Skip to main content

Full text of "A concordance to the poetical and dramatic works of Alfred, lord Tennyson including the poems contained in the "Life of Alfred, lord Tennyson" and the "Suppressed poems," 1830-1868"

See other formats


w 


Digitized  by  the  Internet  Archive 

in  2007  with  funding  from 

IVIicrosoft  Corporation 


http://www.archive.org/details/concordancetopoeOObakerich 


A  TENNYSON   CONCORDANCE 


Uniform  in  Size  witti  ttiis  Volume 


A  GUIDE  TO  THE  BEST  FICTION  IN   ENGLISH. 

By  Ernest  A.  Baker,  M.A.,  D.Litt.,  F.L.A.  New  edition,  entirely 
re-written  and  greatly  amplified,  forming  an  invaluable  guide  to  English 
and  American  fiction.     With  a  classified  Index  of  170  pages. 


A  GUIDE  TO  HISTORICAL  FICTION. 

A  companion  volume  to  the  above.  By  the  same  Author.  New 
edition,  entirely  re-written  and  greatly  amplified,  forming  an  invaluable 
illustrative  aid  to  the  study  and  teachmg  of  the  history  of  all  countries 
and  all  ages.     With  a  classified  Index  of  150  pages. 


THE   BEST  BOOKS:    A  READER'S   GUIDE. 

By  William  Swan  Sonnenschein.  New  and  revised  edition  (con- 
taining about  150,000  titles)  of  a  work  that  has  for  many  years  been 
a  universal  reference  -  book  and  guide  to  literature,  in  the  hands  of 
librarians,  students,  general  readers,  and  book-lovers.     3  vols. 


A    CONCORDANCE 


TO   THE 


POETICAL    AND    DRAMATIC    WORKS 


OF 


ALFRED,    LORD    TENNYSON 

INCLUDING  THE  POEMS  CONTAINED  IN 
THE  "LIFE  OF  ALFRED,  LORD  TENNYSON," 
AND    THE    "SUPPRESSED    POEMS,"    1830-1868. 


By    ARTHUR    E.    BAKER,    F.R.Hist.S.,    F.L.A. 

SECRETARY   AND    LIBRARIAN,    TAUNTON. 

AUTHOR    OF 

"  A    BRIEF    ACCOUNT    OF    THE   PUBLIC    LIBRARY   MOVEMENT    IN   TAUNTON,"    ETC. 


LONDON 

KEGAN    PAUL,    TRENCH,    TRUBNER   &   Co.,    Ltd. 

BROADWAY   HOUSE,  68-74   CARTER   LANE,   E.G. 

1914 


-tr. 


..  ^..  R 


%h    %'\ 


TO   THE    MEMORY 
OF 

MY   MOTHER, 

MY   FIRST   AND    BEST   TEACHER, 

THIS   BOOK    IS 
AFFECTIONATELY    DEDICATED. 

"  Utitil  the  day  break,  and  the  shadows  flee  aivayT 


?R5580 


PREFATORY  NOTE 

It  may,  perhaps,  not  be  out  of  place  to  say  a  word  or  two  as  to  how  I  came  to  undertake    the 
compilation    of    this   work.     Some    years   ago,   when    occupying    the  position  of   Deputy  -  Librarian  in   a 
public   library   in   the   North   of    England,   I   received    numerous    enquiries   from  readers 
Work.  ^*  ^^^^  institution   for   a   Concordance  to  the   Works   of   Tennyson.     Realising  that  here 

was  a  distinct  desideratum  in  the  library  of  the  student  of  English  Literature,  I  there 
and  then  decided  to  undertake  the  compilation  of  such  a  Work.  Taking  from  one  of  the  Book- 
presses  a  copy  of  the  poet's  Works,  and  opening  it,  my  eyes  fell  on  the  following  quotation  : — 

"  Make  knowledge  circle  with  the  winds  ; 
But  let  her  herald,  Reverence,  fly 
Before  her  to  whatever  sky 
Bear  seed  of  men  and  growth  of  minds." 

— Love  thou  thy  land. 

I  jotted  down  the  lines  under  their  respective  key-words,  and  thus  the  work  was  commenced. 

Shortly  afterwards  it  happened  that  I  removed  to  my  present  position  in  the  South  of  England  ; 
consequently  the  matter  was  for  some  time  "shelved";  but  at  the  end  of  1907  I  returned  to  the 
subject,  and  after  about  eight  years  of  what  has  been  to  me  a  labour  of  love,  I  present  my  humble 
labour  to  the  public,  with  a  sincere  hope  that  students,  and  lovers  of  Tennyson,  and  others,  will  find 
it  of  interest  and  utility. 

The  volume  consists  of  Verbal  Indexes  to  the  Poetical  and  Dramatic  Works  of  the  author  comprised 
in  the  Complete  Edition,  published  by  Messrs  Macmillan  &  Co.,  to  the  Poems  contained  in 
the  Life  of  Lord  Tennyson  by  his  son,  and  published  by  the  same  publishers ;  also  to  the 
Supjyt'essed  Poems,  edited  by  J.  C.  Thomson,  and  published  by  Messrs  Sands  &  Co. 

The    Concordance    has    been    arranged    in    strict    alphabetical    sequence ;    the    different    senses    or 

grammatical   functions  of  a   word  are   frequently   distinguished  under   separate  headings ; 
Arrangement.  •     i    i    i 

the    dialect    words    are    paraphrased ;    all   proper   names    are    included,   and    occasionally 

some  indication  has  been  added  of  their  identity. 

Line-references  are  given,  thereby   greatly    facilitating  the  finding  of  a  quotation  or 
Liii6~r6f6r6nc6S« 

reference,  particularly  in  the  larger  poems. 

vii 


viii  PREFATORY  NOTE 

As  each  one  has  to  number  the  lines  for  himself  in  all  but  school  editions  of  Tennyson's  Works,  I  must 

explain  the  method,  or  rather  methods,  of  numbering  for  the  purpose  of  this  Concordance. 

numbering  Lines.    ^^  ^^^  Poems  the  lines  have  been  numbered  without  regard  to  the  typographical  peculiarities 

of  the  standard  edition,  which  has  two  columns  to  a  page.     The  following  lines,  here  reprinted 

as  they  stand  in  that  edition,  were  numbered  1-6,  thus : — 

1  These  to  His  Memory — since  he  held 

them  dear, 

2  Perchance  as  finding  there  unconscioiisly 

3  Some  image  of  himself — I  dedicate, 

4  I  dedicate,  I  consecrate  with  tears — 

5  These  Idylls. 

6  And  indeed  He  seems  to  me 

— Idylls  of  the  King.     Dedication. 

That  is  to  say,  a  line  broken  into  two  by  the  printer  was  counted  as  one ;  a  line  broken  by  the  poet  was 
counted  as  two. 

In  the  Dramatic  Works,  another  and  merely  mechanical  system  was  adopted.  There  every  line  of 
print  as  it  occurs  in  Macmillan's  one-volume  edition  of  the  Complete  Works  was  numbered  separately,  even 
if  only  containing  a  single  word.     Thus  : — 

1  Cranmer.     To  Strasburg,  Antwerp, 

2  Frankfort,  Zurich,  Worms, 

3  Geneva,  Basle — our  Bishops  from  their 

4  sees 

5  Or  fled,  they  say,  or  flying — Poinet, 

6  Barlow, 

— Queen  Mary,  Act  i.,  Scene  ii. 

Metrically,  of  course,  there  are  only  three  lines  here,  not  six.  A  method  of  numbering  that  is  not  to  be 
avoided  in  the  prose  portions  of  the  plays  has  intentionally  been  extended  also  to  the  blank  verse,  in  order 
to  facilitate  rapid  reference  to  copies  of  the  text  in  which  the  lines  are  not  already  numbered.  On  receiving 
a  reference,  say  to  line  560  of  The  Falcon,  a  reader  using  Macmillan's  standard  edition  in  one  volume  can 
quickly  reckon  out  the  page  and  even  the  column  in  which  the  quotation  appears,  by  remembering  that 
the  column  contains  approximately  fifty  lines  of  print.  Had  the  lines  been  numbered  metrically  he  would 
have  had  to  count  from  the  beginning  of  the  piece.  Only  the  lines  of  the  text  proper,  not  the  stage- 
directions,  have  been  numbered. 

Cross-references  are  supplied  in  the  case  of  compounds  and  dialect  forms — e.g.,  Life 
OroflHKlBrences. 

{See  also  After-life,  Loife). 

In  the  Collected  Works,  two  poems  appear  bearing  the  same  title — viz..  To  the  Queen.     The  one  which 

Titi       appears  on  page  474,  immediately  preceding  the  Lover's  Tale,  has  been  described  as  To  the 

and  Headings       Queen  ii,  in  contradistinction  to  the  one  which  appears  on  page  1.     Then  there  are  a  few 

0    oenu.         poems  with  no  distinct  titles,  but  simply  headed  thus  :  To ,  Song,  Sonnet,  etc.     To  avoid 

confusion,  these  are  referred  to  in  the  Concordance  by  the  first  two  or  three  words  of  each  poem. 


PREFATORY  NOTE 


IX 


No  quotations  are   furnished   for   the    following    words.     A  few  quotations,  however,  may  be  found 
under   those    marked   with    an    asterisk    {Poetical    Works)    or    dagger   {Drainatic    Works) 


\ 


Omitted  Words.     , 

but  they 

are   there   to 

illustrate    some   especial 

use,   and   by   no 

means   represer 

currence  of  the  word  : 

— 

A 

But 

tif 

Ourself 

Too 

About 

By 

In 

Out 

'Twas 

Above 

Can 

♦Indeed 

Over 

'Twere 

Adown 

Cannot 

Into 

Perchance 

'Twill 

tAfter 

Canst 

Is 

♦Round 

♦Under 

Again 

tCould 

It 

♦Scarce 

Until 

Against 

Couldst 

Its 

Scarcely 

Unto 

Ago 

Did 

Itself 

Seldom 

Up 

Ah 

Didst 

Lest 

Shall 

Upon 

Albeit 

*Do 

Let 

Shalt 

Us 

tAll 

Does 

May 

She 

♦tVery 

Almost 

Done 

May'st 

Should 

♦fWas 

*Along 

Dost 

Me 

Shouldst 

Wast 

Aloof 

Doth 

*Mid 

Since 

We 

Already 

Down 

Might 

So 

♦tWell 

Also 

fDownward 

Might'st 

♦tSome 

Were 

Although 

Each 

tMine 

♦t  Something 

Wert 

Alway 

E'er 

More 

Soon 

What 

Always 

^Either 

Most 

Still  (adv.) 

Whate'er 

Am 

Else 

Must 

♦tSuch 

Whatsoever 

Among 

Ere 

My 

Than 

♦tWhen 

An 

Even 

Myself 

That 

Whence 

And 

tEver 

Near 

The 

Whene'er 

tAny 

*Every 

Nearly 

Thee 

Where 

Are 

For 

*Need 

Their 

Whereat 

Around 

Forth 

Ne'er 

Theirs 

Whether 

Art 

From 

tNeither 

Them 

Which 

As 

'Gainst 

♦Never 

♦Then 

Whicheve 

At 

•  Had 

*No 

Thence 

While 

Athwart 

Hadst 

♦None 

There 

Who 

Atwain 

Has 

Nor 

Therefore 

Whom 

Atween 

Hast 

Not 

These 

tWhose 

Away 

Have 

Nothing 

They 

Why 

*Ay 

Having 

tNow 

Thine 

♦Will 

Back 

He 

0 

tThis 

Wilt 

Be 

Hence 

O'er 

Tho' 

With 

Because 

Henceforth 

Of 

Those 

Within 

Been 

Her 

Off 

Thou 

Without 

*Before 

Here 

Oft 

Though 

Would 

Behind 

Herself 

Often 

Thro' 

Wouldst 

Being 

Him 

Oh 

Through 

Ye 

Below 

Himself 

On 

Thus 

Yea 

Beneath 

His 

Once 

Thy 

Yes 

Beside 

*How 

♦tOnly 

Thyself 

Yet 

Between 

Howe'er 

♦Onward 

Till 

You 

Betwixt 

However 

Or 

'Tis 

Your 

Beyond 

Howsoe'er 

Our 

To 

Yours 

Both 

*I 

Ours 

Together 

Yourself 

X  PREFATORY  NOTE 

It  was  originally  intended,  in  order  to  curtail  the  heavy  expenditure  entailed  in  publication,  to  omit 
various  adjectives  and  other  words;  but  as  enquiries  were  made  regarding  their  omission,  it  was  decided 
later  to  insert  these  words  as  far  as  it  was  possible.  As,  however,  the  letters  A-D  {Poetical  Works  only) 
had  already  been  printed,  it  was  impossible  to  make  these  entries,  consequently  many  ordinary  adjectives 
under  the  above  letters  are  omitted. 

Poems  in  '^^^    following    poems   in   the    Life  occur  also    in   the   Collected    Works,   or    in    the 

Duplicate.         Suppressed  Poems,  and  are,  of  course,  treated  only  once : — 

As  when  a  man  that  sails  in  a  balloon.     (See  Suppressed  Poems  under  Dream  of  Fair  Women.) 

Check  every  outfiash,  every  ruder  sally.     (See  Suppressed  Poems.) 

Farewell,  Macready,  since  to-night  we  part.     (See  Collected  Works  under  To  W.  C.  Macready.) 

First  drink  a  health,  this  solemn  night.     (See  Suppressed  Poems  under  Hands  all  Round.)     A   few  readings   peculiar  to 

the  Life  are,  however,  recorded  in  their  place. 
Grod  bless  our  Prince  and  Bride  !     (See  Suppressed  Poems.) 

Grave  mother  of  majestic  works.     (See  Collected  Works  under  Of  old  sat  Freedom.) 
Helen's    Tower,    here    I    stand.      (See    Collected    Works,    under    Helen's    Toxver.)      The    sole    variant    is    duly    recorded, 

however. 
Here   often  when   a   child    I   lay   reclined.      (See    Suppressed   Poems    under    Mablethorpe.)      Important   variants   in    the 

Life  are  recorded. 
Me  my  own  Fate  to  lasting  sorrow  doometh.     (See  Suppressed  Poems.) 
Rise,  Britons,  rise,  if  manhood  be  not  dead.     (See  Suppressed  Poems  under  Britons,  guard  your  own.)     Important  variants 

in  the  Life  are  recorded. 
Row  us  out  from  Desenzano,  to  your  Sirmione  row  !     (See  Collected  Works  under  Frater  Ave  Atque  Vale.) 
The  North  wind  fall'n  in  the  new-starred  night.     (See  Suppressed  Poems  under  The  Hesperides.) 
Therefore   your   Halls,   your  ancient   Colleges.     (See  Suppressed   Poems  under  Cambridge.)     The  significant  variants  are 

all  recorded. 
Thy    prayer    was    "  Light  —  more     Light  —  while     time    shall    last  !  "       (See     Collected     Works    under    Epitaph    on 

Caxton.) 

The  poem  Lover's  Tale  appears  in  the  Collected  Works  and  also  in  the  Suppressed  Poems.  The 
portion  common  to  both  versions  have  not  been  indexed  twice;  they  have  been  neglected  in  making 
the  Concordance  to  the  Suppressed  Poems. 

The  volume  contains  approximately  150,000  quotations  and  references ;  and  as  each  quotation  or 
reference   was   written    on   a   separate    slip,    which   was    then   placed    in    its   alphabetical 

Checking.  order,  and  afterwards  classified  according  to  the  sense  or  grammatical  function  of  the 
key-word,  it  can  better  be  imagined  than  described  what  an  immense  amount  of  labour 
and  time  was  thus  bestowed  upon  the  work. 

In  this  respect  my  acknowledgments   are   due,  and  are   hereby   tendered,  to  Miss  Beatrice  Hewlett 

(the  hon.   librarian   of   the  Crewe  Green  Parish  Library,  Cheshire),  and   to   my  two   sisters,  Miss   Mary 

E.   Baker  and   Miss    Miriam   Maud    Mary   Baker,   for   their    valuable   assistance   in    this 
Appreciation.  •  -      , 

portion   of  the   work.     At  the   same   time,   I  beg   to   tender   my  hearty  thanks   to   those 

who    have    from    time    to    time   written    me    encouraging   letters,  which   have    greatly   assisted    me   in 


PREFATORY  NOTE 


XI 


my  arduous  task,  and  in  this  respect  I  would  specially  mention  Mr  Lionel  R.  M.  Strachan,  English 
Lecturer  in  Heidelberg  University,  for  the  great  interest  he  has  invariably  evinced  in  the  compilation 
of  the  work — particularly  for  his  valuable  help  in  the  checking  of  the  proofs — and  for  his  readiness 
at  all  times  to  render  assistance. 

A.  E.  B. 


Taunton, 
1914. 


CORRIGENDA 


Page  132  Dawn  (verb)  Tiresias  206  read  Dawn  (s). 

252  Gave  (See  also  Gied,  Giv)  read  Gave  (See  also  Gev,  Gied,  Giv). 

256  Gev  (give)  read  Gev  (gave). 

258  Give  (See  also  Gev,  Gie)  riad  Give  (See  also  Gie). 

334  Hope  (verb)  Supp.  Confessions  31  read  Hope  (s). 

832  Alight  (lighted)  read  Alight. 

832  Alighted.     See  Lighted — delete. 


CONTENTS 

PAGE 

SHORT  TITLES  AND  ABBREVIATIONS xv 

CONCORDANCE  TO  THE   POETICAL  WORKS   OF  ALFRED,   LORD   TENNYSON       .            .  i 

CONCORDANCE  TO   THE   DRAMATIC  WORKS   OF  ALFRED,   LORD   TENNYSON     .            .  829 

CONCORDANCE    TO    THE    POEMS    CONTAINED    IN    THE    "LIFE    OF    ALFRED,    LORD 

TENNYSON,"  BY   HIS   SON 1137 

CONCORDANCE   TO   THE   "SUPPRESSED   POEMS,"    1830-1868 1165 

ADDENDA     .............  1209 


xm 


LIST   OF   SHORT   TITLES   AND   ABBREVIATIONS 


Achilles  over  the  T.  . 

(adj.) 

(adv.) 

A  gate  and  a  field     . 

Akbar's  D.,  Hymn   . 

Akbar's  D.,   Inscrip. 

Along  this  glimmering 

Arabian  IVights 

Are  those  the  far-fanned 

A  spirit  liaunts 

A  surface  man 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh 
Beauty,  Good,  etc. 
Because  she  bore 
Blow  ye  the  trumpet 
Bold  Uavelock  . 
Bright  is  the  moon 
Britons,  guard  . 
By  an  Evolution. 

Check  every  outflash 
Church^warden,  etc. 
Com.  of  Arthur 
Come  not,  when,  etc. 
(compar.)  . 
Could  I  outwear 

D.  of  F.  Women 
D.  of  the  Duke  of  C. 
B.  of  the  0.    Year 
Bay-Dm.,  Pro. 

Sleep.  P. 

Sleep.  B. 
„         Depart. 

^   "      ^v-  ■ 

Ded.  of  Idylls   . 
Ded.  Poem  Prin.   Alice 
Beep  glens  I  found 
Bef.  of  Lucknow 
Bemeter  and  P. 
Be  Prof.,  Two  G. 
„         Human  C. 


Early-wise 

England  and  Amer. 
Epit.  on  Caxton 
Epit.  on  Gordon 
Epit.  on  Stratford 
Every  day,  etc. 

Faded  ev'ry  violet 
Far  off  in  the  dun 
First  drink  a  health 
Flow,  in  cran.  wall 
Frater  Ave,  etc. 


Achilles  over  the  Trench. 

adjective. 

adverb. 

A  gate  and  a  field  half  ploughed. 

Akbar's  Dream.     Hymn. 

Akbar's  Dream.     Inscription. 

Along  this  giinunering  gallery. 

Recollections  of  the  Arabian  Nights. 

Are  those  the  far-famed  Victor  Hours  ? 

A  spirit  haunts  the  year's  last  hours. 

A  sm-face  man  of  many  theories. 

Battle  of  Brunanburh. 

Beauty,  Good,  and  Knowledge  are  three  sisters. 

Because  she  bore  the  iron  name. 

Blow  ye  the  trumpet,  gather  from  afar. 

Bold  Havelock  march'd. 

Bright  is  the  moon  on  the  deep, 

Britons,  guard  your  own. 

By  an  Evolutionist. 

Check  every  outflash,  every  ruder  sally. 

Church-warden  and  the  Curate. 

Coming  of  Arthur. 

Come  not,  when  I  am  dead. 

comparative. 

Could  I  outwear  my  present  state  of  woe. 

Dream  of  Fair  Women. 

Death  of  the  Duke  of  Clarence  and  Avondale. 

Death  of  the  Old  Year. 

Day-Dream,  Prologue. 

„  Sleeping  Palace. 

„  Sleeping  Beauty. 

„  Departure. 

„  Epilogue. 

Idylls  of  the  King.     Dedication. 
Dedicatory  Poem  to  the  Princess  Alice. 
Deep  glens  I  found,  and  sunless  gulfs. 
Defence  of  Lucknow. 
Demeter  and  Persephone. 
De  Profundis :  The  Two  Greetings. 

„  The  Human  Cry. 

Early-wise,  and  pure,  and  true. 

England  and  America. 

Epitaph  on  Caxton. 

Epitaph  on  General  Gordon. 

Epitaph  on  Lord  Stratford  de  Eedclifie. 

Every  day  hath  its  night. 

Faded  ev'ry  violet,  aU  the  roses. 
Far  off  in  the  dun,  dark  Occident. 
First  drink  a  health,  this  solemn  night. 
Flower  in  the  crannied  wall. 
Frater  Ave  atque  Vale. 


Frenchman,  etc. 
From  shape  to  shape 
Full  light  aloft 

G.  of  Swainston 
Gardener's  D.    , 
Gareth  and  L. 
Geraint  and  E. 
God  and  the    Univ. 
God  bless  our  Prince 
Gone  into  Darkness 

He  was  too  good 
Hear  you  the  sound 
Heavy  Brigade 
Here,  I  that  stood 
Here  often  when  a  child 
High.  Pantheism 
Hither,  when  all 
Hold  thou,  my  friend 
Home  they  brought  him 
How  glad  am  I 
How  is  it  that  men 
How  strange  it  is 

I  keep  no  more 
I,  loving  Freedom 
In  Mem.,  Pro. 
„  Con. 

W.  G.  Ward 
I  met  in  all 
{inter  j.) 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.. 
(intrans.)  . 

June  Bracken,  etc. 

L.  C.    V.  de    Vere 
L.  of  Burleigh  . 
L.  of  Shalott     . 
Lancelot  and  E. 
Leonine  Eleg.    . 
Life  of  the  Life 
Light  Brigade   . 
Lit.  Squabbles   . 
Little  Aubrey   . 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty 
Long  as  the  heart 
Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S. 
Love,  Pride,  etc. 

Mariana  hi  the  S. 
Marr.  of  Geraint 
May  Queen,  N.  Y.'s 

„  Con. 

M.  d'  Arthur     . 


Frenchman,  a  hand  is  thine  ! 

From  shape  to  shape  at  first  within  the  womb 

Full  light  aloft  doth  the  laverock  spring. 

In  the  Garden  at  Swainston. 

Gardener's  Daughter. 

Gareth  and  Lynette. 

Geraint  and  Enid. 

God  and  the  Universe. 

God  bless  our  Prince  and  Bride. 

Gone  into  darkness  that  full  light. 

He  was  too  good  and  kind  and  sweet. 

Hear  you  the  sound  of  wheels  ? 

Charge  of  the  Heavy  Brigade  at  Balaclava. 

Here,  I  that  stood  in  On  beside  the  flow. 

Here  often  when  a  child  I  lay  reclined. 

Higher  Pantheism. 

Hither,  when  all  the  deep,  unsounded  skies 

Hold  thou,  my  friend,  no  lesser  life  in  scorn. 

Home  they  brought  him  slain  with  spears. 

How  glad  am  I  to  walk. 

How  is  it  that  men  have  so  little  grace  ? 

How  strange  it  is,  0  God,  to  wake. 

I  keep  no  more  a  lone  distress. 
I,  loving  Freedom  for  herself. 
In  Memoriam,  Prologue. 

„  Conclusion. 

„  William  George  Ward. 

I  met  in  all  the  close  green  ways, 
interjection. 

In  the  Children's  Hospital, 
intransitive. 

Jime  Bracken  and  Heather. 

Lady  Clara  Vere  de  Vere. 

Lord  of  Burleigh. 

Lady  of  Shalott. 

Lancelot  and  Elaine. 

Leonine  Elegiacs. 

Life  of  the  Life  within  my  blood. 

Charge  of  the  Light  Brigade. 

Literary  Squabbles. 

Little  Aubrey  in  the  West ! 

Locksley  Hall,  Sixty  Years  after. 

Long  as  the  heart  beats  life  within  the  breast. 

Lotos-Eaters.    Choric  Song. 

Love,  Pride,  and  Forgetfulness. 

Mariana  in  the  South. 

Marriage  of  Geraint. 

May  Queen,  New  Year's  Eve. 

„        Conclusion. 
Morte  d' Arthur. 


XV 


XVI 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep. 
Me  my  own  fate 
Merlin  and  the  G. 
Merlin  and    V. 
Methought  I  saw 
Miller's  D. 
Move  eastward  . 
My  life  is  full  . 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S. 
O.  S. 
New  Timon 
North.  Cobbler  . 
Not  a  whisper  . 
Not  such  were  those 
Not  to  Silence 

Ode  on  Well.     . 
Ode  Inter.  Exhib. 


O  God,  make  this  age 

Oh,  Beauty 

O  leave  not  thou 

Of  old  sat  Freedom   . 

Old  ghosts 

On  Jub.  Q.    Victoria 

On  One  who  effec.  E.  M. 

One  was  the  Tishhite 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib. 

Oriana 

O  sad  No  more! 


Pallid  thunderstricken 
(part.) 

Pass,  of  Arthur 
Pelleas  and  E. 
Poets  and  their  B. 
Popular,  Popular 
Pref.  Poem.  Broth.  S 
(prep.)       .         . 
Prin.  Beatrice  . 
Princess,  Pro.    . 
„  Con.   . 

Pro.  to  Gen.   Hamley 
Prog,  of  Spring 
Prom,  of  May  . 
(pron.) 

Remember  you  . 
Remembering  him 
Rise,  Britons,  rise 
Romney's  R. 
Roses  on  the  T. 

St.  S.  Stylites    . 
Shall  the  hag 
Sir  J.  Franklin 
Sir  J.  Oldcastle 
Sir  L.  and  Q.  0. 
Sisters  (E.  and  E.) 
Speak  to  me 
Spec,  of  Iliad    . 

Spinster's  S's    . 
Spurge  with  fairy 
Steersman 
Sugg,  by  Reading 


LIST  OF  SHORT  TITLES  AND  ABBREVIATIONS 


Morte  d' Arthur,  Epilogue. 

Me  my  own  fate  to  lasting  sorrow  doometh. 

Merlin  and  the  Gleam. 

Merlin  and  Vivien. 

Methought  I  saw  a  face  whose  every  line. 

Miller's  Daughter. 

Move  eastward,  happy  earth,  and  leave. 

My  life  is  full  of  weary  days. 

Northern  Farmer,  New  Style. 
Old  Style. 
The  New  Timon  and  the  Poets. 
Northern  Cobbler. 
Not  a  whisper  stirs  the  gloom. 
Not  such  were  those  whom  Freedom  claims. 
Not  to  Silence  would  I  build. 

Ode  on  the  Death  of  the  Duke  of  Wellington. 
Ode  sung  at  the  Opening  of  the  International 

Exhibition. 
O  God,  make  this  age  great  that  we  may  be. 
Oh,  beauty,  passing  beauty. 
O  leave  not  thou  thy  son  forlorn. 
Of  old  sat  Freedom  on  the  heights. 
Old  ghosts  whose  day  was  done  ere  mine  began 
On  the  Jubilee  of  Queen  Victoria. 
On  One  who  affected  an  Effeminate  Manner. 
One  was  the  Tishbite,  whom  the  raven  fed. 
Opening  of  the  Indiaa  and  Colonial  Exhibition 

by  the  Queen. 
Ballad  of  Oriana. 
0  sad  No  more  !    0  sweet  No  more  ! 

The  pallid  thimderstricken  sigh  for  gain. 

participle. 

Passing  of  Arthur. 

Pelleas  and  Ettarre. 

Poets  and  their  Bibliographies. 

Popular,  Popular,  Unpopular  ! 

Prefatory  Poem  to  my  Brother's  Sonnets. 

preposition. 

To  H.R.H.  Princess  Beatrice. 

Princess,  Prologue. 

„  Conclusion. 

Prologue  to  General  Hamley. 
Progress  of  Spring. 
Promise  of  May. 
pronoun. 

Remember  you  the  clear  moonlight? 
Remembering  him  who  waits  thee  far  away. 
Rise,  Britons,  rise,  if  manhood  be  not  dead. 
Romney's  Remorse. 
Roses  on  the  Terrace. 

substantive. 

St.  Simeon  Stylites. 

Shall  the  hag  Evil  die. 

Sir  John  Franklin. 

Sir  John  Oldcastle,  Lord  Cobham. 

Sir  Launcelot  and  Queen  Guinevere. 

Sisters  (Evelyn  and  Edith). 

Speak  to  me  from  the  stormy  sky  ! 

Specimen  of  a  Translation  of  the  Iliad  in 

Blank  Verse. 
Spinster's  Sweet- Arts. 
Spurge  with  fairy  crescent  set. 
Steersman,  be  not  precipitate  in  thine  act. 
Suggested  by  reading  an  article  in  a  newspaper. 


Supp.  Confessions 


Take,  Lady 
That  is  his  portrait   . 
That  the  voice   . 
The  child  was  sitting 
The  form,  the  form    . 
The  lamps  were  bright 
The  lintwhite     . 
The  night,  etc.  . 
The  noblest  men 
The  winds,  etc. 
There  are  three  things 

Therefore  your  Halls 
They  say,  etc.   . 

They  wrought,  etc 

Third  of  Feb.   . 

Thou  viay'st  remember 

Though  night     . 

Thy  soul  is  like 

'Tis  not  alone  . 

To  a  Lady  Sleep. 

To   A .  Tennyson 

To  C.   North    . 

To  F.  D.  Maurice 

To   J.  M.   K.  . 

To  One  who  ran  down  En:j. 

To  Prof.   Jebb  . 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin 

To  Master  of  B. 

To  Prin.  F.  of  H. 

To  thee  with  whom 

To  W.  H.  BrookfUld 

Townsman,  etc. 

(trans.) 

Trans,  of  Homer 

V.  of  Cauteretz 
V.  of  Maeldune 
Vicar  of  this     . 
Voice  and  the  P. 
Voice  spake,  etc, 

W.  to   Alexandra 
W.  to  Marie   Alex. 

Walk,  to  the  Mail 
Wan  Sculptor    . 
We  lost  you 
Well,  as  to  Fame 
What  rustles 
What  time  I  wasted 
Wherever  evil 
While  I  live 
Why  suffers 
Will  Water 
Window.     At  the  W. 
„  Marr.  Mo 

Woman  of  noble 

Yon  huddled  cloud 
You  ask  me,  why. 
You  Tnight  have  won 
Young  is  the  grief 
Youth,  lapsing 


Supposed  Confessions  of  a  Second-rate  Sensi 
tive  Mind. 

Take,  Lady,  what  your  loyal  nurses  give. 
That  is  his  portrait,  painted  by  himself. 
That  the  voice  of  a  satisfied  people  may  k(!ep 
The  child  was  sitting  on  the  bank. 
The  form,  the  form  alone  is  eloquent. 
The  lamps  were  bright  and  gay. 
The  lintwhite  and  the  throstlecock. 
The  night  with  sudden  odour  reel'd. 
The  noblest  men  methinks  are  bred. 
The  winds,  as  at  their  hour  of  birth. 
There   are   three   things   that   fill  my   heart 

with  sighs. 
Therefore  your  Halls,  yom"  ancient  Colleges. 
They  say  some  foreign  powers  have  laid  their 

heads  together. 
They  wrought  a  work  which  time  reveres. 
Third  of  February,  1852. 
Thou  may'st  remember  that  I  said. 
Though  Night  hath  cUmbed. 
Thy  soul  is  like  a  landskip,  friend. 
'Tis  not  alone  the  warbling  woods. 
To  a  Lady  Sleeping. 
To  Alfred  Tennyson,  My  Grandson. 
To  Christopher  North. 
To  the  Rev.  F.  D.  Maurice. 
Sonnet  To  J.  M.  K.  . 

To  One  who  ran  down  the  English.  I 

To  Professor  Jebb. 
To  the  Marquis  of  Dufferin  and  Ava. 
To  the  Master  of  Balliol. 
To  the  Princess  Frederica  of  Hanover  on  her 

Marriage. 

To  thee  with  whom  my  true  affections  dwell. 
To  the  Rev.  W.  H.  Brookfield. 
Townsmen,  or  of  the  hamlet,  young  or  old. 
transitive.  ) 

On  Translations  of  Homer. 

In  the  Valley  of  Cauteretz. 

Voyage  of  Maeldune. 

Vicar  of  this  pleasant  spot. 

Voice  and  the  Peak. 

A  Voice  spake  out  of  the  Skies. 

A  Welcome  to  Alexandra. 

A  Welcome  to  Her  Royal  Highness  Maria 

Alexandre vna.  Duchess  of  Edinburgh. 
Walking  to  the  INIail. 
Wan  sculptor,  weepest  thou. 
We  lost  you  for  how  long  a  time. 
Well,  as  to  Fame,  who  strides  the  earth.  I 

What  rustles  hither  in  the  dark  ? 
What  time  I  wasted  youthful  hours. 
Wherever  evil  customs  thicken. 
While  I  live,  the  owls  !  I 

Why  suffers  human  life  so  soon  eclipse  ? 
Will  Waterproof's  Lyrical  Monologue. 
Window.    At  the  Window. 

„  Marriage  Morning. 

Woman  of  noble  form  and  noble  mind  ! 

Yon  huddled  cloud  his  motion  sliifts. 
You  ask  me,  why,  tho'  ill  at  ease. 
You  might  have  won  the  Poet's  name. 
Yomig  is  the  grief  I  entertain. 
Youth,  lapsing  thro'  fair  solitudes. 


A   CONCORDANCE  to  the   POETICAL  WORKS 


OF 


ALFRED,   LORD  TENNYSON. 


A    inouthing  out  his  hollow  oes  and  oe», 
Aage  (age)    owd  «  as  'appy  as  iver  I  can, 
Aair  (hair)    an'  cryin'  and  tearin'  'er  'a 
A&le  (ale)    Says  that  I  meant  'a  naw  moor  a 
Git  ma  my  «,  (repeat) 
I've  'ed  my  point  o'  a  ivry  noight 
an'  doesn  bring  ma  the  a  ? 
an'  droonk  wi'  the  farmer's  a, 
An'  the  taable  staiiin'd  wi'  'is  a, 
tha  mun  nobbut  hev'  one  glass  of  a. 
'Aapoth  (half-pennyworth) 

sense, 
Aaste  (haste)    thaw  summun  said  it  in  'a : 
Abaddon    A  and  Asmodeus  caught  at  me. 
Abase    A  those  eyes  that  ever  loved 
Abash'd    so  forlorn  As  I  am  ! '  half  a  him  ; 
Enid,  all  a  she  knew  not  why, 
man  of  thine  to-day  A  us  both, 
A  Lavaine,  whose  instant  reverence, 
beauty  of  her  flesh  a  the  boy, 
Abate    A  the  stride,  which  speaks  of  man 
Abbess    Our  simple-seeming  A  and  her  nuns, 
till  in  time  their  A  died. 

Was  chosen  A,  there,  an  A,  lived  For  three  brief 
years,  and  there,  an  A,  past 
'  Abbey    '  Come  out,'  he  said,  '  To  the  A  : 
But  we  went  back  to  the  A, 
fellow  hath  broken  from  some  A, 
The  helmet  in  an  a  far  away 
Abbey-ruin    Carved  stones  of  the  A-r 
Abbey-wall    I  see  the  moulder'd  A-w's, 
Abbot    An  a  on  an  ambling  pad, 
Abdiel    Titan  angels,  Gabriel,  A, 
A-bealin'  (bellowing)    An'  thou  was  a-b  likewise, 
Abear  (bear)    for  I  couldn  a  to  see  it. 

An'  I  can't  a  'em,  I  can't, 
Abeat    Eats  scarce  enow  to  keep  his  pulse  a ; 
A-begging    I  never  came  a-b  for  myself, 
Abeyance    Those  winters  of  a  all  worn  out. 
Abhor    I  hate,  a,  spit,  sicken  at  him  ; 
Abhorr'd    they  fell  and  made  the  glen  a : 
Abhorrent    A  of  a  calculation  crost. 
Abide     '  Trust  me,  in  bliss  I  shall  a 
Tho"  much  is  taken,  much  a's  ; 
In  whose  least  act  a's  the  nameless  charm 
you  failing,  I  a  What  end  soever : 
hate  me  not,  but  a  your  lot, 
A  :  thy  wealth  is  gather'd  in, 
A  a  little  longer  here. 
Dare  I  bid  her  a  by  her  word  ? 
but  a  Without,  among  the  cattle 
A  :  take  counsel ;  for  this  lad 
shalt  a  her  judgment  on  it ; 
'  I  will  a  the  coming  of  my  lord, 
thou  art  man,  and  canst  a  a  truth, 
Yet  better  if  the  King  a, 


The  Epic  50 

Oiod  Roa  3 

Nortlu  Cobbler  34 

N.  Famie);  O.  S.,3 

„    4,  36,  68 

7 

.,  65 

Village  Wife  77 

Spiiuta-'s  S's.  99 

Oiod  Mod  20 

Joanes,  as  'ant  not  a  'a  o' 

JV.  Farmer,  0.  S.,  49 

27 

Si.  S.  Stylites  172 

Princess  ii  427 

Enoch  Arden  288 

Marr.  of  Oeraint  765 

JSalin  and  Balan  71 

Lancelot  and  E.  418 

Pelleas  and  E.  78 

Princess  ii  429 

Guinevere  309 

692 

696 

Princess,  Pro.,  51 

,,      Con.,  106 

Gareth  and  L.  456 

Holjf  Grail  6 

Princess,  Pro.,  14 

Talking  Oak  3 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  20 

Milton  5 

Qwd  Roa  89 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.,  64 

Church-warden,  etc.,  13 

Balin  and  Balan  105 

Dora  141 

Princess  iv  440 

Lucretius  199 

Lancelot  and  E.  42 

Enoch  Arden  473 

Palace  of  Art  18 

Ulysses  65 

Princess  v  70 

405 

Sjnteful  Letter  11 

In  Mem.  Hi  15 

,,     Iviii  11 

Maud  I  xvi  25 

Gai-eth  and  L.  273 

730 

Marr.  of  Geraint  584 

Geraint  and  E.  131 

Balin  and  Balan  501 

Last  Tournament  109 


Abide  (continued)    tho  wife  Whom  he  knows  false,  a 
which  thou  wilt  a,  if  thou  bo  wise, 
Wretch  you  must  a  it  .  .  . 
Abidest    a  lame  and  poor.  Calling  thyself 
Abiding    A  with  me  till  I  sail  To  seek  thee 
Able-bodied    Grew  plump  and  a-b  ; 
Abler    A  quarter-sessions  chairman,  a  none  ; 
Abode    at  the  farm  a  William  and  Dora. 

those  four  a  Within  one  house 
Wherein  the  younger  Charles  a 

she  a  his  coming,  and  said  to  him 

stately  Queen  a  For  many  a  week, 

mightiest  of  my  knights,  a  with  me. 

Clave  to  him,  and  a  in  his  own  land. 

Time  and  Grief  a  too  long  with  Life, 
Abodest    While  thou  a  in  the  bud. 
Abolish    Caught  at  the  hilt,  as  to  a  him  : 
Abominable    The  A ,  that  uninvited  came 

shapes  of  lust,  unspeakable,  A, 

and  shatter  it,  hold  it  a,  \ 

Abreast    One  walk'd  a  with  me. 
Abruptly    broke  the  sentence  in  his  heart  A, 
Absence    she  mourn'd  his  a  as  his  grave, 

in  his  a  full  of  light  and  joy. 
Absolution    find  A  sort  of  a  in  the  sound 
Absolution-seller    a-s's,  monkeries 
Absorb    in  its  onward  current  it  a's 
Absorbing    A  all  the  incense  of  sweet  thoughts 
Abstraction    They  do  so  that  affect  a 
A-buried    I'll  hev  'im  a-b  wi'mma 
Abu  Said  (Sufee  Poet)    him  A  S—a.  sun  but  dimly 

seen 
Abuse  (s)     '  lest  from  the  a  of  war, 

bore  without  a  The  grand  old  name 

Perchance  from  some  a  of  Will 
Abuse  (verb)    wayward  grief  a  The  genial  hour 

my  Leonard,  use  and  not  a  your  day, 
Abused    God's  great  gift  of  speech  a 
Abysm    fell  into  the  a  Of  forms  outworn, 

weigh 'd  him  down  into  the  a — 

into  the  a.  The  A  of  all  A's, 

downward  too  into  the  a. 
Abyss    and  the  waste  wide  Of  that  a, 

to  sound  the  a  Of  science, 

lighten  thro'  The  secular  a  to  come, 

0,  from  the  distance  of  the  a 

upheaven  from  the  a  By  fire,  to  sink  into  the  a 
again ; 

bubble  bursts  above  the  a  Of  Darkness, 
Acacia    Was  lispt  about  the  a's, 

The  slender  a  would  not  shake 
Academe     The  softer  Adams  of  your  A , 

this  your  A,  Whichever  side  be  Victor, 
A-callin'    a-c  ma  '  hugly '  mayhap  to  my  faace 

kep  a-c'  o'  Roa  till  'e  waggled  'is  taail 
Acanthus-wreath    many  a  wov'n  a-w  divine  ! 


Guinevere  515 

Ancient  Sage  35 

Foi'lorn  52 

Tivo  Voices  197 

In  Mem.  cxxv  13 

The  Goose  18 

Princess,  Con.,  90 

Dora    1 

„   169 

Talking  Oak  297 

Geraint  and  E.  139 

Guinevere  146 

„        430 

„        440 

Lover's  Tale  i  107 

Two  Voices  158 

Marr.  of  Geraint  210 

(Enrnie  224 

Lucretius  158 

Boadicea  65 

Lover's  Tale  ii  86 

Geraint  and  E.  42 

Enoch  Arden  247 

Lover's  Tcde  i  425 

Sea  Dreams  61 

Sir  John  Oldcastle  93 

Isabel  31 

Lover's  Tale  i  469 

Princess  ii  359 

North.  Cobbler  106 


Akbar's  Dream  94 

Princess  ■«  126 

In  Mem.  cxi  21 

Epilogue  24 

In  Mem.  cv  9 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  265 

A  Dirge  44 

Lover's  Tale  i  796 

Columbus  137 

A  ncient  Sage  39 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  146 

TvM  Voices  120 

Princess  ii  176 

In  Mem.  Ixxvi  6 

,,      xciii  11 

Pass,  of  Arthur  82 

Roonney's  R.  52 

Princess  vii  251 

Maud  I  xxii  45 

Princess  ii  197 

230 

Spinster's  S's.  91 

O^od  Rod  105 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.,  97 


Acjcens 


Added 


Accent    a^  (i„ypry  low  In  Vlandishraeni,  Isabel  19 

[[     3L6'TfpUes^ina"ifa)tter,c  L.  of  Burleigh  5 

I       Wixh  li>3aring' cha'ir  and  lower'd  «)  Aylmer's  Field  267 

Accept    God  a  him,  Christ  receive  him.  Ode  on  Well.  281 

do  a  my  madness,  and  would  die  Mmid  I  xviii  44 

to  a  this  cloth  of  gold,  Gareth  and  L.  398 

that  I  a  thee  aught  the  more  ,,            766 

a  thee  aught  the  more.  Scullion,  ,,            839 

a  this  old  imperfect  tale.  To  llie  Qmen  ii  36 

dark  lord  a  and  love  the  Sun,  Demeter  and  P.  137 

Acceptance     Blithe  would  her  brother's  a  be.  Maud  I  x  27 

Access    closed  her  a  to  the  wealthier  farms,  Aylmer's  Field  50'i 

down  the  lane  of  o  to  the  King,  Oareth  and  L,  661 

Acclaim    tumult  of  their  a  is  roll'd  laying  Swan  33 

And  followed  with  as,  Will  Water.  138 

let  a  people's  voice  In  full  a,  Ode  on  Well.  143 

Is  wrought  with  tumult  of  a.  In  Mem.  Ixxv  20 

Accompanied    and  oft  a  By  Averill :  Aylmer's  Field  137 

Accompanying   brethren  slowly  with  bent  brows ^1,  Lancelot  and  E.  W^^ 

Accomplice    The  a  of  your  madness  unforgiven,  Princess  vi  276 

Accomplish     '  Which  did  a  their  desire.  Two  Voices  217 

A  thou  my  manhood  and  thyself ;  Princess  vii  365 

A  that  blind  model  in  the  seed,  Proff.  of  Sirring  114 

Accomplish'd  (See  also  All-accomplish 'd,  Full-accomplished) 


Who,  thro'  their  own  desire  a, 

I  have  a  what  I  came  to  do. 

My  mission  l>c  o  ! ' 
Accomplishment    win  all  eyes  with  all  a : 

Misa  the  full  flower  of  this  a.' 
Accord  (s)    when  both  were  brought  to  full  «, 

Faith  and  Work  were  bells  of  full  a, 
Accord  (verb)    I  a  it  ea.sily  aa  a  grace. ' 
Accorded    Prince  A  with  hi.s  wonted  courtesy, 
According    That  mind  and  soul,  a  well, 

would  work  a  as  he  wiU'd. 

lady's  love,  A  to  her  promise, 

A  to  the  Highest  in  the  Highest 

for  my  sake,  A  to  my  word  ? ' 

To  pray,  to  do  a  to  the  prayer. 
Account  (s)    dodged  me  with  a  long  and  loose  a. 

a  hard  friend  in  his  loose  as, 

of  the  crowd  you  took  no  more  a 
Account  (verb)    Eat  and  be  glad,  for  I 
a  you  mine  ' 

whatsoever  he  a's  Of  all  his  treasurci 
Accounted    Is  thy  white  blamelessness  a  blame  ! ' 
Accoutrement    Among  piled  arms  and  rough  a's, 
Accrue    Delight  a  hundredfold  a. 
Accurate    your  fine  epithet  Is  a  too. 


Xylmer's  Field  776 

Columbus  65 

Akhar's  Dream  199 

Tliefonn,  tliefonn  4 

Gareth  and  L.  1297 

Last  Tournament  722 

In  Mem.  W.  G.  Ward  2 

Gareth  and  L.  975 

Lancelot  and  E,  638 

In  Mem.,  Pro.,  27 

Holy  Grail  784 

Pel  leas' and  E.  162 

A  ncient  Sage  90 

Romney's  R.  130 

A  hhar's  Dream  8 

Sea  Dreams  149 

„  162 

Lancelot  and  E.  105 

Geraint  and  E,  647 
Lover's  Tale  iv  233 
Merlin  and  V.  799 
Princess  v  55 
In  Mem.  cxvii  8 
Merlin  and  V.  533 


Accurst-Accursed    Thro'  you,  my  life  will  be  accurst.'         Tlie  Letters  36 


Accursed,  who  from  the  wrongs 

AKiiraed,  who  strikes  nor  lets  the  hand 

A  ccursid  were  she  ! '  (repeat) 
Accusation    Like  bitter  a  ev'n  to  death, 

people's  talk  And  a  of  uxorioiisness 

breathe  but  a  vjist  and  vagne, 
Accuse    sent  for  Blanche  to  a  her 

A  her  of  the  least  immodesty : 
Accused    You  never  once  a  me, 
Acbiean    nor  join'd  The  A's— 
Ache  (8)    {See  (dso  Finger-ache,  Haftche) 

In  coughs,  a's,  stitches. 

And  ills  and  a't,  and  teethings, 
Ache  (verb)    would  not  let  your  little  finger  a 

The  night  that  throbs  and  a's 

n't  in  the  ^rasp  of  an  idiot  iwwer, 
Aehievable    if  our  end  were  less  a 
Achieve    f  tone  !  He  will  a  his  greatness 

spoken  true  Of  all  we  shall  a, 
Achieved    »word  and  golden  circlet  were  a. 

a,  The  loneliest  ways  are  safe 
Achieving    wmo  have  striven,  A  calm, 
Achilles    Hco  the  great  A,  whom  we  knew, 

'Dkh  rose  A  dear  to  Zeus  ; 


Gareth  and  L.  347 

435 

Kapiolani  21,  24 

Love  and  Duty  81 

Man:  of  Geraint  83 

Merlin  and  V.  701 

Princess  iv  239 

Oeraint  and  E.  Ill 

Happy  69 

Achilles  over  the  T,  16 

^.  S.  Stylites  13 

Holy  Grail  554 

Godim  22 

Lover's  Talc  i  33 

Despair  43 

Princess  Hi  283 

Tiresias  168 

Mechanojjhilus  26 

Pelleas  and  E.  1 70 

Ixist  Tilurnament  101 

Two  FOTV.ftv209 

Ulysses  64 

Achillea  over  the  T.  2 


Acknowledge    in  my  heart  of  hearts  I  did  «  nobler.   Lancelot  undE.  1211 


A-cleanin'    as  we  was  a-c  the  floor. 
Aconite    Their  rich  ambrosia  tasted  a. 
Acorn    An  a  in  her  breast, 

nor  yet  Thine  a  in  the  land. 
Acom-ball    wear  Alternate  leaf  and  a-b 
Acquiescing    the  Queen  But  coldly  a, 
A-crawin'  (crowing)    cocks  kep  a-c  an'  crawin' 
Acre    {See  also  Five-acre,  Haacre)    dinner  To 

the  men  of  many  a's, 
Acreage    No  coarse  and  blockish  God  of  a 
A-creeapin  (creeping)    wur  a-c  about  my  waiiist ; 
Acrimony    flow'd  in  shallower  acrimonies : 
A-ciyin'    then  I  seed  'er  a-c,  I  did. 
Act  (b)    a  saying,  hard  to  shape  in  a; 
swift  mind.  In  a  to  throw  : 
king  demand  An  a  unprofitable, 
In  a  to  render  thanks, 
which  1  clothed  in  a, 
a  tiger-cat  In  a  to  spring 
by  single  a  Of  immolation 
And  all  creation  in  one  a  at  once, 
One  a  a  phantom  of  succession  : 
makes  Such  head  from  a  to  a, 
least  a  abides  the  nameless  charm 
creatures  native  unto  gracious  a. 
How  much  of  a  at  human  hands 
bold  in  heart  and  a  and  word  was  he, 
graced  the  lowliest  a  in  doing  it. 
dream  she  could  be  guilty  of  foul  a, 
hearts  who  see  but  a's  of  wrong : 
So  splendid  in  his  a's  and  his  attire, 
Balin  graspt,  but  while  in  a  to  hurl. 
From  noiseful  arms,  and  a's  of  prowess 
one  last  a  of  knighthood  shalt  thou  see. 
the  swift  mind.  In  a  to  throw : 
king  demand  An  a  unprofitable, 
beautiful  in  Past  of  a  or  place, 
with  her  highest  a  the  placid  face 
power  on  thine  own  a  and  on  the  world, 
A  first,  this  Earth,  a  stage 
may  show  In  some  fifth  A 
Act  (verb)    up  and  a,  nor  shrink  For  fear 
For  who  can  always  a  ? 
be  born  and  think,  And  a  and  love. 
Not  he,  not  yet !  and  time  to  a — 
Acted    weaker  grows  thro'  a  crime. 
If  more  and  a  on,  what  follows  'i 
after  madness  a  question  ask'd : 
thro'  the  journey  home,  A  her  hest, 
Acting     («*e  also  Over-acting)    A  the  law  we 

live  by  without  fear  ; 
Action    '  Which  in  all  a  is  the  end  of  all ; 
until  endurance  grow  Sin«w'd  with  a, 
enough  of  a,  and  of  motion  we, 
I  myself  must  mix  with  a, 
A  life  in  civic  a  warm, 
shape  His  a  like  the  greater  ape, 
unfathom'd  woe  Reflex  of  a, 
mould  it  into  a  pure  as  theirs. 
Acton  (Sir  Boger)    See.  Roger  Acton 
Actor    let  the  dying  a  mouth  his  last 
Adair  (Ellen)    See  Ellen  Adair 
A-dallackt  (overdrest)    An'  hallus  a,-d  an'  dizen' 
Adam    The  gardener  .1  and  his  wife 
when  A  first  embraced  his  Eve 
The  softer  A's  of  your  Academe, 
there  be  Two  A's,  two  mankinds, 
Adam's  wine    I  a'  nowt  but  A  w : 
an'  a  beslings-puddin'  an'  A  w ; 
Add    a  A  crimson  to  the  quaint  Macaw, 
Nor  a  and  alter,  many  times, 
a  my  diamonds  to  her  pearls  ; 
months  will  a  themselves  and  make 
Added    set  the  words,  and  a  names  I  knew. 
'  Swear '  a  Enoch  sternly  '  on  the  book.' 


Spinster's  Ss.  49 

Demeter  and  P.  105 

Talking  Oak  228 

260 

287 

Last  Tournament  23 

Oicd  Roa  106 

Maud  I XX  32 

Aylmer's  Field  651 

Sjnnster's  Ss.  26 

Aylmer's  Field  563 

Oitd  Roa  80 

Love  thou  thy  land  49 

M,  d' Arthur  61 

„        96 

Gardener's  D.  162 

Princess  i  195 

,,      M  451 

, ,    Hi  284 

325 

329 

,,     iv  452 

„        vIO 

,,      vii  27 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  38 

Co7n.  of  Arthur  17Q 

Gareth  and  L.  490 

Mar?:  of  Geraint  120 

„  438 

,,  620 

Balin  and  Balan  368 

Hdy  Grail  1 

Pass,  of  Arthur  163 

229 

„  264 

Lover's  Tale  i  135 

216 

De  Prof.  Two  G.  56 

Tlie  Play  1 

"         ! 
Princess  Hi  265 

In  Mem,,   cxi  9 

„    Con.,  127 

Tlie  Flight  73 

Will  12 

Princess  ii  229 

Geraint  and  E.  813 

Pelleas  and  E.  203 

(EvMie  148 

„      122 

„      165 

Lotos-Eaters,  G.  S.,  105 

Locksley  Hall  98 

In  Mem.  cxiii  9 

,,         cxx  11 

Lover's  Tale  i  747 

Tiresias  129 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  152 

d  out,     Village  Wife  37 

L.  (J.  V.  de  Vere  51 

Day -Dm.,  L' Envoi  41 

Princess  ii  197 

Columbus  54 

Nmih.  Cobbler  5 

„        112 

Daij-Thn.,  Pro.,  \i> 

Will  Water.  15 

Lancelot  and  E.  1224 

Guinevere  62.'j 

Audley  Court  61 

Enoch  Arden  842 


Added 

Added  {amlinved)    Put  on  more  calm  and  a 
suppliantly : 
Had  surely  a  praise  to  praise, 
faith,  I  fain  had  a— Knight, 
weight  is  a  only  grain  by  grain. 
Then  Balan  a  to  their  Order 
a,  of  her  wit,  A  border  fantasy 
a  plain  Sir  Torre,  '  Yea,  since  I  cannot 
'A  fair  large  diamond,  a  plain  Sir  Torre, 
a  wound  to  wound,  And  ridd'n  away 
Were  a  mouths  that  gaped, 
a  to  the  griefs  the  great  must  bear, 
each  other  They  should  have  «), 
Your  viceregal  days  Have  a  fulness 

Adder     I  thought  it  was  an  a's  fold, 
harm  an  a  thro'  the  lust  for  harm. 

Addition    Balin,  '  the  Savage  '—that  a 


Princess  vi  215 

In  Mem.  xnxci  8 

Garetiv  and  L.  1162 

Marr.  of  Geraint  526 

Balm  and  Balan  91 

Lancelot  and  E.  10 

198 

230 

567 

1249 

Guinevere  205 

Lover's  Tale  i  263 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  11 

Liymr's  Tale  i  691 

Ancient  Sage  271 

Balin  and  Balan  53 


Addle  (earn)    Mun  be  a  guvness,  lad,  or  summut, 

and  a  her  breiid  :  ^-  J'^^rmet;,  iV.  ^.,26 
Address    Began  to  a  us,  and  was  moving  on         ,    _.    .     i^rincess  ii  lo* 

AddreBsd-Addrest    faces  toward  us  and  addressed  Their  , 

motion:                                                             ,  >'    ,/^    qo 

now  (w?(^rm'*«  to  speech— Who  spoke  few  words  ,,    <^?";'^f, 

suddenly  addrest  the  hoary  Earl :  Man:  qf  Geraint  40^ 

address  d  More  to  the  inward  than  the  outward  Lwer  s  IcUei  iZ\J 

Adeline    Faintly  smiling  A,  ■      ."^^^l^^i 

Shadowy,  dreaming  A  ?  (repeat)  Adeline  10,  39 

Spiritual  A  ?  (repeat)  •>      ^'^>  Y* 

Who  talketh  with  thee,  yl  ?  -.            ^t 

Thou  faint  smiler,  A  ?  "            Ji 

Than  your  twin-sister,  J  ^^STw,  «? 

Adieu    uttered  it.  And  bade  a  for  ever  Love  and  Duty  8d 

What  more  ?  we  took  our  last  a,  Tl^  ^«/^y  85 

M,  a, '  for  evermore.  I^  ^em.  Ivii  lb 

For  tho' my  lips  may  breathe  a,  m    '^'^^':''J± 

Adit    yourself  and  yours  shall  hayo  Free  a;  ^^?"''^fJ!^  VJ9 

Adjust    a  My  vapid  vegetable  loves  Ta^Am^  Oafc  18^ 

^S^al    Chains  for  the  ^  of  the  Ocean  !  Cohmlncs  19 

Chains  !  we  are  A's  of  the  Ocean,  n         ^° 

Ocean— of  the  Indies— ^'s  we—  „;■'%■..  i«^ 

Admire    a  Joints  of  cunning  workmanship  Vision  of  bin  1»& 

not  to  desire  or  a,  if  a  man  "^"''^^^41 

Admired    which  when  now  a  By  Edith  Aylmers  field  231 

Admiring    sat  beside  the  couch,  A  him,  Mar,:  of  Geramt^ 

the  two  Were  turning  and  a  it,  ;»         ...  ^^1 

Admission    beat  a  in  a  thousand  years,  /liT^  ZiH 

Admit    Nor  other  thought  her  mind  a's  In  Mer.i.  a:rau  2 

The  time  a'«  not  flowers  or  leaves  ..      „  '^     ^r 

Ado    why  make  we  such  a?  Ma;/ Queen  Con.   bQ 

Adoration    Meet  a  to  my  household  gods,  Jt^  ila 

shaken  voice.  And  flutter'd  a,  Me>iin  ""^J^lg 

Adore    How  many  measured  words  a  meanore  'to 

To  stand  apart,  and  to  a,  xr^.,l^  1  -.,  9fi 

on  the  meadow  grass,  and  a,  Maud  I  v  2b 

Strong  in  the  power  that  all  men  a,  '^-wits 

Adored    was  a;  He,  loved  for  her  J^^'^V/   tHci 

A  her,  as  the  stateliest  and  the  best  Mar,:  of  Geraint  20 

Call'd  on  the  Power  a  by  the  Christian,  ^"f^K  ^S 

Adoring    ^  That  who  made,  and  makes,  ^^^^^'n    uZ^nl 

Kneel  a  Him  the  Timeless  .>     ^^    IT^A 

Adorn    brought  to  a  her  with,  The  jewels.  Last  ToimmmentJU 

Adom'd    her  1  loved,  a  with  fading  flowers.  Lo^_er  s  Taleui  40 

A-dressin-    an' jessmine  a-c^  it  greean,  ^i^znsier  s  .S  s.  105 

A-drooping    locks  «-rf  twined  Round  thy  neck  ^Irteimc  w 

Adulation^  golden  eloquence  And  amorous  a,  Lancelot  and  h.  650 

Adulterer    My  knighte  are  all  a's  like  his  own,  Last  Tmrn^ent  84 

'  :i ,  Go  back  to  thine  adulteress  and  die  ! '  Leath  of  (Enone  47 

Adulteress    Go  back  to  thine  a  and  die  ! '  ','   v  1 ,  Jtr 

Adultery    mother  of  the  foul  adulteries  Aylmer  s  Fiehl  376 

arfXte.s,  Wife-murders,-  ^"^l^jfi}v, 

Advance  (a)    But  these  are  the  days  of  a,  rr      ^r  ■      ro 

Advance  (verb)    '  The  years  with  change  a :  f'^'J'^'^'fc, 

How  gain  in  life,  as  life  a's  To  F.  D.  Maurue  39 

Let  all  my  genial  spirits  a  In  Mem  ,  <^on.t7 

'  A  and  take,  as  fairest  of  the  fair,  Marr.  of  Geraint  553 


Afire 

Advance  (verb)  {cmdinued)    '  A  and  take  thy  prize  ,  r.  c^o 

The  diamond ' ;  Lancelot  and  h.  oUo 

wreaths  of  all  that  would  a.  To  Victor  Hugo  5 

Advanced    Something  far  a  in  State,  Ode  on  Weil.  275 

a  The  monster,  and  then  paused,  Gareth  and  L,  l^i 

who  rt,  Each  growling  like  a  dog,  Geraint  and  A.  558 

the  King  himself  .1  to  greet  them,  "  j  „  ,  ?7q 
Advancing    up  and  down  A  nor  retreating.             bisters  (A.  anrf  /i.)  i/» 

Advantage    He  took  a  of  his  strength  to  be  .^'^'"'*^*  f  i^^ 

Forebore  his  own  a,  (repeat)  Guinevere  661,  666 

Advent    Wink  at  our  a :  help  my  prince  Princess  iii  IbO 

dividing  clove  An  a  to  the  throne  :  ,,        '^  ^* 

Expecting  still  his  a  home  ;  /«  ™.  ^-t  ^1 

Adventure    battle,  bold  a,  dungeon,  wreck,  yly/wi«-s  Y'leM  y» 

mad  for  strange  a,  dash'd  away  Bahn  and  Balan  ^8J 

then,  with  small  a  met.  Sir  Bors  ^o/y  (^jm/  660 

Bound  upon  solitary  «,  saw  PelleasandE.  lib 

Adversary    robbers  mock  at  a  barbarous  a.  BoMicea  IS 

hearing  her  tumultuous  adversaries  ,"   .,      I 

Advice    he  wouldn't  take  my  a.  ^    ^  Grandmother  4 

Adviser    Horace,  you  the  wise  A  Poets  and  their  B.  b 

A-dying    For  the  old  year  lies  a-d.  H-  of  the  U.  1  earh 

^akides    So  rang  the  clear  voice  of  ^  ;  Achilles  over  the  T.  21 

cry  of  .£  Was  heard  among  the  Trojans,  ,,               -« 

^gis     Pallas  flung  Her  fringed  «■,  rr    "  ir  •    .  a-^ 

iEoIian    ^  harp  that  wakes  No  certain  air.  Two  Voices  4db 

Scarce  living  in  the  .E  harmony,  Lover  s  Tale  i  ill 

JEon  the  great  ^  sinks  in  blood,  In  Meni.  cxzmi  16 
Whirl'd  for  a  million  a's  ,  .,  ..  .^,^  V' .^^"f*  ^^k 
Many  an  jE  moulded  earth  before  her  highest,  Locksley  H.,  bixty,  Mb 

Many  an  ^  too  may  pass  ,r  ,  •"       j,  i,r      a 

Shall  not  a  after  ce  pass  and  touch  Making  of  Man  4 

iEonian    Draw  down  yE  hills,  and  sow  In  Mem.  xxxv  11 

yE  music  measuring  out  The  steps  ,,        n'?'^'"  1i 

.E  Evolution,  swift  or  slow,  TM  Ring  44 

Aerially    And  less  a  blue,  Margaret  b\ 

a  murmur  heard  a,                         _  ^        ,^T^"^«  ^^ 

iEtna    as  ^  does  The  Giant  of  Mythology  Lover  s  Taleiv  17 

and  ^  kept  her  winter  snow  Demeter  andl.Ub 

Afear'd  (afraid)    But  Squire  wur  a  0'  'is  son,  /^"7«  ^*^/«  YX 

alius  a  of  a  man's  gittin'  ower  fond,  Spmstei-s  b  s.  ZJ 

I  wasn't  a,  or  1  thinks  leastwaays  as  I  wasn  t  a  ;  Oiod  Koa  »b 

Affair    For  1  never  whisper'd  a  private  a  i-        Jir  Wn 

kinsman  travelling  on  his  own  a  Merlin  and  V.  717 

Affect    They  do  so  that  a  abstraction  f /Jf'^f' *  J;''  '^3^. 

Affection    The  still  a  of  the  heart  .  Millers  D.  22o 

he  spoke,  Part  banter,  part  a  Princess,  Fro. ,  167 

old  and  strange  a  of  the  house.  .>                *  ^^ 

cared  not  for  the  <x  of  the  house ;  i.                 ^^ 

like  a  flash  the  weird  a  came :  »             ^■t{(! 

wing'd  a's  dipt  with  crime :  «,    "  ,        ^?k   77 

My  old  a  of  the  tomb,  (repeat)  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  75,  77 

With  what  divine  a's  bold  ,,,''    ^  ?TqT 

^,  and  the  light  of  victory,  Ga^f^  «'^5  L.  331 

a  mood  Of  over-strain'd  a,  Merlin  and  V.  522 

'  Stabb'd  through  the  heart's  a's  7  ^  "  j  r.  lor? 

with  full  a  said,  '  Lancelot,  Lancelot  and  E.  1355 

if  A  Living  slew  Love,  Lo^^. «  Taleum 

Affiance    when  I  dwelt  upon  your  old  a,  f?^T,?"U^? 

in  whom  I  have  Most  joy  and  most  a,  Lancelot  and  E.  1357 

Affianced    a  years  ago  To  the  Lady  Ida :  Princess  n'^ 

^,  Sir?  love-whispers  may  not  >>       •••  qkr 

with  Melissa  Florian,  1  With  mine  a.  „       "*  -5^0 

Affirm    ^'s  your  Psyche  thieved  her  theories,  ,>        .     »^ 

Affirm'd    she  a  not,  or  denied :  r  "     ,  -^^  01 « 

Affirming    .4  each  his  own  philosophy-  Lucretius  216 

^thtt  his  father  left  him  gold,  Marr.  of  Geraint  451 

A  that  as  long  as  either  lived,  Lover  s  Tale  iv  277 

Affluence    (See  also  Heart- Affluence)    You,  that  .  ,    ^   „•  t^-r,  o« 

wanton  in  a,  On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  28 

Affright    nothing  there  her  maiden  grace  a !  Maud  I  xvin  71 

like  a  man  in  a  mortal  a  ;  ^'n/ '^"ivTAm 

Affrighted    Round  a  Lisbon  drew  Ofe  on  Well.  103 

Affronted    A  with  his  fulsome  innocence  ?  Pelleasand  A.  ^bb 

Afire  (on  fire)    the  house  is  a,' she  said.  Oiwt /toa  oa 


Afire 

Afire  {om(inyed)    '  But  the  stairs  is  a^'  she  said ; 
A-flyin'    wool  of  a  thistle  a-/  an"  seeadin' 
Afraid    fi^ee  Afear'd,  Half-afraid. 
Afric    On  capes  of  A  as  on  cliffs  of  Kent, 
African    Indian,  Australasian,  A, 
After-a^    ITiro'  a-a's  in  the  love  of  Truth, 
After-beauty    that  a-b  makes  Such  head 
After-days     It  grows  to  guerdon  a-d : 
After  dinner    It  seems  in  a-d  talk 

Twas  but  an  a-d's  nap. 
After-folness    from  the  a-/  of  my  heart. 
After-hands    whence  a-h  May  move  the  world, 
After-heat    It  might  have  drawn  from  a-h.' 
After-life    my  dead  face  would  vex  her  a-l. 

she  will  pass  me  by  in  a-l 
After-love    A-l's  of  maids  and  men 
Aftermath    a  sweep  Of  meadow  smooth  from  a 
After-mom    Which  left  my  a-m  content. 

Tluit  man  can  have  no  a-m, 
Ailemoon    In  the  a  they  came  unto  a  land 

In  which  it  seemed  always  a. 

Bright  was  that  a.  Sunny  but  chill ; 

Half-sickening  of  his  pension'd  a, 

'  That  a  the  Princess  rode 

all  That  a  a  sound  arose 

in  the  all-golden  a  A  guest, 

But  in  the  falling  a  retum'd 

It  made  the  laughter  of  an  a 

Here  in  the  never-ended  a, 

For  brief  repast  or  a  repose 

and  yester  a  I  dream'd, — 
Aftertime    I  am  sung  or  told  In  a, 

relic  of  my  lord  Should  be  to  a, 

some  old  man  speak  in  the  a 

o,  And  that  full  voice  which  circles 

sole  men  we  shall  prize  in  the  a, 

I  am  sung  or  told  In  a, 

relic  of  my  lord  Should  be  to  a, 

some  old  man  speak  in  the  a 
After-years    a-y  Will  learn  the  secret  of  our 

Arthur's  birth.' 
Agape    A  rabbit  mouth  that  is  ever  d — 

ye  seem  a  to  roar  ! 
Agaric    learned  names  of  a,  moss  and  fern, 

as  one  That  smells  a  foiil-flesh'd  a 
Agate    Tnrkis  and  a  and  almondine 

bottom  a'8  seen  to  wave  and  float 
AgKvi    One  tall  A  above  the  lake. 
A-gawin'  (going)    I  beant  a-g  to  break  my  rule. 
A-gawinin'  (staring)    an'  foalk  stood  a-f/'  in, 
Age    ('S^^  n/^'^'  AAge,  After-age,  Mother-age) 
hath  he  lain  for  a's  and  will  lie. 

'  I  know  that  a  to  a  succeeds, 

makes  me  talk  too  much  in  a. 

And  the  great  a's  onward  roll. 

Now  the  most  blessed  memory  of  mine  a. 

thrifty  too  beyond  her  a. 

until  be  nows  Of  a  to  help  us.' 

old  aore  breaks  out  from  a  to  a 

Of  different  a't,  like  twin-sisters 

aalTer'd  long  For  a's  and  for  a's ! ' 

float  about  the  threshold  of  an  a, 

an  a,  when  every  hour  Must  sweat 

Old  a  hath  yet  hia  honour 

Immortal  a  beside  immortal  youth, 

thro'  the  a's  one  increasing  purpose 
I  the  heir  of  all  the  a's, 

As  all  were  order'd,  a's  since. 

Tis  rain  !  in  such  a  bramy  a 

fooad  Mr  spiritM  in  the  golden  a. 

tonsured  h«ad  in  middle  «  forlorn, 
when  this  Aylmcr  cumo  of  a— 
buffe  oathedral  fronts  of  every  a, 
paby,  death'in-lifo.  And  wretched  a — 
•very  dime  and  a  Jumbled  together ; 


Oicd  Rod  80 
Spinster's  S's.  79 

W,  to  Marie  Alex.  17 

On  Juh.  Q.  Victwia  61 

Akhar's  Dream  101 

Princess  iv  451 

Love-  thou  thy  land  27 

MiUer's  D.  31 

Day-Ihn.,  Revival  24 

Lover's  Tale  i  146 

Princess  Hi  263 

In  Mem.  Ixxxi  12 

Hiwch  Arden  891 

Princess  v  91 

Window,  No  Answer  25 

Audley  Court  14 

In  Mem.  ciii  4 

EpUogiie  73 

Lotos-Eaters  3 

4 

Enoch  Arden  669 

Aylmer's  Field  461 

Princess  Hi  169 

,,       vi  379 

Jn  Mem.  Ixxxix  25 

Geraint  and  E.  591 

Merlin  and  V.  163 

Last  Toum&Tiient  584 

Guinevere  395 

Akbar's  Dream  169 

M.  d' Arthur  35 

99 

107 

Princess  H  44 

„      ^412 

Pass,  of  Arthur  203 

267 

275 

Com.  of  Arthur  158 

Maud  I  xZ\ 

Gareth  and  L.  1306 

Edwin  Morris  17 

Gareth  and  L.  747 

The  Merman  32 

Princess  ii  327 

The  Daisy  84 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.,  4 

North.  Cobbler  81 


There 

27i€  Kraken  11 

Two  Voices  205 

Miller's  D.  194 

To  J.  S.  72 

Gardener's  D.  279 

DoralQ 

,,127 

Walk,  to  tli£  Mail  79 

Edwin  Morris  32 

St.  S.  Stylites  100 

Golden  Year  16 

„  68 

Vlysses  50 

TiUumvs  22 

Locksley  Hall  137 

178 

Day- Dm.,  Sleep.  P.,  54 

Amphion  65 

To  E.  L.  12 

The  Brook  200 

Aylmer's  Field  407 

Sea  Dreams  218 

Lucretius  155 

Princess,  Pro,,  16 


A-glare 

Princess,  Pro.,  ii  50 

Princess  ii  127 

„        153 

448 

„    1^-251 

Ode  on  Wdl.  76 

„        226 

259 

Grandmother  20,  100 

97 

Spiteful  Letter  8 

Milton  4 

Wind(yw,  When  14 

In  Mem.  Ixxiii  12 

Mmid  I  i  30 

„        iv  35 

„     Ilv2\ 

Gareth  and  L.  79 

"       .1^29 

Geraint  and  E.  115 

Merlin  and  V.  185 

553 

Lancelot  and  E.  953 

Holy  Grail  340 

431 

Pass,  of  Arthur  4 

Lover's  Tale  i  125 

196 

357 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  141 

Columbus  202 

Tiresias  19 

„     104 

Despair  40 

„       88 

Ancient  Sage  98 

„        146 

Locksley  II. ,  Sixty,  10 

46 

81 

83 

„  108 

137 

151 

„  281 

Epilogue  71 

To  Virgil  25 

May  we  find,  as  a's  run,  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  11 

darkness  Dawns  into  the  Jubilee  of  the  A's.       On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  71 

Tlie  Ring  77 

„       160 

„       289 

Happy  46 

Romney's  R.  64 

Parnassus  3 

By  an  Evulutimi.  9 

17 

St.  Telemo/chus  41 

Making  of  Man  3 

Tlie  Dreamer  7 

Poets  and  Critics  2 


Age  (continued)     '  The  climax  of  his  a  f 
Amazon  As  emblematic  of  a  nobler  a  ; 
some  a's  had  been  lost ; 
second-sight  of  some  Astrsean  a, 
reasons  drawn  from  a  and  state, 
you  got  a  friend  of  your  own  a. 
To  such  a  name  for  a's  long, 
For  many  and  many  an  a  proclaim 
tho'  the  Giant  A's  heave  the  hill 
at  your  a,  Annie,  I  could  have  wept  (repeat) 
And  a  is  a  time  of  peace, 
I  hear  the  roll  of  the  a's. 
Milton,  a  name  to  resound  for  a's  ; 
to-morrow,  And  that's  an  a  away.' 
left  for  human  deeds  In  endless  A  ? 
take  the  print  Of  the  golden  a — 
many  a  million  of  a's  have  gone 
Wretchedest  a,  since  Time  began. 
His  a  hath  slowly  droopt, 
sadder  a  begins  To  war  against  ill  uses 
suffering  thus  he  made  Minutes  an  a : 
flatter  his  own  wish  in  a  for  love. 
Who  paced  it,  a's  back  : 
more  fitly  yours,  not  thrice  your  a : 
Built  by  old  kings,  a  after  a, 
I  found  Only  one  man  of  an  exceeding  a. 
In  the  white  winter  of  his  a, 
weight  as  if  of  a  upon  my  limbs, 
she,  my  love,  is  of  an  a  with  me 
poisons  of  his  heart  In  his  old  a.' 
the  fool  this  A  that  doubts  of  all — 
in  that  flight  of  a's  which  are  God's 
but  thine  a,  by  a  as  winter-white 
And  oldest  a  in  shadow  from  the  night, 
and  the  human  heart,  and  the  A. 
For  these  are  the  new  dark  a's. 
And  cap  our  a  with  snow  ? ' 
The  poet  whom  his  A  would  quote 
well  might  fool  a  dotard's  a. 
Some  thro'  a  and  slow  diseases, 
A 's  after,  while  in  Asia, 
an  a  of  noblest  English  names. 
When  was  a  so  cramm'd  with  menace  ? 
Bring  the  old  dark  a's  back  without  the  faith, 
well,  it  scarce  becomes  mine  a — 
Gone  at  eighty,  mine  own  a, 
tho',  in  this  lean  a  forlorn. 
Light  among  the  vanish'd  a's  ; 


the  morning  when  you  came  of  a 

girls  of  equal  a,  but  one  was  fair. 

My  ring  too  when  she  comes  of  a. 

For  A  will  chink  the  face, 

gloom  of  A  And  suffering  cloud 

And  over  the  flight  of  the  A 's  ! 

What  hast  thou  done  for  me,  grim  Old  A 

I  have  climb'd  to  the  snows  of  A , 

all  but  deaf  thro'  a  and  weariness, 

and  ere  the  crowning  A  of  a's, 

When  I  make  for  an  A  of  gold, 

Helter-skelter  runs  the  a  ; 
Agent  (SeecdsoA^pnt)  Thro"  many  «',s  making  strong.  Love  thou  thy  land  39 
Aghast    {See  also  Half-Aghast)    all  that  mark'd  him 

were  a.  Gareth  and  L.  1399 

not  a  word  ! '  and  Enid  was  a  ;  Geraint  and  E.  18 

men  and  women  staring  and  a,  ,,  804 

a  the  maiden  rose.  White  as  her  veil,  Guinevere  362 

Agincourt     '  this,'  he  said,  '  was  Hugh's  at  A  ;  Princess,  Pro.,  25 

Agint  (Agent)     Yer  Honour's  own  a,  he  says  to  me  Tomorrow  63 

Agitated    j^ople  around  the  royal  chariot  a,  BoOdicea  73 

Aglala    a  double  April  old,  A  slept.  Princess  ii  111 

my  sweet  yl,  my  one  child  :  „        i;  101 

Came  i'sycho,  sorrowing  for  A,  ,,         •yi  29 

A-glare    all  tho  Hells  a-g  in  either  eye,  Akbar's  Dream  115 


Aglow 

Aglow    '  yiy  Rose '  set  all  your  face  re, 
Agned-Cathregonion    And  up  in  A  -O  too, 
Ago3,n  (gone)    whoy,  Doctor's  abeiin  an'  a : 
Agony    ancient  melody  Of  an  inward  a, 

one  voice  an  a  Of  lamentation, 

kill'd  with  some  luxurious  a, 

modest  bosom  prest  In  a, 

as  cried  Christ  ere  His  a 


wail  of  women  and  children,  multitudmoua  agomes, 
Roman  slaughter,  multitudinous  agonies. 
With  agonies,  with  energies, 
Travail,  and  throes  and  agonies  of  the  life, 
into  wastes  and  solitudes  For  a, 
up  the  side,  sweating  with  a. 
Brain-feverous  in  his  heat  and  a, 
one  voice,  an  a  Of  lamentation, 
All  joy,  to  whom  my  a  was  a  joy. 
and  in  his  a  conceives  A  shameful  sense 
these  in  my  a  Did  I  make  bare 
my  dull  a,  Ideally  to  her  transferr'd, 
Dead  of  some  inward  a— is  it  so  ? 
Twisted  hard  in  mortal  a 
A-grawin'  (growing)    hes  now  be  a-g  sa  howd, 
Agreed    a  That  much  allowance  must  be  made 
80  it  was  a  when  first  they  came  ; 
A  to,  this,  the  day  fled  on 
his  wish,  whereto  the  Queen  a 
then  they  were  a  upon  a  night 
he  sent,  an'  the  father  a ; 
An'  Molly  an'  me  was  o, 
Agrin    His  visage  all  a  as  at  a  wake, 
Agi'ippuia    and  the  Roman  brows  Of  A 
Agypt  (Egypt)    Thim  ould  blind  nagers  in  A, 
A-hawking    We  ride  a-h  with  Sir  Lancelot 
Ahead    ho  rode  on  a,  as  he  waved  his  blade 
Aid  (a)    knew  not  whither  he  should  turn  for  a. 
for  lack  of  gentle  maiden's  a. 
He  needs  no  a  who  doth  his  ladv's  will.' 
following  thy  true  counsel,  by  thine  a, 
Aid  (verb)    Us,  who  stand  now,  when  we  should  a 
the  right— 
0  Lord,  A  all  this  foolish  people  ; 
«  me,  give  me  strength  Not  to  tell  her, 
a  me  Heaven  when  at  mine  uttermost, 
Aiding    serve  them  both  in  a  her — 
Aidless    to  leave  thee  thus.  A,  alone, 

to  leave  thee  thus,  A ,  alone, 
Aldoneus    car  Of  dark  A  rising  rapt  thee 
Ail    mother  thought,  What  a's  the  boy  ? 

What  a's  us,  who  are  sound, 
Ail'd    What  a  her  then,  that  ere  she  enter'd, 

told  his  gentle  wife  What  a  him, 
Aileth    Whata  thee?  whom  waitest  thou 
Ailing     '  Anything  a,'  I  ask'd  her,  '  with  baby  ? 

only — you  Were  always  a. 
Ailment    Yours  has  been  a  slighter  a, 
Aim(s)    Embrace  our  re's :  work  out  your  freedom. 
For  fear  our  solid  re  be  dissipated 
works  Without  a  conscience  or  an  a. 
so  I  wake  to  the  higher  a's 
he  kept  his  mind  on  one  sole  a, 
a's  Were  sharpen'd  by  strong  hate 
Because  all  other  Hope  had  lower  a  ; 
Ready  !  take  a  at  their  leaders- 
Look  to  your  butts,  and  take  good  a's ! 
Aim  (verb)    one  would  a  an  arrow  fair, 
Aim'd    fairy  arrows  a  All  at  one  mark, 
Nay,  but  she  re  not  at  glory ,^ 
A  at  the  helm,  his  lance  err'd  ; 
better  a  are  your  flank  fusillades — 
Aiming    near  storm,  and  a  at  his  head, 

In  a  at  an  all  but  hopeless  mark 
Aimless    three  days,  a  about  the  land. 
Air  (atmosphere)    Till  the  &  And  the  ground 
Or  breathe  into  the  hollow  a, 


Roses  on  the  T.  3 

Lancelot  and  E.  300 

N.  Fdmier,  O.  S.,  2 

Claribel  7 

M.  d'Arthiir  200 

Vision  of  Sin  43 

Aylmer's  Field  417 

793 


Boadicea  26 

»   ..?! 

In  Mem.  conn  18 

Corn,  of  Arthur  76 

Lancelot  and  E.  253 

494 

854 

Pass,  of  Arthur  368 

Lover's  Tale  i  656 

793 

,,       a  47 

136 

To  W.  n.  Brookfield  10 

Locksley  //.,  Sixty,  98 

Village  Wife  107 

Aylmer's  Field  409 

Princess  Hi  36 

176 

Lancelot  and  E.  1169 

Ouinevere  96 

First  Quarrel  18 

Spinster's  S's.  49 

Princess  v  521 

,,        a  85 

Tonwrroto  69 

Merlin  and  V.  95 

Heavy  Brigade  9 

Com.  of  Arthur  40 

Lancelot  and  E.  765 

Pelleas  and  E.  281 

Akhar's  Dream  154 


Poland  13 
St.  S.  Stylites  223 
Enoch  Arden  785 
Man:  of  Geraint  502 
Princess  vvi  268 
M.  d' Arthur  41 
Pass,  of  Arthur  209 
JJemeter  and  P.  39 
Miller's  J).  93 
Walk,  to  tlie  Mail  105 
Enoch  Arden  518 
Geraint  and  E.  504 
Adeline  45 
The  Wreck  61 
Tlie  Ring  311 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  17 
Princess  ii  89 
,,    Hi  266 
In  Mem.  xxxiv  8 
Maud  III  TO  38 
Merlin  aiid  V.  626 
Guinevere  19 
Lover's  Tale  i  455 
Def.  of  Lucknoiv  42 
Riflemen  form  / 16 
In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  25 
Aylmer's  Field  94 
Wages  4 
Geraint  and  E.  157 
Def.  of  Lucknmv  57 
Aylmer's  Field  727 
The  Ring  346 
Pelleas  and  E.  391 
Nothing  will  Die  27 
Snpp.  Confessions  58 


Air  (atmosphere)  {enntimi.ed)    fires  and  fluid 
range  Of  lawless  a's, 
The  living  a's  of  middle  night 
a  is  damp,  and  hush'd,  and  close. 
Life  in  dead  stones,  or  spirit  in  a ; 
Wide,  wild,  and  open  to  the  a. 
Or  when  little  a's  arise, 
With  melodious  a's  lovelorn, 
reveal'd  themselves  to  English  a, 
a  Sleepeth  over  all  the  heaven, 
Like  softened  a's  that  blowing  steal. 
The  very  a  about  the  door 
earth  and  a  seem  only  burning  fire.' 
the  summer  a's  blow  cool 
the  languid  a  did  swoon. 
Falls,  and  floats  adown  the  a. 
warm  a's  lull  us,  blowing  lowly) 
was  no  motion  in  the  dumb  dead  re, 
round  them  sea  and  a  are  dark 
made  the  a  Of  Life  delicious, 
murmur  broke  the  stillness  of  that  a 
Felt  earth  as  re  beneath  me, 
A  soft  re  fans  the  cloud  apart ; 
deep  re  listen'd  round  her  as  she  rode, 
I  yearn  to  breathe  the  a's  of  heaven 
Are  touch'd,  are  turn'd  to  finest  a. 
And  clouds  are  highest  up  in  o, 
All  the  re  was  torn  in  sunder. 
Like  Fancy  made  of  golden  re, 
green  From  draughts  of  balmy  re. 
black  yew  gloom'd  the  stagnant  re, 
sweet  half-English  Neilgherry  re 
breath  Of  tender  a  made  tremble 
at  a  touch  of  light,  an  a  of  heaven, 
rush  of  the  re  in  the  prone  swing, 
to  flush  his  blood  with  re. 
Drank  the  large  re,  and  saw, 
towering  o'er  him  in  serenest  re, 
flushing  the  guiltless  re.  Spout 
soul  flies  out  and  dies  in  the  re.' 
sweet  as  English  re  could  make  her, 
each  light  re  On  our  mail'd  heads : 
'  for  this  wild  wreath  of  re, 
went  The  enamour'd  re  sighing 
with  a  tender  foot,  light  as  on  re, 
shake  To  the  same  sweet  re. 
Naked,  a  double  light  in  re  and  wave, 
like  a  broken  purpose  waste  in  re : 
In  that  fine  re  I  tremble. 
Thro'  the  long-tormented  a  Heaven 
Flash'd  as  they  turn'd  in  re 
€lash,  ye  bells,  in  the  merry  March  re ! 
diviner  re  Breathe  thro'  the  world 
And  snowy  dells  in  a  golden  re. 
.bird  in  re,  and  fishes  turn'd 
cloud  in  my  heart,  and  a  storm  in  the  re  ! 
no  ruder  re  perplex  Thy  sliding  keel, 
Calm  and  deep  peace  in  this  wide  a, 
And  circle  moaning  in  the  a : 
Was  as  the  whisper  of  an  a 
As  light  as  carrier-birds  in  re ; 
seem  to  have  reach'd  a  purer  a. 
Sweet  after  showers,  ambrosial  re. 
And  shook  to  all  the  liberal  re 
drink  the  cooler  re,  and  mark 
The  memory  like  a  cloudless  a. 
With  summer  spice  the  humming  re ; 
the  stirring  re  The  life  re-orient 
Thy  voice  is  on  the  rolling  re  ; 
ruin'd  woodlands  drove  thro'  the  re. 
essences  turn'd  the  live  re  sick 
fed  With  honey'd  rain  and  delicate  re, 
Melody  on  branch,  and  melody  in  mid  re. 
solid  turrets  topsy-turvy  in  re : 
under  one  long  lane  of  cloudless  a 


Ms 


Siipp.  Confessions  148 

Arabian  Nights  69 

A  spirit  liaunts  13 

A  Character  9 

Dying  Sivan  2 

Adeline  33 

„      55 

Elednore  2 

„     38 

Two  Voices  406 

Miller's  D.  103 

(Enone 268 

May  Quem,  N.  Ts.  E.  27 

Lotos-Eaters  5 

„    C.^.,31 

89 

D.  of  F.  Women  65 

Love  thmi  thy  land  63 

Gardener's  D.  69 

147 

,,         212 

Ttthonus  32 

Godiva  54 

Sir  Galahad  63 

72 

Lady  Clare  2 

TJie  Captain  43 

Tlie  Voyage  66 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  9 

Tlie  Letters  2 

The  Brook  17 

„      202 

Avhner's  Field  5 

86 

Sea  Dreams  34 
Lucretius  178 

274 

Princess,  Pro.,  155 

V  244 

318 

'^'  lo 
88 

,,  vii  69 

167 

214 

3.54 

Ode  on  Well.  128 

Light  Brigade  28 

W.  to  Alacandra  18 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  43 

Tlie  Daisy  68 

The  Victim  19 

Wiiidmo,  Gone  6 

In  Mem.  ix  9 

,,        a»  13 

,,       xii  15 

,,       xvii  3 

,,       XXV  6 

,,  xxxiii2 

,,  Ixxxvi  1 

,,  Uexxix  7 

"     •  V? 

,,       XCIV  11 

„  ci% 

,,       cxvi  5 

Maud  I  i  12 

,,    odii  11 

,,  xviii  21 

Gareth  and  L.  183 

255 

Balin  and  Balan  461 


Air 


6 


Alia 


Air  (atmosphere)  {contin  ved)    their  foreheads  felt 

the  cooling  a,  Balin  and  Balan  589 

for  God's  love,  a  little  a  !  Lancelot  and  E.  505 

a  that  smites  his  forehead  is  not  a  Holy  Grail  914 

choice  from  a,  land,  stream,  and  sea,  Pdleas  and  E.  149 

my  rase,  that  sweeten'd  all  mine  a —  ,,              403 

started  thro'  mid  a  Bearing  an  eagle's  nest :  Last  Tournament  14 

stump  Pitch-blacken'd  sawing  the  a,  ,,67 

heather-scented  a,  Pulsing  full  man ;  „            691 

spouting  from  a  cliflf  Fails  in  mid  a,  Guinevere  609 

could  not  breathe  in  that  fine  a  ,,        645 

outward  circling  a  wherewith  I  breathe,  Lover's  Tale  i  167 

seem'd  a  gossamer  filament  up  in  a,  ,,             413 

moon.  Half -melted  into  thin  blue  a,  „             421 

flowing  odour  of  the  spacious  a,  ,,             478 

to  all  that  draw  the  wholesome  o,  „             500 

the  gentlest  a's  of  Heaven  Should  kiss  „              738 

A  morning  a,  sweet  after  rain,  ,,            Hi  3 

Bore  her  free-faced  to  the  free  a's  ,,           iw  38 

veil,  that  seemed  no  more  than  gilded  a,  ,,             290 

and  horrible  fowls  of  the  a,  Jtizpah  39 

♦0  diviner  ^.' (repeat)  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  4 

Breathe,  diviner  A\  , ,               13 

but  as  welcome  as  free  a's  of  heaven  ,,             197 

Ctod's  free  a,  and  hope  of  better  things.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  10 

jewell'd  throne  thro'  the  fragrant  a,  V.  of  Maeldune  59 

where  the  water  is  clearer  than  a:  „             77 

all  that  suffers  on  land  or  in  a  or  the  deep.  Despair  45 

Yon  summit  half-a-league  in  a —  Ancient  Sage  11 

And  now  one  breath  of  cooler  a  ,,         117 

side  by  side  in  God's  free  light  and  a,  The  Flight  81 

The  woods  with  living  a's  Early  Spring  19 

light  a's  from  where  the  deep,  ,,           21 
there  In  haunts  of  junglc-poison'd  a                 To  Marq.  of  Ihtfferin  31 

pierce  the  glad  and  songful  a,  Devieier  and  P.  45 

we  will  feed  her  with  our  mountain  a,  The  Ring  319 

np  the  tower — an  icy  a  Fled  by  me. —  ,,        445 

marvel  how  in  English  a  My  yucca,  To  Ulysses  20 

her  bare  To  breaths  of  balmier  a  ;  Prog,  of  Spring  13 
Air  (strain  of  music)    .^Eolian  harp  that  wakes  No 

certain  a,  Two  Voices  437 

With  the  a  of  the  trumpet  round  him,  Princess  v  162 

slightest  a  of  song  shall  breathe  In  Mem.,  xlix  7 

She  is  singing  an  a  that  is  known  to  me,  Maud  /  v  3 

while  I  past  he  was  bumming  an  a,  ,,  xiii  17 

playest  that  a  with  Queen  Isolt,  Last  Tournament  263 

num  An  a  the  nuns  had  taught  her ;  Guinevere  163 

plajr  That  a  which  pleased  her  first.  Lover's  Tale  i  21 

amid  eddies  of  melodious  a's,  „          450 

'  A  and  Words,'  Said  Hubert,  The  Ring  24 

Air  (manner)    1  know  her  by  her  angry  a,  Kate  1 

A  cold  a  pass'd  between  us,  The  Ring  380 

'Air  (hair)    was  stroakin  ma  down  wi'  the  'a,  Spinster's  Ss.  19 

An'  'is  'a  coom'd  off  i'  my  'ands  (hod  Raii  100 

Air'd    into  the  world,  And  a  him  there :  Aylmer's  Field  468 

Atrtng    A  a  snowy  hand  and  signet  gem,  Princess  i  121 

Airm  (arm)    blacksmith  'e  strips  me  the  thick  ov  'is  a,   North.  Cobbler  85 

Airth    But  a  was  at  pace  nixt  mornin',  Tomorrow  25 

Aisle     '  Dark  porch,'  I  said,  'and  silent  a,  The  Letters  47 

but  in  the  middle  a  Reel'd,  Aylmer's  Field  818 

ambrosial  a's  of  lofty  lime  Princess,  Pro.,  87 

giant  a'l,  Rich  in  model  and  design  ;  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  12 

■ombre,  old,  colonnaded  a't.  The  Daisy  56 

often  I  and  Amy  in  the  mouldering  a  have  stood,  Locksley  //.,  Sixty,  31 

AJalon    like  Joshua's  miwn  in  A  !  Locksley  Hall  180 

Ajar    Thky  have  left  the  doors  o ;  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  \ 

A-Joompin'  (jumping)    An'  hallus  a-j'  about  ma  Spinster's  Ss.  89 

Akbar  (^Hogul  Emperor)    a-fk'd  his  Chronicler  Of  A        Akhar't  Dream  2 

turning  hIowIv  toward  him,  A  said  ,,            4 

Akin    (Stf  tdsu  Half-akin)     Maud  to  him  is  nothing  a :      Maud  I  xiii  38 

lawful  and  la wlcHH  war  Are  scarcely  even  a.  ,,       II  v  9!) 

■wallow  nnd  the  «wift  are  near  a,  Vam.  of  Arthur  313 

Akrokeraunian    'I'he  vast  A  walls.  To  E.  L.  4 

A-la&id  (l3ring)    fun  'urn  theer  a-l  on  'is  faitce  N.  Fann/r,  0.  S.,  33 

Alarm    when  fresh  from  war's  a't,  I),  of  F.  ^^'<mlen  149 


Alarm  [continued)  I  shook  her  breast  with  vague  a's —  The  Letters  38 

our  sallies,  their  lying  a's,  Def.  of  Lucknmo  75 

a's  Sounding  'To  arms  !  to  arms  ! '  Prog,  of  Spring  103 

Alas    with  many  a  vain  '  A  \'  Doubt  and  Prayer  2 

Albert     '  And  with  him  A  came  on  his.  Talking  Oak  105 
Albert  (Prince  Consort)    Hereafter,  thro'  all 

times,  A  the  Good.  Ded,.  of  Idylls  43 

Albion    laborious,  Patient  children  of  A  O'li  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  59 

Alcestis    The  true  A  of  the  time.  Romney's  R.  91 

Alchemise    a  old  hates  into  the  gold  Of  Love,  Akbar' s  Dream  163 

Alcor    Red-pulsing  up  thro'  Alioth  and  A,  Last  Tournament  480 

Alder    blowing  over  meadowy  holms  And  a's,  Edicin  Morris  96 

Came  wet-shod  a  from  the  wave,  Amphion  41 

But  here  will  sigh  thine  a  tree,  A  Fareivell  9 

Balin's  horse  Was  fast  beside  an  a,  Balin  and  Balan  29 

Ale    [See  also  A5,le)    mellow'd  all  his  heart  with  a,  The  Brook  155 

A  mockery  to  the  yeomen  over  a,  Aylmer's  Field  497 

A-leaning    Weak  Truth  a-l  on  her  crutch,  Clear-lieaded  friend  18 

Ale-house    Jack  on  his  a-h  bench  Maud  I  iv  9 

Alexandra    Sea-king's  daughter  from  over 

the  sea,  A  !  W.  to  Alexandra  2 

Danes  in  our  welcome  of  thee,  A\  ,,5 

all  Dane  in  our  welcome  of  thee,  A\  ,,34 
AlexandroTna    (See  also  Marie,  Marie  Alexandrovna) 

Prince  his  own  imperial  Flower,  A.  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  5 

sultry  palms  of  India  known,  A.  ,,15 

gives  its  throne  a  wife,  A\  , ,               25 

thy  j'oung  lover  hand  in  hand  A  \  ,,              35 

and  change  the  hearts  of  men,  Al  ,,45 

Alfred— yl  !  „               50 
Alfred  (King  of  England)    Truth-teller  was  our 

England's  A  named  ;  Ode  on  Well.  188 
Alfred  (Duke  of  Edinburgh,  1844-1900)    A— 

Alexandrovna  !  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  50 

Alice    My  own  sweet  A,  we  must  die.  Miller's  D.  18 

Pray,  A,  pray,  my  darling  wife,  ,,           23 

But,  A ,  what  an  hour  was  that,  , ,           57 

Sweet  ^,  if  I  told  her  all  ? '  ,,         120 

Go  fetch  your  A  here,'  she  said :  ,,         143 

But,  A,  you  were  ill  at  ease  ;  ,,         146 

foolish  song  I  gave  you,  A,  on  the  day  „         162 

none  so  fair  as  little  A  May  Queen  7 

In  there  came  old  A  the  nurse,  Lady  Clare  1.3 

said  A  the  nurse,  (repeat)  Lady  Clare  17,  23,  33,  41,  45 

Alien    I  am  but  an  a  and  a  Genovese.  Columbus  243 

Alif    The  A  of  Thine  alphabet  of  Love.'  Akbar's  Jh-eam  31 

A-liggin'  (Ijring)  wheere  thou  was  a-l,  my  lad,  02vd  Roa  87 

Alighted    (See  also  Lighted)    To  Francis  just  a  from 

the  boat,  Audley  Court  7 

Alioth    Red-pulsing  up  thro'  A  and  Alcor,  Last  Tournament  480 

Alive    That  thou,  if  thou  wert  yet  a,  Supp.  Confessions  100 

Joying  to  feel  herself  a.  Palace  of  Art  178 

pass  away  before,  and  yet  a  I  am  ;  May  Queen,  Con.,  1 

palace-front  A  with  fluttering  scarfs  Princess  v  509 

not  always  certain  if  they  be  a  Grandmother  84 

there's  none  of  them  left  a ;  ,,           85 

strive  To  keep  so  sweet  a  thing  a:'  In  Mem.  xxxv  7 

Dark  bulks  that  tumble  half  a,  ,,          Ixxll 

at  fifty  Should  Nature  keep  me  a,  Maud  I  vi  32 

with  beatings  in  it,  as  if  a.  Holy  Grail  118 

marvel  among  us  that  one  should  be  left  a,  Def.  of  Luchimo  78 

And  doom'd  to  burn  a.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  183 

But  we  old  friends  are  still  a,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  42 

The  love  that  keeps  this  heart  a  The  Flight  35 

the  dead  are  not  dead  but  a.  Vastness  36 

'All  (hall)    sin  fust  a  coom'd  to  the  'A  ;  JV.  Farmer,  0.  S.,  55 

walks  down  fro'  the  'A  to  see.  North.  Cobbler  91 

Alia    both,  to  worship  A,  but  the  prayers,  Akbar's  Dream  9 

are  faint  And  pale  in  A's  eyes  ,,           n 

A  be  my  guide  !  \Q 

'  Mine  is  the  one  fruit  A  made  for  man.'  40 

pulse  of  A  beats  Thro'  all  His  world.  \\           41 

Vet '^,' says  their  sacred  book,  'is  Love,'  '            73 

Yea,  A  here  on  earth,  who  caught  ,            84 

was  not  A  call'd  In  old  Irfm  "          §6 


Alia 


Alone 


Alia  {continued)    Who  all  but  lost  himself  in  A^  Alcbar's  Ih'eam  93 

One  A  !    one  Kalifa !  ,,167 

'  All  praise  to  A  by  whatever  hands  ,,         198 

All-accomplish'd    modest,  kindly,  a-a,  wise  Bed.  of  Idi/lls  18 

All-amorouB    Brushing  his  instep,  bow'd  the  a-a  Earl    Geraint  and  E.  360 

Allan    With  Farmer  A  at  the  farm  Dwa  1 

a  day  When  A  call'd  his  son,  ,,     10 

bells  were  ringing,  A  call'd  His  niece  ,,     41 

said  A,  'did  I  not  Forbid  you,  Dora?'  ,,     91 

.4  said,  'I  see  it  is  a  trick  ,,     95 

seal,  that  hung  From  A's  watch,  ,,  136 

.1  set  him  down,  and  Mary  said  :  ,,  139 

All-arm'd    A  -a  I  ride,  whate'er  betide.  Sir  Galahad  83 

All-assuming    The  a-a  months  and  years  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  67 

All-comprehensive    express  ^  I -c  tenderness,  ,,            47 

Allegfiance    from  all  neighbour  crowns  Alliance  and  a,  (Enmie  125 

my  rose,  there  my  a  due.  Sir  J.  Oidcastle  59 

One  full  voice  of  a,  On  Jiib.  Q.  Victoria  22 

Allegory    I  send  you  here  a  sort  of  a,  To With  Pal.  of  Art  \ 

the  third  fool  of  their  a.'  Gareth  and  L.  1085 

four  fools  have  suck'd  their  a  ,,           1199 
Allen  (Francis)    .See  Francis,  Francis  Allen 

All-enduring    like  the  a-e  camel.  Lover's  Tale  i  136 

Alley     From  the  long  a's  latticed  shade  Arabian  Nights  112 

plaited  a's  of  the  trailing  rose.  Ode  to  Memory  106 

a's  falling  down  to  twilight  grots,  ,,              107 

every  hollow  cave  and  a  lone  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.,  103 

And  a's,  faded  places,  Amphion  86 

firefly-like  in  copse  And  linden  a :  Princess  i  209 

as  she  rode  The  woodland  a's,  Balin  and  Balan  439 

There  among  the  glooming  a's  Lockdey  H.,  Sixty,  219 

All-fragrant    slip  at  once  a-finUi  one.  Princess  vii  70 

All-generating    a-g  powers  and  genial  heat  Of  Nature,  Lucretivs  97 

All-golden    in  the  a-g  afternoon  A  guest.  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  25 

All-graceful    ^-ff  head,  so  richly  curl'd.  Day- Dm.,  L' Envoi  38 

All-heal    with  a  ounch  of  a-A  in  her  hand,  Vastness  12 

Alliance    from  all  neighbour  crowns  A  (Enone  125 

longs  For  this  a :  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  29 

Allied    However  she  came  to  be  so  a.  Maud  I  xiii  36 

Allies    backward  reel'd  the  Trojans  and  a  ;  Achilles  over  the  T.  31 

All-in-all    Is  like  another,  a  i  a.'  Two  Voices  36 

with  that  mood  or  this.  Is  a-i-a  to  all :  Will  Water.  108 

Philip  was  her  children's  a-i-a ;  Enoch  Arden  348 

her  good  Philip  was  her  a-i-a,  „            525 

take  them  a-i-a.  Were  we  ourselves  Princess  o  200 

'  trust  me  not  at  all  or  ai  a'  (repeat)         Me^iin  and  V.  384,  398,  449 

Love  Were  not  his  own  imperial  a-i-a.  Sisters  (E,  and  E.)  'itil 

Out  of  His  whole  World-self  and  a-i^-a —  De  Prof.  Ttoo  G.  49 

What  England  is,  and  what  her  a-i-a.  The  Fleet  2 

fleet  of  England  is  her  a-i-a  ;  ,,13 

been  till  now  each  other's  a-i-a.  The  Ring  53 

Within  us,  as  without,  that  A-i-a,  Akhar's  Dream  146 

All-kindled    A-k  by  a  still  and  sacred  fire,  Enoch  Arden  71 

Allot     The  sphere  thy  fate  a's  :  Will  Water.  218 

Allotted  (part-)    quit  the  post  A  by  the  Gods :  Lucretius  149 

show'd  an  empty  tent  a  her,  Geraint  and  E.  885 

Allow    one  of  less  desert  a's  This  laurel  To  the  Queen  6 

fly  no  more :  I  a  thee  for  an  hour.  Gareth  and  L.  892 

A  me  for  mine  hour,  and  thou  wilt  find  ,,            902 

our  true  King  Will  then  a  your  pretext,  Lancelot  and  E.  153 

answer  for  a  noble  knight  ?    A  him !  ,,             202 

Will  well  a  my  pretext,  ,,              586 

Allowance    much  a  must  be  made  for  men.  A  ylmer's  Field  410 

Made  more  and  more  a  for  his  talk ;  Sea  Dreams  75 

To  make  a  for  us  all.  In  Mem.  li  16 

Allow'd    leave  To  see  the  hunt,  a  it  easily.  Marr.  of  Geraint  155 

loyal  worship  is  a  Of  all  men :  Lancelot  and  ^.110 

Lightly,  her  suit  a,  she  slipt  away,  „             778 

Scorn  was  a  as  part  of  his  defect,  Guinevere  43 

thro'  his  cowardice  a  Her  station,  ,,        516 

Allowing    (See  also  Half-allowing)    A  it,  the  Prince 

and  Enid  rode,  Man:  of  Geraint  43 

Alloy     Bright  metal  all  without  a  Rosalind  21 

All-perfect    A-p,  finish'd  to  the  finger  nail.  Edioin  Morris  22 

All-puissant    noble  breast  and  a-p  arms,  Marr.  of  Geraint  86 


All-seeing    or  of  older  use  A-s  Hyperion— 
All-shamed    I  rode  a-s,  hating  the  life 
All-silent    Sigh  fully,  or  a-s  gaze  upon  him 
All-subtilising    A-s  intellect : 
All-too-full    a-t-f  in  bud  For  puritanic  stays 
Allure    beacon-blaze  a's  The  bird  of  passage. 
Allured    A  him,  as  the  beacon-blaze  allures 

a  The  glance  of  Gareth 

the  sweet  name  ^1  him  first. 
Allusion    phrases  of  the  hearth,  And  far  a. 
Ally  (Alfred)    Goldkn-Hair'd  .4  whose  name  is  one 
Ally  (s)    True  we  have  got — such  a  faithful  a 
Ally  (verb)    d  Your  fortunes,  justlier  balanced, 
Almesbury    sat  There  in  the  holy  house  at  A 

she  to  ^4  Fled  all  night  long 

when  she  came  to  A  she  spake 

As  even  here  they  talk  at  A 

saw  One  lying  in  the  dust  at  A, 
Almighty    (See  also  Amoighty)    0  God  A,  blessed 
Saviour,  Thou 

Sir  Aylmeb-Aylmeb,  that  a  man. 
Almond-blossom     Tlie  sunlit  a-b  shakes — 
Almondine    Turkis  and  agate  and  a : 
Alms     set  himself.  Scorning  an  a,  to  work 

free  of  a  her  hand — The  hand  that 

life  of  prayer,  Praise,  fast  and  a ; 

She  gave  herself,  to  fast  and  a. 

cripple,  one  that  held  a  hand  for  a — 

fling  free  a  into  the  beggar's  bowl, 

From  the  golden  a  of  Blessing 
Almsdeed    wear  out  in  a  and  in  prayer 
Alo&n  (alone)    an'  if  Sally  be  left  a, 

Hallus  a  wi'  'is  boooks, 

one  night  I  wur  sittin'  a, 
Aloe    Of  olive,  a,  maize  and  vine. 


Lucretius  126 

Geraint  and  E.  852 

Merlin  and  V.  182 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  48 

Talking  Oak  59 

Enoch  Arden  728 

728 

Gareth  and  L.  1315 

Last  Tournament  399 

Princess  ii  316 

To  A .  Tennyson  1 

Riflemen  form  I  24 

Princess  ii  65 

Guinevere  2 

„     127 

„     138 

„     208 

Pass,  of  Arthur  77 


Enoch  Arden  782 

Aylmer's  Field  13 

To  tlie  Queen  16 

The  Merman  32 

Enoch  Arden  812 

Aylmer's  Field  697 

Holy  Grail  5 

„        77 

Pelleas  and  E.  542 

Ancient  Sage  260 

Locksley  II.,  Sixty,  87 

Guinevere  687 

North.  Cobbler  105 

Village  Wife  27 

Owd  Rod,  29 

The  Daisy  4 


Alone    (See  also  Alo&n)    moon  cometh.  And  looketh  down  a.     Claribel  14 


While  I  do  pray  to  Thee  a, 

A  and  warming  his  five  wits,  (repeat) 

My  friend,  with  you  to  live  a. 

Death,  walking  all  a  beneath  a  yew, 

A  I  wander  to  and  fro, 

A  merman  bold.  Sitting  a.  Singing  a 

mermaid  fair.  Singing  a. 

Springing  a  With  a  shrill  inner  sound. 

For  sure  thou  art  not  all  a. 

broad  river  rushing  down  a, 

'  Ah,'  she  sang,  'to  be  all  a,  (repeat) 

'  but  I  wake  a,  I  sleep  forgotten, 

She  thought,  '  My  spirit  is  here  a, 

'  Sweet  Mother,  let  me  not  here  a 

So  be  d  for  evermore.' 

Is  this  the  end  to  be  left  a, 

'  But  thou  shalt  be  a  no  more.' 

And  day  and  night  I  am  left  a 

When  I  shall  cease  to  be  all  a, 

And  you  and  I  were  all  a. 

Came  up  from  reedy  Simois  all  a. 

from  that  time  to  this  I  am  a. 

And  I  shall  be  a  until  I  die. 

I  will  not  die  a,  (repeat) 

some  one  pacing  there  a. 

Nor  these  a,  but  every  landscape  fair, 

Nor  these  a :  but  every  legend 

prolong  Her  low  preamble  all  a. 

Flash' d  thro'  her  as  she  sat  a. 

And  all  a  in  crime  : 

But  I  shall  lie  a,  mother, 

why  should  we  toil  a, 

Let  us  a.     Time  driveth  onward 

Let  us  A.    What  is  it  that  will  last  ? 

Let  us  a.    What  pleasure  can  we  have 

'  Not  so,  nor  once  a  ; 

That  standeth  there  a. 

Falls  off,  and  love  is  left  a. 

leave  thee  thus,  Aidless,  a, 


Suj}p.  Confessions  12 

The  Old,  I.  6,  13 

Ode  to  Memm-y  119 

Love  and  Death  5 

Oriana  8 

The  Merman  3 

The  Mennaid  3 

19 

A  deline  25 

Mine  be  the  strength  2 

Mariana  in  the  S.  11,  23 

35 

47 

59 

68 

71 

76 

83 

95 

Millet^'s  D.  136 

(Enone  52 

„    193 

„     194 

(Enone  246,  257 

Palace  of  Art  ^Q 

89 

125 

174 

214 

272 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  20 
Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.,  15 
43 
45 
48 
D.  of  F.  Wmnen  203 
D.  of  the  0.  Year  50 
To  J.  S.  16 
M.  d' Arthur  41 


Alone 


Ambassador 


Alone  (c(nitinued)    For  not  a  this  pillar- 
punishment,  Not  this  a 
I  might  be  more  a  with  thee, 
In  which  we  sat  together  and  a, 
both  with  those  That  loved  me,  and  a ; 
About  the  hall,  among  his  dogs,  a, 
She  lying  on  her  couch  a, 
Ah,  let  uie  rusty  theme  a  ! 
fell  Sun-stricken,  and  that  other  lived  a 
who  speaks  with  Him,  seem  all  a, 
'A,'  I  said,  'from  earlier  than  I  know, 
When  ill  and  weary,  a  and  cold, 
^,  a,  to  where  he  sits, 
When  I  contemplate  all  a 
light  Went  out,  and  I  was  all  a, 
Which  not  a  had  guided  me, 
she  will  let  me  a. 
For  am  I  not,  am  I  not,  here  a 
I  am  here  at  the  gate  a ; 
When  will  the  dancers  leave  her  a  ? 
That  thou  art  left  for  ever  a : 
a  And  all  the  world  asleep, 
sought  The  King  a,  and  found,  and  told 
and  they  were  left  a, 
endured  Strange  chances  here  a ; ' 
I  was  all  a  upon  the  flood, 
shaped,  it  seems.  By  God  for  thee  a, 
leave  me  all  a  with  Mark  and  hell. 
leave  thee  thus.  Aidless,  a, 
didst  sit  a  in  the  inner  house. 
To  me  o,  Push'd  from  his  chair 
Our  general  mother  meant  for  me  a, 
They  tell  me  we  would  not  be  a, — 
many  weary  moons  I  lived  a — A, 
day  waned  ;  A  I  sat  with  her : 
I  will  be  idl  a  with  all  I  love. 
Found,  as  it  seem'd,  a  skeleton  a, 
dark  eyes !  and  not  her  eyes  a, 
I  am  all  a  in  the  world, 

fo,  go,  you  may  leave  me  a — 
was  there  a :  The  phantom 

I  lying  here  bedridden  and  a, 

when!  left  my  darling  a.' 

a  on  that  lonely  shore — 

I  am  left  a  on  the  land,  she  is  all  a 

Nor  canst  not  prove  that  thou  art  bod^  a, 

Nor  canst  thou  prove  that  thou  art  spirit  a, 

when  I  Sat  all  a,  revolving 

but  we  were  left  a : 

sitting  on  the  wreck  a. 

Thou  o,  my  boy,  of  Amy's  kin 

wearying  to  be  left  a, 

first  dark  hour  of  his  last  sleep  a. 

gazing  from  this  height  a, 

he  dasb'd  up  a  Thro"  the  great  gray  slope 

Or  Might  must  rule  a  ; 

And  be  sung  not  a  of  an  old  sun  set, 

To  forage  for  herself  a  ; 

I  parted  from  her,  and  I  went  a. 

would  he  live  and  die  a  'I 

bot  I  wept  a,  and  sigh'd 

Listen  !  we  three  were  a  in  the  dell 

of  that  Power  which  a  is  great, 
Along    xix  tall  men  haling  a  seventh  a, 
Alongside    if  t'one  stick  a  t'lither 
A-lorlng    When  I  was  a-l  you  all  along 
Alphabet    Tlio  Alif  of  Thine  a  of  Love.' 
Alphabet-of-heaven-in-inan    A-o-h-i-m  Made 
Alpine     In  Ra/.ing  up  an  A  height, 

an  A  harel)ell  hung  with  tears 
Alps    Hun-smitten  A  before  me  lay. 
Alraschid    Se/-  Hutmn  Alraschid 
Altar   {Sr/;  aJio  Iile-altax,  Monntain-altan) 
to  the  village  u. 

And  Mw  the  a  cold  and  bare. 


St.  S.  Stylites  60 
85 
Love  and  Duty  60 
Ulysses  9 
Oodiva  17 
Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.,  2 
WUl  Water.  177 
Enoch  Arden  570 
620 
Princess  vii  311 
The  Daisy  96 
In  Mem.  xxiii  3 
„     Ixxxiv  1 
„        axv  20 
,,        cxiii  3 
Maud  /  i  74 
„      vi  65 
„    xadi  4 
21 
,,  Jliii  4 
Com.  of  Arthur  118 
Oareth  and  L.  541 
Geraint  and  E.  244 
810 
Lancelot  and  E.  1046 
1367 
Last  Tmimament  536 
Pass,  of  Arthur  im 
Lover's  Tale  i  112 
117 
245 
252 
,,  ii  2 

140 
„  iv  47 

139 
166 
First  Quarrel  8 
RizpaJi  79 
Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  \\Z 
Columbus  164 
The  Wreck  97 
Despair  33 
„      63 
Ancient  Sage  59 
60 
„       230 
Tlie  Flight  77 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  16 

m 
hi 

238 

Pro.  to  Qen.  Hamley  9 

Heavy  Brigade  16 

Epilogue  29 

Dead  Propliel  41 

Open.  L  and  C.  Exhih.  29 

The  Ring  437 

Happy  5 

„   "69 

Bandit's  Death  19 

Ood  and  the  Univ.  5 

Gareth  and  L.  811 

Churcli-warden,  etc.,  lO 

First  Quarrel  65 

Akhar'a  Dream  31 

vocal—  „  136 

Two  Voices  362 

Princess  vii  115 

T/ie  Daisy  62 

Leads  her 

L.  of  Burleii/h  11 
Tlie  Letters  4 


The  Letters  7 

Enoch  Arden  72 

Princess  v  377 

The  Victim  7 

Boddicea  2 

Com.  of  Arthur  461 

Balin  and  Balan  410 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  210 

239 

Ancient  Sage  33 

Forlorn  34 

Pa'rnassus  17 

Sir  Galahad  33 

Gareth  And  L.  599 

Tiresias  147 

Lii  Mem.  xli  3 

Maud  I  xviii  24 

Com.  of  Arthur  455 

In  Mem.  Iv  15 

The  Victim  67 

(Enone  153 

Wai  Water.  15 

Ayhner's  Field  418 

Princess  v  262 

Miller's  D.  94 

Princess  ii  306 

Maiid  IiS9 

(Enone  97 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.,  88 

Romney's  /?.  Ill 

The  Daisy  16 

Guinevere  23 


Altar  {continued)    '  Cold  A,  Heaven  and  earth  shall  meet 
fire.  That  burn'd  as  on  an  a. 
at  the  a  the  poor  bride  Gives  her  harsh  groom 
The  Priest  in  horror  about  his  a 
Burnt  and  broke  the  grove  and  a 
sacred  a  blossom 'd  white  with  May, 
Beheld  before  a  golden  a  lie 
from  the  a  glancing  back  upon  her, 
to  pray  Before  tfiat  a — so  I  think  ; 
There,  brooding  by  the  central  a, 
Tower  and  a  trembling  .  .  . 
fire  from  off  a  pure  Pierian  a, 

Altar-cloth    Fair  gleams  the  snowy  a-c, 
as  thine  a-c  From  that  best  blood 

Altar-fasbion'd   smooth  rock  Before  it,  a-f. 

Altar -fire    As  mounts  the  heavenward  a-f, 

Altar-flame    made  my  life  a  perfumed  a-f ; 

Altar-shrine    before  The  stateliest  of  her  a-s's, 

Altar-stairs    Upon  the  great  world's  a-s 

Altar-stone    To  the  a-s  she  sprang  alone, 

Alter    Sequel  of  guerdon  could  not  a  me 
Nor  add  and  a,  many  times. 
Persuasion,  no,  nor  death  could  a  her : 
as  the  fiery  Sirius  a's  hue, 

Alter'd    For  I  was  a,  and  began 

tho'  you  have  grown  You  scarce  have  a : 

Alum    chalk  and  a  and  plaster  are  sold 

AmaracuB    Violet,  a,  and  asphodel. 

Amaranth    propt  on  beds  of  a  and  moly, 
in  heaven  With  Milton's  a. 

Amaryllis    A  milky-bell'd  a  blew. 

A-maying    Had  been,  their  wont,  a-7n 

Amaze  (See  also  Half-amaze)  In  much  a  he  stared 

On  eyes  TJie  Brook  205 

Up  went  the  hush'd  a  of  hand  and  eye.  Princess  Hi  138 

Suddenly  honest,  answer'd  in  «,  Geraint  and  E.  410 

sister's  vision,  fill'd  me  with  a  ;  Holy  Grail  140 

And  some  of  us,  all  in  a,  Heavy  Brigade  35 

a  Our  brief  humanities ;  Epilogue  56 

set  the  mother  waking  in  a  Demeter  and  P.  57 

Amazed   {See  also  Half-amazed,  Part-amazed)    A 

and  melted  all  who  listen'd  Enoch  Arden  649 

Averill  solaced  as  he  might,  a :  Ayhnm-'s  Field  343 

half  a  half  frighted  all  his  flock :  „  631 

A  he  fled  away  Thro'  the  dark  land,  Pnncess  v  48 

'  A  am  I  to  hear  Your  Highness :  ,,  t'i  324 

a  They  glared  upon  the  women,  ,,        360 

brake  on  him,  till,  «,  He  knew  not  Cmn.  of  Arthur  39 

those  who  went  with  Gareth  were  a,  Gareth  and  L.  197 

and  all  hearers  were  a.  ,,  655 

Enid  ask'd,  a,  '  If  Enid  errs,  Marr.  of  Geraint  131 

the  armourer  turning  all «  ,,  283 

plover's  human  whistle  a  Her  heart,  Geraint  and  E.  49 

when  he  found  all  empty,  was  a;  ,,  216 

A  am  I,  Beholding  how  ye  butt  ,,  676 

He  much  a  us  ;  after,  when  we  sought  Baliu  and  Balan  115 

A  were  these  ;  '  Lo  there '  she  cried —  ,,  465 

more  a  Than  if  seven  men  had  set  Lancelot  and  E.  350 

the  Queen  a,  '  Was  he  not  with  you  ?  ,,  572 

He  a,  '  Torre  and  Elaine  !  why  here  ?  ,,  795 

So  that  the  angels  were  a,  JMy  Grail  451 

ye  look  a,  Not  knowing  they  were  lost  Last  Tuuruament  41 

babble  about  his  end  ^1  me ;  ,,  671 

I  sware.  Being  rt :  but  this  went  by —  ,,  674 

dead  world's  winter  dawn  A  him,  Pass.  <f  Arthur  443 

nor  lights  nor  feast  Dazed  or  a,  Lover's  Tale  iv  311 

mask  that  I  saw  so  a  me,  The  Wreck  117 

I  stood  there,  naked,  a  Despair  77 

still  in  her  cave,  A ,  Death  of  (Enone  70 

Amazement    stood  Stock-still  for  sheer  «.  Will  Water.  136 

all  the  guests  in  mute  a  rose—  Lover's  Tale  iv  305 

which  made  tho  a  more,  334 

Amazing    See  Maftzin'  ' 

Amazon    Glanced  at  the  legendary  A  Princess  ii  126 

Ambassador    My  father  sent  a's  with  furs  {  42 


Ambassador 


Angel 


Ambassador  (continued)    Sir  Lancelot  went  a,  at  first,  Merlin  and  V,  774 

-1,  to  lead  her  to  his  lord  Guinevere  383 

Ambassadress     '  are  you  a'es  From  him  to  me  ?  Princess  Hi  203 

Amber  (adj.)    lights,  rose,  «,  emerald,  blue,  Palace  of  Art  169 

Purple  or  a,  dangled  a  hundred  fathoms  V.  of  MaMdune  56 

Like  the  tender  a  round,  Margaret  19 

and  the  a  eves  When  thou  and  I,  Camilla,  Lover's  Tale  i  52 

Ran  a  towards  the  west,  and  nigh  the  sea  „        432 

Amber  (s)    fans  Of  sandal,  a,  ancient  rosaries.  Princess,  Pro.,  19 

Ambition    No  madness  of  a,  avarice,  none:  Lucretius  212 

lawless  perch  Of  wing'd  a's,  Ded.  of  Idylls  23 

Down  with  a,  avarice,  pride,  Ma\id  I  x  47 

Ambrosia    Hebes  are  they  to  hand  a.  Princess  Hi  113 

Their  rich  a  tasted  aconite.  Dei)ieter  and  P.  105 

Ambrosial    oak-tree  sigheth,  Thick-leaved,  a,  Claribel  5 

her  deep  hair  A,  golden  (Enone  178 

Sweet  after  showers,  a  air,  In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  1 

Ambrosially    fruit  of  pure  Hesperian  gold.  That  smelt  a,  (Enmte  67 

Ambrosius    fellow-monk  among  the  rest,  .1 ,  Holy  Grail  9 

monk  A  question'd  Percivale :  „         17 

Then  s^mke  the  monk  .1,  asking  him,  ,,      203 

I  told  him  all  thyself  hast  heard,  A,  ,,      737 

Ambuscade    In  every  wavering  brake  an  a.  Geraint  and  E.  51 

Ambush    (See  also  Lilac-ambush)    Lances  in  a  set ;    D.  of  F.  Women  28 

Ambush 'd    meanings  a  under  all  they  saw,  Tiresias  5 

Ambushing    poisonous  counsels,  wayside  a's —  Gareth  and  L.  432 

Amen    yet  I  take  it  with  A .  Lancelot  and  E.  1223 

.1  !    Nay,  I  can  burn.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  172 

Amend  might  a  it  by  the  grace  of  Heaven,  Geraint  and  E.  53 

Amends    Can  thy  love.  Thy  beauty,  make  a,  Tithonus  24 

She  made  me  divine  a  Maud  /  to  13 

Well,  we  will  make  a.'  Gareth  and  L.  300 

A  hereafter  by  some  gaudy-day,  Marr.  of  Geraint  818 

Courteous — a  for  gauntne.ss —  Merlin  and  V.  104 

our  a  for  all  we  might  have  done —  Columbus  34 

Amethyst    chrysoprase,  Jacynth,  and  a —  ,,        86 

Amid    gap  they  had  made — Four  a  thoasands  !  Heavy  Brigade  24 

Golden  branch  a  the  shadows.  To  Virgil  27 

Why  not  bask  a  the  senses  By  an  Evolution.  6 

bracken  a  the  gloom  of  the  heather.  June  Bracken,  etc.,  9 

Amiss    There's  somewhat  in  this  world  «  Miller's  D.  19 

Kind  to  Maud  ?  that  were  not  a.  Maud  I  xix  82 

pray  you  check  me  if  I  ask  a —  Guiiievere  324 

Amity    idioted  By  the  rough  a  of  the  other,  Aylmefs  Field  591 

Ammon    my  race  Hew'd  A ,  hip  and  thigh,  7>.  if  F.  Wmnen  238 

Ammonian    A  Oasis  in  the  waste.  A  Uaxiiuler  8 

Ammonite    Huge  A's,  and  the  first  bones  of  Time  ;       Princess,  Pro.,  15 

Amo     '  lo  t'a ' — and  these  diamonds —  The  Ring  70 

This  very  ring  To  t'a  ?  „    1-34 

This  ring  '  lo  t'a '  to  his  best  beloved,  ,,     210 

cried  '  I  see  him.  To  t'«,  lo  t'a.'  ,,     223 

call  thro'  this  '  lo  t'a '  to  the  heart  Of  Miriam  ;  ,,     234 

'  lo  t'rt,  all  is  well  then.'    Muriel  fled.  ,,    271 

You  love  me  still  '  lo  t'a.'—  „     291 

'  lo  t'a,  lo  t'a' ! '  flung  herself  ,,     397 

even  that  '  lo  t'a,'  those  three  sweet  Italian  words,  ,,     406 

Amoighty    (Almighty)     '  The  a's  a  taakin  o' 

you  to  'iss^n,  (repeat)  N.  Fanner,  0.  S.,  10,  26 

Amorous    (See  cdso  All-amorou^  Human-amorous) 

with  argent-lidded  eyes  A,  Arabian  Nights  136 

Of  temper  a,  as  the  first  of  May,  Princess  i  2 

High  nature  a  of  the  good,  In  Mem.  cix  9 

Amorously    kiss  Thy  taper  fingers  a,  Madeline  44 

shall  we  dandle  it  a  ?  Boddicea  33 

A-mountin'    we  'card  'im  a-m  oop  'igher  an'  'igher.  North.  Cobbler  47 

Amourist    your  modem  a  is  of  easier,  earthlior 

make.  Locksley  IT.,  Sixty,  18 

Amphion    In  days  of  old  yl,  AmphionW 

Amuck    Ran  a  Malayan  a  against  the  times,  Aylmer's  Field  463 

Amulet    What « drew  her  down  ,,            507 

kept  it  as  a  sacred  a  About  mo, —  The  Ring  442 

Amurath  (Turkish  Emperor)    Or  A  of  the  East  ?  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  97 

Amy    I  said,  '  My  cousin  A,  speak,  Locksley  Hall  23 

0  my  A,  mine  no  more !  „            39 

A's  arms  about  my  neck —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  13 


Amy  (cmitinued)    A  loyed  me,  A  fail'd  me,  A  was 

a  timid  child  ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  19 

often  I  and  A  in  the  mouldering  aisle  have  .stood,  ,,                31 

Lies  my  A  dead  in  child-birth,  ,,                36 

Hero  to-day  was  A  with  me,  ,,               53 

of  .fl 's  kin  and  mine  art  left  to  me.  ,,               56 

our  latest  meeting — A — sixty  years  ago —  ,,              177 

Amygdaloid    trap  and  tuflf,  .1  and  trachyte.  Princess  Hi  363 

Ana    Ere  days,  that  deal  in  a.  Will  Water.  199 

Anadem    Lit  light  in  wreaths  and  a's,  Palace  of  Art  186 

A-naggin '     Moother  'ed  beiin  a-n  about  the  gell  Chvd  Rod  69 

Anakim    I  felt  the  thews  of  ..4,  InMem.ciii^l 

Analyse    and  a  Onr  double  nature,  Supp.  Confessions  174 

Anarch    wearied  of  Autocrats,  A 's,  and  Slaves,  Tlie  hreamer  10 

Anathema    Thunder  '■A,'  friend,  at  you  ;  To  F.  D.  Maurice  8 

Anatolian  Ghost    Crag -cloister ;  A  G  ;  To  Ulysses  43 

Anatomic    not  found  among  them  all  One  a.'  Princess  Hi  307 

Ancestor    those  fixt  ayes  of  painted  a's  Aylmer's  Field  832 

Anchor  (s)    with  silver  a  left  afloat,  Arabian  Nights  93 

there  was  no  a,  none.  To  hold  by.'  The  Epic  20 

Nor  a  dropt  at  eve  or  morn  ;  The  Voyage  82 

A's  of  rusty  fluke,  and  boats  Enoch  Arden  18 

Cast  all  your  cares  on  God  ;  that  a  holds.  ,,        222 

lay  At  a  in  the  flood  below  ;  In  Mem.  ciii  20 

my  love  Waver'd  at  a  with  me.  Lover's  Tale  i  65 

Anchor  (verb)    Why  not  yet  A  thy  frailty  there,    Supp.  Confessions  124 

To  a  by  one  gloomy  thought ;  Two  Voices  459 

Anchor'd    Tho'  a  to  the  bottom,  such  is  he.'  Pnncess  iv  257 

A  tawny  pirate  a  in  his  port.  Merlin  and  V.  558 

Half-swallow'd  in  it,  a  with  a  chain  ;  Holy  Grail  803 

Anchorite    a  Would  haunt  the  desolated  fane,  St.  Teleinachus  12 

Ancients  (s)     For  we  are  ^4 's  of  the  earth.  Day- Dm,,  L' Envoi  \9 

Ancle    See  Ankle 

'And  (hand)    an"  thy  muther  coom  to  'a,  N.  Farmed',  N.  S.,  21 

But  I  puts  it  inter  'er  'a's  North.  Cobbler  72 

an'  poonch'd  my  'a  wi'  the  hawl,  ,,            78 

Fur  I  couldn't  'owd  'a's  off  gin,  „            84 

An"  'e  spanks  'is  'a  into  mine,  ,,            92 
new  Squire's  coom'd  wi'  'is  taail  in  'is  'a,  (repeat)  Village  Wife  14,  121 

'e  'ed  hallus  a  booiJk  i'  'is  'a,  ,,               26 

an'  our  Nelly  she  gied  me  'er  'a,  ,,             111 

An'  that  squeedg'd  m  t'a  i'  the  shed,  Spinsta-'s  S's.  39 

Or  sits  wi'  their  'a's  afoor  'em,  ,,            86 

An'  'is  'air  coom'd  off  i'  my  'a's  Oivd  Rod  100 
Anemone    (See.  also  'Enemies)    bum'd  The  red  a.      D.  of  F.  Women  72 

Crocus,  a,  violet,  To  F,  D.  Maurice  44 

among  the  gardens,  auriculas,  a's.  City  Child  4 
'Ang'd  (hanged)    Noiikswur'a  for  it  oop  at'soize —  N'.  Fanner,  0.  S.,  36 

Angel  (adj.)    So  sweet  a  face,  such  a  grace.  Beggar  Maid  13 

With  books,  with  flowers,  with  A  offices.  Princess  vii  26 

a  dearer  being,  all  dipt  In  A  instincts,  ,,         321 

Rings  to  the  roar  of  an  a  onset —  Milton  8 

And  be  found  of  a  eyes  Helen's  Toicev  11 
The  toll  of  funeral  in  an  A  ear                             D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  10 
Angel  (s)    (See  also  Earth-Angel,  Hangel) 

When  a's  spake  to  men  aloud,  Supp.  Confessious  25 

once  by  man  and  a's  to  be  seen.  The  Kraken  14 

Like  that  strange  a  which  of  old.  Clear -headeil  friend  24 

thyself  a  little  lower  '  Than  a's.  Tim  Voice^s  199 

temper'd  with  the  tears  Of  a's  To With  Pal.  of  Art  19 

slept  St.  Cecily  ;  An  a  look'd  at  her.  Palace  of  Art  100 

a's  rising  and  descending  met  ,,           143 

March-morning  I  heard  the  a's  call ;  May  Queen,  Cmi.,  25 

saw  An  a  stand  and  watch  me,  St.  S.  Stylitcs  35 

Is  that  the  a  there  That  holds  .,          203 

Three  a's  bear  the  holy  Grail :  Sir  Galahad  42 

And,  stricken  by  an  a's  hand,  ,,           69 

been  as  God's  good  a  in  our  house.  Enoch  Ardeit  423 

Fair  as  the  A  that  said  '  Hail !  *  Aylmer's  Field  681 

himself  Were  that  great  A  ;  Sea,  Dreams  27 

devil  in  man,  there  is  an  a  too,  ,,         278 

His  a  broke  his  heart.  ,,         280 

'  lest  some  classic  A  speak  In  scorn  Princess  Hi  70 

the  woman's  yl  guards  you,  ,,      r  410 

No  A,  but  a  dearer  being,  ,,    vii  .320 


Angel 


10 


Annie 


Angel  (b)  (coh/ih ued)    Whose  Titan  a's,  Gabriel,  Abdiel,  Milton  5 

My  guardian  a  will  sjieak  out  In  Mem.  xltv  15 

1  found  an  a  of  the  night ;  ,,      Ixix  14 

An  a  watching  an  urn  Wept  Maud  I  viii  3 

ship  and  sail  and  a's  blowing  on  it :  lialin  and  Balan  365 

a's  of  our  Lord's  report.  Merlin  and  V.  16 

I  pray  him,  send  a  sudden  A  down  Ijincelot  and  E.  1424 

So  that  the  a's  vrere  amazed,  Holy  Qrail  451 

a't,  awful  shapes,  and  wings  and  eyes.  ,,  848 

I,  and  Arthur  and  the  a's  hear,  Last  Toumuinent  350 

we  are  not  a's  here  Nor  shall  be : 

face,  Which  then  was  as  an  a's, 

I  to  her  became  Her  guardian  and  her  a, 

Come  like  an  a  to  a  damned  soul, 

like  the  waft  of  an  A 's  wing  ; 

Till  you  find  the  deathless  .1 

mountain-walls  Young  a's  pass. 

hear  a  death-bed  ,1  whisper  'Hope.' 
Angelo    The  bar  of  Michael  A . 
Anger  (b)    Delicious  spites  and  darling  a's, 

Then  wax'd  her  a  stronger. 

as  with  a  kind  of  a  in  him, 

his  a  reddens  in  the  heavens ; 

their  ravening  eagle  rose  In  a, 

troubled,  as  if  with  a  or  pain : 

all  their  a  in  miraculous  utterances, 

an  a,  not  by  blood  to  be  satiated. 

The  bitter  springs  of  a  and  fear  ; 

Till  I  with  as  fierce  an  a  spoke, 

vassals  of  wine  and  a  and  lust, 

strength  of  a  thro'  mine  arms, 

And  when  his  a  tare  him, 

ruth  began  to  work  Against  his  a 

or  hot,  God's  curse,  with  a — 

beast,  whose  a  was  his  lord. 

As  acme  wild  turn  of  a, 

turn  of  a  bom  Of  your  misfaith  ; 

Vivien,  frowning  in  true  a, 

breaths  of  a  iJuflTd  Her  fairy  nostril 

his  a  slowly  died  Within  him, 

too  faint  and  sick  am  I  For  a  : 

first  her  a,  leaving  Pelleas, 

storm  of  a  brake  From  Guinevere, 

as  a  falls  aside  And  withers 

so  fluster'd  with  a  were  they 

and  in  a  we  sail'd  away. 

great  God,  Ares,  burns  in  a  still 

climbing  from  the  bath  In  a  ; 

And  a's  of  the  Gods  for  evil  done 

and  quench  The  red  God's  a, 

And  who,  when  his  a  was  kindled, 

moment's  a  of  bees  in  their  hive '{ — 

sound  of  a  like  a  distant  storm. 

wild  horse,  a,  plunged  To  fling  me. 

Rolling  her  a  Thro'  blasted  valley 
Anger  (verb)    A 's  thee  most,  or  a's  thee  at  all  ? . 
Anger  charm 'd    Sat  a-c  from  sorrow, 
Anger'dfadj.)    (.See  «/*<>  Half-anger'd)    The  flush 
of  a  shame  O'erflows 

Those  dragon  eyes  of  a  Eleanor 

(Weth  spake  A,  'Old  Master, 

Sick  ?  or  for  any  matter  a  at  me  ? ' 

most  of  these  were  mute,  some  o, 

I  was  jealous,  a,  vain, 
Anger'd  (verb)    jealousies  Which  a  her.    Who  a 
JameM  T 

'So  Merlin  riddling  a  me  ; 

a  saying  that  a  her. 

But  he  a  me  all  the  more, 

an'  be  a  me  more  and  more. 

Kh  !  how  I  «  Arundel  asking  me 
Angerly    Again  thou  blushest  a ; 
Angle  (comerl    We  nib  each  other's  a's  down, 
Angle  (race  of  people)    Saxon  and  A  from 
Over  the  broad  billow 


Guinevere  596 

Lover's  Tale  i  393 

673 

In  the.  Chad.  Hasp.  38 

Locksley  H.,  Sixtj/,  278 

Early  Spring  12 

Romney's  R.  148 

In  Menu  Ixxxvii  40 

Madeline  6 

T}i£  Goose  30 

Enoch  Arden  392 

Princess  iv  386 

Ode  on  Well.  120 

Grandmother  65 

Boadicea  23 

„       52 

Maud  /  X  49 

„   //  i  17 

43 

Gareth  and  L.  948 

1340 

Geraint  and  E.  102 

661 

Balin  and  Balan  488 

Merlin  and  V.  521 

531 

691 

848 

891 

Lancelot  and  E.  1087 

Pelleas  and  E.  289 

Gxdnevere  361 

Lover's  Tale  i  9 

V.  of  Maeldune  25 

54 

Tiresias  11 

n        41 

„      62 

„     L58 

The  Wreck  17 

Vastness  35 

T)ie  Ring  119 

Akhar's  Ih-eam  118 

Kapiolani  11 

Lucretius  75 

Aybner's  Field  728 

Madeline  32 

D.  ofF.  Women  2r>5 

Gareth  and  L.  280 

Baiin  and  Balan  276 

Last  Tournament  210 

Happy  66 

Tlie  Brook  100 

Com.  of  Arthur  412 

Last  Tmirnament  628 

First  Quarrel  64 

66 

^r  J.  Oldcaslle  135 

Madeline  45 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  40 


Bait,  of  Brunanburh  118 


Angled    But  a  in  the  higher  pool. 

a  with  them  for  her  pupil's  love : 
Angling  loft  That  a  to  the  mother. 
Angrier  I  never  ate  with  a  appetite 
Angry    Hungry  for  honour,  a  for  his  king. 

Hortensia  pleading :  a  was  her  face. 

— it  makes  me  a  now. 

makes  me  a  yet  to  speak  of  it — 
Anguisant  (King  of  Erin)    With  A  of  Erin, 

Morganore, 
Anguish    Life,  a,  death,  immortal  love, 

'  Thine  a  will  not  let  thee  sleep, 

'  Or  that  this  a  fleeting  hence, 

down  in  hell  Suffer  endless  «, 

Beauty  and  a  walking  hand  in  hand 

She  loveth  her  own  a  deep 

Shall  I  heed  them  in  their  a  ? 

My  deeper  a  also  falls, 

My  a  hangs  like  shame. 

inher  a  found  The  casement : 

Sweat,  writhings,  a,  labouring 

in  the  sudden  a  of  her  heart 

became  A  intolerable. 

Life  with  its  a,  and  horrors,  and  errors — 
Animal  (adj.)    With  a  beat  and  dire  insanity  ? 
Animal  (s)    "rhe  single  pure  and  perfect  a, 
Animalism    Hetairai,  curious  in  their  art, 

Hired  a's, 
Ankle-Ancle    From  head  to  ande  fine. 

One  praised  her  ancles,  one  her  eyes. 

At  last  I  hook'd  my  ankle  in  a  vine, 

Behind  his  ankle  twined  her  hollow  feet 
Ankle-bells    To  make  her  smile,  her  golden  a-h. 
Ankle-bones    feet  unmortised  from  their  a-b 
Ankle-deep    And  brushing  a-d  in  flowers, 
Ankle-wing    as  it  were  with  Mercury's  a-w, 
Anlaf  (Danish  King)    Sparing  not  any  of  "Those 
that  with  A , 

Earls  of  the  army  of  A  Fell 

nor  had  A  With  armies  so  broken 
Annal-book    Merlin  did  In  one  great  a-h, 
Annals    Holding  the  folded  a  of  my  youth  ; 

Told  him,  with  other  a  of  the  port, 

with  a  day  Blanch'd  in  our  a, 

Bead  the  wide  world's  a,  you, 

glorious  a  of  army  and  fleet, 
Anne    is  gone,  you  say,  little  A  ? 

I  had  not  wept,  little  A ,  not  since 
Annie    {See  also  Annie  Lee,  Hannie)    While  A 

still  was  mistress ; 

and  make  a  home  For  A  : 

a  home  For  A ,  neat  and  nestlike, 

Enoch  and  A,  sitting  hand-in-hand, 

set  A  forth  in  trade  With  all  that  seamen 

moving  homeward  came  on  A  pale, 

to  break  his  purposes  To  A , 

A  fought  against  his  will : 

Bought  A  goods  and  stores, 

A  seem'd  to  hear  Her  own  death-scaffold 

would  work  for  A  to  the  last, 

A's  fears,  Save,  as  his  A's, 

'  A ,  this  voyage  by  the  grace  of  God 

A ,  come,  cheer  up  before  I  go. ' 

A,  the  ship  I  sail  in  passes  here 

'  A ,  my  girl,  cheer  up,  be  comforted, 

When  A  would  have  raised  him 

A  from  her  baby's  forehead  dipt 

same  week  when  A  buried  it, 

but  A,  seated  with  her  grief, 

'^1,1  came  to  ask  a  favour  of  you. ' 

A ,  now — Have  we  not  known  each  other 

A — for  I  am  rich  and  well-to-do. 

A  with  her  brows  against  the  wall 

ask'd  '  Then  you  will  let  me,  A  ? ' 

for  A 's  sake,  Fearing  the  lazy  gossip 


Miller's  D.  64 

Princess  Hi  93 

The  Ring  356 

Geraint  and  E.  233 

Princess  vB14 

,,     vii  132 

Grandmother  44 

Lover's  Tale  iv  135 

Com.  of  Arthur  115 

Arabian  Nights  73 

T^vo  Voices  49 

235 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.,  124 

D.  ofF.  Women  \h 

To  J.  S.  42 

Boadicea  9 

In  Mem.  xix  15 

Ma%id  II  iv  74 

Guinevere  586 

Pass,  of  Arthur  115 

Lover's  Tcde  i  702 

„      a  138 

Despair  48 

iMcretius  163 

Princess  vii  306 

Lucretius  53 

Talking  Oak  224 

Beggar  Maid  11 

Princess  iv  268 

Merlin  and  V.  240 

579 

552 

In  Mem,  Ixxxix  49 

Lucretius  201 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  46 

53 

81 

Com.  of  Arthur  158 

Gardener's  D.  244 

Enoch  Arden  702 

Princess  vi  63 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  104 

Vastness  7 

Grandmother  1 

63 

Enoch  Arden  26 
48 
59 
69 
138 
149 
156 
158 
169 
174 
180 
183 
190 
200 
214 
218 
232 
235 
271 
280 
285 
305 
311 
314 
323 
334 


Annie 


11 


Answered 


Annie  {continued)    Philip  did  not  fathom 
A 's  mind : 
one  evening  A's  children  long'd  To  go 
And  A  would  go  with  them  ; 
For  was  not  A  with  them  ? 
'  Listen,  A ,  How  merry  they  are 
Tired,  A  ? '  for  she  did  not  speak 
And  A  said  '  I  thought  not  of  it : 
*  A,  there  is  a  thing  upon  my  mind, 

0  A,  It  is  beyond  all  hope, 
answer'd  .1  ;  tenderly  she  spoke  : 
^  A,  as  I  have  waited  all  my  life 
fearing  night  and  chill  for  A, 

At  A 's  door  he  p>aused  and  gave 

'A,  when  I  spoke  to  you, 

A  weeping  answer'd  '  I  am  bound.' 

'Take  your  own  time,  A,  take 

A  could  have  wept  for  pity  of  him  ; 

chanced  That  A  could  not  sleep, 

never  merrily  beat  A 's  heart. 

The  babes,  their  babble,  A , 

home  Where  A  lived  and  loved  him, 

His  gazing  in  on  A ,  his  resolve, 

tell  my  daughter  A,  whom  I  saw 

For,  A,  you  see,  her  father  was  not  the  man 

1  cannot  cry  for  him,  A  : 
Why  do  you  look  at  me,  A  ? 

at  your  age,  A ,  I  could  have  wept  (repeat) 

I  mean  your  grandfather,  A  : 

But  soihng  another,  A, 

Shadow  and  shine  is  life,  little  A, 

children.  A,  they're  all  about  me  yet. 

my  A  who  left  me  at  two, 

my  own  little  .4,  an  ^  like  you : 

in  this  Book,  little  A ,  the  message 

Get  me  my  glasses,  A  : 

Hall  but  Miss  A ,  the  heldest, 

but  Miss  A  she  said  it  wur  draains, 

Hoanly  Miss  A  were  saw  stuck  oop, 

An'  es  for  Miss  A  es  call'd  me  afoor 

taake  it  kindly  ov  owd  Miss  A 

0  A,  what  shall  I  do  ? ' 

A  consider'd.     '  If  I,'  said  the  wise  little  A, 

That  was  a  puzzle  for  A . 


Enoch  Arden  344 

362 

364 

371 

388 

390 

395 

399 

„  402 

„  422 

435 

443 

447 

448 

451 

,,  466 

467 

490 

513 

606 

685 

863 

882 

Qraiuiniother  5 

15 

17 

„  20,  100 

23 

36 

60 

76 

77 

78 

96 

„   106 

Village  Wife  8 

11 

59 

„        105 

„        109 

In  the  Child,  ffosp.  47 

48 

55 


A  L,  The  prettiest  little 


Annie  Lee    (See  also  Annie) 

damsel  Enoch  Arden  11 

A  later  but  a  loftier  A  L,  ,,         748 

Annihilate    eagle's  beak  and  talon  a  us  ?  Boddicea  11 

Announced    ^1  the  coming  doom,  and  fulminated  Sea  Dreams  22 

Annulet    And  into  many  a  listless  «,  Qei-aint  and  E.  258 

Answer  (s)    Our  thought  gave  «  each  to  each,  Sonnet  To 10 

The  sullen  a  slid  betwixt :  Two  Voices  226 

There  must  be  a  to  his  doubt,  ,,          309 

I  spoke,  but  a  came  there  none :  ,,          425 

To  which  my  soul  made  a  readily :  Palace  of  Art  17 

Not  rendering  true  a,  AI.  d' Arthur  74 

some  sweet  a,  tho'  no  a  came.  Gardener's  I).  159 

let  me  have  an  a  to  my  wish  ;  Dwa  30 

before  thine  a  given  Departest,  Titlwnns  44 

an  a  peal'd  from  that  high  land.  Vision  of  Sin  221 

Rejoicing  at  that  a  to  his  prayer.  Enoch  Arden  127 

such  a  voluble  a  promising  all,  ,,          903 

And  Leolin's  horror-stricken  a,  Aylmer's  Field  318 

hush'd  itself  at  last  Hopeless  of  a:  ,,          543 

therewithal  an  rt  vague  as  wind  :  Pnncess  i  45 

In  this  report,  this  a  of  a  king,  ,,         70 

Her  a  was  '  Leave  me  to  deal  with  that.'  ,,  Hi  149 

a  which,  half-muffled  in  his  beard,  ,,    v  234 

oozed  All  o'er  with  honey'd  a  ,,        242 

I  lagg'd  in  a  loth  to  render  up  ,,        299 

shall  have  her  a  by  tho  word.'  ,,        327 

Last,  Ida's  o,  in  a  royal  hand,  ,,       371 

what  a  should  I  give  ?  ,,     mi  6 

The  noblest  a  unto  such  Is  perfect  Lit.  Squabbles  19 

it  seem'd  that  an  a  came.  The  Victim  24 


Answer  (s)  (continued)    Bark  an  a,  Britain's 
doubts  and  a's  here  proposed, 
What  hope  of  a,  or  redress  ? 
But  Death  returns  an  a  sweet : 
A  faithful  a  from  the  breast, 
win  An  a  from  my  lips, 
Make  a,  Maud  my  bliss, 
old  Seer  made  a  playing  on  him 
said  your  say  ;  Mine  a  was  my  deed, 
being  still  rebuked,  would  a  still 
Made  a  sharply  that  she  should  not 
So  moving  without  a  to  her  rest 
He  made  a  wrathful  a  :  '  Did  I  wish 
he  flung  a  wrathful  a  back  : 
Made  a,  either  eyelid  wet 
Is  that  an  a  for  a  noble  knight  ? 
Full  simple  was  her  a,  '  What  know  I  ? 
all  their  a's  were  as  one : 
And  when  his  a  chafed  them, 
Percivale  made  a  not  a  word. 
Well  then,  what  a  ? ' 
voice  about  his  feet  Sent  up  an  a 
when  she  drew  No  a,  by  and  by 
a  mournful  a  made  the  Queen : 
Not  rendering  true  a, 
Had  made  a  silent  a : 
to  that  passionate  a  of  full  heart 
an  a  came  Not  from  the  nurse — 
all  the  night  an  a  shrill'd. 
Answer  (verb)     And  a's  to  his  mother's  calls 
I  shall  know  Thy  voice,  and  a 
Or  a  should  one  press  his  hands '( 
He  a's  not,  nor  understands. 
'  But  thou  canst  a  not  again. 
Or  thou  wilt  a  but  in  vain. 
0  will  she  a  if  I  call  ? 

you  dare  to  a  thus  ! 

To  that  man  My  work  shall  a, 

He  will  a  to  the  purpose. 

Scarce  a  to  my  whistle  ; 

in  gentle  murmur.  When  they  a 

could  a  him,  If  question'd, 

to  a.  Madam,  all  those  hard  things 

Madam,  you  should  a,  we  would  ask) 

told  me  she  would  a  us  to-day, 

a,  echoes,  dying,  dying,  dying,  (repeat) 

a,  echoes,  a,  dying,  dying,  dying. 

{A,  0  a)  We  give  you  his  life.' 

'  0  wife,  what  use  to  a  now  ? 

A  each  other  in  the  mist. 

Love  would  a  with  a  sigh, 

whatever  is  ask'd  her,  a's  'Death.' 

wilt  thou  not  a  this  ? 

musing  '  Shall  I  a  yea  or  nay  ? ' 

but  a  scorn  with  scorn. 

it  shall  a  for  me.     Ljsten  to  it. 
But  shall  it  ?  a,  darling,  a,  no. 

To  a  that  which  came : 

he  had  Scarce  any  voice  to  a, 

Doth  question'd  memory  a  not, 

if  my  neighbour  whistle  a's  him — 

Highlanders  a  with  conquering  cheers, 

Who  then  will  have  to  a, 

'  give  it  to  me, '  but  he  would  not  a  me — 
Answer'd    To  which  he  a  scoffingly  ; 

in  that  time  and  place  she  a  me. 

But  William  a  short ; 

William  a  madly ;  bit  his  lips, 

he  a  me  ;  And  well  his  words 

plagiarised  a  heart.  And  a 

in  mimic  cadence  a  James — 

She  a  to  my  call, 

A  all  queries  touching  those  at  home 

Echo  a  in  her  sleep  From  hollow  fields : 

a  sharply  that  I  talk'd  astray. 


raven !  Boadicea  13 

In  Mem.  xlviii    3 

,,         Ivi      27 

,,        Ixxxv  14 

,,        ciii     50 

Maud  I  xviii  57 

Gareth  and  L.  252 

1175 

1249 

Man:  of  Geraint  196 

■„  530 

Geraint  and  E.  76 

146 

Merlin  and  V.  379 

Lancelot  and  E.  201 

671 

Holy  Grail  284 

673 

Pelleas  and  E.  534 

Last  Tournament  713 

761 

Guinevere  162 

„        841 

Pass,  of  Arthur  242 

Lover's  Tale  iv  96 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  259 

The  Wreck  143 

Demeter  and  P.  61 

Supp.  Confessions  159 

My  life  is  full  10 

Tivo  Voices  245 

246 

310 

312 

Miller's  D.  118 

Dora  26 

Love  and  Duty  29 

Locksley  Hall  55 

Amphion  68 

L.  of  Burleigh  50 

Enoch  Arden  653  . 

Princess  ii  345 

"      ...^^^ 
,,     Hi  166 

„    ivQ,  12 

,,        iv  18 

The  Victim  15 

„         55 

In  Mem.  xxviii  4 

,,        XXXV  13 

Maud  I  i  4 

,,  xviii  59 

Cmn.  of  Arthur  426 

Gareth  and  L.  953 

Merlin  and  V.  386 

397 

Holy  Grail  12 

„       434 

Lover's  Tale  i  277 

,,        iv  161 

Def.  of  Lucknow  99 

Columbus  213 

Bandit's  Death  27 

Two  Voices  37 

Gardener's  D.  231 

Dora  22 

„    33 

Edwin  Mo7Ti.i  24 

Talking  Oak  20 

Golden  Year  53 

Will  Water.  106 

Aylmer's  Fidd  465 

Princess,  Pro.,  66 

,,  Hi  140 


Answer'd 


12 


Approved 


Answer'd  {condnuetf)    I  a  nothing,  doubtful  in 

when  have  I  a  thee  ? 

Gods  have  a  ;  We  give  them  the  wife ! ' 

Doubt  not  ye  the  Gk)ds  have  a, 

The  *  wilt  thou '  «,  and  again 

and  a  me  In  riddling  triplets 

Gareth  «  them  With  laughter, 

Sir  Gareth  a,  laughingly, 

thou  hast  ever  a  courteously, 

reviled,  hast  a  graciously, 

A  Sir  Gareth  graciously  to  one 

ask'd  it  of  him,  Who  a  as  before ; 

«  with  such  craft  as  women  use, 

not  dead  ! '  she  a  in  all  haste. 

Enid  a,  harder  to  be  moved 

truest  eyes  that  ever  a  Heaven, 

I  am  a,  and  henceforth 

ever  well  and  readily  a  he : 

Lancelot  spoke  And  a  him  at  full, 

in  ber  heart  she  a  it  and  said, 

he  a  not,  Or  short  and  coldly, 

whom  she  a  with  all  calm. 

He  a  with  his  eyes  upon  the  ground, 

Lancelot  a  nothing,  but  he  went, 

a  not,  but,  sharply  turning, 

she  a,  and  she  laugh'd, 

Gawain  a  kindly  tho*  in  scorn, 

a  them  Even  before  high  God. 

he  a  not,  *  Or  hast  thou  other  griefs  ? 

was  a  softly  by  the  King 

I  should  have  a  his  farewell. 

To  all  their  queries  a  not  a  word, 

Julian,  sitting  by  her,  a  all : 

he  a  her  wail  with  a  song — 
Answering    a  under  crescent  brows ; 

a  now  my  random  stroke 

a  not  one  word,  she  led  the  way. 

to  the  court  of  Arthur  a  yea. 
Ant    one  whose  foot  is  bitten  by  an  a, 

What  Ls  it  all  but  a  trouble  of  a's 
Antagonism    in  the  teeth  of  clench 'd  a's 

And  toppling  over  all  a 

And,  toppling  over  all  a, 
Anthem    a  sung,  is  charm'd  and  tied 

sound  of  the  sorrowing  a  roH'd 
Anther    With  a's  and  with  dust : 
Antibabylonianism    And  loud -lung'd  ^r« 
Antichrist    He  leans  on  ^1  ;  or  that  his  mind, 

Tliat  mock-meek  mouth  of  utter  ,1, 
Antiquity    A  front  of  timher-crost  a, 
Anton  (a  knight)    This  is  the  son  of  A,  not  the 

Arthur  born  of  Gorlois,  Others  of  ^  ?  ' 

And  gave  him  to  Sir  /I, 

else  the  child  of  A ,  and  no  king, 
Antony  (Mark)  >'^e.  Mark  Antony 
Anvil    Hilvcr  hammern  falling  On  silver  a's, 

iron-clanging  a  bang'd  With  hammers  ; 
Ansrthing    He  never  meant  us  a  I  but  good. 

iJehoId,  we  know  not  a  ; 

can  nee  elsewhere,  a  so  fair. 

Henceforth  in  all  the  world  at  «, 
Apartment    die<l  Of  fright  in  far  u'a. 
Ape  (s)     In  Ijed  like  monstrous  u'a 
And  let  tho  a  and  tiger  die. 
Hi*  action  like  tho  greater  «, 
moods  of  tiger,  or  of  a  ? 
Ape  (Terb)    should  «  Those  monstrous  males 

as  far  As  J  could  a  their  treble, 
Aphrodite     Here  comes  to-day,  Pallas  and  A, 

Idalinn  A  lioautiful. 
Apocalyptic    a«  if  he  held  The  A  millstone, 
Apollo    strange  song  J  heard  A  sing, 
another  of  our  (}<k1«.  the  Sun,  A, 
Apology     But  ended  with  a  so  sweet, 
No  loM  than  one  divine  u. 


myself      Princess  iii  272 

„  mi  4 

The  Victim  78 

BoSdicea  '23. 

In  Mem.  Con.,  54 

Com,  of  Arthur  401 

Gareth  and  L.  208 

„  1007 

1167 

„  1269 

1414 

Marr.  of  Geraint  205 

Geraint  and  E.  352 

542 

694 

842 

Merlin  and  V.  879 

Lancelot  and  E.  269 

286 

786 

,,      886 

■  997 

13.52 

1387 

Holy  Grail  739 

Pelleas  ami  E.  132 

,,  333 

462 

598 

Guinevere  44 

„      615 

Lover's  Tale  iv  3-33 

340 

Tlve  Dreamer  16 

Princess  ii  428 

In  Mem.  xxxix  2 

Geraint  and  E.  495 

Com.  of  Arthur  446 

Pelleas  and  E.  184 

Vastness  4 

Princess  iv  465 

Marr.  of  Geraint  491 

Geraint  and  E.  834 

D.  of  F.  Women  193 

Ode  on  Well.  60 

Talking  Oak  184 

Sea  iJreams  252 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  74 

170 

Enoch  Arden  692 

King.'    Com.  of  Arthur  74 

171 

„  222 

233 

Princess  i  217 

,,     V.504 

Enoch  Arden  887 

In  Mem.  liv  13 

Marr.  of  Geraint  499 

Geraint  and  E.  649 

Princess  vi  371 

St.  8.  Stylites  174 

In  Mem.  cxviii  28 

,,        atxll 

Makiuf/  of  Man  2 

Princess  Hi  309 

,,       iw  92 

CEnone  86 

.,     174 

Sea  Dreams  26 

Tithonus  62 

Lua-etius  125 

Geraint  and  K.  394 

louver's  Tale  iv  169 


Apostle    shrive  myself  No,  not  to  an  yl.* 
Apothegm    My  curse  upon  the  Master's  a. 
Appal    A  me  from  the  quest.' 
Appall'd  cliff-side,  a  them,  and  they  said, 

In  our  most  need,  a  them, 
Apparel    in  her  hand  A  suit  of  bright  a, 

store  of  rich  a,  sumptuous  fare, 

a  as  might  well  beseem  His  princess, 

clothed  her  in  a  like  the  day. 
Appeal  (s)    She  the  a  Brook'd  not, 

'  Thou  makest  thine  a  to  me : 

tho'  it  spake  and  made  « 

she  lifted  up  A  face  of  sad  a, 
Appeal  (verb)    a  Once  more  to  France  or  England 
Appeal'd    a  To  one  that  stood  beside. 

And  with  a  larger  faith  a 
Appealing    A  to  the  bolts  of  Heaven  ; 
Appear    Shadows  of  the  world  a. 

made  a  Still-lighted  in  a  secret  shrine. 

Falling  had  let  a  the  brand  of  John — 

things  a  the  work  of  mighty  Gods. 

Thy  marble  bright  in  dark  a's. 

Which  makes  a  the  songs  I  made 

Shall  I  a,  0  Queen,  at  Camelot, 

beauties  of  the  work  a  The  darkest  faults : 

and  now  the  morn  a's, 

Miriam  your  Mother  might  a  to  me. 
Appear'd    The  very  graves  a  to  smile, 

now  that  shadow  of  mischance  a 

blew  and  blew,  but  none  a  : 

the  work  To  both  a  so  costly, 

a,  low-built  but  strong  ; 

never  yet  Had  heaven  a  so  blue. 
Appearing    A  ere  the  times  were  ripe, 

dark  in  the  golden  grove  A, 
Appeased    holy  Gods,  they  must  be  a, 
Appertain    all  That  a's  to  noble  maintenance. 
Appetite    I  never  ate  with  angrier  a 
Applauded    mildly,  that  all  hearts  A, 
Applause    (See  also  Self-applause)    might  reap 
the  a  of  Great, 

the  Trojans  roar'd  a  ; 

Shall  he  for  whose  a  I  strove, 

To  laughter  and  his  comrades  to  a. 
Apple    full-juiced  «,  waxing  over-mellow, 

swung  an  a  of  the  purest  gold, 

a's  by  the  brook  Fallen,  and  on  the  lawns. 

and  ate  The  goodly  a's, 

The  warm  white  a  of  her  throat, 

peak  of  the  mountain  was  a's, 
Apple-arbiter    beardless  a-a  Decided  fairest. 
Apple-blossom    Fresh  a-h,  blushing  for  a  boon. 

cheek  of  a-h.  Hawk-eyes  ; 
Apple-cheek'd    a  bevy  of  Eroses  a-c, 
Apple-tree    and  o'er  the  brook  Were  a-t's. 
Appliances    With  half  a  night's  «, 
Application    And  liberal  a's  lie  In  Art 
Appraised    A  his  weight,  and  fondled 

A  tho  Lycian  custom, 
Apprehend    And  thro'  thick  veils  to  a 
Approach  (s)    less  achievable  By  slow  a'es. 

Preserve  a  broad  a  of  fame. 
Approach  (verb)    and  let  him  presently  A , 

a  To  save  the  life  despair'd  of, 

A  and  fear  not ; 

Morning-Star,  a,  Arm  me,' 

'  A  and  arm  mo  ! ' 
Approach'd    «  Melissa,  tinged  with  wan 

A  V)etween  them  toward  the  King, 

as  the  great  knight  A  them  : 

A  him,  and  with  full  affection  said, 
Approaching    A ,  press'd  you  heart  to  heart. 

A  thro'  the  darkness,  call'd  ; 
Approve    And  wishes  me  to  a  him. 
Approved    She  wore  the  colours  I  a. 


Sir  J.  Oldcastle  147 

Roviney's  R.  37 

Gareth  and  L.  1331 

Lancelot  and  E.  1253 

Columbus  71 

Marr.  of  Geraint  678 

709 

758 

Geraint  and  E.  948 

Princess  vi  139 

In  Mem.  Ivi  5 

,,      xcii  4 

Merlin  aiid  V.  234 

;  Columbus  57 

D.  of  F.  Women  99 

Talking  Oak  15 

Princess  iv  372 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  12 

Mariana  in  the  S.  17 

Aylm^r's  Field  509 

Lucretius  102 

In  Mem.  loovii  5 

„      Con.,  21 

Lancelot  and  E.  142 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  105 

The  Flight  18 

The  Ring  137 

TJie  Lettm-s  45 

Enoch  Arden  128 

Princess  v  336 

Marr,  of  Geraint  638 

Balin  and  Balan  333 

Holy  Grail  365 

In  Mem.  Con. ,  139 

Last  Toumamerit  380 

The  Victim  47 

Man:  of  Geraint  712 

Geraint  and  E.  233 

„  958 

Princess  iii  262 

Spec  of  Iliad  1 

In  Menn.  Ii  5 

Geraint  and  E.  296 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.,  33 

Marr.  of  Geraint  170 

Holy  Grail  384 

388 

Last  Tmimament  717 

V.  of  Maeldune  63 

Lucretius  91 

The  Brook  90 

Gareth  and  L.  589 

The  Islet  11 

Holy  Gmil  384 

Lover's  Tale  iv  93 

Day-Dm.,  Moral  13 

Enoch  Arden  154 

Princess  ii  128 

Two  Voices  29Q 

Princess  iii  284 

Oile  on  Well.  78 

St.  S.  Stylites  216 

Enoch  Arden  830 

Princess  vii  353 

Gareth  and  L.  924 

1112 

Princess  iii  24 

Gareth  and  L.  441 

Lancelot  and  E.  180 

1355 

Miller's  D.  160 

Lancelot  and  E.  1000 

Maud  I  xix  71 

The  Letters  16 


Approved 


13 


Aristocrat 


Approved  (conimued)    A  him,  bowing  at  their  own 

deserts  Tlie  Brook  128 

and  all  the  knights  A  him,  Balin  atid  Bcdnn  210 

Approven    he  by  miracle  was  a  King :  Guinevere  296 

Approvingly    often  talk'd  of  him  A ,  Aylmer's  Field  474 

'Appy  (happy)    as  'a  as  'art  could  think,  North.  Cobbler  15 

1  loovs  tha  to  maake  thysen  'a,  Spinster's  S's.  57 

maiike  'is  owd  aage  as  'a  as  iver  I  can,  Owd  Rod  3 

A-pre&chin'    Fur  they've  bin  a-p  viea  down,  ChurcJi-warden,  etc.,  53 

Apricot    blanching  a  like  snow  in  snow.             ,  Prog,  of  Spring  30 

April  (adj.)    When  A  nights  began  to  blow,  Millers  D.  106 

A  hopes,  the  fools  of  chance  ;  Vision  of  Sin  164 

And  breathes  in  A  autumns.  Tlie  Brrn^l;  196 

clad  her  like  an  .l  daffodilly  Princess  ii  324 

Can  trouble  live  with  .1  days,  In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  7 

Thro'  all  the  years  of  A  blood  ;  „           dx  12 

and  my  regret  Becomes  an  A  violet,  ,,            cxv  19 

For  all  an  A  morning,  till  the  ear  Ldmcdot  and  E.  897 

gustful  A  mom  That  puff'd  Holy  Grail  14 

Green  prelude,  A  promise,  glad  new-year  Lover's  Tale  i  281 

April  (b)     ('Twas  ^1  then),  I  came  and  sat  Miller's  D.  59 

And  A  s  crescent  glimmer'd  cold,  ,,        107 

balmier  than  half-oj)ening  buds  Of  A ,  Tithonvs  60 

May  or  .1 ,  he  forgot.  The  last  of  ^1  The  Broiik  151 

Her  maiden  babe,  a  double  A  old.  Princess  ii  110 

To  rain  an  A  of  ovation  round  Their  statues,  , ,        vi  66 

From  A  on  to  ^1  went,  In  Mem.  xxii  7 

Make  .1  of  her  tender  eyes ;  „          a^  8 

That  keenlior  in  sweet  A  wakes,  ,,      cxvi  2 

(For  then  was  latter  ^1)  Com.  of  Arthtir  451 

in  A  suddenly  Breaks  from  a  coppice  Marr.  of  Ge)-aint  338 

With  ^4  and  the  swallow.  T/ie  Ring  60 

Apt    supple,  sinew-corded,  a  at  arms ;  Pritwess  v  535 

a  at  arms  and  big  of  bone              -  Marr.  of  Geraint  489 

A-ra&gin'  (raging)    fire  was  «-/•  an'  raavin'  Owd  Rod  110 

Arab    delicate  A  arch  of  her  feet  Maitd  I  xvi  15 

Arabi  (Leader  of  Egyptian  Revolt,  1882)    And 

Wolseley  overthrew  A,  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  31 

Arabian    nodding  together  In  some  ^1  night  ?  Maud  I  vii  12 

I  know  not,  your  A  sands  ;  To  Ulysses  35 

plunge  old  Merlin  in  the  A  sea :  Garcth  and  L.  211 

Arac  (Prince)     Not  ev'n  her  brother  .1,  Princess  i  \b'i 

rumour  of  Prince  A  hard  at  hand.  ,,      t?  112 

speak  with  y4  :  ^1 '»  word  is  thrice  ,,         226 

midmost  and  the  highest  Was  A:  ,,         257 

The  genial  giant.  A,  roll'd  himself  ,,         274 

but  we  will  send  to  her,' Said  ^1,  ,,          325 

whereas  I  know  Your  prowess.  A,  , ,         404 

Down  From  those  two  bulks  at  A's  side,  ,,         499 

From  yl's  arm,  as  from  a  giant's  flail,  ,,         500 

but  A  rode  him  down :  ,,          532 

A,  satiate  with  his  victory.  ,,      vii  90 

Arbaces    A,  and  Phenomenon,  and  the  rest,  Tlie  Brook  162 

Arbiter    See  Apple-arbiter 

Arbitrate    to-morrow,  a  the  field  ;  Last  Tmirmiment  104 

Arbitration    Before  his  throne  of «  ,,                162 

Arbour    They  read  in  a's  dipt  and  cut,  AmjjhionS^ 

Arbutus    there  ?  yon  a  Totters ;  Lucretius  184 

Arc     thro'  a  little  a  Of  heaven,  To  J.  S.  26 

Bear  had  wheel'd  Thro'  a  great  a  Princess  iv  213 

sine  and  a,  spheroid  and  azimuth,  ,,       vi  256 

Run  out  your  measured  a's,  In  Mem.  cv  27 

bridge  of  single  a  Took  at  a  leap ;  Gareth  and  L.  908 

Arcady    To  many  a  flute  of  ^.  In  Mem.  xxiii  24 

Arch  (b)    (See  also  Innocent-arch,  Portal-arch)    Thro' 

little  crystal  a'es  low  Arabian  Nights  49 

shadow'd  grots  of  a'es  interlaced.  Palace  of  Art  51 

Many  an  a  high  up  did  lift,  ,,        142 

round  and  round,  and  whirl'd  in  an  a,  M.  d' Arthur  138 

to  three  a'es  of  a  bridge  Crown'd  Gardener's  D.  43 

Yet  all  experience  is  an  a  wherethro'  Gleams  Ulysses  19 

we  past  an  a.  Whereon  a  woman-statue  Princess  i  209 

Or  under  a'es  of  the  marble  bridge  ,,    ii  458 

bloom  profuse  and  cedar  a'es  Charm,  Milton  11 

the  delicate  Arab  a  of  her  feet  Maud  I  xvi  15 


Arch  (b)  (continued)    round  and  round,  and 
whirl'd  in  an  a, 
Straining  his  eyes  beneath  an  a  of  hand, 
thro'  the  a  Down  those  loud  waters, 
Arch  (verb)    fires  that  a  this  dusky  dot — 
Archbishop    A,  Bishop,  Priors,  Canons, 
Arched    See  High-arched 
Arching    (See  (dso  Slow-arching)    now  a 

leaves  her  bare  To  breaths 
Architect    You,  the  Patriot  A, 
Archives    of  crimeful  record  all  My  mortal  a. 
Archway    Gleam  thro'  the  Gothic  a  in  the  wall, 
so  thou  pass  Beneath  this  a, 
a  shatter'd  a  plumed  with  fern  ; 
While  I  shelter'd  in  this  a 
Arctic    would  dare  Hell-heat  or  A  cold, 
Arden  (surname)  (See  also  Enoch,  Enoch  Arden) 

'  You  A,  you  !  nay, — sure  he  was  a  foot  Higher 
Eh,  let  me  fetch  'em,  A,' 
Arden  (forest)    face  again.  My  Rosalind 

in  this  A — 
'Are  (hare)    An'  'e  niver  not  shot  one  'a, 
Ares    great  God,  A ,  burns  in  anger  still 

hail  of  A  crash  Along  the  sounding  walls. 

yesternight.  To  me,  the  great  God  A, 
Argent    The  polish'd  a  of  her  breast 

To  yonder  a  round  ; 
Argent-lidded    Serene  with  a-l  eyes  Amorous, 
Argive    On  .1  heights  divinely  sang, 
Argosy    argosies  of  magic  sails. 
Arguing    A  boundless  forbearance  : 

seem  As  a  love  of  knowledge  and  of  power ; 
Argument    Half -buried  in  some  weightier  a, 
A-rilin'    thowt  she  was  nobbut  a-r  ma  then. 
Arimathsean  Joseph    See  Joseph 
A-ringing    we  heard  them  a-r  the  bell. 
Arise    Scarce  outward  signs  of  joy  a, 

Come  forth,  I  charge  thee,  a, 

I  feel  the  tears  of  blood  a 

Or  when  little  airs  «, 

Many  suns  a  and  set. 

A,  and  let  us  wander  forth, 

I  will  a  and  slay  thee  with  my  hands.' 

yearning  for  thy  yoke,  a, 

mighty  wind  a's,  roaring  seaward. 

Expecting  when  a  fountain  should  a : 

The  thoughts  that  a  in  me. 

pillars  of  the  hearth  A  to  thee  ; 

'  A,  and  get  thee  forth  and  seek 

A  and  fly  The  reeling  Faun, 

Morning  a's  stormy  and  pale. 

And  ah  for  a  man  to  a  in  me, 

A,  my  God,  and  strike,  for  we  hold 

war  would  a  in  defence  of  the  right, 

saw  the  dreary  phantom  a  and  fly 

saying,  '  A ,  and  help  us  thou  ! 

A  And  quickly  pass  to  Arthur's  hall, 

these  from  all  his  life  a,  and  cry. 

Until  my  lord  a  and  look  upon  me  ? ' 

Till  yonder  man  upon  the  bier  a, 

my  dear  lord  a  and  bid  me  do  it, 

Until  himself  a  a  living  man. 

And  by  the  great  Queen's  name,  a 

A,  go  forth  and  conquer  as  of  old." 

I  will  a  and  slay  thee  with  my  hands.' 

A  in  open  prospect — heath  and  hill, 

A ,  my  own  true  sister,  come  forth  ! 
Arisen    (See  also  Half -arisen)    mountains  have  a 

since  With  cities 
Arising    at  Bible  meetings,  o'er  the  rest  A, 

from  the  floor,  Tusklike,  a, 

horse,  A  wearily  at  a  fallen  oak, 

goblet  with  a  priceless  wine  A, 

Ilion  falling,  Rome  a, 
Aristocrat    what  care  J,  A ,  democrat,  autocrat- 


Pass,  of  Arthur  S06 

„  464 

Lover's  Tale  i  58 

Epilogue  52 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  159 


Prog,  of  Spi'ing  12 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  42 

St.  S.  Stylites  159 

Godiva  64 

Gareth  and  L,  268 

Marr.  of  Geraint  316 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  259 

Ancient  Sage  116 

Enoch  Arden  854 
871 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  119 

Village  Wife  42 

Tiresias  11 

„       96 

„      111 

I).  ofF.  Women  \5% 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  16 

Arabian  Nights  135 

In  Mem.  xo:iii  22 

Locksley  Hall  121 

Aylmer's  Field  317 

Princess  ii  57 

Lucretius  9 

Ovxl  Rod  74 

First  Quarrel  21 

Supp.  Confessions  49 

Ode  to  Memory  46 

Oriana  77 

Adeline  33 

Miller's  D.  205 

239 

M,  d' Arthur  132 

Tithonus  40 

Locksley  Hall  194 

Vision  of  Sin  8 

Break,  break,  etc.  4 

Princess  vii  217 

In  Mem,  Ixxxv  79 

,,         cxviii  25 

Maud  I  vi  1 

„        X  67 

//  i  45 

Maud' II I  vi  19 

36 

Com.  of  A  rthur  44 

Gareth  and  L.  983 

„    1131 

Geraint  and  E.  650 

667 

„     666 

706 

B(din  and  Bnlan  482 

Pass,  of  Arthur  6i 

„  300 

Lover's  Talc  i  397 

Tlie  Flight  96 

Merlin  and  V.  675 

Sea  Dreams  195 

Ba/in  and  Balan  316 

425 

Lover's  Tale  iv  228 

To  Virgil^ 

Maud  I  xQ5 


Ark 


14 


Arm 


Ark    sought'st  to  wreck  ray  mortal  a,  Tioo  Voices  389 

1  leave  this  mortal  a  behind,  Jn  Mem.  odi  6 
Rich  as  with  priceless  bones                                  Bcdin  and  Sedan  110 
Arm  (s)    (<S?#  also  Airm,  Hairm)    enormous  polypi 

Winnow  with  giant  a's  The  Kraken  10 

And  with  a  sweeping  of  the  a,  A  Character  16 

Of  wrath  her  right  a  whirl'd,  Th«  Poet  54 

Sweet  faces,  rounded  a's,  Sea  Fairies  3 

Fold  thine  a's,  turn  to  thy  rest.  A  Dirge  3 

right  a  debased  The  throne  of  Persia,  Alexander  1 

A  glowing  a,  a  gleaming  neck,  Miller's  D.  78 

When,  a  in  a,  we  went  along,  ,,          163 

Round  my  true  heart  thine  a's  entwine  ,,         216 

The  kiss,  The  woven  a's,  seem  ,,          232 

Puts  forth  an  «,  and  creeps  (Enone  4 

when  I  look'd,  Paris  had  raised  his  a,  >>  1^9 

that  my  a's  Were  wound  about  thee,  ,,  202 

Sat  smiling,  babe  in  a.  Palace  of  Art  96 
my  a  was  lifted  to  hew  down                                       D.  of  F.  Women  45 

humid  a's  festooning  tree  to  tree,  ,,             70 

mailed  Bacchus  leapt  into  mj  a's,  „           151 

kneeling,  with  one  a  about  her  king,  ,,          270 

He  held  a  goose  upon  his  a,  The  Goose  5 

He  took  the  goose  upon  his  a,  ,,       41 

an  a  Rose  up  from  out  the  bosom  M.  d' Arthur  29 

rose  an  a  Clothed  in  white  samite,  ,,         143 

behold  an  a.  Clothed  in  white  samite,  ,,         158 

with  pain,  reclining  on  his  a,  ,,         168 

One  a  aloft — Gown'd  in  pure  white.  Gardener's  D.  125 

in  the  circle  of  his  a's  Enwound  us  both  ;  ,,             216 

thrust  him  in  the  hollows  of  his  a,  Dora  132 

To  Francis,  with  a  basket  on  his  a,  Audley  Cohort  6 

Sleep,  Ellen,  folded  in  thy  sister's  a,  ,,        63 

sleeping,  haply  dream  her  a  is  mine.  „         64 

'Sleep,  Ellen,  folded  in  Emilia's  a  ;  ,,65 

in  my  weak,  lean  a's  I  lift  the  cross,  St.  S.  Slylites  118 

leg  and  a  with  love-knots  gay.  Talking  Oak  65 

She  sank  her  head  upon  her  a  ,,         207 

close  and  dark  my  a's  I  spread,  ,,         225 

I  wither  slowly  in  thine  a's,  Tithonus  6 

Roll'd  in  one  another's  a's,  Locksley  Hall  58 
Glows  forth  each  softly-shadow'd  a                      Day-Dm.  Sleep.  B.  13 

And  on  her  lover's  a  she  leant,  ,,         Depart.      1 

Mute  with  folded  a's  they  waited —  Tlie  Captain  39 

Her  a's  across  her  breast  she  laid  Beggar  Maid  1 

We  rush'd  into  each  other's  a's.  The  Letters  40 

laid  the  feeble  infant  in  his  a's ;  Enoch  Arden  152 

strong  a's  about  his  drooping  wife,  ,,           228 

babe,  who  rear'd  his  creasy  a's,  ,,           751 

he  rose,  he  spread  his  a's  abroad  ,,           912 
grovelike,  each  huge  a  a  tree,                                     Aylmer's  Field  510 

a's  stretch'd  as  to  grasp  a  flyer :  ,,           588 

sideways  up  he  swung  his  a's,  Sea  Di'eavis  24 

waved  my  a  to  warn  them  off  ;  ,,       132 

raised  your  a,  you  tumbled  down  ,,       141 

soft  a,  which,  like  the  pliant  bough  , ,       290 

roll  thy  tender  a's  Round  him,  Lucretius  82 

her  «  lifted,  eyes  on  fire —  Princess,  Pro.,  41 

long  a's  and  hands  Reach'd  out,  ,,       i    28 

lapt  In  the  a's  of  leisure,  ,,     w  168 

holding  out  her  lily  a's  Took  both  his  hands,  ,,          303 

Herself  and  Lady  Psyche  the  two  a's;  ,,    Hi    35 

then  Oaring  one  a,  and  bearing  in  my  left  ,,     iv  183 

drew  My  burthen  from  mine  a's ;  ,,          192 

A  Niobijan  daughter,  one  a  out,  ,,          371 

She  stretch'd  her  a's  and  call'd  ,,          496 

From  Arac's  a,  as  from  a  giant's  flail,  ,,       v  500 

Ida  stood  With  Psyche's  babe  in  a :  „     vi    31 

on  every  side  A  thousand  a'$  ,,            37 

glittering  axe  was  broken  in  their  a's,  „            51 

a'$  were  shattor'd  to  the  shoulder  blade.  ,,            52 

and  with  the  l>abe  yet  in  her  a's,  j,            74 

reach  its  fatling  innocent  a's  ,^          138 

in  your  own  «'«  To  hold  your  own,  ^^          177 

breast  that  fed  or  a  that  dandled  you,  181 


Arm  (b)  (continued)    from  mine  a's  she  rose  Glowing  Princess  vii  159 

and  Jenny  hung  on  his  a.  Grandmother  42 

he  turn'd  and  claspt  me  in  his  a's,  , ,           55 

So  dear  a  life  your  a's  enfold  The  Daisy  93 

She  cast  her  a's  about  the  child.  The  Victim  32 

He  stay'd  his  a's  upon  his  knee  :  ,,54 

And  moves  his  doubtful  a's,  and  feels  Jn  Mem.  xiii  3 

When  Science  reaches  forth  her  a's  „      xxi  18 

Laid  their  dark  a's  about  the  field,  (repeat)  In  Mevi.  xcv  16,  52 

They  mix  in  one  another's  a's  In  Mem.  cii  23 

That  watch'd  her  on  her  nurse's  a,  „    Con.   46 

To  find  the  a's  of  my  true  love  Maud  II  iv  3 

So  well  thine  a  hath  wrought  for  me  to-day."  Com.  of  Arthur  127 

«'s  Stretch'd  under  all  the  cornice  Gareth  and  L.  218 

with  a  kindly  hand  on  Gareth's  a  , ,           578 

bears  a  skeleton  figured  on  his  a's,  ,,           640 

lifted  either  a,  '  Fie  on  thee,  King  !  ,,            657 

His  a's,  the  rosy  raiment,  and  the  star.  ,,           938 

Sun  Heaved  up  a  ponderous  a  ,,         1045 

writhed  his  wiry  a's  Around  him,  ,,          1150 

Lifted  an  a.  and  softly  whisper'd,  ,,          1361 

a's  on  which  the  standing  muscle  sloped,  Man;  of  Gerainl  76 

'  0  noble  breast  and  all-puissant  a's,  ,,               86 

Not  to  be  folded  more  in  these  dear  a's,  ,,               99 

Claspt  the  gray  walls  with  hairy-fibred  a's,  ,,             323 

Down  by  the  length  of  lance  and  a  Gerainl  and  E.  463 

and  she  cast  her  a's  About  him,                      %  ,,              761 

His  a  half  rose  to  strike  again,  but  fell :  Balin  and  Balan  223 

If  a  of  flesh  could  lay  him.'  ,,              299 

either  lock'd  in  cither's  a.  ,,               632 

woven  paces  and  with  waving  a's.  Merlin  and  V,  207 

curved  an  a  about  his  neck,  ,,            241 

made  her  lithe  a  round  his  neck  Tighten,  ,,            614 

gentle  wizard  cast  a  shielding  a.  ,,            908 

rose.  Her  a's  upon  her  breast  across,  ,,             910 

sloping  down  to  make  A 's  for  his  chair,  Lancelot  and  E,  438 

battle-writhen  a's  and  mighty  hands  „              812 

innocently  extending  her  white  a's,  „               932 

armlet  for  the  roundest  a  on  earth,  „             1183 

an  a  to  which  the  Queen's  Is  haggard,  „             1226 

Caught  from  his  mother's  a's —  ,,            1405 

often  in  her  a's  She  bare  me,  ,,             1410 

milky  a  Red-rent  with  hooks  of  bramble,  Holy  Grail  210 

she  rose  Opening  her  a's  to  meet  me,  „          395 

Open'd  his  a's  to  embrace  me  as  he  came,  ,,          417 

every  moment  glanced  His  silver  a's  ,,          493 

Hold  her  a  wealthy  bride  within  thine  a's,  „          621 

in  her  white  a's  Received,  Last  Tournament  23 

Why  ye  not  wear  on  a,  or  neck,  or  zone  ,,              36 

Eight  a  of  Arthur  in  the  battlefield,  „             202 

wert  lying  in  thy  new  leman's  a's.'  ,,             625 

For  feel  this  a  of  mine —  ,,             690 

milkwhite  a's  and  shadowy  hair  Guinevere  416 

while  yet  Sir  Lancelot,  my  right  a  „          429 

Then  she  stretch'd  out  her  a's  and  cried  ,,         606 

an  a  Rose  up  from  out  the  bosom  Pass,  of  Arthur  197 

rose  an  a  Clothed  in  white  samite,  „             311 

behold  an  a.  Clothed  in  white  samite,  „             326 

with  pain,  reclining  on  his  a,  „             336 

on  one  a  The  flaxen  ringlets  of  our  infancies  Lover's  Tale  i  233 

Bent  o'er  me,  and  my  neck  his  a  upstay'd.  ,,  690 
Love's  a's  were  wreath'd  about  the  neck  of 

Hope,  „            815 

I  wound  my  a's  About  her :  ,,        H  200 

softly  put  his  a  about  her  neck  ,,        iv    71 

Holding  his  golden  burthen  in  his  a's,  ,,              89 

To  greet  us,  her  young  hero  in  her  a's  !  ,,            171 

bearing  high  in  a's  the  mightly  babe,  „            295 

bearing  on  one  a  the  noble  babe,  „  370 
sisters  closed  in  another's  a's,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  155 
'  Emmie,  you  put  out  your  a's.                             In  the  Child.  IIosp.  56 

It's  the  little  girl  with  her  a's  lying  out  ,,                  58 

little  a's  lying  out  on  the  counterpane  ;  „                   70 

I  spread  mine  a's,  God's  work,  I  said,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  136 

As  I  lean'd  away  from  his  a's—  The  Wreck  102 


Arm 

Arm  (s)  {conlimicd)    '  Woman  '—he  graspt  at  my 
Ah,  clasp  me  in  your  a's,  sister, 

0  would  I  were  in  Edwin's  a's — 

1  feel'd  thy  a  es  I  stood 
Amy's  a's  about  my  neck — 
'  Mother  ! '  and  I  was  folded  in  thine  a's. 
hero,  my  child,  tho'  folded  in  thine  a's, 
And  dying  rose,  and  rear'd  her  a's, 
happy  had  I  died  within  thine  a's, 
and  Kome  was  a  babe  in  as, 
'  0  what  an  a,'  said  the  king. 

Arm  (verb)    to  a  in  proof,  and  guard  about 
Morning-star,  approach,  A  me,' 
'  Approach  and  a  me  ! ' 
Arm-chair    Her  father  left  his  good  a-c, 
small  goodraan  Shrinks  in  his  a-c 
When  asleep  in  this  a-c '( 
So  I  sits  i'  my  oiin  a-c 
Arm'd    (.*^  also  All-arm'd,  Full-arm'd,  Plump 
one  that  a  Her  own  fair  head, 
Sleep  must  lie  down  n,  for  tho  villainous 
fair,  strong,  a— But  to  be  won  by  force — 
who  alway  rideth  a  in  black. 
These  a  him  in  blue  arms,  and  gave 
damsel  came.  And  a  him  in  old  axms, 
wholly  a,  behind  a  rock  In  shadow, 
horsemen  waiting,  wholly  a. 
And  each  of  them  is  wholly  a, 
issuing  a  ho  found  the  host  and  cried, 
ho  a  himself  and  went, 
There  two  stood  a,  and  kept  the  door ; 
and  we  ride,  A  as  ye  see, 
•     knights  ^4  for  a  day  of  glory  before  the  King. 

a  by  day  and  night  Against  the  Turk  ; 
Armlet    a  for  the  roundest  arm  on  earth, 

n  for  an  arm  to  which  the  Queen's 
Armour    And  as  he  rode  his  a  rung. 
This  mortal  a  that  I  wear. 
His  own  forefathers'  arms  and  «  hung. 
Your  very  a  hallow'd,  and  your  statues 
When  rt  clash'd  or  jingled, 
he  had  ask'd  For  horse  and  a  : 
so  ye  cleave  His  a  off  him, 
hew'd  great  pieces  of  his  a  off  him, 
youth  who  scour'd  His  master's  a  ; 
slay  him  and  will  have  his  horse  And  a, 
and  possess  your  horse  And  a, 
three  gay  suits  of  a  which  they  wore, 
bound  the  suits  Of  a  on  their  horses. 
Their  three  gay  suits  of  a,  each  from  each, 
heap'd  The  pieces  of  his  a  in  one  place, 
glimmer'd  on  his  a  in  the  room. 
'  Take  Five  horsea  and  their  a's  ; ' 
palfrey  heart  enough  To  bear  his  a  ? 
Bled  underneath  his  a  secretly, 
A  light  of  a  by  him  flash, 
moved  Among  us  in  white  «,  Galahad, 
one  that  on  me  moved  In  golden  a 
horse  In  golden  a  jewell'd  everywhere : 
In  silver  a  suddenly  Galahad  shone 
In  silver-shining  a  starry -clear  ; 
Wherefore  now  thy  horse  And  a : 
Behold  hia  horse  and  a. 
he  that  hath  His  horse  and  a  : 
In  blood-red  a  sallying. 
And  all  her  golden  a  on  the  grass, 
Armour'd    And  a  all  in  forest  green. 
Armourer    riding  further  past  an  a's,  Who, 

Whereat  the  a  turning  all  amazed 
Armoury    from  Jehovah's  gorgeous  armouries, 
Arms  (weapons)    a,  orpmcer  of  brain,  or  birth 
Thase  men  thine  a  withstood, 
one  might  show  it  at  a  joust  of  a, 
broke  a  close  with  force  and  a : 
Uia  own  forefathers'  a  and  armour  hung. 


15 


Aromat 


a—  The  Wreck  120 

Tlie  Flight  5 

„       45 

Spinsters  S's.  '2b 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  13 

Detiieter  ami  I'.  22 

40 

The  Ring  222 

Death  of  (Enone  31 

The  Daxon  9 

Tlie  Tourney  12 

Svpp.  Confessions  65 

O'areth  and  L.  925 

1112 

Talking  Oak  103 

Princess  v  454 

Maud  J  vii  4 

S2)inslers  Ss.  9 

•armed) 

I'rincess,  Pro,,  32 

Maud  I  i  41 

Gareth  and  L.  104 

636 

931 

1115 

Oerainl  and  E.  57 

121 

143 

,,  407 

Balin  and  Balan  22 

Lancelot  and  E.  1247 

Pelleas  and  E.  65 

Last  Tonmavient  55 

Montenegro  3 

Lancelot  and  E.  1183 

L.  of  Shalott  III  17 

Sir  Galahad  70 

Princess,  Pro.,  24 

V  413 

„      vi  363 

Gareth  and  L.  474 

1095 

.'       .   llf^ 

Marr.  of  Geraint  258 

Geraint  and  E.  63 

75 

97 

374 

386 

409 

490 

502 

Balin  and  Balan  326 

Udv  Grail  135 

.,        410 

;,        412 

„        458 

„        511 

Pelleas  aiul  E.  355 

373 

;;     378 

Last  Tournament  443 

Tiresias  45 

Last  Tournament  170 

Marr.  of  Geraint  266 

Milton  b 

To  tlie  Queen  3 

England  and  Amer.  7 

M.  d' Arthur  102 

Edioin  Morris  131 

Princess,  Pro.,  24 


Arms  (weapons)  {contimicd)    clash'd  in  a,  By  glimmering 

1 /vi 


lanes 
piled  a  and  rough  accoutrements, 
horses  yell'd  ;  they  clash'd  their  a  ; 
two  armies  and  the  noise  Of  a  ; 
none  to  trust  Since  our  a  fail'd — 
supple,  sinew-corded,  apt  at  a ; 
whose  a  Champion'd  our  cause  and  won  it 
Roll  of  cannon  and  clash  of  a, 
Arthur  yet  had  done  no  deed  of  a, 
many  of  these  in  richer  a  than  he, 
Closed  in  her  castle  from  the  sound  of  a, 
his  a  Clash'd  ;  and  the  sound  was  good 
A  for  her  son,  and  loosed  him  from  his  vow. 
Gareth  ere  he  parted  Hash'd  in  a. 
Mounted  in  a,  threw  up  their  caps 
'  Bound  upon  a  quest  With  horse  and  a — 
few  goodlier  than  he)  Shining  in  a. 
These  arm'd  him  in  blue  a, 
strength  of  anger  thro'  mine  a, 
and  take  his  horse  And  a, 
Hath  overthrown  thy  brother,  and  hath  his  a 
damsel  came,  And  arm'd  him  in  old  a, 
His  a  are  old,  he  trusts  the  harden'd  skin — 
on  a  nightblack  horse,  in  nightblack  a, 
a  On  loan,  or  else  for  pledge  ; 
a,  rt,  a  to  fight  my  enemy '( 
A  ?  truth  !  I  know  not : 
thought  to  find  A  in  your  town, 
if  ye  know  Where  I  can  light  on  a, 
heard  me  praise  Your  feats  of  a, 
true  heart,'  replied  Geraint,  'but  a, 
'  .1 ,  indeed,  but  old  And  rusty. 
Who  being  apt  at  a  and  big  of  bone 
Yniol's  rusted  a  Were  on  his  princely  person, 
will  not  light  my  way  with  gilded  a, 
Three  horses  and  three  goodly  suits  of  a. 
Two  sets  of  three  laden  with  jingling  a, 
take  A  horse  and  a  for  guerdon  ; 
one  with  a  to  guard  his  head  and  yours, 
paid  with  horses  and  with  a  ; 
loosed  the  fastenings  of  his  a, 
grow  In  use  of  a  and  manhood, 
while  she  watch'd  their  a  far-off  Sparkle, 
earth  shake,  and  a  low  thunder  of  a. 
glittering  in  enamell'd  a  the  maid 
From  noiseful  a,  and  acts  of  prowess 
a  Hack'd,  and  their  foreheads  grimed 
Lend  me  thine  horse  and  a, 
Pelleas  lent  his  horse  and  all  his  a, 
one  might  show  it  at  a  joust  of  a, 
Grold,  jewels,  a,  whatever  it  may  be. 
and  shoutings  and  soundings  to  a, 
The  warrior  hath  forgot  his  a,  ^ 
alarms  Sounding  '  To  a  !  to  a  ! ' 
clatter  of  a,  and  voices,  and  men  passmg 
Arms  (ensigns  armorial)    His  a  were  carven  only  ; 
V)ut  if  twain  His  a  were  blazon'd  also  ; 
then  was  painting  on  it  fancied  «, 
guess'd  a  hidden  meaning  in  his  a, 
quartering  your  own  royal  a  of  Spain, 
Arm's-length    Paris  held  the  costly  fruit  Out  at  a-l, 
Army    crying  there  was  an  a  in  the  land, 
compassed  by  two  armies  and  the  noise 
Charging  an  a,  while  All  the  world 
To  preach  our  poor  little  a  down, 
councils  thinn'd.  And  armies  waned. 
Earls  of  the  a  of  Anlaf  Fell 
nor  had  Anlaf  With  armies  so  broken 
Her  dauntless  a  scatter'd,  and  so  small, 
glorious  annals  of  a  and  fleet, 
Amo     unfamiliar  A,  and  the  dome 
Amon    from  Aroer  On  A  unto  Minneth. ' 
Aroer    from  yl  On  Amon  unto  Minneth.' 
Aromat    from  the  blessed  land  of  A  — 


Princess,  Pro.,  v  5 

55    ' 

250 

„  346 

427 

„  535 

,,        vi  61 

Ode  on  Well.  116 

Com,  of  Arthur  46 

52 

Gareth  and  L.  163 

311 

530 

689 

„  697 

/45 
931 

956 

„        1037 

,,       1115 

1139 

1381 

Marr.  of  Geraint  219 

282 

289 

418 

422 

435 

474 

477 

489 

543 

Geraint  and  E.  21 

124 

188 

218 

486 

511 

Lancelot  and  E.  64 

395 

460 

619 

Holy  Grail  1 

„      264 

Pelleas  and  E.  345 

J'ass.  of  Arthur  2/0 

Lover's  Tale  iv  235 

Def.  of  Lucknow  76 

Ancient  Sage  138 

Prog,  of  Spring  104 

Bandit's  Death  24 

Gareth  and  L.  412 

Merlin  and  V.  474 

Lancelot  and  E.  17 

Columbus  115 

Ginone  136 

Princess  iv  484 

,,      V  345 

Light  Brigade  30 

Maud  I X  38 

Merlin  and  V.  573 

Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  53 

82 

Tlie  Fleet  11 

VaMness  7 

The  Brook  189 

D.  of  F.  Women  239 

238 

JIolj/  Grail  48 


Arose 


16 


Arthur 


Arose    n,  and  I  releas'd  The  casement, 

a  wind  a,  And  overhead  the  wandering  ivy 
The  rain  had  fallen,  the  Poet  a, 
and  a  Eager  to  bring  them  down, 
not  to  die  a  listener,  I  a, 
a  the  labourers'  homes, 
footstool  from  before  him,  and  a  ; 
wind  a  and  rush'd  upon  the  South, 
a  Once  more  thro'  all  her  height, 
That  afternoon  a  sound  a  of  hoof  And  chariot, 
Star  after  star,  a  and  fell ; 
on  one  side  a  The  women  up  in  wild  revolt. 
Then  thorpe  and  byre  a  in  tire, 
Thro'  four  sweet  years  a  and  fell, 
Since  our  first  Sun  a  and  set. 
Till  at  the  last  a  the  man ; 
till  I  could  bear  it  no  more,  But  a, 
Nor  ever  a  from  below, 
on  the  further  side  A  a  silk  pavilion, 
a,  and  raised  Her  mother  too, 
in  their  halls  a  The  cry  of  children, 
damsel  l)idden  a  And  stood  with  folded  hands 
with  smiling  face  a, 
and  all  the  knights  a,  And  staring 
King  a  and  went  To  smoke  the 
words  of  Arthur  flying  shriek'd,  a, 
She  clear 'd  her  sight,  she  a, 
call'd  rt,  and,  slowly  plunging  down 
from  the  ruin  a  The  shriek  and  curse 
Aroused    So  sleeping,  so  a  from  sleep 
A  the  black  republic  on  his  elms, 
a  Lancelot,  who  rushing  outward 
Arran^^e    Dispute  the  claims,  a  the  chances  ; 

^1  the  board  and  brim  the  glass  ; 
Arranged    «  Her  garden,  sow'd  her  name 
men  and  maids  A  a  country  dance, 
A  the  favour,  and  assumed  the  Prince. 
Arras  (adj.)    In  Arthur's  a  hall  at  Camelot : 
Arras  (s)    hung  with  a  green  and  blue, 
Array  (s)    Singing  of  men  that  in  battle  a, 
Array'd    with  her  own  white  hands  A 
took  them,  and  a  herself  therein, 
took  it,  and  a  herself  therein, 
there  the  Queen  a  me  like  the  sun : 
Arraying    morn  by  morn,  a  her  sweet  self 
Arrival    will  harangue  The  fresh  a's  of  the  week 
Arrive    A  at  last  the  blessed  goal, 
Arrived    A  and  found  the  sun  of  sweet  content 

a,  by  Dubric  the  high  saint. 
Arriving    A  all  confused  among  the  rest 

^  at  a  time  of  golden  rest. 
Arrogance    They  said  with  such  heretical  a 
Arrow    viewless  a's  of  his  thoughts  were  headed 
The  bitter  a  went  aside. 
The  false,  false  a  went  aside. 
The  damned  a  glanced  aside. 
Within  thy  heart  my  a  lies, 
Hhoot  into  the  dark  A'g  of  lightnings. 
A  random  a  from  the  brain, 
look'd  a  flight  of  fairj*  a's  aim'd 
Fly  twanging  headless  a's  at  the  hearts, 
When  one  would  aim  an  a  fair. 
Or  into  silver  a's  break  The  sailing 
Before  an  ever-fancied  a,  made 
rt  whizz'd  to  the  right,  one  to  the  left, 
lest  an  a  from  the  bush  Should  leave  me 
jingle  of  bit«.  Shouts,  a'«, 
Struck  by  a  poison'd  a  in  the  fight. 
Arrowing    «  light  from  clime  to  clime, 
Arrowlet    V)lows  a  globe  of  after  a's, 
Arrow-seed    like  the  a-x's  of  the  field  flower. 
Arrow-slain    With  loss  of  half  his  people  a-s ; 
Arrow- wounded    your  a-w  fawn  Came  flying 
Arsenic    A ,  « ,  sure,  would  do  it. 
Art    discovery  And  newness  of  thine  a  hu  pleased 


Tioo  Voices  403 

(Enonem 

Poet's  Song  1 

Enoch  Arden  871 

The  Brook  163 

Ay  Inter' s  Field  147 

327 

Princess  i  97 

,,  vi  159 

"      -Kl 
,,   mi  50 

122 

Tlve  'victim  3 

In  Mem.,  xodi  3 

,,        xxiv  8 

„    cocoiii  12 

Maud  I  Hi  10 

„   nam 

Oareth  and  L.  910 

Marr.  of  Geraint  535 

Geraint  and  E.  964 

Merlin  and  V.  68 

Lancelot  and  E.  552 

Holy  Grail  192 

„         213 

Last  Tournament  139 

Dead  Prophet  31 

St.  Telemachus  28 

Akbar's  Dream  189 

DoAj-Dm.,  L Envoi  21 

Aylmer's  Field  529 

Guinevere  106 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  31 

In  Mem.,  cvii  16 

Aylmer's  Field  87 

Princess,  Pro.,  84 

„        iv  602 

Merlin  and  V.  250 

Palace  o/ArtQl 

Maud  I  v8 

Marr.  of  Geraint  17 

139 

849 

Geraint  and  E.  701 

Lancelot  and  E.  906 

Pri'iicess  ii  96 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  41 

Tlie  Brook  168 

Com.  of  Arthur  453 

Princess  iv  224 

Merlin  and  V.  142 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  15 

TJie  Poet  11 

Oriana  37 

„      39 

„      41 

„      80 

To  J.  M.  K.  14 

Two  Voices  345 

Aylnwr's  Field  94 

Princess  ii  402 

In  Mem,  Ixxxvii  25 

,,  ci  15 

Geraint  and  E.  531 

Balin  and  Balan  419 

LaM  Tournament  535 

Tiresias  94 

Death  of  (Enone  26 

Akbar's  D,  H^jmn  5 

Gareth  and  L.  1029 

The  Poet  19 

Merlin  atid  V.  565 

Princess  ii  270 

Maud  II V  62 

Ode  to  Memory  88 


Art  {continued)    knowledge  of  his  a  Held  me 
words,  tho'  cuU'd  with  choicest  a, 
I  and  he.  Brothers  in  A  ; 
'  will  you  climb  the  top  of  ^ . 
liberal  applications  lie  In  A  like  Nature, 
Her  a,  her  hand,  her  counsel 
Hetairai,  curious  in  their  a. 
At  wine,  in  clubs,  of  a,  of  politics  ; 
in  a's  of  government  Elizabeth  and  others ;  ah  of 
war  The  peasant  Joan  and  others ;  a's  of  grace 
Sappho  and  others 
with  inmost  terms  Of  a  and  science : 
Two  great  statues,  A  And  Science, 
Science,  A,  and  Labour  have  outpour'd 

shapes  and  hues  of  A  divine  ! 
piece  of  inmost  Horticultural  a, 

And  owning  but  a  little  a 

From  a,  from  nature,  from  the  schools, 

on  mind  and  a,  And  labour, 

The  graceful  tact,  the  Christian  a ; 

That  all,  as  in  some  piece  of  a, 

letters,  dear  to  Science,  dear  to  A, 

served  King  Uther  thro'  his  magic  a ; 

Knowing  all  a's,  had  touch 'd, 

knew  the  range  of  all  their  a's, 

since  ye  seem  the  Master  of  all  A, 

Or  A  with  poisonous  honey  stol'n  from  France, 

Heirlooms,  and  ancient  miracles  of  A, 

Kepell'd  by  the  magnet  of  A 

with  the  living  hues  of  A. 

A  and  Grace  are  less  and  less : 

And  here  the  Singer  for  his  A 

You  see  your  A  still  shrined  in 

a  nation  purer  through  their  a. 

the  fault  is  less  In  me  than  A. 

A  !  Why  should  I  so  disrelish 

seem'd  my  lodestar  in  the  Heaven  of  A, 

Of  ancient  A  in  Paris,  or  in  Rome. 

This  A ,  that  harlot-like 

I  replied  'Nay,  Lord,  for  A,' 
'Art  (heart)    as  'appy  as  'a  could  think, 
Artemisia  (Carian)    See  Carian  Artemisia 
Arthur  (Epic  poem)     'he  burnt  His  epic,  his  King  A, 
Arthur  (King)    Until  King  A's  table,  man  by  man, 

fallen  in  Lyonnesse  about  their  Lord,  King  A  : 

spake  King  A  to  Sir  Bedivere :  (repeat) 

replied  King  A,  faint  and  pale  : 

'King  ^'s  sword,  Excalibur, 

spoke  King  A,  breathing  heavily : 

replied  King  A,  much  in  wrath : 

Then  spoke  King  A,  drawing  thicker  breath : 

answer  made  King  A,  breathing  hard : 

as  he  walk'd,  King  A  panted  hard, 

murmur'd  A,  '  Place  me  in  the  barge,' 

like  that  A  who,  with  lance  in  rest, 

my  Lord  A,  whither  shall  I  go  ? 

slowly  answer'd  A  from  the  barge : 

sail  with  A  under  looming  shores. 

King  A,  like  a  modern  gentleman 

cried  '  A  is  come  again  :  he  cannot  die.' 

For  many  a  petty  king  ere  A  came 

man  was  less  and  less,  till  A  came. 

after  these  King  A  for  a  space, 

for  he  heard  of  A  newly  crown'd, 

A  yet  had  done  no  deed  of  arms, 

A,  looking  downward  as  he  past, 

A,  passing  thence  to  battle, 

W  hen  A  reach'd  a  field-of- battle 

till  A  by  main  might,  And  mightier 

A  call'd  to  stay  the  brands 

in  the  heart  of  A  joy  was  lord. 

A  said,  '  Man's  word  is  God  in  man : 

'  Knowest  thou  aught  of  A's  birth  ? ' 

learn  the  secret  of  our  A's  birth ? ' 

By  this  King  yl  as  by  thee  to-day, 


D.  of  F.  Women  9 

„         285 

Gardener's  D.  4 

„         169 

Day-Dm.  Moral  14 

Aylmei-'s  Field  151 

Lucretius  52 

Princess,  Pro.,  161 


, ,         ii  161 

447 

„         iv  200 

Ode  Inter,  Exhib.  5 

„  22 

Ilendecasyllabics  20 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  14 

„  xlix  1 

„       Ixxxmi  22 

„  ex  16 

„       cxxviii  23 

Ded.  of  Idylls  ^0 

Com,  of  Arthur  152 

Gareth  and  L.  307 

Merlin  and  V.  167 

468 

To  tlie  Queen  ii  56 

Lover's  Tale  iv  192 

The  Wreck  22 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  140 

245 

Epilogue  79 

Poets  and  tlieir  B.  11 

To  W,  C.  Macready  8 

Romney's  R.  9 

10 

39 

87 

115 

131 

North.  Cobbler  15 


The  Epic  28 

M,  d' Arthur  3 

5 

„    13,  66 

72 

103 

„        113 

„        118 

148 

162 

„        176 

204 

222 

227 

„        239 

„  Ep.  17 

22 

24 

Com.  of  Arthur  5 

12 

16 

41 

46 

„  55 

5,  75 

96 

109 

120 

124 

„  133 

147 

159 

162 


Arthur 


17 


Arthur  (King)  {continued)    A  bom  of  Gorlois,  Others 
of  Anton  ?  ,r  ^     .  7  ■ 

Hold  ye  this  A  for  King  U  ther  s  son  < 
Knighted  by  A  at  his  crowning, 
like  a  loyal  sister  cleaved  To  ^1,— 
before  his  time  Was  A  born, 
Brought  A  forth,  and  set  him  in  the  hall, 
clamour'd  for  a  king,  Had  .4  crown'd  ; 
.1  were  the  child  of  shamefulness. 
Ye  come  from  A's  court, 
and  A  sat  Crown'd  on  the  dais, 
from  the  casement  over  A,  smote  Flame-coloui', 
friends  Of  A,  gazing  on  him, 
A  row'd  across  and  took  it — 
sad  was  A'a  face  Taking  it, 
therefore  yl's sister?"  ask'd  the  King, 
when  did  A  chance  upon  thee  first  ? ' 
Back  to  the  court  of  A  answering  yea. 
.1  charged  his  warrior  whom  he  loved 
A  said,  '  Behold,  thy  doom  is  mine. 
A's  knighthood  sang  before  the  King  :— 
Rome  or  Heathen  rule  in  A's  realm '? 
A  spake,  '  Behold,  for  these  have  sworn 
and  A  strove  with  Rome. 
A  and  his  knighthood  for  a  space 
knight  of  A,  working  out  his  will, 
A  gave  him  back  his  territory, 
both  thy  brethren  are  in  ^'s  hall, 
thou  shalt  go  disguised  to  A's  hall, 
A's  wars  in  weird  devices  done, 
three  Queens,  the  friends  Of  A, 
Merlin's  hand,  the  Mage  at  A's  court, 

everywhere  At  .4's  ordinance, 

heard  A  voice,  the  voice  of  A, 

Said  A,  '  Whether  would  ye? 

A,  '  Have  thy  pleasant  field  again, 

^,  'We  sit  King,  to  help  the  wrong'd 

heard  that  A  of  his  grace  Had  made 

,4  cried  To  rend  the  cloth,  (repeat) 

this  was  .4  's  custom  in  his  hall ; 

^4  mightiest  on  the  battle-field — 

'Comfort  thyself,'  said  A, 

A  mindful  of  Sir  Gareth  ask'd, 

and  A  glancing  at  him.  Brought 

without  the  door  King  A's  gift,    ^ 

most  ungentle  knight  in  As  hall. 

A's  men  are  set  along  the  wood  ; 

a  stalwart  Baron,  ^'s  friend.  ^ 

'  I  well  believe  You  be  of  A's  Table, 

being  A's  kitchen-knave  !— 

this  mom  I  stood  in  A's  hall, 

^4  all  at  once  gone  mad  replies,  ,   ,    „ , 

champion  thou  hast  brought  from  .1  s  haU  f 

And  quickly  pass  to  .4 's  hall, 

'  Here  is  a  kitchen-knave  from  A  s  hall 

'  No  star  of  thine,  but  shot  from  A's  heaven 

meek  withal  As  any  of  A's  best. 


Com.  of  Aiihur  170 
„  172 

175 
192 
212 
229 
236 
239 
249 
257 
274 
278 
298 
305 
317 
338 
446 
447 
467 
481 
485 
507 
514 
;;  515 

Oat-eth  and  L.  24 
78 
82 
152 
225 
230 
306 
308 
318 
340 

371 
393 
„  400,  417 
410 
496 
601 
624 
652 
.  677 

757 
788 
818 
836 
838 
855 
863 
916 
984 
,  1036 
1100 
1169 

knight  of  ,4,  here  lie  thrown  by  whom  I  know  not,  „         i|^^ 

on  the  day  when  A  knighted  him."  "         1254 

tmth  if  not  in  A's  hall.  In  A's  presence  ?  o         J^^^ 

yl 's  harp  tho' summer- wan,         ,  ^  „ ,,  "         1417 

challenge  the  chief  knight  Of  ^  s  haU  ?  nfr^.„M  1 

Geraint  a  knight  of  A 's  court,  Marr.  of  (^maivt^ 

Weeping  for  some  gay  knight  in  .1  s  hall.  >»               g 

For  .4  on  the  Whitsuntide  before  »>           ^^„ 

Cavall,  King  A's  hound  of  deepest  mouth,  »           ^^^ 

That  eat  in  ^ 'shall  at  Camelot.  »»          ggg 

Shalt  ride  to  yl'«  court,  '»           ggj 

rising  up,  he  rode  to  A's  court,  r<^„A^i  ««/?  w  77^ 

A  knight  of  yl's  court,  who  laid  Geraxntand  E.ll^ 

made  a  knight  of  J 's  Table  Round,              ^  ..           '^" 

will  not  go  To  yl ,  then  will  A  come  to  you,  »           "^ 

yl  laugh'd  upon  him.     'Oldfnend,  » 


Arthur 

^^'^^^l  {-n^.""'^^)    «Pi"<^  °^  b-  y°«^^  '^'^""''Lm  and  Balan  22 

On  A  s  nearv  >                   ,        . .  v\ 

« Fair  Sirs,"  said  A,  '  wherefore  sit  >»            ^J 

we  be  mightier  men  than  all  In  A's  court ;  >»            ^* 

«I  too,'  said  ^4,  'am  of  A's  hall,  »               ' 

A  lightly  smote  the  brethren  down,  »             .„ 

.4  seeing  ask'd  '  Tell  me  your  names ;  "73 

Said  A  '  Thou  hast  ever  spoken  truth  ;  "89 

yl'shost  Proclaim' d  him  Victor,  »>           ^„. 

Then  ^,  'Let  who  goes  before  me,  "           .,„ 

learn  what  .4  meant  by  courtesy,  »>           j„g 

^,  when  Sir  Balin  sought  him,  »           236 

all  the  kindly  warmth  of  A  'a  hall  » >           „,, 

(for  J 's  knights  Were  hated  strangers  >.           ^^^ 

<;i(wf  romp's  hall,  and  yet  So  simple!  .»           |^j^ 

ve  men  of  A  be  but  babes."  "           oon 

io  thy  guest.  Me,  me  of  ^"s  -Table.  »           g^ 

some  high  lord-pnnce  of  ^  s  nail,  >»           .-q 

if  from  A's  haU,  To  help  the  weak.  »           |' 
A  the  blameless,  pure  as  any  maid,                                \r.^ii" „r,d  V  7 
The  slights  of  A  and  bis  Table,                                      ^erhn  and  K.^7 

foUow'd,  Sir,  In  A's  household  V—  "28 

A  bound  them  not  to  singleness  '»          ^g 

'  This  ^  pure!                       ,     ,,     j  "          53 

If  I  were  A,  I  would  have  thy  blood.  "          ^o 

Perchance,  one  curl  of  A's  golden  beard.  »          ^^ 

A   him  Ye  scarce  can  overpraise,  '»        ,  .q 

^'in  the  highest  Leaveu'd  the  world,  »        .  ^ 

While  all  the  heathen  lay  at  A's  feet,  »        ^^^ 

wily  Vivien  stole  from  A'a  court.  >'        jgg 

J  walking  all  alone,  Vext  "        197 

leaving  A's  court  he  gain'd  the  beach  ;  "250 

In  A's  arras  hall  at  Camelot :  "        297 

I  rose  and  fled  from  A's  court  "        -03 

many-corridor'd  complexities  Of  ^s  palace:  ..        '^^ 

the  royal  rose  In  ^'s  casement  "  --g 
A,  blameless  King  and  stainless  man  ?  r^^rAot  and  E  32 
jousts.  Which  A  had  ordain'd,                                    LaruxLot  awl  lu.  0| 

A.  long  before  they  crown'd  him  King,  >>            ^ 

A  came,  and  labouring  up  the  pass,  )>            ^^ 

yl,  holding  then  his  court  Hard  "          ^^^ 

Has  J.  spoken  aught  ?       ,       ^,.  "          121 

'^,  my  lord.  A,  the  faultless  King,  >»          ^gg 

I  am  yours.  Not  A's,  as  ye  know,  '»          ^g^ 

After  the  King,  who  eat  in  A's  halls.  »          ^gg 

•  Known  am  I,  and  of  .4 "shaU,  and  known,  ..          |- 

till  our  good  A  broke  The  Pagan  "          285 

you  know  Of  A's  glorious  wars."  "          237 

having  been  With  A  in  the  fight  "          ^^2 

where  he  sat  At  yl's  right,  with  smiling  face  arose,  „          ^^ 

A  to  the  banquet,  dark  in  mood,  "          ggg 

'  Our  true  A ,  when  he  learns,  "          gQj 

A's  wars  were  render'd  mystically,  "        ^^^g 

of  A's  palace  toward  the  stream,  '»         -j^221 

In  which  as  A's  Queen  I  move  and  rule :  >'        ^253 

For  some  do  hold  our  A  cannot  die,  >>        ^2^4 

So  A  bad  the  meek  Sir  Percivale  "        ^270 

But  A  spied  the  letter  in  her  hand,  "        ^290 

•  My  lord  liege  A,  and  all  ye  that  hear,  »        ^^26 

yl  answer'd,  '  0  my  knight,  "        jggj 

A  leading,  slowly  went  The  marshali  d  >.        ^^^g 

Then  A  spake  among  them,  '  Let  her  tomb  »  g^ 
yl,  who  beheld  his  cloudy  brows,  ^^  ^  .,  .,  ,  „„  .  ,  "  1410 
Alas  for  A's  greatest  knight,  a  man  Not  after  A  s  heart !      ,,        141 

A  and  his  knighthood  call'd  The  Pure,  Soly  UraU^^ 

one  of  those  who  eat  in  A's  hall ;  "        7< 

Sin  against  A  and  the  Table  Round,  >»        „; 

when  King  A  made  His  Table  Round,  .«      ^^J 

not  A's  use  To  hunt  by  moonlight ;  »>      .3. 

Said  .4,  when  he  dubb'd  him  knight;  "      20' 

Did  yl  take  the  vow  ? "  "22' 

For  dear  to  A  was  that  hall  of  ours,  "      221 

Which  Merlin  built  for  yllong  ago  !  »'      23' 

statue  in  the  mould  Of  A,  made  by  Merlin,  ..      ^4, 

twelve  great  windows  blazon  A  s  wars,  »» 


Arthur 


18 


A-singein' 


ArUmr  (King)  (coniimicd)    A  finds  the  brand  Excalibur.   llohj  Grail  253 

'  Lo  now,"  said  A,  '  have  ye  seen  a  cloud  ?  „  286 
voice  Shrilling  along  the  hall  to  A,  call'd,  'But  I, 

Sir  yl,  saw  ,,  289 

the  great  table  of  our  A  closed  ,,  329 

Had  Camelot  seen  the  like,  since  A  came ;  ,,  332 

A's  wars  are  render'd  mystically,  „  359 

the  gate  of  . I "s  wars."  „  539 

I  remember'd  yl 's  warning  word,  ,,  598 

thou  shalt  be  as  A  in  our  land.'  ,,  606 

foUow'd — almost  yl 's  words —  ,,  669 

sevenclear  stars  of  yl's  Table  Round —  ,,  684 

Or  was  there  sooth  in  vl 's  prophecy,  „  709 

there  sat  .1  on  the  dais-throne,  ,,  721 

and  A  turn'd  to  whom  at  first  He  saw  not,  „  751 

A  kept  his  best  until  the  last ;  ,,  763 
KiHG  A  made  new  knights  to  fill                                   Pelleas  and  E.  1 

and  A  made  him  knight.  >,  16 

I  will  be  thine  A  when  we  meet.'  ,,  47 

.-1  made  vast  banquets,  and  strange  knights  ,,  147 

For  A,  loving  his  young  knight,  ,,  159 

A  had  the  jousts  Down  in  the  flat  field  ,,  163 

our  A  made  Knight  of  his  table  ;  ,,  319 

*  Gawain  am  I,  Gawain  of  A's  court,  „  371 
he,  Gasping,  '  Of  ^'s  hall  am  I,  ,,  514 
Had  made  mock-knight  of  A's  Table  Round,  Last  Tournament  2 
For  A  and  Sir  Lancelot  riding  once  ,,  10 
brought  A  maiden  babe  ;  which  A  pitying  took,  ,,  21 
So  she,  delivering  it  to  vl,  said,  ,,  30 
A  tum'd  to  Kay  the  seneschal,  ,,  89 
A  rose  and  Lancelot  follow'd  him,  ,,  112 
words  of  A  flying  shriek 'd,  arose,  ,,  139 
Right  arm  of  A  in  the  battlefield,  ,,  202 
D^onet,  skipping,  '  A,  the  King's;  ,,  262 
so  thou  breakest  J's  music  too.'  ,,  266 
thank  the  Lord  I  am  King  yl 's  fool.  ,,  320 
call  the  harp  of  A  up  in  heaven  ? '  , ,  333 
With  A 's  vows  on  the  great  lake  of  fire.  ,,  345 
1,  and  A  and  the  angels  hear,  ,,  350 
^i  with  a  hundred  spears  Rode  far,  ,,  420 

•  Lo  there,"  said  one  of  yl's  youth,  ,,  429 
But  .1  waved  them  back.  ,,  437 
He  ended :  A  knew  the  voice ;  ,,  455 
yl  deign 'd  not  use  of  word  or  sword,  ,,  458 
in  the  heart  of  A  pain  was  lord.  ,,  486 
other  was  the  Tristram,  y! 's  knight !  ,,  634 
Had  A  right  to  bind  them  to  himself  ?  ,,  684 
A  make  me  pure  As  any  maiden  child  ?  ,,  692 
That  night  came  A  home,  and  while  ,,  755 
disruption  in  the  Table  Round  Of  A,  Guinevere  18 
knight  of  A 's  noblest  dealt  in  scorn  ;  ,,40 
Which  good  KinK  A  founded,  years  ago,  ,,  221 
the  bard  Sang  A  s  glorious  wars,  ,,  286 
And  that  was  A  ;  and  they  foster'd  him  ,,  295 
to  lead  her  to  his  lord  A,  ,,  384 
silk  pavilions  of  King  yf  raised  ,,  394 
think  How  sad  it  were  for  A,  should  he  live,  ,,  496 
'  Oh  yl  1 '  there  her  voice  brake  suddenly,  ,,  607 
There  came  on  A  sleeping,  Pass,  of  Arthur  30 
yl  woke  and  call'd,  '  Who  spake  ?  ,,  45 
Then  spake  King  A  to  Sir  Bedivero : 

(repeat)  Pcm.  of  Arthur  65,  136,  181,  234 

ever  yot  had  A  fought  a  fight  Like  this  I'ass,  of  A  rthur  93 

and  ev'n  on  yl  fell  Confusion,  ,,  98 

while  A  at  one  blow,  Striking  ,,  167 

Until  King  yl's  Table,  man  by  man,  ,,  172 

fall'n  in  Lyonnesse  about  their  lord,  King  A.  ,,  174 

replied  King  A,  faint  and  palo :  ,,  240 

'  King  yl  '*  sword,  ExcaliVmr,  „  271 

Jtpoko  King  yl,  breathing  heavily:  ,,  281 

replied  King  yl,  much  in  wrath :  ,,  286 

Then  spoke  King  yl,  drawing  thicker  breath:  ,,  316 

answer  made  King  yt,  breathing  hard :  ,,  330 

as  he  walk'd.  King  A  panted  hard,  ,,  344 

murmur'd  yl,  '  Place  me  in  the  barge.'  ,,  372 


Arthur  (King)  (contimied)    like  that  yl  who,  with  lance 

in  rest,  Pass,  of  ArUmr  390 

my  Lord  yl,  whither  shall  I  go?  „  395 

slowly  answer'd  yl  from  the  barge :  »  407 

friends  Of  A,  who  should  help  him  ,,  456 

city  and  palace  Of  yl  the  king  ;  Merlin  and  the  G.  66 

on  the  forehead  Of  yl  the  blameless  ,,  73 

A  had  vanish'd  I  knew  not  whither,  ,,  77 

Arthur  (Sir,  a  local  magnate)    To  show  Sir  A's  deer.         The  Brook  133 
Arthur  (A.  H.  Hallam,  1811-1833)    With  my  lost  A's  loved 

remains.  In  Mem.  ix  3 

My  A,  whom  I  shall  not  see  ,,  17 

That  holy  Death  ere  yl  died  „     Ixxx  2 

My  A,  found  your  shadows  fair,  „  Ixxxix  6 

Artificer    yl  and  subject,  lord  and  slave.  Lover's  Tale,  ii  103 

Artist    Well  hast  thou  done,  great  a  Memory,  Ode  to  Menwry  80 

A  more  ideal  A  he  than  all,  (repeat)  Gardener's  IJ.  25,  173 

wife,  an  unknown  a's  orphan  child  —  **5fea  Dreavis  2 

golden  moods  Of  sovereign  a's  ;  Princess,  v.  195 

portrait  of  his  friend  Drawn  by  an  a.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  135 

What  yl  ever  yet  Could  make  pure  light  Romney's  R.  9 

wife  and  children  drag  an  A  down  !  ,,38 

'  This  model  husband,  this  fine  yl  '  !  ,,  124 

Artist-like    A-l,  Ever  retiring  thou  dost  gaze  Ode  to  Memm-y  92 

'Arty  (hearty)    glad  to  seea  tha  sa  'a  an'  well.  North.  Cobbler  2 

Arundel  (Archbishop  of  Canterbury)    (See  cdso  Caiaphas- 

Arundel)    Against  the  proud  archbishop  yl —      Sir  J.  Oldcastle  16 

this  mitred  yl  Dooms  our  unlicensed  preacher  ,,  104 

how  1  anger'd  yl  asking  me  To  worship  ,,  135 

Arviragus    there  the  heathen  Prince,  yl,  Holy  Grail  61 

A-sailing    a-s  with  wind  an'  tide.  First  Quarrel  42 

Ascalon   that  was  old  Sir  Ralph's  at  A  :  Princess,  Pro.  26 

Ascend    Take  wings  of  fancy,  and  a,  In  Mem.  Ixxvi  1 

thy  deeds  in  light,  yl's  to  thee  ;  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  10 

Ascended    shouts  A,  and  there  brake  Gareth  and  L.  801 

as  Kapiolani  a  her  mountain,  Kapiolani  28 

Ascending    A  tired,  heavily  slept  till  morn.  Enoch  Anleri  181 

with  the  dawn  a  lets  the  day  Strike  Geraint  and  E.  692 

with  slow  sad  steps  A,  fill'd  Last  Tournament  144 

Ascension    spheroid  and  azimuth.  And  right  a,  Princess  vi  257 

Ascent    in  steepness  overcome,  And  victories  of  a,  Lover's  Tale  i  387 

Ash  (tree)    (See  also  Esh)     Young  a'es  pirouetted  down  Amphion  27 

Delaying  as  the  tender  a  delays  Princess,  iv  106 

Nor  hoary  knoll  of  a  and  haw  In  Mem.  c  9 

AshaS,med  (ashamed)    an'  I  wur  dreiidful  a  ;  Nm-th.  Cobbler  40 

Ashamed    (See  also  A8ha9.med,  Half-ashamed,  Shaamed) 

Shall  1  believe  him  a  to  be  seen  ?  Maud  I.  xiii  25 

'  A  boon,  Sir  King  (his  voice  was  all  a),  Gareth  and  L.  442 

yl  am  I  that  I  should  tell  it  thee.  Man:  of  G&i'aint  577 

Your  hand  shakes.     1  am  a.  Romney's  R.  25 

A-shawin'  (showing)    mun  be  fools  to  be  hallus  a-s  your 

claws.  Spinster's  S's.  61 

Ashbud    hair  More  black  than  a's  in  the  front  of  March.'  Gardener's  IJ.  28 

Ashen-gray    seems  But  an  a-g  delight.  Maud  I.  vi  22 

Ashes    And  heap  their  a  on  the  head  ;  Love  thou  thy  land  70 

And  all  1  was,  in  a.  Tithonus  23 

Who  will  not  let  his  a  rest !  Tun  anight  have  v}on  28 

Slipt  into  a,  and  was  found  no  more.  Ayhner's  Field  6 

A  to  a,  dust  to  dust ;  Ode  on  Well.  270 

And  from  his  a  may  be  made  In  Mem.  xviii  3 

And  dust  and  a  all  that  is  ;  ,,       xxxiv  4c 

who  knows  ?  we  are  a  and  dust.  Maud  I  i  32 

I  spring  Like  flame  from  a.'  Gareth  and  L.  546 

champion  from  the  a  of  his  hearth.'  „  899 

who  lay  Among  the  a  and  wedded  ,,  904 

youth  gone  out  Had  left  in  a :  Merlin  and,  V.  246 

dead  a  and  all  fire  again  Thrice  in  a  second,  lever's  Tale  iv  323 

but  now  to  silent  a  fall'n  away.  Locksley  H. ,  Sixty,  41 

Had  the  fierce  a  of  some  fiery  peak  St.  Telemachus  1 

Ashore    I've  ninety  men  and  more  that  are  lying  sick  a.    The  Revenge  10 

And  a  day  less  or  more  At  sea  or  a,  ,,  87 

But  the  blind  wave  cast  me  a,  Despair  61 

Ashy    quivering  brine  With  a  rains.  The  Voyage  43 

Asia    Ages  after,  while  in  yl,  Locksley  II.,  Sixty,  81 

A-singein'      Fur  'o  smell'd  like  a  herse  a-s,  Oivd  Rod  110 


A-singin' 


19 


Asmodeus 


I 


A-singin'      Theer  wur  a  lark  a-s  'is  best 
Ask     -I  the  sea  At  midnight, 

When  I  a  her  if  she  love  me, 

A 's  what  thou  lackest, 

a  thou  not  my  name : 

You  a  me,  why,  the'  ill  at  ease, 

he  has  a  mint  of  reasons  :  a. 

'  Annie,  I  came  to  a  a  favour  of  you.' 

This  is  the  favour  that  I  came  to  a.' 

what  is  it  that  you  a  ? ' 

0  then  to  a  her  of  my  shares, 
That  Sheba  came  to  a  of  Solomon.' 
you,  should  answer,  we  would  a) 

'  0  a  me  nothing,'  I  said  : 

a  for  him  Of  your  great  head — 

A  me  no  more :  (repeat)  Princess 

would  but  a  you  to  fulfil  yourself : 

1  a  you  nothing :  only,  if  a  dream, 
A  her  to  marry  me  by  and  by  ? 
And  a  a  thousand  things  of  home  ; 
Let  no  one  n  me  how  it  came  to  pass ; 
If  one  should  a  me  whether  The  habit, 
I  will  not  a  thee  why 

Or  if  I  a  thee  why. 
Or  to  «  her,  '  Take  me,  sweet, 
Before  thou  a  the  King  to  make  thee  knight, 
and  loathe  to  a  thee  aught. 
I  scarce  can  a  it  thee  for  hate, 
or  thyself  be  mad,  I  a  not : 
'  So  this  damsel  a  it  of  me  Good — 
'  I  charge  thee,  a  not.  but  obey.' 
'Then  will  I  a  it  of  himself,' 
I  swear  I  will  not  a  your  meaning  in  it : 
1  am  silent  then.  And  a  no  kiss  ; ' 
a  your  boon,  for  boon  I  owe  you 
wherefore  a  ;  And  take  this  boon 
will  ye  never  a  some  other  boon  ? 
Who  feels  no  heart  to  a  another  boon, 
has  tript  a  little :  a  thyself, 
never  could  undo  it :  a  no  more : 
I  a  you,  is  it  clamour'd  by  the  child, 
a  me  not  Hereafter  ye  shall  know  me — 
a  you  not  to  see  the  shield  he  left, 
should  a  some  goodly  gift  of  him 
'  A  me  not,  for  I  may  not  speak  of  it : 
yield  me  sanctuary,  nor  a  Her  name 
and  they  spared  1  o  a  it. 
pray  you  check  me  if  I  a  amiss — 
Ye  a  me,  friends,  When  I  began  to  love. 
Ye  know  not  what  ye  a. 
I  a  you  now,  should  this  first  master 
let  me  a  you  then.  Which  voice 
Edith  wrote :  '  My  mother  bids  me  a ' 
Did  he  believe  it  ?  did  you  a  him  ? 
a  '  Why  left  you  wife  and  children  ? 
Ask'd    {See  also  Hax'd)    for  I  a  him,  and  he  said, 
once  I  a  him  of  his  early  life, 
I  a  him  half-sardonically. 
she  knew  it  not,  And  would  if  a  deny  it. 
till  I  a  If  James  were  coming. 
To  learn  the  price  and  what  the  price  he  a, 
a  her  '  Are  you  from  the  farm  1 ' 
wonder'd  at  her  strength,  and  a  her  of  it : 
And  a  ;  but  not  a  word  ; 
and  n  iTiat  which  I  a  the  woman 
her  we  a  of  that  and  this, 
and  when  I  a  her  '  how, ' 
'  Tell  US,'  Florian  a,  '  How  grew  this  feud 
mutual  pardon  a  and  given 
a  but  space  and  fairplay  for  her  scheme  ; 
Ay  or  no,  if  a  to  her  face  ? 
again  The  '  wilt  thou '  a, 
whatever  is  a  her,  answers  *  Death,' 
therefore  Arthur's  sister  ? '  a  the  King. 
a  him  if  these  things  were  truth — 


North.  Cobbler  46 

Sripp.  Coiifessimu  125 

Lilian  3 

Two  Voices  98 

Z>.  ofF.  Women  m 

Toil  ask  me,  why,  1 

The  Epic  33 

Enoch  Arden  '285 

313 

427 

iSea  Dream*  115 

Princess  ii  346 

„        353 

„     Hi  59 

,,    vi  313 

vii  1,  5,  6,  9,  10,  11,  15 

Princess  vii  146 

„        148 

WduLow,  Letter  6 

In  Mem,  xiv  12 

Maud  1  xviii  49 

,,  XX 17 

„         //  Hi  2 

6 

,,  iv  87 

Garetli  and  L.  145 

356 

„  361 

877 

974 

Marr.  of  Oeraint  133 

197 

Geraint  and  E.  743 

Merlin  and  V.  254 

306 

309 

375 

382 

602 

686 

771 

Lancelot  and  E.  191 

„  653 

912 

Holy  Grail  758 

Guinevere  141 

„         145 

„         324 

Lover's  Tale  i  144 

,,  150 

„       iv  265 

Sisters  IE.  and  E.)  29 

181 

J/iC  Rinrf  225 

Romney's  R.  128 

Dvra  145 

Edivin  Morris  23 

59 

Enocli  Arden  44 

The  Brook  105 

„        142 

„        209 

Sea  Dreavis  113 

116 

146 

Princess  i  231 

„      Hi  29 

76 

„        V  46 

282 

Window,  Letter-  9 

In  Mem.  Con.  55 

Maud  Hi 

Com.  of  Arthur  317 

398 


Ask'd  {continued)    A  me  to  tilt  with  him, 

he  had  a  For  horse  and  armour  : 

1  a  for  thy  chief  knight, 

bound  to  thee  for  any  favour  a  ! ' 

a  it  of  him.  Who  answer'd  as  before  ; 

after  madness  acted  question  a  : 

«  her  not  a  word,  But  went  apart 

Arthur  seeing  a  '  Tell  me  your  names  ; 

Balin  was  bold,  and  a  To  bear 

at  feast  Sir  Galon  likewise  a 

a  this  very  boon.  Now  a  again : 

died  Thrice  than  have  a  it  once — 

proof  of  trust — so  often  a  in  vain  ! 

they  a  of  court  and  Table  Round, 

when  he  a  'Is  it  for  Lancelot, 

and  eyes  that  a  '  What  is  it  ? ' 

a  us,  knight  by  knight,  if  any  Had  seen  it, 

'  0  brother,'  a  Ambrosius, — 'for  in  sooth 

then  he  a,  '  Where  is  he  ? 

scarce  had  pray'd  or  o  it  for  myself — 

sharply  turning,  a  Of  Gawain, 

Lancelot,'  a  the  King,  '  my  friend, 

'  Dead,  is  it  so  ? '  she  a.     '  Ay,  ay,'  said  he, 

'  Have  ye  fought  ? '  She  a  of  Lancelot. 

a,  '  Why  skipt  ye  not.  Sir  Fool  ? ' 

she  a,  1  know  not  what,  and  a, 

and  a  If  I  would  see  her  burial : 

in  his  fantasy,  I  never  a : 

she  rais'd  an  eye  that  a  '  Where  ? ' 

then  he  suddenly  a  her  if  she  were. 

once  my  prattling  Edith  a  him  '  why  ? ' 

'Anything  ailing,'  I  a  her,  '  with  baby?' 

a  the  waves  that  moan  about  the  world 

and  I  a  About  my  Mother, 

'  Why  weird  ? '  I  a  him  ; 

Had  a  us  to  their  marriage, 

paused — and  then  a  Falteringly, 

a  '  Is  earth  On  fire  to  the  West  ? 

of  the  nations '  a  his  Chronicler  Of  Akbar 

her  name  ?  what  was  it  ?  la  her. 
Askew    all  his  conscience  and  one  eye  a ' — (repeat) 
Asking    {See  also  Hazin')    grant  mine  a  with  a  smile,  Tithonus  16 

Nor  a  overmuch  and  taking  less,  Enoch  Arden  252 

a,  one  Not  fit  to  cope  your  quest.  Gareth  and  L.  1173 

therefore  at  thine  a,  thine.  Marr.  of  Geraint  479 

not  so  strange  as  my  long  a  it,  Merlin  and  V.  312 

braved  a  riotous  heart  in  a  for  it.  Lancelot  and  E.  359 

a  him,  '  What  said  the  King  ?  Holy  GraU  203 

a  whence  Had  Arthur  right  to  bind  Last  Tournament  683 

Arundel  a  me  To  worship  Holy  Cross  !  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  135 

A-slee&pin'  (sleeping)    cat  wur  a-s  alongside  Roaver,  Owd  Rod  33 

Asleep    {See  also  Deep-asleep,  Half-asleep,  Warm-asleep) 


Gareth  and  L.  27 

473 

658 

977 

Mwrr.  of  Geraint  204 

Geraint  and  E.  813 

880 

Balin  and  Balan  49 

199 

347 

Merlin  and  V.  323 

919 

920 

Lancelot  and  E.  268 

1104 

„  1249 

Holy  Grail  283 

540 

„    638 

691 

739 

764 

Pelleas  and  E.  384 

„  593 

Last  Toxirnam^ent  256 

Lover's  Tale  i  706 

„       a  70 

,,  iv\Z 

94 

328 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  58 

Tlie  Wreck  61 

Demcter  and  P.  64 

Tlie  Ring  102 

„        197 

430 

Death  of  (Enone  94 

St.  TelemMchus  18 

Akbar' s  Dream  1 

Cliarity  35 

Sea  Dreams  180,  184 


smiling  a,  Slowly  awaken'd, 
but  I  fall  a  at  morn  ; 
Falling  a  in  a  half -dream  ! 
Since  that  dear  soul  hath  fall'n  a. 
To  fall  a  with  all  one's  friends  ; 
If  e'er  when  faith  had  fall'n  a. 
When  a  in  this  arm-chair  ? 
But  come  to  her  waking,  find  her  a, 
himself  alone  And  all  the  world  a, 
vext  his  day,  but  blesses  him  a — 
half  a  she  made  comparison 
fell  a  again  ;  And  dreamt  herself 
He  fell  a,  and  Enid  had  no  heart 
not  seem  as  dead,  But  fast  a, 
when  they  fall  a  Into  delicious  dreams, 
First  falls  a  in  swoon,  wherefrom  awaked, 
I  have  done  it,  while  you  were  a — 
we  believed  her  a  again — 
ere  the  dotard  fall  a  ? 
fall  of  water  lull'd  the  noon  a. 
But  such  a  tide  as  moving  seems  a, 
A-smilin'      An'  Squire  wur  hallus  a-s, 
Asmodeus    Abaddon  and  A  caught  at  me. 


Eleanore  84 

May  Queen,  N.  Vs.  E.  50 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.S.  56 

To  J.  S.  34 

Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  4 

In  Mem.  cxxiv  9 

Maud  I  vii  4 

„   II  ii  81 

Com.  of  Arthur  119 

Gareth  and  L.  1286 

Marr.  </  Geraint  651 

653 

Geraint  and  E.  369 

Lancelot  aiid  E.  1161 

Lover's  Tale  i  161 

791 

Rizpah  19 

In  live.  Child.  Hosp.  69 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  153 

Romney's  R.  83 

Crossing  the  Bar  5 

Village  Wife  S3 

St.  S.  Stylites  172 


la 


20 


Aspasia     not  for  all  A's  cleverness,  Princess  ii  344 

Aspect    Of  pensive  thought  and  a  pale,  ^     Margaret  6 

More  bounteous  a's  on  me  beam,  Sir  Galahad  21 

Under  the  selfsame  a  of  the  stars,  Lover's  Tale  i  199 

Aspen  (.?«■  rt/so  Aspen-tree)  Willows  whiten,  a's  quiver,  L.  of  Shalott  ilO 

And  here  thine  a  shiver  ;  A  Farewell  10 

Aspen-tree    in  the  meadows  tremulous  a-t's  Lancelot  aiid  E.  410 

showers,  And  ever- tremulous  a-t's,  ,,              524 

Asphodel    Violet,  amaracus,  and  a,  (Enone  97 

weary  limbs  at  last  on  beds  of  a.  Lotos-Eaters,  O.  S.  125 

Along  the  silent  field  of  A .  Demeter  and  P.  153 

Aspick    Showing  the  a's  bite.)  D.  of  F.  Wonunl&O 

A-sque&lin'    an'  a-s,  as  if  tha  was  bit,  Owd  Roa  89 

and  thou  was  a-s' thysen,  ,,    ..10' 

Ass  (an  animal)   whisper'd  '  A'es'  ears,'  among  the  sedge,   Princess  ii  113 

one  of  thy  long  a'es'  ears.  Last  Toitmammt  273 

swine,  goats,  a'es,  rams  and  geese  „               321 

'  Then  were  swine,  goats,  a'es,  geese  ,,               325 

Ass  {a  stupid  fellow)   Sam,  thou's  an  a  for  thy  paa'ins :  N,  Farmer,  N.S.  3 

we  boath  on  us  thinks  tha  an  a.  (repeat)  ,,         12,  38 

an  a  as  near  as  mays  nowt —  ,,        . . .    ^^ 

Assail    To  a  this  gray  preeminence  of  man  !  Princess  Hi  234 

Assail'd    brother  king,  Urien,  a  him  :  Com.  of  Arthur  36 

They  that  a,  and  they  that  held  Lancelot  and  E.  455 

Assassin    earls,  and  caitiff  knights,  ^'s,  Marr.  of  Geraint  d6 

Sanctuary  granted  To  bandit,  thief,  a —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  113 

Assault    Sharp  is  the  fire  of  a,  Def.  of  Liccknow  57 

Ever  the  mine  and  a,  our  sallies,  ,,              75 

Assay     '  I  shall  a,'  said  (Jareth  Gareth  and  L.  783 

A  it  on  some  one  of  the  Table  Round,  Merlin  and  V.  689 

Assaye    Against  the  myriads  of  A  Ode  on  Well.  99 

Assemble    plans,  And  phantom  hopes  a  ;  Will  Water.  30 

Assembled    Narrowing  in  to  where  they  sat  a  Vision  of  Sin  16 

Assent    I  gave  a  :  Yet  how  to  bind  Princess,  Con.  7 

Assented    Enoch  all  at  once  a  to  it,  Enoch  Arden  126 

Assert    a  None  lordlier  than  themselves  Princess  ii  143 

a's  his  claim  In  that  dread  sound  Ode  on  Well.  70 

Assign'd    purpose  of  God,  and  the  doom  a.  Maud  III  vi  59 

quest  A  to  her  not  worthy  of  it,  Lancelot  and  E.  825 

kiss  the  child  That  does  the  task  a,  „             829 

Assize    Se£  'Soize 

Association    A  fresh  a  blow.  In  Mem.  ci  18 

Assoil'd    And  the  Holy  man  he  a  us,  V.  of  Maeldune  126 

Assume    law  The  growing  world  a,  England  and  Amer.  17 

lose  the  child,  a  The  woman :  Princess  i  137 

Assumed    Arranged  the  favour,  and  a  the  Prince.  ,,      iv  602 

A  from  thence  a  half -consent  , ,      vii  82 

A  that  she  had  thank'd  him,  Geraint  and  E.  646 

Assuming    See  All-assuming 

Assumption    heart  In  its  a's  up  to  heaven  ;  In  Mem.  Ixiii  4 
fjuench'd  herself  In  that  a  of  the  bridesmaid —  Sisters  (E.  and  E).  234 

Assurance    A  only  breeds  resolve.'  Two  Voices  315 

Assure    may  now  a  you  mine  ;  Merlin  and  V.  549 
Assured    See  Half-assured 

Assyrian    oil 'd  and  curl'd  vl  Bull  Smelling  of  musk  Maud  I  viii 

A  kings  would  Hay  Captives  Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  79 
A-itanning  (standing)    '  What's  i' tha  bottle  a'«  theer  ? '   North.  Cobbler  7 

A-steppin'    yon  laady  a-s  along  the  streeiit,  ,,           107 
Astolat    {See  alto  Lord  of  Astolat,  Maid  of  Astolat) 

Elaine,  the  lily  maid  of  A ,  Lancelot  and  E.  2 

Ilan  to  the  Castle  of  .i ,  ,,           167 

And  issuing  found  the  Lord  of  yl  ,,          173 

then  the  Lord  of  yl  :  '  Whence  comest  thou,  ,,          180 

said  the  Lord  oi  A,'  Here  is  Torre's  :  ,,195 

And  came  at  last,  tho'  late,  to  yl  :  ,,618 

came  The  Lord  of  A  out,  to  whom  the  Prince  ,,          627 

the  Lord  of  A^  'Bide  with  us,  ,,          632 

About  the  maid  of  A ,  and  her  love.  ,,          723 

'  The  maid  of  A  loves  Sir  Lancelot,  ,,          725 

Sir  Lancelot  loves  the  maid  of  A.'  „          726 

But  far  away  the  maid  in  A,  ,,          745 

To  A  returning  rode  the  three.  ,,          905 

Then  spake  the  lily  maid  of  A  :  „        1085 

Ho  that  day  there  was  dole  in  yl.  ,,        1136 

the  lily  maid  of  A  Lay  smiling,  ,,        1242 


A-tuggin' 

Astolat  {continued)   I,  sometime  call'd  the  maid  of  A,  Lancelot  and  £.1273 

Astride    men  and  boys  a  On  wy  vern.  Holy  Grail  349 

A-stroakin'  (stroking)     as  I  be  a-s  o'  you,  Spinster's  S's.  19 

Astrsean    second-sight  of  some  A  age,  Princess  ii  443 

Astrology    brought  to  understand  A  sad  a,  Maud  I  xviii  36 

Astronomy    their  cosmogonies,  their  astronomies :  Columius  42 

Dead  the  new  a  calls  her  .  .  .  Locksley  II.,  Sixty,  175 

A  and  Geology,  terrible  Muses  !  Parmissus  16 

Asunder    each  as  each.  Not  to  be  pluck'd  a ;  Holy  Grail  777 

They  might  be  pluck'd  a.  „          780 

save  they  could  be  pluck'd  a,  ,,          782 

To  tear  the  twain  a  in  my  heart,  ,,          786 

As  if  'twere  drawn  a  by  the  rack.  Lover's  Tale  ii  57 

shook  us  a,  as  if  she  had  struck  The  Wreck  108 

'At  (hat)    doesn  not  touch  thy  'a  to  the  Squire  ; '  North.  Cobbler  25 

says  Parson,  and  laays  down  'is  'a,  ,,            89 

A-taakin'  (taking)    what  a's  doing  a-t  o'  mea  ?  N.  Farmer,  O.S.  45 

A-talkin'    Me  an'  thy  muther,  Sammy,  'as 

bean  a-t  o'  thee ;  ,,          iV.<Si.  9 

Atar    infuse  Rich  a  in  the  bosom  of  the  rose.  Lover's  Tale  i  270 

Ate    A  with  young  lads  his  portion  Gareth  and  L.  480 

Sat  down  beside  him,  a  and  then  began.  ,,              872 

Sir  Gareth  drank  and  a,  and  all  his  life  ,,           1280 

let  the  horses  graze,  and  a  themselves.  Geraint  and  E.  211 

Geraint  A  all  the  mowers'  victual  ,,             215 

I  never  a  with  angrier  appetite  ,,             233 

a  with  tumult  in  the  naked  hall,  ,,              605 

That  ever  among  ladies  a  in  hall,  Lancelot  and  E.  255 

drank  the  brook,  and  a  The  goodly  apples,  Holy  Giuil  387 

our  solemn  feast — we  a  and  drank.  Lover's  Tale  iv  221 

Atheist    Authors — essayist,  a,  Locksley  H. ,  Sixty,  139 

On  whom  the  women  shrieking  '.1 '  Akbar's  Dream  91 

Atheling    {See  also  Edmund  Atheling)    Also  the 

brethren.  King  and  A,  Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  100 

Athelstan  (King  of  England)    A  King,  Lord 

among  Earls,  ,,                       1 
Athene  (Pallas)    See  Pallas,  Pallas  Athene 

Athens    when  A  reign'd  and  Rome,  Freedom  9 

Athlete    Until  she  be  an  a  bold.  Clear-headed  friend  21 

an  a,  strong  to  break  or  bind  Palace  of  Art  153 

Athos    Tomohrit,  A,  all  things  fair,  To  E.  L.  5 

Atlantic    waste  A  roll'd  On  her  and  us  Third  of  Feb.  21 

I  wish  they  were  a  whole  A  broad.'  Princess,  Con.  71 

same  bones  back  thro'  the  A  sea,  Columbus  214 

Atmosphere    Floating  thro'  an  evening  a,  Eleanore  100 

For  love  possess'd  the  a,  Miller's  D.  91 

Cold  in  that  a  of  Death,  In  Mem.  xx  14 

Atom    If  all  be  a's,  how  then  should  the  Gods  Lucretius  114 

Vanishing,  a  and  void,  a  and  void,  ,,        258 

Boundless  inward,  in  the  a,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  212 

Atomic    Being  a  not  be  dissoluble,  Lucretius  115 

Atom-stream    I  saw  the  flaring  a-s's  And  torrents  „          38 

Atomy    Crowded  with  driving  atomies,  Lover's  Tale  ii  174 

Atonement    morning  shine  So  rich  in  a  as  this  Maud  I  xix  6 

Attach    phantasm  of  the  form  It  should  a  to  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  647 

Attain    A  the  wise  indifference  of  the  wise  ;  A  Dedication  8 

Attain'd  (&e«/so  Half-attained)  have  «  Rest  in  a  happy  place  QSnone  I'&O 

Attempt    Vivien  should  a  the  blameless  King.  Merlin  and  V.  164 

Attend    each  ear  was  prick'd  to  a  A  tempest,  Princess  vi  280 

And  in  his  presence  I  a  To  hear  In  Mem.  cxxvi  2 

Attendance    And  make  her  dance  a  ;  Amphion  62 

You  come  with  no  a,  page  or  maid,  Geraint  arm  E.  322 

Attended    So  she  goes  by  him  a,  L.  of  Burleigh    25 

Attest    A  their  great  commander's  claim  (Me  on  Well.  148 

Attic    And  round  the  a's  rumbled,  The  Goose  46 

single  sordid  a  holds  the  living  and  tho  dead.  Locksley  II.,  Sixty,  222 

Attire    She  in  her  poor  a  was  seen :  Beggar  Maid  10 

So  splendid  in  his  acts  and  his  a,  Marr.  of  Geraint  620 

Attired    women  who  a  her  head,  ,,               62 

than  Geraint  to  greet  her  thus  a ;  ,,             772 

Attorney    See  'Tumey 

Attracted    a,  won,  Married,  made  one  with.  Lover's  Tale  i  133 

Attribute    all  the  gentle  a's  Of  his  lost  child,  Ayhner's  Fidd  730 

Or,  crown'd  with  a's  of  woe  In  Mem.  cxviii  18 

A-tuggin'    Roiiver  a-t  an'  teiirin'  my  slieiive.  Oivd  Roa  60 


A-tuggin' 


21 


Awake 


A-tuggin'  {corUinued)    a-t  an'  tearin'  mo  wuss  nor  afoor, 
A-tumin     '  be  a-t  ma  hout  upo'  Christmas  Eave '  ? 
A-twizzen'd  (twisted)    Wi'  haafe  o'  the  chimleys  a-t 
Aubrey  (Ellen)    iSec  Ellen,  Ellen  Aubrey 
Audacious    .See  Outdacious 
Audible    Shaped  by  the  a  and  visible,  Moulded  the  a 


OwdRoum 

„       59 
„        22 


i 


and  visible ; 
Audibly    Half  inwardly,  half  a  she  spoke, 
Audience    at  the  palace  craved  A  pf  Guinevere, 
Audley    A  feast  Humm'd  like  a  hive 
Audley  Court    Let  us  picnic  there  At  yl  C 
Auger    hammer  and  &se,  A  and  saw, 
Auger-hole    Boring  a  little  a-h  in  fear. 
Aught — what,  I  would  not  a  of  false — 

Unfaith  in  a  is  want  of  faith  in  all. 

less  than  swine,  A  naked  a — 
Augury    how  shall  Britain  light  upon  auguries  happier  ? 

Now  with  prosperous  auguries  On  Jub. 


Lover's  Tale  ii  104 

Marr.  of  Geraint  109 

Lancelot  and  E.  1163 

Audley  Court  4 

3 

Enoch  Arden  174 

Oodiva  68 

Princess  v  402 

Merlin  and  V.  389 

Last  Tournament  309 

Boddicea  45 

).  Victona  9 


Augustine  (of  Hippo)  and  besides.  The  great  A  wrote 


Columbus  52 


Aunt    came  Trustees  and  A 's  and  Uncles. 

maiden  A  Took  this  fair  day  for  text, 

'  Why  not  now  ? '  the  maiden  A. 

the  maiden  A  (A  little  sense  of  wrong 

She  fixt  a  showery  glance  upon  her  a, 
Aurelian  (Roman  Emperor)    the  Palmyrene  That 

fought  A, 
Aorelius  (King  of  Britain)     A  lived  and  fought 
and  died, 

A  Emrys  would  have  scourged  thee  dead, 
Auricula    among  the  gardens,  a's,  anemones, 
Ausonian    stay'd  the  .4  king  to  hear 
Austerely    master  took  Small  notice,  or  a, 
Australasian    the  long  wash  of  A  seas  Far  off, 

Indian,  A,  African, 


Edwin  Morris  121 

Princess,  Pro.,  107 

„  208 

218 

„     Con.  33 

it  84 


Com.  of  Arthur  13 

O'areth  and  L.  375 

City  Child  4 

Palace  of  Art  111 

Lucretius  8 

The  Brook  194 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  61 


Australian    black  A  dying  hopes  he  shall  return,    Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  70 


Author    A's — essayist,  atheist, 
Authority    ^1  forgets  a  dying  king, 

see  that  some  one  with  a  Be  near  her 

All  people  said  she  had  a — 

And  simple  words  of  great  a, 

A  forgets  a  dying  king. 
Autocrat    Aristocrat,  democrat,  a — 

wearied  of  A's,  Anarchs,  and  Slaves, 
Autumn  (adj.)    then  one  low  roll  Of  A  thunder. 
Autumn  (s)    (See  also  Fall)    A  and  summer  Are 
gone  long  ago  ; 

^,  in  a  bower  Grape- thicken'd 

Till  A  brought  an  hour  For  Eustace, 

That  a  into  a  flash 'd  again, 

And  breathes  in  April  a's. 

parcel -bearded  with  the  traveller's-joy  In  A, 

A 's  mock  sunshine  of  the  faded  woods 

breadth  Of  .4,  dropping  fruits  of  power: 

after  A  past — if  left  to  pass  His  a 

And  A,  with  a  noise  of  rooks, 

A  laying  here  and  there  A  fiery  finger 

storms  Of  A  swept  across  the  city, 

and  bless  Their  gamer'd  A  also, 

Spring  and  Summer  and  A  and  Winter, 

like  May-blossoms  in  mid  a — 

mist  of  a  gather  from  your  lake, 
Autumn-changed    Then;  and  then  yl-c. 
Autumn-dripping    in  a  death-dumb  a-d  gloom. 
Autumn-fields    In  looking  on  the  happy  A-f, 
Autumn-sheaf    Than  of  the  gamer'd  A-s. 
Autumn-tide    High  over  all  the  yellowing  A-t, 
Avail  (s)     '  I  count  it  of  no  more  a,  Dame, 
Avail  (verb)    Let  this  a,  just,  dreadful, 

Nor  branding  summer  suns  a 
Avail'd    hath  this  Quest  a  for  thee  ? ' 
Avalon     Lay,  dozing  in  the  vale  of  A, 
Avanturine    Like  sparkles  in  the  stone  A . 
Avarice    No  madness  of  ambition,  a, 

evil  tyrannies,  all  her  pitiless  a, 

Down  with  ambition,  a,  pride, 


139 

M.  a  Arthur  121 

Princess  vi  236 

238 

Com.  of  Arthur  261 

Pass,  of  AHhur  289 

Maud  I  x65 

The  Dreamer  10 

Last  Tournament  153 

Nothing  loill  Die  18 

Elearurre  35 

Gardener's  D.  207 

Enoch  Arden  456 

The  Brook  196 

Aylmer's  Field  154 

610 

Princess  vi  55 

A  Dedication  9 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  71 

,,  xcix  11 

Demeter  and  P.  71 

147 

Vastness  29 

The  Ring  255 

329 

The  Oak  8 

Last  Tournament  756 

Princess  iv  42 

Two  Voices  114 

iMst  Tournument  241 

Geraint  and  E.  715 

St.  S.  Stylites  9 

In  Mem.  ii  11 

Holy  Grail  765 

Palace  of  Art  107 

Gareth  and  L.  930 

Lucretius  212 

Boddicea  80 

Maud  J  X  47 


Avarice  {continued)    the  lust.  Villainy,  violence,  a,  Columbus  172 

Opulent  A,  lean  as  Poverty  ;  Vastness  20 

Avaunt     'A,'  they  cried,  '  our  lady  loves  Pel  leas  and  E.  369 

Ave     'A,  A,  A,'  said,  '  Adieu,  adieu '  /«,  Mem.  Ivii  15 

singin'  yer  '  ^'s '  an'  '  Fathers '  Tomorrow  96 

Ave  atque  Vale    Came  that  ^A  a  F '  of  the  Poet's  Frater  Ave,  etc.  5 

Ave  Mary    But  '.4  J/,'  made  she  moan.  And  'A  M,' 


night  and  morn. 

And  'A  M,'  was  her  moan. 
Avenge    Peace  !  there  are  those  to  a  us 

felon  knight,  I  a  me  for  my  friend.' 

'  I  will  a  this  insult,  noble  Queen, 

God's  A  on  stony  hearts 

I  cried  to  the  Saints  to  a  me. 

crying  '  I  dare  her,  let  Peelfe  a  herself ' ! 
Avenged    it  was  a  crime  Of  sense  a  by  sense 
Avenging    learn  his  name,  A  this  great  insult 
Avenue    (See  also  Lily-avenue)    Down  at  the  far 
end  of  an  a, 

And  ever-echoing  a's  of  song. 

city  glitter'd.  Thro'  cypress  a's, 

flash'd  again  Down  the  long  a's 

thro'  the  slowly-mellowing  a's 

Entering  all  the  a's  of  sense 

in  yon  arching  a  of  old  elms. 
Aver    a  That  all  thy  motions  gently  pass 

I ,  clasping  brother-hands,  a  I  could  not, 
Averill    A  A  at  the  Rectory  Thrice  over ; 

might  not  A,  had  he  will'd  it  so. 

Not  proven'  A  said,  or  laughingly  '  Some  other  race 
of  A's' — 

his  brother,  living  oft  With  A, 

A  was  a  decade  and  a  half  His  elder, 

He  wasted  hours  with  A  ; 

and  oft  accompanied  By  A  : 

To  let  that  handsome  fellow  A  walk 

foam'd  away  his  heart  at  A 's  ear :  whom  A  solaced 

A  seeing  How  low  his  brother's  mood 

Forbad  her  first  the  house  of  A, 

A  wrote  And  bad  him  with  good  heart 

A  went  and  gazed  upon  his  death. 

Long  o'er  his  bent  brows  linger'd  A , 
Averring    A  it  was  clear  against  all  rules 
Averse    with  sick  and  scornful  looks  a, 
Avilion    To  the  island-valley  of  A  ; 

'  He  passes  to  the  Isle  A, 

To  the  island-valley  of  A  ; 
A-wa£litin'  (waiting)    An'  she  wur  a-iu  fo'mma, 
Awa9.ke  (awake)    but  I  wur  a, 
Await    Some  draught  of  Lethe  might  a 

slow-develop'd  strength  a's  Completion 

come  ;  for  all  the  vales  A  thee  ; 

Yea,  let  all  good  things  a  Him  who  cares 

and  happier  hours  A  them. 

A  the  last  and  largest  sense 
Awaiting    Beheld  her  first  in  field  a  him, 
Awake  (adj.)    (See  also  AwaS,ke,  Half-awake) 
night  I  lie  a, 

lying  broad  a  I  thought  of  you  and  Effie 

deep-asleep  he  seem'd,  yet  all  a, 

That  I  might  kiss  those  eyes  a  ! 

but  watch'd  a  A  cypress  in  the  moonlight 

I  have  walk'd  a  with  Truth. 

the  rose  was  a  all  night  for  your  sake. 

The  lilies  and  roses  were  all  a, 

shook  his  drowsy  squire  a  and  cried, 

her  mother  grasping  her  To  get  her  well  a  ; 

Held  her  a  :  or  if  she  slept. 

Wherein  we  nested  sleeping  or  a, 

our  palace  is  a,  and  morn  Has  lifted 
Awake  (verb)    bee  Is  lily-cradled  :  I  alone  a. 

strike  it,  and  a  her  with  the  gleam  ; 

may  death  A  them  with  heaven's  music 

and  a  to  a  livid  light, 

A  !  the  creeping  glimmer  steals, 


Mariana  in  the  S.  9 

21 

Princess  iv  501 

Gareth  and  L.  1220 

Marr.  of  Geraint  215 

Death  of  QSnone  41 

Bandit's  Death  14 

Kapiolani  32 

Vision  of  Sin  214 

Marr.  of  Geraint  425 

Enoch  Arden  358 

Ode  on  Well.  79 

The  Daisy  48 

Gareth  and  L.  785 

iMSt  Tournament  360 

Lover's  Tale  i  630 

The  Ring  172 

In  Mem,,  xv  9 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  102 

Aylmer's  Field  37 

46 

53 

58 

82 

109 

138 

269 

342 

403 

502 

543 

599 

625 

Princess  i  178 

D.  of  F.  Women  101 

M.  d' Arthur  259 

Gareth  and  L.  502 

Pass,  of  Arthur  427 

North.  Cobbler  34 

Owd  Rod  33 

Two  Voices  350 

Love  tJiou  thy  land  57 

Princess  vii  216 

Ode  on  Well.  198 

Li  Mem.  Con.  66 

Ancient  Sage  180 

Mair.  of  Geraint  540 

All 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  50 

Con.  29 

Lotos-Eaters  35 

Day -Dm.  L' Envoi  28 

Tlie  Daisy  81 

Maud  I  xix  4 

, ,  xxii  49 

51 

Marr.  of  Geraint  125 

677 

Guinevere  75 

Lover's  Tale  i  231 

Akbar's  Dream  200 

CEnone  30 

Lancelot  and  E.  6 

Lover's  Tale  i  761 

The  Wreck  7 

The  FliglU  4 


Awaked 


22 


Babe 


Awaked    {See  also  Half-awaked)    myself  have  a,  as 

it  seems,  Maud  III  vi  56 

falls  asleep  in  swoon,  wherefrom  a,  Lover's  Tale  i  791 

Awaken    if  the  King  a  from  his  craze,  Gareth  and  L.  724 
Awaken'd    (.See  also  Half-awaken'd)    Slowly  «,  grow 

so  full  and  deep  Elednwe  85 

Awaking    A  knew  the  sword,  and  turn'd  Pdleas  and  E.  489 

A-waUdn'    mumin'  when  we  was  a-w  togither,  Spinster's  S's.  23 

Award    would  seem  to  a  it  thine,  (Enone  73 

Aware    After  a  lingering, — ere  she  was  a, —  Enoch  Arden  268 

Enid  was  a  of  three  tall  knights  Oeraint  and  E.  56 

she  by  tact  of  love  was  well  a  Lancelot  and  E.  984 

Awe    springs  of  life,  the  depths  of  a,  Two  Voices  140 

shall  hold  a  fretful  realm  in  a,  Locksley  Hall  129 

heart  beat  thick  with  passion  and  with  a ;  Princess  Hi  190 

To  feel  once  more,  in  placid  a,  In  Mem.  cxxii  5 

but  all  in  a.  For  twenty  strokes  Lancelot  and  E.  719 

he  wellnigh  kiss'd  her  feet  For  loyal  a,  ,,            1173 

tenderness  of  manner,  and  chaste  a,  Pelleas  and  E.  110 

with  the  excess  of  sweetness  and  of  a,  Lover's  Tale  ii  155 

Awearied    For  I  was  much  a  of  the  Quest :  Hdy  Grail  744 

Aweary    She  said,  'I  am  a,  a,  (repeat)       Mariana  11,  23,  35,  47,  59,  71 

She  wept,  '  I  am  a,  a,  Mariana  83 

And  I  am  all  a  of  my  life.  (Enone  33 

Awed    a  and  promise-bounden  she  forbore,  Enoch  Arden  869 

Still  It  a  me."  Sea  Dreams  205 

And  my  dream  a  me : — well —  ,,         247 

eyes  A  even  me  at  first,  thy  mother —  Demeter  and  P.  24 

Awe-stricken    hold  A-s  breaths  at  a  work  divine,  Maud  I  xl7 

Awful    But  all  she  is  and  does  is  a ;  Princess  i  140 

Awl    See  Hawl 

Awning    ample  a's  gay  Betwixt  the  pillars,  Princess  ii  25 

A  blood-red  a  waver  overhead,  St.  Telemachus  52 

Awoke    And  last  with  these  the  king  a,  Day-Dm.  Revival  17 

night-light  flickering  in  my  eyes  A  me.'  Sea  Dreams  104 

desire  that  a  in  the  heart  of  the  child,  Maud  I  xix  48 

Leodogran  a,  and  sent  Ulfius,  Com.  of  Arthur  444 

these  a  him,  and  by  great  mischance  Marr.  of  Geraint  112 

Refused  her  to  him,  then  his  pride  a;  ,,              448 

strongly  striking  out  her  limbs  a ;  Oeraint  and  E.  380 

every  evil  deed  I  ever  did,  A  Holy  Grail  374 

mantle  clung.  And  pettish  cries  a,  Last  Tournament  214 

owl-whoop  and  dorhawk-whirr  A  me  not,  Lover's  Tale  ii  117 

Awry    wherefore  do  we  grow  a  From  roots  Suj)p.  Confessions  77 

To  woman,  superstition  all  a :  Princess  ii  137 

Stampt  into  dust — tremulous,  all  a,  Romney's  R.  113 

Axe    {See  also  Battle-aze)    ere  the  falling  a  did  part  Margaret  38 

see  the  woodman  lift  His  a  to  slay  my  kin.  Talking  Oak  236 

Nor  wielded  a  disjoint,  „           262 

hammer  and  a,  Auger  and  saw,  Enoch  Arden  173 

The  woodmen  with  their  a's :  Princess  vi  44 

glittering  a  was  broken  in  their  arms,  ,,             51 

train  of  dames  :  by  a  and  eagle  sat,  ,,     vii  128 

•  Churl,  thine  a  ! '  he  cried,  Balin  aiid  Balan  295 

Azelike    That  a  edge  untumable,  I^rincess  ii  203 

Axle    war  Rides  on  those  ringing  a's !  Tiresias  93 

Ay    Why  ?    For  its  a  a,  a  a.  Windmv.  Ay.  18 

A-year    my  two  'oonderd  a-y  to  mysen  ;  Spinster's  S's.  12 

but  my  two  'oonderd  a-y.  ,,            22 

fro'  my  oan  two  'oonderd  a-y.  j,            58 

Aylmer    {See  also  Lawrence  Aylmer) 

Sir  A  A  that  almighty  man,  Aylmer' s  Field  13 

A  followed  A  at  the  Hall  „            36 

like  an  A  in  his  Aylmerism,  ,,           123 

Sir  A  half  forgot  his  lazy  smile  ,,          197 

Sir  A  past,  And  neither  loved  ,,          249 

did  Sir  A  know  That  great  pock-pitten  „          255 

had  Sir  A  heard — Nay,  but  he  must —  „          261 

did  Sir  A  (deferentially  With  nearing  chair  ,,          266 

Sir  A  A  slowly  stiffening  spoke :  ,,           273 

They  parted,  and  Sir  A  A  watch'd.  ,,           277 

Things  in  an  A  deem'd  impossible,  , ,           305 

Sir  A  reddening  from  the  storm  within,  ,,           322 

To  shame  these  mouldy  A's  in  their  graves :  ,,          ,396 

when  this  A  camo  of  age —  407 


Aylmer  [continued)    and  Sir  A  watch'd  them  all,  Aylmer's  Field  552 

and  with  her  the  race  of  yl ,  past.  ,,            577 

Aylmer- Averill    There  was  an  ^1 -^  marriage  once.  ,,              49 

Aymerism    like  an  Aylmer  in  his  ^,  ,,            123 

A-yowlin'    a-y  an'  yaupin'  like  mad  ;  Otcd  Rod  88 

An'  the  dogs  was  a-y  all  round,  ,,        107 

Azimuth    sine  and  arc,  spheroid  and  a,  Princess  vi  256 

Azores    At  Flores  in  the  A  Sir  Richard  Greville  lay.          The  Revenge  1 

Azrael    the  black-wing'd  A  overcame,  Akbar's  Dream  186 

Azure    Her  eyes  a  bashful  a,  and  her  hair  Th^  Brook  71 

he  stared  On  eyes  a  bashful  a,  ,,      206 

Immingled  with  Heaven's  a  waveringly,  Gareth  and  L.  936 

A ,  an  Eagle  rising  or,  the  Sun  Merlin  and  V.  475 

Shallow  skin  of  green  and  a —  Locksley  H,,  Sixty,  208 

and,  men,  below  the  dome  of  a  Akbar's  D.  Hymn  7 

Azure-circled    High  over  all  the  a-c  earth,  Lover's  Tale  i  390 


B 

Ba3.con  (bacon)    B  an'  taates,  an'  a  beslings  puddin'     North.  Cobbler  112 

BaS.ked  (baked)    fever  'ed  b  Jinny's  'ead  as  bald  Village  Wife  102 

Bad.1    and  honour  thy  brute  B,  Aylmer's  Field  644 

came  a  Lord  in  no  wise  like  \x>  B.  ,,          647 

Babble  (s)    the  b  of  the  stream  Fell,  Mariana  in  tJie  S,  51 

The  babes,  their  b,  Annie,  Enoch  Arden  606 

night  goes  In  b  and  revel  and  wine.  Maud  I  ocxii  28 

But  6,  merely  for  b.  „        II  v  AS 

Merlin's  mystic  b  about  his  end  Last  Tournament  670 

laughter  and  b  and  earth's  new  wine,  To  A,  Tennyson  2 

And  you  liken — boyish  b —  Locksley  H,,  Sixty,  6 

B,  b  ;  our  old  England  may  go  down  in  6  ,,               8 

— words,  Wild  b.  Romney's  R.  32 

Babble  (verb)    by  the  poplar  tall  rivulets  h  and  fall.  Leonine  Eleg.  4 

I  6  on  the  pebbles.  The  Brook  42 

Howe'er  you  b,  great  deeds  cannot  die ;  Princess  Hi  254 

brook  shall  b  down  the  plain.  In  Mem,  ci  10 

Began  to  scoff  and  jeer  and  o  of  him  Marr.  of  Geraint  58 

because  ye  dream  they  b  of  you.'  Merlin  and  V.  690 

ye  set  yourself  To  b  about  him.  Last  Tournament  340 

Babbled    b  for  the  golden  seal,  that  hung  Dora  135 

b  for  you,  as  babies  for  the  moon,  Princess  iv  428 

Had  b  '  Uncle  '  on  my  knee  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  13 

He  moving  homeward  b  to  his  men,  Geraint  and  E.  362 

While  thus  they  h  of  the  King,  Lancelot  and  E.  1260 

their  tongues  may  have  b  of  me —  The  Wreck  41 

I  myself  have  often  b  doubtless  Locksley  II.,  Sixty,  7 

she  said,  I  b,  Mother,  Mother—  The  Ring  115 

Babbler    garrulously  given,  A  &  in  the  land.  Talking  Oak  24 

she,  like  many  another  b,  hurt  Guinevere  354 

mothers  with  their  b's  of  the  dawn,  Tiresias  103 

Babbling    runlets  b  down  the  glen.  Mariana  in  tJie  S.  44 

his  wheat-suburb,  h  as  he  went.  The  Brook  123 
My  words  are  like  the  b's  in  a  dream  Of  nightmare, 

when  the  b's  break  the  dream.  Ancient  Sage  106 

Babby    {See  also  Babe,  Baby)    An'  then  the 

6  wur  burn,  North.  Cobbler  16 

an'  she  an'  the  b  beal'd,  ^^             37 

An'  the  b's  faiice  wurn't  wesh'd  ,,             42 

Thou's  rode  of  'is  back  when  a  b,  Owd  Roa  5 

Babe    (See  also  Babby,  Baby)    Sat  smiling,  b  in  arm.      Palace  of  Art  96 

With  his  first  b's  first  cry,  Enoch  Arden  85 

Nursing  the  sickly  b,  her  latest-born.  ,,          150 

Pray'd  for  a  blessing  on  his  wife  and  b's  ,,          188 

be  comforted,  Look  to  the  b's,  219 

To  give  his  b's  a  better  bringing-up  "          299 

know  his  h's  were  running  wild  Lik  e  colts  304 

A  gilded  dragon,  also,  for  the  b's.  ''          540 

The  6's,  their  babble,  Annie,  ',,         606 

lived  and  loved  him,  and  his  b's  \\         685 

rosy,  with  his  b  across  his  knees  ;  \\          746 

and  a  ring  To  tempt  the  i,  "          751 

mother  glancing  often  toward  her  6,  "         754 

saw  the  b  Hers,  yet  not  his,  7f,9 


Babe 


23 


Baffle 


Babe  (amtinued)    I  shall  see  him,  My  h  in  bliss : 

The  h  shall  lead  the  lion. 

the  6  Too  ragged  to  be  fondled 

One  b  was  theirs,  a  Margaret, 

the  h,  Their  Margaret  cradled  near 

Her  maiden  h,  a  double  April  old. 

Father  will  come  to  his  h  in  the  nest, 

vassals  to  be  beat,  nor  pretty  h's 

my  h,  my  blossom,  ah,  my  child, 

My  b,  my  sweet  Aglaia,  my  one  child : 

With  Psyche's  h,  was  Ida  watching  us, 

Ida  stood  With  Psyche's  6  in  arm : 

with  the  b  yet  in  her  arms, 

h  that  by  us,  Half-lapt  in  glowing  gauze 

burst  The  laces  toward  her  b ; 

Laid  the  soft  b  in  his  hard-mailed  hands. 

Not  tho'  he  built  upon  the  b  restored  ; 

'  Here's  a  leg  for  a  6  of  a  week  ! ' 

for  the  b  had  fought  for  his  life. 

bring  her  b,  and  make  her  boast, 

From  youth  and  b  and  hoary  hairs : 

Mammonite  mother  kills  her  b  for  a  burial  fee, 

red  man's  b  Leap,  beyond  the  sea. 

now  we  poison  oiu-  b's,  poor  souls  ! 

in  the  flame  was  borne  A  naked  6,  and  rode 
to  Merlin's  feet.  Who  stoopt  and  caught 
the&, 

naked  b,  of  whom  the  Prophet  spake, 

lad  and  girl — yea,  the  soft  b  ! 

ye  men  of  Arthur  be  but  b's,' 

As  clean  as  blood  of  b's, 

his  wife  And  two  fair  b's, 

seven-months'  b  had  been  a  truer  gift. 

broken  shed,  And  in  it  a  dead  b  ; 

brought  A  maiden  b  ;  which  Arthur  ^ 
pitying  took. 

But  the  sweet  body  of  a  maiden  b. 

cursed  The  dead  b  and  the  follies 

In  honour  of  poor  Innocence  the  b, 

bearing  high  in  arms  the  mighty  6, 

And  over  all  her  h  and  her  the  jewels 

bearing  on  one  arm  the  noble  b, 

Whereat  the  very  b  began  to  wail ; 

a  truth  the  b  Will  suck  in  with  his  milk 

b  in  lineament  and  limb  Perfect, 

and  the  wail  Of  a  beaten  b, 

Saving  women  and  their  b's, 

a  cotter's  b  is  royal-born  by  right  divine ; 

many  a  time  ranged  over  when  a  b, 

senseless,  worthless,  wordless  b, 

all  her  talk  was  of  the  b  she  loved  ; 

She  used  to  shun  the  wailing  b, 

In  your  sweet  b  she  finds  but  you — 

bending  by  the  cradle  of  her  b. 

linger,  till  her  own,  the  b  She  lean'd  to 

found  Paris,  a  naked  b,  among  the  woods 

I  was  lilting  a  song  to  the  b. 

Screams  of  a  6  in  the  red-hot  palms 

and  Rome  was  a  6  in  arms. 
Babe-faced    He  came  with  the  b-f  lord  ; 
Babel    let  be  Their  cancell'd  B's : 

clamoiir  grew  As  of  a  new-world  B, 
Baby  (adj.)     Moulded  thy  6  thought. 
Baby  (s)     in  her  bosom  bore  the  h,  Sleep, 

As  ruthless  as  a  6  with  a  worm. 

Then  lightly  rocking  b's  cradle 

from  her  b's  forehead  dipt  A  tiny  curl, 

His  b's  death,  her  growing  poverty, 

What  does  little  b  say, 

B  says,  like  little  birdie, 

B,  sleep  a  little  longer, 

B  too  shall  fly  away. 

Ixibies  roll'd  about  Like  tumbled  fruit 

babbled  for  you,  as  babies  for  the  moon, 

I  knew  them  all  as  babies, 


Enoch  Arden  898 

Aylmer's  Field  648 

„  685 

Sea  Dreams  3 

„         56 

Princess  ii  110 

,,      iii  13 

,,      iv  146 

„         vd>2 

101 

512 

,,       m  31 

74 

133 

149 

208 

,,      vii75 

GrandTnother  11 

64 

In  Mem.  xl  26 

,,    Ixix  10 

Maud  I  i  45 

„  xvii  19 

..  7/^63 


C(mi.  of  Arthur  384 

Gareth  and  L.  501 

1341 

Balin  and  Sedan  361 

Merlin  and  V.  344 

707 

711 

Holy  Qrail  399 

Last  Tmimainent  21 

48 

163 

„  292 

Lover's  Tide  iv  295 

298 

370 

375 

Cohimbvs  37 

De  Prof.  Two  G.  11 

The  Wreck  123 

Lochsley  H.,  Sixty,  64 

125 

The  Ring  151 

„         304 

353 

„        358 

365 

415 

„         483 

Death  of  (Enone  54 

Bandit's  Death  20 

The  Daiom  2 

9 

Mand  II  i  13 

Princess  iv  77 

487 

Elednore  5 

Gardener's  D.  268 

yValk.  to  tlie  MaU  108 

Enoch  Arden  194 

„  235 

706 

Sea  Dreams  301 

„  303 

„  305 

„  308 

Princess,  Pro.,  82 

„  iv  428 

Grandmotlier  88 


Baby  (s)  (cov/inued\    The  b  new  to  earth  and  sky,  Tn  Mem.  xlv  1 

I  cannot  bide  Sir  B.  Pelleas  and  E.  190 

I  have  gather'd  my  b  together—  Rizpah  20 

My  b,  the  bones  that  had  suck'd  me,  ,,       53 

kill  Their  babies  at  the  breast  Columbus  180 

'  Anything  ailing,'  I  asked  her,  *  with  b  ? '  The  Wreck  61 

Baby-germ    gamboll'd  on  the  greens  A  b-r/.  Talking  Oak  78 

Baby-girl    a  b-g,  that  had  never  look'd  on  the  light :  Despair  71 

Babyism    In  b's,  and  dear  diminutives  Aylmer's  Field  539 

Babylon    Shall  B  be  cast  into  the  sea ;  Sea  Dreams  28 

and  life  Pass  in  the  fire  of  B  !  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  124 

For  B  was  a  child  new-born,  The  Davm  9 

Babylonian    The  foundress  of  the  B  wall,  Princess  ii  80 

Baby-oak    magnetise  The  b-o  within.  Talking  Oak  256 

Baby-roae    The  b-r's  in  her  cheeks ;  Lilian  17 

Baby-sole    tender  pink  five-beaded  b-s's,  Aylmer's  Field  186 

Baby-wife    nor  wail  of  b-io,  Or  Indian  widow  ;  Akbar's  Dream  196 

Bacchanal    like  wild  B's  Fled  onward  Lover's  Tale  iii  25 

Bacchante    B,  what  you  will ;  Romney's  R.  6 

Bacchus    mailed  B  leapt  into  my  arms,  D.  of  F.  Women  151 

Back      wear  an  undress'd  goatskin  on  my  b  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  116 

How  she  mouths  behind  my  b.  Vision  of  Sin  110 

Read  rascal  in  the  motions  of  his  b  Sea  Dreams  167 

hear  my  father's  clamour  at  our  b's  Princess  i  105 

Her  b  against  a  pillar,  her  foot  ,,    iii  180 

Them  as  'as  coats  to  their  b's  an'  taakes  If.  Farmer,  N.S.  46 

The  daily  burden  for  the  b.  In  Mem.  xxv  4 

b  turn'd,  and  bow'd  above  his  work,  Man:  of  Geiuint  267 

brutes  of  mountain  b  That  carry  kings  Merlin  and  V.  576 

long  b's  of  the  bushless  downs,  (repeat)  Lancelot  and  E.  400,  789 

Look  at  the  cloiiths  on  'er  b,  North.  Cobbler  109 

Backbiter    Face-flatterer  and  b  are  the  same.  Merlin  arudL  V.  824 

Back'd    See  Bow-back'd 

Bacon  (Francis)    See  Verulam 

Bacon    See  Ba&con 

Bad  (adj. )    0  base  and  b  !  what  comfort  ?  Princess  v  78 

for  she  wur  a  b  un,  shea.  iV.  Farmer,  O.S.  22 

the  poor  in  a  loomp  is  b.  „        N.S.  48 

What  is  she  now  ?  My  dreams  are  b.  Maud  /  i  73 

And  here  beneath  it  is  all  as  6,  ,,  IIvl4^ 

good  ye  are  and  b,  and  like  to  coins,  ffoly  Grail  25 
Ya  was  niver  sa  6  as  that.                                      Church-warden,  etc.  26 

Bad  (b)    I  fear  to  slide  from  b  to  worse.  Two  Voices  231 

sa  o'  coorse  she  be  gone  to  the  b  !  Village  Wife  98 

I  wur  gawin'  that  waJiy  to  the  b,  Owd  Rod  71 

Bad-bade  (verb)    I  made  a  feast :  I  bad  him  come  ;  The  Sisters  13 

and  do  the  thing  I  bad  thee,  M.  d' Arthur  81 

utter'd  it,  And  bade  adieu  for  ever.  Love  and  Duty  83 

bade  him  cry,  with  sound  of  trumpet,  Godiva  36 

bad  him  with  good  heart  sustain  himself —  Aylmer's  Field  544 

He  bad  you  guard  the  sacred  coasts.  Ode  on  Well.  172 

my  three  brethren  bad  me  do  it,  Gareth  and  L.  1410  , 

'  Fair  Sir,  they  bad  me  do  it.  ,,             1417 

Thro'  which  he  bad  her  lead  him  on,  Geraint  and  E.  29 

6rt^^  the  host  Call  in  what  men  ,,            285 

Prince  6a<£  him  a  loud  good -night.  ,,            361 

In  this  poor  gown  he  6a«?  me  clothe  myself,  ,,            702 

Nor  waved  his  hand,  Nor  bad  farewell,  Lancelot  and  E.  987 

who  bad  a  thousand  farewells  to  me,  , ,            1056 

Lancelot,  who  coldly  went,  nor  bad  me  one  :  ,,            1057 

So  Arthur  bad  the  meek  Sir  Percivale  ,,             1264 

I  left  her  and  I  bad  her  no  farewell ;  ,,            1304 

when  he  saw  me,  rose,  and  bad  me  hail,  Holy  Grail  725 

and  do  the  thing  I  bade  thee.  Pass,  of  Arthur  249 

bad  them  to  a  banquet  of  farewells.  Lw>er's  Tale  iv  186 

bad  his  menials  bear  him  from  the  door,  ,,          260 

We  bad  them  no  farewell,  ,,          386 

bad  them  remember  my  father's  death,  V.  of  Maeldwie  70 

bad  his  trumpeter  sound  To  the  charge,  Heavy  Brigade  8 

I  bad  her  keep.  Like  a  seal'd  book,  The  Ring  122 

6a(?  the  man  engrave  '  From  Walter '  on  the  ring,  ,,        235 

Badger    live  like  an  old  b  in  his  earth,  Holy  Grail  629 
Badon    broke  the  Pagan  yet  once  more  on  B  hill.'      iMncdot  and  E.  280 

on  the  mount  Of  B  I  myself  beheld  ,,            303 

Baffle     '  Thy  glory  b's  wisdom.  Akbar's  Dream  28 


BafSed 


24 


Band 


Baffled    Havelock  b,  or  beaten.  Def.  of  Luckrmo  91 

B  her  priesthood,  Broke  the  Taboo,  Kapiolani  29 
Baffling    winds  variable,  Then  h,  a  long  course  of 

them  ;  Enodi  Arden  546 

'  blown  by  6  winds,  Like  the  Good  Fortune,  , ,            628 

Bag    not  plunge  His  hand  into  the  6 :  Golden  Year  72 

with  b  and  sack  and  basket,  Enoch  Arden  63 

Bagdat    By  B's  shrines  of  fretted  gold,  Arabian  Nights  7 

mooned  domes  aloof  In  inmost  B,  , ,           128 

Bagpipe    b's,  revelling,  devil's-dances.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  149 

Bailey -gate    storm  at  the  B-g  !  storm,  Def.  of  Litckrwio  37 

Bailiff    his  b  brought  A  Chartist  pike.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  70 

how  he  sent  the  b  to  the  farm  The  Brook  141 

how  the  6  swore  that  he  was  mad,  '              ,,        143 

He  met  the  6  at  the  Golden  Fleece,  ,,        146 

He  found  the  b  riding  by  the  farm,  ,,        153 

Bairn    (See  also  Bame)    '  See  your  b's  before  you  go  !     En^h  Arden  870 

But  fur  thy  b's,  poor  Steevie,  Spinstei-'s  S's.  82 

thou  was  es  fond  o'  thy  b's  ,.            83 

tci'  my  hi'  'is  inoitth  to  the  winder  Owd  Roii  92 

Bait    the  b's  Of  gold  and  beauty,  Ayliner's  Field  486 

Christ  the  b  to  trap  his  dupe  and  fool ;  Sea  Dreams  191 

hinted  love  was  only  wasted  b,  The  Ring  360 

Baited    so  spum'd,  so  b  two  whole  days —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  163 

Bake     whose  brain  the  sunshine  b's  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  164 

Baked    (See  also  Ba&ked)    Over  all  the  meadow  b 

and  bare.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  8 

Baking    not  eam'd  my  cake  in  6  of  it  ?  Oareth  and  L.  575 

Bala    south-west  that  blowing  B  lake  Geraiyit  and  E.  929 

Balan    Balin  and  B  sitting  statuelike,  Balin  and  Balan  24 

on  the  left  Of  B  B's  near  a  poplartree.  ,,              30 

Balin  and  B  answer'd  '  For  the  sake  ,,             32 

Then  Balin  rose,  and  B,  ,,43 

and  my  better,  this  man  here,  B.  „             55 

fury  on  myself,  Saving  for  B  :  ,,63 

Than  twenty  Balins,  B  knight.  ,,             69 

Then  B  added  to  their  Order  „              91 

Said  B  *  I '  !  So  claim 'd  the  quest  ,,            137 

B  wam'd,  and  went ;  Balin  remain'd  :  ,,            153 

He  took  the  selfsame  track  as  J5,  ,,            290 

and  B  lurking  there  (His  quest  was  unaccomplish'd)  ,,            546 

shield  of  B  prick'd  The  hauberk  ,,            559 

had  chanced,  and  B  moan'd  again.  ,,            604 

Balance  (equipoise)    As  the  wind-hover  hangs  in  b,     Ayliner's  Field  321 

Balance  (verb)    who  would  cast  and  6  at  a  desk,  Audley  Court  44 

Like  souls  that  b  joy  and  pain.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G,  1 

Balanced    (See  also  SeUf-balanced)    Your  fortunes, 

justlier  b,  Princess  ii  66 

Well,  she  b  this  a  little,  ,,    Hi  165 

And  6  either  way  by  each.  Lover's  Tale  iv  269 

Balcony    Under  tower  and  b,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  37 

And  lean'd  upon  the  b.  Mariana  in  the  S.  88 

Bald    Jinny's  'ciid  as  b  as  one  o'  them  heggs,  Village  Wife  102 

Baldness    (*«  also  Earth-baldness)    Began  to  wag 

their  b  up  and  down.  Princess  v  19 

Baldric    from  his  blazon'd  b  slung  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  15 

Bale    dropping  down  with  costly  b's  ;  Locksley  Hall  122 

tho"  they  brought  Vjut  merchants'  b's,  In  Mem.  xiii  19 

Balin    B  and  Balan  sitting  statuelike,  Balin  and  Balan  24 

on  thp  right  of  B  B's  horse  Wa«  fast  „               28 

B  and  Balan  answer'd  '  For  the  sake  „               82 

Then  B  rose,  and  Balan,  „               48 

B  the  stillness  of  a  minute  broke  „               51 

B.  '  the  Savage ' — that  addition  thine —  „               53 

Than  twenty  li's,  Balan  knight.  „                69 

Thereafter,  when  Sir  B  entcr'd  hall,  „               80 

heretofore  with  these  And  B,  „               93 

Embracing  B,  '  Good  my  brother,  „             139 

Balan  wam'd,  and  went ;  B  remain'd :  „             L53 

B  marvelling  oft  How  far  beyond  „              171 

Arthur,  when  Sir  B  soiight  him,  said  ,,             198 

B  wan  bold,  and  ask'd  To  boar  „             199 

'  No  shadow'  aaid  Sir  i?  '  0  my  Queen,  „             206 

B  bare  the  crown,  and  all  the  knights  „             209 

chanced,  one  morning,  that  Sir  B  sat  240 


Balin  (continued)  Follow'd  the  Queen;  Sir  B  heard  her  Balin  and  Balan  250 

and  £  started  from  his  bower.  ,,            ,280 

B  cried  '  Him,  or  the  viler  devil  ,,              299 

B  answer'd  him  '  Old  fabler,  ,,             306 

Said  5  '  For  the  fairest  and  the  best  ,,             339 

B  said  '  The  Queen  we  worship,  ,,              348 

A  goblet  on  the  board  by  £,  ,,              362 

This  B  graspt,  but  while  in  act  to  hurl,  ,,              368 

Sir  jB  with  a  fiery  '  Ha !  ,,             393 

B  by  the  banneret  of  his  helm  , ,             398 

iJ  drew  the  shield  from  off  his  neck,  ,,             429 

And  B  rose,  '  Thither  no  more  !  „             483 

Said  B  to  her  '  Is  this  thy  coiuiesy —  , ,              494 

Sir  ii  spake  not  word,  But  snatch 'd        \  ,,              .553 

JB's  horse  Was  wearied  to  the  death,  ,,              .560 

they  clash'd.  Rolling  back  upon  B,  ,,             562 

£  first  woke,  and  seeing  that  true  face,  ,,              590 

'  0  5, -B,  I  that  fain  had  died  To  save  ,,             599 

B  told  him  brokenly,  and  in  gasps,  ,,             603 

'  0  brother '  answer'd  B  '  woe  is  me  !  ,,             618 

£  answer'd  low  '  Goodnight,  ,,             627 

and  slept  the  sleep  With  B,  ,,             632 

Balk'd    with  a  worm  I  b  his  fame.  D.  of  F.  Wmnen  155 

Ball  (globe)     '  No  compound  of  this  earthly  b  Two  Voices  35 

Ball  (game)    Had  tost  his  b  and  flown  his  kite,  Aylmer's  Field  84 

Flung  b,  flew  kite,  and  raced  the  purple  fly,  Pnncess  ii  248 

others  tost  a  b  Above  the  fountain-jets,  ,,            461 

Quoit,  tennis,  6 — no  games?  ,,       m  215 

And  we  took  to  playing  at  b,  V.  of  Maddune  94 

Ball  (round  object)    whereon  the  gilded  h  Danced         Princess,  Pro.,  63 

like  a  b  The  russet-bearded  head  roll'd  Geraint  and  E.  728 

he  made  me  the  cowslip  b.  First  Quarrel  13 

Ball  (orb)    To  him  who  grasps  a  golden  b.  In  Mem.  cxi  3 

Ball  (the  sun)    The  day  comes,  a  dull  red  b  Maud  II  iv  65 

Ball  (the  heel)    Dagonet,  turning  on  the  b  of 

his  foot.  Last  Tournament  329 
Ball  (entertainment  of  dancing)    But  I  came  on 

him  once  at  a  b,  The  Wreck  47 

Ball  (plajrthing)    Is  to  be  the  b  of  Time,  Vision  of  Sin  105 
Ball    (See  also  AcOm-ball,  Blossom-ball,  Cannon-ball, 

Cowslip  Ball,  Football) 

Ballad    time  to  time,  some  6  or  a  song  Princess,  Pro.,  241 

something  in  the  h's  which  they  sang,  , ,            Con,  14 

flung  A  i  to  the  brightening  moon  :  In  Mem,,  Ixxxix  28 

A  passionate  6  gallant  and  gay,  Maud  Ivi 

To  the  b  that  she  sings.  Maud  II  iv  43 

carolling  as  he  went  A  true-love  b,  Lancelot  and  E.  705 

lay  At  thy  pale  feet  this  b  Bed.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  20 

Ballad-burthen    Like  b-b  music,  kept,  The  Daisy  77 

Ballast    we  laid  them  on  the  b  down  below  ;  The  Revenge  18 

Balliol    loved  by  all  the  younger  gown  There  at  B,         To  Master  of  B.  3 

Balloon    See  Fire-balloon 

Balm    steep  our  brows  in  slumber's  holy  b  ;  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  21 

desires,  like  fltful  blasts  of  b  Gardener's  D.  68 

spikenard,  and  b,  and  frankincense.  St.  S.  Stylites'lW 

caress  The  ringlet's  waving  b—  Talking  Oak  178 

Beat  b  upon  our  eyelids.  Princess  Hi  123 

Be  thme  the  b  of  pity.  Merlin  and  V.  80 

Strowmg  b,  or  shedding  poison  Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  274 

who  breathe  the  b  Of  summer-winters  To  Ulysses  10 

'  From  the  South  I  bring  you  b,  Prog,  of  Spring  66 

whatever  herb  or  b  May  clear  the  blood  Death  of  (Enone  35 

Balm-cricket    The  b-c  carols  clear  In  the  green  A  Dirge  47 

Balm-dew    drop  B-d's  to  bathe  thy  feet !  Talking  Oak  268 

Balm'd    swathed  and  b  it  for  herself.  Lover's  Tale  i  682 

Balmier    kisses  b  than  half -opening  buds  Tithoniis  59 

B  and  nobler  from  her  bath  of  storm,                 "  Lucretius  175 

Baltic    shaker  of  the  B  and  the  Nile,  Ode  on  Well.  137 

side  of  the  Black  and  the  B  deep,  Maud  III  vi  51 

Baluster    And  leaning  there  on  those  b's.  Princess  Hi  119 

Balustrade    stairs  Ran  up  with  golden  b,  Arabian  Nights  118 

Bamboo    Your  cane,  your  palm,  tree-fern,  b,  To  Ulysses  36 

Band  (bond,  strip)    bind  with  b's  That  island  queen  Buonaparte  2 

Sleep  had  bound  her  in  his  rosy  b,  Caress'd  or  chidden  6 

A  6  of  pam  across  my  brow  ;  Tfie  Letters  6 


Band 


25 


Bard 


I 


Band  (bond,  strip)  (contimied)    single  b  of  gold  about 

her  hair,  Princess  v  513 

No  spirit  ever  brake  the  b  In  Mem,  xdii  2 

bars  Of  black  and  b's  of  silver,  Lover's  Tale  iv  59 

an"  twined  like  a  6  o'  haay.  (hod  Rod  22 

Band  (a  company)    held  debate,  a  6  Of  youthful 

friends,  In  Mem.  Ixocxvii  21 

in  a  dream  from  a  &  of  the  blest,  Maud  III  vi  10 

if  he  live,  we  will  have  him  of  our  h  ;  Oeraint  and  E.  553 
thanks  to  the  Blessed  Saints  that  T  came  on 

none  of  his  b  ;  Bandit's  Death  40 

b  will  be  scatter 'd  now  their  gallant  captain  is  dead,  ,,             41 

Bandage    raised  the  blinding  b  from  his  eyes :  Princess  i  244 

Banded    (See  also  Snowy-bajided,  Yellow-banded) 

but  after,  the  great  lords  B,  Com.  of  Arthur  237 

Bandied    B  by  the  hands  of  fools.  Vision  of  Sin  106 

Bandit    redden'd  with  no  b's  blood  :  Aylmer's  Field  597 

bridge,  ford,  beset  By  b's,  Oareth  and  L.  595 

I  saw  three  b's  by  the  rock  Oeraint  aTid  E.  72 

Struck  thro' the  Dulky  6's  corselet  home,  ,,             159 

now  so  long  By  b's  groom'd,  ,,             193 

Was  half  a  6  in  my  lawless  hour,  „             795 

One  from  the  b  scatter'd  in  the  field,  ,,             818 

Scaped  thro'  a  cavern  from  a  b  hold,  Holy  Grail  207 

Thieves,  b's,  leavings  of  confusion.  Last  Tmtmame7it  95 

Sanctuary  granted  To  b,  thief.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  113 

tho'  I  am  the  B's  bride.  Bandit's  Death  6 

But  the  B  had  woo'd  me  in  vain,  „            10 

Bandit-haunted    past  The  marches,  and  by  b-h  holds,  Gei-aint  and  E.  30 

Bane    courtesies  of  household  life.  Became  her  b  ;  OviTievere  87 

mockery  of  my  people,  and  their  b.'  „      526 

Bang    Let  us  b's  these  dogs  of  Seville,  The  Revenge  30 

good  manners  b  thruf  to  the  tip  o'  the  taail.  Spiitster's  S's,  66 

Bang'd    palace  b,  and  buzz'd  and  clackt.  Day- Dm..,  Revival,  14 

iron-clanging  anvil  b  With  hammers  ;  Princess  v  504 

Banished    born  And  b  into  mystery,  De  Prof.  Two  G.  42 

Banishment    causer  of  his  b  and  shame,  Balin  and  Balan  221 

Bank    {See  also  Biver-bank,  Sea-bank)    In  cool 

soft  turf  upon  the  b,  Arabian  Nights  96 

wave-worn  horns  of  the  echoing  b.  Dying  Swan  39 

Shadow  forth  the  b's  at  will :  EleaTwre  110 

From  the  b  and  from  the  river  L.  of  Shalott,  Hi  33 

broad  stream  in  his  b's  complaining,  „             w  3 
The  little  life  of  b  and  brier.                                You  might  have  won  30 

With  many  a  curve  my  b's  I  fret  The  Brook  43 

maidens  glimmeringly  group'd  In  tho  hollow  b.  Princess  iv  191 

shadowing  bluflf  that  made  the  b's.  In  Mem.  ciii  22 

Behind  a  purple-frosty  b  Of  vapoiur,  ,,          cvii  3 

Full  to  the  b's,  close  on  the  promised  good  Maud  I  xviii  6 

Rough-thicketed  were  the  b's  and  steep  ;  Oareth  and  L.  907 

star  of  mom  Parts  from  a  6  of  snow,  Marr.  of  Oeraint  735 

Tho'  happily  down  on  a  6  of  grass,  Oeraint  and  E.  507 

like  a  6  Of  maiden  snow  mingled  Last  Tournament  148 

leaves  Low  b's  of  yellow  sand  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  535 

thaw  the  b's  o'  the  beck  be  sa  high,  Village  Wife  83 

Plunges  and  heaves  at  a  6  Def.  of  Lvjcknmo  39 

slushin'  down  fro'  the  b  to  the  beck,  Owd  Rod  41 

Here  on  this  6  in  smne  way  live  tho  life  Akbar's  Dream  144 

Bankrupt    b  of  all  claim  On  your  obedience,  Romney's  R.  70 

Banner    (See  also  Flame-banner)    Here  droops  the  b 

on  the  tower.  Day -Dm.,  Sleep.  P.,  13 

hedge  broke  in,  the  b  blew,  Day-Dm.  Revival  9 

unfurl  the  maiden  b  of  our  rights.  Princess  iv  503 

undulated  The  b  :  anon  to  meet  us  ,,         v  254 

With  b  and  with  music.  Ode  on  Well.  81 

March  with  b  and  bugle  and  fife  Maud  IvlQ 

hail  once  more  to  the  b  of  battle  unroll'd  !  Maud  III  vi  42 

So  when  the  King  had  set  his  b  broad.  Com.  of  Arthur  101 

with  black  b,  and  a  long  black  horn  Oareth  and  L.  1366 

b's  of  twelve  battles  overhead  Stir,  Balin  and  Balan  88 
deeds  Of  England,  and  her  b  in  the  East  ?    Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  21 

B  of  England,  not  for  a  season,  0  b  Def.  of  Imcknow  1 
topmost  roof  our  b  of  England 

blew,  (repeat)  Def.  of  Lucknotc  6,  30,  45,  60,  94 

topmost  roof  our  b  in  India  blew.  Def.  of  Lucknmo  72 


Banner  (continued)    on  the  palace  roof  the  old 
b  of  England  blow. 
Thraldom  who  walks  with  the  6  of  Freedom, 
b's  blazoning  a  Power  That  is  not  seen 

Banneret    a  slender  b  fluttering. 

Balin  by  the  b  of  his  helm  Dragg'd 


Def.  ofLucknoiv  106 

Vastness  10 

Akbar's  Dream  137 

Oareth  and  L.  913 

Balin  and  Balan  398 


Banquet    (See  also  Marriage-banquet,  Mid-banquet) 

Each  baron  at  the  b  sleeps,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.,  37 

beeswing  from  a  binn  reserved  For  b's,  Aylmer's  Field  406 

distant  blaze  of  those  dull  b's,  ,,             489 

with  this  our  b's  rang  ;  Princess  i  132 

With  b  in  tho  distant  woods  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  32 

flowers  or  leaves  To  deck  the  b.  , ,              cvii  6 

Spice  his  fair  b  with  the  dust  of  death  ?  Maud  I  xviii  56 

at  the  b  those  great  Lords  from  Rome,  Com.  of  Arthur  504 

Faint  in  the  low  dark  hall  of  b  :  Balin  and  Balan  343 

(She  sat  beside  the  b  nearest  Mark),  Merlin  and  V.\S 

made  him  leave  The  b,  and  concourse  Lancelot  and  E.  562 

Arthur  to  the  b,  dark  in  mood,  ,,              564 

ev'n  the  knights  at  b  twice  or  thrice  „              736 

against  the  floor  Beneath  the  b,  ,,               743 

While  the  great  b  lay  along  the  hall.  Holy  Orail  180 

Then  Arthur  made  vast  b's,  Pelleas  and  E.  147 

bad  them  to  a  6  of  farewells.  Love>''s  Tale  iv  186 

cries  about  the  b — '  Beautiful !  „              239 

To  make  their  b  relish  ?  Ancient  Sage  18 

Banqueted    Let  the  needy  be  b,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  35 

Banquet-hall    Into  the  fair  Peleian  b-h,  (Enone  225 

Banter  (s)    he  spoke,  Part  b,  part  affection.  Princess,  Pro.,  167 

They  hated  h,  wish'd  for  something  real,  ,,          Con.,  18 

Banter  (verb)    With  solemn  gibe  did  Eustace  h  me.       Gardener's  D.  168 

Banter'd    I  b  him,  and  swore  They  said  Golden  Year  8 

With  which  we  6  little  Lilia  first :  Pnncess,  Con. ,  12 

Bantling    Then  let  the  b  scald  at  home,  Pri7icess,  v  458 

Lo  their  precious  Roman  b,  Boddicea  31 

Baptis  (Baptist)    Fur  I  wur  a  B  wonst.  Church-warden,  etc.  11 

tha  ?«?/,«  speak  hout  to  the  i?'e5  here  i' the  town,  ,,                 51 

Bar  (barrier)    (See  also  Harbour-bar,  Window-bars) 

Sang  looking  thro'  his  prison  6's?  Margaret  35 

salt  jxjol,  lock'd  in  with  b's  of  sand.  Palace  of  Art  249 

My  spirit  beais  her  mortal  b's,  Sir  Galahad  46 

Low  breezes  fann'd  the  belfry  b's.  The  Letters  43 

Save  for  the  b  between  us,  loving  Enoch  Arden  880 

I  linger  by  my  shingly  b's  ;  The  Brook  180 

Baronet  yet  had  laid  No  b  between  them  :  Aylmer's  Field  118 

nor  conscious  of  a  h  Between  them,  , ,             134 

squeezed  himself  betwixt  the  b's.  Princess,  Pro.,  112 

Who  breaks  his  birth's  invidious  b.  In  Mem.  Ixiv  5 

Unloved,  by  many  a  sandy  b,  ,,             ct  9 

Rave  over  the  rocky  b,  Voice  and  the  P.  6 

those  that  hand  the  dish  across  the  h.  Oareth  and  L.  155 

may  there  be  no  moaning  of  the  b.  Crossing  the  Bar  3 

When  I  have  crost  the  b.  „               16 

Bar  (band)  long  night  in  silver  streaks  and  b's,  Ijtver's  Tide,  ii  112 

b's  Of  black  and  bands  of  silver,  ,,           w  58 

Bar  (iron  rod)  casting  b  or  stone  Was  counted  best ;      Oareth  and  L.  518 

Bar  (bony  rid!ge)  The  b  of  Michael  Angelo  In  Mem..  Ixxxvii  40 

Bar  (ray)  stream 'd  thro'  many  a  golden  b,  Day-Dm.,  Depart.  15 

Bar  (tribunal)    himself  The  prisoner  at  the  b.  Sea  Dreams  176 

Bar  (body  of  barristers)    year  or  two  before  Call'd 

to  the  b,  Aylmer's  Field  59 
Bar  (division  of  music)    Whistling  a  random  6  of 

Bonny  Doon,  The  Brook  82 

Bar  (verb)    doors  that  b  The  secret  bridal  chambers      Gardener's  D.  248 

block  and  b  Your  heart  with  system  Princess  iv  462 

Thro'  the  gates  that  b  the  distance  Faith  6 

Barbarian    Till  that  o'ergrown  B  in  the  East  Poland  7 

gray  b  lower  than  the  Christian  child.  Lockdey  Hall  174 

'  Who  ever  saw  such  wild  b's.  ?    Girls  ? —  Princess  Hi  42 

B's,  grosser  than  your  native  bears —  ,,        iv  537 

Barbarous    These  women  were  too  b,  „        H  298 

Barcelona    At  B — tho'  you  were  not  Coluinlms  8 

Bard    b  has  honour'd  beech  or  lime.  Talking  Oak  291 

0  little  h,  is  your  lot  so  hard,  Spitefid  Letter  5 

6's  of  him  will  sing  Hereafter  ;  Com.  of  Artliur  414 


Bard 


26 


Barrier 


Bard  (cotititm^)    not  then  the  Riddling  of  the  B's"!      Gareth  and  L.  286 

Was  also  B,  and  knew  the  starry  heavens ;  Merlin  and  V.  169 

her  b,  her  silver  star  of  eve,  Her  God,  ,,            954 

many  a  /*,  without  offence,  Ltmcdot  and  E.  Ill 

all  the  sacred  madness  of  the  h,  Holy  th-ail  877 

thy  Paynim  6  Had  such  a  mastery  Last  Towmainent  326 

•  Yea,  one,  a  /* ;  of  whom  my  father  said,  Gninevere  111 

the  h  Sang  Arthur's  glorious  wars,  ,,        285 

we  chanted  the  songs  of  the  B's  V.  of  Maddune  90 

B  whose  fame-lit  laurels  glance  To  Victor  Hvgo  4 

B'.%  that  the  mighty  Muses  have  raised  Pamassns  2 

Bare  (a!dj.)    plain  was  grassy,  wild  and  h,  Hying  Sioan  1 

God,  before  whom  ever  lie  h  PalMce  of  Art  222 

argent  of  her  breast  to  sight  Laid  b,  D.  of  F.  Women  159 

And  saw  the  altar  cold  and  b.  The  Letters  4 

our  love  and  reverence  left  them  &  ?  Aylmer's  Field  785 

walks  were  stript  as  6  as  brooms.  Princess,  Pro.,  184 

strip  a  hundred  hollows  b  of  Spring,  „              vi  65 

Flashed  all  their  sabres  b.  Light  Brigade  27 

B  of  the  body,  might  it  last.  In  Mem.  xliii  6 

breathing  h  Tlie  round  of  space,  ,,       Ixxxvi  4 

shield  was  blank  and  b  without  a  sign  Gareth  and  L.  414 
Worn  by  the  feet  that  now  were  silent,  wound 

B  to  the  sun,  Marr,  of  Geraint  322 

in  my  agony  Did  I  make  b  Lover's  Tale  ii  48 

Over  all  the  meadow  baked  and  b.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  8 
strip  your  own  foul  passions  b  ;                            Locksley  H.,  Sio'Iy,  141 

His  friends  had  stript  him  b.  Dead  Prophet  14 

An'  haafe  on  'im  i  as  a  bublin'.  Owd  Roa  102 

honest  Poverty,  b  to  the  bone  ;  Vastriess  19 

now  arching  leaves  her  b  To  breaths  Prog,  of  Spring  12 

Bare  (to  bear)    hoofs  6  on  the  ridge  of  spears  Prin/xss  v  489 

and  b  Straight  to  the  doors :  ,,      vi  348 

first  that  ever  I  b  was  dead  Grandmother  59 

b  The  use  of  virtue  out  of  earth :  In  Mem.  Ixxxii  9 

This  h  a  maiden  shield,  a  casque ;  Gareth  and  L.  680 

down  upon  him  6  the  bandit  three.  Geraint  and  E.  84 

he,  she  dreaded  most,  b  down  upon  him.  „            156 

B  victual  for  the  mowers :  ,,            202 

b  her  by  main  violence  to  the  board,  ,,            654 

Balin  b  the  crown,  and  all  the  knights  Balin  and  Balan  209 

Trampled  ye  thus  on  that  which  b  the  Crown  ? '  „              602 

he  that  always  b  in  bitter  grudge  Merlin  and  V,  6 

grefit  and  guilty  love  he  b  the  Queen,  Lancelot  and  E.  245 

In  battle  with  the  love  he  6  his  lord,  , ,            246 

all  together  down  upon  him  B,  ,,            482 

came  the  hermit  out  and  b  him  in,  ,,            519 

often  in  her  arms  She  ft  me,  ,,          1411 

none  might  see  who  b  it,  and  it  past.  Holy  Grail  190 

his  creatures  took  and  b  him  off,  Guinevere  109 

Bare  (to  lay  open)    Falsehood  shall  b  her 

plaited  brow :  Clear-headed  friend  11 

To  b  the  eternal  Heavens  again,  In  Mem.  cxxii  4 

Bared    The  rites  prepared,  the  victim  h.  The  Victim  65 

tho'  it  spake  and  b  to  view  In  Mem.  xcii  9 

b  the  knotted  column  of  his  throat,  Marr.  of  Geraint  74 

It  her  forehead  to  the  blistering  sun,  Geraint  and  E.  515 

Barefoot    For  b  on  the  keystone,  Gareth  and  L.  214 

Bare-footed     Kf  came  the  beggar  maid  Beggar  Maid  3 

I'.l  and  bare-headed  three  fair  girls  Gareth  and  L.  926 

Bare  grinning    Flash'd  the  b-g  skeleton  of  doath  !        Merlin  and  V.  847 

Bare-headed    Some  cowled,  and  some  6-/t,  Princess  vi  77 

Bnro-footed  and  b-h  three  fair  girls  Gareth  and  L.  926 

BarenesB    To  make  old  b  picturesque  In  Mem.  cxxviii  19 

Bargain    they  closed  a  b,  hand  in  hand.  The  Brook  156 

May  rue  the  b  made.'  Princess  i  74 

Barge    Slide  tho  heavy  b's  trail'd  L.  of  S/utlott  i  20 

Then  saw  they  how  there  hove  a  dusky  b,  M.  d^ Arthur  193 

'  Place  me  in  the  b,'  And  to  the  h  they  came.  ,,          204 

slowly  answered  Arthur  from  the  b :  „          239 

b  with  oar  and  sail  Moved  from  the  brink,  ,,          265 

and  a  b  Be  ready  on  tho  river,  Ixtncelot  and  E.  1122 

tf)  that  stream  whereon  the  ft,  ,,            1141 

slowly  past  the  ft  Whereon  tho  lily  maid  ,,            1241 

the  6,  On  to  the  palace-doorway  sliding,  „           1245 


Barge  {continued)   ft  that  brought  her  moving 

down,  Lancelot  and  E.  139 

that  unhappy  child  Pa^t  in  her  6 :  Last  Toumamsnt  45 

Then  saw  they  how  there  hove  a  dusky  6,  Pass,  of  Arthur  361 

'  Place  me  in  the  ft.'    So  to  the  6  they  came.  „              372 

slowly  answer'd  Arthur  from  the  ft :  ,,              407 

ft  with  oar  and  sail  Moved  from  the  brink,  ,,              433 

Barge-laden    creeps  on,  B4,  to  three  arches  Gardiner's  D.  43 
Bark  (vessel)    (See  cdso  Crescent-bark)    a  ft  that, 

blowing  forward,  bore  M.  d' Arthur  Ep.  21 

I  find  a  magic  6  ;  Sir  Gakihad  38 

swiftly  streara'd  ye  by  the  ft  !  The  Voyage  50 

lading  and  unlading  the  tall  b's,  Enoch  Arden  816 

this  frail  ft  of  ours,  when  sorely  tried,  Aylmer's  Field  715 

I  sit  within  a  helmless.ft.  In  Mem.  iv  3 

unhappy  ft  That  strikes  by  night  ,,     xvi  12 

spare  thee,  sacred  ft  ;  ,,  xmi  14 

ft  had  plunder'd  twenty  nameless  isles ;  Merlin  and  V.  559 

Down  on  a  ft,  and  overbears  the  ft,  Lancelot  and  E.  485 

Bark  (of  a  tree)    silver-green  with  gnarled  6 :  Ma'riana  42 

And  rugged  b's  begin  to  bud.  My  life  is  full  18 

Could  slip  its  ft  and  walk.  Tidking  Oak  188 
Bark  (verb)    B  an  answer,  Britain's  raven  !  ft  and 

blacken  innumerable,  Boddicea  13 

Let  the  fox  6,  let  the  wolf  yell.  PeUeas  and  E.  472 

and  the  dog  couldn't  6.  V.  of  Maeldune  18 

Barketh    B  the  shepherd-dog  cheerly  ;  Leonine  Eleg.  5 

Barking    ft  for  the  thrones  of  kings  ;  Ode  on  Well.  121 

Bark's-bosom    Borne  in  the  ft-ft,  Batt.  of  BruTianburh  ^9 

Barley    Long  fields  of  ft  and  of  rye,  L.  of  SJudott  i  2 

In  among  the  bearded  ft,  ,,29 

And  raked  in  golden  6.  Will  Water.  128 

Barley-sheaves    He  rode  between  the  b-s,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  2 

Barley-spear    b-s's  Were  hollow-husk'd,  Deimeter  and  P.  112 

Barmaid     '  Bitter  ft,  waning  fast !  Vision  of  Sin  67 

Bam    got  to  the  6,  fur  the  ft  wouldn't  burn  Owd  Rod  103 

but  the  ft  was  as  cowd  as  owt,  ,,        111 

Bame  (bairn)    Bessy  Marris's  6.  (repeat)  N.  Fanner,  O.S.  14,  21 

Baron  (title)    Each  ft  at  the  banquet  sleeps,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.,  37 

The  b's  swore,  with  many  words,  ,,            Revival  23 

gaunt  old  B  with  his  beetle  brow  Priiicess  ii  240 

bush-bearded  B's  heaved  and  blew,  ,,          « 21 

In  doubt  if  you  be  of  our  B's'  breed —  Third  of  Feb.  32 

Lords  and  B's  of  his  realm  Com.  of  Arthur  65 

B's  and  the  kings  prevail'd,  ,,              105 

fought  against  him  in  the  B's'  war,  Gareth  and  L.  77 

A  knight  of  Uther  in  the  B's'  war,  ,,            353 

a  stalwart  B,  Arthur's  friend.  ,,            818 

B  saying,  '  I  well  believe  ,,            835 

the  ^  set  Gareth  beside  her,  ,,            851 

Setting  this  knave,  Lord  B,  at  my  side.  ,,            854 

His  B  said  '  We  go  but  harkon :  Balin  and  Balan  9 

Heard  from  the  B  that,  ten  years  La-^ticdot  and  E.  272 

Count,  ft — whom  he  smote,  he  overthrew.  ,,              465 

Bracelet-bestower  and  B  of  B's,  Bait,  of  Bninanburh  4 

Baronet    hoar  hair  of  the  B  bristle  up  Aylmer's  Fidd  42 

B  yet  had  laid  No  bar  between  them :  ,,           117 

No  little  lily-handed  B  he,  Princess,  Con.  84 

Barr'd    All  ft  with  long  white  cloud  Palace  of  Art  BiZ 

Every  door  is  ft  with  gold,  Locksley  Hall  100 

door  shut,  and  window  ft.  Godiva  41 

home-circle  of  the  poor  They  ft  her  :  Aylmer's  Fidd  505 

But  now  fast  6 :  Princess  v  367 

and  entering  ft  her  door,  Lancelot  and  E.  15 

ribb'd  And  6  with  bloom  on  bloom.  Lover's  Tale  i  416 

Barren    But  it  is  wild  and  ft,  Amphion  2 

Tho  soil,  left  ft,  scarce  had  grown  In  Mem.  liii  7 

Barren-beaten    He  left  the  ft-ft  thoroughfare,  Lancdot  and  E.  161 

Barricade    Should  pile  her  b's  with  dead.  In  Mem.  cxxvii  8 

death  at  our  slight  ft,  Def.  of  Luckn&w  15 

Barrier    trumpet  blared  At  the  ft  Princess  v  486 

burst  All  b's  in  her  onward  race  In  Mem.  cxiv  14 

Back  to  the  ft  ;  then  the  trumpets  lAincelot  and  E.  500 

almost  burst  the  b's  in  their  heat.  Holy  Grail  336 

voice  that  billow'd  round  the  b's  Last  Tournament  167 


Barrier 


27 


Battle 


Barrier  (continued)    Russia  bursts  our 
Indian  b, 

h  that  divided  beast  from  man  Slipt, 
Barring  out    graver  than  a  schoolboy's  h  o ; 
Barrow    grassy  b's  of  the  happier  dead. 

behind  it  a  gray  down  With  Danish  b's  ; 

Pass  from  the  Danish  b  overhead  ; 
Barter    not  being  bred  To  b, 
Base  (adj.)    him  thai  utter  d  nothing  b ; 

Counts  nothing  that  she  meets  with  b, 

'  Ungenerous,  dishonourable,  b, 

0  b  and  bad !  what  comfort  ? 

is  he  not  too  b  ? 

And  myself  so  languid  and  b. 

And  therefore  splenetic,  personal,  b, 

Nor  know  I  whether  I  be  very  b 

Not  only  to  keep  down  the  b  in  man, 

spared  the  flesh  of  thousands,  the  coward  and 
the&, 
Base  (s)    (See  also  Meadow-bases)    Wrapt  in  dense 
cloud  from  b  to  cope. 

The  seas  that  shock  thy  b  ! 

Upon  the  hidden  b's  of  the  hills.' 

people  hum  About  the  column's  b, 

The  broken  6  of  a  black  tower, 

a  pillar'd  porch,  the  b's  lost  In  laurel : 

He  has  a  solid  b  of  temperament : 

roots  of  earth  and  b  of  all ; 

fangs  Shall  move  the  stony  b's  of  the  world, 

roar  that  breaks  the  Pharos  from  his  b 

great  the  crush  was,  and  each  b, 

It  sees  itself  from  thatch  to  b 

drown  The  b's  of  my  life  in  tears. 

a  hundred  feet  Up  from  the  /; : 

lash'd  it  at  the  b  with  slanting  storm  ; 

at  the  b  we  found  On  either  hand, 

earthquake  shivering  to  your  b  Split  you, 

gathering  at  the  b  Re-makes  itself, 

Upon  the  hidden  b's  of  the  hills.' 

iceberg  splits  From  cope  to  b — 

wander  round  the  b's  of  the  hilk, 

plunge  to  the  b  of  the  mountain  walls, 
Basebom    Call  him  b,  and  since  his  ways 

and  no  king.  Or  else  b.' 
Based    (•S^^  also  Broad-based,  Firm-based) 
feet  on  juts  of  slippery  crag 

b  His  feet  on  juts  of  slippery  crag 
Basement    Modred  brought  His  creatures  to  the  b 
Baseness     '  He  knows  a  bin  his  blood 

e<)ual  b  lived  in  sleeker  times 

Is  there  no  b  we  would  hide  ? 

She  finds  the  b  of  her  lot, 

there  is  no  b  in  her.' 

To  leave  an  equal b  ; 

Puts  his  own  6  in  him  by  default 
Basest    Altho'  I  be  the  b  of  mankind, 

The  b,  far  into  that  council-hall 

All  that  is  noblest,  all  that  is  b, 
Bashful    reddens,  cannot  speak.  So  b, 
Bashfulness    His  b  and  tenderness  at  war, 

His  broken  utterances  and  b, 
Basilisk    hornless  unicorns,  Crack'd  b's, 
Baisis    All  but  the  b  of  the  soul. 
Bask    or  to  6  in  a  summer  sky : 

To  you  that  b  below  the  Line, 

Why  not  b  amid  the  senses 
Bask'd    b  and  batton'd  in  the  woods. 

wealthy  enough  to  have  b 
Basket    To  Francis,  with  a  6  on  his  arm, 

holiday.  With  bag  and  sack  and  b, 

set  down  His  b,  and  dismounting 

skin  Clung  but  to  crate  and  b, 
Basking    city  Of  little  Monaco,  b,  glow'd. 

summer  b  in  the  sultry  plains 
Bassa    by  the  shore  Of  DugLos ;  that  on  B ; 


Lockdey  H.,  Sixty,  115 

St.  Tdemachus  60 

Princess  Con.  66 

Tithomis  71 

Enoch  Arden  7 

„        442 

„        250 

To  the  Queen  8 

On  a  Mourns-  4 

Aylmer's  Field  292 

Princess  v  78 

Ma\id  I  iv  36 

„     t>18 

„     a;  33 

Marr.  of  Oeraint  468 

Guinevere  480 

Happy  17 


T^oo  Voice.s  186 

England  and  Amer.  15 

M.  d' Arthur  106 

St.  S  Stylites  39 

Aylmer's  Field  511 

Princess  i  230 

„     iv  254 

,,       w  446 

,,     vi   58 

339 

353 

Requiescai  3 

In  Mem.  xlix  16 

Jialin  and  Balan  171 

Merlin  awl  V.  635 

Holy  Grail  497 

Pelleas  and  E.  46.5 

„        609 

Pass,  of  Arthur  "^^ 

Lover's  Tale  i  604 

„        a  121 

V.  of  Maeldune  14 

Ctm.  of  Arthur  ISO 

234 


6  His 


M.  d" Arthur  188 

Pass,  of  Arthur  356 

Guinevere  104 

Two  Voices  301 

Princess  v  385 

In  Mem.  li  3 

,,      Ix  6 

Merlin  and  V.  127 

830 

Pelleas  and  E.  81 

St.  S.  Stylitejs  1 

Lucretius  171 

Vastness  32 

B(din  and  Balan  520 

Enoch  Arden  289 

Pelleas  and  E.  Ill 

Hidy  Grail  718 

Love  thou  thy  land  44 

Wages  9 

To  Ulysses  5 

By  an  Evolution.  6 

In  Mem.  xzxv  24 

The  Wreck  45 

Andley  Coui-t  6 

Enoch  Arden  63 

Geraint  and  E.  210 

Merlin  and  V.  625 

The  Daisy  8 

Prog,  of  Spring  77 

Lancelot  ami  E.  290 


Bassoon  (continued)    liquid  treble  of  that  6,  my  throat ;      Princess  ii  426 

Bassoon    heard  The  flute,  violin,  b  ;  Maud  I  xxii  14 

Basting    be  for  the  spit,  Larding  and  b.  Gareth  and  L.  1083 

Bastion    A  looming  h  fringed  with  fire.  In  Mem.  xv  20 

Bastion'd    from  the  b  walls  Like  threaded  spiders,  Princess  i  107 

Bat    After  the  flitting  of  the  b'a,  Marinna  17 

this  Mock-Hymen  were  laid  up  like  winter  b's  Princess  iv  144 

b's  wheel'd,  and  owls  whoop'd,  Priticess,  Con.,  110 

b's  went  round  in  fragrant  skies.  In  Metn.  xcv  9 

For  the  black  b,  night,  has  flown,  Maiid  I  xxii  2 

A  home  of  b's,  in  every  tower  an  owl.  Balin  and  Balan  336 

When  the  6  comes  out  of  his  cave,  Despair  89 

Batchelor    Molly  Magee  wid  her  b,  Danny  O'Roon —  TonKrrroio  10 

Bath    the  b's  Of  all  the  western  stars,  Ulysses  60 

His  wife  a  faded  beauty  of  the  B's,  Aylnm-'s  Field  27 

Balmier  and  nobler  from  her  b  of  storm,  Lucretius  175 

dipt  in  b'a  of  hissing  tears.  In  Mem.  cxviii  23 

Pallas  Athene  climbing  from  the  b  In  anger ;  Tiresias  40 

fuse  themselves  to  little  spicy  b's,  Prog,  of  Spring  33 

The  B's,  the  Forum  gabbled  of  his  death,  St.  Tdemachus  74 

Bathe    Balm-dows  to  b  thy  feet !  Talking  Oak  268 

Coldly  thy  rosy  shadows  b  me,  Tithonus  66 

Soft  lustre  b's  the  range  of  urns  Day-Dm.,  Sleep,  P.,  9 

she  b's  the  Saviour's  feet  In  Mem.  xxxii  11 

Bathed    (.S««  (dso  New-bathed)    lying  b  In  the 

green  gleam  Princess  i  93 

Vivien  b  your  feet  before  her  own  ?  Merlin  and  V.  284 

So  b  we  were  in  brilliance.  Lover's  Tale  i  313 

So  fair  in  southern  sunshine  b.  Freedom  5 

B  in  that  lurid  crimson —  St.  Tdemachus  18 
Batin'    (beating)    set  me  heart  b  to  music  wid  ivery 

word  !  Tomorrow  34 

Batten    And  b  on  her  poisons  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  777 

Batten'd    bask'd  and  b  in  the  woods.  In  Mem.  xxxv  24 

Battenest    Thou  b  by  the  greasy  gleam  Will  Water.  221 

Battening    lie  B  upon  huge  seaworms  The  Kraken  12 

Batter    some  one  b's  at  the  dovecote-doors,  Princess  iv  169 
Batter 'd    (See  also  Bone-batter'd)     flints  b  with 

clanging  hoofs  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  21 

He  b  at  the  doors  ;  none  came :  Princess  v  337 

Cyril,  b  as  he  was,  Trail'd  himself  ,,      vi  154 

And  b  with  the  shocks  of  doom  In  Mem,,  cxviii  24 

and  so  left  him  bruised  And  b,  Pdlcas  and  E.  547 

Battering    B  the  gates  of  heaven  St.  S.  Stylites  7 

Battery-smoke     Plunged  in  the  b's  Light  Brigade  32 

Battle    (s)    (See  also  Field-of-battle,  Mahratta-battle) 

We  heard  the  steeds  to  h  going,  Oriana  15 

The  b  deepen'd  in  its  place,  ,,     51 

The  distant  b  flash'd  and  rung.  Two  Voices  126 

Peal  after  peal,  the  British  b  broke,  Buonaparte  7 

all  day  long  the  noise  of  b  roll'd  M,  d' Arthur  1 

drunk  delight  of  b  with  my  peers,  Ulysses  16 

boyish  histories  Of  b,  bold  adventure,  Aylnur's  Fidd  98 

That  beat  to  b  where  he  stands  Princess  iv  578 

And  gives  the  b  to  his  hands :  ,,           580 

prove  Your  knight,  and  fight  your  b,  ,,           595 

Breathing  and  sounding  beauteous  6,  ,,         «  161 

doing  b  with  forgotten  ghosts,  ,,           480 

I  and  mine  have  fought  Your  b:  „       vi  225 

FVom  talk  of  b's  loud  and  vain.  Ode  on  Well.  247 
Some  ship  of  b  slowly  creep.                                    To  F.  I),  Mam-ice  26 

War  with  a  thousand  b's,  Maiid  I  i  48 

months  ran  on  and  rumour  of  b  grew,  ,,  ///  vi  29 

Far  into  the  North,  and  b,  ,,37 

hail  once  more  to  the  banner  of  6  unroll'd  !  ,,             42 

Arthur,  passing  thence  to  b,  felt  Co7n.  of  Arthur  75 

long-lanced  b  let  their  horses  run.  ,,            104 

like  a  painted  b  the  war  stood  Silenced,  ,,           122 

in  twelve  great  b's  overcame  The  heathen  hordes,  „            518 

Grant  me  some  knight  to  do  the  b  for  me,  Gareth  and  L.  362 

King  had  saved  his  life  In  b  twice,  „           494 

thou  send  To  do  the  b  with  him,  ,,           619 

To  bring  thee  back  to  do  the  b  „          1294 

loving  the  b  as  well  As  he  that  rides  him.'  „          1301 
ride  with  him  to  b  and  stand  by,                             Marr.  of  Geraint  94 


BatUe 


28 


Beam 


Battle  (b)  (continvM)    '  Do  b  for  it  then,"  no  more ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  561 

In  the  great  h  fighting  for  the  King.  „              596 

soldiers  wont  to  hear  His  voice  in  b,  Geraint  and  E.  175 

In  6,  fighting  for  the  blameless  King,  „              970 

l»nners  of  twelve  b's  overhead  stir,  Balin  and  Balan  88 

My  father  died  in  b  for  thy  King,  Merlin  and  V.  72 

ever-moaning  b  in  the  mist,  ,,           192 

after  furious  b  turfs  the  slain  ,,           657 

In  h  with  the  love  he  bare  his  lord,  iMncdot  and  E.  246 

in  the  four  loud  b's  by  the  shore  Of  Duglas ;  „            289 

hast  been  in  h  by  my  side,  „          1358 

twelve  great  Vs  of  our  King.  Hdy  Grail  250 

Knights  that  in  twelve  great  b's  „           311 

with  one  Who  gets  a  wound  in  b,  Pelleas  and  E.  529 

Fought  in  her  father's  b's  ?  wounded  Last  Tournament  592 

Isolt  ?— I  fought  his  b's,  for  Isolt !  „               604 

In  open  b  or  the  tilting-field  (repeat)  Guinevere  330,  332 

In  twelve  great  b's  ruining  ,,                432 

Far  down  to  that  great  b  in  the  west,  „               571 

ere  he  goes  to  the  great  Bl  „               652 

ere  that  last  weird  b  in  the  west,  Pass,  of  Arthur  29 

is  this  b  in  the  west  Whereto  we  move,  , ,               66 

last,  dim,  weird  b  of  the  west.  „               94 

old  ghosts  Look  in  upon  the  b ;  „              104 

King  glanced  across  the  field  Of  6 :  „              127 

held  the  field  of  b  was  the  King :  ,,              138 

all  day  long  the  noise  of  b  roll'd  ,,              170 

The  darkness  of  that  b  in  the  West,  To  the  Queen  ii  65 

In  b  with  the  glooms  of  my  dark  will.  Lover's  Tale  i  744 

God  of  b's,  was  ever  a  b  like  this  The  Revenge  62 

Floated  in  conquering  b  or  flapt  Def.  of  Liicknow  2 

kings  Of  Spain  than  all  their  b's  !  Columbus  23 

And  we  took  to  playing  at  b,  V.  of  Maddune  95 

For  the  passion  of  b  was  in  us,  ,,              96 

Till  the  passion  of  b  was  on  us,  „            111 

Gaining  a  lifelong  Glory  in  b,  Batt.  of  Bi-unanburh  8 

That  they  had  the  better  In  perils  of  6  ,,                  85 

himself  Blood-red  from  b,  Tiresias  113 

flay  Captives  whom  they  caught  in  b —  Lochdey  H..  Sixty,  80 

mad  for  the  charge  and  the  b  were  we.  Heavy  Brigade  41 

Stately  purposes,  valour  in  b,  Vastness  7 

crimson  with  b's,  and  hollow  with  graves,  The  Dreamer  12 

Storm  of  b  and  thunder  of  war !  Rijlemenfmin  !  3 

Battle  (verb)    For  them  I  b  till  the  end,  Sir  Galalutd  15 

Battle-axe    Bloodily,  bloodily  fall  the  b-a,  Boadicea  56 

fall  b  upon  helm,  Fall  b,  Com.  of  Arthur  486 

Clang  b  and  clash  brand  !  (repeat)  Com.  of  Arthur  493,  496,  499 

crash  Of  b's  on  shatter'd  helms.  Pass,  of  Arthur  110 

Battle-bolt    b-b  sang  from  the  three-decker  Maud  I  i  50 

Battle-club    b-c's  From  the  isles  of  palm :  Princess,  Pro.,  21 

Battle-cry    battle  or  flapt  to  the  b-c  !  Def.  of  Luckno^o  2 

and  could  raise  such  a  b-c  V.  of  Maddune  23 

Battled  (adj.)    glow  Beneath  the  b  tower.  D.  of  F.  Women  220 

Battled  (verb)    Who  b  for  the  True,  the  Just,  In  Mem.  Ivi  18 

Battle-field    Be  shot  for  sixpence  in  a  b-f,  Aitdley  Court  41 

Descends  upon  thee  in  the  b-f:  Com.  of  Arthur  129 

Arthur  mightiest  on  the  6-/—  Gareth  and  L.  496 

Right  arm  of  Arthur  in  the  b,  Last  Tournament  202 

A  galleried  palace,  or  a  b.  The  Ring  246 

Battle-flag    and  the  b-fs  were  furl'd  I^ocksley  Hall  127 

Battlement    'ITie  b  overtopt  with  ivytods,  Balin  and  Balan  335 

Battle  plain    8j>ring8  Of  Dirc6  laving  yonder  b-p,  Tiresias  139 

Battleshield    Hack'd  the  b,  Batt.  of  Brurmnbii/rh  13 

Battle  song    hear  again  The  chivalrous  h-s  Maud  I  x5A 

Battle  thunder    thine  the  b-t  of  God,'  Boadicea  44 

the  h-t  broke  from  them  all.  The  Revenge  49 

with  her  b-t  and  flame  ;  ,,59 

Battle-twig  (earwig)    '  Twur  es  bad  es  a  b-t  'ere  Spinster's  S's.  80 

Battle-writhen    b-w  arms  and  mighty  hands  Lancelot  and  E.  812 

Baulk  (beam)    'card  the  bricks  an'  the  b's  Owd  Rod  109 

Bawl    throats  of  Manchester  may  b,  Third  of  Feb.  43 

Milliona  of  throats  would  6  for  civil  rights,  Princess  v  387 

Rbamed  to  h  himself  a  kitchen-knave.  Gareth  and  L.  717 

b's  this  frontloBs  kitchen-knave,  ,,           860 

Bawl'd    you  b  the  dark  side  of  your  faith  Despair  39 


Bay  (arm  of  the  sea)    {See  also  Lover's  Bay)    spangle 

dances  in  bight  and  b,  Sea-Fairies  24 

glassy  b's  among  her  tallest  towers.'  (Enone  119 

where  the  b  runs  up  its  latest  horn.  Audley  Court  11 

farmer's  son,  who  lived  across  the  b,  ,,75 

lower  down  The  b  was  oily  calm  ;  ,,86 

That  he  sings  in  his  boat  on  the  b  !  BreaJc,  hreak,  etc.  8 

I  bubble  into  eddying  b's,  The  Brook  41 

By  b's,  the  peacock's  neck  in  hue  ;  The  Daisy  14 

In  caves  about  the  dreary  b.  Sailor  Boy  10 

long  waves  that  roll  in  yonder  b  ?  Maud  I  xviii  63 

pleasant  breast  of  waters,  quiet  b,  Lover's  Tale  i  6 

borne  about  the  h  or  safely  moor'd  ,,          54 

growing  holier  as  you  near'd  the  i,  ,,        338 

into  the  sympathy  Of  that  small  ft,  ,,     i  435 

curving  round  The  silver-sheeted  b  :  „      ii  76 

Moved  with  one  spirit  round  about  the  &,  ,,     Hi  17 

their  gloom,  the  mountains  and  the  B,  „      iv  16 

After  their  marriage  lit  the  lover's  B,  ,,28 

I  with  our  lover  to  his  native  B.  ,,       155 

and  flung  them  in  bight  and  b,  V.  of  Maeldune  53 

that  dropt  to  the  brink  of  his  6,  The  Wreck  73 

that  b  with  the  colour'd  sand —  ,,         135 

Bay  (a  tree)    the  boar  hath  rosemaries  and  h.  Gareth  and  L.  1074 

that  wear  a  wreath  of  sweeter  b,  Poets  and  t/ieir  B.  7 

Bay  (at  bay)    Where  he  greatly  stood  at  b,  Ode  on  Wdl.  106 

heard  The  noble  hart  at  b,  Marr.  of  Geraint  233 

Bay  (verb)    Not  less,  tho'  dogs  of  Faction  b,  Love  thou  thy  land  85 

Baying    chiefly  for  the  b  of  Cavall,  Marr.  of  Geraint  185 

Bay-window    from  some  b-vj  shake  the  night ;  Princess  i  106 

lands  in  your  view  From  this  b-io  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  52 

Beach    rib  and  fret  The  broad-imbased  b,  Supp.  Confessions  128 

To  watch  the  crisping  ripples  on  the  b.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.S.  61 

rounded  by  the  stillness  of  the  h  Audley  Court  10 

Here  about  the  b  I  wander'd,  Lockdey  Hall  11 

on  this  b  a  hundred  years  ago,  Enoch  Arden  10 

here  and  there,  on  sandy  b'es  The  Daisy  15 

The  breaker  breaking  on  the  b.  In  Mem.  Ixxi  16 

the  scream  of  a  madden'd  b  Maud  1  Hi  12 

shore-cliff's  windy  walls  to  the  6,  Geraint  and  E.  164 

leaving  Arthur's  court  he  gain'd  the  h  ;  Merlin  and  V.  197 

tremulously  as  foam  upon  the  h  Guinevere  364 

the  narrow  fringe  Of  curving  b —  Lover's  Tale  i  39 

the  fig  ran  up  from  the  b  V.  of  Maddune  58 

Beacon  (s)     like  a  h  guards  thee  home.  In  Mem.  xvii  12 

prophet's  b  burn'd   in  vain,  Ancient  Sage  142 

Beacon  (verb)    Not  in  vain  the  distance  b's.  Locksley  Hall  181 

Beacon-blaze    h-h  allures  The  bird  of  passage,  Enoch  Arden  728 

Beacon-star    Each  with  a  b-s  upon  his  head,  Guinevere  241 

Beacon-tower    Fixt  like  a  b-t  above  the  waves  Princess  iv  493 

Bead    {See  also  Frost-bead)    And  number'd  h,  and 

shrift.  Talking  Oak  46 

Beaded    {See  also  Black-beaded,  Five-beaded)    And 

woolly  breasts  and  b  eyes  ;  In  Mem.  xcv  12 

Beak    hawk  stood  with  the  down  on  his  b,  Poet's  Song  11 

swoops  The  vulture,  b  and  talon,  Princess  v  383 

ever-ravening  eagle's  b  and  talon  Boadicea  11 

And  all  unscarr'd  from  b  or  talon.  Last  Tmirnament  20 

Beaker    b  brimm'd  with  noble  wine.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.,  36 

Be&l'd  (bellowed)    she  b  '  Ya  miin  saiive  little 

Dick,  Oivd  Roa  81 

an'  she  an'  the  babby  b.  North.  Cobble)-  37 

an'  'e  6  to  ya  '  Lad  coom  hout '  Church-warden,  etc.  28 

Beam  (ray)    So  many  minds  did  gird  their  orbs 

with  b's  The  Pod  29 

'  Or  will  one  6  be  less  intense,  Two  Voices  40 

into  two  burning  rings  All  ?»'s  of  Love,  D.ofF.  Women  \7h 

deep-blue  gloom  with  b's  divine :  ,,                186 

the  white  dawn's  creeping  b's,  ,,                261 

fresh  /)  of  the  springing  east ;  M.  d' Arthur  214 

like  a  lane  of  b's  athwart  the  sea,  Golden  Year  50 

b's,  that  thro'  the  Oriel  shine,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.,  34 

Pure  spaces  clothed  in  living  b's,  Sir  Galahad  66 

b  of  Heaven  Dawn'd  sometime  Aylmer's  Fidd  684 

Was  it  the  first  b  of  my  latest  day  ?  Lucretius  59 


Beam 


29 


Princess  ii  138 

,,         iv  44 

„        v258 

In  Mem,  Pro.,  24 

,,        lxxiil5 

Maud  I  Hi  3 

,,    xiv  21 

Matr.  of  Geraint  262 

Hdy  Grail  116 

„  117,  188 

122 

155 

187 

Pass,  of  Arthur  Zd,2 

Lover's  Tale  i  672 

a  173 


Beam  (ray)  (continued)    a  h  Had  slanted  forward, 

'  Fresh  as  the  first  b  glittering  on  a  sail, 

h  Of  the  East,  that  play'd  upon  them, 

A  6  in  darkness :  let  it  grow. 

A  chequer-work  of  h  and  shade 

Pale  with  the  golden  b  of  an  eyelash 

Like  a  6  of  the  seventh  Heaven, 

smitten  by  the  dusty  sloping  b', 

Stream'd  thro'  my  cell  a  cold  and  silver  h, 

down  the  long  b  stole  the  Holy-  Grail,  (repeat) 

Grail  Past,  and  the  b  decay'd; 

A  crimson  grail  within  a  silver  6  ; 

b  of  light  seven  times  more  clear  than  day : 

Smote  by  the  fresh  b  of  springing  east ; 

crown  of  Vs  about  his  brows — 

And  solid  b  of  isolated  light, 
Beam  (timber)    (See  also  Baulk,  Bigtree)    shape 

it  plank  and  b  for  roof 
Beam  (verb)     More  bounteous  aspects  on  me  &, 
Beam'd    Love's  white  star  B  thro' 

h,  Beneath  a  manelike  mass 

ghostly  grace  B  on  his  fancy, 
Be&n  'ere  a  b  an'  yonder  a  pea  ; 
Bear  (an  animal)    grosser  than  your  native  Vs — 

dog,  and  wolf  and  boar  and  b 

Albeit  grizzlier  than  a  b,  to  ride 
Bear  (constellation)    B  had  wheel'd  Thro'  a  great  arc 
Bear  (verb)    (See  also  Abear,  Bore)    That  Vs  relation 
to  the  mind. 

'  His  sons  grow  up  that  b  his  name, 

how  canst  thou  b  my  weight  ? 

I  know  you  proud  to  b  your  name, 

whatever  sky  B  seed  of  men 

As  we  b  blossom  of  the  dead  ; 

1  will  not  6  it  longer.' 

And  b  me  to  the  margin  ; 

Less  burthen,  by  ten-hundred-fold,  to  b, 

B  witness,  if  I  could  have  found 

in  truth  (thou  wilt  b  witness  here) 

that  which  Vs  but  bitter  fniit  ? 

and  he  Vs  a  laden  breast. 

Three  angels  b  the  holy  Grail : 

Which  Va  a  season 'd  brain  about, 

h  me  with  thee,  smoothly  borne, 

beseech  you  by  the  love  you  b  Him 

'  Too  hard  to  b  !  why  did  they  take  me 

boat  that  Vs  the  hope  of  life 

thought  to  6  it  with  me  to  my  grave  ; 

Vs  about  A  silent  court  of  justice 

jam  the  doors,  and  b  The  keepers  down, 

not  he,  who  Vs  one  name  with  her 

The  king  would  b  him  out ; ' 

Earth  Should  b  a  double  growth 

think  I  b  that  heart  within  my  breast, 

much  I  b  with  her : 

hear  me,  for  I  b,  Tho'  man,  yet  human, 

if  thou  needs  must  h  the  yoke, 

skater  on  ice  that  hardly  Vs  him, 

But  help  thy  foolish  ones  to  b  ; 

Help  thy  vain  worlds  to  b  thy  light.  ,, 

To  b  thro'  Heaven  a  tale  of  woe,  ,,        xii 

Come  then,  pure  hands,  and  b  the  head  ,,    ocviii   9 

I  loved  the  weight  I  had  to  6,  ,,      axro    7 

A  life  that  6's  immortal  fruit  ,,         a^  18 

To  that  ideal  which  he  /j'«?  ,,        lii  10 

She  often  brings  but  one  to  ?>,  ,,  Iv  12 

He  Vs  the  burthen  of  the  weeks  ,,     Ixoax  11 

growing,  till  I  could  6  it  no  more,  Ma,ud  I  Hi  9 

Vs  a  skeleton  figured  on  his  arms,  Gareth  and  L.  640 

heart  enough  To  b  his  armour  ?  Geraint  and  E.  490 

h  him  hence  out  of  this  cruel  sun  ?  ,,  544 

take  him  up,  and  h  him  to  our  hall :  ,,  552 

pray  the  King  To  let  me  b  some  token  Bctlin  and  Balan  188 

said  '  What  wilt  thou  6  ? '  „  199 

and  ask'd  To  h  her  own  crown-royal  „  200 


Princess  vi  46 

Sir  Galahad  21 

Gardener's  D.  166 

Aylmer's  Field  67 

Lancelot  and  E.  886 

N.  Farmer,  O.S.  46 

Princess  iv  537 

Co7n.  of  Arthur  23 

PeUeas  and  E.  193 

Princess  iv  212 


Tioo  Voices  177 

256 

(Enone  237 

L.C.V.de  VerelO 

Love  thou  thy  land  20 

94 

7%«  Goose  32 

M.  d: Arthur  165 

St.  S.  Stylites  24 

55 

„         129 

Lockdey  Hall  65 

143 

Sir  Galahad  42 

Will  Waier.  85 

Mvce  eastward  9 

Enoch  Arden  307 

781 

830 

„         896 

Sea  iJi-eams  173 

Lucretius  169 

„       235 

Princess  i  182 

„     ii  180 

334 

,,     Hi   81 

„     iv  424 

,,     m205 

Hendeaisyllabics  6 

In  Mem.  Pro.,  31 

32 

2 


Bear  (verb)  (continued)  ladies  living  gave  me  this  to 
best  and  purest,  granted  me  To  6  it ! ' 
Thee  will  I  6  no  more,' 
Vs,  with  all  Its  stormy  crests 
Then  will  I  h  it  gladly  ; ' 
But  I  myself  must  b  it.' 
seize  me  by  the  hair  and  b  me  far, 
see  thou,  that  it  may  b  its  flower, 
cannot  b  to  dream  you  so  forsworn : 
added  to  the  griefs  the  great  must  b, 
B  with  me  for  the  last  time 
And  b  me  to  the  margin  ; 
B  witness,  that  rememberable  day, 
that  perfectness  Which  I  do  6  within  me  : 
bade  his  menials  b  him  from  the  door, 
How  could  I  b  with  the  sights  and  the  loath- 
some smells 
Him,  who  should  b  the  sword  Of  Justice — 
Why  should  we  b  with  an  hour  of  torture, 
sorrow  that  I  6  is  sorrow  for  his  sake, 
and  I  and  you  will  b  the  pall ; 
B  witness  you,  that  yesterday 
younger  kindlier  Gods  to  6  us  down, 
creed  and  race  Shall  b  false  witness, 
The  flood  may  b  me  far, 

Beard    b  Was  tagg'd  with  icy  fringes 
His  b  a  foot  before  him,  and  his  hair 
'  By  holy  rood,  a  royal  6  ! 
My  b  has  grown  into  my  lap.' 
paw'd  his  b,  and  muttered  '  catalepsy.' 
answer  which,  half-muffled  in  his  6, 
father's  face  and  reverend  b 
b  That  looks  as  white  as  utter  truth, 
Broad-faced  with  under-fringe  of  russet  b, 
took  his  russet  b  between  his  teeth  ; 
one  curl  of  Arthur's  golden  b. 
to  part  The  lists  of  such  a  b 
shaggy  mantle  of  his  b  Across  her  neck 
no  more  sign  of  reverence  than  a  b. 
b  that  clothed  his  lips  with  light — 
and  his  white  b  fell  to  his  feet, 
we  kiss'd  the  fringe  of  his  6 

Beard-blown    b-b  goat  Hang  on  the  shaft. 

Bearded  (See  also  Black-bearded,  Bush-bearded, 
Bearded,  Long-bearded,  Parcel-bearded 
bearded)    In  among  the  b  barley, 
Some  b  meteor,  trailing  light, 
the  b  grass  Is  dry  and  dewless. 
tho'  you  were  not  then  So  b. 

Beardless    h  apple-arbiter  Decided  fairest. 

Bearer    Save  under  pall  with  Vs. 

Bearest    love  thou  b  The  first-born 

Bearing  (part.)    b  on  My  shallop  thro' 
Ii  a  lifelong  hunger  in  his  heart. 
b  hardly  more  Than  his  own  shadow 
and,  as  h  in  myself  the  shame 
Oaring  one  arm,  and  b  in  my  left 
as  underhand,  not  openly  b  the  sword. 
B  all  down  in  thy  precipitancy — 
b  in  their  common  bond  of  love, 
sent  him  to  the  Queen  B  his  wish, 
started  thro'  mid  air  B  an  eagle's  nest : 
b  round  about  him  his  own  day, 
b  high  in  arms  the  mighty  babe, 
b  on  one  arm  the  noble  babe, 
from  our  fiery  beech  Were  b  off  the  mast. 

Bearing  (mien)    face  nor  b,  limbs  nor  voice, 
thro'  these  Princelike  his  b  shone  ; 
And  all  her  b  gracious  ; 
gazed  upon  the  man  Of  princely  b, 
I  dream 'd  the  &  of  our  knights 

Bearing  (bringing  forth)    b  and  the  training  of  a 

Bearing  (armorial)    gateway  she  discerns  With 
armorial  Vs 

Bearing  (force)    To  change  the  &  of  a  word, 


Bearing 

6.'  Balin and BalanMO 

351 

432 

Lancelot  and  E.    483 

„      1106 

„      1108 

1425 

Holy  Grail  887 

Pelleas  and  E.  300 

Gicinevere  205 

„        454 

Pass,  of  Arthur  Z'Si 

To  the  Queen  ii  3 

Lover's  Tale  i   89 

„    iv  260 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  25 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  87 

Despair  81 

The  Flight  64 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  281 

To  Prof.  J  ebb  2 

Demeter  and  P.  131 

Akbar's  Dream  98 

Grossing  tlie  Bar  14 

St.  S.  Stylites  31 

Godiva  18 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  20 

22 

Princess  i    20 

„      V  234 

,,     vi  103 

Gareth  and  L.  280 

Geraint  and  E.  537 

713 

Merlin  and  V.    58 

245 

256 

279 

Last  Tournament  668 

V.  of  Maeldune  118 

125 

Princess  iv  78 

Lichen- 

,  Busset- 

L.  of  Sludott  i  29 

, ,        Hi  26 

Miller's  D.  245 

Columbus  9 

Lucretius  91 

Aylmer's  Field  827 

Ode  to  Memory  91 

Arabian  Nights  35 

Enoch  Arden  79 

Aylmer's  Field   29 

355 

Princess  iv  183 

Maud  I  i  28 

Gareth  and  L.  8 

Bcdin  and  Balan  150 

Lamcdot  and  E.  1169 

Last  Toui-nament  15 

Lover's  Tale  i  510 

,,      iv  295 

„  370 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  4 

Com.  of  Arthur  71 

Marr.  of  Geraint  545 

Holy  Grail  394 

Pelleas  and  E.  306 

La.st  Tournament  120 

child       Princess  v  465 

L.  of  Burleigh  43 
In  Mem,  cxxviii  16 


Beast 


30 


Beat 


Beast    {'See  also  Be&st,  Man-Beast)    but  a  little 

more  Than  h's, 
l)eople  here,  a  6  of  burden  slow, 
one  deep  cry  Of  great  wild  Vs  ; 
I  a  /*  To  take  them  as  I  did  ? 
and  even  b's  have  stalls, 
Like  a  h  with  lower  plea-sures,  like  a  h 
The  many -headed  b  should  know.' 
,  like  s  b  hard-ridden,  breathing  bard, 
there  surely  lives  in  man  and  b 
(What  b  has  heart  to  do  it  'i 
b  or  bird  or  fish,  or  opulent  flower : 
biting  laws  to  scare  the  Vs  of  prey 
envy  not  the  b  that  takes  His  license 
Move  upward,  working  out  the  b, 
Like  Paul  with  b's,  I  fought  with  Death  ; 
Wherein  the  b  was  ever  more  and  more, 
wet  woods,  and  many  a  6  therein, 
none  or  few  to  scare  or  chase  the  b  ; 
between  the  man  and  b  we  die.' 
slew  the  b,  and  fell'd  The  forest, 
between  the  man  and  b  they  die. 
lift  her  from  this  land  of  Us  Up  to  my  throne, 
b  and  man  had  had  their  share  of  me : 
/>'»,  and  surely  would  have  torn  the  child 
Have  foughten  like  wild  b's 
noise  of  ravage  wrought  by  b  and  man, 
Care  not,  good  b's,  so  well  I  care 
skins  the  wild  b  after  slaying  him, 
first  as  sullen  as  a  6  new-caged, 
In  lieu  of  this  rough  b  upon  my  shield, 
maws  ensepulchre  Their  brother  b, 
yell,  Unearthier  than  all  shriek  of  bird  or  b, 
l>eauteous  h  Scared  by  the  noise 
weak  b  seeking  to  help  herself 
b's  themselves  would  worship  ; 
in  the  lowest  b's  are  slaying  men,  And  in  the  second 

men  are  slaying  b's, 
great  b's  rose  upright  like  a  man, 
the  b's  Will  tear  thee  piecemeal.' 
b — he,  she,  or  I  ?  myself  most  fool ; 
B  too,  as  lacking  human  wit — 
made  his  b  that  better  knew  it,  swerve 
what  evil  b  Hath  drawn  his  claws 
Reel  back  into  the  b,  and  be  no  more  ? ' 
And  men  from  b's — Long  live  the  king 
thro'  ever  harrying  thy  wild  b's — 
art  grown  wild  b  thyself, 
like  a  subtle  6  Lay  couchant 
subtle  b,  Would  track  her  guilt 
my  realm  Reels  back  into  the  b. 
As  ignorant  and  impolitic  as  a  b — 
That  gray  b,  the  wolf  of  the  weald, 
the  multitudinous  b,  The  dragon, 
fierce  b  found  A  wiser  than  herself, 
curb  the  b  would  cast  thee  in  the  mire, 
Misters,  brothers, — and  the  b's — 

Have  we  risen  from  out  the  b,  then  back  into  the  6  again  ? 
bouse  with  all  its  hateful  needs  no  cleaner  than  the  b. 


Two  Voices  197 

Pcdace  of  Art  149 

283 

Edwin  Moms  71 

St.  S.  Stylit.es  109 

Locksley  Hall  176 

You  might  luive  toon  20 

Aylmer's  Field  291 

Sea  Dreains  68 

Lucretius  233 

„        249 

Princess  v  393 

In  Mem.  xxvii  5 

,,     cxviii27 

Com.  of  Arthur  11 

45 

59 

79 

80 

163 

217 

226 

Gareth  aiid  L.  437 

„  1308 

Geraint  OAid  E.  93 

856 

Bcdin  and  Bcdan  196 

488 

545 

421 

498 

575 


Merlin  and  V. 


starved  the  wild  b  that  was  linkt 

But  I  hear  no  yelp  of  the  b, 

caged  b  Yell'd,  as  he  yell'd  of  yore 

barrier  that  divided  b  from  roan  Slipt, 

that  stare  of  a  b  of  prey. 

is  prized  for  it  smells  of  the  b, 
Beftst    nor  a  mortal  b  o'  the  feiild. 

An'  1  says  'Git  awaJiy,  ya  b,' 
Beastlier     /i  than  any  phantom  of  his  kind 
BeastUke    b  as  1  find  myself,  Not  manlike 
Beat  (s)    {See  alto  Heart-beat)    nigh  to  burst  with 

violence  of  the  b, 
Beat  (verb)    {See  <dso  Be&t)    The  cloud  fleets,  The 
heart  b's, 

The  heart  will  cease  to  b ; 

And  the  blue  wave  b  the  shore ; 


Holy  Grail  234 

821 

824 

Pdleas  and  E.  475 

476 

551 

LaM  Tourrwjiient  62 

125 

358 

635 

637 

Guinevere  10 

„        59 

Pass,  of  Arthur  26 

Coluvibus  128 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  110 

Tiresias  15 

„     151 

Ancient  Sage  276 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  102 

148 

HapTpfy  32 


By  an  Evolution.  11 

19 

St.  Tele7>mchvs  45 

60 

V/uirity  10 

TJie  Dawn  14 

North.  Cobbler  38 

Owd  Roa  62 

Lucretius  196 

„        231 

Gareth  and  L.  763 

Nothing  will  Die  12 

All  Things  ivill  Die  12 

43 


Beat  (verb)  {continued)    From  winter  rains  that 
his  grave. 
My  frozen  heart  began  to  b, 
B  time  to  nothing  in  my  head 
And  her  heart  would  b  against  me, 
I  should  know  if  it  b  right, 
dog  howl,  motherror  the  death-watch  b, 
wind,  that  b's  the  mountain,  blows 
'  B  quicker,  for  the  time  Is  pleasant, 
b  me  down  and  marr'd  and  wasted  me, 
b  the  twilight  into  flakes  of  fire, 
heart  of  existence  h  for  ever  like  a  boy's  ? 
where  my  life  began  to  b  ; 
Music  in  his  heart  B's  quick 
My  spirit  b's  her  mortal  bars, 
But  never  merrily  b  Annie's  heart. 
b's  out  his  weary  life. 
May  b  a  pathway  out  to  wealth 
Long  since  her  heart  had  b  remorselessly, 
B  breast,  tore  hair,  cried  out 
Had  b  her  foes  with  slaughter 
but  convention  b's  them  down  : 
B  balm  upon  our  eyelids, 
wave  May  b  admission  in  a  thousand  years, 
My  hea,irt  b  thick  with  passion 
vassals  tx)  be  b,  nor  pretty  babes 
That  b  to  battle  where  he  stands  ; 
and  they  will  b  my  girl 
clash'd  their  arms  ;  the  dxum  B  ; 
One  pulse  that  b's  true  woman, 
greater  than  all  knowledge,  b  her  down, 
faith  in  womankind  B's  with  his  blood, 
b  with  rapid  unanimous  hand, 
dance  with  death,  to  b  the  ground 
ciggk  B's  out  the  little  lives  of  men. 
'What  is  it  makes  me  b  so  low  ? ' 
Hath  still'd  the  life  that  b  from  thee, 
my  heart  was  used  to  b  So  quickly, 
A  flower  b  with  rain  and  wind, 
darken'd  he^jt  that  b  no  more  ; 
hearts  that  b  from  day  to  day, 
plays  with  threads,  he  b's  his  chair 
My  pulses  therefore  b  again 
That  b's  within  a  lonely  place, 
But  seeks  to  6  in  time  with  one 
crash'd  the  glass  and  b  the  floor ; 
At  last  he  b  his  music  out. 
hearts  of  old  have  b  in  tune, 
But  let  no  footstep  b  the  floor, 
my  heart  was  used  to  b  So  quickly, 
heart  b  stronger  And  thicker, 
B'to  the  noiseless  music  of  the  night ! 
li,  happy  stars,  timing  with  things  below, 
B  with  my  heart  more  blest  than  heart 
My  heart  would  hear  her  and  b, 
My  dust  would  hear  her  and  b. 
Is  it  gone  ?  my  pulses  b — 
But  the  broad  light  glares  and  b's, 
■  the  hoofs  of  the  horses  b,  b,  The  hoofs  of  the 
B  into  my  scalp  and  my  brain, 

heart  of  a  people  b  with  one  desire  ; 

fierce  light  which  b's  upon  a  throne, 
and  by  this  will  b  his  foemen  down.' 
B  thro'  the  blindless  casement 
Invaded  Britain,  '  But  we  b  him  back, 
Not  b  him  back,  but  welcomed  him 
B,  till  she  woke  the  sleepers, 
while  the  sun  yet  b  a  dewy  blade. 
And  b  the  cross  to  earth,  and  break 
Vivien,  tho'  ye  b  me  like  your  dog. 
Across  the  iron  grating  of  her  cell  B, 
~  blood  b's,  and  tho  blossom  blows, 
felt  the  sun  B  like  a  strong  knight 
let  my  lady  b  me  if  she  will : 
And  b's  upon  the  faces  of  the  dead, 


Ttoo  Voices  261 

„        422 

MiUer's  D.  67 

„        177 

„        179 

May  Queen,  Con.  21 

To  J.  S.  1 

On  ft  Mourner  12 

Tithonus  19 

„         42 

Locksley  Hall  140 

154 

Day -Dm.  Arrival  27 

Sir  Gala/iad  46 

Enoch  Arden  513 

730 

Aylmer's  Field  439 

799 

Lucretius  277 

Princess,  Pro.,  34 

,,     Hi  123 

155 

190 

,,      iv  146 

578 

i;88 

251 

,.     mlSO 

,,     vii  238 

329 

Boadicea  79 

In  Mem,  i  12 

,,        ii  8 

,,        ivS 

„     m  12 

,,      vii  3 

,,   via  15 

,,      zix  2 

,,    Iviii  6 

,,  Ixvi  13 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  57 

„        110 

„        115 

,,   Ixxxvii  20 

,,        zcvi  10 

,,       xcvii  10 

,,  ev  17 

,,  cxix  1 

Maud  I  via  8 

,,  xviii  77 

81 

82 

,,     xxii  69 

71 

„     II  i  36 

,,         ti;89 

horses  b, 

„  v8 

„  nivi'id 

Ded.  of  Idylls  27 

Com.  ofA7tfiurm9 

Man:  of  Geraint  71 

746 

748 

Geraint  and  E.  404 

446 

Balin  and  Balan  458 

582 

Holy  Grail  82 

„        671 

Pellea^  and  E.  23 

335 

Pass,  of  Arthur  141 


>1 


Beat 


31 


Beauty 


Beat  (verb)  (conlinued)    tho'  there  h  a  heart  in  either  eye  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  34 

Death  drew  nigh  and  b  the  doors  of  Life  ;  ,,            111 

noons  £  from  the  concave  sand ;  ,,           140 

felt  the  blast  B  on  my  heated  eyelids :  , ,        Hi  28 

—  Hearts  that  had  b  with  such  a  love  ,,         iv  69 

-  It  6— the  heart— it  ft :  Faint— but  it  6 :  „  80 
They  b  me  for  that,  they  b  me —  Rizjjah  48 
and  b  Thro'  all  the  homely  town  Columbus  82 

"^eart  alive  b's  on  it  night  and  day —  The  Flight  35 

— ^heart  that  once  had  h  beside  her  own.  Lockstey  H.,  Sixty,  58 

"--when  life  has  ceased  to  b.  Happy  52 

—*  B,  little  heart— I  give  you  this  and  this '  Rom)ietJs  R.  1 

-  '  B  upon  mine,  little  heart  \  b,b\  ,,94 
'  B  upon  mine !  you  are  mine,  my  sweet !  ,,95 

- — '  li  little  heart'  on  this  fool  brain  ,,        155 

_   pulse  of  Alia  b's  Thro'  all  His  world.  AUxir's  Dream  41 

h  back  The  menacing  poison  ,,              164 

-  Harmony  Whereto  the  worlds  b  time,  D.  of  Lite  Ixkke  of  C.  16 
Beat  (verb)    An'  it  b's  ma  to  knaw  wot 

she  died  on,  Churck-warden,  etc.  6 

Beaten    (-^e  aim  Barren-beaten,  Breaker-beaten, 

Hollow-beaten,  Thrice-beaten,  Weather-beaten) 

Ji  with  some  great  passion  at  her  heart,  Princess  iv  388 

B  I  had  been  for  a  little  fault  Com.  of  Arthur  341 

seems  no  bolder  than  a  b  hound  ;  Geraint  and  E.  61 

forward  by  a  way  which,  b  broad,  „              436 

b  back,  and  b  back  Settles,  Merlin  and  V.  371 

took  To  bitter  weeping  like  a  b  child,  „              855 

Of  every  dint  a  sword  had  b  in  it,  Lancelot  and  E.  19 

lance  had  b  down  the  knights,  Holy  Grail  363 

There  was  I  b  down  by  little  men  ,,         789 

a  traitor  proven,  or  hound  B,  Pdleas  and  E.  440 

save  for  dread  of  thee  had  b  me.  Last  Tunrnamerit  525 

many  a  heathen  sword  Had  b  thin  ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  167 

Drooping  and  b  by  the  breeze,  Lwxr's  Tale  i  700 

better  ha'  b  me  black  an'  blue  First  Quarrel  72 

Havelock  baffled,  or  b,  Def.  of  l/ucknow  91 

thus  was  I  b  back,  Columbus  55 

Beating  (See  cdso  Batin)    When  will  the  heart 

be  aweaiy  of  b  ?  Nothing  will  Die  6 

in  joyance  is  b  Full  merrily  ;  All  Things  will  Die  6 

Do  h  hearts  of  salient  springs  Adeline  26 

music  in  his  ears  his  b  heart  did  make.  Lotos-Eaters  36 

heard  with  b  heart  The  Sweet-Gale  Edwin  Morris  109 

bosom  b  with  a  heart  renew'd.  Tithonus  36 

B  it  in  upon  his  weary  brain,  Enoch  Arden  796 

b  up  thro'  all  the  bitter  world,  „           802 

two-cell'd  heart  b,  with  one  full  stroke,  Princess  vii  307 

B  from  the  wasted  vines  Ode  on  Well.  109 

Rose-red  with  b's  in  it,  as  if  alive,  Holy  Grail  118 

own  steps,  and  his  own  heart  B,  Pelleas  and  E.  417 

Heart  b  time  to  heart,  Lover's  Tale  i  260 

found  her  b  the  hard  Protestant  doors.  Sisters  (E.  and  E. )  240 

warriors  b  back  the  swarm  Of  Turkish  Montenegro  10 

O  the  deathwatch  b  I  Forlorn  24 

Beatitude    Fulfils  him  with  b.  Supp.  Confessions  62 

Beauteous    The  reflex  of  a  6  form.  Miller's  D.  77 

To  find  my  heart  so  near  the  b  breast,  Tliefyrm,  tliefwm  7 

when  the  h  hateful  isle  Retum'd  Enoch  Arden  617 

Breathing  and  sounding  b  battle,  Princess  v  161 

In  whispers  of  the  h  world.  In  Mem.  Ixxix  12 

Come,  b  in  thine  after  form,  ,,          xci  15 

the  b  beast  Scared  by  the  noise  Merlin  and,  V.  421 

Paris,  himself  as  6  as  a  God.  Death  of  (Enone  18 

Paris,  no  longer  6  as  a  God,  ,,              25 

Beaatifnl    spirit-thrilling  eyes  so  keen  and  b :  Ode  to  Me^nory  39 

And  said  the  earth  was  o.  A  Character  12 

Her  b  bold  brow,  The  Poet  38 

B  Paris,  evil-hearted  Paris,  (Enone  50 

Idalian  Aphrodite  b,  ,,     174 

How  b  a  thing  it  was  to  die  For  God  D.  of  F.  Women  231 

Twin-sisters  differently  b.  Edwin  Morris  33 

ever  thus  thou  growest  b  In  silence,  Tithontis  43 

'  She  is  more  b  than  day.'  Beggar  Maid  8 

his  own  children  tall  and  b,  Enoch  Arden  762 


Beautiful  {coulinuaV)    the  stars  about  the  moon  Look  b,  Spec,  of  Iliad  12 


made  His  darkness  h  with  thee 
Perfectly  b  ;  let  it  be  granted  her : 
pride  flash'd  over  her  b  face. 
Silence,  b  voice ! 
0  b  creature,  what  am  I 
Not  b  now,  not  even  kind  ; 
He  had  not  dreixm'd  she  was  so  b. 
Beyond  my  knowing  of  them,  b, 
B  in  the  light  of  holiness. 
'  Grod  make  thee  good  as  thou  art  b,' 
'  Is  Guinevere  herself  so  b  ? ' 
And  enter  it,  and  make  it  6  ? 
Forgetting  how  to  render  b  Her  countenance 
The  b  in  Past  of  act  or  place. 
Of  all  his  treasures  the  most  b, 
cries  about  the  banquet — 'B  ! 
That  which  is  thrice  as  6  as  these. 
Of  all  my  treasures  the  most  b, 
pity,  if  one  so  b  Prove, 
both  are  b :  Evelyn  is  gayer, 
Both  b  alike,  nor  can  1  tell 
So  b,  vast,  various, 
one  was  dark,  and  both  were  b. 
Bountiful,  b,  apparell'd  gay, 
Beautiful-brow'd    B-b  (Enone,  my  own  soul, 
Beautifully    So  lightly,  b  built : 

dress  her  b  and  keep  her  true' — 

that  beauty  should  go  b  :  (repeat) 
Beauty  (See  also  After -beauty)    solid  form 
Of  constant  b. 

He  spake  of  b :  that  the  dull 

I  see  thy  b  gradually  unfold, 

Light  Hope  at  B's  call  would  perch 

they  live  with  B  less  and  less, 

'  But  now  thy  b  flows  away, 

I  loved  his  b  passing  well. 

love  B  only  (B  seen  In  all  varieties  To 

And  Knowledge  for  its  b  ; 

Good  only  for  its  b,  seeing  not  That  B,  Good, 
and  Knowledge,  are  three  sisters 

B  and  anguish  walking  hand  in  hand 

'  I  had  great  b  :  ask  thou  not  my  name : 

B  such  a  mistress  of  the  world. 

Her  b  grew  ;  till  Autumn  brought 

many  a  group  Of  beauties, 

glorious  in  his  b  and  thy  choice. 

Can  thy  love.  Thy  b,  make  amends. 

Thou  wilt  renew  thy  b  morn  by  morn  ; 

Her  constant  b  doth  inform  Stillness 

His  wife  a  faded  b  of  the  Baths, 

Edith,  whose  pensive  b,  perfect  else, 

made  pleasant  the  baits  Of  gold  and  b, 

sank  down  shamed  At  all  that  b  ; 

murmurs  of  her  b  from  the  South, 

All  b  compass'd  in  a  female  form, 

beauties  every  shade  of  brown  and  fair 

underneath  the  crag,  Full  of  all  b. 

brief  the  moon  of  b  in  the  South. 

Another  kind  of  b  in  detail 

We  hunt  them  for  the  b  of  their  skins  ; 

became  Her  former  b  treble  ; 

All  of  b,  all  of  use, 

Willy,  my  b,  my  eldest-born. 

So  Willy  has  gone,  my  b,  my  eldest-born. 

She's  a  b  thou  thinks — 

— wot's  a  b  1 — the  flower  as  blaws. 

Maaybe  she  warn't  a  6 : — 

His  b  still  with  his  years  increased, 

this  orb  of  flame.  Fantastic  b  ; 

Who  shall  rail  Against  her  b  ? 

of  the  singular  b  of  Maud  ; 

Done  but  in  thought  to  your  b, 

0  child,  you  wrong  your  b, 

and  B  fair  in  her  flower ; 


In  Mem.  locxiv  12 

Maud  1  a  4 

„     iv  16 

„      V 19 

,,   xvi  10 

„  //  V  66 

Lancelot  and  E.  353 

Holy  Grail  103 

105 

136 

Pelleas  and  E.  70 

Pass,  of  ArUiur  17 

Lover's  Tale  i  96 

135 

„     iD234 

239 

248 

318 

338 

Sisters  (E  and  E)  35 

'^76 

Ancient  Sage  84 

The  Ring  161 

Prog,  of  Spring  62 

(Enone  71 

Palace  of  Art '^A: 

Geraint  and  E.  40 

„  681,  684 

Si'2^p.  Confessions  150 

A  Clmracter  7 

Eleanore  70 

Caress'd  or  chidden  3 

Mariana  in  tlie  S.  67 

T/ie  Sisters  23 

With  Pal.  of  Art  Q 


D.  of  F.  Wmnen  15 

93 

Gardener's  D.  58 

207 

Talking  Oak  62 

Tithonns  12 

„        24 

„       74 

Do.y-Dm.  Sleep.  B.  15 

Aylmer's  Field  27 

70 

487 

Lucretii/^s  64 

Princess  i  36 

„     ii  34 

»       437 

„  m  337 

„  iv.  113 

„       448 

,,  v\m 

„    vii '2^ 

Ode.  Inter.  Exhib.  23 

Grandmother  9 

„       101 

N.  Fanner,  N.  S.  14 

15 

28 

The  Victim  34 

In  Mem.  xxxiv  6 

,,  cxiv  2 

Maud  I  i  67 

,,       Hi  6 

„      iv  17 

25 


Beauty 

BeaxAj  (cotUinued)    dream  of  her  6  with 

teader  dread, 
To  know  her  b  might  half  undo  it. 
The  b  would  be  the  same. 
Kemembering  all  the  b  of  that  star 
gazed  oa  all  earth's  b  in  their  Queen, 
To  make  her  b  vary  day  by  day. 
The  prize  of  b  for  the  fairest  there, 
having  seen  all  beauties  of  our  time, 
won  lor  thee,  The  prize  of  6.' 
Your  6  is  no  6  to  him  now  : 
pat  your  b  to  this  flout  and  scorn 
that  6  should  go  beautifully :  (repeat) 
thine  The  wreath  of  b,  thine  the  crown 
Guinevere,  The  pearl  of  b  : 
Your  b  is  your  b,  and  I  sin 
b  of  her  flesh  abash'd  the  boy, 
As  tho'  it  were  the  b  of  her  soul : 
so  did  Pelleas  lend  All  the  young  b 
And  title,  '  Queen  of  £,'  in  the  lists 
the  sight  Of  her  rich  b  made  him 
cannot  brook  to  see  your  b  marr'd 
Qaeen  of  B  and  of  love,  behold  This 

day  my  Queen  of  £ 
great  Queen  My  dole  of  b  trebled  ? ' 
'  Her  b  is  her  b,  and  thine  thine, 
her  b,  grace  and  power,  Wrought 
b  such  as  never  woman  wore. 
In  giving  so  much  b  to  the  world, 
A  b  which  is  death  ; 
did  he  know  her  worth.  Her  b  even  ? 
Who  could  desire  more  6  at  a  feast  ? ' 
b  that  is  dearest  to  his  heart — 
veriest  beaxUies  of  the  work  appear 
One  bloom  of  youth,  health,  b, 
Ineffable  b,  out  of  whom,  at  a  glance, 
A  b  with  defect — till  That  which  knows, 
Science  grows  and  B  dwindles — 
Like  worldly  beauties  in  the  Cell, 
that  only  doats  On  outward  b, 
You  would  not  mar  the  b  of  your  bride 
give  place  to  the  b  that  endures, 
0  that  endures  on  the  Spiritual  height, 
A  b  came  upon  your  face. 
My  b  marred  by  you  ?  by  you  ! 
lose  it  and  myself  in  the  higher  b, 
b  lured  that  falcon  from  his  eyry  on  the  fell. 


32 


Bedivere 


Maud  1  XV  i  14 

„  II  a  12 

Ded.  of  Idylls  46 

Com.  of  Arthur  463 

Marr.  of  Geraint  9 

485 

498 

555 

Geraint  and  E.  330 

675 

„     681,  684 

Merlin  and  V.  79 

Lancelot  and  E.  114 

1186 

Pelleas  and  E.  /8 

79 

83 

116 

238 

298 

Last  Towmament  208 

„  558 

„  559 

Guinevere  143 

549 

Lover's  Tale  i  212 

„        a  190 

„        iv  151 

240 

249 

Sisters  IE.  and  E.)  105 

120 

Tiresias  55 

Ancient  Sage  86 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  246 

The  Ring  143 

„        164 

Happy  24 

„      36 

„      37 

„      51 

»      57 

„      58 

„      59 


never  caught  one  gleam  of  the  6  which  endures —  ,,       60 

Became    Therefore  revenge  b  me  well.  The  Sisters  5 

And  well  his  words  b  him  :  Edwin  Morris  25 

And  one  b  head-waiter.  Will  Water.  144 

crime  of  sense  b  The  crime  of  malice,  Vision  of  Sin  215 

b  Her  former  beauty  treble  ;  Princess  vii  24 

B  no  better  than  a  broken  shed,  Holy  Grail  398 

Thereon  her  wrath  b  a  hate  ;  Pelleas  and  E.  224 

courtexies  of  household  life,  B  her  bane  ;  Guinevere  87 

'  Sir  Lancelot,  as  6  a  noble  knight,  ,,       328 

1  to  her  b  Her  giuirdian  and  her  angel,  Lover's  Tale  i  392 

Italian  words,  b  a  weariness.  The  Ring  407 

Hor  Past  b  her  Present,  Death  of  (Enone  14 

in  the  mist  at  once  B  a  shadow,  ,,               50 

dre.-im  li  a  deed  that  woke  the  world,  <S'^  Tdemachus  70 
Beck  (Brook)    (.v^  r//v<  Howlaby  beck,  Wrigglesby  beck) 

Within  the  dark  and  dimpled  b.  Miller's  I).  80 

Thou's  coom'd  oop  by  the  b  ;  Village  Wife  79 

thaw  the  banks  o  the  6  bo  sa  high,  ,,           83 

fur  'e  lost  'is  taail  i'  the  h.  „           86 

An'  'cos  o'  thy  farm  by  the  b,  Spinster's  S's.  73 

Kur  I  seed  the  b  oo<jmin'  down  Owd  Roa  40 

sluHbin'  down  fro'  the  bank  to  the  b,  ,,        41 

An'  ya  Mtood  oop  naiikt  i'  tho  b,  Church-warden,  etc.  29 

Beok  (caJl)    move,  mj  friend.  At  no  man's  b.  Princess  Hi  227 

Beckon    Time  and  Orief  did  0  unto  Death,  Lover's  Tale  i  110 

Beokon'd    She  ended  here,  and  b  us  :  Princess  ii  182 

Beokooiiag    And  b  unto  those  they  know  ;  In  Mem,  xiv  8 


Become    B's  dishonour  to  her  race—  Two  Voices  255 

£  the  master  of  a  larger  craft,  Enoch  Arden  144 

it  b's  no  man  to  nurse  despair.  Princess  iv  464 
then  wilt  thou  b  A  thrall  to  his  enchantments,         Gareth  and  L.  268 

B's  the  sea-cliff  pathway  broken  short,  Moiin  and  V.  882 

had  the  boat  B  a  living  creature  Holy  Grail  519 

tilt  with  a  lance  B's  thee  well —  Last  Towmainent  637 
well,  it  scarce  b's  mine  age —                               Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  151 

Bed    (See  also  Bulrush-bed,  Deathbed,  Moss-bed, 

River-bed)    Upon  her  b,  across  her  brow.  MariciJia  56 

Thou  wilt  not  turn  upon  thy  b ;  A  Dirge  15 

And  after  supper,  on  a  b.  The  Sisters  16 

I  blest  him,  as  he  knelt  beside  my  b.  May  Queen,  Con.  16 

But  sit  beside  my  b,  mother,  ,,                23 

and  I  listened  in  my  b,  ,,33 

propt  on  b's  of  amaranth  and  raoly,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  88 

limbs  at  last  on  b's  of  asphodel.  ,,            125 

Like  one  that  feels  a  nightmare  on  his  b  M.  d' Arthur  177 

so  to  6  :  where  yet  in  sleep  ,,     Ep.  16 

farmer  vext  packs  up  his  b's  and  chairs,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  39 

had  pack'd  the  thing  among  the  6's,)  „               44 

to  the  college  tower  From  her  warm  b,  ,,90 

In  b  like  monstrous  apes  St.  S.  Stylites  174 

See  that  sheets  are  on  my  b  ;  Vision  of  Sin  68 

Started  from  b,  and  struck  herself  a  light,  Enoch  Arden  494 

with  yet  a  b  for  wandering  men.  ,,             698 

kept  the  house,  his  chair,  and  last  his  b.  „            826 

then  homeward  and  to  b  :  Sea  Dreams  40 

In  her  6  at  peep  of  day  ?  ,,          302 

then  to  b,  where  half  in  doze  Princess  i  246 

hall  glitter'd  like  a  6  of  flowers.  ,,      ii  439 

Half-naked  as  if  caught  at  once  from  b  »     ii^  285 

I  took  it  for  an  hour  in  mine  own  6  ,,      w  434 

they  hover  about  my  b —  Grandmother  83 

an'  a  sittin'  'ere  o'  my  b.  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  9 

An'  'e  maade  the  b  as  e'  ligs  on  ,,      N.  S.  28 

flush'd  the  b  Of  silent  torrents,  The  Daisy  33 

along  the  valley,  down  thy  rocky  b,  V.  of  Cauteretz  7 

When  on  my  b  the  moonlight  falls.  In  Mem.  Ixvii  1 

From  off  my  b  the  moonlight  dies ;  ,,10 

And  tends  upon  6  and  bower,  Maud  I  xiv  4 

Hung  over  her  dying  b —  ,,     xix  36 

On  a  6  of  daffodil  sky,  ,,    xxii  10 

Were  it  earth  in  an  earthy  b;  ,,70 

By  the  curtains  of  my  b  „  H  iv  54 

hurl'd  his  huge  limbs  out  of  b,  Marr,  of  Geraint  124 

brook  o'er  a  shingley  6  Brawling,  ,,              248 

now  get  you  hence  tob:'  Lancelot  and  E.  388 

Full  lowly  by  the  corners  of  his  6,  ,,             826 

Then  take  the  little  6  on  which  I  died  ,,            1117 

on  the  black  decks  laid  her  in  her  b,  ,,            1147 

but  creatures  of  the  board  and  b,  Pelleas  and  E.  267 

drier  than  a  fountain  b  In  summer :  ,,              507 

that  feels  a  nightmare  on  his  b  Pass,  of  Arthur  345 

they  fasten'd  me  down  on  my  b.  Rizpah  46 

I  blubber'd  awaay  o'  the  b —  North.  Cobbler  61 

such  a  lot  of  b's  in  the  ward  ! '  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  54 

you  leave  'em  outside  on  the  b —  ,,                  56 

women  who  tended  the  hospital  b,  Def.  of  Lucknoio  87 

I  have  hung  them  by  my  b,  Columbus  200 

an'  my  oan  b  o'  sparrow-grass,  Spinste)''s  S's.  104 

when  Moother  'ed  gotten  to  b,  Oivd  Roa  53 

Too  laate,  tha  mun  git  tha  to  &,  ,,        117 

I  am  fitter  for  my  b,  or  for  my  grave.  The  Ring  433 

leech  forsake  the  dying  b  for  terror  of  his  life  ?  Hap^y  98 

she  sat  day  and  night  by  my  b,  Cliarity  33 

Brings  the  Dreams  about  my  b.  Silent  Voices  2 

Bedded    With  all  its  casements  b,  Audley  Court  18 

Bedivere    (A  Knight  of  the  Bound  Table)    The  bold 

Sir  B  uplifted  him,  M.  d' Arthur  6 

Sir  B,  the  last  of  all  his  knights,  ,,            7 

spake  King  Arthur  to  Sir  £  :  (repeat)  ,,     13,  66 

To  him  replied  the  bold  Sir  ^ :  ,,39 
answer  made  the  bold  Sir  £ :  (repeat)            31,  d' Arthur  69,  115,  151 

Then  went  Sir  B  the  second  time  M,  d' Arthur  82 


Bedivere 

Bedivere  (ccmtinued)    Then  quickly  rose  Sir  B,  and  ^  ^^^a^r  133 

Him  dir  B  RemorseMly  regarded  »          ^70 

Then  loudly  cried  the  bold  Sir  B,  »          ^^^ 

stood  Sir  J5  Revolving  many  memories,  iqJ.'  irk  I^k 
Ulfius,  and  Brastias,  and  B,  (repeat)        Cam.  of  Arthur  136.  165,  445 

B,  the  first  of  all  his  knights  Com.  of  Arthur  m 

That  story  which  the  bold  Sir  B,             .  Pass,  of  ArtMir  1 

B,  Who  slowly  paced  among  the  slumbering  „               o 


33 


heard  the  bold  Sir  B  and  spake : 
Then  spake  King  Arthur  to  Sir  B 

(repeat)  ^ 

B,  for  on  my  heart  hath  fall  n 
Then  spake  the  bold  Sir  B : 
The  bold  Sir  B  uplifted  him, 
To  him  replied  the  bold  Sir  B : 
answer  made  the  bold  Sir  B :  (repeat) 
Then  went  Sir  B  the  second  time 
Then  quickly  rose  Sir  B,  and  ran. 
Him  Sir  B  Remorsefully  regarded 
loudly  cried  the  bold  Sir  B : 
stood  Sir  B  Revolving  many  memories, 
Bedmate    A  6  of  the  snail  and  eft  and  snake. 
Bedridden    infancy  Or  old  6  palsy,— 

I  lying  here  6  and  alone. 
Bedtime    B,  Dicky  !  but  waait  till  tha  ears 
Bee    (See  also  Bwk)    At  noon  the  wild  6  hummeth 
Chaunteth  not  the  brooding  6 
Or  the  yellow-banded  6's, 
With  the  hum  of  swarming  b's 
•  Not  less  the  b  would  range  her  cells, 
the  golden  b  Is  lily-cradled : 
With  all  her  b's  behind  her : 
here  by  thee  will  hum  the  b, 
like  the  working  6  in  blossom -dust, 
Alade  noise  with  b's  and  breeze 
thoughts  would  swarm  as  b's  about  their  queen. 
And  murmuring  of  innumerable  b's.' 
the  b's  is  as  fell  as  owt. 
b's  are  still'd,  and  the  flies  are  kill  d. 
As  we  shake  off  the  6  that  buzzes  at  us ; 
b's  That  made  such  honey  in  his  realm. 
Nor  thou  be  rageful,  like  a  handled  6, 
moment's  anger  of  b's  in  their  hive  ?— 
That  trembles  not  to  kisses  of  the  b : 
No  louder  than  a  b  among  the  flowers, 
Bee&  (bee)    We  was  busy  as  b's  i'  the  bloom 
Beech     Moving  in  the  leavy  b. 
b  and  lime  Put  forth  and  feel 
like  a  purple  b  among  the  greens 
'  I  wish'd  myself  the  fair  young  b 
bard  has  honour'd  b  or  lime, 
Coquetting  with  young  b'es  ; 
seated  on  a  serpent- rooted  b, 
We  paused :  the  winds  were  in  the  6 : 
that  b  will  gather  brown, 
Whereon  a  hundred  stately  b  es  grew. 
While  squirrels  from  our  fiery  b 
perpetual  pine,  nor  round  the  ^  ; 
Beechen-bough    lodge  of  intertwisted  b-b  s 
Beef    he  had  not  b  and  brewis  enow. 
Beelike    Than  b  instinct  hive  ward, 
Beer    sung  their  songs  an'  'ed  'ed  their  0, 
Beeswing    richest  b  from  a  binn  reserved 
Beetle  (adj.)    gaunt  old  Baron  with  his  6  brow 
Beetle  (8.)    At  eve  the  6  boometh 
Beetling    from  the  b  crag  to  which  he  clung 
Beeves    men  brought  in  whole  hogs  and  quarter  0, 
Befall    Shame  might  b  Melissa, 
If  aught  of  things  that  here  b 
I  hold  it  true,  whate'er  b  ; 
Befit    tale  for  summer  as  b's  the  time, 

As  b's  a  solemn  fane  : 
Befool'd    being  much  b  and  idiotcd 
Before    Or  see  (in  Him  is  no  b) 


Pass,  of  Arthur  65,  136,  181,  234 
Fass.  of  Arthur  143 
147 
175 
207 
Pass,  of  Arthur  237,  283,  319 
Pass.  ofxirthur^S^ 
301 
338 
894 
487 
Hdy  Grail  570 
Aylvwr's  Fidd  178 
Columbus  164 
Ouxl  Rod  18 
Claribd  11 
A  Dirge  16 
Elednore  22 
„      29 
Tvx>  Voices  70 
CEno7ie29 
Amphion  36 
A  Farewell  11 
Enoch  Arden  366 
Princess,  Pro.,  88 
„        i   40 
„     vii  222 
N.  Farmer,  N.  S.,  40 
WindoiO,  Winter  10 
Lancelot  and  E.  785 
Holy  OraU  214 
Andmit  Sage  269 
Vastness  35 
Prog,  of  Spring  4 
Romney's  R.  82 
North.  Cobbler  15 
Margaret  61 
On  a  Mo^tmer  14 
Edwin  Morris  84 
Talking  Oak  141 
291 
Amphion  28 
The  Brook  135 
In  Mem.  xxx  9 
ci     3 
Pdleas  and  E.  26 
Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  3 
Prog,  of  Spring  32 
Last  Tournament  376 
Gareth  and  L.  457 
Princess,  iv  199 
Owd  Roa  35 
Aylmer's  Field  405 
Princess,  ii  240 
Claribel  9 
Aylmer's  Field  229 
Geraint  and  E.  602 
Princess,  Hi  147 
Ode  on  Wdl.  138 
In  Mem.  xxvii  13 
Princess,  Pro.,  210 
Ode  on  Well.  250 
Aylmer's  Field  590 
In  Mem.  xxvi  10 


Beg    I  will  b  of  him  to  take  thee  back : 
I  cannot  steal  or  plunder,  no  nor  b : 
Began     '  When  first  the  world  b, 
'  Before  the  little  ducts  b 
The  sweet  church  bells  b  to  peal. 
My  frozen  heart  b  to  beat, 
those  great  bells  B  to  chime, 
trees  b  to  whisper,  and  the  wind  6 
5 :  '  I  govern'd  men  by  change. 
At  this  a  hundred  bells  b  to  peal, 
For  when  my  passion  first  b, 
where  my  life  b  to  beat ; 
So  fares  it  since  the  years  b, 
prone  edge  of  the  wood  b  To  feather  (repeat) 
B  to  chafe  as  at  a  personal  wrong, 
drooping  chestnut-buds  b  To  spread 
And  then  b  to  bloat  himself. 
Till  she  b  to  totter,  and  the  child 
'  He  b.  The  rest  would  follow. 
So  I  b,  And  the  rest  foUow'd : 
but  as  his  brain  B  to  mellow, 
when  the  college  lights  B  to  glitter 
B  to  address  us,  and  was  moving  on 
'  Are  you  that  Lady  Psyche,'  I  b, 
b  A  blind  and  babbling  laughter, 
greatest  sailor  since  our  world  b. 
I  6  to  be  tired  a  little. 
What  seem'd  my  worth  since  I  b  ; 
The  total  world  since  life  b  ; 
Whose  life  in  low  estate  b 
A  breeze  6  to  tremble  o'er 
wind  b  to  sweep  A  music 
In  tracts  of  fluent  heat  b, 
Wretchedest  age,  since  Time  b, 
B  to  move,  seethe,  twine  and  curl : 
Sat  down  beside  him,  ate  and  then  b. 
B  to  scoff  and  jeer  and  babble 
that  I  6  To  glance  behind  me 
B  to  break  her  sports  with  graver  fits, 

No  sooner  gone  than  suddenly  she  b  : 

plain  that  then  b  To  darken  under  Camelot ; 

when  the  day  b  to  wane,  we  went. 

such  a  blast,  my  King,  5  to  blow, 

Then  she  b  to  rail  so  bitterly. 

Autumn  thunder,  and  the  jousts  b : 

and  both  B  to  struggle  for  it, 

B  to  gall  the  knighthood,  asking 

b  To  vex  and  plague  her. 

by  and  by  b  to  hum  An  air 

Ye  ask  me,  friends,  When  I  6  to  love. 

So  know  I  not  when  I  &  to  love. 

B  to  heave  upon  that  painted  sea ; 

Four  bells  instead  of  one  b  to  ring, 

his  own  b  To  pulse  with  such  a  vehemence 

At  once  b  to  wander  and  to  wail, 

then  b  the  story  of  his  love 

Whereat  the  very  babe  b  to  wail ; 

An'  the  wind  b  to  rise,  , 

when  the  storm  on  the  downs  b, 

water  b  to  heave  and  the  weather  to  moan, 

But  at  length  we  6  to  be  weary, 

and  there  I  6  to  weep, 

cry  so  desolate,  not  since  the  world  o, 

'  And  since — from  when  this  earth  b — 
'  The  years  that  when  my  Youth  b 

She  b  to  spake  to  herself, 

for  since  our  dying  race  b, 

111  To  waste  this  earth  b — 

I  that  loved  thee  since  my  day  b, 

his  fresh  life  may  close  as  it  6, 
And  a  beggar  h  to  cry  '  Food,  food 
Beget    Many  a  chance  the  years  b. 
Begetters    woridly-wise  b's,  plagued  themselves 
Beggar  (s)    Are  there  no  b's  at  your  gate, 
'  If  I'm  a  i  born,'  she  said, 


Beggar 

Dora  123 

Geraint  and  E.  487 

Tvx)  Voices  16 

„        325 

„        408 

„        422 

Palace  of  Art  158 

May  Queen,  Con.,  27 

D.  of  F.  Women  129 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  29 

Talking  Oak  9 

Loclcsley  Hall  154 

WUl  Water.  169 

Enoch  Arden  67,  373 

474 

Sir  L.'and  Q.  G.  16 

Sea  Dreams  154 

244 

Princess,  Pro.,  200 

243 

„        i  180 

208 

„       u  184 

261 

,,       OT 136 

Ode  on  Well.  86 

Grandmother  74 

In  Mem.,  Pro.,  34 

,,         xliii  12 

,,         Ixiv   3 

,,  xcv  54 

,,  ciii  53 

,,       cxviii  9 

Maud  II V  21 

Gareth  and  L.  234 

872 

Marr.  of  Geraint  58 

Geraint  and  E.  862 

Merlin  and  V.  180 

Lancelot  and  E.  96 

Holy  Grail  217 

488 

795 

Pdleas  and  E.  250 

Last  Tournament  153 

410 

683 

Guinevere  67 

,,     162 

Lover's  Tale  i  145 

163 

„      ii  192 

,,       m20 

„        iv  81 

99 

354 

375 

First  Qjiarrd  89 

Rizpah  71 

The  Revenge  113 

V.  of  Maddune  91 

T/ie  Wreck  93 

Despair  59 

Ancient  Sage  53 

155 

Tomorrmo  54 

Lockdey  //.,  Sixty,  65 

Epilogue  23 

To  Virgil  38 

Prog,  of  Spring  89 

Voice  spake,  etc.  5 

Miller's  D.  206 

Aylmer's  Field  482 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  67 

Lady  Clare  37 


Beggar 


34 


Being 


Beggar  (s)  {contimied)    I  am  a  b  born,'  she  said, 

ner,  he  loved,  a  b  :  then  he  pray'd 

tho'  she  were  a  b  from  the  hedge, 

fling  free  alms  into  the  b's  bowl, 

And  a  b  began  to  cry,  '  Food,  food 
Beggar'd    and  I  fell  £  for  ever — 
Beggar  Maid    Bare-footed  came  the  b  m 

'  This  h  m  shall  be  my  queen  ! ' 
Beggar- Woman    silken  rag,  the  b-w's  weed  : 
Begged    then  they  b  For  Father  Philip 

At  last  she  b  a  boon. 
Begin    fret  Of  that  sharp-headed  worm  Vs 

And  rugged  barks  b  to  bud, 

That  to  b  implies  to  end  ; 

When  meres  b  to  uncongeal, 

call  me  loud  when  the  day  b's  to  break : 

0  look  !  the  sun  b's  to  rise, 

lights  b  to  twinkle  from  the  rocks : 

Bsto  move  and  tremble. 

Till  the  graves  b  to  move.  And  the  dead  b  to 
dance. 

B's  the  scandal  and  the  cry  : 

Which  made  a  selfish  war  b  ; 

The  noise  of  life  b's  again. 

From  whence  clear  memory  may  b, 

overhead  B's  the  clash  and  clang 

sadder  age  b's  To  war  against 

b's  to  play  That  air  which  pleased  her 

an'  saw  she  b's  to  cry, 

Evelyn  b's  it  '  0  diviner  Air. ' 

listen  how  the  birds  B  to  warble 
Beginner  fair  b's  of  a  nobler  time, 
Beginning  (part.)    world's  great  work  is  heard  B, 

B  to  faint  in  the  light  that  she  loves 

B  at  the  sequel  know  no  more. 

And  he  6  languidly — 

The  boat  was  b  to  move, 
Beginning  (b)    end  and  the  b  vex  His  reason : 

blind  b's  that  have  made  me  man, 

break  The  low  b's  of  content. 

And  be  the  fair  2>  of  a  time. 
Begone     '  You  must  b,'  said  Death, 

B :  we  will  not  look  upon  you  more. 

B !  my  knave  ! — belike  and  like 

thou  b,  take  counsel,  and  away, 
Begotten    (See  also  Wajit-begotten)    My  father 

hath  b  me  in  his  wrath. 
Beguile    To  b  her  melancholy ; 
Beguil'd    well,  well,  well,  I  Tnay  be  b 
B^un    help  me  as  when  life  b : 

into  my  heart,  and  b  to  darken  my  eyes. 

My  brain  had  b  to  reel — 

A  juster  epoch  has  b. 

The  light  of  days  when  life  b, 

Altho'  the  months  have  scarce  b^ 

this  bare  dome  had  not  b  to  gleam 

0  weary  one,  has  it  6  ? 
Beheld    6  Thy  mild  deep  eyes  upraised, 

1  6  great  Herb's  angry  eyes, 
Since  I  6  young  Laurence  dead, 
ere  a  star  can  wink,  b  her  there. 
I  b  her  ere  she  knew  my  heart, 
when  the  boy  b  His  mother, 
B  the  dead  flame  of  the  fallen  day 
b  His  wife  his  wife  no  more. 
Turning  b  the  Powers  of  the  House 
I  b  her,  when  she  rose  The  yesternight, 
The  Priest  b  him,  And  cried 
And  what  I  am  b  again 
b  The  death-white  curtain  drawn  ; 
I  b  From  eye  to  eye  thro'  all  their  Order 
likewise  I  6  Excalibur 
when  her  son  B  his  only  way  to  glory 
h  Far  over  heads  in  that  long-vaulted 
B  the  long  street  of  a  little  town 


Lady  Clare  71 

Enoch  Arden  117 

Marr.  of  Geraint  230 

Ancient  Sage  260 

Voice  spake,  etc.  5 

Lover's  Tale  i  670 

Beggar  Maid  3 

16 

Geraint  and  E.  680 

Enoch  Arden  364 

Princess  i  146 

Supp,  Co7ifessions  186 

My  life  is  full  18 

Two  Voices  339 

„         407 

May  Qioeen  10 

May  Qneen,  Con. ,  49 

Ulysses  54 

Will  Water.  32 

Vision  of  Sin  165 

You  might  have  won  16 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  30 

In  Mem.  vii  10 

„        xlv  10 

,,      Con.  61 

Gareth  and  L.  1129 

Lover's  Tale  i  20 

North.  Cobbler  71 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  4 

The  Flight  61 

Co7n.  of  Arthur  457 

In  Mem.  cxxi  11 

Maud  I  xxii  9 

Lover's  Tale  iv  158 

274 

First  Quarrel  21 

Two  Voices  298 

Lucretius  246 

In  Mem.  Ixxodv  48 

Guinevere  466 

Love  and  Death  7 

Princess  iv  547 

Gareth  and  L.  713 

1002 


Balin  and  Balan  283 

Maud  I  xxZ 

„        m  89 

Lockdey  Hall  185 

Rizpah  16 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  60 

Epilogue  6 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  23 

To  Ulysses  22 

To  Mary  Boyle  41 

The  Dreamer  26 

Supp.  Confessions  73 

(Enone  190 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  28 

Gardener's  D,  122 

276 

Doi-a  137 

Enoch  Arden  441 

758 

Aylmer's  Field  287 

Princess  v  175 

The  Victim  37 

In  Mem.  czxiv  21 

Maud  I  xiv  33 

C&m.  of  Arthur  269 

„  295 

Gareth  and  L.  159 

318 

Marr.  of  Geraint  242 


Beheld  {conti7iiied)    Geraint  B  her  firat  in  field, 

Tum'd,  and  6  the  four,  and  all 

b  A  little  town  with  towers, 

I  never  yet  6  a  thing  so  pale. 

Have  I  6  a  lily  like  yourself. 

true  eyes  B  the  man  you  loved 

b  Balin  and  Balan  sitting  Statuelike, 

B  before  a  golden  altar  lie 

B  the  Queen  and  Lancelot  get  to  horse. 

b  the  King  Charge  at  the  head 

Arthur,  who  b  his  cloudy  brows, 

every  knight  b  his  fellow's  face 

Another  hath  b  it  afar  off, 

b  That  victor  of  the  Pagan 

b  three  spirits  mad  with  joy 

B  at  noon  in  some  delicious  dale 

glancing  up  b  the  holy  nuns  All  round  her, 

some  b  the  faces  of  old  ghosts 

When  I  b  her  weep  so  ruefully  ; 

b  All  round  about  him  that  which 

never  yet  b  a  thing  so  strange, 

when  before  have  Gods  or  men  b  The  Life 

b  A  blood-red  awning  waver 
Behest    Then  not  to  disobey  her  lord's  b, 
Behold    Where'er  they  fell,  b.  Like  to 

'  B,  it  is  the  Sabbath  mom.' 

B  this  fruit,  whose  gleaming  rind 

Mayst  well  b  them  unbeheld, 

when  I  look'd  again,  b  an  arm, 

B  her  there.  As  I  beheld  her 

'  Who  is  this  ?  b  thy  bride,' 

some  one  spake :  'B\it  was  a  crime 

In  such  a  shape  dost  thou  b  thy  God. 

in  me  b  the  Prince  Your  countryman, 

B  your  father's  letter.' 

reverent  people  b  The  towering  car, 

'  B  the  man  that  loved  and  lost, 

B  me,  for  I  cannot  sleep, 

B  a  man  raised  up  by  Christ ! 

An  inner  trouble  I  b, 

B,  we  know  not  anything  ; 

B  their  brides  in  other  hands  ; 

B,  I  dream  a  dream  of  good, 

0  happy  hour,  b  the  bride 

Arthur  said,  '  B  thy  doom  is  mine. 

'  B,  for  these  have  sworn  To  wage  my  wars, 

did  Enid,  keeping  watch,  b 

B  me  overturn  and  trample  on  him. 

b  me  come  To  cleanse  this  common 

father,  I  b  him  in  my  dreams 

B  it,  crying,  '  We  have  still  a  King.' 

b  a  woman  at  a  door  Spinning  ; 

when  they  led  me  into  hall,  b. 

looking  up,  B,  the  enchanted  towers 

'  In  happy  time  b  our  pilot-star  I 

'  B  me.  Lady,  A  prisoner, 

B  his  horse  and  armour. 

b  This  day  my  Queen  of  Beauty 

Till  the  High  God  b  it  from  beyond, 

B,  I  seem  but  King  among  the  dead.' 

when  I  look'd  again,  b  an  arm, 

in  her  b  Of  all  my  treasures 

Behind  this  darkness,  I  b  her  still, 

when  these  b  their  Lord, 
Beholden    But  being  po  b  to  the  Prince, 

shame  the  Prince  To  whom  we  are  b  ; 
Beholding    B  how  the  years  which  are  not  Time's 

B  one  so  bright  in  dark  estate, 

B  how  ye  butt  against  my  wish, 

B  it  was  Edyrn  son  of  Nudd, 

b  her  Tho'  pale,  yet  happy, 

b  him  so  strong,  she  thought 
Behoof    break  them  more  in  their  b, 

To  mask,  tho'  but  in  his  own  b, 
Being    changes  should  control  Our  b, 


Marr,  of  Geraint  540 

„  558 

Geraint  and  E.  196 

615 

620 

847 

Balin  and  Balan  23 

410 

Merlin  and  V.  102 

Lancelot  and  E.  303 

1354 

Holy  Grail  191 

897 

Last  Tournament  664 

Guinevere  252 

393 

666 

Pass,  of  Arthur  lOS 

Lover's  Tale  i  773 

,,         iv  53 

„  303 

Demeter  and  P.  29 

St.  Telemachus  51 

Geraint  and  E.  450 

The  Poet  22 

Two  Voices  ifyz 

(Enone  72 

.,      89 

M.  d' Arthur  158 

Gardetier's  D.  275 

Love  and  Duty  49 

Vision  of  Sin  213 

Aylm^'s  Field  657 

Princess  ii  214 

„      iv  468 

OcU  071  Well.  54 

In  Mem.  i  15 

,,       vii  6 

,,  axcxilS 

„     odi  18 

„      liv  13 

,,       a»14 

,,caxcix  11 

„  Con.  69 

Com.  of  Arthur  ^Q7 

507 

Gemint  aiid  E,  118 

843 

894 

Lancelot  and  E.  763 

Holy  Grail  245 

391 

577 

813 

Pelleas  a7id  E.  63 

240 

373 

Last  Tournament  208 

Pass,  of  Arthur  16 

146 

326 

Lover's  Tale  iv  317 

Tiresias  52 

Akbar's  Drea7n  142 

Marr.  of  Geraint  623 

727 

Aylmer's  Field  601 

Marr.  of  Geraint  786 

Geraint  and  E.  677 

781 

879 

Pelleas  a7id  E.  117 

Princess  vi  61 

Maud  /  w  48 

Love  thou  thy  land  42 


Being 

Being  (cMUinued)    all  the  current  of  my  b  sets  to 

and  spoils  My  bliss  in  b ; 

No  Angel,  but  a  dearer  6, 

Her  peaceful  b  slowly  passes  by 

And  all  the  wheels  of  B  slow. 

His  b  working  in  mine  own, 

And  strike  his  6  into  bounds, 

b  he  loved  best  in  all  the  world, 

and  he  felt  his  b  move  In  music 

glad  new-year  Of  B,  which  with  earliest 
Beknaved    Gareth  following  was  again  b. 
Bel    'I'ill  the  face  of  ^  be  brighten'd, 
Belaboor'd    so  b  him  on  rib  and  cheek 
Belaud    blush  to  b  myself  a  moment — 
Beldam    Then  glided  a  vulturous  B  forth, 
Beleaguerer    Blown  by  the  fierce  b'a  of  a  town, 
Belfry    white  owl  in  the  b  sits,  (repeat) 

Low  breezes  fann'd  the  b  bars, 
Belied    liars  6  in  the  hubbub  of  lies  ; 
Belief    Think  my  b  would  stronger  grow  ! 

but  my  b  In  all  this  matter — 

Beyond  mine  old  b  in  womanhood, 

I  am  quicker  of  6  Than  you  believe  me, 

and  he  believed  in  her  b. 

or  that  which  most  Enchains  b, 
Believable    that  he  sinn'd  is  not  b  ; 
Believe    (See  also  Make-believes)    Why  not 
b  then  ? 

But  I  b  she  wept. 

I  b,  if  you  were  fast  my  wife, 

Save  Cfhrist  as  we  6  him — 

Gods  there  are,  for  all  men  so  b. 

there  is  iron  in  the  blood,  And  I  6  it. 

we  b  him  Something  far  advanced 

nor  b  me  Too  presumptuous, 

I  heard  a  voice,  '  b  no  more  ' 

you  wrong  your  beauty,  b  it. 

Shall  I  b  him  ashamed  to  be  seen  ? 

I  well  b  You  be  of  Arthur's  Table,* 

I  do  6  yourself  against  yourself, 

world  will  not  b  a  man  repents : 

I  well  b  this  damsel,  and  the  one 

we  b  all  evil  of  thy  Mark — 

and  half  b  her  true : 

I  well  b  that  all  about  this  world 

I  well  b  she  tempted  them  and  fail'd, 

I  might  6  you  then,  Who«knows  ? 

noble  it  is,  I  well  b,  the  noblest — 

if  I  could  b  the  things  you  say 

I  may  not  well  b  that  you  b.' 

I  am  quicker  of  belief  Than  you  b  me, 

with  him,  to  6  as  he  believed. 

Our  Lady  says  it,  and  we  well  b : 

greatest  hardly  will  6  he  saw  ; 

lie  to  me  :  I  6.     Will  ye  not  lie  ? 

I  should  all  as  soon  b  that  his, 

to  h  it — 'tis  so  sweet  a  thought, 

can  well  b,  for  he  look'd  so  coarse 

'  O  soul  of  little  faith,  slow  to  b  ! 

who  b  These  hard  memorials 

speak  the  truth  that  no  man  may  b. ' 

were  used  to  b  everlasting  would  die : 

Did  he  b  it  ?  did  you  ask  him  ? 

That  no  man  would  b. 
Believed    The  woman  cannot  be  b, 

b  This  filthy  marriage-hindering 

when  he  came  again,  his  flock  b — 

and  saw,  but  scarce  b 

often  she  b  that  I  should  die : 

I  b  that  in  the  living  world  My  spirit 

Queen  b  that  when  her  son 

Not  less  Geraint  b  it ; 

I  b  myself  Unconquerable, 

He  spoke,  and  Enid  easily  b, 

and  half  b  her  true,  (repeat) 


35 


thee.'      Loeksley  Hall  24 

Lucretiiis  222 

Princess  vii  320 

Requiescat  7 

In  Mem.  I  4 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  43 

,,   Con.  124 

Geraint  and  E.  103 

Balin  and  Balan  211 

Laver's  Tale  i  282 

Gareth  and  L.  786 

Boiidicea  16 

Princess  t>  341 

Hendecasyllabics  18 

Dead  PropJut  25 

Achilles  over  the  T.  20 

The  Owl  I.  7,  14 

The  Letters  43 

Maud  I  iv  51 

Svpp.  Confessions  13 

Com.  ofArihurlSS 

Lancelot  and  E.  955 

„  1204 

Holy  GraU  165 

Lover's  Tale  ii  134 

Merlin  and  V.  760 

Supp.  Confessions  123 

Talking  Oak  164 

Enoch  Arden  414 

Aylmer's  Field  573 

Lucretius  117 

Princess  vi  231 

Ode  on  WeU.  274 

Hendecasyllabics  15 

In  Mem.  cxxiv  10 

Maud  I  iv  17 

,,    xiii  25 

Gareth  and  L.  835 

Geraint  and  E.  744 

900 

Balin  and  Balan  612 

Merlin  and  V,  93 

186 

541 

819 

„         922 

Lancelot  and  E,  361 

1097 

„  1196 

„  1205 

Holy  GraU  487 

604 

„  896 

Last  Tournament  645 

Guinevere  350 

Lover's  Tale  i  275 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  7 

Columbus  147 

195 

Tiresias  50 

Despair  54 

The  Pino  225 

Meckanophiius  28 

The  Letters  32 

Aylmer's  Fidd  373 

,,  600 

^Sea  Dreams  34 

Princess  vii  100 

„        157 

Gareth  and  L.  158 

Marr.  of  Geraint  28 

Geraint  and  E.  835 

874 

Merlin  and  V.  400,  893 


\ 

Believed  {conliwued)    and  he  b  in  her  belief. 

One  with  him,  to  believe  as  he  b. 

in  vows  when  men  6  the  King  ! 

every  knight  B  himself  a  greater 

we  6  her  asleep  again — 

And  if  I  6  in  a  God,  I  would 
Believing    B  where  we  cannot  prove  ; 

own  soul  to  hers,  B  her  ; 

JS,  '  lo  mine  helpmate,  one  to  feel 

Only,  b  I  loved  Edith, 

b  that  the  girl's  Lean  fancy, 

people  b  that  Peelfe  the  Goddess 
Bell    {See  also  Ankle-bells,  Bindweed-bell,  Chapel  Bell, 
Church-bell,  Flower-bells,  Marriage-bell)    Nine 


Bell 

Holy  Grail  165 

487 

iMst  Tournament  649 

677 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  69 

Despair  70 

In  Mem.,  Pro.,  4 

Pelleas  and  E.  84 

Guinevere  485 

Sistei-s  {E.  and  E.)  138 

Tfie  Ring  335 

Kapiolani  8 


times  goes  the  passing  b  : 
dropping  low  their  crimson  b's  Half-closed, 
with  white  b's  the  clover-hill  swells 
The  bridle  b's  rang  merrily 
The  foxglove  cluster  dappled  b's.' 
The  sweet  church  b's  began  to  peal, 
in  the  towers  I  placed  great  b's  that  swung, 
those  great  b's  Began  to  chime, 
midnight  b's  cease  ringing  suddenly, 
At  this  a  hundred  6's  began  to  peal, 
sound  of  funeral  or  of  marriage  b's ; 
ffom  them  clash 'd  The  b's ;  we  listen 'd  ; 
when  the  b's  were  ringing,  Allan  call'd 
I  do  not  hear  the  b's  upon  my  cap, 
blow  The  sound  of  minster  b's, 
shrill  6  rings,  the  censer  swings, 
There  comes  a  sound  of  marriage  b's. 
were  wed,  and  merrily  rang  the  b's,  (repeat) 
Merrily  rang  the  b's  and  they  were  wed 
heard  the  pealing  of  his  parish  b's  ; 
hark  the  b  For  dinner,  let  us  go  ! ' 
the  chapel  b's  Call'd  us  :  we  left 
half  open'd  b  of  the  woods  ! 
like  a  b  Toll'd  bv  an  earthquake 
Let  the  b  be  toll'd :  (repeat) 
Clash,  ye  b's,  in  the  merry  March  air  ! 
Saaint's  daay — they  was  ringing  the  b's. 
'  lights  and  rings  the  gateway  b, 
I  hear  the  b  struck  in  the  night : 
The  Christmas  b's  from  hill  to  hill 
Before  I  heard  those  b's  again  : 
The  merry  merry  b's  of  Yule. 
One  set  slow  b  will  seem  to  toll 
A  single  peal  of  b's  below, 
That  these  are  not  the  b's  I  know. 
Ring  out,  wild  b's,  to  the  wild  sky. 
Ring,  happy  b's,  across  the  snow  : 
The  dead  leaf  trembles  to  the  b's. 
Is  cap  and  b's  for  a  fool. 
Not  a  b  was  rung,  not  a  prayer  was  read  ; 
she  tower'd  ;  her  b's,  Tone  under  tone, 
ye,  that  follow  but  the  leader's  b ' 
thence  at  intervals  A  low  b  tolling, 
came  on  me  The  hollow  tolling  of  the  b, 
by  slow  degrees  the  sullen  b  Toll'd  quicker. 
Four  b's  instead  of  one  began  to  ring. 
Four  merry  b's,  four  merry  marriage-bells, 
b's  Lapsed  into  frightful  stillness  ; 
again  the  b's  Jangled  and  clang'd  : 
the  b's.  Those  marriage-bells. 
Heard  yet  once  more  the  tolling  b, 
we  heard  them  a-ringing  the  b, 
butted  each  other  with  clashing  of  b's, 
the  clash  and  boom  of  the  b's  rang 
The  tolling  of  his  funeral  b 
Ring  little  b's  of  change 
b's  that  rang  without  a  hand, 
where  the  loyal  b's  Clash  welcome — 
Bridal  b's  with  tolling  !  .  .  . 
A  spike  of  half-accomplish'd  b's — 
lin-lan-lone  of  evening  b's  Far-far-away. 


A II  Things  will  Die  35 

Arabian  Nights  62 

Sea-Fairies  14 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  13 

Two  Voices  72 

„         408 

Palace  of  Art  129 

157 

D.  ofF.  Women  247 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.,  29 

Gardener's  D.  36 

221 

Dora  41 

Edtoin  Morris  56 

Talking  Oak  272 

Sir  Galahad  35 

The  Letters  48 

Enoch  Arden  80,  511 

512 

615 

Princess  ii  432 

470 

„     vi  193 

331 

Ode  on  Well.  53,  58 

W.  to  Alexandra  18 

N.  Farmer,  JST.  S.  13 

In  Mem.  viii  3 

x2 

„     xxviii  3 

16 

20 

, ,        Ivii  10 

,,  civ  5 

8 

,,  cvi  1 

6 

„     Con.  64 

Maud  I  vi  62 

„     IIv2i 

Merlin  and  V.  131 

Holy  Grail  298 

Lover's  Tale  ii  83 

,,       Hi  10 

18 

20 

21 

29 

62 

,,  iv2 

29 

First  Qttarrel  21 

V.  of  Maeldune  108 

„  110 

Tiresias  192 

Early  Spring  41 

The  Ring  411 

„        482 

Ftyrlom  70 

To  Ulysses  24 

Far-far-away  6 


BeU 


36 


Best 


Bell  (coutinued)    Faith  and  Work  were  b's  of  full 

accord,  In  Mem.,  W.  G.  Ward  2 

many  a  pendent  6  and  fragrant  star,  Death  of  (Enone  13 
people  nag  the  b  from  love  to  Thee.              Akbar's  Dream,  Inscrip.  4 

m  praise  of  Whom  The  Christian  6,  Alchar's  Dream  149 

Twilight  and  evening  h.  Crossing  the  Bar  9 

Bell'd    See  Milky-Bell'd 

Bellerophon    White  Rose,  B,  the  Jilt,  The  Brook  161 

Bellicent  (Queen)  the  Queen  of  Orkney,  B, 

(repeat)  Com.  of  Arthur  190,  245 

last  tall  son  of  Lot  and  B,  Gareth  and  L.  1 

Then  B  bemoan'd  herself  and  said,  „          72 

son  Of  old  King  Lot  and  good  Queen  B,  , ,      1231 

Belling    L^*-  '"^  *  roky  hollow,  b,  heard  Last  Tmirnament  502 

Bell-like    many  a  deep-hued  b-l  flower  Eleanore  37 

Bell-mouth'd    whom  the  b-m  glass  had  wrought,  Princess  iv  155 

Bellow'd    (See  also  Be&l'd)    ever  overhead 

B  the  tempest,  Merlin  and  V.  957 

Bellowin^r    {See  also  A-bealin',  HoUower-bellowing) 

B  victory,  b  doom  :  Ode  on  Well.  66 

b  thro'  the  darkness  on  to  dawn,  Gareth  and  L.  177 

Hell  burst  up  your  harlot  roofs  B,  Pelleas  and  E.  467 

Bellringrer    Friars,  b's.  Parish-clerks —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  160 

Belong'd    boooks,  I  ha'  see'd  'em,  b  to  the  Squire,  Village  Wife  71 

an'  'is  gells  es  6  to  the  land  ;  ,,        112 

my  Fathers  6  to  the  church  of  old.  The  Wreck  1 

Belon^ring    things  b  to  thy  peace  and  ours  !  Aylmer's  Field  740 

I  knew  it — Of  and  b  to  me,  Lucretius  44 

Beloved    (See  also  Much-beloved,  Well-beloved) 

Revered,  b — 0  you  tfutt  hold  To  the  Queen  1 

0  this  world's  curse, — 6  but  hated —  Love  and  Duty  47 
For  love  reflects  the  thing  b  ;  In  Mem.  Hi  2 
Maud  the  6  of  my  mother,  Maud  I  i  72 
the  liquid  note  b  of  men  Comes  Marr.  of  Geraint  336 
friend,  the  neighbour,  Lionel,  the  6,  Lovei-'s  Tale  i  653 
6  for  a  kindliness  Rare  in  Fable  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  4 
This  ring  '  To  t'amo '  to  his  best  6,  The  Ring  210 

Belt  (s)    (<See  a/«o  Blossom-belt,  Sword-belt)    A 

gleaming  crag  with  b's  of  pines.  Two  Voices  189 

Unclasp'd  the  wedded  eagles  of  her  h,  Godiva  43 

glories  of  the  broad  b  of  the  world,  Enoch  Arden  579 

A  b,  it  seem'd,  of  luminous  vapour,  Sea  Dreams  209 

ridge  Of  breaker  issued  from  the  6,  „             212 

same  as  that  Living  within  the  b)  „             216 

past  into  the  b  and  swell'd  again  „             222 

Half -lost  in  b'*  of  hop  and  breadths  of  wheat ;  Princess,  Con. ,  45 

From  6  to  ii  of  crimson  seas  Jn  Mem.  Ixxxvi  13 

By  summer  b'$  of  wheat  and  vine  „           xcviii  4 

a  mighty  purse,  Hung  at  his  b,  Geraint  and  E.  23 

seem  a  sword  beneath  a  6  of  three.  Merlin  and  V.  510 

faltering  sideways  downward  to  her  b,  „           S.W 

crimson  in  the  b  a  strange  device.  Holy  Grail  154 

round  thee,  maiden,  bind  my  b.  ,,           159 

Belt  (verb)    woods  that  b  the  gray  hill-side,  Ode  to  Memory  55 

and  from  the  woods  That  b  it  rise  Lover's  Tale  i  536 

fleefH  that  b  the  changeful  West,  Prog,  of  Spring  98 

Belt  (built)    an'  b  long  afoor  my  daiiy  Owa  Roa  21 

Belted    with  puff'd  cheek  the  6  hunter  blew  Palace  of  Art  6i 

B  his  body  with  her  white  embrace,  Ixtst  Tournament  513 

Bemoan'd    llien  Bellicent  b  herself  and  said,  Gareth  and  L.  Tl 

Bench    Jack  on  his  ale-house  b  has  as  many  Maud  I  iv  9 

1  saw.  No  b  nor  table,  painting  Holy  Grail  829 
Down  on  a  b,  hard-breathing.  Pelleas  and  E.  592 

Bench'd    stately  theatres  B  crescent-wise.  Princess  ii  370 

Bencher    wrinkled  b'i  often  talk'd  of  him  Aylmer's  Field  473 

Bend    chafes  me  that  1  could  not  b  One  will ;  D.  of  F.  Women  TS7 

How  sweet  are  looks  that  ladies  li  Sir  Galahad  13 

fathers  b  Above  more  graves,  In  Mem.  xcmii  15 

On  me  she  b'g  her  blissful  eyes  ^^         Co7i.  29 

tyranny  now  should  b  or  cease,  Maud  III  vi  20 

O  ay— the  winds  that  b  the  brier !  Lmt  Tournammt  731 

Bending    erect,  but  b  from  his  height  Aylmer's  Field  119 

b  by  the  cradle  of  her  babe.  The  Ring  415 

Bengal    For  which,  in  branding  summers  of  B,  The  Brook  16 

Bent    lowly  b  With  melwUous  airs  Adeline  M 


Bent  (continued)    From  yon  blue  heavens  above  us  b    L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  50 

b  or  broke  The  lithe  reluctant  boughs  Enoch  Arden  380 

b  as  he  was  To  make  disproof  of  scorn,  Aylmer's  Field  445 

Nor  b,  nor  broke,  nor  shunn'd  Princess,  Pro. ,  38 

seal  was  Cupid  h  above  a  scroll,  ,,           i  242 

B  their  broad  faces  toward  us  ,,         iv  551 

Her  head  a  little  b  ;  and  on  her  mouth  ,,         vi  269 

The  King  b  low,  with  hand  on  brow,  The  Victim  53 

a  straight  staff  i  in  a  pool ;  High.  Pantheism  16 

thrice  as  large  as  man  he  b  To  greet  In  Mem.  ciii  42 

either  spear  B  but  not  brake,  Gareth  and  L.  964 

h  he  seem'd  on  going  the  third  day,  Ma'rr.  of  Geraint  604 

B  as  he  seem'd  on  going  this  third  day,  ,,                625 

since  her  mind  was  b  On  hearing,  Pelleas  and  E.  114 

round  him  6  the  spirits  of  the  hills  Guinevere  283 

but  he  B  o'er  me,  and  my  neck  Lover's  Tale  i  690 

so  feeble :  she  b  above  me,  too ;  ,,            693 

the  mast  6  and  the  ravin  wind  ,,        ii  170 

And  the  pikes  were  all  broken  or  6,  The  Revenge  80 

Bow'd  the  spoiler,  B  the  Scotsman,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  21 

The  plowman  passes,  6  with  pain,  Ancient  Sage  144 

Bequeath'd    This  ring  b  you  by  your  mother,  The  Ring  75 

Bereave    nothing  can  b  him  Of  the  force  Ode  on  Well.  272 

Berg'    goes,  like  glittering  b's  of  ice,  Princess  iv  71 

Berkshire    weed  the  white  horse  on  the  B  hills  Geraint  and  E.  936 

Berried    about  my  feet  The  b  briony  fold.'  Talking  Oak  148 

Berry    With  bunch  and  b  and  flower  (Enone  102 

red  berries  charm  the  bird,  Gareth  and  L.  85 

With  ever-scattering  berries,  and  on  Last  Tournament  173 

Married  among  the  red  berries.  First  Quarrel  40 

and  the  branch  with  berries  on  it,  Columbus  73 

And  the  crimson  and  scarlet  of  berries  V.  of  Maeldune  61 

But  in  every  6  and  fruit  was  the  ,,             62 

Clomb  the  mountain,  and  flung  the  berries,  Kapiolani  6 

handle  or  gather  the  berries  of  Peelfe  !  „        20 

Into  the  flame-billow  dash'd  the  berries,  ,,       33 

Beryl    sardius.  Chrysolite,  b,  topaz,  Columbus  85 

Beseech    1  do  6  you  by  the  love  you  bear  Enoch  Arden  307 

Beseem    might  well  b  His  princess,  Marr.  of  Geraint  758 

Beseem'd    true  answer,  as  b  Thy  fealty,  M.  d' Arthur  74 

true  answer,  as  b  Thy  fealty.  Pass,  of  Arthur  'iA'i, 

Besiege    so  Vs  her  To  break  her  will,  Gareth  and  L.  616 

Besieged    (See  also  Strait-Besieged)    h  Ygerne 

within  Tintagil,  Com.  of  Arthur  198 

Besotted    A  drowning  life,  b  in  sweet  self,  Princess  vii  314 

So  far  b  that  they  fail  to  see  Balin  and  Balan  359 

Besought    B  him,  supplicating,  if  he  cared  Enoch  Arden  163 

the  knight  b  him,  '  Follow  me,  Geraint  and  E.  807 

B  Lavaine  to  write  as  she  devised  Lancelot  and  E.  1103 

B  me  to  be  plain  and  blunt,  ,,            1301 

Bess  (horse)    Black  B,  Tantivy,  Tallyho,  The  Brook  160 

Bess  (Christian  name)    Milk  for  my  sweet-'arts,  B  !        Spinster's  S's.  1 

Mew  !  mew  ! — B  wi'  the  milk  !  ,,          113 

I  says  '  I'd  be  good  to  tha,  B,  Oivd  Rod  75 

Bessy  Harris    'bout  B  M's  barne.  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  14 

B  M's  barne !  tha  knaws  she  laaid  ,,               21 

Best    (See  also  Earthly-best,  Heavenly-best)    at  b 

A  vague  suspicion  of  the  breast :  Two  Voices  335 

they  say :  Kind  nature  is  the  b :  Walk  to  the  Mail  64 

b  That  ever  came  from  pipe.  Will  Water.  75 

He  gave  the  people  of  his  i  :  You  might  have  won  25 

His  worst  he  kept,  his  h  he  gave.  ,,             26 

You  chose  the  b  among  us— a  strong  man  :  Enoch  Arden  293 

Their  b  and  brightest,  when  they  dwelt  Aylmer's  Field  69 

so  true  that  second  thoughts  are  b  ?  Sea  Dreams  65 

Arising,  did  his  holy  oily  b,  ,,          195 

sit  the  I)  and  stateliest  of  the  land  ?  Lucretius  172 

who  love  b  have  b  the  grace  to  know  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  28 

I  could  have  wept  with  the  b.  (repeat)  Grand7)iother  20,  100 

fur  them  as  'as  it's  the  b.  N.  Farmer;  JV.  S.  44 

And  do  their  little  b  to  bite  Lit.  Squabbles  6 

And  cancell'd  nature's  b  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxii  20 

Fair  words  were  b  for  him  who  fights  Gareth  and  L.  946 

as  the  stateliest  and  the  b  Marr.  of  Geraint  20 

my  dear  child  is  set  forth  at  her  b,  ,,             728 


I 


Best 

Best  {continued)     arms  for  guerdon  ;    choose 
the  b.' 
desired  the  humbling  of  their  b, 
fairest  and  the  b  Of  ladies  living 
I,  and  all,  As  fairest,  6  and  purest, 
I  have  seen  ;  but  b,  B,  purest  ? 
From  homage  to  the  b  and  purest, 
women,  worst  and  b,  as  Heaven  and  Hell. 
Win  shall  I  not,  but  do  my  i  to  win  :  _ 
Young  as  I  am,  yet  would  I  do  my  b.' 
with  meats  and  vintage  of  their  b 
Lives  for  his  children,  ever  at  its  b 
when  they  love  their  b,  Closest 
she  deem  d  she  look'd  her  6, 
having  loved  God's  b  And  greatest, 
'  Let  love  be  free  ;  free  love  is  for  the  b : 
What  should  be  6,  if  not  so  pure  a  love 
Arthur  kept  his  b  until  the  last ; 
'  ITien,'  I  said,  '  I'm  none  o'  the  6.' 
he  would  have  been  one  of  his  6. 
our  Lawrence  the  b  of  the  brave : 
their  marksmen  were  told  of  our  b, 
sees  the  B  that  glimmers  thro'  the  Worst, 
an'  I  knaws  it  be  all  fur  the  b. 
Is  girlish  talk  at  b  ; 
rank  with  the  b,  Garrick 
so  fickle  are  men — the  6  ! 
and  body  is  foul  at  b. 
Phra-Chai,  the  Shadow  of  the  B, 
The  b  in  me  that  sees  the  worst  in  me, 
the  Highest  is  the  wisest  and  the  b. 
Bestial    Courteous  or  b  from  the  moment,   ^ 
Best-natured     '  Which  was  prettiest,  B-n  ? 
Bestrode    he  6  my  Grandsire,  when  he  fell, 
Bethink    B  thee,  Lord,  while  thou  and  all 
Bethlehem    Not  least  art  thou,  thou  little  B  In 

Judah, 
Bethought    Then  she  b  her  of  a  faded  silk, 
and  b  her  of  her  promise  given 
6  her  how  she  used  to  watch, 
Betide     All-arm'd  I  ride,  whate'er  b, 
I  meet  my  fate,  whatever  ills  b  ! 
Betray    wouldst  b  me  for  the  precious  hilt ; 
Break  lock  and  seal :  b  the  trust : 
They  know  me  not.     I  should  b  myself. 
and  said,  '  B  me  not,  but  help — 
Simpler  than  any  child,  b's  itself, 
wouldst  b  me  for  the  precious  hilt ; 
you  knew  that  he  meant  to  b  me — 
Betray'd     '  Thou  hast  6  thy  nature  and  thy  name, 
B  my  secret  penance,  so  that  all 
let  them  know  themselves  6  ; 
b  her  cause  and  mine — 
'  Thou  hast  b  thy  nature  and  thy  name, 
Betraying    statesman  there,  b  His  party-secret. 
Betrothed   (.%«  oZso  Long-betroth'd)    hbr  far-off 
and  b, 
b  To  one,  a  neighbouring  Princess : 
I  spake  of  why  we  came,  And  my  b. 
B  us  over  their  wine, 
Betrothment    how  the  strange  6  was  to  end : 
Betted    they  b  ;  made  a  hundred  friends. 
Better    how  much  b  than  to  own  A  crown. 
Were  it  not  b  not  to  be  ? ' 
Is  boundless  b,  boundless  worse. 
Surely  'twere  b  not  to  be. 
'Twere  b  not  to  breathe  or  speak, 
A  murmur,  '  Be  of  &  cheer.' 
'Twere  b  I  should  cease  Although 
are  men  b  than  sheep  or  goats 
Something  b  than  his  dog, 
B  thou  wert  dead  before  me, 
B  thou  and  I  were  lying, 
held  it  6  men  should  perish  one  by  one, 
5  to  me  the  meanest  weed 


37 


Geraint  and  E.  218 
637 
Balin  and  Balan  339 
350 
356 
376 

Merlin  and  V.  815 

Lancelot  and  E.  221 

222 

266 


907 

1093 

1381 

1383 

Holy  Grail  763 

First  Quan-el  61 

Rizpah  28 

J)ef.  of  Luckmno  11 

Ancient  Sage  72 

Spinster's  S's.  52 

Epilogue  43 

To  W.  C.  Macreday  6 

Tlie  Ring  ^92 

Happy  28 

To  Ulysses  41 

Romney's  R.  44 

Faith  1 

Gareth  and  L.  631 

Princess  i  234 

,,      m242 

St.  S.  Stylites  105 

Sir  J.  Oldmstle  24 

Marr.  of  Geraint  134 

602 

647 

Sir  Galahad  83 

The  Flight  95 

M.  d' Arthur  126 

Van  might  Jmve  won  18 

Enoch  Arden  789 

Pelleat  and  E.  360 

Guinevere  371 

Pass,  of  Arthur  29i 

Charity  12 

M.  d' Arthur  73 

St.  S.  Stylites  68 

Aylmer's  Field  524 

Princess  v  76 

Pass,  of  Arthur  241 

Maud  II V  34 

consin 

The  Brook  75 

Princess  i  32 

„        120 

Maud  I  xix  39 

Princess  v  474 

Princess,  Pro.  163 

Ode  to  Memory  120 

Two  Voices  3 

"        'il 
48 

„        94 

429 

To  'j.  S.  66 

M.  d' Arthur  250 

Locksley  Hall  50 

56 

57 

179 

Amphion  93 


Better  [continued)  griefs  Like  his  have  worse  or  b, 
B  not  be  at  all  Than  not  be  noble. 
B  to  clear  prime  forests, 
Methinks  he  seems  no  b  than  a  girl ; 
You  hold  the  woman  is  the  b  man  ; 
Almost  our  maids  were  b  at  their  homes, 
b  or  worse  Than  the  heart  of  the  citizen 
peace  or  war?  b,  war  !  loud  war 
far  b  to  be  bom  To  labour 

myself  have  awaked,  as  it  seems,  to  the  b  mind  ; 
It  is  b  to  fight  for  the  good 
A  worse  were  b  ;  yet  no  worse  would  I, 
But  truly  foul  are  b,  for  they  send 
b  were  I  laid  in  the  dark  earth, 
sigh'd  '  Was  I  not  b  there  with  him  ? ' 
b  have  died  Thrice  than  have  ask'd 
B  the  King's  waste  hearth  and 
are  men  b  than  sheep  or  goats 
b  that  than  his,  than  he  The  friend, 
B  have  sent  Our  Edith  thro' 
B  a  rotten  borough  or  so 
Go,  therefore,  thou  !  thy  Vs  went 
Thine  elders  and  thy  b's. 
Thy  b  born  unhappily  from  thee, 
in  the  distance  pealing  news  Of  /;, 
My  brother  and  my  b,  this  man  here. 
By  striking  at  her  b,  miss'd, 
That  they  had  the  b  In  perils  of  battle 
And  then  I  will  let  you  a  b.' 
ever  cared  to  b  his  own  kind, 
his  work.  That  practice  6's?' 
voice  that — you  scarce  could  b  that. 

B  fifty  years  of  Europe  than  a  cycle 
for  I  love  him  all  the  b  for  it— 

B  the  waste  Atlantic  roU'd  On  her 

For  himself  has  done  much  b. 

I  loved  him  b  than  play  ; 

an'  I  loved  him  b  than  all. 

I  had  b  ha'  put  my  naked  hand  in  a  hornets'  nest. 

you  had  b  ha'  beaten  me  black  an'  blue 
Bettering    ill  for  him  who,  6  not  with  time, 
Beugh  (bough)    togither  like  birds  on  a  6  ; 
Beverley    Burnt  too,  my  faithful  preacher,  B  ! 
Bevy    a  &  of  Eroses  apple-cheek'd, 
Bewail     Let  golden  youth  b  the  friend, 
Bewail'd    maidens  with  one  mind  B  their  lot ; 
Beware    b  Lest,  where  you  seek 
Bewitch'd    thaw  it  wur  summat  b 
Bib    their  bottles  o'  pap,  an'  their  mucky  Vs, 
Bible    oft  at  B  meetings,  o'er  the  rest 

read  me  a  £  verse  of  the  Lord's  good  will 

But  as  a  Latin  B  to  the  crowd  ; 
Bicker    To  b  down  a  valley. 

And  Vs  into  red  and  emerald, 

men  may  6  with  the  things  they  love, 

and  the  points  of  lances  b  in  it. 
Bicker'd    Flicker'd  and  b  From  helmet 
Bid    Friends,  I  was  b  to  speak  of  such  a  one 

of  him  I  was  not  b  to  speak — 

lest  I  should  6  thee  live  ; 

Dare  I  b  her  abide  by  her  word  ?  ^ 

6  him  bring  Charger  and  palfrey.' 

my  dear  lord  arise  and  6  me  do  it, 

And  6  me  cast  it. 

we  shall  never  b  again  Groodmorrow — 

I  b  the  stranger  welcome. 

She  needs  must  b  farewell  to  sweet  Lavaine 

and  b  call  the  ghostly  man  Hither, 

Send  !  b  him  come  ; '  but  Lionel  was  away- 

when  he  came  to  6  me  goodbye. 

I  had  b  him  my  last  goodbye  ;  ^ 

Edith  wrote  :  '  My  mother  Vs  me  ask 

Not  there  to  b  my  boy  farewell, 

as  'uU  hallus  do  as  'e's  6.' 

B  him  farewell  for  me,  and  tell  him— 


Bid 

Enoch  Arden  741 
Princess  ii   93 
,,      in  127 
218 
w410 
1)428 
Maud  I  i  23 
„         47 
Maud  I  xviii  33 
„  III      vi  56 
57 
Gareth  and  L.    17 
947 
Marr.  of  Geraint  97 
Balin  and  Balan  292 
Merlin  and  F.  918 
Guinevere  524 
Pass,  of  Arthur  418 
Lover's  Tale  i  652 
Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  224 
Riflemen  form !  17 
Will  Water.  185 
192 
Aylmer's  Field  675 
Princess  iv  82 
Balin  and  Balan  54 
Me)iin  and  V.  499 
Bait,  of  Brunanburh  84 
By  an  Evolution.  4 
Sea  Dreams  201 
Princess  iii  299 
SisUrs  (E.  and  E.)  14 
Locksley  Hall  184 
Enoch  Arden  196 
Third  of  Feb.  21 
Spitqful  Letter  4 
First  Quarrel  12 
14 
50 
72 
WiU  10 
North.  Gobbler  54 
.Sir  /.  OldatMe  80 
Tlie  Met  11 
To  Mary  Boyle  53 
In  Mem.  ciii  46 
Princess,  vi  171 
North.  Cobbler  82 
Spinster's  S's.  87 
Sea  Breams  194 
Rizpah  61 
Sir  J.  Oldcastle  18 
Tlie  Brook  26 
Princess  v  263 
Geraint  and  E.  325 
449 
Merlin  and  the  G.  70 
Aylmer's  Field  677 
710 
Princess  vii  9 
Maud  I  xvi  25 
Geraint  and  E.  400 
665 
707 
Balin  and  Balan  622 
Merlin  and  V.  270 
Lancelot  and  E,  341 
1099 
Lover's  Tale  iv  101 
First  Quarrd  78 
Rizpah  41 
Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  181 
To  Marq.  of  Duffenn  42 
Owd  Rod  79 
Romney's  Ii.  147 


Bidden 


38 


Bird 


Bidden    I  knock'd  and,  b,  enter'd  ; 

Rise  ! '  and  the  damsel  h  rise  arose 

The  foot  that  loiters,  6  go, — 
Bidding    b  him  Disband  himself,  and  scatter 

And  in  my  vision  6  me  dream  on, 
Bide     '  Were  this  not  well,  to  b  mine  hour, 

Will  you  not  6  your  year  as  I  &  mine  ? ' 

Philip  answer'd  '  I  will  b  my  year,' 

why  she  should  B  by  this  issue  : 

bound  am  I  to  i  with  thee.' 

B  ye  here  the  while. 

*  Go  !  I  6  the  while. ' 

To  whom  the  Lord  of  Astolat,  '  B  with  us, 

if  I  6,  lo  !  this  wild  flower  for  me  ! ' 

B,'  answer'd  he  :  'we  needs  must  hear 

I  cannot  b  Sir  Baby. 

yourselves  :  how  can  ye  b  at  peace. 

But  never  let  me  h  one  hour  at  peace.' 

thou  canst  not  b,  unfrowardly, 

will  draw  me  into  sanctuary,  And  b  my  doom,' 

I  6  no  more,  I  meet  my  fate, 


Princess  in  130 

Merlin  and  V.  68 

Last  Tournament  117 

Geraint  and,  E.  797 

Lover's  Tale  u  119 

Two  Voices  76 

Enoch  Arden  438 

439 

Princess  v  326 

Gareth  and  L.  805 

Merlin  and  V.  97 

99 

Lancelot  and  E,  632 

644 

756 

Pdleas  and  E.  190 

265 

387 

597 

Guinevere  122 

The  Flight  95 


Bind  {continued)    rent  The  woodbine  wreaths  that  b  her,         Amvhion  34 


Bided    ever  b  tryst  at  village  stile,  Merlin  and  V.  378 

They  heard,  they  b  their  time.  Bandit's  Death  14 

Bideford    Men  of  B  in  Devon,  Tlie  Revenge  17 

Biding    leave  Thine  easeful  b  here,  Gareth  and  L.  128 
Bier    {See  also  Chariot-bier,  Litter-bier)    This  truth 

came  borne  with  b  and  pall,  In  Mem.  Ixxoev  1 

cast  him  and  the  b  in  which  he  lay  Geraint  and  E.  572 

Till  yonder  man  upon  the  b  arise,  ,,              657 

Wreathed  round  the  b  with  garlands :  Lover's  Tale  ii  79 

those  six  virgins  which  upheld  the  b,  ,,84 

and  all  The  vision  of  the  6.  „         Hi  11 

those  that  held  the  b  before  my  face,  , ,              16 

on  the  sand  Threw  down  the  b;  , ,              33 

She  from  her  6,  as  into  fresher  life,  ,,              42 

I  stood  stole  beside  the  vacant  b,  , ,              58 

I  hate  the  black  negation  of  the  b,  Ancient  Sage  204 

Who  saw  you  kneel  beside  your  b,  Happy  54 

The  bridal  garland  falls  upon  the  b,  D.  of  tlie  Duke  of  C.\ 

Big    being  apt  at  arms  and  b  of  bone  Marr.  of  Geraint  489 

Cried  out  with  a  b  voice,  '  What,  is  he  dead  ? '        Geraint  atid  E,  541 

as  b  i'  the  mouth  as  a  cow.  Village  Wife  103 

Bigger    With  me,  Sir,  enter'd  in  the  b  boy,  Princess  ii  404 

No  6  than  a  glow-worm  shone  the  tent  ,,          iv25 

Bight    the  spangle  dances  in  6  and  bay,  Sea-Fairies  24 

and  flung  them  in  6  and  bay,  V.  of  Maeldune  53 

Bill  (beak)     With  that  gold  dagger  of  thy  b  The  Blackbird  11 

A  golden  b  I  the  silver  tongue,  ,,              13 

Bill  (parliamentary  measure)    I  had  heard  it  was 

this  b  that  past,  Walk,  to  tlie  Mail  67 

My  lord,  and  shall  we  pass  the  b  Day-Dm.,  Revival  27 

Bill  (an  account)    But  'e  niver  loookt  ower  a  &,  Village  Wife  51 

Bill  of  Sale    {Kbo  s  gleam'd  thro'  the  drizzle)  Enoch  Arden  68& 

Billow    (See  also  Flame-billow)    to  the  b  the  fountain 

calls :  Sea-Fairies  9 

a  b,  blown  against,  Falls  back,  Two  Voices  316 

the  wanton  b  wash'd  Them  over,  Lover's  Tale  ii  9 

the  upblown  b  ran  Shoreward  ,,        178 

flow'd  away  To  those  unreal  b's:  ,,        196 

jarring  breaker,  the  deep-sea  b,  Bait,  of  BruvMnbiirh  97 

Saxon  and  Angle  from  Over  the  broad  &  ,,                 119 

Billow'd    heard  The  voice  that  b  round  Last  Tournament  167 

Billowing    Blanching  and  6  in  a  hollow  of  it,  Lucretitis  31 

Enring'd  a  b  fountain  in  the  midst ;  Princess  ii  28 

and  his  river  b  ran,  Maud  I  iv  32 

Billy  (horse)    '  B,'  says  'e,  ' hev  a  joomp  ! '—  Village  Wife  83 

But  B  fell  bakkuds  o'  Charlie,  „            85 

Billy-rough -un  (horse)    Fur  he  ca'd  'is  'erse  B-r-u,  „           84 

Bin    {See  also  Corn-bin)    In  musty  Vs  and  chambers,       Will  Water.  102 

Bind    cords  that  b  and  strain  The  heart  Clear-lieaded  friend  4 

We  must  b  And  keep  you  fast,  Rosalind  42 

We'll />  you  fast  in  silken  cords,  ,,         49 

b  with  bands  That  island  Queen  Buonaparte  2 

an  athlete,  strong  to  break  or  b  Palace  of  Art  158 

Life,  that,  working  strongly,  b's—  Love  thou  thy  land  34 


Faster  b's  a  tyrant's  power  ; 

dream  That  Love  could  b  them  closer 

my  vow  B's  me  to  speak, 

Psyche,  wont  to  b  my  throbbing  brow, 

b  the  scatter'd  scheme  of  seven 

he  may  read  that  b's  the  sheaf, 

the  frame  that  b's  him  in  His  isolation 

I  took  the  thorns  to  b  my  brows, 

May  b  a  book,  may  line  a  box, 

King  Will  b  thee  by  such  vows, 

would  b  The  two  together ; 

what  is  worthy  love  Could  b  him, 

yet  thee  She  fail'd  to  b, 

round  thee,  maiden,  6  my  belt. 

'  B  him,  and  bring  him  in.' 

B  him  as  heretofore,  and  bring  him  in : 

Far  less  to  b,  your  victor,  and  thrust  him 

let  my  lady  b  me  if  she  will, 

vow  that  b's  too  strictly  snaps  itself — 

Had  Arthur  right  to  b  them  to  himself  ? 

To  b  them  by  inviolable  vows, 

B  me  to  one  ?    The  wide  world  laughs 

What !  shall  I  b  him  more  ? 

b  the  maid  to  love  you  by  the  ring  ; 
Binding    b  his  good  horse  To  a  tree, 
Bindweed-bell    fragile  b-b's  and  briony  rings  ; 
Bine    When  burr  and  b  were  gather'd  ; 

berries  that  flamed  upon  b  and  vine, 
Binn    beeswing  from  a  b  reserved  For  banquets. 
Birch    {See  also  Birk)    Our  b'es  yellowing  and  from 

each  Pro.  to  Gen,  Hamley  1 

Bird  {See  also  Birdie,  Wild-bird,  Carrier-bird,  Sea- 
bird)    voice  of  the  b  Shall  no  more  be  heard,  All  Things  wUl  Die  24 


Vision  of  Sin  128 

Aylmer's  Field  41 

Princess  ii  202 

250 

,,       Con.  8 

In  Mem.  xxxm  13 

,,  odv  11 

,,  lxix7 

,,  Ixxviid 

Gareth  and  L.  270 

Marr.  of  Geraint  790 

Lancelot  and  E.  1379 

1385 

Holy  Grail  159 

Pdleas  and  E.  232 

271 

293 

„  334 

Last  Tournanunt  657 

684 

688 

695 

Lover's  Tale  iv  346 

The  Ring  202 

Pelleas  and  E.  30 

Tlie  Brook  203 

Aylmer's  Field  113 

V.  of  Maeldune  61 

Ay  liner's  Field  405 


heart  of  the  garden  the  merry  b  chants. 

b  would  sing,  nor  lamb  would  bleat. 

Not  any  song  of  b  or  sound  of  rill ; 

singing  clearer  than  the  crested  b 

lusty  b  takes  every  hour  for  dawn  : 

Sang  loud,  as  tho'  ho  were  the  b  of  day. 

These  b's  have  joyful  thoughts. 

Slides  the  b  o'er  lustrous  woodland, 

every  b  of  Eden  burst  In  carol, 

Like  long-tail'd  b's  of  Paradise 

fly,  like  a  b,  from  tree  to  tree  ; 

b  that  pipes  his  lone  desire 

Like  the  caged  b  escaping  suddenly, 

lightning  flash  of  insect  and  of  b, 

beacon-blaze  allures  The  b  of  passage, 

Philip  chatter'd  more  than  brook  or  b  ; 

'  The  b's  were  warm,  (repeat) 

Returning,  as  the  b  returns,  at  night, 

and  every  b  that  sings : 

b  Makes  his  heart  voice  amid 

b  or  fish,  or  opulent  flower : 

the  b,  the  fish,  the  shell,  the'flower. 

As  flies  the  shadow  of  a  b,  she  fled. 

not  see  The  b  of  passage  flying  south 

earliest  pipe  of  half-awaken'd  b's 

wild  b's  on  the  light  Dash  themselves  dead. 

b's  that  piped  their  Valentines, 

a  b,  That  early  woke  to  feed 

Make  music,  O  b,  in  the  new-budded 

There  is  but  one  b  with  a  musical  throat. 

And  b  in  air,  and  fishes  turn'd 

B's'  love,  and  b's'  song 

B's'  song  and  b's'  love,  (repeat) 

We'll  be  b's  of  a  feather, 

Be  merry,  all  b's,  to-day, 

Like  b's  the  charming  serpent  draws, 

Wild  b,  whose  warble,  liquid  sweet, 

Flits  by  the  sea-blue  b  of  March ; 

So  loud  with  voices  of  the  b's, 

low  love-language  of  the  b 

happy  b's,  that  change  their  sky 


Poet's  Mind  22 

Mariarui  in  tlie  S.  37 

D.  of  F.  Women  66 

179 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  11 

Gardener's  D.  96 

99 

Locksley  Hall  162 

Day-Dm. ,  L' Envoi  43 

Ep.  7 

Edward  Gray  30 

You  might  liave  won  31 

Enoch  Arden  269 

575 

729 

The  Brook  51 

Aylmer's  Field  260 

Sea  Dreams  43 

102 

Lucretius  100 

249 

Princess  ii  383 

, ,        Hi  96 

210 

, ,        iv  50 

495 

,,       1)239 

,,    vii  251 

W.  to  Alexandra  11 

T/ie  Islet  27 

Tlie  Victim  19 

Windo^o,  Spring  1 

3,5 

14 

„       Ay.  1 

In  Mem.  ocxxiv  14 

Ixxxviii  1 

xci  4 

X(!ix2 

cii  11 

cxv  15 


Bird 


39 


Biting 


Bird  {contimied)    I  hear  a  chirp  of  6*5 ; 
Beginning,  and  the  wakeful  b  ; 
B's  in  the  high  Hall-garden  (repeat) 
£'s  in  our  wood  sang 
And  the  b  of  prey  will  hover, 
Till  a  silence  fell  with  the  waking  6, 
My  b  with  the  shining  head, 
red  berries  charm  the  b, 
b's  made  Melody  on  branch , 
'0  b's,  that  warble  to  the  morning  sky,  0  b's 

warble  as  the  day  goes  by, 
'  What  knowest  thou  of  b's, 
and  as  the  sweet  voice  of  a  6, 
Moves  him  to  think  what  kind  of  b  it  is 
by  the  b's  song  ye  may  learn  the  nest, ' 
Among  the  dancing  shadows  of  the  b's, 
all  about  were  b's  Of  sunny  plume 
we  will  live  like  two  b's  in  one  nest, 
than  all  shriek  of  b  or  beast, 
the  b  Who  pounced  her  quarry 
took  his  brush  and  blotted  out  the  6, 
foul  b  of  rapine  whose  whole  prey 
Then  as  a  little  helpless  innocent  b, 
b's  of  passage  piping  up  and  down, 
once  the  shadow  of  a  6  Flying, 
Beneath  the  shadow  of  some  6  of  prey  ; 
head  all  night,  like  b's  of  prey, 
like  wild  b's  that  change  Their  season 
sent  his  soul  Into  the  songs  of  b's, 
the  b  That  will  not  hear  my  call, 
togither  like  b's  on  a  beugh  ; 
And  a  pinnace,  like  a  flutter'd  b, 
b's  make  ready  for  their  bridal-time 
Some  b's  are  sick  and  sullen  when  they  moult, 
not  arter  the  b's  wi'  'is  gun, 
a  score  of  wild  b's  Cried 
And  the  shouting  of  these  wild  b's 
And  we  left  the  dead  to  the  b's 
flight  of  b's,  the  flame  of  sacrifice, 
b  with  a  warble  plaintively  sweet 
b's  could  make  This  music  in  the  b  ? 
shell  must  break  before  the  6  can  fly. 
listen  how  the  b's  Begin  to  warble 
whisbper  was  sweet  as  the  lilt  of  a  6  ! 
av  the  b  'ud  come  to  me  call, 
thy  chuckled  note,  Thou  twinkling  b. 
The  summer  b  is  still. 
Faint  as  a  climate-changing  b  that  flies 
I  envied  human  wives,  and  nested  b's, 
my  ravings  hush'd  The  b, 
b's  that  circle  round  the  tower 
B's  and  brides  must  leave  the  nest, 
bright  b  that  still  is  veering  there 
My  b's  would  sing,  You  heard  not. 
scaled  the  buoyant  highway  of  the  b's, 
Sing  like  a  b  and  be  happy, 
waked  a  6  of  prey  that  scream'd  and  past ; 
Warble  b,  and  open  flower, 

Birdie    Sleep,  little  b,  sleep  ! 

Without  her  '  little  b '  ?  well  then. 

sleep.  And  I  will  sing  you  '6.' 

What  does  little  b  say 

Let  me  fly,  says  little  b,         • 

B,  rest  a  little  longer. 

Baby  says,  like  little  b. 

Bird's-eye-view    b-e-v  of  all  the  ungracious  past 

Birk    Shadows  of  the  silver  b 

ere  thy  maiden  b  be  wholly  clad. 

Birth    amis,  or  pmoer  of  brain,  or  b 
The  old  earth  Had  a  b. 
Her  temple  and  her  place  of  b, 
winds,  as  at  their  hour  of  b. 
At  the  moment  of  thy  b, 
range  of  evil  between  death  and  b, 
hadst  not  between  death  and  b 


In  Mem.  cxix  5 

,,        cxxi  11 

Maud  I  mi  1,  25 

9 

ay;  28 

,,         xxii  17 

,,        IIiv45 

Garetfi  and  L  85 

182 


that 


1075 

1078 

Marr.  of  Qeraint  329 

331 

369 

601 

658 

Geraint  and  E.  627 

Balin  and  Balan  545 

Merlin  and  V.  134 

478 

728 

Lancelot  and  E.  894 

Holy  Grail  146 

Pellcas  and  E.  38 

608 

Last  Tournament  138 

Pass,  of  A  rthur  38 

Lover's  Tale  i  321 

,,        £«159 

North.  Cobbler  54 

The  Revenge  2 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  71 

73 

Village  Wife  41 

V.  of  Maeldune  27 

33 

36 

Tiresias  6 

The  Wreck  81 

Ancient  Sage  21 

154 

Tlie  Flight  60 

Tomorrow  33 

„         45 

Early  Spring  38 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  18 

Deineter  and  P.  1 

53 

109 

The  Ring  85 

„       89 

„      332 

To  Mary  Boyle  18 

Prog,  of' Spring  80 

Parruissus  14 

Deaih  of  CEnone  87 

Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  7 

Sea  Dreams  282 

283 

284 

293 

295 

297 

303 

Princess  ii  125 

A  Dirge  5 

Prog,  of  Spring  50 

To  tlie  Queen  3 

All  Things  loiU  Die  38 

Sujjp.  Confessions  53 

The  Winds,  etc.  1 

Eleanor e  15 

If  I  were  loved  3 

'Two  Voices  169 


Birth  (continued)    From  that  first  nothing  ere  his 

Would  God  renew  me  from  my  6 

slew  him  with  your  noble  b. 

Titanic  forces  taking  b  In  divers 

'He  does  not  love  me  for  my  b, 

marriage,  and  the  b  Of  Philip's  child : 

one  act  at  once.  The  b  of  light : 

The  time  draws  near  the  b  of  Christ : 

Beyond  the  second  b  of  Death. 

Who  breaks  his  b's  individous  bar. 

Evil  haunts  The  6,  the  bridal ; 

Memories  of  bridal,  or  of  b. 

The  time  draws  near  the  b  of  Christ ; 

Becoming,  when  the  time  has  6, 

shaping  an  infant  ripe  for  his  b, 

mine  by  a  right,  from  b  till  death. 

By  the  home  that  gave  me  b, 

'  Knowest  thou  aught  of  Arthur's  b  ? ' 

learn  the  secret  of  our  Arthur's  b.' 

the  cloud  that  settles  round  his  b 

had  tended  on  him  from  his  b, 

creatures  voiceless  thro'  the  fault  of  b, 

that  weird  legend  of  his  b, 

mystery  From  all  men,  like  his  b  ; 

govern  a  whole  life  from  b  to  death, 

like  each  other  was  the  h  of  each  !  (repeat) 

Gives  6  to  a  brawling  brook. 

Rose  of  Lancaster,  Ked  in  thy  b. 

Have  I  not  been  about  thee  from  thy  b  ? 

and  was  noble  in  l  as  in  worth, 

sweet  mother  land  which  gave  them  6 

Youth  and  Health,  and  b  and  wealth, 

how  far  ?  from  o'er  the  gates  of  B, 

the  6  of  a  baseborn  child. 
Birthday    Each  month,  a  b-d  coming  on, 

the  night  Before  my  Enid's  6, 

given  her  on  the  night  Before  her  6, 

I  send  a  b  line  Of  greeting  ; 

on  your  third  September  b 

And  sent  it  on  her  b. 

She  in  wrath  Retum'd  it  on  her  b. 

And  on  your  Mother's  b — all  but  yours — 

This  b,  death-day,  and  betrothal  ring. 

Your  b  was  her  death-day. 

forgotten  it  was  your  b,  child — 

Your  fifth  September  b. 

Every  morning  is  thy  b 

b  came  of  a  boy  born  happily  dead. 
Biscay    The  B,  roughly  ridging  eastward, 
Bishop    Archbishop,  B,  Priors,  Canons, 

Ay,  an'  ya  seed  the  B. 

an'  sits  o'  the  B's  throan. 

an'  thou'll  be  a  5  j^it. 
Bit  (s)    or  b's  of  roasting  ox  Moan 

Nobbut  a  6  on  it's  left, 

an'  a  nicetish  b  o'  land. 

Vext  me  a  b,  till  he  told  me 

I  am  going  to  leave  you  a  b — 

'  tha  mun  break  'im  off  6  by  6.' 

jingle  of  6*s,  Shouts,  arrows, 

like  a  6  of  yisther-day  in  a  dhrame— 

Now  I'll  gie  tha  a  6  o'  my  mind 

if  tha  wants  to  git  forrads  a  b, 
Bit  (verb)    6  his  lips.  And  broke  away. 

crack'd  the  helmet  thro',  and  b  the  bone, 

clench'd  her  fingers  till  they  b  the  palm, 

an'  a-squealin,  as  if  tha  was  b, 
Bite  (s)    Showing  the  aspick's  b.) 

An'  it  wasn't  a  b  but  a  burn, 
Bite  (verb)    b's  it  for  true  heart  and  not  for  harm, 

And  do  their  little  best  to  b 

B,  frost,  b  !  (repeat) 

b  far  into  the  heart  of  the  house, 
Biting    b  laws  to  scare  the  beasts  of  prey 

Modred  b  his  thin  lips  was  mute, 


b  Tioo  Voices  332 

Miller's  D.  27 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  48 

Day- Dm.,  L' Envoi  17 

Lady  Clare  9 

Enoch  Arden  708 

Princess  Hi  326 

In  Mem,  xxviii  1 

,,  zlv  16 

,,  Ixiv  5 

„      xcviii  14 

,,        xcix  15 

,,  civ  1 

,,        cxiii  14 

Maud  I  iv  34 

,,    xix  42 

„    Ilivl 

Com.  of  Arthur  147 

159 

Gareth  and  L,  130 

179 

Geraint  and  E.  266 

Last  Tottrnainent  669 

Guinevere  298 

Lover's  Tale  i  76 

,,    197,  201 

„  526 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  53 

Columbus  148 

V.  of  Maeldune  3 

Tiresias  122 

By  an  Evolution.  8 

Far-far-away  13 

Chanty  28 

Will  Water.  93 

Marr.  of  Geraint  458 

633 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  45 

The  Ring  130 

„        211 

„        212 

„        248 

.,       276 

„       301 

„       378 

„        423 

AkbAr's  D.,  Hymn  2 

Charity  34 

Enoch  Arden  529 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  159 

Church-warden,  etc.  17 

„  20 

50 

Lucretius  131 

N.  Farmer,  O.S.  41 

N.S.  22 

First  Quarrel  36 

80 

Nm-th.  Cobbler  88 

Tiresias  93 

Tomorrow  8 

Church-warden,  etc.  21 

49 

Dora  33 

Man:  of  Geraint  573 

Lancelot  and  E.  611 

Owd  Rod  89 

D.  ofF.  Women  im 

Oiod  Rod  90 

Princess,  Pro.,  174 

Lit.  Squabbles  6 

Window,  Winter  7,  13 

11 

Princess  v  393 
GareUi  and  L.  31 


Bitten 


40 


Blame 


Bitten    {See  also  Root-bitten)    h  the  heel  of  the 
going  year. 
b  into  the  heart  of  the  earth, 
one  whose  foot  is  b  by  an  ant, 
Scratch'd,  b,  blinded,  marr'd  me 
Bitter    (See  also  Seeming-bitter,  Wormwood- 
bitter)    Failing  to  give  the  b  of  the  sweet, 
0  sweet  and  6  in  a  breath, 
My  own  less  6,  rather  more : 
If  I  find  the  world  so  b 
Then  the  world  were  not  so  b  (repeat) 
canst  abide  a  truth,  Tho'  b. 
she  tempted  them  and  fail'd,  Being  so  b  : 
b  death  must  be  :  Love,  thou  art  b  ; 
Bitterer    Yet  b  from  his  readings : 
Bitterly    B  weeping  I  turn'd  away :  (repeat) 
'  B  wept  I  over  the  stone : 
long  and  6  meditating, 
spake  the  Queen  and  somewhat  b. 
Bittern    See  Butter-bump 
Bitterness    Sweet  in  their  utmost  b, 
Have  fretted  all  to  dust  and  b.' 
wake  The  old  b  again. 
By  reason  of  the  b  and  grief 
they  were,  A  &  to  me  ! — 
his  spirit  From  b  of  death. 
Bivouac     Gone  the  comrades  of  my  b, 
Blabbing    physician,  b  The  case  of  his  patient — 

Prophet,  curse  me  the  b  lip, 
Black  (See  also  Coal-black,  Jet-black)    B  the 
garden-bowers  and  grots 
In  the  yew-wood  b  as  night, 
foreground  b  with  stones  and  slags, 
that  hair  More  b  than  ashbuds 
in  its  coarse  b's  or  whites, 
The  streets  were  b  with  smoke 
To  b  and  brown  on  kindred  brows. 
who  alway  rideth  arm'd  in  b, 
B,  with  b  banner,  and  a  long  b  horn 
ready  on  the  river,  clothed  in  b. 
Part  b,  part  whiten'd  with  the  bones 
B  as  the  harlot's  heart — 
Wear  b  and  white,  and  be  a  nun 
stoled  from  head  to  foot  in  flowing  b ; 
bars  Of  b  and  bands  of  silver, 
better  ha'  beaten  me  b  an'  blue 
An'  yer  hair  as  b  as  the  night, 
b  in  white  above  his  bones. 
B  with  bridal  favours  mixt ! 
B  was  the  night  when  we  crept  away 
the  dumb  Hour,  clothed  in  6, 
Black  (Sea)    side  of  the  B  and  the  Baltic  deep, 
Black-beaded    Glancing  with  b-b  eyes, 


Window,  Winter  6 

18 

Pelleas  and  E.  184 

Last  Tournainent  526 

D.ofF.  Wmnen2SQ 

In  Mem.  Hi  3 

,,        vi  6 

Maud  /  m  33 

,,    38,94 

Balin  and  Balan  502 

Merlin  and  V.  820 

Lancelot  and  E.  1010 

Aylmer's  Field  553 

Edvjard  Gray  6,  34 

33 

Boadicea  35 

Guinevere  271 

Supp.  Confessions  117 

Princess  vi  264 

In  Mem.  locxxiv  47 

Com.  of  Arthur  210 

Last  Tournament  41 

Lover's  Tale  i  143 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  45 

Maud  II V  36 

57 

Arabian  Nights  78 
Onatia  19 
Palace  of  Art  81 
Gardener's  D.  28 
W.  to  the  Mail  107 
In  Mem.  Ixix  3 
,,    Ixxix  16 
Gareth  and  L.  636 
1366 
Lancelot  and  E.  1123 
Holy  Grail  500 
Pelleas  and  E.  468 
Guinevere  677 
Lover's  Tale  ii  85 
,,        iv  59 
First  Quarrel  72 
Tomorrow  32 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  44 
Forlorn  69 
Bandit's  Death  25 
Silent  Voices  1 
Maud  III  vi  51 
Lilian  15 
Black-bearded    stem  b-b  kings  with  wolfish  eyes,       D.  of  F.  Women  111 
Black  Bess  (Horse)    B  B,  Tantivy,  Tallyho,  The  Brook  160 

Blackbird    (See  also  Merle)    0  B !    sing  me  some- 
thing well :  The  Blackbird  1 
while  the  b  on  the  pippin  hung                                      Audley  Court  38 
The  b's  have  their  wills,  (repeat)                                Early  Spring  5,  47 
Black-blue    b-b  Irish  hair  and  Irish  eyes                    Last  Tournament  404 
Blackcap    The  b  warbles,  and  the  turtle  purrs,              Prog,  of  Spring  55 
Black'd    B  with  thy  branding  thunder,                              St.  S.  Stylites  76 
Blacken    pierces  the  liver  and  b's  the  blood  ;  The  Islet  35 
bark  and  b  innumerable,                                                         BoOdicea  13 
B  round  the  Roman  carrion,  ,,        14 
upon  a  throne,  And  b's  every  blot :                               Ded.  of  Idylls  28 
City  children  soak  and  b                                     Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  218 
b  round  The  corpse  of  every  man                                  Romney's  R.  122 
Blacken'd    (See  also  Pitch-blacken'd)    So  b  all  her  world 

in  secret.  Princess  vii  42 

the  walls  B  about  us,  ,,     Cmi  110 

His  countenance  b,  and  his  forehead  Balin  and  Balan  391 

Blackening    b  over  heath  and  holt,  Locksley  Hall  191 

And  b  in  the  sea-foam  sway'd  Holy  Grail  802 

B  against  the  dead -green  stripes  Pelleas  and  E.  554 


Blackening  (continued)    b,  swallow'd  all  the  land,  Guinevere  82 

Was  b  on  the  slopes  of  Portugal,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  62 

Blackest    lie  which  is  half  a  truth  is  ever  the  b  of  lies,       GrandmotJier  30 

To  lie,  to  lie — in  God's  own  house — the  b  of  all  lies  !        The  Flight  52 

Black-heart    unnetted  b-h's  ripen  dark.  The  Blackbird  7 

Black-hooded     Black -stoled,  b-h,  like  a  dream  M.  d' Arthur  197 

Black-stoled,  b-h,  like  a  dream  Pass,  of  Arthur  365 

Blackness    In  the  gross  b  underneath.  Supp.  Confessions  187 

With  6  as  a  solid  wall.  Palace  of  Art  274 

The  b  round  the  tombing  sod,  On  a  Mourner  27 

dark  was  Uther  too,  Wellnigh  to  b  ;  Co7n.  of  Arthur  330 

she  make  My  darkness  b  ?  Balin  and  Balan  193 

Blackshadow'd    there,  b  nigh  the  mere  Gareth  and  L.  809 

Blacksmith    i  border-marriage — one  they  knew —       Aylmer's  Field '2Q3 

b  'e  strips  me  the  thick  ov  'is  airm,  North.  Cobbler  85 

Black-stoled    B-s,  bla9k-hooded,  like  a  dream  M.  d' Arthur  197 

7>-,s,  black-hooded,  like  a  dream  Pass,  of  Arthur  365 

Blackthorn    never  see  The  blossom  on  the  b.      May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  8 

Blackthorn-blossom    b-b  fades  and  falls  and  leaves 

the  bitter  sloe,  T!ie  Flight  15 

Black-wing'd    the  b-w  Azrael  overcame,  Akbar's  Bream  186 
Blade  (of  grass)    varying  year  with  b  and 

sheaf  Day- Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  1 

In  bud  or  b,  or  bloom,  may  find,  ,,          Moral  10 

While  life  was  yet  in  bud  and  b,  Princess  i  32 

while  the  sun  yet  beat  a  dewy  6,  Geraint  and  E.  446 

voice  clings  to  each  b  of  grass,  Lancelot  and  E.  107 

From  buried  grain  thro'  springing  b,  Demeter  and  P.  146 

Blade  (of  sword)    pure  and  true  as  b's  of  steel.  Kate  16 

My  good  b  carves  the  casques  of  men,  Sir  Galahad  1 

She  bore  the  b  of  Liberty.  The  Voyage  72 

struck  out  and  shouted  ;  the  b  glanced,  Princess  v  540 

Geraint's,  vi^ho  heaved  his  b  aloft,  Marr.  of  Geraint  572 

b  so  bright  That  men  are  blinded  Com.  of  Arthur  300 

but  turn  the  h  and  ye  shall  see,  ,,              303 

these  will  turn  the  b.'  Gareth  and  L.  1095 

the  b  flew  Splintering  in  six,  Balin  and  Balan  395 

■waved  his  b  To  the  gallant  three  hundred  Heavy  Brigade  9 

drove  the  b  that  had  slain  my  husband  Bandit's  Death  34 
Blade  (of  dagger)     with  the  6  he  prick'd  his  hand,        Aylmer's  Field  239 

'  From  Edith '  was  engraven  on  the  b.  ,,            598 
Blade  (shoulder-bone)    (See  also  Shoulder  blade) 

arms  were  shatter'd  to  the  shoulder  b.  Princess  vi  52 

Blain    face  deform'd  by  lurid  blotch  and  b —  Death  of  (Enone  72 

Blame  (s)    But  he  is  chill  to  praise  or  b.  Two  Voices  258 

Joyful  and  free  from  6.  D.ofF.  WmnenSO 

Shall  smile  away  my  maiden  6  ,,             214 

The  crime  of  malice,  and  is  equal  b.'  Vision  of  Sin  216 

Nor  yours  the  b — for  who  beside  Ayhner's  Field  735 

Which  he  has  worn  so  pure  of  b,  Ode  on  Well.  72 

I  had  such  reverence  for  his  b.  In  Mem.  li  6 

white  blamelessness  accounted  b  ! '  Merlin  and  V.  799 

mine  the  6  that  oft  I  seem  as  he  Last  Tournament  115 

Received  unto  himself  a  part  of  b.  Lover's  Tale  i  786 

lines  I  read  Nor  uttcr'd  word  of  6,  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  18 

Blame  (verb)    in  truth  You  must  b  Love.  Miller's  D.  192 

'  I  have  been  to  b — to  b.  Dora  159 

I  have  been  to  b.     Kiss  me,  my  children.'  ,,      161 

Am  I  to  6  for  this,  St.  S.  Stylites  124 

she  had  a  will  ;  was  he  to  &  ?  Pnncess  i  48 

yet  I  b  you  not  so  much  for  fear ;  tt    i'o  506 

'  Ida — 'sdeath  !  you  b  the  man  ;  ,,     "in  221 

'  b  not  thyself  too  much,'  I  said,  '  nor  b  „   i^i  255 

They  are  all  to  b,  they  are  all  to  b.  Sailor  Boy  20 

knot  thou  the  winds  that  make  In  Mem,  xlix  10 

6  not  thou  thy  plaintive  song,'  ,,             Hi  5 

Nor  b  I  Death,  because  he  bare  , ,      Ixxxii  9 

Nor  count  me  all  to  6  if  I  ,,       Con.  85 

She  did  not  wish  to  b  him —  Maud  Ixx5 

'  Damsel,'  he  said,  '  you  be  not  all  to  b,  Gareth  and  L.  1171 

who  should  6  me  then  'i '  Merlin  and  V.  661 

'  To  b,  my  lord  Sir  Lancelot,  much  to  b  I  Lancelot  and  E.  97 

the  girl  was  the  most  to  I.  First  Quarrel  26 

An'  I  felt  I  had  been  to  6  ;  ,,90 

You  praise  when  you  should  b  Epilogue  4 


Blame 

Blame  (verb)  {continued)    the  Priest  is  not  to  b, 
Blamed    Shall  love  be  b  for  want  of  faith  ? 
Let  lore  be  6  for  it,  not  she,  nor  I : 
b  herself  for  telling  hearsay  tales  : 
Blameless    b  is  he,  centred  in  the  sphere 
Wearinj  the  white  flower  of  a  6  life. 
Fearing  the  mild  face  of  the  b  King, 
Yourself  were  first  the  b  cause 
The  b  Kiig  went  forth  and  cast 
fighting  hr  the  b  King. 
Arthur  ths  b,  pure  as  any  maid, 
Vivien  should  attempt  the  b  King. 
Arthur,  6  5ing  and  stainless  man  ? ' 
And  I  myself,  myself  not  b, 
Blamelessness   thy  white  6  accounted  blame  ! ' 
Blanch    breakecs  boom  and  b  on  the  precipices, 
6  the  bones  cf  whom  she  slew, 
ripple  would  hardly  b  into  spray 
Blanche    Two  wflows,  Lady  Psyche,  Lady  Ji  ■ 
who  were  tutcrs.     ' Lady  B'^ 
brought  a  mesage  here  from  Lady  B.' 
we  saw  The  Laly  B's  daughter 
Lady  B  alone  O  faded  form 
sent  for  B  to  accuse  her  face  to  face  ; 
Lady  B  erect  Stod  up  and  spake, 
but  B  At  distance  follow'd : 
With  kisses,  ere  t)e  days  of  Lady  B : 
she  had  authority ^The  Lady  B : 
'  Ay  so ? '  said  B :  'imazed  am  I 
B  had  gone,  but  leftHer  child 
Not  tho'  B  had  swor\  That  after  that  dark  night 
Blanched    (6ee  o^so  Sunmer-blanched)    Upon  the  6 
tablets  of  her  heart 
B  with  his  mill,  they  fuind  ; 
won  it  with  a  day  B  in  »ur  annals, 
How  6  with  darkness  mi^t  I  crow ! 
wave,  That  b  upon  its  si(i. 
Blanching    Or  scatter'd  b  on\he  grass, 
confluence  of  watercourses^  and 
chanted  on  the  b  bones  of  Cen  ? ' 
b  apricot  like  snow  in  snow. 
Bland    Shakespeare  6  and  mild\ 
small  his  voice,  But  b  the  smip 
And  bless  thee,  for  thy  lips  ai  b, 
like  the  Ijountiful  season  b. 
Blandishment    an  accent  very  lo\^n  b 
Blank    made  6  of  crimef  ul  record 
As  b  as  death  in  marble  ; 
b  And  waste  it  seem'd  and  vain  ; 
rain  On  the  bald  street  breaks  thi 
some  but  carven,  and  some  b, 
shield  was  b  and  bare  without  a  si 
B,  or  at  least  with  some  device 
God  wot,  his  shield  is  b  enough, 
he  roll'd  his  eyes  Yet  b  from  sleep, 
one  to  the  west,  and  counter  to  it,  An 
the  world  as  b  as  Winter-tide, 
the  goodly  view  Was  now  one  b, 
Blanket    When  a  b  wraps  the  day. 
Blankly    Had  gazed  upon  her  b  and  gone  by 
Blare  (s)    With  b  of  bugle,  clamour  of  men, 

Lured  by  the  glare  and  the  b, 
Blare  (verb)    Warble,  0  bugle,  and  trumpet,  & 

To  6  its  own  interpretation — 
Blared  trumpet  b  At  the  barrier 
Blaspheme    So  they  b  the  muse  ! 

0  God,  I  could  b,  for  he  fought 
Blasphemy    troops  of  devils,  mad  with  b, 
filth,  and  monstrous  blasphemies, 
B !  whose  is  the  fault  ? 
B  !  ay,  why  not, 
B !  true  !  I  have  scared  you 
But  the  b  to  my  mind  lies 
Blast  (s)    {See  cdso  Trumpet-blast)    burst  thro' 
with  heated  b's 


41 


Blazon'd 


Happy  105 

III  Mem.  li  10 

Gareth  and  L.  299 

Merlin  and  V.  951 

Ulysses  39 

Ded.  of  Idylls  2S> 

Geraint  and  E.  812 

„  826 

„  932 

«  ,.       "  ^70 

Balm  and  Baian  479 

Merlin  and  V.  164 

779 

(Jolumbus  185 

Merlin  and  V.  799 

Boddicea  76 

Tiresias  150 

Tfie  Wreck  137 

Princess  i  128 

„        232 

„  a  319 

„        321 

„        447 

„    iv239 

290 

,,  vi  82 
„  114 
239 
„  .324 
,,  vii  56 
72 


day. 


Isabel  17 
Enoch  Arden  367 
Princess  m  63 
In  Mem.  Ixi  8 
Lover's  Tale  i  45 
Day-Dm.,  Arrival  12 
I/iccretius  31 
Princess  ii  199 
Proff.  of  Spring  30 
Palace  of  Art  134 
Princess  i  115 
In  Mem.  cxix  9 
Maitd  I  iv.  3 
Isabel  20 
St.  S.  Stylites  158 
Princess  i  177 
,,      vii  42 
In  Mem.  vii  12 
Gareth  and  L.  406 
414 
Lancelot  and  E.  194 
197 
820 
Holy  Grail  255 
Last  Tournament  221 
Death  of  (Enone  4 
Vision  of  Sin  80 
Merlin  and  V  161 
Ode  on  Well.  115 
V.  of  Maeldune  73 
W.  to  Alexandra  14 
Lancelot  and  E.  943 
Princess  v  485 
„     iv  137 
Happy  15 
St.  S.  Stylites  4 
Pass,  of  Arthur  114 
Despair  107 
„       109 
„       111 
»       112 

\ofF.  Women  29 


Blast  {B)  {continued)    The  b  was  hard  and  harder.  The  Goose  50 

l«f  1  """n     «!."?  l^""  ?r ;  ^'  ^'  Arthur.  Ep.  15 

desires,  like  fitful  b's  of  balm  Garden^',^s  £.  68 

Cramming  all  the  b  before  it,  j^^ksley  Hall  192 

HvJT  1  "f^^"*^  ""w^  ^^/  ^^^'^'  The  Voyage  85 

like  the  b  of  doom.  Would  shatter  ^noch  Arden  769 

f  i,t  f  *'^"?P^t«  ^'■°P»  the  g^*^.                  •  PHmess,  Pro.  42 

the  b  and  bray  of  the  long  horn  ^  252 

storm  and  6  Had  blown  the  lake  'The  Daisy  70 

1^  i'w  ^,^^  i°*  '^"^t^'"'  ^*^°**  5  To  F.  D.  Maurice  22 

6  *  that  blow  the  poplar  white,  /,,  Mem.  Ixxii  3 

Fiercely  flies  The  b  of  North  and  East,  cvii  7 

^°  f  K*  h  f^^  overhead  Thunder,  Holy  GraU  184 

m  the  b  there  smote  along  the  hall  i86 

such  a  b,  my  King,  began  to  blow,  "          795 

So  loud  a  b  along  the  shore  and  sea,  "          796 

could  not  hear  the  waters  for  the  b,  "          797 

That  turns  its  back  on  the  salt  b,  Pelleas  and  E.  544 

felt  the  6  Beat  on  my  heated  eyelids  :  Lover's  Tale  in  27 

A,    ;   ^I't  ^°  ^'"™'"g  «li?nf  Rizpah  18 

the  b  of  that  underground  thunderclap  Def.  of  Lmknono  32 

a  sudden j»  blew  us  out  and  away  F.  of  Maeldune  10 
to  put  fortih  and  brave  the  h  ;                             Pref  Son.  19th.  Cent.  8 

Tnr  Au""^^  *°f  ^.  ^°°^  °^  *h®  ^  ^/^e  Wreck  91 

still  d  the  b  and  strown  the  wave.  Freedom  34 

Blast  (verb)     I  heard  them  b  The  steep  slate-quarry,  Golden  Tear  75 

like  a  poisonous  wind  I  pass  to  b  Pelleas  and  E.  569 

Blasted    a  sunbeam  by  the  b  Pine,  Princess  vii  196 

was  b  with  a  curse  :  2>.  ^y  ^.  p^^wiej^  103 

years  which  are  not  Time's  Had  b  him-  Aylmer's  Field  602 

I?  and  burnt,  and  blinded  as  I  was,  Holy  Grail  844 

A°7^°''f  u^^^l suit  was  6-  Zocfofey  ^. ,  Sixty  5 

And  sent  him  charr'd  and  6  "^     HavmiM 

Rl«Sw^  a'  i^^T  "°'^  than  lightning  !  Pama^si^  12 

Blatant    Ob  Magazines,  regard  me  rather-  HendecasyllaUcs  17 

Rioi^^w           ';°"^  "^"^  *°  ?  ^  ^^°'^'  ^««^  Ix  63 
Blaw  (blossom)    — wot's  a  beauty  ?— tho 

Blaze  (s)    (See  also  Beacon-blaze)    The  b  upon  the 
waters  to  the  east ;  The  h  upon  his  island  ovcr- 

.  head  ;  The  6  upon  the  waters  to  the  west ;  Enoch  Arden  594 

distant  6  of  those  dull  banquets,  Aylmer's  Field  489 

voice  amid  the  6  of  flowers:  Lucretius  IQl 

bat  hf  ty  m  the  6  of  burning  fire  ;  Spec,  of  Iliad  20 

Her  shadow  on  the  b  of  kings  :  In  Mem.  xcviii  19 

wayside  blossoms  open  to  tho  b.  Balin  and  Balan  449 

The  incorporate  b  of  sun  and  sea.  Lover's  Tale  i  409 

wl-^" '.l"'*!"'.  ^^^^^K^  \    .  ,  .  Epilogue  54 

betwixt  the  whitening  sloe  And  kingcup  b.  To  Mary  Boyle  26 

PI.  ,^?      K^  * 'if  noonday  b  without,  St.  TdLachus  50 

Blaze  (verb)    B  upon  her  window,  sun,  Windmo,  When  15 

the  sun  6  on  the  turning  scythe,  Geraint  and  E.  252 

b  the  cnme  of  Lancelot  and  the  Queen.'  Pelleas  and  E.  570 

smouldenng  scandal  break  and  b  Guinevere  91 

Ji  by  the  rushing  brook  or  silent  well.  400 

B,  making  all  the  night  a  steam  "      599 

Blazed    many  a  fire  before  them  6 :  Spec,  of  Iliad  10 

b  before  the  towers  of  Troy,  ^       J             ^^ 

joy  that  b  itself  in  woodland  wealth  Balin  and  Balan  82 

thing  was  b  about  the  court,  Merlin  and  V.  743 

i>  the  last  diamond  of  the  nameless  king,  Lancelot  and  E.  444 

heart  s  sad  secret  h  itself  gog 

heavens  Open'd  and  b  with  thunder  liky  Grail  508 

the  heavens  open  d  and  6  again  gjg 

in  a  moment  when  they  b  again  "          523 

Blaz^^  X^^itlaii^^  "'" ""'  '"'"''•  ""^"^  "-^'^^-^  77 

Blazon    B  your  mottos  of  blessing  ^F.  to  Alexandra  12 

It    t  g^^f  *  ^^ndows  b  Arthur's  wars,  ZTo/y  ^ai7  248 

who  shall  b  it  ?    when  and  how  ? —  255 

Blazon'd    from  his  b  baldric  slung  x.  „/  silalUt  Hi  15 

Sweat  on  his  6  chairs;  Wa^;fc.  to  <Ae  Jfai7  76 
No  b  statesman  he,  nor  king.                              You  anight  have  won  24 


Blazon'd 


42 


Blew 


Blazon'd  (continued)    b  lions  o'er  the  imperial 
Bright  let  it  be  with  its  b  deeds, 
The  giant  windows*  b  fires, 
b  fair  In  diverse  raiment 
tiome  b,  some  but  carven, 
if  twain  His  ai'ms  were  b  also ; 
all  true  hearts  be  b  on  her  tomb 

Eurple  b  with  armorial  gold, 
imps  b  like  Heaven  and  Earth 

monsters  b  what  they  were. 

The  prophet  b  on  the  panes  ; 

shield  of  Gawain  b  rich  and  bright, 

All  the  devices  b  on  the  shield 
Blazoning    silken  case  with  braided  b's, 

banners  b  a  Power  That  is  not  seen 
Bleach'd    wizard  brow  6  on  the  walls : 

lay  till  all  their  bones  were  b, 
Bleat    b  Of  the  thick-fleeced  sheep 

bird  would  sing,  nor  lamb  would  b, 

motherless  6  of  a  lamb  in  the  storm 
Bleating    I  hear  the  b  of  the  lamb. 

Sent  out  a  bitter  b  for  its  dam  ; 
Bled    when  her  Satrap  b  At  Issus 

B  underneath  his  armour  secretly, 
Bleed    strain  The  heart  until  it  b's, 

For  which  her  warriors  6, 
Bleedeth    my  true  breast  B  for  both  ; 
Blemish    stain  or  6  in  a  name  of  note, 

'  Small  b  upon  the  skin  ! 
Blench    make  thee  somewhat  b  or  fail, 
Blend    all  their  voices  b  in  choric  Hallelujah 
Blent    hatred  of  her  weakness,  b  with  shame. 
Bless    But  that  God  b  thee,  dear — 

And  b  him  for  the  sake  of  him  (repeat) 

'  God  b  him  ! '  he  said,  '  and  may  he 

And  b  me,  mother,  ere  I  go.' 

b  him,  he  shall  sit  upon  my  knees 

Grod  b  you  for  it,  God  reward  you 

softly  whisper  'B,  God  b  'em  : 

And  forty  blest  ones  b  him, 

God  b  the  narrow  sea  which  keeps 

God  b  the  narrow  seas  ! 

O  for  thy  voice  to  soothe  and  b  ! 

And  6  thee,  for  thy  lips  are  bland. 

That  which  we  dare  invoke  to  b ; 

And  cried,  '  God  b  the  King, 

vext  his  day,  but  b'es  him  asleep — 

God  b  you,  my  own  little  Nell.' 

the  Saviour  lives  but  to  b. 

that  men  May  b  thee  as  we  b  thee, 

dream  of  a  shadow,  go — God  b  you. 

He  b'es  the  wife. 

Love  yom-  enemy,  b  your  haters, 

and  b  Their  garner'd  Autumn  also, 

and  '  b '  Whom  ?  even  '  your  persecutors ' ! 

a  woman,  God  b  her,  kept  me  from  Hell. 
Blessed    See  Blest 

Blessedness    Or  is  there  b  like  theirs  ? 
Blessin'    for  a  b  'ud  come  wid  the  green  ! ' 
Blessing    tell  her  that  I  died  B  her, 

spent  in  b  her  and  praying  for  her. 

tell  my  son  that  I  died  b  him. 

b  those  that  look  on  them. 

B  the  wholesome  white  faces 

B  his  field,  or  seated  in  the  dusk 

With  b's  beyond  hope  or  thought, 

With  b's  which  no  words  can  find. 

0  b's  on  his  kindly  voice 

And  b's  on  his  whole  life  long, 

0  b's  on  his  kindly  heart 

be  tended  by  My  b  ! 

God's  b  on  the  day  ! 

Pray'd  for  a  i  on  his  wife  and  babes 

calhng  down  a  b  on  his  head 

And  b's  on  the  falling  out 


tent  Princess  v  9 

Ode  mi  Well.  56 

The  Daisy  58 

Palace  of  Art  167 

Gareth  and  L.  406 

„  413 

Lancelot  and  E.  1344 

Godiva  52 

Princess  i  223 

„     iv  345 

In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  8 

Gareth  and  L.  416 

Lancelot  and  E.  9 

1149 

Akbar's  Dream  137 

Merlin  and  V,  597 

Lancelot  and  E.  43 

Ode  to  Memwy  65 

Mariana  in  the  S.  37 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  64 

May  Queen,  Con.  2 

Princess  iv  392 

Alexander  2 

Geraint  and  E.  502 

Clear-headed  friend  5 

Epilogue  35 

To  J.  S.  63 

Merlin  and  V.  832 

Dead  Prophet  66 

In  Mem.  Ixii  2 

Making  of  Man  7 

Princess  vii  30 

Miller's  D.'iSb 

Dora  70,  94 

„  149 

Lady  Clare  56 

Enoch  Arden  197 

424 

Aylm^r's  Field  187 

372 

Princess,  Con.  51 

70 

In  Mem.  Ivi  26 

„      cxodv  1 

Gareth  and  L.  698 

„  1286 

First  Quarrel  22 

Rizpah  64 

De  Prof.  Two  G.  17 

To  W.  H.  Brookfield  14 

To  Prin.  F.  of  H.  4 

Locksley  H,,  Sixty  85 

Demeter  and  P.  146 

Akbar's  Dream  76 

Charity  4 

In  Mem.  xxxii  16 

Tmnorrow  64 

Enoch  Arden  879 

884 

885 

Princess  Hi  256 

Dcf.  of  Liicknmo  101 

Demeter  and  P.  125 

Miller's  D.  237 

238 

May  Queen,  Con.  13 

14 

15 

Love  and  Duty  88 

Lady  Clare  8 

Enoch  Arden  188 

327 

Princess  ii  6 


Blessing  {continued)    from  Heaven  A  6  on  her  labours         Princess  ii  479 


Blazon  your  mottoes  of  6  and  prayer  ! 
My  b,  like  a  line  of  light, 
We  yield  all  b  to  the  name 
crown'd  with  b  she  doth  rise 
Why  do  they  prate  of  the  b's  of  Peace  ? 
she  was  deaf  To  b  or  to  cursing 
Thy  b,  stainless  King  ! 
take  withal  Thy  poet's  b, 
hold  the  hand  of  6  over  them, 
saved  by  the  b  of  Heaven  ! 
'  Bread — Bread  left  after  the  b  ? ' 
Fi'om  the  golden  alms  of  B 
Blest-Blessed    And  forty  blest  ones  bless  him, 


W.  to  Alexandra  12 

In  Mim.  xvii  10 

,,       xxxvi  3 

xl  5 

Maud  I  i 21 

Geraint  and  E.  579 

Merl'n  and  V.  54 

To  tlie  Qjvecn  ii  46 

Lovir's  Tale  i  754 

Def.  oj  Lvxknow  104 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  154 

Lockshy  H.,  Sixty  87 

Ayhner's  Field  372 


Sammy,  I'm  blest  If  it  isn't  the  saame  oop  yonder,    N.  farmer,  N.S.  43 


soul  laments,  which  hath  been  blest, 

fruit  of  thine  by  Love  is  blest, 

Thy  name  was  blest  within  the  narrow  door ; 

Marie,  shall  thy  name  be  blest. 

As  if  the  quiet  bones  were  blest 

what  may  count  itself  as  blest. 

Thrice  blest  whose  lives  are  faithful  prayers, 

my  heart  more  blest  than  heart  can  tell, 

Blest,  but  for  some  dark  undercurrent 

'  Blessed  be  thou.  Sir  Gareth  ! 

They  might  as  well  have  blest  her : 

blest  be  Heaven  That  brought  thee 

Blessed  are  Bors,  Lancelot  and  Percivale, 

blessed  be  the  King,  who  hath  forgiven 

Blest  be  the  voice  of  the  Teacher 

fancy  made  me  for  a  moment  Uest 

She  desires  no  isles  of  the  blest. 

As  she  looks  among  the  blest, 

in  a  dream  from  a  band  of  the  blest, 

fellowship  Would  make  me  wholly  blest : 

follow  Edwin  to  those  isles,  those  islands  jf 

the  Blest ! 
I  blest  them,  and  they  wander'd  on : 
A  thousand  times  I  hlest  him, 
bless'd  herself,  and  cursed  herself, 
say  to  Philip  that  I  blest  him  too  ; 
Perceived  the  waving  of  his  hands  tiat  blest. 
saw  not  his  daughter — he  blest  her : 
And  they  blest  him  in  their  pain. 
Blew    breeze  of  a  joyful  dawn  b  free 
B  his  own  praises  in  his  eyes, 
hunter  b  His  wreathed  bugle-hor- 
sweet  Europa's  mantle  b  unclaspi, 
The  glass  b  in,  the  fire  b  out. 
Her  cap  b  off,  her  gown  b  up, 
full-fed  with  pei-fume,  b  Beyad  us. 
The  hedge  broke  in,  the  ban»Jr  b, 
A  light  wind  b  from  the  gat*^  of  the  sun, 
from  the  tiny  pitted  target ' 
the  wind  b  ;  The  rain  of  heaven, 
b  the  swoU'n  cheek  of  a  trmpeter, 
bush-bearded  Barons  hesed  and  b, 
he  b  and  b,  but  none  api^ar'd : 
stood  four-square  to  all  ne  winds  that  b  ! 
Last,  the  Prussian  trurpet  b ; 
A  milky-bell'd  amaryl^  b. 
all  the  bugle  breezes  /ReveilMe 
Altho'  the  trumpet  t^o  loud, 
cloth  of  gold,  the  trmpets  b, 
other  b  A  hard  andleadly  note 
that  ye  b  your  bos'  in  vain  ? ' 
and  lights,  and  of^e  again  he  b  ; 
O'er  the  four  riv<«  the  first  roses  b, 
and  anon  The  trmpets  b  ; 
trumpets  b  Procwming  his  the  prize, 
sun  Shone,  anc^he  wind  b,  thro'  her. 
And  b  my  mery  maidens  all  about 
to  the  summi'  and  the  trumpets  b. 
ever  the  win'^>  and  yellowing  leaf 
Far  off  a  soiary  trumpet  b. 


D.  cf  F.  Women  281 

Talking  Oak  249 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  38 

39 

In  Mem.  xviii  6 

,,       xxvii  9 

,,     xooxii  13 

Maud  I.  xviii  82 

„  83 

Gareth  aiut  L.  1258 

Geraint  and  E.  578 

Holy  Grail  616 

874 

Guinevere  634 

Kapiolani  2 

Tliefonn,  tlieform  6 

Wages  8 

Maud  II  iv  84 

„    III  vi  10 

Balin  and  Balan  148 

The  Flight  42 
Two  Voices  424 
May  Queen,  Con.  16 
The  Goose  15 
Eiioch  Arden  886 
Guinevere  584 
To  Prin.  F.  of  H.  3 
The  Revenge  20 
Arabian  Nights  1 
A  Character  22 
Palace  of  Art6S 
„       117 
The  Goose  49 
„        51 
Gardener's  2).  113 
Day -Dm.,  Revival  9 
Poet's  Song  3 
Ayhner's  Field  93 
427 
Pnncess  ii  364 
•y21 
„  336 

Ode  oil  Well.  39 
„  127 

T/ie  Daisy  16 
In  Mem.  lawiii  7 
,,       xcvi  24 
Com.  of  Arthtir  480 
Gareth  and  L.  1110 
1229 
1371 
Geraint  and  E.  764 
Lancelot  and  E.  454 
„  500 

Holy  Grail  99 
»        748 
Pelleas  and  E.  167 
Last  Tournament  154 
Guinevere  529 


Blew 


43 


Bloat 


Blew  (cotilinved)    from  the  North,  and  h  The 

mist  aside,  Pass,  of  Arthur  12i 

and  b  Fresh  fire  into  the  sun,  Lover's  Tale  i  318 

and  h  Coolness  and  moisture  and  all  smells  ,,         Hi  4 

and  6  it  far  Until  it  hung,  ,,             35 

ever  that  evening  ended  a  great  gale  h,  The  Revenge  114 
topmost  roof  our  banner  of  England 

6.  (repeat)  Def.  of  Lucknow  Q,  20,  45,  &0,  M 


topmost  roof  our  banner  in  India  b. 
the  old  banner  of  England  b.  „ 

a  sudden  blast  b  us  out  and  away 
whirlwind  blow  these  woods,  as  never  b  before, 
All  at  once  the  trumpet  b, 
Bleys  (Merlin's  master)  (so  they  call  him)  B, 
B  Laid  magic  by,  and  sat  him  down, 
B,  our  Merlin's  master,  as  they  say. 
Blight  (s)    B  and  famine,  plague  and  earthquake, 
The  b  of  low  desires — 
b  Of  ancient  influence  and  scorn. 
And  b  and  famine  on  all  the  lea : 
like  a  6  On  my  fresh  hope, 
b  Lives  in  the  dewy  touch  of  pity 
if  the  blossom  can  doat  on  the  b. 
Blight  (verb)    Which  would  b  the  plants. 
Shall  sharpest  pathos  b  us, 
h  thy  hope  or  break  thy  rest, 
Blighted     '  your  pretty  bud.  So  b  here. 
Blind  (sightless)    (See  also  Half-blind,  Hoodman-blind) 
All  night  long  on  darkness  b. 
this  dreamer,  deaf  and  b, 
men,  whose  reason  long  was  b, 
parch'd  and  wither'd,  deaf  and  b, 
those,  not  b,  who  wait  for  day, 
almost  b.  And  scarce  can  recognise 
mate  is  h  and  captain  lame, 
h  or  lame  or  sick  or  sound, 
for  he  groped  as  b,  and  seem'd 
wept  her  true  eyes  b  for  such  a  one, 
b  with  rage  she  miss'd  the  plank, 
I  cried  myself  well-nigh  b, 
And  shall  I  take  a  thing  so  b. 
He  would  not  make  his  judgment  b, 
not  b  To  the  faults  of  his  heart 
He  mark'd  not  this,  but  b  and  deaf 
were  I  stricken  6  That  minute, 
one  hath  seen,  and  all  the  b  will  see. 
on  the  splendour  came,  flashing  me  b  ; 
thrice  as  6  as  any  noonday  owl, 

Being  too  b  to  have  desire  to  see. 

Mute,  b  and  motionless  as  then  I  lay  ; 

B,  for  the  day  was  as  the  night 
Almost  h  With  ever-growing  cataract, 

'  Henceforth  be  b,  for  thou  hast  seen 

Or  power  as  of  the  Gods  gone  b 

leave  him,  b  of  heart  and  eyes. 

For  wert  thou  bom  or  b  or  deaf, 

no  man  halt,  or  deaf  or  b  ; 

Fur  the  dog's  stoan-deaf ,  an'  e's  h, 

an'  seeam'd  as  b  as  a  p)Oop, 

A  barbarous  people,  B  to  the  magic, 
Blind  (screen)    (See  also  Lattice-blind) 

your  shadow  cross'd  the  b. 
Blind  (verb)    lest  the  gems  Should  b  my  purpose, 

Ere  yet  they  b  the  stars, 

To  b  the  truth  and  me  : 

He  shall  not  6  his  soul  with  clay.' 

good  King  means  to  b  himself, 

b's  himself  and  all  the  Table  Round 

lest  the  gems  Should  b  my  purpose, 

b  your  pretty  blue  eyes  with  a  kiss  ! 
Blinded    ('See  also  Half -blinded,  Self-blinded) 

those  whom  passion  hath  not  b, 

blissful  tears  b  my  sight 

and  b  With  many  a  deep-hued 

Droops  b  with  his  shining  eye : 


72 

106 

V.  of  Maeldune  10 

The  FligU  12 

Happy  75 

Com.  of  Arthur  153 

155 

360 

Lotos-Es.,  a.  S.,  115 

Aylme^-'s  Field  673 

Princess  ii  168 

Tlie  Victim  46 

Maud  I  xix  102 

Lover's  Tale  i  694 

Tlie  Wreck  19 

Poet's  Mind  18 

Love  and  Duty  85 

Faith  2 

Tlie  Ring  317 

A  deline  44 

Tioo  Voices  175 

„        370 

Fatima  6 

Lore  thou,  thy  land  15 

St.  S.  Stylites  39 

Tlie  Voyage  91 

„         93 

Aylmer's  Field  821 

Pnncess  iv  134 

177 

Grandmother  37 

In  Mem.  Hi  13 

,,      axvi  14 

Maud  I  xix  67 

Balin  a7id  Balan  318 

Lancelot  and  E.  426 

Holy  Grail  313 

„         413 

866 

872 

Lover's  Tide  i  607 

610 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  191 

Tiresias  49 

Ancient  Sage  80 

„       113 

„       175 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty,  163 

Owd  Rod  2 

„     101 

Merlin  and  the  O.  26 

Sometimes 

Miller's  D.  124 

M.  d'AHhurlhZ 

Tithonus  39 

Princess  Hi  112 

,,     vii  331 

Merlin  and  V.  783 

784 

Pass,  of  Arthur  321 

Romney's  R.  101 

Ode  to  Memory  117 

Oriana  23 

Elednore  36 

Fatima  38 


Blinded  (continued)    I,  b  with  my  tears,  '  Still 
strove 

Not  with  b  eyesight  poring 

so  bright  That  men  are  6  by  it — 

Blasted  and  burnt,  and  6  as  I  was, 

Scratch 'd,  bitten,  b,  marr'd  me 

Too  early  6  by  the  kiss  of  death — 

May  leave  the  windows  b. 

He  stumbled  in,  and  sat  B ; 
Blinder    Nature  made  them  b  motions 

'  Gawain,  and  b  unto  holy  things 
Blind  Fate    Rail  a,t  '  B  F'  with  many 
Blindfold    Drug  down  the  b  sense  of  wrong 

from  what  side  The  b  rummage 
Blinding    Struck  up  against  the  b  wall. 

Dash'd  together  in  b  dew : 

his  fire  is  on  my  face  B, 

raised  the  b  bandage  from  his  eyes : 

suck  the  6  splendour  from  the  sand, 

all  in  mail  Burnish'd  to  b, 

Are  b  desert  sand  ;  we  scarce  can 
Blindless    the  b  casement  of  the  room, 
Blindly    That  read  his  spirit  b  wise, 

And,  while  now  she  wonders  6, 

'  The  stars,'  she  whispers,  '  6  run ; 

And  staggers  6  ere  she  sink  ? 

muffled  motions  b  drown 

b  rush'd  on  all  the  rout  behind. 
Blindness    That  in  this  b  of  the  frame 

for  talk  Which  lives  with  b, 

curse  Of  b  and  their  unbelief, 
Blink    those  that  did  not  b  the  terror, 
Blinkt    B  the  white  morn,  sprays  gi-ated, 
Bliss     Then  in  madness  and  in  b, 

Weak  symbols  of  the  settled  b, 

Above  the  thunder,  with  undying  b 

'  Trust  me,  in  6  I  shall  abide 

move  Me  from  my  6  of  life, 

I  rose  up  Full  of  his  b, 

A  man  had  given  all  other  b, 

I  shall  see  him,  My  babe  in  b : 

and  spoils  My  b  in  being ; 

A  central  warmth  diffusing  b 

1  triumph  in  conclusive  b, 

0  b,  when  all  in  circle  drawn 

With  gods  in  unconjectured  b, 

A  wither'd  violet  is  her  b : 

For  fuller  gain  of  after  b : 

Nor  have  I  felt  so  much  of  b 

Make  answer,  Maud  my  b, 

My  dream  ?  do  I  dream  of  b  ? 

Sun,  that  wakenest  all  to  b  or  pain, 

thrills  of  b  That  strike  across  the  soul 

b  stood  round  me  like  the  light  of  Heaven,- 

tell  him  of  the  b  he  had  with  God — 

sunder'd  With  smiles  of  tranquil  b, 

0  b,  what  a  Paradise  there  ! 

whose  one  b  Is  war,  and  human  sacrifice — 
Twelve  times  in  the  year  Bring  me  b, 
'  Sleep,  little  blossom,  my  honey,  my  b  ! 

1  had  one  brief  summer  of  b. 
Blissful    hei'e  are  the  b  downs  and  dales. 

While  b  tears  blinded  my  sight 

As  from  some  b  neighbourhood, 

sleep  down  from  the  b  skies. 

With  b  treble  ringing  clear. 

b  palpitations  in  the  blood, 

B  bride  of  a  &  heir, 

led  him  thro'  the  b  climes. 

On  me  she  bends  her  b  eyes 
Blister'd    B  every  word  with  teai's. 
Blistering    bared  her  forehead  to  the  b  sun, 
Blithe    New-year  b  and  bold,  my  friend, 

B  would  her  brother's  acceptance  be. 
Bloat    b  himself,  and  ooze  All  over 


D.  of  F.  Women  108 

Locksley  Hall  172 

Com.  of  Arthur  301 

Holy  Grail  844 

Last  Tournament  526 

Romney's  R.  103 

,;      146 

St.  Telemachus  49 

Locksley  Hall  150 

Holy  Grail  870 

Doubt  and  Prayer  2 

In  Mem.  Ixxi  7 

Balin  and  Balan  416 

Mai-iana  in  the  S.  56 

Vision  of  Sin  42 

Lucretius  145 

Princess  i  244 

,,      vii  39 

Gareth  and  L.  1027 

Akbar's  Dream  30 

Marr.  of  Geraint  71 

Tim  Voices  287 

L.  of  Burleigh  53 

l7i  Mem.  Hi  5 

,,      xvi  14 

,,     xlix  15 

Geraint  and  E.  466 

In  Mem.  xciii  15 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  249 

Tiresias  59 

Gareth  and  L.  1402 

Balin  and  Balan  385 

Madelitie  42 

Miller's  D.  233 

CEnone  132 

Palace  of  Art  18 

D.  ofF.  Wo7nen  210 

Gardener's  D.  211 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  42 

Enoch  Arden  898 

Lucretius  222 

In  Mem,  Ixocxiv  6 

,,         lococxv  91 

,,        Ixxxix  21 

,,  xciii  10 

,,  xcvii  2*0 

, ,  cxvii  4 

,,  Co7i.  5 

Maud  I  xviii  57 

,,  xix  3 

Gareth  and  L.  1060 

Lover's  Tale  i  363 

495 

674 

ii  143 

V.  of  Maeldune  78 

Tiresias  111 

The  Ring  6 

Romiiey's  R.  99 

Bandit's  Death  9 

Sea- Fairies  22 

Ch'iana  23 

Two  Voices  430 

Lotos-Ealers,  C.S.  7 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  22 

Princess  iv  28 

W.  to  Alexandra  27 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  25 

„  Con.  29 

Forlorn  81 

Geraint  and  E.  515 

D.  of  tlie  0.  Year  35 

Maud  I  x27 

Sea  Dreams  154 


Bloated 


44 


Blood 


Bloated    forehead  veins  B,  and  branch'd ; 

merry  6  things  Shoulder'd  the  spigot, 
Block  (s)    {See  also  Yiile-block)    on  black  Vs  A 
of  thunder. 

as  a  6  Left  in  the  quarry  ; 

(Huge  h's,  which  some  old  trembling 
Block  (verb)    h  and  bar  Your  heart  with  system 
Block'd    knew  mankind,  And  h  them  out ; 
Blockish    No  coarse  and  h  God  of  acreage 
Blonde     rosy  h,  and  in  a  college  gown, 
Blood    And  leave  Its  riders  of  your  h 

Ice  with  the  warm  h  mixing  ; 

Which  mixing  with  the  infant's  h, 

till  his  own  6  flows  About  his  hoof. 

was  no  h  upon  her  maiden  robes 

I  feel  the  tears  of  h  arise 

her  sacred  h  doth  drown  The  fields, 

A  matter  to  be  wept  with  tears  of  h  ! 

Till  her  h  was  frozen  slowly, 

It  was  the  stirring  of  the  h. 

'  He  knows  a  baseness  in  his  h 

The  pnident  partner  of  his  h 

my  swift  6  that  went  and  came 

my  vigour,  wedded  to  thy  h, 

She  mix'd  her  ancient  h  with  shame. 

phantasms  weeping  tears  of  b, 

'J'he  guilt  of  h  is  at  your  door  : 

And  simple  faith  than  Norman  h, 

ever-shifting  currents  of  the  h 

That  Principles  are  rain'd  in  b  ; 

Who  sprang  from  English  b  ! 

his  brow  Striped  with  dark  h : 

Vex'd  with  a  morbid  devil  in  his  6 

'  The  slight  she-slips  of  loyal  b, 

felt  my  b  Glow  with  the  glow 

stays  the  h  along  the  veins. 

grapes  with  bunches  red  as  b  ; 

Ah,  blessed  vision  !  b  of  God! 

Let  Whig  and  Tory  stir  their  b  ; 

To  make  my  6  run  quicker, 

And  I,'  said  he,  '  the  next  in  b — 

Burnt  in  each  man's  6. 

scatter'd  B  and  brains  of  men. 

In  their  b,  as  they  lay  dying, 

'  We  are  men  of  ruin'd  6  ; 

down  thro'  all  his  b  Drew  in 

now  there  is  but  one  of  all  my  6 

distant  kinship  to  the  gracious  6 

to  flush  his  b  with  air, 

redden'd  with  no  bandit's  b : 

Runs  in  a  river  of  b  to  the  sick  sea. 

swept  away  The  men  of  flesh  and  6, 

Confused  the  chemic  labour  of  the  6, 

thought  that  all  the  b  by  Sylla  shed 

keep  him  from  the  luat  of  b 

strikes  thro'  the  thick  b  Of  cattle, 

lust  or  lusty  b  or  provender : 

made  her  b  in  sight  of  Collatine 

none  of  all  our  6  should  know 

thoughts  enrich  the  b  of  the  world.' 
6  Was  sprinkled  on  your  kirtle. 

That  was  fawn's  b,  not  brother's, 
blissful  palpitations  in  the  b, 
what  mother's  h  You  draw  from, 
The  brethren  of  our  b  and  cause, 
da1)bled  with  the  b  Of  his  own  son, 
'  I've  hoard  that  there  is  iron  in  the  b, 
faith  in  womankind  Beats  with  his  b, 
Mourn  for  the  man  of  long-enduring  b. 
Shall  lash  all  Europe  into  b  ; 
pierces  the  liver  and  blackens  the  b  ; 
To  spill  his  b  and  heal  the  land : 
anger,  not  by  &  to  be  satiated. 
Into  my  heart  and  my  b  ! 
I  seem  to  fail  from  out  my  h 


Bcdin  and  Balan  392 
Guinevere  267 
breadth 

Privxxss  Hi  291 

„        vii  230 

Lover's  Tale  ii  45 

Princess  iv  462 

„      m328 

AylTner's  Field  651 

Princess  ii  323 

To  the  Queen  21 

All  Things  will  Die  33 

iSupp.  Confessions  61 

155 

The  Poet  41 

Orianu  77 

Poland  4 

„     14 

L.  of  Sludott  iv  30 

Two  Voices  159 

301 

415 

Fatima  16 

(Enone  161 

The  Sisters  8 

Palace  of  Art  289 

L.C.V.de  Fere  43 

56 

D.  ofF.  Wmmn\^ 

Love  tlwu  thy  land  80 

England  and  Amer.  10 

M.  d' Arthur  212 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  19 

Talking  Oak  57 

Timonus  55 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  4 

44 

Sir  Galalmd  45 

WiU  Water.  53 

„         110 

Lady  Clare  84 

The  Captain  16 

48 

55 

Vision  of  Sin  99 

Enoch  Arden  659 

892 

Aylmer's  Field  62 

„  459 

597 

768 

Sea  Dreams  237 

Lucretius  20 

„        47 

„        83 

„        98 

„      198 

„      238 

Princess  i  8 

„   m181 

„       273 

„       275 

„    iv  28 

Princess  v  404 

„        vi  71 

„  104 

230 

,,    vii  329 

Ode  on  Well.  24 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  34 

Tlie  Islet  35 

The  Victim  ^i 

BoOdicea  52 

Window^  Marr.  Morn.  16 

In  Mem.  ii  15 


Blood  (continued)    Or  crush  her,  like  a  vice  of  b, 
.  Moved  in  the  ckambers  of  the  b  ; 
Oh,  sacred  be  the  flesh  and  b 
This  use  may  lie  in  b  and  breath, 
b  creeps,  and  the  nerves  prick 
Defects  of  doubt,  and  taints  of  b  ; 
0  Sorrow,  wilt  thou  rule  my  b, 
Delay  est  the  sorrow  in  my  b, 
branches  of  thy  b  ;  Thy  b,  my  friend, 
My  b  an  even  tenor  kept, 
Ring  out  false  piide  in  place  and  6, 
Thro'  all  the  years  of  April  b  ; 
By  6  a  king,  at  heart  a  clown ; 
Till  all  my  b,  a  fuller  wave, 
And  the  great  .^Eon  sinks  in  b. 
Remade  the  b  and  changed  the  frame, 
drip  with  a  silent  horror  of  6, 
sweeter  b  by  the  other  side  ; 
never  yet  so  warmly  ran  my  b 
household  Fury  sprinkled  with  b 
true  b  spilt  had  in  it  a  heat 
soul  of  the  rose  went  into  my  b, 
A  cry  for  a  brother's  b : 
Am  I  guilty  of  6  ? 
fear  they  are  not  roses,  but  b  ; 
sun  with  smoke  and  earth  with  b, 
and  clarions  shrilling  unto  b, 
And  mine  is  living  6  : 
he  had  glamoui'  enow  In  his  own  b, 
that  best  6  it  is  a  sin  to  spill.' 
ev'n  Sir  Lancelot  thro'  his  warm  h 
Pi'ince's  6  spirted  upon  the  scarf, 
fail'd  to  draw  The  quiet  night  into  her  6, 
6  Of  their  strong  bodies,  flowing, 
nay  ;  I  do  not  mean  b : 
fearing  for  his  hurt  and  loss  of  b, 
nature's  prideful  sparkle  in  the  b 
vicious  quitch  Of  b  and  custom 
Fill'd  all  the  genial  courses  of  his  b 
Born  with  the  6,  not  learnable, 
starve  not  thou  this  fire  within  thy  6, 
Reputed  to  be  red  with  sinless  6, 
If  I  were  Arthur,  I  would  have  thy  6. 
As  clean  as  b  of  babes, 
for  my  h  Hath  earnest  in  it 
sin  that  practice  burns  into  the  b, 
pale  b  of  the  wizard  at  her  touch 
Red  as  the  rising  sun  with  heathen  h, 
the  b  Sprang  to  her  face  and  fill'd 
And  half  his  b  burst  forth. 
For  twenty  strokes  of  the  b, 
far  b,  which  dwelt  at  Camelot ; 
when  the  b  ran  lustier  in  him  again, 
Ev'n  to  the  death,  as  tho'  ye  were  my  6, 
Was  rather  in  the  fantasy  than  the  b. 
what  are  they  ?  flesh  and  b  ? 
no  further  off  in  b  from  me  Than  sister ; 
White  Horse  in  his  own  heathen  b — 
my  b  danced  in  me,  and  I  knew 
Our  race  and  b,  a  remnant 
b  beats,  and  the  blossom  blows, 
slept  that  night  for  pleasure  in  his  b, 
have  risen  against  me  in  their  b 
No  b  of  mine,  I  trow  ; 
be  no  nibies,  this  is  frozen  b, 
Showing  a  shower  of  6  in  a  field  noir, 
flesh  and  b  Of  our  old  kings : 
flesh  and  6  perforce  would  violate : 
comforted  the  b  With  meats  and  wines, 
reverencing  king's  6  in  a  bad  man. 
To  save  his  b  from  scandal, 
drew  Down  with  his  b,  till  all  his  heart 
a  brow  Striped  with  dark  b : 
countenance  with  quick  and  healthful  6 — 
And  hourly  visitation  of  the  b. 


In  Mem.  Hi  15 

,,    xxiii  20 

,,  xxxiii  11 

,,       odv  13 

12 

,,  liv  4 

,,         lix  5 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  14 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  8 

,,      locxxv  17 

,,  coi  21 

,,  cix  12 

,,  cxi  4 

,,       cxodi  12 

,,     cxxvii  16 

Con.  11 

Maud  lis 

,,   xiii  34 

,,    xviii  3 

,,    aria;  32 

44 
"        .. 

,,  ocxii  33 

„  //i34 

„       ii  73 

„        ■»78 

Com.  of  Arthur  37 

103 

Gareth  and  L.  10 

210 

600 

1398 

Marr.  of  Geraint  208 

532 

568 

Geraint  and  E.  338 

777 

827 

»»    804 

927 

Balin  and  Balan  175 

453 

557 

Merlin  and  V.  53 

344 

„  556 

762 

949 

Lancelot  and  E.  308 

376 

517 

720 

„  803 

881 

„  960 

1132 

„  1256 

Holy  Grail  69 

„        312 

366 

663 

„       671 

Pelleas  and  E.  138 

461 

La^t  Tournament  201 

418 

438 

„     686 

„     689 

724 

Guinevere  37 

„      514 

Pass,  of  Arthur  97 

380 

Lover's  Tale  i  97 

206 


rA^: 


Blood 


45 


Blossom 


Blood  {contimied)    stream  of  life,  one  stream,  one  life, 

one  6,  Lover's  Tale  i  239 

As  mountain  streams  Onr  b's  ran  free :  „          327 

I  was  as  the  brother  of  her  b,  „          559 

my  6  Crept  like  marsh  drains  ,,        ii  52 

I  weant  shed  a  drop  on  'is  b,  North.  Cobbler  114 

Now  reddest  with  the  b  of  holy  men,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  54 

a  cross  of  flesh  and  6  And  holier.  ,,          137 

Blue  6  of  Spain,  Colwnbits  114 

blue  b  and  black  6  of  Spain,  ,,        116 

innocent  hospitalities  quench'd  in  b,  „        176 

and  the  boast  of  our  ancient  b,  V.  of  Maeldune  88 

red  with  b  the  Crescent  reels  Montenegro  6 

All  the  field  with  6  of  the  fighters  Flow'd,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  24 

wholesome  heat  the  b  had  lost,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  24 

crowd  would  roar  For  6,  for  war,  Tiresias  65 

Spain  in  his  b  and  the  Jew —  The  Wreck  15 

are  both  of  them  tum'd  into  b,  Despair  91 

Her  b  is  in  your  bloom.  Ancient  Sage  166 

evil  thought  may  soil  thy  children's  b;  „         275 

yer  Honour's  the  thrue  ould  b  Tojnorrow  5 

on  that  founder  of  our  b.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  32 

shriek'd  and  slaked  the  light  with  b.  „              90 

Like  drops  of  6  in  a  dark-gray  sea,  Heavy  Brigade  43 

O  follow,  leaping  6,  Early  Spring  25 

Their  idol  smear'd  with  b,  Freedom  28 

crescent  moon,  and  changed  it  into  b.  Happy  44 

Diffuse  thyself  at  will  thro'  all  my  b,  Prog,  of  Spring  24 

hopes,  which  race  the  restless  6,  ,,            115 

herb  or  balm  May  clear  the  6  from  poison,  Deaih  of  CEnone  36 

as  he  yell'd  of  yore  for  Christian  b.  St.  Telemachus  46 

dust  send  up  a  steam  of  human  b,  ,,53 

hour  Dark  with  the  6  of  man  ,,           80 

warms  the  6  of  Shiah  and  Sunnee,  Akbar's  Dream  107 

gentleman,  heart,  b  and  bone.  Bandit's  Death  2 

For  he  reek'd  with  the  b  of  Piero  ;  ,,13 

a  ray  red  as  b  Glanced  on  the  strangled  face —                        „           31 

Rang  the  stroke,  and  sprang  the  b,  The  Tourney  9 

Blood-eagle    red  '  B-e '  of  liver  and  heart ;  Dead  Prophet  71 

Blooded    See  Cold-blooded,  Pale-blooded 

Bloodier    the  hands  of  power  Were  b,  Aylmer's  Field  453 

Bloodily    B  flow'd  the  Tamesa  rolling  Boadicea  27 

B,  0  fall  the  battle-axe,  ,,       56 

Bloodless    now,  the  b  point  reversed,  The  Voyage  71 

b  east  began  To  quicken  to  the  sun,        -  Marr.  of  Geraint  534 

Blood-red    dabbled  with  b-r  heath,  Maiid     Ii  2 

flames  The  6-r  blossom  of  war  ,,  III  vi  53 

the  b-r  light  of  dawn  Flared  Lancelot  and  E.  1025 

but  always  in  the  night  B-r,  and  sliding  down 
the  blacken'd  marsh  B-r,  and  on  the  naked 

mountain  top  B-r,  and  in  the  sleeping  mere 

below  B-r.  Holy  Grail  473 

In  b-r  armour  sallying.  Last  Tournament  443 

himself  B-r  from  battle,  Tiresias  113 

Bloodshed    hold  were  all  as  free  From  cursed  h,             Gareth  and  L.  599 

Bloody    shovell'd  up  into  some  b  trench  Audley  Court  42 

sec  the  raw  mechanic's  b  thumbs  Walk,  to  tlie  Mail  75 

Where  the  6  conduit  runs.  Vision  of  Sin  144 

take  such  b  vengeance  on  you  both  ? —  Princess  iv  534 

Bloom  (s)    (.See  cdso  Chestnut-bloom,  Milk-bloom, 

Orange-bloom)    inlay  Of  braided  b's  unmown,    Arabian  Nights  29 

lovely  freight  Of  overflowing  b's.  Ode  to  Mevwry  17 

throng  with  stately  b's  the  breathing  spring  The  Poet  27 

Whence  that  aery  b  of  thine,  Adeline  11 

violet  eyes  and  all  her  Hebe  b,  Gardenefr's  D.  137 

In  bud  or  blade,  or  b,  may  find,  Day-Dm.,  Moral  10 

many  a  slope  was  rich  in  b  To  E.  L.  20 

fair  in  our  sad  world's  best  b.  The  Brook  218 

scatter'd,  each  a  nest  in  b.  Aylmer's  Field  150 

cheek  and  bosom  brake  the  wrathful  b  Pnncess  iv  383 

bud  ever  breaks  into  b  on  the  tree,  The  Islet  32 

The  chestnut  towers  in  his  b  ;  Voice  and  the  P.  18 

b  profuse  and  cedar  arches  Charm,  Milton  11 

not  for  thee  the  glow,  the  b.  In  Mem.      ii  9 

And  every  spirit's  folded  b  „         xliii  2 


Bloom  (s)  {continued)    Which  sicken'd  every  living  b,       In  Mem.  Ixodi  7 

over  brake  and  b  And  meadow,  ,,      Ixxxvi  3 

And  passion  pure  in  snowy  6  ,,         ax  11 

azure  6  of  a  crescent  of  sea,  Maud  I  iv  5 

wild-wood  hyacinth  and  the  6  of  May.  Balin  and  Balan  271 

and  her  b  A  losy  dawn  kindled  Pelleas  and  E.  71 

ribb'd  And  barr'd  with  b  on  b.  Lover's  Tale  i  416 

We  was  busy  as  beeas  i'  the  b  North.  Cobbler  15 

Edith— all  One  b  of  youth.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  120 

'  How  far  thro'  all  the  b  and  brake  Ancient  Sage  19 

wake  The  6  that  fades  away  ?  „          94 

Her  blood  is  in  your  &.  ,,        166 

lifts  her  buried  life  from  gloom  to  b,  Demeter  and  P.  98 

rounder  cheek  had  brighten'd  into  b.  The  Ring  351 

vernal  b  from  every  vale  and  plain  To  Mary  Boyle  9 

Bloom  (verb)    She  saw  the  water-lily  b,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  39 

Lotos  b's  below  the  barren  peak :  Lotos-Eat&rs,  C.S.  100 

6's  the  garden  that  I  love.  Gardener's  D.  34 

That  if  it  can  it  there  may  b,  In  Mem.    viii  23 

from  marge  to  marge  shall  ?>  the  eternal  landscape  ,,            xlvi7 

Will  6  to  profit,  otherwhere.  ,,       Ixxxii  12 

hearts  are  warm'd  and  faces  b,  „          Con.  82 

my  white  heather  only  b's  in  heaven  Romney's  R.  110 

B's  in  the  Past,  but  close  to  me  to-day  Roses  on  the  T.  6 

Bloomed    thro'  The  low  and  b  foliage,  Arabian  Nights  13 

Blooming    The  maid-of -honour  b  fair  ;  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  28 

By  Cupid-boys  of  b  hue —  ,,                   Ep.  10 

her  b  mantle  torn,  Princess  vi  145 

Blossom  (s)  {See  also  Almond-blossom,  Apple- 
blossom,  Blackthorn-blossom,  Lake-blossom, 
May-blossom,  Orange-blossom)    Atween  the 

b's,  'We  are  free.'  The  Winds,  etc.  8 

Bursts  into  b  in  his  sight.  Fatima  35 

He  prest  the  b  of  his  lips  to  mine,  (Enmie  78 
The  b  on  the  blackthorn,  the  leaf                    May  Queen,  N.  Vs.  E.  8 

As  we  bear  b  of  the  dead  ;  Love  thou  thy  land  94 

b  fades,  and  they  that  loved  Walk,  to  the  Mail  57 

The  maiden  b's  of  her  teens  Talking  Oak  79 

break  In  full  and  kindly  b.  Will  Water.  24 

as  Nature  packs  Her  b  or  her  seedling,  Enoch  Arden  179 

With  here  a  b  sailing,  The  Brook  56 

Gather'd  the  b  that  rebloom'd,  Aylmer's  Field  142 

Into  a  land  all  sun  and  b.  Sea  Dreams  101 

caught  the  b  of  the  flying  terms.  Princess,  Pro.  164 

Pereh'd  on  the  pouted  b  of  her  lips :  ,,            199 

Fruit,  b,  viand,  amber  wine,  and  gold.  ,,          iv  35 

my  babe,  my  b,  ah,  my  child,  ,,          ■»  82 

lay  my  little  b  at  my  feet,  „            100 

the  b  wavering  fell,  ,,          m"  80 

Scatter  the  b  under  her  feet !  W.  to  Alexandra  9 

Or  rosy  b  in  hot  ravine,  The  Daisy  32 

they  tumble  the  b,  the  mad  little  tits  !  WiTidow,  Ay.  9 

The  tender  b  flutter  down,  In  Menn.  ci  2 

flames  The  blood-red  b  of  war  Maud  III  vi  53 

sun,  and  rain  !  and  the  free  b  flows :  Cmn.  of  Arthur  409 

near  her,  like  a  b  vermeil-white,  Marr.  of  Gei-aint  364 

tints  the  b  of  the  quince  Balin  and  Balan  267 

wayside  b's  open  to  the  blaze.  „               449 

that  will  strike  my  b  dead.  Lancelot  and  E.  971 

blood  beats,  and  the  b  blows,  Holy  Grail  671 

groves  that  look'd  a  paradise  Of  6,  Guinevere  390 

little  b,  O  mine,  and  mine  To  A.  Tennyson  4 

Had  set  the  b  of  her  health  again.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  151 

And  stan''d  with  a  myriad  b  V.  of  Maeldune  40 

B  and  b,  and  promise  oib,  „             51 

if  the  b  can  doat  on  the  blight,  The-  Wreck  19 

tastes  the  fruit  before  the  b  falls.  Ancient  Sage  75 

Jet  upward  thro'  the  mid-day  b.  Demeter  and  P.  47 

hillock,  Would  break  into  b  ;  Merlin  and  the  G.  108 

'  Sleep,  little  b,  my  honey,  my  bliss  !  Romney's  R.  99 

From  each  fair  plant  the  b  choicest-grown  Akbar's  Dream  22 

Blossom  (verb)     A  little  garden  b.  Amphion  104 

wilderness  shall  b  as  the  rose.  Aylmer's  Field  649 

buds  and  b's  like  the  rest.  In  Mem.  cxv  20 

And  b  in  purple  and  red.  Maud  I  xxii  74 


Blossom 


46 


Blowing 


Blossom  (verb)  (continued)    where  the  winter  thorn  B's  at 

Christmas,  JTbZy  Grail  52 

b  an'  spring  from  the  grass,  Tomorrow  89 

B  again  on  a  colder  isle.  To  Prof.  Jebb  12 

Blossom-ball    Made  b-b  or  daisy-chain,  Aylmer's  Field  87 

Blossom-belt    Above  the  garden's  glowing  b-Vs,  Princess  v  363 

Blossom-dust    like  the  working  bee  in  b-d,  Enoch  Arden  366 

Foot-gilt  with  all  the  h-d  Merlin  and  V.  282 

Blossom'd  (adj.)    (See  also  Daisy-blossomed,  Heavy- 

blossom'd)    white  robe  like  a  h  branch  Princess  iv  179 

On  the  b  gable-ends  Mated  I  in  9 

O  b  portal  of  the  lonely  house,  Lover's  Tale  i  280 

Blossom'd  (verb)    branch'd  And  b  in  the  zenith,  Enoch  Arden  586 

b  up  From  out  a  common  vein  Princess  ii  313 

when  the  wreath  of  March  has  b,  To  F.  D.  Maurice  43 

Great  garlands  swung  and  b  ;  Lover's  Tale  iv  191 

Blossom-flake    elmtree's  ruddy-hearted  b-f  To  Mary  Boyle  3 

Blossom-fragrant    ?;-/slipt  the  heavy  dews  Princess  v  243 

Blossoming    (See  also  Many-blossoming)    and  the 

happy  b  shore  ?  Sea-Fairies  8 

Blot  (s)    With  b's  of  it  about  them,  Ayhner's  Field  620 

"Tis  the  b  upon  the  brain  Maud  II  iv  60 

a  throne.  And  blackens  every  b :  Ded.  of  Idylls  28 

Gareth's  eyes  had  flying  b's  Gareth  and  L.  1031 

square  of  text  that  looks  a  little  b,  Merlin  and  V.  671 

Far-off,  a  b  upon  the  stream,  Lancelot  and  E.  1392 

A  6  in  heaven,  the  Raven,  Guinevere  133 

Blot  (verb)    B  out  the  slope  of  sea  Princess  vii  38 

Blotch    face  deform'd  by  lurid  b  and  blain —  Death  of  (Enone  72 

Blotted    (See  also  Mist-blotted)    took  his  brush 

and  b  out  the  bird.  Merlin  and  V.  478 

Blow  (s)    (See  also  Death-blow,  Head-blow)    0  cursed 

hand  !    0  cursed  b  !  Oriana  82 

stood  like  one  that  had  received  a  b :  Sea  Dreams  161 

red-hot  iron  to  be  shaped  with  b's.  Princess  v  209 

clench'd  his  purpose  like  aft!  ,,          306 

b's  rain'd,  as  here  and  everywhere  ,,           501 

With  their  own  b's  they  hurt  themselves,  .        ,,        w  49 

Back  to  France  with  countless  b'^s.  Ode  on  Well.  Ill 

knife  uprising  toward  the  /;        '  The  Victim  66 

Phantom  sound  of  b's  descending,  Boadicea  25 

breasts  the  b's  of  circumstance.  In  Mem.  lodv  7 

Bat  in  the  present  broke  the  b.  „    Ixxxv  56 

shocks  of  Chance — The  b's  of  Death.  ,,        xco  43 

That  must  have  life  for  a  b.  Maud  II  i  27 

red  life  spilt  for  a  private  b —  ,,        t>  93 

mightier  of  his  hands  with  every  6,  Com.  of  Arthur  110 

Three  with  good  b's  he  quieted,  Gareth  and  L.  813 

mightful  hand  striking  great  b's  Marr.  of  Geraint  95 

lash 'd  at  each  So  often  and  with  such  &'s,  ,,            564 

Descended,  and  disjointed  it  at  a  & :  Balin  and  Balan  296 

Kill'd  with  a  word  worse  than  a  life  of  b's  !  Merlin  and  V.  870 

each  had  slain  his  brother  at  a  &  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  41 

hardly  won  with  bruise  and  b,  „           1165 

while  Arthur  at  one  b.  Striking  Pass,  of  Arthur  167 

live  to  fight  again  and  to  strike  another  b.'  The  Revenge  95 

Rode  flashing  b  upon  b,  Heavy  Brigade  32 

Blow  (verb)    (See  also  Blaw)   The  stream  flows. 

The  wind  b's,  Nothing  will  Die  10 

make  the  winds  b  Round  and  round,  ,,               23 

The  wind  will  cease  to  ft  ;  All  Things  will  Die  10 

loud  the  Norland  whirlwinds  b,  Oriana  6 

Round  thee  6,  self-pleached  deep,  A  Dirge  29 

And  tell  me  if  the  woodbines  6.  My  life  isfidl  25 

Crazing  where  the  lilies  b  L.  of  Shalott  i  7 

That  all  about  the  thorn  will  h  Tvm  Voices  59 

When  April  nights  began  to  b,  Miller's  D.  106 

gales,  as  from  deep  gardens,  b  Before  him,  Fationa  24 

the  wind  b's  the  foam,  and  all  my  heart  (Enone  62 
by  the  meadow-trenches  b  the  faint  sweet  cuckoo-flowers ;  May  Queen  30 
from  the  dry  dark  wold  the  summer  airs  b 

cool  May  Queen,  N.  Vs.  E.  27 

and  all  the  flowers  that  b,  „                    Con.  7 

Lotos  b's  by  every  winding  creek  :  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  101 

b's  More  softly  round  the  open  wold,  To  J.  S.  1 


Blow  (verb)  (continued)    Nor  ever  wind  b's  loudly  ;  M.  d' Arthur  261 

or  then  While  the  gold-lily  b's,  Edwin  Morris  146 

I  saw  Your  own  Olivia  b,  Talking  Oah  76 

light  as  any  wind  that  b's  So  fleetly  ,,         129 

The  full  south-breeze  around  thee  b  ,,271 

winds  from  all  the  compass  shift  and  b,  Godiva  33 

wildweed-flower  that  simply  b's  ?  Day-Dm.,  Moral  6 

B,  flute,  and  stir  the  stiff-set  sprigs,  Amphion  63 

weed  That  b's  upon  its  mountain,  ,,        94 

she  makes  The  violet  of  a  legend  b  Will  Water.  147 

It  was  the  time  when  lilies  b.  Lady  Clare  1 

And  the  wind  did  b  ;  The  Captain  34 

To  b  these  sacrifices  thro'  the  world —  Aylmer's  Field  758 

Low,  low,  breathe  and  b,  Princess  Hi  3 

and  6,  J5  him  again  to  me ;  ,,             g 

B,  bugle,  b,  set  the  wild  echoes  flying,  (repeat)  ,,   ivb  17 

B,  bugle  ;  answer,  echoes,  dying,  (repeat)  ,,        6  12 

-B,  let  us  hear  the  purple  glens  replying :  „           H 

A  moment,  while  the  trumpets  b,  „         581 

let  the  mournful  martial  music  h  ;  Ode  on  Well.  17 

To  Britain,  when  her  flowers  begin  to  6  !  W.to  Marie  Alex.  7 
Wet  west  wind  how  you  b,  you  b  I                      Windmu,  No  Answer  14 

B  then,  b,  and  when  I  am  gone,  ,,                    „         17 

And  make  them  pipes  whereon  to  b.  In  Mem.  oaxi  4 

With  blasts  that  b  the  poplar  white,  ,,     locxii  3 

fan  my  brows  and  b  The  fever  from  my  cheek,  ,,  Ixxxvi  8 

from  the  garden  and  the  wild  A  fresh  association  h,  ,,        ci  18 

There  in  due  time  the  woodbine  b's,  „         cv  7 

By  ashen  roots  the  violets  6.  „        caw  4 

And  all  the  breeze  of  Fancy  b's,  „   cocxii  17 

woodland  lilies,  Myriads  b  together.  Maud  I  odi  8 

lily  and  rose  That  b  by  night,  ,,     II  v  75 

and  rain  !  and  the  free  blossom  b's :  Com.  of  Arthur  409 

'  B  trumpet,  for  the  world  is  white  with  May  ;  ,,              482 

J5  trumpet,  the  long  night  hath  roll 'd  away  !  ,,              483 

-B  thro' the  living  world —  ,,              484 

'  B  trumpet !  he  will  lift  us  from  the  dust.  ,,             491 

B  trumpet !  live  the  strength  and  die  the  lust !  ,,              492 

'  B,  for  our  Sun  is  mighty  in  his  May  !  ,,              497 

B,  for  our  Sun  is  mightier  day  by  day  !  ,,              498 

flower.  That  b's  a  globe  of  after  arrowlets,  Gareth  and  L.  1029 

flowers  that  close  when  day  is  done,  B  sweetly :  , ,             1068 

King  gave  order  to  let  b  His  horns  Marr.  of  Geraint  152 

we  b  with  breath,  or  touch  with  hand,  Holy  Grail  114 

blood  beats,  and  the  blossom  b's,  ,,         671 

But  such  a  blast,  my  King,  began  to  6,  ,,         795 

clash  the  shield,  and  b  the  horn.  Last  Tournament  436 

I  hear  the  trumpet  b  :  They  summon  me  Guinevere  569 

Nor  ever  wind  b's  loudly  ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  429 

trust  that  Heaven  Will  b  the  tempest  To  the  Queen  ii  47 

whirlwind  b  these  woods,  as  never  blew  before.  The  Flight  12 

gather  the  roses  whenever  they  b,  Romney's  R.  107 

Let  6  the  trumpet  strongly  while  I  pray.  Doubt  and  Prayer  10 

Blower     '  0  hunter,  and  0  6  of  the  horn,  Harper,  La.st  Tournament  542 

Blowing    (See  also  Blawin',  Equal-blowing,  Merrily- 
blowing,  Trumpet-blowings)    When  will  the 

wind  be  aweary  of  b  Over  the  sky  ?  Nothing  will  Die  3 

south  winds  are  b  Over  the  sky.  All  Things  vrill  Die  3 

myrrh-thickets  b  round  The  stately  cedar,  Arabian  Nights  104 

Winds  were  b,  waters  flowing,  Oriana  14 

Aloud  the  hollow  bugle  b,  ,,17 

/?  a  noise  of  tongues  and  deeds,  Ttoo  Voices  206 

Like  soften'd  airs  that  b  steal,  ,,         406 

wind  is  b  in  tijrret  and  tree,  (repeat)  The  Sisters  3,  33 

(while  warm  airs  lull  us,  b  lowly)  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  89 

a  bark  that,  6  forward,  bore  King  Arthur,  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  21 

wind  6  over  meadowy  holms  And  alders,  Edwin  Morris  95 

and  b  havenward  With  silks,  and  fruits,  Golden  Year  44 

Summer  woods,  about  them  b,  L.  of  Burleigh  19 

B  the  ringlet  from  the  braid :  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  39 

and  6  bosks  of  wilderness.  Princess  i  111 

The  horns  of  Elfland  faintly  h\  „       iv  10 

'  Fear  not,  isle  of  b  woodland,  Boddicea  38 

No  joy  the  b  season  gives.  In  Mem.  xocxviii  5 

Over  glowing  ships ;  Over  h  seas,  Maud  I  xvii  13 


Blowing 


47 


Boan 


Blowing  {continued)    south-west  that  6  Bala  lake  Fills    Geraint  and  E,  929 

ship  and  sail  and  angels  &  on  it :  Bcdin  and  Balan  365 

he  waits  below  the  wall,  B  his  bugle  PeUeas  and  E.  381 

Brake  with  a  wet  wind  b,  Last  Tourrmvient  137 

breezes  of  May  6  over  an  English  field,  JJef.  of  Lucknow  83 

Wild  flowers  b  side  by  side  in  God's  The  Flight  81 

Fame  b  out  from  her  golden  trumpet  Vustness  21 

When  the  storms  are  b.  Forlorn  6 

Blown    (See  also  Beard-blown,   Broad-blown, 
Full-blown)    your  branching  limes  have  b 

Since  I  beheld  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  27 

petals  from  b  roses  on  the  grass,  Lotos-Eaters,  Q.  S,  2 

round  the  spicy  downs  the  yellow  Lotos-dust  Sab.  „            104 

Death  is  b  in  every  wind  ; '  To  J.  S.  46 

and  roughly  set  His  Briton  in  b  seas  Ode  on  Well.  155 

The  golden  news  along  the  steppes  is  b,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  11 

The  rooks  are  b  about  the  skies  ;  Ju  Mem.  ocv  4 

Be  b  about  the  desert  dust,  ,,    Ivi  19 

Nor  harp  be  touch 'd,  nor  flute  heb;  ,,     cw  22 

far-off  sail  is  b  by  the  breeze  Maud  I  iv  4 

And  the  musk  of  the  rose  is  b.  „   axcii  6 

when  the  Prince  Three  times  had  b —  O'areth  and  L.  1378 

the  face,  as,  when  a  gust  hath  b,  Last  Toiimavient  368 
her  father  left  us  just  before  The  daffodil  was  b  ?        Laoer's  Tale  i  294 

The  wind  had  b  above  me,  ,,           622 

fhost  of  Gawain  b  Along  a  wandering  wind,  Pass,  of  Arthur  31 
am  b  along  a  wandering  wind,  „  36 
we  came  to  the  Isle  we  were  b  from,  V.  of  Maeldnne  127 
thy  fame  Is  b  thro'  all  the  Troad,  Death  of  (Enwiie  37 
Like  Indian  reeds  b  from  his  silver  tongue,  The  Poet  13 
when  a  billow,  b  against.  Falls  back,  Two  Voices  316 
And  trumpets  b  for  wars  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  20 
gale  had  caught.  And  6  across  the  walk.  Gardener's  D.  125 
b  by  baflling  winds,  Enoch  Arden  628 
b  across  her  ghostly  wall :  ,,  661 
gale  That  b  about  the  foliage  underneath,  Princess  Hi  121 
from  inmost  south  And  b  to  inmost  north  ;  n  *"^  432 
B  from  over  every  main,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  26 
Had  b  the  lake  beyond  his  limit.  The  Daisy  71 
after  trumpet  b,  Spake  to  the  lady  Marr.  of  Geraint  551 
by  strong  storm  B  into  shelter  at  Tintagil,  Merlin  and  V.  10 
Her  bright  hair  b  about  the  serious  face  Lancelot  and  E.  392 
silver  horn  from  o'er  the  hills  B,  Holy  Grail  110 
after  trumpet  b,  her  name  And  title,  Pelleas  and  E.  115 
night,  a  rumour  wildly  b  about  Came,  "  Guinevere  153 
all  their  dewy  hair  b  back  like  flame  :  ,,  284 
B  by  the  fierce  beleaguerers  of  a  town,  Achilles  over  the  T.  20 
B  into  glittering  by  the  popular  breath,  Roraney's  R.  49 
Blowzed  Huge  women  b  with  health.  Princess  iv  279 
Blubber 'd  I  b  awaay  o'  the  bed —  North.  Cobbler  61 
Blue  (adj.)  (See  cdso  Black-blue,  Dark-blue,  Dead- 
blue,  Deep-blue,  Faint-blue,  June-blue,  Light- 
blue,  Sea-blue,  Steel-blue,  Warm-blue)  And 
less  aerially  b,  Margaret  51 
the  lights,  rose,  amber,  emerald,  6,  Palace  of  Art  169 
and  gave  a  shield  B  adSo,  Gareth  and  L.  932 
never  yet  Had  heaVen  appeai''d  so  6,  Holy  Grail  365 
better  ha'  beaten  me  black  an'  b  First  Qiuirrel  Tl 
ship  stood  still,  and  the  skies  were  6,  The  Wreck  115 
Some  far  b  fell,  Early  Spring  34 
Blue  (a)  clove  The  citron-shadows  in  the  b :  Arabian  Nights  15 
Were  glistening  to  the  breezy  6  ;  Miller's  D.  61 
star  Shook  in  the  stedfast  b.  D.  of  F.  Women  56 
While  yon  sun  prospers  in  the  b,  Blackbird  22 
navies  grappling  in  the  central  b  ;  Locksley  Hall  124 
And  sweet  the  vapour-braided  b,  The  Letters  42 
B's  and  reds  They  talk'd  of  :  Vs  were  Aylme)-'s  Field  251 
such  a  star  of  morning  in  their  6,  ,,  692 
years  That  breathed  beneath  the  Syrian  b  :  In  Mem.  Hi  12 
The  little  speedwell's  darling  &,  ,,  IxxxiiilO 
And  drown'd  in  yonder  living  6  ,,  cxvl 
morning  star  that  smilest  in  the  h,  Gareth  and  L.  999 
like  a  shoaling  sea  the  lovely  b  Play'd  Geraint  and  E.  688 
but  under  open  b  Came  on  the  hoarhead 
woodman  Balin  and  Balan  293 


Blue  (a)  {continued)    Venus  ere  she  fell  Would  often 

loiter  in  her  balmy  b,  Lover's  Tale  i  62 

little  star  Were  drunk  into  the  inmost  6,  ,,  309 

from  the  sky  to  the  b  of  the  sea  ;  V.  of  Maeldnne  46 

sign  of  aught  that  lies  Behind  the  green  and  b  ?  Ancient  Sage  26 

6  of  sky  and  sea,  the  green  of  earth,  ,,  41 

Green  Sussex  fading  into  b  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  7 

domes  the  red-plow'd  hills  With  loving  b  ;  Early  Spring  4 

moon  of  heaven.  Bright  in  b,  The  Ring  2 

Broaden  the  glowing  isles  of  vernal  b.  Prog,  of  Spring  60 

Glows  in  the  b  of  fifty  miles  away.  Roses  cm  the  T.  8 

Sing  the  new  year  in  under  the  b.  The  Throstle  5 

round  me  and  over  nie  June's  high  6,  June  Bracken,  etc.  2 

Bluebell    frail  b  peoreth  over  Rare  broidry  A  Dirge  37 

merry  b  rings  To  the  mosses  underneath  ?  Adeline  34 

Rose-campion,  h,  kingcup.  Last  Toiirnament  234 

Blue-eyed    A  Prince  I  was,  b-e,  and  fair  Princess  i  1 

Bluff  (adj.)     B  Harry  broke  into  the  spence  Talking  Oak  47 

Bluff  (a)     echo  flap  And  buffet  round  the  hills, 

from  b  to  b.  Golden  Year  77 

shadowing  b  that  made  the  banks.  In  Mem.  ciii  22 

Blunder'd    the  soldier  knew  Spme  one  had  b :  Light  Brigade  12 

Blunt  (adj.)    So />  in  memory,  so  old  at  heart,  Gardener's  D.  b^ 

felt  so  b  and  stupid  at  the  heart :  Geraint  and  E.  747 

Besought  me  to  be  plain  and  b,  Lancelot  and  E.  1301 

Blunt  (verb)    discourtesy  To  ?»  or  break  her  passion.'  ,,  974 

b  the  curse  Of  Pallas,  hear,  Tiresias  154 

Blunted     being  rudely  b,  glanced  and  shot  Holy  Grail  75 

Being  b  in  the  Present,  grew  at  length  Lmer's  Tale  ii  131 

Blur     but  for  one  black  b  of  earth  Demeter  and  P.  37 

Blurr'd  (adj.  and  part.)    one  was  patch'd  and  b 

and  lustreless  Marr.  of  Geraint  649 

light  betwixt  them  burn'd  B  by  the  creeping  mist,  Guinevere  5 

And  b  in  colour  and  form,  Dead  Propliet  22 

B  like  a  landskip  in  a  ruffled  pool, —  Rmnney's  R.  114 

Blurr'd  (verb)    And  b  the  splendour  of  the  sun  ;  In  Mem.  IxxH  8 

Blurt    they  6  Their  furious  formalisms,  Akbar's  Dream  h^ 

Bluah  (a)    She  look'd  :  but  all  Suffused  with  b'es —  Gardener's  D.  154 

The  b  is  fix'd  upon  her  cheek.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  32 

loose  A  flying  charm  of  b'es  o'er  this  cheek.  Princess  ii  430 

'  What  pardon,  sweet  Melissa,  for  a  i  ? '  ,,       Hi  66 

b  and  smile,  a  medicine  in  themselves  ,,      mi  62 

And  the  sick  man  forgot  her  simple  b,  Lancelot  and  E.  864 

Quick  b'es,  the  sweet  dwelling  of  her  eyes  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  165 

the  b  Of  millions  of  roses  that  sprang  V.  of  Maeldune  43 

Solved  in  the  tender  b'es  of  the  peach  ;  Prog,  of  Spring  34 

That  b  of  fifty  years  ago,  my  dear,  Roses  on  the  T.  5 

Blush  (verb)    As  it  were  with  shame  she  b'ei,  L.  of  Burleigh  63 

Said  Cyril :  '  Pale  one,  b  again :  than  wear  Those 

lilies,  better  b  our  lives  away.  Princess  Hi  67 

Since  I  J  to  belaud  myself  a  moment —  Hendecasyllabics  18 

Pass  and  b  the  news  Over  glowing  ships  ;  Maud  I  xiyii  11 

B  it  thro'  the  West ;  (repeat)  ,,      16  24 

/J  from  West  to  East,  5  from  East  to  West,  ,,  21 

You  should  have  seen  him  b  ;  Merlin  and  V.  481 

The  linnet's  bosom  b'es  at  her  gaze,  Prog,  of  Spring  17 

Blush'd    Katie  laugh 'd,  and  laughing  b,  The  Brook  214 

how  pretty  Her  blushing  was,  and  how  she  b  again.      Princess  Hi  100 
suddenly,  sweetly,  strangely  b  Maud  I  viii  6 

She  neither  b  nor  shook,  Lancelot  and  E.  965 

Then  b  and  brake  the  morning  Pelican  and  E.  157 

Bluaheat    Again  thou  b  angerly  ;  Madeline  45 

Blushing  (adj.)    On  a  i  mission  to  me,  MaudlxxlW 

Blushing  (part. )    Fresh  apple-blossom,  b  for  a  boon.  Tlie  Brook  90 

B  upon  them  b,  and  at  once  He  rose  Merlin  and  V.  741 

Blushing  (s)    how  pretty  Her  b  was,  and  how  she 

blush'd  again.  Princess  Hi  100 

Bluster    B  the  winds  and  tides  the  self-same  way,       D.  of  F.  Women  38 
'tis  well  that  I  should  b  '.—  Locksley  Hall  63 

And  b  into  stormy  sobs  and  say,  Lancelot  and  E.  1067 

Blustering    b  I  know  not  what  Of  insolence  and  love.  Princess  v  396 

Sir  Kay,  the  seneschal,  would  come  B  upon  them,    Gareth  and  L.  514 

Bo&dicea  (British  Queen)    B,  standing  loftilv  charioted, 

(repeat)  '  Boddicea  3,  70 

Bo&n  (bone)    an'  'e  got  a  brown  pot  an'  a  b,  Village  Wife  48 


Boane 


48 


Body 


Boane  (bone)    when  an*  wheere  to  bury  his  b.  Otod  Roa  8 

Boanerges    Our  B  with  his  threats  of  doom,  Sea  Dreams  251 

Boar    dog,  and  wolf  and  &  and  bear  Came  Cmn.  of  Arthur  2Z 

wherewithal  deck  the  Vs  head  ?    Flowers  ?  nay, 

the  h  hath  rosemaries  and  bay.  Gareth  and  L.  1073 

Board  (table)     '  This  was  cast  upon  the  I,  (Enone  79 

cast  the  golden  fruit  upon  the  6,  ,,    226 

I  pledge  her  silent  at  the  h  ;  Will  Water.  25 

cups  and  silver  on  the  burnish'd  I  Enoch  Arden  742 

There  at  a  i  by  tome  and  paper  sat,  Princess  ii  32 

And  on  the  I  the  fluttering  urn  :  In  Mem.  xcv  8 

Arrange  the  h  and  brim  the  glass  ;  ,,      cvii  16 

seating  Gareth  at  another  h.  Sat  down  Gareth  and  L.  871 

boil'd  the  flesh,  and  spread  the  h,  Marr.  of  Geraint  391 

knife's  haft  hard  against  the  b,  Geraint  and  E.  600 

bare  her  by  main  violence  to  the  6,  ,,             654 

Along  the  walls  and  down  the  b  ;  Balin  and  Balan  84 

A  goblet  on  the  h  by  Balin,  ,,             362 

all  the  light  that  falls  upon  the  b  Holy  Grail  249 

"Who  spake  so  low  and  sadly  at  our  b  ;  ,,         701 

left  me  gazing  at  a  barren  &,  ,,          893 

Are  ye  but  creatures  of  the  b  and  bed,  Pelle-as  and  E.  267 

Before  the  6,  there  paused  and  stood,  Lover's  Tale  iv  307 

Board  (ship)    he  served  a  year  On  6  a  merchantman,        Enoch  Arden  53 

Am  I  so  like  her  ?  so  they  said  on  b.  The  Brook  223 

I  leap  on  6 :   no  helmsman  steers :  Sir  Galahad  39 

Board  (for  a  game)    That  pushes  us  off  from  the  b,  Maud  I  iv  27 

Board  (floor)    Pattering  over  the  h's,  (repeat)  Grandmother  77,  79 

Board  (list,  register)  hastily  subscribed,  We  enter'd  on 

the  Vs :  Prinxxss  ii  74 

Boarding    B's  and  rafters  and  doors—  Def.  of  Lucknmo  67 

Boast  (s)    To  shame  the  b  so  often  made,  Lme  thou  thy  land  71 

And  bring  her  babe,  and  make  her  b,  In  Mem.  xl  26 

that  ye  blew  your  b  in  vain  ? '  Gareth  and  L.  1229 

to  mar  the  b  Thy  brethren  of  thee  make —  „            1242 

Abash'd  us  both,  and  brake  my  b.  Balin  and  Balan  71 

and  the  b  of  our  ancient  blood,  F.  of  Maeldiine  88 

crime,  of  her  eldest-born,  her  glory,  her  b,  Despair  73 

Boast  (verb)    you  know  it — I  will  not  b  :  Princess  iv  353 

the  dipt  palm  of  which  they  b  ;  The  Daisy  26 

and  b,  '  Behold  the  man  that  loved  and  lost.  In  Mem'i  14 

heard  them  b  That  they  would  slay  you,  Geraint  and  E.  73 

b's  his  life  as  purer  than  thine  own  ;  Balin  and  Balan  104 

Boasted    each  of  them  b  he  sprang  from  the 

oldest  race  V.  of  Maeldune  4 

Boastful    ruled  the  hour,  Tho'  seeming  b :  Aylnier's  Field  195 

Boat    (See  also  Pleasure-boat)    leaping  lightly 

from  the  6,  Arabian  Nights  92 

Down  she  came  and  found  &b  L.  of  SJialott  iv  6 

Francis  just  alighted  from  the  h,  Audley  Court  7 

B,  island,  ruins  of  a  castle,  built  Edwin  Mcrrris  6 

That  he  sings  in  his  b  on  the  bay  !  Break,  h-eak,  eic.  8 

Anchors  of  rusty  fluke,  and  b's  updrawn  ;  Enoch  Arden  18 

To  purchase  his  own  &,  and  make  a  home  ,,            47 

He  purchased  his  own  b,  and  made  a  home  For  Annie,  ,,            58 

sell  the  b — and  yet  he  loved  her  well —  ,,          134 

The  horse  he  drove,  the  b  he  sold,  ,,          609 

b  that  bears  the  hope  of  life  approach  ,,          830 

till  as  when  a  b  Tacks,  Princess  ii  185 

fc'«  and  bridges  for  the  use  of  men.  ,,         m  47 

The  b  is  drawn  upon  the  shore  ;  In  Mem.  cxxi  6 

The  market  b  is  on  the  stream,  ,,           13 

There  found  a  little  6,  and  stept  into  it ;  Merlin  and  V.  198 

the  b  Drave  with  a  sudden  wind  across  ,,            200 

He  saw  two  cities  in  a  thousand  b's  , ,            561 

Up  the  great  river  in  the  boatman's  b.  Lancelot  arul  E.  1038 

with  exceeding  swiftness  ran  the  b,  If  b  it  were —  Holy  Orail  514 

or  had  the  6  Become  a  living  creature  ,,        518 

blackening  in  the  sea-foam  sway'd  a  6,  ,,        802 

I  burst  the  chain,  I  sprang  into  the  h.  ,,        807 

And  felt  the  b  shock  earth,  , ,        812 

Then  from  the  6  Ileapt,  ,,         819 

be  yon  dark  Queens  in  yon  black  b,  Past,  of  Arthur  452 

The  b  was  beginning  to  move,  First  Quarrel  21 

an' go  to-night  by  the  i.'  ,,           88 


Boat  (continued)    the  b  went  down  that  night— (repeat)    First  Quarrel  92 

till  I  saw  that  a  b  was  nearing  us —  The  Wreck  123 

and  there  in  the  b  I  lay  With  sad  eyes  , ,         125 

his  b  was  on  the  sand  ;  The  Flight  37 
And  lay  on  that  funereal  b,                                 To  Marq.  of  Dxifferin  34 

Had  parted  from  his  comrade  in  the  b.  The  Ring  308 

Vs  of  Dahomey  that  float  upon  human  blood  !  The  Daion  5 

Boated    I  b  over,  ran  My  craft  aground,  Edunn  Mo'rris  108 

They  b  and  they  cricketed  ;  Princess,  Pro.  160 

Boat-head    did  I  turn  away  The  l-h  Arabian  Nights  25 

as  the  b-h  wound  along  The  willowy  hills  L.  of  Shalott  iv  24 
Boatman    wrought  To  make  the  boatmen  fishing-nets,     Enoch  Arden  815 

By  the  great  river  in  a  Vs  hut.  Lancelot  and  E.  278 

Up  the  great  river  in  a  &'s  boat.  ,,           1038 

Boatswain    China-bound,  And  wanting  yet  a  h.  Enoch  Arden  123 

Boboli    Or  walks  in  B's  ducal  bowers.  The  Daisy  44 

Bode    thither  wending  there  that  night  they  b.  Lancelot  and  E.  412 

And  Lancelot  b  a  little,  till  he  saw  ,,              461 

There  6  the  night :  but  woke  with  dawn,  ,,              846 

And  6  among  them  yet  a  little  space  ,,              921 

And  there  awhile  it  b  ;  and  if  a  man  Holy  Grail  54 

spake  not  any  word.  But  6  his  hour,  Last  Tournament  386 

Bodied    Is  b  forth  the  second  whole.  Love  thou  thy  land  66 

Bodily    were  she  the  prize  of  b  force,  Marr.  of  Geraint  541 

Body     I  wrapt  his  b  in  the  sheet.  The  Sisters  34 

A  b  slight  and  round,  and  like  a  pear  Walk,  to  the  Mail  53 

I  was  strong  and  hale  of  b  then  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  29 

touch  my  b  and  be  heal'd,  and  live :  ..79 

bodies  and  the  bones  of  those  That  strove  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  9 

'  Here  lies  the  b  of  Ellen  Adair  ;  Edward  Gray  27 

There  lies  the  b  of  Ellen  Adair !  ,,35 

Bore  to  earth  her  b,  drest  In  the  dress  L.  of  Burleigh  98 

He  cast  his  6,  and  on  we  swept.  The  Voyage  80 

Like  that  long-buried  b  of  the  king,  Aylmer's  Field  3 

adulteries  That  saturate  soul  with  b.  , ,          377 

His  b  half  flung  forward  in  pursuit,  , ,          587 

as  not  passing  thro'  the  fire  Bodies,  but  souls —  , ,          672 

that  break  B  toward  death,  and  palsy,  Lucretius  154 

unlaced  my  casque  And  grovell'd  on  my  b,  Princess  vi  28 

and  to  dance  Its  b,  and  reach  ,,         138 

There  lay  the  sweet  little  b  Grandmothei-  62 

I  look'd  at  the  still  little  J—  ,,           66 

this  weight  of  b  and  limb.  High.  Pantheism  5 

phantom  bodies  of  horses  and  men  ;  Boadicea  27 

and  back  return  To  where  the  b  sits,  In  Mem.  xii  19 

cheeks  drop  in  ;  the  b  bows  Man  dies :  ,,      xxxv  3 

Bare  of  the  b,  might  it  last,  „        xliii  6 

in  the  ghastly  pit  long  since  a  b  was  found,  Mavd  lib 

sworn  to  bury  All  this  dead  b  of  hate,  , ,  xix  97 

Hath  b  enow  to  hold  his  foemen  down  ? '  Com.  of  Arthur  253 

blood  Of  their  strong  bodies,  flowing,  Marr.  of  Geraint  569 

And  let  the  bodies  lie,  but  bound  Geraint  and  E.  96 

And  being  weak  in  b  said  no  more  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  839 

'  Faith  of  my  b, '  he  said,  '  and  art  thou  not —  Pelleas  and  E.  318 

But  the  sweet  &  of  a  maiden  babe.  Last  Tournament  48 

Belted  his  b  with  her  white  embrace,  ,,          513 

A  b  journeying  onward,  sick  with  toil.  Loverr's  Tale  i  124 

breathless  i  of  her  good  deeds  past.  ,,          217 

soul  and  heart  and  b  are  all  at  ease :  ,,          556 

had  the  ghastliest  That  ever  lusted  for  a  &,  ,,          648 

She  took  the  b  of  my  past  delight,  „          681 

'  i  and  soul  And  life  and  limbs,  ,,      iij  282 

sank  his  b  with  honour  down  into  the  deep,  TJie  Revenge  109 
He  veils  His  flesh  in  bread,  b  and  bread 

together.'  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  157 

'  No  bread,  no  bread.     God's  b\'  ,,            159 

Thou  canst  not  prove  that  thou  art  b  alone.  Ancient  Sage  59 

they  laid  this  b  they  foun'  an  the  grass  Tomorrow  73 

nurse  of  ailing  b  and  mind,  Loclcsley  H.,  Sixty  51 

lustier  i,  larger  mind  ?  ,,              164 

out  of  his  b  she  drew  The  red  '  Blood-eagle '  Dead  Prophet  70 

You  say  your  b  is  so  foul —  Happy  25 

Your  b  is  not  foul  to  me,  and  b  is  foul  at  best.  „      28 
If  my  h  come  from  brutes,  (repeat)                      By  an  Evolution.  5,  13 

Where  I  sank  with  the  6  at  times  ,,                   18 


Body 


49 


Bone 


Body  (contimied)    that  dark  6  which  had  lain  Of  old      Death  of  (Emnie  93 

bodies  and  souls  go  down  in  a  common  wreck,  Tlie  Dawti  13 
Bog  (See  also  Irish  Bog)    last  month  they  wor  diggin' 

the  h,  Tomoirow  61 

bad  scran  to  the  b's  whin  they  swallies  the  man  „           66 

sorra  the  h  that's  in  Hiven  ,,           67 

aisier  work  av  they  lived  be  an  Irish  6.  ,,72 

Boggle  (ghost)    Theer  wur  a  bin  it,  Jf.  Farmer,  0.  S.  30 

Bog-wather    foun'  Dhrownded  in  black  b-w  Tomorrmo  62 

Boil    hell  beneath  Made  me  b  over.  St.  S.  Stylites  171 

Boil'd    burn'd  in  fire,  or  h  in  oil,  ,                ,,             52 

b  the  flesh,  and  spread  the  board,  Marr.  of  Geraint  391 

Bold  {See  also  Half-bold,  Over-bold)    so  clear  and  b 

and  free  As  you,  Rosalind  17 

Kate  loves  well  the  b  and  fierce  ;  Kate  29 

But  none  are  6  enough  for  Kate  ,,    30 

wide  in  soul  and  b  of  tongue,  Two  Voices  124 

New-year  blithe  and  b,  my  friend,  D.  of  the  0.  Year  35 

A  man  more  pure  and  b  and  just  To  J.  S.  31 

the'  keen  and  b  and  soldierly  Sear'd  Aylmer's  Field  192 

You  are  b  indeed :  Princess  Hi  250 

Among  the  wise  and  the  b.  Ode  on  Well.  52 

If  you  be  fearful,  then  must  we  be  b.  Third  of  Feb.  19 

men  are  b  and  strongly  say  their  say  ; —  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  32 

With  what  divine  affections  b  In,  Mem.  xciv  2 

b  to  dwell  On  doubts  that  drive  the  coward  ,,        xcv  29 

b  in  heart  and  act  and  word  was  he,  Com.  of  Arthur  176 

And  wholly  b  thou  art,  and  meek  Oareth  and  L.  1168 

Am  I  so  b,  and  could  I  so  stand  by,  Marr.  of  Geraint  102 

B  will  I  be —  Balin  and  Balan  194 

Balin  was  b,  and  ask'd  To  bear  ,,               199 

B  was  mine  answer,  '  Had  thyself  Holy  Grail  277 

'  Art  thou  so  6  and  hast  not  seen  the  Grail  ? '  ,,          279 

This  heard  the  b  Sir  Bedivere  and  spake :  Pass,  of  Arthur  50 

death  And  silence  made  him  b —  Lover's  Tale  iv  73 

Had  they  been  b  enough  then,  Def.  of  I/ucknow  66 

still  be  b  Not  only  to  slight  praise  To  Duke  of  Argyll  3 

Bolden'd    b  by  the  silence  of  his  B^ng, —  Holy  Grail  857 

Bolder    And  me  this  knowledge  b  made,  To  J.  S.  5 

seems  no  b  than  a  beaten  hound  ;  Geraint  and  R.  61 

Not  risen  to,  she  was  b.  The  Ring  361 

Boldest    drawn  of  fairest  Or  b  since,  Ode  to  Memory  90 

their  oldest  and  their  b  said.  Death  of  CEnone  100 

Boldly    for  such  a  face  had  6  died,'  D.  of  F.  Women  99, 
Enoch  faced  this  morning  of  farewell  Brightly 

and  b.  Enoch  Arden  183 

And  b  ventured  on  the  liberties.  Princess  i  205 

I  offer  h :  we  will  seat  you  highest :  ,,      Hi  159 

B  they  rode  and  well,  Light  Brigade  23 

Boldness    Should  licensed  b  gather  force,  In  Mem.  cxiii  13 

B  and  royal  knighthood  of  the  bird  Merlin  and  V.  134 
Bole  (See  also  Elm-tree-boles)    stanzas  that  you  made 

About  my  '  giant  b  ; '  Talking  Oak  136 

wind  And  double  in  and  out  the  b's,  Princess  iv  262 

a  thousand  rings  of  Spring  In  every  b,  ,,        v  238 

glancing  thro'  the  hoary  b's,  he  saw,  Pelleas  and  E.  50 

Bolster'd    An'  the  fences  all  on  'em  b  oop  Oiod  Rod  32 

Bolt  (See  also  Battle-bolt)    and  if  a  6  of  fire  Would 

rive  Sup}}.  Confessions  10 
b's  are  hurl'd  Far  below  them  in  the  valleys,       Lotos-Eaters,  C.S.  Ill 

Appealing  to  the  b's  of  Heaven  ;  Princess  iv  372 

Scarce  had  she  ceased,  when  out  of  heaven  a  b  Merlin  and  V.  934 

Pray  Heaven,  they  be  not  smitten  by  the  b,'  Holy  Grail  221 

slant  His  b  from  falling  on  your  head —  Happy  81 

b  of  war  dashing  down  upon  cities  The  Dawn  8 

Bolted    gate  Is  b,  and  the  master  gone.  Tiresias  201 

Bond  (adj. )    dwarf 'd  or  godlike,  b  or  free :  Princess  vii  260 

Bond  (s)    Unmanacled  from  b's  of  sense.  Two  Voices  236 
break  or  bind  All  force  in  b's  that  might  endure.        Palace  of  Art  154 

Seeing  obedience  is  the  b  of  rule.  M.  d' Arthur  94 

Then  broke  all  b's  of  courtesy,  Aylmer's  Field  323 

Which  breaks  all  b's  of  ours ;  ,,            425 

broke  the  b  which  they  desired  to  break,  ,,            778 

all  her  b's  Crack'd  ;  and  I  saw  Lucretius  37 

bis  dearest  b  is  this,  Princess  vii  277 


Bond  (s)  (continued)    Has  broke  the  b  of  dying  use.  In  Mem.  cv  12 

Than  some  strong  b  which  is  to  be.  cxvi  16 

Gareth  loosed  his  b's  and  on  free  feet  Gareth  and  L.  817 

all  Their  bearing  in  their  common  b  of  love,  Balin  and  Balan  150 

I  purity  Beyond  the  limit  of  their  b,  Merlin  avd  V.  27 

For  such  a  supersensual  sensual  b  ,j            109 

our  b  Had  best  be  loosed  for  ever :  ,,            341 

world  howling  forced  them  into  b's,  ,,            744 
yours,  Not  Arthur's,  as  ye  know,  save  by  the  6,     Lancelot  and  E.  135 

Not  violating  the  b  of  like  to  like.'  ,,            241 

daughter  fled  From  b's  or  death,  , ,            277 

Our  6,  as  not  the  6  of  man  and  wife,  ,,'          I191 

Our  b  is  not  the  b  of  man  and  wife.  , ,          1206 

needs  must  break  These  b's  that  so  defame  me :  ,,          1421 

More  bondsman  in  his  heart  than  in  his  b's.  Pelleas  and  E.  239 

may  be  ye  shall  slay  him  in  his  b's.'  ,,            272 

let  who  will  release  him  from  his  6's.  ,,            294 

gazed  upon  the  man  Of  princely  bearing,  tho'  in  b's,  ,',            306 

sprang  Gawain,  and  loosed  him  from  his  b's,  ,,            315 

bound,  save  by  white  b's  and  warm,  ,,            353 

brakest  thro'  the  scruple  of  my  b,  Last  Tournament  568 

Seeing  obedience  is  the  b  of  rule.  Pass,  of  Arthur  262 

Is  but  a  burthen :  loose  the  b,  and  go.  To  the  Queen  ii  17 

it  was  a  b  and  seal  Of  friendship,  Lover's  Tale  ii  181 

Were  these  not  6'<?  nay,  nay,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  167 

that  mystic  b  betwixt  the  twins —  „              256 

For  I  broke  the  6.  The  Wreck  59 

snap  the  b  that  link'd  us  life  to  life,  Happy  61 

since  my  will  Seal'd  not  the  b —  Princess  v  399 

To  dissolve  the  previous  seal  on  a  b,  Maud  I  xix  45 
Bondslave    bound  by  precontract  Your  bride,  your  b  !        Princess  iv  542 

Bondsman    My  will  is  b  to  the  dark  ;  In  Mem.  iv  2 

More  b  in  his  heart  than  in  his  bonds.  Pelleas  and  E.  239 
Bone  (See  also  Ankle-bones,  Bo&n,  Boane,  Breast- 
bone, Collar-bone,  Cross-bones)    To  feed  thy 

b's  with  lime.  Two  Voices  326 

green  Christmas  crams  with  weary  b's.  Wan  Sculptor  14 

lay  the  mighty  b's  of  ancient  men,  M.  d' Arthur  47 

burn  a  fragrant  lamp  before  my  b's,  St.  S.  Stylites  196 

bodies  and  the  b's  of  those  That  strove  Day -Dm.,  Arrival  9 

'  You  are  b's,  and  what  of  that  ?  Vision  of  Sin  175 

From  the  fashion  of  your  b's.  ,,           182 

his  b's  long  laid  within  the  grave,  lAccretius  256 

Ammonites,  and  the  first  b's  of  Time  ;  Princess,  Pro.  15 

chanted  on  the  blanching  b's  of  men  ? '  ,,        a  199 

cut  this  epitaph  above  my  b's ;  ,,            207 

stuck  out  The  b's  of  some  vast  bulk  ,,       m  294 

'  As  these  rude  b's  to  us,  are  we  to  her  ,,             296 

and  spilt  our  b's  in  the  flood —  ,,        iv  532 

Echo  round  his  b's  for  evermore.  Ode  on  Well.  12 

Be  glad,  because  his  b's  are  laid  by  thine  !  ,,        141 

Thy  roots  are  wrapt  about  the  b's.  In  Mem.  ii  4 

As  if  the  quiet  b's  were  blest  ,,    xviii  6 

Old  warder  of  these  buried  b's,  , ,  xxxix  1 

grins  on  a  pile  of  children's  b's,  Maud  I  i  Ma 

And  my  b's  are  shaken  with  pain,  ^^      II  v  ^ 

b's  for  his  o'ergrown  whelp  to  crack ;  ,,55 

being  apt  at  arms  and  big  of  b  Marr.  of  Geraint  489 

crack'd  the  helmet  thro',  and  bit  the  6,  ,,              573 

when  his  good  b  Seems  to  be  pluck'd  at  Geraint  and  E.  559 

and  he  fears  To  lose  his  b,  and  lays  his  foot  ,,              562 

arks  with  priceless  b's  of  martyrdom,  Balin  and  Balan  110 

lay  till  all  their  b's  were  bleach 'd,  Lancelot  and  E.  43 

part  whiten'd  with  the  b's  of  men,  Holy  Grail  500 

Fool  to  the  midmost  marrow  of  his  b's,  Pelleas  and  E.  258 

Like  a  dry  b  cast  to  some  hungry  hound  ?  Last  Tournament  196 

lay  the  mighty  b's  of  ancient  men.  Pass,  of  Arthur  215 

I  have  number'd  the  b's,  Rizpah  10 

but  b  of  my  b  was  left —  ,,      51 

the  b's  that  had  suck'd  me,  the  b's  that  had  laughed  „      53 

Do  you  think  I  was  scared  by  the  &'«  ?  ,,       55 
every  b  seem'd  out  of  its  place —                          In  the  Child.  Hosp.  13 

can  prayer  set  a  broken  &? '  ,,                 20 

'  Behold  the  b's  of  Christopher  Colon ' —  Columbus  210 

'  These  same  chains  Bound  these  same  b's  , ,        214 

D 


Bone 


50 


Bore 


Bone  (co)itinued)    in  these  spasms  that  grind  B  against  b.      Columbus  221 

the  white  North  has  thy  b's  ;  Sir  J.  Franklin  1 

There  blanch  the  b's  of  whom  she  slew,  Tiresias  150 

black  in  white  above  his  b's.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  44 

moulder'd  nest  On  its  barkless  b's,  Dead  Prophet  19 

honest  Poverty,  bare  to  the  b  ;  Vastness  19 

save  breaking  my  b's  on  the  rack  ?  By  an  Evolution.  9 

gentleman,  heart,  blood  and  b,  Bandit's  Death  2 

Bone-batter'd    being  all  b-b  on  the  rock,  Yielded  ;       Gareth  and  L.  1050 

Bonnet    Or  the  frock  and  gipsy  b  Maud  I  xx  19 

Bonny  Doon    Whistling  a  random  bar  of  B  D,  The  Brook  82 

Book    {See  also  Annal-book,  Boook,  Statute-book) 

Take,  Madam,  this  poor  b  of  song  ;  To  the  Queen  17 

burnt  His  epic,  his  King  Arthur,  some  twelve  b's ' —  The  Epic  28 

these  twelve  6's  of  mine  Were  faint  ,,        38 

old  Sir  Robert's  pride,  His  b's —  Audley  Court  59 

faces  grow  between  me  and  my  b  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  176 

eyesight  poring  over  miserable  b's —  Locksley  Hall  172 

prose  O'er  6's  of  travell'd  seamen,  Amphion  SI 

Nor  yet  the  fear  of  little  b's  Will  Water.  195 

the  priest,  above  his  b  Leering  Vision  of  Sin  117 

And  bought  them  needful  b's,  Enoch  Arden  332 

Then  desperately  seized  the  holy  B,  ,,            495 

she  closed  the  B  and  slept :  ,,            499 

swear  upon  the  b  Not  to  reveal  it,  ,,            838 

'on  the  b.'    And  on  the  b,  half -frighted,  ,,            842 
After  his  b's,  to  ilush  his  blood  with  air.  Then  to 

his  b's  again.  Aylmer's  Field  459 

'  Show  me  the  b's ! '  Sea  Dreams  148 

'  The  b's !  the  b's ! '  but  he,  he  could  not  ,,          150 

great  jB's  (see  Daniel  seven  and  ten)  ,,          152 

'  0  miracle  of  women, '  said  the  b,  Princess,  Pro.  35 

(I  kept  the  b  and  had  my  finger  in  it)  „              53 

which  brought  My  6  to  mind :  ,,            120 

on  lattice  edges  lay  Or  6  or  lute  ;  ,,          ii  30 

'  can  he  not  read — no  6'«  ?  ,,       Hi  214 

but  brooding  turn  The  b  of  scorn,  ,,         v  142 

rout  of  saucy  boys  Brake  on  us  at  our  b's,  ,,            395 

to  and  fro  With  6's,  with  flowers,  ,,        vii  26 

was  cramm'd  with  theories  out  of  b's,  ,,     Con.  35 

in  this  B,  little  Annie,  the  message  Grandmother  96 

Still  in  the  little  b  you  lent  me.  The  Daisy  99 

May  bind  a  6,  may  line  a  box,  In  Mem.  Ixxoii  6 

One  lesson  from  one  b  we  leam'd,  ,,      Ixxix  14 

Discuss'd  the  b's  to  love  or  hate,  „     Ixxxix  34 

With  festal  cheer,  With  b's  and  music,  , ,         cvii  22 

in  their  hand  Is  Nature  like  an  open  b;  „      Con.  132 

She  sits  by  her  music  and  b's  Maud  I  xiv  13 

a  palm  As  glitters  gilded  in  thy  B  of  Hours.  Gareth  and  L.  46 

Read  but  one  b,  and  ever  reading  Merlin  and  V.  622 

and  his  6  came  down  to  me.'  ,,             650 

'Ye  have  the  6:  the  charm  is  written  in  it :  ,,             652 

'  Thou  read  the  b,  my  pretty  Vivien !  ,,              667 

cities  on  their  flanks — thou  read  the  b\  „             676 

'  From  our  old  b's  I  know  That  Joseph  Holy  Grail  59 

For  so  they  say,  these  b's  of  ours,  ,,          65 

'  for  in  sooth  These  ancient  b's —  ,,         541 

Of  Geoffrey's  b,  or  him  of  Malleor's,  To  the  Queen  ii  42 

gie  fur  a  howry  owd  b  thutty  pound  an'  moor.  Village  Wife  45 

An'  'e'd  wrote  an  owd  b,  his  awn  sen,  ,,            46 

I  am  written  in  the  Lamb's  own  B  of  Life  Colurnbais  88 

dipt  In  some  forgotten  b  of  mine  To  E.  Fitzgerald  47 

He  would  open  the  b's  that  I  prized.  The  Wreck  21 

We  had  read  their  know-nothing  b's  Despair  55 

their  knowing  and  know-nothing  &'s  ,,93 

knows  not  ev'n  the  b  he  wrote,  Ancient  Sage  148 

knew  no  b's  and  no  philosophies,  ,,           218 

there  were  b's  and  dresses — left  to  me.  The  Ring  113 

I  bad  her  keep.  Like  a  seal'd  b,  „        123 

scarce  have  learnt  the  title  of  your  b,  „        126 

'The  b's,  the  miniature,  the  lace  are  hers,  ,,        288 

my  friend.  To  prize  your  various  b.  To  Ulysses  47 
thought  to  myself  I  would  offer  this  b  to  you,        June  Bracken,  etc,  4 

'  Alia,'  says  their  sacred  b,  '  is  Love,'  Akbar's  Dream  73 
Bookleamed    See  Boooklam'd. 


Bookleaming    See  Boooklamin'. 

Bookless    Your  flight  from  out  your  6  wilds  Priiicess  ii  56 

Boom  (s)    air  was  torn  in  sunder,  Crashing  went  the  b        The  Captain  44 

clash  and  b  of  the  bells  rang  V.  of  Maeldune  110 

Boom  (verb)     His  captain's-ear  has  heard  them  b  Ode  on  Well.  65 

b  and  blanch  on  the  precipices,  Boadicea  76 

Boometh    At  eve  the  beetle  b  Claribel  9 

Booming    Listens  the  muffled  b  indistinct  Lover's  Tale  i  637 

Boon  (adj.)     Fled  all  the  b  companions  of  the  Earl,  Geraint  and  E.  477 

Boon  (s)    b  from  me.  From  me,  Heaven's  Queen,  (Enone  126 

Fresh  apple-blossom,  blushing  for  a  b.  Tlie  Brook  90 

At  last  she  begg'd  a  b,  Princess  i  146 

widow  crying  to  the  King,  '  A  b.  Sir  King  !  Gareth  and  L.  334 

No  b  is  here.  But  justice,  ,,            345 

'A  b,  Sir  King !    Thine  enemy.  King,  am  I.  ,,            351 

'A  b,  Sir  King !    I  am  her  kinsman,  I.  ,,            365 

came  Sir  Kay,  the  seneschal,  and  cried,  '  A  b,  Sir  King  !    ,,  368 

the  wholesome  6  of  gyve  and  gag.'  ,,            370 

b,  Sir  King  (his  voice  was  all  ashamed),  ,,          •  442 

youth  and  worth  a  goodlier  b\  , ,            449 

'A  b.  Sir  King — this  quest ! '  then —  ,,            647 

'  To  what  request  for  what  strange  6,'  Merlin  and  V.  264 

B,  ay,  there  was  a  b,  one  not  so  strange —  ,,              287 

ask  your  b,  for  b  I  owe  you  thrice,    ^  ,,              306 

take  this  6  so  strange  and  not  so  strange,'  ,,              310 

Whenever  I  have  ask'd  this  very  b,  „             323 

Yield  my  b.  Till  which  I  scarce  can  yield  ,,              351 

Why  will  ye  never  ask  some  other  6  ?  ,,              375 

Who  feels  no  heart  to  ask  another  6.  ,,             382 

Not  ever  be  too  curious  for  a  6,  „              486 

Lo,  there  my  6 !    What  other?  ,,             494 

To  snare  her  royal  fancy  with  a  b  Lancelot  and  E.  71 

tale  of  diamonds  for  his  destined  b)  „               91 

Boook  (book)    'e  'ed  hallus  &b^  'is  'and.  Village  Wife  26 

Hallus  aloan  wi'  'is  b's,  „           27 

An'  b's,  what's  6's  ?  „           28 

niver  knawd  nowt  but  b's,  an'  b's,  „           52 

why  shouldn't  thy  b's  be  sowd  ?  ,,69 

I  hears  es  soom  o'  thy  b's  mebbe  worth  , ,           70 

Heaps  an'  heaps  o'  b's,  I  ha'  see'd  'em,  ,,           71 

moast  on  'is  owd  big  b's  fetch 'd  „            73 

Sa  'is  taail  wur  lost  an'  'is  b's  wur  gone  ,,            87 

B's,  es  I  said  afoor,  thebbe  neyther  'ere  nor  theer  !  ,,          113 

Boooklam'd  (bookleamed)    An'  I  'oaps  es  'e  beant  h:  „            23 

Boooklamin'  (bookleaming)    an'  we  haates  6  'ere.  ,,           24 

Booot  (boot)     I  could  fettle  and  clump  owd  h's  North.  Cdbbl&r  13 

And  browt  me  the  6's  to  be  cobbled  ,,           94 

Boor-tree  (elder-tree)    in  wan  grave  be  the  dead  b-t,  Tmnwrow  87 

Boot  [See  also  Boobt)     Leisurely  tapping  a  glossy  6,  Maud  I  xiii  19 

an'  the  mud  o'  'is  b's  o'  the  stairs,  Spinster's  Ss.  99 

Boot  (in  addition)    Will  pay  thee  all  thy  wages, 

and  to  b.  Gareth  and  L.  1005 

Booth     sport  and  song,  in  6  and  tent.  In  Mem.  xcviii  28 

Bootless    proxy-wedded  with  a  h  calf  Princess  i  34 

Booty    chance  of  6  from  the  morning's  raid,  Geraiiit  and  E.  565 

Border  (adj.)    A  6  fantasy  of  branch  and  flower,  Lancelot  and  E.W 

Border  (s)     Morn  broaden'd  on  the  6's  of  the  dark,  D.  of  F.  Women  265 

From  out  the  6's  of  the  morn.  On  a  Mmimer  24 

Close  on  the  6's  of  a  territory,  Mai-r.  of  Geraint  34 

on  the  6  of  her  couch  they  sat  Guinevere  101 

There  on  the  6  Of  boundless  Ocean,  Merlin  and  the  G.  116 

Border'd    the  yellow  down  B  with  palm,  Lotos-Eaters  22 

Border-marriage    land  was  ringing  of  it — This 

blacksmith  b-m —  Aylmer's  Field  263 
Border-race  such  counter-terms,  my  son.  Are  b-r's,  Ancient  Sage  251 
Bore  (to  burrow)    hedgehog  underneath  the 

plaintain  6's,  Aylmer's  Field  850 

Bore  (to  bear)    winds  which  6  Them  earthward  till  , 

they  lit ;  The  Poet  17 

The  broad  stream  6  her  far  away,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  17 

B  and  forbore,  and  did  not  tire,  Tum  Voices  218 

That  b  a  lady  from  a  leaguer'd  town  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  47 

Branches  they  6  of  that  enchanted  stem,  Lotos-Eaters  28 

6  him  to  a  chapel  nigh  the  field.  M.  d' Arthur  8 

And  rising  6  him  thro'  the  place  of  tombs.  „        175 


Bore 


51 


Born 


Bore  (to  bear)  {contimied)    blowing  forward,  b  King 

Arthur,  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  21 

in  her  bosom  b  the  baby,  Sleep.  Gardener's  D.  268 

But  Dora  b  them  meekly,  Dora  36 

knowest  I  b  this  better  at  the  first,  St.  S.  Stylites  28 

Not  this  alone  lb:  ,,61 

I  b,  whereof,  0  God,  thou  knowest  all.  „           70 

and  love  her  for  the  love  she  b  ?  Lockiley  Hall  73 

she  Not  less  thro'  all  b  up,  till,  Godiva  62 

Right  down  by  smoky  Paul's  they  b.  Will  Water.  141 

Three  fair  children  first  she  b  him,  L.  of  Burleigh  87 

B  to  earth  her  body,  drest  In  the  dress  ,,             98 

She  b  the  blade  of  Liberty.  The  Voyage  72 

A  light-green  tuft  of  plumes  she  b  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  26 

B  him  another  son,  a  sickly  one :  Enoch  Arden  109 

grieving  held  his  will,  and  b  it  thro'.  ,,           167 

do  the  thing  he  will'd,  and  b  it  thro'.  ,,           295 

weight  of  the  dead  leaf  6  it  down :  ,,           678 

And  Enoch  b  his  weakness  cheerfully.  , ,           827 

To  be  the  ghost  of  one  who  b  your  name  The  Brook  219 

yet  she  b  it :  yet  her  cheek  Aylmer's  Field  505 

loneliness  of  grief  jB  down  in  flood,  ,,            633 

her  own  people  b  along  the  nave  Her  pendent  hands,  ,,            812 

motion  of  the  boundless  deep  B  thro'  the  cave.  Sea  Dreams  92 

motion  of  the  great  deep  6  me  on,  ,,         111 

They  b  her  back  into  the  tent :  Princess  iv  193 

Yet  I  6  up  in  part  from  ancient  love,                  '  ,,            803 

Yet  I  6  up  in  hope  she  would  be  known :  ,,            320 

b  down  a  Prince,  And  Cyril,  one.  ,,         v  518 

me  they  b  up  the  broad  stairs,  ,,        vi  374 

He  b  but  little  game  in  hand  ;  The  Victim  42 

And  b  thee  where  I  could  not  see  In  Mem.  xxii  17 

And  thus  he  b  without  abuse  ,,            cxi  21 

In  either  hand  he  b  What  dazzled  all;  Gareth  and  L.  386 

And  he  that  b  The  star,  when  mounted,  , ,            950 
with  a  costrel  b  The  means  of  goodly  welcome,     Marr.  of  Geraint  386 

best  by  her  that  b  her  understood.  , ,                511 

6  Down  by  the  length  of  lance  and  arm  Geraint  and  E.  462 

b  him  to  the  naked  hall  of  Doorm,  ,,             570 

She  b  me  there,  for  born  from  death  was  I  Merlin  and  V.  44 

He  b  a  knight  of  old  repute  to  the  earth,  Lancelot  and  E.  492 

he  6  the  prize  and  could  not  find  The  victor,  ,,              629 

thus  they  &  her  swooning  to  her  tower.  ,,              968 

reverently  they  b  her  into  hall.  ,,            1266 

b  them  down.  And  broke  thro'  all.  Holy  Grail  479 

b  him  to  a  chapel  nigh  the  field,  Pass,  of  Arthur  1 76 

And  rising  6  him  thro' the  place  of  tombs.  ,,              343 

she  that  b  Camilla  close  beneath  Lover's  Tale  i  202 

converse  sweet,  In  which  our  voices  b  least  part.  ,,             542 

A  whirlwind  caught  and  bus;  ,,          ii  197 

so  they  b  her  (for  in  Julian's  land  „           iv  36 

B  her  free-faced  to  the  free  airs              -  ,,38 

So  b  her  thro'  the  solitary  land  ,,               90 

Sir  Richard  b  in  hand  all  his  sick  men  The  Revenge  15 

stately  Spanish  men  to  their  flagship  6  him  ,,97 
She  b  a  child,  whom  reverently  we  call'd            Sisters  {E.  arid  E.)  268 

and  the  love  I  b  them  both —  ,,               281 

we,  who  b  the  Cross  Thither,  Columbus  191 

And  so,  when  I  b  him  a  girl,  The  Wreck  33 

Nature  who  knew  not  that  which  she  6  !  Despair  34 

on  an  earth  that  6  not  a  flower ;  ,,      44 

wheat  Of  Egypt  b  a  grain  as  sweet  To  Prof.  Jebb  6 

As  we  b  down  the  Gods  before  us  ?  Demeter  and  P.  132 

yesterday  They  b  the  Cross  before  you  Happy  48 

In  a  while  I  b  him  a  son,  Bandit's  Death  15 

Borest     Ah  little  rat  that  b  in  the  dyke  Merlin  and  V.  112 

Boring    B  a  little  auger-hole  in  fear,  Godiva  68 
Bom  {See   also   Bum,  Devil-bora,  Eldest-bom, 
Equal-bom,  First-born,  Gentle-born,  King- 
bom,  Lame-bom,  Latest-bom,  New-bom, 
Royal -bom.    Sickly-bom,    Spleen -bom) 

Nothing  was  b  ;  Nothing  will  die  ;  Nothing  vnll  Die  36 
All  things  were  b.                                                    A  U  Things  will  Die  47 

And  Thou  and  peace  to  earth  were  b,  Supp.  Cmifessions  26 

Thb  poet  in  a  golden  clime  was  b.  The  Poet  1 


Bom  (continued)   Two  children  in  one  hamlet  6  and  bred  ;     Circumstance  8 

Thou  wert  b,  on  a  summer  morn,  Elednore  7 

Truth  is  6  Beyond  the  polar  gleam  Two  Voices  181 

features  of  her  child  Ere  it  is  J :  CEnone  253 

never  child  be  b  of  me,  Unblest,  „       254 

which  mood  was  b  Scorn  of  herself ;  Palace  of  Art  230 
call  me  before  the  day  is  b.                             May  Queen,  N.  Vs.  E.  49 

thousand  times  I  would  be  b  and  die.  D.  of  F.  Women  204 

Was  never  b  into  the  earth.  To  J.  S.  32 

With  that  fair  child  betwixt  them  b.  On  a  Mourner  25 

B  out  of  everything  I  heard  and  saw.  Gardener's  D.  66 

days  went  on,  there  was  b  a  boy  To  William ;  Dora  48 

sinful  man,  conceived  and  b  in  sin :  St.  S.  Stylites  122 
group  Of  beauties,  that  were  b  In  teacup-times  of  hood     Talking  Oak  62 

'  But  I  was  b  too  late :  the  fair  new  forms,  Golden  Year  15 

glimpse  of  that  dark  world  where  I  was  b.  Tithonus  33 
And  thought  and  time  be  b  again,                       Day- Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  50 

serving-man  As  any  b  of  woman.  Will  Water.  152 

I'm  a  beggar  b,'  she  said.  Lady  Clare  37 

I  am  a  beggar  6,' she  said,  ,,             71 

'  If  you  are  not  the  heiress  b,  (repeat)  ,,       83,  85 

honour  Unto  which  she  was  not  b.  L.  of  Burleigh  80 
Every  moment  dies  a  man,  Every  moment  one 

is  0.  (repeat)  Vision  of  Sin  98,  122 

but  when  her  child  was  b,  Enoch  Arden  522 

In  those  far-off  seven  happy  years  were  6 ;  ,,            686 

B  oi  a.  village  girl,  carpenter's  son,  Aylmer's  Field  668 

Thy  better  b  unhappily  from  thee,  „             675 

A  CITT  clerk,  but  gently  b  and  bred  ;  Sea  Drea^ns  1 

chiefly  you  were  b  for  something  great,  Princess  iv  307 

Ere  you  were  b  to  vex  us  ?  „     vi  248 

dead  before  he  was  b,  (repeat)  Gi'andmother  59,  68 

naw,  naw,  tha  was  not  b  then ;  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  29 

The  linnet  b  within  the  cage.  In  Mem.  xxvii  3 

The  light  that  shone  when  Hope  was  b.  „           xa^  32 

In  these  brief  lays,  of  Sorrow  b,  ,,         xlviii  1 

In  that  dark  house  where  she  was  b.  „             Ix  12 

It  is  the  day  when  he  was  b,  „             cvii  1 

And,  b  of  love,  the  vague  desire  „             ex  19 

But  I  was  b  to  other  things.  ,,           cxx  12 

Result  in  man,  be  b  and  think,  ,,       Con.  126 

it  seem'd  far  better  to  be  6  To  labour  Maud  I  xviii  33 

On  the  day  when  Maud  was  b;  ,,         xix  40 

0  Rivulet,  b  at  the  Hall,  „           ocxi  8 

Is  a  juggle  &  of  the  brain  ?  ,,        II  ii  ^ 

tickle  the  maggot  b  in  an  empty  head,  ,,             ij  38 
Some  calling  Arthur  b  of  Gorlois,  Others  of 

Anton?  Com.  of  Arthur  no 

all  before  his  time  Was  Arthur  S,  ,,             212 
Or  b  the  son  of  Gorlois,  after  death,  Or  Uther's 

son,  and  b  before  his  time,  ,,             240 

Else,  wherefore  b  ?  '  Gareth  and  L.  119 

saying  thou  wert  basely  b.  „             355 

God  wot,  so  thou  wert  nobly  b,  ,,            1064 

Stript  from  the  three  dead  wolves  of  woman  b  Geraint  and  E.  94 

creatures  gently  b  But  into  bad  hands  „            191 

B  with  the  blood,  not  leamable,  Balin  and  Balan  175 

We  two  were  b  together,  and  we  die  ,,               629 

bore  me  there,  for  b  from  death  was  I  Merlin  and  V.  44 

turn  of  anger  6  Of  your  misfaith ;  ,,            531 

but  b  of  sickness,  could  not  live :  Lancelot  and  E.  880 

sons  B  to  the  glory  of  thy  name  and  fame,  ,,             1372 

Well  is  it  that  no  child  is  b  of  thee.  Guinevere  424 

children  b  of  thee  are  sword  and  fire,  ,,        425 

Like  the  last  echo  6  of  a  great  cry,  Pass,  of  Arthur  459 

Life  knows  not  when  young  Life  was  b,  Loner's  Tale  i  156 

falsehood  of  all  starcraft ! )  we  were  h.  „            200 

So  were  we  b,  so  orphan'd.  ,,            218 

Because  my  grief  as  yet  was  newly  b  ,,            613 

Back  to  the  mother's  house  where  she  was  b.  ,,         iv  91 

b  Not  from  believing  mind,  ,,            104 

and  that  day  a  boy  was  b,  Heir  ,,            128 

But  the  boy  was  b  i'  trouble.  First  Quarrel  2 

The  boy  was  b  in  wedlock,  ,,           6 

For  the  lawyer  is  b  but  to  murder —  Rizpah  64 


Born 


52 


Bottom 


Bom  {cMitimied)    all  my  doubts  were  fools  B  of 
the  fool 

in  the  second  year  was  b  A  second — 

fatal  kiss,  B  of  true  life  and  love, 

In  Judah,  for  in  thee  the  Lord  was  h ; 

for  in  thee  the  word  was  b  again. 

slain  my  father  the  day  before  I  was  b, 

who  wailest  being  b  And  banish'd  into  mystery, 

grief  for  ever  6  from  griefs  to  be, 

as  if  she  were  basely  o  ! 

B  of  the  brainless  Nature  who  knew  not 

For  wert  thou  b  or  blind  or  deaf, 

a  bitter  word,  not  once  since  we  were  b ; 

She  the  worldling  b  of  worldlings — 

Stronger  ever  b  of  weaker, 

before  her  highest,  man,  was  b, 

you  my  Miriam  b  within  the  year ; 

As  we  forget  our  wail  at  being  6. 

You  will  live  till  that  is  b, 

For  on  a  tropic  mountain  was  I  b, 

words  !  Words  only,  b  of  fever, 

and  him,  and  the  day  I  was  b. 

birthday  came  of  a  boy  b  happily  dead. 

Where  is  one  that,  b  of  woman, 
Borne    (See  also  Eagle-borne,  Fancy-borne) 

Adown  the  Tigris  I  was  b, 

From  off  her  shoulder  backward  b : 

And  many  a  merry  wind  was  b, 

When  on  my  goodly  charger  b 

bear  me  with  thee,  smoothly  b, 

Enoch  lives :  that  is  6  in  on  me. 

I  have  b  it  with  me  all  these  years. 

ovation  round  Their  statues,  6  aloft, 

Now  to  glorious  burial  slowly  b, 

B  down  by  gladness  so  complete, 

This  truth  came  b  with  bier  and  pall, 

And  daughters  had  she  b  him, — 

but  a  son  she  had  not  b. 

Before  him  at  his  crowning  b, 

down  the  wave  and  in  the  flame  was  b  A  naked  babe,         ,,  383 

wild  Limours,  £  on  a  black  horse,  Geraint  and  E.  458 

B  by  some  high  lord-prince  of  Arthur's  hall,         Balin  and  Balan  466 

Else  never  had  he  6  her  crown,  ,,  666 

Across  the  silent  seeded  meadow-grass  B,  clash'd :  Pelleas  and  E.  562 


Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  141 

„  269 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  3 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  25 

27 

V.  o/Maeldune  8 

De  Prof.  Two  G.  41 

Tiresias  80 

Tfie  Wreck  36 

Despair  34 

Ancient  Sage  175 

The  Flight  86 

Locksley  H,,  Sixty  25 

164 

205 

The  Ring  285 

„        465 

Forlorn  63 

Prog,  of  Spring  67 

Romney's  R.  30 

Charity  24 

„       34 

Making  of  Man  1 

Arabian  Nights  6 

Palace  of  Art  118 

Day -Dm,,  Depart  14 

Sir  Galahad  49 

Move  Eastward  9 

Enoch  Arden  319 

,,  895 

Princess  vi  67 

Ode  on  Well.  193 

In  Mem.  xxxii  10 

,,         Ixxxv  1 

Com.  of  Arthur  189 

192 

296 


b  about  the  bay  or  safely  moor'd 
my  name  was  b  Upon  her  breath 
B  into  alien  lands  and  far  away. 
I,  too,  was  b  along  and  felt  the  blast 
great  love  they  both  had  b  the  dead, 
we  had  always  b  a  good  name — 
You  never  have  6  a  child — 
thou  wouldst  have  her  flag  B  on  thy 

coffin — 
great  flame-banner  b  by  Teneriffe, 
B  in  the  bark's-bosom, 
wail  came  b  in  the  shriek  of  a  growing  wind, 
nurse  Who  had  b  my  flower  on  her  hireling  heart ; 
b  in  white  To  burial  or  to  burning, 
earth  has  never  b  a  nobler  man. 
b  along  by  that  full  stream  of  men, 
I  have  b  Rain,  wind,  frost, 
think  that  I  have  b  as  much  as  this — 
bearing  in  myself  the  shame  The  woman  should 

have  b, 
That  a  calamity  hard  to  be  6  ? 
likewise  for  the  high  rank  she  had  6, 
b  With  more  than  mortal  swiftness, 
The  love  they  both  have  b  me, 
heathen  men  have  b  as  much  as  this, 


Lover's  Tale  i  54 

443 

802 

, ,       Hi  27 

„      iv  181 

Rizpah  35 

..      80 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  17 

Columbus  69 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  49 

The  Wreck  87 

„       143 

Ancient  Sage  207 

Epit.  on  Gordon  4 

St.  TelemachusiS 

St.  S.  Stylites  15 

A  ylmer's  Field  356 

Maud  1  xiii  3 

Guinevere  695 

Lover's  Tale  ii  72 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  280 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  185 

Bom-unborn    with  their  offspring,  b-u,  Locksley  H. ,  Sixty  98 

Borough    half  The  neighbouring  o  with  their  Institute      Princess,  Pro.  5 

may  they  see  Beyond  the  b  and  the  shire  !  Hands  all  Round  28 

Better  a  rotten  b  or  so  Than  a  rotten  fleet  Riflemen  form  in 

Borrow'd     B  a  glass,  but  all  in  vain  :  Enoch  Arden  240 

A  cap  of  Tyrol  b  from  the  hall.  Princess  iv  601 


Bora  (a  knight)    Sir  B,  our  Lancelot's  cousin,  sware,  Holy  Grail  200 

The  pelican  on  the  casque  of  our  Sir  B  , ,          635 

Once,' Said  good  Sir  5,  'he  dash'd  across  me  ,,          640 

'  Then  Sir  B  had  ridden  on  Softly,  , ,          647 

to  B  Beyond  the  rest :  , ,          652 

Sir  B  Rode  to  the  lonest  tract  of  all  the  realm,  , ,         660 

Said  good  Sir  B,  '  beyond  all  hopes  of  mine,  ,,         690 

Sir  B  it  was  Who  spake  so  low  ,,         700 

Ay,  ay,  Sir  B,  who  else  ?  , ,         707 

for  Sir  B,  on  entering,  push'd  Athwart  , ,         752 

saying  to  him,  '  Hail,  B  !  if  ever  loyal  man  , ,         756 

and  B,  '  Ask  me  not  for  I  may  not  speak  ,,          757 

Blessed  are  B,  Lancelot  and  Percivale,  ,,          874 

Boa    thundering  shores  of  Bude  and  B,  Guinevere  291 

Boscage    to  thee,  green  b,  work  of  God,  Sir  J.  Oldcasde  129 

Bosk    and  blowing  b's  of  wilderness.  Princess  i  111 

Boskage    Thridding  the  sombre  b  of  the  wood,  D.  of  F.  Women  243 

Bosom    {See  also  Bark's-bosom)    b's  prest  To  little 

harps  of  gold  ;  Sea-Fairies  3 

woodpecker  From  the  &  of  a  hill.  Kate  5 

From  brow  and  b  slowly  down  Mariana  in  the  S.  14 

rising,  from  her  b  drew  Old  letters,  ,,                 61 

long  to  fall  and  rise  Upon  her  balmy  6,  Miller's  D.  183 

fingers  backward  drew  From  her  warm  brows  and  b  (Enone  177 

an  arm  Rose  up  from  out  the  b  of  the  lake,  M.  d' Arthur  30 

in  her  b  bore  the  baby.  Sleep.  Gardener's  D.  268 

and  fall  about  thy  neck,  And  on  thy  b  Love  and  Duty  42 

and  b  beating  with  a  heart  renew'd.  Tithonus  36 

her  b  shaken  with  a  sudden  storm  of  sighs —  Locksley  Hall  27 

I  will  pluck  it  from  my  6,  ,,           66 

moral  shut  Within  the  b  of  the  rose  ?  Day- Dm.,  Moral  8 

I  will  not  vex  my  b :  Amphion  102 

snowdrop  of  the  year  That  in  my  b  lies.  St.  Agnes'  Ike  12 
charm  have  power  to  make  New  lif eblood  warm  the  b,  WUl  Water.  22 
Him,  to  her  meek  and  modest  b  prest  In  agony,      Aylmer's  Field  416 

fondled  on  her  lap,  Warm'd  at  her  6  ?  ,,              687 

sun  their  milky  b's  on  the  thatch,  Princess  ii  103 

an  erring  pearl  Lost  in  her  6 :                             -"  ,,        iv  61 

lay  me  on  her  b,  and  her  heart  Would  rook  , ,            103 

over  brow  And  cheek  and  6  brake  the  wrathful  bloom  , ,           383 

half  The  sacred  mother's  6,  panting,  ,,       viliS 

And  hid  her  6  with  it ;  ,,           214 

And  slips  into  the  b  of  the  lake :  ,,     vii  187 

and  slip  Into  my  b  and  be  lost  in  me. '  , ,           189 

The  b  with  long  sighs  labour'd ;  ,,           225 

Slide  from  the  b  of  the  stars.  In  Mem.  xvii  16 

sword  That  rose  from  out  the  6  of  the  lake.  Com.  of  Arthur  297 

Yniol's  heart  Danced  in  his  b,  Mair.  of  Geraint  505 

his  beard  Across  her  neck  and  b  to  her  knee,  Merlin  and  V.  257 

and  in  her  b  pain  was  lord.  Last  Tournament  239 

arm  Rose  up  from  out  the  6  of  the  lake,  Pass,  of  Arthur  198 

our  baby  lips.  Kissing  one  b.  Lover's  Tale  i  238 

infuse  Rich  atar  in  the  6  of  the  rose,  ,,  270 
Cast  the  poison  from  your  b,                                  Locksley  H. ,  Sixty  241 

The  linnet's  6  blushes  at  her  gaze,  Prog,  of  Spring  17 

Bosom 'd    and  b  the  burst  of  the  spray,  V.  of  Maeldune  103 

Bosom-friend    My  6-/ and  half  of  life;  InMem.lixZ 

Bosom-peak    And  budded  b-p's — who  this  way  Lucretius  191 
Bosom- sepulchre    Sympathy  hew'd  out  The  b-s 

of  Sympathy  ?  Lover's  Tale  ii  32 

Bosom-throne    Had  nestled  in  this  b-t  of  Love,  „        i  624 

Boss    the  silver  b  Of  her  own  halo's  The  Voyage  31 

Boss'd    b  with  lengths  Of  classic  frieze,  Princess  ii  24 

goblet  on  the  board  by  Balin,  b  With  holy 

Joseph's  legend,  Balin  and  Balan  362 

Botanic    They  read  B  Treatises,  A  mphion  77 

Bottle     '  What's  i'  tha  b  a-stanning  theer  ? '  North.  Cobbler  7 

Thou  gits  naw  gin  fro'  tho  b  theer,  ,,            10 

yon  big  black  b  o'  gin.  ,,            70 

An'  'e  points  to  the  b  o'  gin,  ,,            90 

Smash  the  b  to  smithers,  the  Divil's  in  'im,'  ,,          104 

And  'a  taken  to  the  b  beside.  Spinster's  iS's.  56 

their  b's  o'  pap,  an'  their  mucky  bibs,  ,,            87 

Bottom  (adj.)    As  b  agates  seem  to  wave  and  float  Princess  ii  327 

Bottom  (a)    creation  pierce  Beyond  the  b  of  his  eye.  A  Character  Q 


Bottom 


53 


Bountiful 


Bottom  (s)  {coiUinued)    made  a  plunge  To  the  b,  and 

dispersed,  Jinoch  Arden  380 

fox — where  started — kill'd  In  such  a  b :  Aylmer's  Field  254 

Tho'  anchor'd  to  the  b,  such  is  he.'  Princess  iv  257 

the  sand  danced  at  the  b  of  it.  Balin  and  Balan  27 

b  of  the  well,  Where  Truth  is  hidden.  Merlin  and  V.  47 

glances  from  the  b  of  the  pool,  The  Ring  371 
Bongh  (iSee  also  Beechen-bough,  Beugh)    beneath 

the  dome  Of  hollow  b's.  Arabian  Nights  42 

garlanding  the  gnarled  b's  With  bunch  CEnone  101 

Whose  thick  mysterious  b's  in  the  dark  mom  ,,      213 

came  To  rest  beneath  thy  b's. — (repeat)  Talking  Oak  36,  156 

Olivia  came  To  sport  beneath  thy  b's.  ,,               100 

till  thy  b's  discern  The  front  of  Sumner-place.  ,,               247 

bent  or  broke  The  lithe  reluctant  b's  Enoch  Arden  381 

one  soft  arm,  which,  like  the  pliant  b  Sea  Dreams  290 

grasping  down  the  b's  I  gain'd  the  shore.  Princess  iv  189 

and  while  the  holly  b's  Entwine  In  Mem.  xxix  9 

I  found  a  wood  with  thorny  b's :  „           Ixix  6 

And  sow  the  sky  with  flying  b's,  „        Ixxii  24 

Unwatch'd,  the  garden  b  shall  sway,  ,,               ci\ 
Came  on  the  hoarhead  woodman  at  a  6  Wearily 

hewing.  Balin  and  Balan  294 

He  burst  his  lance  against  a  forest  b,  ,,               329 

canker'd  b's  without  Whined  in  the  wood  ;  „               345 

and  old  b's  Whined  in  the  wood.  ,,               385 

made  him  quickly  dive  Beneath  the  b's,  „               423 

and  on  the  o's  a  shield  Showing  Last  Tournament  432 

and  the  wind  among  the  b's.  „                489 

shot  forth  B's  on  each  side,  Lover's  Tale  i  230 
beechen  b's  Of  our  New  Forest.                            Sisters  {£.  and  ^.)  112 

Look,  he  stands,  Trunk  and  6,  The  Oak  14 
Bought  {See  also  Bowt)    have  b  A  mansion 

incorruptible.  Deserted  House  20 

B  Annie  goods  and  stores,  and  set  Enoch  Arden  169 

b  them  needful  books,  and  everyway,  ,,           332 

b  Quaint  monsters  for  the  market  of  those  times,  ,,           538 

We  b  the  farm  we  tenanted  before.  The  Brook  222 

B  ?  what  is  it  he  cannot  buy  ?  Maud  I  xS2 

sold  and  sold  had  b  them  bread  :  Marr.  of  Geraint  641 

who  b  me  for  his  slave :  Tlie  Flight  19 

Boulder    found  a  glen,  gray  b  and  black  tarn.  Laiicelot  and  E.  36 
Bound  (adj.)    {See  also  China-bound,  Seaward-bound) 

^  on  a  matter  he  of  life  and  death :  Sea  Dreanis  151 

'  Was  he  so  J,  poor  soul  ? '  ,,           169 

B  for  the  Hall,  I  am  sure  was  he :  Maud  1  x  25 

B  for  the  Hall,  and  I  think  for  a  bride.  ,,        26 

'  B  upon  a  quest  With  horse  and  arms —  Gareth  and  L.  708 

i5  on  a  foray,  rolling  eyes  of  prey,  Get'aint  and  E.  538 

B  upon  solitary  adventure,  Pellea*  and  E.  275 

Whither  are  you  b  ?    For  Naples  The  Ring  57 

Bound  (limit)     make  The  b's  of  freedom  wider  yet  To  the  Qiieen  32 

Transgress  his  ample  b  to  some  new  crown : —  Poland  8 

And  mete  the  b's  of  hate  and  love —  Two  Voices  135 

Beyond  the  utmost  b  of  human  thought.  Ulysses  32 

You  that  have  dared  to  break  our  b.  Princess  iv  539 

And  music  in  the  b's  of  law,  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  34 

And  strike  his  being  into  b's,  „            Con.  124 

b's  of  heaven  and  earth  were  lost —  Com.  of  Arthv,r  372 

shun  to  break  those  b's  of  courtesy  Ijtncelot  and  E.  1220 

Drew  from  before  Sir  Tristram  to  the  b's.  Last  Tournament  185 

Back  to  the  sunset  b  of  Lyonnesse —  Pass,  of  Arthur  81 
charged  the  winds  With  spiced  May-sweets 

from  h  to  b.  Lover's  Tale  i  318 

Nor  understandest  b  nor  boundlessness,  Ancient  Sage  48 

and  the  b's  Determining  concession  ;  To  Duke  of  A  r^yll  2 

Narrowing  the  b's  of  night.'  Prog,  of  Spring  91 

all  the  b's  of  earth.  Far-far-away  ?  Far-far-away  14 

I  spy  nor  term  nor  b,  Mechanophilus  20 

Bound  (spring)    but  a  single  b,  and  with  a  sweep  Geraint  and  E.  727 

Bound  (verb)     wild  winds  b  within  their  cell,  Mariana  54 

Two  lives  b  fast  in  one  Circumstance  5 

Sleep  had  b  her  in  his  rosy  band,  Caress'd  or  chidden  6 

Art  thou  so  J  To  men,  Two  Voices  109 

Which  only  to  one  engine  b  ,,           347 


Bound  (verb)  (coidmued)  In  front  they  b  the  sheaves.  Palace  of  Art  7S 
earth  is  every  way  B  by  gold  chains  M.  d' Arthur  255 
'  I  am  6 :  you  have  my  promise—  Enoch  Arden  437 
I  am  always  b  to  you,  but  you  are  free.'  ,,  450" 
Annie  weeping  answer'd  '  I  am  6.'  451 
she  knew  that  she  was  b —  462 
B  in  an  immemorial  intimacy,  Aylmer's  Field  39 
nor  by  plight  or  broken  ring  B,  ,,  136 
you  think  me  b  In  some  sort.  Princes  i  158 
given  us  letters,  was  he  b  to  speak  ?  ,,  181 
y  6  by  precontract  Your  bride,  ,,  iv  541 
each  beside  his  chariot  b  his  own  ;  Spec,  of  Iliad  3 
lost  the  links  that  b  Thy  changes  ;  hi  Mem.  xli  6 
Had  b  us  one  to  the  other,  Maud  I  scix  38 
B  them  by  so  strait  vows  to  his  own  self,  Com.  of  Arthur  262 
vows,  as  is  a  shame  A  man  should  not  be  6  by,  Gareth  and  L.  271 
b  my  lord  to  cast  him  in  the  mere,'  ,,  803 
'  jS  am  I  to  right  the  wrong'd,  ,,  804 
straitlier  6  am  I  to  bide  with  thee.'  ,,  805 
I  6  to  thee  for  any  favour  ask'd  ! '  ,,  977 
b  the  suits  Of  armour  on  their  horses,  Geraint  and  E.  96 
6  them  on  their  horses,  each  on  each,  ,,  182 
B  are  they  To  speak  no  evil.  Balin  and  Balan  145 
Arthur  b  them  not  to  singleness  Merlin  and  V.  28 
They  b  to  holy  vows  of  chastity  !  ,,  695 
then  he  b  Her  token  on  his  helmet,  Lancelot  and  E.  373 
but  free  love  will  not  be  6.'  ,,  1379 
'Free  love,  so  b,  were  freest,'  ,,  1380 
bright  boy-knight,  and  b  it  on  him,  Holy  Grail  156 
'  All  men,  to  one  so  b  by  such  a  vow,  „  565 
Seized  him,  and  b  and  plunged  him  into  a  cell  ,,  675 
Give  ye  the  slave  mine  order  to  be  b,  Pelleas  and  E.  270 
rose  up,  and  b,  and  brought  him  in.  ,,  288 
Not  to  be  b,  save  by  white  bonds  ,,  353 
and  b  his  horse  Hard  by  the  gates.  ,,  413 
B  on  her  brow,  were  Gawain  and  Ettarre.  , ,  435 
the  King  hath  b  And  sworn  me  to  this  brother- 
hood ;  ,,448 
earth  is  every  way  B  by  gold  chains  Pass,  of  Arthur  423 
So  Z»  to  me  by  common  love  and  loss —  Lover's  Tale  iv  345 
Harry  was  b  to  the  Dorsetshire  farm  First  Quarrel  19 
only  done  my  duty  as  a  man  is  6  to  do :  The  Revenge  102 
I  had  not  6  myself  by  words,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  137 
I  was  b  to  her  ;  I  could  not  free  myself  ,,  160 
b  Not  by  the  sounded  letter  of  the  word,  ,,  161 
broken  chain  that  b  me  to  my  kind.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  52 
the  laughing  shepherd  b  with  flowers  ;  "  To  Virgil  16 
b  to  follow,  wherever  she  go  Stark-naked,  Dead  Prophet  45 
for  twenty  years  B  by  the  golden  cord  The  Ring  429 
Bound    See  also  Brow-bound,  Charm-bound 

Boundary    Close  at  the  b  of  the  liberties ;  Princess  i  172 

Bounded    motions  &  in  a  shallower  brain :  Lockdey  Hall  150 

a  spirit  b  and  poor  ;  Maud  I  iv  38 

Death's  dark  war-horse  b  forward  Gareth  and  L.  1401 

Then  6  forward  to  the  castle  walls,  PeUeas  and  E.  363 

6  forth  and  vanish 'd  thro' the  night.  ,,            487 

Seeing  it  is  not  b  save  by  love.'  Last  Tournament  703 
Bounden  {See  also  Long-bounden,  Promise-bounden) 

and  lying  b  there  In  darkness  Hdy  Grail  676 

those  he  overthrew  Be  b  straight,  Pelleas  and  E.  236 

but  thrust  him  6  out  of  door.  ,,            314 

Thus  to  be  6,  so  to  see  her  face,  ,,            326 

tho' she  hath  me  6  but  in  spite,  ,,            329 

Let  me  be  b,  I  shall  see  her  face  ;  ,,            331 

Bounding    b  forward  '  Leave  them  to  the  wolves.'     Bcdin  and  Balan  588 

Boundless    Feels  that  the  deep  is  h,  Ancient  Sage  192 

Sent  the  shadow  of  Himself,  the  b,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  211 

B  inward,  in  the  atom,  b  outward,  „                212 

Boundlessness    Nor  understandest  bound  nor  &,  Ancient  Sage  i8 

Bounteous     Of  whom  were  any  b,  merciful,  Gareth  and  L.  423 

Bounteous  Isle    And  we  came  to  the  B  I,  V.  of  Maeldune  83 

Till  we  hated  the  B  I  and  the  sunbright  hand  , ,             92 

Bounteously    b  made.  And  yet  so  finely,  Aylmer's  Field  74 

Bountiful    Spare  not  now  to  be  b,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  29 

B,  beautiful,  apparell'd  gay,  Prog,  of  Spring  62 


Bounty 


54 


Boy 


Bounty    God  only  thro'  his  b  hath  thought  fit,  St.  S.  Stylites  186 

Here  he  lives  in  state  and  b,  L.  of  Burleigh  57 

Or  Heaven  in  lavish  b  moulded,  grew.  Aylmer's  Field  107 

Bourg    Ye  think  the  rustic  cackle  of  your  b  Marr,  of  Geraint  276 

They  take  the  rustic  murmur  of  their  b  „  419 

Boum-Boume    and  rang  Beyond  the  bourn  of  sunset;  PriTicess,  Con.  100 
from  out  our  bourne  of  Time  and  Place  Grossing  the  Bar  13 

Bovadilla    B,  one  As  ignorant  and  impolitic  Columbus  127 

Bow  (respectful  inclination)    0  the  formal  mocking  b,        Tite  Flight  29 

Bow  (an  instrument)    spirit  ever  strung  Like  a  new  b,  Kate  11 

Bow  (rainbow)    great  ft  will  waver  in  the  sun,  Palace  of  Art  ^Z  • 

And  every  dew-drop  paints  a  b,  In  Mem.  cxxii  18 

For  there  beyond  a  bridge  of  treble  b,  Gareth  and  L.  1086 

Bow  (part  of  a  ship)    figure-head  Stared  o'er  the  ripple 

feathering  from  her  b's :  Enoch  Arden  544 

huge  sea-castles  heaving  upon  the  weather  b.  The  Revenge  24 

Bow  (b)    See  Foam-bow,  Saddle-bow,  Torrent-bow 

Bow  (verb)    B  myself  down,  where  thou  hast  knelt,   Supp.  Confessions  80 
B  down  one  thousand  and  two  hundred  St.  S.  Stylites  111 

gay  domestic  B's  before  him  at  the  door.  L,  of  Burleigh  48 

as  when  a  field  of  corn  B's  all  its  ears  Prirvcess  i  237 

She  Vs,  she  bathes  the  Saviour's  feet  In  Mem.  xxxii  11 

cheeks  drop  in  ;  the  body  Vs  Man  dies :  ,,  xxxio  3 

made  him  flush,  and  b  Lowly,  to  kiss  his  hand,         Gareth  and  L.  548 
0  ay — the  winds  that  b  the  grass  !  Last  ToM-nament  735 

To  thee,  dead  wood,  I  b  not  head  nor  knees.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  128 

Bow-back'd    supporters  on  a  shield,  B-b  with  fear :  Princess  vi  359 

Bow'd    Like  Thine  own  mother's  when  she  b  Above 

Thee,  Siipp.  Confessions  23 

A  group  of  Houris  b  to  see  The  dying  Islamite,  Palace  of  Art  102 

power  in  his  eye  That  b  the  will.  M.  d' Arthur  123 

She  b  upon  her  hands,  Dora  103 

She  6  down  her  head,  ,,     105 

She  b  down  And  wept  in  secret ;  ,,     107 

My  knees  are  6  in  crypt  and  shrine :  Sir  Galaliad  18 

Enoch  as  a  brave  God-fearing  man  B  himself  down,  Ihioch  Arden  186 
Enoch  was  so  brown,  so  b,  So  broken —  ,,  703 

'  My  Grod  has  b  me  down  to  what  I  am  ;  „  856 

b  her  state  to  them,  that  they  might  grow  Princess  ii  166 

She  6  as  if  to  veil  a  noble  tear ;  ,,       Hi  289 

handmaid  on  each  side  B  toward  her,  ,,        iv  276 

j8  on  her  palms  and  folded  up  from  wrong,  ,,  288 

She  b,  she  set  the  child  on  the  earth  ;  „        vi  120 

thine  own  land  has  b  to  Tartar  hordes  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  23 

save  Thy  sailor, — while  thy  head  is  6,  In  Mem.  vi  14 

When  have  I  6  to  her  father,  Maiid  I  iv  13 

not  to  her  brother  lb;  I  6  to  his  lady-sister  ,,  14 

the  budded  peaks  of  the  wood  are  b  „         vi  i 

redden 'd  her  cheek  When  I  6  to  her  ,,     xix  66 

Gareth  b  himself  With  all  obedience  Gareth  and  L.  487 

Low  b  the  tributary  Prince,  Marr.  of  Geraint  174 

with  back  tum'd,  and  b  above  his  work,  ,,  267 

lifted  adoring  eyes,  B  at  her  side  Geraint  and  E.  305 

b  the  all-amorous  Earl,  ,,  360 

low  b  the  Prince,  and  felt  His  work  ,,  920 

h  black  knees  Of  homage.  Merlin  and  V.  577 

then  b  his  homage,  bluntly  saying.  Last  Tournament  206 

he  b  to  kiss  the  jewell'd  throat,  ,,  751 

and  b  down  upon  her  hands  Silent,  Guinevere  158 

and  b  her  head  nor  spake.  ,,  310 

power  in  his  eye  That  b  the  will.  Pass,  of  Arthur  291 

B  the  spoiler.  Bent  the  Scotsman,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  20 

b  myself  down  as  a  slave  to  his  intellectual  throne.  The  Wreck  66 

Edith  b  her  stately  head,  T/ie  Tourney  13 

Edith  Montfort  6  her  head,  ,,  15 

Bower  (See  also  Oarden-bower,  Tree-bower)  Creeping 
thro'  blossomy  rushes  and  b's  of  rose-blowing 
bushes.  Leonine  Eleg.  3 

day  Was  sloping  toward  his  western  6.  Mariana  80 

Dwelling  amid  these  yellowing  b's :  A  spirit  haunts  2 

Youngest  Autumn,  in  a  6  Grape-thicken'd  Ele&n&re  35 

Then  to  the  b  they  came,  .  (Enone  94 

they  came  to  that  smooth-swarded  &,  ,,      95 

And  I  was  left  alone  within  the  b;  „     192 

honeysuckle  round  the  porch  has  wov'n  its  wavy  b's,       May  Queen  29 


Bower  (continued)     Leaving  the  promise  of  my 

bridal  ft,  D.  of  F.  Wometi2\S 

bulk  Of  mellow  brickwork  on  an  isle  of  b's.  Edwin  Mmris  12 

Pursue  thy  loves  among  the  b's  Talking  Oah  199 

Droops  the  heavy-blossom'd  6,  Locksley  Hall  163 

Then  fled  she  to  her  inmost  b,  Godiva  42 

but  even  then  she  gain'd  Her  b;  ,,77 
The  peacock  in  his  laurel  b,                                  Day-Dm,,  Sleep.  P.  15 

From  havens  hid  in  fairy  b's.  The  Voyage  54 
she  moved  To  meet  me,  winding  under  woodbine  b's,       Tlie  Brook  88 

from  a  6  of  vine  and  honeysuckle :  Aylmer's  Fidd  156 

broader-grown  the  b's  Drew  the  great  night  Princess  vii  48 

music,  0  bird,  in  the  new-budded  b's  !  W.  to  Aleocandra  11 

Or  walks  in  Boboli's  ducal  b's.  The  Daisy  44 

and  make  her  a  b  All  of  flowers,  Window,  At  Uie  W.  5 

-  V  out  of  her  &  All  of  flowers,  ,,                  12 

light  Dies  off  at  once  from  b  and  hall.  In  Mem.  viii  6 

That  sweeps  with  all  its  autumn  6's,  ,,         a;4 10 

have  clothed  their  branchy  b's  With  fifty  Mays,  ,,     Ixxvi  13 

With  thy  lost  friend  among  the  6's,  ,,        m  15 

glowing  like  the  moon  Of  Eden  on  its  bridal  6 :  ,,     Co?i.  28 

And  tends  upon  bed  and  b,  Mavd  I  xiv  4 

out  of  b  and  casement  shyly  glanced  Gareth  and  L.  313 

walk  of  lilies  crost  it  to  the  b :  Balin  and  Balan  243 

long  white  walk  of  lilies  toward  the  b.  „             249 

and  Balin  started  from  his  b,  „              280 

Kemembering  that  dark  b  at  Camelot,  ,,              526 

'  Had  ye  not  held  your  Lancelot  in  your  b,  Pelleas  and  E.  182 

spied  not  any  light  in  hall  or  6,  ,,           419 

In  her  high  b  the  Queen,  Working  a  tapestry.  Last  Tournament  128 

then  slowly  to  her  b  Parted,  ,,               238 

Thro'  many  a  league-long  b  he  rode.  „                374 

saw  The  great  Queen's  b  was  dark, —  „               758 

in  thy  b's  of  Camelot  or  of  Usk  Guinevere  503 

vanish'd  from  my  sight  Beneath  the  b  Lover's  Tale  ii  43 

they  were  swallow'd  in  the  leafy  b's,  „        Hi  57 

All  the  b's  and  the  flowers.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  10 

Fainting  flowers,  faded  b's,  „                11 

Over  all  the  woodland's  flooded  b's,  „               20 

piping  underneath  his  beechen  b's  ;  To  Virgil  14 

wealth  of  tropic  b  and  brake  ;  To  Ulysses  37 
Bower'd  (See  also  Close-bower'd)    garden  b  close  With 

plaited  alleys  of  the  trailing  rose,  Ode  to  Memory  105 

Bower-eaves    Look  out  below  your  b-e,  Margaret  66 

A  BOW-SHOT  from  her  b-e,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  1 

Boweth    Earthward  he  b  the  heavy  stalks  A  spirit  haunts  7 

Bowing    Approved  him,  b  at  their  own  deserts :  The  Brook  128 

and  6  o'er  the  brook  A  tonsured  head  ,,         199 

She  spoke,  and  b  waved  Dismissal :  Princess  ii  99 

b  over  him.  Low  to  her  own  heart  Marr.  of  Geraint  84 

b  lowly  down  before  thee,  Altar's  D.,  Hymn  3 

Bowl    (See  also  Wassail-bowl)    Nor  robb'd  the  farmer  of 

his  h  of  cream  :  Princess  v  223 

Nor  b  of  wassail  mantle  warm  ;  In  Mem.  cv  18 

fling  free  alms  into  the  beggar's  b,  Ancient  Sage  260 

BowI'd    a  herd  of  boys  with  clamour  b  Princess,  Pro.  81 

Bowl-shaped    saw,  B-s,  thro'  tops  of  many  thousand 

pines  Gareth  and  L.  796 
Bowman    See  Master-bowman 

Bow-shot    A  B-s  from  her  bower-eaves,  L.  of  Slmlott  Hi  1 

Bow-string     His  b-s  slacken'd,  languid  Love,  Eleanore  117 
Bowt  (bought)     An'  'e  b  owd  money,  es  wouldn't  goa.        Village  Wife  49 

An'  'e  b  little  statues  all-naakt  „            50 

Box  (a  case)    (See  also  Deal-box)    A  long  green  &  of 

mignonette.  Miller's  D.  83 

and  the  b  of  mignonette.  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  -£.48 

May  bind  a  book,  may  line  a  b.  In  Mem.  Ixxvii  6 

Box  (compartment)     Old  b'es,  larded  with  the  steam         Will  Water.  223 

Shall  call  thee  from  the  b'es.  ,,         240 

Box  (boxful)  'e  snifft  up  a  6  in  a  daiiy,  Village  Wife  40 

Box  (a  shrub)    breath  Of  the  fading  edges  of  i!* 

beneath,  A  spirit  haunts  19 
Boy    (See  also  Cupid-boys,  Orphan-boy)    A  merry  b 

in  sun  and  shade  ?  Two  Voices  321 

'  A  merry  b  they  call'd  him  then,  m         322 


Boy 


55 


Bracken-roott 


Boy  (contimied)    To  be  the  long  and  listless  S  Late-left 
My  mother  thought,  What  ails  the  b  ? 
'  No  fair  Hebrew  b  Shall  smile  away 
'  You  will  not,  b  !  you  dare  to  answer  thus  ! 
there  was  born  a  6  To  William  ; 
Mary  sat  And  look'd  with  tears  upon  her  b, 
let  me  take  the  b, 

he  may  see  the  b,  And  bless  him  for  the  sake 
Well— for  I  will  take  the  b  ; 
So  saying,  he  took  the  b  that  cried  aloud 
the  b's  cry  came  to  her  from  the  field, 
Mary  saw  the  b  Was  not  with  Dora. 
Dora  said,  '  My  uncle  took  the  b  ; 
now  I  think,  he  shall  not  have  the  b, 
I  will  have  my  b,  and  bring  him  home  ; 
b  set  up  betwixt  his  grandsire's  knees, 
but  when  the  b  beheld  His  mother, 
now,  Sir,  let  me  have  my  b, 
and  with  his  b  Betwixt  his  knees, 
was  as  a  6  Destructive, 
So  seems  she  to  the  b. 
Eager-hearted  as  a  6  when  first  he  leaves 
heart  of  existence  beat  for  ever  like  a  b's  ? 
A  something-pottle-bodied  b 
O  well  for  the  fisherman's  b, 
two  years  after  came  a  6  to  be  The  rosy  idol 
Now  let  me  put  the  b  and  girl  to  school : 
Philip  put  the  b  and  girl  to  school, 
the  youngest,  hardly  more  than  b, 
like  her  mother,  and  the  b,  my  son.' 
Prattling  the  primrose  fancies  of  the  b, 
So  much  the  b  foreran ; 
b  might  get  a  notion  into  him  ; 
girl  and  b,  Sir,  know  their  differences  ! ' 
Last  he  said,  '  B,  mark  me ! 
'  B,  should  I  find  you  by  my  doors 
twenty  b's  and  girls  should  marry  on  it, 
a  herd  of  b's  with  clamour  bowl'd 
embower  the  nest,  Some  6  would  spy  it.' 
daughter  and  his  housemaid  were  the  b's : 
'  Wretched  b,  How  saw  you  not  the  inscription 
With  me.  Sir,  enter'd  in  the  bigger  b, 
'  Poor  b,'  she  said,  '  can  he  not  read — 
when  a  b,  you  stoop'd  to  me  From  aU  high  places, 
more  Than  growing  b's  their  manhood  ; 
As  b's  that  slink  From  ferule 
B,  when  I  hear  you  prate  I  almost  think 
B,  there's  no  rose  that's  half  so  dear 
idle  b's  are  cowards  to  their  shame, 
•  B's  ! '  shriek'd  the  old  king, 
rout  of  saucy  b's  Brake  on  us  at  our  books, 
B,  The  bearing  and  the  training  of  a  child 
The  little  b's  begin  to  shoot  and  stab, 
Among  six  b's,  head  under  head. 
Godfather,  come  and  see  your  b : 
'  0  b,  tho'  thou  art  young  and  proud. 
We  give  them  the  b.' 
Cut  the  Roman  b  to  pieces  in  his  lust 
For  they  controU'd  me  when  a  b  ; 
A  sober  man,  among  his  b's, 
When  he  was  little  more  than  b, 
and  b's  of  thine  Had  babbled  '  Uncle '  on  my  knee  ; 
and  b's  That  crash'd  the  glass  and  beat  the  floor  ; 
And  like  an  inconsiderate  b, 
b  Will  have  plenty :  so  let  it  be,'  (repeat) 
Read  with  a  b's  delight, 
To  take  a  wanton  dissolute  b  For  a  man 
so  the  b.  Sweet  mother,  neither  clomb, 
ye  are  yet  more  b  than  man.' 
the  b  Is  noble-natured. 
the  b  Was  half  beyond  himself  for  ecstasy, 
the  might  and  breath  of  twenty  b's.' 
Issued  the  bright  face  of  a  blooming  b 
fears  And  horrors  only  proven  a  blooming  b. 
'  B,'  said  he,  '  I  have  eaten  all. 


Miller's  D.  33 

93 

D.  of  F.  IFo»«CTi213 

Dora  26 

„     48 

„     57 

„     66 

„     69 

„     99 

„  101 

„  104 

„  111 

„  114 

„  119 

„  122 

„  131 

»  137 

„  152 

Walk,  to  tlie  Mail  40 

81 

Talking  Oak  108 

Locksley  Hall  112 

„  140 

Will  Water.  131 

Break,  break,  etc.  5 

Enoch  Arden  89 

312 

„        331 

563 

791 

The  Brook  19 

Aylmer's  Field  80 

271 

274 

„  300 

324 

371 

Princess,  Pro.  81 

148 

i  190 

a  193 

404 

m214 

ivA3Q 

457 

v21 

152 

159 

309 

328 

394 

464 

,,         Con.  61 

83 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  2 

SaiZor  Boy  7 

The  Victim  40 

Bo&dicea  66 

In  Mem,  xxviii  18 

liii  2 

Ixii  6 

Ixxxiv  12 

locxxvii  19 

cxxii  14 

Maud  I  vii  7,  15 

10 

„  X  58 

Oareth  and  L.  55 

„  98 

467 

„  523 

1106 

1408 

1425 

Germnt  and  E.  217 


Boy  {continued)     '  I  take  it  as  free  gift,  then,'  said 
the  b, 

b  return'd  And  told  them  of  a  chamber, 

bone  Seems  to  be  pluck'd  at  by  the  village  b's 

as  a  &  lame-born  beneath  a  height, 

old  sun-worship,  b,  will  rise  again, 

Hither,  b — and  mark  me  well. 

'  Live  on,  Sir  B,'  she  cried. 

men  and  b's  astride  On  wyvern,  lion, 

beauty  of  her  flesh  abash  d  the  b, 

as  the  wholesome  mothers  tell  their  b's. 

b  Paused  not,  but  overrode  him,  shouting, 

on  whom  the  b,  Across  the  silent  seeded  meadow-grass        , ,  560 

thronging  fancies  come  To  b's  and  girls  Lover's  Tale  i  555 

so  love  that  men  and  b's  may  say, 

that  day  a  b  was  born,  Heir  of  his  face  and  land, 

Another,  if  the  b  were  hers  : 

But  the  b  was  born  i'  trouble, 

the  b  can  hold  up  his  head, 

The  b  was  born  in  wedlock, 

He  fought  the  b's  that  were  rude, 

I  was  near  my  time  wi'  the  b, 

But  say  nothing  hard  of  my  b, 

I  kiss'd  my  b  in  the  prison, 

hear  that  cry  of  my  b  that  was  dead, 

But  I  go  to-night  to  my  b, 

For  I  cared  so  much  for  my  b  that  the  Lord 

if  my  b  be  gone  to  the  fire  ? 

and  gain  her  then :  no  wavering,  b  ! 

for  all  that,  my  b,  Some  birds  are  sick 

boooks  wur  gone  an'  'is  b  wur  dead. 

Here  was  a  b — I  am  sure  that  some  of  our 
children 
•»   Here  was  a  6  in  the  ward, 

what !  the  kingly,  kindly  b  ; 

thou  comest,  darling  b  ;  Our  own  ; 

Down  yon  dark  sea,  thou  comest,  darling  b. 

To  younger  England  in  the  b  my  son. 

said  to  me  '  Pity  it  isn't  a  b. ' 

for  oft  On  me,  when  6,  there  came 

what  had  he  lost,  the  b  ? 

For  the  b's  wor  about  her  agin 

a  bouncin'  b  an'  a  gell. 

Thou  alone,  my  b,  of  Amy's  kin 

a  shatter'd  wheel  ?  a  vicious  b 

Not  there  to  bid  my  6  farewell, 

haunt  him  when  a  b,  Far-far-away  ? 

Turn'd  him  again  to  b,  for  up  he  sprang, 

that  the  b  never  cried  again. 

birthday  came  of  a  6  born  happily  dead. 
Boyhood    Then,  in  the  b  of  the  year. 

Sweet  love  on  pranks  of  saucy  b : 

One  whispers,  '  Here  thy  b  sung  Long  since 

Wander'd  back  to  living  b  while  I  heard 

Eyes  that  lured  a  doting  b 

Feed  the  budding  rose  of  b 

I  was  then  in  early  b, 


Oeraint  and  E.  222 

260 

560 

Balin  and  Balan  164 

457 

502 

584 

Holy  Grail  349 

Pdleas  and  E.  78 

197 

544 


756 

„         iv  128 

332 

First  Qiuirrel  2 

..  5 

6 

14 
82 
Rizpah  22 
23 
45 
74 
75 
78 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  39 

72 

Village  Wife  87 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  11 

13 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  88 

De  Prof.  Tioo  G.  10 

34 

To  Victor  Hugo  14 

The  Wreck  34 

Ancient  Sage  217 

227 

TomoiTOW  43 

Spinster's  S's.  82 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  56 

215 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  42 

Far-far-away  8 

St.  Telemachus  68 

Bandit's  Death  28 

Charity  34 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  19 

Princess  vii  344 

In  Mem.  cii  9 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  3 

10 

143 

258 


Boy-knight    saw  the  bright  b-k,  and  bound  it  on  him,         Holy  Grail  156 


Boy-love    this  b-l  of  yours  with  mine. 
Boy -phrase    my  b-p  '  The  Passion  of  the  Past.' 
Braaln  (brain)    moor  sense  i'  one  o'  'is  legs  nor 
in  all  thy  b's. 

'  Sottin'  thy  b's  Guzzlin'  an'  soakin' 
Brace    b  Of  twins  may  weed  her  of  her  folly. 

and  then  against  his  6  Of  comrades. 
Braced    Had  b  my  purpose  to  declare  myself : 
Bracelet    With  b's  of  the  diamond  bright : 
Bracelet-bestower    B-b  and  Baron  of  Barons, 
Bracken    when  the  6  rusted  on  their  crags, 

Nowt  at  all  but  b  an'  fuzz, 

Breast-high  in  that  bright  line  of  b  stood : 

Among  our  heath  and  b. 

When  I  look'd  at  the  b  so  bright 

As  the  green  of  the  b  amid  the  gloom 
Bracken-roofb    Furze-cramm'd,  and  b-r, 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  6 
Ancient  Sage  219 

N.  Fanner,  N.S.  4 

North.  Cobbler  23 

Princess  v  463 

Geraint  and  E.  87 

Sisters  [E.  and  E.)  143 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  14 

Batt.  of  Brtinanburh  3 

Edwin  Moi-ris  100 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  38 

Pelleas  and  E.  56 

The  Ring  318 

June  Bracken,  etc.  3 

9 

Last  Tournament  377 


Bracket 


56 


Branch 


Bracket    statuette  Of  my  dear  Mother  on  your  b  here —       Tlie  Ring  110 

Brag  (s)    Said  Gareth,  '  Old,  and  over-bold  in  h  !  Gareth  and  L.  1107 

Brag  (verb)     h  to  his  fellow  rakes  of  his  conquest  Charity  18 

Bragging    armies  so  broken  A  reason  for  b  Batt.  of  Bmnanhurh  83 

Brahmin    J5,*and  Buddhist,  Christian,  and  Parsee,         Akbar's  Dream  25 

Braid    wound  Her  looser  hair  in  b,  Oordener's  I).  158 

fire-flies  tangled  in  a  silver  b.  Locksley  Hcdl  10 

Forth  streaming  from  a  6  of  pearl :  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  6 

Blowing  the  ringlet  from  the  b  :  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  39 

the  b  Slipt  and  uncoil'd  itself,  Ma-lin  and  V.  888 

Braided    {See  also  Vapour -braided)    b  thereupon  All 

the  devices  blazon'd  iMiicelot  and  E.  8 

precious  crystal  into  which  I  b  Edwin's  hair  !  The  Flight  34 

Brain  (See  (dso  Bra&in,  Full-brain,  Half-brain)  ai-ms, 

or  power  of  b,  w  birth  To  the  Queen  3 

Right  to  the  heart  and  b,  tho'  undescried,  Isabel  22 

From  the  6  of  the  purple  mountain  Poet's  Mwid  29 
falling  axe  did  part  The  burning  b  from  the  true  heart,     Margarei  39 

A  random  arrow  from  the  b.  Two  Voices  345 

From  some  odd  corner  of  the  b.  Miller's  D.  68 

In  my  dry  b  my  spirit  soon,  Fatima  26 

Devil,  large  in  heart  and  b,  To — With  Pal.  of  Art  5 

great  thought  strikes  along  the  b,  D.  of  F.  Women  43 

dawn's  creeping  beams,  Stol'n  to  my  b,  ,,              262 

Drawn  from  the  spirit  thro'  the  b,  To  ./.  S.  38 

nourish  a  blind  life  within  the  b,  M.  d' Arthur  251 

Simeon,  whose  b  the  sunshine  bakes  ;  Si.  S.  Stylites  164 

Better  the  narrow  b,  the  stony  heart,  Love  and  Duty  15 

mist  of  tears,  that  weigh'd  Upon  my  b,  ,,44 

that  his  b  is  overwrought :  Locksley  Hall  53 

blinder  motions  bounded  in  a  shallower  6  :  ,,         150 

On  secrets  of  the  b,  the  stars,  Day-Dm.,  L'Fnvoi  11 

Which  bears  a  season'd  b  about.  Will  Water,  85 

were  scatter'd  Blood  and  b's  of  men.  The  Captain  48 

Beating  it  in  upon  his  weary  b,  Enoch  Arden  796 

tickling  the  brute  b  within  the  man's  Lucretius  21 

but  as  his  b  Began  to  mellow,  Princess  i  179 

Besides  the  b  was  like  the  hand,  ,,      ii  150 

Then  while  I  dragg'd  my  b's  for  such  a  song,  ,,      iv  154 

Whose  b's  are  in  their  hands  and  in  their  heels,  ,,          518 

upon  whose  hand  and  heart  and  b  ikle  on  Well.  239 

Perchance,  to  charm  a  vacant  b,  Tfie  Daiij/  106 

dash  the  b's  of  the  little  one  out,  Boadicea  68 

But,  for  the  unquiet  heart  and  b,  In  Mem.  v  5 

And  marvel  what  possess'd  my  ft  ;  ,,   xivl6 

I  make  a  picture  in  the  b;  ,,   Ixxx  9 

As  but  the  canker  of  the  6  ;  ,,    xcii  3 

Pallas  from  the  b  Of  Demons?  ,,  cxiv  12 

I  think  we  are  not  wholly  b,  „     ca!:x  2 

And  like  is  darken'd  in  the  6.  ,,    cxxi  8 
would  not  marvel  at  either,  but  keep  a  temperate  b  ;       Maud  I  iv  40 

What  was  it ?  a  lying  trick  of  the  6 ?  ,,      Hi  37 

Is  a  juggle  born  of  the  6  ?  ,,          ii  42 

'Tis  the  blot  upon  the  6  That  wi^^  show  ,,          ivQO 

Beat  into  my  scalp  and  my  b,  ,,           v  10 

So  dark  a  forethought  roU'd  about  his  b.  Merlin  and  V,  230 

may  make  My  scheming  b  a  cinder,  ,,            933 

Skip  to  the  broken  music  of  my  b's  Last  Tournament  258 

'  Save  for  that  broken  music  in  thy  b's,  ,,            267 

and  clove  him  thro'  the  b.  ,,            754 

nourish  a  blind  life  within  the  b.  Pass,  of  Arthur  419 

springing  from  her  fountains  in  the  b,  Lover's  Tale  i  83 

clear  brow,  bulwark  of  the  precious  b,  ,,         130 

Past  thro' into  his  citadel,  the  6,  ,,        631 

O'erbore  the  limits  of  my  b:  „        689 

meaning  of  the  letters  shot  into  My  6  ;  ,,        ii9 

In  my  b  The  spirit  seem'd  to  flag  ,,          50 

thro'  my  eyes  into  my  innermost  b,  ,,          95 

Flatter'd  the  fancy  of  my  fading  6  ;  ,,        107 

love  is  of  the  b,  the  mind,  the  soul :  ,,    i'"  156 

her  b  broke  With  over-acting,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  235 

My  b  had  begun  to  reel —  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  60 

brute  bullet  broke  thro"  the  b  Def.  of  Lucknow  20 

For  I  am  emptier  than  a  friar's  b's ;  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  7 

rang  into  the  heart  and  tho  h,  V.  of  Maeldune  110 


Brain  (continued)    My  h  is  full  of  the  crash  of  wrecks.  The  Wreck  4 

for  my  b  was  drunk  with  the  water,  Despair  65 

statesman's  b  that  sway'd  the  past  Ancient  Sage  134 
Set  the  feet  above  the  b  and  swear  the  b  is  in 

the  feet.  _  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  l^Q 

oust  the  madness  from  your  b.  ,,              241 
Works  of  subtle  b  and  hand,                             Open.  I,  and  C.  EyJiib.  7 

'  Beat  little  heart '  on  this  fool  b  of  mine.  Romney's  R.  155 

Who  was  a  shadow  in  the  b,  Mechanoj>hilus  15 

Brain-feverouB    B-fm  his  heat  and  agony,  Lancelot  and  E.  854 

Brain-labour    And  prodigal  of  all  b-l  he,  Aylmer's  Field  447 

Brainless    Insolent,  b,  heartless !  ,,             368 

Brainpan    Than  if  my  b  were  an  empty  hull.  Princess  ii  398 
Brake  (s)    Close-matted,  bur  and  b  and  briar,          Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  46 
gloom  Of  evening  over  b  and  bloom  And  meadow.     In  Mem,  Ixxxvi  3 

And  bristles  all  the  b's  and  thorns  ,,            cvii  9 

In  every  wavering  b  an  ambuscade.  Geraint  and  E.  51 

'  How  far  thro'  all  the  bloom  and  b  Ancient  Sage  19 

wealth  of  tropic  bower  and  b  ;  To  Ulysses  37 

downy  drift  against  the  b's,  Prog,  of  Spring  27 

Brake  (verb)    at  their  feet  the  crocus  b  like  fire,  (Enone  96 

B  with  a  blast  of  trumpets  from  the  gate.  Princess,  Pro.  42 

from  my  breast  the  involuntary  sigh /J,  ,,          iii  192 

over  brow  And  cheek  and  bosom  b  the  wrathful  bloom     , ,  iv  383 

titter,  out  of  which  there  b  On  all  sides,  ,,               v\Q 

a  rout  of  saucy  boys  B  on  us  at  our  books,  ,,               395 

then  b  out  my  sire.  Lifting  his  grim  head  ,,           vi  271 

For  on  them  b  the  sudden  foe  ;  Tlie  Victim  4 

Suddenly  from  him  b  his  wife,  „        70 

No  spirit  ever  b  the  band  That  stays  him  In  Mem.  xciii  2 

fires  of  Hell  b  out  of  thy  rising  sun,  Maud  II  i  9 

b  on  him,  till,  amazed.  He  knew  not  whither  Com.  of  Arthur  39 

they  swerved  and  6  Flying,  ,,             119 

great  lords  Banded,  and  so  b  o\it  in  open  war.'  ,,             237 
neither  clomb,  nor  b  his  neck.  But  6  his  very  heart 

in  pining  for  it,  Gareth  and  L.  56 

That  lookt  ha  If -dead,  b  bright,  „            685 

there  6  a  servingman  Flying  from  out  of  the  black  wood,    ,,  801 

either  spear  Bent  but  not  b,  ,,             964 

Clash'd  his,  and  b  it  utterly  to  the  hilt.  ,,          1148 

and  thrice  they  b  their  spears.  Marr.  of  Geraint  562 

then  b  short,  and  down  his  enemy  roll'd,  Geraint  and  E.  160 

Abash'd  us  both ,  and  b  my  boast.     Thy  will  ? '  Balin  and  Balan  71 

I  b  upon  thy  rest,  And  now  full  loth  ,,•             499 

the  storm  B  on  the  mountain  and  I  cared  not  Merlin  and  V.  503 

and  the  skull  B  from  the  nape,  La.ncelot  and  E.  50 

b  a  sudden-beaming  tenderness  Of  manners  , ,            328 

then  out  she  6:  'Gk)ing?  „            925 

when  the  next  sun  b  from  underground,  ,,           1137 

B  from  the  vast  oriel-embowering  vine  ,,           1198 

Stoopt,  took,  b  seal,  and  read  it ;  ,,          1271 

'  But  when  the  next  day  b  from  under  ground —  Holy  Grail  338 

Then  blush'd  and  b  the  morning  of  the  jousts,  PelUas  and  E.  157 

comes  again ' — there  she  6  short ;  ,,              295 

Reel'd  in  the  smoke,  b  into  flame,  and  fell.  ,,              519 

It  chanced  that  both  B  into  hall  together,  ,,              587 

and  the  Red  Knight  B  in  upon  me  Last  Tournament  72 

B  with  a  wet  wind  blowing,  ,,                137 

B  up  their  sports,  then  slowly  to  her  bower  ,,                238 

maid,  who  brook'd  No  silence,  b  it,  Guinevere  160 

storm  of  anger  b  From  Guinevere,  „        361 

there  her  voice  h  suddenly,  , ,        607 

b  the  petty  kings,  and  fought  with  Rome,  Pass,  of  Arthur  68 

wan  wave  5  in  among  dead  faces,  ,,            130 

while  they  h  them,  own'd  me  King.  ,,             158 
B  the  shield-wall,                                                   Batt.  of  Brunanbiirh  11 

Brakest    b  thro'  the  scruple  of  my  bond,  Last  Tournament  568 

Bramble    arm  Red-rent  with  hooks  of  b,  Holy  Grail  211 

and  b's  mixt  And  overgrowing  them,  Pelleas  and  E.  422 

Bramble  Rose    B  r's,  faint  and  pale,  A  Dirge  30 
Branch  (s)  (^ee  a/so  Willow-branches)    Like  to  some 

b  of  stars  we  see  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  11 

B'es  they  bore  of  that  enchanted  stem,  Lotos- Eaters  28 

With  winds  upon  the  b,  „  C.  S.  27 

curved  b'es,  fledged  with  clearest  green,  D,  of  F.  Women  59 


Branch 

BrancAi  (s)  (contirmed)  paused.  And  dropttheisheheld,   Gardetwr's  D.  157 

Whose  topmost  b  eg  can  discern  The  roofs  Talking  Oak  31 

And  Irom  thy  topmost  b  discern  The  roofs  95 

From  spray,  and  b,  and  stem,  "         iqq 

^^f'f^  and  shook  holding  the  b,  Enoch  Arden  767 

whirl  d  her  white  robe  like  a  blossom'd  b  Princess  iv  179 

the  b  eg  thereupon  Spread  out  at  top,  205 

and  shook  the  b'es  of  the  deer  "  q^^  98 

??**ir.f  ^^  *^^^l"^u°,  ^'*f  ^"'^^  ''  1^^  Mem.  XV  13 

On  all  the  6  e«  of  thy  blood  ;  Ixxxiv  8 

lie,  while  these  long  b'eg  sway,  Maud  I  xmu  29 

Melody  on  6  and  melody  m  mid  air.  Gareth  and  L.  183 

high  on  a  6  Hung  it  ji^^in  and  Balun  432 

lore  from  the  o,  and  cast  on  earth,  539 

""^i^^I  '■*i"T  *  ^'V'P*  '"i  *^®  Tushins  Merlin  and  V.  957 

A  terder  fantasy  of  i  and  flower,  Larvcelol  and  E.  11 

putt  d  the  swaying  b  es  into  smoke  Rohi  Grail  15 

were  our  mothers  b'es  of  one  stem  ?  Lover's  Tale  u  25 

and  the  6  with  bernes  on  it,  .               Coluvdncs  73 

Golden  b  amid  the  shadows,  To  Virgil  27 

Who  lops  the  moulder  d  b  away.  Ha^ids  all  round  8 

gliding  thro  the  bes  over-bower'd  Death  of  (Jimne  6 

Branch  (verb)    But  b  e.^  current  yet  in  kindred  veins. '         Princess  ii  245 

o  er  the  friths  that  b  and  spread  in  Mem. ,  Con.  115 

a  name  that  i  es  o  er  the  rest,  Balin  and  Balan  182 

Branch  d  cloisters,  b  hke  mighty  woods,  Palace  of  Art  26 
whisper  of  huge  trees  that  b  And  blossom'd  in 

,.*nTu\-           •      r  Enoch  Arden  h%h 

that  h  Itself  Fine  as  ice-fems  Aylnvers  Field  221 

throve  and  b  from  clime  to  clime,  In,  Mem.  cxviii  13 

dress  All  b  and  flower'd  with  gold,  Marr.  of  Geraint  631 

forehead  veins  Bloated   and  b  ;  iMin  and  Balan  392 

Branching:    empires  b,  both,  in  lusty  life  !-  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  21 

trace  On  paler  heavens  the  b  grace  Of  leafless  elm,  To  Ulysses  15 

Branch-work    Beneath  h-ir  of  costly  sardonyx  Palace  0/ Art  95 

Brand  (a  mark)    a  part  Falling  had  let  appear 

Rr»n//'/«^J!!.iw^~    /     T      .    V       ..  Aijlnie,-'s  Field  509 
Brand  (a  sword)  (Aee  also  Levin-brand)    The  b,  the 

buckler,  and  the  spear-  r,co  Voices  129 

Ihou  therefore  take  my  b  Excalibur,  M.  d' Arthur  27 

Ihere  drew  he  forth  the  b  Excalibur,  52 

'  And  if  indeed  I  cast  the  b  away,      '  "            gs 

The  great  6  Made  lightnings  in  the  splendour  !!          136 

80  flash  d  and  fell  the  b  Excalibur :  142 

The  hard  Vs  shiver  on  the  steel,  Sir  Galalmd  6 

And,  ringing,  springs  from  b  and  mail ;  54 

-6,  mace  and  shaft,  and  shield-  Prin^ss  v  503 

Arthur  call  d  to  stay  the  Vs  Com.  of  Arthur  120 

So  this  great  b  the  king  Took,  308 

Flash  b  and  lance,  fall  battleaxe  "                  486 

Fall  battleaxe,  and  flash  b  !  (repeat)  ",  487,  490,  502 

l^Jang  battleaxe  and  clash  b  !  (repeat)  493  495  499 

Gareth  la^h'd  so  fiercely  with  his  b  Gareth  and  L.  968 

bir  Gareth  s  b  Clash  d  his,  1147 

neither  hunting-dress  Nor  weapon,  save  a  " 

golden-hilted  b,  Marr.  of  Geraint  166 

Swung  from  his  b  a  windy  buffet  out  Once,  Gen-aint  and  E.  90 

and  tearing  out  of  sheath  The  b,  Balin  and  Balan  393 

Where  Arthur  finds  the  b  Excalibur.  Holy  Grail  253 

1  he  0  Excalibur  will  be  cast  away.  257 

Shield-breakings,  and  the  clash  of  b\  Pass,  of  Arthur  109 

o  s  that  once  had  fought  with  Rome,  I33 

There  drew  he  forth  the  b  Excalibur,  "              220 

'  And  if  indeed  I  cast  the  i  away,  "             256 

The  great  b  Made  lightnings  in  the  splendour  ''              304 

So  flash'd  and  fell  the  b  Excalibur :  3IO 
Sons  of  Edward  with  hammer'd  b's.                   Ualt.  of  Brunanburh  14 
Brand  (verb)    power  to  burn  and  b  His  nothingness 

into  man.  Maud  I  xmii  39 

^us  after,  of  whose  fold  we  be :  Merlin  and  V.  764 

Jiarth  and  Hell  will  b  your  name.  Forlorn  51 

Brandagoraa    King  ^  of  Latangor,  Com.  of  Arthur  \U 

Brandish  d    caught  him  by  the  hilt,  and  b 

him  (repeat)  M.  d'AHhurUb,UO 
caught  him  by  the  hilt,  and  b  him  (repeat)      Pass,  qf  Arthur  313,  328 


57 


Breadth 


Brandishing    iJ  in  her  band  a  dart  Boddiceall 

Brass    crag-platform  smooth  as  burnish'd  b  I  chose.  Palace  of  AH  5 

iwo  handfuls  of  white  dust,  shut  in  an  urn 

.«^*'        ,      ,  ,    ,,  Lotos  -  Eaters  C.S.  68 

A  flying  splendour  out  of  b  and  steel,  Princess  vi  365 

Brastias  (a  knight)    Ulfius,  and  B,  and  Bedivere, 

(repeat)  ,^    ^  ^     ,  Cmn.  of  Arth^ir  1S6,  165,  U6 

Rr-ot     T  K  """"i     ^''','^y^i    \^-  Com.  of  Arthur  173 

5^L  r» h1?   « tr  'n  "".  *"'  *  *' '  Spinster's  S^s.  84 

Brave  (ac^j.      Bthe  Captain  was :  r/ie  Captain  5 

few  his  knights,  however  b  they  be-  Com.  of  Arthur  252 

but  all  b,  all  of  one  mmd  with  him  ;  255 

Truth-speaking  b,  good  livers,  Gareth  and  L.  424 

ti    she  left  Not  even  Lancelot  b,  Merlin  and  V.  805 

All  b,  and  many  generous,  and  some  chaste.  817 

Each  was  as  bin  the  fight  v.  ofMaeldune  5 

Tir^i!'!'^x           f^^^^tl    V.         .  LocksleyH.,  Sixty  m 

Brave  s)    our  Lawrence  the  best  of  the  b :  Def.  if  Lucknow  11 

Follow  d  by  the  b  of  other  lands,  Qdl  on  Well.  194 

whatsoe  er  He  wrought  of  good  or  b  Emlooue  76 

Brave  (verb)    never :  here  I  b  the  worst : '  Edwin  Morris  118 

However  we  b  it  out,  we  men  are  a  little  breed.  Maud  I  iv  30 

Braved    She  b  a  riotous  heart  in  asking  for  it.  Lancelot  and  E.  359 

Bravery    Lancelot,  the  flower  of  b,  ng 

5^11'/*  ^  *'°''^^*  with  the  /;  among  us.  Def  of  Lucknow  71 

R^II  "^   ^feature  wholly  given  to  b's  and  wine,  Marr.  of  Geraint  441 

Brawl  (verb)    Cease  to  wail  and  b  !  Two  Voices  199 

1  *f  *t  °^*  ^^^^  *??  ^^""^  ™^y  ^-  ^a^«c«  of  A  rt  210 

eft  the  drunken  king  To  b  at  Shushan  Princess  Hi  230 

b  Iheir  rights  or  wrongs  like  potherbs  ^  458 

our  free  press  should  cease  to  6,  ThiJrd  of  Feb.  3 

Rr«ilJf  fwu  .  ?°**^  ^^^S  t^^y  *•  ^ii-  Squabbles  20 
Brawling    brook  o  er  a  shingly  bed  B,                        Marr.  of  Geraint  249 

x^^^^^^A           their  monstrous  games ;  St.  Telemachus  40 

Bray    'oud  rung  out  the  bugle's  b's,  Qriana  48 

in  the  blast  and  b  of  the  long  horn  Princess  v  252 

Brazen-headed    O'erthwarted  with  the  b-h  spear  (Enone  139 

?«^^^.v    *  the  belting  wall  of  Cambalu,  Columbitsm 

Bread  (^See  also  Bread)    I  speak  the  truth,  as  I  live  by  b  !    Lady  Clare  26 
Taking  her  6  and  theirs:  Enoch  ArdenlU 

wine  And  b  from  out  the  houses  brought,  Spec,  of  Iliad  6 

chalk  and  alum  and  plaster  are  sold  to  the  poor  for  b,       Maud  I  i  39 
Where  b  and  baken  meats  and  good  red  wine  (hireth  and  L.  1190 

l!iiH  *■  !f    f^u  ^^®u '  "^  jnchet  b.  Ma,i:  of  Geraint  389 

sold  and  sold  had  bought  them  b:  541 

smote  itself  into  the  b,  and  went ;  iMy  Grail  467 

But,  6,  merely  for  5.  Sir  J.  Oldcastleli. 

J* — B  left  after  the  blessing  ?  n  ro 

now  He  veils  His  flesh  in  b,  body  and  b  "            i  f,7 

'N06,  no  6.  (repeat)  "159  |g( 

Hast  thou  brought  b  with  thee  ?  "          '  198 

I  have  not  broken  b  for  fifty  hours.  "            199 

For  holding  there  was  b  where  b  was  none— No  b.                "            2OI 

I  am  not  like  to  die  for  lack  of  b.  "            205 

B  enough  for  his  need  till  the  labourless  day  V.  of  Maddune  86 
rtream,  now  and  then,  of  a  hand  giving  b  and  wine.  Tlie  Wreck  114 
Master  scrimps  his  haggard  sempstress  of  her 

Tl™a,«^*'M^\  ,,  Locksley  II.,  Sixty  2Q1 

Bread    Mun  be  a  guvness,  lad,  or  summut,  and  addle 

R^a^iif  *»■     r  i.       •     ,.    ,         ,      ,       .  ^^-  J'^(iJ'»i^r,  N.  S.  26 

Breadth    A  s  of  tropic  shade  and  palms  in  cluster,  Locksleu  Hall  160 

left  but  narrow  ft  to  left  and  right  iJnoch  Ardm  674 

shattenng  on  black  blocks  A  b  of  thunder.  Prin^,>,  Hi  292 

whence  they  need  More  b  of  culture  :  ^  188 

ab  Of  Autumn,  dropping  fruits  of  power :  "         ,.;;  54 

She  mental  b,  nor  fail  in  childward  care,  "      ,,,v  28S 

tower  Half-lost  in  belts  of  hop  and  6's  of  wheat ;  "     Con   4^ 

w_^h  all  thy  b  and  height  Of  foliage.  In  Mem.  tol 

highway  running  by  it  leaves  a  6  Of  sward  to  left 
tJ^^^'^^^l    A    *      ^      .  Sisters  (E.  a7id  E.)  80 

she  wiTnll  fh^  f  f  '*"""*'  ^^-  V Lucknow  23 

bhe  with  all  the  b  of  man,  Locksley  II.,  Sixt.y  48 


Break 


58 


Breaker 


Break  (b)     Across  a  b  on  the  mist-wreathen  isle  Hiioch  Ardoi  632 

At  b  of  day  the  College  Portress  came  :  Princess  ii  15 

I  climb'd  the  roofs  at  h  of  day  ;  The  Daisy  61 

Break  (verb)  {See  also  Bre3,k)    passion  fann'd,  About 

thee  b's  and  dances :  Madeline  30 

breaking  heart  that  will  not  b,  Oriana  64 

athlete,  strong  to  b  or  bind  All  force  Palme  of  Art  153 

'  No  voice  b's  thro'  the  stillness  , ,          259 

You  thought  to  6  a  country  heart  L.  G.  V.  de  Vere  3 

Nor  would  I  b  for  your  sweet  sake  ,,             13 

call  me  loud  when  the  day  begins  to  b :  May  Queen  10 
lest  a  cry  Should  h  his  sleep  by  night,                      Walk,  to  the  Mail  74 

same  old  sore  6's  out  from  age  to  age  ,,              79 

Faltering,  would  b  its  syllables,  Love  and  Duty  39 
He  b's  the  hedge :  he  enters  there :                       Day-Dm.,  Arrival  18 

But  b  it.     In  the  name  of  wife,  ,,        U Envoi  53 

B  up  the  heavens,  0  Lord  !  St.  Agnes'  Eve  21 
barren  commonplaces  b  In  full  and  kindly  blossom.  Wm  Water.  23 
B  lock  and  seal :  betray  the  trust :  You  might  have  won  18 
B,  b,  b,  On  thy  cold  gray  stones.                                  Break,  break,  etc.  1 

B,  b,  b,  At  the  foot  of  thy  crags,  ,,              13 

But  had  no  heart  to  b  his  purposes  To  Annie,  Enoch  Arden  155 

I  think  your  kindness  b's  me  down  ;  ,,           318 

Help  me  not  to  J  in  upon  her  peace.  ,,  787 
Which  b's  all  bonds  but  ours  ;                                     Aylmer's  Field  425 

Who  broke  the  bond  which  they  desired  tob,  „          778 

trifle  makes  a  dream,  a  trifle  b's.'  Sea  Dreams  144 

that  b  Body  toward  death,  Lticretius  153 

which  b's  As  I  am  breaking  now  !  ,,         241 

In  iron  gauntlets :  b  the  council  up.'  Princess  i  89 

wherefore  b  her  troth  ?  ,,95 

To  b  my  chain,  to  shake  my  mane  :  u     **  ^24 

Kill  up  with  pity,  b  us  with  ourselves—  „    Hi  258 

tho'  the  rough  kex  b  The  starr'd  mosaic,  ,,       iv  77 

did  I  b  Your  precinct ;  ,,          421 

On  me,  me,  me,  the  storm  first  b's:  „         499 

You  that  have  dared  to  b  our  bound,  ,,         539 

she's  yet  a  colt — Take,  b  her :  „      v  456 

takes,  and  b's,  and  cracks,  and  splits,  ,,         527 

fear  we  not  To  6  them  more  in  their  behoof,  ,,       to  61 

Nemesis  B  from  a  darken'd  future,  ,,         175 

We  b  our  laws  with  ease,  ,,          323 

your  Highness  b's  with  ease  The  law  ,,         325 

roar  that  b's  the  Pharos  from  his  base  ,,         339 

sorrowing  in  a  pause  I  dared  not  b  ;  „    vii  249 

b  the  shore,  and  evermore  Make  and  b.  Ode  on  Well.  260 

War,  who  b's  the  converse  of  the  wise  ;  Third  of  Feb.  8 

Tho'  all  the  storm  of  Europe  on  us  6  ;  ,,  14 
B,  happy  land,  into  earlier  flowers  !  W.  to  Alexandra  10 
everywhere,  The  blue  heaven  b,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  43 
To  b  the  blast  of  winter,  stand  ;                                To  F.  D.  Ma^irice  22 

the  bud  ever  b's  into  bloom  on  the  tree,  The  Met  32 

b  the  works  of  the  statuary,  Boddicea  64 

immeasurable  heavens  B  open  to  their  highest.  Spec,  of  Iliad  15 
Must  I  take  you  and  b  you,                                  Window,  The  Answer  3 

I  must  take  you,  and  b  you,  ,,                       5 

take — b,  b — B — you  may  b  my  heart.  ,,                       7 

J3,  6  and  all's  done.  ,,                     10 

B,  thou  deep  vase  of  chilling  tears,  In  Mem.  iv  11 

To  evening,  but  some  heart  did  b.  „            viS 

On  the  bald  street  b's  the  blank  day.  „         vii  12 

B's  hither  over  Indian  seas,  ,,      xxvi  14 

that  my  hold  on  life  would  b  Before  I  hoard  ,,   xxviii  15 

That  6's  about  the  dappled  pools :  ,,        xlix  i 

Who  b's  his  birth's  invidious  bar,  ,,         Ixvv  5 

and  b  The  low  beginnings  of  content.  , ,  Ixxxiv  47 

And  b  the  livelong  summer  day  ,,  Ixxxix  31 

b's  The  rocket  molten  into  flakes  Of  crimson  ,,    rxviii  30 

Or  into  silver  arrows  b  Tho  sailing  moon  ,,          ci  15 

the  rolling  brine  That  b's  the  coast.  ,,       eoii  15 

Will  let  his  coltish  nature  b  „          cxi  7 

And  every  thought  b's  out  a  rose.  ,,     cxxii  20 

million  emeralds  b  from  tho  ruby -budded  lime  Maud  I  iv  1 

Can  b  her  word  were  it  even  for  me  ?  ,,    xvi  29 

B  not,  0  woman'e-heart,  Ded.  of  Idylls  44 


Break  (verb)  {continued)    B  not,  for  thou  art  Royal,  but 

endure,  Ded.  of  Idylls  i^ 

'  Climb  not  lest  thou  b  thy  neck,  Gareth  and  L.  54 

To  5  him  from  the  intent  to  which  he  grew,  ,,            140 

so  besieges  her  To  b  her  will,  and  make  her  wed  ,,            617 

Running  too  vehemently  to  b  upon  it.  Marr.  of  Qeraint  78 

Here  often  they  6  covert  at  our  feet.'  ,,            183 

Then  will  I  fight  him,  and  will  b  his  pride,  ,,            221 

and  in  April  suddenly  B's  from  a  coppice  ,,            339 

That  lightly  ?/s  a  faded  flower-sheath,  ,,            365 

fight  and  ?)  his  pride  and  have  it  of  him.  ,,            416 

I  will  b  his  pride,  and  learn  his  name,  ,            ,,            424 

In  next  day's  tourney  I  may  6  his  pride.'  ,,            476 

b  perforce  Upon  a  head  so  dear  in  thunder,  Geraint  and  E.  12 

as  a  man  upon  his  tongue  May  6  it,  ,,              43 

chance  That  6',s  upon  them  perilously,  ,,  354 
nature's  prideful  sparkle  in  the  blood  B  into 

furious  flame ;  , ,            828 

b  Into  some  madness  ev'n  before  the  Queen  ? '  Balin  and  Balan  229 

and  b  the  King  And  all  his  Table.'  , ,              458 

knight,  we  6  on  thy  sweet  rest,  ,,              470 

now  full  loth  am  I  to  fi  thy  dream,  ,,              500 

Began  to  b  her  sports  with  graver  fits.  Merlin  and  V.  180 

in  the  slippery  sand  before  it  i's  ?  ,,            293 

fled  from  Arthur's  court  To  b  the  mood.  , ,            298 

that  wave  about  to  b  upon  me  And  sweep  me  , ,  302 
tiny-trumpeting  gnat  can  b  our  dream  When 

sweetest ;  Lancelot  and  E.  137 

crying  Christ  and  him.  And  b  them ;  ,,            306 

Would  he  b  faith  with  one  I  may  not  name  ?  , ,            685 

discourtesy  To  blunt  or  6  her  passion.'  ,,            974 

(He  meant  to  6  the  passion  in  her)  ,,          1079 

Would  shun  to  6  those  bounds  of  courtesy  ,,          1220 

To  b  her  passion,  some  discourtesy  ,,          1302 

I  needs  must  b  These  bonds  that  so  defame  me  :  , ,          1420 

b  thro'  all,  till  one  will  crown  thee  king  Holy  Grail  161 

'  I  never  heard  his  voice  But  long'd  to  b  away.  Pclleas  and  E.  256 

said  Tristram,  '  I  would  b  thy  head.  Last  Tournament  268 

and  after  the  great  waters  b  Whitening  ,,           464 

make  the  smouldering  scandal  b  and  blaze  Guinevere  91 

Stands  in  a  wind,  ready  to  b  and  fly,  ,,      365 

b  the  heathen  and  uphold  the  Christ,  ,,      470 

— let  my  heart  B  rather —  Lover's  Talei  738 

Not  to  6  in  on  what  I  say  by  word  ,,  iv  352 
B,  diviner  light !  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  23 
one  of  those  who  would  b  their  jests  on  the 

dead,  In  tlie  Child.  Hasp.  8 
B  thro'  the  yews  and  cypre.ss  of  thy  grave,    Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  12 

would  b  down  and  raze  'The  blessed  tomb  Columbus  98 

Years  that  make  And  b  the  vase  of  clay,  Ancient  Sage  92 

B  into  '  Thens '  and  '  Whens '  ,,104 

when  the  babblings  b  the  dream.  ,,         107 

Scarce  feels  the  senses  b  away  ,,         152 

shell  must  b  before  the  bird  can  fly.  ,,  154 
B  the  State,  the  Church,  the  Throne,  LocJcdey  H.,  Sixty  138 
thro'  this  midnight  b's  the  sun                            Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  21 

Might  b  thro'  clouded  memories  Demeter  and  P.  10 

And  b's  into  the  crocus-purple  hour  ,,              50 

b  The  sunless  halls  of  Hades  into  Heaven  ?  ,,             135 

b's  her  latest  earthy  link  With  me  to-day.  The  Ring  47 

Your  '  Miriam  b's' — is  making  ,,         50 

No  pliable  idiot  I  to  i  my  vow  ;  ,,      402 

made  one  barren  effort  to  b  it  at  the  last.  Happy  72 

groundflame  of  the  crocus  b's  the  mould,  Prog,  of  Sirring  1 
The  mortal  hillock.  Would  b  into  blossom  ;          Merlin  and  the  G.  108 

blight  thy  hope  or  b  thy  rest.  Faith  2 

Bre9,k  (verb)    fur  I  beant  a-gawin'  to  b  my  rule.  JV.  Farmer,  0.  S.  4 

I  weant  b  rules  fur  Doctor,  ,,                   67 

B  me  a  bit  o'  the  esh  for  his  'ead,  ,,        If.  S.  41 

Tis'n  them  as  'as  munny  as  b's  into  'ouses  ,,                  45 

an'  sweiir'd  as  I'd  b  ivry  stick  North.  Cobbler  35 

'  tha  mun  b  'im  off  bit  by  bit.'  ,,            88 

runs  out  when  ya  b's  the  shell.  Village  Wife  4 
Breaker  (one  who  breaks)    A  ^i  of  the  bitter  news 

from  home,  Aylmer's  Field  594 


f0^ 


Breaker 


59 


Breath 


Breaker  (one  who  breaks)  (mntinued)    Nor  those  horn- 
handed  b's  of  the  glebe,  Princess  ii  159 

Breaker  (wave)    long  swells  of  b  sweep  The  nutmeg 

rocks  The  Voyage  39 

following  up  And  flying  the  white  h,  Enoch  Arden  21 

hard  upon  the  cry  of  '  b's '  came  ,,         548 

a  ridge  Of  b  issued  from  the  belt,  Sea  Dreams  212 

The  mellow  b  murmur'd  Ida.  Princess  iv  436 

roaring  b's  boom  and  blanch  on  the  precipices,  Boadicea  76 

The  b  breaking  on  the  beach.  In  Meni.  Ixxi  16 

And  the  fringe  Of  that  great  b,  Com.  of  Arthur  387 

And  steps  that  met  the  b  !  Soly  Grail  816 

chafed  6  s  of  the  outer  sea  Sank  powerless,  Lover's  Tale  i  8 

the  b's  on  the  shore  Sloped  into  louder  surf :  ,,  Hi  14 
Javelins  over  The  jarring  b,                                  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  97 

came  thro'  the  roar  of  the  b  a  whisper,  Despair  13 
The  b's  lash  the  shores :                                        Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  2 

Breaker-beaten    For  leagues  along  that  6-6  coast  Enoch  Arden  51 

Breakest    so  thou  b  Arthur's  music  too.'  Last  Tournament  266 

Breaking  (part)    (See  also  Ever-breaking)    Just 

6  over  land  and  main  ?  Ttoo  Voices  84 

heart  is  6,  and  my  eyes  are  dim,  CEnone  32 

They  say  his  heart  is  6,  mother —  May  Queen  22 

The  thunders  b  at  her  feet :  0/  old  sat  Freedom  2 

while  on  all  sides  6  loose  Her  household  Hod  The  Goose  53 

Old  elms  came  b  from  the  vine,  Amphion  45 

Long  lines  of  cliff  6  have  left  a  chasm  ;  Enoch  Arden  1 

Nor  let  him  be,  but  often  6  in,  , ,        701 

he  saw  An  end,  a  hope,  a  light  6  upon  him.  Aylnier's  Field  480 

b  that,  you  made  and  broke  your  dream :  Sea  Dreams  143 

which  breaks  As  I  am  6  now  !  Lucretius  241 

nation  weeping,  and  6  on  my  rest  ?  Ode  on  Well.  82 

B  their  mailed  fleets  and  armed  towers,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  39 

Or  b  into  song  by  fits,  In  Mem.  xxiii  2 

The  breaker  6  on  the  beach.  ,,         IxxilQ 

And  b  let  the  splendour  fall  „      Con.  119 

why  come  you  so  cruelly  meek,  B  a  slumber  Maud  I  Hi  2 

B  up  my  dream  of  delight.  ,,      xix  2 

and  6  into  song  Sprang  out,  Com.  of  Arthur  320 

heard  The  world's  loud  whisper  b  into  storm,  Marr.  of  Geraint  27 

Then  6  his  command  of  silence  given,  Geraint  and  E.  390 

Vivien  6  in  upon  him,  said :  Merlin  and  V.  600 

Outram  and  Havelock  6  their  way  through  Def.  of  Lucknow  96 

0  young  life  B  with  laughter  De.  Prof.  Two  (?.  18 
Who  b  in  upon  us  yestermorn,  Akbar's  Di-eam  114 

Breaking  (s)  (See  also  Shield-breaking)    Until  the  b 

of  the  light,  Clear-headed  fi-iend  25 

Yours  came  but  from  the  6  of  a  glass,  Sea  Dreams  248 

crave  His  pardon  for  thy  6  of  his  laws.  Gareth  and  L.  986 

Red  ruin,  and  the  b  up  of  laws,  Guinevere  426 

making  a  new  link  B  an  old  one  ?  The  Ring  51 

save  6  my  bones  on  the  rack  ?  By  an  Evolution.  9 

Breast  (s)     Naiad  Throbbing  in  mild  unrest  holds  him 

beneath  in  her  b.  Leonine  Eleg.  12 

Showering  thy  gleaned  wealth  into  my  open  6  Ode  to  Memory  23 

Fold  thy  palms  across  thy  b,  A  Dirge  2 

Take  the  heart  from  out  my  6.  A  deliiie  8 

To  find  my  heart  so  near  the  beauteous  6  Tkefo^-m,  thefwm  7 

Dominion  in  the  head  and  6.'  Tivo  Voices  21 

'  His  palms  are  folded  on  his  6  :  ,,         247 

A  vague  suspicion  of  the  6  :  ,,         336 

fiU'd  the  6  with  purer  breath.  Miller's  D.  92 

1  crush'd  them  on  my  6,  my  mouth  ;  Fatima  12 
Over  her  snow-cold  6  and  angry  cheek  CEnone  142 
His  ruddy  cheek  upon  my  6,  The  Sisters  20 
hundred  winters  snow'd  upon  his  b.  Palace  of  Art  139 
as  I  lie  upon  your  6 —  May  Queen,  Con.  59 
polish'd  argent  of  her  6  to  sight  D.  of  F.  Women  158 
and  my  true  6  Bleedeth  for  both  ;  To  J.  S.  62 
So  muscular  he  spread,  so  broad  of  b.  Gardenen-'s  D.  8 
wave  of  such  a  6  As  never  pencil  drew.  ,,  139 
breathing  health  and  peace  upon  her  b :  Audley  Court  68 
An  acorn  in  her  6.  Talking  Oak  228 
crimson  comes  upon  the  robin's  6  ;  Locksley  Hall  17 
press  me  from  the  mother's  6.  ,,90 


Breast  (s)  (continued)    and  he  bears  a  laden  6,  Locksley  Hall  143 

in  its  6  a  thunderbolt.  '  ,,         192 

old  Earl's  daughter  died  at  my  6  ;  Lady  Clare  25 

Her  arms  across  her  b  she  laid  ;  Beggar  Maid  1 

I  shook  her  6  with  vague  alarms —  The  Letters  38 

silent  court  of  justice  in  his  6,  Sea  Dreams  174 

stood  out  the  b's,  The  b's  of  Helen,  Lwretius  60 

blasting  the  long  quiet  of  my  6  ,,       162 

Beat  6,  tore  hair,  cried  out  upon  herself  , ,      277 

think  I  bear  that  heart  within  my  6,  Princess  ii  334 

Rest,  rest,  on  mother's  b,  ,,         Hi  11 

My  secret,  seem'd  to  stir  within  my  6  ;  ,,44 

from  my  6  the  involuntary  sigh  Brake,  ,,            191 

I  smote  him  on  the  b  ;  ,,        iv  164 

now  her  6,  Beaten  with  some  great  passion  ,,            387 

Her  noble  heart  was  molten  in  her  6  ;  ,,        ri  119 

if  you  loved  The  6  that  fed  or  arm  , ,            181 

Thy  helpless  warmth  about  my  barren  6  , ,            202 

something  wild  within  her  6,  ,,      mi  237 

Sent  from  a  dewy  b  a  cry  for  light :  „            253 

Chop  the  b's  from  off  the  mother,  Boadicea  68 

And  dead  calm  in  that  noble  b  In  Mem.  xi  19 

And  onward  drags  a  labouring  6,  ,,        xo  18 

Be  tenants  of  a  single  b,  , ,         xvi  3 

Against  the  circle  of  the  6,  ,,         xlv  3 

A  faithful  answer  from  the  b,  ,,    Ixxxv  14 

That  warms  another  living  b.  ,,             116 

They  haunt  the  silence  of  the  6,  ,,        xciv  9 

And  woolly  b's  and  beaded  eyes  ;  , ,       xcv  12 

A  single  murmur  in  the  6,  , ,          civ  7 

and  in  my  6  Spring  wakens  too  ;  ,,        cxvVJ 

And  enter  in  at  6  and  brow,  ,,     cxxii\\ 

A  warmth  within  the  b  would  melt  ,,     caxciv  13 

opulence  jewel-thick  Sunn'd  itself  on  his  6  Maud  I  xiii  13 

Lord  of  the  pulse  that  is  lord  of  her  6,  ,,         rm  13 

ruddy  shield  on  the  Lion's  b.  ,,    III  vi  14 

o'er  her  6  floated  the  sacred  fish  ;  Gareth  and  L.  223 

The  massive  square  of  his  heroic  6,  Man:  of  Geraint  75 

'  O  noble  b  and  all-puissant  arms,  ,,               86 

weep  True  tears  upon  his  broad  and  naked  6,  ,,              111 

thro'  his  manful  b  darted  the  pang  ,,              121 

Sank  her  sweet  head  upon  her  gentle  6 ;  ,,              527 

fell'd  him,  and  set  foot  upon  his  6,  ,,              574 

Drave  the  long  spear  a  cubit  thro'  his  b  Geraint  and  E.  86 

Her  arms  upon  her  6  across,  Merlin  and  V.  910 

pleasant  b  of  waters,  quiet  bay,  Lovet-'s  Tale  i  6 

anger  falls  aside  And  withers  on  the  6  of  peaceful  love ;  ,,          10 

Her  6  as  in  a  shadow-prison,  „      iv  58 

her  b  Hard-heaving,  and  her  eyes  upon  her  feet,  , ,        307 
her  thin  hands  crost  on  her  6 —                              In  the  Child.  Hosp,  39 

kill  Their  babies  at  the  6  Columbus  180 

And  from  her  virgin  6,  and  virgin  eyes  Tiresias  46 

ah,  fold  me  to  your  6  !  The  Flight  5 

pluck  from  this  true  b  the  locket  that  I  wear,  ,,         33 

well-used  to  move  the  public  6.  To  W.  C.  Macready  3 

gave  Thy  6  to  ailing  infants  in  the  night,  Demeter  and  P.  66 

my  loving  head  upon  your  leprous  b.  Happy  26 

let  me  lean  my  head  upon  your  6.  Romney's  R.  154 
blade  that  had  slain  my  husband  thrice  thro'  his  b.  Bandit's  Death  34 

Breast  (verb)    b's  the  blows  of  circumstance.  In  Mem.  Ixiv  7 
Breast-l3one    white  6-6,  and  barren  ribs  of  Death,        Gareth  and  L.  1382 

Breast-deep    all  night  long  b<l  in  corn.  Princess  ii  387 
Breasted    See  Full-breasted,  Man-breasted,  White- 
breasted. 

Breast-high    B-h  in  that  bright  line  Pelleas  and  E.  56 
Breath    (See  cdso  Morning-breath)    Her  subtil,  warm, 

and  golden  6,  Su2)2}.  Confessions  60 

6  Of  the  fading  edges  of  box  beneath,  A  spirit  liaunts  18 

There  is  frost  in  your  6  Poet's  Mind  17 

the  6  Of  the  lilies  at  sunrise  1  Adeline  36 

I  lose  my  colour,  I  lose  my  6,  Eleiinore  137 

No  life  that  breathes  with  human  6  Two  Voices  395 

fill'd  the  breast  with  purer  6.  Miller's  D.  92 

As  half-asleep  his  b  he  drew,  Tlie  Sisters  28 
Long  labour  unto  aged  6,                                     Lotos-Eater's,  O.  S.  85 


Breath 


60 


Breathed 


Breath  (continued)    Dan  Chaucer,  the  first  warbler, 

whose  sweet  b  D,  of  F.  Women  5 

Drew  forth  the  poison  with  her  balmy  b,  ,,             271 

but  empty  b  And  rumours  of  a  doubt  ?  M.  d' Arthur  99 

spoke  King  Arthur,  drawing  thicker  b:  ,,           148 

Clothed  with  his  b,  and  looking,  ,,           182 

my  ears  could  hear  Her  lightest  b ;  Edvnn  Morris  65 

but  ever  at  a  6  She  linger'd,  Godiva  44 

My  b  to  heaven  like  vapour  goes :  St.  Agnes'  Eve  3 

'  Greet  her  with  applausive  o.  Vision  of  Sin  135 

While  we  keep  a  little  b  !  „          192 

The  b  of  heaven  came  continually  Enoch  Arden  535 

my  latest  b  Was  spent  in  blessing  her  ,,           883 

a  low  b  Of  tender  air  made  tremble  The  Brook  201 

ice-ferns  on  January  panes  Made  by  a  b.  Aybner's  Field  223 

on  a  sudden  rush'd  Among  us,  out  of  b.  Princess  iv  375 

b  of  life  ;  O  more  than  poor  men  wealth,  ,,         459 

body  that  never  had  drawn  a  b.  Grandmother  62 

0  sweet  and  bitter  in  a  6,  In  Mem,  Hi  3 
And  scarce  endure  to  draw  the  b,  „  xx  15 
And  so  the  Word  had  b,  and  wrought  „  xxxvi  9 
This  use  may  lie  in  blood  and  b,  „  xlv  13 
spirit  does  but  mean  the  b  I  know  no  more.'  ,,  lvi7 
Death's  twin-brother,  times  my  b  ;  ,,  Ixviii  2 
new  life  that  feeds  thy  b  Throughout  In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  10 
East  and  West,  without  a  b,  In  Mem.  xcv  62 
To  where  he  breathed  his  latest  b,  „  xeoiii  5 
Who  wakenest  with  thy  balmy  b  „       xcix  13 

1  trust  I  have  not  wasted  b:  ,,  cxx  1 
Be  quicken'd  with  a  livelier  b,  , ,  cxxii  13 
Awe-stricken  b's  at  a  work  divine,  Maud  I  xl7 
Prickle  my  skin  and  catch  my  6,  ,,  odv36 
Catch  not  my  b,  0  clamorous  heart,  ,,  xvi  31 
Not  die  ;  but  live  a  life  of  truest  b,  Maud  I  xviii  53 
Seal'd  her  mine  from  her  first  sweet  b.  ,,  xix  41 
mix'd  my  b  With  a  loyal  people  shouting  ,,  III  vi  34 
with  the  might  and  b  of  twenty  boys.'  Gareth  and  L.  1106 
Sent  all  his  heart  and  b  thro'  all  the  horn.  „  1369 
Here  ceased  the  kindly  mother  out  of  b  ;  Man:  of  Geraint  732 
fits  of  prayer,  at  every  stroke  a  b.  Geraint  and  E.  155 
Sweet  lady,  never  since  I  first  drew  b  ,,  619 
and  the  b  Of  her  sweet  tendance  ,,  925 
b's  of  anger  puflF'd  Her  fairy  nostril  Merlin  and  V.  848 
At  last  he  got  his  b  and  answer'd,  '  One,  Lancelot  and  E.  422 
whereat  she  caught  her  6 ;  ,,  623 
blow  with  b,  or  touch  with  hand.  Holy  Grail  114 
She  felt  the  King's  6  wander  o'er  her  neck,  Guinevere  582 
but  empty  b  And  rumours  of  a  doubt  ?  Pass,  of  Arthur  267 
spoke  King  Arthur,  drawing  thicker  b :  „  316 
Clothed  with  his  b,  and  looking,  „  350 
I  feel  thy  b  ;  I  come,  great  Mistress  Lover's  Tale  i  21 
Thy  b  18  of  the  pinewood  ;  ,,23 
faints,  and  hath  no  pulse,  no  b —  „  268 
rose  as  it  were  b  and  steam  of  gold,  ,,  402 
my  name  was  borne  Upon  her  b.  ,,  444 
by  that  name  I  moved  upon  her  b;  ,,  560 
Love  drew  in  her  b  In  that  close  kiss,  ,,  816 
about  my  brow  Her  warm  b  floated  ,,  H  141 
at  once,  soul,  life  And />  and  motion,  ,,  195 
And  parted  lips  which  drank  her  b,  ,,  204 
Took  the  b  from  our  sails,  and  we  stay'd.  Tlve  Revenge  42 
but  never  a  murmur,  a  b —  V.  of  Maeldune  19 
their  b  met  us  out  on  the  seas,  ,,  37 
thro'  life  to  my  latest  b  ;  T/iC  Wreck  79 
thro'  the  roar  of  the  breaker  a  whisper,  a  b,  Dexpair  13 
And  now  one  b  of  cooler  air  Ancient  Sage  117 
A  ft,  a  whisper — some  divine  farewell —  ,,  225 
to  feel  his  b  Upon  my  cheek —  The  Fiigld  45 
b  that  past  With  all  the  cold  of  winter.  The  Ring  32 
and  felt  An  icy  b  play  on  mo,  „  131 
an  icy  b,  As  from  the  grating  of  a  sepulchre,  „  399 
leaves  her  bare  To  b's  of  balmier  air ;  Prog,  of  Spi-iiig  13 
Blown  into  glittering  by  the  popular  b,  Romney's  R,  49 
a  b  From  some  fair  dawn  beyond  Far-far-away  10 
oi>en-door'd  To  overy  b  from  beavon,  Ahbai's  Dream  180 


Breathe    in  her  first  sleep  earth  b's  stilly : 
Or  b  into  the  hollow  air, 
odorous  wind  B's  low  between  the  sunset 
But  b  it  into  earth  and  close  it  up 
'Twere  better  not  to  b  or  speak, 
'To  b  and  loathe,  to  live  and  sigh. 
No  life  that  b's  with  human  breath 
I  least  should  b  a  thought  of  pain, 
wind  b's  low  with  mellower  tone  : 
How  hard  he  b's  ! 
to  sit,  to  sleep,  to  wake,  to  b.' 
I  do  not  b,  Not  whisper,  any  murmur 
When  that,  which  b's  within  the  leaf, 
As  tho'  to  b  were  life. 
I  yearn  to  b  the  airs  of  heaven 
A  carefuller  in  peril,  did  not  b 
And  b's  in  April-autumns. 


love-whispers  may  not  b  Within  this  vestal  limit, 

Low,  low,  b  and  blow, 

let  us  b  for  one  hour  more  in  Heaven ' 

'  Alas  your  Highness  b's  full  East,' 

Where  shall  I  b  ? 

that  each  May  b  himself,  and  quick  ! 

b  upon  my  brows  ; 

To  let  the  people  h  ? 

diviner  air  B  thro'  the  world  and  change 

To  b  thee  over  lonely  seas. 

That  6  a  thousand  tender  vows, 

The  slightest  air  of  song  shall  b 

And  b's  a  novel  world,  the  while 

And,  while  we  6  beneath  the  sun. 

To  b  my  loss  is  more  than  fame, 

summer's  hourly-mellowing  change  May  b, 


Leonine  Eleg.  7 

Supp.  Confessions  58 

Elednore  124 

Wan  Scidptor  12 

Two  Voices  94 

„  104 

395 

Miller's  D.  26 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  102 

D.  if  the  0.  Fear  37 

Edwin  Morris  40 

St.  S.  Stylites  21 

TalUng  Oak  187 

Ulysses  24 

Sir  Galahad  63 

Enoch  Arden  50 

The  Brook  196 


Princess  ii  221 

, ,  Hi  3 

69 

231 

«77 

316 

,,       vii  353 

„    Con.  104 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  44 

In  Mem.  xvii  4 

,,  xlix  7 

J)  CXVt  V 

,,  la^v  14 
,,  Ixxvii  16 
,,  xci  10 


I  find  no  place  that  does  not  6  Some  gracious 

memory  ,,                c  3 

Nor  landmark  b's  of  other  days,  ,,            civ  11 

Thro'  which  the  spirit  b's  no  more  ?          •  ,,             cv20 

For  tho'  mjr  lips  may  b  adieu,  ,,       cxxiii  11 

Left  the  still  King,  and  passing  forth  to  b.  Com,  of  Arthur  369 

only  b  Short  fits  of  prayer,  Geraint  and  E.  154 

'  You  b  but  accusation  vast  and  vague.  Merlin  and  V.  701 

No  keener  hunter  after  glory  b's.  Lancelot  and  E.  156 

there  b's  not  one  of  you  Will  deem  this  prize  , ,             540 

'  Look,  He  haunts  me — I  cannot  b —  Pelleas  and  E.  227 

thought  I  could  not  b  in  that  fine  air  Guinevere  645 

B  but  a  little  on  me.  Lover's  Tale  i  26 

outward  circling  air  wherewith  16,  ,,            167 

&  with  her  as  if  in  heaven  itself ;  ,,            391 

Which  pass  with  that  which  b's  them  ?  ,,            481 

B,  diviner  Air  ■  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  13 

none  could  b  Within  the  zone  of  heat ;  Columbus  52 

can  I  b  divorced  from  the  Past  ?  Despair  113 

And  all  that  b  are  one  Slight  ripple  Ancient  Sage  188 

who  b  the  balm  Of  summer-winters  To  Ulysses  10 

Breathed    B  low  around  the  rolling  earth  The  Winds,  etc.  3 

She  b  in  sleep  a  lower  moan,  Mariana  in  tite  S.  45 

Rose  slowly  to  a  music  slowly  b,  CEnone  41 

B,  like  the  covenant  of  a  (Jod,  Gardener's  D.  209 

I  J  In  some  new  planet :  Edunn  Morris  114 

I  b  upon  her  eyes  Thro'  all  the  summer  Talking  Oak  210 

tho  low  wind  hardly  b  for  fear.  Godiva  55 

on  him  b  Far  purelier  in  his  rushings  Aylmer's  Field  457 

while  I  J  in  sight  of  haven,  he.  Poor  fellow,  The  Brook  157 

he  had  b  the  Proctor's  dogs ;  Princess,  Pro,  113 

And  look  on  Spirits  b  away,  In  Mem.  xl  2 

That /»  beneath  the  Syrian  blue :  ,,         liiVl 

Where  all  things  round  mo  b  of  him.  ,,    Ixxxv  32 

To  where  he  b  his  latest  breath,  , ,     xcviii  5 

He  6  the  spirit  of  the  song  ;  ,,     cxxvlO 

living  words  of  life  B  in  her  ear,  ,,     Con.  53 

Whenever  slander  b  against  the  King —  Com.  of  Arthur  177 

God  hath  b  a  secret  thing.  ,,             501 

twice  they  fought,  and  twice  they  b,  Man:  of  Geraint  567 

Queen's  fair  name  was  b  upon,  Geraint  and  E.  951 

,B  in  a  dismal  whisper  *  It  is  truth.*  Balin  and  Balan  527 


Breathed 


61 


Bridal-gift 


Breathed  {continued)    emerald  center'd  in  a  sun  Of  silver 

rays,  that  lighten'd  as  he  6  ;  Lancelot  and  E,  296 

Whereof  the  chill,  to  him  who  b  it,  Pass,  of  Arthur  96 

Has  b  a  race  of  mightier  mountaineers.  Montenegro  14 

No  sound  is  b  so  potent  to  coerce,  Tiredas  120 

warm  winds  had  gently  b  us  away  from  the  land —  The  Wreck  63 
Breather    those  we  call  the  dead  Are  b's  of  an  ampler 

day  In  Mem.  cxviii  6 
Breathuiigr    {See  also  Hard-breathing)    B  Light 

against  thy  face,  Adeline  56 

Old  letters,  o  of  her  worth,  Mariana  in  the  S.  62 

A  hint,  a  whisper  b  low.  Two  Voices  434 

B  like  one  that  hath  a  weary  dream.  Lotos-Eaters  6 

spoke  King  Arthur,  b  heavily  :  M.  d^ Arthur  113 

answer  made  King  Arthur,  o  hard :  „         162 

alighted  from  the  boat.  And  b  of  the  sea.  A\vdley  Court  8 

*  Sleep,  b  health  and  peace  upon  her  breast :  ,,68 

Sleep,  b  love  and  trust  against  her  lip  :  ,,         69 
her  b's  are  not  heard  In  palace  chambers            Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  17 

warm-blue  Vs  of  a  hidden  hearth  Broke  Aylmer's  Field  155 

like  a  beast  hard-ridden,  b  hard.  „             291 

b  down  From  over  her  arch'd  brows,  Princess  ii  38 

B  and  sounding  beauteous  battle,  ,,      v  161 

In  Angel  instincts,  b  Paradise,  ,,    vii  321 

Closer  is  He  than  b,  and  nearer  than  hands  High.  Pantheism  12 

Would  b  thro'  his  lips  impart  In  Mem.  xvivi  15 

slowly  b  bare  The  round  of  space,  ,,        Ixxxvi  4 

By  meadows  b  of  the  past,  ,,           occix  7 

Bright  English  lily,  b  a  prayer  Maud  1  xix  55 

hear  him  b  low  and  equally.  Geraint  and  E.  372 

she  glided  out  Among  the  heavy  Vs  of  the  house,  „            402 

Beside  the  placid  Vs  of  the  King,  Ouinevere  69 

spoke  King  Arthur,  b  heavily :  Pass,  of  Arthur  281 

answer  made  King  Arthur,  b  hard :  , ,             330 

b  on  esich  other,  Dreaming  together  Lover's  'tale  i  261 

and  joy  In  b  nearer  heaven ;  „              389 

6  hard  at  the  approach  of  Death, —  ,,              585 

Is  b  in  his  sleep,  Earlv  Spring  23 

changest,  b  it,  the  sullen  wind.  Prog,  of  Spring  110 

Breathing-Bpace    ballad  or  a  song  To  give  us  b-s.'  Princess,  Pro.  242 

BreathiBg- while    Except  when  for  a  ft-w  at  eve,  Aylmer's  Field  ^^9 
Bred    (See  also  Home-bred,  Wisdom-bred)    Two 

children  in  one  hamlet  born  and  b  ;  Circumstance  8 

upon  the  board,  And  b  this  change  ;  (Enone  227 

for  his  sake  I  b  His  daughter  Dora :       -  Dora  19 

not  being  6  To  barter,  Enoch  Arden  249 

A  CITY  clerk,  but  gently  bom  and  b ;  Sea  Dreams  1 

her  will  B  will  in  me  to  overcome  Princess  vZbl 

From  out  the  doors  where  I  was  b,  In  Mem.  ciii  2 

'e  wur  burn  an'  b  i'  the  'ouse.  Spinster's  S.'s  69 

opiate  then  B  this  black  mood  ?  Momney's  R.  62 

Brede    in  glowing  gauze  and  golden  b.  Princess  vi  134 
Breed  (b)    looks  not  like  the  common  b  That  with  the 

napkin  dally  ;  Will  Water.  117 

In  doubt  if  you  be  of  our  Barons'  b —  Third  of  Feh.  32 

we  men  are  a  little  b.  Maud  I  iv  30 

Breed  (verb)    Assurance  only  6's  resolve.'  Two  Voices  SlSi 

graze  and  wallow,  b  and  sleep ;  Palace  of  Art  202 

like  h's  like,  they  say :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  63 

could  he  understand  how  money  b's,  The  Brook  6 

much  loth  to  b  Dispute  betwixt  myself  Princess  i  156 

in  thunderstorms,  And  b  up  warriors  !  „      v  440 

earth's  embrace  May  6  with  him,  In  Mem.  Ixxxii  4 

Breeding    Softness  h  scorn  of  simple  life.  To  the  Queen  ii  53 

Breeze    {See  also  Biver-breeze,  South-breeze)    The 

Vs  pause  and  die,  Claribel  2 

Low-flowing  b's  are  roaming  the  broad  valley  Leonine  Eleg.  1 

When  the  6  of  a  joyful  dawn  blew  free  Arabian  Nights  1 

fann'd  With  b's  from  our  oaken  glades,  Eleiinore  10 

Coming  in  the  scented  b,  ,,24 

Little  h's  dusk  and  shiver  L.  of  Slialott  ill 

And  heard  her  native  b's  pass,  Maria/tva  in  the  S.  43 

A  b  thro'  all  the  garden  swept.  Day -Dm.,  Revival  6 

Warm  broke  the  b  against  the  brow,  The  Voyage  9 

Low  b's  fann'd  the  belfry  bars,  The  Letters  43 


Breeze  {continued)    Made  noise  with  bees  and  h  from 

end  to  end.  Princess,  Pro.  88 

long  b's  rapt  from  inmost  south  ,,          iv  431 

roll'd  With  music  in  the  growing  6  of  Time,  ,,            m  56 

such  a  b  Compell'd  thy  canvas,  In  Mem.  xvii  1 

all  the  bugle  Vs  blew  ReveilMe  ,,        Ixviii  7 

And  round  thee  with  the  b  of  song  ,,        Ixxv  11 

A  6  began  to  tremble  o'er  The  large  leaves  ,,          xcvM 

And  all  the  b  of  Fancy  blows,  ,,       cxxii  17 

tells  The  joy  to  every  wandering  b  ;  ,,       Con.  62 

blown  by  the  5  of  a  softer  clime,  Maud  I  iv  4 

sighing  for  Lebanon  In  the  long  b  ,,  ocviii  16 

For  a  6  of  morning  moves,  ,,     xxii  7 

Drooping  and  beaten  by  the  b,  Lover's  Tale  i  700 

Thoughts  of  the  Vs  of  May  blowing  Def.  of  Lucknow  83 

sat  each  on  the  lap  of  the  b;  V.  of  Maeldune  38 

a  balmier  b  curl'd  over  a  peacefuller  sea,  The  Wreck  133 
lark  has  past  from  earth  to  Heaven  upon  the 

morning  b  !  The  Flight  62 

Flies  back  in  fragrant  b's  to  display  Prog,  of  Spring  64 
Brendan  (Irish  Saint)    who  had  sail'd  with  St.  B 

of  yore,  V.  of  Maeldune  115 
Brethren    {See  also  Brother)    so  that  all  My  b 

marvell'd  greatly.  St.  S.  Stylites  69 

And  of  her  b,  youths  of  puissance  ;  Princess  i  37 

Not  ev'n  her  brother  Arac,  nor  the  twins  Her  b,  ,,        154 

The  b  of  our  blood  and  cause,  ,,      vi  71 

To  where  her  wounded  6  lay  ;  ,,          90 

0  let  me  have  him  with  my  b  here  ,,        123 

bite  And  pinch  their  b  in  the  throng.  Lit.  Squabbles  7 

grieve  Thy  6  with  a  fruitless  tear  ?  In  Mem.  Iviii  10 

till  Doubt  and  Death,  111  6,  ,,       Ixxxvi  12 

both  my  b  are  in  Arthur's  hall,  Gareth  and  L.  82 

b,  and  a  fourth  And  of  that  four  the  mightiest,  , ,             614 

younger  b  have  gone  down  Before  this  youth  ;  ,,          1102 

to  mar  the  boast  Thy  b  of  thee  make —  „          1243 

my  three  b  bad  me  do  it,  ,,          1410 

Among  his  burnish'd  b  of  the  pool ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  650 

B,  to  right  and  left  the  spring,  Balin  and  Balan  25 

Arthur  lightly  smote  the  6  down,  ,,               41 

Thy  chair,  a  grief  to  all  the  6,  ,,               78 

My  b  have  been  all  my  fellowship  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  672 

came  her  b  saying,  '  Peace  to  thee,  „            996 

those  two  b  slowly  with  bent  brows  Accompanying,  ,,          1138 

So  those  two  b  from  the  chariot  took  ,,          1146 

friends  in  testimony,  Her  b,  and  her  father,  ,,           1300 

Where  all  the  b  are  so  hard.  Holy  Grail  618 

Also  the  b,  King  and  Atheling,  Batt.  of  Brurmnburh  100 

Breton    on  the  B  strand  !  B,  not  Briton  ;  Maud  II  ii  29 

Back  from  the  ^  coast,  ,,          43 

touching  B  sands,  they  disembark'd.  Merlin  and  V.  202 

cried  the  B,  '  Look,  her  hand  is  red  !  Last  Tournament  412 

Breviary    read  but  on  my  b  with  ease.  Holy  Grail  545 

Brew'd    found  a  witch  Who  b  the  philtre  Luaretius  16 

Brewer    gloomy  b's  soul  Went  by  me.  Talking  Oak  55 

Brewis    "The  kitchen  b  that  was  ever  supt  Gareth  and  L.  781 

Briar    {See  also  Brier)    bur  and  brake  and  b,  Day-Dm,,  Sleep.  P.  46 

Bribe    a  costly  b  To  guerdon  silence.  Princess  i  203 

which  for  b  had  wink'd  at  wrong,  Geraint  and  E.  939 

Bribed    B  with  large  promises  the  men  Marr.  of  Geraint  453 

Brick    When  we  made  Vs  in  I^ypt.  Princess  iv  128 

mantles  all  the  mouldering  Vs —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  257 

as  graw'd  hall  ower  the  h  ;  Owd  Roil  26 

'card  the  Vs  an'  the  baulks  , ,       109 

Brickwork    Tudor-chimnied  bulk  Of  mellow  b  Edwin  Atorris  12 

Bridal  (adj.)    Leapt  lightly  clad  in  b  white —  Lomer's  Tale  Hi  44 

Thy  Soldier-brother's  h  orange-bloom  Break    Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  11 

The  b  garland  falls  upon  the  bier,  D.  of  the  Duke  of  O.  1 

Bridal  (a)    Then  reign  the  world's  great  Vs,  Princess  vii  294 

Evil  haunts  The  birth,  the  b ;  In  Mem.  xcviii  14 

Memories  of  b,  or  of  birth,  „          xcix  15 

Will  clothe  her  for  her  b's  like  the  sun.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  231 

clothed  her  for  her  Vs  like  the  sun ;  , ,             836 

Bridal-gift    poor  bride  Gives  her  harsh  groom  for  b-g 

a  scourge  ;  Princess  v  378 


Bridal  music 


62 


Brief 


Bridal  music  No  h  m  this !  But  fear  not  you !  The  Ring  474 
Bridal-time  birds  make  ready  for  their  h-t  Sisters  {E.  and  E. )  71 
Bride    (See  aho  Harlot-bride,  Widow-bride)    like 

a  6  of  old  In  triumph  led,  Ode  to  Memory  75 

For  merry  b's  are  we  :  Sea-fairies  33 

pierced  thy  heart,  my  love,  my  h,  Oi'iana  42 

Thy  heart,  my  life,  my  love,  my  b,  „       44 

happy  bridesmaid  makes  a  happy  b.'  Tlie  Bridesmaid  4 

happy  bridesmaid,  make  a  happy  6.'  (repeat)  ,,        8  14 

down  I  went  to  fetch  my  b :  Miller's  D.  145 

far-renowned  b's  of  ancient  song  D.  of  F.  Women  17 

Hope  and  Memory,  spouse  and  b,  On  a  MourTier  23 

And  gain  her  for  my  b.  Talking  Oah  284 

'  Who  is  this  ?  behold  thy  b,'  Love  and  Didy  49 

Draw  me,  thy  b,  a  glittering  star,  St  Agnes'  Eve  23 

The  Bridegroom  with  his  b\  ,,36 

Passionless  b,  divine  Tranquillity,  Lucretius  266 

I  myself,  my  h  once  seen,  Princess  i  72 

But  chafing  me  on  fire  to  find  my  b)  ,,        166 

help  my  prince  to  gain  His  rightful  b,  ,,   Hi  161 

/  bound  by  precontract  Your  b,  „    iv  542 

To  fight  in  tourney  for  my  b,  }>      *'  353 

the  poor  b  Gives  her  harsh  groom  ,,         377 

My  b.  My  wife,  my  life.  ,,   vii  359 

Blissful  6  of  a  blissful  heir,  W.  to  Alexandra  27 

B  of  the  heir  of  the  kings  of  the  sea —  ,,              28 

mother  unto  mother,  stately  b,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  9 

Be  cheer'd  with  tidings  of  the  b,  In  Mem.  xl  23 

Be  sometimes  lovely  like  a  6,  ,,         UxQ 

Behold  their  b's  in  other  hands  ;  „        xc  14 

And  I  must  give  away  the  b;  , ,    Con.  42 

0  happy  hour,  behold  the  b  ,,69 
As  drinking  health  to  b  and  groom  ,,  83 
Bound  for  the  Hall,  and  I  think  for  a  b,  Maud  I  x26 
My  b  to  be,  my  evermore  delight,  ,,  xviii  73 
He  linkt  a  dead  man  there  to  a  spectral  6  ;  ,,  TIv  80 
Some  comfortable  b  and  fair,  Gareth  and  L.  94 
tall  and  marriageable,  Ask'd  for  a  & ;  ,,  103 
red-faced  6  who  knew  herself  so  vile,  ,,  110 
doom'd  to  be  the  b  of  Night  and  Death  ;  ,,  1396 
ere  you  wed  with  any,  bring  your  b,  Marr.  of  Geraint  228 
mended  fortunes  and  a  Prince's  6 :  ,,  718 
sweeter  than  the  b  of  Cassivelaun,  ,,  744 
promise,  that  whatever  b  I  brought,  ,,  783 
did  her  honour  as  the  Prince's  6,  , ,  835 
found  his  own  dear  6  propping  his  head,  Geraint  and  E.  584 
stainless  b  of  stainless  King —  Merlin  and  V.  81 
glowing  on  him,  like  a  b's  On  her  new  lord,  ,,  616 
he  never  wrong'd  his  b.  I  know  the  tale.  ,,  729 
Sees  what  his  fair  b  is  and  does,  ,,  782 
Hold  her  a  wealthy  b  within  thine  arms,  Holy  Grail  621 
makest  broken  music  with  thy  b,  Last  Tournament  264 
Isolt  of  Britain  and  his  b,  „  408 
twain  had  fallen  out  about  the  b  „  545 
Lionel,  the  happy,  and  her,  and  her,  his  b !  Lover's  Tale  i  755 
cold  heart  or  none— No  b  for  me.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  202 
placed  My  ring  upon  the  finger  of  my  b.  ,,  214 
Till  that  dead  bridesmaid,  meant  to  be  ray  b,  ,,  264 
a  heedless  and  innocent  b —  Tlie  Wreck  13 
not  Love  but  Hate  that  weds  a  h  against  her  will ;  The  Flight  32 
would  I  were  there,  the  friend,  the  b,  the  wife,  ,,  43 
6  who  stabb'd  her  bridegroom  on  her  bridal  night —  ,,  57 
one  has  come  to  claim  his  b,  Locksley  H,,  Sixty  263 
for  evermore  The  B  of  Darkness.'  Demeter  and  P.  100 

1  sang  the  song,  '  are  b  And  bridegroom.'  Tlie  Ring  25 
Birds  and  b's  must  leave  the  nest.  ,,  89 
not  forgiven  me  yet,  his  over-jealous  b,  Happi/  6 
You  would  not  mar  the  beauty  of  your  6  ,,  24 
how  it  froze  you  from  your  b,  ,,71 
tho'  I  am  the  Bandit's  b.  Bandit's  Death  6 
and  never  a  ring  for  the  b.  Charity  6 
when  he  promised  to  make  me  his  6,  ,,     11 

Bridegroom    {See  also  Groom)    For  me  the 

Heavenly  B  waits,  St  Agnes'  Eve  31 

ITie  B  with  his  bride !  ,,86 


Bridegroom  {continued)  And  learning  this,  the  b  will  relent.    Guinevere  172 

'  Have  we  not  heard  the  b  is  so  sweet  ?  , ,         177 

bride  who  stabb'd  her  b  on  her  bridal  night —  Tlie  Flight  57 

I  sang  the  song,  'are  bride  And  b.'  The  Ring  26 

when  the  6  murmur'd,  'With  this  ring,'  ,,       438 

Bride-kiss    Would  that  have  chill'd  her  b-k  ?  Last  Tournament  590 

Bridesmaid    B,  ere  the  happy  knot  was  tied,  Tlie  Bridesmaid  1 

A  happy  6  makes  a  happy  bride.'  ,,               4 

'  O  happy  b,  make  a  happy  bride.'  (repeat).  ,,         8  14 
Edith  would  be  b  on  the  day.                               Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  208 

saw  The  b  pale,  statuelike,  ,,                 212 

In  that  assumption  of  the  b —  ,,                 234 

Till  that  dead  b,  meant  to  be  my  bride,  ,,                 264 

Bridesman    Bantering  b,  reddening  priest,  Forlwn  33 

Bridge    {See  also  Brig,  Castle-bridge)    Where  from 

the  frequent  6,  Ode  to  Mernory  102 

Or  from  the  b  I  lean'd  to  hear  Miller's  D.  49 
But  Robin  leaning  on  the  h  beneath  the  hazel-tree  ?        May  Queen  14 

Across  the  brazen  b  of  war —  Love  tkou  thy  land  76 

arches  of  a  6  Crown'd  with  the  minster-towers.  Gardener's  D.  43 

half  has  fall'n  and  made  a  b  ;  Walk,  to  the  Mail  32 

curves  of  mountain,  b,  Boat,  island,  Edunn  Morris  5 

/  hiing  with  grooms  and  porters  on  the  b,  Godiva  2 

By  b  and  ford,  by  park  and  pale.  Sir  GaZahad  82 

And  half  a  hundred  b's.  The  Brook  30 

There  is  Darnley  b,  It  has  more  ivy  ;  ,,36 

that  old  b,  which,  half  in  ruins  then,  ,,         79 

naked  marriages  Flash  from  the  b,  Aylmet's  Field  766 

under  arches  of  the  marble  b  Hung,  Princess  ii  458 

o'er  a  6  of  pine  wood  crossing,  ,,       Hi  335 

knell  to  my  desires,  Clang'd  on  the  b;  „       iv  175 

boats  and  6's  for  the  use  of  men.  ,,          m47 

all  night  upon  the  b  of  war  Spec,  of  Iliad  9 

The  cataract  flashing  from  the  6,  In  Mem.  Ixid  15 

paced  the  shores.  And  many  a  &,  ,,   Ixoaovii  12 

b,  ford,  beset  By  bandits,  Gareth  and  L,  594 

this  a  6  of  single  arc  Took  at  a  leap  ;  ,,              908 

when  mounted,  cried  from  o'er  the  b,  ,,              951 

at  fiery  speed  the  two  Shock'd  on  the  central  b,  „             963 

Beyond  his  horse's  crupper  and  the  b,  „              966 

drave  his  enemy  backward  down  the  6,  ,,              969 

watch 'd  thee  striking  on  the  b  ,,              992 

For  there  beyond  a  6  of  treble  bow,  , ,            1086 

Then  the  third  brother  shouted  o'er  the  b,  „             1096 

They  madly  hurl'd  together  on  the  b ;  ,,             1120 

hurl'd  him  headlong  o'er  the  6  Down  to  the  river,  ,,            1153 

victor  of  the  b's  and  the  ford,  ,,            1232 
b  that  spann'd  a  dry  ravine ;  (repeat)            Marr.  of  Geraint  246,  294 

Earl  Yniol's,  o'er  the  b  Yonder.'  „                      291 

after  went  her  way  across  the  b,  „                     383 

I  saw  you  moving  by  me  on  the  6,  ,,                       429 

Like  him  who  tries  the  b  he  fears  may  fail,  Geraint  and  E.  303 

way,  where,  link'd  with  a  many  a  b,  Holy  Grail  502 

Galahad  fled  along  them  bhy  b,  ,,         504 

every  b  as  quickly  as  he  crost  Sprang  into  fire  , ,         505 

gain  d  her  castle,  upsprang  the  b,  Pelleas  and  E.  206 

A  6  is  there,  that,  look'd  at  from  beneath  Lover's  Tale  i  375 

on  the  tremulous  b,  that  from  beneath  ,,           412 

Standin'  here  be  the  b,  TomoiTow  2 

live  the  life  Beyond  the  b,  Akbar's  Ih'eam  145 

we  dipt  down  under  the  b  Bandit's  Death  22 

Bridge-broken    his  nose  B-b,  one  eye  out,  Last  Tournament  59 

Bridle     The  gemmy  b  glitter'd  free,  L.  of  SJmlott  Hi  10 

The  b  bells  rang  merrily  ,,              13 

Bridle-hand    Down  with  the  b-h  drew  The  foe  Heavy  Brigade  53 

Bridle-rein    glimmering  moorland  rings  With 

jingling  b-r's.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  36 
tied  the  b-r's  of  all  the  three  Together,  (repeat)    Geraint  and  E.  98, 183 

And  sadly  gazing  on  her  b-r's,  ,,                 494 

held  His  people  by  the  b-r  of  Truth.  Akbar's  Dream  85 

Brief    In  endless  time  is  scarce  more  b  Two  Voices  113 

days  were  b  Whereof  the  poets  talk,  Talking  Oak  185 
'  0  tell  her,  b  is  life  but  love  is  long.  And  b  the  sun 
of  summer  in  the  North,  And  b  the  moon  of 

beauty  in  tho  South.  Pnncess  iv  111 


Brief 


63 


Bring 


Spitefxd  Letter  21 
Doitht  and  Prayer  13 


Brief  (continued)    B,h  is  a,  summer  leaf, 
if  Thou  wiliest,  let  my  day  be  h, 

Brier    {See  also  Briar)    whom  Gideon  school'd 

with  6'*-.  Buonaparte  14 

The  little  life  of  bank  and  h.  You  might  have  won  30 

drench 'd  with  ooze,  and  torn  with  Vs,  Princess  v  28 
I  have  heard  of  thorns  and  b's.                        Window,  Marr.  Morn.  20 

Over  the  thorns  and  6's,  ,,                   21 

the  winds  that  bend  the  h  !  La^t  Tournament  731 

wild  h  had  driven  Its  knotted  thorns  Lover's  Tale  i  619 

rough  6  tore  my  bleeding  palms ;  ,,          ii    18 

Brig  (bridge)    An'  I'll  run  oop  to  the  h,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  55 

Brigade    Glory  to  all  the  three  hundred,  and  all 

the  B  !  Heavy  Brigade  66 

Brigade,  Heavy    See  Heavy  Brigade 

Brigade,  Light    See  Light  Brigade 

Bright  (adj.)    See  also  Over-bright,  Rosy-bright,  Summer- 
bright) 

Clear  and  b  it  should  be  ever,  Poet's  Mind  5 

B  as  light,  and  clear  as  wind.  ,,           7 

met  with  two  so  full  and  b — Such  eyes  !  Miller's  D.  86 

I  made  my  dagger  sharp  and  b.  The  Sisters  26 

but  none  so  6  as  mine  ;  May  Queen  5 

Make  b  our  days  and  light  our  dreams.  Of  old  sat  Freedom  22 

B  was  that  afternoon.  Sunny  but  chill ;  Enoch  Arden  669 

B  with  the  sun  upon  the  stream  Sea  Ih-eams  97 

b  and  fierce  and  fickle  is  the  South,               '  Princess  iv  97 

B  let  it  be  with  its  blazon'd  deeds.  Ode  on  Well.  56 

Phosphor,  b  As  our  pure  love.  In  Mem.  ix      10 

Thy  marble  b  in  dark  appears,  ,,        Ixvii   5 

The  voice  was  low,  the  look  was  b  ;  „        Ixix  15 

And  b  the  friendship  of  thine  eye ;  ,,       cxix  10 

To-day  the  grave  is  b  for  me,  , ,       Con.  73 

b  and  light  as  the  crest  Of  a  peacock,  Maud  I     xvi    16 

soft  splendours  that  you  look  so  6  ?  ,,            xviii  79 

dawn  of  Eden  b  over  earth  and  sky,  „    II    i          8 

in  a  weary  world  my  one  thing  b  ;  „    III  id      17 

Geraint  with  eyes  all  b  replied,  Marr.  of  Geraint  494 

strange  b  and  dreadful  thing,  a  court,  „              616 

she  knew  That  all  was  b ;  ,,              658 

Beholding  one  so  b  in  dark  estate,  ,,              786 

keep  him  b  and  clean  as  heretofore,  Geraint  and  E.  937 

She  with  a  face,  b  as  for  sin  forgiven,  Lancelot  and  E.  1102 

her  look  B  for  all  others,  Pdleas  and  E.  Yil 
our  eyes  met :  hers  were  b,  and  mine  Were  dim         Lover's  Tale  i  441 

an'  I  keeaps  'im  clean  an'  b,  North.  Cobbler  97 

Far  from  out  a  sky  for  ever  b.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  19 

an'  yer  eyes  as  b  as  the  day !  Tomorrow  32 

How  b  you  keep  your  marriage- ring  !  Romney's  R.  59 

morning  that  looks  so  b  from  afar !  By  an  Evohdion.  10 

When  I  look'd  at  the  bracken  so  b  June  Bracken,  etc.  3 

Bright  (s)    level  lake  with  diamond-plots  Of  dark 

and  b.  Arabian  Nights  86 

Remaining  betwixt  dark  and  b  :  Margaret  28 

Of  this  flat  lawn  with  dusk  and  b  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  2 

B  and  Dark  have  sworn  that  I,  Demeter  and  P.  96 

Beyond  the  darker  hour  to  see  the  b,  Prog,  of  Spring  88 

Brighten    cheek  brighten'd  as  the  foam-bow  Vs  (Enone  61 

stars  above  them  seem  to  b  as  they  pass  ;  May  Queen  34 

Thy  sweet  eyes  b  slowly  close  to  mine,  Tithonus  38 

it  b's  and  darkens  down  on  the  plain.  Windma,  On  the  Hill  2 
it  b's  and  darkens  and  b's  like  my  hope,  And 

it  darkens  and  b's  and  darkens  like  my  fear,  ,,                 18 

And  b  like  the  star  that  shook  In  Mem.,  Con.  31 

b's  at  the  clash  of  '  Yes '  and  '  No,'  Ancient  Sage  71 

b's  thro'  the  Mother's  tender  eyes,  Prin.  Beatnce  4 

Brighten'd    cheek  b  as  the  foam-bow  brightens  QSnone  61 

For  so  mine  own  was  b :  Aylmer's  Field  683 

Till  the  face  of  Bel  be  b,  Boadicea  16 

Your  pretty  sports  have  b  all  again.  Merlin  and  V.  305 

The  rounder  cheek  had  b  into  bloom.  Tlie  Ring  351 
Brightening    (See  also  Ever-brightening)    Like  sheet 

lightning,  Ever  b  Poet's  Mind  26 

B  the  skirts  of  a  long  cloud,  M.  d' Arthur  54 

Unseen,  is  b  to  his  bridal  morn.  Gardener's  D,  73 


Brightening  (continued)    Enid  listen'd  b  as  she  lay :    Mair.  of{jleraint  733 

B  the  skirts  of  a  long  cloud.  Pass,  of  Arthur  2'22 

And  slowly  b  Out  of  the  glimmer.  Merlin  and  the  G.  88 

Brighter    broader  and  b  The  Gleam  flying  onward,  ,,               95 

Brightest    Their  best  and  b,  when  they  dwelt  on  hers,      Aylmer's  Field  69 

Brightly    Enoch  faced  this  morning  of  farewell  B  Enoch  Arden  183 

Brightness    as  babies  for  the  moon.  Vague  b  ;  Princess  iv  429 
false  sense  in  her  own  self  Of  my  contrasting  6, 

overbore  Marr.  of  Geraint  801 
set  apart  Their  motions  and  their  b  from  the 

stars,  Lover's  Tale  i  174 

The  6  of  a  burning  thought,  „            743 

Brilliance    star  The  black  earth  with  b  rare.  Ode  to  Memory  20 

So  bathed  we  were  in  b.  Lover's  Tale  i  313 

Brim  (b)     By  garden  porches  on  the  6,  Arabian  Nights  16 

He  froth'd  his  bumpers  to  the  b  ;  D.  of  the  0.  Year  19 

New  stars  all  night  above  the  b  The  Voyage  25 

Brim  (verb)    I  b  with  sorrow  drowning  song.  In  Mem.  xix  12 

Arrange  the  board  and  b  the  glass  ;  ,,       cvii  16 

Brimful    heart,  B  of  those  wild  tales,  D.  of  F.  Women  12 

Brimm'd    (See  alao  Broad-brimm'd)    B  with  delirious 

draughts  of  warmest  life.  Eleanore  139 
And  beaker  b  with  noble  wine.                               Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  36 

Brine    Lulling  the  b  against  the  Coptic  sands.  Buonaparte  8 

Fresh- water  springs  come  up  through  bitter  b.  If  I  were  loved  8 

hear  and  see  the  far-off  sparkling  b,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  98 

Gloom'd  the  low  coast  and  quivering  b  The  Voyage  42 

Should  gulf  him  fathom-deep  in  6  ;  In  Mem.  x  18 

To  darken  on  the  rolling  b  That  breaks  „      cvii  14 

Bring    b  me  my  love,  Rosalind.  Leonine  Eleg.  1 4 

'  B  this  lamb  back  into  Thy  fold,  Supp.  Confessions  105 

Music  that  b's  sweet  sleep  down  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  7 

And  in  its  season  b  the  law  ;  Love  tlimc  thy  larul  32 
Certain,  if  knowledge  b  the  sword.  That 

knowledge  takes  ,,                87 

For  nature  b's  not  back  the  Mastodon,  The  Epic  36 

Watch  what  thou  seest,  and  lightly  b  me  word.'  M.  d' Arthur  38 

Watch  what  I  see,  and  lightly  b  thee  word.'  ,,           44 

I  bad  thee,  watch,  and  lightly  b  me  word.'  ,,          81 

A  word  could  b  the  colour  to  my  cheek  ;  Gardener's  D.  196 

I  will  have  my  boy,  and  b  him  home  ;  Dora  122 

b  me  offerings  of  fruit  and  flowers :  St.  S.  Stylites  128 

Love  himself  will  b  The  drooping  flower  Love  and  Duty  23 

sweet  hours  that  b  as  all  things  good,  „             57 

sad  hours  that  b  us  all  things  ill,  ,,              .^8 

Nay,  but  Nature  b's  thee  solace  ;  Lochsley  Hall  87 

my  latest  rival  b's  thee  rest.  ,,           89 
B  truth  that  sways  the  soul  of  men  ?                    Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  52 

And  b  the  fated  fairy  Prince.  ,,                56 

'  B  the  dress  and  put  it  on  her,  L.  of  Burleigh  95 

B  me  spices,  b  me  wine  ;  Vision  of  Sin  76 

Will  b  fair  weather  yet  to  all  of  us.  Enoch  Arden  191 

I  warrant,  man,  that  we  shall  b  you  round.'  ,,            841 

and  arose  Eager  to  6  them  down,  ,,            872 
b  Their  own  gray  hairs  with  sorrow  to  the 

grave —  Aylmer's  Field  776 

And  b  her  in  a  whirlwind  :  Princess  i  65 

b's  our  friends  up  from  the  underworld.  ,,     iv  45 

an'  doesn  b  ma  the  aale  ?  N.  Fanner,  0.  S.  65 

The  seasons  b  the  flower  again.  In  Mem.        ii   5 

And  b  the  firstling  to  the  flock  ;  ,,6 

So  b  him :  we  have  idle  dreams :  „                 a;    9 

And  not  the  burthen  that  they  b.  ,,             xiii  20 

If  one  should  b  me  this  report,  ,,              xiv    1 

And  all  was  good  that  Time  could  b,  ,,           xodii  18 

They  b  me  sorrow  touch'd  with  joy,  ,,         xxviii  19 

Which  b's  no  more  a  welcome  guest  ,,            xxix    5 

And  b  her  babe,  and  make  her  boast,  „               xl  26 

She  often  b's  but  one  to  bear,  „                Iv  12 

1 6  to  life,  1 6  to  death :  „                Ivi    6 

Then  b  an  opiate  trebly  strong,  ,,            Ixxi   6 

In  verse  that  6'.s  myself  relief,  ,,            Ixxv   2 

B  orchis,  b  the  foxglove  spire,  ,,        Ixxxiii    9 

Demanding,  so  to  b  relief  ,,          Ixxxv    6 

Ah,  take  the  imperfect  gift  I  b,  „                   II7 


Bring 


64 


Broidry 


Bring  (continued)    B  in  great  logs  and  let  them  lie,  In  Mem.  cvii  17 

Which  every  hour  his  couriers  h.  „      cxxvi   4 

She  may  b  me  a  curse.  Maud  I  ilZ 

how  Goid  will  h  them  about  ,,      i«  44 

to  ride  forth  And  b  the  Queen  ; —  Com.  of  Arthur  449 

b  him  here,  that  I  may  judge  the  right,  Gareth  and  L.  380 

And  could  not  wholly  b  him  under,  ,,          1144 

To  b  thee  back  to  do  the  battle  with  him.  ,,         1294 

ere  you  wed  with  any,  b  your  bride,  Marr.  of  Oeraint  228 
Call  the  host  and  bid  him  b  Charger  and  palfrey.'  Oeraint  and  E.  400 

'  Go  thou  with  hira  and  him  and  b  it  Balin  aiul  Balan  6 

I  b  thee  back,  When  I  have  ferreted  Merlin  aiul  V.  54 

charged  by  Valence  to  b  home  the  child.  ,,            718 

one  dark  hour  which  b's  remorse,  ,,            763 

Joust  for  it,  and  win,  and  b  it  in  an  hour,  Lancelot  and  E.  204 

let  me  6  your  colour  back  ;  ,,            387 

b  us  where  he  is,  and  how  he  fares,  ,,            547 

'  Bind  him,  and  b  him  in.'  Pelleas  and  E.  232 

Bind  him  as  heretofore,  and  b  him  in :  ,,            271 

to  flout  me,  when  they  b  me  in,  , ,            330 

third  night  hence  will  6  thee  news  of  gold.'  ,,            357 
Watch  what  thou  seest,  and  lightly  b  me  word.'     Pass,  of  Arthur  206 

Watch  what  I  see,  and  lightly  b  thee  word.'  ,,            212 

I  bade  thee,  watch,  and  lightly  b  me  word.'  ,,            249 

b's  And  shows  them  whatsoever  he  accounts  Lover's  T(de  iv  232 

b's  and  sets  before  him  in  rich  guise  ,,             247 

To  6  Camilla  down  before  them  all.  ,,             285 

be  none  left  here  to  b  her  back :  ,,             367 

b  on  both  the  yoke  Of  stronger  states,  Tiresias  69 

God  curse  him  and  b  him  to  nought !  Despair  106 

morning  b's  the  day  I  hate  and  fear ;  Tlie  Flight  2 

which  b's  our  Edwin  home.  ,,         92 
B  the  old  dark  ages  back  without  the  faith,        Locksley  H.,  Sixty  137 

Moother  'ed  tell'd  ma  to  b  tha  down,  Owd  Rod  50 

Twelve  times  in  the  year  B  me  bliss,  The  Ring  6 

Hubert  6's  me  home  With  April  ,,       59 

once  more  I  b  you  these.  Ho-ppy  22 

'  From  the  South  I  b  you  balm.  Prog,  of  Spring  66 

The  shepherd  b's  his  adder-bitten  lamb,  Death  of  (Enone  38 

B  me  my  horse — my  horse  ?  Mechanophilus  9 

And  b  or  chase  the  storm,  ,,          14 

B's  the  Dreams  about  my  bed.  Silent  Voices  2 

Bringer    something  more,  A  6  of  new  things  ;  Ulysses  28 

Bringest    Thou  b  the  sailor  to  his  wife,  In  Mem.  x  5 

^Come  quick,  thou  b  all  I  love.  ,,     xvii  8 

thou  b  Not  peace,  a  sword,  a  fire.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  35 
Bringeth    poetess  singeth,  that  Hesperus  all  things  b.      Leonine  Eleg.  13 

Bringing    And  b  me  down  from  the  Hall  Maud  I  xxi  2 

the  new  sun  rose  b  the  new  year.  Pass,  of  Arthur  469 

Briogiog-up    give  his  child  a  better  6-m  Enoch  Arden  87 

To  give  his  babes  a  better  b-u  „          299 

It  is  but  b  u:  no  more  than  that :  Princess,  Pro.  129 

Brink    Betwixt  the  green  b  and  the  running  foam^  Sea-fairies  2 

now  shake  hands  across  the  b  Of  that  deep  grave  My  life  is  full  6 

barge  with  oar  and  sail  Moved  from  the  b,  M.  d' Arthur  266 

the  woman  walk'd  upon  the  b  :  Sea  Dreams  112 

Leapt  fiery  Passion  from  the  b's  of  death  ;  Princess  vii  156 

And  voices  hail  it  from  the  b  ;  In  Mem.  cxxi  14 

But  if  a  man  who  stands  upon  the  b  Geraint  and  E.  472 

barge  with  oar  and  sail  Moved  from  the  b,  Pass,  of  Arthur  434 

lianas  that  dropt  to  the  b  of  his  bay,  T/i£  Wreck  73 

Briony    about  my  feet  The  berried  b  fold.'  Talking  Oak  148 

fragile  bindweed-bells  and  b  rings  ;  The  Brook  203 

Briony- vine    b-v  and  ivy- wreath  Ran  forward  Aniphion  29 

Bristle  (s)     Figs  out  of  thistles,  silk  from  b's,  Last  Tournament  356 

Bristle  (verb)    half  stands  up  And  b's  ;  Walk,  to  the  Mail  32 

'fhe  hoar  hair  of  the  Baronet  h  up  Aylmer's  Field  42 

And  b's  all  the  brakes  and  thorns  In  Mem.  cvii  9 

Britain    The  name  of  B  trebly  great —  You  ask  me,  why  22 

And  keeps  our  B,  whole  within  herself,  Princess,  Con.  52 

Our  B  cannot  salve  a  tyrant  o'er.  Third  of  Feb.  20 
welcome  Russian  flower,  a  people's  pride,  To  B,    W.  to  Marie  Alex.  7 

Girt  by  half  the  tribes  of /{,  Boildiceah 

call  us  B's  barbarous  populaces,  , ,        7 

Tear  the  noble  heart  oi  B,  ,,12 


Britain  {contimied)    Bark  an  answer,  B's  raven  ! 
shall  B  light  upon  auguries  happier  ? 
Nor  B's  one  sole  God  be  the  millionaire : 
Chief  of  the  church  in  B, 
flying  over  many  a  windy  wave  To  B, 
Roman  Csesar  first  Invaded  B, 
Brought  the  great  faith  to  B 
dread  Pendragon,  B's  Kings  of  kings, 
Isolt  of  B  and  his  bride, 
Isolt  of  B  dash'd  Before  Isolt 
for  crest  the  golden  dragon  clung  Of  B ; 
The  voice  of  B,  or  a  sinking  land, 
0  banner  of  B,  hast  thou  Floated 
Nor  thou  in  B,  little  Lutterworth, 


Boadicea  13 

„      45 

Maud  III  in  22 

Com.  of  Arthur  454 

J/a/T.  of  Geraint  338 

746 

Balin  and  Balan  103 

Lancelot  and  E.  424 

Last  Tourtmrnent  408 

588 

Guinefoere  595 

To  the  Qiieen  ii  24 

Def.  of  Lucknow  1 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  26 


Broke  into  B  with  Haughty  war- workers        Batt.  of  Brunanburh  120 

Makes  the  might  of  B  known  ;  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  19 

B  fought  her  sons  of  yore —  ,,  21 

B  fail'd ;  and  never  more,  ,,  22 

B's  myriad  voices  call,  ,,  35 

One  with  B,  heart  and  soul !  ,,38 

At  times  our  B  cannot  rest.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  1 

British    Peal  after  peal,  the  B  battle  broke,  Buonaparte  7 

With  a  stony  B  stare.  Maud  1  xiii  22 

And  curse  me  the  B  vermin,  the  rat ;  ,,       II  v  58 

Howiver  was  B  farmers  to  stan'  agean  o'  their  feeat.  Ouxi  Rod  46 

Briton    set  His  B  in  blown  seas  and  storming  showers.     Ode  on  Well,  165 

Up  my  B's,  on  my  chariot,  Boadicea  69 

Breton,  not  B :  here  Like  a  shipwreck'd  man  Maud  II  ii  30 

Beyond  the  race  of  B's  and  of  men.  Com.  of  Arthur  331 

B's,  hold  your  own  !  (repeat)        Open,  I,  and  C,  Exhib,  10,  20,  30,  40 

Britoness    haled  the  yellow-ringleted  B —  Boadicea  55 

Brittany    (See  also  Breton)    From  overseas  in 

B  return'd.  Last  Tournament  175 

Her  daintier  namesake  down  in  B —  „  265 

Was  it  the  name  of  one  in  B,  ,,  396 

He  seem'd  to  pace  the  strand  of  j5  ,,  407 

Before  Isolt  of  B  on  the  strand,  ,,  589 

Broach-turner    Dish-washer  and  b-t,  loon  ! —  Gareth  and  L.  770 

Broad    Grows  green  and  b,  and  takes  no  care,  Lotos-Eaters,  C,  S.  28 

Make  b  thy  shoulders  to  receive  my  weight,  M.  d' Arthur  164 

muscular  he  spread,  so  b  of  breast.  Gardener's  D.  8 

Alas,  I  was  so  6  of  girth.  Tailing  Oak  139 

rain.  That  makes  thee  b  and  deep  !  ,,  280 

those  that  saunter  in  the  b  Cries  Aylmer's  Field  744 

I  wish  they  were  a  whole  Atlantic  b.'  Princess,  Con.  71 

Make  b  thy  shoulders  to  receive  my  weight.  Pass,  of  Arthur  332 

Broad-based    B-b  upon  her  people's  will,  To  the  Queen  35 

B-b  flights  of  marble'stairs  Ran  up  Arabian  Nights  117 

Broad-blown    b-b  comeliness,  red  and  white,  Maud  I  xiii  9 

Broad-brimm'd    6-6  hawker  of  holy  things,  ,,  a;  41 

Broadcast    shower  the  fiery  grain  Of  freedom  b  Princess  v  422 

Broaden     Freedom  slowly  b's  down  From  precedent    You  ask  me,  why  11 

To  b  into  boundless  day.  In  Mem.  xcv  64 

B  the  glowing  isles  of  vernal  blue.  Prog,  of  Spring  60 

Broaden'd    Morn  b  on  the  borders  of  the  dark,  D.  of  F.  Women  265 

Broadening    (See  also  Ever -broadening)    b  from  her 

feet,  And  blackening,  Guinevere  81 

Broader     Sun  Grew  b  toward  his  death  Princess  Hi  364 

B  and  higher  than  any  in  all  the  lands  !  Holy  Grail  247 

b  and  brighter  The  Gleam  flying  onward.  Merlin  and  the  G.  95 

Broader-grown    b-g  the  bowers  Drew  the  great  night         Pnncess  vii  48 

Broad-faced    Bf  with  under-fringe  of  iiisset  beard,    Geraint  atid  E.  537 

Broad-flung    tide  in  its  6-/ shipwrecking  roar,  Maud  I  Hi  11 

Broad-limb'd    there  alone  The  h-l  Gods  at  random  thrown      To  E.  L.  15 

Broad-shoulder'd    great  b-s  genial  Englishman,  Princess,  Con.  85 

Brocade    That  stood  from  out  a  stiff  6  Aylmer's  Field  20i 

He  found  an  ancient  dame  in  dim  b  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  363 

Broceliande    And  in  the  wild  woods  of  B,  Merlin  and  V.  2 

Ev'n  to  the  wild  woods  oi  B.  ,,         204 

Broider'd    (See  also  Costly-broider'd,  Star-broider'd) 

'  A  red  sleeve  B  with  pearls, '  Lancelot  and  E,  373 

sleeve  of  scarlet,  6  with  great  pearls,  ,,  604 

Broidering    Among  her  damsels  b  sat.  Merlin  and  V,  138 

Broidery-ftame    take  the  b-f,  and  add  A  crimson  Day- Dm.,  Pro.  15 

Broidry    Hare  b  of  the  purple  clover,  A  Dirge  38 


Brok 


66 


Bronze 


Brok  (broke)    an'  Charlie  'e  b  'is  neck,  Village  Wife  85 

Broke  {See  also  Brok)    Peal  after  peal,  the  British 

battle  h,  Buonaparte  7 

A  nobler  yearning  never  b  her  rest  The  Form,  the  form  2 

AVhat  time  the  foeman's  line  is  6,  Two  Voices  155 

From  out  my  sullen  heart  a  power  B,  ,,            444 

thro'  wavering  lights  and  shadows  b,  Lotos-Haters  12 
love  the  gleams  of  good  that  b  From  either  side,  Love  thou  thy  land  89 

murmur  b  the  stillness  of  that  air  Gardeners  D.  147 

bit  his  lips,  And  b  away.  Dora  34 

She  b  out  in  praise  To  God,  ,,    112 

I  6  a  close  with  force  and  arms :  Edvrin  Morris  131 

Bluff  Harry  b  into  the  spence  Talking  Oak  47 

struck  his  stafif  against  the  rocks  And  6  it, —  Golden  Year  60 

The  hedge  b  in,  the  banner  blew,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  9 

The  linden  b  her  ranks  and  rent  Amphion  33 

Warm  b  the  breeze  against  the  brow,  The  Voyage  9 

When  you  came  in  my  sorrow  b  me  down  ;  Enoch  Arden  317 

with  jubilant  cries  B  from  their  elders,  ,,            378 

bent  or  6  The  lithe  reluctant  boughs  ,,            380 

long-winded  tale,  and  b  him  short ;  The  Brook  109 

tide  of  youth  B  with  a  phosphorescence  Aylmer's  Field  116 

B  from  a  bower  of  vine  and  honeysuckle :  ,,          156 

Then  6  all  bonds  of  courtesy,  ,,          323 

/{ into  nature's  music  when  they  saw  her.  ,,          694 

Who  b  the  bond  which  they  desired  to  break,  ,,          778 

you  tumbled  down  and  b  The  glass  Sea  Dreams  141 

you  made  and  J  your  dream :  ,,           143 

on  those  cliffs  B,  mixt  with  awful  light,  ,,          215 

ever  when  it  b  The  statues,  ,,          223 

on  the  crowd  B,  mixt  with  awful  light  ,,          235 

His  angel  ft  his  heart.  ,,          280 

nor  b,  nor  shunn'd  a  soldier's  death,  Princess,  Pro.  38 

when  the  council  b,  I  rose  and  past  ,,         i  90 

dances  b  and  buzz'd  in  knots  of  talk  ;  ,,133 

she  b  out  interpreting  my  thoughts :  ,,     Hi  275 

b  the  letter  of  it  to  keep  the  sense.  ,,      iv  338 

in  the  furrow  b  the  ploughman's  head,  ,,       v  221 

at  our  disguise  B  from  their  lips,  ,,          272 

cloud  that  dimm'd  her  b  A  genial  warmth  and  light  ,,      m  281 

courts  of  twilight  b  them  up  Thro'  all  the  ,,  Con.  113 

even  if  they  b  In  thunder,  silent ;  Ode  on  Well.  176 

We  b  them  on  the  land,  we  drove  them  Third  of  Feb.  30 

Right  thro'  the  line  they  b  ;  Light  Brigade  33 

Burnt  and  b  the  grove  and  altar                 -  Bo&dicea  2 

Who  b  our  fair  companionship.  In  Mem.  xodi  13 

idly  b  the  peace  Of  hearts  that  beat  ,,          Iviii  5 

But  in  the  present  b  the  blow.  , ,      locxxo  56 

And  strangely  on  the  silence  b  ,,          xcro  25 

Has  b  the  bond  of  dying  use.  ,,            cv  12 

And  the  sunlight  b  from  her  lip  ?  Maud  I  id  86 

million  horrible  bellowing  echoes  J  ,,     Hi  24: 

light  laugh  B  from  Lynette,  Gareth  and  L.  837 

there  he  b  the  sentence  in  his  heart  Geraint  and  E.  41 

b  the  bandit  holds  and  cleansed  the  land.  ,,            944 

Balin  the  stillness  of  a  minute  b  Balin  arid  Balan  51 

but  God  B  the  strong  lance,  Lancelot  and  E.  26 

She  b  into  a  little  scornful  laugh :  ,,          120 

till  our  good  Arthur  b  The  Pagan  ,,          279 

when  the  next  day  b  from  underground,  ,,          413 

heard  mass,  b  fast,  and  rode  away :  ,,          415 

But  sin  b  out.     Ah,  Christ,  Holy  Grail  93 

when  the  sun  b  next  from  under  ground,  ,,         328 

bore  them  down,  And  b  thro'  all,  ,,         480 
fairy-circle  wheel'd  and  b  Flying,  and  link'd  again, 

and  wheel'd  and  b  Flying,  Guinevere  257 

after  tempest,  when  the  long  wave  b  „        290 

wicked  one,  who  b  The  vast  design  „         669 

Gleams  of  the  water-circles  as  they  b,  Lover's  Tale  i  67 

light  methought  b  from  her  dark,  dark  eyes,  ,,          368 

bliss,  which  b  in  light  Like  morning  ,,       ii  143 

softly  as  his  mother  6  it  to  him —  ,,        iv  31 

all  The  guests  h  in  upon  him  ,,          238 

the  battle-thunder  h  from  them  all.  The  Revenge  49 
her  brain  b  With  over-acting.                               Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  235 


Broke  (continued)   mother  b  her  promise  to  the 
dead, 
the  brute  bullet  b  thro'  the  brain 
I  have  b  their  cage,  no  gilded  one, 
silent  ocean  always  6  on  a  silent  shore, 
and  the  dwelling  b  into  flame ; 


Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  252 

Def.  of  Lucknmo  20 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  3 

V.  of  Maeldune  12 

32 


B  into  Britain  with  Haughty  war-workers       Bait,  of  Brunanburh  120 
funeral  bell  B  on  my  Pagan  Paradise,  Tiresias  193 
For  I  b  the  bond.  Tlie  Wreck  69 
a  tone  so  rough  that  I  b  into  passionate  tears,  ,,        122 
And  we  b  away  from  the  Christ,  Despair  25 
heart  of  the  mother,  and  b  it  almost ;  ,,74 
B  thro'  the  mass  from  below.  Heavy  Brigade  29 
then  the  tear  fell,  the  voice  b.  The  Ring  367 
light  of  happy  marriage  b  Thro'  all  Death  of  (Enone  102 
B  the  Taboo,  Dipt  to  the  crater,  Kapiolani  30 
Broken  {See  also  Bridge-broken,  Brokken,  Heart- 
broken)   Half  shown,  are  b  and  withdrawn.  Two  Voices  306 
Each  mom  my  sleep  was  b  thro"  Miller's  D.  39 
Let  what  is  b  so  remain.  Lotos-Eaters,  C  S.  80 
all  the  man  was  b  with  remorse ;  Dmra  165 
Oh,  his.     He  was  not  b.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  17 
The  clouds  are  b  in  the  sky.  Sir  Galahad  73 
Spars  were  splinter'd ;  decks  were  b :  The  Captain  49 
Mine  was  b,  When  that  cold  vapour  Vision  of  Sin  57 
A  limb  was  b  when  they  lifted  him  ;  Enoch  Arden  107 
I  seem  so  foolish  and  so  6  down.  ,,            316 
every  day  The  sunrise  b  into  scarlet  shafts  ,,            592 
Enoch  was  so  brown,  so  bow'd,  So  b —  ,,            704 
My  grief  and  solitude  have  6  me ;  ,,            857 
The  tented  winter-field  was  b  up  Aylmer's  Field  110 
A  creeper  when  the  prop  is  b,  „              810 
Then  the  great  Hall  was  wholly  b  down,  „              846 
Till  like  three  horses  that  have  b  fence.  Princess  ii  386 
Your  oath  isb:  we  dismiss  you :  ,,       iv  360 
glittering  axe  was  b  in  their  arms,  ,,          vi  51 
sanctuary  Is  violate,  our  laws  b:  ,,60 
Her  iron  will  was  6  in  her  mind ;  ,,            118 
'  Our  laws  are  6  :  let  him  enter  too.'  ,,            317 
It  will  never  be  b  by  Maud,  Maud  I  ii  2 
This  fellow  hath  b  from  some  Abbey,  Gareth  and  L.  456 
Because  my  means  were  somewhat  b  into  Marr.  of  Geraint  455 
My  pride  is  b :  men  have  seen  my  fall,'  ,,              578 
my  pride  Is  b  down,  for  Enid  sees  my  fall ! '  ,,              590 
each  of  whom  had  b  on  him  A  lance  Geraint  and  E.  88 
From  which  old  fires  have  b,  „            822 
There  was  I  b  down ;  ,,            851 
hast  b  shell.  Art  yet  half -yolk,  Balin  and  Balan  568 
the  high  purpose  b  by  the  worm.  Merlin  and  V.  196 
these  have  b  up  my  melancholy.'  ,,              267 
false  voice  made  way,  b  with  sobs :  ,,              857 
Becomes  the  sea-cliff  pathway  b  short,  ,,              882 
cried  '  They  are  b,  they  are  b  ! '  Lancelot  and  E.  310 
It  can  be  b  easier.  ,,            1208 
and  so  full,  So  many  lances  b —  Holy  Grail  331 
lance  B,  and  his  Excalibur  a  straw.*  Last  Tournament  88 
saw  the  laws  that  ruled  the  tournament  B,  „            161 
what  music  have  I  b,  fool  ? '  ,,            261 
B  with  Mark  and  hate  and  solitude,  „            643 
Not  to  be  loudly  b  in  upon.  Lover's  Tale  i  687 
the  Spanish  fleet  with  b  sides  lay  round  The  Revenge  71 
And  the  pikes  were  all  b  or  bent,  ,,         80 
My  sleep  was  b  besides  with  dreams                    In  tlie  Child.  Hosp.  65 
I  have  not  b  bread  for  fifty  hours.  Sir  J.  Okleastle  199 
With  armies  so  b  A  reason  for  bragging             Batt.  of  Brunanburh  82 
And  Hope  will  have  b  her  heart.  Despair  92 
that  poor  link  With  earth  is  b,  The  Ring  476 
wait  on  one  so  b,  so  forlorn  ?  Romney's  R.  17 
We  return'd  to  his  cave — the  link  was  b —  Bandit's  Death  29 

Broken-kneed    See  Brokken-knee^ld 

Broken-wise    Peering  askance,  and  muttering  b-w,       Merlin  and  V.  100 

Brokken  (broken)    as  if  'e'd  'a  b  'is  neck,  Owd  Roa  63 

Brokken-knee^d  (broken-kneed)    an'  the 

mare  b-k,  Church-warden,  etc.  4 

Bronze    on  his  right  Stood,  all  of  massiest  b :  Balin  and  Balan  364 

E 


Bronzed 


66 


Brother 


Bronzed    on  the  cheek,  And  bruised  and  h, 
Brooch    Pull  off,  pull  off,  the  h  of  gold, 

read  and  earn  our  prize,  A  golden  b : 
Brood  (s)     If  there  were  many  Lilias  in  the  &, 

tell  her.  Swallow,  that  thy  h  is  flown : 

He  sees  his  h  about  thy  knee ; 

Because  her  h  is  stol'n  away. 

O  sound  to  rout  the  b  of  cares. 

Her  own  b  lost  or  dead. 

Heathen,  the  b  by  Hengist  left ; 
Brood  (verb)    with  downcast  eyes  we  muse  and  6, 

About  him  b's  the  twilight  dim  : 

To  muse  and  6  and  live  again  in  memory, 

That  b's  above  the  fallen  sun, 

happy  birds,  that  change  their  sky  To  build  and  b  ; 

nevermore  to  6  On  a  horror  of  shatter'd  limbs 

sunshine  seem'd  to  b  More  warmly  on  the  heart 

What  use  to  6  ?  this  life  of  mingled  pains 
Brooded    stillness  of  that  air  Which  b  round  about  her ; 

while  she  b  thus  And  grew  half -guilty 

tender  love  Of  him  she  b  over. 

B  one  master- passion  evermore, 
Broodeth    But  where  the  sunbeam  b  warm, 
Brooding    ragged  rims  of  thunder  b  low, 

Sit  b  in  the  ruins  of  a  life. 

Across  my  fancy,  b  warm, 

but  b  turn  The  book  of  scorn, 

wordless  Vs  on  the  wasted  cheek — 

But  b  on  the  dear  one  dead. 

But  over  all  things  h  slept 

felt  that  tempest  b  round  his  heart, 

There,  b  by  the  central  altar, 

She  that  in  her  heart  is  b 
Brook  (b)    (See  also  Beck,  Mountain-brook,  Yabbok 

brook)    Past  Yabbok  b  the  livelong  night.      Clear-headed  friend  27 


Lancelot  and  E.  259 

Lady  Clare  39 

Princess  Hi  301 

„    Pro.  146 

„        iv  108 

582 

In  Mem.  xxi  28 

,,    Ixxxix  17 

Com.  of  Arthur  28 

Guinevere  16 

Sonnet  to 1 

Two  Voices  26d 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  65 

To  J.  S.  51 

In  Mem.  cxv  16 

Maud  Ii65 

Lover's  Tale  i  327 

To  Mary  Boyle  49 

Gardener's  Z).  148 

Guinevere  407 

Lover's  Tale  i  617 

,,  ii  60 

In  Mem.  xci  14 

Palace  of  Art  75 

Love  and  Duty  12 

Day- Dm.,  Pro.  10 

Princess  v  141 

,,    vii  112 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  17 

,,  Ixxviii  7 

Geraint  and  E.  11 

Ancient  Sage  33 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  23 


b  that  loves  To  purl  o'er  matted  cress 

deep  b  groan'd  beneath  the  mill ; 

I  thirsted  for  the  b's,  the  showers  : 

long  6  falling  thro'  the  clov'n  ravine 

0  mountain  b's,  I  am  the  daughter 

'  The  torrent  b's  of  hallow'd  Israel 

and  leap  the  rainbows  of  the  b's, 

Here,  by  this  h,  we  parted  ; 

yet  the  b  he  loved, 

'  0  6,'  he  says,  '  0  babbling  b,' 

and  the  b,  why  not  ?  replies. 

Philip's  farm  where  b  and  river  meet. 

Philip  chatter'd  more  than  b  or  bird  ; 

Beyond  the  b,  waist-deep  in  meadow-sweet. 

and  bowing  o'er  the  b  A  tonsured  head 

Little  about  it  stirring  save  a  b  ! 

where  the  b  Vocal,  with  here  and  there  a  silence, 

part  were  drown 'd  within  the  whirling  b : 

Cataract  b's  to  the  ocean  run, 

b's  of  Eden  mazily  murmuring, 

Oh  is  it  the  b,  or  a  pool. 

Spring  that  swells  the  narrow  b's, 

The  b  alone  far-off  was  heard, 

On  yon  swoll'n  b  that  bubbles  fast 

The  b  shall  babble  down  the  plain, 

slopes  a  wild  b  o'er  a  little  stone, 

a  broad  b  o'er  a  shingly  bed  Brawling, 

And  at  the  inrunning  of  a  little  b 

By  grove,  and  garden-lawn,  and  rushing  b, 

saw  deep  lawns,  and  then  a  b, 

and  o'er  the  b  Were  apple-trees,  and  apples  by  the  6  Fallen, 

But  even  while  I  drank  the  b, 

Stay'd  in  the  wandering  warble  of  a  6  ; 

Blaze  by  the  rushing  b  or  silent  well. 

blue  valley  and  the  glistening  b's. 

With  falling  b  or  blossom'd  bush — 

Gives  birth  to  a  brawling  b, 

echoes  of  the  hollow-banked  b's 

the  chillness  of  the  sprinkled  b  Smote 

black  b's  Of  the  midforest  heard  me — 


Ode  to  Memory  58 

Miller's  D.  113 

Fatima  10 

(Enone  8 

37 

D.  ofF.  Women  1^\ 

Locksley  Hall  171 

The  Brook  1 

15 

20 

22 

38 

51 

118 

199 

Aylmer's  Fidd  32 

145 

Princess,  Pro.  47 

The  Islet  17 

Milton  10 

Window,  On  the  Hill  4 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  70 

„  xcv  7 

„  xcix  6 

„  ci  10 

Marr.  of  Geraint  77 

248 

Lancelot  and  E.  1388 

Holy  Grail  230 

380 

383 

387 

Ijost  Tournament  254 

Guinevere  400 

Lover's  Tale  i  331 

405 


526 

566 

633 

ii  11 


Brook  (b)  (continued)    I  cast  them  in  the  noisy  h 

beneath.  Lover's  Tale  ii  41 

moanings  in  the  forest,  the  loud  b,  ,,            114 

b's  glitter 'd  on  in  the  light  without  sound,  V.  of  Maeldune  13 

I  found  these  cousins  often  by  the  b,  The  Ring  158 

b  that  feeds  this  lakelet  murmur'd  '  debt,'  ,,        171 

following  her  old  pastime  of  the  b,  „        354 

the  secret  splendour  of  the  b's.  Prog,  of  Spring  21 

thunder  of  the  b  Sounded  '  (Enone  ' ;  Death  of  (Enone  23 
Brook  (verb)    I  must  b  the  rod  And  chastisement    Supp.  Confessions  107 

I  would  not  b  my  fear  Of  the  other  :  D.  of  F.  Women  154 

We  b  no  further  insult  but  are  gone.'  Princess  vi  342 

shall  I  6  to  be  supplicated  ?  Boddicea  9 

I  scarce  could  b  the  strain  and  stir  In  Mem.  xv  12 

Who  cannot  6  the  shadow  of  any  lie.'  Gareth  and  L.  293 

I  cannot  b  to  gaze  upon  the  dead. '  Balin  and  Balan  586 

I  cannot  b  to  see  your  beauty  marr'd  Pelleas  and  E.  298 

thine  eyes  not  b  in  forest-paths.  Prog,  of  Spring  31 

Brook 'd    B  not  the  expectant  terror  of  her  heart,  Enoch  Arden  493 

but  she  6  no  more :  Aylmer's  Field  798 

She  b  it  not ;  but  wrathful,  Lucretius  14 

She  the  appeal  B  not,  but  clamouring  out  Princess  vi  140 

until  the  little  maid,  who  b  No  silence,  Guinevere  159 

Brooking    b  not  the  Tarquin  in  her  veins,  Lucretius  237 

peculiar  treasure,  b  not  Exchange  or  currency :  Lover's  Tale  i  447 
Brooks    B,  for  they  call'd  you  so  that  knew  you  best. 

Old  B,  who  loved  so  well  to  mouth                   To  W.  H.  Brookfield  1 
Broom    walks  were  stript  as  bare  as  b's.  Princess,  Pro.  184 
Gilded  with  b,  or  shatter'd  ihto  spires,  Lover's  Tale  i  400 
Broth    wicked  b  Confused  the  chemic  labour  Lucretius  19 
Brother    (See  also  Brethren,  Soldier-brother,  Twin- 
brother)    my  b's  they  :  B's  in  Christ —  Supp.  Confessions  28 
vexed  eddies  of  its  wayward  b  :  Isabel  33 
Each  to  each  is  dearest  b  ;  Madeline  21 
Oh  rest  ye,  6  mariners,                                          Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  128 
I  knew  your  b ;  his  mute  dust  I  honour  To  J.  S.  29 
Who  miss  the  b  of  your  youth  ?  ,,59 
Thy  b's  and  immortal  souls.  Love  them  thy  land  8 
I  and  he,  B's  in  Art ;  GardcTier's  D.  4 
She  is  my  b's  daughter :  Dora  17 
Come,  blessed  b,  come.  St.  S.  Stylites  204 
Sun  flies  forward  to  his  b  Sun  ;  Golden  Year  23 
Men,  my  b's,  men  the  workers,  Locksley  Hall  117 
b's  of  the  weather  stood  Stock-still  Will  Water.  135 
Hob-and-nob  with  b  Death  !  Vision  of  Sin  194 
My  dearest  b,  Edmund,  sleeps,  The  Brook  187 
My  b  James  is  in  the  harvest-field  :  „         227 
Leolin,  his  b,  living  oft  With  Averill,  Aylmer's  Field  57 
his,  a  b's  love,  that  hung  With  wings  „          138 
thro' the  bright  lawns  to  his  6's  ran,  ,,          341 
'  B,  for  I  have  loved  you  more  as  son  Than  b,  ,,          351 
b,  where  two  fight  The  strongest  wins,  ,,          364 
'  0  ft,  I  am  grieved  to  learn  your  grief —  , ,          398 
How  low  his  b's  mood  had  fallen,  ,,          404 
Sent  to  the  harrow'd  b,  praying  him  ,,          607 
shall  thy  6  man,  the  Lord  from  Heaven,  ,,          667 
they  see  no  men.  Not  ev'n  her  b  Arac,  Pnncess  i  153 
'  My  6  ! '  '  Well,  my  sister.'  ,,      ii  188 
Here  lies  ah  by  a  sister  slain,  ,,          208 
That  was  fawn's  blood,  not  6's,  ,,          275 
be  swerved  from  right  to  save  A  prince,  aft?  ,,          291 
/give  thee  to  death  My  6  !  „          308 
Till,  one  of  those  two  b's,  half  aside  ,,       v  302 
'  0  6,  you  have  known  the  pangs  we  felt,  , ,          374 
B's,  the  woman's  Angel  guards  you,  ,,          410 
'  He  saved  my  life  :  my  b  slew  him  for  it.'  ,,     ri  108 
to  wait  upon  him.  Like  mine  own  b.  , ,          299 
Help,  father,  b,  help ;  „          305 
'  Your  6,  Lady, — Florian, — ask  for  him  ,,          313 
but  the  Prince  Her  b  came ;  ,,          345 
Did  those  twin  b's,  risen  again  ,,      vii  89 
My  friend,  the  b  of  my  love  ;  In  Mem.  ix  16 
More  than  my  b's  are  to  me.  ,,            20 
'  Where  wert  thou,  b,  those  four  days  ? '  ,,     xxxi  5 
Roves  from  the  living  b's  face,  ,,   xxxii  7 


Brother 


67 


Brought 


Brother  {continued)     'More  than  my  6's  are  to  me,' —        In  Mem.  Ixxix  1 
I  met  her  to-day  with  her  6,  but  not  to  her  h  I  bow'd  :     Maud  I  iv  14 

and  chuckle,  and  grin  at  a  b's  shame  ;  ,,29 

Her  6,  from  whom  I  keep  aloof,  ,,        m  46 

Blithe  would  her  b's  acceptance  be,  ,,         x  27 

All,  all  upon  the  b.  ■            ,,     xiii  43 

her  b  lingers  late  With  a  roystering  company)  ,,      xiv  14 

Her  b  is  coming  back  to-night,  „        xix  1 

only  Maud  and  the  b  Hung  over  her  dying  bed —  „             35 

This  b  had  laugh'd  her  down,  „             60 

her  b  comes,  like  a  blight  On  my  fresh  hope,  ,,           102 

her  6  ran  in  his  rage  to  the  gate,  ,,     Hi  12 

A  cry  for  a  b's  blood :  „             34 

'  0  that  ye  had  some  6,  pretty  one,  Com.  of  Arthur  335 
my  husband's  b  had  my  son  Thrall'd  in  his  castle,     Gareth  and  L.  357 

Our  noblest  b,  and  our  truest  man,  , ,             565 

second  b  in  their  fool's  parable —  ,,           1004 

'  What  doest  thou,  b,  in  my  marches  here  ? '  ,,           1034 

Hath  overthrown  thy  b,  and  hath  his  arms.'  „           1037 

the  third  b  shouted  o'er  the  bridge,  ,,  1096 
My  b  and  my  better,  this  man  here,                        Balin  and  Balan  54 

Embracing  Balin,  '  Good  my  b,  hear !  „             139 

on  his  dying  6  cast  himself  Dying ;  ,,             593 

'  B,  I  dwelt  a  day  in  Pellam's  hall :  ,,             605 

'06'  answer'd  Balin  '  woe  is  me !  ,,618 

darken  thine,  Groodnight,  true  b.'  ,,              626 

'  Groodnight,  true  6  here !  goodmorrow  there !  ,,              628 

two  b's,  one  a  king,  had  met  And  fought  Lancelot  and  E.  39 

each  had  slain  his  6  at  a  blow ;  .,               41 

brought  the  yet-unblazon'd  shield,  His  b's;  „             380 

rosy- kindled  with  her  b's  kiss —  ,,             393 

Sir  Modred's  b,  and  the  child  of  Lot,  ,,             558 

Came  on  her  b  with  a  happy  face  ,,            791 

Full  ill  then  should  I  quit  your  b's  love,  ,,            944 

the  b's  heard,  and  thought  With  shuddering,  ,,           1021 

'Sweet  b'g,  yesternight  I  seem'd  ,,           1034 

'  Fret  not  yourself,  dear  b,  nor  be  wroth,  ,,           1074 

'  O  6,  I  have  seen  this  yew-tree  smoke.  Holy  Orail  18 

what  drove  thee  from  the  Table  Round,  My  6  ?  ,,29 

'  Sweet  6,  I  have  seen  the  Holy  Grail :  ,,  107 
b,  fast  thou  too  and  pray.  And  tell  thy  b  knights  to  fast 

and  pray,  „        125 

and  himself  her  &  more  than  I.  ,,        142 

'  Sister  or  b  none  had  he  ;                              _  ,,        143 

b,  In  our  great  hall  there  stood                     '  ,,        166 

b,  had  you  known  our  mighty  hall,  „        225 

b,  had  you  known  our  hall  within,  ,,         246 

b,  when  I  told  him  what  had  chanced,  ,,        271 

(^,  the  King  was  hard  upon  his  knights)  ,,         299 

0  b,  had  you  known  our  Camelot,  „         339 

'0  6,' ask'd  Ambrosius, —  ,,         540 

0  b,  saving  this  Sir  Galahad,                                   •  ,,         561 

my  b,  Why  wilt   hou  shame  me  to  confess  ,,         566 

was  the  one,  B,  and  that  one  only,  ,,         579 

0  me,  my  b !  but  one  night  my  vow  ,,  607 
For,  b,  so  one  night,  because  they  roll  ,,  685 
'  And  that  can  I,  B,  and  truly  ;  ,,  712 
B,  I  need  not  tell  thee  foolish  words, —  „  855 
Art  thou  the  purest,  b  ?  Last  Tournament  192 
b,  thou  nor  I  have  made  the  world  ;  „  203 
is  the  King  thy  b  fool  ? '  „  852 
ay,  my  b  fool,  the  king  of  fools !  „  854 
A  goodly  b  of  the  Table  Round  ,,  431 
Slain  was  the  6  of  my  paramour  ,,  448 
So  b,  pluck  and  spare  not.'  Ijover's  Tale  i  351 
'5,' she  said,  'let  thisbe  call'd  ,,             461 

1  was  as  the  b  of  her  blood,  ,,  559 
deem'd  I  wore  a  b's  mind :  she  call'd  me  6 :  ,,  741 
Deem  that  I  love  thee  but  as  b's  do,  ,,  767 
Praise  to  our  Indian  b's,  Def.  of  Luchnow  69 
Drove  me  and  my  good  b's  home  in  chains,  Columbus  134 
He  with  his  6,  Edmund  Atheling,  Batt.  of  Brunxinburh  5 
Christ,  our  human  b  and  friend,  Despair  25 
the  tears,  O  b,  mine  or  thine.  Ancient  Sage  186 
Sisters,  b's — and  the  beasts —                                Locksley  H.,  Sixty  102 


Brother  (continued)    Rip  your  b's'  voices  open,  LocTcsley  H.,  Sixty  141 

True  b,  only  to  be  known  By  those  who  love     Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  7 
Sons  and  b's  that  have  sent,  Ope».  /.  and  C.  Exhib. 


B's,  must  we  part  at  last  ? 

Is  b  of  the  Dark  one  in  the  lowest. 

He,  the  b  of  this  Darkness, 

Will  my  Indian  b  come  ? 

Well  spake  thy  6  in  his  hymn  to  heaven 

Meanwhile,  my  b's,  work,  and  wield 

Father,  and  my  B,  and  my  God  ! 
Brother-brute    ever  butted  his  rough  h-b  For  lust 
Brother-hands    I,  clasping  b-h,  aver  I  could  not, 
Brotherhood    And  all  men  work  in  noble  b. 

To  fight  the  6  of  Day  and  Night- 
hast  thou  so  defamed  Thy  b 

hath  bound  And  sworn  me  to  this  b  ; ' 

Unlawful  and  disloyal  b — 
Brother-in-law    that  mock-sister  there — B-i-l 
Brother-knight    Lo  !  he  hath  slain  some  b-k, 
Brother-like    kiss'd  her  with  all  pureness,  b-l, 
Brother-oak    honours  that,  Thy  famous  b-o, 
Brother-sister    are  you  That  b-s  Psyche, 
Brother-slayer    Not  from  the  skeleton  of  a  b-s, 
Brother-star    b-s,  why  shine  ye  here  so  low  ? 
Brother-worm    and  its  last  b-w  will  have  fled 
Brought    (-See  also  Browt,  Far-brought)    Is  not  my 

human  pride  b  low  ?  Supp.  Confessions  14 

from  the  outward  to  the  inward  b,  Elednore  4 

The  oriental  fairy  b,  ,,14 

I  marvell'd  how  the  mind  was  5  To  anchor  Two  Voices  458 

slowly  was  my  mother  b  To  yield  consent 

Although  the  loss  had  b  us  pain, 

light-foot  Iris  b  it  yester-eve, 

I  won  his  love,  I  b  him  home. 

and  b  Into  the  gulfs  of  sleep. 

Where'er  I  came  I  b  calamity. ' 

then  at  my  request  He  ft  it ; 

every  morning  b  a  noble  chance.  And  every  chance 
b  out  a  noble  knight. 

till  Autumn  b  an  hour  For  Eustace, 

B  out  a  dusky  loaf  that  smelt  of  home, 

his  bailiff  b  A  Chartist  pike. 

h  the  night  In  which  we  sat  together 

all  the  mothers  6  Their  children. 

The  pint,  you  b  me,  was  the  best 

Lord  Ronald  b  a  lily-white  doe 

lily-white  doe  Lord  Ronald  had  b 

then  with  what  she  b  Buy  goods  and  stores — 

b  the  stinted  commerce  of  those  days ; 

letter  which  he  b,  and  swore  besides 

She  b  strange  news. 

which  he  b,  and  I  Dived  in  a  hoard  of  tales 

which  b  My  book  to  mind  : 

these  6  back  A  present,  a  great  labour 

He  b  it,  and  himself,  a  sight  to  shake 

She  b  us  Academic  silks, 

'  I  6  a  message  here  from  Lady  Blanche.' 

from  the  Queen's  decease  she  6  her  up. 

— or  b  her  chain'd,  a  slave, 

Home  they  b  her  warrior  dead : 

B  from  under  every  star. 

And  bread  from  out  the  houses  b, 

As  tho'  they  b  but  merchants'  bales. 

Such  precious  relics  b  by  thee  ; 

And  he  that  6  him  back  is  there. 

He  b  an  eye  for  all  he  saw  ; 

she  b  the  harp  and  flung  A  ballad 

And  b  a  summons  from  the  sea : 

Large  elements  in  order  b, 

and  b  to  understand  A  sad  astrology, 

B  Arthur  forth,  and  set  him  in  the  hall. 

Or  b  by  Merlin,  who,  they  say, 

B  down  a  momentary  brow. 

champion  thou  hast  b  from  Arthur's  hall  ? 

ere  his  horse  was  b,  Glorying  ; 


32 

Demeter  and  P.  95 

116 

Romney's  R.  143 

Akbar's  Dream  27 

MechanopMlus  29 

Doubt  and  Prayer  8 

Lucretius  197 

In  Mem.  Ixxxro  102 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  38 

Gareth  and  L.  857 

Pelleas  and  E.  322 

449 

Sisters  {E!'and  E.)  174 

173 

Balin  and  Balan  549 

Geraint  and  E.  884 

Talhing  Oak  296 

Princess  ii  254 

Last  Tournament  47 

Gareth  and  L.  1097 

Despair  85 


Miller's  D.  137 

229 

"(Enone  83 

The  Sisters  14 

D.  of  F.  Women  51 

„  96 

The  Epic  48 


M.  d' Arthur  230 

Gardener's  D.  207 

Avdley  Court  22 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  70 

Love  and  Duty  59 

Godiva  14 

WiU  Water.  75 

Lady  Clare  3 

61 

Enoch  Arden  137 

817 

Aylmer's  Field  522 

Sea  Dreams  267 

Princess,  Pro.  28 

119 

i43 

200 

ii  16 

319 

m  86 

^139 

ml 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  25 

Spec,  of  Iliad  6 

In  Mem.  xiii  19 

„        xvii  18 

,,        xxodi  4 

,,      Ixxxix  9 

27 

,,         dii  16 

,,         cxii  13 

Maud  I  xviii  35 

Com.  of  Arthur  229 

347 

Gareth  and  L.  653 

916 

934 


Brought 


68 


Brow 


Brought  {continued)    b  a  helm  With  but  a  drying 
evergreen 

Gareth  b  him  grovelling  on  his  knees, 

Enid  b  sweet  cakes  to  make  them  cheer, 

and  he  b  me  to  a  goodly  house  ; 

like  a  madman  b  her  to  the  court, 

promise,  that  whatever  bride  I  b, 

b  a  mantle  down  and  wrapt  her  in  it. 

Prince  had  b  his  errant  eyes  Home 

And  wine  and  food  were  h, 

as  they  b  upon  their  forays  out 

men  b  in  whole  hogs  and  quarter  beeves, 

they  b  report  '  we  hardly  found, 

who  iirst  B  the  great  faith  to  Britain 

b  By  holy  Joseph  hither, 

b  report  of  azure  lands  and  fair, 

as  he  That  b  her  hither. 

To  save  thy  life,  have  b  thee  to  thy  death. 

miss'd,  and  b  Her  own  claw  back. 

He  lightly  scatter'd  theirs  and  6  her  off. 

He  6,  not  found  it  therefore  : 

I  by  mere  mischance  have  b,  my  shield. 

red  sleeve  Broider'd  with  pearls,'  and  b  it : 

Ketuming  b  the  yet-unblazon'd  shield. 

And  b  his  horse  to  Lancelot  where  he  lay. 

the  shield  was  b,  and  Gawain  saw 

have  6  thee,  now  a  lonely  man  Wifeless 

saw  the  barge  that  b  her  moving  down, 

Joseph,  journeying  B  to  Glastonbury, 

b  thee  here  to  this  poor  house  of  ours 

they  fell  from,  6  us  to  the  hall. 

Joseph  b  of  old  to  Glastonbury  ? ' 

bounden  straight,  and  so  they  b  him  in. 

rose  up,  and  bound,  and  b  him  in. 

Waited,  until  the  third  night  b  a  moon 

b  A  maiden  babe  ;  which  Arthur  pitying  took, 

b  to  adorn  her  with.  The  jewels, 

when  both  were  b  to  full  accord, 

And  hither  b  by  Tristram  for  his  last 

Modred  b  His  creatures  to  the  basement 

and  my  tears  have  b  me  good  : 

he  that  b  The  heathen  back  among  us, 

every  morning  b  a  noble  chance.  And  every 
chance  b  out  a  noble  knight. 

Looking  on  her  that  b  him  to  the  light : 

the  shuddering  moonlight  b  its  face 

rare  or  fair  Was  b  before  the  guest : 

He  slowly  b  them  back  to  Lionel. 

caught  and  b  him  in  To  their  charm'd  circle, 

For  we  b  them  all  aboard. 

On  whom  I  6  a  strange  unhappiness, 

So  took  her  thence,  and  b  her  here, 

He  had  b  his  ghastly  tools  : 

Hast  thou  b  bread  with  thee  ? 

b  out  a  broad  sky  Of  dawning  over — 

Whatever  wealth  I  b  from  that  new  world 

I  had  b  your  Princes  gold  enough 

I  b  From  Solomon's  now-recover'd  Ophir 

This  creedless  people  will  be  6  to  Christ 

That  day  my  nurse  had  b  me  the  child. 

Dead !  '  Is  it  he  then  b  so  low  ? ' 

Until  I  b  thee  hither, 

I  b  you  to  that  chamber  on  your 

I  b  you,  you  remember,  these  roses, 

b  you  down  A  length  of  staghorn-moss, 

'  hast  thou  b  us  down  a  new  Korto 

when  I  met  you  first — when  he  h  you  ! — 
Brow     This  laurel  greener  frcym  the  b's 

Among  the  thorns  that  girt  Thy  i, 

when  with  b'g  Propt  on  thy  knees, 

An  image  with  profiilgent  b's, 

Upon  her  bed,  across  her  b. 

Falsehood  shall  bare  her  plaited  b : 

Frowns  perfect-sweet  along  the  b 

o'er  black  b's  drops  down  A  sudden-curved  frown :  (repeat) 


Gareth  and  L.  1115 

1124 

Marr.  of  Geraint  388 

713 

725 

783 

824 

Geraint  and  E.  24o 

289 

„  567 

602 

Balm  and  Balan  94 

103 

112 

168 

187 

600 

Merlin  and  V.  499 

564 

719 

Lancelot  and  E.  189 

373 

379 

493 

„  662 

1370 

1391 

Hdy  Grail  51 

»        617 

,,        720 

735 

PeUeas  ami  E.  236 

„  288 

393 

Last  Tournament  20 

715 

722 

747 

Guinevere  103 

202 

Pass,  of  Arthur  151 

„  398 

Lover's  Tale  i  160 

650 

,,        iv204: 

„  371 

376 

The  Revenge  19 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  89 

267 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  69 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  198 

Columbus  77 

101 

105 

111 

189 

The  Wreck  59 

Dead  Prophet  6 

Dernier  and  P.  8 

The  Ring  129 

Happy  73 

Romney's  R.  78 

Akbar's  Dream  116 

Charity  9 

To  the  Queen  7 

Supp.  Confessions  6 

69 

145 

Mariana  56 

Clear-lieaded  friend  11 

Madeline  15 

34,46 


Brow  {continued)    a  &  of  pearl  Tressed  with 
redolent  ebony, 
Even  as  a  maid,  whose  stately  b 
Her  beautiful  bold  b, 
With  thy  soften'd,  shadow'd  b, 
wearing  on  my  swarthy  b's  The  garland 
His  broad  clear  b  in  sunlight  glow'd  ; 
From  b  and  bosom  slowly  down 
Look  up,  the  fold  is  on  her  b. 
blow  Before  him,  striking  on  my  b. 
and  the  charm  of  married  b's.' 


drew  From  her  warm  b's  and  bosom  her  deep  hair 

steep  our  b's  in  slumber's  holy  balm  ; 

Whereto  the  other  with  a  downward  6 : 

lying  dead,  my  crown  about  my  b's, 

dropping  bitter  tears  against  his  6 

But  the  full  day  dwelt  on  her  b's, 

Love  with  knit  b's  went  by, 

whose  bald  b's  in  silent  hours  become 

I  waited  long ;  My  b's  are  ready. 

glimmer  steals  From  thy  pure  b's, 

Her  sweet  face  from  b  to  chin  : 

Warm  broke  the  breeze  against  the  b, 

A  band  of  pain  across  my  6  ; 

sleepy  light  upon  their  b's  and  lips — 

we  know  the  hue  Of  that  cap  upon  her  b's. 

And  gain'd  a  laurel  for  your  b 

Annie  with  her  b's  against  the  wall 

o'er  his  bent  b's  linger'd  Averill, 

often  placed  upon  the  sick  man's  b 

breathing  down  From  over  her  arch'd  b's, 

and  the  Roman  b's  Of  Agrippina. 

gaunt  old  baron  with  his  beetle  b  Sun-shaded 

Psyche,  wont  to  bind  my  throbbing  b. 

Star-sisters  answering  under  crescent  b's ; 

lilylike  Melissa  droop'd  her  b's  ; 

manlike,  but  his  b's  Had  sprouted, 

With  hooded  b's  I  crept  into  the  hall, 

made  the  single  jewel  on  her  b  Burn 

till  over  b  And  cheek  and  bosom  brake 

raised  the  cloak  from  b's  as  pale  and  smooth 

veil'd  her  b's,  and  prone  she  sank, 

she  laid  A  feeling  linger  on  my  b's, 

With  b  to  b  like  night  and  evening 

fear  not ;  breathe  upon  my  b's  ; 

King  bent  low,  with  hand  on  b, 

gladness  even  crown'd  The  purple  b's  of  Olivet. 

Urania  speaks  with  darken 'd  b  : 

I  took  the  thorns  to  bind  my  b's, 

Lift  as  thou  may'st  thy  burthen'd  b's 

So,  dearest,  now  thy  b's  are  cold, 

turn'd  To  black  and  brown  on  kindred  b's. 

fan  my  b's  and  blow  The  fever  from  my  cheek, 

Be  large  and  lucid  round  thy  b. 

And  enter  in  at  breast  and  b, 

Broad  b's  and  fair,  a  fluent  hair  and  fine, 

a  b  May -blossom,  and  a  cheek  of  apple-blossom, 

Brought  down  a  momentary  b. 

Then  seeing  cloud  upon  the  mother's  b, 

with  droopt  b  down  the  long  glades  he  rodo  ; 

drawing  down  the  dim  disastrous  b 

a  wizard  b  bleach'd  on  the  walls : 

two  brethren  slowly  with  bent  b's 

Accompanying, 
kiss'd  her  quiet  b's,  and  saying 
Arthur,  who  beheld  his  cloudy  b's, 
the  circlet  of  the  jousts  Bound  on  her  b, 
circlet  of  the  tourney  round  her  b's, 
under  her  black  b's  a  swarthy  one  Laugh'd 
laid  His  b's  upon  the  drifted  leaf  and  dream'd. 
a  b  Like  hillsnow  high  in  heaven, 
dropping  bitter  tears  against  a  b 
To  pass  my  hands  across  my  b's, 
clear  b,  bulwark  of  the  precious  brain, 
lirood  More  warmly  on  the  heart  than  on  the  b. 


Arabian  Nights  137 

Ode  to  Memory  13 

Tlie  Poet  38 

Adeline  46 

Kate  23 

L,  of  ShaZott  Hi  28 

Mariana  in  the  &  14 

Two  Voices  192 

Fatima  25 

(Enone  76 


„    177 

Lotos-Eaters,  0.  S.  21 

D.ofF.  Women  m 

162 

M.  d' Arthur  211 

Gardener's  D.  136 

245 

St.  S.  "Stylites  165 

206 

Tithonus  35 

L.  of  Burleigh  62 

The  Voyage  9 

The  Letters  6 

Vision  of  Sin  9 

„         142 

Yoit  might  have  won  3 

Erioch  Arden  314 

Aylmer's  Field  625 

700 

Princess  ii   39 

84 

240 

250 

428 

„    wl61 

„        204 

„        225 

„        273 

382 

„     V   73 

„        107 

„    ml21 

„        131 

,,  OT'i353 

The  Victim  53 

In  Mem.     xxxi  12 

xxxvii    1 

Ixix   7 

Ixxii  21 

Ixxiv   5 

Ixxix  16 

Ixxxvi    8 

xci    8 

cocxii  11 

Gareth  and  L.  464 

588 

„  6.53 

Marr.  of  Geraint  777 

Balin  and  Balan  311 

597 

Merlin  and  V.  597 

Lancelot  and  E.  1138 

ll.'iO 

13.54 

Pdleas  and  E.  435 

454 

Last  ToumaTnent  216 

406 

„  666 

Pass.  ofA7-thur379 

Lover's  Tale  iSl 

130 

328 


Brow 


69 


Bugle 


Brow  (continued)   for  her  b's  And  mine  made  garlands    Lover's  Tale  i  342 

Beyond  the  nearest  mountain's  bosky  b'g,  ,,            396 

knotted  thorns  thro'  my  unpaining  b's,  „            620 

sprinkled  brook  Smote  on  my  b's,  ,,             634 

great  crown  of  beams  about  his  b's —  ,,             672 

walk'd  abreast  with  me,  and  veil'd  his  b,  ,,          ii  86 

and  from  his  6  drew  back  His  hand  to  push  ,,              92 

about  my  b  Her  warm  breath  floated  ,,            140 

Upon  my  fever'd  b's  that  shook  and  throbb'd  „          Hi  7 

walk'd  behind  with  one  who  veil'd  his  b.  ,,              12 

Cold  were  his  b's  when  we  kiss'd  him —  Def.  o/Lucknoio  12 

in  your  raised  b's  I  read  Some  wonder  Colu7nbus  1 

Why,  what  a  6  was  there  !  The  Wreck  48 

The  broad  white  b  of  the  Isle —  „        135 

dreamer  stoopt  and  kiss'd  her  marble  b.  LocMey  H.,  Sixty  38 

out  of  the  field.  And  over  the  b  and  away.  Heavy  Brigade  64 

Unfurnish'd  b's,  tempestuous  tongues—  Freedmn  38 

But  seen  upon  the  silent  b  when  life  Rappy  52 

when  I  let  him  kiss  my  b;  , ,      65 

,          round  her  b's  a  woodland  culver  flits,  Prog,  of  Spring  18 

I          till  the  heat  Smote  on  her  b.  Death  of  CEnone  98 

'          Me  they  front  With  sullen  b's.  Akbar's  Dream  52 
Brow-beat    while  the  worn-out  clerk  B^'s  his  desk 

below.  To  J.  M.  K.  12 

Brow-bound    eyes,  B-b  with  burning  gold.  D.  of  F.  Women  128 

Brow'd    See  Beautifol-brow'd,  Dark-brow'd,  Lai^e-brow'd 

Brow-high    the  hemlock,  B-h,  did  strike  my  forehead    Lover's  Tale  ii  19 

Brown    in  a  silent  shade  of  laurel  b  Apart  Alexander  9 

Her  streaming  curls  of  deepest  b  Mariana  in  the  S.  16 

B,  looking  hardly  human,  strangely  clad,  Enoch  Arden  638 

Enoch  was  so  6,  so  bow'd,  ,,             703 

beauties  every  shade  of  b  and  fair  Princess  ii  437 

all  her  autumn  tresses  falsely  b,  „          449 

I  watch  the  twilight  falling  b  To  F.  D.  Maurice  14 

To  black  and  b  on  kindred  brows.  In  Mem.  Ixxix  16 

park  and  suburb  under  b  Of  lustier  leaves  ;  ,,       occviii  24 

Unloved,  that  beech  will  gather  b,  „               ci3 

bracken  so  bright  and  the  heather  so  b,  June  Bracken,  etc.  3 

Browsed    b  by  deep-udder'd  kine,  Gardener's  D.  46 

Browt  (brought)    I  b  what  tha  seeas  stannin'  theer.        North.  Cobbler  70 

h  me  the  boocits  to  be  cobbled  „             94 

So  IJ  tha  down,  an'  I  says  Owd  Roa  97 

I  b  'im  down,  an'  we  got  to  the  barn,  ,,       103 

An'  I  b  Roa  round,  but  Moother  ,,       113 

Braise    Hard-won  and  hardly  won  with  b  and  blow,  Lancelot  and  E.  1165 

Braised    cursed  and  scom'd,  and  b  with  stones :  Two  Voices  222 

that  there  Lie  b  and  maim'd.  Princess  vi  72 

Had  b  the  herb  and  crush'd  the  grape,  Lt  Mem.  xxxv  23 

swordcut  on  the  cheek,  And  b  and  bronzed,  Lancelot  and  E.  259 

and  so  left  him  b  And  batter'd,  Pelleas  and  E.  546 

Nor  6  the  wildbird's  egg.  Lover's  Tale  ii  21 

h  and  butted  with  the  shuddering  War-thunder  Tiresias  99 

Brunanburh    Slew  with  the  sword-edge 

There  by  B,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  10 

Brunelleschi    Arno,  and  the  dome  Of  B  ;  The  Brook  190 

Brunette     A  quick  /;,  well-moulded,  Princess  ii  106 

Brush  (pencil)    took  his  b  and  blotted  out  the  bird.  Merlin  and  V.  478 
Brush  (tail  of  fox)     '  Peter  had  the  b.  My 

Peter,  first : '  Aylmer's  Field  254 

Brush  (verb)    to  b  the  dew  From  thine  own  lily,  Siipp.  Confessions  84 

Brush 'd    6 'Thro' the  dim  meadow  toward  his  Aylmer's  Field  b^Q 

when,  this  gad-fly  b  aside,  Princess  v  414 

and  h  My  fallen  forehead  in  their  to  and  fro,  Lover's  Tale  i  700 

Brushing    And  b  ankle-deep  in  flowers,  In  Mem..  Ixxxix  49 

with  his  brandish 'd  plume  B  his  instep,  Geraint  and  E.  360 

Brushwood    elm-tree-boles  did  stoop  and  lean  Upon 

the  dusky  b  D.  of  F.  Women  58 
Brute    {See  also  Brother-brute)    Take  my  b,  and 

lead  him  in,  Vision  of  Sin  65 

Thou  madest  Life  in  man  and  b\  In  Mem.,  Pro.  6 

No  longer  half-akin  to  6,  ,,      Con.  133 

he  had  not  been  a  Sultan  of  b's,  Maud  II  v  81 

b's  of  mountain  back  That  carry  kings  Merlin  and  V.  576 

0  great  and  sane  and  simple  race  of  b's  Pelleas  and  E.  480 

Come  from  the  b,  poor  souls —  Despair  36 


Brute  {co7itinued)    no  souls — and  to  die  with  the  b —  Despair  36 

and  burn  the  kindlier  b's  alive.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  96 

B's,  the  b's  are  not  your  wrongers —  ,,                97 

let  the  house  of  a  J  to  the  soul  of  a  man,  By  an  Evolution.  1 

If  my  body  come  from  b's,  (repeat)  „          5,  13 

I,  the  finer  b  rejoicing  in  toy  hounds,  „                7 

and  rule  thy  Province  of  the  b.  ,,16 

these  Are  like  wild  b's  new-caged —  Attar's  Dream  50 

The  Ghost  of  the  B  that  is  walking  The  Dawn  23 

Brutus  (Lucius  Junius)    See  Lucius  Junius  Brutus 

Bubble  (s)     watch'd  Or  seem'd  to  watch  the  dancing  b,        Princess  Hi  24 

colour'd  6  bursts  above  the  abyss  Romney's  R.  52 

Bubble  (verb)     I  b  into  eddying  bays,  The  Brook  41 

On  yon  swoll'n  brook  that  b's  fast  In  Mem.  xcix  6 

And  yet  b's  o'er  like  a  city,  with  gossip,  Maud  I  iv  8 

Bubbled    at  mine  ear  B  the  nightingale  Princess  iv  266 

The  milk  that  b  in  the  pail,  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  51 

oilily  b  up  the  mere.  Gareth  and  L.  816 

Bubbling    See  Life -bubbling 

Bublin'  (young  unfledged  bird)    An'  haafe  on 

'im  bare  as  a  6.'  Owd  Rod  102 

Bucket    rope  that  haled  the  b's  from  the  well,  St.  S.  Stylites  64 

helpt  to  pass  a  b  from  the  well  To  Mary  Boyle  39 

Buckled    B  with  golden  clasps  before ;  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  25 

Buckler     The  brand,  the  b,  and  the  spear —  Two  Voices  129 

Clash  the  darts  and  on  the  b  beat  Boddicea  79 

snatch'd  a  sudden  b  from  the  Squire,  Balin  and  Balan  554 

Bud  (b)    (See  also  Chestnut-bud,  Sea-bud)    While 

thou  abodest  in  the  b.  Two  Voices  158 

chestnuts,  when  their  b's  Were  glistening  Miller's  D.  60 

flowers,  and  b's  and  garlands  gay,  May  Queen  11 

folded  leaf  is  woo'd  from  out  the  b  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  26 

Sweet  as  new  b's  in  Spring.  D.  of  F.  Women  272 

all-too-full  in  b  For  puritanic  stays  :  Talking  Oak  59 

kisses  balmier  than  half-opening  b's  Of  April,  Tithonus  59 

In  b  or  blade,  or  bloom,  may  find,  Day-Dm.,  Moral  10 

burst  In  carol,  every  b  to  flower,  ,,       L' Envoi  44 

While  life  was  yet  in  b  and  blade.  Princess  i  32 

'  Pretty  b  !  Lily  of  the  vale  !  „   vi  192 

b  ever  breaks  into  bloom  on  the  tree,  The  Islet  32 

longs  to  burst  a  frozen  b  And  flood  In  Mem.  locxxiii  15 

0  when  her  life  was  yet  in  6,  ,,             Con.  33 

flower  tell  What  sort  of  b  it  was.  Lover's  Tale  i  152 

from  within  Burst  thro'  the  heated  b's,  „            320 

No  b,  no  leaf,  no  flower,  no  fruit  ,,            725 

and  all  smells  of  b  And  foliage  from  the  dark  , ,          Hi  5 

spies  the  summer  thro'  the  winter  b,  Ancieiit  Sage  74 

fleets  the  shower,  And  burst  the  b's.  Early  Spring  14 

'  your  pretty  6,  So  blighted  here,  The  Ring  316 

Thy  warmths  from  6  to  6  Accomplish  Prog,  of  Spring  113 

Bud  (verb)     And  rugged  barks  begin  to  b,  My  life  is  full  18 

times,  when  some  new  thought  can  b,  Golden  Year  27 

out  of  tyranny  tyranny  b's.  Boddicea  83 

And  b's  and  blossoms  like  the  rest.  In  Mem.  cxv  20 

Budded    See  New-budded,  Ruby-budded 

Buddhist    Brahmin,  and  B,  Christian,  and  Parsee,        A  kbar's  Dream  25 

Bude     the  thundering  shores  of  B  and  Bos,  Guinsvere  291 

Buffet  (s)    with  a  stronger  b  he  clove  the  helm  Gareth  and  L.  1406 

Swung  from  his  brand  a  windy  b  Geraint  and.  E.  90 

Buffet  (verb)    echo  flap  And  b  round  the  hills.  Golden  Year  77 

Strove  to  b  to  land  in  vain.  Princess  iv  185 
Buffeted    See  Tempest-buffeted 

Bugle  (adj.)    all  the  6  breezes  blew  Reveillee  In  Mem.  Ixviiil 

Bugle  (s)    Aloud  the  hollow  b  blowing,  Oriana  17 

Loud,  loud  rung  out  the  b's  brays,  ,,      48 

A  mighty  silver  b  hung,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  16 

Blow,  b,  blow,  set  the  wild  echoes  (repeat)  Princess  iv  5,  17 

Blow,  b ;  answer,  echoes,  dying,  (repeat)  ,,           6,  12 

and  bray  of  the  long  horn  And  serpent-throated  b,  „          v  253 

With  blare  of  6,  clamour  of  men.  Ode  on  Well.  115 

Warble,  0  b,  and  trumpet,  blare  !  W.  to  Alexandra  14 

March  with  banner  and  b  and  fife  Mavd  I  v  10 

raised  a  b  hanging  from  his  neck,  Pelleas  and  E.  364 

waits  below  the  wall,  Blowing  his  6  ,,           381 

and  on  shield  A  spear,  a  harp,  a  b —  Last  Tournament  174 


Bugle 


70 


Buried 


Bugle  (s)  (continued)    S's  and  drums  in  the  darkness,  Def.  of  Luchnow  76 

Bugle-hom    belted  hunter  blew  His  wreathed  &-A,  Palace  of  Art  &A: 

when  you  want  me,  sound  upon  the  h-h.  Lochsley  HaU  2 

call  me,  sounding  on  the  b-h,  ,,      145 

Build    6  up  all  My  sorrow  with  my  song,  (Enone  39 

built  When  men  knew  how  to  b,  Edwin  Morris  7 

I  would  b  Far  oflf  from  men  a  college  Princess,  Pro.  134 

She  had  founded  ;  they  must  b.  ,,         ii  145 

I,  that  have  lent  my  life  to  b  up  yours,  ,,         iv  351 

6  some  plan  Foursquare  to  opposition.'  ,,          « 230 

On  God  and  Grodlike  men  we  b  our  trust.  Ode  on  Well.  266 

b's  the  house,  or  digs  the  grave.  In  Mem.  xxxvi  14 

change  their  sky  To  b  and  brood  ;  ,,            cxv  16 

Grave  him  an  isle  of  marsh  whereon  to  b  ;  Holy  Grail  62 

he  groan'd,  '  ye  b  too  high.'  Pelleas  and  E.  555 

b  a  wall  betwixt  my  life  and  love,  Lover's  Tale  i  176 

none  but  Gods  could  b  this  house  Ancient  Sage  83 

Builded    The  house  was  b  of  the  earth,  Deserted  House  15 

Building    like  enow  They  are  b  still,  Gareth  and  L.  '2!JQ 
Built    {See  also  Belt,  Half-built,  Low-built,  Sand- 
built,   Woman-built)     b  up  everywhere  An 

under-roof  Dying  Swan  3 

I  B  my  soul  a  lordly  pleasure-house.  Palace  of  Art! 

Thereon  1 6  it  firm.  ,,            9 

In  this  great  mansion,  that  is  b  for  me,  ,,          19 

'  My  spacious  mansion  b  for  me,  ,,         234 

palace  towers,  that  are  So  lightly,  beautifully  b:  ,,        294 

b  When  men  knew  how  to  build,  Edwin  Mwris  6 

And  b  herself  an  everlasting  name.  '             Godiva  79 

B  for  pleasure  and  for  state.  L.  of  Burleigh  2!2, 

b  their  castles  of  dissolving  sand  Enoch  Arden  19 

b,  and  thatch'd  with  leaves  of  palm,  ,,           559 

Ehodope,  that  b  the  pyramid.  Princess  ii  82 

vapour  streak  the  crowned  towers  jB  to  the  Sun :  *  ,,     iiiBi5 

'  The  plan  was  mine.     I  b  the  nest '  „      iv  365 

conscious  of  what  temper  you  are  6,  ,,          400 

Far  oflf  from  men  I  6  a  fold  for  them  :  ,,        i;  390 

tho'  he  b  upon  the  babe  restored  ;  „       vii  75 

And  towers  fall'n  as  soon  as  b —  In  Mem.  xxvi  8 

Who  6  him  fanes  of  fruitless  prayer,  ,,           Zm  12 

New  as  his  title,  b  last  year,  Mavd  /  a;  19 

city  of  Enchanters,  b  By  fairy  Kings.'  Gareth  and  L.  199 

and  whether  this  be  b  By  magic,  ,,            247 

Fairy  Queens  have  b  the  city,  son ;  ,,            259 

And  6  it  to  the  music  of  their  harps.  ,,            262 
seeing  the  city  is  b  To  music,  therefore  never 

6  at  all,  „            276 

And  therefore  b  for  ever.'  ,,            278 

B  that  new  fort  to  overawe  my  friends,  Marr.  of  Geraint  460 

that  low  church  he  b  at  Glastonbury.  Balin  and  Balan  367 

Had  b  the  King  his  havens,  ships.  Merlin  and  V.  168 

there  he  6  with  wattles  from  the  marsh  Holy  Grail  63 

Which  Merlin  b  for  Arthur  long  ago  !  ,,        226 

Climbs  to  the  mighty  hall  that  Merlin  b.  „        231 

B  by  old  kings,  age  after  age,  ,,        340 

some  ancient  king  Had  b  a  way,  , ,        502 

saw  High  up  in  heaven  the  hall  that  Merlin  b,  Pelleas  and  E.  553 

B  for  a  summer  day  with  Queen  Isolt  Last  Tournament  378 

There  be  some  hearts  so  airily  b,  that  they,  Lover's  Tale  i  803 
Timur  b  his  ghastly  tower  of  eighty  thousand      Locksley  H.,  Sixty  82 

Served  the  poor,  and  b  the  cottage,  ,,              268 

Son's  love  b  me,  and  I  hold  Mother's  love  Helen's  Tower  3 

b  their  shepherd-prince  a  funeral  pile  ;  Death  of  (Enone  63 

whose  pious  hand  had  b  the  cross,  St.  Telemachus  9 

Bulbul    Died  roimd  the  b  as  he  sung ;  Arabian  Nights  70 

'  0  B,  any  rose  of  Gulistan  Shall  burst  Princess  iv  122 

Bulge    cheek  B  with  the  unswallow'd  piece,  Geraint  and  E.  631 

Bulk    Tudor-chimnied  b  Of  mellow  brickwork  Edwin  Morris  11 

bones  of  some  vast  b  that  lived  and  roar'd  Princess  Hi  294 

Down  From  those  two  b's  at  Arac's  side,  „           v  499 

and  grown  a  6  Of  spanless  girth,  ,,           w  35 

Dark  b's  that  tumble  half  alive.  In  Mem.  Ixx  11 

strike  him,  overbalancing  his  b,  Last  Torwrnament  460 

Bulk'd    an  old-world  mammoth  b  in  ice,  Princess  v  148 

Bull    grasp'd  The  mild  b'*  golden  horn.  Palace  of  Art  120 


Bull  {continued)    oil'd  and  curl'd  Assyrian  B  Smelling 

of  musk  JUaud  I  m  44 

Kay  near  him  groaning  like  a  wounded  b—  Gareth  awl  L.  648 

whom  his  shaking  vassals  call'd  the  B,  Geraitit  and  E.  439 

brainless  b's,  Dead  for  one  heifer  ! '  Balin  and  Balan  578 

like  a  b  gotten  loose  at  a  faair.  North.  Cobbler  33 

and  the  b  couldn't  low,  and  the  dog  V.  of  Maeldune  18 

Bull  (Inn  Sign)     '  Thk  B,  the  Fleece  are  cramm'd,  Attdley  Court  1 

Bull  (Edward)    See  Edward  Bull 

Bullet    {See  also  Cannon-bullet,  Musket-bullet,  Biiie- 

buUet)    B's  fell  like  rain  ;  The  Captain  46 

b  struck  him  that  was  dressing  it  The  Revenge  67 

And  caught  the  laming  b.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  65 

the  brute  b  broke  thro'  the  brain  Def.  of  Lucknmu  20 

B's  would  sing  by  our  foreheads,  and  b's  would  rain  ,,  21 

Bulrush     sword-grass,  and  the  b  in  the  pool.      May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  28 
mid-thigh-deep  in  b'es  and  reed,  Gareth  and  L.  810 

Bulrush-bed    plunged  Among  the  b-b's,  and  clutch'd 

the  sword,  M.  d' Arthur  135 

plunged  Among  the  b-b's,  and  clutch'd  the  sword.    Pass,  of  Arthur  303 

Bulwark    now  they  saw  their  b  fallen,  Geraint  and  E.  168 

Bummin'  (buzzing)     b'  awaay  loike  a  buzzard-clock    N.  Fai-mer,  0.  S.  18 

Bump'd    I  b  the  ice  into  three  several  stars,  The  Ejiic  12 

Bumper    He  froth 'd  his  b's  to  the  brim  ;  D.  of  the  0.  Year  19 

Bunch    {See  also  Fruit-bunches,  Vine-bunches)    With 

b  and  berry  and  flower  CEnmie  102 

grapes  with  b'es  red  as  blood  ;  Day-Dm.,  Sleep,  P.  44 

Craft  with  a  6  of  all-heal  in  her  hand,  Vastness  12 

Bundle    now  hastily  caught  His  b,  waved  his  hand,  Enoch  Arden  238 

Buoy    {See  also  Harbour-buoy)    We  left  behind  the 

painted  b  The  Voyage  1 

The  b  that  rides  at  sea,  and  dips  Gareth  aiid  L.  1146 

Buoy'd    range  Of  vapour  b  the  crescent-bark,  Day-Dm.,  Depart.  22 

B  upon  floating  tackle  and  broken  Enoch  Arden  551 

Bur    {See  also  Burr)    b  and  brake  and  briar,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  46 

like  a  wall  of  b's  and  thorns  ;  Sea  Dreams  119 

Burden    {See  also  Burthen)    people  here,  a  beast 

of  b  slow.  Palace  of  Art  149 

prepared  The  daily  b  for  the  back.  In  Mem.  zxo  4 

Burdock    eft  and  snake.  In  grass  and  b,  Holy  Grail  571 

Burgeon    space  to  b  out  of  all  Within  her—  Princess  vii  271 

Now  b's  every  maze  of  quick  In  Mem.  cxv  2 

Burgher    Knight  and  b,  lord  and  dame,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  43 

Burial  (adj.)    Mammonite  mother  kills  her  babe  for  a  6  fee,    Maud  I i  4:5 

Burial  (s)     at  a  6  to  hear  The  creaking  cords  Supp.  Confessions  35 

Fresh  from  the  b  of  her  little  one,  Enoch  Arden  281 

A  summer  b  deep  in  hollyhocks  ;  Ayliner's  Field  164 

That  hears  his  b  talk'd  of  by  his  friends.  Princess  vii  152 

Now  to  glorious  b  slowly  borne,  Ode  on  Well.  193 

Pray  for  my  soul,  and  yield  me  b.  Lancelot  and  E.  1280 

place  of  b  Far  lovelier  than  its  cradle ;  Lover's  Tale  i  529 

and  ask'd  If  I  would  see  her  & :  ,,  ii7\ 

At  some  precipitance  in  her  b.  ,,        iv  107 

Past  thro  his  visions  to  the  b;  ,,  357 

borne  in  white  To  6  or  to  burning.  Ancient  Sage  208 

Those  that  in  barbarian  b's  kill'd  the  slave,        Locksley  Hall,  Sixty  67 
Beyond  our  b  and  our  buried  eyes.  The  Ring  296 

Buried   {See  also  A-buried,  Half-buried,  Long-buried) 

I  b  her  like  my  own  sweet  child.  Lady  Clare  27 

that  same  week  when  Annie  b  it,  Enoch  Arden  271 

And  when  they  b  him  the  little  port  ,,  916 

Old  scandals  b  now  seven  decads  deep  Aylmer's  Field  442 

Half  b  in  some  weightier  argument,  I/wcretius  9 

have  they  not  b  me  deep  enough  ?  Maud  II  v  96 

Dead,  whom  we  b ;  more  than  one  of  us  Balin  and  Balan  122 

rummage  b  in  the  walls  Might  echo,  „  416 

see  that  she  be  b  worshipfully.'  Lancelot  and  E.  1329 

maiden  b,  not  as  one  unknown,  ,,  1334 

I  kiss'd  'em,  I  b  'em  all —  Rizpah  55 

She  died  and  she  was  b  ere  we  knew.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  241 

So  feyther  an'  son  was  b  togither,  Village  Wife  f 

as  God's  truer  images  Are  daily  b.'  Sir  J,  Oldcastle  1 

I  will  have  them  b  in  my  grave.  Columbus  '^ 

his  Riverence  b  thim  both  in  wan  grave  Tomorrow 

There,  there  !  he  b  you,  the  Priest ;  Happy  ll 


Burleigh 


71 


Burst 


Burleigh    •See  Lord  of  Burleigh 

Burleigh-house    B-h  by  Stamt'ord-town.  L.  of  Burleigh  92 

Burlesque    Had  ever  seem'd  to  wrestle  with  b,  Princess,  Con.  16 

Bum  (stream)    Over  the  pools  in  the  b  water-gnats  Leonine  Eleg.  8 

tall  firs  and  our  fast-falling  b's  ;  Gareth  and  L.  91 

Bum  (burnt  place)    An'  it  was'nt  a  bite  but  a  b,  Owd  Rod  90 

Bum  (verb)    cricket  chirps :  the  light  b's  low  :  D.  of  the  0.  Year  40 

While  the  stars  b,  the  moons  increase,  To  J.  S.  71 

And  b  a  fragrant  lamp  before  my  bones,  St.  S.  Stylites  196 

And  b  the  threshold  of  the  night.  The  Voyage  18 

but  my  cheek  Began  to  b  and  b,  Princess  Hi  46 

b's  Above  the  unrisen  morrow : '  „         iv9i2 

made  the  single  jewel  on  her  brow  B  ,,            274 

Wherefore  in  me  b's  an  anger,  Boddicea  52 

Burst  the  gates,  and  b  the  palaces,  ,,        64 

fires  b  clear,  And  frost  is  here  Window,  Wilder  4 

And  with  the  thought  her  colour  b's ;  In  Mem.  vi  34 

And  calm  that  let  the  tapers  b  „        xcv  5 

This  maple  b  itself  away ;  ,,           ci  4 

Cold  fires,  yet  with  power  to  b  Maud  I  xviii  39 

beneath  there  b's  A  jewell'd  harness,  Gareth  and  L.  687 

Made  her  cheek  b  and  either  eyelid  fall,  Marr.  of  Geraint  775 

Made  her  cheek  6  and  either  eyelid  fall.  Geraint  and  E.  434 

sin  that  practice  b's  into  the  blood,  Merlin  and  V.  762 

Made  my  tears  b — is  also  past —  Guinevere  542 

Amen !    Nay,  I  can  b,  so  that  the  Lord  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  173 

And  doom'd  to  b  alive.  ,,              183 

So,  caught,  I  6.     5?  ,,184 

God  willing,  I  will  b  for  Him.  „              193 

for  the  bright-eyed  goddess  made  it  b.  Achilles  over  the  T.  29 

great  God,  Ares,  b's  in  anger  still  Tiresias  11 

noonday  crag  made  the  hand  b;  ,,35 

— but  how  my  temples  b  !  The  Flight  73 

and  6  the  kindlier  brutes  alive.  LocJcsley  H.,  Sixty  96 

fur  the  bam  wouldn't  b  Owd  Rod  103 

What  star  could  b  so  low  ?  not  Ilion  yet.  Death  of  (Enone  83 

'  Who  6 's  upon  the  pyre  ? '  ,,              99 

Bum  (bom)    Cooms  of  a  gentleman  b :  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  38 

Gentleman  6 !  what's  gentleman  6  ?  ,,               42 

An'  then  the  babby  wur  b.  North.  Cobbler  16 

For  'e  warn't  not  b  to  the  land,  Village  Wife  44 

'e  wur  b  an'  bred  i'  the  'ouse.  Spinster's  S's.  69 
Bum'd   (<See  also  Burnt)    B  like  one  burning  flame 

together,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  22 

green  grasses  b  The  red  anemone.  D.  of  F.  Women  71 

Or  b  in  fire,  or  boil'd  in  oil,  St.  S.  Stylites  52 

that,  which  in  me  b.  The  love,  Talking  Oak  10 

eye.  That  b  upon  its  object  thro'  such  tears  Love  and  Duty  63 

At  times  the  whole  sea  b.  The  Voyage  51 

sacred  fire.  That  b  as  on  an  altar.  Enoch  Arden  72 

But  still  the  foeman  spoil'd  and  b.  The  Victim  17 

Last  night,  when  the  sunset  b  Maud  I  vi8 

b  Full  on  her  knights  in  many  an  evil  name  Pelleas  and  E.  289 

one  low  light  betwixt  them  b  Guinevere  4 

great  light  of  heaven  B  at  his  lowest  Pass,  of  Arthur  91 

And  &  alive  as  heretics  I  "Sir  J.  Oldcastle  48 

o'er  the  great  Peleion's  head  B,  Achilles  over  the  T.  29 

The  prophet's  beacon  b  in  vain.  Ancient  Sage  142 

Burning    A  love  still  6  upward,  Isabel  18 

All  earth  and  air  seem  only  b  fire.'  (Enane  268 

Larger  constellations  6,  mellow  moons  Locksley  Hall  159 

The  tapers  b  fair.  Sir  Galahad  32 

with  life-long  injuries  b  unavenged,  Geraint  and  E.  696 

On  tlieni  the  smell  of  6  had  not  past.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  177 

borne  in  white  To  biirial  or  to  h.  Ancient  Sage  208 

Burnish    to  scream,  to  b,  and  to  scour.  Princess  iv  520 

Bumish'd    sitting,  b  without  fear  The  brand.  Two  Voices  128 

That  glitter  b  by  the  frosty  dark  ;  Princess  v  261 

and  all  in  mail  B  to  blinding,  Gareth  and  L.  1027 

Burnt  [See  also  Bum'd)    B  like  a  fringe  of  fire.  Palace  of  Art  48 

he  b  His  epic,  his  King  Arthur,  The  Epic  27 

Mere  chaff  and  draff,  much  better  b.'  ,,40 

B  in  each  man's  blood.  The  Captain  16 

and  b,  Now  chafing  at  his  own  great  self  Aylmer's  Field  536 

the  good  Sir  Ralph  had  b  them  all—  Princess,  Pro.  236 


Burnt  {continued)    grandsire  b  Because  he  cast  no 
shadow. 
Nor  b  the  grange,  nor  buss'd  the  milking-maid, 
other  thoughts  than  Peace  B  in  us, 
B  and  broke  the  grove  and  altar 
the  rest  Slew  on  and  b,  crying. 
So  b  he  was  with  passion, 
smoulder'd  wrong  that  b  him  all  within  ; 
many  of  those  who  b  the  hold, 
but  one  night  my  vow  B  me  within. 
Blasted  and  b,  and  blinded  as  I  was, 
£  as  a  living  tire  of  emeralds, 
and  in  it  Far  cities  b, 
took  and  hang'd,  Took,  hang'd  and  b — 
B — good  Sir  Roger  Acton,  my  dear  friend  ! 
B  too,  my  faithful  preacher,  Beverley ! 
B,  b  !  and  while  this  mitred  Arundel 
Not  b  were  they.     On  them  the  smell  of  burning 
b  at  midnight,  found  at  morn, 
the  smoke.  The  pyre  he  b  in.'- 


Princess  i  6 

„    i>222 

.,       246 

Boddicea  2 

Com.  of  Arthur  439 

Marr.  of  Geraint  560 

Geraint  and  E.  107 

Holy  GraU  264 

„         608 

„         844 

Pelleas  and  E.  35 

Guinevere  83 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  46 

79 

80 

104 

176 

Locksletf  H.,  Sixty  97 

'The  Ring  SAO 


Burr    (See  also  Bur)    When  b  and  bine  were  gather'd  ;    Aylmer's  Field  113 


Burrowing    I  have  ferreted  out  their  b's. 
Burst  (s)    Preluded  those  melodious  b's 

Caught  in  a  &  of  unexpected  storm, 

more  than  mortal  in  the  b  Of  sunrise, 

but  given  to  starts  and  b's  Of  revel ; 

B's  of  great  heart  and  slips  in  sensual  mire, 

after  some  quick  b  of  sudden  wrath, 

now  the  storm,  its  b  of  passion  spent, 

interspaces  gush'd  in  blinding  b's  The 
incorporate  blaze  of  sun 

and  bosom'd  the  b  of  the  spray. 
Burst  (verb)     B's  into  blossom  in  his  sight. 

shrine-doors  b  thro'  heated  blasts 

all  at  once  the  old  man  b  in  sobs  : — 

with  hoggish  whine  They  b  my  prayer. 

Or  to  b  all  links  of  habit — 

every  bird  of  Eden  b  In  carol. 

All  heaven  b's  her  starry  floors, 

Now  high  on  waves  that  idly  b 

b  away  In  search  of  stream  or  fount, 

B  his  own  wyvern  on  the  seal, 

the  great  organ  almost  b  his  pipes, 

rose  of  Gulistan  Shall  b  her  veil : 

Ready  to  b  and  flood  the  world  with  foam : 

clad  in  iron  b  the  ranks  of  war, 

in  the  saddle,  then  b  out  in  words. 

Descending,  b  the  great  bronze  valves, 

b  The  laces  toward  her  babe ; 

made  the  serf  a  man,  and  b  his  chain — 

B  the  gates,  and  burn  the  palaces, 

That  longs  to  6  a  frozen  bud 

fiery-hot  to  b  All  barriers 

And  yearn'd  to  b  the  folded  gloom. 

Ready  to  6  in  a  colour'd  flame  ; 

should  b  and  drown  with  deluging  storms 

should  make  your  Enid  b  Sunlike 

pavement  echoing,  6  Their  drowse  ; 

fringe  of  coppice  round  them  6  A  sprangled 
pursuivant, 

b  his  lance  against  a  forest  bough, 

pearl-necklace  of  the  Queen,  That  b 

And  half  his  blood  b  forth, 

b  away  To  weep  and  wail  in  secret ; 

almost  b  the  barriers  in  their  heat, 

I  b  the  chain,  I  sprang  into  the  boat. 

Hell  b  up  your  harlot  roofs  Bellowing 

from  within  B  thro'  the  heated  buds, 

Methought  a  light  B  from  the  garland 

b  through  the  cloud  of  thought  Keen, 

B  vein,  snap  sinew,  and  crack  heart, 

wish  yon  moaning  sea  would  rise  and  b  the  shore, 


Merlin  and  V.  55 

D.  ofF.  Women  6 

Aylmer's  Field  285 

Princess,  Pro.  40 

,,  i54 

,,       •yl99 

Balin  and  Balan  216 

Merlin  and  V.  961 

Lover's  Tale  i  408 

V.  of  Maeldune  103 

Fatima  35 

D.  of  F.  Women  29 

D(yra  158 

St.  S,  Stylites  178 

Locksley  Hall  157 

Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  43 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  27 

The  Voyage  69 

Enoch  Arden  634 

Aylmer's  Field  516 

Princess  ii  474 

ivl2S 

474 

504 

'ij275 

m75 

148 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  3 

Boddicea  64 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  15 

,,  cxiv  13 

,,  cxxii  8 

Maud  I  vi  19 

„      //  t42 

Marr.  of  Geraint  788 

Geraint  and  E.  271 

Balin  and  Balan  46 

329 

Merlin  and  V.  452 

Lancelot  and  E.  517 

1244 

Holy  GraU  336 

»        807 

Pelleas  and  E.  466 

Lover's  Tale  i  320 

„  366 

„        ii  164 

&ir  J.  Oldcastle  123 

Tlie  FligU  11 


Russia  b's  our  Indian  barrier,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  115 

B  like  a  thunderbolt.  Crash 'd  like  a  hurricane,  Heavy  Brigade  27 

fleets  the  shower,  And  b  the  buds,  Early  Spring  14 


Burst 


72 


Caerleon 


Burst  (verb)  {continued)    Sun  B  from  a  swimming 

fleece  Demeter  and  P.  20 
smoke  of  war's  volcano  b  again  Prog,  of  Spring  97 
colour'd  bubble  b's  above  the  abyss  Romney's  R.  52 
Bursting  thistle  h  Into  glossy  purples,  Ode  on  Well.  206 
Burthen  (load)  (See  also  Burden)  Less  b,  by  ten- 
hundred-fold,  St.  S.  Stylites  24 
Or  seem  to  lift  a  b  from  thy  heart  Lm>e  and  Duty  96 
vapours  weep  their  b  to  the  ground,  Tithonus  2 
With  the  b  of  an  honour  L.  of  Burleigh  79 
No  b,  save  my  care  for  you  and  yours  :  Enoch  Arden  419 
breathless  b  of  low-folded  heavens  Aylmer's  Field  612 
One  b  and  she  would  not  lighten  it  ?  ,,  703 
reaching  forward  drew  My  b  from  mine  arms ;  Princess  iv  192 
We  flung  the  b  of  the  second  James.  Third  of  Feb.  28 
And  not  the  b  that  they  bring.  In  Mem.  xiii  20 
He  bears  the  b  of  the  weeks  But  turns  his  b  into  gain.  ,,  Ixxx  11 
Were  all  a  6  to  her,  and  in  her  heart  Pelleas  and  E.  112 
now  yearn'd  to  shake  The  b  off  his  heart  Last  Tournament  180 
friends — your  love  Is  but  &b:  To  the  Queen  ii  17 
careful  b  of  our  tender  years  Trembled  Lover's  Tale  i  222 
Holding  his  golden  b  in  his  arms,  ,,  iv  89 
Burthen  (refrain)    [See  also  Ballad-Biirthen)    Again 

they  shriek'd  the  b — '  Him  ! '  Edwin  Morris  123 

As  tho'  it  were  the  6  of  a  song,  Enoch  Arden  797 

Again  and  like  a  b,  '  Him  or  death.'  Lancelot  and  E.  903 

Bliry    You'll  b  me,  my  mother,  just  beneath      May  Queen,  N.  Vs.  E.  29 

b  me  beside  the  gate.  And  cut  this  epitaph  Princess  ii  206 

B  the  Great  Duke  With  an  empire's  Ode  on  Well.  1 

Let  us  b  the  Great  Duke  To  the  noise  ,,3 

I  will  b  myself  in  myself,  Maud  Ii76 

have  sworn  to  b  All  this  dead  body  of  hate,  ,,       xix  96 

They  cannot  even  b  a  man  ;  „      II  v  2^1 

some  kind  heart  will  come  To  b  me,  b  me  Deeper,  ,,            103 

when  an'  wheere  to  b  his  boane.  Owd  Roa  8 

Burying    Driving,  hurrying,  marrying,  b,  Maud  II  v  12 

Bush    [See  also  Myrrh-bush,  Rose-bush)    rushes  and 

bowers  of  rose-blowing  b'es,  Leonine  Eleg.  3 

girls  all  kiss'd  Beneath  the  sacred  b  The  Epic  3 

'  Hear  how  the  b'es  echo  !  Gardener's  I).  98 

Holding  the  b,  to  fix  it  back,  ,,          127 

What  ? — that  the  b  were  leafless  ?  Lucretius  206 

in  the  b  beside  me  chirrupt  the  nightingale.  Grandm,other  40 

Or  underneath  the  barren  b  In  Mem.  xci  3 

He  dragg'd  his  eyebrow  b'es  down.  Merlin  and  V.  807 

Above  the  b'es,  gilden-peakt :  Pelleas  and  E.  429 

lest  an  arrow  from  the  b  Should  leave  me  Last  Tournament  535 

With  falling  brook  or  blossom 'd  b —  Lover's  Tale  i  405 

sprang  without  leaf  or  a  thorn  from  the  b  ;  V.  of  Maeldune  44 

sick  For  shadow — not  one  b  was  near —  Tiresias  36 

from  the  b  we  both  had  set —  Ilappy  102 

low  b'es  dip  their  twigs  in  foam.  Prog,  of  Spring  51 

Bush-bearded    huge  b-b  Barons  heaved  and  blew.  Princess  v  21 

Bush'd    So  b  about  it  is  with  gloom,  Balin  and  Balan  95 

Business    her  b  often  call'd  her  from  it,  Enoch  Arden  264 

Two  in  the  tangled  b  of  the  world,  Princess  ii  174 

Buss    B  me,  thou  rough  sketch  of  man,  Vision  of  Sin  189 

Buss'd    nor  6  the  milking-maid.  Princess  v  222 

Bust    show'd  the  house,  Greek,  set  with  b's:  ,,     Pro.  11 

There  stood  a  6  of  Pallas  for  a  sign,  ,,          i  222 

Busted    See  Full-busted 

Busying    5  themselves  about  the  floworage  Aylmer's  Field  203 

Butcher'd    or  b  for  all  that  we  knew —  iJef.  ofLucknow  91 

Butler    Here  sits  the  B  with  a  flask  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  25 

The  b  drank,  the  steward  scrawl'd,  ,,         Revival  10 

Butt  (cask)    woman  like  a  b,  and  harsh  as  crabs.  Walk,  to  tlie  Mail  49 

drew,  from  b's  of  water  on  the  slope,  Princess,  Pro.  60 

straddling  on  the  b's  While  the  wine  Guinevere  268 

Butt  (target)    Look  to  your  b's,  and  take  good  aims  !    Riflemen  form  1 16 

Butt  (verb)     Beholding  how  ye  b  against  my  wish,       Geraint  and  E.  677 

b  each  other  here,  like  brainless  bulls,  Balin  and  Balan  578 

cow  shall  b  the  '  Lion  passant '  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  248 

Butted    b  his  rough  brother-brute  For  lust  Lucretius  197 

b  each  other  with  clashing  of  bells,  V.  of  Maeldune  108 

bruised  aiul  b  with  the  shuddering  War-thunder  Tvredas  99 


Village  Wife  2 

„      114 
„      119 


iV.  Farmer,  0.  S.  31 

Adeline  28 

Talking  Oak  220 

Enoch  Arden  138 

Sea  Dreains  15 

Maud  /  a;  32 

Ma7r.  of  Geraint  372 

Columbus  169 

Enoch  Arden  256 

Merlin  and  V.  432 

Lancelot  and  E.  139 

785 


Butter    B  an'  heggs— yis— yis. 

B  I  warrants  be  prime, 

But  I  sarved  'em  wi'  b  an'  heggs 

An'  I  niver  puts  saame  i'  my  b, 
Butter-bump  (bittern)    Moast  loike  a  b-b, 

for  I  'eard  'um 
Butterfly    Hast  thou  heard  the  butterflies 

flutter'd  round  her  lip  Like  a  golden  b  ; 
Buttoned    See  Close-buttoned 
Buy    B  goods  and  stores — set  Annie  forth 

b  strange  shares  in  some  Peruvian  mine. 

Bought  ?  what  is  it  he  cannot  b  ? 

Go  to  the  town  and  b  us  flesh 

scarce  a  coin  to  6  a  meal  withal. 
Buying    sold  her  wares  for  less  Than  what  she 

gave  in  b 
Buzz    It  b'es  fiercely  round  the  point ; 

vermin  voices  here  May  b  so  loud — 

shake  off  the  bee  that  b'es  at  us  ; 
Buzzard-clock  (Cockchafer)    bummin'  awaay 

loike  a  b-c  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  18 

Buzz'd    palace  bang'd,  and  b  and  clackt,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  14 

dances  broke  and  b  in  knots  of  talk  ;  Princess  i  133 

b  abroad  About  the  maid  of  Astolat,  Lancelot  and  E.  722 

Buzzing    {See  also  Bummin')    And  b's  of  the  honied 

hours.  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  52 

By-and-by    I  will  show  it  you  b-a-b.  Bandit's  Death  8 

Bygones    trim  our  sails,  and  let  old  b  be.  Princess  iv  69 

'  Let  bhe\'     'B\  First  Quarrel  67 

'  B-g  ma'  be  come-agains  ;  ,,69 

By-lane    Till  the  filthy  b-l  rings  to  the  yell  Maud  I  i  38 

Byre  (cow-house)    Then  thorpe  and  b  arose  in  fire,  The  Victim  3 

Byway    where  this  b  joins  The  turnpike  ?  Walk,  to  the  Mail  4 

Byword    fatal  b  of  all  years  to  come,  Godiva  67 


Caake  (cake)    Doant  maake  thysen  sick  wi'  the  c.  Oiod  Rod  34 
Cabin    all  day  long  till  Enoch's  last  at  home.  Shaking 

their  pretty  c,  Enoch  Arden  173 

And  down  in  the  c  were  we,  Tlie  Wreck  89 

lay  like  the  dead  by  the  dead  on  the  c  floor,  ,,      112 

Call'd  from  her  c  an'  tould  her  to  come  away  Tomorrow  20 

Cabin'd    Be  c  up  in  words  and  syllables,  Lover's  Tale  i  480 

Cabinet    And  moving  toward  a  cedarn  c,  Man:  of  Geraint  136 

Cabin-window    I  see  the  c-w  bright ;  In  Mem.  x  3 

Cackle     With  c  and  with  clatter.  The  Goose  12 

rustic  c  of  your  bourg  The  murmur  of  the 

world  !  Marr.  of  Geraint  276 

The  c  of  the  unborn  about  the  grave,  Merlin  and  V.  507 

Cackled    It  clack'd  and  c  louder.  The  Goose  24 

Cadence    a  hand,  a  foot  Lessening  in  perfect  c.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  55 

in  mimic  c  answer'd  James —  Golden  Year  53 

but  when  the  preacher's  c  flow'd  Aylmer's  Field  729 

In  clanging  c  jangling  peal  on  peal —  Lover's  Tale  iii  22 

Cadmean    sprang  No  dragon  warriors  from  C  teeth,  Lucretius  50 

Cadmus    Our  C,  out  of  whom  thou  art,  Tiresias  13 

for  I  loathe  The  seed  of  C—  „      117 

Thou,  one  of  these,  the  race  of  C —  „      134 

Caer-Er^    On  C-E's  highest  found  the  King,  Ga/reth  and  L.  500 

Caerleon    Held  court  at  old  C  upon  Usk.  Man:  cf  Geraint  146 

When  late  I  left  C,  our  great  Queen,  ,,               781 

And  all  that  week  was  old  C  gay,  ,,               837 

longer  time  Than  at  C  the  full-tided  Usk,  Geraint  and  E.  116 

they  past  With  Arthur  to  0  upon  Usk.  ,,              946 

Dost  thou  remember  at  G  once — A  year  ago —  Balin  and  Balan  503 

By  the  great  tower — C  upon  Usk —  ,,               606 

Who  never  sawest  C  upon  Usk —  „               570 

dealt  him  at  Caerlyle  ;  That  at  C ;  this  at 

Camelot :  Lancelot  and  E.  23 

And  at  G  had  he  help'd  his  lord,  ,,             297 

A  minstrel  of  C  by  strong  storm  Merlin  and  V.  9 


Caerleon 


73 


Can 


Caerleon  {continiced)    as  he  sat  In  hall  at  old  C,  the 

high  doors  Pelleaa  and  E.  3 

to  find  C7and  the  King,  had  felt  the  sun  „            22 

to  tilt  against  the  knights  There  at  C7,  „            66 

but  will  ye  to  C?    I  Gto  likewise :  ,,106 

when  they  reach'd  G,  ere  they  past  to  lodging,  „          125 

Then  at  V  for  a  space — her  look  Bright  ,,          176 

Caerlyle    this  dealt  him  at  C;  That  at  Caerleon  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  22 

Ctesar    tame  and  tutor  with  mine  eye  That  dull  cold- 


blooded C. 

Roman  legions  here  again,  And  G's  eagle : 

for  whose  love  the  Roman  C  first  Invaded 
Britain, 

Rome  of  C,  Rome  of  Peter, 

fallen  every  purple  (7s  dome — 

Lightning  may  shrivel  the  laurel  of  C, 
Cage  (b)    Lay  silent  in  the  muffled  c  of  life : 

The  linnet  bom  within  the  c, 

I  have  broke  their  c,  no  gilded  one, 

I  took  it,  he  made  it  a  c, 

the  narrower  The  c,  the  more  their  fury. 
Cage  (verb)    Ye  c  a  buxom  captive  here  and  there. 
Caged     See  New-caged,  Newly-caged 
Cageling    as  the  c  newly-flown  returns, 
Caiaphas-Amndel    These  Pharisees,  this  C-A 
Cain    lust  of  gain,  in  the  spirit  of  C, 

Daughter  of  the  seed  of  C, 

And  set  a  crueller  mark  than  Cs  on  him. 
Cairn    And  cleaves  to  c  and  cromlech  still ; 
Caim'd    And  the  c  mountain  was  a  shadow. 
Caitiff  (adj.)    bandit  earls,  and  c  knights, 

I  will  tell  him  all  their  c  talk  ; 
Caitiff  (b)    hand  striking  great  blows  At  c^s 

I  would  track  this  c  to  his  hold, 

In  shadow,  waiting  for  them,  c's  all ; 

The  ds\'  ' Nay,'  said  Pelleas,  but  forbear ; 

As  let  these  c's  on  thee  work  their  will  ? ' 
Cajole    and  juggle,  and  lie  and  c, 
Ca^e    {See  also  Ca4ke)    brought  sweet  c's  to  make 
them  cheer, 

*  Have  I  not  earn'd  my  c  in  baking  of  it  ? 
Calaber  (Quintus)    See  Quintus  Calaber 
Calamity    Where'er  I  came  I  brought  c.' 

His  heart  foreshadowing  all  c, 

Nor  all  CTs  hughest  waves  confound, 

That  a  c  hard  to  be  borne  ? 
Calculated    mind  Mine  ;  worse,  cold,  c. 
Calculation    Abhorrent  of  a  c  crost, 
Calendar'd    names  Are  register'd  and  c  for  saints. 
Calf  (of  the  leg)    proxy- wedded  with  a  bootless  c 
Calf  (young  of  the  cow)    See  Cauf 
Caliphat    I  came  upon  the  great  Pavilion  of  the  C. 
Call  (s)     And  answers  to  his  mother's  c's 

Hope  at  Beauty's  c  would  perch  and  stand, 

At  length  I  saw  a  lady  within  c. 

Whistle  back  the  parrot's  c. 

She  answer'd  to  my  c. 

When  they  answer  to  his  c, 

a  stable  wench  Came  running  at  the  c, 

A  martial  song  like  a  trumpet's  c  ! 

But  heard  the  c,  and  came  : 

Then  at  his  c,  '  0  daughters  of  the  Dawn, 

yet  I  say  the  bird  That  will  not  hear  my  c. 

An'  Parson  as  hesn't  the  c,  nor  the  mooney. 

av  the  bird  'ud  come  to  me  c, 

we  couldn't  ha'  'eard  tha  c, 

in  his  heart  he  cried,  '  The  c  of  God  ! ' 

muttering  to  himself,  '  The  c  of  God ' 

And  one  clear  c  for  me  ! 
Call  (verb)    And  thro'  wild  March  the  throstle  c's, 

Yet,  my  God,  Whom  c  I  Idol  ? 

Day  and  night  to  the  billow  the  fountain  c's : 

She  saw  me  fight,  she  heard  me  c, 

We  would  c  aloud  in  the  dreamy  dells, 

C  to  each  other  and  whoop  and  cry 


D.  ofF.  Women  \Z9 
Gam,  of  Arthur  35 

Marr.  of  GerairU  745 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  88 

To  Virgil  30 

Parnassus  4 

Princess  vii  47 

In  Mem.  xxvii  3 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  3 

The  Wreck  83 

Akbar's  Dream  51 

Merlin  and  V.  542 

901 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  179 

Maud  /  i  23 

Forlorn  39 

Happy  18 

To  tlie  Queen  ii  41 

Merlin  and  V.  638 

Marr.  of  Geraint  35 

Geraint  and  E.  66 

Marr.  ofOeraint  96 

415 

Geraint  and  E.  58 

PeUeas  and  E.  280 

„  323 

Charity  29 

Marr.  of  Geraint  388 
Gareth  and  L.  575 

D.  ofF.  Women  m 

Enoch  Arden  683 

WU15 

Maitd  I  xiii  3 

Romney's  R.  152 

Enoch  Arden  i^^Z 

St.  S.  Stylites  132 

Princess  i  34 

Arabian  Nights  114 

Supp.  Confessions  159 

Caress'dj  or  chidden  3 

D.  ofF.  Women  85 

Locksley  Hall  171 

Will  Water.  106 

L.  of  Burleigh  50 

Princess  i  227 

Maud  Iv  5 

Com.  of  Arthur  47 

Gareth  and  L.  923 

Lover's  Tale  iv  160 

Village  Wife  91 

Tomorrow  45 

Owd  Roa  49 

St.  Tel&nachus  27 

42 

Crossing  tlie  Bar  2 

To  the  Queen  14 

Supp.  Confessions  180 

Sea-Fairies  9 

Oriana  32 

The  Merman  26 

26 


Call  (verb)  {continued)    if  any  came  near  I  would  c, 

and  shriek.  The  Mermaid  38 

0  will  she  answer  if  I  c  ?  Miller's  D.  118 
You  must  wake  and  c  me  early,  c  me  early,  (repeat)  May  Queen  1,  41 
If  you  do  not  c  me  loud  when  the  day  begins  to 

break ;  ,,10 
They  c  me  cruel-hearted,  but  I  care  not  what 

they  say,  ,,  19 
If  you're  waking  c  me  early,  c  me  early, 

(repeat)  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  1,  52 

c  me  before  the  day  is  born.  ,,                  49 

in  the  wild  March-morning  I  heard  the  angels  c  ;  May  Qiieen,  Con.  25 

in  the  wild  March-morning  I  heard  them  c  my  soul.    "  ,,              28 

1  am  that  Rosamond,  whom  men  c  fair,  D.  of  F.  Women  251 
for  themselves  and  those  who  c  them  friend  ?  M.  d' Arthur  253 
Or  change  a  word  with  her  he  c's  his  wife,  Dora  44 
Father  ! — if  you  let  me  c  you  so —  „  140 
'  They  c  me  what  they  will,'  he  said  :  Golden  Year  14 
as  of  old,  the  curlews  c,  .  Locksley  Hall  3 
Hark,  my  merry  comrades  c  me,  '  ,,  145 
Yet  say  the  neighbours  when  they  c,  Amphion  5 
guest,  Shall  c  thee  from  the  boxes.  Will  Water.  240 
But  when  he  c's,  and  thou  shalt  cease  ,,  241 
What  do  they  c  you  ? '  '  Katie.'  The  Brook  211 
the  voice  that  c's  Doom  upon  kings,  '  Aylmer's  Field  741 
do  not  c  him,  love,  Before  you  prove  him,  '  Sea  Dreams  170 
From  childly  wont  and  ancient  use  I  c —  Lucretius  209 
I — would  c  them  masterpieces :  Princess  i  145 
Brutus  of  my  kind  ?  Him  you  c  great :  ,,  m  285 
Should  I  not  c  her  wise,  who  made  me  wise  ?  „  396 
c  down  from  Heaven  A  blessing  on  her  labours  „  478 
She  c's  her  plagiarist ;  ,,  m  94 
'  There  sinks  the  nebulous  star  we  c  the  Sun,  ,,  ivl9 
And  c  her  Ida,  tho'  I  knew  her  not,  And  c  her  sweet, 

as  if   in  irony.  And  c  her  hard  and  cold  which 

seem'd  a  truth  :  „       vii  96 

the  children  c,  and  I  Thy  shepherd  pipe,  ,,          217 

again  the  people  C  it  but  a  weed.  The  Flower  24 

c  us  Britain's  barbarous  populaces,  Boddicea  7 

and  c  To  what  I  feel  is  Lord  of  all,  In  Mem.  Iv  18 

To  clap  their  cheeks,  to  c  them  mine.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  18 

c  The  spirits  from  their  golden  day,  ,,              xciv  5 

To  whom  a  thousand  memories  c,  ,,               cxi  10 

But  trust  that  those  we  c  the  dead  ,,            cxmiiSt 

you  may  c  it  a  little  too  ripe,  Maud  I     HQ 

Whatever  they  c  him,  what  care  I,  ,,           x  64 

Who  shall  c  me  ungentle,  unfair,  „       oyiii  14 

Scarcely,  now,  would  I  c  him  a  cheat ;  „              29 

That  heard  me  softly  c,  ,,   //   iv  76 

Merlin's  master  (so  they  c  him)  Bleys,  Com.  of  Arthur  153 

those  who  hate  him  in  their  hearts,  C  him  bascborn,  ,,            180 

And  there  was  none  to  c  to  but  himself.  ,,  202 
Than  make  him  knight  because  men  c  him 

king,  Gareth  and  L.  420 

Look  therefore  when  he  c's  for  this  in  hall,  ,,            583 

Proud  in  their  fantasy  c  themselves  the  Day,  ,,            633 

But  that  I  heard  thee  c  thyself  a  knave, —  ,,           1163 

0  damsel,  be  you  wise  To  c  him  shamed,  ,,  1260 
And  tho'  I  heard  him  c  you  fairest  fair,  Marr.  of  Geraint  720 
his  own  ear  had  heard  C  herself  false :  Geraint  and  E.  114 
C  for  the  woman  of  the  house,'  ,,  263 
bad  the  host  C  in  what  men  soever  were  his  friends,  ,,  286 
Yet  fear  me  not :  I  c  mine  own  self  wild,  ,,  311 
For,  c  it  lovers'  quarrels,  yet  I  know  „  324 
C  the  host  and  bid  him  bring  Charger  and  palfrey.'  ,,  400 
whom  her  ladies  loved  to  c  Enid  the  Fair,  ,,  962 
The  people  c  you  prophet :  let  it  be :  Merlin  and  V.  317 
she  will  c  That  three-days-long  presageful  gloom  ,,            319 

1  c  it, — well,  I  will  not  c  it  vice :  ,,  368 
Know  well  that  Envy  c's  you  Devil's  son,  „  467 
And  then  did  Envy  c  me  Devil's  son :  ,,  497 
Master,  shall  we  c  him  overquick  To  crop  „  724 
Could  c  him  (were  it  not  for  womanhood)  ,,  786 
Could  c  him  the  main  cause  of  all  their  crime  ;  ,,  788 
For  fear  our  people  c  you  lily  maid  In  earnest,  Lancelot  and  E.  386 


Call 

Call  (verb)  {anUinued)    « Me  you  c  great :  mine  is  the 

,Tj?Tf®®^*'             .,^  ,        ,.  Lancelot  and  E.  4i6 

J  ather,  you  c  me  wilful,  and  the  fault  Is  yours  T^q 

Would  c  her  friend  and  sister,  sweet  Elaine  "              865 

I  needs  must  follow  death,  who  c's  for  me  •  C  and  " 

I  follow,  I  follow !  let  me  die.'                 '  lOjj 

I  know  not  what  you  c  the  highest ;  "            1 0SO 

and  bid  c  the  ghostly  man  Hither,  "             Toqg 

To  this  I  c  my  friends  in  testimony,  "            1099 

Art  thou  not  he  whom  men  c  light-of-love  ? '  Pdlea^'and  E.  361 
"Trik.  nl^^?+f  Arthur  up  m  heaven  ? '               Last  Tournament  333 

j-trike  against  the  man  they  c  My  sister's  son-  Guvneoere  572 

how  dare  I  c  him  mine  ?  The  shadow  of  another  ^^^'^^^e  o'^ 

JNor  shun  to  c  me  sister,  dwell  with  you  •  "        676 

B^tVfor'f?""  ^^'^  ^'^'^fu"*  my  house  '  Pass,  of  Arthur  155 

Both  for  themselves  and  those  who  c  them  friend «  421 

WhTTn^^H  ^^''^  ^^'^  People  c  ' The  Hill  of  Woe. ' '  Lover'^ Tale  i  374 

Why  should  he  c  me  to-night,  Riznah  '? 

and  you,  will  you  c  it  a  theft  ?-  n%zpali6 

he  used  but  to  c  in  the  dark,  "     co 

he  c's  to  me  now  from  the  church  "     of 

Good-night.     I  am  going.     He  c's.  "     og 

Th.,?r*°'"  'V'*  "'^^l^^^  rr.  N<yrth.  Cobbler  87 

Their  favourite— which  I  c  '  The  Tables 

An- W^fixr  'is  son,  ^'''^vi&r^ti:^^ 

if'wtat  w  ''  Vy.  *°  HYi'  '-  '^  cSmt  53 

^what  we  c  The  spirit  flash  not  all  at  once     Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  4 

the  waters— you  hear  them  c !  Besnair  47 

c  on  that  Infinite  Love  that  has  served  us  despair  4/ 

mI  Fdwin"!^!^'?^*'  ^"i'  ^^^  S^^*^^"  °^^^^'''  ^'"^^'^i  ^9^  196 

My  ±.dwin  loved  to  c  us  then  yt-  /,7,-„i/  on 

What  did  they  c  her,  yer  Honour  ?  Tolw^owl 

Ih  I'tV''/.*^  ''".''•^  ^J^insZ'sl-7.  4 

while  I  heard  the  curlews  c,  LorhSii  TT     <f,v>-/.,  '^ 

curse  your  fellow-victim  ?  c'him  dotard  in  your  ^      '         "^  ^ 
rage 

used  to  c  the  very  flowers  Sisters,  brothers—  "  101 

Dead  the  new  astronomy  c's  her  .  .  "  175 

g^^r'psisrtithyou,    '    n.^rl>^^3l 
rwoTd^^hro-^^thTfi^tVr^-^^^^^^^        '^"^J 

Down  I  ^t^l^  ^"'"  ^""'^°"  '^^  ^'^  MaryBoyltl 

Spn^l^  <^  t    ?r"'  ^  ^"""l  companions,  i»/erfo>i  «nrf  <L  G.IQ^ 

gT«  nnt  i.  nft      K ''^    ^^*  yourselves  free ! '  Kapiolani  2 

r  T.  ^.f V,        *i^°  J'^"^'  Silent  Voices  3 

c  me  rather,  silent  voices,  7 

Uld  voices  c  her  from  without.  ^  Mnriri'nn  fiS 

•A  merry  boy  they  c  him  then,  r^f r™322 

FW-off  the  torrent  c  me  from  the  cleft :  ""  (EnZeH 

r  to  m^'f'^nS'.v."  °^"«.  ^o'^Plaining  loud,  k  rf'^,<A«r-  210 

came  a  day  When  Allan  c  his  son,  and  said.  Bora  10 

bells  were  nngiog,  Allan  c  His  niece  and  said  :  41 

lilZ^.r^^'^.l  ^°'  ^u  ""J"^'^  All-perfect,  Edwin  Mo^is  21 

her  business  often  c  her  from  it,  A'woc/t  A  rdp«  264 

playy  with  him  And  c  him.  Father  Philip.  ^'^^''^  I54 

-      for  Father  Philip  (as  they  c  him)  too:  "          ^H^ 

'After  the  Lord  has  c  me  she  shall  know,  "          sio 

He  c  aloud  for  Miriam  Lane  and  said  "          SSfi 

^°ti';ffK^'''KP^*  '^^  '^°^  ^^^  *^™  =  r^e'^roo^- 120 

o  to  the  bar,  but  ever  c  awav  /i  -.,/^»..'-  c-  /j  en 

C  all  her  vitil  spirits  into  ea^h  ear  To  listen :  ^^^'"^  '  ^'""^^ 

the  great  Sicilian  c  Calliope  to  grace  his  golden  " 

enter'd  an  old  hostel,  c  mine  host  To  council,  PrUwetTlll 

Above  an  entry :  riding  in,  we  c  ;                   '  **  '  ^.t 

the  chapel  bells  C  us :  we  left  the  walks ;  "     ,v  47i 

Girl  after  girl  was  c  to  trial:  "     •«228 

she  c  For  Psyche's  child  to  cast  it  from  the  doors  ;  ' ',        237 


74 


CaU'd 


Call'd  (continued)    stretch'd  her  arms  and  c  Across  the 
tumult 
pique  at  what  she  c  The  raillery,  or  grotesque 
C  him  worthy  to  be  loved,  ' 

prest  Their  hands,  and  c  them  dear  deliverers 
or  c  On  flying  Time  from  all  their  silver  tongues— 
I  hey  c  me  in  the  public  squares 
They  c  me  fool,  they  c  me  child  ; 
and  Arthur  c  to  stay  the  brands 
and  c  A  hoary  man,  his  chamberiain, 

And  one— they  c  her  Fame  ;  and  one,— 

they  c  To  Gareth,  '  Lord,  the  gateway  is  alive,' 

Sir  Gareth  c  from  where  he  rose 

Of  any  save  of  him  whom  I  c— 

Why  came  ye  not,  when  c  ?  and  wherefore  now 
Come  ye,  not  c  ? 

And  c  her  like  that  maiden  in  the  tale, 

c  For  Enid,  and  when  Yniol  made  report 

Or  hasty  judger  would  have  c  her  guilt, 

whom  his  shaking  vassals  c  the  Bull, 

And  c  for  flesh  and  wine  to  feed  his  spears. 

They  c  him  the  great  Prince  and  man  of  men. 

wherefore  Arthur  c  His  treasurer, 

The  people  c  him  Wizard  ; 

And  c  herself  a  gilded  summer  fly 

So  Vivien  c  herself.  But  rather  seem'd 

Who  c  her  what  he  c  her — 

C  her  to  shelter  in  the  hollow  oak. 

Since,  if  I  be  what  I  am  grossly  c, 

And  c  him  dear  protector  in  her  fright, 
she  c  him  lord  and  liege.  Her  seer,  her  bard 
Lancelot  Would,  tho'  he  c  his  wound  a  little 

hurt 
Approaching  thro'  the  darkness,  c ; 
And  c  her  song  'The  Song  of  Love  and  Death,' 
and  c  The  father,  and  all  three  in  hurry 
I,  sometime  c  the  maid  of  Astolat, 
Whom  Arthur  and  his  knighthood  c  The  Pure, 
but  some  C  him  a  son  of  Lancelot, 
And  Merlin  c  it  '  The  Siege  perilous,' 
Shrilling  along  the  hall  to  Arthur,  c. 
Across  the  forest  c  of  Dean,  to  find  Caerieon 
And  this  was  c  '  The  Tournament  of  Youth  • ' 
She  c  them,  saying,  '  There  he  watches  yet 
he  c,  'I  strike  upon  thy  side— The  cailiffs ! ' 
the  poor  Pelleas  whom  she  c  her  fool  ? 
rider,  who  c  out  from  the  dark  field. 
And  when  I  c  upon  thy  name  as  one 
By  these  in  earnest  those  in  mockery  c 
'  Isolt  Of  the  white  hands  '  they  c  her : 
Who  c  him  the  false  son  of  Gorlois : 
he,  the  King,  C  me  polluted  : 
His  hope  he  c  it ;  but  he  never  mocks, 
Arthur  woke  and  c,  '  Who  spake  ?    A  dream. 
And  c  him  by  his  name,  complaining  loud, 
'let  this  be  c  henceforth  The  Hill  of  Hope  ; ' 
I  wore  a  brother's  mind  :  she  c  me  brother : 
he  c  me  his  own  little  wife  ; 
he  c  in  the  dark  to  me  year  after  year- 
one  of  those  about  her  knowing  me  C  me  to  join 

^h^l^ '       u-^A      ,.  ^^(ers  (E.  and  E.)  123 

btie  bore  a  chud,  whom  reverently  we  c  Edith  •  268 

An' es  for  Miss  Annie  es  c  me  afoor  '  Village  Wife  105 

boftly  she  c  from  her  cot  to  the  next  aq 

how  many-thirty-nine-a  it  revellion-  Sir  j!  Oldcastle  47 

Enon^f  f  *^« '^^'"^  ;  San  Salvador  I  c  it ;  Columbus  76 
Brooks,  for  they  c  you  so  that  knew 

you  best       ^  ^        ,  ^  ,  ToW.H.  Broohfieldl 

standing  shouted   and  Pallas  far  away  C ;  Achilles  ore,-  tlJ T.  18 

our  trembling  fathers  c  The  God's  own  son.  Tiresias  16 

and  he  c  to  me  '  Kiss  me  ! '  and  there-  The  Wreck  104 

On  me,  when  boy,  there  came  what  then  I  c,  Ancient  Sage  217 

rfr^mif^K-^^^^^;^.     .  T<mJrow4. 

O  irom  her  cabin  an  tould  her  to  come  20 


Princess  iv  496 

587 

,,  vi  6 

92 

„       vii  104 

7»i  Mmn.  Ixix  11 

13 

Com.  of  Arthur  120 

144 

Gareth  arul  L.  114 

234 

645 

859 

1247 

Marr.  of  Geraint  742 

755 

Geraint  and  E.  433 

439 

601 

961 

Baim  and  Balan  4 

Merlin  and  V.  170 

„  258 

M  261 

864 

894 

915 

946 

„  953 

Lancelot  and  E.  852 
1000 
1005 
1023 
1273 
Holy  Grail  3 
„      144 
„      172 
„      289 
Pelleas  and  E.  21 
.,  158 

„  262 

279 
474 
575 
Last  Tournameni  73 
135 
„  398 

Guinevere  288 
„         620 
632 
Pass,  of  Arthur  45 
378 
Lover  s  Tale  i  461 
741 
First  Qimrrel  10 
Rizpah  47 


CaU'd 


75 


Came 


Call'd  {conti7med)    Thin  a  slip  of  a  gossoon  c, 

c  me  es  pretty  ea  ony  lass  i'  the  Shere  ; 

poet  c  the  Bringer  home  of  all  good  things. 

he  c  '  Left  wheel  into  line  ! ' 

They  c  her  '  Reverence  '  here  upon  earth, 

Then  I  c  out  Roa,  Roa,  Roa, 

I  raised  her,  c  her  '  Muriel, 

and  c  arose,  and,  slowly  plunging  down 

c  '  Forbear  In  the  great  name  of  Him  who 
died  for  men. 

Alia  c  In  old  Ir&n  the  Sun  of  Love  ? 

An'  ya  c  'im  a  clown,  ya  did, 

C  on  the  Power  adored  by  the  Christian, 
Callest    G  thou  that  thing  a  leg  ? 
Callin'    o'  use  to  be  c  'im  Roa,  Roa,  Roa, 


Tomorrow  78 

Spinster's  S's.  13 

Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  185 

Heavy  Brigade  6 

Dead  Prophet  27 

Qiod  Rod  91 

The  Ring  449 

iS^.  TdeniMchus  28 

62 

Akbar's  Dream  86 

Clmrch- Warden,  etc.  30 

Kapiolani  32 

Vision  of  Sin  89 

Oiod  Rod  1 

Calling  (part)    {See  also  A-callin',  Callin')    Hark ! 

death  is  c  While  I  speak  AU  Things  will  Die  28 

C  thyself  a  little  lower  '  Than  angels.  Tioo  Voices  198 

To  hear  the  dewy  echoes  c  From  cave  to  cave      Lotos-Eaters,  O.  S.  94 
Then  c  down  a  blessing  on  his  head  Enoch  Arden  327 

And  c,  here  and  there,  about  the  wood,  ,,  383 

Maud,  Maud,  They  were  crying  and  c.  Maud  I  xii  4 

Were  crying  and  c  to  her,  Where  is  Maud,  ,,        26 

Some  c  Arthur  born  of  Gorlois,  Others  of  Anton  ?  Com.  qf  Arthur  170 
c  two  That  still  had  tended  on  him  Gareth  and  L.  178 

and  c  '  Damsel,  is  this  he.  The  champion  „  915 

And  chafing  his  pale  hands,  and  c  to  him.  Geraivi  and  E.  582 

And  chafing  his  faint  hands,  and  c  to  him  ;  „  585 

Moaning  and  c  out  of  other  lands.  Merlin  and  V.  962 

But  he  pursued  her,  c  '  Stay  a  little  !  Lancelot  and  E.  683 

the  King  Look'd  up,  c  aloud,  '  Lo,  there  !  Holy  G'rail  219 

named  us  each  by  name,  C  '  God  speed  ! '  ,,         352 

And  c  me  the  greatest  of  all  knights,  ,,         595 

Then  c  her  three  knights,  she  charged  them,  Pdleas  and  E.  219 

C  me  thy  white  hind,  and  saying  to  me  Last  Tournament  569 

rollers  on  the  cliffs  Clash'd,  c  to  each  other.  Lover's  Tale  i  58 

And  voices  in  the  distance  c  to  me  ,,      ii  118 

cuckoo  of  a  joyless  June  Is  c  out  of  doors :        Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  4 
cuckoo  of  a  worse  July  Is  c  thro'  the  dark  :  ,,  12 

Are  c  to  each  other  thro'  a  dawn  The  Ring  37 

all  Stood  round  it,  hush'd,  or  c  on  his  name.  Death  of  (Enone  66 

very  well  just  now  to  be  c  me  darling  and  sweet,  Charity  7 

Calling  (b)    There  came  so  loud  a  c  of  the  sea,  Enoch  Arden  910 

Calliope    called  C  to  grace  his  golden  verse —  Lucretius  94 

Calm  (adj.)  reign  the  world's  great  bridals,  chaste  and  c :  Princess  vii  294 
C  is  the  mom  without  a  sound,  (7  as  to  suit  a 

calmer  grief.  In  Mem.  xi  1 

if  calm  at  all.  If  any  calm,  a  c  despair :  ,,16 

His  eye  was  c,  and  suddenly  she  took  Merlin  and  V.  854 

'  May  her  life  be  as  blissfully  c.  The  Wreck  139 

The  night  was  c,  the  morn  is  c.  The  Flight  10 

Calm  (b)     The  summer  c  of  golden  charity,  Isabel  8 

No  tranced  summer  c  is  thine,  Madeline  2 

My  shallop  through  the  star-strown  c,  Arabian  Nights  36 

I  cannot  hide  that  some  have  striven,  Achieving  c.        Two  Voices  209 
'  There  is  no  joy  but  c  ! '  Lotos-Eaters,  G.  S.  23 

lower  down  "The  bay  was  oily  c  ;  Audley  Court  86 

star  of  phosphorescence  in  the  c,  ,,87 

Then  foUow'd  c's,  and  then  winds  variable,  Enoch  Arden  545 

That  mock'd  him  with  returning  c,  Lucretius  25 

fain  Would  follow,  center'd  in  eternal  c.  ,,79 

to  mar  Their  sacred  everlasting  c  !  ,,      110 

Not  all  so  fine,  nor  so  divine  a  c,  ,,      111 

Put  on  more  c  and  added  suppliantly  :  Princess  vi  215 

C  and  deep  peace  on  this  high  wold,  l7i  Metn.  xi  5 

C  and  still  light  on  yon  great  plain  ,,  9 

C  and  deep  peace  in  this  wide  air,  ,,        13 

if  c  at  all.  If  any  c,  a  calm  despair :  „        15 

C  on  the  seas,  and  silver  sleep,  ,,        17 

And  dead  c  in  that  noble  breast  ,,         19 

The  touch  of  change  in  c  or  storm  ;  ,,    ayvi  6 

And  c  that  let  the  tapers  burn  Unwavering :  ,,   axv  5 

And  tracts  of  c  from  tempest  made,  hi  Mem.  cxii  14 

And  moulded  in  colossal  c.  ,,   Con.  16 

Long  have  I  sigh'd  for  a  c :  Maud  I  ii  1 


Calm  (s)  (continued)    And  presently  thereafter 
follow'd  c, 
whom  she  answer'd  with  all  c. 
sway  and  whirl  Of  the  storm  dropt  to  windless  c, 

Calming    C  itself  to  the  long-wish 'd-for  end, 

Calpe    From  C  unto  Caucasus  they  sung, 

Calumet    celts  and  c's,  Claymore  and  snowshoe. 

Calumny    Sweeter  tones  than  c  ? 

Calve    See  Cauve 

Cama    throne  of  Indian  C  slowly  sail'd 

Cambalu    breach'd  the  belting  wall  of  C, 

Came    (See  also  Coom'd,  Eem)    From  the  dark  fen 
the  oxen's  low  C  to  her : 
In  marvel  whence  that  glory  c  Upon  me, 
I  c  upon  the  great  Pavilion  of  the  Caliphat. 
It  would  fall  to  the  ground  if  you  c  in. 
It  would  shrink  to  the  earth  if  you  c  in. 
But  if  any  c  near  I  would  call. 
Fancy  c  and  at  her  pillow  sat, 
A  moment  c  the  tenderness  of  tears, 
C  two  young  lovers  lately  wed  ; 
The  sun  c  dazzling  thro'  the  leaves, 
Down  she  c  and  found  a  boat  Beneath  a  willow 
Out  upon  the  wharfs  they  c. 
There  c  a  sound  as  of  the  sea  ; 
C  out  clear  plates  of  sapphire  mail. 
'  Or  if  thro'  lower  lives  I  c — 
I  spoke,  but  answer  c  there  none  : 
I  c  and  sat  Below  the  chestnuts. 
That  went  and  c  a  thousand  times. 
From  off  the  wold  I  c,  and  lay 
From  my  swift  blood  that  went  and  c 
Hither  c  at  noon  Mournful  (Enone, 
C  up  from  reedy  Simois  all  alone. 
Went  forth  to  embrace  him  coming  ere  he  c. 
river  of  speech  C  down  upon  my  heart. 
Then  to  the  bower  they  c.  Naked  they  c 
They  c,  they  cut  away  my  tallest  pines, 
in  the  dark  morn  The  panther's  roar  c  muffled. 
The  Abominable,  that  uninvited  c 
On  corpses  three-months-old  at  noon  she  c, 
Too  proud  to  care  from  whence  I  c. 
As  I  c  up  the  valley  whom  think  ye  should  I  see. 
Till  Charles's  Wain  c  out  above  the  tall  white 

chimney-tops.  May  Queen,  N.  Y^s.  E.  12 

To  die  before  the  snowdrop  c,  May  Queen,  Con.  4 

There  c  a  sweeter  token  when  the  night  ,,  22 

up  the  valley  c  a  swell  of  music  on  the  wind.  ,,  32 

And  up  the  valley  c  again  the  music  ,,  36 

once  again  it  c,  and  close  beside  the  window-bars,  ,,  39 

In  the  afternoon  they  c  unto  a  land  Lotos-Eaters  3 

mild-eyed  melancholy  Lotos-eaters  c.  , ,  27 

Where'er  I  c  I  brought  calamity.'  D.  of  F.  Wmnen  95 

Strength  c  to  me  that  equall'd  my  desire.  ,,  230 

You  c  to  us  so  readily,  D.  of  the  0.  Year  7 

mighty  voice  C  rolling  on  the  wind.  Of  old  sat  Freedom  8 

(for  so  we  held  it  then),  What  c  of  that  ? '  The  Epic  27 

C  on  the  shining  levels  of  the  lake.  M.  d' Arthur  51 

And  to  the  barge  they  c.  ,,        205 

Then  c  a  bark  that,  blowing  forward,  ,,  Ep.  21 

Artist  he  than  all,  C,  drew  your  pencil  from  you.        Gardener's  D.  26 
C  voices  of  the  well-contented  doves.  ,,  89 

some  sweet  answer,  tho'  no  answer  c,  ,,  1,59 

little  words,  More  musical  than  ever  c  ,,  233 

while  I  mused  c  Memory  with  sad  eyes,  ,,  243 

farewells — Of  that  which  c  between,  ,,  252 

Then  there  c  a  day  When  Allan  call'd  his  son,  Dora     9 

then  distresses  c  on  him  ;  ,,49 

Dora  c  and  said  :  '  I  have  obey'd  my  uncle  ,,       58 

all  thro'  me  This  evil  c  on  William  at  the  first.  ,,       61 

Far  off  the  farmer  c  into  the  field  ,,      74 

when  the  morrow  c,  she  rose  and  took  The  child  ,,      80 

c  and  said :  '  Where  were  you  yesterday  ?  ,,87 

the  boy's  cry  c  to  her  from  the  field,  ,,     104 

Remembering  the  day  when  first  she  c,  „     106 


Com.  of  Arthur  391 

Lancelot  and  E.  997 

Lover's  Tale  ii  207 

Maud  I  xviii  5 

The  Poet  15 

Princess,  Pro.  18 

A  Dirge  17 

Palace  of  Art  115 
Columbus  108 

MarianM  29 

Arabian  Nights  94 

113 

Poet's  Mind  23 

37 

The  Mermaid  38 

Caress'd  or  chidden  5 

The  form,  the  form  9 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  34 

,,  Hi  3 

,,  iv  6 

42 

Mariana  in  the  S.  86 

Tioo  Voices  12 

„        364 

„        425 

MiUer's  D.  59 

72 

„        111 

Fatima  16 

CEnone  15 

„     52 

„      63 

„     69 

„     94 

„    208 

„    214 

„    224 

Palace  of  Art  243 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  12 

May  Queen  13 


Came 


76 


Came 


Came  (continued)    they  c  in  : 
mother, 
I  never  c  a-begging  for  myself, 
all  his  love  c  back  a  hundred-fold  ; 
c  again  together  on  the  king  With  heated  faces ; 


but  when  the  boy  beheld  His 

Dora  137 

„     141 

„     166 

Audley  Court  36 


C  to  the  hammer  here  in  March —  " ,,          60 

I  went  and  c  ;  Her  voice  fled  Edvnn  Morris  66 

out  they  c  Trustees  and  Aunts  and  Uncles.  „         120 

There  c  a  mystic  token  from  the  king  ,,          132 

those  that  c  To  touch  my  body  and  be  heal'd,  St.  S.  Stylites  78 
c  To  rest  beneath  thy  boughs. — (repeat)                  Talking  Oak  35,  155 

c.  To  sport  beneath  thy  boughs.  ,,                    99 

*  And  with  him  Albert  c  on  his.  ,,                 105 

here  she  c,  and  round  me  play'd,  ,,                  133 

c  Like  Death  betwixt  thy  dear  embrace  Love  aiid  Duty  47 

cheek  and  forehead  c  a  colour  and  a  light,  LocJcsley  Hall  25 

from  the  valleys  underneath  C  little  copses  climbing.  Amphion  32 
C  wet-shod  alder  from  the  wave,  Q  yews,  a  dismal 

coterie ;  ,,41 

Old  elms  c  breaking  from  the  vine,  ,,        45 

Cruelly  c  they  back  to-day :  Edward  Gray  18 

was  the  best  That  ever  c  from  pipe.  Will  Waler.  76 

For  since  I  c  to  live  and  learn,  ,,           81 

I  think  he  c  like  Ganymede,  ,,         119 

C  crowing  over  Thames.  ,,         140 

thy  betters  went  Long  since,  and  c  no  more ;  ,,186 

In  there  c  old  Alice  the  nurse.  Lady  Clare  13 

great  in  story,  Wheresoe'er  he  c.  The  Captain  20 

Joyful  c  his  speech :  ,,30 

And  he  c  to  look  upon  her,  L.  of  Burleigh  93 

We  c  to  warmer  waves,  and  deep  Across  ITie  Voyage  37 

Again  to  colder  climes  we  c,  „  89 
C  in  a  sun-lit  fall  of  rain.                                             Sir  L,  and  Q.  O.  4 

Bare-footed  c  the  beggar  maid  Beggar  Maid  3 

A  youth  c  riding  toward  a  palace-gate.  Vision  of  Sin  2 

And  from  the  palace  c  a  child  of  sin,  ,,            5 

C  floating  on  for  many  a  month  and  year,  ,,          54 

there  c  a  further  change :  ,,        207 

two  years  after  c  a  boy  to  be  The  rosy  idol  Enoch  Arden  89 

c  a  change,  as  all  things  human  change.  ,,          101 

hearing  his  mischance,  C,  for  he  knew  the  man  ,,          121 

Then  moving  homeward  c  on  Annie  pale,  ,,          149 

blessing  on  his  wife  and  babes  Whatever  c  to  him :  ,,          189 

when  the  last  of  those  last  moments  c,  ,,          217 

when  the  day,  that  Enoch  mention'd,  c,  ,,          239 

Expectant  of  that  news  which  never  c,  ,,          258 

'  Annie,  I  c  to  ask  a  favour  of  j'ou.'  ,,          285 

'  I  c  to  speak  to  you  of  what  he  wish'd,  ,,          291 

This  is  the  favour  that  I  c  to  ask. '  ,,          313 

When  you  c  in  my  sorrow  broke  me  down  ;  ,,          317 

Scarce  could  the  woman  when  he  c  upon  her,  ,,          345 

and  no  news  of  Enoch  c.  ,,          361 

I  know  not  when  it  first  c  there,  ,,          401 

c  the  children  laden  with  their  spoil ;  ,,          445 

Then  the  new  mother  c  about  her  heart,  ,,          524 

breath  of  heaven  c  continually  And  sent  her  ,,          535 

upon  the  cry  of  '  breakers '  c  The  crash  of  ruin,  ,,          548 

sunny  and  rainy  seasons  c  and  went  , ,          623 

his  lonely  doom  C  suddenly  to  an  end.  ,,          627 

None  of  these  C  from  his  country,  ,,          653 

and  he  c  upon  the  place.  ,,          681 

and  c  out  upon  the  waste.  ,,          777 

a  langour  c  Upon  him,  gentle  sickness,  ,,          823 

There  c  so  loud  a  calling  of  the  sea,  ,,          910 

For  here  I  c,  twenty  years  back —  T/ie  Brook  77 

her  father  c  across  With  some  long-winded  tale,  ,,        108 

'  Have  you  not  heard? '  said  Katie,  '  we  c back.  ,,  221 
C  from  a  grizzled  cripple,  whom  I  saw  Sunning 

himself  Aylmer't  Field  8 

With  half  a  score  of  swarthy  faces  c.  ,,          191 

like  a  storm  he  c,  And  shook  the  house,  ,,          215 

The  next  day  c  a  neighbour.  ,,          251 

c  Her  sicklier  iteration.  ,,          298 

— when  </ti»  Aylmer  c  of  age —  ,,          407 

(7  at  the  moment  Leolin's  emisaary,  ,,         518 


Came  (continued)    But  passionately  restless  c  and  went,   Aylmer's  Field  546 
And  c  upon  him  half -arisen  from  sleep,  '  '" ' 

And  when  he  c  again,  his  flock  believed — 
Then  c  a  Lord  in  no  wise  like  to  Baal, 
when  the  second  Christmas  c,  escaped  His  keepers, 
C,  with  a  month's  leave  given  them, 
forth  they  c  and  paced  the  shore, 
when  I  c  To  know  him  more,  I  lost  it, 
'  It  c,'  she  said,  '  by  working  in  the  mines : ' 
C  men  and  women  in  dark  clusters  round, 
Yours  c  but  from  the  breaking  of  a  glass, 
blood  by  Sylla  shed  C  driving  rainlike 
but  satiated  at  length  C  to  the  ruins. 
C  murmurs  of  her  beauty  from  the  South, 
I  spake  of  why  we  c,  And  my  betroth'd. 
and  a  stable  wench  C  running  at  the  call, 
when  we  c  where  lies  the  child  We  lost 
At  break  of  day  the  College  Portress  c : 
c  to  chivalry :  When  some  respect,  however  slight, 
(what  other  way  was  left)  I  c' 
arrow^- wounded  fawn  C  flying  while  you  sat 
as  you  c,  to  slip  away  To-day,  to-morrow, 
stood,  so  rapt,  we  gazing,  c  a  voice. 
That  Sheba  c  to  ask  of  Solomon.' 
if  you  c  Among  us,  debtors  for  our  lives 
Will  wonder  why  they  c  : 
often  c  Melissa  hitting  all  we  saw  with  shafts 
C  furrowing  all  the  orient  into  gold, 
so  it  was  agreed  when  first  they  c  ; 
Then  c  these  dreadful  words  out  one  by  one, 
when  your  sister  c  she  won  the  heart  Of  Ida : 
Hither  c  Cyril,  and  yawning  *0  hard  task,' 
demanded  who  we  were,  And  why  we  c  ? 
He  ceasing,  c  a  message  from  the  Head. 
On  a  sudden  my  strange  seizure  c  Upon  me, 
we  c  to  where  the  river  sloped  To  plunge  in  cataract, 
For  many  weary  moons  before  we  c, 
c  On  flowery  levels  underneath  the  crag, 
all  The  rosy  heights  c  out  above  the  lawns. 
How  c  you  here  ? '  I  told  him  : 
as  we  c,  the  crowd  dividing  clove  An  advent 
Then  c  your  new  friend  : 
What  student  c  but  that  you  planed  her  path 
Then  c  these  wolves :  they  knew  her : 
I  c  to  tell  you :  found  that  you  had  gone, 
c  a  little  stir  About  the  doors, 
G  all  in  haste  to  hinder  wrong, 
C  in  long  breezes  rapt  from  inmost  south 
A  man  I  c  to  see  you :  but,  indeed. 
Yet  that  I  c  not  all  unauthorized 
While  I  listen 'd,  c  On  a  sudden  the  weird  seizure  and 

the  doubt : 
This  went  by  As  strangely  as  it  c, 
touch  of  all  mischance  but  c  As  night  to  him 
morions,  washed  with  morning,  as  they  c. 
He  batter'd  at  the  doors  ;  none  c : 
C  sallying  thro'  the  gates,  and  caught  his  hair. 
With  message  and  defiance,  went  and  c  ; 
Then  c  a  postscript  dash'd  across  the  rest. 
And  like  a  flash  the  weird  affection  c : 
c  As  comes  a  pillar  of  electric  cloud, 
Like  summer  tempest  c  her  tears — 
after  him  C  Psyche,  sorrowing  for  A.glaia. 
'  Our  enemies  have  fall'n,  have  fall'n :  they  c  ;  (repeat) 
on  they  c.  Their  feet  in  flowers,  her  loveliest : 
At  distance  follow'd  :  so  they  c  : 
When  first  she  c,  all  flush'd  you  said 
these  men  c  to  woo  Your  Highness — 
but  the  Prince  Her  brother  c, 
maidens  c,  they  talk'd.  They  sang, 
down  she  c.  And  found  fair  peace  once  more 
with  her  oft,  Melissa  c  ;  for  Blanche  had  gone, 
on  a  day  When  Cyril  pleaded,  Ida  c  behind 
with  me  oft  she  sat :  Then  c  a  change  ; 
a  touch  C  round  my  wrist,  and  tears  upon  my  hand 


JJ 

584 

600 

,, 

647 

838 

Sea  Dreavis  6 

32 

71 

„      114 

„      226 

„      248 

Liicretitis  48 

Princess^ 

Pro.  91 

i> 

i   36 

99 

119 

99 

227 

99 

ulO 

15 

)J 

135 

3> 

217 

fi 

271 

9  7 

296 

99 

318 

}| 

346 

}> 

354 

99 

432 

9J 

467 

JJ 

Hi  18 

99 

36 

57 

9) 

87 

39 

123 

99 

136 

99 

168 

183 

99 

290 

)9 

319 

99 

335 

365 

J) 

iv  221 

9) 

283 

99 

298 

99 

315 

99 

321 

99 

342 

99 

373 

99 

401 

99 

431 

99 

441 

467 

95 

559 

99 

569 

573 

jj 

v26i 

jj 

337 

J) 

340 

99 

370 

99 

424 

99 

477 

99 

523 

J9 

vi  15 

9) 

29 

t)  „ 

38,43 

77 

9  9 

83 

99 

250 

99 

328 

9) 

345 

mi22 

jj 

43 

9) 

56 

J  ) 

78 

92 

99 

138 

Came 


77 


Came 


Came  (continued)    when  she  c  From  barren  deeps  to  conquer 


Ma 


all  with  love ; 
when  we  ceased  There  c  a  minute's  pause, 
C  thro'  the  jaws  of  Death, 
Remember  how  we  c  at  last  To  Como ; 
Up  there  c  a  flower, 
at  last  it  seem'd  that  an  answer  c. 
And  looking  back  to  whence  I  c, 
'  I  murmur 'd,  as  I  c  along, 
The  path  we  c  by,  thorn  and  flower, 
c  In  whispers  of  the  beauteous  world. 
This  truth  c  borne  with  bier  and  pall, 
But  if  they  c  who  past  away, 

c  on  that  which  is,  and  caught  The  deep  pulsations 
c  at  length  To  find  a  stronger  faith  his  own  ; 
And  out  of  darkness  c  the  hands 
they  went  and  c,  Remade  the  blood 
if  an  enemy's  fleet  c  yonder  round  the  hill, 
when  the  morning  c  In  a  cloud,  it  faded, 
C  out  of  her  pitying  womanhood, 
She  c  to  the  village  church, 
Last  week  c  one  to  the  county  town, 
However  she  c  to  be  so  allied, 
snow-limb'd  Eve  from  whom  she  c. 
Let  no  one  ask  me  how  it  c  to  pass  ; 
And  at  last,  when  each  c  home, 
He  c  with  the  babe-faced  lord  ; 
hard  mechanic  ghost  That  never  c  from  on  high 
C  glimmering  thro'  the  laurels  At  the  quiet  evenfall. 
Everything  c  to  be  known, 
for  he  c  not  back  From  the  wilderness, 
know  not  whether  he  c  in  the  Hanover  ship, 
man  was  less  and  less,  till  Arthur  c. 
wolf  and  boar  and  bear  C  night  and  day, 
But  heard  the  call,  and  c : 
when  they  c  before  him,  the  King  said, 
c  to  Cameliard,  With  Gawain  and  young  Modred, 
I  know  not  whether  of  himself  he  c, 
Why,  Gawain,  when  he  c  With  Modred  hither 
c  an  ancient  man.  Long-bearded, 
They  c  from  out  a  sacred  mountain-cleft 
Then  c  a  widow  crying  to  the  King, 
C  yet  another  widow  crying  to  him. 
Then  c  Sir  Kay,  the  seneschal,  and  cried, 
Then  c  in  hall  the  messenger  of  Mark, 
suppliant  crying  c  With  noise  of  ravage 
out  of  kitchen  c  The  thralls  in  throng, 
Out  of  the  smoke  he  c,  and  so  my  lance  Hold, 
'  Well  that  Ye  c,  or  else  these  caitiff  rogues 
Wherethro'  the  serpent  river  coil'd,  they  c.  ,,  906 

three  fair  girls  in  gilt  and  rosy  raiment  c  :  ,,  927 

Then  when  he  c  upon  her,  spake  '  Methought,  ,,  991 

The  savour  of  thy  kitchen  c  upon  me  ,,  993 

damsel  c.  And  arm'd  him  in  old  arms,  ,,  1114 

unhappiness  Of  one  who  c  to  help  thee,  ,,  1238 

Why  c  ye  not,  when  call'd  ?  ,,  1247 

a  page  Who  c  and  went,  and  still  reported  ,,  1338 

anon  C  lights  and  lights,  and  once  again  he  blew  ;  ,,  1371 

Remembering  when  first  he  c  on  her  Marr.  of  Oeraint  140 

Before  him  c  a  forester  of  Dean,  ,,  148 

C  quickly  flashing  thro'  the  shallow  ford  „  167 

And  thither  c  Geraint,  and  underneath  „  241 

C  forward  with  the  helmet  yet  in  hand  ,,  28.5 

c  again  with  one,  A  youth,  ,,  38.5 

thither  c  the  twain,  and  when  Geraint  Beheld  her  ,,  .539 

and  errant  knights  And  ladies  c,  „  546 

There  c  a  clapping  as  of  phantom  hands.  ,,  .566 

and  c  to  loathe  His  crime  of  traitor,  ,,  .593 

c  A  stately  queen  whose  name  was  Guinevere,  ,,  666 

therewithal  one  c  and  seized  on  her,  ,,  673 

C  one  with  this  and  laid  it  in  my  hand,  „  699 

I  c  among  you  here  so  suddenly,  „  794 

Remembering  how  first  he  c  on  her,  „  842 

from  the  place  There  c  a  fair-hair'd  youth,  Oeraint  and  R.  201 

when  the  fair-hair'd  youth  c  by  him,  said,  ,,  20.5 


Princess  vii  163 

,,       Con.  4 

Light  Brigade  46 

The  Daisy  69 

The  Flovxr  3 

The  Victim  24 

In  Mem.  xsdii  7 

xxxvii  21 

xlvi  2 

Ixxix  11 

Ixxxv  1 

xc\Z 

xcv  39 

xcvi  16 

cxxiv  23 

Con.  10 

id  I  i  49 

vi20 

64 

viii  1 

£c37 

adii  36 

xmii  28 

49 

xix  61 

II  US 

ii  3.5 

iv77 

t?51 

53 

59 

Com.  of  Arthur  12 

24 

47 

166 

243 

346 

Gareth  and  L.  25 

240 

„  260 

„  333 

350 

367 

384 

„  436 

694 

722 

819 


Came  {continued)    c  upon  him,  and  he  sigh'd  ; 
Crost  and  c  near,  lifted  adoring  eyes, 
I  thought,  but  that  your  father  c  between, 
Suddenly  c,  and  at  his  side  all  pale  Dismounting, 
She  rested,  and  her  desolation  c  Upon  her, 
G  riding  with  a  hundred  lances  up  ; 
ere  he  c,  like  one  that  hails  a  ship, 
out  of  her  there  c  a  power  upon  him  ; 
Neigh'd  with  all  gladness  as  they  c, 
C  purer  pleasure  unto  mortal  kind 
o'er  her  meek  eyes  c  a  happy  mist 
And  you  c — But  once  you  c, — 
thither  c  The  King's  own  leech  to  look 
For  whatsoever  knight  against  us  c 
and  c  To  learn  black  magic,  and  to  hate  his  kind 
the  great  Queen  C  with  slow  steps, 
under  open  blue  C  on  the  hoarhead  woodman  at  a 

bough 
scream  of  that  Wood-devil  I  c  to  quell  ! ' 
a  wanton  damsel  c.  And  sought  for  Garlon 
no  quest  c,  but  all  was  joust  and  play, 
turn'd  to  tyrants  when  they  c  to  power) 
They  said  a  light  c  from  her  when  she  moved  : 
and  his  book  c  down  to  me.' 
C  to  her  old  perch  back,  and  settled  there. 
Her  eyes  and  neck  glittering  went  and  c  ; 
How  c  the  lily  maid  by  that  good  shield  Of 

Lancelot, 
Arthur  c,  and  labouring  up  the  pass, 
Then  c  an  old,  dumb,  myriad-wrinkled  man, 
across  him  c  a  cloud  Of  melancholy  severe. 
Past  inward,  as  she  c  from  out  the  tower. 
Then  c  on  him  a  sort  of  sacred  fear. 
Then  c  the  hermit  out  and  bare  him  in, 
C  round  their  great  Pendragon,  saying 
since  the  knight  C  not  to  us, 
c  at  last,  tho'  late,  to  Astolat : 
c  The  Lord  of  Astolat  out. 
One  old  dame  C  suddenly  on  the  Queen 
C  on  her  brother  with  a  happy  face 
She  c  before  Sir  Lancelot,  for  she  thought 
Then  c  her  father,  saying  in  low  tones, 
c  her  brethren  saying,  '  Peace  to  thee, 
the  King  C  girt  with  knights : 
c  the  fine  Gawain  and  wonder'd  at  her,  And 

Lancelot  later  c  and  mused  at  her. 
To  answer  that  which  c  : 
I  know  That  Joseph  c  of  old  to  Glastonbury, 
And  when  she  c  to  speak,  behold  her  eyes 
touch  with  hand.  Was  like  that  music  as  it  c ; 
'  Then  c  a  year  of  miracle : 
'  Then  on  a  summer  night  it  c  to  pass, 
Had  Camelot  seen  the  like,  since  Arthur  c ; 
to  the  Gate  of  the  three  Queens  we  c, 
C  like  a  driving  gloom  across  my  mind. 
And  on  the  splendour  c,  flashing  me  blind  ; 
Open'd  his  arms  to  embrace  me  as  he  c, 
I  saw  not  whence  it  c. 

return'd  To  whence  I  c,  the  gate  of  Arthur's  wars.' 
C  ye  on  none  but  phantoms  in  your  quest, 
And  now  I  c  upon  her  once  again, 
c  a  night  Still  as  the  day  was  loud  ; 
My  madness  c  upon  me  as  of  old, 
I  c  All  in  my  folly  to  the  naked  shore. 
But  if  indeed  there  c  a  sign  from  heaven, 
out  of  those  to  whom  the  vision  c 
and  the  sunshine  c  along  with  him. 
And  as  he  c  away,  The  men  who  met  him 
strange  knights  From  the  four  winds  c  in : 
out  they  c,  But  Pelleas  overthrew  them 
Then  when  he  c  before  Ettarre, 
from  a  tiny  cave  C  lightening  downward, 
c  the  village  girls  And  linger'd  talking, 
Then  a  long  silence  c  upon  the  hall, 
C  Tristram,  saying,  '  Why  skip  ye  so, 


Geraint  and  E,  249 

9) 

304 

314 

jj 

510 

)} 

518 

)| 

589 

I) 

540 

M 

618 

9> 

756 

>9 

765 

»» 

769 

99 

845 

)  J 

922 

Balin  and  Balan  35 

jj 

126 

)9 

245 

)| 

294 

ft 

548 

ij 

609 

Merlin  and  V.  145 

)  J 

518 

567 

jj 

650 

}  J 

903 

)> 

960 

Lancelot  and  E.  28 

*» 

47 

170 

jj 

324 

jj 

346 

>9 

854 

99 

519 

J) 

528 

544 

99 

618 

99 

626 

99 

730 

9) 

791 

99 

908 

99 

994 

996 

)J 

1261 

99 

1267 

Holy  OraU  12 

99 

102 

115 

166 

99 

179 

99 

332 

99 

358 

370 

jj 

413 

99 

417 

99 

515 

539 

jj 

562 

99 

585 

99 

682 

9) 

787 

99 

792 

99 

873 

99 

895 

Pel  leas  ai 

dE.6 

99 

141 

148 

jj 

220 

>J 

237 

99 

426 

508 

99 

609 

Latt  Tournament  9 

Came 


78 


Cameloi 


Came  {continued)    they  c  Not  from  the  skeleton  of  a 

brother-slayer,  Last  Tournament  46 

Fool,  I  c  late,  the  heathen  wars  were  o'er,  ,,           269 

Who  knew  thee  swine  enow  before  I  c,  ,,           304 

That  night  c  Arthur  home,  ,,           755 


In  the  dead  night,  grim  faces  c  and  went  Before  her, 

when  she  c  to  Almesbury  she  spake 

a  rumour  wildly  blown  about  C, 

remembering  Her  thought  when  first  she  c, 

when  at  last  he  c  to  Camelot, 

there  was  no  man  knew  from  whence  he  c ; 

There  c  a  day  as  still  as  heaven, 

Lancelot  c,  Reputed  the  best  knight 

C  to  that  point  where  first  she  saw  the  King 

then  c  silence,  then  a  voice, 

Then  c  thy  shameful  sin  with  Lancelot ; 

Then  c  the  sin  of  Tristram  and  Isolt ; 

Until  it  c  a  kingdom's  curse  with  thee — 

There  c  on  Arthur  sleeping,  Gawain 

c  A  bitter  wind,  clear  from  the  North, 

C  on  the  shining  levels  of  the  lake. 

So  to  the  barge  they  c. 

therewithal  c  on  him  the  weird  rhyme, 

Then  from  the  dawn  it  seem'd  there  c, 

There  c  a  glorious  morning,  such  a  one 

first  we  c  from  out  the  pines  at  noon, 

sounds  of  joy  That  c  on  the  sea-wind. 

Last  we  c  To  what  our  people  call 

yet  to  both  there  c  The  joy  of  life 

Hither  we  c.  And  sitting  down  upon  the  golden  moss, 

then  c  in  The  white  light  of  the  weary  moon 

Had  I  not  learnt  my  loss  before  he  c  ? 

Could  that  be  more  because  he  c  my  way  ? 

the  wind  C  wooingly  with  woodbine  smells. 

I  c  upon  The  rear  of  a  procession, 

c  a  broad  And  solid  beam  of  isolated  light, 

I  c  one  day  and  sat  among  the  stones 

Then  c  on  me  The  hollow  tolling  of  the  bell, 

hand  she  reach'd  to  those  that  c  behind, 

Julian  c  again  Back  to  his  mother's  house 

wrapping  her  all  over  with  the  cloak  He  c  in, 

'  Here !  and  how  c  I  here  ? ' 

An  hour  or  two,  Camilla's  travail  c  Upon  her, 

Suddenly  c  her  notice  and  we  past, 

So  sweetly  and  so  modestly  she  c  To  greet  us, 

And  crossing  her  own  picture  as  she  c. 

So  she  c  in : — I  am  long  in  telling  it, 

some  other  question'd  if  she  c  From  foreign  lands, 

he  was  a  child,  an'  he  c  to  harm  ; 

when  Harry  c  home  for  good. 

And  Harry  c  home  at  last, 

Harry  c  in,  an'  I  flung  him  the  letter 

watch'd  him,  an'  when  he  c  in  I  felt 

when  he  c  to  bid  me  goodbye. 

I  c  into  court  to  the  Judge  and  the  lawyers. 

like  a  flutter'd  bird,  c  flying  from  far  away  : 

sailed  away  from  Flores  till  the  Spaniard  c  in  sight. 

And  the  rest  they  c  aboard  us. 

For  a  dozen  times  they  c  with  their  pikes 

and  the  stars  c  out  far  over  the  summer  sea, 

their  high-built  galleons  c.  Ship  after  ship, 

I  c  on  lake  Llanberris  in  the  dark, 

Then  c  the  day  when  I,  Flattering  myself 

And  the  doctor  c  at  his  hour, 

Whv  there  ?  they  c  to  hear  their  preacher. 

And  c  upon  th»  Mountain  of  the  World, 

I  have  accomplish'd  what  I  c  to  do. 

Then  c  two  voices  from  the  Sepulchre, 

what  was  mine,  c  happily  to  the  shore. 

And  we  c  to  the  isle  in  the  ocean. 

And  we  c  to  the  Silent  Isle 

And  we  c  to  the  Isle  of  Shouting, 

And  we  c  to  the  Isle  of  Flowers : 

And  we  c  to  the  Isle  of  Fruits  :  „^^ 

And  we  c  to  the  Isle  of  Fire :  .^t>. 


Gvinevere  70 

138 

154 

182 

260 

289 

292 

381 

403 

419 

487 

488 

550 

Pass,  of  Arthur  30 

123 

„     219 

373 

„     444 

457 

Lover's  Tale  i  299 

-  „    310 

326 

373 

385 

539 

639 

665 

666 

,,   ii  36 

74 

.172 

,,    in  1 

9 

48 

,,  iv  14 

87 

97 

127 

154 

170 

286 

302 

330 

First  Quarrel  23 

30 

35 

57 

75 

78 

Rizpah  33 

Tlie  Revenge  2 

23 

52 

53 

56 

58 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  95 

„  139 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  68 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  42 

Columbus  26 

„        65 

95 

„      141 

I'',  of  Maeldune  9 

11 

27 

37 

55 

71 


Came  (continued)    And  we  c  to  the  Bounteous  Isle,         V.  of  Maeldune  83 

And  we  c  in  an  evil  time  to  the  Isle  ,,          105 

And  we  c  to  the  Isle  of  a  Saint  ,,          115 

And  we  c  to  the  Isle  we  were  blown  from,  ,,          127 
c  back  That  wholesome  heat  the  blood                     To  E.  Fitzgerald  23 

dreadful  light  G  from  her  golden  hair,  Tiresias  44 

But  I  c  on  him  once  at  a  ball.  The  Wreck  47 

wail  c  borne  in  the  shriek  of  a  growing  wind,  „         87 

then  <;  the  crash  of  the  mast.  ,,         92 

an  answer  c  Not  from  the  nurse —  ,,        143 

0  Mother,  she  c  to  me  there.  ,,        148 

That  you  c  unwish'd  for,  uncall'd.  Despair  5 

there  c  thro'  the  roar  of  the  breaker  a  whisper,  ,,     13 

Hoped  for  a  dawn  and  it  c,  ,,     27 

foam  in  the  dusk  c  playing  about  our  feet.  ,,    50 

From  out  his  ancient  city  c  a  Seer  Ancient  Sage  2 

The  Nameless  never  c  Among  us,  ,,        54 

oft  On  me,  when  boy,  there  c  what  then  I  call'd,  ,,      217 

And  yet  no  comfort  c  to  me.  The  Flight  18 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  5 


You  c,  and  look'd  and  loved  the  view 

C  that  '  Ave  atque  Vale '  of  the  Poet's 
hopeless  woe, 

from  all  the  world  the  voices  c 

c  On  three  gray  heads  beneath  a  gleaming  rift. 

Given  on  the  morning  when  you  c  of  age 

then  a  woman  c  And  caught  me  from  my  nurse 

She  c  to  you,  not  me. 

Vext,  that  you  thought  my  Mother  c  to  me  ? 

one  silent  voice  C  on  the  wind. 

And  she  that  c  to  part  them  all  too  late, 

one  day  c  And  saw  you,  shook  her  head, 

I  c,  I  went,  was  happier  day  by  day  ; 

She  always  c  to  meet  me  carrying  you. 

She  c  no  more  to  meet  me,  carrying  you, 

A  beauty  c  upon  your  face, 

c,  my  friend.  To  prize  your  various  book. 

You  c  not,  friend  ; 

There  no  one  c,  the  turf  was  fresh, 

so  to  the  land's  Last  limit  I  c — 

c  of  your  own  will  To  wait  on  one  so  broken, 

shouted,  and  the  shepherds  heard  and  c. 

shape  with  wings  C  sweeping  by  him. 

Love  and  Justice  c  and  dwelt  therein ; 
(repeat) 

that  I  c  on  none  of  his  band  ; 

would  it  matter  so  much  if  I  c  on  the  street  ? 

— a  widow  c  to  my  door : 

birthday  c  of  a  boy  born  happily  dead. 
Camel    c's  knelt  Unbidden,  and  the  brutes 

And  like  the  all-enduring  c,  driven 
Cameliard    Leodogran,  the  King  of  C, 

And  thus  the  land  of  C  was  waste, 

came  to  C,  With  Gawain  and  young  Modred, 
Camelot    road  runs  by  To  many-tower'd  C ; 

island  in  the  river  Flowing  down  to  C. 

shallop  flitteth  silken-sail'd  Skimming  down  to  C : 

river  winding  clearly,  Down  to  tower'd  C: 

A  curse  is  on  her  if  she  stay  To  look  down  to  G. 

she  sees  the  highway  near  Winding  down  to  G : 

long-hair'd  page  in  crimson  clad,  Goes  by  to  tower'd  C ; 

with  plumes  and  lights  And  music,  went  to  C-. 

As  he  rode  down  to  C:  (repeat) 

She  look'd  down  to  C. 


Frater  Ave,  etc.  5 

Demeter  and  P.  66 

82 

Tlie  Ring  77 

117 

138 

140 

154 

216 

312 

348 

352 

385 

Happy  51 

To  Ulysses  46 

To  Mary  Boyle  17 

Prog,  of  Spnng  72 

Merlin  and  the  G.  110 

Romney's  R.  16 

Death  of  (Enon^  56 

St.  Telemachus  25 

Akbar's  Dream  181,  194 

Bandit's  Death  40 

Charity  8 

„      26 

„      34 

Merlin  and  V.  575 

Lover's  Tale  i  136 

Com.  of  Arthur  1 

20 

243 

L.  of  ShaZott  i  5 

14 

23 

32 

ii  5 

14 

23 

32 

L.  ofShalott  Hi  14,  23,  32 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  41 


Heavily  the  low  sky  raining  Over  tower'd  C;  ,,        iv  5 

With  a  glassy  countenance  Did  she  look  to  C.  ,,  14 

Thro'  the  noises  of  the  night  She  floated  down  to  C:  „  23 

her  eyes  were  darken'd  wholly,  Tuni'd  to  tower'd  G.  ,,  32 

Silent  into  C.  »  41 

they  cross'd  themselves  for  fear,  All  the  knights  at  C:  „  50 

Walking  about  the  gardens  and  the  halls  Of  C,  M.  d' Arthur  21 

Shot  thro'  the  lists  at  C,  ,,224 

plain  That  broaden'd  toward  the  base  of  C,  Gareth  and  L.  188 

then  enter'd  with  his  twain  C,  ,,  303 

king.  Was  ev'n  upon  his  way  to  C;  ,,  392 

helping  back  the  dislocated  Kay  To  C,  „  1214 


Camelot 


79 


Capital 


Camelot  (contimied)    That  eat  in  Arthur's  hall  at  0.  Marr,  of  Oeraint  432 

Adown  the  crystal  dykes  at  O  Geraint  and  E.  470 
strange  knights  Who  sit  near  C  at  a 

fountain-side,  Balin  and  Balan  11 

'  Too  high  this  mount  of  C  for  me  :  ,,            226 

Remembering  that  dark  bower  at  C,'  „            526 

But  Vivien,  into  C  stealing,  lodged  Merlin  and  V.  63 

In  Arthur's  arras  hall  at  C :  ,,          250 
this  dealt  him  at  Caerlyle  ;  That  at  Caerleon  ; 

this  at  C :  Lancelot  and  E.  23 

let  proclaim  a  joust  At  C,  ,,              77 

Shall  I  appear,  0  Queen,  at  0,  ,,            142 

go  to  joust  as  one  unknown  At  C  for  the  diamond,  ,,            191 

To  ride  to  C  with  this  noble  knight :  ,,            220 

knew  there  lived  a  knight  Not  far  from  C,  ,,            402 

when  they  reach'd  the  lists  By  C  in  the  meadow,  ,,            429 

'  What  news  from  0,  lord  ?  ,,620 

To  C,  and  before  the  city-gates  Came  on  her  brother  ,,            790 

His  own  far  blood,  which  dwelt  at  C ;  ,,            803 

helmet  in  an  abbey  far  away  From  C,  Holy  Grail  7 

o'er  the  plain  that  then  began  To  darken  under  C :  „      218 

For  all  the  sacred  mount  of  C,  ,,      227 

never  yet  Had  C  seen  the  like,  since  Arthur  came  ;  „      332 

O  brother  had  you  known  our  C,  „      339 

Lancelot  slowly  rode  his  warhorse  back  To  C,  Pelleas  and  E.  584 

mock -knight  of  Arthiir's  Table  Round,  At  C,  Last  Totirnavient  3 

trumpet-blowings  ran  on  all  the  ways  From  G,  „              53 

At  C,  ere  the  coming  of  the  Queen.'  Gvinevere  223 

And  when  at  last  he  came  to  C,  ,,        260 

And  in  thy  bowers  of  0  or  of  Usk  „        503 

Walking  about  the  gardens  and  the  halls  Of  C,  Pass,  of  Arthur  189 

Shot  thro'  the  lists  at  C,  „             392 

Clouds  and  darkness  Closed  upon  C ;  Merlin  and  the  G.  76 

Camest    Come  not  as  thou  c  of  late,  Ode  to  Memory  8 

Whilome  thou  c  with  the  morning  mist,  (repeat)  ,,        12,  21 

friend,  who  c  to  thy  goal  So  early,  In  Mem.  cxiv  23 

but  thee,  When  first  thou  c —  Holy  Grail  22 

can  no  more,  thou  c,  0  my  child,  Demeter  and  P.  4 

Camilla    thou  and  I,  C,  thou  and  I  Were  borne  Lover's  Tale  i  53 

bore  C  close  beneath  her  beating  heart,  ,,           203 

What  marvel  my  C  told  me  all  ?  (repeat)  ,,   557,  579 

C,  my  C,  who  was  mine  No  longer  in  the  dearest  sense         ,,  586 

And  as  for  me,  C,  as  for  me, —  ,,            764 

Sometimes  I  thought  C  was  no  more,  ,,         ii  69 

An  hour  or  two,  C's  travail  came  Upon  her,  ,,       iv  127 

To  bring  C  down  before  them  all.  ,,           285 

Camp    Thro'  the  courts,  the  c's,  the  schools,  Visuyti  of  Sin  104 

And  at  her  head  a  follower  of  the  c,  Princess  v  60 

a  murmur  ran  Thro'  all  the  c  and  inward  raced  ,,        111 

Back  rode  we  to  my  father's  c,  ,,        331 

'  See  that  there  be  no  traitors  in  your  c  :  ,,         425 

King,  c  and  college  tum'd  to  hollow  shows  ;  ,,         478 

'  Follow  me,  Prince,  to  the  c,  Geraint  and  E.  808 

when  they  reach'd  the  c  the  King  himself  ,,             878 

Campanili    What  slender  c  grew  By  bays,  The  Daisy  13 
Campion    See  Bose-campion 

Camulodiine    near  the  colony  G,  Boddicea  5 

Lo  their  colony  half-defended  !  lo  their  colony,  C !  ,,17 

lo  the  colony  C,  (repeat)  ,,  31,  53 

city,  and  citadel,  London,  Verulam,  C  ,,86 

Can     'Tis  but  a  steward  of  the  c,  Will  Water.  149 

truth,  that  flies  the  flowing  c,  ,,            171 

'  Fill  the  cup,  and  fill  the  c  :  (repeat)  Vidmi  of  Sin  95,  119,  203 

'  Fill  the  c,  and  fill  the  cup :  (repeat)  „               131,  167 

Cana    like  him  of  C  in  Holy  Writ,  Holy  Grail  762 

Canada    loyal  pines  of  C  murmur  thee,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  19 

To  G  whom  we  love  and  prize.  Hands  all  Round  19 

Canadian    V,  Indian,  Australasian,  African,  On,  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  60 

Canal    The  boat-head  down  a  broad  c  AraMan  Nights  25 

the  clear  c  Is  rounded  to  as  clear  a  lake.  ,,              45 

Cancel    Hours  That  c  weal  with  woe.  Ancient  Sage  96 

Cancell'd    Is  c  in  the  world  of  sense  ? '            ^  Tioo  Voices  42 

Powers,  who  wait  On  noble  deeds,  c  a  sense  misused  ;  Godiva  72 

And  c  nature's  best :  In  Mem.  Ixxii  20 

At  length  my  trance  Was  c,  ,,          xcv  44 


Cancer    Cured  lameness,  palsies,  c's.  St.  S.  Stylites  82 

Candle    an'  just  as  c's  was  lit,  North.  Gobbler  87 

Candle-light    and  with  solemn  rites  by  c-l —  Princess  v  292 

Cane     court-Galen  poised  his  gilt-head  c,  ,,          i  19 

home  in  the  c's  by  the  purple  tide.  The  Wreck  71 

Your  c,  your  palm,  tree-fern,  bamboo,  To  Ulysses  36 

in  the  sultry  plains  About  a  land  of  c's  ;  Prog,  of  Spring  78 

Canker  (b)    As  but  the  c  of  the  brain  ;  'in  Mem.  xcii  3 

Canker  (verb)    No  lapse  of  moons  can  c  Love,  ,,        xxviS 

Canker'd    See  Worm-canker'd 

Canning    Or  stow'd,  when  classic  G  died.  Will  Water.  101 

Thou  third  great  G,  stand  among  our  best  Epit.  on  Stratford  1 

Cannon    with  knobs  and  wires  and  vials  fired  A  c  ;  Princess,  Pro.  66 

the  volleying  c  thunder  his  loss  ;  Ode  on  Well.  62 

Roll  of  c  and  clash  of  arms,  ,,         116 

Your  c's  moulder  on  the  seaward  wall ;  ,,         173 

G  to  right  of  them,  G  to  left  (repeat)  Light  Brigade  18,  39 

C  in  front  of  them  Volley'd  and  thunder'd  ;  ,,                 20 

C  behind  them  Volley 'd  and  thunder'd  ;  ,,                 41 

cobweb  woven  across  the  c's  throat  Shall  shake  Maud  III  vi  27 

Cannonade    In  the  crash  of  the  c's  The  Revenge  78 

Hark  c,  fusillade  !  is  it  true  what  was  told  Def,  of  Lwcloimo  95 

Cannon-ball    and  death  from  their  c-6's,  ,,              14 

musket-bullets,  and  thousand  of  c-&'s —  ,,              93 

Cannon-bullet    Nor  the  c-h  rust  on  a  slothful  shore,  Mavd  III  vi  26 

Cannon-shot    Cs,  musket-shot,  volley  on  volley,  Def.  of  Lucknoio  34 

Fell  like  a  c.  Burst  like  a  thunderbolt.  Heavy  Brigade  26 

Canon    Archbishop,  Bishop,  Priors,  Gs,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  160 

Canonized    See  Half-canonized 

CanopuB    and  lit  Lamps  which  out-burn'd  C  D.ofF.  Women  li6 

Canopy    in  the  costly  c  o'er  him  set,  Lancelot  and  E.  443 

Canter    'ear  my  'erse's  legs,  as  they  c's  awaay.  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  1 

proputty,  proputty — c  an' o  awaay?  ,,                60 

Canterbury-bell    Roses  and  lilies  and  G-h's.'  Gity  Ghild  5 

Canvas    In  the  north,  her  c  flowing.  The  Captain  27 

By  glimmering  lanes  and  walls  of  c  Princess  v  6 

such  a  breeze  Compell'd  thy  c,  In  Mem.  xvii  2 

Launch  your  vessel,  And  crowd  your  c.  Merlin  and  the  G.  127 

Could  make  pure  light  live  on  the  c  %  Romney's  R.  10 

Canvass     Doubtless  our  narrow  world  must  c  it :  Aylmer's  Field  774 

And  so  last  night  she  fell  to  c  you  :  Princess  Hi  40 

Canvass'd    He  c  human  mysteries,  A  Gharacter  20 

Canzonet    A  rogue  of  c's  and  serenades.  Princess  iv  135 

Cap  (s)    Nor  wreathe  thy  c  with  doleful  crape.  My  life  is  full  14 

Her  c  blew  off,  her  gown  blew  up.  The  Goose  51 

I  do  not  hear  the  bells  upon  my  c,  Edwin  Morris  56 

we  know  the  hue  Of  that  c  upon  her  brows.  Vision  of  Sin  142 

knightlike  in  his  c  instead  of  casque,  Princess  iv  600 

man's  own  angry  pride  Is  c  and  bells  for  a  fool.  Maud  I  vi  62 

Mounted  in  arms,  threw  up  their  c's  Gareth  and  L.  697 

put  on  the  black  c  except  for  the  worst  Rizpah  65 

staghom-moss,  and  this  you  twined  About  her  c.          Romney's  R.  80 

Cap  (verb)     '  That  c's  owt,  says  Sally,  North.  Gobbler  71 

And  c  our  age  with  snow  ? '  Ancient  Sage  98 

Capability    love  for  him  have  drain'd  My  capahilities 

of  love  ;  In  Mem.  locxoco  12 

Capable    neither  c  of  lies,  Nor  asking  overmuch  Enoch  Arden  251 

Cape  (headland)    tower,  and  hill,  and  c,  and  isle.  Mine  be  the  strength  6 

So  they  past  by  c's  and  islands,  The  Captain  21 

We  past  long  lines  of  Northern  c's  The  Voyage  35 

By  grassy  c's  with  fuller  sound  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  14 

lake  and  lawn,  and  isles  and  c's —  Vision  of  Sin  11 

Then  after  a  long  tumble  about  the  G  Enoch  Aiden  532 

fold  to  fold,  of  mountain  or  of  c  ;  Princess  vii  3 

On  c's  of  Afric  as  on  cliffs  of  Kent,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  17 

Or  olive-hoary  c  in  ocean  ;  The  Daisy  31 
would  not  pass  beyond  the  c  That  has  the  poplar 

on  it :  Lancelot  and  E.  1039 

round  from  the  cliffs  and  the  c's,  V.  of  Maddune  55 

stood  on  each  of  the  loftiest  c's  ,j            IQQ 

set  me  climbing  icy  c's  And  glaciers.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  25 

From  isle  and  c  and  continent.  Open.  I.  and  G.  Exhib.  4 

Cape  (a  covering)    with  ermine  c's  And  woolly  breasts     In  Mem.  xcv.  11 

Caper    Making  a  roan  horse  c  and  curvet  Lancelot  and  E.  792 

Capital    North  to  gain  Her  c  city,  27te  Ring  482 


Capitol 


80 


Cared 


Capitol    the  pillar'd  Parthenon,  The  glittering  C ; 
Caprera    which  here  The  warrior  of  (7  set, 
Captain    melting  the  mighty  hearts  Of  c's  and  of 
kings. 

The  c  of  my  dreams  Ruled  in  the  eastern  sky. 

Brave  the  C  was : 

harsh  and  cruel  Seem'd  the  Cs  mood. 

Then  the  C$  colour  heighten 'd, 

beneath  the  water  Crew  and  C  lie  ; 

Now  mate  is  blind,  and  c  lame, 

He  got  it ;  for  their  c  after  fight, 

Without  the  c's  knowledge : 

Communing  with  his  c's  of  the  war. 

young  c's  flash'd  their  glittering  teeth, 

to  meet  us  lightly  pranced  Three  c's  out ; 

every  c  waits  Hungry  for  honour. 

Foremost  c  of  his  time, 

those  deep  voices  our  dead  c  taught  The  tyrant, 

To  a  lord,  a  c,  a  padded  shape, 

the  crew  were  gentle,  the  c  kind  ; 

band  will  be  scatter'd  now  their  gallant  c  is  dead 
Captain 's-ear    His  c-e  has  heard  them  boom 
Captive    'sdeath !  and  he  himself  Your  c, 

The  c  void  of  noble  rage. 

Ye  cage  a  buxom  c  here  and  there. 

seized  upon  my  papers,  loosed  My  c's, 

void  of  joy,  Lest  she  be  taken  c — 

flay  Cs  whom  they  caught  in  battle — 
Car    reverent  people  behold  The  towering  c, 

Fixt  by  their  c's,  waited  the  golden  dawn. 

thro'  which  the  c  Of  dark  A'ldoneus  rising 
Caracole    round  the  gallery  made  his  horse  C ; 
Carddos  (King)     C,  Urion,  Cradlemont  of  Wales, 
Caravel    frailer  c,  With  what  was  mine, 
Carbonek    the  enchanted  towers  of  C, 
Carcanet    Make  a  c  of  rays, 

a  c  Of  ruby  swaying  to  and  fro, 

c  Vext  her  with  plaintive  memories  of  the  child  : 
•  Because  the  twain  had  spoil'd  her  c. 

Tristram  show'd  And  swung  the  ruby  c. 
Carcase    make  the  c  a  skeleton. 

Many  a  c  they  left  to  be  carrion. 
Card    Insipid  as  the  Queen  upon  a  c  ; 
Care  (s)    and  the  c  That  yokes  vnth  empire, 

He  hath  no  c  of  life  or  death  ; 

sure  it  is  a  special  c  Of  God, 

Thee  nor  carketh  c  nor  slander ; 

And  little  other  c  hath  she, 

Grows  green  and  broad,  and  takes  no  c, 

a  low  voice,  full  of  c,  Murmur'd 

took  with  c,  and  kneeline  on  one  knee, 

Come,  G  and  Pleasure,  Hope  and  Pain, 

Thy  c  is,  under  polish'd  tins, 

Cast  all  your  c's  on  God  : 

mother  cared  for  it  With  all  a  mother's  c : 

no  kin,  no  c,  No  burthen,  save  my  c  for  you 

The  common  c  whom  no  one  cared  for, 

Seam'd  with  the  shallow  c's  of  fifty  years : 

takes  a  lady's  finger  with  all  c, 

each  by  other  drest  with  c  Descended 

She  had  the  c  of  Lady  Ida's  youth, 

either  she  will  die  from  want  of  c, 

out  of  long  frustration  of  her  c, 

mental  breadth,  nor  fail  in  childward  c, 

Comb,  when  no  graver  c's  employ, 

Which  once  she  foster'd  up  with  c  ; 

Is  this  the  end  of  all  my  c  ? ' 

If  any  c  for  what  is  here  Survive 

Her  c  is  not  to  part  and  prove  ; 

And  falling  with  my  weight  of  c's 

O  sound  to  rout  the  brood  of  c's, 

A  song  that  slights  the  coming  c, 

Let  c's  that  petty  shadows  cast. 

Ring  out  the  want,  the  c,  the  sin, 

And  if  the  song  were  full  of  c, 


Freedom  4 
To  Ulysses  26 

D.  ofF.  Women  176 

263 

The  Captain  5 

„  14 

„         29 

68 

The  Voyage  91 

Aylmer's  Field  226 

717 

PrtTwess  i  67 

„       v20 

255 

313 

Ode  on  Well.  31 

69 

Maud  7  a;  29 

The  Wreck  129 

,      Bandit's  Death  41 

Ode  on  Well.  65 

Princess  v  277 

In  Mem,  xxvii  2 

Mo'lin  and  V.  542 

Columbus  131 

Tiresias  102 

Loclcsle^i  H.,  Sixty  80 

Ode  on  Well.  55 

Spec,  of  Iliad 'n 

Demeter  and  P.  38 

Last  Tournament  206 

Com.  of  Arthur  112 

Columbus  140 

Holy  Grail  813 

Adeline  59 

Last  Tournament  6 

28 

419 

740 

Boddicea  14 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  105 

Aylmer's  Field  28 

To  the  Queen  9 

Supp.  Confessions  48 

63 

A  Dirge  8 

L.  of  Shalott  a  8 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  28 

D.  ofF.  Women  2\9 

M.  d' Arthur  173 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  55 

Will  Water.  227 

Enoch  Arden  222 

263 

418 

Aylmer's  Field  688 

814 

Princess,  Pro.  173 

,,        iii  19 

85 

„         V  85 

,,      vii  101 

283 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  1 

In  Mem.      via  16 

xii  14 

Dcxxviii    9 

xlviii   5 

IvU 

Ixaxdx  17 

xcix  10 

wis 

ci>i  17 

cxxv    9 


Care  (s)  {continued)    Shall  I  not  take  c  of  all  that  I  think,       Maud  I  xv7 

Forgetful  of  his  princedom  and  its  c's.  Marr.  of  Geraint  54 

he  thought,  '  In  spite  of  all  my  c,  ,,            115 

Told  him  that  her  fine  c  had  saved  his  life.  Lancelot  a^id  E.  863 

so  forgot  herself  A  moment,  and  her  c's  :  Last  Tournam^ent  26 

took  with  c,  and  kneeling  on  one  knee,  Pass,  of  Arthur  341 

oifices  Of  watchful  c  and  trembling  tenderness.  Lover's  Talei  226 

But  there  from  fever  and  my  c  of  him  ,,       iv  143 

the  Lord  has  look'd  into  my  c,  Rizpah  75 

lad  will  need  little  more  of  your  c*  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  17 

days'  of  fever,  and  want  of  c  !  The  Wreck  147 

Muriel  nursed  you  with  a  mother's  c ;  The  Ring  349 

made  you  leper  in  His  loving  c  for  both,  Happy  91 

With  politic  c,  with  utter  gentleness,  A  Icbar's  Dream  128 

Care  (verb)     You  c  not  for  another's  pains,  Rosalind  19 

random  eyes.  That  c  not  whom  they  kill,  ,,       38 

Nor  c's  to  lisp  in  love's  delicious  creeds  ;  Caress'd  or  chidden  11 

She  still  will  take  the  praise,  and  c  no  more.  The  form,  the  form  14 

Nor  c  to  sit  beside  her  where  she  sits —  Wan  Sculptor  10 

I  c  not  what  the  sects  may  brawl.  Palace  of  Art  210 

Too  proud  to  c  from  whence  I  came.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  12 

but  I  c  not  what  they  say,                             *  May  Queen  19 

I  c  not  if  I  go  to-day.  ,,  Con.  43 

But  if  you  c  indeed  to  listen,  hear  Golden  Year  20 

Like  wealthy  men  who  c  not  how  they  give.  Tithonus  17 

be  happy  !  wherefore  should  I  c  ?  Lochsley  Hall  97 

To  choose  your  own  you  did  not  c ;  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  30 

And  that  for  which  I  c  to  live.  ,,                56 

I  c  no  longer,  being  all  unblest :  Come  not,  when  etc.  8 

What  c  I  for  any  name  ?  Vision  of  Sin  85 

'  His  head  is  low,  and  no  man  c's  for  him.  Enoch  Arden  850 

if  my  children  c  to  see  me  dead,  ,,          888 

Would  c  no  more  for  Leolin's  walking  Aylmer's  Field  124 

Slight  was  his  answer  '  Well — I  c  not  for  it : '  ,,            238 

I  c  not  for  it  either  ; '  ,,       _     248 

wherefore  need  he  c  Greatly  for  them,  Lucretius  150 

'  G  not  thou  !    Thy  duty  ?     What  is  duty  ?  , ,       _  280 

c  not  while  we  hear  A  trumpet  in  the  distance  Princess  iv  80 

myself,  what  c  I,  war  or  no?  »>      ^  278 

And,  right  or  wrong,  I  c  not:  ,,         290 

nor  c's  to  walk  With  Death  and  Morning  ,,    vii  203 

Him  who  c's  not  to  be  great.  Ode  on  Well.  199 

what  do  I  c  for  Jane,  let  her  speak  of  you  Grandmother  51 

shall  we  c  to  be  pitiful  ?  Boadicea  32 

Nor  c's  to  fix  itself  to  form,  In  Mem.  xxxiii  4 

I  c  for  nothing,  all  shall  go.  ,,               Ivii 

I  c  not  in  these  fading  days  ,,             Ixxv  9 

Whatever  they  call  him,  what  c  I,  Maud  I  x  64 

But  now  shine  on,  and  what  c  I,  ,)    xnlii_  41 

C  not  thou  to  reply :  „  ^^  ***'  7 
G  not  for  shame :  thou  art  not  knight  but  knave."   Gareth  ayid  L.  1006 

'  And  c  not  for  the  cost ;  the  cost  is  mine.'  Geraint  and  E.  288 

Nor  did  I  c  or  dare  to  speak  with  you,  ,,             871 

He  c's  not  for  me :  only  here  to-day  lAmcelot  and  E.  126 

nor  c's  For  triumph  in  our  mimic  wars,  ,,            311 

she  cried,  '  I  c  not  to  be  wife,  „            937 

I  c  not  howsoever  great  he  be,  ,,          1069 

And  this  am  I,  so  that  ye  c  for  me  Holy  Grail  615 

C's  but  to  pass  into  the  silent  life.  ,,          899 

And  pass  and  c  no  more.  Pelleas  and  E.  77 

wherefore  shouldst  thou  c  to  mingle  with  it,  Last  To^irnament  105 

since  I  c  not  for  thy  pearls.  ,,              314 

C  not  for  her !  patient,  and  prayerful,  „              607 

I  the  King  should  greatly  c  to  live  ;  Guinevere  452 

Not  greatly  c  to  lose  ;  >>        495 

And  c  not  thou  for  dreams  from  him,  Pass,  of  Arthur  58 

Do  you  think  that  I  c  for  my  soul  if  my  boy  Rizpah  78 

I  c  not  for  a  name— no  fault  of  mine.  Sisters  (E.  and  E. )  77 

Not  es  I  c's  fur  to  hear  ony  harm,  ViUage  Wife  22 

Ah  why  should  we  c  what  they  say  ?  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  71 

heart  of  the  father  will  c  for  his  own.'  The  Wreck  98 

Fly— c  not.  Birds  and  brides  must  leave  Tlie  Ring  9Q 
their  music  here  be  mortal  need  the  singer  greatly  c  ?       Parnassus  18 

Cared  Which  you  had  hardly  c  to  see.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  32 
nor  heard  of  her,  nor  c  to  hear.     Nor  c  to  hear  ?       Edwin  Morris  138 


Cared 


81 


Casd 


Caxed  (continued)    Nor  c  for  seed  or  scion  !  Amphion  12 

if  he  c  For  her  or  his  dear  children,  Enoch  Arden  163 

Yet  sicklier,  tho'  the  mother  c  for  it  ,,          262 

G  not  to  look  on  any  human  face,  „          282 

question'd,  aught  of  what  he  c  to  know.  ,,          654 

Held  his  head  high,  and  c  for  no  man,  ,,          848 

prov'n  or  no.  What  c  he  ?  Ayhaer's  Fidd  55 

Me  ?— but  I  c  not  for  it.  „          244 

slowly  lost  Nor  greatly  c  to  lose,  her  hold  on  life.  ,,          568 

The  common  care  whom  no  one  c  for,  ,,          688 

Nor  ever  c  to  better  his  own  kind,  Sea  Dreams  201 

c  not  for  the  affection  of  the  house  ;  Princess  i  26 

And  some  they  c  not ;  till  a  clamour  grew  ,,    iv  486 

but  she  nor  c  Nor  knew  it,  ,,     vi  149 

Which  little  c  for  fades  not  yet.  In  Mem.  viii  20 

Nor  c  the  serpent  at  thy  side  ,,            ex  7 

Now  I  thought  that  she  c  for  me,  Maud  I  xiv  25 

Nor  c  a  broken  egg-shell  for  her  lord.  Oeraint  and  E.  364 

Was  c  as  much  for  as  a  summer  shower :  ,,            523 
storm  Urake  on  the  mountain  and  I  c  not  for  it.       Merlin  and  V.  503 

cackle  of  the  unborn  about  the  grave,  I  c  not  for  it :  ,,            508 

G  not  for  her,  nor  anything  upon  earth.'  Holy  Grail  612 

I  c  not  for  the  thorns  ;  Pelleas  and  E.  404 

who  c  Only  to  use  his  own.  Lover's  Tale  iv  311 

For  I  c  so  much  for  my  boy  that  the  Lord  Rizpah  75 

meller  'e  mun  be  by  this,  &  I  c  to  taaste.  North.  Gobbler  101 

he  c  not  for  his  own  ;  The  Flight  78 

Fur  I  niver  c  nothink  for  neither — •  Spinster's  Ss.  62 

Nor  ever  c  to  set  you  on  her  knee,  The  Rin^  386 

Caxeful    At  you,  so  c  of  the  right.  To  F.  D.  Mauitce  10 

All  in  quantity,  c  of  my  motion,  Heiidecasi/llabics  5 

So  c  of  the  type  she  seems.  In  Mem.  Iv  7 

'  So  c  of  the  type  ? '  but  no.  ,,        Ivi  1 

And  that  which  knows,  but  c  for  itself,  To  tlie  Queen  ii  57 

Carefuller    A  c  in  peril,  did  not  breathe  Enoch  Arden  50 

Careless     G  both  of  wind  and  weather,  Rosalind  7 

To  wait  for  death — mute — c  of  all  ills,  Jf  1  were  loved  10 

like  Gods  together,  c  of  mankind.  Lotos-Eaters,  G.  S.  110 

And  Enoch's  comrade,  c  of  himself,  Enoch  Arden  568 

Where  c  of  the  household  faces  near,  Aylmer's  Field  575 

but  he  that  holds  The  Gods  are  c,  Lucretius  150 

0  ye  Gods,  I  know  you  c,  ,,        208 

Rapt  in  her  song,  and  c  of  the  snare.  Princess  i  221 

So  c  of  the  single  life  ;  In  Mem.  Iv  8 

Now  with  slack  rein  and  c  of  himself,  Balin  and  Balan  309 

eats  And  uses,  c  of  the  rest ;  Merlin  and  V.  463 

Then  answer'd  Merlin  c  of  her  words :  ,,              700 

Merlin  answer'd  c  of  her  charge,  ,,              754 

G  of  all  things  else,  led  on  with  light  Lover's  Tale  i  77 
G  of  our  growing  kin.                                        Open  I.  and  G.  Exhib.  23 

Careless-order'd    All  round  a  c-o  garden  To  F.  D.  Maurice  15 

Caress  (s)    The  trance  gave  way  To  those  c'cs,  Love  and  Duty  66 

Or  for  chilling  his  c'es  Maud  I  xx  12 

white  hand  whose  ring'd  c  Had  wander'd  Balin  and  Balan  512 

Thy  hurt  and  heart  with  unguent  and  c —  Last  Tournament  595 

that  no  c  could  win  my  wife  Sisters  (E.  and  E. )  258 

at  home  if  I  sought  for  a  kindly  c.  The  Wreck  31 
Caress  (verb)     '  Thrice-happy  he  that  may  c  The  ringlet's 

waving  balm —  Talking  Oak  177 

be  not  wrathful  with  your  maid  ;  G  her :  Merlin  and  V.  381 

Caress'd    G  or  chidden  by  the  slender  hand,  Garess'd  or  chidden  1 

Carest    c  not  How  roughly  men  may  woo  Lucretius  272 

Careworn    contracting  grew  Cand  wan  ;  Enoch  Arden  487 

Carian  Artemisia    The  G  A  strong  in  war,  Princess  ii  81 

Caring    not  for  his  own  self  c  but  her,  Enoch  Arden  165 

No  longer  c  to  embalm  In  dying  songs  In  Mem.,  Gon.  13 

Carketh    Thee  nor  c  care  nor  slander ;  A  Dirge  8 

Carnage    Leaving  his  son  too  Lost  in  the  c,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  73 

Could  we  dream  of  wars  and  c,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  189 

Carnation    See  Bose-camation 

Carnival    Love  in  the  sacred  halls  Held  c  Princess  vii  85 

Carol  (s)    Flow'd  forth  on  a  c  free  and  bold  ;  Dying  Swan  30 

Heard  a  c,  mournful,  holy,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  28 

She,  as  her  c  sadder  grew,  Mariana  in  the  S,  13 

Losing  her  c  I  stood  pensively,  D.  of  F.  Wom^n  245 


Carol  (s)  {continued)  swan  That,  fluting  a  wild  c  ere 

her  death,  M.  d' Arthur  267 
every  bird  of  Eden  burst  In  c.                               Day -Dm.,  L' Envoi  44 

The  hall  with  harp  and  c  rang.  In  Mem,  ciii  9 

swan  That,  fluting  a  wild  c  ere  her  death,  Pass,  of  Arthur  435 

And  lavish  c  of  clear-throated  larks  Lover's  Tale  i  283 

Carol  (verb)    merrily,  merrily  c  the  gales,  Sea-Fairies  23 

The  balm-cricket  c's  clear  In  the  green  A  Dirge  47 

if  I  should  c  aloud,  from  aloft  All  things  The  Mernvaid  52 

Or  c  some  old  roundelay,  Oareth  and  L.  506 

That  you  should  c  so  madly  ?  The  Throstle  8 

Caroline    Margaret  and  Mary,  there's  Kate  and  G :  Alay  Queen  6 

CaroUeth    the  grasshopper  c  clearly  ;  Leonine  Eleg.  5 

Carolling    (-See  also  Down-carolling)    and  beside  The  c 

water  set  themselves  again,  Balin  and  Balan  44 

and  c  as  he  went  A  true-love  ballad,  Lancelot  and  E.  704 

Carouse     '  0  Soul,  make  merry  and  c,  Palace  of  Art 'd 

Where  long  and  largely  we  c  Will  Water.  91 

Carp    Near  that  old  home,  a  pool  of  golden  c  ;  Ma^iT.  of  Oeraint  648 

Carpenter    Cooper  he  was  and  c,  Enoch  Arden  814 

Born  of  a  village  girl,  c's  son,  Aylmer's  Field  668 

Carpet    c  es  fresh  es  a  midder  o'  flowers  i'  Maay —  Spinsters  S's.  45 

Carriage    as  I  found  when  her  c  past,  Maud  I  ii3 

Carried    see  me  c  out  from  the  threshold  of 

the  door ;                                                       May  Queen,  JV.  Y's.  E.  42 

But  him  she  c,  him  nor  lights  nor  feast  Lover's  Tale  iv  310 

Carrier-bird    As  light  as  c-b's  in  air  ;  In  Mem.  xxv  6 

Carrion    For  whom  the  c  vulture  waits  To  tear 

his  heart  You  might  have  won  35 

Blacken  round  the  Roman  c,  Boadicea  14 

And  deems  it  c  of  some  woodland  thing,  Gareth  and  L.  748 

troop  of  c  crows  Hung  like  a  cloud  Merlin  and  V.  598 
Many  a  carcase  they  left  to  be  c,                      Batt.  of  Bi-unanburh  105 

Carry    the  king  of  them  all  would  c  me.  The  Mermaid  45 

Warriors  c  the  warrior's  pall,  Ode  on  Well.  6 

brutes  of  mountain  back  That  c  kings  in  castles,  Merlin  and  V.  577 

Fur  'e'd  fetch  an'  c  like  owt,  Owd  Rod  6 

Carrying    always  came  to  meet  me  c  you.  The  Ring  352 

She  came  no  more  to  meet  me,  c  you,  ,,        385 

Cart    A^ee  Go-cart 

Carve    to  c  out  Free  space  for  every  human  doubt.  Two  Voices  136 

you  may  c  a  shrine  about  my  dust,  St.  S.  Stylites  195 

My  good  blade  c's  the  casques  of  men,  Sir  Galahad  1 

monstrous  males  that  c  the  living  hound,  Princess  Hi  310 

c's  A  portion  from  the  solid  present,  Merlin  and  V.  461 

Beyond  all  work  of  those  who  c  the  stone,  Tiresias  53 

Carved    Caucasian  mind  G  out  of  Nature  for  itself,  Palace  of  Art  127 

A  million  wrinkles  c  his  skin ;  „            138 

for  if  I  c  my  name  Upon  the  cliffs  Audley  Gourt  48 

thou,  whereon  I  c  her  name,  (repeat)  Talking  Oak  33,  97 

read  the  name  I  c  with  many  vows  ,,              154 

Wept  over  her,  c  in  stone  ;  Maud  I  viii  4 

Had  c  himself  a  knightly  shield  of  wood.  Merlin  and  V.  473 

our  Lady's  Head,  G  of  one  emerald  Lancelot  and  E.  295 

her  scarlet  sleeve,  Tho'  c  and  cut,  ,,          807 

Scribbled  or  c  upon  the  pitiless  stone  ;  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  5 

one  c  all  over  with  flowers,  V.  of  Maeldune  106 

Homer's  fame,  Tho'  c  in  harder  stone —  Epilogue  59 

Carven    {See  also  Crag-carven)    Some  blazon'd, 

some  but  c,  and  some  blank,  Gareth  and  L.  406 

His  arms  were  c  only ;  ,,            412 
shield  of  Lancelot  at  her  feet  Be  c,                         Lancelot  and  E.  1342 

And  c  with  strange  figures ;  Holy  Grail  169 

Carven-work    from  the  c-w  behind  him  crept  Lancelot  and  E.  436 

Caryatid    great  statues,  Art  And  Science,  Gs,  Prhicess  iv  201 

Cascine    What  drives  about  the  fresh  G,  The  Daisy  43 

Case  (covering)    {See  also  Wing-case)    And  warm'd 

in  crystal  c's.  Amphion  88 

fearing  rust  or  soilure  fashion'd  for  it  A  c  of  silk,  Lancelot  and  E.  8 

entering  barr'd  her  door,  Stript  off  the  c,  ,,16 

meekly  rose  the  maid,  Stript  off  the  c,  ,,            979 

shield  was  gone  ;  only  the  c,  Her  own  poor  work,  ,,            990 

The  silken  c  with  braided  blazonings,  ,,          1149 

Case  (circumstance)    profits  it  to  put  An  idle  c  ?  In  Mem.  xxxv  18 

blabbing  The  c  of  his  patient —  Maud  II  v  37 


Case 


82 


Cast 


Case  (circumstance)  (continued)    it  was  all  but  a 

hopeless  c :  In  the  Child.  Hosp,  14 

And  it  was  but  a  hopeless  c,  ,,16 
Casement    [See  also  Chancel-casement)    Or  at  the 

c  seen  her  stand  ?  L.  of  Shcdott  i  25 

I  arose,  and  I  released  The  c,  Two  Voices  404 

And  all  the  c  darken'd  there.  Miller's  D.  128 

And  fires  your  narrow  c  glass,  ,,         243 

As  one  that  from  a  c  leans  his  head,  D.  of  F,  Women  246 

gardener's  lodge.  With  all  its  c's  bedded,  AucUey  Court  18 

Many  a  night  from  yonder  ivied  c,  Locksley  Hall  7 

Flew  over  roof  and  c  :  Will  Water.  134 

and  he  clamour'd  from  a  c,  '  Run '  The  Brook  85 

The  c  slowly  grows  a  glimmering  square  ;  Princess  iv  52 

All  night  has  the  c  jessamine  stirr'd  Maud  I  xxii  15 

Down  from  the  c  over  Arthur,  smote  Flame-colour,   Com.  of  Arthur  274 

out  of  bower  and  c  shyly  glanced  Eyes  Oareth  and  L.  313 

Beat  thro'  the  blindless  c  of  the  room,  Marr.  of  Geraint  71 

rang  Clear  thro' the  open  c  of  the  hall,  ,,          328 

Push'd  thro"  an  open  c  down,  Balin  and  Balan  413 

royal  rose  In  Arthur's  c  glimmer'd  chastely  Merlin  and  V.  740 

Unclasping  flung  the  c  back,  Lancelot  and  E.  981 

Down  in  a  c  sat,  A  low  sea-sunset  glorying  La^t  Tournament  507 

and  in  her  anguish  found  The  c :  Guinevere  587 

From  that  c  where  the  trailer  mantles  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  257 

Close  beneath  the  c  crimson  with  the  shield  ,,                 34 

Casement-curtain    She  drew  her  c-c  by,  Mariana  19 

Casement-edge    That  morning,  on  the  c-e  Miller's  D.  82 

Cask    when  their  c's  were  fiU'd  they  took  aboard :  Enoch  Arden  646 

Casket    since  The  key  to  that  weird  c,  Ancient  Sage  254 

Casque   And  loosed  the  shatter'd  c,  and  chafed  his  hands,  M.  d'A  rthur  209 

My  good  blade  carves  the  c's  of  men.  Sir  Galahad  1 

knightlike  in  his  cap  instead  of  c.  Princess  iv  600 

unlaced  my  c  And  grovell'd  on  my  body,  ,,         m  27 

This  bare  a  maiden  shield,  a  c ;  Gareth  and  L.  680 

jangling,  the  c  Fell,  and  he  started  up  Geraint  and  E.  388 

dismount  and  loose  their  c's  Balin  and  Balan  573 

there  first  she  saw  the  c  Of  Lancelot  on  the  wall :   Lancelot  and  E.  805 

a  crown  of  gold  About  a  c  all  jewels  ;  Holy  Grail  411 

I  saw  The  pelican  on  the  c  of  our  Sir  Bors  ,,          635 

I  remember  now  That  pelican  on  the  c :  ,,          700 

That  ware  their  ladies'  colours  on  the  c.  Last  Tournament  184 

And  loosed  the  shatter'd  c,  and  chafed  his  hands,   Pass,  of  Arthur  377 

Cs  were  crack'd,  and  hauberks  hack'd  The  Tourney  7 

Cassandra    Talk  with  the  wild  G,  (Enone  263 

C,  Hebe,  Joan,  Romney's  R.  4 

Cassia    turning  round  a  c,  full  in  view,  Love  and  Death  4 

Cassiopeia    had  you  been  Sphered  up  with  C,  Princess  iv  438 

Cissivelaun  (British  king)    hear  it,  Spirit  of  G !  Boadicea  20 

sweeter  then  the  bride  of  C,  Flur,  Marr.  of  Geraint  744 

Cast  (mould)    take  the  c  Of  those  dead  lineaments  Wan  Sculptor  1 

Not  only  cunning  c's  in  clay :  In  Mem.  cxx  5 

Cast  (vomit)    Lies  the  hawk's  c,  Aylmer's  Field  849 

Cast  (throw)    Jephtha  vows  his  child  ...  to  one  c 

of  the  dice.  The  Flight  26 

Cast  (verb)    Low  on  her  knees  herself  she  c,  Mariana  in  the  S.  27 

'  Let  me  not  c  in  endless  shade  Two  Voices  5 

I  c  me  down,  nor  thought  of  you,  Miller's  D.  63 

'  This  was  c  upon  the  board,  (Enone  79 

And  c  the  golden  fruit  upon  the  board,  ,,     226 

those  That  are  c  in  gentle  mould.  To  J.  S.  4 

Memory  standing  near  C  down  her  eyes,  ,,     54 

•  And  if  indeed  I  c  the  brand  away,  M.  d' Arthur  88 

Dora  c  her  eyes  upon  the  ground,  Bora  89 

who  would  c  and  balance  at  a  desk,  Audley  Court  44 

'  Yet,  since  I  first  could  c  a  shade.  Talking  Oak  85 

Had  c  upon  its  crusty  side  Will  Water.  103 

overboard  one  stormy  night  He  c  his  body,  The  Voyage  80 

C  all  your  cares  on  God  ;  Enoch  Arden  222 

C  his  strong  arms  about  his  drooping  wife,  ,,           228 

•Enoch,  poor  man,  was  c  away  and  lost,  „           713 

Repeated  muttering  '  c  away  and  lost ; '  ,,           715 

she  c  back  upon  him  A  piteous  glance,  Aylmer's  Field  283 

But  they  that  c  her  spirit  into  flesh,  ,,            481 

He  had  c  the  curtains  of  their  seat  aside—  ,,           803 


Cast  (verb)  (continued)    Shall  Babylon  be  c  into  the  sea  ;      Sea  Dreams  28 
The  mountain  there  has  c  his  cloudy  slough,  Lucretius  177 

grandsire  burnt  Because  he  c  no  shadow.  Princess  i  7 

entering  here,  to  c  and  fling  The  tricks,  ,,     ii    62 

eddied  into  suns,  that  wheeling  c  The  planets :  ,,         118 

Psyche's  child  to  c  it  from  the  doors  ;  ,,    to  238 

turn'd  her  face,  and  c  A  liquid  look  on  Ida,  ,,        368 

But  a  c  oop,  thot  a  did,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  14 

in  a  golden  hour  I  c  to  earth  a  seed.  The  Flower  2 

She  c  her  arms  about  the  child.  The  Victim  32 

Or  c  as  rubbish  to  the  void.  In  Mem.    liv   7 

And  if  thou  c  thine  eyes  below,  ,,         Ixi   5 

Tho'  if  an  eye  that's  downward  c  ,,        Ixii    1 

To  chances  where  our  lots  were  c  „        xcii    5 

Let  cares  that  petty  shadows  c,  „  cv  13 

I  seem  to  c  a  careless  eye  On  souls,  ,,        cxii    7 

Uther  c  upon  her  eyes  of  love  :  Com.  of  Arthur  193 

written  in  the  speech  ye  speak  yourself,  '  C  me 

„  305 

307 

Gareth  and  L.  401 

418 

683 

803 

1011 

1153 

1403 

Marr.  of  Geraint  73 

609 

672 

807 

Geraint  and  E.  46 

572 

595 

705 

707 

„    761 

932 


away ! 
time  to  c  away  Is  yet  far-off.' 
rend  In  pieces,  and  so  c  it  on  the  hearth, 
rend  the  cloth  and  c  it  on  the  hearth, 
cloth  of  roughest  web,  and  c  it  down, 
bound  my  lord  to  c  him  in  the  mere.' 
rough  dog,  to  whom  he  c  his  coat, 
but  straining  ev'n  his  uttermost  C, 
saw  That  Death  was  c  to  ground. 
Who,  moving,  c  the  coverlet  aside. 
At  this  she  c  her  eyes  upon  her  dress. 
And  c  it  on  the  mixen  that  it  die.' 
she  could  c  aside  A  splendour  dear  to  women, 
she  c  about  For  that  unnoticed  failing 
c  him  and  the  bier  in  which  he  lay 
c  his  lance  aside.  And  dofE'd  his  helm : 
this  poor  gown  I  will  not  c  aside 
arise  a  living  man,  And  bid  me  c  it. 
and  she  c  her  arms  About  him, 
c  his  eyes  On  each  of  all  whom  Uther  left 


Stumbled  headlong,  and  c  his  face  to  ground,       Balin  and  Balan  426 

And  there  in  gloom  c  himself  all  along,  ,,              434 

Tore  from  the  branch,  and  c  on  earth,  the  shield,  ,,              539 

on  his  dying  brother  c  himself  Dying ;  ,,  593 
As  Love,  if  Love  be  perfect,  c's  out  fear.  So  Hate, 

if  Hate  be  perfect,  c's  out  fear.  Merlin  and  V.  40 

C  herself  down,  knelt  to  the  Queen,  ,,            66 

Where  children  c  their  pins  and  nails,  ,,           430 

The  gentle  wizard  c  a  shielding  arm.  ,,           908 

For  if  his  own  knight  c  him  down,  Lancelot  and  E.  313 

stay'd  ;  and  c  his  eyes  on  fair  Elaine :  „              640 

Leaf  after  leaf,  and  tore,  and  c  them  off,  ,,             1199 

The  brand  Excalibur  will  be  c  away.  Holy  Grail  257 

all  but  hold,  and  then — c  her  aside,  ,,  622 
binding  his  good  horse  To  a  tree,  c  himself  down ;      Pclleas  and  E.  31 

c  himself  down,  And  gulf'd  his  griefs  ,,           515 

but  c  himself  Down  on  a  bench,  hard-breathing.  ,,  591 
a  knight  c  down  Before  his  throne  of  arbitration  ImsI  Tournament  161 

Like  a  dry  bone  c  to  some  hungry  hound  ?  ,,             196 

So  dame  and  damsel  c  the  simple  white,  ,,             232 

and  c  thee  back  Thine  own  small  saw,  ,,   _          711 

And  c  him  as  a  worm  upon  the  way  ;  Guinevere  35 

*  And  if  indeed  I  c  the  brand  away.  Pass,  of  Arthur  256 
Are  morning  shadows  huger  than  the  shapes 

That  c  them,  To  the  Queen  ii  64 

we  found  The  dead  man  c  upon  the  shore  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  295 

I  c  them  in  the  noisy  brook  beneath,  „          ii  41 

But  c  a  parting  glance  at  me,  ,,           iv  i 

'  He  c's  me  out, '  she  wept,  '  and  goes '  ,,            103 

She  shook,  and  c  her  eyes  down,  ,,            329 

Yet  c  her  not  away  so  suddenly,  , ,            366 

'  C  awaay  on  a  disolut  land  wi'  a  vartical  soon  1 '  North.  Gobbler  3 

And  c  it  to  the  Moor :  Columbus  111 

I  heard  his  voice,  '  Be  not  c  down.  ,,        158 

C  off,  put  by,  scouted  by  court  and  king —  ,,        165 

C  at  thy  feet  one  flower  that  fades  To  Dante  7 

A  planet  equal  to  the  sun  Which  c  it.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  36 


Cast 


83 


Cattle 


Cast  (verb)  (continued)    To  c  wise  words  among  the  multitude  Tiresias  66 

when  he  c  a  contemptuous  glance  The  Wreck  25 

the  crew  should  c  me  into  the  deep,  ,,        94 

But  the  blind  wave  c  me  ashore,  Despair  61 

curb  the  beast  would  c  thee  in  the  mire.  Ancient  Sage  276 

Crime  and  hunger  c  our  maidens  Locksley  H. ,  Sixty  220 

C  the  poison  from  your  bosom,  ,,           '   241 

shadows  which  that  light  would  c,  Epit.  on  Caxton  3 

The  roses  that  you  c  aside —  Happy  22 

Which,  c  in  later  Grecian  mould,  To  Master  of  B.  6 

And  c  aside,  when  old,  for  newer, —  Akbar's  Dream  134 

vanish'd  in  the  shadow  c  by  Death.  Z>.  of  the  Duke  of  C.Z 

Castalies    I  led  you  then  to  all  the  C ;  Princess  iv  294 

Castanet    The  starling  claps  his  tiny  c's.  Prog,  of  Spring  56 

Caste    Which  stamps  the  c  of  Vere  de  Vere.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  40 

I  hate  the  rancour  of  their  c's  and  creeds,  Akbar's  Dream  65 

Castile    The  noble  and  the  convict  of  C,  Colurnbus  117 

Castillano    Weigh'd  nigh  four  thousand  C's  ,,        136 

Casting    {See  also  Shadow-Casting)    by  two  yards  in 

c  bar  or  stone  Was  counted  best ;  Gareth  and  L.  518 

unhooded  c  off  The  goodly  falcon  free ;  Merlin  and  V.  130 

Castle  (adj.)    She  stood  upon  the  c  wall,  Oriana  28 

Atween  me  and  the  c  wall,  ,,      35 

The  splendour  falls  on  c  walls  Princess  iv  1 
Guinevere  Stood  by  the  c  walls  to  watch  him 

pass  ;  Com.  of  Arthur  48 

Then  from  the  c  gateway  by  the  chasm  Descending  ,,           370 

Then  rode  Geraint  into  the  c  court,  Marr  of  Geraint  312 

And  while  he  waited  in  the  c  court,  ,,             326 

met  The  scorner  in  the  c  court,  Balin  and  Balan  387 

Moving  to  meet  him  in  the  c  court ;  Lancelot  and  E.  175 

Then  bounded  forward  to  the  c  walls,  Pelleas  and  E.  363 
Castle  (s)  (-See  also  Sea-castle)    c,  built  When  men 

knew  how  to  build,  Edwin  Morris  6 

See  the  lordly  c's  stand  :  L.  of  Burleigh  18 

And  built  their  c's  of  dissolving  sand  Enoch  Arden  19 

The  lady  of  three  c's  in  that  land  :  Princess  i  79 

Well,  Are  c's  shadows  ?    Three  of  them  ?  >)     w  414 

Shall  those  three  c'«  patch  my  tatter'd  coat?  ,,         416 

dear  are  those  three  c's  to  my  wants,  ,,         417 

To  that  fair  port  below  the  c  The  Daisy  79 

Seeing  his  gewgaw  c  shine,  Maud  I  xl8 

he  that  held  Tintagil  c  by  the  Cornish  sea,  Com.  of  Arthur  187 

Closed  in  her  c  from  the  sound  of  arms.  Gareth  and  L.  163 

husband's  brother  had  my  son  Thrall'd  in  his  c,  ,,            358 

And  saddening  in  her  childless  c,  ,,            528 

holds  her  stay'd  In  her  own  c,  ,,            616 

And  on  one  side  a  c  in  decay,  Marr.  of  Geraint  245 

And  keeps  me  in  this  ruinous  c  here,  ,,               462 

till  the  c  of  a  King,  the  hall  Of  Pellam,  Balin  and  Balan  331 

from  the  c  a  cry  Sounded  across  the  court,  ,,              399 

brutes  of  mountain  back  That  carry  kings  in  c's,      Merlin  and  V.  577 

Ran  to  the  C  of  Astolat,  Lancelot  and  E.  167 

and  again  By  c  Gumion,  where  the  glorious  King  , ,             293 

The  Princess  of  that  c  was  the  one.  Holy  Orail  578 

A  c  like  a  rock  upon  a  rock,  „        814 

when  she  gain'd  her  c,  upsprang  the  bridge,  Pelleas  and  E.  206 

Catlike  thro'  his  own  c  steals  my  Mark,  Last  Tournament  516 

And  fly  to  my  strong  c  overseas :  Guinevere  113 

Round  that  strong  c  where  he  holds  the  Queen  ;  ,,         194 

Castle-bridge    until  he  stood  There  on  the  c-b  Pelleas  and  E.  443 

Castle-gate    sought  for  Garlon  at  the  c-g's,  Balin  a-)id  Balan  610 

Castle  Perilous    She  lives  'va.C  P:  Gareth  and  L.  611 

pitch'd  Beside  the  C  P  on  flat  field,  ,,           1363 

Castle-wall    her  orchard  underneath  Her  c-w's,  Holy  Grail  594 

Castle- well    pool  or  stream.  The  c-w,  belike  ;  Lancelot  and  E,  215 

Casualty    Howbeit  ourself,  foreseeing  c,  _          Princess  Hi  317 

Cat    {See  also  Tiger-cat)    When  c's  run  home  and  light 

is  come.  The  Owl  i  1 

yelp'd  the  cur,  and  yawl'd  the  c  ;  The  Goose  33 

like  dove  and  dove  were  c  and  dog.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  58 

Her  gay-furr'd  c's  a  painted  fantasy,  Princess  Hi  186 

the  two  great  c's  Close  by  her,  ,,  .     vi  357 

Within  the  hearing  of  c  or  mouse,  Maud  II  v  48 

I  will  be  deafer  than  the  blue-eyed  c,  Holy  Grail  865 


Cat  {continued)    an'  scratted  my  faace  like  a  c,  North.  Cobbler  22 

they  kep  the  c  an'  the  dog,  Toinorrow  71 
a  c  may  loook  at  a  king  thou  knaws  but  the  c 

mun  be  clean.  Spinster's  S's.  34 

fond  o'  thy  bairns  es  I  be  mysen  o'  my  c's,  ,,            83 

till  the  Lion  look  no  larger  than  the  C,  Till  the  G 

thro'  that  mirage  Locksley  H.,  Siody  112 

c  wur  a-sleeJipin  alongside  Roaver,  Owd  Rod  33 

to-daay,  when  she  hurl'd  a  plaate  at  the  c  Church-warden,  etc.  25 

Catacomb    water  falls  In  vaults  and  c's.  In  Metn.  Iviii  4 

Catalepsy    paw'd  his  beard,  and  mutter'd  'c'  Princess  i  20 

Catalonian  Minorite    By  him,  the  C  M,  Columbus  194 

Catapult    Your  cities  into  shards  with  c's,  Princess  v  138 

Hurl'd  as  a  stone  from  out  of  a  c  Gareth  and  L.  965 

Cataract  (a  fall  of  water)    {See  also  Sea-cataract) 

In  c  after  c  to  the  sea.  (Enmie  9 

snowy  peak  and  snow-white  c  Foster'd  ,,  211 

ocean-ridges  roaring  into  c's.  Locksley  Hall  6 

stream  of  life  Dashed  downward  in  a  c.  Day- Dm.,  Revival  16 

Beyond  the  darkness  and  the  c.  Vision  of  Sin  49 

we  came  to  where  the  river  sloped  To  plunge  in  c,         Princess  Hi  291 

And  the  wild  c  leaps  in  glory.  ,,        iv     i 

c  and  the  tumult  and  the  kings  Were  shadows ;  , ,             564 

Set  in  a  c  on  an  island-crag,  ,,          ?;  347 

C  brooks  to  the  ocean  run.  The  Met  17 

The  c  flashing  from  the  bridge,  In  Mem.  Ixod  15 
senseless  c,  Bearing  all  down  in  thy  precipitancy —      Gareth  and  L.  7 

thro'  the  crash  of  the  near  c  hears  Geraint  and  E.  172 

the  sea  Drove  like  a  c,  and  all  the  sand  Holy  Grail  799 

and  swept  in  a  c  off  from  her  sides,  The  Wreck  90 

hollow  ridges  roaring  into  c's,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  2 

Or  c  music  Of  falling  torrents,  Merlin  and  the  G.  46 

Hear  my  c's  Downward  thunder  To  Master  of  B.  15 

in  blood-red  c's  down  to  the  sea  !  Kapiolani  12 
Cataract  (a  disease  of  the  eye)    Almost  blind  With 

ever-growing  c.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  192 

Catch  (s)    '  but  'tis  eating  dry  To  dance  without  a  c.  Last  Tournament  250 

Catch  (verb)    Whereof  I  c  the  issue,  as  I  hear  Dead  sounds      (Enone  248 

C  me  who  can,  and  make  the  catcher  crown'd —  Golden  Year  18 

C  the  wild  goat  by  the  hair,  Locksley  Hall  170 

C  her,  goatfoot :  nay.  Hide,  Lucretius  203 

To  c  a  dragon  in  a  cherry  net.  Princess  v  169 

I  would  c  Her  hand  in  wild  delirium,  ,,        m  92 

c  The  far-off  interest  of  tears  ?  In  Mem.  i  7 

And  c  at  every  mountain  head,  In  Mem.  Con.  114 

Prickle  my  skin  and  c  my  breath,  Maud  I  xiv  36 

C  not  my  breath,  0  clamorous  heart,  ,,       ccvi  31 

To  c  a  friend  of  mine  one  stormy  day  ;  „      77  w  85 

for  my  wont  hath  ever  been  To  c  my  thief,  Gareth  and  L.  822 

'  Overquick  art  thou  To  c  a  loathly  plume  Merlin  and  V.  727 

cheek  did  c  the  colour  of  her  words.  Lover's  Tale  i  569 

The  hope  I  c  at  vanishes  and  youth  The  Flight  16 

Prophet-eyes  may  c  a  glory  slowly  gaining  Making  of  Man  6 

Catcher    and  make  the  c  crown'd —  Golden  Year  18 

Catching    Seem'd  c  at  a  rootless  thorn,  Geraint  and  E.  378 

Cate    many  a  viand  left,  And  many  a  costly  c,  Gareth  and  L.  849 

Caterpillar    Picks  from  the  colewort  a  green  c,  Guinevere  32 

Cat-footed    C^  thro' the  town  and  half  in  dread  Princess  ilOi 

Cathay    Better  fifty  years  of  Europe  than  a 

cycle  of  C.  Locksley  Hall  184 

Cathedral    sunshine  laves  The  lawn  by  some  c,  D.  of  F.  Women  190 

gray  c  towers.  Across  a  hazy  glimmer  Gardener's  D.  218 

But  huge  c  fronts  of  every  age,  Sea  Dreams  218 

And  in  the  vast  c  leave  him.  Ode  on  Well.  280 

Catherine    O,  C,  in  the  night.  Forlorn  13 

Catholic  Cross    I  cling  to  the  C  C  once  more.  The  Wreck  3 

Catholic  Faith    hope  was  mine  to  spread  the  Cf,  Columbus  230 

Catieuchlanian    Hear  Icenian,  G,  hear  Coritanian, 

(repeat)  Boadicea  10,  34,  47 

Gods  have  answer'd,  G,  Trinobant.  ,,                 22 

Shout  Icenian,  C,  shout  Coritanian,  ,,                 57 

Catlike    C  thro'  his  own  castle  steals  Last  Tournament  516 

Cato    A  dwarf-like  Ccower'd.  Princess  vii  126 

Catspaw    Him  his  c  and  the  Cross  his  tool,  Sea  Dreams  190 

Cattle    strikes  thro'  the  thick  blood  Of  c,  Lucretius  99 


Cattle 


84 


Cause 


Cattle  {continued)    And  c  died,  and  deer  in  wood, 

The  c  huddled  on  the  lea  ; 

ahide  Without,  among  the  c  of  the  field. 

half  of  the  c  went  lame, 

drive  Innocent  c  under  thatch, 
Catullus    All  composed  in  a  metre  of  C, 

Thro'  this  metrification  of  C, 

Sweet  C's  all-but-island, 

C,  whose  dead  songster  never  dies  ; 
Caucasian    Which  the  supreme  C  mind  Carved 

Where  our  Cs  let  themselves  be  sold. 
Caucasus     From  Calpe  unto  G  they  sung, 

Elburz  and  all  the  (7  have  heard  ; 
Cauf  (calf)     '  Cushie  wur  craazed  fur  'er  c ' 

'  thank  God  that  I  hevn't  naw  c  o'  my  oan.' 
Caught  (See  also  Cotch'd)    eddying  of  her  garments  c  from 

thee  The  light  Ode  to  Memory  31 

And  there  a  vision  c  my  eye  ;  Miller's  I).  76 

C  in  the  frozen  palms  of  Spring.  The  BlackUrd  24 

She  c  the  white  goose  by  the  leg,  The  Goose  9 

She  dropt  the  goose,  and  c  the  pelf,  ,,        13 

c  him  by  the  hilt,  and  brandish'd  him  Three  times, 


The  Victim  18 

In  Mem.  xv  6 

Gareth  and  L.  21  A. 

V.  of  Maeldune  31 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  96 

Hendecasyllabics  4 

10 

Frater  Ave,  etc.  9 

Poets  and  their  B.  8 

Palace  of  Art  126 

Aylmer's  Field  349 

The  Poet  15 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  13 

Spinster's  S's.  115 

116 


(repeat) 
the  last  night's  gale  had  c. 
And  there  he  c  the  younker  tickling  trout — 
C  in  flagrante — what's  the  Latin  word  ? 
Thou  wouldst  have  c  me  up  into  thy  rest, 
Abaddon  and  Asmodeus  c  at  me. 
O  up  the  whole  of  love  and  utter'd  it. 
Like  truths  of  Science  waiting  to  be  c — 
The  page  has  c  her  hand  in  his : 
Lady's-head  upon  the  prow  C  the  shrill  salt, 
O  the  sparkles,  and  in  circles, 
C  each  other  with  wild  grimaces, 
now  hastily  c  His  bundle,  waved  his  hand, 
O  at  his  hand,  and  wrung  it  passionately, 
O  at  and  ever  miss'd  it,  and  they  laugh'd  ; 


M.  d'Arih7ir  145,  160 

Gardener's  D.  124 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  33 

34 

St.  S.  Stylites  18 

„    ■        172 

Love  and  Didy  82 

Golden  Year  17 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  29 

The  Voyage  12 

Vision  of  Sin  30 

35 

Enoch  Arden  237 

328 

752 


about  the  fields  you  c  His  weary  daylong  chirping.  The  Brook  b2 

great  pock-pitten  fellow  had  been  c?  '       '  ~ 

C  in  a  burst  of  unexpected  storm, 

And  c  the  blossom  of  the  flying  terms, 

and  the  flood  drew  :  yet  I  c  her  ; 

Right  on  this  we  drove  and  c. 

And  falling  on  my  face  was  c  and  known. 

as  if  c  at  once  from  bed  And  tumbled 

On  one  knee  Kneeling,  I  gave  it,  which  she  c. 

Like  tender  things  that  being  c  feign  death. 

Were  c  within  the  record  of  her  wrongs, 

Came  sallying  thro'  the  gates,  and  c  his  hair, 

not  less  one  glance  he  c  Thro'  open  doors 

And  reach'd  the  ship  and  c  the  rope. 

He  c  her  away  with  a  sudden  cry  ; 

And  Fancy  light  from  Fancy  c. 

And  c  once  more  the  distant  shout, 

c  The  deep  pulsations  of  the  world, 

C  and  cuff 'd  by  the  gale  : 

and  c  By  that  you  swore  to  withstand  ? 

Last  year,  lea  glimpse  of  his  face, 

For  how  often  I  c  her  with  eyes  all  wet, 

Who  stoopt  and  c  the  babe,  and  cried 

c  And  stay'd  him,  '  Climb  not  lest  thou  break 

The  listening  rogue  hath  c  the  manner  of  it. 

C  at  the  hilt,  as  to  abolish  him  : 

Yniol  c  His  purple  scarf,  and  held, 

Edyrn's  men  had  c  them  in  their  flight. 

Her  by  both  hands  he  c,  and  sweetly  said, 

he  sharply  c  his  lance  and  shield, 

'  And  passing  gentle '  c  his  hand  away 

C  in  a  great  old  tyrant  spider's  web, 

one  of  Satan's  shepherdesses  c  And  meant  to 

stamp  him 
plunged,  and  c  And  set  it  on  his  head. 
The  heathen  c  and  reft  him  of  his  tongue, 
and  him  they  c  and  maim'd  ; 
whereat  she  c  her  breath ; 


Aylmer's  Field  256 

285 

Princess,  Pro.  164 

iv  182 

188 

270 

285 

470 

ul08 

143 

340 

342 

Sailor  Boy  3 

The  Victim  &^ 

In  Mem.  xxiii  14 

,,        Ixxxvii  9 

,,  xcv  39 

Maud  I  vi  5 

"       .  79 

,,    xiii27 

„     xix  23 

Com.  of  A  rthur  385 

Gareth  and  L.  53 

778 

Marr.  of  Geraint  210 

376 

642 

778 

Balin  and  Balan  287 

371 

Merlin  and  V.  259 

758 
Lancelot  and  E.  54 
273 
275 
623 


Caught  (coniinueH)    Lady  of  the  Lake  C  from  his 

mother's  arms —  Lancelot  and  E.  1405 

the  holy  cup  Was  c  away  to  Heaven,  Holy  Grail  58 

c  his  hand.  Held  it,  and  there,  half -hidden  by  him,  ,,  753 

she  c  the  circlet  from  his  lance,  Pelleas  and  E,  173 

C  his  unbroken  limbs  from  the  dark  field,  ,,  585 

Then  Tristram  laughing  c  the  harp,  Last  Tournament  730 

c  him  by  the  hilt,  and  brandish'd  him  Three  times, 

(repeat)  Pass,  of  Arthur  313,  328 

round  and  round  A  whirlwind  c  and  bore  us ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  197 

they  turn'd,  and  c  and  brought  him  in  ,,         iv  376 

old  Sir  Richard  c  at  last.  The  Revenge  98 

And  c  the  laming  bullet.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  65 

Had  c  her  hand,  her  eyelids  fell—  ,,  148 

C  in  a  mill  and  crush'd —  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  li 

So,  c,  I  burn,  Burn  ?  heathen  men  have  borne  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  184 

I  c  the  wreath  that  was  flung.  The  Wreck  40 

flay  Captives  whom  they  c  in  battle —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  80 

And  his  eloquence  c  like  a  flame  Dead  Prophet  34 

And  c  her  chaplet  here — and  there  To  Marg.  of  Dufferin  30 

woman  came  And  c  me  from  my  nurse.  The  Ring  113 

C  by  the  flower  that  closes  on  the  fly,  „  344 

Who  never  c  one  gleam  of  the  beauty  Ilaypy  60 

cand  held  His  people  by  the  bridle-rein  Akhar's  Dream  84 

And  he  c  my  little  one  from  me :  Bandit's  Death  22 

died  of  a  fever  c  when  a  nurse  Charity  41 

Cause    embattail  and  to  wall  about  thy  c  To  J.  M.  K.  8 

more  c  to  weep  have  I :  My  tears,  no  tears  of  love,         Wan  Sculptor  6 
Nor  in  a  merely  selfish  c —  Two  Voices  147 

'  In  some  good  c,  not  in  mine  own,  '  ,,  148 

This  woman  was  the  c.  D.  of  F.  Women  104 

only  love  were  c  enough  for  praise.'  Gardener's  D.  105 

no  c  ;  James  had  no  c  :  but  when  I  prest  the  c,  The  Brook  97 

who  most  have  c  to  sorrow  for  her —  Aylmer's  Field  678 

such  extremes,  I  told  her,  well  might  harm  The 

woman's  c.  Princess  Hi  145 

Or,  falling,  protomartyr  of  our  c.  Die :  „        iv  505 

twice  I  sought  to  plead  my  c,  ,,  552 

betray 'd  her  c  and  mine —  ,,  w    76 

and  storming  in  extremes,  Stood  for  her  c,  „  177 

why,  the  c's  weigh'd.  Fatherly  fears —  ,,  215 

in  our  noble  sister's  c  ?  More,  more,  for  honour :  ,,  312 

I  would  not  aught  of  false — Is  not  our  c  pure  ?  ,,  403 

you  The  sole  men  to  be  mingled  with  our  c,  ,,  411 

our  side  was  vanquish'd  and  my  c  For  ever  lost,  ,,         m  24 

whose  arms  Champion'd  our  c  and  won  it  ,,  62 

The  brethren  of  our  blood  and  c,  ,,  71 

To  dream  thy  c  embraced  in  mine,  ,,  200 

She  pray'd  me  not  to  judge  their  c  from  her  ,,       vii  235 

that  know  The  woman's  c  is  man's :  ,,  259 

With  such  compelling  c  to  grieve  In  Mem.  xxix  1 

Ring  out  a  slowly  dying  c,  ,,         cvi  13 

can  he  tell  Whether  war  be  a  c  or  a  consequence  ?  Maud  /  a;  45 

I  cleaved  to  a  c  that  I  felt  to  be  pure  Maud  III  vi  31 

We  have  proved  we  have  hearts  in  a  c,  ,,  55 

good  c  is  theirs  To  hate  me,  Gareth  and  L,  820 

'  Sound  sleep  be  thine  !  sound  c  to  sleep  hast  thou.  ,,         1282 

Am  I  the  c,  I  the  poor  c  that  men  Reproach  you,  Marr,  of  Geraint  87 
I  am  the  c,  because  I  dare  not  speak  ,,  89 

'  Graver  c  than  yours  is  mine,  To  curse  ,,  308 

you  that  most  had  c  To  fear  me,  fear  no  longer,      Geraint  and  E.  824 
Yourself  were  first  the  blameless  c  ,,  826 

And  made  her  good  man  jealous  with  good  c.  Merlin  and  V.  605 

Some  c  had  kept  him  sunder'd  from  his  wife  :  ,,  715 

Could  call  him  the  main  c  of  all  their  crime ;  ,,  788 

now  remains  But  little  c  for  laughter :  Lancelot  and  E.  597 

that  I  gave  No  c,  not  willingly,  for  such  a  love  :  ,,  1298 

hither  had  she  fled,  her  c  of  flight  Sir  Modred  ;  Guinevere  9 

come  my  way  !  to  twit  me  with  the  c  !  Lover's  Tale  i  661 

So  much  God's  c  was  fluent  in  it —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  17 

some  less  c,  some  c  far  less  than  mine  ;  ,,  187 

For  every  other  c  is  less  than  mine.  ,,  188 

To  this  great  c  of  Freedom  drink,  my  friends, 

(repeat)  Hands  all  Round  11,  35 

Death  for  the  right  c,  death  for  the  wrong  c,  Vastness  8 


Causer 


85 


Cedar 


Causer    c  of  his  banishment  and  shame,  BaZin  and  Balan  221 

him  The  c  of  that  scandal,  fought  and  fell ;  The  Ring  215 
Causeway    from  the  c  heavily  to  the  swamp  Fall,    Last  Tournament  461 

Cauve  (calve).     Wi'  aaf  the  cows  to  c  N.  Farmer,  O.S.  52 

Cavalier    A  c  from  off  his  saddle-bow,  D.  of  F.  Women  46 
Cavall  (King  Arthur's  hound)    chiefly  for  the 

baying  of  C,  Marr.  of  Oeraint  185 
Cave  (see  also  Chamel-cave,  Temple-cave)    And  sweet 

is  the  colour  of  cove  and  c,  Sea-Fairies  30 

O  C's  That  house  the  cold  crown'd  snake  !  (Enone  36 

within  the  c  Behind  yon  whispering  tuft  ,,       87 

rock-thwarted  under  bellowing  c's,  Palace  of  Art  71 

To  hear  the  dewy  echoes  calling  From  c  to  c  Lotos-Eaters,  C'.S.  95 

Thro' every  hollow  c  and  alley  lone  ,,           103 

Dry  clash 'd  his  harness  in  the  icy  c's  M.  d' Arthur  186 

A  narrow  e  ran  in  beneath  the  cliff  :  Enoch  Arden  23 
a  c  Of  touchwood,  met  a  single  flourishing  spray,    Aylmer's  Field  511 

All  sand  and  cliff  and  deep-inrunning  c,  Sea  Dreams  17 

Ran  in  and  out  the  long  sea- framing  c's,  ,,          33 

dark  c's  that  run  beneath  the  cliffs.  ,,          90 

motion  of  the  boundless  deep  Bore  thro' the  c,  ,,         92 

I  found  Only  the  landward  exit  of  the  c,  „         96 

along  the  valley,  by  rock  and  c  and  tree,  V.  of  Caiiteretz  9 

In  c's  about  the  dreary  bay,  Sailor  Boy  10 

help  and  shelter  to  the  hermit's  c.  Oareth  and  L.  1209 

A  c.  Sir  Lancelot,  is  hard  by,  ,,             1275 

woodman  show'd  the  e  From  which  ho  sallies,  Balin  aiid  Balan  131 

Look  to  the  c'  ,,               306 

As  on  a  dull  day  in  an  Ocean  c  The  blind  wave  Merlin  and  V.  231 

But  into  some  low  c  to  crawl,  ,,            884 

massive  columns,  like  a  shorecliflf  c,  Lancelot  and  E.  406 

shot  red  fire  and  shadows  thro'  the  c,  „            414 

across  the  poplar  grove  Led  to  the  c's :  ,,            805 

city  to  the  fields.  Thence  to  the  c :  „            848 
rivulet  from  a  tiny  c  Came  lightening  downward,    Pdleas  and  E.  425 

Dry  clash'd  his  harness  in  the  icy  c's  Pass,  of  Arthur  354 
the  c.  Storm,  sunset,  glows  and  glories  of  the 

moon  Lover's  Tale  ii  109 

stately  vestibules  To  c's  and  shows  of  Death  :  ,,           126 

Strewn  in  the  entry  of  the  moaning  c ;  ,,         Hi  2 

Dragon's  c  Half  hid,  they  tell  me,  Tiresias  143 

When  the  bat  comes  out  of  his  c.  Despair  89 

seem  to  draw  From  yon  dark  c,  Ancient  Sage  10 

I  peer'd  thro'  tomb  and  c,  Demeter  and  P.  70 

CEnone  sat  within  the  c  from  out  Death  of  (Enone  1 

still  in  her  c.  Amazed,  and  ever  seeming  stared  ,,              69 

in  his  c  The  man,  whose  pious  hand  had  built  St.  Telemachus  8 

Reason  in  the  dusky  c  of  Life,  Akhar's  Dream  121 

dragg'd  me  up  there  to  his  c  in  the  mountain,  Bandit's  Death  11 

We  return' d  to  his  c — the  link  was  broken —  ,,            29 

slept  Ay,  till  dawn  stole  into  the  c,  , ,            31 

Cavern    shoulder  under  gloom  Of  c  pillars  ;  To  E.  L.  18 

a  hut,  Half  hut,  half  native  c.  Enoch  Arden  560 

I  long  to  creep  Into  some  still  c  deep,  Maud  II  iv  96 

And  told  him  of  a  c  hard  at  hand,  Oareth  aiid  L.  1189 

Scaped  thro'  a  c  from  a  bandit  hold.  Holy  Grail  207 
Beneath  a  low-brow'd  c,  where  the  tide  Plash'd,         Lover's  Tale  i  55 

Is  scoop'd  a  c  and  a  mountain  hall,  „            517 

The  hollow  c's  heard  me —  «,         H  11 

Chiefly  I  sought  the  e  and  the  hill  ,,             33 

old  man  before  A  c  whence  an  affluent  Ancient  Sage  7 

Gnome  of  the  c.  Griffin  and  Giant,  Merlin  and  the  G.  39 

Cavern-chasm    mark'd  not  on  his  right  a  c-c  Balin  and  Balan  312 

Cavern-mouth    c-m.  Half  overtrailed  with  a  wanton 

weed  Lover's  Tale  i  524 

All  day  I  sat  within  the  c-m,  „          H  37 

Cavern-shadowing    wilderness,  And  c-s  laurels,  Lucretius  205 

Caw    The  building  rook  '11  c  May  Queen,  N.  rs.  E.  17 

Cease    The  stream  will  c  to  flow  ;  The  wind  will  c 

to  blow  ;  The  clouds  will  c  to  fleet ;  The  heart 

will  c  to  beat ;  All  Things  will  Die  9 

trust  and  hope  till  things  should  c,  Supp.  Confessions  31 

When  I  shall  c  to  be  all  alone,  Mariana  in  the  S.  95 

A  wither'd  palsy  c  to  shake  ? '  Two  Voices  57 

V  to  wail  and  brawl !  ,,        199 


Cease  (continued)    Not  make  him  sure  that  he  shall  c  ?        Two  Voices  282 


And  the  wicked  c  from  troubling, 

fold  our  wings,  And  c  from  wanderings, 

In  silence  ;  ripen,  fall  and  c : 

When  midnight  bells  c  ringing  suddenly, 

'Twere  better  I  should  c 

the  wise  of  heart  would  c  To  hold  his  hope 

Shall  I  c  here  ?  Is  this  enough  to  say 

I  will  not  c  to  grasp  the  hope  I  hold  Of  saintdom 

Yet  c  I  not  to  clamour  and  to  cry, 

I  muse  on  joy  that  will  not  c, 

thou  shalt  c  To  pace  the  gritted  floor, 

For  blasts  would  rise  and  rave  and  c, 

I  cannot  c  to  follow  you. 

Nor  did  her  father  c  to  press  my  claim, 

But  c  to  move  so  near  the  Heavens,  and  c 

That  our  free  press  should  c  to  brawl, 

hearts  that  change  not,  love  that  cannot  c, 

the  Judge  of  us  all  when  life  shall  c ; 

Her  quiet  dream  of  life  this  hour  may  C. 

They  have  their  day  and  c  to  be : 

jaws  Of  vacant  darkness  and  to  c. 

And  those  cold  crypts  where  they  shall  c. 

That  the  man  I  am  may  c  to  be  ! 

Pass  and  c  to  move  about ! 

iron  tyranny  now  should  bend  or  c, 

c  not  from  your  quest  until  ye  find.' 

wherefore  c,  Sweet  father,  and  bid  call 

I  would  that  wars  should  c, 

silver  year  should  c  to  mourn  and  sigh — 

Ceased    heart  of  Poland  hath  not  c  To  quiver, 
A  little  c,  but  recommenced. 
I  c,  and  sat  as  one  forlorn. 
She  c,  and  Paris  held  the  costly  fruit 
'  Here  she  c.  And  Paris  ponder'd. 
But  all  these  things  have  c  to  be, 
She  c  in  tears,  fallen  from  hope  and  trust : 
Before  he  c  I  turn'd, 
He  c ;  and  Miriam  Lane  Made  such  a  voluble 

answer 
And  then  the  motion  of  the  current  c, 
cloud  That  not  one  moment  c  to  thunder, 
I  c,  and  all  the  ladies,  each  at  each, 
Scarce  had  I  c  when  from  a  tamarisk  near 
She  c :  the  Princess  answer'd  coldly, 
I  c  ;  he  said,  '  Stubborn,  but  she  may  sit 
G  all  on  tremble :  piteous  was  the  cry : 
when  we  c  There  came  a  minute's  pause, 
We  c  :  a  gentler  feeling  crept  Upon  us  : 
him  who  had  c  to  share  her  heart, 
sod  and  shingle  c  to  fly  Behind  her. 
Here  c  the  kindly  mother  out  of  breath  ; 
She  c  ;  his  evil  spirit  upon  him  leapt, 
He  c,  and  then — for  Vivien  sweetly  said 
She  c,  and  made  her  lithe  arm  round  his  neck 
Scarce  had  she  c,  when  out  of  heaven  a  bolt 
He  spoke  and  c :  the  lily  maid  Elaine, 
She  c :  her  father  promised  ; 
Then,  when  he  c,  in  one  cold  passive  hand 
'  He  c  ;  and  Arthur  turn'd  to  whom  at  first 
leave  this  land  for  ever.'    Here  he  c. 
But  never  a  moment  c  the  fight 
And  when  I  c  to  speak,  the  king, 
now  thy  long  day's  work  hath  c. 
Nor  ever  c  to  clamour  for  the  ring  ; 
when  life  has  c  to  beat. 

Ceasing    C  not,  mingled,  unrepress'd, 
He  c,  came  a  message  from  the  Head. 
'  So  speaking,  and  here  c, 

Cecily    Wound  with  white  roses,  slept  St.  0  ; 

Cedar    (See  also  Cedar-wood)    The  stately  c, 
tamarisks, 
A  c  spread  his  dark -green  layers  of  shade. 
Beam'd  thro'  the  thicken'd  c  in  the  dusk, 
in  halls  Of  Lebanonian  c : 


May  Queen,  Con.  60 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  20 

52 

D.  ofF.  Women  2^7 

To  J.  S.  66 

Love  thou  thy  land  81 

Gardener's  D.  236 

St.  S.  Stylites  5 

42 

Sir  Galahad  65 

Will  Water.  241 

The  Voyage  85 

Princess  iv  455 

„     vii   87 

195 

Third  of  Feb.  3 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  46 

Grandmother  95 

Requiescat  6 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  18 

,,      xxxiv  16 

,,        Iviii   8 

Maud   /  a;  68 

„     //  iv  59 

„   IIIvi2Q 

Lancelot  and  E.  548 

1098 

Epilogue  11 

To  Mary  Boyle  57 

Poland  3 

Two  Voices  318 

„        400 

(Enone 135 

„     168 

May  Queen,  Con.  48 

D.  of  F.  Women  257 

Gardener's  D.  121 

Enoch  Arden  902 

Sea  Dreams  117 

„        125 

Princess  iv  117 

258 

359 

W438 

ml42 

Con.  3 

In  Mem.  xocx  17 

Maud  I  xix  30 

Gareth  and  L,  761 

Marr.  of  Geraint  732 

Balin  and  Balan  537 

Merlin  and  F.  17 

614 

934 

Lancelot  and  E.  242 

„  1130 

„  1201 

Holy  Grail  751 

Lover's  Tale  iv  368 

The  Revenge  57 

Columbus  14 

Epit.  on  Stratford  2 

The  Ring  389 

Hapjjy  52 

Arabian  Nights  74 

Princess  Hi  168 

Holy  Grail  853 

Palace  of  Art  92 

Arabian  Nights  105 

Gardener's  D.  116 

„  166 

Princess  ii  352 


Cedar 


86 


Chair 


Cedax  {continued)    bloom  profuse  and  c  arches  Charm, 

Sighing  for  Lebanon,  Dark  c, 
Cedar-tree    A  voice  by  the  c  tin  the  meadow 

red  man  dance  By  his  red  c-t, 
Cedar-wood    A  mile  beneath  the  c-w. 


Milton  11 

Maud  1  xviii  18 

V    1 

,,        xidi  18 

Elednore  8 

Princess  v  333 


Cede    learn  if  Ida  yet  would  c  our  claim, 

Ceiling    (See  also  Hall-ceiling)    men  Walk'd  like  the 

fly  on  c's  ?  Columbus  51 

Celandine    in  varnish 'd  glory  shine  Thy  stars  of  c.        Prog,  of  Spring  39 

Celebrate    To  c  the  golden  prime  Arahian  Nights  131 

Celebrated    thine  the  deeds  to  be  c,  Boiidicea  41 

Celibacy    Into  the  suburb — their  hard  c,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  107 

Celidon    gloomy  skirts  Of  C  the  forest ;  Lancelot  and  E.  292 

Cell    From  many  a  wondrous  grot  and  secret  c  The  Kraken  8 

And  wild  winds  bound  within  their  c,  Mariana  54 

'  Not  less  the  bee  would  range  her  c's,  Two  Voices  70 

From  c's  of  madness  unconfined,  ,,       371 

Made  havock  among  those  tender  c's,  Lucretius  22 

And  weave  their  petty  c's  and  die.  In  Mem.  1 12 

track  Suggestion  to  her  inmost  c.  ,,     xcv  32 

The  tiny  c  is  forlorn,  Maud  II  ii  13 

Thro'  c's  of  madness,  haunts  of  horror  „      III  vi  2 

in  your  frosty  c's  ye  feel  the  fire  !  Balin  and  Balan  446 

c's  and  chambers :  all  were  fair  and  dry  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  4Syj 

When  they  gain'd  the  c  wherein  he  slept,  ,,               811 

Across  the  iron  grating  of  her  c  Beat,  Holy  Grail  81 

Stream 'd  thro'  my  c  a  cold  and  silver  beam,  ,,       116 

Till  all  the  white  walls  of  my  c  were  dyed  ,,       119 

I  never  stray 'd  beyond  the  c,  ,,       628 

bound  and  plunged  him  into  a  c  Of  great  piled  stones  ;  ,,       675 

such  a  craziness  as  needs  A  c  and  keeper).  Lover's  Tale  iv  165 

They  had  fasten'd  the  door  of  his  c.  Rizpah  42 

Like  worldly  beauties  in  the  C,  The  Ring  143 

Cellar    in  the  c's  merry  bloated  things  Cfuinevere  267 

Celled    See  Full-celled,  Two-cell'd 

Celt  (race  of  people)    Teuton  or  C,  or  whatever 

we  be,  W.  to  Alexandra  32 

The  blind  hysterics  of  the  0 ;  In  Mem.  cix  16 
Celt  (stone  implement)    c's  and  calumets,  Claymore  and 

snowshoe,  Princess,  Pro.  17 

Censer    incense  free  From  one  c  in  one  shrine,  Eleanore  59 

The  shrill  bell  rings,  the  c  swings,  Sir  Galahad  35 

A  c,  either  worn  with  wind  and  storm  ;  Gareth  and  L.  222 

Censure    England's  honest  c  went  too  far ;  Third  of  Feb.  2 

It  might  be  safe  our  c's  to  withdraw ;  ,,           11 

Cent    mellow  metres  more  than  c  for  c  ;  The  Brook  5 

Center'd    See  Centred 

Centre    Earth  is  dry  to  the  c,  Nothing  will  Die  20 

Till  toward  the  c  set  the  starry  tides.  Princess  ii  117 

thoughts  that  wait  On  you,  their  c  :  ,,11)  444 

in  the  c  stood  The  common  men  with  rolling  eyes  ;  »>      ^  359 

Whose  faith  has  c  everywhere,  In  Mem.  xxxiii  3 

The  c  of  a  world's  desire  ;  ,,          Ixiv  16 

In  the  c  stood  A  statue  veil'd,  ,,           ciiiW 

Safe,  damsel,  as  the  c  of  this  hall.  Gardh  and  L.  604 

To  c  in  this  place  and  time.  Lover's  Tale  i  552 

the  c  and  crater  of  European  confusion,  Beautiful  City  1 

Centre-bit    c-h's  Grind  on  the  wakeful  ear  Maud  /  i  41 
Centred-Center'd    music  centred  in  a  doleful 

song  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  117 

centred  in  the  sphere  Of  common  duties,  Ulysses  39 

Would  follow,  center'd  in  eternal  calm.  Lucretius  79 

one  emerald  center'd  in  a  sun  Of  silver  rays,  Lancelot  and  E.  295 

Century    When  the  centuries  behind  me  like  a  fruitful 

land  Locksley  Hall  13 

A  maiden  of  our  c,  yet  most  meek  ;  The  Brook  68 

thro'  the  centuries  let  a  people's  voice  Ode  on  Well.  142 

Had  I  lain  for  a  c  dead  ;  Maud  I  xxii  72 

years  will  roll  into  the  centuries,  Guinevere  626 

speak  to  the  centuries,  All  the  centuries.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  48 

The  c's  three  strong  eights  have  met  To  Ulysses  7 
Ceremonial    Hail  the  fair  C  Of  this  year  of  her 

Jubilee.  On  Jul.  Q.  Victoria  23 

in  his  heart  rejoice  At  this  glad  C,  ,,37 

Of  this  great  C,  „                50 


Ceremony    Long  summers  back,  a  kind  of  c —  Princess  i  124 

in  the  darkness,  at  the  mystical  c,  Boddicea  36 
suit  of  fray'd  magnificence.  Once  fit  for  feasts 

of  c)  Marr.  of  Geraint  297 

And  there  be  wedded  with  all  c.  „             608 

They  twain  were  wedded  with  all  c.  ,,             839 

Cha&nge  (change)    I  thowt  shall  I  c  my  staate  ?  Spinster's  S's.  44 

Cha9,nged  (changed)    But  arter  I  c  my  mind.  North.  Cobbler  105 

Cha&ngin'  (changing)    all  the  while  I  wur  c  my  gown,   Spinster's  S's.  43 

Chace-Chase    (See  also  Sunmer-chace)    That  stand 

within  the  chace.  Talking  Oak  4 

And  overlook  the  chace  ;  ,,94 

Look  further  through  the  cAace,  ,,        246 

Then  crost  the  common  into  Darnley  chase  The  Brook  132 

Chafe    yet  it  c's  me  that  I  could  not  bend  D,  of  F.  Women  137 

Began  to  c  as  at  a  personal  wrong.  Enoch  Arden  474 

Chafed    c  his  hands,  And  call'd  him  by  his  name,  M.  d' Arthur  209 

And  when  his  answer  c  them.  Holy  Grail  673 

c  his  hands,  And  call'd  him  by  his  name.  Pass,  of  Arthur  377 

I  took  And  c  the  freezing  hand.  The  Ring  452 

Chaff    Mere  c  and  draff,  much  better  burnt. '  The  Epic  40 

will  be  c  For  every  gust  of  chance,  Princess  iv  355 

And  vacant  c  well  meant  for  grain.  In  Mem.  vi  4 

and  grope,  And  gather  dust  and  c,  ,,      Iv  18 

Chaffering    C's  and  chatterings  at  the  market-cross,  Holy  Grail  558 


Chafing    c  at  his  own  great  self  defied, 
But  c  me  on  fire  to  find  my  bride) 
and  the  squire  C  his  shoulder : 
c  his  pale  hands,  and  calling  to  him. 
c  his  faint  hands,  and  calling  to  him  ; 


Chain  (s)    (See  also  Daisy-chain,  Buby-chain)    to  chain 
with  c's,  and  bind  with  bands 

loosed  the  c,  and  down  she  lay  ; 

such  a  c  Of  knitted  purport, 

Bound  by  gold  c's  about  the  feet  of  God. 

But  dallied  with  his  golden  c, 

Twof  ooted  at  the  limit  of  his  c, 

To  break  my  c,  to  shake  my  mane : 

From  growing  commerce  loose  her  latest  c, 

made  the  serf  a  man,  and  burst  his  c — 

boat,  Half-swallow'd  in  it,  anchor'd  with  a  c  ; 

I  burst  the  c,  I  sprang  into  the  boat. 

Bound  by  gold  c's  about  the  feet  of  God. 

seem'd  as  tho'  a  link  Of  some  tight  c 

sat  as  if  in  c's — to  whom  he  said : 

He  workt  me  the  daisy  c — 

but  am  led  by  the  creak  of  the  c. 

They  hang'd  him  in  c's  for  a  show — 

O's,  my  good  lord  :  in  your  raised  brows 

C's  for  the  Admiral  of  the  Ocean !  c's  For  him  who  gave 
a  new  heaven, 

c's  for  him  Who  push'd  his  prows 

Os  !  we  are  Admirals  of  the  Ocean, 

Drove  me  and  my  good  brothers  home  in  c's, 

the  c's,  what  do  they  mean — the  c's  ? ' 

'  These  same  c's  Bound  these  same  bones 

wept  with  me  when  I  return'd  in  c's. 

She  that  link'd  again  the  broken  c 

c's  of  mountain,  grains  of  sand 

The  slave,  the  scourge,  the  c ; 

all  the  gold  from  each  laburnum  c 

Down  hill  '  Too-quick,'  the  c. 
Chain  (verb)    to  c  with  chains,  and  bind  with  bands 

And  c's  regret  to  his  decease, 
Chain'd     My  right  leg  c  into  the  crag, 

— or  brought  her  c,  a  slave, 

so  c  and  coupled  with  the  curse  Of  blindness 
dog  :  it  was  c,  but  its  horrible  yell 
Chaining    But  c  fancy  now  at  home 
Chair    (See  also  Arm-chair,  Elbow-chair)    If  one 
but  speaks  or  hems  or  stirs  his  c. 
In  yonder  c  I  see  him  sit. 
And  the  long  shadow  of  the  c 
Two  years  his  c  is  seen  Empty 
farmer  vext  packs  up  his  beds  and  e's, 


Aylmer's  Field  537 
Princess  i  166 

Geraint  and  E.  27 
582 
585 


BuoTiaparte  2 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  16 

Two  Voices  167 

M.  d' Arthur  255 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  31 

Aylmer's  Field  127 

Princess  ii  424 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  33 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  3 

Holy  Grail  803 

„        807 

Pass,  of  Arthur  423 

Lover's  Tale  i  595 

„        iv  362 

First  Quarrel  13 

Rizpah  7 

„    35 

Columbus  1 


19 
23 

28 

134 

211 

213 

231 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  52 

„  208 

Freedom  12 

To  Mary  Boyle  11 

Politics  12 

Buonaparte  2 

In  Mem.  xxix  3 

St.  S.  Stylites  73 

Pnncess  v  139 

Tiresias  58 

Bandit's  Death  35 

To  Ulysses  S] 

Sonnet  To 5 

Miller's  D.  9 

126 

To  J.  S.  22 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  39 


Chair 


87 


Chanced 


Chair  (continued)    Sweat  on  his  blazon'd  c's ; 
And  in  his  c  himself  uprear'd, 
But  kept  the  house,  his  e,  and  last  his  bed. 
With  nearing  c  and  lower'd  accent) 
I  cry  to  vacant  c's  and  widow'd  walls, 

They  come  and  sit  by  my  c, 

spirits  sink  To  see  the  vacant  c, 

The  c's  and  thrones  of  civil  power? 

He  plays  with  threads,  he  beats  his  c 

Why  sits  he  here  in  his  father's  c  ? 

Gareth  went,  and  hovering  round  her  c  Ask'd, 

pushing  could  move  The  c  of  Idris. 

in  their  c's  set  up  a  stronger  race 

Thy  c,  a  grief  to  all  the  brethren, 

sloping  down  to  make  Arms  for  his  c, 

In  our  great  hall  there  stood  a  vacant  c. 

Merlin  sat  In  his  own  c,  and  so  was  lost ; 

Galahad  would  sit  down  in  Merlin's  c. 

now  his  c  desires  him  here  in  vain, 

fill'd  his  double-dragon'd  c. 

Push'd  from  his  c  of  regal  heritage. 

Led  his  dear  lady  to  a  c  of  state. 

I  mash'd  the  taables  an'  c's, 

an'  the  mark  o'  'is  'ead  o'  the  c's ! 

An'  I  slep  i'  my  c  hup-on-end, 

An'  I  slep'  i'  my  c  ageiin 

Sa  I  kep  i'  my  c,  fur  I  thowt  she  was  nobbut 

she  skelpt  ma  haafe  ower  i'  the  c, 
Chairman    A  quarter-sessions  c,  abler  none ; 
Chaise    Within  the  low-wheel'd  c, 
Chalcedony    C,  emerald,  sardonyx,  sardius, 
Chalice    The  c  of  the  grapes  of  God  ; 

C  and  salver,  wines  that.  Heavens  knows  when, 
Chalk    all  his  joints  Are  full  of  c  ? 

Tumbles  a  billow  on  c  and  sand  ; 

e  and  alum  and  plaster  are  sold  to  the  poor 
Chalk'd    c  her  face,  and  wing'd  Her  transit 
Chalk-hill    On  the  c-h  the  bearded  grass  Is  dry 
Chalk-quarry    white  c-q  from  the  hill  Gleam'd 
Challenge    madness  made  thee  c  the  chief  knight 

a  jubilant  c  to  Time  and  to  Fate ; 
Challenging    c  And  overthrowing  every  knight 
Chamber    (See  also  Chaumber)   faults  were  thick 
as  dust  In  vacant  c's, 

thick-moted  sunbeam  lay  Athwart  the  c's, 

door  that  bar  The  secret  bridal  c's  of  the  heart, 

breathings  are  not  heard  In  palace  c's  far 
apart. 

till  he  find  The  quiet  c  far  apart. 

In  musty  bins  and  c's, 

till  the  comrade  of  his  c's  woke. 

To  one  deep  c  shut  from  sound, 

all  The  c's  emptied  of  delight : 

The  field,  the  c  and  the  street, 

Moved  in  the  c's  of  the  blood  ; 

About  its  echoing  c's  wide, 

In  the  c  or  the  street, 

But  hire  us  some  fair  c  for  the  night, 

the  boy  retum'd  And  told  them  of  a  c, 

the  two  remain'd  Apart  by  all  the  c's  width, 

High  in  her  c  up  a  tower  to  the  east 

cells  and  c's :  all  were  fair  and  dry  ; 

Past  to  her  c,  and  there  flung  herself 

The  lucid  c's  of  the  morning  star, 

Shut  in  the  secret  c's  of  the  rock. 

Death  in  our  innermost  c, 

read  Some  wonder  at  our  c  ornaments. 

That  c  in  the  tower. 

What  c,  child  ?  Your  nurse  is  here  ? 

You  took  me  to  that  c  in  the  tower, 

I  brought  you  to  that  c 
Chamber-door    (See  also  Chaumber-door)    As 

lightly  as  a  sick  man's  c-d, 
Chamberlain    call'd  A  hoary  man,  his  c, 

Then  spake  the  hoary  c  and  said, 


Walk,  to  the  Mail  76 

Day- Dm.,  Revival  18 

Enoch  Arden  826 

Aylmer's  Field  267 

720 

Grandmother  83 

In  Mem.  xx  19 

„       xxi  16 

,,      Ixvi  13 

Maud  I  xiii  23 

Oareth  and  L.  33 

Marr.  of  Oeraint  543 

Oeraint  and  E.  940 

Balin  and  BaZan  78 

Lancelot  and  E.  438 

Holy  GraU  167 

176 

181 

901 

Last  Tov/mament  144 

Lffoer's  Tale  i  118 

„  iv  321 

Nmth.  Gobbler  37 

Spinster's  S's.  100 

Owd  Roa  54 

„        65 

,.        74 

„       76 

Princess,  Con.  90 

TalMng  Oah  110 

Columbus  84 

In  Mem.  a;  16 

Lover's  Tale  iv  193 

Atulley  Cmirt  47 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  24 

Maud  /  i  39 

Princess  iv  377 

Miller's  D.  245 

„        115 

Gareth  and  L.  1416 

Vastness  21 

Balin  and  Baian  12 

To  the  Queen  19 

Mariana  79 

Gardener's  D.  249 

Day -Dm.,  Sleep  B.  18 

,,  Arrival^ 

Will  Water.  102 

Aylmer's  Field  583 

Princess  vi  376 

In  Mem.  viii  8 

11 

,,    xxiii  20 

Maud  /  m  74 

,,    IlivSS 

Oeraint  and  E.  238 

261 

265 

Lancelot  and  E.  3 

407 

609 

Lmer's  Tale  i  28 

521 

Def.  of  Lucknow  15 

Columbus  2 

The  Ring  94 

„        95 

„      111 

„      129 

Enoch  Arden  776 

Com.  of  Arthur  145 

148 


Chamian    Apart  the  G  Oracle  divine  Aleocander  10 

Champaign    river-sunder'd  c  clothed  with  corn,  (Enone  114 

high  Above  the  empurpled  c,  drank  the  gale  Princess  Hi  120 

shadowing  down  the  c  till  it  strikes  On  a  wood,  ,,        v  526 

Champion    My  c  from  the  ashes  of  his  hearth.'  Gareth  and  L.  899 

c  thou  hast  brought  from  Arthur's  hall  ?  ,,             916 

but  have  ye  slain  The  damsel's  c  ?  ,,            1099 

Lady  Lyonors  Had  sent  her  coming  c,  ,,           1192 

Champion'd    G  our  cause  and  won  it  Princess  m  62 

Chance  (s)    I  shut  my  life  from  happier  c.  Two  Voices  54 

Many  a  c  the  years  beget.  Miller's  D.  206 

For  that  is  not  a  common  c  To  J.  S.  47 

every  morning  brought  a  noble  c,  And  every  c  brought 


out  a  noble  knight. 
April  hopes,  the  fools  of  c ; 
'  Drink  to  Fortune,  drink  to  C, 
It  is  beyond  all  hope,  against  all  c, 
He  gave  them  line :  and  how  by  c 
rate  your  c  Almost  at  naked  nothing.' 
With  open  eyes,  and  we  must  take  the  c. 
dread  His  wildness,  and  the  c's  of  the  dark.' 
will  be  chatf  For  every  gust  of  c, 
my  flitting  c  Were  caught  within  the  record 
she's  comely ;  there's  the  fairer  c : 
or  was  it  c.  She  past  my  way. 
Dispute  the  claims,  arrange  the  c's ; 
And  grasps  the  skirts  of  happy  c. 
To  c's  where  our  lots  were  cast 
steps  of  Time — the  shocks  of  C — 
And  leaps  into  the  future  e, 
can  a  sweeter  c  ever  come  to  me  here  ? 
if  it  had  not  been  For  a  c  of  travel, 
an  often  c  In  those  brain-stunning  shocks, 
some  c  to  mar  the  boast  Thy  brethren 
good  c  that  we  shall  hear  the  hounds : 
What  c  is  this  ?  how  is  it  I  see  you 
A  common  c — right  well  I  know  it — 
Guilty  or  guiltless,  to  stave  off  a  c 
Their  c  of  booty  from  the  morning's  raid, 
ye  surely  have  endured  Strange  c's  here  alone  ; ' 


M.  d' Arthur  230 

Vision  of  Sin  164 

191 

Enoch  Arden  403 

The  Brook  150 

Princess  i  160 

,,    Hi  143 

„      iv  244 

„         356 

„       V 142 

460 

„        vi  97 

To  F.  D.  Matirice  31 

In  Mem.  Ixiv  6 

,,      xcii  5 

,,     xcv  42 

,,      cxiv  7 

Maud  I  i  62 

,,       ii  8 

Gareth  and  L.  88 

1242 

Marr.  of  Geraint  182 

Oeraint  and  E.  309 

,,  331 

353 

„  565 

810 


Queen  demanded  as  by  c  '  Know  ye  the  stranger 

woman  ? '  Merlin  and  V.  128 

This  c  of  noble  deeds  will  come  and  go  Unchallenged,   Holy  Grail  318 


Our  fear  of  some  disastrous  c  for  thee  On  hill. 

Ready  to  spring,  waiting  a  c : 

Some  evil  c  Will  make  the  smouldering  scandal 

c  and  craft  and  strength  in  single  fights, 

every  morning  brought  a  noble  c.  And  every  c 
brought  out  a  noble  knight.  ,,  398 

Above  the  perilous  seas  of  Change  and  O ;  Lover's  Tale  i  806 

c's  of  dividend,  consol,  and  share —  The  Wreck  30 

Like  a  clown — by  c  he  met  me —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  256 

Chance  (verb)    when  did  Arthur  c  upon  thee  first  ? '    Com.  of  Arthur  338 

However  that  might  c  ! 

boast  Thy  brethren  of  thee  make — which  could 
not  c — 
Chance-comer    You  set  before  c-c's. 
Chanced    It  c  one  evening  Annie's  children 

At  last  one  night  it  c  That  Annie  could  not  sleep, 

Now  it  c  that  I  had  been, 

and  if  their  c  a  joust, 

then  by  what  thereafter  c. 

At  last,  it  c  that  on  a  summer  morn 

It  c  the  song  that  Enid  sang  was  one 

with  her  mind  all  full  of  what  had  c, 

King's  own  ear  Speak  what  has  c ; 

Then  c,  one  morning,  that  Sir  Balin  sat 

All  that  had  c,  and  Balan  moan'd  again. 

And  as  it  cthey  are  happy,  being  pure.' 

'  These  jewels,  whereupon  I  c  Divinely, 

one  morn  it  c  He  found  her  in  among  the  garden 
yews, 

I  told  him  what  had  c.  My  sister's  vision. 

And  then  I  c  upon  a  goodly  town 

It  c  that  both  Brake  into  hall  together 


727 

Giiinevere  12 

90 

Pass,  of  Arthur  106 


Gareth  and  L.  458 

1243 

Will  Water.  6 

Enoch  Arden  362 

„  489 

Princess  i  31 

Gareth  and  L.  519 

1214 

Marr.  of  Geraint  69 

345 

Oeraint  and  E.  778 

809 

Balin  and  Balan  240 

604 

Merlin  and  V.  745 

Lancelot  and  E.  58 

922 

Holy  Grail,  271 

„        573 

Pdleas  and  E.  586 


Chanced 


88 


Changed 


Chanced  {contimted)    For  thus  it  c  one  morn  when  all    . 

the  court,  Guinevere  21 
c  that,  when  half  of  the  short  summer  night  was  gone,     The  Revenge  65 

and  it  c  on  a  day  Soon  as  the  blast  Def.  of  Lucknow  31 

Chance-gift    eating  not.  Except  the  spare  c-g  St,  S.  Stylites  78 

Chancel    A  broken  c  with  a  broken  cross,  M.  d' Arthur  9 

I  peer'd  athwart  the  c  pane  The  Letters  3 

A  broken  c  with  a  broken  cross,  Pass,  of  Arthur  177 

and  mute  below  the  c  stones,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  43 

Chancel-casement    Upon  the  c-c,  and  upon  that 

grave  May  Queen,  N.  T's.  E.  21 

Chancellor    The  c,  sedate  and  vain.  Day- Dm.,  Revival  29 

C,  or  what  is  greatest  would  he  be —  Aylmer's  Field  397 

Chance-met    cross-lightnings  of  four  c-m  eyes  ,,             129 

Change  (s)    Truth  may  stand  forth  unmoved  of  c,  Swpp.  Gonfessions  144 

oxen's  low  Came  to  her :  without  hope  of  c,  Mariana  29 

And  airy  forms  of  flitting  c.  Madeline  7 

run  thro'  every  c  of  sharp  and  flat ;  Garess'd  or  Ghidden  4 

I  said,  '  The  years  with  c  advance  :  Tioo  Voices  52 

'Then  comes  the  check,  the  c,  the  fall,  ,,         163 

upon  the  board.  And  bred  this  c  ;  CEnone  227 

fit  for  every  mood  And  c  of  my  still  soul.  Palace  of  Art  60 

Full-welling  fountain-heads  of  c,  ,,          166 

but  all  hath  suffer'd  c :  Lotos- Eateis,  G.S.  71 

'  I  govem'd  men  by  c,  and  so  I  sway'd  D.  of  F.  Women  130 

thro'  all  c  Of  liveliest  utterance.  ,,               167 

Lie  still,  dry  dust,  secure  of  c.  To  J.  S.  76 

Meet  is  it  c's  should  control  Our  being,  Love  thou  thy  land  41 

So  let  the  c  which  comes  bo  free  „               45 

Of  many  c's,  aptly  join'd,  „               65 

And  sick  of  home  went  overseas  for  c.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  24 

And  fear  of  c  at  home,  that  drove  him  hence.  ,,               68 

With  all  the  varied  c's  of  the  dark,  Edwin  Morris  36 

shrivelling  thro'  me,  and  a  cloudlike  c,  St.  S.  Stylites  199 

Changed  with  thy  mystic  c,  Tithonus  55 

spin  for  ever  down  the  ringing  grooves  of  c.  Locksley  Hall  182 

And,  rapt  thro'  many  a  rosy  c,  Day-Dm.,  Depart  23 

The  flower  and  quintessence  of  c.  ,,        V Envoi  24 

voice  grew  faint :  there  came  a  further  c :  Vision  of  Sin  207 

came  a  c,  as  all  things  human  change.  Enoch  Arden  101 

So  much  to  look  to — such  a  c —  ,,             461 

and  the  c  and  not  the  c,  Aylmer's  Field  831 

dismal  lyrics,  prophesying  c  Beyond  all  reason  :  Pnncess  i  142 

woman  wed  is  not  as  we.  But  suffers  c  of  frame.  ,,        v  463 

Then  came  a  c :  for  sometimes  I  would  catch  ,,       mi  92 

Till  notice  of  a  c  in  the  dark  world  ,,           250 

the  c.  This  truthful  c  in  thee  has  kill'd  it.  ,,           349 

Iperceived  no  touch  of  c.  In  Mem.  xiv  17 

The  touch  of  c  in  calm  or  storm  ;  ,,           ayid  6 

Each  voice  four  c's  on  the  wind,  ,,       axemii  9 
I  have  lost  the  links  that  bound  Thy  c's  ;  hero  upon 

the  ground  No  more  partaker  of  thy  c.  ,,             xli7 

we  talk'd  Of  men  and  minds,  the  dust  of  c,  ,,        Ixxi  10 

There  cannot  come  a  mellower  c,  ,,        Ixxod  3 

For  c's  wrought  on  form  and  face  ;  ,,       Ixxxii  2 

Recalls,  in  c  of  light  or  gloom,  ,,      Ixxxv  74 

Or  touch'd  the  c's  of  the  state,  ,,     Ixxxix  35 

When  summer's  hourly-mellowing  c  May  breathe,  ,,            xci9 

abyss  Of  tenfold -complicated  c,  ,,        xciii  12 

For  c  of  place,  like  growth  of  time,  ,,            evil 

O  earth,  what  c's  hast  thou  seen  !  ,,        cxodii  2 

His  very  face  with  c  of  heart  is  changed.  Geraint  and  E.  899 

in  c  of  glare  and  gloom  Her  eyes  and  neck  Merlin  and  V.  959 

Naked  of  glory  for  His  mortal  c.  Holy  Grail  448 

vdth  living  waters  in  the  c  Of  seasons :  Pelleas  and  E.  511 

Above  the  perilous  seas  of  C  and  Chance  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  806 

In  marvel  at  that  gradual  c,  I  thought  „          Hi  19 

their  bridal-time  By  c  of  feather :  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  72 

Glance  at  the  wheeling  Orb  of  e.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  3 

Over  the  range  and  the  c  of  the  world  The  Wreck  70 

After  all  the  stormy  c's  shall  we  find  Locksley  H. ,  Sixty  156 

Far  away  beyond  her  myriad  coming  c's  „              231 

Ring  little  bells  of  c  From  word  to  word.  Early  Spring  41 

By  c's  all  too  fierce  and  fast  Freedom,  22 

c  of  the  tide — what  is  all  of  it  worth  ?  Vastneas  30 


CShange  (b)  (fumiinued)    glimmer  of  relief  In  c  of  place.     To  Mary  Boyle  48 

That  after  many  c's  may  succeed  Life,  Prog,  of  Spring  116 

Change  (verb)    (See  also  Chainge)    All  things  will 

c  Thro'  eternity.  Nothing  vnll  Die  15 

It  will  c,  but  it  will  not  fade  ,,31 

All  things  will  c.  ,,38 

Not  swift  nor  slow  to  c,  but  firm :  Lwe  thou  thy  land  31 

Or  c  a  word  with  her  he  calls  his  wife,  Dwa  44 

'  It  cannot  be :  my  uncle's  mind  will  c  ! '  ,,     47 

full  music  seem'd  to  move  and  c  Edwin  Morris  35 

iris  c's  on  the  burnish'd  dove  ;  Locksley  Hall  19 

She  c's  with  that  mood  or  this.  Will  Water.  107 

'  C,  reverting  to  the  years.  Vision  of  Sin  159 

Then  came  a  change,  as  all  things  human  e,  Enoch  Arden  101 

If  our  old  halls  could  c  their  sex.  Princess,  Pro.  140 

you  began  to  c — I  saw  it  and  grieved —  „            iv  298 

one  that  wishes  at  a  dance  to  c  The  music —  „                589 

When  your  skies  c  again:  ,,            vi  278 

Some  patient  force  to  c  them  when  we  will,  ,,         Con.  56 

and  c  the  hearts  of  men,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  44 

But  hearts  that  c  not,  love  that  cannot  cease,  ,,                 46 

Nor  c  to  us,  although  they  c ;  In  Mem.  xxx  24 

Will  c  my  sweetness  more  and  more,                  '  ,,         xxxv  15 

And  every  winter  c  to  spring.  „            Uv  16 

Thy  ransoni'd  reason  c  replies  ,,             Ixi   2 

fly  The  happy  birds,  that  c  their  sky  „            cxv  15 

To  c  the  bearing  of  a  word,  „      cxxviii  16 

the  wind  will  never  c  again.'  Ga/reth  and  L.  1140 

Let  Gareth,  an  he  will,  C  his  for  mine,  „              1300 

and  the  wine  will  c  your  will.'  Geraint  and  E.  663 

The  music  in  him  seem'd  to  c,  Balin  and  Balan  217 

Must  our  true  man  c  like  a  leaf  at  last  ?  Lancelot  and  E.  686 

The  twain  together  well  might  c  the  world.  Guinevere  301 
like  wild  birds  that  c  Their  season  in  the  night        Pass,  of  Arthur  38 

Nevertheless,  we  did  not  c  the  name.  Lover's  Tale  i  464 

Yet  must  you  c  your  name  :  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  69 

To  c  with  her  horizon,  ,,               226 

A  wish  in  you  To  c  our  dark  Queen-city,  To  Mary  Boyle  65 

Changed    (See  also  Chaanged,  Autumn-changed, 
Counter-changed)     Till  all  the  crimson  c, 

and  past  Mariana  in  the  S.  25 

'  0  cruel  heart,'  she  c  her  tone,  ,,                  69 

You  c  a  wholesome  heart  to  gall.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  44 

but  ere  my  flower  to  fruit  C,  D.  of  F.  Women  208 

thy  flute-notes  are  c  to  coarse.  The  Blackbird  18 

We  all  are  c  by  still  degrees.  Love  thou  thy  land  43 

flower  of  knowledge  c  to  fruit  Of  wisdom.  Love  and  Ditty  24 

C  with  thy  mystic  change,  Tithonus  55 

And  her  spirit  c  within.  L.  of  Burleigh  64 

the  rim  O  every  moment  as  we  flow.  The  Voyage  28 

Moved  with  violence,  c  in  hue.  Vision  of  Sin  34 

but  that  name  has  twice  been  c —  Enoch  Arden  859 

my  mind  is  c,  for  I  shall  see  him,  ,,           897 

tost  on  thoughts  that  c  from  hue  to  hue.  Princess  iv  210 

Our  mind  is  c :  we  take  it  to  ourself.'  ,,            362 

and  her  hue  c,  and  she  said  :  ,,        vi  107 

Walk'd  at  their  will,  and  everything  was  c.  „            384 

And  one  is  sad  ;  her  note  is  c.  In  Mem.  xon  27 

crying,  How  c  from  where  it  ran  ,,          xxiii  9 

A  grief,  then  c  to  something  else,  „       Ixxvii  11 

0  grief,  can  grief  be  c  to  less  ?  ,,     Ixxviii  16 

Thy  place  is  c  ;  thou  art  the  same.  ,,         cxxi  20 

Remade  the  blood  and  c  the  frame,  ,,        Con.  11 

Of  her  whose  gentle  will  has  c  my  fate,  Maud  I  xviii  23 

mood  is  c,  for  it  fell  at  a  time  of  year  ,,        ///  vi  4 

Till  with  a  wink  his  dream  was  c,  Com.  of  Arthur  441 

but  the  wind  hath  c :  Gareth  and  L.  994 

'  Hath  not  the  good  wind,  damsel,  c  again  ? '  ,,            1054 
being  young,  he  c  and  came  to  loathe  His  crime  Marr.  of  Geraint  593 

To  fear  me,  fear  no  longer,  I  am  e.  Geraint  and  E,  825 
But  kept  myself  aloof  till  I  was  c ;  And  fear  not, 

cousin ;  I  am  c  indeed.'  ,,              872 

have  ye  seen  how  nobly  c  ?  >,              897 

His  very  face  with  change  of  heart  is  c.  ,,              899 

her  hue  6'  at  his  gaze :  Balin  and  Balan  279 


iini. 


Changed 


89 


Charger 


Changed  {continued)    And  e  itself  and  echo'd  in  her 

heart,  Lancelot  and  E.  782 
I  doubt  not  that  however  c,  „            1218 
I  was  c  to  wan  And  meagre,  Holy  Grail  571 
find  thy  favour  c  and  love  thee  not ' —  Last  Tcnimament  500 
Denouncing  judgment,  but  tho'  c,  Guinevere  421 
I  e  the  name  ;  San  Salvador  I  call'd  it ;  Columbus  75 
And  c  her  into  dust.  Ancient  Sage  162 
We  never  c  a  bitter  word,  The  Flight  86 
And  then  had  c  ?  so  fickle  are  men —  The  Ring  392 
clove  the  Moslem  crescent  moon,  and  c  it  into  blood.  Happy  44 
I  that  heard,  and  e  the  prayer  „       55 
A  man  who  never  c  a  word  with  men,  St.  Telemachus  10 
Changeless    thee  the  c  in  thine  ever-changing  skies.  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  4 
Changeling    Or  sorrow  such  a  c  be  ?  In  Mem.  xvi  4 
like  a  fairy  c  lay  the  mage  ;  Com.  of  Arthur  363 
But  only  c  out  of  Fairyland,  Gareth  and  L.  203 
Changest    Who  c  not  in  any  gale,  Jn  Mem.  ii  10 
And  c,  breathing  it,  the  sullen  wind,  Prog,  of  Spring  110 
Changeth    old  order  c,  yielding  place  to  new,  M.  d' Arthur  240 
old  order  c,  yielding  place  to  new  ;  Com.  of  Arthur  509 
old  order  c,  yielding  place  to  new,  Pass,  of  Arthur  408 
Changing    {See  also  Chaangin',  Ever-changing, 
Never-changing)     In  c,  chime  with  never- 
changing  Law.  To  Duke  of  Argyll  11 
Channel    {See  also  Mid-channel)    Tho'  every  c  of  tho 

State  Should  fill  Yvu.  ask  me,  why  23 
tho  hoary  C  Tumbles  a  billow  on  chalk  and 

sand  ;  To  F.  D.  Maiirice  23 

brooks  Are  fashion'd  by  the  c  which  they  keep),        Lowr's  Tale  i  567 

We  seem'd  like  ships  i  the  C  First  Quarrel  42 

may  The  fated  c  where  thy  motion  lives  De  Prof.  Two  G.  19 

Chant    In  the  heart  of  the  garden  the  merry  bird  c's.        Poet's  Mind  22 

'  C  me  now  some  wicked  stave,  Vision  of  Sin  151 

e  the  history  Of  that  great  race,  Jn  Mem.  ciii  34 

From  prime  to  vespers  will  I  c  thy  praise  Pelleas  and  £.  349 

to  the  e  of  funeral  hymns.  Happy  48 

Chanted     C  loudly,  c  lowly,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  29 

C  from  an  ill-used  race  of  men  that  cleave         Lotos-Eaters,  G.  S.  120 

And  c  a  melody  loud  and  sweet,  Poet's  Song  6 

c  on  the  blanching  bones  of  men  ? '  Princess  ii  199 

So  they  c :  how  shall  Britain  light  Boadicea  45 

So  they  c  in  the  darkness,  ,,        46 

whose  hymns  Are  c  in  the  minster.  Merlin  ancl  V.  766 

She  c  snatehes  of  mysterious  hymns  Lancelot  and  E.  1407 

Had  c  on  the  smoky  mountain-tops,      ~  Guine'oere  282 

and  c  the  triumph  of  Finn,  V.  of  Maddune  48 

And  we  c  the  songs  of  the  Bards  „            90 

Chanter    C  of  the  Pollio,  To  Virgil  17 

Chanting    But  mine  own  phantom  c  hymns  ?  In  Mem.  cviii  10 

murmur  of  their  temples  c  me.  Me,  me,  Demetefr  and  P.  72 

Chaos     C,  Cosmos  !  Cosmos,  C  !  (repeat)  Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  103,  127 

Chapel    bore  him  to  a  c  nigh  the  field,  M.  d' Arthur  8 

To  c :  where  a  heated  pulpiteer.  Sea  Dreams  20 

The  portal  of  King  Pellam's  c  Balin  and  Balan  405 

In  the  white  rock  a  c  and  a  hall  Lancelot  and  E.  405 

where  the  vale  Was  lowest,  found  a  c,  Holy  Grail  442 

bore  him  to  a  c  nigh  the  field,  Pass,  of  Arthur  176 

Is  it  you,  that  preach 'd  in  the  c  Despair  1 

We  have  knelt  in  your  know-all  c  )>      94 

Yonder  in  that  c,  slowly  sinking  Lockdey  H.,  Sixty  27 

Chapel  bell    the  c  b's  Call'd  us :  we  left  the  walks  ;  Princess  ii  470 

when  they  toll  the  C  b  !  Loeksley  H.,  Sixty  261 

Chapel-door    and  against  the  c  d  Laid  lance.  Holy  Grail  459 

I  touch'd  The  c-d's  at  dawn  I  know  ;  ,,          536 

meet  you  again  tomorra,'  says  he,  '  l>e  the  c-d.'  Tomorrow  16 

this  body  they  foun'  an  the  grass  Be  the  c-d,  ,,        74 

Chai>el -green    she  stept  an  the  c-g,  „       27 

Chapel-yard    in  the  precincts  of  the  c-y,  Merlin  and  V.  751 

Then  paced  for  coolness  in  the  c-y ;  ,,              757 

Chap-fallen    The  e-/ circle  spreads  :  Vision  of  Sin  172 

Chaplet    And  caught  her  e  here —  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  30 

Char    Nor  ever  lightning  c  thy  grain,  Talking  Oak  277 

Character'd    laws  of  marriage  c  in  gold  Isabel  16 

How  dimly  c  and  slight.  In  Mem.  Ixi  6 


Charade    C  s  and  riddles  as  at  Christmas  Princess,  Pro.  189 

Charge  (imputation)    Redeem'd  it  from  the  e  of 

nothingness—  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  7 

Set  up  the  c  ye  know,  Merlin  and  V.  703 

Merlin  answer'd  careless  of  her  e,  ,,            754 

Charge  (care)    father  left  him  gold.  And  in  my  c,    Marr.  of  Geraint  452 

And  all  in  c  of  whom  ?  a  girl :  Geraml  and  E.  125 

whom  Uther  left  in  c  Long  since,  ,,              9,33 

Modred  whom  he  left  in  c  of  all,  Guinevere  195 

Charge  (directions)    he  gave  them  c  about  the  Queen,  ,,        591 

thy  c  Is  an  abounding  pleasure  to  mo.  Gareth  and  L.  981 

Charge  (attack)    surging  c's  foam'd  themselves  away ;       Ode  on  Well.  126 

O  the  wild  c  they  made  !  Light  Briga/le  51 

Honour  the  c  they  made !  ,,           53 

Plunged  in  the  last  fierce  c  at  Waterloo,  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  64 
The  crash  of  tho  c's,                                            Batt.  of  Brunanburh  89 

The  c  of  the  gallant  three  hundred,  Heavy  Brigade  1 

bad  his  trumpeter  soiind  To  the  c,  ,,9 

The  trumpet,  the  gallop,  the  c,  „           13 

0  mad  for  the  c  and  the  battle  were  we,  ,,  41 
Glory  to  each  and  to  all,  and  the  c  that  they  made  !  ,,           65 

Charge  (to  enjoin)     Come  forth,  I  c  thee,  arise.  Ode  to  Memmy  46 

1  c  thee,  quickly  go  again  M.  d' Arthur  79 
I  c  you  now.  When  you  shall  see  her,  Enoch  Arden  877 
I  c  thee  by  my  love,'  Gareth  and  L.  55 
'  I  c  thee,  ask  not,  but  obey.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  133 
e  the  gardeners  now  To  pick  the  faded  creature  „  670 
I  c  thee  ride  before,  Geraint  and,  E.  14 
I  c  thee,  on  thy  duty  as  a  wife,  ,,  16 
I  c  you,  Enid,  more  especially,  ,,  414 
I  count  it  of  small  use  To  c  you)  ,,  417 
I  c  thee  by  that  crown  upon  thy  shield,  Balin  and  Balan  481 
I  c  you,  follow  me  not.'  Lancelot  a7id  E.  507 
I  c  you  that  you  get  at  once  to  horse.  ,,  539 
Leave  me  that,  I  e  thee,  my  last  hope.  Guinevere  568 
I  c  thee,  quickly  go  again,  Pass,  of  A  rthur  247 
I  c  you  never  to  say  that  I  laid  him  Rizpah  58 
'  Never  surrender,  I  c  you,  Def  of  Lucknow  10 

Charge  (to  impute)    if  he  did  that  wrong  you  c 

him  with,  Sea  Dreams  279 

Charge  (to  rush)    C  for  the  guns ! '  ho  said  :  Light  Brigade  6 

I  myself  beheld  the  King  C  at  the  head  Lancelot  and  E.  304 

Charge  (to  load)    See  Double-charge 

Charged  (ordered)    Then  Arthur  c  his  warrior  whom 

he  loved  Com.  of  Arthur  447 

c  by  Valence  to  bring  home  the  child.  Merlin  and  V.  718 

calling  her  three  knights,  she  c  them,  Pelleas  and  E.  219 

Charged  (attacked)    c  Before  the  eyes  of  ladies  and 

of  kings.  M.  d' Arthur  224 

down  we  swept  and  c  and  overthrew.  Ode  on  Well.  130 

c  Before  the  eyes  of  ladies  and  ef  kings.  Pass,  of  Arthur  392 

Charged  (filled)     C  both  mine  eyes  with  tears.  D.  of  F.  Women  13 

and  c  the  winds  With  spiced  May-sweets  Lover's  Tale  i  317 

Charged  (loaded)    It  is  c  and  we  fire,  and  they  run.     Def.  of  Lucknmo  68 

Charged  (entrusted)    so  much  wealth  as  God  had 

c  her  with—  Lover's  Tale  i  213 

Charger    When  on  my  goodly  c  borne  Sir  Galahad  49 

on  my  c's,  trample  them  under  us.'  BoUdicea  69 

and  take  my  c,  fresh,  Gareth  and  L.  1300 

At  once  Sir  Lancelot's  c  fiercely  neigh'd,  ,,            1400 

cried,  '  My  c  and  her  palfrey  ; '  Marr.  of  Geraint  126 

His  c  trampling  many  a  prickly  star  ,,              313 

So  Enid  took  his  c  to  the  stall ;  ,,  382 
Call  the  host  and  bid  him  bring  C  and  palfrey.'       Geraint  and  E.  401 

Who  saw  the  c's  of  the  two  that  fell  „              431 

While  the  great  c  stood,  grieved  like  a  man.  ,,              535 

See  ye  take  the  c  too,  A  noble  one."  ,j              555 

(His  gentle  c  following  him  unled)  ,,              571 

fly,  your  c  is  without,  ^^               749 

When  Edym  rein'd  his  c  at  her  side,  ,,              §20 

found  His  c,  mounted  on  him  and  away.  Balin  and  Balan  418 

glad,  Knightlike,  to  find  his  c  yet  unlamed,  „  428 
so  they  overbore  Sir  Lancelot  and  his  c,  and 

a  spear  Down-glancing  lamed  the  c,  Lancelot  and  E.  487 

from  his  c  down  he  slid,  and  sat,  ,,            510 


Charger 


90 


Chasm 


CShai^er  {continued)    Full-arm'd  upon  his  c  all  day  long    Pdleas  and  E.  216 

Charging    C  an  army,  while  All  the  world  wonder'd  :      Light  Brigade  30 

at  the  midmost  c,  Prince  Geraint  Drave  Geraint  aiid  E.  85 

Charier    C  of  sleep,  and  wine,  and  exercise,  Ayliner's  Field  448 

Chariot    to  the  lychgate,  where  his  c  stood,  ,,            824 

a  sound  arose  of  hoof  And  c,  Princess  vi  380 

Up  my  Britons,  on  my  c,  Boddicea  69 

her  people  all  around  the  royal  c  agitated,  ,,       73 

each  beside  his  c  bound  his  own  ;  <^ec.  of  Iliad  3 

The  double  tides  of  c's  flow  In  Mem.  xcviii  23 

So  those  two  brethren  from  the  c  took  Lancelot  and  E.  1146 

The  prophet  and  the  e  and  the  steeds.  Lover's  Tale  i  307 

horses  whirl'd  The  c's  backward,  Achilles  over  the  T,  25 

died  Among  their  spears  and  c's.  „               33 

watch  the  c  whirl  About  the  goal  Tiresias  176 

Chariot-bier    let  there  be  prepared  a  c-h  Lancelot  and  E,  1121 

sad  c-b  Past  like  a  shadow  thro'  the  field,  ,,             1139 

Charioted    Far  in  the  East  Boadic^a,  standing  loftily  c,  Boddicea  3 

So  the  Queen  Boadic^a,  standing  loftily  c,  >»      70 

Charioteer    the  C  And  starry  Gemini  hang  Maud  HI  vi  6 

sheer-astounded  were  the  c's  To  see  the  dread,     Achilles  over  the  T.  26- 

Charitable    To  save  the  offence  of  c,  Enoch  Arden  342 

Charity    summer  calm  of  golden  c,  Isabel  8 

And  thou  of  God  in  thy  gi'eat  c)  n  40 

with  shafts  of  gentle  satire,  kin  to  c.  Princess  ii  469 

those  fair  charities  Join'd  at  her  side,  ,,      vii  65 

A  patron  of  some  thirty  charities,  ,,   Con,  88 

Valour  and  c  more  and  more.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  40 

"When  one  small  touch  of  C  Could  lift  Lit.  Squabbles  13 

In  reverence  and  in  c.  In  Mem.  cxiv  28 

C  setting  the  martyr  aflame  ;  Vastness  9 

Charlatan    Defamed  by  every  c.  In  Mem.  cod  23 

Charles  (the  Second)    Wherein  the  younger  C  abode       Talking  Oak  297 

Charles  (the  First)    From  our  first  C  by  force  we  wrung 

our  claims.  Third  of  Feb.  26 
Charles's  Wain    Till  O  W  came  out  above        May  Queen,  If.  Y's.  E.  12 

Charley-Charlie    and  C  ploughing  the  hill.  Qrand-jnother  80 

And  Harry  and  C,  I  hear  them  too —  ,,             81 

And  little  King  C  snarling,  Maud  I  xii  30 

but  "e  leaved  it  to  C  'is  son.  Village  Wife  42 

but  Ce  cotch'd  the  pike,  ,,            43 

But  C  'e  sets  back  'is  ears,  ,,            67 

And  Squire  were  at  C  agean  ,,            74 

Ya  wouldn't  find  C's  likes —  „            75 

Theerabouts  C  joompt —  „            81 

thowt  it  wur  C's  ghoast  i'  the  derk,  ,,            82 

But  Billy  fell  bakkuds  o'  C,  an'  C  „            85 

Charlock    shone  far-off  as  shines  A  field  of  c  Gareth  and  L.  388 

Charm  (s)    and  the  c  of  married  brows.'  (Enone  76 

A  heart  that  doats  on  truer  c's.  L.  G.  V.  de  Vere  14 

all  his  life  the  c  did  talk  About  his  path,  Day-Dm. ,  Arrival  21 

A  Touch,  a  kiss  !  the  c  was  snapt  ,,        Revival  1 

c  have  power  to  make  New  lifeblood  Will  Water.  21 

Each,  its  own  c  ;  and  Edith's  everywhere  ;  Aylmer's  Field  165 

loose  A  flying  c  of  blushes  o'er  this  cheek,  Princess  ii  430 

nameless  c  That  none  has  else  for  me  ? '  ,,          «  70 

mar  their  c  of  stainless  maidenhood.'  Balin  and  Balan  268 

For  that  small  c  of  feature  mine,  pursued —  Merlin  and  V.  76 

Merlin  once  had  told  her  of  a  c,  ,,            205 

see  but  him  who  wrought  the  c  Coming  and  going,  „            212 

Vivien  ever  sought  to  work  the  c,  ,,            215 

make  me  wish  still  more  to  learn  this  c  ,,            329 

c  80  taught  will  charm  us  both  to  rest.  „            332 

when  I  told  you  first  of  such  a  c.  ,,            359 

I  felt  as  tho'  you  knew  this  cursed  c,  „            435 

I  dreamt  Of  some  vast  c  concluded  in  that  star  „            512 

Giving  you  power  upon  me  thro'  this  c,  „            514 

try  this  c  on  whom  ye  say  ye  love.'  ,,            525 

this  fair  c  invented  by  yourself?  ,,            540 

I  needed  then  no  c  to  keep  them  mine  ,,            547 

wizard  who  might  teach  the  King  Some  c,  ,,            584 

the  c  Of  nature  in  her  overbore  their  own :  ,,            595 

they  found — his  foragers  for  c's —  ,,            619 

nave  the  King,  who  wrought  tho  c,  ,,            643 

9U  '  Ye  have  the  book :  the  e  is  written  in  it :  „            652 


Charm  (s)  (continued)    To  dig,  pick,  open,  find  and  read 


the  c 
And  every  square  of  text  an  awful  c, 
And  in  the  comment  did  I  find  the  c. 
mutter'd  in  himself,  '  Tell  h£r  the  c ! 
told  her  all  the  c,  and  slept, 
in  one  moment,  she  put  forth  the  c 
Wrought  as  a  c  upon  them, 
haze  to  magnify  The  c  of  Edith — 

0  they  to  be  dumb'd  by  the  c  ! — 
She  with  all  the  c  of  woman. 
Take  the  c  '  For  ever '  from  them, 
the  c  of  all  the  Muses  often  flowering 

1  hear  a  c  of  song  thro'  all  the  land. 
What  c  in  words,  a  c  no  words 

Charm  (verb)    wish  to  c  Pallas  and  Juno  sitting  by  : 

seem'd  to  c  from  thence  The  wrath  I  nursed 

Perchance,  to  c  a  vacant  brain, 

bloom  profuse  and  cedar  arches  C, 

c's  Her  secret  from  the  latest  moon  ? ' 

red  berries  c  the  bird, 

charm  so  taught  will  c  us  both  to  rest. 

then  he  taught  the  King  to  c  the  Queen 

changing  market  frets  or  c's 

C  us.  Orator,  till  the  Lion  look 

Do  your  best  to  c  the  worst, 
Charm-bound    the  eye  Was  riveted  and  c-b, 
Charm'd    (See  also  Anger-charm'd,  Love-charm'd)  c 

and  tied  To  where  he  stands, —  D.  of  F.  Women  193 

C  him  thro'  every  labyrinth  Aylmer's  Field  479 

the  king  her  father  c  Her  wounded  soul  with  words :      Princess  vi  345 

So  much  the  gathering  darkness  c  :  , ,     Con.  107 

sitting  round  him,  idle  hands,  C  ;  Gareth  and  L.  513 

golden  mist  C  amid  eddies  of  melodious  airs,  Lover's  Tale  i  450 

Charming    with  a  phosphorescence  c  even  My  Lady  ;   Aylmer's  Field  116 


Merlin  and  V.  660 

673 

683 

809 

966 

967 

Guinevere  144 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  130 

V.  of  Maddune  25 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  48 

72 

To  Virgil  11 

Prog,  of  8 f  ring  47 

Far-far-away  16 

A  Character  14 

Princess  v  436 

The  Daisy  106 

Milton  12 

In  Mem  xxi  19 

Gareth  and  L  85 

Merlin  and  V.  332 

„  641 

Ancient  Sage  140 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  112 

147 

Lover's  Tale  ii  188 


Chamel    Ev'n  in  the  c's  of  the  dead, 
Chamel-cave     When  Lazarus  left  his  c-c, 
Charr'd    and  c  you  thro'  and  thro'  within, 

sent  him  c  and  blasted  to  the  deathless  fire 
Chart  (verb)    c's  us  all  in  its  coarse  blacks 
Chartered    craft  seaworthy  still ,  Have  c  this ; 
Chartist    his  bailiff  brought  A  C  pike. 


Two  Voices  215 

In  Mem.  xxxi  1 

Pelleas  and  E.  467 

Happy  84 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  107 

Pref.  Son.,  I9th  Cent.  4 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  71 


Chase  (s)     (See  also  Chace)    and  in  the  c  grew  wild,  Talking  Oak  126 


Follow,  follow  the  c  ! 

sleek  and  shining  creatures  of  the  c. 

And  reason  in  the  c  : 

And  being  ever  foremost  in  the  c, 

the  tide  within  Red  with  free  c 
Chase  (verb)    rose  To  c  the  deer  at  five  ; 

'C,'  he  said  :  the  ship  flew  forward, 

do  I  c  The  substance  or  the  shadow  ? 

To  c  a  creature  that  was  current 

And  bring  or  c  the  storm, 
Chased  (engraved)    hilt.  How  curiously  and 
strangely  c, 

meadow  gemlike  c  In  the  brown  wild, 

hilt,  How  curiously  and  strangely  c. 
Chased  (pursued)    c  away  the  still-recurring 


So  shape  c  shape  as  swift  as, 

•  A  light  wind  c  her  on  the  wing, 

but  c  The  wisp  that  flickers  where  no  foot  can  tread.'    Princess  iv  357 


Window.     On  the  Hill  11 

Princess  v  155 

Com.  of  Arthur  168 

Geraint  and  E.  959 

Last  Tournament  691 

Talking  Oak  52 

Tfie  Captain  33 

Princess  ii  408 

Merlin  and  V.  408 

Mechanophilus  14 

M.  d' Arthur  86 
Geraint  and  E.  198 
Pass  of  Arthur  254 

Caress'd  or  Chidden  7 

D.ofF.  Women  S7 

Talking  Oak  125 


Com.  of  Arthur  167 

Merlin  and  V.  427 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  29 

Demeter  and  P.  15 

Lying  Swan  17 

The  Merman  20 


'  I  have  seen  the  cuckoo  c  by  lesser  fowl, 

c  the  flashes  of  his  golden  horns 

Who  might  have  c  and  claspt  Renown 

and  c  away  That  shadow  of  a  likeness 
Chasing    C  itself  at  its  own  wild  will, 

C  each  other  merrily. 
Chasm    (See  also  Cavern-chasm)     '  Heaven  opens  inward, 

c's  yawn,  Two  Voices  304 

in  the  icy  caves  And  barren  c's,  M.  d' Arthur  187 

lines  of  cliff  breaking  have  left  a  c ;  And  in  the  c  are 

foam  and  yellow  sands  ;  Enoch  Arden  1 

till  drawn  thro'  either  c,  ,,        670 

from  the  gaps  and  c's  of  ruin  left  Sea  Dreams  225 


^i 


Chasm 


91 


Cheer 


Chasm  (amtinued)    Thro'  one  wide  e  of  time  and  frost     Princess,  Pro.  93 

By  every  coppice-feather'd  c  and  cleft,  ,,            ti>  23 

from  the  castle  gateway  by  the  c  Com.  of  Arthur  370 

little  elves  of  c  and  cleft  Made  answer,  Guinevere  248 
clash'd  his  harness  in  the  icy  caves  And 

barren  c's,  Pass,  of  Arthur  355 

The  yawning  of  an  earthquake-cloven  e.  Lover's  Tcde  i  377 

Flies  with  a  shatter'd  foam  along  the  c.  ,,            383 

Clove  into  perilous  c's  our  walls  Def.  of  iMcknow  55 

black  passes  and  foam-churning  c's —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  9 

blur  of  earth  Left  by  that  closing  c,  Demeter  and  P.  38 

of  the  c  between  Work  and  Ideal  ?  Romney's  R.  63 

Chasm-like    With  e-l  portals  open  to  the  sea,  Holy  Grail  815 

Chaste    world's  great  bridals,  c  and  calm :  Princess,  vii  294 

All  brave,  and  many  generous,  and  some  c.  Merlin  and  V.  817 

Chasten    we  love  the  Heaven  that  c's  us.  Geraint  and  E.  789 

Chastisement    brook  the  rod  And  c  of  human 

pride  ;  Sujyp.  Confessions  108 

May  not  that  earthly  c  suffice  ?  Aylmer's  Field  784 

Chastity    With  the  clear-pointed  flame  of  c,  Isabel  2 

she  rode  forth,  clothed  on  with  c :  Godiva  53 

she  rode  back,  clothed  on  with  c:  ,,65 

They  bound  to  holy  vows  of  c  !  Merlin  and  V.  695 

To  lead  sweet  lives  in  purest  c,  Guinevere  474 

Chatelet    The  last  wild  thought  of  C,  Margaret  37 

Chattel    Live  c's,  mincers  of  each  other's  fame,  Princess,  iv  515 

Chatter    Would  c  with  the  cold,  and  all  my  beard  St.  S.  Stylites  31 

I  c  over  stony  ways,  The  Brook  39 

I  c,  c,  as  I  flow  To  join  the  brimming  river,  ,,       47 

crane,'  I  said,  '  may  c  of  the  crane,  Princess  Hi  104 

then  to  hear  a  dead  man  c  Is  enough  Maud  II  v  19 

Chatter'd    Philip  c  more  than  brook  or  bird  ;  The  Brook  51 

They  c  trifles  at  the  door :  In  Mem.  Ixix  4 

Chatterer    Begotten  by  enchantment — c's  they,  Holy  Grail  145 

Chattering  (ptui;.)    c  stony  names  Of  shale  and 

hornblende, «  Princess  Hi  361 

Chattering  (si    Chafferings  and  c's  at  the  market-cross,      Holy  Grail  558 

Chaucer  (Dan)    See  Dan  Chaucer 

Chaumber  (chamber)    i'  my  oan  blue  c  to  mo.  Spinster's  S's.  80 

Thou  slep  i'  the  c  above  us,  Owd  Roa  49 

Roaver  was  theere  i'  the  c  ,,88 

Chaumber  door  (chamber  door)    thy  e  d  wouldn't  sneck ;  ,,64 

Chaunt    (See  also  Chant)    I  would  mock  thy  c  anew  ;  The  Owl  ii  8 

And  solemn  c's  resound  between.  Sir  Galahad  36 

Chaunteth    C  not  the  brooding  bee  A  Dirge  16 

Cheap    had  holden  the  power  and  glory  of  Spain  so  c        The  Revenge  106 

Cheat  (s)    Yet,  if  she  were  not  a  c,  (repeat)  Maud  I  vi  35,  91 

Scarcely,  now,  would  I  call  him  a  c  ;  ,,         xiii  29 

Cheat  (verb)    love  to  c  yourself  with  words  :  Princess  vii  334 

C  and  be  cheated,  and  die  :  Maud  I  i  32 

Cheated    (See  also  Half-cheated)    Cheat  and  be  c,  and  die:        ,,        32 

Cheating    c  the  sick  of  a  few  last  gasps,  ,,        43 

Check  (s)     '  Then  comes  the  c,  the  change,  Two  Voices  163 

With  motions,  c's,  and  counterchecks.  ,,          300 

Check  (verb)    too  noble'  he  said  'to  c  at  pies,  Merlin  and  V.  126 

the  good  nuns  would  c  her  gadding  tongue  Guinevere  313 

c  me  too  Nor  let  me  shame  my  father's  memory,  ,,        317 

pray  you  c  me  if  I  ask  amiss —  ,,     _    324 

Check'd    and  c  His  power  to  shape  :  Lucretius  22 

Here  the  King's  calm  eye  Fell  on,  and  c,  Gareth  and  L.  548 

there  he  c  himself  and  paused.  Pelleas  and  E.  527 

Cheek    (See  also  Maiden-cheek)    The  red  c  paling, 

The  strong  limbs  failing ;  All  things  will  Die  31 

laughters  dimple  The  baby-roses  in  her  c's  ;  Lilian  17 

then  the  tears  run  down  my  c,  Oriana  69 

That  dimples  your  transparent  c,  Margaret  15 

Tie  up  the  ringlets  on  your  c:  ,,57 

And  your  c,  whose  brilliant  hue  Rosalind  39 

Leaning  his  c  upon  bis  hand,  Elednore  118 

Returning  with  hot  c  and  kindled  eyes.  Alexander  14 

Tho'  one  should  smite  him  on  the  c.  Two  Voices  251 

c  Flush'd  like  the  coming  of  the  day  ;  Miller's  D.  131 

Her  c  had  lost  the  rose,  and  round  her  neck  CEnone  18 

his  c  brighten'd  as  tho  foam-bow  brightens  ,,       61 

eye  Over  her  snow-cold  breast  and  angry  c  Kept  watch,  ,,     142 


Cheek  (continued)    His  ruddy  c  upon  my  breast, 
with  puff'd  c  the  belted  hunter  blew 
From  c  and  throat  and  chin, 
along  the  brain.  And  flushes  all  the  c. 
with  swarthy  c's  and  bold  black  eyes, 
A  word  could  bring  the  colour  to  my  c  ; 
clapt  him  on  the  hands  and  on  the  c's, 
laughter  dimpled  in  his  swarthy  c  ; 
and  pat  The  girls  upon  the  c, 
'  Then  flush'd  her  c  with  rosy  light. 
Thy  c  begins  to  redden  thro'  the  gloom, 
and  thy  tears  are  on  my  c. 
Then  her  c  was  pale  and  thinner 
On  her  pallid  c  and  forehead  came  a  colour 
the  barking  cur  Made  her  c  flame : 
While,  dreaming  on  your  damask  c. 
The  blush  is  fix'd  upon  her  c. 
The  colour  flies  into  his  c's : 
C  by  jowl,  and  knee  by  knee : 
Flamed  in  his  c  ;  and  eager  eyes, 
Cooling  her  false  c  with  a  featherfan, 
yet  her  c  Kept  colour :  wondrous  ! 
On  glassy  water  drove  his  c  in  lines ; 
when  the  king  Kiss'd  her  pale  c, 
blew  the  swoll'n  c  of  a  trumpeter, 
flying  charm  of  blushes  o'er  this  c, 
but  my  c  Began  to  burn  and  burn, 
till  over  brow  And  c  and  bosom  brake 
my  Sire,  his  rough  c  wet  with  tears. 
And  so  belabour'd  him  on  rib  and  c 
wan  was  her  c  With  hollow  watch, 
I  love  not  hollow  c  or  faded  eye : 
wordless  broodings  on  the  wasted  c — 
'  The  c's  drop  in  ;  the  body  bows 
A  touch  of  shame  upon  her  c  > 
Come  ;  let  us  go :  your  c's  are  pale  ; 
To  clap  their  c's,  to  call  them  mine, 
fan  my  brows  and  blow  The  fever  from  my  c, 
beam  of  an  eyelash  dead  on  the  c. 


The  Sisters  20 

Palace  of  Art  63 

140 

D.  of  F.  Women  44 

127 

Gardener's  D.  196 

Dora  133 

Edwin  Morris  61 

Talking  Oak  44 

165 

Tithonus  37 

45 

Locksley  Hall  21 

25 

Godiva  58 

Day -Dm.,  Pro.  3 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  32 

,,  Arrival  19 

Vision  of  Sin  84 

Aylmer's  Field  66 

289 

„  505 

Princess  i  116 

,,      m264 

364 

430 

, ,       Hi  45 

,,     iv'383 

t)23 

341 

,,      vi  144 

,,        vii  7 

„  112 

In  Mem.  xxxv  3 

,,    xxxvii  10 

,,  Ivii  5 

,,    Ixxxiv  18 

, ,      Ixxxvi  9 

Maud  I  Hi  3 


Roses  are  her  c's.  And  a  rose  her  mouth  (repeat)        Maud  I  xvii  7,  27 

but  speak  Of  my  mother's  faded  c  ,,           xix  19 

this  was  what  had  redden'd  her  c  ,,                 65 

and  a  c  of  apple-blossom.  Hawk-eyes  ;  GareUi  and  L.  589 

Struck  at  him  with  his  whip,  and  cut  his  c.  Marr.  of  Geraint  207 

Whom  first  she  kiss'd  on  either  c,  „               517 

Made  her  c  burn  and  either  eyelid  fall,  ,,                775 

Made  her  c  burn  and  either  eyelid  fall.  Geraint  and  E.  434 

so  there  lived  some  colour  in  your  c,  ,,             621 
spearman  let  his  c  Bulge  with  the  unswallow'd 

piece,  „             630 

However  lightly,  smote  her  on  the  c.  ,,             718 
White  was  her  c :  sharp  breaths  of  anger  puff'd        Merlin  and  V.  848 

Seam'd  with  an  ancient  swordcut  on  the  c,  Lancelot  and  E.  258 

c  did  catch  the  colour  of  her  words.  Lover's  Tale  i  569 

bent  above  me,  too ;  Wan  was  her  c  ;  ,,            694 

c's  as  bright  as  when  she  climb'd  the  hill.  ,,         Hi  47 
As  well  as  the  plump  c —                                       Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  184 

kiss  fell  chill  as  a  flake  of  snow  on  the  c :  The  Wreck  32 

to  feel  his  breath  Upon  my  c —  The  Flight  46 

Yet  tho'  this  c  be  gray.  Epilogue  7 

Each  poor  pale  e  a  momentary  rose —  The  Ring  315 

rounder  c  had  brighten'd  into  bloom.  ,,        351 

her  lips  Were  warm  upon  my  c,  ,,        399 

From  off  the  rosy  c  of  waking  Day.  ATchar's  Dream  202 

Cheek'd    See  Apple-cheek'd 

Cheep    c  and  twitter  twenty  million  loves.  Princess  iv  101 

Cheeping    birds  that  circle  round  the  tower  Are  c 

to  each  other  The  Ring  86 

Cheer  (s)    flowers  would  faint  at  your  cruel  c.  Poet's  Mind  15 

Died  the  sound  of  royal  c  ;  ^'  2f  '^^'^^  iv  48 

Naked  I  go,  and  void  of  c :  Two  Voices  239 

A  murmur,  '  Be  of  better  c'  ,,        429 

Welcome  her,  thundering  c  of  tho  street !  W.  to  Alexandra  7 

With  festal  c,  With  books  and  music,  In  Mem.  cvH  21 

And  I  make  myself  such  evil  c,  Maud  I  xv2 


Cheer 


92 


Cheer  (s)  (corUinued)    With  all  good  .,  He  spake  and       ^^^^^  ^^^  ^  ^^^ 

Emd'broi:^lit  sweet  cakes  to  make  them  c,  Man.  ofGeraint  388 

cried  GerTint  for  wine  and  goodly  c  Geratnt  and  E.  283 

lUy  maid  had  striven  to  make  him  c.  Lancelot  and  K  327 

Y  Jt  with  good  c  he  spake,                       ,  Pdleasand  £.240 

mghlanders  answer  with  conquering  c\  Def  ofl^know^9 

hard  rocks,  hard  life,  hard  c,  or  none,  Sir  J.  Old^af"  6 
guest  may  make  True  c  with  honest  wine-        Pro.  to  Gen.  Eardey  16 

men  gallopt  up  with  a  c  and  a  shout,  -Sf*^  ^"rtSo 

ClieeT(vert)     Annie,  come  c  up  before  I  go.'  En^oh  Arden  200 

'  Annie  mv  girl,  c  up,  be  comforted,  r'h    i  ■  tToq 

Chee^d     Au7hl  .her  Foul  with  love.  M^££    9 

But  he  c  me,  my  good  inan,  tTmZxxU^ 

And  we  with  singing  c  the  way,  I^  Mem.  xxnb 

Be  c  with  ti  J"gf.  «f  J^^X^^d  Com.  of  Arthur  267 

he  spake  and  c  his  iable  Kouna  '^""■-   J                  _ 

Nor  ever  c  you  with  a  kindly  smile,  -T  ">  f  S^ 

Cheerfil    It  wiunigh  made  her  c ;  _  Geramt  andK  443 

^^^gVew  so  c  that  they  deem'd  her  death  ^"'^'^'^irL  827 

ChelrfuUy    Enoch  bore  his  weakness  c.  Enoch  Ard^n^l 

ChlSminded    Be  .-«,  talk  and  treat  Of  all  things    ^^jlf^^ffgj^ 

Cheerfulness    hold  out  the  lights  of  c;  TheDawnlb 

Cheque    violates  virgin  Truth  for  a  com  or  a  c.  S.m  zSS  15 

Cheauer-work    A  c-w  of  beam  and  shade  _  r    7  7     w  7/ fi^ 

cffih    c  that  which  bears  but  bitter  fruit  ?  ^'Y^f.^f  % 

The  love  of  all  Thy  daughters  c  Thee,  ^ed.^  Idylls  53 

erace  Thy  climbing  life,  and  c  my  prone  year,  Garethand  i  95 

CheSd    fe'd,  and  /him, 'and  -ved  his  life.  ^-^  ^^^^  ?§^ 

Cherry    To  catch  a  dragon  in  a  c  net,  MeruTand  V  52 

Cherub    There  is  no  being  pure,  My  c ;  Princess  vi  246 

Chess    our  wine  and  c  beneath  the  planes,  ^riwcess  t;*  ^40 

Chest  (part  of  bddy)    like  monstrous  apes  they  ^^^  ^_              ^^^ 

Liri?n^,"^//eelinbeadorc          ,  ^    ,,^iK;fI 

big  voic^'big  ..  big  xnerciless  hands !  In  '^j^^^-fes 

Ches?(W^reroSett?eivoryc  ^^e  Xe«..  17 

J:fther:.Vythth'you  knelt-  ^/.i^^n,  112 

There  the  c  was  open— all  The  sacred  relics  ,,        *■*" 

SSSt  KTrtd™.  «•.  near,  that  hu,^  Um.',  D.  56 

I  came  and  sat  Below  the  c's,  »         ^gg 

While  those  full  c's  whisper  by.  "        oni 

in  the  c  shade  I  found  the  blue  Forget-me-not.  „       /'i^ 

Parks  with  oak  and  c  shady,  /•  «/  f  "''^^^^^  ^9 

I  see  the  slowly-thickening  c  towers  Pro^.  0/ -Sprz«?  42 
Chestnut  (fruit)    <^,  when  the  shell  Divides  threefold     ^^^  ^^^^^  ^^  ^^^ 

TheT^attering  to  the  ground  :   _,        ^  .  ^«  ^^'^^  ^^'  ^ 

Chestnut-bloom    that  islet  in  the  c-b  Flamed  m  ^^^^^.^  ^.^^^  ^^ 

ChestS-buf  'drooping  c-l's  began  To  spread  ^ir  X.  ^^  16 

Chew'd    c  The  thrice-turn'd  cud  of  wrath,  rrtncess  ivo 

cK    Sir  C,  that  scarce  hast  broken  shell  Balm  and  Balan  568 

Or  else  Sir  C-dismount  and  loose  their  casques  .              57rf 

Chid    be  friends,  like  children  being  c  !  ^^T/  Tir  63 

Cher  and  forbid  her  to  spoak  To  me,  .-T     >,^j^    1 

Chidden  '  CaRESb'd  or  c  by  the  slender  hand,  Carm'd  or  Ch^Men  1 

Chief    answer'd  Lancelot,  the  c  of  kmght« :  ^^  ^_  ^^     ^g^ 

(repeat)                                  .     rr-  18^ 

eueas  thee  c  of  those,  After  the  King,  .>                     ;i°^ 

Cs  of  cs  and  princes  fall  so  fast,  jvl^fr  sFjdd  763 

an  Eagle  rising  or,  the  Sun  In  dexter  c ;  Merhn  <^r>dV.m 

the  thit  seem'd  the  c  among  them  said  PeZZeas  ani  E.  62 

ChUd    (^e.«Z,o  Bairn,  ChUder,  Children)    Fed  thee,  a  ^^^^^^^ 

c,  lying  alone,  07 

A  glorious  c,  dreaming  alone,  •  i          ' 

One  walk'd  between  his  wife  and  e,  Two  Vot^a  41Z 

features  of  her  c  Ere  it  is  born :  her  c  !  ^none  ^l 

'  never  c  be  born  of  me,  Unblest,  ,.      ^"J* 


Child 

Child  (^--f)J^-'''  b^  ^  ^«**-  "  ^  y°^  *%%Ven,  iV.  r-.  E.  44 
dream  of  Fatherland,  Of  c,  and  wife.  Lotos-Eaters  40 

With  that  fair  c  betwixt  them  bom.  On  a  Mourner  2b 

Dora  took  the  c,  and  went  her  way  -^oJ-a  '^ 

none  of  all  his  men  Dare  tell  him  Dora  waited  with  the  c ;  , ,     /b 

she  rose  and  took  The  c  once  more,  ■■    »J- 

Whose  c  is  that  ?    What  are  you  doing  here  i 
answer'd  softly,  '  This  is  William's  c\' 
take  the  e,  And  bless  him  for  the  sake  of  him  that  s  gone  ! 
work  for  William's  c,  until  he  grows  Of  age 
a-begging  for  myself.  Or  William,  or  this  e  ; 

three  hours  he  sobb'd  o'er  William's  c  n,„ji.-„  /o^i- 1 9S 

cling  About  the  darling  c :  ?''^ ??£,%;  m 

O,  the  c  too  clothes  the  father  Locksley  Hall  91 

barbarian  lower  than  the  Christian  c.  w^ll'wnter  'U 

that  cs  heart  within  the  man's  Begins  ^lifr/S;  24 

'  I  speak  the  truth  :  you  are  my  c.  Lady  Llare  l\ 

I  biuied  her  like  my  own  sweet  c,  And  put  my  c  in  her  ^ 

'  Nay  now,  my  c,'  said  Alice  the  nurse,  (repeat)  ,,    33,  41 

Alas,  mv  c,  I  sinn'd  for  thee.'  .     i'       .    t 

C,  if  it  were  thine  error  or  thy  crime  Come  not,  when,  etc.  7 


90 

93 

126 

142 

167 


from  the  palace  came  a  c  of  sin, 

And  give  his  c  a  better  bringing-up 

how  should  the  c  Remember  this  ?       ,^  ^    .  ,  ,. 

the  third  c  was  sickly-born  and  grew  Yet  sick  her, 

fears  were  common  to  her  state.  Being  with  c :  but 

when  her  c  was  born.  Then  her  new  e 
marriage,  and  the  birth  Of  Philip's  c  : 
darling  Katie  Willows,  his  one  c ! 
His  only  c,  his  Edith  whom  he  loved 
Nursing  a  c,  and  turning  to  the  warmth 
— who  could  trust  a  c  ? 
Their  c'     'Ourc!'     'Our  heiress! 
and  because  I  love  their  c  They  hate  me  : 
and  read  Writhing  a  letter  from  his  c. 
Of  such  a  love  as  like  a  chidden  c. 
He  seldom  crost  his  c  without  a  sneer  ; 
praying  him  To  speak  before  the  people  of  her  c, 
The  poor  c  of  shame  The  common  care 
all  the  gentle  attributes  Of  his  lost  c, 
Is  not  our  own  c  on  the  narrow  way, 
The  childless  mother  went  to  seek  her  c ; 
in  the  narrow  gloom  By  wife  and  c  ; 
His  wife,  an  unknown  artist's  orphan  c— 
Virdn  Mother  standing  with  her  c 
the  c  Clung  to  the  mother,  and  sent  out  a  cry 
And  mine  but  from  the  crying  of  a  c. 

'  C  ?  No  ! '  said  he,  '  but  this  tide  s  roar, 

Good  man,  to  please  the  c. 

voice  (You  spoke  so  loud)  has  roused  the  c  again. 

flock'd  at  noon  His  tenants,  wife  and  c. 

Half  c  half  woman  as  she  was, 

they  must  lose  the  c,  assume  The  woman  : 

odes  About  this  losing  of  the  c  ; 

when  we  came  where  lies  the  c  We  lost  in  other  years. 

Your  language  proves  you  still  the  c. 

At  her  left,  a  c,  In  shining  draperies, 

turn'd  to  go,  but  Cyril  took  the  c, 

the  c  Push'd  her  flat  hand  against  his  face 

call'd  For  Psyche's  c  to  cast  it  from  the  doors  , 

on  the  purple  footcloth,  lay  The  lily-shimng  e  ; 

For  this  lost  lamb  (she  pointed  to  the  c) 

and  a  hope  The  c  of  regal  compact, 

S.''bS::my'blSsorih,  my  c,  My  one  sweet  c,  whom 

wheSejr/Thrc  is  hers-for  every  little  fault,  The 

c  is  hers ; 
My  babe,  my  sweet  Aglaia,  my  one  c : 
Who  gave  me  back  my  c  ? ' 
You  have  spoilt  this  c ;  she  laughs  at  you 
Our  chiefest  comfort  is  the  little  c 
c  shall  grow  To  prize  the  authentic  mother 


Vision  of  Sin  5 

Enoch  Arden  87 

233 


„        261 

„        522 

„        709 

The  Brook  67 

Aylmer's  Field  23 

185 

264 

297 

423 

517 

541 

562 

608 

687 

731 

„         743 

829 

841 

Sea  Dreams  2 

242 

244 

249 

250 

267 

281 

Pro.  4 

101 

n37 

141 

nlO 

58 

108 

362 

365 

ii>238 

287 

361 

421 

V    80 

82 

87 
101 
105 
116 
430 
432 


Princess 


Child 


93 


Child 


CShild  (continued)    the  training  of  a  c  Is  woman's  wisdom.' 
Set  his  c  upon  her  knee — 
'Sweet  my  c,  I  live  for  thee.' 
Knelt  on  one  knee, — the  c  on  one, — 
She  bow'd,  she  set  the  c  on  the  earth  ; 
not  yours,  but  mine :  give  me  the  c ' 
The  mother,  me,  the  c ; 
give  her  the  c  !  (repeat) 
twilight  mellowing,  dwelt  Full  on  the  c  ; 
Ida  spoke  not,  rapt  upon  the  c. 
Blanche  had  gone,  but  left  Her  c  among  us, 
old  world  of  ours  is  but  a  e  Yet  in  the  go-cart, 
love  not  this  French  God,  the  c  of  Hell, 
But  I  wept  like  a  c  that  day, 
wept  like  a  c  for  the  c  that  was  dead 
King  is  happy  In  c  and  wife  ; 
She  cast  her  arms  about  the  c. 
The  c  was  only  eight  summers  old, 
'  They  have  taken  the  c  To  spill  his  blood 
Poor  c,  that  waitest  for  thy  love  ! 
They  call'd  me  fool,  they  call  me  c : 
find  in  c  and  wife  An  iron  welcome 
Familiar  to  the  stranger's  c  ; 

c  would  twine  A  trustful  hand,  unask'd,  in  thine, 
Half -grown  as  yet,  a  c,  and  vain— 
With  wisdom,  like  the  younger  c : 
No,  like  a  c  in  doubt  and  fear : 
Then  was  I  as  a  <;  that  cries, 
I  play'd  with  the  girl  when  a  c  ; 

0  c,  you  wrong  your  beauty, 

1  have  play'd  with  her  when  a  c  ; 
For  then,  perhaps,  as  a  c  of  deceit, 
Made  her  only  the  c  of  her  mother, 
desire  that  awoke  in  the  heart  of  the  c, 
one  fair  daughter,  and  none  other  c  ; 
split  the  mother's  heart  Spitting  the  c, 
surely  would  have  torn  the  c  Piecemeal  among  them, 
Wherefore  Merlin  took  the  c, 
Or  else  the  c  of  Anton,  and  no  king, 
Arthur  were  the  c  of  shamefulness, 
dried  my  tears,  being  a  c  with  me. 
So  that  the  c  and  he  were  clothed  in  fire, 
same  c,'  he  said,  '  Is  he  who  reigns  ; 
The  shining  dragon  and  the  naked  c 
this  King  thine  only  c,  Guinevere : 
the  good  mother  holds  me  still  a  c  ! 
'  Mother,  tho'  ye  count  me  still  the  c,  Sweet  mother, 

do  ye  love  the  c  ? ' 
'  Then,  mother,  an  ye  love  the  c,' 
Hear  the  c's  story. ' 
'  An  ye  hold  me  yet  for  e,  Hear  yet  once  more  the  story 

of  the  c.  „  99 

all  day  long  hath  rated  at  her  c,  , ,        1285 

'  My  fair  c,  What  madness  made  thee  challenge  ,,        1415 

Had  married  Enid,  Yniol's  only  c,  Marr.  of  Geraint  4 

dear  c  hath  often  heard  me  praise  ,,  434 

0  noble  host.  For  this  dear  c,  ,,  497 
'  See  here,  my  c,  how  fresh  the  colours  ,,  680 
Look  on  it,  c,  and  tell  me  if  ye  know  it.'  ,,  684 
worn  My  faded  suit,  as  you,  my  e,  ,,  706 
my  dear  c  is  set  forth  at  her  best,  ,,  728 
your  fair  c  shall  wear  your  costly  gift  ,,  819 
wail  ye  for  him  thus  ?  ye  seem  a  c.  Geraint  and  E.  547 
Make  knight  or  churl  or  c  or  damsel  seem  Balin  and  Balan  162 
plumed  with  green  replied,  '  Peace,  c  !  Merlin  and  V.  90 
neither  eyes  nor  tongue— 0  stupid  c  !  ,,  251 
Your  pardon,  c.     Your  pretty  sports  have  brighten'd 

all  again. 
In  you,  that  are  no  c,  for  still  I  find  Your  face 
a  mere  c  Might  use  it  to  the  harm  of  anyone, 
One  c  they  had  ;  it  lived  with  her : 
charged  by  Valence  to  bring  home  the  c. 

1  ask  you,  is  it  clamour'd  by  the  e, 
bitter  weeping  like  a  beaten  c. 


Princess  v  465 

,,       vi  14 

16 

91 

„  120 

141 

153 

Princess  v  168,  179,  183 

Princess  t)  192 

„      _  220 

, ,    vii   57 

„  Con.  77 

Third  of  Feb.  7 

Grandmother  64 

„  68 

The  Victim  26 

„         32 

„        33 

43 

In  Mem.  vi  28 

,,     Ixix  13 

,,        xc    7 

„        ci20 

cm;  18 

, ,     cxiv    9 

20 

,,  cxxiv  17 

19 

Mavd  I  i  68 

iv  17 

vi  87 

xiii  30 

40 

xix  48 

Com.  of  Arthur  2 

39 

217 

221 

233 

239 

350 

390 

392 

399 

413 

Gareth  and  L.  15 

34 
37 
39 


Child  [continued)     '  True,  my  c.    Well,  I  will  wear 

it :  Lancelot  and  E.  370 

'  Do  me  this  grace,  my  c,  to  have  my  shield  ,,           382 

Sir  Modred's  brother,  and  the  c  of  Lot,  , ,           558 

the  diamond:  wit  ye  well,  my  c,  ,,           771 

kiss  the  c  That  does  the  task  assign'd,  ,,           828 

Meeker  than  any  c  to  a  rough  nurse,  ,,           857 

Milder  than  any  mother  to  a  sick  c,  ,,           858 

'0  my  c,  ye  seem  Light-headed,  ,,          1062 

Yet,  seeing  you  desire  your  c  to  live,  ,,         1095 

kiss'd  me  saying,  "Thou  are  fair,  my  c,  „         1409 

I  saw  the  fiery  face  as  of  a  c  Holy  Grail  466 

winding  wall  of  rock  Heard  a  c  wail.  Last  Tournament  12 

thro'  the  wind  Pierced  ever  a  c's  cry  :  ,,17 

Vext  her  with  plaintive  memories  of  the  c :  ,,            29 

that  unhappy  c  Past  in  her  barge  :  ,,44 

Queen  White-robed  in  honour  of  the  stainless  c,  „           147 

whimpering  of  the  spirit  of  the  c,  „          418 

Arthur  make  me  pure  As  any  maiden  c?  ,,           693 

'  Will  the  c  kill  me  with  her  innocent  talk  ? '  Guinevere  214 

'  Will  the  c  kill  me  with  her  foolish  prate  ? '  „         225 

They  found  a  naked  c  upon  the  sands  ,,        293 

'  Tho  simple,  fearful  c  Meant  nothing,  ,,         369 

too-fearful  guilt,  Simpler  than  any  c,  ,,         371 

'  Liest  thou  here  so  low,  the  c  of  one  I  honour'd,  ,,         422 

Well  is  it  that  no  c  is  born  of  thee.  , ,         424 

wife  and  c  with  wail  Pass  to  new  lords  ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  44 

Or  Cowardice,  the  c  of  lust  for  gold.  To  the  Queen  ii  54 

Which  to  the  imprison'd  spirit  of  the  c,  Lover's  Tale  i  204 

Had  thrust  his  wife  and  c  and  dash'd  himself  ,,            380 

you  may  hear  The  moaning  of  the  woman  and  the  c,  ,,            520 

at  last  he  freed  himself  From  wife  and  c,  „        iv  380 

I  was  a  c,  an'  he  was  a  c,  an'  he  came  First  Quarrel  23 

told  it  me  all  at  once,  as  simple  as  any  c,  , ,            58 

You'll  have  her  to  nurse  my  c,  ,,            70 

when  he  was  but  a  c —  Eizpah  25 

The  wind  that 'ill  wail  like  a  c     *  ,,72 

You  never  have  borne  a  c —  ,,       80 
My  father  with  a  c  on  either  knee,  A  hand  upon  the 

head  of  either  c,  iSisters  (E.  and  E. )  54 

Here's  to  your  happy  union  with  my  c !  ,,                68 

widow  with  less  guile  than  many  a  c.  ,,               182 

desire  that  her  lost  c  Should  earn  ,,              250 

here  She  bore  a  c,  whom  reverently  we  call'd  Edith  ;          ,,  268 
gratefullest  heart  I  have  found  in  a  c  of  her 


moral  c  without  the  craft  to  rule, 


304 
366 
684 
„  716 

718 
771 
855 
Lancelot  and  E.  146 


years — 
the  c  didn't  see  I  was  there. 
I  had  sat  three  nights  by  the  c — 
and  we  went  to  see  to  the  c. 
I  sorrow  for  that  kindly  c  of  Spain 
Out  of  the  deep,  my  c,  (repeat) 
I  am  roused  by  the  wail  of  a  c, 
The  c  that  I  felt  I  could  die  for — 
That  day  my  nurse  had  brought  me  the  c. 
I  thought  of  the  c  for  a  moment, 
I  shall  look  on  the  c  again. 
'  0  c,  I  am  coming  to  thee.' 
I  pray'd — '  my  c ' — for  I  still  could  pray — 
Was  it  well  with  the  c  ? 
Godless  Jeptha  vows  his  c  .  .  . 
that  smiles  at  her  sleepin'  c — 
Amy  was  a  timid  c  ; 
dead  the  mother,  dead  the  c. 
Edith  but  a  c  of  six — 
wife  and  his  c  stood  by  him  in  tears. 
And  warms  the  c's  awakening  world 
from  her  household  orbit  draws  the  c 
the  c  Is  happy — ev'n  in  leaving  her  ! 
can  no  more,  thou  earnest,  0  my  c, 
Queen  of  the  dead  no  more — my  c  ! 
C,  those  imperial,  disimpassion'd  eyes 
here,  my  c,  tho'  folded  in  thine  arms, 
C,  when  thou  wert  gone,  I  envied  human  wives, 
do  ye  make  your  moaning  for  my  c  ? ' 
the  c  Of  thee,  the  great  Earth-Mother, 


In  the  Child.  Hosp.  32 

„  44 

59 

68 

Columbus  212 

Be  Prof.  Two  G.  1,  5,  26,  29 

The  Wreck  7 

36 

59 

84 

124 

134 

138 

141 

TJie  FligJtt  26 

Tomorrow  26 

Locksley  II.,  Sixty  19 

36 

258 

Bead  Prophet  57 

Prin.  Beatrice  5 

7 

11 

Bemeter  and  P.  4 

18 


23 
40 
52 
65 
99 


ChUd 


94 


Chillness 


Child  (continued)    c,  Because  I  hear  your  Mother's  voice  in 
yours, 
for  we,  ray  c,  Have  been  till  now  each  other's  all-in-all, 
you  the  livelong  guardian  of  the  c. 
This  ring  bequeath'd  you  by  your  mother,  c. 
C,  I  am  happier  in  your  happiness 
What  chamber,  c  ?    Your  nurse  is  here  ? 
but  the  c  Is  paler  than  before, 
forgotten  it  was  your  birthday,  c — 
Kiss  me  c  and  go. 
Mother,  dare  you  kill  your  c  ? 
I  see  the  picture  yet,  Mother  and  c. 
a  c  Had  shamed  me  at  it — 


The  Ring  27 

52 

:;    ?l 

90 

95 

„        326 

„        378 

489 

Forlorn  37 

Romney's  R.  81 

111 

Bandit's  Death  15 

Charity  28 

The  Dawn  9 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  36 

Akbar's  Dream  12 

Village  Wife  13 

55 

Tomorrow  85 

"    ,     86 

Spinster's  S's.  84 

Enoch  Arden  37 

In  Mem.  Ixxix  15 

,,  cxx  10 

Gareth  and  L.  53 

Lover's  Tale  i  188 

221 

249 

a  183 

Merlin  and  the  G.  115 

Princess  vii  284 

To  Victor  Hugo  4 


Children  [coniinued)    the  c  call,  and  I  Thy  shepherd 

pipe.  Princess  vii  217 

Late  the  little  c  clung  :  Ode  on  Well.  237 

But  all  my  c  have  gone  before  me,  Grandmother  18 

But  as  to  the  c,  Annie,  they're  all  about  me  yet.  „            76 

Phantom  wail  of  women  and  c,  Boddicea  26 


and  he  loved  to  dandle  the  c, 
the  birth  of  a  baseborn  c. 
For  Babylon  was  a  c  new-born, 

Child-birth    Lies  my  Amy  dead  in  c-b, 
Dying  in  c-b  of  dead  sons. 

Childer  (children)    thebbe  all  wi'  the  Lord  my  c, 
all  es  one,  the  c  an'  me, 
has  now  ten  c,  hansome  an'  tall, 
Him  an'  his  c  wor  keenin' 
But  I  niver  not  wish'd  fur  c. 

Childhood    when  the  dawn  of  rosy  c  past, 
Ere  c's  flaxen  ringlet  turn'd 
up  from  c  shape  His  action  like  the  greater  ape. 
One,  that  had  loved  him  from  his  c, 
In  the  Maydews  of  c, 
pillars  which  from  earth  uphold  Our  c, 
As  was  our  c,  so  our  infancy, 
A  monument  of  c  and  of  love  ;  The  poesy  of  c ; 
Him  the  Mighty,  Who  taught  me  in  c. 

Childlike    lose  the  c  in  the  larger  mind  ; 

Child-lover    Lord  of  human  tears  ;  C-l ; 

Children    [See  also  Child,  Childer,  Men-children) 

May  c  of  our  c  say,  To  the  Queen  23 

And  c  all  seem  full  of  Thee  !  Supp.  Confessions  21 

Two  c  in  two  neighbour  villages  Circumstance  1 

Two  c  in  one  hamlet  born  and  bred  ;  ,,8 

I  have  been  to  blame.     Kiss  me,  my  c'  Dora  162 

Not  in  our  time,  nor  in  our  c's  time.  Golden  Year  55 

mothers  brought  Their  c,  clamouring,  Godiya  15 

Three  fair  c  first  she  bore  him,  L.  of  Burleigh  87 

Three  c  of  three  houses,  Enoch  Arden  11 

In  this  the  c  play'd  at  keeping  house.  ,,  24 

With  c ;  first  a  daughter.  ,,  84 

To  see  his  c  leading  evermore  Low  miserable  lives  ,,        115 

■    When  he  was  gone — the  c — what  to  do  ?  „        132 

if  he  cared  For  her  or  his  dear  c,  „        164 

Her  and  her  c,  let  her  plead  in  vain  ;  ,,        166 

by  the  love  you  bear  Him  and  his  c  ,,        308 

yet  he  sent  Gifts  by  the  c,  ,,        338 

PhiUp  was  her  c's  all-in-all ;  ,,        348 

Annie's  c  long'd  To  go  with  others,  ,,        362 

But  when  the  c  pluck'd  at  him  to  go,  ,,        369 

I  fain  would  prove  A  father  to  your  c ;  ,,        411 

Up  came  the  c  laden  with  their  spoil ;  ,,        445 

And  his  own  c  tall  and  beautiful,  ,,        762 

Lord  of  his  rights  and  of  his  c's  love, —  ,,        764 

My  c  too  !  must  I  not  speak  to  these  ?  ,,        788 

But  if  my  c  care  to  see  me  dead,  , ,        888 

A  childly  way  with  c,  and  a  laugh  Ringing  Aylmer's  Field  181 

they  talk'd.  Poor  c,  for  their  comfort :  „  427 

Bodies,  but  souls — thy  c's —  ,,  672 

Will  there  be  c's  laughter  in  their  hall  ,,  787 

That  love  to  keep  us  c  !  Princess,  Pro.  133 

they  had  but  been,  she  thought.  As  c ;  ,,  i  137 

baser  courses,  c  of  despair.'  ,,  m213 

every  woman  counts  her  due,  Love,  c,  happiness? '  ,,  245 

c,  would  they  grew  Like  field-flowers  ,,  251 

But  c  die ;  and  let  me  tell  you,  girl,  ,,  253 

C — that  men  may  pluck  them  from  our  hearts,  ,,  257 

0 — c — there  is  nothing  upon  earth  ,,  259 

Whose  name  is  yoked  with  c's,  ,,  v  418 

Kiss  and  be  friends,  like  c  being  chid  !  „  vi  289 


For  by  the  hearth  the  c  sit 

Who  takes  the  c  on  his  knee, 

Timour- Mammon  grins  on  a  pile  of  c's  bones, 

wolf  would  steal  The  c  and  devour, 

and  the  c,  housed  In  her  foul  den, 

at  tourney  once.  When  both  were  c. 

And  c  of  the  King  in  cloth  of  gold 

all  the  c  in  their  cloth  of  gold  Ran  to  her. 

The  cry  of  e,  Enids  and  Geraints 

As  c  learn,  be  thou  Wiser  for  falling  ! 

In  c  a  great  curiousness  be  well, 

Where  c  cast  their  pins  and  nails. 

To  one  at  least,  who  hath  not  c, 

Lives  for  his  c,  ever  at  its  best  And  fullest ; 

And  mirthful  sayings,  c  of  the  place. 

Where  c  sat  in  white  with  cups  of  gold. 

The  c  born  of  thee  are  sword  and  fire, 

Who  either  for  his  own  or  c's  sake, 

When  Harry  an'  I  were  c, 

dogs  of  Seville,  the  c  of  the  devil, 

'  We  have  c,  we  have  wives, 

God  help  the  wrinkled  c  that  are  Christ's 

I  am  sure  that  some  of  our  c  would  die 

They  are  all  his  c  here, 

we  past  to  this  ward  where  the  younger  c 
are  laid : 

'  Little  c  should  come  to  me.' 

I  find  that  it  always  can  please  Our  c,  the  dear 
Lord  Jesus  with  c  about  his  knees.) 

Lord  of  the  c  had  heard  her. 

Women  and  c  among  us,  God  help  them,  our  c 

'  C  and  wives — if  the  tigers  leap 

Grief  for  our  perishing  c, 

women  and  c  come  out. 

Their  wives  and  c  Spanish  concubines, 

they  play'd  with  The  c  of  Edward. 

clouds  themselves  are  c  of  the  Sun. 

Day  and  Night  are  c  of  the  Sun, 

evil  thought  may  soil  thy  c's  blood  ; 

Happy  c  in  a  sunbeam  sitting 

City  c  soak  and  blacken  soul 

laborious.  Patient  c  of  Albion, 

Household  happiness,  gracious  c, 

Father's  fault  Visited  on  the  c ! 

Innocent  maidens,  Garrulous  c. 

That  wife  and  c  drag  an  Artist  down  ! 

'  Why  left  you  wife  and  c  ? 

nurse  my  c  on  the  milk  of  Truth, 

Ah,  that  will  our  c  be. 
Chill    But  he  is  c  to  praise  or  blame. 

Then  fearing  night  and  c  for  Annie, 

Bright  was  that  afternoon.  Sunny  but  c : 

As  wan,  as  c,  as  wild  as  now : 

and  dark  the  night  and  c  ! 

and  dark  and  c  the  night ! 

Whereof  the  c,  to  him  who  breathed  it, 

'  not  even  death  Can  c  you  all  at  once  : ' 

But  he  sent  a  c  to  my  heart  when  I  saw  him 

kiss  fell  c  as  a  flake  of  snow  on  the  cheek  : 

His  winter  c's  him  to  the  root, 
Chill'd    heavens  Stifled  and  c  at  once  ; 

Would  that  have  c  her  bride-kiss  ? 

He  c  the  popular  praises  of  the  King 

The  very  fountains  of  her  life  were  c  ; 

fell  from  that  half -spiritual  height  C, 
Chilling    c  his  caresses  By  the  coldness 

like  a  phantom  pass  C  the  night : 
Chillness    Whose  c  would  make  visible 

c  of  the  sprinkled  brook  Smote  on  my  brows, 


In  Mem.  a;a;  13 

,,     Ixvi  11 

Mavd  /  i  46 

Com.  of  Arthur  27 

29 

Gareth  and  L.  533 

Marr.  of  Geraint  664 

668 

Geraint  and  E.  965 

Balin  and  Balan  75 

Merlin  and  V.  364 

430 

506 

Lancelot  and  E.  336 

Holy  Grail  555 

Last  Tournament  142 

Guinevere  425 

513 

First  Quarrd  10 

The  Revenge  30 

„  92 

SisUrs  (E.  and  E.)  183 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  11 

19 

27 
50 

72 
Def.  of  Ly/;know  8 

II 
89 

100 

Columbus  175 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  92 

Ancient  Sage  242 

245 

275 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  14 

.  218 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  59 

Vastness  24 

The  Ring  176 

Merlin  and  the  G.  56 

Romney's  R.  38 

„  129 

Akbar's  Dream  162 

The  Dawn  24 

Two  Voices  258 

Enoch  Arden  443 

670 

In  Mem.  Ixxii  17 

Guinevere  168 

174 

Pass,  of  Arthur  96 

Lover's  Tale  iv  77 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  2 

The  Wreck  32 

Ancient  Sage  119 

Aylmer's  Fidd  613 

Last  Tournament  590 

Guinevere  13 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  266 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  20 

Maud  I  XX  12 

Gareth  and  L.  1336 

Supp.  Confessions  59 

Lover's  Tale  I  633 


Chime 


Christian 


Chime  (s)    speak  for  noise  Of  clocks  and  c's, 
oft  we  two  have  heard  St.  Mary's  c's  ! 

Chime  (verb)    the  blue  river  c's  in  its  flowing 
and  those  great  bells  Began  to  c. 
Set  her  sad  will  no  less  to  c  with  his, 
changing,  c  with  never  changing  Law. 

Chimera    (Ts,  crotchets,  Christmas  solecisms, 

Chimley  (Chimney)    haiife  o'  the  c's  a-twizzen'd 


Princess  i  216 

To  W.  H.  Brookfidd  3 

All  Things  will  Die  1 

Pcdace  of  Art  158 

Enoch  Arden  248 

To  Duke  of  Argyll  11 

Princess,  Pro.  203 

Owd  Bod  22 


Chimney  (See  also  Chimley,  Chimney-top)  And  half  the  c's 

tumbled.  The  Goose  48 

And  c's  muffled  in  the  leafy  vine.  AvMey  Court  19 

For  now  her  father's  c  glows  In  Mem.  vi  29 

Chimney-top    above  the  tall  white  c-t's.  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  12 

Chin    smooth 'd  his  c  and  sleek'd  his  hair,  A  Character  11 

His  double  c,  his  portly  size.  Miller's  D.  2 

From  cheek  and  throat  and  c.  Palace  of  Art  140 

Close  up  his  eyes :  tie  up  his  c :  D.  of  the  O.  Year  48 

Her  sweet  face  from  brow  to  c :  L.  of  Burleigh  62 

reddening  in  the  furrows  of  his  c,  Princess  vi  228 

many-winter'd  fleece  of  throat  and  c.  Merlin  and  V.  841 

China    laws  Salique  And  little-footed  C,  Princess  ii  134 

China-bound    Reporting  of  his  vessel  C-b,  Enach  Arden  122 

Chink  (sound)    Even  in  dreams  to  the  c  of  his  pence,  Maud  I  x  i'3 

Chink  (crevice)    walls  Were  full  of  c's  and  holes  ;  Godiva  60 

Found  in  a  c  of  that  old  moulder'd  floor  ! '  The  Ring  280 

Chink  (verb)     For  Age  will  c  the  face,  Happy  46 

Chink'd    C  as  you  see,  and  seam'd —  Lover's  Tale  i  131 

Chirp  (a)  (See  also  Matin-chirp)    I  hear  a  c  of  birds  ;  In  Mem.  cxix  5 

Chirp  (verb)    The  cricket  c's :  the  light  burns 

low:  D.  of  the  0.  Year  iO 
Chirping    about  the  fields  you  caught  His  weary 

daylong  c.  The  Brook  53 

Chirpt    gray  cricket  c  of  at  our  hearth —  Merlin  and  V.  110 

Chirr'd    not  a  cricket  c :  In  Mem.  xcv  6 

Chirrup    The  sparrow's  c  on  the  roof,  Mariana  73 

titmouse  hope  to  win  her  With  his  c  at  her  ear.  Maud  I  xx  30 

Chirrupt    beside  me  c  the  nightingale.  Grandmother  40 

Chivalry    came  to  c :  When  some  respect,  Princess  ii  135 

urged  All  the  devisings  of  their  c  Gareth  and  L.  1349 

Choice    wherefore  rather  I  made  c  To  commune  Two  Voices  460 

Teach  that  sick  heart  the  stronger  c,  On  a  Mourner  18 

And  told  him  of  my  c.  Talking  Oak  18 

glorious  in  his  beauty  and  thy  c,  Tithonus  12 

But  you  have  made  the  wiser  c.  You  might  have  won  5 

Which  weep  the  comrade  of  my  c.  In  Mem.  xiii  9 

your  sweetness  hardly  leaves  me  a  c  Maud  I  v2i 

c  from  air,  land,  stream,  and  sea,  Pelleas  and  E.  149 

her  c  did  leap  forth  from  his  eyes  !  Lover's  Tale  i  657 

Choicest-grown    blossom  c-g  To  wreathe  a  crown  Akhar's  Dream  22 

Choke    Should  fill  and  c  with  golden  sand —  You  ask  me,  why  24 

'  A  quinsy  c  thy  cursed  note  ! '  The  Goose  29 

yellow  vapours  c  The  great  city  Maud  II  iv  63 

Chok'd    I  c.     Again  they  shriek'd  the  burthen —  Edwin  Morris  123 

Heaven,  and  Earth,  and  Time  are  c.  St.  S.  Stylites^  104 

Her  voice  C,  and  her  forehead  sank  Princess  vii  247 

hopes  are  mine,'  and  saying  that,  she  c,  Lancelot  and  E.  607 

His  mercy  c  me.  Guinevere  616 

C  all  the  syllables,  that  strove  to  rise  Lover's  Tale  i  711 

Choler    old,  but  full  Of  force  and  c,  Golden  Year  61 

Cholera    C,  scurvy,  and  fever,  Def.  of  Lucknow  84 

Chooch  (church)    An'  I  alius  comed  to  's  c  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  17 

Choorch  (church)    voated  wi'  Squoire  an'  c  an' 

staiite,  I,           15 

Choose    To  c  your  own  you  did  not  care  ;  Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  30 

'Twere  hardly  worth  my  while  to  c  In  Mem.  xxxiv  10 

arms  for  guerdon  ;  c  the  best.'  Geraint  and  E.  218 

of  overpraise  and  overblame  We  c  the  last.  Merlin  and  V.  91 

Chop  (s)     His  proper  c  to  each.  Will  Water.  116 

Among  the  c's  and  steaks  !  . ,      _     148 

Chop  (verb)    C  the  breasts  from  off  the  mother,  Boddicea  68 

Chop-house    Head-waiter  of  the  c-h  here,  WiU  Water.  209 

Chord    (See  also  Master-chord)    clear  twang  of  the 

golden  c's  Sea-Fairies  38 
note  From  that  deep  c  which  Hampden  smote     England  and  Amer.  19 

and  smote  on  all  the  c'a  with  might ;  Locksley  HaU  33 


Chord  (continued)    '  Screw  not  the  e  too  sharply  lest  it 
snap. ' 

Consonant  c's  that  shiver  to  one  note ; 

The  deepest  measure  from  the  c's : 

Will  flash  along  the  c's  and  go. 

speak  His  music  by  the  framework  and  the  c  ; 

Sweeps  suddenly  all  its  half-moulder'd  c's 

would  drop  from  the  c's  or  the  keys. 
Chorus    Go '  (shrill'd  the  cotton-spining  c) ; 


Aylm^r's  Field  469 
Princess  Hi  90 
In  Mem.  xlviii  12 
,,     Ixxxviii  12 
Holy  Grail  879 
Lover's  Tale  i  ]  9 
The  Wreck  27 

„    ,  ,  Edwin  Morris  122 

0  YOU  c  of  indolent  reviewers,  Hendecasyllabics  1 

All  that  c  of  indolent  reviewers,  ,,            12 

whereupon  Their  common  shout  in  c,  mounting,  Balin  and  Balan  87 

Chose     crag-platform,  smooth  as  burnish'd  brass  I  c.  Palace  of  Art  6 

That  sober-suited  Freedom  c.  You  ask  me,  why  6 

for  your  sake,  the  woman  that  he  c,  Dora  63 

You  c  the  best  among  us—  Enoch  Arden  293 

C  the  green  path  that  show'd  the  rarer  foot,  Lancelot  and  E.  162 

Chosen    Who  madest  him  thy  c,  Titlwnus  13 

Gods,'  he  said,  '  would  have  c  well ;  The  Victim 58 

'  Had  I  c  to  wed,  I  had  been  wedded  earlier,  Lancelot  and  E.  934 

Was  c  Abbess,  there,  an  Abbess,  Guinevere  696 

happy  to  be  c  Judge  of  Gods,  Death  of  OLnone  16 

Chousin'    an'  I  wur  c  the  wife,  North.  Cobbler  83 

Christ    (See  also  Christ  Jesus,  Jesus,  Lamb) 

Brothers  in  C— a  world  of  peace  Supp.  Confessions  29 

C,  the  Virgin  Mother,  and  the  saints  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  112 

So  I  clutch  it.     Cl'Tisgone:  ,,            207 

Save  C  as  we  believe  him—  Aylm^r's  Field  573 

as  cried  C  ere  His  agony  to  those  that  swore  ,,            793 

Not  preaching  simple  (J  to  simple  men,  Sea  Dreams  21 

C  the  bait  to  trap  his  dupe  and  fool ;  ,,191 

God  accept  him,  C  receive  him.  Ode  on  Well.  281 

The  time  draws  near  the  birth  of  C :  In  Mem.  xxviii  1 

Behold  a  man  raised  up  by  C !  ,,         xxxi  13 

The  time  draws  near  the  birth  of  C ;  ,,              dvl 

Ring  in  the  C  that  is  to  be.  ,,            ewi  32 

Ah  C,  that  it  were  possible  For  one  short  hour  Maud  II  iv  13 

As  the  churches  have  kill'd  their  C  ,,        v  29 

Sware  at  the  shrine  of  C  a  deathless  love  :  Com.  of  Arthur  466 

'  The  King  will  follow  C,  and  we  the  King  ,,              500 

we  that  fight  for  our  fair  father  C,  , ,              510 

Follow  the  deer?  follow  the  C,  the  King,  Gareth  and  L.  117 

Hath  prosper'd  in  the  name  of  C,  Balin  and  Balan  99 

the  Roman  pierced  the  side  of  C.  114 

scarce  could  spy  the  C  for  Saints,  ''            409 

saintly  youth,  the  spotless  lamb  of  C,  Merlin  and  V.  749 

all  his  legions  crying  C  and  him,  Lancelot  and  E.  305 

Ah,  C,  that  it  would  come.  Holy  Grail  93 

C  kill  me  then  But  I  will  slice  him  Pelleas  and  E.  337 

'  My  churl,  for  whom  C  died,  Last  Tournament  62 

Have  everywhere  about  this  land  of  C  Guinevere  431 

To  break  the  heathen  and  uphold  the  C,  ,,        470 

And  so  thou  lean  on  our  fair  father  C,  ,,        562 

God  my  C— I  pass  but  shall  not  die.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  28 

and  shrieks  After  the  C,  111 
wrinkled  children  that  are  C's                              Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  183 

ears  for  C  in  this  wild  field  of  Wales—  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  13 

and  raze  The  blessed  tomb  of  C ;  Columbus  99 

This  creedless  people  will  be  brought  to  C  , ,       189 

And  we  broke  away  from  the  0,  Despair  25 

A  THOUSAND  summers  ere  the  time  of  C  Ancient  Sage  1 

transfigured,  like  C  on  Hermon  hill,  Happy  38 

In  that  four-hundredth  summer  after  C,  St.  Tele^nachus  4 

Christian    C's  with  happy  countenances —  Supp.  Confessions  20 

barbarian  lower  than  the  C  child.  Locksley  Hall  174 

she,  who  kept  a  tender  C  hope,     .  Sea  Dreams  41 

The  graceful  tact,  the  C  art ;  In  Mem.  ex  16 

Nor  any  cry  of  C  heard  thereon,  Pass,  of  Arthur  128 
C  conquerors  took  and  flung  the  conquered  C  into 

flames.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  84 

That  ever  wore  a  C  marriage-ring.  Romney's  R.  36 

at  length  he  touch'd  his  gaol,  The  C  city.  St.  Tdemachus  35 

as  he  yell'd  of  yore  for  C  blood.  ,,            46 

eighty  thousand  C  faces  watch  Man  murder  man.  ,,           55 

Brahmin,  and  Buddhist,  C,  and  Parsee,  Akhar's  Dream  25 


Christian 


96 


Circle 


Christian  {continued)    I  shudder  at  the  C  and  the 

stake  ;  Akbar's  Bream  72 

in  praise  of  Whom  The  C  bell,  ,,           149 

The  C's  own  a  Spiritual  Head ;  ,,          153 

Cali'd  on  the  Power  adored  by  the  C,  Kapiolani  32 

Christian  Church    if  it  be  a  C  0,  people  ring  the  bell 

for  love  to  Thee,  Alcbar's  D.  Inscrip.  4 

Christ  Jesus    of  Him  who  died  for  men,  C  J  ['  iSt.  Telemachus  64 

Christless    C  code,  That  must  have  life  Mand  II  i  26 

Pellam,  once  A  C  foe  of  thine  BcUin  and  Balan  97 

fury  of  peoples,  and  C  frolic  of  kings,  The  Dawn  7 

Christ-like     The  tenderest  C-l  creature  Charity  32 

Christmas    {See  also  Christmas  day,  Christmas-eve, 
Christmas-mom)      in    the    pits  Which  some 

green  C  crams  with  weary  bones.  Wan  Sadftor  14 

all  the  old  honour  had  from  C  gone,  The  Epic  7 

The  cock  crows  ere  the  C  morn,  Sir  Galahad  51 

lastly  there  At  C  ;  ever  welcome  at  the  Hall,  Aylmer's  Field  114 

when  the  second  C  came,  escaped  His  keepers,  , ,            838 

We  seven  stay'd  at  C  up  to  read  ;  Princess,  Pro.  178 

play'd  Charades  and  riddles  as  at  C  here,  „         189 

told  a  tale  from  mouth  to  mouth  As  here  at  C.'  ,,         192 

Chimeras,  crotchets,  G  solecisms,  ,,         203 

The  C  bells  from  hill  to  hill  In  Mem.  xxviii  3 

weave  The  holly  round  the  G  hearth  ;  „             xxx  2 
Again  at  G  did  we  weave  The  holly  round  the  G 

hearth ;  ,,         Ixxviii  1 

where  the  winter  thorn  Blossoms  at  G,  Holy  Grail  53 

Christmas  day    we  were  married  o'  C  d,  First  Quarrel  39 

Cliristmas  Eave    Oia.G  E,  an'  as  cowd  as  this,  Owd  Rod  31 

goa  that  night  to  'er  foolk  by  cause  o'  the  0  E ;  ,,52 

'  be  a-turnin'  ma  hout  upo'  U E"l  ,,59 

Christmas-eve    {See  also  Christmas  Eave)    At  Francis 

Allen's  on  the  C-e, —  The  Epic  1 

How  dare  we  keep  our  C-e  ;  In  Mem.  xxix  4 

And  sadly  fell  our  G-e.  ,,         xxx  4 

And  calmly  fell  our  6'-e :  ,,     Ixxviii  4t 

And  strangely  falls  our  O-e,  , ,            cvi 

Christmas-morn    church-bells  ring  in  the  G-m.  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  31 

Christopher  Colon  (Columbus)    '  i3ehold  the  bones 

of  C  G ' —  Columbus  210 

Chronicle    ran  thro'  all  the  coltish  c.  The  Brook  159 

dash'd  Into  the  c  of  a  deedful  day,  Aylmer's  Field  196 

we  keep  a  c  With  all  about  him ' —  Princess,  Pro.  27 

So  sang  the  gallant  glorious  c ;  ,,            49 

The  total  c's  of  man,  the  mind,  ,,       n  881 

Chronicler    ask'd  his  G  Of  Akbar  '  what  has  darken'd 

thee  to-night  ? '  Alcbar's  Dream  2 

Chrysalis    This  dull  c  Cracks  into  shining  wings,  St.  S.  Stylites  155 

Or  ruin'd  c  of  one.  In  Mem.  Ixxxii  8 

But  she  from  out  her  death-like  c.  Lover's  Tale  Hi  41 

Chrysolite    sardius,  C,  beryl,  topaz,  Columbus  85 

Ghrysoprase    c,  Jacynth,  and  amethyst —  ,,        85 

Chuch  (church)    the  c  weant  happen  a  fall.  Church-warden,  etc.  10 

as  long  as  I  lives  to  the  owd  e  now,  ,,                 15 

Chuch- warden  (church-warden)    I  bean  c-w  mysen 

i' the  parish  fur  fifteen  year,  ,,                    8 

Well — sin  ther  bea  c-w's,  ,,                    9 

An'  then  I  wur  chose  G-w  „                 38 

plaate  fuller  o'  Soondays  nor  ony  c-w  afoor,  ,,                 40 

Chuckle    c,  and  grin  at  a  brother's  shame  ;  Maud  I  iv  29 

Chuckled    It  clutter'd  here,  it  c  there  ;  The  Goose  25 

Church    {See  also  Chooch,  Choorch,  Christian  Church, 

Chuch)     As  homeward  by  the  c  1  drew.  The  Letters  44 

a  moulder'd  c  ;  and  higher  A  long  street  Enoch  Arden  4 

c, — one  night,  except  Por  greenish  glimmerings  Aylmer's  Field  621 

pious  variers  from  the  c.  To  chapel ;  Sea  Dreams  19 

And  in  the  dark  c  like  a  ghost  In  Mem.  Ixvii  15 

A  single  c  below  the  hill  „            civ  3 

She  came  to  the  village  c,  Maud  I  viii  1 

fragrant  gloom  Of  foreign  c'es —  ,,       xix  54 

kill  their  c,  As  the  c'es  have  kill'd  ,,      II  v2S 

Chief  of  the  c  in  Britain,  Com.  of  Arthur  454 
walls  Of  that  low  e  he  built  at  Glastonbury.           Balin  and  Balan  367 

A  little  lonely  c  in  days  of  yore,  Holy  Grail  64 


Church  {continvM)    first  may  be  last— I  have  heard  it  in  c—       Rizpah  66 

he  calls  to  me  now  from  the  c  , ,       84 
To  the  deaf  c— to  be  let  in—                                 Sisters  {E.  and  E. )  238 

Back  to  the  pure  and  universal  c,  isir  J.  Oldcastle  71 

Tether 'd  to  these  dead  pillars  of  the  G —  ,,          121 

Authority  of  the  G,  Power  of  the  keys  ! '  „           161 

Sylvester  shed  the  venom  of  world- wealth  Into  the  c,  „          167 

chiefly  to  my  sorrow  by  the  G,  Columbus  56 

Holy  G,  from  whom  1  never  swerved  ,,        63 

my  Fathers  belong'd  to  the  c  of  old.  The  Wreck  1 

Christian  love  among  the  C's  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  86 

Break  the  State,  the  G,  the  Throne,  ,,             138 

Her  spirit  hovering  by  the  c.  The  Ring  478 

Touch'd  at  the  golden  Cross  of  the  c'es,  Merlin  and  the  G.  68 

all  but  sure  I  have — in  Kendal  c —  Bomney's  E.  19 

temple,  neither  Pagod,  Mosque,  nor  G,  Akbar's  Dream  178 

Church-bell    The  sweet  c-b's  began  to  peal.  Two  Voices  408 

Toll  ye  the  c-b  sad  and  slow,  D.  of  the  O.  Year  3 

clear  c-b's  ring  in  the  Christmas-morn.  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  31 

Church-commissioner    Now  harping  on  the  c-c's,  The  Epic  15 

Church-harpy    scare  church-harpies  from  the  master's 

feast ;  To  J.  M.  K.  3 

Churchmen    Should  all  our  c  foam  in  spite  To  F.  D.  Maurice  9 

the  c  fain  would  kill  their  church,  Maud  II  v  28 

Church-tower    graves  grass-green  beside  a  gray  c-t.  Circumstance  6 

morning  grows  apace,  and  lights  the  old  c-t,  The  Flight  93 

Churchwarden    (See  also  Chuch-warden)    Until  the 

grave  c  doft'd.  The  Goose  19 

Churchyard  wall    — in  the  night  by  the  c  w.  Rizpah  56 

Churl    {See  also  Village-churls)    low  c,  compact  of 

thankless  earth,  Godiva  66 

The  c  in  spirit,  up  or  down  In  Mem.  cxi  1 

The  c  in  spirit,  howe'er  he  veil  ,,             5 

Mark  would  sully  the  low  state  of  c :  Gareth  and  L.  427 

Then  riding  close  behind  an  ancient  c,  Marr.  of  Geraint  261 

transitory  word  Made  knight  or  c  or  child  Balin  and  Balan  162 

not  worthy  to  be  knight ;  A  c,  a  clown  ! '  „              286 

'  G,  thine  axe ! '  he  cried,  ,,              295 

said  the  c,  '  our  devil  is  a  truth,  „              302 

'  Old  fabler,  these  be  fancies  of  the  c,  ,,              307 

laugh'd  the  father  saying,  '  Fie,  Sir  C,  Lancelot  and  E.  200 

A  c,  to  whom  indignantly  the  King,  '  My  c.  Last  Tournament  61 

sawing  the  air,  said  the  maim'd  c,  ,,              67 

That  doest  right  by  gentle  and  by  c,  ,,              74 

'  Take  thou  my  c,  and  tend  him  curiously  ,,              90 

Cicala    At  eve  a  dry  c  sung,  Mariana  in  the  S.  85 

Cider    flask  of  c  from  his  father's  vats,  Avdley  Court  27 

Cinder    may  make  My  scheming  brain  a  c,  Merlin  and  V.  933 

Circle  (s)    {See  also  Eagle-circle,  Fairy-circle,  Home- 
circle,  Sea-circle,  Water-circle)    round  about 

the  c's  of  the  globes  The  Poet  43 

In  the  same  c  we  revolve.  Two  Voices  314 

In  lazy  mood  I  watch'd  the  little  c's  die  ;  Miller's  D,  74 

The  greensward  into  greener  c's.  Gardener's  D.  134 

in  the  c  of  his  arms  Enwound  us  both  ;  , ,             216 

Sun  will  run  his  orbit,  and  the  Moon  Her  c.  Love  and  Duty  23 

Thro'  all  the  c  of  the  golden  year  ? '  Golden  Year  51 

music  winding  trembled,  Wov'n  in  c's :  Vision  of  Sin  18 

Caught  the  sparkles,  and  in  c's,  „           30 

mouldy  dens  The  chap-fallen  c  spreads ;  ,,         172 

yell'd  and  round  me  drove  In  narrowing  c's  Lucretius  57 

a  group  of  girls  In  c  waited.  Princess,  Pro.  69 

The  c  rounded  under  female  hands  ,,       ii  372 

Thro'  c's  of  the  bounding  sky,  In  Mem.  xvii    6 

And  in  a  c  hand-in-hand  Sat  silent,  ,,         xxx  11 

Against  the  c  of  the  breast,  ,,           xlv    Z 

With  all  the  c  of  the  wise,  ,,           Ixi    3 

In  c  round  the  blessed  gate,  „      Ixxxv  23 

0  bliss,  when  all  in  c  drawn  About  him,  ,,    Ixxxix  21 

memory  fades  From  all  the  c  of  the  hills.  ,,             «  24 

held  All  in  a  gap-mouth'd  c  his  good  mates  Gareth  and  L.  511 

remnant  that  were  left  Payniro  amid  their  e's.  Holy  Grail  664 

The  c  widens  till  it  lip  the  marge,  Pelleas  and  E.  94 

The  phantom  c  of  a  moaning  sea.  Pass,  of  Arthur  87 

shower'd  down  Rays  of  a  mighty  c  Lover's  Tale  i  418 


I 


Circle 

Circle  (s)  (continued)    Scarce  housed  within  the  c  of  this 

^*^'    ,,         ,^^..     .    ^     ,    .  Lover's  Tale  ii79 

caught  and  brought  him  in  To  their  charm'd  c  iv  377 

Whirling  their  sabres  in  c'5  of  light!                 '  Heavy  Brigade  Si 

Circle  (verb)    Make  knowledge  c  with  the  winds ;      L<m  thou  thy  land  17 

tho  I  cm  the  grain  Five  hundred  rings  Talking  Oak  83 

We  c  with  the  seasons.  jym  prater.  64 

full  voice  which  c  5  round  tho  grave,  Princess  ii  45 

And  c  moaning  m  the  air :  /„  Mem.  xii  15 

It  c  5  round,  and  fancy  plays,  Qq^  g j 

birds  that  c  round  the  tower  Are  cheeping  The  Ring  85 

Circled    {See  also  Azure-circled,  Crimson-circled,  Musky- 
circled.  Ruby-circled)    G  thro'  all  experiences,  pure 

T  ''^^'              -^i,  ^,  CEnone  166 

I  prosper,  c  with  thy  voice ;  /„  j^g^  ^xxx  15 

c  with  her  maids.  The  Lady  Lyonors  Garetk  and  L  1374 

and  settling  e  all  the  lists  Uarr.  of  Geraini  547 

Circlet    prize  A  golden  c  and  a  knightly  sword,  PeUeasandE  12 

Pelleas  for  his  lady  won  The  golden  c,  '  14 

he  will  fight  for  me.  And  win  tho  c :  "          119 

And  win  me  this  fine  c,  Pelleas,  "          128 

The  sword  and  golden  e  were  aqhieved.  "          170 

she  caught  the  c  from  his  lance,  "          J73 

yea  and  he  that  won  The  c  ?  "          321 

their  wills  are  hers  For  whom  I  won  the  c;  "          325 

the  e  of  the  jousts  Bound  on  her  brow,  "          434 

The  c  of  the  tourney  round  her  brows,  "          454 

—on  her  head  A  diamond  c,  Lover's  Tale  iv  2S9 

Circling    past  her  feet  the  swallow  c  flies.  Prog,  of  Spring  44 

Circuit    The  c's  of  thine  orbit  round  In  Mem.  Ixiii  11 

Circumstance    strong  Against  the  grief  of  c  Supp.  Confessions  92 

saw  The  hollow  orb  of  moving  O  Palace  of  Art  255 

And  breasts  the  blows  of  c,  Jn  Mem.  Ixiv  7 

This  ever-changing  world  of  e.  To  Duke  of  A  rgyll  10 

Cirque    Within  the  magic  c  of  memory,  Lcrver's  Tale  ii  159 

Citadel    Troas  and  Ilion's  column'd  c,  CEnone  13 

Mast-throng'd  beneath  her  shadowing  c  118 

A  moulder'd  c  on  the  coast.  The  Daisy  28 

Fell  the  colony,  city,  and  c,  Boadicea  86 

Past  thro'  into  his  c,  the  brain.  Lover's  Tale  i  631 

Citadel-crown'd    Tempest-buffeted,  c-c.  wiU  9 

Cited    Some  c  old  Lactantius :  Columbus  49 
Citizen    (See  also  Fellow-citizen)    gravest  c  seems  to 

lose  his  head.  Princess,  Con.  59 

heart  of  the  c  hissing  in  war  Maud  I  i  24 

like  a  statue,  rear'd  To  some  great  c,  Tiresias  83 

Citron-shado'w    clove  The  c-s's  in  the  blue :  Arabian  Nights  15 

City    (See  also  Mother-city,  Queen-city,  Soldier-city) 

Full  of  the  c's  stilly  sound,  103 

a  c  glorious— A  great  and  distant  ff—  Deserted' House  19 

Thro'  the  open  gates  of  the  c  afar.  Dying  Swan  34 

Below  the  c's  eastern  towers  :  Fatima  9 

Or  in  a  clear- wall'd  c  on  the  sea,  Palace  of  Art  97 

When  I  and  Eustace  from  the  c  went  Gardener's  D.  2 

grew  The  fable  of  the  c  where  wo  dwelt.  6 

News  from  the  humming  c  comes  to  it  "          35 

O'er  the  mute  c  stole  with  folded  wings,  '        I86 

in  the  dust  and  drouth  Of  c  life  !  Edwin  "Morris  4 

Bej'ond  the  lodge  the  c  lies,  Talking  Oak  5 

cities  of  men  And  manners,  climates,  Ulysses  13 

/  shaped  The  c's  ancient  legend  into  this : —  Godiva  4 

Mammon  made  The  harlot  of  the  cities  :  Aylmer's  Field  375 

A  C  clerk,  but  gently  born  and  brod  ;  Sea  Dreams  1 

There  rose  a  shriek  as  of  a  c  sack'd  ;  Princess  iv  165 

we  dash'd  Your  ct<ies  into  shards  with  catapults,  ,,        »  138 

cross  of  gold  That  shines  over  c  and  river.  Ode  on  Well.  50 

when  the  long-illumined  cities  flame,  228 

Flash,  ye  cities,  in  rivers  of  fire !  W.  to  Alexandra  19 

e  Of  little  Monaco,  basking,  glow'd.  The  Daisy  7 

the  c  glitter'd,  Thro'  cypress  avenues,  47 

Yet  here  to-night  in  this  dark  c,  "95 

The  c  sparkles  like  a  grain  of  salt.  'iviU  20 

they  rioted  in  the  c  of  Cdnobellno  !  BoOdicea  60 

Fell  the  colony,  c,  and  citadel,  gg 

And  oxen  from  the  c,  and  goodly  sheep  Spec,  of  Iliad  4 


97 


Claay 


Ci\iy  (continued)     breathed  his  latest  breath,  That  C.         In  Mem  xcviii  6 

I  come  once  more :  the  c  sleeps  :  ^n  mem.  xcvni  0 

bubbles  o'er  like  a  c,  with  gossip,  "  MavA  Th,  S 

For  a  tumult  shakes  the  c,  Maud  I  xvS 

vapours  choke  The  great  c  sounding  wide  :  "           fiV 
paced  a  c  all  on  fire  With  sun  and  cloth  of  gold.       Com  of  Arthur  479 

At  times  the  summit  of  the  high  cflash'd;  '         G^^eta^L  ill 

the  whole  fair  c  had  disappeared.  "  ili 

Here  is  a  c  of  Enchanters,  "            Jgo 

'  Lord,  there  is  no  such  c  anywhere,  "            oor 

Out  of  the  c  a  blast  of  music  peal'd,  "            000 

(Your  c  moved  so  weirdly  in  the  mist)  "            04K 

there  be  any  c  at  all.  Or  all  a  vision :  "            94Q 

Fairy  Queens  have  built  the  c,  son ;  "            ^q 

hold  The  King  a  shadow,  and  the  c  real :  "            orr 

seeing  the  c  is  built  To  music,  "            ^^ 

a  c  of  shadowy  palaces  And  stately,  "            qAo 

nay,  the  King's— Descend  into  the  c : '  "            r^o 

thro'  silent  faces  rode  Down  the  slope  c,  "            ytn 

Vivien,  into  Camelot  stealing,  lodged  Low  in  " 

urSf  far-off  ciHes  while  they  dance-  ^""^'^  ""'^  ^1?! 

He  saw  two  cities  in  a  thousand  boats  "          k«i 

heads  should  moulder  on  the  c  gates.  "          ^04 

arisen  since  With  cities  on  their  flanks—  "          676 

Past  up  the  still  rich  c  to  his  kin,  Lancelot  and  E.  802 

Far  up  the  dim  rich  c  to  her  kin ;  oVk 

thro'  the  dim  rich  c  to  the  fields,  "              047 

across  the  fields  Far  into  the  rich  c,  "              om 

crown  thee  king  Far  in  the  spiritual  c : '  Holy  Grail  162 

all  the  dim  rich  c,  roof  by  roof,  "           990 

And  on  the  top,  a  c  wall'd :  "422 

I  past  Far  thro' a  ruinous  c,  "          400 

crown  me  king  Far  in  the  spiritual  c  ;  "483 

I  saw  the  spiritual  e  and  all  her  spires  "          526 

from  the  star  there  shot  A  rose-red  sparkle  to  the  c  "          ^so 

But  when  ye  reach 'd  The  c,  '              "708 

0,  when  we  reach'd  The  c,  "          iVS 

Andfollow'dtothec.  Pelleas  and  E.  686 

AZ'^nlli^F^  '1^°^^'  rf  '^^?^y  ^''""'^  ^"'^  Tournament  127 

And  down  the  c  Dagonet  danced  away  ;  ocq 

and  in  it  Far  cities  burnt,  "Ouiri^-^X^ 

saw  the  King  Ride  toward  her  from  the  c,  ^umezere^ 

As  of  some  lonely  c  sack'd  by  night.  Pass,  of  Arthur  43 

bounds,  as  if  some  fair  e  were  one  voice  450 

the  full  c peal'd  Thee  and  thy  Prince  !  To  theQueen  ii 26 

The  c  deck'd  herself  To  meet  me,  Columbus  9 

when  a  smoke  from  a  c  goes  to  heaven  AchiUes  over  the  T  7 

men  contend  in  grievous  war  From  their  own  e,  in 

The  madness  of  our  cities  and  their  kings.  "Tiresias  71 

from  within  The  c  comes  a  murmur  void  of  joy  loi 

All  day  long  far-off  in  the  cloud  of  tho  c,           '  The  Wreck  29 

From  out  his  ancient  c  came  a  Seer  Ancient  Sage  2 

I  am  weaned  of  our  c,  son,  ^  -.f 

But  some  in  yonder  c  hold,  my  son,  "          go 

night  enough  is  there  In  yon  dark  c :  "        253 

storms  Of  Autumn  swept  across  the  c,  Demeter  and  P  71 

North  to  gam  Her  capital  c,  The  Rina  489 

ruin,  this  little  c  of  sewers,  HaZf^l 

To  the  c  and  palace  Of  Arthur  the  king ;  Merlin  and  theG  65 

passing  it  glanced  upon  Hamlet  or  c,  \nA 

Beautiful  c,  the  centre  and  crater  Beautiful  Cihil 

at  length  he  touch'd  his  goal.  The  Christian  c.  St.  TdeLmhuizl 

war  dashing  down  upon  caies  and  blazing  farms.  The  Dawn  8 

press  of  a  thousand  cities  is  prized  14 

rnJi^L''  r  f*"""  ^f  *  ^""^  n  "  '"^  ^^?^'  1  Riflemen,  Form  /  18 

City-gate    before  the  c-g  s  Came  on  her  brother  Lancelot  and  E  790 

City-gloom    Droopt  in  the  giant-factoried  c-g,  Sea  Dredms  5 

City-house    this  pretty  house,  this  c-h  of  ours  ?  Citv  Child  7 
City-roar    a  shout  More  joyful  than  the  c-r  that  hails 

r™-Tit?TTu '■  ^'°^J     V    .          .  Princess,  Con.  m 

X^^J^^y  .  ^^^  ^®®P  ^  *o^ch  of  sweet  c  Geraint  and  E  312 

CmliBation    Or  an  infant  c  be  ruled  with  rod  Maud  I  iv  47 

Claay  (clay)    hoickt  my  feet  wi' a  flop  fro' the  c.  Spinster's  S's  30 

it  wur  clatted  all  ower  wi'  c.  Aa 

G 


Clack'd-Clackt  ] 

Clack'd-Clackt    It  dacKd  and  cackled  louder.  The  Goose  24 

The  palace  bang'd ,  and  buzz'd  and  clackt,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  14 

Clad     [See  also  Ivy -clad.  Lady -clad.  Vine -clad 

Winter-clad)    Or  long-hair'd  page  in  crimson  c!     Z.  of  ShcdoU  ii  22 

bhe  c  herself  m  a  russet  gown,  £ady  (ji^^^g  57 

looking  hardly  human  strangely  c,  Enoch  Arden  638 

c  her  hke  an  April  daffodilly  p,i„,,,^  ^  324 

bix  hundred  maidens  c  \n  purest  white,  472 

c  in  iron  burst  the  ranks  of  war,  "  "       iv  504 

Mixt  with  myrtle  and  c  with  vine,  2%g  jgigi  jg 

three  were  c  like  tillers  of  the  soil,  Gareth  and  L  181 

boat  Become  a  living  creature  c  with  wings  ?  Holy  Grail  519 

Leapt  lightly  c  m  bridal  white-  Iter's  Tale  Hi  44 

ere  thy  maiden  birk  be  wholly  c.  Prog,  of  Spring  50 

Claim  (b)    a  thousand  c  s  to  reverence  closed  To  the  Queen  27 

Smile  at  the  c  s  of  long  descent.  X.  c.  F.  de  Vere  52 

she  will  not :  waive  your  c :  p.^^,,,,  ^  296 

lo  learn  if  Ida  yet  would  cede  our  c,  333 

sware  to  combat  for  my  c  till  death.  "        Qgn 

■  With  c  on  c  from  right  to  right,  "         4^7 

Nor  did  her  father  cease  to  press  my  c,  '              "     ^i  37 

asserte  his  c  In  that  dread  sound  Ode  on  Well.  70 

Attest  their  great  commander  s  c  24g 
From  our  first  Charles  by  force  we  wrung  our  c's.         Third  of  Feb  26 

Dispute  the  c's,  arrange  the  chances  ;  To  F.  D.  Maurice  31 

And  each  prefers  his  separate  c  /„  Mem  cii  18 

crush  d  in  the  clash  of  jarring  c's,  Maud  III  vi  44 

lays  c  to  for  the  ady  at  his  side,  Marr.  of  Geraint  487 

Who  had  a  twofold  c  upon  my  heart,  Lover's  Tale  i  210 

their  c  to  be  thy  peers;  To  Victor  Hugo  6 

I  am  bankmpt  of  all  c  On  your  obedience,  Eomney's  R.  70 

rinirFio',^f'nf''"^^^^"?''l*fu^     T  Akbar's  Dream  4Z 

Claim  (verb)    Of  sounder  leaf  than  I  can  c  ;  You  might  have  won  4 

in  his  walks  with  Edith,  c  A  distant  kinship  Aylmer's  Field  61 

much  that  Ida  c  s  as  right  Had  ne'er  been  mooted,  Princess  v  202 

Who  but  c  5  her  as  his  due?  MaudlxxW 

Came  not  to  us,  of  us  to  c  the  prize,  Lancelot  and  E.  544 

Wilt  spring  to  me,  and  c  me  thine,  Guinevere  565 

should  this  first  master  c  His  service.  Loner's  Tale  iv  265 
-one  has  come  to  c  his  bride,                               Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  263 

ryJj'^^VT^^^'''^^V'%       ,  Bandit's  nLthl 

Claim  d    So  c  the  quest  and  rode  away,  Balin  and  Balan  138 

Munel  c  and  open  d  what  I  meant  For  Miriam,  The  Rina  242 

Claiming    c  each  This  meed  of  fairest.  (EnrnieSQ 

stood  once  more  before  her  face,  G  her  promise.  Enoch  Arden  458 

Nay,  but  I  am  not  c  your  pity :  Desvair  37 

Clamber'd    c  half  way  up  The  counter  side ;  Golden  Year  6 

narrow  street  that  c  toward  the  mill.  Emch  Arden  60 

Icoerattopwithpam.  Princess  iv  208 

Piornni^iL''"  °^        '''■''^  ^^ T  "Y  "?:  P^^y'  ^f^  Flight  22 

Clambenng    and  c  on  a  mast  In  harbour,  Enoch  Arden  105 

Clamour  (s)    And  fill  d  the  house  with  c.  y^e  Goose  36 

^Jl  fii^M  I't,     f''''' w-!u*  ^^'^  Water.  187 

and  fill  d  the  shores  With  c.  ^woc^i  Jr,ie«  636 

a  herd  of  boys  with  c  bowl'd  and  stump'd  Princess,  Pro.  81 

lo  hear  my  father  s  c  at  our  backs  {  IO5 

A  c  thicken'd,  mixt  with  inmost  terms  "        a  446 

till  a  c  grew  As  of  a  new-world  Babel,  "        {^  aqq 

trampling  the  flowers  With  c:  "         » 248 

Far-off  from  the  c  of  liars  behod  j^«„^  7  i^  5I 

C  and  rumble,  and  ringing  and  clatter,  7/  ^  13 

TJ^^'^iiM"^  the  rooks  At  distance,  Marr.  of  Geraint  249 

Clamour  (verb)    and  to  c,  mourn,  and  sob,      .  St.  S.  Stylites  6 

Yet  cease  I  not  to  c  and  to  cry,  40 

Nor  ever  ceased  to  c  for  the  ring  ;  The  Rina  389 

Clamour  d     'Dead    c  the  good  woman,  Enoch  Arden  8i0 

^T  u    /r""!,?  casement,  '  Run  '  The  Brook  85 

Take  Lilia,  then,  for  heroine, '  c  he,  Princess,  Pro.  223 

Melissa  c  '  Flee  the  death  ; '  tt>  ]  66 

And  while  the  people  e  for  a  king  Com.  of  Arthur  235 


'«*  Clash 

Clamour'd  (continued)    I  ask  you,  is  it  c  by  the  child.     Merlin  and  V.  771 

Clamouring    c,  'If  we  pay,  we  starve  ! '  Godiva  15 

c  etiquette  to  death,  Unmeasured  mirth  ;  Princess  v  17 

but  c  out    Mine— mine— not  yours,  ^^  149 

c  on,  till  Ida  heard,  Look'd  up,  "         ^bO 

pulses  at  the  c  of  her  enemy  fainted  Bokdicea  82 

the  damsel  c  all  the  while,  Gareth  and  L.  \\U 

Clan     beyond  the  passions  of  the  primal  c  ?  Locksley  H    Sixty  93 

Clang   s)     overhead  Begins  the  clash  and  c  In  Mem'   Con.  61 

Clang  (verb)    An  eagle  c  an  eagle  to  the  sphere.  Princess  Hi  106 

,  wildswan  m  among  the  stars  Would  c  it,  {■„  435 

the  wood  which  grides  and  c's  7«  Mem.  cvii  11 

O  battleaxe,  and  clash  brand  !  (repeat)       Com.  of  Arthur  493   4%   499 

ring  thy  name  To  every  hoof  that  c's  it,  Ttresia's  138 

Clang'd    left  and  right  The  bare  black  cliff  c  round  him,  M.  d' Arthur  188 

knell  to  my  desires   V  on  the  bridge  ;  Princess  iv  175 

left  and  right  The  bare  black  cliff  c  round  him.       Pass,  of  Arthur  356 

again  the  bells  Jangled  and  c :  Lover's  Tale  Hi  53 

Olangmg    (bee  also  Iron-Clanging)    you  hear  The  windy 

rior,  ^-^°*n^^"'^.'''*f.u^°''^  '  .            ....  Gardeners  D.B8 

Clap  (8)     Dead  c  s  of  thunder  from  within  Sea  Breams  55 

stammering  cracks  and  c's  that  follow'd.  Merlin  and  V  942 

Clap  (verb)     C  s  her  tiny  hands  above  me,  Lilian  4 

crested  bird  That  c's  his  wings  at  dawn.  D.  of  F  Women  180 

c  their  cheeks,  to  call  them  mine.  /„  Mem.  Ixxxiv  18 

J  he  starling  c  s  his  tiny  castanets.  Prog,  of  Spring  56 

Clapper    Than  in  a  c  clapping  in  a  garth.  Princess  ii  227 

Clapping    Laughing  and  c  their  hands  between,  The  Merman  29 

Ihan  in  a  clapper  c  in  a  garth.  Princess  ii  227 

all  within  was  noise  Of  songs,  and  c  hands.  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  19 

from  distant  walls  There  came  a  c  as  of  phantom 

PTo«+ ^'^'^^^^  I,     1,     J        J      •    ,    .X  Marr.  of  Geraint  bm 

Olapt    and  c  her  hands  and  cried,  '  I  marvel  Palace  of  Art  189 

c  his  hand  On  Everard's  shoulder.  The  Epic  21 

c  him  on  the  hands  and  on  the  cheeks,  Bo^a  133 

c  his  hand  in  mine  and  sang—  Audley  Court  39 

And  feet  that  ran,  and  doors  that  c,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  3 

c  her  hands  and  cried  for  war,  Princess  iv  590 

Lancelot  '—and  she  c  her  hands—  Gareth  and  L.  1290 

mused  a  little,  and  then  c  her  hands  Merlin  and  V  8m 

Dagonet  c  his  hands  and  shriU'd,  Last  Tournament  353 

ba  I  ban  t  c  eyes  on  im  yit,  ViUage  Wife  123 

1  c  my  hands.  Hnnmi  S*? 

Clara  Vere  de  Vere    (-Sfee  oZso  Vere  de  Vere)    Lady  ^ 
rr  '^  r  '^  ^' (>:epeat)                          i.  V.  V.  de  Vere  1,  9,  17,  25,  33,  41 

Trust  me,  GVd  V  l.  O.  V.de  Vere  49 

1  know  you,  CVdV  C7 

C,  C  F  d  F,  "               gi 

^^^A    To  give  his  cousin  Lady  0.  'tody  Clare  A 

And  that  is  well,'  said  Lady  C.  ^          12 

'  It  was  my  cousin,'  said  Lady  C,  "         15 

And  you  are  mo<  the  Lady  C '  "         20 

Said  Ijady  C,  '  that  ye  speak  so  wild  ? '  "22 

She  was  no  longer  Lady  C :  "        go 

Lady  C,  you  shame  your  worth  !  "        qq 

beggar  born,'  she  said,  '  And  not  the  Lady  C  "         72 

And  you  shall  still  be  Lady  O.'  "         33 

Clariance    Claudias,  and  6' of  Northnmberland,  Com.  of  Arthur  113 

Claribel     Where  0  low-lieth  (repeat)  Claribel  1    8  21 

Claiion    shouts,  and  c's  shrilling  unto  blood.  Com.  of  Arthur  'l03 

Clash  (8)     I  heard  the  c  so  clearly.  Sea  Dreams  136 

Koll  of  cannon  and  c  of  arms,  Qde  on  Wdl.  116 

overhead  Begins  the  c  and  clang  Jn  Mem.,  Con.  61 

crush  dm  the  c  of  jarring  claims,  Maud  III  vi  44 

bhield-breakings,  and  the  c  of  brands,  Pass,  of  Arthur  109 

long  loud  c  of  rapid  marriage-bells.  Lover's  Tale  Hi  23 

by  their  c.  And  prelude  on  the  keys.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  1 

And  the  c  and  boom  of  the  bells  v,  of  Maeldune  110 
reasons  had  He  to  be  glad  of  The  c  of  the  war- 

glaive-  _„     ,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  78 

brightens  at  the  c  of  '  Yes    and  '  No,"  Ancient  Sage  71 

struck  from  out  the  c  of  warring  wills  ;  Prog,  of  Spring  95 

hear  The  c  of  tides  that  meet  in  narrow  seas.—  Akbar's  Dream  58 

and  your  fiery  c  of  meteorites  ?  God  and  the  Univ.  3 

Clasn  (verb)    I  ly  on  to  c  together  again,  Lucretius  41 


Clash 


99 


Clear 


Clash  (verb)  [continued)    0  hard,  when  love  and  duty  c  !     Princess  ii  293 

but  you  c  them  all  in  one,  ,,       v  180 

C,  ye  bells,  in  the  merry  March  air  !  W.  to  Alexandra  18 

C  the  darts  and  on  the  buckler  Boadicea  79 
Clang  battleaxe,  and  c  brand  !  (repeat)      Com.  of  Arthur  493,  496,  499 

C  like  the  coming  and  retiring  wave,  Gareth  and  L.  522 

each  would  c  the  shield,  and  blow  the  horn.  Last  Tournament  436 

at  her  girdle  c  The  golden  keys  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  3 

where  the  loyal  bells  C  welcome —  The  Ring  483 

And  I  c  with  an  iron  Truth,  The  Dreamer  6 

Clash 'd    Dry  c  his  harness  in  the  icy  caves  M.  d' Arthur  186 

from  them  e  The  bells  ;  we  listen'd  ;  Gardener's  D.  220 

shameless  noon  Was  c  and  hammer'd  Godiva  75 

Touch'd,  clink'd,  and  c,  and  vanish 'd,  Sea  Dreams  135 

and  one,  that  c  in  arms.  Princess  v  5 

they  c  their  arms ;  the  drum  Beat ;  ,,       250 

he  c  His  iron  palms  together  with  a  cry  ;  ,,       353 

all  silent,  save  When  armour  c  or  jingled,  ,,  vi  363 

C  with  his  fiery  few  and  won  ;  Ode  on  Well.  100 

As  the  music  c  in  the  hall ;  Maud  I  xxii  34 

his  arms  C ;  and  the  sound  was  good  Gareth  and  L.  312 

Sir  Gareth 's  brand  C  his,  and  brake  it  utterly  „          1148 
thrice  They  c  together,  and  thrice  they  brake  their 

spears.  Marr.  of  Geraint  562 

they  sat.  And  cuj)  c  cup  ;  Bdin  and  Balan  85 

when  they  c,  Rolling  back  upon  Balin,  ,,            561 

table  of  our  Arthur  closed  And  c  Holy  Grail  330 

And  c  with  Pagan  hordes,  and  bore  them  down  ,,        479 

meadow-grass  Borne,  e :  FeUeas  and  E.  562 

Dry  c  his  harness  in  the  icy  caves  Pass,  of  Arthur  354 

slowly-ridging  rollers  on  the  cliffs  C,  Lover's  Tale  i  58 

Two  trains  c :  then  and  there  he  was  crush'd  Charity  21 

Clashing    (See  also  Iron-clashing)    there  were  cries  and 

c's  in  the  nest,  GareOi  and  L.  70 

Enid  heard  the  c  of  his  fall,  Geraint  and  E.  509 

With  all  her  golden  thresholds  c,  Lover's  Tale  i  605 

butted  each  other  with  c  of  bells,  V.  of  Maddune  108 

Clasp  (fastening)     Buckled  with  golden  c's  before  ;      Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  25 

Clasp  (embrace)    In  glance  and  smile,  and  c  and 

kiss,  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  7 

Clasp  (verb)    I'd  c  it  round  so  close  and  tight.  Miller's  D.  180 

He  c's  the  crag  with  crooked  hands  ;  The  Eagle  1 

but  everywhere  Some  must  c  Idols.  Swpp.  Confessions  179 

c  These  idols  to  herself  ?  Lucretius  164 

c  it  once  again,  And  call  her  Ida,  Princess  vii  95 

C  her  window,  trail  and  twine  !  Window.    At  the  W.  2 

Trail  and  twine  and  c  and  kiss,  ,,                  4 

Let  Love  c  Grief  lest  both  be  drown'd,  In  Mem.  i  9 

Some  landing-place,  to  c  and  say,  , ,    xlvii  15 

Thy  passion  c's  a  secret  joy  :  ,,  IxxxviiiS 

and  c  the  hands  and  murmur,  LocTcsley  H.,  Sixty  192 

Ah,  c  me  in  your  arms,  sister.  The  Flight  5 

Clasp'd-Claspt    (See  also  Ivy-claspt)    clas-pt  hand-in-hand 

with  thee.  If  I  were  loved  9 

Die,  dying  clasp'd  in  his  embrace.  Fatima  42 

I  saw  her,  who  clasp'd  in  her  last  trance  -D.  of  F.  Women  266 

Are  clasp'd  the  moral  of  thy  life,  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  55 

But  he  clasp'd  her  like  a  lover,  L.  of  Burleigh  67 

Claspt  hands  and  that  petitionary  grace  The  Brook  112 

fell  on  him,  Clasp'd,  kiss'd  him,  wail'd  :  Lucretius  280 

That  claspt  the  feet  of  a  Mnemosyne,  Princess  iv  269 

in  hands  so  lately  cZaspi  with  yours,  ,,       vi  184 

But  he  turn'd  and  claspt  me  in  his  arms.  Grandmother  55 
Ckispt  on  her  seal,  my  sweet  !                              Window,     The  Answer  2 

A  hand  that  can  be  clasp'd  no  more —  In  Mem.  vii  5 

And  hands  so  often  clasp'd  in  mine,  , ,           a;  19 

Of  comfort  dasp'd  in  truth  reveal'd  ;  ,,  xxxvii  22 

land  Where  first  he  walk'd  when  claspt  in  clay  ?  ,,       xciii  4 

He  is  claspt  by  a  passion-flower.  Maud  I  xiv  8 
ivy-stems  Claspt  the  gray  walls  with  hairy-fibred 

arms,  Marr.  of  Geraint  323 

claspt  and  kiss'd  her,  and  they  rode  away.  ,,                825 

flinging  round  her  neck,  Claspt  it,  Last  Tournament  750 

but  I  clasp'd  her  without  fear  :  Lover's  Tale  ii  202 

And  claspt  her  hand  in  his :  ,,          Hi  52 


Clasp'd-Claspt  (continue)    round  him  closed  and  claspt 

again.  Lover's  Tale  iv  378 

she  that  clasp'd  my  neck  had  flown  ;  LocTcsley  H.,  Sixty  15 

Here  we  stood  and  claspt  each  other,  ,,              180 
Who  might  have  chased  and  claspt  Renown      To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  29 

You  claspt  our  infant  daughter,  Romney's  R.  77 

Clasping    That  round  me,  c  each  in  each,  Talking  Oak  143 

I,  c  brother-hands,  aver  I  could  not,  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  102 
Claspt    See  Clasp'd 

Class    Of  Knowledge  fusing  c  with  c,  Freedom  17 

Clat  (mess)    But  wa  boiith  was  i'  sich  a  c  Spinster's  S's.  33 

their  mucky  bibs,  an'  the  c's  an'  the  clouts,  ,,             87 

Clatted  (soiled)    it  wur  c  all  ower  wi'  claay.  ,,            46 

Clatter    With  cackle  and  with  c.  The  Goose  12 

Clamour  and  rumble,  and  ringing  and  c,  Maud  II  v  13 

and  a  c  of  hail  on  the  glass.  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  62 

c  of  arms,  and  voices,  and  men  passing  Bandit's  Death  24 

Claudias    Urien,  Cradlemont  of  Wales,  C,  Com.  of  Arthur  IIB 

Claum  (climb)    I  c's  an'  I  mashes  the  winder  hin,  Owd  Roa  83 

Claumb'd  (climbed)    I  c  up  agean  to  the  winder,  ,,        99 

Clause     lead  my  Memmius  in  a  train  Of  flowery  c's  Lucretius  120 

the  little  c  '  take  not  his  life  : '  Princess  v  470 

Clave    loved  one  only  and  who  c  to  her — '  Ded.  of  Idylls  11 

c  Like  its  own  mists  to  all  the  mountain  side  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  37 

and  all  his  kith  and  kin  C  to  him,  Guinevere  440 

cTo  Modred,  and  a  remnant  stays  with  me.  ,,         442 

Claw    Nature,  red  in  tooth  and  c  With  ravine,  In  Mem.  hi  15 

miss'd,  and  brought  Her  own  c  back,  Merlin  and  V.  500 

what  evil  beast  Hath  drawn  his  c's  Last  TournaTnent  63 

Naay,  but  the  c's  o'  tha  !  quiet  !  Spinster's  S's.  36 

mun  be  fools  to  be  hallus  a-shawin'  your  c's,  „              61 

Clay    (See  also  ClaJiy)    grave  Was  deep,  my 

mother,  in  the  c  ?  Supp,  Confessions  86 

They  should  have  trod  me  into  c,  Oriana  62 

And  on  my  c  her  darnel  grow  ;  My  life  is  full  22 

Doing  dishonour  to  my  c'  Two  Voices  102 

common  c  ta'en  from  the  common  earth      To With  Pal.  of  Art.  17 

growing  coarse  to  sympathize  with  c.  Locksley  Hall  46 

And  the  leaf  is  stamp'd  in  c.  Vision  of  Sin  82 

Rose  from  the  c  it  work'd  in  as  she  past,  Aylm£r's  Field  170 

He  shall  not  blind  his  soul  with  c'  Princess  vii  331 

Half -conscious  of  their  dying  c,  In  Mem.  Iviii  7 

land  Where  first  he  walk'd  when  claspt  in  c  ?  ,,        xciii  4 

Not  only  cunning  casts  in  c :  ,,          cxx  5 

judge  all  nature  from  her  feet  of  c.  Merlin  and  V.  835 

death,  that  seems  to  make  us  loveless  c,  Lancelot  and  E.  1014 

From  the  same  c  came  into  light  Lover's  Tale  i  194 

make  And  break  the  vase  of  c,  Ancient  Sage  92 

Claymore     C  and  snowshoe,  toys  in  lava.  Princess,  Pro.  18 

Clean    (See  also  Clean)    As  c  and  white  as  privet 

when  it  flowers.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  56 

whole,  and  c,  and  meet  for  Heaven,  St.  S.  Stylites  213 

will  never  make  oneself  c.  Grandmother  36 

make  all  c,  and  plant  himself  afresh.  Geraint  and  E.  905 

keep  him  bright  and  c  as  heretofore,  ,,            937 

As  c  as  blood  of  babes,  as  white  as  milk  :  Merlin  and  V.  344 

I  decreed  That  even  the  dog  was  c,  Akbar's  Dream  53 

CIe3.n    c  as  a  flower  fro'  'ead  to  feeiit :  North.  Cobbler  44 

an'  I  keeaps  'im  c  an'  bright,  ,,          97 

but  the  cat  mun  be  c.  Spinster's  S's.  34 

es  c  Es  a  shillin'  fresh  fro'  the  mint  ,,            75 

An' thy  farmin' es  c  es  thysen,'  ,,            77 

Clean-cut    There  were  some  for  the  c-c  stone,  V.  of  Maeldune  112 

Cleaner    house  with  all  its  hateful  needs  no  c  than  the  beast,        Happy  32 

Cleaner-fashion'd    fork  of  thine  Is  c-/—  Merlin  andV.  60 

Cleaning    See  A-cleanin' 

Cleanse    working  out  his  will.  Toe  the  world.  Gareth  and  L.  25 

c  this  common  sewer  of  all  his  realm,  Marr.  of  Geraint  39 

c  this  common  sewer  of  all  my  realm,  Geraint  and  E.  895 

Cleansed    broke  the  bandit  holds  and  c  the  land.  ,,          944 

Cleanser    saved  a  life  Worth  somewhat  as  the  c  of 

this  wood.  Gareth  and  L.  828 

Clean-wud  (clean-mad)    An'  I  thowt  as  'e'd  goan  c-w,  Owd  Rod  61 

Clear  (adj.)    (See  also  Silver-clear,  Staixy-clear) 

C,  without  heat,  undying,  Isabel  3 


Clear 


100 


Climb 


Clear  (a.dj.)  {continued)   With  chisell'd  features  cand  sleek.  A  Character  30 

G  and  bright  it  should  be  ever,  Poet's  Mind  5 

Bright  as  light,  and  c  as  wind.  ,,        7 

so  c  and  bold  and  free  As  you,  Rosalind  17 

C  as  the  twanging  of  a  harp,  Kate  8 

So  healthy,  sound,  and  c  and  whole,  Miller's  D.  15 

Make  Thou  my  spirit  pure  and  c  St.  Agnes'  Eve  9 

0  hark,  0  hear  !  how  thin  and  c,  Princess  iv  7 
nobbut  a  curate,  an'  weant  niver  git  hissen  c,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  27 

1  feel  so  free  and  so  c  Mavd  I  xix  98 
world  Was  all  so  c  about  him,  that  he  saw  Com.  of  Arthur  98 
0  as  a  lark,  high  o'er  me  as  a  lark,  Holy  Grail  833 
Name,  surname,  all  as  c  as  noon.  The  Ring  237 
a  faith  as  c  as  the  heights  of  the  June-blue 

heaven,  June-Bracken,  etc.  7 

Clear  (adv.)    came  A  bitter  wind,  c  from  the  North,     Pass,  of  Arthur  124 

That  sings  so  delicately  c,  Marr.  of  Geraint  332 

long  es  she  lived  she  kep  'em  all  c,  Village  Wife  53 

Clear  (verb)    Better  to  c  prime  forests,  Princess  Hi  127 

Will  c  away  the  parasitic  forms  ,,       i«i269 

balm  May  c  the  blood  from  poison.  Death  of  (Enone  36 

Clear-cut    But  a  cold  and  c-c  face,  Maud  I  ii  3 

Cold  and  c-c  face,  why  come  you  so  cruelly  meek,  ,,  m  1 

Clear'd    And  a  whirlwind  c  the  larder :  The  Goose  52 

flash  of  semi-jealousy  c  it  to  her.  Aylmer's  Field  189 

moving  everywhere  C  the  dark  places  Geraint  and  E.  943 

She  c  her  sight,  she  arose.  Dead  Prophet  31 

Clearer    like  a  light  that  grows  Larger  and  c,  (Enone  109 

The  fires  are  all  the  c.  Window.  Winter  16 

every  turn  and  depth  Between  is  c  in  my  life  Lover's  Tale  i  149 

Clearest    Yet  c  of  ambitious  crime.  Ode  on  Well.  28 

Clear- faced    Until  they  found  the  c-f  King,  Lancelot  and  E.  432 

Clear-featured    that  c-/ face  Was  lovely,  ,,          1159 

Clear-headed    C-h  friend,  whose  joyful  scorn.  Clear-headed  friend  1 

Clearness    '  are  like  the  rest ;  No  certain  c,  Two  Voices  335 

The  starry  c  of  the  free  ?  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  86 

The  critic  c  of  an  eye,  ,,           cm;  3 

c  of  his  fame  hath  gone  Beneath  the  shadow  Lover's  Tale  i  789 

no  shade  of  doubt.  But  utter  c.  Ancient  Sage  236 

Clear-pointed    fed  With  the  c-p  flame  of  chastity,  Isabel  2 

Clear-stemm'd    c-s  platans  guard  The  outlet,  Arabian  Nights  23 

Clear- voiced    The  c-v  mavis  dwelleth,  Claribd  16 

Clear-wall'd    Or  in  a  c-io  city  on  the  sea,  Palace  of  Art  97 

Cleave  (to  adhere)    love  thee  well  and  c  to  thee,  (Enone  160 

'  The  man  will  c  unto  his  right.'  Lady  Clare  46 

O  to  your  contract :  Princess  iv  409 

if  I  fall,  c  to  the  better  man.'  Geraint  and  E.  152 

To  love  one  maiden  only,  c  to  her,  Guinevere  475 

The  shadow  of  another  c's  to  me,  , ,        618 

c's  to  cairn  and  cromlech  still ;  To  the  Queen  ii  41 

The  lecher  would  c  to  his  lusts.  Despair  100 

•    C  ever  to  the  sunnier  side  of  doubt,  Ancient  Sage  68 

0  to  one  another  still  ?  Open.  I  and  C.  Exhib.  34 

Cleave  (to  divide)    Clear  Love  would  pierce  and  c.  If  I  were  loved  6 

ill-used  race  of  men  that  c  the  soil,  Lotos-Eaters,  O.  S.  120 

To  c  the  rift  of  difference  deeper  yet ;  Princess  v  301 

When  mighty  Love  would  c  in  twain  In  Mem.  xxv  10 

master-bowman,  he.  Would  c  the  mark.  ,,       Ixxxvii  30 

To  c  a  creed  in  sects  and  cries,  ,,       cxxviii  15 

and  so  ye  e  His  armour  off  him,  Gareth  and  L.  1094 

May  this  hard  earth  c  to  the  Nadir  hell  Merlin  and  V.  349 

Cleaved    (For  I  c  to  a  cause  that  I  felt  Mavd  III  vi  31 

ever  like  a  loyal  sister  c  To  Arthur,  Com.  of  Arthur  191 

some  she  c  to,  but  they  died  of  her.  Gareth  and  L.  113 

So  to  this  king  I  c :  my  friend  was  he.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  61 

Cleaving    The  fruitful  wit  C,  took  root.  The  Poet  21 

Cleft  (b)    (See  also  Mountain-cleft)    Far-off  the 

torrent  call'd  me  from  the  c :  (Enone  54 

thro'  mountain  c's  the  dale  Was  seen  Lotos-Eaters  20 

every  coppice-feather'd  chasm  and  c,  Princess  iv  23 

gather'd  trickling  dropwise  from  the  c,  Merlin  and  V.  274 

little  elves  of  chasm  and  c  Made  answer,  Guinevere  248 

saw  The  c's  and  openings  in  the  mountains  Lover's  Tale  i  330 

Cleft  (verb)    He  e  me  thro'  the  stomacher ;  Princess  ii  407 

spire  of  land  that  stands  apart  C  from  the  main,  ,,      iv  282 


Cleft  (verb)  {continued)    Has  risen  and  c  the  soil,  and 

grown  a  bulk  Princess  vi  35 

Which  c  and  c  again  for  evermore.  Ancient  Sage  43 

Clelia    C,  Cornelia,  with  the  Palmyrene  Princess  ii  83 

Clematis    O'erflourish'd  with  the  hoary  e :  Golden  Year  63 

among  the  meadows,  the  clover  and  the  c,  City  Child  9 
Rose,  rose  and  c,  (repeat)                                 Window.    At  the  W.  3,  10 

and  the  dark-blue  c,  clung,  V.  of  Maddune  39 

Clemm'd  (clutched)    an'  c  owd  Tloa  by  the  'ead,  Owd  Roa  99 

Clench    those,  who  c  their  nerves  to  rush  Love  and  Duty  77 

Clench'd    {See  also  Half-clench'd)    taunt  that  c  his 

purpose  like  a  blow  !  Princess  v  306 

c  her  fingers  till  they  bit  the  palm,  Lancelot  and  E.  611 

c  His  hands,  and  madden'd  with  himself  Pelleas  and  E.  459 

Muriel  c  The  hand  that  wore  it.  The  Ring  261 

Cleopatra-like    C-l  as  of  old  To  entangle  me  Maud  I  vi  27 

Clergyman    that  good  man,  the  c,  has  told  me 

words  of  peace.  May  Queen,  Con.  12 

Clerk  {See  also  Parish-clerks)  worn-out  c  Brow- 
beats his  desk  below.  To  J.  M.K.W 
now  we  left  The  c  behind  us,  I  and  he,  Edwin  Morris  97 
That  was  a  God,  and  is  a  lawyer's  c,  ,,  102 
A  CITY  c,  but  gently  born  and  bred  ;  Sea  Dreains  1 
mitre-sanction'd  harlot  draws  his  c's  Into  the 
suburb—  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  106 

Cletch  (brood  of  chickens)    But  Nelly,  the  last  of  the  c,      Village  Wife  9 

Cleverness    not  for  all  Aspasia's  c,  Princess  ii  344 

Click    merry  milkmaids  c  the  latch,  The  Owl  I  8 

C  with  the  pick,  coming  nearer  Def.  of  Lucknow  28 

Cliff    {See  also  Sea-cliflf,  Shore-cliflf)    light  upon  the 

wall  Of  purple  c's,  Ode  to  Memory  54 
mountain-shade  Sloped  downward  to  her  seat  from 

the  upper  c.  (Enone  22 

Along  the  c  to  fall  and  pause  and  fall  Lotos-Eaters  9 

bare  black  c  clang'd  round  him,  M.  d' Arthur  188 

Upon  the  c's  that  guard  my  native  land,  AvMey  Court  49 

girt  the  region  with  high  c  and  lawn  :  Vision  of  Sin  47 

lines  of  c  breaking  have  left  a  chasm  :  Enoch  Arden  1 

A  narrow  cave  ran  in  beneath  the  c :  ,,23 

sand  and  c  and  deep-inrunning  cave,  Sea  Dreams  17 

on  sand  they  walk'd,  and  now  on  c,  ,,          37 

claps  of  thunder  from  within  the  c's  ,,  55 
enter'd  one  Of  those  dark  caves  that  run  beneath 

the  c's.                             _  „          90 

on  those  c's  Broke,  mixt  with  awful  light  ,,        214 

those  lines  of  c's  were  c's  no  more,  ,,        217 

we  wound  About  the  c's,  the  copses,  Princess  Hi  360 

0  sweet  and  far  from  c  and  scar  „  j^  9 
A  stroke  of  cruel  sunshine  on  the  c,  ,,  524 
On  capes  of  Afric  as  on  c's  of  Kent,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  17 
And  leave  the  c's,  and  haste  away  In  Mem.  xii  8 
From  scarped  c  and  quarried  stone  ,,  hi  2 
like  a  crag  that  tumbles  from  the  c,  Marr.  of  Geraint  318 
Between  the  steep  c  and  the  coming  wave  ;  Guinevere  280 
as  a  stream  that  spouting  from  a  c  Fails  ,,  608 
left  and  right  The  bare  black  c  clang'd  round  him.  Pass,  of  Arthur  356 
Hbbe  far  away,  seen  from  the  topmast  c,  Lover's  Tale  i  1 
slowly-ridging  rollers  on  the  c's  Clash'd,  ,,  57 
the  red  passion-flower  to  the  c's,  V.  of  Maddune  39 
all  round  from  the  c's  and  the  capes,  ,,  55 
And  c's  all  robed  in  lianas  that  dropt  The  Wreck  73 
blanch  into  spray  At  the  feet  of  the  e;  „       138 

1  climb'd  on  all  the  c's  of  all  the  seas,  Denuter  and  P.  63 
Cliff-side  broken  rocks  On  some  c-s,  Lancelot  and  E.  1253 
Climate  manners,  c's,  councils,  governments,  Ulysses  14 
Climax  and  he :  '  The  c  of  his  age  !  Princess  ii  50 
Climb    {See  also  Claum)    Where  he  was  wont  to  leap 

and  c,  Supp.  Confessions  165 

'  Cry,  faint  not,  c:  the  summits  slope  Two  Voices  184 

could  she  c  Beyond  her  own  material  prime?  ,,         377 

You  seem'd  to  hear  them  c  and  fall  Palace  of  Art  70 

'  will  you  c  the  top  of  Art.  Gardener's  D.  169 

long  day  wanes :  the  slow  moon  c's  ;  Ulysses  55 

I  leave  the  plain,  I  c  the  height ;  Sir  Galahad,  57 

street  c's  to  one  tall-tower'd  mill ;  Enoch  Arden  5 


Climb 


101 


Cldse-' 


Climb  (continued)    stairs  That  c  into  the  windy  halls  of 

heaven :  Lucretius  136 

but  we  Set  forth  to  c ;  Princess  Hi  354 

as  one  that  c's  a  peak  to  gaze  O'er  land  and  main,  ,,     vii   35 

Be  near  us  when  we  c  or  fall :  Jn  Mem.  li  13 

G  thy  thick  noon,  disastrous  day ;  ,,  Ixxii  26 

I  c  the  hill :  from  end  to  end  ,,         c    1 

I  could  c  and  lay  my  hand  upon  it,  Gareth  and  L.  50 

*  G  not  lest  thou  break  thy  neck,  54 

felt  the  knot  G  in  her  throat,  Lancelot  and  E.  741 

G's  to  the  mighty  hall  that  Merlin  built.  Holy  Grail  231 

'  There  rose  a  hill  that  none  but  man  could  c,  ,,         489 

in  a  dream  I  seem'd  to  c  For  ever :  836 

I  would  not  or  I  could  not  c —  Guinevere  644 

clomb  Ev'n  to  the  highest  he  could  c,  Pass  of  Arthur  463 

G  first  and  reach  me  down  thy  hand.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  204 

sister  of  the  sun  Would  c  from  out  the  dark,  Tiresias  31 

And  c  the  Mount  of  Blessing,  Ancient  Sage  280 

wounded  warrior  c's  from  Troy  to  thee.  Death  of  CEnone  39 

if  ever  a  woman  should  c  to  the  dwelling  Kapiolani  '22 

Climb'd    (See  also  Claumb'd)    They  c  as  quickly,  for 

the  rim  Changed  The  Voyage  27 

as  he  c  the  hill,  Just  where  the  prone  edge  Enoch  Arden  66 

he  had  c  across  the  spikes,  Princess,  Pro.  Ill 

we  c  The  slope  to  Vivian-place,  ,,        Gon.  39 

I  c  to  the  top  of  the  garth,  Grandmother  38 

I  c  the  roofs  at  break  of  day ;  JDaisy  61 

And  thither  I  c  at  dawn  Maud  I    xiv   5 

I  have  c  nearer  out  of  lonely  Hell.  ,,     xviii  80 

sweet  son,  had  risk'd  himself  and  c,  Gare^  and  L.  60 

And  c  upon  a  fair  and  even  ridge,  Marr.  of  Geraint  239 

Guinevere  had  c  The  giant  tower,  ,,            826 

on  his  foot  She  set  her  own  and  c ;  Geraint  and  E.  760 

For  one  from  out  his  village  lately  c  Balin  and  Balan  167 

c  That  eastern  tower,  and  entering  barr'd  Lancdot  and  E.  14 

Then  to  her  tower  she  c,  ,,           397 

lea  thousand  steps  With  pain :  Holy  Grail  835 

came  Arthur  home,  and  while  he  c,  Last  Tournament  755 

G  to  the  high  top  of  the  garden-wall  Guinevere  25 

cheeks  as  bright  as  when  she  c  the  hill.  Lover's  Tcde  Hi  47 
heard  a  groaning  overhead,  and  c  The  moulder'd 

stairs  ,,         iv  136 

c  one  step  beyond  Our  village  Ancient  Sage  206 

I  c  on  all  the  cliffs  of  all  the  seas,  Demeter  and  P.  63 

I  c  the  hill  with  Hubert  yesterday.  The  Ring  152 

I  have  c  to  the  snows  of  Age,  By  an  Evolution.  17 

c  from  the  dens  in  the  levels  below,  The  Dawn  17 

Climbing    In  ever  c  up  the  c  wave  ?  Lotos-Eater's,  G.  S.  50 

And  ever  c  higher ;  D.  of  F.  Women  32 

And  c  up  into  my  airy  home,  St,  S.  Stylites  217 

valleys  underneath  Came  little  copses  c.  Amphion  32 

A  lily-avenue  c  to  the  doors  ;  Aylmer's  Field  162 

Was  c  up  the  valley  ;  at  whom  he  shot :  , ,            228 

then,  c,  Cyril  kept  With  Psyche,  Princess  Hi  354 

tum'd  his  face  And  kiss'd  her  c,              ,  Geraint  and  E.  761 

Cried  to  me  c,  '  Welcome,  Percivale !  Holy  Grail  425 

over  all  the  great  wood  rioting  And  c,  Lover's  Tale  i  404 

set  me  c  icy  capes  And  glaciers,  To  E,  Fitzgerald  25 

Pallas  Athene  c  from  the  bath  In  anger ;  Tiresias  40 
Evolution  ever  c  after  some  ideal  good,                 Locksley  H. ,  Sixty  199 

saw  Him,  c  toward  her  with  the  golden  Death  of  CEnone  15 

Climbing  (b)    Maud  with  her  venturous  c's  Maud  /  t  69 

Clime    Thk  poet  in  a  golden  c  was  born,       .  The  Poet  1 

thro'  mine  ears  in  that  unblissful  c,  D.  of  F.  Women  82 

Put  forth  and  feel  a  gladder  c'  On  a  Mourner  15 

— what  to  me  were  sun  or  c  1  Locksley  Hall  177 

In  divers  seasons,  divers  c's  ;  Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  18 

O  hundred  shores  of  happy  c's.  The  Voyage  49 

Again  to  colder  c's  we  came,  ,,         89 
on  the  tables  every  c  and  age  a  Jumbled  together ;     Princess,  Pro.  16 

For  many  a  time  in  many  a  c  Ode  on  Well.  64 

And  led  him  through  the  blissful  c's.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  25 

who  throve  and  branch'd  from  c  to  c,  ,,        cxviii  13 

blown  by  the  breeze  of  a  softer  c,  Maud  I  iv  i 

prayer  of  many  a  race  and  creed,  and  c—  To  the  Queen  ii  U 


Clime  (continue)    arrowing  light  from  c  to  V  ''■'■'>      ilJSi^A's  p,]  Hymn  5 

Cling    As  close  as  might  be  would  he  c  Talking  &>'^  --27 

They  c  together  in  the  ghastly  sack —  Aylmer's  Field  764 

'  My  mother  c's  about  my  neck,  Sailor  Boy  17 

flower  that  c's  To  the  turrets  and  the  walls  ;  Maud  II  iv  33 

all  night  long  a  cloud  c's  to  the  hill,  Geraint  and  E.  691 

voice  c's  to  each  blade  of  grass,  Lancelot  and  E.  107 

glory  c  To  all  high  places  like  a  golden  cloud  Pass,  of  Arthur  53 

I  c  to  the  Catholic  Cross  once  more,  The  Wreck  3 

c  to  Faith  beyond  the  forms  of  Faith  !  Ancient  Sage  69 

Who  c's  to  earth,  and  once  would  dare  ,,          115 

That  we  might  c  together,  Happy  92 

Clinging    Not  c  to  some  ancient  saw ;  Love  thou  thy  land  29 

Unshaken,  c  to  her  purpose.  Princess  y  344 

necks  Of  dragons  c  to  the  crazy  walls.  Holy  Grail  347 

C  to  the  silent  mother !  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  99 

Clink  (a)    the  tinsel  c  of  compliment.  Princess  ii  55 

Clink  (verb)    Thou  hear'st  the  village  hammer  c,  In  Mem.  cxxi  15 

Clink'd    Touch'd,  c,  and  clash'd  and  vanish 'd.  Sea  Dreams  135 

Clinking    Hammering  and  c,  chattering  stony  names         Princess  Hi  361 

Clinkt    blade  flew  Splintering  in  six,  and  c  upon  the 

stones.  Balin  and  Balan  396 

Clip    And  c  your  wings,  and  make  you  love :  Rosalind  45 

Tho'  fortune  c  my  wings,  WiU  Water.  50 

Clipt    They  read  in  arbours  c  and  cut,  Amphion  85 
from  her  baby's  forehead  c  A  tiny  curl,  and  gave  it :  Enoch  Arden  235 

many  thousand  days  Were  c  by  horror  Aylmer's  Field  603 

Or  keeps  his  wing'd  affections  c  with  crime :  Princess  vii  316 

had  c  free  manhood  from  the  world —  Last  Tournament  446 

a  scrap,  c  out  of  the  '  deaths '  in  a  paper,  fell.  The  Wreck  li6 

Cloak  (b)    And  the  red  c's  of  market  girls,  L.  of  Shdott  ii  17 

Pitiful  sight,  wrapp'd  in  a  soldier's  c.  Princess  v  56 

raised  the  c  from  brows  as  pale  and  smooth  , ,       73 

Wrapt  in  a  c,  as  I  saw  him,  Matid  1 159 

Sir  Gareth  loosed  A  c  that  dropt  Gareth  and  L.  682 

wrapping  her  all  over  with  the  c  He  came  in,  Lover's  Tale  iv  86 

Cloak  (verb)    wife-worship  c's  a  secret  shame  ?  Balin  and  Balan  360 

c's  the  scar  of  some  repulse  with  lies ;  Merlin  and  V.  818 

Cloak'd    The  Shadow  c  from  head  to  foot.  In  Mem.  xxiii  4 

Cloaths  (clothes)    Sally  she  wesh'd  foalks '  c  JNorth.  Gobbler  29 

Look  at  the  c  on 'er  back,  ,,           109 

CloStthes  (clothes)    an'  a-buyin'  new  c.  Village  Wife  37 

Clock    The  slow  c  ticking,  and  the  sound  Mariana  74 

The  windy  clanging  of  the  minster  c ;  Gardener's  D.  38 

The  heavy  c's  knoUing  the  drowsy  hours.  ,,            184 

There  rose  a  noise  of  striking  c's,  Day-Dm. ,  Revival  2 

speak  for  noise  Of  c's  and  chimes.  Princess  i  216 

the  dark,  when  c's  Throbb'd  thunder  ,,      vii  103 

c  Beats  out  the  little  lives  of  men.  In  Mem.  ii  7 

And  hark  the  c  within,  Maud  I  xviii  64 

lights  the  c !  the  hand  points  five—  The  Flight  94 

Clock-work    little  c-w  steamer  paddling  plied  Princess,  Pro.  71 

Clod    before  the  heavy  c  Weighs  on  me,  Supp.  Gonfessions  184 

and  the  c,  Less  dull  than  thou,  Gareth  and  L.  1391 

Clog  (s)     A  c  of  lead  was  round  my  feet.  The  Letters  5 

To  lighten  this  great  c  of  thanks.  Princess  vi  126 

Clog  (verb)    fulsome  Pleasure  c  him,  and  drown  Maud  I  xvii 

Cloister  (See  also  Crag-cloister)    row  Of  c's,  branch'd 

like  mighty  woods,  Palace  of  Art  26 

while  our  c's  echo'd  frosty  feet.  Princess,  Pro.  183 

world-old  yew-tree,  darkening  half  The  c's.  Holy  Grail  14 

Walk  your  dim  c,  and  distribute  dole  Guinevere683 

Sometimes  I  frequent  the  Christian  c,  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  5 

Clomb    Imprisoning  sweets,  which,  as  they  c  Arabian  Nights  40 

C  to  the  roofs,  and  gazed  alone  for  hours  Princess  vii  32 

neither  c,  nor  brake  his  neck,  Gareth  and  L.  56 

And  glad  was  I  and  c,  but  found  at  top  Holy  Grail  427 

turn'd  and  slowly  c  The  last  hard  footstep  Pass,  of  Arthur  446 

c  Ev'n  to  the  highest  he  could  climb,  ,,            462 

C  the  mountain,  and  flung  the  bierries,  Kapiolani  6 

Close  (an  enclosure)    I  broke  a  c  with  force  and 

arms :  Edwin  Morris  131 

I  lay  Pent  in  a  roofless  c  of  ragged  stones  ;  8.  St.  Stylites  74 

Are  wither'd  in  the  thorny  c,  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  11 

Close  (an  end)    sweet  c  of  his  delicious  toils —  Palace  of  Art  185 


i 


Close 


102 


Clothed 


Clo^„(akn  fcni)' (J;<wrffeiwd)r    The  c,  '  Your  Letty,  only 

"     yours  ; '  Edwin  Morris  106 

Of  love  that  never  found  his  earthly  c,  Love  and  Duty  1 

Death  dawning  on  him,  and  the  c  of  all.  Enoch  Arden  832 

At  c  of  day  ;  slept,  woke,  and  went  the  next,  Sea  Dreams  18 

Then  comes  the  c'  ,,          29 

and  the  bitter  c  of  all,  Princess  vi  117 

drove  us,  last  to  quite  a  solemn  c —  ,,     Con.  17 

all,  they  said,  as  earnest  as  the  c  ?  , ,             21 

Such  a  war  had  such  a  e.  Ode  on  Well.  118 

Herb  ;  it  is  here,  the  c  of  the  year,  SpiteftU  Letter  1 
Here  is  the  golden  c  of  love,                                Window.  Marr.  Morn.  3 

To  such  a  stern  and  iron-clashing  c.  Merlin  and  V.  419 

Perchance,  because  we  see  not  to  the  c  ; —  Pass,  of  Arthur  21 

Restrain'd  himself  quite  to  the  c —  Lover  s  Tale  iv  10 

Laud  me  not  Before  my  time,  but  hear  me  to  the  c.  ,,          243 

My  c  of  earth's  experience  May  prove  Tiresias  216 

gloom  of  the  evening,  Life  at  a  c  ;  Vasiness  15 

were  alone  in  the  dell  at  the  c  of  the  day.  Bandit's  Death  19 

Close  (adj.  and  adv.)    order'd  all  Almost  as  neat  and  c  Enoch  Arden  178 

princedom  lay  C  on  the  borders  of  a  territory,  Marr.  of  Geraint  33 

So  c  are  we,  dear  Mary,  To  Mary  Boyle  59 

but  c  to  me  to-day  As  this  red  rose,  Roses  on  the  T.  6 

I  was  c  on  that  hour  of  dishonour.  Charity  28 

my  hot  lips  prest  C,  c  to  thine  QHnone  204 

I  never  can  be  c  with  her,  Balin  and  Balan  186 

c  upon  it  peal'd  A  sharp  quick  thunder.'  Holy  Grail  695 

C  beneath  the  casement  crimson  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  34 

they  stood  So  c  together.  The  Ring  258 

Now  wraps  her  c,  now  arching  leaves  her  bare  Prog,  of  Spring  12 

Close  (verb)    C  the  door,  the  shutters  c.  Deserted  House  9 

breathe  it  into  earth  and  c  it  up  Wan  Sculftor  12 

In  love  with  thee  forgets  to  c  His  curtains,  Adeline  42 

C  up  his  eyes :  tie  up  his  chin :  D.  of  the  0.  Year  48 

With  one  wide  Will  that  c's  thine.  On  a  Mourner  20 

To  c  the  interests  of  all.  Love  thou  thy  land  36 

And  this  be  true,  till  Time  shall  c,  , ,               79 

Death  c's  all :  but  something  ere  the  end,  Ulysses  51 

till  he  heard  the  ponderous  door  C,  Aylmer's  Field  338 

to  c  with  Cyril's  random  wish :  Princess  Hi  101 

hearts  So  gentle,  so  employ 'd,  should  c  in  love,  ,,        vii   67 

before  his  journey  c's,  He  shall  find  Ode  on  Well.  205 

and  the  daisy  c  Her  crimson  fringes  In  Mem.  Ixxii^  11 

Until  we  c  with  all  we  loved,  ,,         cxxxill 

'  0  dewy  flowers  that  c  when  day  is  done,  Gareth  and  L.  1067 

To  c  with  her  lord's  pleasure  ;  Geraint  and  E.  214 

— so  that  fate  and  craft  and  folly  c,  Merlin  and  V.  57 

Down,  down,  and  c  again,  and  nip  me  flat,  , ,         350 

and  c  the  hand  Uf)on  it ;  Lancelot  and  E.  1114 
but  he  that  c's  both  Is  perfect,  he  is  Lancelot —    Last  Tournament  708 

And  who  shall  escape  if  they  c  ?  Heavy  Brigade  16 

Both  the  days  Now  c  in  one.  The  Ring  79 

closed  her  eyes,  which  would  not  c,  „      299 

Caught  by  the  flower  that  c's  on  the  fly,  ,,      344 

his  fresh  life  may  c  as  it  began.  Prog,  of  Spring  89 

Close-bower'd    Sir  Balin  sat  C-b  in  that  garden  Balin  and  Balan  241 

Close-button'd    turned  once  more,  c-b  to  the  storm  ;      Edwin  Morris  136 

Closed    (See  also  Half-closed)    A  thousand  claims  to 

reverence  c  To  the  Queen  27 

I  c  mine  eyelids,  lest  the  gems  M.  d' Arthur  152 

all  grace  Summ'd  up  and  c  in  little  ; —  Gardener's  D.  13 

She  turn'd,  we  c,  we  kiss'd,  Edwin  Morris  114 

I  had  hoped  that  ere  this  period  c  St.  S.  Stylites  17 

for  the  promise  that  it  c :  Locksley  Hall  14 

C  in  a  golden  ring.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  27 

she  c  the  Book  and  slept :  Enoch  Arden  499 

when  she  c  'Enoch,  poor  man,  was  cast  away  ,,            712 

Crept  to  the  gate,  and  open'd  it,  and  c,  ,,            775 

Until  they  c  a  bargain,  hand  in  hand.  The  Brook  156 

c  her  access  to  the  wealthier  farms,  Aylmer's  Field  503 

fain  had  she  c  them  now,  , ,            805 

c  by  those  who  mourn  a  friend  in  vain,  Lucretius  142 

And  thus  our  conference  c.  Princess  ii  367 

until  they  c  In  conflict  with  the  crash  ,,        v  490 

darkness  c  me ;  and  I  fell.  ,,           542 


Closed  (continued)    My  spirit  c  with  Ida's  at  the  lips  ;  Princess  vii  158 

So  c  our  tale,  of  which  I  give  you  all  ,,       Con.  1 

the  gates  were  c  At  sunset,  ,,             36 

few  words  and  pithy,  such  as  a  c  Welcome,  farewell,  ,,             94 

where  warm  hands  have  prest  and  c,  In  Mem.  xiii  7 

such  as  c  Grave  doubts  and  answers  ,,     xlviii  2 

whose  dying  eyes  Were  c  with  wail,  ,,          xc6 

pulses  c  their  gates  with  a  shock  Maud  7  i  15 

gates  of  Heaven  are  c,  and  she  is  gone.  ,,  xviii  12 

now  by  this  my  love  has  c  her  sight  ,,            67 

C  in  her  castle  from  the  sound  of  arms.  Gareth  and  L  163 

But  when  they  c — in  a  moment—  ,,           1222 

Dash'd  on  Geraint,  who  c  with  him,  Geraint  and  E.  462 

while  he  spoke  C  his  death-drowsing  eyes,  Balin  and  Balan  631 
C  in  the  four  walls  of  a  hollow  tower, 

(repeat)  Merlin  and  V.  209,  543 

and  the  thicket  c  Behind  her,  ,,                 973 

And  c  the  hand  upon  it,  and  she  died.  Lancelot  and  E.  1135 

great  table  of  our  Arthur  c  And  clash 'd  Holy  Grail  329 

and  then  a  fawn  ;  and  his  eyes  c.  Pelleas  and  E.  39 

Drew  back  a  space,  and  when  they  c,  ,,        573 

'  0  c  about  by  narrowing  nunnery-walls,  Guinevere  34'2 

On  the  waste  sand  by  the  waste  sea  they  c.  Pass,  of  Arthur  92 

'Sir  King,  I  c  mine  eyelids,  lest  the  gems  ,,            320 

Ideal  manhood  c  in  real  man,  To  the  Queen  ii  38 

round  him  c  and  claspt  again.  Lover's  Tale  iv  378 

I  c  my  heart  to  the  gloom  ;  The  Wreck  38 

If  utter  darkness  c  the  day,  Ancient  Sage  199 

c  her  eyes,  which  would  not  close.  The  Ring  299 

Clouds  and  darkness  C  upon  Camelot ;  Merlin  and  the  G.  76 

kiss'd  his  hand,  another  c  his  eyes.  Death  of  (Enone  58 

Close-latticed     C-l  to  the  brooding  heat,  Mariana  in  the  S.  3 

Close-lapt    c-l  in  silken  folds,  Lover's  Tale  i  153 

Closelier    once  mine,  now  thine,  is  c  mine,  Merlin  and  V.  446 

Close-matted    a  wall  of  green  C-m,  Day-Dm. ,  Sleep  P.  46 

Closeness    such  a  c,  but  apart  there  grew.  Holy  Grail  884 

Closer     C  is  He  than  breathing.  High.  Pantheism  12 

But  thou  art  c  to  this  noble  prince,  Com.  of  Arthur  314 

C  on  the  Sun,  perhaps  a  world  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  184 

Close-set    wore  A  c-s  robe  of  jasmine  Aylmer's  Field  158 

Betwixt  the  c-s  ivies  came  a  broad  Lover's  Tale  ii  172 

Closet    not  to  myself  in  the  c  alone,  Maud  II  v  49 

Closeted    (See  also  Long-closeted)    with  that  woman  c 

for  hours  ! '  Princess  Hi  56 

Closing  (part)    There— c  like  an  individual  life —  Love  and  Duty  79 

And  c  eaves  of  wearied  eyes  In  Mem.  Ixvii  11 

As  c  in  himself  the  strength  of  ten,  Gareth  and  L.  1339 

c  round  him  thro'  the  journey  home,  Pelleas  and  E.  202 

Closing  (s)    And  at  the  c  of  the  day  L.  of  Shalott  iv  15 

Clot     Is  a  c  of  warmer  dust,  Vision  of  Sin  113 

Cloth    (See  also  Altar-cloth,  Cloth  of  Gold,  Face-cloth) 

a  c  of  palest  gold,  Which  down  he  laid  Gareth  and  L.  389 

Arthur  cried  to  rend  the  c,  (repeat)  ,,     400,  418 

we  should  lap  him  up  in  c  of  lead,  ,,             430 

c  of  roughest  web,  and  cast  it  down,  ,,             683 

sparkle  of  a  c  On  fern  and  foxglove.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  117 

What  have  I  here  in  the  c  ?  Bandit's  Death  8 

Clothe    That  c  the  wold  and  meet  the  sky  ;  L.  of  Shalott  i  3 

O,  the  child  too  c's  the  father  Locksley  Hall  91 

C's  and  reclothes  the  happy  plains,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  2 

often  toil'd  to  c  your  little  ones  ;  Aylmer's  Field  699 

lingereth  she  to  c  her  heart  with  love,  Princess  iv  105 

tender  ash  delays  To  c  herself,  ,,        107 

Will  c  her  for  her  bridals  like  the  sun.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  231 

So  c  yourself  in  this,  that  better  fits  ,,              717 

Herself  would  c  her  like  the  sim  in  Heaven.  , ,             784 

In  this  poor  gown  he  bad  me  c  myself,  Geraint  and  E.  702 

'  And  lo,  I  c  myself  with  wisdom,  Merlin  and  V.  255 

her  love  did  c  itself  in  smiles  About  his  lips  !  Lover's  Tale  i  658 

earth -baldness  c's  itself  afresh,  Demeter  and  P.  49 

Clothed    river-sunder'd  champaign  c  with  corn,  (Enone  114 
C  in  white  samite,  mystic,  wonderful, 

(repeat)  M.  d' Arthur  31,  144,  159 

ridge  to  ridge,  C  with  his  breath,  ,,                      182 

she  rode  forth,  c  on  with  chastity :  Godiva  53 


Clothed 


103 


Cloud 


Clothed  {continued)    she  rode  back,  c  on  with  chastity  :  Godiva  65 

Pure  spaces  c  in  living  beams,  Sir  Galahad  6t) 

with  thy  worst  self  hast  thou  cthy  God.  Aylmer's  Field  646 

thought  flash 'd  thro'  me  which  I  c  in  act,  Princess  i  195 
these  have  c  their  branchy  bowers  With  fifty  Mays,  In  Mem.  Ixxvi  13 

C  in  white  samite,  mystic,  wonderful.  '    Com.  of  Arthur  285 

So  that  the  child  and  he  were  c  in  fire.  ,,            390 

And  truth  or  c  or  naked  let  it  be,  ,,            408 

see  her  now,  C  with  my  gift,  Mart,  of  Geraint  753 

And  c  her  for  her  bridals  like  the  sun ;  ,,              836 

And  c  her  in  apparel  like  the  day.  Geraint  and  E.  948 

barge  Be  ready  on  the  river,  c  in  black.  Lancelot  and  E.  1123 

a  love  C  in  so  pure  a  loveliness  ?  ,,            1384 

C  in  white  samite  or  a  luminous  cloud.  Holy  Grail  513 

golden  beard  that  c  his  lips  with  light —  Last  Tournament  668 
C  in  white  samite,  mystic,  wonderful, 

(repeat)                                                      Pass.  o/Jr<AMr  199,  312,  327 

ridge  to  ridge,  C  with  his  breath,  Pass,  of  Arthur  350 
e  with  living  light,  They  stood  before  his 

throne  ,,              454 

When  he  c  a  naked  mind  with  the  wisdom  The  Wreck  65 

But  c  with  The  Gleam,  Merlin  and  the  G.  94 

When  the  dumb  Hour,  c  in  black,  Sileni  Voices  1 

Clothes    (See  also  Clo&thes,  CloS,thB)    wholesome 

food.  And  wear  warm  c,  St.  S.  Stylites  109 

And  c  they  gave  him  and  free  passage  Enoch  Arden  650 

Like  coarsest  c  against  the  cold  :  In  Mem.  v  10 

She  is  not  fairer  in  new  c  than  old.  Marr.  of  Geraint  T22 

Clothing    upbearing  parasite,  C  the  stem,  Isabel  35 

Cloth  of  Gold    With  inwrought  flowers,  a,  c  o  g,  Arabian  Nights  149 

city  all  on  fire  With  sun  and  cog,  Com.  of  Arthur  480 

pray'd  him  well  to  accept  this  cog,  Gareth  and  L.  398 

seeing  he  hath  sent  \13  c  o  g,  „            428 

children  of  the  King  in  c  o  ^  Glanced  Marr.  of  Geraint  664 

all  the  children  in  their  c  o  y  Ran  to  her,  ,,              668 

all  the  coverlid  was  cog  Drawn  to  her  waist,  Lancelot  and  E.  1157 

Clotted    Or,  c  into  points  and  hanging  loose,  M.  d' Arthur  219 

Or,  c  into  points  and  hanging  loose,  Pass,  of  Arthur  387 

Cloud  (s)    {See  also  Thunder-cloud)    When  will  the 

c's  be  aweary  of  fleeting  ?  Nothing  viiU  die  5 

The  c  fleets.  The  heart  beats,  ,,            11 

One  after  another  the  white  c's  are  fleeting  ;  All  Things  wiU  die  5 

The  c's  will  cease  to  fleet ; ,  ,,11 

Like  little  c's  sun-fringed,  Madeline  17 
with  the  evening  c,  Showering  thy  gleaned  wealth    Ode  to  Memory  22 

morn  Forth  gushes  from  beneath  a  low-hung  c.  ,,             71 

while  Slowly,  as  from  a  c  of  gold,  _       Elednore  73 

Nor  any  c  would  cross  the  vault,  Mariana  in  the  S.  38 

Wrapt  in  dense  c  from  base  to  cope.  Two  Voices  186 

Embracing  c,  Ixion-like ;  ,,          195 

That  every  c,  that  spreads  above  And  veileth  love,  ,,          446 

A  c  that  gather'd  shape :  (Enone  42 

one  silvery  c  Had  lost  his  way  between  ,,      92 

o'er  him  flow'd  a  golden  c,  and  lean'd  ,,     105 

As  she  withdrew  into  the  golden  c,  ,,     191 

narrow  moon-lit  slips  of  silver  c,  „     218 

death,  death,  thou  ever-floating  c,  ,,     238 

A  c  of  incense  of  all  odour  steam'd  Palace  of  Art.  39 

All  barr'd  with  long  white  c  the  scornful  crags,  , ,           83 
c's  are  lightly  curl'd  Round  their  golden 

houses  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  112 

Hold  swollen  c's  from  raining,  B.  of  F.  Women  11 

'  The  light  white  c  swam  over  us.  ,,          221 

Brightening  the  skirts  of  a  long  c,  M.  d' Arthur  54 

as  one  large  c  Drew  downward  :  Gardener's  D.  78 

The  light  c  smoulders  on  the  summer  crag.  Edwin  Morris  147 

sign  betwixt  the  meadow  and  the  c,  St.  S.  Stylites  14 

A  soft  air  fans  the  c  apart ;  Tithonus  32 

looking  like  a  summer  moon  Half -dipt  in  c :  _      Godiva  46 

The  c's  are  broken  in  the  sky.  Sir  Galahad  73 

And  c's  are  highest  up  in  air.  Lady  Clare  2 

made  the  wild -swan  pause  in  her  c,  Poet's  Song  7 

c  Cuts  off  the  fiery  highway  of  the  sun,  Enoch  Arden  129 

Sailing  along  before  a  gloomy  c  Sea  Dreams  124 

Where  never  creeps  a  c,  or  moves  a  wind,  Lucretius  106 


Cloud  (b)  {continued)  and  molten  on  the  waste  Becomes  a  c:  Princess  iv  78 

As  of  some  fire  against  a  stormy  c,  ,,         384 

Settled  a  gentle  c  of  melancholy  ;  ,,         570 

As  comes  a  pillar  of  electric  c,  ,,      v  524 

thro'  the  c  that  dimm'd  her  broke  A  genial  warmth  , ,     vi  281 

The  c  may  stoop  from  heaven  and  take  the  shape  , ,        vii  2 

sees  a  great  black  c  Drag  inward  from  the  deeps,  ,,           36 
C's  that  are  racing  above.                                         Window.  On  the  Hill  6 

Gone,  and  a  c  in  my  heart,  ,,                  Gone  6 

No  is  trouble  and  c  and  storm,  „       No  Answer  8 

Such  c's  of  nameless  trouble  cross  In  Mem.  iv  13 

dote  and  pore  on  yonder  c  That  rises  upward  ,,         a:»  16 

A  rainy  c  possess'd  the  earth,  ,,         xxx  3 

With  fruitful  c  and  living  smoke,  ,,     xxxix  3 

Thro'  c's  that  drench  the  morning  star,  ,,     Ixxii  22 

'  Can  c's  of  nature  stain  The  starry  clearness  ,,    Ixxxv  85 

But  in  the  darkness  and  the  c,  ,,      xcvi  21 

We  steer'd  her  toward  a  crimson  c  ,,        ciii  55 

The  flying  c,  the  frosty  light :  „          cvi2 

Like  c's  they  shape  themselves  and  go.  ,,     ca;a;m  8 

high  in  heaven  the  streaming  c,  ,,  Con.  107 

man  walks  with  his  head  in  a  c  of  poisonous  flies.  Maud  I  iv  54 

In  fold  upon  fold  of  hueless  c,  ,,        vi  B 

when  the  morning  came  In  a  c,  it  faded,  ,,           21 
sun  look'd  out  with  a  smile  Betwixt  the  c  and  the  moor          ,,         ix  i 

till  the  c  that  settles  round  his  birth  Gareth  and  L.  130 

In  counter  motion  to  the  c's,  ,,         1315 
under  c  that  grew  To  thunder-gdoom  palling 

all  stars,  „        1358 
Turn  thy  wild  wheel  thro'  sunshine,  storm, 

and  c  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  348 

wheel  and  thou  are  shadows  in  the  c ;  ,,              357 

and  by  and  by  Slips  into  golden  c,  „              736 

Then  seeing  c  upon  the  mother's  brow,  ,,              777 

make  your  Enid  burst  Sunlike  from  c —  ,,              789 

all  night  long  a  c  clings  to  the  hill,  Geraint  and  E.  691 

Hung  like  a  c  above  the  gateway  towers.'  Merlin  and  V.  599 

Drew  the  vast  eyelid  of  an  inky  c,  ,,            634 

across  him  came  a  c  Of  melancholy  severe,  Lancelot  and  E.  324 

Dispersed  his  resolution  like  a  c.  ,,            884 

All  over  cover'd  with  a  luminous  c.  Holy  GraU  189 

'  Lo  now,'  said  Arthur,  '  have  ye  seen  a  c  ?  „        286 

Clothed  in  white  samite  or  a  luminous  c.  ,,         513 

— a  smile  beneath  a  c.  But  heaven  had  meant  it  „        705 

o'er  it  crost  the  dimness  of  a  c  Floating,  Pelleas  and  E.  37 

colours  like  the  c  Of  sunset  and  sunrise,  ,,             53 
upward-rushing  storm  and  c  Of  shriek  and 

plume,  Last  Tournament  440 

Far  over  sands  marbled  with  moon  and  c,  , ,           466 

they  cannot  weep  behind  a  c :  Guinevere  207 

and  wail  their  way  From  c  to  c,  Pass,  of  Arthur  40 
glory  cling  To  all  high  places  like  a  golden  c 

Forever:  ,,             54 

Brightening  the  skirts  of  a  long  c,  ,,          222 

Streams  like  a  c,  man-shaped,  To  the  Queen  ii  40 

sails,  White  as  white  c's,  floated  from  sky  to  sky.  Lover's  Tale  i  5 

Moved  from  the  c  of  unforgotten  things,  ,,           48 

Stay'd  on  the  c  of  sorrow ;  ,,        255 

daylight  of  your  minds  But  c  and  smoke,  ,,         297 

would  have  flung  himself  From  c  to  c,  ,,        302 

Shading  his  eyes  till  all  the  fiery  c,  ,,         306 

Held  for  a  space  'twixt  c  and  wave,  ,,         417 

Into  a  clearer  zehith,  pure  of  c.           v  ,,         514 

Diffused  and  molten  into  flaky  c.  , ,         641 

life,  burst  through  the  c  of  thought  Keen,  ,,     ii  164 

billow  ran  Shoreward  beneath  red  c's,  '           ,,         179 

a  little  silver  c  Over  the  sounding  seas :  ,,     m  36 

Willy — the  moon's  in  a  c —  Eizpah  86 

melted  like  a  c  in  the  silent  summer  heaven ;  The  Sevenge  14 

San  Philip  hung  above  us  like  a  c  ,,          43 
c  that  roofs  our  noon  with  night,                              Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  17 

days  Of  doubt  and  c  and  storm,  Columbus  156 

at  dawn  from-  the  c  glitter'd  o'er  us  V.  of  Maeldune  84 

ridges  drew  the  c  and  brake  the  storm  Montenegro  13 
glorious  goddess  wreath'd  a  golden  c,                      Achilles  over  the  T.  5 


Cloud 


104 


Coast 


Cloud  (b)  [continued)    All  day  long  far-off  in  the  c  of  the  city,  The  Wreck  29 

c  of  the  mother's  shame  will  enfold  her  ,,         100 

only  a  c  and  a  smoke  who  was  once  a  pillar  Despair  29 
and  higher,  The  c  that  hides  it — higher  still,  the 
heavens  Whereby  the  c  was  moulded,  and 

whereout  The  c  descended.  Ancient  Sage  12 

beacon  burn'd  in  vain,  And  now  is  lost  in  c :  ,,        143 

past  into  the  Nameless,  as  a  c  Melts  into  Heaven.  ,,        233 
But  still  the  c's  remain  ; '  The  c's  themselves  are 

children  of  the  Sun.  ,,        241 

A  c  between  the  Nameless  and  thyself ,  ,,       278 

An'  the  sun  kem  out  of  a  c  Tomorrow  37 

And  roU'd  them  around  like  a  c, —  Heavy  Brigade  40 

One  year  without  a  storm,  or  even  a  c ;  The  Ring  284 

Would  Earth  tho'  hid  in  c  not  be  follow'd  Happy  97 

C's  and  darkness  Closed  upon  Camelot ;  Merlin  and  the  G  75 

Or  does  the  gloom  of  Age  And  suffering  c  Romney's  R.  65 

my  reign  Was  redden'd  by  that  c  of  shame  Akbar's  Dream  64 

methought  The  c  was  rifted  by  a  purer  gleam  ,,              78 

Cloud  (verb)    ever  swarm  about  And  c  the  highest  heads,     Columbus  120 

Clouded    So  spake  he,  c  with  his  own  conceit,  M.  d' Arthur  110 

(For  all  my  mind  is  c  with  a  doubt) —  ,,           258 

Being  so  c  with  his  grief  and  love,  Holy  Grail  656 

So  spake  he,  c  with  his  own  conceit,  Pass,  of  Arthur  278 

(For  all  my  mind  is  c  with  a  doubt) —  ,,              426 

c  with  the  grateful  incense-fume  Tiresias  183 

all  the  Thrones  are  c  by  your  loss,  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  6 

Cloudier    c  on  her  knight — Linger'd  Ettarre :  Pelleas  and  E.  177 

Cloudlet    From  little  c's  on  the  grass.  In  Mem.,  Con.  94 

Cloud-pavilion'd    The  c-p  element,  the  wood.  Lover's  Tale  ii  108 

Cloud-tower    C-t's  by  ghostly  masons  wrought,  In  Mem.  Ixx  5 

Cloud-weaver    C-w  of  phantasmal  hopes  and  fears,  To  Victor  Hugo  2 

Cloudy    made  him  look  so  c  and  so  cold  ;  Geraint  and  E.  48 

Clout    an'  the  clats  an'  the  c's,  Spinster's  S's.  87 

Clove  (s)    nutmeg  rocks  and  isles  of  c.  The  Voyage  40 

Clove  (verb)     c  The  citron-shadows  in  the  blue :  Arabian  Nights  14 

the  crowd  dividing  c  An  advent  to  the  throne :  Princess  iv  283 

Laid  him  that  c  it  grovelling  on  the  ground.  Gareth  and  L.  972 

with  a  stronger  buffet  he  c  the  helm  ,,        1406 

said  Mark,  and  c  him  thro'  the  brain.  Last  Tournament  754 

C  into  perilous  chasms  our  walls  Def.  of  Lv/:know  55 

And  c  the  Moslem  crescent  moon,  Happy  44 

Cloven    (See  also  Earthquake-cloven,  Furrow-cloven) 

Was  c  with  the  million  stars  Ode  to  Memory  35 

That  not  a  worm  is  c  in  vain ;  In  Mem.  liv  9 

Till  Gareth's  shield  was  c ;  Gareth  and  L.  971 

earth  beneath  me  yawning  c  With  such  a  sound  Lover's  Tale  i  602 

My  heart  was  c  with  pain  ;  ,,        it  200 

Clover    Rare  broidry  of  the  purple  c.  A  Dirge  38 

among  the  meadows,  the  c  and  the  clematis.  City  Child  9 

Clover-hill    with  white  bells  the  c-h  swells  Sea-Fairies  14 

Clown    thou  art  mated  with  a  c,  Locksley  Hall  47 

knave  nor  c  Shall  hold  their  orgies  You  might  have  won  11 

Shakespeare's  curse  on  c  and  knave  ,,                 27 

this  is  proper  to  the  c,  Tho'  smock'd,  or  f  urr'd  and 

purpled,  still  the  c,  Princess  iv  246 

turnspits  for  the  c.  The  drunkard's  football,  ,,        516 

Glorifying  c  and  satyr ;  i,     «  187 

By  blood  a  king,  at  heart  a  c  ;  In  Mem.  cxi  4 

Not  all  mismated  with  a  yawning  c,  Geraint  and  E.  426 

not  worthy  to  be  knight ;  A  churl,  a  c ! '  Balin  and  Balan  286 
Like  a  c — by  chance  he  met  me —                         Locksley  H.,  Sixty  256 

An'  ya  call'd  'im  a  c,  ya  did.  Church-warden,  etc.  30 
Club    (See  also  Battle-club)    talk'd  At  wine,  in  c's, 

of  art.  Princess,  Pro.  161 

Clump  (mend)    I  could  fettle  and  e  owd  booots  North.  Cobbler  13 

ClunjT    You  should  have  c  to  Fulvia's  waist,  D.  ofF.  Wom^n  259 

llien  they  c  about  The  old  man's  neck,  Dora  163 

friendly  mist  of  mom  C  to  the  lake.  Edwin  Morris  108 

When  I  c  to  all  the  present  Locksley  Hall  14 

evil  fancies  c  Like  serpent  eggs  together,  Enoch  A  rden  479 

from  the  beetling  crag  to  which  he  c  Aylmer's  Field  229 
sootflake  of  so  many  a  summer  still  C  to  their  fancies)     Sea  Dreams  36 

and  the  child  C  to  the  mother,  ,,        245 

then,  a  moment  after,  c  About  him.  Princess  ii  312 


Clung  (continued)    about  his  motion  c  The  shadow  of  his 

sister,  Princess  v  257 

Late  the  little  children  c :  Ode  on  Well.  237 

C  to  the  shield  that  Lancelot  lent  him,  Gareth  and  L.  1320 
dawn  ascending  lets  the  day  Strike  where  it  c  :         Geraint  and  E.  693 

but  that  other  c  to  him,  Fixt  in  her  will,  Merlin  and  V.  187 

c  about  her  lissome  limbs,  ,,            223 

curved  an  arm  about  his  neck,  C  like  a  snake ;  , ,            242 

while  the  skin  C  but  to  crate  and  basket,  ,,             625 

c  to  him  and  hugg'd  him  close ;  ,,             945 

to  his  crown  the  golden  dragon  c,  Lancelot  and  E  434 

knightly  in  me  twined  and  c  Round  that  one  sin.  Holy  Grail  774 

fell  thick  rain,  plume  droopt  and  mantel  c.  Last  Tournament  213 

A  voice  c  sobbing  till  he  question'd  it,  ,,            759 

C  to  the  dead  earth,  and  the  land  was  still.  Guinevere  8 

for  crest  the  golden  dragon  c  Of  Britain ;  ,,     594 
c  In  utter  silence  for  so  long,                                   Sisters  (E.  and  E. )  216 

from  the  ladders  to  which  they  had  c,  Def.  of  Lucknow  58 

C  closer  to  us  for  a  longer  term  Columbus  197 

and  the  dark-blue  clematis,  c,  V.  of  Maeldune  39 

I  c  to  the  sinking  form.  The  Wreck  105 

She  c  to  me  with  such  a  hard  embrace,  The  Ring  435 
Cluster  (s)     (See  also  Swi-olaater)    Below  the  starry 

c's  bright,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  25 

tropic  shade  and  palms  in  c,  Locksley  Hall  160 

red  roofs  about  a  narrow  wharf  In  c ;  Enoch  Arden  4 

lithe  reluctant  boughs  to  tear  away  Their  tawny  c's,  „        382 

Came  men  and  women  in  dark  c's  Sea  Dreams  226 

Cluster  (verb)    The  foxglove  c  dappled  bells.'  Two  Voices  72 

Clustered    sunny  hair  C  about  his  temples  (Enone  60 

Clutch     So  I  c  it.     Christ !     'Tis  gone :  St.  S.  Stylites  207 

And  lives  to  c  the  golden  keys,  In  Mem.  Ixiv  10 

Clutch'd    (See  also  Clemm'd)    c  the  sword.  And  strongly 

wheel'd  and  threw  it.  M.  d' Arthur  135 

stoop'd  and  c  him,  fair  and  good,  WiU  Water.  133 

So  my  mother  c  The  truth  at  once,  Princess  Hi  60 

He,  standing  still,  was  c;  ,,       iv  260 

wakening,  fiercely  c  the  shield  ;  Gareth  and  L.  1304 

C  at  the  crag,  and  started  thro'  mid  air  Last  Tournament  14 
c  the  sword,  And  strongly  wheel'd  and  threw  it.      Pass,  of  Arthur  303 

Or  c  the  sacred  crown  of  Prester  John,  Columbus  110 

Clutter'd    It  c  here,  it  chuckled  there  ;  The  Goose  25 

Coal    On  the  c's  I  lay,  A  vessel  full  of  sin :  St.  S.  Stylites  169 

left  his  c  all  turn'd  into  gold  Maud  /  a;  11 

c's  of  fire  you  heap  upon  my  head  Romney's  R.  141 

Coal-black    flow'd  His  c-b  curls  as  on  he  rode,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  31 

Co&mb  (comb)    raake  out  Hell  wi'  a  small-tooth  c —  Village  Wife  76 
Coamb'd  (combed)    theer  an'  then  I  c  'im  down.       Church  warden,  etc.  32 

Coarse     sense  of  touch  is  something  c,  Talking  Oak  163 

growing  c  to  sympathise  with  clay.  Locksley  Hall  46 

daughter  of  our  meadows,  yet  not  c ;  The  Brook  69 

thou,  My  lord,  eat  also,  tho'  tho  fare  is  c,  Geraint  and  E.  208 

I  can  well  believe,  for  he  look'd  so  c  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  7 

Coarseness    According  to  the  c  of  their  kind.  Princess  iv  346 

Coast     show'd  an  iron  c  and  angry  waves.  Palace  of  Art  69 

All  round  the  c  the  languid  air  Lotos-Eaters  5 

all  in  shade,  Gloom'd  the  low  c  The  Voyage  42 

leagues  along  that  breaker-beaten  c  Enoch  Arden  51 

Then  moving  up  the  c  they  landed  him,  ,,        665 

seaward-bound  for  health  they  gain'd  a  c,  Sea  Dreams  16 

she  told  it,  having  dream'd  Of  that  same  c.  ,,       207 

He  bad  you  guard  the  sacred  c's.  Ode  on  Well.  172 

left  the  last  free  race  with  naked  c's  !  Third  of  Feb.  40 

A  moulder'd  citadel  on  the  c,  TJie  Daisy  28 

A  lucid  veil  from  c  to  c.  In  Mem.  Ixvii  14 

rolling  brine  That  breaks  the  c.  ,,       cvii\b 
shipwreck'd  man  on  a  c  Of  ancient  fable  and  fear —         Maud  II  ii  31 

Back  from  the  Breton  c,  ,,43 
province  with  a  hundred  miles  of  c,  (repeat)      Merlin  and  V.  588,  647 

about  a  stone  On  the  bare  c.  Guinevere  52 

After  the  sunset,  down  the  c,  ,,      238 

All  down  the  lonely  c  of  Lyonnesse,  ,,      240 

mountains  ended  in  a  c  Of  ever-shifting  sand,  Pass,  of  Arthur  85 

while  we  roam'd  along  the  dreary  c,  Lover's  Tale  iv  145 

while  I  wander' d  down  the  c,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  53 


Coast 


105 


College-council 


Coast  (continued)    Phra-bat  the  step  ;  your  Pontic  c ;  To  Ulysses  42 
Coasted    See  Silver-coasted 

Coat    (See  also  Coftt)    three  castles  patch  my  tattor'd  c  ?     Princess  ii  416 

rough  dog,  to  whom  he  cast  his  c,  Gareth  and  L.  1011 

And  such  a  c  art  thou,  ,,         1013 

Coat    Them  as  'as  c's  to  their  backs  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  46 

Coat-of-arms     Is  worth  a  hundred  c's-o-a.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  16 

Coax'd    kept  and  c  and  whistled  to —  Gareth  and  Z.  14 

Co&x'd    An'  c  an'  coodled  me  oop  North.  Cobbler  80 

Cobbled    browt  me  the  booots  to  be  c  ,,             94 

Cobham    Some  cried  on  C,  on  the  good  Lord  C  ;  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  43 

Cobra    Those  c's  ever  setting  up  their  hoods —  Akbar's  Dream  166 

Cobweb    The  petty  c's  we  have  spun :  In  Mem.  cxxiv  8 

the  c  woven  across  the  cannon's  throat  Mavd  III  vi  27 

I  well  could  wish  a  c  for  the  gnat,  Merlin/ind  V.  370 

Seems  but  a  c  filament  to  link  Lover's  Tale  i  376 

Cobweb'd    See  Many-cobweb'd 

Cock    .The  c  sung  out  an  hour  ere  light :  Mariana  27 

the  c  hath  sung  beneath  the  thatch  The  Owl  1 10 

At  midnight  the  c  was  crowing,  Oriana  12 
Before  the  red  c  crows  from  the  farm            May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  23 

I  heard  just  now  the  crowing  c.  D.  of  the  O.  Year  38 

sitting,  as  I  said,  The  c  crew  loud  ;  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  10 

And  barking  dogs,  and  crowing  c's  ;  Day-Dm.,  Revival  4 

The  c  crows  ere  the  Christmas  morn.  Sir  Galahad  51 

0  PLUMP  head-waiter  at  The  C,  Will  Water.  1 

The  C  was  of  a  larger  egg  ,,        121 

Which  was  the  red  c  shouting  to  the  light,  Geraint  and  E.  384 

And  the  c  couldn't  crow,  V.  of  Maeldune  18 

The  c  has  crow'd  already  once,  The  Flight  3 

c's  kep  a-crawin'  an'  crawin'  Owd  Boa  106 

Cockatrice    basilisks,  and  splinter'd  c's,  Roly  Grail  718 
Cockchafer    See  Buzzard-Clock 

Cock-eyed    I  loodk'd  c-e  at  my  noase  North.  Cobbler  26 

Cockney    (Look  at  it)  pricking  a  c  ear.  Maud  /  a:  22 

Coco     slender  c's  drooping  crown  of  plumes,  Enoch  Arden  574 

Cocoon    Spins,  toiling  out  his  own  c.  Two  Voices  180 

we  as  rich  as  moths  from  dusk  c's.  Princess  ii  19 

Coco-palm    some  dark  dweller  by  the  c-p  Prog,  of  Spring  68 

Code    Christless  c.  That  must  have  life  Maud  II  i  26 

Codlin    fresh  as  a  c  wesh'd  i'  the  dew.  North.  Cobbler  110 

Coerce    No  sound  is  breathed  so  potent  to  c,  Tiresias  120 
Coffin    (See  also  Corpse-coffin)    in  his  c  the  Prince 

of  courtesy  lay.  G.  of  Swainston  10 

thou  wouldst  have  her  flag  Borne  on  thy  c —  Bed.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  17 

That  within  the  c  fell,  Fell—  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  43 

brother  come  ?  to  find  Me  or  my  c?  Romney's  R.  144 

Cognizance    Some  goodly  c  of  Guinevere.  Balin  and  Balan  195 

memory  of  that  c  on  shield  Weighted  it  down,  ,,              224 

Stared  at  the  priceless  c,  ,,              430 

one  that  hath  defamed  The  c  she  gave  me :  ,,              485 

Cogoletto    I  stay'd  the  wheels  at  C,  The  Daisy  23 

Coil     Hard  c's  of  cordage,  swarthy  fishing-nets,  Enoch  Arden  17 

roots  like  some  black  c  of  carven  snakes,  Last  Tournament  13 

Coil'd    convolvuluses  That  c  around  the  stately  stems,      Enoch  Arden  577 

long  loops  Wherethro'  the  serpent  river  c,  Gareth  and  L.  906 

serpent  c  about  his  broken  shaft,  Demeter  and  P.  77 

Coin    Light  c,  the  tinsel  clink  of  compliment.  Princess  ii  55 

Him  that  made  them  current  c ;  In  Mem.  xxxvi  4 

and  like  to  c's,  Some  true,  some  light,  Holy  Grail  25 

With  scarce  a  c  to  buy  a  meal  withal,  Columbus  169 

All  the  chosen  c  of  fancy  flashing  To  Virgil  7 

violates  virgin  Truth  for  a  c  or  a  cheque.  The  Dawn  15 

Coinage     Ringing  like  proven  golden  c  true,  Aylmer's  Field  182 

strown  With  gold  and  scatter'd  c,  Geraint  and  E.  26 

Coin'd    When  he  c  into  English  gold  some  treasure  The  Wreck  67 

man  had  c  himself  a  curse  :  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  87 

Cold  (adj.)    (See  also  Snow-cold,  Cowd)    All  c,  and  dead, 

and  corpse-like  grown  ?  Supp.  Confessions  17 

And  dew  is  c  upon  the  ground,  The  Owl  I  2 

Quiet,  dispassionate,  and  c,  A  Character  28 

Ere  the  placid  lips  be  c  ?  Adeline  20 

Because  my  memory  is  so  c.  Two  Voices  341 

Is  not  more  c  to  you  than  I.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  24 

surely  now  our  household  hearts  are  c :  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  72 


Cold  (Sidj.)  (continued)  Night  is  starry  and  c,  my  friend,  D.  of  the  0.  Year  34 

c  Are  all  thy  lights,  and  c  my  wrinkled  feet  Tithonus  66 

'  Shy  she  was,  and  I  thought  her  c ;  Edward  Gray  13 

And  saw  the  altar  c  and  bare.  The  Letters  4 

Full  c  my  greeting  was  and  dry  ;  ,,        13 
round  him  ere  he  scarce  be  c.  Begins  the 

scandal  You  might  have  won  15 

LuciLiA,  wedded  to  Lucretius,  found  Her  master  c ;  iMcretius  2 

The  loyal  warmth  of  Florian  is  not  c.  Princess  ii  244 

motionlessly  pale,  C  ev'n  to  her,  ,,      vi  102 

And  call  her  bard  and  c  which  seem'd  a  truth  :  „      '"H    ^^ 

you  think  1  am  hard  and  c  ;  Grandmother  17 

We  loved  that  hall,  tho'  white  and  c.  The  Daisy  37 

When  ill  and  weary,  alone  and  c,  ,,96 

C  in  that  atmosphere  of  Death,  In  Mem.  xx  14 

A  spectral  doubt  which  makes  me  c,  ,,         xli  19 

So,  dearest,  now  thy  brows  are  c,  ,,       Ixxiv  5 

Is  c  to  all  that  might  have  been.  ,,      Ixxv  16 

He  looks  so  c  :  she  thinks  him  kind.  ,,     xcvii  24: 

And  smile  as  sunny  as  c,  Maud  I  vi  24 

she  was  kind  Only  because  she  was  c.  ,,     xiv  27 

made  him  look  so  cloudy  and  so  c ;  Geraint  and  E.  48 

'  Poor  men,  when  yule  is  c.  Holy  Grail  613 
glanced  at  him,  thought  him  c.  High,  self-contain'd,        Guinevere  405 

till  all  his  heart  was  c  With  formless  fear  ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  97 

subject  of  thy  power,  be  c  in  her,  Lover' i  Tale  i  782 

in  the  hold  were  most  of  them  stark  and  c.  The  Revenge  79 

C  were  his  brows  when  we  kiss'd  him —  Def.  of  Lucknow  12 

of  the  mind  Mine  ;  worse,  c,  calculated.  Romney's  R.  152 
Cold  (s)  (See  also  Cowd)    I  fear  My  wound  hath 

taken  c,  M.  d' Arthur  166 

and  in  thirsts,  fevers  and  c,  St.  S.  Stylites  12 

Would  chatter  with  the  c,  ,,31 

In  height  and  c,  the  splendour  of  the  hills  ?  Princess  vii  194 

Like  coarsest  clothes  against  the  c  :  In  Mem.  v.  10 

How  dwarf 'd  a  growth  of  c  and  night,  ,,       lxi7 

fire  of  Heav'n  has  kill'd  the  barren  c,  Balin  and  Balan  440 
smitten  in  mid  heaven  with  mortal  c  Past  from 

her  ;  Last  Tournament  27 
hour  of  c  Falls  on  the  mountain  in  midsummer 

snows,  ,,            227 

I  fear  My  wound  hath  taken  c,  Pass,  of  Arthur  334 

the  c  Without,  and  warmth  within  me,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  28 

would  dare  Hell-heat  or  Arctic  c.  Ancient  Sage  116 

thaws  the  c,  and  fills  the  flower  Early  Spring  45 

a  breath  that  past  With  all  the  c  of  winter  The  Ring  33 

Cold-blooded    That  dull  c-b  Cajsar.  D.  of  F.  Women  139 

Coldness    The  faithless  c  of  the  times  ;  In  Mem.  cvi  18 

By  the  c  of  her  manners,  Mavd  I  xx  13 

Cold-white    white  against  the  c-w  sky.  Dying  Swan  12 

Colewort    Picks  from  the  c  a  green  caterpillar,  Guinevere  32 

Collar    A  grazing  iron  c  grinds  my  neck  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  117 

She  cried,  '  The  c  of  some  Order,  which  Last  Tournament  741 

Collar-bone    cloak  that  dropt  from  c-b  to  heel,  Gareth  and  L.  682 

CoUatine    made  her  blood  in  sight  of  C  Lucretius  238 

CoUeaguing    C  with  a  score  of  petty  kings.  Com.  of  Arthur  67 

College     '  we  knew  your  gift  that  way  At  c  :  The  Epic  25 

For  I  remember'd  Everard's  c  fame  , ,         46 

I  was  at  school — a  c  in  the  South  :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  83 

By  night  we  dragg'd  her  to  the  c  tower  ,,                89 

My  c  friendships  glimmer.  WiU  Water.  40 

I  was  there  From  c,  visiting  the  son, —  Princess,  Pro.  7 

but  we,  unworthier,  told  Of  c :  ,,111 

build  Far  off  from  men  a  c  like  a  man's,  „         135 

swore  he  long'd  at  c,  only  long'd,  ,,          158 

A  talk  of  c  and  of  ladies'  rights,  ,,         233 

when  the  c  lights  Began  to  glitter  „       i  207 

At  break  of  day  the  C  Portress  came :  „       ii  15 

A  rosy  blonde,  and  in  a  c  gown,  „         323 

Her  c  and  her  maidens,  empty  masks,  ,,     im  187 

King,  camp  and  c  turn'd  to  hollow  shows  ;  ,>       «  478 

So  their  fair  c  turn'd  to  hospital ;  ,,       vii  17 

'  Look  there,  garden  ! '  said  my  c  friend,  ,,   Con.  49 

And  heard  once  more  in  c  fanes  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  5 

College-council    Should  eighty-thousand  c-c's  To  F.  D.  Maurice  7 


College-time 


106 


Come 


College-time    save  for  c-t's  Or  Temple-eaten  terms,        Alymer's  Field  104 

Colon  (Columbus)    See  Christopher  Colon 

Colony    near  the  c  Camulodiine,  Boiidicea  5 

Lo  their  c  half-defended  !  lo  their  c,  ,,      17 

Then  a  phantom  c  smoulder'd  on  the  refluent  estuary  ;  ,'.28 

Lo  the  c,  there  they  rioted  in  the  city  of  Cunobeline  !  „       60 

silent  c  hearing  her  tumultuous  adversaries  ,,       78 

Fell  the  c,  city  and  citadel,  ,,       86 

Colossal    Let  his  great  example  stand  C,  Ode  on  Well.  221 

Colosseum    Gain'd  their  huge  C.  St.  Telemachus  45 

Colour  {See  also  Flame-colour)    sweet  is  the  c  of  cove 

and  cave,  Sea-Fairies  30 

I  lose  my  c,  I  lose  my  breath,  Eleanore  137 

A  magic  web  with  c's  gay.  L.  of  Shalott  ii  2 

A  word  could  bring  the  c  to  my  cheek  ;  Gardener's  D.  196 

came  a  c  and  a  light,  Locksley  Hall  25 
The  c  flies  into  his  cheeks  :                                         Day-Dm.,  Arrival  19 

Then  the  Captain's  c  heighten'd,  The  Captain  29 

the  c  flushes  Her  sweet  face  from  brow  to  chin  :  L.  of  Burleigh  61 

She  wore  the  c's  I  approved.  The  Letters  16 

a  rough  piece  Of  early  rigid  c,  Aylmer's  Field  281 

yet  her  cheek  Kept  c :  wondrous!  ,,            506 

sense  of  wrong  had  touched  her  face  With  c)  Princess,  Pro.  220 

April  daffodilly  (Her  mother's  c)  ,,        m  325 

In  c's  gayer  than  the  morning  mist,  ,,             438 

shook  the  woods.  And  danced  the  c,  ,,        Hi  293 

'  Sir  Ralph  has  got  your  c's :  ,,        iv  ^9i 

With  Psyche's  c  round  his  helmet,  ,,         z;  534 

But  such  as  gather'd  c  day  by  day.  , ,       vii  118 

But  distant  c,  happy  hamlet,  The  Daisy  27 

And  with  the  thought  her  c  burns  ;  In  Mem.  vi  34 

Be  all  the  c  of  the  flower :                                          '  ,,       xliii  8 

The  c's  of  the  crescent  prime  ?  ,,       cxvi  4t 

Saying  in  odour  and  c,  'Ah,  be  Among  the  roses  Maud  I  xxi  12 

0  rainbow  with  three  c's  after  rain,  Gareth  and  L.  1160 
my  child,  how  fresh  the  c's  look.  How  fast  they 

hold  like  c^s  of  a  shell  Marr.  of  Geraint  680 

and  play'd  upon  it.  And  made  it  of  two  c's  ;  Geraint  and  E.  292 

And  so  there  lived  some  c  in  your  cheek,  ,,            621 

In  c  like  the  satin-shining  palm  Merlin  and  V.  224 

With  c's  of  the  heart  that  are  not  theirs.  ,,              822 

Took  gayer  c's,  like  an  opal  warm'd.  ,,             950 

And  lichen'd  into  c  with  the  crags  :  Lancelot  and  E.  44 

The  low  sun  makes  the  c :  ,,            134 

The  shape  and  c  of  a  mind  and  life,  ,,            335 

let  me  bring  your  c  back ;  ,,            387 

secret  blazed  itself  In  the  heart's  c's  ,,            837 

But  did  not  love  the  c ;  ,,            840 

cell  were  dyed  With  rosy  c's  leaping  on  the  wall  ;  Holy  Grail  120 

In  c  like  the  fingers  of  a  hand  Before  a  burning  taper,  ,,          693 

Damsels  in  divers  c's  like  the  cloud  Pelleas  and  E.  53 
That  ware  their  ladies'  c's  on  the  casque,               Last  Tournament  184 

With  all  the  kindlier  c's  of  the  field.'  ,,              224 

And  glowing  in  all  c's,  the  live  grass,  ,,              233 

1  yeam'd  for  warmth  and  c  which  I  found  In 

Lancelot —  Guinevere  647 

The  c  and  the  sweetness  from  the  rose.  Lover's  Tale  i  172 

Her  cheek  did  catch  the  c  of  her  words.  ,,            569 

shadowing  pencil's  naked  forms  C  and  life  :  ,,        it  181 

And  blurr'd  in  c  and  form.  Dead  Prophet  22 

concentrate  into  form  And  c  all  you  are,  liomney's  R.  8 

Colour'd    See  Emerald-colour'd,  Leaden-coloured, 
Vary-coloured 

Colourless    for  all  his  face  was  white  And  c,  M.  d' Arthur  213 

for  all  his  face  was  white  And  c.  Pass,  of  Arthur  381 

Colt     'Then  ran  she,  gamesome  as  the  c.  Talking  Oak  121 
babes  were  running  wild  Like  c's  about  the  waste.       Enoch  Arden  305 

He  pointed  out  a  pasturing  c,  The  Brook  136 

Squire  had  seen  the  c  at  grass,  ,,          139 

the  c  would  fetch  its  price ;  ,,          149 

she's  yet  a  c — Take,  break  her :  Princess  v  455 

Ran  like  a  c,  and  leapt  at  all  he  saw  :  Com.  of  Arthur  322 

never  c  would  more  delight  To  roll  Romney's  R.  13 

Colt-like    c-l  whinny  and  with  hoggish  whine  St.  S.  Stylites  177 

Columbus    How  young  C  seom'd  to  rove,  The  Daisy  17 


Column    Six  c's,  three  on  either  side. 
So  like  a  shatter'd  c  lay  the  King  ; 
people  hum  About  the  c's  base, 
The  watcher  on  the  c  till  the  end  ; 
And  in  we  stream'd  Among  the  c's. 
To  left  and  right,  of  those  tall  c's 
bared  the  knotted  c  of  his  throat, 
massive  c's,  like  a  shorecliff  cave. 
So  like  a  shatter'd  c  lay  the  King  ; 
masses  Of  thundershaken  c's  indistinct, 
From  c  on  to  c,  as  in  a  wood, 
names.  Graven  on  memorial  c's, 

Co-mate    one  of  my  c-m's  Own'd  a  rough  dog, 
true  c-m's  regather  round  the  mast ; 


Arabian  Nights  144 

M.  d' Arthur  221 

St.  S.  Stylites  39 

„        163 

Princess  ii  435 

„       vi  354 

Marr.  of  Geraint  74 

Lancelot  and  E.  406 

Pass,  of  Arthur  389 

Lover's  Tale  ii  66 

it;  189 

Tiresias  124 

Gareth  and  L.  1010 

Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  5 


Comb  (s)    See  Coamb,  Comb  of  Pearl,  Hornet-comb 

Comb  (valley)    they  past  a  narrow  c  wherein  Gareth  and  L.  1193 

Comb  (verb)    With  a  comb  of  pearl  I  would  c  my  hair  ;    The  Mermaid  11 

I  would  c  my  hair  till  my  ringlets  ,,  •          14 

Combat  (s)    And  when  the  tide  of  c  stands,  Sir  Galahad  10 

To  prick  us  on  to  c  '  Like  to  like  !  Princess  v  304 

Not  dare  to  watch  the  c,  Geraint  and  E.  154 

In  c  with  the  follower  of  Limours,  ,,           501 

Combat  (verb)    sware  to  c  for  my  claim  till  death.  Princess  v  360 

a  knight  To  c  for  my  sister,  Lyonors,  Gareth  and  L.  608 

He  needs  must  c  might  with  might.  Epilogue  28 

Comb'd    (See  also  Cod,mb'd)    as  I  c  I  would  sing  and 

say.  The  Mermaid  12 

I  curl'd  and  c  his  comely  head,  The  Sisters  31 

Combing    C  her  hair  Under  the  sea.  The  Mermaid  4 

c  out  her  long  black  hair  damp  from  the  river  ;  Princess  iv  276 

Comb  of  Pearl    With  a  cop,  On  a  throne  ?  The  Mermaid  7 

With  a  c  0  p  I  would  comb  my  hair ;  ,,11 

Made  with  her  right  &  c  op  Merlin  and  V.  244 

Come    (See  also  Coom,  To-come)    Spring  will  c 

never  more.  All  Things  voill  die  15 

Ye  will  c  never  more,  , ,              48 

He  will  not  c,'  she  said  ;  Mariana  82 

When  cats  run  home  and  light  is  c.  The  Owl  i  1 

C  not  as  thou  earnest  of  late,  Ode  to  Memory  8 

C  forth,  I  charge  thee,  arise,  ,,            46 

C  from  the  woods  that  belt  the  gray  hill-side,  ,,        .    ^^ 

Dark-brow'd  sophist,  c  not  anear  ;  Poet's  Mind  8 

Hollow  smile  and  frozen  sneer  C  not  here.  ,,_  _     11 

0  hither,  c  hither  and  furl  your  sails,  Sea-Fairies  16 
C  hither  to  me  and  to  me  ;  Hither,  c  hither  and  frolic 

and  play  ;  ,,17 

Hither,  c  hither  and  see  ;  >»        28 

0  hither,  c  hither,  and  be  our  lords,  ,,  32 
C  away  :  no  more  of  mirth  Is  here  Deserted  House  13 
C  away  :  for  Life  and  Thought  Here  no  longer 

dwell ;  ,,17 

How  could  I  rise  and  c  away,  Oriana  57 

1  dare  not  die  and  c  to  thee,  ,,96 
LuU'd  echoes  of  laborious  day  C  to  you,  Margaret  30 
C  down,  c  down,  and  hear  me  speak  :  ,,56 
C  down,  c  home.  My  Rosalind,  Rosalind  33 
C's  out  thy  deep  ambrosial  smile.  Eleanore  74 
Thought  seems  to  c  and  go  In  thy  large  eyes,  ,,  96 
C  only,  when  the  days  are  still.  My  life  is  full  23 
Fresh- water  springs  c  up  through  bitter  brine.  //  /  were  loved  8 
The  knights  c  riding  two  and  two  ;  L.  of  Shalott  ii  25 
'  The  curse  is  c  upon  me, '  >,  Hi  ii 
night  c's  on  that  knows  not  morn,  Mariana  in  the  S.  94 
I  saw  the  dragon-fly  C  from  the  wells  Two  Voices  9 
'  Then  c's  the  check,  the  change,  the  fall,  >>  163 
In  days  that  never  c  again.  >>  324 
Herh  c's  to-day,  Pallas  and  Aphroditfe,  (Enone  85 
Should  e  most  welcome,  seeing  men,  „  129 
(power  of  herself  Would  c  uncall'd  for)  ,,  147 
sounds  at  night  c  from  the  inmost  hills,  „  249 
her  child  ! — a  shudder  c's  Across  me  :  ,,  253 
Lest  their  shrill  happy  laughter  c  to  me  ,,  258 
the  stars' c  forth  Talk  with  the  wild  Cassandra,  ,,  262 
I  made  a  feast ;  I  bad  him  c ;  The  Sisters  13 
There  c's  no  murmur  of  reply.  Palace  of  Art  286 


Come 


107 


Come 


Come  {continued)    shepherd  lads  on  every  side  'ill  c  from 
far  away, 
The  night-winds  c  and  go,  mother, 
I  only  wish  to  live  till  the  snowdrops  c 

again: 
and  the  sun  c  out  on  high : 
And  the  swallow,  'ill  c  back  again 
When  the  flowers  c  again,  mother, 
And  you'll  c  sometimes  and  see  me 
If  I  can  I'll  c  again,  mother, 
Don't  let  Eflie  c  to  see  me 
sweet  is  the  new  violet,  that  c's  beneath  the 

skies, 
if  it  c  three  times,  I  thought, 
to  wait  a  little  while  till  you  and  Effie  c — 
we  should  c  like  ghosts  to  trouble  joy. 
'  C  here.  That  I  may  look  on  thee." 
C's  up  to  take  his  own. 
And  gently  c's  the  world  to  those 
Nothing  c's  to  thee  new  or  strange. 
So  let  the  change  which  c's  be  free 
The  Spirit  of  the  years  to  c 
keep  a  thing,  its  use  will  c. 
Merlin  sware  that  I  should  c  again 
land,  where  no  one  c's,  Or  hath  c, 

'  Arthur  is  c  again :  he  cannot  die. ' 

'  C  again,  and  thrice  as  fair  ; 

'  C  With  all  good  things,  and  war  shall  be  no  more 

News  from  the  humming  city  c's  to  it  In  sound 

of  funeral 
Nor  heard  us  c,  nor  from  her  tendance 

Call'd  to  me  from  the  years  to  c, 

the  time  Is  c  to  raise  the  veil. 

for  this  orphan,  I  am  c  to  you : 

His  mother,  he  cried  out  to  c  to  her : 

but  now  I  c  For  Dora :  take  her  back  ; 

I  go  to-night :  I  c  to-morrow  morn. 

And  when  does  this  c  by  ? 

and  here  it  c's  With  five  at  top : 

For  that  the  evil  ones  c  here. 

That  here  e  those  that  worship  me  ? 

I  do  not  say  But  that  a  time  may  c — 

C,  blessed  brother,  c. 

Aiid  down  the  way  you  use  to  c, 

Spun  round  in  station,  but  the  end  had  c. 

O  might  it  c  like  one  that  looks  content, 

slow  and  sure  c's  up  the  golden  year. 

The  fatal  byword  of  all  years  to  c, 

C,  my  friends,  'Tis  not  too  late  to  seek 

Man  c's  and  tills  the  field  and  lies 

there  c's  A  glimpse  of  that  dark  world 

crimson  c's  upon  the  robin's  breast ; 

tho'  my  mortal  summers  to  such  length  of  years 
should  c 

Slowly  c's  a  hungry  people, 

Knowledge  c's,  but  wisdom  lingers,  (repeat) 

Never  c's  the  trader,  never  floats 

C's  a  vapour  from  the  margin, 

Faint  murmurs  from  the  meadows  c, 

C,  Care  and  Pleasure,  Hope  and  Pain, 

He  c's,  scarce  knowing  what  he  seeks : 

The  flashes  c  and  go ; 

'  Love  may  c,  and  love  may  go, 

Till  Ellen  Adair  c  back  to  me. 

she  c's  and  dips  Her  laurel  in  the  wine, 

earth  of  light  and  shade  C's  out  a  perfect  round. 

To  c  and  go,  and  c  again, 

'  That  all  c's  round  so  just  and  fair : 

Why  c  you  drest  like  a  village  maid, 

'  If  I  c  drest  like  a  village  maid.  ,,  oy 

When  beneath  his  roof  they  c.  L.  of  Burleigh  40 

C  not,  when  I  am  dead.  Come  not,  when,  etc.  1 

There  c's  a  sound  of  marriage  bells.  The  Letters  48 

Here  is  custom  c  your  way ;  Vision  of  Sin  64 

Therefore  c's  it  we  are  wise.  ,,        100 


May  Queen  27 
33 

May  Queen,  N.  ¥'s.  JS.  14 
15 

■'     i? 
;: 


Con.  5 

38 
58 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  74 

D.ofF.  WomenV2^ 

D.oftheO.  YearM 

To  J.  8.  3 

■  >     74 

Love  thou  thy  land  45 

55 

^The  Epic  42 

M.  d' Arthur  23 

„        202 

„  Ep.  24 

26 

Gardener's  D.  35 

144 

„        180 

274 

Dora  64 

„  138 

„  142 

Audley  Court  70 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  7 

112 

St.  8.  Stylites  98 

125 

190 

204 

Talking  Oak  115 

Love  arid  Dviy  76 

93 

Golden  Year  31 

Godiixi  67 

Ulysses  56 

Tithonus  3 

„      32 

Locksley  Hall  17 

67 
135 

„  141, 143 

„  161 

191 

Day- Dm.,  Sleep  P.  6 

55 

,,  Arrival  17 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  26 

Edward  Gray  29 

32 

WiU  Water.  17 

„  68 

„         229 

Lady  Clare  18 

67 


Come  [continued]    day  that  is  dead  Will  never  c  back 

to  me.  Break,  break,  etc.  16 

'  Save  them  from  this,  whatever  c's  to  me.'  Enoch  Arden  118 

(Sure  that  all  evil  would  c  out  of  it)  ,,          162 

make  him  merry,  when  I  c  home  again.  ,,          199 

C,  Annie,  c,  cheer  up  before  I  go.'  ,,          200 

Look  to  the  babes,  and  till  I  c  again  ,,          219 

if  he  c  again,  vext  will  he  be  To  find  ,,          301 

when  Enoch  c's  again  Why  then  he  shall  repay  me —  ,,          309 

'  C  with  us  Father  Philip '  ,,368 

If  Enoch  c's — but  Enoch  will  not  c —  ,,          431 

C  out  and  see.'    But  she — she  put  him  off —  ,,          460 

when  the  dead  man  c  to  life  beheld  His  wife  ,,  758 
let  them  c,  I  am  their  father  ;  but  she  must  not  c, 

For  my  dead  face  would  vex  her  after-life.  ,,  889 
'  Whence  c  you  ? '  and  the  brook,  why  not  ?  replies, 

I  c  from  haunts  of  coot  and  hern, 


men  may  c  and  men  may  go,  (repeat) 


The  Brook  22 
The  Brook  33,  49,  65,  184 


Yes,  men  may  c  and  go  ;  and  these  are  gone,  The  Brook  186 

days  That  most  she  loves  to  talk  of,  c  with  me.  ,,         226 

you  will  be  welcome — 0,  c  in  ! '  ,,          228 

Cries  '  C  up  hither,'  as  a  prophet  to  us  ?  Aylmer's  Field  745 

link'd  their  race  with  times  to  c —  , ,          779 

Then  c'a  the  close,'  Sea  Dreams  29 

Too  ripe,  too  late  !  they  c  too  late  for  use.  ,,          67 

then  c's  what  c's  Hereafter :            ■  ,,         177 

'  His  deeds  yet  live,  the  worst  is  yet  to  c.  ,,         314 

recollect  the  dreams  that  c  Just  ere  the  waking  :  Lucretius  35 

'  C  out,'  he  said,  '  To  the  Abbey :  Princess,  Pro.  50 

'  C,  listen  !  here  is  proof  that  you  were  miss'd :  ,,         177 

No  matter :  we  will  say  whatever  c's.  , ,        239 

Should  c  to  fight  with  shadows  and  to  fall.  ,,        i  10 

what,  if  these  weird  seizures  c  Upon  you  ,,         82 

ye  c.  The  first-fruits  of  the  stranger :  ,,      ii  43 

For  Solomon  may  c  to  Sheba  yet.'  ,,        349 

C  from  the  dying  moon,  and  blow,  ,,       Hi  6 

Father  will  c  to  thee  soon  ;  (repeat)  ,,    10,  12 

Father  will  c  to  his  babe  in  the  nest,  ,,          13 

Then  c's  the  feebler  heiress  of  your  plan,  ,,        237 

Nor  willing  men  should  c  among  us,  ,,        318 

Would  rather  we  had  never  c  !  ,,    iv  243 

there  are  those  to  avenge  us  and  they  c:  ■                         „       501 

Thy  face  across  his  fancy  c's,  „       579 

in  the  night  Had  c  on  Psyche  weeping :  ,,     »    50 

c's  With  the  air  of  the  trumpet  round  him,  ,,        161 

You  did  but  c  as  goblins  in  the  night,  ,,        220 

(our  royal  word  upon  it,  He  c's  back  safe)  ,,        225 

As  c's  a  pillar  of  electric  cloud,  ,,      '  524 

'  C  hither,  O  Psyche,"  she  cried  out,  '  embrace  me, 

c.  Quick  while  I  melt ;  ,,    fi  284 

C  to  the  hollow  heart  they  slander  so  !  >  >         288 

C  down,  0  maid,  from  yonder  mountain  ,,  vii  192 

And  c,  for  Love  is  of  the  valley,  c.  For  Love  is  of  the 

valley,  c  thou  down  And  find  him  ;  ,,        198 

but  c  ;  for  all  the  vales  Await  thee  ;  „        215 

When  c's  another  such  ?  never,  I  think,  ,,        244 

Then  c's  the  statelier  Eden  back  to  men  :  ,,        293 

trust  in  all  things  high  C's  easy  to  him,  ,,        330 

the  new  day  c's,  the  light  Dearer  for  night,  ,,        346 

I  love  thee :  c,  Yield  thyself  up :  ,,      '363 

But  yonder,  whiff  !  there  c's  a  sudden  heat,  ,,  Cow.  58 

To  thee  the  greatest  soldier  c's  ;  Ode  on  Well.  88 

C  to  us,  love  us  and  make  us  your  own  :  W.  to  Alexandra  30 

Jenny,  my  cousin,  had  c  to  the  place.  Grandmother  25 

she  c's  and  goes  at  her  will,  ,,            79 

Often  they  c  to  the  door  in  a  pleasant  kind  of  a  dream. 

They  c  and  sit  by  my  chair,  ,,            82 

neighbours  c  and  laugh  and  gossip,  ,,            91 

summun  'uU  c  ater  mea  mayhap  N.  Farmer,  0.  8.  61 

C,  when  no  graver  cares  employ,  Godfather,  c  and 

see  your  boy :  To  F.  D.  Maurice  1 

(Take  it  and  c)  to  the  Isle  of  Wight ;        '  ,,        '    12 

C,  Maurice,  c :  the  lawn  as  yet  Is  hoar  with  rime,                 ,,            41 

Nor  pay  but  one,  ,but  c  for  many,  , ,            47 

I  c  to  the  test,  a  tiny  poem  Hendecasyllabics  3 


Come 

^""mv  W^"lf Ih^''"'^  ^'^^*  "''  °''*'  ^""^  J^"'"^  P«^^  -^P^-  «/ Iii<^d  13 
Talp  mv  Invi  f  V^^*""^  T,"""  '7^  "'  ^°^  &°'^«'  irindcm;.  On  the  HiU  14 
lake  my  love,  for  love  will  c,  Love  will  c  but 

once  a  life. 
Sun  c's,  moon  c's.  Time  slips  away. 
Flash,  I  am  coming,  I  c, 
And  yet  we  trust  it  c's  from  thee, 
From  out  waste  places  c's  a  cry, 
Or  '  here  to-morrow  will  he  c' 
A  happy  lover  who  has  c 
saying ;  '  Cs  he  thus,  my  friend  ? 
C  Time,  and  teach  me,  many  years 
C  stepping  lightly  down  the  plank  ' 
c  The  man  I  held  as  half-divine  ; 
C  quick,  thou  bringest  all  I  love. 
C  then,  pure  hands,  and  bear  the  head 
And  c,  whatever  loves  to  weep, 
The  praise  that  c's  to  constancy.' 
To  thee  too  c's  the  golden  hour 
And  hopes  and  light  regrets  that  c 
The  wonders  that  have  c  to  thee. 
Peace  ;  c  away :  the  song  of  woe 
Peace  ;  c  away  :  we  do  him  wrong 
let  us  go.     C ;  let  us  go :  your  cheeks  are  pale  ; 
With  so  much  hope  for  years  to  c. 
The  foolish  neighbours  c  and  go. 
There  c's  a  glory  on  the  walls : 
likeness,  hardly  seen  before,  C's  9ut— 
There  cannot  c  a  mellower  change, 
Ah  dear,  but  c  thou  back  to  me  :  ' 
But  he,  the  Spirit  himself,  may  c 
The  violet  c's,  but  we  are  gone. 
With  thousand  shocks  that  c  and  go, 
I  c  once  more  ;  the  city  sleeps  ; 
Behind  thee  c's  the  greater  light : 
With  faith  that  c's  of  self-control, 
And  back  we  c  at  fall  of  dew. 
can  a  sweeter  chance  ever  c  to  me  here  ? 
Cold  and  clear-cut  face,  why  c  you  so  cruelly  meek 
C  shdmg  out  of  her  sacred  glove. 
Then  let  c  what  c  may,  (repeat) 
One  is  c  to  woo  her. 
That  old  man  never  c's  to  his  place : 
shook  my  heart  to  think  she  c's  once  more  ; 
her  brother  c's,  like  a  blight  On  my  fresh  hope, 
And  then,  oh  then,  c  out  to  me  For  a  minute 
C  out  to  your  own  true  lover,  ' 

C  into  the  garden,  Maud,  (repeat) 
C  hither,  the  dances  are  done. 
But  c  to  her  waking,  find  her  asleep, 
Gtet  thee  hence,  nor  c  again 
The  day  c's,  a  dull  red  ball  ' 
Has  c  to  pass  as  foretold  ; 
cs  from  another  stiller  world  of  the  dead, 
he  c's  to  the  second  corpse  in  the  pit  ? 
some  kind  heart  will  c  To  bury  me, 
I  c  to  be  grateful  at  last  for  a  little  thing : 
Ye  c  from  Arthur's  court, 
will  not  die,  But  pass,  again  to  c ; 
c  to  see  The  glories  of  our  King : 
King  be  King  at  all,  or  c  From  Fairyland, 
Lest  he  should  c  to  shame  thy  judging  of  him.' 
the  seneschal,  would  c  Blustering  upon  them. 
Now  therefore  have  I  c  for  Lancelot.' 
And  therefore  am  I  c  for  Lancelot.' 
And  look  who  c's  behind,' 
C,  therefore,  leave  thy  lady  lightly 
Look,  Who  c's  behind  ? ' 
and  wherefore  now  C  ye,  not  call'd  ? 
I  but  c  like  you  to  see  the  hunt, 
To  find,  at  some  place  I  shall  c  at, 
C's  flying  over  many  a  windy  wave  To  Britain, 
Constrain'd  us,  but  a  better  time  has  c ; 
By  the  flat  meadow,  till  she  saw  them  c ; 
Look,  Here  c's  a  laggard  hanging  down  bis  head, 


108 


Come 


I        No  Answer  20 

When  1 

Marr.  Morn.  13 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  23 

Hi    7 

»i24 

via  1 

xii  13 

xiii  13 

xiv    7 

9 

acvii   8 

xviii   9 

11 

xxi  12 

xxxix   6 

xl   7 

xli22 

Ivii    1 

3 

5 

lix  14 

fel3 

Ixvii   4 

Ixxiv   4 

arc  21 
xciii   6 

ev  8 
cxiii  17 
cxix  3 
cxxi  12 

Con.  100 

Maud  / 1  62 

in  1 

t)i85 

xi  5,  12 

xii  28 

xiii  24 

xviii  10 

xix  102 

a;a;44 

46 

xxii  1,  3 

54 

//it  81 

iv  56 


>) 


66 

t;44 
70 


102 

„    III  viz 

Com.  of  Arthur  249 

„  422 

Gareth  and  L.  243 

246 


513 

623 

„  644 

752 

957 

1211 

1248 

Marr.  of  Geraint  179 

219 

337 

716 

„  832 

Geraint  and  E.  60 


Come  i^^^nn^)    C.  we  will  slay  him  and  will  have 

said  the  second,  'yonder  c's  a  knight  ' 

And  if  he  want  me,  let  him  c  to  me    ' 

You  c  with  no  attendance,  page  or  miid 

c  with  morn,  And  snatch  me^om  him  a.s  hv  vJni-. 

C  slipping  o'er  their  shadows  on  "he Tani  ^  ''"^'''""  ' 

And  now  their  hour  has  c ;  ' 

I  c  the  mouthpiece  of  our  King  to  Doorm 
If  he  will  not  go  To  Arthur,  then  wiU  Trth.i r  .  f 

sometime  you  would  c  To  these  my  hsts  *°  ^°"' 

now  behold  me  c  To  cleanse  this  common  sewer 
overthrowing  ever  knight  who  c's. 
S  vpfS  *°,^  '"y/'llainy,  c  to  shame.' 

Art  yet  ha  f-yolk,  not  even  c  to  down— 
and  now  The  night  has  c. 
'C  from  the  storm,'  and  having  no  reply 
to  have  my  shield  In  keeping  till  Ic' 
who  will  c  to  all  I  am  And  overcome"  it ; 

Is  It  Lancelot  who  hath  c  Despite  the  Wound 
This  will  he  send  or  c  for  :  ""«  wouna 

when  the  ghostly  man  had  c  and  gone. 
Or  c  to  take  the  King  to  Fairyland  « 
C,  for  you  left  me  taking  no  farewell 
phantom  of  a  cup  that  c's  and  goes  ? ' 
thought  That  now  the  Holy  Grail  would  c  again  •  But 

mi'^ht  ft",  t'"''*'   ^^^'  ^'^"^*'  "-^^^  it  wouldT    ' 

might  It  c  To  me  by  prayer  and  fasting  ? ' 

we  know  not  whence  they  c ; 

chance  of  noble  deeds  will  c'and  go 

madness  has  c  on  us  for  our  sins  ' 

And  hither  am  I  c ; 

fail'd  from  my  side,  nor  c  Cover'd 

and  in  the  strength  of  this  C  victor 

and  c  thou  too.  For  thou  shalt  see  the  vision 

and  the  vision  had  not  c  ; 

C,  as  they  will ;  and  many  a  time  they  c. 

But  lately  c  to  his  mherita.nce, 

t°\2^}:?^  *^®  ^'^^*^  islands  had  he  c, 

bo  that  he  could  not  c  to  speech  with  her 

If  he  cs  again  '—there  she  brake  short  • 

C  ye  know  nothing  :  here  I  pledge  my  troth. 

Then,  when  I  c  within  her  counsels 

they  c  no  more  Till  the  sweet  heavens  have  fill'd  it 

and  say  his  hour  is  c, 

C— let  us  gladden  their  sad  eyes, 

Tnstram,  waiting  for  the  quip  to  c, 

C,  thou  art  crabb'd  and  sour  : 

as  the  water  Moab  saw  C  round  by  the  East 

C,  I  am  hunger'd  and  half-anger'd—  ' 

And  out  beyond  into  the  dream  to  c  ' 

Traitor,  c  out,  ye  are  trapt  at  last  ' 

then  she,  'The  end  is  c,  And  I  am  shamed 

i<  or  if  there  ever  c  a  grief  to  me 

knowest  thou  now  from  whence  I  c— 

think  not  that  I  c  to  urge  thy  crimes 

I  did  not  c  to  curse  thee,  Guinevere  ' 

But  hither  shall  I  never  c  again,        ' 

Merlin  sware  that  I  should  c  again  To  rule 

waste  land,  where  no  one  c's.  Or  hath  c 

He  c  s  again ;  but— if  he  c  no  more—     ' 

I  c,  great  Mistress  of  the  ear  and  eve  • 

0  Love,  0  Hope  !    They  c,  ' 

Death  gave  back,  and  would  no  further  c 

thronging  fancies  c  To  boys  and  girls 

seas  upon  my  head  To  c  my  way  ! 

should  he  not  c  my  way  if  he  would  1 

why  shovU  he  c  my  way  Robed  in  those  robes 

C  like  an  angel  to  a  damned  soul, 

C  like  a  careless  and  a  greedy  heir 

C's  in  upon  him  in  the  dead  of  night 

thought  His  dreams  had  c  again.       ' 

Send  I  bid  him  c ; '  but  Lionel  was  away— 

To  c  and  revel  for  one  hour  with  him 

'  you  are  sure  it  '11  all  c  right,' 


Geraint  and  E.  62 

„  126 

237 

322 

356 

471 

697 

796 

815 

839 

894 

Balin  and  Balan  13 

492 

569 

„  621 

Merlin  and  V.  895 

Lancelot  and  E.  383 

448 

565 

635 

1101 

»  1257 

1274 

Holy  Grail  ii 


92 

„        95 

„      147 

„      318 

„      357 

„      468 

,,      470 

„      481 

»      483 

„      572 

„      911 

Pelleas  and  E.  18 

86 

205 

295 

341 

348 

»  509 

Last  Tournament  86 

„  222 

„  260 

272 

483 

719 

721 

Guinevere  106 

110 

„        200 

„        433 

„        532 

533 

Pass,  of  Arthur  191 

370 

^    »  451 

Lover's  Tale  i  22 

47 

115 

554 

661 

667 

670 

673 

675 

a  154 

tt»78 

101 

182 

Quarrel  1 


I 


First 


Come 


109 


Coming 


Ciome  (continued)    I'll  c  for  an  hour  to-morrow,  First  Quarrd  46 

C,  c,  little  wife,  let  it  rest !  „            62 

I  am  sure  it  '11  all  c  right.'  (repeat)  „     74,  91 

•  0  mother,  c  out  to  me  ! '  Bizpah  2 

what  are  you  ?  do  you  c  as  a  spy  ?  ,.11 
C !  Here's  to  your  happy  union  with  my  child  !    Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  67 

Pray  c  and  see  my  mother.  ,,              191 

'Pray  e  and  see  my  mother,  and  farewell.'  „              196 

know  they  c,  They  smile  upon  me,  ,,              278 

when  I  saw  him  c  in  at  the  door.  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  2 

Had  ?  has  it  c  ?  It  has  only  dawn'd.    It  will  c  by 

and  by.  „               23 

'  Little  children  should  e  to  me.'  ,,               50 

women  and  children  c  out,  Def.  of  Luchnow  100 

He  might  be  kindlier  :  happily  c  the  day  !  Sir  J.  OMcasde  23 

might  have  c  to  learn  Our  Wiclif's  learning :  ,,             64 

who  will  e,  Grod  willing,  to  outlearn  the  filthy  friar.  „           117 

He  that  thirsteth,  c  and  drink !  ,,           134 

Who  c's  ?  A  thousand  marks  are  set  upon  my  head.  ,,           194 

he  unchain'd  for  all  the  world  to  c'  Columhus  215 

'  C  to  us,  0  c,  c '  V.  of  Maddune  98 

that  also  has  c  from  Thee  ;  Be  Prof.  Human  C.  7 

from  within  The  city  c's  a  murmur  void  of  joy,  Tiresias  101 

C  from  the  brute,  poor  souls —  Despair  36 

When  the  bat  c's  out  of  his  cave,  ,,        89 

'  And  idle  gleams  will  c  and  go.  Ancient  Sage  240 

C,  speak  a  little  comfort !  The  Flight  17 

he  c's,  and  finds  me  dead.  ,,        72 

my  own  true  sister,  c  forth  !  the  world  is  wide.  ,,        96 

That  matters  not :  let  c  what  will ;  „      103 

an'  tpuld  her  to  c  away  from  the  man.  Tomorrow  20 

whin  Dan  didn't  c  to  the  fore,  ,,         43 

av  the  bird  'ud  c  to  me  call,  ,,         45 

for  a  blessin'  'ud  c  wid  the  green  ! '  , ,         64 

to-morrow — you,  you  c  so  late,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  214 

one  has  c  to  claim  his  bride,  ,,             263 

I  that  loathed,  have  c  to  love  him.  „              280 

On  you  will  c  the  curse  of  all  the  land,  The  Fleet  3 

C's  at  last  to  the  bounteous  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  10 

far-ofif  friendship  that  he  c's  no  more,  Demeter  and  P.  90 

She  c's  to  dress  me  in  my  bridal  veil.  The  Ring  98 

My  ring  too  when  she  c's  of  age,  ,,      289 

Let  her  c !  And  we  will  feed  her  with  our  mountain  air,  ,,      318 

There  will  c  a  witness  soon  Forlorn  25 

Dreadful !  has  it  c  to  this,  ,,      43 

C  back,  nor  let  me  know  it !  Happy  5 

wall  of  solid  flesh  that  c's  between  your  soul  ,,     35 

May  lea  little  nearer,  ,,     55 

'  I  c  with  your  spring-flowers.'  To  Mary  Boyle  17 

C,  Spring,  for  now  from  all  the  dripping  eaves  Prog,  of  Spring  5 

She  c's !  The  loosen'd  rivulets  run ;  , ,            9 

C,  Spring  !  She  c's  on  waste  and  wood,  ,,          22 

C,  Spring  !  She  c's,  and  Earth  is  glad  ,,          48 

Will  my  Indian  brother  c  ?  Romney's  R.  143 

If  my  body  c  from  brutes,  (repeat)  By  an  Evolution.  5.  13 

ghostly  murmur  floated,  '  C  to  me,  CEnone  !              Death  of  CEnone  79 

But  c.  My  noble  friend,  Akbar's  Dream  17 

Or  makes  a  friend  where'er  he  c.  The  Wanderer  6 

But  seldom  c's  the  poet  here.  Poets  and  Critics  15 

c's  a  gleam  of  what  is  higher.  Faith  6 

Come-agains    By-gones  ma'  be  c-a  ;  First  Quarrel  69 

Comelier    comely,  yea,  and  c  than  myself.  Gareth  and  L.  610 

taller  indeed.  Rosier  and  c,  thou —  Last  Tournament  710 

Comeliness    a  broad-blown  c,  red  and  white,  Maud  I  xiii  9 

Ck>mely     '  C,  too,  by  all  that's  fair,'  Princess  ii  114 

say  she's  c  ;  there's  the  fairer  chance  :  ,  >       ^  460 

c,  yea,  and  comelier  than  myself.  Gareth  and  L.  610 

Yet,  since  the  face  is  c —  Geraint  and  E.  551 

Comer  (See  also  Chance-comer,  New-comer)  But 

spring,  a  new  c,  A  spring  rich  Nothing  will  die  21 

Comest    Thou  c  morning  or  even  ;  Leonine  Eleg.  15 

Tliou  c  not  with  shows  of  flaunting  vines  Ode  to  Memory  48 

Thou  c  atween  me  and  the  skies,  Oriana  75 

Thou  c,  much  wept  for :  In  Mem.  xvii  1 

'  Whence  c  thou,  my  guest,  Lancelot  and  E.  181 


Comest  (continued)    thou  c,  darling  boy  ;  (repeat)    De  Prof.  Two  G.  10,  34 

Cometh    At  midnight  the  moon  c,  Claribd  13 

she  c  not  morning  or  even.  Leonine  Eleg.  15 

He  c  not,'  she  said  ;  (repeat)  Mariana  22,  34,  46,  58 

I  know  He  c  quickly  :  Fatimn  23 

he  that  c,  like  an  honour'd  guest.  Ode  on  Wdl.  80 

and  there  c  a  victory  now.  Boddicea  46 

Comfort  (b)  (See  also  Coomfut)    The  c,  I  have  found  in 

thee  :  Miller's  D.  234 

dreadful  eternity.  No  c  anywhere  ;  Palace  of  Art  268 

Comfort  thyself :  what  c  is  in  me  ?  M.  d' Arthur  243 

Then  follow'd  counsel,  c,  Love  and  Duty  69 
Where  is  c  ?  in  division  of  the  records  of  the  mind  ?     Locksley  Hall  69 

C  (  c  scorned  of  devils  !  ,,75 

*  I  may  see  her  now.  May  be  some  little  c  ;  *                 Enoch  Arden  276 

Why,  that  would  be  her  c ; '  „            809 

but  a  voice  Of  c  and  an  open  hand  of  help,  Aylmer's  Fidd  174 

they  talk'd.  Poor  children,  for  their  c :  ,,            427 

what  c  ?  none  for  me  ! '  Princess  w  78 

Take  c :  live,  dear  lady,  ,,        80 

I  think  Our  chiefest  c  is  the  little  child  ,,      430 

Sole  c  of  my  dark  hour,  ,,  »i  194 

That  out  of  words  a  c  win  ;  In  Mem.  xx  10 

Of  c  clasp'd  in  truth  reveal 'd  ;  ,,     xxxvii'iZ 

And  find  his  c  in  thy  face  ;  ,,          cia;  20 

take  again  That  c  from  their  converse  Geraint  and  E.  950 

saying  in  low  tones,  '  Have  c,'  Lancelot  and  E.  995 

If  here  be  c,  and  if  ours  be  sin.  Last  Tournament  575 

Comfort  thyself :  what  c  is  in  me  ?  Pass,  of  Arthur  411 

Come,  speak  a  little  c !  The  Flight  17 

And  yet  no  c  came  to  me,  ,,         18 

'Take  c  you  have  won  the  Painter's  fame,'  Romney's  R.  43 

groans  to  see  it,  finds  no  c  there.  ,,           45 

Comfort  (verb)    (See  also  Coomfut)    They  c  him  by 

night  and  day  ;  Stipp.  Confessions  45 

But,  Efiie,  you  must  c  her  May  Queen,  Con.  44 

'  It  c's  me  in  this  one  thought  to  dwell,  D.  of  F.  Women  233 

C  thyself :  what  comfort  is  in  me  ?  M.  d' Arthur  243 

Take,  give  her  this,  for  it  may  c  her :  Enoch  Arden  899 

said  the  kindly  wife  to  c  him.  Sea  Dreams  140 

Reach  out  dead  hands  to  c  me.  In  Mem.  Ixxx  16 

C  her,  c  her,  all  things  good,  Maud  II  ii  75 

And  c  her  tho'  I  die.  , ,            83 

The  love  of  all  Thy  people  c  Thee,  Ded.  of  Idylls  54 

'  C  thyself,'  said  Arthur,  '  I  nor  mine  Rest :  Gareth  and  L.  601 

Because  I  saw  you  sad,  to  c  you.  Merlin  and  V.  441 

C  your  sorrows ;  for  they  do  not  flow  Guinevere  188 

C  thyself :  what  comfort  is  in  me  ?  Pass,  of  Arthur  411 

C  yourself,  for  tho  heart  of  the  father  The  Wreck  98 

Comfortable    Nor  wholly  c,  I  sit,  WiU  Water.  158 

Comforted     '  Annie,  my  girl,  cheer  up,  be  c,  Enoch  Arden  218 

look  up  :  be  c :  Sweet  is  it  to  have  done  the  thing              Princess  v  66 

'  Be  c :  have  I  not  lost  her  too,  ,,         69 

'  Be  c,'  Said  Cyril,  '  you  shall  have  it : '  ■                            ,,       105 

and  c  my  heart,  And  dried  my  tears,  Com.  of  Arthur  349 

let  me  go  :  be  c :  Pelleas  and  E.  355 

He  answer'd,  '  0  my  soul,  be  c  !  Last  Tournament  573 

after  these  had  c  the  blood  With  meats  ,,            724 

Queen  Smiles  on  me,  saying,  '  Be  thou  c !  ColwmbTis  188 

Let  the  weary  be  c,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  34 

Yet  be  c ;  For  if  this  earth  be  ruled  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  7 

Comforting    An  image  c  the  mind,  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  51 

Comic    Too  e  for  the  solemn  things  they  are.  Princess,  Con.  67 

Comin'    remimbers  wan  night  c  down  be  the 

sthrame.  Tomorrow  7 

Coming    (See  also  Comin',  Coomin')    C  in  the  scented 

breeze,  Elednore  24 

heart  Went  forth  to  embrace  him  c  ere  he  came.                     CEnone  63 

C  thro'  Heaven,  like  a  light  that  grows  ,,    108 

the  New-year's  c  up,  mother,  May  Queen,  N.  ¥'s.  E,  7 

A  noise  of  some  one  c  thro'  the  lawn,  D.  of  F.  Women  178 

Each  month,  a  birth-day  c  on,  WiU  Water.  93 

Philip  c  somewhat  closer  spoke.  Enoch  Arden  398 

'  Ay,  ay,  I  mind  him  c  down  the  street ;    .  ,,           847 

His  wreck,  his  lonely  life,  his  c  back.  „           862 


Coming 

CoXQhig  (continued)  If  James  were  c.   'C  every  day.'  >  The  Brook  106 

ff?!.°^f''/,WM^'rf°"^'      ■       •  Aylmer's  Field  23i 

and  c  fitfully  Like  broken  music,  ajq 

A  crippled  lad,  and  c  turn'd  to  fly,     ,  "             kJq 

like  swallows  c  out  of  time  Will  wonder  Pri^u^ess  ii  431 

Or  at  thy  c,  Princess,  everywhere,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  42 

she  to  be  c  and  slandering  me,  Grandmother  27 
Flash,  I  am  c,  I  come.                                        Window.  Marr.  Mom.  13 

they  are  c  back  from  abroad  ;  Mand  I  i  65 

i  see  my  Oread  c  down,  •  g 

Her  brother  is  c  back  to-night  "      ^^^  j 

She  is  c,  my  dove,  my  dear ;  She  is  c,  my  life,  my  fate  ;  ','  xxii  6] 

tone  IS  c,  my  own,  my  sweet ;  gj 

But  c  back  he  learns  it,  Geraint  aUd  E.  498 

And  c  up  close  to  her,  said  at  last :  gyn 

c  up  quite  close,  and  in  his  mood  "             724 

So  c  to  the  fountain-side  beheld  Balin  arU  Balan  23 

A  STORM  was  c,  but  the  wipds  were  still,  Merlin  andV  1 

C  and  going,  and  he  lay  as  dead  213 

Such  trumpet-blowings  in  it,  c  down  "        423 

C  and  going,  and  she  lay  as  dead,  "644 

C  upon  me— 0  never  harp  nor  horn.  Holy  Grail  113 
and  c  out  of  gloom  Was  dazzled  by  the  sudden 

K  l'^^*'     Ar^rr,        ■  FeUeas  and  E.  lQ4t 

but  a  sound  Of  Gawam  ever  c,  and  this  lay —  396 

feet  Thro' the  long  gallery  from  the  outer  doors  " 

Range,  Guinevere '^.i 

lo  guard  thee  m  the  wild  hour  con,  446 

for  wasn't  he  c  that  day  ?  pi^.^  q'^^^^^  47 

it  IS  c— shaking  the  walls—  Rizpah  85 

c  nearer  and  nearer  again  than  before-  Def.  of  Lucknow  28 

c  down  on  the  still-shatter'd  walls  92 

hands,  when  I  heard  him  c  would  drop  The  Wreck  27 

'  I  am  c  to  thee  in  thine  Ocean-grave.'  132 

'0  child,  I  am  c  to  thee.'  "      J34 

light  of  a  Sun  that  was  c  would  scatter  Despair  23 

But  a  sun  c  up  in  his  youth  !  Dead  Frophet  42 

Silver  crescent-curve,  C  soon,  xhe  Ring  14 

c  home— And  on  your  Mother's  birthday—  247 

c  nearer— Muriel  had  the  ring—  "      259 

she  sees  Her  maiden  c  like  a  Queen,  "      430 

he  was  c  down  the  fell-  jfappy  82 

?«^„^L''°  '^  *'°'^'         •  T^  Snowdrop  5 

SUMMKB  IS  c,  summer  IS  c.  The  Throstle  1 

bummer  is  c,  is  c,  my  dear,  Ig 

'^, "  "f?'','.,^"™^^  ^^®  downward  thunder  Dea^A  0/  (Enone  22 

i<  lush  d  like  the  c  of  the  day  ;  Miller's  D  132 

Narrow'd  her  goings  out  and  c's  in  ;  A  ylmefs  Field  501 

Half-bhnded  at  the  c  of  a  light.  Com.  of  Arthur  266 
himself  Had  told  her,  and  their  c  to  the  court. 

(repeat)  jl/a„.  0/  Geraint  144,  846 

bne  look  d  on  ere  the  c  of  Geraint.  ,                       6I4 

'I  will  abide  the  c  of  my  lord,  dlraint  and  E.  131 

And  she  abode  his  c,  and  said  to  him  I39 

Would  listen  for  her  c  and  regret  Her  parting  " 

^f '       *  ^r-    r>          .  /            .  Zan<;cZo<  and  E.  866 

ere  the  c  of  the  Queen,  (repeat)     '  Guinevere  223,  233 

Before  the  c  of  the  sinful  Queen.'  270 

(My  friend  is  long  in  c.)  Sir  J."oidcasUeU8 

you  have  dared  Somewhat  perhaps  in  c  ?  Columbus  242 

kiss  so  sad,  no,  not  since  the  c  of  man  !  Despair  60 

Command  (s)    He,  that  ever  following  her  c's,  Ode  on  Well  211 

?rl'^''l7'^°ll9  I«  Earth  and  Earth's,  /„  Mem.,  Con.  130 

Ihy  hfeis  thineat  her  c.  Gareth  and  L  983 

gave  c  that  all  which  once  was  ours  Marr.  of  Geraint  696 

one  c  I  laid  upon  you,  not  to  speak  to  mo,  Geraint  and  E.  77 

Debating  his  c  of  silence  given,  3gQ 

Then  breaking  his  c  of  silence  given,  ' '          390 

Wroth  that  the  King's  c  to  sally  forth  Lancelot  and  E.  560 
I'hat  only  seepos  half-loyal  to  c,-                          Last  Tournament  118 

r«J™«*«/r^lKWWu\""K'         V.               .0  Death  of  (Enone  99 

Command  (verb)      Will  he  obey  when  one  c's  ?  Two  Voices  244 

Man  to  c  and  woman  to  obey  ;  Frincess  v  450 

I  cannot  all  c  the  strings  ;  /„  Mem.  Ixxxvni  10 

itrength  of  the  race  to  c,  to  obey,  Def.  of  Lucknow  47 


110 


Companionship 


Commander    Attest  their  great  c's  claim  With 

« honour;                   /  Ode  on  WeU.  U8 

Oommeasure    C  perfect  freedom.  (Enone  167 

Commenced    However  then  c  the  dawn :  Princess  ii  138 

c  A  to-and-fro,  so  pacing  till  she  paused  301 

Comment     thoughtsinrubric  thus  For  wholesale  c,'  "        m  51 

and  heard  in  thought  Their  lavish  c  Merlin  and  V  151 

crost,  and  cramm'd  With  c,  gjg 

And  none  can  read  the  c  but  myself  ;  And  in  the  " 

c  did  I  find  the  charm.  g82 

like  the  critic's  blurring  c  make  Sisters  (E.  and  JS. )  104 
Six  foot  deep  of  burial  mould  Will  dull 

their  c's  !  Romneu's  R  126 

Commerce    Saw  the  heavens  fill  with  c,  Locksl^  Hall  121 

brought  the  stinted  c  of  those  days  ;  Enoch  Arden  817 

two  crowned  twins,  C  and  conquest,  Frincess  v  421 

From  growing  c  loose  her  latest  chain,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  33 

bo  hold  I  c  with  the  dead,  /„  Mem.  Ixxxv  93 

No  more  shall  c  be  all  in  all,  Maud  HI  vi  23 

that  c  with  the  Queen,  I  ask  you,  .  Merlin  and  V.  770 

if  if  ty  years  of  ever-broadening  C  !  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  52 

Commercing    c  with  himself,  He  lost  the  sense  Walk,  to  the  Mail  21 

Commingled    C  with  the  gloom  of  imminent  war,  Ded.  of  Idylls  I'd 

Commission    A  bought  c,  a  waxen  face,  Maud  I  x  30 

c  one  of  weight  and  worth  To  judge  between  Columbus  12i 

Commissioner    See  Church-commissioner 

Common  (adj.)    and  fears  were  c  to  her  state,  Enoch  Arden  521 

'Loss  is  c  to  the  race  '—And  c  is  the  commonplace.  In  Mem.  vi  2 

That  loss  is  c  would  not  make  My  own  less  bitter,  ,,          5 

Too  c !  Never  morning  wore  To  evening,  "          7 

Their  c  shout  in  chorus,  mounting,  Balin  and  Balan  87 

but  love  s  first  flash  in  youth.  Most  c  :  Lancelot  and  E.  950 

Common  (s)    crost  the  c  into  Darnley  chase  The  Brook  132 
Commonplace    barren  c's  break  In  full  and  kindly 

blossom.       _  ^nu  Water.  23 

And  common  is  the  c,  And  vacant  chaff  In  Mem.  vi  3 

To  lift  us  as  it  were  from  c,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  223 

shrunk  by  usage  into  commonest  c !  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  76 

Common-sense    Rich  in  saving  c-s,  Ode  on  WeU.  32 

crown  d  Republic's  crowning  c-s,  To  the  Queen  ii  61 

1  nests  Who  fear  the  king's  hard  c-s  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  66 

Commonwealth    from  it  sprang  the  C,  which  breaks  Lucretius  241 

Commune  (s)    For  days  of  happy  c  dead  ;  In  Mem.  cxvi  14 

Held  c  with  herself,  Geraint  and  E.  368 

Commune  (verb)    To  c  with  that  barren  voice,  Two  Voices  461 

Communed    I  c  with  a  saintly  man.  Holy  Grail  742 

But  c  only  with  the  little  maid,  Guinevere  150 

And  while  I  c  with  my  truest  self.  The  Ring  181 

Communicate     We  two  c  no  more.'  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  84 

Communing    C  with  herself :  '  All  these  are  mine,  Falace  of  Art  181 

C  with  his  captains  of  the  war.  Frincess  i  67 

Communion    An  hour's  c  with  the  dead.  In  Mem.  xeiv  4 

was  a  very  miracle  Of  fellow-feeling  and  c.  Lover's  Tale  i  251 

Como     Remember  how  we  came  at  last  To  C  ;  The  Daisy  70 

past  From  C,  when  the  light  was  gray,  ,,          73 

Compact  (adj.)    churl,  c  of  thankless  earth,  Godiva  66 

issued  in  a  court  C  of  lucid  marbles,  Frincess  ii  24 

Compact  (s)    He  said  there  was  a  c  ;  ,,        i  47 

there  did  a  c  pass  Long  summers  back,  ,,          123 

Our  formal  c,  yet,  not  less  ,,         165 

and  a  hope  The  child  of  regal  c,  ,,    iv  421 

'  that  our  c  be  fulfill'd  :  ,|      ,,  115 

she  would  not  keep  Her  c'  "        324 

Companion    on  her  bridal  morn  before  she  past  From  all 

her  old  c's,  ^       a  263 

Too  harsh  to  your  c  yestermorn  ;  ,','    m  199 

When  wine  and  free  c's  kindled  him,  Geraint  and  E.  293 

Fled  all  the  boon  c's  of  the  Earl,  ,,            477 

Meanwhile  the  new  c's  past  away  Lancelot  and  E.  399 

My  boon  c,  tavern-fellow—  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  90 
Kindly  landlord,  boon  c—                                        Locksley  H.,  Sixty  240 

Down  to  the  haven.  Call  your  c's,  Merlin  and  the  G.  125 

Companionless    I,  the  last,  go  forth  c,  M.  d' Arthur  236 

I,  the  last,  go  forth  c,  Fass.  of  Arthur  404 

Companionship    Who  broke  our  fair  c.  In  Mem.  xxii  13 


Company 


111 


Confusion 


Ck>mpany    Where  sat  a  c  with  heated  eyes, 

The  little  wife  would  weep  for  c, 
^     ,yes  ! — but  a  c  forges  the  wine. 

her  brother  lingers  late  With  a  roystering  c) 
twos  and  threes,  or  fuller  companies,. 
'  Where  is  that  goodly  c,'  said  I, 
Spread  the  slow  smile  thro'  all  her  c' 
'  Belike  for  lack  of  wiser  c  ; 
A  glorious  c,  the  flower  of  men, 
in  companies  Troubled  the  track  of  the  host 
Compaiison    And  half  asleep  she  made  c 
Compass  (s)     And  in  the  c  of  three  little  words, 
winds  from  all  the  c  shift  and  blow, 
Might  lie  within  their  c, 
And  his  c  is  but  of  a  single  note, 
sorrow  of  my  spirit  Was  of  so  wide  a  c 
The  c,  like  an  old  friend  false 
Compass  (verb)    To  c  our  dear  sisters'  liberties.' 
To  c  her  with  sweet  observances, 
you  should  only  c  her  disgrace, 
made  him  leper  to  c  him  with  scorn — 
Compass'd    And  c  by  the  inviolate  sea.' 
With  what  dull  pain  C, 
Then  c  round  by  the  blind  wall  of  night 
All  beauty  c  in  a  female  form, 
Sat  c  with  professors : 
Tho'  c  by  two  armies  and  the  noise 
That,  c  round  with  turbulent  sound, 
And  c  by  the  fires  of  Hell ; 
So,  c  by  the  power  of  the  King, 
He  c  her  with  sweet  observances 
Compassion    '  Full  of  c  and  mercy— (repeat) 
Compel    I  c  all  creatures  to  my  will.'  (repeat) 
Compell'd    such  a  breeze  C  thy  canvas, 
Compensated    For  often  fineness  c  size : 
Compensating    nor  c  the  want  By  shrewdness. 
Competence    Seven  happy  years  of  health  and  c, 

gracious  children,  debtless  c,  golden  mean  ; 
Complaining    broad  stream  in  his  banks  c, 
C,  '  Mother,  give  me  grace  To  help  me 
call'd  him  by  his  name,  c  loud, 
call'd  him  by  his  name,  c  loud, 
Complaint    Not  whisper,  any  murmur  of  c. 

What  end  is  here  to  my  c  ? 
Completer    gipsy  bonnet  Be  the  neater  and  c ; 
Completion    awaits  C  in  a  painful  school ; 

fulfill'd  itself,  Merged  in  c? 
Complexity    many-corridor'd  complexities  Of  Arth 

palace : 
Complicated    See  Tenfold-complicated 
Compliment     Light  coin,  the  tinsel  clink  of  c. 
Composed    All  c  in  a  metre  of  Catullus, 
Compound     '  No  c  of  this  earthly  ball 
Comprehensive    See  All-comprehensive 
Comprest    rais'd  her  head  with  lips  c, 
Comrade    C's,  leave  me  here  a  little. 
Hark,  my  merry  c's  call  me. 
And  Enoch's  c,  careless  of  himself. 
His  c's  having  fought  their  last  below, 
till  the  c  of  his  chambers  woke. 
Which  weep  the  c  of  my  choice. 
Is  c  of  the  lesser  faith 
labour  him  Beyond  his  c  of  the  hearth, 
and  then  against  his  brace  Of  c's, 
His  craven  pair  Of  c's  making  slowlier 
To  laughter  and  his  c's  to  applause. 
— thy  shame,  and  mine.  Thy  c — 
And  some  are  wilder  c's,  sworn  to  seek 
Gone  the  c's  of  my  bivouac, 
parted  from  his  c  in  the  boat. 
Conceal    she  knows  too.  And  she  c's  it.' 
And  half  c  the  Soul  within. 
Marriage  will  c  it  .  .  . 
Conceal'd    it  aeem'd  Better  to  leave  Excalibur  c 
it  seom'd  Better  to  leave  Excalibur  c 


Vision  of  Sin  7 

Enoch  Arden  34 

Maud  7  »  36 

, ,  xiv  15 

Mart,  of  Geraint  57 

Holy  Grail  432 

PeUeas  and  E.  95 

Last  Tournament  245 

Guinevere  464 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  39 

Marr.  of  Geraint  651 

Gardener's  D.  232 

Godiva  33 

Aylmer's  Field  485 

The  Islet  28 

Lover's  Tale  ii  135 

Colurnbus  70 

Princess  Hi  288 

Geraint  and  E.  39 

The  Fleet  17 

Happy  16 

To  the  Queen  36 

D.ofF.  Women  278 

Enoch  Arden  492 

Princess  ii  34 

444 

„     V  345 

WiU7 

In  Mem.  cxxvii  17 

Com.  of  Arthur  20Z 

Marr.  of  Geraint  48 

Rizpah  62,  63 

Geraint  and  E.  629,  673 

In  Mem.  xvii  2 

Princess  ii  149 

Enoch  Arden  250 

82 

Fastness  24 

L.  of  Shalott  ivZ 

Mariana  in  the  S.  29 

M.  d' Arthur  210 

Pass,  of  Arthur  378 

St.  S.  Stylites  '2f2. 

In  Mem.  Ixxxi  6 

Maud  I  XX  20 

Love  thou  thy  land  58 

Gardener's  D.  239 

ur's 

Merlin  and  V.  732 

Princess  ii  55 

Hendecasyllabics  4 

Two  Voices  35 

The  Letters  19 

Locksley  Hall  1 

145 

Enoch  Arden  568 

Aylmer's  Field  227 

583 

In  Mem.  xiii  9 

,,     cxxviii  3 

Gareth  and  L.  485 

Geraint  and  E.  88 

167 

296 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  102 

Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  12 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  45 

The  Ring  308 

Princess  Hi  60 

In  Mem.  v  4 

Forlorn  10 

M.  d' Arthur  62 

Pass,  of  Arthur  2dO 


Concealment    maiden-meek  I  pray'd  C ;  Princess  Hi  135 

Conceit  (s)    (See  also  Self-conceit)    So  spake  he,  clouded 

with  his  own  c,  M.  d' Arthur  110 

;      So  spake  he,  clouded  with  his  own  c.  Pass,  of  Arthur  278 

Conceit  (verb)    C's  himself  as  God  that  he  can    v 

make  Last  Tournament'.S55 

Conceive    and  in  his  agony  c's  A  shameful  sense   •  Lover's  Tale  i  793 

Conceived     sinful  man,  c  and  born  in  sin  :  St.  S.  Stylites  122 

Concentrate     if  I  fail  To  conjure  and  c  Romney's  R.  7 

Concession    and  the  bounds  Determining  c  ;  To  Duke  of  Argyll  3 

Conciliate    so  potent  to  coerce,  And  to  c,  Ttresias  121 

Concluded    At  last  a  solemn  grace  C,  Princess  ii  453 

dreamt  Of  some  vast  charm  c  in  that  star  Merlin  and  V.  .'512 

Conclusion    To  those  c's  when  we  saw  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  35 

a  semi-smile  As  at  a  strong  c —  Lover's  Tale  iv  282 

Concourse    banquet,  and  c  of  knights  and  kings.  Lancelot  and  E.  562 

Concubine    Sent  like  the  twelve-divided  c  Aylmer's  Field  759 

wives  and  children  Spanish  c's,  Columbus  175 

Condemn'd     prisoner  at  the  bar,  ever  c :  Sea  Dreams  176 

Condensation    cramm'd  With  comment,  densest  c,        Merlin  and  V.  678 
Condition     with  sound  of  trumpet,  all  The  hard  c  ;  Godiva  37 

Hear  my  c's  :  promise  (otherwise  You  perish)  Princess  ii  295 

And  these  were  the  c's  of  the  King :  Gareth  and  L.  107 

Conditioning    ebb  and  flow  c  their  march.  Golden  Year  30 

Condole    See  Condowl 

Condoned    treacheries — wink'd  at,  and  c —  Columbus  226 

Condowl  (condole)     frinds  'ud  ponsowl  an'  c  wid  her,  Tomorrow  47 

Conduct  (verb)     C  by  paths  of  growing  powers.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  31 

Conduit    Where  the  bloody  c  rung,  Vision  of  Sin  144 

Cone    (See  also  Cjrpress-cone,  Mountain-cones)    In 

masses  thick  with  milky  c's. 
Confederacy    between  her  daughters  o'er  a  wild  c. 
Conference    And  thus  our  c  closed. 
Confess    I  c  with  right)  you  think  me  bound 

As  I  c  it  needs  must  be  ; 

Why  wilt  thou  shame  me  to  c  to  thee 

I  will  find  the  Priest  and  c. 
Confessed    thunders  often  have  c  Thy  power. 
Confidence    In  e  of  unabated  strength, 
Confined    C  on  points  of  faith. 
Conflict    c  with  the  crash  of  shivering  points. 

Folk  and  his  friends  that  had  Fallen  in  c, 
Confluence    A  riotous  c  of  watercourses 
Confound    did  all  c  Her  sense  ; 

Nor  all  Calamity's  hugest  waves  c. 

On  whom  the  victor,  to  c  them  more, 

God  the  traitor's  hope  c !  (repeat) 
Confounded  (See  also  Worse-confounded) 
wrath  his  heart  c. 

Saw  them  lie  c. 
Confuse    Nor  thou  with  shadow'd  hint  c  A  life 

pass  on  !  the  sight  c's — 
Confused    Makes  thy  memory  c : 

Remaining  utterly  c  with  fears, 

wicked  broth  C  the  chemic  labour  of  the  blood, 

Arriving  all  c  among  the  rest 

C  by  brainless  mobs  and  lawless  Powers  ; 

C  me  like  the  unhappy  bark 

Thro'  all  that  crowd  c  and  loud, 

'  C,  and  illusion,  and  relation, 

Enid  look'd,  but  all  c  at  first. 

Those  twelve  sweet  moons  c  his  fatherhood.' 
Confusion    The  airy  hand  c  wrought, 

Is  there  c  in  the  little  isle  ? 

There  is  c  worse  than  death, 

Unsubject  to  c,  Tho'  soak'd  and  saturate, 

Man  to  command  and  woman  to  obey  ;  All  else  c. 

At  first  with  all  c :  by  and  by  Sweet  order  lived 

C's  of  a  wasted  youth  ; 

yet-loved  sire  would  make  C  worse  than  death, 

Once  for  wrong  done  you  by  c, 

Thieves,  bandits,  leavings  of  c. 

From  flat  c  and  brute  violences, 

disloyal  life  Hath  wrought  c  in  the  Table  Round 

and  ev'n  on  Arthur  fell  C, 


Miller's  D.  56 

Boadicea  6 

Princess  ii  367 

n.58 

In  Mem.  lix  4 

Holy  Grail  567 

Bandit's  Death  18 

To  W.  C.  Macready  2 

Lover's  Tale  i  51 1 

ii  150 

Princess  v  491 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  71 

Lucretius  30 

-    Mariana  76 

■  WiU  5 

Geraint  and  E.  169 

Hands  all  Round  10,  22,  34 

Shame  and 

The  Captain  61 

The  Tourney}^ 

In  Mem.  xxxiii  7 

Parnassus  15 

A  Dirge  45 

Palace  of  Art  269 

Lucretius  20 

Princess  iv  224 

Ode  on  WeU.  153 

In  Mem.  xvi  12 

Maud  II  iv  71 

Gareth  and  L.  287 

Marr.  of  Geraint  685 

Merlin  and  F.  712 

Palace  of  Art  22Q 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.S.  79 

83 

Witt  Water.  86 

Princess  «  451 

,,      vii  18 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  42 

„      xc  19 

Merlin  and  V.  307 

Last  Tournament  95 

124 

Guinevere  220 

Pass.  ofArUmr  99 


Pass,  of  Arthur  li4i 

Beaviifvl  City  1 

Forlorn  26 


Confnsion 

Confusion  (continued)    for  on  my  heart  hath 
fall'n  C, 
centre  and  crater  of  European  c, 
Confuted    come  a  witness  soon  Hard  to  be  c 
Conjecture  (s)    make  C  of  the  plumage  and  the 

ConjectS'(verb)    C's  of  the  features  of  her  child  ^'"^'  ''^  &t'  H 

rnniTr,*rinr'^tJ'^^"'?\^°^^e^'"^'"^^^*'  In  Mem.,  Con.  86 

Conjecturing    C  when  and  where  :  this  cut  is  fresh  ;      Lancelot  and  E.  21 

Conjure    if  I  fail  To  c  and  concentrate  Romneu's  R  7 

Conquer    From  barren  deeps  to  c  all  PHZ::!:ii{A. 

Is  rack  d  with  pangs  that  c  trust ;  /„  j^g^  i  g 

you  are  Lancelot ;  your  great  name,  This  c's :  Lancelot  and  E.  \b\ 

Arise,  go  forth  and  c  as  of  old,'  p^ss  of  Arthur  64 

lake  and  mountain  c's  all  the  day.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  100 

Love  wi  1  c  at  the  last.  locksley  H.,  Sixty  280 

That  only  cs  men  toe  peace,  Akbar's  Drelm  15 

Conquer  d  (See  also  Woman-conquer'd)    A  cry  above 

A+*!'t+''^^T+v,        i*u       X.    ..  InMem.cxxxi? 

At  last  she  let  herself  be  c  by  him.  Merlin  and  V.  900 

knowing  he  was  Lancelot ;  his  great  name  C :  Lancelot  and  E.  580 
Conqueror  (See  also  Woman-conqueror)    Christian 

c'5  took  and  flung  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  8i 

Conquest    two  crowned  twins,  Commerce  and  e,  Princess  vi21 

brag  to  his  fellow  rakes  of  his  c  Cfuiritv  18 

^^^^x^^^u    ,A?'"^®  ^J"^'"  °^  "  ™''*^®  ^^°^  ««"'••■  J^wwn  0/  -Sin  218 

With  a  1  his  c  and  one  eye  askew  '—(repeat)  Sea  Dreams  180,  184 

My  a  wiU  not  count  me  fleckless ;  princess  ii  294 

Who  reverenced  his  c  as  his  king ;  Bed.  of  Idylls  8 

To  whom  a  c  never  wakes ;  /„  j^,  J.  ^^^  8 

Without  a  c  or  an  aim.  _„  • ,  o 

Thee  as  a  cat  rest:  "       ^!?'^.S 

Their  c,  and  their  c  as  their  King,  Guinevere  469 

as  IS  the  c  of  a  saint  Among  his  warring  senses,  fiSQ 

Conscious  («ee  oZso  Half-conscious)    nor  c  of  a  bar  " 

Between  them  Aylmer's  Field  ISi 

blowly  and  c  of  the  rageful  eye  That  watch'd  him,  336 

c  of  ourselves,  Perused  the  matting  ;  p^l^,,,  ^  67 

And  partly  c  of  my  own  deserts,  ,•„  oqk 

We,  c  of  what  temper  you  are  built,  "        400 

r^r.TJ,t "?'?  H^^°.  °*?^'"  ^^i^"^'  Romn^y's  R.  62 

Consecrate    I  dedicate,  I  c  with  tears-  Bed.  of  Idylls  4 

t'c  c  to  lead  A  new  crusade  against  the  Saracen.  Columbus  102 

Consent  (See  also  Half-consent)    To  yield  c  to  my  ^oiumous  w^ 

desire  ;  Miller's  D  138 

w  'T^  ^'^'"^  ^f '  ^^i"  ^,\°^  "'  ^°**  marriage,  JEwocA  Jrden  708 
Was  handed  over  by  c  of  all  To  one  who  had  not 

Consequence    Were  wisdom  in  the  scorn  of  c'  '^  *  rpXtll  1  In 

And  duty  duty,  clear  of  c's.  Prinie^iii  152 

canhetell  Whether  warbeacauseorac?  Maud  T  r  4.n 

Conservative    That  man's  the  true  C  Handsa^lRm,^A7 

Consider    'C  well,' the  voice  replied.  TwoVokAl 

C,  William  :  take  a  month  t^  thiAk,  """      Boratl 
c  them,  and  all  Their  bearing  in  their  common 

P-„_,.]^3j      .„„.      ,  ,      .,  BalinandBalanliQ 

Consider  d    Again  she  c  and  said :  /„  the  Child.  Hosp.  55 

Sn«  ?S^  rf  ^^f  yybj"-«  H«r  «°cret  meaning  /„  Mem.lv  9 

Consistent    hberal-mmded,  great,  C ;  r;„~,   qq 

Consol    chances  of  dividend,  c,  and  share—  The  Wreck  30 

SSot'^'L^Swl"^  ""^"^'  ""'  "  ^^^^^■'^  ^-^  ^-  «^« 

S^nli^*^    became  C  in  mind  and  frame-  Two  Foic«5  366 

Consort    And  a  gentle  c  made  he,  £  0/  Burleiah  T\ 

Consowl  (console)    'ud  c  an'  condowl  wid  her,  To^^S  47 

Constancy    The  praise  that  comes  to  c'          '  i/mZ^iI 
may  yours  for  ever  be  That  old  strength 

rn««tr^«^«-     Ai     *i,         *.  ^  Open.  Land  C.Exhib.U 

?^?f ^*I^""    T^'*"  **'°.  ''i:^^*^'.  °°°'  ^'  ^««-  of  Brunanburh  63 

Constellation    Larger  c'«  burning,  mellow  moons  and  »  "w  00 

happy  skies  Locksley  Hall  159 

With  c  and  with  continent,  Prmcm  i  224 

Sphere-music  of  stars  and  of  c's.  iWsLfs 

Conatram'd    thro'  that  young  traitor,  cruel  need  Parnassus  » 

^  "'*'  .afarr.  of  Geraint  716 


112 


Converse 


Lover's  Tale  i  468 

Tithonus  6 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  13 

/w  Mem.  Ixxxiv  1 

, ,  carctM  1 

Akbar's  Dream  48 

PoZace  o/^r<  212 

Marr.  of  Geraint  533 

Elednore  107 


Constraining    C  it  with  kisses  close  and  warm 
Consume    Me  only  cruel  immortality  C's :        ' 
Consumed    utterly  c  with  sharp  distress, ' 
Contained    See  Self-contained 
Contemplate    When  I  c  all  alone 

C  all  this  work  of  Time, 

c  The  torment  of  the  damn'd ' 
Contemplating    no  form  of  creed,  But  c  all,' 

but  lay  C  her  own  unworthiness  ; 
Contemplation    And  luxury  of  c : 
Contempt    (See  also  Self-contempt)    touch 'd  on 

Cor.^JIf'T^^  7'^^  """'^.  '^^  Princess  ii  135 

Contend    C  for  lovmg  masterdom.  /„  Mf^m  «V  8 

Content  (adj.)    (-See  oZso  Ill-content.  Well-content)    I       ^"  ^^'»- "^  » 

had  been  e  to  perish,  Locksley  Hall  IQZ 

might  It  come  like  one  that  looks  e,  Lov^  ami  Duty  93 

Which  left  my  after-morn  e.  /„  ^,^_  ^^^  4 

He  rested  well  e  that  all  wa^  well.  Geraint  and  E.  962 

Nor  rested  thus  c  but  day  by  day,  Lam^elot  and  E.  13 

yueen,  she  would  not  be  e  Save  that  I  wedded  her  1  qi  4 

Must  be  c  to  sit  by  little  fires.  '      Holv  Grail  au 

he  well  had  been  e  Not  to  have  seen,  ^      "^  653 

C  am  I  so  that  I  see  thy  face  But  once  a  day :  Pelleas  a^  E.  243 

that  had  left  her  111  c;  The  Revenge  51 

Not  findable  here— c,  and  not  c,  '  ^30 

born  of  worldlings— father,  mother— be  e  LocksleuH    Sixtv  25 

I  shall  hardly  be  e  Till  I  be  leper  '^''^  ^^^^  g 

He  rests  c,  if  his  young  music  wakes  To  Marv  Bmifp  6^ 

Content  (s)    (-See  also  Self-content)    breast  That  once              ^    ^ 

W?ff  nf  f*°  '"^  '*  f  %         u  ^'^^  /""«.  i^^  form  8 

With  meditative  grunts  of  much  e,  JFa/i.  to  the  Mail  87 

found  the  sun  of  sweet  c  Re-risen  The  Brook  168 

and  break  The  low  beginnings  of  c.  /„  ji/g^.  ;^^^j^  43 

nor  more  c.  He  told  me,  lives  m  any  crowd,  xcmii  9^ 

Contented    (-See  aZso  Well-contented)    leapt  into  my 

arms,  C  there  to  die  !  DofF  Women  152 

Continent    With  constellation  and  with  c,  '       Princess  i  224: 

Maoris  and  that  Isle  of  C,  w.  to  Marie  Alex.  18 

From  isleand  cape  and  c,  Open.  I  and  C.  Exhib.  4 

and  sow  The  dust  of  c's  to  be  ;  7n  ilfem.  a:ar:n.  12 

Continue    you  saw.  As  who  should  say  '  C  Lover's  Tale  iv  5 

Contradiction    seem  d  to  live  A  c  on  the  tongue,  In  Mem.  cxxv  4 

Contract    Cleave  to  your  c:  Princess  iv  409 

Contracting    Philip  s  rosy  face  c  grew  Enoch  Arden  486 

Contrast    love  will  go  by  c,  as  by  likes.  Sisters  (E.  and  E)  42 

Contrivance    With  great  c's  of  Power.  Love  thou  thy  land  64 

Contrived    where  the  two  c  their  daughter's  good—      Aylmer's  Field  848 

Contriving    c  their  dear  daughter's  good —  701 

Control  (s)    (See  also  Half-control,  Self-control)  keep          " 

it  oui^,  0  God,  from  brute  c ;  Ode  on  Well.  159 

U  triendship,  equal-poised  c,  /„  Mem  Ixxxv  33 

Control  (verb)    changes  should  c  Our  being,  Love  thou  thy  land  41 

Controll  d    For  they  c  me  when  a  boy  ;  /„  Mem.  xxviii  18 

Oontrolletn    C  all  the  soul  and  sense  Of  Passion  Eleanore  115 

Convent    (-See  also  Hill-convent)    while  I  lived  In  the 

white  c  down  the  valley  St.  S.  Styliies  62 

Convention    but  c  beats  them  down :  Princess,  Pro.  128 

Dwell  with  these,  and  lose  C,  ^  gg 

to-morrow  morn  We  hold  a  great  c :  "            tv  511 

Convent-roof    Deep  on  the  c-r  the  snows  St" Agnes'  Eve  1 

Convent-tower    shadows  of  the  c-t's  Slant  down  '                     5 

Converse  (s)    (See  also  Honey-converse)    We  may  hold             " 

c  with  all  forms  Ode  to  Memory  115 

War,  who  breaks  the  c  of  the  wise  ;  Third  of  Feb  8 

But  open  c  is  there  none,  /„  Mem.  xx  17 

Ihy  c  drew  us  with  delight,  ^^  j 

rode  In  c  till  she  made  her  palfrey  halt,  Gareth  and  L.  1360 

he  suspends  his  c  with  a  friend,  Marr.  of  Geraint  340 

told  her  all  their  c  in  the  hall,  520 

Edyrn,  whom  he  held  In  c  for  a  little,  Geraint'and  E.  882 

1  hat  comfort  from  their  c  which  he  took  950 

c  sweet  and  low— low  c  sweet.  Lover's  Tale  i  541 

Am  not  thyself  in  c  with  thyself,  A  ncient  Sage  65 


Converse 


113 


Corner 


Converse  (verb)    Hears  him  lovingly  c,  L.  of  Burleigh  26 

Convert    That  was  a  miracle  to  c  the  king.  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  178 

Convey'd    c  them  on  their  way  And  left  them  Gareth  and  L.  889 

Convict    The  noble  and  the  c  of  Castile,  Columbus  117 

Convolution    saturate,  out  and  out.  Thro'  every  c.  WiU  Water.  88 

Convolvulus    The  lustre  of  the  long  c'es  Enoch  Arden  576 

with  a  myriad  blossom  the  long  c  hung  ;  V.  of  Maeldune  40 

Cony    Or  conies  from  the  down,  Enoch  Arden  340 

Coo    Deeply  the  wood-dove  c's  ;  Leonine  Eleg.  6 

Coodled  (cuddled)    An'  coax'd  an'  c  mo  oop  North.  Gobbler  80 

Coo'd    it  c  to  the  Mother  and  smiled.  The  Wreck  60 

Cook'd    c  his  spleen,  Communing  with  his  captains  Princess  i  66 

Cool  (adj.)    while  she  wept,  and  I  strove  to  be  c,  Maud  II  i  15 

fair  days— not  all  as  c  as  these,  Balin  and  Balan  273 

Is  all  as  c  and  white  as  any  flower,'  Last  Tournament  416 

Cool  (s)     as  we  enter'd  in  the  c.  Gardener's  D.  114 

Cool  (verb)     '  Drink  to  lofty  hopes  that  c—  Vision  of  Sin  147 

saw  it  and  grieved — to  slacken  and  to  c ;  Princess  iv  299 

Cool'd    placed  upon  the  sick  man's  brow  C  it,  Aylmer's  Field  701 

Or  c  within  the  glooming  wave  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  45 

ere  his  cause  Be  c  by  fighting,  Gareth  and  L.  703 

Cooling    C  her  false  cheek  with  a  featherfan,  Aylmer's  Field  289 

Coolness    paced  for  c  in  the  chapel-yard  ;  Merlin  and  V.  757 

blew  C  and  moisture  and  all  smells  of  bud  Lover's  Tale  Hi  5 

Coom  (come)    But  Parson  a  c's  an'  a  goas,  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  25 

an'  thy  muther  c  to  'and,  ,,        N.S.  21 

C's  of  a  gentleman  burn :  ,,38 

Wrigglesby  beck  c'a  out  by  the 'ill !  ,,                  53 

C  oop,  proputty,  proputty —  ,,                  59 

WaXit  till  our  Sally  c's  in,  North.  Cobbler  1 

one  night  I  c'» 'oam  like  a  bull  ,,             33 

'  My  lass,  when  I  c's  to  die,  ,,          103 

C  thou 'eer— yon  laady  a-steppin'  ,,          107 

but  'e  dosn'  not  c  fro'  the  shere  ;  Village  Wife  23 

sa  I  knaw'd  es  'e'd  c  to  be  poor ;  ,,46 

C !  c  !  fey ther,' 'e  says,  ,,          69 

fur  they  weant  niver  c  to  naw  good.  ,,          96 

When  Mollv  c's  in  fro'  the  far-end  close  Spinster's  S's.  2 

Rob,  e  oop  ere  o'  my  knee.  „          11 

C  give  hoaver  then,  weant  ye  ?  ,,63 

let  Steevie  c  oop  o'  my  knee.  ,,          67 

Dick,  when  'e  c's  to  be  dead,  Otod  Rod  11 

'ud  c  at  the  fall  o'  the  year,  „        23 

I'll  c  an'  I'll  squench  the  light,  ,,       117 
an'  'e  beal'd  to  ya  '  Lad  c  hout '                             Church-warden,  etc.  28 

Coom'd  (came)    An'  I  hallus  c  to  's  chooch  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  17 

said  whot  a  owt  to  'a  said  an'  I  c  awaay.  ,,              20 

afoor  I  c  to  the  plaace.  „              34 

sin  fust  a  c  to  the  'All ;  ,,55 

afoor  'e  c  to  the  shere.  ,,    N.S.  28 

'e  c  to  the  parish  wi'  lots  o'  Varsity  debt,  ,,             29 

An'  I  c  neck-an-crop  soomtimes,  North.  Cobbler  20 

An'  when  we  c  into  Meeatin',  ,,            53 

fur  New  Squire  c  last  night.  ViUage  Wife  1 

new  Squire's  c  wi'  'is  taail  in  'is  'and,  (repeat)  ,,  14,  121 

Thou's  c  oop  by  the  beck ;  ,,79 

fur  he  c  last  night  so  laate —  ,,         123 

Bui  'e  c  thruf  the  fire  wi'  my  bairn  Owd  Bod  92 

He  c  like  a  Hangel  o'  marcy  ,,        93 

An'  'is  'air  c  off  i'  my  'ands  ,,       100 
fur  a  lot  on  'em  c  ta-year —                                    Church-warden,  etc.  13 

They  says 'at  he  c  fra  nowt —  ,,               17 

an'  c  to  the  top  o'  the  tree,  ,,                38 

Coomfut  (s)  (comfort)    But  she  wur  a  power  o'  c.  North.  Cobbler  79 

Fur  she  hedn't  naw  c  in  'er,  ViUage  Wife  12 

Coomfut  (verb)    When  I  goas  fur  to  c  the  poor  Spinster's  S's.  108 

Coomin'  (coming)   upo'  c  awaay  Sally  gied  me  a  kiss  North.  Cobbler  56 

Fur  I  seed  that  Steevie  wur  c,'  Spinster's  S's.  40 

but,  0  Lord,  upo'  c  down —  ,,            44 

'cep' it  wur  at  a  dog  c  in,  ,,           60 

By  a  man  c  in  wi'  a  hiccup  ,,            98 

Fur  I  seed  the  beck  c  down  Oivd  Bod  40 

an'  the  times  'at  was  c  on  ;  ,,44 
Coontryside  (Countryside)    booots  to  be  cobbled 

fro'  hafe  the  c.  North.  Cobbler  94 


Cooper    C  he  was  and  carpenter,  Enoch  Arden  814 

Cooperant    Is  toil  c  to  an  end.  In  Mem.  cxxviii  24 
Coortin  (courting)    gied  tha  a  raatin  that  sattled  thy 

c  o'  me,  Spinster's  S's.  48 

Coostom  (custom)    Foalks'  c  flitted  awaay  North.  Cobbler  28 

An'  c  agean  draw'd  in  like  a  wind  ,,            93 

Coot    I  come  from  haunts  of  c  and  hern,  The  Brook  23 

Cope    c  Of  the  half-attain'd  futurity.  Ode  to  Memory  32 

Wrapt  in  dense  cloud  from  base  to  c.  Two  Voices  186 

one  Not  fit  to  c  your  quest.  Gareth  and  L.  1174 

slinks  from  what  he  fears  To  c  with,  Pelleas  and  E.  439 

sound  as  when  an  iceberg  splits  From  c  to  base —       Lover's  Tale  i  604 

the  c  and  crown  Of  all  I  hoped  and  fear'd  ? —  ,,        ii  27 

Cophetua    came  the  beggar  maid  Before  the  king  C.  Beggar  Maid  4 

C  sware  a  royal  oath  ;  ,,15 

Coppice    in  April  suddenly  Breaks  from  a  c  Marr.  of  Geraint  339 

scour'd  into  the  c's  and  was  lost,  Geraint  and  E.  534 

from  the  fringe  of  c  round  them  burst  Balin  and  Balan  46 

Coppice-feather'd    every  c-/ chasm  and  cleft,  Princess  iv2S 

Copse    danced  about  the  may-pole  and  in  the 

hazel  c,  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  11 

shadowy  pine  above  the  woven  c.  Lotos-Eaters  18 

did  we  hear  the  c's  ring,  Locksley  Roll  35 

Came  little  c's  climbing.  Amphion  32 

Then  move  the  trees,  the  c's  nod.  Sir  Galahad  77 

In  c  and  fera  Twinkled  the  innumerable  ear  The  Brook  133 

firefly-like  in  c  And  linden  alley  :  Princess  i  208 

we  wound  About  the  the  cliffs,  the  c's,  ,,     Hi  360 

Here  is  the  c,  the  fountain  and —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  127 

seas  leaning  on  the  mangrove  c,  Prog,  of  Spring  76 

Coptic     Lulling  the  brine  against  the  C  sands.  Buonaparte  8 

Coquette    the  slight  c,  she  cannot  love.  The  form,  the  form  12 

Coquette-like    or  half  c-l  Maiden,  Eendecasyllabics  20 

Coquetting    C  with  young  beeches  ;  Amphion  28 

Cord    The  creaking  c's  which  wound  and  eat  Supp.  Confessions  36 

The  wounding  c's  that  bind  and  strain  Clear-headed  friend  4 

We'll  bind  you  fast  in  silken  c's,  Bosalind  49 

Lower 'd  softly  with  a  threefold  c  of  love  D.  ofF.  Women  211 

Bound  by  the  golden  c  of  their  first  love —  The  Bing  429 

while  she  stared  at  those  dead  c's  Death  of  (Enone  10 

A  silken  c  let  down  from  Paradise,  Akbar's  Dream  139 

Cordage    coils  of  c,  swarthy  fishing-nets,  Enoch  Arden  17 

Corded    See  Sinew-corded 

Cordon    draw  The  c  close  and  closer  Aylmer's  Field  500 

Core    Else  earth  is  darkness  at  the  c.  In  Mem.  xxxiv  3 

To  make  a  solid  c  of  heat ;  ,,          cmi  18 

Corinna    wrought  With  fair  C's  triumph  ;  Princess  Hi  349 

Coritanian    hear  C,  Trinobant !  (repeat)  Boddicea  10,  34,  47 

Gods  have  heard  it,  0  Icenian,  O  C  !  Boddicea  21 

Shout  Icenian,  Catieuchlanian,  shout  C,  Trinobant,  ,,        57 

Corkscrew    up  the  c  stair  With  hand  and  rope  Walk,  to  the  Mail  90 

Com    {See  also  Cum)   river-sunder'd  champaign  clothed  with  c,  (Enone  114 

land  of  hops  and  poppy-mingled  c,  Aylmer's  Field  31 

Ruth  among  the  fields  of  c,  ,,          680 

when  a  field  of  c  Bows  all  its  ears  Princess  i  236 

glutted  all  night  long  breast-deep  in  c,  ,,     it  387 

Steel  and  gold,  and  c  and  wine,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  17 

sweating  underneath  a  sack  of  c,  Marr.  of  Geraint  263 

Take  him  to  stall,  and  give  him  c,  „             371 

fell  Like  flaws  in  Summer  laying  lusty  c:  ,,             764 

spice  and  her  vintage,  her  silk  and  her  c ;  Vastness  13 

A  thousand  squares  of  c  and  meadow.  The  Bing  149 

Corn-bin    horse  That  hears  the  c-b  open.  The  Epic  45 

Cornelia    Clelia,  C,  with  the  Palmyrene  Princess  ii  83 

Comer    '  Sometimes  a  little  c  shines.  Two  Voices  187 

From  some  odd  c  of  the  brain.  Miller's  D.  68 

in  dark  c's  of  her  palace  stood  Uncertain  shapes ;        Palace  of  Art  237 

crow  shall  tread  The  c's  of  thine  eyes :  WiU  Water.  236 

sitting-room  With  shelf  and  c  for  the  goods  Enoch  Arden  171 

From  distant  c's  of  the  street  they  ran  „         349 

or  Ralph  Who  shines  so  in  the  c ;  Princess,  Pro.  145 

my  own  sad  name  in  c's  cried,  Maud  I  vi  72 

Found  Enid  with  the  c  of  his  eye,  Geraint  and  E.  281 

A  damsel  drooping  in  a  c  of  it.  ,,            611 

folded  hands  and  downward  eyes  Of  glancing  c,  Merlin  and  V,  70 


Corner 


114 


Count 


Comer  (continued)  Or  whisper'd  in  the  c?  do  ye  know  it  ? '  Merlin  and  V.  772 

knelt  Full  lowly  by  the  c's  of  his  bed,  Lancelot  and  E.  826 

dragon,  grifl&n,  swan,  At  all  the  c's,  Holy  Grail  351 

deal-box  that  was  push'd  in  a  c  away.  First  Qvxirrd  48 

Cornice    Now  watching  high  on  mountain  c.  The  Daisy  19 

Stretch'd  under  all  the  c  and  upheld  :  Gareth  and  L.  219 

Cornish    held  Tintagil  castle  by  the  C  sea,  Com.  of  Arthur  187 

name  of  evil  savour  in  the  land,  The  C  king.  Gareth  and  L.  386 

Mark  her  lord  had  past.  The  C  King,  Last  Tournament  382 

sands  Of  dark  Tintagil  by  the  C  sea  ;  Guinevere  294 

Corn-laws    And  struck  upon  the  c-l,  Audley  Court  35 

Coronach    Prevailing  in  weakness,  the  c  stole  Dying  Swan  26 

Coronal    My  c  slowly  disentwined  itself  Lover's  Tale  i  361 

dost  uphold  Thy  c  of  glory  like  a  God,  ,,            488 

Coroner    c  doubtless  will  find  it  a  felo-de-se,  Despair  115 

Coronet    Kind  hearts  are  more  than  c's,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  55 

Corp  (corpse)    a  c  lyin'  undher  groun'.  Tomorrow  62 

Corpse    {See  also  Corp)    On  c's  three-months-old  at 

noon  she  came,  Palace  of  Art  24:3 

C's  across  the  threshold  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  25 

Step  from  the  c,  and  let  him  in  D.  of  the  0.  Year  49 

he  comes  to  the  second  c  in  the  pit  ?  Maud  II  v  88 

A  yet-warm  c,  and  yet  unburiable,  Gareth  and  L.  80 

My  mother  on  his  c  in  open  field  ;  (repeat)  Merlin  and  V.  43,  73 

night  with  its  coffinless  c  to  be  laid  Def.  of  Lucknow  80 

I'd  sooner  fold  an  icy  c  dead  of  some  The  Flight  54 

She  tumbled  his  helpless  c  about.  Dead  Prophet  65 

Pain,  that  has  crawl'd  from  the  c  of  Pleasure,  Vastness  17 

And  found  a  c  and  silence,  The  Ring  217 

lies,  that  blacken  round  The  c  of  every  man  Eomney's  R.  123 

Corpse-cofEm.    end  but  in  being  our  own  c-c's  at  last,  Vastness  33 

Correspond    Not  for  three  years  to  c  with  home  ;  Princess  ii  70 

Corridor    Full  of  long-sounding  c's  it  was,  Palace  of  Art  53 

Corridor'd    See  Many-corridor'd 

Corrientes    and  flowers.  From  C  to  Japan,  To  Ulysses  4 
Corrupt    Plenty  c's  the  melody  That  made  thee  famous 

once.  The  Blackbird  15 

Lest  one  good  custom  should  c  the  world.  M.  d' Arthur  242 

C's  the  strength  of  heaven-descended  WiU  11 

Lest  one  good  custom  should  c  the  world.  Pass,  of  Arthur  410 

Corruption    c  crept  among  his  knights,  Merlin  and  V.  154 

Corselet    thro'  the  bulky  bandit's  c  home,  Geraint  and  E.  159 

Cosmogony    their  cosmogonies,  their  astronomies :  Columbus  42 

Cosmopolite    That  man's  the  best  C  Hands  all  Round  3 

Cosmos    Chaos,  C!    C,  Chaos!  (repeat)  Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  103,  127 

Cossack    C  and  Russian  Reel'd  Light  Brigade  34 

Cost  (s)  care  not  for  the  c  ;  the  c  is  mine.'  Geraint  and  E.  288 

Cost  (verb)    story  that  c  me  many  a  tear.  Grandmother  22 

it  c  me  a  world  of  woe,  , ,          23 

They  still  remember  what  it  c  them  here,  The  Ring  201 

Costliest    Black  velvet  of  the  c—  Aylmer's  Field  804 

Costly    the  work  To  both  appear'd  so  c,  Marr.  of  Geraint  638 

'  Let  her  tomb  Be  c,  Lancelot  and  E.  1340 

Costly-broider'd    Laid  from  her  limbs  the  c-b  gift,      Marr.  of  Geraint  769 

Costly-made    half-cut-down,  a  pasty  c-m,  Audley  Court  23 

Costrel    youth,  that  following  with  a  c  bore  Marr.  of  Geraint  386 

Cot    and  kiss'd  him  in  his  c.  Enoch  Arden  234 

Here  is  the  c  of  our  orphan.  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  28 

Softly  she  call'd  from  her  c  to  the  next,  „                 46 

Thro  many  a  palace,  many  a  c,  Demeter  and  P.  55 

Cotch'd  (caught)    but  Charlie  'e  c  the  pike,  Village  Wife  43 

Thou'd  niver  'a  c  ony  mice  Spinster's  S's.  55 

An'  'e  c  howd  hard  o'  my  hairm,  Owd  Rod  58 

c 'cr  death  o' cowd  that  night,  ,,     114 

I  c  tha  wonst  i'  my  garden.  Church-warden,  etc.  33 

Coterie    Camo  yews,  a  dismal  c ;  Amphion  42 

Cottage     Or  even  a  lowly  c  whence  we  see  Ode  to  Memory  100 

'  Make  me  a  c  in  the  vale,'  she  said,  Palace  of  Art  291 

Love  will  make  our  c  pleasant,  L.  of  Burleigh  15 

she  seems  to  gaze  On  that  c  growing  nearer,  , ,           35 

Fair  is  her  c  in  its  place,  Reguiescat  1 

Served  the  poor,  and  built  the  c,  Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  268 

sound  ran  Thro'  palace  and  c  door.  Dead  Prophet  38 

Cottager    She  was  the  daughter  of  a  c,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  59 

Cottage-walls    robed  your  c-w  with  flowers  Aylmer's  Field  698 


Cotter    a  c's  babe  is  royal-born  by  right  divine  ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  125 

Cotton  (s)     Whose  ear  is  cramm'd  with  his  c,  Maud  /  a;  42  ' 

Cotton  (verb)     If  tha  c's  down  to  thy  betters.  Church-warden,  etc.  48 

Cotton-spinner     We  are  not  c-s's  all.  Third  of  Feb.  i5 

Cotton-spinning    Go'  (shrill'd  the  c-s  chorus) ;  Edwin  Morris  122 

Co-twisted     New  things  and  old  c-t,  Gareth  and  L.  226 

Couch    Kings  have  no  such  c  as  thine.  Dirge  40 

She  lying  on  her  c  alone,  Day -Dm.,  Sleep  B.  2 

And  flung  her  down  upon  a  c  of  fire,  Aylmer's  Field  574 

light  of  healing,  glanced  about  the  c.  Princess  vii  59 

Rolling  on  their  purple  c'es  Bocidicea  62 

And  Enid  woke  and  sat  beside  the  c,  Marr.  of  Geraint  79 

which  she  laid  Flat  on  the  c,  and  spoke  exultingly  :  ,,            679 

left  her  maiden  c,  and  robed  herself,  ,,             737 

wearied  out  made  for  the  c  and  slept,  Merlin  and  V,  736 

flung  herself  Down  on  the  great  King's  c,  Lancelot  and  E.  610 

Low  on  the  border  of  her  c  they  sat  Guinevere  101 

And  the  crowded  c  of  incest  in  the  warrens  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  224 

Couchant    c  with  his  eyes  upon  the  throne,  Guinevere  11 

Couch'd    (See  also  Low-couch'd)    tame  leopards  c  beside 

her  throne.  Princess  ii  33 

c  behind  a  Judith,  underneath  The  head  ,,        iv  226 

The  wine-flask  lying  c  in  moss.  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  44 

c  at  ease,  The  white  kine  glimmer'd,  (repeat)  ,,         xcv  14,  50 

c  at  night  with  grimy  kitchen-knaves.  Gareth  and  L.  481 

They  c  their  spears  and  prick'd  their  steeds,  Lancelot  and  E.  479 
at  her  will  they  c  their  spears,  Three  against  one :     Pdleas  and  E.  273 

Lancelot  passing  by  Spied  where  he  c,  Guinevere  31 

Cough     c's,  aches,  stitches,  ulcerous  throes  St.  S.  Stylites  13 
Council    ((See  aZso  College-council)     '  And  statesmen  at 

her  c  met  To  the  Queen  29 

manners,  climates,  c's,  governments,  Ulysses  14 

In  iron  gauntlets  :  break  the  c  up.'  Princess  i  89 

But  when  the  c  broke,  I  rose  and  past  ,,         90 

enter'd  an  old  hostel,  call'd  mine  host  To  c,  ,,       174 

'  everywhere  Two  heads  in  c,  ,,  ii  173 

Great  in  c  and  great  in  war.  Ode  on  Well.  30 

c's  thinn'd.  And  armies  waned.  Merlin  and  V.  572 

CouncU-hall    The  basest,  far  into  that  c-h  Lucretius  171 

His  voice  is  silent  in  your  c-h  Ode  on  Well.  174 

Counsel  (advice)    silver  flow  Of  subtle-paced  c  Isabel  21 

Then  follow'd  c,  comfort,  and  the  words  Love  and  Duty  69 

Her  art,  her  hand,  her  c  all  had  wrought  Aylmer's  Field  151 

Nor  dealing  goodly  c  from  a  height  ,,            172 

You  prized  my  c,  lived  upon  my  lips  :  Princess  iv  293 

In  part  It  was  ill  c  had  misled  the  girl  ,,     vii  241 
to  whom  He  trusted  all  things,  and  of  him  required 

His  c:  Com.  of  Arthur  147 

man  of  plots,  Craft,  poisonous  c's,  Gareth  and  L.  432 

Abide:  take  c :  for  this  lad  is  great  ,,           730 

thou  begone,  take  c,  and  away,  ,,          1002 

take  my  c :  let  me  know  it  at  once  :  Merlin  and  V.  653 

he  turn'd  Her  c  up  and  down  within  his  mind,  Lancelot  arid  E.  369 

Then,  when  I  come  within  her  c's,  Pelleas  and  E.  348 

I  would  not  spurn  Good  c  of  good  friends.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  146 

My  c  that  the  tyranny  of  all  Led  backward  Tiresias  75 

And  following  thy  true  c,  Akbar's  Dream  154 

mix  the  wines  of  heresy  in  the  cup  Of  c —  ,,             175 

Counsel  (advocate)    a  sound  Like  sleepy  c  pleading  ;  Amphion  7i 

A  man  is  likewise  c  for  himself,  Sea  Dreams  182 

Counsel  (verb)    Speak  to  me,  sister ;  c  me  ;  The  Flight  75 

Counsell'd    but  old  Merlin  c  him,  Com.  of  Arthur  306 

Counsellor    He  play'd  at  c's  and  kings.  In  Mem.  Ixiv  23 

My  noble  friend,  my  faithful  c,  Akbar's  Dream  18 

and  bravest  soul  for  c  and  friend.  ,,             69 

Count  (title)    c's  and  kings  Who  laid  about  them  Princess,  Pro.  30 

C,  baron — whom  he  smote,  he  overthrew.  Lancelot  and  E.  465 

C  who  sought  to  snap  the  bond  Happy  61 

Count  (reckoning)     '  Heaven  heads  the  c  of  crimes      D.  of  F.  Women  201 

Count  (verb)     I  can  but  c  thee  perfect  gain.  Palace  of  Art  198 

or  touch  Of  pension,  neither  c  on  praise  :  Love  thou  thy  land  26 

C's  nothing  that  she  meets  with  base.  On  a  Mourner  4 

but  c  not  me  the  herd  !  Golden  Year  13 

But  I  c  the  gray  barbarian  lower  Locksley  Hall  174 

Deep  as  Hell  I  c  his  error.  The  Captain  3 


Count 


115 


Court 


C  the  more  base  idolater  of 


Count  (verb)  (continued) 
the  two ; 

conscience  will  not  c  me  fleckless ; 

what  every  woman  c's  her  due,  Love,  children, 

Nor,  what  may  c  itself  as  blest. 

Shall  c  new  things  as  dear  as  old  : 

I  c  it  crime  To  mourn  for  any 

To  c  their  memories  half  divine  ; 

Thy  likeness,  I  might  c  it  vain 

To-day  they  c  as  kindred  souls ; 

Nor  c  me  all  to  blame  if  I 

'  Mother,  tho'  ye  c  me  still  the  child, 

I  c  it  of  small  use  To  charge  you) 

be  he  dead,  1  c  you  for  a  fool ; 

'  I  c  it  of  no  more  avail,  Dame, 

may  c  The  yet-unbroken  strength 

I  should  c  myself  the  coward  if  I  left  them, 

You  c  the  father  of  your  fortune. 

The  gells  they  c's  fur  nowt. 

Thy  frailty  c's  most  real, 

I  c  them  all  My  friends 

I  c  you  kind,  I  hold  you  true  ; 
CSounted    casting  bar  or  stone  Was  c  best ; 

So  died  Earl  Doorm  by  him  he  c  dead. 

And  only  queens  are  to  be  c  so. 
Countenance    Christians  with  happy  c's — 

With  a  glassy  c  Did  she  look  to  Camelot, 

If  I  make  dark  my  e,  I  shut  my  life 

Then  her  c  all  over  Pale  again  as  death 

o'er  his  c  No  shadow  past,  nor  motion : 

Else  I  withdraw  favour  and  c  From  you 

She  sets  her  forward  c 

His  c  blacken'd,  and  his  forehead  veins 

his  face  Shone  like  the  c  of  a  priest 

Forgetting  how  to  render  beautiful  Her  c 

to  see  the  settled  c  Of  her  I  loved. 
Counter    rogue  would  leap  from  his  c 

one  to  the  west,  and  c  to  it.  And  blank : 

My  knights  have  sworn  the  c  to  it — 

We  run  more  c  to  the  soul  thereof 
Coiinterchange     Witch-elms  that  c  the  floor 
Counter-changed    c  The  level  lake  with  diamond- 
plots 

half-disfarae.  And  c  with  darkness  ? 
Countercharm    c  of  space  and  hollow  sky. 
Countercheck    With  motions,  checks,  and  c's. 
Countermarch    would  fight  and  march  and  c. 
Counterpane    girl  with  her  arms  lying  out  on 
the  c' 

little  arms  lying  out  on  the  c ; 
Counterpressure    But  c's  of  the  yielded  hand 
Counter-scoff    fiery-short  was  Cyril's  c-s, 
Counter- term    such  c-t's,  my  son.  Are  border-races 
Counter-yell    yells  and  c-y's  of  feud  And  faction, 
Countest     See  thou,  that  c  reason  ripe 
Counting    C  the  dewy  pebbles,  fix'd  in  thought ; 

C  the  dewy  pebbles,  fix'd  in  thought ; 
Country    His  c's  war-song  thrill  his  ears : 

None  of  these  Came  from  his  c, 

0  Prince,  I  have  no  c  none  ; 

If  love  of  c  move  thee  there  at  all, 

neither  court  nor  c,  tho'  they  sought 

Who  loves  his  native  c  best. 
Countryman    and  in  me  behold  the  Prince  Your  c, 
Country-side    {See  also  Coontryside) 

c-s  descended  ; 
Countrjrvroman    countrywomen  !  she  did  not  envy 

gives  the  manners  of  your  countrywomen  ? ' 
A  foreigner,  and  I  your  c. 
County    Not  a  lord  in  all  the  c 

that  almighty  man,  The  c  God — 
County  Member    not  the  C  M's  with  the  vane : 
County  Town    Last  week  came  one  to  the  c  t, 
Couple  (a)    a  c,  fair  As  ever  painter  painted, 

then,  the  c  standing  side  by  side, 


Aylmer's  Fidd  670 

Princess  ii  294 

„     m244 

In  Mem.  xxvii   9 

a:Z28 

Ixxxv  61 

xcl2 

xcii   2 

xdx  19 

Con.  85 

Gareth  and  L.  34 

Geraint  and  E.  416 

548 

715 

Holy  Grail  325 

The  Revenge  11 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  28 

ViUage  Wife  18 

Ancient  Sage  51 

Epilogue  18 

The  Wanderer  13 

Gareth  and  L.  519 

Geraint  and  E.  730 

Lancelot  and  E.  238 

Supj).  Confessions  20 

L.  ofShalottivlS 

Two  Voices  53 

L.  of  Burleigh  65 

Enoch  Arden  709 

Aylmer's  Field  307 

In  Mem.  cxiv  6 

Balin  and  Balan  391 

Pelleas  and  E.  144 

Lover's  Tale  i  97 

„      m  39 

Maud  I  i  51 

Holy  Grail  254 

Last  Tournament  80 

659 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  1 

Arabian  Nights  84 

Merlin  and  V.  466 

Maud  I  xviii  43 

Two  Voices  300 

AuMey  Court  40 

In  the  Child  Hasp.  58 

70 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  163 

Princess  v  307 

Ancient  Sage  250 

To  Duke  of  Argyll?, 

In  Mem.  xxxiii  13 

M.  d' Arthur  84 

Pass,  of  Arthur  252 

Two  Voices  153 

Enoch  Arden  653 

Princess  ii  218 

Ode  on  WeU.  140 

Marr.  of  Geraint  729 

Hands  all  Round  4 

Princess  ii  215 

tree  by  tree.  The 

Amphion  52 

Princess  Hi  41 

,,      iv  151 

317 

L.  of  Burleigh  59 

Aylmer's  Field  14 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  12 

Maud  I  x37 

Aylmer's  Field  105 

The  Bridesmaid  5 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  107 

In  Mem.  cxxvi  4 

Guinevere  396 


Two  Voices  327 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  45 

Enoch  Arden  546 

„  629 

Princess  Hi  213 

In  Mem.  cix  8 

,,      cxiii  16 

,,      cxvii  12 

, ,     cxviii  19 

,,     cxxviii  4 

Geraint  and  E.  927 

Merlin  and  V.  880 

Lover's  Tale  ii  14 

De  Prof.  Two  G.  20 

Heavy  Brigade  21 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  120 

Gardener's  D.  222 

Marr.  of  Geraint  b'23, 

To  the  Queen  25 


Couple  (verb)    then  let  men  c  at  once  with  wolves.         Pelleas  and  E.  536 

Coupled    No  power — so  chain'd  and  c  with  the  curse  Tiresias  58 

Courage    A  c  to  endure  and  to  obey  ;  Isabel  25 

'  C  ! '  he  said,  and  pointed  toward  the  land,  Lotos-Eaters  1 

C,  St  Simeon  !    This  dull  chrysalis  St.  S.  Stylites  155 

Till  thy  drooping  c  rise.  Vision  of  Sin  152 

C,  poor  heart  of  stone  !  Maud  II  Hi  1 

C,  poor  stupid  heart  of  stone. —  ,,  5 

if  dynamite  and  revolver  leave  you  c  to  be 
wise: 

Courier    Which  every  hour  his  c's  bring. 
By  c's  gone  before  ; 

Course  (s)    {See  also  Water-course)    Their  c,  till  thou 
wert  also  man : 
.You  held  your  c  without  remorse,  j 

winds  variable,  Then  baffling,  a  long  c  of  them  ; 
Like  the  Good  Fortune,  from  her  destined  c. 
Or  baser  c's,  children  of  despair.' 
outran  The  hearer  in  its  fiery  c ; 
And  roll  it  in  another  c. 
And  all  the  c's  of  the  suns, 
move  his  c,  and  show  That  life  is  not  as  idle  ore, 
faith  That  sees  the  c  of  human  things. 
Fill'd  all  the  genial  c's  of  his  blood 
The  c  of  life  that  seem'd  so  flowery  to  me  ' 
Paused  in  their  c  to  hear  me, 
and  sway  thy  c  Along  the  years  of  haste 
Three  that  were  next  in  their  fiery  c. 

Course  (verb)    To  c  and  range  thro'  all  the  world. 

Coursed    we  c  about  The  subject  most  at  heart, 
C  one  another  more  on  open  ground 

Court    Her  c  was  pure ;  her  life  serene  ; 

Four  c's  I  made.  East,  West,  and  South  and  North,      Palace  of  Art  21 

round  the  cool  green  c's  there  ran  a  row  Of  cloisters,  , ,  25 

I  earth  in  earth  forget  these  empty  c's,  Tiihonus  75 

'  0  seek  my  father's  c  with  me,  Day-Dm.,  Depart.  27 

old-world  trains,  upheld  at  c  By  Cupid-boys  ,,  Ep.  9 

in  a  c  he  saw  A  something-pottle-bodied  boy  Will  Water.  130 

Thro'  the  c's,  the  camps,  the  schools,  Vision  of  Sin  104 

A  silent  c  of  justice  in  his  breast.  Sea  Dreams  174 

often,  in  that  silent  c  of  yours —  ,,  183 

'  I  have  a  sister  at  a  foreign  c.  Princess  i  75 

I  stole  from  c  With  Cyril  and  with  Florian,  , ,  102 

In  masque  or  pageant  at  my  father's  c.  ,,  198 

a  c  Compact  of  lucid  marbles, 

'  We  of  the  c, '  said  Cyril.     '  From  the  c ' 

we  crost  the  c  To  Lady  Psyche's  : 

rolling  thro'  the  c  A  long  melodious  thunder 

Descended  to  the  c  that  lay  three  parts  In  shadow. 

So  saying  from  the  c  we  paced, 

there  rose  A  hubbub  in  the  c 

push'd  us,  down  the  steps  and  thro'  the  c, 

Deepening  the  c's  of  twilight  broke  them  up 

pleased  him,  fresh  from  brawling  c's 

I  keep  Within  his  c  on  earth. 

Ye  come  from  Arthur's  c. 

to  the  c  of  Arthur  answering  yea. 

Merlin's  hand,  the  Mage  at  Arthur's  c, 

then  will  I  to  c  again,  And  shame  the  King 

brave  Geraint,  a  knight  of  Arthur's  c. 

Next  after  her  own  self,  in  all  the  c. 

himself  Had  told  her,  and  their  coming  to  the  c. 

(repeat)  ,,  144,  846 

Held  c  at  old  Caerleon  upon  Usk.  ,,  146 

with  the  morning  all  the  c  were  gone.  ,,  156 

rode  Geraint  into  the  castle  c,  ,,  312 

while  he  waited  in  the  castle  c,  ,,  326 

the  good  knight's  horse  stands  in  the  c ;  ,,  370 

Shalt  ride  to  Arthur's  c,  and  coming  there,  ,,  582 

rising  up,  he  rode  to  Arthur's  c,  ,,  591 

ride  with  him  this  morning  to  the  c,  ,,  606 

bright  and  dreadful  thing,  a  c,  ,,  616 

her  own  faded  self  And  the  gay  c,  „  653 

lord  and  ladies  of  the  high  c  went  In  silver  tissue  ,,  662 

like  a  madman  brought  her  to  the  c,  „  725 


it  23 

48 

100 

475 

Hi  20 

117 

iv  476 

555 

Cow.  113 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  11 

,,  cxxvi  7 

Com.  of  Arthur  249 

446 

Gareth  and  L.  306 

897 

Marr.  of  Geraint  1 

18 


Court 


116 


Court  {continued)    neither  c  nor  country,  though  they  _ 

sought  Marr.  of  Geraint  729 

I  can  scarcely  ride  with  you  to  c,  ,,  749 

such  a  sense  might  make  her  long  for  c  ,,      „  °Xa 

In  this  poor  gown  I  rode  with  him  to  c,  Geraint  and  E.  700 

A  knight  of  Arthur's  c,  who  laid  his  lance  In  rest,  ,,  7/5 

Was  but  to  rest  awhile  within  her  c  ;  ,,  855 

we  be  mightier  men  than  all  In  Arthur's  c ;  Balin  and  Balan  34 

c  and  King  And  all  the  kindly  warmth  ,,  235 

stall'd  his  horse,  and  strode  across  the  c,  ,,  341 

He  rose,  descended,  met  The  scorner  in  the  castle  c,  ,,  387 

from  the  castle  a  cry  Sounded  across  the  c,  ,,       ,  „    ,2 

the  mask  of  pure  Worn  by  this  c,  Merlin  and  V.  3b 


because  that  f oster'd  at  thy  c  I  savour 
narrow  c  and  lubber  King,  farewell ! 
thro'  the  peaceful  c  she  crept  And  whisper'd  : 
wily  Vivien  stole  from  Arthur's  c. 
leaving  Arthur's  c  he  gained  the  beach  ; 
I  rose  and  fled  from  Arthur's  c 
the  thing  was  blazed  about  the  c, 
the  c,  the  king,  dark  in  your  light, 
Arthur,  holding  then  his  c  Hard  on  the  river 
Moving  to  meet  him  in  the  castle  c  ; 
great  knight,  the  darling  of  the  c, 
much  they  ask'd  of  c  and  Table  Round, 
she  heard  Sir  Lancelot  cry  in  the  c. 
Above  her,  graces  of  the  c,  and  songs,  Sighs, 
we  two  May  meet  at  c  hereafter : 
ye  will  learn  the  courtesies  of  the  c, 
Thence  to  the  c  he  past ; 
So  ran  the  tale  like  fire  about  the  c, 
And  all  the  gentle  c  will  welcome  me, 
I  go  in  state  to  c,  to  meet  the  Queen. 
I  hear  of  rumours  flying  thro'  your  c. 
Nun  as  she  was,  the  scandal  of  the  C, 
'  Gawain  am  I,  Gawain  of  Arthur's  c, 
Gawain  of  the  c,  Sir  Gawain — 
Then  he  crost  the  c,  And  spied  not  any  light 
Creep  with  his  shadow  thro'  the  c  again, 
My  tower  is  full  of  harlots,  like  his  c, 
tonguesters  of  the  c  she  had  not  heard. 
QtJKBN  Guinevere  had  fled  the  c, 
one  morn  when  all  the  c.  Green-suited, 
lissome  Vivien,  of  her  c  The  wiliest  and  the  worst ; 
Lured  by  the  crimes  and  frailties  of  the  c, 
I  came  into  c  to  the  Judge  and  the  lawyers, 
showing  c's  and  kings  a  truth 
Fonseca  my  main  enemy  at  their  c. 
Cast  off,  put  by,  scouted  by  c  and  king — 
Than  any  friend  of  ours  at  C  ? 

You  move  about  the  C,  I  pray  you  tell  King  Ferdinand 
Courted    a  well-worn  pathway  c  us  To  one  green 

wicket 
Courteous    And  mighty  c  in  the  main — 
Sir,  I  was  c,  every  phrase  well  oil'd, 
C  or  bestial  from  the  moment, 
C — amends  for  gauntness — 
Gawain,  sumamed  The  C,  fair  and  strong, 
•  Too  c  truly  !  ye  shall  go  no  more 
Too  c  are  ye,  fair  Lord  Lancelot, 
some  one  thrice  as  c  as  thyself — 
Courtesy    To  greet  the  sheriff,  needless  c  ! 
Then  broke  all  bonds  of  c, 
With  garrulous  ease  and  oily  courtesies 
in  his  coffin  the  Prince  of  c  lay. 
men  have  I  known  In  c  like  to  thee  : 
amends  For  a  c  not  retum'd. 
stout  knaves  with  foolish  courtesies : ' 
waving  to  him  White  hands,  and  c ; 
Geraint,  from  utter  c,  forbore. 
Host  and  Earl,  I  pray  your  e ; 
'  I  pray  you  of  your  c,  He  being  as  he  is, 
I  see  ye  scorn  my  courtesies, 
such  a  grace  Of  tenderest  c, 
To  learn  what  Arthur  meant  by  c. 


38 

139 
149 
197 
297 
743 
870 
Lancelot  and  E.  74 
175 


„     268 

344 

648 

698 

„     699 

706 

734 

1060 

1124 

1190 

Holy  Grail  78 

PeUeas  and  E.  371 

379 

„     418 

441 

Last  Tournament  81 

393 

Guinevere  1 

"      21 

„      28 

"     ^It 
Rizpah  33 

Columbus  37 

„      126 

„      165 

„      198 

..      222 


Gardener's  D.  109 

Aylmer's  Field  121 

Princess  Hi  133 

Gareth  and  L.  631 

Merlin  and  V.  104 

Lancelot  and  E.  555 

„  716 

972 

Last  Tournament  706 

Edwin  Morris  133 

Aylmer's  Field  323 

Princess  1 164 

G.  of  Swainston  10 

12 

Maud  I  vi  14 

Gareth  and  L.  733 

„       _  1377 

Marr.  of  Geraint  d81 

403 

Geraint  and  E.  641 

671 

862 

Balin  and  Balan  158 


Courtesy  {coniinued)    high-set  courtesies  are  not  for 
me. 
Whom  all  men  rate  the  king  of  c. 
'  Is  this  thy  c — to  mock  me,  ha  ? 
wonted  e,  C  with  a  touch  of  traitor  in  it, 
ye  will  learn  the  courtesies  of  the  court, 
Deeming  our  c  is  the  truest  law. 
Obedience  is  the  c  due  to  kings.' 
myself  Would  shun  to  break  those  bounds  of  c 
And  loved  thy  courtesies  and  thee, 
such  a  c  Spake  thro'  the  limbs  and  in  the  voice- 
one  Murmuring,  '  All  c  is  dead,' 
King  by  c.  Or  King  by  right— 
The  greater  man,  the  greater  c. 
For  c  wins  woman  all  as  well  As  valour 
trustful  courtesies  of  household  life. 
And  of  the  two  first-famed  for  c — 
Had  yet  that  grace  of  c  in  him  left 
Yield  thee  full  thanks  for  thy  full  c 
Court-favour    willing  she  should  keep  C-f: 
Court-Galen    c-G  poised  his  gilt-head  cane. 
Court-lady    And  should  some  great  c-l  say. 
Courtliness    He  moving  up  with  pliant  c, 

thought,  and  amiable  words  And  c, 
Courting    See  Coortin 
Courtly    Not  her,  who  is  neither  c  nor  kind, 

looking  at  her,  Full  c,  yet  not  falsely, 
Courtship    Discussing  how  their  c  grew. 
Cousin    a  silent  c  stole  Upon  us  and  departed  : 
Trust  me,  c,  all  the  current  of  my  being 
Saying,  '  Dost  thou  love  me,  c  ? ' 
0  my  c,  shallow-hearted  ! 
To  give  his  c,  Lady  Clare. 
'  It  was  my  c,'  said  Lady  Clare, 
Her  and  her  far-off  c  and  betrothed. 
My  lady's  c.  Half-sickening  of  his  pension'd 
And  had  a  c  tumbled  on  the  plain, 
Jenny,  my  c,  had  come  to  the  place. 
Had  made  his  goodly  c,  Tristram,  knight, 
'  0  c,  slay  not  him  who  gave  you  life.' 
'  Fair  and  dear  c,  you  that  most  had 
poor  c,  with  your  meek  blue  eyes,  ^ 
fear  not,  c  ;  I  am  changed  indeed.' 
My  sister,  and  my  c,  and  my  love, 
c  of  his  and  hers — 0  God,  so  like  ! ' 
'  Take  my  free  gift,  my  c,  for  your  wife  ; 
And  Muriel  Erne— the  two  were  c's — 
I  found  these  c's  often  by  the  brook. 
Cove    dimple  in  the  dark  of  rushy  c's, 
sweet  is  the  colour  of  c  and  cave. 
And  shadow'd  c's  on  a  sunny  shore, 
waves  that  up  a  quiet  c  Rolling  slide, 
And  steering,  now,  from  a  purple  c, 
curl'd  Thro'  all  his  eddying  c's  ; 
The  sailing  moon  in  creek  and  c  ; 
then  the  two  Dropt  to  the  c. 
Sat  by  the  river  in  a  c,  and  watch'd 
Covenant    Breathed,  like  the  c  of  a  God, 
Coventry    /  waited  for  the  train  at  C  ; 

wife  to  that  grim  Earl,  who  ruled  In  C : 
Cover  (s)    I  slide  by  hazel  c's  ; 
Cover  (verb)    Have  mercy,  mercy  !  c  all  my  sin. 

C  the  lions  on  thy  shield, 
Cover'd    His  blue  shield-lions  c — 
All  over  c  with  a  luminous  cloud, 
fail'd  from  my  side,  nor  come  C, 
what  I  saw  was  veil'd  And  c  ; 
Coverlet    Across  the  purple  c. 

Who,  moving,  cast  the  c  aside. 
Coverlid    The  silk  star-broider'd  c 
And  all  the  c  was  cloth  of  gold 
Covert    Rode  thro'  the  c's  of  the  deer. 

Here  often  they  break  c  at  our  feet.' 
Coverture    In  closest  c  upsprung. 
Cow    He  praised  his  ploughs,  his  c's,  his  hogs, 


Cow 


Balin  and  Balan  227 

257 

495 

Lancelot  and  E.  638 

699 

712 

718 

1220 

1363 

Holy  Grail  22 

Last  Tournament  211 

341 

633 

"  707 

Guinevere  86 

„      323 

„      436 

To  Victor  Hugo  13 

Princess  vii  58 

„  il9 

Marr.  of  Geraint  723 

Geraint  and  E.  278 

Guinevere  482 

Maud  / 1)  27 

Lancelot  and  E.  236 

In  Mem.,  Con.  97 

Edwin  Morris  115 

Locksley  Hall  24 

30 

39 

Lady  Clare  4 

,,        15 
The  Brook  75 
Aylm^er's  Field  460 
Princess  vi  319 
Grandmother  25 
Gareth  and  L.  394 
Geraint  and  E.  783 
„  824 

841 
J73 
Lover's  Tale  Hi  43 
iv  327 
363 
The  Ring  147 
158 
Ode  to  Memory  60 
Sea-Fairies  30 
Eleanore  18 
,,      108 
The  Daisy  20 
In  Mem.  Ixxix  10 
„  ct  16 

Com.  of  Arthur  378 
Lancelot  and  E.  1389 
Gardener's  D.  209 
Godiva  1 
„     13 
The  Brook  171 
St.  S.  Stylites  84 
Gareth  and  L.  585 
1217 
Holy  Grail  189 
„        471 
852 
Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.3 
Marr.  of  Geraint  73 
Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  9 
Lancelot  and  E.  1157 
Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  21 
Marr.  of  Geraint  183 
Arabian  Nights  68 
The  Brook  125 


Cow 


117 


Cramm'd 


N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  37 

52 

Village  Wife  103 

Spinsters  S's.  2 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  248 

Church-warden,  etc.  5 

16 

54 

Two  Voices  108 

Princess  v  309 

In  Mem.  xcv  30 

AferZm  and  V.  789 

Pe«ms  ajwi  E.  438 

TAe  Revenge  4 


Cow  (conimwai)    theer  warn't  not  feead  for  a  c ; 

Wi'  aaf  the  c's  to  cauve 

as  big  i'  the  mouth  as  a  c, 

wi'  her  paails  fro'  the  c. 

peasant  e  shall  butt  the  '  Lion  passant ' 

an'  wa  lost  wer  Haldeny  c, 

an'  I  doubts  they  poison'd  the  c, 

an'  it  poison'd  the  c. 
CJoward    The  fear  of  men,  a  e  still. 

Where  idle  boys  are  c**  to  their  shame, 

dwell  On  doubts  that  drive  the  c  back, 

were  he  not  crown'd  King,  c,  and  fool. ' 

a  c  slinks  from  what  he  fears  To  cope  with, 

*  Fore  Gk)d  I  am  no  c : 

*  I  know  you  are  no  c ; 
I  should  count  myself  the  c  if  I  left  them,  ,,        11 
spared  the  flesh  of  thousands,  the  e  and  the  base,  Happy  17 

Cowsu^ce    full  of  e  and  guilty  shame,  Princess  tv  348 

being  thro'  his  c  allow'd  Her  station,  Guinevere  516 

Or  c,  the  child  of  lust  for  gold.  To  the  Queen  II 54 

Cowd  (cold)    sa  c  ! — hev  another  glass  !  Straange  an'  c 

fur  the  time  !  Village  Wife  20 

Of  a  Christmas  Eave,  an'  as  c  as  this,  Owd  Rod  31 

but  the  barn  was  as  c  as  owt,  ,,       111 

she  cotch'd  'er  death  o'  c  that  night,  ,,      114 

CJower'd    A  dwarf -like  Cato  c.  Princess  vii  126 

Had  often  truckled  and  c  When  he  rose  Dead  Prophet  62 

Cowering    See  Low-cowering 

Cowl    And  turn'd  the  c's  adrift :  Talking  Oak  48 

leaving  for  the  c  The  helmet  in  an  abbey  Holy  Grail  5 

Cowl'd    Some  e,  and  some  bare-headed.  Princess  vi  77 

Beside  that  tower  where  Percivale  was  c,  Pelleas  and  E.  501 

Cowslip    Spring  Letters  c's  on  the  hill  ?  Adeline  62 

To  stoop  the  c  to  the  plains,  Rosalind  16 

c  and  the  crowfoot  are  over  all  the  hill,  May  Queen  38 

As  c  unto  oxlip  is,  Talking  Oak  107 

The  little  dells  of  c,  fairy  palms,  Aylmer's  Field  91 
what  joy  can  be  got  from  a  c  out  of  the  field  ;      In  the  Child.  Hasp.  36 

Cowslip  BaU    he  made  me  the  c  b,  First  Quarrel  13 

Cowslip  Wine    hev  a  glass  o'  c  w  !  Village  Wife  5 

Cra&dle  (cradle)    An'  I  tummled  athurt  the  c  North.  Cobbler  35 

Nelly  wur  up  fro'  the  c  Village  Wife  103 

bring  tha  down,  an'  thy  c  an'  all ;  Owd  Rod  50 

Cra&zed  (crazed)    Warn't  I  c  fur  the  lasses  mys^n      N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  18 

'  Cushie  wur  c  fur  'er  cauf  '  Spinster's  S's.  115 

Crab    like  a  butt,  and  harsh  as  c's.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  49 

Crabb'd    Thro'  solid  opposition  c  and  gnarl'd.  Princess  iii  126 

Come,  thou  are  c  and  sour :  Last  Tournament  272 

Crack  (s)     deafen'd  with  the  stammering  c's  Merlin  and  V.  942 

c  of  earthquake  shivering  to  your  base  Pelleas  and  E.  465 

Crack  (verb)    chrysalis  C's  into  shining  wings,  St.  S.  Stylites  156 

splinter'd  spear-shafts  c  and  fly.  Sir  Galahad  7 

earthquake  in  one  day  C's  all  to  pieces, —  Lucretius  252 

living  hearts  that  c  within  the  fire  Princess  v  379 

and  takes,  and  breaks,  and  c's,  and  splits,  ,,         527 

whelp  to  c  ;  C  them  now  for  yourself,  Maud  II  v  55 

Burst  vein,  snap  sinew,  and  c  heart.  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  y21i 

Crack'd    The  mirrow  c  from  side  to  side  ;  L.  of  Shalott  iii  43 

all  her  bonds  C ;  and  I  saw  the  flaring  atom-streams  Lucretius  38 

The  forest  c,  the  waters  curl'd.  In  Mem.  xv  5 

And  c  the  helmet  thro',  and  bit  the  bone,  Marr.  of  Geraint  573 

And  once  the  laces  of  a  helmet  c.  Last  Tournament  164 

whin  I  c  his  skull  for  her  sake.  Tomorrow  41 

Casques  were  c  and  hauberks  hack'd  The  Tourney  7 

Crackle    The  tempest  c's  on  the  leads.  Sir  Galahad  53 

Crackling    His  hair  as  it  were  c  into  flames,  Aylmer's  Field  586 

heard  A  c  and  a  rising  of  the  roofs,  Holy  Grail  183 

Cradle    (See  also  Cra9,dle)    To  deck  thy  c,  Eleiinore.  Eleanore  21 

Then  lightly  rocking  baby's  c  Enoch  Arden  194 

sway'd  The  c,  while  she  sang  this  baby  song.  Sea  Breams  292 

on  my  c  shone  the  Northern  star.  Princess  i  4 

rock  the  snowy  c  till  I  died.  >,  iv  104 

Love,  Warm  in  the  heart,  his  c,  Lover's  Tale  i  158 

we  slept  In  the  same  c  always,  ,,          259 

place  of  burial  Far  lovelier  than  its  c ;  ,,          530 


Cradle  {continued)    bending  by  the  c  of  her  babe.  The  Ring  415 

paler  then  Than  ever  you  were  in  your  c,  moan'd,  ,,        432 
Cradled    (See  also  Lily-cradled)    Their  Margaret  c 

near  them.  Sea  Dreams  57 

Cradle-head    half-embraced  the  basket  c-h  ,,       289 

Cradle-time    Familiar  up  from  c-t,  so  wan,  Balin  and  Balan  591 

Cradlemont    Urien,  C  of  Wales,  Claudias,  Com.  of  Arthur  112 

Craft  (art,  etc.)    before  we  came.  This  c  of  healing.  Princess  iii  320 

less  from  Indian  e  Than  beeliko  instinct  ,,    iv  198 

Yet  Merlin  thro'  his  c,  Com.  of  Arthur  234 

man  of  plots,  C,  poisonous  counsels,  Gareth  and  L.  432 

answer'd  with  such  c  as  women  use,  Geraint  and  E.  352 

Nor  left  untold  the  c  herself  had  used ;  ,,            393 

moral  child  without  the  c  to  rule,  Lancelot  and  E.  146 

The  c  of  kindred  and  the  Godless  hosts  Guinevere  427 

chance  and  a  and  strength  in  single  fights,  Pass,  of  Arthur  106 
c  and  madness,  lust  and  spite,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  189 
Had  never  served  for  c  or  fear,                           To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  27 

C  with  a  bunch  of  all-heal  in  her  hand,  Vastness  12 

0  the  flattery  and  the  c  Forlorn  3 

Then  you  that  drive,  and  know  your  C,  Politics  5 

Craft  (vessel)    I  boated  over,  ran  My  c  aground,  Edwin  Morris  109 

At  times  a  carven  c  would  shoot  The  Voyage  53 

Become  the  master  of  a  larger  c,  Enoch  Arden  144 

pushing  his  black  c  among  them  all.  Merlin  and  V.  563 

seamen  made  mock  at  the  mad  little  c  The  Revenge  38 
Of  others  their  old  c  seaworthy  still,                     Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  3 
Crag    (See  also  Island-crag)    And  the  c  that  fronts  the  Even,  Eleanore  40 

A  gleaming  c  with  belts  of  pines.  Two  Voices  189 

barr'd  with  long  white  cloud  the  scornful  c's,  Palace  of  Art  83 

All  night  the  splinter'd  c's  that  wall  the  dell  D.  of  F.  Women  187 

And  the  wild  water  lapping  on  the  c'  M.  d'Arthur  71 

'  I  heard  the  water  lapping  on  the  c,  ,,        116 

based  His  feet  on  juts  of  slippery  c  „        189 

when  the  bracken  rusted  on  their  c's,  Edwin  Morris  100 

The  light  cloud  smoulders  on  the  summer  c.  ,,          147 

My  right  leg  chain'd  into  the  c,  I  lay  St.  S.  Stylites  73 

still  hearth,  among  these  barren  c's,  Ulysses  2 

swings  the  trailer  from  the  c  ;  Locksley  Hall  162 

He  clasps  the  c  with  crooked  hands  ;  The  Eagle  1 

At  the  foot  of  thy  c's,  0  Sea  !  Break,  break,  etc.  14 

from  the  beetling  c  to  which  he  clung  Aylmer's  Field  229 

came  On  flowery  levels  underneath  the  c.  Princess  iii  336 

like  a  jewel  set  In  the  dark  c :  ,,         359 

find  the  toppling  c's  of  Duty  scaled  Ode  on  WeU.  215 

They  tremble,  the  sustaining  c's :  In  Mem.  cxxvii  11 
like  a  c  that  tumbles  from  the  cliff.  And  like  a  c 

was  gay  with  wilding  flowers :  Marr.  of  Geraint  318 

And  lichen'd  into  colour  vsrith  the  c's :  Lancelot  and  E.  44 

And  found  a  people  there  among  their  c's.  Holy  Grail  662 

Clutch'd  at  the  c,  and  started  thro'  mid  air  Last  Tournament  14 

and  c  and  tree  Scaling,  Sir  Lancelot  ,,               17 

And  the  wild  water  lapping  on  the  c'  Pass,  of  Arthur  239 

'  I  heard  the  water  lapping  on  the  c,  ,,            284 

based  His  feet  on  juts  of  slippery  e  ,,            357 

last  hard  footstep  of  that  iron  c ;  ,,            447 

path  was  perilous,  loosely  strown  with  c's  :  Lover's  Tale  i  384 

issuing  from  his  portals  in  the  c  ,,            430 

Revenge  herself  went  down  by  the  island  c's  The  Revenge  118 

the  pine  shot  along  from  the  c  V.  of  Maddv/ne  16 

down  the  c's  and  thro'  the  vales.  Montenegro  8 

The  noonday  c  made  the  hand  burn  ;  Tiresias  35 

When  I  had  fall'n  from  off  the  c  we  clamber'd  The  Flight  22 

Crag-carven    left  c-c  o'er  the  streaming  Gelt —  Gareth  and  L.  1203 

Crag-cloister    C-c  ;  Anatolian  Ghost ;  To  Ulysses  43 

Crag-platform    huge  c-p,  smooth  as  burnish'd  brass  Palace  of  Art  5 

Crake    (See  also  Meadow-crake)    flood  the  haunts  of 

hern  and  c ;  In  Mem.  ci  14 

Cram    green  Christmas  c's  with  weary  bones.  Wan  Sculptor  14 

'  Give,  C  us  with  all,'  Golden  Year  13 

c  him  with  the  fragments  of  the  grave,  Princess  iii  311 

Well  needs  it  we  should  c  our  ears  with  wool  ,,         tu  65 

Like  any  pigeon  will  I  c  his  crop,  Gareth  and  L.  459 
Cramm'd    (See  also  Furze-cramm'd)    '  The  Bull,  the 

Fleece  are  c,  Audley  Court  1 


Cramm'd 

Cramm'd  {continued)    And  e  a  plumper  crop ; 
Not  like  your  Princess  c  with  erring  pride, 
Titanic  shapes,  they  c  The  forum, 
she  was  c  with  theories  out  of  books. 
Whose  ear  is  c  with  his  cotton, 
every  margin  scribbled,  crost,  and  c  With 

comment, 
When  was  age  so  c  with  menace  ? 
Cramming    C  all  the  blast  before  it, 
Cramp  (s)    stitches,  ulcerous  throes  and  c's, 
Crsimp  (verb)    c  its  use,  if  I  Should  hookit 
I  will  not  c  my  heart,  nor  take  Half-views 
To  c  the  student  at  his  desk. 


118 


Win  Water.  124 

Princess  Hi  102 

„      vii  124 

„     Con.  35 

Maud  I  xi2 

Merlin  and  V.  677 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  108 

Locksley  HaU  192 

St.  S.  Stylites  13 

Day -Dm.,  Moral  15 

Will  Water.  51 

In  Mem.  cxroiii  18 


I  saw  her 


Cramp'd    (/See  oZso  Iron-cramp'd)    for  women,  up  till  ...o-o 

this  C  under  worse  Princess  xii  m 

weakness  or  necessity  have  c  Within  themselves,  1  iresias  »/ 

Crane    c,'  I  said,  '  may  chatter  of  the  c,  Princess  tw  104 
steaming  marshes  of  the  scarlet  c's,                         ^,  Prog,  of  Spring  7b 
Crannied    Flowek  in  the  c  wall,         ,                         Flow,  m  Cran.  wall  1 

Cranny    I  pluck  you  out  of  the  crannies,  ,,               ^ 

In  an  ancient  mansion's  crannies  and  holes :  „,"  T.    -i^ooi 

A  light  was  in  the  crannies,  Holy  GrflSdS 

Crape    Nor  wreathe  thy  cap  with  doleful  c.  My  hfeisfuMU 

Crash  (b)    came  The  c  of  ruin,  and  the  loss  of  all  Enoch  Arden  549 

In  conflict  with  the  c  of  shivering  points,  Pnwessv'^l 

There  at  his  right  with  a  sudden  c,  .         /£  170 

thro'  the  c  of  the  near  cataract  hears  Geratnt  andlL.  1// 

c  Of  battleaxes  on  shatter'd  helms,  ^"-^^jJ  i''^'^"'"  ^o 

maim'd  for  life  In  the  c  of  the  cannonades  The  Revenge  78 
The  c  of  the  charges,                                              Batt.  of  BnmanburhS^ 

My  brain  is  full  of  the  c  of  wrecks,  The  Wreck  ^ 

then  came  the  c  of  the  mast.  »        ^^ 

the  c  was  long  and  loud-  ^    ^^      Happy  m 

Crash  (verb)    The  fortress  c'es  from  on  high,  In  Mem.cxxmil'i 

I  thought  the  great  tower  would  c  Balm  andBalan  515 

hail  of  ArSs  c  Along  the  sounding  walls.  i^trestas  yb 

Crash'd    boys  That  c  the  glass  and  beat  the  floor ;  In  Mem.  ^^«^*  20 

and  so  they  c  In  onset,  Baiin  and  Ba^ano55 

the  stormy  surf  C  in  the  shingle  :  Lov^s  Tale  in  54 

as  if  she  had  struck  and  c  on  a  rock  ;  The  Wreck  108 

C  like  a  hurricane.  Broke  thro'  the  mass  Heavy  Brigade  ^8 

Crashing    C  went  the  boom,  P'P"S^f',^ 

c  with  long  echoes  thro'  the  land,  ^VJ'^^S  ^f '^  ^?2 

c  thro'  it,  their  shot  and  their  shell,  Def.  of  Lu.chiow  18 

Crass  (cross)    as  ye  did-over  yer  C  !  Tomorrow  90 

An  shure,  be  the  C,  that's  betther  nor  cuttm  „         «* 
Crasst  (crossed)     '  niver  c  over  say  to  the  Sassenach  whate  ;        ,,         48 

Crate    the  skin  Clung  but  to  c  and  basket,  Merlin  andy.bZb 

Crater    the  centre  and  c  of  European  confusion,  BeauttfuH^ity  >- 

Broke  the  Taboo,  Dipt  to  the  c,  Kapiolani  6\ 

Crathur'  (whisky)    been  takin"  a  dhrop  o'  the  c  Tomorrow  ll 

Crave    household  shelter  c  From  winter  rains  Two  Voices  /bU 

I  c  your  pardon,  0  my  friend  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  lUU 
damsel  back  To  c  again  Sir  Lancelot  of  the  King.        Gareth  and  L  88/ 

See  thou  c  His  pardon  for  thy  breaking  ,,     .  ^  ^°^ 

C  pardon  for  that  insult  done  the  Queen,  Marr.  of  Geramt  08,i 

Btay'd  to  c  permission  of  the  King,  Balm  and  Balan  ^88 

dazzled  by  the  sudden  light,  and  c  Pardon  :  Pelleas  and  h.  1U& 

Might  I  c  One  favour  ?  Romm.^  s  K.  69 

Craved    He  c  a  fair  permission  to  depart,  Marr  of  Geramt  4U 
Lancelot  at  the  palace  c  Audience  of  Guinevere,    Lancelot  and  iL.  iio/ 

Craven    Silenced  for  ever— c— a  man  of  plots,  Gareth  and  L.  idl 

'  A  c ;  how  he  hangs  his  head.'  Geramt  and  E.  127 

c,  weakling,  and  thrice-beaten  hound  :  Pelleas  and  h.  ^91 

my  c  seeks  To  wreck  thee  villainously :  Last  Tournament  548 

c  shifts,  and  long  crane  legs  of  Mark—  ,,           729 

Craw  (crow)    theer's  a  c  to  pluck  wi'  tha,  Sam :  N.  Farmer,  ^-S.b 

Crawin'  (crowing)    cocks  kep  a-crawin'  an'  c'  Owd  Moa  lUb 

Crawl    Why  inch  by  inch  to  darkness  c?  Two  Voices  200 

The  wrinkled  sea  beneath  him  c's ;  Af^ooA 

But  into  some  low  cave  to  c.  Merlin  and  K.  884 
Crawl'd    (-See  oZso  Scaped)    C  slowly  with  low  moans  to 

where  he  lay.  Balm  and  Balan  ^<^ 

Pain,  that  has  c  from  the  corpse  of  Pleasure,  Vastness  U 

But  'e  creeapt  an"  'e  c  along.  Church-warden,  etc.  19 


Crawling    scorpion  c  over  naked  skulls  ;- 
Crayon    Mary,  my  c's  !  if  I  can,  I  will. 
Craze    if  the  King  awaken  from  his  c. 
Crazed    {See  also  Craazed,  Half-crazed) 
(and  I  thought  him  c, 
so  c  that  at  last  There  were  some  leap'd 
arrogant  opulence,  fear'd  myself  turned  c, 
I  c  myself  over  their  horrible  infidel  writings  ? 
for  War's  own  sake  Is  fool,  or  c,  or  worse  ; 
coals  of  fire  you  heap  upon  my  head  Have  c  me. 
I  was  all  but  c  With  the  grief 
CrazinesB    such  a  c  as  needs  A  cell  and  keeper), 

For  such  a  c  as  Julian's  look'd 
Crazy    when  I  were  so  c  wi'  spite. 

Never  a  prophet  so  c ! 
Creak    but  am  led  by  the  c  of  the  chain, 
Creak'd    The  doors  upon  their  hinges  c ; 
Cream    fruits  and  c  Served  in  the  weeping  elm  ; 

robb'd  the  farmer  of  his  bowl  of  c : 
Cream- white    Her  c-w  mule  his  pastern  set : 
Crease  (weapon)    cursed  Malayan  c,  and  battle  clubs 


Create    Life  eminent  c's  the  shade  of  death  ; 
Creation    Yet  could  not  all  c  pierce 

And  all  c  in  one  act  at  once, 

serene  C  minted  in  the  golden  moods 

And  love  C's  final  law— 

To  which  the  whole  c  moves,  _ 
Creature    Did  never  c  pass  So  slightly, 

But  not  a  c  was  in  sight : 

happy  as  God  grants  To  any  of  his  c's. 

As  hunters  round  a  hunted  c  draw 

the  gentle  c  shut  from  all  Her  charitable  use, 

The  c  laid  his  muzzle  on  your  lap. 

Like  some  wild  c  newly-caged. 

So  stood  that  same  fair  c  at  the  door. 

The  sleek  and  shining  c's  of  the  chase. 

The  lovely,  lordly  c  floated  on 

Like  c's  native  unto  gracious  act. 

Thy  c,  whom  I  found  so  fair. 

leave  at  times  to  play  As  with  the  c  of  my  love 

0  beautiful  c,  what  am  I 

A  c  wholly  given  to  brawls  and  wine. 
To  pick  the  faded  c  from  the  pool, 
they  themselves,  like  c's  gently  bom 
c's  voiceless  thro'  the  fault  of  birth, 

1  compel  all  c's  to  my  will.'  (repeat) 
To  chase  a  c  that  was  current  then 
There  sat  the  lifelong  c  of  the  house. 


Creed 

Demeter  and  P.  78 

Romney's  R.  88 

Gareth  and  L.  724 

Lover's  Tale  iv  163 

V.  of  Maddune  75 

Despair  78 

Epilogue  31 
Romney's  R.  142 
Bandit's  Death  38 
Lover's  Tale  iv  164 
„  168 

First  Quarrel  73 
The  Throstle  10 
.  Rizpah  7 
Mariana  62 
Gardener's  D.  194 
Princess  v  223 
Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  31 
Princess,  Pro.  21 
Love  and  Death  13 
A  Character  5 
Princess  Hi  325 
V  194 
In  Mem.  Ivi  14 
„     Con.  144 
Talking  Oak  86 
167 
Enoch  Arden  417 
Aylmer's  Field  499 
565 
Princess  ii  272 
301 
329 
0I55 
in  89 
vii  27 
Pro.  38 
lix  12 
Maud  I  xm\0 
Marr.  of  Geraint  441 
671 
Geraint  and  E.  191 
„  266 

„     629,  673 
Merlin  and  V.  408 
Lancelot  and  E.  1143 


In  Mem 


or  had  the  boat  Become  a  living  c  clad  with  wings  ?        Holy  Grail  519 


Are  ye  but  c's  of  the  board  and  bed, 
His  c's  to  the  basement  of  the  tower 
and  his  c's  took  and  bare  him  off. 
Had  I  but  loved  thy  highest  c  here  ? 
but  the  c's  had  worked  their  will, 
glorious  c  Sank  to  his  setting. 

0  unhappy  c  ? 

diseaseful  c  which  in  Eden  was  divine, 

1  worshipt  all  too  well  this  c  of  decay, 

like  a  c  frozen  to  the  heart  Beyond  all  hope 
tendorost  Christ-like  c  that  ever  stept 
Credible    I  almost  think  That  idiot  legend  c. 
Credit  (s)     Hadst  thou  such  c  with  the  soul  ? 

His  c  thus  shall  set  me  free  ; 
Credit  (verb)     The  world  which  c's  what  is  done 
Credited    See  Scarce-credited 
Creditor    They  set  an  ancient  c  to  work  : 
Credulous    c  Of  what  they  long  for, 
Credulousness    darken,  as  he  cursed  his  c, 
Creeap  (creep)    But  c  along  the  hedge-bottoms, 
Creeapt  (crept)    But  'e  c  an'  'e  crawl'd  along. 
Creed    compare  All  c's  till  we  have  found  the  one 
The  knots  that  tangle  human  c's. 
And  other  than  his  form  of  c, 
cares  to  lisp  in  love's  delicious  c's : 
A  dust  of  systems  and  of  c's. 


Pelleas  and  E.  267 

Guinevere  104 

109 

„        656 

Rizpah  50 

Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  29 

Forlorn  44 

Happy  33 

,,      45 

Death  of  (Enone  73 

Charity  32 

Princess  v  153 

In  Mem.  Ixxi  5 

,,      Ixxx  13 

,,      Ixxv  15 

Edwin  Morris  130 

Geraint  and  E.  875 

Sea  Dreams  13 

Church-warden,  etc.  50 

19 

,    Supp.  Confessions  176 

Clear-headed  friend  3 

A  Character  29 

Car  ess' d  or  Chidden  11 

Two  Voices  207 


Creed 


119 


Cried 


Creed  (continued)    I  sit  as  God  holding  no  form  of  c,        Palace  of  Art  211 

Against  the  scarlet  woman  and  her  c  ;  Sea  Dreams  22 

Who  keeps  the  keys  of  all  the  c's,  In  Mem.  xxiii  5 

wrought  With  human  hands  the  c  of  c's  ,,       xxxvi  10 

shriek'd  against  his  c —  ,,            Ivi  16 

Believe  me,  than  in  half  the  c's.  „         xcyi  12 

To  cleave  a  c  in  sects  and  cries,  ,,    cxxviii  15 

The  prayer  of  many  a  race  and  c,  and  clime —  To  the  Queen  tt  11 

drear  night-fold  of  your  fatalist  c,  Despair  21 

cramping  c's  that  had  madden'd  the  peoples  ,,         24 

Despite  of  very  Faith  and  C,  To  Mary  Boyle  51 

I  hate  the  rancour  of  their  castes  and  c's,  Akbar's  Dream  65 

when  c  and  race  Shall  bear  false  witness,  ,,             97 

Like  calming  oil  on  all  their  stormy  c's,  ,,          160 

Neither  mourn  if  human  c's  be  lower  Faith  5 

Creedless    This  c  people  will  be  brought  to  Christ  Columlms  189 

Creek    marish-flowors  that  throng  The  desolate  c's  and 

pools  among,  Dying  Swan  41 
The  Lotos  blows  by  every  winding  c :                  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  101 

The  sailing  moon  in  c  and  cove  ;  In  Mem.  ci  16 

Creep  (See  also  Cree&p)    Wind  c  ;  dews  fall  chilly :  Leonine  Eleg.  7 

These  in  every  shower  c  -4  Dirge  33 

a  languid  fire  c's  Thro'  my  veins  Eleanore  130 

c's  from  pine  to  pine,  And  loiters,  CEnone  4 

And  thro'  the  moss  the  ivies  c,  Lotos-Eaters  C.  S.  9 

lost  their  edges,  and  did  c  Roll'd  on  each  other,  D.  of  F.  Women  50 

C's  to  the  garden  water-pipes  beneath,  ,,            206 

c's  on,  Bai^e-laden,  to  three  arches  of  a  bridge  Gardener's  D.  42 

The  slow-worn  c's,  and  the  thin  weasel  Aylmer's  Field  852 

Where  never  c's  a  cloud,  or  moves  a  wind,  Lucretius  106 

Could  dead  flesh  c,  or  bits  of  roasting  ox  ,,        131 
Some  ship  of  battle  slowly  c,                                      To  F.  D.  Maurice  26 

And  like  a  guilty  thing  I  c  In  Mem.  vii  7 

When  the  blood  c's,  and  the  nerves  prick  „          12 

Must  /  too  c  to  the  hollow  and  dash  myself  Maud  I  i  54 

Felt  a  horror  over  me  c,  >)     ^y  35 

Always  I  long  to  c  Into  some  still  cavern  deep,  ,,  II  iv  95 

The  slow  tear  c  from  her  closed  eyelid  Merlin  and  V.  906 

C  with  his  shadow  thro'  the  court  again,  Fdleas  and  E.  441 

like  a  new  disease,  unknown  to  men,  C's,  Guinevere  519 

down,  down  !  and  c  thro'  the  hole  !  Def.  of  Luchnow  25 

who  c  from  thought  to  thought.  Ancient  Sage  103 

he — some  one —  this  way  c's  !  The  Flight  lO 
fire  of  fever  c's  across  the  rotted  floor,                 LocJcsley  H.,  Sixty  223 

c  down  to  the  river-shore,  Charity  15 

Creeper    as  falls  A  c  when  the  prop  is  broken,  Aylmer's  Field  810 

With  c's  crimsoning  to  the  pinnacles,              _  The  Bing  82 

Creeping    (See  also  A-cree&pin,  Forward-creeping, 
Silent-creeping)     C  thro'  blossomy  rushes  and 

bowers  Leonine  Eleg.  3 

And  crystal  silence  c  down.  Two  Voices  86 

Upon  the  tortoise  c  to  the  wall  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  27 

c  on  from  point  to  point :                   _  LocJcsley  Hall  134 

comes  a  hungry  people,  as  a  lion  c  nigher,  ,,         -r,^^^ 

Still  c  with  the  c  hours  »<•  ^y«««  ^^e  7 

Crept    (See  also  Creeapt)    The  cluster'd  marish-mosses  c.       'Mariana  40 

deep  inlay  Of  braided  blooms  unmown,  which  c  .      ,  -  ,     on 

Adown  Arabian  Nights  29 

'  From  grave  to  grave  the  shadow  c :  Two  Voices  274 

And  out  I  stept,  and  up  I  c  :  Edwin  Morris  111 

And  down  my  surface  c.  Talking  Oak  162 

C  down  into  the  hollows  of  the  wood  ;  Enoch  Arden  76 

Another  hand  c  too  across  his  trade  ,,         110 

He  c  into  the  shadow  :  at  last  he  said,  , ,         o87 

c  Still  downward  thinking  '  dead  >>         688 

C  to  the  gate,  and  open'd  it,  „■   "      •   U^r 

With  hooded  brows  I  c  into  the  hall.  Princess  iv  22b 

As  on  The  Lariano  c  To  that  fair  port  The  Daisy  78 

a  gentler  feeling  c  Upon  us  :  In  Mem.  xxx  17 

till  he  c  from  a  gutted  mine  Maud  I  x  9 

Mt  life  has  c  so  long  on  a  broken  wing  „  III  ml 

thro'  the  peaceful  court  she  c  And  whisper'd  :  Merlm  and  V.  139 

some  corruption  c  among  his  knights,  ,    "    j  ti  I^^ 

from  the  carven-work  behind  him  c  Lancelot  and  E.  436 

C  to  her  father,  while  he  mused  alone,  ,,            748 


Crept  (continued)    all  that  walk'd,  or  c,  or  perch'd, 

or  flew.  Last  Tournament  367 

in  the  pause  she  c  an  inch  Nearer,  Guinevere  527 
my  blood  C  like  marsh  drains  thro'  all  my  languid 

limbs  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  53 

the  night  has  c  into  my  heart,  Rizpah  16 

C  to  his  North  again.  Hoar-headed  hero  !  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  64 

Black  was  the  night  when  we  c  away  Bandit's  Death  25 

Crescent  (adj.)    (See  also  De-crescent,  In-crescent) 

many  a  youth  Now  c,  who  will  come  Lancelot  and  E.  448 

Crescent  (s)     Hundreds  of  c's  on  the  roof  Arabian  Nights  129 

And  April's  e  glimmer'd  cold,  Miller's  D.  107 

beneath  a  moon,  that,  just  In  c,  Audley  Court  81 

When  down  the  stormy  c  goes.  Sir  Galahad  25 

As  when  the  sun,  a  c  of  eclipse.  Vision  of  Sin  10 

A  downward  c  of  her  minion  mouth,  Aylmer's  Field  533 

To  which  thy  c  would  have  grown  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  4 

To  yon  hard  c,  as  she  hangs  ,,          cvii  10 

Half-lost  in  the  liquid  azure  bloom  of  a  c  of  sea,  Maud  I  iv  5 

With  this  last  moon,  this  c—  De  Prof.  Two  G.  9 

red  with  blood  the  C  reels  from  fight  Montenegro  6 

Crescent-bark    range  Of  vapour  buoy'd  the  c-b,  Day-Dm.,  Depart.  22 

Crescent-curve    Set  in  a  gleaming  river's  c-c,  Princess  i  171 

Silver  c-c.  Coming  soon.  The  Ring  13 

Crescent-lit    while  the  balmy  glooming,  c-l,  Gardener's  D.  263 

Crescent-moon    And  clove  the  Moslem  c-m,  Happy  44 

Crescent-wise    thro'  stately  theatres  Bench'd  c-w.  Princess  ii  370 

Cress    brook  that  loves  To  purl  o'er  matted  c  Ode  to  Memory  59 

I  loiter  round  my  <^es  ;  The  Brook  181 

Crest     She  watch'd  my  c  among  them  all,  Oriana  30 

lapwing  gets  himself  another  c  ;  Locksley  Hall  18 

and  light  as  the  c  Of  a  peacock,  Maud  I  xvil6 

With  but  a  drying  evergreen  for  c,  Gareth  and  L.  1116 

The  giant  tower,  from  whose  high  c,  they  say,        Marr.  of  Geraint  827 

stormy  c's  that  smoke  against  the  skies,  Lancelot  and  E.  484 

And  wearing  but  a  holly-spray  for  c.  Last  Tournament  172 

while  he  mutter'd,  '  Craven  c's  !  0  shame  !  ,,                187 

Fall,  as  the  c  of  some  slow-arching  wave,  ,,                462 

To  which  for  c  the  golden  dragon  clung  Guinevere  594 

c  of  the  tides  Plunged  on  the  vessel  The  Wreck  89 

'  A  warrior's  c  above  the  cloud  of  war ' —  The  Ring  338 

Crete    Had  rest  by  stony  hills  of  C.  On  a  Mourner  35 

Crevice    shriek'd.  Or  from  the  c  peer'd  about.  Mariana  65 

fretful  as  the  wind  Pent  in  a  c :  Princess  Hi  81 

Crew  (s)    the  seamen  Made  a  gallant  c,  The  Captain  6 

beneath  the  water  C  and  Captain  lie  ;  ,,         68 

And  half  the  c  are  sick  or  dead.  The  Voyage  92 

They  sent  a  c  that  landing  burst  away  Enoch  Arden  634 

And  ever  as  he  mingled  with  the  c,  ,,-         643 

a  c  that  is  neither  rude  nor  rash.  The  Islet  10 

mann'd  the  Revenge  with  a  swarthier  alien  c.  The  Revenge  110 

harass'd  by  the  frights  Of  my  first  c,  Columbus  68 

ran  into  the  hearts  of  my  c,  V.  of  Maeldune  33 

the  c  should  cast  me  into  the  deep,              '  The  Wreck  94 

the  c  were  gentle,  the  captain  kind  ;  ,,         129 

Crew  (verb)    sitting,  as  I  said.  The  cock  c  loud  ;  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  10 

Crichton    I  call'd  him  C,  for  he  seem'd  Edwin  Morris  21 

Cricket    (See  also  Balm-cricket)    The  c  chirps  ;  the 

light  burns  low :  D.  of  the  0.  Year  40 

not  a  c  chirr'd  :  In  Mem.  xcv  6 

As  that  gray  c  chirpt  of  at  our  hearth —  Merlin  and  V.  110 

Than  of  the  myriad  c  of  the  mead,  Lancelot  and  E.  106 

And  each  was  as  dry  as  a  c,  V.  of  Maeldune  50 

Cricketed    They  boated  and  they  c  ;  Princess,  Pro.  160 

Cried    he  took  the  boy  that  c  aloud  Dora  101 

when  the  boy  beheld  His  mother  he  c  out  ,,     138 

Leolin  c  out  the  more  upon  them —  Aylmer's  Field  367 

mock'd  him  with  returning  calm,  and  c :  Lucretius  25 

c  out  upon  herself  As  having  fail'd  in  duty  ,,      277 

clapt  her  hands  and  c  for  war.  Princess  iv  590 

So  thrice  they  c,  I  likewise,  ,,  Con.  104 

I  c  myself  well-nigh  blind.  Grandmother  37 

Like  those  who  c  Diana  great :  Lit.  Sqvxzbbles  16 

So  thick  they  died  the  people  c,  The  Victim  5 

And  c  with  joy,  '  The  Gods  have  answer'd  :  „         38 


Cried 


120 


Cross 


Cried  (eontimied)    my  own  sad  name  in  corners  c,  Maud  I  vi  72 
Arthur  c  to  rend  the  cloth  (repeat)                       Gareth  and  L.  400,  417 

when  mounted,  e  from  o'er  the  bridge,  Gareth  and  L.  951 

Then  c  the  fall 'n,  '  Take  not  my  life  :  „              973 

C  out  with  a  big  voice,  '  What,  is  he  dead  ? '  Geraint  and  E.  541 

Here  the  huge  Earl  c  out  upon  her  talk,  „              651 

had  you  c,  or  knelt,  or  pray'd  to  me,  ,              844 

more  than  one  of  us  C  out  on  Garlon,  Balin  and  Balan  123 

lost  itself  in  darkness,  till  she  c —  ,,            514 

I  c  because  ye  would  not  pass  Beyond  it,  Lancelot  and  S.  1042 

So  many  knights  that  all  the  people  c.  Holy  Grail  335 

'  That  so  c  out  upon  me  ? '  ,,        433 

left  alone  once  more,  and  c  in  grief,  ,,        437 

'  Queen  of  Beauty,'  in  the  lists  C—  Pelleas  arid  E.  117 

his  helpless  heart  Leapt,  and  he  c,  ,,            131 

from  the  tower  above  him  c  Ettarre,  ,,            231 

'  And  oft  in  djring  c  upon  your  name.*  ,,            385 

And  woke  again  in  utter  dark,  and  c,  Last  Tournament  623 

We  c  when  we  were  parted :  Lover's  Tale  i  253 

the  bones  that  had  laughed  and  had  c —  Rizpah  53 

Sir  Richard  c  in  his  English  pride,  The  Revenge  82 

An'  I  c  along  wi'  the  gells.  Village  Wife  96 

Fur,  lawks !  'ow  I  c  when  they  went,  ,,  111 
Some  c  on  Cobham,  on  the  good  Lord  Cobham  ;  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  43 
a  score  of  wild  birds  C  from  the  topmost  summit      V.  of  Maeldune  28 

Once  in  an  hour  they  c,  ,,29 

An'  I  could  'a  c  ammost,  Spinster's  S's.  47 

c  the  king  of  sacred  song  ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  201 

And  the  Muses  c  with  a  stormy  cry  Dead  Prophet  2 

till  I  c  again :  '  0  Miriam,  if  you  love  me  The  Ring  262 

I  c  for  nurse,  and  felt  a  gentle  hand  ,,        418 

I  c  to  the  Saints  to  avenge  me.  Bandit's  Death  14 

that  the  boy  never  c  again.  ,,            28 

Crime    thorough-edged  intellect  to  part  Error  from  c  ;  Isabel  15 

And  all  alone  in  c :  Palace  of  Art  272 

*  Heaven  heads  the  count  of  c's  D.  of  F.  Women  201 

When  single  thought  is  civil  c,  '  You  ask  me,  why,  19 

if  it  were  thine  error  or  thy  c  Come  not,  when,  etc.  7 

it  was  a  c  Of  sense  avenged  by  sense  Vision  of  Sin  213 

'  The  c  of  sense  became  The  c  of  malice,  , ,       . .  215 

keeps  his  wing'd  affections  dipt  with  c :  Princess  vii  316 

Yet  clearest  of  ambitious  c.  Ode  on  Well.  28 

to  dodge  and  palter  with  a  public  c  ?  Third  of  Feb.  24 

And  ever  weaker  grows  thro'  acted  c,  Will  12 

Unfetter'd  by  the  sense  of  c.  In  Mem.  xxvii  7 

Day,  mark'd  as  with  some  hideous  c,  ,,     Ixxii  18 

I  count  it  c  To  mourn  for  any  overmuch ;  „    Ixxxv  61 

Perhaps  from  madness,  perhaps  from  c,  Maud  I  xvt  22 

came  to  loathe  His  c  of  traitor,  Marr.  of  Geraint  594 

call  him  the  main  cause  of  all  their  c ;  Merlin  and  V.  788 

that  most  impute  a  e  Are  pronest  to  it,  ,,            825 

all  her  c.  All — all — the  wish  to  prove  him  ,,            864 

blaze  the  c  of  Lancelot  and  the  Queen.'  Pelleas  and  E.  570 

Lured  by  the  c's  and  frailties  of  the  court,  Guinevere  136 

think  not  that  I  come  to  urge  thy  c's,  , ,        532 

A  shameful  sense  as  of  a  cleaving  c —  Lover's  Tale  i  794 

or  such  c's  As  holy  Paul—  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  109 

curbing  c's  that  scandalised  the  Cross,  Columbus  193 

But  the  c,  if  a  c,  of  her  eldest-born.  Despair  73 

crown'd  for  a  virtue,  or  hang'd  for  a  c  ?  ,,76 

C  and  hunger  cast  our  maidens  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  220 

'  Who  was  witness  of  the  c  ?  Forlorn  7 

His  c  was  of  the  senses :  Romney's  R.  151 

Whose  c  had  half  unpeopled  Hion,  Death  of  (Enone  61 

his  kisses  were  red  with  his  c.  Bandit's  Death  13 
Crimson  (adj.)    (See  also  Silvery-crimson)    above,  C, 

a  slender  banneret  fluttering.  Gareth  and  L.  913 

c  in  the  belt  of  strange  device,  A  c  grail  Holy  Grail  154 

All  pall'd  in  c  samite,  ,,       ..^^7 

We  steer'd  her  toward  a  c  cloud  In  Mem.  ciii  55 

c  with  battles,  and  hollow  with  graves,  The  Dreamer  12 

Crimson  (s)    long-hair'd  page  in  c  clad,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  22 

IMll  all  the  c  changed,  and  past  Mariana  in  the  S.  25 

In  the  Spring  a  fuller  c  comes  Locksley  Hall  17 

add  A  c  to  the  quaint  Macaw,  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  16 


Crimson  (s)  {continued)    rocket  molten  into  flakes  Of  c    In  Mem.  xcviii  32 

Sunder  the  glooming  c  on  the  marge,  Gareth  and  L.  1365 

In  c's  and  in  purples  and  in  gems.  Marr.  of  Geraint  10 

the  c  and  scarlet  of  berries  that  flamed  V.  of  Maeldune  61 

Close  beneath  the  casement  c  Locksley  H. ,  Sixty  34 

Was  all  ablaze  with  c  to  the  roof.  The  Ring  250 

but — when  now  Bathed  in  that  lurid  c —  St.  Tdemachus  18 

Crimson  (verb)    C's  over  an  inland  mere,  Eleanore  42 

Crimson-circled    Before  the  c-c  star  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  47 

Crimson'd    glow  that  slowly  c  all  Thy  presence  Tithonus  56 

Grimson-hued    c-h  the  stately  palmwoods  Whisper  Milton  15 

Crimson-rolling    when  the  c-r  eye  Glares  ruin.  Princess  iv  494 

Crimson-threaded    When  from  c-t  lips  Silver-treble 

laughter  trilleth :  Lilian  23 
Cripple    a  story  which  in  rougher  shape  Came  from  a 

grizzled  c,  Aylmer's  Field  8 

he  met  A  c,  one  that  held  a  hand  for  alms —  Pelleas  and  E.  542 

Crisp    To  make  the  sullen  surface  c.  In  Mem.  xlix  8 

Crispeth    The  babbling  runnel  c,  Claribel  19 

Critic    No  c  I — would  call  them  masterpieces :  Princess  i  145 

Musician,  painter,  sculptor,  c,  ,,      ii  178 

And  like  the  c's  blurring  comment  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  104 

And  the  C's  rarer  still.  Poets  and  Critics  16 

Critic-pen    Unboding  c-p.  Will  Water.  42 

Croak    c  thee  sister,  or  the  meadow-crake  Princess  iv  124 

When  did  a  frog  coarser  c  upon  our  Helicon  ?  Trans,  of  Homer  4 

For  a  raven  ever  <^s,  at  my  side,  Maud  I  vi57 

Once  at  the  c  of  a  Raven  who  crost  it.  Merlin  and  the  G.  24 

Croak'd    A  blot  in  heaven,  the  Raven,  flying  high,  C,            Guinevere  134 

Crocodile    C's  wept  tears  for  thee :  A  Dirge  22 

Crocus    at  their  feet  the  c  brake  like  fire,  (Enone  96 

From  one  hand  droop'd  a  c :  Palace  of  Art  119 

C,  anemone,  violet.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  44 

And  we  roH'd  upon  capes  of  c  V.  of  Maeldune  47 

in  this  roaring  moon  of  daffodil  And  c,  Pref.  Son.  19th  Certt.  8 

groundflame  of  the  c  breaks  the  mould.  Prog,  of  Spring  1 

Croft    Thro'  c's  and  pastures  wet  with  dew  Two  Voices  14 

Started  a  green  linnet  Out  of  the  c ;  Minnie  and  Winnie  18 

an'  thy  windmill  oop  o'  the  c.  Spinster's  S's.  73 

Cromlech    And  cleaves  to  cairn  and  c  still ;  To  the  Queen  ii  41 

Crone    rhymes  and  scraps  of  ancient  c's,  Lover's  Tale  i  289 

Garrulous  old  c,  The  Ring  120 

Crook    C  and  turn  upon  itself  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  236 

Crooked    Lame,  c,  reeling,  livid.  Death  of  (Enone  27 

Crop  (of  a  bird)    And  cramm'd  a  plumper  c ;  WHl  Water.  124 

Like  any  pigeon  will  I  cram  his  c,  Gareth  and  L.  459 

Crop  (verb)    call  him  overquick  To  c  his  own  sweet  rose  Merlin  and  V.  725 

Crept    They  might  have  c  the  myriad  flower  of  May,  Balin  and  Balan  577 

Cross  (s)  (See  also  Catholic  Cross,  Crass,  Market-Cross) 

A  broken  chancel  with  a  broken  c,  M.  d' Arthur  9 

1  lift  the  c,  and  strive  and  wrestle  St.  S.  Stylites  118 

I  smote  them  with  the  c ;  „           173 

Fly  happy  with  the  mission  of  the  C ;  Golden  Year  43 

Made  Him  his  catspaw  and  the  C  his  tool,  Sea  Dreams  190 

They  mark'd  it  with  the  red  c  to  the  fall.  Princess  vi  41 

Under  the  c  of  gold  That  shines  Ode  on  Well.  49 

roU'd  Thro'  the  dome  of  the  golden  c ;  ,,61 

the  c  And  those  around  it  and  the  Crucified,  Com.  of  Arthur  272 

like  the  c  her  great  and  goodly  arms  Stretch 'd  Gareth  and  L.  218 

Thorns  of  the  crown  and  shivers  of  the  c,  Balin  and  Balan  111 

beat  the  c  to  earth,  and  break  the  King_  ,,             458 

lone  woman,  weeping  near  a  c,  Stay'd  him.  Last  Tournament  493 

A  broken  chancel  with  a  broken  c,  Pass,  of  Arthur  177 

the  copse,  the  fountain  and— a  C !  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  127 

how  I  anger'd  Arundel  asking  me  To  worship  Holy  C !         , ,  136 

I  said,  a  c  of  flesh  and  blood  And  holier.  ,,             137 

we,  who  bore  the  C  Thither,  were  excommunicated  Columbus  191 

curbing  crimes  that  scandalised  the  C,  ,,        193 

He  that  has  nail'd  all  flesh  to  the  C,  Vastness  28 

My  soldier  of  the  C  ?  it  is  he  and  he  Happy  12 

My  warrior  of  the  Holy  C  and  of  the  conquering  sword,  ,,      21 

yesterday  They  bore  the  C  before  you  ,,      48 

Touch'd  at  the  golden  C  of  the  churches,  Merlin  and  the  G.  68 

under  the  Ces  The  dead  man's  garden,  ,,              105 

sunset  glared  against  a  c  St.  Telemachus  5 


Cross 


121 


Crown 


Cross  (verb)    Nor  any  cloud  would  c  the  vault  Mariana  in  the  S.  38 

he  was  wrong  to  c  his  father  thus :  Dora  148 

Should  my  Shadow  c  thy  thoughts  Too  sadly  Love  and  Duty  88 

Should  it  c  thy  dreams,  0  might  it  come  ,,            92 

the  lonely  seabird  des  With  one  waft  of  the  wing.  The  Captain  71 

Not  for  three  years  to  c  the  liberties  ;  Princess  ii  71 

It  c'es  here,  it  c'es  there,  Maud  II  iv  70 

never  shadow  of  mistrust  can  c  Between  us.  Marr.  of  Oeraint  815 

shadow  of  mistrust  should  never  e  Geraint  and  E.  248 

Your  leave,  my  Ibrd,  to  c  the  room,  ,,            298 

He  shall  not  c  us  more ;  ,,            342 

I  forbear  you  thus :  c  me  no  more.  ,,            678 

To  e  our  mighty  Lancelot  in  his  loves !  Lancelot  and  E.  688 

To  c  between  their  happy  star  and  them  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  730 

Cross-bones    carved  c-b,  the  types  of  Death,  WHl  Water.  245 

Cross'd-Crost  (See  also  Crasst)    And  they  cross'd 

themselves  for  fear,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  49 

Sometimes  your  shadow  cross'd  the  blind.  Miller's  D.  124 

And  cross'd  the  garden  to  the  gardener's  lodge,  Audley  Court  17 

then  we  crost  Between  the  lakes,  and  clamber'd  Golden  Year  5 

And  seldom  crost  her  threshold,  Enoch  Arden  337 

Abhorrent  of  a  calculation  <Tos<,  ,,          473 

crost  By  that  old  bridge  which,  half  in  ruins  The  Brook  78 

where  the  waters  maxry— crost,  Whistling  a  random  bar  ,,        81 

Then  cro«<  the  common  into  Darnley  chase  ,,      182 

He  seldom  crost  his  child  without  a  sneer  ;  Aylmer's  Field  562 

then  we  crost  To  a  livelier  land  ;  Princess  i  109 

back  again  we  crost  the  court  To  Lady  Psyche's :  ,,      «  100 

We  cross'd  the  street  and  gain'd  a  petty  mound  ,,      iv  557 

But  when  we  crost  the  Lombard  plain  The  Daisy  49 

The  shade  by  which  my  life  was  crost,  In  Mem.  Ixvi  5 

little  thumb.  That  crost  the  trencher  Marr.  of  Geraint  396 

Croat  and  came  near,  lifted  adoring  eyes,  '  Geraint  and  E.  304 

A  walk  of  lilies  crost  it  to  the  bower :  Balin  and  Balan  243 
every  margin  scribbled,  crost,  and  cramm'd  With 

comment,  Merlin  and  V.  677 

was  it  earthly  passion  crost  ? '  Holy  Grail  29 

with  the  bones  of  men,  Not  to  be  crost,  „        501 

every  bridge  as  quickly  as  he  crost  Sprang  into  fire  ,,        505 

crost  the  dimness  of  a  cloud  Floating,  PeUeas  and  E.  37 

Then  he  crost  the  court.  And  spied  not  any  light  ,,          418 
her  thin  hands  crost  on  her  breast —                      In  the  Child.  Hasp.  39 

Wiclif-preacher  whom  I  crost  In  flying  hither  ?  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  38 

Cross'd  !  for  once  he  sailed  the  sea  LocJcsley  H.,  Sixty  29 

at  the  croak  of  a  Raven  who  crost  it,  Merlin  and  the  G.  24 

shadowy  fighters  crost  The  disk,  St.  Tdemachus  23 

When  I  have  crost  the  bar.  Crossing  the  Bar  16 

Crossing  (part)    And,  c,  oft  we  saw  the  glisten  The  Daisy  35 

I  past  him,  I  was  c  his  lands ;  Maud  I  xiii  6 

Rivulet  c  my  ground,  ,,       xxi  1 
Guinevere  was  c  the  great  hall  Cast  herself  down,      Merlin  and  V.  65 

c  her  own  picture  as  she  came.  Lover's  Tale  iv  286 

we  saw  your  soldiers  c  the  ridge,  Bandit's  Death  21 

Crossing  (s)    Who  sweep  the  c's,  wet  or  dry.  Will  Water.  47 

Cross-lightnings    c-l  of  four  chance-met  eyes  Aylmer's  Field  129 

Cross-pipes    carved  c-p,  and,  underneath.  Will  Water.  247 

Cross-road    stake  and  the  c-r,  fool,  if  you  will,  Despair  116 

Crost    See  Cross'd 

Crotchet    Chimeras,  c's,  Christmas  solecisms.  Princess,  Pro.  203 

Crouch 'd    with  playful  tail  C  fawning  in  the  weed.  (Enone  201 

I  c  on  one  that  rose  Twenty  by  measure  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  88 

I  c  upon  deck —  The  Wreck  120 

She  c,  she  tore  him  part  from  part,  Dead  Prophet  69 

heard  as  we  c  below.  The  clatter  of  arms,  Bandit's  Death  23 

Crow  (s)  (See  also  Craw)     Perch'd  like  a  c  upon  a  thrce- 

legg'd  stool,  AuMey  Court  45 

many-winter'd  c  that  leads  Locksley  Hall  68 

ere  the  hateful  c  shall  tread  The  corners  WiU  Water.  235 

a  troop  of  carrion  c's  Hung  like  a  cloud  Merlin  and  V.  598 

soVjer  rook  And  carrion  c  cry  '  Mortgage.'  The  Ring  174 

Crow  (verb)    she  heard  the  night-fowl  c :  Mariana  26 
Before  the  red  cock  c's  from  the  farm            May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  23 

The  cock  c's  ere  the  Christmas  morn,  Sir  Galahad  51 

And  the  cock  couldn't  c,  V.  of  Maeldune  18 

and  c's  to  the  sun  and  the  moon,  Despair  90 


Crow  (verb)  continued    he  c's  before  his  time  ; 

Crowd  (s)    I  saw  c's  in  columned  sanctuaries : 
The  c's,  the  temples,  waver'd. 
To  me,  methought,  who  waited  with  a  c, 
A  c  of  hopes,  That  sought  to  sow  themselves 
To  tear  his  heart  before  the  c  ! 
those  that  held  their  heads  above  the  c. 
Among  the  honest  shoulders  of  the  c, 
while  none  mark'd  it,  on  the  c  Broke, 
c's  that  in  an  hour  Of  civic  tumult 
they  gave  The  park,  the  c,  the  house  ; 
preach'd  An  universal  culture  for  the  c, 
as  we  came,  the  c  dividing  clove  An  advent 
I  know  Your  faces  there  in  the  c — 
thereat  the  c  Muttering,  dissolved  : 
the  c  were  swarming  now.  To  take  their  leave, 
civic  manhood  firm  against  the  c — 
For  me,  the  genial  day,  the  happy  c, 
let  the  sorrowing  c  about  it  grow. 
Till  c's  at  length  be  sane  and  crowns  be  just, 
dark  c  moves,  and  there  are  sobs  and  tears  ; 
c's  that  stream  from  yawning  doors, 
more  content.  He  told  me,  lives  in  any  c, 
To  fool  the  c  with  glorious  lies. 
Thro'  all  that  c  confused  and  loud, 
turn  thy  wheel  above  the  staring  c ; 
such  blows,  that  all  the  c  Wonder'd, 
and  in  this  Are  harlots  like  the  c, 
c  Will  murmur,  '  Lo  the  shameless  ones. 
Then  of  the  c  ye  took  no  more  account 
And  by  the  gateway  stirr'd  a  c ; 


rough  c,  Hearing  he  had  a  difference  with  their  priests, 


The  Flight  3 

D.ofF.  Women  22 

114 

M.  d'Arthur,  Ep.  20 

Gardener's  D.  64 

You  might  have  won  36 

The  Brook  10 

Sea  Dreams  166 

„  234 

Lucretius  168 

Princess,  Pro.  94 

109 

iv28B 

510 

522 

Cow.  37 

57 

75 

Ode  on  Wdl.  16 

169 

268 

In  Mem.  Ixx  9 

,,    xcviii  26 

, ,  cxxviii  14 

Maud  II  iv  71 

Marr.  of  Geraint  356 

564 

Merlin  and  V.  831 

Lancelot  and  E.  99 

105 

Holy  Grail  424 


673 


no  precaution  used,  among  the  c,  Guinevere  519 

But  as  a  Latin  Bible  to  the  c ;  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  18 

And  then  in  Latin  to  the  Latin  c,  ,,31 

a  c  Throng'd  the  waste  field  about  the  city  gates :  ,,            39 

I  saw  your  face  that  morning  in  the  c.  Columbus  7 

the  c  would  roar  For  blood,  for  war,  Tiresias  64 

the  heart  of  a  listening  c —  The  Wreck  47 

dark -muffled  Russian  c  Folded  its  wings  Heavy  Brigade  38 

That  all  the  c  might  stare.  Dead  Prophet  16 

lawless  crown  As  of  the  lawless  c  ;  Freedom  32 

there  past  a  c  With  shameless  laughter,  St.  Telemachus  38 

draw  The  c  from  wallowing  in  the  mire  Akbar's  Dream  141 
Crowd  (verb)    They  come,  tliey  c  upon  me  all  at  once —  Lover's  Tale  i  47 


Launch  your  vessel.  And  c  your  canvas. 
Crowded    C  with  driving  atomies, 
Crow'd    C  lustier  late  and  early, 

maid.  That  ever  c  for  kisses.' 

The  cock  has  c  already  once. 
Crowfoot    cowslip  and  the  e  are  over  all  the  hill, 


Merlin  and  the  G.  127 

Lover's  Tale  ii  174 

WiU  Water.  126 

Princess  ii  280 

The  Flight  3 

May  Queen  38 


Crowing    (See  also  A-crawin',  Crawln')    At  midnight  the 

cock  was  c,  Oriana  12 

Came  c  over  Thames.  Will  Water.  140 

Crown  (diadem,  etc.)    Revered  Isabel,  the  c  and  head,  Isabel  10 


better  than  to  own  A  c,  a  sceptre, 

With  a  c  of  gold.  On  a  throne  ? 

under  my  starry  sea-bud  c  Low  adown 

Gliding  with  equal  c's  two  serpents  led 

his  ample  bound  to  some  new  c : — 

from  his  cold  c  And  crystal  silence 

Ilion's  column'd  citadel.  The  c  of  Troas. 

from  all  neighbour  c's  Alliance  and  allegiance, 

rolling  to  and  fro  The  heads  and  c's  of  kings  ; 

Last  May  we  made  a  c  of  flowers : 

only  toil,  the  roof  and  c  of  things  ? 


Ode  to  Memory  121 

The  Merman  6 

The  Mermaid  16 

Alexander  6 

Poland  8 

Two  Voices  85 

(Enone 14 

„     124 

Palace  of  Art  152 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  9 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  24 


soldier  found  Me  lying  dead,  my  e  about  my  brows,  D.  ofF.  Women  162 


And,  King-like,  wears  the  c  : 

Three  Queens  with  c's  of  gold — 

those  moments  when  we  met.  The  c  of  all, 

the  angel  there  That  holds  a  c  ? 

'tis  here  again ;  the  c  !  the  c  ! 

That  a  sorrow's  e  of  sorrow  is 

The  mountain  stirr'd  its  bushy  c. 

In  robe  and  c  the  King  stept  down, 


Of  old  sat  Freedom  16 

M.  d'Arthur  198 

Edwin  Morris  70 

St.  S.  Stylites  204 

208 

Locksley  Hall  76 

Amphion  25 

BeggarMaid  5 


Crown 


122 


Crush'd 


Crown  (diadem,  etc.)  (continued)    doom  Of  those 

that  wear  the  Poet's  c :  You  might  have  won  10 

slender  coco's  drooping  c  of  plumes,  Enoch  Arden  574 

And  so  she  wears  her  error  like  a  c  Princess  Hi  111 
gold  That  veins  the  world  were  pack'd  to  make  your  c,       ,,         iv  543 

one  that  sought  but  Duty's  iron  c  Ode  on  Well.  122 

crowds  at  length  be  sane  and  c's  be  just.  , ,           169 

he  wears  a  truer  c  Than  any  wreath  ,,           276 

It  wore  a  c  of  light,  The  Flower  10 

And  you  my  wren  with  a  c  of  gold.  Window.  Spring  11 

flit  like  the  king  of  the  wrens  with  a  c  of  fire.  ,,             Ay.  16 

I  wore  them  like  a  civic  c :  In  Mem.  Ixix  8 

The  fool  that  wears  a  c  of  thorns :  ,,              12 

He  look'd  upon  my  c  and  smiled  :  ,,16 

But  ill  for  him  that  wears  a  c,  ,,     cxxvii9 

has  past  and  leaves  The  C  a  lonely  splendour.  Ded.  of  Idylls  49 

More  like  are  we  to  reave  him  of  his  c  Gareth  and  L.  419 

Thorns  of  the  c  and  shivers  of  the  cross,  Balin  and  Balan  111 
'  Thou  shalt  put  the  c  to  use.     The  c  is  but  the 

shadow  of  the  King,  ,,              202 

Balin  bare  the  c,  and  all  the  knights  Approved  him,  ,,              209 

Before  another  wood,  the  royal  c  Sparkled,  „              462 

'  Lo  there  '  she  cried — 'ac —  ,,              465 

I  charge  thee  by  that  c  upon  thy  shield,  ,,              481 

Drove  his  mail'd  heel  athwart  the  royal  c,  „              640 

Else  never  had  he  borne  her  c,  ,,             566 

Trampled  ye  thus  on  that  which  bare  the  CI'  ,,              602 

wreath  of  beauty  thine  the  c  of  power.  Merlin  and  V.  79 

he,  that  once  was  king,  had  on  a  c  Of  diamonds,  Lancelot  and  E.  45 

from  the  skull  the  c  RoU'd  into  light,  ,,            50 

he  had  the  gems  Pluck'd  from  the  c,  ,,            57 

Since  to  his  c  the  golden  dragon  clung,  ,,          434 
statue  in  the  mould  Of  A  rthur,  made  by  Merlin,  with  a  c,  Holy  Grail  239 

the  c  And  both  the  wings  are  made  of  gold,  ,,        241 

a  c  of  gold  About  a  casque  all  jewels  ;  ,,        410 

And  from  the  c  thereof  a  carcanet  Of  ruby  Last  Tournament  6 

high  on  land,  A  c  of  towers.  ,,          506 

then  this  c  of  towers  So  shook  to  such  a  roar  ,,          620 

Three  queens  with  c's  of  gold  :  Pass,  of  Arthur  366 
The  loyal  to  their  c  Are  loyal  to  their  own  far  sons,  To  the  Queen  ii  27 

great  c  of  beams  about  his  brows —  Lover's  Tale  i  672 

the  cope  and  c  Of  all  I  hoped  and  fear'd  ?  „          ii  27 

clutch 'd  the  sacred  c  of  Prester  John,  Columbus  110 

feed  the  rebels  of  the  c,  ,,        131 

A  c  the  Singer  hopes  may  last,  Epilogue  38 

I  should  wear  my  c  entire  Helen's  Tower  9 

Thou  loather  of  the  lawless  c  Freedom  31 

Wilt  neither  quit  the  widow'd  C  Prin.  Beatrice  15 

To  wreathe  a  c  not  only  for  the  king  Akbar's  Dream  23 
The  shadow  of  a  c,  that  o'er  him  hung,                  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  2 

CJrown  (five  shillings)    [See  also  Half-crown)    and 

he  gave  the  nngers  a  c.  Grandmother  58 

Crown  (verb)    this  high  dial,  which  my  sorrow  c's —  St.  S.  Stylites  95 

C  thyself,  worm,  and  worship  thine  own  lusts  ! —  Aylmer's  Field  650 

you  fair  stars  that  c  a  happy  day  Maud  I  xviii  30 

c  thee  king  Far  in  the  spiritual  city  : '  Holy  Grail  161 

and  one  will  c  me  king  Far  in  the  spiritual  city  ;  „       482 

However  they  may  c  him  otherwhere.  ,,       902 

To  c  it  with  herself.  Lover's  Tale  i  63 

who  c's  himself  Above  the  naked  poisons  ,,         355 

It  still  were  right  to  c  with  song  Epilogue  36 

Crown'd     (See  also  Citadel-crown'd,  Fire-crown'd, 

Glory-crown'd)     '  The  simple  senses  c  his  head  :        Two  Voices  277 

night  divine  C  dying  day  with  stars.  Palace  of  Art  184 

A  name  for  ever  ! — lying  robed  and  c,  D.  ofF.  Women  163 

I  shall  be  saved  ;  Yea,  c  a  saint.  St.  S.  Stylites  153 

Catch  me  who  can,  and  make  the  catcher  c —  Golden  Year  18 

reissuing,  robed  and  c,  To  meet  her  lord,  Godiva  77 

Like  Heavenly  hope  she  c  the  sea.  The  Voyage  70 

and  true  love  C  after  trial ;  Aylmer's  Field  100 

two  fair  images.  Both  c  with  stars  Sea  Dreams  241 

C  with  a  flower  or  two,  Lucretius  229 

and  c  with  all  her  flowers.  Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  41 

And,  c  with  all  the  season  lent,  In  Mem.  xxii  6 

c  The  purple  brows  of  Olivet.  „       xxxi  11 


Crown'd  (continued)    When  c  with  blessing  she  doth  rise    In  Mem.       xl  5 

I  see  thee  sitting  c  with  good,  ,,       Ixxxiv  5 

Or,  c  with  attributes  of  woe  ,,       cxviii  18 

for  he  heard  of  Arthur  newly  c.  Com.  of  ArOiur  41 

clamour'd  for  a  king,  Had  Arthur  c ;  ,,            236 

Arthur  sat  C  on  the  dais,  ,,            258 

the  King  stood  out  in  heaven,  C,  ,,            444 

And  c  with  fleshless  laughter—  Gareth  and  L.  1383 

he  c  A  happy  life  with  a  fair  death,  Geraint  and  E.  967 

had  I  c  With  my  slain  self  the  heaps  Balin  and  Balan  177 

were  he  not  c  King,  coward,  and  fool.'  Merlin  and  V.  789 

Her  godlike  head  c  with  spiritual  fire,  ,,          837 

Arthur,  long  before  they  c  him  King,  Lancelot  and  E.  34 

Lancelot's  azure  lions,  c  with  gold,  ,,          663 

the  gilded  parapets  were  c  With  faces,  PeUeas  and  E.  165 

there  before  the  people  c  herself :  , ,            174 

c  the  state  pavilion  of  the  King,  Guinevere  399 

dying  thus,  C  with  her  highest  act  Lover's  Tale  i  216 

with  my  work  thus  C  her  clear  forehead.  ,,            345 

where  that  day  I  c  myself  as  king,  ,,            592 

Julian,  who  himself  was  c  With  roses,  ,,        iv  296 

There  c  with  worship —  Tiresias  175 

whether  c  for  a  virtue,  or  hang'd  for  a  crime  ?  Despair  76 

Her  shadow  c  with  stars —  Ancient  Sage  201 

songs  in  praise  of  death,  and  c  with  flowers !  ,,             209 

C  with  sunlight — over  darkness —  LocTcsley  H.,  Sixty  92 

C  so  long  with  a  diadem  Never  worn  by  a  worthier,  On  Jui.  Q.  Victoria  7 

Love  for  the  maiden,  c  with  marriage,  Vastness  23 

maiden-Princess,  c  with  flowers,  The  Ring  485 

the  c  ones  all  disappearing !  Parnassus  13 

C  her  knights,  and  flush'd  as  red  As  poppies  when 

she  c  it.  The  Tourney  16 

Crowning    Knighted  by  Arthur  at  his  c —  Com.  of  Arthur  175 

And  c's  and  dethronements :  To  the  Queen  ii  45 

Crown-farm    Sold  the  c-f's  for  all  but  nothing,  Columbus  132 

Crown-royal    bear  her  own  c-r  iipon  shield,  Balin  and  Balan  200 

Why  wear  ye  this  c-r  upon  shield  ? '  ,,              338 

'  Why  wear  ye  that  c-r  ? '  „              348 

Crown-scandalous    wear  ye  still  that  same  c-sV  ,,             390 

Crowsfoot    Made  wet  the  crafty  c  round  his  eye  ;  Sea  Dreams  187 

Crucified    either  they  were  stoned  or  c,  St.  S.  Stylites  51 

the  cross  And  those  around  it  and  the  C,  Com.  of  Arthur  273 

Crucifix    Or  the  maid-mother  by  a  c.  Palace  of  Art  9S 

Cruel    c  as  a  schoolboy  ere  he  grows  To  Pity —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  109 

'  C,  c  the  words  I  said  !  Edward  Gray  17 

more  harsh  and  c  Seem'd  the  Captain's  mood.  The  Captain  13 

no  tenderness — Too  hard,  too  c :  Princess  v  516 

O  c,  there  was  nothing  wild  or  strange.  Merlin  and  V.  860 

Cruel-hearted    They  call  me  c-h,  but  I  care  not  May  Queen  19 

Crueller    C :  as  not  passing  thro'  the  fire  Aylmer's  Field  671 

'  0  c  than  was  ever  told  in  tale,  Merlin  and  V.  858 

which  was  c  ?  which  was  worse  '(  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  88 

Cruelty    Infinite  c  rather  that  made  everlasting  Hell,  Despair  96 

Cruet    gentlemen,  That  trifle  with  the  c.  Will  Water.  232 

Crumble    touch  it,  it  will  c  into  dust.'  Holy  Grail  439 

and  they  c  into  dust.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  72 

Crumbled    Till  public  wrong  be  c  into  dust,  Ode  on  Well.  167 

Fell  into  dust,  and  c  in  the  dark —  Lover's  Tale  i  95 

Crumpled     More  c  than  a  poppy  from  the  sheath.  Princess  v  29 

the  rest  Were  c  inwards.  The  Ring  454 

Crupper    Beyond  his  horse's  c  and  the  bridge,  Gareth  and  L.  966 

length  of  lance  and  arm  beyond  The  c,  Geraint  and  E.  464 

Crusade    to  lead  A  new  c  against  the  Saracen,  Columb'us  103 

load  One  last  c  against  the  Saracen,  ,,        239 

Crush  (s)    great  the  c  was,  and  each  base,  Princess  vi  353 

Crush  (verb)     Like  a  rose-leaf  I  will  c  thee,  Lilian  29 

Will  c  her  pretty  maiden  fancies  dead  Princess  i  88 

Or  c  her,  like  a  vice  of  blood.  In  Mem.  Hi  15 

this  Order  lives  to  c  All  wrongers  Gareth  and  L.  625 

when  I  thought  he  meant  To  c  me.  Holy  Grail  416 

he  sail'd  the  sea  to  c  the  Moslem  in  his  pride  ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  29 

Crush'd  (See  also  Half-crushed)     I  c  them  on  my  breast,  my 

mouth  ;  Fatima  12 

sin,  that  c  My  spirit  flat  before  thee.  St.  S.  Stylites  25 

like  monstrous  apes  they  c  my  chest :  ,,          174 


Crush'd 


123 


Cry 


Crush'd  (continued)    Lady  Psyche  will  be  c ; 
she  c  The  scrolls  together, 
record  of  her  wrongs,  And  c  to  death : 
I  found,  tho'  c  to  hard  and  dry, 
Had  bruised  the  herb  and  c  the  grape, 
Mangled,  and  flatten'd,  and  c, 
c  with  a  tap  Of  my  finger-nail 
c  in  the  clash  of  jarring  claims, 
c  The  Idolaters,  and  made  the  people  free  ? 
c  the  man  Inward,  and  either  fell, 
her  feet  unseen  C  the  wild  passion  out 
Then  c  the  saddle  with  his  thighs, 
Caught  in  a  mill  and  c — 
he  was  c  in  a  moment  and  died, 


Princess  Hi  63 

,,      iv  393 

„       V 144 

The  Daisy  97 

In  Mem.  xxxv  23 

Mavd  III 

Maud  II  a  21 

„  /77ot44 

Gareth  and  L.  1 36 

Balin  and  Balan  562 

Lancdot  and  E.  742 

PeHeas  and  E.  459 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  14 

Charity  21 


Crushing    Kaw  from  the  prime,  and  c  down  his  mate ;         Princess  ii  121 

Crust    one  slough  and  c  of  sin,  St.  S.  Stylites  2 

saw  Thee  woman  through  the  c  of  iron  moods  Princess  vii  342 

Crusted    flower-plots  Were  thickly  c,  one  and  all :  Mariana  2 

Crutch     Weak  Truth  a-leaning  on  her  c.  Clear-headed  friend  18 
Cry  (s)  [See  also  Battle-cry,  Wax-cry)    I  cry  aloud  :  none 

hear  my  cries,  Oriana  73 

one  deep  c  Of  great  wild  beasts  ;  Palace  of  Art  282 

the  deep  behind  him,  and  a  c  Before.  M.  d' Arthur  184 

A  c  that  ahiver'd  to  the  tingling  stars,  ,,           199 

the  boy's  c  came  to  her  from  the  field.  Bora  104 

lest  a  c  Should  break  his  sleep  by  night.  Walk,  to  the  Mail73 

In  one  blind  c  of  passion  and  of  pain,  Love  and  DtUy  80 
Begins  the  scandal  and  the  c  :                               You  might  have  won  16 

In  him  woke.  With  his  first  babe's  first  c,  Enoch  Arden  85 

Forward  she  started  with  a  happy  c,  ,,          151 

all  the  younger  ones  with  jubilant  cries  Broke  ,,          377 

hard  upon  the  c  of  '  breakers '  came  ,,          548 

send  abroad  a  shrill  and  terrible  c,  „          768 

gave  A  half -incredulous,  half-hysterical  c.  ,,          853 

knew  he  wherefore  he  had  made  the  c  ;  Aylmer's  Field  589 

Clung  to  the  mother,  and  sent  out  a  c  Sea  Breams  245 

A  mtisic  harmonizing  our  wild  cries,  ,,          255 

The  plaintive  c  jarr'd  on  her  ire  ;  Princess  iv  393 

To  lag  behind,  scared  by  the  c  they  made,  ,,        «  94 

rose  a  c  As  if  to  greet  the  king  ;  ,,         248 

clash'd  flis  iron  palms  together  with  a  c ;  ,,         354 

She  nor  swoon 'd,  nor  utter'd  c:  ,,        «i  2 

went  up  a  great  c,  The  Prince  is  slain.  ,,          25 

piteous  was  the  c :  ,,        142 

and  out  of  languor  leapt  a  c ;  ,,  wi  155 

Sent  from  a  dewy  breast  a  c  for  light :  ,,         253 

Whose  crying  is  a  c  for  gold  :  The  Baisy  94 

He  heard  a  fierce  mermaiden  c.  Sailor  Boy  6 

Greater  than  I — is  that  your  c  ?  Spiteful  Letter  17 

He  caught  her  away  with  a  sudden  c  ;  The  Victim  69 

Forgive  these  wild  and  wandering  cries,  In  Mem.,  Pro.  ^1 

From  out  waste  places  comes  a  c,  , ,              iii  7 

And  with  no  language  but  a  c.  ,,            liv20 

To  raise  a  c  that  lasts  not  long,  ,,         Ixxv  10 

strange  Was  love's  dumb  c  defying  change  ,,           xcv27 

The  roofs,  that  heard  our  earliest  c,  ,,              cii  3 

With  overthrowings,  and  with  cries,  „        cxiii  19 

To  cleave  a  creed  in  sects  and  mes,  ,,     cxxviii  15 

A  c  above  the  conquer'd  years  ,,         cxxxi  7 

A  wounded  thing  with  a  rancorous  c,  Maud  I  xM 

And  there  rises  ever  a  passionate  c  ,,       II  i  5 
there  rang  on  a  sudden  a  passionate  c,  Ac  for  a  brother's 

blood:  )j             33 

rings  on  a  sudden  a  passionate  c,  ,,         iv  47 

loyal  people  shouting  a  battle  c,  ,,  ///  vi  35 

'  Ay,'  said  the  King,  '  and  hear  ye  such  a  c  ?  Com.  of  Arthur  337 

Died  but  of  late,  and  sent  his  c  to  me,  ,,            361 

there  were  cries  and  clashings  in  the  nest,  Gareth  and  L.  70 

Gareth  crying  prick'd  against  the  c  ;  ,,          1221 

rose  a  c  That  Edyrn's  men  were  on  them,  Marr.  of  Geraint  638 

Sent  forth  a  sudden  sharp  and  bitter  c,  Geraint  and  E.  722 

c  of  children,  Enid's  and  Gteraint's  ,,            965 

from  the  castle  a  c  Sounded  across  the  court,  Balin  and  Balan  399 

Pellam's  feeble  c  '  Stay,  stay  him  !  ,,420 

Utter'd  a  little  tender  dolorous  c.  Lancelot  and  E.  817 


Cry  (s)  (continued)    overhead  Thunder,  and  in  the  thunder 

was  a  c.  Eoly  Grail  185 

I  saw  tho  Holy  Grail  and  heard  a  c —  ,,         291 

ye  know  the  cries  of  all  my  realm  Pass  thro'  this  hall —  ,,         315 

Such  was  his  c :  for  having  heard  the  King  Pelleas  and  E.  10 

thro'  the  wind  Pierced  ever  a  child's  c :  Last  Tournament  17 

She  ended,  and  the  c  of  a  great  jousts  ,,              51 

mantle  clung,  And  pettish  cries  awoke,  ,,            214 

Nor  heard  the  King  for  their  own  cries,  „            472 

cities  burnt,  and  with  a  c  she  woke.  Guinevere  83 

I  cry  my  c  in  silence,  and  have  done.  ,,       201 

Then  on  a  sudden  a  c,  '  The  King.'  ,,       411 

but  in  going  mingled  with  dim  cries  Pass,  of  Arthur  41 

are  these  dim  cries  Thine  ?  ,,47 

Nor  any  c  of  Christian  heard  thereon,  , ,             128 

King  am  I,  whatsoever  be  their  c :  ,,             162 

heard  the  deep  behind  him,  and  a  c  Before.  ,,            352 

A  c  that  shiver 'd  to  the  tingling  stars,  ,,             367 

Like  the  last  echo  born  of  a  great  c,  ,,            459 

witness,  too,  the  silent  c.  To  the  Queen  ii  10 

sent  my  c  Thro'  the  blank  night  to  Him  Lover's  Tale  i  751 

I  flung  myself  upon  him  In  tears  and  cries  :  ,,           ii  90 

Cries  of  the  partridge  like  a  rusty  key  ^^  115 
guests  broke  in  upon  him  with  meeting  hands  And  cries     „         iv  239 

Rush'd  at  each  other  with  a  c,  ,,             373 

hear  that  c  of  my  boy  that  was  dead,  Rizpah  45 

strangled  vanity  Utter'd  a  stifled  c—  Sisters  (E.  arid  E.)  200 
there  was  a  phantom  c  that  I  heard  as  I  tost 

about.  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  63 

and  heard  their  musical  c —  V.  of  Maddune  97 

when  the  brazen  c  of  ^akides  Achilles  over  the  T.  22 

Never  a  c  so  desolate,  Bespair  59 

Gone  the  c  of  '  Forward,  Forward,'  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  73 

Let  us  hush  this  c  of  '  Forward  '  ,,78 

Cries  of  unprogressive  dotage  ,,              153 

leave  the  dog  too  lame  to  follow  with  the  c,  ,,              226 

the  Muses  cried  with  a  stormy  c  Bead  Prophet  2 

0  scorner  of  the  party  c  Freedom  25 
mighty  was  the  mother's  childless  c,  A  c  Bemeter  and  P.  32 
he,  the  God  of  dreams,  who  heard  my  c,  ,,  91 
lover  thro'  this  ring  Had  sent  his  c  for  her  forgiveness,     The  Ring  233 

1  myself  was  madden'd  with  her  c,  ,,  405 
Nor  lend  an  ear  to  random  cries,  Politics  7 
from  out  the  long  ravine  below,  She  heard  a 

wailing  c,  Beath  of  (Enone  20 

following,  as  in  trance,  the  silent  c.  ,,86 

the  c  from  off  the  mosque,  Akbar's  Bream  149 

on  the  sudden,  and  with  a  c  '  Saleem '  184 

till  the  little  one  utter'd  a  c.  Bandit's  Beath  26 

Cry  (verb)    I  c  aloud :  none  hear  my  cries,  Oriana  73 

Call  to  each  other  and  whoop  and  c  The  Merman  26 

every  smouldering  town  Cries  to  Thee,  Poland  6 

Cries  to  Thee,  '  Lord,  how  long  shall  these  things  be  ?  ,,9 

Than  c  for  strength,  remaining  weak,  Two  Voices  95 

'  C,  faint  not :  either  Truth  is  born  181 

'  C,  faint  not,  climb  :  the  summits  slope  ,,         184 

We  did  so  laugh  and  c  with  you,  B.  of  the  O.  Fear  25 

Yet  cease  I  not  to  clamour  and  to  c,  St.  S.  Stylites  42 

for  a  tender  voice  will  c.  Locksley  Hall  87 

C  down  the  past,  not  only  we,  Godiva  7 

bade  him  c,  with  sound  of  trumpet,  ,      36 

c  For  that  which  all  deny  them —  WiU  Water.  45 

let  the  wind  sweep  and  the  plover  c  ;  Come  not,  when,  etc.  5 

C  to  tho  summit,  '  Is  there  any  hope  ?  Vision  of  Sin  220 

I  c  to  vacant  chairs  and  widow'd  walls,  Aylmer's  Fidd  720 

Must  c  to  these  the  last  of  theirs,  ,,            792 

I  c  to  thee  To  kiss  thy  Mavors,  Lua-elius  81 

Earth  Reels,  and  the  herdsmen  c ;  Princess  v  529 

I  cannot  c  for  him,  Annie :  Grandmx)ther  15 

Than  if  the  crowded  Orb  should  c  Lit.  Squabbles  15 

With  morning  wakes  the  will,  and  cries,  In  Mem.  iv  15 

thought  That  cries  against  my  wish  for  thee.  ,,         a;c  24 

C  thro'  the  sense  to  hearten  trust  ,,        cxvi  7 

Then  was  I  as  a  child  that  cries,  ,,   cxxivlQ 

I  to  c  out  on  pride  Who  have  won  Maud  I  xii  17 


Cry 


124 


Curious 


Cry  (verb)  {continued)  rose  cries,  '  She  is  near,  she  is  near ; '  Maud  I  xxii  63 

I  will  c  to  the  steps  above  my  head  ,,     II  v  101 

A  c  from  out  the  dawning  of  my  life,  Com.  of  Arthur  333 

Who  will  c  shame  ?  Gareth  and  L.  942 

and  c,  '  Thou  hast  made  us  lords,  ,,         1131 
mother-maidenhood  of  Heaven,  C  out  upon  her.    Balin  and  Balan  522 

children  cast  their  pins  and  nails,  and  c.  Merlin  and  V.  430 

she  heard  Sir  Lancelot  c  in  the  court,  Lancelot  and  E.  344 

I  c  my  cry  in  silence,  Guinevere  201 

'  0  mother  ! '  I  heard  him  c.  Bizpah  42 

an'  saw  she  begins  to  c,  North.  Cobbler  71 

I  should  c  to  the  dear  Lord  Jesus  to  help  me,  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  49 

Before  thy  light,  and  c  continually — C  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  85 

that  men  C  out  against  thee  :  Columbus  153 

So  dark  that  men  c  out  against  the  Heavens.  Ancient  Sage  172 

weep  my  fill  once  more,  and  c  myself  to  rest !  The  Flight  6 

Cries  to  Weakest  as  to  Strongest,  Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  110 

Nay,  your  pardon,  c  your  '  forward, '  ,,                225 

Too  many  a  voice  may  c  That  man  Epilogue  72 
Far  off  a  phantom  cuckoo  cries                             Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  19 

sober  rook  And  carrion  crow  c  '  Mortgage.'  The  Ring  174 

Nor  even  a  Sir  Joshua,  some  will  c,  Romney's  R.  47 

some  c  '  Quick  '  and  some  c  '  Slow,'  Politics  9 

Shall  the  rose  C  to  the  lotus  Ahbar's  Dream  37 

And  a  beggar  began  to  c  '  Food,  food  Voice  spake,  etc.  5 

Cryin'  (paxt)    an'  c  and  tearin'  'er  'aair,  North.  Cobbler  34 

but  we  hard  it  c,  '  Ochone  !  '  Tomorrow  84 

Crying  (part)    (See  also  A-cryin',  Cr3an',  Keenin')    c  to 

each  other  And  calling,  Enoch  Arden  382 

C  with  a  loud  voice  *  A  sail !  ,,913 

And  c  upon  the  name  of  Leolin,  Aylm^r's  Field  576 

Some  c  there  was  an  army  in  the  land.  Princess  iv  484 
An  infant  c  in  the  night :  An  infant  c  for  the  light :        In  Mem.  liv  18 

But,  c,  knows  his  father  near  ;  ,,  cxxiv  20 

They  were  c  and  calling.  Maud  I  xii  4 

Were  c  and  calling  to  her,  ,,          26 

many  another  suppliant  c  came  With  noise  Gareth  and  L.  436 

Then  came  a  widow  c  to  the  King,  ,,         333 

Came  yet  another  widow  c  to  him,  ,,         350 

Gareth  c  prick'd  against  the  cry  ;  ,,        1221 

flying  back  and  c  out,  '  0  Merlin,  Merlin  and  V.  943 

And  all  his  legions  c  Christ  and  him,  Lancelot  and  E.  305 

c  that  his  prize  is  death.'  ,,            531 

maiden  sprang  into  the  hall  C  on  help :  Holy  Grail  209 

c  with  full  voice  '  Traitor,  come  out,  Guinevere  105 

Whereat  the  novice  c,  with  clasp'd  hands,  ,,         311 

Two  friars  c  that  if  Spain  should  oust  Columbus  96 

c  after  voices  that  have  fled  !  Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  251 

Crying  (s)    mine  but  from  the  c  of  a  child."  Sea  Dreams  249 

Whose  c  is  a  cry  for  gold :  The  Daisy  94 

and  0*3  for  the  light.  Pass,  of  Arthur  116 

Or  at  my  c  '  Mother  ? '  The  Ring  141 

Crypt    My  knees  are  bow'd  in  c  and  shrine :  Sir  Galahad  18 

And  fall'n  into  the  dusty  c  WiU  Water.  183 

those  cold  c's  where  they  shall  cease.  In  Mem.  Iviii  8 

Crystal    And  down  the  streaming  c  dropt ;  Princess  vii  165 

In  a  shallop  of  c  ivory-beak'd.  The  Islet  12 

Became  a  c,  and  he  saw  them  thro'  it.  Merlin  and  V.  630 

c  into  which  I  braided  Edwin's  hair  !  The  Flight  34 

Cube    hard-grain'd  Muses  of  the  c  and  square  Princess,  Pro.  180 

Cubit    lived  upon  a  pillar,  high  Six  c's,  St.  S.  Stylites  87 

numbers  forty  c's  from  the  soil.  ,,            91 

Drave  the  long  spear  a  c  thro'  his  breast  Geraint  and  E.  86 

Cuckoo    The  c  told  his  name  to  all  the  hills ;  Gardener's  D.  93 

I  built  the  nest,'  she  said,  'To  hatch  the  c.  Princess  iv  366 

'  C  !  c  ! '  was  ever  a  May  so  fine  ?  Window.    Ay  10 

'  I  have  seen  the  c  chased  by  lesser  fowl,  Com.  of  Arthur  167 

Than  the  gray  c  loves  his  name.  Lover's  Tale  i  257 
The  c  of  a  joyless  June  Is  calling  out  of  doors :    Pref  Poem  Broth.  S.  3 

I'he  c  of  a  worse  July  Is  calling  thro' the  dark  :  ,,              11 

a  phantom  c  cries  From  out  a  phantom  hill ;  ,,              19 

There  I  I  heard  Our  c  call.  To  Mary  Boyle  6 

A  clamorous  c  stoops  to  meet  her  hand  ;  Prog,  of  Spring  45 

Cuckoo-flower    As  perfume  of  thee-/?  Margarets 

blow  the  faint  sweet  c-f's ;  May  Q,ueen  30 


Cud    chew'd  The  thrice-turn'd  c  of  wrath 


Princess  i  ( 


Cuddle    as  good  to  c  an'  kiss  as  a  lass  as  ant  nowt  ?    N.  Farm^,  N.  S.  24 
Cuddled    (See  also  Coodled)    An'  we  c  and  huddled 

togither,  Qwd  Rod  112 

CuflTd    Caught  and  c  by  the  gale :  Maud  Ivi5 

Cuirass    on  his  c  work  our  Lady's  Head,  Lancelot  and  E.  294 

and  a  spear  Prick'd  sharply  his  own  c,  ,,            489 

Cuisses    and  c  dash'd  with  drops  Of  onset ;  M.  d' Arthur  215 

and  c  dash'd  with  drops  Of  onset ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  383 

Cull     I  c  from  every  faith  and  race  Akbar's  Dream  68 

Cull'd    whitest  honey  in  fairy  gardens  c —  Eleanore  26 

Because  all  words,  tho'  c  with  choicest  art,  D.  of  F.  Women  285 

but  one,  by  those  fair  fingers  c.  Gardener's  D.  150 

In  mine  own  lady  palms  I  c  the  spring  Merlin  and  V.  273 

Culminate    lead  The  new  light  up,  and  c  in  peace,  Princess  ii  348 

Culmination    All  starry  c  drop  Balm-dews  Talking  Oak  267 

Cultivation    months  of  toil.  And  years  of  c,  Amphion  98 

Culture    An  universal  e  for  the  crowd,  Princess,  Pro.  109 

whence  they  need  More  breadth  of  c :  ,,           «  188 

Culver    round  her  brows  a  woodland  c  flits.  Prog,  of  Spring  18 

Cunning-simple    So  innocent-arch,  so  c-s,  Lilian  13 

Ciinobeline    rioted  in  the  city  of  C !  Boadicea  60 

Cup     I  drink  the  c  of  a  costly  death,  Eleanore  138 

I  pledge  her  not  in  any  cheerful  c.  Wan  Sculptor  9 

Three  fingers  round  the  old  silver  c —  Miller's  D.  10 

incense  of  all  odour  steam'd  From  out  a  golden  c.         Palace  of  Art  40 

That  was  the  last  drop  in  the  c  of  gall.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  69 

My  little  oakling  from  the  c.  Talking  Oak  231 

Will  haunt  the  vacant  c :  Will  Water.  172 

'  Fill  the  c,  and  fill  the  can :  (repeat)  Vision  of  Sin  95,  119,  203 

'  Fill  the  can,  and  fill  the  c :  (repeat)  ,,              131,  167 

c's  and  silver  on  the  burnish'd  board  Sparkled  Enoch  Arden  742 

The  magic  c  that  fill'd  itself  anew.  Aylmer's  Field  143 

Only  such  c's  as  left  us  friendly-warm,  Lucretius  215 

There  they  drank  in  c's  of  emerald,  Boadicea  61 

The  crowning  c,  the  three-times-three,  In  Mem.  Con.  104 

they  sat,  And  c  clash'd  c  ;  Balin  and  Balan  85 

to  hurl  his  c  Straight  at  the  speaker.  Merlin  and  V.  30 

Except  indeed  to  drink :  no  c  had  we :  ,,         272 

made  a  pretty  c  of  both  my  hands  ,,         275 

phantom  of  a  c  that  comes  and  goes  ? '  Holy  Grail  44 

'  The  c,  the  c  itself,  from  which  our  Lord  ,,          46 

the  holy  c  Was  caught  away  to  Heaven,  ,,          57 

Lancelot  might  have  seen,  The  Holy  C  of  healing ;  ,,         655 

hast  thou  seen  the  Holy  C,  ,,        734 

children  sat  in  white  with  c's  of  gold.  Last  Tournament  142 

And  them  that  round  it  sat  with  golden  c's  ,,               289 

white  slips  Handed  her  c  and  piped,  ,,               296 

the  c  was  gold,  the  draught  was  mud.'  ,,               298 

c's  Where  nymph  and  god  ran  ever  round  Lover's  Tale  iv  196 

Warm  as  the  crocus  c.  Early  Spring  29 

wines  of  heresy  in  the  c  Of  counsel —  Akbar's  Dream  174 

Cupid    The  rentroll  C  of  our  rainy  isles.  Edwin  Morris  103 

The  modish  C  of  the  day.  Talking  Oak  67 

The  seal  was  C  bent  above  a  scroll.  Princess  i  242 

Cupid-boys    By  C-b  of  blooming  hue —  Day-Dm.,  Ep.  10 

Cur    yelp'd  the  c,  and  yawl'd  the  cat ;  The  Goose  33 

the  barking  c  Made  her  cheek  flame :  Godiva  57 

c  Pluckt  from  the  c  he  fights  with,  Gareth  and  L.  701 

Curate    and  with  Edward  Bull  The  c  ;  Edwin  Morris  15 

said  the  fat-faced  c  Edward  Bull,  (repeat)  ,,      42,  90 

'e's  nobbut  a  c,  an'  weant  niver  git  hissen  clear,     N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  27 

An'  thou'U  be  'is  C  'ere,  Church-warden,  etc.  45 

Curb     '  Wild  natures  need  wise  c's.  Princess  v  173 

mine  the  voice  to  c  The  madness  Tiresias  70 

c  the  beast  would  cast  thee  in  the  mire.  Ancient  Sage  276 

Curb'd    strongly  groom 'd  and  straitly  e  Princess  y  456 

Curdled    half  the  wolf 's-milk  c  in  their  veins,  ,,     vii  ISO 

Cure  (curacy)    The  curate  ;  he  was  fatter  than  his  c.       Edwin  Morris  15 

Cure  (remedy)    declined.  And  trusted  any  c.  Palace  of  Art  156 

Wonderful  c's  he  had  done,  0  yes,  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  5 

Cured    C  lameness,  palsies,  cancers.  St.  S.  Stylites  82 

And  c  some  halt  and  maim'd ;  x         137 

could  only  be  c,  if  c,  by  the  surgeon's  knife,  Despair  80 

Curious    Hetairai,  c  in  their  art,  Lucretius  52 


Curious 


125 


Curve 


Curious  (continued)    Too  c  Vivien,  the'  you  talk  of 

trust,  Merlin  and  V.  358 

Not  ever  be  too  c  for  a  boon,  ,,           486 

You  are  c.     How  should  I  tell  ?  Despair  3 

Curiousness     In  children  a  great  c  be  well,  Merlin  and  V.  364 

Curl  (s)     his  ridges  are  not  cTs  And  ripples  Supp.  Confessions  130 

In  many  a  dark  delicious  c,  Arabian  Nights  139 

In  a  golden  c  With  a  comb  of  pearl,  The  Mermaid  6 

flow'd  His  coal-black  c'i  as  on  he  rode,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  31 
fingers  drew  Her  streaming  c's  of  deepest  brown  Mariana  in  the  S.  16 

and  the  light  and  lustrous  c's —  M.  d  Arthur  216 

dim  c's  kindle  into  sunny  rings ;  Tithonus  54 

And  moves  not  on  the  rounded  c.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  8 

took  him  by  the  c's,  and  led  him  in,  Vision  of  Sin  6 
from  her  baby's  forehead  dipt  A  tiny  c,  and  gave  it :  Enoch  Arden  236 

The  hand  that  play'd  the  patron  with  her  c's.  Princess,  Pro.  138 

Melissa  shook  her  doubtful  c's,  ,,              Hi  75 

From  the  flaxen  c  to  the  gray  lock  ,,             iv  426 
on  their  c's  From  the  high  tree  the  blossom  wavering 

fell,  „              vi  79 

And  down  dead-heavy  sank  her  c's,  ,,                147 

And  winds  their  c's  about  his  hand :  In  Mem.  Ixvi  12 

little  head,  sunning  over  with  c's,  Maud  I  xxii  57 

Perchance,  one  c  of  Arthur's  golden  beard.  Merlin  and  V.  58 

and  the  light  and  lustrous  c's —  Pass,  of  Arthur  384 

One  golden  c,  his  golden  gift.  The  Flight  36 

begun  to  gleam  Thro'  youthful  c's.  To  Mary  Boyle  42 

Curl  (verb)     c  round  my  silver  feet  silently,  The  Mermaid  50 

May  serve  to  c  a  maiden's  locks.  In  Mem.  Ixxvii  7 

Began  to  move,  seethe,  twine  and  c :  Gareth  and  L.  234 

Curl'd    about  His  dusty  forehead  drily  c,  Miller's  D.  6 

I  c  and  comb'd  his  comely  head,  The  Sisters  31 

on  herself  her  serpent  pride  had  c.  Palace  of  Art  257 
the  clouds  are  lightly  c  Round  their  golden 

houses,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  112 
Faint  shadows,  vapours  lightly  c,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  5 
All-graceful  head,  so  richly  c,  ,,  L' Envoi  38 
The  forest  crack'd,  the  waters  c,  In  Mem.  xv  5 
For  us  the  same  cold  streamlet  c  ,,  Ixxix  9 
a  mist  Of  incense  c  about  her,  Com.  of  Arthur  288 
breeze  c  over  a  peacef uller  sea.  The  Wreck  133 
Curlew  all  around  it,  as  of  old,  the  c's  call,  Locksley  Hall  3 
while  I  heard  the  c's  call,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  3 
Cum  (Com)  Till  I  gied  'em  Hinjian  c.  Village  Wife  118 
Currency  brooking  not  Exchange  or  c :  Lover's  Tale  i  448 
Current  (See  also  Full-current,  Main-current,  Sea- 
current)  Till  in  its  onward  c  it  absorbs  Isabel  31 
From  those  four  jets  four  c's  in  one  swell  Palace  of  Art  33 
The  ever-shifting  c's  of  the  blood  D.  of  F.  Women  133 
'  all  the  c  of  my  being  sets  to  thee.'  Locksley  HaU  24 
upward  runs  The  c  of  my  days  :  Will  Water.  36 
turn'd  The  c  of  his  talk  to  graver  things  Enoch  Arden  203 
Fast  flow'd  the  c  of  her  easy  tears,  , ,  865 
then  the  motion  of  the  c  ceased.  Sea  Dreams  117 
crystal  c's  of  clear  morning  seas.  Princess  ii  328 
You  turn'd  your  warmer  c's  all  to  her,  ,,  zu  301 
glowing  in  the  broad  Deep-dimpled  c  underneath,  Gareth  and  L.  1089 
and  driven  My  c  to  the  fountain  whence  it  sprang,  Lover's  Tale  i  503 
But  in  the  onward  c  of  her  speech,  ,,  565 
Noises  of  a  c  narrowing,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  154 
alchemise  old  hates  into  the  gold  Of  Love,  and  make 

it  c  ;  Akbar's  Dream  164 

Curse  (s)     A  c  is  on  her  if  she  stay  L.  of  Shalott  ii  4 

She  knows  not  what  the  c  may  be,  ,,             6 

'  The  c  is  come  upon  me,'  cried  The  Lady  „       Hi  44 

I  said,  '  I  toil  beneath  the  c.  Two  Voices  229 
'  My  youth,'  she  said,  '  was  blasted  with  a  c  :         D.  of  F.  Women  103 

This  is  the  c  of  time.  To  J.  S.  17 

this  world's  c, — beloved  but  hated —  Love  and  Duty  47 

My  Shakespeare's  c  on  clown  and  knave  You  might  have  won  27 

And  left  their  memories  a  world's  c —  Aylm^r's  Field  796 

A  c  in  his  God-bless-you :  Sea  Dreams  164 

I  remember'd  that  burnt  sorcerer's  c  Princess  v  475 

when  she  turn'd,  the  c  Had  fallen,  In  Mem.  vi  37 

we  have  made  them  a  c,  Maud  /  i  21 


Corse  (s)  (continued)    She  may  bring  me  a  c. 
the  sparrow-hawk.  My  c,  my  nephew — 
God's  c,  it  makes  me  mad  to  see  you  weep. 
Thy  c,  and  darken'd  all  thy  day  ; 
'  That  is  love's  c  ;  pass  on, 
woman-worshipper  ?    Yea,  God's  c,  and  I  ! 
Until  it  came  a  Kingdom's  c  with  thee — 
their  c's  and  their  groans. 


Maud  I  i  73 

Marr.  of  Geraint  445 

Geraint  and  E.  616 

Balin  and  Balan  620 

Lancelot  and  E.  1353 

Last  Tournament  447 

Guinevere  bbQ 

Columlnis  68 


chain'd  and  coupled  with  the  c  Of  blindness  and  their 

unbelief,  Tiresias^bS 

blunt  the  c  Of  Pallas,  hear,  ,,     154 

never  gloom'd  by  the  c  Of  a  sin,  The  Wreck  139 

If  a  c  meant  ought,  I  would  curse  you  Despair  64 

follies,  furies,  c's,  passionate  tears,  Locksley  H,,  Sixty  39 

man  had  coin'd  himself  a  c :  ,,87 

And  '  The  C  of  the  Prophet '  in  Heaven.  Dead  Prophet  28 

On  you  will  come  the  c  of  all  the  land,  The  Fleet  3 

stings  him  back  to  the  c  of  the  light ;  Vastness  18 

My  c  upon  the  Master's  apothegm,  Romney's  B.  37 

arose  The  shriek  and  c  of  trampled  millions,  Akbar's  Dream  190 

I  sent  him  a  desolate  wail  and  a  c.  Charity  14 

Curse  (verb)     I  c  not  nature,  no,  nor  death  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxiii  7 

c  me  the  blabbing  lip.  And  c  me  Maud  II  v  57 

I  c  the  tongue  that  all  thro'  yesterday  Gareth  and  L.  1322 

To  c  this  hedgerow  thief,  Marr.  of  Geraint  309 

I  did  not  come  to  c  thee,  Guinevere,  Guinevere  533 

I  would  c  you  for  not  having  let  me  be.  Despair  64 

m.ay  the  Great  God  c  him  and  bring  him  ,,      106 

'C  him  ! '  c  your  fellow- victim  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  9 

Cursed    c  and  scorn'd,  and  bruised  with  stones :  Two  Voices  222 

And  bless'd  herself,  and  c  herself.  The  Goose  15 
C  be  the  social  wants  that  sin  against  the  strength 
of  youth  !     C  be  the  social  lies  that  warp  us  from 
the  living  truth  !     C  be  the  sickly  forms  that  err 
from  honest  Nature's  rule  !     C  be  the  gold  that 

gilds  Locksley  Hall  59 

face  Would  darken,  as  he  c  his  credulousness.  Sea  Dreams  13 

C  me  and  my  flower.  The  Flower  8 

I  have  c  him  even  to  lifeless  things)  Maud  I  xix  15 

and  c  the  tale,  The  told-of,  and  the  teller.  Balin  and  Balan  542 

c  The  dead  babe  and  the  follies,  of  the  King  ;  Last  Tournament  162 

'  I  had  sooner  be  c  than  kiss'd  !  ' —  First  Quarrel  83 

I,  Earth-Goddess,  c  the  Gods  of  Heaven.  Demeter  and  P.  102 

Snarl'd  at  and  c  me.  Merlin  and  the  G.  28 

he  sobb'd  and  he  wept.  And  c  himself  ;  Bandit's  Death  30 

I  had  c  the  woman  he  married.  Charity  24 

I  had  c  her  as  woman  and  wife,  ,,       31 

Cursing  (part. )    I  stood  With  Florian,  c  Cyril,  Princess  iv  171 

I  was  c  them  and  my  doom,  Maud  I  xix  51 

And  c  their  lost  time,  and  the  dead  man,  Geraint  and  E.  576 

Cursing  (s)    she  was  deaf  To  blessing  or  to  c  ,,            579 

Curtain    [See  also  Casement-curtain)    In  the  white 

c,  to  and  fro.  She  saw  Mariana  51 

with  thee  forgets  to  close  His  c's,  Adeline  43 

haunted  with  a  jolly  ghost,  that  shook  The  c's,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  37 

He  had  cast  the  c's  of  their  seat  aside —  Ayltner's  Field  803 

I  beheld  The  death-white  c  drawn  ;  Maud  I  xiv  34 

the  death-white  c  meant  but  sleep,  ,,            37 

By  the  c's  of  my  bed  ,,  II  iv  54 

at  one  end  of  the  hall  Two  great  funereal  c's,  Lover's  Tale  iv  214 

drama's  closing  c  is  the  pall  I  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  62 

Curtain-fold    from  out  the  silken  c-f's  Gareth  and  L.  925 

Curtsey    made  me  a  mocking  c  and  went.  Grandmother  46 

Curtseying    c  her  obeisance,  let  us  know  The  Princess 

Ida  waited  :  Princess  ii  20 

Curve  (s)    (See  also  Crescent-ourve)    the  rainbow  lives 

in  the  c  of  the  sand  ;  Sea-Fairies  27 

c's  of  mountain,  bridge,  Boat,  island,  Edwin  Morris  5 

In  c's  the  yellowing  river  ran.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  15 

With  many  a  c  my  banks  I  fret  The  Brook  43 

To  left  and  right  thro'  meadowy  c's,  In  Mem.  c  15 

Or  the  least  little  delicate  aquiline  c  Maud  I  ii  10 

in  kindly  c's,  with  gentlest  fall,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  23 
turn  upon  itself  in  many  a  backward  stream- 
ing c.                                                                 Locksley  H.,  Sixty  236 


Curve 


126 


Dagonet 


Curve  (verb)    And  out  again  I  c  and  flow 

Curved    (See  also  Sudden-curved)    c  an  arm  about 

his  neck, 
Curvet    Making  a  roan  horse  caper  and  c 
Curving    And  c  a  contumelious  lip, 

a  procession,  c  round  The  silver-sheeted  bay  : 
Cushie     '  C  wur  craazed  fur  'er  cauf ' 
Cushion    On  silken  c's  half  reclined  ; 

The  c's  of  whose  touch  may  press 

Tom,  lig  theere  o'  the  c, 
Custom  (habit)    one  good  c  should  corrupt  the  world 

Appraised  the  Lycian  c, 

Disyoke  their  necks  from  c, 

And  moved  beyond  his  c,  Gama  said : 

For  this  was  Arthur's  c  in  his  hall ; 

And  reverencing  the  c  of  the  house 

pick  the  vicious  quitch  Of  blood  and  c 

I  rode,  Shattering  all  evil  c's 

one  good  c  should  corrupt  the  world. 

'  There  is  a  c  in  the  Orient,  friends — 

This  c — '  Pausing  here  a  moment. 

This  c  steps  yet  further  when  the  guest 
Cutsom  (business)    See  Coostom 

Here  is  c  come  your  way  ; 
Cut  (s)    this  c  is  fresh  ;  That  ten  years  back ; 
Cut  (verb)    c's  atwain  The  knots  that  tangle 

they  c  away  my  tallest  pines, 

I  was  c  off  from  hope  in  that  sad  place, 

C  Prejudice  against  the  grain : 

where  the  hedge-row  c's  the  pathway,  stood, 

some  little  cloud  C's  off  the  fiery  highway 

C  off  the  length  of  highway  on  before, 

This  hair  is  his  :  she  c  it  off  and  gave  it, 

And  c  this  epitaph  above  my  bones ; 

C  the  Roman  boy  to  pieces 

What  is  she,  c  from  love  and  faith, 

c  off  from  the  mind  The  bitter  springs 

Struck  at  him  with  his  whip,  and  c  his  cheek, 

es  he  couldn't  c  down  a  tree  ! 

'  Lad,  thou  mun  c  ofif  thy  taail, 

thou'll  'gree  to  c  off  thy  taail 

to  git  'im  to  c  off  'is  taail. 

an'  'e  wouldn't  c  off  the  taail. 

'  Groin'  to  c  the  Sassenach  whate  ' 

c  his  bit  o'  turf  for  the  tire  ? 
Cut    See  also  Clean-cut,  Clear-cut 
Cuttin'     betther  nor  c  the  Sassenach  whate 
Cutting    (See  also  Cuttin')    c  eights  that  day  upon  the 

pond, 
Cycle  (s)    Young  Nature  thro'  five  c's  ran, 

plann'd  With  c's  of  the  human  tale, 

Better  fifty  years  of  Europe  than  a  c  of  Cathay. 

together  at  her  will  Thro'  all  her  c's — 

But  when  their  c  is  o'er, 

lead  The  closing  c  rich  in  good. 
Cycle  (verb)    Falls  off,  but  c's  always  round. 
Cycle-year    Will  mould  him  thro'  the  c-y 
Cygnet    the  swan's  Is  tawnier  than  her  c's  : 
Cymbal    people  rejoice  With  shawms,  and  with  c's, 
Cypress     With  c  promenaded. 

Nor  waves  the  c  in  the  palace  walk  ; 

watch'd  awake  A  c  in  the  moonlight  shake, 

Made  c  of  her  orange  flower, 

rise  three  dark,  tall  c'es, — Three  c'es, 

The  mountain,  the  three  c'es,  the  cave. 

Break  thro'  the  yews  and  c  of  thy  grave, 

the  poplar  and  c  unshaken  by  storm 

the  palm  Call  to  the  c  '  I  alone  am  fair  ? ' 
Cypress-cone    c-c's  I'hat  spired  above  the  wood  ; 
Cyril    I  stood  With  C  and  with  Florian, 

C  whisper'd  :    '  Take  me  with  you  too.' 

I  stole  from  court  With  C  and  with  Florian, 

'  We  of  the  court '  said  C.     '  From  the  court 

'  Comely,  too,  by  all  that's  fair,'  said  C 

'  Let  me  die  too,'  said  C,  '  having  seen 


The  Brook  182 

Merlin  and  V.  241 

Lancelot  and  E.  792 

Maud  I  xiii  20 

Lover's  Tale  ii  75 

Spinster's  S's.  115 

Elednore  126 

Talking  Oak  179 

Spinster's  S's.  94 

M.  d' Arthur  242 

Princess  ii  128 

143 

„      vi  229 

Gareth  and  i.  410 

Marr.  of  Geraint  380 

Geraint  and  E.  904 

Holy  Grail  477 

Pass,  of  Arthur  410 

Lover's  Tale  iv  230 

236 

244 

Vision  of  Sin  64 

Lancelot  and  E.  21 

Clear-headed  friend  2 

CEnone 208 

D.  ofF.  Women  105 

Love  thou  thy  land  22 

Gardener's  D.  86 

Enoch  Arden  130 

673 

„  894 

Princess  ii  207 

Boadicea  66 

In  Mem,  cxiv  11 

Maud  /  a:  48 

Marr.  of  Geraint  207 

Village  Wife  30 

64 

66 

74 

78 

Tomorrow  14 

65 

Tomorrow  94 

The  Epic  10 

Two  Voices  17 

Palace  of  ArtUQ 

Locksley  Rail  184 

Lucretius  248 

Voice  and  the  P.  26 

In  Mem.  cv  28 

Two  Voices  348 

Epilogue  77 

Lancelot  and  E.  1185 

Dying  Swan  32 

Amphion  38 

Princess  vii  177 

'The  Daisy  82 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  15 

Lover's  Tale  i  536 

,,        ii  109 

Ded,  Poem  Prin.  Alice  12 

V.  of  Maeldwne  15 

Akbar's  Dream  38 

Lover's  Tale  ii  38 

Princess  i  52 

81 

103 

n  48 

115 

210 


Cyril  (continv^)     '  You  are  that  Psyche,'  C  said, 

(repeat)  Princess  ii  256,  278 

Said  C,  '  Madam,  he  the  wisest  man  ,,  350 

C  took  the  child,  And  held  her  round  ,,  362 

Said  C :  '  Pale  one,  blush  again :  ,,  Hi  67 

As  if  to  close  with  C's  random  wish  :  ,,  101 

Hither  came  C,  and  yawning  '  0  hard  task,'  „  124 

then,  climbing,  C  kept  With  Psyche,  ,,  354 

C,  with  whom  the  bell-mouth'd  glass  had  wrought  ,,  iv  155 

I  stood  With  Florian,  cursing  C,  ,,  171 

And  where  are  Psyche,  C  ?  both  are  fled :  ,,  241 

for  C,  howe'er  He  deal  in  frolic,  as  to-night —  ,,  249 

Go :  C  told  us  all.'  „  v  36 

C  met  us.    A  little  shy  at  first,  ,,  44 

To  whom  remorseful  C,  '  Yet  I  pray  Take  comfort :  ,,  79 

such  as  her !  if  C  spake  her  true,  ,,  168 

fiery -short  was  C's  counter-scoff,  ,,  307 

and  bore  down  a  Prince,  And  C,  one.  ,,  519 

C  seeing  it,  push'd  against  the  Prince,  ,,  533 

Beside  us,  C,  batter'd  as  he  was,  ,,  vi  154 

When  C  pleaded,  Ida  came  behind  ,,  vii  78 

Csnnis    And  what  she  did  to  C  after  fight,  ,,  v  366 
Czar    Jack  on  his  ale-house  bench  has  as  many  lies  as  a  C  ;     Maud  I  iv9 


Daale  (dale)    (See  also  Howlaby  Daale)    an'  the  d  was 

all  of  a  thaw,  Owd  Rod  39 

Daay  (day)     'e  shall  stan  to  my  dying  d ;  North.  Cobbler  95 

'e  snifft  up  a  box  in  a  d.  Village  Wife  40 

I'll  tell  tha  some  o'  these  d's.  „            58 

niver  'a  Uked  tha  sa  well,  as  I  did  that  d,  Spinster's  S.'s  29 

I  warrant  ye  soom  fine  d —  „             63 

Thaw  thou  was  es  soiiber  es  d,  „            75 

an'  belt  long  afoor  my  d  Owd  Boa  21 
Eh ?  good  d\  good  d !  thaw  it  bean't  not  mooch 

of  a  d.  Church-warden,  etc.  1 

I  minds  when  i'  Howlaby  beck  won  d  ,,              27 

Dabbled    all  d  with  the  blood  Of  his  own  son,  Princess  vi  104 

Its  lips  in  the  field  above  are  d  with  blood-red  heath,  Maud  I  i2 

Dabbling    d  in  the  fount  of  fictive  tears,  The  Brook  93 

D  a  shameless  hand  with  shameful  jest,  Princess  Hi  314 

Daffodil    (/See  aZso  Daffodilly)    and  found  The 

shining  d  dead,  Maud  I  Hi  14 

On  a  bed  of  d  sky,  „     xxii  10 

And  the  shining  d  dies,  „    ///  vi  6 

left  us  just  before  The  d  was  blown  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  294 
in  this  roaring  moon  of  d  And  crocus,                   Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  7 

Daffodilly    That  clad  her  Uke  an  April  d  Princess  ii  324 

Dagger    I  made  my  d  sharp  and  bright.  The  Sisters  26 

and  thrust  The  d  thro"  her  side.'  D.  of  F.  Women  260 

With  that  gold  d  of  thy  bill  The  Blackbird  11 

A  d,  in  rich  sheath  with  jewels  on  it  Aylmer's  Field  220 

Tumbled  the  tawny  rascal  at  his  feet,  This  d  with  him,         „  231 

left  alone  he  pluck'd  her  d  forth  „            470 

and  the  d  which  himself  Gave  Edith,  „            596 

Shot  sidelong  d's  at  us.  Princess  ii  450 

had  she  found  a  d  there  Merlin  and  V.  851 

Sib,  do  you  see  this  d  ?  Bandit's  Death  5 

one  day  He  had  left  his  d  beliind  him.  „            12 

felt  I  cotdd  end  myself  too  with  the  d —  „           37 

I  with  this  d  of  his — do  you  doubt  me?  „           42 

Dagonet    D,  the  fool,  whom  Gawain  in  his  mood  Last  Tournament  1 

And  little  D  on  the  morrow  morn,  „           240 

D  replied, '  Belike  for  lack  of  wiser  company ;  „           244 

while  he  twangled  little  D  stood  Quiet  „           252 

And  little  D,  skipping,  '  Arthur,  the  King's ;  „           262 

but  lean  me  down,  Sir  D,  „           273 

D  with  one  foot  poised  in  his  hand,  „           285 

And  little  D  mincing  with  his  feet,  „            311 

D,  turning  on  the  ball  of  his  foot,  „           329 

D  answer'd, '  Ay,  and  when  the  land  Was  freed,  „           338 

D, '  Nay,  nor  will :  I  see  it  and  hear.  „           348 


Dagonet 


127 


Damsel 


Dagonet  (continued)    D  clapt  his  hands  and 

shrill'd,  Ldst  Tournament  353 

And  down  the  city  D  danced  away ;  „           359 

Dahomey    boats  of  D  that  float  upon  human  blood !  The  Dawn  5 

Daily    Z)  and  hourly,  more  and  more.  Eleanore  71 

Daily-dwindling    With  d-d,  profits  held  the  house;  Enoch  Arden  696 


Window.  No  Answer  26 

Margaret  53 

Palace  of  Art  \2,2 

Com.  of  Arthur  258 

M.  d' Arthur  218 

Holy  Grail  721 

Pass,  of  Arthur  386 

Two  Voices  276 

Gardiner's  D.  165 

The  Daisy  88 

City  Child  10 

In  Mem.  Ixxii  11 

Maud  I  xii  24 

Lover's  Tale  i  193 

The  Wreck  38 

The  Ring  323 


I 


Dainty    Are  but  dainties  drest  again 

Dainty-woeful    thro'  the  dew  Of  d-w  sympathies. 

Dais    I  himg  The  royal  d  round. 

and  Arthur  sat  Crown'd  on  the  d, 

Dais-throne    like  a  rising  sun  High  from  the  d-t — 
And  there  sat  Arthur  on  the  d-t, 
hke  a  rising  sun  High  from  the  d-t — 

Daisy    Touch'd  by  his  feet  the  d  slept, 
linger'd  there  Till  every  d  slept, 
I  pluck'd  ad,  I  gave  it  you. 
Daisies  and  kingcups  and  honeysuckle-flowers.' 
the  d  close  Her  crimson  fringes 
And  left  the  daisies  rosy. 
But  I  and  the  first  d  on  his  grave 
The  d  will  shut  to  the  shadow, 
tiny  fist  Had  graspt  a  d  from  your  Mother's  grave — 
hardly  a  d  as  yet,  little  friend.  See,  there  is  hardly 

a  d.  The  Throstle  11 

Daisy  Blossomed    Wash'd  with  still  rains  and  d  b ;  Circumstance  7 

Daisy-chain    Made  blossom-ball  or  d-c,  Aylmer's  Field  87 

He  workt  me  the  d  c —  First  Quarrel  13 

Dale    (See  also  DaMle)    here  are  the  blissful  downs  and  d's,    Sea-Fairies  22 

And  long  purples  of  the  d.  A  Dirge  31 

And  the  nvulet  in  the  flowery  d  May  Queen  39 

thro'  mountain  clefts  the  d  Was  seen  far  inland,  Lotos-Eaters  20 

She  went  by  d,  and  she  went  by  down.  Lady  Clare  59 

moon  like  a  rick  on  fire  was  rising  over  the  d.  Grandmother  39 

Till  over  down  and  over  d  In  Mem.,  Con.  110 

all  in  loops  and  links  among  the  d's  Lancelot  and  E.  166 

Beheld  at  noon  in  some  delicious  d  Guinevere  393 

Dalliance    O  the  d  and  the  wit,  D.  of  F.  Women  147 

Dallied    But  d  with  his  golden  chain,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  31 

Dally    That  with  the  napkin  d;  WiU  Water.  118 
'  and  meets  And  daUies  with  him  in  the  Mouth 

of  Hell.'  Balin  and  Balan  615 

For  dare  we  d  with  the  sphere  E-pilogue  44 

Dallying    In  Ueu  of  idly  d  with  the  truth,  Lancelot  and  E.  590 

Tristram,  ever  d  with  her  hand,  Last  Tournament  626 

Dam  (obstruction)    The  sleepy  pool  above  the  d.  Miller's  D.  99 

As  waits  a  river  level  with  the  d  Princess  iv  473 

Dam  (mother)    Sent  out  a  bitter  bleating  for  its  d;  „         392 

Damask-work    sloping  of  the  moon-lit  sward  Was  d-w,    Arabian  Nights  28 

Dame     Knight  and  burgher,  lord  and  d,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  43 

To  have  a  d  indoors,  that  trims  us  up,  Edwin  Morris  46 

no  liveUer  than  the  d  That  whisper'd  '  Asses'  ears,'  Princess  ii  112 

Like  that  great  d  of  Lapidoth  she  sang.  „        vi  32 

When  d's  and  heroines  of  the  golden  year  „            64 

behind,  A  train  of  d's :  „    vii  128 

found  an  ancient  d  in  dim  brocade ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  363 

But  that  old  d,  to  whom  full  tenderly  „              508 

'  Yea,  surely,'  said  the  d,  '  And  gladly  „              690 

no  more  avail,  D,  to  be  gentle  than  ungentle  Geraint  and  E.  716 

nor  lets  Or  d  or  damsel  enter  at  his  gates  Balin  and  Balan  107 

lived  there  neither  d  nor  damsel  Merlin  and  V.  606 

Sir  Valence  wedded  with  an  outland  d :  „             714 

One  old  d  Came  suddenly  on  the  Queen  Lancelot  and  E.  729 

ever  in  the  reading,  lords  and  d's  Wept,  „            1284 

when  now  the  lords  and  d's  And  people,  „            1346 

with  her  knights  and  d's  was  Guinevere.  Pelleas  and  E.  588 

D,  damsel,  each  thro'  worship  of  their  Queen  Last  Tournament  146 

So  d  and  damsel  gUtter'd  at  the  feast  „              225 

So  d  and  damsel  cast  the  simple  white,  „              232 

What  d  or  damsel  have  ye  kneel 'd  to  last  ? '  ,„              550 

Damn    (See  also  Dangtha)     One  truth  will  d  me  with 

the  mindless  mob,  Romney's  R.  120 

Damn'd    (See  also  Dang'd)   I  am  i  already  by  the  Priest   Sir  J.  OldcasUe  200 

ay,  why  not,  being  d  beyond  hope  of  grace  ?  Despair  109 

contemplate  The  torrent  of  the  d '  Akbar's  Dream  49 

Damosel    twelve  small  d's  white  as  Innocence,  Last  Tournament  291 


Damp  (adj.)    air  is  d,  and  hush'd,  and  close,  A  spirit  haunts  13 

combing  out  her  long  black  hair  D  from  the  river ;  Princess  iv  277 

Damp  (s)     heat,  haU,  d,  and  sleet,  and  snow ;  St.  S.  Stylites  16 

sometimes  Sucking  the  d's  for  drink,  „           77 

Damsel    (See  also  Damosel)    Sometimes  a  troop  of 

d's  glad,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  19 

The  prettiest  Uttle  d  in  the  port,  Enoch  Arden  12 

Safe,  d,  as  the  centre  of  this  hall.  Gareth  and  L.  604 

'  D,  ye  know  this  Order  lives  to  crush  All  wrongers  „            625 

But  on  the  d's  forehead  shame,  „            656 

by  this  entry  fled  The  d  in  her  wrath,  „            675 

Mutter'd  the  d, '  Wherefore  did  the  King  Scorn  me  ?  „            737 

'  D,  the  quest  is  mine.  „           745 

*  D,'  Sir  Gareth  answer'd  gently,  „            772 

And  when  the  d  spake  contemptuously,  „           806 

wilt  thou  yield  this  d  harbourage  ? '  „            834 

placed  a  peacock  in  his  pride  Before  the  d,  „           851 

left  The  a  by  the  peacock  in  his  pride,  „           870 

Whether  thou  wilt  not  with  thy  d  back  „            881 

and  calling, '  D,  is  this  he,  „           915 

Said  Gareth, '  D,  whether  knave  or  knight,  „           943 

The  d  crying, '  Well-stricken,  kitchen-knave ! '  „            970 

'  So  this  d  ask  it  of  me  Good —  „            974 

'  D,  thy  chaise  Is  an  abounding  pleasure  „            981 

Thy  shield  is  mine — ^farewell ;  and,  d,  thou,  „            988 

'  Fair  d,  you  should  worship  me  the  more,  „          1022 

'  Hath  not  the  good  wind,  d,  changed  again  ? '  „  1054 
have  ye  slain  The  d's  champion  ? '  and  the  d  cried, 

'  No  star  of  thine,  „          1099 

'  Old,  d,  old  and  hard.  Old,  with  the  might  and  breath  „          1105 

grizzled  d  came,  And  arm'd  him  in  old  arms,  „          1114 

the  d  clamouring  all  the  while,  „          1134 

But  the  d  said,  '  I  lead  no  longer  ;  „           1156 

'  D,'  he  said, '  you  be  not  all  to  blame,  „          1171 

nor  meet  To  fight  for  gentle  d,  he,  „          1177 

At  any  gentle  d's  waywardness.  „          1179 

Then  tum'd  the  noble  d  smiUng  at  him,  „          1188 

The  d's  headlong  error  thro'  the  wood —  „          1215 

'  Nay,  noble  d,  but  that  I,  the  son  Of  old  King  Lot  „          1230 

0  d,  be  you  wise  To  call  him  shamed,  „  1259 
wherefore,  d  ?  tell  me  all  you  know.  „  1328 
thou  thyself,  with  d  and  with  dwarf,  Marr.  of  Geraint  581 
have  his  horse  And  armour,  and  his  d  shall  be  ours.'  Geraint  and  E.  63 
possess  your  horse  And  armour,  and  your  d  should 

be  theirs.'  „             75 

Friend,  let  her  eat ;  the  <Z  is  so  faint.'  „           206 

While  your  good  d  rests,  return,  „           224 

speak  To  your  good  d  there  who  sits  apart,  „           299 

found  A  d  drooping  in  a  comer  of  it.  „  611 
nor  lets  Or  dame  or  d  enter  at  his  gates                    Balin  and  Balan  107 

Make  knight  or  churl  or  child  or  d  seem  „               162 

D  and  lover  ?  hear  not  what  I  hear.  „               282 

Then  to  her  Squire  mutter'd  the  d  '  Fools !  „               564 

that  twice  a  wanton  d  came,  „               609 

1  well  beUeve  this  d,  and  the  one  „  612 
and  the  d  bidden  rise  arose  And  stood  Merlin  and  V.  68 
Queen  Among  her  d's  broidering  sat,  „  138 
hved  there  neither  dame  nor  d  then  „  606 
And  set  it  in  this  d's  golden  hair,  Lancelot  and  E.  205 
O  d,  in  the  light  of  your  blue  eyes ;  „  660 
And,  d,  for  I  deem  you  know  full  well  „  689 
This  will  I  do,  dead  d,  for  your  sake,  „  962 
rose  And  pointed  to  the  d,  and  the  doors.  „  1263 
had  I  dreamt  the  d  would  have  died,  „  1305 
Ye  loved  me,  d,  surely  with  a  love  „  1394 
D's  in  divers  colours  like  the  cloud  Pelleas  and  E.  53 
And  all  the  d's  talk'd  confusedly,  „  57 
^O  d,'  answer'd  he, '  I  woke  from  dreams ;  „  103 
her  knights  And  all  her  d's  too  were  gracious  „  122 
O  d,  wearing  this  unsunny  face  To  him  who  won  „  180 
But  after,  when  her  d's,  and  herself,  „  186 
She  that  saw  him  cried,  *  D's —  „  189 
This  her  d's  heard,  And  mindful  of  her  small  „  200 
With  all  her  d's,  ho  was  stricken  mute ;  „  251 
Up  ran  a  score  of  d's  to  the  tower ;  „           368 


Damsel 


128 


Dare 


Damsel  (continued)    And  down  they  ran,  Her  d's,  crying  to 

their  lady,  P^^  ^""^  ^-  376 

Froz'n  by  sweet  sleep,  four  of  her  d's  lay :  ,„      "         ^Txa 

Dame,  d,  each  thro'  worship  of  their  Queen  Last  Tournament  140 

'  Fair  d's,  each  to  him  who  worships  each  „              ^^7 

dame  and  d  glitter'd  at  the  feast  Variously  gay :  „              ^^| 

So  dame  and  d  cast  the  simple  white,  „               ^^^ 

dame  or  d  have  ye  kneel'd  to  last  ? '  ,.      ",  «  7      ^oa 

Damsel-errant    A  d-e,  warbling,  as  she  rode  Balm  and  Balan^o 

Youth,  we  are  d's-e,  and  we  ride,  Pdleas  and  h.  b4 

Dan    that  had  no  likin' for  A  Tomorrow^ 

An'  D  stood  there  for  a  minute,  «        ^ 

whin  D  didn't  come  to  the  fore,  5>        ^^ 

Dan  Chaucer    D  C,  the  first  warbler,  I>.  of  F.  Women  5 

Danae    lies  the  Earth  aU  2>  to  the  stars,  Princess  mtlSZ 

Danaid    prove  The  -D  of  a  leaky  vase,  »         **  ^^^ 

Dance  (s)    (-See  o^so  Devil's-dances)    echoing  d  Of  ^     ,    .      ca 

reboant  whirlwinds,  Suvp.  Confessions  96 

Yet  in  the  whirUng  d's  as  we  went.  The  form,  m  form^ 

star  that  with  the  choral  starry  d  Join'd  not.  Palace  of  Art  25d 

Leaving  the  d  and  song,  ■»•  0/  ^-  Women  216 

men  and  maids  Arranged  a  country  d.  Princess,  ^^^.m 

d's  broke  and  buzz'd  in  knots  of  talk ;  »          .*  ^^^ 

Like  one  that  wishes  at  a  d  to  change  The  music—  „          tv  OW 

In  d  and  song  and  game  and  jest  ?  In  Mem.  xxuc  » 

And  d  and  song  and  hoodman-bUnd.  j>  ixxvtn  1^ 

wheels  the  circled  d,  and  breaks  The  rocket  »     a^c^t"  ^^ 

No  d,  no  motion,  save  alone  What  lightens  „           cvfo 

And  last  the  d ;— till  I  retire :  ,,    ^on.  iU£> 

A  dinner  and  then  a  d  For  the  maids  and  marriage- 

makers,  -^^^""^  ^  '=?.  |4 

She  is  weary  of  d  and  play.'  »»     ^^*  ^^ 

Come  hither,  the  d's  are  done,  i.   "  j  r  i  yioo 
with  d  And  revel  and  song,  made  merry  over  Death,    Gareth  and  h.  14^J 

Eush'd  into  d,  and  like  wild  Bacchanals  Lmer's  Tale  m  25 

whirling  rout  Led  by  those  two  rush'd  into  d,  »               o& 

An'  the  fall  of  yer  foot  in  the  d  ^"TST?""  qh 

Dance  (verb)    About  thee  breaks  and  d's :  c^^-'^^oa 

And  the  spangle  d's  in  bight  and  bay,  ^^    ^  Sea-Fatries  Zi 

but  to  d  and  sing,  be  gaily  drest.  The  form,i^e  form  6 

for  she  says  A  fire  d's  before  her,  (Ewowe  264 

And  make  her  d  attendance ;  ^^ .  .  Amfhion  62 

And  the  dead  begin  to  d.  Vision  of  Sin  16b 

I  make  the  netted  sunbeam  d  The  Brook  17b 

But  fit  to  flaunt,  to  dress,  to  d,  to  thrum.  Princess  iv  519 

to  d  Its  body,  and  reach  its  f atUng  innocent  arms  „        vy  I6i 

let  the  torrent  d  thee  down  To  find  him  in  the  valley ;  ,,      mi  2uy 

To  d  with  death,  to  beat  the  ground.  In  Mem.  1 12 

Now  d  the  lights  on  lawn  and  lea,  ..       'v^^ 

Till  the  red  man  d  By  his  red  cedar-tree,  Maud  I^\^ 

flickering  in  a  grimly  light  D  on  the  mere.  Gareth  and  L.  B2< 

Down  upon  far-ofi  cities  while  they  dr-  Merlin  and  V.  114 
eating  dry  To  d  without  a  cateh,  a  roundelay 

Tott  to  '  Tjos^  Tournament  250 

D  to  the  pibroch !— saved !  Def.  of  Lwknow  103 

D  in  a  fountain  of  flame  with  her  devils,  Kapioiani  10 

Danced    we  d  about  the  may-pole  and  in  the  ,7,  tt,    t^  n 
hazel  copse,                                                      May  Q««m, /VT's  £.  11 

Till  all  the  tables  d  again,  ^    /^"F^n^ll 

d  The  greensward  into  greener  circles.  Gardener  s  v.  i^a 

Z)  into  light,  and  died  into  the  shade ;  ,.            ^^% 

And  madly  d  our  hearts  with  joy,  ^  ^'^  ^ri'^^^e^ 

the  gilded  ball  B  Uke  a  wisp :  Pnwess,  Bro-^ 

O'er  it  shook  the  woods,  And  d  the  colour,  „        *"  ^^f 

For  I  that  d  her  on  my  knee,  ,/«  Mem.,  Con.f 

Yniol's  heart  Z>  in  his  bosom,  Marr.  of  Geraint  505 

and  the  sand  d  at  the  bottom  of  it.  Balm  and  BalanZl 

For  all  my  blood  d  in  me,  and  I  knew  ^    Holy  Grail  ^bb 
D  Uke  a  wither'd  leaf  before  the  haU.  (repeat)    Last  Tournament  4,  242 

And  down  the  city  Dagonet  d  away;  »                 ^o^ 

as  d  in  'er  pratty  blue  eye ;  North.  Cobbler  50 

Dancer    To  the  d'5  dancing  in  tune ;  Maud  I  xxn  lb 

When  will  the  d'«  leave  her  alone?  ,»            *:J 

A  wreath  of  airy  d's  hand-in-hand  ^ ,  Gwtwwre  261 

Dancing    Tho' if,  in  d  after  Letty  HUl,    5,.  Edwin  Moms  55 


Dancing  (continued)    that  keeps  A  thousand  pulses  d,  In  Mem.  cxxv  16 

To  the  dancers  d  in  tune ;  Maud  7  ^^t  16 

burst  in  d,  and  the  pearls  were  spilt ;  Merlin  and  V.  452 

Till  the  d  will  be  over ;  Maud  I  xx  43 

d  of  Fairies  In  desolate  hollows.  Merlin  and  the  G.  41 

Dandle    shall  we  d  it  amorously  ?  ,.^''^*''^  ?k 

I  bore  him  a  son,  and  he  loved  to  d  the  child,  Bandit  s  Death  15 

Dandled    nor  pretty  babes  To  be  d,  Princess  iv  147 

breast  that  fed  or  arm  that  d  you,  »        «»  lol 

Dandy-despot    What  if  that  d-d,  he,  Maud  7  ct  42 

Dane    Saxon  and  Norman  and  7)  are  we,  But  all  of 

us  D's  in  our  welcome  of  thee,  W.  to  Alexandras 

For  Saxon  or  D  or  Norman  we,  »            31 

We  are  each  all  7?  in  our  welcome  of  thee,  „        .,  ^q 

Dang'd  (damned)    an'  be  d  if  I  iver  let  goa !  Village  Wifem 

Danger    Uke  of  shocks,  D's,  and  deeds,  „,   '^"*  ^^ 

Her  household  fled  the  d,  The  Goose  54 

I  take  my  part  Of  d  on  the  roaring  sea,  ."^^j^^.i^ 

I  see  the  d  which  you  cannot  see :  Geraint  andE.  421 

Dangled    D  a  length  of  ribbon  and  a  ring  Enoch  Arden  750 

when  my  father  d  the  grapes,  ^f ««»  -'  »  71 

d  a  hundred  fathom  of  grapes,  V.  of  Maddune  5b 

Dangling    one  with  shatter'd  fingers  d  lame,  Last  Tournament  bO 

Dangtha  (damn  you)    Woa  then,  wiltha  ?  d !  N.  Farmer,  ■^•'S'.  40 

Daniel    great  Books  (see  D  seven  and  ten)  Sea  Dreams  152 

Danish    behind  it  a  gray  down  With  D  barrows ;  Enoch  -^rdenl 

Pass  from  the  D  barrow  overhead ;  „        442 

Danny    (*Se«  oZso  Danny  O'Roon)    an' 7)  says  '  Troth, 

an'  I  been  Dhrinkin'  Tomarrow  11 

for  D  was  not  to  be  foim',  »         ^ 

For  the  Divil  a  D  was  there,  ,>         ^ 

'  Your  D,'  they  says,  '  niver  crasst  over  „         48 

Danny  O'Roon    (.See  oZso  Danny)    MoUy  Magee  wid  her 

batchelor,  7)  O'T?—  "         =" 

meet  your  paaxints  agin  an'  yer  D  O'E  afore  God  „         01 

young  man  D  O'R  wid  his  ould  woman,  „         "o 

about  Molly  Magee  an'  her  I>  0'2?,  ,,         ^^ 

Dante    there  the  world-worn  D  grasp'd  his  song,  Palace  of  Art  ld& 

Danube    The  D  to  the  Severn  gave  In  Mem.  xix  1 

Let  her  great  D  rolUng  fair  Enwind  her  isles,  „     xcmii9 

Dare    why  d  Paths  in  the  desert  ?  Supp.  Confessions  78 

d  to  kiss  Thy  taper  fingers  amorously,  Maddme  4d 

I  d  not  think  of  thee,  Oriana.  Oriana  9d 

I  d  not  die  and  come  to  thee,  »       96 

'  The  doubt  would  rest,  I  d  not  solve.  Two  Voices  616 

'  You  will  not,  boy !  you  d  to  answer  thus !  Bora  26 

none  of  all  his  men  D  tell  him  Dora  waited  „     76 

Then  not  to  d  to  see !  Love  and  Duly  rf8 

'  I  will  speak  out,  for  I  d  not  he.  Lady  Clare  d8 

But  I  must  go :  I  d  not  tarry,'  Princess  iit  95 

« D  we  dream  of  that,'  I  ask'd,  „       .   297 

7  d  All  these  male  thunderbolts :  "*"?«« 

he  that  does  the  thing  they  d  not  do,  „        ®  160 

What  d's  not  Ida  do  that  she  should  pnze  V  t  t?  t.  \ri 

d  not  ev'n  by  silence  sanction  hes.  Third  of  Feb.  10 

How  d  we  keep  our  Christmas-eve  ;  In  Mem.  xxix  4 

Nor  d  she  trust  a  larger  lay,  »     xlmii  16 

And  d  we  to  this  fancy  give,  ..           '*»»^ 

By  which  we  d  to  Uve  or  die.  »     txxxvfJ 

D  I  say  No  spirit  ever  brake  the  band  „        xciii  1 

That  which  we  d  invoke  to  bless ;  ,,      /?*»''-l 

Who  can  rule  and  d  not  lie.  Maud  I  x  bb 

That  I  d  to  look  her  way ;  "     '^  ki 

D  I  bid  her  abide  by  her  word ?  r^  .     '.'rj  n   00 

Who  d's  foreshadow  for  an  only  son  Ded.of  Idylls  2V 

not  once  d  to  look  him  in  the  face.'  Gareth  and  L.  782 

I  am  the  cause,  because  I  d  not  speak  Marr.  of  Geraint  W 

yet  not  d  to  tell  him  what  I  think,  •    »     ,  t-  loc 

How  should  I  d  obey  him  to  his  harm  ?  Geraint  and  h.  Idb 

Not  d  to  watch  the  combat,  »              ^^4 

Nor  did  I  care  or  d  to  speak  with  you,  „      ,  ^^  °'i 

'  What  d  the  full-fed  hars  say  of  me  ?  il^e^^^n  "t/ "i  n^^ 

And  no  man  there  will  d  to  mock  at  me ;  Lancdot  and  E.  lua^ 
What  rights  are  his  that  d  not  strike  for  them  ?      Last  1  oumament  52  / 

how  d  I  caU  him  mine  ?  Gttm«;ere  617 


Dare 


129 


Dare  (continued)    They  swore  that  he  d  not  rob  the  mail,  Rizuah  sn 

names  who  d  For  that  sweet  mother  land  Tir^ZTl  99 

but  if  thou  d— Thou,  one  of  these,  '"''  yJ 

would  d  Hell-heat  or  Arctic  cold.  Ancient  Saae  U% 

I  d  without  your  leave  to  head  Pro  t^al   TJn3J]l 

For  d  we  dally  with  the  sphere  *  *^        -J^f^Jl  1^ 

Mother,  d  you  kill  your  cfild  ?  ^|^^^„*  ^ 

crymg'Irf  her,  let  Peelfe  avenge  herself'!  KavZlaXii2 

Dared    '  He  d  not  tarry,' men  wiU  say,  TwoToteTlOl 

But  when  at  last  I  ei  to  speak,  MillerTL  12^ 

I  had  not  d  to  flow  In  these  words  toward  you  To  /  \  ft 

my  word  was  law  and  yet  you  d  To  slight  it.  '  Dora  98 

Yet  d  not  stu-  to  do  it,  ^„/,„>^'»  pjlw  «n« 

^To  leap  the  rotten  pales  of  prejudice,  '^iLllfi  iS 

You  that  have  d  to  break  our  bound,  ^nncessn  141 

sorrowing  in  a  pause  I  d  not  break ;  "      ^i  otq 

Bnot  to  glance  at  her  good  mother's  face,  Man.  of  Geraint  766 

sue  thought.    He  had  not  d  to  do  it,  toX 

'  They  d  me  to  do  it,' he  said,  "    j?i^^„Jti 

'The  farmer  d  me  to  do  it,'  he  said ;  ^*^P"*  i 

But  they  d  not  touch  us  again.  r*-,  p-„,J'      Iro 

d  her  with  one  little  ship  and  his  English  few  Sevenge  72 

you  have  d  Somewhat  perhaps  in  coming  ?      '  Columbia  242 

When  thickest  d  did  trance  the  sky,  "Mariana  A 

Which  upon  the  d  afloat,  r*^^T-  q 

evel  lake  with  diamond-plots  Of  d  and  bright.  Arabian  Niahi^m 

twisted  silvers  look'd  to  shame  The  hoUow-vauIted  a  '^'^     ^126 

Or  dimple  m  the  d  of  rushv  coves  n^   4  ''\t            tr^ 

thro'  t^e  wreaths  of  floaS'rupcurl'd.  ^'^  MXl  3^ 

AH  within  is  das  night:  Tt^^J,.^VK 

Ere  the  Ught  on  rf  w^as  growing,  OAaZM 

Remaining  betwixt  <i  and  brgt :  MalZZ  28 

shoot  into  the  rf  Arrows  of  li?htnings.  To  jIk  ?4 

?Tf    nl^^'^  "^y  countenance,  -"^^^  )^- -^1  J| 

'  If  all  be  <i,  vague  voice,'  I  said,  "^^^^ 

seem'd  all  d  and  red-a  tract  of  sand.  Palace  "of  Art§, 

moon  was  setting,  and  the  d  was  ovei^  all ;  MavoZmcJn  26 

te^if ^  T'1!J*  '°°f  ^««P'«d  the  hollow'^,  D^oiF  }Vomen  18 

Mom  broaden'd  on  the  borders  of  the  d'  ^       women  l^ 

1  he  unnetted  black-hearts  rinen  d  TJ.JhT7j.-yn 

Shot  on  the  sudden  into  d.  ^        '  ^^  ^^f^'jM 

TiitwThf.tLToi^^*'^^'^-  |....:^?;;| 

l^ove.  If  thy  tresses  be  so  d.  How  d  those  hidden 

eyes  must  be  '  n^,.  n        ^-701 

The  twilight  died  into  the  d.  ^"^-^"^•'  ^^^  fj 

I^floatTiira^t?-  "^  ^^^^''^  -^  '^'  %^Tf  f  J I 

But  o'er  the  d  a  glory  spreads,  ^''  ^"^^  g 

With  wakes  of  fire  we  tore  the  d ;  The  Vovaae  52 

And  d  and  true  and  tender  is  the  North.  PrincZfv  98 

I  dread  His  wildness,  and  the  chances  of  the  d.'  244 

bhpt  round  and  in  the  d  invested  you,  "         4^ 

That  ghtter  bumish'd  by  the  frosty  d\  "      «  261 

bttle  seed  they  laugh'd  at  in  the  df  "      Hm 

like  night  and  evening  mixt  Their  d  and  gray,  "         ill 

And  watches  m  the  dead,  the  d,                     ^'  "    ,„vino 

D  in  Its  funeral  fold.  n^,  ^  "  J  n  k^ 

D  is  the  world  to  thee :  /7,-?/,    P^  ^T"^^"  ^l 

My  wUl  is  bondsman  to  the  d ;  ^'^^>f  "^^^'"^  I 

And  aU  the  place  is  d,  and  aU'The  chambers  ^"  '^''"^^^  ? 


Darken 


In  Mem.  viii  12 
„  xvii  15 
„  feijii  5 
„  Ixxxix  14 
„  Con.  93 
A/attd  /  i»  43 
„  vi  17 
„        ix  15 


Dark  [continued)    For  all  is  d  where  thou  art  not 
bahny  drops  in  suiimier  d  Slide  from  the  bosom 
Ihy  marble  bright  in  d  appears, 
Immantled  in  ambrosial  d, 
A  shade  falls  on  us  Uke  the  d 
For  the  drift  of  the  Maker  is  d, 
Thro'  the  livelong  hours  of  the  d 
Then  returns  the  d  With  no  more  hope  of  li"ht 
l-or  d  my  mother  was  in  eyes  and  hair.  And  d  ' 

m  hair  and  eyes  am  I ;  and  d  Was  Gorlois 

yea  and  d  was  Uther  too,  '  Cn^  ^t  a  ,1      qo^t 

D  my  doom  wL  here,  and  i  It  will  be  there.  *°'" '""''  **"  Ig 

feps  s^r.-.cr'^r"'       ""'"  ""^  ^-  i 

Arthur  to  the  banquet,  d  in  mood  t^«..i  T     j  p  ei . 

Was  T  fnn  /7  Q  »^w^T:K„^     i,     "      ■  5  Lancelot  and  E.  564 

Hl^^^I^iSS..  isoit.Th,  ^"-=^-^™ 

name  was  ruler  of  the  d— Isolt  ?  a^K 

Mark's  way  to  steal  behind  one  in  the  d~  "              ms 

Ihat  here  in  utter  d  I  swoon'd  away.  And  woke  " 

again  m  utter  d,  and  cried,  «„c 

Out  of  the  d,  just  as  the  hps  had  touch'd,  "              7.9 

look  d  and  saw  The  great  Queen's  bower  was  d,—  "              75^ 

so  late !  and  d  the  night  and  chill '  A'  ■           iaa 

so  late !  and  d  and  cMU  the  night!  Gmnevere  168 

Fell  into  dust,  and  crumbled  in  the  d-~  Lover's^TalP  /qt 

m  the  d  of  mme  Is  traced  with  flame.  '^    ^  ""'^  907 

We  past  from  Ught  to  d.  "           f^j. 

All  thro'  the  livelong  hours  of  utter  d,  "           ofn 

spray  wind-driven  Far  thro'  the  dizzy  d.  "       ,•,•  Yqq 

Down  welter'd  thro'  the  d  ever  and  ever.  "           gno 

the  nightingale's  hymn  in  the  d.  7?,v<,/"/o         70^ 

call'd  in  the  d  to  me  year  after  year-  ^'''^  f^^i  li 

I  have  been  with  God  in  the  d^  ^''^''^  ^7 

he  used  but  to  call  in  the  d,  "  i^ 
I  came  on  lake  Llanberris  in  the  d,                         Sisteri  (T?  n^Ji'v  \  o^ 

B  thro'  the  smoke  and  the  sulphu^  £?  Ti'rA  ^  fr> 

B  with  the  smoke  of  hmnan  sacrifice,  %  J^JZZ  fx 

Breaking  with  laughter  from  the  d ;  '  Be  Prof  tZc  ?« 
I  cannot  laud  this  life,  it  looks  so  d-  ToW  w  r  Z%  j}  10 
sister  of  the  sun  Would  climb  from  out  the  d,     ^'  ^'  ^^  "^TirSl! 

till  mme  grew  d  For  ever,  ^res^as  61 

in  the  d  of  his  wonderful  eyes.  tr    nP    7  jJ 

te°iii-is"a's? "'  "^  "'^™ " "» ^-    ^2^^^'  s 

the  world  is  d  with  griefs  and  graves,  So  d  that  "          ^^^ 

men  cry  out  against  the  Heavens.  ,,71 

an  thin  wint  into  the  d.  m "            Lk 

Bright  and  B  have  sworn  that  I,  n,^  Tomorrow  22 

Ltr '^-t-f  .^s  srwsr  "^  ^°'- »'  ">=  ^ ""« | 

one  betwixt  the  d  and  light  had  seen  Her,  "      ^\ 

Stark  and  d  in  his  funeral  fire.  t^  m„,,     "r  r.  o^ 

dead  cords  that  ran  B  thro'  the  mist  -^3^  fm^ ^-  ?? 

festal  hour  B  with  the  blood  of  iS  who  "•'^  ^'""*'  " 

murder'd  man.  ^.  m 

Thro'  a  dream  of  the  d  ?  i>t.Telemachus  80 

i>  no  more  with  human  hatreds  ^'^     ^^T^.^f 

Must  my  day  be  d  bv  reason  /^  ji      y  -,     iJ^^"'  ^ 

And  after  that  the  d '             '  ^^^  ""^^  '\«  ^^i^-  2 

Dark-blue    i?-6  the  deep  sphere  overhead              ^  Crossing  the  Bar  10 

Dark-brow'd    D-b  sophist,  come  not  anear  •  ''4^^f,'^'$r^^o 

And  never  more  d  my  doors  again  '  n       oA 

shores  that  d  with  the  gatherme  wolf  j  7      >    ic-?';''„^H 

face  Would  d,  as  he  cuLd  h^creduk,usness  ^Talf^  ^^l 

And  sorrow  d's  hamlet  and  hall.      "'''"^''^'  %^«  ^'^^^,^5 

It  brightens  and  d'.  down  on  the  plain.  Window^nle'mii  2 


Barken 


130 


Darling 


Darken  (continited)  d's  and  brightens  like  mjr  hope, 
And  it  d's  and  brightens  and  d's  hke  my 
fear, 

drifts  that  pass  To  d  on  the  rolling  brine 

Not  close  and  d  above  me 

Tho'  many  a  light  shall  d, 

I  would  not  mine  again  should  d  thine. 

May  yon  just  heaven,  that  d's  o'er  me, 

fla^  of  youth,  would  d  down  To  rise  hereafter 

o'er  the  plain  that  then  began  To  d  under  Camelot ; 

deed  seem'd  to  be  done  in  vain,  D ; 

the  days  d  roimd  me,  and  the  years, 

And  why  was  I  to  d  their  pure  love, 

into  my  heart,  and  begun  to  d  my  eyes. 

as  I  saw  the  white  sail  run,  And  d, 

lost  in  the  gloom  of  doubts  that  d  the  schools ; 

Storm  in  the  South  that  d's  the  day ! 

His  shadow  d's  earth : 
Darken'd    {See  also  Derken'd,  Self-darken'd)    And 
her  eyes  were  d  wholly. 

And  all  the  casement  d  there. 

pines  That  d  all  the  northward  of  her  Hall. 

all  the  sails  were  d  in  the  west, 

You  stood  in  jrour  own  light  and  d  mine. 

And  d  sanctities  with  song.' 

And  life  is  d  in  the  brain. 

D  watching  a  mother  decline 

He  held  d  into  a  frown. 

And  d  from  the  high  light  in  his  eyes, 

Till  his  eye  d  and  his  helmet  wagg'd ; 

So  when  his  moods  were  d,  court  and  King 

Thy  curse,  and  d  all  thy  day ; 

his  face  Z>,  as  I  have  seen  it  more  than  once, 

D  the  common  path : 

when  the  outer  Ughts  are  d  thus, 

Because  my  own  was  d  ? 

And  all  my  life  was  d, 

The  landskip  d.  The  melody  deaden'd, 

'  what  has  d  thee  to-night  ? ' 

d  with  doubts  of  a  Faith  that  saves. 
Darkening    d  thine  own  To  thine  own  likeness ; 

swarms  of  men  D  her  female  field : 

And  d  the  dark  graves  of  men, — 

shadow  of  His  loss  drew  like  eclipse,  D  the  world 

world-old  yew-tree,  d  half  The  cloisters, 

D  the  wreaths  of  all  that  would  advance, 

And,  d  in  the  light. 
Darker    Your  hair  is  d,  and  your  eyes 

made  those  eyes  D  than  darkest  pansies, 

lonelier,  d,  earthlier  for  my  loss. 

loved  to  make  men  d  than  they  are. 
Dark-eyed    She  was  dark-haired,  d-e : 
Dark-green    spread  his  d-g  layers  of  shade. 
Dark-hair'd    She  was  d-h,  dark-eyed : 
Darkling    name  Went  wandering  somewhere  d  in  his 

mind. 
Darkness    something  in  the  d  draws  His  forehead 
earthward, 

something  which  possess'd  The  d  of  the  world, 

and  lashes  like  to  rays  Of  d, 

All  niglit  long  on  d  blind. 

When  in  the  d  over  me  The  four-handed  mole 

Whv  inch  by  inch  to  d  crawl  ? 

And  d  in  the  village  yew. 

on  her  threshold  lie  Howling  in  outer  d.     To 

Gross  d  of  the  imier  sepulchre 

Had  wink'd  and  threaten'd  d, 

I  would  I  were  The  pilot  of  the  d 

shake  the  d  from  their  loosen'd  manes, 

were  shrivell'd  into  d  in  his  head, 

Beyond  the  d  and  the  cataract, 

as  they  klss'd  each  other  In  d, 

worshipt  their  own  d  in  the  Highest  ? 

May  Pharaoh's  d,  folds  as  dense 

and  I  was  hcavod  upon  it  In  d : 


Window.  On  the  EiU  18 

In  Mem.  cvii  14 

Maud  I  xi9 

„IIIviA3 

Balin  and  Balan  625 

Merlin  and  V.  931 

Lancelot  and  E.  1318 

Holy  Grail  218 

„       275 

Pass,  of  Arthur  405 

Lover's  Tale  i  727 

Rizpah  16 

The  Flight  40 

Fastness  11 

Riflemen  form.'  2 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  13 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  31 

MiUer's  D.  128 

Aylmer's  Field  415 

iSea  Dreams  39 

Princess  iv  314 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  24 

„  cxxi  8 

Maud  I  xix  8 

62 

Marr.  of  Geraint  100 

Geraint  and  E.  505 

Balin  and  Balan  235 

620 

Holy  Grail  273 

PeUeas  and  E.  550 

Lover's  Tale  i  35 

729 

The  Flight  dQ 

Merlin  and  the  G.  31 

Akbar's  Dream  2 

The  Dreamer  11 

Aylmer's  Field  673 

Princess  vii  34 

In  Mem.  xxxix  9 

Ded.  of  Idylls  15 

Holy  Grail  13 

To  Victor  Hugo  5 

Ancient  Sage  151 

Margaret  49 

Gardener's  D.  27 

Aylmer's  Field  750 

Merlin  and  V.  876 

Lover's  Tale  i  74 

Gardener's  D.  116 

Lover's  Tale  i  74 

Last  Tournament  457 

Supp.  Confessions  167 

Arabian  Nights  72 

„  137 

Adeline  44 

My  life  is  fuU  11 

Two  Voices  200 

273 

-,  With  Pal.  of  Art  16 

D.ofF.  Wo7nen61 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  2 

Audley  Court  72 

Tithonus  41 

Godiva  70 

Vision  of  Sin  49 

Aylmer's  Field  431 

„  643 

771 

Sea  Dreams  93 


Darkness  (continued)    Muses'  beads  were  touch'd  Above 

the  d  Princess  Hi  22 

d  closed  me ;  and  I  fell.  „          v  542 

So  much  the  gathering  d  charm'd :  „     Con.  107 

There  I  heard  them  in  the  d,  Boddicea  36 

So  they  chanted  in  the  d,  „       46 

A  beam  in  d :,  let  it  grow.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  24 

Let  d  keep  her  raven  gloss :  „              1 10 

Else  earth  is  d  at  the  core,  „        xxxiv  3 

drop  head-foremost  in  the  jaws  Of  vacant  d  „               16 

That  slope  thro'  d  up  to  God,  „           Iv  16 

How  blanch'd  with  d  must  I  grow !  „           Ixi  8 

Death  has  made  His  d  beautiful  with  thee.  „      Ixxiv  12 

matin  songs,  that  woke  The  d  of  our  planet,  „      Ixxvi  10 

which  makes  the  d  and  the  light,  „        xcvi  19 

But  in  the  d  and  the  cloud,  „               21 

A  treble  d,  Evil  haunts  The  birth,  „     xcviii  13 

Ring  out  the  d  of  the  land,  „         cvi  31 

The  Power  in  d  whom  we  guess ;  „       cxxiv  4 

out  of  d  came  the  hands  That  reach  thro'  nature,  „               23 

over  whom  thy  d  must  have  spread  Mavd  I  xviii  25 

many  a  d  into  the  light  shall  leap,  „      ///  vi  46 

Swept  bellowing  thro'  the  d  on  to  dawn,  Gareth  and  L.  Ill 
would  she  make  My  d  blackness  ?                             Balin  and  Balan  193 

mark'd  not  on  his  right  a  cavern-chasm  Yawn  over  d,  „            313 


514 

Merlin  and  V.  190 

466 

Lancelot  and  E.  1000 

Holy  Grail  49 

„      677 

PeUeas  and  E.  213 

458 

Guinevere  417 

583 

To  the  Queen  ii  65 

Lover's  Tale  i  524 

597 


And  lost  itself  in  d,  till  she  cried — 
He  walk'd  with  dreams  and  d. 
And  counterchanged  with  d  ? 
Approaching  thro'  the  d,  call'd ; 
After  the  day  of  d,  when  the  dead 
and  lying  bounden  there  In  d 
d  falling,  sought  A  priory  not  far  off, 
their  own  d,  throng'd  into  the  moon. 
She  made  her  face  a  d  from  the  King : 
And  in  the  d  o'er  her  fallen  head, 
forego  The  d  of  that  battle  in  the  West, 
far  on  within  its  inmost  halls,  The  home  of  d ; 
and  the  d  of  the  grave,  The  d  of  the  grave  and  utter  night, 
And  vex  them  with  my  d  ?  „  732 

in  the  end.  Opening  ond,  „        u'  125 

so  those  fair  eyes  Shone  on  my  d,  „  158 

Seem'd  stepping  out  of  d  with  a  smile.  „        iv  220 

What  end  but  d  could  ensue  from  this  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  175 

bleat  of  a  lamb  in  the  stonn  and  the  d  without ;  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  64 
"     '  '  '  •    . .      -  jy^j  ^j  Lwcknow  76 

ToPrin.F.ofH.2 

Tiresias  52 

„     115 

„     159 

„     202 

Ancient  Sage  8 

„      173 

„      198 

„      199 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  92 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamlet^  29 

Prin.  Beatrice  3 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  67 

Demeter  and  P.  2 

82 

„        100 

„        116 

Merlin  and  the  G.  75 

81 

llomney's  R.  53 

Locksley  Ilall  164 

Lancelot  and  E.  338 

Tomorrow  39 


Bugles  and  drums  in  the  d, 

he  past  away  From  the  d  of  life — 

world  of  sight,  that  lives  Behind  this  d. 

Stood  out  before  a  d,  crying, 

not  to  plunge  Thy  torch  of  life  in  d, 

and  the  master  gone.     Gone  into  d, 

fountain  pour'd  From  d  into  daylight. 

Who  knows  but  that  the  d  is  in  man  ? 

and  forget  The  d  of  the  pall.' 

If  utter  d  closed  the  day,  my  son — 

Crown'd  with  sunMght— -over  d — 

Flare  from  Tel-el- Kebir  Thro'  d, 

and  griefs,  and  deaths,  Were  utter  d — 

Are  there  spectres  moving  in  the  d  ? 

the  d  Pawns  into  the  Jubilee  of  the  Ages. 

bird  that  flies  All  night  across  the  d, 

following  out  A  league  of  labyrinthine  d, 

and  for  evermore  The  Bride  of  D.' 

Then  He,  the  brother  of  this  D, 

Clouds  and  d  Closed  upon  Camelot ; 

For  out  of  the  d  Silent  and  slowly 

bubble  bursts  above  the  abyss  Of  D, 
Dark-purple    lying  in  d-p  spheres  of  sea. 
Dark-splendid    the  face  Tbefore  her  lived,  D-s, 
Darlin'     wid  a  heart  and  a  half,  me  d. 
Darling    {See  also  Darlin')    The  d  of  my  manhood,  and, 
alas! 

how  pale  she  had  look'd  D,  to-night ! 

Seventy  years  ago,  my  d,  (repeat) 

'  Me,  not  my  d,  no ! ' 

Her  feet,  my  d,  on  the  dead ; 


Gardener's  D.  278 

Aylmer's  Field  380 

Grandmother  24,  56 

The  Victim  68 

In  Mem.,  Con.  50 


Darling 


131 


Daughter 


Darling  {continued)    the  moon-faced  d  of  all, — ■ 
You  are  not  her  d. 
and  render  All  homage  to  his  own  d, 
But  shall  it  ?  answer,  d,  answer,  no. 
Then  the  great  knight,  the  d  of  the  court, 
our  orphan,  our  d,  our  meek  little  maid ; 
not  a  mother's  heart,  when  I  left  my  d  alone.' 
All  very  well  just  now  to  be  calling  me  d 

Damel    And  on  my  clay  her  d  grow ; 

Damley    There  is  D  bridge,  It  has  more  ivy ; 
Then  crost  the  common  into  D  chase 

Dart  (s)     with  their  fires  Love  tipt  his  keenest  d's ; 
Brandishing  in  her  hand  a  d 
Madly  dash'd  the  d's  together, 
Clash  the  d's  and  on  the  buckler 
dying  now  Pierced  by  a  poison'd  d. 


Maud  I  i  72 

„  xii  32 

„    XX  49 

Merlin  and  V.  397 

Lancelot  and  E.  261 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  28 

The  Wreck  97 

Charity  7 

My  life  is  full  22 

The  Brook  36 

„        132 

D.ofF.  Women  113 

,  Boadicea  71 

»        74 

79 

Death  of  CEnone  34 


Dart  (verb)    forward  d  again,  and  play  About  the  prow.        In  Mem.  xii  17 

Darted    thro'  his  manful  breast  d  tne  pang  Marr.  of  Geraint  121 

Darter  (daughter)     the  Squire  an'  'is  ^s  an'  me.  Village  Wife  7 

talkt  o'  my  d  es  died  o'  the  fever  at  fall :  „         10 

ivry  d  o'  Squire's  hed  her  awn  ridin-erse  „         35 

niver  hed  none  of  'er  d's  'ere ;  ,,54 

'Er  an'  'er  blessed  d —  „         60 

Then  'e  married  a  great  Yerl's  d,  Church-warden,  etc.  20 

Dash    D  them  anew  together  at  her  will  Lucretius  247 

birds  on  the  light  I)  themselves  dead.  Princess  iv  496 

Waves  on  a  diamond  shingle  d,  The  Islet  16 

d  the  brains  of  the  little  one  out,  Boadicea  68 

and  d  myself  down  and  die  Maud  I  i  54 

upon  all  things  base,  and  d  them  dead,  Gareth  and  L.  23 

I               each  at  either  d  from  either  end —  „         535 

To  d  against  mine  enemy  and  to  win.  „       1355 

D  back  that  ocean  with  a  pier,  Mechanophilus  5 

Dash'd  (rushed)     D  downward  in  a  cataract.  Day-Dm.,  Eevival  16 

Again  we  d  into  the  dawn !  The  Voyage  24 

d  Into  the  chronicle  of  a  deedful  day,  Aylmer's  Field  195 

I,               uttering  a  dry  shriek,  D  on  Geraint,  Geraint  and  E.  462 

I  But,  mad  for  strange  adventure,  d  away,  Balin  and  Balan  289 
'  he  d  across  me — mad.  And  maddening  what  he  rode ;  Holy  Grail  641 
Pelleas  overthrew  them  as  they  d  Against  him  one 

by  one ;  Pelleas  and  E.  221 

d  up  alone  Thro'  the  great  gray  slope  Heavy  Brigade  16 

Dash'd  (flung,  hurled)     As  d  about  the  drunken  leaves  Amphion  55 

D  together  in  blinding  dew :  Vision  of  Sin  42 

grief  Bore  down  in  flood,  and  d  his  angry  heart  Aylmer's  Field  633 
or  into  rhythm  have  d  The  passion  of  the  prophetess ;     Princess  iv  139 

and  d  Unopen'd  at  her  feet :  „          470 

roll  The  torrents,  d  to  the  vale :  „       v  350 

Then  came  a  postscript  d  across  the  rest.  ,,          424 

D  on  every  rocky  square  Their  surging  charges  Ode  on  Well.  125 

Roll  as  a  ground-swell  d  on  the  strand,  W.  to  Alexandra  23 

And  wildly  d  on  tower  and  tree  In  Mem.  xv  7 
Christless  foe  of  thine  as  ever  d  Horse  against 

horse ;  Balin  and  Balan  97 

He  d  the  pummel  at  the  foremost  face,  „           402 

with  violence  The  sword  was  d  from  out  my  hand,  Holy  Grail  826 

Isolt  of  Britain  d  Before  Isolt  Last  Tournament  588 

and  d  himself  Into  the  dizzy  depth  below.  Lover's  Tale  i  380 

and  d  herself  Dead  in  her  rage :  Tiresias  152 

And  d  half  dead  on  barren  sands,  The  Ring  309 

Into  the  flame-billow  d  the  berries,  Kapiolani  33 

Dash'd  (siruck)    Madly  d  the  darts  together,  Boadicea  74 

He  d  the  rowel  into  his  horse,  Pelleas  and  E.  486 

sudden  fire  from  Heaven  had  d  him  dead,  Happy  83 

Dash'd  (broke)    we  d  Your  cities  into  shards  with 

catapults,  Princess  v  137 

Dash'd  (bespattered)    his  greaves  and  cuisses  d  with  drops 

Of  onset ;  M.  d' Arthur  215 

And  where  it  d  the  reddening  meadow,  Lucretius  49 

d  with  death  He  reddens  what  he  kisses :  Princess  v  164 

d  with  wandering  isles  of  night.  In  Mem.  xxiv  4 

That  life  is  d  with  flecks  of  sin.  „        Hi  14 

Deep  tulips  d  with  fiery  dew,  „  Ixxxiii  11 

his  greaves  and  cuisses  d  with  drops  Of  onset ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  383 

Dashing    d  down  on  a  tall  wayside  flower,  Guinevere  253 


Dashing  (continued)    D  the  fires  and  the  shadows  of 

dawn  V.  of  Maddune  99 

the  bolt  of  war  d  down  upon  cities  The  Dawn  8 

Date     but  when  his  d  Doubled  her  own,  Aylmer's  Field  80 

Beyond  the  conmion  d  of  death —  The  Ring  108 

Dating    d,  many  a  year  ago.  Has  hit  on  this.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  49 

Daughter    (See  also  Darter)    His  little  d,  whose  sweet 

face  He  kiss'd,  Two  Voices  253 

It  is  the  miller's  d.  Miller's  D.  169 

I  am  the  dot  a.  River-God,  Qinone  38 

We  were  two  d's  of  one  race :  The  Sisters  1 

The  doiA  hundred  Earls,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  7 

A  d  of  the  gods,  divinely  tall,  D.  of  F.  Women  87 

The  d  of  the  warrior  Gileadite,  „           197 
Eustace  from  the  city  went  To  see  the  Gardener's  D ;     Gardener's  D.  3 

Go  and  see  The  Gardener's  d:  „          30 

Who  had  not  heard  Of  Rose,  the  Gardener's  d?  „           52 

The  d's  of  the  year,  One  after  one,  „         200 

She  is  my  brother's  d :  Dora  17 

for  his  sake  I  bred  His  d  Dora :  „    20 

woo'd  and  wed  A  labourer's  d,  Mary  Morrison.  „    40 

d  of  a  cottager.  Out  of  her  sphere,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  59 

Cry,  like  the  d's  of  the  horseleech,  *  Give,  Golden  Year  12 

preaching  down  a  d's  heart.  Locksley  Hall  94 

'  The  old  Earl's  d  died  at  my  breast ;  Lady  Clare  25 

With  children ;  first  a  d.  Enoch  Arden  84 

evermore  the  d  prest  upon  her  To  wed  the  man  „          483 

tell  my  d  Annie,  whom  I  saw  So  like  her  mother,  „          882 

A  d  of  our  meadows,  yet  not  coarse ;  The  Brook  69 

And  how  it  was  the  thing  his  d  wish'd,  „       140 

sons  of  men  D's  of  God;  Aylmer's  Field  45 

Averill  walk  So  freely  with  his  d?  „            270 

Pale  as  the  Jephtha's  d,  „            280 

He  never  yet  had  set  his  d  forth  „            347 

Grossly  contriving  their  dear  d's  good —  „            781 

devising  their  own  d's  death !  „            783 

where  the  two  contrived  their  d's  good,  ,,            848 

knowledge,  so  my  d  held.  Was  all  in  all :  Princess  i  135 

His  d  and  his  housemaid  were  the  boys :  „          190 

turning  round  we  saw  The  Lady  Blanche's  d  „      ii  321 

d's  of  the  plough,  stronger  than  men,  „      iv  278 

A  Niobean  d,  one  arm  out,  „          371 

'  Fair  d,  when  we  sent  the  Prince  your  way  „          398 

Then  those  eight  mighty  d's  of  the  plough  „          550 

I  would  he  had  our  d:  »       ^  214 

vainlier  than  a  hen  To  her  false  d's  in  the  pool ;  „          329 

those  eight  d's  of  the  plough  Game  „          339 

Sea-kings'  d  from  over  the  sea,  W.  to  Alexandra  1 

The  sea-kings'  d  as  happy  as  fair,  „            26 

Yell'd  and  shriek'd  between  her  d's,  (repeat)  Boadicea  6,  72 

he  loved  A  doi  omr  house ;  In  Mem.,  Con.  7 

love  of  all  Thy  d's  cherish  Thee,  Ded.  of  Idylls  53 

Had  one  fair  d,  and  none  other  child ;  Com.  of  Arthur  2 

Give  me  thy  d  Guinevere  to  wife,'  „         139 

Give  my  one  d  saving  to  a  king,  „          143 

And  d's  had  she  borne  him, —  „         189 

'  D  of  Gorlois  and  Ygeme  am  I ; '  „         316 

Then  at  his  caU, '  O  d's  of  the  Dawn,  Gareth  and  L.  923 

were  she  the  d  of  a  king,  Marr.  of  Geraint  229 

The  voice  of  Enid,  Yniol's  d,  rang  Clear  „              327 

fair  Enid,  all  in  faded  silk.  Her  d.  „              367 

after,  tum'd  her  d  round,  and  said,  „               740 

I  doubted  whether  d's  tenderness,  Or  easy  nature,  „               797 

behind  them  stept  the  lily  maid  Elaine,  his  d :  Lancelot  and  E.  177 

But  I,  my  sons,  and  little  d  fled  „             276 

D,  I  know  not  what  you  call  the  highest ;  „           1080 

Isolt,  the  d  of  the  King  ?  Last  Tournament  397 
The  mother  fell  about  the  d's  neck,                  •     Sister's  {E.  and  E.)  154 

told  the  living  d  with  what  love  „    _          _  253 
England's  England-loving  d — thou                    Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  15 

He  saw  not  his  d — he  blest  her :  To  Prin.  F.  of  H.  3 

d  yield  her  life,  heart,  soul  to  one —  The  Flight  28 
hold  the  Present  fatal  d  of  the  Past,                       Locksley  H.,  Sixti^  105 

Her  maiden  d's  marriage ;  Prin.  Beatrice  10 

True  d,  whose  all-faithful,  filial  eyes  „           13 


Daughter 


132 


Forlorn  39 

Bomney's  B.  77 

Columbus  47 

In  Mem.  c  12 

Geraint  and  E.  255 

V.  of  Maeldune  109 


Daughter  {continued)    D  of  the  seed  of  Cain, 
You  claspt  our  infant  d, 

David     King  D  call'd  the  heavens  a  hide, 

Daw     And  haunted  by  the  wrangUng  d ; 
And  all  the  windy  clamour  of  the  d's 
the  d's  flew  out  of  the  Towers 

Dawes  (Jocky)    .See  Jocky  Dawes 

Dawn(s)    (.See  oZso  Summer-dawn)    When  the  breeze  ,r- i,  i 

of  a  joyful  d  blew  free,  .^'■"^'""/afti 
Thou  dewy  d  of  memory,  (repeat)                     0&  to  Memory  7,  45, 124 

dew-impearled  winds  of  d  have  kiss'd,  ,,                        J^^ 

Vast  images  in  glimmering  d,  ,         ^w"  Vmces  305 

white-breasted  hke  a  star  Fronting  the  d  he  moved ;  tfcnowe  s» 

The  tearful  glimmer  of  the  languid  d  D.  of  F.  Women  74 

crested  bird  That  claps  his  wings  at  d.  »             ^°^ 
With  that  sharp  soimd  the  white  d's  creeping 

He  S^ot  see  the  d  of  day.  D.  oftUO.  Year  11 

A  bridal  d  of  thunder-peals,  ^     ^^^  $'f  "^/^^i      971 

hull  Look'd  one  black  dot  against  the  verge  of  d,           M.  d  Arthur  ^li 

Thelusty  bird  takes  every  hour  for  d:  »     ^  is 

till  on  to  d,  when  dreams  Begin  to  feel  the  truth  ,  ,"   u  77  iT^ 

light  of  London  flaring  hke  a  dreary  d ;  LocksleyUaU  114 

iiain  we  dash'd  into  the  dl                             .  rr-  ■     ^ ^'J'^^f^li 

God  made  himself  an  awful  rose  of  d,  (repeat)  Vision  of  Sin  50,  ZZ^ 

when  the  d  of  rosy  childhood  past,  Enoch  Ardendl 

Faint  as  a  figure  seen  in  early  d  »         ^"?' 

the  chill  November  d's  and  dewy-glooming  downs,  „         o^y 

since  the  mate  had  seen  at  early  d  .   ,       ,  "t^-  tj  iqi 

follow  Such  dear  familiarities  of  d  ?  Aylmer  s  Field  161 

as  d  Aroused  the  black  republic  on  his  elms,  >,.          .  ^^° 

I  gave  the  letter  to  be  sent  with  d ;  Princess  i  245 

However  then  commenced  the  d :  »      **  ^^° 

sad  and  strange  as  in  dark  summer  d's  »>       ^^/^ 

at  eve  and  d  With  Ida,  Ida,  Ida,  rang  the  woods ;  „          4^^ 

He  rose  at  d  and,  fired  with  hope,  *«*'«"•  -^^"2/  -^ 

Green-rushing  from  the  rosy  thrones  of  d !  ,  ,     n  ^   ^n 

(repeat)  Voice  and  the  P.  4,  40 

Fixt  by  their  cars,  waited  the  golden  d.  Spec,  of  Iliad.  ZA 

In  that  deep  d  behind  the  tomb.  In  -Mem.  xlyib 

Thy  tablet  glimmers  to  the  d.  »    /ctm  10 

Risest  thou  thus,  dim  d,  »     ia;a;ti  1 

said  '  The  d,  the  d,'  and  died  away ;  v       iS";  01 

Risest  thou  thus,  dim  d,  again,  »»       ^''^^  ;t 

A  light-blue  lane  of  early  d,  '     »      ^^*.^  ' 

And  thither  I  climb'd  at  d  And  stood  Maud  I  xiv5 

Now  and  then  in  the  dim-gray  d ;  »          . .  ^^ 

They  sigh'd  for  the  d  and  thee.  »     ^^"  ?^ 

O  d  of  Eden  bright  over  earth  and  sky,  „       ^j  »  ° 

In  the  shuddering  d,  behold,  ,.         */>  °^ 

Voice  in  the  rich  d  of  an  ampler  day—  -fed.  0;  ■'j*^"«  ^^ 

Swept  bellowing  thro'  the  darkness  on  to  d,  Gare</t  and  L.  177 

honour  shining  like  the  dewy  star  Of  d,  »            ^^^ 

How  once  the  wandering  forester  at  d,  »            4^° 

Will  there  be  d  in  West  and  eve  in  East  ?  „            71J 

Then  at  his  call, '  O  daughters  of  the  D,  „            »^^ 

In  the  half-light— thro'  the  dim  d—  .    »          1^°* 

As  the  gray  d  stole  o'er  the  dewy  world,  Geraint  and  £>.  d»o 

with  the  d  ascending  lets  the  day  Strike  .      " ,  „  ,      on 

one  fair  d,  The  light-wing'd  spint  Balm  and  BalanM 

thou  rememberest  well — one  summer  d —  »           °^ 

passiijg  one,  at  the  high  peep  of  d,  Merlm  andV.oiM 

the  high  d  piercing  the  royal  rose  »             '''•' 

woke  with  d,  and  past  Down  thro'  the  dim  rich  ,  -n  o^o 

city  Lancelot  and  L.  o4b 

the  blood-red  light  of  d  Flared  on  her  face,  „            1025 

I  touch'd  The  chapel-doors  at  d  I  know ;  Holy  GratlbSb 

her  bloom  A  rosy  d  kindled  in  stainless  heavens,  PeUeas  and  E.TZ 

Glanced  from  the  rosy  forehead  of  the  d,  »           ^OJ 

Pure  on  the  virgin  forehead  of  the  d ! '  »            ^05 

hull  Look'd  one  black  dot  against  the  verge  of  d,      Pass,  of  Arthur  4^9 

stillness  of  the  dead  world's  winter  d  Amazed  him,                „            442 

Then  from  the  d  it  seem'd  there  came,  „            457 

kindled  from  within  As  'twere  with  d.  Lover's  Tale  i  74 

opposite  The  flush  and  d  of  youth,  ,,         lo9 


Day 

Dawn  (s)  {continued)    at  d  from  the  cloud  glitter'd  o'er  us  V.  of  Maeldune  84 

and  the  sunbright  hand  of  the  d,  »              ^^ 

Dasliing  the  fires  and  the  shadows  of  d  r^    r.    r"  t^       n    i 

Waste  d  of  multitudinous-eddying  light—  De  Prof.,  I  wo  O.i 

mothers  with  their  babblers  of  the  d,  Tiresias  106 

And  we  tum'd  to  the  growing  d,  we  had  hoped  for  a  d  mdeed,    JJespair  22 

Hoped  for  a  d  and  it  came,  >     •    .  c."    oci 

see  The  high-heaven  d  of  more  than  mortal  day  Ancient  ^age  2S4 
light  the  glimmer  of  the  d  ?                                   Locksley  H.,  ^ixtyZAJ 

Sun  of  d  That  brightens  thro'  the  Mother's  Pnn.  Beatrice  6 

Virgil  who  would  write  ten  lines,  they  say,  At  d.  Poets  and  their  Ji.  6 

at  d  Falls  on  the  threshold  of  her  native  land,  Demeter  and  P.Z 

the  reaper  in  the  gleam  of  d  Will  see  me  ..          ■'■^^ 

Are  calling  to  each  other  thro'  a  d  The  BmgSl 

in  the  gleam  of  those  mid-summer  d's,  »      -"-"^ 

In  the  night,  and  nigh  the  d,  Forlorn  8d 
A  whisper  from  his  d  of  life  ?  a  breath  From  some 

fair  i^ beyond                                        ,  n  ^^J^p '""^.  It 

Her  husband  in  the  flush  of  youth  and  d,  ^^,"^hri       t      ql 

d  Struck  from  him  his  own  shadow  on  to  Rome.  ^t.  lelemachus  o^ 

and  it  laugh'd  like  a  d  in  May.  J^andit  s  Death  2(J 

slept,  Ay,  till  d  stole  mto  the  cave,  n   "    1    a  9i 

Red  of  the  D !  (repeat)  The  Dawn  1,6,  21 

D  not  Day !  (repeat)  »           ^]\  ^° 

Dawn  (verb)    let  your  blue  eyes  d  Upon  me  ,    ?.TTqm 

such  a  one  As  d's  but  once  a  season.  Lover's  Tale  i  300 

Than  our  poor  twiUght  d  on  earth—  Tiresias  20b 

That  d's  behind  the  grave.  ^     .  ^  ^  £pi%«e  78 

darkness  D's  into  the  Jubilee  of  the  Ages.  On  Juh.  Q.  /  *^tona  71 

Dawn'd    D  sometime  thro'  the  doorway  ?  A  ylmer  s  Field  685 

twilight  d ;  and  mom  by  morn  the  lark  /j^Tu'Z  f^ 

Had  ?  has  it  come  ?  It  has  only  d.  /«  <^e  ChiU.  Hosp.  2d 

One  from  the  Sunrise  D  on  His  people,  Kapiolam  25 

Dawning  (part.)    (.See  also  Dark-dawning)    clear  ^    r     •    „  at 

Del^ht,  the  infant's  d  year.  -Swpp.  Confessions  67 

All  the  spirit  deeply  d  in  the  dark  i^'W,£  si 

he  saw  Death  d  on  him,  and  the  close  of  all.  Enoch  Arden  832 

Dawnii^  (S)     thro'  that  d  gleam'd  a  kmdUer  hope  „           ^^ 

ATry  from  out  the  d  of  my  life.  Com  of  ^ fur  333 

All  in  a  fiery  d  wild  with  wind  Lancelot  andh  102U 

days  Of  dewy  d  and  the  amber  eves  Lovers  Tale  t  52 

brought  out  a  broad  sky  Of  d  over—  Columbus  78 

Loi^beforethed.  Forlorn  54. 
Day    (.See  also  After-days,  Birth-day,  Christmas  Day, 
Daay,  Death-day,  Easterday,  Gaudy-day,  Jidge- 
ment   Day,  Judgment  Daay,  Judgment  Day, 
Marriage  Day,  Mid-day,  Middle-day,  Nine-days', 

One-day-seen,  To-daay,  To-day,  Yisther-day)  ^  ,,    ^        09 

As  noble  tin  the  latest  d\                          ^  ^        To  the  Queen  ^ 

a  world  of  peace  And  confidence,  d  after  d ;  Supp.  Confessions  30 

They  comfort  him  by  night  and  d ;  »        .        ^ 

She  only  said, '  The  d  is  dreary,  Mariana  33 

All  d  within  the  dreamy  house,  »        "^ 

the  d  Was  sloping  toward  his  western  bower.  ,,         '» 

Wears  all  d  a  fainter  tone.                               .  ,        ^j   /^r          \n 

Flinging  the  gloom  of  yesternight  On  the  white  d ;      Ode  to  Memory  10 

the  prime  labour  of  thine  early  d's:  t,  ^,",,-  joa 

AU  5  and  all  night  it  is  ever  drawn    ,  "^"e^'S^q 

D  and  night  to  the  billow  the  fountam  calls :  &ea-Jf  airies^y 

We  will  sing  to  you  all  the  d :  "c.„^^  r 

It  was  the  middle  of  the  d.  ^V^^  ^^««  » 

Now  is  done  thy  long  d's  work ;  rtrt^lTsg 

How  could  I  look  upon  the  d?  ^T^Lo 

I  would  sit  and  sing  the  whole  of  the  d ;  The  Merman  9 

I  would  sing  to  myself  the  whole  of  the  d ;  The  Mernrn^  10 

Looking  at  the  set  of  d,  m    „  *!^  yo 

LuU'd  echoes  of  laborious  d  Come  to  you,  Margaret  29 

And  gave  you  on  your  natal  d.  "63 

all  d  long  you  sit  between  Joy  and  woe,  jfnJlind  47 

delight  of  frolic  flight,  by  d  or  night,  rf.  •,  ff/Z  1 

My  life  is  full  of  weai^  d's,  ^^V  ^»^  ^  /^^ 

Come  only,  when  the  d's  are  still,  .cL/^a  ji  1 

These  she  weaves  by  night  and  d  L-  of  ^f^\l\^ 

And  at  the  closing  of  the  d  .        ."  ,     „  oq 

But  d  increased  f  ram  heat  to  heat,  ilfarm«a  m  the  S.  39 


Day 


133 


Day 


Day  (eontinued)    But  sometimes  in  the  falling  d  Mariana  in  the  S.  73 

From  heat  to  heat  the  d  decreased,  „  78 
'  The  d  to  night,'  she  made  her  moan,  '  The  d  to 

night,  the  night  to  mom,  And  d  and  night  I 

am  left  alone  „              81 

Would  sweep  the  tracts  of  d  and  night.  Two  Voices  69 

How  grows  the  d  of  human  power  ? '  „         78 

One  hope  that  warm'd  me  in  the  d's  „        122 

In  d's  that  never  come  again.  „       324 

Whose  troubles  number  with  his  d's :  „        330 

That  we  may  die  the  self-same  d.  Miller's  D.  24 

Flush'd  like  the  coming  of  the  d ;  „        132 

song  I  gave  you,  Alice,  on  the  d  When,  arm  in  arm,  „        162 

For  hid  in  ringlets  d  and  night,  „        173 

And  all  d  long  to  fall  and  rise  „        182 

The  d,  when  in  the  chestnut  shade  I  found  „        201 

wheresoe'er  I  am  by  night  and  d,  (Enone  267 

And,  whUe  d  sank  or  movmted  higher,  Palace  of  Art.  46 

Thro'  which  the  livelong  d  my  soul  did  pass,  „          55 

yoimg  night  divine  Crown'd  dying  d  with  stars^  „  184 
Of  all  the  glad  New-year,  mother,  the  maddest 

merriest  d ;  May  Queen  3 

call  me  loud  when  the  d  begins  to  break :  „        10 

many  a  bolder  lad  'ill  woo  me  any  summer  d,  „        23 

drop  of  rain  the  whole  of  the  livelong  d,  „        35 

To-morrow  'ill  be  of  all  the  year  the  maddest  merriest  d,  „  43 
we  had  a  merry  d ;                                               May  Queen,  N.Y's.  E.  9 

I  long  to  see  a  flower  so  before  the  d  I  die.  „  16 
Grood-night,  sweet  mother :  call  me  before 

the  d  is  bom.  „                 49 

ere  this  d  is  done  The  voice,  that  now  is  speaking,  „  Con.  53 
AU  its  allotted  length  of  d's,                                   Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  35 

Eating  the  Lotos  d  by  d,  „               60 

All  d  the  wind  breathes  low  with  mellower  tone :  „              102 

eyes  of  anger'd  Eleanor  Do  hunt  me,  d  and  night.'  D.  of  F.  Women  256 

He  will  not  see  the  dawn  of  d.  D.  of  the  0.  Year  11 
Make  bright  our  d's  and  light  our  dreams.  Of  old  sat  Freedom  22 
From  those,  not  blind,  who  wait  for  d.                    Love  thou  thy  land  15 

cutting  eights  that  d  upon  the  pond,  The  Epic  10 

Looks  freshest  in  the  fashion  of  the  d:  „        32 

So  all  d  long  the  noise  of  battle  roU'd  M.  d' Arthur  1 

the  halls  Of  Camelot,  as  in  the  d's  that  were.  „         21 

In  those  old  d's,  one  summer  noon,  „         29 

And  the  d's  darken  round  me,  and  the  years,  „       237 

Rise  like  a  fountain  for  me  night  and  d.  „       249 

Begin  to  feel  the  truth  and  stir  of  d,  „  Ep.  19 

This  morning  is  the  morning  of  the  d  Gardener's  D.  1 
memory  folds  For  ever  in  itself  the  d  we  went  To 

see  her.  „          75 

Sang  loud,  as  tho'  he  were  the  bird  of  d.  „          96 

But  the  full  d  dwelt  on  her  brows,  „         136 

I,  that  whole  d.  Saw  her  no  more,  „         163 

d  by  d,  Like  one  that  never  can  be  wholly  known,  „        205 

chambers  of  the  heart.  Let  in  the  d.'  „        250 

May  not  be  dwelt  on  by  the  common  d.  „        271 

came  a  d  When  Allan  called  his  son,  Dora  9 

d's  went  on,  and  there  was  bom  a  boy  To  William ;  „    48 

And  d  by  a!  he  pass'd  his  father's  gate,  „    50 

Remembering  the  d  when  first  she  came,  „  106 

And  either  twilight  and  the  d  between ;  Edwin  Morris  37 

I  spoke  her  name  alone.    Thrice-happy  d's !  „            68 

seems  a  part  of  those  fresh  d's  to  me ;  ,,          142 

leap'd  and  laugh'd  The  modish  Cupid  of  the  d.  Talking  Oak  67 

ah !  my  friend,  the  d's  were  brief  „          185 

'TLs  little  more :  the  d  was  warm ;  „         205 

Some  happy  future  d.  „         252 

staring  eye  glazed  o'er  with  sapless  d's.  Love  and  Duty  16 

we  that  d  had  been  Up  Snowdon ;  Golden  Year  3 

A  tongue-tied  Poet  in  the  feverous  d's,  „          10 

Happy  d's  Roll  onward,  leading  up  the  golden  year.  „         40 

The  long  d  wanes :  the  slow  moon  climbs  :  Ulysses  55 

strength  which  in  old  d's  Moved  earth  and  heaven ;  „      66 

a  saying  leamt.  In  d's  far-off,  Tithonus  48 

with  what  another  heart  In  d's  far-off,  „        51 

thou  shalt  lower  to  his  level  d  by  d,  Locksley  Hall  45 


Locksley  Hall  99 

110 

158 

183 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  16 

„  Arrival  10 

„  Depart.  7 

31 

Amphion  10 

WiU  Water.  36 

»        154 

„        199 

„        219 

Lady  Clare  8 

The  Captain  13 

25 

L.  of  Burleigh  36 

The  Voyage  58 

Beggar  Maid  8 

Vision  of  Sin  80 

Break,  break,  etc.  15 

Enoch  Arden  25 

147 


Day  {continued)    tum  to,  lighting  upon  d's  like  these  ? 
When  I  heard  my  d's  before  me, 
island  unto  island  at  the  gateways  of  the  d. 
we  sweep  into  the  younger  d : 
Stillness  with  love,  and  d  with  light. 
That  strove  in  other  d's  to  pass. 
And  deep  into  the  dying  d 
Beyond  the  night,  across  the  d, 
song  was  great  In  d's  of  old  Amphion, 
fountain  upward  runs  The  current  of  my  d's : 
draws  me  down  Into  the  common  d  ? 
Ere  d's,  that  deal  in  ana, 
Thy  latter  d's  increased  with  pence 
Grod's  blessing  on  the  d ! 
Dhy  d  more  harsh  and  cruel 

On  a  d  when  they  were  going  O'er  the  lone  expanse. 
Where  they  twain  will  spend  their  d's 
Down  the  waste  waters  d  and  night, 
'  She  is  more  beautiful  than  d,' 
When  a  blanket  wraps  the  d, 
the  tender  grace  of  a  d  that  is  dead 
Enoch  was  host  one  d,  Philip  the  next, 
And  pass  his  d's  in  peace  among  his  own. 

Many  a  sad  kiss  by  d  by  night  renew'd  „         161 

So  all  d  long  till  Enoch's  last  at  home,  „         172 

ship  I  sail  in  passes  here  (He  named  the  d)  „         215 

the  d,  that  Enoch  mention'd,  came,  „         239 

in  d's  of  difficulty  And  pressure,  „         254 

Beheld  the  dead  flame  of  the  fallen  d  „         441 

Thro'  many  a  fair  sea-circle,  d  by  d,  „         542 

or  all  d  long  Sat  often  in  the  seaward-gazing  gorge,  „         588 

No  sail  from  dtod,  but  every  d  „         591 

There  Enoch  rested  silent  manip^  d's.  „         699 

the  dull  November  d  Was  growing  duller  twilight,  „         721 

brought  the  stinted  commerce  of  those  d's ;  „         817 

meet  the  d  When  Enoch  had  retum'd,  „         822 

I  have  not  three  d's  more  to  live ;  „         851 

Coming  every  d,'  She  answer'd.  The  Brook  106 

five  d's  after  that  He  met  the  bailiff  „         145 

if  you  knew  her  in  her  English  d's,  „         224 

the  d's  That  most  she  loves  to  talk  of,  „         225 
Thinn'd,  or  would  seem  to  thin  her  in  a  d,                   Aylmer's  Field  76 

dash'd  Iiito  the  chronicle  of  a  deedful  d,  „           196 

Slept  thro'  the  stately^  minuet  of  those  d's :  „          207 

The  next  d  came  a  neighbour.  „           251 

second  d.  My  lady's  Indian  kinsman  rushing  in,  „           592 

many  thousand  d's  Were  clipt  by  horror  „           602 

Darkly  that  d  rose :  „           609 

At  close  of  d ;  slept,  woke,  Sea  Dreams  18 

birdie  say.  In  her  nest  at  peep  of  d  ?  „         294 

baby  say.  In  her  bed  at  peep  of  d  ?  „         302 

Was  it  the  first  beam  of  my  latest  d  ?  Lucretius  59 

Whether  I  mean  this  d  to  end  myself,  „      146 

Shatter'd  into  one  earthquake  in  one  d  _        „      251 
all  a  summer's  d  Gave  his  broad  lawns                             Princess,  Pro.  1 

Took  this  fair  d  for  text,  „             108 

On  a  sudden  in  the  midst  of  men  and  d,  „            i  15 

the  d's  drew  nigh  that  I  should  wed,  „               41 

three  d's  he  feasted  us.  And  on  the  fourth  „             118 

At  break  of  d  the  College  Portress  came :  „           ii  15 

In  gentler  d's,  your  arrow-wounded  fawn  „             270 

then  d  droopt ;  the  chapel  bells  Call'd  „             470 

the  d  fled  on  thro'  all  Its  range  of  duties  „       Hi  176 

and  mould  The  woman  to  the  fuller  d.'  „             332 

thinking  of  the  d's  that  are  no  more.  „           iv  43 

So  sad,  so  fresh,  the  d's  that  are  no  more.  „               48 

So  sad,  so  strange,  the  d's  that  are  no  more.  „               53 

0  Death  in  Life,  the  d's  that  are  no  more.'  „               58 

was  not  thus,  0  Princess,  in  old  d's :  „            292 

yet  this  d  (tho'  you  should  hate  me  for  it)  „             341 

won  it  with  a  d  Blanch'd  in  oiu"  annals,  „           vi  62 

a  d  Rose  from  the  distance  on  her  memory,  „             111 

With  kisses,  ere  the  d's  of  Lady  Blanche :  ,,114 

while  the  d,  Descending,  stmck  athwart  the  hall,  „             363 

till  on  a  d  When  Cyril  pleaded,  „         vii  11 


Day 


134 


Day 


Day  (continued)    out  of  memories  of  her  kindlier  d's, 
But  such  as  gather'd  colour  d  by  d. 
shares  with  man  His  nights,  his  d's, 
the  new  d  comes,  the  light  Dearer  for  night, 
For  me,  the  genial  d,  the  happy  crowd, 
another  sun,  Warring  on  a  later  d, 
A  d  of  onsets  of  despair ! 
Peace,  it  is  a,d  oi  pain  (repeat) 
not  been  down  to  the  farm  for  a  week  and  a  d ; 
But  I  wept  like  a  child  that  d, 
I  climb'd  the  roofs  at  break  of  d ; 
And  in  my  head,  for  half  the  d ; 
passion  that  lasts  but  a  d ; 
the  d  that  follow'd  the  d  she  was  wed, 
autumn  into  seeming-leafless  d's — 
stars  from  the  night  and  the  sun  from  the  d ! 
merry  for  ever  and  ever,  and  one  d  more. 
Sun  sets,  moon  sets.  Love,  fix  a  d. 
wait  a  little.  You  shall  fix  a  d.' 
And  honour  all  the  d. 
Our  little  systems  have  their  d ; 
They  have  their  d  and  cease  to  be : 
On  the  bald  street  breaks  the  blank  d. 
And  roar  from  yonder  dropping  d : 
Week  after  week :  the  d's  go  by : 
Is  on  the  waters  d  and  night, 
There  twice  a  d  the  Severn  fills ; 
And  was  the  d  of  my  delight  As  pure 
The  very  source  and  fount  of  D 
the  d  prepared  The  daily  burden  for  the  back. 
Old  sisters  ot&d  gone  by. 
Draw  forth  the  cheerful  d  from  night : 
'  Where  wert  thou,  brother,  those  four  d's  ? ' 
A  life  that  leads  melodious  d's. 
As  on  a  meiiden  in  the  d  When  first  she  wears  her 

orange-flower ! 
A  link  among  the  d's,  to  knit 
But  he  forgets  the  d's  before 
The  d's  have  vanish'd,  tone  and  tint, 
D's  order'd  in  a  wealthy  peace, 
The  twilight  of  eternal  d. 
Of  hearts  that  beat  from  dU)  d, 
She  sighs  amid  her  narrow  d's. 
And  tease  her  till  the  d  draws  by : 
His  inner  d  can  never  die, 
The  d's  that  grow  to  something  strange, 
D,  when  my  crown'd  estate  begun 
D,  mark'd  as  with  some  hideous  crime, 

Climb  thy  thick  noon,  disastrous  d : 

I  care  not  in  these  fading  d's 

Can  trouble  Hve  with  April  d's. 

For  now  the  d  was  drawing  on, 

sun  by  sun  the  happy  d's  Descend  below 

Whatever  way  my  d's  decline, 

And  break  the  livelong  summer  d 

And  will  not  yield  them  for  a  d. 

cast  Together  in  the  d's  behind, 

call  The  spirits  from  their  golden  d. 

To  broaden  into  boundless  d. 

The  d's  she  never  can  forget 

D,  when  I  lost  the  flower  of  men ; 

And  each  reflects  a  kindlier  d ; 

These  two  have  striven  half  the  d. 

Nor  landmark  breathes  of  other  d's, 

It  is  the  d  when  he  was  bom,  A  bitter  d  that  early  i 

We  keep  the  d.    With  festal  cheer, 

For  d's  of  happy  commime  deadj 

O  d's  and  hours,  your  work  is  this. 

Are  breathers  of  an  ampler  d 

And  think  of  early  d's  and  thee, 

In  that  it  is  thy  marriage  d 

Since  that  dark  dad  like  this ; 

We  wish  them  store  of  happy  d's. 

But  these  are  the  d'a  oi  advance, 

and  slurring  the  d's  gone  by, 


Princess  mi  106 

5> 

118 

J) 

-263 

)) 

346 

99 

Con.  75 

Ode  on 

Well.  102 

„ 

124 

235,  238 

Grandmother  33 

64 
Daisy  61 

„      74 

G.  of  Swainston  9 

The  Islet  4 

A  Dedication  10 

Window.  Gone  5 

9, 

Ayi 
When  4: 

12 

j^ 

16 

In  Mem 

.,  Pro.  17 

jj 

18 

99 

vii  12 

JJ 

XV  2 

xvii  7 

)> 

11 

xix  5 

,, 

xxiv  1 

3 

,, 

XXV  3 

» 

xxix  13 

» 

XXX  30 

>» 

xxxi  5 

xxxiii  8 

„ 

xlB 

15 

xliv  3 

» 

5 
xlvi  11 

116 

JJ 

Iviii  6 

„ 

IxlO 

14 

Ixvi  15 

JJ 

Ixxi  11 

j' 

Ixxii  5 

JJ 

18 

26 

JJ 

Ixxv  9 

JJ 

Ixxxiii  7 

„ 

Ixxxiv  10 

„ 

27 

Ixxxv  41 

,1 

Ixxxix  31 

a;c  16 

») 

xdi  6 

xciv  6 

'j' 

xcv  64 

JJ 

xcvii  14 

xcix  4 

cl8 

JJ 

CM  17 

J, 

civ  11 

ink     „ 

cvii  1 

JJ 

21 

JJ 

cxvi  14 

99 

cxvii  1 

cxviii  6 

cxix  8 

JJ 

Con.  3 

J 

8 

"j 

84 

"Maud  I  i  25 

33 

Day  (continued)    riding  at  set  of  d  Over  the  dark  moor  land,      Maud  I  ix  5 
I  siaall  have  had  my  d.  (repeat).  „  xi  7,  14 

But  this  is  the  d  when  I  must  speak,  „       xvi  7 

O  this  is  the  d !  „      _  _      9 

Go  not,  happy  d,  (repeat)  ,9  xvii  1,  3 

And  you  fair  stars  that  crown  a  happy  d  „  xviii  30 

Among  the  fragments  of  the  golden  d.  „  70 

On  the  d  when  Maud  was  bom ;  „     xix  40 

Sat  with  her,  read  to  her,  night  and  d,  „  75 

And  half  to  the  rising  d ;  „    xxii  24 

The  d  comes,  a  dull  red  ball  „  //  iv  65 

paid  our  tithes  in  the  d's  that  arc  gone,  „        v  23 

To  catch  a  friend  of  mine  one  stormy  d;  „  85 

Voice  in  the  rich  dawn  of  an  ampler  d —  Ded.  of  Idylls  36 

wolf  and  boar  and  bear  Came  night  and  d,  Com.  of  Arthur  24 

And  even  in  high  d  the  morning  star.  „  100 

lords  Of  that  fierce  d  were  as  the  lords  „  216 

those  first  d's  had  golden  hours  for  me,  „  357 

Blow,  for  our  Sun  is  mightier  dhy  dl 
So  make  thy  manhood  mightier  dhj  d; 
thou  shalt  serve  a  twelvemonth  and  a  d.' 
ancient  kings  who  did  their  d's  in  stone ; 
drink  among  thy  kitchen-knaves  A  twelvemonth  and  a  d, 
some  fine  d  Und.o  thee  not — 
My  deeds  will  speak :  it  is  but  for  a  d.' 
That  same  d  there  past  into  the  hall 
call  themselves  the  D,  Moming-Star, 
towers  where  that  d  a  feast  had  been  Held 
To  fight  the  brotherhood  of  D  and  Night — 
D  and  Night  and  Death  and  Hell.' 
O  dewy  flowers  that  close  when  d  is  done, 
O  birds  that  warble  as  the  d  goes  by. 
As  on  the  d*when  Arthur  knighted  him.' 
all  d  long  hath  rated  at  her  child.  And  vext  his  d, 

but  blesses  him  asleep — . 
Seeing  he  never  rides  abroad  by  d ; 
sprang  the  happier  d  from  imderground ; 
To  make  her  beauty  vary  d  by  d. 
And  dhy  d  she  thought  to  tell  Geraint, 
There  on  a  d,  he  sitting  high  in  hall, 
milky-white.  First  seen  that  d : 
And  on  the  third  d  will  again  be  here, 
this  nephew,  fight  In  next  d's  tourney 
Danced  in  his  bosom,  seeing  better  d's. 
the  third  d  from  the  himting-mom  Made 
So  bent  he  seem'd  on  going  the  third  d, 
Bent  as  he  seem'd  on  going  this  third  d. 
Yet  if  he  could  but  tarry  a  d  or  two, 
when  the  fourth  part  of  the  d  was  gone. 
In  former  d's  you  saw  me  favourably, 
but  overtoil'd  By  that  d's  grief  and  travel, 
dawn  ascending  lets  the  d  Strike  where  it  clung 
hardest  tyrants  in  their  d  of  power. 
So  past  the  d's. 

And  clothed  her  in  apparel  like  the  d. 
Proclaim'd  him  Victor,  and  the  d  was  won. 
those  fair  d's — not  all  as  cool  as  these 
The  whole  d  died,  but,  dying,  gleam'd 
'  Brother,  I  dwelt  a  din  Pellam's  hall : 
Thy  curse,  and  darken'd  all  thy  d ; 
on  a  festal  d  When  Guinevere  was  crossing 
on  a  dull  d  in  an  Ocean  cave  The  blind  wave 
Had  I  for  three  d's  seen,  ready  to  fall. 
Sweet  were  the  d's  when  I  was  all  unknown, 
Well,  those  were  not  our  d's : 
Nor  rested  thus  content,  but  d  by  d. 
Dull  d's  were  those,  till  our  good  Arthur 
in  the  fight  which  all  d  long  Hang 
when  the  next  d  broke  from  underground, 
If  any  man  that  d  were  left  afield, 
But  on  that  d  when  Lancelot  fled  the  lists, 
our  knight,  thro'  whom  we  won  the  d, 
after  two  d's'  tarriance  there,  retum'd. 
so  d  by  d  she  past  In  either  twilight 
and  every  d  she  tended  him, 


Gareih  and  L.  92 

157 

305 

446 

476 

577 

587 

633 

847 

857 

887 

1067 

1076 

,9         1240 

1285 
1334 
1421 

Mart,  of  Geraint  9 
65 
147 
151 
222 
476 
505 
597 
604 
625 
627 
Geraint  and  E.  55 
315 
377 


930 
„  948 
Balin  and  Balan  90 
273 
314 
605 
620 
Merlin  and  V.  64 
231 
296 
501 
612 
Lancelot  and  E.  13 
279 
287 
413 
459 
525 
529 
569 
848 
850 


Day  135 

Day  (contimied)  Alas  for  me  then,  my  good  d's  are  done.'  Lancelot  and  E.  947 


Day 


And  in  those  d's  she  made  a  httle  song, 

So  that  d  there  was  dole  in  Astolat. 

That  d  Sir  Lancelot  at  the  palace  craved 

After  the  d  of  darkness,  when  the  dead 

A  little  lonely  church  in  d's  of  yore, 

For  on  A  d  she  sent  to  speak  with  me. 

beam  of  light  seven  times  more  clear  than  d : 

ride  A  twelvemonth  and  a  d  in  quest  of  it, 

early  that  same  d,  Scaped  thro'  a  cavern 

'  But  when  the  next  d  brake  from  under  ground — 

but  moving  with  me  night  and  d,  Fainter  by  d,  but  always 

in  the  night 
when  the  d  began  to  wane,  we  went, 
while  I  tarried,  every  d  she  set  A  banquet  richer  than  the 

d  before 
then  came  a  night  Still  as  the  d  was  loud ; 
twelvemonth  and  a  d  were  pleasant  to  me,' 
Seven  d's  I  drove  along  the  dreary  deep, 
Let  visions  of  the  night  or  of  the  d  Come, 
Riding  at  noon,  a  dor  twain  before, 
and  slowly  Pelleas  drew  To  that  dim  d, 
all  d  long  Sir  Pelleas  kept  the  field 
but  rose  With  morning  every  d, 

Full-arm'd  upon  his  charger  all  d  long  Sat  by  the  walls, 
I  see  thy  face  But  once  a  d : 
Give  me  three  d's  to  melt  her  fancy, 
So  those  three  d's,  aimless  about  the  land, 
risen  against  me  in  their  blood  At  the  last  d  ? 
And  each  foresaw  the  dolorous  dtohe: 
Arm'd  for  &doi  glory  before  the  King, 
behold  This  d  my  Queen  of  Beauty  is  not  here.' 
wan  d  Went  glooming  down  in  wet  and  weariness : 
Our  one  white  d  of  Innocence  hath  past, 
new  life — the  d's  of  frost  are  o'er :  New  life,  new  love, 

to  suit  the  newer  d : 
I  have  had  my  d. 

I  have  had  my  d  and  my  philosophies — 
King  Was  victor  wellnigh  d  by  d, 
fool,'  said  Tristram, '  not  in  open  d.' 
So  on  for  all  that  d  from  lawn  to  lawn 
Built  for  a  summer  d  with  Queen  Isolt 
Then  pressing  dhy  d  thro'  Lyonesse 
he  went  To-day  for  three  d's'  hunting, — 
There  came  a  5  as  still  as  heaven, 
golden  d's  In  which  she  saw  him  first, 
and  every  d  Beheld  at  noon  in  some  delicious  dale 
in  the  golden  d's  before  thy  sin. 
The  d's  will  grow  to  weeks, 
The  sombre  close  of  that  voluptuous  d, 
that  d  when  the  great  light  of  heaven  Bum'd 
when  the  dolorous  d  Grew  drearier 
The  voice  of  d's  of  old  and  d's  to  be. 
whiter  than  the  mist  that  all  d  long 
So  all  d  long  the  noise  of  battle  roU'd 
the  halls  Of  Camelot,  as  in  the  d's  that  were. 
In  those  old  d's,  one  summer  noon, 
the  d's  darken  round  me,  and  the  years, 
Rise  like  a  fountain  for  me  night  and  d. 
the  three  whereat  we  gazed  On  that  high  d, 
Bear  witness,  that  rememberable  d, 
make  it  wholly  thine  on  sunny  d's. 
d's  Of  dewy  dawning  and  the  amber  eves 
when  d  himg  From  his  mid-dome  in  Heaven's 
all  her  flowers,  And  length  of  d's, 
with  the  growths  Of  vigorous  early  d's. 
Before  he  saw  my  d  my  father  died, 
I  said  to  her, '  A  rf  for  Gods  to  stoop,' 
for  that  d  Love,  rising,  shook  his  wings, 
d  which  did  enwomb  that  happy  hour,  Thou  art  blessed 

in  the  years,  divinest  d ! 
Then  had  he  stemm'd  my  d  with  night. 
Yet  bearing  round  about  him  his  own  d, 
come  To  boys  and  girls  when  summer  d's  are  new, 
where  that  d  I  crown'd  myself  as  king, 


1004 

1136 

,;  1162 

Edy  Grail  49 

64 


101 
187 
197 
206 
338 

471 


„   588 

„   683 

„   750 

„   808 

„   910 

PeSeas  and  E.  20 

30 

168 

215 

216 

244 

356 

391 

462 

606 

iMst  Tournament  55 

209 

214 

218 

278 
316 

;;     319 

„  335 
347 
373 
378 
501 
530 
Guinevere  292 

„  380 
392 

„    500 

„    624 

688 

Pass,  of  Arthur  90 

122 

135 

137 

170 

189 

197 

405 

417 

454 

To  the  Queen  ii3 

Lover's  Tale  i  14 

51 

65 

105 

133 

191 

304 

316 

485 
502 
510 
555 
592 


Day  {continued)    for  the  d  was  as  the  night  to  me !  The  night 
to  me  was  kinder  than  the  d ;  The  night  in  pity  took 
away  my  d.  Lover's  Tale  610 

All  (i  I  watch'd  the  floating  isles  of  shade,  ,,         ii5 

All  d  I  sat  within  the  cavern-mouth. 

The  d  waned ;  Alone  I  sat  with  her : 

From  the  outer  d.  Betwixt  the  close-set  ivies 

I  CAME  one  d  and  sat  among  the  stones 

what  height  The  d  had  grown  I  know  not. 

had  lain  three  d's  without  a  pulse : 

till  the  great  d  Peal'd  on  us  with  that  music 

that  d  a  boy  was  bom,  Heir  to  his  face  and  land, 

for  wasn't  he  coming  that  d  ? 

For  the  down's  are  as  bright  as  d, 

you  were  only  made  for  the  d. 

past  away  with  five  ships  of  war  that  d, 

drew  away  From  the  Spanish  fleet  that  d, 

fought  such  a  fight  for  a  d  and  a  night 

And  a  d  less  or  more  At  sea  or  ashore, 

tho'  I  loiter'd  there  The  full  d  after, 

lake  and  mountain  conquers  all  the  d. 

my  crowning  hoiu",  my  d  of  d's. 

Then  came  the  d  when  I,  Flattering  myself 

Not  I  that  d  of  Edith's  love  or  mine — 

Edith  would  be  bridesmaid  on  the  d.    But  on  that 
d,  not  being  all  at  ease. 

Thro'  dreams  by  night  and  trances  of  the  d, 

but  the  good  Lord  Jesus  has  had  his  d.' 

Say  that  His  d  is  done ! 

for  fifteen  d's  or  for  twenty  at  most. 

it  chanced  on  a  d  Soon  as  the  blast 

we  were  every  d  fewer  and  fewer. 

to  be  a  soldier  all  d  and  be  sentinel 

Ever  the  d  with  its  traitorous  death 

Then  d  and  night,  d  and  night, 

♦  Hold  it  for  fifteen  d's ! ' 

might  be  kindlier :  happOy  come  the  d ! 

so  spum'd,  so  baited  two  whole  d's — 

more  than  once  in  d's  Of  doubt  and  cloud 

To  whom  I  send  my  prayer  by  night  and  d — 

slain  my  father  the  d  before  I  was  bom. 

And  we  stay'd  three  d's,  and  we  gorged 

till  the  labourless  d  dipt  under  the  West ; 

thunder  of  God  peal'd  over  us  all  the  d, 

I  shall  join  you  in&d. 

arm'd  by  d  and  night  Against  the  Turk ; 

All  d  the  men  contend  in  grievous  war 

I,  wearing  but  the  garland  of  a  d, 

When,  in  our  younger  London  d's, 

A  clearer  d  Than  om  poor  twiUght 

All  d  long  far-off  in  the  cloud  of  the  city, 

the  sun  of  the  soul  made  d  in  the  dark 

That  d  my  nurse  had  brought  me  the  child. 

Ten  long  sweet  summer  d's  upon  deck, 

the  sons  of  a  winterless  d. 

Ten  long  d's  of  summer  and  sin — if  it  must  be  so — 
But  d's  of  a  larger  light  than  I  ever  again  shall 
know — D's  that  wiU  glimmer,  I  fear, 

little  one  found  me  at  sea  on  a  d, 

the  storm  and  the  d's  went  by,  but  I  knew  no  more — 

'  Ten  long  sweet  summer  d's '  of  fever. 

And  gone — that  d  of  the  storm — 

Three  d's  since,  three  more  dark  d's 

to  the  glare  of  a  drearier  d ; 

What  mlers  but  the  D's  and  Hours 

The  d's  and  hours  are  ever  glancing  by. 

But  with-  the  Nameless  is  nor  D  nor  Hour ; 

For  man  has  overlived  his  d 

If  utter  darkness  closed  the  d, 

sight  and  night  to  lose  themselves  in  d. 

When  only  D  should  reign.' 

D  and  Night  are  children  of  the  Sun, 

No  night  no  d ! — I  touch  thy  world  again — 

And  send  the  d  into  the  darken'd  heart ; 

dawn  of  more  than  mortal  d  Strike  on  the  Mount  of  Vision ! 


37 

139 

.171 

„         Hi  1 

"        .     9 

„        iv  34 

64 

128 

First  Quarrel  47 

Rizpah  4 

„     19 

The  Revenge  13 

47 

83 

86 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  98 

100 

124 

139 

142 

208 

274 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  22 

71 

Def.  of  Lwchnow  9 

31 

49 

74 

79 

92 

105 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  23 

163 

Columbus  155 

233 

V.  of  Maeldune  8 

67 


„        113 
To  W.  H.  BroohfUld  14 

Montenegro  3 

AchiUes  over  the  T.  9 

To  Dante  6 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  54 

Tiresias  205 

The  Wreck  29 

55 

59 

64 

74 


77 

86 

»       111 

147 

„       148 

Despair  6 

„     28 

Ancient  Sage  95 

99 

102 

150 

199 

203 

244 

245 

249 

261 

284 


Day 


136 


Dead 


Day  (continited)    morning  brings  the  d  I  hate  and  fear ;  The  Flight  2 

the  mom  is  cahn,  and  like  another  d;  „         10 

on  that  summer  d  When  I  had  fall'n  „         21 

love  that  keeps  his  heart  alive  beats  on  it  night  and  d —  „         35 

an'  yer  eyes  as  bright  as  the  d !  Tomorrow  32 

paiirints  had  inter'd  glory,  an'  both  in  wan  d,  „         53 

sleeps  the  gleam  of  dying  d.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  42 

watching  till  the  d  begun —  „  91 

force  to  guide  us  thro'  the  d's  I  shall  not  see  ?  „  158 

On  this  d  and  at  this  hour,  „  175 

planets  whirling  round  them,  flash  a  million  miles  ad.         „  204 

I  shelter'd  in  this  archway  from  a,  dot  driving  showers —    „  259 

my  Leonard,  use  and  not  abuse  your  d,  „  265 

stood  like  a  rock  In  the  wave  of  a  stormy  d ;  Heavy  Brigade  57 

I  that  loved  thee  since  my  d  began,  To  Virgil  38 

The  light  of  d's  when  life  begun.  The  d's  that 

seem  to-day, 
now  thy  long  d's  work  hath  ceased, 
maintain  The  d  against  the  moment,  and  the 

year  Against  the  d ; 
Uve  With  stronger  life  from  dtod; 
Two  Suns  of  Love  make  d  of  human  life, 
light  and  genial  warmth  of  double  d. 
Men  that  in  a  narrower  d — 


Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  23 
Epit.  on  Stratford  2 


To  Duke  of  Argyll  6 
Hands  all  round  6 
Prin.  Beatrice  1 
22 
Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  25 
lavish  all  the  golden  d  To  make  them  wealthier  Poets  and  their  B.  3 
Your  viceregal  d's  Have  added  fulness  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  10 

My  memories  of  his  briefer  d  WUl  mix  „  51 

,    that  the  d,  When  here  thy  hands  let  fall  Demeter  and  P.  8 

And  robed  thee  in  his  ^  from  head  to  feet —  „  21 

a  worm  which  writhes  all  d,  Fastness  17 

Voices  of  the  d  Are  heard  across  the  Voices  of  the  dark.       The  Ring  39 
when  you  came  of  age  Or  on  the  d  you  married.     Both 

the  d's  Now  close  in  one. 
made  The  rosy  twilight  of  a  perfect  d. 
on  her  birthday,  and  that  d  His  death-day, 
one  d  came  And  saw  you,  shook  her  head, 
I  came,  I  went,  was  happier  dhj  d; 
on  that  d  Two  lovers  parted  by  no  scurrilous  tale — 
In  summer  if  I  reach  my  d — 
When  frost  is  keen  and  d's  are  brief — 
years  ago.  In  rick-fire  d's,  When  Dives  loathed 

the  times, 
O'er  his  uncertain  shadow  droops  the  d. 
While  the  long  d  of  knowledge  grows  and  warms, 
Thy  scope  of  operation,  d  by  d, 
stvtmbled  back  again  Into  the  common  d, 
To  you  my  d's  have  been  a  life-long  lie, 
To  flame  along  another  dreary  d. 
And  on  this  white  midwinter  d — 
d  long  labour'd,  hewing  the  pines, 
vanish'd  hke  a  ghost  Before  the  d, 
more  than  he  that  sang  the  Works  and  D's, 
d  by  d,  thro'  many  a  blood-red  eve, 
off  the  rosy  cheek  of  waking  D. 
one  d  He  had  left  his  dagger  behind  him. 
alone  in  the  dell  at  the  close  of  the  d. 
and  the  d  I  was  bom. 
she  sat  d  and  night  by  my  bed, 
Dawn  not  D !  (repeat) 
Storm  in  the  South  that  darkeas  the  d ! 
if  Thou  wiliest,  let  my  d  be  brief.  So  Thou  wilt 

strike  Thy  glory  thro'  the  d. 
Must  my  d  be  dark  by  reason, 
after  his  brief  range  of  blameless  d's, 
Daylight    Ind  to  Ind,  but  in  fair  d  woke, 
Flood  with  full  d  glebe  and  town  ? 
Seems  to  the  quiet  d  of  your  minds 
J^ong  as  the  d  Lasted, 


„  78 

,,  187 

„  212 

„  312 

„  348 

„  426 
To  Ulysses  9 

„  19 

To  Mary  Boyle  28 

Prog,  of  Spring  8 

101 

111 

Romney's  R.  33 

41 

„  58 

To  Master  of  B.  9 

Death  of  (Enone  62 

68 

To  Virgil  6 

St.  Telemachus  3 

A  kbar's  Dream  202 

Bandit's  Death  11 

19 

Charity  24 

33 

The  Dawn  11, 16 

Riflemen,  form  !  2 


Doubt  and  Prayer  13 

God  and  the  Univ.  2 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  9 

Buonaparte  4 

Two  Voices  87 

Lover's  Tale  i  296 

Batt.  of  Brunanbiirh  38 

d  made  itself  Ruddy  thro'  both  the  roofs  of  sight,  Tiresias  2 

whence  an  affluent  f  oimtain  pour'd  From  darkness  into  d,    A  ncient  Sage  8 

vapour  in  d  Over  the  mountain  Floats,  Kapiolani  16 

Daylong    you  caught  HLs  weary  d  chirping.  The  Brook  53 

Dayshine     Naked  in  open  d?'     '  Nay,'  she  cried,  Gareth  and  L.  1092 

Dazed     the  sudden  light  D  me  half-blind  :  Princess  v  12 

And  d  all  eyes,  till  Arthur  by  main  might.  Com.  of  Arthur  109 


Dazed  (continued)    Some  flush 'd,  and  others  d.  Com.  of  Arthur  265 

nor  lights  nor  feast  D  or  amazed,  Lover's  Tale  iv  311 

d  and  dumb  With  passing  thro'  at  once  Demeter  and  P.  6 

end  myself  too  with  the  dagger — so  deafen'd  and  d —  Bandit's  Death  37 

Dazing    from  the  lava-lake  D  the  starlight,  Kapiolani  15 

Dazzle    not  shown  To  d  all  that  see  them  ?  The  Ring  144 

Dazzled    both  his  eyes  were  d,  as  he  stood,  M.  d' Arthur  59 

The  rhymes  are  d  from  their  place  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  19 

boyish  dream  involved  and  d  down  Princess  iv  450 

Be  d  by  the  wildfire  Love  to  sloughs  „        v  441 

In  either  hand  be  bore  What  d  all,  Gareth  and  L.  387 

And  d  by  the  livid-flickering  fork,  Merlin  and  V.  941 

So  that  his  eyes  were  d  looking  at  it.  Pelleas  and  E.  36 

Was  d  by  the  sudden  light,  „           105 

both  his  eyes  were  ti  as  he  stood,  Pass,  of  Arthur  227 

Dazzling    The  sun  came  d  thro'  the  leaves,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  3 

Dead  (adj.)    {See  also  DeS,d,  Half-dead)    All  cold,  and 

d,  and  corpse-Uke  grown  ?  Supp.  Confessions  17 
I  would  that  I  were  d ! '  (repeat)                Mariana  12,  24,  36,  48,  60,  72 

Oh  God,  that  I  were  d ! '  Mariana  84 

Nor  canst  thou  show  the  dead  are  d.  Two  Voices  267 

like  a  shadow,  and  the  winds  are  d.  (Enone  28 

He  look'd  so  grand  when  he  was  d.  The  Sisters  32 

Since  I  beheld  yoimg  Laurence  d.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vera  28 

Roman  soldier  found  Me  lying  d,  D.  of  F.  Women  1 62 

And  the  old  year  is  d.  „               248 

But  he'll  be  d  before.  D.  of  the  0.  Year  32 

I  see  the  true  old  times  are  d,  M.  d' Arthur  229 

who  was  d.  Who  married,  who  was  like  to  be,  AuMey  Court  29 

I  hope  my  end  draws  nigh :  half  d  I  am,  St.  S.  Stylites  37 

this  wonder,  d,  become  Mere  highway  dust  ?  Love  and  Duty  10 

Better  thou  wert  d  before  me,  Locksley  Hall  56 

Can  I  think  of  her  as  d,  and  love  her  „             73 

And  haU  the  crew  are  sick  or  d.  The  Voyage  92 
Come  not,  when  I  am  d,                                            Come  not,  when,  etc.  1 

She  talk'd  as  if  her  love  were  d,  The  Letters  27 

tender  grace  of  a  day  that  is  d  Break,  break,  etc.  15 

Still  downward  thinking  '  dor  dto  me ! '  Enoch  Arden  689 

If  you  could  tell  her  you  had  seen  him  d,  „           808 

Not  to  reveal  it,  till  you  see  me  d.'    '  D,'  „           839 

But  if  my  children  care  to  see  me  d,  „           888 

Were  d  to  him  already ;  bent  as  he  was  Aylmer's  Field  445 

D  for  two  years  before  his  death  was  he ;  „             837 

We  mwsi  forgive  the  dead.'    '  Dead !  who  is  d?'  Sea  Dreams  270 
He  suddenly  dropt  d  of  heart-disease.'      '  Z)  ?  he  ? 

of  heart-disease ?  what  heart  had  he  To  die  of  ?  d\'  „          274 

crush  her  pretty  maiden  fancies  d  Princess  i  88 

Peace  be  with  her.    She  is  d.  „    i»  136 

And  strikes  him  d  for  thine  and  thee.  „        584 

cold  reverence  worse  than  were  she  d.  „       v  92 

I  would  the  old  God  of  war  himself  were  d,  „        145 

Home  they  brought  her  warrior  d :  „       vi  1 

she  said, '  he  Hves :  he  is  not  d :  „        122 

he  is  d,  Or  all  as  d! :  „        169 

Till  the  Srni  drop,  d,  from  the  signs.'  „  vii  245 

lift  thine  eyes ;  my  doubts  are  d,  „        348 

if  to-night  our  greatness  were  strack  d.  Third  of  Feb.  17 

was  d  before  he  was  bom,  (repeat)  Grandmother  59,  68 

not  always  certain  if  they  be  alive  or  d.  „                 84 
And  when  I  am  there  and  d  and  gone,                   Window.  No  Answer  11 

Where  lies  the  master  newly  d ;  In  Mem.  xx  4 

But,  he  was  d,  and  there  he  sits,  „   xxxii  3 

'  But  brooding  on  the  dear  one  d.  In  Mem.  xxxvii  17 

Nor  can  I  dream  of  thee  as  d:  „           Ixviii  4 

Regret  is  d,  but  love  is  more  „          Con.  17 

and  found  The  shining  daffodil  d,  Maud  I  Hi  14 

Had  I  lain  for  a  century  d ;  „      xxii  72 

Strike  d  the  whole  weak  race  of  venomous  worms,  „      II  i46 

Who  knows  if  he  bed?  „         ii  71 

She  is  but  d,  and  the  time  Ls  at  hand  „         iii  8 

There  is  some  one  dying  or  d,  „         iv  48 

D,  long  d.  Long  d\  „            vl 

And  wept,  and  wLsh'd  that  I  were  d;  Com.  of  Arthur  345 

Thrall'd  in  his  castle,  and  hath  starved  him  d ;  Gareth  and  L.  358 

Emrys  would  have  scourged  thee  d,  „           375 


Dead 


137 


Dead 


Dead  (adj.)  (continued)  Fell,  as  if  (2 ;  but  quickly  rose 

and  drew,  Gareth  and  L.  967 
and  all  wing'd  nothings  peck  him  d !                        Marr.  of  Geraint  275 

be  he  d  I  know  not,  but  he  past  to  the  wild  land.  „             442 

once  without  remorse  to  strike  her  d,  Geraint  and  E.  109 

and  so  left  him  stunn'd  or  d,  „             464 

'What,  is  he  <Z?'    '  No,  no,  not  d ! '  „             541 

sure  am  I,  quite  sure,  he  is  not  d.'  „             545 

if  he  be  not  d.  Why  wail  ye  for  him  thus  ?  „  546 
And  be  he  d,  I  count  you  for  a  fool ;  Your  wailing 

will  not  quicken  him :  d  or  not,  „             548 

yet  lay  stUl,  and  feign'd  himself  as  d,  „             588 

were  I  d  who  is  it  would  weep  for  me  ?  „             618 

Take  warning :  yonder  man  is  surely  d ;  „             672 

Except  he  surely  knew  my  lord  was  d,^  „             721 

died  Earl  Doorm  by  him  be  counted  d.  „  730 
D,  whom  we  buried ;  more  than  one  of  us               Balin  and  Balan  122 

yonder  lies  one  d  within  the  wood.     Not  d ;  „              468 

like  brainless  bulls,  D  for  one  heifer ! '  „             579 

Coming  and  going,  and  he  lay  as  d  Merlin  and  V.  213 

Ck)ming  and  going,  and  she  lay  as  d,  „             644 

And  in  the  hollow  oak  he  lay  as  d,  „              969 

I  fear  me,  that  will  strike  my  blossom  d.  Lancelot  and  E.  971 

Give  me  good  fortune,  I  will  strike  him  d,  „            1071 

she  did  not  seem  as  d,  But  fast  asleep,  „            1160 

broken  shed.  And  in  it  a  <2  babe ;  Holy  Grail  399 

dry  old  trunks  about  us,  d,  Yea,  rotten  „          495 

And  one  had  wedded  her,  and  he  was  d,  „          586 

'  Lo !  Pelleas  is  d — he  told  us —  Pelleas  and  E.  377 

'  Z>,  is  it  so  ? '  she  ask'd.    '  Ay,  ay,'  said  he,  „              384 

I  to  your  d  man  have  given  my  troth,  „  389 
one  Murmuring,  *  All  courtesy  is  d,'                          Last  Tournament  211 

The  leaf  is  d,  the  yearning  past  away :  „              277 

Is  all  the  laughter  gone  d  out  of  thee  ? —  „              300 

High  on  a  grim  d  tree  before  the  tower,  „              430 

Heard  in  d  night  along  that  table-shore,  „              463 

' my  man  Hath  left  me  qx  is  d;'  „              495 

child  of  one  I  honour'd,  happy,  d  before  thy  shame  ?  Guinevere  423 

strike  him  d,  and  meet  myself  Death,  „        575 

strikes  them  d  is  as  my  death  to  me.  Pass,  of  Arthur  74 

That  quick  or  d  thou  boldest  me  for  King.  „             161 

I  see  the  true  old  times  are  d,  „            397 

Hope  was  not  wholly  d,  But  breathing  hard  Lover's  Tale  i  584 

I  had  lain  as  d.  Mute,  blind  and  motionless  „              606 

D,  for  henceforth  there  was  no  life  for  me !  „              608 

but  mine  was  wholly  d,  „              724 

Some  one  had  told  me  she  was  d,  „            ii  70 

low  knell  tolling  his  lady  d —  D —  „            iv  33 

All  that  look'd  on  her  had  pronoimced  her  d.  „               35 

but  after  my  man  was  d ;  First  Quarrel  6 

an'  I  wish  I  was  d —  „         52 

hear  that  cry  of  my  boy  that  was  d,  Rizpah  45 

bullet  struck  him  that  was  dressing  it  suddenly  d,  The  Eeoenge  67 

nay,  murder'd,  doubtless  d.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  60 

Some  d  of  hunger,  some  beneath  the  scoui^e,  Columbus  177 

he  had  stricken  my  father  d —  V.  of  Maddune  1 

men  dropt  d  in  the  valleys  „  31 
D  of  some  inward  agony — is  it  so  ?                        To  W.  H.  Brookfield  10 

the  winds  were  d  for  heat ;  Tiresias  34 

and  dash'd  herself  D  in  her  rage :  „      153 

D  to  the  death  beside  me.  The  Wreck  113 

I  would  thank  him,  the  other  is  d,  Despair  70 
From  the  d  fossil  skull  that  is  left  in  the  rocks  of 

an  earth  that  isd?  „       86 

Would  fain  that  he  were  d ;  Ancient  Sage  126 

Found,  fear'd  me  d,  and  groan'd,  The  Flight  23 

an  icy  corpse  d  of  some  foul  disease :  „          54 

he  comes,  and  finds  me  d.  „          72 

'Ud  'a  shot  his  own  sowl  d  for  a  kiss  Tomorrow  40 

her  wits  wor  d,  an'  her  hair  was  as  white  „        60 

an'  dhropt  down  d  an  the  dead.  „  80 
D  the  warrior,  d  his  glory,  d  the  cause  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  30 
Lies  my  Amy  d  in  child-birth,  d  the  mother,  d 

the  child.     D — and  sixty  years  ago,  and  d 

her  aged  husband  now —  36 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  174 
181 
Dead  Prophet  1 
5 
9 
Epit.  on  Gordon  2 
To  Prof.  Jehh  11 
Vastness  36 
The  Ring  286 
„        451 
454 
462 
471 
Forlorn  1 

„        9 

Happy  50 

„      83 


Dead  (adj.)  (continued)    earth  be  d  as  yon  d  world 

the    moon?       D  the   new   astronomy   calls 

her.  .  .  . 
D,  but  now  her  living  glory  lights  the  hall, 
D !  And  the  Muses  cried  with  a  stormy  cry 
Z> !  '  Is  it  fee  then  brought  so  low  ? ' 
D,  who  had  served  his  time, 
somewhere  d  far  in  the  waste  Soudan, 
Tho'  d  in  its  Trinacrian  Enna, 
The  dead  are  not  d  but  alive, 
she  my  Miriam  d  within  the  year. 
D !  I  took  And  chafed  the  freezing  hand. 
D ! — and  maybe  stung  With  some  remorse, 
— but  d  so  long,  gone  up  so  far. 
In  fright,  and  fallen  d. 
'  He  is  fled — I  wish  him  d — 
He  is  fled,  or  he  is  d, 
and  when  The  Priest  pronounced  you  d, 
fire  from  Heaven  had  dash'd  him  d, 
As  d  from  all  the  human  race  as  if  beneath  the  mould ;  If 

you  be  d,  then  I  am  d,  „      95 

D  with  the  dead  ?  To  Mary  Boyle  14 

mountain  rolls  into  the  plain.  Fell  headlong  d ;  Death  of  (Enone  52 

then  a  shower  of  stones  that  stoned  him  d,  St.  Telemachus  68 

rabble  in  half -amaze  Stared  at  him  d,  „            72 
band  will  be  scatter'd  now  their  gallant  captain  is  d,    Bandit's  Death  41 

birthday  came  of  a  boy  bom  happily  d.  Charity  34 

when  all  but  the  winds  were  d.  The  Dreamer  1 
Dead  (s)     (See  also  Living-dead).     Ev'n  in  the  chamels 

of  the  d,  Two  Voices  215 

Nor  canst  thou  show  the  d  are  dead.  „         267 

'  We  find  no  motion  in  the  d.'  „          279 

And  of  the  rising  from  the  d.  Palace  of  Art  206 

Once  heard  at  d  of  night  to  greet  On  a  Mourner  32 
As  we  bear  blossom  of  the  d ;                                    Love  thou  thy  land  94 

And  grassy  barrows  of  the  happier  d.  Tithonus  71 
He  gazes  on  the  silent  d :                                            Day -Dm.,  Arrival  13 

'  O  love,  thy  kiss  would  wake  the  d\'  „         Depart.  20 

was  deadly  wounded  Falling  on  the  d.  The  Captain  64 

And  the  d  begin  to  dance.  Vision  of  Sin  166 

Yes,  as  the  d  we  weep  for  testify —  Aylmer's  Field  747 

We  must  forgive  the  d.'    ' D\  who  is  dead ? '  Sea  Dreams  270 

shine  among  the  d  Hereafter ;  tales !  Lucretius  129 

Sat  watching  like  a  watcher  by  the  d.  Princess  v  62 

And  watches  in  the  d,  the  dark,  „  vii  103 

Thy  living  voice  to  me  was  as  the  voice  of  the  d,  V.  of  Cauteretz  8 

voice  of  the  d  was  a  living  voice  to  me.  „          10 

And  scratch  the  very  d  for  spite :  Lit.  Squabbles  8 

That  name  the  imder-lying  d.  In  Mem.  ii  2 

And  hear  the  ritual  of  the  d.  „     xviii  12 

But  Sorrow — fixt  upon  the  d,  „     xxxix  8 

How  fares  it  with  the  happy  d?  „         xliv  1 

Do  we  indeed  desire  the  d  Should  still  be  near  „           U  1 

The  d  shall  look  me  thro'  and  thro'.  „          u  12 

Eternal  greetings  to  the  d ;  „      IvH  14 

So  hold  I  commerce  with  the  d ;  ,,  Ixxxv  93 

Or  so  methinks  the  d  would  say ;  „              94 

That  could  the  d,  whose  dying  eyes  „          xc  5 

hold  An  hour's  communion  with  the  d.  „       xciv  4 

The  noble  letters  of  the  d :  ,,      xcv  24 

And  woodlands  holy  to  the  d',  xcix  8 

I  dream'd  a  vision  of  the  d,  ciii  3 

But  trust  that  those  we  call  the  d  ,,    cxviii  5 

Should  pile  her  barricades  with  d.  „    cxxvii  8 

Her  feet,  my  darling,  on  the  d ;  „    Con.  50 

I  hear  the  d  at  midday  moan,  Maud  I  vi  70 

For  I  thought  the  d  had  peace,  „    II  v  15 

which  makes  us  loud  in  the  world  of  the  d  „           25 

For  it  is  but  a  world  of  the  d;  „            40 

comes  from  another  stiller  world  of  the  d,  „            70 

the  Uving  quiet  as  the  d,  Com.  of  Arthur  123 
I  cannot  brook  to  gaze  upon  the  d.'                           Balin  and  Balan  586 

Among  the  d  and  sown  upon  the  wind —  Merlin  and  V.  45 

And  by  the  cold  Ilic  .Tacets  of  the  d  ! '  753 
and  the  d,  Oar'd  by  the  dumb,                                 Lancelot  and  E.  1153 


Dead 

Dead  (s)  (continued)  If  one  may  judge  the  living  by  the  d,  Lancelot  and  E.  1368 

the  d  Went  wandering  o'er  Moriah —  Holy  Grail  49 

Moans  of  the  dying,  and  voices  of  the  d.  Pass,  of  Arthur  117 

beats  upon  the  faces  of  the  d,  My  d,  141 

Behold,  I  seem  but  King  among  the  d.'  "            145 

and  so  the  d  have  kings,  "            143 

'  He  passes  to  be  King  among  the  d,  "  449 
She  is  his  no  more :  The  d  returns  to  me,  and  I  go 

down  To  kiss  the  d'  Zover's  Tale  iv  49 

tnat  great  love  they  both  had  home  the  d,  181 

drew  back  with  her  d  and  her  shame.  The"Bevenge  60 

they  stared  at  the  d  that  had  been  so  valiant  105 
mother  broke  her  promise  to  the  d,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  252 
one  of  those  who  would  break  their  jests  on  the  d,     In  the  Child.  Hasp  8 


Voice  of  the  d  whom  we  loved, 

women  in  travail  among  the  dying  and  d, 

God's  Own  voice  to  justify  the  d — 

And  we  left  the  d  to  the  birds 

hours  Now  silent,  and  so  many  d, 

lay  like  the  d  by  the  d  on  the  cabin  floor, 

And  wish  the  d,  as  happier  than  ourselves 

an'  dhropt  down  dead  an  the  d. 

single  sordid  attic  holds  the  living  and  the  d. 

all  my  steps  are  on  the  d. 

stood  stark  by  the  d ; 

She  gabbled,  as  she  groped  in  the  d, 

Persephone !     Queen  of  the  d  no  more — 

as  having  risen  from  out  the  d, 

the  d  are  not  dead  but  alive 

Priest,  who  join'd  you  to  the  d, 

Dead  with  the  d  ? 

would  sound  so  mean  That  all  the  d, 

Thin  as  the  batlike  shrilUngs  of  the  D 

Silent  Voices  of  the  d, 
De&d    hallus  coom'd  to  's  chooch  afoor  moy  Sally 
wur  d, 

toaner  'ed  shot  'um  as  d  as  &  naail. 

an'  she  weant  'a  nowt  when  'e's  d. 

But  'e  tued  an'  moil'd  'issen  d, 

boooks  wur  gone  an'  'is  boy  wur  d, 

an'  one  o'  ye  d  ye  knaws ! 

Dick,  when  'e  cooms  to  be  d, 

an'  I  taaked  'im  at  fust  fur  d ; 
Dead-blue    And  a  lack-ltistre  d-b  eye, 
Deaden    and  learns  to  d  Love  of  self, 
Deaden'd    landskip  darken'd,  The  melody  d, 
Dead-heavy    down  d-h  sank  her  curls, 
Dead  Innocence    call'd  The  Tournament  of  the  D  I, 
Dead  Uarch    the  I)  M  waiLs  in  the  people's  ears : 
Dead-pale    D-p  between  the  houses  high. 
Deaf    (See  also  DeSi)     '  Much  less  this  dreamer,  d  and 
blind, 
parch'd  and  wither'd,  d  and  blind, 
my  end  draws  nigh :  half  d  I  am, 
she  was  d  To  blessing  or  to  cursing 
mark'd  not  this,  but  blind  and  d 
For  wert  thou  bom  or  blind  or  d. 


no  man  halt,  or  d  or  blind ; 

And  d  to  the  melody, 

all  but  d  thro'  age  and  weariness, 

Be  not  d  to  the  sound  that  warns, 
Deal    an'  maiikin'  ma  d  wi'  their  shouts, 
Deafen'd    d  with  the  stammering  cracks  and  claps 

end  myself  too  with  the  dagger— so  d  and  dazed 

Deafer    I  will  be  d  than  the  blue-eyed  cat, 

'  2),'  said  the  blameless  King, 
Deal    You  know  so  ill  to  d  with  time, 

Nor  d  in  watch-words  overmuch : 

Ere  days,  that  d  in  ana,  swarm'd 

Her  answer  was  '  Leave  me  to  <Z  with  that 

nor  d's  in  that  Which  men  delight  in, 

d's  with  the  other  distance  and  the  hues 

for  Cyril,  howe'er  He  d  in  frolic, 

learn  With  whom  they  d. 

Shall  we  d  with  it  as  an  infant  ? 


Def.  of  Lucknow  11 

88 

Columbus  203 

V.  of  Maeldune  36 

Tiresias  211 

The  Wreck  112 

Ancient  Sage  205 

Tomorrow  80 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  222 

„  252 

Dead  Prophet  19 

73 

Demeter  and  P.  18 

144 

Vastness  36 

Happy  93 

Mary  Boyle  14 

Romney's  R.  132 

Death  of  (Enone  21 

Silent  Voices  4 

N.  Farmer,  O.S.  17 

35 

N.S.  25 

52 

village  Wife  87 

Spinster's  S's.  62 

Owd  Rod  11 

„      100 

A  Character  17 

Ode  on  Well.  204 

Merlin  and  the  G.  32 

Princess  vi  147 

iMst  Tournament  136 

Ode  on  Well.  267 

L.  ofShaloUiv^ 

Two  Voices  175 

Fatima  6 

St.  S.  Stylites  37 

Geraint  and  E.  578 

Balin  and  Balan  318 

Ancient  Sage  175 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  163 

Merlin  and  the  G.  27 

St.  Telemuchus  41 

Riflemen  form!  8 

Spinster's  S's.  88 

Merlin  and  V.  942 

Bandit's  Death  37 

Holy  Grail  865 

869 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  63 

Love  thou  thy  land  28 

Win  Water.  199 

Princess  Hi  149 

215 

„         iv  86 

250 

u  513 

BoMtcea  33 


138 

Deal  (continued)    d's  comfortable  words  To  hearts 

wounded 
Deal-box    An'  I  hit  on  an  old  d-b  that  was  push'd 
Deal'd    sa  I  hallus  d  wi'  the  Hall, 
Dealing  (part.)     '  For  memory  d  but  with  time, 

Nor  d  goodly  coimsel  from  a  height 
Dealing  (s)     And  full  of  d's  with  the  world  ? 

Thy  elect  have  no  d's  with  either  heresy  or 
orthodoxy ; 
Dealt    Oh !  deathful  stabs  were  d  apace, 

My  nerves  have  d  with  stiffer. 

hoard  of  tales  that  d  with  knights. 

For  Wisdom  d  with  mortal  powers, 

this  d  him  at  Caerlyle ;  That  at  Caerieon ; 

knight  of  Arthur's  noblest  d  in  scorn ; 

Our  mutual  mother  d  to  both  of  us : 
Dean  (forest)     Before  him  came  a  forester  of  D, 

Across  the  forest  call'd  of  D,  to  find 
Dean  (dignitary)    prudes  for  proctors,  dowagers  for 

they  vext  the  souls  of  d's ; 
Dear    And  she  is  grown  so  d,  so  d, 

D  is  the  memory  of  our  wedded  lives, 

d  the  last  embraces  of  our  wives 

As  thou  are  lief  and  d,  and  do  the  thing 

I  hold  thee  d  For  this  good  pint  of  port. 

I  am  not  all  as  wrong  As  a  bitter  jest  is  d. 

To  wed  the  man  so  d  to  all  of  them 

The  discords  d  to  the  musician, 
declared  that  ancient  ties  Would  still  be  d 
'  D  as  remember'd  kisses  after  death, 
there's  no  rose  that's  half  so  d  to  them 
D  to  the  man  that  is  d  to  God ; 
For  those  are  few  we  hold  as  d ; 
Yet  both  are  near,  and  both  are  d, 
D,  near  and  true — no  truer  Time 
follow  them  down  to  the  window-pane  of  my  d, 
frost  is  here,  And  fuel  is  d, 
D  as  the  mother  to  the  son, 
(And  d  to  me  as  sacred  wine  To  dying  lips 
Shall  count  new  things  as  ^  as  old : 
Knowing  the  primrose  yet  is  d, 
And  this  hath  made  them  trebly  d.' 
That  if  7  be  (Z  to  some  one  else, 
But  1i  I  he  d  to  some  one  else, 
I  should  be  to  myself  more  d. 
If  I  be  i  If  I  be  5  to  some  one  else 
With  d  Love's  tie,  makes  Love  himself  more  d.' 
These  to  His  Memory— since  he  held  them  d, 
d  to  Science,  d  to  Art,  D  to  thy  land  and  ours, 
d  to  Arthur  was  that  hall  of  ours, 
As  thou  are  lief  and  d,  and  do  the  thing 
an'  soa  purr  awaay,  my  d, 
Dl  dl  d]  I  mun  part  them  Tommies — 
Dearer    a  little  d  than  his  horse. 
All  he  shows  her  makes  him  d 
the  light  D  for  night,  as  d  thou  for  faults 
tho'  he  make  you  evermore  D  and  nearer, 
the  fuel  is  all  the  d, 
Our  wood,  that  is  d  than  all ; 
therefore  d;  oiit  not  so  new.  Yet  therefore 

tenfold  d 
reverence,  D  to  true  young  hearts 
by  white  bonds  and  warm,  D  than  freedom. 
I  held  you  at  that  moment  even  d  than  before ; 
fame  with  me  To  make  it  d. 
Dearest    '  Never,  d,  never :  here  I  brave  the  worst : ' 
Were  it  our  nearest,  Were  it  our  d, 
Take  you  his  d,  Give  us  a  life.' 
Is  he  your  d?    Or  I,  the  wife ? ' 
And  which  the  d  I  cannot  tell ! ' 
♦  We  have  his  d,  His  only  son ! ' 
shrieking  '  7  am  his  d,  1—7  am  his  d ! ' 
Which  was  his  nearest  ?    Who  was  his  d? 
The  beauty  that  is  d  to  his  heart — 
To  show  you  what  is  d  to  my  heart, 


Dearest 


Lover's  Tale  i  717 

First  Quarrel  48 

Village  Wife  115 

Two  Voices  376 

Aylmer's  Field  172 

MiUer's  D.  8 

Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  7 
Oriana  50 
Will  Water.  78 
Princess,  Pro.  29 
7«  Mem.  xxxvi  5 
Lancelot  and  E.  22 
Guinevere  40 
Lover's  Tale  i  246 
Marr.  of  Geraint  148 
Pelleas  and  E.  21 
d's.     Princess,  Pro.  141 
162 
MiUer's  D.  170 
Lotos-Eaters,  C.S.  69 
70 
M.  d' Arthur  80 
Will  Water.  211 
Vision  of  Sin  198 
Enoch  Arden  484 
Sea  Dreams  258 
Princess  ii  265 
„         iv  54 
„        V 159 
To  F.  D.  Maurice  36 
46 
The  Victim  59 
A  Dedication  1 
Window.  On  the  Hill  17 
)>  Winter  2 

In  Mem.  ix  19 
„  xxxvii  19 
„        xl  28 
„  Ixxxv  118 
„        cii  16 
Maud  I  XV  3 
5 
6 

»     .      9 

„xviii  61 

Ded.  of  Idylls  1 

„  40 

Holy  Grail  222 

Pass,  of  Arthur  248 

Spinster's  S's.  57 

92 

Locksley  Hall  50 

L.  of  Burleigh  33 

Princess  vii  347 

A  Dedication  3 

Window.  Winter  15 

Maud  I  xxii  38 

Marr.  of  Geraint  809 

Lancelot  and  E.  419 

Pelleas  and  E.  354 

Happy  90 

Romney's  R.  56 

Edwin  Morris  117 

The  Victim  14 

27 

51 

60 

63 

71 

77 

Lover's  Tale  iv  249 


252 


I 


Dearest 


139 


Death 


Deaxest  {continued)    Of  all  things  upon  earth  the  d  to  me.' 

which  of  all  things  is  the  d  to  me, 

What  soimd  was  d  in  his  native  deUs  ? 
Deamess    with  a  d  not  his  due. 

A  distant  d  in  the  hill, 
Death    Oh !  vanity !  D  waits  at  the  door. 

Hark !  d  is  calling  While  I  speak  to  ye. 

Patient  of  ill,  and  d,  and  scorn, 

To  hold  a  common  scorn  of  d ! 

He  hath  no  care  of  life  or  d ; 

stooping  low  Unto  the  d,  not  sunk ! 

Shall  we  not  look  into  the  laws  Of  life  and  d, 

0  weary  life !  O  weary  d ! 
A  gentler  d  shall  Falsehood  die. 
Life,  anguish,  d,  immortal  love, 
when  he  taketh  repose  An  hour  before  d ; 
He  saw  thro'  life  and  d. 
In  your  eye  there  is  d, 
D,  walking  all  alone  beneath  a  yew, 
'  You  must  begone,'  said  D, 
Life  eminent  creates  the  shade  of  d ; 

1  drink  the  cup  of  a  costly  d, 
With  secret  d  for  ever,  in  the  pits 
And  range  of  evil  between  d  and  birth, 
wait  for  d — mute — careless  of  all  ills, 
'  Thou  hadst  not  between  d  and  birth 
Know  I  not  -D  ?  the  outward  signs  ? 
Has  ever  truly  long'd  for  d. 
Oh  life,  not  d,  for  which  we  pant ; 
That  I  should  die  an  early  d : 

0  d,  d,  d,  thou  ever-floating  cloud. 
Walking  the  cold  and  starless  road  of  D 
And  d  and  life  she  hated  equally, 
And  sweeter  isn  is  d  than  life  to  me 
D  is  the  end  of  life ; 

Give  us  long  rest  or  d,  dark  d,  or  dreamful  ease. 
There  is  confusion  worse  than  d, 
The  downward  slope  to  d. 

,         bright  d  quiver'd  at  the  victim's  throat ; 

1  was  ripe  for  d. 

who  knew  that  Love  can  vanquish  D, 
Once  thro'  mine  own  doors  D  did  pass ; 
D  is  blown  in  every  wind ; ' 
fluting  a  wild  csirol  ere  her  d, 
But  Dora  lived  unmarried  till  her  d. 
suit  had  wlther'd,  nipt  to  <i  by  him 
did  not  all  thy  martyrs  die  one  d  ? 
and  whole  years  long,  a  life  of  d. 
hope  ere  d  Spreads  more  and  more  and  more. 
Like  D  betwixt  thy  dear  embrace  and  mine, 
Like  bitter  accusation  ev'n  to  d, 
every  hour  Must  sweat  her  sixty  minutes  to  the  d, 
D  closes  all :  but  something  ere  the  end. 
Till  mellow  D,  Uke  some  late  guest, 
No  carved  cross-bonas,  the  types  of  D, 
Pale  again  as  d  did  prove :  , 

gray  and  gap-tooth'd  man  as  lean  as  d, 
Let  us  hob-and-nob  with  B. 
'  D  is  king,  and  Vivat  Rex ! 
Hob-and-nob  with  brother  D ! 
h\  those  two  d's  he  read  God's  warning 
His  baby's  d,  her  growing  poverty, 
than  he  saw  D  dawning  on  him, 
peace  which  each  had  prick'd  to  d. 
no  force,  Persuasion,  no,  nor  d  could  alter  her : 
cordon  close  and  closer  toward  the  d, 
a  letter  edged  with  d  Beside  him, 
AveriU  went  and  gazed  upon  his  d. 
for  the  second  d  Scarce  touch'd  her 
hapless  loves  And  double  d  were  widely  murmur'd, 
woimded  to  the  d  that  cannot  die ; 
from  the  people's  eyes  Ere  the  great  d, 
devising  tneir  own  daughter's  d ! 
Stumbling  across  the  market  to  his  d, 
Dead  for  two  years  before  his  d  was  he ; 


Lover's  Taie  iv  319 

348 

Far-far-away  4 

Locksley  HaU  91 

In  Mem.  Ixiv  19 

AU  Things  wiU  Die  17 

28 

Suvy.  Confessions  4 

34 

48 

„  98 

172 

„       _     188 

Clear-headed  friend  16 

Arabian  Nights  73 

A  Spirit  haunts  15 

The  Poet  5 

Poet's  Mind  16 

Love  and  Death  5 

^ 

13 

Elednore  138 

Wan  Scviftor  13 

If  I  were  loved  3 

„  10 

Two  Voices  169 

„  270 

396 

398 

MiUer's  D.  90 

(Enone  238 

„     259 

Palace  of  Art  205 

May  Queen,  Con.  8 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  41 

53 

„  83 

D.ofF.  Women  16 

115 

„  208 

„  269 

To  J.  S.  19 

46 

M.  d' Arthur  267 

Dora  172 

Edwin  Morris  101 

St.  S.  Stylites  50 

54 

156 

iMoe  and  Duty  48 

81 

Golden  Year  69 

Ulysses  51 

Will  Water.  239 

245 

L.  of  Burleigh  66 

Visum  of  Sin  60 

74 

179 

,  194 

Enoch  Arden  571 

705 

832 

Aylmer's  Field  52 

418 


500 
595 
599 
604 
617 
662 
773 
783 
820 
837 


Death  {continued)    dark  retinue  reverencing  d  At  golden 

thresholds;  Aylmer's  Field  M2 

Boxmd  on  a  matter  he  of  life  and  d :  Sea  Dreams  151 

gout  and  stone,  that  break  Body  toward  d,  Lucretius  154 
nor  shunn'd  a  soldier's  d.                                                Princess,  Pro.  38 

I  would  make  it  d  For  any  male  thing  „              151 

As  blank  as  d  in  marble ;  „            i  177 

Let  no  man  entee  in  on  pain  of  D  ?  „          H  195 

/  give  thee  to  d  My  brother !  „              307 

To  give  three  gallant  gentlemen  to  dJ  „              335 

I  spoke  of  war  to  come  and  many  d's,  „         Hi  150 

you  will  shock  him  ev'n  to  d,  „              212 

act  Of  immolation,  any  phase  of  d,  „              285 

Sum  Grew  broader  toward  his  d  and  fell,  „              364 

'  Dear  as  remember'd  kisses  after  d,  „            iv  54 

O  -D  in  Life,  the  days  that  are  no  more.'  „                58 

MeUssa  clamour'd ' Flee  the  d;'  „              166 

On  all  sides,  clamouring  etiquette  to  d,  „             v  17 

those  that  mourn  half-shrouded  over  d  „                74 

record  of  her  wrongs,  And  crush'd  to  rf :  „              144 

dash'd  with  d  He  reddens  what  he  kisses :  „              164 

and  had  not  shunn'd  the  d,  „              178 

sware  to  combat  for  my  claim  till  d.  „              360 

trust  that  there  is  no  one  hurt  to  d,  „          i)i  242 

think  that  you  might  mix  his  draught  with  d,  „              277 

well-nigh  close  to  d  For  weakness :  „        vii  119 

Leapt  fiery  Passion  from  the  brinks  ot  d;  „              156 

nor  cares  to  walk  With  D  and  Morning  „              204 

Or  pines  in  sad  experience  worse  than  d,  „              315 

All  in  the  valley  of  D  Rode  the  six  hundred.  Light  Brigade  3 

Into  the  valley  of  D  Rode  the  six  himdred.  (repeat)  „      7,  16 

Into  the  jaws  of  D,  „          24 

Came  thro'  the  jaws  of  D,  „          46 

first  time,  too,  that  ever  I  thought  of  d.  Grandmother  61 

'  d  is  sure  To  those  that  stay  and  those  that  roam,  Sailor  Boy  13 

My  father  raves  of  d  and  wreck,  „          19 

Far  worse  than  any  d  to  me.'  „          24 

The  wages  of  sin  is  dt :  Wages  6 

Thou  madest  D ;  and  lo,  thy  foot  In  Mem.,  Pro.  7 

To  dance  with  d,  to  beat  the  ground,  „            i  12 

0  Priestess  in  the  vaults  of  D,  „  m  2 
No  hint  of  d  in  all  his  frame,  „  xiv  18 
Cold  in  that  atmosphere  of  D,  „  xx  14 
If  D  were  seen  At  first  as  D,  „  xxxv  18 
To  that  vague  fear  imphed  in  d;  „  xli  14 
If  Sleep  and  D  be  truly  one,  „  xliii  1 
(If  D  so  taste  Lethean  springs),  „  xliv  10 
Beyond  the  second  birth  of  D.  „  xlv  16 
There  must  be  wisdom  with  great  D:  „           li  11 

1  bring  to  life,  I  bring  to  d:  „  Ivi  6 
Sleep,  D's  twin-brother,  times  my  breath ;  Sleep,  D's 

twin-brother,  knows  not  D,  „       Ixviii  2 

Sleep,  kinsman  thou  to  d  and  trance  „         Ixxi  1 

I  curse  not  nature,  no,  nor  d ;  „      Ixxiii  7 

knowing  D  has  made  His  darkness  beautiful  „    Ixxiv  11 

That  holy  D  ere  Arthur  died  „       Ixxx  2 

But  D  returns  an  answer  sweet :  „     Ixxxi  9 

I  wage  not  any  feud  with  D  „    Ixxxii  1 

Nor  blame  I D,  because  he  bare  „               9 

For  this  alone  on  D I  wreak  „              13 

till  Doubt  and  D,  111  brethren,  „  Ixxxvi  11 

sire  would  make  Confusion  worse  than  d,  „         xc  19 

shocks  of  Chance — The  blows  of  D.  „        xcv  43 

Mixt  their  dim  lights,  like  life  and  d,  „              63 

gleams  On  Lethe  in  the  eyes  of  D.  „     xcviii  8 

And  imto  myriads  more,  of  d.  „      xcix  16 

As  one  would  sing  the  d  of  war,  „       ciii  33 

Or  dive  below  the  wells  of  D  ?  „       cviii  8 

on  the  depths  of  d  there  swims  The  reflex  „              11 

She  cannot  fight  the  fear  of  d.  „      cxiv  10 

Like  Paul  with  beasts,  I  fought  with  D ;  „         cxx  4 

I  slip  the  thoughts  of  life  and  d ;  „    cxxii  16 

Unpalsied  when  he  met  with  D,  „  cxxviii  2 

whatever  is  ask'd  her,  answers  'D.'  Maud  I  i4 

To  the  d,  for  their  native  land.  ^  H 


Death 


140 


Death 


Death  (continued)    Singing  of  D,  and  of  Honour  that  cannot 

die, 
thought  like  a  fool  of  the  sleep  of  d. 
for  sullen-seeming  D  may  give  More  life 
Spice  his  fair  banquet  with  the  dust  ot  d? 
The  dusky  strand  of  Z>  inwoven  here 
And  given  false  d  her  hand, 
mine  by  a  right,  from  birth  till  d. 
Far  into  the  North,  and  battle,  and  seas  of  d. 
chance  what  will,  I  trust  thee  to  the  d.' 
bom  the  son  of  Gorlois,  after  d, 
thro'  the  strait  and  dreadful  pass  of  d, 
chance  what  will,  I  love  thee  to  the  d ! ' 
'  King  and  my  lord,  I  love  thee  to  the  d ! ' 
And  Modred's  blank  as  d ;  and  Arthur  cried 
names  himself  the  Night  and  oftener  D 
Despite  of  Day  and  Night  and  D  and  Hell.' 
white  breast-bone,  and  barren  ribs  of  2), 
doom'd  to  be  the  bride  of  Night  and  D ; 
D's  dark  war-horse  bounded  forward  with  him. 
saw  That  D  was  cast  to  ground,  and  slowly  rose, 
revel  and  song,  made  merry  over  D, 
maybe  pierced  to  d  before  mine  eyes, 
doubtless  he  would  put  me  soon  to  d, 
Long  for  my  life,  or  hunger  for  my  d, 
Leave  me  to-night :  I  am  weary  to  the  d.' 
So  pains  him  that  he  sickens  nigh  to  d ; 
were  himself  nigh  wounded  to  the  d.' 
he  crown'd  A  happy  life  with  a  fair  d, 
His  passion  half  had  gauntleted  to  d, 
Balin's  horse  Was  wearied  to  the  d, 
To  save  thy  life,  have  brought  thee  to  thy  d. 
bore  me  there,  for  bom  from  d  was  I 
an  enemy  that  has  left  D  in  the  living  waters, 
D  in  all  life  and  lying  in  all  love. 
Fame  that  follows  d  is  nothing  to  us ; 
Flash'd  the  bare-grinning  skeleton  of  d ! 
little  daughter  fl^  From  bonds  or  d, 
Prize  me  no  prizes,  for  my  prize  is  d ! 
crying  that  his  prize  is  d.' 
had  died  the  d  In  any  knightly  fashion 
'  Him  or  d,'  she  mutter'd, '  d  or  him,'  Again  and  like 

a  burthen, '  Him  or  d.' 
Ev'n  to  the  d,'  as  tho'  ye  were  my  blood, 
D,  like  a  friend's  voice  from  a  distant  field 
call'd  her  song  '  The  Song  of  Love  and  Z»,' 
sweet  is  d  who  puts  an  end  to  pain : 
'  Love,  art  thou  sweet  ?  then  bitter  d  must  be :  '  Love, 

thou  art  bitter ;  sweet  is  (Z  to  me.    O  Love,  if  d  be 

sweeter,  let  me  die. 
Sweet  d,  that  seems  to  make  us  loveless  clay, 
I  needs  must  follow  d,  who  calls  for  me ; 
Phantom  of  the  house  That  ever  shrieks  before  a  d,' 
I  shall  guard  it  even  in  d. 
her  d  Was  rather  in  the  fantasy  than  the  blood, 
bruise  and  blow.  With  d's  of  others, 
therefore  my  true  love  has  been  my  d. 
for  this  most  gentle  maiden's  d 
as  would  have  help'd  her  from  her  d.' 
after  heaven,  on  our  dull  side  of  d, 


Maud  I  vl6 

„         xiv  38 

,,  /  xviii  46 

56 

60 

„  68 

„        xix  42 

„  IllviZI 

Com.  of  Arthur  134 

240 

395 

468 

470 

Gareth  and  L.  417 

638 

887 

1382 

1396 

„    1401 

1403 

1423 

Marr.  of  Geraint  104 

463 

Geraint  and  E.  81 

„  358 

499 

919 

968 

Balin  and  Balan  220 

„  561 

600 

Merlin  and  V.  44 

148 

194 

464 

847 

Lancelot  and  E.  277 

„  506 

531 

870 


902 
960 


Death  {continued)    strike  him  dead,  and  meet  myself  i?,  Guinevere  576 

My  God,  thou  hast  foi^otten  me  in  my  d :  Pass,  of  Arthur  27 

Light  was  Gawain  in  life,  and  light  in  d  Is  Gawain,  „  56 


1005 
1008 


1010 
1014 
1017 
1023 
1115 
1131 
1166 
1277 
1291 
1311 
1382 
And  I  was  thirsty  even  unto  d ;  Holy  Grail  377 

storm  Roimd  us  and  d ;  „        492 

rotten  with  a  hundred  years  of  d,  „        496 

Your  sleep  is  d,'  and  drew  the  sword,  PeUeas  and  E.  447 

But  here  will  I  disedge  it  by  thy  d,'  „  578 

this  honour  after  d,  Following  thy  will !  Last  Tournament  34 

heart  in  one  full  shock  With  Tristram  ev'n  to  d:  „  181 

And  stings  itself  to  everlasting  d,  „  452 

hates  thee,  as  I  him — ev'n  to  the  d.  „  518 

and  I  will  love  thee  to  the  d,  „  720 

To  help  it  from  the  d  that  cannot  die,  Guinevere  66 

she  thought '  He  spies  a  field  of  d;  „       134 

many  a  mystic  lay  of  life  and  d  „       281 

Fear  not :  thou  shalt  be  guarded  till  my  d.  „       448 

The  doom  of  treason  and  the  flaming  d,  „       538 


strikes  them  dead  is  as  my  d  to  me. 

or  thro'  d  Or  deathlike  swoon, 

fluting  a  wild  carol  ere  her  d, 

govern  a  whole  life  from  birth  to  d,  Lover 

Time  and  Grief  did  beckon  imto  D,  And  D  drew  nigh 

wakeful  portress,  and  didst  parle  with  D, — 

So  D  gave  back,  and  would  no  fm-ther  come. 

and  his  spirit  From  bitterness  of  d. 

Is  to  me  daily  life  and  daily  d : 

I  died  then,  I  had  not  known  the  d ; 

from  whose  left  hand  floweth  The  Shadow  of  D, 

Which  seeming  for  the  moment  due  to  d. 

But  breathing  hard  at  the  approach  of  D, 

Smit  with  exceeding  sorrow  unto  Z>. 

from  a  dismal  dream  of  my  own  (Z, 

may  d  Awake  them  with  heaven's  music 

So  Love,  arraign'd  to  judgment  and  to  d, 

vestibules  To  caves  and  shows  of  D : 

A  beauty  which  is  d ; 

down-himg  The  jaws  of  D : 

till  helpless  d  And  silence  made  him  bold — 

He  reverenced  his  dear  lady  even  in  d  ■ 

'  not  even  d  Can  chill  you  all  at  once : 

He  falling  sick,  and  seeming  close  on  d. 

For  some  new  d  than  for  a  life  renew'd ; 

which  might  Be  d  to  one : 

And  all  her  sweet  self-sacrifice  and  d. 

D  from  their  rifle-bullets,  and  d  from  their  cannon- 
balls,  D  in  oiu"  innermost  chamber,  and  d  at  our 
slight  barricade,  D  while  we  stood  with  the 
musket,  and  d  while  we  stoopt  to  the  spade,  D 
to  the  dying,  and  woimds  to  the  wounded, 

D — for  their  spies  were  among  us, 

D  at  the  glimj)se  of  a  finger 

D  from  the  heights  of  the  mosque  and  the  palace, 
and  d  in  the  ground ! 

Ever  the  d  with  its  traitorous  d 

Lord  of  life  Be  by  me  in  my  d. 

I  woke,  and  thought — d — I  shall  die — 

That  I  am  loyal  to  him  till  the  d, 

it  was  all  of  it  as  quiet  as  d, 

I  bad  them  remember  my  father's  d, 

From  dio  d  thro'  life  and  life. 

In  seas  of  D  and  sunless  gulfs  of  Doubt. 

Fell  the  shipcrews  Doom'd  to  the  d. 

Drew  to  this  island :  Doom'd  to  the  d, 

storm  and  sin  and  d  to  the  ancient  fold. 

He  helpt  me  with  d,  and  he  heal'd  me  with  sorrow 

'  as  in  truest  Love  no  D.' 

'  The  wages  of  sin  is  rf,' 

Dead  to  the  d  beside  me, 

a  scrap,  dipt  out  of  the  '  <i's '  in  a  paper,  fell. 

Glared  on  our  way  toward  d, 

I  am  frighted  at  fife  not  d.' 

With  songs  in  praise  ot  d, 

on  Edwin's  ship,  with  Edwin,  ev'n  in  d, 

dhrame  of  a  married  man,  d  alive,  is  a  mortial  sin.' 

I  myself  so  close  on  d,  and  d 

While  she  vows  '  till  d  shall  part  us,' 

that  crowning  barren  D  as  lord  of  all. 

Beautiful  was  d  in  him,  who  saw  the  d, 

B  and  Silence  hold  their  own. 

That  on  dumb  d  had  thriven ; 

She  tore  the  Prophet  after  d, 

with  all  its  pains,  and  griefs,  and  ds, 

Gods  against  the  fear  Of  B  and  Hell ; 

thou  that  hast  from  men.  As  Queen  of  X>, 

B  for  the  right  cause,  d  for  the  wrong  cause, 

Beyond  the  common  date  of  d — 

theft  were  d  or  madness  to  the  thief, 

drew  the  ring  From  his  dead  finger,  wore  it  till  her  d. 

to  laugh  at  love  in  d ! 


74 

119 

435 

Tale  i  76 

110 

113 

115 

143 

169 

496 

499 

508 

585 

601 

748 

760 

785 

nl26 

190 

205 

{■0  72 

74 

76 

258 

374 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  35 

255 


Bef.  of  Ltuiknow  14 

„  19 

23 

24 

79 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  174 

Columbus  87 

„       227 

V.  of  Maeldune  20 

70 

Be  Prof.,  Two  G.  52 

Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  14  - 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  23 

51 

The  Wreck  2 

58 

80 

93 

„       113 

Bespair  11 

"        1* 

Ancient  Sage  209 

The  Flight  46 

Tomorrow  51 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  4 

:;     237 

Bead  Prophet  26 

77 

To  Prin.  Beatrice  2 

Bemeter  and  P.  142 

1^ 

Vastness  8 

The  Ring  108 

204 

218 

231 


Death 


141 


Dedicate 


Deatti  (continued)    D  and  marriage,  B  and  marriage ! 

To  share  his  living  d  with  him, 

D  will  freeze  the  supplest  limbs — 

Too  early  blinded  by  the  kiss  of  d — 

beyond  the  doors  of  d  Far-far-away  ? 

My  life  and  d  are  in  thy  hand. 

A  silence  follow'd  as  of  d,  and  then  A  hiss 

And  then  once  more  a  silence  as  of  d. 

Baths,  the  Forum  gabbled  of  his  d. 

But  D  had  ears  and  eyes ; 

I  could  make  Sleep  D,  if  I  would — 

sod  Draw  from  my  d  Thy  living  flower 

Wait  till  D  has  flung  them  open. 

Has  vanish'd  in  the  shadow  cast  by  D. 

face  of  Z)  is  toward  the  Sun  of  Life, 
Deathbed    Kind  ?  but  the  d  desire  Spum'd 

as  by  some  one  d  after  wail  Of  suffering, 

I  hear  a  d-b  Angel  whisper  '  Hope.' 
Death-blow    d-b  struck  the  dateless  doom  of  kijigs, 
Death-day    her  birthday,  and  that  day  His  d-d, 

birthday,  d-d,  and  betrothal  ring. 

Your  birthday  was  her  d-d. 
Death-drowsing    while  he  spoke  Closed  his  d-d  eyes, 
Death-dumb    in  a  drd  autumn-dripping  gloom, 
Deathful-grinniiig    d-g  mouths  of  the  fortress. 
Death-hymn    wild  swan's  d-h  took  the  soul 
Death-in-life    Lay  lingering  out  a  five-years'  d-i4. 

and  palsy,  d-i-l.  And  wretched  age — 
Deathless    {See  also  SeemingHdeathless)    That  Gods 
there  are,  and  d. 

magic  cirque  of  memory,  Invisible  but  d. 
Deathlike    Luminous,  gemlike,  ghostlike,  d, 
Deathly-pale    d-f  Stood  grasping  what  was  nearest, 
Death-pale    -D-j>,  for  lack  of  gentle  maiden's  aid. 
Deathruckle    Vows  that  will  last  to  the  last  d. 
Death-scaffold    seem'd  to  hear  Her  own  d-s  raising, 
Death's-head    not  a  d-h  at  the  wine.' 
Deathsong    Some  d  for  the  Ghouls  To  make 
Death-watch    dog  howl,  mother,  or  the  d-w  beat, 

0  the  d  beating ! 
Death-white    beheld  The  d-w  curtain  drawn ; 

Knew  that  the  d-w  curtain  meant  but  sleep. 
Debased    right  arm  d  The  throne  of  Persia, 
Debate    beat  the  floor ;  Where  once  we  held  d. 
Debated    while  the  King  d  with  himself  If  Arthur 
Debating    Leodogran  in  heart  D — 

D  his  command  of  silence  given, 
Debt    Love  the  gift  is  Love  the  d. 

Deep,  indeed,  Their  d  of  thanks  to  her 

my  d  to  him,  This  nightmare  weight  of  gratitude, 

We  have  a  voice,  with  which  to  pay  the  d 

coom'd  to  the  parish  wi'  lots  o'  Vjirsity  d, 

Vext  with  lawyers  and  harass'd  with  d : 

1  feel  I  shall  owe  you  a  d. 
That  I  owe  this  d  to  you 
the  whole  dear  d  of  all  you  are. 
Fur  I  finds  es  I  be  that  i'  d, 
easy  es  leaves  their  d's  to  be  paiiid. 
This  father  pays  his  d  with  me, 

how  dear  a  d  We  owed  you,  and  are  owing  yet  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  18 
that  ample  woodland  whisper'd  '  d,'  The  brook 

that  feeds  this  lakelet  murmur'd  '  d,'  The  Ring  170 

Debtor    d's  for  oiu-  lives  to  you,  Princess  ii  355 

And  the  man  said  '  Am  I  your  d  ?  '  By  an  Evolution.  2 

Decad    Thro'  sunny  d's  new  and  strange,  Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  22 

Averill  was  a  d  and  a  half  His  elder,  Aylmer's  Field  82 

Old  scandals  buried  now  seven  d's  deep  „  442 

Decay  (s)     Upon  the  general  d  of  faith  The  Epic  18 

And  on  one  side  a  castle  in  d,  Man.  of  Geraint  245 

worshipt  all  too  well  this  creature  of  d,  Happy  45 

Decay  (verb)    The  woods  d,  the  woods  d  and  fall,  Tithonus  1 

Decay'd    and  learn  If  his  old  prowess  were  in  aught  cZ;   Zancelot  and  E.  584 

and  the  Grail  Past,  and  the  beam  d,  Holy  Grail  122 

Decaying    Stench  of  old  offal  d,  Def.  of  Lwknow  82 

Decease    from  the  Queen's  d  she  brought  her  up.  Princess  Hi  86 


Forlorn  67 

Happy  8 

„    46 

Romney's  R.  103 

Far-far-away  11 

Death  of  (Enone  40 

St.  Telemachus  65 

69 

74 

Akbar's  Dream  187 

Bandit's  Death  32 

Doubt  and  Prayer  6^ 

Faith  7 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  3 

"  ^^ 

Maud  I  xix  77 

Pass,  of  Arthur  118 

Romney's  R.  148 

Lucretius  236 

The  Ring  213 

„         276 

301 

Balin  and  Balan  631 

Last  Tournament  756 

Maud  III  vi  52 

Dying  Swan  21 

Enoch  Arden  565 

Lucretius  154 

„        121 

Lover's  Tale  ii  160 

Maud  I  Hi  8 

Lancelot  and  E.  965 

765 

Fastness  26 

Enoch  Arden  175 

Princess  iv  87 

Ancient  Sage  17 

May  Queen,  Con.  21 

Forlorn  24 

Maud  I  xiv  34 

37 

Alexander  1 

In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  21 

Com.  of  Arthur  238 

„  141 

Geraint  and  E.  366 

MiUer's  D.  207 

Princess  ii  141 

„        vi  299 

Ode  on  Well.  156 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  29 

Maud  I  xix  22 

87 

90 

Geraint  and  E.  319 

ViUage  Wife  65 

94 

The"Flight  20 


Decease  {continued)     And  chains  regret  to  his  d,  In  Mem.  xxix  3 

Deceased    Nor  will  be  when  our  summers  have  d.  Maud  I  xviii  14 

Deceit    weave  me  a  snare  Of  some  coquettish  d,  „            vi  26 

I  may  be  beguiled  By  some  coquettish  d,  „                90 

For  then,  perhaps,  as  a  child  of  d,  „        xiii  30 

Deceive.    See  Desave 

Deceived    I  never  will  be  twice  d.  The  Letters  30 

Meet  is  it  the  good  King  be  not  d.  Balin  and  Balan  533 

One  had  d  her  an'  left  her  First  Quarrel  25 

Is  it  I  who  have  d  thee  or  the  world  ?  Columbus  151 

December    The  gloom  of  ten  D's.  Will  Water.  104 

Their  meetings  made  D  June  In  Mem.  xcvii  11 

Decent    d  not  to  fail  In  offices  of  tenderness,  Ulysses  4D 

Decide    '  D  not  ere  you  pause.  Princess  Hi  156 

at  once  D's  it,  '  sdeath !  against  my  father's  will.'  „         v  298 

'  D  it  here :  why  not  ?  „             310 

Decided    beardless  apple-arbiter  D  fairest.  Lucretius  92 

Decision    The  intuitive  d  of  a  bright  Isabel  13 

Kept  watch,  waiting  d,  made  reply.  Qinone  143 

Since,  what  d  ?  if  we  fail,  we  fail.  Princess  v  322 

Deck  (s)    d's  were  dense  with  stately  forms  M.  d' Arthur  196 

d's  were  shatter'd.  Bullets  fell  like  rain ;  The  Captain  45 

Over  mast  and  d  were  scatter'd  Blood  and  brains  „          47 

Spars  were  splinter'd ;  d's  were  broken :  „          49 

On  the  d's  as  they  were  lying,  „          53 

and  while  he  stood  on  d  Waving,  Enoch  Arden  243 

light  Shall  glimmer  on  the  dewy  d's.  In  Mem.  ix  12 

The  man  we  loved  was  there  on  d,  „       ciii  41 

I  stood  on  a  giant  d  and  mix'd  Maud  III  vi  34 

Bright  with  a  shining  people  on  the  d's.  Com.  of  Arthur  376 

Loyal,  the  dumb  old  servitor,  on  d,  Lancelot  and  E.  1144 

on  the  black  d's  laid  her  in  her  bed,  „             1147 

all  the  d's  were  dense  with  stately  fonns,  Pass,  of  Arthur  364 

With  her  hundred  fighters  on  d.  The  Revenge  34 

soldiers  look'd  down  from  their  d's  „          37 

wound  to  be  drest  he  had  left  the  d,  „          66 

he  rose  upon  their  d's,  and  he  cried :  „        100 

he  fell  upon  their  d's,  and  he  died.  „        104 

Ten  long  sweet  summer  days  upon  d.  The  Wreck  64 

every  soul  from  the  d's  of  The  Falcon  „        109 

that  I  Stumbled  on  d,  half  mad.  „        118 

I  crouch'd  upon  d —  „        120 

who  saw  the  death,  but  kept  the  d,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  63 

Deck  (verb)     To  d  thy  cradle,  Eleanore.  Elednore  21 

flowers  or  leaves  To  d  the  banquet.  In  Mem.  cvii  6 

wherewithal  d  the  boar's  head  i*  Gareth  and  L  1073 

d  it  Uke  the  Queen's  For  richness,  Lancelot  and  E.  1118 

add  my  diamonds  to  her  pearls ;  D  her  with  these ;  „  1225 
D  your  houses,  illuminate  All  your  towns              On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  18 

Deck'd — ^Deckt    deck'd  her  out  For  worship  without  end;      Princess  vii  168 

A  life  that  all  the  Muses  deck'd  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  45 

and  deckt  in  slowly-waning  hues.  Gareth  and  L.  1195 

Array'd  and  deck'd  her,  as  the  loveliest,  Marr.  of  Geraint  17 
for  he  had  decked  them  out  As  for  a  solemn  sacrifice  Lover's  Tale  iv  300 


The  city  deck'd  herself  To  meet  me, 
Declare    Such  as  no  language  may  d.' 

D  when  last  OUvia  came 

Had  braced  my  purpose  to  d  myself : 
Declared    d  that  ancient  ties  Would  stiU 
Decline  (s)     Looks  thro'  in  his  sad  d, 
Decline  (verb)    sap  dries  up  :  the  plant  d's. 

to  <Z  On  a  range  of  lower  feelings 

Whatever  way  my  days  d, 

Darken'd  watching  a  mother  d 
Declined    once  more  like  some  sick  man  d. 

And  thou,  as  one  that  once  d. 
Decrease    That  now  dilate,  and  now  d. 
Decreased    From  heat  to  heat  the  day  d. 
Decree     '  By  shaping  some  augiist  d. 

To  mould  a  mighty  state's  d's. 
Decreed    d  that  thou  should'st  dwell 

and  d  That  Rome  no  more  should  wallow 

I  d  That  even  the  dog  was  clean. 
De-crescent    Between  the  in-crescent  and  d-c  moou, 
Dedicate    ld,ld,l  consecrate  with  tears — 


Columbus  9 

Two  Voices  384 

Talking  Oak  99 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  143 

Princess  ii  264 

Adeline  13 

Two  Voices  268 

Locksley  Hall  43 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  41 

Maud  I  xix  8 

Palace  of  Art  155 

In  Mem.  Ixii  5 

„   xxviii  10 

Mariana  in  the  S.  78 

To  the  Queen  33 

In  Mem.  Ixiv  11 

Demeter  and  P.  120 

St.  Telemachus  77 

Akbar's  Dream  52 

Gareth  and  L.  529 

Ded.  of  Idylls  3 


Dedicate 


142 


Deep 


Dedicate  (continued)    Shut  in  from  Time,  and  d  to 

Dee     Bala  lake  Fills  all  the  sacred  D. 

Deed    Fruitful  of  further  thought  and  d, 
Blowing  a  noise  of  tongues  and  d's, 
a  life  of  shocks,  Dangers,  and  d's, 
'  I  take  possession  of  man's  mind  and  d. 
our  great  d's,  as  half-forgotten  things. 
Would  serve  his  kind  in  d  and  word, 
Delight  our  souls  with  talk  of  knightly  d's, 
the  Powers,  who  wait  On  noble  d's, 
'  They  perish'd  in  their  daring  d's.' 
I  am  yours  in  word  and  in  d. 
Divorce  the  Feeling  from  her  mate  the  D. 
Nor  d's  of  gift,  but  gifts  of  grace 
'  His  d's  yet  live,  the  worst  is  yet  to  come, 
and  your  great  d's  P'or  issue, 
Howe'er  you  babble,  great  d's  cannot  die  ; 
on  the  highest  Foam  of  men's  d's — ■ 
Bright  let  it  be  with  its  blazon'd  d's, 
thine  the  d's  to  be  celebrated. 
In  loveliness  of  perfect  d's. 
Her  secret  meaning  in  her  d's, 
What  fame  is  left  for  human  d's 
On  songs,  and  d's,  and  lives, 

0  true  in  word,  and  tried  in  d, 
Perplext  in  faith,  but  pure  in  d's, 
Flow  thro'  our  d's  and  make  them  pure, 
some  good  knight  had  done  one  noble  d, 
And  the  d's  sake  my  knighthood  do  the  d. 
My  d's  will  speak  :  it  is  but  for  a  day.' 
for  the  d's  sake  have  I  done  the  d, 

'  Say  thou  thy  say,  and  I  will  do  my  d. 
said  yovu"  say ;  Mine  answer  was  my  d. 
far-sounded  among  men  For  noble  d's  ? 
So  grateful  is  the  noise  of  noble  d's 
Because  I  knew  my  d's  were  known, 
doubtless,  all  imeam'd  by  noble  d's. 
love  of  God  and  men  And  noble  d's, 
And  each  incited  each  to  noble  d's. 
the  great  d's  Of  Lancelot,  and  his  prowess 
do  and  almost  overdo  the  d's  Of  Lancelot ; 
some  brave  d  seem'd  to  be  done  in  vain, 
This  chance  of  noble  d's  will  come  and  go 
every  evil  d  I  ever  did.  Awoke  and  cried, 
honour  and  all  noble  d's  Flash'd, 
flower  Waits  to  be  solid  fruit  of  golden  d's, 
uprear'd  By  noble  d's  at  one  with  noble  vows. 
Did  mightier  d's  than  elsewise  he  had  done, 
here  and  there  ad  01  prowess  done 
And  worship  her  by  years  of  noble  d's, 
miss  to  hear  high  talk  of  noble  d's 
she,  for  her  good  d's  and  her  pure  life, 
and  in  the  mist  Was  many  a  noble  d, 
Delight  our  souls  with  talk  of  knightly  d's, 
breathless  body  of  her  good  d's  past. 
Love  and  Longing  dress  thy  d's  in  hght, 
this  ballad  of  the  d's  Of  England, 
Virtue  must  shape  itself  in  d, 
light  upon  the  ways  of  men  As  one  great  d. 
crown  with  song  The  warrior's  noble  d — 
P'or  so  the  d  endures  ; 
And  d  and  song  alike  are  swept  Away, 
nation's  heart.  Is  in  itself  a  d.' 
His  dream  became  a  d  that  woke  the  world, 
prayers.  That  have  no  successor  in  d, 
By  d's  a  light  to  men  ? 
Desm    who  d  him  not.  Or  will  not  d  him. 

And  d's  it  carrion  of  some  woodland  thing. 
But  d  not  I  accept  thee  aught  the  more, 
who  d  this  maid  Mi^ht  wear  as  fair  a  jewel 
d  this  prize  of  ours  is  rashly  given  : 
damsel,  for  I  d  you  know  full  well 

1  d  As  of  the  visioas  tliat  he  told — 
If  I  should  d  it  over  nice — 

And  d  me  grateful,  and  farewell  1 


thee :     Lover's  Tale  i  438 

Geraint  and  E.  930 

Two  Voices  144 

206 

CEnone  164 

Palace  of  Art  209 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  78 

Love  thou  thy  land  86 

M.  d' Arthur  19 

Godiva  72 

Day- Dm.,  Arrival  14 

Lady  Clare  74 

The  Brook  95 

Sea  Dreams  192 

»    ...314 

Princess  Hi  242 

254 

V  320 

Ode  on  Well.  56 

Boctdicea  41 

In  Mem.  xxxvi  11 

„  ly  10 

„       Ixxiii  11 

„         Ixxvii  3 

„  Ixxxv  5 

„  xevi  9 

Gareih  and  L.  411 

572 

577 

832 

„     901 

1175 

Marr.  of  Geraint  428 

437 

Geraint  and  E.  858 

Balin  and  Balan  471 

Merlin  and  V.  413 

414 

Lancelot  and  E.  81 

469 

Holy  Grail  274 

„        318 

373 

Pelleas  and  E.  278 

Last  Tournament  100 

123 

680 

Guinevere  458 

476 

„        499 

693 

Pass,  of  Arthur  105 

187 

Lover's  Tale  i  217 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  9 

20 

liresias  86 

„      162 

Epilogue  37 

„        39 

»        67 

82 

St.  Telemachv^  70 

Akhar's  Dream  10 

„     111 

Gareth  and  L.  120 

748 

839 

Lancelot  and  E.  239 

541 

„  689 

Lover's  Tale  iv  22 

Tiresias  191 

The  Wanderer  16 


Deem'd    she  d  no  mist  of  earth  could  dull 

well  had  d  he  felt  the  tale  Less  than  the  teller : 

Things  in  an  Aylmer  d  impossible, 

the  peace,  that  I  dno  peace,  is  over 

Smile  at  him,  as  he  d,  presumptuously : 

wherein  she  d  she  look'd  her  best, 

they  d  her  death  Was  rather  in  the  fantasy 

wellnigh  d  His  wish  by  hers  was  echo'd ; 

I  loved  you  and  I  d  you  beautiful, 

I  d  him  fool  ?  yea  so  ? 

She  d  I  wore  a  brother's  mind  : 
Deeming    Vivien,  d  Merlin  overborne  By  instance, 

D  our  courtesy  is  the  truest  law, 

Deem'st    D  thou  that  I  accept  thee 

Deep  (adj.  and  adv.)    (See  also  Ankle-deep,  Breast-deep, 

Elbow -deep,   Fathom  -  deep.  Knee -deep,  Love- 

deep,  Mellow-deep,  Mid-thigh-deep,  Waist-deep) 

Tho'  d  not  fathomless, 

grow  so  full  and  d  In  thy  large  eyes 

So  full,  so  d,  so  slow, 

King  Arthur :  then,  because  his  wound  was  d, 

rain.  That  makes  thee  broad  and  d ! 

And  d  into  the  dying  day 

One  sabbath  d  and  wide — 

D  as  Hell  I  count  his  error. 

King  Arthur.    Then,  because  his  woimd  was  d, 

Love  lieth  d :  Love  dwells  not  in  lip-depths. 

I  can't  dig  d,  I  am  old — 

look  you  here — the  shadows  are  too  d. 


I  heard  that  voice, — as  mellow  and  d  As  a  psalm 
Six  foot  d  of  burial  mould  Will  dull 
thou  knowest  how  d  a  well  of  love 
Deep  (s)     (See  also  Forest-deeps)     Below  the  thunders 
of  the  upper  d ; 
Until  the  latter  fire  shall  heat  the  d ; 
drove  The  fragrant,  glistening  d's, 
Round  thee  blow,  seLE-pleached  d. 
From  his  coiled  sleeps  in  the  central  d's 
And  drives  them  to  the  d.' 
The  abysmal  d's  of  Personahty, 
roaring  d's  and  fiery  sands,  * 

Nine  years  she  wrought  it,  sitting  in  the  d's 
He  heard  the  d  behind  him, 
the  d  Moans  round  with  many  voices. 
Where  either  haven  open'd  on  the  d's. 
Trembled  in  perilous  places  o'er  a,  d: 
I  from  out  the  boundless  outer  d 
I  thought  the  motion  of  the  boimdless  d 
motion  of  the  great  d  bore  me  on. 
To  the  waste  d's  together, 
great  black  cloud  Drag  inward  from  the  d's. 
From  barren  d's  to  conquer  all  with  love ; 
Glimmer  away  to  the  lonely  d. 
But  they — they  feel  the  desire  of  the  d — 
The  d  has  power  on  the  height,  And  the  height  has 

power  on  the  d ; 
A  d  below  the  d. 

Which  heaves  but  with  the  heaving  d. 
That  stir  the  spirit's  inner  d's, 
A  higher  height,  a  deeper  d. 
and  we  to  draw  From  d  to  d, 
cloud  That  landlike  slept  along  the  d. 
There  rolls  the  d  whore  grew  the  tree. 
That  tmnbled  in  the  Godless  d ; 
To  seek  thee  on  the  mystic  d's. 
Powers  of  the  height.  Powers  of  the  d, 
by  the  side  of  the  Black  and  the  Baltic  d, 
high  upon  the  dreary  d's  It  seem'd  in  heaven, 
gathering  half  the  d  And  full  of  voices, 
F'rom  the  great  d  to  the  great  d  he  goes.' 
in  the  d's  whereof  a  mere, 
by  night  to  let  the  boundless  d  Down 
boat  Drave  with  a  sudden  wind  across  the  d's. 
On  some  wild  down  above  the  windy  d, 
fell  the  floods  of  heaven  drowning  the  d. 


Ode  to  Memory  38 

Enoch  Arden  711 

Aylmer' s  Field  305 

Maud  III  vi  50 

Balin  and  Balan  222 

Lancelot  and  E.  907 

„  1131 

Pelleas  and  E.  120 

297 

309 

Lover's  Tale  i  740 

Merlin  and  V.  800 

Lancelot  and  E.  712 

Gareth  and  L.  766 


Ode  to  Memory  34 

Elednore  85 

„       95 

M.  d' Arthur  5 

Talking  Oak  280 

Day- Dm.,  Depart.  7 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  34 

The  Captain  3 

Pass,  of  Arthur  m 

Lover's  Tale  i  466 

Eizpah  56 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  103 


The  Wreck  52 

Romney's  R.  125 

Akhar's  Dream  170 

The  Krdken  1 

„        13 

Arabian  Nights  14 

A  Dirge  29 

The  Mermaid  24 

Palace  of  Art  20i 

223 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  115 

M.  d'Arthur  105 

184 

Ulysses  55 

Enoch  Arden  671 

Sea  Dreams  11 

88 

91 

„        111 

"       .?^^ 

Princess  vii  37 

„        164 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  28 

Voice  and  the  P.  19 


21 
33 

In  Mem.  xi  20 

„      xlii  10 

„     Ixiii  12 

„       ciii  39 

56 

,,    cxxiii  1 

„   cxxiv  12 

„     cxxv  14 

Maud  II  ii  82 

„    III  vi  51 

Com.  of  Arthur  373 

380 

411 

Gareth  and  L.  798 

Merlin  and  V.  113 

201 

„  658 

Holy  Grail  533 


eajp-' 


Deep 


143 


Delaying 


Holy  Grail  808 

Last  Townamenl  133 

„  685 

Pass,  of  ArOmr  21Z 

352 

445 

466 

The  Revenge  109 


Deep  (s)  (continvM)    Seven  days  I  drove  along  the 
dreary  d, 
From  the  great  d  to  the  great  d  he  goes.' 
wash'd  up  from  out  the  d? 
Nine  years  she  wrought  it,  sitting  in  the  d's 
He  heard  the  d  behind  him,  and  a  cry 
From  the  great  d  to  the  great  d  he  goes.' 
Down  that  long  water  opening  on  the  d 
sank  his  body  with  honour  down  into  the  d. 
Out  of  the  d,  my  child,  out  of  the  d, 

(repeat)  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  1,  5,  26,  29. 

To  that  last  d  where  we  and  thou  are  still.  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  25 

From  that  great  d,  before  our  world  begins,  „              27 

Out  of  the  d,  Spirit,  out  of  the  d,  „              32 

rolls  the  heavens,  and  lifts,  and  lays  the  d,  Tiresias  22 
word  of  the  Poet  by  whom  the  d's  of  the  world 

are  stirr'd,  The  Wreck  23 

the  crew  should  cast  me  into  the  d,  „         94 

between  me  and  the  d  and  my  doom,  Despair  5 

suffers  on  land  or  in  air  or  the  d,  „     45 

Slight  ripple  on  the  boundless  d  Ancient  Sage  189 
that  one  ripple  on  the  boundless  d  Feels  that  the  d 

is  boundless,  „           191 

One  with  the  boundless  motion  of  the  d.  „           194 
Noises  of  a  current  narrowing,  not  the  music 

of  a  d  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  154 

Light  airs  from  where  the  d,  Early  Spring  21 

she  peers  along  the  tremulous  d,  Demeter  and  P.  14 

drown'd  in  the  d's  of  a  meaningless  Past  ?  Vastness  34 

far  As  the  gray  d,  a  landscape  The  Ring  150 

hoary  d's  that  belt  the  changeful  West,  Prog,  of  Spring  98 

Not  the  Great  Voice  not  the  true  D.  Akbar's  Dream  59 

D  under  d  for  ever  goes,  MecJianophilus  35 

wholly  vanish  in  your  d's  and  heights  ?  God  and  the  Univ.  1 

which  drew  from  out  the  boundless  d  Crossing  the  Bar  7 

Deep-asleep     d-a  he  seem'd,  yet  all  awake,  Lotos-Eaters  35 

Deep-blue    Floods  all  the  d-b  gloom  D.  of  F.  Women  186 

Deep-chested    D-c  music,  and  to  this  result.  The  Epic  51 

Deep-domed    as  the  d-d  empyrean  Rings  Milton  7 

Deepen    d's  on  and  up !  the  gates  Roll  back,  St  Agnes'  Eve  29 

same  old  rut  would  d  year  by  year ;  Aylmer's  Field  34 

Ay  me,  the  sorrow  d's  down.  In  Mem.  tdix  14 

the  gloom  Of  twilight  d's  round  it,  Balin  and  Balan  233 

Deepen'd    (See  also  Ever-deepen'd)    The  battle  d  in 

its  place,  Oriana  51 

and  in  him  gloom  on  gloom  D :  Balin  and  Balan  287 
DeepenifS    (See  also  Down-deepening)    d  thro'  the 

silent  spheres  Heaven  over  Heaven  Mariana  in  the  S.  91 

D  the  courts  of  twilight  broke  them  up  Princess,  Con.  113 

D  thy  voice  with  the  d  of  the  night,  V.  of  Cauteretz  2 

Deeper    bmy  me  D,  ever  so  little  d.  Mavd  II  v  104 

plunges  thro'  the  wound  again.  And  pricks  it  d :         Pelleas  and  E.  531 

D  than  any  yearnings  after  thee  Last  Tournament  586 

Tho'  one  is  somewhat  d  than  the  other,  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  25 

Deep-hued    With  many  a  d-h  bell-Uke  flower  Elednore  37 

garden  rose  D-h  and  many-folded !  Balin  and  Balan  270 

Deep-inrunning    sand  and  cliff  and  d-i  cave.  Sea  Dreams  17 

Deeply-wounded    Or  mythic  Uther's  d-w  son  Palace  of  Art  105 

Deep-meadow'd    it  lies  D-m,  happy,  fair  with 

orchard-lawns  M.  d' Arthur  262 

it  lies  D-m,  happy,  fair  with  orchard-lawns  Pass,  of  Arthur  430 

Deep-seated    D-s  in  our  mystic  frame.  In  Mem.  xxxvi  2 

Deep-set     the  ti-s  windows,  stain 'd  and  traced,  Palace  of  Art  Ad 

Deep-tranced     they  dwelt  D-t  on  hers,  Bcdin  and  Balan  278 

Deep-udder'd    dewy-fresh,  browsed  by  d-u  kine,  Gardener's  D.  46 

Deep-wooded    on  the  d-w  mountain-side.  The  Wreck  72 

Deer     To  chase  the  d  at  five ;  Talking  Oak  52 

Rode  thro'  the  coverts  of  the  d.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  21 

To  show  Sir  Arthur's  d.  The  Brook  133 

Like  flies  that  haimt  a  wound,  or  d,  Aylmer's  Field  571 

Betwixt  the  monstrous  horns  of  elk  and  d,  Princess,  Pro.  23 

and  shook  the  branches  of  the  d  „        Con.  98 

And  cattle  died,  and  d  in  wood.  The  Victim  18 

follow  the  d  By  these  tall  firs  Gareth  and  L.  90 

FoUow  the  d  ?  follow  the  Christ,  the  King,  „          117 


Deer  (continued)    There  tript  a  hundred  tiny  silver  d,    Last  Tournament  171 

But  at  the  slot  or  fewmets  of  a  d,  „              371 

The  d,  the  dews,  the  fern,  the  founts,  „              727 

Defacement    royal  crown,  Stampt  all  into  d,  Balin  and  Balan  541 

Defacing     Defaming  and  d,  till  she  left  Merlin  and  V.  804 

Defamed    D  by  every  charlatan,  In  Mem.  cxi  23 

one  that  hath  d  The  cognizance  she  gave  me :  Balin  and  Balan  484 

hast  thou  so  d  Thy  brotherhood  Pelleas  and  E.  321 

Defaming    D  and  defacing,  till  she  left  Merlin  and  V.  804 

Default    own  baseness  in  him  by  d  Of  will  and  nature,       Pelleas  and  E.  81 

Defeat    Whether  ye  wish  me  victory  or  d,  Geraint  and  E.  80 

I  must  not  dwell  on  that  d  of  fame.  Guinevere  628 

trumpets  of  victory,  groans  of  d ;  Vastness  8 

Defect    each  fulfils  D  in  each,  and  always  thought 

in  thought,  Princess  vii  304 

D's  of  doubt,  and  taints  of  blood ;  In  Mem.  liv  4 

an  hour's  d  of  the  rose,  Maud  I  US 
have  in  it  an  absoluter  trust  To  make  up  that  d:   Lancelot  and  E.  1193 

Scorn  was  allow'd  as  part  of  his  d,  Guinevere  43 

A  beauty  with  d — till  That  which  knows.  Ancient  Sage  86 

Defence    war  would  arise  in  d  of  the  right,  Maud  III  vi  19 

and  my  squire  Hath  in  him  small  d;  Balin  and  Balan  477 

on  all  the  d's  our  myriad  enemy  fell.  Def.  of  Lucknow  35 

Clean  from  our  lines  of  d  ten  or  twelve  „              62 

Defend     thou  might'st  d  The  thesis  which  thy  words  Two  Voices  337 

and  three  knights  D  the  passings,  Gareth  and  L.  614 

And  there  d  his  marches ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  41 

and  there  d  Your  marches,  Geraint  and  E.  889 

And  would  d  liis  judgment  well,  Tiresias  190 
Defended    (See  also  Half-defended)    works  that  d  the 

hold  we  held  with  our  lives —  Def.  of  Lucknow  7 

Deferentially    Sir  Aylmer  (d  With  nearing  chair  Aylmer's  Field  266 

Defiance     With  one  smile  of  still  d  Sold  him  The  Captain  59 

and  flung  d  down  Gagelike  to  man.  Princess  v  177 

With  message  and  d,  went  and  came ;  „         370 

Defiant    Sullen,  d,  pitying,  wroth,  Aylmer's  Field  492 

Deficiency     Who'll  weep  for  thy  d  ?  Two  Voices  39 

Defied     chafing  at  his  own  groat  self  d,  Aylmer's  Field  537 

Defileth     he  d  heavenly  things  With  earthly  uses  ' —      Balin  and  Balan  421 

Define    Hold  thou  the  good :  d  it  well :  In  Mem.  liii  13 

Defined    His  isolation  grows  d.  „        xlv  12 

Deform'd    Vext  with  unworthy  madness,  and  d.  Aylmer's  Field  335 

His  face  d  by  lurid  blotch  and  blain —  Death  of  QSnone  72 

Defying    We  drink  d  trouble.  Will  Water.  94 

Was  love's  dumb  cry  d  change  In  Mem.  xcv  27 

Degrade     And  throned  races  may  d ;  „     cxxviii  7 

Degree    and  by  d's  May  into  uncongenial  spirits         Mine  be  the  strength  10 

But  by  d's  to  fullness  wrought.  You  ask  me,  why,  14 

We  aU  are  changed  by  still  d's,  Love  thou  thy  land  43 

and  thro'  soft  d's  Subdue  them  to  the  useful  Ulysses  37 

What  for  order  oi  d?  Vision  of  Sin  86 

More  than  is  of  man's  d  Must  be  with  us.  Ode  on  Well.  242 

by  slow  d's  the  sullen  bell  Toll'd  Lover's  Tale  Hi  13 

Deign'd    Arthur  d  not  use  of  word  or  sword.  Last  Tournament  458 

Deity    lays  that  will  outlast  thy  D?  ' D?  nay,  Liicretius  72 

i)  false  in  human-amorous  tears ;  „          90 

Such  is  Rome,  and  this  her  d :  Boddicea  20 

Nor  take  thy  dial  for  thy  d,  Ancient  Sage  109 

Delay  (s)     Raw  Haste,  half-sister  to  D.  Love  thou  thy  land  96 

And  dull  the  voyage  was  with  long  d's,  Enoch  Arden  655 

winning  easy  grace.  No  doubt,  for  slight  d.  Princess  iv  331 

'  Ah,  the  long  d.'  Window.  When  10 

Delay  (verb)     now  d  not :  take  Excahbur,  And  fling  him        M.  d' Arthur  36 

tender  ash  d's  To  clothe  herself.  Princess  iv  106 

Delaying  long,  d  no  more.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  4 

but  d's  his  purport  till  thou  send  Gareth  and  L.  618 

D  not  thou  for  ought,  but  let  them  sit,  Balin  and  Balan  18 

'i)  no  longer,  speak  your  wish,  Lancelot  and  E.  924 

*  now  d  not :  take  Excalibur,  And  fling  him  Pass,  of  Arthur  204 

While  you  still  d  to  take  Your  leave  of  Town,  To  Mary  Boyle  1 

Delay'd    — d  at  first  Thro'  helping  back  Gareth  and  L.  1212 

till  d  By  their  mountain-Uke  San  PhiUp  The  Revenge  39 

Delayest    D  the  sorrow  in  my  blood,  In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  14 

Delaying    D  as  the  tender  ash  delays  To  clothe  herself,  Princess  iv  106 

A  sweet  new-year  d  long ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  2 


Delaying 


144 


Dense 


Delaying  (conlinued)    D  long,  delay  no  more.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  4 

0  thou,  new-year,  d  long,  „  13 
Delayingly  And  yet  she  held  him  on  d  Enoch  Arden  468 
Delegate  she  send  her  d  to  thrall  These  fighting  hands  Pdleas  and  E.  336 
Delicacy  But  could  not  out  of  bashful  d ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  66 
Delicate    (See  also  Fairily-delicato)     Fair  speech  was  his, 

and  d  of  phrase.  Lover's  Tale  iv  273 

Delicate-handed    dilettante,  D-h  priest  intone  ;  Mavd  I  viii  11 

Delicately    Most  d  hour  by  hour  He  canvass'd  A  Character  19 

And  Enid  took  a  Uttle  d,  Geraint  and  E.  212 

Delicious    made  the  air  Of  Life  d,  Gardener's  D.  70 

Were  not  his  words  d,  Edwin  Morris  71 

Delicto    what's  the  Latin  word  ? — D :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  35 

Delight  (s)     triple-mailed  trust,  and  clear  D,  Supp.  Confessions  67 

So  took  echo  with  d,  (repeat)  The  Owl  ii  4 

d,  Life,  anguish,  death,  immortal  love,  Arabian  Nights  72 

and  feedeth  The  senses  with  a  still  d  Margaret  17 

Whose  free  d,  from  any  height  of  rapid  flight,  Rosalind  3 

seeming-bitter  From  excess  of  swift  d.  „     •82 

And  that  d  of  frolic  flight,  „       47 

Falling  into  a  still  d,  Elednore  106 

1  die  with  my  d,  before  I  hear  what  I  would  hear  „  140 
'  Some  vague  emotion  of  d  Two  Voices  361 
My  heart,  pierced  thro'  with  fierce  d,  Fatima  34 
'  I  marvel  if  my  still  d  Palace  of  Art  190 
great  d  and  shuddering  took  hold  of  all  my  mind.  May  Queen,  Con.  35 
When  she  made  pause  I  knew  not  for  d;  D.  of  F.  Women  169 
Thesole  d  is,  sitting  still.  The  Blackbird  10 
The  common  mouth.  So  gross  to  express  d.  Gardener's  D.  56 
drunk  d  of  battle  with  my  peers,  Ulysses  16 
To  shape  the  song  for  your  d  Day-Dm.,  Ep.  6 
and  all  The  chambers  emptied  of  c^ :  In  M^m.  mii  8 
And  was  the  day  of  my  d  As  pure  „  xxiv  1 
With  shower'd  largess  of  d  In  dance  „  xxix  7 
And  what  d's  can  equal  those  „  xlii  9 
Thy  converse  drew  us  with  d,  „  ex  1 
when  we  meet,  D  a  hundredfold  accrue,  „  cxvii  8 
Maud  the  d  of  the  village,  Maud  I  ilO 
and  seems  But  an  ashen-gray  d,  „  vi  22 
echo  of  something  Read  with  a  boy's  d,  „  vii  10 
and  my  D  Had  a  sudden  desire,  „  xiv  19 
darkness  must  have  spread  With  such  d  as  theirs  „  xviii  26 
My  bride  to  be,  my  evermore  d,  „  73 
Breaking  up  my  dream  of  d.  „  xix  2 
I  sorrow  after  The  d  of  early  skies  ;  „  II  iv  25 
The  d  of  happy  laughter,  the  d  of  low  replies.  „  29 
a  dream,  yet  it  yielded  a  dear  d  „  Illvi  15 
Guinevere,  and  in  her  his  one  d.  Com.  of  Arthur  4 
He,  reddening  in  extremity  of  d,  Geraint  and  E.  219 
Inflate  themselves  with  some  insane  d,  Merlin  and  V.  834 
Sprang  to  her  face  and  fiU'd  her  with  d  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  377 
slmlling,  '  Hollow,  hollow  all  d  !  Pass,  of  Arthur  33 
And  hollow,  hollow,  hollow  all  d.'  „  37 
She  took  the  body  of  my  past  d,  Lover's  Tale  i  681 
without  hope,  without  any  d  In  anytliing  Despair  7 

Delight  (verb)     in  her  web  she  still  d's  To  weave  L.  of  Shalott  ii  28 

D  our  souls  with  talk  of  knightly  deeds,  \J!k.  d' Arthur  19 

how  the  sun  d's  To  glance  and  shift  about  Lucretius  188 

nor  deals  in  that  Which  men  d  in.  Princess  Hi  216 

1)  myself  with  gossip  and  old  wives.  Holy  Grail  553 

D  our  souls  with  talk  of  knightly  deeds,  Pass,  of  Arthur  187 

and  d  thyself  To  make  it  wholly  thine  Lover's  Tale  i  13 

never  colt  would  more  d  To  roll  himself  Romney's  R.  13 

Delighted    B  with  the  freshness  and  the  sound.  Edwin  Morris  99 

I  am  all  as  well  d,  Maud  I  xx  40 

Delighteth    nightingale  d  to  prolong  Her  low  preamble       Palace  of  Art  173 

Delirium    I  would  catch  Her  hand  in  wild  d,  Princess  vii  93 

DeUus    the  Sun,  Apollo,  D,  or  of  older  use  Lucretius  125 

Deliver    D  not  the  tasks  of  might  To  weakness.  Love  thou  thy  land  13 

U  me  the  blessed  sacrament ;  St.  S.  Stylites  218 

Thy  tribute  wave  d  :  A  Farewell  2 

Ignorance  D's  brawling  judgments.  Merlin  and  V.  665 

Kise  and  take  This  diamond,  and  a  it,  Lancelot  and  E.  546 

Deliver'd    Z>  at  a  secret  postcm-^ate  Com.  of  Arthur  213 

Deliverer     and  call'd  them  dear  d's,  Princess  vi  92 


Delivering    D,  that  to  me,  by  common  voice  (Enone  84 

D  seal'd  dispatches  which  the  Head  Prhicess  iv  379 

D,  that  his  lord,  the  vassal  king,  Gareth  and  L.  391 

So  she,  ti  it  to  Arthur,  said.  Last  Tournament  30 

Dell    Out  of  the  live-green  heart  of  the  d's  Sea-Fairies  12 

We  would  call  aloud  in  the  dreamy  d's.  The  Merman  25 

diamond-ledges  that  jut  from  the  d's ;  The  Mermaid  40 

The  furzy  prickle  fire  the  d's,  Two  Voices  71 

all  night  long,  in  falling  thro'  the  d,  D.  of  F.  Women  183 

the  sjjlinter'd  crags  that  wall  the  d  „              187 

The  little  d's  of  cowslip,  fairy  palms,  Aylmer's  Field  91 

How  richly  down  the  rocky  d  The  Daisy  9 

And  snowy  d's  in  a  golden  air.  „        68 

moved  in  the  hollows  xmder  the  d's,  V.  of  Maddune  107 

What  sound  was  dearest  in  his  native  d's  ?  Far-far-away  4 

were  alone  in  the  d  at  the  close  of  the  day.  Bandit's  Death  19 

rang  out  all  down  thro'  the  d,  „            36 

Deluge    some  new  d  from  a  thousand  hills  7/  /  were  loved  12 

Pour  with  such  sudden  d's  of  light  Lover's  Tale  i  315 

or  a  d  of  cataract  skies,  Def.  of  Lucknow  81 
In  the  common  d  drowning  old  political  common- 


sense! 
Delyer    careful  robins  eye  the  d's  toil, 

careful  robins  eye  the  d's  toil; 
Demand  (s)     To  make  d  of  modem  rhyme 

obedience  make  d  Of  whom  ye  gave  me  to. 
Demand  (verb)     if  a  king  d  An  act  improfitable, 

The  sense  of  human  will  d's 

D  not  thou  a  marriage  lay ; 

thy  love  to  me.  Thy  mother, — I  d' 

sent  Her  maiden  to  <i  it  of  the  dwarf ; 

Sent  her  own  maiden  to  d  the  name, 

Garlon,  mine  heir.  Of  him  d  it,' 

if  a  king  d  An  act  improfitable. 
Demanded    she  d  who  we  were.  And  why  we  came  ? 

And  then,  d  if  her  mother  knew. 

Was  this  d — if  he  yearn'd  To  hear 

when  the  Queen  d  as  by  chance 

And  when  the  King  d  how  she  knew, 
Demanding    And  then  to  me  d  why  ? 

D,  so  to  bring  relief 
Demigod    Elysian  lawns.  Where  paced  the  D's  of  old. 
Democrat    what  care  I,  Aristocrat,  d. 
Demon    Pallas  from  the  brain  Of  D's  ? 

some  d  in  the  woods  Was  once  a  man, 

who  will  hunt  for  me  This  d  of  the  woods  ?  ' 

Whereout  the  D  issued  up  from  Hell. 

Celtic  Demos  rose  a  D, 

A  d  vext  me, 

and  drove  the  d  from  Hawa-i-ee. 
Demon-god    is  the  d-g  Wroth  at  his  fallj?  ' 
Demonstration    rounded  under  female  hands  With 

flawless  d : 
Demos    Celtic  D  rose  a  Demon, 

D  end  in  working  its  own  doom. 
Demur    He  yielded,  wroth  and  red,  with  fierce  d : 
Demure    The  little  maiden  walk'd  d. 
Den    We  heard  the  lion  roaring  from  his  d ; 

'  Trooping  from  their  mouldy  d's 

and  the  children,  housed  In  her  foul  d, 

climb'd  from  the  d's  in  the  levels  below. 
Denial    Or  by  d  flush  her  babbling  wells 

Who  will  not  hear  d,  vain  and  rude 
Denied    He  oft  d  his  heart  his  dearest  wish, 

'  Come  with  us  Father  PliiUp  '  he  d ; 

at  first  Was  silent ;  closer  prest,  d  it  not, 

she  aliirm'd  not,  or  d : 

'  ye  never  yet  D  my  fancies — 

d  to  him,  Wlio  finds  the  Saviour 
Denouncing    Uke  a  Ghost's  D  judgment. 
Dense    the  decks  were  d  with  stately  fonns 

folds  as  d  as  those  Which  hid  the  HoUest 

race  thro'  many  a  mile  Of  d  and  open. 

But  that  these  eyes  of  men  are  d  and  dim, 

all  the  decks  were  d  with  stately  forms. 


Locksley  II.,  Sixty  250 

Marr.  of  Geraint  774: 

Geraint  and  E.  431 

To  the  Queen  11 

Gareth  and  L.  558 

M.  d' Arthur  95 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  39 

„  Con.  2 

Gareth  and  L.  147 

Marr.  of  Geraint  193 

411 

Balin  and  Balan  118 

Pass,  of  Arthur  263 

Princess  Hi  135 

iv  233 

In  Mem.  xxxi  3 

Merlin  and  V.  128 

Lancdot  and  E.  575 

The  Epic  29 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  6 

Princess  Hi  343 

Maud  I  X  65 

In  Mem.  cxiv  13 

Balin  and  Balan  124 

137 

317 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  90 

Merlin  and  the  G.  29 

Kapiolani  33 

St.  Telemachus  19 

Princess  ii  373 

Locksley  U.,  Sixty  90 

„  114 

Princess  v  358 

Two  Voices  419 

D.ofF.  Women  222 

Vision  of  Sin  171 

Com.  of  Arthur  29 

The  Dawn  17 

Princess  v  334 

Lover's  Tale  i  628 

Enoch  Arden  336 

„  368 

Princess  iv  232 

Lancdot  and  E.  1112 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  114 

Guinevere  421 

M.  d' Arthur  196 

Aylmer's  Field  771 

Balm  and  Balan  424 

Pass,  of  Arthur  19 

364 


Deny 


145 


Desire 


Deny    What !  A  it  now  ?     Nay,  draw, 
and  cry  For  that  which  all  i  them — 
And  would  if  ask'd  d,  it. 
To  hold  your  own,  A  not  hers  to  her 
father,  tender  and  true,  B  me  not,' 
you  will  not  A  my  sultry  throat 

Denying    D  not  these  weather-beaten  limbs 

Denjringly    How  hard  you  look  and  how  A ! 

Depart    He  craved  a  fair  permission  to  A, 
friend,  too  old  to  be  so  young.  A, 
and  still  A  From  death  to  death 

Departed    a  silent  cousin  stole  Upon  us  and  A: 
She  watch'd  it,  and  A  weeping  for  him ; 
James  A  vext  with  him  and  her.' 


St.  S.  StyliUs  206 

Will  Water.  46 

Enoch  ArAen  44 

Princess  m  178 

Lancelot  anA  E.  1111 

Eomney's  R.  22 

St.  S.  Stylites  19 

Merlin  and  V.  338 

Marr.  of  Geraint  40 

Balin  anA  Balan  17 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  51 

EAwin  Morris  116 

Enoch  ArAen  246 

The  Brook  110 


then  A,  hot  in  haste  to  join  Their  luckier  mates,        Geraint  and  E.  574 

So  these  A.     Early,  one  fair  dawn,  Balin  and  Balan  20 

And  thence  d  every  one  his  way.  Holy  Grail  360 

Departest    then  before  thine  answer  given  D,  Tithonus  45 

Departing    With  frequent  smile  and  nod  A  Marr.  of  Geraint  515 

Deplore    Where  shall  we  lay  the  man  whom  we  A?  OAe  on  Well.  8 

Such  was  he  whom  we  A.  „        40 

Still  mine,  that  cannot  but  A,  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  109 

Depress'd    With  lips  i  as  he  were  meek,  A  Character  25 

Depth    (See  also  Love-deptbs)     The  springs  of  life,  the 

A's  of  awe,  Two  Voices  140 

Tears  from  the  A  of  some  divine  despair  Princess  iv  40 

on  the  A's  of  death  there  swims  The  reflex  In  Mem.  cviii  11 

You  cannot  find  their  A ;  for  they  go  back,  Lover's  Tale  i  80 

tho'  every  turn  and  A  Between  is  clearer  „        148 

dash'd  himself  Into  the  dizzy  A  below.  „        381 

dwelling  on  the  light  and  A  of  thine,  „        492 

There  on  the  A  of  an  imfathom'd  woe             -  „        746 

Derive    D's  it  not  from  what  we  have  In  Mem.  h  3 

Derk  (dark)     tliowt  it  wur  CharUe's  ghojist  i'  the  d,  Village  Wife  82 

Derken'd  (darkened)    — they  niver  A  my  door.  „          60 

Desave  (deceive)     an'  she  didn't  intind  to  A,  Tomorrow  59 

Descend    A,  and  proffer  these  The  brethren  Princess  vi  70 

D  below  the  golden  hills  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  28 

D,  and  touch,  and  enter;  „          xciii  13 

Why  then  my  scorn  might  well  A  On  you  „       cxxviii  21 

Would  the  happy  spirit  d,  Mavd  II  iv  81 

fire  of  God  D's  upon  thee  in  the  battle-field :  Com.  of  Arthur  129 

nay,  the  King's — D  into  the  city : '  Gareth  and  L.  540 

The  Holy  Grail,  A  upon  the  shrine :  Holy  Grail  465 

Descendant    On  him  their  last  A,  Ayhner's  Field  834 

Descended    (See  also  Heaven-descended)    tree  by  tree.  The 

country-sided;  Amphion  52 

Then  all  d  to  the  port,  Enoch  Arden  446 

D  to  the  court  that  lay  three  parts  Princess  Hi  20 

As  we  d  following' Hope,  In  Mem.  xxii  11 

his  dream  was  changed,  the  haze  D,  Com.  of  Arthur  442 

The  Sun  of  May  d  on  their  King,  „            462 

the  stream  D,  and  the  Sun  was  wash'd  away.  Gareth  and  L.  1047 
robed  them  in  her  ancient  suit  again.  And  so  d.  Marr.  of  Geraint  771 
finds  himself  d  from  the  Saint  Arimathsean 

Joseph ;  Balin  and  Balan  101 

D,  and  disjointed  it  at  a  blow :  „              296 

He  rose.  A,  met  The  scomer  in  the  castle  court,  „              386 

setting,  when  Even  A,  the  very  sunset  V.  of  Maeldune  66 

and  whereout  The  cloud  A.  Ancient  Sage  14 

beheld  The  Life  that  had  A  re-arise,  Demeter  anA  P.  30 

Descending     angels  rising  and  d  met  Palace  of  Art  \A^ 

A  they  were  ware  That  all  the  decks  M.  A' Arthur  195 

Once  she  lean'd  on  me,  D ;  Princess  iv  27 

D,  burst  the  great  bronze  valves,  „      vi  75 

the  day,  D,  struck  athwart  the  hall,  „        364 

Phantom  sound  of  blows  A,  Bohdicea  25 

D  thro'  the  dismal  night —  Com.  of  Arthur  371 

D  in  the  glory  of  the  seas —  „            400 

And  then  d  met  them  at  the  gates,  Marr.  of  Geraint  833 

d  they  were  ware  That  all  the  decks  Pass,  of  Arthur  363 

D  from  the  point  and  standing  both.  Lover's  Tale  i  411 
some,  d  from  the  sacred  peak  Of  hoar                   Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  9 

Self-darken'd  in  the  sky,  d  slow !  Prog,  of  Spring  28 

Descent    Smile  at  the  claims  of  long  d.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  52 


Descent  (continued)    She  might  by  a  true  A  be  untrue ;  Maud  I  xiii  31 

Fierce  in  the  strength  of  far  d,  Lover's  Tale  i  382 

farm  can  teach  us  there  is  something  in  d.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  26 

Descried    wall  Of  purple  cliffs,  aloof  d :  Ode  to  Memory  54 

Descry     I  could  d  The  stem  black-bearded  kings  D.  of  F.  Women  110 

Desenzano     Row  us  out  from  D,  Frater  Ave,  etc.  1 

Desert  (merit)     Royal  grace  To  one  of  less  d  allows.  To  the  Queen  6 

bowing  at  their  own  d's  :  The  Brook  128 

And  partly  conscious  of  my  own  d's.  Princess  iv  305 

Desert  (waste)     why  dare  Paths  in  the  d  ?  Sufp.  Confessions  79 

Of  that  long  d  to  the  south.  Fatima  14 

Which  makes  a  d  in  the  mind.  In  Mem.  Ixvi  6 

every  blazing  d  till'd,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  168 

science  making  toward  Thy  Perfectness  Are 

blinding  d  sand ;  Akbar's  Dream  30 

the  Star  that  lights  a  A  pathway,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  275 

Deserve    A  That  we  this  night  should  pluck  Princess  iv  413 

what  might  that  man  not  A  of  me,  „        v  104 

Deserved    Since  we  A  the  name  of  friends.  In  Mem.  Ixv  9 

Design     wherein  were  wrought  Two  grand  A's ;  Piincess  vii  122 

the  vast  A's  Of  his  labour'd  rampart-lines,  OAe  on  Well.  104 

giant  aisles,  Rich  in  model  and  A ;  OAe  Inter.  Exhib.  13 

A  miracle  of  d !  Maud  II  ii  8 

learnt  and  wam'd  me  of  their  fierce  d  Lancelot  and  E.  274 

found  The  new  d  wherein  they  lost  themselves,  „              441 

broke  The  vast  d  and  purpose  of  the  King.  Guinevere  670 

Design'd    was  there  Not  less  than  truth  d.  Palace  of  Art  92 

Not  less  than  life,  d.  „           128 

Desire  (S)     oh,  haste.  Visit  my  low  d !  Ode  to  Memory  4 

flow'd  upon  the  soul  in  many  dreams  Of  high  d.  The  Poet  32 

'  Which  did  accomplish  their  d,  Two  Voices  217 

To  yield  consent  to  my  d :  Miller's  D.  138 

The  skies  stoop  down  in  their  d ;  Fatima  32 

my  d  is  but  to  pass  to  Him  that  died  for  me.  May  Queen,  Con.  20 

things  have  ceased  to  be,  with  my  d  of  life.  „                 48 

Strength  came  to  me  that  equall'd  my  d.  D.  of  F.  Women  230 

vague  d's,  like  fitful  blasts  of  balm  Gardener's  D.  68 

to  say  That  my  d,  like  all  strongest  hopes,  „           237 

this  gray  spirit  yearning  in  d  To  follow  Ulysses  30 

The  bird  that  pipes  his  lone  d  You  might  have  won  31 

thro'  the  smoke  The  blight  of  low  d's —  Aylmer's  Field  673 

thro'  their  own  d  accomplish'd,  ,,              776 

That  lent  my  knee  d  to  kneel,  Princess  Hi  193 

fail  so  far  In  high  d,  they  know  not,  „            280 

And  every  hoof  a  knell  to  my  d's,  „        iv  174 

Melt  into  stars  for  the  land's  d\  W.  to  Alexandra  21 

welcome  her,  welcome  the  land's  d,  „             25 

But  they — they  feel  the  d  of  the  deep —  Voice  and  the  P.  19 

sparrow  and  throstle,  and  have  your  <i!  Window,  Ay  14 

That  thou  should 'st  fail  from  thy  d.  In  Mem.  iv  6 

That  not  a  moth  with  vain  d  Is  shrivell'd  „        liv  10 

The  centre  of  a  world's  d ;  „      Ixiv  16 

If  any  vague  d  should  rise,  „       Ixxx  1 

I  seem  to  meet  their  least  d,  „  Ixxxiv  17 

bom  of  love,  the  vague  d  That  spurs  „        ex  19 

Submitting  all  things  to  d.  „       cxiv  8 

might  ensue  D  of  nearness  doubly  sweet ;  „      cxvii  6 

Dear  friend,  far  off,  my  lost  d,  „     cxxix  1 

and  my  Delight  Had  a  sudden  d,  Maud  I  xiv  20 

A  d  that  awoke  in  the  heart  of  the  child,  „         xix  48 

but  the  deathbed  d  Spurn'd  by  this  heir  „                77 

the  heart  of  a  people  beat  with  one  d ;  „     III  vi  49 

d  To  close  with  her  lord's  pleasure  ;  Geraint  and  E.  213 

monk  and  nun,  ye  scorn  the  world's  A,  Balin  and  Balan  445 

low  d  Not  to  feel  lowest  makes  them  level  all ;  Merlin  and  V.  827 

Suddenly  flash'd  on  her  a  wild  d,  Lancelot  and  E.  357 

but  you  work  against  your  own  d ;  „             1096 

her  hand  is  hot  With  ill  d's.  Last  Tournament  415 

when  old  and  gray.  And  past  d\'  „               628 

love  me  ev'n  when  old,  Gray-hair'd,  and  past  d,  „              653 

Ay,  ay,  0  ay — a  star  was  my  d,  „               733 

words  And  courtUness,  and  the  d  of  fame,  Guinevere  482 

or  d  that  her  lost  child  Should  earn  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  250 

O  therefore  that  the  unfulfiU'd  d,  Tiresias  79 
sank  with  the  body  at  tunes  in  the  sloughs  of  a  low  d.   By  an  Evolution.  18 

K 


Desire 


146 


Devising 


Desire  (s)  {continued)    Till,  led  by  dream  and  vague  d.     To  Master  of  B.  17 

creeds  be  lower  than  the  heart's  d !  Faith  5 

and  woke  D  in  me  to  infuse  my  tale  of  love  Princess  v  240 

save  my  soul,  that  is  all  your  d :  Eizpah  77 

d  to  keep  So  skilled  a  nurse  about  you  always —  The  Sing  373 

Desire  (verb)     If  I  were  loved,  as  I  d  to  be,  If  I  were  loved  1 

Her  open  eyes  d  the  truth.  Of  old  sat  Freedom  17 

Why  should  a  man  d  in  any  way  To  vary  Tiihonus  28 

And  Id  to  rest.  Co-me  not,  when,  etc.  10 

not  of  those  that  men  d,  Sleek  Odalisques,  Princess  ii  76 

d  you  more  Than  growing  boys  their  manhood ;  „     iv  456 

She  d's  no  isles  of  the  blest.  Wages  8 

Do  we  indeed  d  the  dead  In  Mem.  li  1 

not  to  d  or  admire,  if  a  man  could  learn  Mavd  I  iv  41 

Rich  in  the  grace  all  women  d,  „        x  13 

save  yourself  d  it,  We  will  not  touch  Marr.  of  Geraint  310 

Yet,  seeing  jrou  d  your  child  to  live,  Lancelot  and  E.  1095 

now  his  chair  d's  him  here  in  vain.  Holy  Grail  901 

howsoever  much  they  may  d  Silence,  Guinevere  206 

Who  could  d  more  beauty  at  a  feast  ?  '  Lover's  Tale  iv  240 

more  than  one  Here  sitting  who  d's  it.  „             242 

Wan,  but  as  pretty  as  heart  can  d,  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  40 

Desired    You  are  not  one  to  be  d.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  8 

long  d  A  certain  miracle  of  symmetry,  Gardener's  D.  10 

they  hated,  Had  what  they  d :  The  Captain  38 

broke  the  bond  which  they  d  to  break,  Aylmer's  Field  778 
— and  many  men  D  her ;  one,  good  lack,  no  man  d.    Gareth  and  L.  106 

needs  Must  wed  that  other,  whom  no  man  d,  „  109 
d  his  name,  and  sent  Her  maiden  to  demand  it       Marr.  of  Geraint  192 

_  But  now  d  the  humbling  of  their  best,  Geraint  and  E.  637 

Desiring    D  what  is  mingled  with  past  years,  D.  of  F.  Women  282 

Z)  to  be  join'd  with  Guinevere ;  Com.  of  Arthur  77 

Wasted  and  pined,  d  him  in  vain.  Pelleas  and  E.  496 

And  I,  d  that  diviner  day,  To  Victor  Hugo  12 

Desk    worn-out  clerk  Brow-beats  his  d  below.  To  J.  M.  K.  12 

'  Oh !  who  would  cast  and  balance  at  a  d,  Audley  Court  44 

Erect  behind  ad  oi  satin-wood,  Princess  ii  105 

To  cramp  the  student  at  his  d,  In  Mem.  cxxviii  18 

Deskwork    a  dozen  years  Of  dust  and  <?:  Sea  Dreams  18 

Desolate  O  spirit  and  heart  made  <i !  Supp.  Confessions  189 
Your  house  is  left  imto  you  d ! '  (repeat)              Aylmer's  Field  629,  797 

*  My  house  is  left  unto  me  d.'  „                   721 

*  Our  house  is  left  unto  us  a! '  ?  „  737 
became  Imbecile ;  his  one  word  was  'd;'  „  836 
D?  yes !  Z>  as  that  sailor.  The  Ring  306 

Desolation    Against  the  d's  of  the  world.  Aylmer's  Field  634 

No  d  but  by  sword  and  fire  ?  „            748 

and  her  d  came  Upon  her,  and  she  wept  Geraint  and  E.  518 

wind  of  the  Night  shrilling  out  D  and  wrong  The  Dreamer  15 

Despair     Plagued  her  with  sore  d.  Palace  of  Art  224 

And  nothing  saw,  for  her  d,  „          266 

must  mis.  with  action,  lest  I  wither  by  d.  Locksley  Hall  98 

Whisper'd  '  Listen  to  my  d :  Edward  Gray  22 

shake  The  midriff  of  d  with  laughter,  Princess  i  201 

Or  baser  courses,  children  of  d.'  „    Hi  213 

Tears  from  the  depth  of  some  divine  d  „       iv  40 

hold  That  it  becomes  no  mart  to  nurse  d,  „         464 

A  day  of  onsets  of  d\  Ode  on  Well.  124 

If  any  calm,  a  calm  d :  In  Mem.  xil6 

Can  calm  d  and  wild  unrest  Be  tenants  „         xvi  2 

D  of  Hope,  and  earth  of  thee.  „  Ixxxiv  16 

and  ever  wann'd  with  d,  Maud  7  i  10 

was  but  a  dream,  yet  it  lighten'd  my  d  „  ///  vi  18 

He  half  d's ;  so  Gareth  seem'd  to  strike  Gareth  and  L.  1133 

Gray-hair'd,  and  past  desire,  and  in  d.'  Last  Tournament  653 

Despair'd    approach  To  save  the  life  d  of,  Enoch  Arden  831 

Despise    my  flesh,  which  I  d  and  hate,  St.  S.  Stylites  58 

whom  the  strong  sons  of  the  world  d ;  The  Brook  3 
But  that  his  pride  too  much  d's  me :  And  I  myself 

sometimes  d  myself ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  464 

Despised    See  Half-despised 

Despite    D  of  Day  and  Night  and  Death  and  Hell.'  Gareth  and  L.  887 

till  he  felt,  d  his  mail,  Strangled,  „        1151 

Lancelot  who  hath  come  D  the  woimd  Lancelot  and  E.  566 

many  a  year  have  done  d  and  wrong  To  one  „           1209 


Despite  {continued)    d  All  fast  and  penance.  Holy  Grail  630 

the  Gods,  d  of  human  prayer.  Are  slower  to  forgive  Tiresias  9 

D  of  every  Faith  and  Greed,  To  Mary  Boyle  51 

Despondence    Listless  in  all  d, — read ;  Aylmer's  Field  534 

Despot    {See  also  Dandy-despot)    the  fire  Y^ere  smoulder 

their  dead  d's ;  Princess  v  380 

Nothing  of  the  lawless,  of  the  D,  On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  12 

How  can  a  d  feel  with  the  Free  ?  Riflemen  form  !  11 

Destined    opposite  Of  all  my  heart  had  d  Guinevere  492 

Destiny    No  one  can  be  more  wise  than  d.  D.  of  F.  Women  94 

hung  their  heavy  hands.  The  weight  of  d :  Princess  iv  554 

Destitute    All  the  lowly,  the  d.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  31 

Destroyed     void.  Dark,  formless,  utterly  d.  Supp.  Confessions  122 

And  this  d  him ;  for  the  wicked  broth  Lucretius  19 

That  not  one  life  shall  be  d,  In  Mem.  liv  6 

Destructive    was  as  a  boy  D,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  82 

Detaching    d,  fold  by  fold.  From  those  still  heights  Vision  of  Sin  51 

Detail    Another  kind  of  beauty  in  d  Princess  iv  448 

Detention    for  the  rest.  Our  own  d,  why,  „        v  215 

Determined    Thus  Enoch  in  his  heart  d  all :  Enoch  Arden  148 

Detestable    She  might  not  rank  with  those  d  Princess  v  457 

Dethronement    And  crownings  and  d's :  To  the  Queen  ii  45 

Develop'd    {See  also  Slow-developed)     Beyond  all 

grades  d  ?  Gardener's  D.  241 

Development    present  The  world  with  some  d.  Two  Voices  75 

And  new  d  s,  whatever  spark  Be  struck  Prog,  of  Spring  94 

Device     our  d ;  wrought  to  the  life ;  Princess  Hi  303 

Were  Arthur's  wars  in  weird  d's  done,  Gareth  and  L.  225 

by  some  d  Full  cowardly,  or  by  mere  unhappiness,  „          767 

Or  some  d,  hast  foully  overthrown),  „          998 

D  and  sorcery  and  unhappiness —  „        1235 

All  the  d's  blazon'd  on  the  shield  Lancelot  and  E.  9 

Blank,  or  at  least  with  some  d  not  mine.'  „        194 

thread  And  crimson  in  the  belt  a  strange  d ;  Holy  Grail  154 

Among  the  strange  d's  of  our  kings ;  „        730 

Restrain'd  him  with  all  manner  of  d,  Pdleas  and  E.  204 

Devil    {See  also  Divil,  Wood-devil)    What  D  had  the 

heart  to  scathe  Flowers  Supp.  Confessions  83 

That  pride,  the  sin  of  d's,  „            109 

A  glorious  D,  large  in  heart  and  brain,         To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  5 

And  oft  some  brainless  d  enters  in,  Palace  of  Art  203 

Quoth  she, '  The  D  take  the  goose.  The  Goose  55 

Vex'd  with  a  morbid  <i  in  his  blood  Walk,  to  the  Mail  19 

let  him  go ;  his  d  goes  with  him,  „              27 


scarce  meet  For  troops  of  d's, 

D's  pluck'd  my  sleeve. 

Comfort  ?  conif ort  scorn'd  of  d's ! 

glaring,  by  his  own  stale  d  spurr'd. 

True  D's  with  no  ear,  they  howl  in  tune  With 

nothing  but  the  D ! ' 
if  there  be  A  <i  in  man,  there  is  an  angel  too, 
A  d  rises  in  my  heart, 
and  the  D  may  pipe  to  his  own. 
thou  could'st  lay  the  D  of  these  woods 


St.  S.  Stylites  4    ' 

»       171 

Locksley  Hall  75 
Aylmer's  Field  290 

Sea  Dreams  260 

278 

Sailor  Boy  23 

Maud  I  ilQ 

'Balin  and  Balan  298 


Balin  cried  '  Him,  or  the  viler  d  who  plays  his  part, 

To  lay  that  d  would  lay  the  D  in  me.'    '  Nay,' 

said  the  churl, '  our  i  is  a  truth,  „            300 

Or  d  or  man  Guard  thou  thine  head.'  „            552 

Know  well  that  Envy  calls  you  D's  son :  Merlin  and  V.  467 

And  then  did  Envy  call  me  D's  son :  „              497 

and  stirs  the  pulse  With  d's  leaps,  Guinevere  522 

dogs  of  Seville,  the  children  of  the  d.  The  Revenge  30 

I  never  turn'd  my  back  upon  Don  or  d  yet.'  „        31 

Was  he  d  or  man  ?    He  was  d  for  aught  they  knew,  „      108 

Are  we  d's  ?  are  we  men  ?  Locksley  H,,  Sixty  99 

Dance  in  a  fountain  of  flame  with  her  d's,  Kapiolani  10 

only  the  D  can  tell  what  he  means.  Riflemen  form.'  25 

Devil-bom    You  tell  me,  doubt  is  D-b.  In  Mem.  xcvi  4 

Devil's-d.ances    bagpipes,  revelling,  d-d.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  149 

Devised    Besought  Lavaine  to  write  as  she  d  Lancelot  and  E.  1103 

Then  he  wrote  The  letter  she  d ;  „              1109 

her  lips.  Who  had  d  the  letter,  moved  again.  „              1288 

Devising    And  moist  and  drv,  d  long,  Love  thou  thy  land  38 

d  their  own  daughter's  death !  Aylmer's  Field  783 

urged  All  the  d'i  of  their  chivalry  Gareth  and  L,  1349 


Devising 

Devising  (continued)    But  bode  his  hour,  d 

wretchedness. 
Devoir    Now  weary  of  my  service  and  d, 
Devolved    D  his  rounded  periods. 
Devon    A  tributary  prince  of  D, 
I  am  Geraint  Of  D — 
'  was  it  for  him  she  wept  In  D  ? ' 
Men  of  Bideford  in  D, 
Devotion    gaze  upon  him  With  such  a  fixt  d. 
Devour    wolf  would  steal  The  children  and  d, 
Devour'd    bank  that  is  daily  d  by  the  tide — 
Dew    (See  also  Balm-dew,  Night-dew)    Winds  creep ; 
d's  f  aU  chilly :  ^ ' 

to  brush  the  d  From  thine  own  lily, 
Her  tears  fell  \vith  the  d's  at  even ;  Her  tears  fell 

ere  the  d's  were  dried, 
And  d  is  cold  upon  the  ground, 
woodbine  and  eglatere  Drip  sweeter  d's 
violet  woos  To  his  heart  the  silver  d's  ? 
But  ever  trembling  thro'  the  d 
Some  red  heath-flower  in  the  d, 
Thro'  crofts  and  pastures  wet  with  d 
And  d's,  that  would  have  fall'n  in  tears, 
as  sunhght  drinketh  d. 
slowly  dropping  fr^rant  d. 
quick-falling  d  Of  fruitful  kisses, 
fresh-wash'd  in  coolest  d  The  maiden  splendours 
dark  wood-walks  drench'd  in  d, 
And  tho'  mine  own  eyes  fill  with  d, 
A  thought  would  fill  my  eyes  with  happy  d ; 
my  thighs  are  rotted  with  the  a! ; 
I  am  wet  With  drenching  d's, 
And  flung  him  in  the  d. 
and  there  rain'd  a  ghastly  d 
Dash'd  together  in  blinding  d : 
till  the  gracious  d's  Began  to  glisten 
blossom-fragrant  slipt  the  heavy  d's 
the  d  Dwelt  in  her  eyes, 
And  on  these  d's  that  drench  the  furze, 
When  all  our  path  was  fresh  with  d, 
Deep  tuUps  dash'd  with  fiery  d. 
The  sweep  of  scythe  in  morning  d. 
And  back  we  come  at  fall  of  d. 
still  The  d  of  their  great  labour, 
than  the  sward  with  drops  of  d. 
The  deer,  the  d's,  the  fern,  the  founts. 
The  d  of  tears  is  an  unwholesome  d, 
fresh  as  a  codlin  wesh'd  i'  the  d. 
my  eyes  are  dim  with  d, 
and  fills  The  flower  with  d ; 
scatters  on  her  throat  the  sparks  of  d, 
drank  the  d's  and  drizzle  of  the  North, 
Dew'd    and,  d  with  showery  drops, 
Dewdrop    when  two  d's  on  the  petal  shake 
And  every  d-d  paints  a  bow, 
glanced  with  d  or  with  gem  Like  sparkles 
Dew-fed    and  in  the  moon  Nightly  d-f; 
Dew-impearled    d-i  winds  of  dawn  have  kiss'd, 
Dewless    bearded  grass  Is  dry  and  d. 
Dew-lit    And  those  d-l  eyes  of  thine. 
Dewy-dark    lawn  was  d-d.  And  d-d  aloft 
Dewy-fresh    The  fields  between  Are  d-f, 
Dewy-glooming    November  dawns  and  d-g  downs, 
Dewy-tasseU'd    In  the  green  gleam  of  d-t  trees : 

Thro'  all  the  d-t  wood. 
Dewy-warm    eyeUds,  growing  d-w  With  kisses 
Dexter    Eagle  rising  or,  the  Sun  In  d  chief ; 
Dhrame  (dream)     like  a  bit  of  yisther-day  in  a  dr— 

An'  to  rf  of  a  married  man,  death  ahve, 
Dhrink  (drink)    give  me  a  thrifle  to  d  yer  health 
Dhrmkin'  (drinkii^)     an'  I  been  I)  yer  health 
Dhrop  (drop)     been  takin'  ado'  the  crathur ' 

Wid  a  diamond  d  in  her  eye, 
Dhropt  (dropt)     an'  d  down  dead  an  the  dead. 
Dhrownded  (drowned)    foun'  I)  in  black  bog-wather 


147 


Die 


Irtist  Tournament  386 

Lancelot  and  ^.118 

A  Character  18 

Marr.  of  Geraint  2 

410 

Geraint  and  E.  398 

The  Revenge  17 

Merlin  and  V.  183 

Com.  of  Arthur  27 

Def.  of  Lucknow  39 

Leonine  Eleg.  7 
Supp.  Confessions  84 

Mariana  13 
The  Owl  I  2 
A  Dirge  24 
Adeline  32 
Margaret  52 
Rosalind  41 
Two  Voices  14 
MiUer's  D.  151 
Fatima  21 
(EnoTie  106 
„      204 
D.ofF.  Women  54^ 
75 
To  J.  S.  37 
Gardener's  D.  197 
8t.  S.  StylUes  41 
115 
Talking  Oak  232 
Locksley  HaU  123 
Vision  of  Sin  42 
Princess  ii  316 
„         v243 
„      vii  135 
In  Mem.  xi  6 
„      Ixviii  6 
„  Ixxxiii  11 
„  Ixxxix  18 
„    Con.  100 
Marr.  of  Geraint  568 
Geraint  and  E.  690 
Last  Tournament  727 
Lover's  Tale  i  765 
North.  Cobbler  110 
The  Flight  97 
Early  Spring  46 
Prog,  of  Spring  bQ 
81 
Lotos-Eaters  17 
Princess  vii  68 
In  Mem.  cxxii  18 
Gareth  and  L.  929 
Lotos-Eaters,  C.S.  30 
Ode  to  Memory  14 
Miller's  D.  246 
Adeline  47 
(Enone  48 
Gardener's  D.  46 
Enoch  Arden  610 
Princess  i  94 
In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  6 
Tithonus  58 
Merlin  and  V.  476 
Tomorrow  8 
51 
98 
12 
11 
28 
80 
62 


Diadem    Crown'd  so  long  with  a  d 

Diagonal    I  moved  as  in  a  strange  d. 

Dial    this  high  d,  which  my  sorrow  crowns — 

Nor  take  thy  d  for  thy  deity. 
Diamond    Then  fiUip'd  at  the  d  in  her  ear ; 
With  bracelets  of  the  d  bright : 
rode  to  tilt  For  the  great  d  in  the  i  jousts, 
since  a  d  was  the  prize, 
king,  had  on  a  crown  Of  d's,  one  in  front, 
Lancelot  won  the  d  of  the  year, 
Now  for  the  central  d  and  the  last  And  largest, 
my  love  is  more  Than  many  d's  ' 
yeam'd  to  make  complete  The  tale  of  d's 
]oust  as  one  unknown  At  Camelot  for  the  d, 
maiden  dreamt  That  some  one  put  this  d  in  her  hand, 
And  you  shall  win  this  d, — as  I  hear  It  is  a  fair  large  d, — 
'  A  fair  large  d,'  added  plain  Sir  Torre, 
Blazed  the  last  d  of  the  nameless  king. 
'  Advance  and  take  thy  prize  The  d;'  but  he  answer'd, 

D  me  No  d's ! 
Rise  and  take  This  d,  and  deliver  it, 
he  took.  And  gave,  the  d : 
Rode  with  his  d,  wearied  of  the  quest, 
leave  My  quest  with  you ;  the  d  also :  here ! 
whether  he  love  or  not,  Ad  is  ad. 
kiss'd  the  hand  to  which  he  gave.  The  d, 
I  gave  the  d :  she  will  render  it ; 
with  mine  own  hand  give  his  d  to  him, 
'  Ay,  ay,  the  d :  wit  ye  well,  my  child, 
'  Your  prize  the  d  sent  you  by  the  King : ' 
the  tale  Of  King  and  Prince,  the  d  sent, 
And  laid  the  <i  in  his  open  hand. 
The  nine-years-fought-f or  d's : 
What  are  these  ?    D's  for  me ! 
pray  you,  add  my  d's  to  her  pearls ; 
once  fair  Was  richer  than  these  d's — 
flash'd,  as  it  were,  D's  to  meet  them. 
Those  d's  that  I  rescued  from  the  tarn, 
'  lo  t'amo ' — and  these  d's — 
or  to  find  My  Mother's  d's  hidden 
Diamond-drift    showering  wide  Sleet  of  d-d 
Diamond-ledge    d-l's  that  jut  from  the  dells ; 
Diamond-plot    d-p's  Of  dark  and  bright. 
Dian    set  a  wrathful  D's  moon  on  flame, 

Diana     Like  those  who  cried  2)  great :  ^„.  ^,j-^umes  lo 

Diaper'd    Engarlanded  and  d  With  inwrought  flowers,    Arabian  Nights  148 
Dice    vows  his  child  ....  to  one  cast  of  the  d.  The  Flight  26 

Dick    if  thou  marries  a  bad  un,  I'll  leave  the  land 

toD—  ,    ^    ^     ,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  58 

Awhen  ecoomstobedead  OwdRoa  11 

Ya  mun  saave  httle  D,  an'  be  sharp  about  it  gl 

and  soa  little  D,  good-night.  "      ug 

Dicky     Bedtime,  D !  but  waait  till  tha  'ears  "        ig 

But  D,  the  Ghosist  moastUns  "        3g 

An'  I'd  clear  forgot,  little  D,  "        g^ 

Dictator    The  rnulberiy-faced  D's  orgies  Lucretius  54 

Dido     wars,  and  fihal  faith,  and  D's  pyre ;  ^'o  Virqil  4 

Die    (See  also  Doy)     The  breezes  pause  and  d,  Claribel  2 

aweary  of  beating  ?    And  nature  d  ?    Never,  oh ! 

never,  nothing  will  d ;  Nothing  wiU  Die  7 

Nothing  will  d.     Nothmg  will  d;  13 

Nothing  was  bom ;  Nothing  will  d;  "37 

Yet  all  things  must  d.  m  Things  wiU  Die  8 

i-or  all  things  must  «i.  (repeat)  13  49 

AU  things  must  d.  "  '  ^, 

And  the  old  earth  must  d.  "  ^j 

Men  say  that  Thou  Didst  d  for  me,  for  such  as  me,  Supp.  Confessions  3 


On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  1 

Princess,  Con.  27 

St.  S.  Stylites  95 

Ancient  Sage  109 

Godiva  25 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep  B.  14 

Lancelot  and  E.  31 

33 

46 

68 

73 


91 
191 
212 

227 
230 
444 


504 

546 

551 

616 

691 

695 

703 

713 

760 

771 

821 

824 

827 

1167 

1212 

1224 

1229 

1237 

Last  Tournament  37 

The  Ring  70 

„      142 

Vision  of  Sin  22 

The  Mermaid  40 

Arabian  Nights  85 

Princess  vi  368 

Lit.  Squabbles  16 


draws  His  forehead  earthward,  and  he  d's. 

he  shall  rise  and  on  the  surface  d. 

A  gentler  death  shall  Falsehood  d, 

I  dare  not  d  and  come  to  thee, 

D  in  their  hearts  for  the  love  of  me. 

I  d  with  my  deUght, 

No  tears  of  love,  but  tears  that  Love  can  d. 

Live  forgotten  and  d  forlorn.'  (repeat) 


168 

The  Kraken  15 

Clear-headed  friend  16 

Oriana  96 

The  Mermaid  30 

Elednore  140 

Wan  Sculptor  8 

Mariana  in  Uie  S.  60,  72 


Die 

Die  (continued)    I  wept, '  Tho'  I  should  d,  I  know 
Than  once  from  dread  of  pain  to  a. 
To  flatter  me  that  I  may  d  ? 
Not  simple  as  a  thing  that  d's. 
My  own  sweet  Alice,  we  must  d. 
That  we  may  d  the  self -same  day. 
I  watch'd  the  little  circles  d ; 
I  should  d  an  early  death : 
I  wiU  possess  him  or  will  d 


148 

Two  Voices  58      Die 

„        105 

204 

"       288 

Miner's  D.  18 

»        24 

90 
Fatima  39 
Grow,  Uve,  d  looking  on  his  face,  D,  dymg  clasp  d  m  his  ^^ 

mo^her^a.  harken  ere  I  d.  (repeat)  CEnone  24,|5,  46,  53,Jk  T7, 

151,  173,  183, 195 
194 
And  I  shall  be  alone  until  Id.  »  245  256 

mother,  hear  me  yet  before  I  d.  (repeat)  „  207,  220,  230,  24^,  |^ 

shadow  all  my  soul,  that  I  may  d.  „  244 

Weigh  heavy  on  my  eyelids :  let  me  d.  ,,  ^46  257 

I  wiU  not  d  alone,  (repeat)  »  p^      „.  j^J  284 

'  I  have  found  A  new  land,  but  I  d.'  ■^<"«««  "J  ^^^  ggg 

And  save  me  lest  I  d  ?  ,      ^  ■,    ,,      n.  Arv'^TTlfi 

I  long  to  see  a  flower  so  before  the  day  I  d.  May  Queen,  N.  Y.  s.^E^lb 
To  d  before  the  snowdrop  came,  »  '^q 

up  to  Heaven  and  d  among  the  stars.  ,,  ^^^^^  ^-^^ 

Waiting  to  see  me  rf.  ,    ,,       ^    ji  152 

leapt  into  my  arms.  Contented  there  to  d '.  »  2^^ 

a  thousand  times  I  would  be  bom  and  d.  »  231 

How  beautiful  a  tMng  it  was  to  d  For  God  »         ^^^^  g 

Old  year,  you  must  not  d ;  j^- ^'j  '-  ^  ^^ 

Old  year,  you  shall  not  die.  (repeat)  "  '  gg 

I've  half  a  mind  to  d  with  you,  Old  year,  if  you  must  d.         „  ^o 

To  see  him  d,  across  the  waste  His  son  and  heir  „  ^ 

Shake  hands,  before  you  d.  .  "45 

WsefbSflTTfcpalmsandtemples  you^^^.^^^^^il 

Nor  shall  see,  here  or  elsewhere,  till  Id  M.  d  Arthur  104 

I  fear  My  wound  hath  taken  cold,  and  I  shall  d.  ,,          ^^ 

I  fear  it  is  too  late,  and  I  shall  d.'  "     E«  24 

'  Arthur  is  come  again  :  he  cannot  d.  "   j^  Q  jg 

see  My  grandchild  on  my  knees  before  Id:  Shdites  50 

did  not  all  thy  martyrs  d  one  death  ?  St.  <S.  ^tylites  ou 

I  d  here  To-day,  and  whole  years  long,  "          j^g 

strive  and  wrestle  with  thee  till  Id:  »          220 

I  prophesy  that  I  shall  d  to-night,  ^^          gj 

Of  all  the  western  stars,  until  I  d.  Tithonus  4 

after  many  a  summer  d's  the  swan.  rjQ 

happy  men  that  have  the  power  to  d,  ^^^^^  23 

'  But  I  would  d,'  said  she.  „,       p  49 

When  will  the  hundred  summers  d,  ^^WUl   Water  234 

The  thick-set  hazel  d's;  r„>,,  Clare  48 

the  lady  repUed, '  Tho'  I  should  d  to-night.'  .  .     ^fl}"^^'-^^ 

Every  mon^ent  d's  a  man,  (repeat)  ^t««'«  «/  -^^^  ^7,  121 

S  r^wlKel  cTS- d,  ro«  «.a.  /..c  .on  13 

rSrhoiJ^fp^tseTnid.  ^itiSfJ 

not  to  d  a  listener,  I  arose,  ,    t^-„i^  a  a  a. 

Sd  left  the  living  scandal  that  shall  d-  ^2/?^«-'s  ^^^^  444 

wounded  to  the  death  that  cannot  d ;  Sph' Dreams  276 

what  heart  had  he  To  d  of  ?  dead !  ^  zSraZ  274 

the  soul  flies  out  and  d's  in  the  air.'  P^Tiidl 

gossip  and  spite  And  slander,  d.  ■" "           gio 

'  Let  me  d  too,' said  Cyril,  "     ^^^205 

speak,  and  let  the  topic  d.                      ,  ,  .        ,  n                 " 

we  like  them  well :  But  children  d ;  and  let  me  tell 

you,  girl,  Howe'er  you  babble,  great  deeds  cannot  d ;  „        ,^'^^ 

O  love,  they  d  in  yon  rich  sky,  »          ^gg 

To  follow  up  the  worthiest  till  he  d :  »         g^g 

protomartyr  of  our  cause,  D:          ,    ,  ,  ,,                          "        « 14 

wakes  A  Usping  of  the  innumerous  leaf  and  ds,                       "85 

And  either  she  will  d  from  want  of  care,  "         ^^^^ 

the  question  settled  d.'  "         ci  4 

'  She  must  weep  or  she  will  d.  "         oog 

Let  our  girls  flit.  Till  the  storm  dl  "        viiS 

O  my  friend,  I  will  not  have  thee  dl  »       *' 


(continued)    often  she  beUeved  that  I  should  d 

Sweet  dream,  be  perfect.     I  shaU  d  to-night. 

Stoop  down  and  seem  to  kiss  me  ere  I  d. 

Their's  but  to  do  and  d: 

fairer  she,  but  ah  how  soon  to  d ! 

Echo  on  echo  D's  to  the  moon. 

Give  her  the  wages  of  going  on,  and  not  to  d. 

I  may  d  but  the  grass  will  grow. 

He  thinks  he  was  not  made  to  d; 

all  the  magic  light  D's  oS  at  once 

Or  dying,  there  at  least  may  d. 

impart  The  life  that  almost  d's  in  me;  That 

d's  not,  but  endures  with  pain. 
Before  their  time  ?  they  too  will  d. 
do  not  d  Nor  lose  their  mortal  sympathy. 
Which  telling  what  it  is  to  d 
use  A  Uttle  patience  ere  Id; 

Man  d's :  nor  is  there  hope  in  dust: 

Half-dead  to  know  that  I  shall  d.' 

The  purple  from  the  distance  d's, 

And  weave  their  petty  cells  and  d. 

Yet  in  these  ears,  till  hearing  d's. 

His  other  passion  wholly  d's, 

His  inner  day  can  never  d,  ^ 

From  ofi  my  bed  the  moonlight  d  s ; 

0  last  regret,  regret  can  d ! 

demands  By  which  we  dare  to  live  or  d. 
Their  every  parting  was  to  d. 

1  think  once  more  he  seems  to  d. 
Ring  out,  wild  bells,  and  let  him  d. 
And  let  the  ape  and  tiger  d. 

And  ready,  thou,  to  d  with  him. 
Dear  heavenly  friend  that  canst  not  d, 
I  shall  not  lose  thee  tho'  I  d. 
Cheat  and  be  cheated,  and  d : 
and  dash  myself  down  and  d 
Singing  of  Death,  and  of  Honour  that  cannot  d, 
I  must  tell  her,  or  d. 

And  do  accept  my  madness,  and  would  d 
Would  d ;  for  sullen-seeming  Death  may  give 
Not  d ;  but  Uve  a  life  of  truest  breath. 
Yet  so  did  I  let  my  freshness  d. 
To  faint  in  his  light,  and  to  d. 
ring  in  my  heart  and  my  ears,  till  I  d,  till  i  d. 
And  comfort  her  tho'  I  d. 
When  thou  shalt  more  than  d.  ,        ,  , 

Crack  them  now  for  yourself,  and  howl,  and  d. 
And  the  shining  daffodil  d's. 
That  old  hysterical  mock-disease  should  d.  ^ 
For  here  between  the  man  and  beast  we  d. 
there  between  the  man  and  beast  they  d. 
An  old  man's  wit  may  wander  ere  he  d. 
he  will  not  d.  But  pass  again  to  come, 
Uve  the  strength  and  d  the  lust ! 
'  Strike  for  the  King  and  d !  ,    „  , , 

Uved  and  died  for  men,  the  man  shaU  d. 
He  passes  and  is  heal'd  and  cannot  d  — 
I  finish  this  fair  quest.  Or  d  therefore. 
'  Then  shall  he  d.'  j  ^  •  ,  ,  1 

marvel  d's,  and  leaves  me  fool  d  and  trick  a, 
two  things  Shalt  thou  do,  or  thou  shalt  d. 
cast  it  on  the  mixen  that  it  d.' 
Far  Uefer  by  his  dear  hand  had  Id, 
if  he  d,  why  earth  has  earth  enough  To  hide  him. 
I  wiU  not  look  at  wine  until  I  d.' 
Henceforward  I  will  rather  d  than  doubt, 
will  henceforward  rather  d  than  doubt, 
here  d—D :  let  the  wolves'  black  maws 
I  too  could  d,  as  now  I  Uve,  for  thee, 
and  we  d  Together  by  one  doom : 
*  I  dread  me,  if  I  draw  it,  you  will  d. 
But  he, '  I  d  abeady  with  it :  draw- 
in  daily  doubt  Whether  to  Uve  or  d, 
added  wound  to  wound.  And  ridd'n  away  to  d  i 
'  Being  so  very  wilful  you  must  d.' 


Die 

Princess  vii  100 

149 

150 

Light  Brigade  15 

Requiescat  5 

Minnie  and  Winnie  12 

Wages  10 

Window,  No  Answer  4 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  II 

viii  6 

24 


„         xviii  16 

„  xxix  16 

„  XXX  22 

„  xxxi  7 

„         xxxiv  12 

XXXV  4 

16 

xxxviii  3 

"  n2 

„  Ivii  9 

„  Ixii  10 

„  Ixvi  15 

,,  Ixvii  10 

„  Ixxviii  17 

„  Ixxxv  40 
xcvii  12 

;;      -'po 

,,  eoi  4 

„        cxviii  28 

,,  cxxi  2 

,,  cxxix  7 

cxxx  16 

Maud  I  i  32 

54 

„  xvi  34 

,,  xviii  44 
46 

"  53 

„  xix  11 

„  xxii  12 

,  II  i  35 

a  83 

„         Hi  9 

t)56 

„    IIIviQ 

33 

Com.  of  Arthur  ^ 

79 

405 

421 

;:    492 

494 

Gareth  and  L.  383 

503 

775 

978 

"  1251 

Marr.  of  Geraint  586 

672 

Geraint  and  E.  68 

554 

;  667 

738 

"  "^45 

Balin  and  Balan  486 

583 

629 

Lancelot  and  E.  513 

514 

521 

"      568 

783 


Die 


149 


Died 


Die  {continued)    He  will  not  love  me :  how  then  ? 

must  Id?  Lancelot  and  E.  893 

h^  the  night  repeating,  '  Must  Id?*  „             899 

I  must  d  for  want  of  one  bold  word.'  „             927 

I  lore  you :  let  me  d.'  „             930 

0  Love,  if  death  be  sweeter,  let  me  d.  „  1012 
CaU  and  I  follow,  I  follow !  let  me  d.'  „  1018 
she  shriUing,  '  Let  me  d ! '  „           1026 

1  should  but  d  the  sooner ;  „  1098 
and  let  me  shrive  me  clean,  and  d.'  „  1100 
lay  the  letter  in  my  hand  A  little  ere  I  d,  „  1114 
some  do  hold  our  Arthur  cannot  d,  „  1258 
Not  knowing  he  should  d  a  holy  man.  „  1429 
In  moments  when  he  feels  he  cannot  d,  Holy  Grail  916 
I  d  thro'  mine  imhappiness.'  Pdleas  and  E.  332 
One  rose,  my  rose ;  a  rose  that  will  not  d, —  „  408 
He  d's  who  loves  it, — if  the  worm  be  there.'  „  409 
but  here.  Here  let  me  rest  and  d,'  „  515 
help  it  from  the  death  that  cannot  d,  Guinevere  66 
I,  whose  vast  pity  almost  makes  me  d  „  534 
I  waged  His  wars,  and  now  I  pass  and  d.  Pass,  of  Arthur  12 
God  my  Christ — I  pass  but  shall  not  d.'  „  28 
Nor  shall  see,  here  or  elsewhere,  till  I  d,  „  322 
I  fear  My  wound  hath  taken  cold,  and  I  shall  d.'  „  334 
I  fear  it  is  too  late,  and  I  shall  d.'  „  348 
Where  all  of  high  and  holy  d's  away.  To  the  Queen  ii  66 
To  d  in  gazing  on  that  perfectness  Lover's  Tale  i  88 
And  cannot  d,  and  am,  in  having  been —  „  121 
I  died  then,  I  had  not  seem'd  to  d,  „  494 
Love  would  d  when  Hope  was  gone,  „  818 
I  seem'd  to  faint  and  fall.  To  fall  and  d  away.  „  ii  97 
What  did  he  then  ?  not  d :  he  is  here  and  hale —  „  iv  40 
And  leave  him  in  the  public  way  to  d.  „  261 
iil  do'  my  lying  in !  First  Quarrel  70 
I  kiss'd  my  boy  in  the  prison,  before  he  went  out  to  d.  Rizpah  23 
'  My  lass,  when  I  cooms  to  d,  North.  Cobbler  103 
For  to  fight  is  but  to  d !  The  Revenge  27 
We  d — does  it  matter  when  ?  „  88 
With  a  joyful  spirit  I  Sir  Richard  Grenville  d\'  „  103 
I  am  sure  that  some  of  our  children  would  d  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  11 
every  man  d  at  his  post ! '  (repeat)                  Def.  of  Lucknow  10, 13,  52 


Kill  or  be  kill'd,  Uve  or  d, 
I  am  not  Uke  to  d  for  lack  of  bread. 
I  woke,  and  thought — death — I  shall  d — 
would  rush  on  a  thousand  lances  and  d — 
Nobly  to  do,  nobly  to  d. 
The  child  that  I  felt  I  could  d  for— 
I  would  fling  myself  over  and  d ! 
no  souls — and  to  d  with  the  brute — 
we  were  used  to  beUeve  everlasting  would  d : 
If  every  man  d  for  ever. 

With  lum,  where  summer  never  d's,  with  Love, 
I  will  wander  till  I  d  about  the  barren  moors, 
war  will  d  out  late  then. 

gallant  three  hundred  whose  glory  will  never  d- 
for  evermore.    Let  the  people  d.' 
Catullus,  whose  dead  songster  never  d's ; 
Thine  is  it  that  our  drama  did  not  d, 
why  The  sons  before  the  fathers  d. 
And  all  the  Shadow  d  into  the  Light, 
Do  not  d  with  a  he  in  your  mouth, 
No — you  will  not  d  before. 
Tell  him  all  before  you  d,  Lest  you  d  for  ever 
would  he  live  and  d  alone  ? 
d  with  him  side  by  side  ? 
I  will  live  and  d  with  you. 
They  lose  themselves  and  d  On  that  new  Ufe 
king  who  loved  me.  And  cannot  d ; 
And  can  no  longer.  But  d  rejoicing. 
To  win  her  back  before  I  d — 
Go  back  to  thine  adulteress  and  d ! ' 
his  dying  words.  Which  would  not  d, 
Form,  be  ready  to  do  or  d ! 
beggar  began  to  cry  '  Food,  food  or  I  d ' ! 
Died    D  round  the  bulbul  as  he  sung ; 


41 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  205 

Columbus  87 

V.  of  Maeldune  24 

Tiresias  123 

The  Wreck  36 

„       118 

Despair  36 

„       54 

„       82 

The  Flight  44 

56 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  173 

—  Heavy  Brigade  10 

Dead  Prophet  4 

Poets  and  their  B.  8 

To  W.  C.  Macready  9 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  47 

Demeter  and  P.  138 

Forlorn  57 

„       61 

„       75 

Happy  5 

,,      8 

„  108 

Prog,  of  Spring  35 

Merlin  and  the  G.  80 

„  112 

Romney's  ^.118 

Death  of  CEnone  48 

St.  Telemachus  76 

Riflemen  form  !  22 

voice  spake,  etc.  6 

Arabian  Nights  70 


Died  (continued)    Singing  in  her  song  she  d, 
D  the  sound  of  royal  cheer ; 
'  His  face,  that  two  hours  since  hath  d ; 
She  d :  she  went  to  burning  flame : 
desire  is  but  to  pass  to  Him  that  d  for  me. 
The  dim  red  morn  had  d. 
Many  drew  swords  and  d. 
Myself  for  such  a  face  had  boldly  d,' 
Contented  there  to  dl    *  And  there  he  d : 
*  I  d  a  Queen.     The  Roman  soldier  found  Me 
her  that  d  To  save  her  father's  vow ; 
To  whom  the  Egyptian ;  '  0,  you  tamely  d ! 
And  when  the  zoning  eve  has  d 
And  on  the  mere  the  wailing  d  away. 
Danced  into  light,  and  d  into  the  shade ; 
Had  once  hard  words,  and  parted,  and  he  d 
and  in  harvest  time  he  d. 
when  William  d,  he  d  at  peace  With  all  men ; 
like  endless  welcome,  hved  and  d. 
The  twilight  d  into  the  dark. 
Or  stow'd,  when  classic  Canning  d, 
old  Earl's  daughter  d  at  my  breast ; 
Then  before  her  time  she  d. 
Then  the  music  touch'd  the  gates  and  d : 
When  the  years  have  d  away.' 
And  that  mysterious  instinct  wholly  d. 
Surely  the  man  had  d  of  solitude, 
tell  her  that  I  d  Blessing  her,  praying  for  her, 
And  tell  my  son  that  I  d  blessing  him. 
he  d  at  Florence,  quite  worn  out, 
knolls  That  dimpling  d  into  each  other, 
scandals  that  have  lived  and  d. 
Remembering  her  dear  Lord  who  d  for  all, 
(I  thought  I  could  have  d  to  save  it) 
a  low  musical  note  Swell'd  up  and  d ; 
the  first  embrace  had  d  Between  them, 
laid  about  them  at  their  wills  and  d ; 
teaching  him  that  d  Of  hemlock ;  our  device ; 
her  heart  Would  rock  the  snowy  cradle  till  I  d. 
Better  have  d  and  spilt  our  bones  in  the  flood — 
My  dream  had  never  d  or  hved  again. 
Ida  has  a  heart ' — just  ere  she  dr— 
and  d  Of  fright  in  far  apartments. 
And  he  d,  and  I  could  not  weep — 
God's  will  that  I,  too,  then  could  have  d : 
an'  'e  d  a,  good  'un,  'e  did. 
So  thick  they  d  the  people  cried, 
And  cattle  d,  and  deer  in  wood, 
That  holy  Death  ere  Arthur  d 
And  He  that  d  in  Holy  Land 
' The  dawn,  the  dawn,'  and  d  away; 
So  many  a  summer  since  she  d, 
Whose  old  grandfather  has  lately  d, 
past  in  bridal  white.  And  d  to  hve, 
AureUus  lived  and  fought  and  d,  And  after  him 

King  Uther  fought  and  d. 
King  Uther  d  himself.  Moaning  and  wailing 
the  savage  yells  Of  Uther's  peerage  d, 
D  but  of  late,  and  sent  his  cry  to  me, 
served  about  the  King,  Uther,  before  he  d ; 
some  she  cleaved  to,  but  they  d  of  her. 
King  Who  hved  and  d  for  men, 
but,  overtaken,  d  the  death  Themselves 
So  d  Earl  Doorm  by  him  he  counted  dead, 
and  the  spiteful  whisper  d : 
when  he  d,  his  soul  Became  a  Fiend, 
The  whole  day  d,  but,  dying,  gleam'd 
'  I  hold  them  happy,  so  they  d  for  love : 
I  that  fain  had  a  To  save  thy  life. 
My  father  d  in  battle  against  the  King, 
My  father  d  in  battle  for  thy  King, 
One  child  they  had :  it  lived  with  her :  she  d : 
while  his  anger  slowly  d  Within  him, 
better  have  d  Thrice  than  have  ask'd  it  once — 
the  Uving  smile  D  from  his  lips, 


L.  of  Shalott  iv  35 

48 

Two  Voices  242 

The  Sisters  7 

May  Queen,  Con.  20 

D.ofF.  Women  61 

95 

98 

152 

161 

195 

258 

On  a  Mourner  21 

M.  d' Arthur  272 

Gardener's  D.  203 

Dora  18 

„     55 

„   144 

Love  and  Duty  68 

Day-Dm.,  Depart.  24 

Will  Water.  101 

Lady  Clare  25 

L.  of  Burleigh  88 

Vision  of  Sin  23 

Poet's  Song  16 

Enoch  Arden  526 

621 

878 

885 

The  Brook  35 

Aylmer's  Field  149 

443 

Sea  Dreams  47 

134 

„         211 

Lucretius  3 

Princess,  Pro.  31 

„      Hi  302 

„       iv  104 

532 

„         vi  17 

„  235 

370 

Grandmother  72 

73 

N.  Farmer"N.  S.  52 

The  Victim  5 

18 

In  Mem.  Ixxx  2 

„  Ixxxiv  42 

„        xcv  61 

Maud  I  vi  66 

„  a;  5 

„    xvtii  66 

Com.  of  Arthur  13 

206 

257 

361 

„  366 

Gareth  and  L.  113 

383 

Geraint  and  E.  177 

730 

„  958 

Balin  am,  Balan  128 

314 

581 

„  599 

Merlin  and  V.  42 

72 

716 

891 

•918 

Lancelot  and  E.  324 


Died 


150 


Dipt 


Died  (continued)    d  the  death  In  any  knightly  fashion 
Then  take  the  little  bed  on  which  I  d 
And  closed  the  hand  upon  it,  and  she  d. 
I  dreamt  the  damsel  would  have  d, 
this  she  would  not,  and  she  d.' 
From  Camelot,  there,  and  not  long  after,  d. 
ere  the  summer  when  he  d, 
The  rosy  quiverings  d  into  the  night. 
And  all  talk  d,  as  in  a  grove  all  song 
'  My  churl,  for  whom  Christ  d, 
and  he  d,  Kill'd  in  a  tilt, 
till  in  time  their  Abbess  d. 
My  dead,  as  tho'  they  had  not  d  for  me  ? — 
And  on  the  mere  the  wailing  d  away. 
Trust  me,  long  ago  I  should  have  d, 
I  had  d.  But  from  my  farthest  lapse, 
Before  he  saw  my  day  my  father  d, 
Had  I  d  then,  I  had  not  seem'd  to  die. 
Had  I  d  then,  I  had  not  known  the  death ; 
So  d  that  hour,  and  fell  into  the  abysm 
So  that  hour  d  Like  odour  rapt 
Had  d  almost  to  serve  them  any  way. 
His  master  would  not  wait  until  he  d, 
An'  I  almost  d  o'  your  going  away. 
And  he  fell  upon  their  decks,  and  he  d. 
She  d  and  she  was  buried  ere  we  knew, 
my  darter  esd  o'  the  fever  at  fall : 
But  arter  she  d  we  was  all  es  one, 
each  of  them  liefer  had  d  than  have  done 
and  the  harvest  d  from  the  field, 
twelve  of  their  noblest  d  Among  their  spears 
prayer  for  a  soul  that  d  in  his  sin. 
But  it  d,  and  I  thought  of  the  child 
perhaps,  perhaps,  if  we  a!,  if  we  <J ; 
dead  the  cause  in  which  he  d. 
Rain-rotten  d  the  wheat, 
d  in  the  doing  it,  flesh  without  mind ; 
till  Self  d  out  in  the  love  of  his  kind ; 
she  did  not  grow,  she  d. 
happy  had  I  d  within  thine  arms, 
In  tne  great  name  of  Him  who  d  for  men. 
An'  it  beats  ma  to  knaw  wot  she  d  on, 
he  was  crush'd  in  a  moment  and  d, 
She  d  of  a  fever  caught  when  a  nurse 
Diest    if  thou  d,  The  King  is  King, 

two  things  shalt  thou  do,  or  else  thou  d. 
Diet    X>  and  seedling,  jesses,  leash  and  lure. 

As  if  they  knew  your  d  spares 
Differ    Or  do  my  peptics  d  ? 

men  at  most  a  as  Heaven  and  earth. 
Difference    When  thy  peculiar  d  Is  cancell'd 
Might  I  not  tell  Of  d,  reconcilement, 
girl  and  boy.  Sir,  know  their  d's ! ' 
when  some  heat  of  d  sparkled  out, 
That  have  as  many  d's  as  we. 
To  cleave  the  rift  of  d  deeper  yet ; 
Not  like  to  like,  but  like  in  d. 
Ay  me,  the  d  I  discern  ! 
Hearing  he  had  a  d  with  their  priests. 
Difficulty    in  days  of  d  And  pressure,  bad  she  sold 

With  d  in  mild  obedience  Driving  them  on : 
Diffuse    D  thyself  at  will  thro'  all  my  blood. 
Diffused    Thy  God  is  far  d  in  noble  groves 
J)  the  shock  thro'  all  my  life, 
D  and  molten  into  flaky  cloud. 
Diffusing    A  central  warmth  d  bliss 
Dig    builds  the  house,  or  d's  the  grave, 
d,  pick,  open,  find  and  read  the  charm : 
I  can't  d  deep,  I  am  old — 
Digg'd    An'  'e  d  up  a  loomp  i'  the  land 
Diggin'    last  month  they  wor  d  the  bog. 
Digging    See  Diggin',  Hall-digging 
Dignity    maiden  dignities  of  Hope  and  Love — 
Dilate    in  a  day,  A  joyous  to  d,  an  toward  the  light, 
That  now  d,  and  now  decrease, 


Lancelot  and  E.  870 

1117 

„  1135 

„  1305 

„  1325 

Holy  Grail  7 

16 

„      123 

Pelleas  and  E.  607 

Last  Tournament  62 

Guinevere  320 

692 

Pass,  of  Arthur  142 

440 

Lover's  Tale  i  87 

89 

„  191 

494 

496 

796 

800 

„       iv  124 

259 

First  Quarrel  54 

The  Revenge  104 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  241 

Village  Wife  10 

V.  of  Maddune  6 

30 

Achilles  over  the  T.  32 

The  Wreck  10 

„     _   84 

Despair  56 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  30 

Demeter  and  P.  112 

Fastness  27 

„       28 

Romney's  R.  105 

Death  of  CEnone  31 

St.  Tdemachus  63 

Church-warden,  etc.  6 

Charity  21 

„      41 

Com.  of  Arthur  494 

Marr.  of  Geraint  580 

Merlin  and  V.  125 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  10 

WiU  Water.  80 

Merlin  and  V.  814 

Two  Voices  41 

Gardener's  D.  257 

Aylmer's  Fidd  274 

705 

Princess  v  181 

301 

„    vu  278 

In  Mem.  xl  21 

Holy  Grail  674 

Enoch  Arden  254 

Geraint  and  E.  104 

Prog,  of  Spring  24 

Aylmer's  Field  653 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  55 

Lover's  Tale  i  641 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  6 

„      xxxvi  14 

Merlin  and  V.  660 

Rizpah  56 

Village  Wife  48 

Tomorrow  61 

Lover's  Tale  i  580 
Aylmer's  Fidd  77 
In  Mem.  xxviii  10 


Dilating     wind  of  prophecy  D  on  the  future ; 
Dilation    her  eye  with  slow  d  roU'd  Dry  flame, 
Dilettante    snowy-banded,  d,  Delicate-handed 
Dim  (adj.)     eyes  are  d  with  glorious  tears, 
About  him  broods  the  twilight  d : 
My  heart  is  breaking,  and  my  eyes  are  d, 
eyes  grown  d  with  gazing  on  the  pilot-stars. 
Till  all  the  paths  were  d, 
He  saw  not  far :  his  eyes  were  d : 
Perhaps  her  eye  was  d,  hand  tremulous ; 
We  sung,  tho'  every  eye  was  d, 
Is  d,  or  will  be  d,  with  weeds : 
I  remain'd,  whose  hopes  were  d, 
Thou  watches't  all  things  ever  d  And  dimmer. 
Myself  would  work  eye  d, 
the  hall  was  d  with  steam  of  flesh : 
and  d  thro'  leaves  Blinkt  the  white  mom, 
So  strange,  and  rich,  and  d ; 
these  eyes  of  men  are  dense  and  d, 
and  mine  Were  d  with  floating  tears. 
Dim  (verb)     work  in  hues  to  d  The  Titianic  Flora. 
Dim-gray    Now  and  then  in  the  d-g  dawn ; 
Diminutive     In  babyisms,  and  dear  d's. 
Dim-lit    while  he  past  the  d-l  woods, 
Dimm'd    broad  valley  d  in  the  gloaming : 
thro'  the  cloud  that  d  her  broke    . 
trust  in  things  above  Be  d  of  sorrow, 
and  the  sorrow  d  her  sight. 
Thy  glorious  eyes  were  d  with  pain 
Dimmer    all  things  ever  dim  And  d, 
Dimness    o'er  it  crost  the  dot  a,  cloud  Floating, 
Dimple    Till  the  lightning  laughters  d 
Ot  din  the  dark  of  rushy  coves. 
That  d's  your  transparent  cheek. 
Dimpled    laughter  d  in  his  swarthy  cheek ; 
Dimpling    knolls  That  d  died  into  each  other, 

Upon  the  dappled  d's  of  the  wave. 
Dim  Saesneg    with  his  hard  ' D  S'  passes. 
Dim-yellow    With  her  fair  head  in  the  d-y  light. 
Din    From  the  groves  within  The  wild-bird's  d. 
The  dust  and  d  and  steam  of  town : 
But  when  the  heart  is  full  of  d, 
for  me  that  sicken  at  your  lawless  d, 
Dine    You'll  have  no  scandal  while  you  d, 
shall  we  fast,  or  d? 
an'  we  be  a-goin  to  d. 
Dinner    {See  also  After-dinner) 
thousand  d's. 
hark  the  bell  For  d,  let  us  go ! ' 
A  grand  political  d  To  half  the  squirelings 
A  grand  political  d  To  the  men  of  many  acres, 
A  d  and  then  a  dance  For  the  maids 
Man  with  his  brotherless  d 
Dinnerless    when  I  left  your  mowers  d. 

The  lusty  mowers  labouring  d, 
Dint    Sharp-smitten  with  the  d  of  armed  heels — 
every  d  a  sword  had  beaten  in  it. 
Sharp-smitten  with  the  d  of  armed  heels — 
Dinted     and  crush'd,  and  d  into  the  ground : 

his  strong  hands  gript  And  d  the  gilt  dragons 
Diotima    beneath  an  emerald  plane  Sits  D, 
Dip  (s)     the  last  d  of  the  vanisning  sail 

The  d  of  certain  strata  to  the  North. 
Dip  (verb)     the  prime  swallow  d's  his  wing, 
and  d's  Her  laurel  in  the  wine, 
D  forward  under  starry  light, 
d  Their  wings  in  tears,  and  skim  away. 
D  down  upon  the  northern  shore, 
and  d's  and  springs  For  ever ; 
these  low  bushes  d  their  twigs  in  foam, 
Dippest     And  d  toward  the  dreamless  head. 
Dipping    d  his  head  low  beneath  the  verge, 

ships  from  out  the  West  go  d  thro'  the  foam. 
Dipt     (See  also  Half-dipt)     the  sky  D  down  to  sea  and 
sands. 


Princess  ii  172 

„        vi  189 

Maud  I  via  10 

Two  Voices  151 

263 

(Enone  32 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  87 

Talking  Oak  298 

The  Voyage  75 

Enoch  Arden  242 

In  Mem.  xxx  14 

„    Ixxiii  10 

„     Ixxxv  29 

„        cxxi  3 

Marr.  of  Geraint  628 

Geraint  and  E.  603 

Balin  and  i?aZaM'384 

Holy  Grail  342 

Pass,  of  Arthur  19 

Lover's  Tale  i  442 

Gardener's  D.  170 

Maud  I  xiv  32 

Aylmer's  Fidd  539 

Guinevere  251 

Leonine  Eleg.  1 

Princess  vi  281 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  10 

Lancelot  and  E.  889 

Freedom  10 

In  Mem.  cxxi  4 

Pelleas  and  E.  37 

Lilian  16 

Ode  to  Memory  60 

Margaret  15 

Edwin  Morris  61 

Aylmer's  Field  149 

Lover's  Tale  i  44 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  21 

Marr.  of  Geraint  600 

Poet's  Mind  21 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  8 


„  xciv  13 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  149 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  17 

Geraint  and  E.  490 

North.  Cobbler  111 

with  the  steam  Of  thirty 

Will  Water.  224 

Princess  ii  433 

Maud  I  XX  25 

31 

„         34 

The  Dawn  3 

Geraint  and  E.  234 

251 

M.  d' Arthur  190 

Lancdot  and  E.\9 

Pass,  of  Arthur  358 

Maud  lit 

Last  Tournament  182 

Princess  Hi  302 

Enoch  Arden  245 

Princess  Hi  170 

Edwin  Morris  145 

Will  Water.  17 

Move  eastward  10 

In  Mem.  xlviii  15 

„        Ixxxiii  1 

Gareth  and  L.  1146 

Prog,  of  Spring  51 

In  Mem.  xxxix  5 

Lover's  Tale  i  509 

The  Flight  91 

Palace  of  AH  ^2 


Dipt 


151 


Dismember 


Dipt  (continued)     But  ere  he  d  the  surface,  rose  an  ami 
d.  And  mix'd  with  shadows  of  the  common  ground ! 
one  green  sparkle  ever  and  anon  D  by  itself, 

d  and  rose,  And  tum'd  to  look  at  her. 

When  I  d  into  the  future  (repeat) 

with  her  d  Against  the  rush  of  the  air 

d  in  all  That  treats  of  whatsoever  is, 

and  d  Beneath  the  satin  dome  and  enter'd  in, 

a  dearer  being,  all  d  In  Angel  instincts, 

I  sleep  till  dusk  is  i  in  gray : 

And  a  in  baths  of  hissing  tears. 

Beneath  a  low  door  d,  and  made  his  feet 

Sparkle,  imtU  they  d  below  the  downs. 

But  ere  he  d  the  surface,  rose  an  ann 

till  the  labourless  day  d  under  the  West ; 

son,  who  d  In  some  forgotten  book  of  mine 

dark  hull  d  under  the  smiling  main, 

never  yet  hath  d  into  the  abysm, 

we  d  down  under  the  bridge 

Broke  the  Taboo,  D  to  the  crater, 
Dirce    who  found  Beside  the  springs  of  D, 

and  the  springs  Of  -D  laving  yonder  battle-plain, 
Direct    Now  over  and  now  under,  now  d. 
Dirt    these,  tho'  fed  with  careful  d, 
Disappear    earth  yawns :  the  mortal  d's ; 

and  as  the  phantom  d's, 
Disappear'd    the  whole  fair  city  had  d. 

And  up  the  rocky  pathway  d, 

cup  Was  caught  away  to  Heaven,  and  d.' 

as  he  spoke  Fell  into  dust,  and  d. 

Became  a  shadow,  sank  and  d, 
Disarm'd    The  proud  was  half  d  of  pride, 

Who  let  him  into  lodging  and  d. 

Thither  I  made,  and  there  was  I  d 
Disarray    Drove  it  in  wild  d, 
Disarray'd    found.  Half  d  as  to  her  rest, 
Disaster    all  d  unto  thine  and  thee ! 
Disbuid    bidding  him  D  himself,  and  scatter 
Discaged     Until  she  let  me  fly  d  to  sweep 
Discern    d  The  roofs  Of  Sumner-place !  (repeat) 

till  thy  bough  d  The  front  of  Sumner-place. 

Till  a  gateway  she  d's  With  armorial  bearings 

Ay  me,  the  difference  I  d ! 

I  wake,  and  I  d  the  truth ; 
Discerned    into  my  inmost  ring  A  pleasure  I  d. 
Discerning    d  to  fulfil  This  labour, 
Disciple    and  yet  Was  no  d,  richly  garb'd, 
Disclaim'd    each  D  all  knowledge  of  us : 
Disclosed    -D  a  fruit  of  pure  Hesperian  gold, 
Discomfort    this  d  he  hath  done  the  house.' 

blew  my  merry  maidens  all  about  With  all  d ; 
Disconsolate    On  the  nigh-naked  tree  the  robin  piped  B, 
Discontent    lent  The  pulse  of  hope  to  d. 

She  look'd  with  a. 

muttering  d  Cursed  me  and  my  flower. 
Discord    soul  Of  D  race  the  rising  wind ; 

too  Hke  The  d's  dear  to  the  musician. 

A  monster  then,  a  dream,  A  d. 
Discordance    no  d  in  the  roll  And  march 
Discouraged    I  grew  d,  Sir ;  but  since  I  knew 
Discourse     In  such  d  we  gain'd  the  garden  rails. 
Discourtesy     '  Meseems,  that  here  is  much  d, 

I  pray  you,  use  some  rough  d 

This  was  the  one  d  that  he  used.  „  988 

some  d  Against  my  nature :  ,,  1302 

Discover'd    Aix  precious  things,  d  late,  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  1 

Discoverer    The  first  d  starves — his  followers,  Columbus  166 

Discovery    For  the  d  And  newness  of  thine  art  Ode  to  Memory  87 

Discredit     heaven,  how  much  1  shall  d  him !  Marr.  of  Geraint  621 

Far  liefer  than  so  much  d  him.'  „  629 

Discuss     We  might  d  the  Northern  sin  To  F.  D.  Maurice  29 

Discuss'd    d  the  farm,  The  fourfield  system,  Audiey  Court  33 

D  his  tutor,  rough  to  common  men.  Princess,  Pro.  114 

D  a  doubt  and  tost  it  to  and  fro :  „  ii  445 

D  the  books  to  love  or  hate,  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  34 


M.  d' Arthur  143 

Gardener's  D.  134 

Audiey  Court  89 

Talking  Oak  131 

Locksley  Hall  15,  119 

Aylmer's  Field  85 

Princess  ii  379 

„        iv  30 

„     m320 

In  Mem.  Ixvii  12 

„      cxviii  23 

Balin  arid  Balan  403 

Lancelot  and  E.  396 

Pass,  of  Arthur  311 

V.  of  Maddune  86 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  46 

The  Wreck  127 

Ancient  Sage  39 

Bandit's  Death  22 

Kaviolani  31 

Tiresias  14 

„     139 

Lucretius  62 

Amphion  89 

Ode  on  WeU.  269 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  253 

Gareth  and  L.  196 

Geraint  and  E.  243 

Holy  Grail  58 

„      436 

Death  of  (Enone  50 

In  Mem.  ex  6 

Lancelot  and  E.  171 

Holy  GraU  575 

Heavy  Brigade  60 

Marr.  of  Geraint  516 

Gareth  and  L.  1101 

Geraint  and  E.  798 

Gareth  and  L.  20 

Talking  Oak  31,  95,  151 

247 

L.  of  Burleigh  42 

In  Mem.  xl  21 

„  Ixviii  14 

Talking  Oak  174 

Ulysses  35 

Ancient  Sage  4 

Princess  iv  229 

QLnone  66 

Lancelot  and  E.  1072 

Holy  Grail  749 

Enoch  Arden  677 

Two  Voices  450 

Talking  Oak  116 

The  Flower  7 

Love  thou  thy  land  68 

Sea  Dreams  258 

In  Mem.  Ivi  22 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  14 

Princess  Hi  153 

„      Con.  80 

Gareth  and  L.  853 

Lancelot  and  E.  973 


Discussing    D  how  their  courtship  grew.  In  Mem.,  Con.  97 

Discussion    That  from  D's  lip  may  fall  With  L<yve  thou  thy  land  33 

Disdain    (See  also  Half-disdain)     And  my  ci  is  my  reply.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  22 

with  some  d  Answer'd  the  Princess,  Princess  iv  61 

With  some  surprise  and  thrice  as  much  d  Tum'd,  Marr.  of  Geraint  557 

not  with  half  a  Hid  under  grace,  Lancelot  and  E.  263 

Sir  Lancelot  leant,  in  half  d  At  love,  „            1238 

Disdain'd    if  the  Queen  d  to  grant  it !  Balin  and  Balan  191 

Tolerant  of  what  he  half  d,  and  she,  Perceiving 

that  she  was  but  half  d,  Merlin  and  V.  178 

Disease    (See  also  Heart-disease,  Mock-disease)    But 

sickening  of  a  vague  d,  L.  C,  V.  de  Vere  62 

wretched  age — and  worst  d  of  all,  Lucretius  155 

Ring  out  old  shapes  of  foul  d ;  In  Mem.  cvi  25 

A  d,  a  hard  mechanic  ghost  That  never  came  Maud  II  ii  34 

She  like  a  new  d,  unknown  to  men,  Guinevere  518 
and  the  loathsome  smells  of  d                                 In  the  Child.  Hasp.  25 

I'd  sooner  fold  an  icy  corpse  deed  of  some  foul  d :  The  Flight  54 

Some  thro'  age  and  slow  d's,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  46 

All  d's  quench'd  by  Science,  „              163 

mar  the  beauty  of  your  bride  with  your  d.  Happy  24 
Diseased    (See  also  Half-diseased)    But  ours  he  swore 

were  all  d.  The  Voyage  76 

The  land  is  sick,  the  people  d.  The  Victim  45 

You  thought  my  heart  too  far  d ;  In  Mem.  Ixvi  1 

Disedge    served  a  little  to  d  The  sharpness  Geraint  and  E.  189 

But  here  will  I  d  it  by  thy  death.'  Pelleas  and  E.  578 

Disembark'd     touching  Breton  sands,  they  d.  Merlin  and  V.  202 

Disengage    I  strove  to  d  myself,  but  f ail'd.  Lover's  Tale  i  692 

Disentwined    My  coronal  slowly  d  itself  „            361 

Disfame    See  Half-disfame. 

Disgraaced  (disgraced)     I'd  feal  mysen  cleiin  d.  North.  Cobbler  102 
black  Sal,  es  'ed  been  d  ?  Spinster's  S's.  25 
Disgrace    Alone  might  hint  of  my  d ;  Two  Voices  360 
lying,  hidden  from  the  heart's  d,  Locksley  Hall  57 
why,  the  greater  their  d !  Aylmer's  Field  384 
Heap'd  on  her  terms  of  d,  Maud  II  i  14 
an'  often  at  home  in  d.  First  Quarrd  15 
If  you  should  only  compass  her  d,  The  Fleet  17 
Disgraced    (See  also  Disgra&ced)    Memmian  naphtha- 
pits,  d  For  ever —  Alexander  1 
d,  Dishonour'd  all  for  trial  of  true  love — ■  Pelleas  and  E.  474 
Disguise     common  light  of  smiles  at  our  d  Princess  v  276 
Disguised    thou  shalt  go  <i  to  Arthur's  hall,  Gareth  and  L.  152 
For  hence  will  I,  d,  and  hire  myself  „           169 
Thou  art  so  well  d,  I  knew  thee  not.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  197 
Dish    harpies  miring  every  d,  Lucretius  159 
And  those  that  hand  the  d  across  the  bar.  Gareth  and  L.  155 
Think  ye  this  fellow  will  poison  the  King's  d?  „            471 
thrust  the  d  before  her,  crying,  '  Eat.'  Geraint  and  E.  655 
Dishallow     '  Ye,  that  so  d  the  holy  sleep,  Pelleas  and  E.  446 
Dishehn'd    she  saw  me  lying  stark,  D  and  mute,  Princess  vi  101 
Dishonour    Doing  d  to  my  clay.'  Two  Voices  102 
Becomes  d  to  her  race —  „          255 
So  loathed  the  bright  d  of  his  love.  Com.  of  Arthur  195 
His  honour  rooted  in  d  stood,  Lancelot  and  E.  876 
knights  At  that  d  done  the  gilded  spur.  Last  Tournament  435 
I  was  close  on  that  hour  of  d,  Charity  28 
Dishonourable    '  Ungenerous,  d,  base,  Aylmer's  Fidd  292 
Dishonour'd    D  all  for  trial  of  true  love —  Pelleas  and  E.  477 
Dishorsed    each,  d  and  drawing,  lash'd  at  each  Marr.  of  Geraint  563 
D  himself,  and  rose  again,  and  fled  Balin  and  Balan  330 
Dish-washer    D-w  and  broach-turner,  loon ! —  Gareth  and  L.  770 
Disjoint     Nor  wielded  axe  d.  Talking  Oak  262 
Disjointed     Descended,  and  <Z  it  at  a  blow :  Balin  and  Balan  296 
Disk    studded  wide  With  d's  and  tiars,  Arabian  Nights  64 
Ray  round  with  flames  her  d  of  seed.  In  Mem.  ci  6 
flight  of  shadowy  fighters  crost  The  d,  St.  Tdemachus  24 
Dislink'd    D  with  shrieks  and  laughter :  Princess,  Pro.  70 
But  she  d  herself  at  once  and  rose.  Merlin  and  V.  909 
Dislodging    heroes  tall  D  pinnacle  and  parapet  D.  of  F.  Woinen  26 
Dismay    were  the  words  Mutter'd  in  our  d ;  Heavy  Brigade  47 
Dismay'd     Wa.s  there  a  man  d  ?  Light  Brigade  10 
we  tum'd  to  each  other,  whispering,  all  d.  Heavy  Brigade  44 
Dismember    May  never  saw  d  thee,  Talking  Oak  261 


Dismiss 


152 


Divine 


Dismiss    D  me,  and  I  prophesy  your  plan,  Princess  iv  354 

Your  oath  is  broken :  we  d  you :  „            360 

Dismissal    She  spoke,  and  bowing  waved  D :  „        U  100 

Dismiss'd    d  in  shame  to  live  No  wiser  than  their  mothers,  „        iv  513 

Dismotmt    d  and  loose  their  casques  Balin  and  Balan  573 

Dismounting    d  like  a  man  That  skins  the  wild  beast         Geraint  and  E.  92 

Geraint,  d,  pick'd  the  lance  That  pleased  him  „            179 

d  on  the  sward  They  let  the  horses  graze,  „           210 

at  his  side  all  pale  D,  loosed  the  fastenings  „            511 

Disobey    deep  harm  to  d,  Seeing  obedience  is  the 

bond  of  rule.  M.  d' Arthur  93 

I  needs  must  d  him  for  his  good ;  Geraint  and  E.  135 

Then  not  to  d  her  lord's  behest,  „              450 

Deep  harm  to  d.  Seeing  obedience  is  the  bond 

of  rule.  Pass,  of  Arthur  261 

Disorderly    Z)  the  women.    Alone  I  stood  Princess  iv  170 

from  the  high  door  streaming,  brake  D,  Lancelot  and  E.  1348 

Disparagement    with  some  prelude  of  d,  Read,  The  Epic  49 

Flush'd  slightly  at  the  slight  d  Lancelot  and  E.  234 

With  silent  smiles  of  slow  d ;  Guinevere  14 

Dispassionate     Quiet,  d,  and  cold,  A  Character  28 

Dispatch    Delivering  sealed  d'es  which  the  Head  Princess  iv  379 

Dispell'd    I  loved,  and  love  d  the  fear  Miller's  D.  89 

Dispense    D  with  careful  hands :  Mechanophilus  34 

Dispenser    drowsy  hours,  d's  of  all  good,  'Gardener's  D.  185 

Dispensing    D  harvest,  sowing  the  To-be,  Princess  vii  289 

Dispersed    made  a  pltmge  To  the  bottom,  and  d,  Enoch  Arden  380 

D  his  resolution  like  a  cloud.  Lancelot  and  E.  884 

Displaced     If  this  false  traitor  have  d  his  lord,  Guinevere  216 

Display     \a  d  A  tunic  white  as  May  !  Prog,  of  Spring  64 

Display'd    D  a  splendid  silk  of  foreign  loom,  Geraint  and  E.  687 

Dispraise    In  praise  and  in  d  the  same.  Ode  on  Well.  73 

hissing  d  Because  their  natures  are  little,  Maud  I  iv  52 

Dispread    See  Wide-dispread 

Disprinced    one  rag,  d  from  head  to  heel.  Princess  v  30 

Disproof    as  he  was  To  make  d  of  scorn,  Aylmer's  Field  446 
Disproven    nothing  worthy  proving  can  be  proven, 

Nor  yet  d :  Ancient  Sage  67 

Dispnte  (s)    breed  D  betwixt  myself  and  mine  :  Princess  i  157 

for  she  took  no  part  In  our  d :  „    Con.  30 

Or  deep  d,  and  graceful  jest ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  24 

Dispute  (verb)     D  the  claims,  arrange  the  chances  ;  To  F.  D.  Maurice  31 

Disquiet     But  long  d  merged  in  rest.  Two  Voices  249 

Disrelish    Why  should  Iso  d  that  short  word  ?  Romney's  R.ll 

Disrobed     If  gazing  on  divinity  d  (Enone  157 

D  the  glimmering  statue  of  Sir  Ralph  Princess,  Con.  117 

Disrooted    (See  also  Half-disrooted)    Whate'er  I  was  D, 

what  I  am  is  grafted  here.  ,,            H  220 

Disruption    sought  To  make  d  in  the  Table  Round  Guinevere  17 

Dissecting    wayward  modem  mind  D  passion.  Edwin  Morris  88 

Dissembling    Fright  and  foul  d,  Forlorn  32 

Dissipated    shrink  For  fear  our  solid  aim  be  d.  Princess  Hi  266 

Dissoluble    Gods  Being  atomic  not  be  d,  Lucretius  115 

Dissolution    clench  their  nerves  to  rush  Upon  their  d,        Love  and  Duly  78 

Dissolve    d  the  previous  seal  on  a  bond,  Maud  I  xix  45 

Dissolved    Z>  the  riddle  of  the  earth.  Two  Voices  170 

d  the  mystery  Of  folded  sleep.  D.  of  F.  Women  262 

now  the  whole  hound  table  is  d  M.  d' Arthur  234 

thereat  the  crowd  Muttering,  d :  Princess  iv  523 

now  the  whole  Round  Table  is  d  Pass,  of  Arthur  402 

Dissolving    See  Half-dissolving 

Dissolvingly    to  all  my  frame,  D  and  slowly :  EleOnore  132 

Distance    mountain  Which  stands  in  the  d  yonder :  Poet's  Mind  30 

Some  blue  peaks  in  the  d  rose.  Dying  Swan  11 

such  a  d  from  his  youth  in  grief,  Gardener's  D.  54 

in  the  d  overlooks  the  sandy  tracts,  Locksley  Hall  5 

And  a  song  from  out  the  d  „          84 

Not  in  vain  the  d  beacons.  „        181 

and  shows  At  d  like  a  little  wood ;  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  42 

A  trumpet  in  the  d  pealing  news  Of  better,  Princess  iv  81 

deals  with  the  other  d  and  the  hues  Of  promise ;  „          86 

but  Blanche  At  d  follow'd :  „      vi  83 

a  day  Rose  from  the  d  on  her  memory,  ,,112 

and  broken  system  made  No  purple  in  the  d,  „        196 

And  see  the  sails  at  d  rise,  In  Mem.  xii  11 


Distance  (continued)    The  purple  from  the  d  dies, 
O,  from  the  d  of  the  abyss 
The  d  takes  a  loveUer  hue. 
That  out  of  d  might  ensue 
or  like  a  clamour  of  the  rocks  At  d, 
drumming  thunder  of  the  huger  fall  At  d, 
warmth  of  Arthur's  hall  Shadow'd  an  angry  d : 
soimd  As  from  a  d  beyond  d  grew 
and  set  me  far  In  the  gray  d, 
Heaven  Will  blow  the  tempest  in  the  d  back 
And  heralded  the  d  of  this  time ! 
that  same  nearness  Were  father  to  this  d, 


In  Mem.  xxxviii  3 

„      xciii  11 

„  cxv  6 

„        cxvii  5 

Mart,  of  Geraint  250 

Geraint  and  E.  174 

Balin  and  Balan  237 

Holy  Grail  112 

Last  Tournament  640 

To  the  Queen  II  47 

Lover's  Tale  i  562 

a  29 


in  the  d,  From  out  the  yellow  woods  upon  the  hill  „             79 

And  voices  in  the  d  calling  to  me  „            118 

and  murmiu"  down  Truth  in  the  d —  Columbus  120 

Are  there  thunders  moaning  in  the  d?  On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  66 

Thro'  the  gates  that  bar  the  d  comes  a  gleam  Faith  6 

Distant    in  her  throat  Her  voice  seem'd  d.  To  J.  S.  55 

cry  came  to  her  from  the  field.  More  and  more  d.  Dora  105 

Distill'd    D  from  some  worm-canker'd  homily ;  To  J.  M.  K.  6 

hoard  of  happiness  d  Some  drops  of  solace ;  Lover's  Tale  i  714 

Distilling    D  odours  on  me  as  they  went  Gardener's  D.  187 

Distinct     D  with  vivid  stars  inlaid,  Arabian  Nights  90 

D  in  individuaUties,  Privx:ess  vii  291 

Distress    flow  Of  subtle-paced  coiuisel  in  d  Isabel  21 

Small  thought  was  there  of  life's  d ;  Ode  to  Memory  37 

And  utterly  consumed  with  sharp  d,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  13 

then  d'es  came  on  him ;  Dora  49 

Who  show'd  a  token  oi  d?  In  Mem.  Ixxviii  13 

No  limit  to  his  <Z ;  Maud  II  v  31 

Distribute    Walk  your  dim  cloister,  and  d  dole  Guinevere  683 

Distrust    See  Self-distrust 

Disturb     '  Woman,  d  me  not  now  at  the  last,  Enoch  Arden  874 

Disturb'd    D  me  with  the  doubt  '  if  this  were  she,'  Princess  iv  217 

one  glittering  foot  d  The  lucid  well ;  Tiresias  41 

Disyoke    D  their  necks  from  custom.  Princess  ii  143 

Ditch    cannot  see  for  slime,  Slime  of  the  d :  Holy  Grail  772 

from  the  d  where  they  shelter  we  drive  them  Def.  of  Lucknow  59 

Dive    they  shall  d,  and  they  shall  run,  Locksley  Hall  169 

Or  d  below  the  wells  of  Death  ?  In  Mem.  cviii  8 

or  d's  In  yonder  greening  gleam,  „        cxv  13 

made  him  quickly  d  Beneath  the  boughs,  Balin  and  Balan  422 

wilt  d  Into  the  Temple-cave  of  thine  own  self.  Ancient  Sage  31 

Dived    I  Z)  in  a  hoard  of  tales  that  dealt  with  knights,        Princess,  Pro.  29 

Diver    See  Marsh-diver 

Diverse    woman  is  not  undevelopt  man.  But  d :  „       vii  276 

Dives     When  D  loathed  the  times,  To  Mary  Boyle  29 

Divide     God  d  the  night  with  flying  flame,  D.  of  F.  Women  225 

these  two  parties  still  d  the  world —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  77 

shell  D's  threefold  to  show  the  fruit  (repeat)  The  Brook  73,  208     • 

Eternal  form  shall  still  d  The  eternal  soul  In  Mem.  xlvii  6 

D  us  not,  be  with  me  now,  ,,       cxxii  10 

shriek  of  a  mother  d  the  shuddering  night.  Maud  /  i  16 

She  seem'd  to  tZ  in  a  dream  „  ///  vi  10 

Could  scarce  d  it  from  her  foolish  dream :  Marr.  of  Geraint  686 

Divided    d  quite  The  kingdom  of  her  thought.  Palace  of  Art  227 

Z)  in  a  graceful  quiet — paused,  Gardener's  D.  156 

a  walk  Of  shingle,  and  a  walk  d  it :  Enoch  Arden  1S7 

nor  was  his  love  the  less  Because  it  was  d.  Lover's  Tale  i  229 

d  asl  am  From  either  by  the  stillness  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  281 

The  barrier  that  d  beast  from  man  St.  Telemachus  60 

Dividend    chances  of  d,  consol,  and  share —  The  Wreck  30 

Dividing    <Z  the  swift  mind.  In  act  to  throw ;  M.  d' Arthur  60 

the  crowd  d  clove  An  advent  to  the  throne :  Princess  iv  283 

d  the  swift  mind,  In  act  to  throw  ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  228 

Divil  (devil)     blessed  feiilds  wi'  the  d's  oiin  team.  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  62 

an'  'e's  the  D's  oiin  sen.'  North.  Cobbler  76 

the  D's  in  'im,'  said  I.  „          104 

'  The  D  take  all  the  black  Ian',  Tomorrow  64 

Divine  (adj.)     (See  also  Half-divine)     Scarce  of  earth  nor  all  d,       Adeline  3 

You  are  not  less  d,  Margaret  46 

Apart  the  Chamian  Oracle  d  Alexander  10 

I  think.  That  my  youth  was  half  d.  Vision  of  Sin  78 

Left  by  the  Teacher,  whom  he  held  d.  Lucretius  13 

Love  by  right  d  is  deathless  king,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  29 


Divine  153 

Divine  (adj.)  (continued)    Thou  seemest  human  and  d, 

To  count  their  memories  half  d ; 

Known  and  unknown ;  human,  d ; 

not  leamable,  d,  Beyond  my  reach. 

see  the  hifihest  Human  Nature  is  d. 

creature  which  in  Eden  was  d, 

she  the  faultless,  the  d ; 
Divine  (verb)     A  deeper  tale  my  heart  d's. 

Nor  the  meaning  can  d, 

She  is  not  of  us,  as  I  d; 
Divinely    D  thro'  all  hindrance  finds  the  man 

Some  warning — sent  d — as  it  seem'd 
Divinity    the  dull  Saw  no  d  in  grass. 

If  gazing  on  d  disrobed  Thy  mortal  eyes 

lift  the  woman's  fall'n  d  Upon  an  even  pedestal 
Division    in  d  of  the  records  of  the  mind  ? 

'  betwixt  these  two  D  smoulders  hidden ; 

Are  they  not  sign  and  symbol  of  thy  d  from  Him  ? 

Made  strange  d  of  its  suffering  With  her, 
Divorce    D  the  Feeling  from  her  mate  the  Deed. 

d  thee  not  From  earthly  love  and  life —  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  3 

Divorced    I  prophesy  your  plan,  D  from  my  experience,        Princess  iv  355 


In  Mem.,  Pro.  13 

„  arc  12 

„       cxxix  5 

Bdlin  and  Balan  175 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  276 

Haffy  33 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  5 

Two  Voices  269 

L.  of  Burleigh  54 

Maud  II  V  69 

Lancelot  and  E.  333 

Lover's  Tale  iv  21 

A  Character  8 

(Enone  157 

Princess  Hi  223 

Locksley  Hall  69 

Princess  Hi  79 

High.  Pantheism  6 

Lover's  Tale  ii  128 

The  Brook  95 


To 


can  I  breathe  d  from  the  Past  ? 
Do    '  Ye  (i  it  to  me,  when  ye  <i  it  to  these '  ? 
Doat    sisters  That  d  upon  each  other, 

A  heart  that  d's  on  truer  charms. 

if  the  blossom  can  d  on  the  blight, 

eye,  that  only  d's  On  outward  beauty, 

and  d's  On  this  of  yomrs.' 
Dock'd    For  which  his  gains  were  d, 
Doctor    Ulted  out  By  violet-hooded  D's, 

then  the  D's\     0  to  hear  The  D's ! 

*  Here's  a  leg  for  a  babe  of  a  week ! '  says  d ; 

whoy,  D's  abean  an'  agoiin ; 

D's,  they  knaws  nowt, 

D's  a  'toattler,  lass, 

I  weant  break  rules  fur  D, 

D,  if  you  can  wait,  I'll  tell  you  the  tale 

An'  b  'e  calls  o'  Sunday 

Our  d  had  call'd  in  another, 

— so  quiet,  our  d  said  '  Poor  little  dear, 

I  walk'd  with  our  kindly  old  d 

And  the  d  came  at  his  hour. 
Doctrine    if  we  held  the  d  sound 
Dodge    to  d  and  palter  with  a  public  crime  ? 
Dodged     He  d  me  with  a  long  and  loose  account, 
Doe     Lord  Ronald  brought  a  lily-white  d 

The  lily-white  d  Lord  Ronald  had  brought 

And  follow'd  up  by  a  hundred  airy  d's, 
DofTd     Until  the  grave  churchwarden  d, 

cast  his  lance  aside,  And  d  his  helm 
Dog    (See  also  Shepherd-dog) 
mother. 

Not  less,  tho'  d's  of  Faction  bay. 

At  first  like  dove  and  dove  were  cat  and  d. 

Something  better  than  his  d. 

Like  a  d,  he  hunts  in  dreams, 

he  strode  About  the  hall,  among  his  d's. 

He  parted,  with  great  strides  among  his  d's. 

And  barking  d's,  and  crowing  cocks ; 

He  praised  his  ploughs,  his  cows,  his  hogs,  his  d's ; 

My  men  shall  lash  you  from  them  like  a  d ; 

the  d  With  inward  yelp  and  restless  forefoot 

he  had  breathed  the  Proctor's  d's ; 

swine  were  sows,  and  all  the  d's ' — 

wild  d,  and  wolf  and  boar  and  bear  Came 

'  D,  thou  liest.     I  spring  from  loftier  lineage 

one  of  my  co-mates  Own'd  a  rough  d, 

a  d  am  I,  To  worry,  and  not  to  flee — 

advanced,  Each  growling  like  a  d, 

Vivien,  tho'  ye  beat  me  like  your  d, 

I  better  prize  The  living  d  than  the  dead  lion : 

There  like  a  d  before  his  master's  door ! 

Trembled  and  quiver'd,  as  the  d, 

these  Inquisition  d's  and  the  devildoms  of  Spain.' 


Despair  113 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  26 

-.  With  Pal.  of  Art  11 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  14 

The  Wreck  19 

The  Ring  163 

358 

Sea  Dreams  7 

Princess  ii  376 

421 

Grandmother  11 

N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  2 

5 

66 

67 

First  Quarrel  9 

North.  Cobbler  87 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  1 

41 

„  43 

In  Mem.  liii  9 

Third  of  Feb.  24 

Sea  Dreams  149 

Lady  Clare  3 

„       61 

Princess  vi  87 

The  Goose  19 

Geraint  and  E.  596 

I  did  not  hear  the  d  howl. 

May  Queen,  Con.  21 

Love  thou  thy  land  85 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  58 

Locksley  Hall  50 

79 

Godiva  17 

„      31 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  4 

The  Brook  125 

Aylmer's  Field  325 

Lucretius  44 

Princess,  Pro.  113 

i  193 

Com.  of  Arthur  23 

Gareth  and  L.  960 

1011 

1014 

Geraint  and  E.  559 

Balin  and  Balan  582 

585 

Pelleas  and  E.  263 

284 

The  Revenge  12 


Dog  {continued)    Let  us  bang  these  d's  of  Seville, 
shook  'em  off  as  a  <i  that  shakes  his  ears 
And  mangle  the  living  d  that  had  loved  him 
and  the  d  couldn't  bark, 
they  kep  the  cat  an'  the  d, 
swear  'cep'  it  wur  &t  a,  d  coomin'  in, 
Eighty  winters  leave  the  d.  too  lame 
Fur  the  d's  stoiin-deaf,  an'  e's  blind, 
Roa  was  the  d  as  knaw'd  when  an'  wheere 
An'  the  d's  was  a-yowlin'  all  round, 
I  decreed  That  even  the  d  was  clean. 
He  was  loved  at  least  by  his  d: 

"Dogg^A     and  d  us,  and  drew  me  to  land  ? 

Dogwhip-weals    From  ear  to  ear  with  d-w. 

Doing     See  here,  my  d : 

their  own  d ;  this  is  none  of  mine ; 
With  all  its  d's  had  and  had  not  been, 
No,  no,  you  are  d  me  wrong ! 
died  in  the  d  it,  flesh   without  mind ; 

Dole  (moiuming)     that  day  there  was  d  in  Astolat. 

Dole  (gift)     distribute  d  To  poor  sick  people. 


Doom 

The  Revenge  30 

54 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  9 

V.  of  Maeldune  18 

Tomorrow  71 

Spinster's  S's.  60 

Locksley  H.,  Sxty  226 

Owd  Roa  2 

„        8 

„    107 

Akbar's  Dream  53 

Bandit's  Death  35 

Despair  2 

Last  Tournament  58 

Edwin  Morris  5 

St.  S.Stylites  123 

Princess  iv  566 

First  Quarrel  4 

Vastness  27 

Lancelot  and  E.  1136 

Guinevere  683 


hath  not  our  great  Queen  My  d  of  beauty  trebled? '  Last  Tournament  558 

Dole  (verb)     I  mete  and  d  Unequal  laws  Ulysses  3 

Domain    See  World-domain. 

Dome  (s)     (See  also  Mid-dome)     stay'd  beneath  the  d 

Of  hollow  boughs.  Arabian  Nights  41 

stream'd  Upon  the  mooned  d's  aloof  „            127 

Arno,  and  the  d  Of  Brunelleschi ;  The  Brook  189 

and  dipt  Beneath  the  satin  d  Princess  iv  31 

roll  'd  Thro'  the  d  of  the  golden  cross ;  Ode  on  Well.  61 

Save  that  the  d  was  purple,  Gareth  and  L.  912 

fallen  every  purple  Csesar's  d —  To  Virgil  30 

this  bare  d  had  not  begun  to  gleam  To  Mary  Boyle  41 

roll  her  North  below  thy  deepening  d.  Prog,  of  Spring  49 

and  men,  below  the  d  of  azure  Kneel  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  7 

Dome  (verb)    d's  the  red-plow'd  hills  With  loving  blue ;  Early  Spring  3 

Domed  See  Deep-domed. 

Domestic     Many  a  gallant  gay  d  Bows  L.  of  Burleigh  47 

Domine     '  Libera  me,  D  ! '  you  sang  the  Psalm,  Happy  49 

'  Libera  nos,  D ' — you  knew  not  one  was  there  „       53 

Dominion    D  in  the  head  and  breast.'  Two  Voices  21 

Think  I  may  hold  d  sweet,  Maud  I  xvi  12 

Thro'  all  the  vast  d  which  a  sword,  Akbar's  Dream  14 

Don    I  never  tum'd  my  back  upon  D  or  devil  yet.'  The  Revenge  31 

Done    See  Ill-done 

Donjon     The  ruinous  d  as  a  knoll  of  moss,  Balin  and  Balan  334 

And  if  thou  keep  me  in  thy  d  here,  Pelleas  and  E.  242 

Donn'd     Then  ashed  the  helm,  Gareth  and  L.  690 

Donovan's    back  wid  the  best  he  could  give  at  ould  D's  wake —  Tomorrow  42 

Doom  (s)     chord  which  Hampden  smote  WDl  vibrate 

to  the  d.  England  and  Amer.  20 

Hard  is  my  d  and  thine :  Love  and  Duty  54 

thunder  Roaring  out  their  d ;  ■  The  Captain  42 
you  have  miss'd  the  irreverent  d                              You  might  have  won  9 

in  their  eyes  and  faces  read  his  d ;  Enoch  Arden  73 

his  lonely  d  Came  suddenly  to  an  end.  „           626 

like  the  blast  of  d,  Would  shatter  all  „           769 

the  voice  that  calls  D  upon  kings,  Aylmer's  Field  742 

Announced  the  coming  d.  Sea  Dreams  22 

Boanerges  with  his  threats  of  d,  „         251 

death-blow  struck  the  dateless  d  of  kings,  Lucretius  236 

But  lies  and  dreads  his  d.  Princess  vii  154 

Bellowine  victory,  bellowing  d :  Ode  on  Well.  66 

thou  fulfillftst  thy  d  Making  him  High.  Pantheism  9 

Fall,  and  follow  their  d.  Voice  and  the  P.  20 

On  souls,  the  lesser  lords  of  d.  In  Mem.,  cxii  8 

And  batter'd  with  the  shocks  of  d  „    cxviii  24 

While  I  rose  up  against  my  d,  ,,      cxxii  2 

I  was  cursing  them  and  my  d,  Maud  I  xix  51 

I  embrace  the  purpose  of  God,  and  the  d  assign'd.  „    III  vi  59 

and  striking  found  his  d.  Com.  of  Arthur  325 

Arthur  said,  '  Behold  thy  d  is  mine.  „              467 

the  King  Throned,  and  delivering  d —  Gareth  and  L.  321 

own  false  d,  Tliat  shadow  of  mistrust  Geraint  and  E.  247 
My  madness  all  thy  life  has  been  thy  d,                   Balin  and  Balan  619 


Doom 


154 


Door 


Dark  my  d  was  here,  and  dark  It 


Doom  (s)  (continued) 
will  be 

bom  together,  and  we  die  Together  by  one  d : ' 

A  d  that  ever  poised  itself  to  fall, 

loved  him,  with  that  love  which  was  her  d. 

Galahad,  when  he  heard  of  Merlin's  d,  Cried, 

draw  me  into  sanctuary,  And  bide  my  d.' 

Pray  for  him  that  he  scape  the  d  of  fire,  And  weep 
for  her  who  drew  him  to  his  d.' 

that  I  march  to  meet  my  d. 

The  d  of  treason  and  the  flaming  death, 

that  my  d\s,\  love  thee  still. 

I  know  not  what  mysterious  d. 

became  as  mist  Before  her,  moving  ghostlike  to  hLs  d. 

J[\dia  mine  To  war  against  my  people 

'  My  house  hath  been  my  d. 

On  that  sharp  ridge  of  utmost  d  ride 

whose  issue  was  their  d, 

echo  shall  not  tongue  thy  glorious  d, 

uncall'd,  between  me  and  the  deep  and  my  d. 

Demos  end  in  working  its  own  d. 

for  man  can  half-control  his  d 

at  the  doubtful  d  of  human  kind ; 

the  dead,  who  wait  the  d  of  Hell 
Doom  (verb)    King  will  d  me  when  I  speak.' 
Doom'd    D  them  to  the  lash. 

kings  of  old  had  d  thee  to  the  flames, 

<?  to  be  the  bride  of  Night  and  Death ; 

Who  rose  and  d  me  to  the  fire. 

And  d  to  bum  alive. 

Fell  the  shipcrews  D  to  the  death. 

Drew  to  this  island :  D  to  the  death. 
Doomsday    as  grand  as  d  and  as  grave : 

To  and  thro'  the  D  fire, 
Doon  (Bomiy)    See  Bomiy  Doon. 
Door    (See  also  Chamber-door,  Chapel-door,  Chamnber 
door.  Dovecote -doors,  Sirine  -  doors.  Tavern- 
door)  Oh !    vanity !       Death      waits     at 
the  d. 

The  d's  upon  their  hinges  creak'd; 

Old  faces  glimmer'd  thro'  the  d's, 

The  costly  d's  flung  open  wide. 

Right  to  the  carven  cedam  d's, 

poplars  four  That  stand  beside  my  father's  d. 

Leaving  d  and  windows  wide : 

And  no  murmur  at  the  d. 

Close  the  d,  the  shutters  close. 

An  image  seem'd  to  pass  the  d,  (repeat) 

The  very  air  about  the  d  Made  misty 

As  near  this  d  you  sat  apart. 

The  guilt  of  blood  is  at  your  d : 

carried  out  from  the  threshold  of  the  d ; 

thro'  the  d  Hearing  the  holy  organ 

standeth  there  alone,  And  waiteth  at  the  d. 


Badin  and  Bcdan  623 

630 

Merlin  and  V.  191 

Lancelot  and  E.  260 

Holy  Grail  177 

Guinevere  122 

347 

450 

538 

559 

576 

605 

Pass,  of  Arthur  70 

154 

Lover's  Tale  i  805 

Tiresias  65 

„     136 

Despair  5 

LocTcsley  H.,  Sixty  114 

277 

To  Virgil  24 

Romney's  R.  132 

Gareih  and  L.  324 

The  Captain  12 

Gareth  and  L.  374 

1396 

Sir  J.  Oldcasile  172 

183 

Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  23 

51 

Princess  i  187 

Helen's  Tower  10 


All  Things  will  Die  17 

Mariana  62 

66 

Arabian  Nights  17 

115 

Ode  to  Memory  57 

Deserted  House  3 

7 


Mariana  in  the  S.  65,  74 

Miller's  D.  103 

158 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  43 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  42 

D.ofF.  Women  190 

D.  of  the  O.  Year  51 


a  new  face  at  the  d,  my  friend,  A  new  face  at  the  d.  „             53 

thro'  mine  own  d's  Death  did  pass ;  To  J.  S.  19 

There  strode  a  stranger  to  the  d,  (repeat)  The  Goose  3,  39 
d's  that  bar  The  secret  bridal  chambers  of  the  heart,  Gardener's  D.  248 

And  never  more  darken  my  d's  again.'  Dora  32 

The  d  was  oft  the  latch :  they  peep'd,  „  130 

whined  in  lobbies,  tapt  at  d's,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  37 

I  say,  that  time  is  at  the  d's  St.  S.  Stylites  192 

This  same  grand  year  is  ever  at  the  d's.'  Golden  Year  74 

Every  d  is  barr'd  with  gold,  Locksley  Hall  100 

all  Should  keep  within,  d  shut,  Godiva  41 

And  feet  that  ran,  and  d's  that  clapt,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  3 

He  lifts  me  to  the  golden  d's ;  St.  Agnes'  Eve  25 

The  stalls  are  void,  the  d's  are  wide,  Sir  Galahad  31 

One  fix'd  for  ever  at  the  d,  WiU  Water.  143 

gay  domestic  Bows  before  him  at  the  d.  L.  of  Burleigh  48 

Paused  for  a  moment  at  an  inner  d,  Enoch  Arden  278 

there  At  Annie's  d  he  paused  and  gave  his  hand,  „            447 

when  they  follow'd  us  from  Philip's  d.  The  Brook  167 

A  lily-avenue  climbing  to  the  d's ;  Aylmer's  Field  162 

Withdrawing  by  the  counter  d  „           282 


Door  (continued)    should  I  find  you  by  my  d's  again,        Aylmer's  Field  324 

tiU  he  heard  the  ponderous  d  Close,  „            337 

month  by  month  the  noise  about  their  d's,  „            488 

oaken  finials  till  he  touch'd  the  d ;  „            823 

jam  the  d's,  and  bear  The  keepers  down,  Lucretius  169 

stood  that  same  fair  creature  at  the  d.  Princess  ii  329 

call'd  For  Psyche's  child  to  cast  it  from  the  d's ;  „       iv  238 

came  a  little  stir  About  the  d's,  „          374 

I  will  go  and  sit  beside  the  d's,  „         v  96 

He  batter'd  at  the  d's ;  none  came :  „          337 

one  glance  he  caught  Thro'  open  d's  of  Ida  „          343 

'  Fling  our  d's  wide !  all,  all,  „      vi  334 

bare  Straight  to  the  d's :  to  them  the  d's  „           349 

long-laid  galleries  past  a  hundred  d's  „           375 

roll  the  torrent  out  of  dusky  d's :  „      vii  208 
Thy  name  was  blest  within  the  narrow  d;               W.  to  Marie  Alex.  38 

Often  they  come  to  the  d  Grandmother  82 

D's,  where  my  heart  was  used  to  beat  In  Mem.  vii  3 

I  creep  At  earliest  morning  to  the  d.  „               8 

as  if  a.  d  Were  shut  between  me  and  the  sound :  „    xxviii  7 

Shall  enter  in  at  lowly  d's.  „     xxxvi  8 

They  chatter'd  trifles  at  the  d :  „        Ixix  4 

crowds  that  stream  from  yawning  d's,  „         Ixx  9 

Another  name  was  on  the  d :  „  Ixxxvii  17 

From  out  the  d's  where  I  was  bred,  „         ciii  2 

D's,  where  my  heart  was  used  to  beat  „       cxix  1 

Thou  listenest  to  the  closing  d,  „       cxxi  7 

And  touch  with  shade  the  bridal  d's,  „   Con.  117 

Look,  a  horse  at  the  d,  Maud  I  xii  29 

even  then  I  heard  her  close  the  d,  „      xviii  11 

Did  he  stand  at  the  diamond  d  „      II  ii  16 

Modred  laid  his  ear  beside  the  d's,  Com.  of  Arthnr  323 

shone  the  fields  of  May  thro'  open  d,  „             460 

Ate  with  young  lads  his  portion  by  the  d,  Gareth  and  L.  480 

saw  without  the  d  King  Arthur's  gift,  „           676 

so  Sir  Kay  beside  the  d  Mutter'd  in  scorn  „           705 
broken  into  Thro'  open  d's  and  hospitality ;             Marr.  of  Geraint  456 

Glanced  at  the  d's  or  gambol'd  down  „               665 

d,  Push'd  from  without,  drave  backward  Geraint  and  E.  272 

thought  she  heard  the  wild  Earl  at  the  d,  „            381 
A  walk  of  roses  ran  from  dtod;                                Balin  and  Balan  242 

And  all  in  shadow  from  the  counter  d  „            246 

Beneath  a  low  d  dipt,  and  made  his  feet  „             403 
found  a  d,  And  darkling  felt  the  sculptured 

ornament  Merlin  and  V.  733 

and  entering  barr'd  her  d,  Lancelot  and  E.  15 

guide  me  to  that  palace,  to  the  d's.'  „            1129 

There  two  stood  arm'd,  and  kept  the  d ;  „            1247 

rose  And  pointed  to  the  damsel,  and  the  d's.  „            1263 

lords  and  dames  And  people,  from  the  high  d  streaming,     „  1347 

behold  a  woman  at  a  d  Spinning ;  Holy  Grail  391 

against  the  chapel  d  Laid  lance,  and  enter'd,  „          459 

Pass  not  from  dto  d  and  out  again,  „          714 

at  the  last  I  reach'd  a  d,  „          837 

in  my  madness  I  essay'd  the  d ;  „          841 

the  high  d's  Were  softly  sunder'd,  Pdleas  and  E.  3 

Unbind  him  now.  And  thrust  him  out  of  d's ;  „        257 

There  like  a  dog  before  his  master's  d !  „        263 

but  thrust  him  bounden  out  of  d.  „        314 

straight  on  thro'  open  d  Rode  Gawain,  „        382 

Pelleas,  leaping  up,  Ran  thro'  the  d's  „        539 

Sprang  from  the  a  into  the  dark.  „        603 
And  while  they  stood  within  the  d's.                       Last  Tournament  113 

machicolated  tower  That  stood  with  open  d's,  „               425 

but  sprang  Thro'  open  d's,  „               473 

Flush'd,  started,  met  him  at  the  d's,  „               512 

Like  to  some  doubtful  noise  of  creaking  d's,  Guinevere  72 

There  rode  an  armed  warrior  to  the  d's.  „        409 

Thro'  the  long  gallery  from  the  outer  d's  Rang  „        413 

waiting  by  the  d's  the  warhorse  neigh'd  „        530 

lo,  he  sat  on  horseback  at  the  d !  „        589 

open'd  on  the  pines  with  d's  of  glass.  Lover's  Tale  i  41 

Death  drew  nigh  and  beat  the  d's  of  Life ;  ,,111 

had  Heaven  from  all  her  d's,  „          604 

To  stand  a  shadow  by  their  shining  d's,  „         731 


Door 


155 


Doubt 


Door  (continued)    bad  his  menials  bear  him  from  the  d. 

There  were  our  horses  ready  at  the  d's — 

They  had  fasten'd  the  d  of  his  cell. 

to  keep  the  wolf  fro'  the  d, 

our  Sally  as  kep  the  wolf  fro'  the  d, 

They  have  left  the  d's  ajar ; 

and  a  noise  of  welcome  at  the  d's — 

found  her  beating  the  hard  Protestant  d's. 

they  niver  derken'd  my  d. 

when  I  saw  him  come  in  at  the  d, 

Boardings  and  rafters  and  d's — 

what  a  d  for  scoundrel  scum  I  open'd 

The  d's  of  Night  may  be  the  gates  of  Light ; 

let  them  spurn  me  from  the  d's, 

A  d  was  open'd  in  the  house — 

but  she  put  thim  all  to  the  d. 

sound  ran  Thro'  palace  and  cottage  d. 

Opens  a  d  in  Heaven ; 

cuckoo  of  a  joyless  June  Is  calling  out  of  d's : 

Door-handles  tum'd  when  none  was  at  the  d,  And  bolted 
d's  that  open'd  of  themselves  :  The  Ring  412 

The  d  is  open.    He !  is  he  standing  at  the  d,  Happy  11 

some  fair  dawn  beyond  the  d's  of  death  Far-far-away  11 

— a  widow  came  to  my  d :  Charity  26 

Door'd    See  Open-door'd 

Door-handle    D-h's  tum'd  when  none  was  at  the  door,  The  Ring  412 

Doorm    D,  whom  his  shaking  vassals  call'd  the  Bull,       Geraint  and  E.  439 


Lover's  Tale  iv  260 

„  385 

Rizpah  42 

Nor(h.  Cobbler  29 

59 

Sisters  {E"and  E )  1 

149 

240 

Village  Wife  60 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  2 

Def.  of  Lucknow  67 

Columbus  170 

Ancient  Sage  174 

The  Flight  55 

69 

Tomorrow  44 

Dead  Prophet  38 

Early  Spring  7 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  4 


we  may  meet  the  horsemen  of  Earl  Z>, 

One  took  him  for  a  victim  of  Earl  D, 

Another,  flying  from  the  wrath  of  D 

at  the  point  of  noon  the  huge  Earl  D, 

said  Earl  D :  '  Well,  if  he  be  not  dead, 

And  bore  him  to  the  naked  hall  of  D, 

retum'd  The  huge  Earl  I)  with  plunder  to  the  hall 

Earl  D  Struck  with  a  knife's  haft  hard 

But  when  Earl  D  had  eaten  aU  he  would. 

So  died  Earl  D  by  him  he  counted  dead. 

I  took  you  for  a  bandit  knight  of  D ; 

I  come  the  mouthpiece  of  our  King  to  D 

*  and  lo,  the  powers  of  D  Are  scatter'd,' 
Door-poorch  (door-porch)    my  oan  d-p  wi'  the 
woodbine 

to  pictur  the  d-p  theere, 
Doorwa3,y  (doorway)    An'  then  as  I  stood  i'  the  d. 
Doorway    (See  also  Doorwaay,  Palace-doorway) 
sometime  thro'  the  d  ? 

God  shut  the  d's  of  his  head. 

out  by  this  main  d  past  the  King. 
Doost  (dust)     Loovs  'im,  an'  roobs  'im,  an'  d's  'im, 
Dora    at  the  farm  abode  William  and  D. 

Now  D  felt  her  uncle's  will  in  all. 

Thought  not  of  D. 

Now  therefore  look  to  D ; 

for  his  sake  I  bred  His  daughter  D : 

'  I  cannot  marry  D ;  by  my  life,  I  will  not  marry  D.' 

his  ways  were  harsh ;  But  D  bore  them  meekly. 

And  D  promised,  being  meek. 

D  stored  what  little  she  could  save. 

Then  D  went  to  Mary. 

and  thought  Hard  things  of  D.    D  came  and  said : 

D  took  the  child,  and  went  her  way 

none  of  all  his  men  Dare  tell  him  D  waited  with  the  child ; 

D  would  have  risen  and  gone  to  him, 

D  cast  her  eyes  upon  the  ground,  „    89 

' did  I  not  Forbid  you,  D?'    D  said  again :  „    92 

The  wreath  of  flowers  fell  At  D's  feet.  „  103 

Then  D  went  to  Mary's  house,  „  110 

Mary  saw  the  boy  Was  not  with  D.  „  112 

D  said,  '  My  uncle  took  the  boy ;  „  114 

now  I  come  For  D :  take  her  back ;  „  143 

take  D  back  And  let  all  this  be  as  it  was  „  154 

and  D  hid  her  face  By  Mary.  „  156 

But  D  lived  unmarried  till  her  death.  „  172 

Dorhawk-whirr    and  d-w  Awoke  me  not.  Lover's  Tale  «  116 

Dormouse    blue  wood-louse,  and  the  plump  d,  Window,  Winter  9 


492 
524 
„  530 

536 
546 
570 
592 
599 
609 
730 
786 
796 
801 

Spinster's  S's.  la") 
Owd  Rod  24 

Dawnd 

Aylmer's  Field  685 
In  Mem.  xliv  4 
Gareth  and  L.  671 
North.  Cobbler  98 
Dora  2 
„     5 
»      8 
„    15 
„    20 
„    23 
„    36 
„    46 
„    52 
„    56 
„    58 

»    71 
„    76 

»    77 


Dorset-Dorsetshire    There  was  a  fanner  in  Dorset  of 

Harry's  kin.  First  Quarrel  17 

So  Harry  was  bound  to  the  Dorsetshire  farm  „            19 

Dose    fiunes  Of  that  dark  opiate  d  you  gave  me, —  Romney's  R.  31 

Dot    hull  Look'd  one  black  d  against  the  verge  M.  d' Arthur  271 

hull  Look'd  one  black  d  against  the  verge  Pass,  of  Arthur  439 

The  fires  that  arch  this  dusky  d —  Epilogue  52 
Dotage    Cries  of  unprogressive  d                                  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  153 

Dotard    call  him  d  in  your  rage  „                   9 

ere  the  d  fell  asleep  ?  „                153 

Dote    d  and  pore  on  yonder  cloud  In  Mem.  xv  16 

Double  (adv.)     And  then  we  drank  it  d ;  Will  Water.  96 

Double  (verb)     wind  And  d  in  and  out  the  boles.  Princess  iv  262 

Double-charge    Now  d-c  it  with  grape !  Def.  of  Lucknow  68 

Doubled    d  his  own  warmth  against  her  lips.  Gardener's  D.  138 

old  man  Was  wroth,  and  d  up  his  hands,  Dora  25 

but  when  his  date  D  her  own,  Aylmer's  Field  81 

Double-dragon'd    fill'd  his  d-d  chsiir.  Last  Tournament  144 

Doubling     d  all  his  master's  vice  of  pride,  Marr.  of  Geraint  195 

Doubt  (S)     a  special  care  Of  God,  to  fortify  from  d,  Supp.  Confessions  64 

Moved  from  beneath  with  d  and  fear.  „            138 

If  so  be  that  from  d  at  length,  „             143 

Koof'd  the  world  with  d  and  fear,  Elednore  99 

carve  out  Free  space  for  every  human  d.  Two  Voices  137 

These  things  are  wrapt  in  d  and  dread,  „        266 

There  must  be  answer  to  his  d.  „        309 

'  The  d  would  rest,  I  dare  not  solve.  „        313 

The  d  my  mother  would  not  see  ;  MiUer's  D.  154 

In  d  and  great  perplexity,  Palace  of  Art  278 

but  empty  breath  And  rumours  of  a  d?  M.  d' Arthur  100 

(For  all  my  mind  is  clouded  with  a  d)  „           258 

lying  thus  inactive,  d  and  gloom.  Enoch  Arden  113 

Such  d's  and  fears  were  common  to  her  state,  „            521 

One  spiritual  d  she  did  not  soothe  ?  Aylmer's  Field  704 

Discuss'd  a  d  and  tost  it  to  and  fro :  Princess  ii  445 

Disturb'd  me  with  the  d  '  if  this  were  she,'  „        iv  217 

came  On  a  sudden  the  weird  seizure  and  the  d :  „            560 

for  spite  of  d's  And  sudden  ghostly  shadowings  „           571 

Deeper  than  those  weird  d's  could  reach  me,  „        vii  51 

I  have  heard  Of  your  strange  d's :  „            336 

my  d's  are  dead,  My  haunting  sense  of  hollow  shows :  „           348 

In  ei  if  you  be  of  our  Barons'  breed —  Third  of  Feb.  32 

A  spectral  d  which  makes  me  cold,  In  Mem.  xli  19 

O  turn  thee  round,  resolve  the  d ;  „        xliv  14 

such  as  closed  Grave  d's  and  answers  „       xlviti  3 

What  slender  shade  of  d  may  flit,  „                 7 

Defects  of  d,  and  taints  of  blood ;  „           Hv  4 

Nor  can  my  dream  resolve  the  d :  „     Ixviii  12 

D  and  Death,  111  brethren,  let  the  ^ancy  fly  „   Ixxxvi  11 

And  d  beside  the  portal  waits,  „        xciv  14 

bold  to  dwell  On  d's  that  drive  the  coward  back,  „          xcv  30 

trance  Was  cancell'd,  stricken  thro'  with  d.  „               44 

You  tell  me,  d  is  Devil-born.  „          xcvi  4 

There  lives  more  faith  in  honest  d,  „               11 

He  fought  his  d's  and  gather'd  strength,  „                13 

To  seize  and  throw  the  d's  of  man ;  „           cix  6 

Our  dearest  faith ;  our  ghastliest  d;  „        cxxiv  2 

No,  Uke  a  child  in  d  and  fear :  „                17 

Mix  not  memory  with  d,  Maud  II  iv  57 

A  d  that  ever  smoulder'd  in  the  hearts  Com.  of  Arthur  64 

in  daily  d  Whether  to  live  or  die,  Lancelot  and  E.  520 

Lost  in  a  d,  Pelleas  wandering  Waited,  Pelleas  and  E.  392 

This  tender  rhyme,  and  evermore  the  d,  „             410 

fault  and  d — no  word  of  that  fond  tale —  Last  Tournament  578 

but  empty  breath  And  rumours  of  a  d  ?  Pass,  of  Arthur  268 

(For  all  my  mind  is  clouded  with  a  d) —  „            426 

'  But  solve  me  first  a  d.  Lover's  Tale  iv  254 

Naw  d :  But  I  liked  a  bigger  feller  to  fight  North.  Cobbler  99 

fluttering  in  a  d!  Between  the  two —  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  33 

raise  the  full  High-tide  of  d  „             178 

in  days  Of  d  and  cloud  and  storm,  Columlus  156 

And  D  is  the  lord  of  this  dunghill  Despair  90 

Cleave  ever  to  the  sunnier  side  of  d,  Ancient  Sage  68 

and  yet  no  shade  of  d,  But  utter  clearness,  „          235 

lost  in  the  gloom  of  d's  that  darken  the  schools ;  Vastness  11 


Donbt 


156 


Dragon 


Doubt  (s)  (continued)    after  hours  of  search  and  d  and  threats,   The  Bing  278 


Still — at  times  Xd,a.  fear, — 

darken'd  with  d's  of  a  Faith  that  saves, 
Donbt  (verb)     It  is  man's  privilege  to  d, 

I  fear  All  may  not  d, 

evidence,  By  which  he  d's  against  the  sense  ? 

I  d  not  thro'  the  ages 

'  True,'  she  said,  '  We  d  not  that. 

*  D  my  word  again  ! '  he  said. 

Unto  we  d  not  that  for  one  so  true 

2)  not  ye  the  Gods  have  answer'd, 

For  can  I  d,  who  knew  thee  keen 

I  d  not  what  thou  wouldst  have  been : 

Who  d's  thee  victor  ? 

I  do  not  <i  To  find,  at  some  place 

Henceforward  I  will  rather  die  than  d. 

And  will  henceforward  rather  die  than  d. 

nor  did  he  d  her  more.  But  rested  in  her  fealty, 

I  d  not  that  however  changed. 

To  d  her  fairness  were  to  want  an  eye,  To  d  her 
pureness  were  to  want  a  heart — 

heard  a  voice,  '  D  not,  go  forward ;  if  thou  d, 
the  beasts  Will  tear  thee  piecemeal.' 

enow  To  make  one  d  if  ever  the  great  Queen 

never  d  each  other  more. 

I  with  this  dagger  of  his — do  you  d  me  ? 

an'  I  d's  they  poison'd  the  cow. 

D  no  longer  that  the  Highest  is  the  wisest 
Donbted    A  and  drowsed,  nodded  and  slept, 

and  d  him  No  more  than  he,  himself  ; 

I  d  whether  daughter's  tenderness, 
Donbtfol    I  answer'd  nothing,  d  in  myself 

the  old  man,  Tho'  d,  felt  the  flattery, 

some  were  d  how  the  law  would  hold, 
Donbting    thought  To  sift  his  d's  to  the  last. 
Doubtless     '  D — ay,  but  ever  since  In  all  the  world 
Dove    (See  also  Ringdove,  Wood-dove)    Let  Thy  d 
Shadow  me  over, 

And  oft  I  heard  the  tender  d 

Came  voices  of  the  well-contented  d's. 

Like  d's  about  a  dovecote,  wheeling  round 

they  that  loved  At  first  like  d  and  d 

iris  changes  on  the  bumish'd  d ; 

I  would  not  one  of  thine  own  d's, 

morning  d's  That  sim  their  milky  bosoms 

The  d  may  murmur  of  the  d, 

A  troop  of  snowy  d's  athwart  the  dusk, 

The  moan  of  d's  in  immemorial  elms, 

O  merry  the  linnet  and  d, 

O  somewhere,  meek,  unconscious  d, 

as&d  when  up  she  springs  To  bear 

then  flew  in  a  <i  And  brought  a  summons 

She  is  coming,  my  d,  my  dear ; 

My  own  d  with  the  tender  eye  ? 

And  while  your  d's  about  you  flit, 

round  her  forehead  wheels  the  woodland  d. 
Dovecote    Like  doves  about  a  d,  wheeling  round 
Dovecote-doors    some  one  batters  at  the  d-d, 
Dowager    prudes  for  proctors,  d's  for  deans. 
Do-well    D-w  will  follow  thought. 

Dower    lent  you,  love,  your  mortal  d  Of  pensive  thought 
Dower'd    D  with  the  hate  of  hate, 
Dowerless    but  both  Were  d,  and  myself, 
Down  (hiU)    here  are  the  blissful  d's  and  dales, 

the  yellow  d  Border'd  with  palm, 

Roimd  and  round  the  spicy  d's 

She  went  by  dale,  and  she  went  by  d, 

behind  it  a  gray  d  With  Danish  barrows ; 

Green  in  a  cupUke  hollow  of  the  d. 

But  in  the  leafy  lanes  behind  the  d, 

early  roses  from  his  wall,  Or  conies  from  the  d, 

after  scaling  half  the  weary  d, 

November  dawns  and  dewy-glooming  d'*, 

Close  to  the  ridge  of  a  noble  d.         .^  ^^ 

And  on  the  i'a  a  rising  fire :  jSkl  iti 


Akbar's  Bream  169 

The  Dreamer  11 

8upp.  Confessions  142 

178 

Two  Voices  285 

Locksley  Hall  137 

Princess,  Pro.  169 

176 

Ode  on  Well.  255 

Bocidicea  22 

In  Mem.  cxiii  5 

„         cxiii  8 

Gareth  and  L.  1296 

Marr.  of  Geraint  218 

Geraint  and  E.  738 

745 

966 

Lancelot  and  E.  1218 

1376 

Holy  Grail  824 

Last  Tournament  564 

Happy  92 

Bandit's  Death  42 

Church-warden,  etc.  16 

Faith  1 

Com.  of  Arthur  427 

Gareth  and  L.  125 

Marr.  of  Geraint  797 

Princess  Hi  272 

Merlin  and  V.  184 

Lover's  Tale  iv  270 

Com.  of  Arthur  311 

The  Ring  363 

Supp.  Confessions  180 

MiUer's  D.  41 

Gardener's  D.  89 

224 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  58 

Locksley  Hall  19 

Lucretius  68 

Princess  ii  102 

„     m  105 

„      iv  168 

„    mi  221 

Window,  Ay  13 

In  Mem.  vi  25 

„         xii  1 

„       ciii  15 

Mavd  I  xxii  61 

„       II  iv  46 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  7 

Prog,  of  Spring  57 

Gardener's  D.  224 

Princess  iv  169 

„    Pro.  141 

Ancient  Sage  273 

Margaret  5 

The  Poet  3 

The  Bing  167 

Sea-Fairies  22 

Lotos-Eaters  21 

„  C.  S.  104 

Lady  Clare  59 

Enoch  Arden  6 

9 

97 

340 

372 

610 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  16 

In  Mem.,  Con.  108 


Down  (hill)  (continued)    And  rise,  0  moon,  from 

yonder  d,  In  Mem.,  Con.  109 

Till  over  d  and  over  dale  „                 110 

face  of  night  is  fair  on  the  dewy  d's,  Maud  III  in  5 

some  wild  d  above  the  windy  deep,  Merlin  and  V.  658 

And  there  among  the  solitary  d's,  Lancelot  and  E.  163 

O'er  these  waste  d's  whereon  I  lost  myself,  „              225 

Sparkle,  until  they  dipt  below  the  d's.  „              396 

the  long  backs  of  the  bushless  d's,  (repeat)  „      400,  789 

For  the  d's  are  as  bright  as  day,  Bizpah  4 

and  the  storm  rushing  over  the  d,  „      6 

when  the  storm  on  the  d's  began,  „    71 

lived  With  Muriel's  mother  on  the  d,  The  Ring  148 

Among  the  quarried  d's  of  Wight,  To  Ulysses  32 

There  on  the  top  of  the  d,  June  Bracken,  etc.  1 

Down  (feathery  substance)    silk-soft  folds,  upon  yielding  d,         Eleanore  28 

rosy  thigh  Half-buried  in  the  Eagle's  d.  Palace  of  Art  122 

wild  hawk  stood  with  the  d  on  his  beak,  Poet's  Song  11 

in  broider'd  d  we  sank  Our  elbows :  Princess  iv  32 

When  in  the  d  I  sink  my  head.  In  Mem.  Ixviii  1 

Art  yet  half-yolk,  not  even  come  to  d —  Balin  and  Balan  569 

Down-carolling    D-c  to  the  crisped  sea.  The  Winds,  etc.  6 

Downcast    her  eyes  were  d,  not  to  be  seen)  Maud  I  ii  5 

Down-deepening    D-d  from  swoon  to  swoon,  Fatima  27 

Down-droop'd-Down-dropt     Eyes  not  down-dropt  nor  over-bright,     Isabel  1 

Down-droop'd,  in  many  a  floating  fold,  Arabian  Nights  147 

Wit  h  down-dropt  eyes  I  sat  alone :  CEnone  56 

Downfa  II    'tween  the  spring  and  d  of  the  light,  St.  S.  Stylites  110 

Down-glancing    a  spear  D-g  lamed  the  charger  Lancelot  and  E.  488 

Down-lapsing    fancies,  by  d-l  thought  Stream'd  onward,  D.  of  F.  Women  49 


Down-streaming    the  dread  sweep  of  the  d-s  seas 
Dovm-way     Pleasure  who  flaunts  on  her  wide  d-w 
Dowry    Large  dowries  doth  the  raptured  eye 
Doy  (die)     But  sin'  I  mun  d  I  mun  d, 

an'  if  I  mun  d  I  mxm  d. 
Doze    Fell  'm.a,d;  and  half-awake  I  heard 
half  indl  seem'd  To  float  about 
Did  I  hear  it  half  m&d  Long  since, 
In  a  wakeful  d  I  sorrow  For  the  hand, 
Dozed    Miriam  watch'd  and  d  at  intervals, 
As  the  pimpernel  d  on  the  lea ; 
Then  d  awhile  herself,  but  overtoil'd 
Id;  1  woke.     An  open  landaulet  Whirl'd 
Dozing    Lay,  d  in  the  vale  of  Avalon, 
Draain  (drain)    Miss  Annie  she  said  it  wur  d's, 
Draff    chafi  and  d,  much  better  burnt.' 
Drag    will  have  weight  to  d  thee  down. 
And  that  d's  down  his  life : 
poor  Psyche  whom  she  d's  in  tow.' 
Should  d  you  down,  and  some  great  Nemesis 
and  d's  me  down  From  my  fixt  height 
a  great  black  cloud  D  inward  from  the  deeps, 
That  seem  to  keep  her  up  but  d  her  down — 
And  onward  d's  a  labouring  breast. 
To  d  me  down  to  seventy-nine, 
wife  and  children  d  an  Artist  down ! 
if  the  rebel  subject  seek  to  d  me  from  the  throne 
Dragg'd    we  d  her  to  the  college  tower 

What  Roman  would  be  d  in  triumph  thus  ? 
I  d  my  brains  for  such  a  song, 
a  madden'd  beach  d  down  by  the  wave, 
D  him,  and  struck,  but  from  the  castle 
so  by  force  they  d  him  to  the  King. 
He  d,  his  eyebrow  bushes  down, 
d  me  up  there  to  his  cave  in  the  mountain, 
and  the  weight  that  d  at  my  hand ; 
Dragging    Grimy  nakedness  d  his  trucks 

a  dream  Of  d  down  his  enemy  made  them  move. 
Reversion  ever  d  Evolution  in  the  mud. 
Draggle    An'  Sally  wur  sloomy  an'  d 
Draggled    Tho'  somewhat  d  at  the  skirt. 
Dragon    The  golden  gorge  of  d's  spouted  forth 
A  gilded  d,  also,  for  the  babes. 
To  catch  a  d  in  a  cherry  net, 
D's  of  the  prime,  That  tare  each  other 


Enoch  Arden  55 

Vastness  16 

Ode  to  Memory  72 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  64 

68 

The  Epic  13 

Princess  i  246 

Maud  I  vii  1 

,.  .  „  77^26 

Enoch  Arden  909 

Maud  I  xxii  48 

Geraint  and  E.  376 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  85 

Palace  of  Art  \01 

Village  Wife  11 

The  Epic  40 

Locksley  Hall  48 

Sea  Dreams  177 

Princess  Hi  103 

„         vi  174 

.307 

„  vii  37 

270 

In  Mem.  xv  18 

To  Ulysses  8 

Bomney's  B.  38 

I      By  an  Evolution.  15 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  89 

Lucretius  234 

Princess  iv  154 

Maud  I  Hi  12 

Balin  and  Balan  399 

Merlin  and  V.  640 

807 

Bandit's  Death  11 

39 

Maud  I  xl 

Lancelot  and  ^.814 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  200 

North.  Cobbler  41 

Last  Tournament  219 

Palace  of  Art  23 

Enoch  Arden  540 

Princess  «  169 

In  Mem.  Ivi  22 


Dragon 

Dragon  (continued)     the  shape  thereof  A  d  wiiK^'ri  r.«,  ^f  a  ,i      on^ 

The  shining  d  and  the  naked  child              °    '  ^""'-  ""^  '^'^^'''  ^^^ 

Thro'  twenty  folds  of  twisted  d,  rn,Jh      ^  r  rin 

Smce  to  his  crown  the  golden  d'clung,  And  down  his  "^  ^-  ^^*^ 

robe  the  d  writhed  in  gold  r        i  ,      j  r.  .o. 

behind  him  crept  Two /^  id  i^an^rfoi  and  ^.  434 

saw  The  golden  d  sparkUng  over'aU  •  tjJ:,  r    -j  Wi 

weigh'd  the  necks  Of  d's  chnging  "^"^^  ^""""^  S?^ 

On  wyvem,  lion,  d,  griffin,  swan,  »          ttl 

i)';  cave,  HaU  hid,  theyteU  me,  Ttresu,  16 

rolling  of  ix"s  Bv  marble  of  wafer  »*    .-         .  ."  ^ 

Dragon  (inn  sign)    At  the  1)  on  the  heath  '  ^"'^v-  ''^  t.^'  ^ 

Dragon-boughts    cZ-6  and  elvish  emblerSnc^s  r     T  ''^  f%l^ 

Dragon'd    6'ee  Double-Dragon'd               ^  Gareth  and  L.  233 

Dragon-fly    '  To-day  I  saw  the  d-f  v,,„„  ^  ■      « 

glancing  Uke  a  d-f  In  summer  <!n.>  ,^          r  T  *^'''^**  ^ 

_    d  Shot  by  me  Uki  a  fl™  puS  fire  ^"T  ''f  PZ^]^*.  ^ 
"^  2i  t&f  '^^^^    FlSthJ  roofs  and  sacking "  ^  ^'^^  "  '' 

Drain  (verb)    a  hp  to  d  thr&e  dry  ^'^ff}^'f!'^}^. 

.-i'sThechaUceofthe^apesofS-  Lofsley  HaU  88 

Dunnage    with  the  rf  of  your  sewer  •        '  r    t,    ^^^^•"'•*,i^ 

°'^''.  ofhlrt^c^-^-'^^^^^  «^«^  -  «P0ke^    ^     ^      '         '    ^ 

love  for  him  have  d  My  capabihties  of  Iovp  •  r    {^"^^f  ''^  266 

scheme  that  had  left  Z  flaccid  and  f         '  ^"  ^'m*  ^7.^  I}, 

bl«^Of  their  strong  bodies,  flom^nl;  d  their  ^""^  ^  '  ^^ 

the  Ct  that  d  her  dear  lord's  Ufe  ^r""'  "//^'^^'l*  ^69 

Z>  of  her  force,  again  she  sat  r  ^f^'"''  "'*^  ^-  ^^^ 

raised  the  school;  and  d  the  fen  Last  Tournament  540 

Drake    So  witty  that  ye  plav'd  at  duck.  ^nH  ^'  '^''^^^^  ^•'  '^''"'2'  268 

Drama  .  Vicxoi^in  A  VicK  Romance           '  LastTourr^ment  344 

Thine  is  it  that  our  rf  did  not  S        '  r„  J'^r   m""  ^T  q 

In  some  fifth  Act  what  this  wM  'i)  means  •  Tr"?'/''^  a 

Drank    '  We  d  the  Libyan  Sun  to  sleen  n     /  x^  ul^^  ^^"hi 

The  butler  d,  the  steward  scrawl'd  '  nJlZ.  ^^"^""If^ 

And  then  we  d  it  double ;               '  ^'^wh^.TT^  ^^ 

and  d  The  magic  cup  that  fiU'd  itself  ^ ,  7       .    ?^?^,^-i  ^o 

D  the  large  air,  and  saw,  ^,„  \\         ^. 

Sf  at  his  table :  d  his  costly  wines ;  "^'^  ^'^'""^^  l\ 

d  the  gale  That  blown  about  the  foliage  Princess  in  120 

and  d  hmiself  mto  his  erave  -rrincess  m  izu 

And  d,  and  loyaUy  d  to  him!  ^rlfn^-^OA 

There  they  d  in  cups  of  emerald,  r'SIT  It 

Nor  ever  d  the  inviolate  spring  r  ^^?^*^^«  61 

Sir  Gareth  d  and  ate,        ^  ^  r.rJ''  ^T'  ilf^n 

Earl  Limours  D  tiU  he  jested  with  all  ease,  SSf^f  A  gS 

they  d  and  some  one  sang,                          '  nj^      Tt  i      tl 

then  you  d  And  knew  no  more  m\  ^"^  ^J^lf^'cB 

a  ss  ra-Ks"  -  -  -  -  -  s„p^r'K;lL 

And  parted  hps  which  d  her  breath,  '      ^      i  ■  Sol 

Well  then--our  solemn  f east-we  ate  and  d,  "        •'  ioi 

show'd  he  d  beyond  his  use ;                           '  "            Hi 

d  the  dews  and  drizzle  of  the  North  p,^.,    '/  c     •     oT 

Draped    sweet  sculpture  d  from  head  to  foot,  '^ PhZI^VA 

DraS'^A?h'Ir?effrc3!nTh'-^PPT''^'    ■  ^«^- «^  Srsfl 

ntoi^*     D  •  ^  } , ''  .^,  ^'^'■^y  In  shming  draperies.  Princess  ii  lOQ 

Drai^t    Bnmm'd  with  dehrious  d's  of  warmest  life.  Eorl  139 

Some  d  of  Lethe  might  await  T.tv^     Q^n 

gather'd  green  Fro^^d'.  of  bahny  air.  ^/^  aS  0  J  9 

nux  the  foaming  d  Of  fever  p  "  ■  "^  ^:  •  „V? 

think  that  you  Lght  mix'&is  d  with  death.  Prir^ess  ^^_  251 


157 


Draw'd 


TitWigYlt  (continued)    A  shot,  ere  half  thy  d  be  done  7^4         -n 

the  cup  was  gold,  the  d  was  mud.'  ^  '      r„,,  ,,      ^^"*-  fooJ 

keeps  A  d  of  that  sweet  fountain  Last  Tournament  298 

Love  pledge  Hatred  in  her  bitter  d's  ^^^''  '  ^'^^  '  }!^\ 

deny  my  sultry  throat  One  d  of  icv  water  p     "     ,    r,oo 

Drave    I  d  Among  the  thickest  and  bore  doml  a  Prince         ^'T^'^V^  \f^ 

Then  he  d  The  heathen;              ""^«  uown  a  i-nnce,  Princess  v  517 

Who  d  the  heathen  hence  by  sorcery  r'^'.^f  ^S' r"''o^? 

He  d  his  enemy  backward  down  the^bridge  ^'""''^  "'^^  ^-  ^2^ 

d  her  ere  her  time  across  the  fiekS  -^"^'^"^  '""^  -^^  ^^^ 

'  He  took  them  and  he  d  them  to  his  tower  r    .  v   "            ^?o 

tow'S^'''  Brake  in  upon  me  and  1  tIfm~to  his  ^''^''"^'"^'^^  ^8 

Draw    -D  down  into  his  vexed  pools  c,         .^     i'    •       ,^2 

something  in  the  darkness  d's  His  forehead  ^^"  ^"'*-^^**""*^  1^3 

the  mountain  d'5  it  from  Heaven  above  'w    ..    j^-  /ol 

And  d  itself  to  what  it  was  beforer  'Cl  ^''^^  E 

D's  different  threads,  and  late  and  soon  rn.nv"-'^''\ ^o 

plunging  seas  d  backward  from  the  land  vIT.    fT,  11^ 

To  her  full  height  her  stately  stature  S'.  •  n  nf^w^^'^  ?no 

Watch  what  main-currents  d  the  yeare  •  '  r.'   4      fi."'^'''}?^ 

'Mj  end  d's  nigh ;  'tis  time  that  fwero  gone  ' MV^Vr^.H 

and  d's  The  greater  to  the  lesser,             ^  ^^  '^/''^A,"'- 163 

end  d's  mgh ;  I  hope  my  end  d's  nigh :  .<??%  '^f/ v  ^'J 

deny  it  now  ?     Nay,  d,  ^,  d  nigh  ''  '^^  '^^2/^*^«*  36 

And  d's  the  veil  from  hidden  worth  n„„  n    "  ^     •  2pl 

i>  me,  thy  bride,  a  gUttering  star,  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  i 

what  d's  me  down  Into  the  common  day  P  wmw,     ^  f. 

Some  that  she  but  held  off  to  d  him  on  •  '  pi  ^J'f-  ]^r,i 

And  d  them  all  along,  and  flow              '  "^^l  ^p'^''*,^If 

hunters  round  a  hunted  creature  d  The  cordon  ^  ;      ,    ^'^°,,.A 

yet  he  d's  Nearer  and  nearer  ^y W's  i^teM  499 

what  mother's  blood  You  d  from  fight  •  L^mretius  194 

Ask  me  no  more :  the  moon  may'dlhe  sea ;  ^'''"''''  \^\ 

and  d  The  stmg  from  pain ;        •'               «*»  „         v%%\ 

i>  toward  the  long  frost  and  longest  night  a  nJh    *•      fi 

So  d  him  home  to  those  that  mourn  ^  Dedication  11 

And  scarce  endure  to  d  the  breath  ^^"  *^  ^ 

The  time  d'5  near  the  birth  of  Christ-  "       "^"^-i^? 

Z*  forth  the  cheerful  day  from  night  •'  "    ^•^"'1 

Like  birds  the  charming  serpent  d'5  "  "      '^'^^  f^ 

Z>  down  Ionian  hills,  and  sow  The  dust  "  ^^^^''^f 

d  The  deepest  measure  from  the  chords-  "    ^'^'^y.]} 

And  tease  her  till  the  day  d'5  by  "   ^'^"*  H 

virtue  such  as  d's  A  faithful  answer  "  ,     ^  }i 

and  we  to  d  From  deep  to  deep  "  '^^f?!  ^'^ 

The  time  d'5  near  the  birth  of  Christ  •  "      ""•  ^? 

To  d,  to  sheathe  a  useless  sword         '  "         5?^  ■'■ 

•  But  they  must  go,  the  time  d'5  on,  „cxxvtu  13 

A  soul  shall  d  from  out  the  vast  "    ^"'^'  ^^ 

dark  undercurrent  woe  That  seems  tn /7  t,^      V^      .123 

To  turn  the  broach,  d  water  ^^"^'^  ^  i™»"  84 

and  ever  fail'd  to  d  The  quiet  night  into  '''^'^  ^-  ^^^ 

her  blood.  , , 

as  the  worm  d'5  in  the  wither'd  leaf  z^'"'''  ?-/,^«'"f ««  531 

long  have  watch'd  how  Lancelot  d^5  GeramtandE.  633 

Gasping  to  Sir  Lavaine,  '  Ke  lice-head  • '  f""  Tf  ^t,"^  'fl^. 

'  I  dread  me,  if  I  ti  it,  you  will  dJe^              *  Lancelot  and  E.  511 

'  I  die  already  with  it :  d — Z>,' "  "              ^1^ 

For  I  will  d  me  into  sanctuair  A'  ■           ^^'^ 

'  My  end  d'5  nigh ;  'tis  time  thkt  I  were  srono  p        Guinevere  121 

sail  Will  d  me  to  the  rising  of  the  si  /'  ''^  f^t^'"'-  ^^l 

Whereof  to  all  that  d  the  iholesomr^r  ^'"''  ^"^^  \^ 

mitre-sanction'd  harlot  d'5  his  clerks       '  c-     7  ^'?^       ,     ^0 

In  his  own  well,  d  solace  as  he  rnay  ^''  *^-  ^^-^"'^^^  ^^ 

but  seem  to  d  From  yon  dark  cave,'  .     TiresmsSQ 

from  her  household  orbit  d'5  the  cMd  t    -^V^^^*  ^^^pe  Q 

serpent-wanded  power  D  downward  info  tto^oo  ?.       ''•  ^^^'^'^ce  7 

woSld  fail,  to  d  I'he  crowd  from  walloiw'^''  Am"'^' ^^"^  \^1 

nor  the  sod  D  from  mv  death  Thv  lil^nctT  ^Mar's  Dream  140 

Orawa    c„„.fo,„a«ea„3'L'Sfal''iSd'*"^^°''''  -^SrcSSrsI 


Drawing 


158 


Dream 


Drawing    D  into  his  narrow  earthen  urn, 
d  nigh  Half-whisper'd  in  his  ear, 
bright  river  d  slowly  His  waters 
And  o'er  him,  d  it,  the  winter  moon, 
Then  spoke  King  Arthur,  d  thicker  breath ; 
And  newer  knowledge,  d  nigh, 
slowly  d  near,  A  vapour  heavy,  hueless, 
For  now  the  day  was  d  on, 
each,  dishorsed  and  d,  lash'd  at  each  So  often 
And  d  down  the  dim  disastrous  brow 
And  d  somewhat  backward  she  replied, 
And  d  foul  ensample  from  fair  names, 
o'er  him,  d  it,  the  wiater  moon, 
Then  spoke  King  Arthur,  d  thicker  breath  ; 


Ode  to  Memory  61 

(Enone  185 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  92 

M.  d' Arthur  53 

„         148 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  51 

Vision  of  Sin  52 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  10 

Marr.  of  Geraint  563 

Balin  and  Balan  5iQ1 

Last  Tournament  523 

Guinevere  490 

Pass,  of  Arthur  221 

316 


d  down  from  both  The  light  and  genial  warmth  To  Prin.  Beatrice  21 

the  star  of  eve  was  d  light  From  the  dead  sun,  Death  of  (Enone  64 

Drawn    Thence  thro'  the  garden  I  was  d —  Arabian  Nights  100 

all  which  thou  hast  d  of  fairest  Or  boldest  since.  Ode  to  Memory  89 

All  day  and  all  night  it  is  ever  d  Poet's  Mind  28 

D  from  each  other  meUow-deep ;  Elednore  67 

creeps  from  pine  to  pine,  And  loiters,  slowly  d.  (Enone  5 

dew,  D  from  the  spirit  thro'  the  brain.  To  J.  S.  38 

the  dusky  highway  near  and  nearer  d,  Lochsley  HaU  113 

But  aU  my  heart  is  d  above.  Sir  Galahad  17 

robe  Of  twilight  slowly  downward  d.  The  Voyage  22 

till  d  thro'  either  chasm,  Enoch  Arden  670 

With  reasons  d  from  age  and  state.  Princess  v  357 

all  their  foreheads  d  in  Roman  scowls,  „     vii  129 

sweet  httle  body  that  never  had  d  a  breath.  Grandmother  62 

And  then  I  know  the  mist  i&d  In  Mem.  Ixvii  13 

It  might  have  d  from  after-heat.'  „       Ixxxi  12 

0  bliss,  when  all  in  circle  d  „  Ixxxix  21 
The  silvery  haze  of  summer  d ;  „  xcv  4 
The  boat  is  d  upon  the  shore ;  „           cxxi  6 

1  beheld  The  death- white  curtain  d ;  Maud  I  xiv  34 
Gareth  overthrew  him,  lighted,  drew.  There  met 

him  d,  Gareth  and  L.  1122 

souls  the  old  serpent  long  had  d  Down,  Geraint  and  E.  632 

coveriid  was  cloth  of  gold  I)  to  her  waist,  Lancelot  and  E.  1158 
what  evil  beast  Hath  d  his  claws  athwart 

thy  face  ?  Last  Tournament  63 

Irish  eyes  Had  d  him  home — what  marvel  ?  „            405 

Had  d  herself  from  many  thousand  years.  Lover's  Tale  i  550 

As  if  'twere  d  asimder  by  the  rack.  „  ii  57 
the  portrait  of  his  friend  D  by  an  artist.               Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  135 

living  water,  d  By  this  good  Wiclif  mountain  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  131 

Sphinx,  with  wings  d  back.  Folded  her  Uon  paws,  Tiresias  148 

magnet  of  Art  to  the  which  my  nature  was  d.  The  Wreck  22 

still  d  downward  for  an  hour.  The  Ring  477 

Dread  (s)     once  from  d  of  pain  to  die.  Two  Voices  105 

'  These  things  are  wrapt  in  doubt  and  d,  „          266 

Deep  d  and  loathing  of  her  solitude  Palace  of  Art  229 

and  half  in  d  To  hear  my  father's  clamour  Princess  i  104 

Sick,  am  I  sick  of  a  jealous  d  ?  Maud  I  x  1 

And  dream  of  her  beauty  with  tender  d,  „    xvi  14 

But  save  for  d  of  thee  had  beaten  me.  Last  Tournament  525 

Dread  (verb)    might  I  d  that  you.  With  only  Fame  Princess  Hi  241 

I  d  His  wildness,  and  the  chances  of  the  dark.'  „         iv  243 

But  lies  and  d's  his  doom.  „       vii  154 

No  inner  vileness  that  we  a!  ?  In  Mem.  li  4 

but,  so  thou  d  to  swear,  Gareth  and  L.  272 

I  rather  d  the  loss  of  use  than  fame ;  Merlin  and  V.  519 

I I  d  me,  if  I  draw  it,  you  will  die.'  Lancelot  and  E.  513 
if  she  knows  And  d's  it  we  are  fall'n. —  To  the  Queen  ii  33 
I  almost  d  to  find  her,  dumb ! '  Lover's  Tale  iv  339 

Dreaded    he,  she  d  most,  bare  down  upon  him.  Geraint  and  E.  156 

Dreadfnl    D\  has  it  come  to  this,  Forlorn  43 

Dreading    d  worse  than  shame  Her  warrior  Tris.tram,  Last  Tournament  384 
Dream  (s)    (See  also  Dhrame,  Hall-dream)    swaet  d's 

softer  than  unbroken  rest  Ode  to  Memory  29 

Heaven  flow'd  upon  the  soul  in  many  d'a  The  Poet  31 

a  name  to  shake  All  evil  d's  of  power —  „        47 

To  lapse  far  back  in  some  confused  d  Sonnet  To 3 

Dreaming,  she  knew  it  was  a  d :  Mariana  in  the  S.  49 

said  the  voice,  '  thy  d  was  good,  Two  Voices  157 


Dream  (s)  (eonttnued)    And  did  not  dream  it  was  a  d;  Two  Voices  213 

men  Forget  the  d  that  happens  then,  „          353 

Like  glimpses  of  forgotten  d's —  „          381 

'  I  talk,'  said  he,  '  Not  with  thy  d's.  „          386 

Before  I  dream'd  that  pleasant  dr—  Miller's  D.  46 

Breathing  like  one  that  hath  a  weary  d.  Lotos-Eaters  6 
my  voice  was  thick  with  sighs  As  in  a  (i,                  B.  of  F.  Women  110 

captain  of  my  d's  Ruled  in  the  eastern  sky.  „  263 
Into  that  wondrous  track  of  d's  again !     But  no 

two  d's  are  Uke.  „  279 
Make  bright  our  days  and  light  our  d's.                  Of  old  sat  Freedom  22 

Black-stoled,  black-hooded,  like  a  d —  M.  d' Arthur  197 

on  to  dawn,  when  d's  Begin  to  feel  the  truth  „     Ep.  18 

sweeter  than  the  d  Dream'd  by  a  happy  man.  Gardener's  D.  71 

The  pilot  of  the  darkness  and  the  d  AvAley  Court  72 

should  one  give  to  light  on  such  a.  d?'  Edwin  Morris  58 

Should  it  cross  thy  d's,  Love  and  Duty  92 

A  white-hair'd  shadow  roaming  like  a  d  Tithonus  8 

Like  a  dog,  he  hunts  in  d's,  Lochsley  Hall  79 

Fool,  again  the  d,  the  fancy !  „          173 

Whose  odoiu^  haunt  my  d's ;  Sir  Galahad  68 

But,  as  in  d's,  I  could  not.  Vision  of  Sin  57 

.  Uncertain  as  a  vision  or  a  d,  Enoch  Arden  356 

Who  feels  a  glimmering  strangeness  in  his  d.  The  Brook  216 

teeth  that  ground  As  in  a  dreadful  d,  Aylmer's  Field  329 

After  an  angry  d  this  kindlier  glow  Faded  „           411 

oft  from  out  a  despot  d  The  father  panting  woke,  „           527 

Had  you  ill  d's  ? '  Sea  Dreams  85 

'  That  was  then  your  d,'  she  said,  „        105 

Now  I  see  My  d  was  Life ;  „  137 
you  made  and  broke  your  d :  A  trifle  makes  a  d, 

a  trifle  breaks.'  „        143 

I  ask'd  the  woman  in  my  d.  „        147 

But  will  you  hear  my  d,  „        203 

and  she  grieved  In  her  strange  d,  „        230 

d  awed  me : — well — but  what  are  d's  ?  „        247 

Went  both  to  make  your  d :  „  254 
what  d's,  ye  holy  Gods,  what  d's !     For  thrice  I 

waken'd  after  d's.  Lucretius  33 
We  do  but  recollect  the  d's  that  come  Just  ere  the 

waking :  „        35 

that  was  mine,  my  d,  I  knew  it —  „        43 

I  thought  my  d  would  show  to  me,  „        51 

Seven  and  yet  one,  like  shadows  in  a  d. — ■  Princess,  Pro.  229 

truly,  waking  d's  were,  more  or  less,  „             i  12 

And  feel  myself  the  shadow  of  a  d.  „                18 

and  read  My  sickness  down  to  happy  d's  ?  „           ii  253 

Intent  on  her,  who  rapt  in  glorious  d's,  „             442 

I  myself  the  shadow  of  a  d,  „         Hi  188 

We  had  our  d's :  perhaps  he  mixt  with  them :  „              220 

I  found  My  boyish  d  involved  and  dazzled  „          iv  450 

To  dream  myself  the  shadow  of  a  d :  „           v  481 

it  seem'd  a,d,I  dream'd  Of  fighting.  „              492 

and  in  my  d  I  glanced  aside,  and  saw  „              507 

let  me  make  my  d  All  that  I  would.  „              519 

and  d  and  truth  Flow'd  from  me ;  „              541 

My  d  had  never  died  or  Hved  again.  „            vi  17 

lonely  listenings  to  my  mutter'd  d,  „        vii  110 

'  If  you  be,  what  I  think  you,  some  sweet  d,  „              145 

only,  if  a  rf.  Sweet  d,  be  perfect.  „              148 

'  A  d  That  once  was  mine !  „              309 

Princess  with  as  wise  a  d  As  some  of  theirs —  „       Con.  69 

wildest  d's  Are  but  the  needful  preludes  „                73 

all  men  else  their  nobler  d's  forget.  Ode  on  Well.  152 
Let  us  dream  our  d  to-day.                                        Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  31 

come  to  the  door  in  a  pleasant  kind  of  a  d.  Grandmother  82 

Her  quiet  d  of  life  this  hour  may  cease.  Eequiescat  6 
D's  are  true  while  they  last,  and  do  we  not  live 

in  d's  ?  High.  Pantheism  4 

So  bring  him :  we  have  idle  d's :  In  Mem.  x  9 

I  do  not  suffer  in  ad;  „      xiii  14 

What  vaster  d  can  hit  the  mood  Of  Love  „    sclvii  11 

So  nms  my  d :  but  what  am  I  ?  „       Uv  17 

That  Nature  lends  such  evil  d's  ?  „           lv6 

A  monster  then,  a.d,  A  discord.  ^       li>i  21 


Dream 


159 


Dream'd-Dreamt 


Dream  (s)  {continued)    Yet  feels,  as  in  a  pensive  d,  In  Mem.  Ixiv  17 

Nor  can  my  d  resolve  the  doubt :  „   Ixviii  12 

Or  threaded  some  Socratic  d ;  „  Ixxxix  36 

And  dream  my  d,  and  hold  it  true ;  „  cxxiii  10 

Behold,  I  dream  a  i  of  good,  „  cxxix  11 

What  is  she  now  ?    My  d's  are  bad.  Matid  /  t  73 

Kept  itself  warm  in  the  heart  of  my  d's,  „      vi  18 

Even  in  d's  to  the  chink  of  his  ponce,  „       a;  43 

Breaking  up  my  d  of  delight.  „     xix  2 

My  d?  dot  dream  of  bli^  ?  „            3 

Half  in  d^s  I  sorrow  after  The  delight  „  //  iv  24 

And  I  wake,  my  d  is  fled ;  ,,          51 

divide  in  a  d  from  a  band  of  the  blest,  Maud  III  vi  10 
it  was  but  a  d,  yet  it  yielded  a  dear  delight  To  have 

look'd,  tho'  but  in  a  d,  upon  eyes  so  fair,  „           15 

but  a  d,  yet  it  lighten'd  my  despair  „           18 

Vext  with  waste  d's  ?  Com,  of  Arthur  85 

Till  with  a  wink  his  d  was  changed,  „         441 

0  star,  my  morning  d  hath  proven  true,  Gareth  and  L.  1000 
And  heated  the  strong  wamor  in  his  d's ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  72 
lay  late  into  the  mom.  Lost  in  sweet  d's,  „  158 
All  overshadow'd  hj  the  foolish  d,  „  675 
Could  scarce  divide  it  from  her  foolish  d;  „  686 
And  ears  to  hear  you  even  in  his  d's.'  Geraint  and  E.  429 
D's  ruling  when  wit  sleeps !  Balin  and  Balan  143 
Let  be :  ye  stand,  fair  lord,  as  in  a  d.'  „  258 
Lancelot  with  his  hand  among  the  flowers  '  Yea — 

for  a  d.  „             260 

poisoning  all  his  rest.  Stung  him  in  d's.  „              384 

And  now  full  loth  am  1  to  break  thy  d,  „              500 

As  one  that  labours  with  an  evil  d.  Merlin  and  V.  101 
ride,  and  dream  The  mortal  d  that  never  yet  was 

mine —  „            117 

He  walk'd  with  d's  and  darkness,  „            190 

Ev'n  in  the  jumbled  rubbish  of  a  d,  „            347 

tiny-trumpeting  gnat  can  break  our  d  Lancelot  and  E.  137 

1  behold  him  in  my  d's  Gaunt  „  763 
a  d  Of  dragging  down  his  enemy  made  them  move.  „  813 
plagued  with  d's  of  something  sweet  Boly  Grail  625 
in  a  d  I  seem'd  to  climb  For  ever :  „  836 
damsel,'  answer'd  he,  '  I  woke  from  d's ;  Pelleas  and  E.  104 
so  lay,  Till  shaken  by  a  d,  „  517 
Or  art  thou  mazed  with  d's  ?  „  525 
The  sudden  trumpet  sounded  as  in  a  d  Last  Tournament  151 
Tristram  waking,  the  red  d  Fled  with  a  shout,  „  487 
And  out  beyond  into  the  d  to  come.'  „  721 
if  she  slept,  she  dream'd  An  awful  d ;  Guinevere  76 
down  the  long  wind  the  d  Shrill'd ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  40 
Arthiu-  woke  and  call'd  *  Who  spake  ?  Ad.  „  46 
And  care  not  thou  for  d's  from  him,  „  58 
Black-stoled,  black-hooded,  like  a  d —  ,,  365 
they  fall  asleep  Into  dehcious  d's,  Lover's  Tale  i  162 
As  from  a  dismal  d  of  my  own  death,  „  748 
One  golden  d  of  love,  from  which  may  death  „  760 
Were  wrought  into  the  tissue  of  my  d:  ,,  "  113 
Like  sounds  without  the  twilight  realm  of  d's,  „  120 
thought  His  d's  had  come  again.  „  iv  78 
Thro'  d's  by  night  and  trances  of  the  day.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  274 
broken  besides  with  d's  of  the  dreadful  knife  In  the  Child.  Hos-p.  65 
Not  yet — not  all — last  night  a  d —  Columbus  66 
The  Lord  had  sent  this  bright,  strange  d  to  mo  „  91 
wrought  To  mould  the  d;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  30 
Beyond  all  d's  of  Godlike  womanhood,  Tiresias  54 
And  mixt  the  d  of  classic  times  „  194 
And  all  the  phantoms  of  the  d,  „  195 
With  a  dim  d,  now  and  then,  The  Wreck  114 
quiet  at  length  out  of  plejisant  d's,  Despair  66 
words  are  like  the  babblings  in  a  a!  Of  nightmare, 

when  the  babblings  break  the  d.  Ancient  Sage  106 

brainless  will  May  jar  thy  golden  d  Freedom  16 
d's  that  scarce  will  let  me  be.                              To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  41 

Led  upward  by  the  God  of  ghosts  and  d's,  Demeter  and  P.  5 

he,  the  God  of  d's,  who  heard  my  cry,  „              91 

saw  the  world  fly  by  me  like  a  d.  The  Sing  180 

Or  is  it  some  half  memory  of  a  d  ?  „        422 


Dream  (s)  {continued)     0  foolish  d's,  that  you,  that  I,  Happy  89 

you  were  then  a  lover's  fairy  d.  To  Mary  Boyle  43 

Till,  led  by  d  and  vague  desire.  To  Master  of  B.  17 

thro'  her  d  A  ghostly  murmiur  floated,  Death  of  (Enone  78 

and  the  d  Wail'd  in  her,  „            81 

His  d  became  a  deed  that  woke  the  world,  St.  Telemachus  70 

shadow  of  a  d — an  idle  one  It  may  be.  Akbar's  Dream  5 

I  pray'd  against  the  d.  „             7 

I  vow'd  Whate'er  my  d's,  I  still  would  do  the  right  „           13 

And  yet  so  wild  and  wayward  that  my  d —  „         172 

Desolation  and  wrong  Thro'  a  d  of  the  dark  ?  The  Dreamer  16 

Brings  the  D's  about  my  bed.  Silent  Voices  2 
d  of  a  shadow,  go — God  bless  you.                       To  W.  H.  Brookfield  13 

Dream  (verb)    As  a  young  lamb,  who  cannot  d,  Supp.  Confessions  170 

And  did  not  d  it  was  a  dream ;  Two  Voices  213 

sweet  it  was  to  d  of  Fatherland,  Lotos-Eaters  39 

To  d  and  d,  like  yonder  amber  light,  „  C.  S.  57 
More  things  are  wrought  by  prayer  Than  this  world 

d's  of.  M.  d' Arthur  248 

Ellen  Aubrey,  sleep,  and  d  of  me :  Audley  Court  62 

And  sleeping,  haply  d  her  arm  is  mine.  „          64 

Ellen  Aubrey,  love,  and  d  of  me.'  „          73 

borne  as  much  as  this — Or  else  I  d —  St.  S.  Stylites  93 

She  sleeps,  nor  d's,  but  ever  dwells  Day-Dm,.,  Sleep  B.  23 

D's  over  lake  and  lawn,  and  isles  Vision  of  Sin  11 

to  d  That  love  could  bind  them  closer  Aylmer's  Field  40 

Indeed,  We  d  not  of  him :  Princess  ii  59 

'  Dare  we  d  of  that,'  I  ask'd,  „    Hi  297 

We  shudder  but  to  d  our  maids  should  ape  „         309 

To  d  myself  the  shadow  of  a  dream :  „      v  481 

To  d  thy  cause  embraced  in  mine,  „     vi  200 

Let  us  d  our  dream  to-day.  Ode  Open.  Exhib.  31 

Perchance,  to  d  you  still  beside  me,  The  Daisy  107 

D  in  the  sliding  tides.                   _  Requiescat  4 

That  made  me  d  I  rank'd  with  him.  In  Mem.  xlii  4 

Nor  can  I  d  of  thee  as  dead :  „    Ixviii  4 

rather  d  that  there,  A  treble  darkness,  „  xcviii  12 

Nor  d  of  human  love  and  truth,  „  cxviii  3 

And  d  my  dream,  and  hold  it  true ;  „  cxxiii  10 

Behold,  Ida,  dream  of  good,  „  cxxix  11 

Did  I  d  it  an  hour  ago,                                '  Maud  I  vii  3 

And  d  of  her  beauty  with  tender  dread,  „     xvi  14 

My  dream  ?  do  I  d  of  bliss  ?  „      xix  3 

And  d  he  dropt  from  heaven :  Com.  of  Arthur  183 

what  d  ye  when  they  utter  forth  May-music  Gareth  and  L.  1079 

d's  Of  goodly  supper  in  the  distant  pool,  „             1186 

To  d  she  could  be  guilty  of  foul  act,  Marr.  of  Geraint  120 

I  full  oft  shall  d  I  see  my  princess  „              751 

d  That  any  of  these  would  wrong  thee,  Balin  and  Balan  143 

Or  d — of  thee  they  dream'd  not —  Merlin  and  V.  115 

ride,  and  d  The  mortal  dream  that  never  yet  „          116 

Ride,  ride  and  d  until  ye  wake —  ,,           118 

'  Man  d's  of  Fame  while  woman  wakes  to  love.'  „          460 

because  ye  d  they  babble  of  you.'  „          690 

I  cannot  bear  to  d  you  so  forsworn :  Pelleas  and  E.  300 

Too  wholly  true  to  d  untruth  in  thee,  Guinevere  541 

Let  no  man  d  but  that  I  love  thee  still.  „        560 

Let  no  one  d  but  that  he  loves  me  „        674 
More  things  are  wrought  by  prayer  Than  this 

world  d's  of.  Pass,  of  Arthur  416 

Or  if  thou  d  aiight  farther,  d  but  how  Lover's  Tale  i  769 

And  in  my  vision  bidding  me  d  on,  „        ii  119 

But  who  could  d  that  we,  who  bore  the  Cross  Columbus  191 

Indian  warriors  d  of  ampler  hunting  grounds  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  69 

but  d  not  that  the  hour  will  last.  „            106 

Could  we  d  of  wars  and  carnage,  „            189 

He  d's  of  that  long  walk  To  Mary  Boyle  55 

Dream'd    TiU  1  d  'at  Squire  walkt  in,  Owd  Boa  55 

Dream'd-Dreamt    {See  also  Dream'd)    In  midst  of  knowledge, 

dream'd  not  yet.  Two  Voices  90 

Before  I  dream'd  that  pleasant  dream —  Miller's  D.  46 
sweeter  than  the  dream  Dream'd  by  a  happy  man,        Gardener's  D.  72 

I  too  dream'd,  until  at  last  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  9 

'  I  dream'd  Of  such  a  tide  swelling  Sea  Dreams  86 

I  dream'd  that  still  The  motion  of  the  great  deep  „          110 


Dream'd-Dreamt 


160 


Drew 


Dream'd-Dreamt  {contmued)    told  it,  having  dream'd  Of  that^  ^^^^^^  ^^ 

same  coast.                                         ,,1,1.  256 

Sphere-music  such  f.'^^U^lf'Sk^  Princess  v  492 
it  seem'd  a  dream,  I  dream  d  Ut  tigntmg. 

I  dream'd  there  would  be  Spnng  no  more,  /«  Mem.  teg  l 

I  dream'd  a  vision  of  the  dead,  "   ,  ^  ^  g,^ 

And  her  smile  were  all  that  I  dream'd,  ^<^^  ^  ^  ^^ 

her  smile  had  all  that  I  dream'd,  r-„,wfc  ^w'k  1413 

They  never  dream'd  the  passes  would  be  past,'  Gareth  awl  L.  I4ig 

They  never  dream'd  the  passes  could  be  past.  ^/ /^^„,-„/  a54 

ireaL  herself  was  such  a  faded  form  ^Xzi{  and  F  US 

Or  dream^f  thee  they  dream'd  not—  Merlin  and  V .  iio 

I  dreamt  Of  some  vast  charm  concluded  »     j  f  91 1 
the  mSen  dreamt  That  some  one  put  this  diamond    Lancelot  and  E.  211 

He  had  not  dream'd  she  was  so  beautiful.  »                 _ 

Who  dream'd  my  knight  the  greatest  kmght  »             ^gg 

'  And  if  /  dream'd,'  said  Gawam,  "          ,^^ 

this  night  I  dream'd  That  I  was  all  alone  »           ^^^^ 

I  dreamt  the  damsel  would  have  died,  v.lUa^"nnd  E  152 

for  he  dream'd  His  lady  loved  hin,  T  aft  Tour nmtmt  120 

I  dream'd  the  bearing  of  our  knights  ias<  i  owr«am«nJ  i^u 

laid  His  brows  upon  the  drifted  leaf  and  dream  d.  „              ^ 

He  dream'd ;  but  Arthur  with  a  hundred  spears  'huineverelt 

if  she  slept,  she  dream'd  An  awful  dream ;  uutnevere^^o 

such  a  feast  As  never  man  had  dream'd ;  »>        ^gg 

and  as  vet  no  sin  was  dream'd,)  _       'i  p  \  i«q 

Hadtnot  dream'd  I  loved  her  yestermom?  Sisters  g^^.f -j^l^Q 

I  dream'd  last  night  of  that  clear  summer  noon,  .^T^^Lm  45 
sphere-music  as  the  Greek  Had  hardly  dream'd  of.       Akbar  s  Vream^^ 

and  yester  afternoon  I  dream'd, —  »             -|^„g 

I  dream'd  That  stone  by  stone  I  rear  d  Th^' Dreamer  3 

he  dream'd  that  a  Voice  of  the  Earth  went  The  ^rmmer^ 

Dreamer    '  Much  less  this  d,  deaf  and  bhnd,  GddenYearQl 

fools  they,-we  forward :  d's  both :  AvuZ'TFieMlQl 

visions  in  the  Northern  d's  heavens,  Ayimers  -^ *«"^  -^^ 

^t^headeddstooptandkiss'dher  ^"f'lde^'chZll 

heard  an  answer  '  VVake  Thou  deedless  d,  ^i-  ^^^^^^^  i] 

Dreamily    A  glonous  child,  d  alone,  ^^^^  28 

In  d  of  my  lady's  eyes  Mariana  in  the  S.  49 

D,  she  knew  it  was  a  dreani :  nav-Dm    Pro  3 

While,  d  on  your  damask  cheek,  ^"■V  ^^•■>  ^^°-  ^ 

To  see  you  d— and,  behind,  r,xrre<iMS  15 

wrathful  petulant,  D  some  nval,  ,,.     .       j^-7iXk 

^tr^Vy  d  of  ?    Who  can  tell? '  ^— ^^S^i  K 

SrVof  sS^  »d'of^^^  --  CoiVJSl^ 

nodded  and  s  «P^^-d -w^^^^^  S;M  1  1316 

Sd  of  h^e  Tove'p^r  SnSt,  i>ia-.  0/  (?era^|  Ig 

he  pray'd  for  both  he  slept  Z>  of  both:  „   ^.-^""^  '  ^'^^  '  |S 

Z)  together  (d  of  each  other  They  should  have  added),  "j,^^i^J\i 

What  is  this  you're  d  ?  ,        „.7,.  /;_„^7  260 

nreamlike    I>.  should  on  the  sudden  vanish,  ^?^yXT.  in« 

SjSworld    thou  be  wise  in  this  d-w  of  ours,  Ancient  6age  108 

KSS*   She  ?nly  faS, '  My  hf e  is  d,  (repeat)  Mariuna  9,  45,  69 

She  only  said, '  The  night  is  d,  (repeat)  ..                  S3 

She  only  said,  '  The  day  is  d,  >»                  gj 

Then,  said  she,  '  I  am  very  d,  »        ,  ^ .    395 

Dregs    1>  of  life,  and  lees  of  man :  '^   PAncissiv  187 

Dr^ch    stoop'd  To  d  his  dark  locks  11^  ^i  6 

And  on  ttiese  dews  that  d  the  furze,  ^«      toir22 

Thro'  clouds  that  d  the  morning  star  »  '^  ' 

Drench'd    long,  rank,  dark  wood-walks  d  in  dew,  D.  of  F-J^omei  70 

For  I  was  d  with  ooze,  and  torn  with  bners,  !,iiU2 

So  d  it  is  with  tempest,  to  the  sun,  'klvah  8 

l,t»etilSrali-"^'           .   ^       ,  ^,  ^  /«  tke  CUM.  Ho^.  10 

Dress  (8)    (-S'eeoZ^o  Hunting-dress)    This  d  and  that  by  ^^^,^^147 

turns  you  tried,  ^     ,  ihirleiah  95 

'  Bring  the  d  and  put  it  on  her,  X.  oj -«wrte^?ft  yo 

drest  In  the  d  that  she  was  wed  in  PriZess  ii  189 

'  What  do  you  here  ?  and  in  this  d  P  -^  nncess  n  loy 

you  look  weU  too  in  your  wonmn  s  d :  ..       ^^    ^ 

^ay,  the  plainness  of  her  d'es  ?  ^''^  '^  *^  -^^ 


Dress  (s)  (continued)    all  her  d  Wept  from  her  sides  Gareth  and  L.  216 

put  on  thy  worst  and  meanest  d  Marr.  0/  Geraw<  130 

he  came  on  her  Drest  in  that  d,  (repeat)  „        141,  o4rf 

And  aU  her  fooUsh  fears  about  the  d,  (repeat)  „        14^,  »44 

(His  d  a  suit  of  fray'd  magnificence,  „                ^^ 

At  this  she  cast  her  eyes  upon  her  d,  „                ^^ 

The  d  that  now  she  look'd  on  to  the  d  „                old 

Enid  fell  in  longing  for  ad  „                o^^ 

Put  on  your  worst  and  meanest  d,'  ^     '.'         ,  r-  007 

your  wretched  d,  A  wretched  insult  on  you,  OeratntandJi.  6M 

there  were  books  and  d'es— left  to  me.  The  Eing  113 

D'es  and  laces  and  jewels  and  never  a  ring  .    ^"^P%*^ 

Dress  (verb)    d  the  victim  to  the  offering  up.  Fnncess  iv  130 

to  flaunt,  to  d,  to  dance,  to  thrum,  .      ''  ,  r^  in 

d  her  beautifully  and  keep  her  true '—  Geraint  and  E.  40 
Love  and  Longing  d  thy  deeds  in  Ught,             Bed.  Poem  Prm.  AhceJ) 

Pretty  anew  when  ya  d'es  'em  oop,  Spinster  si,  s.  8& 

She  comes  to  d  me  in  my  bridal  veil.  The  King  98 
Dressed    -See  Drest                      „  ,    .   ,    .      ... 

Dressing    (.S'ee  aiso  A-dressin')    Z>  their  hau:  with  ^,    ,,           ,0 

the  white  sea-flower;  ^  ^H^Tr^vl 

flout  and  scorn  By  d  it  in  rags  ?  Geraint  and  E.  67b 

bullet  struck  him  that  was  d  it  suddenly  dead,  The  Revenge  bl 

I  am  d  the  grave  of  a  woman  with  flowers.  Chanty^ 

I  am  d  her  grave  with  flowers.  ».      ^* 

Drest-Dressed    to  dance  and  sing,  be  gaily  drest,  The  form,  the  form  6 

Why  come  you  drest  hke  a  village  maid,  Lady  Llare  01 

'  If  I  come  drest  hke  a  village  maid,  t      .  r."  7  •  i.  oa 

her  body,  dres<  In  the  dress  that  she  was  wed  in,  L.  of  Burleigh.  M 

each  by  other  drest  with  care  Descended  Princess  in  19 

'  What,  if  you  drest  it  up  poetically ! '  ..  ^'^■Ji 
Are  but  dainties  drest  again :  .V'''^^"?). ^°- iVZ^'^x 
he  came  on  her  Drest  in  that  dress ,  (repeat)     Marr.  of  Geraint  141,  8« 

A  tribe  of  women,  dress'd  in  many  hues,  Geravnt  and  J^.  &y» 

With  a  grisly  wound  to  be  drest  The  Revenge  6b 

Drew    She  d  her  casement-curtain  by,  .       •^'^"''^„"  {^ 

Thro'  rosy  taper  fingers  d  Her  streaming  curls  Marmna  m  the  ».  10 

rising,  from  her  bosom  d  Old  letters,  "  i,  ,-       ii 

once  he  d  With  one  long  kiss  my  whole  soul  ^atima  iJ 

With  rosy  slender  fingers  backward  d  ^,     ^?^    oa 

As  haU-a^leep  his  breath  he  d,  ^  ^^^'^e  S^'j^^f^  28 

as  mom  from  Memnon,  d  Rivers  of  melodies.  P'TS,^  %  ^"  -^A^ 

Many  d  swords  and  died.  -»•  of  F.  Women  Q^ 

they  d  into  two  burning  rings  All  beams  of  Love,  „            ^'^ 

D  forth  the  poison  with  her  balmy  breath,  ,^  'J,  .  ,,      ii 

There  d  he  forth  the  brand  ExcaUbur,  M.  d  Arthur  b^ 

and  d  him  under  in  the  mere,  (repeat)  »  l^o,  ioi 

O'er  both  his  shoulders  d  the  languid  hands,  ^     ,  "    ,    n  /,« 

Came,  d  your  pencil  from  you,  Gardener  s  D.  ^<o 

as  one  large  cloud  D  downward :  "          iln 

wave  of  such  a  breast  As  never  pencil  d.  ».          ^^ 

Light  pretexts  d  me ;  „,  77  • "  n  7  wn 

and  d  My  Uttle  oakling  from  the  cup,  Talking  Oak  ^60 

As  homeward  by  the  church  I  d.  The  Letters  44 

as  their  faces  d  together,  groan'd,  Enoch  Ardenli 

thro'  all  his  blood  D  in  the  dewy  meadowy  y        oou 

talking  from  the  point,  he  d  him  in,  2^/^  '»';?^5  Iff 

What  amulet  d  her  down  to  that  old  oak,  .      Aylmer  s  i  leld  507 
the  great  ridge  d,  Lessening  to  the  lessening  music,        Sea  Dreams  J^U 

One  rear'd  a  font  of  stone  And  d.  Princess,  Pro.  bO 

the  days  d  nigh  that  I  should  wed,  .»         •  ■  •  *i  «2 

Id  near;  I  gazed.  »         *!*/|°| 

the  flood  d ;  yet  I  caught  her ;                       ,  »          *"  :f  "t' 

One  reaching  forward  d  My  burthen  from  mine  arms ;  „              ^j*^ 

roU'd  on  the  earth  and  rose  again  and  d :  »          *.  ^"i' 

D  from  my  neck  the  painting  and  the  tress,  „          '*'*  ^^ 

he  d  Her  robe  to  meet  his  lips,  »              ^.,0 

Whence  d  you  this  steel  temper  ?  »            ..  ^„ 

I>  the  great  night  into  themselves,  »»        ^**  *^ 

voice  from  which  their  omens  all  men  d.  Ode  on  WeU.^^ 

Round  affrighted  Lisbon  d  The  treble  works,  »       .   -^^^ 

And  up  the  snowy  Splugen  d,  T^FVl 

Thy  converse  d  u^  withdelight,  /«  ^'"!.VflJ 

D  in  the  expression  of  an  eye,  »        ^   , . 

The  shadow  of  His  loss  d  Ukc  eclipse,  -Oed.  of  Idylls  i* 


Drew 

'^w  (■'^^tinued)    D  aU  their  petty  princedoms  under 

thosTgreat  lords  D  back  in  wrath,  ^'^^  "Z^''^*"'- 18 

King  Z?  in  the  petty  princedoms  under  hini,  "            %\n 

To  whom  Sir  Gareth  d  (And  there  were  none  Gareih\nd  T  74^ 

t  ell,  as  If  dead ;  but  quickly  rose  and  d,  *  "'^  ^-  2? 

ilch^  ^TVu  ^"'  ^^  l^?*-  ^°"g^*  °o  more,  "        i5$A 

lighted,  d,  There  met  him  drawn  "        ffj? 

ffii.f^R'^K.*^*^^'^d^benhesawthestar  "        }217 

a  himself  Bright  from  his  old  Hart  Hfo  jV  ,  ^'.'     .     '^^ ' 

^  from  thosrdead  wdv^  TheFr  hrS  ^ay  suite         'Zaft^^'f'^'  f^t 

Sweet^lady,  never  since  I  first  d  Eh  '"'  "'^  ^-  ^^^ 

these  her  emblems  d  mine  eyes 

Bahn  d  the  shield  from  off  his  neck 

D  the  vague  glance  of  Vivien, 

and  d  down  from  out  his  night-black  hair 

rf  Ihe  vast  and  shaggy  mantle  of  his  beard 

magnet-hke  she  d  The  rustiest  iron 

d  back,  and  let  her  eyes  Speak  for  her. 

n  the  vast  eyehd  of  an  inky  cloud. 


161 


Drive 


UtiSk  {continued)    Together,  in  the  d's  that  nass  Tn  H^rtor,     i-    »r  •  • ,  o 

For  the  <i  of  the  Maker  is  Hart  ^^  ^°  ^^^"^    In  Mem.  cvix  13 


619 
Balm  and  Balan  265 
429 
464 
511 
Merlin  and  V.  255 
573 
615 
634 


sft  £^TLd'S^I^^'°  (^"^^  «^«  ^-^  b-"  -^)  ^-^''«»^  ^."It 


she  d  Nearer  and  stood.' 

draw— Draw,'— and  Lavaine  d, 

D  near,  and  sigh'd  in  passing,  '  Lancelot. 

/^  me,  with  power  upon  me,  till  I  grew 

The  heads  of  all  her  people  d  to  me, 

Inere  d  my  sword. 

slowly  Pelleas  d  To  that  dim  day 

find  a  nest  and  feels  a  snake,  he  d  • 

and  d  the  sword,  and  thought,  '  What' 

and  either  knight  D  back  a  space 

D  from  before  Sir  Tristram  to  the  bounds 

and  when  she  d  No  answer,  by  and  by 

weep  for  her  who  d  him  to  his  doom  ' 

kings  who  d  The  knighthood-errant  of  this  reahn 

d  Down  with  his  blood,  till  all  his  heart 

There  d  he  forth  the  brand  ExcaUbur 

and  d  him  under  in  the  mere,  (repeat) 

O  er  both  his  shoulders  d  the  languid  hands. 

Death  d  nigh  and  beat  the  doors  of  Life  • 

ever  d  from  thence  The  stream  of  Ufe      * 

and  iKJve  d  in  her  breath  In  that  close  kiss, 

upon  the  sands  Insensibly  I  d  her  name. 

fed  we  from  one  fountain  ?  d  one  sun  ? 

^^J^^^^  ^  ^^^  H^  ^^"d  to  push  me 

bhe  d  It  ong  ago  Forthgazing  on  the  waste 

Four  galleons  d  away  From  the  Spanish  fleet 

d  back  with  her  dead  and  her  shame 

one  quick  peal  Of  laughter  d  me  thro' 

But  1  d  them  the  one  from  the  other- 

eveiy  one  d  His  sword  on  his  feUow  tl)  slay  him, 

x>  to  this  shore  ht  by  the  suns 

D  to  this  island :  Doom'd  to  the  death. 

i^Zif''}:^^'^^^  Pl*"'"*^  from  our  best 
as  we  d  to  the  land ; 

and  dogg'd  us,  and  d  me  to  land  ? 
horsemen,  d  to  the  valley— and  stay'd; 
d  The  foe  from  the  saddle  and  threw 
d  perchance  a  happier  lot  Than  oure 
out  of  his  body  she  d  The  red  '  Blood-eagle ' 

And  d  him  over  sea  to  you 

D  from  thyself  the  Ukeness  of  thyself 
d  down  before  his  time  Sickening 
d  the  nng  From  his  dead  finger,  ' 
Uncl(^ed  the  hand,  and  from  it  d  the  ring, 
D  to  the  valley  Named  of  the  shadow, 
that  which  d  from  out  the  boundless  deep 

Dried    Her  tears  fell  ere  the  dews  were  d  • 
iied  his  wings :  hke  gauze  they  grew ; 
all  his  jmce  is  d,  and  all  his  joints 
comforted  my  heart,  And  d  my  tears. 

^•«    ,^"*  felt  his  eyes  Harder  and  d 

ofsm"oke?***™°°^'*""*^    city  lies,  Beneath  its  d 
Thro'  scudding  d's  the  rainy  Hyades 


349 

515 

1350 

Holy  Grail  486 

»  601 

„  820 

Pelleas  and  E.  29 

437 

447 

r      ^      "  573 

Last  Tournament  185 

Guinevere  161 

348 

460 

Pass,  of  Arthur  96 

„  220 

„  314,  329 

.       ,  "  342 

Lover's  Tale  i  111 

238 

816 

n'7 

24 

92 

176 

The  Revenge  46 

»  60 

Sxsters  (E.  and  E.)  116 

V.  of  Maddune  35 

7.    T,    ,  »  67 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  38 

Bait,  of  Brunanburh  50 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  37 

The  Wreck  136 

Despair  2 

Heavy  Brigade  3 

53 

Epilogue  50 

Dead  Prophet  70 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  22 

Demeter  and  P.  92 

The  Ring  217 

269 

Merlin  and  the  G.  86 

Crossing  the  Bar  7 

Mariana  14 

Two  Voices  13 

Audley  Court  46 

Com.  of  Arthur  350 

Pelleas  and  E.  507 

Talking  Oak  6 
Ulysses  10 


For  the  d  of  the  Maker  is  dark 
Wrapt  in  d's  of  lurid  smoke     ' 
In  d  s  of  smoke  before  a  rolling  wind 
and  sank  Down  on  a  d  of  foliage       ' 
with  his  d  Of  flickering  spectres 
a  downy  d  against  the  brakes,    ' 
Drifted    These  d,  stranding  on  an  isle 
Drifting    d  up  the  stream  In  fancy 
Drill    d  the  raw  world  for  the  march  of  mind 
Drink  (s)    sometmies  Sucking  the  damps  for  d 
this,  at  times,  she  mingled  with  his  d 
Yea  ev'n  of  wretched  meat  and  d       ' 
hire  thyself  to  serve  for  meats  and  d's 
grant  me  to  serve  For  meat  and  d 
Kay,  The  master  of  the  meats  and  d's 
mellow  master  of  the  meats  and  d's  ' 
And  mighty  thro'  thy  meats  and  d's  am  I  (reneat^ 
with  meats  and  d's  And  forage  for  the  ho^e         ^ 
pinch  a  murderous  dust  into  her  d  ' 

and  then  I  taakes  to  tlie  d.  ' 

she  druv  me  to  d  the  moor, 
All  along  o'  the  d,  fur  I  loov'd  her 
,  '  Pilgrunages  ? '     '  Z>,  bagpipes, 

d?ath    ('^^^'^^^  Shrink)    Id  the  cup  of  a  costly 
I  will  d  Life  to  the  lees : 
We  d  defying  trouble, 
'I  am  old,  but  let  me  d; 
'  D,  and  let  the  parties  rave ; 
'  D  to  lofty  hopes  that  cool — 
D  we,  last,  the  pubhc  fool, 
'  i>  to  Fortune,  d  to  Chance, 
D  to  heavy  Ignorance ! 
D  deep,  until  the  habits  of  the  slave, 

To  d  the  cooler  air,  and  mark  t„  ii#        r —  •"  "* 

Will  d  to  liim,  whate'er  he  be  "  ^*"'-  ^*^^*?.  l^ 

'  A  then,' he  answer'd.     'Here!'  n    "■  .      j  ??"^?„ 

D  therefore  and  the  wine  will  change  your  will '        ^""'''''  ""^  ^-  ^. 

^^^f  ^1^^  ™y  ^^'■''  '"^-i  ^^^^^  bid  me  do  it  "  ^ 

And  d  with  me ;  ' 

Not  eat  nor  d  ?    And  wherefore  wail  for  one 
you  never  open'd  Up,  Except  indeed  to  d  ■     ' 
f  oi^ot  to  ^  to  Lancelot  and  the  Queen, 
D,  d.  Sir  Fool,'  and  thereupon  I  drank 
Nor  d:  and  when  thou  passest  any  wood 
Summat  to  d— sa'  'ot  ? ' 
He  that  thirsteth,  come  and  d ! 

Then  d  to  England,  every  guest  •  /y 

To  this  great  cause  of  Freedom  d,  my  friends  (renean 
To  this  great  name  of  England  d,  '""os,  trepeat) 

_  men  may  taste  Swine-flesh,  d  wine- 
Drinketh    as  sunlight  d  dew. 
DrinMn'    thaw  theer's  naw  d  i'  Hell  • 
Drmking    (See  also  Dhrinkin',  Drinkm') 
to  bride  and  groom 
Men  were  d  together,  D  and  talking  of  me  • 
Dnnking-song    why  should  Love,  hke  nien  in  d-s's 
°"'«ru  "'^^^'"^  ^"^^  eglatere  D  sweeter  dews 
When  the  rotten  woodland  d's 

SSJi  ^S^S  ^  ^""^' '^""^^  «^ '^'-^' 

°"''fpicf(^?itiry?||I^-^^^P^)    ^withSab.an 
Dript    belike  the  lance  hath  d  upon  it- 
Drive  s)    What  d's  about  the  fresh  Casein^ 
Dnve  (verb)    and  seest  me  d  Thro'  utter  dark 

And  d's  them  to  the  deep.' 

Nature's  evil  star  D  men  in  manhood. 

And  shoals  of  pucker'd  faces  d  • 

On  doubts  that  d  the  coward  back 

Is  enough  to  d  one  mad.  ' 

sword  Whereby  to  d  the  heathen  out: 
A.u  ^e**','?en  from  your  Roman  wall. 

and  d  them  all  apart. 


As  d  health 


Mavd  I  iv  43 
„  //  iv  66 
Com.  of  Arthur  434 
Last  Tournament  388 
Demeter  and  P.  26 
Prog,  of  Spring  27 
Enoch  Arden  552 
Sea  Dreams  108 
Ode  on  Well.  168 
St.  S.  Stylites  77 
Lucretius  18 
Maud  I  XV  8 
Gareth  and  L.  153 
445 
451 
„  560 

„  650,  862 
1276 
Merlin  and  V.  610 
North.  Cobbler  16 
30 
60 
Sir  J.  Oldcastle  149 

Eleanore  138 

Ulysses  6 

Will  Water.  94 

Vision  of  Sin  75 

123 

147 

149 

191 

193 

Princess  ii  91 


,,  664 

674 

Merlin  and  V.  272 

Lancelot  and  E.  T37 

Last  Tournament  297 

534 

North.  Cobbler  5 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  134 

Hands  all  Round  2 

11,35 

A      "  23 

Akbar's  Dream  54 

Fatima  21 

North.  Cobbler  58 

In  Mem.,  Con.  83 

Ma^id  I  vii  5 

„    xviii  55 

A  Dirge  24 

Vision  of  Sin  81 

Maud  lis 

Owd  Roa  42 


Adeline  53 

Last  Tournament  200 

The  Daisy  43 

Supp.  Confessions  94 

Palace  of  Art  204 

Love  thou  thy  land  74 

In  Mem.  Ixx  10 

>i        xcv  30 

Maud  II  V  20 

Com.  of  Arthur  281 

512 

Gareth  and  L.  515 


I. 


Drive 


162 


Dropping 


Drive  (verb)  {continued)    '  D  them  on  Before  you ; ' 

(repeat)  Geraint  and  E.  99,  184 
d  The  Heathen,  who,  some  say,  shall  rule  the  land     Lancelot  and  E.  64 

'  Out !     And  d  him  from  the  walk.'  Felleas  and  E.  220 

And  d  him  from  my  walls.'  „              229 

from  the  ditch  where  they  shelter  we  d  them  Def.  of  Lucknow  59 

and  d  Innocent  cattle  under  thatch,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  95 

Then  you  that  d,  and  know  your  Craft,  Politics  5 

Or  you  may  d  in  vain,  „       8 

To  d  A  people  from  their  ancient  fold  Akbar's  Dream  60 
Driv'n-Driven    (See  also  O'er-driven,  Wind-driven) 

morning  driv'n  her  plow  of  pearl  Far  furrowing  Love  and  Duty  99 

the  herd  was  driven,  Fire  glimpsed ;  Com.  of  Arthur  432 

'  O  King,  for  thou  hast  driven  the  foe  without,  Gareth  and  L.  593 

driven  by  evil  tongues  From  all  his  fellows,  Balin  and  Balan  125 

Their  plumes  driv'n  backward  by  the  wind  Lancelot  and  E.  480 

Thy  holy  mm  and  thou  have  driven  men  mad,  Holy  Grail  862 

camel,  driven  Far  from  the  diamond  fountain  Lover's  Tale  i  136 

driven  My  current  to  the  fountain  whence  it  sprang, —         „  502 

the  wild  brier  had  driven  Its  knotted  thorns  „             619 

driven  by  one  angel  face.  And  all  the  Furies.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  158 

I  am  driven  by  storm  and  sin  and  death  The  Wreck  2 

s}ie  had  never  driven  me  wild.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  20 

the  foe  was  driven.  And  Wolseley  overthrew  Pro.  to  Gen.  Ilandey  29 

shrillings  of  the  Dead  When  driven  to  Hades,  Death  of  QLnone  22 

Driveth    Let  us  alone.    Time  d  onward  fast,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  43 

Driving     The  svmlight  d  down  the  lea,  Rosalind  13 

blood  by  Sylla  shed  Came  d  rainlike  Lvycretius  48 

D,  hurrying,  marrying,  burying,  Maud  II  v  12 

difficulty  in  mild  obedience  D  them  on :  Geraint  and  E.  105 

Drissle    Thicker  the  d  grew,  deeper  the  gloom ;  Enoch  Arden  679 

(A  bill  of  sale  gleam'd  thro'  the  d)  „           688 

drank  the  dews  and  d  of  the  North,  Prog,  of  Spring  81 
Drone    See  Pulpit-drone 

Droned    d  her  lurdane  knights  Slumbering,  Pelleas  and  E.  430 

Droonk  (drunk)     hallus  as  ti  as  a  king,  North.  Cobbler  27 
D  wi'  the  Quoloty's  wine,  an'  d  wi'  the  farmer's  aale.      Village  Wife  77 

Droop     Fair-fronted  Truth  shall  d  not  now  Clear-headed  friend  12 

I  cannot  veil,  or  d  my  sight,  Elednore  87 

D's  both  his  wings,  regarding  thee,  „       119 

D's  blinded  with  his  shining  eye :  Fatima  38 

The  purple  flower  d's :  CEnone  29 

D's  the  heavy-blossom'd  bower,  Locksley  Hall  163 

Here  d's  the  banner  on  the  tower,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  13 

mantles  from  the  golden  pegs  D  sleepily :  „                       20 

Where  on  the  double  rosebud  d's  „         L'Envoi  47 

his  own  head  Began  to  d,  to  fall ;  Aylmer's  Field  835 

d's  the  mUkwhite  peacock  like  a  ghost.  Princess  vii  180 

left  hand  D  from  his  mighty  shoSder'  Merlin  and  V.  243 

and  seeing  Pelleas  d.  Said  Guinevere,  Pelleas  and  E.  178 

O'er  his  uncertain  shadow  d's  the  day.  Prog,  of  Spring  8 

Droop'd-Droopt     a  leopard-skin  Droop'd  from  his  shoulder,  Qinone  59 

From  one  hand  droop'd  a  crocus:  Palace  of  Art  119 

So  she  droop'd  and  droop'd  before  him,  L.  of  Burleigh  85 

thinking  that  her  clear  germander  eye  Droopt  Sea  Dreams  5 

then  day  droopt ;  the  chapel  bells  Call'd  Princess  ii  470 

The  lily  like  Melissa  droop  d  her  brows ;  „        iv  l&l 

above  her  droop'd  a  lamp.  And  made  ,,            272 

And  how  my  life  had  droop'd  of  late,  In  Mem.  xiv  14 

His  age  hath  slowly  droopt,  and  now  lies  Gareth  and  L.  79 

he  let  them  glance  At  Enid,  where  she  droopt :  Geraint  and  E.  247 

plume  droopt  and  mantle  clung,  Last  Tournament  213 
Drooping    (See  also  A-drooping,  Half-drooping,  Low- 
drooping)    found  A  damsel  din  a  comer  of  it.        Geraint  and  E.  611 

aaswer'd  in  low  voice,  her  meek  head  yet  D,  „             641 

D  and  beaten  by  the  breeze,  Lover's  Tale  i  700 
Droopt    See  Droop'd. 

Drop  (s)     (See  also  Dhrop)     There  will  not  he  a.  dot  rain        May  Queen  35 

and,  dew'd  with  showery  d's,  Lotos-Eaters  17 

greaves  and  cuissas  dash'd  with  d's  Of  onset ;  M.  d' Arthur  215 

That  was  the  last  d  in  the  cup  of  gall.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  69 

Thro'  glittering  d's  on  her  sad  friend.  Princess  vi  283 

And  balmy  d's  in  summer  dark  In  Mem,  xvii  15 

As  d  by  d  the  water  falls  In  vaults  and  catacombs,  „          Iviii  3 

than  the  sward  with  d's  of  dew,  Geraint  and  E.  690 


Drop  (s)  (continued)    Thicker  than  d's  from  thunder.  Holy  Grail  348 

greaves  and  cuisses  dash'd  with  d's  Of  onset ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  383 

Like  water,  d  by  d,  upon  my  ear  Fell ;  Lover's  Tale  i  576 

few  d's  of  that  distressful  rain  Fell  on  my  face,  „          698 

hoard  of  happiness  distill'd  Some  d's  of  solace ;  „          715 

I  weiint  shed  a  rf  on  'is  blood,  North.  Cobbler  114 

wi'  hoffens  a  (i  in  'is  eye.  Village  Wife  34 

Taiiste  another  d  o'  the  wine —  „         120 

ye  shant  hev  a  d  fro'  the  paiiil.  Spinster's  S.'s  65 

Like  d's  of  blood  in  a  dark-gray  sea.  Heavy  Brigade  43 

The  falling  d  will  make  his  name  Epilogue  60 

you  spill  The  d's  upon  my  forehead.  Romney's  R.  24 
Drop  (verb)    that  grace  Would  d  from  his  o'er-brimming 

love,  Supp.  Confessions  113 

o'er  black  brows  d's  down  (repeat)  Madeline  34,  46 

D's  in  a  silent  autumn  night.  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  34 

Till  all  my  limbs  d  piecemeal  from  the  stone,  St.  S.  Stylites  44 

All  starry  culmination  d  Babn-dews  Talking  Oak  267 

a  larger  egg  Than  modem  poultry  d,  Will  Water.  122 

To  d  thy  fooUsh  tears  upon  my  grave,  Com£  not,  when,  etc.  2 

And  d's  at  Glory's  temple-gates,  You  might  have  won  34 

And  the  lark  d  down  at  his  feet.  Poet's  Song  8 

Till  the  Sun  d,  dead,  from  the  signs.'  Princess  vii  245 

d  me  a  flower,  D  me  a  flower.  Window,  At  the  W.  6 

D  me  a  flower,  a  flower,  to  kiss,  „               H 

D's  in  his  vast  and  wandering  grave.  In  Mem.  vi  16 

To  d  head-foremost  in  the  jaws  „     xxxiv  15 

'  The  cheeks  d  in ;  the  body  bows  Man  dies :  „        xxxv  3 

D's  flat,  and  after  the  great  waters  break  Last  Tournament  464 

would  d  from  the  chords  or  the  keys,  I'he  Wreck  27 

till  I  feiild  mysen  ready  to  d.  Owd  Rod  84 

gold  from  each  laburnum  chain  D  to  the  grass.  To  Mary  Boyle  11 

Dropp'd-Dropt    (See  also  Dhropt,  Down-drooped,  Down-dropt, 

Half-dropt,  Low-dropt)     before  my  eyelids  dropt  their 

shade,  D.  of  F.  Women  1 

a  tear  Dropt  on  the  letters  as  I  wrote.  To  J.  S.  56 

She  dropt  the  goose,  and  caught  the  pelf.  The  Goose  13 

And  dropt  the  branch  she  held,  and  turning  Gardener's  D.  157 

tho'  my  teeth,  which  now  are  dropt  away,  St.  S.  Stylites  30 

'  Her  eyehds  dropp'd  their  silken  eaves.  Talking  Oak  209 

Dropt  dews  upon  her  golden  head,  „        227 

shrivell'd  into  darkness  in  his  head,  And  dropt  before  him.       Godiva  71 

Down  they  dropt — no  word  was  spoken —  The  Captain  51 

Nor  anchor  dropt  at  eve  or  mom ;  The  Voyage  82 

Dropt  her  head  in  the  maiden's  hand.  Lady  Clare  63 

He  suddenly  dropt  dead  of  heart-disease.'  Sea  Dreams  274 

And  dropt  a  fairy  parachute  and  past :  Princess,  Pro.  76 

Like  threaded  spiders,  one  by  one,  we  dropt,  ,,            i  108 

We  dropt  with  evening  on  a  rustic  town  „              170 

Two  plummets  dropt  for  one  to  sound  the  abyss  „           ii  176 

Dropt  thro'  the  ambrosial  gloom  to  where  below  ,,             iv  24 

I  clamber'd  o'er  at  top  with  pain,  Dropt  on  the  sward,       „               209 

And  down  the  streaming  crystal  dropt ;  „         vii  165 

Nor  find  him  dropt  upon  the  firths  of  ice,  „               206 

a  flower,  a  flower,  Dropt,  a  flower.  Window,  At  the  W.  14 

And  dropt  the  dust  on  tearless  eyes ;  In  Mem.  Ixxx  4 

Dropt  off  gorged  from  a  scheme  that  had  left  Maud  I  i20 

And  dream  he  dropt  from  heaven:  Com.  of  Arthur  183 

then  the  two  Dropt  to  the  cove,  „             378 

A  cloak  that  dropt  from  collar-bone  to  heel,  Gareth  and  L.  682 

'  And  thence  I  dropt  into  a  lowly  vale,  Holy  Grail  440 

Dropt  down  from  heaven  ?  Last  Tournament  685 

with  his  head  below  the  surface  dropt  Lover's  Tale  i  636 

And  the  men  dropt  dead  in  the  valleys  V.  of  Maeldune  31 

it  open'd  and  dropt  at  the  side  of  each  man,  „             85 

that  dropt  to  the  brink  of  his  bay,  The  Wreck  73 

She  dropt  the  gracious  mask  of  motherhood,  The  Ring  384 

Dropping    (See  also  Slow-dropping)    Some  d  low  their 

crimson  bells  Arabian  Nights  62 

lean'd  Upon  him,  slowly  d  fragrant  dew.  Qinone  106 

d  bitter  tears  against  his  brow  M.  d' Arthur  211 

d  down  wilh  costly  bales ;  Locksley  Hall  122 

D  the  too  rough  H  in  Hell  and  Heaven,  Sea  Dreams  196 

a  breadth  Of  Autmnn,  d  fruits  of  power;  Princess  vi  55 

d  bitter  tears  against  a  brow  Pass,  of  Arthur  379 


Dropping-wells 


163 


Dae 


Droppiog-wells    Laburnums,  d-w  of  fiie.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  12 

Dropt    iSee  Dropp'd 

Dropwise    gather'd  trickling  d  from  the  cleft,  Merlin  and  V.  274 

Dross    scurf  of  salt,  and  scum  of  <i,  Vision  of  Sin  211 

Drought     On  stony  d  and  steaming  salt ;  Mariana  in  the  S.  40 

Drouth     (See  also  Drowth)     I  look'd  athwart  the  burning  d  Fatima  13 

My  one  Oasis  in  the  dust  and  d  Of  city  life !  Edwin  Morris  3 

in  the  dust  and  d  of  London  life  She  moves  „        143 

Drove  (S)     I  watch  the  darkening  d's  of  swine  Palace  of  Art  199 

Not  one  of  all  the  d  should  touch  me :  swine ! '  Merlin  and  V.  699 

Drove  (verb)    {See  also  Druv)    foUage,  d  The  fragrant, 

glistening  deeps.  Arabian  Nights  13 

His  own  thought  d  him,  like  a  goad.  M.  d' Arthur  185 

d  his  heel  into  the  smoixlder'd  log,  „        Ep.  14 

fear  of  change  at  home,  that  d  him  hence.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  68 

Across  the  bomidless  east  we  d,  The  Voyage  38 

But  whence  were  those  that  d  the  sail  „          86 

Storm,  such  as  d  her  under  moonless  heavens  Enoch  Arden  547 

The  horse  he  d,  the  boat  he  sold,  „           609 

thought  Haunted  and  harass'd  him,  and  d  him  forth,  „           720 

d  The  footstool  from  before  him,  and  arose ;  Aylmer's  Field  326 

D  in  upon  the  student  once  or  twice,  „            462 

and  round  me  d  In  narrowing  circles  Lucretius  56 

With  that  he  <i  the  knife  into  his  side :  „      275 

tale  of  her  That  d  her  foes  with  slaughter  Princess,  Pro.  123 

On  glassy  water  d  his  cheek  in  lines ;  „            i  116 

Right  on  this  we  d  and  caught,  „           iv  188 

And  d  us,  last,  to  quite  a  solemn  close —  „        Con.  17 
We  broke  them  on  the  land,  we  d  them  on  the  seas.      Third  of  Feb.  30 

and  goodly  sheep  In  haste  they  d.  Spec,  of  Iliad  5 

gold  of  the  ruin'd  woodlands  d  thro'  the  air.  Maud  I  i  12 

and  she  d  them  thro'  the  waste.  Geraint  and  E.  100 

and  she  d  them  thro'  the  wood.  „            185 

He  d  the  dust  against  her  veilless  eyes :  „            529 

D  his  mail'd  heel  athwart  the  royal  crown,  Balin  and  Balan  540 

Whom  Pellam  d  away  with  holy  heat.  „              611 

And  d  him  into  wastes  and  solitudes  Lancelot  and  E.  252 

Tell  me,  what  d  thee  from  the  Table  Round,  Holy  Grail  28 

D  me  from  all  vainglories,  rivalries,  „          32 

heapt  in  mounds  and  ridges  all  the  sea  D  like  a  cataract,  „        799 
Seven  days  I  d  along  the  dreary  deep,  And  with 

me  d  the  moon  and  all  the  stars ;  „        808 

His  own  thought  d  him  Uke  a  goad.  Pass,  of  Arthur  353 

I  flung  him  the  letter  that  d  me  wild.  First  Quarrel  57 

and  d  them,  and  smote  them,  and  slew,  Def.  of  Lucknow  71 

Z>  me  and  my  good  brothers  home  Columbus  134 

B  thro'  the  midst  of  the  foe.  Heavy  Brigade  30 

D  it  in  wild  disarray,  „            60 
D  from  out  the  mother's  nest                           Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  27 

I  d  the  blade  that  had  slain  my  husband  Bandit's  Death  34 

and  d  the  demon  from  Hawa-i-ee.  Kapiolani  33 

Drown    her  sacred  blood  doth  d  The  fields,  Poland  4 

Whose  muffled  motions  blindly  d  In  Mem.  xlix  15 

d  His  heart  in  the  gross  mud-honey  Mavd  I  xvi  ^ 

they  should  burst  and  d  with  deluging  storms  „    //  i  42 

Might  d  all  life  in  the  eye, —  „        ii  61 

A  stone  about  his  neck  to  d  him  in  it.  Gareth  and  L.  812 

and  then  like  vermin  here  D  him,  „            823 

melody  That  d's  the  nearer  echoes.  Lover's  Tale  i  533 

Nor  d  thyself  with  flies  Ancient  Sage  268 

Drowndid  (drowned)     Wheer  the  poor  wench  d  hersen.        Spinster's  S's.  25 

Drown'd    (See  also  Dhrownded,  Drowndid)    I  d  the 

whoopings  of  the  owl  St.  S.  Stylites  33 

part  were  d  within  the  whirling  brook :  Princess,  Pro.  47 

the  glens  are  d  in  azure  gloom  „        iv  525 

tall  columns  d  In  silken  fluctuation  „        vi  354 

Love  clasp  Grief  lest  both  be  d.  In  Mem.  i  9 

Was  d  in  passing  thro'  the  ford,  „    vi  39 

And  d  in  yonder  living  blue  „    coov  7 

in  which  all  spleenful  folly  was  d,  Maud  I  Hi  2 
Would  she  had  d  me  in  it,                                           Lancelot  and  E.  1412 

rest  of  her  D  in  the  gloom  and  horror  Lover's  Tale  iv  62 

such  a  vehemence  that  it  d  The  feebler  motion  „             82 

d  in  the  deeps  of  a  meaningless  Past  ?  Vastness  34 

Drowning    I  brim  with  sorrow  d  song,  In  Mem.  xix  12 


Drowning  (continvfd)    fell  the  floods  of  heaven  d  the  deep.    Holy  Grail  533 

and  the  transient  trouble  of  d —  Despair  67 

d  old  poUtical  common-sense !  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  250 

Thousands  of  voices  d  his  own  Vastness  6 

Drowse    Let  not  your  prudence,  dearest,  d,  Princess  ii  339 
heel  against  the  pavement  echoing,  burst  Their  d ;     Geraint  and  E.  272 

Drowsed    Doubted,  and  d,  nodded  and  slept.  Com.  of  Arthur  427 

ravine  Which  d  in  i,'loom,  seld-darken'd  Death  of  (Enone  76 

Drowsing    See  Death-drowsing 

Drowth  (See  also  Drouth)  Thro'  the  heat,  the  d,  the  dust,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  6 

Drug  (s)     '  What  d  can  make  A  wither'd  palsy  Two  Voices  56 

Drug  (verb)    D  thy  memories,  lest  thou  learn  it,  Locksley  HaU  77 

D  down  the  blindfold  sense  of  wrong  In  Mem.  Ixxi  7 

Druid     Each  was  hke  a  D  rock ;  Princess  iv  280 

grove  and  altar  of  the  D  and  Druidess,  Boddicea  2 

Druidess    grove  and  altar  of  the  Druid  and  D,  „       2 

Drum    (See  also  War-drum)    The  munnurs  of  the  d 

and  fife  Talking  Oak  215 

Thy  voice  is  heard  thro'  rolling  d's  Princess  iv  577 

they  clash'd  their  arms ;  the  <i  Beat ;  „        u  250 

Now,  to  the  roll  of  mulBed  d's,  Ode  on  Well.  87 

Bugles  and  d's  in  the  darkness,  Def.  of  Lv^know  76 

Drunk    (See  also  Droonk,  Sow-droonk)    And  d 

delight  of  battle  with  my  peers,  Ulysses  16 

Ah,  sweeter  to  be  d  with  loss.  In  Mem.  i  11 

D  even  when  he  woo'd ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  442 

Till,  d  with  its  own  wine,  and  overfull  Lover's  Tale  i  271 

Were  d  into  the  inmost  blue,  „          309 

D  in  the  largeness  of  the  utterance  Of  Love ;  „          472 

for  my  brain  was  d  with  the  water.  Despair  65 

Drunkard    Shaking  a  little  Uke  a  d's  hand,  Enoch  Arden  465 

The  d's  football,  laughing-stocks  of  Time,  Princess  iv  517 

let  the  d,  as  he  stretch'd  from  horse  Last  Tournament  459 

Drunken    (See  also  Love-drunken)    Before  I  well  have 

d,  scarce  can  eat :  Geraint  and  E.  662 

Druv  (drove)    she  d  me  to  drink  the  moor,  North.  Cobbler  30 

But  the  heiit  d  bout  i'  my  heyes  Owd  Bod  84 

Dry  (adj.)     (See  also  Dusty-d^)    Earth  is  tZ  to  the 

centre.  Nothing  will  Die  20 

the  bearded  grass  Is  d  and  dewless.  Miller's  D.  246 

the  silver  tongue.  Cold  February  loved,  is  d :  The  Blackbird  14 

youth  Keep  d  their  light  from  tears ;  Of  old  sat  Freedom  20 

And  moist  and  d,  devising  long.  Love  thou  thy  land  38 

passion  sweeping  thro'  me  left  me  d,  Locksley  Hall  131 

Full  cold  my  greeting  was  and  d ;  The  Letters  13 

Whose  pious  talk,  when  most  his  heart  was  d,  Sea  Dreams  186 

I  found,  tho'  crush'd  to  hard  and  d,  The  Daisy  97 

Be  near  me  when  my  faith  is  d,  In  Mem.  1 9 

But  with  long  use  her  tears  are  d.  „  Ixxviii  20 

For  imderf oot  the  herb  was  d ;  „         xcv  2 

cells  and  chambers ;  all  were  fair  and  d ;  Lancelot  and  E.  407 

and  moist  or  d,  Full-arm'd  upon  his  charger  Pdleas  and  E.  215 

I  never  said  '  on  wi'  the  d,'  First  Quarrel  77 

but  thaw  tha  was  iver  sa  d,  North.  Cobbler  9 

And  each  was  as  ti  as  a  cricket,  V.  of  Maeldune  50 

Dry  (verb)     '  The  sap  dries  up :  the  plant  declines.  Two  Voices  268 

if  thou  be'st  Love,  d  up  these  tears  Lover's  Tale  i  780 

Dryad-like    D-l,  shall  wear  Alternate  leaf  Talking  Oak  286 

Dry-tongued    the  d-t  laurels'  pattering  talk  Mavd  I  xviii  8 

Dubb'd    Said  Arthur,  when  he  d  him  knight ;  Holy  Grail  137 

Dubric    To  whom  arrived,  by  Z)  the  high  saint.  Com.  of  Arthur  453 

holy  D  spread  his  hands  and  spake,  „              471 

D  said ;  but  when  they  left  the  shrine  „              476 

For  by  the  hsuids  of  D,  the  high  saint,  Marr.  of  Geraint  838 

oft  I  talk'd  with  D,  the  high  saint,  Geraint  and  E.  865 

Duck    grew  So  witty  that  ye  play'd  at  d's  and 

drakes  Last  Tournament  344 

Duct    '  Before  the  little  d's  began  Two  Voices  325 

Due  (adj.)    feud,  with  question  unto  whom  'twere  d :  (Enone  82 

Up  in  one  night  and  d  to  sudden  sun :  Princess  iv  312 

and  d  To  languid  limbs  and  sickness ;  „      vi  376 

one  so  saved  was  d  All  to  the  saver —  Lover's  Tale  iv  279 

Due  (s)    Uttle  d's  of  wheat,  and  wine  and  oil ;  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  8. 122 

clothes  the  father  with  a  dearness  not  his  d.  Locksley  Hall  91 

So  many  years  from  his  d.'  Lady  Clare  32 


Dae 


164 


Dusty-white 


Due  (s)  {continiud)    what  every  woman  counts  her  d.  Love,  Princess  Hi  244 

but  as  frankly  theirs  As  d's  of  Nature.  „        v  204 

Who  give  the  Fiend  himself  his  d,  To  F.  D.  Maurice  6 

they  miss  their  yearly  d  Before  their  time  ?  In  Mem.  xxix  15 

And  render  human  love  his  d's ;  „     xxxvii  16 

Which  else  were  fruitless  of  their  d,  „           xlv  14 

lazy  lover  Who  but  claims  her  as  his  i  ?  Maud  I  xxW 

and  let  the  dark  face  have  his  d !  Def.  of  Lucknow  69 

Tho'  a  prophet  should  have  his  d,  Bead  Prophet  50 
Dug    {See  also  New-dog)    falling  prone  he  d  His  fingers 

into  the  wet  earth,  Enoch  Arden  779 

But  iron  d  from  central  gloom,  In  Mem.  cxviii  21 

Doglas    loud  battles  by  the  shore  Of  D ;  Lancelot  and  E.  290 
Duke     BuEY  the  Great  D  With  an  empire's  lamentation, 

Let  us  bury  the  Great  D  Ode  on  Well.  1 

Truth-lover  was  our  English  D ;  „        189 

King,  d,  earl.  Count,  baron —  Lancelot  and  E.  464 

DuQ  (adj.)     the  d  Saw  no  divinity  in  grass,  A  Character  7 

You  never  would  hear  it ;  your  ears  are  so  d ;  Poet's  Mind  35 

How  d  it  is  to  pause,  to  make  an  end,  Ulysses  22 

And  d  the  voyage  was  with  long  delays,  Enoch  Arden  655 

d  and  self -involved.  Tall  and  erect,  Aylmer's  Field  118 

Dull  (verb)    d  Those  spirit-thrilUng  eyes  Ode  to  Memory  38 

'  Weep,  weeping  d's  the  inward  pain.'  To  J.  S.  40 

burial  mould  Will  d  their  comments !  Romney's  R.  126 

Dxill'd    And  d  the  murmur  on  thy  lip,  In  Mem.  xxii  16 

Duller    something  d  than  at  first,  Witt  Water.  157 

Dumb    (See  also  Death-dumb)    And  the  far-oS  stream  is  d,        The  Owl  i  3 

in  a  little  while  our  lips  are  d.  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  44 

The  streets  are  d  with  snow.  Sir  Galahad  52 

Winds  are  loud  and  you  are  d,  Window,  No  Answer  19 

ran  Thro'  lands  where  not  a  leaf  was  d ;  In  Mem.  xxiii  10 

lo,  thy  deepest  lays  are  d  „          Ixxvi  7 

D  is  that  tower  which  spake  so  loud,  „       Con.  106 

Then  I  cannot  be  wholly  d ;  Mavd  II  v  100 

and  the  dead,  Oar'd  by  the  d,  went  upward  Lancelot  and  E.  1154 

one  hath  sung  and  all  the  d  will  sing.  Eoly  Grail  301 

and  cast  her  eyes  down,  and  was  d.  Lover's  Tale  iv  329 

I  almost  dread  to  find  her,  d\'  „          339 

•  She  is  but  d,  because  in  her  you  see  „          341 

•  Now  all  be  d,  and  promise  all  of  you  „  351 
D  on  the  winter  heath  he  lay.  Dead  Prophet  13 
dazed  and  d  With  passing  thro'  Demeter  and  P.  6 

Dumb'd    the  wholesome  music  of  the  wood  Was  d        Balin  and  Balan  437 

0  they  to  be  d  by  the  charm ! —  V.  of  Maeldune  25 
Dune    (See  also  Sea-done)    long  low  d,  and  lazy- 
plunging  sea.  Last  Tournament  484 

glory  lights  the  hall,  the  d,  the  grass !  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  181 

Dong    round  and  round  In  d  and  nettles !  Pelleas  and  E.  471 

Dungeon    histories  Of  battle,  bold  adventure,  d,  Aylmer's  Field  98 

In  damp  and  dismal  d's  underground,  Lover's  Tale  ii  149 

airs  of  heaven  After  a  d's  closeness.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  198 

rib-grated  d  of  the  holy  human  ghost,  Happy  31 

Dunghill    Upon  an  ampler  d  trod.  Will  Water.  125 

And  Doubt  is  the  lord  of  this  d  Despair  90 

Duomo    Of  tower  or  d,  sunny-sweet,  The  Daisy  46 

Dope    Christ  the  bait  to  trap  his  d  Sea  Dreams  191 

Dusk  (s)     Beam'd  thro'  the  thicken'd  cedar  in  the  d.  Gardener's  D.  166 

A  troop  of  snowy  doves  athwart  the  d,  Princess  iv  168 

And  in  the  d  of  thee,  the  clock  Beats  out  In  Mem.  ii  7 

1  sleep  till  d  is  dipt  in  gray :  „  Ixvii  12 
this  flat  lawn  with  d  and  bright ;  „  Ixxxix  2 
shapes  That  haunt  the  d,  with  ermine  capes  „  xcv  11 
now  the  doubtful  d  reveal'd  The  knolls  „  49 
So  till  the  d  that  follow'd  evensong  Gareth  and  L.  793 
Till  the  points  of  the  foam  in  the  d  came  Despair  50 
or  seated  in  the  d  Of  even,  Demeter  and  P.  125 

Dusk  (verb)    Little  breezes  d  and  shiver  L.  of  Shalott  i  11 

Dusky-rafter'd    The  d-r  many-cobweb'd  hall,  Marr.  of  Geraint  362 

Dust    (See  also  Blossom-dust,  Doost,  Lotos-dost,  Tooch- 

wood-dust)    tho'  the  faults  were  thick  as  d  In 

vacant  chambers,  To  the  Queen  18 

right  ear,  that  is  fill'd  with  d.  Hears  little  Two  Voices  116 

soil'd  with  noble  d,  he  hears  His  country's  war-song  „          152 

A  d  of  systems  and  of  creeds.  „          207 


Dost  (continued)    Two  handfuls  of  white  d,  shut  in  an  urn 

of  brass !  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  68 

I  knew  your  brother :  his  mute  d  I  honour  To  J.  S.  29 

Lie  still,  dry  d,  secure  of  change.  „        76 

parch'd  with  d;  Or,  clotted  into  points  M.  d' Arthur  218 

The  pillar'd  d  of  sounding  sycamores,  Audley  Court  16 

My  one  Oasis  in  the  d  and  drouth  Of  city  life !  Edwin  Morris  3 

For  in  the  d  and  drouth  of  London  Life  „        143 

you  may  carve  a  shrine  about  my  d,  St.  S.  Stylites  195 

With  anthers  and  with  d :  Talking  Oak  184 

dead,  become  Mere  highway  d  ?  Love  and  Duty  11 
And  vex  the  unhappy  d  thou  wouldst  not  save.     Come  not,  when,  etc.  4 

Is  a  clot  of  warmer  d.  Vision  of  Sin  113 

Are  but  d  that  rises  up,  (repeat)  „    133,  169 

D  are  our  frames ;  and,  gilded  d,  Aylmer's  Field  1 

scrapings  from  a  dozen  years  Of  d  and  deskwork :  Sea  Dreams  78 

Have  fretted  all  to  d  and  bitterness.'  Princess  vi  264 

Till  pubUc  wrong  be  crumbled  into  d,  Ode  on  Well.  167 

Ashes  to  ashes,  dtod;  „          270 

if  the  wages  of  Virtue  be  d.  Wages  6 

Thou  wilt  not  leave  us  in  the  d :  In  Mem.,  Pro.'  9 

The  d  of  him  I  shall  not  see  „         xvii  19 

Ye  never  knew  the  sacred  d :  „         xxi  22 

And  d  and  ashes  all  that  is ;  „       xxxiv  4 

Man  dies :  nor  is  there  hope  in  d : '  „        xxxv  4 

sow  The  d  of  continents  to  be ;  „                12 

And  Time,  a  maniac  scattering  d,  ,,11 

grope,  And  gather  d  and  cha£E,  „           Iv  18 

Be  blown  about  the  desert  d,  „          Ivi  19 

we  talk'd  Of  men  and  minds,  the  d  of  change,  „       Ixxi  10 

To  stir  a  httle  d  of  praise.  „       Ixxv  12 

And  dropt  the  d  on  tearless  eyes ;  „         Ixxx  4 

The  d  and  din  and  steam  of  town :  „      Ixxxix  8 

Our  father's  d  is  left  alone  „              cv  5 

The  life  re-orient  out  of  d,  „          cxvi  6 

That  we  may  lift  from  out  of  d  A  voice  „       cxxxi  5 

who  knows  ?  we  are  ashes  and  d.  Maud  I  i  32 

Spice  his  fair  banquet  with  the  d  of  death  ?  „  xviii  56 

My  d  would  hear  her  and  beat,  „    xxii  71 

That  sting  each  other  here  in  the  d;  „    II  HI 

And  my  heart  is  a  handful  of  d,  „          v3 

he  will  lift  us  from  the  d.  Com.  of  Arthur  491 

who  swept  the  d  of  ruin'd  Rome  Gareth  and  L.  135 
turning  roimd  she  saw  D,  and  the  points  of  lances      Geraint  and  E.  449 

held  Her  finger  up,  and  pointed  to  the  d.  „              453 

He  drove  the  d  against  her  veilless  eyes :  „              529 

Or  pinch  a  murderous  d  into  her  drink.  Merlin  and  V.  610 

in  the  d  of  half-forgotten  kings,  Lancelot  and  E.  1338 
Fell  into  d,  and  I  was  left  alone,  (repeat)           Holy  Grail  389,  400,  419 

she,  too.  Fell  into  d  and  nothing,  „                         397 

Fell  into  d,  and  disappear'd,  „                         436 

And  touch  it,  it  will  crumble  into  d.'  „                         439 

whirl  the  d  of  harlots  round  and  round  Pelleas  and  E.  470 

he  knew  the  Prince  tho'  marr'd  with  d,  Guinevere  36 

I  saw  One  lying  in  the  d  at  Almesbury,  Pass,  of  Arthur  77 

parch'd  with  d ;  Or,  clotted  into  points  „            386 

heart  of  Hope  Fell  into  d,  and  crumbled  Lover's  Tale  i  95 

Down  in  the  dreadful  d  that  once  was  man,  D,  „         iv  67 

Having  of  dead  men's  d  and  beating  hearts.  ,,            140 

D  to  d — low  down — let  us  hide !  Rizpah  37 

Thro'  the  heat,  the  drowth,  the  d,  the  glare.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  6 

The  guess  of  a  worm  in  the  d  Despair  30 

And  changed  her  into  d.  Ancient  Sage  162 

Her  d  is  greening  in  your  leaf,  „           165 

and  bums  the  feet  would  trample  it  to  d.  The  Flight  68 

and  they  crumble  into  d.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  72 

Only  '  d  to  d! '  for  me  that  sicken  „              149 

D  in  wholesome  old-world  d  „              150 

she  swept  The  d  of  earth  from  her  knee.  Dead  Prophet  32 

may  roll  with  the  i  of  a  vanish'd  race.  Vastness  2 

Stampt  into  d — tremulous,  all  awry,  Romney's  R.  113 

The  /send  up  a  steam  of  human  blood,  St.  Telemachus  53 

d  of  the  rose-petal  belongs  to  the  heart  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  9 

Dusty-dry    all  but  yester-eve  was  d-d.  Lucretius  32 

Dusty-white    The  river-bed  was  d-w ;  Mariana  in  the  S.  54 


Dutch 


165 


Dyflen 


Dutch    sometimes  a  D  love  For  tulips ; 

Duty    for  a  man  may  fail  in  d  twice, 
I  must  be  taught  my  d,  and  by  you ! 
and  D  loved  of  Love — 
centred  in  the  sphere  Of  common  duties, 
Go  to  him :  it  is  thy  d :  kiss  him : 
To  all  duties  of  her  rank : 
Like  one  who  does  his  d  by  his  own, 
Swerve  from  her  d  to  herself  and  us — 
As  having  fail'd  in  <i  to  him, 
Thy  d ?    What  is  d?    Fare  thee  well ! ' 

0  hard,  when  love  and  d  clash ! 
My  brother !  it  was  d  spoke,  not  L 
she  replied,  her  d  was  to  speak,  And  d  d,  clear 

of  consequences, 
day  fled  on  thro'  all  Its  range  of  duties 
they  That  love  their  voices  more  than  d. 
Some  sense  of  d,  something  of  a  faith, 
Till  one  that  sought  but  D's  iron  crown 
path  of  d  was  the  way  to  glory :  (repeat) 
find  the  toppling  crags  of  D  scaled 
The  path  of  d  be  the  way  to  glory : 

1  done  moy  d  boy  'um,  (repeat) 
I  done  moy  d  by  Squoire  an'  I  done  moy  d 
As  it  were  a  d  done  to  the  tomb, 
I  charge  thee,  on  thy  das  &  wife, 
It  was  my  d  to  have  loved  the  highest : 
for  a  man  may  fail  in  d  twice, 
I  have  only  done  my  i  as  a  man  is  bound  to  do 

Dwarf  (s)    D's  of  the  gynaeceum,  fail  so  far 

after  seen  The  d's  of  presage : 

there  rode  Full  slowly  by  a  knight,  lady,  and  d ; 
Whereof  the  d  lagg'd  latest, 

sent  Her  maiden  to  demand  it  of  the  d ; 

my  faith,  thou  shalt  not,'  cried  the  d ; 

Made  sharply  to  the  d,  and  ask'd  it  of  him,' 

His  d,  a  vicious  under-shapen  thing, 

thou  thyself,  with  damsel  and  with  d, 

Selfish,  strange !    What  d's  are  men ! 

for  all  but  a  d  was  he, 
Dwarf  (verb)    d's  the  petty  love  of  one  to  one. 
DwarPd    rise  or  sink  Together,  d  or  godlike, 

How  d  a  growth  of  cold  and  night, 

their  ever-rising  life  has  d  Or  lost 
Dwarf-elm    like  an  old  d-e  That  turns  its  back 
Dwarf-like    among  the  rest  A  d-l  Cato  cower'd. 
Dwell    Where  she  would  ever  wish  to  d, 

Life  and  Thought  Here  no  longer  d ; 

His  light  upon  the  letter  d's, 

May  those  kind  eyes  for  ever  d ! 

Wherein  at  ease  for  aye  to  d. 

My  Gods,  with  whom  I  d ! 

others  in  Elysian  valleys  d, 

'  It  comforts  me  in  this  one  thought  to  d, 

thou  may'st  warble,  eat  and  d. 

And  d's  in  heaven  half  the  night. 

would  d  One  earnest,  earnest  moment 

To  din  presence  of  immortal  youtli, 

d's  A  perfect  form  in  perfect  rest. 

Where  the  wealthy  nobles  d.' 

D  with  these,  and  lose  Convention, 

pretty  home,  the  home  where  mother  d's  ? 

there — there — they  d  no  more. 

But  more  of  reverence  in  us  e2 ; 

the  vigour,  bold  to  d  On  doubts  that  drive 

And  d's  not  in  the  light  alone, 

She  d's  on  him  with  faitliful  eyes. 

But  in  my  spirit  will  I  d. 

So  dark  a  mind  within  me  d's, 

wastes  where  footless  fancies  d 

for  she  d's  Down  in  a  deep ;  calm, 

I  d  Savage  among  the  savage  woods, 

'  She  d's  among  the  woods '  he  said 

and  in  me  there  d's  No  greatnass, 

As  when  we  d  upon  a  word  we  know, 


Gardener's  D.  192 

M.  d' Arthur  129 

Dora  97 

Love  and  Duty  46 

Ulysses  40 

Locksley  Hall  52 

L.  of  Burleigh  72 

Enoch  Arden  333 

Aylmer's  Field  304 

Lucretius  278 

„        281 

Princess  ii  293 

„  308 

„      Hi  151 

177 

„       iv  512 

„    Con.  54 

Ode  on  Well.  122 

„    202,210 

215 

224 

N.  Fanner,  0.  S.  12,  24 

56 

Maud  I  xix  49 

Geraint  and  E.  16 

Guinevere  657 

Pass,  of  Arthur  297 

The  Revenge  102 

Princess  Hi  279 

„        iv  447 

Marr.  of  Geraint  187 

193 

198 

204 

412 

„      581 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  199 

The  Wreck  42 

Merlin  and  V.  492 

Princess  vii  260 

In  Mem.  Ixi  7 

The  Ring  463 

Pelleas  and  E.  543 

Princess  vii  126 

Supp.  Confessions  54 

Deserted  House  18 

Miller's  D.  189 

„  220 

Palace  of  Art  2 

„       196 

Lotos-Eaters  C.  S.  124 

D.ofF.  Women  233 

The  Blackbird  4 

To  J.  S.  52 

Love  and  Duty  36 

Tithonus  21 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep  B.,  23 

L.  of  Burleigh  24 

Princess  ii  85 

City  Child  2 

Boiidicea  63 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  26 

„  xcv  29 

„  xcvi  20 

'  „  xcvii  35 

„  cxxiii  9 

Maud  I  xvl 

„   xviii  69 

Com.  of  Arthur  291 

Balin  and  Balan  485 

614 

Lancelot  and  E.  449 

1027 


Dwell  {continued)    Why  did  the  King  d  on  my  name 
to  me  ? 
I  must  not  d  on  that  defeat  of  fame. 

d  with  you ;  Wear  black  and  white. 
Love  d's  not  in  Up-depths. 

Shakespeare's  bland  and  universal  eye  D's 
pleased, 

thou  should'st  d  For  nine  white  moons 

thou  shalt  d  the  whole  bright  year  with  me, 

noble  Ulric  d's  forlorn. 
Dweller    some  dark  d  by  the  coco-palm 
Dwelleth    The  clear-voiced  mavis  d. 
Dwelling    D  amid  these  yellowing  bowers ; 

<i  on  his  boundless  love, 

Her  fancy  d  in  this  dusky  hall : 

thus  he  spake,  his  eye,  d  on  mine, 

their  eyes  are  dim  With  d  on  the  light 

Unto  the  d  she  must  sway. 

Phihp's  d  fronted  on  the  street. 

How  mend  the  d's,  of  the  poor ; 

With  one  great  d  in  the  middle  of  it ; 

This  is  a  charmed  d  which  I  hold ; ' 

the  sweet  d  of  her  eyes  Upon  me 

who  sack'd  My  d.  seized  upon  my  papers, 

and  the  d  broke  mto  flame ; 

Old  Empires,  d's  of  the  kings  of  men ; 

climb  to  the  d  of  Peelfe  the  Goddess  1 
Dwelling-place    So  unproportion'd  to  the  drp,) 
Dwelt    The  fable  of  the  city  where  we  d. 

But  the  full  day  d  on  her  brows, 

keep  me  from  that  Eden  where  she  d. 

May  not  be  d  on  by  the  common  day. 

And  d  a  moment  on  his  kindly  face, 

Ev'n  as  she  d  upon  his  latest  words. 

Her  hand  d  lingeringly  on  the  lateh, 

D  with  eternal  summer,  ill-content. 

best  and  brightest,  when  they  d  on  hers, 

But  when  I  d  upon  your  old  affiance, 

There  d  an  iron  nature  in  the  grain : 

mournful  twilight  mellowing,  d  Full  on  the  child ; 

A  doubtful  smile  d  like  a  clouded  moon 

the  dew  D  in  her  eyes. 

There  they  d  and  there  they  rioted ; 

I  past  To  see  the  rooms  in  which  he  d. 

These  two — they  d  with  eye  on  eye, 

Methought  I  d  within  a  hall. 

From  which  he  sallies,  and  wherein  he  d. 

they  d  Deep-tranced  on  hers, 

•  Brother,  Ida.  day  in  Pellam's  hall : 


Lifted  her  eyes,  and  they  d  languidly  On  Lancelot, 

and  d  among  the  woods  By  the  great  river 

His  own  far  blood,  which  d  at  Camelot ; 

Yet  larger  thro'  his  leanness,  d  upon  her. 

So  d  the  father  on  her  face, 

happy  as  when  we  d  among  the  woods, 

I  saw  That  man  had  once  d  there ; 

shot  A  rose-red  sparkle  to  the  city,  and  there  D, 

D  with  them,  till  in  time  their  Abbess  died. 

to  those  With  whom  he  d,  new  faces, 

fragments  of  forgotten  peoples  d, 

Who  hath  but  d  beneath  one  roof  with  me. 

And  heaven  pass  too,  d  on  my  heaven, 

the  sudden  wail  his  lady  made  D  in  his  fancy : 

he  d  and  whence  he  roll'd  himself 

while  we  d  Together  in  this  valley — 

Love  and  Justice  came  and  d  therein; 

(repeat)  Akbar's  Dream  181,  194 

Dwindle    Thou  shalt  wax  and  he  shall  d,  Boiidicea  40 

Science  grows  and  Beauty  d's —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  246 

Dwindled    d  down  to  some  odd  games  In  some  odd  nooks  The  Epic  8 

Dwindling    See  Daily-Dwindling 
Dyed    walls  of  my  cell  were  d  With  rosy  colours  leaping        Holy  Grail  119 

splash 'd  and  d  The  strong  White  Horse  „  311 

Dyeing    blood  spirted  upon  the  scarf,  D  it ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  209 

Dyflen    Shaping  their  way  toward  D  again,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  98 


Lancelot  and  E.  1402 

Guinevere  628 

„        676 

Lover's  Tale  i  466 

To  W.  C.  Macready  14 

Demeter  and  P.  120 

139 

Happy  10 

Prog,  of  Spring  68 

Claribd  16 

A  spirit  haunts  2 

Marr.  of  Geraint  63 

„  802 

Holy  Grail  485 

Lover's  Tale  i  492 

Ode  to  Memory  79 

Enoch  Arden  731 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  38 

Holy  Grail  514: 

Lover's  Tale  i  114 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  165 

Columbus  130 

V.  of  Maddune  32 

Prog,  of  Spring  99 

Kapiolani  22 

Lover's  Tale  i  187 

Gardener's  D.  6 

136 

191 

271 

Enoch  Arden  326 

454 

519 

562 

Aylmer's  Field  69 

Princess  Hi  139 

„        vi  50 

191 

270 

„     vii  136 

Boddicea  63 

In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  16 

„  xcvii  9 

„  ciii  5 

Balin  and  Balan  132 

277 

605 

Lancelot  and  E.  84 

277 

„         803 

„         835 

„        1030 

1036 

Holy  Grail  430 

„  531 

Guinevere  692 

Pass,  of  Arthur  5 

84 

156 

Lover's  Tale  i  72 

„        iv  150 

Tiresias  145 

Death  of  Qinone  29 


Dying 


166 


Ear 


Dying    {See  also  Slowly-dyii^)    I  wovld  be  d  eTennore, 

So  d  ever,  Elednore  143 

Then  d  of  a  mortal  stroke,  Two  Voices  154 

Die,  d  clasp'd  in  his  embrace.  Fatima  42 

They  say  he's  d  all  for  love.  May  Queen  21 

When  Ellen  Adair  was  d  for  me.  Edward  Gray  16 

as  they  lay  d,  Did  they  smile  on  him.  The  Captain  55 

foretold,  I),  that  none  of  all  our  blood  Princess  i  8 

He,  d  lately,  left  her,  as  I  hear,  „          78 

Blow,  bugle ;  answer,  echoes,  d,  d,  d.  (repeat)  „  iv  6, 12 

And  answer,  echoes,  answer,  d,  d,  d.  „          18 

Or  d,  there  at  least  may  die.  In  Mem.  viii  24 

The  year  is  d  in  the  night ;  „            cvi  3 

I  felt  she  was  slowly  d  Vext  with  lawyers  Maud  I  xix  21 

D  abroad  and  it  seems  apart  „              29 

When  he  lay  d  there,  „     II  ii  67 

There  is  some  one  d  or  dead,  „         iv  48 

d,  gleam'd  on  rocks  Roof-pendent,  sharp ;  Balin  and  Balan  314 
laughter  d  down  as  the  great  knight  Approach'd       Lancelot  and  E.  179 

methought  I  spied  A  d  fire  of  madness  Holy  Grail  768 

'  And  oft  in  d  cried  upon  your  name.'  Pelleas  and  E.  385 

Moans  of  the  d,  and  voices  of  the  dead.  Pass,  of  Arthur  117 

d  thus,  Crown'd  with  her  highest  act  Lover's  Tale  i  215 

And  the  lion  there  lay  d,  The  Revenge  96 
D  so  English  thou  wouldst  have  her  flag           Bed.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  16 

Death  to  the  d,  and  woimds  to  the  wounded,  Bef.  of  Lucknow  17 

women  in  travail  among  the  d  and  dead,  „               88 

glory  and  shame  d  out  for  ever  Bespair  75 

and  d  while  they  shout  her  name.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  128 
B, '  Unspeakable '  he  wrote  '  Their  kindness,'     To  Marq.  of  Bufferin  35 

but  then  A  kinsman,  d,  summon'd  me  to  Rome —  The  Ring  178 

And  d  rose,  and  rear'd  her  arms,  „        222 

I  sat  beside  her  d,  and  she  gaspt :  „        287 

You  that  know  you're  d  .  .  ,  Forlorn  58 

/  am  Merlin,  And  /  am  d,  Merlin  and  ike  G.  8 
worn-out  Reason  d  in  her  house  May  leave  the 

windows  Romney's  R.  145 

I&md  now  Pierced  by  a  poison'd  dart.  Beath  of  (Enone  33 

B  in  childbirth  of  dead  sons.  Akbar's  Bream  12 

Dyke     Adown  the  crystal  d's  at  Camelot  Geraint  and  E.  470 

Ah  little  rat  that  borest  in  the  d  Merlin  and  V.  112 

From  wall  to  d  he  stept,  he  stood,  Achilles  over  the  T.  15 

Thrice  from  the  d  he  sent  his  mighty  shout,  „              30 

Dynamite    if  d  and  revolver  leave  you  courage  LocJcsley  H.,  Sixty  107 

E 

Each    E  month  is  various  to  present  the  world  Two  Voices  74 

E  mom  my  sleep  was  broken  thro'  Miller's  B.  39 

And  steal  you  from  e  other !  Aylmer's  Field  707 

Who  hate  e  other  for  a  song.  Lit.  Squabbles  5 
scarce  could  hear  e  other  speak  for  noise  Of  clocks 

and  chimes,  Princess  i  215 

with  e  light  air  On  our  mail'd  heads :  „       v  '24A 

while  e  ear  was  prick'd  to  attend  A  tempest,  „      vi  280 

and  e  base.  To  left  and  right,  „  353 
Christmas  beUs  from  hill  to  hill  Answer  e  other  in 

the  mist.  In  Mem.  xxviii  4 

E  voice  four  changes  on  the  wind,  „                 9 

and  prey  By  «  cold  hearth,  „      xcviii  18 

That  will  not  yield  e  other  way.  „          cii  20 

and  join'd  E  office  of  the  social  hour  „  cxi  14 
Where  e  man  walks  with  his  head  in  a  cloud  of 

poisonous  flies.  Maud  I  iv  54 
hiss'd  e  at  other's  ear  What  shall  not  be 

recorded —  Geraint  and  E.  634 

With  e  chest  lock'd  and  padlock'd  thirty-fold.  Merlin  and  V.  655 

the  knights,  Glorying  in  e  new  glory,  Last  Tournament  336 

Do  e  low  office  of  your  holy  house ;  Guinevere  682 

IIow  like  e  other  was  the  birth  of  e !  Lover's  Tale  i  197 

E  way  from  verge  to  verge  a  Holy  Land,  „            337 

No  sisters  ever  prized  e  other  more.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  43 

Sway'd  by  e  Love,  and  swaying  to  e  Love,  Prin.  Beatrice  19 
birds  that  circle  round  the  tower  Are  cheeping  to  e  other      The  Ring  86 


'Eftd  (head)    bummin'  awaay  loike  a  buzzard-clock 

ower  my  'e,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  18 

Break  me  a  bit  o'  the  esh  for  his  'e  „         N.  S.  41 

clean  as  a  flower  fro'  'e  to  feeat :  North.  Cobbler  44 

'  When  theer's  naw  'e  to  a  'Ouse  Village  Wife  17 

but  'e  niver  not  lift  oop  'is  'e :  „          88 
fever  'ed  baaked  Jinny's  'e  as  bald  as  one  o'  them 


„        102 

Spinster's  S's.  76 

100 

Owd  Rod  54 

99 

Enach  Arden  872 


Aylmer's  Field  66 

208 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  228 

Merlin  and  V.  133 
Merlin  and  the  G.  101 


wi'  a  bran-new  'e  o'  the  Queean, 
an'  the  mark  o'  'is  'e  o'  the  chairs ! 
an'  the  Freea  Traade  nmn'd  'i  my  'e, 
an'  clemm'd  owd  Roii  by  the  'e, 
Eager    and  arose  E  to  bring  them  down, 

e  eyes,  that  still  Took  joyfid  note  of  all  things 

joyful. 
But  Edith's  e  fancy  hurried  with  him 
rising  race  were  half  as  e  for  the  light, 
they  hfted  up  Their  e  faces,  wondering  at  the 

strength, 
But  e  to  follow,  I  saw, 
Eager-hearted    E-h  as  a  boy  when  first  he  leaves  his 

father's  field,  LocJcsley  Hall  112 

Eagerness    in  his  heat  and  e  Trembled  and  quiver'd,        Pelleas  and  E.  283 
Eagle    {See  also  Blood-eagle,  Heagle)    Half-buried  in  the 

E's  down,  ■  Palace  of  Art  122 

Shall  e's  not  be  e's  ?  wrens  be  wrens  ?  Golden  Tear  37 

wonder  of  the  e  were  the  less,  But  he  not  less  the  e.  „         39 

Unclasp'd  the  wedded  e's  of  her  belt, 
An  e  clang  an  e  to  the  sphere, 
a  poising  e,  bums  Above  the  unrisen  morrow : ' 
A  train  of  dames :  by  axe  and  e  sat, 
Lean-headed  E's  yelp  alone, 
Till  o'er  the  hills  her  e's  flew 
Again  their  ravening  e  rose  In  anger. 
Must  their  ever-ravening  e's  beak  and  talon 
Tho'  the  Roman  e  shadow  thee, 
Or  e's  wing,  or  insect's  eye ; 
Roman  legions  here  again,  And  Caesar's  e : 
For  this  an  E,  a  royal  E, 
an  E  rising  or,  the  Sun  In  dexter  chief ; 
and  started  thro'  mid  air  Bearing  an  e's  nest : 
Follow'd  a  rush  of  e's  wings. 
They  rose  to  where  their  sovran  e  sails. 
Left  for  the  white-tail'd  e  to  tear  it, 
rose  as  it  were  on  the  wings  of  an  e 
That  young  e  of  the  West  To  forage  for 
herself 
Eagle-borne    '  Peace  to  thine  e-b  Dead  nestling, 
Eagle-circle    sweep  In  ever-highering  e-c's 
Eagle-like    e-l  Stoop  at  thy  will  on  Lancelot 
Eagle-owl    Round  as  the  red  eye  of  an  E-o, 
Eagle-peak    I  stared  from  every  e-p, 
Eaglet    Foster'd  the  callow  e — 
Ear  (organ  of  hearing)    {See  also  Captain's-ear,  Ear- 
stunning)    Pour  round  mine  e's  the  livelong 

bleat  Ode  to  Memory  65 

You  never  would  hear  it ;  your  e's  are  so  dull ;  Poet's  Mind  35 

at  first  to  the  e  The  warble  was  low.  Dying  Swan  23 

With  dinning  sound  my  e's  are  rife,  Elednore  135 

The  right  e,  that  is  fiU'd  with  dust,  ,  Two  Voices  116 

His  country's  war-song  thrill  his  e's :  „  153 

A  second  voice  was  at  mine  e,  „         427 

the  jewel  That  trembles  in  her  e :  Miller's  B.  172 

drawing  nigh  Half-whisper'd  in  his  e,  (Enone  186 

a  sound  Rings  ever  in  her  e's  of  armed  men.  „      265 

Or  hollowing  one  hand  against  liis  e,  Palace  of  Art  109 

Like  Herod,  when  the  shout  was  in  his  e's,  „  219 

music  in  his  e's  his  beating  heart  did  make.  Lotos-Eaters  36 

a  clear  under-tone  Thrill'd  thro'  mine  e's  B.  of  F.  Women  82 

horse  That  hears  the  com-bin  open,  prick'd  my  e's ;  The  Epic  45 

murmuring  at  his  e  '  Quick,  Quick  !  M.  d' Arthur  179 

Rings  in  mine  e's.     The  steer  forgot  to  graze.  Gardener's  B.  85 

my  e's  could  hear  Her  liglitest  breath ;  Edwin  Morris  64 

pits  of  fire,  that  still  Sing  in  mine  e's.  St.  S.  Stylites  185 


Godiva  43 

Princess  Hi  106 

„        iv  82 

„     vii  128 

211 

Ode  on  Well.  112 

119 

Boddicea  11 

39 

In  Mem.  cxxiv  6 

Com.  of  Arthur  35 

Gareth  and  L.  44 

Merlin  and  V.  475 

Last  Tournam£nt  15 

417 

Montenegro  1 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  107 

The  Wreck  69 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  28 

Last  Tournament  33 

Gareth  and  L.  21 

Balin  and  Balan  535 

Gareth  and  L.  799 

Demeter  and  P.  68 

(Enone  212 


(And  hear  me  with  thine  e's,) 


Talking  Oak  82 


Ear 


167 


Earl 


Ear  (o^an  of  hearing)  (continued)    K  the  sense  is  hard 

To  2ilien  e's,  Love  and  Duty  52 

song  from  out  the  distance  in  the  ringing  of  thine  e's ;  Locksley  HaU  84 
Then  filUp'd  at  the  diamond  in  her  e;  Godiva  25 

And  whisper'd  voices  at  his  e.  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  24 

In  her  e  he  whispers  gaily,  L.  of  Burleigh  1 

Worried  his  passive  e  with  petty  wrongs  Enoch  Arden  352 

a  whisper  on  her  e,  She  knew  not  what;  „  515 

likewise,  in  the  ringing  of  his  e's,  „  613 

Twinkl«i  the  innumerable  e  and  tail.  The  Brook  134 

Call'd  all  her  vital  spirits  into  each  e  Aylmer's  Field  201 

And  foam'd  away  his  heart  at  Averill's  e :  „  342 

His  message  ringing  in  thine  e's,  „  666 

won  mysterious  way  Thro'  the  seal'd  e 
True  Devils  with  no  e,  they  howl  in  tuno 
Or  lend  an  e  to  Plato  where  he  says, 
twinn'd  as  horse's  e  and  eye. 
my  very  e's  were  hot  To  hear  them : 
no  livelier  than  the  dame  That  whisper'd  '  Asses'  e's,' 
To  dying  e's,  when  unto  dying  eyes 
we  should  cram  our  e's  with  wool  And  so  pace  by : 
at  mine  e  Bubbled  the  nightingale  and  heeded  not. 
Each  hissing  in  Ids  neighbour's  e ; 
infuse  my  tale  of  love  In  the  old  king's  e's, 
while  each  e  was  prick'd  to  attend  A  tempest, 
the  Dead  March  wails  in  the  people's  e's : 
And  the  e  of  man  cannot  hear, 
But  I  should  turn  mine  e's  and  hear 
Not  all  ungrateful  to  thine  e. 
Yet  in  these  e's,  till  hearing  dies, 
Till  on  mine  e  this  message  iaiis, 
A  willing  e  We  lent  him. 
heart  and  e  were  fed  To  hear  him, 
words  of  life  Breath'd  in  her  e. 
centre-bits  Grind  on  the  wakeful  e 
(Look  at  it)  pricking  a  cockney  e. 
Whose  e  is  cramm'd  with  his  cotton, 
With  the  evil  tongue  and  the  evil  e, 
hope  to  win  her  With  his  chirrup  at  her  e. 
It  will  ring  in  my  heart  and  my  e's,  till  I  die. 
An  old  song  vexes  my  e ; 
Modred  laid  his  e  beside  the  doors, 
weary  her  e's  with  one  continuous  prayer, 
and  the  sound  was  good  to  Gareth's  e. 
felt  his  young  heart  hammering  in  his  e's. 
He  sow'd  a  slander  in  the  common  e, 
she  could  speak  whom  his  own  e  had  heard 
prick'd  their  Ught  e's,  and  felt  Her  low  firm  voice 
And  e's  to  hear  you  even  in  his  dreams.' 
a  heavily-galloping  hoof  Smote  on  her  e. 


Sea  breams  260 

L^icretius  147 

Princess  i  57 

134 

a  113 

it)  51 

65 

265 

v\5 

241 

vi  280 

Ode  on  Well.  267 

High.  Pantheism  17 

In  Mem.  xxxv  8 

„  xxxviii  12 

„  Ivii  9 

„    Ixxxv  18 

„  Ixxxvii  30 

„  Ixxxix  22 

„     Con.  53 

Maud  / 1  42 

„        a;  22 

42 

51 

„      XX  30 

„   //i35 

„       a  47 

Com.  of  Arthur  2,2^ 

Gareth  and  Z.  19 

312 

322 

Marr.  of  Geraint  450 

Geraint  and  E.  113 

193 

429 

448 


hiss'd  each  at  other's  e  What  shall  not  be  recorded —  „  634 
tho'  mine  own  e's  heard  you  yestermorn —  „  740 
in  the  King's  own  e  Speak  what  has  chanced ;  „  808 
Then  hand  at  e,  and  hearkening  from  what  side  Balin  and  Balan  415 
Woods  have  tongues,  As  walls  have  e's :  „  531 
And  sowing  one  ill  hint  from  e  to  e.  Merlin  and  V.  143 
That  glorious  roundel  echoing  in  our  e's,  „  426 
All  e's  were  prick'd  at  once,  Lancelot  and  E.  724 
Her  father's  latest  word  humm'd  in  her  e,  „  780 
till  the  e  Wearias  to  hear  it,  „  897 
the  world,  the  world,  All  e  and  eye ;  „  941 
a  stupid  heart  To  interpret  e  and  eye,  „  942 
And  took  both  e  and  eye ;  Holy  Grail  383 
by  mine  eyes  and  by  mine  e's  I  swear,  „  864 
From  e  to  e  with  dogwhip-weals,  Last  Tournament  58 
'  A  sound  is  in  his  e's '  ?  „  116 
trumpet  sounded  as  in  a  dream  To  e's  but  half- 
awaked.  „  152 
one  of  thy  long  asses'  e's,  „  273 
Modred  still  in  green,  all  e  and  eye,  Guinevere  24 
To  vex  an  e  too  sad  to  listen  to  me,  „  315 
and  past  his  e  Went  shrilling,  '  Hollow,  Pass,  of  Arthur  32 
murmuring  at  his  e,  '  Quick,  Quick !  „  347 
I  come,  great  Mistress  of  the  e  and  eye :  Lover's  Tale  i  22 
drop  by  drop,  upon  my  e  Fell ;  „            576 


Ear  (oi^an  of  hearing)  (continued)    And  thro'  the  hasty 

notice  of  the  e  Lover's  Tale  i  615 

address'd  More  to  the  inward  than  the  outward  e,  „            721 

marriage-bells,  echoing  in  e  and  heart — •  „            iv  3 

A  crueller  reason  than  a  crazy  e,  „              32 

Flying  by  each  fine  e,  an  Eastern  gauze  „            291 

we  shook  'em  off  as  a  dog  that  shakes  his  e's  The  Revenge  54 

But  Charlie  'e  sets  back  'is  e's.  Village  Wife  67 

pibroch  of  Europe  is  ringing  again  in  our  e's !  Def.  of  Lucknow  97 

lyre  Is  ever  sounding  in  heroic  e's  Heroic  hymns,  Tiresias  181 

Nor  lend  an  e  to  random  cries.  Politics  7 

at  his  e  he  heard  a  whisper  '  Rome  '  St.  Telemachus  26 

But  Death  had  e's  and  eyes;  Akbar's  Bream  187 
The  toll  of  funeral  in  an  Angel  e                           D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  10 
Ear  (as  of  com)     Bows  all  its  e's  before  the  roaring  East ;        Princess  i  237 

And  pluck'd  the  ripen'd  e's,  „           H  2 

For  now  is  love  mature  in  e.'  In  Mem.  Ixxxi  4 

some  scatter'd  e's.  Some  e's  for  Christ  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  12 

'Ear  (hear)     Dosn't  thou  'e  my  'erse's  legs,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  1 

that's  what  I  'e's  'em  saily.  „                2 

woii  then  woii — let  ma  'e  mys€n  speiik.  „                8 

that's  what  I  'e's  'im  saiiy —  „              59 

But  I  'e's  es  'e'd  gie  fur  a  howry  owd  book  Village  Wife  45 

An'  I  liked  to  'e  it  I  did.  Spinster's  S's  18 

ye  knawed  it  wur  pleasant  to  'e,  „            21 

so  es  all  that  I  'e's  be  true ;  „            56 

wait  till  tha  'e's  it  be  strikin'  the  hour,  Owd  Roa  18 

thaw  I  didn't  hailfe  think  as  'e'd  'e,  „        91 

an'  I  'e's  'em  yit ;  „      106 
An'  Parson  'e  'e's  on  it  all.                                      Church-warden,  etc.  37 

'EJUrd  (heard)     An  'e  'um  a  bummin'  awaiiy  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  18 
Theer  wur  a  boggle  in  it,  I  often  'e  'um  mysen ; 
Moiist  like  a  butter-bump,  fur  I  'e  'um  about 

an'  about,  „               30 

we  'e  'im  a-mountin'  oop  'igher  an'  'igher,  North.  Cobbler  47 

An'  nawbody  'e  on  'er  sin.  Village  Wife  98 

Ye  niver  'e  Steevie  sweiir                            ^  Spinster's  S's.  60 

I  'e  'er  a  maiikin'  'er  moan,  „           115 

we  couldn't  ha'  'e  tha  call,  Owd  Rod  49 

tummled  up  stairs,  fur  I  'e  'im,  „        63 

as  soon  as  'e  'e  'is  naiime,  „        93 

An'  I  *e  the  bricks  an'  the  baulks  „      109 
Earl    (See  also  Yerl)    0  the  E  was  fair  to  see ! 

(repeat)  The  Sisters  6, 12, 18,  24,  30,  36 

The  daughter  of  a  hundred  E's,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  7 

that  grim  E,  who  ruled  In  Coventry :  Godiva  12 

eagles  of  her  belt,  The  grim  E's  gift ;  „      44 

'  The  old  E's  daughter  died  at  my  breast ;  Lady  Clare  25 

Wherein  were  bandit  e's,  and  caitiff  knights,  Marr.  of  Geraint  35 

There  musing  sat  the  hoary-headed  E,  „            295 

Then  sigh'd  and  smiled  the  hoary-headed  E,  „            307 

But  none  spake  word  except  the  hoary  E :  „            369 

while  the  Prince  and  E  Yet  spoke  together,  „            384 
Then  suddenly  addrest  the  hoary  E :  '  Fair  Host 

and  E,  I  pray  your  courtesy ;  „            402 

So  spake  the  kindly-hearted  E,  „            514 

'  E,  entreat  her  by  my  love,  „            760 

fetch  Fresh  victual  for  these  mowers  of  our  E ;  Geraint  and  E.  225 

And  into  no  E's  palace  will  I  go.  „             235 

And  feast  with  these  in  honour  of  their  E ;  „             287 

'  E,  if  you  love  me  as  in  former  years,  „             355 

bow'd  the  all-amorous  E,  „             360 

thought  she  heard  the  wild  E  at  the  door,  „             381 

To  the  waste  earldom  of  another  e,  „             438 

Fled  all  the  boon  companions  of  the  E,  „              477 

Rode  on  a  mission  to  the  bandit  E ;  „              527 

And  their  own  E,  and  their  own  souls,  „             577 

the  huge  E  cried  out  upon  her  talk,  „             651 

Then  strode  the  brute  E  up  and  down  his  hall,  „             712 

I  knew  this  E,  when  I  myself  Was  half  a  bandit  „              794 

the  huge  E  lay  slain  within  his  hall.  „             806 

King,  duke,  e,  Count,  baron —  Lancelot  and  E.  464 
Athelstan  King,  Lord  among  E's,                        Batt.  of  Brunanburh  2 

Seven  strong  E's  of  the  army  of  Anlaf  „               53 

E's  that  were  lured  by  the  Hunger  „             123 


Earldom 


168 


Earth 


Earldom    From  mine  own  e  foully  ousted  me ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  459 

Thou  shalt  give  back  their  e  to  thy  kin.  „              585 

'  This  noble  prince  who  won  our  e  back,  „              619 

Because  we  have  our  e  back  again.  „              701 

To  the  waste  e  of  another  earl,  Geraint  and  E,  438 

ye  shall  share  my  e  with  me,  girl,  „              626 

Earlier    (See  also  Season-earlier)    I  will  turn  that  e 

page.  Locksley  Hall  107 

Break,  happy  land,  into  e  flowers !  W.  to  Alexandra  10 

But  that  was  in  her  e  maidenhood,  Holy  Grail  73 

Earliest     Because  they  are  the  e  of  the  year).  Ode  to  Memory  27 

The  e  pipe  of  half-awaken'd  birds  Princess  iv  50 

like  a  guilty  thing  I  creep  At  e  morning  to  the  door.  In  Mem.  vii  8 

With  one  that  was  his  e  mate ;  „    Ixiv  24 

The  roofs,  that  heard  our  e  cry,  „        cii  3 

she  placed  where  morning's  e  ray  Might  strike  it,  Lancelot  and  E.  5 

So  what  was  e  mine  in  e  life.  Lover's  Tale  i  247 

nor  tell  Of  this  our  e,  our  closest-drawn,  „             278 

with  e  violets  And  lavish  carol  of  clear- throated  larks  „             282 


first  gray  streak  of  e  summer-dawn, 
A  soul  that,  watch'd  from  e  youth. 


Ancient  Sage  220 
To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  25 


Early    {See  also  Rathe)    gaze  On  the  prime  labour 

of  thine  e  days :  Ode  to  Memory  94 

Make  thy  grass  hoar  with  e  rime.  Two  Voices  66 

love  dispell'd  the  fear  That  I  should  die  an  e  death :  MiUer's  D.  90 

His  e  rage  Had  force  to  make  me  rhyme  in  youth,  „        192 

Whole  weeks  and  months,  and  e  and  late,  The  Sisters  10 

In  the  e  e  morning  the  summer  svm  'ill  shine.  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  22 
And  once  I  ask'd  him  of  his  e  life,  Edwin  Morris  23 

leave  me  here  a  little,  while  as  yet  'tis  e  mom :  Locksley  Hall  1 

Faint  as  a  figure  seen  in  e  dawn  Enoch  Arden  357 

mate  had  seen  at  e  dawn  Across  a  break  „  631 

a  rough  piece  Of  e  rigid  colour,  Aylmer's  Fidd  281 

Some  pleasure  from  thine  e  years.  In  Mem.  iv  10 

e  light  Shall  glimmer  on  the  dewy  decks.  „        tar  11 

Her  e  Heaven,  her  happy  views ;  „  xxxiii  6 

to  him  she  sings  Of  e  faith  and  plighted  vows ;  „   xcvii  30 

A  light-blue  lane  of  e  dawn.  And  think  of  e  days  and  thee,     „      cxix  7 
Half  in  dreams  I  sorrow  after  The  delight  of  e  skies ;        Maud  II  iv  25 


Enid,  my  e  and  my  only  love, 

soul  twines  and  mingles  with  the  growths  Of 
vigorous  e  days, 

I  was  then  in  e  boyhood,  Edith  but  a  child 
of  six — 

When  over  the  valley.  In  e  summers. 
Early-silvering    Thus  over  Enoch's  e-s  head 
Earn    {See  also  Addle)    E  well  the  thrifty  months, 

lease  Of  life,  shalt  e  no  more ; 

metaphysics !  read  and  e  our  prize, 

popular  name  such  manhood  e's, 


Geraint  and  E.  307 

Lover's  Tale  i  133 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  258 

Merlin,  and  the  G.  18 

Enoch  Arden  622 

Love  thou  thy  land  95 

WiU  Water.  244 

Princess  Hi  300 

Merlin  and  V.  787 

child  Should  e  from  both  the  praise  of  heroism,    Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  251 


Eam'd    Thus  e  a  scanty  living  for  himself : 
Has  e  himself  the  name  of  sparrow-hawk. 
'  Have  I  not  e  my  cake  in  baking  of  it  ? 

Earnest  (adj.)    {See  also  Too-earnest)    all,  they  said, 
as  e  as  the  close  ? 
her  full  and  e  eye  Over  her  snow-cold  breast 
dwell  One  e,  e  moment  upon  mine, 

Earnest  (seriousness)    words  were  half  in  e,  half  in  jest,) 
take  it — e  wed  with  sport, 
jest  and  e  working  sicle  by  side. 
By  these  in  e  those  in  mockery  call'd 

Earnest  (pledge)     e  of  the  things  that  they  shall  do : 
Are  e  tliat  ho  loves  her  yet, 
blood  Hath  e  in  it  of  far  springs  to  be. 

Earning    save  all  e's  to  tlie  uttermost 

Ear-stonning    e-s  hail  of  Arfis  crash  Along  the  sounding 

walls,'  Tiresias  96 

Earth    O  you  that  hold  A  nobler  office  upon  e  Than  arms,         To  the  Queen  2 
E  Ls  dry  to  the  centre.  Nothing  will  Die  20 

Tlie  old  e  Had  a  birth,  AU  Things  will  Die  37 

And  the  old  e  must  die.  „  41 

in  her  first  sleep  c  breathes  stilly:  Leonine  Eleg.  7 

And  Thou  and  peace  to  e  were  bom.  Supp.  Confessions  26 

whene'er  E  goes  to  e,  with  grief,  „  38 


Enoch  Arden  818 
Marr.  of  Geraint  492 
Gareth  and  L.  575 

Princess,  Con.  21 

Qinone  141 

Love  and  Duty  37 

Gardener's  D.  23 

Day-Dm.,  Ep.  11 

Princess  iv  563 

Last  Tournament  135 

Locksley  Hall  118 

In  Mem.  xcvii  15 

Merlin  and  V.  557 

Enoch  Arden  86 


Earth  (continued)    Hating  to  wander  out  on  e, 
To  the  e — until  the  ice  would  melt 
Breathed  low  around  the  rolling  e 
star  The  black  e  with  brilliance  rare, 
sure  she  deem'd  no  mist  of  e  could  dull 
Over  the  dark  dewy  e  forlorn. 
Over  its  grave  i'  the  e  so  chilly ;  (repeat) 
And  said  the  e  was  beautiful, 
spirit  of  man,  Making  e  wonder, 
It  would  shrink  to  the  e  if  you  came  in. 
The  house  was  builded  of  the  e, 
Adeline,  Scarce  of  e  nor  all  divine, 
The  choicest  wealth  of  all  the  e. 
But  breathe  it  into  e  and  close  it  up 
What  is  there  in  the  great  sphere  of  the  e, 
tme.  To  what  is  loveliest  upon  e.' 
Dissolved  the  riddle  of  the  e. 
To  that  last  nothing  under  e !  * 
Have  I  not  found  a  happy  e  ? 
Hear  me,  O  E,  hear  me,  O  Hills, 

0  happy  e,  how  canst  thou  bear  my  weight  ? 
There  are  enough  unhappy  on  this  e. 
All  e  and  air  seem  only  burning  fire.' 
common  clay  ta'en  from  the  common  e       To  ■ 
Lord  of  the  visible  e, 

oft  the  riddle  of  the  painful  e  Flash'd  thro'  her 
mouldering  with  the  dull  e's  mouldering  sod. 
Was  never  bom  into  the  e. 
note.  Should  thus  be  lost  for  ever  from  the  e, 
round  e  is  every  way  Bound  by  gold  chains 
Felt  e  as  air  beneath  me. 
Unfit  for  e,  imfit  for  heaven. 
Heaven,  and  E,  and  Time  are  choked, 
men  on  e  House  in  the  shade  of  comfortable  roofs. 
The  fat  e  feed  thy  branchy  root, 
dark  E  follows  wheel'd  in  her  ellipse ; 
strength  which  in  old  days  Moved  e  and  heaven ; 
In  days  far-off,  on  that  dark  e, 

1  e  in  e  forget  these  empty  courts, 
And  the  kindly  e  shall  slumber, 
perish  one  by  one.  Than  that  e  should  stand  at  gaze 
one  low  churl,  compact  of  thankless  e. 
For  we  are  Ancients  of  the  e. 
This  e  is  rich  in  man  and  maid ; 
This  whole  wise  e  of  light  and  shade  Comes  out 
Like  all  good  things  on  e ! 
That  are  the  flower  of  the  e  ? ' 
Bore  to  e  her  body,  drest  In  the  dress 
Move  eastward,  happy  e,  and  leave 
'  Cold  altar.  Heaven  and  e  shall  meet 
No  public  life  was  his  on  e, 
he  dug  His  fingers  into  the  wet  e, 
this,  a  milky-way  on  e,  Like  visions 
one  kiss  Was  Leolin's  one  strong  rival  upon  e ; 
Never  since  our  bad  e  became  one  sea, 
e  Lightens  from  her  own  central  Hell — ■ 
All  over  earthy,  like  a  piece  of  e, 
blood  by  Sylla  shed  Came  driving  rainlike  down  again  on  e,  Lucretius  48 
never  yet  on  e  Could  dead  flesh  creep,  „  130 
two  sphere  lamps  blazon'd  like  Heaven  and  E  Princess  i  223 
close  upon  the  Sun,  Than  our  man's  e ;  „  «  37 
broad  and  bounteous  E  Should  bear  a  double  growth  „  179 
there  is  nothing  upon  e  More  miserable  „  Hi  259 
Leapt  from  the  dewy  shoulders  of  the  E,  „  «  43 
sweet  influences  Of  e  and  heaven  ?  „  192 
fixt  As  are  the  roots  of  e  and  base  of  all ;  „  446 
Part  roll'd  on  the  e  and  rose  again  „  497 
twists  the  grain  with  such  a  roar  that  E  Reels,  „  528 
she  set  the  child  on  the  e;  »  ^.  ^^^ 
lies  the  E  all  Danaii  to  the  stars,  „  vii  182 
black  e  yawns :  the  mortal  disappears ;                           Ode  on  Well.  269 


Supp.  Confessions  57 

81 

The  Winds,  etc.  3 

Ode  to  Memory  20 

„  38 

„  69 

A  spirit  haunts  10,  22 

A  Character  12 

The  Poet  52 

Poet's  Mind  37 

Deserted  House  15 

Adeline  3 

Eleanor  e  19 

Wan  Sculptor  12 

///  were  loved  2 

Mariana  in  the  S.  64 

Two  Voices  170 

333 

MtUer's  D.  25 

(Enone  36 

„    237 

„    239 

„    268 

— ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  n 

Palace  of  Art  119 

213 

261 

To  J.  S.  32 

M.  d' Arthur  90 

„        254 

Gardener's  D.  212 

St.  S.  Stylites  3 

104 

106 

Talking  Oak  273 

Golden  Year  24 

Ulysses  67 

Tithonus  48 

,,       75 

Locksley  Hall  130 

„  180 

Godiva  66 

Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  19 

Will  Water.  65 

67 

202 

Lady  Clare  68 

L.  of  Burleigh  98 

Move  Eastward  1 

The  Letters  7 

You  might  have  won  23 

Enoch  Arden  780 

Aylmer's  Field  160 

557 

635 

760 

Sea  Dreams  99 


wide  hall  with  e's  invention  stored. 
And  gath<;ring  all  the  fruits  of  e 
The  gloom  that  saddens  Heaven  and  E, 
I  cast  to  e  a  seed. 


Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  2 

41 

The  Daisy  102 

The  Flower  2 


Earth 


169 


Earth 


Earth  (continued)    To  a  sweet  little  Eden  on  e  that  I  know,  The  Islet  14 

E,  these  solid  stars,  this  weight  of  body  High.  Pantheism  5 

You  have  bitten  into  the  heart  of  the  e,  Window,  Winter  18 

Be  merry  on  e  as  you  never  were  merry  before,  „                 Ay  2 

Light,  so  low  upon  e,  „  Mart.  Morn.  1 

Where  he  in  English  e  is  laid.  In  Mem.  xviii  2 

This  e  had  been  the  Paradise  It  never  look'd  „          xxiv  6 

A  rainy  cloud  possess'd  the  e,  „           xxx  3 

Else  e  is  darkness  at  the  core,  „         xxxiv  3 

The  baby  new  to  e  and  sky,  „             xlvl 

The  silent  snow  possess'd  the  e,  „       Ixxviii  3 

No  lower  life  that  e's  embrace  May  breed  „        Ixxxii  3 

he  bare  The  use  of  virtue  out  of  e :  „                 10 

To  wander  on  a  darken'd  e,  „       Ixxxv  31 

To  myriads  on  the  genial  e,  „         xci.v  14 

A  lever  to  uplift  the  e  And  roll  it  „        cxiii  15 

As  dying  Nature's  e  and  lime ;  „         cxviii  4 

They  say.  The  soUd  e  whereon  we  tread  „                   8 

0  e,  what  changes  hast  thou  seen !  „        cxxiii  2 

yet  I  keep  Within  his  court  on  e,  „         cxxvi  7 

The  brute  e  lightens  to  the  sky,  „      cxxvii  15 

under  whose  command  Is  E  and  E's,  „      Con.  131 

eft  was  of  old  the  Lord  and  Master  of  E,  Maud  I  iv  31 

Put  down  the  passions  that  make  e  Hell !  „         a;  46 

This  lump  of  e  has  left  his  estate  „        xvi  1 

Has  our  whole  e  gone  nearer  to  the  glow  „    xviii  78 

Were  it  e  in  an  earthy  bed ;  „    xxii  70 

dawn  of  Eden  bright  over  e  and  sky,  „      //  i  8 

kisses  sweeter  sweeter  Than  anything  on  e.  „        iv  10 

she  was  fairest  of  all  flesh  on  e.  Com.  of  Arthur  3 

Eeddening  the  sun  with  smoke  and  e  with  blood,  „            37 

0  e  that  soundest  hollow  imder  me,  „  84 
the  bounds  of  heaven  and  e  were  lost —  „  372 
and  the  soUd  e  became  As  nothing,  „  442 
And  loveUest  of  all  women  upon  e.  Mart,  of  Geraint  21 
better  were  I  laid  in  the  dark  e,  „              97 

1  will  track  this  vermin  to  their  e's :  „  217 
'  I  have  track'd  him  to  his  e.'  „  253 
if  he  die,  why  e  has  e  enough  To  hide  him.  Geraint  and  E.  554 
draws  in  the  wither'd  leaf  And  makes  it  e,  „  634 
Sir  Lancelot  with  his  eyes  on  e,  Balin  and  Balan  253 
Leapt  in  a  semicircle,  and  Ut  on  e ;  „  414 
beat  the  cross  to  e,  and  break  the  King  „  458 
Tore  from  the  branch,  and  cast  on  e,  „  539 
O  Merlin,  may  this  e,  if  ever  I,  Merlin  and  V.  345 
May  this  hard  e  cleave  to  the  Nadir  hell  „  349 
men  at  most  differ  as  Heaven  and  e,  „  814 
spikes  and  splinters  of  the  wood  The  dark  e  „  938 
who  loves  me  must  have  a  touch  of  e ;  Lancelot  and  E.  133 
Might  wear  as  fair  a  jewel  as  is  on  e,  „  240 
hard  e  shake,  and  a  low  thunder  of  arms.  „  460 
He  bore  a  knight  of  old  repute  to  the  e,  „  492 
An  armlet  for  the  roundest  arm  on  e,  „  1183 
for  all  her  shining  hair  Was  smear'd  with  e,  Holy  Grail  210 
heaven  appear'd  so  blue,  nor  e  so  green,  „  365 
Which  never  eyes  on  e  again  shall  see.  „  532 
Cared  not  for  her,  nor  anything  upon  e.'  „  612 
But  live  like  an  old  badger  in  his  e,  With  e  about 

him  everywhere,  „         629 

And  felt  the  boat  shock  e,  „        812 

Until  this  e  he  walks  on  seems  not  e,  „        912 

At  random  looking  over  the  brown  e  Pelleas  and  E.  32 

One  rose,  a  rose  that  gladden'd  e  and  sky,  „          402 

the  one  true  knight  on  e.  And  only  lover ;  „          494 

Clung  to  the  dead  e,  and  the  land  was  still.  Guinevere  8 

seem'd  the  heavens  upbreaking  thro'  the  e,  „      391 

note,  Should  thus  be  lost  for  ever  from  the  e,  Pass,  of  Arthur  258 

round  e  is  every  way  Boimd  by  gold  chains  „            422 

will  not  pass,  till  e  And  heaven  pass  too,  Lover's  Tale  i  71 

My  inward  sap,  the  hold  I  have  on  e,  „          166 

pillars  which  from  e  uphold  Our  childhood,  „          220 

High  over  all  the  azure-circled  e,  „          390 

and  the  e  They  fell  on  became  hallow'd  evermore.  „          439 

Scarce  housed  within  the  circle  of  this  E,  „          479 

Sooner  E  Might  go  round  Heaven,  „          481 


Earth  (continued)    all  the  separate  Edens  of  this  e,  Lover's  Tale  551 

had  the  e  beneath  me  yawning  cloven  „          602 

all  from  these  to  where  she  touch'd  on  e,  „      iv  167 

loved  His  master  more  than  all  on  e  beside.  „          257 

Of  all  things  upon  e  the  dearest  to  me.'  „  319 
Crazy  with  laughter  and  babble  and  e's  new  wine,  To  A.  Tennyson  2 
Turning  my  way,  the  loveliest  face  on  e.                Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  87 

sent  Our  Edith  thro'  the  glories  of  the  e,  „  225 
gleam  from  our  poor  e  May  touch  thee,            Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  18 

Twice  do  we  hurl  them  to  e  from  the  ladders  Def.  of  Lucknow  58 

chains  For  him  who  gave  a  new  heaven,  a  new  e,  Columbus  20 

suck  in  with  his  milk  hereafter — e  A  sphere.  „        38 

a  tent  Spread  over  e,  and  so  this  e  was  flat :  „        48 

half-assured  this  e  might  be  a  sphere.  „  60 
Spain  once  the  most  chivalric  race  on  e,  Spain  then 

the  mightiest,  wealthiest  realm  on  e,  „      204 

boasted  he  sprang  from  the  oldest  race  upon  e.  V.  of  Maeldune  4 
her  dark  orb  Touch'd  with  e's  light—  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  10 
Glode  over  e  till  the  glorious  creature                   Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  29 

One  night  when  e  was  winter-black.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  21 

Two  voices  heard  on  e  no  more ;  „              41 

clearer  day  Than  our  poor  twilight  dawn  on  e —  Tiresias  206 

My  close  of  e's  experience  May  prove  as  peaceful  „       216 

without  any  delight  In  anything  here  upon  e  ?  Despair  8 

no  soul  on  the  e  below,  „      19 

own  selves  on  an  e  that  bore  not  a  flower;  „      44 

We  never  had  found  Him  on  e,  this  e  is  a  fatherless  Hell —  „      57 

left  in  the  rocks  of  an  e  that  is  dead  ?  „      86 

And  e  as  fair  in  hue!  Ancient  Sage  24 

blue  of  sky  and  sea,  the  green  of  e,  „          41 

'  And  since — ^from  when  this  e  began —  „          53 

stir  the  sleeping  e,  and  wake  The  bloom  „          93 

Who  clings  to  e,  and  once  would  dare  Hell-heat  „        115 

In  vain  you  tell  mo  '  J5  is  fair '  „        169 

And  we,  the  poor  e's  dying  race,  „        178 

e's  dark  forehead  flings  athwart  the  heavens  „        200 

The  lark  has  past  from  e  to  Heaven  The  Flight  62 
gone  as  all  on  e  will  go.                                             Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  46 

E  at  last  a  warless  world,  „            165 

for  is  not  E  as  yet  so  young  ? —  „            166 

Can  it,  till  this  outworn  e  be  dead  „            174 

smiling  downward  at  this  earthlier  e  of  ours,  „            183 

Is  there  evil  but  on  e  ?  „            197 
Many  an  Mon  moulded  e  before  her  highest, 
man,  was  bom.  Many  an  iEon  too  may 

Eass  when  e  is  manless  and  forlorn,  E  so 

uge,  and  yet  so  bounded —  „            205 

e  will  be  Something  other  than  the  widest  „            231 

E  may  reach  her  earthly-worst,  „            233 

E  would  never  touch  her  worst,  „            270 

111  To  waste  this  e  began —  Epilogue  23 

And  so  does  E ;  for  Homer's  fame,  „        58 

E  passes,  all  is  lost  In  what  they  prophesy,  „        64 

unlaborious  e  and  oarless  sea ;  To  Virgil  20 

They  call'd  her  '  Keverence  '  here  upon  e.  Dead  Prophet  27 

she  swept  The  dust  of  e  from  her  knee.  „            32 

angel  eyes  In  e's  recurring  Paradise.  Helen's  Tower  12 

This  e  has  never  home  a  nobler  man.  Epit.  On  Gordon  4 

His  isle,  the  mightiest  Ocean-power  on  e,  The  Fleet  6 

cry  that  rang  thro'  Hades,  E,  and  Heaven !  Demeter  and  P.  33 

one  black  blur  of  e  Left  by  that  closing  chasm,  „            37 

glancing  from  his  height  On  e  a  fruitless  fallow,  „           118 

in  the  harvest  hymns  of  E  The  worship  „          148 

as  this  poor  e's  pale  history  runs, —  Fastness  3 

and  all  these  old  revolutions  of  e  ;  „      29 

Stranger  than  e  has  ever  seen ;  The  Bing  38 

An  ever  lessening  e — and  she  perhaps,  „       46 

Gleam'tZ  for  a  moment  in  her  own  on  e.  „     297 

lost  the  moment  of  their  past  on  e,  „     464 

that  poor  link  With  e  is  broken,  „     476 

E  and  Hell  will  brand  your  name.  Forlorn  51 

Would  E  tho'  hid  in  cloud  not  be  follow'd  Happy  97 

name  that  e  will  not  forget  Till  e  To  Ulysses  27 

She  comes,  and  E  is  glad  To  roll  her  North  Prog,  of  Spring  48 

lured  me  from  the  household  fire  on  e,  Romney's  R.  40 


Earth 


170 


East 


Eontney's  R.  128 

Parnassus  7 

Far-far-away  2 

„        14 

The  Play  1 

Death  of  (Enone  9 

St.  Telemachus  18 

Akhar's  Bream  84 

„  96 

105 

141 

The  Dreamer  2 

3 

17 

25 

Poets  and  Critics  3 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  8 

13 

Merlin  and  V.  81 

Demeter  and  P.  49 

OcZe  to  Memory  61 

Demeter  and  P.  102 

128 

Aylmer's  Field  750 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  18 

183 

Xofe  a«<Z  Z)Miy  1 

iiS^.  Agnes'  Eve  15 

19 

Aylmer's  Field  784 

"0(Ze  on  IFeZZ.  279 

7w  Mem.  xxxvii  13 

„  arZiw  11 


Earth  {continued)    throbs  Thro'  e,  and  all  her  graves,^ 
Sounding  for  ever  and  ever  thro'  E 
e's  green  stole  into  heaven's  own  hue, 
all  the  bounds  of  e,  Far-far-away  ? 
Act  first,  this  E,  a  stage  so  gloom'd 
In  silence  wept  upon  the  flowerless  e. 
•  Is  e  On  fire  to  the  West  ? 
Yea,  Alia  here  on  e,  who  caught  and  held 
mists  of  e  Fade  in  the  noon  of  heaven, 
Let  the  Sun,  Who  heats  our  e  to  yield  us  grain 
draw  The  crowd  from  wallowing  in  the  mire  of  e, 
'  The  meek  shall  inherit  the  e ' 
dream'd  that  a  Voice  of  the  E  went  wailingly  past 
Moaning  your  losses,  0  E, 
The  Eeign  of  the  Meek  upon  e, 
Minds  on  this  round  e  of  ours 
For  if  this  e  be  ruled  by  Perfect  Love, 
His  shadow  darkens  e : 
Earth-angel    0  Heaven's  own  white  E-a, 
Earth-baldness    e-b  clothes  itself  afresh, 
Earthen     Drawing  into  his  narrow  e  urn, 
Earth-Goddess    I,  E-  G,  cursed  the  Gods  of  Heaven. 

I,  E-G,  am  but  ill-content  With  them, 
Earthlier    myself  Am  lonelier,  darker,  e  for  my  loss 
your  modem  amourist  is  of  easier,  e  make, 
smiling  downward  at  this  e  earth  of  ours. 
Earthly    Of  love  that  never  found  his  e  close, 
As  this  pale  taper's  e  spark, 
So  in  mine  e  house  I  am. 
May  not  that  e  chastisement  suffice  ? 
Lay  your  e  fancies  down, 
For  i  am  but  an  e  Muse, 
May  some  dim  touch  of  e  things  Surprise  thee 
the  song  of  woe  Is  after  all  an  e  song :  „  Ivii  2 

The  head  hath  miss'd  an  e  wreath :  „  Ixxiii  6 

Till  slowly  worn  her  e  robe,  „        Ixxxiv  33 

For  she  is  e  of  the  mind,  „  cxiv  21 

he  defileth  heavenly  things  With  e  uses  ' —  Balin  and  Balan  422 

was  it  e  passion  crost  ?  '  Holy  Grail  29 

e  heats  that  spring  and  sparkle  out  „        33 

how  should  E  measure  mete  The  Heavenly- 
unmeasured  Lover's  Tale  i  473 
divorce  thee  not  From  e  love  and  life —             Bed.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  4 
happier  voyage  now  Toward  no  e  pole.                         Sir  J.  Franklin  4 
Trusting  no  longer  that  e  flower  would  be  heavenly 

fruit —  Despair  35 

filial  eyes  Have  seen  the  loneliness  of  e  thrones,  Prin.  Beatrice  14 

Miriam,  breaks  her  latest  e  link  With  me  to-day.  The  Ring  47 

Earthly-best    or  if  she  gain  her  e-b,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  233 

Earthly-heavenliest    Most  loveliest,  e-h  harmony  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  279 

Earthly-wise    blessed  Lord,  I  speak  too  e,  Holy  Grail  627 

Earthly-worst    Earth  may  reach  her  e-w,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  233 

Earth-Mother    child  Of  thee,  the  great  E-M,  Demeter  and  P.  97 

reap  with  me,  E-m,  in  the  harvest  hymns  „  148 

Earth-narrow    whether  this  e-n  life  Be  yet  but  yolk,  Ancient  Sage  129 

Earthquake    {See  also  World's-earthquake)    Blight 

and  famine,  plague  and  e,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  115 

flood,  fire,  e,  thunder,  wrought  Such  waste  Aylmer's  Field  639 

wholly  out  of  sight,  and  sink  Past  e —  Lucretius  153 

Shatter'd  into  one  e  in  one  day  „        251 

like  a  bell  ToU'd  by  an  e  in  a  trembling  tower,  Princess  vi  332 

crack  of  e  shivering  to  your  base  SpUt  you,  Pelleas  and  E.  465 

An  e,  my  loud  heart-beats,  Lover's  Tale  ii  193 

a  wave  like  the  wave  that  is  raised  by  an  e  grew,  The  Revenge  115 

another  wild  e  out-tore  Clean  from  our  lines  Def.  of  Lti,cknow  61 

an  e  always  moved  in  the  hollows  under  the  ^Jells,    V.  of  Maeldune  107 

Shrine-shattering  e,  fire,  flood,  thunderbolt,  Tiresias  61 

Gone  Uke  fires  and  floods  and  e's  Locksley  E.,  Sixty  40 

Thunder,  or  the  rending  e,  or  the  famine.  Faith  4 

Earthquake-cloven    yawning  of  an  e-c  chasm.  Lover's  Tale  i  377 

Earth-shock'd    Above  some  fair  metropolis,  e-s, —  „  ii  62 

Earth-sweeping    upbare  A  broad  e-s  pall  of  whitest  lawn  „  78 

Earthy    Were  it  earth  in  an  e  bed ;  Maud  I  xxii  70 

All  over  e,  like  a  piece  of  earth,  Sea  Dreams  99 

Earwig    See  BatUe-Twig 


Ease    Two  lives  bound  fast  in  one  with  golden  e ; 

'  Why,  if  man  rot  in  dreamless  e, 

Alice ,  you  were  ill  at  e ; 

Wherein  at  e  for  aye  to  dwell, 

long  rest  or  death,  dark  death,  or  dreamful  e. 

You  ask  me,  why,  tho'  ill  at  e, 

control  Our  being,  lest  we  rust  in  e. 

Seeing  with  how  great  e  Nature  can  smile. 

With  garrulous  e  and  oily  courtesies 

We  break  our  laws  with  e, 

but  your  Highness  breaks  with  e  The  law 

I  would  set  their  pains  at  e. 

wrought  All  kind  of  service  with  a  noble  e 

Drank  till  he  jested  with  all  e. 

She  lied  with  e ;  but  horror-stricken  he, 

he  let  his  wisdom  go  For  e  of  heart. 

Them  surely  I  can  silence  with  all  e. 

they  lost  themselves.  Yet  with  aU  e, 

And  found  no  e  in  turning  or  in  rest ; 

Who  read  but  on  my  breviary  with  e, 

ruffians  at  their  e  Among  their  harlot-brides. 

But  on  that  day,  not  being  all  at  e, 

And  yet  my  heart  is  ill  at  e, 
Eased     And  e  her  heart  of  madness  .  .  . 
Easeful    wilt  thou  leave  Thine  e  biding  here. 
Easier    With  fuller  profits  lead  an  e  life. 

But  evermore  it  seem'd  an  e  thing 

your  modern  amourist  is  of  e,  earthlier  make. 
East    Till  that  o'ergrown  Barbarian  in  the  E 

And  slowly  rounded  to  the  e 

light  increased  With  freshness  in  the  dawning  e. 

Four  courts  I  made,  E,  West  and  South  and  North, 

Smote  by  the  fresh  beam  of  the  springing  e ; 

dark  E,  Unseen,  is  brightening  to  his  bridal  mom. 

went  To  greet  their  fairer  sisters  of  the  E. 

The  ever-silent  spaces  of  the  E, 

Yet  hold  me  not  for  ever  in  thine  E: 

Across  the  boundless  e  we  drove. 

The  blaze  upon  the  waters  to  the  e ; 

I  to  the  E  And  he  for  Italy — 

darken'd  in  the  west.  And  rosed  in  the  e : 

King  of  the  E  altho'  he  seem. 

Bows  all  its  ears  before  the  roaring  E ; 

Nor  stunted  squaws  of  West  or  E ; 

touch'd  Above  the  darkness  from  their  native  E. 

'  Alas  your  Highness  breathes  full  E,' 

beam  Of  the  E,  that  play'd  upon  them, 

a  feast  Of  wonder,  out  of  West  and  E, 


Circumstance  5 

Two  Voices  280 

Miller's  D.  146 

Palace  of  Art  2 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  53 

You  ask  me,  why  1 

Love  thou  thy  land  42 

Lucretius  174 

Princess  i  164 

„     vi  323 

325 

In  Mem.  Ixiii  8 

Gareth  and  L.  489 

Geraint  and  E.  290 

Balin  and  Balan  525 

Merlin  and  V.  893 

Lancelot  and  E.  109 

442 

901 

Holy  Grail  545 

Last  Tournament  427 

Sister's  (E.  and  E.)  209 

The  Flight  97 

Forlorn  82 

Gareth  and  L.  128 

Enoch  Arden  145 

Geraint  and  E.  108 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  18 

Poland  7 

Mariana  in  the  S.  79 

Two  Voices  405 

Palace  of  Art  21 

M.  d' Arthur  214 

Gardener's  D.  72 

188 

Tiihonus  9 

„       64 

The  Voyage  38 

Enoch  Arden  594 

The  Brook  1 

Sea  Dreams  40 

Lucretius  133 

Princess  i  237 

„      ii  78 

„    Hi  22 

„       231 

„    V  259 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  21 


The  bitter  e,  the  misty  summer  And  gray  metropolis        The  Daisy  103 

voices  go  To  North,  South,  E,  and  West ;  Voice  and  the  P.  14 

Far  in  the  E  Boiidic^a,  standing  loftily  charioted,  Boiidicea  3 

Flown  to  the  e  or  the  west.  Window,  Gone  7 

O  Father,  touch  the  e,  and  light  In  Mem.  xxx  31 

heaved  a  windless  flame  Up  the  deep  E,  „       Ixxii  14 

E  and  West,  without  a  breath,  „         xev  62 

What  lightens  in  the  lucid  e  „           co  24 

Fiercely  flies  The  blast  of  North  and  E,  „           cvii  7 

Blush  from  West  to  E,  Blush  from  E  to  West,  Till 

the  West  is  E,  Maud  I  xvii  21 

breeze  that  streams  to  thy  delicious  E,  „      xviii  16 

there  be  dawn  in  West  and  eve  in  E?  Gareth  and  L.  712 

pale  and  bloodless  e  began  To  quicken  Marr.  of  Geraint  534 

There  lived  a  king  in  the  most  Eastern  E,  Merlin  and  V.  555 

in  her  chamber  up  a  tower  to  the  e  Lancelot  and  E.  3 

star  Led  on  the  gray-hair'd  wisdom  of  the  e ;  Holy  Grail  453 

'  One  night  my  pathway  swerving  e,  „          634 

Let  the  fierce  e  scream  thro'  your  eyelet-holes,  Pelleas  and  E.  469 

water  Moab  saw  Come  round  by  the  E,  Last  Tournament  483 

Smote  by  the  fresh  beam  of  the  springing  e ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  382 
deeds  Of  England,  and  her  banner  in  the  E  ?   Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  21 

Or  Amurath  of  the  E?  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  97 

made  West  E,  and  sail'd  the  Dragon's  mouth,  Colun^bus  25 

our  most  ancient  E  Moriah  with  Jerusalem ;  „        80 

Up  from  the  E  hither  Saxon  and  Angle  Batt.  of  Brunanourh  117 

Who  wert  the  voice  of  England  in  the  E.  Epit.  on  Stratford  4 


East 


171 


Echo 


East  (continued)    clash  The  golden  keys  of  E  and 

West.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  4 

she  lent  The  sceptres  of  her  West,  her  E,  „                 6 

Easterday    For  it  was  past  the  time  of  E.  Gareth  and  L.  186 

Eastern     Below  the  city's  e  towers :  Fatima  9 

captain  of  my  dreams  Ruled  in  the  e  sky.  D.  of  F.  Women  264 

Far  up  the  porch  there  grew  an  E  rose,  Gardener's  D.  123 

Beyond  the  fair  green  field  and  e  sea.  Love  and  Duty  101 

'  There  lived  a  king  in  the  most  E  East,  Merlin  and  V.  555 

an  E  gauze  With  seeds  of  gold —  Lover's  Tale  iv  291 

Who  reads  your  golden  E  lay,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  32 

e  flowers  large,  Some  dropping  low  Arabian  Nights  61 

But  she  was  sharper  than  an  e  wind,  Audley  Court  53 

The  foaming  grape  of  e  France.  In  Mem.,  Con.  80 

climb'd  That  e  tower,  and  entering  barr'd  her  door,    Lancelot  and  E.  15 

at  the  e  end.  Wealthy  with  wandering  lines  Holy  Grail  251 

Eastward     Past  e  from  the  falling  sun.  Balin  and  Balan  320 

singing  in  the  topmost  tower  To  the  e :  Holy  Grail  835 

East-wind    In  tlie  stormy  e-w  straining,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  1 

Easy    (See  also  Easy)     For  it's  e  to  find  a  rhyme. 

(repeat)  Window,  Ay  6,  12 
sleepless  nights  Of  my  long  life  have  made  it 

e  to  me.  Merlin  and  V.  680 
He  will  answer  to  the  purpose,  e  things  to 

understand —  Locksley  Hall  55 

Fast  flow'd  the  current  of  her  e  tears,  Enoch  Arden  865 

Were  no  false  passport  to  that  e  realm,  Aylmer's  Field  183 

I  said  no,  Yet  being  an  e  man,  gave  it :  Princess  i  149 

winning  e  grace,  No  doubt,  for  slight  delay,  „  iv  330 
If  e  patrons  of  their  kin  Have  left  the  last  free  race  Third  of  Feb.  39 
doubted  whether  daughter's  tenderness,  Or 

e  nature,  Marr.  of  Geraint  798 

down  the  highway  moving  on  With  e  laughter  Tiresias  200 

Flowing  with  e  greatness  and  touching  The  Wreck  50 

E95y    an'  a  says  it  e  an'  freeii  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  25 

Lets  them  inter  'eaven  e  es  leaves  their  debts  to 

be  paiiid.  Village  Wife  94 

but  they  wasn't  that  e  to  please,  „          117 

Eat    The  creaking  cords  which  wound  and  e  Supp.  Confessions  36 

princes  over-bold  Have  e  our  substance,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  76 

thou  may'st  warble,  e  and  dwell.  The  Blackbird  4 

we  sat  and  e  And  talk'd  old  matters  over;  Audley  Court  28 

e  wholesome  food.  And  wear  warm  clothes,  St.  S.  Stylites  108 

I  will  not  e  my  heart  alone.  In  Mem.  cviii  3 

'  A  thousand  pips  e  up  your  sparrow-hawk !  Marr.  of  Geraint  274 

I  will  enter,  I  will  e  With  all  the  passion  „               305 

those  That  e  in  Arthur's  hall  at  Camelot.  „              432 

'  Friend,  let  her  e ;  the  damsel  is  so  faint.'  Geraint  and  E.  206 

My  lord,  e  also,  tho'  the  fare  is  coarse,  „              208 

And  rising  on  the  sudden  he  said,  'El  „              614 

it  makes  me  mad  to  see  you  weep.    E\  „              617 

E  and  be  glad,  for  I  account  you  mine.'  „              647 

thrust  the  dish  before  her,  crying, '  E.'  „              655 

'  No,  no,'  said  Enid,  vext,  '  I  will  not  e  „              656 

man  upon  the  bier  arise.  And  e  with  me.'  „              658 

Before  I  well  have  drunken,  scarce  can  e :  „              662 

Not  e  nor  drink  ?    And  wherefore  wail  for  one,  „              674 

E's  scarce  enow  to  keep  his  pulse  abeat ;  Balin  and  Balan  105 

And  one  said  '  E  in  peace !  a  liar  is  he,  „               607 

i           Who  meant  to  e  her  up  in  that  wild  wood  Merlin  and  V.  260 

j           e's  And  uses,  careleas  of  the  rest ;  „             462 

'           After  the  king,  who  e  in  Arthur's  halls.  Lancelot  and  E.  184 

I  knew  For  one  of  those  who  e  in  Arthur's  hall ;  Holy  Grail  24 

but  e  not  thou  with  Mark,  Last  Tournament  532 

Is  it  worth  his  while  to  e,  Voice  spake,  etc.  7 

:  "Eat  (heat)     What's  the  'e  of  this  'illside  to  the  'e  North.  Cobbler  6 
Eaten    (See  also  Temple-eaten,  Worm-eaten)    after  all 

had  e,  then  Geraint,  Marr.  of  Geraint  397 

'  Boy,'  said  he,  '  I  have  e  all,  Geraint  and  E.  217 

when  Earl  Doorm  had  e  all  he  would,  „              609 

And  myself,  I  had  e  but  sparely,  V.  of  Maeldune  69 

Eater    See  Lotos-Eaters 

Eating    E  the  Lotos  day  by  day,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  60 

Until  the  ulcer,  e  thro'  my  skin,  St.  S.  Stylites  67 

and  e  not.  Except  the  spare  chance-gift  „            77 


Eating  (continued)     And  e  hoary  grain  and  pulse  the 

steeds.  Spec,  of  Iliad.  21 

And  a  morbid  e  lichen  fixt  On  a  heart  Maud  I  vi  77 

the  village  boys  Who  love  to  vex  him  e,  Geraint  and  E.  561 

'tis  e  dry  To  dance  without  a  catch.  Last  Tournament  249 

Eavedrops    Then  I  rise,  the  e  fall,  Maud  II  iv  62 

'Eaven  (heaven)     Lets  them  inter  'e  eiisy  es  leiiv&s  Village  Wife  94 


Eaves    (See  also  Bower-eaves,  Moimtain-eaves) 
dropp'd  their  silken  e. 

One,  almost  to  the  martin-haunted  e 

Fly  to  her,  and  fall  upon  her  gilded  e, 

closing  e  of  wearied  eyes  I  sleep  till  dusk 

Who  munnurest  in  the  foliaged  e 

Makes  daggers  at  the  sharpen'd  e. 

With  hands  for  e,  uplooking  and  almost  Waiting 

And  murmur  at  the  low-dropt  e  of  sleep, 

now  from  all  the  dripping  e  Tlie  spear  of  ice 
Ebb  (s)     We  left  the  dying  e  that  faintly  lipp'd 

Have  e  and  flow  conditioning  their  march, 

float  or  fall  in  endless  e  and  flow ; 

I  could  rest,  a  rock  in  e's  and  flows, 

from  my  farthest  lapse,  my  latest  e, 

Sway'd  by  vaster  e's  and  flows 
Ebb  (verb)     brood,  And  e  into  a  former  life. 

According  to  my  humour  e  and  flow. 

When  the  tide  e's  in  sunshine, 
Ebb'd    sat  round  the  wassail-bowl.  Then  half-way  e : 

(possibly  He  flow'd  and  e  uncertain, 

'  O  mine  have  e  away  for  evermore. 
Ebbing     felt  them  slowly  e,  name  and  fame.' 
Ebony    brow  of  pearl  Tress'd  with  redolent  e, 

cups  of  emerald,  there  at  tables  of  e  lay, 
Echo  (s)    So  took  e  with  delight,  (repeat) 

Lull'd  e'es  of  laborious  day  Come  to  you. 

An  e  from  a  measured  strain. 


Her  eyelids 

Talking  Oak  209 

Aylmer's  Field  163 

Princess  iv  94 

In  Mem.  Ixvii  11 

„  cvii  8 

Lover's  Tale  i  311 

a  122 

Prog,  of  Spring  5 

Audley  Court  12 

Golden  Year  30 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  27 

Marr.  of  Geraint  812 

Lover's  Tale  i  90 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  194 

Sonnet  To 2 

D.  of  F.  Women  134: 

Princess  vi  162 

The  Epic  6 

Aylmer's  Field  218 

Merlin  and  V.  439 

437 

Arabian  Nights  138 

Boadicea  61 

The  Owl  a  4 

Margaret  29 

Miller's  D.  m 


To  hear  the  dewy  e'es  calling  From  cave  to  cave    Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  94 
Were  faint  Homeric  e'es,  nothing-worth.  The  Epic  39 

the  great  e  flap  And  buffet  round  the  hills,  Golden  Year  76 

Like  hints  and  e'es  of  the  world  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  7 

Like  e'es  from  beyond  a  hollow,  Aylmer's  Field  298 

crashing  with  long  e'es  thro'  the  land,  „  338 

E  answer'd  in  her  sleep  From  hollow  fields :  Princess,  Pro.  66 

An  e  like  a  ghostly  woodpecker,  „  217 

Blow,  bugle,  blow,  set  the  wild  e's  flying,  (repeat) 
Blow,  bugle ;  answer,  e'es,  dying,  dying,  dying,  (repeat) 
Our  e'es  roll  from  soul  to  soul. 
And  answer,  e'es,  answer,  dying,  dying, 
A  step  Of  lightest  e, 

barrier  like  a  wild  horn  in  a  land  Of  e'es, 
And  now  and  then  an  e  started  up. 
The  proof  and  e  of  all  human  fame, 
E  on  e  Dies  to  the  moon. 
A  hollow  e  of  my  own — 
Like  e'es  in  sepulchral  halls. 
As  e'es  out  of  weaker  times, 
E  there,  whatever  is  ask'd  her, 
an  e  of  something  Read  with  a  boy's  delight, 
a  million  horrible  bellowing  e'es  broke 
And  the  woodland  e  rings ; 
great  Queen,  In  words  whose  e  lasts, 
old  e'es  hidden  in  the  wall  Rang  out 
Like  the  last  e  bom  of  a  great  cry, 
And  mellow'd  e'es  of  the  outer  world — 
melody  That  drowns  the  nearer  e'es. 
e'es  of  the  hollow-banked  brooks  Are  fashion'd 
If  so  be  that  the  e  of  that  name  Ringing 
Whose  e  shall  not  tongue  thy  glorious  doom, 
A  dying  e  from  a  falling  wall ; 
Silent  e'es !  You,  my  Leonard, 
Echo  (verb)     Hear  a  song  that  e's  clearly. 
The  haunts  of  memory  e  not. 
With  sounds  that  e  still. 
'  Hear  how  the  bushes  e ! 
Then  made  his  pleasure  e,  hand  to  hand, 
E  roimd  his  bones  for  evermore. 


iv  5, 17 

6,12 

15 

18 

215 

„  «487 

„  vi  369 

Ode  on  Wdl.  145 

Minnie  and  Winnie  11 

In  Mem.  Hi  11 

„  Iviii  2 

„        Con.  22 

Maud  I  i  4: 

„      vii  9 

„7/i24 

„      iv  38 

Marr.  of  Geraint  782 

Pelleas  and  E.  366 

Pass,  of  Arthur  459 

Lover's  Tale  i  208 

533 

566 

644 

Tiresias  136 

Ancient  Sage  263 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  265 

L.  of  Shallot  i  30 

Two  Voices  369 

D.  of  F.  Women  8 

Gardener's  D.  98 

Aylmer's  Field  257 

Ode  on  Wdl.  12 


Echo 


172 


Edmnnd 


Echo  (verb)  (eontintted)    The  last  wheel  e'es  away.  Maud  I  xxii  26 

the  great  wave  that  e'es  round  the  world ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  420 

rummage  buried  in  the  walls  Might  e,  Balin  and  Balan  417 
Echo'd  (adj.)    hear  her  e  song  Throb  thro'  the  ribbed 

stone ;  Palace  of  Art  175 

Echo'd  (verb)    further  inland,  voices  e — '  Come  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  27 

For  while  our  cloisters  e  frosty  feet,  Princess,  Pro.  183 

And  e  by  old  folk  beside  their  fires  Com.  of  Arthur  417 

second  e  him,  '  Lord,  we  have  heard  from  our 

wise  man  Gareth  and  L.  200 

E  the  walls  ;  a  light  twinkled ;  „         1370 

and  the  forest  e  '  fool.'  Merlin  and  V.  974 

And  changed  itself  and  e  in  her  heart,  Lancelot  and  E.  782 

he  wellnigh  deem'd  His  wish  by  hers  was  e ;  Pelleas  and  E.  121 

That  timorously  and  faintly  e  mine.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  164 

that  underground  thunderclap  e  away,  Def.  of  Lucknow  32 

a  song  Which  often  e  in  me,  Eomney's  R.  85 

All  her  harmonies  e  away? —  To  Master  of  B.  12 

would  not  die,  but  e  on  to  reach  Honorius,  St.  Tdemachus  76 
Echoing    (See  also  Ever-echoing)     the  e  dance  Of  reboant 

whirlwinds,  Suff.  Confessions  96 

with  e  feet  he  threaded  The  secretest  walks  The  Poet  9 

And  the  wave-worn  horns  of  the  e  bank,  Dying  Swan  39 
was  thrown  From  his  loud  fount  upon  the  e 

lea : —  Mine  he  the  strength  4 
shiver  of  dancing  leaves  is  thrown  About  its  e 

chambers  wide,  Maud  I  vi  74 

E  all  night  to  that  sonorous  flow  Palace  of  Art  27 

Illyrian  woodlands,  e  falls  Of  water.  To  E.  L.  1 

e  me  you  cry  '  Our  house  is  left  unto  us  desolate  '  ?   Aylmer's  Field  736 

And  heel  against  the  pavement  e,  Geraint  and  E.  271 

That  glorious  roundel  e  in  our  ears,  Merlin  and  V.  426 

the  father  answer'd,  e  '  highest  ? '  Lancelot  and  E.  1078 

e  yell  with  yell,  they  fired  the  tower,  Last  Tournament  478 

Or  ghostly  footfall  e  on  the  stair.  Guinevere  507 

Echo-like    Then  e-l  our  voices  rang ;  In  Mem.  xxx  13 

Eclipse     Gaiety  without  e  Wearieth  me,  Lilian  20 

As  when  the  sun,  a  crescent  of  e.  Vision  of  Sin  10 

The  shadow  of  His  loss  drew  hke  e,  Ded.  of  Idylls  14 

Ecliptic    Sear'd  by  the  close  e,  Aylm^'s  Field  193 

Ecstasy    So  tranced,  so  rapt  in  ecstasies,  Eleiinore  78 

the  boy  Was  half  beyond  himself  for  e.  Gareth  and  L.  524 

To  holy  virgins  in  their  ecstasies.  Holy  Grail  867 

Eddied    e  into  suns,  that  wheeling  cast  Princess  ii  118 

Eddy  (s)    vexed  eddies  of  its  wayward  brother :  Isahd  33 

There  the  river  e  whirls,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  15 

In  crystal  eddies  glance  and  poise,  Miller's  D.  52 

I  cannot  keep  My  heart  an  e  Princess  vi  322 

The  fancy's  tenderest  e  wreathe.  In  Mem.  xlix  6 

No  doubt  vast  eddies  in  the  flood  „    cxxviii  5 

Charm'd  amid  eddies  of  melodious  airs,  Lover's  TaJe  i  450 

Eddy  (verb)     those  that  e  round  and  round  ?  In  Mem.  liii  12 

Eddying  (part)    (See  also  Multitudinous-eddying)    Were 

flooded  over  with  e  song.  Dying  Swan  42 

I  bubble  into  e  bays.  The  Brook  41 

cold  streamlet  curl'd  Thro'  all  his  e  cov&s ;  In  Mem.  Ixxix  10 

Eddying  (s)     The  e  of  her  garments  caught  from  thee         Ode  to  Memory  31 

Eden    Saw  distant  gates  of  E  gleam.  Two  Voices  212 

Could  keep  me  from  that  E  where  she  dwelt.  Gardener's  D.  191 

Summer  isl&s  of  E  lying  in  dark-purple  spheres  Locksley  Hall  104 

And  eveiy  bird  of  E  burst  In  carol,  Da.y-Dm.,  L'Knvoi  43 

Set  in  this  E  of  all  plenteoasness,  Enoch  Arden  561 

Then  comes  the  statelier  E  back  to  men :  Princess  mi  293 

a  sweet  little  E  on  earth  that  I  know,  The  Islet  14 

The  brooks  of  E  mazily  murmuring,  Milton  10 

Kings  E  thro'  the  budded  quicks.  In  Mem.  Ixxxviii  2 

the  moon  Of  E  on  its  bridal  bower :  „            Con.  28 

O  dawn  of  E  bright  over  earth  and  sky,  Maud  II  i  8 

Like  that  which  kept  the  heart  of  E  green  Geraint  and  E.  770 

And  all  the  separate  E's  of  this  earth.  Lover's  Tale  i  551 

dLsea-seful  creature  which  in  E  was  divine,  Happy  33 

Eden-isle    Your  Oriental  E-i's,  To  Ulysses  38 

Edge    (See  also  Casement-edge,  Sword-edge)    the  fading 

e's  of  box  beneath,  A  spirit  haunts  19 

bright  and  sharp  As  e's  of  scymetar.  Kate  12 


Edge  (continued)    Stream'd  onward,  lost  their  e's, 
three  times  slipping  from  the  outer  e, 
where  the  prone  e  of  the  wood  began  (repeat) 
here  and  there  on  lattice  e's  lay 
That  axelike  e  unturnable,  our  Head, 
grass  There  growing  longest  by  the  meadow's  e. 
The  memory's  vision  hath  a  keener  e. 
sweeping  down  Took  the  e's  of  the  pall. 
Edged    (See  also  Shrill-edged,  Thorough-edged)    scoi 
E  with  sharp  laughter. 
Found  a  dead  man,  a  letter  e  with  death 
Beside  him. 
Edge-tools    ill  jesting  with  e-t ! 
Edict    waiting  still  The  e  of  the  will 
Edith    (See  also  Edith  Montfort)     his  E,  whom  he  loved 
As  heiress 
often,  in  his  walks  with  E,  claim  A  distant  kinship 
shook  the  heart  of  E  hearing  him. 
E,  whose  pensive  beauty,  perfect  else, 
and  roU'd  His  hoop  to  pleasure  E, 
make-believes  For  E  and  himself : 
the  labourers'  homes,  A  frequent  haunt  of  E, 
Each,  its  own  charm ;  and  E's  everywhere ;  and  E 
ever  visitant  with  him.  He  but  less  loved  than 
E,  of  her  poor : 
But  E's  eager  fancy  hurried  with  him 
oriental  gifts  on  everyone  And  most  on  E : 
E  whom  his  pleasure  was  to  please, 
was  E  that  same  night ;  Pale  as  the  Jephtha's 

daughter, 
its  worth  Was  being  E's. 
would  go.  Labour  for  his  own  E,  and  return 
remembering  His  former  talks  with  E, 
the  keen  shriek  '  Yes  love,  yes  E,  yes,' 
dagger  which  himself  Gave  E,  redden'd  with  no 
bandit's  blood :  '  From  E '  was  engraven  on 
the  blade, 
many  too  had  known  E  among  the  hamlets  round, 


D.  ofF.  Women  50 

The  Epic  11 

Enoch  Arden  67,  373 

Princess  ii  29 

203 

Geraint  and  E.  257 

Lover's  Tale  i  36 

„        iii  35 

> 

Clear-headed  friend  2 

Aylmer's  Field  595 

Princess  ii  201 

Lover's  Tale  ii  161 

Aylmer's  Field  23 
61 
63 
70 
85 
96 
148 


165 
208 
215 
232 

279 
379 
420 
457 
582 


597 
615 


Now  follows  E  echoing  Evelyn.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  15 

one  is  somewhat  graver  than  the  other — E  than 
Evelyn. 

but  the  paler  and  the  graver,  E. 

once  my  prattling  E  ask'd  him  '  why  ? ' 

memorial  Of  E — no,  the  other, — both 

E — all  One  bloom  of  youth,  healthy, 

haze  to  magnify  The  charm  of  E — 

believing  I  loved  E,  made  E  love  me. 

Not  I  that  day  of  E's  love  or  mine — 

E  wrote :  '  My  mother  bids  me  ask ' 

simple  mother  work'd  upon  By  E  pray'd  me  not 
to  whisper  of  it.  And  E  would  be  bridesmaid 
on  the  day. 

when  we  parted,  E  spoke  no  word. 

Our  E  thro'  the  glories  of  the  earth, 

she  That  loved  me — our  true  E — 

daily  want  Of  E  in  the  house,  the  garden, 

E  had  welcomed  my  brief  wooing  of  her, 

scarce  as  great  as  E's  power  of  love, 

bore  a  child  whom  reverently  we  call'd  E ; 

But  you  love  E ;  and  her  own  true  eyes 

I  think  I  likewise  love  your  E  most. 

E,  yet  so  lowly-sweet. 

Near  us  E's  holy  shadow, 

E  but  a  child  of  six — 

Peept  the  winsome  face  of  E 

Ralph  would  fight  in  E's  sight,  For  Ralph  was 
E's  lover, 

E  bow'd  her  stately  head, 
Edith  Montfort    (See  also  Edith)    E  M  bow'd  her  head. 
Educated    Sir  Robert  with  his  watery  smile  And 
e  whisker. 

Have  all  his  pretty  young  ones  e, 
Edmund    '  0  babbhng  brook,'  says  E  in  his  rhyme, 

the  week  Before  I  parted  with  poor  E ; 

My  dearest  brother,  E,  sleeps. 


27 
38 
58 
108 
119 
130 
138 
142 
180 


207 

215 

225 

„  235 

„  246 

254 

261 

269 

284 

293 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  49 

„  54 

258 

260 

The  Tourney  1 

;;    11 

Edwin  Morris  129 

Enoch  A  rden  146 

The  Brook  21 

78 

„        187 


Edmund  Atheling 


173 


Elaine 


Edmund  Atheling    {See  also  Atheling)     He  with  his 

brother,  E  A , 
Edward  (the  Elder,  King  of  the  T'^g"''^'i  901-925) 

Sons  of  E  with  hammer'd  brands. 

they  play'd  with  The  children  of  E. 
Edward  (III.,  King  of  England)    Gray  with  distance 

E's  lifty  summers, 
Edward  (Christian  name)    Then,  and  here  in  E's 

time, 
Edward  BuU    With  Edwin  Morris  and  with  E  B 

Then  said  the  fat-faced  curate  E  B,  (repeat) 
Edward  Gray    '  And  are  you  married  yet,  EG?' 

love  no  more  Can  touch  the  heart  of  E  G. 

' To  trouble  the  heart  olEG' 

And  here  the  heart  ot  E  G\' 

And  there  the  heart  otEGl' 
Edward  Head    Sir  E  H's :  But  he's  abroad : 
Edwin    (See  also  Edwin  Morris)    '  Friend  E,  do  not 
think  yourself  alone 

And  I  and  E  laugh'd ; 

So  left  the  place,  left  E, 

crystal  into  which  I  braided  E's  hair ! 

follow  E  to  those  isles,  those  islands  of  the  Blest ! 

0  would  I  were  in  E's  arms — 
— on  E's  ship,  with  E,  ev'n  in  death, 
My  E  loved  to  call  us  then 

flowers  of  the  secret  woods,  when  E  found  us  there, 
sail  at  last  which  brings  our  E  home. 

Edwin  Morris    (See  also  Edwin)    With  E  M  and  with 
Edward  Bull 

But  E  M,  he  that  knew  the  names, 
Edym    answer,  groaning,  *  E,  son  of  Nudd ! 

'  Then,  E,  son  of  Nudd,'  replied  Geraint, 

E  answer'd,  '  These  things  will  I  do, 

night  of  fire,  when  E  sack'd  their  house, 

rose  a  cry  That  E's  men  were  on  them, 

E's  men  had  caught  them  in  their  flight, 

Beholding  it  was  E  son  of  Nudd, 

E  moving  frankly  forward  spake : 

Till  E  crying,  '  If  ye  will  not  go  To  Arthur, 

And  one  from  E.  Eveiy  now  and  then.  When  E  rein'd 
his  charger  at  her  side, 

went  apart  with  E,  whom  he  held  In  converse 

E  and  with  others :  have  ye  look'd  At  E  ? 

E  has  done  it,  weeding  all  his  heart 
_  This  work  of  E  wrought  upon  himself 
Eerie    My  people  too  were  scared  with  e  sounds. 
Eery     elfin  prancer  springs  By  night  to  e  warblings. 
Effect  (s)     And  thine  e  so  lives  in  me. 

Thro'  manifold  e  of  simple  powers — 
Effect  (verb)     tho'  she  herself  e  But  httle : 
Effeminacy     Rolling  on  their  purple  couches  in  their 
tender  e. 

all  his  force  Is  melted  into  mere  e  ? 
Effeminate    •  £  as  I  am,  I  will  not  fight  my  way 
Effie    Little  E  shall  go  with  me  tomorrow 

Don't  let  E  come  to  see  me 

And  E  on  the  other  side, 

1  thought  of  you  and  E  dear ; 
But,  E,  you  must  comfort  her 
there  to  wait  a  little  while  till  you  and  E  come — 

Ef9aence    perennial  e's,  Whereof  to  all  that  draw 
Effort     I  made  one  barren  e  to  break  it  at  the  last. 
Eft     A  monstrous  e  was  of  old  the  Lord 

A  bedmate  of  the  snail  and  e  and  snake, 
Egalities     That  cursed  France  with  her  e ! 
Egbert    doing  nothing  Since  E — why. 
Egg    (See  also  Hegg)     The  goose  let  fall  a  golden  e 

we  stole  his  fruit.  His  hens,  his  e's  ; 

Roof-haunting  martins  warm  their  e's : 

The  Cock  was  of  a  larger  e 

evil  fancies  clung  Like  serpent  e's 

Sleeps  in  the  plain  e's  of  the  nightingale, 

lay  their  e's,  and  sting  and  sing 

'twere  but  of  the  goose  and  golden  e's.' 


Batt.  of  Brunanburh  6 

14 

92 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  40 

Locksley  U.,  Sixty  83 

Edwin  Morris  14 

„        42, 90 

Edward  Gray  4 

:;    & 

28 

36 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  15 

Edwin  Morris  77 
93 
137 
TheFligld  34 
42 
45 
46 
80 
82 
92 

Edwin  Morris  14 

„  16 

Marr.  of  Geraint  576 

579 

587 

634 

639 

642 

Geraint  and  E.  781 

784 

814 

819 

;;       881 

896 

906 

912 

The  Ring  408 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  34 

In  Mem.  Ixv  10 

Prog,  of  Spring  86 

Princess  Hi  264 

Boadicea  62 

Marr.  of  Geraint  107 

Geraint  and  E.  20 

May  Queen  25 

May  Queen,  N.  ¥'s.  E.  43 

Con.  24 

29 

44 

'  58 

Lover's  Tale  i  499 

Happy  72 

Mated  I  iv  31 

Holy  Grail  570 

Aylmer's  Field  265 

384 

The  Goose  11 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  85 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  17 

Will  Water.  121 

Enoch  Arden  480 

Aylmer's  Field  103 

In  Mem.  Ill 

Gareth  and  L.  40 


Egg  (coiitinued)    good  mother,  but  this  e  of  mine  Was  finer 

gold  Gareth  and  L.  42 

even  in  their  hens  and  in  their  e's — •  Holy  Grail  560 

Nor  bruised  the  wildbird's  e.  Lover's  Tale  ii  21 

She  hears  the  lark  witliin  the  songless  e.  Ancient  Sage  76 

Egg-shell    Nor  cared  a  broken  e-s  for  her  lord.  Geraint  and  E.  364 

Eglantine    Vine,  vine  and  e,  (repeat)  Window,  At  the  W.  1,  8 

presently  received  in  a  sweet  grave  Of  e's.  Lover's  Tale  i  529 

Beneath  the  bower  of  wreathed  e's :  „           ii  43 

Eglatere    woodbine  and  e  Drip  sweeter  dews  A  Dirge  23 

Egypt    (See  also  Agypt)     O  my  life  In  jB  !  D.  of  F.  Women  147 

the  time  When  we  made  bricks  in  E.  Princess  iv  128 

fierce  Soldan  of  E,  would  break  down  Columbus  98 

torpid  mummy  wheat  Of  E  bore  a  grain  as  sweet  To  Prof.  Jebh  6 

Egypti^    To  whom  the  E:  '0,  you  tamely  died !  D.  of  F,  Wome^i  258 

Egypt-plague    our  arms  f  ail'd — this  E-p  of  men !  Princess  v  427 

Eight  (adj.)     (See  also  Height)     Was  proxy- wedded  with 

a  bootless  calf  At  e  years  old  ;  „         i  35 

close  behind  her  stood  E  daughters  of  the  plough,  „    iv  278 

Then  those  c  mighty  daughters  of  the  plough  „         550 

those  e  daughters  of  the  plough  Came  sallyhig  thro'  „      v  339 

And  e  years  past,  e  jousts  had  been,  Lancelot  and  E.  67 

E  that  were  left  to  make  a  purer  world —  Aylmer's  Field  638 

The  child  was  only  e  summers  old,  The  Victim  33 

Eight  (s)     cutting  e's  that  day  upon  the  pond.  The  Epic  10 

Eighteen     Pass  me  then  A  term  of  e  years.  Lover's  Tale  i  287 

E  long  years  of  waste,  seven  in  your  Spain,  Columbus  36 

Eighty    Whose  e  winters  freeze  with  one  rebuke  Ode  on  Well.  186 
Timur  built  his  ghastly  tower  of  e  thousand  human 

skulls,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  82 

E  winters  leave  the  dog  too  lame  to  follow  „            226 
Forward  far  and  far  from  here  is  all  the  hope  of 

e  years.  „            254 
starved  the  wild  beast  that  was  linkt  with  thee  e 

years  back  By  an  Evolution.  11 
e  thousand  Christian  faces  watch  Man  murder  man.    St.  Telemachus  55 

Eighty-thousand    Should  e-t  college-councils  To  F.  D.  Maurice  7 

Eight-year-old    See  Height-year-old 

Either     e  hand.  Or  voice,  or  else  a  motion  of  the  mere.  M.  d' Arthur  76 

On  e  side  AH  round  about  the  fragrant  marge  Arabian  Nights  58 

And  e  twilight  and  the  day  between ;  Edwin  Morris  37 

Powers  of  the  House  On  e  side  the  hearth,  Aylmer's  Field  288 

with  his  hopes  in  e  grave.  „            624 

familiar  with  her.  Easily  gather'd  e  guilt.  Princess  iv  236 

seeing  e  sex  alone  Is  half  itself,  „       vii  301 

For  groves  of  pine  on  e  hand.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  21 

And  drops  of  water  fell  from  e  hand ;  Gareth  and  L.  220 

In  e  hand  he  bore  What  dazzled  all,  „            386 

And  each  at  either  dash  from  e  end —  ,,            535 

she  lifted  e  arm,  '  Fie  on  thee.  King !  „            657 
and  e  spear  Bent  but  not  brake,  and  e  knight 

at  once,  „            963 

at  e  end  whereof  There  swung  an  apple  Marr.  of  Geraint  169 

Whom  first  she  kiss'd  on  e  cheek,  and  then  On  e  „              517 

Made  her  cheek  bum  and  e  eyelid  fall.  „              775 

day  by  day  she  past  In  e  twilight  ghost-Uke  Lancelot  and  E.  849 

at  the  base  we  found  On  e  hand.  Holy  Grail  498 
yell'd  the  youth,  and  e  knight  Drew  back  a  space,      Pelleas  and  E.  572 

Wheel'd  round  on  e  heel,  Dagonet  repUed,  Last  Tournament  244 

At  once  from  e  side,  with  trumpet-blast.  Com.  of  Arthur  102 

e  hand.  Or  voice,  or  else  a  motion  of  the  mere.  Pass,  of  Arthur  244 

As  tho'  there  beat  a  heart  in  e  eye  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  34 

Love  wraps  his  wings  on  e  side  the  heart,  ,,            467 
My  father  with  a  child  on  e  knee,  A  hand  upon 

the  head  of  e  child.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  54 

He  joins  us  once  again,  to  his  e  office  true :  Happy  106 
Thy  elect  have  no  dealings  with  e  heresy  or 

orthodoxy;  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  7 

With  all  the  Hells  a-glare  in  e  eye,  Akbar's  Dream  115 

And  each  at  e  dash  from  either  end —  Gareth  and  L.  535 

Elaborately     Who  read  me  rhymes  e  good,  Edwin  Morris  20 

Elaine     E  the  fair,  E  the  loveable,  E,  the  lily  maid  Lancelot  and  E.  1 

behind  them  stept  the  lily  maid  E,  „            177 

E,  and  heard  her  name  so  tost  about,  „            233 

hly  maid  E,  Won  by  the  mellow  voice  „            242 


Elaine 


174 


Embowering 


Elaine  {continued)    Who  parted  with  his  own  to 

fair  E :  Lancelot  and  E.  381 

stay'd ;  and  cast  his  eyes  on  fair  E :  „            640 

'  So  be  it,'  cried  E,  And  lifted  her  fair  face  „            681 

'  Torre  and  E !  why  here  ?  „            796 

Then  rose  E  and  glided  thro'  the  fields,  „            843 

call  her  friend  and  sister,  sweet  E,  „            865 

I  had  been  wedded  earlier,  sweet  E :  „            935 

on  her  face,  and  thought '  Is  this  E?'  „          1031 

Elbow    In  every  e  and  turn.  Ode  to  Memory  62 

deep  in  broider'd  down  we  sank  Our  e's :  Princess  iv  33 

Elbow-chair    She  shifted  in  her  e-c,  The  Goose  27 

Elbow-deep    Or  e-d  in  sawdust,  slept,  WUl  Water.  99 

Elbowed    See  Half-elbowed 

Elburz    E  and  all  the  Caucasus  have  heard ;  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  13 

Elder  (s)     led  The  holy  E's  with  the  gift  of  myrrh.  M.  d' Arthur  233 

Thuie  e's  and  thy  betters.  Will  Water.  192 

with  jubilant  cries  Broke  from  their  e's,  Enoch  Arden  378 

passion  of  youth  Toward  greatness  in  its  e,  Lancelot  and  E.  283 

led  The  holy  E's  with  the  gift  of  myrrh  Fass.  of  Arthur  400 

Elder  (adj.)     The  Tory  member's  e  son.  Princess,  Con.  50 

Elderly    I  knew  them  all  as  babies,  and  now  they're  e  men.     Grandmother  88 

Elder-thicket    saw  The  white-flower'd  e-t  from  the  field  Godiva  63 

Elder-tree    See  Boor-tree 

Eldest-born    Whatever  e-b  of  rank  or  wealth  Aylmer's  Field  484 

And  Willy,  my  e-b,  is  gone,  you  say,  Grandmother  1,  87 

Willy,  my  beauty,  my  e-b,  the  flower  of  the  flock ;  „                9 

Willy,  my  e-b,  at  nigh  threescore  and  ten ;  „              87 

Willy  has  gone,  my  beauty,  my  e-b,  my  flower ;  „            101 

her  e-b,  her  glory,  her  boast,    ■  Despair  73 
Eleanor    Those  dragon  eyes  of  anger'd  E                        D.  of  F.  Women  255 

Eleanore    To  deck  thy  cradle,  E.  Elednore  21 

Crimsons  over  an  inland  mere,  E\  „          43 

Of  thy  swan-like  stateliness,  £  ?  „         48 

Of  thy  floating  gracefulness,  E?  „          51 

Every  lineament  divine,  E.  „         54 

Who  may  express  thee,  E?  „         68 

I  stand  before  thee,  E;  „         69 

Serene,  imperial  E !  (repeat)  „  81, 121 

In  thy  large  eyes,  imperial  E.  „         97 

So  dying  ever,  E.  „        144 
Elect  (chosen)     Thy  e  have  no  dealings  with  either 

heresy  or  orthodoxy;  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  7 

Elected     by  common  voice  E  umpire,  (Enone  85 

Election    E,  E  and  Reprobation —  Eizpah  73 

Electric    e  shock  Dislink'd  with  shrieks  and  laughter :  Princess,  Pro.  69 

E,  chemic  laws,  and  aU  the  rest,  „          ii  384 

came  As  comes  a  pillar  of  e  cloud,  „           v  524 

this  e  force,  that  keeps  A  thousand  pulses  dancing,      In  Mem.  cxxv  15 

with  some  e  thrill  A  cold  air  pass'd  between  us.  The  Ring  379 

El^ant    See  Uigant 

El%y    elegies  And  quoted  odes.  Princess  ii  376 

Element    The  e's  were  kindlier  mix'd.'  Two  Voices  228 

may  soul  to  soul  Strike  thro'  a  finer  e  Aylmer's  Field  579 

And  in  their  own  clear  e,  they  moved.  Princess  vii  28 

Large  e's  in  order  brought,  In  Mem.  cxii  13 

One  God,  one  law,  one  e,  „     Con.  142 

I  saw  The  holy  e's  alone ;  Holy  Grail  463 

I  am  not  made  of  so  slight  e's.  Guinevere  510 

The  cloud-paviUon'd  e,  the  wood,  Lover's  Tale  ii  108 

Elemental    And  learnt  their  e  secrets.  Merlin  and  V.  632 

Eleusis     Who  laid  thee  at  E,  dazed  and  dumb  Demeter  and  P.  6 

Eleventh    when  the  e  moon  After  their  marriage  lit  the 

lover's  Bay,  Lover's  Tale  iv  27 

Elf    the  little  dves  of  chasm  and  cleft  Made  Guinevere  248 

Elves,  and  the  harmless  glamour  of  the  field ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  52 

and  glancing  at  E  of  the  woodland,  Merlin  and  the  G.  38 

Elf-god     '  I  saw  the  little  e-g  eyeless  once  Merlin  and  V.  249 

Elfin     rich  With  jewels,  e  Urim,  on  the  hilt.  Com.  of  Arthur  298 

whose  e  prancer  springs  By  night  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  33 

Elfland    The  horns  of  E  faintly  blowing !  Princess  iv  10 

Elizabeth  (Queen)     The  spacious  times  of  great  E  D.  of  F.  Women  7 

in  arts  of  government  E  and  others ;  Princess  ii  162 

Elizabeth  (Aunt)    there  is  Aunt  E  And  sister  Liha  „     Pro.  51 

And  here  we  lit  on  Aunt  E  „             96 


Elk    the  monstrous  horns  of  e  and  deer,  Princess,  Pro.  23 

Ellen    (See  also  Ellen  Adair,  Ellen  Aubrey)    Sleep, 
E,  folded  in  thy  sister's  arm, 

'  Sleep,  E,  folded  in  Emilia's  arm ; 

By  E's  grave,  on  the  windy  hill. 

'  You  said  that  you  hated  me,  E, 
Ellen  Adair    {See  also  Ellen)    '  £  ^  she  loved  me  well, 

When  E  A  was  dying  for  me. 

Speak  a  Uttle,  E  AV 

'  Here  Ues  the  body  ot  E  A; 

Till  E  A  come  back  to  me. 

There  lies  the  body  ot  E  Al 
Ellen  Aubrey    {See  also  Ellen)    E  A,  sleep,  and  dream 
of  me: 

Sleep,  E  A,  love,  and  dream  of  me.' 
Elle  vous  suit    sent  a  note,  the  seal  an  E  v  s, 
Ellipse     Earth  follows  wheel'd  in  her  e ; 
Elm    {See  also  Dwarf-elm,  Witch-elm)    The  seven  e's, 
the  poplars  four 

The  mellow  ouzel  fluted  in  the  e ; 

fruits  and  cream  Served  in  the  weeping  e ; 

Old  e's  came  breaking  from  the  vine, 

Aroused  the  black  republic  on  his  e's, 

always  friends,  none  closer,  e  and  vine : 

varies  from  the  lily  as  far  As  oak  from  e : 

The  moan  of  doves  in  immemorial  e'a, 

approaching  rookery  swerve  From  the  e's, 

Kock'd  the  full-foUaged  e's, 

swaying  upon  a  restless  e  Drew  the  vague  glance 

in  Juhan's  land  They  never  nail  a  diunb  head 
up  in  e), 

in  yon  arching  avenue  of  old  e's, 

Of  leafless  e,  or  naked  hme, 

few  lanes  of  e  And  whispering  oak. 
Elm-tree    rook  'ill  caw  from  the  windy  tall  e-t, 

topmost  e-t  gather'd  green  From  draughts 

e's  ruddy-hearted  blossom-flake  Is  fluttering 
Elm-tree-boles    Enormous  e-t-b  did  stoop  and  lean 
Eloquence     A  fuU-cell'd  honeycomb  of  e 

and  golden  e  And  amorous  adulation, 

his  e  caught  like  a  flame  From  zone  to  zone 
Eloquent    The  form,  the  form  alone  is  e ! 

her  e  eyes,  (As  I  have  seen  them  many  a  hundred 
times) 
'Elp  (help)     es  I  otips  es  thou'll  'e  me  a  bit, 
Elsewise    Did  mightier  deeds  than  e  he  had  done, 
Elsinore    when  E  Heard  the  war  moan 
Elusion    E,  and  occasion,  and  evasion '  ? 
Elvish    dragon-boughts  and  e  emblemings  Began  to  move,  „  233 

Elysian    others  in  E  valleys  dwell,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  124 

fields  Are  lovely,  lovelier  not  the  E  lawns.  Princess  Hi  342 

Elysium     dimly-glimmering  lawns  Of  that  E,  Demeter  and  P.  151 

Emancipation    on  whom  The  secular  e  turns  Princess  ii  289 

Embalm    e  In  dying  songs  a  dead  regret,  In  Mem.,  Con.  13 

Embark     '  I  will  e  and  I  will  lose  myself,  Holy  Grail  805 

may  there  be  no  sadness  of  farewell,  When  I  e ;         Crossing  the  Bar  12 
Embassage    till  their  e  return'd.  Balin  and  Balan  93 

Embassy     Such  touches  are  but  embassies  of  love.  Gardener's  D.  18 

Embatlidng    E  all  with  wild  and  woeful  hues.  Lover's  Tale  ii  64 

Embattail    To  e  and  to  wall  about  thy  cause  To  J.  M.  K.  8 

Embattled     when  we  saw  the  e  squares.  Princess  v  246 

Till  this  e  wall  of  unbelief  My  prison,  Doubt  and  Prayer  11 

Embellish     overflowing  revenue  Wherewith  to  c  state,  Qinone  113 

Emblem    Graven  with  e's  of  the  time,  Arabian  Nights  108 

Like  e's  of  infinity.  Ode  to  Memory  103 

Caryatids,  lifted  up  A  weight  of  e.  Princess  iv  202 

rich  in  e  and  the  work  Of  ancient  kings  Gareth  and  L.  304 

Half-tarnish'd  and  half-bright,  his  e,  shone.  „        1118 

these  her  e's  drew  mine  eyes — away :  Balin  and  Balan  265 

Emblematic    Amazon  As  e  of  a  nobler  age ;  Princess  ii  127 

Embleming    and  elvish  e's  Began  to  move,  Gareth  and  L.  233 

Embodied    When  truth  e  in  a  tale  In  Mem.  xxxvi  7 

Emboss'd    bronze  valves,  e  with  Tomyris  Princess  v  365 

Embower    However  deep  you  might  e  the  nest,  „   Pro.  147 

Embowering    See  Oriel-embowering 


Audley  Court  63 

65 

Edward  Gray  12 

First  Quarrel  79 

Edward  Gray  9 

16 

24 

27 

32 

35 

Audley  Court  62 
„  73 

Edwin  Morris  105 
Golden  Year  24 

Ode  to  Memory  56 

Gardener's  D.  94 

„  195 

Amphion  45 

Aylmer's  Field  529 

Princess  ii  337 

„        V 183 

„     vii  221 

„    Con.  97 

In  Mem.  xcv  58 

Balin  and  Balan  463 


Lover's  Tale  iv  37 

The  Ring  172 

To  Ulysses  16 

To  Mary  Boyle  67 

May  Queen,  N.Y's.  E.  17 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  8 

To  Mary  Boyle  3 

D.  of  F.  Women  57 

Edwin  Morris  26 

Lancelot  and  E.  649 

Dead  Prophet  34 

The  form,  the  form  1 


Lover's  Tale  ii  144 

Village  Wife  65 

Last  Tournament  680 

Buonaparte  9 

Gareth  and  L.  288 


Embrace 

Embrace  (s)    face  He  kiss'd,  taking  his  last  e. 
Die,  dying  clasp'd  in  his  e. 
And  dear  the  last  e's  of  our  wives 
came  Like  Death  betwixt  thy  dear  e  and  mine 
and  silent  in  a  last  e.  ' 

such  have  sUpt  Away  from  my  e's. 
Twisted  hard  in  fierce  e's, 
the  first  e  had  died  Between  them, 
As  parting  with  a  long  e  She  enters 
No  lower  life  that  earth's  e  May  breed 
That  yet  remembers  his  e, 
A  little  while  from  his  e, 
We  stood  tranced  in  long  e's 


175 


Enchantment 


Two  Voices  254 

Fatima  42 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  70 

Iiove  and  Duty  48 

Locksley  Hall  58 

WiU  Water.  182 

Vision  of  Sin  40 

Lucretius  3 

In  Mem.  xlll 

„      Ixxxii  3 

„   Ixxxv  in 

„        cxxii  3 

Belt^  his  body  ^Th  heT  v.hite  e.  Last  Tou^miLUlS 

\-           that  hast  never  known  the  e  of  love,  TirS  lfi4 

bhe  clung  to  me  with  such  a  hard  e,  The^Zn  ^t 

gone !  and  gone  in  that  e !  ^^^  T^o 

body  which  had  lain  Of  old  in  her  e.  Death  of"(Fnn^7l± 

Embrace  (verb)    my  heart  Went  forth  t^  e  him  coming  ^  g^^e  63 

\V  ho  wiU  e  me  in  the  world-to-be :  ^       Enoch  ArTeT^t 

E  our  amis ;  work  out  your  freedom.  PrinlesTiim 

'  e  me,  come,  Quick  while  I  melt ;  I-  or^ 

we  e  you  yet  once  more  With  all  forgiveness,  "         2q4 

By  faith,  and  faith  alone,  e,              ^  '                  Jr,  mZ     VrH 

E  her  as  my  natural  good ;  ^"^  ^''"•>  "^r?-  3 

I  e  the  purpose  of  God,         -  mJI^  ttt^^^-  In 

Sen'^Km.^f^,'^^'  ^^  '^^"^  ^=  BalinaA'Ilir5tl 

upen  d  his  arms  to  «  me  as  he  came,  »-,/„  ^miZ  41 7 

To  dream  thy  cause  e  in  mine,  ^     Priw«,,^2nn 

E  her  with  aU  welcome  as  a  friend,  il/arr  o7SI^  834 

the  great  Queen  once  more  e  her  friend,  gZ'c^LZTe  947 

E  me,  and  so  kiss'd  me  the  firet  time,   '  Eolv  Grail  596 

we  kiss'd,  we  e,  she  and  I,  uoiyuratl  &Jb 

Embradng  (^ee  0^50  Imbrashin')  E  cloud,  Ixion-like ;  Two  rXriSs 
and  while  we  stood  hke  fools  E  va    •     L      ■    1 1 « 

E  Balin,  '  Good  my  brother  ht^r '  EnW^^'^'A'T  v.o 

when  he  saw  the  ^neen^^^l  '  tZ'J^a^E  It 

Embrasure    rafters  and  dooW-an  e'  J^anceiot  and  E.  510 

A  million  «'.  break  f  n,rS  the  ^by-budded  lime  MaiTivl 

A  hveher  e  twmkles  in  the  grass  •  *  =| 

Emer'^Ste^'I^Str^^^^^^^^^  W^^S^^^^^ 

Emi^ar^i'Sier^ate'^""''^'^  ^'  ^^-'^  ^«'«  '  '^ 

Emiha    '  Sleep,  Ellen,  folded  in  E's  arm ;  E,  Audlev  Court  65 

r^mssa^    Oame  at  the  moment  Leo  in's  e,  Aylmer't  Vielti  -SIR 

'Sw^t  E  M,  love  no  more  Can  touch  the  heart  "  7 

^'h^hLThfm"''^''m°"l^'  ,„.  ^«  ^^^  Child:Eosf.  33 

ii  iiad  heard  him.    Softly  she  call'd  from  her  cot  46 

for  E,  you  see.  It's  all  in  the  picture  there :  "  49 

Yes,  and  I  will,'  said  E,  "  ro 

\E,  you  put  out  your  arms,  "  % 

but  E,  you  tell  it  him  plain,  "  % 

And  fears  for  our  delicate  E  "  «« 

and  ^  had  past  away.  "  70 

Hide  mpZ'J^','  °^  ^'"S^'  ^^'^  ^«'^^  361 

play  1  he  Spartan  Mother  with  e,  Princesi  ii  28^ 

EmpanopUed    £  and  plumed  We  enter'd  in,  rrmcessiz^^ 

Emperor    E,  Ottoman,  which  shall  win :  To  F  D  Maurice  32 

Emperor-Idiot    hive  of  Koman  hars  worship  an  e-i.  BoldZZ  19 

Emperor-moth    But  move  as  rich  as  £-m'..  Princess  pTiU 


Empire    (See  also  Ocean-empire)    the  care  That  yokes 

i-i'^'^V'      .    ,^      ^1,        ■•  To  the  Queen  10 

hke  a  household  god  Promising  e;  On  a  Mourner  31 

ere  he  found  E  for  life  ?  Gardener's  D  20 

hated  by  the  wise,  to  law  System  and  e  ?  Love  and  Duty  8 

'  Three  ladies  of  the  Northern  e  Princess  i  238 

Persian,  Grecian,  Roman  lines  Of  e,  n  131 

BuEY  the  Great  Duke  With  an  e's  lamentation,  Ode'on  Well  2 

Fair  e's  branchmg,  both,  in  lusty  hfe !—  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  21 

See,  e  upon  e  smiles  to-day,  33 

Is  thistle  tone  of  e?  To  the  Queen  ii  Id, 

And  all  the  maiden  e  of  her  mind.  Lover's  Tale  i  589 

Gave  glory  and  more  e  to  the  kings  Columbus  22 

T  J  ^°,??  ^"  }^^  ""^  ^ngli^h  E  whole !  Bands  aU  Round  14 

And  all  her  glorious  e,  round  and  round.  24 

Fifty  years  of  ever-widening  E !  On  Jub.  q!  Victoria  54 

All  new-old  revolutions  of  E —  Vastness  30 

Old  E's,  dwellings  of  the  kings  of  men ;  Prog,  of  Spring  99 

a  world-wide  E  mourns  with  you,  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  5 

Employ    Come,  when  no  graver  cares  e,  To  F  D  Maurice  1 

extremes  e  Thy  spirits  in  the  darkening  leaf.  In  Mem.  Ixxxviii  5 

Employ  d    bo  gentle,  so  e,  should  close  in  love,  Princess  vii  67 

Empress    Queen,  and  E  of  India,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  6 

Empnse    The  garland  of  new-wreathed  e :  Kate  24 
Emptied    e  of  all  joy.  Leaving  the  dance  and  song,         D.  of  F.  Women  215 

allluent  Fortune  e  all  her  horn.  ode  on  Wdl.  197 

and  all  The  chambers  e  of  delight :  /«  Mem.  viii  8 

Emptier    lor  I  am  e  than  a  friar's  brains;  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  7 

£mptmess     '  Irom  e  and  the  waste  wide  Two  Voices  119 

The  sins  of  e,  gossip  and  spite  And  slander,  Princess  ii  92 

Empty     An  e  river-bed  before,  Mariana  in  the  S.  6 

Pour  d  back  into  my  e  soul  and  frame  D.  of  F.  Women  78 

Two  years  his  chair  is  seen  E  before  us.  To  J.  S.  23 

but  e  breath  And  rumours  of  a  doubt  ?  M.  d' Arthur  99 
summer  pilot  of  an  e  heart  Unto  the  shores  of  nothing !  Gardener's  D  16 

1  earth  in  earth  forget  these  e  courts,  Tithonus  75 

I  sit,  my  e  glass  reversed,  lym  ly^ter.  159 

Lest  of  the  fulness  of  my  life  I  leave  an  e  flask  :  164 

It  is  but  yonder  e  glass  That  makes  me  "           207 

^scarecrows,  I  and  you!  Vision  of  Sin  M 

Hollow  hearts  and  e  heads !  jj^ 

Than  if  my  brainpan  were  an  e  hull,  Princess  ii  398 

e  masks,  And  I  myself  the  shadow  of  a  dream,  m  187 

her  e  glove  upon  the  tomb  Lay  by  her  "        {^  595 

nevermore  endue  To  sit  with  e  hands  at  home.  Sailor  Boy  16 

A  hollow  form  with  e  hands.'  /„  Mem.  iii  12 

and  feels  Her  place  is  e,  fall  hke  these ;  ^m  4. 

Living  alone  in  an  e  house,  Maud  I  vi  Q 

To  tickle  tlie  maggot  born  in  an  e  head,  II v3 

And  when  he  found  aU  e,  was  amazed  ;  Geraint  and  E.  21 

As  all  but  e  heart  and  weariness  (552 

And  show'd  an  e  tent  allotted  her,  "             5^5 

Her  own  poor  work,  her  e  labour,  left.  Lancelot  and  E.  991 

Hurl  d  back  again  .0  often  m  e  foam,  Last  Tournament  93 

but  e  breath  And  rumours  of  a  doubt  ?  Pass,  of  Arthur  267 

I,  groamng,  from  me  flung  Her  e  phantom :  Lover's  Tale  ii  206 

Pmnfr^l^'w^^'^w'^V    .       .u               ■  hi  the  Child.  Hosp.  29 

Empurpled     His  golden  feet  on  those  e  stairs  Lucretius  V6b 

f™«S  ^^""Z^   *k  •  f>  f ""aTP^^u'  ^?"^  ^^^  sale  Princess  iii  120 

Empyreal    and  whirl'd  About  e  heights  of  thought,  In  Mem.  tc,  S8 

Empyrean    deep-domed  e  Kings  to  the  roar  MuTonl 
Emrys  (King  of  Britain)    Aurelius  E  would  have 

Fn.n,an"r'!^f  *''''^^.f '^•'      •  Gareth  and  L.  375 

S^nii     y!  ^^  glittering  m  e  arms  the  maid  Lancelot  and  E.  619 

EnamouT'd    by  them  went  The  e  air  sighing,  PriTicess  vi  79 

Encamahze    with  shameful  jest,  E  their  spirits :  1^315 

SSi   "k"'"^  r  '??  P'f  ^  ^  to-morrow.  Last  Tournament  104 

Enchanted     Branches  they  bore  of  that  e  stem,  Lotos-Eaters  28 

Is  that  e  moan  only  the  swell  Of  the  long  waves  Maud  I  xviii  62 

e  towers  of  Carbonek,  A  castle  hke  a  rock  H^t  Gm"/  glS 

as  thou  sayest,  it  is  .son,  GaretZ^t  IH 

Enchanter    Here  is  a  city  of  £'«,  built  6Ve<;i  ««//  r   l  qq 

charm  Upon  the  great  i' of  the  Time,  SI«Sf216 

Enchantment    wilt  thou  become  A  thraU 'to  his  e's,  SS  aS  i.' 2 Jg 


Enchantment 


176 


Endure 


Enchantment  (continued)    Begotten  by  e— chatterers  they,    Eoly  Grail  145 

all  his  guests  Once  more  as  by  e ;  Lover J^  ^fV''"  fv\ 

Enchantress    A  great  e  you  may  be ;  L.l>.y  .ae  y  ere  ou 

Encircle    £'s  all  the  heart,  and  feedeth  ^Vff^x^ 

Enclosing    hollow  shades  e  hearts  of  flame.  Palace  of  Art  J4i 

every  marge  e  in  the  midst  A  square  of  text  Merlin  andV.  b7U 

EncompMS    love  of  all  Thy  sons  e  Thee,  ^ed.of  Idylls  52 

Encompass'd    sleep  i;  by  his  faithful  guard,  r^^''-^''^-,%Al 

Encounter     A  little  in  the  late  e  strain'd,  Geraint  and  h.  1&» 

End  (s)    (^ee  aZso  Gable-ends,  Hend)    '  And  cruel  love,  •    .t,    c,  rrn 
whose  e  is  scorn,  Is  this  the  e  to  be  left  alone,      Mariana  inthe  *.  7U 

apprehend  A  labour  working  to  an  e.  Two  Voices  297 

'  The  e  and  the  beginning  vex  His  reason :  ..          ^^° 

♦  I  see  the  e,  and  know  the  good.'  »          J^ 

'  Which  in  all  action  is  the  e  of  all ;  ..-,.,  ^'^"c  H 

Death  is  the  e  of  life ;  ah,  why  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  6.  41 

wood  is  all  thine  own,  Until  the  e  of  time.'  D.  of  F.  Women  84 

Sleep  till  the  e,  true  soul  and  sweet.  ft.    7     j  ^ 

Love,  that  endures  not  sordid  e's,  Love  thou  thy  landb 

'  My  e  draws  nigh ;  'tis  time  that  I  were  gone.  M.d  Arthur  JLM 

Here,  then,  my  words  have  e.  ^'^r^S^J ,  ■/    q« 

my  e  draws  nigh ;  I  hope  my  e  draws  nigh :  k>t.  6.  btylitesA^ 

The  watcher  on  the  column  till  the  e  ;  »          ^J*9 

The  e\  the  e !  Surely  the  e !  t          'i  r,  ,    is 

The  set  gray  life,  and  apathetic  e.  Love  and  Duty  iS 

And  that  which  shapes  it  to  some  perfect  e.  »             ^^ 

Spun  roimd  in  station,  but  the  e  had  come.  »>             '^ 

How  dull  it  is  to  pause,  to  make  an  e,  Ulysses  j^ 

something  ere  the  e,  Some  work  of  noble  note,  ,/'    7i« 

if  I  Should  hook  it  to  some  useful  e.  Day-Drn.,  Moral  Lb 

Enough  if  at  the  «  of  aU  A  little  garden  blossom.  Amphion  106 

For  them  I  battle  tiU  the  e,  ^^        Sir  Galahad  15 

A  life  that  moves  to  gracious  e's  You  might  have  won  b 

Down  at  the  far  e  of  an  avenue,  Enoch  Arden  rf6» 

his  lonely  doom  Came  suddenly  to  an  e,  ,"7:,-7jQni 

rioted  his  life  out,  and  made  an  e.  Aylmer  s  Field  d91 

thro'  every  labyrinth  till  he  saw  An  e,  ,,           ^ 

nor  wanted  at  his  e  The  dark  retinue  »            o*^ 

Crown'd  with  a  flower  or  two,  and  there  an  e—  Lwretius  J^y 

noise  with  bees  and  breeze  from  e  to  «.  Princess,  -f^r?- °° 

from  e  to  e  With  beauties  every  shade  „          }}.  ^^ 

if  our  e  were  less  achievable  By  slow  approaches,  „         «*  ^°^ 

I  fight  with  iron  laws,  in  the  e  Found  golden :  „             »^  '^ 

But  great  is  song  Used  to  great  e's :  ,.               ^ 

some  grand  fight  to  kill  and  make  an  e:  «               ^^ 

you  failing,  I  abide  What  e  soever :  »           «  f^ 

at  the  further  e  Was  Ida  by  the  throne,  ,,          vi  rfoo 

For  worship  without  e ;  nor  e  of  mine,  »         ""  ^ 

Yoked  in  aU  exercise  of  noble  e,  ?.               ^^^ 

Gone,  tiU  the  e  of  the  year,  ^]''^'"<,A 
Over  the  world  to  the  e  of  it                               Window,  Marr.Morn.  16 

0  what  to  her  shaU  be  the  e  ?  i^i  Mem.  vi  41 
'Is  this  thee?  Is  this  thee?'  »  f "  |^ 
And  move  thee  on  to  noble  e's.  »  '^^  f^. 
Are  sharpen'd  to  a  needle's  e  ;  »  '*^*  * 
What  e  is  here  to  my  complaint?  ,.  '^ff*? 
Now  looking  to  some  settled  e,  ..    '^^^  =*' 

1  climb  the  hill:  from  e  to  e  »  .?.  ;L 
breathers  of  an  ampler  day  For  ever  nobler  e's.  „  "xviii  I 
Is  toil  coiiperant  to  an  e.  ,,  »  ^xxviuZi 
Calming  itself  to  the  long-wish'd-for  e,  Maud  I  xviiib 
never  an  e  to  the  stream  of  passing  feet,  »  j^i\.yt. 
And  each  at  either  dash  from  either  e—  Gareth  and  h.  MD 
At  one  e  one,  that  gave  uiK)n  a  range  ,,  .,Vpo 
at  either  e  whereof  There  swung  an  apple  Marr.  of  Geraint  IbJ 
O  to  what  e,  except  a  jealous  one,  ilf erZtn  OTwi  K.  &^» 
and  to  this  e  Had  made  the  pretext  Lancelot  and  ii.  &»1 
sweet  is  death  who  puts  an  e  to  pain :  »  |^° 
An  c  to  this !  A  strange  one!  »  ^^^^^ 
one  there  is,  and  at  the  eastern  e,  Holy  Grail  ^51 
When  the  hermit  made  an  e,  ^  .m  "  .  oca 
run  itself  AU  out  like  a  long  life  to  a  sour  e—  Last  Tournament  ^b» 
mystic  babble  about  his  e  Amazed  me ;  i>  ^^^ 
whitens  ere  his  hour  Woos  his  own  e;  ..  .  "^° 
Serving  his  traitorous  e  Guinevere  I'J 


End  (S)  (continued)    '  The  e  is  come,  And  I  am  shamed  for 


'  My  e  draws  nigh ;  'tis  time  that  I  were  gone. 

Was  this  the  e  ?    Why  grew  we  then  together 

in  the  e.  Opening  on  darkness. 

Then  at  the  far  e  of  the  vault  he  saw 

And  stranger  yet,  at  one  e  of  the  hall 

And  when  the  feast  was  near  an  e, 

an'  I  work  an'  I  wait  to  the  e. 

It  was  full  of  old  odds  an  e's, 

they  watch'd  what  the  e  would  be. 

What  e  but  darkness  could  ensue 

if  life's  best  e  Be  to  end  well ! 

A  less  difiuse  and  opulent  e, 

of  a  HeU  without  help,  without  e. 

at  last  the  e  is  sure, 

globe  from  e  to  e  Might  sow  and  reap  in  peace 
An'  sattle  their  e's  upo  stools 
when  he  heard  what  an  e  was  mine  ? 
And  loves  the  world  from  c  to  e. 
End  (verb)     That  to  begin  implies  to  e ; 

tho'  they  could  not  e  me,  left  me  maun'd 
Whether  I  mean  this  day  to  e  myself. 
Not  manlUie  e  myself  ?— our  privilege- 
how  the  strange  betrothment  was  to  e : 
There  will  I  hide  thee,  till  my  life  shall  e, 
if  life's  best  end  Be  to  e  well ! 
who  can  tell  how  all  will  e  ? 
Demos  e  in  working  its  own  doom, 
e  but  in  being  our  own  corpse-coffins  at  last, 
I  felt  I  could  e  myself  with  the  dagger— 


Guinevere  110 

Pass,  of  Arthur  331 

Lover's  Tale  ii  22 

„  124 

„  iv  56 

213 

229 

First  Quarrel  7 

49 

The  Revenge  73 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  175 

Tiresias  130 

„         189 

Despair  26 

The  Flight  103 

Epilogue  12 

Owd  Mod  24 

Charity  17 

The  Wanderer  7 

Two  Voices  339 

Tithonus  20 

Lucretius  146 

»        232 

Princess  v  47* 

Guinevere  114 

Tiresias  131 

Locksley  E.,  Sixty  103 

„  114 

Vastness  33 

Bandit's  Death  37  : 


The  Dreamer  19,  23,  27,  31 :; 
The  Wanderer  1  ; 


Princess  ii  7 


all's  well  that  e's  weU,  (repeat) 
Thk  gleam  of  household  sunshine  e's. 
End    "See  also  Far-end 

Endear    the  falhng  out  That  all  the  more  e  s. 

Ended    (See  also  Never-ended)    Heee  e  Hall,  and  our  . 

last  light  ^-  d' Arthur,  Ep.  1 

Thus  far  he  flow'd,  and  e ;  Golden  Year  52 

When,  ere  his  song  was  e,  fT^""*i7fi 

TiU  this  was  e,  and  his  careful  hand,—  Enoch  Arden  17b 

E  he  had  not,  but  she  brook'd  no  more :  Aylmer  s  Field  798 

but  when  the  wordy  storm  Had  e,  Sea  Dreams  32 

She  e  here,  and  beckon'd  us :  Princess  it  182 

She  e  with  such  passion  that  the  tear,  »     .  »«  ^^ 

For  when  the  jousts  were  e  yesterday,  Marr.  of  Geraint  6J2 

But  e  with  apology  so  sweet,  Geraint  arid  E.  394 

Half -wroth  he  had  not  e,  Balm  and  Balan  427 

She  e,  and  the  cry  of  a  great  jousts  Last  Tournament  bl 

But  when  the  twangling  e,  skipt  again ;  „              ^^ 

He  e :  Arthur  knew  the  voice ;  t,       "  r  ^  .i.      a? 

mountains  e  in  a  coast  Of  ever-shifting  sand,  Pass  of  Arthur  i^ 

ever  that  evening  e  a  great  gale  blew,  j  he  Revenge  114 

Have  e  mortal  foes ;  Ancievi  Sage  158 

Ending    She,  e,  waved  her  hands :  Pr^^c^'^  f  gf 

tiie  mocker  e  here  Turn'd  to  the  right,  Garelh  and  L.  294 

And  e  in  a  ruin-nothing  left,          .  Merlin  and  V.  883 

e,  he  moved  toward  her,  and  she  said.  Last  Tournament  704 

Endless     '  Let  me  not  cast  in  e  shade  Two  Voices^ 

memory  of  the  wither'd  leaf  In  e  time  is  scarce  ^^^ 

more  brief                                              ,  .  „  ,        "t  a..,  7a 

river  winding  slow  By  herds  upon  an  e  plain.  Palace  of  Art.  <4 

down  in  hell  Sutler  e  anguish,  ^"^''F"      '  fht.m 

Farewell,  like  e  welcome,  lived  and  died.  /-"i^*  "'f^  Duty  faS 

And  float  or  fall,  in  e  ebb  and  flow ;  W.  to  Mar»e  Alex.^ 

Paid  with  a  voice  flying  by  to  be  lost  on  an  e  sea-  , . /^f,?,^.  i 

And  we  shaU  sit  at  e  feast,  ■^"7:^^12 

What  fame  is  left  for  human  deeds  In  e  age  I*  ,,    *f7'*^^ 

Slain  by  himself,  shall  enter  e  night.         .  G^areiA  '^rtdL.b^ 

glory  and  shame  dying  out  for  ever  m  e  tune,  .   ^^P^y'.i 

poet  whom  his  Age  would  quote  As  heir  of  e  fame-    ^«eten«  Sage  147 

border-races,  holding,  each  its  own  By  e  war :  ,  ,  "  j  f  q^7 

Endow    E  you  with  broad  land  and  territory  Ixincelot  ondE.  9&7 

Endurance    untU  e  grow  Sinew'd  with  action,  i^d  25 

Endure    A  courage  to  e  and  to  obey ;  7,  7    ^  „f  ^w  i  «i4 

AU  force  in  bonds  that  might  e,  -f a^-^^  <'f  ^^^  ^^^ 


Endure 


177 


Engraven 


Endure  (continued)    Love,  that  e's  not  sordid  ends,  Love  thou  thy  land  6 

But  while  the  races  of  mankind  e.  Ode  on  Well.  219 

I  will  nevermore  e  To  sit  with  empty  hands  Sailor  Boy  15 

Would  she  have  heart  to  e  for  the  life  of  the  worm  Wages  7 

That  dies  not,  but  e's  with  pain,  In  Mem.  xviii  17 

And  scarce  e  to  draw  the  breath,  „            xx  15 

Whose  loves  in  higher  love  e ;  „       xxxii  14 

0  living  will  that  shalt  e  „  cxxxi  1 
Let  the  sweet  heavens  e,  Mavd  I  xi8 
As  long  as  my  life  e's  I  feel  I  shall  owe  you  „  xix  86 
Break  not,  O  woman's-heart,  but  still  e ;  Break  not, 

for  thou  art  Royal,  but  e.  Bed.  of  Idylls  44 

E's  not  that  her  guest  should  serve  Marr.  of  Geraint  379 

But  can  e  it  all  most  patiently.'  „              473 

canst  e  To  mouth  so  huge  a  foulness —  Balin  and  Balan  378 

thought  to  do  while  he  might  yet  e,  Lancelot  and  E.  495 

strength  of  the  race  to  command,  to  obey,  to  e,  Def.  of  Lucknow  47 

E !  thou  hast  done  so  well  for  men,  Columbiis  152 

every  heart  that  loves  with  truth  is  equal  to  e.  The  Flight  104 

For  so  the  deed  e's ;  Epilogue  39 
But  while  my  life's  late  eve  e's.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  49 
vanish  and  give  place  to  the  beauty  that  e's,  The 

beauty  that  e's  on  the  Spiritual  height,  Happy  36 

caught  one  gleam  of  the  beauty  which  e's —  „      60 

Endured    Have  all  in  all  e  as  much,  St.  S.  Stylites  130 

Nor  yet  e  to  meet  her  opening  eyes,  Princess  iv  195 

they  knew  her ;  they  e,  Long-closeted  with  her  „         321 

ye  surely  have  e  Strange  chances  here  alone ; '  Geraint  and  E.  809 

Nor  yet  e  in  presence  of  His  eyes  Lover's  Tale  i  423 

while  I  mused  nor  yet  e  to  take  So  rich  a  prize,  „         Hi  49 

Enduring    (See  also  All-enduring,  Long-enduring)    '  Yet 

hadst  thou,  thro'  e  pain,  Two  Voices  166 

Sow  the  seed,  and  reap  the  harvest  with  e  toil,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  121 

'Enemies  (anemones)     Down  i'  the  woild  'e  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  34 

Enemy    (See  also  Hennemy)     '  Our  enemies  have  f all'n, 

but  this  shall  grow  Princess  vi  53 
'  Our  enemies  have  fall'n,  have  fall'n :  (repeat)  Princess  vi  33,  38,  43,  48 

moan  of  an  e  massacred,  Boddicea  25 

tho'  the  gathering  e  narrow  thee,  „        39 

pulses  at  the  clamouring  of  her  e  fainted  „        82 

1  trust  if  an  e's  fleet  came  yonder  Maud  7  »  49 
'  A  boon.  Sir  King !  Thine  e.  King,  am  I.  Gareth  and  L.  351 
He  drave  his  e  backward  down  the  bridge,  „  969 
being  but  knave,  I  throw  thine  enemies.'  „  1023 
To  dash  against  mine  e  and  to  win.  „  1355 
arms,  arms,  arms  to  fight  my  e  ?  Marr.  of  Geraint  282 
down  his  e  roll'd.  And  there  lay  still ;  Geraint  and  E.  160 
an  e  that  has  left  Death  in  the  living  waters.  Merlin  and  V.  147 
roU'd  his  e  down.  And  saved  him :  Lancelot  and  E.  26 
the  knights  Are  half  of  them  our  enemies,  „  99 
a  dream  Of  dragging  down  his  e  made  them  move,  „  814 
and  said, '  Mine  enemies  Pursue  me,  Guinevere  139 
Ev'n  in  the  presence  of  an  e's  fleet,  „  279 
on  all  the  defences  our  myriad  e  fell.  Def.  of  Lucknow  35 
in  a  moment  two  mines  by  the  e  sprung  „  54 
Fonseca  my  main  e  at  their  court,  Columbus  126 
For  there  was  not  an  e  near,  V.  of  Maddune  93 
so  often  in  Strife  with  their  enemies  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  18 
Love  your  e,  bless  your  haters,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  85 
'  Kill  your  e,  for  you  hate  him,'  still, '  your  e  „               94 

Energy    spurr'd  at  heart  with  fieriest  e  To  J.  M.  K.  7 

By  its  own  e  fulfill'd  itself,  Gardener's  D.  238 

suit  The  full-grown  energies  of  heaven.  In  Mem.  xl  20 

come  and  go.  With  agonies,  with  energies,  „       cxiii  18 

To  those  still-working  energies  I  spy  Mechanophilus  19 

Enfold    So  dear  a  life  your  arms  e  The  Daisy  93 

that  large  grief  which  these  e  In  Mem.  r  11 

mother's  shame  will  e  her  and  darken  The  Wreck  100 

Enfolded    Two  mutually  e ;  Love,  the  third.  Gardener's  D.  215 

And  in  her  veil  e,  manchet  bread.  Marr.  of  Geraint  389 

Enfolding    E  that  dark  body  which  had  lain  Death  of  (Enone  93 

Enforced    £  she  was  to  wed  him  in  her  tears.  Com.  of  Arthur  204t 

Engarlanded    E  and  diaper'd  With  inwrought  flowers,    Arabian  Nights  148 

Engine    Which  only  to  one  e  bound  Falls  ofE,  Two  Voices  347 

Enginery    Loom  and  wheel  and  e.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  15 


Engirt    E  with  many  a  florid  maiden-cheek.  Princess  Hi  350 

England     And  more  than  E  honours  that.  Talking  Oak  295 
show  you  slips  of  all  that  grows  From  E  to  Van  Diemen.     Amphion  84 

dewy  meadowy  morning-breath  Of  E,  Enoch  Arden  661 

thanks  to  the  Giver,  E,  for  thy  son.  Ode  on  Well.  45 

For  this  is  E's  greatest  son,  „            95 

And  E  pouring  on  her  foes.  „          117 

keep  our  noble  E  whole,  „          161 

Truth-teller  was  our  E's  Alfred  named ;  „          188 

E's  honest  censure  went  too  far ;  Third  of  Feb.  2 

What  E  was,  shall  her  true  sons  forget  ?  „          44 

some  love  E  and  her  honour  yet.  „          46 

Harold's  E  fell  to  Norman  swords ;  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  22 

It  told  of  E  then  to  me,  The  Daisy  89 

harsher  sound  ever  heard,  ye  Muses,  inE?  Trans,  of  Homer  3 

God-gifted  organ-voice  of  E,  Milton  3 

freedom  in  her  regal  seat  Ot  E;  In  Mem.  cix  15 

Or  how  should  E  dreaming  of  his  sons  Ded.  of  Idylls  31 

boundless  homes  For  ever-broadening  E,  To  the  Queen  ii  30 
Thou — E's  England-loving  daughter — thou      Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  15 

this  ballad  of  the  deeds  Of  E,  „                   21 

Banner  of  E,  not  for  a  season,  Def.  of  Lucknow  1 
upon  the  topmost  roof  our  banner  of  E  blew. 

(repeat)  Def.  of  Lucknow  6,  30,  45,  60,  94 

the  old  banner  of  E  blew.                                  „  106 

appeal  Once  more  to  France  or  E ;  Columbus  58 

Who  dost  not  love  our  E —  To  Victor  Hugo  9 

E,  France,  all  man  to  be  Will  make  one  people  „            10 

To  younger  E  in  the  boy  my  son.  „            14 

E  may  go  down  in  babble  at  last.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  8 

Yet  know  you,  as  your  E  knows  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  23 

Who  wert  the  voice  of  £  in  the  East.  Epit.  on  Stratford  4 

Then  drink  to  E,  every  guest ;  Hands  all  Round  2 

New  E  of  the  Southern  Pole !  „              16 

the  great  name  of  E,  round  and  round,  (repeat)  „        12,  36 

To  ^  under  Indian  skies,  ,,17 

To  this  great  name  of  E  drink,  „              23 

if  you  shall  fail  to  understand  What  E  is,  The  Fleet  2 

Should  this  old  E  fall  Which  Nelson  left  „         4 

The  fleet  of  E  is  her  all-in-all ;  „        13 

that  which  gilds  the  glebe  of  E,  To  Prof.  Jebb.  7 

a  valorous  weapon  in  olden  E !  Kapiolani  4 
England-loving  England's  E-l  daughter — thou  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  15 
Ei^lish    (See  also  Half-English)    first  reveal'd  themselves 

to  E  air,  Eleanore  2 

one,  an  E  home — gray  twilight  pour'd  Palace  of  Art  85 

E  natures,  freemen,  friends.  Love  thou  thy  land  7 

Who  sprang  from  E  blood !  England  and  Amer.  10 

Gallant  sons  of  E  freemen.  The  Captain  7 

if  you  knew  her  in  her  E  days.  The  Brook  224 

sweet  as  E  air  could  make  her,  she :  Princess,  Pro.  155 

Nor  ever  lost  an  E  gun ;  Ode  on  Well.  97 

Truth-lover  was  our  E  Duke ;  „         189 

since  E  Harold  gave  its  throne  a  wife,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  24 

we  may  stand  Where  he  in  E  earth  is  laid,  In  Mem.  xviii  2 

feet  like  sunny  gems  on  an  E  green,  Maiid  I  v  14 

I  see  her  there.  Bright  E  lily,  „    xix  55 

Sir  Richard  cried  in  his  E  pride.  The  Revenge  82 

dared  her  with  one  little  ship  and  his  E  few ;  „           107 
Dying  so  E  thou  wouldst  have  her  flag             Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  16 

we  were  E  in  heart  and  in  limb,  Def.  of  LuckTww  46 

When  he  coin'd  into  E  gold  some  treasure  The  Wreck  67 

no  version  done  In  E  more  divinely  well ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  34 

an  age  of  noblest  E  names,  Locksley  //.,  Sixty  83 

who  long  To  keep  our  E  Empire  whole !  Hands  aU  Round  14 

Or  marvel  how  in  E  air  My  yucca.  To  Ulysses  20 

All  flaming,  made  an  E  homestead  Hell —  To  Mary  Boyle  37 

Englishman    A  great  broad-shoulder'd  genial  E,  Princess,  Con.  85 

The  last  great  E  is  low.  Ode  on  Well.  18 

'  We  be  all  good  English  men.  The  Revenge  29 

held  his  own  Like  an  E  there  and  then ;  Heavy  Brigade  19 

Engrail'd     over  hills  with  peaky  tops  e.  Palace  o/^rt  113 
Engrain'd    walk  with  vary-colour'd  shells  Wander'd  e.      Arabian  Nights  58 

Engrave    I  bad  the  man  e  '  From  Walter '  on  the  ring,  The  Ring  235 

Engraven    '  From  Edith '  was  e  on  the  blade.  Aylmer's  Field  598 


M 


Engraven 


178 


Enoch 


EIngraven  {continued)    Some  younger  hand  must  have  e  the 

ring—  The  Ring  238 
Enid     Had  married  E,  Yniol's  only  child,                           Marr.  of  Geraint  4 

E,  but  to  please  her  husband's  eye,  „  11 

E  loved  the  Queen,  and  with  true  heart  „  19 

Allowing  it,  the  Prince  and  E  rode,  „  43 

Told  E,  and  they  sadden'd  her  the  more :  „  64 

E  woke,  and  sat  beside  the  couch,  „  79 

'  If  E  errs,  let  E  learn  her  fault.'  „  132 

The  voice  of  E,  Yniol's  daughter,  rang  „  327 

the  sweet  voice  of  E  moved  Geraint ;  „  334 
song  that  E  sang  was  one  Of  Fortune  and  her 

wheel,  and  E  sang :  „  345 

Moved  the  fair  E,  all  in  faded  silk,  „  366 

'  E,  the  good  knight's  horse  stands  in  the  court ;  „  370 

the  Prince,  as  E  past  liim,  fain  To  follow,  ,,  375 

E  took  his  charger  to  the  stall ;  „  382 

E  brought  sweet  cakes  to  make  them  cheer,  „  388 

rest  On  E  at  her  lowly  handmaid-work,  „  400 
Raised  my  own  town  against  me  in  the  night  Before  my 

E's  birthday,  „  458 

looking  round  he  saw  not  E  there,  ,,  506 

red  and  pale  Across  the  face  of  E  hearing  her ;  „  524 

my  pride  Is  broken  down,  for  E  sees  my  fall  !  '  „  590 
E,  for  she  lay  With  her  fair  head  in  the  dim-yellow 

light,  „  599 

And  E  fell  in  longing  for  a  dress  „  630 

And  E  started  waking,  with  her  heart  „  674 

E  look'd,  but  all  confused  at  first,  „  685 

E  listen'd  brightening  as  she  lay ;  „  733 
call'd  For  E,  and  when  Yniol  made  report  Of  that 

good  mother  making  E  gay  „  756 

E,  all  abash'd  she  knew  not  why,  „  765 

make  your  E  burst  SunUke  from  cloud —  „  788 

how  can  E  find  A  nobler  friend  ?  „  792 

But  E  ever  kept  the  faded  silk,  „  841 
No,  not  a  word  !  '  and  E  was  aghast ;                           Geraint  and  E.  18 

So  the  last  sight  that  E  had  of  home  „  24 

E  leading  down  the  tracks  Thro'  which  he  bad  „  28 

E  was  aware  of  three  tall  knights  On  horseback,  „  56 

E  ponder'd  in  her  heart,  and  said :  (repeat)  „      64, 130 

E  waited  pale  and  sorrowful,  „  83 

E,  keeping  watch,  behold  In  the  first  shallow  shade  „  118 

E  stood  aside  to  wait  the  event,  „  153 

Geraint  Had  ruth  again  on  E  looking  pale :  „  203 

And  E  took  a  little  deUcately,  „  212 

he  let  them  glance  At  E,  where  she  droopt :  „  247 

Foimd  E  with  the  comer  of  his  eye,  „  281 
*  E,  the  pilot  star  of  my  lone  life,  E,  my  early  and  my 

only  love,  E,  the  loss  of  whom  hath  tum'd  me  wild —        „  306 

E,  you  and  he,  I  see  with  Joy,  „  320 

E  fear'd  his  eyes.  Moist  as  they  were,  „  350 

flow  E  never  loved  a  man  but  him,  „  363 

But  E  left  alone  with  Prince  Geraint,  „  365 

He  fell  asleep,  and  E  had  no  heart  To  wake  him,  „  369 

then  to  E, '  Forward  !   and  to-day  I  charge  you,  E,  „  413 

E  answer'd, '  Yea,  my  lord,  I  know  Your  wish,  „  418 

Went  E  with  her  sullen  follower  on.            ,  „  440 

And  E  heard  the  clashing  of  his  fall,  „  509 

So  for  long  hours  sat  E  by  her  lord,  „  580 

Till  E  shrank  far  back  into  herself,  „  607 

'  No,  no  '  said  E,  vext,  '  I  will  not  eat                         •  „  656 

But  E  answer'd,  harder  to  be  moved  „  694 

E  said  :   '  In  this  poor  gown  my  dear  lord  „  697 

E,  in  her  utter  helplessness,  „  719 

'  E,  I  have  used  you  worse  than  that  dead  man  ;  „  735 

And  E  could  not  say  one  tender  word,  „  746 
'  Then,  E,  shall  you  ride  Behind  me.'    '  Yea,'  said  E, 

'  let  us  go.'  „  750 

'  The  voice  of  E,'  said  the  knight ;  „  780 

fear  not,  E,  I  should  fall  upon  him,  „  787 

But  E  in  their  going  heid  two  fears,  „  817 

E  easily  believed.  Like  simple  noble  natures,  „  874 
past  to  E's  tent :  and  thither  came  The  King's 

own  leech  ,,  922 


Enid  (continued)    And  E  tended  on  him  there  :                 Geraint  and  E.  924 
E,  whom  her  ladies  loved  to  call  E  the  Fair,  a 
grateful  people  named  E  the  Good ;  and  in  their 

halls  arose  The  cry  of  children,  E's  and  Geraint's  „  962 

sat  betwixt  her  best  E,  and  lissome  Vivien,  Guinevere  28 

Enjoy    all  the  saints  E  themselves  in  heaven,  St.  S.  Stylites  106 

Enjoy'd    all  times  I  have  e  Greatly,  have  suffer'd  greatly,  Ulysses  7 

Enjoying     E  each  the  other's  good  :  In  Mem.  xlvii  10 

Enjoyment    There  methinks  would  be  e  more  Locksley  Hall  165 
Enlighten    Strengthen  me,  e  me  !  (repeat)               Ode  to  Memory  5,  43, 122 

Enna    moved  Like  Proserpine  in  E,  gathering  flowers  :  Edwin  Morris  112 

in  this  pleasant  vale  we  stand  again.  The  field  of  E,  Demeter  and  P.  35 

Tho'  dead  in  its  Trinacrian  E,  To  Prof.  Jebb  11 
Enoch    (See  also  Arden,  Enoch  Arden)    E  was  host  one 

day,  Philip  the  next,  Enoch  Arden  25 

E  would  hold  possession  for  a  week :  „  27 

if  they  quarrell'd,  E  stronger-made  Was  Master :  „  30 

Shriek  out '  I  hate  you,  E,'  „  33 

E  spoke  his  love,  But  Philip  loved  in  silence ;  „  40 

But  she  loved  E ;  tho'  she  knew  it  not,  „  43 

E  set  A  purpose  evermore  before  his  eyes,  „  44 

Than  E.    Likewise  had  he  served  a  year  „  52 

E  and  Annie,  sitting  hand-in-hand,  ,,  69 

While  E  was  abroad  on  wrathful  seas,  „  91 

E's  white  horse,  and  E's  ocean  spoil  „  93 

Friday  fare  was  E's  ministering.  „  100 

thither  used  E  at  times  to  go  by  land  or  sea ;  „  104 

the  master  of  that  ship  E  had  served  in,  „  120 

Would  E  have  the  place  ?    And  E  all  at  once  assented  to  it,    „  125 

Then  E  lay  long-pondering  on  his  plans  ;  „  133 

Thus  jB  in  his  heart  determined  all :  „  148 

Whom  E  took,  and  handled  all  his  limbs,  „  153 

first  since  E's  golden  ring  had  girt  Her  finger,  „  157 

For  E  parted  with  his  old  sea-friend,  „  168 

So  all  day  long  till  E's  last  at  home,  „  172 

E  faced  this  morning  of  farewell  Brightly  „  182 

E  as  SL  brave  God-fearing  man  Bow'd  himself  „  185 

0  E,  you  are  wise  ;  And  yet  for  all  your  wisdom  „  210 

'  Well  then,'  said  E,  '  I  shall  look  on  yours.  „  213 

E  rose.  Cast  his  strong  arms  about  his  drooping  wife,  ,,  227 

when  the  day,  that  E  mention'd,  came,  „  239 

still  foreboding  '  what  would  E  say  ?  „  253 

(Since  E  left  he  had  not  look'd  upon  her),  „  273 

speak  to  you  of  what  he  wish'd,  E,  your  husband  :  „  292 

For,  if  you  will,  when  E  comes  again  „  309 

But  E  Uves  ;  that  is  borne  in  on  me.  „  319 

PhiUp  gain'd  As  E  lost :  for  E  seem'd  „  355 
so  ten  years  Since  E  left  his  hearth  and  native  land, 

Fled  forward,  and  no  news  of  E  came.  „  360 

can  you  be  ever  loved  As  E  was  ?  „  427 

'  I  am  content,'  he  answer'd,  '  to  be  loved  A  Uttle  after  E.'    „  429 

If  E  comes — but  E  will  not  come —  „  431 

Pray'd  for  a  sign  '  my  £  is  he  gone  ?  '  „  491 

E  sitting  on  a  height.  Under  a  palm  tree,  „  500 

where  was  E  ?  prosperously  sail'd  The  ship  „  527 

E  traded  for  himself,  and  bought  Quaint  monsters  „  538 

the  loss  of  all  But  E  and  two  others.  „  550 

And  E's  comrade,  careless  of  himself,  „  568 

Thus  over  E's  early-silvering  head  „  622 

There  E  spoke  no  word  to  any  one,  „  667 

There  E  rested  silent  many  days.  ,)  699 

E  was  so  brown,  so  bow'd.  So  broken —  „  703 

'  E,  poor  man,  was  cast  away  and  lost '  »  713 

E  yeam'd  to  see  her  face  again  ;  „  717 

E  shunn'd  the  middle  walk  and  stole  Up  by  the  wall,  „  738 

griefs  Like  his  have  worse  or  better,  E  saw.  „  711 

E  set  himself.  Scorning  an  alms,  „  811 

round  again  to  meet  the  day  When  E  had  return'd,  „  823 

And  E  bore  his  weakness  cheerfully.  ,>  827 

E  thinking  '  after  1  am  gone,  „  834 

'  Swear  '  added  E  sternly  '  on  the  book.'  „  842 

Then  E  rolling  his  gray  eyes  upon  her,  ,,  844 

E  said  again, '  My  God  has  bow'd  me  down  „  855 

for  E  hung  A  moment  on  her  words,  „  872 

While  E  slumber'd  motionless  and  pale,  ),  ^08 


Enoch  Arden 


179 


Equal 


Enoch  Arden    (See  also  Arden,  Enoch)    E  A,a  rough 
sailor's  lad 

Did  you  know  E  A  oi  this  town  ?  ' 

Proclaiming  E  A  and  his  woes ; 
Enormous    e  polypi  Winnow  with  giant  arms 

Stretch'd  wide  and  wild  the  waste  e  marsh, 

E  elm-tree-boles  did  stoop  and  lean 
Enrich     E  the  markets  of  the  golden  year. 

thoughts  e  the  blood  of  the  world.' 

To  e  the  threshold  of  the  night 
Enring'd     E  a  billowing  fountain  in  the  midst ; 
Enroll    Your  Highness  would  e  them  with  your  own, 

In  many  a  figured  leaf  e's 
Enroll'd    good  livers,  them  we  e  Among  us, 
Ensample    drawing  foul  e  from  fair  names, 
Ensepulchre    let  the  wolves'  black  maws  e 
Enshrouded    cold  worm  Fretteth  thine  e  form. — 
Ensign    drowsy  folds  of  our  great  e  shake 
Enskied    seem  d  at  first  'a  thing  e ' 
Ensue    that  which  might  e  With  this  old  soul 

out  of  distance  might  e  Desire  of  nearness 
Ensued,     then  e  A  Martin's  summer  of  his  faded  love, 
EntaU    <SeeTa&il 
Entangle    To  e  me  when  we  met, 
Entangled    The  girl  might  be  e  ere  she  knew. 
Entanglest    All  my  bounding  heart  e 
Enter    But  e  not  the  toil  of  life. 

oft  some  brainless  devil  «'s  in, 

He  breaks  the  hedge  :  he  e's  there  : 

lingeringly  on  the  latch.  Fearing  to  e : 

Let  no  man  e  in  on  pain  of  death  ? 

'  Our  laws  are  broken  :  let  him  e  too.' 

friend  or  foe.  Shall  e,  if  he  will. 

in  a  tade  Shall  e  in  at  lowly  doors. 

She  e's  other  realms  of  love ; 

Descend,  and  touch,  and  e ; 

'  E  Ukewise  ye  And  go  with  us  : ' 

And  e  in  at  breast  and  brow, 

She  e's,  glowing  Uke  the  moon 

Slain  by  himself,  shall  e  endless  night. 

Then  Yniol,  '  E  therefore  and  partake 

I  will  e,  I  will  eat  With  all  the  passion 

Said  Yniol ;   '  e  quickly.' 

nor  lets  Or  dame  or  damsel  e  at  his  gates 

There  will  I  e  in  among  them  all. 

Late,  late,  so  late  !  but  we  can  e  still. 

too  late  !  ye  cannot  e  now.  (repeat) 

And  e  it,  and  make  it  beautiful  ? 

but  e  also  here,  Diffuse  thyself  at  will 
Enter'd    {See  also  Newly-enter'd) 
le, 

Each  e  Uke  a  welcome  guest. 


Enoch  Arden  14 

845 

868 

The  Krdken  9 

Ode  to  Memory  101 

D.  of  F.  Women  57 

Golden  Year  46 

Princess  ii  181 

In  Mem.  xxix  6 

Princess  ii  28 

i239 

In  Mem.  xliii  11 

Gareth  and  L.  424 

Guinevere  490 

Balin  and  Balan  487 

A  Dirge  10 

Princess  v  8 

I'd  E.  Fitzgerald  16 

Two  Voices  392 

In  Mem.  cxvii  5 

Aylmer's  Field  559 

Maud  I  vi  28 

Aylmer's  Field  272 

Madeline  40 

Margaret  24 

Palace  of  Art  203 

Day-Dm.,  Arrival  18 

Enoch  Arden  520 

Princess  ii  195 

„      vi  317 

337 

In  Mem.  xxxvi  8 

xll2 

xciii  13 

ciii  51 

cxxii  11 

Con.  27 

Gareth  and  L.  642 

Marr.  of  Geraint  300 

„  305 

360 

Balin  and  Balan  107 

Lancelot  and  E.  1052 

Guinevere  169 

Guinevere  170, 173,  176,  179 

Pass,  of  Arthur  17 

Prog,  of  Spring  23 

another  night  in  night 

Arabian  Nights  38 
Two  Voices  411 


blew  Beyond  us,  as  we  e  in  the  cool. 

struck  it  thrice,  and,  no  one  opening,  E ; 

What  ail'd  her  then,  that  ere  she  e, 

e  one  Of  those  dark  caves  that  run  beneath  the  cUlIs 

e  an  old  hostel,  call'd  mine  host  To  council, 

hastily  subscribed,  We  e  on  the  boards  : 

as  we  e  in.  There  sat  along  the  forms. 

With  me.  Sir,  e  in  the  bigger  boy, 

I  knock'd  and,  bidden,  e  ; 

dipt  Beneath  the  satin  dome  and  e  in, 

we  e  in,  and  there  Among  piled  arms 

Empanoplied  and  plumed  We  e  in, 

'  Enter  Ukewise  ye  And  go  with  us  : '  they  e  in, 

Left  her  and  fled,  and  Uther  e  in, 

when  I  e  told  me  that  himself  And  Merlin 

then  e  with  his  twain  Camelot, 

And  «,  and  were  lost  behind  the  walls. 

E,  the  wild  lord  of  the  place,  Limours. 

Thereafter,  when  Sir  BaUn  e  hall. 

Laid  lance,  and  e,  and  we  knelt  in  prayer. 

The  younger  sister,  Evelyn,  e — 

Muriel  e  with  it, '  See  ! — 

Has  e  on  the  larger  woman-world 


Gardener's  D.  114 

Enoch  Arden  280 

518 

Sea  Dreams  89 

Princess  i  173 

„        ii  74 

„  101 

"      ...404 

„     Hi  130 

„        iv  31 

„         V  54 

»        ..484 

In  Mem.  ciii  52 

Com.  of  Arthur  201 

364 

Gareth  and  L.  302 

Marr.  of  Geraint  252 

Geraint  and  E.  277 

Balin  and  Balan  80 

Holy  Grail  460 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  152 

The  Ring  279 

„        486 


Entering    {See  also  Half-entering)    e  filPd  the  house  with 

sudden  light.  Aylmer's  Field  682 

for  on  e  He  had  cast  the  curtains  of  their  seat  aside —  „  802 

You  likewise  will  do  well,  Ladies,  in  e  here,  Princess  ii  62 

E,  the  sudden  light  Dazed  me  half -blind :  „         v  11 

E  then.  Right  o'er  a  mount  of  newly-fallen  stones,  Marr.  of  Geraint  360 

and  e  barr'd  her  door,  Stript  off  the  case,  Lancelot  and  E.  15 

e,  loosed  and  let  him  go.'  Holy  Grail  698 

Sir  Bors,  on  e,  push'd  Athwart  the  throng  to  Lancelot,  „  752 

E  aU  the  avenues  of  sense  Past  thro'  into  his  citadel.  Lover's  Tale  i  630 

and  e  the  dim  vault,  And,  making  there  a  sudden  light,        „         iv  52 

Enterprise     Far-famed  for  well-won  e,  Kate  22 

Here  on  the  threshold  of  our  e.  Gareth  and  L.  298 

Entertain'd     talk  and  minstrel  melody  e.  Lancelot  and  E.  267 

Entertainment    the  slender  e  of  a  house  Once  rich,        Marr.  of  Geraint  301 

Enthroned    or  the  e  Persephonfe  in  Hades,  Princess  iv  438 

Entranced     E  with  that  place  and  time,  Arabian  Nights  97 

Entreat    '  Earl,  e  her  by  my  love,  Marr.  of  Geraint  760 

Entreaty    manifold  entreaties,  many  a  tear,  Enoch  Arden  160 

Entry     Above  an  e  :  riding  in,  we  call'd  ;  Princess  i  225 

A  column'd  e  shone  and  marble  stairs,  „       v  364 

in  the  Vestal  e  shriek'd  The  virgin  marble  „      vi  350 

two  great  entries  open'd  from  the  hall,  Gareth  and  L.  665 

by  this  e  fled  The  damsel  in  her  wrath,  „  674 

a  lion  on  each  side  That  kept  the  e,  Holy  Grail  818 

Strewn  in  the  e  of  the  moaning  cave  ;  Lover's  Tale  Hi  2 

Entry-gates    Stood  from  his  walls  and  wing  dhis  e  g         Aylmer's  Field  18 

Entwine     Round  my  true  heart  thine  arms  e  Miller's  D.  216 

E  the  cold  baptismal  font.  In  Mem.  xxix  10 

Envied     I  e  your  sweet  slumber,  The  Flight  9 

Envious    See  Half-envious 

Envy  (s)  far  aloof  From  e,  hate  and  pity,  Lucretius  77 

No  lewdness,  narrowing  e,  monkey-spite,  „  211 

Know  well  that  E  calls  you  Devil's  son.  Merlin  and  V.  467 

then  did  E  call  me  Devil's  son :  „  497 

E  wears  the  mask  of  Love,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  109 

Envy  (verb)     Her  countrywomen  !  she  did  not  e  Princess  Hi  41 

I  e  not  in  any  moods  The  captive  void  In  Mem.  xxvii  1 

I  e  not  the  beast  that  takes  His  Ucense  „  5 

Ehivying    LeoUn,  I  almost  sin  in  e  you :  Aylmer's  Field  360 

And  e  all  that  meet  him  there.  In  Mem.  Ix  8 

Enwind     Danube  rolling  fair  E  her  isles.  In  Mem.  xcviii  10 

Enwomb    O  day  which  did  e  that  happy  hour.  Lover's  Tale  i  485 

Enwound    the  circle  of  his  arms  E  us  both  ;  Gardener's  D  217 

E  him  fold  by  fold,  and  made  him  gray  Guinevere  603 

Epic  (adj.)     Princess,  six  feet  high,  Grand,  e.  Princess,  Pro.  225 

Epic  (s)     '  he  burnt  His  e,  his  King  Arthur,  The  Epic  28 

With  scraps  of  thundrous  E  lilted  out  Princess  ii  375 

Epicurean  (adj.)    majesties  Of  settled,  sweet,  E  life,  Lucretius  218 

Epicurean  (s)    like  a  stoic,  or  like  A  wiser  e,  Maud  I  iv  21 

Epitaph     {See  also  Hepitaph)     cut  this  e  above  my  bones  ;      Princess  ii  207 

Epithet    And  pelted  with  outrageous  e's,  Aylmer's  Field  286 

and  your  fine  e  Is  accurate  too,  Merlin  and  V.  532 

Epoch    A  juster  e  has  begun.  Epilogue  6 

Equal  (adj.)     Gliding  with  e  crowns  two  serpents  led  Alexander  6 

who  wrought  Two  spirits  to  one  e  mind —  Miller's  D.  236 

Let  us  swear  an  oath,  and  keep  it  with  an  e  mind,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  108 

we  are  ;  One  e  temper  of  heroic  hearts,  Ulysses  68 

crime  of  sense  became  The  crime  of  maUce,  and  is 

e  blame.'  Vision  of  Sin  216 

Maintaining  that  with  e  husbandry  Princess  i  130 

Toward  that  great  year  of  e  mights  and  rights,  „  iv  74 

I  saw  That  e  baseness  lived  in  sleeker  times  „         v  385 

scorn'd  to  help  their  e  rights  Against  the  sons  of  men,  „       vii  233 

the  track  Whereon  with  e  feet  we  fared  ;  In  Mem.  xxv  2 

But  lives  to  wed  an  e  mind  ;  „         Ixii  8 

First  love,  first  friendship,  e  powers,  „  Ixxxv  107 

Faith  and  imfaith  can  ne'er  be  e  powers  :  Merlin  and  V.  388 

To  leave  an  e  baseness ;  „  830 

As  Love  and  I  do  number  e  years,  Lover's  Tale  i  195 

A  planet  e  to  the  sun  Which  cast  it.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  35 

The  girls  of  e  age,  but  one  was  fair.  The  Ring  160 

every  heart  that  loves  with  truth  is  e  to  endure.  The  Flight  104 

your  passionate  shriek  for  the  rights  of  an  e  humanity.  Beautiful  City  2 
For  aU  they  rule — by  e  law  for  aU  ?  Akbar's  Dream  110 


Equal 


180 


Eustace 


EQual  (s)    The  woman  were  an  e  to  the  man.  Princess  i  131 

and  this  proud  watchword  rest  Of  e ;  „      vii  301 

in  true  marriage  hes  Nor  e,  nor  imequal :  „            303 

'  Ye  are  e's,  equal-born.'  Loclcsley  H.,  Sixty  110 

Each  religion  says,  '  Thou  art  one,  without  e.'  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  3 

Equal  (verb)     what  delights  can  e  those  In  Mem.  xlii  9 

Equal-blowing     Beneath  a  broad  and  e-b  wind.  Gardener's  B.  77 

Equal-bom     '  Ye  are  equals,  e-b  '     E-b  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  110 

Equall'd     Strength  came  to  me  that  e  my  desire.  D.  of  F.  Women  230 

Equal-poised     O  friendship,  e-p  control.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  33 

Equatorial    Not  such  as  here — an  e  one.  Lover's  Tale  iv  190 

Equinox    feel  in  head  or  chest  Our  changeful  e'es,  Will  Water.  238 

Erased    See  Sand-erased 

Erect    Tall  and  e,  but  bending  from  his  height  Aylmer's  Field  119 

anger-charm'd  from  sorrow,  soldierlike,  E :  „            729 

Tall  and  e,  but  in  the  middle  aisle  Reel'd,  „            818 

Strode  from  the  porch,  tall,  and  e  again.  „            825 

E  behind  a  desk  of  satin-wood.  Princess  ii  105 

Lady  Blanche  e  Stood  up  and  spake,  „     iv  290 

E  and  silent,  striking  with  her  glance  „      vi  152 

Erin    With  Anguisant  of  E,  Morganore,  Com.  of  Arthur  115 
Ermine    with  e  capes  And  woolly-breasts  and  beaded 

eyes  ;  In  Mem.  xcv  11 
Erne  (Miriam)    See  Miriam,  Miriam  Erne 
Erne  (Muriel)    See  Muriel,  Muriel  Erne 

Eros     a  bevy  of  E'es,  apple-cheek'd.  The  Islet  11 

Err    forms  that  e  from  honest  Nature's  rule  !  Locksley  Hail  61 

O  my  princess  !   true  she  e's,  Princess  Hi  107 

she  that  has  a  son  And  sees  him  e:  „            261 

For  nothing  is  that  e's  from  law.  In  Mem.  Ixxiii  8 

'  If  Enid  e's,  let  Enid  learn  her  fault.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  132 
Errant    (See  also  Damsel-errant,  Knighthood-errant) 

and  e  knights  And  ladies  came,  Marr.  of  Geraint  545 

To  lead  an  e  passion  home  again.  Lucretius  17 
Prince  had  brought  his  e  eyes  Home  from  the  rock,  Geraint  and  E.  245 
Errantry    See  Knight-errantry 

Err'd    Aim'd  at  the  hehn,  his  lance  e ;  Geraint  and  E.  157 

if  ancient  prophecies  Have  e  not,  Guinevere  450 

Errest     '  Nay — but  thou  e,  Lancelot :  Holy  Grail  881 

Erring    an  e  pearl  Lost  in  her  bosom  :  Princess  iv  60 

Error    intellect  to  part  E  from  crime  ;  Isabel  15 

Shall  E  in  the  round  of  time  Still  father  Truth  ?  Love  and  Duty  4 

Deep  as  Hell  I  count  his  e.  The  Captain  3 

Dismal  e  !  fearful  slaughter !  „          65 

Child,  if  it  were  thine  e  or  thy  crime  Come  not,  when,  etc.  7 

some  gross  e  lies  In  this  report.  Princess  i  69 

so  she  wears  her  e  like  a  crown  „         Hi  111 

The  damsel's  headlong  e  thro'  the  wood —  Gareth  and  L.  1215 

When  he  flouted  a  statesman's  e.  The  Wreck  68 

Life  with  its  anguLsh,  and  horrors,  and  e's —  Despair  48 

'Erse  (horse)     Dosn't  thou  'ear  my  'e's  legs,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  1 

Fur  he  ca'd  'is  'e  Billy-rough-un,  ViUage  Wife  84 

Esau    a  heart  as  rough  as  E's  hand,  Godiva  28 

Escape  (S)     and  tumbles  and  childish  e's,  Maud  I  i  69 

From  which,  was  no  e  for  evermore  ;  Merlin  and  V.  210 

From  which  is  no  e  for  evermore.'  ,,              544 

Escape  (verb)    who  scarce  would  e  with  her  life  ;  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  66 

if  they  be  bold  enough,  who  shall  e  ?  Def.  of  Liicknow  40 

if  I  do  not  e  you  at  last.  Despair  114 

And  who  shall  e  if  they  close  ?  Heavy  Brigade  16 

can  e  From  the  lower  world  within  him.  Making  of  Man  1 

Escaped    {See  also  'Scaped)    when  the  second  Christmas 

came,  e  HLs  keepers,  Aylmer's  Field  838 

From  which  I  e  heart-free,  Maud  I  ii  11 

Escaping     Like  the  caged  bird  e  suddenly,  Enoch  Arden  269 

Esh  (ash)     Break  me  a  bit  o'  the  e  for  his  'ead,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  41 

Eshcol     vines  with  grapes  Of  E  hugeness  ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  28 

Espalier    e's  and  the  standards  all  Are  thine  ;  The  Blackbird  5 

Espied    stood.  Until  the  King  e  him.  Holy  Grail  755 

Essay     must  thou  dearly  love  thy  first  e,  Ode  to  Memory  83 

Essay'd    e,  by  tenderest-touching  terms,  Merlin  and  V.  898 

Then  in  my  madness  I  e  the  door ;  Holy  Grail  841 

Essayist    Authors — e,  atheist,  novelist,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  139 

~              I  floated  free,  As  naked  e.  Two  Voices  374 

O  sacred  e,  other  form,  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  35 


Essence  (continued)    his  e's  turn'd  the  live  air  sick,  Maud  I  xiii  11 

In  thine  own  e,  and  delight  thyself  Lover's  Tale  i  13 

Estate  (condition)     Whose  life  in  low  e  began  In  Mem.  Ixiv  3 

Day,  when  my  crown'd  e  begun  To  pine  „       Ixxii  5 

Beholding  one  so  bright  in  dark  e,  Marr.  of  Geraint  786 

Estate  (lands)     (See  also  'Staate)     now  lord  of  the  broad  e 

and  the  Hall,  Maud  /  i  19 

This  lump  of  earth  has  left  his  e  „        xvi  1 

an  orphan  with  half  a  shire  of  e, —  Charity  13 

Estate  (verb)     E  them  with  large  land  and  territory      Lancelot  and  E.  1322 

Esteem    talk  kindlier :  we  e  you  for  it —  Princess  v  212 

Esteem'd    we  trust  that  you  e  us  not  Too  harsh  „       Hi  198 

Esther     those  of  old  That  Ughted  on  Queen  E,  Marr.  of  Geraint  731 

Estuary     colony  smoulder'd  on  the  refluent  e  ;  Boddicea  28 

Ethereal    over  those  e  eyes  The  bar  of  Michael  Angelo.   In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  39 

Eternal  (adj.)     Lay  there  exiled  from  e  God,  Palace  of  Art  263 

every  hour  is  saved  From  that  e  silence,  Ulysses  27 

Pure  Ulies  of  e  peace,  Sir  Galahad  67 

Or  that  e  want  of  pence.  Will  Water.  43 

Dwelt  with  e  summer,  ill-content.  Enoch  Arden  562 

center'd  in  e  calm.  Lucretius  79 

E  honour  to  his  name,  (repeat)  Ode  on  Well.  150,  231 

Nor  palter'd  with  E  God  for  power ;  „               180 

shall  bloom  The  e  landscape  of  the  past ;  In  Mem.  xlvi  8 

E  form  shall  still  divide  The  e  soul  from  all  beside  ;              „        xlvii  6 

on  the  low  dark  verge  of  life  The  twilight  of  e  day.                „           1 16 

E  greetings  to  the  dead  ;  „       Ivii  14 

E  process  moving  on,  „    Ixxxii  5 

Which  masters  Time  indeed,  and  is  E,  „    Ixxxv  66 

To  bare  the  e  Heavens  again,  „      cxxii  4 

Lo  !  I  forgive  thee,  as  E  God  Forgives  :  Guinevere  544 

quiet  fields  of  e  sleep  !  V.  of  Maeldune  80 

bawl'd  the  dark  side  of  your  faith  and  a  God  of  e  rage,         Despair  39 

pity  for  our  own  selves  till  we  long'd  for  e  sleep.  „            46 

march  of  that  E  Harmony  Whereto  the  worlds  beat 

time,  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  15 

Eternal  (s)     Shiah  and  Sunnee,  Symbol  the  E  !  Akbar's  Dream  108 

Eternity    All  things  will  change  Thro'  e.  Nothing  will  Die  16 

even  and  mom  Ever  will  be  Thro'  e.  „              35 

even  and  morn  Ye  will  never  see  Thro'  e.  All  Things  wiU  Die  46 

So  in  the  Ught  of  great  e  Love  and  Death  12 

He  names  the  name  E.  Two  Voices  291 

But  dreadful  time,  dreadful  e,  Palace  of  Art  267 

The  sabbaths  of  E,  St  Agnes'  Eve  33 

Music's  golden  sea  Setting  toward  e,  Ode  on  Well.  253 

O  skill'd  to  sing  of  Time  or  E,  Milton  2 

girth  of  Time  Inswathe  the  fullness  of  E,  Lover's  Tale  i  483 

You  that  shape  for  E,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  43 

Seem'd  nobler  than  their  hard  Eternities.  Demeter  and  P.  107 

Etiquette     clamouring  e  to  death.  Princess  v  11 

Ettarre    for  the  lady  was  E,  And  she  was  a  great  lady       Pelleas  and  E.  97 

Linger'd  E :  and  seeing  Pelleas  droop,  „            178 

from  the  tower  above  him  cried  E,  „           231 

Then  when  he  came  before  E,  „            237 

Bound  on  her  brow,  were  Gawain  and  E.  „            435 

Eunuch-hearted    art  thou  not  that  e-h  King  Last  Tournament  445 

whine  And  snivel,  being  e-h  too,  „            450 

Europa    sweet  E's  mantle  blew  unclasp'd,  Palace  of  Art  117 

Europe     Better  fifty  years  of  E  than  a  cycle  of  Cathay.     Locksley  Hall  184 

guard  the  eye,  the  soul  Of  E,  Ode  on  Well.  161 

Once  the  weight  and  fate  of  E  hung.  „            240 

Tho'  all  the  storm  of  JE  on  us  break  ;  Third  of  Feb.  14 

But  the  one  voice  in  iE :   we  must  speak ;  ,,              16 

avenging  rod  Shall  lash  all  E  into  blood  ;  To  F.  D.  Maurice  34 

Surely  tiie  pibroch  of  E  is  ringing  Def.  of  Lucknow  97 

gain'd  a  freedom  known  to  E,  known  to  all ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  129 

European     never  floats  an  E  flag,  Locksley  Hall  161 

the  centre  and  crater  of  E  confusion.  Beautiful  City  1 

Europe-shadowing    wheel'd  on  E's  wings,  Ode  on  Well.  120 

Eustace     I  and  E  from  the  city  went  Gardener's  D.  2 

My  E  might  have  sat  for  Hercules ;  „             7 

E  painted  her.  And  said  to  me,  „           20 

E  turn'd,  and  smiling  said  to  me,  „           97 

'  E,'  I  said, '  this  wonder  keeps  the  house.'  „          119 

With  solemn  gibe  did  E  banter  me.  „          168 


Eustace 


181 


Ever-tremuIons 


Eustace  {continued)   till  Autumn  brought  an  hour  For  E,     Gardener's  D.  208 
Evangel    Heaven-sweet  E,  ever-living  word,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  28 

Evangelist    something  seal'd  The  lips  of  that  E.  In  Mem.  xxxi  16 

Evasion    Elusion,  and  occasion,  and  e  '  ?  Gareth  and  L,  288 

Eve    {See  also  Christmas  E&ve,  Christmas-eve,  Yester-eve) 

At  e  the  beetle  boometh  Claribd  9 

At  e  a  dry  cicala  sung,  Mariana  in  the  S.  85 

And  when  the  zoning  e  has  died  On  a  Mourner  21 

Nor  anchor  dropt  at  e  or  mom  ;  The  Voyage  82 

From  fringes  of  the  faded  e,  Move  eastward  3 

Except  when  for  a  breathing- while  at  e,  Aylmer's  Field  449 

As  thro'  the  land  at  e  we  went,  Princess  ii  1 

at  e  and  dawn  With  Ida,  Ida,  Ida,  rang  the  woods ;  „    iv  432 


sitting  at  home  in  my  father's  farm  at  e 

Will  there  be  dawn  in  West  and  e  in  East  ? 

No  later  than  last  e  to  Prince  Geraint — 

Her  seer,  her  bard,  her  silver  star  of  e. 

Heard  on  the  winding  waters,  e  and  mom 

days  Of  dewy  dawning  and  the  amber  e's 

while  my  life's  late  e  endures, 

star  of  e  was  drawing  light  From  the  dead  sun, 

day  by  day,  thro'  many  a  blood-red  e, 

E  after  e  that  haggard  anchorite  Would  haunt 

Eve  (proper  name)    since  the  time  when  Adam  first 
Embraced  his  E 
Shadowing  the  snow-limb'd  E 

Evelyn     E  be^ns  it '  O  diviner  Air.' 
Now  follows  Edith  echoing  E. 
graver  than  the  other — Edith  than  E. 
E  is  gayer,  wittier,  prettier. 
The  younger  sister,  E,  enter'd — 
told  your  wayside  story  to  my  mother  And  E. 
For  E  knew  not  of  my  former  suit, 
round  my  E  clung  In  utter  silence  for  so  long, 
bright  quick  smile  of  E,  that  had  sunn'd 
this  I  named  from  her  own  self,  E : 
traitors  to  her  ;  our  quick  E — 

Even  (adj.)     Upon  an  e  pedestal  with  man.' 
And  climb  d  upon  a  fair  and  e  ridge, 

Even  (s)    {See  also  Yester-even)    For  e  and  mom 
Ever  will  be  Thro'  eternity. 
For  e  and  mom  Ye  will  never  see  Thro'  etemity 


Grandmother  90 

Gareth  and  L.  712 

Marr.  of  Geraint  603 

Merlin  and  V.  954 

Lancelot  and  E.  1408 

Lover's  Tale  i  52 

To  Marq.  of  Bufferin  49 

Death  of  (Enone  64 

St.  Telemachus  3 

12 

Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  42 

Maud  I  xviii  28 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  4 

15 

27 

36 

152 

190 

205 

216 

243 

271 

285 

Princess  Hi  224 

Marr.  of  Geraint  239 

Nothing  will  Die  33 
All  Things  will  Die  AA 


Thou  comest  morning  or  e;  she  cometh  not  morning  or  e.  Leonine  Eleg.  15 


Her  tears  fell  with  the  dews  at  e ; 
And  the  crag  that  fronts  the  E, 
Whisper  in  odorous  heights  of  e. 
gave  a  shield  whereon  the  Star  of  E 
setting,  when  E  descended,  the  very  sunset 
Light  the  fading  gleam  of  E? 
or  seated  in  the  dusk  Of  e, 
Evenfall.    thro'  the  laurels  At  the  quiet  e, 


Mariana  13 

Elednore  40 

Milton  16 

Gareth  and  L.  1117 

V.  of  Maddune  66 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  229 

Demeter  and  P.  126 

Maud  II  iv  78 


Evening  (adj.)  {See  also  Evening-Star)  And  with  the  e  cloud,  Ode  to  Memory  22 


To  the  shepherd  who  watcheth  the  e  star. 

You  are  the  e  star. 

Floating  thro'  an  e  atmosphere, 

Eyed  like  the  e  star,  with  playful  tail 

same  strength  which  threw  the  Homing  Star  Can 

throw  the  E,' 
We  should  see  the  Globe  we  groan  in,  fairest  of 

their  e  stars. 
The  mellow  lin-lan-lone  of  e  bells 
Sunset  and  e  star. 
Twilight  and  e  bell, 
Evening  (s)    in  stillest  e's  With  what  voice 
Many  an  e  by  the  waters  did  we  watch 
It  chanced  one  e  Annie's  children  long'd 
At  e  when  the  dull  November  day 
We  dropt  with  e  on  a  rustic  town 
With  brow  to  brow  like  night  and  e  mixt 
it  was  e  :  silent  light  Slept  on  the  painted  walls 
all  of  an  e  late  I  climb'd  to  the  top 
Never  morning  wore  To  e, 
air.  That  rollest  from  the  gorgeous  gloom  Of  e 
It  leads  me  forth  at  e, 
knight,  That  named  himself  the  Star  of  E, 


Dying  Swan  35 

Margaret  27 

Elednore  100 

(Enone  200 

Gareth  and  L.  1109 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  188 

Far-far-away  5 

Crossing  the  Bar  1 

Adeline  30 

Locksley  Hall  37 

Enoch  Arden  362 

721 

Princess  i  170 

„       vi  131 

„       vii  120 

Grandmother  37 

In  Mem.  vi  8 

„    Ixxxvi  3 

Maud  II  iv  17 

Gareth  and  L.  1090 


Evening  (s)  {continued)    mixt  Her  fancies  with  the 

sallow-rifted  glooms  Of  e,  Lancdot  and  E.  1003 

or  ever  that  e  ended  a  great  gale  blew,  The  Revenge  114 

gloom  of  the  e,  Life  at  a  close ;  Vastness  15 

Evening-lighted    From  the  e-l  wood,  Margaret  10 

Evening-Star    call  themsleves  the  Day,  Moming-Star, 

and  Noon-Sun,  and  E-S,  Gareth  and  L.  634 

Evenness    I  lost  myself  and  fell  from  e.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  164 

Even-sdoping     Near  him  a  mound  of  e-s  side,  Pelleas  and  E.  25 

Evensong    I  know  At  matins  and  at  e,  Supv.  Confessions  99 

till  the  dusk  that  follow'd  e  Gareth  and  L.  793 

Event    such  retraction  of  e's  As  often  rises  In  Mem.  xcii  15 

And  one  far-off  divine  e,  „   Con.  143 

Enid  stood  aside  to  wait  the  e,  Geraint  and  E.  153 

thou  remaining  here  wilt  learn  the  e  ;  Guinevere  577 

Move  with  me  to  the  e.  Lover's  Tale  i  298 

there,  my  latest  vision — then  the  e  !  „       Hi  59 

He  flies  the  e  :  he  leaves  the  e  to  me :  „  iv  1 

the  e  Glanced  back  upon  them  in  his  after  life,  „  23 

Eventide    Either  at  morn  or  e.  Mariana  16 

For  at  e,  listening  earnestly,  A  spirit  haunts  4 

Then,  on  a  golden  autumn  e,  Enoch  Arden  61 

Everard    {See  also  Everard  Hall,  Hall)    clapt  his  hand  On 

E's  shoulder,  and,  '  I  hold  by  him.'    And  I,'  quoth  E,    The  Epic  22 
For  I  remember'd  E's  college  fame  „      46 

Everard  Hall    {See  also  Everard,  Hall)    parson  Holmes,  the 

poet  EH,  „        4 

Ever-breaking    heard  an  e-h  shore  That  tumbled  In  Mem.  cxxiv  11 

Ever-brightening    Fifty  years  of  e-b  Science  !  On  Jui.  Q.  Victoria  53 

Ever-broadening    Fifty  years  of  e-b  Commerce  !  „  52 

ocean-empire  with  her  boundless  homes  For  e-b 

England,  To  the  Queen  ii  30 

Ever-chai^ing    a  power  to  make  This  e-c  world  of 

.  circumstance,  To  Duke  of  Argyll  10 

the  never-changing  One  And  e-c  Many,  Akbar's  Dream  148 

thee  the  changeless  in  thine  e-c  skies.  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  4 

Ever-climbing    but  that  e-c  wave,  Hurl'd  back  again     Last  Tournament  92 
Ever-deepen'd    By  the  long  torrent's  e-d  roar,  Death  of  (Enone  85 

Ever-echoing    And  e-e  avenues  of  song.  Ode  on  Well.  79 

Ever-fancied    Before  an  e-f  arrow,  made  Geraint  and  E.  531 

Ever-fleeting    And  rippled  like  an  e-f  wave,  Gareth  and  L.  215 

Ever-floating    death,  death,  thou  e-f  cloud,  (Enone  238 

Evergreen  (adj.)    that  e  laurel  is  blasted  by  more  than 

lightning  !  Parnassus  12 

Evergreen  (s)    And  in  it  throve  an  ancient  e,  Enoch  Arden  735 

O  hollies  and  ivies  and  e's.  Spiteful  Letter  23 

With  but  a  drying  e  for  crest,  Gareth  and  L.  1116 

Ever-growing    Almost  blind  With  e-g  cataract.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  192 

How  long  thine  e-g  mind  Hath  still'd  Freedom  33 

Ever-heightening    And  every  phase  of  e-h  life,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  7 

Ever-highering    In  e-h  eagle-circles  up  To  the  great  Sun     Gareth  and  L.  21 

Everlasting    The  marvel  of  the  e  will.  The  Poet  7 

she  took  the  tax  away  And  built  herself  an  e  name.  Godiva  79 

Nor  sound  of  human  sorrow  mounts  to  mar  Their  sacred 

e  calm  !  Lucretius  110 

Lamp  of  the  Lord  God  Lord  e,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  28 

Knowing  the  Love  we  were  used  to  believe  e  would  die  :        Despair  54 

Infinite  cruelty  rather  than  make  e  Hell,  „        96 

In  the  name  Of  the  e  God,  I  will  live  and  die  with  you.         Happy  108 

Ever-living    Heaven-sweet  Evangel,  e-l  word,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  28 

Ever-loyal    Their  e-l  iron  leader's  fame.  Ode  on  Wdl.  229 

Ever-moaning    An  e-m  battle  in  the  mist,  •         Merlin  and  V.  192 

Evermore    My  bride  to  be,  my  e  delight,  Maud  I  xviii  73 

Ever-murder'd    e-m  France,  By  shores  that  darken  Aylmer's  Fidd  766 

Ever-ravening    e-r  eagle's  beak  and  talon  Boddicea  11 

Ever-rising    A  hundred  e-r  mountain  lines,  Ancient  Sage  282 

now  their  e-r  life  has  dwarf'd  The  Ring  463 

Ever-scattering    wearing  but  a  holly-spray  for  crest. 

With  e-s  berries.  Last  Tournament  173 

Ever-shifting    e-s  currents  of  the  blood  D.  of  F.  Women  133 

long  mountains  ended  in  a  coast  Of  e-s  sand.  Pass  of  Arthur  86 

Ever-showering    And  rode  beneath  an  e-s  leaf.  Last  Tournament  492 

Ever-silent    The  e-s  spaces  of  the  East,  Tithonus  9 

passive  sailor  wrecks  at  last  In  e-s  seas ;  Ancient  Sage  137 

Ever-tremulous    falling  showers,  And  e-t  aapen-trees,     Lancelot  and  E.  S2A 


Ever-vanishing 


182 


Exceed 


Despair  84 

Pelleas  and  E.  493 

On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  54 


Erer-vanishing    Motherless  evermore  of  an  e-v  race, 
Ever-veering    her  e-v  fancy  tum'd  To  Pelleas, 
Ever-widening    Fifty  years  of  e-w  Empire  ! 

Every    {See  also  Ivery,  Ivry)     E  heart  this  May  .„  r.-   n 

morning  in  joyance  is  beating  All  Things  will  Die  b 

'  if  e  star  in  heaven  Can  make  it  fair :  Sea  Dreams  83 

and  e  bird  that  sings :  t,  •         "  n     ■'^?i 

on  the  tables  e  clime  and  age  Jumbled  together  ;  Princess,  Pro.  lb 

Brought  from  imder  e  star,  Blown  from  under  e  main,  Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  25 

We  siuig,  tho' e  eye  was  dim,  ^"  "''""" 

From  e  house  the  neighbours  met, 

Their  e  parting  was  to  die. 

Defamed  by  e  charlatan, 

Now  burgeons  e  maze  of  quick 

For  e  grain  of  sand  that  runs.  And  e  span  of  shade 
that  steals.  And  e  kiss  of  toothed  wlieeLs, 

And  e  dew-drop  paints  a  bow, 

And  e  thought  breaks  out  a  rose. 

The  joy  to  e  wandering  breeze  ; 

And  catch  at  e  moimtain  head. 

And  e  eye  but  mine  will  glance  At  Maud 

And  mightier  of  his  hands  with  e  blow. 

And  under  e  shield  a  knight  was  named  : 

And  overthrowing  e  knight  who  comes. 

A  home  of  bats,  in  e  tower  an  owl. 

But  e  page  having  an  ample  marge.  And  e  marge 
enclosing  in  the  midst 

And  e  square  of  text  an  awful  charm, 

And  e  margin  scribbled,  crost,  and  cramm'd 

And  e  voice  is  nothing 


and  e  day  she  tended  him.  And  likewise  many  a  night : 


In  Mem.  xxx  14 

xxxi  9 

xcmi\2 

cxi  23 

cxv  2 

exvii  9 

cxxii  18 

20 

Con.  62 

Cow.  114 

Maud  I  XX  36 

Com.  of  Arthur  110 

Gareth  and  L.  409 

Balin  and  Balan  13 

336 

Merlin  and  V.  669 

„  673 

677 

Lancelot  and  E.  108 

850 


Holy  Grail  191 

505 

Last  Tournament  676 

678 

Pass,  of  Arthur  422 

To  the  Queen  ii  50 


In  the  Child.  Hosp.  13 


But  e  knight  beheld  liis  fellow's  face 

e  bridge  as  quickly  as  he  crost  Sprang  into  fire 

for  e  knight  Believed  himself  a  greater 

And  e  follower  eyed  him  as  a  God  ; 

earth  is  e  way  Bound  by  gold  chains 

Waverings  of  e  vane  with  e  wind. 

Here  was  a  boy  in  the  ward,  e  bone  seem'd  out 

of  its  place — 
'  Never  surrender,  I  charge  you,  but  e  man  die  at 

his  post ! '  -O^/'  of  Lucknow  10 

'  E  man  die  at  his  post ! '  »>  13 

as  ocean  on  e  side  Plunges  and  heaves  at  a  bank  „  38 

For  e  other  cause  is  less  than  mine.  Sir  J.  Old/:astle  188 

But  in  e  berry  and  fruit  was  the  poisonous  pleasure   V.  of  Maeldune  62 
in  this  pavement  but  shall  ring  thy  name  To  e  hoof 

that  clangs  it,  Teresias  138 

tho'  e  pulse  would  freeze.  The  Flight  53 

Made  e  moment  of  her  after  life  A  virgin  victim  The  Ring  220 

O  God  in  e  temple  I  see  people  that  see  thee,  and 

in  e  language  I  hear  spoken,  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  1 

in  due  time  e  Mussulman,  Brahmin,  and  Buddhist,      Akbar's  Dream  24 
E  moment  dies  a  man,  E  moment  one  is  bom. 

(repeat) 
And  e  height  comes  out. 
Evidence  That  heat  of  inward  e, 
Evfl  (adj.)  a  name  to  shake  All  e  dreams  of  power — 
if  Nature's  e  star  Drive  men  in  manhood. 
For  that  the  e  ones  come  here,  and  say, 
one,  in  whom  all  e  fancies  clung 
Thought  on  all  her  e  tyranni&s. 
That  Nature  lends  such  e  dreams  ? 
And  grapples  with  his  e  star ; 
With  the  e  tongue  and  the  e  ear, 
And  I  make  myself  such  e  cheer, 
Struck  for  himself  an  «  stroke  ; 
'  as  a  false  knight  Or  e  king  before  my  lance 
A  name  of  e  savour  in  the  land, 
who  driven  by  e  tongues  From  all  his  fellows. 
King,  who  sought  to  win  my  love  Thro'  e  ways  : 
his  e  spirit  upon  him  leapt,  He  ground  his  teeth 
As  one  that  labours  with  an  e  dream, 
Then  every  e  word  I  had  spoken  once.  And  every  e 
thought  I  had  thought  of  old.  And  every  e  deed  I 
ever  did,  Holy  Grail  371 


Vision  of  Sin  91,  121 

Spec,  of  Iliad  13 

Two  Voices  284: 

The  Poet  47 

Love  thou  thy  land  73 

St.  S.  Stylites  98 

Enoch  Arden  479 

Boadicea  80 

In.  Mem.  Iv  6 

„   Ixiv  8 

Maud  I  X  51 

„       XV  2 

„  //i21 

Gareth  and  L.  6 

385 

Balin  and  Balan  125 

„  475 

537 

Merlin  arid  V.  101 


Evil  (adj.)  (continued)    I  rode.  Shattering  all  e  customs 

everywhere  I^oly  Grail  477 

A  great  black  swamp  and  of  an  e  smell,  „       499 
her  anger,  leaving  Pelleas,  burn'd  Full  on  her  knights 

in  many  an  e  name  PeUeas  and  E.  290 

I  cannot  brook  to  see  your  beauty  marr'd  Thro'  e  spite  :       „  299 

'  I  am  wrath  and  shame  and  hate  and  e  fame,  „           568 
What  e  beast  Hath  drawn  his  claws  athwart  thy 

fj^Qg  p  Last  Tournament  62 

Among  their  harlot-brides,  an  e  song.  „             428 

some  e  chance  Will  make  the  smouldering  scandal  Guinevere  90 

he  foresaw  This  e  work  of  Lancelot  and  the  Queen  ?  '  „         307 

Like  to  the  wild  youth  of  an  e  prince.  Lover's  Tale  i  354 
we  came  in  an  e  time  to  the  Isle  of  the  Double 

Towers  ^-  "/  Maeldune  105 

Nor  care^for  Hunger  hath  the  E  eye —  Ancient  Sage  264 

An  e  thought  may  soil  thy  children's  blood ;  „            275 

Evil  (s)    range  of  e  between  death  and  birth,  //  /  were  loved  3 
What  pleasure  can  we  have  To  war  with  e  ?          Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  49 

This  e  came  on  WilUam  at  the  first.  Dora  61 

And  all  good  things  from  e.  Love  and  Duty  59 

(Sure  that  all  e  would  come  out  of  it)  Enoch  Arden  162 

let  us  too,  let  all  e,  sleep.  Sea  Dreams  309 

Out  of  e  e  flourishes,  Boadicea  83 

E  haunts  The  bu-th,  the  bridal ;  In  Mem.  xcyni  13 

That  whatsoever  e  happen  to  me,  Marr.  of  Geraint  471 

I  heard  He  had  spoken  e  of  me ;  Balm  and  Balan  58 

Bound  are  they  To  speak  no  e.  "   ,  T,Hn 

What  e  have  ye  wrought  ?  Merlin  and  V.  67 

Nay— we  believe  all  e  of  thy  Mark—  „  3'   ^    -7  c^ 

times  Grew  to  such  e  that  the  holy  cup  Holy  Grail  57 

for  they  do  not  flow  From  e  done ;  Guinevere  189 

angers  of  the  Gods  for  e  done  TiresiasG2 
Is  there  e  but  on  earth  ?                                          Lockdey  H.,  Sixty  197 

fashion'd  and  worship  a  Spirit  of  E,  Kapiolam  1 

Evil-hearted    Beautiful  Paris,  e-h  Paris,  „,*?*,  f9 

Evil-starr'd    fell  my  father  e-s ;—  Locksley  Hall  15o 
Evolution    sounding  watch  ward  '  E '  here.                   Locksley  IL,  Sixty  198 

E  ever  climbing  after  some  ideal  good,  „             199 

Reversion  ever  dragging  E  in  the  mud.  „          _    200 

Ionian  E,  swift  or  slow,  The  Ring  44 

Re-volution  has  proven  but  E  Beautiful  City  3 
Ewe    (See  also  Yow,  Yowe)    snowy  shoulders,  thick  as 

herded  e's.  Princess  iv  479 

Example    To  make  me  an  e  to  mankind,  St.  S.  Stylites  188 

let  them  take  E,  pattern :  "        . . .  ?^^ 

But,  your  e  pilot,  told  her  all.  Princess  ii»  137 

Let  his  great  e  stand  Colossal,  Ode  on  Well.  220 

Unused  e  from  the  grave  Reach  out  dead  hands  In  Mem.  Ixxx  15 

'  And  is  the  fair  e  foUow'd,  Sir,  Merlin  and  V.  19 

their  e's  reach  a  hand  For  thro'  all  years,  Tiresias  126 

Excalibur    Thou  therefore  take  my  brand  E,  M.  d' Arthur  27 

take  E,  And  fling  him  far  into  the  middle  mere :  „            36 

Then  drew  he  forth  the  brand  E,  "            lo 

it  seem'd  Better  to  leave  E  conceal'd  „            62 

Saying, '  King  Arthur's  sword,  E,  „          103 

And  hid  E  the  second  time,  «          llj 

But,  if  thou  spare  to  fling  E,  „          131 

So  flash'd  and  fell  the  brand  £:  „          14^ 

'  There  likewise  I  beheld  E  Before  him  Com.  of  Arthur  295 

Whereof  they  forged  the  brand  E,  Gareth  and  L.  67 

Where  Arthur  finds  the  brand  E.  Holy  Grail  253 

The  brand  E  will  be  cast  away.  ,       „      »         ^l 

his  long  lance  Broken,  and  his  E  a  straw.'  Last  Tournament  8» 

Striking  the  last  stroke  with  E,  Pass,  of  Arthur  168 

Thou  therefore  take  my  brand  E,  „                195 

take  E,  And  fling  him  far  into  the  middle  mere :  „               204 

Then  drew  he  forth  the  brand  E,  »               220 

it  seem'd  Better  to  leave  E  conceal'd  „               230 

Saying,  '  King  Arthur's  sword,  E,  „                271 

And  hid  E  the  second  time,  ,«               2/a 

But,  if  thou  spare  to  fling  E,  „               ^^^ 

So  flash'd  and  fell  the  brand  jB  :  „               3iu 

Exceed    one  whose  rank  e's  her  own.  In  Mem.  Ixjt 

in  his  behalf  Shall  I  e  the  Persian,  Lover's  Tale  iv  347 


Exceeding 


183 


Exceeding    With  slow,  faint  steps,  and  much  e  pain, 
That  each  had  suffer'd  some  e  wrong. 
With  more  e  passion  than  of  old : 
but  there  I  found  Only  one  man  of  e  age. 
Smit  with  e  sorrow  unto  Death. 
Excellence    Even  his  own  abiding  e — 

Methought  all  e  that  ever  was  Had  drawn  herself 
Excess    From  e  of  swift  delight. 

At  which,  like  one  that  sees  his  own  e, 
Exchange    brooking  not  E  or  currency : 
Excitement    Yearning  for  the  large  e 
Exclaim'd    e  Averring  it  was  clear  against  all  rules 
Excommunicated    were  e  there. 
Excuse    With  many  a  scarce-believable  e, 

for  my  e  What  looks  so  little  graceful : 

Made  such  e'5  as  he  might, 
Execration    with  a  sudden  e  drove  The  footstool 
Exempt    she  herself  was  not  e — 
Exercise    Charier  of  sleep,  and  wine,  and  «, 

Which  men  delight  in,  martial  e  ? 

Yoked  in  all  e  of  noble  end, 

The  sad  mechanic  «,  Like  dull  narcotics. 
Exile    (See  also  Self-exile)    a  three-years'  e  from  thine 

eyes. 
Exiled    Lay  there  e  from  eternal  God, 
Existence    deep  heart  of  e  beat  for  ever 
Exit    found  Only  the  landward  e  of  the  cave. 
Expand    Heaven  over  Heaven  e's. 
Ej^Minse    And  down  the  river's  dim  e 

On  a  day  when  they  were  going  O'er  the  lone  e, 
Expect    king  e's — was  there  no  precontract  ? 
Expectant    E  of  that  news  which  never  came, 

Brook'd  not  the  e  terror  of  her  heart. 

Thou  doest  e  nature  wrong ; 
Expectation    eyes  Of  shining  e  &xi  on  mine. 

her  father's  chimney  glows  In  e  of  a  guest ; 
Expecting    E  when  a  fountain  should  arise : 

E  still  his  advent  home ; 
Experience    tho'  all  e  past  became  Coasolidate 

full-grown  will.  Circled  thro'  all  e's, 

remark  was  worth  The  «  of  the  wise. 

Yet  all  e  is  an  arch  wherethro'  Gleams 

he  bears  a  laden  breast.  Full  of  sad  e, 

is  what  Our  own  e  preaches. 

and  strange  e's  Unmeet  for  ladies. 

I  prophesy  your  plan,  Divorced  from  my  e, 

pines  in  sad  e  worse  than  death, 

A  lord  of  large  e, 

E,  in  her  kind  Hath  foul'd  me — 

Mv  close  of  earth's  e  May  prove  as  peaceful 

tell  them  '  old  e  is  a  fool,' 
Experienced    See  Much-experienced 
Experiment     In  setting  round  thy  first  e 

And,  yonder,  shrieks  and  strange  e's 

but  a  most  burlesque  barbarous  e. 

Barbarous  e,  barbarous  hexameters. 
Expert    howsoe'er  e  In  fitting  aptest  words 
Expiation    anger  of  the  Gods  for  evil  done  And  e  lack'd — 
Elxplain    She  answer'd,  '  ever  longing  to  e, 
Explain'd    The  shame  that  cannot  be  e  for  shame. 
B2xpound    not  of  those  that  can  e  themselves. 
Expounder    Take  Vivien  for  e ; 
Express    How  may  full-sail'd  verse  e. 

Who  may  e  thee,  Eleanore  ? 

The  common  mouth.  So  gross  to  e  delight, 

e  All-comprehensive  tenderness, 

may  not  kings  E  him  also  by  their  warmth 
Express'd-Exprest    no  other  thing  exjn-ess'd  But  long 
disquiet 

In  yearnings  that  can  never  be  exprest  By  signs 

Thro'  light  reproaches,  half  exprest 

a  robe  Of  samite  without  price,  that  more  exprest 
Than  hid  her. 
Expression    But  beyond  e  fair 

Drew  in  the  e  of  an  eye, 


St.  S.  Stylitea  183 

Geraint  and  E.  36 

Geraint  and  E.  335 

Holy  Grail  431 

Lover's  Tale  i  601 

504 

549 

Rosalind  32 

Aylmer's  Field  400 

Lover's  Tale  i  448 

Locksley  Hall  111 

Princess  1 177 

Columbus  192 

Enoch  Arden  469 

Princess  Hi  52 

Guinevere  38 

Aylmer's  Field  2,2G 

Locksley  Hall  95 

Aylmer's  Field  448 

Princess  Hi  216 

„      vii  361 

In  Mem.  v  7 

Balin  and  Balan  59 

Palace  of  Art  263 

Locksley  Hall  140 

Sea  Dreams  96 

Mechanophilus  36 

L.  of  ShaloUiv  10 

The  Captain  26 

Princess  Hi  207 

Enoch  Arden  258 

493 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  3 

Princess  iv  153 

In  Mem.  vi  30 

Vision  of  Sin  8 

In  Mem.  vi  21 

Two  Voices  365 

CEnone  166 

Edwin  Morris  66 

Ulysses  19 

Locksley  Hall  144 

Will  Water.  176 

Princess  iv  158 

„  355 

„     vii  315 

In  Mem.  xlii  7 

Last  Tournament  317 

Tiresias  216 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  131 

Ode  to  Memory  81 
Princess,  Pro.  235 
Trans,  of  Hom,er  2 


In  Mem.  Ixxv  5 

Tiresias  63 

The  Brook  107 

Merlin  and  V.  698 

318 

319 

Eleanore  44 

68 

Gardener's  D.  56 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  46 

Akbar's  Dream  109 


Two  Voices  248 

D.ofF.  Women  283 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  15 

Merlin  and  V.  222 

Adeline  5 

In  Mem.  cxi  19 


Exprest    See  Ezpress'd 

Expunge    tam  by  tarn  E  the  world : 

Exquisite    E  Margjiret,  who  can  tell 

kisses  press'd  on  lips  Less  e  than  thine.' 

For  in  all  that  e  isle,  my  dear, 

Maud  with  her  e  face. 
Extending    innocently  e  her  white  arms. 
Extreme  (adj.)    Winning  its  way  with  e  gentleness 
Extreme  (s)    The  falsehood  of  e's ! 


Princess  vii  41 

Margaret  36 

Gardener's  D.  152 

The  Islet  26 

Maud  7 1>  12 

Lancelot  and  E.  932 

Isabel  23 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  24 


such  e's,  I  told  her,  well  might  harm  The  woman's 

cause.  Princess  Hi  144 

storming  in  e's.  Stood  for  her  cause,  „        v  176 
fierce  e's  employ  Thy  spirits  in  the  darkening  leaf,     In  Mem.  Ixxxviii  5 

And  save  it  even  in  e's,  Guinevere  67 

Extremest    In  this  e  misery  Of  ignorance,  Supp.  Confessions  8 
whom  to  have  suffering  view'd  had  been  E  pain ;       Lover's  Tale  ii  130 

Extremity    He,  reddening  in  e  of  delight,  Geraint  and  E.  219 

Exult     Fade  wholly,  while  the  soul  e's.  In  Mem.  Ixxiii  14 

while  my  hand  e's  Within  the  bloodless  heart  Prog,  of  Spring  83 
Eye  (s)    (See  also  Hawk-eye,  Hey,  Lynx-eyes,  Prophet- 
eye)    stream  be  aweary  of  flowing  Under  my  e  ?     Nothing  will  Die  2 
river  chimes  in  its  flowing  Under  my  e ;                  All  Things  will  Die  2 
knows  Nothing  beyond  his  mother's  e's.                  Supp.  Confessions  44 

beheld  Thy  mild  deep  e's  upraised,  „                74 

Floats  from  his  sick  and  filmed  e's,  „              166 

Glancing  with  black-beaded  e's,  Lilian  15 

E's  not  down-dropt  nor  over-bright,  Isabel  1 

Light-glooming  over  e's  divine,  Madeline  16 

Serene  with  argent-lidded  e's  Amorous,  Arabian  Nights  135 

his  deep  e  laughter-stirr'd  With  merriment  „            150 

Those  spirit-thrilling  e's  so  keen  Ode  to  Memory  39 

Thou  of  the  many  tongues,  the  myriad  e's !  „              47 

Unto  mine  inner  e,  Divinest  Memory !  „              49 

Large  dowries  doth  the  raptured  e  „              72 

all  creation  pierce  Beyond  the  bottom  of  his  e.  A  Character  6 

And  a  lack-lustre  dead-blue  e,  „        17 

Blew  his  own  praises  in  his  e's,  „        22 

rites  and  forms  before  his  burning  e's  The  Poet  39 

circles  of  the  globes  Of  her  keen  e's  „        44 

In  your  e  there  is  death.  Poet's  Mind  16 

listen,  listen,  your  e's  shall  glisten  (repeat)  Sea-Fairies  35,  37 

all  about  him  roU'd  his  lustrous  e's  ;  Love  and  Death  3 

tears  of  blood  arise  Up  from  my  heart  unto  my  e's,  Oriana  78 

his  large  cahn  e's  for  the  love  of  me.  The  Mermaid  27 

Thy  rose-lips  and  full  blue  e's  Adeline  7 

And  those  dew-lit  e's  of  thine,  „    47 

What  ht  your  e's  with  tearful  power,  Margaret  3 

your  e's  Touch'd  with  a  somewhat  darker  hue,  „      49 

and  let  your  blue  e's  dawn  Upon  me  „      67 

My  froUc  falcon,  with  bright  e's,  Rosalind  2 

Thro'  lips  and  e's  in  subtle  rays.  „      24 

But  we  must  hood  your  random  e's,  „      37 

Thy  dark  e's  open'd  not,  Eleanore  1 

languors  of  thy  love-deep  e's  Float  on  to  me.  „      76 

grow  so  full  and  deep  In  thy  large  e's,  „      86 

Thought  seems  to  come  and  go  In  thy  large  e's,  „      97 

bright  black  e's,  her  bright  black  hair,  Kate  2 

In  dreaming  of  my  lady's  e's.  „  28 

As  when  with  downcast  e  we  muse  and  brood.  Sonnet  to 1 

Returning  with  hot  cheek  and  kindled  e's.  Alexander  14 
win  all  e's  with  all  accomplishment :                           The  form,  the  form  4 

Below  us,  as  far  on  as  e  could  see.  If  I  were  loved  14 

Thine  e's  so  wept  that  they  could  hardly  see ;  The  Bridesviaid  2 

And  her  e's  were  darken'd  wholly,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  31 
Her  melancholy  e's  divine,                                        Mariana  in  the  S.  19 

To  look  into  her  e's  and  say,  „                75 

'  Whose  e's  are  dim  with  glorious  tears.  Two  Voices  151 

'  He  owns  the  fatal  gift  of  e's,  „           286 

forget  The  busy  wrinkles  round  his  e's  ?  Miller's  D.  4 
I  see  his  gray  e's  twinkle  yet  At  his  own  jest — gray 

e's  Ut  up  With  summer  lightnings  „        11 

But  ere  I  saw  your  e's,  my  love,  „        43 

And  there  a  vision  caught  my  e ;  „        76 

when  I  raised  my  e's,  above  They  met  with  two  so 

full  and  bright— Such  e's !  „        85 


Eye 


184 


Eye 


Eye  (S)  (continued)    E's  with  idle  tears  are  wet. 
Look  thro'  mine  e's  with  thine. 
May  those  kind  e's  for  ever  dwell !    They  have  not 

shed  a  many  tears,  Dear  e's, 
Droops  blinded  with  his  shining  e : 
My  e's  are  full  of  tears,  my  heart  of  love,  My  heart 

is  breaking,  and  my  e's  are  dim, 
With  down-dropt  e's  I  sat  alone : 
The  while,  above,  her  full  and  earnest  e 
Thy  mortal  e's  are  frail  to  judge  of  fair, 
She  with  a  subtle  smile  in  her  mild  e's. 
And  I  beheld  great  Herfe's  angry  e's, 
to  vex  me  with  his  father's  e's ! 


gaze  upon  My  palace  with  imblinded  e's, 

hand  and  e's  That  said,  We  wait  for  thee. 

Flush'd  in  her  temples  and  her  e's, 

all  things  fair  to  sate  my  various  e's ! 

Oh  your  sweet  e's,  your  low  replies : 

The  languid  light  of  your  proud  e's 

There's  many  a  black  e,  they  say, 

Than  tir'd  eyelids  upon  tir'd  e's ; 

With  half -shut  e's  ever  to  seem  Falling 

e's  grown  dim  with  gazing  on  the  pilot-stars. 

Charged  both  mine  e's  with  tears. 

The  star-like  sorrows  of  immortal  e's, 

stern  black-bearded  kings  with  wolfish  e's, 

with  swarthy  cheeks  and  bold  black  e's, 

nor  tame  and  tutor  with  mine  e 

Those  dragon  e's  of  anger'd  Eleanor 

But  tho'  his  e's  are  waxing  dim. 

Close  up  his  e's :  tie  up  his  chin : 

And  tho'  mine  own  e's  fill  with  dew, 

Memory  standing  near  Cast  down  her  e's, 

Her  open  e's  desire  the  truth. 

broke  From  either  side,  nor  veil  his  e's : 

both  his  e's  were  dazzled,  as  he  stood, 

might  have  pleased  the  e's  of  many  men. 

Laid  widow'd  of  the  power  in  his  e 

Valuing  the  giddy  pleasure  of  the  e's. 

'  Now  see  I  by  thine  e's  that  this  is  done. 

looking  wistfully  with  wide  blue  e's  As  in  a  pictiu-e, 

chained  Before  the  e's  of  ladies  and  of  kings. 

shall  I  hide  my  forehead  and  my  e's  ? 

made  those  e's  Darker  than  darkest  pansies, 

Her  violet  e's,  and  all  her  Hebe  bloom, 

A  thought  would  fill  my  e's  with  happy  dew ; 

following  her  dark  e's  Felt  earth  as  air 

while  I  mused  came  Memory  with  sad  e's, 

this  whole  hour  your  e's  have  been  intent 

Make  thine  heart  ready  with  thine  e's : 

And  I  will  set  him  in  my  imcle's  e 

To  make  him  pleasing  in  her  imcle's  e. 

Dora  cast  her  e's  upon  the  ground, 

like  a  pear  In  growing,  modest  e's, 

his  nice  e's  Should  see  the  raw  mechanic's 

film  made  thick  These  heavy,  homy  e's. 

with  what  delighted  e's  I  turn  to  yonder  oak. 

I  breathed  upon  her  e's 

sunbeam  slip,  To  light  her  shaded  e ; 

Streaming  e's  and  breaking  hearts  ? 

staring  e  glazed  o'er  with  sapless  days. 

When  e's,  love-languid  thro  half  tears 

Gave  utterance  by  the  yearning  of  an  e, 

With  quiet  e's  unfaithful  to  the  truth, 

Shines  in  those  tremulous  e's 

sweet  e's  brighten  slowly  close  to  mine, 

with  what  other  e's  I  used  to  watch — 

I  dipt  into  the  future  far  as  human  e  could  see ; 

(repeat) 
And  her  e's  on  all  my  motions 
dawning  in  the  dark  of  hazel  e's — 
What  is  this  ?  his  e's  are  heavy : 
an  e  shall  vex  thee,  looking  ancient  kindness 


Miller's  D.  211 
„      215 

„      220 
Fatima  38 

QLnone  31 

„      56 

„    141 

„    158 

„    184 

„    190 

„    255 

Palace  of  Art  A2 

103 

170 

193 

£.  C.  F.'deFere29 

59 

May  Queen  5 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  6 

55 

87 

B.ofF.  Womm  13 

91 

111 

127 

138 

255 

D.ofihe'b.  Tear  21 

48 

To  J.  8.  37 

„        54 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  17 

Love  tJiou  thy  land  90 

M.  d' Arthur  59 

91 

122 

128 

149 

169 

225 

228 

Gardener's  D.  26 

137 

197 

211 

„  243 

„  269 

273 

Dora  67 

„    84 

„     89 


Walk,  to  the  Mail  54 

74 

St.  s"stylites  201 

Talking  Oak  7 

„        210 

Love  and  Duly  2 

16 

„  36 

62 

94 

Tithonus  26 

„        38 

,.        51 


and  left  me  with  the  jaundiced  e ;  iS,  to  which  all 
order  festers, 


Locksley  Hall  15,  119 

22 

28 

51 

„  85 

132 


Eye  (s)  (continued)    No  e  look  down,  she  pa.ssing ;  Godiva  40 

heads  upon  the  spout  Had  ctmning  e's  to  see :  „      57 

but  his  e's,  before  they  had  their  will,  „      69 

Nor  look  with  that  too-earnest  e —  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  18 

A  fairy  Prince,  with  joyful  e's,  „      Arrival  7 

How  dark  those  hidden  e's  must  be ! '  ,,                 32 

'  0  e's  long  laid  in  happy  sleep ! '  „    Depart.  17 

So  much  your  e's  my  fancy  take —  „   L'Envoi  26 

That  I  might  kiss  those  e's  awake !  „                 28 

What  e's,  like  thine,  have  waken'd  hopes,  „                 45 

this  heart  and  e's,  Are  touch'd,  Sir  Galahad  71 

crow  shall  tread  The  corners  of  thine  e's :  Will  Water.  236 

She  look'd  into  Lord  Ronald's  e's.  Lady  Clare  79 

gladness  lighten'd  In  the  e's  of  each.  The  Captain  32 

He  saw  not  far :  his  e's  were  dim :  The  Voyage  75 

One  praised  her  ancles,  one  her  e's.  Beggar  Maid  11 

To  glass  herself  in  dewy  e's  That  watch  me  Move  eastward  7 

I  saw  with  half-unconscious  e  She  wore  the  colours  The  Letters  15 

Where  sat  a  company  with  heated  e's.  Vision  of  Sin  7 

Hair,  and  e's,  and  limbs,  and  faces,  „          39 

Glimmer  in  thy  rheumy  e's.  „        154 

I  cannot  praise  the  fire  In  your  e —  „        184 

then  would  Philip,  his  blue  e's  All  flooded  Enoch  Arden  31 

Enoch  set  A  purpose  evermore  before  his  e's,  „            45 

His  large  gray  e's  and  weather-beaten  face  „            70 

And  in  their  e's  and  faces  read  his  doom ;  „            73 


She  could  not  fix  the  glass  to  suit  her  e ;  Perhaps  her  e 

was  dim,  hand  tremulous ; 
rose,  and  fixt  her  swimming  e's  upon  him, 
his  e's  Full  of  that  lifelong  hunger. 
His  e's  upon  the  stones,  he  reach'd 
Enoch  rolling  his  gray  e's  upon  her. 
That  once  again  he  roll'd  his  e's  upon  her 


Her  e's  a  bashful  azure,  and  her  hair 

Katie  snatch'd  her  e's  at  once  from  mine, 

sweet  content  Re-risen  in  Katie's  e's, 

he  stared  On  e's  a  bashful  azure, 

Whose  e's  from  under  a  pyramidal  head 

eager  e's,  that  still  Took  joyful  note 

the  cross-lightnings  of  four  chance-met  e's 

Till  Leolin  ever  watchful  of  her  e, 

conscious  of  the  rageful  e  That  watch'd  him. 

With  a  weird  bright  e,  sweating  and  trembling, 

her  fresh  and  innocent  e's  Had  such  a  star  of  morning 

hid  the  Holiest  from  the  people's  e's 

Then  their  e's  vext  her ; 

And  those  fixt  e's  of  painted  ancestors 

thinking  that  her  clear  germander  e  Droopt 

night-light  flickering  in  my  e's  Awoke  me.' 

then  my  e's  Pursued  him  down  the  street, 

all  his  conscience  and  one  e  askew ' — (repeat) 

Made  wet  the  crafty  crowsfoot  round  his  e ; 

Grave,  florid,  stem,  as  far  as  e  could  see, 

show'd  their  e's  Glaring,  and  passionate  looks, 

I  fixt  My  wistful  e's  on  two  fair  images, 

'  Dead !  who  is  dead  ? '    '  The  man  your  e  pursued. 

And  here  he  glances  on  an  e  new-born, 

her  arm  lifted,  e's  on  fire — 

turns  Up  thro'  gilt  wires  a  crafty  loving  e, 

twinn'd  as  horse's  ear  and  e. 

raised  the  blinding  bandage  from  his  e's : 

such  e's  were  in  her  head, 

all  her  thoughts  as  fair  within  her  e's. 

Abase  those  e's  that  ever  loved  to  meet 

wander  from  his  wits  Pierced  thro'  with  e's, 

glowing  round  her  dewy  e's  The  circled  Iris 

her  lynx  e  To  fix  and  make  me  hotter, 

settled  in  her  e's  The  green  malignant  light 

Up  went  the  hush'd  amaze  of  hand  and  e. 

we  had  limed  ourselves  With  open  e's, 

as  she  smote  me  with  the  light  of  e's 

She  spake  With  kindled  e's : 

Rise  in  the  heart,  and  gather  to  the  e's, 

unto  dying  e's  The  casement  slowly  grows 

Stared  witii  great  e's,  and  laugh'd  with  alien  lips, 


241 

„  325 

463 

„  684 

844 

904 

The  Brook  71 

„        101 

„        169 

„        206 

Aylmer's  Field  20 


129 

210 

336 

585 

„  691 

772 

802 

832 

Sea  Dreams  4 

103 

164 

„  180, 184 

'        »  187 

219 

235 

240 

272 

Lucretius  137 

Princess,  Pro.  41 

172 

i57 

244 

a  37 

326 

427 

441 

„         Hi  26 

46 

131 

138 

143 

192 

„  334 

„  tv  41 

51 

1 


Eye 

Eye  (s)  (coTitinued)    She  wept  her  true  e's  blind  for  such 
a  one, 
with  e's  Of  shining  expectation  fixt  on  mine. 
Not  yet  endured  to  meet  her  opening  e's, 
an  e  Hke  mine,  A  lidless  watcher  of  the  public  weal, 
Fear  Stared  in  her  e's,  and  chalk'd  her  face, 
gems  and  gemlike  e's.  And  gold  and  golden  heads ; 
the  crimson-rolling  e  Glares  ruin, 
slink  From  ferule  and  the  trespass-chiding  e. 
Alive  with  fluttering  scarfs  and  ladies'  e's, 
loved  me  closer  than  his  own  right  e, 
old  lion,  glaring  with  his  whelpless  e, 
grief  and  mother's  hunger  in  her  e, 
her  e  with  slow  dilation  roU'd  Dry  flame, 
meet  it,  witli  an  e  that  swum  in  thanks ; 
So  she,  and  tum'd  askance  a  wintry  e : 
The  common  men  with  rolling  e's ; 
I  love  not  hollow  cheek  or  faded  e : 
Nor  knew  what  e  was  on  me, 
the  dew  Dwelt  in  her  e's, 
I  on  her  Fixt  my  faint  e's,  and  utter'd 
with  shut  e's  I  lay  Listening ;  then  look'd. 

and  mild  the  luminous  e's, 

yearlong  poring  on  thy  pictured  e's, 

lift  thine  e's  ;  my  doubts  are  dead, 

guard  the  e,  the  soul  Of  Europe, 

he  tum'd,  and  I  saw  his  e's  all  wet, 

thank  God  that  I  keep  my  e's. 

and  the  e  of  man  cannot  see ; 

A  jewel,  a  jewel  dear  to  a  lover's  e  I 

fine  Uttle  feet — Dewy  blue  e. 

Tell  my  wish  to  her  dewy  blue  e  : 

lighten  into  my  e's  and  my  heart, 

cross  All  night  below  the  darken'd  e's  ; 

But  since  it  pleased  a  vanish'd  e. 

Mine  e's  have  leisure  for  their  tears  ; 

Paradise  It  never  look'd  to  human  e's 

if  that  e  which  watches  guilt  And  goodness, 

Oh,  if  indeed  that  e  foresee  Or  see 

We  sung,  tho'  every  e  was  dim. 

Her  e'«  are  homes  of  silent  prayer, 

those  wild  e's  that  watch  the  wave 

Make  April  of  her  tender  e's ; 

See  with  clear  e  some  hidden  shame 

With  larger  other  e's  than  ours, 


185 


Eye 


Princess  iv  134 

152 

195 

324 

377 

480 

494 

„  i>38 

„  509 

531 

„         vt99 

>,  146 

,,  189 

210 

330 

360 

»  vii  7 

53 

136 

144 


Such  splendid  purpose  in  his  e's. 

That  ever  lookM  with  human  e's. 

And  if  thou  cast  thine  e's  below, 

Tho'  if  an  e  that's  downward  cast 

Or  in  the  light  of  deeper  e's 

And  closing  eaves  of  wearied  e's 

I  find  a  trouble  in  thine  e, 

him,  who  turns  a  musing  e  On  songs, 

And  dropt  the  dust  on  tearless  e's ; 

And  over  those  ethereal  e's 

He  brought  an  e  for  all  he  saw ; 

dying  e's  Were  closed  with  wail. 

And  woolly  breasts  and  beaded  e's ; 

whose  light-blue  e's  Are  tender  over  drowning  flies. 

These  two — they  dwelt  with  e  on  e. 

She  dwells  on  him  with  faithful  e's, 

gleams  On  Lethe  in  the  e's  of  Death. 

But  each  has  pleased  a  kindred  e. 

The  critic  clearness  of  an  e, 

and  thee  mine  e's  Have  look'd  on  : 

Drew  in  the  expression  of  an  e, 

I,  who  gaze  with  temperate  e's 

I  seem  to  cast  a  careless  e  On  souls. 

And  bright  the  friendship  of  thine  e, 

Or  eagle's  wing,  or  insect's  e  ; 

She  did  but  look  thro'  dimmer  e's  ; 

Sweet  human  hand  and  lips  and  e  ; 

On  me  she  bends  her  blissful  e's 

By  village  e's  as  yet  unborn  ; 

e  to  e,  shall  look  On  knowledge ; 


„  226 

340 

348 

Ode  on  Well.  160 

Grandmother  49 

106 

High.  Pantheism  17 

Window,  On  the  Hill  3 

j>  Letter  4 

,.     14 

„      Marr.  Mom.  15 

In  Mem.  iv  14 

,       via  21 

,       xiii  16 

,       xxiv  7 

,       xxvi5 

9 

,      XXX 14 

,     xxxii  1 

,   xxxvi  15 

,  xlS 

HI 

15 

,        Ivi  10 

Ivii  12 

,  Ixi  5 

Ixii  1 

11 

Ixvii  11 

la^ii  10 

Ixxvii  2 

Ixxx  4 

Ixxxvii  39 

IXXXtX  \j 

xc  5 

xcv  12 

xem2 

xcvii  9 

xcvii  35 

xcmii  8 

cl7 

cix  3 

21 

cxi  19 

cxii  2 

7 

cxix  10 

cxxiv  6 

cxxv  6 

cxxix  6 

Con.  29 

59 

129 


Eye  (s)  (continued)    (for  her  e's  were  downcast,  not  to  be  seen) 
An  e  well-practised  in  nature, 
her  e  seemed  full  Of  a  kind  intent  to  me. 
And  a  moist  mirage  in  desert  e's, 
once,  but  once,  she  lifted  her  e's, 
Let  not  my  tongue  be  a  thrall  to  my  e. 
Innumerable,  pitiless,  passionless  e's, 
often  I  caught  her  with  e's  all  wet, 
every  e  but  mine  will  glance  At  Maud 
In  violets  blue  as  your  e's. 
Was  it  he  lay  there  with  a  fading  e  ? 
But  only  moves  with  tlio  moving  e, 

it  well  Might  drown  all  life  in  the  e,— 

I  sorrow  For  the  hand,  the  lips,  the  e's. 

My  own  dove  with  the  tender  e  ? 

look'd,  tho'  but  in  a  dream,  upon  e's  so  fair 

O  passionate  heart  and  morbid  e,  ' 

Felt  the  light  of  her  e's  into  his  life 

And  dazed  all  e's,  till  Arthur  by  main  might 

From  e  to  e  thro'  all  their  Order  flash  ' 

Bewildering  heart  and  e — 

Fixing  full  e's  of  question  on  her  face, 

dark  my  mother  was  in  e's  and  hair.  And  dark  in 
hair  and  e's  am  I ; 

the  Queen  replied  with  drooping  e's, 

Gareth  answer'd  her  with  kindling  e's,  (repeat) 

Nor  fronted  man  or  woman,  e  to  e — ■ 

The  mother's  e  Full  of  the  vristful  fear 

Gareth  likewise  on  them  fixt  his  e's 

shyly  glanced  E's  of  pure  women, 

the  listening  e's  Of  those  tall  knights, 

the  field  was  pleasant  in  our  e's, 

The  field  was  pleasant  in  my  husband's  e.' 

Return,  and  meet,  and  hold  him  from  our  e's, 

the  King's  calm  e  Fell  on,  and  check'd, 

A  head  with  kindling  e's  above  the  throng. 

Round  as  the  red  e  of  an  Eagle-owl, 

Gareth's  e's  had  flying  blots  Before  them 

And  Enid,  but  to  please  her  husband's  e, 

this  she  gather'd  from  the  people's  e's  : 

darken'd  from  the  high  light  in  his  e's, 

maybe  pierced  to  death  before  mine  e's, 

with  fixt  e  following  the  three. 

Let  his  e  rove  in  following. 

To  whom  Geraint  with  e's  all  bright  replied, 

Nor  did  she  lift  an  e  nor  speak  a  word, 

At  this  she  cast  her  e's  upon  her  dress. 

Myself  would  work  e  dim,  and  finger  lame, 

Help'd  by  the  mother's  careful  hand  and  e, 

the  Prince  had  brought  his  errant  e's 

Found  Enid  with  the  comer  of  his  e, 

Crost  and  came  near,  lifted  adoring  e's, 

would  not  make  them  laughable  in  all  e's. 

Made  his  e  moist ;  but  Enid  fear'd  his  e's, 

With  e's  to  find  you  out  however  far, 

his  e  darken'd  and  his  helmet  wagg'd  ; 

let  her  tme  hand  falter,  nor  blue  e  Mo'isten, 

drove  the  dust  against  her  veilless  e's  : 

Bound  on  a  foray,  rolhng  e's  of  prey, 

Half-bold,  half-frighted,  with  dilated  e's. 

He  roll'd  his  e's  about  the  hall, 

o'er  her  meek  blue  e's,  came  a  happy  mist 

Yet  not  so  misty  were  her  meek  blue  e's 

with  your  meek  e's.  The  tmest  e's 

with  your  own  tme  e's  Beheld  the  man 

having  look'd  too  much  thro'  aUen  e's. 

King  went  forth  and  cast  his  e's  On  each 

Sent  me  a  three-years'  exUe  from  thine  e's. 

Sir  Lancelot  with  his  e's  on  earth, 

Lo  !  these  her  emblems  drew  mine  e's — 

Then  Lancelot  lifted  his  large  e's ; 

hast  thou  e's,  or  if,  are  these  So  far  besotted 

Then  fiercely  to  Sir  Garlon  '  E's  have  I  That  saw 

Es  too  that  long  have  watch'd  how  Lancelot 

The  longest  lance  his  e's  had  ever  seen, 


be  seen) 

Maud  I  ii  5 

iv  38 

„          vi  40 

.  53 

„         via  5 

„        xvi  32 

„     xviii  38 

„       xix  23 

„        XX  36 

„      xxii  42 

„      //  i  29 

a  37 

61 

iv  27 

46 

„  ///  vi  16 

32 

Com.  ( 

/  Arthur  56 

109 

270 

300 

312 

327 

469 

Gareth  and,  L.  41,  62 

112 

172 

236 

314 

327 

337 

342 

429 

547 

646 

799 

1031 

Marr.  of 

Geraint  11 

61 

100 

104 

237 

> 

399 

> 

,            494 

528 

> 

609 

628 

9 

738 

Geraint  and  E.  245 

„ 

281 

„ 

304 

>» 

326 

»i 

350 

»> 

428 

„ 

505 

„ 

512 

»5 

529 

„ 

538 

>l 

597 

9t 

610 

» 

769 

II 

772 

II 

841 

l» 

846 

II 

892 

>» 

932 

Balin  and  Balan  59 

it 

253 

II 

265 

»> 

277 

»> 

358 

„ 

372 

II 

375 

II 

411 

Eye 


186 


Eye 


Eye  (S)  {continued)    he  lifted  faint  e's ;  he  felt  One  near 

him  ;  Balin  and  Balan  594 

Closed  his  death-drowsing  e's,  and  slept  „  631 
stood  with  folded  hands  and  downward  e's  Of 

glancing  comer,                                                          Merlin  and  V.  69 

her  slow  sweet  e's  Fear-tremulous,  „  85 

With  reverent  e's  mock-loyal,  „  157 

neither  e's  nor  tongue — 0  stupid  child  !  „  251 

sweetly  gleam'd  her  e's  behind  her  tears  „  402 

isle-niu-tured  e's  Waged  such  unwilling  tho'  successful  war    „  570 

lady  never  made  unwilling  war  With  those  fine  e's  :  „  604 

Not  one  to  flirt  a  venom  at  her  e's,  „  609 

let  her  e's  Speak  for  her,  glowing  on  him,  „  615 

So  lean  his  e's  were  monstrous ;  „  624 

often  o'er  the  sim's  bright  e  Drew  the  vast  eyelid  „  633 

densest  condensation,  hard  To  mind  and  e;  „  679 

A  snowy  penthouse  for  his  hollow  e's,  „  808 

Without  the  will  to  lift  their  e's,  „  836 

His  e  was  calm,  and  suddenly  she  took  To  bitter  weeping     „  854 

He  raised  his  e's  and  saw  The  tree  that  shone  „  938 

Her  e's  and  neck  glittering  went  and  came ;  „  960 

Queen  Lifted  her  e's,  and  they  dwelt                           Lancelot  and  E.  84 

gleam'd  a  vague  suspicion  in  his  e's  :  „  127 

she,  who  held  her  e's  upon  the  ground,  „  232 

Lifted  her  e's,  and  read  his  lineaments.  „  244 

And  noblest,  when  she  lifted  up  her  e's,  „  256 

she  lifted  up  her  e's  And  loved  him,  „  259 

let  his  e's  Rim  thro'  the  peopled  gallery  „  429 

stay'd ;  and  cast  his  e's  on  fair  Elaine :  „  640 

0  damsel,  in  the  light  of  yoiu"  blue  e's ;  „  660 
he  roU'd  his  e's  Yet  blank  from  sleep,  „  819 
His  e's  glisten'd  :  she  fancied  '  Is  it  for  me  ?  '  „  822 
his  large  black  e's.  Yet  larger  thro'  his  leanness,  „  834 
'  Nay,  the  world,  the  world.  All  ear  and  e,  with  such 

a  stupid  heart  To  interpret  ear  and  e,  „  941 

Speaking  a  still  good-morrow  with  her  e's.  „  1033 

old  servitor,  on  deck.  Winking  his  e's,  „  1145 

saw  with  a  sidelong  e  The  shadow  of  some  piece  „  1173 

Close  imdemeath  Ws  e's,  and  right  across  „  1240 

and  e's  that  ask'd  '  What  is  it  ?  '  „  1249 

men  Shape  to  their  fancy's  e  from  broken  rocks  „  1252 

From  the  half-face  to  the  full  e,  „  1262 

raised  his  head,  their  e's  met  and  hers  fell,  „  1312 

He  answer'd  with  his  e's  upon  the  ground,  „  1352 

Seeing  the  homeless  trouble  in  thine  e's,  „  1365 

To  doubt  her  fairness  were  to  want  an  e,  „  1376 

lifted  up  his  e's  And  saw  the  baige  that  brought  „  1390 

1  trust  We  are  green  in  Heaven's  e's ;  Holy  Grail  38 
her  e's  Beyond  my  knowing  of  them,  beautiful,  „  102 
His  e's  became  so  like  her  own,  „  141 
sent  the  deathless  passion  in  her  e's  Thro'  him,  „  163 
lifting  up  mine  e's,  I  foimd  myself  Alone,  „  375 
And  took  both  ear  and  e ;  „  383 
And  kind  the  woman's  e's  and  innocent,  „  393 
'  While  thus  he  spake,  his  e,  dwelling  on  mine,  „  485 
On  either  hand,  as  far  as  e  could  see,  „  498 
Which  never  e's  on  earth  again  shall  see.J  „  532 
like  bright  e's  of  familiar  friends,  „  688 
his  e's,  An  out-door  sign  of  all  the  warmth  „  703 
'  A  welfare  in  thine  e  reproves  Our  fear  „  726 
I  saw  it ; '  and  the  tears  were  in  his  e's.  „  759 
A  dying  fire  of  madness  in  his  e's —  „  768 
angels,  awful  shapes,  and  wings  and  e's.  „  848 
by  mine  e's  and  by  mine  ears  I  swear,  „  864 
light  that  strikes  his  e  is  not  light,  „  913 
So  that  his  e's  were  dazzled  looking  at  it.  PeUeas  and  E.  36 
and  his  e's  closed.  And  since  he  loved  all  maidens,  „  39 
For  laige  her  violet  e's  look'd,  „  71 
for  those  large  e's,  the  haimts  of  scorn,  „  75 
while  they  rode,  the  meaning  in  his  e's,  „  109 
green  wood-ways,  and  e's  among  the  leaves ;  „  139 
in  mid-banquet  measuring  with  his  e's  „  150 
tower  fill'd  with  e's  Up  to  the  summit,  „  166 
glory  fired  her  face ;  her  e  Sparkled,  „  172 
but  felt  bis  e's  Harder  and  drier  „  506 


Eye  (s)  (continued)    hard  his  e's ;  harder  his  heart 
Seem'd ; 
Rolling  his  e's,  a  moment  stood,  then  spake : 
PeUeas  lifted  up  an  e  so  fierce  She  quail'd ; 
nose  Bridge-broken,  one  e  out,  and  one  hand  off. 
He  look'd  but  once,  and  vail'd  his  e's 
Come — ^let  us  gladden  their  sad  e's. 
Made  dull  his  inner,  keen  his  outer  e 
The  black-blue  Irish  hair  and  Irish  e's 
steel-blue  e's,  The  golden  beard  that  clothed 
Lay  couchant  with  his  e's  upon  the  throne, 
Modred  still  in  green,  all  ear  and  e. 
Heart-hiding  smile,  and  gray  persistent  e : 
Hands  in  hands,  and  e  to  e. 
Makes  wicked  lightnings  of  her  e's, 
her  hand  Grasp'd,  made  her  vail  her  e's : 
richer  in  His  e  s  Who  ransom'd  us, 
these  e's  of  men  are  dense  and  dim, 
both  his  e's  were  dazzled  as  he  stood, 
might  have  pleased  the  e's  of  many  men. 
Laid  widow'd  of  the  power  in  his  e 
Valuing  the  giddy  pleasure  of  the  e's. 
'  Now  see  I  by  thine  e's  that  this  is  done, 
looking  wistfully  with  wide  blue  e's  As  in  a  picture, 
charged  Before  the  e's  of  ladies  and  of  kings, 
shall  I  hide  my  forehead  and  my  e's  ? 
Straining  his  e's  beneath  an  arch  of  hand, 
I  come,  great  Mistress  of  the  ear  and  e : 
tho'  there  beat  a  heart  in  either  e ; 
Leapt  like  a  passing  thought  across  her  e's ; 
Oh,  such  dark  e's !  a  single  glance  of  them 
a  common  light  of  e's  Was  on  us  as  we  lay : 
Shading  his  e's  till  all  the  fiery  cloud, 
down  to  sea,  and  far  as  e  could  ken, 
light  methought  broke  from  her  dark,  dark  e's, 
endured  in  presence  of  His  e's  To  indue  his  lustre ; 
our  e's  met :  hers  were  bright, 
gaze  upon  thee  till  their  e's  are  dim 
still  I  kept  my  e's  upon  the  sky. 
Of  e's  too  weak  to  look  upon  the  light ; 
Leaning  its  roses  on  my  faded  e's. 
And  what  it  has  for  e's  as  close  to  mine 
how  her  choice  did  leap  forth  from  his  e's ! 
e's — I  saw  the  moonlight  glitter  on  their  tears — 
And  could  I  look  upon  her  tearful  e's  ? 
Fixing  my  e's  on  those  three  cypress-cones 
Flash'd  thro'  my  e's  into  my  innermost  brain, 
Like  morning  from  her  e's — her  eloquent  e's. 
All  unawares  before  his  half-shut  e's, 
so  those  fair  e's  Shone  on  my  darkness, 
and  the  e  Was  riveted  and  charm-bound, 
over  my  dim  e's.  And  parted  lips  which  drank  her  breath, 
— hea-  e's  And  cheeks  as  bright  as  when  she  climb'd 
she  rais'd  an  e  that  ask'd  '  Where  ? ' 

dark  e's  of  hers — Oh !  such  dark  e's !  and  not  her  e's  alone, 
Wonder'd  at  some  strange  light  in  Julian's  e's 
Have  jested  also,  but  for  Julian's  e's, 
breast  Hard-heaving,  and  her  e's  upon  her  feet, 
Dazed  or  amazed,  nor  e's  of  men ; 
She  shook,  and  cast  her  e's  down, 
and  begun  to  darken  my  e's. 
sun  as  danced  in  'er  pratty  blue  e ; 
sweet  e's  frown :  the  lips  Seem  but  a  gash, 
the  sweet  dwelling  of  her  e's  Upon  me 
her  own  true  e's  Are  traitors  to  her ; 
wi'  hoffens  a  drop  in  'is  e. 
Sa  I  han't  clapt  e's  on  'im  yit, 
and  the  smile,  and  the  comforting  e — 
and  his  e's  were  sweet, 
YOU  that  were  e's  and  light  to  the  King 
and  woke,  These  e's,  now  dull,  but  then  so  keen 
And  from  her  virgin  breast,  and  virgin  e's 
Menoeceus,  thou  hast  e's,  and  I  can  hear 
These  eyeless  e's,  that  cannot  see  thine  own, 
these  e's  will  find  The  men  I  knew, 


Pdeas  and  E.  512 

581 

601 

Last  Tournament  59 

„      150 

222 

366 

404 

667 

Guinevere  11 

24 

64 

100 

520 

663 

684 

Pass,  of  Arthur  19 

227 

259 

290 

„     296 

317 

337 

393 

„     396 

464 

Lover's  Tale  i  22 

34 

70 

75 

236 

306 

„    336 

368 

423 

„    441 

491 

572 

614 

621 

651 

657 

696 

„        ii  38 

95 

144 

153 

157 

187 

203 

Hi  46 

iv  94 

165 

205 

223 

308 

311 

329 

Eizpah  16 

North.  Cobbler  50 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  106 

165 

284 

Village  Wife  34 

"  1?L 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  13J 

V.  of  Maeldune  ll7l 

ToPrin.F.ofH.l] 

Tiresias  • 


IC 

175 


Eye 


187 


Face 


Eye  (s)  continued)    in  the  dark  of  his  wonderful  «'s.  The  Wreck  55 

sad  e's  fixt  on  the  lost  sea-home,  „        126 

When  the  rolUng  e^s  of  the  Ughthouse  Despair  9 

leave  him,  bUnd  of  heart  and  e's.  Ancient  Sage  113 

Nor  care — for  Hunger  hath  the  Evil  e —  „          264 

in  the  sidelong  e's  a  gleam  of  all  things  ill —  The  Flight  31 

my  e's  are  dim  with  dew,  „          97 

Wid  a  diamond  dhrop  in  her  e.  Tomorrow  28 

an'  yer  e's  as  bright  as  the  day  !  „         32 

An'  ye'll  niver  set  e's  an  the  face  „         50 

the  dhry  e  thin  but  was  wet  for  the  frinds  „         83 

E's  that  lured  a  doting  boyhood  Lockdey  H.,  Sixty  10 

kiss'd  the  miniature  with  those  sweet  e's.  „              12 

sphere  of  all  the  boundless  Heavens  within  the  human  «,      „            210 

Aged  e's  may  take  the  growing  glimmer  „            230 

in  the  wars  your  own  Crimean  e's  had  seen ;  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  12 

Those  e's  the  blue  to-day,  Epilogue  9 
be  found  of  angel  e's  In  earth's  recurring  Paradise.      Helen's  Tower  11 


Thy  glorious  e's  were  dimm'd  with  pain 

brightens  thro'  the  Mother's  tender  e's, 

True  daughter,  whose  all-faithful,  filial  e's 

make  them  wealthier  in  his  readers'  e's  ; 

Shakespeare's  bland  and  universal  e  Dwells 

Thine  e's  Again  were  human-godlike, 

e's  Awed  even  me  at  first,  thy  mother — e's  That  oft 
had  seen  the  serpent-wanded  power 

who  was  he  with  such  love-drunken  e's 

landscape  which  your  e's  Have  many  a  time 

sin^ace  e,  that  only  doats  On  outward  beauty, 

a  ribald  twinkle  in  his  bleak  e's — 

Beyond  our  burial  and  our  buried  e's, 

closed  her  e's,  which  would  not  close, 

the  glazed  e  Glared  at  me  as  in  horror. 

floated  in  with  sad  reproachful  e's, 

I  lifted  up  my  e's,  he  was  coming  down  the  fell — 

Whose  e's  have  known  this  globe  of  ours, 

Watching  her  large  light  e's 

These  will  thine  e's  not  brook  in  forest-paths. 

Her  light  makes  rainbows  in  my  closing  e's, 

gray  Magician  With  e's  of  wonder, 

Her  sad  e's  plead  for  my  own  fame 

mine  from  your  pretty  blue  e's  to  your  feet, 

I  blind  your  pretty  blue  e's  with  a  kiss ! 

One  kiss'd  his  hand,  another  closed  his  e's, 

lure  those  e's  that  only  yeam'd  to  see, 

had  left  His  aged  e's,  he  raised  them, 

are  faint  And  pale  in  Alla's  e's, 

all  the  Hells  a-glare  in  either  e. 

But  Death  had  ears  and  e's ; 

gladdening  human  hearts  and  e's. 

Haven't  you  e's  ?     I  am  dressing  the  grave 

And  the  hard  blue  e's  have  it  still, 
Eye  (verb)    careful  robins  e  the  delver's  toil, 

careful  robin's  e  the  delver's  toil ; 
Eyeball    warm  blood  mixing ;  The  e's  fixing. 
Eyebrow    He  dragg'd  his  e  bushes  down. 

Still  makes  a  hoary  c  for  the  gleam 
Eyed  (adj.)    {See  also  Blue-eyed,  Cock-eyed, Dark-eyed,  False- 
eyed,  Falcon-eyed,  Gold-eyed,  Gray-eyed,  Mild-eyed, 
Ettill-eyed,   White -eyed.  Wild -eyed)     a   wild   and 
wanton  pard,  E  like  the  evening  star, 
Eyed  (verb)     And  every  follower  e  him  as  a  God ; 
Eyelash    The  lifting  of  whose  e  is  my  lord, 

golden  beam  of  an  e  dead  on  the  cheek, 

mom  Has  lifted  the  dark  e  of  the  Night 
Eyeless     '  I  saw  the  little  elf-god  e  once 

These  e  eyes,  that  cannot  see  thine  own, — 
Eyelet-holes    fierce  east  scream  thro'  your  e-h, 


Freedom  10 

Prin.  Beatrice  4 

13 

Poets  and  their  B.  4 

To  W.  C.  Macready  13 

Demeter  and  P.  18 


EyeUd    (<S^ee  also  Sster-eyelids) 
mom  Roof  not  a  glance 
Pacing  with  downward  e's  pure. 
Her  e  quiver'd  as  she  spake. 
Weigh  heavy  on  my  e's :  let  me  die. 
1  kiss'd  his  e's  into  rest : 
Than  tir'd  e's  upon  tir'd  eyes ; 


Ray-fringed  e's  of  the 


23 

The  Ring  21 

„      150 

„      163 

„      199 

„      296 

„      299 

„      450 

»      469 

Happy  82 

To  Ulysses  2 

Prog,  of  Spring  19 

31 

46 

Merlin  and  the  G.  6 

Romney's  R.  55 

96 

101 

Death  of  (Enone  58 

St.  Tdemachus  36 

51 

Akbar's  Dream  11 

115 

187 

Hymn  2 

Charity  2 

„     10 

Marr.  of  Geraint  774 

Geraint  and  E.  431 

All  Things  will  Die  34 

Merlin  and  V.  807 

The  Brook  80 


(Enone  200 

Last  Tournament  678 

Princess  v  140 

Maud  I  Hi  3 

Akbar's  Dream  201 

Merlin  and  V.  249 

Tiresias  108 

Pdleas  and  E.  469 


Clear-headed  friend  6 

Two  Voices  420 

Miller's  D.  144 

(Enone 244 

The  Sisters  19 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  6 


Eyelid  (continued)    With  half-dropt  e  still, 
I  BEAD,  before  my  e's  dropt  their  shade, 
I  closed  mine  e's,  lest  the  gems  Should  bUnd 
'  Her  e's  dropp'd  their  silken  eaves, 
forehead,  e's,  growing  dewy-warm  With  kisses 
A  little  flutter'd,  with  her  e's  down, 
And  here  upon  a  yellow  e  fall'n 
Beat  balm  upon  our  e's. 
on  my  heavy  e's  My  anguish  hangs 
Made  her  cheek  burn  and  either  e  fall, 
Made  her  cheek  bum  and  either  e  fall. 
Made  answer,  either  e  wet  with  tears : 
Drew  the  vast  e  of  an  inky  cloud, 
saw  The  slow  tear  creep  from  her  closed  e 
I  closed  mine  e's,  lest  the  gems  Should  blind 
Falling,  unseal'd  our  e's,  and  we  woke 
My  heart  paused — my  raised  e's  would  not  fall, 
felt  the  blast  Beat  on  my  heated  e's : 
Had  caught  her  hand,  her  e's  fell — 
Vailing  a  sudden  e  with  his  hard 
Eye-reach    Eagle,  laid  Almost  beyond  e-r, 
Eyesight     Not  with  blinded  e  poring 
Eye-witness    would'st  against  thine  own  e-w  fain 
Eyry    lured  that  falcon  from  his  e  on  the  fell, 


FaS,ce  (face)    fun  'um  theer  a-laiiid  of  'is  / 

an'  scratted  my  /  like  a  cat, 

An'  the  babby's/ wum't  wesh'd 

I'll  looiJk  my  hennemy  strait  i'  the  /, 

Tommy's  /  be  as  fresh  as  a  codlin 

call'd  me  afoor  my  awn  foillks  to  my  / 

wi'  a  niced  red  /,  an'  es  cleiin  Es  a  shillin' 

a-callin  ma  '  hugly '  mayhap  to  my  /, 

I  seed  at  'is  /  wur  as  red  as  the  Yule-block 

an'  ya  thraw'd  the  fish  i'  'is  /, 
FaSir  (fair)     like  a  bull  gotten  loose  at  a  /, 
Faaithful  (faithful)     '  F  an'  True  '—(repeat) 

'  A  /  an'  loovin'  wife ! ' 
Fable  (s)    we  grew  The  /  of  the  city  where  we  dwelt. 

Read  my  httle  /: 

Like  a  shipwreck'd  man  on  a  coast  Of  ancient 
/  and  fear — 

Old  milky  f's  of  the  wolf  and  sheep, 

Rare  in  JF"  or  History, 

my  soul  uncertain,  or  a  /, 
Fable  (verb)    aught  they  /  of  the  quiet  Gods. 
Fabled    why  we  came  ?     I  /  nothing  fair, 
Fabler     Balin  answer'd  him  '  Old  /, 
Fabric     F  rough,  or  fairy-fine, 
Face    (See  also  Fa^ce,  Fine-face,  Half-face)    Old  f's 
glimmer'd  thro'  the  doors, 

Sweet  f's,  rounded  arms,  and  bosoms 

I  was  down  upon  my  /, 

O  pale,  pale  /so  sweet  and  meek, 

Breathing  Light  against  thy  /, 

and  slowly  grow  To  a  full  /, 

While  I  muse  upon  thy  /; 

So,  friend,  when  first  I  look'd  upon  your  /, 

He  said, '  She  has  a  lovely  /; 

glow'd  The  clear  perfection  of  her  /. 

God's  glory  smote  him  on  the  /.' 

'His /,  that  two  hours  since  hath  died ; 

little  daughter,  whose  sweet  /  He  kiss'd, 

Whose  wrinkles  gather'd  on  his  /, 

And  turning  look'd  upon  your  /, 

Grow,  live,  die  looking  on  his  /, 

tell  her  to  her  /  how  much  I  hate  Her  presence, 

O  happy  Heaven,  how  canst  thou  see  my  /? 

She  was  the  fairest  in  the  /: 

Two  godlike  f's  gazed  below ; 


Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  90 

D.  of  F.  Women  1 

M.  d' Arthur  152 

Talking  Oak  209 

Tithonus  58 

The  Brook  89 

Lucretius  141 

Princess  Hi  123 

Maud  II  iv  73 

Marr.  of  Geraint  775 

Geraint  and  E.  434 

Merlin  and  V.  379 

634 

„  906 

Pass,  of  Arthur  320 

Lover's  Tale  i  265 

571 

„         Hi  28 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  148 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  20 

Gareth  and  L.  45 

Locksley  Hall  172 

Merlin  and  V.  793 

Happy  59 


N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  33 

North.  Cobbler  22 

42 

74 

110 

Village  Wife  105 

Spinster's  S's.  75 

91 

Owd  Rod  56 

Church-warden,  etc.  30 

North.  Cobbler  33 

Owd  Roil  15 

Spinster's  S's.  72 

Gardener's  D.  6 

The  Flower  17 

Maud  II  a  32 

Pdleas  and  E.  196 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  5 

By  an  Evolution.  5 

Lucretius  55 

Princess  Hi  136 

Balin  and  Balan  307 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  18 

Mariana  66 

Sea-Fairies  3 

Oriana  53 

„      66 

Addine  56 

Elednore  92 

„       129 

Sonnet  To 9 

L.  of  ShaloU  iv  5,2 

Mariana  in  the  S.  32 

Two  Voices  225 

242 

„  253 

329 

Milter's  D.  157 

Fatima  41 

(Enone  228 

„      236 

The  Sisters  2 

Palace  of  Art  162 


Face 


188 


Face 


Pace  (continued)  0  silent  f's  of  the  Great  and  Wise,  Palace  of  Art  195 
I  shall  look  upon  your/;  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  38 

round  about  the  keel  with  f's  pale,  Dark  f's  pale 

against  that  rosy  flame,  Lotos-Eaters  25 

With  those  old  f's  of  our  infancy  „  C.  S.  66 

turning  on  my  /  The  star-Uke  sorrows  D.  of  F.  Women  90 

Myself  for  such  a  /  had  boldly  died,'  „              98 

My  father  held  his  hand  upon  his  /;  „            107 

Here  her  /  Glow'd,  as  I  look'd  at  her.  „            239 

His  /  is  growing  sharp  and  thin.  D.  of  the  O.  Year  46 

a  new  /  at  the  door,  my  friend,  A  new  /  at  the  door.              „              53 

Imitates  God,  and  turns  her  /  To  every  land  On  a  Mourner  2 

reveal'd  The  fullness  of  her  / —  Of  old  sat  Freedom  12 

Lift  up  thy  rocky  /,  England  and  Amer.  12 

all  his  /  was  white  And  colourless,  M.  d' Arthur  212 

Among  new  men,  strange  f's,  other  minds.'  „            238 

If  thou  should'st  never  see  my  /  again,  „            246 

Then  he  turn'd  His  /  and  pass'd —  Dora  151 

and  Dora  hid  her  /  By  Mary.  „    156 

came  again  togeth^  on  the  king  With  heated  f's ;  Audley  Court  37 

hid  his  /  From  all  men,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  20 

A  pretty  /  is  well,  and  this  is  well,  Edwin  Morris  45 

saw  Their  f's  grow  between  me  and  my  book  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  176 

I  know  thy  gUttering  /.  „            205 

before  my  / 1  see  the  moulder'd  Abbey-walls,  Talking  Oak  2 

seen  some  score  of  those  Fresh  f's,  „  50 
Turn  your  /,  Nor  look  with  that  too-earnest  eye —      Day-Dm.,  Pro.  17 

Grave  f's  gather'd  in  a  ring.  „  Sleep.  P.  38 

And  yawn'd,  and  rubb'd  his  /,  and  spoke,  „     Revival  19 

'  There  I  put  my  /  in  the  grass —  Edward  Gray  21 

the  dusty  crypt  Of  darken'd  forms  and  f's.  Will  Water.  184 

Were  their  f's  grim.  The  Captain  54 

colour  flushes  Her  sweet  /  from  brow  to  chin :  L.  of  Burleigh  62 

Her  /  was  evermore  unseen.  The  Voyage  61 

So  sweet  a  /,  such  angel  grace,  Beggar  Maid  13 

Panted  hand-in-hand  with  /'s  pale,  Vision  of  Sin  19 

Hair,  and  eyes,  and  limbs,  and/ 's,  „            39 

Every  /,  however  full.  Padded  rovmd  „          176 

His  large  gray  eyes  and  weather-beaten  /  Enoch  Arden  70 
And  in  their  eyes  and  f's  read  his  doom ;  Then,  as 

their  f's  drew  together,  groan'd,  „          73 

his  /,  Rough-redden'd  with  a  thousand  winter  gales,  „          94 

I  shall  look  upon  your  /  no  more.'  „        212 

Spy  out  my  /,  and  laugh  at  all  your  fears.'  „        216 

Cared  not  to  look  on  any  human  /,  „        282 

'  I  cannot  look  you  in  the  / 1  seem  so  foolish  „        315 

And  dwelt  a  moment  on  his  kindly  /,  „        326 

but  her  /  had  f  all'n  upon  her  hands ;  „        391 

stood  once  more  before  her  /,  Claiming  her  promise.  „        457 

Philip's  rosy  /  contracting  grew  Careworn  and  wan ;  „        486 

He  could  not  see,  the  kindly  human  /,  „  581 
Enoch  yeam'd  to  see  her  /  again ;  '  If  I  might  look 

on  her  sweet  /  again  „        717 

my  dead  /  would  vex  her  after-life.  „        891 

With  half  a  score  of  swarthy  f's  came.  Aylmer's  Field  191 

a  hoary  /  Meet  for  the  reverence  of  the  hearth,  „            332 

her  sweet  /  and  faith  Held  him  from  that :  „            392 

mixt  Upon  their /'s,  as  they  kiss'd  each  other  „            430 

/  to  /  With  twenty  months  of  silence,  „           566 

careless  of  the  household  f's  near,  „           575 

His  /  magnetic  to  the  hand  from  which  „            626 

the  wife,  who  watch'd  his  /,  Paled  „            731 

he  veil'd  His  /  with  the  other,  „            809 

pendent  hands,  and  narrow  meagre  /  „            813 

The  rabbit  fondles  his  own  harmless  /,  „            851 

sitting  all  alone,  his  /  Would  darken.  Sea  Dreams  12 

altho'  his  fire  is  on  my  /  Blinding,  Lucretius  144 

sown  With  happy  f's  and  with  holiday.  Princess,  Pro.  56 

(A  little  sense  of  wrong  had  touch'd  her/  „               219 

prince  I  was,  blue-eyed,  and  fair  in  /,  „                1 1 

I  saw  my  father's  /  Grow  long  and  troubled  „                58 

keep  your  hoods  about  the/;  „           ii  358 

Push'd  her  flat  hand  against  his  /  „               366 

She  sent  for  Blanche  to  accuse  her  /  to  /;  „           iv  239 

And  falling  on  my  /  was  caught  and  known.  „              270 


Face  (continued)    Half-drooping  from  her,  turn'd  her  /,        Princess,  iv.  368 

Stared  in  her  eyes,  and  chalk'd  her  /,  „               377 

I  know  Your /'s  there  in  the  crowd —  „               510 

Bent  their  broad  f's  toward  us  and  address'd  „               551 

so  from  her  /  They  push'd  us,  down  the  steps,  „              554 

Thy  /  across  his  fancy  comes,  „               579 

And  every  /  she  look'd  on  justify  it)  „            v  134 

therefore  I  set  my  /  Against  all  men,  „               388 

Took  the  face-cloth  from  the/;  „            vi  11 

The  haggard  father's  /and  reverend  beard  ,,               103 

then  once  more  she  look'd  at  my  pale  /:  „               115 

And  turn'd  each  /  her  way :  „               144 

when  she  learnt  his  /,  Remembering  his  ill-omen'd  song,     „  158 

thro' the  parted  silks  the  tender/ Peep'd,  „           vii  60 

at  which  her  /  A  little  flush'd,  „                 80 

Hortensia  pleading :  angry  was  her  /.  „                132 

all  for  languor  and  self-pity  ran  Mine  down  my  /,  „               140 

Pale  was  the  perfect/;  „               224 

His  dear  little  /  was  troubled,  Grandmother  65 

Before  the  stony  /  of  Time,  Lit.  Squabbles  3 

His  /  was  ruddy,  his  hair  was  gold,  The  Victim  36 

Till  the  /  of  Bel  be  brighten'd,  Boddicea  16 

they  hide  their /'s,  miserable  in  ignominy!  „       51 
are  you  flying  over  her  sweet  little  /  ?                  Window,  On  the  Hill  13 

Ay  or  no,  if  ask'd  to  her/?                                        „  Letter  Q 

Whom  we,  that  have  not  seen  thy  /,  In  Mem.,  Pro.  2 

Roves  from  the  living  brother's  /,  „         xxxii  7 

And  tears  are  on  the  mother's  /,  „             xl  10 

I  strive  to  paint  The  / 1  know ;  „            Ixx  3 

And  shoals  of  pucker'd  f's  drive ;  „                10 

Looks  thy  fair  /  and  makes  it  still.  „                16 

As  sometimes  in  a  dead  man's  /,  „         Ixxiv  1 

And  in  a  moment  set  thy  /  „         Ixxvi  2 

For  changes  wrought  on  form  and  /;  „       Ixxxii  2 

I  see  their  unborn  f's  shine  „    Ixxxiv  19 

saw  The  God  within  him  light  his  /,  „  Ixxxvii  36 

swims  The  reflex  of  a  human  /.  „       cviii  12 

And  find  his  comfort  in  thy  /;  „          cix  20 

Not  all  regret :  the  /  will  shine  Upon  me,  „          cxvi  9 

Many  a  merry  /  Salutes  them —  „        Con.  66 

And  hearts  are  warm'd  and/ 's  bloom,             _  „                82 

make  my  heart  as  a  millstone,  set  my  /  as  a  flint,  Maud  I  i31 

But  a  cold  and  clear-cut  /,  „         ii  3 

Cold  and  clear-cut  /,  why  come  you  so  cruelly  meek,  „        Hi  1 

Passionless,  pale,  cold/,  star-sweet  „        _     4 

pride  flash'd  over  her  beautiful /.  „       iv  16 

Maud  with  her  exquisite  /,  „        v  12 

A  /  of  tenderness  might  be  feign'd,  „       vi  52 

A  bought  commission,  a  waxen /,  „        a;  30 

His  /,  as  I  grant,  in  spite  of  spite,  „      xiii  8 

Last  year,  I  caught  a  glimpse  of  his  /,  „           27 

And  he  struck  me,  madman,  over  the  /,  „    II  i  18 

And  the/ 's  that  one  meets,  „       iv  93 

the  /  of  night  is  fair  on  the  dewy  downs,  „  III  vi  5 
One  among  many,  tho'  his  /  was  bare.                          Com.  of  Arthur  54 

find  nor  /  nor  bearing,  Umbs  nor  voice,  „              71 

And  ere  it  left  their /'s,  „            272 

gazing  on  him,  tall,  with  bright  Sweet /'s,  „            279 

her  /  Wellnigh  was  hidden  in  the  minster  „            288 

And  sad  was  Arthur's  /  Taking  it,  „            305 

Fixing  full  eyes  of  question  on  her  /,  „            312 
Southward  they  set  their /'s,                                         Gareth  and  L.  182 

on  thro' silent /'s  rode  Down  the  slope  city,  „            734 

not  once  dare  to  look  him  in  the /.'  „            782 

And  cipher /of  roimded  foolishness,  „          1039 

Slab  after  slab,  their /'» forward  all,  „          1206 

'Follow  the/ '5,  and  we  find  it.  „          1210 

nor  rough  /,  or  voice.  Brute  bulk  of  limb,  „          1329 

'  God  wot,  I  never  look'd  upon  the  /,  „          1333 

Issued  the  bright  /  of  a  blooming  boy  „          1408 
the  sweet  /  of  her  Whom  he  loves  most,                   Marr.  of  Geraint  122 

knight  Had  vizor  up,  and  show'd  a  youthful  /,  „              189 

Guinevere,  not  mindful  of  his  /  „              191 

kept  her  off  and  gazed  upon  her  /,  „              519 

Across  the /of  Enid  hearing  her;  „             524 


Face 


189 


Face  (continued)    all  his  f  Glow'd  like  the  heart  of  a 

Da^'noUo  glance  at  her  good  mother's/,  '^""'-  "^  ^"""^''^  ^l 

But  rested  with  her  sweet /satisfied-  "  77« 
to  her  own  bright  /  Accuse  her  Geraint  n«yi  V  n  n 
Greeted  Geraint  full  /,  but  stealthily,                          ^'™""  ""^  ^'  iJR 

Your  sweet  f's  make  good  fellows  fools  "            qqq 

Ye  mar  a  comely /with  idiot  teare.    Yet,  since  the  " 

/»«comely— some  of  you,  «« 

felt  the  warm  tears  falhng  on  his  /•  "            «« 

he  tum'd  his  /  And  kiss'd  her  climbing,  "            ?S 

Fearing  the  mild  /  of  the  blameless  Kiir,  "            i?X 

His  very  /  with  change  of  heart  is  chanSd.  "            ^ 

itTi?  ^^L^'"'^  stf PS.  the  morning  on  her  /;  Bcdin  and  Balan  2^ 

all  the  light  upon  her  silver/  Flow'd  9^ 

wtT  km'Iu'''''^  S^'i  -^'*  ^^<^  ^^st  fcl^e  panes,  ,"              3^ 

He  d^h'd  the  pummel  at  the  foremost/,  4^ 

Stumbled  headlong,  and  cast  him  /  to  ^ound.  "              %i 

Balin  first  woke,  and  seeing  that  true  /,  "  ^ 
and  they  hfted  up  Their  eaeer  f'l  j^  7"  j  rr  V^ 
she  Wt^  up  A  /^of  saTa^S     '                               ^'"■^^"  ""^  "^^  ^S 

I  find  Your  /  is  practised  when  I  spell  the  Unes,  "            367 

So  tender  was  her  voice,  so  fair  her/,  "            m\ 

ookuponhis/!— butif  hesinn'd,  "            ^i 

harlots  paint  their  talk  as  weU  as  /  "            iSt 

heaving  shoulder,  and  the/ Hand-liidden,  '     "            ^r 

aaa  niarr  d  his  /,  and  mark'd  it  ere  Ids  tune.  247 

all  mght  long  his  /  before  her  lived,  As  when  a  " 

painter,  poring  on  a/,  001 

and  so  paints  him  that  his  /,  "            ooi 

so  the  /  before  her  lived.  Dark-splendid,  "            qqt 

Rapt  on  his /as  if  it  were  a  God's.  "            5^A 

blood  Sprang  to  her  /  and  fill'd  her  with  dehght ;  "            377 

Her  bright  hau:  blown  about  the  serious  f  "            SQ2 

with  smilmg/arose.  With  smiling/  "            fd 

sharply  tum'd  about  to  hide  her  /,  "            ^ 

Where  could  be  found  /  daintier  ?  "            fidi 

And  lifted  her  fair  /  and  moved  away :  "            ^% 

Some  read  the  King's  /,  some  the  Queen's,  "            fJi 

bat  on  his  knee,  stroked  his  gray/  "            ifl, 

Came  on  her  brother  with  a  happy  /  "            70, 

Her  /  was  near,  and  as  we  kiss  the  child  That  does  " 

the  task  assign'd,  he  kiss'd  her/.  000 

In  the  heart's  colours  on  her  simple  /;  "si? 

t  ull  often  the  bright  image  of  one  /,  "            rc? 

like  a  ghost  she  lifted  up  her/,  "            ^.t 

Not  to  be  with  you,  not  to  see  your  /—  "            WTa 

the  blood-red  light  of  dawn  Flared  on  her  /,  "          loS 

So  dwelt  the  father  on  her  /,  and  thought  "          Io30 

She  with  a  /,  bright  as  for  sin  foi^venT  "           {\m 

Wmkmg  his  eyes,  and  twisted  all  his  /.  "          \\Tk 

her  /,  and  that  clear-featured  /  Was  lovely  "          1 1  ^ 
but  that  oareman's  haggard  /,  As  hard  and  still  as  is 

the  /  that  men  Shape  to  their  fancy's  eye  1250 

looking  often  from  his /who  read  "           joRS 

ByGodfor  thee  alone,  and  from  her/,  "          iw 

Dngiit  /  s,  ours,  Full  of  the  vision,  2fifi 

his  /  Darken'd,  as  I  have  seen  it  more  than  once,  "        272 

I  saw  the  fiery /as  of  a  child  That  smote  itself  466 

And  knowing  every  honest  /  of  theirs  "         t^n 

And  one  hath  had  the  vision  /  to  /  "         ono 

"i7  *"°"^  "•'6  the  countenance  of  a  priest  14S 

gilded  parapets  were  crown'd  With  f's,  "             i«k 

tlie  heat  Of  pride  and  glory  fired  her  /  "             1 70 

O  damsel,  wearing  this  unsunny/  "            To^ 

those  three  knights  all  set  their  f's  home,  "            1  aV 

Content  am  I  so  that  I  see  thy/  "            0% 

Thus  to  bebounden,  so  tosee  her/,  "            q^ 

Let  me  be  bounden,  I  shall  see  her  /;  "            ooj 

M^^f  na^w/'^  ''^'''  ''''^'''  "'^-^^  ^-'  tournament  63 

Before  him  fled  the  /  of  Queen  Isolt  "           3^ 


Face 


Face  (continued)    Anon  the/,  as,  when  a  gust  hath 
blown, 
That  sent  the  /  of  all  the  marsh  aloft 
the  /  Wellnigh  was  helmet-hidden, 
trampled  out  his  /  from  being  known 
Men,  women,  on  their  sodden  f's,       ' 
mist,  like  a  face-cloth  to  the  /,  Clung 
Modred's  narrow  foxy  /, 
grim/'s  came  and  went  Before  her, 
Till  ev'n  the  clear /of  the  guileless  King, 
Fired  all  the  pale  /  of  the  Queen, 
grovell'd  with  her  /  against  the  floor : 
She  made  her/  a  darkness  from  the  King: 
I  might  see  his  /,  and  not  be  seen.' 
^  ^*'%xr*."''i^^''  i.^^^'  ^'"^^^  *^en  was  as  an  angel's, 

the  wan  wave  Brake  in  among  dead  f's  " 

And  beats  upon  the  /  's  of  the  dead,      ' 

for  all  his  /  was  white  And  colourless 

new  men,  strange/ '5,  other  minds.'  ' 

If  thou  should'st  never  see  my  /  again 

dwelt  on  my  heaven,  a  /  Most  starry-f kir.  Lover 

placid  /  And  breathless  body  of  her  good  deeds 

slept  In  the  same  cradle  always,  /  to  /.  ' 

in  the  shuddering  moonlight  brought  its  /  ' 

drops  of  that  distressful  rain  Fell  on  my/  ' 

when  their  /  's  are  forgot  in  the  land—     '  ' 

the  /,  The  very  /  and  f  onn  of  Lionel  ' 

those  that  held  the  bier  before  my/,  ' 

His  lady  with  the  moonlight  on  her/  •  ' 

Heir  of  his  /  and  land,  to  Lionel.         '  ' 

Sent  such  a  flame  into  his  /, 

I,  by  Lionel  sitting,  saw  his/  Fire, 

lifted  up  a  /  All  over  glowing  with  the  sun 

I  had  but  to  look  in  his  /. 

But  I  tum'd  my  /  from  him,  an'  he  tum'd  his  f  an' 

he  went. 

praised  him  to  liis  /  with  their  courtly  The  Revenae  99 

Turmng  my  way,  the  loveliest  /  on  earth.    The  /  iievenge  jy 

of  one  there  sitting  opposite.  Sisters  (K  n«A  V  \  87 

and  for  a  /  Gone  in  a  moment^trange.  ^        ^  ^'^  ol 

Sun  himself  has  limn'd  the  /  for  me.  "  ini 

So  that  bright/  was  flash'd  thro'  sense  and  soul  "  Tno 

tlie/  again.  My  Rosalind  in  this  Arden—    ■  "  7 Vu 

There  was  the/,  and  altogether  she.  "  T^o 

driven  by  one  angel  /,  And  all  the  Furies.  "  \r^ 

but  his  voice  and  his /  were  not  kind,  /„  the  ChJd  Nn.-n  ^% 

and  let  the  dark  /  have  his  due !     Tllanks  to  the  ^' 


Last  Tournament  368 

439 

455 

470 

»    .        474 

Guinevere  7 

„      63 

„      70 

»      85 

»    357 

„    415 

»    417 

588 

595 


130 
141 
380 
406 
414 
Tale  i  72 
216 
259 
650 
699 
759 

it  93 
Hi  16 

iv  57 
129 
177 
322 
380 
Quarrel  16 


First 


kindly  dark/ '5  who  fought  with  us 
wliite/'s  of  Havelock's  good  fusileers, 
I  saw  your/  that  morning  in  the  crowd, 
thought  to  turn  my /from  Spain, 
/  and  form  are  hers  and  mine  in  one 
flash  The  /  's  of  the  Gods—  ' 

a  ghastlier/  than  ever  has  haunted  a  grave 
I  will  hide  my/,  I  will  tell  you  all. 
The  small  sweet  /  was  flush'd. 
Then  his  pale  /  twitch'd ;  '  O  Stephen, 
the  /  I  had  known,  O  Mother,  was  not  the  f 
and  away  from  your  faith  and  your  / ' 
waken  every  morning  to  that/  I  loathe  to  see 
an  tJie  /  of  the  thraithur  agin  in  Hfe  • 
pelt  your  offal  at  her/. 
Peept  the  winsome  /  of  Edith 
Fled  wavering  o'er  thy/,  and  chased  away 
sighs  after  many  a  vanish'd  /, 
the  /  Of  Miriam  grew  upon  me, 
as  a  man  Who  sees  his  /  in  water, 
a  sudden  /  Look'd  in  upon  me  like  a  gleam 
And  the  /,  The  hand,-my  Mother.    ^ 
Among  them  Muriel  lying  on  her/— 
I  will  front  him  /  to  /.  ■ 

For  Age  will  chink  the/, 
A  beauty  came  upon  your  /, 


Def.  of  Lwcknow  69 

»  101 

Columbus  7 

„      57 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  13 

Tiresias  173 

The  Wreck  8 

„       12 

„       60 

„     101 

„     116 

Despair  110 

Tfie  Flight  8 

Tomorrow  50 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  134 

^     ,,  260 

^emeter  and  P.  15 

Vastness  1 

The  Ring  184 

370 

»        419 

424 

448 

Happy  19 

»      46 

„      51 


Face 


190 


Fail 


Face  (continued)    and  with  Grief  Sit  /  to  /,  To  Mary  Boyle  46 

On  human  /'s,  And  all  around  me,  Merlin  and  the  G.  20 

And  rough-ruddy  /  's  Of  lowly  labour,  „              59 

Less  profile !  turn  to  me — three-quarter  /.  Bomney's  B.  98 

'  My  Rose  '  set  all  your  /  aglow,  Boses  on  the  T.  3 
ghastlier  than  the  Gorgon  head,  a  /, — His  f  def orm'd 

by  lurid  blotch  and  blain —  Death  of  (Enone  71 

saw  The  ring  of  /  's  redden'd  by  the  flames  „            92 

set  his  /  By  waste  and  field  and  town  St.  Telemachus  29 

Christian /'s  watch  Man  murder  man.  „            55 

Glanced  from  our  Presence  on  the  /  of  one,  AJd>ar's  Dream  113 

ray  red  as  blood  Glanced  on  the  strangled  / —  Bandit's  Death  32 

So  I  turn'd  my  /  to  the  wall.  Charity  27 

with  a  sudden  glow  On  her  patient  /  „      36 

she  is  /  to  /  with  her  Lord,  „      42 
The  /  of  Death  is  toward  the  Sun  of  Life,             D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  12 

I  hope  to  see  my  Pilot  /  to  /  Crossing  the  Bar  15 

Face-cloth    Took  the  f-c  from  the  face ;  Princess  mil 

mist,  like  a  f-c  to  the  face,  Clung  Guinevere  7 

Faced  {See  also  Babe-faced,  Broad-faced,  Clear-faced, 
Fat-faced,  Free-faced,  Full-faced,  Moon-faced, 
Mulberry-faced,  Plain-faced,  Red-faced,  Smooth- 
faced, White-faced)     Enoch  /  this  morning  of 

farewell  Brightly  Enoch  Arden  182 

He  /  the  spectres  of  the  mind  In  Mem.  xcvi  15 

Face-flatterer    F-f  and  backbiter  are  the  same.  Merlin  and  V.  824 

Facet    The  f's  of  the  glorious  mountain  flash  The  Islet  22 

glance  and  sparkle  like  a  gem  Of  fifty  f's ;  Geraint  and  E.  295 

Fact    that  plain  /,  as  taught  by  these,  Two  Voices  281 

Wherever  Thought  hath  wedded  F.  Love  tJiou  thy  land  52 

Taught  them  with/'s.  Princess,  Pro.  59 

A  /  within  the  coming  year ;  In  Mem.  xcii  10 
and,  laughing  sober  /  to  scorn,                                Locksley  H.,  Sixty  109 

Faction    Where  /  seldom  gathers  head.  You  ask  m£,  why  13 

Not  less,  tho'  dogs  of  F  bay,                            ,  Love  thou  thy  land  85 

Not  swaying  to  this  /  or  to  that ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  21 

and  counter-yells  of  feud  And  /,  To  Duke  of  Argyll  9 

Faculty     all  my  faculties  are  lamed.  Lucretius  123 

Fade    It  will  change,  but  it  will  not  /  Nothing  will  Die  31 

Fix'd — then  as  slowly  /  again,  Eleanore  93 

Ripens  and  f's,  and  falls,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  37 

Ay,  ay,  the  blossom  f's.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  57 

whose  mai^n  f's  For  ever  and  for  ever  Ulysses  20 

since  the  nobler  pleasure  seems  to  /,  Lucretius  230 

When  can  their  glory  /?  Light  Brigade  50 

flower  of  poesy  Wliich  little  cared  for/'s  not  yet.  In  Mem.  viii  20 

Before  the  spirits  /  away,  „      xlvii  14 

Be  near  me  when  I  /  away,  „            1 13 

F  wholly,  while  the  soul  exults,  „     Ixxiii  14 

And  year  by  year  our  memory  fs  „           ci  23 

Now  f's  the  last  long  streak  of  snow,  „          cxv  1 

Let  it  flame  or/,  and  the  war  roll  down  Maud  III  vi  54 

'  Sweet  love,  tliat  seems  not  made  to  /  Lancelot  and  E.  1013 

Cast  at  thy  feet  one  flower  that  f's  away.  To  Dante  7 

Shall  /  with  him  into  the  unknown,  Tiresias  215 

and  wake  The  bloom  that/'*  away  ?  Ancient  Sage  94 

The  phantom  walls  of  this  illusion  /,  „          181 

blackthorn-blossom  f's  and  falls  and  leaves  The  Flight  15 

we  watch'd  the  sun  /  from  us  thro'  the  West,  „          41 

glimpse  and  /  Thro'  some  slight  spell,  Early  Spring  31 

Faik  things  are  slow  to  /  away,  To  Prof.  Jebb.  1 

Moon,  you  /  at  times  From  the  night.  The  Ring  9 

mists  of  earth  F  in  the  noon  of  heaven,  Akbar's  Dream  97 

but,  while  the  races  flower  and  /,  Making  of  Man  5 

Faded  (adj.)    /places,  By  squares  of  tropic  summer  Am-phion  86 

From  fringes  of  the  /  eve.  Move  eastward  3 

His  wife  a  /  beauty  of  the  Baths,  Aylmer's  Field  27 

then  ensued  A  Martin's  summer  of  his  /  love,  „            560 

Autumn's  mock  sunshine  of  the  /  woods  „            610 
Lady  Blanche  alone  Of /form  and  haughtiest  lineaments,  Princess  ii  448 

/  woman-slough  To  sheathing  splendours  „         » 40 

I  love  not  hollow  cheek  or  /  eye :  „        vii  7 

This  /  leaf,  our  names  are  as  brief ;  Spiteful  Letter  13 
thro'  the  /  leaf  The  chestnut  pattering  to  the  ground :        In  Mem.  xi  3 

I  did  but  speak  Of  my  mother's  /  cheek  Maud  I  xix  19 


Faded  (adj.)  (continued)    Then  she  bethought  her  of  a/ 

silk,  A  /  mantle  and  a  /  veil,  Marr.  of  Geraint  134 

That  lightly  breaks  a  /  flower-sheath.  Moved  the 

fair  Enid,  all  in  /  silk,  „  365 

All  staring  at  her  in  her  /  silk :  „  617 

to  her  own  /  self  And  the  gay  court,  „  652 

dreamt  herself  was  such  a  /  form  „  654 

charge  the  gardeners  now  To  pick  the  /  creature  from  the 

pool, 
I  myself  unwilUngly  have  worn  My  /  suit. 
That  she  ride  with  me  in  her  /  silk.' 
But  Enid  ever  kept  the  /  silk. 
And  tearing  off  her  veil  of  /  silk 
From  Camelot  in  among  the  /  fields  To  furthest 

towers; 
as  one  Who  sits  and  gazes  on  a  /  fire. 
The  /  rhymes  and  scraps  of  ancient  crones. 
Leaning  its  roses  on  my  /  eyes. 
Fainting  flowers,  /  bowers. 
On  icy  fallow  And  /  forest. 
Faded  (verb)     the  heart  Faints,  /  by  its  heat, 
by  Nature's  law.  Have  /  long  ago ; 
this  kindlier  glow  F  with  morning, 
it  /,  and  seems  But  an  ashen-gray  delight. 
/  from  the  presence  into  years  Of  exile — 
then  the  music  /,  and  the  Grail  Past, 
And  the  Quest  /  in  my  heart, 
till  they  /  like  my  love, 
but  the  promise  had  /  away ; 
Fifty  times  the  rose  has  flower'd  and  /, 
fonn  of  Muriel  /,  and  the  face  Of  Miriam 
Fading    (See  also  Slowly-fading)    breath  Of  the  / 

edges  of  box  beneath. 
The  /  poUtics  of  mortal  Rome, 
And  /  legend  of  the  past ; 
I  care  not  in  these  /  days  To  raise  a  cry 
Was  it  he  lay  there  with  a  /  eye  ? 
Flatter'd  the  fancy  of  my  /  brain ; 
Of  her  I  loved,  adorn'd  with  /  flowers. 
Closer  on  the  Sun,  perhaps  a  world  of  never 

/  flowers. 
Light  the  /  gleam  of  Even  ? 
F  slowly  from  his  side : 
Growing  and  /  and  growing  (repeat) 


671 
706 
762 
841 
Geraint  and  E.  514 

Last  Tournament  53 

157 

Lover's  Tale  i  289 

„  621 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  11 

Merlin  and  the  G.  85 

D.ofF.  Women  29,9, 

Talking  Oak  74 

Aylmer's  Field  412 

Maud  I  vi  21 

Balin  and  Balan  156 

Holy  Grail  121 

600 

Lover's  Tale  ii  10 

Despair  27 

Oti  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  1 

The  Bing  184 

A  spirit  haunts  19 

Princess  ii  286 

In  Mem.  Ixii  4 

„       Ixxv  9 

Maud  II  i  29 

Lover's  Tale  ii  107 

„  Hi  40 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  184 

229 

L.  of  Burleigh  86 

Maud  I  Hi  7,  9 


Green  Sussex  /into  blue  With  one  gray  glunpse    Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  7 

Faggot     we  will  make  it  f's  for  the  hearth.  Princess  vi  45 

Fsul     I  shall  not  /  to  find  her  now.  Two  Voices  191 

till  thy  hand  F  from  the  sceptre-staff.  (Enone  126 

So  wrought,  they  will  not/.  Palace  of  Art  148 

Lest  she  should  /  and  perish  utterly,  „            221 

for  a  man  may  /  in  duty  twice,  M.  d' Arthur  129 

You  scarce  can  /  to  match  his  masterpiece.'  Gardener's  D.  31 

You  cannot  /  but  work  in  hues  to  dim  „           170 

Who  may  be  made  a  saint,  if  I  /  here  ?  St.  S.  Stylites  48 

Thy  leaf  shall  never  /,  nor  yet  Talking  Oak  259 

decent  not  to  /  In  offices  of  tenderness,  Ulysses  40 
'  The  many  /:  the  one  succeeds.'                                Day-Dm.,  Arrival  16 

Her  heart  within  her  did  not  /:  Lady  Clare  78 

Rose  again  from  where  it  seem'd  to  /,  Vision  of  Sin  24 

it  f's  at  last  And  perishes  as  I  must ;  LiLcretius  264 

Who  /  to  find  thee,  being  as  tliou  art  „        268 

Ere  half  be  done  perchance  your  life  may  /;  Princess  Hi  236 

/  so  far  In  high  desire,  they  know  not,  „            279 

if  we  /,  we  /,  And  if  we  win,  we  /:  „         v  322 

What  end  soever :  /  you  will  not.  „             406 

She  mental  breadth,  nor  /  in  childward  care,  „       vii  283 

Forgive  them  where  they  /  in  truth,  In  Mem.,  Pro.  43 

I  seem  to  /  from  out  my  blood  „             ii  15 

That  thou  should'st  /  from  thy  desire,  „              iv  6 

Swell  out  and  /,  as  if  a  door  „        xxviii  7 

Thou  /  not  in  a  world  of  sin,  „      xxxiii  15 

Where  truth  in  closest  words  shall  /,  „        xxxvi  6 

Lest  Ufe  should  /  in  looking  back.  „            xlvi  4 

No  life  may  /  beyond  the  grave,  „               Iv  2 

I  shall  pass ;  my  work  will /.  „            IviiS 


mt 


Fail 

Fail  (c^mtinued)    Could  make  thee  somewhat  blench  or/,         In  Mem.  Ixii  2 

1  hy  spint  should  /  from  ofiE  the  globe ;  ixxxiv  Sfi 

that  keeps  A  thousand  pulses  dandng,  /.  "      -xt-u  Ifi 

shaU  I  shriek  if  a  Hungary / ?  Mn,Ji^..  i« 

solid  ground  Not  /  b^eaih  my  feet  ^""^  ^  '^/f 

fill  up  the  gap  where  force  might  /  Gareth  and  L  1352 

^tl  ^^  "^^"J^^,  ^^^  ^P^e  he  fears  may  /,  Geraint  and  E.  303 

fin/n^nf  ^  ^^r^^,  wife-worship  Balin  and  Balan  359 

fane  plots  may  /  Tho'  harlots  paint  Merlin  and  V.  820 

It  ye/,  Oive  ye  the  slave  mme  order  PeOeas  and  E  26Q 

spoutmg  from  a  clifif  F's  in  mid  air,  Q,Sv7re  609 

1  hat  saved  her  many  tunes,  not  /-  To  ihi  Queen  ii  62 

Pray  God  oiur  greatness  may  not/  Hands  all  Round  Zl 

if  you  shaU  /  to  understand  What  England  is,  The  FUetl 

should  those/,  that  hold  the  helm,     ^           '  Frog,  of  Spring  id 

H,f  f  ^^  conjure  and  concentrate  "  Rhmnev',  Rli 

And?et';fofR^"''P'J"  "^"''^•^'  AUar'TDZlm 

F^f'spi^Sr^lZk  never/,  ^""^IS^XJ 

her  heart  /  her ;  and  the  reaper  reap'd,  V ''  it 

She/ and  sadden'd  knowing  it;  Enoch  A rdZ  2^7 

aU  her  force  2?  her;  and  sighing,  ^'^"'  ^'^"^^  S7I 

thought  and  nature  /  a  little,  "          709 

As  having  /  in  duty  to  him,  Lr^etius  278 

the  year  in  which  our  olivet  /.  PriZlTi  125 

none  to  trust  Since  our  anus  /—  ^nncess  t  iZb 

Old  studies/:  seldom  she  spoke :  "      ,„/o{ 

she  had  /  In  sweet  hmniUty ;  had  /  in  all  •  "          99a 

for  a  vast  speculation  had  /,  t!}.,,^  ,  ,•  q 

either  /  to  make  the  kingdom  one.  Com  of  Arthur  li 

T^nO^i'"''  V'^T^^  "^^^  ^""^  ^''  blood,  MaTofGit:i^k 

/  of  late  To  send  his  tnbute :  KniiJ „^^  n  i      5 

But  on  aU  those  who  tried  and/,  M^UnfJvtm 

many  tried  and  /,  because  the  charm  ^^  ^-  sS 

I  well  believe  she  tempted  them  and/,  "            aVq 

?Ko'S7i/iT,uSr?SS°™  ^"'•'''    «»*  «-■'  ™ 

the  great  heart  of  knighthood  in  thee  /  PeUeas  and  E  596 

They/to  trace  him  thro'  the  flesh  and  blood  LastTTur^^nFnt  ml 

the  purport  of  my  throne  hath  /,  pj,  oFIr^ur  160 
BreVerfVl^nTrr"'  '"'^'  ^^^^oteehle:       J^'w^/rSr   JS 

utterfn^  Ap?  \*hi   V•^''.iT^*'  ^-  ^f  P-  Women  286 

(vhVn  ihe'mtd^i^}?"''  ^«^^^'=  ..      ,  ^  405 

Ito°^h?lfw:^l"Tot'^^?.'^"«'^'       .  (?™S^"4? 

*lBin     how  /  was  I  To  dream  thy  cause  embraced  Princess  vi  199 

'  tw7uS  ImiT'  !/^f  added-Knight,  GarfthZTllll 

and  /  For  h.f^       .  ?^^\ ^  ^^^  ^f  f  e-  ^«^'«  ""'^  -»«^"  254 

and  /,  J<  or  hate  and  loathing,  would  have  past  387 

1/  would  know  what  manner  of  men  they  be.'  "              574 

Mm,  Bahn,  I  that  /  had  died  To  save  thy  life,  "              590 

/  Have  all  men  true  and  leal,  l/er^m  avd  V  WK 

WoS/ttfh'^  "^'d'  'd'  ''"  ^'""'  ^^"  "^^^'^  '^ 

Faint°(^°V'BriyHr"'^  '"f' r'V'  ^--  to^oJ^^HaZeylt 

i!amt  (adj.)     Bramble  roses,  /  and  pale,  a  Dirae  SO 

Wherefore  those  /  smiles  of  thine,  Adeline  21 

Wherefore  that  /  smile  of  thine,  ^^^''^  tl 

Thou /smiler,  Adeline?  "       ^8 

And  /,  rainy  lights  are  seen,  Maraaret  60 

by  the  meadow-trenches  blow  the  /  sweet  ^ 

cuckoo-flowers ;  »,/„,,  ^1,,  .^„  o^ 

these  twelve  books  of  mine  Were  /  Homeric  echoes,  Thil^c  39 


191 


Fair 


Faint  (adj.)  (continued)    To  whom  replied  King  Arthur,  / 

and  pale:  M  d^ Arthur  12 

with  slow  steps,  With  slow,  /  steps,  St.  S.  Stylites  183 

Jf  shadows,  vapours  lightly  curl'd,  F  murmurs 

from  the  meadows  come,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  5 

sketches  rude  and  /.  Aylme^'s  Field  100 

I  on  her  1-  ixt  my  /  eyes.  Princess  vii  144 

?iw  h."^''^' "^  n":^    u       .      .         ,  Window,  Answer  i) 

The  /  horizons,  all  the  bounds  of  earth.  Far-far-away  14 

F  she  grew,  and  ever  famter,  l.  of  Burleigh  81 

1  he  voice  grew  /:  there  came  a  further  change :  Vision  of  Sm  207 

^  as  a  figure  seen  in  eariy  dawn  Enoch  A  rden  357 

the  hues  are  /  And  mix  with  hollow  masks  In  Mem.  Ixx  3 

Ihis  haunting  whisper  makes  me  /,  i^xxi  7 

let  her  eat ;  the  damsel  is  so  /.'  Geraintand  E.  206 

chafang  his  /  hands,  and  calling  to  him ;  535 

seem'd  to  change,  and  grow  F  and  far-off.  Balin  and  Balan  218 

J>  in  the  low  dark  hall  of  banquet :  3^3 

dying  brother  cast  himself  Dying ;  and  lie  lifted  /  eyes ;        "  594 

I  was  /to  swooning,  and  you  lay  Foot-gilt  Merlin  and  V.  281 

all  too  /  and  sick  am  1  For  anger :  Lancelot  and  E.  1086 

To  whom  replied  King  Arthur,  /  and  pale :  Pass,  of  Arthur  240 

there  came,  but  /As  from  beyond  the  lunit  of  the  woritl  457 

the  heart-it  beat :  J'-but  it  beat :  Leer's  Tale  iv  81 

famt-stomach'd    /  as  I  am,  ^,v  j,  oidcasUe  192 

as  a  chmate-changmg  bird  that  flies  Demeter  and  P.  1 

P^inW^i^     TP/^'?i"n'^"*.)^y'^'     .         u  Akbar's  Dream  m 

^T  ^l-l  -^k^  ^*"-     ^*^"  ^*y  ^^^^  '^«"  *Vp-  Confessions  2 

1  /  m  this  obscurity,  (repeat)  Ode  to  Memory  6,  44, 123 

My  veiy  heart  /  s  and  my  whole  soul  grieves  A  spirit  haunts  16 

flowers  would  /at  your  cruel  cheer.  Poet's  Mind  15 

Cry,  /  not :  either  Truth  is  born  Two  Voices  181 

Ory,  /  not,  climb :  the  summits  slope  1^4 

JF"s  hke  a  dazzled  morning  moon.  Fatima  28 

and  the  heart  F's  faded  by  its  heat.  D.  of  F.  Women  288 

They /on  hill  or  held  or  river:  Princess  iv  U 

Beginnii^  to  /  in  the  light  that  she  loves  Maud  I  xxii  9 

lo  /  in  the  light  of  the  sun  she  loves.  To  /  in  his 

Ught,  and  to  die.  j^ 

my  whole  soul  languishes  And  f's,  Lover's  Tale  i  268 

at  his  feet  I  seem'd  to  /  and  fall,  ^  qq 

Faint-blue    Af-b  ridge  upon  the  right,  Mariumi  In  the  S.  5 

Fainted     at  the  claniouniig  of  her  enemy  /  Boadicea  82 

P»i„w    w      *'''?.'  J  ^^  "Jtervals,  Lover's  Tale  i  546 

FarntCT    Wears  all  day  a /tone.  The  Owl  HI 

She  rephes,  m  accents  /,  z.  of  Burleigh  5 

lamt  she  grew  and  ever/,  "  q^ 

F  by  day,  but  always  in  the  night  Blood-red,  Holy  Grail  4T2 

/onward,  hke  wild  birds  that  change  Pass,  of  Arthur  38 

?ullrf^  TnJ^'"^r'  ^"'^  ^  ^-  "f  Maeldune  22 

slower  and  /,  Old  and  weary.  Merlin  and  the  G.  99 

Is  it  turning  a  /  red  ?  y^  Dawn  22 

Faintest    /  sunlights  flee  About  his  shadowy  sides :  The  Krala-r,  A 

The  smallest  rock  far  on  the/hill,  Com.ofAriurQt 

Has  push'd  toward  our  /  sun  To  UlviiJ^  2S 

Snn  J^.'^fl  ^-^  ^  /".*  !-f  aint-stomach'd !  Sir  JOlUllelA 

5Sw    IS^^'y'^'l^^  ^•'^e^J  s  '^^i^rs  (E.  and  E.)  11 

Famther    Then  laugh'd  again,  but/,  Guinevere  58 

Fainflt^'TlW  P  ^^'tf^'^«",C'*'"e  upon  ine  A  little /:  Gareth  and  L.  994 

Fain^    Tho  /  mernly-far  and  far  away-  Enoch  Arden  614 

1<  smiling  Adeline,  j^  J-      S 

Faintly-flush'd    How /-/,  how  phantom-fair,  TheDa^7d 

Faintly-shadowed     as  he  tracefa/-.  track,  Lancelot  afdEl^ 

K  ^?nS3    "7^T\  ^"?  /-t' points  Of  slander,  Merlin  and  V.  172 

Famt-st9mach'd      f-s !  famt  as  I  am,  .y^v  j  oidra^a,  199 

Fair  (adj.,  s.,  adv.)    {See  also  FuU-fair,  Phantom-fair,  Silver-fair 

Starry-fair)     But  beyond  expression  /  '    Adeline  "^ 

gleaming  rind  ingrav'n,  '  For  tfie  most  /,'  ^ZnTlS 

Thjr  mortal  eyes  are  frail  to  judge  of  /,  1  it 

Fairest— why  fairest  wife  ?  am  1  not/?  "     iqa 

Methinks  I  must  be  /,  for  yesterday,  "    Jqq 

unmvited  came  Into  the  /  Peleian  banquet-hall  "    99? 

O  the  Eari  was  /  to  see !  (repeat)  The  Sisters  6,  12,  Is! 

divinely  taU,  And  most  divinely  /.  n.  of  F.  Wo^n  88 


Fair 


192 


Fair 


Fair  (adj.,  s.,  adv.)  (continued)    in  /  field  Myself  for  such 

a  face  had  boldly  died  D.  of  F.  Women  97 

"  No  /  Hebrew  boy  Shall  smile  away  my  maiden  blame        „  213 

I  am  that  Rosamond,  whom  men  call /,  „  251 
' Come  again,  and  thrice  as/; '                                  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  26 

maid  or  spouse,  As  /  as  my  Olivia,  Talking  Oak  35 

/  young  beech  That  here  beside  me  stands,  „        141 

oak  on  lea  Shall  grow  so  /  as  this.'  „        244 

What  moral  is  in  being  /.  Day-Dm.,  Moral  4 

'  What  wonder,  if  he  thinks  me  /  ? '  „            Ep.  4 

Sees  whatever  /  and  splendid  L.  of  Burleigh  27 

She  was  more  /  than  words  can  say :  Beggar  Maid  2 

Tomohrit,  Athos,  all  things  /,  To  E.  L.  5 

frequent  interchange  of  foul  and  /,  Enoch  Arden  533 

'  Too  happy,  fresh,  and  /,  Too  fresh  and  /  The  Brook  217 

a  couple,  /  As  ever  painter  painted,  Aylmer's  Field  105 

Sear'd  by  the  close  ecliptic,  was  not/;  „            193 

Should  as  by  miracle,  grow  straight  and  / —  „            676 

F  as  the  Angel  that  said  '  Hail ! '  „  681 
a  fearful  night ! '  '  Not  fearful ;  /,'  Said  the  good  wife, 

'  if  every  star  in  heaven  Can  make  it  /:  Sea  Dreams  82 

one  that  arm'd  Her  own  /  head.  Princess,  Pro.  33 

then  the  maiden  Aunt  Took  this  /  day  for  text,  „              108 

A  prince  I  was,  blue-eyed,  and  /  in  face,  ,,               i  1 

'My  sister.'     ' Comely,  too,  by  all  that's/,  „         ii  114 

and  pass  With  all  /  theories  made  to  gild  „             233 

all  her  thoughts  as  /  within  her  eyes,  „             326 

So  stood  that  same  /  creature  at  the  door.  „             329 

beauties  every  shade  of  brown  and  /  „             437 

And  why  we  came  ?     I  fabled  nothing  /,  „        iii  136 

The  head  and  heart  of  all  our  /  she-world,  „              163 

'  or  with  /  philosophies  That  lift  the  fancy ;  „              340 

elaborately  wrought  With  /  Corinna's  triumph ;  „              349 

'  F  daughter,  when  we  sent  the  Prince  your  way  „         iv  398 

From  all  high  places,  lived  in  all  /  lights,  „             430 

All  her  /  length  upon  the  ground  she  lay :  „            t)  59 

Upon  the  skirt  and  fringe  of  our  /  land,  „             219 

'  O  /  and  strong  and  terrible !  „         vi  163 

So  their  /  college  tum'd  to  hospital ;  „         vii  17 

till  she  not  /  began  To  gather  light             _  „               23 

And  found  /  peace  once  more  among  the  sick.  „               44 

those  /  charities  Join'd  at  her  side ;  „               65 

Stays  all  the  /  young  planet  in  her  hands —  „             264 

The  sea-kings'  daughter  as  happy  as/,  W.  to  Alexandra  26 

Not  once  or  twice  in  our  /  island-story,  Ode  on  Well.  209 
That  one  /  planet  can  produce.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  24 
let  the  /  white-wing'd  peacemaker  fly  To  happy 

havens  „  34 
F  empires  branching,  both,  in  lusty  life! —             W.  to  Marie  Alex.  21 

Lariano  crept  To  that  /  port  below  the  castle  The  Daisy  79 

The  fields  are  /  beside  them.  Voice  and  the  P.  17 

F  is  her  cottage  in  its  place,  liequiescat  1 

Thy  creature,  whom  I  found  so/.  hi  Mem.,  Pro.  38 

And  glad  to  find  thjs^self  so  /,  „             vi  27 

F  ship,  that  from  the  Italian  shore  „               ix  1 

Who  broke  our  /  companionship,  „          xxii  13 

And  all  we  met  was  /  and  good,  „         xxiii  17 

If  all  was  good  and  /  we  met,  „            xxiv  5 

Man,  her  last  work,  who  seem'd  so  /,  „               Ivi  9 

Looks  thy /face  and  makes  it  still.  „           Ixx  16 

With  promise  of  a  mom  as  /;  ,,      Ixxxiv  29 

great  Intelligences  /  That  range  above  „        Ixxxv  21 

When  one  would  ami  an  arrow  /,  „     Ixxxvii  25 

My  Arthur  found  your  shadows  /,  „        Ixxxix  6 

Imaginations  calm  and /,  „          xcivlO 

And  those  /  hills  I  sail'd  below,  „          xcviii  2 

Let  her  great  Danube  rolling  /  Enwind  her  isles,  „                   9 

Unloved,  the  sun-flower,  shining  /,  „               ci  5 

trust  In  that  which  made  the  world  so  /.  „           cxvi  8 

And  in  the  setting  thou  art  /.  „          cxxx  4 

she  grows  For  ever,  and  as  /  as  good.  „        Con.  36 

she  promised  then  to  be  /.  Maud  I  i68 

Man  in  his  pride,  and  Beauty  /  in  her  flower ;  „         iv  25 

I  had  fancied  it  would  be  /.  „          vi  6 

And  /  without,  faithful  within,  „      arm  37 


1415 

Marr.  of  Geraint  40 
224 
239 
298 
366 
403 
499 
553 
600 


Fair  (adj.,  s.,  adv.)  (continued)    garden  of  roses  And  lilies  /  on 

a  lawn ;  Maud  I  xiy  2 

Upon  a  pastoral  slope  as  /,  „    xviii  19 

And  you  /  stars  that  crown  a  happy  day  „  30 

Spice  his  /  banquet  with  the  dust  of  death  ?  „  56 

When  the  face  of  night  is  /  on  the  dewy  downs,  „  ///  vi  5 

To  have  look'd,  tho'  but  in  a  dream,  upon  eyes  so  /,  „  16 

Had  one  /  daughter,  and  none  other  child ;  Com.  of  Arthur  2 

One  falling  upon  each  of  three  /  queens,  „  276 

but  this  King  is  /  Beyond  the  race  of  Britons  „  330 

And  hated  this  /  world  and  all  therein,  „  344 

The  /  beginners  of  a  nobler  time,  „  457 

And  we  that  fight  for  our  /  father  Christ,  „  510 

One  was  /,  strong,  arm'd —  Gareth  and  L.  104 

the  whole  /  city  had  disappear'd  „  196 

Broad  brows  and  /,  a  fluent  hair  and  fine,  High  nose, 

a  nostril  large  and  fine,  and  hands  Large,  /  and  tine ! —       „  464 

/  and  fine,  forsooth !  „  474 

I  leave  not  till  I  finish  this  /  quest,  „  774 

find  My  fortunes  all  as  /  as  hers  who  lay  „  903 

Bare-footed  and  bare-headed  three  /  girls  „  926 

F  words  were  best  for  him  who  fights  for  thee ;  „  946 

.'  jP  damsel,  you  should  worship  me  the  more,  „        1022 

And  seeing  now  thy  words  are  /,  methinks  „         1181 

'  My  /  child,  What  madness  made  thee  challenge  the 

chief  knight  Of  Arthur's  hall  ? '     'F  Sir,  they  bad 

me  do  it. 
He  craved  a  /  permission  to  depart, 
'Farewell,  /  Prince,'  answer'd  the  stately  Queen. 
And  climb'd  upon  a  /  and  even  ridge, 
'  Whither,  /  son  ? '  to  whom  Geraint  replied, 
Moved  the  /  Enid,  all  in  faded  silk, 
'  F  Host  and  Earl,  I  pray  your  courtesy ; 
Nor  can  see  elsewhere,  anything  so  /. 
'  Advance  and  take,  as  fairest  of  the  /, 
With  her  /  head  in  the  dim-yellow  light. 
For  tho'  ye  won  the  prize  of  fairest  /,  And  tho'  I  heard 

him  call  you  fairest  /, 
however  /,  She  is  not  fairer  in  new  clothes 
She  never  yet  had  seen  her  half  so  /; 
I  vow'd  that  could  I  gain  her,  our  /  Queen, 
When  your  /  child  shall  wear  your  costly  gift 
not  to  goodly  hill  or  yellow  sea  Look'd  the  /  Queen, 
But  hire  us  some  /  chamber  for  the  night,  Geraint 

Femininely  /  and  dissolutely  pale. 
'  F  and  dear  cousin,  you  that  most  had  cause 
Did  her  mock-honour  as  the  fairest  /, 
Before  the  Queen's  /  name  was  breathed  upon, 
her  ladies  loved  to  call  Enid  the  F, 
till  he  crown'd  A  happy  life  with  a  /  death, 
Early,  one  /  dawn,  The  light-wing'd  spirit  Bcdin  a 

'  F  Sirs,'  said  Arthur,  '  wherefore  sit  ye  here  ? ' 
And  brought  report  of  azure  lands  and  /, 
ye  stand,  /  lord,  as  in  a  dream.' 
we  have  ridd'n  before  among  the  flowers  In  those 

/  days —  „  273 

This  /  wife-worship  cloaks  a  secret  shame  ?  „  360 

this  /  lord  The  flower  of  all  their  vestal  knighthood,  „  507 

'  And  is  the  /  example  follow'd,  Sir,  Merlin  and  V.  19 

He  hath  given  us  a  /  falcon  which  he  train'd ;  „  96 

Had  met  her,  Vivien,  being  greeted  /,  „  155 

tender  was  her  voice,  so  /  her  face,  „  401 

Is  like  the  /  pearl-necklace  of  the  Queen,  „  451 

And  found  a  /  young  squire  who  sat  alone,  „  472 

Was  this  /  charm  invented  by  yourself  ?  „  540 

I  mean,  as  noble,  as  their  Queen  was/?  „  608 

kinsman  left  him  watcher  o'er  his  wife  And  two  /  babes,         „  707 

What  say  ye  then  to  /  Sir  Percivale  „  747  . 

Sees  what  his  /  bride  is  and  does,  „  782 

Elaine  the  /,  Elaine  the  loveable,  Lancelot  and  E.  1 

you  cannot  move  To  these  /  jousts  ? '  „  80 

Why  go  ye  not  to  these  /  jousts  ?  „  98 

as  I  hear  It  is  a  /  large  diamond, —  „  228 

'  A  /  large  diamond,'  added  plain  Sir  Torre,  „  230 

'  If  what  is  /  be  but  for  what  is  /,  „  237 


719 
721 
741 
787 
819 
831 

and  E.  238 
275 
824 
833 

,  951 
963 
968 
lid  Balan  20 
31 
168 
258 


Pair 

Fair  (adj^  s.,  adv.)  (continued)    who  deem  this  maid 
Might  wear  as /a  jewel  "j«  umiu 

*  Save  your  great  self,  /  lord ; '  JMncelot  and  E.  240 

'  F  lord,  whose  name  I  know  not—  "          o^ 

j;  lady  smce  I  never  yet  have  worn  "          ^^ 

Who  parted  with  his  own  to  /  Elaine  •  "          o^ 

cells  and  chambers :  all  were  /  and  dry  •  "          a^I 

Jn^cf '  !^^«d  The  Courteous,  /  and  strong,  "          S? 

AnH  SI'  '^^.  "^^^  ^  ^y^  °" /Elaine :  '                     "         ^ 

And  hf ted  her  /  face  and  moved  away :  "          ^ 

Nay  for  near  you,  /  lord,  I  am  at  r^t.'  »          f?? 

a  faith  once /  Was  richer  than  these  diamonds-  "        i^ 

^  lord  as  would  have  help'd  her  from  her  dSth.'  "        }!?? 

Dehcately  pure  and  marvellously  f  "        ^^^^ 

'-F  she  was,  my  King,  Pure  »        ^^^^ 

FareweU  too— now  at  last-^Farewell,  /  lily  "        Ul^ 

A  /  ^^  f  ^"^'  '  Tli°"  ^  /'  my  child,  "        jf^ 

and  /  the  house  whereby  she  sat,  rj  7"r,     r^ 

disarm'd  By  maidens  each  as  /  alk  any  flower :  ^"^^  ^""^  ^l 

Fnr7f/  '"''!?•  ^T^^'"^  to  and  fro  Wide  a  stream  "          S? 

I"  or /thou  art  and  pure  as  Guinevere              '"'"'«*'"  „          591 

have  the  Heavens  but  given  thee  a  /  face  '^'^'  "'^  ^\  ^ 

Ay,  thought  Gawain,  '  and  you  be  /  enoW :  "          121 

A  rose,  one  rose,  and  this  was  wondrous/,  "          ^^? 

Let  be  thy /Queen's  fantasy,                   '''  r^.,  m       "          ^^ 

Be  happy  in  thy  /  Queen  as"^!  in  mine.'  ^''  Tournament  197 

InitTfn'J^'^K^  ^^  ^^°  worships  each  "                ^ 

In  that  /  Order  of  my  Table  Round  '/^  •           "^ 

And  be  the  /  beginniiig  of  a  tim^  '  Gmnevere  463 

And  drawing  foul  ensample  from /names,  "        j^ 

And  so  thou  lean  on  our /father  Christ,  "        1^ 

What  might  I  not  have  made  of  thy  /  world,  "        «f  f 

Or  else  as  if  the  world  were  wholly  r  p         r ']   ^    ^^ 

/  with  orchard-lawns  And  bowery  hollows  *'  "f  ^''^^^^l» 

bounds,  as  if  some  /  city  were  one  voice  "              T^X 

1  e  cannot  shape  Fancy  so  /"  as  is  thi<!  mi>mnmr  r      ','  ,„         ^"" 

^speech  was  L  and  JelTcate  of pte        "^^  ^^ *  ^«^«  *' ^f 8 

Above  some / metropolis,  earth-shock'd'-  "          -H^ 

Oftentimes  The  vision  has /prelude       '  "          "  °^ 

80  those /eyes  Shone  on  my  darkness  "            ]^i 

me  or/Was  brought  before  the  guest:  »        •    },^l 

F  speech  was  his,  and  delicate  of  phrase.  "       ^^  1°^ 

Makmg  fresh  and  /  All  the  bowers  and  the  »            ^^^ 

flowers,  „. 

the  great  things  of  Nature  and  the  /  *"'^*  ^^-  ""'^  ^^l^ 

what  IS  /  without  Is  often  as  foul  Within  '  n.  j"o      r  ^f B 

aU  that  is  filthy  with  all  that  is  f?"^  Dead  Prophet  67 

one  was  /,  And  one  was  dark  ,r£  "^'?*^**  ^^ 

Who  would  be  A  mermaid  /  ^/  fie  Ring  160 

I  would  be  a  mermaid  /;  "^  Mermaid  2 

From  Ind  to  Ind,  but  in'/ daylight  woke  r>    "            ^ 

Not  these  alone,  but  eveiy  landfcapl/,   '  "    P  fuonapartej 

In  some  /  space  of  sloping  greens  Lay  ^"^  "*/  ^ '"',  ^^ 

but  eve^  legend  /  Which  the  supreme  Caucasian  mind  "        ]^ 

Above,  the/ hall-ceUing  stately-set              ^'an  mind  „        i26 

O  all  tilings  /  to  sate  my  various  eye.s !  "        iH 

xT'Jk  !?  /  "f  H*"®  ^"^«  in  all  the  land  they  say  MJ.'n,.     ^ 

Pontius  and  Isoapiot  by'mj  side  Show'd  lilts  e<"d«>er  s  D.  150 

/seraphs.  c^   o  r,    ,. 

Beyond  the/green  field  and  eastern  .»a.  Uh^S^d^iI  \m 

the  /  nej,  fonns.  That  float  about  the  threshold  «.(*,  jS,  ?^ 

S'tsrisK^irs^y,        ^»»-i'£»| 

??ii7hoi5*rhrdr^  f^^"^  'w-  '>-'  «'<f ss 

Nor  for  my  lands  so  broad  and  /;  t  A    A'"^'  ^ 

Lord  of  Burleigh,  /  and  free,  r     /r^  ^7^1 12 

Three  /  chiklren  first  she  bore  him,  *  "^  '^"''^"i'*  58 

For  one  /  Vision  ever  fled  Down  the  waste  wafers  Th.  7/          ^l 

Like  Virtue  firm,  like  Knowledge  /  ^'^^  ^^^'^^^  ^J 

WiU  bring/ weather  yet  to  aU  of  us.  Enoch  Arden  ifl 


193 


Fairness 


^'^^*d^y'bV'dIy^'°"'^""'^    Thro' many  a/sea-circle, 

'Then  I  fixt  My  wistful  eyes  on  two  f  imaees  ^noch  Arden  542 

The  marvel  of  that  /  new  nature-    ^      ^    '  ^ea  Breams  240 

d'^Sh^  of  'fc  /  as  life,  it  was  all  of  it  quiet  as  Columbus  79 

F  FloreAee  honouring  thy  nativity,  ^-  "-^  M^'^^^e  20 

And  earth  as  /  in  hue '  a           Dante  3 

'Earth  is  /'  When  all  'is  dark  as  night '  AncterU  Sage  24 

And  show  us  that  the  worid  is  wholly/.  "          ]^^ 

0  Thou  so/ m  summers  gone,  'i,      ,  ^°^ 
bo  /  in  southern  sunshine  bathed  "''  '■^«*'»»  1 

Our  own /isle,  the  lord  of  every  sea—  m,    'i,,      ^ 
R  ^T"iT  y°^  /  ^^'"^  Of  Statesman,             To  Mara  of  nt%5    1 1 

Hail  the  /  Ceremonial  Of  this  year          '  OnjJ  O  T^f^^  of 

f  things  are  slow  to  fade  away,  **  *^**%^-/'S^"«  23 

1  loved  you  first  when  young  and  /,  ^  "  '^''^-  -^^^^l 
i^  Sprmg  slides  hither  o'er  the  Southern  sea  p  x  «  ^.^  ^^ 
'^  Seat^""  '°™«-^'i^^'^  beyond  th^doo'rs  ^''°'-  '^  ^^''""^  ^ 
/mothers  they  Dying  in  childbirth  of  dead  sons  I^aJfl^'"''^  Vi 
From  ea^h/  plant  the  blossom  choicest-grown  "'  '  ^''""*  ^1 
pahn  Call  to  the  cypress 'I  alone  am/'?  "  H 
^  garments,  plain  or  rich,  and  fitting  close  "  ,  o? 
loosen  stone  from  stone,  All  my  /  work ;  "          Jf ^ 

^f  ^itcoWot  *KSr"  ^'  '^«  ^-"^    ^«^«;iOa.  JS 

Ernilia, /than  all  else  but  thou,  For  thou  art /  '^'^  ^^^ 

than  all  else  that  is.  •'                ^   j,     ^ 

^  his  talk,  a  tongue  that  ruled  the  hour  a  Audiey  Court  QQ 

i^  than  Rachel  bTthe  palmy  weU,%2n  Ruth  ^V^^'^  ^^eldlQl 

among  the  fields  of  com. 

And  /  she,  but  ah  how  soon  to  die !  t>"     .     ^'^? 

Stiller,  not  /  than  mine  nequtescat  5 

F  than  aught  in  the  worid  beside,  ^"^  ^^  *  '^^ 

She  IS  not / in  new  clothes  than  old.  Mn^,.  r,t n   "■  .r^^ 

O  as  much /—as  a  faith  once  fair  Marr  of  Geramt  122 

To  greet  their  /  sisters  of  the  East  ^""n^^l  '''^.  ^^.^228 

Where  /  fruit  of  Love  may  rest  Some  happy  G<^rdeners  D.  188 

future  day.                                               ^^^  _  „ . 

there's  the  /  chance :  ^  '*^**'*^  <^«*  251 

i;  thy  fate  than  mine,  if  life's  best  end  Prxn^ess  v  460 

She  that  finds  a  winter  sunset  /  than  a  mom  J^^resms  ISO 

of  Spring  _    J 

Fairest    That  aU  which  thou  hast  drawn  of  f  J-ocksley  H.  Sixty  22 

(Tho'  all  her/forms  are  types  of  ^ee^  ^^'  ^^  ^'ITV^  f 

claiming  each  This  meed  of/  isabdZQ 

So  Shalt  thou  find  me/,  (Enone  87 

I  promise  thee  The  /  and  most  loving  wife  in  Greece  '  "    ?^ 

i^— why /wife?  am  I  not  fair?                   '"  ureece,  ^^    287 

She  was  the /in  the  face:  „,      >»    196 

rose  the  tallest  of  them  all  And  f  ,^  ^,     Ststers  2 

beardless  apple-arbiter  Decided  f  '  "-/^t^ur  208 

her  that  is  the /under  heaven  ^        Liuretius  92 

The  prize  of  beauty  for  the  f  t.'hprp  :.,     *"•  ^f-^^fhur  86 

'  Advance  and  tak  J,  as  /of  the  f  afr'  ^'"''-  "^  ^""«*"«'  485 

For  tho'  ye  won  the  prize  of  /  fair.  And  tho'  I  "               ^^^ 

heard  him  call  you  /  fair 

/  and  the  best  Of  ladies  living  gave  me  r„7-      "j  ^  ,      ^19 

I,  and  all.  As  /,  best  and  purest  "'*"  ''''^  ^«^««  339 

'  F  I  grant  her :  I  have  seen  •     '  "              350 

rose  the  tallest  of  them  all  And  f  t,        ".              356 

/  of  their  evening  stars                 '  r    i^'  "/  ^'■'^*w  376 

/flesh  at  last  is  filth  on  which  the  worm  will  fex.t  •  "^  "'^  rz"^^/ 188 
Fairest-spoken    That  art  the  f-s  tree                      ^^'^^ '        ^  „  .  ^^^Wy  30 

Fair-fronted    ^-/ Truth  shall  droop  not  now  .o,      \'dkmgOak2& 

Fair-hair'd     a  loftier  Annie  Lee™^?;i  "nd Ta"  Clear-headed  friend  12 

-F-A  and  redder  than  a  windy  morn  •        '  ^noch  Arden  749 

came  a  f-h  youth,  that  in  his  hand  Bare  Princess,  Con.  91 

_   when  the  f-h  youth  came  by  him  said  Geramt  and  E.  201 

Pair-hands    Sir  Fine-face,  Sir /-A?            '  ^       >.             205 

Fain ly    Made  so  /  well  With  delicate  spire  ^"""'t  ""^  h  ^J^ 

Fairily-dehcate    -P-i  palaces  shine  Maud  II  ii  5 

Fair-maid    many  welcomes  FehmaTO/-™  /.        i»  ,          The  Islet  18 

Fairness    To  do4t  her  /  w^re  toTa^t^^^'el'^"^*^  /'^^  f^^t"^  2,  10 

J               waiii  an  eye,  Lancelot  and  E.  1376 

N 


Fairplay 

Fairplay    ask'd  but  space  and  /  for  her  scheme ; 
Fair-spoken    stranger  that  hath  been  To  thee  f-s  ? ' 
Fairy  (adj.)    Aiey,  /  Lihan,  rutting,  /  LiUan, 
Like  a  rose-leaf  I  will  crush  thee,  F  LiUan. 
A  /  shield  your  Genius  made 
With  whitest  honey  in  /  gardens  cuU'd — 
And  woke  her  with  a  lay  from  /  land. 
♦  Tis  the  /  Lady  of  Shalott.' 
heavens  between  their  /  fleeces  pale 
With  the  /  tales  of  science. 


And  bring  the  fated  /  Prince.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  56 

A  /  Prince,  with  joyful  eyes,  „          ^^'^'^-1 

As  wild  as  aught  of  /  lore ;  „    ^^  LEnvo^  12 

From  havens  hid  in  /  bowers.  The  Voyage  54 

many  a  /  foreland  set  With  willow-weed  The  Brook  45 
Show'd  her  the  /  footings  on  the  grass,  The  little 

dells  of  cowsUp,  /  palms.  The  petty  marestaU  -^.,,„r> 

forest,  /  pines,  ^  ylmer's  Field  90 

What  look'd  a  flight  of  /  arrows  aim'd  .    ,,             »* 

And  dropt  a  /  parachute  and  past :  Princess,  Fro.  7b 

golden  foot  or  a  /  horn  Thro'  his  dim  water-world  ?  Mavd  II  ti  19 

Here  is  a  city  of  Enchanters,  built  By  /  Kings.'  Gareth  and  L.  200 
whether  this  be  built  By  magic,  and  by  /  Kings 

and  Queens ;                                              .  »             ^^° 

a  F  King  And  F  Queens  have  built  the  city,  ,,             ^o» 

Shrunk  Uke  a  /  changeling  lay  the  mage ;  Com.  of  Arthur  dM 

Until  they  vanish'd  by  the  /  well  That  laughs  ,  „   ,.00 

at  iron Merlin  and  V.  Alo 

sharp  breaths  of  anger  pufE'd  Her  /  nostril  out ;  ,  "    j  t-  lot^ 

Look  how  she  sleeps — the  F  Queen,  so  fair !  Lancelot  and  E.  l^o& 
we  chanted  the  songs  of  the  Bards  and  the 

glories  of  /  kings ;  V.  of  Maeldune  90 

The  /  fancies  range.  Early  Spring  ^9 

but  now  Your  /  Prince  has  found  you,  2  he  King  b9 

And  you  were  then  a  lover's  /  dream,  To  Mary  Boyle  43 

Fairy  (S)    The  oriental  /  brought,  N^"''^^^,Jk 

'  For  as  to  fairies,  that  will  flit  Talking  Oak  89 

dancing  of  Fairies  In  desolate  hollows,  Merlin  and  the  &.  41 

Fairy-circle    flickering /-c  wheel'd  and  broke  Guinevere  25a 

Fairy-fine    Fabric  rough,  or /-/,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  18 

Fairyland    (See  also  Fairy)    But  only  changeling  ^     ,,       ,  r  ohq 

out  of  F  Gareth  and  L.  M6 

if  the  King'  be  King  at  all,  or  come  From  F ;  »  ,  -n  TotiJ 

Or  come  to  take  the  King  toF?  Lancelot  and  E.  1J57 

Fairy-tale    (See  also  Fairy)    told  herf-fs,  Show'd  her  the  ,    „.  , ,  „„ 

fjjiry  Aylmer's  FieldSd 

Faith    (iS'ee  aZso  Catholic  Faith)    left  to  me,  but  Thou,  ^     ,     . 

And  /  in  Thee  ?  Supp.  Confessions  19 

How  sweet  to  have  a  common  /!  »              ^^ 

that  knew  The  beauty  and  repose  of  /,  ,,              75 

Great  in /,  and  strong  Against  the  grief  „               Jl 

And  simple  /  than  Norman  blood.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  &h 

F  from  tracts  no  feet  have  trod,  On  a  Mourner  29 

settled  down  Upon  the  general  decay  of  /  The  Epic  18 

run  My  /  beyond  my  practice  into  liis :  Edwin  Morris  64 

we  closed,  we  kiss'd,  swore  /,                           ,  ^  77 ''    ^  i\r 

with  a  larger  /  appeal'd  Than  Papist  unto  Saint.  Talking  Oak  lo 

Wait :  my  /  is  large  in  Time,  Love  and  Duty  25 

So  keep  I  fair  thro'  /  and  prayer  Sir  Galahad  26 

I  will  know  If  there  be  any  /  in  man.'     '  Nay  now,  -   ,    „,       . , 

what  /?  '  said  Alice  the  nurse.  Lady  Clare  44 

His  r&solve  Upbore  him,  and  firm  /,  Enoch  Arden  800 

lier  sweet  face  and  /  Held  him  from  that :  Aylmer's  Field  392 

Have  /,  have  / !    We  Uve  by  /,'  said  he ;  Sea  Dreams  157 

why  kept  ye  not  your  /  ?  Princess  v  77 

their  sinless  /,  A  maiden  moon  that  sparkles  „     ,,  185 

/  in  womankind  Beats  with  his  blood,  „  ^^  328 

Some  sense  of  duty,  sonietliiiig  of  a  /,  »  Con.  54 

The  sport  half-science,  fill  me  with  a/,  «       .    "6 

honouring  your  sweet  /  in  him,  A  Dedication  5 

By  /,  and  /  alone,  embrace.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  A 

We  have  but/:  we  cannot  know ;  >»             ..fl 

Whose  f  ha.s  centre  everywhere,  n      xarxtjt  3 

Her  /  thro'  fonn  is  pure  as  thine,  »              .9 

Tliis  /  has  many  a  purer  priest,  ,»      xxxmi  6 


194 

Princess  v  282      Faith  (continued)    Is  fas  vague  as  all  unsweet : 
Gareth  and  L.  284:  Be  near  me  when  my  /  is  dry 

Lilian  1  Shall  love  be  blamed  for  want  of  /i* 

30  I  stretch  lame  hands  of  /,  and  grope, 

Margaret  41  May  breed  with  him,  can  fright  my  /. 

Eleanore  26  The  /,  the  vigour,  bold  to  dwell 

Caress' d  or  chidden  8  Perplext  in  /,  but  pure  m  deeds, 

L.  of  Shalott  i  35  There  lives  more  /  m  honest  doubt, 

Gardener's  D.  261  To  find  a  stronger  /  his  own ; 

Locksley  Hall  12  to  him  she  sings  Of  early  /  and  plighted  vows ; 

-  --  Her / is  fixt  and  cannot  move, 

What  profit  lies  in  barren  /, 
What  is  she,  cut  from  love  and  /, 
Our  dearest/;  our  ghastUest  doubt ; 
If  e'er  when  /  had  f  all'n  asleep, 
all  is  well,  tho'  /  and  form  Be  sunder  d 
Is  comrade  of  the  lesser  / 
With  /  that  comes  of  self-control, 
have  /  in  a  tradesman's  ware  or  his  word .-' 
and  /  in  their  great  King, 
good/,  I  fain  had  added— Knight, 


Faithful 

In.  Mem.  xlvii  5 

^9 
li  10 

„       Ixxxit  4 
„  xcv  29 

„  xcvi  9 

11 
17 

xcvii  30 
„  33 

„  cviii  5 

„  cxiv  11 
„  cxxiv  2 
„  cxxiv  9 
„  cxxvii  1 
„  cxxviii  3 
„  cxxxi  9 
Maud  I  i  26 
Gareth  and  L.  330 
1162 


•'NiTy'  by  my  /,"thou  shalt  not?  cried  Marr.  of  Geraint  198 

a  rock  in  ebbs  and  flows,  Fixt  on  her  /.  ,,              o^^ 

Brought  the  great  /  to  Britam  over  seas ;  Balm  and  Balan  103 
F  and  unfaith  can  ne'er  be  equal  powers :  Unfaith 

in  aught  is  want  of  /  in  all.        ^  Merlin  and  V  388 

break  /with  one  I  may  not  name  ?  Larwelot  and  E.  685 

And /unfaithful  kept  him  falsely  true.  „             oh 

/once  fair  Was  richer  than  these  diamonds—  ,,           |^^o 

•heal'datonce,By/,ofallhisills.  Holy  Grail  hC, 

a  maid.  Who  kept  our  holy  /among  her  km  ,,      ^Ji 

those  who  love  them,  trials  of  our  /.  FeUeas  and  E.  210 

all  these  pains  are  trials  of  my  /,  »          ^*" 

'  ii'  of  my  body,'  he  said,  '  and  art  thou  not—  ^    ,  ^       "        ,  V«a 

/have  these  'm  whom  they  sware  to  love ?  Last  Tournament  188 

here  the  /  That  made  us  rulers  ?  To  the  Queen  ti  18 

fierce  or  careless  looseners  of  the  /,  "                -^ 

Confined  on  points  of  /,  ^The  SenTe  IW 

'  I  have  fought  for  Queen  and  i*'  J  ^^  ^ff^^e  lui 

In  matters  of  the  /,  alas  the  while !  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  76 

Lest  the  false  /  make  merry  oyer  them !  Columhus  147 
'OsoulofUttle/,  slowtobeheve!  „  ,  „  rofj, /^  /in 
the  sacred  peak  'of  hoar  high-templed  F,          Pref.  Poem  19th  Cen    10 

to  the  F  that  saves,                                   ^  -^  ^       f  qq 

Where  you  bawl'd  the  dark  side  of  your  /  Despair  39 

away  from  your  /  and  your  face !  ^     •    /«.  „.  no 

cUnI to  J' beyond  the  forms  of  F!  ^  7^'^'t-  ^^fiS 

Bri^  the  old  dark  ages  back  without  the  /,  LocJcsley  H.  Sixty  137 

wars  and  filial  /,  and  Dido's  pyre ;  F«,/iT  11 

F  at  her  zenith,  or  all  but  lost  ^    ,^  Fastness  11 

bespiteofever^J'andCreed,  m^"  ^"ZVldl 
Whose  F  and  Works  were  bells  of  full  accord,    In  Mem.  G.  W.  Ward  2 

With  a  /  a.s  clear  as  the  heights  '^''TvhJXmJmi. 

And  mood  of  /  may  hold  its  own,  Ahbar  s  Dream  56 

A  people  from  their  ancient  fold  of  i',  »              " 

I  cull  from  every  /  and  race  the  best  »              ^" 

shook  Those  pillars  of  a  moulder  d  /,  »              °^ 

and  to  spread  the  Divine  F  'h■,.n^J^^ 

darken'ct  with  doubts  of  a  2^  that  saves.  The  Dreamer  11 

Faithful    (See  also  TBmSxA)    Lean'd  on  him, /,  gentle,       ^^^  ^^.^^^  ^^g 

And  shaping  /  record  of  the  glance  Gardener's  2).  177 

<  A  •     i.  ^   1  r  1  „;„i,f  f^f  nnrl  I  Sir  Galahad  iy 

'  O  ]ust  and  /  knight  of  Goa !  ^ 

I.faUingonhis/heart,  ^  ^xTll 

Thrice  blest  whose  lives  are  /  prayers,  »      f^»"  |^ 

A  /  answer  from  the  breast,  »      '^f;^  ^5 

She  dwells  on  him  with /eyes,  »       fJlT^g 

sleep  Encompass'd  by  his  /  guard,  ,,      ^cx^^ 

And  fair  without,  J  witnin,  „      •  <ii7 

Sjte/tS'S  o/c  wES  l«v«i  His  ma,to  Lo.e,''  Tale  i.  2-^ 

in  her  you  see  That  /  servant  whom  we  spoke  about,  „            ^^^ 

Thanks  to  the  kindly  dark  faces  who  fought  with  ^^ 

us,  /  and  few,  •'    •' 


Faithful 


195 


Fall 


Faithful  (continued)    Burnt  too,  my  /  preacher, 

Beverley !  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  80 

My  noble  friend,  my  /  counsellor,  Akbar's  Dream  18 

True  we  have  got — sitch  a  /  ally  Riflemen  form !  24 

Faithfulness     loving,  utter  /  in  love,  Gareth  and  L.  554 

Faithless     Lest  I  be  found  as  /  in  the  quest  Lancelot  and  E.  761 

VVhate'er  the  /  people  say.  In  Mem.  xcvii  16 

The  /  coldness  of  the  times ;  „            cvi  18 

Falcon  (adj.)    bold  and  free  As  you,  my  /  RosaUnd.  Rosalind  18 

Falcon  (s)    My  frohc  /,  with  bright  eyes,  „          2 

My  bright-eyed,  wild-eyed  /,  „           6 

If  all  the  worid  were  /'s,  what  of  that  ?  Golden  Year  38 

Forgetful  of  the  /  and  the  hunt,  Marr.  of  Geraint  51 

given  us  a  fair  /  which  he  train'd ;  Merlin  and  V.  96 

unliooded  casting  off  The  goodly  /  free ;  „           131 

No  surer  than  our  /  yesterday,  Lancelot  and  E.  656 

beauty  lured  that  /  from  his  eyry  on  the  fell,  Happy  59 

Falcon  (name  of  ship)    every  soul  from  the  decks  of  The 

F  but  one ;  The  Wreck  109 

Falcon-eyed    quick  brunette,  well-moulded,  f-e,  Princess  ii  106 

Fall  (s)     (See  also  Foot-fall,  Toumey-fall)     many  a  /  Of 

diamond  rillets  musical,  Arabian  Nights  47 

comes  the  check,  the  change,  the  /,  Two  Voices  163 

Came  in  a  sun-Ut  /  of  rain.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  4 

Illyhian  woodlands,  echoing  /'s  Of  water,  To  E.  L.  1 

like  the  flakes  In  a  /  of  snow,  Lturetius  167 

and  the  river  made  a  /  Out  yonder :  Princess  Hi  172 

blossom'd  branch  Rapt  to  the  horrible  /:  „        iv  180 

They  mark'd  it  with  the  red  cross  to  the  /,  „          vi  41 

That  huddhng  slant  in  furrow-cloven  f's  „      vii  207 

as  the  rapid  of  life  Shoots  to  the  / —  A  dedication  4 

These  leaves  that  redden  to  the/;  In  Mem.  xi  14 

And  back  we  come  at  /  of  dew.  „    Con.  100 

Here  at  the  head  of  a  tinkUng  /,  Maud  I  xxi  6 

My  pride  Ls  broken :  men  have  seen  my  /.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  578 

my  pride  Is  broken  down,  for  Enid  sees  my/! '  „            590 

The  drumming  thunder  of  the  huger  /  Geraint  and  E.  173 

Enid  heard  the  clashing  of  his  /,  „            509 

never  woman  yet,  since  man's  first  /,  Lancelot  and  E.  859 

hear  the  manner  of  thy  fight  and  /;  PeUeas  and  E.  347 

bide,  unf rowardly,  A  /  from  him  ? '  „              598 

laugh'd  Lightly,  to  think  of  Modred's  dusty  /,  Guinevere  55 

a  /  fro'  a  kiss  to  a  kick  like  Saatan  as  fell  North.  Cobbler  57 

we  may  happen  a  /  o'  snaw —  Village  Wife  21 

kindly  curves,  with  gentlest  /,  De.  Prof.,  Two  G.  23 

Following  a  torrent  till  its  myriad  /'s  Tiresias  37 

and  mine  was  the  deeper/;  The  Wreck  11 

An'  the  /  of  yer  foot  in  the  dance  Tomorrow  36 

A  /  of  water  lull'd  the  noon  asleep.  Romney's  R.  83 

is  the  Demon-god  Wroth  at  his/? '  St.  Telemachus  20 

he,  That  other,  prophet  of  their/,  Akbar's  Dream  82 

Fall  (autumn)     an'  I  mean'd  to  'a  stubb'd  it  at  /,  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  41 

we  talkt  o'  my  darter  es  died  o'  the  fever  at  /:  Village  Wife  10 

'ud  coom  at  the  /  o'  the  year,  Owd  Rod  23 

An'  pigs  didn't  sell  at  /,  Church-warden,  etc.  5 

Fan  (verb)     (See  also  Fall  oat)     Letting  the  rose-leaves/:  Claribel  3 

Down  by  the  poplar  tall  rivulets  babble  and  /.  Leonine  Eleg.  4 

Winds  creep ;  dews  /  chilly ;  „             7 

I  faint,  I  /,  Men  say  that  Thou  Didst  die  Supp.  Confessions  2 

on  his  light  there  /  s  A  shadow ;  „             163 

Place  it,  where  sweetest  sunlight  f's  Ode  to  Memory  85 

It  would  /  to  the  ground  if  you  came  in.  Poet's  Mind  23 

And  shall  /  again  to  ground.  Deserted  House  16 

The  shadow  passeth  when  the  tree  shall  /,  Love  and  Death  14 

my  ringlets  would  /  Low  adown.  The  Mermaid  14 

Then  did  my  response  clearer  f :  Two  Voices  34 

when  a  billow,  blown  against,  F's  back,  „          317 

Which  only  to  one  engine  bound  F's  off,  „          348 

Until  they  /  in  trance  again.  „          354 

And  all  day  long  to  /  and  rise  Miller's  D.  182 

You  seem'd  to  hear  them  climb  and  /  Palace  of  Art  70 

to  hear  the  dully  sound  Of  himian  footsteps  /.  „        276 

Along  the  cliff  to  /  and  pause  and  /  did  seem.  Lotos-Eaters  9 

There  is  sweet  music  here  that  softer  f's  „  C.  S.  1 

turning  yellow  F's,  and  floats  adown  the  air.  „          31 

Ripens  and  fades,  and  f's,  and  hath  no  toil,  „          37 


Fall  (verb)  (continue)    In  silence :  ripen,  /  and  cease :  Lotos-Eaters  52 

thunder-drops  /  on  a  sleeping  sea :  D.  of  F.  Women  122 

/  down  and  glance  From  tone  to  tone,  „              166 

F  into  shadow,  soonest  lost:  To  J.  S.  11 

that  on  which  it  throve  F  's  off,  „        16 
That  from  Discussion's  Up  may  /  With  Life,           Love  thou  thy  land  33 

The  goose  let  /  a  golden  egg  The  Goose  11 

Where  f's  not  hail,  or  rain,  or  any  snow,  M.  d' Arthur  260 

'  F  down,  O  Simeon :  thou  hast  suffer'd  long  St.  S.  Stylites  99 

and  oft  I  /,  Maybe  for  months,  „        102 

Once  more  the  gate  behind  me/'s;  Talking  Oak  1 

And  when  my  marriage  morn  may  /,  „       285 

not  leap  forth  and  /  about  thy  neck.  Love  and  Duty  41 

The  woods  decay,  the  woods  decay  and  /,  Tithonus  1 

and  the  shadows  rise  and  /.  Locksley  Hall  80 

now  for  me  the  roof-tree  /.  „        190 

Let  it  /  on  Locksley  Hall,  „        193 

I'll  take  the  showers  as  they/,  Amphion  101 

Perfume  and  flowers  /  in  showers.  Sir  Galaliad  11 

On  whom  their  favours/!  „         14 

Swells  up,  and  shakes  and  f's.  „         76 

F  from  iiis  Ocean-lane  of  fire,  The  Voyage  19 

And  like  a  thunderbolt  he  f's.  The  Eagle  6 

A  footstep  seem'd  to  /  beside  her  path,  Enoch  Arden  514 

F  back  upon  a  name !  rest,  rot  in  that !  Aylmer's  Field  385 

heads  of  chiefs  and  princes  /  so  fast,  „             763 

as  f's  A  creeper  when  the  prop  is  broken,  „             809 

and  seem'd  Always  about  to  /,  „             822 

his  own  head  Began  to  droop,  to  /;  „             835 

'Set  them  up!  they  shall  not/! '  Sea  Dreams  227 

ever/'s  the  least  white  star  of  snow,  Lucretius  107 

She  heard  him  raging,  heard  him  /;  ,,        276 

come  to  fight  with  shadows  and  to  /.  Princess  i  10 

but  prepare :  I  speak ;  it  f's. '  „     H  224 

the  gracious  dews  Began  to  glisten  and  to  /:  „        317 

The  splendour /'«  on  castle  walls  „        ivl 

Fly  to  her,  and  /  upon  her  gilded  eaves,  „          94 

Bred  will  in  me  to  overcome  it  or  /.  ,^     ^  351 

one  should  fight  with  shadows  and  should/;  „        476 

Yea,  let  her  see  me  /!  „        517 

tho'  he  trip  and  /  He  shall  not  blind  his  soul  „  vii  330 

Mourning  when  their  leaders  /,  Ode  on  Well.  5 
float  or/,  in  endless  ebb  and  flow  ;                            W.  to  Marie  Alex.  27 

I  roar  and  rave  for  I  /.  Voice  and  the  P.  12 

F,  and  follow  their  doom.  ,^              20 

Bloodily,  bloodily  /  the  battle-axe,  Boddicea  56 

she  felt  the  heart  within  her  /  „        81 

I  /  unawares  before  the  people,  Hendecasyllabics  7 

Her  place  is  empty,  /  like  these ;  In  Mem  xiii  4 

When  fiU'd  with  tears  that  cannot /,  „       xix  11 

My  deeper  anguish  also  f's,  „               15 

If  such  a  dreamy  touch  should  /,  „      xliv  13 

should  /  Remeiging  in  the  general  Soul,  „       xlvii  3 

Be  near  us  when  we  climb  or/:  „          Zi  13 

I  can  but  trust  that  good  shall  /  „        iw  14 

As  drop  by  drop  the  water /'s  ,,        lviii3 

When  on  my  bed  the  moonlight  f's,  „       Ixvii  1 

Till  on  mine  ear  this  message  f's,  „  Ixxxv  18 

And  lightly  does  the  whisper/;  „              89 

And  strangely  f's  our  Christmas-eve.  „           cv  4. 

A  shade /'s  on  us  like  the  dark  From  little  cloudlets  „     Con.  93 

And  breaking  let  the  splendour  /  „              119 

Shall  I  weep  if  a  Poland  /?  Maud  I  iv  46 

and  /  before  Her  feet  on  the  meadow  grass,  „          v  25 

For  I  heard  your  rivulet  /  „     xxii  36 

the  heavens  /  in  a  gentle  rain,  „     //  i  41 

a  dewy  splendour  /'s  On  the  little  flower  „        iv  32 

Then  I  rise,  the  eavedrops  /,  „            62 

and  watch'd  the  great  sea  /,  Wave  after  wave.  Com.  of  Arthur  378 

/  battleaxe  upon  helm,  F  battleaxe,  „              486 

See  that  he  /  not  on  thee  suddenly,  Gareth  and  L.  921 

♦  Lo,'  said  Gareth,  '  the  foe  f's  I '  „           1317 
And  if  1/  her  name  will  yet  remain                           Marr.  of  Geraint  500 

While  slowly  falling  as  a  scale  that/ 's,  „             525 

Made  her  cheek  burn  and  either  eyelid  /,  „              775 

Before  he  turn  to  /  seaward  again,  Geraint  and  E.  117 


FaU 


196 


Falling 


Fall  (verb)  (continued)    Wait  here,  and  when  he  passes  / 

upon  him.'  Geraint  and  E,  129 

And  they  will  /  upon  him  imawares.  „            134 

they  will  /  upon  you  while  ye  pass.'  „            145 

And  if  I  /,  cleave  to  the  better  man.'  „            152 

Made  her  cheek  bum  and  either  eyelid  /.  „            434 

a  dreadful  loss  F's  in  a  far  land  and  he  knows  it  not,  „            497 

and  made  as  if  to  /  upon  him.  „            776 

fear  not,  Enid,  I  should  /  upon  him,  „            787 

see  He  do  not  /  behind  me :  Bcdin  and  Balan  135 

Deep-tranced  on  hers,  and  could  not  /:  „              278 

A  doom  that  ever  poised  itself  to  /,  Merlin  and  V.  191 

Had  I  for  three  days  seen,  ready  to  /.  „            296 

Set  up  the  charge  ye  know,  to  stand  or  /! '  „            703 

the  victim's  flowers  before  he  /.'  Lancelot  and  E.  910 

women  watch  Who  wins,  who  f's ;  Holy  Grail  35 

all  the  light  that/'s  upon  the  board  „       249 

King  himself  had  fears  that  it  would  /,  „       341 

F  on  him  aU  at  once.  And  if  ye  slay  mm  Pdleas  and  E.  268 

'  Would  rather  you  had  let  them  /,'  Last  Tournament  39 

cold  F's  on  the  mountain  in  midsummer  snows,  „             228 

F,  as  the  crest  of  some  slow-arching  wave,  „            462 

Where /'s  not  hail,  or  rain,  or  any  snow.  Pass,  of  Arthur  428 

as  anger /'s  aside  And  withers  on  the  breast  Lover's  Tale  i  9 

Or  as  men  know  not  when  they  /  asleep  „         161 

It  /  on  its  own  thorns — if  this  be  true —  „         273 

my  raised  eyeUds  would  not  /,  „       i  571 

First /'«  asleep  in  swoon,  wherefrom  awaked,  „         791 

faint  and  /,  To  /  and  die  away.  „       ii  96 

nay — what  was  there  left  to  /?  Rizpah  9 
F's  ?  what /'s  ?  who  knows  ?    As  the  tree  f's  so 

must  it  lie.  „    12 

the  thunderbolt  will  /  Long  and  loud.  The  Revenge  44 

F  into  the  hands  of  God,  not  into  the  hands  of  Spain ! '  „         90 
Better  to  /  by  the  hands  that  they  love,  than  to  /     Def.  of  Lv^know  53 

"      " "              ■  „            65 


Mark  him — he  f's !  then  another, 

I  knew  we  should  /  on  each  other, 

Have  heard  this  footstep  /, 

Thy  Thebes  shall  /  and  perish, 

I  felt  one  warm  tear  /  upon  it. 

My  Shelley  would  /  from  my  hands 

She  tastes  the  fruit  before  the  blossom  f's, 

The  blackthorn-blossom  fades  and  f's 

thro'  the  tonguesters  we  may  /. 

Kingdoms  and  Republics  /, 

Jacob's  ladder  f's  On  greening  grass. 

Should  this  old  England  / 

and  at  dawn  F's  on  the  threshold 

thy  hands  let  /  the  gather'd  flower, 

flowers  that  brighten  as  thy  footstep  f's, 

felt  a  gentle  hand  F  on  my  forehead, 

my  strongest  wish  F's  flat  before  your  least 

unwillingness. 
Thou,  thou — I  saw  thee  /  before  me, 
the  chuch  weant  happen  a  /. 
your  shadow  f's  on  the  grave. 
My  prison,  not  my  fortress,  /  away ! 
The  bridal  garland  f's  upon  the  bier, 
Fallen    {See  also  Chap-fallen,  Half-fallen,  New-fallen, 

Newly-fallen)    legend  of  a  /  race  Alone  might  liint      Two  Voices  359 
mournful  light  That  broods  above  the /sun,  To  J.  S.  51 

To  trample  round  my  /  head,  Come  not,  when  3 

PhiUp  glancing  up  Beheld  the  dead  flame  of  the  /  day  Enoch  Arden  441 
The  two  remaining  found  a  /  stem ;  .»        . . .  ^^^ 

To  lift  the  woman's  /divinity  Princess  Hi  223 

So  those  two  foes  above  my  /  life,  „         vi  130 

O  /  nobility,  that,  overawed,  Third,  of  Feb.  35 

In  those  /  leaves  which  kept  their  green,  In  Mem.  xcv  23 

saw  the  chargers  of  the  two  that  fell  Start  from 

their  /  lords,  Geraint  and  E.  482 

Arising  wearily  at  a  /  oak,  Balin  and  Balan  425 

Then  leapt  her  palfrey  o'er  the  /  oak,  „  587 

And  in  the  darkness  o'er  lier  /  head,  Guinevere  583 

Or  ev'n  a  /  feather,  vanLsh'd  again.  Last  Tournament  372 

My  /  forehead  in  their  to  and  fro,  Lover's  Tale  i  701 


V.  of  Maddwne  104 

Tiresias  27 

„      116 

„      167 

The  Wreck  25 

Ancient  Sage  75 

The  Flight  15 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  130 

159 

Early  Spring  9 

The  Fleet  4 

Demeter  and  P.  3 

9 

36 

The  Ring  419 

Romney's  R.  72 

Akbar's  Dream  185 

Church-warden,  etc.  10 

Charity  20 

Doubt  and  Prayer  12 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  1 


Fallen  (continued)    Were  she  .  .  .  a  /  state  ?  The  Fleet  10 
I  saw  the  tiger  in  the  ruin'd  fane  Spring  from  his 

/  God,  Demeter  and  P.  80 

stem,  which  else  had  /  quite  With  cluster'd  flower-bells  Isabel  35 

F  silver-chiming,  seem'd  to  shake  Arabian  Nights  51 

dews,  that  would  have  /  in  tears.  Miller's  D.  151 

She  ceased  in  tears,  /  from  hope  and  trust :  D.  of  F.  Women  257 

Had  /  in  Lyonnesse  about  their  Lord,  M.  d' Arthur  4 

half  has  /  and  made  a  bridge ;  Walk,  to  the  Mail  32 

/  into  the  dusty  crypt  Of  darken'd  forms  Will.  Water  183 

The  rain  had  /,  the  Poet  arose.  Poet's  Song  1 

but  her  face  had  /  upon  her  hands ;  Enoch  Arden  391 

on  her  the  thunders  of  the  house  Had  /  first  Aylm^r's  Field  279 

How  low  his  brother's  mood  had  /,  „             404 

'  Let  them  Ue,  for  they  have  /.'  Sea  Dreams  228 

And  here  upon  a  yellow  eyeUd  /  Lucretius  141 

When  /  in  darker  ways.'  Princess  v  68 
'  Our  enemies  have  /,  have  /:  (repeat)               Princess  vi  33,  38,  43,  48 

would  have  strown  it,  and  are  /  themselves.  Princess  vi  42 

Our  enemies  have  /,  but  this  shall  grow  „       53 

0  /  at  length  that  tower  of  strength  Ode  on  Well.  38 
when  she  tum'd,  the  curse  Had  /,  In  Mem.  vi  38 
What  words  are  these  have  /  from  me  ?  „  xvi  1 
And  towers  /  as  soon  as  built —  „  xxvi  8 
Had  /  into  her  father's  grave,  ,,  Ixxxix  48 
There  has  /  a  splendid  tear  From  the  passion-flower  Maud  I  xxii  59 
Then  cried  the  /, '  Take  not  my  life :  Gareth  and  L.  973 

1  have  not  /  so  low  as  some  would  wish.  Marr.  of  Geraint  129 
So  that  I  be  not /in  fight.  Farewell.'  „  223 
And  here  had  /  a  great  part  of  a  tower,  „  317 
now  they  saw  their  bulwark  /,  stood ;  Geraint  and  E.  168 
creatures  gently  born  But  into  bad  hands  /,  „  192 
catch  a  loathly  plmne  /  from  the  wing  Merlin  and  V.  727 
Lay  like  a  rainbow  /  upon  the  grass,  Lancelot  and  E.  431 
Where  these  had  /,  slowly  past  the  barge  „  1241 
apples  by  the  brook  F,  and  on  the  lawns.  Holy  Grail  385 
Lancelot,  with  his  heel  upon  the  /,  Pdleas  and  E.  580 
A  manner  somewhat  /  from  reverence —  Last  Tournament  119 
And  shouted  and  leapt  down  upon  the  /;  „  469 
Ye  twain  had  /  out  about  the  bride  Of  one —  „  545 
wonders,  what  has  /  upon  the  realm  ?  Guinevere  275 
tum'd,  and  reel'd,  and  would  have  /,  „  304 
Tumbling  the  hollow  helmets  of  the  /,  Pass,  of  Arthur  132 
for  on  my  heart  hath  /  Confusion,  „  143 
Had  /  in  Lyonnesse  about  their  lord,  „  173 
if  she  knows  And  dreads  it  we  are  /. —  To  the  Qu£en  ii  33 
And  /  away  from  judgment.  _  Lover's  Tale  i  103 
piUars  which  from  earth  uphold  Our  childhood,  one 

had  /  away,  „             221 

that  shock  of  gloom  had  /  Unf elt,  „             505 

and  the  rain  Had  /  upon  me,  and  the  gilded  snake  „             623 

I  had  /  Prone  by  the  dashing  runnel  on  the  grass.  „         ii  100 

Anything  /  again  ?  nay —  Rizpah  9 

and  his  friends  that  had  F  in  conflict,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  71 

When  I  had  /  from  off  the  crag  The  Flight  22 

but  now  to  silent  ashes  /  away.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  41 

/  every  purple  Caesar's  aome —  To  Virgil  30 

Fifty  times  the  golden  harvest  /,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  2 

torn  the  ring  In  fright,  and  /  dead.  I'he  Ring  471 

All  his  leaves  F  at  length,  The  Oak  12 
Falling    (See  also  Fast-falling,  Half-falling,  Quick- 
falling,  Slow-falling)     The  jaw  is  /,  The  red 

cheek  paling.  All  Things  will  Die  30 

Long  alleys  /  down  to  twilight  grots,  Ode  to  Memory  107 

F  into  a  still  delight,  And  luxury  Eleanor e  106 

The  leaves  upon  her  /  light —  L.  of  Shalott  iv  21 

Lo,  /  from  my  constant  mind,  Fatima  5 

The  long  brook  /  thro'  the  clov'n  ravine  CEnone  8 

watch  the  emerald-colour'd  water  /  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  96 

Sound  all  night  long,  in  /  thro'  the  dell,  D.  of  F.  Women  183 

content  to  perish,  /  on  the  foeman's  ground,  Locksley  Hall  103 

himself  was  deadly  wounded  F  on  the  dead.  The  Captain  64 

Rising,  /,  like  a  wave.  Vision  of  Sin  125 

Like  moonlight  on  a  /  shower  ?  Margaret  4 

Just  ere  the  /  axe  did  part  The  buming  brain  „     3^ 


II 


Falling 


197 


Fame 


Falling  (continued)    sometimes  in  the  /  day  An  image 

seem'd  to  pass  the  door,  Mariana  in  the  S.  73 

/  prone  he  dug  His  fingers  into  the  wet  earth,  Enoch  Arden  779 

We  tum'd  our  foreheads  from  the  /  sun,  The  Brook  165 

F  had  let  appear  the  brand  of  John—  Aylmer's  Field  509 

And,  /  on  them  like  a  thunderbolt,  Princess,  Pro.  43 

Uke  silver  hammers  /  On  silver  anvils,  i  216 

slanted  forward,  /  in  a  land  Of  promise ;  ,''          H  139 

And  /  on  my  face  was  caught  and  known.  „          iv  270 

Or,  /,  protomartyr  of  our  cause,  Die :  ',              505 

I  watch  the  twilight  /  brown  All  round  To  F.  d!  Maurice  14 

Or  kill'd  in  /  from  his  horse.  /n  Mem.  vi  40 

I,  /  on  his  faithful  heart,  ,,     xviii  14 

I  wander,  often  /  lame,  xxiii  6 
/  with  my  weight  of  cares  Upon  the  great  world's 

altar-stairs  ^p  14 

And,  /,  idly  broke  the  peace  Of  hearts  "        hiii  5 

When  twilight  was  /,  Maud,  Maud,  Maud  I  xii  2 

One  /  upon  each  of  three  fair  queens.  Com.  of  Arthur  276 

Till  /  mto  Lot's  forgetfuhiess  I  know  not  thee,  GaretJi  and  L.  96 

While  slowly  /  as  a  scale  that  falls,  Marr.  ofGeraint  525 

And  felt  the  warm  tears  /  on  his  face ;  Geraint  and  E.  586 
in  the  /  afternoon  retum'd  The  huge  Earl 

Doorm  59I 

As  children  learn,  be  thou  Wiser  for/!  Bcdin  and  Bcdan  76 

Past  eastward  from  the  /  sun.  320 

and  reel'd  Almost  to  /  from  his  horse ;  Pdleas  and  E.  24 

darkness  /,  sought  A  prioiy  not  far  off,  „        213 

those  who  /  down  Look'd  up  for  heaven  Pass,  of  Arthur  111 

Grew  drearier  toward  twilignt  /,  123 

To  stay  his  feet  from  /,  and  his  spirit  Lover's  Tale  i  142 

upon  the  dewy  pane  F,  unseal'd  our  eyelids,  ,             265 

streak'd  or  starr'd  at  intervals  With  /  brook  „            405 

F  in  whispers  on  the  sense,  ^^            720 

taken  Some  years  before,  and  /  hid  the  frame.  ,"        iv  217 

He  /  sick,  and  seeming  close  on  death,  „            258 

F  about  their  shrines  before  their  Gods,  Tiresias  105 

roll  Eising  and  /—for,  Mother,  The  Wreck  54 

moon  was  /  greenish  thro'  a  rosy  glow,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  178 

and  from  each  The  light  leaf  /  fast,  Pro.  to  Gen.  Handey  2 

Ihon/,  Rome  arising.  To  Virgil  3 

A  noise  of  /  weights  that  never  fell.  The  Bing  410 

slant  His  bolt  from  /  on  your  head —  Eavfy  81 

Or  cataract  music  Of  /  torrents.  Merlin  and  the  G.  47 

poplars  made  a  noise  of  /  showers.  Lancelot  and  E.  411 

A  dying  echo  from  a  /  waU ;  Ancient  Sage  263 

/  drop  will  make  his  name  As  mortal  as  my  own.  Epilogue  60 

Falling  out    And  blessings  on  the  /  0  Princess  ii  6 

Fall  out    When  wefo  with  those  we  love  8 

Fallow  (adj.)    the  tufted  plover  pipe  along  the  " 

.  ^}^^'  ,     , .  .  ^<^y  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  18 

And  m  the  /  leisure  of  my  life  Audiey  Court  77 

A  thousand  hearts  lie  /  in  these  halls,  Princess  ii  400 
Saving  Ms  life  on  the  /  flood.                                 Batt.  of  Brunanburh  61 

FaUow  (s)     By  many  a  field  and  /,  The  Brook  44 

On  earth  a  fruitless  /,  Demeter  and  P.  118 

On  icy  /And  faded  forest.  Merlin  and  the  G.  84 

False  (ad].)    The  /,  /  arrow  went  aside,  Oriana  39 

there  seem'd  A  touch  of  something  /,  Edwin  Morris  74 

Were  no  /  passport  to  that  easy  reabn,  Aylmer's  Field  183 

Coohng  her  /  cheek  with  a  featherian,  „            289 

So  /,  he  partly  took  himself  for  true ;  Sea  Dreams  185 
o'er  her  wounded  hunter  wept  Her  Deity /in  hmnan- 

amorous  tears ;  Lucretius  90 

The  raillery,  or  grotesque,  or  /  sublime —  Princess  iv  588 

vainlier  than  a  hen  To  her  /  daughters  in  the  pool ;  „       v  329 

As  true  to  thee  as  /,  /,  /  to  me  !  „      vi  204 

Ah  /  but  dear,  Dear  traitor,  too  much  loved,  „          292 

Ring  out  /  pride  in  place  and  blood,  In  Mem.  cvi  21 

silent  thing  that  had  made  /  haste  to  the  grave—  Maud  7  i  58 

love  has  closed  her  sight  And  given  /  death  ,,  xviii  68 

'  as  a  /  knight  Or  evil  kii^  before  my  lance  Gareth  and  L.  5 

Or  whether  some  /  sense  in  her  own  self  Marr.  of  Geraint  800 

whom  his  own  ear  had  heard  Call  herself  /:  Geraint  and  E.  114 

like  that  /  pair  who  turn'd  Flying,  „            176 


False  (adj.)  (continued)  Led  from  the  territory  of /Limours  Geraint  and  E.  431 

as  /  and  foul  As  the  poach'd  filth  that  floods  Merlin  and  V.  797 

(For  in  a  wink  the  /  love  turns  to  hate)  „            852 

Then  her  /  voice  made  way,  broken  with  sobs :  „            857 

'  Alas  that  ever  a  knight  should  be  so  /.'  Pdleas  and  E.  450 

crjdng  '  F !  and  I  held  thee  pure  as  Guinevere.'  „            522 

'  Am  I  but  /  as  Guinevere  is  pure  ?  ,            524 

'  Is  the  Queen/? '  and  Percivale  was  mute.  ,''            532 

shouting, '  F,  And  /  with  Gawain !  „            545 

'  Thou  art  /  as  Hell :  slay  me :  ,,            576 

when  the  land  Was  freed,  and  the  Queen  /,  Last  Tournament  339 

'  Ah  then,  /  hunter  and  /  harper,  „              567 

If  this  /  traitor  have  displaced  his  lord,  Guinevere  216 

raill'd  at  those  Who  calPd  him  the  /  son  of  Gorlois :  „        288 
lets  the  wife  Whom  he  knows  /,  abide  and  rule  the  house :       „        515 

To  whom  my  /  voluptuous  pride,  „        641 

Lest  the  /  faith  make  merry  over  them !  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  82 
compass,  Uke  an  old  friend  /  at  last  In  our  most  need,        Columbus  70 

when  creed  and  race  Shall  bear  /  witness,  Akhar's  Dream  98 

False  (s)     Hears  httle  of  the  /  or  just.'  Two  Voices  117 

what,  I  would  not  aught  of  /—  Princess  v  402 

And  flashes  into  /  and  true.  In  Mem.  xvi  19 

Ring  out  the  /,  ring  in  the  true.  ,,          cvi  8 

By  taking  true  for  /,  or  /  for  true ;  Geraint  and  E.  4 

And  sunder  /from  true,  Mechanophilus  2 

False-eyed    F-e  Hesper,  unkind.  Leonine  Eleg.  16 

Falsehood    F  shall  bare  her  plaited  brow ;  Clear-headed  friend  11 

A  gentler  death  shall  F  die,  „                  16 

To  war  with  /  to  the  knife.  Two  Voices  131 

The  /  of  extremes !  Of  old  sat  Freedom  24 

Your  /  and  yourself  are  hateful  to  us :  Princess  iv  545 
selfsame  aspect  of  the  stars,  (Oh  /  of  all  starcraft !)      Lover's  Tale  i  200 

Falsely    '  F,  f  have  ye  done,  O  mother,'  Lady  Clare  29 

you  might  play  me  /,  having  power.  Merlin  and  V.  515 

looking  at  her.  Full  courtly,  yet  not/,  Lancelot  and  E.  236 

Falser    F  than  all  fancy  fathoms,  /  than  Locksley  Hall  41 

all  Her  /  self  slipt  from  her  like  a  robe,  Princess  vii  161 

Falter    Whose  spirits  /  in  the  mist,  You  ask  me,  why  3 

He  to  lips,  that  fondly  /,  £.  of  Burleigh  9 

wirer  of  their  innocent  hare  F  before  he  took  it.  Aylmer's  Field  491 

make  Our  progress  /  to  the  woman's  goal.'  Princess  vi  127 

I  /  where  I  firmly  trod,  /«  Mem.  Iv  13 

When  the  happy  Yes  F's  from  her  lips,  Maud  I  xvii  10 

Nor  let  her  true  hand  /,  nor  blue  eye  Moisten,  Geraint  and  E.  512 

the  fire  within  him  would  not  /;  Parnassus  19 

Falter'd    I  /  from  my  quest  and  vow  ?  Holy  Grail  568 

even  in  the  middle  of  his  song  He  /,  Guinevere  303 

Faltereth    My  tremulous  tongue  /,  Eleanore  136 

Faltering    Made  me  most  happy,  /  *  I  am  thine.'  Gardener's  D.  235 

low  voice,  F,  would  break  its  syllables.  Love  and  Duty  39 

her  voice  F  and  fluttering  in  her  throat,  Princess  ii  187 

Went  /  sideways  downward  to  her  belt,  Merlin  and  V.  850 

/  hopes  of  relief,  Def.  of  Lucknow  90 

Falteringly    Phihp  standing  up  said  / '  Annie,  Enoch  Arden  284 

Fame    threaded  The  secretest  walks  of  /:  The  Poet  10 

with  a  worm  I  balk'd  his  /.  D.  of  F.  Women  155 

I  remember'd  Everard's  college  /  The  Epic  46 

now  much  honour  and  much  /  were  lost.'  M.  d' Arthur  109 

among  us  lived  Her  /  from  lip  to  Up.  Gardener's  D.  51 

Whereof  my  /  is  loud  amongst  mankind,  St.  S.  Stylites  81 

'  Name  and  / !  to  fly  sublime  Thro'  the  courts,  Vision  of  Sin  103 

May  beat  a  pathway  out  to  wealth  and/.  Aylmer's  Field  439 

my  grief  to  find  her  less  than  /,  Princess  i  73 

With  only  F  for  spouse  and  your  great  deeds  „      Hi  242 

nor  would  we  work  for/;  ^            261 

chattels,  mincers  of  each  other's  /,  "        iv  515 

Preserve  a  broad  approach  of/.  Ode" on  Well.  78 

The  proof  and  echo  of  aU  human  /,  ,,         145 

Their  ever-loyal  iron  leader's  /,  229 

The  /  is  quench'd  that  I  foresaw.  In  Mem.  Ixxiii  5 

What  /  is  left  for  human  deeds  n 

O  hoUow  wraith  of  dying  /,  "                 13 

So  here  shall  silence  guard  thy  /;  "         i^xv  17 

To  breathe  my  loss  is  more  than  /,  ,"      Ixxvii  15 

his  honest  /  should  at  least  by  me  be  maintained :  Maud  /  1 18 


Fame 


198 


Fancy 


Fame  (continued)    And  one — they  call'd  her  F ;  and 
one, — 
And  lost  to  life  and  use  and  name  and  /. 

(repeat) 
such  fire  for  /,  Such  trumpet-blowings  in  it, 
My  use  and  name  and  /. 
Upon  my  Ufe  and  use  and  name  and  /, 
And  into  such  a  song,  such  fire  for  /, 
felt  them  slowly  ebbing,  name  and  /.' 
touching  /,  howe'er  ye  scorn  my  song. 
For  /,  could  /  be  mine,  that  /  were  thine, 


'  Man  dreams  of  F  while  woman  wakes  to  love.' 

F,  The  F  that  follows  death  is  nothing 

what  is  i?"  in  life  but  half-disfame, 

the  scroll '  I  follow  /.' 

this  for  motto, '  Rather  use  than  /.' 

F  with  men,  Being  but  ampler  means  to  serve 

Use  gave  me  F  at  first,  and  F  again 

Right  well  know  I  that  F  is  half-disfame. 

That  other  /,  To  one  at  least,  who  hath  not  children, 

concluded  in  that  star  To  make  /  nothing. 

I  rather  dread  the  loss  of  use  than  /; 


Gareth  and  L.  113 

Merlin  and  V.  214,  970 
417 
304 
374 
417 
437 
444 
447 
460 
463 
465 
„  476 

480 


493 
504 
505 
513 
519 


Bom  to  the  glory  of  thy  name  and  /, 
May  not  your  crescent  fear  for  name  and  / 
'  I  am  wrath  and  shame  and  hate  and  evil  /, 
courtliness,  and  the  desire  of  /, 
I  must  not  dwell  on  that  defeat  of  /. 
now  much  honour  and  much  /  were  lost.' 
aU  the  clearness  of  his  /  hath  gone 
As  heir  of  endless  / — 

patriot — soldier  take  His  meed  of  /  in  verse ; 
And  so  does  Earth ;  for  Homer's  /, 
Her  ancient  /  of  Free — 
honouring  your  fair  /  Of  Statesman, 
F  blowing  out  from  her  golden  trumpet 
'  Take  comfort  you  have  won  the  Painter's  /,' 
What  /?    I  am  not  Raphael, 
Wrong  there !    The  painter's  /? 
Her  sad  eyes  plead  for  my  own  /  with  me 
thy  /  Is  blown  thro'  all  the  Troad, 
Famed    See  Far-famed,  First-famed 
Fame-lit    Bard  whose  f-l  laurels  glance 
Familiar    And  pace  the  sacred  old  /  fields, 
like  bright  eyes  of  /  friends, 
till  the  things  /  to  her  youth  Had  made  a  silent 

answer : 
Surely  his  King  and  most  /  friend 
whence  the  Royal  mind,  /  with  her, 
bones  were  blest  Among  /  names  to  rest 
grow  F  to  the  stranger's  child ; 


Lancelot  and  E.  1372 

1400 

Pelleas  and  E.  568 

Guinevere  482 

628 

Pass,  of  Arthur  211 

Lover's  Tale  i  789 

Ancient  Sage  147 

Epilogue  33 

58 

The  Fleet  9 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  14 

Vastness  21 

Romney's  R.  43 

:;    '& 

Death  of  (Enone  36 


To  Victor  Hugo  4 

Enoch  Arden  625 

Holy  Grail  688 

Lover's  Tale  iv  95 
Lancelot  and  E.  592 
Princess  iv  235 
In  Mem.  xviii  7 
"20 
F  up  from  cradle-time,  so  wan,  Balin  and  Balan  591 

Familiarity    Such  dear  familiarities  of  dawn  ?  Aylmer's  Field  131 

Family    the  /  tree  Sprang  from  the  midriff  of  a  prostrate 

king—  „  15 

A  fieiy  /  passion  for  the  name  Of  Lancelot,  Lancelot  and  E.  411 

Famine     Blight  and /,  plague  and  earthquake,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  115 

A/ after  laid  them  low.  The  Victim  2 

*  Help  us  from  /  And  plague  and  strife !  „  9 

And  Wight  and  /  on  all  the  lea :  „        46 

shipwrecks,  f's,  fevers,  fighis.  Mutinies,  Columbus  225 

when  I  spake  of  /,  plague,  Slmne-shattering  earthquake,       Tiresias  60 

to  stay.  Not  spread  the  plague,  the  /;  Demster  and  P.  134 

earthquake,  or  the  /,  or  the  pest !  Faith  4 

Famishing    /  populace,  wharves  forlorn ;  Vastness  14 

Famous     Plenty  corrupts  the  melody  That  made  thee  /  once,    Blackbird  16 

fellowship  of  /  knights  Whereof  this  world  holds 

record.  M.  d' Arthur  15 

Thy  /  brother-oak.  Talking  Oak  296 

That  many  a  /  man  and  woman,  Princess  iv  445 

Thine  island  loves  thee  well,  thou  /  man.  Ode  on  Well.  85 

rather  proven  in  his  Paynim  wars  Than  /  jousts ;     Balin  and  Balan  39 
the  most  /  man  of  all  those  times,  Merlin  and  V.  166 

lance  had  beaten  down  the  knights,  So  many  and 

/  names ;  Holy  Grail  364 

I  will  make  thee  with  my  spear  and  sword  As  /—        Pelleas  and  E.  46 


Famous  (continued)    fellowship  of  /  knights  Whereof 

this  world  holds  record.  Pass,  of  Arthur  183 

And  mingled  with  the  /  kings  of  old,  Tiresias  171 

Fan  (s)     To  spread  into  the  perfect  /,  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  17 

toys  in  lava,  f's  Of  sandal,  amber.  Princess,  Pro.  18 

Fan  (verb)     A  soft  air  /'  s  the  cloud  apart ;  Tithonus  32 

/  my  brows  and  blow  The  fever  from  my  cheek.  In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  8 

Fancied     (See  also  Ever-fancied)     I  had  /  it  would  be  fair.  Maud  I  vi6 

she  /  '  Is  it  for  me  ?  '  Lancelot  and  E.  822 

I  /  that  my  friend  For  this  brief  idyll  Tiresias  187 

In  impotence  of  /  power.  A  Character  24 

Beneath  all  /  hopes  and  fears  Ay  me.  In  Mem.  xlix  13 

And  then  was  painting  on  it  /  arms.  Merlin  and  V.  474 

Fancy  (s)     And  a  /  as  summer-new  As  the  green  June  Bracken,  etc.  8 

Would  that  my  gloomed  /  were  As  thine,  Supp.  Confessions  68 

With  youthful  /  re-inspired.  Ode  to  Memory  114 

F  came  and  at  her  pillow  sat,  Caress'd  or  chidden  5 
F  watches  in  the  wilderness.  Poor  F  sadder  than 

a  single  star,  „              12 

My  /  made  me  for  a  moment  blest  The  form,  the  form  6 

my  lite  with  /  play'd  Before  I  dream 'd  Miller's  D.  45 

I  thought  that  it  was  /,  and  I  listen'd  May  Queen,  Con.  33 

those  sharp  fancies,  by  down-lapsing  thought  D.  of  F.  Wom^n  49 

And  if  I  said  that  F,  led  by  Love,  Gardener's  D.  59 

In  the  Spring  a  young  man's  /  lightly  turns  Locksley  Hall  20 

Falser  than  all  /  fathoms,  „            41 

Soothe  him  with  thy  finer /awcies,  ,,            54 

I  have  but  an  angry  /:  „          102 

Fool,  again  the  dream,  the  /!  „          173 

foimts  of  inspiration  well  thro'  all  my  /  yet.  „          188 

Across  my  /,  brooding  warm,  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  10 

So  much  your  eyes  my  /  take —  „  L'Envoi  26 

My  /,  ranging  thro'  and  thro',  „                 34 

But  whither  would  my  /  go  ?  Wi.ll  Water.  145 

she  gleam'd  Like  F  made  of  golden  air,  The  Voyage  66 

Set  thy  hoary  fancies  free ;  Vision  of  Sin  156 

evil  fancies  clung  Like  serpent  eggs  together,  Enoch  Arden  479 

His  /  fled  before  the  lazy  wind  Returning,  „          657 

Prattling  the  primrose  fancies  of  the  boy.  The  Brook  19 

But  Edith's  eager  /  hurried  with  him  Aylmer's  Field  208 

many  a  summer  still  Clung  to  their  fancies)  Sea  Dreams  36 

drifting  up  the  stream  In  /,  till  I  slept  again,  „         109 

maiden  fancies ;  loved  to  live  alone  Princess  i  49 

crush  her  pretty  maiden  fancies  dead  „          88 

What  were  those /amctes  ?  „          95 

fair  philosophies  That  lift  the  /;  „  Hi  341 

sweet  as  those  by  hopeless  /  feign'd  „     iv  55 

thine  are /amcies  hatch'd  In  silken-folded  „          66 

Which  melted  Florian's  /  as  she  hung,  „        370 

Thy  face  across  his  /  comes,  „        579 

understanding  all  the  foolish  work  Of  F,  „    vi  111 

fancies  like  the  vermin  in  a  nut  Have  fretted  „        263 

Lay  your  earthly  fancies  down.  Ode  on  Well.  279 

My  /  fled  to  the  South  again.  The  Daisy  108 

flatters  thus  Our  home-bred  fancies :  In  Mem.  all 

My  fancies  time  to  rise  on  wing,  „       xiii  17 

And  but  for  fancies,  which  aver  „            xy9 

dehrious  man  Whose  /  fuses  old  and  new,  „         oti  18 

And  F  light  from  F  caught,  „      xxiii  14 

I  vex  my  heart  with  fancies  dim :  „          xlii  1 

The  /'  s  tenderest  eddy  wreathe,  „         xlix  6 

And  dare  we  to  this  /  give,  „          UH  5 

1  lull  a  /  trouble-tost  „          Ixv  2 

You  wonder  when  my  fancies  play  „         Ixvi  2 

Take  wings  of  /,  and  ascend,  „      Ixxvi  1 

Then  /  shapes,  as  /  can,  The  grief  my  loss  „       Ixxx  5 

backward  /,  wherefore  wake  The  old  bitterness  again,  „  Ixxxiv  46 

111  brethren,  let  the  /  fly.  „  Ixxxvi  12 

Or  villain  /  fleeting  by,  „       cxi  18 

And  all  the  breeze  of  F  blows,  „    cxxii  17 

It  circles  round,  and  /  plays,  „     Con.  81 

The  /  flatter'd  my  mind,  Maud  I  xiy  23 

dreamful  wastes  where  footless  fancies  dwell  „    scviii  69 

these  be  for  the  snare  (So  runs  thy  /)  Gareth  and  L.  1082 

Then  let  her  /  flit  across  the  past,  Marr.  of  Geraint  i 


Fancy 


199 


Farewell 


Fancy  (S)  {continued)    Her  /  dwelling  in  this  dusky 
hall; 

And  sweet  self-pity,  or  the  /  of  it, 

fabler,  these  be  fancies  of  the  churl, 

mood  as  that,  which  lately  gloom'd  Your  / 

So  fixt  her  /  on  him :  let  them  be. 

what  was  once  to  me  Mere  matter  of  the  /, 

To  snare  her  royal  /  with  a  boon 

Kapt  in  this  /  of  his  Table  Round, 

Full  often  lost  in  /,  lost  his  way ; 

that  ghostly  grace  Beam'd  on  his  /, 

Her  fancies  witli  the  sallow-rifted  glooms 

'  ye  never  yet  Denied  my  fancies — 

Not  for  me !    For  her !  for  your  new  /. 

men  Shtpe  to  their  f's  eye  from  broken  rocks 

Give  me  three  days  to  melt  her  /, 

her  ever-veering  /  turn'd  To  Pelleas, 

Appearing,  sent  his  /  back  to  where 

push  me  even  In  /  from  thy  side, 

Made  lU  our  tastes  and  fancies  like, 

graceful  thought  of  hers  Grav'n  on  my  /! 

Ye  cannot  shape  F  so  fair  as  in  this  memory. 

thronging  fancies  come  To  boys  and  girls 

Hinging  within  the  /  had  updrawn  A  fashion 

Fktter'd  the  /  of  my  fading  brain ; 

TIb  /  stirr'd  him  so  He  rose  and  went, 

the  sudden  wail  his  lady  made  Dwelt  in  his  /: 

And  idle  fancies  flutter  me, 

88t  the  maiden  fancies  wallowing 

All  the  chosen  coin  of  /  flashing  out 

The  f adry  fancies  range, 
I        till  I  believing  that  the  girl's  Lean  /, 
r        For  one  monotonous  /  madden'd  her, 

But  chaining  /  now  at  home 
Fancy  (verb)     I  /  her  sweetness  only  due  To  the  sweeter 
blood 

What  tiling  soever  ye  may  hear,  or  see,  Or  / 

Hope !    O  yes,  I  hope,  or  /  that, 
Fancy-borne    Or  f-b  perhaps  upon  the  rise 
Fancy-fed    And  pining  life  be  /-/. 
Fancy-^es    we  that  love  the  mud,  Rising  to  no  /-/. 
Fancying    /  that  her  glory  would  be  great 
Fane    translucent  /  Of  her  still  spirit ; 

hopes  and  hates,  his  homes  and/'s, 

wise  humility  As  befits  a  solemn/: 

Who  built  him  f's  of  fruitless  prayer, 

And  heard  once  more  in  college  f  s 

I  saw  the  tiger  in  the  ruin'd  / 

an  old  /  No  longer  sacred  to  the  Sun, 

anchorite  Would  haunt  the  desolated  /, 

stone  by  stone,  I  rear'd  a  sacred  /, 
Fang    the  f's  Shall  move  the  stony  bases 
Fann'd    sudden  flame,  By  veering  passion  /, 

Thy  bounteous  forehead  was  not  / 

A  summer  /  with  spice. 

Low  breezes  /  the  belfry  bars, 


I 


Marr.  of  Geraint  802 

Geraint  and  E.  349 

Balin  and  Balan  307 

Merlin  and  V.  326 

777 

924 

Lancelot  and  E.  71 

129 

164 

„     886 

1002 

1112 

1216 

1252 

Pelleas'and  E.  356 

493 

Last  Tournament  380 

639 

Lover's  Tale  i  242 

358 

548 

554 

645 

„        a  107 

„         iv  51 

150 

The  Flight  74 

Locksleij  H.,  Sixty  145 

To  Virgil  7 

Early  Spring  39 

The  Ring  336 

404 

To  Ulysses  31 

Maud  I  xiii  33 

Geraint  and  E.  416 

Romney's  R.  158 

Lucretius  10 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  96 

Vision  of  Sin  102 

Merlin  and  V.  217 

Isabel  4 

Lucretius  255 

Ode  on  Well.  250 

In  Mem.  Ivi  12 

„     Ixxxvii  5 

Demeter  and  P.  79 

St.  Telemachus  6 

„  12 

Akbar's  Dream  177 

Princess  vi  57 

Madeline  29 

Elednore  9 

Palace  of  Art  116 

The  Letters  43 

river-breeze.  Which  /  the  gardens  of  that  rival  rose   Alymer's  Field  455 

The  woods  with  Uving  airs  How  softly  /,  Early  Spring  20 

Fantastic    overhead  F  gables,  crowding,  stared :  Godiva  61 

That  lute  and  flute  /  tenderness.  Princess  iv  129 

long  /  night  With  all  its  doings  „  565 

round  of  green,  this  orb  of  flame,  F  beauty ;  In  Me^n.  xxxiv  6 

spreading  made  F  plume  or  sable  pine ;  The  Voyage  44 

Fantastical    So  /  is  the  dainty  metre.  Ilendecasyllabics  14 

Albeit  I  know  my  knights  /,  Lancelot  and  E.  594 

Fantasy    Her  gay-furr'd  cats  a  painted  /,  Princess  Hi  186 

Proud  in  their  /  call  themselves  the  Day,  Gareth  and  L.  633 

Or  whether  it  be  the  maiden's  /,  „  874 

A  border  /  of  branch  and  flower,  Lancelot  and  E.  11 

And  saved  him :  so  she  Uved  in  /.  „  27 

There  kept  it,  and  so  lived  in  /.  „  398 

death  Was  rather  in  the  /  than  the  blood.  „  1132 

Let  be  thy  fair  Queen's  /.  Last  Tournament  197 

Or  prophets  of  them  in  his  /,  Lover's  Tale  iv  12 

Far    Thoro'  the  black-stemm'd  pines  only  the  /  river  shines.  Leonine  Eleg.  2 


Far  (continued)    Sadly  the  /  kine  loweth : 

overtakes  F  thought  with  music  that  it  makes : 

Going  before  to  some  /  shrine, 

I  cannot  sink  So  / — f  down, 

And  fixt  upon  the  /  sea-line ; 

Down  at  the  /  end  of  an  avenue, 

phrases  of  the  hearth,  And  /  allusion, 

O  sweet  and  /  from  cliff  and  scar 

and  died  Of  fright  in  /  apartments. 

Tliro'  the  long  gorge  to  the  /  light 

'  F  and  /  away,'  said  the  dainty  little  maiden, 

(repeat) 
He  seems  so  near  and  yet  so  /, 
Falls  in  a  /  land  and  he  knows  it  not, 
my  blood  Hath  earnest  in  it  of  /  springs 
His  own  /  blood,  which  dwelt  at  Camelot ; 
flame  At  sunrise  till  the  people  in  /  fields, 


Leonine  Eleg.  9 

Two  Voices  438 

On  a  Mourner  17 

My  life  is  full  9 

The  Voyage  62 

Enoch  Arden  358 

Princess  ii  316 

„  iv  9 

„       vi  371 

Ode  on  Well.  213 

CUy  Chad  3,  8 

In  Mem.  xcvii  23 

Geraint  and  E.  497 

Merlin  and  V.  557 

Lancelot  and  E.  803 

Holy  Grail  243 

loyal  to  their  crown  Are  loyal  to  their  own  /  sons,       To  the  Queen  ii  28 

Fierce  in  the  strength  of  /  descent,  Lover's  Tale  i  382 

Then  at  the  /  end  of  the  vault  he  saw  His  lady  „  iv  56 

On  one  /  height  in  one  far-shining  fire,  Tiresias  185 

Some  /  blue  fell.  Early  Spring  34 

Watch'd  my  /  meadow  zoned  with  airy  morn ;  Prog,  of  Spring  69 

D&solate  sweetness — f  and  /  away —  A  ncient  Sage  226 

Far-blazing    F-b  from  the  rear  of  Philip's  house,  Enoch  Arden  727 

Far-brought    love  f-b  From  out  the  storied  Past,  Love  thou  thy  land  1 

Farce     '  Ah  fool,  and  made  myself  a  Queen  of  / !  Princess  vii  243 

For  by  and  by  she  sicken  d  of  the  /,  Tlie  Ring  383 

Fare  (S)     Friday  /was  Enoch's  ministering.  Enoch  Arden  100 

With  store  of  rich  apparel,  sumptuous  /,  Marr.  of  Geraint  709 

My  lord,  eat  also,  tho'  the  /  is  coarse,  Geraint  and  E.  208 

And  serve  thee  costlier  than  with  mowers'  /.' 

Then  said  Geraint,  '  I  wish  no  better/:  ,,  231 

That  Lenten  /  makes  Lenten  thought,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  31 

Fare  (verb)     So  f's  it  since  the  years  began,  Will  Water.  169 

F's  richly,  in  fine  linen,  not  a  hair  Aylmer's  Field  659 

Thy  duty?     What  is  duty?     i^Hheewell!'  Lucretius  281 

0  heart,  how  f's  it  with  thee  now.  In  Mem.  iv  5 
How  f's  it  with  the  happy  dead  ?  „  xliv  1 
bring  us  where  he  is,  and  how  he  f's,  Lancelot  and  E.  547 
F  you  well  A  thousand  times ! —  „  695 
How  f's  my  lord  Sir  Lancelot  ? '                                            „  795 

Fared     so  /  she  gazing  there ;  Princess  vii  41 

Whereon  with  equal  feet  we  /;  In  Mem.  xxv  2 
So  /  it  with  Geraint,  who  thought  and  said,  Marr.  of  Geraint  343 
So  /  it  with  Geraint,  (repeat)                                     Geraint  and  E.  8,  500 

Then  /  it  with  Sir  Pelleas  as  with  one  Pelleas  and  E.  528 

Far-end    When  Molly  cooms  in  fro'  the  f-e  close  Spinster's  S's.  2 
Farewell     Ye  merry  souls,  /.                                            All  Things  will  Die  36 
But  now  /.    I  am  going  a  long  way  With  these 

thou  seest —  M.  d' Arthur  256 

might  I  tell  of  meetings,  of  f's —  Gardener's  D.  251 

F,  like  endless  welcome,  lived  and  died.  Love  and  Duty  68 

a  long  /  to  Locksley  Hall !  Locksley  Hall  189 

Enoch  faced  this  morning  of  /  Brightly  Enoch  Arden  182 

she  said :  '/,  Sir — and  to  you.  Princess  ii  235 

he  reach'd  White  hands  of  /  to  my  sire,  „        v  233 

The  wrath  I  nursed  against  the  world :  /.'  „            437 

Pledge  of  a  love  not  to  be  mine,  /;  „       vi  197 

few  words  and  pithy,  such  as  closed  Welcome,  /,  „    Con.  95 

landing-place,  to  clasp  and  say  ' Fl  In  Mem.  xlvii  16 

In  those  sad  words  I  book  /:  „           Iviii  1 

1  cannot  think  the  thing/.  „  cxxiii  12 
F,  we  kiss,  and  they  are  gone.  „  Con.  92 
own  heart's  heart,  my  ownest  own,  /;  Maud  I  xvHi  74 
Thy  shield  is  mine—/;  Gareth  and  L.  988 
So  that  I  be  not  fall'n  in  fight.    F.'    '  F,  fair 

Prince,'  answer'd  the  stately  Queen.  Marr.  of  Geraint  223 

narrow  court  and  lubber  King,  /!  Merlin  and  V.  119 

F ;  think  gently  of  me,  for  I  fear  My  fate  or  folly,  „            926 

She  needs  must  bid  /  to  sweet  Lavaine.  Lancelot  and  E.  341 

A  thousand  times ! — a  thousand  times  /!  „             696 

Nor  bad  /,  but  sadly  rode  away.  „              987 

Gawain,  who  bad  a  thousand  f's  to  me,  „            1056 

'  Sister,  /  for  ever,'  and  again  '  F,  „           1151 


Farewell 


200 


Fast 


Fvewell  (continued)    Come,  for  you  left  me  taking  no  /, 


Hither,  to  take  my  last  /  of  you. 

I  left  her  and  I  bad  her  no  /; 

F  too — now  at  last — F,  fair  lily. 

Than  to  be  loved  again  of  you — f; 

It  was  their  last  hour,  A  madness  of  f's. 

Nay,  friend,  for  we  have  taken  our  f's. 

see  thee  no  more — F ! ' 

F?    I  should  have  answer'd  his  /. 

F !  there  is  an  isle  of  rest  for  thee. 

But  now  /.    I  am  going  a  long  way  With  these 
thou  seest — 

And  bad  them  to  a  banquet  of  f's. 

We  bad  them  no  /,  but  mounting  these  He  past 

She  remembers  you.    F. 

thinks  She  sees  you  when  she  hears.    Again  /.' 

'  Pray  come  and  see  my  mother,  and  /.' 

for  ever  and  ever,  for  ever  and  ever  /,' 

a  whisper — some  divine  / — 

Strike  on  the  Mount  of  Vision !    So,  /. 

F,  Macready,  since  to-night  we  part ; 

F,  Macready,  since  this  night  we  part ; 

F,  Macready ;  moral,  grave,  sublime ; 

Not  there  to  bid  my  boy  /, 

if  so,  Bid  him  /  for  me, 

F,  whose  living  like  I  shall  not  find, 

F ! — You  will  not  speak,  my  friends, 

deem  me  grateful,  and/! 

And  may  there  be  no  sadness  of  /, 
Far-famed    F-f  for  well-won  enterprise. 
Far-fleeted    F-f  by  the  purple  island-sides. 
Far-folded    F-f  mists,  and  gleaming  halls  of  mom. 
Far-heurd    F-h  beneath  the  moon. 
Fana    {See  also  Crown-farm)    red  cock  crows  from 
the  /  upon  the  hill, 

With  farmer  Allan  at  the  /  abode 

and  set  out,  and  reach'd  the  /. 

discuss'd  the  /,  The  four-field  system, 

Till  last  by  Philip's  / 1  flow 

Philip's  /  where  brook  and  river  meet. 

and  call'd  old  PhiUp  out  To  show  the  /: 

how  he  sent  the  bailifE  to  the  /  To  learn 

He  found  the  bailiff  riding  by  the  /, 

ask'd  her  '  Are  you  from  the  /? ' 

We  bought  the  /  we  tenanted  before. 

closed  her  access  to  the  wealthier /'s, 

princely  halls,  and  f's,  and  flowing  lawns, 

the  broad  woodland  parcell'd  into  f's ; 

Willy  had  not  been  down  to  the  / 

there  past  by  the  gate  of  the  /,  WUly, — 

sitting  at  home  in  my  father's  /  at  eve : 

Feyther  run  oop  to  the  /, 

And  crowded  f  s  and  lessening  towers. 

To  leave  the  pleasant  fields  and  f's ; 

had  need  Of  a  good  stout  lad  at  his  /; 

Harry  was  bound  to  the  Dorsetshire  / 

that  workt  with  him  up  at  the  /, 

the-y  does  it  at  Willis's  /, 

An*  'cos  o'  thy  /  by  the  beck, 

Ev'n  the  homely  /  can  teach  us 

Fur  the  gell  o'  the  /  'at  slep  wi'  tha 

Moother  'ed  bean  a-naggin  about  the  gell  o'  the  /, 

mine  the  hall,  the  /,  the  field ; 

on  waste  and  wood,  On  /  and  field 


Lancelot  and  E.  1274 

1304 

1396 

Pelleas  and  E.  302 

Guinevere  103 

„        117 

„        580 

615 

Pass,  of  Arthur  35 

424 

Lover's  Tale  iv  186 

„  386 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  190 

193 

„  196 

Despair  58 

Ancient  Sage  225 

286 

To  W.  C.  Macready  1 

"  12 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  42 

Romney's  R.  147 

In  Mem.  W.  G.  Ward  1 

The  Wanderer  3 

16 

Crossing  the  Bar  11 

Kate  22 

Princess  vii  166 

Tiihonus  10 

D.ofF.  Women  184: 


May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  23 

Bora  1 

,,129 

Audley  Court  33 

The  Brook  31 

38 

121 

141 

153 

209 

222 

Aylmer's  Field  503 

„  654 

„  847 

Grandmother  33 

41 

90 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  54 

In  Mem.  xill 

„         cii  22 

First  Quarrel  18 

19 

24 

Village  Wife  119 

Spinster's  S's.  73 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  26 

Owd  Rod  51 

69 

The  Ring  169 

Prog,  of  Spring  23 


How  be  the  /  gittin  on  ?  noaways.  Church-warden,  etc.  3 

war  dashing  down  upon  cities  and  blazing  fa,  The  Dawn  8 

Farmer    With  /  Allan  at  the  farm  abode  Dora  1 

Far  off  the  /  came  into  the  field  And  spied  her  not ;  „  74 

when  the  /  pass'd  into  the  field  He  spied  her,  „  85 

Francis  Hale,  The  f's  son,  who  lived  across  the  bay,     Audley  Court  75 
The  /  vext  packs  up  his  beds  and  chairs,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  39 

robb'd  the  /  of  his  Dowl  of  cream :  Princess  v  223 

There  was  a  /  in  Dorset  of  Harry's  kin,  First  Quarrel  17 

•  The  /  dared  me  to  do  it,'  he  said ;  Rizpah  26 

Howiver  was  British  f's  to  stan'  agean  Owd  Rod  46 


Farmin'    An'  thy  /'  es  clean  es  thysen,' 
Farmstead    he,  by  /,  thorpe  and  spire. 
Far-off    And  the  f-o  stream  is  dumb, 

F-o  the  torrent  call'd  me  from  the  cleft : 
I  dimly  see  My  f-o  doubtful  purpose. 
In  those  f-o  seven  happy  years  were  born ; 
her  f-o  cousin  and  betrothed, 
sorcerer,  whom  a  f-o  grandsire  burnt 
to  catch  The  f-o  interest  of  tears  ? 
The  brook  alone  f-o  was  heard. 
And  one  f-o  divine  event, 
the  f-o  sail  is  blown  by  the  breeze 
some  f-o  touch  Of  greatness  to  know 
The  storm,  you  hear  F-o,  is  Muriel — 
Only  to  hear  and  see  the  f-o  sparkling  bruie. 
In  days  f-o,  on  that  dark  earth,  be  true  ? 
deep  Down  upon  f-o  cities  while  they  dance — 
from  him  flits  to  warn  A  f-o  friendship 
For  have  the  f-o  hymns  of  May, 
Farran'd  (fashioned)    See  Owd-farran'd 
Far-renowned    f-r  brides  of  ancient  song 
Far-rolling    Seem'd  those  f-r,  westward-smiling 

seas, 
Far-seen    Amid  thy  melancholy  mates  f-s, 
Far-shadowing    half  in  light,  and  half  F-s 
Far-shining    On  one  far  height  in  one  f-s  fire. 

'  One  height  and  one  f-s  fire ' 
Far-sighted    F-s  summoner  of  War  and  Waste 
Far-sounded    Geraint,  a  name  f-s  among  men 
Farther    With  /  lockings  on. 
Farthest    But  from  my  /  lapse,  my  latest  ebb. 


Spinster's  S's.  77 

Wm  Water.  137 

The  Owl  i  3 

(Enone  54 

„     251 

Enoch  Arden  686 

The  Brook  75 

Princess  i  6 

In  Mem.  i  8 

„        xcv  7 

„  Con.  143 

Maud  I  ivi 

Lancdet  and  E.  450 

rhe  Ring  139 

Lotos-Eders,  C.  S.  98 

Tiihonus  48 

Merlin  and  V.  114 

Demetir  and  P.  90 

To  Matter  of  B.  10 

D.  of  F.  Women  n 

Last  Tournanent  587 

Lover's  Tde  i  489 

Princess,Con.  42 

Tireiias  185 

„      186 

Ded.  of  Idylls  31 

Marr.  of  Geraint  427 

Miller's  D.  231 

Lover's  Tale  i  90 


Far-welter'd  (overthrown)    Woorse  nor  a  f-w  yowe :  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  32 

Fashion  (S)     After  the  /  of  the  time,  Arabian  Nights  119i 

Looks  freshest  in  the  /  of  the  day :  The  Epic  32! 

I  know  your  sex.  From  the  /  of  your  bones.  Vision  of  Sin  182 

In  sailor  /  roughly  sermonizing  Enoch  Arden  204 

Fire-hollowing  tins  in  Indian  /,  „          569 

No  more  in  soldier  /  will  he  greet  Ode  on  Well.  21 

veil  His  want  in  forms  for  f's  sake,  In  Mem.  cxi  6 
What  the  /  of  the  men  ? '     '  They  be  of  foolish  /, 

O  Sir  King,  The  /  of  that  old  knight-errantry  Gareth  and  L.  627 

and  sumptuously  According  to  his  /,  Geraint  and  E.  285 

In  any  knightly  /  for  her  sake.  Lancelot  and  E.  871 

Knowest  thou  not  the  /  of  our  speech  ?  Pelleas  and  E.  100 

had  updrawn  A  /  and  a  phantasm  of  the  form  Lover's  Tale  i  645 
In  some  such  /  as  a  man  may  be                           Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  133 

Fashion  (verb)    skill  To  strive,  to  /,  to  fulfil —  In  Mem.  cxiii  7 

Fashion'd    {See  also  Altar-fashion'd,  Cleaner-fashion'd, 
Noblier-fashion'd,  Owd-farran'd)    holy  hand  hath 

/  on  the  rock  Gareth  and  L.  1197 

/  for  it  A  case  of  silk,  and  braided  Lancelot  and  E.  7 

F  by  Merlin  ere  he  past  away.  Holy  Grail  168 

brooks  Are  /  by  the  channel  which  they  keep).  Lover's  Tale  i  567 

a  people  have  /  and  worship  a  Spirit  Kapiolani  1 

F  after  certain  laws ;  Poets  and  Critics  5 

Fast  (adj.)    my  friend  was  he.  Once  my  /  friend :  Sir  J.  Oldcastte  62 

By  changes  all  too  fierce  and  /  Freedom  22 

Fast  (s)     all  the  passion  of  a  twelve  hours'  /.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  306 

heard  mass,  broke  /,  and  rode  away :  Lancelot  and  E.  415 

life  of  prayer.  Praise,  /  and  alms ;  Holy  Grail  5 

She  gave  herself,  to  /,  and  alms.  „        77 

about  him  everywhere,  despite  All  /  and  penance.  „      631 

Fast  with  your  f's,  not  feasting  Guinevere  678 

Penance  ?      'F,  Hairshirt  and  scourge —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  141 

Fast  (adv.)    Two  lives  bound  /  in  one  Circumstance  5 

And  I  believe,  if  you  were  /  my  wife,  Enoch  Arden  414 
We  must  bind  And  keep  you  /,  my  Rosalind,  F,  f, 

my  wild-eyed  Rosalind,  Rosalind  43 

We'll  bind  you  /  in  silken  cords,  „        49 
'  Lead,  and  I  follow,'  and  /  away  she  fled, 
(repeat)                                                                Gareth  and  L.  760,  990 

Fast  (verb)    If  it  may  be,  /  Whole  Lents,  St.  S.  Stylites  181 

bear  his  armour?  shall  we /,  or  dine ?  Geraint  and  E.  490 
brother,  /  thou  too  and  pray,  And  tell  thy  brother 

knights  to  /  and  pray,  Holy  Grail  125 


Fast 


201 


Father 


Fast  (verb)  (coniinued)    F  with  your  fasts,  not  feasting 

witb  your  feasts ; 
Fasted    she  pray'd  and  /  all  the  more. 

she  pray  d  and  /,  tiU  the  sun  Shone, 

and  myself  /  and  pray'd  Always, 

F  and  pray'd  even  to  the  uttermost, 

F  and  pray'd,  Telemachus  the  Saint. 
Fasten'd    if  she  be  /  to  this  fool  lord, 

They  had  /  the  door  of  his  cell. 

they  /  me  down  on  my  bed. 
Fastening    loosed  the/ 's  of  his  arms. 
Fast-falling    follow  the  deer  By  these  tall  firs  and 

our  /-/  burns ; 
Fasting    come  To  me  by  prayer  and  /? ' 
Fast-rooted    F-r  in  the  fruitful  soil. 
Fat  (adj.)     '  Old  Summers,  when  the  monk  was  /, 

All  over  with  the  /  affectionate  smile 

A  lord  of  /  prize-oxen  and  of  sheep, 

grew  /  On  Lusitanian  summers. 
Fat  (s)     Padded  romid  with  flesh  and  /, 
Fat  (verb)    The  poor  man's  money  gone  to  /  the  friar. 
Fatal    '  He  owns  the  /  gift  of  eyes. 

The  /  byword  of  all  years  to  come. 

So  sweet  a  voice  and  vague,  /  to  men, 

Thy  spirit  ere  our  /  loss  Did  ever  rise 

That  m  Vienna's  /  walls  God's  finger  touch'd  him. 

When  now  we  rode  upon  this  /  quest 

which  lived  True  life,  Uve  on — and  if  the  / 
kiss, 

eyes  of  the  lighthouse  there  on  the  /  neck 

And  in  the  /  sequence  of  this  world 

but  hold  the  Present  /  daughter  of  the  Past, 

But  ere  he  left  your  /  shore, 

'  Ever  since  You  sent  the  /  ring ' — 

The  /  ring  lay  near  her ; 
Fatalist    we  were  nursed  in  the  drear  night-fold  of  your 

/  creed. 
Fate    hers  by  right  of  f ull-accomplish'd  F ; 

heroic  hearts.  Made  weak  by  time  and  /, 

For  love  in  sequel  works  with  /, 

The  sphere  thy  /  allots : 

we  three  Sat  muffled  Uke  the  F's ; 

Ask  me  no  more :  thy  /  and  mine  are  seal'd : 

Once  the  weight  and  /  of  Europe  hung. 

The  limit  of  his  narrower  /, 

As  link'd  with  thine  in  love  and  /, 

Of  her  whose  gentle  will  has  changed  my  /, 

She  is  coming,  my  life,  my  /; 

For  man  is  man  and  master  of  his  /. 

Ay — so  that  /  and  craft  and  folly  close, 

grant  me  some  sUght  power  upon  your  /, 

My  /  or  folly,  passing  gayer  youth 

omens  may  foreshadow  /  to  man  And  woman, 

no  power  on  F,  Theirs,  or  mine  own ! 

Fairer  thy  /  than  mine. 

But  if  sin  be  sin,  not  inherited  /, 

I  bide  no  more,  I  meet  my  /, 

And  in  her  fleet  her  F. 

For  he — your  India  was  his  F, 


Guinevere  678 

Holy  GraU  82 

98 

„        130 

„        132 

St.  Teleinachus  11 

Maud  I  xvi  24 

Bizpah  42 

„       46 

Geraint  and  E.  511 

Gareth  and  L.  91 

Holy  GraU  96 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  38 

Talking  Oak  41 

Sea  Dreams  155 

Princess,  Con.  86 

WiU  Water.  7 

Vision  of  Sin  177 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  150 

Two  Voices  286 

Godiva  67 

Princess  iv  64 

In  Mem.  xli  1 

„  Ixxxv  19 

Geraint  and  E.  703 


Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  2 

Despair  9 

Ancient  Sage  274 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  105 

To  Marq.  ofDufferin  33 

The  Ring  362 

450 


There  is  a  2^  beyond  us.'     Nothing  knew. 

What  meant  they  by  their  '  F  beyond  the  F's ' 

a  jubilant  challenge  to  Time  and  to  F; 

Man  is  but  the  slave  of  F. 

and  a  curse,  when  I  leam'd  my  /. 
Fated    (See  also  Ill-fated)     And  bring  the  /  fairy 
Prince. 

may  The  /  channel  where  thy  motion  lives 
Fat-Iaced    said  the  /-/  curate  Edward  Bull,  (repeat) 


I 


Father  (s)    (See  aZso'iFeyther,  God-father) 
That  stand  beside  my  f's  door, 
'  Where  wert  thou  when  thy  /  play'd 

ito  vex  me  with  his  f's  eyes  I 
And  there  the  Ionian  /  of  the  rest ; 
My  /  held  his  hand  upon  his  face ; 
her  that  died  To  save  hex  f's  vow ; 


poplars  four 


Despair  21 

Palace  of  Art  207 

Ulysses  69 

Day-Dm.,  Arrival  3 

WiU  Water.  218 

Princess  ii  467 

Ode  on  Well.  240 

In  Mem.  Ixiv  21 

„     Ixxxiv  38 

Mavd  I  xviii  23 

„  xxii  62 

Marr.  of  Geraint  355 

Merlin  and  V.  57 

333 

»27 

Tiresias  7 

„      63 

„    130 

The  Wreck  85 

The  Flight  95 

The  Fleet  15 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  21 

Demeter  and  P.  87 

130 

Vastness  21 

Death  of  (Enone  44 

Charity  14 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  56 
De.  Prof.,  Two  G.  19 
Edwin  Morris  42,  90 


Ode  to  Memory  57 

Two  Voices  319 

CEnone  255 

Palace  of  Art  137 

D.ofF.  Women  Wl 

196 


Father  (s)  (continued)    *  My  God,  my  land,  my  / — these  did 

move  D.  of  F.  Wom^n  209 

I  subdued  me  to  my  f's  will ;  „  234 

clasp'd  in  her  last  trance  Her  murder'd  f's  head,  „  267 

in  my  time  a  f's  word  was  law,  "  Dora  27 

he  left  his  f's  house.  And  hired  himself  „    37 

pass'd  his  f's  gate,  Heart-broken,  and  his  /  help'd  „    50 

'  O  F ! — ^if  you  let  me  call  you  so —  „  140 

he  was  wrong  to  cross  his  /  thus :  „  148 

he  will  learn  to  shght  His  f's  memory ;  „  154 

A  flask  of  cider  from  his  f  s  vats,  Audley  Court  27 

Her  /  left  his  good  arm-chair.  Talking  Oak  103 

Puppet  to  a  f's  threat,  Locksley  Hall  42 

O,  the  child  too  clothes  the  /  „  91 

a  boy  when  first  he  leaves  his  f's  field,  „        112 

fell  my  /  evil-starr'd ; — •  „        155 

'  O  seek  my  f's  court  with  me,  Day-Dm.,  Depart.  27 

My  /  left  a  park  to  me,  Amphion  1 

Against  her  f's  and  mother's  will :  Edward  Gray  10 

And  they  leave  her  f's  roof.  L.  of  Burleigh  12 

As  looks  a/ on  the  things  Of  his  dead  son.  The  Letters  23 

Philip  stay'd  (His  /  lying  sick  and  Enoch  Arden  65 

caird  him  F  PhiUp,  PliiUp  gain'd  As  Enoch  lost ;  „        354 

they  begg'd  For  F  Philip  (as  they  call'd  him) 
'  Come  with  us  F  Philip^  he  denied ; 
I  fain  would  prove  A  /  to  your  children :  I  do  think 

They  love  me  as  a  /: 
o'er  her  second  f  stoopt  a  girl. 
Hers,  yet  not  his,  upon  the  f's  knee. 
Uphold  me,  F,  in  my  loneliness  A  little  longer ! 
Never :  no  f's  kiss  for  me — 
let  them  come,  I  am  their/; 
But  evermore  her  /  came  across 
'  O  would  I  take  her  /  for  one  hour, 
He  lean'd  not  on  his  f's  but  himself. 
The  man  was  his,  had  been  his  f's,  friend : 
from  out  a  despot  dream  The  /  pantuig  woke, 
the  /  suddenly  cried,  '  A  wreck, 
my  good  /  thought  a  king  a  king ; 
My  /  sent  ambassadors  with  furs  And  jewels, 
gentleman  of  broken  means  (His  f's  fault) 
I  saw  my  f's  face  Grow  long  and  troubled 
At  last  I  spoke,  '  My  /,  let  me  go. 
To  hear  my  f's  clamour  at  our  backs 
which  I  have  Hard  by  your  f's  frontier : 
In  masque  or  pageant  at  my  f's  court. 
Yet  hangs  his  portrait  in  my  f's  hall 
F  will  come  to  thee  soon ;  (repeat) 
F  will  come  to  his  babe  in  the  nest, 
I  never  knew  my  /,  but  she  says  (God  help  her) 
fell  Into  his  f's  hands,  who  has  this  night. 
The  second  was  my  f's  running  thus : 
Behold  your  f's  letter.' 
since  our  / — Wasps  in  our  good  hive, 
'  then  we  fell  Into  your  f's  hand, 
roughly  spake  My  /,  '  Tut,  you  know  them 
Your  captive,  yet  my  /  wills  not  war : 
'sdeath !  against  my  f's  will.' 
Back  rode  we  to  my  f's  camp,  and  found 
My  /  heard  and  ran  In  on  the  lists. 
The  haggard  f's  face  and  reverend  beard 
My  /  stoop'd,  re-f ather'd  o'er  my  wounds. 
Not  one  word ;  No !  tho'  your  /sues : 
Help,  /,  brother,  help ;  speak  to  the  king : 
the  king  her  /  charm'd  Her  wounded  soS 
Nor  did  her  /  cease  to  press  my  claim. 
And  sidelong  glances  at  my  f's  grief, 

0  silent  /  of  our  Kings  to  be 
her  /  was  not  the  man  to  save, 

1  remember  a  quarrel  I  had  with  yoiu*  /, 
Harry  went  at  sixty,  your  /  at  sixty-five : 
sitting  at  home  in  my  f's  farm  at  eve : 
My  /  raves  of  death  and  wreck, 
O  /,  wheresoe'er  thou  be, 
half's  chimney  glows  In  expectation 


365 
368 

411 

747 

760 

784 

790 

890 

The  Brook  108 

„        114 

Aylmer's  Field  56 

344 

528 

Sea  Dreams  58 

Princess  i  25 

42 

54 

58 

68 

„  105 

„  148 

198 

„      ii  239 

„  Hi  10, 12 

13 

82 

„      iv  402 

„  406 

468 

„  535 

„         v51 

151 

277 

„  298 

331 

„        vi  26 

103 

129 

240 

305 

„  345 

„      vii  87 

107 

Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  7 

Grand/mother  5 

21 

86 

Sailor  Boy  19 

In  Mem.  vi  9 

29 


Father 


202 


Fault 


Father  (s)  (continued)     O  F,  touch  the  east,  and  light 
And  doubtful  joys  the  /  move, 
How  many  a  /  have  I  seen, 
star  Had  fall'n  into  her  f's  grave, 
f's  bend  Above  more  graves, 
Out  f's  dust  is  left  alone  And  silent 
But  crying,  knows  his  /  near ; 

0  /!  O  God !  was  it  well  ?— 
raging  alone  as  my  /  raged  in  his  mood  ? 
sweet  purse-mouth  when  my  /  dangled  the  grapes. 
When  have  I  bow'd  to  her  /, 
Your  /  has  wealth  well-gotten, 
Your  /  is  ever  in  London, 
Why  sits  he  here  in  his  /'s  chair  ? 
Not  touch  on  her  f's  sin : 
That  Maud's  dark  /  and  mine  Had  bound 
Mine,  mine — our  /  's  have  sworn. 
Thou  noble  F  of  her  Kings  to  be, 
'  Her  /  said  That  there  between  the  man 
we  that  fight  for  our  fair  /  Christ, 
thy  /  Lot  beside  the  hearth  Lies  like  a  log. 
Thy  /,  Uther,  reft  From  my  dead  lord 
who  from  the  wrongs  his  /  did  Would  shape 
Aflfinning  that  his  /  left  him  gold, 

1  thought,  but  that  your  /  came  between, 
And  loved  me  serving  in  my  f's  hall : 
I  should  have  slain  your  /,  seized  yourself. 
My  /  hath  begotten  me  in  his  wrath. 
My  /  died  in  battle  against  the  King, 
My /died  in  battle  for  thy  King, 
Leaving  her  household  and  good  /, 
Here  laugh'd  the  /  saying  '  Fie,' 
Nay,  /,  nay  good  /,  shame  me  not 
But,  /,  give  me  leave,  an  if  he  will. 
Crept  to  her  /,  while  he  mused  alone, 
'  jF,  you  call  me  wilful,  and  the  fault  Is  yours 
Sweet  /,  will  you  let  me  lose  my  wits  ? ' 
Sweet  /,  I  behold  him  in  my  dreams 
My  /,  to  be  sweet  and  serviceable 
Then  her  /  nodding  said,  '  Ay,  ay, 
Her/'s  latest  word  humm'd  in  her  ear, 
brother's  love.  And  your  good  f's  kindness.' 
her  /:  '  Ay,  a  flash,  I  fear  me. 
Then  came  her  /,  saying  in  low  tones, 
call'd  The  /,  and  all  three  in  hurry 
So  dwelt  the  /  on  her  face,  and  thought 
'  Peace,'  said  her  /,  '  0  my  child, 
'  Highest  ? '  the  /  answer'd,  echoing  '  highest  ? ' 
'  Sweet  /,  all  too  faint  and  sick  am  I 
so  let  me  pass.  My  /,  howsoe'er  I  seem  to  you, 
wherefore  cease.  Sweet  /,  and  bid  call 
sweet  /,  tender  and  true,  Deny  me  not,' 
She  ceased :  her  /  promised ; 
Her  /  laid  the  letter  in  her  hand, 
in  testimony.  Her  brethren,  and  her  /, 
'  O  jP  1 '  ask  d  the  maiden, 
A  slender  page  about  her/'s  hall. 
Fought  in  ner/'5  battles?  wounded 
So  said  my  /,  and  himself  was  knight 
So  said  my  / — yea,  and  furthermore, 
Not  even  thy  wise  /  with  his  signs 
one,  a  bard ;  of  whom  my  /  said. 
So  said  my  / — and  that  night  the  bard 
and  the  tales  Which  my  good  /  told  me,  check  me  too 

Nor  let  me  shame  my  f's  memory,  „         317 

And  so  thou  lean  on  our  fair  /  Christ,  „         562 

Before  he  saw  my  day  my  /  died.  Lover's  Tale  i  191 

She  was  motherless  And  I  without  a  /.  „  219 

what  use  To  know  her  /  left  us  just  before  „  293 

that  same  nearness  Were  /  to  this  distance,  „  ii  29 

His  other  /  you !     KLss  him,  „       ii;  174 

he  sent,  an'  the  /  agreed ;  First  QvMrrd  18 

You  count  the  /  of  your  fortune,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  28 

My  /  with  a  child  on  either  knee,  .  „  54 

he  had  stricken  my  /  dead —  V,  of  Maeldune  1 


In  Mem.  xxx  31 
xl9 
liii  1 
„  Ixxxix  48 
xcviii  15 
cv  5 
cxxiv  20 
Mavd  I  i  6 
53 
71 
ivl3 
18 
59 
xiii  23 
xix  17 
37 
43 
Bed.  of  Idj/Us  34 
Com.  of  Arthur  78 
510 
Gareth  and  L.  74 
334 
347 
Marr.  of  Geraint  451 
Geraint  and  E.  314 
„  699 

838 
Balin  and  Balan  283 
Merlin  and  V.  42 
72 
Lancelot  and  E.  14 
200 
207 
219 
748 
750 
752 
763 
767 
770 
780 
945 
970 
994 
1024 
„  1030 

1062 
1078 
„  1086 

1092 
1099 
1110 
„  1130 

1134 
1300 
Holy  Grail  95 
„       581 
Last  Tournament  592 
Guinevere  234 
250 
274 
277 
285 


V.  of  Maeldune  8 
70 


121 

128 

Tiresias  16 

The  Wreck  1 

„        98 

„        99 

Despair  69 


Father  (s)  (continued)    slain  my  /  the  day  before  I  was 
born. 
I  bad  them  remember  mj  f's  death, 
His  f's  have  slain  thy  f's  in  war  or  in  single  strife, 
Thy  f's  have  slain  his  f's,  each  taken  a  life  for 
a  life.  Thy  /  had  slain  his  /, 
The  man  that  had  slain  my  /. 
trembling /'s  call'd  The  God's  own  son 
my  F's  belong'd  to  the  church  of  old, 
the  heart  of  the  /  will  care  for  his  own.' 
'  The  heart  of  the  /  will  spurn  her,' 
one  son  had  forged  on  his  /  and  fled, 
Some  say,  the  Light  was  /  of  the  Night,  And  some, 

the  Night  was /of  the  Light,  Ancient  Sage  247 

This  /  pays  his  debt  with  me.  The  Flight  20 

What  /,  this  or  mine,  was  he,  „         21 
I  loved  him  then ;  he  was  my  /  then.     No  /  now, 

the  tyrant  vassal  of  a  tyrant  vice !  „         24 

My  f's  madness  makes  me  mad — ■  „        59 

And  tho'  these  f's  will  not  hear,  „         67 

who  ?  who  ?  my  /  sleeps !  „        69 

she  knew  this  /  well ;  „         87 

/,  mother, — be  content,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  25 

Gone  our  sailor  son  thy  /,  „                55 
constancy  Which  has  made  your  f's  great         Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  15 

Shall  we  sin  our  f's  sin,  „                    24 
why  The  sons  before  the  f's  die.                            To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  47 

No  !  /,  Spain,  but  Hubert  brings  me  home  The  Ring  59 

F's  fault  Visited  on  the  children !  „       175 

you,  poor  desolate  F,  and  poor  me,  „       303 
'  F  and  Mother  will  watch  you  grow ' — (repeat)      Romney's  E.  104,  106 

and  the  murderous  /  at  rest,  .  .  .  Bandit's  Death  33 

As  we  surpass  our  f's  skill,  Mechanophilus  21 

My  F,  and  my  Brother,  and  my  God  !  Doubt  and  Prayer  8 

Father  (verb)     in  the  round  of  time  Still  /  Truth  ?  Love  and  Duty  5 
Father'd    -See  Re-father'd 

Father-fool    Thwarted  by  one  of  these  old  f-f's,  Aylmer's  Field  390 

Father-grape    f-g  grew  fat  On  Lusitanian  summers.  WiU  Water.  7 

Fatherhood    twelve  sweet  moons  confused  his/.'  Merlin  and  V.  713 

Fatherland    sweet  it  was  to  dream  of  F,  Lotos-Eaters  39 

Fatherless     this  earth  is  a  /  Hell —  Despair  57 

Fatherlike    Appraised  his  weight  and  fondled  /,  Enoch  Arden  154 

Fathom     For  thou  canst  not  /  it.  Poet's  Mind  4 

Falser  than  all  fancy  f's,  Locksley  HaU  41 

Philip  did  not  /  Annie's  mind  :  Enoch  Arden  344 

'Tis  hard  for  thee  to  /  this ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  90 

dangled  a  hundred  /  of  grapes,  V.  of  Maddime  56 

Fathom-deep     Should  gulf  him  f-d  in  brine ;  In  Mem.  x  18 

Fathom'd     Which  none  have  /.  Lover's  Tale  i  518 

Fathomless    half-attain'd  futurity,  Tho'  deep  not  /,  Ode  to  Memory  34 
Fatling     reach  its  /  innocent  arms  And  lazy  lingering  fingers.  Princess  vi  138 

Fatten     many  streams  to  /  lower  lands.  Golden  Year  34 

Fatter     he  was  /  than  his  cure.  Edwin  Morris  15 

No,  there  is  /  game  on  the  moor ;  Maud  I  Hi 

Fault    tJw'  the  f's  were  thick  as  dust  To  the  Queen  18 
'  Proclaim  the  f's  he  would  not  show :                    You  might  have  won  17 

Nor  mine  the  /,  if  losing  both  of  these  Aylmer's  Field  719 

gentleman  of  broken  means  (His  father's  /)  Princess  i  54 

'  My  /'  she  wept '  my  /!  and  yet  not  mine ;  „     Hi  30 

The  child  is  hers — for  every  little  /,  „        v  87 

her  one  /  The  tenderness,  not  yours,  „    vi  185 

as  dearer  thou  for  f's  Lived  over :  „    vii  317 

Not  ours  the  /  if  we  have  feeble  hosts —  Third  of  Feb.  38 

Or  seeming-genial  venial  /,  Will  13 

let  it  be  granted  her :  where  is  the  /?  Maud  I  m'  4 

blind  To  the  f's  of  his  heart  and  mind,  „     xix  68 

'  The  /  was  mine,  the  /  was  mine ' —  „     II  i  I 

'  The  /  was  mine,'  he  whisper'd,  '  fly ! '  „           30 

a  little  /  Whereof  I  was  not  guilty ;  Com.  of  Arthur  341 

wayside  ambushings — No  /  of  thine :  Gareth  and  L.  433 

'If  Enid  errs,  let  Enid  learn  her/.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  132 

creatures  voiceless  thro'  the  /  of  birth,  Geraint  and  E.  266 

and  for  her  /  she  wept  Of  petulancy ;  Merlin  and  V.  952 

He  is  all  /  who  hath  no  /  at  all :  Lancelot  and  E.  132 

you  call  me  wilful,  and  the  /  Is  yours  „             750 


Fault 

Fault  (continued)    Seeing  it  is  no  more  Sir 
Lancelot's  / 
/  and  doubt — no  word  of  that  fond  tale — 
change  your  name :  no  /  of  mine ! 
/  care  not  for  a  name — ^no  /  of  mine, 
beauties  of  the  work  appear  The  darkest  /'s : 
by  the  /  o'  that  ere  maiile — 
wroth  at  things  of  old — No  /  of  mine. 
Blasphemy?  whose  is  the/? 
Father's  /  Visited  on  the  children ! 
be  the  fs  your  Poet  makes  Or  many  or  few, 
the  /  is  less  In  me  than  Art. 


203 


Fear 


Lancelot  and  E.  1075 

Last  Tournament  578 

Sisters  IE.  and,  E.)  69 

77 

106 

ViUage  Wife  17 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  22 

Despair  107 

The  King  175 

To  Mary  Boyle  61 

Eoinney's  R,  8 


Fear  (S)  {continued)     Remaining  utterly  confused  with 


You  make  our  f's  too  gross,  To  one  wJw  ran  down  Eng.  1 

an'  not  the  f's  o'  the  Squire.  Church-warden,  etc.  46 

Some  too  high — no  /of  thine —  Foets  and  Critics  12 

Fanltful    her  great  heart  thro'  all  the  /  Past  Princess  vii  248 

Faultless    Henceforth  be  truer  to  your  /  lord  ?  Lancelot  and  E.  119 

'Arthur,  my  lord,  Arthur,  the/  King,  „             121 

Faultily  /,  icily  regular,  Maud  I  ii  Q 

she  the  /,  the  divine ;  Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  5 

Faun     mountain  quickens  into  Nymph  and  F ;  Liuretius  187 

Arise  and  fly  The  reeling  F,  In  Mem.  cxviii  26 

Faunns    in  the  garden  snared  Picus  and  F,  Lucretius  182 

Favour     (<See  oZ^o  C!ourt-favour)     On  whom  their /'s  fall !       Sir  Galahad  M 

1  came  to  ask  a  /  of  you.'  Enoch  Arden  285 

'  F  from  one  so  sad  and  so  forlorn  „            287 

This  is  the  /  that  I  came  to  ask.'  „            313 

Else  I  withdraw  /  and  countenance  From  you  Aylmer's  Field  307 

Arranged  the  /,  and  assumed  the  Prince.  Princess  iv  602 

Who  have  won  her/!  Maud  I  xii  18 

I  bound  to  thee  for  an^  /  ask'd ! '  Gareth  and  L.  977 

To  seek  a  second  /  at  his  hands.  Marr.  of  Geraint  626 

love  or  fear,  or  seeking  /  of  us,  „             700 

That  he  should  wear  her  /  at  the  tilt.  Lancelot  and  E.  358 

will  you  wear  My  /  at  this  tourney  ? '  „              362 

worn  F  of  any  lady  in  the  lists,  (repeat)  „      364,  474 

find  thy  /  changed  and  love  thee  not ' —  Last  Tournament  500 

Black  with  bridal  f's  mixt !  Forlorn  69 

Might  I  crave  One  /?  Romney's  R.  70 

Favourable     a  /  speed  Ruffle  thy  mirror'd  mast.  In  Mem.  ix  6 

Favour'd     (See  also  White-favour'd)     These  /  lips  of  mine ;     Will  Water.  20 

Favourite     1  know  the  song,  Their/ —  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  3 

Favouritism    '  So  puddled  as  it  is  with  /.'  Princess  Hi  146 

Fawn  (s)    your  arrow-wounded  /  Came  flying  „        ii  270 

That  was  f's  blood,  not  brother's,  „            275 

Ah  Maud,  you  milkwhite  /,  Maud  I  iv  57 

shadow  of  a  bird  Flying,  and  then  a  /;  PeUeas  and  E.  39 

Fawn  (verb)     And  /  at  a  victor's  feet.  Maud  I  vi  30 

Fawn'd    dog  that  had  loved  him  and  /  at  his  knee —  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  9 

Fawning    Crouch'd  /  in  the  weed.  (Enone  201 

Feal  (feel)     I'd  /  mysen  clean  disgraaced.  North.  Cobbler  102 

Feald  (field)     Huzzin'  an'  maazin'  the  blessed /'s  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  62 

nor  a  mortal  beast  o'  the  /.  North.  Cobbler  38 

Fe&Id  (felt)     till  I  /  mysen  ready  to  drop.  Owd  Rod  84 

FSalty     rendering  true  answer,  as  beseem'd  Thy /,  M.  d' Arthur  15 

In  token  of  true  heart  and  /.  Gareth  and  L.  399 

doubt  her  more,  But  rested  in  her  /,  Geraint  and  E.  967 

Friends,  thro'  your  manhood  and  your  /, —  Last  Tournament  97 

Forgetful  of  their  troth  and  /,  Guinevere  442 

j          and  saps  The  /  of  our  friends,  „         521 

1          rendering  true  answer,  as  beseem'd  Thy /,  Pass,  of  Arthur  2^ 

and  give  His  /  to  the  halcyon  hotu" !  The  Wanderer  12 

Fear  (S)     Earth  goes  to  earth,  with  grief,  not  /,  Supp.  Confessions  38 

Moved  from  beneath  with  doubt  and  /.  „             138 

j          Whispering  to  each  other  half  in  /,  Sea-Fairies  5 

I          What  hope  or  /  or  jov  is  thine  ?  Adeline  23 

Roof'd  the  world  with  doubt  and  /,  Eleanore  99 

And  they  cross'd  themselves  for  /,  L.  of  Shallott  iv  49 

'  Think  you  this  mould  of  hopes  and  f's  Two  Voices  28 

heaping  on  the  /  of  iU  The  /  of  men,  „          107 

sittmg,  bumish'd  without  /  The  brand,  „          128 

love  dispell'd  the  /  That  1  should  die  Miller's  D.  89 

I  loved  you  better  for  your/ 's,  „        149 

Acting  the  law  we  live  by  without/;  CEnone  148 

I  shut  my  sight  for  /:  „      188 


Palace  of  Art  269 

I  would  not  brook  my  /  Of  the  other :  D.  of  F.  Women  154 

/  of  change  at  home,  that  drove  him  hence.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  68 

the  low  wind  hardly  breathed  for  /.  Godiva  55 

Boring  a  little  auger-hole  in  /,  „      68 

to  me  is  given  Such  hope,  I  know  not/;  Sir  Galahad  62 

Nor  yet  the  /  of  little  books  Will  Water.  195 

Hush'd  all  the  groves  from  /  of  wrong :  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  13 

All  his  Annie's /'s.  Save,  as  his  Annie's,  Enoch  Arden  184 

Spy  out  my  face,  and  laugh  at  all  your/'s.'  „             216 

Such  doubts  and/ 's  were  common  to  her  state,  „            521 

Has  she  no  /  that  her  first  husband  lives  ? '  „            806 

'Ay,  ay,  poor  soul '  said  Miriam,  '/enow !  ,,            807 

hollow  as  the  hopes  and  /  's  of  men  ?  Lticretius  180 

for  /  This  wliole  foundation  ruin.  Princess  ii  340 

nor  shrink  For  /  our  soUd  aim  be  dissipated  „      Hi  266 

F  Stared  in  her  eyes,  and  chalk'd  her  face,  „       iv  376 

yet  I  blame  you  not  so  much  for/;  „           506 

Six  thousand  years  of  /  have  made  you  that  „           507 

Fatherly/'* — you  used  us  courteously —  ;„        «  216 

Bow-back'd  with/:  „      vi359 

Shall  /'s  and  jealous  hatreds  flame  again  ?  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  41 

The  King  was  shaken  with  holy  /;  The  Victim  57 
it  darkens  and  brightens  and  darkens  like 

my  /,  Window,  On  the  Kill  19 

but  for  /  it  is  not  so.  The  wild  unrest  In  Mem.  xv  14 

All  subtle  thought,  all  curious /'s,  „       xxxii  9 

yields  To  tliat  vague  /  implied  in  death  ;  „         xli  14 

Beneath  all  fancied  hopes  and/ 's  „        xlix  13 

I  wrong  tlie  grave  with  f's  untrue :  „  \li  9 
For /divine  Philosophy  Should  push  beyond  her  mark,        „         liii  14 

and  is  Eternal,  separate  from  f's:  „     Ixxxv  66 

The  feeble  soul,  a  haunt  oif's,  „            ex  3 

She  cannot  fight  the  /  of  death.  „       cxiv  10 

And  heated  hot  with  burning  /  '5,  „     cxviii  22 

No,  like  a  child  in  doubt  and/:  „     cxxiv  17 

Be  sunder'd  in  the  night  of /;  „      cxxvii  2 

Wild  Hours  that  fly  with  Hope  and  F,  „     cxxviii  9 

I  fled  from  the  place  and  the  pit  and  the  /?  Maud  I  i  Gi 

The  bitter  springs  of  anger  and  /;  „        x  49 

she  lay  Sick  once,  with  a  /  of  worse,  „    xix  73 

a  coast  Of  ancient  fable  and  / —  „  //  H  32 

Sick  of  a  nameless  /,  Back  to  the  dark  sea-line  „           44 

cells  of  madness,  haunts  of  horror  and  /,  „  ///  vi  2 

mother's  eye  Full  of  the  wistful  /  Gareth  and  L.  173 

Yet  pressing  on,  tho'  all  in/  „            325 

Thou  shakest  in  thy/:  there  yet  is  time :  „            940 

the  new  knight  Had  /  he  might  be  shamed ;  „           1044 

after  all  their  foolish  / 's  And  horrors  „  1424 
all  her  foolish /'s  about  the  dress,  (repeat)       Marr.  of  Geraint  142,  844 

Rapt  in  the  /  and  in  the  wonder  of  it ;  „                      529 

For  love  or  /,  or  seeking  favour  of  us,  „                      700 

The  long  way  smoke  beneath  him  in  his  / ;  Geraint  and  E.  532 

Enid  in  their  going  had  two  f's,  „            817 

Truly  save  ioif's.  My  f's  for  thee,  Balin  and  Balan  146 
As  Love,  if  Love  be  perfect,  casts  out  /,  So  Hate, 

if  Hate  be  perfect,  casts  out  /.  Merlin  and  V.  40 

She  shook  from  /,  and  for  her  fault  she  wept  „           952 

First  as  in  /,  step  after  step,  she  stole  Lancelot  and  E.  342 

Then  came  on  him  a  sort  of  sacred  /,  „             354 

For/  our  people  call  you  lily  maid  „             386 

So  fine  a  /  in  our  large  Lancelot  „            595 

all  three  in  hurry  and  /  Ran  to  her,  j,           1024 

May  not  your  crescent  /  for  name  and  fame  Speak,  „           1400 

The  King  himself  had  f's  that  it  would  fall,  Holy  Grail  341 

Our  /  of  some  disastrous  chance  for  thee  „          727 

whence  the  /  lest  this  my  realm,  uprear'd,  Last  Tournament  122 

but  how  ye  greet  me—/  And  fault  and  doubt —  „               577 

or  a  vague  spiritual  /—  Guinevere  71 

all  his  heart  was  cold  With  formless  /;  Pass,  of  Arthur  98 
their  f's  Are  morning  shadows  huger  than  the 

shapes  To  the  Queen  ii  62 

over  the  deep  graves  of  Hope  and  F,  Lover's  Tale  ii  58 
Had  I  not  known  where  Love,  at  first  a/,           Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  170 


Fear 


204 


Feast 


Fear  (s)  {continued)    And  f's  for  our  delicate 
Eniinie 
Cloud-weaver  of  phantasmal  hopes  and  f's, 
fail  Thro'  craven /'s  of  being  great. 
Had  never  swerved  for  craft  or  /, 
as  Gods  against  the  /  Of  Death  and  Hell ; 
that  worship  which  is  F,  Henceforth, 
and  paced  his  land  In  /  of  worse, 
May  your/'s  be  vain  ! 
Still — at  times  A  doubt,  a  /, — 


In  tile  Child.  Hasp.  66 

To  Victor  Hugo  2 

Hands  all  Round  32 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  27 

Demeter  and  P.  141 

143 

To  Mary  Boyle  30 

To  one  who  ran  down  Eng.  2 

Alcbar's  Dream  169 


'Twere  joy,  not  /,  claspt  hand-in-hand  with  thee,  //  /  were  loved  9 

Fear  (verb)     I  /  All  may  not  doubt,  Supp.  Confessions  177 

I  /  to  sUde  from  bad  to  worse.  Two  Voices  231 

What  is  it  that  I  may  not  /? '  „           240 

That  I  should  /, — if  I  were  loved  If  I  were  loved  4 

I  /  My  wound  hath  taken  cold,  M.  d' Arthur  165 

I  /  it  is  too  late,  and  I  shall  die.'  „            180 

I  /  That  we  shall  miss  the  mail :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  111 


'  F  not  thou  to  loose  thy  tongue ; 

/  no  more  for  me ;  or  if  you  /  Cast  all  your  cares 

I  /,  If  there  were  many  Lilias  in  the  brood. 

Let  them  not/:  some  said  their  heads  were  less : 

I  /  My  conscience  will  not  count  me  fleckless ; 

But,  dearest  Lady,  pray  you  /  me  not, 

*  Ah,  /  me  not '  Replied  Melissa ; ' 

'  What  /  ye,  brawlers  ?  am  not  I  your  Head  ? 

what  is  it  ye  /?     Peace ! 

'  We  /,  indeed,  you  spent  a  stormy  time 

/  we  not  To  break  them  more  in  their  behoof. 

Sighing  she  spoke  '  I  /  They  will  not.' 

Approach  and  /  not ;  breathe  upon  my  brows ; 

Shall  we  /  him  ?  our  own  we  never  f ear'd. 

I  /  you'll  listen  to  tales,  be  jealous 

'  F  not,  isle  of  blowing  woodland. 

We  mock  thee  when  we  do  not  /: 

She  f's  not,  or  with  thee  beside 

And  me  behind  her,  will  not  /. 

I  /,  the  new  strong  wine  of  love, 

some  one  else  may  have  much  to  /; 

I  should  grow  Ught-headed,  I  /, 

Should  I  /  to  greet  my  friend 

I  almost  /  they  are  not  roses,  but  blood ; 

F  not  to  give  this  King  thine  only  child, 

I  /  that  I  am  no  true  wife.' 

Like  him  who  tries  the  bridge  he  f's  may  fail, 

Yet  /  me  not :  I  call  mine  own  self  wild, 

he  f's  To  lose  his  bone,  and  lays  his  foot 

/  not,  Enid,  I  should  fall  upon  him, 

men  may  /  Fresh  fire  and  ruin. 

you  that  most  had  cause  To  /  me,  /  no  longer, 

/  not,  cousin ;  I  am  changed  indeed.' 

0  Vivien,  save  ye  /  The  monkish  manhood, 
Vivien  answer'd,  smiling  scornfully,  '  Why  /? 

1  savour  of  thy — virtues  ?  /  them  ?  no. 
loathe,  / — but  honour  me  the  more.' 
make  me  /  still  more  j^ou  are  not  mine, 
Wherefore,  if  I  /,  Giving  you  power  upon  me 
for  I  /  My  fate  or  folly, 

a  flash,  I  /  me,  that  will  strike  my  blossom  dead, 
as  a  coward  slinks  from  what  he  f's  To  cope  with. 


•  F  God :  honour  the  King 

Because  he  hates  thee  even  more  than  f's ; 

F  not :  thou  shalt  be  guarded  till  my  dfeath. 

I  /  My  wound  hath  taken  cold, 

I  /  it  is  too  late,  and  I  shall  die.' 

tho'  sometimes  I  /  You  may  be  flickering, 

she'll  never  live  thro'  it,  I  /.' 

Priests  Who  /  the  king's  hard  common-sense 

And  a  man  men  /  is  a  man  to  be  loved 

Days  that  will  glimmer,  I  /, 

'  Do  you  /? '  and  there  came  thro'  the  roar  of  the 

breaker  a  whisper,  a  breath, '  F  ?  am  I  not  with 

you? 
morning  brings  the  da^  I  hate  and  /; 
lurks,  listens,  ft  his  victim  may  have  fled — 


Vision  of  Sin  155 

Enoch  Arden  221 

Princess,  Pro.  145 

m147 

293 

333 

342 

11)498 

500 

1)121 

vi  60 

vii  297 

353 

Third  of  Feb.  25 

Grandmother  54 

Boadicea  38 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  30 

„         Con.  43 

»  44 

Maud  I  vi  82 

„  XV  4: 

100 

„  IIiv85 

1)78 

Com.  of  Arthur  413 

Marr.  of  Geraint  108 

Geraint  and  E.  303 

311 

561 

787 

822 

825 

873 

Merlin  and  V.  34 

38 

39 

122 

32T 

513 

926 

Lancelot  and  E.  971 

PeUeas  and  E.  438 

Last  Tournament  302 

533 

Guinevere  448 

Pass,  of  Arthur  333 

348 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  32 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  42 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  66 

The  Wreck  18 

79 


Despair  13 

The  Flight  2 

..      71 


Fear  (verb)  {contimied)    and  what  is  it  that  you  /?  Happy  1 

an'  thou'U  git  along,  niver  /,  Church-warden,  etc.  7 

F  not  thou  the  hidden  purpose  of  that  Power  God  and  the  Univ.  5 

Fear'd    /  To  send  abroad  a  shrill  and  terrible  cry,  Enoch  Arden  767 

I  /  Lest  the  gay  navy  there  should  splinter  Sea  Dreams  130 

I  /  To  meet  a  cold  '  We  thank  you.  Princess  iv  327 

but  /  To  incense  the  Head  once  more ;  „        vii  76 

she  /  that  I  should  lose  my  mind,  „              99 

Shall  we  fear  him  ?  our  own  we  never  /.  Third  of  Feb.  25 

I  say,  we  never  f  I  „        __  29 

There  sat  the  Shadow  /  of  man ;  In  Mem.  xxii  12 

And  that  she  /  she  was  not  a  true  wife.  Marr.  of  Geraint  114 

she  /  In  every  wavering  brake  an  ambuscade.  Geraint  and  E.  50 

Enid  /  his  eyes.  Moist  as  they  were,  „          350 

I  ever  /  ye  were  not  wholly  mine ;  Merlin  and  V.  315 

ridd'n  away  to  die  ?  '     So /the  King,  Lancelot  and  E.  508 

cope  and  crown  Of  all  I  hoped  and  /? —  Lover's  Tale  ii  27 

he  was  /  to  look  at  me  now.  First  Quarrel  38 

they  /  that  we  still  could  sting.  The  Revenge  72 
I  /  The  very  fountains  of  her  Ufe  were  chill'd ;     Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  265 

I  be  /  fur  to  tell  tha  'ow  much —  Village  Wife  47 

/  myself  turning  crazed.  Despair  78 

Found,  /  me  dead,  and  groan 'd.  The  Flight  23 

They  was  all  on  'em  /  o'  the  Ghoiist  Owd  Rod  37 

She  / 1  had  forgotten  her.  The  Ring  102 

Fearful    {See  also  Too-fearfuI)    Too  /  that  you  should 

not  please.  Miller's  D.  148 

Half  /  that,  with  self  at  strife,  Will  Water.  161 

If  you  be  /,  then  must  we  be  bold.  Third  of  Feb.  19, 

Dismal  error !  /  slaughter !  The  Captain  65 

the  sea  roars  Ruin :  a  /  night ! '     '  Not  / ;  Sea  Dreams  81 

'  The  simple,  /  child  Meant  nothing,  Guinevere  369 

Fearing    {See  also  God-fearing)    hid  my  feelings,  /  they 

should  do  me  wrong ;  Locksley  HaU  29 

F  the  lazy  gossip  of  the  port,  Enoch  Arden  335 

Then  /  night  and  chill  for  Annie,  „           443 

dwelt  hngeringly  on  the  latch,  F  to  enter :  „           520 

And  /  waved  my  arm  to  warn  them  off ;  Sea  Dreams  132 

fling  whate'er  we  felt,  not  /,  into  words.  Third  of  Feb.  6 

F  to  lose,  and  all  for  a  dead  man,  Geraint  and  E.  564 

Then,  /  for  his  hurt  and  loss  of  blood,  „             777 

F  the  mild  face  of  the  blameless  King,  „            812 

But  Vivien,  /  heaven  had  heard  her  oath.  Merlin  and  V.  940 

/  rust  or  soilure  fashion'd  for  it                    ,  Lancelot  and  E.  7 

Still  hoping,  /  '  is  it  yet  too  late  ? '  Guinevere  691 

/  not  to  plunge  Thy  torch  of  life  Tiresias  158 

Fear-tremulous    her  slow  sweet  eyes  F-t,  Merlin  and  V.  86 

Feast  (s)     Rise  from  the  /  of  sorrow,  lady,  Margaret  62 

scare  church-harpies  from  the  master's/;  To  J.  M.  K.  3 

I  made  a  /;  I  bad  him  come ;  The  Sisters  13 

while  Audley  /  Humm'd  Uke  a  hive  Audley  Court  4 

No  larger  /  than  under  plane  or  pine  Lu/n-etius  21S 

near  his  tomb  a  /  Shone,  silver-set ;  Princess,  Pro.  105 

Nymph,  or  Goddess,  at  high  tide  of  /,  „              i  197 

Blanch'd  in  our  annals,  and  perpetual  /,  „              vi  63 

a/  Of  wonder,  out  of  West  and  East,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  20 

And  we  shall  sit  at  endless  /,  In  Mem.  xlvii  9 

Be  neither  song,  nor  game,  nor/;  „         cv  21 

The  reeling  Faun,  the  sensual/;  „    cxviii  26 

Who  stay  to  share  the  morning  /,  „     Con.  75 

Again  the  /,  the  speech,  the  glee,  „            101 
the  King  Made /for,  saying,  as  they  sat  at  meat.      Com.  of  Arthur  247 

that  day  a  /  had  been  Held  in  high  hall,  Gareth  and  L.  847 
suit  of  f  ray'd  magnificence.  Once  fit  for  f's  of 

ceremony)  Marr.  of  Geraint  297 
eyes.  Moist  as  they  were,  wine-heated  from  the  /;      Geraint  and  E.  351 

Till  when  at  /  Sir  Garlon  Ukewise  ask'd  Balin  and  Balan  347 

our  knights  at  /  Have  pledged  us  in  this  union,  Lancelot  and  E.  114 

So  dame  and  damsel  glitter'd  at  the  /  Last  Tournament  225 

such  a  /  As  never  man  had  dream'd ;  Guinevere  263 

Fast  with  your  fasts,  not  feasting  with  your  f's ;  „        678 

And  Julian  made  a  solemn  /:  Lover's  Tale  iv  187 

such  a  /,  ill-suited  as  it  seem'd  To  such  a  time,  „             207 

such  a  /  So  rich,  so  strange,  „             210 

our  solemn  / — we  ate  and  drank,  „ 


1 


Feast 


^^^  (8)  (continued)     A«^     u  205 

heUr"^    ^"^  '^^^n  the/v^as  near  an  end 


S5Vor4tjJJ -ore  beauty  at  a/P« 

a  man  Will  honour  th^^vT"/  ''^  *^«r  ^ari ;  r^  .  ^^«  ^aw'n  12 

fairest  flesh  at  iLt  is  filfh  I^''  ^u"^'*^^  ^,  ^^''^^  ""^  ^-  287 

Feasted    three  days  he  /us  And  „^^i?^  ^^e  worm  will  f.  ^""^  ^^' »«  232 

he  the  wisest  man  F  the t^l°"  **"?  ^""^t^  p  •  ^"I'Py  ^ 

F««.Jifr"§.*^^^  ««  oft  with  aTK^u^t  ">e°.  ^""^^*  *■  il8 

*eastfu]    Singinff  anrl  X,7         •  ""^  ^mghts  J"  ,,      « 357 

^    l^ing    FT;^irh"^Ji"™unnginh"?/'„,fe^  „/c,//^,«^l  g] 

i    jMt    often  heard  me  prLsf  vA     \f  ^'^^  yow  feasts  •       ^'^'^'^pfArt  177 

Feather  fs)    (^.e  a/*"  few^''"//*  of  an^s,  ^';i,        Guinevere  m 

li^lfs^^-  ^^^""^^    Allgrkssof        ^""••''/G'«-ai«M35 

We'll  b^ViSS  of  {'  r^  "^^  and  truth  ^^^^ing  Oak  269 

O^e^'nlS-/^^^^^^^^^  H  and/.  ^^-^^TS/IJ 

FeatT^  ^Sf£f ;  B-Than^e  of/.-  ,^^  ^|rj^^3?l 

Featherfan    Coo^,^a'^^?'»d             '  ^  «P«at)  ^«ocA  ^r,^^  68  gfi 

Feathering    the  £S^^«  F^^^  «^'th  a /•  , 

Feature  .  chiseird K  efe^^a^lld^^   ^^'^^^  ^^W.^«^289 

Conjectures  of  the  ^k  ''^^;  ^T^  ^^'^^  544 

Reading  her  peS/'fin^^^L'^'  '^  ^  ^;^'-«-'«-  30 

I  cannot  see  the /'7ri4?'*^^S'°°'n.  Tw    ®«<'««252 

_,      that  small  charm  nf/-'  hardener's  D.  175 

Featured    (-S.«  S^»oZl"l^^' P"«"ed-  ,  In  Mem  kx  I 

p,      /inthes^n-^'^*^*"^*')     The  mother  Berlin  and  F.Vs 

*eoruary  Cadi  ^    at  >o 

Febru  "^^'■^"'P^tr  ""'"^  '''''^°™««  ^  fair-  ^^^'^  ^-  ««^  <?•  E:rhil,.  12 

Fed™S^l/^^;^^n^e  a,,d  ^  j„^^  Tke  Snowdrop  2,  10 

^  ,FulI.fed)    /  afe?*  Fpnntkin-fS'  ^^'  ^^^^ird  H 

/the  time  w/th  odou^  ^'^^^^-P^'^ted  flan^of  chastity 
f  thee,  a  child,  lyinffalnn..  J     X-         Isabel  1 

Bv'1;*^°'/-'th'Sfeft  dirt  ^^-^^-n  Nights  64 

^y  dancing  rimlef «  /  vaL  a     \  Eleanore  25 

I  /  you  with  the  milkof  ^,    ^^^  P^ace  „  ^o  £•.  Z.  22 

breast  that/or  aSthitS  Muse;  '^"'^^**  ^"  ^29 

You  haSur}rnSSe^3"--^  „•,„  ^»  ^-.  Wl'g 

^land-myriads  /  f ro'm  ahen  L^^^^  ^^'  »  «  24 

She  watch'd  me  she  nnl   i  '*"'^—  »        *«  264 

,    T^\^?andthePowrre-  Z«.z.  /  ^^"^i' ^3 

/itiS^mXrifli^  '•"/•  ^4?^'it/f6 

^«eed)    ttrwamW^7f'''^^''' a  burial/.  ^'^  ^^ "  ^^-'^  4 

an  nowtheer'slotso'r^"'"'''^"^'-  iV^  Jf„, '^'^''^  ^  ^' 45 

al  (feel)     'p  thou  n^iiJlx.  farmer,  O.  S  37 

f  ;^t^r?/S^--  0'  their/.  ""oSSlo^ 

ra>I  at  firet  AncJ  V  all  nn   ^"'""  P™"«  ^''^  ^'•'^^«  152 

^■^en^age  myself ,  but  fan'^n"?"'  °^  ''^e'f.  P  •    »          779 

"'  ;i  hearts  and  /  whu,,  Tl  '.^emg  so  /.-  Princess  vii  H7 

hme.               ^  """g''  That  every  sophister  can  ^'^  '  ^«^«  *'  693 

"""  ''^  '^"'*  ^  '^e  have/hos.*^  ^«^/-.  %  /a„^  H 

J-hirdofFeh.  38 


Feeble  {continued)    The  ^son)  n  k 

/vassals  of  wine  and  fr.  '  "*  ''aunt  of  fears 
thro'  the  /  tSht  of  ,^''''  ^"?  '"«*. 
^and  PellaJ^'s Tf^*  ?sL^«  ^^Id  GrcJping, 
Wer    Is  f  than\l^L.®*ay,  stay  him ! '  ^' 


Feel 


^  ,and"psi7?^'  'kf  "r^  «™p^.  r  ^«S/r4l 

Feebler    b  /  than-^hSneS^'  '^'^  ^^''  Balt^'^'f'^^  E% 

Then  comes  the  /  heires.;  .f            .  ^  '"?^  ^'^«'»  420 

It  drown'd  The  /nVof  fnf  "^^our  plan,  ^nfient  Sage  135 

Feed    (^..  «^,,  Feead)    Po"r  A'"-"'-'"'  ^""^-  ^^'■'"'-'  "^'^^ 
Thy  kingly  intellect  shall  /    ^  ^  "  ^"  "^°  ^erb.  Suvt^'' %  ^'^^  ^"^  ^3 

Upon  himself  himself  riti  V  ^fV- Confessions  151 

Some  honey-converle  ??  /k'        •  ^^'^'-f^fied  friend  20 

httle  ductsbegS^  To  /f  hi  K^  '"'"^'  ^  CAara^^,  27 

Nor/with  ci^deiia^Sfirr  T      4/^^^^  4Q 

The  fat  earth  f  thv  h£^T   ^'^^  ^^rd,  j-       i^o  Voices  326 

TJat  hoard,  aid  sfcn/,™<>t.  ^''^^^-th.Jand  fo 

That  early  woke  to /heSfi  n  I^'^^^^^ng  Oak  213 

The  full  new  life  that  f's  thtl''"^?;  p  •      ^^^^^^^  5 

That  /  the  mothers  of  f  hi  a  ^  l^^^ath  Princess  vii  252 

a  rose-carnation  /  Kh  ^,^*"^ '  ""  ^''^-  ^''^^i  W 

Nor  /  with  sighs  a  n w  ^"™'?er  spice  ..                 <,  16 

goodly  cheer  To  f,l^"^,  ^^"^ :  "^  „                 ^^2 

Feeding  like  horees  when     ^  ^^  ^P^ars.  ^«-«««<  and  E.  284 

;?i/;^,their  downwIrdX"  '^'^^  *'^«™/'  »            ««' 

«w  fi?5sig«"'-is 'j^ ?r «;  /  fer?? 

^  felt  ?         *"*■''  *^al)    and  1/ 35  t{,oJ  j^^^^  Geramt  and  E.  606 

/  t4|'iirtltt,nn^h  •   .  ''"^^-  ^"^^-^-^  82 

For  Kate  no  common  ?      '''^'''  hearts  ^        Om„a  77 

To/,  althoCTS  'an  n^o'^'  ^f^^  MermZ'i 

Begin  to/th  {i^tra^ftr,''."  '^^  "^^  ""--/o-^ne^ll 

make  a  man  /  stroi^^n  sf  1,°^  "^^y-  ^-  '^  ^'•'^«'- 177 

1/ about  my  feet  The  h^^^^'?^*"^fch;  ^         „      £•«.  19 

my  heart  so^slow  T^.  iV  "''^  ''"''"^  ^'^z.'^'*'^  ^^  70 

unto  him  who  works  and /■'   k  I^<^^^ngOakUl 

guinea  helps  the  hurt  ZVw  ''^  ^°'''^«-  ^«;;«  «»^  i?„^y  3^ 

Make  me/the  wild  pulsafio^^"^'^/'^,  ifff'^r^'^^  73 

Their  yS°,;{k'e"ii:V30^Srv  ,  ^^^ ^aterX 


Ver;iivi;j';^^//J^eness  inl.  , 
And  /  myself  fhll/  ''^^  ''ent  ; 

/.  at  leS  that  silenneT  °^  ^  ^^«am. 

which  has  pSwer  to  ?'  f^'"  r^'''  «'". 

But  they-thev  /•  Vh{  /  am  I '  ? 

As  one  who  /'/the^mi'"'"^  °^  ^^^  ^^^P~~ 

im^s'iil^f^^^^rt''-'''''''^ 

IshoVd^otfer'"^*^' 
reaches  foTth^ertmst^^f- 

i  / 1  sliall  owe  vou  a  rfph. 


^\9h.  Pantheism  8 
^o«<^e  aw<f  the  p,  19 
^  dedication  7 
In  Mem.  v  2 
'»       «m  3 
»       arzi;  20 
»      a:ari  19 
»   S'xvii  14 
»        fo  19 
j>     tow  17 
»  ^iP^a:a  42 

»  87 

»»  ar«tV  16 

»)  a:«)jV34 

»  eararw  5 

»  cxxix  3 

»^      ,",    ''^^^  7 
-^'ajwf  /  xviii  72 

"  xix  87 


Feel 


206 


FeU 


Peel  (continued)    loved  with  that  full  love  I  /  for  thee,  Gareth  and  L.  84 

the  plant  that/' s  itself  Root-bitten  „          453 

in  your  frosty  cells  ye  /  the  fire !  BaJin  and  Balan  446 
Caress  her :  let  her  /  herself  forgiven  Who  f's  no 

heart  to  ask  another  boon.  Merlin  and  V.  381 

Might  /  some  sudden  turn  of  anger  born  „              531 

low  desire  Not  to  /  lowest  makes  them  level  all ;  „             828 

In  moments  when  he  /  's  he  cannot  die,  Holy  Grail  916 

find  a  nest  and  f's  a,  snake,  he  drew  :  Petleas  and  E.  437 

For  /  this  arm  of  mine —  Last  Tournament  690 

'  lo  mine  helpmate,  one  to  /  My  purpose  Guinevere  485 

find  or  /  a  way  Thro'  this  blind  haze.  Pass,  of  Arthur  75 

Like  one  that/ 's  a  nightmare  on  his  bed  „            345 

I  /  thy  breath ;  I  come,  great  Mistress  Lover's  Tale  i  21 

flaw  In  his  throne's  title  make  him  /  so  frail,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  73 
We  /  we  are  nothing — •                                              De  Prof.,  Human  C.  6 

We  /  we  are  something —  „                  7 

What  did  I  /  that  night  ?  Despair  3 

She  f's  the  Sun  is  hid  but  for  a  night,  Ancient  Sage  73 

we  /  Within  oiu^elves  is  highest,           *  „          87 

Scarce /'s  the  senses  break  away  To  mix  „        152 

F's  that  the  deep  is  boundless,  „        192 

to  /  his  breath  Upon  my  cheek —  The  Flight  45 
these  would  /  and  follow  Truth                              Locksley  H.,  Sixty  119 

I  /  the  deathless  heart  of  motherhood  Demeter  and  P.  41 

Who  /  no  touch  of  my  temptation,  Romney's  R.  121 
Polytheism  and  Isl&n/ after  thee.                           Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  2 

Feel'd  (felt)     till  agean  I  /  mysen  free.  North.  Cobbler  80 

I  /  thy  arm  es  I  stood  wur  a-creeapin  Spinster's  S's.  26 

Feeling    /  all  along  the  garden-wall,  Enoch  Arden  773 

She  laid  A  /  finger  on  my  brows.  Princess  vi  121 

And  often  /  of  the  helpless  hands,  „      viiWl 

When  flower  is  /  after  flower ;  In  Mem.  xxxix  7 

The  blind  wave  /  roimd  his  long  sea-hall  Merlin  and  V.  232 

I,  /  that  you  felt  me  worthy  trust,  „            334 

sideways  downward  to  her  belt.  And  /;  „             851 

Feeling  (s)    {See  also  Fellow-feeling)    embassies  of  love. 

To  tamper  with  the  f's,  Gardener's  D.  19 

Saying  '  I  have  hid  my  f's,  Locksley  Hall  29 

to  decline  On  a  range  of  lower /'s  „          44 

'  They  were  dangerous  guides  the  f's —  „          95 

Divorce  the  F  from  her  mate  the  Deed.  The  Brook  95 

Who  speak  their  /  as  it  is,  In  Mem.  xx  5 

We  ceased :  a  gentler  /  crept  Upon  us :  „       xxx  17 

Feign     things  that  being  caught  /  death.  Princess  v  108 

Feign'd    sweet  as  those  by  hopeless  fancy  /  „        iv  55 

A  face  of  tenderness  might  be  /,  Maud  I  vi  52 

yet  lay  still,  and  /  himself  as  dead,  Geraint  and  E.  588 

and  /  a  sleep  until  he  slept.  Lancelot  and  E.  842 

Feigning    /pique  at  what  she  call'd  The  raillery.  Princess  iv  5^1 

Fell  (adj.)     Outram  and  Havelock  breaking  their  way 

through  the  /  mutineers  ?  Def.  of  Luckrum  96 

the  bees  is  as  /  as  owt.  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  40 

Fell  (hair)     Half-.suffocated  in  the  hoary  /  Merlin  and  V.  840 

Fell  (mountain)    ye  meanwhile  far  over  moor  and  /  Maud  I  xviii  76 

gleam  from  yonder  vale,  Some  far  blue  /,  Early  Spring  34 

lured  that  falcon  from  his  eyry  on  the  /,  Happy  59 

he  was  coming  down  the  / —  „       82 

Fell  (verb)     (See  also  Fell  out)    msted  nails  /  from  the  knots         Mariana  3 

Her  tears  /  with  the  dews  at  even ;  „      13 

Her  tears  /  ere  the  dews  were  dried ;  „      14 

The  shadow  of  the  poplar  /  Upon  her  bed,  „      55 

springing  forth  anew  Where'er  they  /,  The  Poet  22 

the  babble  of  the  stream  F,  Mariana  in  the  S.  52 

I  kLss'd  away  before  they  /.  Miller's  D.  152 

They  were  together,  and  she  /;  The  Sisters  4 

folds,  that  floating  as  they /Lit  up  a  torrent-bow.  Palace  of  Art  35 

on  the  fourth  she /,  Like  Herod,  „        218 

and  loathing  of  her  soUtude  F  on  her,  „        230 

because  the  kiss  he  gave  me,  ere  I  /,  D.  of  F.  Women  235 

F  in  a  doze ;  and  half-awake  I  heanl  The  Epic  13 

So  flash'd  and  /  the  brand  Excalibur :  M.  d'A  rthur  142 

and  threaten'd  darkness,  flared  and  /:  „         Ep.  2 

the  sun  /,  and  all  the  land  was  dark,  (repeat)  Dora  79, 109 

The  wreath  of  flowers  /  At  Dora's  feet.  „          102 


Fell  (verb)  (continued)    in  wild  Mahratta-battle/my  father  Locksley  Hall  155 
Bullets  /  Uke  rain ;  The  Captain  46 

The  silver  lily  heaved  and  /;  To  E.  L.  19 

by  mischance  he  slipt  and  /:  Enoch  Arden  106 

on  him  /,  Altho'  a  grave  and  staid  God-fearing  man,  „  111 


Aylmer 


487 

569 

914 

s  Field  409 

810 

Sea  Dreams  53 

224 

Lucretius  279 

Princess  ii  242 

iii  364 

it)  29 

60 

378 

401 

497 

t)50 

542 

vi80 

vii  29 

50 

159 

254 

Light  Brigade  44 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  22 

The  Daisy  10 

The  Victim  1 

Boddicea  30 


these  things  /  on  her  Sharp  as  reproach. 

/  Sim-stricken,  and  that  other  Uved  alone. 

and  so  /  back  and  spoke  no  more. 

Tho'  LeoUn  flamed  and  /  again, 

/  The  woman  shrieking  at  his  feet, 

and  /  In  vast  sea-cataracts — 

The  statues,  king  or  saint,  or  founder  /; 

/  on  liim,  Clasp'd,  kiss'd  him,  wail'd : 

he  bestrode  my  Grandsire,  when  he  /, 

Grew  broader  toward  his  death  and  /, 

Stirring  a  sudden  transport  rose  and  /. 

the  tear,  She  sang  of,  shook  and  /, 

wing'd  Her  transit  to  the  throne,  whereby  she  / 

but  /  Into  his  father's  hands, 

call'd  Across  the  tumult  and  the  tiunult  /. 

'  then  we  /  Into  your  father's  hand, 

darkness  closed  me ;  and  I  /. 

From  the  high  tree  the  blossom  wavering  /, 

But  sadness  on  the  soul  of  Ida  /, 

Star  after  star,  arose  and  /; 

back  I  /,  and  from  mine  arms  she  rose 

She  moved,  and  at  her  feet  the  volume  /. 

While  horse  and  hero  /, 

Yet  Harold's  England  /  to  Norman  swords ; 

The  torrent  vineyard  streaming  / 

A  PLAGUE  upon  the  people  /, 

down  their  statue  of  Victory  /. 

F  the  colony,  city,  and  citadel, 

Thro'  four  sweet  years  arose  and  /,  In  Mem.  xxii  3 

And  sadly  /  our  Christmas-eve.  „         xxx  4 

In  vaults  and  catacombs,  they /;  „  Iviii  4 

And  calmly  /  our  Christmas-eve :  „     Ixxviii  4 

And  /  in  silence  on  his  neck  :  „         ciii  44 

rock  that  /  with  him  when  he  /.  Maud  I  i8 

a  silence  /  with  the  waking  bird,  „  xxii  17 

The  white  lake-blossom  /  into  the  lake  „  47 

mood  is  changed,  for  it  /  at  a  time  of  year  „  Illvi  4 

sword  rose,  the  hind/,  the  herd  was  driven.  Com.  of  Arthur  432 

A  slender-shafted  Pine  Lost  footing,  /,  Gareth  and  L.  4 

And  drops  of  water  /  from  either  hand ;  „        220 

the  King's  calm  eye  F  on,  and  check'd,  „        548 

they  shock'd,  and  Kay  F  shoulder-slipt,  „        759 

F,  as  if  dead ;  but  quickly  rose  and  drew,  „        967 

Went  sliding  down  so  easily,  and  /,  „      1224 

there  /  A  horror  on  him,  lest  his  gentle  wife,  Marr.  of  Geraint  28 

He  spoke  and  /  to  work  again.  „  292 

/  at  last  In  the  great  battle  fighting  „  595 

it  /  Like  flaws  in  summer  laying  lasty  corn :  „  763 

jangling,  the  casque  F,  and  he  started  Geraint  and  E.  389 

saw  the  chargers  of  the  two  that  /  „  481 

Prince,  without  a  word,  from  his  horse  /.  „  508 

a  fair  death,  and  /  Against  the  heathen  „  968 

His  arm  half  rose  to  strike  again,  but  /:  Balin  and  Balan  223 

Garlon,  reeling  slowly  backward,  /,  „  397 

and  either /,  and  swoon'd  away.  ,,  563 

Then  /  on  Merlin  a  great  melancholy ;  Merlin  and  V.  189 

they  /  and  made  the  glen  abhorr'd :  Lancelot  and  E.  42 

slipt  and  /  into  some  pool  or  stream,  „  214 

Treroit,  Where  many  a  heathen  /;  „  302 

when  he  /  From  talk  of  war  to  traits  of  pleasantry —  „  320 

'  Of  all  this  will  I  nothing ; '  and  so  /,  „  967 

back  the  maiden  /,  Then  gave  a  languid  hand  „  1031 

raised  his  head,  their  eyes  met  and  hers  /,  „  1312 

showers  of  flowers  i^  as  we  past ;  Holy  Grail  349 

F  into  dust,  and  I  was  left  alone,  (repeat)  Holy  Grail  389,  400,  419 

slie  too,  F  into  dust  and  nothing,  Holy  Grail  397 

Tlie  plowman  left  his  plowing,  and  /  down  Before  it ;  „         404 

milkmaid  left  her  milking,  and  /  down  Before  it,  „         406 

as  he  spoke  F  into  dust,  and  disappear'd,  ..         436 

Then  /  the  floods  of  heaven  drowning  the  deep. 


,         5^ 


FeU 


207 


Felt 


Fell  (verb)  (continued)  Heavy  as  it  was,  a  great  stone 

slipt  and  /,  Holy  Grail  680 

stones  Raw,  that  they  /  from,  brought  us  to  the  hall.  „         720 

wind  /,  and  on  the  seventh  night  I  heard  „         810 

sword  was  dash'd  from  out  my  hand,  and  /.  „  826 

star  Reel'd  in  the  smoke,  brake  into  flame,  and  /.       Pelleas  and  E.  519 
Then  /  thick  rain,  plume  droopt  Last  Tournament  213 

thus  he  /  Head-heavy ;  then  the  kniglits,  „  467 

Her  light  feet  /  on  our  rough  Lyonnesse,  „  554 

hurl'd  him  headlong,  and  he  /  Stunn'd,  Guinevere  108 

He  f alter'd,  and  his  hand  /  from  the  harp,  „        303 

prone  from  off  her  seat  she  /,  „        414 

and  ev'n  on  Arthur  /  Confusion,  Pass,  of  Arthur  98 

some  whisper  of  the  seething  seas,  A  dead  hush  /;  „  122 

and  all  but  slain  himself,  he  /.  „  169 

So  flash'd  and /the  brand  Excalibur:  „  310 

silver-smiling  Venus  ere  she  /  Would  often  loiter  Lover's  Tale  i  61 

heart  of  Hope  F  into  dust,  and  crumbled  „  95 

My  coronal  slowly  disentwined  itself  And  /  between 

us  both ;  „  362 

/  about  My  footsteps  on  the  moimtains.  „  371 

and  the  earth  They  /  on  became  hallow'd  „  440 

water,  drop  by  drop,  upon  my  ear  JP ;  „  577 

Even  the  feet  of  her  I  loved,  I/,  ,,600 

wealth  Flash'd  from  me  a  moment  and  I  /  Beggar'd 

for  ever — 
few  drops  of  that  distressful  rain  F  on  my  face, 
and  /  into  the  abysm  Of  forms  outworn, 
till  they  /  Half -digging  their  own  graves) 
and  /  Slanting  upon  that  picture, 
the  surge  /  From  thunder  into  whispers ; 
Lionel,  who  fain  had  risen,  but  /  again, 
Saatan  as  /  Down  out  o'  heaven 
And  he  /  upon  their  decks,  and  he  died, 
sea  plunged  and  /  on  the  shot-shatter'd  navy 
Had  caught  her  hand,  her  eyelids  / — 
The  mother  /  about  the  daughter's  neck, 
But  Billy  /  bakkuds  o'  Charlie, 
there  /,  Striking  the  hospital  wall, 
on  all  the  defences  om-  myriad  enemy  /. 
I  lost  myself  and  /  from  evenness. 
The  crowd's  roar  /  as  at  the  '  Peace,  be  still ! ' 
trees  grew  downwards,  rain  /  upward. 
The  hurricane  of  the  latitude  on  him  /, 
They  almost  /  on  each  other ; 
steer  /  down  at  the  plow  and  the  harvest  died 
and  lus  white  beard  /  to  his  feet, 
F  the  shipcrews  Doom'd  to  the  death. 

i         Then  /  from  that  half -spiritual  height  Cliill'd, 

I        His  formal  kiss  /  chill  as  a  flake  of  snow 

j         then  /  fluttering  down  at  my  feet ; 

I        And  I  / — and  the  storm  and  the  days  went 

',        a  scrap,  dipt  out  of  the  '  deaths '  in  a  paper,  /. 
the  tundher,  an'  rain  that  /, 
F  like  a  cannonshot. 
When  That  within  the  coffin  /,  F— 


669 
699 
796 
„  ii  46 

...174 

„        Hi  30 

„       iv  361 

North.  Cobbler  57 

The  Revenge  104 

117 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  148 

154 

Vaiage  Wife  85 

Def.  of  Lu^know  17 

35 

Sir  J.  Oldcasde  164 

Columbus  13 

„         50 

138 

V.  of  Maddune  26 

30 

118 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  22 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  19 

The  Wreck  32 

82 

„        111 

146 

Tomorrow  23 

Heavy  Brigade  26 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  43 


leaf  /,  and  the  sun.  Pale  at  my  grief,  Demeter  and  P.  113 

causer  of  that  scandal,  fought  and  /;  The  Ring  215 

And  then  the  tear  /,  the  voice  broke.  „         367 

hands  F  from  each  other,  and  were  join'd  again.  „         381 

A  noise  of  falling  weights  that  never  /,  „          410 


fell'd  the  foes  before  you  as  the  woodman /'s  the  wood. 


Happy  42 


I       F  on  the  shadow.  No  longer  a  shadow,  Merlin  and  the  G.  92 

mountain  rolls  into  the  plain,  F  headlong  dead ;  Death  of  (Enone  52 

'ell'd    slew  the  beast,  and  /  The  forest.  Com.  of  Arthur  59 

And  /  him,  and  set  foot  upon  his  breast,  Marr.  of  Geraint  574 

hand  Which  /  the  foes  before  you  Happy  42 

'eller  (fellow)     I  knaw'd  a  QuaJiker/as  often  'as  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  19 

I  liked  a  bigger  /  to  fight  wi'  North.  Cobbler  100 

I  calls  'em  arter  the  f's  Spinster's  S's  4 

The  f's  as  maiikes  them  picturs,  Owd  Rod  23 

An'  all  along  o'  the  /  (Sir  Robert  Peel)  as  tum'd  „        48 

ell  out    We  /  o,  my  wife  and  I,  O  we  /  o  I  know  not 

why,  Princess  ii  3 

ellow  (adj.)    Or  brag  to  his  /  rakes  of  his  conquest  Clmrity  18 


Fellow  (adj.)  (continued)    Let  be  thy  wail  and  help 

thy  /  men. 
Fellow  (s)    (See  also  Feller,  Tavern-fellow)    if  his  / 
spake.  His  voice  was  thin. 
And  lowing  to  liLs  f's. 
he.  Poor  /,  could  he  help  it  ? 
That  great  pock-pitten  /  had  been  caught  ? 
wise  To  let  that  handsome  /  Averill  walk 
'  This  /  would  make  weakness  weak. 
This  /  hath  broken  from  some  Abbey, 
Think  ye  this  /  will  poison  the  King's  dish  ? 
a  hart  Taller  than  all  his  f's,  milky-white, 
And  heard  one  crying  to  his  /,  '  Look, 
'  Your  sweet  faces  make  good  /  's  fools 
From  all  his/'s,  lived  alone. 
This  /  hath  wrought  some  foulness  with  his  Queen 
would  ye  look  On  this  proud  /  again, 
all  was  done  He  flung  it  among  his/ '5 — 
But  I  gather'd  my  f's  together, 
drew  His  sword  on  his  /  to  slay  him. 
Fellow-citizen     Welcome  f-c's,  Hollow  hearts 
Fellow-feeling    a  very  miracle  Of  /-/  and  communion. 
Fellow-monk    one,  a  f-m  among  the  rest. 
Fellowship    goodliest  /  of  famous  knights 

0  Sorrow,  cruel/, 
Mere  /  of  sluggish  moods. 
To  give  him  the  grasp  of  /; 
'  God  bless  the  King,  and  all  his  /! ' 
'What  doest  thou,  scullion,  in  my/? 
so  rich  a  /  Would  make  me  wholly  blest : 
your  /  O'er  these  waste  downs  whereon  I  lost 

myself. 

My  brethren  have  been  all  my/; 

The  goodliest  /  of  famous  knights 

They  grew  aweary  of  her/: 
Fellow-victini    '  Curse  him ! '  curse  your  f-v  ? 
Fellow-worker     In  which  I  might  your  /-w  be. 
Felo-de-se    coroner  doubtless  will  find  it  a  f-d-s, 
Felon  (adj.)    F  talk !     Let  be !  no  more ! ' 

*  Stay,  /  knight,  I  avenge  me  for  my  friend.' 
Felon  (s)     that  tall  /  there  Whom  thou  by  sorcery 

Else  yon  black  /  had  not  let  me  pass. 
Felt    (See  also  Feald,  Fee&Id,  Feel'd)    and  I  feel  as 
thou  hast/? 

She  /  he  was  and  was  not  there. 

'  To  search  thro'  all  I  /  or  saw, 

something  /,  like  something  here ; 

1  pray'd  for  both,  and  so  I  /  resign'd, 
She  /  her  heart  grow  prouder : 
F  earth  as  air  beneath  me,  till  I  reach'd 
Dora  /  her  uncle's  will  in  all, 
I  /  a  pang  within  As  when  I  see  the  woodman  lift 
/  my  blood  Glow  with  the  glow 
pulsation  that  I  /  before  the  strife, 
And  round  her  waist  she  /  it  fold, 
I  never  /  the  kiss  of  love, 
touch  upon  the  master-chord  Of  all  I  /  and  feel. 
We  /  the  good  ship  shake  and  reel, 
I  read  and  /  that  I  was  there : 
life's  ascending  sun  Was  /  by  either, 
well  had  deem'd  he  /  the  tale  Less 
when  he  /  the  silence  of  his  house  About  him, 
escaped  His  keepers,  and  the  silence  which  he  /, 
I  /  My  heart  beat  thick  with  passion 
/  the  blind  wildbeast  of  force, 
you  have  known  the  pangs  we  /, 
tender  orphan  hands  F  at  my  heart, 
I  /  my  veins  Stretch  with  fierce  heat ; 
I  /  Thy  helpless  warmth  about  my  barren  breast 
/  it  sound  and  whole  from  head  to  foot, 
and  perhaps  they  /  their  power, 
fling  whate'er  we  /,  not  fearing,  into  words, 
she  /  the  heart  witliin  her  fall  and  flutter 
I  /  it,  when  I  sorrow'd  most, 
I  /  and  feel,  tho'  left  alone. 


Ancient  Sage  258 

Lotos-Eaters  33 

Gardener's  D.  88 

The  Brook  158 

Aylmer's  Field  256 

„  269 

In  Mem.  xxi  7 

Gareih  and  L.  456 

471 

Marr.  of  Geraint  150 

Geraint  and  E.  59 

399 

Balin  and  Balan  126 

:  „  565 

Lancelot  and  E.  1065 

Rizpah  32 

V.  of  Maeldune  2 

„  68 

Vision  of  Sin  173 

Lover's  Tale  i  251 

Holy  Grail  8 

M.  d' Arthur  15 

In  Mem.  Hi  1 

„  XXXV  21 

Maud,  I  xiii  16 

Gareth  and  L.  698 

765 

Balin  and  Balan  147 

Lancelot  and  E.  224 

672 

Pass,  of  Arthur  183 

Lover's  Tale  i  109 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  9 

Princess  iv  308 

Despair  115 

Balin  and  Balan  380 

Gareth  and  L.  1220 

Gareth  and  L.  996 

„  1293 

Supp.  Confessions  82 

Mariana  in  the  S.  50 

Two  Voices  139 

382 

May  Queen,  Con.  31 

The  Goose  22 

Gardener's  D.  212 

Dora  5 

Talking  Oak  234 

TitJumus  55 

Locksley  Hall  109 

Day-Dm.,  Depart.  2 

Sir  Galahad  19 

Will  Water.  28 

The  Voyage  15 

To  E.  L.  8 

Enoch  Arden  39 

711 

Aylmer's  Field  830 

„  839 

Princess  Hi  189 

„         V  266 

374 

436 

537 

vi  201 

211 

„      Con.  13 

Third  of  Feb.  6 

Boadicea  81 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  2 

42 


Felt 


208 


Feud 


Pdt  (continued)    transfer  The  whole  I  /  for  him  to  you.   In  Mem.  Ixxxv  104 

and  /  The  same,  but  not  the  same ;  „  Ixxxvii  13 

I  /  the  thews  of  Anakim,  „       ciii  31 

A  love  of  freedom  rarely  /,  „        cix  13 

And  /  thy  triumph  was  as  mine ;  „         ex  14 

Stood  up  and  answer'd, '  I  have  /.'  „   cxxiv  16 

Because  he  /  so  fix'd  in  truth :  „      cxxv  8 

Nor  have  I  /  so  much  of  bliss  „      Con.  5 

f  himself  in  his  force  to  be  Nature's  crowning  race.  Mavd  I  iv  33 

F  a  horror  over  me  creep,  „       xiv  35 

I  /  she  was  slowly  dying  Vext  with  lawyers  „      xix  21 

Strange,  that  I  /  so  gay,  „         xx  1 

I  cleaved  to  a  cause  that  I  /  to  be  pure  „  III  vi  31 

I  have  /  with  my  native  land,  „             58 

His  love,  imseen  but  /,  o'ershadow  Thee,  Bed.  of  Idylls  51 

F  the  light  of  her  eyes  into  his  life  Com,,  of  Arthur  56 

but  /  him  more.  Of  closest  kin  to  me :  Gareth  and  L.  126 

/  his  young  heart  hammering  in  his  ears,  „            322 

he  /,  despite  his  mail.  Strangled,  _  „          1151 

I  /  Thy  manhood  thro'  that  wearied  lance  „          1265 

Lancelot  thro'  his  warm  blood  /  Ice  strike,  „          1398 

F  ye  were  somewhat,  yea,  and  by,  your  state  Mart.  ofGeraint  430 

He  /,  were  she  the  prize  of  bodily  force,  „              541 

I  /  That  I  could  rest,  a  rock  in  ebbs  and  flows,  ,,              811 

/  that  tempest  brooding  round  his  heart,  Geraint  and  E.ll 

f  Her  low  firm  voice  and  tender  government.  „            193 

/  the  warm  tears  falling  on  his  face ;  „            586 

She  /  so  blunt  and  stupid  at  the  heart :  „            747 

And  /  him  hers  again :  she  did  not  weep,  „            768 

/  His  work  was  neither  great  nor  wonderful,  „            920 

and  he  /  his  being  move  In  music  with  his  order,    Balin  and  Balan  211 

He  /  the  hollow-beaten  mosses  thud  „              321 

when  their  foreheads  /  the  cooling  air,  „              589 

he  lifted  faint  eyes ;  he  /  One  near  him ;  „              594 

old  man,  Tho'  doubtful,  /  the  flattery,  Merlin  and  V.  184 

I,  feeling  that  you  /  me  worthy  trust,  „            334 

I  /  as  tho'  you  knew  this  cursed  charm,  „            435 

that  I  lay  And  /  them  slowing  ebbing,  „            437 

darkling  /  the  sculptured  ornament  „            734 

Thro'  her  own  side  she  /  the  sharp  lance  go ;  Lancelot  and  E.  624 

/  the  knot  Climb  in  her  throat,  „            740 

And  /  the  boat  shock  earth.  Holy  Grail  812 

/  the  svm  Beat  like  a  strong  knight  on  his  helm,  Pelleas  and  E.  22 

she,  that  /  the  cold  touch  on  her  throat,  „            488 

but  /  his  eyes  Harder  and  drier  than  a  fountain  bed  „            506 

and  /  the  goodly  hounds  Yelp  at  his  heart.  Last  Tournament  503 

My  soul,  I  /  my  hatred  for  my  Mark  Quicken  „             519 

/  the  King's  breath  wander  o'er  her  neck,  Guinevere  582 

/  the  blast  Beat  on  my  heated  eyelids :  Lover's  Tale  Hi  27 

Thrice  in  a  second,  /  him  tremble  too,  „          iv22i 

I  /  that  my  heart  was  hard.  First  Quarrel  76 

An'  I  / 1  had  been  to  blame ;  „            90 

I  / 1  could  do  it  no  more.  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  60 

I  /  one  warm  tear  faU  upon  it.  Tiresias  167 

The  chfld  that  I  / 1  could  die  for—  The  Wreck  36 

till  I  /  myself  ready  to  weep  „          61 

With  the  first  great  love  I  had  /  „          76 

Does  it  matter  so  much  what  I  /?  Despair  4 

but/  thro'  what  we  feel  Ancient  Sage  87 

F  within  us  as  ourselves,  the  Powers  of  Good,  LocTcsley  H.,  Sixty  273 

I  /  On  a  sudden  I  know  not  what.  The  Bing  31 

and  /  An  icy  breath  play  on  me,  „      130 

and  /  a  gentle  hand  Fall  on  my  forehead,  „      418 

I  /  for  what  I  could  not  find,  the  key,  „      440 

And  sanguine  Lazarus  /  a  vacant  hand  To  Mary  Boyle  31 

I  / 1  could  end  myself  too  with  the  dagger —  Bandit's  Death  37 

Female    The  stately  flower  of  /  fortitude,  Isabel  1\ 

A  random  string  Your  finer  /  sense  offends.  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  2 

Princess  i  199 

„        a  34 

372 

„        vi  73 


We  sent  mine  host  to  purchase  /  gear ; 

All  beauty  compass'd  in  a  /  form, 

The  circle  rounded  under  /  hands 

tender  ministries  Of  /  hands  and  hospitality.* 

and  served  With  /  hands  and  hospitality.' 

and  the  swarm  Of  /  whisperers : 

swarms  of  men  Darkening  her  /  field : 


a56 
w  34 


Female  {continued)    manhood  fused  with  /  grace 

In  such  a  sort,  In  Mem.  cix  17 

Which  types  all  Nature's  male  and  /  plan,       On  one  who  affec.  E.  M.  3 

'  then  a  loftier  form  Than  /,  Princess  i»  216 

Fen    From  the  dark  /  the  oxen's  low  Came  Mariana  28 

Fly  o'er  waste  f's  and  windy  fields.  Sir  Galahad  60 

raised  the  school,  and  drain'd  the  /.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  268 

somewheers  i'  the  Wowd  or  the  F,  Church-warden,  etc.  47 

Fence    three  horses  that  have  broken  /,  Princess  ii  386 

Robins — a  niver  mended  a/:  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  50 
Break  me  a  bit  o'  the  esh  for  his  'ead,  lad,  out 

o'the/!  „        N.S.41 

An'  the  fs  all  on  'em  bolster'd  oop  Owd  Boa  32 

Fenced  (fought)    voice  with  which  I  /  A  little  ceased,  Two  Voices  317 

Fenced  (hedged)     I  /  it  roimd  with  gallant  institutes.  Princess  v  392 

Ferdinand    F  Hath  signed  it  and  our  Holy  Catholic  queen         Columbus  29 

I  pray  you  tell  King  F  who  plays  with  me,  „        223 

Fere    And  raceth  freely  with  his  /,  Supp.  Confessions  158 

Fern    (See  also  Ice-fems,  Lady-fern,  Tree-fern)    learned 

names  of  agaric,  moss  and  /,  Edwin  Morris  17 

Hail,  hidden  to  the  knees  in  /,  Talking  Oak  29 

Oh,  hide  thy  knotted  knees  in  /,  „            93 

O  muffle  round  thy  knees  with  /,  ,,149 

0  flourish,  hidden  deep  in  /,  ,,201 
Step  deeper  yet  in  herb  and  /,  „  245 
Among  the  palms  and  f's  and  precipices ;  Enoch  Arden  593 
And  sparkle  out  among  the  /,  The  Brook  25 
In  copse  and  /  Twinkled  the  innumerable  „  133 
From  slope  to  slope  thro'  distant  f's,  Princess,  Con.  99 
stood  a  shatter'd  archway  plumed  with/;  Marr.  ofGeraint  316 
all  round  was  open  space.  And  /  and  heath :  Pelleas  and  E.  29 
/  without  Burnt  as  a  living  fire  of  emeralds,  „  34 
The  deer,  the  dews,  the  /,  the  founts.  Last  Tournament  727 
sparkle  of  a  cloth  On  /  and  foxglove.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  118 

Ferreted    I  have  /  out  their  burrowings.  Merlin  and  V.  55 

Ferule    As  boys  that  slink  From  /  Princess  v  38 

Fervent    With  such  a  /  flame  of  human  love,  Boly  Grail  74 

Fescue    Sweeping  the  fro thfly  from  the  /  Aylmer's  Field  5S0 

Festal    With  music  and  sweet  showers  Of  /  flowers.  Ode  to  Memory  78 

On  the  hall-hearths  the  /  fires,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  14 

With  /  cheer,  With  books  and  music.  In  Mem.  cvii  21 

on  a  /  day  When  Guinevere  was  crossing  Merlin  and  V.  04 

'  If  I  be  loved,  these  are  my  /  robes,  Lancelot  and  E.  909 

make  her  /  hour  Dark  with  the  blood  of  man  St.  Telemachus  79 

Fester     Eye,  to  which  all  order /'s,  Locksley  Hall  133 

Festival    Two  strangers  meeting  at  a  /;  Circumstance  3 

illuminate  All  your  towns  for  a  /,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  19 

Festoon    in  many  a  wild  /  Ran  riot,  Qinone  100 

Festooning    Their  humid  arms  /  tree  to  tree,  D.  of  F.  Women  70 

Fetch    Go  /  your  Alice  here,'  she  said :  Miller's  D.  143 

And  down  I  went  to  /  my  bride :  ,,           145 

Go  /  a  pint  of  port :  Will  Water.  4 

Eh,  let  me  /  'em,  Arden,'  Enoch  Arden  871 

the  colt  would  /  its  price ;  The  Brook  149 

with  furs  And  jewels,  gifts,  to  /  her :  Princess  i  43 

/  the  wine,  Arrange  the  board  and  brim  the  glass ;  In  Mem.  cvii  15 

/  Fresh  victual  for  these  mowers  of  our  Earl ;  Geraint  and  E.  224 

1  will  /  you  forage  from  all  fields,  „  628 
Lancelot  went  ambassador,  at  first.  To  /  her.  Merlin  and  V.  775 
Well,  I  will  wear  it :  /it  out  to  me :  Lancelot  and  E.  371 
Fur  'e'd  /  an'  carry  like  owt,  Owd  Bod  6 

Fetch'd-Fetcht    fetch'd  His  richest  beeswing  from 

a  binn  Aylmer's  Field  404 

boooks  fetch'd  nigh  to  nowt  at  the  saiile.  Village  Wife  73 

I  fetcht  'im  a  kick  an'  'e  went.  Owd  Boa  62 

Fettle     I  could  /  and  clump  owd  booiits  North.  Cobbler  13 

Feud    Rose  /,  with  question  unto  whom  'twere  due :  (Enone  82 

New  and  Old,  disastrous  /,  Love  thou  thy  land  77 

how  they  mar  this  little  by  their  f's.  8ea_  Dreams  49 

'  How  grew  this  /  betwixt  the  right  and  left.'  Princess  Hi  77 

Then  rose  a  little  /  betwixt  the  two,  „     Cow.  23 

I  wage  not  any  /  with  Death  In  Mem.  Ixxxii  1 

Ring  out  the  /  of  rich  and  poor,  „            cvi  11 

And  ever  mourning  over  the  /,  Ma/itd  I  xix  31 

splinter  it  into  f's  Serving  his  traitorous  end;  Guinevere . 


1 


Feud 


209 


Field 


Feud  (continued)    counter-yells  of  /  And  faction,  To  Duke  of  Argyll  8 

Before  the  f  of  Gods  had  niarr'd  our  peace,  Death  of  CEnone  32 

feudal    above  their  heads  I  saw  The  /warrior  lady-clad ;    Princess,  Pro.  119 

A  /  knight  in  silken  masquerade,  „          234 

And  tuft  with  grass  a  /  tower ;  In  Mem.  cxxviii  20 

Ilever     till  at  last  a  /  seized  On  William,  Dora  54 

In  hungers  and  in  thirsts,  f's  and  cold,  St.  S.  Stylites  12 

some  low  /  ranging  roimd  to  spy  The  weakness  Aylmer's  Field  569 

mix  the  foaming  draught  Of  /,  Princess  ii  252 

fan  my  brows  and  blow  The  /  from  my  cheek,  In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  9 

There  /  seized  upon  him :  Lover's  Tale  iv  132 

there  from  /  and  my  care  of  him  Sprang  up  „            143 

we  talkt  o'  my  darter  es  died  o'  the  /  at  fall :  Village  Wife  10 

/  'ed  baiiked  Jinny's  'ead  as  bald  as  one  o'  them  heggs,            „        102 

Cholera,  scurvy,  and  /,  Def.  of  Lucknow  84 

f's,  fights.  Mutinies,  treacheries —  Columbtis  225 

summer  days '  of  /,  and  want  of  care !  The  Wreck  147 

fire  of  /  creeps  across  the  rotted  floor,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  223 

bom  of  /,  or  the  fumes  Of  that  dark  opiate  dose  Romney's  R.  30 

I           She  died  of  a  /  caught  when  a  nurse  Charity  41 

j  Fever'd    so  hot.  So  /!  never  colt  would  more  delight  Romney's  R.  13 

Upon  my  /  brows  that  shook  and  throbb'd  Lover's  Tale  Hi  7 

!  Feverous    {See  also  Brain-feverous)    A  tongue-tied  Poet 

in  the  /  days,  Golden  Year  10 

i          who  slept  After  a  night  of  /  wakefulness,  Enoch  Arden  231 

I           or  laid  his  /  pillow  smooth  !  Aylm^'s  Field  701 

Fever-worn    When,  pale  as  yet,  and  f-w.  To  the  Qrieen  ii  4 

Few  (adj.)     Sharp  and /,  but  seeming-bitter  Rosalind  Z\ 

'  I  found  him  when  my  years  were  /;  Two  Voices  271 

Who  spoke  /  words  and  pithy.  Princess,  Con.  94 

For  those  are  /  we  hold  as  dear ;  To  F.  D.  Maurice  46 

\          While  another  is  cheating  the  sick  of  a  /  last  gasps,  Maud  I  i  ^ 

/,  F,  but  all  brave,  all  of  one  mind  with  him ;  Com.  of  Arthur  254 

i          so  /  words,  and  seem'd  So  justified  Geraint  and  E.  395 

I          That  has  but  one  plain  passage  of  /  notes,  Lancelot  and  E.  895 

j  Thanks  to  the  kindly  dark  faces  who  fought  with 

i              us,  faithful  and  /,  Def.  of  Lucknow  70 

•         these  /  lanes  of  elm  And  whispering  oak.  To  Mary  Boyle  67 
some  /  drops  of  that  distressful  rain  Fell  on  my  face,  Lover's  Tale  i 


}  Few  (s)     Clash'd  with  his  fiery  /  and  won ; 
j         that  honest  /,  Who  give  the  Fiend 

F  at  first  will  place  thee  well ; 
( Fewer    we  were  every  day  /  and  /. 
1         albeit  their  glorious  names  Were  /, 
Fewmet    But  at  the  slot  or  f's  of  a  deer, 
Feyther  (father)    Them  or  thir  /'«,  tha  sees, 

F  'ad  ammost  nowt ; 

F  run  oop  to  the  farm, 

Coom !  coom  !  /,'  'e  says, 

Sa  /  an'  son  was  buried  togither, 

F  'ud  saay  I  wur  ugly  es  sin. 

Fur  if  iver  thy  /  'ed  riled  me 
Fiat    This  /  somewhat  soothed  himself 
Fibre    Thy  /  's  net  the  dreamless  head, 
Fibred    See  Hairy-fibred 
Fibrous    pale  and  /  as  a  wither'd  leaf. 
Fickle    '  You're  too  sUght  and  /,'  I  said, 

bright  and  fierce  and  /  is  the  South, 

Whatever  /  tongues  may  say. 

'  Rapt  from  the  /  and  the  frail 
!        so  /  are  men — the  best ! 
|Pictive    Who  dabbling  in  the  fount  of  /  tears, 
I  Piddle    And  ta'en  my  /  to  the  gate,  (repeat) 
I        Twang  out,  my  / !  shake  the  twigs ! 

wa  'greed  as  well  as  a  /  i'  tune : 
Piddled    And  /  in  the  timber ! 
Fie    she  lifted  either  arm,  '  F  on  thee.  King ! 
Field  (adj.)    {See  also  Field-flower)    like  the  arrow-seeds 

of  the  jf  flower. 
Field  (s)    {See  also  Autumn-fields,  Battle-field,  Fea,ld, 
Field-of-battle,  Four-field,   Harvest-field,  War- 
field,  Winter-field)  the  high/on  the  bushless  Pike, 

Whither  away  from  the  high  green  /, 

/  and  wood  Grow  green  beneath  the  showery  gray, 

her  sacred  blood  doth  drown  The  f's, 


Ode  on  Well.  100 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  5 

Poets  and  Critics  10 

Def.  of  I/ucknow  49 

Princess  ii  156 

Last  Tournament  371 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  49 

51 

54 

VUlage  Wife  69 

90 

Spinster's  S's.  15 

Church-Warden,  etc.  41 

Aylmer's  Field  26 

In  Mem.  ii  3 

Lover's  Tale  i  422 

Edward  Gray  19 

Princess  iv  97 

In  Mem.  xxvi  4 

„        XXX  25 

The  Ring  392 

The  Brook  93 

Amphion  11, 15 

61 

North.  Cobbler  12 

Amphion  16 

Gareth  and  L.  658 


The  Poet  19 


Ode  to  Memory  96 

Sea-Fairies  8 

My  life  is  full  16 

Poland  5 


Field  (s)  {continued)    hong  f's  of  barley  and  of  rye,  L.  of  Shalott  i  2 

And  thro'  the  /  the  road  runs  by  „              4 

That  sparkled  on  the  yellow  /,  „        Hi  8 

The  willowy  hills  and  /  's  among,  „       iv  25 

thy  father  play'd  In  his  free  /,  Two  Voices  320 

And  forth  into  the  f's  I  went,  „  448 
see  me  more  in  the  long  gray  /'s  at  night ;  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  26 
in  the  /'s  all  round  I  hear  the  bleating  of 

the  lamb.  „                  Con.  2 

He  shines  upon  a  hundred  f's,  „                         50 

Weary  the  wandering /'s  of  barren  foam.  Lotos-Eaters  42 
in  fair  /  Myself  for  such  a  face  had  boldly  died,'  D.  of  F.  Women  97 
Then  stept  she  down  thro'  town  and  /                       Of  old  sat  Freedom  9 

And  bore  him  to  a  chapel  nigh  the/,  M.  d' Arthur  8 

The  f's  between  Are  dewy -fresh.  Gardener's  D.  45 

Leaning  his  horns  into  the  neighbour  /,  „             87 

hired  himself  to  work  within  the  f's ;  Dora  38 

Far  off  the  farmer  came  into  the  /  „    74 

when  the  farmer  pass'd  into  the  /  »     85 

the  boy's  cry  came  to  her  from  the  /,  „  104 

And  scarce  can  recognise  the  f'sl  know ;  St.  S.  Stylites  40 

To  yonder  oak  within  the  / 1  spoke  Talking  Oak  13 

Beyond  the  fair  green  /  and  eastern  sea.  Love  and  Duty  101 

Man  comes  and  tills  the  /  and  lies  beneath,  Tithonus  3 

the  steam  Floats  up  from  those  dim  f's  „      69 

a  boy  when  first  he  leaves  his  father's/,  Locksley  Hall  112 

white-flower'd  elder-thicket  from  the  /  Godiva  63 

Fly  o'er  waste  fens  and  windy  /'s.  Sir  Galahad  60 

The  houseless  ocean's  heaving  /,  The  Voyoge  30 

And  pace  the  sacred  old  familiar  /'s,  Enoch  Arden  625 

I  fret  By  many  a  /  and  fallow.  The  Brook  44 

all  about  the/ 's  you  caught  His  weary  daylong  chirping,         „  52 

Sunning  himself  in  a  waste  /  alone —  Aylmer's  Field  9 

became  in  other  f's  K  mockery  to  the  yeomen  „          496 

Fairer  than  Ruth  among  the  f's  of  com,  „           680 

That  all  neglected  places  of  the  /  „          693 

Follows  the  mouse,  and  all  is  open  /.  „          853 

woman  heard  his  foot  Return  from  pacings  in  the  /,  Lucretitis  6 

makes  Thy  glory  fly  along  the  ItaUan  /,  „      71 

answer'd  in  her  sleep  From  hollow  f's :  Princess,  Pro.  67 

when  a  /  of  com  Bows  all  its  ears  „            i  236 

First  in  the  /:  some  ages  had  been  lost ;  „           ii  153 

for  indeed  these  f's  Are  lovely,  „         Hi  341 

They  faint  on  hill  or  /  or  river :  „            iv  14 

waive  your  claim :  If  not,  the  f oughten  /,  „           v  297 

ran  the  /  Flat  to  the  garden-wall :  „              361 

Man  for  the  /  and  woman  for  the  hearth :  „              447 

Thro'  open  /  into  the  lists  they  wound  Timorously ;  „            vi  84 

swarms  of  men  Darkening  her  female  /:  „          vii  34 

after  that  dark  night  among  the  f's  „                 73 

'  The  f's  are  fair  beside  them.  Voice  and  the  P.  17 

The  /,  the  chamber  and  the  street.  In  Mem.  viii  11 

beast  that  takes  His  license  in  the  /  of  time,  „       xxvii  6 

And  loiter'd  in  the  master's  /,  „   xxxvii  23 

My  paths  are  in  the  f's  I  know,  „           xlZl 

The  bowlings  from  forgotten  f's ;  „         xli  16 

And  those  five  years  its  richest  /.  „        xlvi  12 

A  bounded  /,  nor  stretching  far ;                            „  14 

And  hill  and  wood  and  /  did  print  „       Ixxix  7 

trees  Laid  their  dark  arms  about  the  /.  (repeat)  „  xcv  16,  52 

set  To  leave  the  pleasant  f's  and  farms ;  „          cii  22 

Its  lips  in  the  /  above  are  dabbled  Maud  7  t  2 

Go  not,  happy  day,  From  the  shining  f's,  „    xvii  2 

Came  night  and  day,  and  rooted  in  the  f's.  Com,  of  Arthur  24 

Sware  on  the  /  of  death  a  deathless  love.  „           132 

from  the  f oughten  /  he  sent  Ulfius,  „           135 

F  after  /,  up  to  a  height,  the  peak  Haze-hidden,  „           429 

Far  shone  the  f's  of  May  thro'  open  door,  „           460 

mount  That  rose  between  the  forest  and  the  /.  Gareth  and  L.  191 

gate  shone  Only,  that  open'd  on  the  /  below :  „             195 

abide  Without,  among  the  cattle  of  the  /.  „             274 

Uther,  reft  From  my  dead  lord  a  /  with  violence :  „            335 

Yet,  for  the  /  was  pleasant  in  our  eyes,  „            337 

reft  iLS  of  it  Perforce,  and  left  us  neither  gold  nor /.'  „            339 

'  Whether  would  ye  ?  gold  or  /?  '  ,,340 


Field 


210 


Fiery 


Field  (s)  {continiied)    The  /  was  pleasant  in  my  husband's 

eye.'    And  Arthiir,  '  Have  thy  pleasant  /  again,       Gareth  and  L.  342 

shone  far-off  as  shines  A  /  of  charlock  „            388 

paiised  without,  beside  The  /  of  tourney,  „            664 

But  by  the  /  of  tourney  lingering  yet  „            736 

Silent  the  silent  /  They  traversed.  „           1313 

pitch'd  Beside  the  Castle  Perilous  on  flat  /,  „           1363 

what  knight  soever  be  in  /  Lays  claim  Marr.  of  Geraint  486 

Geraint  Beheld  her  first  in  /,  awaiting  him,  „              540 

For  these  are  his,  and  all  the  /  is  his,  Geraint  and  E.  226 

I  will  fetch  you  forage  from  all  f's,  „             628 

Are  scatter'd,'  and  he  pointed  to  the  /,  „            802 

One  from  the  bandit  scatter'd  in  the  /,  „            818 

My  mother  on  his  corpse  in  open  /;  (repeat)  Merlin  and  V.  43,  73 

in  the  /  were  Lancelot's  kith  and  kin,  Lancelot  and  E.  466 

spoke,  and  vanish'd  suddenly  from  the  /  „              508 

So  that  he  went  sore  wounded  from  the  /:  „              600 

crown'd  with  gold,  Eamp  in  the  /,  „              664 

For  pleasure  all  about  a  /  of  flowers :  „              793 

Then  rose  Elaine  and  glided  thro'  the  f's,  „              843 

past  Down  thro'  the  dim  rich  city  to  the  f's,  „              847 

And  drave  her  ere  her  time  across  the  f's  „              890 

Death,  hke  a  friend's  voice  from  a  distant  /  „              999 

Past  hke  a  shadow  thro'  the  /,  „             1140 

flame  At  sunrise  till  the  people  in  far  f's,  Holy  Grail  243 

in  one  full  /  Of  gracious  pastime,  „         323 

where  it  smote  the  plowshare  in  the  /,  „         403 

But  found  a  silk  pavilion  in  a  /,  „         745 

And  whipt  me  into  the  waste  f's  far  away ;  „         788 

I  stinted  stroke  in  foughten/?  „         860 

Who  may  not  wander  from  the  allotted  /  „         908 

and  the  sweet  smell  of  the  f's  Past,  Pelleas  and  E.  5 

the  flat  /  by  the  shore  of  Usk  Holden :  „          164 

all  day  long  Sir  Pelleas  kept  the  /  With  honour :  „          168 

And  he  was  left  alone  in  open  /.  „           208 

flimg  His  rider,  who  call'd  out  from  the  dark  /,  „          575 

Caught  his  unbroken  limbs  from  the  dark  /,  „          585 

in  among  the  faded  f's  To  furthest  towers ;  Last  Tournament  53 

Enchair'd  tomorrow,  arbitrate  the/;  „             104 

With  all  the  kmdlier  colours  of  the/.'  „             224 

'  Free  love — ^free  /—we  love  (repeat)  „     275,  281 

Showing  a  shower  of  blood  in  a  /  noir,  „             433 

she  thought '  He  spies  a  /  of  death ;  Guinevere  134 

I  mark'd  Him  in  the  flowering  of  His/'s,  Pass,  of  Arthur  10 

and  the  harmless  glamour  of  the/;  „             52 

the  pale  King  glanced  across  the  /  Of  battle :  „           126 

Had  held  the  /  of  battle  was  the  King :  „           138 

And  bore  him  to  a  chapel  nigh  the  /.  „           176 

For  I  heard  it  abroad  in  the  f's  First  Quarrd  32 

Hard  was  the  frost  in  the  /,  „  39 
what  joy  can  be  got  from  a  cowslip  out  of  the  /;  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  36 

breezes  of  May  blowing  over  an  English  /,  Def.  of  Lucknow  83 

ears  for  Christ  in  this  wild  /  of  Wales —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  13 

a  crowd  Throng'd  the  waste  /  about  the  city  gates :  „            40 

and  the  harvest  died  from  the  /,  V.  of  Maeldune  30 

Silent  palaces,  quiet  f's  of  eternal  sleep !  „              80 

By  qmet/'«,  a  slowly-dying  power,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  24 
the  /  with  blood  of  the  fighters  Flow'd,                 Batt.  of  Brunanburh  24 

hear  the  voices  from  the  /.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  116 

cow  shall  butt  the  '  Lion  passant '  from  his  /.  „                248 

out  of  the  /,  And  over  the  brow  and  away.  Heavy  Brigade  63 

a  careless  people  flock'd  from  the  f's  Bead  Prophet  7 
Produce  of  your  /  and  flood.  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  5 
in  this  pleasant  vale  we  stand  again.  The  /  of  Eima,  Demeter  and  P.  35 

Blessing  his  /,  or  seated  in  the  dusk  Of  even,  „           125 

glide  Along  the  silent  /  of  Asphodel.  „           153 

mine  the  hall,  the  farm,  the  /;  The  Ring  169 

She  comes  on  waste  and  wood.  On  farm  and/:  Prog,  of  Spring  23 

and  I  gaze  at  a  /  in  the  Past,  By  an  Evolution.  17 

What  sight  so  lured  him  thro'  the  f's  Far-far-away  1 

waste  and  /  and  town  of  alien  tongue,  St.  Telemachus  30 

I  reap  No  revenue  from  the  /  of  unbelief.  Akbar's  Dream  67 

And  laughs  upon  thy  /  as  well  as  mine,  „            106 

Nor  in  the  /  without  were  seen  or  heard  „            195 

And  plow  the  Present  like  a  /,  Mechanophilus  31 


Field-flower    (See  also  Field  (adj.))    would  they  grew  Like 

f-f's  everywhere !  Princess  Hi  252 

Field-of-battle    Arthur  reach'd  a /-o-&  Com.  of  Arthur  9& 

Fiend    Who  give  the  F  himself  his  due.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  6 

the  /  best  knows  whether  woman  or  man  Maud  I  il5 

when  he  died,  his  soul  Became  a  F,  Balin  and  Balan  129 

hold  them  outer /'s.  Who  leap  at  thee  to  tear  thee ;  „              141 

but  in  him  His  mood  was  often  like  a  /,  Lancelot  and  E.  251 

drawn  his  claws  athwart  thy  face  ?  or  /  ?  Last  Tournament  63 

In  fuming  sulphur  blue  and  green,  a  / —  „             617 

like  so  many  /'s  in  their  hell —  Def.  of  Luchnow  33 

we  have  sent  them  very  f's  from  Hell ;  Columbus  184 

'The  F  would  yell,  the  grave  would  yawn.  The  Flight  51 

the  night.  While  the  F  is  prowling.  Forlorn  66 

Fierce     Kate  loves  well  the  bold  and  /;  Kate  29 

My  heart,  pierced  thro'  with  /  delight,  Fatima  34 

Twisted  hard  in  /  embraces.  Vision  of  Sin  40 

/  old  man  FoUow'd,  and  under  his  own  lintel  Aylmer's  Field  330 

Methought  I  never  saw  so  /  a  fork —  Lucretius  28 

I  urged  the  /  inscription  on  the  gate.  Princess  Hi  141 

That  bright  and  /  and  fickle  is  the  South,  „         iv  97 

a  tide  of  /  Invective  seem'd  to  wait  „           471 

He  yielded,  wroth  and  red,  with  /  demur :  „        i;  358 

I  felt  my  veins  Stretch  with  /  heat ;  „  538 
half  the  wolf's-milk  curdled  in  their  veins.  The  / 

triumvirs ;  „      vii  131 

He  heard  a  /  mermaiden  cry.  Sailor  Boy  6 
Mad  and  maddening  all  that  heard  her  in  her  /  volubility,  Boadicea  4 
Yell'd  and  shriek'd  between  her  daughters  in  her  /  volubility.  „  72 
/  extremes  employ  Thy  spirits  in  the  darkening 

leaf.  In  Mem.  Ixxxviii  5 

Till  I  with  as  /  an  anger  spoke,  Maud  II  i  17 

In  that  /  light  which  beats  upon  a  throne.  Bed.  of  Idylls  27 

Her  own  brood  lost  or  dead,  lent  her  /  teat  Com.  of  Arthur  28 

the  lords  Of  that  /  day  were  as  the  lords  of  this,  „           216 

When  I  was  kitchen-knave  among  the  rest  F  was  the 

hearth,  Gareth  and  L.  1010 

flash'd  the  /  shield,  All  sun ;  „  1030 
When  I  that  knew  him  /  and  turbulent  Eefused 

her  Marr.  of  Geraint  447 

Thy  too  /  manhood  would  not  let  thee  he.  Balin  and  Balan  74 

In  those  /  wars,  struck  hard —  „            177 

Nor  ever  touch'd  /  wine,  nor  tasted  flesh.  Merlin  and  V.  627 

'  He  learnt  and  wam'd  me  of  their  /  design  Lancelot  and  E.  274 

So  /  a  gale  made  havoc  here  of  late  Holy  Grail  729 

Let  the  /  east  scream  thro'  your  eyelet-holes,  Pelleas  and  E.  469 

But  Pelleas  lifted  up  an  eye  so  /  She  quail'd ;  „              601 

wrath  which  forced  my  thoughts  on  that  /  law,  Guinevere  537 

And  /  or  careless  looseners  of  the  faith.  To  the  Queen  ii  52 

Hued  with  the  scarlet  of  a  /  sunrise.  Lover's  Tale  i  353 

F  in  the  strength  of  far  descent,  „          382 

Plunged  in  the  last  /  charge  at  Waterloo,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  64 

he,  the  /  Soldan  of  Egypt,  Columbus  97 

Had  the  /  ashes  of  some  fiery  peak  Been  hurl'd  St.  Telemachus  1 

Blown  by  the  /  beleaguerers  of  a  town,  Achilles  over  the  T.  20 

because  the  /  beast  found  A  wiser  than  herself,  Tiresias  151 

By  changes  all  too  /  and  fast  Freedom  22 

Fierceness     With  such  a  /  that  I  swoon'd  Holy  Grail  845 

Fierier    F  and  stormier  from  restraining,  Balin  and  Balan  229 

Fieriest     But  spurr'd  at  heart  with  /  energy  To  J.  M.  K.  7 

Fiery    for  /  thoughts  Do  shape  themselves  within  me,  (Enone  246 
roaring  deeps  and  /  sands,                                      Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  115 

To  make  my  blood  run  quicker.  Used  all  her  /  will,  Will  Water.  HI 

cloud  Cuts  off  the  /  highway  of  the  sun,  Enoch  Arden  130 

chance-met  eyes  Flash  into  /  life  from  nothing,  Aylmer's  Field  130 

Or  down  the  /  gulf  as  talk  of  it,  Princess  Hi  287 

And  as  the  /  Sirius  alters  hue,  „          v  262 

shower  the  /  grain  Of  freedom  broadcast  „            ^^ 

And  into  /  splinters  leapt  the  lance,  „            494 

Leapt  /  Passion  from  the  brinks  of  death ;  „       vii  156 

Clash'd  with  his  /  few  and  won ;  Ode  on  Well.  100 

Not  sting  the  /  Frenchman  into  war.  Third  of  Feb.  4 

Deep  tulips  dash'd  with  /  dew.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  11 

here  and  there  A  /  finger  on  the  leaves ;  „            xcix  12 

which  outran  The  hearer  in  its  /  course ;  „              cix  8 


Jl 


Fiery 


211 


Fight 


Fiery  (continued)    all  at  /  speed  the  two  Shock'd  on  the 
central  bridge, 
Sir  Balinwitha/'Ha! 
But  follow  Vivien  thro'  the  /  flood ! 
A  /  family  passion  for  the  name  Of  Lancelot, 
All  in  a  /  dawning  wild  with  wind 
I  saw  the  /  face  as  of  a  child 
For  every  /  prophet  in  old  times, 
Shading  his  eyes  till  all  the  /  cloud, 
Like  to  a  low-hung  and  a  /  sky 
Brother-in-law — the  /  nearness  of  it — 
A  /  scroll  written  over  with  lamentation  and  woe. 
To  vex  the  noon  with  /  gems, 


Gardh  and  L.  962 

BdLin  and  Balan  393 

454 

Lancelot  and.  E.  477 

1020 

Holy  Grail  466 

876 

Lover's  Tale  i  306 

„  ii  61 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  173 

Despair  20 

Ancient  Sage  265 


and  Suns  along  their  /  way,  LocJcsley  H.,  Sixty  203 

While  squirrels  from  our  /  beech  Were  bearing  off 

the  mast.  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  3 

Three  that  were  next  in  their  /  course.  Heavy  Brigade  21 

lighted  from  below  By  the  red  race  of  /  Phlegethon ;  Demeter  and  P.  28 

'  A  /  phoenix  rising  from  the  smoke.  The  Ring  339 

And  you  spurr'd  your  /  horse,  Happy  76 

would  wallow  in  /  riot  and  revel  On  Kilaueu,  Kapiolani  8 

Quail  not  at  the  /  mountain.  Faith  3 

and  your  /  clash  of  meteorites  ?  God  and  the  Univ.  3 

Fiery-hot    f-h  to  burst  All  barriers  In  Mem.  cxiv  13 

Fiery-new    yet  unkept,  Had  relish  f-n,  Will  Water.  98 

Fiery-short    f-s  was  Cyril's  counter-scoff,  Princess  v  307 

Fife     The  murmurs  of  the  drum  and  /  Talking  Oak  215 

merrily-blowing  shrill'd  the  martial  /;  Princess  v  251 

March  with  banner  and  bugle  and  /  Maud  I  v\0 

Fifteen    I  ha'  work'd  for  him  /  years.  First  Quarrel  7 

and  for  /  days  or  for  twenty  at  most.  Def.  of  Lucknow  9 

'  Hold  it  for  /  days ! '  ,,105 

and  his  winters  were  /  score,  V.  of  Maeldune  116 

beiin  chuch-warden  mysen  i'  the  parish  fur  /  year.  Church-warden,  etc.  8 

mountain-like  San  Philip  that,  of  /  hundred  tons.  The  Revenge  40 

Fifth    To  slant  the  /  autumnal  slope.  In  Mem.  xxii  10 

Your  /  September  birthday.  The  Ring  423 

Our  Playwright  may  show  In  some  /  Act  The  Play  4 

Fifty     Better  /  years  of  Europe  than  a  cycle 

of  Cathay.  Locksley  Hall  184 

Seam'd  with  the  shallow  cares  of  /  years :  Aylmer's  Field  814 

Her  that  talk'd  down  the  /  wisest  men ;  Princess  v  294 

finding  that  of  /  seeds  She  often  brings  In  Mem.  Iv  11 

these  have  clothed  their  branchy  bowers  With  /  Mays,  „    Ixxvi  14 

And  /  knights  rode  with  them,  Marr.  of  Geraint  44 
Was  wont  to  glance  and  sparkle  like  a  gem  Of 

/  facets ;  Geraint  and  E.  295 

/  knights  rode  with  them  to  the  shores  Of  Severn,  „            954 

I  have  not  broken  bread  for  /  hours.  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  199 
F  times  the  rose  has  flower'd  and  faded,  F  times 

the  golden  harvest  fallen.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  1 

Henry's  /  years  are  all  in  shadow,  Gray  with 

distance  Edward's  /  summers, 
F  years  of  ever-broadening  Commerce !    F  years 
of  ever-brightening  Science !    F  years  of  ever- 
widening  Empire ! 
Rose,  on  this  terrace  /  years  ago. 
That  blush  of  /  years  ago,  my  dear, 
on  our  terrace  here  Glows  in  the  blue  of  /  miles  away, 


39 


52 

Roses  on  the  T.  1 

5 


Ah,  what  shall  I  be  at  / 
Fifty-fold    '  My  lord,  you  overpay  me  /-/.' 
Fifty-three    We  are  six  ships  of  the  line ;  can  we 

fight  with /-<?' 
Fig    F's  out  of  thistles,  silk  from  bristles, 

the  /  ran  up  from  the  beach  and  rioted  over  the 
land. 

Are  f's  of  thistles  ?  or  grapes  of  thorns  ? 
Fight  (s)     Ere  I  rode  into  the  /, 

Laid  by  the  tumult  of  the  /. 

pierce  The  blackest  files  of  clanging  /, 

Clanging  f's,  and  flaming  towns. 

He  got  it ;  for  their  captain  after  /, 

Sun-shaded  in  the  heat  of  dusty  f's) 

some  grand  /  to  kill  and  make  and  end : 

And  what  she  did  to  Cyrus  after  /, 


Maud  I  vi  31 
Geraint  and  E.  220 

The  Revenge  7 
Last  Tournament  356 

F.  of  Maeldune  58 

Riflemen  form  /  10 

Oriana  21 

Margaret  26 

Kate  26 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  116 

Aylmer's  Field  226 

Princess  ii  241 

„      iv  591 

V  366 


Fight  (s)  (continued) 
princess — 
He  that  gain'd  a  hundred  f's, 
For  each  had  warded  either  in  the  /, 
So  that  I  be  not  f all'n  in  /. 
My  lord  is  weary  with  the  /  before, 

f  leased  To  find  him  yet  un wounded  after  /, 
,  myself,  when  flush'd  with  /, 

free  to  stretch  his  limbs  in  lawful  /, 

having  been  With  Arthur  in  the  / 

hear  the  manner  of  thy  /  and  fall ; 

Nor  ever  yet  had  Arthur  fought  a  /  Like  this 

chance  and  craft  and  strength  in  single  f's, 

But  never  a  moment  ceased  the  / 

fought  such  a  /  for  a  day  and  a  night 

fevers,  f's.  Mutinies,  treacheries — 

Each  was  as  brave  in  the  / 

red  with  blood  the  Crescent  reels  from  / 

some  in  /  against  the  foe, 

the  charge,  and  the  might  of  the  / ! 

Who  were  held  for  a  while  from  the  /, 

for  he  fought  Thy  /  for  Thee, 

Struck  by  a  poison'd  arrow  in  the  /, 

The  gladiators  moving  toward  their  /, 

Ralph  went  down  Uke  a  fire  to  the  / 
Fight  (verb)     She  saw  me  /,  she  heard  me  call, 

who  would  /  and  march  and  countermarch, 

brother,  where  two  /  The  strongest  wins, 

one  Should  come  to  /  with  shadows  and  to  fall. 

Nor  would  I  /  with  iron  laws, 

I  prove  Your  knight,  and  /  your  battle, 

'  F '  she  said,  '  And  make  us  all  we  woiild  be, 

make  yourself  a  man  to  /  with  men. 

I  was  pledged  To  /  in  tourney  for  my  bride, 

what  mother's  blood  You  draw  from,  /; 

F  and  /  well  strike  and  strike  home. 

one  should  /  with  shadows  and  should  fall ; 

she  sees  me  /,  Yea,  let  her  see  me  fall ! 

I  would  sooner  /  thrice  o'er  than  see  it.' 

king  is  scared,  the  soldier  will  not  /, 

a  he  which  is  part  a  truth  is  a  harder  matter  to  /. 

Glory  of  Virtue,  to  /,  to  struggle, 

She  cannot  /  the  fear  of  death. 

teach  true  life  to  /  with  mortal  wrongs. 

It  is  better  to  /  for  the  good  than  to  rail 

we  that  /  for  our  fair  father  Christ, 

Hereafter  I  will  /.' 

the  cur  Pluckt  from  the  cur  he  f's  with, 

F,  an  thou  canst :  I  have  missed  the  only  way,' 

To  /  the  brotherhood  of  Day  and  Night — 

Far  liefer  had  I  /  a  score  of  times 

Fair  words  were  best  for  him  who  f's  for  thee ; 

Such  /  not  I,  but  answer  scorn  with  scorn. 

nor  meet  To  /  for  gentle  damsel, 

thou  goest,  he  will  /  thee  first ; 

yield  him  this  again :  'tis  he  must  /: 

Said  Gareth  laughing,  '  An  he  /  for  this, 

will  I  /  him,  and  will  break  his  pride, 

arms,  arms  to  /  my  enemy  ? 

And  /  and  break  his  pride,  and  have  it  of  him. 

this  nephew,  /  In  next  day's  tourney 

thou,  that  hast  no  lady,  canst  not  /.' 

I  will  not  /  my  way  with  gilded  arms, 

he  will  /  for  me.  And  win  the  circlet : 

look  at  mine !  but  wilt  thou  /  for  me, 

'  F  therefore,'  yell'd  the  youth. 

The  king  who  f's  his  people  f's  himself. 

I  liked  a  bigger  feller  to  /  wi' 

can  we  /  with  fifty-three  ? 

fly  them  for  a  moment  to  /  with  them  again. 

only  a  hundred  seamen  to  work  the  ship  and  to  /, 

'  Shall  we  /  or  shall  we  fly  ? 

For  to  /  is  but  to  die ! 

manj^  were  shatter'd,  and  so  could  /  us  no  more — 

he  said  '  i^  on !  /  on !  (repeat) 


something  real,  A  gallant  /,  a  noble 

Princess,  Con.  19 
Ode  on  WeU.  96 
Com.  of  Arthur  131 
Marr.  of  Geraint  223 
Geraint  and  E.  133 
371 
„  660 

754 
Lancelot  and  E.  287 
Pelleas  and  E.  347 
Pass,  of  Arthur  93 
106 
The  Revenge  57 
,,  8o 

Columbus  225 
V.  of  Maeldune  5 
Montenegro  6 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  45 
Heavy  Brigade  13 
36 
Happy  15 
Death  of  CEnone  26 
St.  Telemachus  54 
The  Tourney  3 
Oriana  32 
AuMey  Court  40 
Aylmer's  Field  364 
Princess  i  10 
w75 
595 
598 
i;35 
353 
405 
409 
476 
516 
m226 
„  Con.  60 
Grandmother  32 
Wages  3 
In  Mem.  cxiv  10 
Maud  I  xviii  54 
„      ///  vi  57 
Com.  of  Arthur  510 
Gareth  and  L.  447 
702 
792 
857 
944 
946 
953 
1177 
1295 
1321 
1345 
Marr.  of  Geraint  221 
282 
416 
475 
493 
Geraint  and  E.  21 
Pelleas  and  E.  118 
127 
572 
Pass,  of  Arthur  72 
North.  Cobbler  100 
The  Revenge  1 
9 
22 
25 
27 
61 
63,69 


Fight 


212 


Find 


Fight  (verb)  (continued)    We  shall  live  to  /  again  and  to 

strike  another  blow.'  The  Revenge  95 

We  can  /!  But  to  be  soldier  aU  day  Def.  of  Lucknow  73 
shall  we  /  her  ?  shall  we  yield  ?                              Locksley  H.,  Sixty  115 

he  needs  must  /  To  make  true  peace  his  own,  Epilogue  26 

'e'd  /  wi'  a  will  when  'e  f owt ;  Owd  Boa  7 

Balph  would  /  in  Edith's  sight,  The  Tourney  1 

Fighter     rustiest  iron  of  old  f's'  hearts ;  Merlin  and  V.  574 

With  her  hundred /'s  on  deck.  The  Revenge  34 
the  field  with  blood  of  the  f's  Flow'd,                    Batt.  of  Brunanburh  24 

a  flight  of  shadowy  f's  crost  The  disk,  St.  Tdemachus  23 

Fighting    '  No  /  shadows  here !  Princess  Hi  125 

Yet  it  seem'd  a  dream,  I  dream'd  Of  /.  „          v  493 

ere  his  cause  Be  cool'd  by  /,  Gareth  and  L.  703 

In  the  great  battle  /  for  the  King.  Marr.  of  Geraint  596 

In  battle,  /  for  the  blameless  King.  Geraint  and  E.  970 

All  /  for  a  woman  on  the  sea.  Merlin  and  V.  562 
send  her  delegate  to  thrall  These  /  hands  of  mine —    Pdleas  and  E.  337 

Figtree     wild  /  split  Their  monstrous  idols,  Princess  iv  79 

Figure    Faint  as  a  /  seen  in  early  dawn  Enoch  Arden  357 

Some  /  like  a  wizard  pentagram  The  Brook  103 

Tall  as  a  /  lengthen'd  on  the  sand  Princess  vi  161 

for  so  long  a  space  Stared  at  the  f's,  Gareth  and  L.  232 

comb  wherein  Were  slabs  of  rock  with  f's,  „           1194 

beneath  five  f's,  armed  men,  „           1205 

carven  with  strange  f's ;  and  in  out  The  f's.  Holy  Grail  169 

So  the  sweet  /  folded  round  with  night  Lover's  Tale  iv  219 

Figured    bears  a  skeleton  /  on  his  arms,  Gareth  and  L.  640 

In  many  a /leaf  enroUs  The  total  world  In  Mem.  xliii  11 

Fignre-head    full-busted /-A  Stared  o'er  the  ripple  Enoch  Arden  54:3 

Filament    Seems  but  a  cobweb  /  to  link  Lover's  Tale  i  376 

Had  seem'd  a  gossamer /up  in  air,  „              413 

File    The  blackest /'s  of  clanging  fight,  Kate  26 

in  the  foremost /'s  of  time —  Locksley  Hall  178 

Filed    grated  down  and  /  away  with  thought.  Merlin  and  V.  623 

jraial    wars,  and  /  faith,  and  Dido's  pyre ;  To  Virgil  4 
/  eyes  Have  seen  the  loneliness  of  earthly  thrones,        Prin.  Beatrice  13 

Fill    (verb)     or/'s  The  homed  valleys  all  about,         Supp.  Confessions  151 

f  the  sea-halls  with  a  voice  of  power ;  The  Merman  10 

Yet  /  my  glass :  give  me  one  kiss :  MiUer's  D.  17 
bursts  that  /  The  spacious  times  of  great  Elizabeth     D.  of  F.  Women  6 

And  tho'  mine  own  eyes  /  with  dew,  To  J.  8.  37 

F's  out  the  homely  quickset-screens.  On  a  Mourner  6 

Should  /  and  choke  with  golden  sand —  You  ask  me,  why  24 

A  thought  would  /  my  eyes  with  happy  dew ;  Gardener's  D.  197 

those  tremulous  eyes  that  /  with  tears  To  hear  me  ?  Tithonus  26 

Saw  the  heavens  /  with  commerce,  Locksley  Hall  121 

Heard  the  heavens  /  with  shouting,  „           123 
'  F  the  cup,  and  /  the  can :  (repeat)                 Vision  of  Sin  95,  119,  203 

' F  the  can,  and/  the  cup :  (repeat)  „                  131,  167 

Musing  on  him  that  used  to  /  it  for  her,  Enoch  Arden  208 

from  all  the  provinces,  And  /  the  hive.'  Princess  ii  98 

gwrt  half-science,  /  me  with  a  faith,  „  Con.  76 

There  twice  a  day  the  Severn  f's ;  In  Mem.  xix  5 

prosperous  labour  f's  The  lips  of  men  „  Ixxxiv  25 

so  /  up  the  gap  where  force  might  fail  Gareth  and  L.  1352 

BaJa  fake  F's  all  the  sacred  Dee.  Geraint  and  E.  930 

in  this  heathen  war  the  fire  of  God  F's  him :  Lancelot  and  E.  316 

Kmo  Akthtje  made  new  knights  to  /  the  gap  PeUeas  and  E.  1 

and  f's  The  flower  with  dew ;  Early  Spring  45 

felt  a  vacant  hand  F  with  his  purse.  To  Mary  Boyle  32 

F  out  the  spaces  by  the  barren  tiles.  Prog,  of  Spring  43 

The  kingcup  f's  her  footprint,  „             59 

/  the  hollows  between  wave  and  wave ;  Akbar's  Dream  161 

FOl  (s)    weep  my  /  once  more,  and  cry  myself  to  rest !  The  Flight  6 

nO'd    the  ground  Shall  be  /  with  life  anew.  Nothing  will  Die  29 

The  right  ear,  that  is  /  with  dust.  Two  Voices  116 

The  woods  were  /  so  full  with  song,  „         455 

And  /  the  breast  with  purer  breath.  Miller's  D.  92 

and  /  with  light  The  interval  of  sound.  D.  of  F.  Women  171 

And  /  the  house  with  clamour.  The  Goose  36 

F  I  was  with  folly  and  spite,  Edward  Gray  15 

They  are  /  with  idle  spleen ;  Vision  of  Sin  124 

and  /  the  shores  With  clamour.  Enoch  Arden  635 

when  their  casks  were  /  they  took  aboard :  „          646 


Fill'd  (continued)    drank  The  magic  cup  that  /  itself 

anew.  Aylmer's  Field  143 

entering/  the  house  with  sudden  light.  „  682 

F  thro'  and  thro'  with  Love,  a  happy  sleep.  Princess  vii  172 

When  /  with  tears  that  cannot  fall,  In  Mem.  xix  11 

The  streets  were  /  with  joyful  sound,  „      xxxi  10 

/  a  horn  with  wine  and  held  it  to  her,)  Geraint  and  E.  659 

F  all  the  genial  courses  of  his  blood  „  927 

Sprang  to  her  face  and  /  her  with  delight ;  Lancelot  and  E.  377 

great  tower  /  with  eyes  Up  to  the  summit,  Pelleas  and  E.  166 

Till  the  sweet  heavens  have  /  it  „  510 

Ascending,  /  his  double-dragon'd  chair.  Last  Tournament  144 

and  the  ways  Were  /  with  rapine,  Guinevere  458 

larks  F  all  the  March  of  life  !—  Lover's  Tale  i  284 

openings  in  the  mountains  /  With  the  blue  valley  „  330 

F  all  with  pure  clear  fire,  „  ii  146 

Fillest    thou,  that  /  all  the  room  Of  all  my  love.  In  Mem.  cxii  5 

Filling    F  with  light  And  vagrant  melodies  The  Poet  16 

Fillip'd    /  at  the  diamond  in  her  ear ;  Godiva  25 

Film    with  a  grosser  /  made  thick  These  heavy,  homy 

eyes.  St.  S.  Stylites  200 

Filmed    Floats  from  his  sick  and  /  eyes,  Supp.  Confessions  166 

Filmy    wheel'd  or  lit  the  /  shapes  That  haunt  the  dusk.        In  Mem.  xcv  10 

Filter'd     The  /  tribute  of  the  rough  woodland.  Ode  to  Memory  63 

Filth    shown  the  trath  betimes.  That  old  true  /,  Merlin  and  V.  47 

poach'd  /  that  floods  the  middle  street,  „  798 

insult,  /,  and  monstrous  blasphemies.  Pass,  of  Arthur  114 

fairest  flesh  at  last  is  /  on  which  the  worm  will  feast ;  Happy  30 

women  shrieking  '  Atheist '  flur^  F  from  the  roof,       Ahbar's  Dream  92 

Filthy     In  /  sloughs  they  roll  a  prurient  skin,  Palace  of  A  rt  201 

He  believed  This  /  marriage-hindering  Mammon         Aylmer's  Field  374 

monster  lays  His  vast  and  /  hands  upon  my  will,  Lucretius  220 

Till  the  /  by-lane  rings  to  the  yell  of  the  trampled  wife,       Maud  I  i38 

to  outlearn  the  /  friar.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  118 

all  that  is  /  with  all  that  is  fair  ?  Vastness  32 

Fin     winks  the  gold  /  in  the  porphyry  font :  Princess  vii  178 

There  is  not  left  the  twinkle  of  a  /  Geraint  and  E.  474 

Finance    poring  over  his  Tables  of  Trade  and  F ;  The  Wreck  26 

Final    we  trust  that  somehow  good  Will  be  the  /  goal  of  ill.    In  Mem.  liv  2 

trusted  God  was  love  indeed  And  love  Creation's  /  law —         „      Ivi  Ii 

---■-■  Kate  31 

The  form,  the  form  7 

Two  Voices  29 

96 

97 

176 

191 

233 

243 

279 

293 

308 

352 

MiUer's  D.  238 

(Enone  155 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  18 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  45 

„  Con.  11 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  117 

Ulysses  70 

Day-Dm.,  Arrival  27 

„  Moral  2 

10 

„        L' Envoi  37 

Ep.Ji, 

Sir  Galahad  £ 


Find    She  cannot  /  a  fitting  mate 

for  a  moment  blest  To  /  my  heart  so  near 

Could  /  no  statelier  than  his  peers 

And  seem  to  /,  but  still  to  seek. 

but  to  seem  to  /  Asks  what  thou  lackest. 

Named  man,  may  hope  some  truth  to  /, 

I  shall  not  fail  to  /  her  now. 

seeking  to  undo  One  riddle,  and  to  /  the  trae, 

Wilt  thou  /  passion,  pain  or  pride  ? 

'  We  /  no  motion  in  the  dead.' 

In  Nature  can  he  nowhere  /. 

Could  his  dark  wisdom  /  it  out, 

'  As  here  we  /  in  trances,  men  Forget  the  dream 

With  blessings  which  no  words  can  /. 

So  shalt  thou  /  me  fairest. 

Some  meeker  pupil  you  must  /, 

/  my  garden-tools  upon  the  granary  floor : 

it  can't  be  long  before  I  /  release ; 

But  they  smile,  they  /  a  music  centred 

To  strive,  to  seek,  to  /,  and  not  to  yield. 

till  he  /  The  quiet  chamber  far  apart. 

And  if  you  /  no  moral  there, 

In  bud,  or  blade,  or  bloom,  may  /, 

f's  a  closer  truth  than  this  All-graceful  head. 

And,  if  you  /  a  meaning  there, 

on  lonely  mountain-meres  I  /  a  magic  bark ; 

Until  I /the  holy  Grail. 

/  the  precious  morning  hours  were  lost. 

Suddenly  set  it  wide  to  /  a  sign, 

you  /  That  you  meant  nothing — 

should  I  /  you  by  my  doors  again. 

And  being  used  to  /  her  pastor  texts, 

To  /  a  deeper  in  the  narrow  gloom 

and  /  A  sort  of  absolution  in  the  sound 

I  should  /  he  meant  me  well ; 


Enoch  Arden  • 

Aylmer's  Field  31S 
324 


Sea  Dreams  i 


Find 


213 


Fine 


Fmd  (continued)    to  /  Their  wildest  wailings  never  out  of 
tune 
beastlike  as  I  /  myself,  Not  manlike  end  myself  ? — 
Who  fail  to  /  thee,  being  as  thou  art 
Whate'er  my  grief  to  /  her  less  than  fame, 
But  chafing  me  on  fire  to  /  my  bride) 
As  yet  we  /  in  barbarous  isles, 
'  But  you  will  /  it  otherwise '  she  said. 
Less  welcome  /  among  us,  if  you  came 
I  /  you  here  but  in  the  second  place, 
we  should  /  the  land  Worth  seeing ; 
I  go  to  mine  own  land  For  ever :  /  some  other : 
come  thou  down  And  /  him ; 
/  him  dropt  upon  the  firths  of  ice, 
dance  thee  down  To  /  him  in  the  valley ; 
He  shall  /  the  stubborn  thistle  bursting 
Shall  /  the  toppling  crags  of  Duty  scaled 
I  /  myself  often  laughing  at  things 
For  it's  easy  to  /  a  rhyme,     (repeat) 
and  there  I  /  him  worthier  to  be  loved. 
And  /  in  loss  a  gain  to  match  ? 
And  glad  to  /  thyself  so  fair, 
So  / 1  every  pleasant  spot  In  which  we  two 
may  /  A  flower  beat  with  rain  and  wind, 
Treasuring  the  look  it  cannot  /, 
'  to  /  Another  service  such  as  this.' 
Then  might  I  /,  ere  yet  the  mom  Breaks 
And  /'s  '  I  am  not  what  I  see, 
She/'s  the  baseness  of  her  lot, 
fancies  play  To  /  me  gay  among  the  gay, 
I  /  a  trouble  in  thine  eye, 
A  man  upon  a  stall  may  /, 
I  /  An  image  comforting  the  mind, 
They  would  but  /  in  child  and  wife 
I  /  not  yet  one  lonely  thought 
To  /  a  stronger  faith  his  own ; 
He/'s  on  misty  mountain-ground 
I  /  no  place  that  does  not  breathe 
What  / 1  in  the  highest  place. 
And  /  his  comfort  in  thy  face ; 
God  grant  I  may  /  it  at  last ! 
A  glory  I  shall  not  /. 

If  I  /  the  world  so  bitter  When  I  am  but  twenty-five  ? 
blush'd  To  /  they  were  met  by  my  own  ; 
And  so  that  he  /  what  he  went  to  seek, 
I  /  whenever  she  touch'd  on  me 
But  come  to  her  waking,  /  her  asleep, 
To  /  the  arms  of  my  true  love  Round  me 
we  look  at  him.  And  /  nor  face  nor  bearing, 
all  in  fear  to  /  Sir  Gawain  or  Sir  Modred, 
thou  wilt  /  My  fortunes  all  as  fair 
'  Follow  the  faces,  and  we  /  it. 
and  all  as  glad  to  /  thee  whole, 
Seek,  till  we  /.' 

'  Full  merry  am  I  to  /  my  goodly  knave 
To  /,  at  some  place  I  shall  come  at, 
I  rode,  and  thought  to  /  Arms  in  your  town, 
how  can  Enid  /  A  nobler  friend  ? 
pleased  To  /  hrni  yet  unwounded  after  fight. 
With  eyes  to  /  you  out  however  far, 
And  /  that  it  had  been  the  wolf's  indeed : 
sit,  Until  they  /  a  lustier  than  themselves.' 
And  f's  himself  descended  from  the  Saint 
glad.  Knightlike,  to  /  his  charger  yet  unlamed, 
And  none  could  /  that  man  for  evermore, 
for  still  I  /  Your  face  is  practised 
hide  it,  hide  it ;  I  shall  /  it  out ; 
To  /  a  wizard  who  might  teach  the  King 
but  did  they  /  A  wizard  ?    Tell  me,  was  he  like  to 

thee? 
To  dig,  pick,  open,  /  and  read  the  charm : 
And  in  the  comment  did  I  /  the  charm, 
that  if  they  /  Some  stain  or  blemish 
vile  term  of  yours,  I  /  with  grief ! 
listen  to  me,  If  /  must  /  your  wit : 


Sea  Dreams  230 

Lucretius  231 

268 

Princess  i  73 

„        166 

„  a  122 

200 

„        354 

„  Hi  157 

»        171 

„    OT217 

„  m200 

206 

210 

Ode  on  WM.  206 

215 

Grandmother  92 

Window,  Ay  Q,  12 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  40 

t6 

w27 

via  9 

14 

xviii  19 

XX  7 

xxvi  13 

xlvl 

Ix  6 

Ixvi  3 

Ixviii  10 

Ixxvii  9 

Ixxxv  50 

xc  7 

23 

xcvi  17 

xcvii  2 

,  c  3 

,  cviii  9 

,  cix20 

Mavd  I  ii  1 

tj22 

vi33 

viii  7 

xvi  3 

xix  59 

,  7/  ii  81 

iv3 

Com.  of  Arthur  71 

Gareth  and  L.  325 

902 

1210 

1239 

1279 

1291 

Marr.  of  Geraint  219 

417 

792 

Geraint  and  E.  371 

428 

864 

Balin  and  Bcdan  19 

101 

428 

Merlin  and  V.  211 

366 

528 

583 

612 
„  660 

„  683 

831 

„  922 

Lancelot  and  E.  148 


Find  (continued)    thro'  all  hindrance /'s  the  man 
Behind  it, 

0  Gawain,  and  ride  forth  and  /  the  knight, 
cease  not  from  your  quest  until  ye  /.' 
he  bore  the  prize  and  could  not  /  The  victor, 
f  ail'd  to  /  him,  tho'  I  rode  all  round 
'  and  /  out  our  dear  Lavaine.' 

1  needs  must  hence  And  /  that  other, 
Until  I  /  the  palace  of  the  King. 
Where  Arthur  fs  the  brand  Excalibur. 
if  I  /  the  Holy  Grail  itself  And  touch  it. 
Only  I  /  not  there  this  Holy  Grail, 
the  pity  To  /  thine  own  first  love  once  more — 
to  /  Caerleon  and  the  King, 
a  merry  one  To  /  his  mettle,  good : 
/  a  nest  and  feels  a  snake,  he  drew : 
I  have  flung  thee  pearls  and/  thee  swine.' 
He  /  thy  favour  changed  and  love  thee  not ' — 

0  let  us  in,  that  we  may/  the  light ! 
And  weighing  /  them  less ; 
and  could  he  /  A  woman  in  her  womanhood 
sigh'd  to  /  Her  journey  done. 
But  in  His  ways  with  men  I  /  Him  not. 
and  /  or  feel  a  way  Thro'  this  blind  haze. 
You  cannot  /  their  depth ;  for  they  go  back, 

1  almost  dread  to  /  her,  dumb  ! ' 
'  You  promised  to  /  me  work  near  you, 
and  I  shall  not  /  him  in  Hell. 
You  will  not  /  me  here. 
Fur  I  f's  es  I  be  that  i'  debt, 
Ya  wouldn't  /  Charlie's  likes — 
I  /  that  it  always  can  please  Our  children, 
should  /  What  rotten  piles  uphold  their  mason- 
work, 

denied  to  him.  Who  f's  the  Saviour 

and  /  Nearer  and  ever  nearer  Him, 

these  eyes  will  /  The  men  I  knew. 

With  easy  laughter  /  the  gate  Is  bolted, 

Ah  God,  should  we  /  Him,  perhaps, 

coroner  doubtless  will  /  it  a  felo-de-se, 

She  f's  the  fountain  where  they  wail'd  '  Mirage ' ! 

he  comes,  and  f's  me  dead. 

She  that  f's  a  winter  sunset  fairer  than 

I  found,  and  more  than  once,  and  stUl  could  /, 

shall  we  /  a  changeless  May  ? 

Would  she  /  her  human  offspring  this  ideal  man 

at  rest  ? 
Till  you  /  the  deathless  Angel  seated  in  the  vacant 

tomb.  „  278 

May  we  /,  as  ages  run.  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  11 

in  amaze  To  /  her  sick  one  whole ;  Demeter  and  P.  58 

Howiver  was  I  fur  to  /  my  rent  Owd  Rod  47 

to  /  My  Mother's  diamonds  hidden  from  her  there,  The  Ring  141 


Lancelot  and  E.  333 

537 

548 

629 

709 

754 

759 

1051 

Holy  Grail  253 

438 

542 

620 

Pelleas  and  E.  21 

199 

437 

Last  Tournament  310 

500 

Guinevere  175 

„        192 

„        298 

404 

Pass,  of  Arthur  11 

75 

Lover's  Tale  i  80 

iv  339 

First  Quarrel  52 

Rizpah  74 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  187 

Village  Wife  65 

75 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  51 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  66 

115 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  52 

Tiresias  175 

„       200 

Despair  56 

„      115 

Ancient  Sage  77 

The  Flight  72 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  22 

121 

156 

234 


who  should  say — '  that  those  who  lose  can  /.' 
groping  for  it,  could  not  /  One  likeness. 
In  your  sweet  babe  she  f's  but  you — 
I  felt  for  what  I  could  not  /,  the  key, 
Might  /  a  flickering  glimmer  of  relief 
groans  to  see  it,  f's  no  comfort  there. 
/  the  white  heather  wherever  you  go, 
to  /  Me  or  my  coffin  ? 
Fabewell,  whose  living  like  I  shall  not  /, 
F  her  warrior  Stark  and  dark 
But  /  their  limits  by  that  larger  light, 
I  will  /  the  Priest  and  confess. 
I  /  her  with  the  eye. 
O  well  for  him  that  f's  a  friend, 
Findable    Not  /  here — content,  and  not  content. 
Finding    /  neither  light  nor  murmur  there 
And  /  that  of  fifty  seeds 

/  there  unconsciously  Some  image  of  himself — 
Fine     (See  also  Fairy-fine)     What  is  /  within  thee 
growing  coarse 
F  of  the  /,  and  shy  of  the  shy  ?    F  little  hands, 
/little  feet— 


282 

336 

365 

„        440 

To  Mary  Boyle  47 

Romney's  R.  45 

108 

143 

In  Mem.  W.  G.  Ward  1 

To  Master  of  B.  19 

Akbar's  Dream  99 

Bandit's  Death  18 

Mechanophilus  12 

The  Wanderer  5 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  132 

Enoch  Arden  687 

In  Mem.  Iv  11 

Ded.  of  Idylls  2 

Locksley  Hall  46 

Window,  Letter  2 


Fine 


214 


Fire 


Fine  (continued)    Cuck-oo ! '  was  ever  a  May  so  /?  Window,  Ay  10 

hair  Is  golden  like  thy  Mother's,  not  so  /.'  The  Ring  104 

From  head  to  ancle  /,  Talking  Oak  224 

in  /  linen,  not  a  hair  Ruffled  upon  the  scarfskin,  Aylmer's  Field  659 

In  that  /  air  I  tremble,  all  the  past  Princess  vii  354 

This  /  old  world  of  ours  is  but  a  child  „      Con.  77 
Broad  brows  and  fair,  a  fluent  hair  and  /,  High 
nose,  a  nostril  large  and  /,  and  hands  Large, 

fair  and/! —  Gareth  and  L.  464 
fair  and  /,  forsooth !    Sir  Fine-face,  Sir  Fair-hands  ? 
but  see  thou  to  it  That  thine  own  fineness, 

Lancelot,  some  /  day  „            474 

Such  /  reserve  and  noble  reticence,  Geraint  and  E.  860 

and  your  /  epithet  Is  accurate  too.  Merlin  and  V.  532 

lady  never  made  unwilling  war  With  those  /  eyes :  „            604 

for  /  plots  may  fail,  „            820 

Told  him  that  her  /  care  had  saved  his  life.  Lancelot  and  E.  863 

But  there  the  /  Gawain  will  wonder  at  me,  „            1054 

Then  came  the  /  Gawain  and  wonder'd  at  her,  „            1267 

And  win  me  this  /  circlet,  Pelleas,  PeUeas  and  E.  128 
a  wire  as  musically  as  thou  Some  such  /  song —     Last  Tournament  324 

I  thought  I  could  not  breathe  in  that  /  air  Guinevere  645 

Flying  by  each  /  ear,  an  Eastern  gauze  Iiover's  Tale  iv  291 

F  an'  meller  'e  mun  be  by  this.  North.  Cobbler  101 

I  warrant  ye  soom  /  daay —  Spinster's  S's.  63 

An'  my  oan  /  Jackman  i'  purple  „            106 

'  This  model  husband,  this  /  Artist ' !  Romney's  R.  124 

When  /  Philosophies  would  faU,  Akbar's  Dream  140 

Fine-face    Sir  F-f,  Sir  Fair-hands  ?  Gareth  and  L.  475 

Fineness    some  pretext  of  /  in  the  meal  Enoch  Arden  Z^l 

For  often  /  compensated  size ;  Princess  ii  149 

That  thine  own  /,  Lancelot,  Garelh  and  L.  476 

force  might  fail  With  skiU  and  /.  „          1352 

Finn    Soothe  him  with  thy  /  fancies,  Locksley  Hall  54 

A  random  string  Your/ female  sense  offends.  I) ay- Dm.,  L' Envoi  2 
may  soul  to  som  Strike  thro'  a  /  element  of 

her  own  ?  Aylmer's  Field  579 

And  like  a  /  light  in  Ught.  In  Mem.  xci  16 

Who  wants  the  /  politic  sense  To  mask,  Mavd  I  vi  47 
this  egg  of  mine  Was  /  gold  than  any  goose  can 

lay ;  Gareth  and  L.  43 

I,  the  /  brute  rejoicing  in  my  hounds.  By  an  Evolution.  7 

tho'  somewhat  /  than  their  own,  ,,              13 

Finest    because  he  was  The  /  on  the  tree.  Talking  Oak  238 

Are  touch'd,  are  tum'd  to  /  air.  Sir  Galahad  72 

Of  /  Gothic  lighter  than  a  fire.  Princess,  Pro.  92 

Finger  (adj.)    seem'd  All-perfect,  nnish'd  to  the  /  nail.        Edwin  Morris  22 

Finger  (s)    lets  his  rosy  f's  play  About  his  mother's 

neck,  Supp.  Confessions  42 
weary  with  a  f's  touch  Those  writhed  limbs           Clear-headed  friend  22 

dare  to  kiss  Thy  taper  f's  amorously,  Madeline  44 

Kate  snaps  her  f's  at  my  vows ;  Kate  19 

Thro'  rosy  taper  f's  drew  Her  streaming  curls  Mariana  in  the  S.  15 

Three  f's  round  the  old  silver  cup —  Miller's  D.  10 

With  rosy  slender  f's  backward  drew  CEnone  176 

And  on  thy  heart  a  /  lays.  On  a  Mourner  11 

One  rose,  but  one,  by  those  fair  f's  cull'd,  Gardener's  D.  150 

And  with  a  flving  /  swept  my  lips,  „            246 

To  save  her  httle  /  from  a  scratch  Edwin  Morris  63 

Baby  f's,  waxen  touches,  Locksley  HaU  90 

'  You  would  not  let  your  little  /  ache  Godiva  22 

f's  steal  And  touch  upon  the  master-chord  Will  Water.  26 

Enoch's  golden  ring  had  girt  Her  /,  Enoch  Arden  158 

Suddenly  put  her  /  on  the  text,  „            497 

he  dug  His  f's  into  the  wet  earth,  „            780 

My  lady  with  her  f's  interlock'd,  Aylmer's  Field  199 

(I  kept  the  book  and  had  my  /  in  it)  Princess,  Pro.  63 

And  takes  a  lady's  /  with  all  care,  „            173 

now  a  pointed  /,  told  them  all ;  ,,1;  270 

she  laid  A  feeling  /  on  my  brows,  „        vi  121 

innocent  arms  And  lazy  lingering  f's.  „            139 

With  trembling  f's  dia  we  weave  The  holly  In  Mem,  xxx  1 

God's  /  touch'd  him,  and  he  slept.  „     Ixxxv  20 

A  fiery  /  on  the  leaves ;  ,,       xcix  12 

With  petulant  thumb  and  /,  shrilling,  Garelh  and  L.  750 


Finger  (s)  {continued)    Myself  would  work  eye  dim,  and 

/  lame,  Marr.  of  Geraint  628 

He  sits  imarm'd ;  I  hold  a  /  up ;  Geraint  and  E.  337 

moving  back  she  held  Her  /  up,  „           453 

clench'd  her  f's  till  they  bit  the  palm,  Lancelot  and  E.  611 
In  colour  like  the  f'sota,  hand  Before  a  burning  taper.  Holy  Gra/il  693 
one  with  shatter'd  f's  dangling  lame.                        Last  Tournament  60 

had  let  one  /  lightly  touch  The  warm  white  apple  „              716 

Touch'd  by  the  adulterous  /  of  a  time  To  the  Queen  ii  43 
placed  My  ring  upon  the  /  of  my  bride.                 Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  214 

Death  at  the  glimpse  of  a  /  Def.  of  Lucknow  23 

nor  voice  Nor  /  raised  against  him —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  45 

drew  the  ring  From  his  dead  /,  The  Ring  218 

His  / '5  were  so  stiff en'd  by  the  frost  „        239 

mark  ran  All  round  one  /  pointed  straight,  „        453 

worn  the  ring — Then  torn  it  from  her  /,  „        456 

Finger-ache    Who  never  knewest  f-a,  Gareth  and  L.  87 

Fingering    /  at  the  hair  about  his  Up,  Princess  v  303 

F  at  his  sword-handle  imtil  he  stood  Pelleas  and  E.  442 

Finger-nail    {See  also  Finger  (adj.) 

crush'd  with  a  tap  Of  my  f-n  on  the  sand,  Maud  II  ii  22 

Fingers  an'  to^s  (a  disease  in  turnips)    tonups  was  haafe 

on  'em  fat.  Church-warden,  etc.  4 

Finger-tips    she  sway'd  The  rein  with  dainty  f-t,  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  41 

FinisJs    grasping  the  pews  And  oaken  /  Aylmer's  Field  823 

Finish    I  leave  not  till  I  /  this  fair  quest,  Gareth  and  L.  774 

'  Ay,  wilt  thou  /  it  ?    Sweet  lord,  „          776 

Finished    when  four  years  were  wholly  /,  Palace  of  Art  289 

Of  such  a  /  chasten'd  purity.  Isabel  41 

seem'd  All-perfect,  /  to  the  finger-nail.  Edwin  Morris  22 

'  It  is  /.     Man  is  made.'  Making  of  Man  8 

Finite-infinite    wrought  Not  Matter,  nor  the /-i,  De  Prof .,  Two  G.  54: 

Sun,  sun,  and  sun,  thro'  f-i  space  In  f-i  Time —  „              45 

Finn    and  chanted  the  triumph  of  F,  V.  of  Maddune  48 

And  we  sang  of  the  triumphs  of  F,  „              88 

Go  back  to  the  Isle  of  F  „            124 

I  landed  again,  with  a  tithe  of  my  men,  on  the  Isle 

of  F.  „            130 

Fir    tall  / '5  and  oiu-  fast-falling  burns ;  Gareth  and  L.  91 

glories  of  the  moon  Below  black  /'s.  Lover's  Tale  ii  111 

Fire  (s)  {See  also  Afire,  Altar-fire,  Hell-fire,  Idol-fires, 
Rick-fire)  a  bolt  of  /  Would  rive  the  slumbrous 
summer  noon  Supp.  Confessions  10 

the  storm  Of  running/ '5  and  fluid  range  „                147 

Until  the  latter  /  shall  heat  the  deep ;  The  Kraken  13 

Thou  who  stealest  /,  From  the  fountains  Ode  to  Memory  1 

Tho'  one  did  fling  the  /.  The  Poet  30 

Losing  his  /  and  active  might  Eleanore  104 

a  languid  /  creeps  Thro'  my  veins  „        130 

with  sudden  /'s  Flamed  over :  Bu/)naparte  11 

Like  Stephen,  an  unquenched  /.  Two  Voices  219 

O  Love,  O  /!  once  he  drew  With  one  long  kiss  Faiima  19 

from  beyond  the  noon  a  /  Is  pour'd  upon  the  hills,  „      30 

at  their  feet  the  crocus  brake  like  /,  CEnone  96 

for  she  says  A  /  dances  before  her,  „    264 

All  earth  and  air  seem  only  burning  /.'  „    268 

Burnt  like  a  fringe  of  /.  Palace  of  Art  ^ 

slow-flaming  crimson /'s  From  shadow'd  grots  „           50 

And  highest,  snow  and /.  „            84 

She  howl'd  aloud,  '  I  am  on  /  within.  „          285 

wild  marsh-marigold  shines  like  /  May  Queen  31 
blasts  That  rvm  before  the  fluttering  tongues  of  /;    D.  of  F.  Women  30 

their /'s  Love  tipt  his  keenest  darts;  „              173 

The  glass  blew  in,  the  /  blew  out.  The  Goose  49 

hung  From  Allan's  watch,  and  sparkled  by  the  /.  Dora  136 

Or  biutt'd  in  /,  or  boil'd  in  oil,  St.  8.  Stylites  52 

Sit  with  their  wives  by/ 's,  „            108 

Have  scrambled  past  those  pits  of  /,  „            184 

beat  the  twilight  into  flakes  of  /.  Tithonus  42 

and  winks  behind  a  slowly-dying  /.  Locksley  HaU  136 

with  rain  or  hail,  or  /  or  snow ;  „  193 
On  the  hall-hearths  the  festal  /'s,                          Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  14 

The  /  shot  up,  the  martin  flew,  „            Revival  11 

But  in  my  words  were  seeds  of  /.  The  Letters  28 

Fall  from  his  Ocean-lane  of  /,  The  Voyage  19 


Jl 


Fire 


215 


Fire 


Fire  (s)  {contimied)    With  wakes  of  /  we  tore  the  dark ;  The  Voyage  52 

'  No,  I  cannot  praise  the  /  In  your  eye —  Vision  of  Sin  183 

All-kindled  by  a  still  and  sacred  /,  Enoch  Arden  71 

Keep  a  clean  hearth  and  a  clear  /  for  me,  „        192 

And  flung  her  down  upon  a  couch  of  /,  Aylmer's  Field  574 

flood,  /,  earthquake,  thunder,  wrought  „            639 

as  not  passing  thro'  the  /  Bodies,  but  souls —  „            671 

No  desolation  but  by  sword  and/?  „            748 

a  /,  The  /  that  left  a  roofless  Ihon,  Liicretiv^  64 

altho'  his  /  is  on  my  face  Blinding,  „        144 

her  arm  lifted,  eyes  on  / —  Princess,  Pro.  41 

Of  finest  Gothic  lighter  than  a  /,  „              92 

made  to  kill  Time  by  the  /  in  winter.'  „            205 

But  chafing  me  on  /  to  find  my  bride)  „         i  166 

Burnt  like  the  mystic  /  on  a  mast-head,  „        iv  274 

bloom  As  of  some  /  against  a  stormy  cloud,  „            384 

The  next,  Uke/  he  meets  the  foe,  '  „            583 

red-faced  war  has  rods  of  steel  and/;  „         v  118 

living  hearts  that  crack  within  the  /  „            379 

the  /'s  of  Hell  Mix  with  his  hearth :  „            454 

out  of  stricken  helmets  sprang  the  /.  „            495 

Break  from  a  darken'd  future,  crown'd  with/,  „        vi  175 

Flash,  ye  cities,  in  rivers  of  /!  W.  to  Alexander  19 
the  tongue  is  a  /  as  you  know,  my  dear,  the  tongue 

is  a  /.  Grandmother  28 

moon  like  a  rick  on  /  was  rising  over  the  dale,  „           39 

The  giant  windows'  blazon'd  f's.  The  Daisy  58 

Then  thorpe  and  byre  arose  in  /,  The  Victim  3 

At  his  highest  with  sunrise  /;  Voice  and  the  P.  30 

Thunder,  a  flying  /  in  heaven,  Boddicea  24 

many  a  /  before  them  blazed :  Spec,  of  Iliad  10 

many  a  /  between  the  ships  and  stream  „            17 

Sat  fifty  in  the  blaze  of  burning  /;  „            20 

And  f's  bum  clear,  And  frost  is  here  Window,  Winter  4 

The /'s  are  all  the  clearer,  „                 16 

king  of  the  wrens  with  a  crovm  of  /.  „            Ay  16 

A  loonung  bastion  fringed  with  /.  In  Mem.  xv  20 

Is  shrivell'd  in  a  fruitless  /,  „         liv  11 

Labumiuns,  dropping- wells  of  /.  „  Ixxxiii  12 

shine  Beside  the  never-lighted  /.  „   Ixxxiv  20 

But  on  her  forehead  sits  a  /:  „         cxiv  5 

And  compass'd  by  the  f's  of  Hell ;  „     cxxvii  17 

And  on  the  downs  a  rising/:  „     Con.  108 

/  of  a  foolish  pride  flash'd  over  Mavd  I  iv  16 

Cold  f's,  yet  with  power  to  bum  and  brand  „  xviii  39 
f's  of  Hell  brake  out  of  thy  rising  sun,  The  f's  of 

HeU  and  of  Hate;  „       7/ {  9 

blood-red  blossom  of  war  with  a  heart  of  /.  „  III  vi  53 
/of  God  Descends  upon  thee  in  the  battle-field:        Com.  of  Arthur  128 

And  all  at  once  all  round  him  rose  in  /,  „            389 

the  child  and  he  were  clothed  in  /.  „            390 

echo'd  by  old  folk  beside  their /'s  For  comfort  „            417 

the  herd  was  driven,  F  glimpsed ;  „            433 

a  city  all  on  /  With  sun  and  cloth  of  gold,  „            479 

I  will  walk  thro'  /,  Mother,  to  gain  it —  Gareth  and  L.  133 
'  Will  ve  walk  thro'  /?    Who  walks  thro'  /  will 

hardly  heed  the  smoke.  „            142 

/,  That  lookt  half-dead,  brake  bright,  „            684 

For  an  your  /  be  low  ye  kindle  mine !  ,,711 

But  up  hke  /  he  started :  „          1123 

forage  for  the  horse,  and  flint  for /.  „  1277 
Glow'd  like  the  heart  of  a  great  /  at  Yule,                Marr.  of  Geraint  559 

night  of  /,  when  Edym  sack'd  their  house,  „               634 

loosed  in  words  of  sudden  /  the  wrath  Geraint  and  E.  106 
In  a  hollow  land.  From  which  old  /'s  have  broken, 

men  may  fear  Fresh  /  and  ruin.  „  822 
/  of  Heaven  has  kiU'd  the  barren  cold,                     Balin  and  Balan  440 


/  of  heaven  is  not  the  flame  of  Hell,  (repeat) 

Yet  in  your  frosty  cells  ye  feel  the/! 

'  The  /  of  Heaven  is  on  the  dusty  ways. 

'  The  /  of  Heaven  is  lord  of  all  things  good,  And 

starve  not  thou  this  /  within  thy  blood, 
[  This  /  of  heaven,  This  old  sun-worship, 
into  such  a  song,  such  /  for  fame. 


„      443, 447, 
451,455 
„  446 

448 

452 

456 

Merlin  and  V.  417 


Fire  (s)  (continued)     Rage  like  a  /  among  the  noblest 

names.  Merlin  and  V.  802 

Her  godlike  head  crown'd  with  spiritual  /,  „            837 

in  this  heathen  war  the  /  of  God  Fills  him :  Lancelot  and  E.  315 

shot  red /and  shadows  thro'  the  cave,  „              414 

So  ran  the  tale  like  /  about  the  court,  „              734 

F  in  dry  stubble  a  nine-days'  wonder  flared :  „              735 

wrapt  In  unremorsef ul  folds  of  rolling  /.  Holy  Grail  261 

while  ye  follow  wandering  f's  Lost  in  the  quagmire !  „          319 

most  of  us  would  follow  wandering  f's,  (repeat)  „  369,  599 

years  of  death,  Sprang  into  /:  „          497 

Sprang  into  /  and  vanish'd,  „          506 

Must  be  content  to  sit  by  httle  f's.  „          614 

A  mocking/:  '  what  other /  than  he,  „          670 

methought  I  spied  A  dying  /  of  madness  „          768 

most  of  them  would  foUow  wandering /'s,  „          891 

Burnt  as  a  Uving  /  of  emeralds,  Pdleas  and  E.  35 

A  vision  hovering  on  a  sea  of  /,  „              52 

a  sacrifice  Kindled  by  /  from  heaven ;  „            146 

thro'  his  heart  The  /  of  honour  and  all  noble  deeds  Flash'd,  „  278 
maiden  snow  mingled  with  sparks  of  /.                    Last  Tournament  149 

Who  sits  and  gazes  on  a  faded  /,  „              157 

Arthur's  vows  on  the  great  lake  of /.  „              345 

one  was  water  and  one  star  was  /,  „              736 

Pray  for  him  that  he  scape  the  doom  of  /,  Guinevere  347 

The  children  bom  of  thee  are  sword  and /,  „         425 

making  all  the  night  a  steam  of  /.  „         599 

land  of  old  unheaven  from  the  abyss  By/,  Pass,  of  Arthur  83 

and  blew  Fresh  /  into  the  sun.  Lover's  Tale  i  319 

Thy  f's  from  heaven  had  touch'd  it,  „            439 

dragonfly  Shot  by  me  like  a  flash  of  purple  /.  „          ii  17 

Fill'd  all  with  pure  clear /,  „            146 

Had  suck'd  the  /  of  some  forgotten  sun,  „        iv  194 

and  all  /  again  Thrice  in  a  second,  „            323 

if  my  boy  be  gone  to  the  /  ?  Rizpah  78 

an'  I  seead  'im  a-gittin'  o'  /;  North.  Cobbler  26 

an'  'e  shined  like  a  sparkle  o'  /.  „            48 

leaves  i'  the  middle  to  kindle  the  /;  Village  Wife  72 

F  from  ten  thousand  at  once  of  the  rebels  Def.  of  Lucknow  22 

Sharp  is  the  /  of  assault,  „              57 

thou  bringest  Not  peace,  a  sword,  a  /.  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  36 

and  life  Pass  in  the  /  of  Babylon !  „           124 

Who  rose  and  doom'd  me  to  the /.  „           172 

How  now,  my  soul,  we  do  not  heed  the/?  „           191 

For  I  must  live  to  testify  by  /.'  „           206 

Thro'  the  /  of  the  tulip  and  poppy,  V.  of  Maddune  43 

And  we  came  to  the  Isle  of  ^ :  „             71 

For  the  peak  sent  up  one  league  of  /  „             72 

There  were  some  leap'd  into  the/;  „             76 

Dashing  the  f's  and  the  shadows  of  dawn  „             99 
with  set  of  sun  Their  f's  flame  thickly,                    Achilles  over  the  T.  11 

To  see  the  dread,  unweariable  /  „                27 

Shrine-shattering  earthquake,  /,  flood,  thimderbolt,  Tiresias  61 

On  one  far  height  in  one  far-shining/.  „     185 

'  One  height  and  one  far-shining  /.'  „      186 

Flashing  with  f's  as  of  God,  Despair  16 

and  a  smoke  who  was  once  a  pillar  of  /,  „       29 

Love  is  /,  and  bums  the  feet  The  Flight  68 

cut  his  bit  o'  turf  for  the  /?  Tomorrow  65 
Gone  the  /'s  of  youth,  the  follies,                             LocTcsley  H.,  Sixty  39 

Gone  like  f's  and  floods  and  earthquakes  „                40 

F's  that  shook  me  once,  but  now  to  silent  ashes  „                41 

/  of  fever  creeps  across  the  rotted  floor,  „              223 

The  f's  that  arch  this  dusky  dot —  Epilogue  52 

Ihon's  lofty  temples  robed  in  /,  To  Virgil  2 

One  shriek'd  '  The  f's  of  Hell ! '  Dead  Prophet  80 

To  and  thro'  the  Doomsday  /,  Hden's  Tower  10 
all  the  hateful /'s  Of  torment,                                    Demeter  and  P.  151 

'e  coom'd  thruf  the  f  wi'  my  bairn  i'  'is  mouth  Owd  Bod  92 

the  /  was  a-raagin' an' raavin'  „      110 

Fur  we  moiint 'ev  naw  moor/'s —  „      118 

vows  that  are  snapt  in  a  moment  of  /;  Vastness  26 

/  from  Heaven  had  dash'd  him  dead,  Happy  83 

blasted  to  the  deathless  /  of  Hell.  „      84 

lured  me  from  the  household  /  on  earth.  Romney's  R.  40 


Fire 


216 


Fit 


Fite  (s)  (cantinued)    The  coals  of /you  heap  upon  my  head     Romney's  R.  14cl 

If  the  lips  were  touch'd  with  /  Parnassus  17 

the  /  within  him  would  not  falter ;  .   „          19 

Stark  and  dark  in  his  funeral  /.  To  Master  of  B.  20 

mixt  herself  with  him  and  past  in  /.  Death  of  CEnone  106 

'  Is  earth  On  /  to  the  West  ?  St.  Telemachus  19 

were  seen  or  heard  F^s  of  Silttee,  Akbar's  Dream  196 

passing  souls  thro'  /  to  the  /,  The  Dawn  4 

Ralph  went  down  like  a  /  to  the  fight  The  Tourney  3 

in  the  glare  of  deathless  / !  FaiA  8 

/ — thro'  one  that  will  not  shame  Gareth  and  L.  1310 

Fire  (verb)     The  furzy  prickle  /  the  dells,  Two  Voices  71 

And  /'s  your  narrow  casement  glass,  Miller's  D.  243 

I,  by  Lionel  sitting,  saw  his  face  F,  Lover's  Tale  iv  323 

Now  let  it  speak,  and  you  /,  Def.  of  Lucknow  29 

It  is  charged  and  we  /,  and  they  run.  „            68 

Fire-balloon    a  f-h  Rose  gem-like  up  Princess,  Pro.  74 

Firebrand    this  / — gentleness  To  such  as  her !  „           i)  167 

Fire-crown'd    The  f-c  king  of  the  wrens.  Window,  Ay.  8 

Fired     Not  a  gun  was  /.  The  Captain  40 

man  with  knobs  and  wires  and  vials  /  A  cannon ;  Princess,  Pro.  65 

Now  /  an  angry  Pallas  on  the  helm,  ,,          vi  367 

He  rose  at  dawn  and,  /  with  hope.  Sailor  Boy  1 

he  saw  F  from  the  west,  far  on  a  hill,  Lancelot  and  E.  168 

the  heat  Of  pride  and  glory  /  her  face ;  Pelleas  and  E.  172 

that  Gawain  /  The  hall  of  MerUn,  „            517 

echoing  yell  with  yell,  they  /  the  tower.  Last  Tournament  478 

F  all  the  pale  face  of  the  Queen,  Guinevere  357 

Fire-fly     Glitter  like  a  swarm  of  fire-jlies  Locksley  Hall  10 

The  /-/  wakens  :  waken  thou  with  me.  Princess  vii  179 

Firefly-like    glitter  f-l  in  copse  And  linden  alley :  „           i  208 

Fire-hollowing     F-h  this  in  Indian  fashion,  fell  Enoch  Arden  569 

Fireside    her  old  /  Be  cheer'd  with  tidings  of  the  bride,  In  Mem.  xl  22 

at  your  own  /,  With  the  evil  tongue  Maud  /  j;  50 

Firewood    heap'd  Their  /,  and  the  winds  Spec,  of  Iliad  7 

Finn  (adj.  and  adv.)     Not  swift  nor  slow  to  change, 

but  /:  Love  thou  thy  land  31 

With  measured  footfall  /  and  mild.  Two  Voices  413 

Thereon  I  built  it /.  Palace  of  Art  9 

Like  Virtue  /,  like  Knowledge  fair.  Voyage  68 

His  resolve  Upbore  him,  and /faith,  Enoch  Arden  800 

/  upon  his  feet.  And  like  an  oaken  stock  Golden  Year  61 

Not  one  stroke  /.  Romney's  R.  115 

he  stood  /;  and  so  the  matter  hung ;  (repeat)  The  Brook  144,  148 

Her  /  will,  her  fix'd  purpose.  The  Ring  293 

/  Tho'  compass'd  by  two  armies  Princess  v  344 

Some  civic  manhood  /  against  the  crowd — •  „   Con.  57 

keep  the  soldier  /,  the  statesman  pure :  Ode  on  Well.  222 

Met  his  full  frown  timidly  /,  and  said  ;  Geraint  and  E.  71 

felt  Her  low  /  voice  and  tender  government.  „          194 

Firm  (s)     Head  of  all  the  golden-shafted  /,  Princess  ii  405 

Firmament    Shoot  your  stars  to  the  /,  On  Jul.  Q.  Victoria  17 

Firm-based    stand  F-b  with  all  her  Gods.  Tiresias  142 

Firmer    Stept  forward  on  a  /  leg,  Will  Water.  123 

And  slowly  forms  the /mind,  In  Mem.  xviii  18 

mine  is  the  /  seat,  Lancelot  and  E.  446 

Firmly    Will  /  hold  the  rein.  Politics  6 

Firmness     and  said  to  him  With  timid  /,  Geraint  and  E.  140 

Firry    heard  the  tender  dove  In  /  woodlands  making  moan ;    Miller's  D.  42 

First  (adj.)  {SeealsoTvak)  in  her /sleep  earth  breathes  stilly :  Leonine  Eleg.  7 

When  the  /  matin-song  hath  waken'd  loud  Ode  to  Memory  68 

In  setting  round  thy  /  experiment  „            81 

Needs  must  thou  dearly  love  thy  /  essay,  „            83 

The  /  house  by  the  water-side,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  34 

From  that  /  nothing  ere  his  birth  Two  Voices  332 

For  is  not  our  /  year  forgot  ?  „           368 

foundation-stones  were  laid  Since  my  /  memory  ? '        Palace  of  Art  236 

Dan  Chaucer,  the  /  warbler,  whose  sweet  breath  D.  of  Fr-  Women  5 

Love  at  /  sight,  first-bom,  and  heir  to  all,  Gardener's  D.  189 

beheld  her  ere  she  knew  my  heart,  My  /,  last  love ;  „            277 

once  I  ask'd  him  of  his  early  life.  And  his  /  passion ;    Edwin  Morris  24 

when  the  /  low  matin-chirp  hath  grown  Full  quire,      Love  and  Duty  98 

Or  this  /  snowdrop  of  the  year  St.  Agnes'  Eve  11 

'  Tell  me  tales  of  thy  /  love —  Vision  of  Sin  163 

In  him  woke,  With  his  /  babe's  /  cry,  Enoch  Arden  85 


First  (adj.)  {continued)    Has  she  no  fear  that  her/  husband 

lives  ?  '  Enoch  Arden  806- 

Leolin's  /  nurse  was,  five  years  after,  hers :  Aylmer's  Field  79 

and  the  /  embrace  has  died  Between  them,  Lucretius  3 

Was  it  the  /  beam  of  my  latest  day  ?  ,,59 

Huge  Ammonites,  and  the  /  bones  of  Time ;  Princess,  Pro.  15 

took  advantage  of  his  strength  to  be  F  in  the  field :  „          ii  153 

'  Fresh  as  the  /  beam  glittering  on  a  sail,  „            iv  44 

Deep  as  /  love,  and  wild  with  all  regret ;  „  57 
lines  of  green  that  streak  the  white  Of  the  /  snowdrop's 

inner  leaves;  „          v  197 

From  our  /  Charles  by  force  we  wrung  our  claims.  Third  of  Feb.  26 

That  was  the  /  time,  too.  Grandmother  61 

Since  our  /  Sun  arose  and  set.  In  Mem.  xxiv  8 

Where  thy  /  form  was  made  a  man  ;  „        Ixi  10 

F  love,  /  friendship,  equal  powers,  „  Ixxxv  107 

Seal'd  her  mine  from  her  /  sweet  breath.  Maud  I  xix  41 

But  those  /  days  had  golden  hours  for  me.  Com.  of  Arthur  357 

let  my  name  Be  hidd'n,  and  give  me  the  /  quest,  Gareth  and  L.  545 

'  I  have  given  him  the  /  quest :  ,,582 

In  the  /  shallow  shade  of  a  deep  wood,  Geraint  and  E.  119 

O'er  the  four  rivers  the  /  roses  blew,  „            764 

who  held  and  lost  with  Lot  In  that  /  war,  Balin  and  Balan  2 

which  ruin'd  man  Thro'  woman  the  /  hour  :  Merlin  and  V.  363 

Hurt  in  his  /  tilt  was  my  son.  Sir  Torre.  Lancelot  and  E.  196 

never  woman  yet,  since  man's  /  fall,  „             859 

Tliis  is  not  love :  but  love's  /  flash  in  youth,  „             949 

Embraced  me,  and  so  kiss'd  me  the  /  time.  Holy  Grail  596 

0  the  pity  To  find  thine  own  /  love  once  more —  „  620 
But  I  and  the  /  daisy  on  his  grave  Lover's  Tale  i  193 
should  this  /  master  claim  HLs  service,  „  iv  265 
As  I  of  mine,  and  my  /  passion.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  67 
Love  at  /  sight  May  seem —  „  91 
at  /  glimpse  and  for  a  face  Gone  in  a  moment —  „                93 

1  sail'd  On  my  /  voyage,  harass'd  by  the  frights  Of 

my  /  crew,  Columbus  67 

scouted  by  court  and  king — The  /  discoverer  starves —  „       166 

Who  fain  had  pledged  her  jewels  on  my  /  voyage,  ,,  229 
With  the  /  great  love  I  had  felt  for  the  /  and  greatest  of 

men  ;  The  Wreck  76 

The  /  gray  streak  of  earliest  summer-dawn,  Ancient  Sage  220 
Leave  the  Master  in  the  /  dark  hour  of  his  last 

sleep  alone.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  238 

Boimd  by  the  golden  cord  of  their  /  love —  The  Ring  429 

First  (s)     And  these  had  been  together  from  the  /;  Aylmer's  Field  713 

First-bom     love  thou  bearest  The  f-b  of  thy  genius.  Ode  to  Memory  92 

Love  at  first  sight,  f-b,  and  heir  to  all.  Gardener's  D.  189 

meal  she  makes  On  the  f-b  of  her  sons.  Vision  of  Sin  146 

First-famed    of  the  two  /-/  for  courtesy —  Guinevere  323 

First-fruits    The  /-/  of  the  stranger :  Princess  ii  'i4 

Firstling    And  bring  the  /  to  the  flock ;  In  Mem.  ii  6 

Ever  as  of  old  time,  Sohtary  /,  The  Snowdrop  4 

Firth    find  him  dropt  upon  the  f's  of  ice,  Princess  vii  i306 

By  /  and  loch  tny  silver  sister  grow.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  58 

Fish    F  are  we  that  love  the  mud.  Vision  of  Sin  101 

beast  or  bird  or  /,  or  opulent  flower :  Lucretius  249 

the  bird,  the  /,  the  shell,  the  flower.  Princess  ii  383 

bird  in  air,  and  /'«5  tum'd  And  whiten'd  The  Victim  19 

o'er  her  breast  floated  the  sacred  /;  Gareth  and  L.  223 

'  If  we  have  /  at  all  Let  them  be  gold ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  669 

vanish'd  panic-stricken,  like  a  shoal  Of  darting  /,  Geraint  and  E.  469 

an'  ya  thraw'd  the  /  i'  'is  faiice.  Church-warden,  etc.  30 

Fish'd     An'  'e  niver  not  /  'is  awn  ponds.  Village  Wife  43 

Fisherman    O  well  for  the  f's  boy.  Break,  break,  etc.  5 

A  luckier  or  a  bolder/,  Enoch  Arden  49 

Fishing-nets    coils  of  cordage,  swarthy /-«,  „          17 

and  wrought  To  make  the  boatmen  f-n,  „        815 

Fist    tiny  /  Had  gra-spt  a  daisy  from  your  Mother's  grave —    The  Ring  322 

Fit  (adj.)     I  scarce  am  /  for  your  great  plans :  Princess  vi  21% 

Becoming  as  is  meet  and  /  A  link  In  Mem.  xl  14 

asking,  one  Not/  to  cope  your  quest.  Gareth  and  L.  1174 

ye  that  scarce  are  /  to  touch,  Pelleas  and  E.  292 

O  happy  he,  and  /  to  live.  The  Wanderer  9 

Fit  (s)     Gleam'd  to  the  flying  moon  by/ 's.  Miller's  D.  11& 

in  a  /  of  frolic  mirth  She  strove  to  span  my  waist :  Talking  Oak  137 


Fit 


217 


Flame 


Fit  (s)  {continued)     Or  breaking  into  song  by/ '5,  In  Mem.  xxiii  2 

only  breathe  Short  f's  of  prayer,  Geraint  and  E.  155 

Began  to  break  her  sports  with  graver /'s,  Merlin  and  V.  180 

the  riotous  f's  Of  wine  and  harlotry —  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  100 

Fit  (verb)    /  us  like  a  nature  second-hand ;  Walk,  to  the  Mail  65 

/their  little  streetward  sitting-room  Enoch  Arden  170 

sad  and  slow,  As  /  's  an  universal  woe.  Ode  on  Well.  14 

harden'd  skins  That  /  him  like  his  own  ;  Gareth  and  L.  1094 
better /'s  Our  mended  fortunes  and  a  Prince's 

bride :  Marr.  of  Geraint  717 

Fitful    like  /  blasts  of  balm  To  one  that  travels  quickly,      Gardener's  D. 


Fitly    yield  your  flower  of  life  To  one  more  /  yours. 
Fitted     Power  /  to  the  season ;  wisdom-bred 

Gown'd  in  pure  white,  that  /  to  the  shape — 

So  now  'tis  /  on  and  grows  to  me, 

old  and  formal,  /  to  thy  petty  part, 

As  his  unlikeness  /  mine. 

No  stone  is  /  in  yon  marble  girth 

Who  /  stone  to  stone  again. 
Fitter    a  villain  /  to  stick  swine  Than  ride  abroad 

I  am  /  for  my  bed,  or  for  my  grave, 
Fitting    expert  In  /  aptest  words  to  things, 

and  /  close  Or  flying  looselier. 

Whence  shall  she  take  a  /  mate  ? 

She  cannot  find  a  /  mate. 
Fitz    Old  F,  who  from  your  suburb  grange, 

which  you  will  take  My  F,  and  welcome. 
Five     Alone  and  warming  his  /  wits,  (repeat) 

Young  Nature  thro'  /  cycles  ran. 

Lord  of  the  senses  / ; 

You  know  there  has  not  been  for  these  /  years 

and  here  it  comes  With  /  at  top  : 

Leolin's  first  nurse  was,  /  years  after,  hers : 

son  A  Walter  too, — with  others  of  our  set,  F 
others : 

And  those  /  years  its  richest  field. 

beneath  /  figures,  armed  men, 

'  Take  F  horses  and  their  armours ; ' 

and  hath  overborne  F  knights  at  once, 

/  summers  back.  And  left  me ; 

So  Lord  Howard  past  away  with  /  ships  of  war 

swarm  Of  Turkish  Islam  for  /  hundred  years. 


Lancelot  and  E.  953 

(Enone  123 

Gardener's  D.  126 

St.  S.  Stylites  209 

Locksley  Hail  93 

In  Mem.  Ixxix  20 

Tiresias  135 

Akbar's  Dream  193 

Gareth  and  L.  865 

The  Ring  433 

In  Mem.  Ixxv  6 

Akbar's  Dream  131 

Kate  13 

„     31 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  1 

51 

The  Owl  i  6,  13 

Tico  Voices  17 

Palace  of  Art  180 

Dora  65 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  113 

Aylmer's  Field  79 

Princess,  Pro.  9 

In  Mem.  xlvi  12 

Gareth  and  L.  1205 

Geraint  and  E.  409 

Holy  Grail  303 

Guinevere  .321 

The  Revenge  13 

Montenegro  11 


F  young  kings  put  asleep  by  the  sword-stroke,    Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  52 


Five-acre    While  Harry  is  in  the  f-a 
Five-beaded    The  tender  pink  f-h  baby-soles. 
Five-fold    /-/  thy  term  Of  years,  I  lay ; 
Five-words-long    quoted  odas,  and  jewels  f-w-l 
Fix     Holding  the  bush,  to  /  it  back,  she  stood, 
'Twere  all  as  one  to  /  our  hopes  on  Heaven 
She  could  not  /  the  glass  to  suit  her  eye ; 
and  her  lynx  eye  To  /  and  make  me  hotter. 
Sun  sets,  moon  sets.  Love,  /  a  day. 
wait  a  little.  You  shall  /  a  day.' 
Nor  cares  to  /  itself  to  form. 
And  /  my  thoughts  on  all  the  glow 
Who  shall  /  Her  pillars  ? 
Fized-Fixt    there  like  a  sun  remain  Fix'd — 
'  Not  that  the  grounds  of  hope  were  fix'd, 
Be  fix'd  and  f  roz'n  to  permanence : 
And,  last,  you  fix'd  a  vacant  stare, 
Counting  the  dewy  pebbles,  fix'd  in  thought ; 
The  blash  is  fix'd  upon  her  cheek. 
One  fix'd  for  ever  at  the  door, 
And  fix't  upon  the  far  sea-line ; 
Were  fixed  shadows  of  thy  fixed  mood, 
orb  of  moving  Circumstance  RoU'd  round  by 

one  fix'd  law. 
True  love  tum'd  roimd  on  fixed  poles, 
my  fresh  but  fixt  resolve  To  pass  away 
either  fixt  his  heart  On  that  one  girl ; 
where  he  fixt  his  heart  he  set  his  hand 
and  fixt  her  swimming  eyas  upon  him, 
fixt  the  Sabbath.    Darkly  that  day  rose : 
And  those  fixt  eyes  of  painted  ancestors 
I  fixt  My  wistful  eyes  on  two  fair  images, 


Grandmother  80 

Aylmer's  Field  186 

Tiresias  33 

Princess  ii  377 

Gardener's  D.  127 

Golden  Tear  57 

Enoch  Arden  241 

Princess  Hi  47 

Window,  When  4 

.12 

In  Mem.  xxxiii  4 

„  Ixxxiv  3 

„  cxiv  3 

Eleanore  93 

Two  Voices  227 

237 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  47 

M.  d' Arthur  84 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  32 

WUl  Water.  143 

The  Voyage  62 

Isabel  9 

Palace  of  Art  256 

Love  thou  thy  land  5 

Holy  Grail  737 

Enoch  A  rden  39 

„  294 

325 

Aylmer's  Field  609 

832 

Sea  Dreams  239 


Fixed-Fizt  (continiied)    eyes  Of  shining  expectation  fixt  on 

mine.  Princess  iv  153 

Fixt  like  a  beacon-tower  above  the  waves  „  493 

this  is  fixt  As  are  the  roots  of  earth 
Fix'd  in  yourself,  never  in  your  own  arms 
drags  me  down  From  my  fixt  height  to  mob  me 
I  on  her  Fixt  my  faint  eyes,  and  utter'd  whisperingly : 
she  fixt  A  showery  glance  upon  her  aunt, 
Fixt  by  their  cars,  waited  the  golden  dawn. 
But  Sorrow — fixt  upon  the  dead, 
Her  faith  is  fixt  and  cannot  move. 
Because  he  felt  so  fix'd  in  truth : 
And  a  morbid  eating  lichen  fixt  On  a  heart 
Gareth  likewise  on  them  fixt  his  eyes 
with  fixt  eye  following  the  three. 
Two  forks  are  fixt  into  the  meadow  ground, 
there  they  fixt  the  forks  into  the  ground, 
a  rock  in  ebbs  and  flows,  Fixt  on  her  faith, 
humbly  hopeful,  rose  Fixt  on  her  hearer's, 
or  all-silent  gaze  upon  him  With  such  a  fixt  devotion, 
but  that  other  clung  to  him,  Fixt  in  her  will. 
So  fixt  her  fancy  on  him :  let  them  be. 
ye  fixt  Your  limit,  oft  returning  with  the  tide, 
Counting  the  dewy  pebbles,  fix'd  in  thought ; 
and  virgin  eyes  Remainuig  fixt  on  mine, 
With  sad  eyes  fixt  on  the  lost  sea-home, 
*  That  should  be  fix'd,'  she  said ; 
But  after  ten  slow  weeks  hei  fix'd  intent. 
Her  firm  will,  her  fix'd  purpose. 
Fixing    warm  blood  mixing ;  The  eyeballs  /. 
F  full  eyes  of  question  on  her  face, 
F  my  eyes  on  those  three  cypress-cones 
Fixt    See  Fixed 

Fla&me  (flame)     '  at  summun  seed  i'  the  /, 
Flaccid    a  scheme  that  had  left  us  /  and  drain'd. 
Flag    never  floats  an  European  /, 

F's,  flutter  out  upon  turrets  and  towers ! 
their  sails  and  their  masts  and  their /'s, 
thou  would'st  have  her  /  Borne  on  thy 

coffin — 
But  one — he  was  waving  a  / — 
wherever  her  /  fly,  Glorying  between  sea 

and  sky. 
One  life,  one  /,  one  fleet,  one  Throne ! ' 
Flag-fiower    tall /-/'s  when  they  sprung 
Flagrante    Caught  in  f — what's  the  Latin  word  ?— 
Flagship    stately  Spanish  men  to  their  /  bore  him 
Flail    From  Arac's  arm,  as  from  a  giant's  /, 

A  thresher  with  his  /  had  scatter'd  them. 

Flake    (See  also  Blossom-flake,  Foam-flakes) 

sang  Shrill,  chill,  with  f's  of  foam. 

beat  the  twilight  into  f's  of  fire. 

here  and  there  a  foamy  /  Upon  me, 

thicker,  like  the  f's  In  a  fall  of  snow. 

Before  me  shower'd  the  rose  in  f's; 

This  /  of  rainbow  flying  on  the  highest 

rocket  molten  into  f's  Of  crimson 

sea- wind  sang  Shrill,  chill,  with/'s  of  foam, 

gladly  see  I  thro'  the  wavering/ '5 

Flaky    Diffused  and  molten  into  /  cloud. 

Flame  (s)    (See  also  Altar-flame,  Flaame,  Martyr-flames, 

Sun-flame,  Under-flame)    With  the  clear-pointed 

/  of  chastity,  Isabel  2 

A  subtle,  sudden  /,  By  veering  passion  fann'd,  Madeline  28 

alight  As  with  the  quintessence  of  /,  Arabian  Nights  123 

arrows  of  his  thoughts  were  headed  And  wing'd  with  /,         The  Poet  12 

in  her  raiment's  hem  was  traced  in  /  Wisdom,  „        45 

Bum'd  hke  one  burning  /  together,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  22 

A  thousand  little  shafts  of  /  Fatima  17 

She  died:  she  went  to  burning/:  The  Sisters  7 

thro'  the  topmost  Oriels'  coloured  /  Palace  of  Art  161 

hollow  shEides  enclosing  hearts  of  /,  „  241 

Dark  faces  pale  against  that  rosy  /,  Lotos-Eaters  26 

'  Saw  God  divide  the  night  with  flying  /,  D.  of  F.  Women  225 

Beheld  the  dead  /  of  the  fallen  day  Enoch  Arden  441 


V  445 

vim 

308 

vii  144 

Con.  32 

Spec,  of  Iliad  22 

In  Mem.  xxxix  8 

„  xcvii  33 

,,  cxxv  8 

Mavd  I  vi  77 

Gareth  and  L.  236 

Marr.  of  Geraint  237 

482 

548 

813 

Merlin  and  V.  87 

183 

188 

777 

Lancelot  and  E.  1040 

Pass,  of  Arthur  252 

Tiresias  47 

The  Wreck  126 

The  Ring  316 

„        345 

293 

All  Things  will  Die  34 

Com.  of  Arthur  312 

Lover's  Tale  ii  38 

Owd  Roa  94 

Maud  I  i  20 

Locksley  Hall  161 

W.  to  Alexander  15 

The  Revenge  116 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  16 
The  Wreck  119 

Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  17 
39 
Miller's  D.  53 
Walk,  to  the  Mail  34 
The  Revenge  97 
Princess  v  50O 
Gareth  and  L.  842 


sea-wind 


M.  d' Arthur  49 

Tithonus  42 

The  Brook  59 

Lucretius  166 

Princess  iv  264 

V  319 

In  Mem,,  xcviii  31 

Pass,  of  Arthur  217 

Prog,  of  Spring  29 

Lover's  Tale  i  641 


Flame 


218 


Flash'd 


Flame  (s)  (continued)    His  hair  as  it  were  crackling 

into  f's, 
and  girt  With  song  and  /  and  fragrance, 
on  a  tripod  in  the  midst  A  fragrant  /  rose, 
her  eye  with  slow  dilation  roll'd  Dry  /, 
Now  set  a  wrathful  Dian's  moon  on  /, 
F's,  on  the  windy  headland  flare ! 
Or  down  in  a  furrow  scathed  with  /: 
Pierces  the  keen  seraphic  / 
This  round  of  green,  this  orb  of  /, 
And  Life,  a  Fury  slinging  /. 
As  slowly  steals  a  silver  / 
Who  might'st  have  heaved  a  windless  / 
Ray  round  with  f's  her  disk  of  seed. 
Ready  to  burst  m  a  colour'd/; 
and  all  the  wave  was  in  a/:  And  down  the  wave 

and  in  the  /  was  borne  A  naked  babe, 
kings  of  old  had  doom'd  thee  to  the  f's, 
I  spring  Like  /  from  ashes.' 
sparkle  in  the  blood  Break  into  fiuious  /; 
seems  a  /  That  rages  in  the  woodland  far  below, 
fire  of  Heaven  is  not  the  /  of  Hell,  (repeat) 


Aylmer's  Field  586 

Lwcrelius  134 

Princess  io  34 

„    vi  190 

368 

W.  to  Alexandra  16 

The  Victim  22 

In  Mem.  xxx  27 

xxxiv  5 

IQ 

Ixvii  6 

Ixxii  13 

ci  6 

Maud  I  vi  19 


Hap  {continued)    dimpled  flounce  of  the  sea-furbelow  /,        Sea  Dreams  266 
a  boat  Tacks,  and  the  slacken'd  sail  f's.  Princess  ii  186 

Flapp'd-FIapt    They  flapp'd  my  light  out  as  I  read :  St.  S.  Stylites  175 


Touch  flax  with  / — a  glance  will  serve — 
darken  down  To  rise  hereafter  in  a  stiller  / 
such  a  fervent  /  of  human  love, 
Against  the  /  about  a  sacrifice  Kindled 
star  Reel'd  in  the  smoke,  brake  into  /,  and  feU 
all  their  dewy  hair  blown  back  Uke  /: 
in  the  dark  of  mine  Is  traced  with  /. 
his  high  hills,  with  /  Milder  and  purer, 
his  own  Sent  such  a  /  into  his  face, 
with  her  battle-thunder  and  /; 
Dooms  our  unUcensed  preacher  to  the  /, 
and  the  dwelhng  broke  into  /; 
from  it  lighted  an  all-shining/. 
The  flight  of  birds,  the  f  of  sacrifice, 
flung  the  conquer'd  Christian  into  f's. 
eloquence  caught  like  a  /  From  zone  to  zone 
The  /  of  life  went  wavering  down ; 
saw  The  ring  of  faces  redden'd  by  the  f's 
in  the  f  that  measures  Time ! 
Dance  in  a  fountain  of  /  with  her  devils, 
Than  a  rotten  fleet  and  a  city  in  f's ! 
Hame  (verb)    barking  cur  Made  her  cheek  /: 
wild  peasant  rights  himseK,  the  rick  F's, 
when  the  long-illumined  cities  /, 
ShaU  fears  and  jealous  hatreds  /  again  ? 
For  him  did  his  high  sun  /, 
f's  The  blood-red  blossom  of  war 
Let  it  /  or  fade,  and  the  war  roll  down 
/  At  sunrise  till  the  people  in  far  fields. 
He  saw  them — headland  after  headland  / 
with  set  of  Sim  Their  fires  /  thickly, 
sun  has  risen  To  /  along  another  dreary  day. 
Hame-banner    great  f-b  borne  by  Teneriffe, 
Flame-billow    Into  the  f-b  dash'd  the  berries, 
Flame-colour    smote  F-c,  vert  and  azure, 
Flamed    with  sudden  fires  F  over : 
And  /  upon  the  brazen  greaves 
By  peaks  that  /,  or,  all  in  shade, 
J"  in  his  cheek ;  and  eager  eyes, 
Tho'  Leolin  /  and  fell  again, 
scarlet  of  berries  that  /  upon  bine  and  vine, 
or  /  at  a  public  wrong, 
and  /  On  one  huge  slope  beyond, 
Flamest    Once  again  thou  /  heavenward. 
Flaming    (See  also  Slow-flaming)    /  downward  over 
all  From  heat  to  heat 
Clanging  fights,  and  /  towns, 
doom  of  treason  and  the  /  death, 
that  red  night  When  thirty  ricks.  All  /, 
Flank  (adj.)    better  aimed  are  your  /  fusillades — 
Flank  (s)     arisen  since  With  cities  on  their  f's — 
Flap    and  the  great  echo  /  And  buffet 


Com.  of  Arthur  382 

Gareth  and  L.  374 

546 

Geraint  and  E.  828 

Balin  and  Balan  233 

„     443, 447, 

451,  455 

Merlin  and  V.  Ill 

Lancelot  and  E.  1319 

Holy  Grail  74 

Pelleas  and  E.  145 

519 

Guinevere  284 

Lover's  Tale  i  298 

322 

iv  177 

The  Revenge  59 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  105 

V.  of  Maeldune  32 

Achilles  over  the  T.  6 

Tiresias  6 

Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  84 

Dead  Prophet  34 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  32 

Death  of  (Enone  92 

Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  8 

Kapiolani  10 

Riflemen  form  !  18 

Godiva  58 

Princess  iv  386 

Ode  on  WeU.  228 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  41 

Maud  I  iv  32 

„  III  vi  52 

54 

Holy  Grail  242 

Guinevere  243 

Achilles  over  the  T.  11 

Romney's  R.  58 

Columbus  69 

Kapiolani  33 

Com.  of  AHhur  274: 

Buonaparte  12 

L.  ofShalott  Hi  4 

The  Voyage  41 

Aylmer's  Field  66 

409 

V.  of  Maeldune  61 

The  Wreck  68 

St.  Tdemachus  7 

AJAar's  D.,  Hymn  1 


conquering  battle  or  flapt  to  the  battle-cry ! 
Flare    Flames,  on  the  windy  headland  /! 

F  from  Tel-el-Kebir  Thro'  darkness, 
Flar'd    threaten'd  darkness,  /  and  fell : 

a  great  mist-blotted  light  F  on  him. 

Fire  in  dry  stubble  a  nine-days'  wonder  /: 

blood-red  light  of  dawn  F  on  her  face, 
Flaring    (See  also  Sudden-flaring)    A  million  tapers 
/  bright  From  twisted  silvers 

Sees  in  heaven  the  Ught  of  London  / 

I  saw  the  /  atom-streams  And  torrents 

Thro'  blasted  valley  and  /  forest 
Flash  (s)    The  Ughtning  /  atween  the  rains, 

A  Uving  /  of  Ught  he  flew.' 

ran  by  him  without  speaking,  like  a  /  of  light. 

a  shape,  a  shade,  A  /  of  light. 

The  f'es  come  and  go ; 

The  lightning  /  of  insect  and  of  bird, 

A  /  of  semi-jealousy  clear'd  it  to  her. 

and  once  the  /  of  a  thimderbolt — 

I  learnt  more  from  her  in  a  /, 

These  f'es  on  the  surface  are  not  he. 

And  Uke  a  /  the  weird  affection  came : 

Down  in  the  South  is  a  /  and  a  groan : 

You  send  a  /  to  the  sim. 

A  Uttle  /,  a  mystic  hint ; 

As  in  the  former  /  of  joy, 

at  the  /  and  motion  of  the  man  They  vanish'd 

I  saw  the  /  of  him  but  yestereven. 

And  chased  the  f'es  of  his  golden  horns 

send  One  /,  that,  missing  aU  things  else, 

free  f'es  from  a  height  Above  her, 

but  love's  first  /  in  youth.  Most  common : 

'  Ay,  a  /,  I  fear  me,  that  will  strike 

I  told  her  that  her  love  Was  but  the  /  of  youth, 

F  upon  /  they  lighten  thro'  me — 

Shot  by  me  like  a  /  of  purple  fire. 

The  light  was  but  a  /,  and  went  again. 
Flash  (verb)    And  f'es  off  a  thousand  ways, 

of  tentimes  they  /  and  gUtter  Like  sunshine 

F  in  the  pools  of  whirling  Simois. 

/  the  lightnings,  weigh  the  Sun. 

This  proverb  f'es  thro'  his  head, 

F  into  fiery  Ufe  from  nothing, 

naked  marriages  F  from  the  bridge, 

F,  ye  cities,  in  rivers  of  fire ! 

The  facets  of  the  glorious  mountain  / 

in  the  vale  You/  and  lighten  afar, 

F,  I  am  coming,  I  come, 

F  for  a  miUion  miles. 

And  f'es  into  false  and  true. 

And  /  at  once,  my  friend,  to  thee. 

Will  /  along  the  chords  and  go. 

/  A  momentary  Ukeness  of  the  King : 

F  brand  and  lance,  fall  battleaxe  upon  helm. 

Fall  battleaxe,  and  /  brand !  (repeat) 

A  light  of  armour  bv  him  /,  and  pass 

Re-makes  itself,  ana  f'es  down  the  vale — 

if  what  we  call  The  spirit  / 

I  saw  The  glory  of  the  Lord  /  up. 


Mariana  in  the  S.  77 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  116 

Guinevere  538 

To  Mary  Boyle  37 

Def.  of  Lucknow  57 

Merlin  and  V.  676 

Golden  Year  76 


about  their  ocean-islets  /  The  faces  of  the  Gods — 
/  a  milUon  miles  a  day. 
shine  the  level  lands.  And  /  the  floods  ; 
ShaU  /  thro'  one  another  in  a  moment 
Flash'd    He  /  into  the  crystal  mirror. 
The  distant  battle  /  and  rung. 
F  thro'  her  as  she  sat  alone, 
So  /  and  fell  the  brand  ExcaUbur : 
He  /  his  random  speeches. 
That  autumn  into  autumn  /  again, 
jests,  that  /  about  the  pleader's  room, 
They  /  a  saucy  message  to  and  fro 


Def.  of  Lucknow  2 

W.  to  Alexandra  16 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  28 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  2 

Enoch  Arden  681 

Lancelot  and  E.  735 

1026 

Arabian  Nights  124 

Locksley  Hall  114 

Lucretius  38 

Kapiolani  12 

Rosalind  12 

Two  Voices  15 

May  Queen  18 

St.  S.  Stylites  203 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  26 

Enoch  Arden  575 

Aylmer's  Field  189 

Lucretius  27 

Princess  ii  397 

„      iv  253 

„       ^;477 

Window,  Gone  8 

Window,  Marr.  Morn.  2 

In  Mem.  xliv  8 

,,    cxxii  15 

Geraint  and  E.  467 

Balin  and  Balan  303 

Merlin  and  V.  427 

932 

Lancelot  and  E.  647 

949 

970 

1318 

Lover's  Tale  i  51 

„         ii  17 

,,         iv  55 

Rosalind  23 

„        28 

(Enone  206 

Locksley  Hall  186 

Day-Dm.,  Arrival  15 

Aylmer's  Field  130 

766 

W.  to  Alexandra  19 

The  Islet  22 

Window,  Marr.  Morn.  10 

31 

.24 

In  Mem.  xvi  19 

„  xli  12 

,,  Ixxxviii  12 

Com.  of  Arthur  270 

486 

,,487,490,502 

Balin  and  Balan  326 

Guinevere  610 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  5 

Columbus  82 

Tiresias  172 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  2C 
Early  Spring  16 
Happy  '' 
L.  of  Shalott  Hi  i 

Two  Voices  12fl 
Palace  of  Art  21i 
M.  d' Arthur  W 
Will  Water.  198 
Enoch  Arden  ■ 
Aylmer's  Field  44 
Princess,  Pro,  78' 


Flashed 


219 


Fled 


A  thought  /  thro'  me  which  I  clothed 

Princess  1 195 
,,  v20 

Ode  on  WeU.  129 
Light  Brigade  27 
In  Mem.  xcv  36 
Mavd  I  iv  16 
„         ix  10 
Com.  of  Arthur  66 
Gareth  and  L.  192 
685 
„  689 

784 
1030 
Marr.  of  Geraint  273 


Merlin  and  V.  416 

847 

Lancelot  and  E.  357 

613 

1235 

1236 

Holy  GraU  402 

593 

PeUeas  and  E.  279 

503 

Last  Tournament  616 

Pass,  of  Arthur  310 

Lover's  Tale  i  370 


Flasb'd  (continued) 
in  act, 
young  captains  /  their  glittering  teeth, 
Heaven  /  a  sudden  jubUant  ray, 
F  all  their  sabres  bare,  F  as  they  tum'd 
The  living  soul  was  /  on  mine, 

Eride  /  over  her  beautiful  face, 
omething  /  in  the  sun, 

Barons  of  his  realm  F  forth  and  into  war : 

At  times  the  summit  of  the  high  city/; 

and  /  as  those  Dull-coated  things. 

So  Gareth  ere  he  parted  /  in  arms. 

madden'd  her,  and  away  she  /  again 

/  the  fierce  shield.  All  sun ; 

Whereat  Geraint  /  into  sudden  spleen : 

out  he  /,  And  into  such  a  song, 

F  the  bare-grinning  skeleton  of  death ! 

Suddenly  /  on  her  a  wild  desire. 

Then  /  into  wild  teau^,  and  rose  again, 

and  down  they  /,  and  smote  the  stream. 

/,  as  it  were.  Diamonds  to  meet  them. 

Then  /  a  yellow  gleam  across  the  world, 

a  stream  That  /  across  her  orchard  underneath 

The  fire  of  honoiu-  and  all  noble  deeds  F, 

For  so  the  words  were  /  into  his  heart 

Then  /  a  levin-brand ;  and  near  me  stood, 

So  /  and  fell  the  brand  Excalibur : 

A  mystic  light  /  ev'n  from  her  white  robe 

all  my  wealth  F  from  me  in  a  moment  „  669 

face  and  form  of  Lionel  F  thro'  my  eyes  „  ii  95 

jewels  Of  many  generations  of  his  house  Sparkled  and  /,       „        iv  300 

one  lightning-fork  F  out  the  lake ;  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  97 

bright  face  was  /  thro'  sense  and  soul  „  109 

And  all  the  heavens  /  in  frost ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  22 

upon  me  /  The  power  of  prophesying —  Tiresias  56 

and  /  into  the  Red  Sea,  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  44 

and  /  into  a  frolic  of  song  And  welcome ;  Demeter  and  P.  12 

F  on  the  Tournament,  Flicker'd  and  bicker'd  Merlin  and  the  G.  69 

Flashest    All  along  the  valley,  stream  that  /  white,       _    V.^f  Cavieretz  1 
Flashing    She,  /  forth  a  haughty  smile,  began 

/  round  and  round,  and  whirl'd  in  an  arch. 

The  cataract  /  from  the  bridge. 

Came  quickly  /  thro'  the  shallow  ford 

Was  all  the  marble  threshold  /, 

on  the  splendour  came,  /  me  blind ; 

/  round  and  round,  and  whirrd  in  an  arch, 

the  whole  isle-side  /  down  from  the  peak 

F  with  fires  as  of  God, 

Rode  /  blow  upon  blow, 

coin  of  fancy  /  out  from  many  a  golden  phrase ; 
Flask    (See  also  Wine-flask)    A  /  of  cider  from  his 
father's  vats, 

Here  sits  the  Butler  with  a  / 

I  leave  an  empty  / : 
Flat  (adj.  and  adv.)    and  so  this  earth  was  /: 

dying  ebb  that  faintly  lipp'd  The  /  red  granite ; 

sin,  that  crush'd  My  spirit  /  before  thee. 

child  Push'd  her  /  hand  against  his  face 

on  this  side  the  palace  ran  the  field  F 

Of  this  /  lawn  with  dusk  and  bright ; 

pitch'd  Beside  the  Castle  Perilous  on  /  field, 

up  the  vale  of  Usk,  By  the  /  meadow. 

Take  my  salute,'  imknightly  with  /  hand, 

Arthur  had  the  jousts  Down  in  the  /  field 

From  /  confusion  and  brute  violences, 

in  dead  night  along  that  table-shore.  Drops  /, 

A  /  malarian  world  of  reed  and  rush ! 

Strow  yonder  mountain  /, 

leaves  Laid  their  green  faces  / 

To  lay  the  sudden  heads  of  violence  /, 

teeth  of  Hell  flay  bare  and  gnash  thee  /! — 

and  my  strongest  wish  Falls  / 
Flat  (a  level)    And  glanced  athwart  the  glooming  f's. 
By  sands  and  steaming  f's,  and  floods 

here  upon  the  /  All  that  long  mom 


D.ofF.  Women  129 

M.  d' Arthur  138 

In  Mem.  Ixxi  15 

Marr.  of  Geraint  167 

Geraint  and  E.  25 

Holy  GraU  413 

Pass,  of  Arthur  306 

V.  of  Maddune  45 

Despair  16 

Heavy  Brigade  32 

To  Virgil  8 

Audley  Court  27 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  25 

WUl  Water.  164 

Columbus  48 

Audley  Court  13 

St.  S.  Stylites  26 

Princess  ii  366 

„        v362 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  2 

Gareth  and  L.  1363 

Marr.  of  Geraint  832 

Geraint  and  E.  717 

Pelleas  and  E.  164 

Last  Tournament  124 

464 

Lover's  Tale  iv  142 

Mechanophilus  6 

Balin  and  Balan  344 

Holy  Grail  310 

Last  Tournament  444 

Romney's  R.  72 

Mariana  20 

The  Voyage  45 

Princess  v  367 


Flat  (a  level)  (continued)    all  about  The  same  gray  f's 

again.  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  13 

Wide  f's,  where  nothing  but  coarse  grasses  grew ;  Holy  Grail  794 
if  yonder  hill  be  level  with  the  /.                            Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  111 

Flat  (note  in  music)    run  thro'  every  change  of 

sharp  and  /;  Caress'd  or  chidden  4 

Flatten'd    Mangled,  and  /,  and  crush'd,  Maud  I  il 

Flatter    (See  also  Face-flatter)    They  would  sue  me, 

and  woo  me,  and  /  me.  The  Mermaid  43 

To  /  me  that  I  may  die  ?  Two  Voices  204 

F  myself  that  always  everywhere  I  know  Princess  ii  412 

This  look  of  quiet  f's  thus  Our  home-bred  fancies :  In  Mem.  x  10 

at  times  Womd  /  his  own  wish  in  age  for  love.  Merlin  and  V.  185 

Softly  laugh'd  Isolt ;  '  2?"  me  not.  Last  Tournament  557 

F  me  rather,  seeing  me  so  weak,  „              642 

0  you  that  can  /  your  victims,  Charity  29 

Flatter'd    Teach  your  /  kings  that  only  those  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  132 

thought  of  power  F  his  spirit ;  (Enone  137 

Be  /  to  the  height.  Palace  of  Art  192 

snares  them  by  the  score  F  and  fluster'd,  Princess  v  164 

The  fancy  /  my  mind,  Maud  I  xiv  23 

therefore  /  him.  Being  so  gracious,  Pelleas  and  E.  119 

F  the  fancy  of  my  fading  brain ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  107 

Flattering    But  /  the  golden  prime  Arabian  Nights  76 

/  thy  childish  thought  The  oriental  fairy  brought,  Elednore  13 

A  splendid  presence  /  the  poor  roofs  Aylmer's  Field  175 

I,  that  /  my  true  passion,  saw  The  knights,  Merlin  and  V.  874 

Half -envious  of  the  /  hand,  Lancelot  and  E.  349 
F  myself  that  all  my  doubts  were  fools                 Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  140 

Flattery    the  wit.  The  /  and  the  strife,  D.  of  F.  Women  148 

Nor  speak  I  now  from  foolish  /;  Marr.  of  Geraint  433 

the  old  man,  Tho'  doubtful,  felt  the  /,  Merlin  and  V.  184 

F  gilding  the  rift  in  a  throne ;  Vastness  20 

0  the  /  and  the  craft  Which  were  my  imdoing  .  .  .  Forlorn  3 
Flaunt    Was  this  a  time  for  these  to  /  their  pride  ?  Aylmer's  Field  770 

and  /  With  prudes  for  proctors.  Princess,  Pro.  140 

to  /,  to  dress,  to  dance,  to  thrum,  „            iv  519 

Pleasure  who  f's  on  her  wide  downway  Vastness  16 

Flaunted    took  the  ring,  and  /  it  Before  that  other  The  Ring  243 

Flaunting    Thou  comest  not  with  shows  of  /  vines  Ode  to  Memory  48 

Flaw    Like  f's  in  summer  laying  lusty  corn :  Marr.  of  Geraint  764 

heirless  /  In  his  throne's  title  make  him  feel  so  frail,  Sir.  J.  Oldcastle  72 

Flawless    circle  rounded  imder  female  hands  With  / 

demonstration :  Princess  ii  373 

Flax    Touch  /  with  flame — a  glance  will  serve  Merlin  and  V.  Ill 

Flaxen    With  thy  floating /hair;  Adeline  6 

From  the  /  curl  to  the  gray  lock  Princess  iv  426 

Ere  childhood's  /  ringlet  turn'd  To  black  and  brown    In  Mem.  Ixxix  15 

on  one  arm  The  /  ringlets  of  our  infancies  Lover's  Tale  i  234 

Flay    teeth  of  Hell  /  bare  and  gnash  thee  Last  Tournament  444 

/  Captives  whom  they  caught  in  battle —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  79 

Flayflint    There  hved  a  /  near ;  we  stole  Walk,  to  the  MaU  84 

Flajring    F  the  roofs  and  sucking  up  the  drains,  Princess  v  525 

Flea    text  no  larger  than  the  limbs  of  f's ;  Merlin  and  V.  672 

Fleck    slid,  a  sunny  /,  From  head  to  ancle  Talking  Oak  223 

That  life  is  dash'd  with  f's  of  sin.  In  Mem.  Hi  14 

Fleckless    My  conscience  will  not  count  me  /;  Princess  ii  294 

Fled    /  Beyond  the  Memmian  naphtha-pits,  Alexander  3 

Her  household  /  the  danger.  The  Goose  54 

Her  voice  /  always  thro'  the  summer  land ;  Edwin  Morris  67 

1  read,  and  /  by  night,  and  flying  turn'd :  „  134 
Then  /  she  to  her  inmost  bower,  Godiva  42 
'  O  happy  sleep,  that  lightly/! '  Day-Dm.,  Depart.  18 
Thought  her  proud,  and  /  over  the  sea ;  Edward  Gray  14 
For  one  fair  Vision  ever  /  Down  the  waste  waters  The  Voyage  57 
As  fast  she  /  thro'  sun  and  shade.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  37 
F  forward,  and  no  news  of  Enoch  came.  Enoch  Arden  361 
His  fancy  /  before  the  lazy  wind  Returning,  „  657 
For  maidens,  on  the  spur  she  /;  Princess  i  151 
when  he  fell,  And  all  else  /  ?  „  ii  243 
They  /,  who  might  have  shamed  us :  „  299 
As  flies  the  shadow  of  a  bird,  she  /.  „  Hi  96 
the  day  /  on  thro'  all  Its  range  of  duties  „  176 
and  /,  as  flies  A  troop  of  snowy  doves  „  iv  167 
Amazed  he  /  away  Thro'  the  dark  land,  „         v  48 


Fled 


220 


Flesh 


Fled  (continued)    And  shuddering  /  from  room  to  room,  Princess  vi  370 

My  fancy  /  to  the  South  again.  The  Daisy  108 

Less  yearning  for  the  friendship  /,  In  Mem.  cxvi  15 

Were  it  not  wise  I  /  from  the  place  Maud  7  i  64 

Whether  I  need  have/?  „    7/ m  72 

And  I  wake,  my  dream  is  /;  „         iv  51 

Left  her  and  /,  and  Uther  enter'd  in,  Com.  of  Arthur  201 

F  down  the  lane  of  access  to  the  King,  Gareth  and  L.  661 

by  this  entry  /  The  damsel  in  her  wrath,  „            674 

'  Lead,  and  I  follow,'  and  fast  away  she  /.  (repeat)  „    760,  990 

but  three  F  thro'  the  pines ;  „            814 

a  Shape  that  /  With  broken  wings,  „           1207 

they  /  With  Httle  save  the  jewels  they  had  on,  Marr.  of  Geraint  639 

F  all  the  boon  companions  of  the  Earl,  Geraint  and  E.  477 

and  /  Yelling  as  from  a  spectre,_  „            732 

women  staring  and  aghast.  While  some  yet  /;  „            805 

Dishorsed  himself,  and  rose  again,  and  /  Far,  Balin  and  Balan  330 

/  from  Arthur's  court  To  break  the  mood.  Merlin  and  V.  297 

F  like  a  glittering  rivulet  to  the  tarn :  Laiicelot  and  E.  52 

But  I,  my  sons,  and  little  daiighter  /  „             276 
F  ever  thro'  the  woodwork,  till  they  found  The 

new  design  „            440 

But  on  that  day  when  Lancelot  /  the  lists,  „            525 

Galahad  /  along  them  bridge  by  bridge.  Holy  Grail  504 

Burnt  me  within,  so  that  I  rose  and  /,  „          608 
Ran  thro'  the  doors  and  vaulted  on  his  horse 

And  /:  Pdleas  and  E.  540 

left  him  bruised  And  batter'd,  and  /on,  „           547 

Before  him  /  the  face  of  Queen  Isolt  Last  Tournament  363 

Tristram  waking,  the  red  dream  F  with  a  shout,  „                488 

Queen  Guineveee  had  /  the  court,  Guinevere  1 

hither  had  she  /,  her  cause  of  flight  Sir  Modred ;  „        9 

F  all  night  long  by  glimmering  waste  „     128 

Moan  as  she  /,  or  thought  she  heard  „     130 

Queen  had  added  '  Get  thee  hence,'  F  frighted.  ,,    367 

he  that  /  no  further  fly  the  King ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  89 

like  wild  Bacchanals  F  onward  to  the  steeple  Lover's  Tale  Hi  26 

/  Wind-footed  to  the  steeple  in  the  woods,  „             55 
in  the  thick  of  question  and  reply  I  /  the  house,   Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  158 

she  rose  and  /  Beneath  a  pitiless  rush  „               236 
Few  were  his  following,  F  to  his  warship :             Batt.  of  Brunanburh  59 

and  tum'd  in  her  haste  and  /.  The  Wreck  62 

one  son  had  forged  on  his  father  and  /,  Despair  69 

and  its  last  brother-worm  will  have  /  „        85 

listens,  fears  his  victim  may  have  / —  The  Flight  71 

crying  after  voices  that  have  /!  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  251 

F  wavering  o'er  thy  face,  and  chased  away  Demeter  and  P.  15 

and  turn'd.  And  /  by  many,  a  waste,  „             74 

Muriel  /.     Poor  Muriel !     Ay,  poor  Muriel  The  Ring  271 

up  the  tower — an  icy  air  F  by  me —  ,,         446 

'  He  is  / — I  wish  him  dead —  Forlorn  1 

He  is  /,  or  he  is  dead,  ,,      9 

have  you  lost  him,  is  he  /?  Happy  2 

If.     I  was  all  but  crazed  With  the  grief  Bandit's  Death  38 

Fledged    curved  branches,  /  with  clearest  green,  D.  of  F.  Wom^n  59 

F  as  it  were  with  Mercury's  ankle-wing,  Lucretius  201 

lightlier  move  The  minutes  /  with  music : '  Princess  iv  37 

pines  that  /  The  hills  that  watch'd  thee.  Lover's  Tale  i  11 

Flee     faintest  sunlights  /  About  his  shadowy  sides :  The  Kraken  4 

with  increasing  might  doth  forward  /  By  town,  Mine  he  the  strength  5 

if  I  /  to  these  Can  I  go  from  Him  ?  Enoch  Arden  224 

Melissa  clamour'd  '  F  the  death ; '  Princess  iv  166 

What  time  mine  own  might  also  /,  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  37 

I  /  from  the  cruel  madness  of  love,  Maud  I  iv  55 

F  down  the  valley  before  he  get  to  horse.  Gareth  and  L.  941 

a  dog  am  I,  To  worry,  and  not  to  / —  „          1015 

'  I  will  /  hence  and  give  myself  to  God  ' —  Last  Tournament  624 

I  would  /  from  the  storm  within,  The  Wreck  9 

Fleece     heavens  between  their  fairy  /  's  pale  Gardener's  D.  261 

many- wintered  /  of  throat  and  chin.  Merlin  and  V.  841 

Burst  from  a  swimming  /  of  winter  gray,  Demeter  and  P.  20 

Fleece  (an  inn)     '  The  Bull,  the  F  are  cramm'd,  Audley  Court  1 

Fleeced    See  Thick-fleeced 

Fleecy    Moving  thro'  a  /  night.  Margaret  21 

Fleet  (adj.)    / 1  was  of  foot :  Before  me  shower'd  Princess  iv  263 


Fleet  (s)     all  the  /  Had  rest  by  stony  hills  On  a  Mourner  34 

a  /  of  glass.  That  seem'd  a  /  of  jewels  Sea  Dreams  122 

An  idle  signal,  for  the  brittle  /  „            133 

my  poor  venture  but  a  /  of  glass  „            138 

Breaking  their  mailed  /  's  and  armed  towers,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  39 

Welconie  her,  thunders  of  fort  and  of  /!  W.  to  Alexandra  6 

I  trust  if  an  enemy's  /  came  yonder  Maud  7  i  49 

Ev'n  in  the  presence  of  an  enemy's  /,  Guinevere  279 

For  half  of  their  /  to  the  right  The  Revenge  35 

the  Spanish  /  with  broken  sides  lay  round  „  71 
The  /  of  England  is  her  all-in-all ;  Her  /  is  in  your 

hands,  And  in  her  /  her  Fate.  The  Fleet  13 

you,  that  have  the  ordering  of  her  /,  „  16 
One  life,  one  flag,  one  /,  one  Throne ! '              Open  I,  and  C.  Exhib.  39 

valour  in  battle,  glorious  annals  of  army  and  /,  Fastness  7 

Than  a  rotten  /  and  a  city  in  flames !  Riflemen  form .'  18 

Fleet  (verb)     The  cloud  f's,  The  heart  beats.  Nothing  will  Die  11 

The  clouds  will  cease  to  /;  All  Things  will  Die  11 

And  the  light  and  shadow  /;  Maud  II  iv  36 

And  the  shadow  flits  and  f's  „        90 

Before  them  f's  the  shower.  Early  Spring  13 

Fleeted    (See  also  Far-fleeted)     As  fast  we  /  to  the  South :        The  Voyage  4 

.    Those  that  of  late  had  /  far  and  fast  Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  1 

F  his  vessel  to  sea  with  the  king  in  it,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  60 

Fleeter     know  Whether  smile  or  frown  be  /?  Madeline  12 

Fleeting    (See  also  Ever-fleeting)    When  will  the  clouds 

be  aweary  of  /?  Nothing  will  Die  5 

Sow'd  all  their  mystic  gulfs  with  /  stars ;  Gardener's  D.  262 

One  after  another  the  white  clouds  are/;  All  Things  will  Die  5 

'  Or  that  this  anguish  /  hence.  Two  Voices  235 

And  /  thro'  the  boundless  universe,  Lucretius  161 

Or  villain  fancy  /  by,  Drew  in  the  expression  In  Mem.  cxi  18 

in  the  night.  When  the  ghosts  are  /.  Forlorn  18 

F  betwixt  her  column'd  palace-waJls,  St.  Telemachus  37 

Flesh     (See  also  Swine-flesh)     my  /,  which  I  despise 

and  hate,  St.  S.  Stylites  58 

Mortify  Your  /,  like  me,  with  scourges  „            180 

But  far  too  spare  of  /.'  Talking  Oak  92 

Padded  round  with  /  and  fat.  Vision  of  Sin  177 

But  they  that  cast  her  spirit  into  /,  Aylmer's  Field  481 

Thou  wUt  not  gash  thy  /  for  him ;  „            658 

and  swept  away  The  men  of  /  and  blood.  Sea  Dreams  237 

never  yet  on  earth  Could  dead  /  creep,  Lucretitts  131 

Oh,  sacred  be  the  /  and  blood  In  Mem.  xxxiii  11 

All  knowledge  that  the  sons  of  /  „           Ixxxv  27 

0  heart  of  stone,  are  you  /,  Maud  I  vi  79 
And  she  was  fairest  of  all  /  on  earth.  Com.  of  Arthur  3 
Some  hold  that  he  hath  swallow'd  infant  /,  Gareth  and  L.  1342 
Go  to  the  town  and  buy  us  /  Marr.  of  Geraint  372 
means  of  goodly  welcome,  /  and  wine.  „  387 
boil'd  the  /,  and  spread  the  board,  „  391 
call'd  for  /  and  wine  to  feed  his  spears.  Geraint  and  E.  601 
all  the  hall  was  dim  with  steam  of /:  „  603 
If  ann  of  /  could  lay  him.'  Balin  and  Balan  299 
shield  of  Balan  prick'd  The  hauberk  to  the  /;  „  560 
World-war  of  dying  /  against  the  life.  Merlin  and  V.  193 
Nor  ever  touch'd  fierce  wine,  nor  tasted  /,  „  627 
how  pale  !  what  are  they  ?  /  and  blood  ?  Lancelot  and  E.  1256 
The  beauty  of  her  /  abash'd  the  boy,  Pdleas  and  E.  78  i 
the  world  Is  /  and  shadow — I  have  had  my  day.  Last  Tournament  316  , 
They  fail'd  to  trace  him  thro'  the  /  and  blood  „  686 
Which  /  and  blood  perforce  would  violate :  „               689  ; 

1  cannot  take  thy  hand ;  that  too  Ls  /,  Guinevere  553 
in  the  /  thou  hast  sinn'd ;  and  mine  own  /,  „  554 
My  love  thro'  /hath  wrought  into  my  life  „  558 
F  of  my  /  was  gone,  but  bone  of  my  bone  was  left —  Rizpah  51 
a  cross  of  /  and  blood  And  holier.  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  137 
'  He  veil'il  Himself  in  /,  and  now  He  veils  His  /  in  bread,  „  156 
Chill'd,  till  I  tasted  /  again  To.  E.  Fitzgerald  20 
keep  their  haithen  kings  in  the  /  for  the  Jidgemint  day.  Tomorrow  70 
died  in  the  doing  it,  /  without  mind ;  Vastness  27 
He  that  has  nail'd  all  /  to  the  Cross,  „  28 
Hast  spared  the  /  of  thousands,  Happy  17 
fairest  /  at  last  is  filth  on  which  the  worm  „  30 
This  wall  of  solid  /  that  comes  between  „      35 


Flesh 


221 


Float 


riesh  (continued)    If  man  and  wife  be  but  one  /,  Sappy  94 
Flesh'd    iSVc  Foul-flesh'd 

Fleshless    crown'd  with  /  laughter —  Gareth  and  L.  1383 

like  a  barren  ghost  From  out  the /world  of  spirits,  _    _   Thejiing  228 


Fleshly    this  /  sign  That  thou  art  thou — 
Fleurs-de-lys    sink  Thy  f-d-l  in  slime  again, 
Flew    Out  /  the  web  and  floated  wide ; 

That  loosely  /  to  left  and  right — 

A  living  flash  of  light  he  /.' 

The  goose  /  this  way  and  /  that, 

The  fire  shot  up,  the  martin  /, 

F  over  roof  and  casement : 

'  Chase,'  he  said :  the  ship  /  forward, 

the  rim  Changed  every  moment  as  we  /. 

till  they  /,  Hair,  and  eyes,  and  limbs, 

a  coimtry  dance,  and  /  thro'  light  And  shadow, 

/  kite,  and  raced  the  purple  fly. 

Till  o'er  the  hills  her  eagles  / 

The  gust  that  round  the  garden  /, 

then  /  in  a  dove  And  brought  a  summons 

and  the  blade  /  Splintering  in  six, 

all  that  walk'd,  or  crept,  or  perch'd,  or  /. 

its  shadow  /  Before  it,  till  it  touch'd  her, 

And  the  daws  /  out  of  the  Towers 
Flexile    So  youthful  and  so  /  then. 
Flicker    The  shadows  /  to  and  fro : 

Where  the  dying  night-lamp  f's, 

wisp  that  f's  where  no  foot  can  tiead.' 

To  /  with  his  double  tongue. 

seem  to  /  past  thro'  sim  and  shade, 

Nor  /  down  to  brainless  pantomime, 
Flicker'd    high  masts  /  as  they  lay  afloat ; 

F  like  doubtful  smiles  about  her  lips, 

in  the  heaven  above  it  there  /  a  songless  lark, 

Lightnings  /  along  the  heath ; 

F  and  bicker'd  From  helmet  to  helmet, 
FUckering    (See  also  Livid-flickering)    night-light  / 
in  my  eyes  Awoke  me.' 

and  /  in  a  grimly  light  Dance  on  the  mere. 

lark  Shot  up  and  shrill'd  in  /  gyres, 

/  fairy-circle  wheel'd  and  broke 

Draw  downward  into  Hades  with  his  drift  Of  / 
spectres,  Demeter  and  P.  27 

Prince  Who  scarce  had  pluck'd  his  /  life  To  the  Queen  ii  5 

Might  find  a /glimmer  of  relief  In  change  of  place.      To  Mary  Boyle  47 

sometimes  I  fear  You  may  be  /,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  33 

Sht  (flying)    (See  also  Swallow-flight)    And  of  so 
fierce  a  /,  From  Calpe  unto  Caucasus 

Love  wept  and  spread  his  sheeny  vans  for  /; 

free  dehght,  from  any  height  of  rapid  /, 

And  that  delight  of  f  rohc  /, 

Rapt  after  heaven's  starry  /, 

summits  slope  Beyond  the  furthest  f's  of  hope, 

she  led,  In  hope  to  gain  upon  her  /. 

What  look'd  a  /  of  fairy  arrows  aim'd 

F's,  terrors,  sudden  rescues. 

Your  /  from  out  your  bookless  wilds 

Edym's  men  had  caught  them  in  their  /, 


De  Prof..  Two  G.  40 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  99 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  42 

„  iv  20 

Two  Voices  15 

The  Goose  35 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  11 

WiU  Water.  134 

The  Captain  33 

The  Voyage  28 

Vision  of  Sin  38 

Princess,  Pro.  84 

„  m248 

Ode  on  WeU.  112 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  19 

„  ciii  15 

Balin  and  Balan  395 

Last  Tournament  367 

Guinevere  79 

V.  of  Maeldune  109 

Amphion  59 

D.  of  the  0.  Fear  39 

Locksley  HaU  80 

Princess  iv  358 

In  Mem.  ex  8 

Ancient  Sage  100 

To  W.  C.  Macready  10 

D.ofF.  Women  Hi 

Lover's  Tale  i  68 

V .  of  Maeldune  17 

Lead  Prophet  79 

Merlin  and  the  G.  70 

Sea  Lreams  103 

Gareth  and  L.  826 

Princess  vii  46 

Guinevere  257 


The  Poet  14 

Love  and  Death  8 

Rosalind  3 

„     47 

Two  Voices  68 

185 

The  Voyage  60 

Aylmer's  Field  94 

„  99 

Princess  ii  56 

Marr.  of  Geraint  642 


she  fled,  her  cause  of  /  Sir  Modred ;       '  Guinevere  9 

prone  /  By  thousands  down  the  crags  Montenegro  7 

/  of  birds,  the  flame  of  sacrifice,  Tiresias  6 

cheeping  to  each  other  of  their  /  To  summer  lands !  The  Ring  86 

And  over  the  /  of  the  Ages !  Parnasstts  3 

once  a  /  of  shadowy  fighters  crost  The  disk,  St.  Telemachus  23 

ht  (ol  stoirs)     Broad-based  f's  of  marble  stsurs  Arabian  Nights  117 

And  up  a  /  of  stairs  into  the  hall.  Princess  ii  31 

K  (s)    Give  me  my/,  and  let  me  say  my  say.'  Aylmer's  Field  399 

linng  (verb)     to  /  The  winged  shafts  of  truth,  The  Poet  25 

Tho' one  did  /  the  fire.  „        30 

/  on  each  side  my  low-flowing  locks.  The  Mermaid  32 
take  ExcaUbur,  And  /  him  far  into  the  middle  mere :       M.  d' Arthur  37 

But,  if  thou  spare  to  /  ExcaUbur,  „         131 

good  luck  Shall  /  her  old  shoe  after.  Will  Water.  216 

And  /  the  diamond  necklace  by.'  Lady  Clare  40 

'  Can  I  not  /  this  horror  off  me  again,  Lucretius  173 


Fling  (verb)  (continued)    will  she  /  herself,  Shameless 

upon  me  ?  Lucretius  202 

/  The  tricks,  which  make  us  toys  of  men,  Princess  ii  62 

all  prophetic  pity,  /  Their  pretty  maids  „       v  381 

'  F  our  doors  wide !  all,  all,  not  one,  „     vi  334 

And  /  it  Uke  a  viper  off,  and  shriek  „      vii  94 

/  whate'er  we  felt,  not  fearing,  into  words.  Third  of  Feb.  6 

Never  a  man  could  /  him :  Grandmother  10 

/  This  bitter  seed  among  mankind ;  In  Mem.  xc  3 

sadness  /  's  Her  shadow  on  the  blaze  of  kings :  „  xcviii  18 

Did  he  /  himself  down  ?  who  knows  ?  Maud  I  i9 

I  swear  thou  canst  not  /  the  fourth.'  Gareth  and  L.  1327 

And  /  me  deep  in  that  forgotten  mere,  Lancelot  and  E.  1426 

an  ye  /  those  rubies  round  my  neck  In  lieu  of 

hers.  Last  Tournament  312 
take  Excahbur,  And  /  him  far  into  the  middle 

mere :  Pass,  of  Arthur  205 

But,  if  thou  spare  to  /  Excalibur,  „            299 

That  f's  a.  mist  behind  it  in  the  sun —  Lover's  Tale  iv  294 

and  /  Thy  royalty  back  into  the  riotous  fits  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  99 

I  would  /  myself  over  and  die !  The  Wreck  118 

earth's  dark  forehead /'s  athwart  the  heavens  Ancient  Sage  200 

And  /  free  alms  into  the  beggar's  bowl,  ,,           260 

What  ?  /  them  to  you  ?— well—  Happy  103 

Mussulman  Who  /'s  his  bowstning  Harem  Romney's  R.  135 

horse,  anger,  plunged  To  /  me,  and  fail'd.  Akbar's  Dream  119 
Flinging    F  the  gloom  of  yesternight  On  the  white  day ;     Ode  to  Memory  9 

/  round  her  neck,  Claspt  it,  and  cried  Last  Tournament  749 

like  the  wave  /  forward  again,  Def.  of  Lucknow  43 

Was  f  fruit  to  lions ;  Tiresias  67 

Flint    shake  The  sparkling  /  's  beneath  the  prow.  Arabian  Nights  52 

clattering/ '5  batter'd  with  clanging  hoofs;  D.  of  F.  Women  21 

Is  there  no  stoning  save  with  /  and  rock  ?  Aylmer's  Field  746 

own  one  port  of  sense  not  /  to  prayer,  Princess  vi  182 

out  upon  you, /!     You  love  nor  her,  „        259 

heart  as  a  millstone,  set  my  face  as  a  /,  Maud  7  i  31 

But  then  what  a  /  is  he !  ,,   xix  57 

forage  for  the  horse,  and  /  for  fire.  Gareth  and  L.  1277 

Flippant     The  /  put  himself  to  school  In  Mem.  ex  10 

Flirt     Not  one  to  /  a  venom  at  her  eyes,  Merlin  and  V.  609 

Flit     will  /  To  make  the  greensward  fresh.  Talking  Oak  89 

Let  our  girls  /,  Till  the  storm  die !  Princess  vi  337 

Look,  look,  how  he  f's,  Window,  Ay  1 

f  like  the  king  of  the  wrens  with  a  crown  of  fire.                        „         16 

Or  like  to  noiseless  phantoms  /:  In  Mem.  xx  16 

What  slender  shade  of  doubt  may  /,  „      xlviii  7 

F's  by  the  sea-blue  bird  of  March ;  „          xci  4 

A  shadow  /'s  before  me,  Maud  II  iv  11 

shadow  /  's  and  fleets  And  will  not  let  me  be ;  „          90 

Then  let  her  fancy  /  across  the  past,  Marr.  of  Geraint  645 

And  while  your  doves  about  you  /,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  7 

from  him  /'s  to  warn  A  far-off  friendship  Demeter  and  P.  89 

round  her  brows  a  woodland  culver/ '5,  Prog,  of  Spring  18 

Flitted    F  across  into  the  night.  Miller's  D.  127 

The  little  innocent  soul  /  away.  Enoch  Arden  270 

unawares  they  /  off.  Busying  themselves  about  Aylmer's  Field  202 

left  me  in  shadow  here !     Gone^  away !  Window,  Gone  4 

/ 1  know  not  where !  ^              7 

Foiilks'  coostom  /  awaiiy  like  a  kite  North.  Cobbler  28 

music  Of  falling  torrents,  F  The  Gleam.  Merlin  and  the  G.  48 

Flittermouse-shriek    fainter  than  any /-s ;  V.  of  Maeldune  22 

Flitteth     The  shallop  /  silken-sail'd  L  of  Shalott  i  22 
Flitting  (part. )     '  What !     You're  / ! '    '  Yes,  we're  /,'     Walk,  to  the  MaU  43 

says  he,  '  you  /  with  us  too —  45 

F,  fairy  Lilian,  "     LUi^n  2 

And  airy  forms  of  /  change.  Madelhie  7 

till  all  my  /  chance  Were  caught  within  the  record            Princess  v  142 

Flitting  (s)     After  the  /  of  the  bats,  Mariana  17 

Plagued  with  a  /  to  and  fro,  Maud  II  ii  33 

Float    F's  from  his  sick  and  fihned  eyes,  Supp.  Confessions  166 

F  by  you  on  the  verge  of  night.  Margaret  31 

languors  of  thy  love-deep  eyes  Ji'  on  to  me.  Elednore  77 

as  the  warm  gulf-stream  of  Florida  F's  Mine  be  the  strength  13 

Floated  her  hair  or  seem'd  to  /  in  rest.  (Enone  19 

Falls,  and  f's  adown  the  air.  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  31 


Float 


222 


Florence 


Float  {continued)    forms,  That  /  about  the  threshold  of  an 

age,  Golden  Year  16 

steam  F's  up  from  those  dim  fields  about  the  homes  Tithonus  69 

never  f's  an  European  flag,  Lochsley  Hall  161 

/  thro'  Heaven,  and  cannot  light  ?  Day-Dm.,  Ep.  8 

I  /  till  all  is  dark.  Sir  Galahad  40 

I  seem'd  To  /  about  a  glimmering  night,  Princess  i  247 

bottom  agates  seem  to  wave  and  /  „      ii  327 

the  streams  that  /  us  each  and  all  „       iv  70 

And  /  or  fall,  in  endless  ebb  and  flow ;  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  27 

airy-light  To  /  above  the  ways  of  men,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  18 

She  f's  across  the  hamlet.  Prog,  of  Spring  40 

May  /  awhile  beneath  the  sun,  Eomney's  R.  50 

vapour  in  daylight  Over  the  mountain  F's,  Kapolani  18 

boats  of  Dahomey  that  /  upon  human  blood !  The  Dawn  5 

Floated     Adown  it  /  a  dying  swan,  Dying  Swan  6 

Out  flew  the  web  and  /  wide ;  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  42 

She  /  down  to  Camelot :  „          iv  23 

A  gleaming  shape  she  /  by,  „              39 

if  first  I  /  free.  As  naked  essence,  Two  Voices  373 

F  her  hair  or  seem'd  to  float  in  rest.  (Enone  19 

F  the  glowing  sunlights,  as  she  moved.  „     182 

she  /  to  us  and  said :  '  You  have  done  well  Princess  iv  526 
lordly  creature  /  on  To  where  her  wounded  brethren  lay ;       „        i)i  89 

And  o'er  her  breast  /  the  sacred  fish ;  Gareth  and  L.  223 

She  might  have  risen  and  /  when  I  saw  her.  Holy  Grail  100 

White  as  white  clouds,  /  from  sky  to  sky.  Lover's  Tcde  i  5 

Waver'd  and  / — which  was  less  than  Hope,  „        452 

And  /  on  and  parted  round  her  neck,  „        704 

about  my  brow  Her  warm  breast  /  in  the  utterance  „    ii  141 

/in — While  all  the  guests  in  mute  amazement  „    iv  304 
F  in  conquering  battle  or  flapt  to  the  battle-cry !        Def.  of  Lucknow  2 

Had  /  in  with  sad  reproachful  eyes,  The  Ring  469 

Moving  to  melody,  F  The  Gleam.  Merlin  and  the  G.  23 

and  thro'  her  dream  A  ghostly  murmur  /,  Death  of  QLnone  79 

Floating    {See  also  Ever-floating)    And  /  about  the  under- 

sky,  Dying  Swan  25 

F  thro'  an  evening  atmosphere,  Elednore  100 

misty  folds,  that  /  as  they  fell  Lit  up  Palace  of  Art  35 

With  thy  /  flaxen  hair ;  Adeline  6 

Down-droop'd,  in  many  a /fold,  Arabian  Nights  147 

Stays  on  her  /  locks  the  lovely  freight  Ode  to  Memory  16 

thro'  the  wreaths  of  /  dark  upcurl'd.  The  Poet  35 

land  Of  lavish  lights,  and  /  shades :  Elednore  12 

luxuriant  symmetry  Of  thy  /  gracefulness,  „        50 

Made  misty  with  the  /  meal.  Miller's  D.  104 

Buoy'd  upon  /  tackle  and  broken  spars,  Enoch  Arden  551 

Came  /  on  for  many  a  month  and  year,  Vision  of  Sin  54 

o'er  it  crost  the  dimness  of  a  cloud  F,  Pelleas  and  E.  38 

and  mine  Were  dim  with  /  tears.  Lover's  Tale  i  442 

All  day  I  watch'd  the  /  isles  of  shade,  „            H  5 

in  their  /  folds  They  past  and  were  no  more :  ,,              99 

Flock    And  in  the  /'5  The  lamb  rejoiceth  Supp.  Confessions  156 

By  dancing  rivulets  fed  his  f's  To  E.  L.  22 

when  he  came  again,  his  /  believed —  Aylmer's  Field  600 

half  amazed  half  frighted  all  his  /:  „            631 

my  eldest-bom,  the  flower  of  the  /;  Grandmother  9 

And  bring  the  firstling  to  the  /;  In  Mem.  ii  6 

meadowy  curves.  That  feed  the  mothers  of  the/;  „        c  16 

The /'s  are  whiter  down  the  vale,  „    cxvlO 

Flock'd    thither  /  at  noon  His  tenants,  Princess,  Pro.  3 

a  careless  people  /  from  the  fields  Dead  Prophet  7 

Flood  (s)  {See  also  Fountain-flood)  From  the  westward- 
winding/,  Margarets 
island  queen  who  sways  the  f's  and  lands  Biumaparte  3 
They  past  into  the  level  /,  Miller's  D.  75 
dragons  spouted  forth  A  /  of  fountain-foam.  Palace  of  Art  24 
and  takes  the  /  With  swarthy  webs.  M.  d' Arthur  268 
By  sands  and  steaming  flats,  and  f's  The  Voyage  45 
his  passions  all  in  /  And  masters  of  his  motion,  Aylmer's  Field  339 
Bore  down  in  /,  and  dash'd  his  angry  heart  „  633 
/,  fire,  earthquake,  thimder,  wrought  Such  waste  „  639 
the  /  drew ;  yet  I  caught  her ;  Princess  iv  182 
Better  have  died  and  spilt  our  bones  in  the  / —  „  532 
fling  Their  pretty  maids  in  the  running/,  „       v  382 


Flood  (s)  {continued)    And  whiten'd  all  the  rolling/; 
lead  Thro'  prosperous  f's  his  holy  urn. 
Summer  on  the  steaming  f's, 
shadowing  down  the  homed  /  In  ripples, 
lay  At  anchor  in  the  /  below ; 
And  roU'd  the  f's  in  grander  space. 
And  molten  up,  and  roar  in  /; 
No  doubt  vast  eddies  in  the  /  Of  onward  time 
have  isled  together,  knave.  In  time  of  /. 
follow  Vivien  thro'  the  fierjr  /! 
when  ye  used  to  take  me  with  the  / 
far  up  the  shining  /  Until  we  found  the  palace 
I  was  all  alone  upon  the  /, 
Beyond  the  poplar  and  far  up  the  /, 
Oar'd  by  the  dumb,  went  upward  with  the  / — 
Then  fell  the  f's  of  heaven  drowning  the  deep, 
and  takes  the  /  With  swarthy  webs, 
booming  indistinct  Of  the  confused  f's, 
Saving  liis  life  on  the  fallow  /. 


The  Victim  20 

In  Mem.  ix  8 

„  Ixxxv  69 

„  Ixxxvi  7 

„      ciii  20 

26 

„  cxxvii  13 

„  cxxviii  5 

Gareth  and  L.  894 

Balin  and  Balan  454 

Lancelot  and  E.  1037 

1043 

„      1046 

1050 

1154 

Holy  Grail  533 

Pass,  of  Arthur  AM 

Lover's  Tale  i  638 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  61 


Shrine-shattering  earthquake,  fire,  /,  thunderbolt,  Tiresias  61 

Gone  like  fires  and  f's  and  earthquakes  Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  40 

shine  the  level  lands.  And  flash  the  f's  ;  Early  Spring  16 

Produce  of  your  field  and  /,  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhih.  5 


From  xmder  rose  a  muffled  moan  of  f's ; 

The  /  may  bear  me  far, 
Flood  (verb)     F  with  full  daylight  glebe  and  town  ? 

F's  all  the  deep-blue  gloom  with  beams 

Ready  to  burst  and  /  the  world  with  foam : 

And  /  a  fresher  throat  with  song. 

/  the  haunts  of  hem  and  crake ; 

poach'd  filth  that  f's  the  middle  street, 

f's  with  redundant  life  Her  narrow  portals. 
Flooded    Were  /  over  with  eddying  song. 

risen  before  his  time  And  /  at  our  nod. 

eyes  All  /  with  the  helpless  wrath  of  tears, 

Over  all  the  woodland's  /  bowers, 

the  lake  beyond  his  Umit,  And  all  was  /; 
Flooding    /,  leaves  Low  banks  of  yellow  sand ; 

On  hill,  or  plain,  at  sea,  or  /  ford. 
Floor    Old  footsteps  trod  the  upper  f's. 

Flung  inward  over  spangled  f's, 

The  meal-sacks  on  the  whiten'd  /, 

find  my  garden-tools  upon  the  granary  / 


rolling  waves  Of  sound  on  roof  and  /  Within, 

There's  a  new  foot  on  the  /,  my  friend. 

As  head  and  heels  upon  the  /  They  flounder'd 

All  heaven  bursts  her  starry /'s, 

thou  shalt  cease  To  pace  the  gritted  /, 

shape  it  plank  and  beam  for  roof  and  /, 

Throbb'd  thunder  thro'  the  palace  f's, 

crash'd  the  glass  and  beat  the/; 

Witch-elms  that  counterchange  the  / 

But  let  no  footstep  beat  the  /, 

russet-bearded  head  roU'd  on  the  /. 

others  from  the  /,  Tusklike,  arising, 

Crush'd  the  wild  passion  out  against  the  / 

once  she  slipt  like  water  to  the  /. 

grovell'd  with  her  face  against  the  /: 

Parted  a  little  ere  they  met  the  /, 

like  the  dead  by  the  dead  on  the  cabin  /, 

as  we  was  a-cleanin'  the  /, 

fire  of  fever  creeps  across  the  rotted  /, 

wi'  my  hairm  hingin'  down  to  the  /, 

Found  in  a  chink  of  that  old  moulder'd/! ' 

The  sacred  relics  tost  about  the  / — 
Flop     hoickt  my  feet  wi'  a  /  fro'  the  claay. 
Flora  (Christian  name)  work  in  hues  to  dim  The  Titianic  F. 

O,  Lady  F,  let  me  speak : 

So,  Lady  F,  take  my  lay. 

So,  Lady  F,  take  my  lay, 
Florence  (town)     '  Poor  lad,  he  died  at  F, 

At  F  too  what  golden  hours, 

Abroad,  at  F,  at  Rome, 

Fair  F  honouring  thy  nativity,  Thy  F  now  the 
crown  of  Italy, 


Prog,  of  Spring  70 

Crossing  the  Bar  14 

Two  Voices  87 

D.  of  F.  Women  186 

Princess  iv  474 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  16 

Merlin  and  V.  798 

Lover's  Tale  i  84 

Dying  Swan  42 

D.  of  F.  Women  144 

Enoch  Arden  32 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  20 

The  Daisy  72 

Lover's  Tale  i  534 

Holy  Grail  728 

Mariana  67 

Arabian  Nights  116 

Miller's  D.  101 

May  Queen,  N.  F's.  E.  45 


D.  of  F.  Women  192 

D.  of  the  0.  Year  52 

The  Goose  37 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  21 

WiU  Water.  242 

Princess  vi  46 

„    vii  104 

In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  20 

„  Ixxxix  1 

evil 

Geraint  and  E.  729 

Balin  and  Balan  315 

Lancelot  and  E.  742 

830 

Guinevere  415 

Lover's  Tale  iv  215 

The  Wreck  112 

Spinster's  S's.  49 

Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  223 

Owd  Rod  65 

The  Ring  280 

„        447 

Spinster's  S's.  30 J 

Gardener's  D.  YILM 

Day-Dm.,  Pro.  L,| 

Moral  If 

Ev.l] 

The  Brook  35  I 

The  Daisy  41 

Maud  I  xix  58 1 


To  Dante  3 1 


Flores 


223 


Flower 


Flores    At  F  in  the  Azores  Sir  Richaid  Grenville  lay,  The  Revenge  1 

And  he  sailed  away  from  F  „  23 

Florian    I  stood  With  Cyril  and  with  F,  Princess  i  52 

F  said :  I  have  a  sister  at  the  foreign  court,  „  74 

I  stole  from  court  With  Cyril  and  with  F,  „  103 

F,  but  no  livelier  than  the  dame  „  ii  112 

'  The  fifth  in  line  from  that  old  F,  „  238 

The  loyal  warmth  of  F  is  not  cold,  „  244 

'  Are  you  that  Psyche,'  F  added ;  „  246 

'Are  you  that  Psyche,'  F  ask'd,  „  269 

so  pacing  till  she  paused  By  F;  „  303 

I  am  sad  and  glad  To  see  you,  F.  „  307 

'  Ungracious ! '  answer'd  F ;  '  have  you  learnt  „  392 

What  think  you  of  it,  F?  ,,408 

'  Tell  us,'  F  ask'd,  '  How  grew  this  feud  „  m  76 

Then  murmur'd  F  gazing  after  her,  „  97 

Cyril  kept  With  Psyche,  with  Melissa  F,  „  355 

F  nodded  at  him,  I  frowning ;  „  iv  159 

Alone  I  stood  With  F,  cursing  Cyril,  „  171 

the  doubt '  if  this  were  she,'  But  it  was  F.  „  218 

prayer.  Which  melted  F's  fancy  as  she  hung,  „  370 

Then  F  knelt,  and  '  Come '  he  whisper'd  to  her,  „  d  63 

F,  he  That  loved  me  closer  than  his  own  right  eye,  „  530 

'  Your  brother,  Lady, — F, — ask  for  him  „  vi  313 

But  Psyche  tended  F :  „  vii  55 


Sea  Dreams  219 

Princess  in  350 

Mine  be  the  strength  12 

Sea  Dreams  266 

Amphion  24 

Hendecasyllabics  9 

The  Goose  38 

PeUeas  and  E.  574 

Princess  v  498 

Enoch  Arden  342 

Lancelot  and  E.  554 

Talking  Oak  197 

201 

Enoch  Arden  8 

The  Brook  12 

Boddicea  83 

Lover's  Tale  i  348 

Enoch  Arden  734 

The  Brook  11 

Princess  vii  113 


I 


Florid    /,  stem,  as  far  as  eye  could  see. 
Engirt  with  many  a  /  maiden-cheek, 

Florida    as  the  warm  gulf-stream  of  F  Floats 

Flounce    dimpled  /  of  the  sea-furbelow  flap, 

Floonder    began  to  move.  And  /  into  hornpipes. 
Should  I  /  awhile  without  a  tumble 

Floundered    They  /  all  together. 

Floundering    The  weary  steed  of  Pelleas  / 
Part  stumbled  mixt  with  /  horses. 

Flour    /  From  his  tall  mill  that  whistled 

Flourish  (s)     In  the  mid  might  and  /  of  his  May, 

Flourish  (verb)    0  /  high,  with  leafy  towers, 
O  /,  hidden  deep  in  fern, 
f'es  Green  in  a  cuplike  hollow  of  the  down, 
life  in  him  Could  scarce  be  said  to  /, 
Out  of  evil  evil  /'«*, 
She  said,  '  The  evil  /  in  the  world.' 

Elonrish'd    F  a  little  garden  square  and  wall'd  : 
They  /  then  or  then ;  but  life  in  him 
From  all  a  closer  interest  /  up, 
poplar  and  cypress  unshaken  by  storm  /  up 

beyond  sight,  V.  of  Alaeldune  15 

You  shouJd  be  jubilant  that  you  /  here  Poets  and  their  B.  12 

Flourishing    cave  Of  touchwood,  with  a  single  /  spray.     Aylmer's  Field  512 
thence  they  wasted  all  the  /  territory,  Boddicea  54 

Flout    put  your  beauty  to  this  /  and  scorn  Geraint  and  E.  675 

And  all  to  /  me,  when  they  bring  me  in,  Pelleas  and  E.  330 

Flouted    When  he  /  a  statesman's  error.  The  Wreck  68 

Flow  (s)     Low-tinkled  with  a  bell-like  /  The  winds,  etc.  7 

silver  /  Of  subtle-paced  counsel  in  distress,  Isabel  20 

Down  from  the  central  fountain's  /  Arabian  Nights  50 

sonorous  /  Of  spouted  fountain-floods.  Palace  of  Art  27 

that  /  Of  music  left  the  lips  of  her  that  died  D.  of  F.  Women  194 

Have  ebb  and  /  conditioning  their  march,  Golden  Year  30 

float  or  fall,  in  endless  ebb  and  /;  W.to  Marie  Alex.  27 

a  rock  in  ebbs  and  f's,  Fixt  on  her  faith.  Mart,  of  Geraint  812 

clearer  in  my  life  than  all  Its  present  /.  Lover's  Tale  i  150 

With  its  true-touch'd  pulses  in  the  /  „  205 

source  Of  these  sad  tears,  and  feeds  their  downward  /.  „  784 

Sway'd  by  vaster  ebbs  and  /'«  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  194 

Plow  (verb)     The  stream  f's.  The  wind  blows,  Nothing  will  Die  9 

The  stream  will  cease  to  /;  All  Things  will  Die  9 

till  his  own  blood  f's  About  his  hoof.  Sv/pp.  Confessions  155 

All  night  the  silence  seems  to  /  Oriana  86 

Motions  /  To  one  another,  Elednore  61 

May  into  uncongenial  spirits  /;  Mine  be  the  strength  11 

But  now  thy  beauty  f's  away.  Mariana  in  the  S.  67 

There's  somewhat  f's  to  us  in  life.  Miller's  D.  21 

They  saw  the  gleaming  river  seaward  /  Lotos-Eaters  14 

According  to  my  humour  ebb  and  /.  D.  of  F.  Women  134 


Flow  (verb)  {continued)    I  had  not  dared  to  /  In  these  words 

toward  you.  To  J.  S.  6 

thro'  such  tears  As  /  but  once  a  life.  Love  and  Duty  64 

F  down,  cold  rivulet,  to  the  sea,  A  Farewell  1 

F,  softly  /,  by  lawn  and  lea,  „  5 

Till  last  by  Philip's  fann  I  /  The  Brook  31 

and  /  To  join  the  brimming  river,  (repeat)  „    63,  182 

your  great  name  /  on  with  broadening  time  Princess  Hi  164 

let  the  turbid  streams  of  rumour  /  Ode  on  Well.  181 

All  along  the  valley,  where  thy  waters  /,  V.  of  Cauteretz  3 

The  tide  / '5  down,  the  wave  again  Is  vocal  In  Mem.  xix  13 

The  double  tides  of  chariots  /  „      xcviii  23 

The  liills  are  shadows,  and  they  /  „        cxxiii  5 

F  thro'  our  deeds  and  make  them  pure,  „        cxxxi  4 

And  all  we  /  from,  soul  in  soul.  „  12 

they  do  not  /  From  evil  done ;  Guinevere  188 

F  back  again  unto  my  slender  spring  Lover's  Tale  i  147 

Flow'd     tide  of  time  /  back  with  me,  Arabian  Nights  3 

Heaven  /  upon  the  soul  in  many  dreams  The  Poet  31 

Rare  sunrise  /.  „        36 

F  forth  on  a  carol  free  and  bold ;  Dying  Swan  30 

From  underneath  his  helmet  /  L.  of  Shalott,  Hi  30 

o'er  him  /  a  golden  cloud,  and  lean'd  Upon  him,  (Enone  105 

Thus  far  he  /,  and  ended ;  Golden  Year  52 

Fast  /  the  current  of  her  easy  tears,  Enoch  Arden  865 

(possibly  He  /  and  ebb'd  uncertain,  Aylmer's  Field  218 

The  mother /in  shallower  acrimonies:  „  563 

but  when  the  preacher's  cadence  /  „  729 

and  dream  and  truth  F  from  me ;  Princess  v  542 

Bloodily  /  the  Tamesa  rolUng  phantom  bodies  Boddicea  27 

ladies  came,  and  by  and  by  the  town  F  in,  Marr.  of  Geraint  547 

light  upon  her  silver  face  F  from  the  spiritual  lily  Balin  and  Balan  264 
in  that  hour  A  hope  /  round  me,  Lover's  Tale  i  449 

that  life  I  heeded  not  F  from  me,  „  597 

Loosed  from  their  simple  thrall  they  had  /  abroad,  „  703 

past  and  /  away  To  those  unreal  billows :  „         ii  195 

the  grape  from  whence  it  /  Was  blackening  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  61 

the  field  with  blood  of  the  fighters  F,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  25 

Flower  (s)  (See  also  Cuckoo-flower,  Field-flower,  Flag- 
flower,  Hearth-flower,  Heather-flower,  Honey- 
suckle-flower, Marish-flowers,  Passion-flower, 
Poison  -  flowers.  Orange  -  flower.  Sea  -  flower. 
Spring-flowers,  Wild-flower,  Wildweed-flower) 
the  heart  to  scathe  F's  thou  hadst  rear'd —  Supp.  Confessions  84 

The  stately  /  of  female  fortitude,  Isabel  11 

In  order,  eastern  f's  large,  Arabian  NigfUs  61 

Engarlanded  and  diaper'd  With  inwrought /'s,  „  149 

(Those  peerless  f's  which  in  the  rudest  wind 
and  sweet  showers  Of  festal  f's, 
the  heavy  stalks  Of  the  mouldering  f's : 
like  the  arrow-seeds  of  the  field  /, 
mother  plant  in  semblance,  grew  A  /  all  gold, 
water  will  I  pour  Into  every  spicy  / 
The  f's  would  faint  at  your  cruel  cheer. 
With  many  a  deep-hued  bell-like  / 
Overlook  a  space  of  f's, 
About  the  opening  of  the  /, 
You  scarce  could  see  the  grass  for  f's. 
and  you  were  gay  With  bridal  f's — 
I  roll'd  among  the  tender  f's : 
meadow-ledges  midway  down  Hang  rich  in  f's, 
purple  /  droops :  the  golden  bee  Is  lily-cradled : 
With  bunch  and  berry  and  /  thro'  and  thro'. 
A  simple  maiden  in  her  /  Is  worth 
But  I  must  gather  knots  of  f's. 
Last  May  we  made  a  crown  of  f's  : 
There's  not  a  /  on  all  the  hills : 
I  long  to  see  a  /  so  before  the  day  I  die. 
When  the  f's  come  again,  mother, 
the  land  about,  and  all  the  f's  that  blow, 
Wild  f's  in  the  valley  for  other  hands 
enchanted  stem.  Laden  with  /  and  fruit, 
in  the  stream  the  long-leaved  f's  weep. 
The  /  ripens  in  its  place, 
I  knew  the  f's,  I  knew  the  leaves, 


Ode  to  Memory  24 

78 

A  spirit  haunts  8 

The  Poet  19 

„        24 

Poet's  Mind  13 

15 

Elednore  37 

L.  of  Shalott  i  16 

Two  Voices  161 

453 

Miller's  D.  165 

Fatima  11 

(Enone  7 

„    29 

„  102 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  15 

May  Queen  11 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  9 

13 

16 

25 

Con.  7 

52 

Lotos-Eaters  29 

„  C.  S.  10 

36 

D.ofF.  Women  13 


Flower 


224 


Flower 


Flower  (s)  (continued)    Feeding  the/;  but  ere  my/ 
to  fruit  Changed, 
shadow  of  the/'s  Stole  all  the  golden  gloss, 
Each  garlanded  with  her  peculiar  / 
And  made  a  little  wreath  of  all  the  f's 
The  wreath  of  f's  fell  At  Dora's  feet, 
honeycomb  of  eloquence  Stored  from  all  f's  ? 
The  /  of  each,  those  moments  when  we  met, 
Like  Proserpine  in  Enna,  gathering  f's : 
bring  me  offerings  of  fruit  and  f's : 
The  /,  she  touch'd  on,  dipt  and  rose, 
The  drooping  /  of  knowledge  changed  to  fruit 
Live  happy ;  tend  thy  f's ; 
we  reap  The  /  and  quintessence  of  change, 
bird  of  Eden  burst  In  carol,  every  bud  to  /, 
Perfume  and/'s  fall  in  showers. 
That  are  the  /  of  the  earth  ?  ' 
With  naked  limbs  and  f's  and  fruit, 
But  we  nor  paused  for  fruit  nor  f's. 
What !  the  /  of  life  is  past : 
robed  your  cottage- walls  with  f's 
Makes  his  heart  voice  amid  the  blaze  of  f's : 
Crown'd  with  a  /  or  two,  and  there  an  end — 
Or  beast  or  bird  or  fish,  or  opulent  / : 
F's  of  all  heavens,  and  lovelier  than  their  names, 
Laid  it  on  f's,  and  watch'd  it  lying  bathed 
and  with  great  urns  of  f's. 
the  bird,  the  fish,  the  shell,  the  /, 
long  hall  glitter'd  like  a  bed  of  f's. 
Fluctuated,  as  f's  in  storm,  some  red, 
Remembering  her  mother :  O  my  / ! 
the  household  /  Torn  from  the  lintel — 
squadrons  of  the  Prince,  trampling  the  f's 
I  take  her  for  the  /  of  womankind. 
Their  feet  in  f's,  her  loveliest : 
With  books,  with  f's,  with  Angel  offices, 
And  Uke  a  /  that  cannot  all  unfold, 
and  crown'd  with  all  her  f's. 
Break,  happy  land,  into  earlier  f's ! 
Has  given  our  Prince  his  own  imperial  F, 
welcome  Russian  /,  a  people's  pride.  To  Britain 

when  her  f's  begin  to  blow ! 
my  eldest-bom,  the  /  of  the  flock ; 
Shadow  and  shine  is  life,  Uttle  Annie,  /  and  thorn, 
my  beauty,  my  eldest-born,  my/; 
— wot's  a  beauty  ? — the  /  as  blaws. 
Up  there  came  a  /,  The  people  said, 
muttering  discontent  Cursed  me  and  my  /. 
the  people  cried,  '  Splendid  is  the  /.' 
Most  can  raise  the  f's  now, 
F  in  the  crannied  wall, 
Little  / — but  if  I  could  understand 
fruit  Which  in  our  winter  woodland  looks  a  /. 
All  of  f's,  and  drop  me  a  /,  Drop  me  a  /. 
Cannot  a  /,  a  /,  be  mine  ? 
Drop  me  a  /,  a  /,  to  kiss, 
her  Dower  All  of  f's,  a  /,  a  /,  Dropt,  a  /. 
The  seasons  bring  the  /  again, 
may  find  A  /  beat  with  rain  and  wind. 
And  this  poor  /  of  poesy 
From  /  to  /,  from  snow  to  snow : 
When  /  is  feeling  after  /; 
traces  of  the  past  Be  all  the  colour  of  the  /: 
The  path  we  came  by,  thorn  and  /, 
The  perfect  /  of  human  time ; 
Made  cypress  of  her  orange  /, 
And  brushing  ankle-deep  in  f's, 
Day,  when  I  lost  the  /  of  men ; 
The  time  admits  not  f's  or  leaves 
the  /  And  native  growth  of  noble  mind ; 
But  tho'  I  seem  in  star  and  /  To  feel  thee 
But  where  is  she,  the  bridal  /, 
weight  Of  learning  lightly  like  a  /. 
That  pelt  us  in  the  porch  with  f's. 
is  but  seed  Of  what  in  them  is  /  and  fruit ; 


D.  ofF.  Women  207 

Gardener's  D.  129 

201 

Dora  82 

„  102 

Edwin  Morris  27 

„  69 

112 

St.  S.  Stylites  128 

Talking  Oak  131 

Love  and  Duty  24 

87 

Day-Dm.,  L  Envoi  24 

44 

Sir  Galahad  11 

Lady  Clare  68 

The  Voyage  55 

56 

Vision  of  Sin  69 

Aylmer's  Field  698 

Lucretius  101 

229 

249 

Princess,  Pro.  12 

„  i93 

„        a  26 

„  383 

439 

„  iv  482 

„  «89 

128 

247 

HI 

„  m  78 

„  vii  26 

141 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  42 

W.  to  Alexandra  10 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  4 


Grandmother  9 

60 

101 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  15 

The  Flower  3 

8 

„        16 

„        19 

Flow,  in  cran.  wall  1 

4 

A  Dedication  13 

Window,  At  the  W.  6 

9 

11 

13 

In  Mem.  ii  5 

„       viii  15 

.19 

„        arartt  4 

„        xliii  8 

„         xlvi  2 

„  Ixi  4 

„   Ixxxiv  15 

„  Ixxxix  49 

„        xcix  4 

„         cvii  5 

„        cxi  15 

„       cxxx  6 

„     Con.  25 

40 

68 

136 


Flower  (S)  (continued) 
her/; 
To  the  f's,  and  be  their  sun. 
For  a  shell,  or  a  /,  little  things 
splendour  falls  On  the  Uttle  /  that  clings 
It  is  only  f's,  they  had  no  fruits, 
Wearing  the  white  /  of  a  blameless  life, 
Lancelot  past  away  among  the  /  's. 


Man  in  his  pride,  and  Beauty  fair  in 

Maud  I  iv  25 

„      xxii  58 

„    //m64 

,,         iv  33 

«77 

Ded.  of  Idylls  25 

Com.  of  Arthur  450 


and  return'd  Among  the/'s,  in  May,  „  452 

the  live  green  had  kindled  into  f's,  Gareth  and  i.  185 

nose  Tip-tilted  like  the  petal  of  a/;  „  591 

As  if  the  /,  That  blows  a  globe  of  after  arrowlets, 
'  0  dewy  f's  that  open  to  the  sun,  O  dewy  /'s  that 

close  when  day  is  done, 
'  What  knowest  thou  otf's,  except,  belike. 
Who  lent  me  thee,  the  /  of  kitchendom,  A  foolish  love 

for/'s? 
F's  ?  nay,  the  boar  hath  rosemaries  and  bay. 
Miss  the  full  /  of  this  accomplishment.' 
will  hide  with  mantling  /'s  As  if  for  pity  ? ' 
Fresh  as  a  /  new-bom,  and  crying, 
like  a  crag  was  gay  with  wilding/ '5 : 
Whom  Gwydion  made  by  glamour  out  oi  f's, 
Betwixt  the  cressy  islets  white  in/; 
wealth  Of  leaf,  and  gayest  garlandage  oif's, 
Lancelot  with  his  hand  among  the/'s 
Prince,  we  have  ridd'n  before  among  the/'s 
The  /  of  all  their  vestal  knighthood,  knelt 
They  might  have  cropt  the  myriad  /  of  May, 
As  once — of  old — among  the/'s — they  rode. 
And  noble  deeds,  the  /  of  all  the  world. 
'  to  pluck  the  /  in  season,'  So  says  the  song, 
A  border  fantasy  of  branch  and  /, 
Lancelot,  the  /  of  bravery,  Guinevere,  The  pearl 
The  /  of  all  the  west  and  aU  the  world, 
So  saying,  from  the  carven  /  above, 
it  I  bide,  lo !  this  wild  /  for  me ! ' 
For  pleasure  all  about  a  field  of  f's: 
the  victim's  f's  before  he  fall.' 
Hereafter,  when  you  yield  your  /  of  life 
showers  ol  f's  Fell  as  we  past ; 
disarm'd  By  maidens  each  as  fair  as  any/: 
the  wholesome  /  And  poisonous  grew  together, 
see  thou,  that  it  may  bear  its  /. 
your  /  Waits  to  be  solid  fruit  of  golden  deeds, 
purple  slopes  of  mountain  /'s  Pass  under  white,  till 

the  warm  hour  returns  With  veer  of  wind,  and  all 

are  f's  again; 
Is  all  as  cool  and  white  as  any  /.' 
Come  dashing  down  on  a  tall  wayside  /, 
A  glorious  company,  the  /  of  men. 
To  which  my  spirit  leaneth  all  her  f's, 
broad  and  open  /  tell  What  sort  of  bud  it  was. 
Can  ye  take  off  the  sweetness  from  the  /, 
And  then  point  out  the  /  or  the  star  ? 
mine  made  garlands  of  the  selfsame  /, 
let  grow  The/'s  that  run  poison  in  their  veins, 
poppy-stem,  '  whose  /,  Hued  with  the  scarlet  of  a 

fierce  simrise, 
no  leaf,  no  /,  no  fruit  for  me. 
Laden  with  thistledown  and  seeds  oif's, 
her  I  loved,  adom'd  with  fading /'s. 
the  /  of  a  year  and  a  half  is  thine, 
'  Our  Nelly's  the  /  of  'em  all.' 
clean  as  a  /  fro'  'ead  to  feeat : 
All  the  bowers  and  the/'s.  Fainting /'s,  faded 

bowers. 
Over  all  the  meadows  drowning /'s, 
you  used  to  send  her  the  f's ; 
F's  to  these  '  spirits  in  prison ' 
And  she  lay  with  a  /  in  one  hand 


1028 


1066 
1069 


1071 

1074 

1297 

1392 

„  1409 

Marr,  of  Geraint  319 

„  743 

Geraint  and  E.  475 

Balin  and  Balan  83 

259 

272 

„  508 

577 

Merlin  and  V.  136 

„  413 

722 

Lancdot  and  £.11 

113 

249 

549 

644 

793 

910 

952 

Holy  Grail  348 

576 

775 

887 

Last  Tournament  99 


And  we  came  to  the  Isle  of  F's : 
we  tore  up  the/'s  by  the  million 
one  carved  all  over  with/'s, 
there  were  more  for  the  carven  f's, 


229 

416 

Guinevere  253 

464 

Lover's  Tale  i  104 

„  151 

171 
175 

,,  343 

347 

352 

„         m  40 

To  A.  Tennyson  3 

First  Quarrel  28 

North.  Cobbler  44 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  10 

21 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  33 

37 

„  39 

V.  of  Maddune  37 

53 

106 

112 


Flower 


225 


Flung 


Slower  (s)  {continued)    Cast  at  thy  feet  one  /  that  fades 

away.  To  Dante  7 

one  snowy  knee  was  prest  Against  the  margin  /'s ;  Tiresias  43 

And  him  the  last ;  and  laying /'s,  „     212 

speaking  aloud  To  women,  the  /  of  the  time,  The  Wreck  49 

Who  had  home  my  /  on  her  hireling  heart ;  „        143 

Trusting  no  longer  that  earthly  /  Despair  35 

on  an  earth  that  bore  not  a/;  „      44 

And  wind  the  front  of  youth  with  /'s,  Ancient  Sage  97 

songs  in  praise  of  death,  and  crown'd  with  f'sl  „  209 

a  /  Had  murmurs  '  Lost  and  gone  and  lost  and  gone ! '  „  223 

' His  two  wild  woodland /'«.'     Wild  /'s  blowing  side 

by  side 
Wild/'s  of  the  secret  woods, 
May  all  the/ '5  0'  Jeroosilim  blossom 
An'  the  lark  fly  out  0'  the/'s 
carpet  es  fresh  es  a  midder  0'  f's  i'  Maiiy — 
used  to  call  the  very  f's  Sisters, 
perhaps  a  world  of  never  tadingf's. 
face  of  Edith  Uke  a / among  the/'s. 
Or  Love  with  wreaths  of  f's. 
the  laughing  shepherd  bound  with  /'» ; 
and  fills  The  /  with  dew ; 
where  the  purple/'*  grow, 
here  thy  hands  let  fall  the  gather'd  /, 
now  once  more  ablsize  With  f's  that  brighten 
All  f's — but  for  one  black  blur  of  earth 
My  quick  tears  kill'd  the  /, 
Caught  by  the  /  that  closes  on  the  fly, 
lonely  maiden-Princess,  crown'd  with  f's, 
Her  tribes  of  men,  and  trees,  and  /  '5, 
the  bloodless  heart  of  lowly  /  's 
No  louder  than  a  bee  among  the  f's, 
the  rose  Cry  to  the  lotus  '  No  /  thou  '? 
Warble  bird,  and  open  /,  and,  men, 
I  am  dressing  the  grave  of  a  woman  with  /  's. 
I  am  dressing  her  grave  with  /  '5. 
Vary  like  the  leaves  and/ 's, 
Draw  from  my  death  Thy  Uving  /  and  grass, 

Flower  (verb)    white  as  privet  when  it/ '«. 
but  as  poets'  seasons  when  they  /, 
his  followers,  all  F  into  fortune — 
So  blighted  here,  would  /  into  full  health 
while  the  races  /  and  fade, 

Flowerage    Busying  themselves  about  the  / 

Flower-bells    cluster'd  f-b  and  ambrosial  orbs 

Jlower'd    (See  also  Fr^ihly-flowered,  White-flower'd) 
a  dress  All  branch'd  and  /  with  gold, 
answers  to  his  mother's  calls  From  the  / 

furrow.  Supp.   Confessions  160 

Fifty  times  the  rose  has  /  and  faded.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  1 

A  rhyme  that  /  betwixt  the  whitening  sloe  To  Mary  Boyle  25 

Jnowering  (part,  and  adj.)    A  spacious  garden  full 

of  /  weeds,  To With  Pal.  ofAri4. 

there  grew  an  Eastern  rose,  That,  /  high.  Gardener's  D.  124 

burgeons  every  maze  of  quick  About  the  /  squares.  In  Mem.  cxv  3 

The  snowdrop  only,  /  thro'  the  year.  Last  Tournament  220 

/  grove  Of  grasses  Lancelot  pluck'd  him  Guinevere  33 

And  we  hated  the  F  Isle,  V.  of  Maeldune  52 

charm  of  all  the  Muses  often  i^  in  a  lonely  word ;  To  Virgil  12 

Flowering  (s)     I  mark'd  Him  in  the  /  of  his  fields.  Pass,  of  Arthur  10 

Flowerless    In  silence  wept  upon  the  /  earth.  Death  of  CEnone  9 

Flower-plot    With  blackest  moss  the  f-p's  Mariana  1 

Flower-sheath    Ughtly  breaks  a  faded  f-s,  Marr  of  Geraint  365 

Flowery     rivulet  in  the  /  dale  '11  merrily  glance  and 

play.  May  Queen  39 

I  turning  saw,  throned  on  a  /  rise,  D.  of  F.  Women  125 

AU  the  land  in  /  squares,  Gardener's  D.  76 

lead  my  Memmius  in  a  train  Of  /  clauses  Lucretitis  120 

came  On  /  levels  xmdemeath  the  crag,  Princess  Hi  336 

Thy  partner  in  the  /  walk  Of  letters.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  22 

Witness  theu-  /  welcome.  Balin  and  Balan  145 

course  of  life  that  seem'd  so  /  to  me  Merlin  and  V.  880 

Floweth    From  thy  rose-red  lips  my  name  F ;  Eleanore  134 

from  whose  left  hand  /  The  Shadow  of  Death,  Lmer's  Tale  i  498 


The  Flight  80 
82 

Tomorrow  89 

91 

Spinster's  S's.  45 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  101 

184 

260 

Epilogue  17 

To  Virgil  16 

Early  Spring  46 

Fraier  Ave,  etc.  4 

Demeter  arid  P.  9 

36 

37 

108 

The  Ring  344 

„        485 

To  Ulysses  3 

Prog,  of  Spring  84 

Romney's  R.  82 

Akbar's  Dream  37 

„         Hymn  7 

Charity  2 

„     44 

Poets  and  Critics  4 

Doubt  and  Prayer  6 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  56 

Golden  Year  28 

Columius  167 

The  Ring  317 

Making  of  Man  5 

Aylmer's  Field  203 

Isabd  36 

Marr.  of  Geraint  631 


Flowing    {See  also  Forward-flowing,  Full-flowing, 
Low-flowing)    stream  be  aweary  of  /  Under 
my  eye  ? 
the  blue  river  chimes  in  its  / 
A  clear  stream  /  with  a  muddy  one, 
/  rapidly  between  Their  interspaces, 
F  beneath  her  rose-hued  zone ; 
lordly  music  /  from  The  illimitable  years. 
F  like  a  crystal  river ; 
Winds  were  blowing,  waters  /, 
My  tears,  no  tears  of  love,  are  / 
island  in  the  river  F  down  to  Camelot 
her  canvas  /,  Rose  a  ship  of  France, 
hung  to  hear  The  rapt  oration  /  free 
the  blood  Of  their  strong  bodies,  /, 
F  with  easy  greatness  and  touching 
A  land  of  promise  /  with  the  milk  And  honey 
Were  stoled  from  head  to  foot  in  /  black ; 
And  holding  them  back  by  their  /  locks 
But  pledge  me  in  the  /  grape. 
And  o'er  them  many  a  /  range 
The  truth,  that  flies  the  /  can, 
princely  halls,  and  farms,  and  /  lawns. 


Nothing  will  Die  1 

AU  Things  will  Die  1 

Isabel  30 

Arabian  Nights  83 

140 

Ode  to  Memory  41 

Poet's  Mind  6 

Oriana  14 

Wan  Sculptor  7 

L.  ofShalott  i  14 

The  Captain  27 

In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  32 

Marr.  of  Geraint  569 

The  Wreck  50 

Lover's  Tale  i  334 

„  m85 

The  Merman  14 

My  life  is  full  15 

Day-Dm.,  Depart.  21 

Will  Water.  171 

Aylmer's  Field  654 


Dragon's  cave  Half  hid,  they  tell  me,  now  in  /  vines —         Tiresias  144 

Flown    as  tho'  it  were  The  hour  just  /,  Gardener's  D.  83 

He  rode  a  horse  with  wings,  that  would  have  /,  Vision  of  Sin  3 

Had  tost  his  ball  and  /  his  kite,  Aylmer's  Field  84 

tell  her.  Swallow,  that  thy  brood  is  /:  Princess  iv  108 

F  to  the  east  or  the  west,  Window,  Gone  7 

love  is  more  Than  in  the  summers  that  are/.  In  Mem.,  Con.  18 

For  the  black  bat,  night,  has  /,  Maud  I  xxii  2 

as  the  cageling  newly  /  returns.  Merlin  and  V.  901 

life  had  /,  we  sware  but  by  the  shell —  Last  Tournament  270 

she  that  clasp'd  my  neck  had  /;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  15 

Floy  (fly)     a  knaws  naw  moor  nor  a/;  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  67 

Fluctuate    And  /  all  the  still  perfume,  In  Mem.  xcv  56 

Fluctuated    F,  as  flowers  in  storm,  some  red,  Princess  iv  482 

Fluctuation    tall  columns  drown'd  In  silken  /  „       vi  355 

world-wide  /  sway'd  In  vassal  tides  In  Mem.  cxii  15 

Flue    sent  a  blast  of  sparkles  up  the/:  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  15 

Fluent    In  tracts  of  /  heat  began.  In  Mem.  cxviii  9 

Broad  brows  and  fair,  a  /  hair  and  fine,  Gareth  and  L.  464 

Fluid    and  /  range  Of  lawless  airs,  Supp.  Confessions  147 

'  This  world  was  once  a  /  haze  of  light,  Princess  ii  116 

Fluke    Anchors  of  rusty  /,  and  boats  updrawn ;  Enoch  Arden  18 
Flung  (^See  aZso  Broad-flung)  The  costly  doors /open  wide,  Arabian  Nights  17 

F  inward  over  spangled  floors,  „            116 

F  leagues  of  roaring  foam  into  the  gorge  //  /  were  loved  13 

Backward  the  lattice-blind  she  /,  Mariana  in  the  S.  87 

Then  with  both  hands  I  /  him,  M.  d' Arthur  157 

And/  him  in  the  dew.  Talking  Oak  232 

F  the  torrent  rainbow  round :  Vision  of  Sin  32 

And  /  her  down  upon  a  couch  of  fire,  Aylmer's  Field  574 

His  body  half  /  forward  in  pursuit,  „            587 

F  ball,  flew  kite,  and  raced  the  purple  fly.  Princess  ii  248 

She  took  it  and  she  /  it.     '  Fight '  she  said,  „        iv  598 

and  /  defiance  down  Gagelike  to  man,  „         v  177 

She  /  it  from  her,  thinking :  ,,     Con.  32 

Wo  /  the  burthen  of  the  second  James.  Third  of  Feb.  28 

and  /  A  ballad  to  the  brightening  moon :  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  27 

and  /  The  lilies  to  and  fro,  and  said  „             xcv  59 

I  ran  And  /  myself  down  on  a  bank  of  heath.  Com.  of  Arthur  343 

here  is  glory  enow  In  having  /  the  three :  Gareth  and  L.  1326 

To  which  he  /  a  wrathful  answer  back :  Geraint  and  E.  146 

/  herself  Down  on  the  great  King's  couch,  Lancelot  and  E.  609 

Unclasping  /  the  casement  back,  „            981 

F  them,  and  down  they  flash'd,  „          1235 

A  stone  is  /  into  some  sleeping  tarn,  Pelleas  and  E.  93 

nipt  the  hand,  and  /  it  from  her ;  „            133 

And  /  them  o'er  the  walls ;  „            316 

steed  of  Pelleas  floundering  /  His  rider,  „            574 

I  have  /  thee  pearls  and  find  thee  swine.'  Last  Tournament  310 

Then  with  both  hands  I /him.  Pass,  of  Arthur  325 

would  have  /  himself  From  cloud  to  cloud,  Lover's  Tale  i  301 

I  /  myself  upon  him  In  tears  and  cries :  „          ii  89 


Flung 


226 


Fly 


Flung  {continued)    I,  groaning,  from  me  /  Her  empty 

phantom :  Lover's  Tale  ii  205 

This  question,  so  /  down  before  the  guests,  „        iv  268 

I  /  him  the  letter  that  drove  me  wild,  First  Quarrel  57 

when  all  was  done  He  /  it  among  his  fellows —  Rizpah  32 

the  Priest's  pearl,  /  down  to  swine —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  116 

and  /  them  in  bight  and  bay,  V.  of  Maeldune  53 

Pallas  /  Her  fringed  segis,  Achilles  over  the  T.  3 

I  am  /  from  the  rushing  tide  of  the  world  The  Wreck  6 

I  caught  the  wreath  that  was /.  „        40 

Till  you  /  us  back  on  ourselves.  Despair  40 

Christian  conquerors  took  and  /  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  84 

from  their  hands  F  thro'  the  woods.  Early  Spring  18 

/  herself  Against  my  heart.  The  Ring  397 

and  /  the  mould  upon  your  feet,  Happy  50 

/  himself  between  The  gladiatorial  swords,  St.  Telemachus  61 
women  shrieking  '  Atheist '  /  Filth  from  the  roof,         Akbar's  Dream  91 

I  /  myseU  down  at  her  feet.  Charity  38 

Clomb  the  mountain,  and  /  the  berries,  Kapiolani  6 

Wait  till  Death  has  /  them  open,  Faith  7 

Flur    F,  for  whose  love  the  Roman  Caesar  Marr.  of  Geraint  745 

Flurried    the  little  fowl  were  /  at  it,  Gareth  and  L.  69 

Flush  (s)    /  of  anger'd  shame  O'erflows  thy  calmer  glances,        Madeline  32 

for  when  the  morning  /  Of  passion  Lucretius  2 

As  light  a  /  As  hardly  tints  the  blossom  Bcdin  and  Balan  266 

For  here  a  sudden  /  of  wrathful  heat  Guinevere  356 

opposite  The  /  and  dawn  of  youth.  Lover's  Tale  i  189 

Her  husband  in  the  /  of  youth  and  dawn.  Death  of  (Enone  17 

Flush  (verb)    strikes  along  the  brain,  And  f'es 

all  the  cheek.  D.  of  F.  Women  44 

colour  f'es  Her  sweet  face  from  brow  to  chin :  L.  of  Burleigh  61 

After  his  books,  to  /  his  blood  with  air,  Aylmer's  Field  459 

Or  by  denial  /  her  babbling  wells  Princess  v  334 

madness  f'es  up  in  the  ruffian's  head,  Maud  I  iSl 

and  made  him  /,  and  bow  Lowly,  Gareth  and  L.  548 

Flush'd    (See  also  Faintly-flushed,  New-flush'd,  Sun- 

flush'd)     F  all  the  leaves  with  rich  gold-green,         Arabian  Nights  82 

F  Uke  the  coming  of  the  day ;  Miller's  D.  132 

/  Ganymede,  his  rosy  thigh  Half-biuied  Palace  of  Art  121 

F  in  her  temples  and  her  eyes,  „          170 

'  Then  /  her  cheek  with  rosy  light,  Talking  Oak  165 

Psyche  /  and  wann'd  and  shook ;  Princess  iv  160 

When  first  she  came,  all  /  you  said  to  me  „       vi  250 

her  face  A  little  /,  and  she  past  on ;  „       vii  81 

Where  oleanders  /  the  bed  Of  silent  torrents.  The  Daisy  33 

The  Peak  is  high  and  /  At  his  highest  Voice  and  the  P.  29 

Some  /,  and  others  dazed.  Com.  of  Arthur  265 

when  /  with  fight,  or  hot,  God's  curse,  Geraint  and  E.  660 

that  other /,  And  hung  his  head,  „            810 

Upright  and  /  before  him :  Merlin  and  V.  912 

F  slightly  at  the  slight  disparagement  Lancelot  and  E.  234 

beyond  them  /  The  long  low  dune.  Last  Tournament  483 

F,  started,  met  him  at  the  doors,  „                512 

The  small  sweet  face  was  /,  The  Wreck  60 

and  /  as  red  As  poppies  when  she  crown'd  it.  The  Tourney  16 

Fhishing    rosy  red  /  in  the  northern  night.  Locksley  Hall  26 

let  my  query  pass  Unclaim'd,  in  /  silence,  The  Brook  105 

/  the  guiltless  air,  Spout  from  the  maiden  fountain  LAicretius  239 

Plusier'd    him  that  /  his  poor  parish  wits  Aylmer's  Field  521 

snares  them  by  the  score  Flatter'd  and  /,  Princess  v  164 

But  once  in  life  was  /  with  new  wine,  Merlin  and  V.  756 

so  /  with  anger  were  they.  They  almost  fell  V.  of  Maeldune  25 

Flute  (s)     Blow,  /,  and  stir  the  stiff-set  sprigs,  Amphion  63 

thicket  rang  To  many  a  /  of  Arcady.  In  Mem.  xxiii  24 

Nor  harp  be  touch'd,  nor  /  be  blown ;  „             ct  22 

the  roses  heard  The /,  violin,  bassoon;  Maud  I  xxii  14 

To  the  sound  of  dancing  music  and  /'* :  „        7/  d  76 

Fhite  (verb)    lute  and  /  fantastic  tenderness,  Princess  iv  129 

Fluted    The  mellow  ouzel  /  in  the  elm ;  Gardener's  D.  94 

From  /  vase,  and  brazen  urn  In  order,  Arabian  Nights  60 

And  /  to  the  morning  sea.  To  E.  L.  24 

Flute-notes    thy  f-n  are  changed  to  coarse,  The  Blackbird  18 

Fluting    swan  That,  /  a  wild  carol  ere  her  death,  M.  d' Arthur  267 

swan  That,  f  a  wild  carol  ere  her  death,  Pass,  of  Arthur  435 

Flutter    His  spirit  /'«  like  a  lark,  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  29 


Flutter  {continued)    Wings  /,  voices  hover  clear :  Sir  Galahad  78 

Flags,  /  out  upon  turrets  and  towers !  W.  to  Alexandra  15 

heart  within  her  fall  and  /  tremulously,  Boadicea  81 

There  /'s  up  a  happy  thought,  In  Mem.  Ixv  7 

The  tender  blossom  /  down,  „         ci  2 

idle  fancies  /  me,  1  know  not  where  to  turn ;  The  Flight  74 

Flutter'd    F  about  my  senses  and  my  soul ;  Gardener's  D.  67 

A  second  /  round  her  lip  Like  a  golden  butterfly ;  Talking  Oak  219 

melody  F  headlong  from  the  sky.  Vision  of  Si^i  45 

A  little  /,  with  her  eyelids  down,  Tlie  Brook  89 

there  /  in,  Half -bold,  half -frighted,  Geraint  and  E.  596 
And  /  adoration,  and  at  last  With  dark  sweet  hints    Merlin  and  V.  158 

The  footstep  /  me  at  first :  Last  Tournament  515 

And  a  pinnace,  like  a  /  bird.  The  Revenge  2 

Fluttering  (part.)    voice  Faltering  and  /  in  her  throat.  Princess  ii  187 

Alive  with  /  scarfs  and  ladies' eyes,  „        i;  509 

above.  Crimson,  a  slender  banneret  /.  Gareth  and  L.  913 

/in  a  doubt  Between  the  two —  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  33 

F  the  hawks  of  this  crown-lusting  line —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  57 

and  then  fell  /  down  at  my  feet ;  The  Wreck  82 

elmtree's  ruddy-hearted  blossom-flake  Is  /  down.  To  Mary  Boyle  4 

blasts  That  nm  before  the  /  tongues  of  fire ;  D.  of  F.  Women  30 

And  on  the  board  the  /  urn :  In  Mem.  xcv  8 
With  half  a  night's  appUances,  recall'd  Her  /  life :        Lover's  Tale  iv  94 

Fluttering  (s)     I  watch'd  the  little/'*,  Miller's  D.  15^ 

Fly  (s)    {See  also  Dragon-fly,  Fancy-flies,  Fire-fly,  Floy, 

Gad-fly)     The  blue  /  sung  in  the  pane ;  Mariana  63 

Kate  saith  '  the  men  are  gilded  flies.'  KatelS 

The  swallow  stopt  as  he  himted  the  /,  Poet's  Song  9 

Like  flies  that  haunt  a  woimd,  Aylmer's  Field  571 

flew  kite,  and  raced  the  purple  /,  Princess  ii  248 

In  lieu  of  many  mortal  flies,  „      Hi  268 

endure  for  the  life  of  the  worm  and  the/?  Wages  7 

bees  are  still'd,  and  the  flies  are  kill'd.  Window,  Winter  10 

And  men  the  flies  of  latter  spring,  In  Mem.  1 10 

eyes  Are  tender  over  drowning  flies,  „     xcvi  3 

his  head  in  a  cloud  of  poisonous  flies.  Maud  I  iv  54 

And  call'd  herself  a  gilded  summer  /  Merlin  and  V.  258 

since  you  name  yourself  the  summer  /,  „             369 

gape  for  flies — we  know  not  whence  they  come ;  Holy  Grail  147 

and  infinite  torment  of  flies,  Def.  of  Lucknow  82 

men  Walk'd  like  the  /  on  ceilings  ?  Columbus  51 

for  you  know  The  flies  at  home,  „       119 

Nor  drown  thyself  yfiih  flies  in  honied  wine ;  Ancient  Sage  268 

Miriam  sketch'd  and  Muriel  threw  the  /;  The  Ring  159 

She  threw  the  /  for  me ;  „        355 
black/  upon  the  pane  May  seem  the  black  ox  To  one  who  ran  down  Eng.  3 

Fly  (verb)     Then  away  she  flies.  Lilian  18 

whither  away,  whither  away  ?  /  no  more.  Sea-Fairies  7 

rainbow  forms  and  flies  on  the  land  „        25 

mariner,  mariner,  /  no  more.  „        42 

Whither  /  ye,  what  game  spy  ye,  Rosalind  8 

'  Here  sits  he  shaping  wings  to  /:  Two  Voices  289 

let  her  herald.  Reverence,  /  Before  her  Love  thou  thy  land  18 

To  ingroove  itself  with  that  which  flies,  „               46 

Simmies  forward  to  his  brother  Sun;  Golden  Year  23 
^F,  happy  happy  sails,  and  bear  the  Press ;  F 

happy  with  the  mission  of  the  Cross ;  „           42 

And  order'd  words  asunder  /.  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  20 

The  colour  ^ies  into  his  cheeks :  „    Arrival  19 

splinter'd  spear-shafts  crack  and  /,  Sir  Galahad  7 

F  o'er  waste  fens  and  windy  fields.  „        60 

And  /,  like  a  bird,  from  tree  to  tree ;  Edward  Gray  30 

The  truth,  that^tes  the  flowing  can.  Will  Water.  171 

We  follow  that  which  flies  before :  The  Voyage  94 

to  /  sublime  Thro'  the  courts,  the  camps,  Vision  of  Sin  103 

A  crippled  lad,  and  coming  tum'd  to  /,  Aylmer's  Field  519 

Let  me  /,  says  little  birdie,  Sea  Dreams  295 

rests  a  httle  longer,  Then  she  flies  away.  „         30O 

Let  me  rise  and  /  away.  „         304 

Baby  too  shall  /  away.  „         308 

F  on  to  clash  together  again,  Lucretius  41 

Thy  glory  /  along  the  ItaUan  field,  „        71 

do  they  /  Now  thinner,  and  now  thicker^  „      165 

the  soul  flies  out  and  dies  in  the  air.'  „      274 


I 


Fly 


227 


Foam 


Fly  (verb)  (continued) 
at  the  hearts, 


baby  loves  F  twanging  headless  arrows 

Princess  ii  402 


/,'  she  cried,  '  O  /,  while  yet  you  may ! 
But  you  may  yet  be  saved,  and  therefore  /: 
As  flies  the  shadow  of  a  bird,  she  fled. 
/'  to  her,  and  fall  upon  her  gilded  eaves, 
F  to  her,  and  pipe  and  woo  her, 
and  fled,  as  flies  A  troop  of  snowy  doves 
I  grant  in  her  some  sense  of  shame,  she  flies; 
She  flies  too  high,  she  flies  too  high ! 
I  say  she  flies  too  high,  'sdeath  ! 


Mi  28 

64 

96 

iv  94 

115 

167 

349 

®281 

286 


peacemaker  /  To  happy  havens  under  all  the  sky,    Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  34 


The  lights  and  shadows/! 

F;  F  to  the  light  in  the  valley  below — 

As  flies  the  lighter  thro'  the  gross, 

111  brethren,  let  the  fancy  / 

Fiercely  flies  The  blast  of  North  and  East, 

and  /  The  happy  birds,  that  change  their  sky 

Arise  and  /  Tne  reeling  Faun, 

Wild  Hours  that  /  with  Hope  and  Fear, 

'  The  fault  was  mine,'  he  wnisper'd,  '/! ' 

I  saw  the  dreary  phantom  arise  and  / 

Until  she  let  me  /  discaged  to  sweep 


A  jewell'd  harness,  ere  they  pass  and  /. 

But  after  sod  and  shingle  ceased  to  / 

'  I  /  no  more :  I  allow  thee  for  an  hour. 

Larded  thy  last,  except  thou  turn  eind  /. 

all  about  it  flies  a  honeysuckle. 

and  wildly  /,  Mixt  with  the  flyers. 

'  F,  they  will  return  And  slay  you ;  /,  your  charger 
is  without, 

Behold,  I  /  from  shame,  A  lustful  King, 

I  /  to  thee.    Save,  save  me  thou — 

When  did  not  rumours/? 

if  he  /  us.  Small  matter !  let  him.' 

And  /  to  my  strong  castle  overseas : 

yet  rise  now,  and  let  us  /, 

Stands  in  a  wind,  ready  to  break  and  /, 

And  he  that  fled  no  further  /  the  King ; 

stream  Flies  with  a  shatter'd  foam 

He  flies  the  event :  he  leaves  the  event 

I  must  /,  but  follow  quick. 

You  /  them  for  a  moment  to  fight  with  them  again 

'  Shall  we  fight  or  shall  we  /? 

and  aloft  the  glare  Flies  streaming, 

shell  must  break  before  the  bird  can  /. 

and  now  I  /  from  Hell,  And  you  with  me ; 

An'  the  lark  /  out  o'  the  flowers 

stormy  moment  /  and  mingle  with  the  Past. 

And  wherever  her  flag  /, 

bird  that  flies  All  night  across  the  darkness, 

F — care  not.     Birds  and  brides  must  leave  the  nest. 

And  saw  the  world  /  by  me  like  a  dream. 

And  flies  above  the  leper's  hut, 

Now  past  her  feet  the  swallow  circling  flies, 

Flies  back  in  fragrant  breezes  to  display 
^ar    arms  stretch'd  as  to  grasp  a  /: 

and  all  f's  from  the  hand  Of  Justice, 

smd  wildly  fly,  Mixt  with  the  f's. 

brands  That  hack'd  among  the  f's, 

Fiercely  we  hack'd  at  the  f's  before  us, 
_  _  n'    Molly  Magee  kem  /  acrass  me, 
l^ing    (See  also  A-Fljrm',  Elyin')    fled  by  night,  and 
/  tum'd : 

Dreary  gleams  about  the  moorland  / 

in  the  /  of  a  wheel  Cry  down  the  past, 

Or  /  shone,  the  silver  boss  Of  her  own  halo's 
dusky  shield ; 

following  up  And  /  the  white  breaker. 

And  caught  the  blossom  of  the  /  terms, 

we  dropt,  And  /  reach'd  the  frontier : 

your  arrow-wounded  fawn  Came  / 

and  loose  A  /  charm  of  blushes  o'er  this  cheek, 

he  could  not  see  The  bird  of  passage  /  south 

Blow,  bugle,  blow,  set  the  wild  echoes  /,  (repeat) 


Window,  On  the  Hill  1 

„  Letter  12 

In  Mem.  xli  4 

„  Ixxxvi  12 

„        coii  6 

„       cxv  14 

„   cxviii  25 

„   cxxviii  9 

Mavd  II  i  30 

„  ///  vi  36 

Gareth  and  L.  20 


761 

892 

1084 

1278 

Geraint  and  E.  482 

748 

Balin  and  Balan  473 

Merlin  and  V.  77 

Lancelot  and  E.  1194 

Pelleas  and  E.  199 

Guinevere  113 

120 

365 

Pass,  of  Arthur  89 

Lover's  Tale  i  383 

„  iv  1 

The  Bevenge  6 

9 

25 

Achilles  over  the  T.  12 

Ancient  Sage  154 

The  Flight  88 

Tomorrow  91 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  279 

Ofen  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  17 

Demeter  and  P.  1 

The  Ring  89 

„       180 

Haffy  4 

Prog,  of  Spring  44 

„  64 

Aylmer's  Field  588 

Marr.  of  Geraint  36 

Geraint  and  E.  483 

Com.  of  Arthur  121 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  42 

Tomorrow  21 

Edwin  Morris  134 

Locksley  Hall  4 

Godiva  6 

The  Voyage  31 

Enoch  Arden  21 

Princess,  Pro.  164 

il09 

ii  271 

430 

m  210 

iv  5, 17 


Flying  (contimied)    '  0  Swallow,  Swallow,  /,  /  South, 
'  O  Swallow,  /  from  the  golden  woods, 
A  woman-post  in  /  raiment, 
/  on  the  highest  Foam  of  men's  deeds — 
shot  A  /  splendour  out  of  brass  and  steel, 
/  struck  With  showers  of  random  sweet 
or  call'd  On  /  Time  from  all  their  silver  tongues — 
Paid  with  a  voice  /  by  to  be  lost 
are  you  /  over  her  sweet  little  face  ? 
and  birds'  song  F  here  and  there. 


Princess  iv  93 
114 


376 
,  v319 
,  vi365 
,     vii  85 

105 

Wages  2 

Window,  On  the  Hill  13 

Spring  2 


/  gold  of  the  ruin'd  woodlands  drove  thro'  the  air.  Maud  I  i  12 

F  along  the  land  and  the  main —  „  II  ii  38 

they  swerved  and  brake  F,  Com.  of  Arthur  120 

follow'd  by  his  /  hair  Ran  like  a  colt,  „              321 

servingman  F  from  out  of  the  black  wood,  Gareth  and  L.  802 

Gareth's  eyes  had  /  blots  Before  them  „          1031 

Comes  /  over  many  a  windy  wave  To  Britain,  Marr.  of  Geraint  337 

And  white  sails  /  on  the  yellow  sea ;  „              829 

F,  but,  overtaken,  died  the  death  Themselves  Geraint  and  E,  177 

Another,  /  from  the  wrath  of  Doorm  „            530 

/  back  and  crying  out,  '  O  Merlin,  Merlin  and  V.  943 

I  hear  of  rumoius  /  thro'  your  court.  Lancelot  and  E.  1190 

and  once  the  shadow  of  a  bird  F,  Pelleas  and  E.  39 

A  blot  in  heaven,  the  Raven,  /  high,  Guinevere  133 
wheel'd  and  broke  F,  and  link'd  again,  and  wheel'd 

and  broke  F,  „          258 

Quiver'd  a  /  glory  on  her  hair.  Lover's  Tale  i  69 

F  by  each  fine  ear,  an  Eastern  gauze  „      iv  291 

pirmace,  like  a  flutter'd  bird,  came  /  from  far  away :  The  Bevenge  2 

F  at  top  of  the  roofs  in  the  ghastly  siege  Def.  of  Lucknow  4 

F  and  foil'd  at  the  last  by  the  handful  „              44 

Wiclif -preacher  whom  I  crost  In  /  hither  ?  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  39 

Trade  /  over  a  thousand  seas  with  her  spice  Fastness  13 

with  her  /  robe  and  her  poison'd  rose ;  „        16 

and  brighter  The  Gleam  /  onward.  Merlin  and  the  G.  96 

and  fitting  close  Or  /  looselier,  Akbar's  Dream  132 

Gleam'd  to  the  /  moon  by  fits.  Miller's  D.  116 

Sole  as  a  /  star  shot  thro'  the  sky  Palace  of  Art  123 

'  Saw  God  divide  the  night  with  /  flame,  D.  of  F.  Women  225 
To  follow  /  steps  of  Truth  Across  the  brazen 

bridge  of  war —  Love  thou  thy  land  75 

Would  play  with  /  forms  and  images,  Gardener's  D.  60 

And  with  a  /  finger  swept  my  lips,  „          246 

Thunder,  a  /  fire  in  heaven,  Boddicea  24 

Loosely  robed  in  /  raiment,  „        37 

Is  matter  for  a  /  smile.  In  Mem.  Ixii  12 

And  sow  the  sky  with  /  boughs,  „        Ixxii  24 

The  /  cloud,  the  frosty  light :  „             cm  2 

like  a  /  star  Led  on  the  gray-hair'd  wisdom  Holy  Grail  452 

Foalk  (folk)     F's  coostom  flitted  awaay           '  North.  Cobbler  28 

an'  /  stood  a-gawmin'  in,  „            81 

call'd  me  afoor  my  awn/'s  to  my  faace  Village  Wife  105 

that  the  /  be  sa  scared  at.  Spinster's  S's.  24 

Fur  to  goa  that  night  to  'er  /  by  cause  Owd  Bod  52 

Foam  (s)  (See  also  Fountain-foam,  Ocean-foam,  Sea- 
foam)  the  green  brink  and  the  running  /,  Sea-Fairies  2 
Flung  leagues  of  roaring  /  into  the  gorge  //  /  were  loved  13 
brightens  When  the  wind  blows  the  /,  (Enone  62 
Aphrodite  beautiful,  Fresh  as  the  /,  „  175 
Rolling  a  slumbrous  sheet  of  /  below.  Lotos-Eaters  13 
Weary  the  wandering  fields  of  barren  /.  „  42 
I  would  the  white  cold  heavy -plunging /,  D.  of  F.  Women  118 
sea-wind  sang  Shrill,  chill,  with  flakes  of  /,  M.  d' Arthur  49 
in  the  chasm  are  /  and  yellow  sands ;  Enoch  Arden  2 
And  scaled  in  sheets  of  wasteful  /,  Sea  Breams  53 
burst  and  flood  the  world  with  /:  Princess  iv  474 
flying  on  the  highest  F  of  men's  deeds — •  „  v  320 
sang  from  the  three-decker  out  of  the  /,  Maud  I  i  50 
Hurl'd  back  again  so  often  in  empty  /,  Last  Tournament  93 
As  tremulously  as  /  upon  the  beach  Guinevere  364 
sea-wind  sang  ShrUl,  chill,  with  flakes  of  /.  Pass,  of  Arthur  217 
Flies  with  a  shatter'd  /  along  the  chasm.  Lover's  Tale  i  383 
the  points  of  the  /  in  the  dusk  came  playing  Despair  50 
ships  from  out  the  West  go  dipping  thro'  the  /,  The  Flight  91 
On  broader  zones  beyond  the  /,  To  Ulysses  30 


Foam 

Foam  (s)  (contmued)    And  these  low  bushes  dip  their  t^^^^  ^^ ^^^.^^  51 

Too  full  for  sound  and  /, 
Foam  (verb)    Should  all  our  churchmen  /  m  spite 

forward-creeping  tides  Began  to  /, 
Foam-bow    his  cheek  brighten'd  as  the  f-b  brightens 


228 


Folded 


Crossing  the  Bar  6 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  9 

In  Mem.  ciii  38 

CEnone  61 


Foam-DOW    nis  cneeK  uriaui-c"  >J  <»  i'"^  J "  "''s""-""  .    t  ^,  t  „.,7^  q 

FSS-chuming    These  wet  black  passes  and/-cchaams-   ^tr  J  OZ^as«.  9 


Foam'd    /  away  his  heart  at  Averill's  ear 

Their  surging  charges  /  themselves  away ; 
raved  And  thus  /  over  at  a  rival  name : 
Foam-flakes    Crisp  /-/  scud  along  the  level  sand, 
Foam-fountains   monster  spouted  his  /-/  in  the  sea, 
Foaming    horse  across  the/ '5  of  the  ford, 

To  smoothe  my  pillow,  mis  the  /  draught  Of  fever, 
The  /  grape  of  eastern  France. 
Foamy    here  and  there  a  /  flake  Upon  me, 
Foe    tho'  his  /'s  speak  ill  of  him,  He  was  a  fnend 
to  me. 
The  land,  where  girt  with  fnends  or/  s 
Must  ever  shock,  like  armed  /'^, 
went  she  Norward,  Till  she  near'd  the/, 
divine  to  warn  them  of  their  f's : 
Had  beat  her  /  's  with  slaughter 
drove  her  f's  with  slaughter  from  her  walls, 
The  next,  like  fire  he  meets  the  /, 
The  general/.    More  soluble  is  this  knot, 
Truest  friend  and  noblest/; 
those  two  f's  above  my  fallen  life, 
friend  or  /,  Shall  enter,  if  he  will. 
His  f's  were  thine ;  he  kept  us  free ; 
And  England  pouring  on  her/'s. 
Who  never  spoke  against  a/; 
For  on  them  brake  the  sudden/; 
Friend,  to  be  struck  by  the  public  /, 
bright  With  pi tch'd  paviUons  of  his /, 
thou  hast  driVen  the  /  without,  See  to  the  /  withm ! 
thou  hast  wreak'd  his  justice  on  his  f's, 
'  Lo,'  said  Gareth,  '  the  /  falls ! ' 
second  was  your  /,  the  sparrow-hawk, 
what  they  long  for,  good  in  friend  or  /, 
Pellam,  once  A  Christless  /  of  thine 
He  makes  no  friend  who  never  made  a  /. 
I  hold  that  man  the  worst  of  pubUc  /'s 
friend  and  /  were  shadows  in  the  mist, 
Kevenge  ran  on  sheer  into  the  heart  of  the  /, 
and  they  yielded  to  the  /. 
the  /  sprung  his  mine  many  times, 
and  the  /  may  outUve  us  at  last — 
Friend  ?— /  perhaps— a  tussle  for  it  then ! 
Far  oS  from  out  an  island  girt  by  f's, 
and  a  boundless  panic  shook  the  /. 
where'er  they  ran.  Have  ended  mortal  f's ; 
some  in  fight  against  the  /, 
the  /  was  driven.  And  Wolseley  overthrew 

Ara,bi, 
Drove  thro'  the  midst  of  the  /, 
drew  The  /  from  the  saddle  and  threw 
Wareior  of  God,  man's  friend,  and  t3n'ant's  /, 
hand  Which  fell'd  the  f's  before  you 
Foeman    forth  there  stept  a  /  tall, 
What  time  the  f's  line  is  broke, 
to  perish,  falling  on  the  f's  ground. 
But  they  heard  the  f's  thunder 
still  the  /  spoil'd  and  bum'd, 
body  enow  to  hold  his  foemen  down  ? 
and  by  this  will  beat  his  foemen  down.' 
foemen  scared,  like  that  false  pair  who  turn'd 
/surged,  and  waver'd,  and  reel'd  Up  the  hill, 
Fog    the  white  /  vanish'd  like  a  ghost 
Foil'd    Flying  and  /  at  the  last  by  the  handful 


Aylmer's  Field  342 

Ode  on  Well.  126 

Balin  and  Balan  567 

Z>.  ofF.  Women  39 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  107 

Gareth  and  L.  1040 

Princess  ii  251 

In  Mem.,  Con.  80 

The  Brook  59 


J>.  of  the  0.  Year  22 

You  ask  me,  why  7 

Love  thou  thy  land  78 

The  Captain  36 

Sea  Dreams  69 

Princess,  Pro.  34 

123 

iv  583 

«135 

vil 

130 

',  336 

Ode  on  WeU.  91 

117 

185 

The  Victim  4 

Maud  II  V  89 

Com.  of  Arthur  97 

Gareth  and  L.  593 

1268 

1317 

Marr.  of  Geraint  444 

Geraint  and  E.  876 

Balin  and  Balan  97 

Lancelot  and  E.  1089 

Guinevere  512 

Pass,  of  Arthur  100 

The  Revenge  33 

96 

Def.  of  Lucknow  31 

,,  52 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  196 

AchiUes  over  the  T.  8 

18 

Ancient  Sage  158 

Locksley  E.,  Sixty  45 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  29 

Heavy  Brigade  30 

„  54 

Efit.  on  Gordon  1 

Happy  42 

Oriana  33 

Two  Voices  155 

Locksley  HaU  103 

The  Captain  41 

The  Victim  1 7 

Com.  of  Arthur  253 

309 

Geraint  and  E.  176 

Heavy  Brigade  62 

Death  of  CEnone  67 

Def.  of  Lucknow  44 


Fold  (thing  folded)  (continued)    detaching,  /  by  /,  From 
those  stiU  heights, 

f's  as  dense  as  those  Which  hid  the  Holiest 

The  drowsy  f's  of  our  great  ensign  shake 

With  /  to  /,  of  mountain  or  of  cape ; 

Dark  in  its  funeral  /. 

And  wrapt  thee  formless  in  the  /, 

In  /  upon  /  of  hueless  cloud, 

Thro'  twenty /'s  of  twisted  dragon, 

sprigs  of  summer  laid  between  the  f's. 

Thro'  knots  and  loops  and  f's  innumerable 

wrapt  In  unremorseful/'s  of  rolling  fire. 

a  streetway  hung  with/'s  of  pure  White  samite, 
Enwoimd  him  /  by  /,  and  made  him  gray  And  grayer, 
I  wish  that  somewhere  in  the  ruin'd  f's, 
Thro'  all  its  f's  the  multitudinous  beast, 
close-lapt  in  silken  f's. 
There  is  no  shade  or  /  of  mystery 
I  thought  it  was  an  adder's  /, 
Himg  round  with  ragged  rims  and  burning/  s, — 
in  their  floating /'s  They  past  and  were  no  more : 
Fold  (as  for  sheep)    {See  also  Night-fold)    *  Bring  this 
lamb  back  into  Thy  /, 
the  thick-fleeced  sheep  from  wattled/  s, 
very  whitest  lamb  in  all  my  /  Loves  you : 
who  are  these  ?  a  wolf  within  the  / ! 
Far  off  from  men  I  built  a  /  for  them : 
No  gray  old  grange,  or  lonely  /, 
some  black  wether  of  St.  Satan's  /. 
brand  us,  after,  of  whose  /  we  be : 
if  the  tigers  leap  into  the  /  unawares — 
driven  by  storm  and  sin  and  death  to  the  ancient  /, 
ranged  from  the  narrow  warmth  of  your  /, 


iroil  a     r lying  anu  r  ail  tuc  jaoo  ujr  uuo  liouv^^^       _       ,    ^  •'I--'     71V •  i,,    -tAn 
Fold  (thing  folded)    Down-droop'd,  in  many  a  floatmg  /,  Arabian  Nights  147 

'        Tr3?-  o^ff  //.    „r,«„  TriAlHina  rinwn.  EUiMwre  28 


Vision  of  Sin  51 

Aylmer's  Field  771 

Princess  v  8 

„    vii  3 

Ode  on  WeU.  57 

In  Mem.  xxii  15 

Maud  I  vi  3 

Gareth  and  L.  510 

Marr.  of  Geraint  138 

Lancelot  and  E.  439 

Holy  Grail  261 

Last  Tournament  140 

Guinevere  603 

(Enone  221 

Tiresias  15 

Lover's  Tale  i  153 

182 

691 

ii  63 

99 


Supp.  Confessions  105 

Ode  to  Memory  66 

Aylnier's  Fidd  361 

Princess  ii  190 

v390 

In  Mem.  c  5 

Merlim,  and  V.  750 

764 

Def.  of  Lucknow  51 

The  Wreck  2 

Despair  38 

Akbar's  Dream  61 


A  people  from  their  ancient  /  of  Faith, 
Fold  (verb)    J' thy  palms  across  thy  breast,  2^  thme 

arms,  turn  to  thy  rest.  «   lo  on  o-r  qa  li^*4S 

the  green  that  f's  thy  grave,  (repeat)     A  Dirge  6,  13,  20^27,J4,  41,^48 


'  High  up  the  vapours  /  and  swim 

/  our  wings.  And  cease  from  wanderings, 

sure  this  orbit  of  the  memory  f's 

about  my  feet  The  berried  briony  /.' 

round  her  waist  she  felt  it  /, 

Now  f's  the  Uly  all  her  sweetness  up. 

So  /  thyself,  my  dearest,  thou, 

or  /  Thy  presence  in  the  silk  of  sumptuous 

ah,  /  me  to  your  breast ! 

I'd  sooner  /  an  icy  corpse  dead  of  some  foul  disease : 
Fold    See  also  Five-fold,  Hundred-fold,  Fifty-fold,  Ten- 
hundred-fold,  Thousand-fold 
Folded    {See  also  Far-folded,  Heavy-folded,  Many-folded, 
Silken-folded)    Thought  /  over  thought,  smihng 


Two  Voices  262 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  19 

Gardener's  D.  74 

Talking  Oak  148 

Day'Dm.,  Depart.  2 

Princess  vii  186 

188 

Ancient  Sage  265 

The  Flight  5 

..       54 


In  silk-soft  f's,  upon  yielding  down, 
Look  up,  the  /  is  on  her  brow. 
Winds  all  the  vale  in  rosy  f's, 
In  misty /'»,  that  floating  as  they  fell 


Eleimore  28 

Two  Voices  192 

MiUer's  D.  242 

Palace  of  Art  35 


'  His  palms  are  /  on  his  breast : 

Sleep,  Ellen,  /  in  thy  sister's  arm, 

'  Sleep,  Ellen,  /  in  Emilia's  arm ; 

To  spirits  /  in  the  womb. 

Bow%  on  her  pahns  and  /  up  from  wrong. 

She  heard,  she  moved.  She  moan'd,  a  /  voice ; 

And  every  spirit's  /  bloom 

Is  pealing,  /  in  the  mist. 

And  yearn'd  to  burst  the  /  gloom. 

Not  to  be  /  more  in  these  dear  arms. 

Wherein  she  kept  them  /  reverently  With  sprigs 

of  summer  •    »   j  x 

letter  she  devised ;  which  bemg  wnt  And  /, 
Hath  /  in  the  passes  of  the  world.' 
on  the  horizon  of  the  mind  Lies  /, 
the  sweet  figure  /  round  with  night 
F  her  Uon  paws,  and  look'd  to  Thebes. 
Russian  crowd  F  its  wings  from  the  left 
and  I  was  /  in  thine  arms, 
here,  my  child,  tho'  /  in  thine  arms. 
The  /  leaf  is  woo'd  from  out  the  bud 
dissolved  the  mystery  Of  /  sleep. 
O'er  the  mute  city  stole  with  /  wmgs, 


Elednore  84 

Two  Voices  247 

Audley  Court  63 

65 

Day -Dm.,  Sleep  P.  8 

Princess  iv  288 

viz 

In  Mem.  xliii  2 

„  civ  4 

,,       cxxii  3 

Marr.  of  Geraint  99 

137 

Lancelot  and  E.  1110 

Pass,  of  Arthur  78 

Lover's  Tale  i  50 

„        iv  219 

Tiresias  149 

Heavy  Brigade  39 

Demeter  and  P.  22 

40 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  26 

D.  of  F.  Women  263 

Gardener's  D.  186 


Folded 

iy>Ided  (continued)    Holding  the  /  annals  of  my  vouth  • 
With/feet,  in  stoles  of  white,  J' J'     "    . 

Mute  with  /  anns  they  waited — 
stood  with  /  hands  and  downward  eyes 
Folding    black  f's,  that  which  housed  therein. 
F  each  other,  breathing  on  each  other, 
i^  his  hands,  deals  comfortable  words  ' 
Foliage    rustling  thro'  The  low  and  bloomed  /, 
gale  That  blown  about  the  /  underneath, 
all  thy  breadth  and  height  Of  /, 
sank  Down  on  a  drift  of  /  random-blown ; 
^  moisture  and  all  smells  of  bud  And/ 
Foliaged    (See  also  Fua-toliaged)    Who  murmurest 

m  the /eaves.  ,     „^  -    „ 

Folk    (J.. f  0  Foalk)    /that  knew  not  their  own  minds,  EZchTrk^jl 

And  echo'd  by  old  /  beside  their  fires  Com  ofArihTr  41 7 

sTa^teTX^^riSdT^-^^^--'^-  ^I'^^fi 

He^that  was  reft  of  his  J-  and  his  friends  Bati.  of  B^ZnbZrhlO 


229 


Gardener's  D.  244 

Sir  Galahad  43 

The  Captain  39 

Merlin  and  V.  69 

Gareth  and  L.  1380 

Lover's  Tale  i  261 

.     X."  717 

Arabian  Nighis  13 
Princess  Hi  121 
In  Mem.  Ixxxix  4 
Last  Tournament  389 
Lover's  Tale  Hi  6 

In  Mem.  xcix  9 


Follow'd 


Thn  FamA  f  df  f>^  aLIZ  ...  inyseu  !  Merlin  and  V.  82 


FoUer  (follow)    tha'U  /  'im  slick  into  Heu! 

FoUer'd  (followed)    fur  the  'tumey's  letters  they  /  sa 

Follow    (-See  also  FoUer)    lightning  to  the  thunder 

Which /'s  it, 
because  right  is  right,  to  /  right 

'lo  f  flying  steps  of  Truth 

What  good  should  /  this,  if  this  were  done  ? 

dark  Earth /'s  wheel'd  in  her  ellipse; 

/  knowledge  like  a  sinking  star. 

The  vine  stream'd  out  to  /, 

May  my  soul  /  soon ! 

I  /  till  I  make  thee  mine.' 

We  /  that  which  flies  before : 

/  Such  dear  familiarities  of  dawn  ? 

One  who  cried,  '  Leave  all  and  /  me.' 

the  thin  weasel  there  F's  the  mouse, 

which  all  our  greatest  fain  Would  /, 

not  be  dissoluble.  Not  /  the  great  law  ? 

A  satyr,  a  satyr,  see,  F's ; 

The  rest  would  /,  each  in  turn ; 

'  Then  /  me,  the  Prince,'  I  answer'd. 
Voice  Went  with  it,  '  F,  f,  thou  shalt  win.' 
falling  m  a  land  Of  promise ;  fruit  would/ 
If  more  and  acted  on,  what  f's  ? 
Whence /'s  many  a  vacant  pang ; 
bird  of  passage  flying  south  but  long'd  To  f- 

O  Swallow,  SwaUow,  if  I  could  /, 
And  tell  her,  tell  her,  that  I  /  thee.' 
I  cannot  cease  to  /you, 
To  /up  the  worthiest  till  he  die  • 
F  us :  who  knows  ?  we  four  may  bufld  some  plan 
And  on  the  '  F,  f,  thou  shalt  win : 
But/;  let  the  torrent  dance  thee  down 
farewell,  and  welcome  for  the  year  To  f- 
Fall,  and /their  doom. 


North.  Cobbler  66 

VUlage  Wife  62 

The  Poet  51 

(Enone  149 

Love  thou  thy  land  75 

M.  d' Arthur  92 

Golden  Year  24 

Ulysses  31 

Amphion  46 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  4 

The  Voyage  64 

94 

Aylmer's  Field  130 

664 

853 

Lucretius  79 

,,      116 

Princess,  Pro.  201 
227 
ilOO 
a  140 
229 
403 
Hi  211 
iv99 
116 
455 
466 
1)230 
472 
vii  209 
„      Con.  96 
Voice  and  the  P.  20 


F,  f  the  chase.! 

F  them  down  the  slope !     And  I  /  them  down 

to  the  wmdow-pane 
Nor/,  tho'  I  walk  in  haste, 
'The  King  will/ Cairist,  and  we  the  King 
/  the  deer  By  these  tall  firs  and  our  fast-faUing 

bums ;  * 

F  the  deer  ?  /  the  Christ,  the  King,  Live  pure, 

speak  true,  right  wrong,  /  the  King— 
Thou  get  to  horse  and  /  him  far  away. 
/  s,  being  named.  His  owner. 

Lead,  and  I  /.'  (repeat)  Gareth  and  L.  746,  76o','807,  sbT 

<  P  T  i«o^  ,y        A  .        .  990.  1053,'ll55' 

'f^ill  paMon,"butl7uTth'?q^'^r"  °'  ''"^'''    ^"^^'  """  ^'  Z 
'F  the  faces,  and  we  find  it.  "        ip?^ 

the  Prince,  as  Enid  past  him,  fain  To  /,  Marr.  of  Gerainttm 

the  knight  besought  him,  '  ii'  me,  GiraiitaldF  807 

•  Enough,'  he  said,  '  I  /,'  and  they  went.  ""^  ^-  f  ?I 

and  crying  '  Sirs,  Rise,  /!  Balin  aiU  Balan^ 


Window,  On  the  Hill  11 

16 

In  Mem.  xxii  18 

Com.  of  Arthur  599 

Gareth  and  L.  90 

117 
584 
703 


The  Fame  that/'s  death  is  nothing  to  us; 
the  scroll '  I  /  fame.'  ' 

1  charge  you,  /me  not.' 
serve  you,  and  to  /you  thro'  the  world.' 
I  fam  would  /  love,  if  that  could  be ;  I  needs 
must /death,  who  calls  for  me;  CaU  and  I 
J,  Ifi  let  me  die.' 
Then  might  she /me  thro'  the  world 
I  sware  a  vow  to  /  it  till  I  saw  '         ' 
Galahad,  and  O  Galahad,  /  me.' 
But  ye,  that /but  the  leader's  bell' 
while  ye  /  wandering  fires  Lost  in  the  quagmire ' 
most  of  us  would  /  wandering  fires,  (repeal      " 
and  vanish'd,  tho'  I  yeam'dTo  /• 
most  of  them  would  /  wandering  fires 
the  gloom.  That /'s  on  the  turning  of  the  worid 
after  wail  Of  suffering,  silence  f'sT  ' 

What  good  should  /  this,  if  this  were  done  ? 
I  could  not  nse  Albeit  I  strove  to  f 
I  must  fly,  but  /  quick.  ' 

Now  f's  Edith  echoing  Evelyn 
crying  out:  ' ii' me,  / me ! '— 
Do-well  will /thought, 

/Edwin  to  those  isles,  those  islands  of  the  Blest ' 
these  would  feel  and/  Truth  if  only  you  and       ' 

leave  the  dog  too  lame  to  /  with  the  cry 

know  them,  /  him  who  led  the  way 

F  you  the  Star  that  lights  a  desert  pathway, 

F  Light,  and  do  the  Right—  ^ 

'F,'  and  up  the  hill,  up  the  hill 

bound  to/,  wherever  she  go  Stark-naked, 

0  /,  leaping  blood,  ' 
poor  Muriel  when  you  hear  What  f's ' 
/  am  Merlin  Who  /  The  Gleam. 
The  Master  whisper'd  'i^  the  Gleam  ' 
But  eager  to  /,  I  saw. 
After  it,  /  it,  F  the  Gleam. 

1  whirl,  and  I /the  Sun.' 
Whirl,  and /the  Sun!  (repeat) 
But  what  may  /  who  can  tell  ? 

Follow'd    (See  also  Foller'd) 
hand, 
^I^^'J/ counsel,  comfort,  and  the  words 


Merlin  and  V.  82 

464 

476 

Lancelot  and  E.  607 

939 


1016 
,,  1316 

Holy  Grail  282 
„  292 

298 
319 
„  369,  599 
507 
„  891 

Pelleas  and  E.  549 
Pass,  of  Arthur  IW 
^       „  260 

Lover's  Tale  ii  98 
The  Revenge  6 
Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  15 
Def.  of  Lucknow  64 
Ancient  Sage  273 
The  Flight  42 


The  bappy  princess  /  him 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  119 

226 

„  266 

275 

„     "  277 

Heavy  Brigade  11 

Dead  Prophet  45 

Early  Spring  25 

The  Ring  274 

Merlin  and  the  G.  10 

34 

101 

130 

/T-r    T,         ■'■"'^  Dreamer  14 

Ine  Dreamer  20,  24,  28,  32 

xi- .      ,     ,  The  Wanderer  14 

For  surer  sign  had  /,  either 

M.  d' Arthur  76 

Love  and  Dviy  69 

Day-Dm.,  Depart.  8 


Thro'  all  the  world  she /him. 

And  /  with  acclaims. 

And  /  her  all  the  way. 

still  we /where  she  led,  (repeat) 

Then/cahns,  and  then  winds  variable 

when  they  /  us  from  Philip's  door, 

Where  Aylmer  /  Aylmer  at  the  Hall 

the  fierce  old  man  F,  and  under  his  own  lintel  stood 

Seconded,  for  my  lady  /  suit 

T  f^lf  T^  ®  ou  *'  *""*  "^  *^®  "^^^^^^  aisle  Reel'd, 

1  /:  and  at  top  She  pointed  seaward  • 

I  began.  And  the  rest  /: 

We /up  the  river  as  we  rode, 

■^      ,?  A  classic  lecture,  rich  in  sentiment, 

resolder  d  peace,  whereon  F  his  tale 

but  Blanche  At  distance/:  so  they  came: 

And  /  up  by  a  hundred  airy  does. 

Passionate  tears  i?" :  the  king  repUed  not : 

i  K^  J?  ""^^^y  ^'^^  ^^^^  With  blaro  of  bugle, 

^  by  the  brave  of  other  lands 

the  day  that  /  the  day  she  was  wed. 

And  silence  /,  and  we  wept. 

In  vassal  tides  that  /  thought. 

/by  h^  flying  hair  Ran  Uke  a  colt, 

thereafter  /  cahn.  Free  sky  and  stars : 

Thl  fJ^fiT'^^^  ^h^^f'  ^^^  good  Queen, 

Ihe  two  that  out  of  north  had  /  him : 

till  the  dusk  that /evensong  Rode  on  the  two 


32 

WUl  Water.  138 

Lady  Clare  64 

The  Voyage  59,  90 

Enoch  Arden  545 

The  Brook  167 

Aylmer's  Field  36 

331 

558 

o      A'  817 

Sea  Dreams  121 
Princess,  Pro.  244 
t206 
it  373 
v48 
m83 
87 
312 
Ode  on  Well.  114 
194 
The  Islet  4 
In  Mem.  xxx  20 
).        cxii  16 
Com.  of  Arthur  Z2l 
391 
Gareth  and  L.  526 
679 
793 


Followed 


230 


Fool 


FoUow'd  (cotainued)    He  /  nearer :  ruth  began  to  work    Geraint  and  E.  101 

He  /  nearer  still ;  the  pain  she  had  „            186 

And  overthrew  the  next  that  /  him,  „            465 

His  lusty  spearmen  /  him  with  noise :  „            593 

ye  be  sent  for  by  the  King,'  They  /;  Balin  arid  Balan  49 

F  the  Queen ;  Sir  Balin  heard  her  „            250 

and  /  this.  But  all  so  blind  in  rage  „            327 

'  And  is  the  fair  example  /,  Sir,  Merlin  and  V.  19 

Vivien  /,  but  he  mark'd  her  not.  „          199 

And  then  she  /  Merlin  all  the  way,  „          203 

Dear  feet,  that  I  have  /  thro'  the  world,  „          227 

You  /  me  unask'd ;  „          298 

the  stammering  cracks  and  claps  That  /,  „          943 

F,  and  in  among  bright  faces,  ours.  Holy  GraU  266 

and  she  F  Him  down,  and  like  a  flying  star  „          452 

Told  him  he  / — almost  Arthur's  words—  „          669 

knights  all  set  their  faces  home,  Sir  Pelleas  /.  PeUeas  and  E.  188 

And  /  to  the  city.  „             586 

Arthur  rose  and  Lancelot  /  him,  Last  Tournament  112 

F  a  rush  of  eagle's  wings,  „              417 

For  surer  sign  had  /,  either  hand,  Pass,  of  Arthur  24i 

in  weeping  and  in  praise  Of  her,  we  /:  Lover's  Tale  ii  88 

it  seem'd  By  that  which  /—  „         iv  22 

F  us  too  that  night,  and  dogg'd  us,  Lespair  2 

From  wasteful  living,  / —  Ancient  Sage  5 

Good,  for  Good  is  Good,  he  /,  Locksley  H,  Sixty  60 

up  the  hill,  F  the  Heavy  Brigade.  Heavy  Brigade  12 

All  in  a  moment  /  with  force  „            20 

/  up  by  her  vassal  legion  of  fools ;  Fastness  12 

hid  in  cloud  not  be  /  by  the  Moon  ?  Happy  97 

Thro'  which  I  /  line  by  line  Your  leading  hand,  To  Ulysses  45 

A  silence  /  as  of  death,  St.  Telemachus  65 

those  that/,  loosen,  stone  from  stone,  Akbar's  Dream  188 

Follower    tho' thou  numberest  with  the/ 's  Aylmer's  Field  66B 

And  at  her  head  a  /  of  the  camp.  Princess  v  60 

my  f's  ring  him  round :  He  sits  unarm'd ;  Geraint  and  E.  336 

With  all  his  rout  of  random  /'s,  „            382 

Went  Enid  with  her  sullen  /  on.  „            440 

prick'd  In  combat  with  the  /  of  Limours,  „            501 

one  true  knight — Sole  /  of  the  vows ' —  Last  Tournament  303 

And  every  /  eyed  him  as  a  God ;  „               678 

his  f's,  aU  Flower  into  fortune —  Columbus  166 

O  /  of  the  Vision,  still  In  motion  to  the  distant  gleam.  Freedom  13 

Following    /  her  dark  eyes  Felt  earth  as  air  Gardener's  D.  211 

or  /  up  And  flying  the  white  breaker,  Enoch  Arden  20 

/  our  own  shadows  thrice  as  long  The  Brook  166 

/  thro'  the  porch  that  sang  All  round  with  laurel,  Princess  ii  22 

Went  forth  in  long  retinue  /  up  The  river  „    Hi  195 

ever  /  those  two  crowned  twins,  „      v  420 

He,  that  ever /her  commands.  Ode  on  Well.  211 

As  we  descended  /  Hope,  In  Mem.  xxii  11 

Tho'  /  with  an  upward  mind  The  wonders  „          xli  21 

And  Gareth  /  was  again  beknaved,  Gareth  and  L.  786 

with  fixt  eye  /  the  three.  Marr.  of  Geraint  237 

A  youth,  that  /  with  a  costrel  bore  „              386 

Let  his  eye  rove  in  /,  or  rest  On  Enid  „              399 

(His  gentle  charger  /  him  unled)  Geraint  and  E.  571 

and  Vivien  /  him,  Tum'd  to  her :  Merlin  and  V.  32 

And  when  I  look'd,  and  saw  you  /  still,  „          299 

gloom'd  Your  fancy  when  ye  saw  me  /  you,  „          326 

/you  to  this  wild  wood,  Because  I  saw  you  sad,  „          440 

and  this  honour  after  death,  F  thy  will !  Last  Tournament  35 

/  these  my  mightiest  knights,  Guinevere  489 
Few  were  his  /,  Fled  to  his  warship :                     Batt.  of  Brunanburh  58 

F  a  torrent  till  its  myriad  falls  Tiresias  37 

and,  /  out  A  league  of  labyrinthine  darkness,  Demeter  and  P.  81 

So,  /  her  old  pastime  of  the  brook.  The  Ring  354 
How  loyal  in  the  /  of  thy  Lord !                           In  Mem.  W.  G.  Ward  6 

/  lighted  on  him  there.  And  shouted,  Death  of  (Enone  55 

/,  as  in  trance,  the  silent  cry.  „              86 

F  a  hundred  sunsets,  and  the  sphere  St.  Tdemachus  31 

And  /  thy  true  counsel,  by  thine  aid,  Akbar's  Dream  154 
FoDy    '  Ah,  /! '  in  mimic  cadence  answer'd  James — 

'  Ah,  /!  for  it  lies  so  far  away.  Golden  Tear  53 

Fill'd  I  was  with  /  and  spite,  Edward  Gray  15 


Folly  {continue    And  others'  foUies  teach  us  not,  WiU  Water.  173 

/  taking  wings  SUpt  o'er  those  lazy  limits  Aylmer's  Field  494 

brace  Of  twins  may  weed  her  of  her  /.  Princess  v  464 

How  I  hate  the  spites  and  the  follies !  Spiteful  Letter  24 

Deep  / !  yet  that  this  could  be—  In  Mem.  xli  9 

slumber  in  which  all  spleenful  /  was  drown'd,  Maud  I  Hi  2 

heart  of  the  poet  is  whirl'd  into  /  and  vice.  „     iv  39 

perplext  her  With  his  worldly  talk  and/:  „      xxl 

thy  much  /  hath  sent  thee  here  His  kitchen-knave :     Gareth  and  L.  919 

for  I  fear  My  fate  or  /,  Merlin  and  V.  927 

I  came  All  in  my  /  to  the  naked  shore.  Holy  GraU  793 

dead  babe  and  the  foUies  of  the  King ;  Last  Tournament  163 

But  then  what  /  had  sent  him  overseas  „                394 

Gone  the  fires  of  youth,  the  follies,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  39 

Fond    But  O  too  /,  when  have  I  answer'd  Princess  vii  4 

no  word  of  that  /  tale —  Last  Tournament  578 

Fonder    man  of  science  himself  is  /  of  glory,  Maud  I  iv  37 

Fondle    rabbit  /'s  his  own  harmless  face,  Aylmer's  Field  851 

Fondled    Appraised  his  weight  and  /  f atherUke,  Enoch  Arden  154 

Too  ragged  to  be  /  on  her  lap,  Aylmer's  Field  686 

And  all  this  morning  when  I  /  you :  Merlin  and  V.  286 

we  /  it,  Stephen  and  I,  But  it  died.  The  Wreck  83 

Fondling    /  all  her  hand  in  his  he  said,  Marr.  of  Geraint  509 

Tristram,  /  her  light  hands,  replied.  Last  Tournament  601 

Fonseca    F  my  main  enemy  at  their  court,  Columbus  126 

Font    One  rear'd  a  /  of  stone  And  drew.  Princess,  Pro.  59 

Nor  winks  the  gold  fin  in  the  porphyry/:  „         wi  178 

Entwine  the  cold  baptismal  /,  In  Mem.  xxix  10 

Food    eat  wholesome  /,  And  wear  warm  clothes,  St.  S.  Stylites  108 

wine  and  /  were  brought,  and  Earl  Limours  Geraint  and  E.289 

a  beggar  began  to  cry  '■F,f  or  I  die ' !  Voice  spake,  etc.  6 

Fool  (adj.)     What,  if  she  be  fasten'd  to  this  /  lord,  Maud  I  xvi2A. 

'  Beat  little  heart '  on  this  /  brain  of  mine.  Romney's  R.  155 

Fool  (s)    (See  also  Father-fool)    an  absent  /,  I  cast 

me  down,  Miller's  D.  62 

we  should  mimic  this  raw  /  the  world,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  106 

while  we  stood  hke  f's  Embracing,  Edwin  Morris  118 
push'd  the  happy  season  back, — The  more/'s  they, —    Golden  Year  67 

gilds  the  straiten'd  forehead  of  the/!  Locksley  Hall  62 

F,  again  the  dream,  the  fancy !  „          173 
'  A  ship  of  /  's,'  he  shriek'd  in  spite, '  A  ship  of 

f's,'  he  sneer'd  and  wept.  The  Voyage  77 

Bandied  by  the  hands  of  f's.  Vision  of  Sin  106 

Drink  we,  last,  the  public  /,  „          149 

April  hopes,  the  f's  of  chance;  „          164 
f's,  With  such  a  vantage-ground  for  nobleness !         Aylmer's  Field  386 

Went  further,  /!  and  trusted  him  with  all.  Sea  Dreams  76 

Christ  the  bait  to  trap  his  dupe  and  /;  „          191 

(God  help  her)  she  was  wedded  to  a/;  Princess  iii  83 

slaves  at  home  and  / 's  abroad.'  „      iv  521 

'  Ah  /,  and  made  myself  a  Queen  of  farce !  „     vii  243 

Ah,  there's  no  /  like  the  old  one —  Grandmother  44 

but  I  beant  a/:  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  3 

'  F,'  he  answer'd,  '  death  is  sure  To  those  that  stay  Sailor  Boy  13 

Ah  God !  the  petty  f's  of  rhyme  Lii.  Squabbles  1 

no  God  at  all,  says  the  /;  High.  Pantheism  15 

We  are  f's  and  slight;  In  Mem.,  Pro.  29 

•Thou  shalt  not  be  the/  of  loss.'  „             iv  16 

O  to  us.  The  f's  of  habit,  „              x  12 

The  /  that  wears  a  crown  of  thorns :  „          Ixvx  12 

They  caU'd  me  /,  they  call'd  me  child :  „                 13 

and  the  brazen  /  Was  sof  ten'd,  „             ex  11 

who  but  a  /  would  have  faith  in  a  tradesman's  ware  Maud  I  i  26 

angry  pride  Is  cap  and  bells  for  a /.  „     **P2 

F  that  I  am  to  be  vext  with  his  pride !  „    xiii  5 

thought  hke  a  /  of  the  sleep  of  death.  „  xiv  38 

Struck  me  before  the  languid  /,  „  //  *  19 

betraying  His  party-secret,  /,  to  the  press ;  „      t;  35 

and  Evening-Star,  Being  strong/'*;  Gareth  and  L.  635 

all  these  four  he  f's,  but  mighty  men,  „          643 

Back  wilt  thou,  /?     For  hard  by  here  is  one  „          895 

The  second  brother  in  their  /'«  parable —  „        1004 

this  strong  /  whom  thou.  Sir  Knave,  „        1058 

There  stands  the  third  /  of  their  allegory.'  .    „        1085 

yon  four /'«  have  suck'd  their  allegory  „        H! 


1 


Fool 


231 


Foot 


Pool  (s)  (coniinued)    Knight,  knave,  prince  and  /,  Gareth  and  L.  1255 

'  jP,  for  thou  hast,  men  say,  the  strength  of  ten,  „        1387 

sweet  faces  make  good  fellows  f's  Geraint  and  E,  399 

which  a  wanton  /,  Or  hasty  judger  „              432 

And  be  he  dead,  I  count  you  for  a  /;  „              548 

F's  prate,  and  perish  traitors.  Balin  and  Balan  530 

to  her  Squire  mutter'd  the  damsel '  F's  I  „              564 

were  he  not  crown'd  King,  coward,  and  /.'  Merlin  and  V.  789 
shrieking  out '  0  /! '  the  harlot  leapt  Adown  the 

forest,  and  the  thicket  closed  Benind  her,  and 

the  forest  echo'd '/.'  „             972 

She  mutter'd,  '  I  have  lighted  on  a  /,  PeUeas  and  E.  113 

'  Thou  /,'  she  said,  '  I  never  heard  his  voice  „            255 

F  to  the  midmost  marrow  of  his  bones,  „            258 

I  deem'd  him  /?  yea,  so  ?  „            309 

Pelleas  whom  she  call'd  her/?  „            474 

F,  beast — ^he,  she,  or  I?  myself  most  /;  „            475 

the  King  Hath  made  us  f's  and  Uars.  „            479 

Dagonet,  the  /,  whom  Gawain  in  his  mood  Last  Tournament  1 

Tristram,  saying,  '  Why  skip  ye  so.  Sir  J!*"  ? '  (repeat)  „      9,  243 

being/,  and  seeing  too  much  wit  Makes  the  world  rotten,       „  246 

*  Ay,  /,'  said  Tristram,  '  but  'tis  eating  dry  „  249 
ask'd, '  Why  skipt  ye  not,  Sir  i^  ? '  „  256 
what  music  have  I  broken,  /  ?  '  „  261 
Sir  /,'  said  Tristram,  '  I  would  break  thy  head.    Ff 

I  came  late,  the  heathen  wars  were  o'er,  „          268 

I  am  but  a  /  to  reason  with  a  / —  „          271 

'  Drink,  drink,  Sir  2^,'  and  thereupon  I  drank,  „          297 

marking  how  the  knighthood  mock  thee,  / —  „          301 

but  when  the  King  Had  made  thee  /,  „  306 
frighted  all  free  /  from  out  thy  heart :  Which  left 

thee  less  than  /,  „          307 

thank  the  Lord  I  am  King  Arthur's  /.  „          320 

Some  such  fine  song — but  never  a  king's  /.'  „          324 

goats,  asses,  geese  The  wiser  f's,  „          326 

Tristram,  '  Ay,  Sir  F,  for  when  our  King  Was  victor  „          334 

*  Nay,  /,'  said  Tristram,  '  not  in  open  day.'  „          347 

*  Lo,  /,'  he  said, '  ye  talk  F's  treason :  is  the  King 

thy  brother/?'  „          351 

Ay,  ay,  my  brother  /,  the  king  of  f's !  „          354 

Long  Uve  the  king  of  f's !  „          358 

Sent  up  an  answer,  sobbing,  '  I  am  thy /,  „  761 
all  my  doubts  were/'s  Bom  of  the  /                     Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  140 

stake  and  the  cross-road,  /,  if  you  will,  Despair  116 

But  man  to-day  is  fancy's  /  Ancient  Sage  27 

I  beant  sich  a  /  as  ye  thinks ;  Spinster's  S's.  18 

ye  mun  be /'«  to  be  h  alius  a-shawin' your  claws,  „  61 
tell  them  '  old  experience  is  a  /,'                             Locksley  H.,  Sixty  131 

Nor  is  he  the  wisest  man  who  never  proved  himself  a  /.      „  244 

for  War's  own  sake  Is  /,  or  crazed,  or  worse ;  Epilogue  31 

f oUow'd  up  by  her  vassal  legion  of  jf's ;  Vastness  12 

'  This  moael  husband,  this  fine  Artist ' !  F,  Romney's  R.  124 
Pool  (verb)    my  own  weakness /'s  My  judgment          Supp.  Confessions  136 

To  /  the  crowd  with  glorious  lies,  In  Mem.  cxxviii  14 

being  f ool'd  Of  others,  is  to  /  one's  self.  Gareth  and  L.  1275 

Jool'd    Ah !  let  me  not  be  /,  sweet  saints :  St.  S.  Stylites  212 

And  were  half  /  to  let  you  tend  our  son,  Princess  vi  274 

dies,  and  leaves  me  /  and  trick'd,  Gareth  and  L.  1251 

for  worse  than  being  /  Of  others,  is  to  fool  one's  self.  „           1274 

What  shock  has  /  her  since.  To  the  Queen  it  22 

Fooleries     '  Are  these  your  pretty  tricks  and  /,  Merlin  and  V.  265 

Pool-fury    The  red  /-/  of  the  Seine  In  Mem.  cxxvii  7 

PoolJsb    but  sing  the  /  song  I  gave  you,  MiUer's  D.  161 

And  let  the  /  yeoman  go.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  72 

Aid  all  this  /  people ;  St.  S.  Stylites  223 
They  to  whom  my  /  passion  were  a  target  for  their 

scorn :  Locksley  Hall  146 

To  drop  thy  /  tears  upon  my  grave,  Come  not,  when  2 

I  seem  so  /  and  so  broken  down.  Enoch  Arden  316 

Till  understanding  all  the  /  work  Of  Fancy,  Princess  vi  116 

But  help  thy  /  ones  to  bear ;  In  Mem.  Pro.  31 

Whose  youth  was  full  of  /  noise,  „            Uii  3 

The  /  neighbours  come  and  go,  „             Ix  13 

That  /  sleep  transfers  to  thee.  „       Ixviii  16 

Eut  the  fire  of  a  /  pride  flash'd  over  Mavd  I  iv  16 


Foolish  {continue     '  They  be  of  /  fashion,  0  Sir  King,      Gareth  and  L.  628 
'  ye  are  overfine  To  mar  stout  knaves  with  /  courtesies : '      „  733 

A  /  love  for  flowers  ?  „         1072 

who  lets  His  heart  be  stirr'd  with  any  /  heat  „  1178 

As  being  after  all  their  /  fears  „  1424 

And  all  her  /  fears  about  the  dress,  Marr.  of  Geraint  142 

Nor  speak  I  now  from  /  flattery ;  „  433 

whether  very  wise  Or  very/;  „  470 

with  her  heart  All  overshadow'd  by  the  /  dream,  „  675 

Could  scarce  divide  it  from  her  /  dream :  „  686 

And  all  her  /  fears  about  the  dress,  „  844 

Brother,  I  need  not  tell  thee  /  words, —  Holy  Grail  855 

'  Will  the  child  kill  me  with  her  /  prate  ? '  Guinevere  225 

I  myself  have  often  babbled  doubtless  of  a  /  past ;    Locksley  H.,  Sixty  7 
O  /  dreams,  that  you,  that  I,  Happy  89 

Foolishness    cipher  face  of  rounded  /,  Gareth  and  L.  1039 

Fool-like     Nay,  for  he  spake  too /-Z :  mystery !  „  472 

Foorty  (forty)     An'  I've  'ed  my  quart  ivry  market-noight 

for  /  year.  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  8 

Foot    (See  also  Crow-foot,  Feeat,  Light-foot)    0 !  hither 

lead  thy  feet  I  Ode  to  Memory  64 

with  echoing  feet  he  threaded  The  secretest  walks  The  Poet  9 

curl  round  my  silver  feet  silently.  The  Mermaid  50 

if  you  kiss'd  her  feet  a  thousand  years,  The  form,  the  form  13 

With  one  black  shadow  at  its  feet,  Mariana  in  the  S.  1 

Thy  feet,  millenniums  hence,  be  set  Two  Voices  89 

Touch'd  by  his  feet  the  daisy  slept.  „        276 

at  their  feet  the  crocus  brake  like  fire,  (Enone  96 

from  the  violets  her  hght  /  Shone  rosy-white,  „     179 

And  laid  him  at  his  mother's  feet.  The  Sisters  35 

when  you  pass.  With  your  feet  above  my 

head 
There's  a  new  /  on  the  floor,  my  friend, 
Sleep  full  of  rest  from  head  to  feet ; 
Comes  Faith  from  tracts  no  feet  have  trod, 
The  thunders  breaking  at  her  feet : 
he  based  His  feet  on  juts  of  slippery  crag 
Bound  by  gold  chains  about  the  feet  of  God. 
So  light  of  /,  so  light  of  spirit — 
a  /,  that  might  have  danced  The  greensward 
The  wreath  of  flowers  fell  At  Dora's  feet. 
a  hand,  a  /  Lessening  in  perfect  cadence. 
But  put  yoiu"  best /forward. 
Or  when  I  feel  about  my  feet 
And  at  my  feet  she  lay. 
drop  Balm-dews  to  bathe  thy  feet ! 
full  Of  force  and  choler,  and  firm  upon  his  feet, 
and  cold  my  wrinkled  feet 

His  beard  a  /  before  him,  and  his  hair  A  yard  behind, 
till  noon  no  /  should  pace  the  street, 
Yeab  after  year  unto  her  /, 
feet  that  ran,  and  doors  that  clapt. 
And  sixty  feet  the  fountain  leapt. 
Each  pluck'd  his  one  /  from  the  grave, 
With  folded  feet,  in  stoles  of  white, 
A  clog  of  lead  was  round  my  feet, 
break.  At  the  /  of  thy  crags,  O  Sea ! 
And  the  lark  drop  down  at  his  feet. 
And  stared,  with  his  /  on  the  prey, 
sketching  with  her  slender  pointed  / 
Tumbled  the  tawny  rascal  at  his  feet, 
therefore  with  His  light  about  thy  feet, 
fell  The  woman  shrieking  at  his  feet, 
she  with  her  strong  feet  up  the  steep  hill 
woman  heard  his  /  Return  from  pacings 

f  olden  feet  on  those  empurpled  stairs 
he  tapt  her  tiny  silken-sandal'd  /: 
oxu"  cloisters  echo'd  frosty  feet, 
make  her  some  great  Princess,  six  feet  high, 
he  started  on  his  feet.  Tore  the  king's  letter, 
tips  of  her  long  hands.  And  to  her  feet. 
Woman,  if  I  might  sit  beside  your  feet, 
her  /  on  one  Of  those  tame  leopards. 
Many  a  light  /  shone  hke  a  jewel  set 
But  when  we  planted  level  feet, 


May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  32 

D.ofiheO.  Year  52 

To  J.  S.  75 

On  a  Mourner  29 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  2 

M.  d' Arthur  189 

255 

Gardener's  D.  14 

133 

Dora  103 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  54 

111 

Talking  Oak  147 

208 

268 

Golden  Year  61 

Tithonus  67 

Godiva  18 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep  B.  1 

„  Revival  3 

8 

Amphion  43 

Sir  Galahad  43 

The  Letters  5 

Break,  break,  etc.  14 

Poet's  Song  8 

12 

The  Brook  102 

Aylmer's  Field  230 

„  665 

811 

Sea  Dreams  120 

Lucretius  5 

„     135 

Prtncess,  Pro.  150 

183 

224 

„  i60 

„  ii  41 

258 

„       Hi  180 

„  358 

„  iv  30 


Foot 


232 


Footcloth 


Princess  iv  196 
263 
269 
326 
358 
391 
471 
1)57 
100 
376 
415 
vil8 
88 
166 
211 
vii  79 
254 
on  Well.  11 
Exhib.  6 


Ode 
Ode  Inte, 


Foot  (continued)    push'd  alone  on  /  (For  since  her  horse 
was  lost 
fleet  I  was  of  /:  Before  we  shower'd  the  rose 
a  vine,  That  claspt  the  feet  of  a  Mnemosyne, 
their  mask  was  patent,  and  my  /  Was  to  you : 
wisp  that  flickers  where  no  /  can  tread.' 
lost  lamb  at  her  feet  Sent  out  a  bitter  bleating 
and  dash'd  Unopen'd  at  her  feet : 
some  sweet  sculpture  draped  from  head  to  /, 
lay  my  Uttle  blossom  at  my  feet, 
those  that  iron-cramp'd  their  women's  feet ; 
We  plsmt  a  solid  /  into  the  Time, 
they  came.  Their  feet  in  flowers,  her  loveliest : 
Steps  with  a  tender  /,  light  as  on  air. 
See,  your  /  is  on  our  necks,  We  vanquish'd, 
felt  it  sound  and  whole  from  head  to  /, 
on  her  /  she  hung  A  moment,  and  she  heard, 
She  moved,  and  at  her  feet  the  volume  fell. 
And  the  feet  of  those  he  fought  for, 
m3mad  horns  of  plenty  at  our  feet. 
Scatter  the  blossom  under  her  feet.  W.  to  Alexandra  9 

Thro'  cypress  avenues,  at  our  feet.  The  Daisy  48 
and  nearer  than  hands  and  feet.  High.  Pantheism  12 
Fine  httle  hands,  fine  little  feet —  Window,  Letter  3 
/  Is  on  the  skull  which  thou  hast  made.                           In  Mem.,  Pro.  7 

The  Shadow  cloak'd  from  head  to  /,  „         xxiii  4 

Whereon  with  equal  feet  we  fared ;  „           xxv  2 

She  bows,  she  bathes  the  Saviour's  feet  „      xxxii  11 

On  thy  Parnassus  set  thy  feet,  „      xxxvii  6 

That  nothing  walks  with  aimless  feet ;  „            liv  5 

Whose  feet  are  guided  thro'  the  land,  „          Ixvi  9 

Thy  feet  have  stray'd  in  after  hours  „          cii  14 

my  feet  are  set  To  leave  the  pleasant  fields  „                21 

Her  feet,  my  darling,  on  the  dead ;  „       Con.  50 

feet  hke  simny  gems  on  an  English  green,  Mavd  7 1)  14 

fall  before  Her  feet  on  the  meadow  grass,  „            26 

And  fawn  at  a  victor's  feet.  „       vi  30 

solid  ground  Not  fail  beneath  my  feet  „          xi  2 

For  her  feet  have  touch'd  the  meadows  „      xii  23 

Gorgonised  me  from  head  to  /  „     xiii  21 

the  delicate  Arab  arch  of  her  feet  „      xvi  15 

her  light  /  along  the  garden  walk,  „     xviii  9 

He  sets  the  jewel-print  of  jova  feet  In  violets  „    xxii  41 

Would  start  and  tremble  under  her  feet,  „            73 

A  shadow  there  at  my  feet,  „    II  i  39 

Lying  close  to  my  /,  Frail,  but  a  work  divine,  „          ii  3 

A  golden  /  or  a  fairy  horn  „            19 

the  rivulet  at  her /eei  Eipples  on  „        iv  41 

never  an  end  to  the  stream  of  passing  feet,  „  v  11 
mock  their  foster-mother  on  four  feet.  Com.  of  Arthur  31 
in  the  flame  was  borne  A  naked  babe,  and  rode  to 

Merlin's  feet,  „            384 
their  feet  were  planted  on  the  plain                                Gareth  and  L.  187 

I  leap  from  Satan's  /  to  Peter's  knee —  „            538 

loosed  his  bonds  and  on  free  feet  Set  him,  „            817 

their  feet  In  dewy  grasses  glisten'd ;  „            927 

The  gay  pavilion  and  the  naked  feet,  „            937 

do  hun  further  wrong  Than  set  him  on  his  feet,  „  955 
often  they  break  covert  at  om  feet.'                         Marr.  of  Geraint  183 

Worn  by  the  feet  that  now  were  silent,  „              321 

fell'd  him,  and  set  /  upon  his  breast,  „  574 
rose  Limours,  and  looking  at  his  feet,                          Geraint  and  E.  302 

lays  his  /  upon  it,  Gnawing  and  growling :  „     .       562 

on  his  /  She  set  her  own  and  climb'd ;  „            769 

set  his  /  upon  me,  and  give  me  life.  „  850 
Hath  hardly  scaled  with  help  a  hundred  feet            Balin  and  Balan  170 

made  his  /eet  Wings  thro'  a  glimmering  gallery,  „  403 
At  Merlin's  feet  the  wily  Vivien  lay.                                 Merlin  and  V.  6 

all  the  heathen  lay  at  Arthur's  feet,  „          144 

kiss'd  his  feet,  As  if  in  deepest  reverence  „          219 

Dear  feet,  that  I  have  follow'd  thro'  the  world,  „          227 

Behind  his  ankle  twined  her  hollow  feet  Together,  „          240 

Vivien  bathed  youv  feet  before  her  own?  „          284 

Scared  by  the  noise  upstarted  at  our  feet,  „          422 

The  feet  unmortised  from  their  ankle-bones  552 


Foot  (continued)    judge  all  nature  from  her  feet  of  clay,    Merlin  and  V.  835 

the  green  path  that  show'd  the  rarer  /,  Lancelot  and  E.  162 
her  shape  From  forehead  down  to  /,  perfect — 

again  From  /  to  forehead  exquisitely  turn'd :  „            642 

with  her  feet  unseen  Crush'd  the  wild  passion  „            741 

he  wellnigh  kiss'd  her /e«<  For  loyal  awe,  „          1172 

let  the  shield  of  Lancelot  at  her  feet  Be  carven,  „          1341 

made  a  silken  mat- work  for  her  feet;  Holy  Grail  151 

how  my  feet  recrost  the  deathful  ridge  „        534 

— yea,  his  very  hand  and  / —  „        915 

one  whose  /  is  bitten  by  an  ant,  Pdleas  and  E.  184 

there  three  squires  across  their  feet :  „            431 
The  /  that  loiters,  bidden  go, —                                Last  Tournament  117 

Dagonet  with  one /poised  in  his  hand,  „              285 

little  Dagonet  mincing  with  his  feet,  „              311 

Dagonet,  turning  on  the  ball  of  his  /,  „              329 

when  she  heard  the  feet  of  Tristram  grind  „              510 

Her  Ught  feet  fell  on  our  rough  Lyonnesse,  „              554 

his  /  was  on  a  stool  Shaped  as  a  dragon;  „              671 

about  his  feet  A  voice  clung  sobbing  till  he  question'd  it,     „  758 

voice  about  his  feet  Sent  up  an  answer,  „              760 

broadening  from  her  feet,  And  blackening,  Guinevere  81 

let  us  in,  tho'  late,  to  kiss  his  feet !  „      178 

with  a  wild  sea-light  about  his  feet.  He  saw  them —  „      242 

when  armed  feet  Thro'  the  long  gallery  „      412 

in  the  darkness  heard  his  armed /eei  Pause  by  her;  „      418 

and  laid  her  hands  about  his  feet.  „      528 

My  pride  in  happier  summers,  at  my  feet.  „      536 

And  while  she  grovell'd  at  his  feet,  „      581 

based  His  feet  on  juts  of  slippery  crag  Pass,  of  Arthur  357 

Bound  by  gold  chains  about  the  feet  of  God.  „             423 

To  stay  his  feet  from  falling.  Lover's  Tale  i  142 

she  saw  Beneath  her  feet  the  region  far  away,  „            395 

at  her  feet,  Ev'n  the  feet  of  her  I  loved,  „            599 

Were  stoled  from  head  to  /  in  flowing  black ;  „          ii  85 

at  his  feet  I  seem'd  to  faint  and  fall,  „              96 

Hard-heaving,  and  her  eyes  upon  hei  feet,  „        iv  308 
I  lay  At  thy  pale  feet  this  ballad                        Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  20 

and  bullets  would  rain  at  oiu*  feet —  Def.  of  Lucknow  21 

was  poUen'd  from  head  to  feet  V.  of  Maeldune  49 

and  his  white  beard  fell  to  his  feet,  „          118 

Cast  at  thy  feet  one  flower  that  fades  away.  To  Dante  7 

Or  on  your  head  their  rosy  feet.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  9 

one  ghttering  /  disturb'd  The  lucid  well ;  Tiresias  41 

I  will  sit  at  your  feet,  I  will  hide  my  face.  The  Wreck  12 

then  fell  fluttering  down  at  my  feet ;  „         82 

blanch  into  spray  At  the  feet  of  the  cliff  ;  „        138 

foam  in  the  dusk  came  playing  about  our  feet.  Despair  50 

And  Love  is  fire,  and  burns  the  feet  The  Flight  68 

A  stealthy  /  upon  the  stair !  „         70 

fall  of  yer  /  in  the  dance  was  as  light  as  snow  Tomorrow  36 

an'  laid  himself  imdher  yer  feet,  „          38 

I  plimapt  /  fust  i'  the  pond ;  Spinster's  S's.  28 

tha' hoickt  my /ee<  wi' a  flop  f ro' the  claay.  „             30 
forefather,  with  his  feet  upon  the  hound.                 Locksley  H.,  Sixty  28 

and  woman  to  her  tender  feet,  „             50 
Set  the  feet  above  the  brain  and  swear  the  brain  is 

in  the  feet.  „            136 

Progress  halts  on  palsied  feet,  „            219 

We  needs  must  scan  him  from  head  to  feet  Dead  Prophet  55 

wild  mob's  million  feet  WiU  kick  you  The  Fleet  18 

robed  thee  in  his  day  from  head  to  feet —  Demeter  and  P.  21 

For,  see,  thy  /  has  touch'd  it ;  „            48 

see  beneath  our  feet  The  mist  of  autumn  The  Ring  328 

and  flung  the  mould  upon  your  feet,  Happy  50 

past  her  feet  the  swallow  circling  flies,  Prog,  of  Spring  44 

/  to  /  With  your  own  shadow  in  the  placid  lake,  Romney's  R.  75 

mine  from  your  pretty  blue  eyes  to  your  feet,  „          96 
Six  /  deep  of  burial  mould  Will  dull  their 

comments !  »>        1^5 

vines  Which  on  the  touch  of  heavenly  feet  Death  of  (Enone  5 

The  mango  spurn  the  melon  at  his  /?  Akbar's  Dream  39 

I  flimg  myself  down  at  her  feet,  Charity  38 

Football    drunkard's  /,  laughing-stocks  of  Time,  Princess  iv  517 

Footcloth    and  tumblM.  on  the  purple  /,  „           286 


Footed 


233 


Forehead 


Footed    See  Bare-footed,  Cat-footed,  Four-footed,  Lighter- 
footed,  Little-footed,  Wind-footed 

Foot-fall     With  measured  /  firm  and  mild,  Two  Voices  413 

list  a/-/,  ere  he  saw  The  wood-nymph.  Palace  of  Art  110 

her  palfrey's  /  shot  Light  horrors  Godiva  58 

Or  ghostly  /  echoing  on  the  stair.  Guinevere  507 

Foot-gilt     lay  F-g  with  all  the  blossom-dust  Merlin  and  V.  282 

Footiiig    Show'd  her  the  isiiry  f's  on  the  grass,  Aylmer's  Field  90 

A  slender-shafted  Pine  Lost  /,  fell,  Gareth  and  L.  4 

hath  o'erstept  The  slippery  /  of  his  narrow  wit.  Lover's  Tale  i  102 

Footless    where  /  fancies  dwell  Among  the  fragments  Maud  I  xviii  69 

Foot-lights     By  the  low  f-l  of  the  world—  The  Wreck  40 

Footprint    left  The  little  /  daily  wash'd  away.  Enoch  Arden  22 

May  only  make  that  /  upon  sand  Princess  Hi  239 

watch  The  sandy  /  harden  into  stone.'  „             271 

The  kingcup  fills  her  /,  Prog,  of  Spring  59 

Foot-sore    Ileel'd  as  a  /  ox  in  crowded  ways  Aylmer's  Field  819 

F-s,  way-worn,  at  length  he  touch'd  his  goal,  St.  Tdemachus  34 

Footstep    Old  f's  trod  the  upper  floors,  Mariana  67 


night  come  from  the  inmost  hills,  Like  f's  upon  wool, 


(Enone  250 


hear  the  dully  sound  Of  human  /  's  fall. 

his  f's  smite  the  threshold  stairs  Of  life — 

More  close  and  close  his  /'s  wind : 

While  he  treads  with  /  firmer, 

A  /  seem'd  to  fall  beside  her  path, 

I  prest  my  f's  into  his, 

He  seems  as  one  whose  / '5  halt, 

The  f's  of  his  life  in  mine ; 

But  at  his  /  leaps  no  more, 

But  let  no  /  beat  the  floor, 

guide  Her/ '5,  moving  side  by  side 

The  /  flutter'd  me  at  first : 

clomb  The  last  hard  /  of  that  iron  crag ; 

and  fell  about  My  /  's  on  the  mountains. 

scales  Their  headlong  passes,  but  his  /  fails, 

Have  heard  this  /  fall, 

flowers  that  brighten  as  thy  /  falls, 

A  /,  a  low  throbbing  in  the  walls, 
Footstool    drove  The  /  from  before  him,  and  arose ; 
Forage    /  for  the  horse,  and  flint  for  fire. 

I  will  fetch  you  /  from  all  fields, 

To  /  for  herself  alone ; 
Forager    they  found — his  /  's  for  charms — 
Foray     Bound  on  a  /,  rolling  eyes  of  prey, 

Such  as  they  brought  upon  their /'s  out 
Forbad    F  her  first  the  house  of  Averill, 
Forbear     '  F,'  the  Princess  cried ;  '  J',  Sir '  I ; 

caught  His  purple  scarf,  and  held,  and  said,  '  F ! 

^F:  there  is  a  worthier,' 

That  I  /  you  thus :  cross  me  no  more. 

'  Nay,'  said  PeUeas, '  but  /. 

call'd  '  F  In  the  great  name  of  Him  who  died 
for  men, 
Fcwbearance    Arguing  boimdless  /: 
Forbid    '  did  I  not  F  you,  Dora  ? ' 

Chid  her,  and  /  her  to  speak  To  me, 

And  batten  on  her  poisons  ?    Love  / ! 
Forbore    Bore  and  /,  and  did  not  tire. 

But  awed  and  promise-bounden  she  /, 

Geraint,  from  utter  courtesy,  /. 

hurl  his  cup  Straight  at  the  speaker,  but/: 

the  meek  maid  Sweetly  /  him  ever, 

looking  at  the  villainy  done,  F, 

F  his  own  advantage,  (repeat) 
Force  (s)     Had  /  to  make  me  rhyme  in  youth, 

All  /  in  bonds  that  might  endure, 

I  broke  a  close  with  /  and  arms : 

you  know  him, — old,  but  full  Of  /  and  choler, 

his  passion  shall  have  spent  its  novel  /, 

Titanic /'s  taking  birth  In  divers  seasons, 

I  spoke  with  heart,  and  heat  and  /, 

toward  the  hollow,  all  her  /  Fail'd  her ; 

she  promised  that  no  /,  Persuasion,  no, 

Is  duer  unto  freedom,  /  and  growth  Of  spirit 

felt  the  blind  wildbeast  of  /, 


Palace  of  Art  21Q 

St.  S.  Stylites  191 

Day-Dm.,  Arrival  25 

L.  of  Burleigh  51 

Enoch  Arden  514 

Lucretius  118 

WiU  15 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  44 

„  112 

„  CO  17 

„  cxiv  19 

Last  Tournament  515 

Pass,  of  Arthur  447 

Lover's  Tale  i  372 

Montenegro  5 

Tiresias  27 

Demeter  and  P.  36 

The  Ring  409 

Aylmer's  Field  327 

Gareth  and  L.  1277 

Geraint  and  E.  628 

Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  29 

Merlin  and  V.  619 

Geraint  and  E'.  538 

567 

Aylmer's  Field  502 

Princess  iv  162 

Marr.  of  Geraint  377 

556 

Geraint  and  E.  678 

Pelleas  and  E.  280 


St.  Telemachus  62 

Aylmer's  Field  317 

Dora  92 

Maud  i  xix  63 

Lover's  Tale  i  111 

Two  Voices  218 

Enoch  Arden  869 

Marr.  of  Geraint  381 

Merlin  and  V.  31 

Lancelot  and  E.  856 

Pelleas  and  E.  283 

Guinevere  331,  333 

Miller's  D.  193 

Palace  of  Art  154 

Edwin  Morris  131 

Golden  Year  61 

Locksley  Hall  49 

Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  17 

The  Letters  37 

Enoch  Arden  374 

Aylmer's  Field  417 

Princess  iv  141 

V  266 


Force  (s)  (continued)      Ida  stood  nor  spoke,  drain'd  of 
her  / 

Some  patient  /  to  change  them  when  we  will, 

can  bereave  him  Of  the  /  he  made  his  own 

From  our  first  Charles  by  /  we  wrimg  our  claims. 

Who  makes  bf  f  his  merit  known 

Of  /  that  would  have  forged  a  name. 

I  know  thee  of  what  /  thou  art 

Seraphic  intellect  and  /  To  seize  and  throw 

with  /  and  skill  To  strive,  to  fashion, 

Should  licensed  boldness  gather  /, 

this  electric  /,  that  keeps  A  thousand  pulses  dancing, 

in  his  /  to  be  Nature's  crowning  race. 

but  of  /  to  withstand,  Year  upon  year, 

That  save  he  won  the  first  by  /, 

his  great  self,  Hath  /  to  quell  me.' 

so  fill  up  the  gap  where  /  might  fail 

Reproach  you,  saying  all  yom:  /  is  gone  ? 

all  nis  /  Is  melted  into  mere  effeminacy  ? 

He  felt,  were  she  the  prize  of  bodily  /, 

blood  Of  their  strong  bodies,  flowing,  drain'd  their  /, 
But  cither's  /  was  match'd  till  Yniol's  cry, 

could  I  someway  prove  such  /  in  her 

elemental  secrets,  powers  And  /  '5 ; 

so  by  /  they  dragg  d  him  to  the  King. 

I  do  not  mean  the  /  alone, 

for  what  /  is  yours  to  go  So  far, 

Drain'd  of  her  /,  again  she  sat, 

But  had  not  /  to  shape  it  as  he  would, 

F  is  from  the  heights. 

/  to  guide  u»  thro'  the  days  I  shall  not  see  ? 

Howe'er  bUnd  /  and  brainless  will  May  jar 

my  brothers,  work,  and  wield  The  f's  of  to-day, 
Force  (verb)     cruel  glee  F's  on  the  freer  hour. 

this  wild  king  to  /  her  to  his  wish, 
Forced     I  /  a  way  Thro'  soHd  opposition 

/  Sweet  love  on  pranks  of  saucy  boyhood : 

brute  world  howUng  /  them  into  bonds, 

wrath  which  /  my  thoughts  on  that  fierce  law, 

the  jailer  /  me  away,  (repeat) 

fur  theere  we  was  /  to  'ide. 
Forcing    /  far  apart  Those  blind  beginnings 
Ford     By  bridge  and  /,  by  park  and  pale, 

her  future  Lord  Was  drown'd  in  passing  thro'  the  /, 

bridge,  /,  beset  By  bandits, 

hard  by  here  is  one  that  guards  a  / — 

Push'd  horse  across  the  foamings  of  the  /, 

Gareth  laid  his  lance  athwart  the/; 

There  lies  a  ridge  of  slate  across  the  /; 

And  victor  of  the  bridges  and  the  /, 

quickly  flashing  thro'  the  shallow  / 

hill,  or  plain,  at  sea,  or  flooding/. 
Forded     Took  horse,  and  /  Usk,  and  gain'd  the 

wood ; 
Fore    when  Dan  didn't  come  to  the  /, 
Forebode    His  heart  f's  a,  mystery : 
Foreboding    / '  what  would  Enoch  say  ? ' 
Forecast    But  who  shall  so  /  the  years 
Foredoom'd    Made  us,  foreknew  us,  /  us. 
Foredooming    F  all  his  trouble  was  in  vain. 
Forefather    His  own  f's'  arms  and  armour  hung. 

thy  great  F's  of  the  thomless  garden, 

Lies  the  warrior,  my  /,  with  his  feet  upon  the 
hoimd. 

that  same  path  our  true  f's  trod ; 
Forefinger    on  the  stretch'd  /  of  all  Time  Sparkle 
Forefoot    With  inward  yelp  and  restless  /  plies 
Forego    which  /  The  darkness  of  that  battle 
Foregoing    F  all  her  sweetness,  like  a  weed. 
Foregone    '  But  could  I,  as  in  times  /, 

have  quite/  All  matters  of  this  world: 
Foreground    a  /  black  with  stones  and  slags, 
Forehead  (adj.)    and  his  /  veins  Bloated,  and 

branch'd ; 
Forehead  (s)    draws  His  /  earthward,  and  he  dies. 


Princess  vi  266 

„    Con.  56 

Ode  on  Well.  273 

Third  of  Feb.  26 

In  Mem.  Ixiv  9 

,,    Ixxiii  16 

J)  LXXtSC  o 

„  cix  5 

„         cxiii  6 

13 

„      ex  XV  15 

Maud  I  iv  33 

„   /Zm24 

Gareth  and  L.  107 

1183 

1352 

Marr.  of  Geraint  88 

106 

541 

569 

805 

Merlin  and  V.  633 

640 

Lancelot  and  E.  471 

1063 

Last  Tournament  540 

Pass,  of  Arthur  15 

Ancient  Sage  14 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  158 

Freedom  15 

Mechanophilus  30 

Vision  of  Sin  130 

Princess,  Pro.  37 

,,         Hi  125 

vii  343 

Merlin  and  V.  744 

Guinevere  537 

Rizpah  41,  44 

Spinster's  S's.  39 

Lucretius  245 

Sir  Galahad  82 

In  Mem.  vi  39 

Gareth  and  L.  594 

1003 

1040 

1048 

1056 

1232 

Marr.  of  Geraint  167 

Holy  Grail  728 

Marr.  of  Geraint  161 

Tomorrow  43 

Two  Voices  290 

Enoch  Arden  253 

In  Mem.  i  5 

Despair  97 

Gareth  and  L.  1127 

Princess,  Pro.  24 

Maud  I  xviii  27 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  28 

Doubt  and  Prayer  4 

Princess  ii  378 

Lu<;retius  45 

To  the  Qu^en  ii  64 

Holy  Grail  623 

Talking  Oak  189 

Balin  and  Balan  116 

Palace  of  Art  SI 


Balin  and  Balan  391 
Supp.  Confessions  168 


Forehead 


234 


Forget 


Porehead  (s)  {continued)    Thy  bounteous  /  was  not  f  ann'd  With 

breezes  Elednore  9 

about  His  dusty  /  drily  curl'd,  Miller's  D.  6 

And,  with  dim  fretted  fs  all,  Palace  of  Art  242 

curls — That  made  his  /  like  a  rising  sun  M.  d' Arthur  217 

Where  shall  I  hide  my  /  and  my  eyes  ?  „         228 

and  opposed  Free  hearts,  free  fs —  Ulysses  49 

/,  eyeUds,  growing  dewy-warm  With  kisses  Tithanus  58 

On  her  pallid  cheek  and  /  came  a  colour  Locksley  Rail  25 

gilds  the  straiten'd  /  of  the  fool !  „            62 

I,  to  herd  with  narrow  f's,  „          175 

Annie  from  her  baby's  /  clipt  A  tiny  curl,  Enoch  Arden  235 

at  last  he  said,  Lifting  his  honest  /,  „            388 

We  tum'd  our  f's  from  the  falling  sun,  The  Brook  165 

With  that  she  kiss'd  His  /,  Princess  ii  312 

and  o'er  her  /  past  A  shadow,  „      vi  106 

With  all  their  f's  drawn  in  Roman  scowls,  „     vii  129 

and  her  /  sank  upon  her  hands,  „          247 

But  on  her  /  sits  a  fire :  In  Mem.  cxiv  5 

But  on  the  damsel's  /  shame,  Gareth  and  L.  656 

Had  bared  her  /  to  the  blistering  sun,  Geraint  and  E.  515 

when  their  f's  felt  the  cooling  air,  Balin  and  Balan  589 
her  shape  From  /  down  to  foot,  perfect — again 

From  foot  to  /  exquisitely  tum'd :  Lancelot  and  E.  642 

Clean  from  her  /  all  that  wealth  of  hair  Holy  Grail  150 

their  f's  grimed  with  smoke,  and  sear'd,  „          265 
Met  f's  all  along  the  street  of  those  Who  watch'd 

us  pass ;  „          344 

This  air  that  smites  his  /  is  not  air  „          914 

Glanced  from  the  rosy  /  of  the  dawn,  PeUeas  and  E.  502 

Pure  on  the  virgin  /  of  the  dawn ! '  ,,            505 

curls — That  made  his  /  like  a  rising  sun  Pass,  of  Arthur  385 

Where  shall  I  hide  my  /  and  my  eyes  ?  „             396 

with  my  work  thus  Crown'd  her  clear  /.  Lover's  Tale  i  345 

holdeth  his  undimmed  /  far  Into  a  clearer  zenith,  „            513 

brush'd  My  fallen /in  their  to  and  fro,  „            701 

Brow-high,  did  strike  my  /  as  I  past ;  „          n  19 

Bullets  would  sing  by  our  f's,  Def.  of  Lucknow  21 

earth's  dark  /  flings  athwart  the  heavens  Ancient  Sage  200 

/  vapoiu"-swathed  In  meadows  ever  green ;  Freedom  7 

felt  a  gentle  hand  Fall  on  my  /,  The  Ring  419 

round  her  /  wheels  the  woodland  dove.  Prog,  of  Spring  57 

And  last  on  the  /  Of  Arthur  the  blameless  Merlin  and  the  G.  72 

you  spill  The  drops  upon  my  /.  Romney's  R.  24 

Foreign    and  he  died  In  /  lands ;  Dora  19 
And  I  will  tell  him  tales  of  /  parts,  Enoch  Arden  198 
'  I  have  a  sister  at  the  /  court,  Princess  i  75 
And  travell'd  men  from  /  lands ;  In  Mem.  x  6 
often  abroad  in  the  fragrant  gloom  Of  /  churches —  Maud  I  xix  54 
Display'd  a  splendid  silk  of  /  loom,  Geraint  and  E.  687 
some  other  question'd  if  she  came  From  /  lands,  Lover's  Tale  iv  331 
they  praised  him  to  his  face  with  their  courtly  /  grace ;  Revenge  99 
Urge  him  to  /  war.  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  68 
Toreigner    {See  also  Furriner)    A  /,  and  I  your  country- 
woman, Princess  iv  317 
.Foreknew    Made  us,  /  us,  foredoom'd  us.  Despair  97 

Foreland    many  a  fairy  /  set  With  willow-weed  The  Brook  45 

Forelock    Are  taken  by  the  /.     Let  it  be.  Golden  Year  19 

Foremost    {See  also  J^aA-loiemost)    /  in  thy  various 

gallery  Place  it.  Ode  to  Memory  84 

And  being  ever  /  in  the  chase,  Geraint  and  E.  959 

I  the  heir  of  all  the  ages,  in  the  /  files  of  time —  Locksley  Hall  178 

which,  on  the  /  rocks  Touching,  Sea  Dreams  51 

F  captain  of  his  time.  Ode  on  Well.  31 

He  aash'd  the  pvimmel  at  the  /  face,  Balan  and  Balan  402 

Foreran    So  much  the  boy/;  Aylmer's  Field  &) 

Foreran    2^  thy  peers,  thy  time,  and  let  Thy  feet,  Two  Voices  dA 

in  the  colci  wind  that  f's  the  mom  Guinevere  132 

Foresaw    (<Se«  oZso  Half-foresaw)    The  f ame  is  quench'd 

that  I  /,  In  Mem.  Ixxiii  5 

what  doubt  that  he  /  This  evil  work  Guinevere  306 

And  each  /  the  dolorous  day  to  be :  Pelleas  and  E.  606 

Foresee    Oh,  if  indeed  that  eye  /  In  Mem.  xxvi  9 

could  none  of  them  /,  Not  even  thy  wise  father  Guinevere  273 

Fweseeing    Uo wbeit  ouiself ,  /  casualty,  Princess  Hi  317 


Foreshadow    Who  dares  /  for  an  only  son  A  loveher  life,     Ded.  of  Idylls  29 

What  omens  may  /  fate  to  man  And  woman,  Tiresias  7 

Foreshadowing    His  heart  /  all  calamity,  Enoch  Arden  683 

Immersed  in  rich  f's  of  the  world.  Princess  vii  312 

Foreshorten'd    he  F  in  the  tract  of  time  ?  In  Mem.  Ixxvii  4 

Foresight    Whose  /  preaches  peace.  Love  and  Duty  34 

Take  wings  of  /;  lighten  thro'  The  secular  abyss  In  Mem.  Ixxvi  5 

Forest  (adj.)     And  armour'd  all  in  /green.  Last  Tournament  170 

his  good  warhorse  left  to  graze  Among  the  /greens,  ,,            491 

He  burst  his  lance  against  a  /  bough,  Balin  and  Balan  329 

hurl'd  it  from  him  Among  the  /  weeds,  „             542 

Forest  (s)    {See  also  Mid-foreS,  New  Forest)    so  deadly 

still  As  that  wide  /.  D.  of  F.  Women  69 
Between  dark  stems  the  /  glows,  Sir  Galahad  27 
The  petty  marestail  /,  fairy  pines,  Aylmer's  Field  92 
Better  to  clear  prime  f's,  heave  and  thump  Princess  Hi  127 
While  I  roved  about  the  /,  Boadicea  35 
The  /  crack'd,  the  waters  curl'd.  In  Mem.  xv  5 
and  pitch'd  His  tents  beside  the/.  Com.  of  Arthur  58 
slew  the  beast,  and  fell'd  The  /,  „  60 
mount  That  rose  between  the  /  and  the  field.  Gareth  and  L.  191 
A  mile  beneath  the  /,  challenging  And  over- 
throwing Balin  and  Balan  12 
the  harlot  leapt  Adown  the  /,  and  the  thicket 

closed  Behind  her,  and  the  /  echo'd  '  fool.'  Merlin  and  V.  973 

the  gloomy  skirts  Of  CeUdon  the/;  Lancelot  and  E.  292 

Across  the  /  call'd  of  Dean,  to  find  Caerleon  PeUeas  and  E.  21 

Alone,  and  in  the  heart  of  the  great  /.  Lover's  Tale  ii  3 

moanings  in  the  /,  the  loud  brook,  „         114 

On  icy  fallow  And  faded  /,  Merlin  and  the  G.  85 

Thro'  blasted  valley  and  flaring  /  Kapiolani  12 

Forest-deeps    And  far,  in  f-d  unseen,  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  7 

Forester    How  once  the  wandering  /  at  dawn,  Gareth  and  L.  498 

Down  on  a  rout  of  craven /'s.  ,,            841 

Before  him  came  a  /  of  Dean,  Marr.  of  Geraint  148 

Forest-path     thine  eyes  not  brook  in  f-p's.  Prog,  of  Spring  31 

Forest-shadow    and  through  the  f-s  borne  Lover's  Tale  ii  72 

Forethought    So  dark  a  /  roll'd  about  his  brain,  Merlin  and  V.  230 

Foretold    /,  Djdng,  that  none  of  all  our  blood  Princess  i  7 

He  too  /  the  perfect  rose.  In  Mem.,  Con.  34 

Has  come  to  pass  as  /;  Maud  II  v  4i 

Forfeits    game  of  /  done — the  girls  all  kiss'd  The  Epic  2 

magic  music,  /,  all  the  rest.  Princess,  Pro.  195 

Forgave    there  the  Queen  /  him  easily.  Marr.  of  Geraint  592 

And  he  /  me,  and  I  could  not  speak.  Guinevere  614 

Forge    yes ! — but  a  company  /'*  the  wine.  Maud  7  i  36 

/  a  life-long  trouble  for  ourselves,  Geraint  and  E.  3 

Forged     '  Who  /  that  other  influence.  Two  Voices  283 

/  a  thousand  theories  of  the  rocks,  Edwin  Morris  18 

he  /,  But  that  was  later,  boyish  histories  Aylmer's  Field  96 

Nor  deeds  of  gift,  but  gifts  of  grace  he  /,  Sea  Dreams  192 

and  so  We  /  a  sevenfold  story.  Princess,  Pro.  202 

thou  hast  /  at  last  A  night-long  Present  In  Mem.  Ixxi  2 

results  Of  force  that  would  have  /  a  name.  „    Ixxiii  16 

Whereof  they  /  the  brand  Excalibur,  Gareth  and  L.  67 

one  son  had  /  on  his  father  and  fled.  Despair  69 

Forget    rose  In  love  with  thee /'s  to  close  His  curtains,  Adeline^ 

men  F  the  dream  that  happens  then,  Two  Voices  353 

'  I  might  /  my  weaker  lot ;  ,,         367 

who  that  knew  him  could  /  The  busy  wrinkles  Miller's  D.  3 

Can  he  pass,  and  we/?  „      204 

What  is  love  ?  for  we  /:  „      213 
I  shall  not  /  you,  mother.                                  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  31 

And  God  /  the  stranger ! '  The  Goose  56 

Authority  f's  a  dying  king,  M.  d' Arthur  121 

I  earth  in  earth  /  these  empty  courts,  Tithonus  75 

Perplext  her,  made  her  half  /  herself,  Aylmer's  Field  303 

Swear  by  St  something — I  /  her  name —  Princess  v  293 

all  men  else  their  nobler  dreams  /,  Ode  on  Well.  152 

What  England  was,  shall  her  tme  sons  /?  Third  of  Feb.  44 

ten  years  back,  or  more,  if  I  don't  /:  Grandmother  75 

Could  we  /  the  widow'd  hour  In  Mem.  xl  1 

But  he  /'*  the  days  before  „      xliv  3 

Nor  can  it  suit  me  to  /  The  mighty  hopes  „  Ixxxy  59 

The  days  she  never  can  /  „  xcvii  14 


Forget 


235 


Forlorn 


Forget  {continued)    I  should  /  That  I  owe  this  debt  to  you     Mattd  I  xix  89 

shall  I  say  ? — li  ever  I  should  f,  „               93 

the  lone  hem  f's  his  melancholy,  Gareth  and  L.  1185 

/  My  heats  and  violences  ?  hve  afresh  ?  Balin  and  Balan  189 

ye  /  Obedience  is  the  courtesy  due  to  kings.'  Lancelot  and  E.  Ill 

Authority /'s  a  dying  king,  Pass,  of  Arthur  289 

Men  will  /  what  we  sufEer  and  not  what  we  do.  Def.  of  Lucknow  73 

and  /  The  darkness  of  the  pall.'  Ancient  Sage  197 

As  we  /  our  wail  at  being  bom.  The  Ring  465 

A  name  that  earth  will  not  /  To  Ulysses  27 

but  thou  forgive,  F  it.  Death  of  (Enone  44 

Wgetfal    F  how  my  rich  proemion  makes  Thy  glory  fly  Lucretius  70 

F  of  Maud  and  me,  Maud  I  xxi  4 

F  of  his  promise  to  the  King,  Marr.  of  Geraint  50 

F  of  the  falcon  and  the  hunt,  „             51 
F  of  the  tilt  and  tournament,  F  of  his  glory  and 

his  name,  F  of  his  princedom  and  its  cares.  „             52 

•  The  sound  of  that  /  shore  In  Mem.  xxxv  14 
dreaming  of  her  love  For  Lancelot,  and  /  of 

the  hunt ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  159 

F  of  their  troth  and  fealty,  Guinevere  442 
/  of  the  man,  Whose  crime  had  half  unpeopled 

lUon,  Death  of  (Enone  60 

Vorgetfulness    falling  into  Lot's  / 1  know  not  thee,  Gareth  and  L.  96 

And  this  /  was  hateful  to  her.  Marr.  of  Geraint  55 

Forget-me-not    I  found  the  blue  F-m-n.  Miller's  D.  202 

f-m-n's  That  grow  for  happy  lovers.  The  Brook  172 

Fo^etteth    The  place  he  knew/  him.'  Two  Voices  264 

Forgetting    F  how  to  render  beautiful  Her  countenance       Lover's  Tale  i  96 

0  the  night,  Where  there's  no  /.  Forlorn  78 
Forgive    Us,  0  Just  and  Good,  F,  Poland  12 

1  have  been  wild  and  wayward,  but  you'U  /  me 
now ;  You'll  kiss  me,  my  own  mother,  and  / 
me  ere  I  go ;  May  Queen  N,  Y's.  E.  33 


May  God  /  me ! — I  have  been  to  blame. 
And  easily  f's  it  as  his  own, 
'  Love,  /  him : '  but  he  did  not  speak ; 
'  F !     How  many  will  say, '/,' 
neither  God  nor  man  can  well  /, 
Before  you  prove  him,  rogue,  and  proved,  /. 
We  must  f  the  dead.' 

/  him,  dear,  And  I  shall  sleep  the  sounder ! ' 
I  do  /  him ! '     '  Thanks,  my  love,' 
F  me,  I  waste  my  heart  in  sighs : 
F  what  seem'd  my  sin  in  me ; 
F  my  grief  for  one  removed, 
F  these  wild  and  wandering  cries, 
F  them  where  they  fail  in  truth, 
hearts  that  know  not  how  to/: 
Or  to  say  '  F  the  wrong,' 
F  me ;  mine  was  jealousy  in  love.' 
I  /  thee,  as  Etemal  God  F's : 
Kiss  him,  and  then  F  him. 
Are  slower  to  /  than  human  kings. 
All  his  virtues — I  /  them — 
For  you  /  me,  you  are  sure  of  that — 
but  thou  /,  Forget  it. 
Airgiven    not  easily  /  Are  those,  who  setting 
Say  one  soft  word  and  let  me  part  /.' 
Caress  her !  let  her  feel  herself  / 
She  with  a  face,  bright  as  for  sin  /, 

Eass  on,  my  Queen,  /.' 
lessed  be  the  King,  who  hath  /  My  wickedness 

'  Yea,  little  maid,  for  am  /  not  /? ' 

And  has  he  not  /  me  yet, 

trust  myself  /  by  the  God  to  whom  I  kneel. 

Reflected,  sends  a  light  on  the  /. 
Forgiveness    /  seem  no  more :  /  want  /  too : 

we  embrace  you  yet  once  more  With  all  /, 

thro'  this  ring  Had  sent  his  cry  for  her  /, 

Could  kneel  for  your  /. 

Human  /  touches  heaven,  and  thence — 
Forgiving    I  had  set  my  heart  on  your  /  him 
Forgot    For  is  not  our  first  year  /? 

having  seen,  /?    The  common  mouth, 


Dora  161 

Aylmer's  Field  401 

Sea  Dreams  45 

60 

63 

„        171 

»        270 

311 

316 

Princess  vii  358 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  33 

37 

41 

43 

Maud  II  i  44 

„       iv  86 

Lancelot  and  E.  1351 

Guinevere  544 

Lover's  Tale  iv  175 

Tiresias  10 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  44 

Romney's  R.  160 

Death  of  (Enone  43 

Gardener's  D.  247 

Princess  vi  219 

Merlin  and  V.  381 

Lancelot  and  E.  1102 

1353 

Guinevere  634 

665 

Hapfy  6 

„      86 

Romney's  R.  161 

Princess  vi  290 

295 

The  Ring  233 

Romney's  R.  26 

„        159 

Sea  Dreams  269 

Two  Voices  368 

Gardener's  D.  55 


Forgot  (continued)    The  steer  /  to  graze.  Gardener's  D.  85 

Philip  sitting  at  her  side  /  Her  presence,  Enoch  Arden  384 

might  be  May  or  April,  he  /,  The  Brook  151 

Sir  Aylmer  half  /  his  lazy  smile  Aylm^'s  Fidd  197 

And  I  /  the  clouded  Forth,  The  Daisy  101 

F  his  weakness  in  thy  sight.  In  Mem.  ex  4 

Nor  yet  /  her  practice  in  her  fright,  Merlin  and  V.  947 

F  to  drink  to  Lancelot  and  the  Queen,  Lancelot  and  E.  737 

And  the  sick  man  /  her  simple  blush,  ,,            864 

so  /  herself  A  moment,  and  her  cares ;  Last  Tournament  25 

when  their  faces  are  /  in  the  land —  Lover's  Tale  i  759 

that  I  might  ha'  /  him  somehow —  First  Quarrel  37 

The  warrior  hath  /  his  arms.  Ancient  Sage  138 

But  I  clean  /  tha,  my  lad,  Owd  Rod  53 

An' I'd  clear/,  little  Dicky,  „         64 

Forgotten    (See  also  Half-forgotten,  Long-forgotten) 

To  live  /,  and  love  forlorn.'  (repeat)  Mariana  in  the  S.  24,  84,  96 

I  sleep  /,  I  wake  forlorn.'  „                         36 

Walks  /,  and  is  forlorn.'  „                         48 

Live  /  and  die  forlorn.'  (repeat)  „                   60,  72 

not  to  be  / — not  at  once — Not  all  /.  Love  and  Duty  91 

I  meant  ?    I  have  /  what  I  meant :  Lucretius  122 

F,  rusting  on  his  iron  hills,  Princess  v  146 

And  doing  battle  with  /  ghosts,  „        480 

'  I  had  /  all  in  my  strong  joy  To  see  thee —  Last  Tournament  582 

My  God,  thou  hast  /  me  in  my  death :  Pass,  of  Arthur  27 

Where  fragments  of  /  peoples  dwelt,  „              84 

Ahe  you  sleeping  ?  have  you  /?  The  Flight  1 

Ev'n  her  grandsire's  fifty  half  /.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  41 
She  fear'd  I  had  /  her,  and  I  ask'd  About  my  Mother,        The  Ring  102 

I  had  /  it  was  your  birthday,  child —  „        378 
/  mine  own  rhyme  By  mine  own  self.  As  I  shall 

be  /  by  old  Time,  To  Mary  Boyle  21 

Like  glimpses  of  /  dreams —  Two  Voices  381 

wasting  his  /  heart,  Aylmer's  Field  689 

The  bowlings  from  /  fields ;  In  Mem.  xli  16 

And  fling  me  deep  in  that  /  mere,  Lancelot  and  E.  1426 

Had  suck'd  the  fire  of  some  /  sun.  Lover's  Tale  iv  194 

who  dipt  In  some  /  book  of  mine  To  E.  Fitzgerald  47 

Fork    (See  also  Lightning-fork)    Who,  God-Uke, 

grasps  the  triple  f's,  Of  old  sat  Freedom  15 

Ruin'd  trunks  on  wither'd  /  's,  Vision  of  Sin  93 

I  never  saw  so  fierce  a  / —  Lucretius  28 

A  double  hill  ran  up  his  furrowy  f's  Princess  Hi  174 

Two  f's  are  fixt  into  the  meadow  groimd,  Marr.  of  Geraint  482 

there  they  flxt  the/ 's  into  the  groxmd,  „              548 

To  me  thiis  narrow  grizzled  /  of  thine  Merlin  and  V.  59 

And  dazzled  by  the  Uvid-flickering  /,  „          941 

Forked    things  that  are  /,  and  horned,  and  soft.  The  Mermaid  53 

/  Of  the  near  storm,  and  aiming  at  his  head,  Aylmer's  Field  726 

Forlorn    In  sleep  she  seem'd  to  walk  /,  Mariana  30 
To  Uve  forgotten,  and  love  /.'  (repeat)         Mariana  in  the  S.  24,  84,  96 

I  sleep  forgotten,  I  wake  /.'  „                         36 

Walks  forgotten,  and  is  /.  „                         48 

Live  forgotten  and  die  /.'  (repeat)  „                   60, 72 

I  am  too  /,  Too  shaken :  Supp.  Confessions  135 

Over  the  dark  dewy  earth  /,  Ode  to  Memory  69 

in  a  lonely  grove  He  set  up  his  /  pipes,  Amphion  22 

I  ceased,  and  sat  as  one  /.  Two  Voices  400 

Mournful  (Enone,  wandering  /  Of  Paris,  (Enone  16 

Yet  we  will  not  die  /.'  Vision  of  Sin  206 

'  Favour  from  one  so  sad  and  so  /  Enoch  Arden  287 

A  tonsured  head  in  middle  age  /,  The  Brook  200 

The  little  village  looks/;  In  Mem.  Ix  9 

I  walk  as  ere  I  walk'd  /,  „    Ixviii  5 

purple-frosty  bank  Of  vapour,  leaving  night/.  „       cvii  4 

Who  am  no  more  so  all  /,  Maud  I  xviii  32 

speak  of  the  mother  she  loved  As  one  scarce  less  /,  „        xix  28 

The  tiny  cell  is  /,  „      //  U  13 

thus  in  grief  to  wander  forth  /;  The  Flight  85 

may  pass  when  earth  is  manless  and/,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  206 

tho',  in  this  lean  age  /,  Epilogue  71 

And  fled  by  msnj  a  waste,  /  of  man,  Demeter  and  P.  74 

Where  noble  Ulnc  dwells  /,  Happy  10 

To  wait  on  one  so  broken,  so  /?  Romney's  R.  17 


Form 


236 


Fortune 


Fonn  (s)     This  excellence  and  solid  /  Of  constant 
beauty. 
(Tho'  all  her  fairest /'«  are  types  of  thee, 
And  airy/'s  of  flitting  change, 
converse  with  all/'s  Of  the  many-sided  mind, 
And  other  than  his  /  of  creed, 
rites  and/'s  before  his  burning  eyes  Melted 
Fretteth  thine  enshrouded  /. 
The  /,  the  /  alone  is  eloquent ! 
'  Is  this  the  /,'  she  made  her  moan, 
The  reflex  of  a  beauteous  /, 
o'er  her  rounded  /  Between  the  shadows 
I  sit  as  God  holding  no  /  of  creed, 
f's  that  pass'd  at  windows  and  on  roofs 
That  her  fair  /  may  stand  and  shine, 
Matiu«s  the  individual  /. 
Phantoms  of  other /'s  of  rule, 
all  the  decks  were  dense  with  stately/ '5 
play  with  flying/ '5  and  images, 
fair  new  f's.  That  float  about  the  threshold 
Cursed  be  the  sickly /'s  that  err 
And  loosely  settled  into  /. 
On  either  side  her  tranced  /  Forth  streaming 
ever  dwells  A  perfect  /  in  perfect  rest. 
But  blessed  /  's  in  whistUi^  storms 
dusty  crypt  Of  darken'd  f's  and  faces. 
And  slowly  quickening  into  lower/ '5; 
All  beauty  compass'd  in  a  female  /, 
since  to  look  on  noble  f's  Makes  noble 
There  sat  along  the  f's,  like  morning  doves 
Of  faded  /  and  haughtiest  lineaments, 
then  a  loftier  /  Than  female, 
I  saw  the  f's:  I  knew  not  where  I  was : 
Will  clear  away  the  parasitic /'s 
And  other  f's  of  life  than  ours, 
A  hollow  /  with  empty  hands.' 
A  late-lost  /  that  sleep  reveals, 
But  knows  no  more  of  transient  / 
Nor  cares  to  fix  itself  to  /, 
Her  faith  thro'  /  is  pure  as  thine. 
Eternal  /  shall  still  divide  The  eternal  soul 
Where  thy  first  /  was  made  a  man ; 
print  The  same  sweet  f's  in  either  mind. 
For  changes  wrought  on  /  and  face ; 
O  sacred  essence,  other  /, 
And  seem  to  lift  the  /,  and  glow 
'  And  merge,'  he  said,  '  in  /  and  gloss 
wear  the  /  by  which  I  know  Thy  spirit 
Come,  beauteous  in  thine  after  /, 
frame  In  matter-moulded /'s  of  speech. 
For  who  would  keep  an  ancient  / 
And  ancient  /'s  of  party  strife ; 
be  veil  His  want  in  f's  for  fashion's  sake, 
And  grew  to  seeming-random /'s, 
flow  From  /  to  /,  and  nothing  stands ; 
tho'  faith  and  /  Be  sunder'd  in  the  night 
these  damp  walls,  and  taken  but  the  /. 
Conjecture  of  the  plumage  and  the  /; 
And  dreamt  herseU  was  such  a  faded  / 
all  her  /  shone  forth  with  sudden  light 

0  imperial-moulded  /, 

all  the  decks  were  dense  with  stately /'s, 

a  phantasm  of  the  /  It  should  attach  to  ? 

Mantling  her  /  halfway. 

fell  into  the  abysm  01  f's  outworn, 

very  face  and  /  of  Lionel  Flash'd  thro'  my  eyes 

f's  which  ever  stood  Within  the  magic  cirque 

pencil's  naked  f's  Colour  and  life: 

Grew  after  marriage  to  full  height  and  /? 

face  and  /  are  hers  and  mine  in  one, 

1  clung  to  the  sinking  /, 

and  itself  For  ever  changing  /, 

And  blurr'd  in  colour  and  f, 

The  /  of  Muriel  faded,  and  the  face  Of  Miriam 

concentrate  into  /  And  colour  all  you  are, 


Supp.  Confessions  149 

Isabel  39 

Madeline  7 

Ode  to  Memory  115 

A  Character  29 

The  Poet  39 

A  Dirge  10 

The  form,  ike  form  1 

Mariana  in  the  S.  33 

Miller's  D.  77 

(Enone  180 

Palace  of  Art  211 

D.  ofF.  Women  23 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  21 

Love  thou  thy  land  40 

59 

M.  d' Arthur  196 

Gardener's  D.  60 

Golden  Year  15 

Locksley  Hall  61 

Day-Dm.,  Pro.  12 

„    Sleep  B.  5 

24 

Sir  Galahad  59 

WiU  Water.  184 

Vision  of  Sin  210 

Princess  ii  34 

86 

102 

448 

„      iv  215 

„    vii  133 

„  269 

Ode  on  Well.  264 

In  Mem.  Hi  12 

„  xiii  2 

„  xvi  7 

„       XX xiii  4 

9 

„         xlvii  6 

„  Ixi  10 

„       Ixxix  8 

„       Ixxxii  2 

„     Ixxxv  35 

„  Ixxxvii  37 

„   Ixxxix  41 

„  xci  5 

„  15 

„         xcv  46 

„  cv  19 

,,  cvi  14 

„  cxi  6 

„     cxviii  10 

,,      ex  xiii  6 

,,      cxxvii  1 

Gareth  and  L.  1200 

Marr.  of  Geraint  333 

654 

Holy  Grail  450 

Guinevere  548 

Pass,  of  Arthur  364 

Lover's  Tale  i  646 

705 

797 

m94 

158 

180 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  171 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  13 

The  Wreck  105 

Ancient  Sage  193 

Dead  Prophet  22 

The  Ring  184 

Romney's  R.  7 


Form  (s)  (continued)    crown'd  f's  high  over  the  sacred 
fountain  ? 

all  else  F,  Ritual,  varying  with  the  tribes  of  men, 

thou  knowest  I  hold  that/'s  Are  needful: 

And  what  are  /'s  ?    Fair  garments, 

F's !  The  Spiritual  in  Nature's  market-place — 

Who  shaped  the  f's,  obey  them. 

And  is  a  living/? 
Form  (verb)     the  rainbow /'s  and  flies  on  the  land 

slowly /'s  the  firmer  mind. 

Storm,  Storm,  Riflemen  /!  (repeat) 

Riflemen,  Riflemen,  Riflemen,  /!  (repeat) 

F,  F,  Riflemen  F !  (repeat) 

F,  be  ready  to  do  or  die !    J"  in  Freedom's  name 
and  the  Queen's ! 
Formal    O  the  /  mocking  bow, 

His  /  kiss  fell  chill  as  a  flake  of  snow 

0,  I  see  thee  old  and  /, 
Formalism    they  blurt  Their  furious  f's. 
Former    And  ebb  into  a  /  life, 

remembering  His  /  talks  with  Edith, 

became  Her  /  beauty  treble ; 

Makes  /  gladness  loom  so  great  ? 

As  in  the  /  flash  of  joy, 

In  /  days  you  saw  me  favourably. 

'  Earl,  if  you  love  me  as  in  /  years, 

that  I  began  To  glance  behind  me  at  my  /  life. 

Because  his  /  madness. 

For  Evelyn  knew  not  of  my  /  suit. 
Forming    The  lucid  outline  /  round  thee  ; 

Be  yet  but  yolk,  and  /  in  the  shell  ? 
Formless     I  am  void,  Dark,  /,  utterly  destroyed. 

A  vapour  heavy,  hueless,  /,  cold. 

And  wrapt  thee  /  in  the  fold, 

till  all  his  heart  was  cold  With  /  fear ; 
Forrards  (forwards)    if  tha'  wants  to  git  /  a  bit, 
Forsake    Ah  yet,  tho'  all  the  world  /, 

what  a  heart  was  mine  to  /  her 

leech  /  the  dying  bed  for  terror 
Forsaken    0  my  /  heart,  with  thee  And  this  poor  flower 

We  saw  far  off  an  old  /  house, 
Forsakii^    See !  our  friends  are  all  / 
Forsworn    I  cannot  bear  to  dream  you  so  /: 

I  swore  to  the  great  King,  and  am  /. 

I  swear  and  swear  /  To  love  him  most, 
Fort     (See  also  Hill-fort)     Welcome  her,  thunders  of 
/  and  of  fleet ! 

Built  that  new  /  to  overawe  my  friends. 
Forth    And  I  forgot  the  clouded  F, 
Forthgazing    F  on  the  waste  and  open  sea. 
Fortitude    stately  flower  of  female  /, 
Fortress    The  /,  and  the  mountain  ridge, 

The  /  crashes  from  on  high, 

deathful-grinning  mouths  of  the  /, 

White  from  the  mason's  hand,  a  /  rose ; 

And  onward  to  the  /  rode  the  three. 

Ride  into  that  new  /  by  your  town, 

be  thy  heart  a  /  to  maintain  The  day 

My  prison,  not  my  /,  fall  away ! 
Fortmiate  You,  the  Mighty,  the  F, 
Fortnne    I  rode  sublime  On  F's  neck : 

Tho'  /  clip  my  wings,  I  will  not  cramp  my  heart, 

I  am  but  as  my  f's  are : 

'  Drink  to  F,  drink  to  Chance, 

mark  me!  for  your/'s  are  to  make. 

Name,  /  too :  the  world  should  ring  of  him 

Thro'  which  a  few,  by  wit  or  /  led, 

besides  Their  slender  household  /  's 

ally  Your/'s,  justlier  balanced, 

affluent  F  emptied  all  her  horn. 

Becomes  on  F's  crowning  slope. 

My  f's  all  as  fair  as  hers  who  lay 

loved  her  in  a  state  Of  broken  f's, 

song  that  Enid  sang  was  one  Of  F  and  her  wheel, 

'  Turn,  F,  turn  thy  wheel  and  lower  the  proud ; 


Parnassus  I 

Akbar's  Dream  124 

126 

130 

„  134 

143 

Mechanophilus  16 

Sea-Fairies  25 

In  Mem.  xviii  18 

Riflemen  form  !  5,  19 

„  7,  14,  21,  28 

12,  26 

22 

"The  Flight  29 

The  Wreck  32 

Locksley  Hall  93 

Akbar's  Dream  57 

Sonnet,  To 2 

Aylmer's  Field  457 

Princess  vii  25 

In  Mem.  xxiv  10 

„        cxxii  15 

Geraint  and  E.  315 

„  355 

863 

Holy  Grail  649 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  205 

Tithonus  53 

Ancient  Sage  130 

Supp.  Confessions  122 

Vision  of  Sin  53 

In  Mem.  xxii  15 

Pass,  of  Arthur  98 

Church-warden,  etc.  49 

Will  Water.  49 

The  Wreck  95 

Happy  98 

In  Mem.  viii  18 

The  Ring  155 

All  Things  will  Die  18 

Pelleas  and  E.  300 

Last  Tournament  661 

The  Flight  49 

W.  to  Alexandra  6 

Marr.  of  Geraint  460 

The  Daisy  101 

Lover's  Tale  ii  177 

Isabel  11 

In  Mem.  Ixxi  14 

„     cxxvii  14 

Maud  III  vi  52 

Marr.  of  Geraint  244 

251 

407 

To  Duke  of  Argyll  5 

Doubt  and  Prayer  12 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  55 

D.  ofF.  Women  142 

Will  Water.  50 

Lady  Clare  70 

Vision  of  Sin  191 

Aylmer's  Field  300 

395 

438 

Sea  Dreams  9 

Princess  ii  66 

Ode  on  Well.  197 

In  Mem.  Ixiv  14 

Gareth  and  L.  903 

Marr.  of  Geraint  13 

346 

34 


ll 


Fortune 


237 


Found 


"^l 


Fortune  (continued)    '  Turn,  F,  turn  thy  wheel  with 

smile  or  frown ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  350 

since  our  /  slipt  from  sun  to  shade,  „            714 

that  better  fits  Our  mended  f's  „            718 

Give  me  good  /,  I  will  strike  him  dead,  Lancdot  and  E.  1071 

You  count  the  father  of  your  /,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  28 

his  followers,  all  Flower  into  / —  Columbus  167 
Forty    {See  also  Foorty)    That  numbers  /  cubits 

from  the  soil.  St.  S.  Stylites  91 

And  /  blest  one  bless  him,  Aylmer's  Field  372 

for  /  years  A  hermit,  who  had  pray'd,  Lancelot  and  E.  402 

Divil  a  Danny  was  there,  yer  Honour,  for  /  year,  Tomorrow  30 

Gone  with  whom  for  /  years  my  life  in  golden 

sequence  ran,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  47 

Ftooin    Titanic  shapes,  they  cramm'd  The  /.  Princess  vii  125 

Now  thy  F  roars  no  longer,  To  Virgil  29 

The  Baths,  the  F  gabbled  of  his  death,  St.  Telemachus  74 

Focward    {See  also  Forrards)    with  increasing  might 

doth  /  flee  Mine  be  the  strength  5 

F,  /  let  us  range,  Locksley  Rail  181 

'  F,  the  Light  Brigade !  (repeat)  Light  Brigade  5,  9 

She  sets  her  /  countenance  In  Mem.  cxiv  6 

To  right  ?  to  left  ?  straight  /?  PeUeas  and  E.  67 

Then  bounded  /  to  the  castle  walls,  „           363 

Gone  the  cry  of  '  F,  F,'  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  73 

'  F '  rang  the  voices  then,  „                77 

Let  us  hush  the  cry  ot'F'  „                78 

/ — naked — let  them  stare.  „              142 

F,  f,  ay  and  backward,  „              146 

F,  backward,  backward,  /,  „              193 

Nay,  your  pardon,  cry  your  '/,*  „              225 
F  then,  but  still  remember  how  the  course  of  Time 

will  swerve,  „              235 

F  far  and  far  from  here  is  all  the  hope  of  eighty  years.        „              254 

F,  till  you  see  the  highest  Human  Nature  is  divine.  „              276 

F,  let  the  stormy  moment  fly  and  mingle  with  the  Past.     „  279 

moving  quickly  /  till  the  heat  Smote  on  her  brow.     Death  of  (Enone  97 

F  to  the  starry  track  Glimmering  up  Silent  Voices  8 

Forward-creeping    f-c  tides  Began  to  foam.  In  Mem.  ciii  37 

Forward-flowing    The  /-/  tide  of  time ;  Arabian  Nights  4 

Fossil    lark  and  leveret  lay,  Like  f's  of  the  rock,  Audley  Court  25 

Foster    guard  and  /  her  for  evermore.  Guinevere  592 

Foster'd    F  the  callow  eaglet —  (Enone  212 

Which  once  she  /  up  with  care ;  In  Mem.  viii  16 

because  that  /  at  thy  court  I  savour  of  thy — virtues  ?  Merlin  and  V.  38 

that  was  Arthur ;  and  they  /  him  Guinevere  295 

Old  poets  /  under  friendlier  skies.  Poets  and  their  B.  1 

Poster-mother    mock  their  f-m  on  four  feet,  Com.  of  Arthur  31 

Foster-sister    She  was  my  f-s :  Lover's  Tale  i  233 

Vooght    {See  also  Fowt)    And  in  thy  spirit  with 

thee  / —  England  and  Amer.  9 

Annie  /  against  his  will :  Enoch  Arden  1 58 

His  comrades  having  /  their  last  below,  Aylmer's  Field  227 

F  with  what  seem'd  my  own  uncharity;  Sea  Dreams  73 

with  the  PalmjT^ne  That  /  Aurelian,  Princess  ii  84 

And  nursed  by  those  for  whom  you  /,  i.       ''i  95 

I  and  mine  have  /  Your  battle :  „         224 

And  the  feet  of  those  he  /  for.  Ode  on  Well.  11 

those  great  men  who  /,  and  kept  it  ours.  „         158 

Than  when  he  /  at  Waterloo,  „        257 

have  we  /  for  Freedom  from  our  prime.  Third  of  Feb.  23 

Were  those  your  sires  who  /  at  Lewes  ?  „            33 

They  that  had  /  so  well  Came  thro'  the  jaws  Light  Brigade  45 

may  be  met  and  /  with  outright.  Grandmother  31 

for  the  babe  had  /  for  his  life.  „           64 

He  /  his  doubts  and  gather'd  strength,  In  Mem.  xcvi  13 

Like  Paul  with  beasts,  I  /  with  Death  ;  „           cxx  4 
Aurelius  lived  and  /  and  died.  And  after  him  King 

Uther/and  died.  Com.  of  Arthur  13 

F,  and  in  twelve  great  battles  overcame  „           518 

He  /  against  him  in  the  Barons'  war,  Gareth  and  L.  77 

Lot  and  many  another  rose  and  /  Against  thee,  „          354 

but  he  that  /  no  more,  As  being  all  bone-batter'd  „        1049 

thy  foul  sayings  /  for  me :  „        1180 

twice  they  /,  and  twice  they  breathed,  Marr.  of  Geraint  567 


Fought  {continued)    f  Hard  with  himself,  and  seem'd 

at  length  in  peace, 
/  in  her  name,  Sware  by  her — 
two  brothers,  one  a  king,  had  met  And  / 
if  I  went  and  if  If  and  won  it 
'  you  have  /.     O  tell  us — ^for  we  live  apart — 
it  seem'd  half -miracle  To  those  he  /  with, — 
name  Of  greatest  knight  ?  I  /  for  it, 
'  Have  ye  /  ? '    She  Eisk'd  of  Lancelot, 
whatever  knight  of  thine  I  /  And  tumbled. 
F  in  her  father's  battles  ?  wounded  there  ? 
Isolt  ?— I  /  his  battles,  for  Isolt ! 
brake  the  petty  kings,  and  /  with  Rome, 
Nor  ever  yet  had  Arthur  /  a  fight  Like  this 
fell  Confusion,  since  he  saw  not  whom  he  /. 
shiver'd  brands  that  once  had  /  with  Rome, 
He  /  the  boys  that  were  rude, 
and  they  /  us  hand  to  hand. 
And  we  had  not  /  them  in  vain, 
'  We  have  /  such  a  fight  for  a  day  and  a  night  As 

may  never  be  /  again ! 
'  I  have  /  for  Queen  and  Faith 
Each  of  us  /  as  if  hope  for  the  garrison 
Thanks  to  the  kindly  dark  faces  who  /  with  us, 

faithful  and  few,  F  with  the  bravest  among  us, 
and  /  till  I  sunder'd  the  fray, 
F  for  their  lives  in  the  narrow  gap 


Balin  and  Balan  238 

Merlin  and  V.  13 

Lancelot  and  E.  40 

„     216 

283 

498 

1414 

Pdleas  and  E.  592 

Last  Tournament  453 

592 

604 

Pass."of  Arihur  && 

93 

99 

133 

First  Quarrd  14 

The  Revenge  52 

74 

83 

101 

Def.  of  Lucknow  48 

70 

V.  of  Maddwne  69 

Heavy  Brigade  23 

Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  21 


Britain  /  her  sons  of  yore — 

He  wildly  /  a  rival  suitor,  him  The  causer  of 

that  scandal,  /  and  fell ;  The  Ring  214 

for  he  /  Thy  fight  for  Thee,  Happy  15 

Foughten    the  lords  Have  /  like  wild  beasts  Com.  of  Arthur  226 

had  I  / — well — In  those  fierce  wars,  Balin  and  Balan  176 

the  /  field,  what  else,  at  once  Decides  it.  Princess  v  297 

Then  quickly  from  the  /  field  he  sent  Com.  of  Arthur  135 

When  have  I  stinted  stroke  in  /  field  ?      _  Holy  Grail  860 

Foul  (adj.)     keep  where  you  are :  you  are  /  with  sin ;  Poet's  Mind  36 

Kill  the  /  thief,  and  wreak  me  for  my  son.'  Gareth  and  L.  363 

But  if  their  talk  were  /,  „          504 

But  truly  /  are  better,  „          947 

thy  /  sayings  fought  for  me :  „        1180 

F  are  their  lives ;  /  are  their  lips ;  Balin  and  Balan  616 

Of  that  /  bird  of  rapine  whose  whole  prey  Merlin  and  V.  728 

as  false  and  /  As  the  poach'd  filth  „            797 

what  is  fair  without  Is  often  as  /  within.'  Dead  Prophet  68 

You  say  your  body  is  so  / —              _  Happy  25 

Your  body  is  not/  to  me,  and  body  is/  at  best.  „      28 

F\  fl  the  word  was  yours  not  mine,  „      41 

'  I  So  /  a  traitor  to  myself  and  her,  Aylmer's  Field  319 

nature  crost  Was  mother  of  the  /  adulteries  „            376 

Ring  out  old  shapes  of  /  disease ;  In  Mem.  cvi  25 
housed  In  her  /  den,  there  at  their  meat  would 

growl,  Com.  of  Arthur  30 

As  one  that  let  /  wrong  stagnate  and  be,  Geraint  and  E.  891 

And  drawing  /  ensample  from  fair  names,  Guinevere  490 

sucking  The  /  steam  of  the  grave  to  thicken  by  it.       Lover's  Tale  i  649 

I'd  sooner  fold  an  icy  corpse  dead  of  some  /  disease  :  The  Flight  54 

Fright  and  /  dissembling,  Forlorn  32 

strip  your  own  /  passions  bare ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  141 

Foul  (s)    frequent  interchange  of  /  and  fair,  Enoch  Arden  533 

Foul'd     Experience,  in  her  kind  Hath  /  me —  Last  Tournament  318 

Foulest    Or  the  /  sewer  of  the  town —  Dead  Prophet  48 

Foul-flesh'd    as  one  That  smells  a  /-/  agaric  in  the  holt,     Gareth  and  L.  747 


Foully    phantom  husks  of  something  /  done, 

Foulness    canst  endure  To  mouth  so  huge  a  / — 
This  fellow  hath  wrought  some  / 
And  of  the  horrid  /  that  he  wrought. 
To  all  the  /  that  they  work. 

Foun'    for  Danny  was  not  to  be  /, 

they  /  Dhrownded  in  black  bog-wather 
they  laid  this  body  they  /  an  the  grass 

Found  (find)    {See  also  Foun',  Fun)    compare  All 
creeds  till  we  have  /  the  one, 
Down  she  came  and  /  a  boat 
'  I  /  him  when  my  years  were  few ; 


Lu/^etius  160 

Balin  and  Balan  379 

565 

Merlin  and  V.  748 

785 

Tomorrow  28 

61 

73 

Swpp.  Confessions  176 

L.  ofShalottivG 

Two  Voices  271 


Found 


238 


Found 


Found  (find)  {continued)    *  It  may  be  that  no  life  is  /,  Two  Voices  346 

Have  I  not  /  a  happy  earth  ?  Miller's  D.  25 

I  /  the  blue  Forget-me-not.  „        202 

The  comfort,  I  have  /  in  thee :  „        234 

'  I  have  /  A  new  land,  but  I  die.'  Palace  of  Art  283 
The  Roman  soldier  /  Me  lying  dead,                         D.  of  F.  Women  161 

I  woke,  and  /  him  settled  down  The  Epic  17 

would  have  spoken,  but  he  /  not  words,  M.  d' Arthur  172 
reach'd  The  wicket-gate,  and  /  her  standing  there.       Gardener's  D.  213 

I  /  it  in  a  volume,  all  of  songs,  Audley  Court  57 
They /you  out  ?    James.     Not  they.                      Walk,  to  the  Mail  101 

Bear  witness,  if  I  could  have  /  a  way  St.  8.  Stylites  55 

I  /  him  garrulously  given,  Talking  Oak  23 

And  /,  and  kiss'd  the  name  she  /,  „          159 

'  She  had  not  /  me  so  remiss ;  „          193 

Of  love  that  never  /  his  earthly  close,  Love  and  Duty  1 

Sin  itself  be  /  The  cloudy  porch  oft  opening  „             8 

And  /  him  in  Llanberis :  Golden  Year  5 

and  /  him,  where  he  strode  About  the  hall,  Godiva  16 

there  she  /  her  palfrey  trapt  In  piu^le  „      51 

I  /  My  spirits  in  the  golden  age.  To  E.  L.  11 

Blanch'd  with  his  mill,  they  /;  Enoch  Arden  367 

The  two  remaining  /  a  fallen  stem ;  „            567 

Lest  he  should  swoon  and  tumble  and  be  /,  „           774 

He  /  the  bailiff  riding  by  the  farm,  The  Brook  153 

/  the  sun  of  sweet  content  Re-risen  „          168 

F  lying  with  his  urns  and  ornaments,  Aylmer's  Field  4 

Slipt  into  ashes,  and  was  /  no  more.  „            6 

written  as  she  /  Or  made  occasion,  „        477 

F  for  himself  a  bitter  treasure-trove ;  „        515 

/  the  girl  And  flung  her  down  upon  a  couch  „        573 

F  a  dead  man,  a  letter  edged  with  death  „        595 

in  moving  on  I  /  Only  the  landward  exit  Sea  Dreams  95 

I  /  a  hard  friend  in  his  loose  accoimts,  „        162 

/  (for  it  was  close  beside)  „        288 

LuciLiA,  wedded  to  Lucretius,  /  Her  master  cold ;  Lucretius  1 

and  /  a  witch  Who  brew'd  the  philtre  „      15 

F  a  still  place,  and  pluck'd  her  likeness  Princess  i  92 

in  the  imperial  palace  /  the  king.  „         113 

/  her  there  At  point  to  move,  „   Hi  130 

I  have  not/ among  them  all  One  anatomic'  „        306 

I  fight  with  iron  laws,  in  the  end  F  golden :  „      iv  76 

Nor  /  my  friends ;  but  push'd  alone  on  foot  „        196 

/  at  length  The  garden  portals.  „        199 

/  that  you  had  gone,  Ridd'n  to  the  hills,  „         342 

but  in  you  /  /  My  boyish  dream  involved  „        449 

F  the  gray  kings  at  parle :  „      v  114 

/  He  thrice  had  sent  a  herald  to  the  gates,  „        331 

/  fair  peace  once  more  among  the  sick.  „     vii  44 

she  /  a  small  Sweet  Idyl,  and  once  more,  „        190 

I  /,  tho'  crush'd  to  hard  and  dry,  The  Daisy  97 

They  /  the  mother  sitting  still ;  The  Victim  31 
peak,  the  star  Pass,  and  are  /  no  more.                       Voice  and  the  P.  28 

Thy  creature,  whom  I  /  so  fair.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  38 

And  /  thee  lying  in  the  port ;  „              xiv  4 

But  /  him  all  in  all  the  same,  „                  19 

I  /  a  wood  with  thomv  boughs :  „             Ixix  6 

I  /  an  angel  of  the  night ;  „                  14 

My  Arthur  /  your  shadows  fair,  „        Ixxxix  6 

I  /  Him  not  in  world  or  sim,  „          cxxiv  5 

in  the  ghastly  pit  long  since  a  body  was  /,  Maud  lib 

as  If  when  her  carriage  past,  „        ii  3 

and  /  The  shining  daffodil  dead,  „    Hi  13 

What,  has  he  /  my  jewel  out  ?  „      a;  23 

my  life  has  /  What  some  have  /  so  sweet ;  „       ari  3 

in  this  stormy  gulf  have  /  a  pearl  „  xviii  42 

This  garden-rose  that  I  /,  „     xxi  3 
and  striking  /  his  doom.                                               Com.  of  Arthur  325 

He  /  me  first  when  yet  a  little  maid :  „             339 

F  her  son's  will  unwaveringly  one,  Gareth  and  L.  141 

kings  we  /,  ye  know  we  stay'd  their  hands  „            421 

On  Caer-Eryri's  highest  /  the  King,  A  naked  babe,  „            500 

he  sought  The  King  alone,  and /,  and  told  him  „            540 

he  /  the  grass  within  his  hands  „          1225 

when  they  sought  and  /,  Sir  Gareth  drank  and  ate,  „          1279 


Found  (find)  (continued)    had  /  and  loved  her  in  a  state 


Of  broken  fortunes, 
being  /,  Then  will  I  fight  him, 
F  every  hostel  full, 

He  /  an  ancient  dame  in  dim  brocade ; 
/  Half  disarray'd  as  to  her  rest,  the  girl ; 
She  /  no  rest,  and  ever  f aU'd  to  draw 
The  Prince  had  /  her  in  her  ancient  home ; 
He  /  the  sack  and  plunder  of  our  house 
/  And  took  it,  and  array'd  herself  therein. 
And  when  he  /  all  empty,  was  amazed ; 
jP  Enid  with  the  corner  of  his  eye, 
issuing  arm'd  he  /  the  host  and  cried, 
/  his  own  dear  bride  propping  his  head, 
/  A  damsel  drooping  in  a  comer  of  it. 
'  In  this  poor  gown  my  dear  lord  /  me  first, 
moving  out  they  /  the  stately  horse, 
I  /,  Instead  of  scornful  pity  or  pure  scorn. 
He  look'd  and  /  them  wanting ; 
The  Lost  one  F  was  greeted  as  in  Heaven 
they  brought  report '  we  hardly  /, 
in  those  deep  woods  we  /  A  knight 
/  the  greetings  both  of  knight  and  King 
/  His  charger,  mounted  on  him  and  away, 
they  /  the  world.  Staring  wild-wide ; 
/  a  little  boat,  and  stept  into  it ; 
my  Master,  have  ye  /  your  voice  ? 
/  a  fair  young  squire  who  sat  alone, 
being  /  take  heed  of  Vivien, 
they  / — his  foragers  for  charms — 
and  on  returning  /  Not  two  but  three  ? 
He  brought,  not  /  it  therefore : 
/  a  door.  And  darkling  felt  the  sculptured  ornament 
had  she  /  a  dagger  there  (For  in  a  wink  the  false  love 

turns  to  hate)  She  would  have  stabb'd  him;  but 

she  /  it  not : 
should  have  /  in  him  a  greater  heart. 
/  a  glen,  gray  boulder  and  black  tarn. 
And  issuing  /  the  Lord  of  Astolat 
/  it  true,  and  answer'd,  '  True,  my  child. 
Until  they  /  the  clear-faced  King, 
till  they  /  The  new  design  wherein  they  lost 
Where  could  be  /  face  daintier  ? 
Lest  I  be  /  as  faithless  in  the  quest 
And  /  no  ease  in  turning  or  in  rest ; 
He  /  her  in  among  the  garden  yews. 
Until  we  /  the  palace  of  the  King. 
Stood,  till  I  /  a  voice  and  sware  a  vow. 
Until  I  /  and  saw  it,  as  the  nun  My  sister  saw  it ; 
lifting  up  mine  eyes,  I  /  myself  Alone, 
I  rode  on  and  /  a  mighty  hill, 
but  /  at  top  No  man,  nor  any  voice, 
I  /  Only  one  man  of  an  exceeding  age. 
where  the  vale  Was  lowest,  /  a  chapel, 
at  the  base  we  /  On  either  hand, 
/  a  people  there  among  their  crags, 
/  ye  all  your  knights  return'd. 
But  /  a  silk  pavilion  in  a  field. 
Other  than  when  I  /  her  in  the  woods ; 
went  on,  and  /,  Here  too,  all  hush'd  below 
Not  lift  a  hand — not,  tho'  he  /  me  thus ! 
Would  track  her  guilt  until  he  /, 
They  /  a  naked  child  upon  the  sands 
and  in  her  anguish  /  The  casement : 
warmth  and  colour  which  I  /  In  Lancelot, 
'  I  /  Him  in  the  shining  of  the  stars, 
would  have  spoken,  but  he  /  not  words ; 
we  /  The  dead  man  cast  upon  the  shore  ? 
I  /,  they  two  did  love  each  other, 
/ — All  softly  as  his  mother  broke  it 
F,  as  it  seem'd,  a  skeleton  alone, 
F  that  the  sudden  wail  his  lady  made 
/  the  dying  servant,  took  him  home, 
over  the  Solent  to  see  if  work  could  be  /; 
they  / 1  had  grown  so  stupid  and  still 


Marr.  of  Geraint  12 
220 


255 

„     363 

„     515 

531 

644 

694 

„     848 

Geraint  and  E.2\Q 

281 

407 

584 

„     610 

698 

752 

„     858 

935 

Balin  and  Balan  81 

94 

120 

342 

„  417 

„  595 

Merlin  and  V.  198 

269 

472 

529 

619 

708 

719 

733 


851 

;;       873 

Lancelot  and  E.  36 

173 

370 

432 

440 

641 

761 

901 

923 

1044 

Holy  GraU  194 

198 

375 

421 

427 

430 

442 

497 

662 

708 

745 

Pelleas  and  E.  328 

423 

Last  Tournament  528 

Guinevere  60 

„      293 

„      586 

„      647 

Pass,  of  Arthur  9 

340 

Lover's  Tale  i  294 

728 

tt>  30 

139 

149 

',  263 

First  Quarrel  44 

Eizpah  49 


I 


Found 


239 


Powt 


Found  (find)  (continued)    to  be  /  Long  after,  as 
it  seem'd, 

seen  And  lost  and  /  again, 

They  /  her  beating  the  hard  Protestant  doors. 

gratefullest  heart  I  have  /  in  a  child 

(Hath  he  been  here — not  /  me — gone 

He  would  be  /  a  heretic  to  Himself, 

the  harmless  people  whom  we  / 

You  /  some  merit  in  my  rhymes, 

who  /  Beside  the  springs  of  Dircd,  smote, 

the  fierce  beast  /  A  wiser  than  herself, 

little  one  /  me  at  sea  on  a  day, 

I  /  myself  moaning  again  '  O  child. 

We  never  had  /  Him  on  earth, 

F,  fear'd  me  dead,  and  groan'd, 

when  Edwin  /  us  there, 

burnt  at  midnight  /  at  mom. 

Shepherds,  have  I  /,  and  more  than  once, 

poet,  surely  to  be  /  When  Truth  is  /  again. 

be  /  of  angel  eyes  In  earth's  recurring  Paradise. 

now  Your  fairy  Prince  has  /  you, 

I  /  these  cousins  often  by  the  brook. 

And  /  a  corpse  and  silence, 

F  in  a  chink  of  that  old  moulder'd  floor ! ' 

laugh'd  a  little  and  /  her  two — 

I  /  her  not  in  house  Or  garden — 

F  yesterday — forgotten  mine  own  rhyme 

Wizard  Who  /  me  at  sunrise  Sleeping, 

and  the  same  who  first  had  /  Paris, 

He  had  left  his  dagger  behind  him.     I  /  it. 

She  /  my  letter  upon  him, 

I  /  The  tenderest  Christ-like  creature 
Found  (establish)    All  wild  to  /  an  University 

ere  he  /  Empire  for  life  ? 
Foundation-stone    Whereof  the  strong  f-s's  were  laid 
Founded    She  had  /;  they  must  build. 

I  Have  /  my  Round  Table  in  the  North, 

some  Order,  which  our  King  Hath  newly  /, 

Table  Round  Which  good  King  Arthur/, 

We  /  many  a  mighty  state ; 
Founder    statues,  king  or  saint,  or  /  fell ; 

on  that  /  of  our  blood. 
Founding     About  the/  of  a  Table  Round, 

knight  Of  the  great  Table— at  the  /  of  it ; 
Foundress    The  /  of  the  Babylonian  wall. 

Some  say  the  third — the  authentic  /  you. 
Fount    he  was  thrown  From  his  loud  / 

Ancient  f's  of  inspiration  well 

burst  away  In  search  of  stream  or  /, 

Who  dabbling  in  the  /  of  Active  tears, 

Not  past  the  living  /  of  pity  in  Heaven. 

There  while  we  stood  beside  the  /, 

The  very  source  and  /  of  Day 

deer,  the  dews,  the  fern,  the  f's,  the  lawns ; 
Fountain  (adj.)    Harder  and  drier  than  a  /  bed  In 

summer : 
Fountain  (s)    {See  also  Foam-fountains)    Life  of  the 
/  there,  beneath  Its  salient  springs, 

from  the  central  f's  flow  Fall'n  silver-chiming, 

stealest  fire.  From  the  f's  of  the  past. 

In  the  middle  leaps  a  / 

Day  and  night  to  the  billow  the  /  calls : 

I  should  look  like  a  /  of  gold 

let  thy  voice  Rise  like  a  /  for  me 

The  /  to  his  place  returns 

And  sixty  feet  the  /  leapt. 

runs  to  seed  Beside  its  native  /. 

Against  its  /  upward  runs  The  current 

Expecting  when  a  /  should  arise : 

I        Till  the  /  spouted,  showering  wide 
Like  f's  of  sweet  water  in  the  sea. 
Spout  from  the  maiden  /  in  her  heart. 
Tne  /  of  the  moment,  playing,  now 
the  splash  and  stir  Of  f's  spouted  up 
Enring'd  a  billowing  /  in  the  midst ; 


Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  110 

147 

240 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  32 

Sir  J.  Oldcasde  152 

182 

Columbus  181 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  55 

Tiresias  13 

„      151 

The  Wreck  86 

134 

Despair  57 

The  Flight  23 

,,        82 

LocTisley  H.,  Sixty  97 

121 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  15 

Helen's  Tower  11 

The  Ring  69 

158 

217 

280 

337 

444 

To  Mary  Boyle  21 

Merlin  and  the  G  12 

Death  of  (Enone  53 

Bandit's  Death  12 

Charity  23 

„       31 

Princess  i  150 

Gardener's  D.  19 

Palace  of  Art  22,b 

Princess  ii  145 

Last  Tournament  78 

742 

Guinevere  221 

Hands  all  Round  30 

Sea  Dreams  224 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  32 

Merlin  and  V.  411 

Guinevere  235 

Princess  ii  80 

„    Hi  158 

Mine  be  the  strength  4 

Locksley  Hall  188 

Enoch  Arden  635 

The  Brook  93 

Aylmer's  Field  752 

Princess  Hi  23 

In  Mem,  xxiv  3 

Last  Tournament  727 

Pelleas  and  E.  507 

Supp.  Confessions  55 

Arabian  Nights  50 

Ode  to  Memory  2 

Poet's  Mind  24 

Sea-Fairies  9 

The  Mermaid  18 

M.  d' Arthur  249 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  11 

„  Revival  8 

Amphion  96 

Will  Water.  35 

Vision  of  Sin  8 

„        21 

Enoch  Arden  803 

Lucretius  240 

Princess,  Pro.  61 

i  218 

„  ii  28 


Fountain  (s)  {continued)  Knowledge  is  now  no  more  a/seal'd :     Princess  ii  90 

and  race  By  all  the  f's:  fleet  I  was  of  foot :  „       iv  263 

And  tears  that  at  their  /  freeze ;  In  Mem.  xx  12 

And  show'd  him  in  the  /  fresh  „    Ixxxv  26 

From  household  f's  never  dry ;  „          cia;  2 

saw  The  /  where  they  sat  together,  Balin  and  Balan  291 

and  by  f's  running  wine,  Last  Tournament  141 

'  Friend,  did  ye  mark  that  /  yesterday  „              286 

let  thy  voice  Rise  like  a /for  me  Pass,  of  Arthur  417 

springing  from  her  f's  in  the  brain.  Lover's  Tale  i  83 

from  the  diamond  /  by  the  palms,  „            137 

A  draught  of  that  sweet  /  that  he  loves,  „            141 

whate'er  is  /  to  the  one  Is  /  to  the  other ;  „            179 

My  current  to  the  /  whence  it  sprang, —  „            503 

Why  fed  we  from  one  /?  drew  one  sun  ?  „          m  24 

I  fear'd  The  very  f's  of  her  life  were  chiU'd ;  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  266 

Here  is  the  copse,  the  /  and — a  Cross !  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  127 

/pour'd  From  darkness  into  daylight.  Ancient  Sage  7 

She  finds  the  /  where  they  wail'd  '  Mirage ' !  ,,77 

Send  the  drain  into  the  /,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  144 

shedding  poison  in  the  f's  of  the  Will.  „              274 

The  /  pulses  high  in  sunnier  Jets,  Prog,  of  Spring  54 

What  be  those  crown'd  forms  high  over  the  sacred/?  Parnassus  1 

What  be  those  two  shapes  high  over  the  sacred  /,  „          9 

Dance  in  a  /  of  flame  with  her  devils,  Kapiolani  10 
Fountain'd    See  Many-fountain'd 

Fountain-fed    /-/  Ammonian  Oasis  in  the  waste.  Alexander  7 

Fountain-flood    sonorous  flow  Of  spouted /-/'s.  Palace  of  Art  2^ 

Fountain-foam    dragons  spouted  forth  A  flood  of  /-/.  „          24 

Fountidn-head     The  murmur  of  the  f-h —  Two  Voices  216 

FuU-welhng /-A's  of  change.  Palace  of  Art  166 

Fountain-jets    others  tost  a  ball  Above  the  /-/,  Princess  ii  461 

Fountain-side     sit  near  Camelot  at  a  f-s,  Balin  and  Balan  11 

So  coming  to  the  f-s  beheld  Balin  and  Balan  „               23 

FoTmtain-ums    Gods  at  random  thrown  By  f-u ;  To  E.  L.  16 

Four     The  seven  elms,  the  poplars  /  Ode  to  Memory  56 

F  gray  walls,  and  /  gray  towers,  L.  of  Sfudott  i  15 

From  those  /  jets  /  currents  in  one  swell  Palace  of  Art  33 

From  /  wing'd  horses  dark  against  the  stars ;  Princess  i  211 

Thro'  /  sweet  years  arose  and  fell.  In  Mem.  xxii  3 

F  voices  of  /  hamlets  round,  „     xxviii  5 

Each  voice  /  changes  on  the  wind,  „                9 

'  Where  wert  thou,  brother,  these  /  days  ? '  „       xxxi  5 

And  mock  their  foster-mother  on  /  feet.  Com.  of  Arthur  31 

And  all  these  /  be  fools,  but  mighty  men,  Gareth  and  L.  643 

/  strokes  they  struck  With  sword  „        1042 

yon  /  fools  have  suck'd  their  allegory  „         1199 

O'er  the  /  rivers  the  first  roses  blew,  Geraint  and  E.  764 

Closed  in  the  /  walls  of  a  hollow  tower,  (repeat)  Merlin  and  V.  209,  543 

in  the  /  loud  battles  by  the  shore  Of  Duglas ;  Lancelot  and  E.  289 

and  strange  knights  From  the  /  winds  came  in :  Pelleas  and  E.  148 

I  thought  F  bells  instead  of  one  began  to  ring,  F 

merry  bells,  /  merry  marriage-bells,  Lover's  Tale  Hi  20 

F  galleons  drew  away  From  the  Spanish  fleet  The  Revenge  46 

a  single  piece  Weigh'd  nigh  /  thousand  Castillanos  Columbus  136 
An'  noan  o'  my  /  sweet-arts  'ud  'a  let  me  'a 

bed  my  oiin  waiiy.  Spinster's  S's.  101 

upo'  /  short  legs  ten  times  fur  one  upo'  two.  Owd  Rod  16 

bird  that  still  is  veering  there  Above  his  /  gold  letters)       The  Ring  333 

Four-field     The /-/system,  and  the  price  of  grain;  Audley  Court  34: 

Four-footed    no  slaves  of  a  /-/  will  ?  The  Dawn  18 

Four-handed    The  f-h  mole  shall  scrape.  My  life  is  full  12 

Four-bimdredth    In  that  f-h  summer  after  Christ,  St.  Telemachus  4 

Four-in-hand    as  quaint  a /-t-A  As  you  shall  see —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  113 

Foursquare     build  some  plan  F  to  opposition.'  Princess  v  231 

stood  /  to  all  the  winds  that  blew !  Ode  on  Well.  39 

Four-year-old    '  That  was  the  f-y-o  I  sold  the  Squire.'  The  Brook  137 

Fowl    {See  also  Night-fowl,  Ocean-fowl,  Water-fowl)    To 

scare  the  /  from  fruit :  Princess  ii  228 

I  have  seen  the  cuckoo  chased  by  lesser/,  Com.  of  Arthur  167 

all  the  little  /  were  flurried  at  it,  Gareth  and  L.  69 

and  horrible  f's  of  the  air,  Rizpah  39 

Fowt  (fought)     An'  once  I  /  wi'  the  Taailor —  North.  Cobbler  21 

feller  to  fight  wi'  an'  /  it  out.  „            100 

'e'd  fight  wi'  a  will  when  'e  /;  Owd  Rod  1 


Fox 

Fox    whole  hill-side  was  redder  than  a  /. 

And  lighter-footed  than  the  /. 

Then  of  the  latest  /—where  started — 

Let  the  /  bark,  let  the  wolf  yell. 

An'  'e  niver  runn'd  arter  the  /, 
Foxglove    The/ cluster  dappled  bells. 

Bring  orchis,  bring  the  /  spire, 

snowlike  sparkle  of  a  cloth  On  fern  and/. 
Foxlike    Or  /  in  the  vine ; 
Foxy    Modred's  narrow  /  face, 
Fraction    Some  niggard  /  of  an  hour. 

For  every  splinter'd  /  of  a  sect  Will  clamour 
_!i-     .,««  i-ViT-iV/i  oQ  sMTcat.  As  wroodbine  s  T 


240 


Wallc.  to  the  Mail  3 

J)ay-Dm.,  Arrival  8 

Aylmer's  Field  253 

PeUeas  and  E.  472 

ViUage  Wife  41 

Two  Voices  72 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  9 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  118 

Princess  vii  203 

Guinevere  63 

Aylmer's  Field  450 

Akbar's  Dream  33 


Frame  (s)  (continued)    Deep-seated  in  our  mystic  /. 
As  thro'  the/  that  binds  him  in  His  isolation 
Be  near  me  when  the  sensuous  /  Is  rack'd 
No— mixt  with  all  this  mystic  /, 
new  life  that  feeds  thy  breath  Throughout  my  /, 
That  in  this  blindness  of  the  / 
Remade  the  blood  and  changed  the  /, 
I  steal,  a  wasted  /,  It  crosses  here, 


The  /  bindweed-bells  and  briony  rings ;  The  ^ookJOd 

Fragment    leaning  on  /  twined  with  vine,  222 

Among  the  f's  tumbled  from  the  glens,  "j^Z,  7 
But  /s  of  her  mighty  voice  Came                              ^^rl,  w/i  234 

The  silver  f's  of  a  broken  voice,  Gardeners  D.  ^34 

cr^  him  U  the/'5  of  the  grave.  SaZT^iflO 

Among  the  f's  of  the  golden  day.  Maudi  xmn  i  u 
^h^rd  hit  f's  of  her  later  words  Marr  ofGerawiUS 
Among  the  tumbled  f's  of  the  hills.'                          I^r^elot  and  E  1421 

me^/'.  of  forgotten  peoples  dwelt,  ^ZJsiTu  A 

And  aU  the  f's  of  the  living  rock  ^rJem^h^  16 

Spuming  a  shatter'd/ of  the  God,  MhcTlU 

Fragriice    girt  With  song  and  flame  and  /,  Lo^elTxTi  723 

f  and  the  green  Of  the  dead  sprmg :  ^^«'-  s  laie  i  i^o 
Fragrant    {See  aZso  M-fragrant,  Blossom-fragrant) 

drove  The  /,  gUstening  deeps,  ^  '•«"»««  ^^  *^""  ^^ 

All  round  about  the  /  marge  " 

blinded  With  many  a  deep-hued  bell-like  flower  Eleiinore  38 

Of /trailers,  (Enone  lOQ 

slowly  dropping /dew  Gardener's  D.  Ud 

mmgled  with  her  /  ton,  „    „   o,,.?,-,-,  iqa 

And  bum  a  /  lamp  before  my  bones,  &i-  *•  %f''^%^^^ 
iSe/tresses^arenotstirr'dThatUe   .                    ^"2/-^"*- ^"^ W'ifi 

Yet  /  in  a  heart  remembering  His  former  talks  '^V^'^f'.ff.fol 

on  a  tripod  in  the  midst  A /flame  rose,  Prmc-.  ^vM 

And  bate  went  round  in  /  skies,                      ,  ^^  ^.^f-  ^^^.^ 

often  abroad  in  the  /  gloom  Of  foreign  churches-  Ma^id  Ixix  53 
11^tain°arose  Uke'a'jeweU'd  throne  thro'  the  /  air,   V  of  Maeldune  59 

FUes  back  in  /  breezes  to  display  A  tunic  ^rog.  of  ^ring  04 

With  many  a  pendent  bell  and  /  star,            .  Death  of^nonelZ 

FraU  (adj.)     Thy  mortal  eyes  are  /  to  judge  of  fair  CEnone  158 

nor  shrink  For  fear  our  solid  aim  be  dissipated  By  ^^  .^^^^^  ...  ^^^ 

/  successors.                              .         , ..    , .  ,„,•  1 1  r 

/  at  first  And  feeble,  all  unconscious  of  itself,  'jf em  Zm"  25 

O  Ufe  as  futile,  then,  as  / !  xfaJdlliil 

F,  but  a  work  divine,  ^^"'^'^  ^^  ^\l 

F,  but  of  force  to  withstand,              .  j'nirae^l 

The  /  bluebell  peereth  over  Rare  broidry  Marmral 

Your  melancholy  sweet  and /As  perfume  ,    v-flnA 

I riendTthis  /  bLk  of  ou^  when  sorely  tried,  ^|  ^/X^/jf^  g^ 

F  Life  was  startled  from  the  tender  love  Lovers  lale  i  oio 

Ind  sympathies,  how  /,  In  sound  and  smell !  Early  Spring^ 

f  werlThe  work's  that  defended  the  hold  ?'^V"^rSZ  73 

in  his  throne's  title  make  him  feel  so  /,  Sir  J-OUc'^fi  g 

PraU  (s)    '  Rapt  from  the  fickle  and  the  /  In  Mem.  xxx  25 

T^S   the  /caravel.  With  what  was  mine,  Columbus  140 
ISS    W  not  vet  Anchor  thy/there,                     ^"^P"  ^^^^T^Z  f I 

Nor  human  /  do  me  wrong.  ^J^  ■     "l'  i  oo 

L^ed  by  thi  crimes  and  fraiUies  of  the  court.  ^^Z^ZlA 

Thy /counts  most  real.  Ancient  Ciage  oi. 

Frame  (8)    (S«  a2.<,  Broidery-frame)    creeps  Thro  my  ^^^..^^,  jgi 

vems  to  all  my  /,  j,      y^i^es  99 

A  healthy  /,  a  quiet  nund.'  ^  ""^           366 

Ck)nsolidate  in  mind  and  /—  7?^/,m/i  1  ft 

shafts  of  flame  Were  shiver'd  m  my  narrow  /.  ^"'^^  18 

Pour'd  back  into  my  empty  soul  and /  U.oj^.W omen  i o 

D^T  are  our/'.;  ^d  |ied  dust,  ^^^'^S  42 

Another  and  another  /  of  things  T^Tif'^9 

The  morals,  something  of  the/,  the  rock,  PnncmtzSg 

woman  wed  is  not  as  we.  But  suffers  change  of  /.  ,,       J/°^ 

A  man  of  well-attemper'd  /.  0^^°^  ^^-  ]l 

No  Wnt  of  death  in  all  his  /,  -?"  ^«'»-  '^^^  ^^ 


Free 

7n  ilf  em.  a;xan»  2 
„         a;Zi>  11 

„  Ixxvut  18 
„  Ixxxvi  11 
„  arctM  15 
„      Cow.  11 

Maui  //  iv  69 

mylmiiost  /  Was' riven  in  twain : '  Lover's  Tale  i  595 

shook  me,  that  my  /  would  shudder,    .  »          .**^° 

taken  Some  years  before,  and  falling  hid  the  /.  „          t»  ^i  < 

Frame  (verb)    Vague  words !  but  ah,  how  hard  to  /  /«  ife»i.  a;«)  45 

Framed    Neither  modeU'd,  glazed,  nor/:  Ji'T^i^          «f 

Framework    With  royal  f-w  of  wrought  gold;  Ode  to  Mermry  8J 

yet  with  such  a  /  scarce  could  be.  PrvMess  Con.  22 

And  aU  the /of  the  land;     _     ^    ^  ^"  ^«?^- ^^^^»  ?^ 

speak  His  music  by  the  /  and  the  chord ;  HoZt/  Grati  879 

Framing    {See  also  Sea-framing)    F  the  mighty  land-  ,   ^  ,   •  .nA 

scape  to  the  west,                           ^  „  -^?TV     '  *  J2? 

France    Joan  of  Arc,  A  light  of  ancient  2? ;  -^^ ''^/z  ^""T  ^^f 

Rose  a  ship  of  i^.                     .     .  ,  ,^''^^"^^^91 

That  cursed  F  with  her  egahties  !  ^yl'rner  s  Field  2b5 

Had  golden  hopes  for  F  and  all  mankmd,  „             *»* 

ever-murder'd  F,  By  shores  that  darken  .  ,,             'oo 

Imacdned  more  than  seen,  the  skirts  of  F.  Princess,  Con.  48 

Back  to  F  her  banded  swarms,  Back  to  F  with  w/  „  n  n 

countless  blows,  Ode  on  Wei.  110 

In  which  we  went  thro'  summer  F.  In  Mem  lxxt4 

The  foaming  grape  of  eastern  F.  „     ^o™-.  fi 

Art  with  prisonous  honey  stol'n  from  F,  To  the  Queen  tt  56 

Fresh  from  the  surgery-schools  ol  F  In  the  Child.  Bosp.3 

appeal  Once  more  to  J'  or  England ;  Columbus  58 

^TUd-  "'  ^ '    '^''"  ^°''  "''  ''''  °"  ^0  Victor  Hugo  8 

Engknd%,  all  man  to  be  WiU  wake  one  people  rr  "cw„  rq 

i?  had  show^  a  Ught  to  aU  men  Xoc^Z^l/  ^A^,fpyJl 

Franchise    Her  f uUer  /—what  would  that  be  worth—  IheJ^  leet  8 

Francis    (-S^e  aZso  Francis  Men)    ^,  laughing,  clapt  The  Evic  21 

his  hand  On  Everard's  shoulder,  -^ ««  -«ip»«  ^| 

'  But  I,'  said  F,  '  pick'd  the  eleventh  »        ^^ 

2?,  muttering  like  a  man  ill-used,  .  M.  i'^r<A«r,  Ep.  12 

To  P,  with  a  basket  on  his  arm,  To  J' ]ust  ahghted  ^    ^« 

from  the  boat,  ^"^'^^  ^""'^  ° 

'With  all  my  heart,' Said  J".  .  j  v,„  „^  "        9n 

y  laid  A  damask  napkin  wrought  with  horse  and  hound,  „        ^u 

Francis  Allen    (See  oZso  Francis)    At  ii'^'s  on  the  TheEvicl 

Christmas-eve, —  .    ,,   '>,  Sf  r,A 

Francis  Hale    F  H,  The  farmer's  son,  ^    .  -rr/y c,-"    \k^ 

SS  ^^sii    Sweet  St  F  0  ^,  would  that  he        LocUsley  H    Sixty  1<^ 

i^Snk     '  You  know,'  said  F,  '  he  burnt  His  Epic,  ^tJ^ou 

Sankincense    sweet !  spikenard,  and  balm,  and  /.  ^':  f ;/„f  ^t  ?50 

ByS^   JT  love  and /hate.  a.      ^    .  Viswn  of  Sm  150 

For  wMe  the  /  rabble  in  half-amaze  Stared  at  ^^  T^emachus  71 

FraterAv^atqueVale    '  i-' J  a  T '-as  we  wander'd  ^^Sj'^.fgS 

Fraud    whispers  of  this  monstrous  /!  J-  fi^<^J>J  fff  ^l 

SJught    when /With  a  passion  so  mtense  VofAdunlm 

Fray    and  fought  tUl  I  sunder'd  the /,  1/  of  Maeiau.ne<^ 

^and  threw^Underfoot  there  in  the  /-  ^'""IrZAfe 

Fray'd    (His  dress  a  suit  of  /  magnificence,  ilfarr.  o/ <?erai»<  296 

Atween  the  blossoms, '  We  are  /.'  'h.c^Ji^A  1 7 

so  clear  and  bold  and  /  As  you,  A±f  80 

to  have  been  Joyful  and  /  from  blame.  B.  of  F.  Women  »U 

So  let  the  change  which  comes  be  /  ^^VlfJ^^ 

I  am  always  bound  to  you,  but  you  are  /.'  Enoch  Arden  450 

!l?S\airha^d-^"''^"^^^'°''^^     ,  Ayl^'sFiM..! 

'King,  you  are/!    We  did  but  keep  you  surety  princess  vU 

for  our  son,  ,     i.     ^  419 

Knowledge  in  our  own  land  make  her/,  >. 

yourself  and  yours  shall  have  i?  adit;  »  ^^^ 

dwarf 'd  or  godUke,  bond  or  /:  «„' Ve«  91 

His  foes  were  thine ;  he  kept  us  /;  t^«  "»  >^*"-  ^^ 


Free 

Free  (adj.)  (continued)    all  too  /  For  such  a  wise  humility     Ode  on  Well.  248 

peace,  so  it  be  /  from  pain,  Grandmother  97 

Survive  m  spints  render'd  /,  /„  Mem.  xxxviii  10 

Whose  ]est  among  his  friends  is  /,  ,,             i^^i  10 

Ring  in  the  vahant  man  and  /,  ''               ^^  29 

I  feel  so  /  and  so  clear  By  the  loss  'Uavd  I  xix  98 

unhooded  casting  off  The  goodly  falcon  /;  Merlin  and  V.  131 

Flow  d  forth  a  carol  /  and  bold  ;  Dying  Swan  30 

Whose  /  deUght,  from  any  height  of  rapid  flight,  Rosalind  3 

Like  two  streams  of  incense  /  Eleanore  58 

Mine  be  the  strength  of  spirit,  full  and  /,   _  Mine  be  the  strength  1 


'  Where  wert  thou  when  thy  father  play'd  In  his  / 

^^'^'        ,^^      ,     ,,     ^     ,  Two  Voices  i2lQ 

and  opposed  F  hearts,  /  foreheads—  Ulysses  49 

Lord  of  Burleigh,  fair  and  /,  i.  <,/  Burleigh  58 

Set  thy  hoary  fancies  /;  Vision  of  Sin  156 

Ihat  our  /  press  should  cease  to  brawl.  Third  of  Feb.  3 

Have  left  the  last  /  race  with  naked  coasts !  ,           40 

presently  thereafter  f  ollow'd  cahn,  i^  sky  and  stars ;  Com.  of  Arthur  392 


crush'd  The  Idolaters,  and  made  the  people  /? 
should  be  King  save  him  who  makes  us /? ' 
'  The  thrall  in  person  may  be  /  in  soul. 
Till  ev'n  the  lonest  hold  were  all  as  / 
Gareth  loosed  his  bonds  and  on  /  feet  Set  him, 
'  I  take  it  as  /  gift,  then,'  said  the  boy 


Who 

Gareth  and  L.  137 
165 
598 
817 
Geraint  and  E.  222 


told  F  tales,  and  took  the  word  and  play'd  upon  it,  „  291 

When  wine  and  /  companions  kindled  him,  „  293 

'  My  /  leave,'  he  said ;  '  Get  her  to  speak :  ,"  SOQ 

But  /  to  stretch  his  limbs  in  lawful  ^ht,  „  754 

/  flashes  from  a  height  Above  her,  Lancelot'and  E.  647 

but  /  love  will  not  be  bound.'     '  F  love,  so  bound, 

were  freest,'  said  the  King.    '  Let  love  be/;  / 

love  is  for  the  best :  2379 

■•  F  love—/  field — we  love  but  while  we  may : 

(repeat)  Last  Tournament  275,  281 


It  frighted  all  /  fool  from  out  thy  heart ; 
King  Who  fain  had  cUpt  /  manhood  from  the 

world — 
tide  within  Red  with  /  chase  and  heather- 
scented  air. 
Was  not  the  land  as  /  thro'  all  her  ways 
Bore  her  free-faced  to  the  /  airs  of  heaven, 
'  Take  my  /  gift,  my  cousin,  for  your  wife ; 
An'  coax'd  an'  coodled  me  oop  till  agean  I  feel'd 

mysen/. 
•Cold,  but  as  welcome  as  /  airs  of  heaven 
'  What,  will  she  never  set  her  sister  /? ' 
And  Grod's  /  air,  and  hope  of  better  things, 
gave  All  but  /  leave  for  all  to  work  the  mines, 
when  thou  sendest  thy /soul  thro'  heaven. 
And  fling  /  alms  into  the  beggar's  bowl, 
Wild  flowers  blowing  side  by  side  in  God's  /  light 

and  air. 
But  Moother  was  /  of  'er  tongue, 
they  know  too  that  whene'er  In  our/ Hall, 
Till  every  Soul  be/; 
Her  ancient  fame  of  F — 
With  earth  is  broken,  and  has  left  her/, 
calls  to  them  '  Set  yourselves  / ! ' 
walking  and  haunting  us  yet,  and  be  /? 
Tree  (s)    The  starry  clearness  of  the  /? 
How  can  a  despot  feel  with  the  F  ? 
Freea  (free)     Parson  a  cooms  an'  a  goiis,  an'  a  says  it 
easy  an'  / 
an'  the  F  Traade  runn'd  i'  my  'ead, 
iPreed    Well  hast  thou  done ;  for  all  the  stream  is  /, 
!        the  land  Was  /,  and  the  Queen  false, 
he  /  himself  From  wife  and  child, 
and  /  the  people  Of  Hawa-i-ee ! 
Freedom    and  make  The  bounds  of  i  wider  yet 
And  F  rear'd  in  that  august  sunrise 
pure  law,  Commeasure  perfect/.' 
That  sober-suited  F  chose, 
F  slowly  broadens  down  From  precedent  to 
precedent : 


307 

446 

691 

Lover^s  Tale  i  662 

„  iv  38 

363 

North.  Cobbler  80 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  197 

218 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  10 

Columbus  133 

Ancient  Sage  47 

260 

The  Flight  81 

Owd  Rod  IZ 

Akbar's  Bream  55 

Freedom  20 

The  Fleet  9 

The  Ring  476 

Kapiolani  3 

The  Dawn  23 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  86 

Riflemen  form  !  11 


iV.  Fanrnr,  0.  S.  25 

Owd  Rod  54 

Gareth  and  L.  1267 

Last  Tournament  339 

Lover's  Tale  iv  379 

Kapiolani  6 

To  the  Queen  32 

The  Poet  37 

(Enone  167 

You  ask  WW,  why,  etc.  6 

11 


241  _  _ 

Freedom  (continued)    And  individual  /  mute ; 
Of  old  sat  F  on  the  heights, 
shout  For  some  blind  glimpse  of  / 
F,  gaily  doth  she  tread ; 
Embrace  our  aims :  work  out  your  /. 
for  song  Is  duer  unto  /, 
shower  the  fiery  grain  Of  /  broadcast 
bear  the  yoke,  I  wish  it  Gentle  as  /' — 
And  save  the  one  true  seed  of  /  sown 
That  sober  /  out  of  which  there  springs 
we  fought  for  F  from  our  prime, 
A  love  of  /  rarely  felt. 
Of  /  in  her  regal  seat  Of  England ; 
white  bonds  and  warm.  Dearer  than  /. 
For  /,  or  the  sake  of  those  they  loved, 
They  kept  their  faith,  their/, 
rough  rock-throne  Of  F ! 
F,  free  to  slay  herself, 
we  gain'd  a  /  known  to  Europe, 
To  this  great  cause  of  F  drink,  my  friends, 

(repeat) 
Thraldom  who  walks  with  the  banner  of  F, 
Form  in  F's  name  and  the  Queen's ! 
Free-faced     Bore  her /-/to  the  free  airs 
Freeing    any  knight  Toward  thy  sister's  /.' 
Freeman     It  is  the  land  that  freemen  till. 
For  English  natures,  freemen,  friends, 
Gallant  sons  of  English  freemen, 
and  the  Rome  of  freemen  holds  her  place, 
To  mark  in  many  a  f's  home  The  slave, 
Freer    leave  thee  /,  till  thou  wake  refresh'd 
But  smit  with  /  light  shall  slowly  melt 
tyrant's  cruel  glee  Forces  on  the  /  hour, 
noble  thought  be  /  under  the  sun, 
Free-spoken    or  being  one  Of  our  f-s  Table 
Freest    '  Free  love,  so  bound,  were  /,' 
Freewill    joy  I  had  in  my  /  All  cold. 
Freeze    eighty  winters  /  with  one  rebuke 
tears  that  at  their  fountain  /; 
tho'  every  pulse  would  /, 
Death  will  /  the  supplest  limbs — 
Freezing    here  he  stays  upon  a  /  orb 
The  /  reason's  colder  part, 
I  took  And  chafed  the  /  hand. 
Freight    lovely  /  Of  overflowing  blooms. 

And,  thy  dark  /,  a  vanish'd  life. 
French    We  love  not  this  F  God,  the  child  of  Hell, 

F  of  the  F,  and  Lord  of  human  tears ; 
Frenchman     Not  sting  the  fiery  F  into  war. 
Frenzied    See  Hall-frenzied 
Frequence    Not  in  this  /  can  I  lend  full  tongue, 

Staled  by  /,  shrunk  by  usage 
Frequent  (adj.)    So  /  on  its  hinge  before. 
I  was  /  with  him  in  my  youth, 
Where  from  the  /  bridge. 
And  /  interchange  of  foul  and  fair, 
A  /  haunt  of  Edith,  on  low  knolls 
she  With  /  smile  and  nod  departing  found. 
Frequent  (verb)     Sometimes  I /the  Christian  cloister. 
Fresh    (See  also  Dewy-fresh,  Frish,  Sparkling-fresh) 
Keeps  his  blue  waters  /  for  many  a  mile. 
Aphrodite  beautiful,  F  as  the  foam, 
All  the  valley,  mother,  'ill  be  / 
How  /  the  meadows  look  Above  the  river, 
I  have  seen  some  score  of  those  F  faces, 
flit  To  make  the  greensward  /, 
Oh,  nature  first  was  /  to  men, 
moon  Smote  by  the  /  beam  of  the  springing  east ; 
My  sweet,  wild,  /  three  quarters  of  a  year, 
She  seems  a  part  of  those  /  days  to  me ; 
her  /  and  innocent  eyes  Had  such  a  star 
What  drives  about  the  /  Cascine, 
her  brother  comes,  like  a  blight  On  my  /  hope, 
take  my  charger,  /,  Not  to  be  spurr'd, 
and  fetch  F  victual  for  these  mowers  of  our  Earl ; 


Fresh 

Tou  ask  me,  why,  etc.  20 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  1 

Love  and  Bwty  6 

Vision  of  Sin  136 

Princess  ii  89 

„      iv  141 

„       v422 

„      vi  206 

Ode  on  Wdl.  162 

164 

Third  of  Feb.  2Z 

In  Mem.  cix  13 

14 

Pelleas  and  E.  354 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  186 

Montenegro  2 

10 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  128 

»  129 

Hands  all  Round  11,  35 
Vastness  10 
Riflemen  form  !  23 
Lover's  Tale  iv  38 
Gareth  and  L.  1018 
You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  5 
Love  thou  thy  land  7 
The  Captain  7 
To  Virgil  34 
Freedom  11 
Love  and  Duty  97 
Golden  Year  33 
Vision  of  Sin  130 
3Iaud  III  vi  48 
Pelleas  and  E.  526 
Lancelot  and  E.  1380 
Supp.  Confessions  16 
Ode  on  Well.  186 
In  Mem.  xx  12 
The  Flight  53 
Hafpy  46 
Lucretius  139 
In  Mem.  cxxiv  14 
The  Ring  452 
Ode  to  Memory  16 
In  Mem.  x  8 
Third  of  Feb.  7 
To  Victor  Hugo  3 
Third  of  Feb.  A 

Princess  iv  442 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  76 

Deserted  House  8 

Gareth  and  L.  124 

Ode  to  Memory  102 

Enoch  Arden  533 

Aylmer's  Field  148 

Marr.  of  Geraint  515 

Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  5 

Mine  be  the  strength  8 

(Enone  175 

May  Queen  37 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  1 

Talking  Oak  50 

„  90 

A  mphion  57 

M.  d' Arthur  214 

Edwin  Morris  2 

142 

Aylmer's  Field  691 

The  Daisy  43 

Maud  I  xix  103 

Gareth  and  L.  1300 

Geraint  and  E.  225 


Fresh 


242 


Friend 


Fnsb  (contimied)    men  may  fear  F  fire  and  ruin.  Geraint  and  E.  823 

my  /  but  fixt  resolve  To  pass  away  Holy  Grail  737 

moon  Smote  by  the  /  beam  of  the  springing  east ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  382 
evermore  F  springing  from  her  fountams  in  the 

brain,  Lover's  Tale  i  83 

and  blew  F  fire  into  the  sun,  „          319 

an'  es  cleiin  Es  a  shilUn'  /  fro'  the  mint  Spinster's  S's.  76 

While  yet  thy  /  and  virgin  soul  Freedom  2 

There  no  one  came,  the  turf  was  /,  Prog,  of  Spring  72 

flowers  To  work  old  laws  of  Love  to  /  results,  „              85 

That  his  /  life  may  close  as  it  began,  „              89 

How  /  was  every  sight  and  sound  The  Voyage  5 

So  /  they  rose  in  shadow'd  swells  The  Letters  46 

F  from  the  burial  of  her  little  one,  Enoch  Arden  281 

'  Too  happy,  /  and  fair,  Too  /  The  Brook  217 

Lady  Psyche  will  harangue  The  /  arrivals  of  the  week       Princess  ii  96 

F  as  the  first  beam  glittering  on  a  sail,  „       iv  44 

So  sad,  so  /,  the  days  that  are  no  more.  „           48 

/young  captains  flash'd  their  glittering  teeth,  „        v  20 

When  all  our  path  was  /  with  dew,  In  Mem.  Ixviii  6 

And  show'd  hmi  in  the  fountain  /  „      Ixxxv  26 

If  not  so  /,  with  love  as  true,  „              101 

pleased  him,  /  from  brawling  courts  „     Ixxxix  11 

from  the  garden  and  the  wild  A  /  association  blow,  ,,            ci  18 

daily  fronted  him  In  some  /  splendour ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  14 

my  child,  how  /  the  colours  look,  „              680 

this  cut  is  /;  That  ten  years  back ;  Lancelot  and  E.  21 

Tommy's  faiice  be  as  /  as  a  codlin  North.  Cobbler  110 

Making  /  and  fair  All  the  bowers  and  the  flowers,    Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  9 

Freshen     They  /  the  silvery -crimson  shells,  Sea-Fairies  13 

They  /  and  sweeten  the  wards  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  38 

Fresher     And  flood  a  /  throat  with  song.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  16 

Bright  Phosphor,  /  for  the  night,  „               cxxi  9 

She  from  her  bier,  as  into  /  life,  lever's  Tale  Hi  42 

Freshest    a  truth  Looks  /  in  the  fashion  of  the  day :  The  Epic  32 

Freshlier    And  gathering  /  overhead,  In  Mem.  xcv  57 

Freshly-flower'd    and  lay  Upon  the /-/slope.  Miller's  D.  112 

Freshmen     Everard's  college  fame  When  we  were  F :  The  Epic  47 

Freshness    The  vmsunn'd  /  of  my  strength,  Supp.  Confessions  140 

increased  With  /  in  the  dawning  east.  Two  Voices  405 

Delighted  with  the  /  and  the  sovmd.  Edwin  Morris  99 

Yet  so  did  I  let  my  /  die.  Maud  I  xix  11 

immortality  Of  thought,  and  /  ever  self-renew'd.  Lover's  Tale  i  106 

Fresh-wash'd  f-w  in  coolest  dew  The  maiden  splendours    D.  of  F.  Women  54 

Eresh-water    F-w  springs  come  up  through  bitter  brine.       //  /  were  loved  8 

Fret  (s)     busy  /  Of  that  sharp-headed  worm  Supp.  Confessions  185 

Love  is  hurt  with  jar  and/.  Miller's  D.  209 

(all  f's  But  chafing  me  on  fire  to  find  Princess  i  165 

Fret  (verb)     rib  and  /  The  broad-imbased  beach,  Supp.  Confessions  127 

You  should  not  /  for  me,  mother,  May  Queen,  N.  ¥'s.  E.  36 

say  to  Robin  a  kind  word,  and  tell  him  not  to/;        „  Con.            45 

Tne  changing  market  f's  or  charms  Ancient  Sage  140 

To  /  the  summer  jenneting.  The  Blackbird  12 

We  /,  we  fume,  would  shift  our  skins,  Will  Water.  225 

With  many  a  curve  my  banks  I  /  The  Brook  43 

'  So  /  not,  like  an  idle  girl,  In  Mem.  Hi  13 

Is  that  a  matter  to  make  me  /?  Maud  I  xiii  2 

'  F  not  yourself,  dear  brother,  Lancelot  and  E.  1074 

Fretfal    /  as  the  wind  Pent  in  a  crevice :  Princess  Hi  80 

common  sense  of  most  shall  hold  a  /  realm  in  awe,       Locksley  Hall  129 

Fretted  (adj.)     By  Bagdat's  shrines  of  /  gold,  Arabian  Nights  7 

And,  with  dim  /  foreheads  all.  Palace  of  Art  242 

Fretted  (verb)    Have  /  all  to  dust  and  bitterness.'  Princess  vi  264 

Fretteth    F  thine  enshrouded  form.  A  Dirge  10 

Fretwork    holds  a  stately  /  to  the  Sun,  Princess  vi  86 

Friar     For  I  am  emptier  than  a  f's  brains ;  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  7 

at  Pardoners,  Summoners,  F's,  absolution-sellers,  „              93 

God  willing,  to  outlearn  the  filthy  /.  „            118 

foor  man's  money  gone  to  fat  the  /.  „            150 

"s,  belhingers.  Parish-clerks —  „            160 

Two  f's  crying  that  if  Spain  should  oust  Columbus  96 

Friday    Whose  F  fare  was  Enoch's  ministering.  Enoch  Arden  100 

we  sail'd  on  a,  F  mom —  V.  of  Maeldune  7 
Friend    {See  also  Bosom-friend,  Frind,  Sea-friend) 

our  f's  are  all  forsaking  The  wine  AU  Things  will  Die  18 


Friend  {continued)    Ci-eae-headed  /,  whose  joyful 
scorn. 

My  /,  with  you  to  live  alone. 

So,  /,  when  first  I  look'd  upon  your  face, 

painting  some  dead  /  from  memory  ? 

'  He  seems  to  hear  a  Heavenly  F, 

f's  to  man.  Living  together  under  the  same 

roof.  To  — 

Prythee,  /,  Where  is  Mark  Antony  ? 

He  gave  me  a  /,  and  a  true  true-love. 

He  was  a  /  to  me. 

The  night  is  starry  and  cold,  my  /,  And  the  New- 
Year  blithe  and  bold,  my  /, 

Alack  !  our  /  is  gone. 

There's  a  new  foot  on  the  floor,  my  /,  And  a  new 
face  at  the  door,  my  /, 

he  too  was  a  /  to  me :  Both  are  my  f's, 

The  land,  where  girt  with  f's  or  foes 

English  natures,  freemen,  f's, 

Both  for  themselves  and  those  who  call  them  /  ? 

who  lived  across  the  bay,  My  /; 

'  F  Edwin,  do  not  think  yourself  alone 

Sets  out,  and  meets  a  /  who  hails 

my  /,  the  days  were  brief  Whereof  the  poets  talk. 

Come,  my  f's,  'Tis  not  too  late  to  seek 
^     In  Art  like  Nature,  dearest/; 

To  fall  asleep  with  all  one's  f's ; 

She  told  me  all  her  f's  had  said  ; 

Thro'  troops  of  unrecording /'s, 

naming  those,  his  f's,  for  whom  they  were : 

'  Good,'  said  his  /,  '  but  watch  ! ' 

The  man  was  his,  had  been  his  father's,  /: 

his  nearer  /  would  say  '  Screw  not  the  chord 

F's,  I  was  bid  to  speak  of  such  a  one 

F's,  this  frail  bark  of  ours, 

their  guest,  their  host,  their  ancient  /, 

'  My  dearest  /,  Have  faith,  have  faith ! 

I  found  a  hard  /  in  his  loose  accovmts, 

he  that  wrongs  his  /  Wrongs  himself 

closed  by  those  who  mourn  a  /  in  vain, 

and  lady  f's  From  neighbour  seats : 

They  rode ;  they  betted ;  made  a  hundred  f's, 

Cyril  and  with  Florian,  my  two  f's : 

AVent  forth  again  with  both  mj  f's. 

always  f's,  none  closer,  elm  and  vine : 

'  O  /,  we  trust  that  you  esteem'd  us  not 

brings  our  f's  up  from  the  underworld, 

Nor  found  my  f's ;  but  push'd  alone  on  foot 

Then  came  your  new  /:  you  began  to  change — 

I  your  okl  /  and  tried,  she  new  in  all  ? 

'  Her,'  she  said,  'my/ — Parted  from  her — 

— and  ours  shall  see  us  f's. 

Truest  /  and  noblest  foe ; 

a  world  Of  traitorous  /  and  broken  system 

'  We  two  were  f's :  I  go  to  mine  own  land 

had  you  got  a  /  of  your  own  age, 

glitteririg  drops  on  her  sad  /. 

be  f's,  like  children,  being  chid ! 

Whatever  man  lies  wounded,/  or  foe, 

0  my  /,  I  will  not  have  thee  die ! 

hears  his  burial  talk'd  of  by  his  f's, 

'  Look  there,  a  garden ! '  said  my  college  /, 

O  f's,  our  chief  state-oracle  is  mute : 

amoighty's  a  taiikin  o'  you  to  'iss^n,  my 
/,'  (repeat) 

Thunder  '  Anathema,'  /,  at  you ; 

One  writes,  that '  Other  f's  remain,' 

And  unto  me  no  second  /. 

My  /,  the  brother  of  my  love ; 

saying ;  '  Comes  he  thus,  my  /  ? 

And  flash  at  once,  my  /,  to  thee. 

Methinks  my  /  is  richly  shrined ; 

'  Does  my  old  /  remember  me  ? ' 

Since  we  deserved  the  name  of /'s, 

Whose  jest  among  his  f's  is  free, 


Clear-headed  friend  1 
Ode  to  Memory  119 

Sonnet  To 9 

Wan  Sculptor  4 
Two  Voices  295 

-  With  Pal.  of  Art  11 

D.ofF.  Women  139 

D.oftheO.  Year  IS 

23 

34 

47 

52 

To  J.  S.  61 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  7 

Love  thou  thy  land  7 

M.  d' Arthur  253 

Avdley  Court  76 

Edwin  Morris  77 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  42 

Talking  Oak  185 

Ulysses  56 

Day-Dm.,  Moral  14 

„  L'Envoi  4 

The  Letters  25 

You  might  have  won  7 

The  Brook  131 

Aylmer's  Field  275 

344 

468 

677 

715 

790 

Sea  Dreams  156 

162 

172 

Lucretius  142 

Princess,  Pro.  97 

163 

i  52 

167 

ii  337 

„       Hi  198 

„  iv  45 

196 

298 

318 

1)75 

228 

„  vi  7 

195 

216 

251 

283 

289 

336 

,,  vii  8 

152 

„      Con.  49 

Ode  on  WeU.  23 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  10,  26 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  8 

In  Mem.  vi  1 

44 

ix  16 

xii  13 

xli  12 

Ivii  7 

Ixiv  28 

lxv9 

lxvil(y 


Friend 


243 


Frieze 


Friend  (continued)    Thy  blood,  my  /,  and  partly  mine ; 
For  other /'5  that  once  I  met ; 
I  crave  your  pardon,  O  my  /; 
held  debate,  a  band  Of  youthful /'«, 
/  from  /  Is  oftener  parted, 
Some  gracious  memory  of  my/; 
With  thy  lost  /  among  the  bowers, 
0,  /,  who  earnest  to  thy  goal 
To  hear  the  tidings  of  my  /, 
Dear  /,  far  off,  my  lost  desire. 
Dear  heavenly  /  that  canst  not  die. 
Strange  /,  past,  present,  and  to  be ; 
That  /  of  mine  who  lives  in  God, 
I  have  led  her  home,  my  love,  my  only  /. 
To  hef's  for  her  sake,  to  be  reconciled; 
To  be  f's,  to  be  reconcUed ! 
To  me,  her  /  of  the  years  before ; 
Should  I  fear  to  greet  my  / 
To  catch  a  /  of  mine  one  stormy  day ; 
F,  to  be  struck  by  the  public  foe, 
'  O  /,  had  I  been  holpen  half  as  well 
an  old  knight  And  ancient  /  of  Uther ; 
the  f's  Of  Arthur,  gazing  on  him, 
three  Queens,  the  f's  Of  Arthur, 
a  stalwart  Baron,  Arthur's  /. 
'  F,  whether  thou  be  kitchen-knave,  or  not, 
and  now  thy  pardon,  /, 
felon,  knight,  I  avenge  me  for  my  /.' 
They  hate  the  King,  and  Lancelot,  the  King's  /, 
'Ff  he  that  labours  for  the  sparrow-hawk 
'  O  /,  I  seek  a  harbourage  for  the  night.' 
'  Thanks,  venerable  /,'  replied  Geraint ; 
he  suspends  his  converse  with  a  /, 
Built  that  new  fort  to  overawe  my  f's, 
how  can  Enid  find  A  nobler/? 
Embraced  her  with  all  welcome  as  a  /. 
'  F,  let  her  eat ;  the  deimsel  is  so  faint.' 
Call  in  what  men  soever  were  his  f's, 
'All  of  one  mind  and  all  right-honest /'s! 
what  they  long  for,  good  in  /  or  foe, 
the  great  Queen  once  more  embraced  her  /, 
'  Old  /,  too  old  to  be  so  young,  depart. 
Poor  wretch — no  / ! — 
Sir  Lancelot,  /  Traitor  or  true  ? 
I  know  the  Table  Round,  my  f's  of  old ; 
were  I  glad  of  you  as  guide  and  /: 
'  This  shield,  my  /,  where  is  it  ? ' 
Surely  his  king  and  most  familiar  / 
Marr'd  her  f's  aim  with  pale  tranquillity, 
call  her  /  and  sister,  sweet  Elaine, 
Death,  hke  a  f's  voice  from  a  distant  field 
He  makes  no  /  who  never  made  a  foe. 
To  this  I  call  my  f's  in  testimony, 
to  warm  My  cold  heart  with  a  /: 
And  these,  like  bright  eyes  of  familiar  f's, 
'Thou,  too,  my  Lancelot,'  ask'd  the  King,  'my/. 
King,  my  /,  if  /  of  thine  I  be. 
But  as  for  thine,  my  good  /  Percivale, 
But  hold  me  for  your  /:  Come,  ye  know  nothing : 
F's,  thro'  your  manhood  and  your  fealty, — 
'  jP,  did  ye  mark  that  fountain  yesterday 
(what  marvel — she  could  see) — Thine,  /; 
Nay,  /,  for  we  have  taken  our  farewells. 
The  most  disloyal  /  in  all  the  world.' 
and  saps  The  fealty  of  our  f's, 
the  warhorse  neigh'd  As  at  a  f's  voice, 
all  whereon  I  lean'd  in  wife  and  / 
For  /  and  foe  were  shadows  in  the  mist.  And  /  slew 

/  not  knowing  whom  he  slew ; 
Both  for  themselves  and  those  who  call  them  /? 
f's  Of  Arthur,  who  should  help  him  at  his  need  ? ' 
f's — jouT  love  Is  but  a  burthen : 
Permit  me,  /,  I  prythee.  To  pass  my  hand 
And,  like  all  other  f's  i'  the  world, 
Ye  ask  me,  f's  When  I  began  to  love. 


In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  9 

„  Ixxxv  58 

100 

„         Ixxxvii  22 

„  xcviii  14 

„  m  IS 

„  cxiv  23 

„  cxxvi  3 

„  cxxix  1 

::         I 

Con.  140 

Mavd  I  xviii  1 

„         xix  50 

56 

64 

„       II  iv  85 

"85 

89 

Com.  of  Arthur  161 

223 

277 

Gareth  and  L.  229 

818 

873 

1166 

1220 

1418 

Marr.  of  Geraint  211 

299 

303 

340 

460 

793 

834 

Geraint  and  E.  206 

286 

484 

876 

947 

Balin  and  Balan  17 

Merlin  and  V.  75 

769 

816 

Lancelot  and  E.  226 

345 

592 

733 

865 

999 

1089 

1299 

Holy  Grail  619 

688 

764 

769 

861 

PeUeas  and  E.  340 

Last  Tournament  97 

286 

548 

Guinevere  117 

„        340 

„        521 

531 

Pass,  of  Arthur  24 

100 
421 
455 
To  the  Queen  ii  16 
Lover's  Tale  i  30 
108 
144 


Nay,  but  my  /. 


Friend  {continued)    Life  (like  a  wanton  too-ofiicious  /, 
/,  the  neighbour,  Lionel,  the  beloved. 
Oh  /,  thoughts  deep  and  heavy  as  these 
looking  round  upon  his  tearful  f's, 
And  then  to  f's — they  were  not  many — 
'  There  is  a  custom  in  the  Orient,  f's — 
his  /  Replied,  in  half  a  whisper, 
sight  of  this  So  frighted  our  good  /, 
an'  you  are  my  only  /. 
my  best  And  oldest  /,  your  uncle,  wishes  it, 
the  portrait  of  his  /  Drawn  by  an  artist, 
an'  'e  smiled,  fur  'e  hedn't  naw/. 
My  /  should  meet  me  somewhere  hereabout 
hang'd,  poor  f's,  as  rebels  And  bum'd  alive 
my  /  was  he.  Once  my  fast  /: 
led  my  /  Back  to  the  pure  and  universal  church, 
Burnt — good  Sir  Roger  Acton,  my  dear/! 
My  /  should  meet  me  here — Here  is  the  copse, 
(My  good  /  By  this  time  should  be  with  me.) 
I  would  not  spurn  Good  counsel  of  good  f's, 
(My  /  is  long  m  coming.) 
F  'i — foe  perhaps — a  tussle  for  it  then ! 
My  /  '5  await  me  yonder  ? 
The  compass,  Uke  an  old  /  false  at  last 
Than  any  /  of  ours  at  Court  ? 
reft  of  his  Folk  and  his  f's 
Old  f's  outvaluing  all  the  rest. 
But  we  old/'s  are  still  alive, 
I  fancied  that  my  /  P'or  this  brief  idyll 
away  from  the  Christ,  our  human  brother  and  /, 
'  Yet  wine  and  laughter  /  's  ! 
would  I  were  there,  the  /,  the  bride,  the  wife, 
With  breaking  hearts,  without  a  /, 
and  take  their  wisdom  for  your  /. 
You  wrong  me,  passionate  little  /. 
I  count  them  all  My  /  's  and  brother  souls, 
His/'s  had  stript  him  bare, 
Waeeioh  of  God,  man's  /,  and  tyrant's  foe. 
To  this  great  cause  of  Freedom  drink,  my/ '5, 

(repeat) 
To  this  great  name  of  England  drink,  mj  f's, 
came,  my  /,  To  prize  your  various  book. 
You  came  not,/; 

golden  youth  bewail  the  /,  the  wife, 
I  once  had  /  's — and  many — none  Uke  you. 
But,  /,  man-woman  is  not  woman-man. 
hardly  a  daisy  as  yet,  little  /, 
My  /,  the  most  unworldly  of  mankind, 
My  noble  /,  my  faithful  counsellor, 
bravest  soul  for  counsellor  and  /. 


Lover's  Tale  i  627 

653 

688 

792 

iv  184 

230 

335 

383 

First  Quarrel  8 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  47 

„  134 

ViUage  Wife  89 

Sir  J.  Oldcaslle  1 

47 

61 

70 

79 

126 

138 

146 

148 

196 

„  202 

Columbus  70 

„      198 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  70 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  40 

„  42 

Tiresias  187 

Despair  25 

Ancient  Sage  195 

The  Flight  43 

100 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  104 

Epilogue  10 

„        19 

Dead  Prophet  14 

Epit.  on  Gordon  1 


my  /,  thou  knowest  I  hold  that  forms  Are  needful : 


Rands  all  Boumd  11,  35 

23 

To  Ulysses  46 

To  Mary  Boyle  17 

53 

Romney's  R.  156 

On  one  who  effec.  E.  M.  4 

The  Throstte  11 

In  Mem.  W.  G.  Ward  3 

Akbar's  Dream  18 

69 


Fur  Quoloty's  hall  my  f's. 

You  were  his  / — you- — you — 

You  will  not  speak,  my  /  's, 

O  well  for  him  that  finds  a  /, 

Or  makes  a  /  where'er  he  come. 
Friendlier     Old  poets  foster'd  imder  /  skies, 
Friendly    (See  also  Frindly)     The  /  mist  of  mom 

Clung  to  the  lake. 
Friendly-warm    Only  such  cups  as  left  usf-w. 
Friendship    a  /  so  complete  Portion'd  in  halves 

My  college /'s  glimmer. 

'  F ! — to  be  two  in  one — 

O  /,  equal-poised  control, 

such  A  /  as  had  master'd  Time ; 

seek  A  /  for  the  years  to  come. 

First  love,  first  /,  equal  powers, 

Less  yearning  for  the  /  fled. 

And  bright  the  /  of  thine  eye ; 

So  vanish  /  's  only  made  in  wine. 

it  was  a  bond  and  seal  Of  /, 

Sprang  up  a  /  that  may  help  us  yet. 

Gone  into  darkness,  that  full  light  Of  /! 

flits  to  warn  A  far-off  /  that  he  comes 
Frieze    boss'd  with  lengths  Of  classic  /, 


126 

Church-warden,  etc.  39 

Charity  11 

The  Wanderer  3 

5 

6 

Poets  and  their  B.  1 

Edwin  Morris  107 

Lucretius  215 

Gardener's  D.  4 

Will  Water.  40 

Vision  of  Sin  107 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  33 

64 

80 

107 

„         cxvi  15 

„         cxix  10 

Geraint  and  E.  479 

Lover's  Tale  ii  182 

„  iv  144 

Tiresias  203 

Demeter  and  P.  90 

Princess  ii  25 


Fright 


244 


Froze 


Fright  (s)     and  died  Of  /  in  far  apartments.  Princess  vi  371 

dead  weight  trail 'd,  by  a  whisper'd  /,  Maud  /  1 14 

F's  to  my  heart ;  but  stay :  Gareth  and  L,  90 
call'd  him  dear  protector  in  her  /,  Nor  yet  forgot 

her  practice  in  her  /,  Merlin  and  V.  946 

and  the  bitter  frost  and  the  /?  Rizpah  18 

till  'e'd  gotten  a  /  at  last,  Village  Wife  61 

harass'd  by  the  /  's  Of  my  first  crew,  Columbus  67 

she  had  torn  the  ring  In  /,  The  Ring  471 

F  and  foul  dissembUng,  Forlorn  32 

Frighted  (verb)     breed  with  him,  can  /  my  faith.  In  Me^n.  Ixxxii  A 
Frighted    (See  also  Half-fr^hted)     Queen  had  added 

Get  thee  hence,'  Fled  /.  Guinevere  367 
My  /  Wiclif-preacher  whom  I  crost  In  flying  hither  ?    Sir  J.  OldcasUe  38 

half  amazed  half  /  all  his  flock :  Aylmer's  Field  631 
/  all  free  fool  from  out  thy  heart ;                             Last  Tournament  307 

the  sight  of  this  So  /  out  good  friend.  Lover's  Tale  iv  383 

I  am  /  at  life  not  death.'  Despair  14 
Frighten'd    See  Half-frighten'd 

Frightful    the  bells  Lapsed  into  /  stillness ;  Lover's  Tale  Hi  30 

Frill    door  Of  his  house  in  a  rainbow/?  Maud  II  ii  11 

Frind  (friend)     But  shure  we  wor  betther /'s  Tomorrow  41 

An'  her  nabours  an'  f's  'ud  consowl  „          47 

dhry  eye  thin  but  was  wet  for  the  f's  „          83 

Frindly    an'  she  gev  him  a  /  nod,  „          58 

Fringe     (See  also  Under-fringe)     Burnt  like  a  /  of  fire.  Palace  of  Art  48 

Tom  from  the  /  of  spray.  D.  of  F.  Women  40 

beard  Was  tagg'd  with  icy  /'s  in  the  moon,  St.  S.  Stylites  32 

From  /'s  of  the  faded  eve.  Move  eastward  3 

Upon  the  skirt  and  /  of  our  fair  land.  Princess  v  219 

daisy  close  Her  crimson  /'s  to  the  shower ;  In  Mem.  Ixxii  12 

/  Of  that  great  breaker,  sweeping  up  the  strand.  Com.  of  Arthur  386 

from  the  /  of  coppice  round  them  burst  Balin  and  Balan  46 

and  the  narrow  /  Of  curving  beach —  Lover's  Tale  i  38 

we  kiss'd  the  /  of  his  beard  V.  of  Maddune  125 
Fringed  (adj.  and  part.)    (See  also  Gold-fringed,  Ray- 
fringed,  Sun-fringed)    hollows  of  the  /  hills  In 

summer  heats,  Supp.  Confessions  153 

A  looming  bastion  /  with  fire.  In  Mem.  xv  20 

Pallas  flung  Her  /  aegis,  Achilles  over  the  T.  4 

Fringed  (verb)     the  knightly  growth  that/ his  lips.  M.  d' Arthur  220 

the  knightly  growth  that  /  his  lips.  Pass,  of  Arthur  388 

Frish  (fresh)     But  a  /  gineration  had  riz,  Tomorrow  75 

Frith    o'er  the/ 's  that  branch  and  spread  In  Mem.,  Con.  lib 

Frock    Or  the  /  and  gipsy  bonnet  Maud  I  xx  19 

Frog    When  did  a  /  coarser  croak  Trans,  of  Earner  4 

FroUc  (adj.)    My  /  falcon,  with  bright  eyes,  Rosalind  2 

in  a  fit  of  /  mirth  She  strove  to  span  my  waist :  Talking  Oak  137 

with  a  /  welcome  took  The  thunder  and  the  sunshine,  Ulysses  47 

Frolic  (s)    Cyril,  howe'er  He  deal  in  /,  Princess  iv  250 

fury  of  peoples,  and  Christless  /  of  kings,  The  Dawn  7 

Frolic  (verb)     come  hither  and  /  and  play ;  Sea-Fairies  18 

Front  (adj.)     all  at  once  The /rank  made  a  sudden  halt;    Lover's  Tale  Hi  29 

Front  (s)    (See  also  Minster-front,  Palace-front)    More 

black  than  ashbuds  in  the  /  of  March.'  Gardener's  D.  28 

but  in  /  The  gorges,  opening  wide  apart,  (Enone  11 

In  /  they  bound  the  sheaves.  Palace  of  Art  78 

discern  The  /  of  Sumner-place.  Talking  Oak  248 

Past  thro'  the  solitary  room  in  /,  Enoch  Arden  277 

A  /  of  timber-crost  antiquity,  „           692 

But  huge  cathedral  /'s  of  every  age,  Sea  Dreams  218 

some  inscription  ran  along  the  /,  Princess  i  212 

terrace  ranged  along  the  Northern /,  „    m  118 

riders  /  to  /,  until  they  closed  In  conflict  „      v  490 

Cannon  in  /  of  them  VoUey'd  and  thunder'd ;  Light  Brigade  20 

Betwixt  the  black  f's  long-withdrawn  In  Mem.  cxix  6 

For  Jf  to  /  in  an  hour  we  stood,  Maud  II  i  23 

whereof  along  the/.  Some  blazon'd,  Gareth  and  L.  405 

thicker  down  the  /  With  jewels  Geraint  and  E.  689 

Kiss'd  the  white  star  upon  his  noble/,  „            757 

in  /  of  which  Six  stately  virgins,  all  in  white,  Lover's  Tale  ii  76 

in  /  of  that  ravine  Which  drowsed  in  gloom,  Death  of  (Enone  75 

Front  (verb)    And  the  crag  that  f's  the  Even,  Eleiinore  40 

And  eastward  f's  the  statue,  Eoly  Grail  241 

Henceforward  rarely  could  she  /  in  hall,  Guinevere  62 


Front  (verb)  (continued)    Shape  your  heart  to  /  the 

hour,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  106 

I  will  /  him  face  to  face.  Happy  19 

Me  they  /  With  sullen  brows.  Akbar's  Dream  51 

Fronted    (See  also  Fair-fronted)    Philip's  dwelling  / 

on  the  street,  Enoch  Arden  731 

when  first  I  /  him.  Said,  '  Trust  him  not ; '  Sea  Dreams  70 

daily  /  him  In  some  fresh  splendour ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  13 

We  /  there  the  learning  of  all  Spain,  Columbus  41 

Frontier    And  flying  reach'd  the  / :  Princess  i  109 

Hard  by  your  father's  /:  „          148 

Fronting    like  a  star  F  the  dawn  he  moved ;  (Enone  58 

Frontless    Suddenly  bawls  this  /  kitchen-knave,  Gareth  and  L.  860 

Frost    There  is  /  in  your  breath  Poet's  Mind  17 
the  /  is  on  the  pane :                                         May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  13 

sparkled  keen  with  /  against  the  hilt :  M.  d' Arthur  55 

Rain,  wind,  /,  heat,  hail,  St.  S.  Stylites  16 

With  drenching  dews,  or  stiff  with  crackling/.  „         115 

one  wide  chasm  of  time  and/  they  gave  Princess,  Pro.  93 

Draw  toward  the  long /and  longest  night,  A  Dedication  11 

The  /  is  here.  And  fuel  is  dear.  Window,  Winter  1 

And  /  is  here  And  has  bitten  the  heel  „               5 

,     Bite,  /,  bite !  (repeat)  „         7, 13 

That  grief  hath  shaken  into  /!  In  Mem.  iv  12 

The  streets  were  black  with  smoke  and  /,  „      Ixix  3 

The  yule-log  sparkled  keen  with  /,  „  Ixxviii  5 

'  My  sudden  /  was  sudden  gain,  „  Ixxxi  10 

New  leaf,  new  life — the  days  of  /  are  o'er :  Last  Tournament  278 

sparkled  keen  with  /  against  the  hilt :  Pass,  of  Arthur  223 

Hard  was  the  /  in  the  field.  First  Quarrel  39 

and  the  bitter  /  and  the  fright  ?  Rizpah  18 

all  the  heavens  flash'd  in  /;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  22 

leaf  rejoice  in  the  /  that  sears  it  at  night ;  The  Wreck  20 

'  No  /  there,'  so  he  said,  ,,         80 

Sun-flame  or  simless  /,  Epilogue  66 

His  fingers  were  so  stiJEEen'd  by  the  /  The  Ring  239 

When  /  is  keen  and  days  are  brief —  To  Ulysses  19 

Frost-bead    f-b  melts  upon  her  golden  hair ;  Prog,  of  Spring  10 

Frost-like     And  tipt  with  f-l  spires.  Palace  of  Art  52 

Frosty    (See  also  Purple-frosty)    Make  thou  my  spirit 

pure  and  clear  As  are  the  /  skies,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  10 

For  while  our  cloisters  echo'd  /  feet.  Princess,  Pro.  183 

That  glitter  burnish'd  by  the  /  dark ;  „             v  261 

Made  the  noise  of  /  woodlands,  Boddicea  75 

The  flying  cloud,  the  /  light :  _    In  Mem.  cvi  2 

Yet  in  your  /  cells  ye  feel  the  fire !  Balin  and  Balan  446 

Thaw  once  of  a  /  night  I  slither'd  North.  Cobbler  19 

Froth     Upon  the  topmost  /  of  thought.  In  Mem.  Hi  4 

Froth'd    He  /  his  bumpers  to  the  brim ;  D.  of  the  0.  Year  19 

is  your  spleen  /  out,  or  have  ye  more  ?  Merlin  andV.  767 

Frothfly    Sweeping  the  /  from  the  fescue  Aylmer's  Field  530 

Frown  (s)    who  may  know  Whether  smile  or/  be 

fleeter  ?  Whether  smile  or  /  be  sweeter,  Madeline  12 

F's  perfect-sweet  along  the  brow  „        15 

Thy  smile  and  /  are  not  aloof  From  one  another,  „        19 

black  brows  drops  down  A  sudden-curved/,  (repeat)  „  35,  47 

other /'s  than  those  That  knit  themselves  Aylmer's  Field  723 

He  had  darken'd  into  a  /,  Maud  I  xix  62 

Fortune,  turn  thy  wheel  with  smile  or/;  Marr.  of  Geraint  350 

Met  his  full  /  timidly  firm,  and  said ;  Geraint  and  E.  71 

Frown  (verb)    F  and  we  smile,  the  lords  of  our  own 

hands ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  3?4 
sweet  eyes  / :  the  lips  Seem  but  a  gash.                Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  106 

Frown'd    The  seldom-frowning  King  /,  Lancelot  and  E.  715 
and  you  took  them  tho'  you  /;  You  /  and  yet 

you  kiss'd  them.  Happy  74 

Frownmg    (See  also  Seldom-frowning)    Smiling,  /, 

evermore,  (repeat)  Madeline  8,  25 

Florian  nodded  at  him,  I  jf ;  Princess  iv  160 

Vivien,  /  in  true  anger,  said :  Merlin  and  V.  691 

Vivien  answer'd  /  wrathfully :  »             704 

Vivien  answer'd  /  yet  in  wrath :  „             768 

With  smiling  face  and  /  heart,  Lancdot  and  E.  553 

Froze    with  surprise  F  my  swift  speech :  D.  of  F.  Women  90 

To  me  you  / :  this  was  my  meed  for  all.  Princess  iv  302 


II 


Hapfy  71 
L.  ofShalottivZO 
Poet's  Mind  10 
Two  Voices  237 
422 
The  Blackbird  24 
M.  d'Arthur  183 
In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  15 
Pass,  of  Arthur  351 
Last  Tournament  413 
Merlin  and  V.  845 
PMeas  and  E.  433 
Death  of  (Enone  73 
Montenegro  3 

Ode  to  Memory  18 

(Enone  66 

„       72 

„     135 

„     226 

Lotos-Eaters  29 


Froze 

f    ^^^^"^Mf  f '^^u,  ^T  ^*  ^  y°"  ^'«™  your  bride, 

f    Sttaea    Till  her  blood  was /slowly 

i  HoUow  smile  and  /  sneer  Come' not  here. 

iie  txx  a  and  /  to  permanence : 

My /heart  began  to  beat. 

Caught  in  the/pahns  of  Spring. 

Larger  than  human  on  the  /  hills. 

That  longs  to  burst  a/  bud 

Larger  than  human  on  the/  hills. 

These  be  no  rubies,  this  is  /  blood 

and  stood  StiflE  as  a  viper  /;  ' 

the  placid  lip  F  by  sweet  sleep, 

hke  a  creature/  to  the  heart 
Wn^    /,  savage,  arm'd  by  day  and  night 
Wmt    (6e«  a^so  First-fruits)    shoots  Of  orient  green 
givmg  safe  pledge  of /'s,  ^ 

?T^?j^^  ?/  of  pure  Hesperian  gold, 
^ehold  this/,  whose  gleaming  rind  ingrav'n 
Paris  held  the  costly  /  Out  at  arm's-length, 
cast  the  golden  /  upon  the  board 

enchanted  stem,  Laden  with  flower  and  /,  /^,„,  ^v,,.„  9a 

ei^  my  flower  to  /  Changed,  I  was  ripe  f^'r  death.    D.  ofTwo^'Z^fl 
f  sand  cream  Served  in  the  weepins  ehn  •  riZ^'J:  >    t^  Tni 

we  stole  his  /,  His  hens,  his  eggs^^        '  wSkt!7'u-iti 

bring  me  offerings  of  /  ^d  ^wek  •  h,  e   cf  ^''^{  «^ 

This  /  of  thineTy  Lo4Tb?esr    '  rlf  ^O  t  Ifo 

Where  fairer  /  of  Love  may  rest  ^"^^'""^  ^"*  !f  ? 

flower  of  knowledge  changed  to  f  Of  wisdom  T^,.     "j  n  .    o7 

and  fs,  and  spicef,  clear  of  toll,"^  '  ^Tn?Jlf  v"'^  H 

cherish  that  which  bears  but  bitter  f?  t    iT  J%  f. 

With  naked  limbs  and  flowers  and  /VBut  we  nor  ^"^^"^  ^"^^  ^ 

paused  for /nor  flowers.  »-     e  nor 

Gifts  by  the  children,  gaiden-herbs  and/,  eIcHaS^^ 

babies  roU'd  about  Like  tSnbled/  i7£.'J'f  ^«^ 

falhng  in  a  land  Of  promise ;  /  would  foUow  """''''  ^'-^H 

To  scare  the  fowl  from/:                  ^  ^ouow.  ^^          „  140 

J',  blossom,  viand,  amber  wine  "            .^of 

breadth  Of  Autumn,  dropping /'s  "            *^  ^ 

And  gathering  aU  the /'5  of  earth  Orf^ /n/^   w.hl^l^ 

Weanng  his  wisdom  %htly,  hke  the  f  Inter.  Exhib.  41 

A  life  that  bears  immortal  /               "^  ^  i>«^.ca<,o„  12 

I'll  rather  take  what  /  may  be  ^"^  ^*"'-  ?^  ^^ 

Of  what  in  them  is  flower  and/;  "   n'^^\l^ 

It  IS  only  flowers,  thev  had  no  f's  >/'  ^V^r    n^ 

little  pitted  speck  in  gamer'd/    '  ;tf    j^'"'^.  U  l^^ 

sure  I  think  this  /  is  hu^  too  high  rf'^t"  ""^  ?^-  ^^f 

your  flower  Waite  to  be  soUd  /^  7^,?^? ^  "'^  ^;  IZ^ 

the  red  /  Grown  on  a  magic  oak-tree  ^"'^  Tournament  100 

manners  are  not  idle,  but  the  /  Of  loval  nature  "n   ■            lit 

said  the  maid,  '  be  m'annei^  such  fai^P            '  Gmnevere  335 

no  leaf,  no  flower,  no  /  for  me.  r^,^,    ^' ,    .  HI 

promise  of  blossom,  but  never  a  / '  iF    f  .S    f/  *  "  !^ 

And  we  came  to  the  Isle  of  ii"s  •  •'  ^««'«w««  51 

irinn'^'F  ^T^  ^"u  L^^^  *^«  poisonous  pleasure  "             H 

g^ddy  besides  with  the/'5  we  had  gorgei  "              ?? 

Was  flinging /to  lions;                    ^    ^     '  "^.      .     l^ 

earthly  flower  would  be  heavenlv  f—  Tiresias  67 

She  tastes  the  /  before  the  blossom  falls,  AnciZllZ  ?? 

The  kernel  of  the  shriveU'd  /  Ancient  i,age  75 

climbing  toward  her  with  the  golden  f  rt^nth  J'n?         T^ 

•Mine  is  the  one/ Alia  made  for  mam'  AUar's^r^Z  ^m 

VruitrT  ?"',?f '^^  V'^'^  "«  ^^^  ^°d/,  "'**"'  '  Dreamy 

Frmtful    like  the  arrow-seeds  of  the  field  flower.  The 

/  wit  Cleavmg,  /ttt    t,      ^ 

P  of  further  thought  and  deed,  tJv  ^°'\  f ? 

FS-^oU^-^?;Lr^-^^'""^^^-^^/^^^^^^ ,  7;&js 

I  keep  smooth  platk  of  /  ground,  ^"5?!?;'  ^^a'^-^I 

When  the  centres  behind  me  like  a/land  reposed;     £cL^"S?i| 


245 


Fruitful  {continued)    With  /  cloud  and  living  smoke. 
The  /  hours  of  still  increase ;  ' 

To  /  strifes  and  rivalries  of  peace — 

Fruitless    Which  else  were  /  of  their  due 
Is  shriveU'd  in  a  /  fire,  * 

Who  built  him  fanes  of  /  prayer 
'Wherefore  grieve  Thy  brethren  with  a/ tear ? 


Full 

In  Mem.  xxxix  3 

,,  xlvi  10 

Bed.  of  Idylls  Z% 

In  Mem.  xlv  14 

„         liv  11 

„         hi  12 

glajcing  from  his  teighro.reaittT/ Mlow"  '         DtMaef' ajfm 

The  /  is  all  the  dearer.  Window,  Winter  2 

Fuel-smother'd    And  from  it  like  a  f-s  fire  n     .j.  "  j  r  ^o^ 

Fulfil    i^'5  him  with  beatitude.      ^          '  ^J^"f'''^-^-^li 

God  f's  himself  in  many  ways,  ^^if  7^'T%a^ 

discerning  to  /  This  labour,  ^- ^  ^^f^^''  ^41 

I  would  but  ask  you  to  /  yourself  •  p  •    ^'y*!?*  35 

each /'5  Defect  in  each,    ^  ^""'^^^^  ^"  146 

To  strive,  to  fashion,  to  f-—  r     ,,"          .vP^ 

F  the  boundless  purpose  of  their  Kine "  r.        /  r;/^*?^I 

God  /  's  himself  in  many  ways          ^  *  S^"*'  <  f^^""'  jj^ 

Fulfill'd     By  its  own  eneiW^f  itseU  Pass,  of  Arthur  409 

For  daJy  hope/,  toTeS  '  ^J'^^^C'  ^'^^l 

My  father  '  that  our  com^ct  be  /:  ^^T-  ^"""^  ?f 

Fulfilment    to  rise  again  Revolving  toward  f  i^j    •     i^      •   o« 

FuU    so  /  and  deep  I„  thy  large  e/es,           ^'  Edwin  Morris  39 

and  slowly  grow  To  a  /  face,  ^^eanore  85 

So  /,  so  deep,  so  slow,  »        ^| 

Since  in  his  absence  /  of  light  and  iov  t^,^>   m\    .  .„f 

that  strove  to  rise  From  my  /  heart?^'  ^"^  '  ^"^^  '  ^25 

It  was  /  of  old  odds  an'  ends,  p,v  J'n         ;  To 

and  the  /  moon  stares  at  the  snow.  ^^'^^^  ^p"-""^  a^ 

'F  of  compassion  and  mercy— (repeat)  7?.v^i?^«o  «q 

My  brain  is  /  of  the  cra^h  of  wrecks,  r^t    'Pa 

I  fun  thy  pockets  as  /  o'  my  pipnins  ri,      %.        /  '^^^^  ^ 

Too  /  for  sound  and  f oam^  Church-warden  etc.  34 

And  yet,  tho'  its  voice  be  so  clear  and /  p'"^  ^t  Pf^^, 

The  warble  was  low,  and  /  and  clear  n°'^  '  ¥^''^  ^4 

Thy  rose-lips  and /blue  eyes              '  DyingSwan24 

My  life  is /of  weary  days,  ;[.    ,v    •   J'^^fJ 

Mine  be  the  strength  of  spirit,  f  and  free  M  ■     ^KI^^^  ''  H^  i 

But  my  /  heart,  that  work'd  below           '  ^''"'  *  V  f'^^'\] 

Flood  with  /  daylight  glebe  and  to^n  ?  ^'"^  ^"^'*  ^ 

Ihey  met  with  two  so  /  and  bright—  m  •„"  ,    7.  qA 

While  those  /  chestnut^  whisper  by.  ^'^^'''  ^\  f  ^ 

My  eyes  are  /  of  tears,  my  heart  of  love,  /h^„  /^ 

her  /  and  earnest  eye  Over  her  snow-cold  breast  " ,  l] 

nf^T/^°^'^^  '^^^  *^'°'  *^^  «"^'i<=«  drear,  D.  of  F  Women  121 

He  was / of  joke  and  jest,  n  %,j;^ ^yomen  Ul 

Vnn  i''^  •'^  "ll^  ^^T^'*  °"  ^«'  ^'°^«'  ^"d  sunn'd^  GaVd'enJ^sDl^ 

that  when  his  heart  is  glad  Of  the  /  harvest  ^''''"'  «q 

lo  some  /  music  rose  and  sank  the  sun.  And  some  " 

/  music  seem'd  to  move  and  change  c'^.,,,-     »^      ■   o. 

Sneeze  out  a  /  God-bless-you  right  and  left  ?  ^'^^^^  ^"'•'•^  ^ 

Un  the  coals  I  lay.  A  vessel  f  of  sin  •  o.   r,   ,^'  , .        "" 

The/south-breez^e  around  t4e  Wow  V^'^'tt^^? 

and  made  himself  F  sailor  ■  i- "'  *f  ™5'  '^ 

Out  ol/heart  and  boimdlis  graUtude  ^"'**  "'"''",% 

,1      a  45 

»     m  231 


emu  watcn  A  /  sea  glazed  with  mufiied  mo( 
that/  voice  which  circles  round  the  grave 
Alas  your  Highness  breathes  /  East ' 


Full 


246 


Funeral 


Full  (continued)    Not  in  this  frequence  can  I  lend  /  tongue,     Princess  iv  442 

and  meek  Seem'd  the  /  lips,  „    vii  226 

The  two-cell'd  heart  beating,  with  one  /  stroke,  „          307 

Not  perfect,  nay,  but  /  of  tender  wants,  „          319 

Uplift  a  thousand  voices  /  and  sweet.  Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  1 

Spread  thy  /  wings,  and  waft  him  o'er.  In  Mem.  ix  4 

sigh  The  /  new  life  that  feeds  thy  breath  „  Ixxxvi  10 

But  when  the  heart  is  /  of  din,  „     xciv  13 

And  if  the  song  were  /  of  care,  „      cxro  9 

underUp,  you  may  call  it  a  little  too  ripe,  too  /,  Maud  I  it  9 

love  of  a  peace  that  was  /  of  wrongs  and  shames,  „  III  vi  40 

Fixing  /  eyes  of  question  on  her  face.  Com.  of  Arthur  312 

gathering  half  the  deep  And  /  of  voices,  „           381 

Albeit  neither  loved  with  that  /  love  Gareth  and  L.  83 

your  /  leave  to  go.  „          134 

When  waken'd  by  the  wind  which  with  /  voice  „          176 

This  railer,  that  hath  mock'd  thee  in  /  hall —  „           369 

The  wood  is  nigh  as  /  of  thieves  as  leaves :  „          789 

'  F  pardon,  but  I  follow  up  the  quest,  „          886 

the  stream,  F,  narrow ;  „          908 

knave  that  doth  thee  service  as  /  knight  „         1016 

so  will  my  knight-knave  Miss  the  /  flower  „        1297 

Met  his  /  frown  timidly  firm,  and  said ;  Geraint  and  E.  71 

The  whole  wood-world  is  one  /  peal  of  praise.  Balin  and  Balan  450 

for  this  /  love  of  mine  Without  the  /  heart  Merlin  and  V.  533 

that/ heart  of  yours  Whereof  ye  prattle,  „            548 

He  is  so  /  of  lustihood,  he  will  ride,  Lancelot  and  E.  203 
then  tum'd  the  tongueless  man  From  the  half -face 

to  the  /  eye,  „            1262 

with  /  affection  said,  '  Lancelot,  my  Lancelot,  „            1355 

let  us  meet  The  morrow  mom  once  more  in  one  /  field     Holy  Grail  323 

That  kept  the  entry,  and  the  moon  was /.  „        818 

My  tower  is  /  of  harlots,  like  his  court.  Last  Tournament  81 

free  chase  and  heather-scented  air.  Pulsing  /  man ;  „            692 

So  then,  when  both  were  brought  to  /  accord,  „            722 

crying  with  /  voice  '  Traitor,  come  out,  Guinevere  105 

land  was  /  of  signs  And  wonders  „        232 

for  all  the  land  was  /  of  life.  „        259 

on  one  Lay  a  great  water,  and  the  moon  was/  .  Pass,  of  Arthur  180 

when  the  /  city  peal'd  Thee  and  thy  Prince !  To  the  Queen  ii  26 

and  tho'  I  loiter'd  there  The  /  day  after,  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  98 

Grew  after  marriage  to  /  height  and  form  ?  „               171 

Love  and  Honour  join'd  to  raise  the  /  High-tide  „               177 

Back  to  that  passionate  answer  of  /  heart  „              259 

golden  guess  Is  moming-star  to  the  /  round  of  truth.  Columbus  44 

then  full-current  thro'  /  man :  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  22 

Yield  thee  /  thanks  for  thy  /  courtesy  To  Victor  Rugo  13 

I  can  hear  Too  plainly  what  /  tides  of  onset  Tiresias  91 

that  /  light  Of  friendship !  „      202 

One  /  voice  of  allegiance.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  22 

would  flower  into  /  health  Among  our  heath  The  Ring  317 

Not  less  would  yield  /  thanks  to  you  To  Ulysses  33 

Whose  Faith  and  Work  were  bells  of  /  accord,  In  Mem.,  W.  G.  Ward  2 

And  borne  along  by  that  /  stream  of  men,  St.  Tdemachus  43 

Fall-accomplished    hers  by  right  of  f-a  Fate ;  Palace  of  Art  207 

Full-ann'd    F-a  upon  his  charger  all  day  Pdleas  and  E.  216 

Full-blown    sail'd,  F-b,  before  us  into  rooms  Princess  i  229 

Full-brain    All  the /-J,  half-brain  races,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  161 

Full-breasted    f-b  swan  That,  fluting  a  wild  carol  M.  d' Arthur  266 

f-b  swan  That,  fluting  a  wild  carol  Pass,  of  Arthur  434 

Full-busted    f-b  figure-head  Stared  o'er  the  ripple  Enoch  Arden  543 

Full-cell'd    A  f-c  honeycomb  of  eloquence  Edwin  Morris  26 

Full-current    then  f-c  thro'  full  man :  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  22 

Fuller    More  life,  and  /,  that  I  want.'  Two  Voices  399 

In  the  Spring  a  /  crimson  comes  upon  the  robin's 

breast ;  Locksley  Hall  17 

A  /  light  illumined  all,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  5 

with  /  sound  In  curves  the  yellowing  river  ran,  Sir  L.  arid  Q.  G.  14 

With  /  profits  lead  an  easier  life,  Enoch  Arden  145 

and  mould  The  woman  to  the  /  day.'  Princess  Hi  332 

So  now  thy  /  life  is  in  the  west,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  36 

But  ring  the  /  minstrel  in.  In  Mem.  cvi  20 

For  /  gain  of  after  bliss  ;  „     cxvii  4 

Till  ail  my  blood,  a  /  wave,  „  cxxii  12 

they  met  In  twos  and  threes,  or  /  companies,  Marr.  of  Geraint  57 


Fuller  (continued)     Her  /  franchise — what  would  that  be 

worth—  The  Fleet  8 

Larger  and  /,  Uke  the  human  mind !  Prog,  of  Spring  112 

When  I  gits  the  plaate  /  o'  Soondays  Church-warden,  etc.  40 

Fullest     his  children,  ever  at  its  best  And  /;  Lancelot  and  E.  337 

'  Taliessin  is  our  /  throat  of  song.  Holy  Grail  300 

Full-faced    all  the  /-/  presence  of  the  Gods  CEnone  80 

F-f  above  the  valley  stood  the  moon ;  Lotos-Eaters  7 

glowing  /-/  welcome,  she  Began  to  address  us.  Princess  ii  183 

Full-fair    All  in  a  /-/  manor  and  a  rich,  Gareth  and  L.  846 

Full-fed     a  /-/  river  winding  slow  By  herds  Palace  of  Art  73 

one  warm  gust,  /-/  with  perfume.  Gardener's  D.  113 

What  dare  the  /-/  liars  say  of  me  ?  Merlin  and  V.  692 

Full-flowing    /-/  harmony  Of  thy  swan-like  stateliness,  Elednore  46 

/-/  river  of  speech  Came  down  upon  my  heart.  CEnone  68 

Full-foliaged     Rock'd  the  /-/  elms,  and  swung  In  Mem.  xcv  58 

Full-grown    f-g  will,  Circled  thro'  all  experiences,  (Enone  165 

suit  The  f-g  energies  of  heaven.  In  Mem.  xl  20 

Full-handed  your  Omar  drew  F-h  plaudits  from  our  best    To  E.  Fitzgerald  38 

F-h  thunders  often  have  confessed  Thy  power.      To  W.  C.  Macready  2 

Full-juiced    The  /-/  apple,  waxing  over-mellow,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  33 

Full-limb'd    those  whom  God  had  made  f-l  and  tall,  Guinevere  42 

FuU-maned    the  f-m  horses  whirl'd  The  chariots 

backward,  Achilles  over  the  T.  24 

Fullness     (See  also  Fulness)     But  by  degrees  to 

/  wrought.  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  14 

part  by  part  to  men  reveal 'd  The  /  of  her  face —    Of  old  sat  Freedom  12 

Full-orb'd     to  this  present  My  f-o  love  has  waned  not.       Lover's  Tale  i  734 

Full-sail'd    How  may  f-s  verse  express,  Elecinore  4A 

and  seest  me  drive  Thro'  utter  dark  a  f-s  skiff,       Supp.  Confessions  95 

Full-summ'd    side  by  side,  f-s  in  all  their  powers.  Princess  vii  288 

Full-summer    thro'  the  field,  that  shone  F-s,  Lancelot  and  E.  1141 

Full-tided     at  Caerleon  the  f-t  Usk,  Geraint  and  E.  116 

Full-toned    swells  High  over  the  f-t  sea :  Sea-Fairies  15 

The  nightingale,  f-t  in  middle  May,  Balin  and  Balan  213 

Full-tuned     break  its  syllables,  to  keep  My  own  f-t, —         Love  and  Duty  40 

Full-welling    2^-w  fountain-heads  of  change.  Palace  of  Art  166 

Fulminated    /  Against  the  scarlet  woman  Sea  Dreams  22 

Fulmined    She  /  out  her  scorn  of  laws  Salique  Princess  ii  133 

Fulness    (See  also  After-fulness)    Have  added  /  to 

the  phrase  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  11 

throng'd  my  pulses  with  the  /  of  the  Spring.  Locksley  Hall  36 

The/  of  the  pensive  mind;  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  48 

Lest  of  the  /  of  my  life  I  leave  Will  Water.  163 

the  note  Had  reach'd  a  thunderous  /,  Sea  Dreams  214 

And  weep  the  /  from  the  mind :  In  Mem.  xx  6 

Fulsome    And  /  Pleasure  clog  him,  and  drown  His  heart  Maud  I  xvi  4 

Affronted  with  his  /  innocence  ?  Pelleas  and  E.  266 

Fulvia    You  should  have  clung  to  F's  waist,  D.  of  F.  Women  259 

Fume  (s)     (See  also  Incense-fume)     For  mockery  is 

the  /  of  little  hearts.  Guinevere  633 

or  the  f's  Of  that  dark  opiate  dose  you  gave  me,  Romney's  R.  30 

Fume  (verb)     We  fret,  we  /,  would  shift  our  skins.  Will  Water.  225 

Fuming    and  near  me  stood.  In  /  sulphur  blue  and 

green.  Last  Tournament  617 

Fun  (found)    /  'um  theer  a-laaid  on  'is  faiice  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  33 

Fur  If',  when  'er  back  wur  turn'd.  North.  Cobbler  31 

UU  be  /'  upo'  four  short  legs  Owd  Rod  16 

Then  I  waaked  an'  I  /  it  was  Roaver  „        60 

Till  1/  that  it  warn't  not  the  gaainist  waay  Church-warden,  etc.  12 

I  /  thy  pockets  as  full  o'  my  pippins  „  34 

Function    pUes  His  /  of  the  woodland :  Lucretius  46 

Funeral  (adj.)     Dark  as  a/  scarf  from  stem  to  stern,  M.  d' Arthur  194 

In  sound  of  /  or  of  marriage  bells ;  Gardener's  D.  36 

Dark  in  its  /  fold.  Ode  on  Well.  57 

Dark  as  a  /  scarf  from  stem  to  stem.  Pass,  of  Arthur  362 

tolling  of  his  /  bell  Broke  on  my  Pagan  Paradise,  Tiresias  192 

F  hearses  rolling !  Forlorn  68 

They  bore  the  Cross  before  you  to  the  chant  of  /  hymns.  Happy  48 

Death  of  (Enone  63 

105 

To  Master  of  B.  20 

Funeral  (s)     A  /,  with  plumes  and  lights  And  music,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  31 

the  little  port  Had  seldom  seen  a  costlier/.  Enoch  Arden  917 

Mother  weeps  At  that  white  /  of  the  single  life,  Prin.  Beatrice  9_ 


II 


Funeral 


247 


Gain 


Tnneral  (s)  (contimied)    toll  of  /  in  an  Angel  ear  Sounds 

happier  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  10 

Fanweal    at  one  end  of  the  hall  Two  great  /  curtains,       Lover's  Tale  iv  214 

And  lay  on  that  /  boat,  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  34 

Fur    My  father  sent  ambassadors  with  f's  Princess  i  42 

Furbelow    See  Sea-furbelow 

Furious    nature's  prideful  sparkle  in  the  blood  Break 
into  /  flame ; 

As  after  /  battle  turfs  the  slain  On  some  wild 
down 

they  blurt  Their  /  formalisms, 
Furiousiy    /  Down  thro'  the  bright  lawns 
Furl    come  hither  and  /  your  sails, 

Mariner,  mariner,  /  your  sails, 
Furl'd    battle-flags  were  /  In  the  Parliament 

And  never  sail  of  ours  was  /, 
Furlough  To  yield  us  farther  /: ' 
Furnace    all  the  /  of  the  light  Struck  up 

a  heat,  As  from  a  seventimes-heated  /, 
Furnished    bravely  /  all  abroad  to  fling 
Fumitur    0'  /  'ere  i'  the  'ouse, 
Furr'd    (See  also  Gay-furr'd)     Tho'  smock'd,  or  /  and 

purpled, 
Forriner  (foreigner)    gawin'  to  let  in  /'«'  wheat. 
Furrow    to  his  mother's  calls  From  the  flower'd  /. 

sitting  well  in  order  smite  The  soimding  f's ; 

in  the  /  broke  the  ploughman's  head, 

reddening  in  the  f's  of  his  chin, 

meteor  on,  and  leaves  A  shining  /, 

down  in  a  /  scathed  with  flame : 

Or  in  the  /  musing  stands ; 

leaving  share  in  /  come  to  see  The  glories 
Furrow-cloven    huddling  slant  in  f-c  falls 
Furrowing    /  into  light  the  moimded  rack, 

Came  /  all  the  orient  into  gold. 

F  a  giant  oak,  and  javelining  With  darted  spikes 
Fnrrowy    A  double  hill  ran  up  his  /  forks 
Further    We  brook  no  /  insult  but  are  gone.' 

at  the  /  end  Was  Ida  by  the  throne. 

Not  ever  to  be  question'd  any  more  Save  on  the 
\  /side; 

and  on  the  /  side  Arose  a  silk  pavilion. 

For  this  were  shame  to  do  him  /  wrong 
Itethest    summits  slope  Beyond  the  /  flights  of  hope, 

From  Camelot  in  among  the  faded  fields  To  / 
towers ; 
Fury  (rage)     (See  also  Fool-fory)    struck  such  warbling 

/  thro'  the  words ;  Princess  iv  586 

Had  often  wrought  some  /  on  myself,  Balin  and  Balan  62 

'  How  then  ?  who  then  ?  a  /  seized  them  Lancelot  and  E.  476 

furies,  curses,  passionate  tears,  Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  39 

narrower  The  cage,  the  more  their/.  ATcbar's  Dream  51 

rememberest  what  a  /  shook  Those  pillars  „  80 

Godless  /  of  peoples,  and  Christless  frolic  of  kings.  The  Dawn  7 

Vnry  (a  deity)    Like  to  Furies,  like  to  Graces, 

numbs  the  F's  ringlet-snake,  and  plucks 

And  Life,  a  F  slinging  flame. 

The  household  JF"  sprinkled  with  blood 

one  angel  face,  And  all  the  Furies.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  159 

'  Furze    (See  also  Fuzz)    on  these  dews  that  drench  the  /,  In  Mem.  xi  6 


Geraint  and  E.  828 

Merlin  and  V.  657 

Akbar's  Dream  57 

Aylmer's  Field  340 

Sea-Fairies  16 

21 

Lochsley  Hall  127 

The  Voyage  81 

Princess  Hi  74 

Mariana  in  the  S.  55 

Holy  Grail  843 

The  Poet  25 

NoHh.  Cobbler  36 

Princess  iv  247 

Owd  Rod,  45 

Supp.  Confessions  160 

Ulysses  59 

Princess  v  221 

„      vi  228 

„     vii  185 

The  Victim  22 

In  Mem.  Ixiv  27 

Gareth  and  L.  243 

Princess  vii  207 

Love  and  Duty  100 

Princess  Hi  18 

Merlin  and  V.  936 

Princess  Hi  174 

vi  342 

356 

Com.  of  Arthur  397 

Gareth  and  L.  909 

954 

Two  Voices  185 

Last  Tournament  54 


Vision  of  Sin  41 

Lucretius  262 

In  Mem.  I  8 

Maud  I  xix  32 


Fnrze-cramm'd    F-c,  and  bracken-rooft, 
Furzy    The  /  prickle  fire  the  dells, 
Fuse    Whose  fancy  f's  old  and  new, 

They  /  themselves  to  little  spicy  baths, 

power  to  /  My  myriads  into  union  under  one ; 
Fnsed    manhood  /  with  female  grace 

/  together  in  the  tyrannous  light — 
Fosileer    faces  of  Havelocks  good  f's, 
FnsiUade    better  aimed  are  your  flank  f's — 

Hark  cannonade,  / ! 
Posing    /  all  The  skirts  of  self  again. 

Of  Knowledge  /  class  with  class, 
Pnst  (first)    then  I  minded  the  /  kiss  I  gied  'er  by 

Thursby  thum ; 
Fatile    O  life  as  /,  then,  as  frail ! 


Last  Tournament  377 

Two  Voices  71 

In  Mem.  xvi  18 

Prog,  of  Spring  33 

Ahbar's  Dream  156 

In  Mem.  cix  Yl 

Lover's  Tale  ii  67 

Def.  of  Lucknow  101 

57 

95 

In  Mem.  xlvii  2 

Freedom  17 

North.  Cobbler  45 
In  Mem.  Ivi  25 


Future  (adj.)    transfused  Thro'  /  time  by  power  of 

thought.  Love  thou  thy  land  4 

I  think  that  we  Shall  never  more,  at  any  /  time,  M.  d' Arthur  18 

fruit  of  Love  may  rest  Some  happy  /  day.  Talking  Oak  252 

Some  /  time,  if  so  indeed  you  will,  Princess  ii  64 

Perchance  upon  the  /  man :  „  Con.  109 

her  /  Lord  Was  drown'd  in  passing  thro'  the  ford,  In  Mem.  vi  38 

And  leaps  into  the  /  chance,  „        cxiv  7 

I  think  that  we  Shall  never  more,  at  any  /  time,  Pass,  of  Arthur  189 

Future  (s)    When  I  dipt  into  the  /,  Locksley  Hall  15 

For  I  dipt  into  the  /.  „          119 

this  he  kept  Thro'  all  his  /;  Enoch  Arden  237 

a  wind  of  prophecy  Dilating  on  the/;  Princess  ii  172 

Nemesis  Break  from  a  darken'd  /,  „        vi  175 

prescient  of  whate'er  The  F  had  in  store :  Lover's  Tale  ii  133 

And  past  and  /  mix'd  in  Heaven  The  Ring  186 

and  thence  maintain  Our  darker  /.  To  one  ran  down  Eng,  2 

Far  as  the  F  vaults  her  skies,  Mechanophilus  17 

Futurity    the  cope  Of  the  half-attain'd  /,  Ode  to  Memory  33 

Fuzz  (furze)     Nowt  at  all  but  bracken  an'  /,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  38 


Gaainist  (nearest)    I  fun'  that  it  wam't  not  the  g 

waiiy  to  the  narra  Gaiite, 
GaainsaEly  (gainsay)    I  weilnt  g  it,  my  lad, 
Gaapin'  (gaping)    tha  be  new  to  the  plaiice — thou'rt  g — 
Gaate  (gate)     why  didn't  tha  hesp  the  g  ? 

an  looiik  thruf  Maddison's  g ! 

I  fun  that  it  wam't  not  the  gaainist  waay  to  the 
narra  G. 
Gabble     Nothing  but  idiot  g ! 
Gabbled    She  g,  as  she  groped  in  the  dead, 

The  Baths,  the  Forum  gr  of  his  death. 
Gable    and  half  A  score  of  g's. 

overhead  Fantastic  g's,  crowding. 
Gable-ends    bum'd  On  the  blossom'd  g-e 
Gable-wall    held  the  pear  to  the  g-w. 
Gabriel    Whose  Titan  angels,  G,  Abdiel, 
Gad-fly    sung  to,  when,  this  g-f  brush'd  aside. 
Gadding    Said  the  good  nuns  would  check  her  g  tongue 
Gaffer    Ran  G,  stumbled  Gammer. 
Gag     the  wholesome  boon  of  gyve  and  g.' 
Gagelike    flung  defiance  down  G  to  man. 
Gaiety    G  without  eclipse  Wearieth  me, 
Gain  (s)     I  can  but  count  thee  perfect  g, 

But  gentle  words  are  always  g : 

foreheads,  vacant  of  our  glorious  g's, 

his  g's  were  dock'd,  however  small :  Small  were 
his  g's,  and  hard  his  work ; 

His  g  is  loss ;  for  he  that  wrongs  his  friend 

Who,  never  naming  God  except  for  g, 

Ours  the  pain,  be  his  the  g ! 

And  find  in  loss  a  ^  to  match  ? 

Or  but  subserves  another's  g. 

But  turns  his  burthen  into  g. 

'  My  sudden  frost  was  sudden  g. 

For  fuller  g  of  after  bUss  : 

And  lust  of  g,  in  the  spirit  of  Cain, 

all  for  g  Of  glory,  and  hath  added  wound 

allow  my  pretext,  as  for  g  Of  purer  glory.' 

that  make  our  griefs  oiur  g's. 

The  g  of  such  large  life  as  match 'd 
Gain  (verb)    And  g  her  for  my  bride. 

In  hope  to  g  upon  her  flight. 

man  may  g  Letting  his  own  life  go. 

help  my  prince  to  g  His  rightful  bride, 

And  play  the  slave  to  g  the  tyranny. 

He  g  in  sweetness  and  in  moral  height. 

How  g  in  life,  as  life  advances, 

g  The  praise  that  comes  to  constancy.' 

I  will  walk  thro'  fire,  Mother,  to  g  it — 

And  glory  gain'd,  and  evermore  to  g. 


Church-warden,  etc.  12 

North.  Cobbler  17 

Spinster's  S's.  3 

Village  Wife  124 

Spinster's  S's.  6 

Church-warden,  etc.  12 

Maud  II  V  41 

Dead  Prophet  73 

St.  Telemachus  74 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  14 

Godiva  61 

Maud  I  vi9 

Mariana  4 

Milton  5 

Princess  v  414 

Guinevere  313 

The  Goose  34 

Gareth  and  L.  370 

Princess  i;  178 

Lilian  20 

Palace  of  Art  198 

Love  thou  thy  land  23 

Locksley  Hall  175 

Sea  Dreams  7 

,,        172 

188 

Ode  on  Well.  241 

In  Mem.  i  6 

„       liv  12 

„   Ixxx  12 

„  Ixxxi  10 

„    cxvii  4 

Maud  I  i  23 

Lancelot  and  E.  566 

586 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  231 

■  Ancient  Sage  237 

Talking  Oak  284 

The  Voyage  60 

Lucretius  112 

Princess  Hi  160 

„        iv  132 

„      vii  281 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  39 

In  Mem.  xxi  11 

Gareth  and  L.  134 

332 


Gain 


248 


Game 


Gain  (verb)  (.continued) 
fair  Queen, 
she  set  herself  to  g  Him,  the  most  famous  man 
Woo  her  and  g  her  then :  no  wavering,  boy ! 
or  if  she  g  her  earthly-best. 
Ere  she  g  her  Heavenly-best, 
in  the  North  to  g  Her  capital  city, 
corpse  of  every  man  that  g's  a  name ; 
As  Wisdom  hopes  to  g,' 

Gain'd    '  Thou  hast  not  g  a  real  height, 
but  even  then  she  g  Her  bower ; 
And  g  a  laurel  for  your  brow 
G  for  her  own  a  scanty  sustenance, 
Philip  g  As  Enoch  lost ; 
seaward-bound  for  health  they  g  a  coast, 
We  g  the  mother-city  thick  with  towers, 
further  on  we  gr  A  little  street  half  garden 
and  g  The  terrace  ranged  along  the  Northern  front, 
thus  much,  nor  more  I  g.' 
grasping  down  the  boughs  I  g  the  shore. 
We  cross'd  the  street  and  g  a  petty  moimd 
And  on  they  moved  and  g  the  hall. 
In  such  discourse  we  g  the  garden  rails, 
He  that  g  a  hundred  fights, 
A  wretched  vote  may  be  g. 
And  glory  g,  and  evermore  to  gain. 
Took  horse,  and  forded  Usk,  and  g  the  wood ; 
fatal  quest  Of  honour,  where  no  honour  can  be  g 
leaving  Arthur's  cornet  he  g  the  beach ; 
when  they  g  the  cell  wherein  he  slept, 
Storm  at  the  top,  and  when  we  g  it, 
she  g  her  castle,  upsprang  the  bridge, 
but  turning,  past  and  g  Tintagil, 
G  in  the  service  of  His  Highness, 
Step  by  step  we  g'  a  freedom 
But  when  she  g  the  broader  vale, 
G  their  huge  Colosseum. 

Gfainil^    Yet  oceans  daily  g  on  the  land, 

worship  woman  as  true  wife  beyond  All  hopes  of  g.      Merlin  and  V.  24 
G  a  lifelong  Glory  in  battle.  Bait,  of  Brunanburh  7 

a  glory  slowly  g  on  the  shade.  Making  of  Man  6 

Gainsay    See  Graainsaay 

Galabad    (a  Knight  of  the  Bound  Table)    Not  even 

Lancelot  brave,  nor  G  clean.  Merlin  and  V.  805 

Sir  Percivale  And  pure  Sir  G  to  uplift  the  maid ;    Lancelot  and  E.  1265 
ever  moved  Among  us  in  white  armour,  G.  Holy  Grail  135 

made  a  knight  Till  G ;  and  this  G,  when  he  heard  „  139 

G,  when  he  heard  of  Merlin's  doom,  „  177 

G  would  sit  down  in  MerUn's  chair.  „  181 

and  G  sware  the  vow.  And  good  Sir  Bore,  „  199 

G  on  the  sudden,  and  in  a  voice  Shrilling  „  288 

G,  and  O  G,  follow  me.'    '  Ah,  G,  G,'  „  292 

What  are  ye  ?  G's  ? — no,  nor  Percivales'  (For  thus  it 

pleased  the  King  to  range  me  close  After  Sir  G);  „  306 

And  I  myself  and  G,  for  a  strength  Was  in  us  „  333 

Shouting, '  Sir  G  and  Sir  Percivale ! '  „  337 

not  lost  thyself  to  save  thyself  As  G.'  „  457 

In  silver  armour  suddenly  G  shone  Before  us,  „  458 

I,  G,  saw  the  Grail,  The  Holy  Grail,  „  464 

G  fled  along  them  bridge  by  bridge,  „  504 

O  brother,  saving  this  Sir  G,  ,,  561 

after  I  was  join'd  with  G  Cared  not  for  her,  „  611 

Oalazy    Hung  in  the  golden  G.  L.  of  Shalott  iiil2 

Gale    And  merrily,  merrily  carol  the  g's,  Sea-Fairies  23 

Sweet  g's,  as  from  deep  gardens,  blow  Fatima  24 

strong  g's  Hold  swollen  clouds  from  raining,  D.  of  F.  Women  10 

last  night's  g  had  caught.  And  blown  across  Gardener's  D.  124 

Caught  the  shrill  salt,  and  sheer'd  the  g.  The  Voyage  12 

And  to  and  thro'  the  counter  g?  „  88 

Storm'd  in  orbs  of  song,  a  growing  g ;  Vision  of  Sin  25 

Kough-redden'd  with  a  thousand  winter  g^s,  Enoch  Arden  95 

drank  the  g  That  blown  about  the  foliage  Princess  Hi  120 

Who  changest  not  in  any  g.  In  Mem.  ii  10 

Caught  and  cuff 'd  by  the  g :  Maud  I  vi5 

So  fierce  a  g  made  hiavoc  here  of  late  Holy  Grail  729 


I  vow'd  that  could  I  g  her,  our 

Marr.  of  Geraint  787 

Merlin  and  V.  165 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  39 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  233 

271 

The  Ring  481 

Romney's  R.  123 

Politics  4 

Two  Voices  91 

Godiva  76 

You  might  have  won  3 

Enoch  Arden  259 

354 

Sea  Dreams  16 

Princess  i  112 

213 

Hi  117 

167 

it!  189 

557 

m352 

Con.  80 

Ode  on  Well.  96 

Maud  7  m  56 

Gareth  and  L.  332 

Marr.  of  Geraint  161 

:      Geraint  and  E.  704 

Merlin  and  V.  197 

Lancelot  and  E.  811 

Holy  Grail  491 

Pdleas  and  E.  206 

Last  Tournament  504 

Columbus  236 

Loclcsley  H.,  Sixty  129 

Death  of  CEnone  91 

St.  TelcTnachus  45 

Golden  Year  29 


Gale  {continued)    this  g  Tore  my  pavilion  from  the 

tenting-pin,  Holy  Grail  746 

ever  that  evening  ended  a  great  g  blew.  The  Revenge  114 
Galilsee    often  mutter  low  '  Vicisti  G ' ;  louder  again 
Spuming  a  shatter'd  fragment  of  the  God, 

'  Vicisti  G\'  St.  Tdemachus  15 

Galilee    still'd  the  rolUng  wave  of  G !  Aylmer's  Field  709 

Galingale    meadow,  set  with  slender  g ;  Lotos-Eaters  23 

Gall  (bitterness)    changed  a  wholesome  heart  to  g.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  44 

That  was  the  last  drop  in  the  cup  of  g.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  69 

Unto  me  my  maudhn  g  And  my  mockeries  Vision  of  Sin  201 

Gall  (oak-gall)    insects  prick  Each  leaf  into  a  g)  Talking  Oak  70 

Gall  (verb)     Began  to  g  the  knighthood,  asking  Las  t  Tournament  683 

Gallant    My  woman-soldier,  g  Kate,  Kate  15 

the  seamen  Made  a  g  crew,  G  sons  of  English  freemen.     The  Captain  6 

Many  a  g  gay  domestic  Bows  before  him  L.  of  Burleigh  47 

So  sang  the  g  glorious  chronicle ;  Princess,  Pro.  49 

To  give  three  g  gentlemen  to  death.'  „        ii  335 

He  seems  a  gracious  and  a  g  Prince,  „         v  213 

I  fenced  it  round  with  g  institutes,  „            392 

A  g  fight,  a  noble  princess —  „      Con.  19 

Who  pledgest  now  thy  g  son ;  In  Mem.  vi  10 

.    A  passionate  ballad  g  and  gay,  Maud  I  vi 

The  charge  of  the  g  three  hundred.  Heavy  Brigade  1 

he  waved  his  blade  To  the  g  three  hundred  „            10 

up  the  hill,  Gallopt  the  g  three  hundred,  „            25 

'  Lost  are  the  g  three  hundred  of  Scarlett's  Brigade ! '  „            45 

0  great  and  g  Scott,  Bandit's  Death  1 

'  G  Sir  Ralph,'  said  the  king.  The  Tourney  6 

Galleon    Four  g's  drew  away  From  the  Spanish  fleet  The  Revenge  46 

their  high-built  g's  came,  „         68 

Galleried    a  minster  there,  A  g  palace.  The  Ring  246 

Gallery    foremost  in  thy  various  g  Place  it,  Ode  to  Memory  84 

By  garden- wall  and  g,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  S8 

And  round  the  roofs  a  gilded  g  Palace  of  Art  29 

The  Ught  aisrial  g,  golden-rail'd,  „            47 

long-laid  galleries  past  a  hundred  doors  Princess  vi  375 

golden  hours,  In  those  long  galleries,  The  Daisy  42 

made  his  feet  Wings  thro'  a  glimmering  g,  Balin  and  Balan  404 

let  his  eyes  Run  thro'  the  peopled  g  Lancelot  and  E.  430 

Rich  galleries,  lady-laden,  weigh'd  the  necks  Holy  Grail  346 

He  glanced  and  saw  the  stately  galleries.  Last  Tournament  145 

Tristram  round  the  g  made  his  horse  Caracole ;  „              205 

armed  feet  Thro'  the  long  g  from  the  outer  doors  Guinevere  413 

Gallop    The  trumpet,  the  g,  the  charge,  Heavy  Brigade  13 

Gallopaded    willows  two  and  two  By  rivers  g.  Amphion  40 

Gallop'd-Gallopt    and  so  gallop'd  up  the  knoll.  Marr.  of  Geraint  168 

as  he  gallop'd  up  To  join  them,  „             171 

Gallopt  the  gallant  three  himdred,  Heavy  Brigade  25 

our  men  gallopt  up  with  a  cheer  and  a  shout,  „            61 

Galloping    {See  also  Eteavily-galloping)    g  hoofs  bare  on 

the  ridge  of  spears  Princess  v  489 
Gallopt    See  Gallop'd 

Gama    His  name  was  G ;  crack'd  and  small  his  voice,  „        i  114 

Then  G  tum'd  to  me :  '  We  fear,  indeed,  „       v  120 

you  spake  but  sense  Said  G.  „          207 

This  G  swamp'd  in  lazy  tolerance.  „          443 

can  this  be  he  From  G's  dwarfish  loins  ?  „          506 

And  moved  beyond  his  custom,  G  said :  „      vi  229 

Gambol    mother  he  had  never  known,  In  ^'s ;  Aylmer's  Field  6Q1 

For  these  your  dainty  g's :  wherefore  ask ;  Merlin  and  V.  309 

Nor  ever  let  you  g  in  her  sight.  The  Ring  387 

Gamboll'd-Gambol'd    when  she  gamboU'd  on  the  greens  Talking  Oak  77 

We  gambol'd,  making  vain  pretence  Of  gladness.  In  Mem.  xxx  6 

Glanced  at  the  doors  or  gambol'd  down  the  walks ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  665 

And  a  hundred  gamboU'd  and  pranced  on  the 

wrecks  V.  of  Maddune  102 

Gambolling    Down  shower  the  g  waterfalls  Sea-Fairies  10 

Game  (thing  hunted)    Stoops  at  all  g  that  wing  the  skies,  Rosalind  4 

Whither  fly  ye,  what  g  spy  ye,  „        8 

touch'd  upon  the  g,  how  scarce  it  was  Audley  Court  32 

Man  is  the  hunter ;  woman  is  his  y :  Princess  v  154 

He  bore  but  little  g  in  hand ;  The  Victim  42 

No,  there  is  fatter  g  on  the  moor;  Maud  I  il^ 

Royaller  g  is  mine.  Merlin  and  V.  IC 


1 


Game 


249 


Garden-wall 


Game  (pastime)    The  g  of  forfeits  done —  The  Epic  2 

dwindled  down  to  some  odd  g's  In  some  odd  nooks  „         8 

She  remember'd  that :  A  pleasant  g,  Princess,  Pro.  194 

Quoit,  tennis,  ball — no  y's  ?  „            in  215 

At  civil  revel  and  pomp  and  g,  (repeat)  Ode  on  Well.  147,  227 

In  dance  and  song  and  g  and  jest  ?  In  Mem.  xxix  8 

Again  our  ancient  y'»  had  place,  „    Ixxviii  10 

Poor  rivals  in  a  losing  g,  „          cii  19 

Be  neither  song,  nor  g,  nor  feast ;  „           cv21 

moved  by  an  unseen  hand  Sitag  That  pushes  Maud  I  iv  26 

And  play  the  g  of  the  despot  kings,  „        x  39 

once  again  the  sickening  g ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  127 

God  must  mingle  with  the  g :  „               271 

Romans  brawlmg  of  their  monstrous  g's ;  St.  Telemachus  40 

Gamesome     '  Then  ran  she,  g  as  the  colt.  Talking  Oak  121 

Gammer    Ran  Gaffer,  stumbled  G.  The  Goose  34 

Gamut     their  shrieks  Ran  highest  up  the  g,  Sea  Dreams  233 

Ganymede    flush'd  G,  his  rosy  thigh  Half -buried  Palace  of  Art  121 

I  think  he  came  hke  G,  Will  Water.  119 

'  They  mounted,  G's,  To  tumble,  Vulcans,  Princess  Hi  71 

Gap    from  the  g's  and  chasms  of  ruin  left  Sea  Dreams  225 

fill  up  the  g  where  force  might  fail  Gareth  and  L.  1352 

thro'  the  g  Glimmer'd  the  streaming  scud :  Holy  Grail  681 

thro'  the  g  The  seven  clear  stars  of  Arthur's  Table 

Round—  „          683 

new  knights  to  fill  the  g  Left  by  the  Holy  Quest ;  Pdleas  and  E.  1 
In  this  g  between  the  sandhills,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  176 
Fought  for  their  lives  in  the  narrow  g  they  had 

made —  Heavy  Brigade  23 

Gape     A  gulf  that  ever  shuts  and  g's.  In  Mem.  Ixx  6 

too  high  For  any  mouth  to  g  for  save  a  queen's —  Lancelot  and  E.  775 

g  for  flies — we  know  not  whence  they  come ;  Holy  Grail  147 

Gaped     Lavaine  g  upon  him  As  on  a  thing  miraculous,  Lancelot  and  E.  452 

tier  over  tier.  Were  added  mouths  that  g,  „             1249 

Gaping     (See  also  Gaapin')     The  passive  oxen  g.  Amphion  72 

fool.  Who  was  g  and  grinning  by :  Maud  II  i  20 

Crap-mouth'd    All  in  a  g-m  circle  his  good  mates  Gareth  and  L.  511 

Gapp'd    their  masses  are  g  with  our  grape —  Def.  of  Lucknow  42 

Gap-tooth'd     A  gray  and  g-t  man  as  lean  as  death.  Vision  of  Sin  60 

Garbaging    and  Gave  to  the  g  war-hawk  to  goige  it,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  109 

Gaib'd     richly  g,  but  worn  From  wasteful  living.  Ancient  Sage  4 

Garda  Lake    Gazing  at  the  Lydian  laughter  of  the 

G  L  below  Prater  Ave,  etc.  3 

Garden  (adj.)     By  g  porches  on  the  brim,  Arabian  Nights  16 

whose  root  Creeps  to  the  g  water-pipes  beneath,  D.  of  F.  Women  206 
black-hearts  ripen  dark.  All  thine,  against  the 

g  wall.  Blackbird  8 

There  sat  we  down  upon  a  g  moimd,  Gardener's  D.  214 
fountain  to  his  place  returns  Deep  in  the  g  lake 

withdrawn.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  12 
Some  figure  like  a  wizard  pentagram  On  g  gravel,  The  Brook  104 
all  withim  The  sward  was  trim  as  any  g  lawn :  Princess,  Pro.  95 
foimd  at  length  The  g  portals.  „  iv  200 
To  take  their  leave,  about  the  g  rails,  „  Con.  38 
In  such  discourse  we  gain'd  the  g  rails.  „  80 
all  by  myself  in  my  own  dark  g  ground,  Maud  I  Hi  10 
Seem'd  her  light  foot  along  the  g  walk,  „  xmii  9 
And  long  by  the  g  lake  I  stood,  „  xxii  35 
'  this  g  rose  Deep-hued  and  many-folded !  Balin  and  Balan  269 
And  oft  they  met  among  the  g  yews,  Lancelot  and  E.  645 
one  mom  it  chanced  He  found  her  in  among  the 
g  yews,  „  923 
Garden  (s)  (See  also  Hall-garden,  Olive-gardens,  Rose- 
garden)  High- wall'd  ^'5  green  and  old ;  Arabian  Nights  8 
Thence  thro'  the  g  I  was  drawn—  „  100 
When  rooted  in  the  g  of  the  mind,  Ode  to  Memory  26 
a  g  bower'd  close  With  plaited  alleys  „  105 
the  world  Like  one  great  g  show'd,  The  Poet  34 
In  the  heart  of  the  g  the  merry  bird  chants.  Poet's  Mind  22 
whitest  honey  in  fairy  g's  cuU'd —  Eleanore  26 
Sweet  gales,  as  from  deep  g's,  blow  Fatima  24 

A  spacious  g  full  of  flowering  weeds,  To With  Pal.  of  Art  ^ 

Walking  about  the  g's  and  the  halls  Of  Camelot,  M.  d' Arthur  20 

blooms  the  g  that  I  love.  Gardener's  D.  34 

between  it  and  the  g  lies  A  League  of  grass,  „            39 


Garden  (s)  (continued)    The  g  stretches  southward. 
One  after  one,  thro'  that  still  g  pass'd ; 
And  cross 'd  the  g  to  the  gardener's  lodge, 
A  breeze  thro'  aU  the  g  swept, 
A  g  too  with  scarce  a  tree, 
at  the  end  of  all  A  little  g  blossom. 
Parks  and  order'd  g's  great, 
Flourished  a  little  g  square  and  wall'd : 
arranged  Her  g,  sow'd  her  name  and  kept  it 

green 
Which  fann'd  the  g's  of  that  rival  rose 
Kept  to  the  g  now,  and  grove  of  pines, 
that  in  the  g  snared  Picus  and  Faunus, 
A  little  street  half  g  and  half  house ; 
grace  Concluded,  and  we  sought  the  g's : 
Above  the  g's  glowing  blossom-belts, 
'  Look  there,  ay!'  said  my  college  friend. 
All  round  a  careless-order  d  g 
'  All  among  the  g's,  auriculas,  anemones, 
So  that  still  g  of  the  souls 
The  gust  that  round  the  g  flew, 
Till  from  the  g  and  the  wild 
like  the  sultan  of  old  in  a  3  of  spice. 
Maud  has  a,  g  oi  roses  And  lilies 
great  Forefathers  of  the  thomless  g. 
Come  into  the  g,  Maud,  (repeat) 
Queen  rose  of  the  rosebud  g  of  girls, 
g  by  the  turrets  Of  the  old  manorial  hall. 
But  I  know  where  a  g  grows. 
And  wallow'd  in  the  g's  of  the  King. 
But  this  was  in  the  y  of  a  king ; 
Sir  Balin  sat  Close-bower'd  in  that  g 
a  slope  of  g,  all  Of  roses  white  and  red. 


Gardener's  D.  115 

201 

Audley  Court  17 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  6 

Amphion  3 

„    104 

L.  of  Burleigh  30 

Enoch  Arden  734 

Ayhner's  Field  88 
455 
550 
Lucretius  181 
Princess  i  214 
„      a  453 
„       v363 
„   Con.  49 
To  F.  D.  Maurice  15 
City  Child  4 
In  Mem.  xliii  10 
„    Ixxxix  19 
„  ci  17 

Maud  I  iv  42 
„         xiv  1 
„    xviii  27 
„  xxii  1,  3 
53 
„    IIiv19 
vl2 
Com.  of  Arthur  25 
Marr.  of  Geraint  656 
Balin  and  Balan  241 
Pelleas  and  E.  421 
Walking  about  the  g's  and  the  halls  Of  Camelot,       Pass,  of  Arthur  188 
as  tho'  A  man  in  some  still  g  should  infuse  Lover's  Tale  i  269 

the  daily  want  Of  Edith  in  the  house,  the  g.         Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  246 
Down  we  look'd :  what  a.g\  V.  of  Maeldune  78 

Wi'  my  oiin  little  g  outside.  Spinster's  S's.  104 

Every  grim  ravine  a  g,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  168 

I  found  her  not  in  house  Or  g —  The  Ring  445 

from  every  vale  and  plain  And  g  pass.  To  Mary  Boyle  10 

Across  my  g !  and  the  thicket  stirs,  Prog,  of  Spring  53 

under  the  Crosses  The  dead  man's  g.  Merlin  and  the  G.  106 

like  a  lonely  man  In  the  king's  g,  Akbar's  Dream  21 

I  cotch'd  tha  wonst  i'  my  g,  Church-warden,  etc.  33 

Garden  (verb)     I  shall  never  g  more :  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  46 

Garden-bower     Black  the  g-b's  and  grots  Arabian  Nights  78 

To  and  fro  they  went  Thro'  my  g-b,  The  Flower  6 

Gardener    The  g  Adam  and  his  wife  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  51 

I  and  Eustace  from  the  city  went  To  see  the  G's 

Daughter ;  Gardener's  D.  3 

'  Go  and  see  The  G's  daughter:  „  30 

not  heard  Of  Rose,  the  G's  daughter  ?  „  52 

And  cross'd  the  garden  to  the  g's  lodge,  Audley  Court  17 

charge  the  g's  now  To  pick  the  faded  creature  Marr.  of  Geraint  670 

And  made  a  G  putting  in  a  graff.  Merlin  and  V.  479 

g's  hand  Picks  from  the  colewort  a  green  caterpillar,  Guinevere  31 

Garden-gate    And  push'd  at  Philip's  g-g.  The  Brook  83 

And  stood  by  her  g-g ;  Maud  I  xiv  6 

looks  Upon  Maud's  own  g-g :  „  16 

Garden-glass    The  g-g'es  glanced,  and  momently  Gardener's  D.  117 

Garden-herbs    Gifts  by  the  children,  g-h  and  fruit,  Enoch  Arden  338 

Gardening    Botanic  Treatises,  And  Works  on  G  Amphion  78 

Garden-isles    meadowy  holms  And  alders,  g-i ;  Edwin  Morris  96 

Garden-lawn    By  grove  and  g-l,  and  rushing  brook.  Holy  Grail  230 

Garden-rose    outredden  All  voluptuous  g-r's.  Ode  on  Well.  208 

Tliis  g-r  that  I  found,  Maud  I  xxi  3 

Garden-square    And  in  the  sultry  g-s's,  The  Blackbird  17 

Garden-squirt    Half -conscious  of  the  g-s,  Amphion  91 

Garden-tools     find  my  g-t  upon  the  granary  floor :  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  45 

Garden-tree     Beneath  your  sheltering  g-t,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  6 

Garden-walks    As  down  the  g-w  I  move,  In  Mem.  cii  6 

Garden-waU    By  g-w  and  gallery,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  38 

And  feeling  all  along  the  g-w,  Enoch  Arden  773 

this  side  the  palace  ran  the  field  Flat  to  the  g-w :  Princess  v  362 


Garden-wall 


250 


Garrulous 


Garden-wall  {continued)    Climb'd  to  the  high  top  of 

the  g-w 
Gareth  (a  knight  of  the  Round  Table)    G,  in  a  showerful 

spring  Stared  at  the  spate. 
'  How  he  went  down,'  said  G',  '  as  a  false  knight 
And  G  went,  and  hovering  round  her  chair 
G  answer'd  her  with  kindling  eyes,  (repeat) 
(t,  *  An  ye  hold  me  yet  for  child, 
G  answer'd  quickly,  '  Not  an  hour, 
G  cried,  '  A  hard  one,  or  a  hundred, 
G  was  too  princely-proud  To  pass  thereby ; 
Silent  awhile  was  G,  then  replied, 
G  awhile  linger'd. 

Then  those  who  went  with  G  were  amazed, 
G  answer'd  them  With  laughter, 
those  with  G  for  so  long  a  space  Stared  at  the  figures, 
they  call'd  To  G,  '  Lord,  the  gateway  is  alive.'  And 

G  likewise  on  them  fixt  his  eyes  So  long. 
Then  G,  '  We  be  tillers  of  the  soil, 
G  spake  Anger'd,  '  Old  Master, 
Whom  G  looking  after  said,  '  My  men, 
and  the  sound  was  good  to  (?'s  ear. 
Then  into  hall  G  ascending  heard  A  voice, 
G  saw  The  shield  of  Gawain  blazon'd  rich  and  bright, 
G  leaning  both  hands  heavily  Down  on  the  shoulders 
So  G  all  for  glory  underwent  The  sooty  yoke 
G  bow'd  himself  With  all  obedience  to  the  King, 
G  was  glad,  (repeat) 

G  telling  some  prodigious  tale  Of  knights, 
This,  G  hearing  from  a  squire  of  Lot 
Shame  never  made  girl  redder  than  G  joy. 
G,  lightly  springing  from  his  knees, 
G  ask'd,  '  Have  I  not  earn'd  my  cake  in  baking  of  it  ? 
with  a  kindly  hand  on  G's  arm  Smiled  the  great  King, 
Arthur  mindful  of  Sir  G  ask'd, 
Sir  G  call'd  from  where  he  rose, 
on  to  this  Sir  G  strode,  and  saw  without  the  door 
Sir  G  loosed  A  cloak  that  dropt  from  collar-bone 
So  G  ere  he  parted  flash'd  in  arms. 
thro'  lanes  of  shouting  G  rode  Down  the  slope  street, 
So  G  past  with  joy ;  but  as  the  cur  Pluckt 
Mutter'd  in  scorn  of  G  whom  he  used  To  harry 
To  whom  Sir  G  drew  (And  there  were  none 
G  to  him,  '  Master  no  more !  too  well  I  know  thee, 
G  cried  again,  '  Lead,  and  I  follow,' 
'  Damsel,'  Sir  G  answer'd  gently, 
I  shall  assay,'  said  G  with  a  smile  That  madden'd  her, 
And  G  following  was  again  beknaved. 
G,  '  Bound  am  I  to  right  the  wrong'd, 
'  Lead,  and  I  follow,'  G  cried  again, 
G  loosed  the  stone  From  off  his  neck, 
G  loosed  his  bonds  and  on  free  feet  Set  him, 
G  sharply  spake,  '  None ! 
and  the  Baron  set  G  beside  her, 
seating  G  at  another  board.  Sat  down  beside  him, 
6  said,  '  Full  pardon,  but  I  follow  up  the  quest, 
Sir  G  spake,  '  Lead,  and  I  follow.' 
To  whom  Sir  G  answer'd  courteously, 
G  silent  gazed  upon  the  knight, 
Said  G,  '  Damsel,  whether  knave  or  knight, 
0  lash'd  so  fiercely  with  his  brand 
Till  G's  shield  was  cloven  : 
<?,  '  So  this  damsel  ask  it  of  me  Good — 
G  there  unlaced  His  helmet  as  to  slay  him, 
Sir  G  answer'd,  laughmgly,  '  Parables  ? 
G's  eyes  had  flying  blots  Before  them 
Whom  G  met  midstream : 
Then  G  laid  his  lance  athwart  the  ford ; 
and  G  sent  him  to  the  King. 
G,  '  Wherefore  waits  the  madman  there 
Said  G,  '  Old,  and  over-bold  in  brag ! 
And  G  overthrew  him,  lighted,  drew, 
G  brought  liim  grovelling  on  his  knees. 
Till  G  panted  hard,  and  his  great  heart, 
80  G  seem'd  to  strike  Vainly, 


Guinevere  25 

Gareth  and  L.  2 

5 

33 

41,62 

99 

132 

149 

161 

164 

172 

197 

208 

231 

235 

242 

279 

296 

312 

317 

415 

439 

478 

487 

"  497,  504 

508 

531 

536 

556 

574 

578 

624 

645 

676 

681 

689 

699 

701 

706 

743 

755 

759 

772 

783 

786 

804 

807 

814 

817 

831 

852 

871 

885 

890 

900 

933 

943 

968 

971 

974 

978 

1007 

1031 

1041 

1048 

1051 

1091 

1107 

1121 

1124 

1126 

1133 

Gareth  and  L.  1141 
1147 
1201 
„  1219 
1221 
1237 

1241 
1258 
1273 
1280 
1299 
1304 
1316 
1317 
1345 
1354 

1367 
1386 
1397 
1404 


Gareth  {continued)    And  G  hearing  ever  stronglier 
smote, 
Sir  G's  brand  Clash'd  his,  and  brake  it  utterly 
G  lookt  and  read — In  letters  like  to  those 
star  Gleam,  on  Sir  G's  turning  to  him, 
G  crying  prick'd  sigainst  the  cry  ; 
Lancelot  answer'd,  '  Prince,  O  G — 
Then  G,  '  Thou— Lancelot !— thine  the  hand  That 

threw  me  ? 
'  Blessed  be  thou.  Sir  Q !  knight  art  thou 
turning  to  Lynette  he  told  The  tale  of  G, 
Sir  G  drank  and  ate,  and  all  his  life  Past  into  sleep ; 
Let  G,  an  he  will.  Change  his  for  mine, 
G,  wakening,  fiercely  clutch'd  the  shield ; 
allured  The  glance  of  G  dreaming  on  his  liege. 
'  Lo,'  said  G,  '  the  foe  falls ! ' 
Said  G  laughing,  '  An  he  fight  for  this. 
Then  G,  '  Here  he  rules.     I  know  but  one — 
which  Sir  G  graspt.  And  so,  before  the  two  could 

hinder  him, 
But  G  spake  and  all  indignantly. 
Sir  G's  head  prickled  beneath  his  helm ; 
with  one  stroke  Sir  G  split  the  skull. 
Answer'd  Sir  G  graciously  to  one  Not  many  a  moon 

his  younger,  „        1414 

So  large  mirth  lived  and  G  won  the  quest.  „        1426 

tale  in  older  times  Says  that  Sir  G  wedded  Lyonors,  „        1428 

Tristram,  and  Geraint  And  G,  a  good  knight,  Lancelot  and  E.  557 

Gargarus    topmost  G  Stands  up  and  takes  the  morning :  (Enone  10 

Garland    The  g  of  new-wreathed  emprise :  Kate  24 

Do  make  a  g  for  the  heart :  Miller's  D.  198 

knots  of  flowers,  and  buds  and  g's  gay.  May  Queen  11 

spears  That  soon  should  wear  the  g;  Aylmer's  Field  112 

made  g's  of  the  selfsame  flower.  Lover's  Tale  i  343 

a  light  Burst  from  the  g  I  had  wov'n,  „  366 

Wreathed  round  the  bier  with  g's:  „  ii  79 

Great  g's  swung  and  blossom'd ;  „        iv  191 

I,  wearing  but  the  gr  of  a  day,  To  Dante  6 

The  bridal  g  falls  upon  the  bier,  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  1 

Garlandage     leai,  and  gayest  g  of  flowers,  Balin  and  Balan  83 

Garlanded    Each  g  with  her  peculiar  flower  Gardener's  D.  202 

Garlanding    g  the  gnarled  boughs  With  bunch  (Enone  101 

Garlon  (a  Knight  of  the  Round  Table)  G,  mine  heir. 
Of  him  demand  it,'  which  this  G  gave  With 
much  ado,  Balin  and  Balan  117 

more  than  one  of  us  Cried  out  on  G,  „  123 

Sir  G  too  Hath  learn'd  black  magic,  „  304 

Till  when  at  feast  Sir  G  likewise  ask'd  „  347 

Made  G,  hissing ;  then  he  sourly  smiled.  ,,  355 

Then  fiercely  to  Sir  G,  '  Eyes  have  I  That  saw  to-day         „  372 

The  scorn  of  G,  poisoning  all  his  rest,  „  383 

Sir  G  utter'd  mocking-wise ;  „  389 

Then  G,  reeling  slowly  backward,  fell,  „  397 

This  G  mock'd  me,  but  I  heeded  not.  "  „  606 

And  sought  for  G  at  the  castle-gates,  „  610 

Garment    eddying  of  her  g's  caught  from  thee  Ode  to  Memory  31 

The  woman's  g  hid  the  woman's  heart.'  Princess  v  305 

Fair  g's,  plain  or  rich,  Akhar's  Dream  131 

Gamer    The  wrath  that  g's  in  my  heart ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxii  14 

And  g  all  you  may !  Mechanophilus  32 

Garner'd  (adj.)     time  is  scarce  more  brief  Than  of  the  g 
Autumn-sheaf. 
Or  little  pitted  speck  in  g  fruit, 
and  bless  Their  g  Autumn  also, 

Garner'd  (verb)    long  ago  they  had  glean'd  and  g 

Garnet     Each  like  a  gr  or  a  turkis  in  it ; 

Garnet-headed    hear  the  g-h  yafiingale  Mock  them : 

Garnish    flowers,  except,  behke.  To  g  meats  with  ? 

Garrick    G  and  statelier  Kemble, 

Garrison    as  if  hope  for  the  g  hung  but  on  him ; 
on  a  sudden  the  g  utter  a  jubilant  shout, 

Garruhty    Shame  on  her  own  g  garrulously. 

Garrulous    Miriam  Lane  was  good  and  g, 
G  under  a  roof  of  pine : 
With  g  ease  and  oily  courtesies 


Two  Voices  114 

Merlin  and  V.  394 

Demeter  and  P.  147 

Lover's  Tale  i  128 

Marr.  of  Geraint  661 

Last  Tournament  700 

Gareth  and  L.  1070 

To  W.  C.  Macready  7 

Def.  of  Lucknow  48 

V  ^^ 

Guinevere  312 

Enoch  Arden  700 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  20 

Princess  i 


1 


Garrulous 


251 


Gathered 


Garrulous  (contintied)    Mother's  g  wail  For  ever  woke 


the  unhappy  Past  again, 

G  old  crone. 

Innocent  maidens,  G  children, 
Garrulously    To  whom  the  little  novice  g. 

To  whom  the  novice  g  again, 

Shame  on  her  own  garruUty  g, 
Garth    past  into  the  little  g  beyond. 

Than  in  a  clapper  clapping  in  a  g, 

I  climb'd  to  the  top  of  the  g, 
jCtash    'G  thyself,  priest,  and  honour  thy  brute  Baiil, 

Thou  wilt  not  g  thy  flesh  for  him. ; 

eyes  frown :  the  lips  Seem  but  a  g. 
Gas-light    The  g-l  wavers  dimmer ; 
Gasp    cheating  the  sick  of  a  few  last  g's, 


Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  262 

The  Ring  120 

Merlin  and  the  G.  56 

Guinevere  231 

276 

„        312 

Enoch  Arden  329 

Princess  ii  227 

Grandmother  38 

Aylmer's  Field  644 

658 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  107 

Will  Water.  38 

Maud  I  i  43 


Balan  told  him  brokenly,  and  in  g's,  Balin  and  Baian  603 

Gasp'd-Gaspt    yet  gasp'd,  '  Whence  and  what  art  thou  ?  '       Holy  Grail  434 

I  sat  beside  her  dying,  and  she  gaspt :  The  Ring  287 

Gasping    G  to  Sir  Lavaine,  '  Draw  the  lancehead : '         Lancelot  and  E.  511 

he  G,  '  Of  Arthur's  hall  am  I,  Pdleas  and  E.  514 

Gaspt    See  Gasp'd 

Gat    Hunger  of  glory  g  Hold  of  the  land.  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  124 

Gate  {See  also  Bailey-gate,  Castle-gate,  City-gate,  Entry- 
gates,  Gaate,  Garden-gate,  Palace-gate,  Postern- 
gate,  Temple-gates,  Watergate,  Wicket-gate)  Thro' 
the  open  g's  of  the  city  afar, 

look  in  at  the  g  With  his  large  calm  eyes 

her  Satrap  bled  At  Issus  by  the  Syrian  g's. 

Saw  distant  g's  of  Eden  gleam, 

The  Uon  on  your  old  stone  g's 

Are  there  no  beggars  at  your  g, 

went  along  From  Mizpeh's  tower'd  g 

he  pass'd  his  father's  g,  Heart-broken, 

we  reach'd  The  grifSn-guarded  g's. 

Battering  the  g's  of  heaven  with  storms 

Once  more  the  g's  behind  me  falls ; 

Her  mother  trundled  to  the  g 

Every  g  is  throng'd  with  suitors, 

And  "ta'en  my  fiddle  to  the  g,  (repeat) 

the  g's  Roll  back,  and  far  within 

And  beneath  the  g  she  turns ; 

the  music  touch'd  the  g's  and  died ; 

cold  vapour  touch'd  the  palace  g, 

A  light  wind  blew  from  the  g's  of  the  sun, 

one  small  g  that  open'd  on  the  waste, 

Crept  to  the  g,  and  open'd  it. 


The  g,  Half-parted  from  a  weak  and  scolding  tuuge. 
Stands  at  thy  g  for  thee  to  grovel  to —  / 

But  nevermore  did  either  pass  the  g  i 

sallying  thro'  the  g.  Had  beat  her  foes  ,■ 

Brake  with  a  blast  of  trumpets  from  the  g/ 
saw  you  not  the  inscription  on  the  g,         I 
bury  me  beside  the  g,  I 

I  urged  the  fierce  inscription  on  the  g,     / 

Eaint  the  g's  of  Hell  with  Paradise,         / 
pread  out  at  top,  and  grimly  spiked  tlie  g's. 
Here,  push  them  out  at  g's.'  j 

with  grim  laughter  thrust  us  out  at  g'd 
He  thrice  had  sent  a  herald  to  the  g's,) 
Came  sallying  thro'  the  g's,  and  caugly.  his  hair, 
so  thro'  those  dark  g's  across  the  wild 
the  g's  were  closed  At  sunset, 
and  stood  by  the  road  at  the  g. 
there  past  by  the  g  of  the  farm,  Willj^ — 
Burst  the  g's,  and  burn  the  palaces. 
In  circle  round  the  blessed  g. 
They  can  but  listen  at  the  ^'5, 
my  pulses  closed  their  g's  with  a  shocK 
g's  of  Heaven  are  closed,  and  she  is  gkne. 
I  am  here  at  the  g  alone ;  I 

From  the  passion-flower  at  the  g.       \ 
When  her  brother  ran  in  his  rage  to  tfe  g, 
and  watch'd  him  from  the  g's: 
at  times  the  great  g  shone  Only, 
So  push'd  them  all  unwilling  toward  t  le  g. 


' 


Dying  Swan  34 

The  Mermaid  26 

Alexander  3 

Two  Voices  212 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  23 

67 

B.  ofF.  Women  199 

Dora  50 

Audley  Court  15 

St.  S.  Stylites  7 

Talking  Oak  1  . 

„       lU' 

Locksley  HaU  101 

Am,phion>ll,  15 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  29 

L.  of  Surleigh  44 

Vifsion  of  Sin  23 

58 

Poet's  Song  3 

Enoch  Arden  733 

775 

The  Brook  83 

Aylmer's  Field  652 

826 

Princess,  Pro.  33 

42 

„  ii  194 

206 

„  Hi  141 

„  iv  131 

206 

548 

556 

„  V  332 

340 

,,         vii  362 

,,        Con.  36 

Grandmother  38 

41 

Boddicea  64 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  23 

„  xciv  15 

Maud  I  il5 

„   xviii  12 

„      xxii  4 

60 

„    II  i  12 

Com.  of  Arthur  449 

Gareth  and  L.  194 

212 


Gate  {continued)  And  there  was  nD  y  like  it  under  heaven.    Gareth  and  L.  213 

Back  from  the  g  started  the  three,  „          239 

past  The  weird  white  g,  and  paused  without,  „           663 

Down  the  slope  street,  and  past  without  the  g.  „          700 

Down  the  slope  city,  and  out  beyond  the  g.  ,,          735 

then  descending  met  them  at  the  g's,  Marr.  of  Geraint  833 

lets  Or  dame  or  damsel  enter  at  his  g*s  Balin  and  Balan  107 

Their  heads  should  moulder  on  the  city  g's.  Merlin  and  V.  594 

Then  made  a  sudden  step  to  the  g,  Lancelot  and  E.  391 

and  under  the  strange-statued  g,  „              800 

past  beneath  the  weirdly-sculptured  g's  ,,              844 

to  the  G  of  the  three  Queens  we  came.  Holy  Grail  358 

whence  I  came,  the  g  of  Arthur's  wars.'  „          539 

and  thrust  him  from  the  g.  Pdleas  and  E.  260 

Open  g's.  And  I  will  make  you  merry.'  „            373 

and  bound  hLs  horse  Hard  by  the  g's.  „            414 

open  were  the  g's.  And  no  watch  kept ;  „            414 

from  the  city  g's  Issued  Sir  Lancelot  ,,            556 

and  sharply  turn'd  North  by  the  g.  Last  Tournament  128 

The  golden  g's  would  open  at  a  word.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  145 

Throng'd  the  waste  field  about  the  city  g's :  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  40 

— and  those  twelve  ^'5,  Pearl —  Columbus  86 

tides  of  onset  sap  Our  seven  high  ^'5,  Tiresias  92 

the  song-built  towers  and  g's  Reel,  „       98 

find  the  y  Is  bolted,  and  the  master  gone.  ,,     200 

doors  of  Night  may  be  the  g's  of  Light;  Ancient  Sage  174 
Till  Holy  St  Pether  gets  up  wid  his  kays  an'  opens  the  g !      Tomorrow  93 

here  the  lion-guarded  g.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  213 

The  sun  hung  over  the  g's  of  Night,  Dead  Prophet  23 

dear  Mary,  you  and  I  To  that  dim  g.  To  Mary  Boyle  60 

from  o'er  the  a't  of  Birth,  Far — far — away  13 

Thro'  the  g's  i^nat  bar  the  distance  Faith  6 

nor  the  si'  nt  Opener  of  the  G.'  God  and  the  Univ.  6 

Gateway  (adj.)     Who  'lights  and  rings  the  g  bell.  In  Mem.  viii  3 
carrion  crows  Hung  like  a  cloud  above  the  g  towers.  Merlin  and  V.  599 

Thither  he  made,  and  blew  the  g  horn.  Lancelot  and  E.  169 

Just  above  the  g  tower,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  179 

Gateway  (S)     Or  in  the  g's  of  the  morn.  Two  Voices  183 

unto  island  at  the  g's  of  the  day.  Locksley  Hall  158 

until  she  reach'd  The  g ;  Godiva  51 

Till  a  g  she  discerns  With  armorial  bearings  L.  of  Burleigh  42 

from  the  castle  g  by  the  chasm  Descending  Com.  of  Arthur  369 

they  call'd  To  Gareth,  '  Lord,  the  g  is  alive.'  Gareth  and  L.  235 

Pass  not  beneath  this  g,  but  abide  Without,  „          273 

Right  in  the  g  of  the  bandit  hold,  Geraint  and  E.  774 

Paused  by  the  g,  standing  near  the  shield  Lancelot  and  E.  394 

And  by  the  g  stirr'd  a  crowd ;  Holy  Grail  424 

the  spiritual  city  and  all  her  spires  And  g's  „          527 

Gather    Her  words  did  g  thunder  as  they  ran.  The  Poet  49 

I  must  g  knots  of  flowers.  May  Queen  11 

To  g  and  tell  o'er  Each  Uttle  sound  D.  of  F.  Women  276 
Where  faction  seldom  g's  head,                             Tou  ask  me,  why,  etc.  13 

Rise  in  the  heart,  and  g  to  the  eyes,  Princess  iv  41 

till  she  not  fair  began  To  g  light,  „       vii  24 

But  as  he  grows  he  g's  much.  In  Mem.  xlv  5 

And  g  dust  and  chaff,  and  call  „          Iv  18 

Shall  g  in  the  cycled  times.  „    Ixxxv  28 

rooks.  That  g  in  the  waning  woods,  ,,              72 

Unloved,  that  beech  will  g  brown,  „            « 3 

Should  licensed  boldness  g  force,  „      cxiii  13 

'  I  sit  and  g  honey ;  yet,  methinks,  Merlin  and  V.  601 
'  One  rose,  a  rose  to  g  by  and  by,  One  rose,  a  rose, 

to  g  and  to  wear,  Pelleas  and  E.  405 

Sigh'd,  and  began  to  g  heart  again,  Guinevere  368 

The  mist  of  autumn  g  from  your  lake,  The  Ring  329 

g  the  roses  wherever  they  blow,  Romney's  R.  107 

handle  or  g  the  berries  of  Peele  !  Kapiolani  20 

Gather'd    {See  also  Self-gather'd)    From  beneath  her 

g  wimple  Lilian  14 

'  Rapt  from  the  fickle  and  the  frail  With  g  power,  In  Mem.  xxx  26 

When  here  thy  hands  let  fall  the  g  flower,  Demeter  and  P.  9 

Whose  wrinkles  g  on  his  face,  Two  Voices  329 

A  cloud  that  g  shape :  CEnone  42 

When  I  am  g  to  the  glorious  saints.  St.  S.  Stylites  197 

Have  suck'd  and  g  into  one  The  life  Talking  Oak  191 


Gather'd 


252 


Gave 


Gather'd  (continued)    Grave  faces  j  in  a  ring.^ 
Till  they  be  ^  up ; 

topmost  elm-tree  g  green  From  draughts 
there  again  When  burr  and  bine  were  g ; 
G  the  blossom  that  rebloom'd, 
Easily  g  either  guilt, 
rose  A  hubbub  in  the  court  of  half  the  maids 

G  together : 
the  heavy  dews  G  by  night  and  peace, 
But  such  as  g  colour  day  by  day. 
Abide :  thy  wealth  is  g  in, 
He  fought  his  doubts  and  g  strength, 
The  maidens  g  strength  and  grace 
He  has  g  the  bones  for  his  o'ergrown  whelp 
this  she  g  from  the  people's  eyes : 
g  trickling  dropwise  from  the  cleft, 
I  stoop'd,  I  g  the  wild  herbs, 
I  have  g  my  baby  together — 
But  I  g  my  fellows  together, 
I  would  that  I  were  g  to  my  rest, 
Thousands  of  horsemen  had  g  there 
The  vast  sun-clusters'  g  blaze, 


Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  38 

Will  Water.  170 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  8 

Aylmer's  Field  113 

142 

Princess  iv  236 

477 

„        V  244 

„     vii  118 

In  Mem.  Hi  15 

„       xcvi  13 

„        ciii  27 

Maud  II  V  55 

Marr.  of  Geraint  61 

Merlin  and  V.  274 

Lover's  Tale  i  342 

Bizfah  20 

V.  of  Maeldune  2 

Tiresias  170 

Heavy  Brigade  14 

Ef  Hague  54 

Gathering  (adj.  and  part.)     the  mighty  moon  was  g  light     Love  and  Death  1 

Proserpine  in  Enna,  g  flowers:  Edwin  Morris  112 

G  up  from  all  the  lower  groimd ;  Vision  of  Sin  15 

And  g  all  the  fruits  of  earth  Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  41 

And  g  freshlier  overhead.  In  Mem.  xcv  57 

G  woodland  lilies.  Myriads  blow  together.  Maud  I  xii  7 

By  shores  that  darken  with  the  g  wolf,  Aylmer's  Field  767 

So  much  the  g  darkness  charm'd :  Princess,  Con.  107 

tho'  the  g  enemy  narrow  thee,  Boadicea  39 

g  half  the  deep  And  full  of  voices.  Com.  of  Arthur  380 

Vivien,  g  somewhat  of  his  mood.  Merlin  and  V.  842 

but  g  at  the  base  Re-makes  itself,  and  flashes  Guinevere  609 

And  g  ruthless  gold —  Columbus  135 

g  here  and  there  From  each  fair  plant  Akbar's  Dream  21 

Gathering  (s)     A  gr  of  the  Tory,  Maud  I  xx  33 

Gaud    those  gilt  g's  men-children  swarm  to  see.  To  W.  C.  Macready  11 

Gaudy     Showing  a  9  summer-mom.  Palace  of  Art  %2 

Gandy-day     Amends  hereafter  by  some  g-d,  Marr.  of  Geraint  818 

Gaunt    Lancelot?  goodly — ay,  but  g:  Merlin  and  V.  103 

G  as  it  were  the  skeleton  of  himself,  (repeat)      Lancelot  and  E.  764,  816 

(The  g  old  Baron  with  his  beetle  brow  Princess  ii  240 

Gauntlet    maiden  fancies  dead  In  iron  ^'s:  „         i  89 

added  fullness  to  the  phrase  Of '  G  in  the  velvet 

glove.'  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  12 

Gauntleted    my  hand  Was  g,  half  slew  him ;  Balin  and  Balan  57 

His  passion  half  had  g  to  death,  „  220 

Gauntness    Courteous — amends  for  g —  Merlin  and  V.  104 

Gauze     '  He  dried  his  wings :  like  g  they  grew ;  Two  Voices  13 

Purple  g's,  golden  hazes,  liquid  mazes.  Vision  of  Sin  31 

Half-lapt  in  glowing  g  and  golden  brede,  Princess  vi  134 

an  Eastern  g  With  seeds  of  gold —  Lover's  Tale  iv  291 

Gave  {See  also  Gied,  Giv)   God  g  her  peace  ;  her  land  reposed ;  To  the  Queen  26 

And  g  you  on  your  natal  day.  Margaret  42 

Our  thought  g  answer  each  to  each.  Sonnet  To 10 

'  She  g  him  mind,  the  lordliest  Proportion,  Two  Voices  19 

sing  the  foolish  song  I  g  you,  Alice,  Miller's  D.  162 

thought  of  that  sharp  look,  mother,  I  g  him  yesterday.     May  Queen  15 
flower  and  fruit,  whereof  they  g  To  each,  Lotos-Eaters  29 

my  bliss  of  life,  that  Nature  g,  D.  of  F.  Women  210 

because  the  kiss  he  g  me,  ere  I  fell,  „  235 

He  9  me  a  friend,  and  a  true  true-love,  D.  of  the  0.  Year  13 

'  Hast  thou  perform'd  my  mission  which  I  ^  ?  M.  d' Arthur  67 

This,  yielding,  g  into  a  grassy  walk  Gardener's  D.  Ill 

Kissing  the  rose  she  g  me  o'er  and  o'er,  „  176 

G  utterance  by  the  yearning  of  an  eye,  Love  and  Duty  62 

The  trance  g  way  To  those  caresses,  „  65 

And  g  my  letters  back  to  me.    And  g  the  trinkets 

and  the  rings.  The  Letters  20 

He  ^  the  people  of  his  best :  His  worst  he  kept, 

his  best  he  g.  You  might  have  won  25 

from  her  baby's  forehead  dipt  A  tiny  curl,  and  g  it:    Enoch  Arden  236 
less  Than  what  she  $r  in  buying  what  she  sold :  „  256 

At  Annie's  door  he  paused  and  g  his  hand,  „         447 


Gave  (continued)    clothes  they  g  him  and  free  passage  Enoch  Arden  650 

Pitying  the  lonely  man,  and  g  him  it :  „          664 

the  woman  g  A  half-incredulous,  half-hysterical  cry.  „          852 

This  hair  is  his :  she  cut  it  off  and  g  it,  „          894 

He  g  them  line  :  (repeat)  The  Brook  145, 150 

scared  with  threats  of  jail  and  halter  g  Aylmer's  Field  520 

the  dagger  which  himself  G  Edith,  „            597 
g  the  verse  '  Behold,  Your  house  is  left  imto  you 

desolate ! '  „            628 

G  his  broad  lawns  until  the  set  of  sun  Princess,  Pro,  2 

they  g  The  park,  the  crowd,  the  house ;  „              93 

I  said  no.  Yet  being  an  easy  man,  ^  it :  „         i  149 

yre  g  a,  costly  bribe  To  guerdon  silence,  „            203 

rooms  which  g  Upon  a  pillar'd  porch,  „            229 

I  g' the  letter  to  be  sent  with  dawn;  „            245 

a  glance  I  g,  No  more ;  „        iv  180 

On  one  knee  Kneeling,  I  g'  it,  „            470 

Who  g  me  back  my  child? '  „         v  105 

Let  so  much  out  as  g  us  leave  to  go.  ,,            235 

for  everything  G  way  before  him :  ,,            530 

Was  it  for  this  we  g  our  palace  up,  „        vi  244 

Eefuse  her  proffer,  lastly  g  his  hand.  „            347 

to  them  the  doors  g  way  Groaning,  „            349 

pray'd  the  men,  the  women :  I  g  assent :  „       Con.  7 
English  Harold  g  its  throne  a  wife,                            W.  to  Marie  Alex.  24 

and  he  g  the  ringers  a  crown.  Grandmother  58 

I  pluck'd  a  daisy,  I  j  it  you.  The  Daisy  88 
Hexameters  no  worse  than  daring  Germany  g  us.        Trans,  of  Homer  5 

The  Danube  to  the  Severn  g  In  Mem.  xix  1 

And  g  all  ripeness  to  the  grain,  „      Ixxxi  11 

Received  and  $r  him  welcome  there ;  „      lxxxv2i 

With  him  to  whom  her  hand  I  g.  „       Con.  70 

He  fiercely  g  me  the  lie,  Maud  II  i  16 

By  the  home  that  g  me  birth,  „          iv  7 

Merlin  took  the  child.  And  g  him  to  Sir  Anton,  Com.  of  Arthur  222 

She  g  the  King  his  huge  cross-hilted  sword,  „            286 

Arthur  g  him  back  his  territory,  Gareth  and  L.  78 

Of  whom  ye  g  me  to,  the  Seneschal,  „          559 

that  g  upon  a  range  Of  level  pavement  „          666 

blue  arms,  and  g  a  shield  Blue  also,  „          931 

and  thee  the  King  G  me  to  guard,  „        1014 

g  a  shield  whereon  the  Star  of  Even  „        1117 
good  king  g  order  to  let  blow  His  horns                   Marr.  of  Geraint  152 

g  command  that  all  which  once  was  ours  „              696 

he  but  g  a  wrathful  groan.  Saying,  Geraint  and  E.  398 

cousin,  slay  not  him  who  g  you  life.'  „            783 

I  rode  all-shamed,  hating  the  life  He  g  me,  „            853 
which  this  Garlon  g  With  much  ado,                         Balin  and.  Balan  118 

best  Of  ladies  living  g  me  this  to  bear.'  „              340 

one  that  hath  defamed  The  cognizance  she  g  me :  „              485 

knew  no  more,  nor  g  me  one  poor  word ;  Merlin  and  V.  277 
Use  g  me  Fame  at  first,  and  Fame  again  Increasing 

g  me  use. 
His  brother's ;  which  he  g  to  Lancelot, 
Sir  Lancelot  g  A  marvellous  great  shriek 
he  took,  And  g,  the  diamond : 
he  g,  And  slightly  kiss'd  the  hand  to  which  he  g, 
I  g  the  diamond :  she  will  render  it ; 
Stript  off  the  case,  and  g  the  naked  shield ; 
Then  g  a  languid  hand  to  each,  and  lay, 
I  ^  No  cause,  not  willingly,  for  such  a  love : 
G  him  an  isle  of  marsh  whereon  to  build ; 
to  prayer  and  praise  She  g  herself, 
And  g  herself  and  all  her  wealth  to  me. 
in  my  madness  I  essay'd  the  door ;  It  g; 
Then  g  it  to  his  Queen  to  rear : 
Tristram  won,  and  Lancelot  (7,  the  gems, 
and  Innocence  the  King  G  ioc  a,  prize — 
this  I  g  thee,  look,  Is  all  as  cc  ol  and  white 
he  g  them  charge  about  the  Ciueen, 
'  Hast  thou  perform'd  my  mi ssion  which  Ig? 
So  Death  g  back,  and  would  ao  further  come. 
He  that  g  Her  life,  to  me  delightedly  fuMll'd 
Then  playfully  she  g  herself  jhe  lie — 
•  Kiss  nim,'  she  said.     '  You  g  me  life  again. 


493 

Lancelot  and  E.  380 

515 

551 

701 

713 

979 

1032 

1297 

Holy  Grail  62 

77 

597 

"        842 

Last  Tournament  22 

190 

295 

415 

Guinevere  591 

Pass,  of  Arthur  235 

Lover's  Tale  i  115 

223 

349 


>171L: 

M 


Gave 


263 


Gazed 


In  the  Child.  Hosp.  51 

Columbus  20 

,,        22 

„      132 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  109 

Tiresias  122 

The  Wreck  13 

Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  256 

Demeter  and  P.  55 

The  Ring  270 

Happy  68 

Romney's  R.  31 

Charity  19 


Gave  (continued)     (Meaning  the  print  that  you  g  us, 
chains  For  him  who  g  a  new  heaven, 
G  glory  and  more  empire  to  the  kings 
g  All  but  free  leave  for  all  to  work 
G  to  the  garbaging  war-hawk  to  gorge  it, 
sweet  mother  land  which  g  them  birth 
He  that  they  3  me  to,  mother, 
I  refused  the  hand  he  g. 
and  g  Thy  breast  to  ailing  infants 
g  it  me,  who  pass'd  it  down  her  own, 
pardon,  O  my  love,  if  I  ever  g  you  pain, 
fumes  Of  that  dark  opiate  dose  you  g  me, 
I  sent  him  back  what  he  g, — 
Gaw  (go)     '  I  mun  g  up  agean  fur  Roa.'    '  G  up  agean 

fur  the  varmint  ?  '  Owd  Rod  97 
Gawain  (a  knight  of  the  Round  Table)    G  and  young 

Modred,  her  two  sons.  Com.  of  Arthur  244 

G  went,  and  breaking  into  song  Sprang  out,  „            320 

G,  when  he  came  With  Modred  hither  Gareth  and  L.  25 

aU  in  fear  to  find  Sir  G,  or  Sir  Modred,  „          326 

The  shield  of  G  blazon'd  rich  and  bright,  „          416 

'  I  have  stagger'd  thy  strong  G  in  a  tilt  „          542 

rise,  O  G,  and  ride  forth  and  find  the  knight.  Lancelot  and  E.  537 

G,  surnamed  The  Courteous,  fair  and  strong,  „             555 

G  the  while  thro'  all  the  region  round  „             615 

G  saw  Sir  Lancelot's  azure  lions,  „             662 
if  I  dream'd,'  said  G,  'that  you  love  This  greatest 

knight,  „             638 

But  there  the  fine  G  will  wonder  at  me,  „           1054 

G,  who  bad  a  thousand  farewells  to  me,  ,,           1056 

Then  came  the  fine  G  sind  wonder'd  at  her,  „           1267 

G  sware,  and  louder  then  the  rest.'  Holy  Grail  202 
sharply  turning,  ask'd  Of  G,  '  G,  was  this  Quest  for 

thee  ? '     '  Nay,  Lord,'  said  G,  '  not  for  such  as  I.  „         740 

left  The  hall  long  silent,  till  Sir  G—  „         854 

'  Hath  G  fail'd  in  any  quest  of  thine  ?  „         859 

'  G,  and  blinder  unto  holy  things  „         870 

Three  against  one :  and  G  passing  by,  Pdleas  and  E.  274 

G,  looking  at  the  villainy  done,  Forebore,  „            282 

Forth  sprang  G,  and  loosed  him  from  his  bonds,  „            315 

G  answer'd  kindly  tho'  in  scorn,  „            333 

and  took  G's,  and  said,  '  Betray  me  not,  „            360 

'  Ay,'  said  G,  '  for  women  be  so  light.'  „            362 

But  G  lifting  up  his  vizor  said, '  G  am  I,  (?  of  Arthur's  court,  ,,  370 

G,  G  of  the  Court,  Sir  G—  „            379 

straight  on  thro'  open  door  Rode  G,  ,  ,,            383 

*  Ay,'  thought  G,  '  and  you  be  fair  enow :  „            388 

but  a  sound  Of  G  ever  coming,  and  this  lay —  „            396 

I        '  Why  lingers  G  with  his  golden  news  ?'  „            411 

I        Bound  on  her  brow,  were  G  and  Ettarre.  „            435 

I        turn'd  herself  To  G:  '  Liar,  for  thou  hast  not  slain  „            490 

I        that  G  fired  The  hall  of  Merlin,  „            517 

I        shouting,  '  False,  And  false  with  (? ! '  „            546 

1        Dagonet,  the  fool,  whom  C  in  his  mood  Last  Tournament  1 

\        G  kill'd  In  Lancelot's  war,  the  ghost  of  G  blown 

i           Along  a  wandering  wind.  Pass,  of  Arthur  ^ 

i        Thine,  G,  was  the  voice —  „              47 

i        Light  was  G  in  hfe,  and  light  in  death  Is  (?,  „              56 

>}8win'  (going)    g  to  let  in  furriners'  wheat,  Owd  Rod.  45 

I        I  wur  g  that  waiiy  to  the  bad,  „        71 

lay    you  were  g  With  bridal  flowers —  Miller's  D.  164 

Or  g,  or  grave,  or  sweet,  or  stem,  Palace  of  Art  91 

many  songs.  But  never  a  one  so  g.  Poet's  Song  14 

statue  propt  against  the  waU,  As  9  as  any.  Princess,  Pro.  100 

My  g  young  hawk,  my  Rosalind :  Rosalind  34 

and  buds  and  garlands  g.  May  Queen  11 

Or  g  quinquenniads  would  we  reap  Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  23 

'  And,  leg  and  arm  with  love-knots  g,  Talking  Oak  65 

With  many  kinsmen  g,  Will  Water.  90 

Many  a  gallant  g  domestic  Bows  before  him  L.  of  Burleigh  47 

I  f ear'd  Lest  the  g  navy  there  should  splinter  on  it.        Sea  Dreams  131 

silk  pavilion,  g  with  gold  In  streaks  and  rays,  Gareth  and  L.  910 

The  g  paviUon  and  the  naked  feet,  „           937 

Prophet  of  the  g  time.  The  Snowdrop  6 

remembering  the  g  playmate  rear'd  Among  them,  Death  of  (Enone  59 


Gay  {continued)    one  is  glad  ;  her  note  is  g,  In  Mem.  xxi  25 

fancies  play  To  find  me  g  among  the  g,  „         Ixvi  3 

all  is  g  with  lamps,  and  loud  With  sport  „    xcviii  27 

Like  things  of  the  season  g,  Maud  I  iv  3 

if  I  cannot  be  g  let  a  passionless  peace  „          50 

A  passionate  ballad  gallant  and  g,  „         i;  4 

Strange,  that  I  felt  so  g,  „       xx  1 

one  With  whom  she  has  heart  to  be  g.  „  xxii  20 
I  see  her  Weeping  for  some  g  knight  in  Arthur's 

hall.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  118 

And  seeing  one  so  g^  in  purple  silks,  „              284 

like  a  crag  was  9  with  wildmg  flowers:  „               319 

these  to  her  own  faded  self  And  the  g  court,  „               653 

Clothed  with  my  gift,  and  g  among  the  g.'  „               753 

that  good  mother,  making  Enid  g  In  such  apparel  „               757 

And  all  that  week  was  old  Caerleon  g,  „               837 

The  three  g  suits  of  armour  which  they  wore,  Geraint  and  E.  95 
drew  from  those  dead  wolves  Their  three  g  suits  of 

armour,  „           181 

How  g,  how  suited  to  the  house  of  one  „           683 

and  damsel  glitter'd  at  the  feast  Variously  g :  Last  Tournament  225 

Thy  g  lent-Ulies  wave  and  put  them  by.  Prog,  of  Spring  37 

Bountiful,  beautiful,  apparell'd  g,  „             62 

Gayer    But  once  were  g  than  a  dawning  sky  Death  of  (Enone  12 

In  colours  g  than  the  morning  mist,  Princess  ii  438 
My  fate  or  folly,  passing  g  youth  For  one  so  old,  Merlin  and  V.  927 
pale  blood  of  the  wizard  at  her  touch  Took  g 

colours,  „            950 

Evelyn  is  g,  wittier,  prettier.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  36 

Gayest    wealth  Of  leaf,  and  g  garlandage  of  flowers,  Balin  and  Balan  83 

Gay-torr'd    Her  g-f  cats  a  painted  fantasy.  Princess  Hi  186 

Gaze  (S)     Than  that  earth  should  stand  at  g  Locksley  Hall  180 
her  ardent  g  Roves  from  the  living  brother's  face,         In  Mem.  xxxii  6 

her  hue  Changed  at  his  g^ :  Balin  and  Balan  279 

And  were  only  standing  at  g,  Heavy  Brigade  37 

The  linnet's  bosom  blushes  at  her  g.  Prog,  of  Spring  17 

Gaze  (verb)     Ever  retiring  thou  dost  g  Ode  to  Memory  93 

Ev'n  while  we  g  on  it,  Elednore  90 

g  upon  My  palace  with  unblinded  eyes,  Palace  of  Art  41 

He  g's  on  the  silent  dead:  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  13 

Evermore  she  seems  to  y  L.  of  Burleigh  34 

orb  That  fain  would  g  upon  him  to  the  last ;  Lucretius  140 

climbs  a  peak  to  g  O'er  land  and  main.  Princess  vii  35 

I,  who  g  with  temperate  eyes  In  Mem.  cxii  2 

bear  some  token  of  his  Queen  Whereon  to  g,  Balin  and  Balan  189 

I  cannot  brook  to  g  upon  the  dead.'  „             586 

Sigh  fully,  or  all-silent  g  upon  him  Merlin  and  V.  182 

But  who  can  g  upon  the  Sun  in  heaven  ?  Lancelot  and  E.  123 

even  while  I  g  The  crack  of  earthquake  Pdleas  and  E.  464 

as  one  Who  sits  and  g's  on  a  faded  fire,  Last  Tournament  157 

and  we  woke  To  g  upon  each  other.  Lover's  Tale  i  266 

To  g  upon  thee  till  their  eyes  are  dim  ,,            491 

and  I  gr  at  a  field  in  the  Fast,  By  an  Evolution.  17 

she  used  to  g  Down  at  the  Troad;  Death  of  (Enone  2 

and  there  G  at  the  ruin,  often  mutter  low  St.  Telemachus  14 

And  g  on  this  great  miracle,  the  World,  Akbar's  Dream  122 

and  is.  And  is  not,  what  I  g  on —  „            124 

Gazed    G  on  the  Persian  girl  alone,  Arabian  Nights  134 

Two  godlike  faces  g  below ;  Palace  of  Art  162 

He  g  so  long  That  both  his  eyes  were  dazzled,  M.  d' Arthur  58 

Averill  went  and  g  upon  his  death.  Aylmer's  Fidd  599 
long  we  g,  but  satiated  at  length  Came  to  the  ruins.     Princess,  Pro.  90 

I  drew  near ;  I  g.  „          m  183 

She  g  awhile  and  said, '  As  these  rude  bones  „               295 

while  We  g  upon  her  came  a  little  stur  ,,           iv  373 

Clomb  to  the  roofs,  and  g  alone  for  hours  „           vii  32 

place  Where  first  we  g  upon  the  sky ;  In  Mem.  cii  2 

They  g  on  all  earth's  beauty  in  their  Queen,  Com.  of  Arthur  463 

Gareth  silent  g  upon  the  knight,  Gareth  and  L.  933 

on  whom  the  maiden  g.  „            1281 

And  kept  her  oS  and  g  upon  her  face,  Marr.  of  Geraint  519 

King  Had  g  upon  her  blankly  and  gone  by :  Merlin  and  V.  161 

I  never  g  upon  it  but  1  dreamt  Of  some  vast  charm  „            511 

G  at  the  heaving  shoulder,  and  the  face  Hand-hidden,  „            896 

while  he  g  wonderingly  at  her,  came  Lancelot  and  E.  626 


A  I 


Gazed 


254 


Gentle 


Gazed  (continiud)    wlule  he  g  The  beauty  of  her  flesh  ^  r  77 

^^^  abash'd  Pelleas  and  E.  77 

she  g  upon  the  man  Of  princely  bearing,  »            305 

FuU  wonderingly  she  g  on  Lancelot      ,      ,    ,  „          ;'     ^,      ^°^ 

He  g  so  long  That  both  bis  eyes  were  dazzled  Pass,  oj  Arthur  jM 

three  whereat  we  g  On  that  high  day,  • "  ,7,  7    •  on^ 

for  as  that  other  g,  Shading  his  eyes  Lovers  Tale  %  6^ 

While  I  g  My  coronal  slowly  disentwined  itself  „              ^bU 

while  I  g  My  spirit  leap'd  as  with  those  thrills  „              oW 

The  other,  like  the  sun  I  y  upon,  „              5U7 

the  stars  Did  tremble  in  their  stations  as  I  </ ;  „           . .  00^ 

We  a  on  it  together  In  mute  and  glad  remembrance,  „          «  leo 

and  the  hght  Grew  as  I  ff,  ,^-,°}''T}"'V1 

And  we  3  at  the  wandering  wave  V.  oi  MaeUune^2 

Eer  heart !     I  ?  into  the  mu-ror.  The  Ring  A<oJ 

Gazer    greet  With  lifted  hand  the  g  in  the  street.  Ode  on  Well,  z^ 

Gazest    When  thou  g  at  the  skies  ?  ^  '^^^^^^  50 
Gazing    (See  also  Seaward-gazing)    G  on  thee  for  evermore,       Eleanore  W 

Sometimes  with  most  intensity  G,  I  seem  to  see  „        e^ 

and  sense  Of  Passion  g  upon  thee.  ,-     r  c-x,"  7  y/-  7 

G  where  the  lilies  blow  Round  an  island  L.  of  6halottii 

In  g  up  an  Alpine  height,  Two  Voices  36^ 

If  0  on  divinity  disrobed  Thy  mortal  eyes  ^'^°^i  ^^l 
eves  grown  dim  with  g  on  the  pilot-stars,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  ^.  » ( 
From  her  isle-altar  g  down,                                      0/  oZd  «««/';«f  ""l^^ 

There  he  sat  down  g  on  all  below ;  Enoch  Arden  TZ6 

His  9  in  on  Aimie,  his  resolve,  »       . .  °t>^ 

They  stood,  so  rapt,  we  g,  came  a  voice,  Princess  t}oio 

Then  murmur'd  Florian  g'  after  her,  ,,       .*"  ^ ' 

AU  open-mouth'd,  all  g  to  the  Ught,  ,.      *^.  |^^ 

Ida  spoke  not,  g  on  the  ground,  »      ''I.  ^i 

so  fared  she  g  there ;  y       ^.^.  *^ 

And  9  on  thee,  sullen  tree,  "^''.^^T-  "97R 

the  friends  Of  Arthur,  g  on  him,  tall.  Com.  of  Arthur  ZW 

In  scornful  stillness  g  as  they  past ;  ^       i,"     j  r   00a 

that  men  Were  giddy  g  there ;  Gareth  and  L.  ZZb 

pace  At  sunrise,  g  over  plain  and  wood ;  ^      ■    "     ■,  r  ?o4 

And  sadly  g  on  her  bridle-reins,  Geramtand  h.  4y4 

gone.  And  left  me  g-  at  a  barren  board,  Holy  hrail  v,yc> 

Pelleas  g  thought,  '  Is  Guinevere  herself  so  j  i,  rq 

beautiful?'  Pelleas  and  E.&^ 

Peace  at  his  heart,  and  g  at  a  star  ,"  ^  7    ■  «» 

To  die  in  g  on  that  perfectness  Lover  s  Tale  i  b» 

o  hke  The  Indian  on  a  still-eyed  snake,  »     c--'.    qo 

G  for  one  pensive  moment  on  that  founder  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  6^ 
And  gr  from  this  height  alone.                                 Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  i) 

^  Klow  ^^^''"'^  ^^"^^*^'  °^  '^^  ^^'"^^  ^^^'  ^^«'«-.  ^^*'  ^'''-  ^ 

Gear    We  sent  mine  host  to  purchase  female  g ;  -£^^"^^**  *  "^^= 

for  my  ships  are  out  of  g,  TA.  2?e™  5 

GeU  (girl)     an' soa  is  scoors  o' ?'s,           .  ^- -^"Tn'  .Wi'f.t 

an-  'is  9'5  as  thaw  they  was  g's  o'  mine,  ViUage  Wife  6 

The  ?'s  they  counts  for  nowt,  >i          ^° 

An'  the  g's,  they  hedn't  naw  taiiils,  »          ^ 

or  the  g's  'ull  goa,  to  the  'Ouse,  »          9^ 

An'  I  cried  along  wi'  the  g's,  "          "^ 

an'  'is  g's  es  belong'd  to  the  land ;  o  •    *. ''    c>»  »9 

a  bouncin'  boy  an'  a  g.                          .,           ..  -S^^^'^r's  5  5  82 

a's  bobs  to  ma  hoffens  es  I  be  abroad  1'  the  laanes,  „          iu  ( 

g  o'  the  farm  'at  slep  wi'  tha  then  Owd  Boa  51 

a-naggin'  about  the  g  0'  the  farm,  »        °^ 

the  g  was  as  howry  a  troUope  /^     ,j,      j'V  ioAq 

Gelt    left  crag-carven  o'er  the  streammg  G—  Gareth  and  L  1203 

S(s)     InhoUow'dmoonsofg's,  ^M^^AiitlfA 

lest  the  g's  Should  blind  my  purpose,  M.d  Arthur  152 

Airing  a  snowy  hand  and  signet  g,  Pnn^essi  121 

rainbow  robes,  and  g's  and  gemlike  eyes,  »      i''.  ^0^ 

How  like  a  g,  beneath,  the  city  Of  little  Monaco,  The  Daisy  - 

feet  like  sunny  g's  on  an  English  green,  Maud  1 1;  14 

All  over  glanced  with  dewdrop  or  with  g  Gareth  and  L.  yjy 

In  crimsons  and  in  purples  and  in  g;s.  "^''"■- f  ^'JT^JJ 
wont  to  glance  and  sparkle  Uke  a  g  Of  fifty  facets ;     Geramt  and  E.  294 

80  thickly  shone  the  g's.  ^         »'      j  r-  i^r 

he  had  the  g's  Pluck'd  from  the  crown,  Lancelot  and  E.bb 

Keceived  at  once  and  laid  aside  the  g  <  »» 


Gem  mcontinued)    Tristram  won,  and  Lancelot  gave  ^^^^^^^^^^^  ^^^ 

the  g  s,                                            ,     r\  2Q3 

Who  left  the  g's  which  Innocence  the  Queen  ,,                ?^ 

lest  the  g's  Should  blmd  my  purpose,  ^ZJsT^ei  S? 

Which  are  as  g's  set  in  my  memory.  Lover  s  1  alei  gl 

g's  Moveable  and  resettable  at  will,  >'            2iQ 

after  he  hath  shown  him  g's  or  gold,  Mneldime  46 

Swept  Uke  a  torrent  of  g's  from  the  sky  V.of  Maeldwae^ 

To  vex  the  noon  with  fiery  g's,  p^''"'fstLS 

Gem  (verb)     new  hfe  that  g's  the  hawthorn  hne ;  ^'%tTuA?i 

Gemini    starry  (?  hang  Uke  glorious  crowns  7W<x«d  Vii  t«  ( 

Gem-like    a  fire-balloon  Rose  g-l  up  before  the  dusky  p^-^^^^^  p^^.  75 

groves  '    i«'480 

And  rainbow  robes,  and  gems  and  g  eyes,  »          '" 

Luminous,  g,  ghostlike,  deathlike,  .  f «««  i,  "*  ° 

iTeadow'g  chased  In'the  brown  wild,  ^TffCWaintm 

Gemm'd     Breaks  from  a  coppice  g  with  green  and  red,  ^f;  ;4^™^??? 

Gemmv    The  g  bridle  glitter'd  free,                       ,  , .  ■^*   •^  t^I  LI*  is 

GeS    Upon  the  g  decay  of  faith  Right  thro'  the  world,       ^^.^'J^^^,^ 

every  face  she  fook'd  on  justify  it)  The  g  foe.  j^Z^'^i^^^ 

should  fall  Remerging  in  the  g  Soul,  rir^Taief 245 

whatsoe'er  Our  g  mother  meant  for  me  alone,  Lover  slalei  /40 

Generating    .Seg  All-generating  ^     ,   ^        ,, 

Generation    (6'ee  aZso  Gineration)     And  mould  a  g  Princessv4l& 

strong  to  move          .  ,         ,  /„  Mem  xl  16 

to  knit  The  g's  each  with  each ;  J,«  ^T'-f  099 

jewels  Of  mLy  g's  of  his  house  Sparkled  Lc.er  s  ^«  jjg 

National  hatreds  of  whole  g  s,  ,,    t        j  j/  ci7 

Generoi    All  brave,  and  many  ?.  and  some  chaste.  M^Un  andV.Jll 

Most  g  of  all  Ultramontanes  Ward,  /«  Mem.W   '^•J^^J^^^ 

But,  having  sown  some  g  seed,  -^     T^ireoias  128 

everywhere  they  meet  And  kindle  g  purpose  ^  ^resias  i.^o 

Genial    (5ee  aZso  Seeming-genial)    With  peals  of  g 

clamour  sent  From  many  a  tavern-door,  i*i^Sm  743 

so  g  was  the  hearth :             ,     ,  ^.  tvt  ^  TyiirrHius  97 

all-generating  powers  and  g  heat  Of  Nature,  pS  "  274 

The  g  giant,  Arac,  roll'd  himself  rnncessv  ^ 

broke  A  g  warmth  and  Ught  once  more,  .'      "'    „ 

For  we,  the  g  day,  the  happy  crowd,  »   ^05 

A  preat  broad-shoulder'd  q  Englishman,  "         .   „„ 

paftner  Sithe  flowery  wall  Of  letters,  g  table-talk.    In  Mem.  lxxxiv2Z 

And  g  warmth ;  and  o'er  the  sky  The  silvery  haze  „             J^^^ 

To  myriads  on  the  g  earth,  "                 cd  10 

The  g  hour  with  mask  and  mime ;  »             „^  ,j,j 

Let  all  my  g  spirits  advance  To  meet  /^  J' -^z  „^^  jt  'q26 

Fill'd  all  the  g  courses  of  his  blood  Geramt  ««^  J;  »^» 

The  light  and  g  warmth  of  double  day.  Prm.  BeaPnce  22 

Genius    thou  bearest  The  first-bom  of  thy  g.  Ode  to  Memory  9^ 

A  fairy  shield  your  (?  made  And  gave  you  ,trnilfm 

G  of  that  hour  which  dost  uphold  Thy  coronal  ^"'VjoaLfo 

Genovese    The  grave,  severe  G  of  old.      ^      ^    _  "^  '^^  ^''"^  ^" 

Being  but  a  (?,  I  am  handled  worse  than  had  1  Columbus  106 

been  a  Moor,  243 

I  am  but  an  alien  and  a  G.  " 

Gentle    (See  aZso  Stately-gentte)    Lean  don  him.  Two  Voices  A16 

faithful,  q,  good,                                            .  .  , ,        rr„  7  o  j. 

gently  comes  the  world  to  those  That  are  cast  m  g  n^uld       ToJJ.^i 

By  g  words  are  always  gain:  ^e         J ^^^  ^^ 

A  g  sound,  an  awful  hght !  "    Kiirleiah  49 

And  they  speak  in  g  murmur,  y.     ^^    ^  Burleigli 

And  a  g  consort  made  he.  And  her  g  mmd  was  such  ^^ 

That  she  grew  a  noble  lady,  ,  'V    ,     g^j 

The  g  shower,  the  smell  of  dying  leaves,  Enoch  Arden  oii 

a  languor  came  Upon  him,  g  sickness,  a  j^'h  v^^i^  f>R5 

So  thit  the  g  creatme  shut  from  all  Her  chantable  use,  Aylmer  s  Fidd  5b& 

Softening  thro'  all  the  g  attributes                ."         ..  .^q 

Sme  Melissa  hitting  all  we  saw  with  shaits  Of  g  satire.     Princess  «  4b9 

on  my  spirits  Settled  a  g  cloud  of  melancholy ;  "       li  206 

the  yoke,  I  wish  it  G  as  freedom '—  "        ^^  g,^ 

nor  stranger  seem'd  that  hearts  So  g,  " 

Sleep,  g  heavens,  before  the  prow ;  Sleep,  g  wmds,  ^^^   .^  ^^ 

as  he  sleeps  now,  Jfaiwi  7^67 

My  mother,  who  was  so  g  and  good  ?  xviii  23 

Of  her  whose  g  will  has  changed  my  fa,te,  »           ^^ 

I  trust  that  I  did  not  talk  To  g  Maud  m  our  walk  „    ^'^ 


Gentle 


265 


Get 


Gentle  (continued)    Was  it  g  to  reprove  her  For  stealing  Maud  I  xx  8 
nor  meet  To  fight  for  g  damsel,  he,  who  lets  His 
heart  be  stirr'd  with  any  foolish  heat  At  any 

g  damsel's  waywardness.  Gareih  and  L.  1177 

there  fell  A  horror  on  him,  lest  his  g  wife,  Marr.  of  Geraint  29 

Am  much  too  gr,  have  not  used  my  power :  „              467 

Sank  her  sweet  head  upon  her  g  breast ;  „              527 

That  tho'  her  g  presence  at  the  lists  „              795 

nor  told  his  g  wife  What  ail'd  him,  Geraint  and  E,  503 

(His  g  charger  following  him  unled)  „            571 

Pray  you  be  g,  pray  you  let  me  be :  „             708 

Dame,  to  be  ^  tnan  ungentle  with  you ;  „            716 
'  I  will  he  g'  he  thought  *  And  passing  g '  caught 

his  hand  Balin  and  Balan  370 

Then  the  g  Squire  '  I  hold  them  happy,  ,,              580 

I  thought  that  he  was  g,  being  great:  Merlin  and  V.  871 

The  g  wizard  cast  a  shielding  arm.  „            908 

Some  g  maiden's  gift.  Lancelot  and  E.  605 

Death-pale,  for  lack  of  g  maiden's  aid.  „            765 

And  all  the  g  court  will  welcome  me,  „          1060 

To  whom  the  g  sister  made  reply,  „           1073 

Know  that  for  this  most  g  maiden's  death  „          1291 

Unbound  as  yet,  and  g,  asl  know.'  „          1386 

That  doest  right  by  g  and  by  churl.  Last  Tournament  74 

Ah  great  and  g  lord,  Who  wast,  Guinevere  638 
to  which  her  gracious  lips  Did  lend  such  g 

utterance,  Lover's  Tale  i  457 

Then  he  patted  my  hand  in  his  y  way,  First  Quarrel  67 

the  crew  were  g,  the  captain  kind ;  The  Wreck  129 

Our  g  mother,  had  she  lived —  The  Flight  77 
All  is  gracious,  g,  great  and  Queenly.                      On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  14 

and  felt  a  g  hand  Fall  on  my  forehead,  The  Ring  418 
You  that  would  not  tread  on  a  worm  For  your 

g  nature  .  .  .  Forlorn  46 

Gentle-hearted    The  g-h  wife  Sat  shuddering  Sea  Breams  29 

Gentleman    bore  King  Arthur,  like  a  modem  g  M.  d'Arthur,  Ep.  22 

And  watch'd  by  silent  gentlemen.  Will  Water.  231 

first,  a  3'  of  broken  means  (His  father's  fault)  Princess  i  53 

To  give  three  gallant  gentlemen  to  death.'  „     it  335 

'  You  have  done  well  and  like  a,  g,  „    iv  527 

Well  have  you  done  and  like  a  g.  „         530 

Cooms  oi  ag  bum :  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  38 

G  bum !  what's  g  bum  ?  „                42 

The  grand  old  name  of  g,  In  Mem.  cxi  22 

O  selfless  man  and  stainless  g.  Merlin  and  V.  792 

Tme  g,  heart,  blood  and  bone.  Bandit's  Death  2 

Gentieness     Winning  its  way  with  extreme  g  Isabel  23 

More  soluble  is  this  knot.  By  g  than  war.  Princess  v  136 

but  this  firebrand — g  To  such  as  her !  „           167 

The  g  he  seem'd  to  be,  In  Mem.  cxi  12 

sworn  to  vows  Of  utter  hardihood,  utter  g,  Gareih  and  L.  553 

world  were  one  Of  utter  peace,  and  love,  and  g  !  „         1289 

Yea,  God,  I  pray  you  of  your  g,  Geraint  and  E.  710 

Subdued  me  somewhat  to  that  g,  „           867 

what  the  King  So  prizes — overprizes— y.  Balin  and  Balan  184 

airs  of  Heaven  Should  kiss  with  an  unwonted  g.  Lover's  Tale  i  739 

With  politic  care,  with  utter  g,  Akbar's  Dream  128 

Gentler     A  g  death  shall  Falsehood  die.  Clear-headed  friend  16 

In  g  days,  your  an-ow-wounded  fawn  Princess  ii  270 

We  ceased :  a  g  feeling  crept  Upon  us :  In  Mem.  xxx  17 

But  golden  earnest  of  a  y  life ! '  Balin  and  Balan  208 

Gentler-born    The  g-b  the  maiden,  the  more  bound,        Lancelot  and  E.  766 

,  Gentlest     whom  the  g  airs  of  Heaven  Should  kiss  Lover's  Tale  i  738 

And  last  in  kindly  curves,  with  g  fall,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  23 

Gentlewoman    hammer  at  this  reverend  g.  Princess  Hi  129 

Or  sit  beside  a  noble  g.'  Gareth  and  L.  867 

There  is  not  one  among  my  gentlewomen  Geraint  and  E,  622 

see  ye  not  my  gentlewomen  here,  „            682 

one  among  his  gentlewomen  Display'd  „            686 

and  stood,  A  virtuous  g  deeply  wrong'd,  Merlin  and  V.  911 

Gentlier    Music  that  g  on  the  spirit  lies,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  5 

Geoffrey  (of  Monmouth)    Of  G's  book,  or  him  of 

Malleor's,  To  the  Queen  ii  42 

Geology    Now  hawking  at  G  and  schism ;  The  Epic  16 

Astronomy  and  G,  terrible  Muses !  Parnassus  16 


Geraint  (a  Knight  of  the  Bound  Table)    brave  G,  a  knight 

of  Arthur's  court,  Marr.  of  Geraint  1 

so  loved  G  To  make  her  beauty  vary  day  by  day,  „                 8 

Grateful  to  Prince  G  for  service  done,  ,,                15 

Long  in  their  common  love  rejoiced  G.  ,,23 

Not  less  G  believed  it ;  ^,               28 

day  by  day  she  thought  to  tell  G,  j,                65 

Pnnce  6^,  Late  also,  wearing  neither  hunting-dress  „              164 

G  Exclaiming,  '  Surely  I  will  learn  the  name,'  „              202 

Prince  G,  now  thinking  that  he  heard  „              232 

came  G,  and  undemeath  Beheld  the  long  street  „              241 

thought  G,  '  I  have  track'd  him  to  his  earth.'  ,,              253 

Whereat  G  flash 'd  into  sudden  spleen :  ,,              273 

Then  rode  G,  a  little  spleenful  yet,  „              293 

Then  rode  G  into  the  castle  court,  ,,              312 

So  the  sweet  voice  of  Enid  moved  G ;  ''              334 

So  fared  it  with  G,  who  thought  and  said,  ,,              343 

thought  G,  '  Here  by  God's  rood  is  the  one  maid  ,,              367 

G,  from  utter  courtesy,  forbore.  „              381 

G  had  longing  in  him  evermore  To  stoop  and  kiss  ,',              394 

But  after  all  had  eaten,  then  G,  ,,              397 

— I  am  G  Of  Devon —  ,'              409 

G,  a  name  far-sounded  among  men  For  noble  deeds  ?  ,\              427 

'  Well  said,  true  heart,'  replied  G,  „              474 

old  And  rusty,  old  and  rusty.  Prince  G,  Are  mine,  ',',              478 

To  whom  G  with  eyes  all  bright  replied,  „              494 

And  waited  there  for  Yniol  and  G.  „              538 

when  G  Beheld  her  first  in  field  awaiting  him,  ,',              539 

Increased  G's,  who  heaved  his  blade  aloft,  ,,              572 

No  later  than  last  eve  to  Prince  G —  ,,              603 

She  look'd  on  ere  the  coming  of  G.  „              614 

G  Woke  where  he  slept  in  the  high  hall,  „              754 

rejoiced  More  than  G  to  greet  her  thus  attired ;  „  772 
So  fared  it  with  G,  (repeat)  Geraint  and  E.  8,  500 
Prince  G  Drave  the  long  spear  a  cubit  thro'  his 

breast  „                85 

his  lance  err'd ;  but  (r'5,  A  little  in  the  late  encounter  „  157 
G,  dismounting,  pick'd  the  lance  That  pleased  him 

best,  „              179 

G  had  ruth  again  on  Enid  looking  pale :  „              202 

G  Ate  all  the  mowers'  victual  unawares,  „              214 

Then  said  G,  '  I  wish  no  better  fare :  „              232 

Her  suitor  in  old  years  before  G,  Enter'd,  ,,              276 

Greeted  G  full  face,  but  stealthily,  „              279 

Then  cried  G  for  wine  and  goodly  cheer  „              283 

But  Enid  left  alone  with  Prince  G,  „              365 

And  G  look'd  and  was  not  satisfied.  „              435 

G  Waving  an  angry  hand  as  who  should  say  „              443 

uttering  a  dry  shriek,  Dash'd  on  G,  „               462 

Then  like  a  stormy  sunlight  smiled  G,  „              480 

This  heard  G,  and  grasping  at  his  sword,  „               725 

then  G  upon  the  horse  Mounted,  and  reach'd  a  hand,  „               758 

'  My  lord  G,  I  greet  you  with  all  love ;  „               785 

But  while  G  lay  healing  of  his  hurt,  „              931 

when  G  was  whole  again,  they  past  With  Arthur  ,',              945 

tho'  6^  could  never  take  again  That  comfort  „              949 

Enids  and  G's  Of  times  to  be ;  „              955 
after  Lancelot,  Tristram,  and  G  And  Gareth,             Lancelot  and  E.  556 
Germ    (See  also  Baby-germ)    in  it  is  the  g  of  all  That 

grows  within  the  woodland.  Amphion  7 
German     No  little  G  state  are  we,                                           Third  of  Feb.  15 

Germander  that  her  clear  g  eye  Droopt  Sea  Dreams  4 
Germany  worse  than  daring  G  gave  us.  Trans,  of  Homer  5 
Get    (See  also  Git)    g  thee  hence — Lest  that  rough 

bumour  Gareth  and  L.  376 

Thou  g  to  horse  and  follow  him  far  away.  „          584 

Flee  down  the  valley  before  he  g  to  horse.  ',  941 
with  Sir  Pelleas  as  with  one  Who  g's  a  wound 

in  battle,  Pelleas  and  E.  529 

I  couldn't  g  back  tho'  I  tried,  Rizpah  43 
In  yon  dark  city :  g  thee  back  :                                        Ancient  Sage  253 

Till  Holy  St.  Pether  g's  up  wid  his  kays  Tomorrow  93 

Up,  g  up,  and  tell  him  all,  Forlorn  55 

Up,  g  up,  the  time  is  short,  „       73 

I  have  told  you  my  tale.    G  you  gone.  Charity  44 


Getting 


256 


Gift 


Getting    See  Gittin' 

Got  (give)     yer  Honour  ye  g  her  the  top  of  the  momin',  Tomorrow  3 

an'  she  g  him  a  frindly  nod,  „        58 

Gewgaw    Seeing  his  g  castle  shine,  Maud  7  a;  18 

Ghastlier    And  a  g  face  than  ever  has  haunted  a  grave  The  Wreck  8 

stared  upon  By  g  than  the  Gorgon  head,  Death  of  (Enone  71 

Ghastliest     Our  dearest  faith ;  our  g  doubt ;  In  Mem.  cxxiv  2 

Ghastly    there  rain'd  a  g  dew  From  the  nations'  airy 

navies  Locksley  Hall  123 

They  cUng  together  in  the  g  sack —  Aylmer's  Field  J  Si 

And  g  thro'  the  drizzling  rain  In  Mem.  vii  11 

For  there  in  the  g  pit  long  since  a  body  was  found,  Maud  I  i  5 

Walk'd  in  a  wintry  wind  by  a  gf  glimmer,  „    Hi  13 

The  g  Wraith  of  one  that  I  know ;  „  II  i  32 

Trick  thyself  out  in  g  imageries  Gareih  and  L.  1390 
Lancelot  gave  A  marvellous  great  shriek  and  g 

groan,  Lancelot  and  E.  516 
from  the  sim  there  swiftly  made  at  her  A  g  something,        Guinevere  79 

He  had  brought  his  g  tools :  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  69 
Flying  at  top  of  the  roofs  in  the  g  siege  of  Lucknow —  Def.  of  Lucknow  4 
Timur  built  his  g  tower  of  eighty  thousand  human 

skulls,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  82 

Ghollst  (ghost)     I  thowt  it  wur  Charlie's  g  Village  Wife  82 

They  was  all  on  'em  fear'd  o'  the  G  Owd  Bod  37 

the  G  moastlins  was  nobbut  a  rat  or  a  mouse.  „        38 

Ghost  (adj.)     So  sacred  those  G  Lovers  hold  the  gift.'  The  Ring  205 

As  if — those  two  G  lovers —  „         459 

Ghost  (s)     {See  also  Boggle,  Ghoast)    g  of  passion  that 

no  smiles  restore —  The  form,  the  form  11 

He  thought  I  was  a  g,  mother,  May  Queen  17 

we  should  come  Uke  g's  to  trouble  joy.  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  74 

Was  haunted  with  a  jolly  g,  that  shook  Walk,  to  the  Mail  36 

'  Yes,  we're  flitting,'  says  the  g  ,,               43 

Old  wishes,  g's  of  broken  plans,  WiU  Water.  29 
g  of  one  who  bore  your  name  About  these  meadows,         The  Brook  219 

I  seem'd  to  move  among  a  world  of  g's.  Princess  i  17 

I  seem'd  to  move  among  a  world  of  g's ;  „    iv  561 

And  doing  battle  with  forgotten  g's,  „     y  480 

droops  the  milkwhite  peacock  like  a  g,  „  vii  180 

And  like  a  g  she  glimmers  on  to  me.  „        181 

And  in  the  dark  church  like  a,  g  In  Mem.  Ixvii  15 

O  solemn  g,  O  crowned  soul !  „        Ixxxv  36 

Spirit  to  Spirit,  G  to  G.  „           xciii  8 

My  G  may  feel  that  thine  is  near.  „                  16 

a  sudden  desire,  Uke  a  glorious  g,  to  glide,  Maud  I  xiy  20 

A  disease,  a  hard  mechanic  g  „      II  "  34 

some  Were  pale  as  at  the  passing  of  a  g,  Com.  of  Arthur  263 

thou  be  shadow,  here  I  make  thee  g,'  Balin  and  Balan  394 

wall  That  sunders  g's  and  shadow-casting  men  Merlin  and  V.  629 
Then  like  a  g  she  lifted  up  her  face.  But  like  a  g 

without  the  power  to  speak.  Lancelot  and  E.  918 

Monotonous  and  hollow  like  a  G's  Guinevere  420 

g  of  Gawain  blown  Along  a  wandering  wind.  Pass,  of  Arthur  31 

fight  in  death  Is  Gawain,  for  the  3  is  as  the  man  ;                  „              57 

Ajid  some  beheld  the  faces  of  old  g's  „            103 

Rather  than  that  gray  king,  whose  name,  a  g,  To  the  Queen  ii  39 

still  Haunted  us  like  her  g;  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  247 

the  g  of  our  great  Catholic  Queen  Smiles  Columbus  187 

would  scatter  the  g's  of  the  Past,  Despair  23 

my  mother's  g  would  rise —  The  Flight  51 

smiling  at  the  slighter  g.  Locksley  E.,  Sixty  54 

All  the  world  is  gf  to  me,  „              253 

G  of  Pindar  in  you  Roll'd  an  Olympian ;  To  Prof.  Jebb.  3 

Led  upward  by  the  God  of  g's  and  dreams,  Demeter  and  P.  5 

G  in  Man,  the  G  that  once  was  Man,  The  Ring  35 

that  half  skeleton,  like  a  barren  g  „      227 

VUe,  so  near  the  g  Himself,  „      230 

dearer  g  had — ^wrench'd  it  away.  „      467 

in  the  night,  When  the  g's  are  fleeting.  Forlorn  18 

rib-grated  dimgeon  of  the  holy  human  g,  Happy  31 

white  fog  vanish'd  like  a  g  Before  the  day.  Death  of  (Enone  67 

G  of  the  Brute  that  is  walking  and  haunting  The  Dawn  23 

Ghostlike    Luminous,  gemlike,  g,  deathlike,  Maud  I  Hi  8 

In  either  twilight  g-l  to  and  fro  Lancelot  and  E.  849 

mist  Before  her,  moving  9  to  his  doom.  Guinevere  605 


Ghostly    morning-breath  Of  England,  blown  across 
her  g  wall : 

An  echo  Uke  a  g  woodpecker. 

No  g  hauntings  like  his  Highness. 

for  spite  of  doubts  And  sudden  g  shadowings 

Cloud-towers  by  g  masons  wrought, 

while  that  g  grace  Beam'd  on  his  fancy, 

and  bid  call  the  g  man  Hither, 

So  when  the  g  man  had  come  and  gone, 

Or  g  footfall  echoing  on  the  stair. 

thro'  her  dream  A  g  murmur  floated, 
Ghoul    Some  deathsong  for  the  G's 
Giant  (adj.)     enormous  polypi  Winnow  with  g  arms  the 
slumbering  green. 

three  stanzas  that  you  made  About  my  '  g  bole ; ' 

And  near  the  light  a  g  woman  sat. 

For  tho'  the  G  Ages  heave  the  hill  And  break 
the  shore, 

g  aisles,  Rich  in  model  and  design ; 

The  g  windows'  blazon'd  fires, 

I  stood  on  a  9  deck  and  mix'd  my  breath 

Yet  God's  just  wrath  shall  be  wreak'd  on  a  ^  liar ; 

thrice  that  morning  Guinevere  had  climb'd  The 
g  tower, 

struck,  Furrowing  a  g  oak, 

and  there  My  g  ilex  keeping  leaf 
Giant  (s)     a  race  Of  g's  living,  each,  a  thousand  years, 

those  three  stars  of  the  airy  G's  zone, 

genial  g,  Arac,  roll'd  himself  Thrice  in  the  saddle, 

From  Arac's  arm,  as  from  a  g's  flail. 

The  g  labouring  in  his  youth ; 

The  g  answer'd  merrily,  '  Yea,  but  one  ? 

the  King,  Who  seem'd  the  phantom  of  a  G  in  it, 

weigh'd  him  down  as  jEtna  does  The  G  of 
Mythology : 

Gnome  of  the  cavern.  Griffin  and  G, 
Giant-factoried    Droopt  in  the  g-f  city-gloom. 
Gibber    point  and  jeer.  And  g  at  the  worm. 
Gibbet    from  the  church  and  not  from  the  g — 
Gibe    With  solemn  g  did  Eustace  banter  me. 

there  with  g's  and  flickering  mockeries 

'  Was  it  muddier  than  thy  g's  ? 
Gibed    — him  Who  g  and  japed — in  many  a  merry  tale 
Giddiest    Ran  into  its  g  whirl  of  sound. 
Giddy    or  like  a  girl  Valuing  the  g  pleasure  of  the  eyes. 

that  man  Were  g  gazing  there ; 

or  like  a  girl  Valuing  the  g  pleasure  of  the  eyes. 

We  were  g  besides  with  the  fruits  we  had  gorged, 
Gideon    those  whom  G  school'd  with  briers. 
Gie  (give)     An'  I  says  '  I  mun  g  tha  a  kiss,' 

ears  es  'e'd  g  fur  a  howry  owd  book 

set  oop  thy  taUil,  tha  may  g  ma  a  kiss, 

I  shall  hev  to  g  one  or  tother  awatiy. 

Now  I'll  g  tha  a  bit  o'  my  mind 
Gied  (gave)     toithe  were  due,  an'  I  9  it  in  bond ; 

an'  I  g  our  Sally  a  kick, 

I  seeiid  that  our  Sally  went  laamed  Cos'  o'  the 
kick  as  I  gp  'er, 

I  minded  the  fust  kiss  I  g  'er 

I  g  'ei  a,  kiss,  an'  then  anoother, 

upo'  coomin'  awaiiy  Sally  g  me  a.  kiss  ov  'ersen. 

an'  g  to  the  tramps  goin'  by — 

'e  g — I  be  fear'd  fur  to  tell  tha  'ow  much — 

it  g  me  a  scare  tother  night, 

an'  our  Nelly  she  g  me  'er  'and. 

Till  I  g  'em  Hinjian  cum, 

Robby  I  g  tha  a  raiitin  that  sattled  thy  coortin  o'  me. 
Gift    (See  also  Bridal-gift,  Chance-gift)     God's  great  g  of 
speech  abused 

'  He  owns  the  fatal  g  of  eyes, 

Love  the  g  is  Love  the  debt. 

'  I  woo  thee  not  with  g's. 

A  sinful  soul  possess'd  of  many  g's.  To 

angels  rising  and  descending  met  With  interchange 
of  ^. 


Enoch  Arden  661 

Princess,  Pro.  217 

ii  411 

iv  572 

In  Mem.  Ixx  5 

Lancelot  and  E.  885 

1099 

1101 

Guinevere  ^fl 

Death  of  (Enone  79 

Ancient  Sage  17 

The  Kraken  10 

Talking  Oak  136 

Sea  Dreams  98 

Ode  on  Well.  259 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  12 

The  Daisy  58 

Maud  III  vi  34 

45 

Marr.  of  Geraint  827 

Merlin  and  V.  936 

To  Ulysses  18 

Princess  Hi  269 

i;260 

274 

500 

In  Mem.  cxviii  2 

Geraint  and  E.  128 

Guinevere  602 

Lover's  Tale  iv  18 

Merlin  and  the  G.  40 

Sea  Dream,s  5 

Romney's  R.  137 

Rizpah  84 

Gardener's  D.  168 

Last  Tournament  186 

299 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  91 

Vision  of  Sin  29 

M.  d' Arthur  128 

Gareth  and  L.  228 

Pass,  of  Arthur  22^ 

V.  of  Maddune  75 

Buonaparte  14 

North.  Cobbler  51 

Village  Wife  45 

Spinster's  S's.  31 

64 

Church-warden,  etc.  21 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  11 

North.  Cobbler  36 


40 

45 

52 

56 

ViUage  Wife  33 

47 

81 

111 

118 

Spinster's  S's.  48 

A  Dirge  44 

Two  Voices  286 

Miller's  D.  207 

(Enone  152 

With  Pal.  of  Ari  3 

Palace  of  Art  lU 


Oift 


257 


Girl 


Gist  {continued)    we  knew  your  ^  that  way  At  college:  The  Epic  24 

The  holy  Elders  with  the  g  of  myrrh.  M.  d' Arthur  233 

Kequiring  at  her  hand  the  greatest  g,  Gardener's  D.  229 

'  And  yet  it  was  a  graceful  g —  Talking  Oak  233 

Let  me  go :  take  back  thy  g :  Tithonus  27 

Gods  themselves  cannot  recall  their  g's.'  „       49 

eagles  of  her  belt,  The  grim  Earl's  g ;  Godiva  44 

g's,  when  g's  of  mine  could  please  ;  The  Letters  22 

G's  by  the  children,  garden-herbs  Enoch  Arden  338 
shower'd  His  oriental  g's  on  everyone  And  most 

on  Edith :  Aylmer's  Field  214 

Among  the  g's  he  left  her  „            217 

'  A  gracious  g  to  give  a  lady,  this  ! '  „            240 

'  Were  I  to  give  this  g  of  his  to  one  „             242 

'  Take  it,'  she  added  sweetly,  '  tho'  his  g-  „            246 

Nor  deeds  of  g,  but  g's  of  grace  he  forged,  Sea  Dreams  192 

And  jewels,  g's,  to  fetch  her :  Princess  i  43 

they  saw  the  king :  he  took  the  g's ;  „        46 

g's  of  grace,  that  might  express  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  46 

Ah,  take  the  imperfect  g  I  bring,  „                117 

She  keeps  the  g  of  years  before,  „         xcvii  25 

and  saw  without  the  door  King  Arthur's  g,  Gareth  and  L.  677 
branch'd  and  flower'd  with  gold,  a  costly  g              Marr.  of  Geraint  631 

*  Yea,  I  know  it ;  your  good  g,  „             688 

Your  own  good  g\'    '  Yea,  surely,'  said  the  dame,  „              690 
I  see  her  now,  Clothed  with  my  g,  and  gay  among 

the  gay.'  „              753 

Laid  from  her  limbs  the  costly-broider'd  g,  „              769 

your  fair  child  shall  wear  your  costly  g  „              819 

Who  knows  ?  another  g  of  the  high  God,  „              821 

'  I  take  it  as  free  g,  then,'  said  the  boy,  Geraint  and  E.  222 
'  These  be  g's,  Bom  with  the  blood,                           Balin  and  Balan  174 

A  seven  months'  babe  had  been  a  truer  g.  Merlin  and  V.  711 
broider'd  wth  great  pearls.  Some  gentle  maiden's  g.'  Lancelot  and  E.  605 


Gilded  (adj.  and  part.)  {continued)    from  the  carven-work 


she  should  ask  some  goodly  g  of  him 

price  of  half  a  realm,  his  costly  g, 

they  had  been  thrice  their  worth  Being  your  g, 

value  of  all  g's  Must  vary  ss  the  giver's. 

this  life  of  mine  I  guard  as  God's  high  g 

holy  Elders  with  the  g  of  myrrh. 

my  rich  g  is  wholly  mine  to  give. 

'  Take  my  free  g,  my  cousin,  for  your  wife ; 

One  golden  curl,  his  golden  g,  before 

G's  from  every  British  zone ; 

And  golden  grain,  my  g  to  helpless  man 

sacred  those  Ghost  Lovers  hold  the  g.' 

full  thanks  to  you  For  your  rich  g, 

send  A  9  of  slenderer  value,  mine. 
Gifted     (See  also  God-glfted)     As  some  divinely  g  man, 
Gigantesque    The  sort  of  mock-heroic  g, 
Gigglesby    we  was  shaamed  to  cross  G  Greeiin, 

out  o'  sight  o'  the  winders  o'  G  Hinn — 

foiilk  be  sa  scared  at,  i'  G  wood. 
Gild    g's  the  straiten'd  forehead  of  the  fool ! 

grain  as  sweet  As  that  which  g's  the  glebe  of 
England, 


912 

1164 

1213 

1214 

Guinevere  494 

Pass,  of  Arthur  401 

Lover's  Tale  iv  350 

363 

The  Flight  36 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  9 

Demeter  and  P.  Ill 

The  Bing  205 

To  Ulysses  34 

48 

In  Mem.  Ixiv  2 

Princess,  Con.  11 

Spinster's  S's.  33 

35 

24 

Locksley  Hall  62 


To  Prof.  Jehh  7 


Gilded  (adj.  and  part.)    {See  also  Lichen-gilded)    Kate  saith 

'  the  men  are  g  flies.'  Kate  18 

And  round  the  roofs  a  g  gallery  Palace  of  Art  29 

Near  g  organ-pipes,  her  hair  Wound  with  white  roses,  „  98 

The  parrot  in  his  g  wires.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  16 

A  g  dragon,  also,  for  the  babes.  Enoch  Arden  540 

Dust  are  our  frames ;  and,  g  dust,  our  pride  Aylmer's  Field  1 

Staring  for  ever  from  their  g  walls  „         833 

steep-up  spout  whereon  the  g  ball  Danced  like  a 

wisp :  Princess,  Pro.  63 

Fly  to  her,  and  fall  upon  her  g  eaves,  „  i-y  94 

And  slain  with  laughter  roll'd  the  g  Squire.  „  « 22 

let  his  coltish  nature  break  At  seasons  thro'  the  g  pale :    In  Mem.  cxi  8 
Sweet  nature  g  by  the  gracious  gleam  Of  letters,  Ded.  of  Idylls  39 

on  such  a  palm  As  glitters  g  in  thy  Book  of  Hours.       Gareth  and  L.  46 
were  birds  Of  sunny  plume  in  g  trellis- work;  Marr.  of  Geraint  659 

I  will  not  fight  my  way  with  g  arms,  Geraint  and  E.  21 

And  call'd  herself  a  g  summer  fly  Merlin  and  V.  258 

Set  every  g  parapet  shuddering ;  Lancelot  and  E.  299 


behind  him  crept  Two  dragons  g, 
the  g  parapets  were  crown'd  With  faces, 
inflamed  the  knights  At  that  dishonour  done  the 

g  spur, 
G  with  broom  or  shatter'd  into  spires, 
and  the  g  snake  Had  nestled  in  this  bosom-throne  of 

Love, 
A  veil,  that  seemed  no  more  than  g  air, 
I  have  broke  their  cage,  no  g  one,  I  trow — 
and  once  we  only  saw  Your  g  vane. 

Gilded  (verb)     Would  that  have  g  me? 

Gilden-peakt    pavilions  rear'd  Above  the  bushes,  g-p : 

Gildest    star  that  g  yet  this  phantom  shore ; 

Gilding    Flattery  g  the  rift  in  a  throne ; 

Gileadite     The  daughter  of  the  warrior  G, 

Gillyflowers    a  rosy  sea  of  g  About  it ; 

Gilt     {See  also  Foot-gilt)     as  a  parrot  turns  Up  thro'  g 
wires  a  crafty  loving  eye, 
dark  old  place  will  be  g  by  the  touch  of  a  millionaire 
his  strong  hands  gript  And  dinted  the  g  dragons  right 


Lancelot  and  E.  437 
Pelleas  and  E.  165 

Last  Tournament  435 
Lover's  Tale  i  400 


„         i  623 

iv  290 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  3 

The  Ring  331 

Columbus  114 

Pelleas  and  E.  429 

To  Virgil  26 

Vastness  20 

D.  of  F.  Women  197 

Aylmer's  Field  159 

Princess,  Pro.  172 
Maud  I  i  66 


and  left 

And  those  g  gauds  men-children  swarm  to  see 
Gilt-head    court-Galen  poised  his  g-h  cane, 
Gin    I'll  tell  tha.     G. 

Thou  gits  naw  g  fro'  the  bottle  theer, 

seeits  stannin'  theer,  yon  big  black  bottle  o'  g. 

summat  bewitch'd  istead  of  a  quart  o'  g ; 

Fur  I  couldn't  'owd  'ands  off  g. 

An'  'e  points  to  the  bottle  o'  g, 
Gineration  (generation)     But  a  frish  g  had  riz, 
Gipsy     Or  the  frock  and  g  bonnet 
Gird     minds  did  g  their  orbs  with  beams, 

Uncared  for,  g  the  windy  grove. 

Far  liefer  had  I  gi  his  harness  on  him, 

many  a  mystic  symbol,  g  the  hall : 
Girded    See  Man-girded 
Girdle    {See  also  Vapour-girdle)    And  I  would  be  the  g 

twist  his  g  tight,  and  pat  The  girls 

She  moving,  at  her  g  clash  The  golden  keys 
Girdled    g  with  the  gleaming  world : 

and  g  her  with  music. 

the  rebels  that  g  us  round — 
Girl    (See  also  Baby-girl,  Gell,  Market-girl,  Orphan-girl) 

Gazed  on  the  Persian  g  alone. 

And  the  red  cloaks  of  market  g's, 

the  g's  all  kiss'd  Beneath  the  sacred  bush 

like  a  g  Valuing  the  giddy  pleasure  of  the  eyes. 

'  My  g,  I  love  you  well ; 

'  Go  \—G,  get  you  in  ! '  She  went — 

and  pat  The  g's  upon  the  cheek. 

This  g,  for  whom  your  heart  is  sick, 

either  fixt  his  heart  On  that  one  g; 

the  g  Seem'd  kinder  unto  Philip  than  to  him ; 

I'll  be  back,  my  g,  before  you  know  it.' 

as  the  village  g.  Who  sets  her  pitcher 

'  Annie,  my  g,  cheer  up,  be  comforted, 

let  me  put  the  boy  and  g  to  school : 

Philip  put  the  boy  and  g  to  school. 

And  o'er  her  second  father  stoopt  a  g, 

the  g  So  like  her  mother,  and  the  boy,  my  son.' 

Where  once  with  Leolin  at  her  side  the  g, 

would  it  be  more  gracious '  asked  the  g 

The  g  might  be  entangled  ere  she  knew. 

g  and  boy,  Sir,  know  their  differences ! ' 

twenty  boys  and  o's  should  marry  on  it, 

foimd  the  g  And  flung  her  down  upon  a  couch  of  fire, 

Bom  of  a  village  g,  carpenter's  son. 

But  g's,  Hetairai,  curious  in  their  art, 

a  group  of  g's  In  circle  waited, 

like  as  many  g's — Sick  for  the  hollies 

lengths  of  yellow  ringlet,  like  a  g, 

G's,  Knowledge  is  now  no  more  a  fountain 

G's  ? — more  like  men ! ' 

Men !  g's,  like  men !  why,  if  they  had  been  men 


Last  Tournament  182 

To  W.  C.  Macready  11 

Princess  i  19 

North.  Cobbler  7 

10 

70 


82 

84 

90 

Tomorrow  75 

Mavd  I  XX  19 

The  Poet  29 

In  Mem.  ci  13 

Marr.  of  Geraint  93 

Holy  Grail  233 

Miner's  D.  175 

Talking  Oak  43 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  3 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  113 

Princess  vii  327 

Def.  of  Lucknow  22 

Arabian  Nights  134 

L.ofShaloUan 

The  Epic  2 

M.  d' Arthur  127 

Dora  42 

Edwin  Morris  125 

Talking  Oak  44 

71 

Enoch  Arden  40 

41 

193 

„    206 

218 

312 

331 

747 

790 

Aylmer's  Field  184 

241 

272 

274 

371 

573 

668 

Lucretius  52 

Princess,  Pro.  68 

186 

i3 

a  89 

Hi  43 

49 

R 


Girl 


258 


Give 


Girl  (continued)    To  nurse  a  blind  ideal  like  a  g,  Methinks 
he  seems  no  better  than  a  ^ ;   As  g's  were  once, 

as  we  ourself  have  been :  Princess  Hi  217 

But  children  die ;  and  let  me  tell  you,  g,  „              253 

G  after  g  was  call'd  to  trial :  „         iv  228 

like  enough,  O  g's,  To  unfurl  the  maiden  banner  „              502 

and  they  will  beat  mj  g  Remembering  her  mother :  „            ti  88 

you  spent  a  stormy  tmie  With  our  strange  g :  „              122 

'  Tut,  you  know  them  not,  the  g's.  „              151 

Let  our  g's  flit.  Till  the  storm  die !  „         vi  337 
ill  coimsel  had  mislead  the  g  To  vex  true  hearts :  yet 

was  she  but  a  g —  „        vii  241 

'  So  fret  not,  like  an  idle  g,  In  Mem.  Hi  13 

Like  some  poor  g  whose  heart  is  set  „          Ix  3 

I  play'd  with  the  g  when  a  child ;  Mavd  /  i  68 

'  Well  if  it  prove  a  g,  the  boy  (repeat)  „  vii  7, 15 

And  soften  as  if  to  a  ^,  „        xlQ 

save  from  some  slight  shame  one  simple  g.  „  xviii  45 

Queen  rose  of  the  rosebud  garden  of  y'5,  „  xxii  53 

Shame  never  made  g  redder  than  Gareth  joy.  Gareih  and  L.  536 

three  fair  g's  In  gilt  and  rosy  raiment  came :  „            926 

massacring  Man,  woman,  lad  and  g —  „          1341 

Half  disarray'd  as  to  her  rest,  the  g ;  Mart,  of  Geraint  516 

And  all  in  charge  of  whom  ?  a,  g:  Geraint  and  E.  125 

ye  shall  share  my  earldom  with  me,  g,  „            626 

'  G,  for  I  see  ye  scorn  my  courtesies,  „            671 

Sir  Lancelot  worshipt  no  unmarried  g  Merlin  and  V.  12 

beyond  All  hopes  of  gaining,  than  as  maiden  g.  „             24 

came  the  village  g's  And  linger'd  talking,  Pdleas  and  E.  508 

like  a  g  Valuing  the  giddy  pleasure  of  the  eyes.  Pass,  of  Arthur  295 

thronging  fancies  come  To  boys  and  g's  Lover's  Tale  i  555 

but  Lionel  and  the  g  Were  wedded,  „           iv  13 

Passionate  g  tho'  I  was,  First  Quarrd  15 

There  was  a  ^,  a  hussy,  that  workt  „            24 

the  g  was  the  most  to  blame.  „            26 

It's  the  little  g  with  her  arms  lying  out  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  58 

And  so,  when  I  bore  him  a  g,  The  Wreck  33 

he  the  knight  for  an  amorous  g's  romance !  „          44 

The  g's  of  equal  age,  but  one  was  fair,  The  Ring  160 

you  my  g  Rode  on  my  shoulder  home —  „        321 

I  believing  that  the  g's  Lean  fancy,  ,,        335 

lover's  fairy  dream.  His  g  of  g's ;  To  Mary  Boyle  44 

Girl-graduates    sweet  g-g  in  their  golden  hair.  Princess,  Pro.  142 

Girli^    Is  g  talk  at  best ;  Epilogs  43 

Girt    Among  the  thorns  that  g  Thy  brow,  Supp.  Confessions  6 

g  round  With  blackness  as  a  solid  wall.  Palace  of  Art  273 

The  land,  where  g  with  friends  or  foes  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  7 

Tho'  sitting  g  with  doubtful  light.  Love  thou  thy  land  16 

g  the  region  with  high  cliff  and  lawn :  Vision  of  Sin  47 

Enoch's  golden  ring  had  g  Her  finger,  Enoch  Arden  157 

g  With  song  and  flame  and  fragrance,  Lucretius  133 

G  by  half  the  tribes  of  Britain,  Boadicea  5 

the  King  Came  g  with  knights :  Lancelot  and  E.  1261 

Far  off  from  out  an  island  g  by  foes,  Achilles  over  the  T.  8 

Girth    Alas,  I  was  so  broad  of  g,  Talking  Oak  139 

and  grown  a  bulk  Of  spanless  g,  Princess  vi  36 
strait  g  of  Time  Inswathe  the  fulness  of  Eternity,        Lover's  Tale  i  482 

No  stone  is  fitted  in  yon  marble  g  Tiresias  135 

Would  my  granite  g  were  strong  Helen's  Tower  7 

Git  (get)     G  ma  my  aale,  (repeat)  iV.  Farmer,  0.  S.  4,  68 

nobbut  a  curate,  an'  weant  niver  g  hissen  clear,  „         N.  S.  27 
Squire  were  at  Charlie  agean  to  g  'im  to  cut  off 

'is  taail.  Village  Wife  74 

or  she  weant  g  a  maiite  onyhow !  „        104 

Robby,  g  down  wi'tha,  wilt  tha  ?  Spinster's  S's.  67 

Steevie  g  down.  „            92 

An'  I  says  '  G  awaay,  ya  beast,'  Owd  Rod  62 

G  oop,  if  ya're  onywaays  good  for  owt.'  „        77 

when  I  g's  to  the  top,  „        83 

Too  laate,  tha  mun  g  tha  to  bed,  „      117 

an'  thou'll  g  along,  niver  fear.  Church-warden,  etc.  7 

I  ^s  the  plaate  fuller  o'  Soondays  „               40 

jf  iver  tha  means  to  g  'igher,  „               45 

if  tha  wants  to  g  forrards  a  bit,  „                49 

OitUn'  (getting)     Fur  work  mun  *a  gone  to  the  g  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  50 


Gittin'  (getting)  (continued)    alius  afear'd  of  a  man's  g' 

ower  fond.  Spinster's  S's.  27 
How  be  the  farm  ^  on  ?  noaways.    G  on  i'  deeiid !     Church-warden,  etc.  3 

Giv  (gave)     I  niver  g^  it  a  thowtn—  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  23 
Give    (See  also  Gev,  Gie)     Could  g  the  warrior  kings 

of  old.  To  the  Queen  4 
'Mother,  g  me  grace  To  help  me  of  my  weary 

load.'  Mariana  in  the  S.  29 

fill  my  glass :  g  me  one  kiss :  Miller's  D.  17 

0  would  she  g  me  vow  for  vow,  „  119 
'  O  Paris,  G  it  to  Pallas  ! '  (Enone  170 
G  us  long  rest  or  death,  dark  death,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  53 
Failing  to  g  the  bitter  of  the  sweet,  D.  of  F.  Women  286 
God  g's  us  love.  Something  to  love  He  lends  us ;  To  J.  S.  13 
What  should  one  g  to  light  on  such  a  dream  ? '  Edwin  Morris  58 
'G?  G  all  thou  art,'  he  answer'd,  „  59 
like  the  daughters  of  the  horseleech,  '  G,  Golden  Year  12 

1  ask'd  thee, '  G  me  immortality.'  Tithonus  15 
wealthy  men  who  care  not  how  they  g.  „  17 
in  the  rights  that  name  may  g,  Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  54 
a  lily-white  doe  To  3  his  cousin.  Lady  Clare.  Lady  Clare  4 
'  Yet  g  one  kiss  to  your  mother  dear !  „  49 
Little  can  I  g  my  wife.  L.  of  Burleigh  14 
And  g  his  child  a  better  bringing-up  Enoch  Arden  87 
To  g  his  babes  a  better  bringing-up  „  299 
— a  month — G  her  a  month —  „  462 
aid  me,  g  me  strength  Not  to  tell  her,  „  785 
Take,  g  her  this,  for  it  may  comfort  her :  ,,  899 
'  A  gracious  gift  to  ^  a  lady,  this ! '  Aylmer's  Field  240 
'  Were  I  to  gf  this  gift  of  his  to  one  „  242 
G  me  my  fling,  and  let  me  say  my  say.'  „  399 
G  me  your  prayers,  for  he  is  past  „  751 
or  a  song  To  gf  us  breathing-space.'  Princess,  Pro.  242 
And  here  I  g  the  story  and  the  songs.  „  247 
I  can  g  you  letters  to  her ;  „  .  i  159 
'  We  g  you  welcome :  not  without  redound  „  ii  42 
I  g  thee  to  death  My  brother !  „  307 
g  three  gallant  gentlemen  to  death.'  „  335 
we  g  you,  being  strange,  A  license :  „  Hi  204 
If  we  could  g  them  surer,  quicker  proof —  „  282 
g's  the  manners  of  your  countrywomen  ? '  „  iv  151 
g  him  your  hand :  Cleave  to  your  contract :  „  408 
And  g's  the  battle  to  his  hands :  „  580 
G  us,  then,  your  mind  at  large :  „  v  123 
G's  her  harsh  groom  for  bridal-gift  a  scourge  ;  „  378 
It  is  not  yours,  but  mine :  g  me  the  child.'  „  vi  141 
g  her  the  child  !  (repeat)  ,,  168, 179, 183 
Gmeit:  /  will  ^  it  her.'  „  187 
what  answer  should  Ig?  „  vii  6 
let  her  make  herself  her  own  To  g  or  keep,  ,,  273 
of  which  I  g  you  all  The  random  scheme  „  Con.  1 
men  required  that  I  should  g  throughout  „  10 
And  yet  to  g  the  story  as  it  rose,  „  26 
G  it  time  To  learn  its  limbs :  „  78 
these  great  Sirs  G  up  their  parks  some  dozen  times 

a  year  „                 103 

he  kept  us  free ;  0  g  him  welcome.  Ode  on  Well.  92 

a  weant  niver  g  it  to  Joanes,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  59 

Who  g  the  Fiend  himself  his  due.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  6 

one  lay-hearth  would  g  you  welcome  „             11 

'  We  g  you  his  life.'  The  Victim  16 

Take  you  his  dearest,  G  us  a  life.'  „          28 

We  g  them  the  boy '  „          40 

'  O,  Father  Odin,  We  g  you  a  life.  „          75 

Gods  have  answer'd ;  We  g  them  the  wife ! '  „          79 

G  her  the  glory  of  going  on.  Wages  5 

G  her  the  wages  of  going  on,  „    10 

To  Sleep  I  g  my  powers  away ;  In  Mem.  iv  1 

No  joy  the  blowing  season  g's,  „  xxxviii  5 

the  hoarding  sense  G"«  out  at  times  „        xlivl 

And  dare  we  to  this  fancy  g,  „        UH  5 

Hath  power  to  g  thee  as  thou  wert  ?  „       Ixxv  8 

meets  the  year,  and  g's  and  takes  „       cxvi  3 

Some  bitter  notes  my  harp  would  g,  „      cxxv  2 

And  I  must  g  away  the  bride ;  „    Con.  42 


r 


Give 


259 


Glad 


Give  {continued)    To  g  him  the  grasp  of  fellowship ;  Maud  I  xiii  16 

sullen-seeming  Death  may  g  More  life  to  Love  „       xviii  46 

squire  will  g  A  grand  political  dinner  „  xx  24 

A  learned  man  Could  gr  it  a  clumsy  name.  „       //  ii  10 

G  me  thy  daughter  Guinevere  to  wife.'  Com.  of  Arthur  139 

G  my  one  daughter  saving  to  a  king,  „  143 

Fear  not  to  g  this  King  thine  only  child,  „  413 

G  me  to  right  her  wrong,  and  slay  the  man.'  Gareih  and  L.  366 

let  my  name  Be  hidd'n,  and  g  me  the  first  quest,  „  545 

and  so  g's  the  quest  to  him —  „  864 

ff  him  back  the  shield.'  „  1344 

Take  him  to  stall,  and  g  him  corn,  Marr.  of  Geraint  371 

Thou  shalt  g  back  their  earldom  to  thy  kin.  „  585 

Albeit  I  g'  no  reason  but  my  wish,  „  761 

Then  not  to  g  you  warning,  that  seems  hard ;  Geraint  and  E.  422 

to  g  him  warning,  for  he  rode  As  if  he  heard  not,  „  451 

set  his  foot  upon  me,  and  g  me  life.  „  850 

G's  him  the  lie !  There  is  no  being  pure.  Merlin  and  V.  51 

But  since  I  will  not  yield  to  g  you  power  „  373 

But,  father,  g  me  leave,  an  if  he  wul,  Lancelot  and  E.  219 

if  you  love,  it  will  be  sweet  to  g'  it ; 

with  mine  own  hand  g  his  diamond  to  him, 

yea,  and  you  must  g  it — 

G  me  good  fortune,  I  will  strike  him  dead, 

g  at  last  The  price  of  half  a  realm, 

Vl  ye  fail,  G  ye  the  slave  mine  order 

G  me  three  days  to  melt  her  fancy, 

'  I  will  flee  hence  and  g  myself  to  God ' — 

G's  birth  to  a  brawling  brook, 

but  you  know  that  you  must  g  me  back : 

you  shall  g  me  back  when  he  returns.' 

pronounced  That  my  rich  gift  is  wholly  mine  to  g. 

would  venture  to  g  him  the  nay  ? 

he  ped  me  back  wid  the  best  he  could  g 

Yer  Honour  'ill  y  me  a  thrifle  to  dhrink 

Coom  g  hoaver  then,  weant  ye  ? 

G  your  gold  to  the  Hospital, 

'  And  if  you  g  the  ring  to  any  maid, 

and  g  place  to  the  beauty  that  endures, 

'  Beat,  little  heart — I  g  you  this  and  this ' 

For  I  g  you  this,  and  I  g  you  this ! 

a  charm  no  words  could  g  ? 

I  whisper'd  '  y  it  to  me,'  but  he  would  not 

and  g  His  fealty  to  the  halcyon  hour ! 

G  me  a  hand — and  you — and  you — 

Or  mine  to  g  him  meat, 
Given    Achieving  calm,  to  whom  was  g 

difference,  reconcilement,  pledges  g, 

I  found  him  garrulously  g, 

then  before  thine  answer  g  Departest, 

to  me  is  g  Such  hope,  I  know  not  fear ; 

A  man  had  g  all  other  bliss. 

Came,  with  a  month's  leave  g  them, 

but  g  to  starts  and  bursts  Of  revel ; 

the  king,'  he  said,  '  Had  g  us  letters, 

with  mutual  pardon  ask'd  and  g  For  stroke  and  song, 

G  back  to  life,  to  life  indeed. 

Is  9  in  outline  and  no  more. 

the  shock,  so  harshly  g.  Confused  me 

imto  thee  is  ^  A  life  that  bears  immortal  fruit 

His  who  had  g  me  life — 

if  she  Had  g  her  word  to  a  thing  so  low  ? 

And  g  false  death  her  hand. 

For  the  prophecy  g  of  old  And  then  not  understood, 

'  I  have  g  him  the  first  quest : 

thou  hast  g  me  but  a  kitchen-knave.' 

Canst  thou  not  trust  the  limbs  thy  God  hath  g, 

A  creature  wholly  g  to  brawls  and  wine. 

Woke  and  bethought  her  of  her  promise  g 

He  would  not  leave  her,  till  her  promise  g — 

g  her  on  the  night  Before  her  birthday, 

'  And  gladly  g  again  this  happy  morn. 

(No  reason  g  her)  she  could  cast  aside 

Debating  his  command  of  silence  g, 

breaking  his  command  of  silence  g, 


760 

773 

1071 

1163 

Pdleas  and  E.  270 

356 

Last  Tournament  624 

Lover's  Tale  i  526 

„        iv  100 

112 

350 

The  Wreck  17 

Tomorrow  42 

„         98 

Spinster's  S's.  63 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  33 

The  Ring  200 

Happy  36 

Romney's  R.  1 

100 

Far — far — away  16 

Bandit's  Deatii  27 

The  Wanderer  11 

15 

Voice  spake,  etc.  8 

Two  Voices  209 

Gardener's  D.  257 

Talking  Oak  23 

TiUionus  44 

Sir  Galahad  61 

Sir  G.  and  Q.  G.  42 

Sea  Dreams  6 

Princess  i  54 

„        181 

„       V  46 

„  vii  345 

In  Mem.  v  12 

„     xvi  11 

„      xl  17 

Maud  I  iQ 

„    xvi  27 

„  xviii  68 

„  IIv42 

Gareih  and  L.  582 

659 

1388 

Marr.  of  Geraint  441 

602 

605 

„      632 

691 

807 

Geraint  and  E.  366 

390 


Given  {continued)    sunshine  that  hath  g  the  man  A 

growth,  Balin  and  Balan  181 

but  neither  marry,  nor  are  g  In  marriage.  Merlin  and  V.  15 

He  hath  j  us  a  fair  falcon  which  he  train'd  ;  „            96 

no  more  thanks  than  might  a  goat  have  g  „          278 

I  fain  had  g  them  greater  wits :  „          496 

He  promised  more  than  ever  king  has  g,  „          586 

deem  this  prize  of  ours  is  rashly  g :  Lancelot  and  E.  541 

'  Sweet  is  true  love  tho'  g  in  vain,  ,,            1007 

a  space  of  land  is  ^  to  the  plow.  Holy  Grail  907 

have  the  Heavens  but  g  thee  a  fair  face,  Pdleas  and  E.  101 

And  thou  hast  g  thy  promise,  and  I  know  „            245 

And  so,  leave  g,  straight  on  thro'  open  door  „            382 

I  to  your  dead  man  have  g  my  troth,  „            389 

Not  knowing  they  were  lost  as  soon  as  g —  Last  Tournament  42 

And  if  I  do  not  there  is  penance  g —  Guinevere  187 

For  you  have  g  me  life  and  love  again,  Lover's  Tale  iv  110 

I  would  have  g  my  life  To  help  his  own  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  62 

G  thee  the  keys  of  the  great  Ocean-sea  ?  Columbus  149 

one  thing  g  me,  to  love  and  to  live  for.  The  Wreck  35 
Was  to  be  gr  you — such  her  dying  wish — G  on 

the  morning  when  you  came  of  age  The  Ring  76 

Miriam !  have  you  g  your  ring  to  her  ?  „      260 

for  him  who  had  g  her  the  name.  Charity  39 

Giver    Kender  thanks  to  the  G,  (repeat)  Ode  on  Well.  44,  47 

value  of  all  gifts  Must  vary  as  the  g's.  Lancelot  and  E.  1215 

And  were  it  only  for  the  g's  sake.  Lover's  Tale  iv  364 

Giving    g  light  To  read  those  laws ;  Isabd  18 

g  safe  pledge  of  fruits.  Ode  to  Memory  18 

record  of  the  glance  That  graced  the  g —  Gardener's  D.  178 

And  part  it,  g  half  to  him.  In  Mem.  xxv  12 

G  you  power  upon  me  thro'  this  charm.  Merlin  and  V.  514 

In  g  so  much  beauty  to  the  world.  Lover's  Tale  i  212 

And  g  light  to  others.  „          426 

g  him  That  which  of  all  things  is  the  dearest  „      iv  347 

of  a  hand  g  bread  and  wine,  The  Wreck  114 

Glacier     with  tears  By  some  cold  morning  g ;  Princess  vii  116 

And  the  lilies  like  g's  winded  down,  V.  of  Maddune  42 

set  me  climbing  icy  capes  And  g's,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  26 

Glad    {See  also  Maain-Glad)     So  full  of  summer 

warmth,  so  g.  Miller's  D.  14 

when  his  heart  is  ^  Of  the  full  harvest,  JDora  68 

and  we  were  g  at  heart.  Audley  Court  89 

I'm  g  I  walk'd.    How  fresh  the  meadows  look  Walk,  to  the  Mail  1 
I  was  g  at  first  To  think  that  in  our  often- 

ransack'd  world  Sea  Dreams  128 

light  is  large,  and  lambs  are  g  Lucretius  99 

I  am  sad  and  g  To  see  you,  Florian.  Princess  ii  306 

Be  g,  because  his  bones  are  laid  by  thine !  Ode  on  Well.  141 

And  g  to  find  thyself  so  fair.  In  Mem.  vi  27 

And  one  is  g ;  her  note  Ls  gay,  „ .      xxi  25 

And  g  at  heart  from  Maj^  to  May :  „        xxii  8 

I  read  Of  that  g  year  which  once  had  been,  „        xcv  22 
'  Yea,  my  kind  lord,'  said  the  g  youth,  and  went,        Geraint  and  E.  241 

Eat  and  be  g,  for  I  account  you  mine.'  „            647 

'  How  should  I  be  gr  Henceforth  in  all  the  world  „            648 

Kiss'd  the  white  star  upon  his  noble  front,  G  also ;  „            758 

Then  were  I  ^  of  you  as  guide  and  friend  :  Lancelot  and  E.  226 

And  g  was  I  and  clomb,  but  foimd  at  top  Holy  Grail  427 

G  that  no  phantom  vext  me  more,  „          538 

so  g  were  spirits  and  men  Before  the  coming  Guinevere  269 

'  Were  they  so  gr  ?  ill  prophets  were  they  all,  „        272 

Sometimes  a  troop  of  damsels  g,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  19 
To-morrow  'ill  be  the  happiest  time  of  all  the 

g  New-year ;  (repeat)  May  Queen  2,  42 

Of  all  the  g  New-year,  mother,  „                  3 

For  I  would  see  the  sun  rise  upon  the  g  New-year.  „  N.  Y's.  E.  2 
Gareth  was  g.  (repeat)                                            Gareth  and  L.  497,  504 

Lancelot,  and  all  as  ?  to  find  thee  whole,  „                 1239 
all  g.  Knightlike,  to  find  his  charger  yet  vmlamed,    Balin  and  Balan  427 

so  g  was  he.  Pdleas  and  E.  146 

April  promise,  g  new-year  Of  Being,  Lover's  Tale  i  281 

We  gazed  on  it  together  In  mute  and  g  remembrance,  „        ii  186 
Let  the  maim'd  in  his  heart  rejoice  At  this  g 

Ceremonial,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  37 


Glad 


260 


Glare 


Glad  {continued)    pierce  the  g  and  songful  air, 

g  to  seea  tha  sa  'arty  an'  well. 

So  g?  no  tear  for  hini,  who  left  you  wealth, 

She  comes,  and  Earth  is  9  To  roll  her  North 
Gladden    the  Shepherd  g's  in  his  heart : 

Come — let  us  g  their  sad  eyes, 
Gladden'd    a  rose  that  g  earth  and  sky. 
Gladder    Put  forth  and  feel  a  g  clime.' 


Demeter  and  P.  45 

North.  Cobbler  2 

The  Ring  188 

Prog,  of  Spring  48 

Spec,  of  Iliad  16 

Last  Tournament  222 

Pelleas  and  E.  402 

On  a  Mourner  15 


Glade    (See  also  Olive-glade)     With  breezes  from  our 

oaken  g's,  Eleanore  10 

winding  g's  high  up  like  ways  to  Heaven,  Enoch  Arden  573 

His  wonted  glebe,  or  lops  the  g's  ;  In  Mem.  ci  22 

thro'  many  a  grassy  g  And  valley,  Marr.  of  Geraint  236 

with  droopt  brow  down  the  long  g's  he  rode;  Balin  and  Balan  311 

Then  they  reach'd  a  g,  „              460 
drew  me  thro'  the  glimmering  g's                           Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  116 
Gladed    See  Gloomy-gladed 

Gladiator    g's  moving  toward  their  fight,  St.  Telemachv^  54 

Gladiatorial    and  flung  himself  between  The  g  swords,  „              62 

Gladlier    For  sure  no  g  does  the  stranded  wreck  Enoch  Arden  828 

Gladly    How  g,  were  I  one  of  those,  The  Flight  63 

Gladness     a  cloudy  g  lighten'd  In  the  eyes  of  each.  The  Captain  31 

I  grew  in  g  till  I  foimd  My  spirits  in  the  golden  age.  To  E.  L.  11 

Makes  former  g  loom  so  great  ?  In  Mem.  xxiv  10 

making  vain  pretence  Of  g,  „           xxx  7 

solemn  g  even  crown'd  The  purple  brows  of  Olivet.  „        xxxi  11 

Borne  down  by  g  so  complete,  „       xxxii  10 

Neigh'd  with  all  g  as  they  came,  Geraint  and  E.  755 

Glaive    See  War-glaive 

GlamOTlt    he  had  g  enow  In  his  own  blood,  Gareth  and  L.  209 

Gwydion  made  by  g  out  of  flowers,  Marr.  of  Geraint  743 

and  the  harmless  g  of  the  field ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  52 
Glance  (s)    (See  also  Half-glance)    women  smile  with 

saint-like  g's  Supp.  Confessions  22 

Roof  not  a,  g  so  keen  as  thine :  Clear-headed  friend  7 

Sudden  g^s,  sweet  and  strange,  Madeline  5 

O'erflows  thy  calmer  g's,  „      33 

Every  turn  and  g  of  thine,  Eleanore  52 

shaping  faitliful  record  of  the  g  That  graced  Gardener's  D.  177 

cast  back  upon  him  A  piteous  g,  and  vanish'd.  Aylmer's  Field  284 

a  9  I  gave,  No  more ;  Princess  iv  180 

one  g  he  caught  Thro'  open  doors  of  Ida  „         v  342 

striking  with  her  g  The  mother,  me,  the  child  ;  „        vi  152 

And  sidelong  g's  at  my  father's  grief,  „       vii  107 

she  fixt  A  showery  g  upon  her  aunt,  ,,     Con.  33 

and  rolling  g's  lioness-like,  Boddicea  71 

In  g  and  smile,  and  clasp  and  kiss,  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  7 

allured  The  g  of  Gareth  dreaming  on  his  liege.  Gareth  and  L.  1316 

Drew  the  vague  g  of  Vivien,  and  her  Squire ;  Balin  and  Balan  464 

That  g  of  theirs,  but  for  the  street,  Merlin  and  V.  105 

a  g  will  serve — the  liars !  ,,            111 

made  him  at  one  g  More  bondsman  in  his  heart  Pelleas  and  E.  238 

the  g  That  only  seems  half-loyal  to  command, —  Last  Tournament  117 

a  single  g  of  them  Will  govern  a  whole  life  Lover's  Tale  i  75 

But  cast  a  parting  g  at  me,  you  saw,  „            iv  4 

at  a  9  And  as  it  were,  perforce,  Tiresias  55 

when  he  cast  a  contemptuous  g  The  Wreck  25 

aft€r  one  quick  g  upon  the  stars,  Akbar's  Dream  3 

Glance  (verb)     Life  shoots  and  g's  thro'  your  veins,  Rosalind  22 

In  crystal  eddies  g  and  poise.  Miller's  D.  52 

rivulet  in  the  flowery  dale  'ill  merrily  g  and  play.  May  Queen  39 

fall  down  and  g  From  tone  to  tone,  D.  of  F.  Women  166 

I  slip,  I  slide,  I  gloom,  I  g.  The  Brook  174 

And  here  he  g's  on  an  eye  new-born,  Lucretius  137 

how  the  sun  delights  To  g  and  shift  about  „        189 

made  them  g  Like  those  three  stars  Princess  v  259 

And  g  about  the  approaching  sails.  In  Mem.  xiii  18 

Let  random  influences  g,  „         xlix  2 

And  every  eye  but  mine  will  g  At  Maud  Maud  I  xx  36 

Dared  not  to  9  at  her  good  mother's  face,  Marr.  of  Geraint  766 

sideways  he  let  them  g  At  Enid,  Oeraint  and  E.  246 

stare  at  open  space,  nor  g  The  one  at  other,  „            268 

wont  to  g  and  sparkle  like  a  gem  Of  fifty  facets ;  „            294 

To  g  behind  me  at  my  former  life,  „             863 

speak  Of  the  pure  heart,  nor  seem  to  g  at  thee  ?  Guinevere  502 


Glance  (verb)  (continued)     Not  daring  yet  to  g'  at  Lionel.     Lover's  Tale  iv  309 

G  at  the  wheeling  Orb  of  change,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  3 

That  g's  from  the  bottom  of  the  pool.  The  Ring  371 

g  the  tits,  and  shriek  the  jays,  Prog,  of  Spring  15 

g's  from  the  sun  of  our  Islam.  Akbar's  Dream  79 

Glanced    And  g  athwart  the  glooming  flats.  Mariana  20 

The  damned  arrow  g  aside,  Oriana  41 
garden-glasses  g,  and  momently  The  twinkling  laurel  Gardener's  D.  117 

She  g  across  the  plain ;  Talking  Oak  166 

We  sat :  the  Lady  g :  Princess  ii  111 

G  at  the  legendary  Amazon  As  emblematic  „          126 

G  like  a  touch  of  sunshine  on  the  rocks,  „     Hi  357 

I  g  aside,  and  saw  the  palace-front  „       v  508 

I  struck  out  and  shouted ;  the  blade  g,  „          540 

A  light  of  healing,  g  about  the  couch,  „      vii  59 

mute  she  glided  forth.  Nor  g  behind  her,  „          171 

Whereat  we  g  from  theme  to  theme.  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  33 

shyly  g  Eyes  of  pure  women,  Gareth  and  i.  313 

the  hair  All  over  g  with  dewdrop  or  with  gem  „            929 

G  at  the  doors  or  gambol'd  down  the  walks ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  665 
had  g  away  From  being  knighted  till  he  smote  the 

thrall,  Balin  and  Balan  154 

g  aside,  and  paced  The  long  white  walk  of  lilies  ,,              248 

the  King  G  first  at  him,  then  her,  Lancelot  and  E.  95 

But  Lancelot,  when  they  g  at  Guinevere,  „            270 

maid  G  at,  and  cried,  '  What  news  from  Camelot,  „            620 

yet  he  g  not  up,  nor  waved  his  hand,  „            986 

g.  and  shot  Only  to  holy  things  ;  Holy  Grail  75 

And  in  he  rode,  and  up  I  g,  and  saw  „        262 

every  moment  g  His  sUver  arms  and  gloom'd :  „        492 

Then  g  askew  at  those  three  knights  of  hers,  Pelleas  and  E.  134 

G  down  upon  her,  tum'd  and  went  her  way.  „            185 

G  from  the  rosy  forehead  of  the  dawn.  ,,            502 

He  g  and  saw  the  stately  galleries.  Last  Tournament  145 

bluebell,  kingcup,  poppy  g  About  the  revels,  „              234 

g  at  him,  thought  him  cold,  High,  Guinevere  405 

pale  King  g  across  the  field  Of  battle :  Pass,  of  Arthur  126 

the  event  G  back  upon  them  in  his  after  life.  Lover's  Tale  iv  24 

G  at  the  point  of  law,  to  pass  it  by,  „            276 

to  love  and  to  live  for,  g  at  in  scorn !  The  Wreck  35 

She  g  at  me,  at  Muriel,  and  was  mute.  The  Ring  264 

In  passing  it  g  upon  Hamlet  or  city,  Merlin  and  the  G.  103 

no  such  light  G  from  our  Presence  Akbar's  Dream  113 

a  ray  red  as  blood  G  on  the  strangled  face —  Bandit's  Death  32 

Glancing    (See  also  Dawn-glancing)    G  with  black-beaded  eyes,     Lilian  15 

a  thence,  discuss'd  the  farm,  AvMey  Court  33 

Philip  g  up  Beheld  the  dead  flame  Enoch  Arden  440 

he  saw  The  mother  g  often  toward  her  babe,  „          754 

The  white-faced  halls,  the  g  rills.  In  Mem.,  Con.  113 
Arthur  g  at  him.  Brought  down  a  momentary  brow.   Gareth  and  L.  652 

g  like  a  dragon-fly  In  summer  suit  Marr.  of  Geraint  172 

And  g  all  at  once  as  keenly  at  her  ,,               773 

and  g  round  the  waste  she  fear'd  Geraint  and  E.  50 

g  for  a  minute,  till  he  saw  her  Pass  into  it,  „  886 
And  g  on  the  window,  when  the  gloom  Of  twilight  Balin  and  Balan  232 
stood  with  folded  hands  and  downward  eyes  Of  g 

comer,  Merlin  and  V.  70 

slander,  o  here  and  grazing  there ;  „          173 

g  thro'  the  hoary  boles,  he  saw,  Pelleas  and  E.  50 

And  many  a  g  plash  and  sallowy  isle,  Last  Tournament  422 

g  up  beheld  the  holy  nuns  All  round  her,  Guinevere  666 

I  from  the  altar  g  back  upon  her,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  210 

The  days  and  hours  are  ever  g  by.  Ancient  Sage  99 

g  heavenward  on  a  star  so  silver-fair,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  191 

g  downward  on  the  kindly  sphere  Poets  and  their  B.  9 

g  from  his  height  On  earth  a  fruitless  fallow,  Demeter  and  P.  117 

g  from  the  one  To  the  other.  The  Ring  164 

Whose  mantle,  every  shade  of  g  green.  Prog,  of  Spring  63 

and  g  at  Elf  of  the  woodland,  Merlin  and  the  G.  37 

Glare  (s)     steady  g  Shrank  one  sick  willow  Mariana  in  the  S.  52 

No  sun,  but  a  wannish  g  In  fold  upon  fold  Maud  I  vi2 

in  change  of  g  and  gloom  Her  eyes  and  neck  Merlin  and  V.  959 

and  thro'  a  stormy  g,  a  heat  Holy  Grail  842 

Thro'  the  heat,  the  drowth,  the  dust,  the  g,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  6 

Lured  by  the  g  and  the  blare,  V.  of  Maeldune  73 


Glare 


261 


Gleaned 


I" 


Glare  (s)  (continued)    and  aloft  the  g  Ffies  streaming,   Achilles  over  the  T.  11 

to  the  y  of  a  drearier  day;  Despair  28 

in  the  g  of  deathless  fire  !  Faith  8 

Glare  (verb)     G's  at  one  that  nods  and  winks  Locksley  Hall  136 

when  the  crimson-roUing  eye  G's  ruin,  Princess  iv  495 

But  the  broad  light  g's  and  beats,  Maud  II  iv  89 

Would  turn,  and  g  at  me,  and  point  and  jeer,  Romney's  R.  136 
He  g's  askance  at  thee  as  one  of  those  Who  mix        Akbar's  Bream  173 

lava-light  G's  from  the  lava-lake  Kapiolani  14 

Glared    amazed  They  g  upon  the  women,  Princess  vi  361 

Under  the  half -dead  sunset  g ;  Gareth  and  L.  800 

G  on  a  huge  machicolated  tower  Last  Tournament  424 

That  was  their  main  test-question — g  at  me !  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  155 

G  on  our  way  toward  death,  Despair  11 

And  gata.  coming  storm.  Dead  Prophet  24 

the  glazed  eye  G  at  me  as  in  horror.  The  Ring  451 

wrathful  sunset  g  against  a  cross  St.  Telemachus  5 

G  on  at  the  murder'd  son,  Bandit's  Death  33 

Glaring     In  g  sand  and  inlets  bright.  Mariana  in  the  S.  8 

old  lion,  g  with  his  whelpless  eye.  Princess  vi  99 

g,  by  his  own  stale  devil  spurr'd,  Aylmer's  Field  290 

tlieir  eyes  G,  and  passionate  looks.  Sea  Dreams  236 

Glass  (substEuice)    (See  also  Garden-glass)    fires  your 

narrow  casement  g,  Miller's  D.  243 

The  g  blew  in,  the  fire  blew  out.  The  Goose  49 

echoing  falk  Of  water,  sheets  of  summer  g.  To  E.  L.  2 

a  fleet  of  g,  That  seem'd  a  fleet  of  jewels  Sea  Dreams  122 

my  poor  venture  but  a  fleet  of  g  „            138 

Athwart  a  plane  of  molten  g,  In  Mem.  xv  11 

— Others  of  jr  as  costly —  Lover's  Tale  iv  198 
and  a  clatter  of  hail  on  the  g,                                  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  62 

From  skies  of  ^  A  Jacob's  ladder  falls  Early  Spring  8 

Glass  (looking)     looking  as  'twere  in  a  g,  A  Character  10 

Gro,  look  in  any  g  and  say,  Day-Dm.,  Moral  3 

0  whisper  to  your  g,  and  say,  „  Ep.  3 
having  left  the  g,  she  turns  Once  more  In  Mem.  vi  35 
Dark  in  the  ^  of  some  presageful  mood,  Merlin  and  V.  295 
As  from  a  ^  m  the  sun.  Lover's  Tale  i  371 
But  whiniver  I  looked  i'  the  g  Spinster's  S's.  20 

Glass  (drinking)    fill  my  g  :  give  me  one  kiss :  Miller's  D.  17 
Make  prisms  in  every  carven  g,                              Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  35 

1  sit,  my  empty  g  reversed.  Will  Water.  159 
It  is  but  yonder  empty  g  That  makes  me  maudlin-moral.  „  207 
g  with  little  Mai^aret's  medicine  in  it ;  Sea  Dreams  142 
Yours  came  but  from  the  breaking  of  a  g,  „  248 
Cyril,  with  whom  the  bell-mouth'd  g  had  wrought.  Princess  iv  155 
crash'd  the  g  and  beat  the  floor ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  20 
Arrange  the  board  and  brim  the  g ;  „  cvii  16 
hev  ago'  cowslip  wine !  Village  Wife  5 
sa  cowd ! — hev  another  gl  „  20 
tha  mun  nobbut  hev'  one  g  of  aale.  Owd  Rod  20 

flass  (spy)    get  you  a  seaman's  g,  Spy  out  Enoch  Arden  215 

Borrow'd  a  g,  but  all  in  vain :  perhaps  She  could 

not  fix  the  g  to  suit  her  eye ;  „            240 

Glass  (verb)     To  g  herself  in  dewy  eyes  Move  eastward  7 

Glass'd    coming  wave  G  in  the  sUppery  sand  Merlin  and  V.  293 

Glasses  (spectacles)     Get  me  my  g,  Annie :  Grandmother  106 

wi'  'is  g  athurt  'is  noase.  Village  Wife  38 

Glassy    With  a  g  coimtenance  Did  she  look  to  Camelot.    L.  of  Shalott  iv  13 

In  g  bays  among  her  tallest  towers.'  (Enone  119 

On  g  water  drove  his  cheek  in  lines ;  Princess  i  116 

With  a  g  smile  his  brutal  scorn —  Maud  I  vi  49 

GIassy-head©a    A  little  g-h  hairless  man.  Merlin  and  V.  620 

Glastonbury    that  low  church  he  built  at  G.  Balin  and  Balan  367 

Joseph,  journeying  brought  To  G,  Holy  Grail  52 

1  know  That  Joseph  came  of  old  to  G,  „          60 

Holy  Cup,  That  Joseph  brought  of  old  to  <?  ?  '  „        735 

Glazed    the  g  eye  Glared  at  me  as  in  horror.  The  Ring  450 

staring  eye  g  o'er  with  sapless  days,  Love  and  Duty  16 

think  not  they  are  g  with  wine.  Locksley  Hall  51 

Neither  modell'd,  g,  nor  framed :  Vision  of  Sin  188 

A  full  sea  g  with  muffled  moonlight.  Princess  i  248 

Gleam  (s)     g's  of  mellow  light  Float  by  you  Margaret  30 

Beyond  the  polar  g  forlorn.  Two  Voices  182 

That  touches  me  with  mystic  g's,  „          380 


Gleam  (s)  (continued)    Would  love  the  g's  of  good 

that  broke 
Dreary  g's  about  the  moorland  flying  over 
Thou  battenest  by  the  greasy  g 
makes  a  hoary  eyebrow  for  the  g  Beyond  it, 
In  the  green  g  of  the  dewy-tassell'd  trees : 
Making  Him  broken  g's, 
A  doubtful  g  of  solace  lives, 
or  dives  In  yonder  greening  g, 
nature  gilded  by  the  gracious  g  Of  letters. 
Or  sallows  in  the  windy  g's  of  March: 
strike  it,  and  awake  her  with  the  g ; 
Then  flash'd  a  yellow  g  across  the  world, 
and  yellowing  leaf  And  gloom  and  g, 
G's  of  the  water-circles  as  they  broke. 


Love  thou  thy  land  89 

Locksley  Hall  4 

Will  Water.  221 

The  Brook  80 

Princess  i  94 

High.  Pantheism  10 

In  Mem.  xxxviii  8 

cxv  14 

Ded.  of  Idylls  ^Q 

Merlin  and  V.  225 

Lancelot  and  E.  6 

Holy  Grail  402 

Last  Tournament  155 

Lover's  Tale  i  67 


what  g  on  those  black  ways  Where  Love  could  walk  „  812 
that  some  broken  g  from  our  poor  earth           Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  18 

The  placid  g  of  sunset  after  storm !  Ancient  Sage  133 

'Tho'  some  have  g's  or  so  they  say  „          214 

'  And  idle  g's  will  come  and  go,  „          240 

And  idle  g's  to  thee  are  light  to  me.  „          246 

in  the  sidelong  eyes  a  g  ot  all  things  ill —  The  Flight  31 

sleeps  the  g  of  dying  day.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  42 

Light  the  fading  g  of  Even  ?  „              229 

the  growing  glimmer  for  the  g  withdrawn.  „              230 

A  g  from  yonder  vale,  Early  Spring  33 

still  In  motion  to  the  distant  g,  Freedom  14 

and  a  jr  as  of  the  moon.  When  first  she  peers  Demeter  and  P.  13 

in  the  ^  of  a  million  of  suns  ?  Vastness  4 

in  the  g  of  those  mid-summer  dawns.  The  Ring  183 

Look'd  in  upon  me  like  a  g  and  pass'd,  „        420 

never  caught  one  g  of  the  beauty  which  endures —  Happy  60 

/  am  Merlin  Who  follow  The  G.  Merlin  and  the  G.  10 

The  Master  whisper'd '  Follow  the  G.'  „               34 

music  Of  falling  torrents,  Flitted  the  G.  „               48 

Of  lowly  labour,  Slided  The  G—  „                61 

Arthur  the  blameless  Rested  The  G.  „                74 

The  G,  that  had  waned  to  a  wintry  glimmer  „               83 

But  clothed  with  The  G.  „                94 

The  G  flying  onward.  Wed  to  the  melody,  „               96 

After  it,  follow  it,  Follow  The  G.  „              131 

The  cloud  was  rifted  by  a  purer  g  Akbar's  Dream  78 

The  g  of  household  sunshine  ends,  The  Wanderer  1 

comes  a  gr  of  what  is  higher.  Faith  6 

Gleam  (verb)    Saw  distant  gates  of  Eden  g,  Two  Voices  212 

wherethro'  G's  that  untravell'd  world,  Ulysses  20 

G  thro'  the  Gothic  archway  in  the  wall.  Godiva  64 

Fair  g's  the  snowy  altar-cloth.  Sir  Galahad  33 

wisp  that  g's  On  Lethe  in  the  eyes  of  Death.  In  Mem.  xcviii  7 

and  when  he  saw  the  star  G,  on  Sir  Gareth's  Gareth  and  L.  1219 

this  bare  dome  had  not  begun  to  g  To  Mary  Boyle  41 

Gleam'd    G  to  the  flying  moon  by  fits.  Miller's  D.  116 

now  she  g  Like  Fancy  made  of  golden  air,  The  Voyage  65 

We  parted :  sweetly  g  the  stars.  The  Letters  41 

(A  bill  of  sale  g  thro'  the  drizzle)  Enoch  Arden  688 

that  dawning  g  a  kindlier  hope  On  Enoch  „            833 

dying,  g  on  rocks  Roof -pendent,  sharp  ;  Balin  and  Balan  314 

Sweetly  g  her  eyes  behind  her  tears  Merlin  and  V.  402 

There  g  a  vague  suspicion  in  his  eyes :  Lancelot  and  E.  127 

G  for  a  moment  in  her  own  on  earth.  The  Ring  297 

Gleaming    A  g  shape  she  floated  by,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  39 

A  g  crag  with  belts  of  pines.  Two  Voices  189 

A  glowing  arm,  a  g  neck,                                    _  Miller's  D.  78 

fruit,  whose  g  rind  ingrav'n  '  For  the  most  fair,'  (Enone  72 

They  saw  the  g  river  seaward  flow  Lotos-Eaters  14 

walls  Of  shadowy  granite,  in  a  g-  pass  ;  „   C.  S.  4 

girdled  with  the  g  world :  „         113 

Far-folded  mists,  and  g  halls  of  morn.  Tithonus  10 

Set  in  a  g'  river's  crescent-curve.  Princess  i  171 

Here  half -hid  in  the  g  wood,  Maud  I  vi  69 

the  stars  went  down  across  the  g  pane.  The  Flight  13 

came  On  three  gray  heads  beneath  a  g  rift.  Demeter  and  P.  83 

Glean    And  g  your  scatter'd  sapience.'  Princess  ii  259 

not  now  to  g,  Not  now — I  hope  to  do  it —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  11 

Gleaned  (adj.)  Showering  thy  jr  wealth  into  my  open  breast  Ode  to  Memory  23 


Gleaned 

Glean'd  (verb)    long  ago  they  had  g  and  gamer'd 
Gleaner    Homestead  and  harvest,  Reaper  and  g 
Glebe    Flood  with  full  daylight  g  and  towTi  ?      ' 
Sons  of  the  g,  with  other  frowns 
those  horn-handed  breakers  of  the  g, 
the  labourer  tills  His  wonted  g, 
That  grind  the  g  to  powder ! 
sweet  As  that  which  gilds  the  g  of  England 
l^t  the  naked  g  Should  yawn  once  more 


262 


Lover's  Tale  i  128 

Merlin  and  the  G.  58 

Two  Voices  87 

Aylmer's  Field  723 

Princess  it  159 

In  Mem.  ci  22 

Tiresias  95 

To  Prof.  Jebb.  7 

Bemeter  and  P.  42 


Glee  (joy)     Love  lighted  down  between  them  full  of  g,  Bridesmaid  6 

tyrant's  cruel  g  Forces  on  the  freer  hour.  Vision  of  Sin  129 

Glee  (part-music)     The  merry  g's  are  still ;  All  Things  will  Die  23 

Again  the  feast,  the  speech,  the  g,  in  Mem.,  Con.  101 

Glem    Rang  by  the  white  mouth  of  the  violent  G ;  Lancelot  and  E.  288 

Glen    (/Seeo/soGlin)    And  runlets  babbling  down  the  gt.    Mariana  in  the  S.U 

The  swimming  vapom  slopes  athwart  the  g,  (Enone  3 

between  the  piney  sides  Of  this  long  g.  94 

Among  the  fragments  tumbled  from  the  g's,  ''  222 

from  the  darken  g,  '  Saw  God  divide  the  night  D.  ofF.  Women  224 

That  watch  me  from  the  g  below.  Move  eastward  8 

And  snared  the  squirrel  of  the  g  ?  Princess  ii  249 

let  us  hear  the  purple  gr's  replying :  „         {.^  n 

all  the  g's  are  diown'd  in  azure  gloom  ,"           525 

FoUow'd  up  in  valley  and  g  Ode  on  Well.  114 

Had  found  a  g,  gray  boulder  and  black  tarn.  Lancelot  and  E.  36 

they  fell  and  made  the  g  abhorr'd :  „              42 

Downward  thunder  in  hollow  and  g,  To  Master  of  B.  16 

Glide    would  she  g  between  your  wraths,  Aylmer's  Field  706 

g  a  sunbeam  by  the  blasted  Pine,  Princess  vii  196 

broad  water  sweetly  slowly  g's.  Eequiescat  2 

g.  Like  a  beam  of  the  seventh  Heaven,  Maud  I  xiv  20 

Thy  shadow  still  would  g  from  room  to  room,  Guinevere  504 
The  sisters  g  about  me  hand  in  hand,                     Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  275 

and  the  shadowy  warrior  g  Along  Bemeter  atid  P.  152 

Glided    g  thro'  all  change  Of  liveliest  utterance.  B.  of  F.  Women  167 

but  mute  she  g  forth.  Nor  glanced  behind  Princess  vii  170 

Above  thee  g  the  star.  Voice  and  the  P.  8 

We  g  winding  under  ranks  Of  iris.  In  Mem.  ciii  23 

Then  g  out  of  the  joyous  wood  Maud  II  i  31 

she  g  out  Among  the  heavy  breathings  Geraint  and  E.  401 

Then  rose  Elaine  and  g  thro'  the  fields,  Lancelot  and  E.  843 

the  Sweet  Grail  G  and  past,  and  close  upon  it  Holy  Grail  695 

sad  eyes  fixt  on  the  lost  sea-home,  as  we  jr  away,  The  Wreck  126 

Then  g  a  vulturous  Beldam  forth.  Bead  Prophet  25 

he  sprang.  And  g  lightly  down  the  stairs,  St.  Telem^chus  59 

Glidest    How  siu-ely  g  thou  from  March  to  May,  Prog,  of  Spring  109 

Gliding    G  with  equal  crowns  two  serpents  led  Alexander  6 

past  In  either  twilight  ghost-like  to  and  fro  G,  Lancelot  and  E.  850 

Over  a  wilderness  G,  Merlin  and  the  G.  37 

g  thro  the  branches  over-bower'd  Beath  of  (Enone  6 

The  woman,  g  toward  the  pyre,  To  Master  of  B.  18 

Glinimer  (s)     I  knew  The  tearful  g  of  the  languid  dawn  B.  of  F.  Women  74 

Across  a  hazy  g  of  the  west.  Gardener's  B.  219 

the  old  mysterious  g  steals  From  thy  pure  brows,  Tithonus  34 

Walk'd  in  a  wintry  wind  by  a  ghastly  g,  Maud  I  Hi  13 

In  gloss  of  satm  and  g  of  pearls,  „  xxH  55 
in  the  light's  last  g  Tristram  show'd  And  swung     Last  Tournament  739 

I  have  had  some  g,  at  times,  Bespair  103 

Awake !  the  creeping  g  steals,  The  Flight  4 
light  the  g  of  the  dawn  ?                                         Locksley  H.,  Sixty  229 

eyes  may  take  the  growing  g  „               230 

Might  find  a  flickering  g  of  relief  To  Mary  Boyle  47 
Gleam,  that  had  waned  to  a  wintry  g  On  icy  fallow  Merlin  and  the  G.  83 

_    And  slowly  brightening  Out  of  the  g,  „              89 

Glimmer  (verb)     '  A  third  would  g  on  her  neck  Talking  Oak  221 

My  college  friendships  g.  will  Water.  40 

G  in  thy  rheumy  eyes.  Vision  of  Sin  154 

And  Uke  a  ghost  she  g's  on  to  me.  Princess  vii  181 

G  away  to  the  lonely  deep.  To  F.  B.  Maurice  28 

eMly  light  Shall  g  on  the  dewy  decks.  In  Mem.  ix  12 

Thy  tablet  g's  to  the  dawn,  ixvii  16 

on  the  landward  side,  by  a  red  rock,  g's  the  HaU ;  Maud  I  iv  10 

Days  that  will  g,  I  fear.  The  Wreck  79 

She  se^  the  Best  that  g's  thro'  the  Worst,  Ancient  Sage  72 

light  That  g's  on  the  marsh  and  on  the  grave.'  The  Bing  341 


Glimmer'd    Old  faces  g  thro'  the  doors. 

And  April's  crescent  g  cold. 

Her  taper  g  in  the  lake  below : 

white  kine  g,  and  the  trees  Laid  their  dark 
arms  (repeat) 

And  g  on  his  armour  in  the  room. 

In  Arthur's  casement  g  chastely  down, 

and  thro'  the  gap  O  the  streaming  scud: 

And  God  Hath  more  than  g  on  me. 
Glimmer-gowk  (owl)    sit  hke  a  great  g-g 


Glitter'd 

Mariana  66 

Miller's  D.  107 

Edwin  Morris  135 

In  Mem.  xcv  15,  51 

Geraint  and  E.  386 

Merlin  and  V.  740 

Holy  Grail  682 

Columbus  144 

Village  Wife  38 


Glimmering  (adj.  and  part.)    (See  also  Green^limmering) 

the  g  water  outfloweth :  Leonine  Eleg.  9 

Vast  images  in  ^  dawn.  Two  Voices  305 

Who  paced  for  ever  in  a  ^  land,  Palace  of  Art  67 

Ranges  of  g  vaults  with  iron  grates,  B.  of  F.  Women  35 

cold  my  wrinkled  feet  Upon  thy  g  thresholds,  Tithonus  68 

When  all  the  g  moorland  rings  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  35 

And  on  the  g  limit  far  withdrawn  Vision  of  Sin  223 

Naiads  oar'd  A  g  shoulder  imder  gloom  To  E.  L.  17 

Who  feels  a  g  strangeness  in  his  dream.  The  Brook  216 

half  in  doze  I  seem'd  To  float  about  a  g  night.  Princess  i  247 

The  casement  slowly  grows  a  g  square  „        iv  52 

By  g  lanes  and  walls  of  canvas  led  „           ■«  6 
Disrobed  the  g  statue  of  Sir  Ralph  From  those  rich  silks,         "„  Con.  117 

Came  g  thro'  the  laurels  At  the  quiet  evenfall,  Maud  II  iv  77 

and  made  his  feet  Wings  thro'  a  g  gallery,  Balin  and  Balan  404 
to  Almesbury  Fled  all  night  long  by  g  waste  and  weald,     Guinevere  128 

peal  Of  laughter  drew  me  thro'  the  g  glades  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  116 

G  up  the  heights  beyond  me,  Silent  Voices  9 

Glimmering  (s)    greenish  g's  thro'  the  lancets,—  Aylmer's  Field  622 

There  was  a  ^  of  God's  hand.  Columbus  142 

Glimpse  (s)    Like  g's  of  forgotten  dreams —  Two  Voices  381 

shout  For  some  blind  g  of  freedom  I^ve  and  Buty  6 

A  c?  of  that  dark  world  where  I  was  bom.  Tithonus  33 

Yet  g's  of  the  true.  Will  Water.  60 

The  shimmering  g's  of  a  stream ;  Princess  Con.  46 

And  never  a  gr  of  her  window  pane !  Window,  No  Answer  3 

Last  year,  I  caught  a  5;  of  his  face,  Maud  I  xHi  27 

He  never  had  a  9  of  mine  untruth,  Lancelot  and  E.  125 
Possible — at  first  g,  and  for  a  face  Gone  in  a 

moment—  Sisters  [E.  and  E.)  93 

Death  at  the  g  oi  a,  finger  Bef.  of  Lucknow  23 

For  larger  g's  of  that  more  than  man  Tiresias  21 
Green  Sussex  fading  into  blue  With  one  gray  g 

of  sea ;  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  8 

agolB.  height  that  is  higher.  By  an  Evolution.  20 

Glimpse  (verb)    lift  the  hidden  ore  That  g's,  B.  of  F.  Women  275 

Past,  Future  g  and  fade  Thro'  some  slight  spell,  Early  Spring  31 

Glimpsed     the  herd  was  driven.  Fire  g ;  Com.  of  Arthur  433 

Glimpsing    And  g  over  these,  just  seen,  Bay-Bm.,  Sleep.  P.  47 

Glin  (glen)    sthrames  runnin'  down  at  the  back  0'  the  g  Tomorrow  24 

Glisten  (s)     oft  we  saw  the  g  Of  ice.  The  Daisy  35 

Glisten  (verb)     0  listen,  listen,  your  eyes  shall  g  (repeat)  Sea- Fairies  35,  37 

gracious  dews  Began  to  g  and  to  fall :  Princess  ii  317 

Glisten'd    the  torrent  ever  pour'd  And  g —  To  E.  L.  14 

their  feet  In  dewy  grasses  g ;  Gareth  and  L.  928 

His  eyes  g :  she  fancied  '  Is  it  for  me  ? '  Lancelot  and  E.  822 

Glistenmg    drove  The  fragrant,  g  deeps,  Arabian  Nights  14 

fall  d  With  the  blue  valley  and  the  g  brooks,  Lover's  Tale  i  331 

buds  Were  g  to  the  breezy  blue ;  Miller's  B.  61 

Glitter    flash  and  g  Like  sunshine  on  a  dancing  rill,  Rosalind  28 

G  like  a  swarm  of  fire-flies  Locksley  Hall  10 

His  mantle  g's  on  the  rocks—  Bay-Bm.,  Arrival  6 

Began  to  g  firefly-like  in  copse  Princess  i  208 

That  g  burnish'd  by  the  frosty  dark ;  „        ^  261 

on  such  a pahn  As  g's  gilded  in  thy  Book  of  Hours.       Gareth' and  L.  46 

I  saw  the  moonUght  g  on  their  tears —  Lover's  Tale  i  697 

Glittw'd    The  genimy  bridle  9  free,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  10 

Large  Hesper  g  on  her  tears,  Mariana  in  the  S.  90 

The  long  hall  g  like  a  bed  of  flowers.  Princess  ii  439 

the  citv  g,  Thro'  cypress  avenues.  The  Baisy  47 

But  when  it  g  o'er  the  saddle-bow,  Gareth  and  L.  1119 

where  it  g  on  her  pail.  The  milkmaid  left  Holy  Grail  405 

So  dame  and  damsel  a  at  the  feast  Last  Tournament  225 

brooks  g  on  m  the  light  without  sound,  v.  of  Maeldune  13 


Glitter'd 


263 


Glorious 


Glitter'd  (continued)     g  o'er  us  a  sunbright  hand, 
Glittering  (adj.  and  part.)     Gold  g  thro'  lamplight 
dini, 


V.  of  Maldune  84 


Arabian  Nights  18 
Come,  blessed  brother,  come.     I  know  thy  g  face.        St.  S.  Stylites  205 

Draw  me,  thy  bride,  a  g  star,  St.  Agnes''  Eve  23 

'  Fresh  as  the  first  beam  g  on  a.  sail,  Princess  iv  44 

goes,  like  g  bergs  of  ice,  „             71 

fresh  young  captains  flash'd  their  g  teeth,  „         v  20 

The  g  axe  was  broken  in  their  arms,  „        vi  51 

shone  Thro'  g  drops  on  her  sad  friend.  „          283 
as  the  white  and  g  star  of  mom  Parts  from  a 

bank  of  snow,  Marr.  of  Geraint  734 
Queen  who  stood  All  g  like  May  sunshine  Merlin  and  V.  88 
Her  eyes  and  neck  g  went  and  came ;  „            960 
Fled  like  a  g  rivulet  to  the  tarn :  Lancelot  and  E.  52 
Whom  g  in  enamell'd  arms  the  maid  „            619 
yet  one  g  foot  disturb'd  The  lucid  well ;  Tiresias  41 
The  g  Capitol ;  Freedom  4 
Glittering  (s)     Blown  into  g  by  the  popular  breath,  Romney's  R.  49 
Globe    circles  of  the  g's  Of  her  keen  eyes  The  Poet  43 
Thro'  the  shadow  of  the  g  we  sweep  Locksley  Hall  183 
As  thro'  the  slimiber  of  the  g  The  Voyage  23 
Thy  spirit  should  fail  from  off  the  g ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  36 
flower,  That  blows  a  ^  of  after  arrowlets,  Gareth  and  L.  1029 
We  should  see  the  G  we  groan  in,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  188 
I  would  the  g  from  end  to  end  Epilogue  12 
Since  our  Queen  assimied  the  g,  the  sceptre.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  3 
Many  a  hearth  upon  our  dark  g  Vastness  1 
G  again,  and  make  Honey  Moon.  The  Ring  15 
eyes  have  known  this  g  of  ours.  To  Ulysses  2 
hurl'd  so  high  they  ranged  about  the  g  ?  St.  Telemachus  2 
Globed    stars  that  g  themselves  in  Heaven,  Enoch  Arden  597 
Globing    G  Honey  Moons  Bright  as  this.  The  Ring  7 
Glode    G  over  earth  till  the  glorious  creature             Batt.  of  Brunanburh  29 
Gloom  (s)    {See  also  tSty-gloom,  Thunder-gloom)    Fling- 
ing the  g  of  yesternight  On  the  white  day ;  Ode  to  Memory  9 
That  over-vaulted  grateful  g,  Palace  of  Art  54 
Floods  all  the  deep-blue  g  with  beams  D.  of  F.  Women  186 
A  motion  toiling  in  the  g —  Love  thou  thy  land  54 
Reading  her  perfect  features  in  the  g.  Gardener's  D.  175 
Thy  cheek  begins  to  redden  thro'  the  g,  Tithonus  37 
The  g  of  ten  Decembers.  Will  Water.  104 
glimmering  shoulder  imder  g  Of  cavern  pillars ;  To  E.  L.  17 
lying  thus  inactive,  doubt  and  g.  Enoch  Arden  113 
Thicker  the  drizzle  grew,  deeper  the  g ;  „            679 
find  a  deeper  in  the  narrow  g  By  wife  and  child ;       Aylmer's  Field  840 
from  utter  g  stood  out  the  breasts,  Lucretius  60 
Dropt  thro'  the  ambrosial  g  Princess  iv  24 
Out  I  sprang  from  glow  to  g' :  „        178 
moving  thro'  the  imcertain  g,  „        216 
all  the  glens  are  drown'd  in  azure  g  „        525 
The  height,  the  space,  the  g,  The  Daisy  59 
The  g  that  saddens  Heaven  and  Earth,  „        102 
and  a  stifled  splendour  and  g.  High.  Pantheism  10 
To  touch  thy  thousand  ^ears  ot  g:  In  Mem.  ii  12 
Thy  g  h  kindled  at  the  tips,  „  xxxix  11 
And  passes  into  g  again.  „             12 
Thro'  all  its  intervital  g  In  some  long  trance  „       xliii  3 
When  on  the  g  I  strive  to  paint  The  face  „        Ixx  2 
Recalls,  in  change  of  light  or  g,  „  Ixxxv  74 
roUest  from  the  gorgeous  g  Of  evening  „   Ixxxvi  2 
And  suck'd  from  out  the  distant  g  „       xcv  53 
But  touch'd  with  no  ascetic  g  ;  „       cix  10 
But  iron  dug  from  central  g,  „  cxviii  21 
And  yeam'd  to  burst  the  folded  g,  „     cxxii  3 
With  tender  g  the  roof,  the  wall ;  „  Con.  118 
cold  face,  star-sweet  on  a  g  profound ;  Maud  I  Hi  4 
And  laying  his  trams  in  a  poison'd  g  „           x  8 
Set  in  the  heart  of  the  carven  g,  „      xiv  11 
in  the  fragrant  g  Of  foreign  churches —  „      xix  53 
Commingled  with  the  g  of  imminent  war.  Bed.  of  Idylls  13 
Before  a  ^  of  stubborn-shafted  oaks,  Geraint  and  E.  120 
thro'  the  green  g  of  the  wood  they  past,  „            195 
So  bush'd  about  it  is  with  g,  Balin  and  Balan  95 
the  g  Of  twilight  deepens  round  it,  „            232 


Balin  and  Balan  286 

434 

Merlin  and  V.  320 

939 

959 

Lancelot  and  E.  1002 

Holy  Grail  370 

Pelleas  and  E.  104 

548 

Last  Tournam,ent  155 

756 


Lover 


De  Prof 


s  Tale  i  2 
505 

744 
iv  16 


Gloom  (s)  {continued)    and  in  him  g  ong  Deepen'd  : 
there  in  g  cast  himself  all  along.  Moaning 
she  will  call  That  three-days-long  presageful  g 
The  tree  that  shone  white-listed  thro'  the  g. 
in  change  of  glare  and  g  Her  eyes  and  neck 
the  sallow-rifted  g's  Of  evening. 
Came  like  a  driving  g  across  my  mind, 
coming  out  of  g  Was  dazzled  by  the  sudden  light, 
the  g,  That  follows  on  the  turning  of  the  world, 
and  yellowing  leaf  And  g  and  gleam, 
AU  in  a  death-dumb  autumn-dripping  g, 
Filling  with  purple  g  the  vacancies 
that  shock  of  g  had  fall'n  Unfelt, 
In  battle  with  the  g's  of  my  dark  will, 
But  these,  their  g,  the  mountains  and  the  Bay, 
Drown'd  in  the  g  and  horror  of  the  vault, 
kept  it  thro'  a  hundred  years  of  g, 
nine  long  months  of  antenatal  g, 
1  closed  my  heart  to  the  g ; 
the  Godless  g  Of  a  life  without  sun, 
last  long  stripe  of  waning  crimson  g, 
lost  within  a  growing  g ; 
lifts  her  buried  life  from  g  to  bloom, 
g  of  the  evening.  Life  at  a  close ; 
but  a  murmur  of  gnats  in  the  g, 
in  the  night,  While  the  g  is  growing.' 
Or  does  the  g  of  Age  And  suffering 
the  bracken  amid  the  g  of  the  heather, 
front  of  that  ravine  Which  drowsed  in  g, 
the  momentary  g,  Made  by  the  noonday  blaze 
Gloom  (verb)     There  g  the  dark  broad  seas. 
I  slip,  I  slide,  I  g,  I  glance, 
That  g's  his  valley,  sighs  to  see  the  peak 
Gloom'd    Would  that  my  g  fancy  were  As  thine, 
G  the  low  coast  and  quivering  brine 
A  black  yew  g  the  stagnant  air, 
twilight  g ;  and  broader-grown  the  bowers 
mood  as  that,  which  lately  g  Your  fancy 
every  moment  glanced  His  silver  arms  and  g : 
never  g  by  the  curse  Of  a  sin, 
this  Earth,  a  stage  so  g  with  woe 
Gloomier    those  g  which  forego  The  darkness 
Gloomiest     I  have  had  some  glimmer,  at  times,  in  my  g  woe. 
Glooming    {See  also  Dewy-glooming,  Green-glooming,  Light- 
glooming)    And  glanced  athwart  the  g  flats.  Mariana  20 
Or  while  the  balmy  g,  crescent-lit.                                Gardener's  D.  263 
we  sank  From  rock  to  rock  upon  the  g  quay,                  Audley  Court  84 
Or  cool'd  within  the  g  wave ;                                       In  Mem.  Ixxxix  45 
Sunder  the  g  crimson  on  the  maige,                            Gareth  and  L.  1365 
among  the  g  alleys  Progress  halts  on  palsied  feet,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  219 
Gloomy    To  anchor  by  one  g  thought ;                                      Two  Voices  459 
wind  made  work  In  which  the  g  brewer's  soul                  Talking  Oak  55 
Sailing  along  before  a  g  cloud                                           Sea  Dreams  124 
in  and  out  the  g  skirts  Of  Celidon  the  forest ;             Lancelot  and  E.  291 
rolling  far  along  the  g  shores  The  voice  of  days         Pass,  of  Arthur  134 
Gloomy-gladed     tops  of  many  thousand  pines  A  g-g 

hollow  slowly  sink  Gareth  and  L.  797 

Gloried     I  g'  in  my  knave.  Who  being  still  rebuked,  „  1248 

Glorify    fountains  of  the  past.  To  g  the  present ;  Ode  to  Memory  3 

Glori^ring    sparkles  on  a  sty,  G  clown  and  satyr ;  Princess  v  187 

Glorious     But  in  a  city  g —  Deserted  House  19 

A  g  child,  dreaming  alone,  Elednore  27 

'  Whose  eyes  are  dim  with  g  tears,  Two  Voices  151 

A  g  Devil,  large  in  heart  and  brain,  To With  Pal.  of  Art  5 

When  I  am  gather'd  to  the  g  saints.  St.  S.  Styhtes  197 

So  g  in  his  beauty  and  thy  choice,  Tithonus  12 

vacant  of  our  g  gains,  Locksley  Hall  175 

So  sang  the  gallant  g  chronicle ;  Princess,  Pro.  49 

and  albeit  their  g  names  Were  fewer,  „  ii  155 

who  rapt  in  g  dreams,  „  442 

facets  of  the  g  mountain  flash  Above  the  valleys  The  Islet  22 

the  leader  in  these  g  wars  Now  to  g  burial  slowly 

borne,  Ode  on  Well.  192 

who  gaze  with  temperate  eyes  On  g  insufficiences,  In  Mem.  cxii  3 

To  fool  the  crowd  with  g  lies,  „  cxxviii  14 


195 

Two  G.  8 

The  Wreck  38 

Despair  6 

Ancient  Sage  221 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  73 

Demeter  and  P.  98 

Vastness  15 

35 

Forlorn  12 

Romney's  R.  64 

June  Backen,  etc.  9 

Death  of  CEnone  76 

St.  Telemachus  49 

Ulysses  45 

The  Brook  174 

Balin  and  Balan  165 

Supp.  Confessions  68 

The  Voyage  42 

The  Letters  2 

Princess  vii  48 

Merlin  and  V.  325 

Holy  GraU  493 

The  Wreck  139 

The  Play  1 

To  the  Qy4en  ii  64 

Despair  103 


Glorious 


264 


Gloss 


Glorious  (continued)    like  a  g  ghost,  to  glide,  Like  a  beam      Maud  I  xiv  20 

starry  Gemini  hang  like  g  crowns  „      ///  m  7 

That  g  roundel  echoing  in  our  ears,  Merlin  and  V.  426 

— you  know  Of  Arthur's  g  wars.'  Lancelot  and  E.  285 
where  the  g  King  Had  on  his  cuirass  worn  our 

Lady's  Head,  „             293 

that  night  the  bard  Sang  Arthur's  g  wars,  Guinevere  286 

A  g  company,  the  flower  of  men,  „          464 

There  came  a  g  morning,  such  a  one  As  dawns  Lover's  Tale  i  299 

G  poet  who  never  hast  written  a  line.  To  A.  Tennyson  5 
Havelock's  g  Highlanders  answer  with  conquering 

cheers,  I>e/.  o/  Lueknow  99 

till  the  g  creature  Sank  to  his  setting.  Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  29 
around  his  head  The  g  goddess  wreath'd  a  golden 

cloud,  Achilles  over  the  T.  5 

Whose  echo  shall  not  tongue  thy  g  doom,  Tiresias  136 

Thy  g  eyes  were  dimm'd  with  pain       ,  Freedom  10 

And  all  her  g  empire,  round  and  round.  Hands  all  Round  24 
Sharers  of  our  g  past,                                           Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  31 

'  Hail  to  the  g  Golden  year  of  her  Jubilee  ! '  On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  64 

g  annals  of  army  and  fleet,  Vastness  7 

Glory  (s)     In  marvel  whence  that  g  came  Arabian  Nights  94 

God's  g  smote  him  on  the  face.'  Two  Voices  225 

'  G  to  God,'  she  sang,  and  past  afar,  B.  of  F.  Women  242 

And  the  long  glories  of  the  winter  moon.  M.  d' Arthur  192 

As  down  dark  tides  the  g  slides.  Sir  Galahad  47 

But  o'er  the  dark  a  g  spreads,  „          55 

things  as  they  are.  But  thro'  a  kind  of  g.  Will  Water.  72 

Yet  he  hoped  to  purchase  g,  The  Captain  17 

We  lov'd  the  glories  of  the  world.  The  Voyage  83 

And  drops  at  G's  temple-gates.  You  might  have  won  34 

glows  And  glories  of  the  broad  belt  of  the  world,  Enoch  Arden  579 

between  the  less  And  greater  g  varying  Aylmer's  Field  73 

Thy  g  fly  along  the  Italian  field,  Lnwretius  71 

redound  Of  use  and  g  to  yourselves  Princess  ii  43 

And  the  wild  cataract  leaps  in  g.  „         iv  4 

Like  a  Saint's  g  up  in  heaven :  „      v  514 

The  path  of  duty  was  the  way  to  g :  (repeat)  Ode  on  Well.  202,  210 

The  path  of  duty  be  the  way  to  g:  „                   224 

When  can  their  g  fade  ?  Light  Brigade  50 

The  height,  the  space,  the  gloom,  the  g !  The  Daisy  59 

G  of  warrior,  g  of  orator,  g  of  song.  Wages  1 
G  of  virtue,  to  fight,  to  struggle,  to  right  the  wrong — Nay, 

but  she  aim'd  not  at  g,  no  lover  of  g  she ;  Give  her  the 

g  of  going  on,  and  still  to  be.  „    3 

G  about  thee,  without  thee  ;  High.  Pantheism  9 

Thine  the  liberty,  thine  the  g,  Boddicea  41 

win  A  g  from  its  being  far ;  In  Mem.  xxiv  14 

There  comes  a  ^  on  the  walls :  „         Ixvii  4 

The  mystic  g  swims  away ;  „                  9 

He  reach'd  the  ^  of  a  hand,  „        Ixix  17 

g  of  the  sum  of  things  Will  flash  along  „  Ixxxviii  11 

crown'd  with  attributes  of  woe  Like  glories,  „      cxviii  19 

dim  And  dimmer,  and  a  g  done :  „          cxxi  4 

The  man  of  science  himself  is  fonder  of  g,  Maud  I  iv  37 

A  g\  shall  not  find.  „           v  22 

every  eye  but  mine  will  glance  At  Maud  in  all  her  g,  „        xx  37 

your  true  lover  may  see  Your  g  also,  „              48 

g  of  manhood  stand  on  his  ancient  height,  „  ///  vi  21 

Whose  g  was,  redressing  himian  wrong;  Ded.  of  Idylls  9 

eagle-circles  up  To  the  great  Sun  of  G,  Gareth  and  L.  22 

her  son  Beheld  his  only  way  to  g  „           159 

And  g  gain'd,  and  evermore  to  gain.  „          332 

Gareth  all  for  g  underwent  The  sooty  yoke  „          478 

trusts  to  overthrow.  Then  wed,  with  g :  „          620 

tUt  for  lady's  love  and  g  here,  „          740 

here  is  g  enow  In  having  flung  the  three :  „        1325 

Forgetful  of  his  g  and  his  name,  Marr.  of  Geraint  53 

court  And  all  its  perilous  glories :  „              804 

Balan  answer'd  '  For  the  sake  Of  g ;  Balin  and  Balan  33 

As  fancying  that  her  g  would  be  great  Merlin  and  V.  217 

crying  '  I  have  made  his  g  mine,'  „            971 

your  pretext,  O  my  knight.  As  all  for  g ;  Lancelot  and  E.  154 

No  keener  hunter  after  g  breathes.  „              156 

need  to  speak  Of  Lancelot  in  his  ^ !  „              464 


Glory  (s)  {continued)    the  name  Of  Lancelot,  and  a  g 

one  with  theirs.  Lancelot  and  E.  478 

wound  he  spake  of,  all  for  gain  Of  g,  „              567 

allow  my  pretext,  as  for  gain  Of  purer  g.'  „              587 

it  is  my  g  to  have  loved  One  peerless,  „            1090 

sons  Born  to  the  g  of  thy  name  and  fame,  „             1372 

beheld  his  fellow's  face  As  in  a  g,  Holy  Grail  192 

Naked  of  g  for  His  mortal  change,  „           448 

spires  And  gateways  in  a  gr  like  one  pearl —  „          527 

'  G  and  joy  and  honour  to  our  Lord  „          839 

the  heat  Of  pride  and  g  fired  her  face ;  Pelleas  and  E.  172 

unsunny  face  To  him  who  won  thee  g !  „             181 

knights  Arm'd  for  a  day  of  g  before  the  King.  Last  Tournament  55 

The  g  of  our  Round  Table  is  no  more.'  (repeat)  „         189,  212 

the  knights,  Glorying  in  each  new  g,  „                 336 

in  their  stead  thy  name  and  g  cling  Pass,  of  Arthur  53 

And  the  long  glories  of  the  winter  moon.  „             360 

Quiver'd  a  flying  g  on  her  hair,  Lover's  Tale  i  69 

A  solid  g  on  her  bright  black  hair ;  „          367 

And  g  of  broad  waters  interfused,  „          401 

uphold  Thy  coronal  of  g  like  a  God,  „          488 

in  this  g  I  had  merged  The  other,  „          506 

sunset,  glows  and  glories  of  the  moon  „      ii  110 

for  the  g  of  the  Lord.  The  Revenge  21 

We  have  won  great  g,  my  men !  „            85 

had  holden  the  power  and  g  of  Spain  so  cheap  „  106 
Better  have  sent  Our  Edith  thro'  the  glories  of  the 

earth,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  225 

Never  with  mightier  g  than  when  we  had  rear'd  Def.  of  Lueknow  3 

Gave  g  and  more  empire  to  the  kings  Columbus  22 

All  g  to  the  all-blessed  Trinity,  „         61 

All  g  to  the  mother  of  our  Lord,  „          62 

I  saw  The  g  of  the  Lord  flash  up,  „          82 

To  walk  within  the  g  of  the  Lord  „          89 

and  the  glories  of  fairy  kings ;  V.  of  Maeldune  90 

Gaining  a  Ufelong  G  in  battle,  Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  8 

King  and  Atheling,  Each  in  his  g,  „               102 

lured  by  the  Hunger  oi  g  „                124 

strive  Again  for  g,  while  the  golden  lyre  Tiresias  180 

of  her  eldest-born,  her  g,  her  boast.  Despair  73 

g  and  shame  dying  out  for  ever  in  endless  time,  „  75 
an'  Hiven  in  its  g  smiled.  As  the  Holy  Mother  o'  G 

that  smiles  Tomorrow  25 

afther  her  paarints  had  inter'd  g,  „          53 

Dead  the  warrior,  dead  his  g,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  30 

how  her  living  g  lights  the  hall,  „  181 
stars  in  heaven  Paled,  and  the  g  grew.                 Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  32 

three  hundred  whose  g  will  never  die —  Heavy  Brigade  10 
G  to  each  and  to  all,  and  the  charge  that  they  made  ! 

G  to  all  the  three  hundred,  and  all  the  Brigade !  „              65 

Thou  sawest  a  g  growing  on  the  night,  Epit.  on  Caxton  2 

Glorying  in  the  glories  of  her  people.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  26 

once  more  in  varnish'd  g  shine  Thy  stars  Prog,  of  Spring  38 

plunging  down  Thro'  that  disastrous  g,  St.  Telemachus  29 

'  Thy  g  baffles  wisdom.  Akbar's  Dream  28 

for  no  Mirage  of  g,  but  for  power  to  fuse  „          156 

g  of  Kapiolani  be  mingled  with  either  on  Hawa-i-ee.  Kapiolani  18 

Prophet-eyes  may  catch  a  g  Making  of  Man  6 

Thou  wilt  strike  Thy  g  thro'  the  day.  Doubt  and  Prayer  14 
Glory  (verb)     how  would'st  thou  g  in  all  The  splendours     Ancient  Sage  176 

Glory-circled     A  center'd,  g-c  memory.  Lover's  Tale  i  446 

Glory-crown'd     His  own  vast  shadow  g-c ;  In  Mem.  xcvii  3 

Glorying    upon  the  bridge  of  war  Sat  g ;  Spec,  of  Iliad  10 
g  in  their  vows  and  him,  his  knights  Stood  roimd  him,  Com.  of  Arthur  458 

stood  a  moment,  ere  his  horse  was  brought,  G ;  Gareth  and  L.  935 

the  knights,  G  in  each  new  glory,  Last  Tournament  336 

A  low  sea-sunset  g  round  her  hair  „                 508 

g  in  the  blissful  years  again  to  be.  To  Virgil  17 
G  between  sea  and  sky.  Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  18 
G  in  the  glories  of  her  people,                                 On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  26 

Gloss    shadow  of  the  flowers  Stole  all  the  golden  g,  Gardener's  D.  130 

hair  In  g  and  hue  the  chestnut,  (repeat)  The  Brook  72,  207 

Let  darkness  keep  her  raven  g :  In  Mem.  i  10 

merge '  he  said  '  in  form  and  g  „  Ixxxix  41 

In  g  of  satin  and  glimmer  of  pearls,  Maud  I  xxii  55 


Glossy 


265 


Go 


Glossy    find  the  stubborn  thistle  bursting  Into  g  purples,    Ode  on  Well.  207 
then  with  a  riding  whip  Leisurely  tapping  a  g  boot,         Mavd  I  xiii  19 

and  smooth'd  The  g  shoulder,  Lancelot  and  E.  348 

Glossy-throated     g-t  grace,  Isolt  the  Queen.  Last  Tournament  509 

Glove     With  blots  of  it  about  them,  ribbon,  g  Aylmer's  Field  620 

It  chanced,  her  empty  g  upon  the  tomb  Princess  iv  596 

Come  sliding  out  of  her  sacred  g,  Maud  I  vi  85 

fit  to  wear  your  slipper  for  a  g.  Geraint  and  E.  623 
added  fullness  to  the  phrase  Of  '  Gauntlet  in  the 

velvet  gr.'  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  12 

CHow  (S)    steady  sunset  g  That  stays  upon  thee  ?  Eleanore  55 

sun  begins  to  rise,  the  heavens  are  in  a  ^  ;  May  Queen,  Con.  49 

felt  my  blood  Glow  with  the  g  that  slowly  crimson'd  Tithonus  56 

and  looks  Had  yet  their  native  g :  Will  Water.  194 

^'5  And  glories  of  the  broad  belt  of  the  world,  Enoch  Arden  578 

this  kindlier  g  Faded  with  morning,  Aylmer's  Field  411 

Out  I  sprang  from  g  to  gloom  :  Princess  iv  178 

With  a  satin  sail  of  a  ruby  g,  The  Islet  13 

lone  g  and  long  roar  Green-rushing  (repeat)  Voice  and  the  P.  3,  39 

not  for  thee  the  g,  the  bloom.  In  Mem.  ii  9 

And  reach  the  g  of  southern  skies,  „      xii  10 

And  fix  my  thoughts  on  all  the  g  „  Ixxxiv  3 

earth  gone  nearer  to  the  g  Of  your  soft  splendours  Maud  I  xviii  78 

sunset,  g's  and  glories  of  the  moon  Lover's  Tale  ii  110 

wid  all  the  light  an'  the  g,  Tomorrow  67 

moon  was  falling  greenish  thro'  a  rosy  g,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  178 

groves  of  olive  in  the  summer  g,  Frater  Ave,  etc.  3 

said  with  a  sudden  g  On  her  patient  face  Charity  35 

Glow  (verb)     vines  that  g  Beneath  the  battled  tower.  D.  of  F.  Women  219 

felt  my  blood  G  with  the  glow  that  slowly  crimson'd  Tithonus  56 

G's  forth  each  softly-shadow'd  arm  Day-Dm.,  Sleep  B.  13 

Between  dark  stems  the  forest  g's,  Sir  Galahad  27 

over  thy  dark  shoulder  g  Thy  silver  sister-world,  Move  Eastward  5 

from  his  ivied  nook  G  like  a  sunbeam  :  Princess,  Pro.  105 

now  her  father's  chimney  g's  In  expectation  In  Mem.  vi  29 

g  In  azure  orbits  heavenly- wise ;  „  Ixxxvii  37 

The  wizard  lightnings  deeply  g,  „      cxxii  19 

G's  in  the  blue  of  fiity  miles  away.  Roses  on  the  T.  8 

Glow'd     His  broad  clear  brow  in  sunlight  g\  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  28 

And  on  the  liquid  mirror  g  Mariana  in  the  S.  31 

her  face  G,  as  I  look'd  at  her.  D.  of  F.  Women  240 

G  for  a  moment  as  we  past.  The  Voyage  48 

before  us  g  Fruit,  blossom,  viand.  Princess  iv  34 

the  city  Of  little  Monaco,  basking,  g.  The  Daisy  8 

As  he  g  like  a  ruddy  shield  Maud  III  vi  14 

his  face  G  like  the  heart  of  a  great  fire  Marr.  of  Geraint  559 

A  holy  maid  ;  tho'  never  maiden  g.  Holy  Grail  72 

G  intermingling  close  beneath  the  sun.  Lover's  Tale  i  436 

Glowing    g  full-faced  welcome,  she  Began  Princess  ii  183 

g  round  her  dewy  eyes  The  circled  Iris  „        Hi  26 

Above  the  garden's  g  blossom-belts,  „         v  363 

Half-lapt  in  g  gauze  and  golden  brede,  ,,       vi  134 

she  rose  G  all  over  noble  shame ;  „      mi  160 

She  enters,  g  like  the  moon  Of  Eden  In  Mem.,  Con.  27 

and  g  in  the  broad  Deep-dimpled  current  Gareth  and  L.  1088 

g  on  him,  like  a  bride's  On  her  new  lord,  Merlin  and  V.  616 

g  in  all  colours,  the  live  grass.  Last  Tournament  233 

Yet  gf  in  a  heart  of  ruby —  Lover's  Tale  iv  196 

All  over  g  with  the  sim  of  life,  „              381 

A  g  arm,  a  gleaming  neck,  Miller's  D.  78 
Between  the  shadows  of  the  vine-bunches  Floated 

the  g  sunlights,  (Enone  182 

In  g  health,  with  boundless  wealth,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  61 
Love  took  up  the  glass  of  Time,  and  turn'd  it  in 

his  g  hancfs ;  Locksley  Hall  31 

delicate  spark  Of  g  and  growing  light  Maud  I  vi  16 

Pass  and  blush  the  news  Over  g  ships ;  ,,     xvii  12 

above  Broaden  the  g  isles  of  vernal  blue.  Prog,  of  Spring  60 

G  with  all-colour'd  plums  V.  of  Maeldune  60 

Glowworm  (adj.)    lapt  in  wreaths  of  g  light  The  mellow 

breaker  Princess  iv  435 

Glow-worm  (s)    And  the  g-w  of  the  grave  Glimmer  Vision  of  Sin  153 

No  bigger  than  a  g-w  shone  the  tent  .  Princess  iv  25 

Now  poring  on  the  g,  now  the  star,  „          211 

Glutted    9  all  night  long  breast-deep  in  com,  „      ii  387 


Gnarl'd  Thro'  solid  opposition  crabb'd  and  g.  Princess  Hi  126 
All  silver  silver-green  with  g  bark :  Mariana  42 
garlanding  the  g  boughs  With  bunch  and  berry  (Enone  101 
Gnarr  a  thousand  wants  G  at  the  heels  In  Mem.  xcviii  17 
Gnash  teeth  of  Hell  flay  bare  and  g  thee  Last  Tournament  444 
Gnat  (See  also  Water-gnat)  chased  away  the  still- 
recurring  g,  Caress'd  or  Chidden  7 
Not  even  of  a  9  that  sings.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  21 
I  well  could  wish  a  cobweb  for  the  g.  Merlin  and  V.  370 
tiny-trumpeting  g  can  break  our  dream  Lancelot  and  E.  137 
but  a  murmur  of  g's  in  the  gloom,  Vastness  35 
Gnaw'd  g  his  under,  now  his  upper  lip,  Geraint  and  E.  669 
crazed  With  the  grief  that  g  at  my  heart.  Bandit's  Death  39 
Gnawing  lays  his  foot  upon  it,  G  and  growling  :  Geraint  and  E.  563 
Gnome  G  of  the  cavern.  Griffin  and  Giant,  Merlin  and  the  G.  39 
Go  [See  also  Gaw,  Goa)  We  are  call'd — we  must  g.  All  Things  will  Die  20 
Nine  times  goes  the  passing  bell :  „  35 
whene'er  Earth  goes  to  earth,  with  grief,  Supp.  Confessions  38 
the  whirring  sail  goes  round,  (repeat)  The  Owl  i  4 
A  weary,  weary  way  I  g,  ^  Oriana  89 
Thought  seems  to  come  and  g  Eleanore  96 
Of  that  deep  grave  to  wliich  I  g :  My  life  is  full  7 
And  up  and  down  the  people  g,  L.  of  Shalott  i  6 
page  in  crimson  clad.  Goes  by  to  tower'd  Camelot ;  „  ii  23 
'  G,  vexed  Spirit,  sleep  in  trust ;  Two  Voices  115 
'  I  will  g  forward,  sayest  thou,  „  190 
I  g,  weak  from  suffering  here :  „  238 
Naked  I  g,  and  void  of  cheer :  „  239 
grass  Is  dry  and  dewless.  Let  us  g.  Miller's  D.  246 
I  will  rise  and  g  Down  into  Troy,  (Enone  261 
And  let  the  foolish  yeoman  g.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  72 
Little  Effie  shall  g  with  me  to-morrow  to  the  green,  May  Qu£en  25 
The  night-winds  come  and  g,  mother,  „  33 
and  forgive  me  ere  I  g' ;  'May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  34 
sweeter  far  is  death  than  life  to  me  that  long  to  g.  May  Qu£en,  Con.  8 
seem'd  to  g  right  up  to  Heaven  and  die  „  40 
music  went  that  way  my  soul  will  have  to  g.  „  42 
I  care  not  if  I  gf  to-day.  „  43 
Slow-dropping  veils  of  thinnest  lawn,  did  g  ;  Lotos-Eaters  11 
Old  Year,  you  must  not  g;  D.  of  the  0.  Year  15 
Old  Year,  you  shall  not  g.  „  18 
'  G,  take  the  goose,  and  wring  her  throat.  The  Goose  31 
Yet  now,  I  charge  thee,  quickly  g  again  M.  d' Arthur  79 
'  Ah  !  my  lord  Arthur,  whither  shall  1  g?  „  227 
I,  the  last,  g  forth  companionless,  „  236 
these  thou  seest — if  indeed  I  g —  „  257 
But  g  you  hence,  and  never  see  me  more.'  Dora  100 
I  will  g.  And  I  will  have  my  boy,  „  121 
I  g  to-night :  I  come  to-morrow  mom.     '  I  g,  but 

I  return :  I  would  I  were  The  pilot  Audley  Court  70 

let  him  g ;  his  devil  goes  with  him.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  27 

G  '  (shrill'd  the  cotton-spinning  chorus ) ;  Edwin  Morris  122 

'  G !— Girt,  get  you  in ! '  „             124 

Power  goes  forth  from  me.  Si.  S.  Stylites  145 

Let  me  g :  take  back  thy  gift :  Tithonus  27 

G  to  him :  it  is  thy  duty :  Locksley  Hall  52 

wind  arises,  roaring  seaward,  and  I  g.  „           194 

G,  look  in  any  glass  and  say,  Day-Dm.,  Moral  3 

My  breath  to  heaven  like  vapour  goes :  St.  Agnes'  Eve  3 

The  flashes  come  and  g;  „            26 

When  down  the  stormy  crescent  goes.  Sir  Galahad  25 

Thro'  dreaming  towns  I  g,  „           50 

'  Love  may  come,  and  love  may  g,  Edward  Gray  29 

How  goes  the  time  ?     'Tis  five  o'clock.  Will  Water.  3 

And  all  the  world  g  by  them.  „          48 

But  whither  would  my  fancy  g?  „        145 

'Tis  gone,  and  let  it  g.  „         180 

G,  therefore,  thou !  thy  betters  went  „        185 
Thy  latter  days  increased  with  pence  G  down  among 

the  pots :  „        220 

To  come  and  g,  and  come  again,  „        229 

And  bless  me,  mother,  ere  I  g.'  Lady  Clare  56 

So  she  goes  by  him  attended,  L.  of  Burleigh  25 

O,  happy  planet,  eastward  g ;  Move  eastward  4 
But  thou,  g  by.                                                         Come  not,  when,  etc.  6 


Go 


266 


Go 


Go  {continued)    G  by,  g  by.  Come  not,  when,  etc.  12 

'  Let  her  g !  her  thirst  she  slakes  Vision  of  Sin  143 
And  the  stately  ships  g  on  To  their  haven                    Break,  break,  etc.  9 

used  Enoch  at  times  to  g  by  land  or  sea  ;  Enoch  Arden  104 

wanting  yet  a  boatswain.     Would  he  ^  ?  „            123 

g  This  voyage  more  than  once  ?  „            141 

cared  For  her  or  his  dear  children,  not  to  g.  „            164 

Annie,  come,  cheer  up  before  I  g.'  „            200 

Keep  everything  shipshape,  for  I  must  g.  „            220 

Can  I  g  from  Him  ?  „            225 

wherefore  did  he  g  this  weary  way,  „  296 
Annie's  children  long'd  To  g  with  others,  nutting 

to  the  wood.  And  Annie  would  g  with  them ;  „            363 

the  children  pluck'd  at  him  to  g,  „            369 

'  See  your  bairns  before  you  g !  „            870 

such  a  time  as  goes  before  the  leaf.  The  Brook  13 
men  may  come  and  men  may  g,  But  I  j  on  for 

ever.  The  Brook  33,  49,  65,  184 

Yes,  men  may  come  and  g ;  and  these  are  gone,  The  Brook  186 
would  g.  Labour  for  his  own  Edith,                             Aylmer's  Field  419 

'  Let  not  the  sun  g  down  upon  your  wrath,'  Sea  Dreams  44 

it  I  g  my  work  is  left  Unfinish'd — if  I  g.  Lucretius  103 

man  may  gain  Letting  his  own  life  g.  „          113 

I  spoke.     '  My  father,  let  me  g.  Princess  i  68 

against  all  rules  For  any  man  to  g:  „        179 

Leave  us :  you  may  g :  „       ii  94 

I  shudder  at  the  sequel,  but  1  g.'  „        236 

' Thanks,'  she  answer'd  'G:  we  have  been  too  long  „        357 

We  tum'd  to  g,  but  Cyril  took  the  child,  „        362 

hark  the  bell  For  dinner,  let  us  gl'  „        433 

Over  the  rolling  waters  g,  „       Hi  5 

she  goes  to  inform  The  Princess :  '  „          62 

heal  me  with  your  pardon  ere  you  g.'  „          65 

I  must  g :  I  dare  not  tarry,'  „          95 

Would  we  g  with  her?  we  should  find  the  land  „        171 

goes,  like  glittering  bergs  of  ice,  „      iv  71 

Your  oath  is  broken ;  we  dismiss  you  :  g.  „         360 

'  Stand,  who  goes  ?  '    '  Two  from  the  palace '  „         v  3 

G:  Cyril  told  us  aU.'  „          36 

I  will  take  her  up  and  g  my  way,  „        102 

A  smoke  g  up  thro'  which  I  loom  to  her  „        130 

Let  so  much  out  as  gave  us  leave  to  g.  „        235 

'  All  good  g  with  thee !  take  it  Sir,'  „    vi  207 

I  y  to  mine  own  land  For  ever :  „        216 

Let  the  long  long  procession  g.  Ode  on  Wdl.  15 
From  love  to  love,  from  home  to  home  you  g,          W.  to  Marie  Alex.  8 

Patter  she  goes,  my  own  little  Annie,  Grandmother  78 

over  the  boards,  she  comes  and  goes  at  her  will,  „            79 

I,  too,  shall  9  in  a  minute.  „          104 

O  love,  we  two  shall  g  no  longer  The  Daisy  91 

O  whither,  love,  shall  we  g,  (repeat)  The  Islet  1,  5 

0  thither,  love,  let  us  g.'  „  24 
'  Mock  me  not !  mock  me  not !  love,  let  us  g.'  „  30 
'  A  thousand  voices  g  To  North,  Voice  and  the  P.  13 
Shall  I  write  to  her  ?  shall  I  g-  ?  Window,  Letter  5 
G,  little  letter,  apace,  apace.  Fly ;  „  11 
wet  west  wind  and  the  world  will  g  on. 

(repeat) 
wet  west  wind  and  the  world  may  g  on. 

1  9  to  plant  it  on  his  tomb, 
Like  her  I  gr ;  I  cannot  stay ; 
Week  after  week :  the  days  ^  by : 
The  path  by  which  we  twain  did  g. 
Yet  g,  and  while  the  holly  boughs  Entwine 
'  G  down  beside  thy  native  rill, 
And  look  thy  look,  and  g  thy  way, 
I  care  for  nothing,  all  shall  g. 
let  us  g.    Come ;  let  us  y : 
The  foolish  neighbours  come  and  g. 
Will  flash  along  the  chords  and  a. 
g  By  summer  belts  of  wheat  and  vine 
We  g,  but  ere  we  g  from  home, 

I  turn  to  g :  my  feet  are  set  To  leave  the  pleasant  fields 
when  thev  learnt  that  I  must  g  They  wept 
•  Enter  likewise  ye  And  g  with  us : ' 


Window,  No  Answer  6, 12 

18 

In  Mem.  viii  22 

xii  5 

xvii  7 

xxii  1 

xxix  9 

xxxvii  5 

xlix  9 

Ivi  4 

Ivii  4 

fa;  13 

Ixxxviii  12 

xcviii  3 

cii  5 

21 

ciii  17 

52 


Go  (continued)      The  year  is  going,  let  him  g ;  In  Mem.  cvi  7 

With  thousand  shocks  that  come  and  g,  „         cxiii  17 

Like  clouds  they  shape  themselves  and  g.  „         cxxiii  8 

But  they  must  g,  the  time  draws  on,  „         Con.  89 

nine  months  g  to  the  shaping  an  infant  Maud  I  iv  34 

G  not,  happy  day,  (repeat)  „  xvii  1,  3 

G  in  and  out  as  if  at  merry  play,  „   xviii  31 

It  is  but  for  a  little  space  I  g:  „  75 

brief  night  goes  In  babble  and  revel  „     xxii  27 

Let  me  and  my  passionate  love  g  by,  „  //  ii  77 

Me  and  my  harmful  love  ^  by ;  „  80 

And  the  wheels  g  over  my  head,  „  v  A 

Ever  about  me  the  dead  men  g;  „  18 

Let  it  g  or  stay,  so  I  wake  to  the  higher  aims  „  ///  vi  38 

From  the  great  deep  to  the  great  deep  he  goes.'  Com.  of  Arthur  411 

sent  him  from  his  senses :  let  me  g.'  Gareth  and  L.  71 

Mother,  to  gain  it — your  full  leave  to  g.  „  134 

'  A  hard  one,  or  a  hundred,  so  I  g.  „  149 

Full  of  the  wistful  fear  that  he  would  g,  „  173 

crying,  '  Let  us  g  no  further,  lord.  „  198 

Thou  that  art  her  kin,  G  likewise ;  „  379 

Sir  Kay  nodded  him  leave  to  g,  „  520 

G  therefore,'  and  all  hearers  were  amazed.  -  „  655 

wherefore  wilt  thou  g  against  the  King,  „  727 

'  G  therefore,'  and  so  gives  the  quest  to  him —  „  864 

0  birds,  that  warble  as  the  day  goes  by,  „  1076 
Hence :  let  us  g.'  „  1312 
in,  g  in ;  for  save  yourself  desire  it,  Marr.  of  Geraint  310 
With  that  wild  wheel  we  g  not  up  or  down ;  „  351 
G  to  the  town  and  buy  us  flesh  and  wine ;  „  372 
G  thou  to  rest,  but  ere  thou  g  to  rest  Tell  her,  „  512 
But  Yniol  goes,  and  I  full  oft  shall  dream  „  751 
'  I  will  g  back  a  Uttle  to  my  lord,  Geraint  and  E.  65 
And  into  no  Earl's  palace  will  I  g.                                             „            235 

1  love  that  beauty  should  g  beautifully :  „  681 
Who  loves  that  beauty  should  g  beautifully  ?  „  684 
'Yea,'  said  Enid,  'let  us  g.'  „  751 
'  If  ye  will  not  g  To  Arthur,  then  will  Arthur  come  „  814 
I  will  weed  this  land  before  1  g.  ,,  907 
'  G  thou  with  him  and  him  and  bring  it  Balin  and  Balan  6 
His  Baron  said  '  W^e  g  but  barken :  ,.  10 
Arthur,  '  Let  who  goes  before  me,  „  134 
but  thou  shalt  g  with  me.  And  we  will  speak  „  531 
We  g  to  prove  it.     Bide  ye  here  the  while.'    She  past ; 

and  Vivien  murmur'd  after '  G !    I  bide  the  while.'     Merlin  and  V.  97 
Let  g  at  last ! — they  ride  away —  ,.  107 

'  It  is  not  worth  the  keeping :  let  it  g : 
let  his  wisdom  g  For  ease  of  heart, 
Would  reckon  worth  the  taking  ?  I  will  g. 
Why  g  ye  not  to  these  fair  jousts  ? 
therefore  hear  my  words :  g  to  the  jousts : 
men  g  down  before  your  spear  at  a  touch, 
hide  it  therefore ;  g  unknown : 
since  Ig  to  joust  as  one  unknown  At  Camelot 
He  seem'd  so  sullen,  vext  he  coiUd  not  g : 
Thro'  her  own  side  she  felt  the  sharp  lance  g ; 
ye  shall  g  no  more  On  quest  of  mine. 
Being  so  very  wilful  you  must  g,'  (repeat) 
speak  your  wish.  Seeing  I  g  to-day : ' 
what  force  is  yours  to  g,  So  far, 
I  gf  in  state  to  court,  to  meet  the  Queen, 
let  our  dumb  old  man  alone  G  with  me, 
phantom  of  a  cup  that  comes  and  goes  ?  ' 
G,  since  your  vows  are  sacred, 
noble  deeds  will  come  and  g  Unchallenged, 
my  time  is  hard  at  hand.  And  hence  I  g ; 
thou  shalt  see  the  vision  when  I  g.' 
g  forth  and  pass  Down  to  the  little  thorpe 
entering,  loosed  and  let  him  g.' 
heard  a  voice,  '  Doubt  not,  g  forward ; 
but  will  ye  to  Caerleon  PIG  likewise : 
Nay,  let  him  g — and  quickly,' 
and  thought,  '  I  will  g  back,  and  slay  them 
The  foot  that  loiters,  bidden  g, — 
From  the  great  deep  to  the  great  deep  he  goes. 


396 

892 

917 

Lancelot  and  E.  98 

136 

149 

151 

190 

210 

624 

716 

„    777,781 

925 

1063 

1124 

1128 

Holy  Grail  44 

314 

318 

482 

484 

546 

698 

824 

Pelleas  and  E.  106 

313 

444 

Last  Tournament  117 

133 


Go 


267 


God 


Go  (continued)    Now — ere  he  goes  to  the  great  Battle  ?  Guinevere  652 

Arise,  g  forth  and  conquer  as  of  old.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  64 

I  charge  thee,  quickly  g  again,  „            247 

my  Lord  Arthur,  whither  shall  Ig?  „            395 

I,  the  last,  g  forth  companionless,  „            404 

With  these  thou  seest — if  indeed  Ig  „            425 

'  From  the  great  deep  to  the  great  deep  he  goes.'  „            445 

and  g  From  less  to  less  and  veinish  into  light.  „            467 

your  love  Is  but  a  burthen :  loose  the  bond,  and  g.'  To  the  Queen  ii  17 


for  they  g  back,  And  farther  back. 

If  you  g  far  in  (The  country  people  rumour) 

he  would  g,  WouJd  leave  the  land  for  ever, 

but  for  a  whisper,  '  G  not  yet,' 

Now,  now,  will  I  g  down  into  the  grave, 

and  I  y  down  To  kiss  the  dead.' 

'  He  casts  me  out,'  she  wept, '  and  goes ' 

But  he  was  all  the  more  resolved  to  g, 

When  Julian  goes,  the  lord  of  all  he  aayr. 

sa3mig,  '  It  is  over :  let  us  y ' — 

an'  kiss  you  before  I  g.' 

you'll  kiss  me  before  I  ^  ?  ' 

an'  g  to-night  by  the  boat.' 

when  he  knows  that  I  cannot  g  ? 

and  now  you  may  g  your  way. 

But  I  g  to-night  to  my  boy, 

g,  g,  you  may  leave  me  alone — 

make  the  Spaniard  promise,  if  we  yield,  to  let  us  g; 


love  will  g  by  contrast,  as  by  likes. 

then  another,  and  him  too,  and  down  goes  he. 

G  back  to  the  Isle  of  Finn  and  suffer  the  Past 

when  a  smoke  from  a  city  goes  to  heaven 

g  To  spend  my  one  last  year  among  the  hills. 

'  And  idle  gleams  will  come  and  g, 

this  Hall  at  last  will  g — ^perhaps  have  gone, 

ships  from  out  the  West  g  dripping  thro' 

gone  as  all  on  earth  will  g. 

bound  to  follow,  wherever  she  g 

G,  take  thine  honours  home ; 

I  cannot  g,  g  you.' 

Kiss  me  child  and  g. 

you  wave  me  off — poor  roses — ^must  I  g — 

find  the  white  heather  wherever  you  g, 

G  back  to  thine  adulteress  and  die  ! ' 

They  sing  it.     Let  us  g.' 

'  Mjr  dear,  I  will  tell  you  before  I  g.' 

bodies  and  souls  g  down  in  a  conunon  wreck, 

Deep  under  deep  for  ever  goes, 

Let  your  reforms  for  a  moment  g ! 
Goa  (go)     But  Parson  a  cooms  an'  a  g's, 

Seeii'd  her  to-daiiy  g  by — 

but  g  wheere  munny  is  ! ' 

Maakin'  'em  g  togither  as  they've  good  right  to  do 

Strange  fur  to  g  fur  to  think 

tha  mun  g  fur  it  down  to  the  inn. 

Thou'll  g  sniffin'  about  the  tap 

I  wefint  g  sniffin'  about  the  tap.' 

tha  mun  g  fur  it  down  to  the  Hinn, 

I'll  g  wi'  tha  back  :  all  right ; 

'e  bowt  owd  money,  es  wouldn't  g, 

or  the  gells  'ull  g  to  the  'Ouse, 

G  to  the  laiine  at  the  back, 

an'  they  g's  fur  a  walk, 

When  I  g's  fur  to  coomfut  the  poor 

'e  can  naither  stan'  nor  g. 

Fur  to  g  that  night  to  'er  foiilk 

'  Then  hout  to-night  tha  shall  g.' 

teU'd  'er,  '  Yeiis  I  mun  g.' 
Goad    prick'd  with  g's  and  stings ; 

His  Own  thought  drove  him,  like  a  g. 

His  own  thought  drove  him  hke  a  g. 
Goal    Making  for  one  sure  g. 

pass  beyond  the  g  of  ordinance 

make  Our  progress  falter  to  the  woman's  g.' 

his  days,  moves  with  him  to  one  g, 

Is  the  g  so  far  away  ? 


Lover's  Tale  i  80 

518 

iv  18 

20 

46 

49 

103 

179 

315 

384 

First  Quarrel  46 

80 

88 

Rizpah  3 

„      20 

,,      74 

„      79 

The  Revenge  94 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  42 

Def.  of  Lucknow  65 

V.  of  Maeldune  124 

Achilles  over  the  T.  7 

Ancient  Sage  15 

240 

The  Flight  27 

91 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  46 

Dead  Prophet  45 

To  W.  C.  Macready  6 

The  Ring  434 

489 

Happy  101 

Romney's  R.  108 

Death  of  CEnone  48 

Akbar's  Dream  204 

Charity  36 

The  Dawn  13 

Mechanophilus  35 

Riflemen  form, !  15 

A^.  Farmer,  0.  S.  25 

N.  S.  13 

20 

34 

North.  Cobbler  4 


64 

67 

113 

Village  Wife  2 

„         49 

64 

Spinster's  S's.  6 

85 

108 

Owd  Rod  2 

„      52 

„      58 

„      98 

Palace  of  Art  150 

M.  d' Arthur  185 

Pass,  of  Arthur  ZbZ 

Palace  of  Art  248 

Tithonus  30 

Princess  vi  127 

„      vii  263 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  29 


Goal  (continued)    good  Will  be  the  final  g  of  ill. 
Touch  thy  dull  g  of  joyless  gray. 
Arrive  at  last  the  blessed  g, 
friend,  who  earnest  to  thy  g  So  early, 
larger,  tho'  the  g  of  all  the  saints — 
g  of  this  great  world  Lies  beyond  sight : 
No  guess-work  !  I  was  certain  of  my  g ; 
watch  the  chariot  whirl  About  the  g  again. 
And  if  we  move  to  such  a  g 
he  touch'd  his  g,  The  Christian  city. 

Goan  (gone)    G  into  mangles  an'  tonups. 
An'  *ed  g  their  waiiys ; 
thowt  o'  the  good  owd  times  'at  was  g, 
an'  I  thowt  as  'e'd  g  cleiin-wud, 

Goan  Padre    And  when  the  G  P  quoting  Him, 

Goat     Leading  a  jet-black  g  white-horn'd, 
are  men  better  than  sheep  or  g's 
Catch  the  wild  g  by  the  hair, 
the  beard-blown  g  Hang  on  the  shaft, 
no  more  thanks  than  might  a  g  have  given 
Swine,  say  ye  ?  swine,  g's,  asses, 


In  Mem.  liv  2 

„    Ixxii  27 

„  Ixxxiv  41 

„     cxiv  23 

Holy  Grail  528 

To  the  Queen  ii  59 

Columbus  45 

Tiresias  177 

Politics  3 

St.  Teleonachus  34 

Owd  Roa  28 

36 

43 

61 

Akbar's  Dream  74 

CEnone  51 

M.  d' Arthur  250 

Locksley  Hall  170 

Princess  iv  78 

Merlin  and  V.  278 

Last  Tournament  321 


'  Then  were  swine,  g's,  asses,  geese  The  wiser  fools,  „              325 

are  men  better  than  sheep  or  g's  Pass,  of  Arthur  418 

Goatfoot     Catch  her,  g :  nay.  Hide,  hide  Lucretiv^s  203 

Goatskin     wear  an  undress'd  g  on  my  back ;  St.  S.  Stylites  116 

Go-between     To  play  their  g-b  as  heretofore  Aylmer's  Field  523 
Goblet     A  ^  on  the  board  by  Balin,                                  Balin  and  Balan  362 

priceless  g  with  a  priceless  wine  Arising,  Lover's  Tale  iv  227 

Goblm     You  did  but  come  as  g's  in  the  night.  Princess  v  220 

Go-cart    is  but  a  child  Yet  in  the  g-c.  „  Con.  78 

God     G  gave  her  peace ;  her  land  reposed ;  To  the  Queen  26 

0  G  !  my  G  !  have  mercy  now.  Supp.  Confessions  1 
sure  it  is  a  special  care  Of  G,  „  64 
strive  To  reconcile  me  with  thy  G.  „  102 
stood  Betwixt  me  and  the  light  of  G !     That  hitherto 

I  had  defied  And  had  rejected  G —  „          110 

1  would  pray — that  G  would  move  And  strike  „  115 
Yet,  my  G,  Whom  call  I  Idol  ?  „  179 
And  thou  of  G  in  thy  great  charity)  Isabel  40 
Oh  G,  that  I  were  dead  ! '  Mariana  84 
not  the  g's  More  purely,  when  they  wish  to  charm  A  Character  13 
G's  great  gift  of  speech  abused  A  Dirge  44 
Half  G's  good  sabbath.  To  J.  M.  K.  11 
Waeeioh  of  G,  whose  strong  right  arm  Alexander  1 
How  long,  0  G,  shall  men  be  ridden  down,  Poland  1 
G  in  his  mercy  lend  her  grace,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  53 
G's  glory  smote  him  on  the  face.'  Two  Voices  225 
On  to  G's  house  the  people  prest :  „  409 
Would  G  renew  me  from  my  birth  Miller's  D.  27 
But  that  G  bless  thee,  dear —  „  235 
Cluster'd  about  his  temples  like  a  G's ;  CEnone  60 
all  the  full-faced  presence  of  the  G's  „  80 
see  thy  Paris  judge  of  G's.'  „  90 
the  G's  Rise  up  for  reverence.  „  109 
likest  g's,  who  have  attain'd  Best  in  a  happy  place  „  130 
strike  within  thy  pulses,  like  a  G's,  „  162 
Her  presence,  hated  both  of  G's  and  men.  „  229 
Moulded  by  G,  and  temper'd  with  the 

tears  To With  Pal.  of  Art  IS 

My  G's,  with  whom  I  dwell !  Palace  of  Art  196 

I  sit  as  G  holding  no  form  of  creed,  „            211 

G,  before  whom  ever  lie  bare  The  abysmal  deeps  „            222 

Lay  there  exiled  from  eternal  G,  „            263 

To  lie  within  the  hght  of  G,  May  Queen,  Con.  59 
The  G's  are  hard  to  reconcile:                                 Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  81 

On  the  hills  like  G's  together,  „            110 

A  daughter  of  the  g's,  divinely  tall,  D.  of  F.  Women  87 

we  sat  as  G  by  G :  „            142 

'  My  G,  my  land,  my  father —  „            209 

'  Saw  G  divide  the  night  with  flying  flame,  „            225 

beautiful  a  thing  it  was  to  die  For  G  and  for  my  sire !  „            232 

'  Glory  to  G,'  she  sang,  and  past  afar,  „            242 

G  gives  us  love.    Something  to  love  He  lends  us ;  To  J.  S.  13 

I  will  not  say  '  G's  ordinance  Of  Death  „       45 

Imitates  G,  and  turns  her  face  To  every  land  On  a  Mourner  2 


God 


268 


God 


God  (continiied)    And  Virtue,  like  a  household  g  Promising 

empire ;  On  a  Mourner  30 

And  G  f oiget  the  stranger  ! '  TJie  Goose  56 

G  knows :  he  has  a  mint  of  reasons :  The  Epic  33 

G  fulfils  himself  in  many  ways,  M.  d' Arthur  241 

knowing  G,  they  lift  not  hands  of  prayer  „          252 

Bound  by  gold  chains  about  the  feet  of  G.  „          255 

Breathed,  like  the  covenant  of  a  G,  Gardener's  D.  209 

She  broke  out  in  praise  To  G,  Dora  113 

'  G  bless  him ! '  he  said,  '  and  may  he  never  know  „     149 

May  G  forgive  me  ! — I  have  been  to  blame.  „  161 
G  made  the  woman  for  the  man,  (repeat)                 Edwin  Morris  43,  50 

'  G  made  the  woman  for  the  use  of  man,  „                  91 

him  That  was  a  G,  and  is  a  lawyer's  clerk,  „                102 

Let  this  avail,  just,  dreadful,  mighty  G,  St.  S.  Stylites  9 

I  had  not  stinted  practice,  O  my  G.  „          59 

I  bore,  whereof,  O  G,  thou  knowest  all.  „          70 

Thou,  O  G,  Knowest  alone  whether  this  was  or  no.  „          82 

in  your  looking  you  may  kneel  to  G.  „        141 

G  reaps  a  harvest  in  me.  „        148 

G  reaps  a  harvest  in  thee.  „        149 

G  hath  now  Sponged  and  made  blank  of  crimeful  record  „        157 

G  only  thro'  his  bounty  hath  thought  fit,  „        186 

a  priest,  a  man  of  G,  Among  you  there,  „        214 

for  a  man  is  not  as  G,  Love  and  Duty  30 

G  love  us,  as  if  the  seedsman,  Golden  Year  70 

Meet  adoration  to  my  household  g's,  Ulysses  42 

imbecoming  men  that  strove  with  G's.  „      53 

To  his  great  heart  none  other  than  a  G !  Tithonus  14 

'  The  G's  themselves  cannot  recall  their  gifts.'  „        49 

Would  to  G — for  I  had  loved  thee  more  Locksley  Hall  64 

Ah,  blessed  vision !  blood  of  G  !  Sir  Galahad  45 

'  O  just  and  faithful  knight  of  <5 !  „          79 

Sipt  wine  from  silver,  praising  G,  WiU  Water.  127 

G's  blessing  on  the  day !  iMdy  Clare  8 

G  be  thank'd  ! '  said  Alice  the  nurse,  „         17 

'  As  G's  above,'  said  Alice  the  nurse,  „  23 
G  made  himself  an  awful  rose  of  dawn,  (repeat)      Vision  of  Sin  50,  224 

'  Lo  !  G's  likeness — the  ground-plan —  „  187 
broad-limb'd  G's  at  random  thrown  By  fountain-urns ;         To  E.  L.  15 

'  Annie,  this  voyage  by  the  grace  of  G  Enoch  Arden  190 

G  bless  him,  he  shall  sit  upon  my  knees  „           197 

Cast  all  your  cares  onG\  „           222 

We  might  be  still  as  happy  as  G  grants  „  416 
'  You  have  been  as  G's  good  angel  in  our  house.    G 

bless  you  for  it,  G  reward  you  for  it,  „           423 

for  G's  sake,'  he  answer'd,  *  both  our  sakes,  „           509 

In  those  two  deaths  be  read  G's  warning  '  wait.'  „           571 

O  G  Almighty,  blessed  Saviour,  „           782 

'  My  G  has  bow'd  me  down  to  what  I  am ;  „           856 

that  almighty  man,  The  county  G—  Aylmer's  Field  14 

sons  of  men  Daughters  of  (? ;  „            45 

'  Bless,  G  bless  'em :  marriages  are  made  in  Heaven.'  „          188 

all  but  those  who  knew  the  living  G—  „          637 

with  thy  worst  self  hast  thou  clothed  thy  G.  „          646 

No  coarse  and  blockish  G  of  acreage  „          651 

Thy  G  is  far  diffused  in  noble  groves  „          653 

In  such  a  shape  dost  thou  behold  thy  G.  „          657 

Prince  of  Peace,  the  Mighty  G,  „          669 

'  O  pray  G  that  he  hold  up '  „          733 

A  rushing  tempest  of  the  wrath  of  G  „          757 

and  made  Their  own  traditions  G,  „  795 
sin  That  neither  G  nor  man  can  well  forgive,  Hypocrisy,  Sea  Breams  63 

Who,  never  naming  G  except  for  gain,  „        188 

what  dreams,  ye  holy  G's,  what  dreams !  Liu:retius  33 

worse  Than  aught  they  fable  of  the  quiet  G's.  „        55 

Rather,  O  ye  G's,  Poet-Uke,  „  92 
Which  things  appear  the  work  of  mighty  G's.    The 

G's  !  and  it  1  go  my  work  is  left  Unfinish'd — if  I 

go.    The  G's,  who  haunt  The  lucid  interspace  of 

world  „  102 
The  G's,  the  G's !    If  all  be  atoms,  how  then  should 

the  G's  Being  atomic  „      113 

My  master  held  That  G's  there  are,  „      117 

G's  there  are,  and  deathless.  „      121 


God  (contimi£d)    '  Look  where  another  of  our  G's,  the  Sun,       iMcretius  124 
men  like  soldiers  may  not  quit  the  post  Allotted  by 

the  G's :  but  he  that  holds  The  G's  are  careless,  „      149 

Picus  and  Faunus,  rustic  G's?  „       182 

0  ye  G's,  I  know  you  careless,  „  207 
(6^  help  her)  she  was  wedded  to  a  fool ;  Princess  Hi  83 
tho'  your  Prince's  love  were  like  a  G's,  „  248 
the  old  G  of  war  himself  were  dead,  „  v  145 
Interpreter  between  the  G's  and  men,  „  vii  322 
G  bless  the  narrow  sea  which  keeps  her  off,  „  Con.  51 
G  bless  the  narrow  seas !  „  70 
keep  it  ours,  O  G,  from  brute  control ;  Ode  on  Well.  159 
palter'd  with  Eternal  G  for  power ;  „  180 
To  which  our  G  himself  is  moon  and  sun.  „  217 
On  G  and  Godlike  men  we  build  our  trust.  „  266 
G  accept  him,  Christ  receive  him.  „  281 
We  love  not  this  French  G,  the  child  of  Hell,  Third  of  Feb.  7 

1  wish'd  it  had  been  G's  will  that  I,  Grandmother  73 
G,  not  man,  is  the  Judge  of  us  all  „  95 
thank  G  that  I  keep  my  eyes.  „  106 
Dear  to  the  man  that  is  dear  to  G ;  To  F.  D.  Maurice  36 
'  G  help  me !  save  I  take  my  part  Sailor  Boy  21 
Ah  G  !  the  petty  fools  of  rhyme  Lit.  Squabbles  1 
G's  are  moved  against  the  land.'  The  Victim  6 
'  The  G's  have  answer'd :  We  give  them  the  boy.'  „  39 
The  holy  G's,  they  must  be  appeased,  „  47 
G's,  he  said,  '  would  have  chosen  well ;  „  58 
G's  have  answer'd ;  We  give  them  the  wife ! '  „  78 
G  is  law,  say  the  wise ;  High.  Pantheism  13 
Law  is  G,  say  some :  no  G  at  all,  says  the  fool ;  „  15 
I  should  know  what  G  and  man  is.  Flow,  in  cran.  wall.  6 
'  Hear  it,  G's !  the  G's  have  heard  it,  Boadicea  21 
Doubt  not  ye  the  G's  have  answer'd,  „  22 
thine  the  battle-thunder  of  6^,'  ,.  44 
Strong  Son  of  G,  immortal  Love,  In  Mem.,  Pro.  1 
O  mother,  praying  G  will  save  Thy  sailor, —  „  vi  13 
drains  The  chalice  of  the  grapes  of  G;  „  x  16 
What  then  were  G  to  such  as  I  ?  „  xxxiv  9 
G  shut  the  doorways  of  his  head.  „  xliv  4 
Ye  watch,  like  G,  the  rolling  hours  „  li  14 
When  G  hath  made  the  pile  complete ;  ^  liv% 
The  Ukest  G  within  the  soul  ?  „  io  4 
Are  G  and  Nature  then  at  strife,  „  5 
That  slope  thro'  darkness  up  to  (?,  „  16 
Who  trusted  G  was  love  indeed  „  Im  13 
In  endless  age  ?  It  rests  with  G.  „  Ixxiii  12 
But  stay'd  in  peace  with  G  and  man.  „  Ixxx  8 
G's  finger  touch'd  him,  and  he  slept.  „  Ixxxv  20 
saw  The  G  within  him  light  his  face,  „  Ixxxvii  36 
With  g's  in  unconjectured  bliss,  „  xciii  10 
Israel  made  their  g's  of  gold,  „  xcvi  23 
Where  G  and  Nature  met  in  light ;  „  cxi  20 
mix'd  with  G  and  Nature  thou,  „  cxxx  11 
That  friend  of  mine  who  lives  in  G,  „  Con.  140 
That  G,  which  ever  lives  and  loves,  „  141 
One  G,  one  law,  one  element,  „                142 

0  father !  0  G\  was  it  well ?—  Maud  I  i  6 
ah  G,  as  he  used  to  rave.  „  60 
G  grant  I  may  find  it  at  last !  „  ii  1 
how  G  will  bring  them  about  „  iv  44 
Ah  G,  for  a  man  with  heart,  head,  hand,  „  ar  60 
May  G  make  me  more  wretched  Than  ever  „  xix  94 
Arise,  my  G,  and  strike,  „  JI  i  45 
as  long,  O  G,  as  she  Have  a  grain  of  love  for  me,  „  ii  52 
Britain's  one  sole  G  be  the  milUonaire :  „  III  vi  22 
G's  just  wrath  shall  be  wreak'd  on  a  giant  liar ;  „           45 

1  embrace  the  purpose  of  G,  „  59 
G's  love  set  Thee  at  his  side  again !  •  Bed.  of  Idylls  55 
*  the  fire  of  G  Descends  upon  thee  in  the  battle-field :  Com.  of  Arthur  129 
Arthur  said, '  Man's  word  is  G  in  man :  „  133 
G  hath  told  the  King  a  secret  word.  „  489 
In  whom  high  G  hath  breathed  a  secret  thing.  „  501 
G  wot,  he  had  not  beef  and  brewis  enow,  OareA  and  L.  457 
as  for  love,  G  wot,  I  love  not  yet,  But  love  F shall, 

G  willing.'  „            561 


God 


269 


God 


God  (continiied)    and  cried,  *  G  bless  the  King,  and  all  his 

feUowship ! '  Gareth  and  L.  698 

my  lance  Hold,  by  G's  grace,  he  shall  into  the  mire —  „            723 

G  wot,  so  thou  wert  nobly  bom,  „          1064 

'  G  wot,  I  never  look'd  upon  the  face,  „          1333 

Canst  thou  not  trust  the  limbs  thy  G  hath  given,  „          1388 

'  Here,  by  G's  grace,  is  the  one  voice  for  me.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  344 

'  Here  by  G's  rood  is  the  one  maid  for  me.'  „              368 

Who  knows  ?  another  gift  of  the  high  G,  „              821 

I  know,  G  knows,  too  much  of  palaces  !  Geraint  and  E.  236 

G's  curse,  it  makes  me  mad  to  see  you  „             616 

flush'd  with  fight,  or  hot,  G's  curse,  with  anger—  „             661 

Yea,  G,  I  pray  you  of  your  gentleness,  „            710 

Man's  word  is  (r  in  man.'  Balin  and  Balan  8 

and  yet — G  guide  them — young.'  Merlin  and  V.  29 

by  G's  rood,  I  trusted  you  too  much.'  „          376 

for  love  of  G  and  men  And  noble  deeds,  „          412 

Her  G,  her  Merlin,  the  one  passionate  love  „          955 

0  G,  that  I  had  loved  a  smaller  man !  „  872 
G's  mercy,  what  a  stroke  was  there !  Lancelot  and  E.  24 
but  G  Broke  the  strong  lance,  „  25 
rule  the  land  Hereafter,  which  G  hinder.'  „  66 
honours  his  own  word,  As  if  it  were  his  G's  ?  '  „  144 
G  wot,  his  shield  is  blank  enough.  „  197 
in  this  heathen  war  the  fire  of  G  Fills  him :  „  315 
Rapt  on  his  face  as  if  it  were  a  G's.  „  356 
No  diamonds !  for  G's  love,  a  little  air !  „  505 
'  Yea,  by  G's  death,'  said  he,  '  ye  love  him  well,  „  679 
Not  all  unhappy,  having  loved  G's  best  And  greatest,  „          1093 

1  would  to  G,  Seeing  the  homeless  trouble  „  1364 
shaped,  it  seems.  By  G  for  thee  alone,  „  1367 
may  G,  I  pray  him,  send  a  sudden  Angel  „  1423 
'  G  make  thee  good  as  thou  are  beautiful,'  Holy  Grail  136 
named  us  each  by  name,  Calling  '  G  speed  ! '  „  352 
seem'd  Shoutings  of  all  the  sons  of  G :  „  509 
If  G  would  send  the  vision,  well :  „  658 
When  G  made  music  thro'  them,  „  878 
Nor  the  high  G  a  vision,  nor  that  One  Who  rose  again :  „  918 
I  might  have  answer'd  them  Even  before  high  G.  Pelleas  and  E.  463 
'  Fear  G :  honour  the  King —  Last  Tournament  302 
Conceits  himself  as  G  that  he  can  make  „  355 
woman-worshipper  ?  Yea,  G's  curse,  and  I !  „  447 
My  G,  the  measure  of  my  hate  for  Mark  „  537 
Pale-blooded,  she  will  yield  herself  to  G.'  „  608 
'  1  will  flee  hence  and  give  myself  to  G ' —  „  624 
May  G  be  with  thee,  sweet,  (repeat)  „  627,  629 
My  G,  the  power  Was  once  in  vows  „  648 
And  every  follower  eyed  him  as  a  G ;  „  678 
those  whom  G  had  made  full-limb'd  and  tall,  Guinevere  42 
Would  G  that  thou  could'st  hide  me  „  118 
To  honour  his  own  word  as  if  his  G's,  '  „  473 
I  guard  as  G's  high  gift  from  scathe  and  wrong,  „  494 
I  foi^ve  thee,  as  Eternal  G  Forgives :  „  544 
We  two  may  meet  before  high  G,  „  564 
hereafter  in  the  heavens  Before  high  G.  „  638 
my  G,  What  might  I  not  have  made  of  thy  fair  world,  „  654 
As  if  some  lesser  g  had  made  the  world.  Pass,  of  Arthur  14 
Till  the  High  G  behold  it  from  beyond,  „  16 
My  G,  thou  hast  foi^otten  me  in  my  death :  Nay — 

G  my  Christ — I  pass  but  shall  not  die.'  ,.              27 

G  fulfils  himself  in  many  ways,  „            409 

knowing  G,  they  lift  not  hands  of  prayer  „            420 

Bound  by  gold  chains  about  the  feet  of  G.  „            423 

G  unknits  the  riddle  of  the  one,  Lover's  Tale  i  181 

so  much  wealth  as  G  had  charged  her  with —  „            213 

I  said  to  her,  '  A  day  for  G's  to  stoop,'  „            304 

uphold  Thy  coronal  of  glory  like  a  G,  „            488 

tell  him  of  the  bliss  he  had  with  G —  „         _    674 

nymph  and  ^  ran  ever  round  in  gold —  „        iv  197 

Some  cousin  of  his  and  hers — O  G,  so  like  ! '  „            327 

G  bless  you,  my  own  little  Nell.'  First  Quarrel  22 

I  told  them  my  tale,  G's  own  truth —  Rizpah  34 

G  'ill  pardon  the  heU-black  raven  „       39 

I  have  been  with  G  in  the  dark —  ..       79 

an'  the  loov  o'  G  fur  men,  North.  Cobbler  55 


God  (continued)    '  Fore  G  I  am  no  coward ; 
G  of  battles,  was  ever  a  battle  like  this 
Fall  into  the  hands  of  G, 
and  lodged  with  Plato's  G, 
G  help  the  wrinkled  children  that  are  Christ's 
My  G,  I  would  not  live  Save  that  I  think 
G  help  them,  our  children  and  wives ! 
But  G  is  with  me  in  this  wilderness, 
G's  free  air,  and  hope  of  better  things. 
So  much  G's  cause  was  fluent  in  it — 
Had  he  G's  word  in  Welsh  He  might  be  kindlier : 
come,  G  willing,  to  outlearn  the  filthy  friar, 
to  thee,  green  boscage,  work  of  G, 
I  spread  mine  arms,  G's  work,  I  said, 
'  Bury  them  as  G's  truer  images  Are  daily  buried.' 
Do  penance  in  his  heart,  G  hears  him.' 


What  profits  an  ill  Priest  Between  me  and  my  G  ? 

'  No  bread,  no  bread.    G's  body  ! ' 

Then  I,  G  help  me,  I  So  mock'd, 

G  pardon  all — Me,  them,  and  all  the  world — 

the  fourth  Was  like  the  Son  of  G ! 

G  willing,  I  will  bum  for  Him. 

In  praise  to  G  who  led  me  thro'  the  waste. 

that  was  clean  Against  G's  word : 

There  was  a  glimmering  of  G's  hand. 

And  G  Hath  more  than  glimmer'd  on  me. 

Ah  G,  the  harmless  people  whom  we  found 

Who  took  us  for  the  very  G's  from  Heaven, 

in  that  flight  of  ages  which  are  G's 

thunder  of  G  peal'd  over  us  all  the  day. 

Whereon  the  Spirit  of  G  moves  as  he  will — 

dream  of  a  shadow,  go — G  bless  you 


The  Revenge  4 

62 

90 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  131 

183 

228 

Bef.  of  Lucknow  8 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  8 

10 

17 

:  „  22 

118 

129 

137 

140 

143 


145 

159 

162 

168 

176 

193 

Columbus  17 

55 

142 

143 

181 

183 

202 

V.  of  Maeldune  113 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  28 

To  W.  H.  BrookfLdd  14 


and  the  secret  of  the  G's.    My  son  the  G's,  despite 

of  human  prayer,  Tiresias  8 

great  G,  Arfis,  burns  in  anger  still  „      11 

trembling  fathers  call'd  The  G's  own  son.  „       17 

some  strange  hope  to  see  the  nearer  G.  „      29 

angers  of  the  G's  for  evil  done  „      62; 

FaUing  about  their  shrines  before  their  G's,  „    105 

yesternight,  To  me,  the  great  G  Ar6s,  „     111 

stand  Firm-based  with  all  her  G's.  „    142 

and  quench  The  red  G's  anger,  „     158 

flash  The  faces  of  the  G's—  „     173 

those  who  mix  all  odour  to  the  G's  „     184 

ah  G,  what  a  heart  was  mine  to  forsake  her  The  Wreck  95 

'  would  G,  we  had  never  met ! '  „        102 

but  ah  G,  that  night,  that  night  JDespair  8 

Flashing  with  fires  as  of  G,  „       16 

your  faith  and  a  G  of  eternal  rage,  „      39 

taking  the  place  of  the  pitying  G  that  should  be !  „  42 
'  Ah  G '  tho'  I  felt  as  I  spoke  I  was  taking  the  name 

in  vain — '  Ah  G  '  and  we  turn'd  to  each  other,  „      52 

Ah  G,  should  we  find  Him,  perhaps,  „      56- 

And  if  I  believed  in  a  G,  „      70 

but  were  there  a  (?  as  you  say,  „  101 
Of  a  G  behind  all — after  all — the  great  G  for  aught  that  I 

know  ;  But  the  G  of  Love  and  of  Hell  together —  „    104 

If  there  be  such  a  G,  may  the  great  G  „    106 

Or  power  as  of  the  G's  gone  blind  Ancient  Sage  80 

none  but  G's  could  build  this  house  „           83 

To  lie,  to  lie — in  G's  own  house —  The  Flight  52 

side  by  side  in  G's  free  light  and  air,  „  81 
meet  your  paarints  agin  an'  yer  Danny  O'Roon  afore  G     Tomorrow  57 

if  soa  please  G,  to  the  hend.  Spinster's  S's.  112 

'  thank  G  that  I  hevn't  naw  cauf  o'  my  oan.'  „  116 
Sons  of  G,  and  kings  of  men                                    Locksleij  H.,  Sixty  122 

'  Would  to  G  that  we  were  there '  ?  „                192 

a  G  must  mingle  with  the  game :  „               271 

Waehior  of  G,  man's  friend,  and  tyrant's  foe,  Epit.  on  Gordon  1 
G  the  traitor's  hope  confound !  (repeat)         Hands  all  Round  10,  22,  34 

Pray  G  our  greatness  may  not  fail  „                         31 

Led  upward  by  the  G  of  ghosts  and  dreams,  Demeter  and  P.  5 

when  before  have  G's  or  men  beheld  The  Life  „            29 

Spring  from  his  fallen  G,  „            80 

we  spin  the  lives  of  men,  And  not  of  G's,  „            86 


God 

God  {continued)    he,  the  G  of  dreams,  who  heard  my 

I,  Elrth-Goddess,  cursed  the  G's  of  Heaven.  ^'"'*^""  ''^^  "^"iS 
But  younger  kmdlier  G's  to  bear  us  down,  As  we  bore 
down  the  G's  before  us  ?    G's,  To  quench,  not  hurl 

the  thunderbolt,  joi 

G's  indeed,  To  send  the  noon  into  the  night  "          134 

made  themselves  as  G's  against  the  fear  Of  Death  "          141 

O  (?,  I  could  blaspheme,  '77/,-««„  T ^ 

That  G  would  ever  slant  His  bolt  from  falling  ^^^  81 

trust  myself  forgiven  by  the  G  to  whom  I  kneel  "      86 

Now  G  has  made  you  leper  in  His  loving  care  "      91 

In  the  name  Of  the  everlasting  G,  I  will  live  and  die  "    108 

G  stay  me  there,  if  only  for  your  sake,  Romney's  R.  34 

happy  to  be  chosen  Judge  of  G's,  Death  of  Snone  16 

Pans,  himself  as  beauteous  asaG.  tg 

Paris,  no  longer  beauteous  as  a  G,  "            95 

Before  the  feud  of  G's  had  marr'd  our  peace,  "            S2 

Thou  knowest.  Taught  by  some  G,  "35 

G's  Avenge  on  stony  hearts  a  fruitless  prayer  "            40 

Spummg  a  shatter'd  fragment  of  the  (?^  St   Tel^uwh«<,ia 

in  his  heart  he  cried  '  The  call  of  <? ! '  eienutcfius  lb 

muttering  to  himself  '  The  call  of  6^ '  "            42 
O  G  in  every  temple  I  see  people  that  see 

4.   *u  ®^'  -i.j  o     XT     ..      ,  Akbar's  D.,  Inscriv.  1 

to  be  reconcil'd  ?-No,  by  the  Mother  of  G,  Bandit's  Death  17 

as  G's  own  scnptures  tell,  Charitu  k 

a  woman,  G  bless  her,  kept  me  from  Hell  4 

Vanish'd  shadow-like  G's  and  Goddesses,  Kapiokini  27 

«rvi»™L^hi^T«i^"l  r"^  Sl^^^^"'  ^"f  ™y  ^  ■,  -^"^^^  a  J  Prayer  8 

eodamoighty  (God  Almighty)    g  an'  parson  'ud  nobbut 

le  nia  aloan  ^.  p^           g  ^_  ^ 

Do  g  knaw  what  a's  domg  a-taiikm'  o'  mea  ?  45 

But  g  a  moost  taiike  mea  an'  taake  ma  now  "              51 

God-bless-you    Sneeze  out  a  full  G-b-y  right  and 

ri^l*'      1,      lu    J        J     ..,    ^,  Edwin  Morris  m 

Gnpt  my  hand  hard,  and  with  G-h-y  went.  ^ea  Dreams  160 

A  curse  in  his  G-b-y :  t,qa 
Goddess    (See  also  Earth-goddess)    if  thou  canst  0  G 

J^^?''^^''^n    >T        u        o  '                 Lucretius  m 

presented  Maid  Or  Nymph,  or  G,  princess  i  197 

Even  now  the  G  of  the  Past,  Lover's  Tale  i  16 

The  glonous  5-  wreath'd  a  golden  cloud,  Achilles  over  the  T.  5 

for  the  bnght-eyed  g  made  it  burn.  29 

0(?'«,  help  me  up  thither!  Parnassus^ 

flung  the  berries,  and  dared  the  G,  Kaviolani  fi 

believing  that  Peele  the  G  would  wallow  J^apwiam  o 

climb  to  the  dwelling  of  Peelfe  the  Gl  "22 

Vanish'd  shadow-like  Gods  and  G'es,  "      27 

Godfather    G,  rame  and  see  your  boy :  To  F.  D.  Maurice  2 

God-feanng    Altho' a  grave  and  staid  (?-/ man,  Enoch  Arden  112 

hnoch  as  a  brave  G-f  man  Bow'd  himself  down  185 

God-gifted    (?-9  organ- voice  of  England,  "  Milton  Z 

God-m-man    G-i-rnis  one  with  man-in-God,  Enoch  Arden  187 

Godiva     G,  wife  to  that  grim  Earl,  Godiva  12 

Godl^    That  tumbled  in  the  G  deep;  In  Mem.  cxxiv  12 

The  craft  of  kindred  and  the  G  hosts  Guinevere  427 

three  more  dark  days  of  the/?  gloom  Despair  6 

The  G  Jeptha  vows  his  child  ...  The  Flight  26 

n^  r  J"^^,  o^  peoples,  and  Christless  frolic  of  kings.  The  Dawn  7 

God-hke    (See  also  Human-Godlike)    G-l,  grasps  the 

tnple  forks  0/  o?d  sat  Freedom  15 

But  then  mostj?  being  most  a  man.  Zoi;e  and  Duty  31 

Together,  dwarf 'd  or  g,  bond  or  free :  Princess  vii  260 

Her  9  head  crown'd  with  spiritual  fire,  Merlin  and  V.  837 

Thee  the  G,  thee  the  changeless  Akbar's  D.,  Hymm,  4 

Two  !,  faces  gazed  below  ;  PaUce  of  Art  162 

U  (j-l  isolation  which  art  mme,  297 

On  God  and  G  men  we  build  our  trust.  Ode  on  Well.  266 

touch  of  Chanty  Could  hft  them  nearer  G-l  state  Lit.  Squabbles  14 

Beyond  all  dreams  of  G  womanhood,  Tiretin'i  54 

Goest    whither  ?  thou,  tell  me  where  ? '  Day-Dm.,  Depart.  26 

i'Ji  «°  h«  ^-n  I  ".?♦  ^  mock  the  King,  Qaretll  uJl.  292 

thou  g,  be  will  fight  thee  first ;  ^           1295 


270 


Gold 


Goin'  (going)     an'  gied  to  the  tramps  g  by— 

'  Ochone  are  ye  g'  away  ? '     '  G '  to  cut  the  Sassenach 

whate 
'An'  whin  are  ye  g'  to  lave  me  ?  ' 
Going    (See  also  A-Gawin',  Gawin',  Goin')    We  heard  the 
steeds  to  battle  g, 
G  before  to  some  far  shrine, 
I  am  ?  a  long  way  With  these  thou  seest— 
On  a  day  when  they  were  g  O'er  the  lone  expanse, 
They  by  parks  and  lodges  g 
far  end  of  an  avenue,  G  we  know  not  where : 
Narrow'd  her  g's  out  and  comings  in ; 
And  thinner,  clearer,  farther  g  ! 
Give  her  the  glory  of  g  on. 
Give  her  the  wages  of  g  on, 
And  has  bitten  the  heel  of  the  g  year. 
The  year  is  g,  let  him  go ; 
g  to  the  king.  He  made  this  pretext, 
bent  he  seem'd  on  g  the  third  day, 
Bent  as  he  seem'd  on  g  this  third  day, 
Enid  in  their  g  had  two  fears. 
Coming  and  g,  and  he  lay  as  dead 
Coming  and  g,  and  she  lay  as  dead, 
'  G  ?  and  we  shall  never  see  you  more, 
but  in  g  mingled  with  dim  cries  Far  in  the  moonlit 
I  am  J?  a  long  way  With  these  thou  seest^— 
Between  the  g  light  and  growing  night  ? 
I  am  ^  to  leave  you  a  bit — 
•  G  !  you're  g  to  her — kiss  her — 
Good-night.     I  am  g.     He  calls. 
G?    I  am  old  and  sHghted : 
I  was  not  g  to  stab  you. 
Gold  (adj.)     With  that  y-dagger  of  thy  bill 
Bound  by  g  chains  about  the  feet  of  God. 
His  face  was  ruddy,  his  hair  was  g, 
'  If  we  have  fish  at  all  Let  them  be  g ; 
true  hearts  be  blazon'd  on  her  tomb  In  letters  g 

and  azure ! ' 
the  cup  was  g,  the  draught  was  mud.' 
Bound  by  g  chains  about  the  feet  of  God.  jras 

knew  not  that  which  pleased  it  most,  The  raven  ringlet 

or  the  g ;  jtt     n  •      -i  /./> 

r.  1 J  ^!^^^^^,  ^^^^  ^^^^  ^*'"  '^  veering  there  Above  his  four  g  letters )         ^^^  33a 
Gold  (s)     (See  also  (Jloth  of  Gold,  Gowd)    laws  of  marriage 


Village  Wife  33 

Tomorrow  13 
,,      17 

Oriana  15 
On  a  Mourner  17 
M.  d' Arthur  256 
The  Captain  25 
L.  of  Burleigh  17 
Enoch  Arden  359 
Aylmer's  Field  501 
Princess  iv  8 
Wages  5 
,,     10 
Window,  Winter  6 
In  Mem.  cvi  7 
Marr.  of  Geraint  32 
604 
625 
Geraint  and  E.  817 
Merlin  and  V.  213 
644 
Lancelot  and  E.  926 
Pass,  of  Arthur  41 
424 
Lover's  Tale  i  664 
First  Quarrel  80 
81 
Rizpah  86 
Columbus  241 
Bandit's  Death  6 
Blackbird  11 
M.  d' Arthur  255 
The  Victim  35 
Marr.  of  Geraint  670 

Lancelot  and  E.  1345 

Last  Tournament  298 

Pass,  of  Arthur  423 


character'd  in  g 
By  Bagdat's  shrines  of  fretted  g, 
G  glittering  thro'  lamplight  dim. 
With  royal  frame- work  of  wrought  g; 

Elant  in  semblance,  grow  A  flower  all  g 
osomsprest  To  little  harps  of  5?;  ' 

with  cymbals,  and  harps  of  g. 

With  a  crown  of  9  On  a  throne  ? 

I  should  look  like  a  fountain  of  g 

Slowly,  as  from  a  cloud  of  g. 

Disclosed  a  fruit  of  pure  Hesperian  g. 

Brow-bound  with  burning  g. 

Either  from  lust  of  g,  or  Hke  a  girl 

Three  Queens  with  crowns  of  g — 

Cursed  be  the  g  that  gUds  the  straiten'd  forehead 

Every  door  is  barr'd  with  g, 

trapt  In  purple  blazon'd  with  armorial  g. 

Pull  off,  pull  off,  the  brooch  of  g. 

Beneath  a  manelike  mass  of  rolling  g, 

g  that  branch'd  itself  Fine  as  ice-ferns 

made  pleasant  by  the  baits  Of  g  and  beauty 

heaps  of  living  g  that  daily  grow,  ' 

swore  Not  by  the  temple  but  the  g, 
but  a  gulf  of  ruin,  swallowing  g, 
a  long  reef  of  g,  Or  what  seem'd  g : 
Still  so  much  g  was  left ; 
Wreck'd  on  a  reef  of  visionary  g.' 
silken  hood  to  each,  And  zoned  with  g ; 
Canie  furrowing  all  the  orient  into  g. 
P'ruit,  blossom,  viand,  amber  wine,  and  g, 
gemUke  eyes,  And  g  and  golden  heads  ; 


Isabel  16 

Arabian  Nights  7 

18 

Ode  to  Memory  8? 

The  Poet  24 

Sea-Fairies  4 

Dying  Swan  32 

The  Merman  6 

The  Mermaid  18 

Elednore  73 

(Enone  66 

D.ofF.  Women  128 

M.  d' Arthur  127 

198 

Locksley  Hall  62 

100- 

Godiva  §2 

Lady  Clare  39 

Aylmer's  Field  68 

221 

487 

655 

794 

Sea  Dreams  79 

127 

130 

139 

Princess  ii  18 

„       Hi  18 

iv  35 

481 


Gold 


271 


Golden 


all  the  g  That  veins  the  world  were 


Princess  iv  542' 
„       V  513 


Gold  (s)  (continued) 

pack'd 
A  single  band  of  g  about  her  hair, 
Under  the  cross  of  g  That  shines  over  city  and 

river, 
Steel  and  g,  and  corn  and  wine. 
Whose  crying  is  a  cry  for  g : 
And  you  with  g  for  hair ! 
And  you  my  wren  with  a  crown'  of  g, 
gossanners  That  twinkle  into  green  and  g : 
Israel  made  their  gods  of  g, 
Ring  out  the  narrowing  lust  of  g; 
the  flying  g  of  the  ruin'd  woodlands 
And  left  his  coal  all  turn'd  into  g 
lost  for  a  Uttle  her  lust  of  g, 
egg  of  mine  Was  finer  g  than  any  goose  can  lay ; 
'  G  ?  said  I  g  ? — ay  then,  why  he,  or  she, 
had  the  thing  I  spake  of  been  Mere  g — 
howsoe'er  at  first  he  proSer'd  g, 
and  left  us  neither  g  nor  field.' 
'  Whether  would  ye  ?  y  or  field  ?  ' 
—thrice  the  g  for  Uther's  use  thereof, 
a  cloth  of  palest  g,  Which  down  he  laid 
gay  with  g  In  streaks  and  rays. 
There  swung  an  apple  of  the  purest  g, 
Affirming  that  his  father  left  him  g, 
a  dress  All  branch'd  and  flower'd  with  g, 
strown  With  g  and  scatter'd  coinage, 
In  green  and  g,  and  plumed  with  green 
A  twist  of  g  was  round  her  hair; 
The  snake  of  g  slid  from  her  hair, 
down  his  robe  the  dragon  writhed  in  g, 
Sir  Lancelot's  azure  lions,  crown'd  with  g, 
both  the  wings  were  made  of  g, 
a  crown  of  g  About  a  casque  all  jewels ; 
third  night  hence  will  bring  thee  news  of  g.' 
children  sat  in  white  with  cups  of  g, 
heard  it  ring  as  true  as  tested  g.' 
Either  from  lust  of  g,  or  like  a  girl 
Three  queens  with  crowns  of  g : 
Or  Cowardice,  the  child  of  lust  for  g, 
rose  as  it  were  breath  and  steam  of  g, 
nymph  and  god  ran  ever  round  in  g — 
G,  jewels,  arms,  whatever  it  may  be. 
after  he  had  shown  him  gems  or  g, 
an  Eastern  gauze  With  seeds  of  g, 
We  brought  this  iron  from  our  isles  of  g. 
G?  I  had  brought  your  Princes  g 
all  The  g  that  Solomon's  navies  carried 
And  gathering  ruthless  g — 
seas  of  our  discovering  over-roll  Him  and  his  g ; 
When  he  coin'd  into  English  g 
and  the  miser  would  yearn  for  his  g, 
make  thy  g  thy  vassal  not  thy  king, 
From  war  with  kindly  links  of  g, 
I  hold  Mother's  love  in  letter'd  g, 
Give  your  g  to  the  Hospital, 
Mere  want  of  g — and  still  for  twenty  years 
g  from  each  laburnum  chain  Drop  to  the  grass. 
Bright  in  spring.  Living  g ; 
Soberer-hued  G  s^ain. 
alchemise  old  hates  into  the-  g  Of  Love, 
When  I  make  for  an  Age  of,  g, 
Ctolden     (See  also  All-golden)    Her  subtil,  warm,  and 

g  breath, 
The  summer  calm  of  g  charity. 
Thou  art  not  steep'd  in  g  languors, 
the  g  prime  Of  good  Haroun 

Alraschid.  (repeat)  Arabian  Nights  10,  21,  32,  43,  54,  65, 

76,  87,  98,  109,  120, 131,  142, 153 
marble  stairs  Ran  up  with  g  balustrade,  Arabian  Alights  118 

The  poet  in  a  9  clime  was  bom,  With  g  stars  above ;  The  Poet  1 

sharp  clear  twang  of  the  g  chords  Runs  up  the 

ridged  sea.  Sea-Fairies  38 

Two  lives  bound  fast  in  one  with  g  ease ;  Circumstance  5 


Ode  on  WeU.  49 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  17 

The  Daisy  94: 

Window,  Spring  4 

11 

In  Mem.  xi  8 

„    xcvi  23 

„      cvi  26 

Maud  I  i  12 

X  11 

,','  ///  vi  39 

Gareth  and  L.  43 

63 

66 

336 

339 

340 

344 

389 

910 

Marr.  of  Geraint  170' 

451 

631 

Geraint  and  E.  26 

Merlin  and  V.  89 

221 

888 

Lancelot  and  E.  435 

663 

Holy  Grail  24a 

410 

Pelleas  and  E.  357 

Last  Tournament  142 

284 

Pass,  of  Arthur  295 

366 

To  the  Queen  ii  54 

Lover's  Tale  i  402 

iv  197 

235 

246 

292 

Columbus  3 

„    105 

„    113 

„     135 

„    140 

The  Wreck  67 

Despair  100 

Ancient  Sage  259 

Epilogue  16 

Helen's  Tower  4 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  33 

The  Ring  428 

To  Mary  Boyle  11 

The  Oak  5 

,,       10 

Akbar's  Dream  163 

The  Dreamer  7 

Supp.  Confessions  60 

Isabel  8 

Madeline  1 


Golden  (continued)    In  a  g  curl  With  a  comb  of  pearl,  The  Mermaid  6 

with  fruitage  golden-rinded  On  g  salvers,  Eleanore  34 

Grow  g  all  about  the  sky ;  „       101 

Nor  g  \axgeas  of  thy  praise.  My  life  is  full  5 

branch  of  stars  we  see  Hung  in  the  g  Galaxy,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  12 

the  g  bee  Is  lily-cradled :  (Enone  29 

And  o'er  him  now'd  a  g  cloud,  „      105 

hair  Ambrosial,  g  round  her  lucid  throat  And  shoulder :  „      178 

As  she  withdrew  into  the  g  cloud,  „       191 

And  cast  the  g  fruit  upon  the  board,  „       226 

wherefrom  The  g  gorge  of  dragons  spouted  forth  Palace  of  Art  23 

cloud  of  incense  of  all  odour  steam'd  From  out  a  g  cup.  „  40 

one  hand  grasp'd  The  mild  bull's  g  horn.  „         120 

the  clouds  are  lightly  curl'd  Round  their  g 

houses.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  113 

A  g  bill !  the  silver  tongue.  The  Blackbird  13 

Should  fill  and  choke  with  g  sand —  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  24 

The  goose  let  fall  a  g  egg  The  Goose  11 

shadow  of  the  flowers  Stole  all  the  g  gloss,  Gardener's  D.  130 

such  a  noise  of  life  Swarm'd  in  the  g  present,  „  179 

lad  stretch'd  out  And  babbled  for  the  g  seal,  Dora  135 

with  g  yolks  Imbedded  and  injellied ;  Audley  Court  25 

A  second  flutter'd  round  her  lip  Like  a  g  butterfly ;  Talking  Oak  220 
Dropt  dews  upon  her  g  head,  „  227 

themselves  Move  onward,  leading  up  the  g  year.  Golden  Year  26 

And  slow  and  sure  comes  up  the  g  year.  „  31 

Thro'  all  the  season  of  the  g  year.  „  36 

Roll  onward,  leading  up  the  g  year.  „  41 

Enrich  the  markets  of  the  g  year.  „  46 

Thro'  all  the  circle  of  the  g  year  ?  '  „  51 

Every  moment,  lightly  shaken,  ran  itself  in  g  sands.  Locksley  Hall  32 
Every  door  is  barr'd  with  gold,  and  opens  but  to  g  keys.  „  100 

mantles  from  the  g  pegs  Droop  sleepily :  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  19 

But  dallied  with  his  g  chain,  „  Revival  31 

And,  stream'd  thro'  many  a  g  bar,  „  Depart.  15 

He  lifts  me  to  the  g  doors  ;  St.  Agnes'  Eve  25 

And  raked  in  g  barley.  Will  Water.  128 

now  she  gleam'd  Like  Fancy  made  of  g  air,  The  Voyage  66 

Buckled  with  g  clasps  before ;  A  light-green  tuft 

of  plumes  she  bore  Closed  in  a  ^  ring.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  25 

Purple  gauzes,  g  hazes,  liquid  mazes,  Vision  of  Sin  31 

I  grew  in  gladness  till  I  found  My  spirits  in  the  g  age.  To  E.  L,  12 

Then,  on  a  gr  autumn  eventide,  Enoch  Arden  61 

first  since  Enoch's  g  ring  had  girt  Her  finger,  „  157 

And  sent  her  sweetly  by  the  g  isles,  „  536 

the  g  lizard  on  him  paused,  „  601 

many  a  silvery  waterbreak  Above  the  g  gravel.  The  Brook  62 

Ringing  Uke  proven  g  coinage  true,  Aylmer's  Field  182 

Had  g  hopes  for  France  and  all  mankind,  „  464 

dark  retinue  reverencing  death  At  g  thresholds ;  „  843 

great  Sicilian  called  Calliope  to  grace  his  g  verse —  Lucretius  94 

slowly  lifts  His  g  feet  on  those  empurpled  stairs  „       135 

that  hour.  My  g  work  in  which  I  told  a  truth  „       260 

And  sweet  girl-graduates  in  their  g  hair.  Princess,  Pro.  142 

ere  the  silver  sickle  of  that  month  Became  her  g  shield,       „  i  102 

read  and  earn  our  prize,  A  g  brooch :  „  Hi  301 

fight  with  iron  laws,  in  the  end  Found  g:  „  iv  76 

'  O  Swallow,  flying  from  the  g  woods,  „  114 

But  led  by  g  wishes,  and  a  hope  „  420 

gems  and  gemlike  eyes.  And  gold  and  g  heads ;  „  481 

sheathing  splendours  and  the  g  scale  Of  harness,  „  v  41 

Creation  minted  in  the  g  moods  Of  sovereign  artists  ;         „  194 

When  dames  and  heroines  of  the  g  year  „  vi  64 

Half-lapt  in  glowing  gauze  and  g  brede,  „  134 

Reels,  as  the  g  Autumn  woodland  reels  „  vii  357 

anthem  roU'd  Thro'  the  dome  of  the  g  cross ;  Ode  on  Well.  61 

we  hear  The  tides  of  Music's  g  sea  Setting  „  252 

Mourn'd  in  this  g  hour  of  jubilee,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  8 

And  mix  the  seasons  and  the  g  hours ;  „  36 

The  g  news  along  the  steppes  is  blown,  W.  to  Marie  Alex,  11 

At  Florence  too  what  g  hours.  The  Daisy  41 

And  snowy  dells  in  a  ^  air.  „  68 

Once  in  a  3  hour  I  cast  to  earth  a  seed.  The  Flower  1 

To  rest  in  a  9  grove,  or  to  bask  in  a  summer  sky :  Wages  9 

Fixt  by  their  cars,  waited  the  g  dawn.  Spec,  of  Iliad  22 


Golden 


272 


Gone 


Golden  (contimted)    Here  is  the  g  close  of  love, 
For  this  is  the  g  morning  of  love, 
That  sittest  ranging  g  hair ; 
To  thee  too  comes  the  g  hour  When  flower 
And  lives  to  clutch  the  g  keys, 


Window,  Marr.  Morn.  3 

11 

In  Mem.  vi  26 

„       xxxix  6 

,         Ixiv  10 


sun  by  sun  the  happy  days  Descend  below  the  g  hills  „    Ixxxiv  28 

The  promise  of  the  g  hours  ?  „    Ixxxv  106 

call  The  spirits  from  their  g  day,  „  xciv  6 

We  glided  winding  under  ranks  Of  iris,  and  the  g  reed ;       „  ciii  24 

To  him  who  grasps  a  g  ball,  „  cxi  3 

I  too  may  passively  take  the  print  Of  the  g  age —  Maud  /  i  30 

Pale  with  the  g  beam  of  an  eyelash  dead  on  the  cheek,  „         in  3 

Among  the  fragments  of  the  g  day.  „   xviii  70 

A  g  foot  or  a  fairy  horn  Thro'  his  dim  water-world  ?  „   //  ii  19 

The  g  symbol  of  his  kingUhood,  Com.  of  Arthur  50 

But  those  first  days  had  g  hours  for  me,  „  357 

An  'twere  but  of  the  goose  and  g  eggs.'  Gareth  and  L.  40 

And  handed  down  the  g  treasure  to  liim.'  „  61 

And  over  that  a  g  sparrow-hawk.  Marr.  of  Geraint  484 

And  over  that  the  g  sparrow-hawk,  „  550 

Near  that  old  home,  a  pool  of  g  carp ;  „  648 

and  by  and  by  Shps  into  g  cloud,  „  736 

But  g  earnest  of  a  gentler  life  ! '  Balin  and  Balan  208 

Beheld  before  a  g  altar  he  The  longest  lance  „  410 

Had  wander'd  from  her  own  King's  g  head,  „  513 

Perchance,  one  curl  of  Arthur's  g  beard.  Merlin  and  V.  58 

Arriving  at  a  time  of  g  rest,  „  142 

In  these  wild  woods,  the  hart  with  g  horns.  „  409 

And  chased  the  flashes  of  his  g  horns  „  427 

To  make  her  smile,  her  g  ankle-bells.  „  579 

A  league  of  mountain  full  of  g  mines,  „  587 

Made  proffer  of  the  league  of  g  mines,  „  646 

And  set  it  in  this  damsel's  g  hair,  Lancelot  and  E.  205 

Since  to  his  crown  the  g  dragon  clung,  „  434 

and  g  eloquence  And  amorous  adulation,  „  649 

'  Stay  a  little !     One  g  minute's  grace!  „  684 

and  saw  The  g  dragon  sparkling  over  all:  Holy  Grail  263 

In  g  armour  with  a  crown  of  gold  „  410 

his  horse  In  g  armour  jewell'd  everywhere :  „  412 

Merlin  moulded  for  us  Half-wrench'd  a  g  wing ;  „  733 

the  prize  A  g  circlet  and  a  knightly  sword.  Full  fain 

had  Pelleas  for  his  lady  won  The  g  circlet,  PeUeas  and  E.  12 

The  sword  and  g  circlet  were  achieved.  „  170 

'  Why  Ungers  Gawain  with  his  g  news  ?  '  ,,411 

your  flower  Waits  to  be  solid  fruit  of  g  deeds.  Last  Tournament  100 
them  that  round  it  sat  with  g  cups  To  hand  the  wine  „  289 

dark  in  the  g  grove  Appearing,  „  379 

The  g  beard  that  clothed  his  lips  with  light —  „  668 

Went  slipping  back  upon  the  g  days  Guinevere  380 

Ab  in  the  g  days  before  thy  sin.  „        500 

makes  me  die  To  see  thee,  laying  there  thy  g  head,  „        535 

O  g  hair,  with  which  I  used  to  play  Not  knowing !  „        547 

To  which  for  crest  the  g  dragon  clung  Of  Britain  „        594 

glory  cling  To  all  high  places  like  a  g  cloud  For 

ever :  Pass,  of  Arthur  54 

And  some  had  visions  out  of  g  youth,  „  102 

like  a  g  mist  Charm'd  amid  eddies  of  melodious  airs,  Lover's  Tale  i  449 
And  sitting  down  upon  the  g  moss,  „  540 

With  all  her  g  thresholds  clashing,  „  605 

One  g  dream  of  love,  from  which  may  death  „  760 

Did  I  make  bare  of  all  the  g  moss,  „  ii  48 

Well  he  had  One  g  hour — of  triumph  shall  I  say  ?  „  iv  6 

evermore  Holding  his  g  burthen  in  his  arms,  „  89 

(I  told  you  that  he  had  his  g  hour),  „  206 

Smoothing  their  locks,  as  jr  as  his  own  Were  silver,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  56 
The  g  gates  would  open  at  a  word.  „  145 

but  the  g  guess  Is  morning-star  to  the  full  round  of  truth.  Columbus  43 
each  like  a  g  image  was  pollen'd  from  head  to  feet  V.  of  Maeldune  49 
Glowing  with  all-colour'd  plums  and  with  g  masses 

of  pear,  „  60 

sworn  to  seek  If  any  g  harbour  be  for  men  Pref.  Son  19th  Cent.  13 

The  glorious  goddess  wreath'd  a  g  cloud,  Achilles  over  the  T.  5 

Who  reads  your  o  Eastern  lay,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  32 

a  dreadful  light  Uame  from  her  g  hair,  her  g  helm 

And  all  her  g  armour  on  the  grass,  Tiresias  44 


Golden  (continued)    while  the  g  lyre  Is  ever  sounding  in 

heroic  ears  Tiresias  180. 

Remembering  all  the  g  hours  Now  silent,  „      210 

and  call  For  g  music.  Ancient  Sage  197 

One  g  curl,  his  g  gift,  before  he  past  away.  The  Flight  36 
She  that  holds  the  diamond  necklace  dearer  than 

the  g  ring,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  21 
Gone  with  whom  for  forty  years  my  life  in  g 

sequence  ran,  „                47 
From  the  g  alms  of  Blessing  man  had  coin'd 

himself  a  curse :  „                87 

flashing  out  from  many  a  g  phrase ;  To  Virgil  8 

G  branch  amid  the  shadows,  „         27 

blind  force  and  brainless  will  May  jar  the  g  dream  Freedom  16 

lavish  all  the  g  day  To  make  them  wealthier  Poets  and  their  B.  3 
at  her  girdle  clash  The  g  keys  of  East  and  West.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  4 

have  I  made  the  name  A  g  portal  to  my  rhyme :  „                   16 

Fifty  times  the  g  harvest  fallen.  On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  2 

'  Hail  to  the  glorious  G  year  of  her  Jubilee  ! '  „                  65 
To  send  my  life  thro'  olive-yard  and  vine  And 

g  grain,  Demeter  and  P.  Ill 
Fame  blowing  out  from  her  g  trumpet  a  jubilant 

challenge  Vastness  21 

debtless  competence,  g  mean ;  „         24 

'  Thy  hair  Is  g  like  thy  Mother's,  not  so  fine.'  The  Ring  104 
for  twenty  years  Bound  by  the  g  cord  of  their 

first  love—  „         429 

Let  g  youth  bewail  the  friend,  the  wife.  To  Mary  Boyle  53 

The  frost-bead  melts  upon  her  g  hair ;  Prog,  of  Spring  10 

Touch'd  at  the  g  Cross  of  the  churches,  Merlin  and  the  G.  67 

Let  the  g  Iliad  vanish.  Homer  here  is  Homer  there.  Parnassus  20 

she  saw  Him,  climbing  toward  her  with  the  g  fruit,    Beath  of  (Enone  15 

Golden  Fleece  (Inn  sign)    met  the  bailiff  at  the  G  F,  The  Brook  146 

Golden-hair'd    G-h  Ally  whose  name  is  one  with  mine.      To  A .  Tennyson  1 

Golden-hilted     Nor  weapon,  save  a  g-h  brand,  Marr.  of  Geraint  166 

Golden-netted     heart  entanglest  In  a  g-n  smile ;  Madeline  41 

Golden-rail'd     The  light  aerial  gallery,  g-r,  Palace  of  Art  47 

Golden-rinded    with  fruitage  g-r  On  golden  salvers,  Elednore  33 

Golden-shafted    The  Head  of  all  the  g-s  firm,  Princess  ii  405 

Gold-eyed    The  g-e  kingcups  fine ;  A  Dirge  36 

Gold-fringed    upswells  The  g-f  pillow  hghtly  prest :    Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  22 

Gold-green     Flush'd  all  the  leaves  with  rich  g-g,  Arabian  Nights  82 

Gold-lily    While  the  g-l  blows,  Edwin  Morris  146 

Gold-mine    from  the  deep  G-m's  of  thought  D.  of  F.  Women  274 

Gone    (See  also  Agoan,  GoS.n)    Autumn  and  Summer 

Are  g  long  ago  ;  Nothing  will  Die  19 

Life  and  Thought  have  g  away  Deserted  House  1 

I  said,  '  When  I  am  ^  away,  Two  Voices  100 

The  dull  and  bitter  voice  was  g.  „          426 

And  now  those  vivid  hours  are  g,  Miller's  D.  195 

tell  her,  when  I'm  g,  to  train  the  rose-bush    May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  47 

Alack  !  our  friend  is  g.  D.  of  the  0.  Year  47 

all  the  old  honour  had  from  Christmas  g.  Or  g.  The  Epic  7 

'  My  end  draws  nigh ;  'tis  time  that  I  were  g.  M.  d' Arthur  163 

for  the  sake  of  him  that's  o,  (repeat)  Dora  62,  70,  94 

Dora  would  have  risen  and  g  to  him,  „                 77 

The  troubles  I  have  g  thro' ! '  „                150 

prate  Of  penances  I  cannot  have  g  thro',  St.  S.  Stylites  101 

Christ !     'Tis  g :  'tis  here  again ;  „            208 

adoration  to  my  household  gods.  When  I  am  g.  Ulysses  43 

his  spirit  leaps  witliin  him  to  be  ^  Locksley  Hall  115 
But  for  my  pleasant  hour,  'tis  g ;  'Tis  g,  and  let  it 

go.    'Tis  g :  a  thousand  such  have  slipt  Away  WiU  Water.  179 

Well  I  know,  when  I  am  g.  Vision  of  Sin  109 

the  wife —  When  he  was  g — the  children —  Enoch  Arden  132 

So  might  she  keep  the  house  while  he  was  g.  „           140 

Pray'd  for  a  sign  '  my  Enoch  is  he  §»  ?  '  „           491 

'  He  is  g,'  she  thought '  he  is  happy,  „           502 

After  he  was  g.  The  two  remaining  found  „           566 

He  thought  it  must  have  g ;  but  he  was  g  „          694 

'  after  I  am  g,  Then  may  she  learn  I  lov'd  „           834 

when  I  am  g.  Take,  give  her  this,  „           898 

and  these  are  g,  All  g.  The  Brook  186 

breathes  in  April  autumns.    All  are  g.'  „        196 

Leolin,  coming  after  he  was  g,  Aylmer's  Field  234 


Gone 


273 


Good 


Gone  (continued)    you  had  g  to  her,  She  told,  perforce ;  Princess  iv  329 

found  that  you  had  g,  Ridd'n  to  the  hills,  „           342 

many  a  pleasant  hour  with  her  that's  g,  „       vi  247 

We  brook  no  further  insult  but  are  g.'  „          342 

Blanche  had  g,  but  left  Her  child  among  us,  „       vii  56 

He  is  gi  who  seem'd  so  great. — G;  Ode  on  Well.  271 

And  Willy,  my  eldest-bom,  is  g,  Grandmother  1 

and  Willy,  you  say,  is  g.  „           8 

I  ought  to  have  g  before  him :  „         14 

But  all  my  children  have  g  before  me,  „         18 

laughing  at  things  that  have  long  g  by.  „         92 

So  Willy  has  g,  my  beauty,  „       101 

he  has  but  g  for  an  hour,— -<?  for  a  minute,  my  son,  „       102 

work  mun  'a  ^  to  the  gittin'  whiniver  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  50 
there  before  you  are  come,  and  g,  Window,  On  the  HiU  14 
G !  G,  till  the  end  of  the  year,  G,  and  the  light 

g  with  her,  „            Gone  1 

(r— flitted  away,  „                     4 

G,  and  a  cloud  in  my  heart,  „                     6 

the  grass  will  grow  when  I  am  g,  „  No  Answer  5 

when  I  am  there  and  dead,  and  g,  „                   11 

Blow  then,  blow,  and  when  I  am  g,  „                   17 

And  learns  her  g  and  far  from  home ;  In  Mem.  viii  4 

'  How  good !  how  kind !  and  he  is  g.'  „          xx  20 

Old  sisters  of  a  day  g  by,  „       xxix  13 

My  prospect  and  horizon  g.  „     xxxviii  4 

She  cries,  '  A  thousand  types  are  g :  „            Ivi  3 

Quite  in  the  love  of  what  is  g,  „    Ixxxv  114 

The  violet  comes,  but  we  are  g.  „             cv  8 

Farewell,  we  kiss,  and  they  are  g.  „       Con.  92 

and  slurring  the  days  g  by,  Maud  /  i  33 

So  many  a  million  of  ages  have  g  „        iv  35 

In  a  moment  they  were  g:  „       ix  12 

lately  died,  G  to  a  blacker  pit,  „           x  6 

Like  some  of  the  simple  great  ones  g  „            61 

He  may  stay  for  a  year  who  has  gr  for  a  week:  „        xviG 

gates  of  Heaven  are  closed,  and  she  is  g.  „    xviii  12 

our  whole  earth  g  nearer  to  the  glow  „            78 

Now  half  to  the  setting  moon  are  g,  „     xxii  23 

Is  it  ^  ?  my  pulses  beat —  „    //  i  36 

It  is  ^ ;  and  the  heavens  fall  in  a  gentle  rain,  „            41 

paid  our  tithes  in  the  days  that  are  g,  „         v  23 

We  have  lost  him :  he  is  gr :  Ded.  of  Idylls  15 

So  that  the  realm  has  g  to  wrack:  Com.  of  Arthur  227 

And  g  as  soon  as  seen.  „            377 

Arthur  all  at  once  g  mad  replies,  Gareth  and  L.  863 

younger  brethren  have  g  down  Before  this  youth ;  „          1102 

a  prince  whose  manhood  was  all  g,  Marr.  of  Geraint  59 

Reproach  you,  saying  all  your  force  is  gr  ?  „               88 

with  the  morning  all  the  court  were  g.  „              156 

when  the  fourth  part  of  the  day  was  g,  Geraint  and  E.  55 

For  the  man's  love  once  g  never  returns.  „            333 

when  I  am  g  Who  used  to  lay  them !  Balin  and  Balan  140 

King  Had  gazed  upon  her  blankly  and  g  by :  Merlin  and  V.  161 

lists  of  such  a  beara  as  youth  g  out  „            245 

Writ  in  a  language  that  has  long  g  by.  „            674 

Was  one  year  g,  and  on  returning  found  „            708 

No  sooner  g  than  suddenly  she  began :  Lancelot  and  E.  96 

take  Their  pastime  now  the  trustful  King  is  gl'  „            101 

g  sore  wounded,  and  hath  left  his  prize  „            530 

I  mean  nothing :  so  then,  get  you  g,  „            776 

on  his  helm,  from  which  her  sleeve  had  g.  „            982 

His  very  shield  was  g ;  only  the  case,  „            990 

when  the  ghostly  man  had  come  and  g,  „          1101 

the  heat  is  g  from  out  my  heart,  „          1116 

those  that  had  g  out  upon  the  Quest,  Holy  Grail  722 

Lost  in  the  quagmire  ? — lost  to  me  and  g,  ,,          892 

y  he  is  To  wage  grim  war  against  Sir  Lancelot  Guinevere  192 

By  couriers  g  before ;  and  on  again,  ,.          396 

listening  till  those  armed  steps  were  g,  „          585 

'  G — my  lord !    G  thro'  my  sin  to  slay  and  to  be  slain !  „          612 

O,  my  lord  the  King,  My  own  true  lord !  „          616 

'  My  end  draws  nigh ;  'tis  time  that  I  were  g.  Pass,  of  Arthur  331 

and  he  groan'd,  '  The  King  is  g.'  »            443 

had  g  Surely,  but  for  a  wlusper,  Lover's  Tale  iv  19 


Gone  (continued)    he  told  me  that  so  many  years  had 

9  by,  First  Quarrel  36 

Flesh  of  my  flesh  was  g,  Rizpah  51 

if  my  boy  be  g  to  the  fire  ?  „      78 

half  of  the  short  summer  night  was  g.  The  Revenge  65 

for  a  face  G  in  a  moment — strange.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  94 

Sa  'is  taail  wur  lost  an'  'is  boobks  wur  g  Village  Wife  87 

sa  o'  coorse  she  be  g  to  the  bad !  „          98 
(Hath  he  been  here— not  found  me—g  again  ?         Sir.  J.  OldcasUe  152 

She  is  g — but  you  will  tell  the  King,  Columbus  234 

G !  He  will  achieve  his  greatness.  Tiresias  167 

the  master  g.     G  into  darkness,  „        201 

And  g — that  day  of  the  storm —  The  Wreck  148 

Hence !  she  is  g' !  can  I  stay  ?  Despair  113 

'  Lost  and  g  and  lost  and  g ! '  Ancient  Sage  224 

this  Hall  at  last  will  go— perhaps  have  g.  The  Flight  27 

He's  g  to  the  States,  aroon,  Tomorrow  49 
dhry  eye  thin  but  was  wet  for  the  frinds  that 

was  gl  „          83 

G  the  fires  of  youth,  the  follies,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  39 

G  like  fires  and  floods  and  earthquakes  „               40 

G  the  tyrant  of  my  youth,  „               43 

O  the  comrades  of  my  bivouac,  „               45 

g  as  all  on  earth  will  go.  „               46 

G  with  whom  for  forty  years  my  life  „               47 

G  our  sailor  son  thy  father,  „               55 

G  thy  tender-natured  mother,  „               57 

(?  for  ever!     Ever?  no —  „               65 

G  the  cry  of '  Forward,  Forward,'  „                73 

till  ten  thousand  years  have  g.  „               78 

G  at  eighty,  mine  own  age,  „              281 
Midnight — and  joyless  June  g  by,                           Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  9 

O  THOU  so  fair  in  summers  g,  Freedom  1 
Child,  when  thou  wert  g,  I  envied  human  wives,         Demeter  and  P.  52 

an'  screeiid  like  a  Howl  g  wud —  Owd  Rod  76 

So  far  g  down,  or  so  far  up  in  life.  The  Ring  193 

Laid  on  her  table  overnight,  was  g ;  „         277 

g !  and  g  in  that  embrace !  „         443 

but  dead  so  long,  g  up  so  far,  „         462 

Is  memory  with  your  Marian  g  to  rest.  To  Mary  Boyle  13 

bewail  the  friend,  the  wife,  For  ever  g.  „             54 
Good  (adj.)    the  golden  prime  Of  ^  Haroun 

Abaschid.  Arabian  Nights  11,  22,  33,  44,  55,  66, 

77,  88,  99,  110, 121,  132, 143, 154 

But  g  things  have  not  kept  aloof.  My  life  is  fvU  2 
humming  of  the  drowsy  pulpit-drone  Half  God's  g 

sabbath.  To  J.  M.  K.  11 

'  In  some  g  cause,  not  in  mine  own,  Two  Voices  148 

'  Yea ! '  said  the  voice,  '  thy  dream  was  g,  „            157 

Lean'd  on  him,  faithful,  gentle,  g,  „            416 
he  set  and  left  behind  The  g  old  year,  the  dear 

old  time.  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  6 

And  that  g  man,  the  cleigyman,  has  told  me 

words  of  peace.  „            Con.  12 

'  The  Legend  of  G  Women,'  long  ago  Sung  D.  of  F.  Women  2 

Lest  one  g  custom  should  corrupt  the  world.  M.  d' Arthur  242 
'  Come  With  all  g  things,  and  war  shall  be  no 

more.'  „      Ep.  28 

Who  read  me  rhymes  elaborately  g,  Edwin  Morris  20 

G  people,  you  do  ill  to  kneel  to  me.  St.  S.  Stylites  133 

The  g  old  Summers,  year  by  year  Talking  Oak  39 

slow  sweet  hours  that  bring  us  all  things  g,  Love  and  Duty  57 

And  all  g  things  from  evil,  „          _    59 

It  is  not  bad  but  g  land,  Amphion  6 

My  g  blade  carves  the  casques  of  men,  Sir  Galahad  1 

Like  all  g  things  on  earth !  WUl  Water.  202 

I  hold  it  g,  g  things  should  pass :  „            205 

I  hold  thee  dear  For  this  g  pint  of  port.  „            212 

We  felt  the  g  ship  shake  and  reel.  The  Voyage  15 

Wine  is  g  for  shnvell'd  lips.  Vision  of  Sin  79 

Virtue ! — to  be  g  and  just—  „          111 

Then  her  g  Philip  was  her  all-in-all,  Enoch  Arden  525 

But  Miriam  Lane  was  g  and  garrulous,  „            700 

Heard  the  g  mother  softly  whisper  '  Bless,  Aylmer's  Field  187 

Till  after  our  g  parents  past  away  „            358 


Good 


274 


Good 


Good  (adj.)  (continued)    plagued  themselves  To  sell  her, 

those  g  j)arents,  for  her  good.  Aylmer's  Field  483 

And  bad  him  with  g  heart  sustain  himself —  „            544 

'  Not  fearful ;  fair,'  Said  the  g  wife.  Sea  Dreams  83 

'  Was  he  so  boimd,  poor  soul  ?  '  said  the  g  wife  ;  „            169 

old  Sir  Ralph's  at  Ascalon :  A  g  knight  he !  Princess,  Pro.  27 

For  which  the  g  Sir  Ralph  had  burnt  them  all —  „              236 

But  my  g  father  thought  a  king  a  king ;  „              t  25 

mounted  our  g  steeds,  And  boldly  ventured  „              204 

As  I  m^ht  slay  this  child,  if  g  need  were,  „          ii  287 

Wasps  in  our  g  hive,  „          iv  535 

thus  I  won  Your  mother,  a  g  mother,  a  g  wife,  „           v  166 

Were  we  ourselves  but  half  as  g',  as  kind,  „              201 

When  the  g  Queen,  her  mother,  shore  the  tress  „          vi  113 

and  all  the  g  knights  maim'd,  „              241 

She  needs  must  wed  him  for  her  own  g  name ;  „          vii  74 

O  g  gray  head  which  all  men  knew,  Ode  on  Well.  35 

let  ail  g  things  await  Him  who  cares  not  to  be  great,  „          198 
You  cannot  love  me  at  all,  if  you  love  not  my  g 

name.'  Grandmother  48 

'  Sweetheart,  I  love  you  so  well  that  your  g  name  is  mine.      „  50 

But  he  cheer'd  me,  my  g  man,  „            69 
Maakin'  'em  goa  togither  as  they've  g  right  to  do.    N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  34 

an  'e  died  a  g  un,  'e  did.  „               52 

if  thou  marries  a  ^  un  I'll  leave  the  land  to  thee.  „                56 

'  How  g !  how  kind !  and  he  is  gone.'  In  Mem.  xx  20 

And  all  we  met  was  fair  and  g.  And  all  was  g  „    xxiii  17 

If  all  was  g  and  fair  we  met,  „       xxiv  5 

If  thou  wilt  have  me  wise  and  g.  „         lix  8 

They  sang  of  what  is  wise  and  g  And  graceful.  „      ciii  10 

for  thee  she  grows  For  ever,  and  as  fair  as  g.  „    Con.  36 

My  mother,  who  was  so  gentle  and  g  ?  Mawd  I  vi  67 

Comfort  her,  comfort  her,  all  things  g,  „     II  ii  75 

lily  and  rose  That  blow  by  night,  when  the  season  is  g,  „          v  75 

Have  strength  and  wit,  in  my  g  mother's  hall  GaretJi  and  L.  12 
Since  the  g  mother  holds  me  still  a  child !     G  mother 

is  bad  mother  unto  me !  „            15 

'  Nay,  nay,  g  mother,  but  this  egg  of  mine  „            42 

one,  g  lack,  no  man  desired.  „          106 

'  Son,  I  have  seen  the  g  ship  sail  Keel  upward,  „          253 

With  all  g  cheer  He  spake  and  laugh'd,  „          301 

and  the  sound  was  g  to  Gareth's  ear.  „          312 

Then  strode  a  g  knight  forward,  „          364 

When  some  g  knight  had  done  one  noble  deed,  „          411 

Truth-speaking,  brave,  g  livers,  them  we  enroU'd  „          424 

All  in  a  gap-mouth'd  circle  his  g  mates  Lying  „          511 

And  the  spear  spring,  and  g  horse  reel,  „          523 

g  Queen,  Repentant  of  the  word  she  made  him  swear,  „          526 

'  Son,  the  g  mother  let  me  know  thee  here,  „          550 

heart  of  her  g  horse  Was  nigh  to  burst  with  violence  „          762 

Three  with  g  blows  he  quieted,  but  three  Fled  „          813 

g  cause  is  theirs  To  hate  me,  „          820 

G — I  accord  it  easily  as  a  grace.'  „          975 

Is  all  as  g,  meseems,  as  any  knight  „        1017 

'  Hath  not  the  g  wind,  damsel,  changed  again  ? '  „        1054 

hath  not  our  g  King  Who  lent  me  thee,  „        1070 

O  g  knight-knave — 0  knave,  „        1135 

'  Sir, — and,  g  faith,  I  fain  had  added — Knight,  „        1162 

Saving  that  you  mistrusted  our  g  King  „        1172 
Where  bread  and  baken  meats  and  g  red  wine  Of  Southland,  „        1190 

son  Of  old  King  Lot  and  g  Queen  Bellicent,  „        1231 

and  thy  g  horse  And  thou  are  weary ;  „         1264 

G  lord,  how  sweetly  smells  the  honeysuckle  „        1287 

Care  not,  g  beasts,  so  well  I  care  for  you.  „        1308 
Then  the  g  King  gave  order  to  let  blow  His  horns  Marr.  of  Geraint  152 

There  is  g  chance  that  we  shall  hear  the  hounds :  „                182 


Harbourage  ?  truth,  g  truth,  I  know  not,  save, 
'  Enid,  the  g  knight's  horse  stands  in  the  court ; 
Rest !  the  g  house,  tho'  ruin'd,  O  my  son, 
His  name  ?  but  no,  g  faith,  I  will  not  have  it : 
And  tilts  with  my  g  nephew  thereupon, 
a  costly  gift  Of  her  g  mother,  given  her 
'  Yea,  I  know  it ;  your  g  gift, 
So  sadly  lost  on  that  unhappy  night ;  Your  own 
ggiitl' 


290 
370 
378 
405 
488 
632 
688 


Good  (adj.)  (continued)    Yniol  made  report  Of  that  g  mother 

making  Enid  gay  Marr.  of  Geraint  757 

Dared  not  to  glance  at  her  g  mother's  face,  „  766 

I  charge  thee  ride  before.  Ever  a  g  way  on  before ;      Geraint  and  E.  15 
While  your  g  damsel  rests,  return,  ancl  fetch  „  224 

speak  To  your  g  damsel  there  who  sits  apart,  „  299 

'  Your  sweet  faces  make  g  fellows  fools  And  traitors.  „  399 

like  a  dog,  when  his  g  bone  Seems  to  be  pluck'd  „  559 

G  luck  had  your  g  man,  „  617 

Embracing  Balin,  '  G  my  brother,  hear !  Balin  and  Balan  139 

As  pass  without  g  morrow  to  thy  Queen  ? '  „  252 

'  The  fire  of  Heaven  is  lord  of  all  things  g,  „  452 

Meet  is  it  the  g  King  be  not  deceived.  „  533 

this  g  knight  Told  me,  that  twice  a  wanton  damsel  came,  „  608 

And  made  her  g  man  jealous  with  g  cause.  Merlin  and  V.  605 

G :  take  my  counsel :  let  me  know  it  at  once :  „  653 

foul  bird  of  rapine  whose  whole  prey  Is  man's  g  name :         „  729 

By  which  the  g  Kmg  means  to  blind  himself,  „  783 

Leaving  her  household  and  g  father,  Lancelot  and  E.  14 

How  came  the  lily  maid  by  that  g  shield  Of  Lancelot,  „  28 

That  passionate  perfection,  my  g  lord —  „  122 

'  Nay,  father,  nay  g  father,  shame  me  not  „  207 

till  our  g  Arthur  broke  The  Pagan  yet  once  more  „  279 

Gareth,  a  g  knight,  but  therewithal  Sir  Modred's 

brother,  „  557 

he  went  sore  wounded  from  the  field :  Yet  g  news  too :         „  601 

Then  far  away  with  g  Sir  Torre  for  guide  „  788 

And  your  g  father's  kindness.'  „  945 

Alas  for  me  then,  my  g  days  are  done.'  „  947 

More  specially  should  your  g  knight  be  poor,  „  956 

Give  me  g  fortune,  I  will  strike  him  dead,  „  1071 

for  g  she  was  and  true,  „  1292 

For  g  ye  are  and  bad,  and  like  to  coins.  Holy  Grail  25 

g  saint  Arimathaean  Joseph,  journeying  brought  „  50 

'  God  make  thee  g  as  thou  art  beautiful,'  „        136 

And  g  Sir  Bors,  our  Lancelot's  cousin,  sware,  „        200 

Said  g  Sir  Bors,  '  beyond  all  hopes  of  mine,  „        690 

But  as  for  thine,  my  g  friend  Percivale,  „         861 

then  binding  his  g  horse  To  a  tree,  PeUeas  and  E.  30 

Yet  with  g  cheer  he  spake, '  Behold  me,  Lady,  „  240 

'  Pity  on  him,'  she  answer'd,  '  a  g  knight,  „  386 

'  G  now,  what  music  have  I  broken,  fool  ?  '  Last  Tournament  261 

He  whistled  his  g  warhorse  left  to  graze  „  490 

'  6^ :  an  I  tum'd  away  my  love  for  thee  „  705 

(When  the  g  King  should  not  be  there)  Guinevere  97 

they  talk  at  Almesbury  About  the  g  King  and  his  wicked 

Queen,  „      209 

wrought  confusion  in  the  Table  Roimd  Which  g  King 

Arthur  founded,  „      221 

Said  the  g  nuns  would  check  her  gadding  tongue  „       313 

tales  Which  my  g  father  told  me,  „      317 

Then  she,  for  her  g  deeds  and  her  pure  life,  „      693 

Lest  one  g  custom  should  corrupt  the  world.  Pass,  of  Arthur  410 

breathless  body  of  her  g  deeds  past.  Lover's  Tale  i  217 

There  the  g  mother's  kindly  ministering,  „  iv  92 

So  frighted  our  g  friend,  that  turning  to  me  „  383 

had  need  Of  a  <?  stout  lad  at  his  farm ;  First  Quarrel  18 

To  make  a  g  wife  for  Harry,  „  30 

and  they  never  would  let  him  be  g ;  Eizpah  29 

we  had  always  borne  a  g  name —  „      35 

read  me  a  Bible  verse  of  the  Lord's  g  will  toward  men —  „      61 

We  could  sing  a  g  song  at  the  Plow,  (repeat)  North.  Cobbler  18 

G  Sir  Richard,  tell  us  now,  The  Revenge  26 

'  We  be  all  g  English  men.  „  29 

Your  g  Uncle,  whom  You  count  the  father  of  your 

fortune,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  27 

'  G !  very  like !  not  altogether  he.'  „  136 

And  not  without  g  reason,  my  g  son —  „  287 

bowt  owd  money,  es  wouldn't  goa,  wi'  g  gowd  o'  the 

Queen,  Village  Wife  49 

'  Ay,  g  woman,  can  prayer  set  a  broken  bone  ? '  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  20 
but  the  g  Lord  Jesus  had  had  His  day.'  „  22 

Clean  from  our  lines  of  defence  ten  or  twelve  g  paces  Def.  ofLucknow  62 
Blessing  the  wholesome  white  faces  of  Havelock's 

g  f  usileers,  „  101 


Good 


275 


Goodmorrow 


Good  (adj.)  (continued)    As  g  need  was — thou  hast  come 

to  talk  our  isle.  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  32 

Some  cried  on  Cobham,  on  the  y  Lord  Cobham ;  „  43 

Burnt — g  Sir  Roger  Acton,  my  dear  friend  !  „  79 

drawn  By  this  g  Wiclif  mountain  down  from  heaven,  „  132 

(My  g  friend  By  this  time  should  be  with  me.)  „  138 

I  would  not  spurn  G  counsel  of  g  friends,  „  146 

Chains,  my  g  lord :  in  your  raised  brows  I  read  Columbus  1 

Drove  me  and  my  g  brothers  home  in  chains,  „      134 

O  never  was  time  so  ^ !  V.  of  Maddune  87 

You  needs  must  have  g  lynx-eyes  if  I  do  not  escape 

you  Despair  114 

Steevie  be  right  g  manners  bang  thruf  Spinster's  S's.  66 

Hesper,  whom  the  poet  call'd  the  Bringer  home  of 

all  g  things.     All  g  things  „  185 

G,  this  forward,  you  that  preach  it,  „  216 

When  our  own  g  redcoats  sank  from  sight,  Heavy  Brigade  42 

'e  was  alius  as  ^  as  gowd.  Qwd  Rod  6 

Fur  'e's  moor  g  sense  na  the  Parliament  man  'at  stans 

for  us  'ere,  ^^      13 

an'  I  thowt  o'  the  g  owd  times  'at  was  goan,  „      43 

An'  I  says  '  I'd  be  g  to  tha,  Bess,  if  tha'd  onywaays  let 

ma  be  g,"  ,,      75 

Git  oop,  if  ya're  onywaiiys  g  for  owt.'    And  I  says  '  If  I 

beiint  noiiwaays — not  nowadaiiys — g  fur  nowt —  „       77 

An'  Roa  was  as  9  as  the  Hangel  i'  saavin'  a  son  fur  me.  „      96 

the  g  and  brave !     He  sees  me,  waves  me  from  him.  Happy  18 

G,  I  am  never  weaiy  painting  you.  Romney's  R.  3 

Eh  ?  ^  daay !  g  daay !  thaw  it  bean't  not  mooch 

of  a  daily.  Church-warden,  etc.  1 

Us,  0  Just  and  G,  Forgive,  Poland  11 

such  strange  war  with  something  g,  Two  Voices  302 

'Tis  only  noble  to  be  g.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  54 

waked  with  silence,  grunted  '  G ! '  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  4 

' G !  my  lady's  kinsman \  g\'  Aylmer's  Field  198 

'G:  Your  oath  is  broken:  we  dismiss  you :  Princess  iv  359 

make  us  all  we  would  be,  great  and  g.'  „  599 

Were  we  ourselves  but  hall  as  j,  as  kind,  „         v  201 

Good  (s)     '  She  wrought  her  people  lasting  g ;  To  the  Queen  24 

saw  thro'  life  and  death,  thro'  g  and  ill.  The  Poet  5 

'  And  not  to  lose  the  g  of  life —  Two  Voices  132 

'  I  see  the  end,  and  know  the  g.'  „  432 

or  if  G,  G  only  for  its  beauty,  seeing  not 

That  Beauty,  G,  and  Knowledge,  are  three 

sisters  To With  Pal.  of  Art  8 

Would  love  the  gleams  of  g  that  broke  Love  thou  thy  land  89 

What  g  should  follow  this,  if  this  were  done  ?  M.  d' Arthur  92 

The  drowsy  hours,  dispensers  of  all  g.  Gardener's  D.  185 

the  g  and  mcrease  of  the  world,  (repeat)  Edwin  Morris  44,  51,  92 

some  one  say.  Then  why  not  ill  for  g  ?  Lcme  and  Duty  27 

when  shall  all  men's  g  Be  each  man's  rule,  Golden  Year  47 

Subdue  them  to  the  useful  and  the  g.  Ulysses  38 

But  for  some  true  result  of  g  Will  Water.  55 

He  never  meant  us  anything  but  g.  Enoch  Arden  887 

To  sell  her,  those  good  parents,  for  her  g.  Aylmer's  Field  483 

contriving  their  dear  daughter's  g —  „  781 

the  two  contrived  their  daughter's  g —  „  848 

all  things  work  together  for  the  g  Of  those ' —  Sea  Dreams  158 

All  for  the  common  g  of  womankind.'  Princess  ii  209 

'  All  g  go  with  thee T  take  it  Sir,'  „        vi  207 

Whole  in  himself,  a  conmion  g.  Ode  on  Well.  26 

Till  each  man  find  his  own  in  all  men's  g.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  37 

Embrace  her  as  my  natural  g ;  In  Mem.  Hi  14 

And  what  to  me  remains  oi  g?  „  vi  42 

Her  hands  are  quicker  unto  g :  „  xxxiii  10 

Enjoying  each  the  other's  g :  „      xlvii  10 

Hold  thou  the  g :  define  it  well :  „        liii  13 

g  Will  be  the  final  goal  of  ill,  „  liv  1 

I  can  but  trust  that  g  shall  fall  „  14 

I  see  thee  sitting  crown'd  with  g,  „    Ixxxiv  5 

lead  The  closing  cycle  rich  in  g.  „  cv  28 

Ring  in  the  common  love  of  g.  „        cvi  24 

High  nature  amorous  of  the  g,  „  cix  9 

Yet  O  ye  mysteries  of  g,  „    cxxviii  8 

Behold,  I  dream  a  dream  of  g,  „   cxxix  11 


Good  (s)  (continued)  Full  to  the  banks,  close  on  the  promised  g.  Maud  I  xviii  6 

Nor  let  any  man  think  for  the  public  g,  „        II  v^ 

It  is  better  to  fight  for  the  g  ,'     ///  m  57 

I  needs  must  disobey  him  for  his  g ;  Geraint  and  E.  135 

what  they  long  for,  g  in  friend  or  foe,  „             876 

This  g  is  in  it,  whatsoe'er  of  ill,  Lancelot  and  E.  1207 

as  the  base  man,  judging  of  the  g,  Pdleas  and  E.  80 

None  knows  it,  and  my  tears  have  brought  me  g :  Guinevere  202 

What  g  should  follow  this,  if  this  were  done  ?  Pass,  of  Arthur  260 

fur  they  weant  niver  coom  to  naw  g.  Village  Wife  96 

power  hath  work'd  no  g  to  aught  that  lives,  Tiresias  77 

running  edter  a  shadow  of  g ;  Despair  92 

No  ill  no  g !  such  counter-terms,  my  son,  Ancient  Sage  250 

G,  for  G  is  G,  he  follow'd,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  60 
Truth  for  truth,  and  giorgl    The  G,  the  True, 

the  Pure,  the  Just —  „              71 

preach'd  a  Gospel,  all  men's  g;  „              89 

Evolution  ever  chmbing  after  some  ideal  g,  „            199 

Powers  of  G,  the  Powers  of  111,  „            273 

whatsoe'er  He  wrought  of  g  or  brave  Epilogue  76 

That  wanders  from  the  public^.  Freedom  26 
Shall  we  not  thro'  g  and  ill                                Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  33 

Goodbye    when  he  came  to  bid  me  g.  First  Quarrel  78 

I  had  bid  him  my  last  g ;  Rizpah  41 

Good  Fortune    prosperously  sail'd  The  ship  '  G  F,'  Enoch  Ardm  528 

blown  by  baffling  winds.  Like  the  G  F,  „          629 

Goodlier    '  A  goodly  youth  and  worth  a  g  boon !     But 

so  thou  wilt  no  g,  then  must  Kay,  Gareth  and  L.  450 

(And  there  were  none  but  few  g  than  he)  „            744 

When  all  the  g  guests  are  past  away,  Last  Toumammtl58 

Goodliest     The  g  fellowship  of  famous  knights  M.  d' Arthur  15 

he  seem'd  the  g  man  That  ever  among  ladies  Lancdot  and  E.  254 

Reputed  the  best  knight  and  g  man,  Guinevere  382 

The  g  fellowship  of  famous  knights  Pass,  of  Arthur  183 

Goodly    In  sooth  it  was  a  g  time,  Arabian  Nights  20 

A  g  place,  a  g  time,  (repeat)  „       31,  53 

A  g  time,  For  it  was  in  the  golden  prime  „              42 

When  on  my  g  charger  borne  Sir  Galahad  49 

Nor  dealing  g  counsel  from  a  height  Aylmer's  Fidd  172 

and  g  sheep  In  haste  they  drove.  Spec,  of  Iliad  4 
her  great  and  g  arms  Stretch'd  under  all  the  cornice   Gareth  and  L.  218 

Had  made  his  g  cousin,  Tristram,  knight,  „            394 

The  g  knight !     What !  „            402 

'  A  g  youth  and  worth  a  goodlier  boon !  „            449 

For  strong  thou  art  and  g  therewithal,  „            878 

dreams  Of  g  supper  in  the  distant  pool,  „          1187 

'  Full  merry  am  I  to  find  my  g  knave  „          1291 
following  with  a  costrel  bore  The  means  of  g 

welcome,  Marr.  of  Geraint  387 

And  roam  the  g  places  that  she  knew ;  „              646 

Ah,  dear,  he  took  me  from  a  g  house,  „              708 

Yea,  and  he  brought  me  to  a  9  house ;  „              713 

Men  saw  the  g  hills  of  Somerset,  „              828 

But  not  to  g  hUl  or  yellow  sea  „              830 

Three  horses  and  three  g  suits  of  arms,  Geraint  and  E.  124 

Then  cried  Geraint  for  wine  and  g  cheer  „             283 

Some  g  cognizance  of  Guinevere,  Balin  and  Balan  195 

till  his  g  horse.  Arising  wearily  at  a  fallen  oak,  „              424 

tramples  on  the  g  shield  to  show  His  loathing  „              550 

and  unhooded  casting  off  The  g  falcon  free ;  Merlin  and  V.  131 

for  g  hopes  are  mine  That  Lancelot  is  no  more  Lancelot  and  E.  601 

she  should  ask  some  g  gift  of  him  For  her  own  self  „             912 

while  I  drank  the  brook,  and  ate  The  g  apples,  Holy  Grail  388 

'  Where  is  that  g  company,'  said  I,  „         432 

And  then  I  chanced  upon  a  g  town  „  •      573 

Saving  the  g  sword,  his  prize,  Pdleas  and  E.  359 
A  g  brother  of  the  Table  Round  Swung  by 

the  neck  :  Last  Tournament  431 

and  felt  the  g  hounds  Yelp  at  his  heart,  „             503 

with  g  rhyme  and  reason  for  it —  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  92 

but  the  g  view  Was  now  one  blank.  Death  of  (Enone  3 

Goodman    her  small  g  Shrinks  in  his  arm-chair  Princess  v  453 

Goodmorrow    G — Dark  my  doom  was  here,  Balin  and  Balan  623 

'  Goodnight,  true  brother  here !  g  there !  „              628 

Speaking  a  still  g-m  with  her  eyes.  Lancdot  and  E.  1033 


Goodness 


276 


Goodn^    eye  which  watches  guilt  And  g,  /„  Mem.  xxvi  6 

BOOdnight    (j,  g,  when  I  have  said  g  for  evermore,  May  Queen  N.  T's  E  41 


Grace 


(j,  sweet  mother :  call  me  before  the  day  is  bom 
G !  for  we  shall  never  bid  again  Good  morrow— 
nune  agam  should  darken  thine,  G,  true  brother,' 
'  (?,  true  brother  here !  goodmorrow  there ! 
the  stout  Prince  bad  him  a  loud  g-n. 
G-n.    I  am  going.    He  calls, 
and  soa  little  Dick,  g-n. 

Goods    with  what  she  brought  Buy  g  and  stores 

Bought  Annie  g  and  stores, 
shelf  and  comer  for  the  g  and  stores. 
Goodwill    G'  to  me  as  well  as  all — 

Peace  and  g,  g  and  peace,  Peace  and  g, 

Bible  verse  of  the  Lord's  g  w  toward  men 

Goose    (.See  also  Wild-goose)    He  held  a  g  upon  his  arm 
take  the  g,  and  keep  you  warm,  ' 

She  caught  the  white  g  by  the  leg,  A  g — 
The  g  let  fall  a  golden  egg 
She  dropt  the  g,  and  caught  the  pelf, 
more  the  white  g  laid  It  clack'd  and  cackled  louder. 
Go,  take  the  g,  and  wring  her  throat, 
The  g  flew  this  way  and  flew  that. 
He  took  the  g  upon  his  arm, 
Quoth  she,  '  The  Devil  take  the  g, 
He  praised  his  hens,  his  geese,  his  guinea-hens  • 
From  the  long-neck'd  geese  of  the  world  ' 

'  Being  a  g  and  rather  tame  than  wild, 
'twere  but  of  the  g  and  golden  eggs.' 
egg  of  mine  Was  finer  gold  than  any  g  can  lay; 
rams  and  ^eese  Troop'd  round  a  Paynim  harper 
swine,  goats,  asses,  geese  The  wiser  fools, 
Gorge  (s)    {See  also  Mountain-goi^e)    roaring  foam 
into  the  g  Below  us, 
The  g's,  opening  wide  apart,  reveal 
craggy  le(%e  High  over  the  blue  g, 
golden  g  of  dragons  spouted  forth  A  flood 
Sat  often  in  the  seaward-gazing  g, 
Downward  from  his  mountain  g 
Thro'  the  long  g  to  the  far  light 
Gorge  (verb)    Gave  to  the  garbaging  war-hawk  to 

9  it, 
Gorged    snake-hke  slimed  his  victim  ere  he  g  • 
We  issued  g  with  knowledge,  ' 

Dropt  off  g  from  a  scheme  that  had  left  us  flaccid 
we  stay'd  three  days,  and  we  g  and  we  madden'd 
giddy  besides  with  the  fruits  we  had  g, 
Gorgeous    And  title-scrolls  and  g  heraldries, 
this  is  he  Worthy  of  our  g  ntes, 
Starr'd  from  Jehovah's  g  armouries, 
That  rollest  from  the  g  gloom  Of  evening 
Without  a  mirror,  in  the  g  gown  ; 
Nor  meanly,  but  with  g  obsequies, 
Mixt  with  the  g  west  the  Ughthouse  shone, 
Raise  a  stately  memorial.  Make  it  regally  g, 
Gorgon    stared  upon  By  ghastlier  than  the  G  head, 
G<»gonised    G  me  from  head  to  foot 
Gorlois    ThisisthesonofG,  not  the  King; 

Some  calling  Arthur  bom  of  G,  Others  of  Anton  ? 
The  prince  and  warrior  G,  he  that  held 
But  she,  a  stainless  wife  to  G, 
That  G  and  King  Uther  went  to  war :  And  over- 
thrown was  G  and  slain, 
many  hated  Uther  for  the  sake  Of  G. 
a  son  of  G  he,  Or  else  the  child  of  Anton, 
bom  the  son  of  G,  after  death, 
'  Daughter  of  G  and  Ygerne  am  I ; ' 
and  dark  Was  G,  yea  and  dark  was  Uther  too, 
those  Who  call'd  him  the  false  son  of  G  • 
Qorae    blaze  of  g,  and  the  blush  Of  millions 
Gospel    The  G,  the  Priest's  pearl, 
Ah  rather.  Lord  than  that  thy  G, 
preach'd  a  G,  all  men's  good ; 
Gossamer  (adj.)    Had  seem'd  a  g  filament  up  in  air 
Gossamer  («)    To  trip  a  tigress  with  a  y, 


49 

Balin  and  Balan  622 

626 

628 

Geraint  and  E.  361 

Bizpah  86 

Owd  Bod  118 

Enoch  Arden  138 

169 

171 

Supp.  Confessions  27 

In  Mem.  xxviii  11 

Bizpah  61 

The  Goose  5 

7 

9 

11 

13 

23 

31 

35 

41 

55 

The  Brook  126 

Maud  I  iv  52 

Gareth  and  L.  38 

40 

43 

Last  Tournament  321 

325 

//  /  were  loved  13 

(Enone  12 

,,    210 

Palace  of  Art  2'i 

Enoch  Arden  589 

636 

Ode  on  Well.  213 

Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  109 

Sea  Dreams  193 

Princess  ii  388 

Maud  I  i  20 

V.  of  Maddune  67 

75 

Aylmer's  Field  656 

Ode  on  Well.  93 

Milton  6 

In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  2 

Marr.  of  Geraint  739 

Lancelot  and  E.  1335 

Lover's  Tale  i  60 

On  Jvh.  Q.  Victoria  45 

Deaih.  of  (Enone  71 

Maud  I  xiii  21 

Com.  of  Arthur  73 

170 

186 

194 


196 

221 

232 

240 

316 

329 

Guinevere  288 

V.  of  Maddune  43 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  116 

119 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  89 

Lover's  Tale  i  413 

Princess  v  170 


Gossamer  (s)  (continued)    all  the  silvery  g's  That  twinkle 

rn««n'^»H4PT»f'J'*^.°^'^=     ,              .  InMem.xil 

Gossip  (adj.)    A  hate  of  g  parlance,  and  of  sway,  isahd  26 

Gossip  (s)     Fearing  the  lazy  g  of  the  port,  Enoch  Arden  335 

iiy  this  the  lazy  g's  of  the  port,  472 

The  sins  of  emptiness,  g  and  spite  Prikcess  ii  92 

like  a  city,  with  g,  scandal,  and  spite ;  Maud  I  iv  8 

Delight  myself  with  g  and  old  wives,  Holy  GraU  553 

Gossip  (verb)     neighbours  come  and  laugh  and  g,  Grandmother  91 

hear  the  magpie  g  Garrulous  under  a  roof  of  pine :    To  F.  D.  Maurice  19 

Gossoon    Thin  a  shp  of  a  ^  call'd,  Tomorrow  18 

W)t    Cr  up  betwixt  you  and  the  woman  there.  Dora  96 

storming  a  hill-fort  of  thieves  He  ^  it ;  Aylmer's  Field  226 

Sir  Ralph  has  g  your  colours :  Princess  iv  594 

JNow  had  you  g  a  fnend  of  your  own  age,  ,       ^i  251 

Stook  to  his  taail  they  did,  an'  'e  'ant  g  shut  on 

v'f^Ju^-        ,u         J  ^-  Farmer,  N.  S.  30 

For  all  have  J,  the  seed.  The  Flower  20 

At  last  he  j;  his  breath  and  answer'd,  Lancelot  and  E.  422 

up  the  side,  sweating  with  agony,  g,  494 

So  Lancelot  g  her  horse,  Set  her  thereon,  Guinevere  122 

we  9  to  the  barn,  fur  the  bam  wouldn't  bum  Owd  Bod  103 

Up  she  g,  and  wrote  him  all.  Forlorn  79 

r.  iJ^^J'f  ^^T®  9— such  a  faithful  aUy  Biflemen  form  !  24 

GOtnic  (adj.)    Gleam  thro'  the  G  archway  in  the  wall.  Godiva  64 

«„*i.-    /  V^f-^^  *  ^^T^"  l^o"se,  Princess,  Pro.  232 

Gothic  (s)    Of  finest  G  lighter  than  a  fire,  92 
Gotten    {See  also  Well-gotten)    you  have  g  the  wings  of 

,,  ^0^,^'              ,  ,  Window,  Ay  15 

1!"  1^  ^  .T^  ^^""7^'      u  .  Owd  Bod  51 

when  Moother  'ed  g  to  bed,  53 

Gourd     By  heaps  of  g's,  and  skins  of  wine.  Vision  of  Sin  13 

In  us  true  growth,  in  her  a  Jonah's  g,  Princess  iv  311 

Gout    5f  and  stone,  that  break  Body  toward  death,  Lucretius  153 

Pw,  ft    U'  ^"^  \^  ^  ^"^  "^'^  ^'  Columbus  235 

Gouty    The  ^  oak  began  to  move,  Amvhion  23 

uovem     1  have  no  men  to  g  m  this  wood :  D.  of  F  Wom^n  135 

g  a  whole  life  from  birth  to  death.  Lover's  Tale  i  76 

Governance    And  own  the  holy  g  of  Rome.'  Columbus  190 

Governed      I  g  men  by  change,  and  so  I  sway'd  D.  of  F.  Women  130 
Governess    See  Guvness 
Government    A  land  of  settled  ^,                                 You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  9 

And  manners,  chmates,  councils,  g's,  Ulysses  14 

in  arts  of  g  Elizabeth  and  others ;  Princess  ii  161 

ft«  J^/''  mT  ^°^  fimj/oice  and  tender  g.  Geraint  and  E.  194 

eowd  (gold)    es  wouldn't  goa,  wi'  good  g  o'  the  Queen,  Village  Wife  49 

boooks  mebbe  worth  their  weight  i'  g.'  70 

Onn^^'^^.^""^M^°°i'f^-    V,,  Owd  Bod  Q 

Gown     Her  cap  blew  off,  her  g  blew  up,  The  Goose  51 

She  clad  herself  m  a  msset  g,  Zady  Clare  57 

A  g  of  grass-green  silk  she  wore,                  -  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  24 

they  should  not  wear  our  rusty  g's,  Princess,  Pro.  143 

A  rosy  blonde,  and  m  a  college  g,  a  323 

\^^:X^lrfA'.           .u  ChandTnother  bl 

W,-fT,^?f        ''■'^  ^  ^pv^the  g ;  /„  Mem.  IxxxvU  2 
Without  a  mimr,  m  the  gorgeous  g ;                         Marr.  of  Geraint  739 

At  least  put  off  to  please  me  this  poor  g,  Geraint  and  E.  679 

In  this  poor  g  my  dear  lord  found  me  first,  698 

In  this  poor  g  I  rode  with  him  to  court,  "            700 

In  this  poor  g  he  bad  me  clothe  myself,  "            702 

And  this  poor  g  I  will  not  cast  aside  "            705 

'tw^'^ 'V,'' ?'^'^  *""?  ^'    .  North! Cobbler  41 

all  the  while  I  wur  chaangm'  my  g,  Spinster's  S's.  43 

to  my  f  aace  or  a  teann'  my  g —  gi 

r^JZ^'^n^  ^"  the  younger  g  There  at  Balliol,  To  Master  of  B.  2 

&tr  J^L^^™  f^^^^~^  "'  P"^^  '^^^^'  Gardener's  D.  126 

Graace  (grace)    an'  the  power  ov  'is  G,  North.  Cobbler  73 

r-osl"/  ^^T  ^^  ^^A  ^  ??'\^.  h'^^t'    ,  Church-warden,  etc.  42 

Graate  (grate)    red  as  the  Yule-block  theer  i'  the  q.  Owd  Bad  56 
Graater  (greater)    They  maakes  ma  a  ^  Laady  nor  'er 

fir»hhM' *  An^/'^ir  *^^''     »,         -..  S^insUr'sS's.WO 

ftro«J  ^i^      }  ^^^■■^T'^Jr^}''  •™^'^®'  ^o^^h.  Cobbler  32 

Grace    (*ee  also  Graace)     Victoria— since  your  Boyal  g  To  the  Queen  5 

that  g  Would  drop  from  his^'er-brimming  love,   Supp.  Confessions  112 

i'rom  all  things  outward  you  have  won  A  tearful  g,  Margaret  12 


Grace 


277 


Grail 


Grace  (continued)    I  watch  thy  g ;  and  in  its  place  My  heart      Elednore  127 


God  in  his  mercy  lend  her  g, 

Complaining,  '  Mother,  give  me  g 

'  But  looking  upward,  full  of  g,  He  pray'd, 

and,  with  a  silent  g  Approaching, 

loveliest  in  all  ^  Of  movement, 

all  g  Summ'd  up  and  closed  in  little ; — 

shelter'd  here  Whatever  maiden  g  The  good  old 

Summers, 
So  sweet  a  face,  such  angel  g, 
But  the  tender  y  of  a  day  that  is  dead 
'  Annie,  this  voyage  by  the  g  of  God 
(Claspt  hands  and  that  petitionary  g 
Nor  deeds  of  gift,  but  gifts  of  g  he  forged. 

And  so  much  g  and  power,  breathing  down 

arts  of  g  Sappho  and  others  vied  with  any  man : 

At  last  a  solemn  g  Concluded, 

easy  g,  No  doubt,  for  slight  delay, 

Come,  a  y  to  me !  I  am  your  warrior : 

who  love  best  have  best  the  g  to  know 

and  there  is  C  to  be  had ; 

The  mimic  picture's  breathing  g. 

With  gifts  of  g,  that  might  express 

with  power  and  g  And  music  in  the  bounds 

The  maidens  gather'd  strength  and  g 

manhood  fused  with  female  g  In  such  a  sort, 

Maud  in  the  light  of  her  youth  and  her  g, 

Rich  in  the  g  all  women  desire. 

Some  peculiar  mystic  g  Made  her  only  the  child 

g  that,  bright  and  light  as  the  crest  Of  a  peacock, 

May  nothing  there  her  maiden  g  affright ! 

heaid  that  Arthur  of  his  g-  Had  made 

Treat  him  with  all  g,  Lest  he  should  come  to  shame 


so  my  lance  Hold,  by  God's  g,  he  shall  into  the  mire — 

I  accord  it  easily  as  a  9.' 

and  with  all  g  Of  womanhood  and  queenhood, 

'  Here,  by  God's  g,  is  the  one  voice  for  me.' 

It  were  but  little  g  in  any  of  us, 

I  might  amend  it  by  the  g  of  Heaven, 

such  a  9  Of  tenderest  courtesy. 

Both  g  and  will  to  pick  the  vicious  quitch 

with  how  sweet  g  She  greeted  my  return ! 

To  learn  the  g's  of  their  Table, 

Name,  manhood,  and  a  g,  but  scantly  thine, 

into  that  rude  hall  Stent  with  all  g,  and  not 
with  haJf  disdain  Hid  under  g, 

'  Do  me  this  g,  my  child,  to  have  my  shield 

'  A  ^  to  me,'  She  answer'd,  '  twice  to-day. 

The  g  and  versatility  of  the  man ! 

g's  of  the  comt,  and  songs.  Sighs, 

'  Stay  a  little !    One  golden  minute's  g ! 

while  that  ghostly  g  Beam'd  on  his  fancy, 

'  Ye  might  at  least  have  done  her  so  much  g, 

the  seven  clear  stars — O  g  to  me — 

mighty  reverent  at  our  g  was  he : 

glossy-throated  g,  Isolt  the  Queen. 

'  G,  Queen,  for  being  loved :  she  loved  me  well. 

to  yield  thee  g  beyond  thy  peers.' 

beauty,  g  and  power,  Wrought  as  a  charm 

Who  see  your  tender  g  and  stateliness. 

Had  yet  that  g  of  courtesy  in  him  left 

and — not  one  moment's  g — 

— so,  with  that  g  of  hers.  Slow-moving 

praised  him  to  his  face  with  their  courtly  foreign  g ; 

being  damn'd  beyond  hope  of  g'  ? 

Art  and  G  are  less  and  less : 

the  branching  g  Of  leafless  elm, 

they  do  me  too  much  g — for  me  ? 
Grace  (goddess)    Like  to  Furies,  like  to  G's, 

Muses  and  the  G's,  group'd  in  threes, 

meet  her  G's,  where  they  deck'd  her 
Grace  (verb)    moss  or  musk,  To  g  my  city  rooms ; 

CalUope  to  g  his  golden  verse — 

'  So  ye  will  g  me,'  answer'd  Lancelot, 
Graced    the  glance  That  g  the  giving — 


L.  ofShaloU  iv53 

Mariana  in  the  S.  29 

Two  Voices  223 

Miner's  D.  159 

(Enone  75 

Gardener's  D.  12 

Talking  Oak  38 
Beggar  Maid  13 
Break,  Break,  etc.  15 
Enoch  Arden  190 
The  Brook  112 
Sea  Dreams  192 
Princess  ii  38 
163 
452 
„    to  330 
„    OT223 
W.  to  Marie  Alex.  28 
Grandmother  94 
In  Mem.  Ixxviii  11 
„         Ixxxv  46 
„      Ixxxvii  33 
„  ciii  27 

„  cix  17 

Maud  7  o  15 
„        X 13 
„     xiii  39 
„      xvi  16 
„  xviii  71 
Gareth  and  L.  393 
468 
723 
975 
Marr.  of  Geraint  175 
344 
624 
Geraint  and  E.  53 
861 
903 
Balin  and  Balan  193 
238 
377 


ease  That  g  the  lowliest  act  in 

'  And  yet  it  was 


Lancelot  and  E.  263 
382 
383 

472 

648 

684 

885 

1310 

Holy  Grail  692 

702 

Last  Tournament  509 

602 

743 

Guinevere  143 

190 

436 

Lover's  Tale  i  659 

iv  292 

The  Revenge  99 

Despair  109 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  245 

To  Ulysses  15 

Romney's  R.  27 

Vision  of  Sin  41 

Princess  ii  27 

„     vii  168 

Gardener's  D.  194 

Lucretius  94 

Lancelot  and  E.  223 

Gardener's  D.  178 


Graced  (continued) 

doing  it. 
Graceful    (See  also  All-graceful) 

a  !7  gift- 
Divided  in  a  ^  quiet — paused. 
What  looks  so  little  g :  '  men ' 
Or  deep  dispute,  and  g  jest ; 
They  sang  of  what  is  wise  and  good  And  g. 
The  g  tact,  the  Christian  art ; 
you  keep  So  much  of  what  is  g : 
A  g  thought  of  her  Grav'n  on  my  fancy ! 
Gracefulness    symmetry  Of  thy  floating  g. 
Graceless    Loud  laugh'd  the  g  Mark. 
Gracious    Maud  could  be  g  too,  no  doubt  To  a  lord, 
G  lessons  thine  And  maxims  of  the  mud ! 
For  Lancelot  will  be  g  to  the  rat, 
thine  is  more  to  me — soft,  g,  kind — 
thy  Mark  is  kindled  on  thy  lips  Most  g ; 
Was  g  to  all  ladies,  and  the  same  In  open  battle 
All  is  g,  gentle,  great  and  Queenly. 
— well — that  were  hardly  g.    No ! 
A  life  that  moves  to  g  ends 
A  distant  kinship  to  the  g  blood 
'  A  g  gift  to  give  a  lady,  this ! '    '  But  would  it 
be  more  g '  ask'd  the  girl '  Were  I  to  give 
this  gift  of  his  to  one   That  is  no  lady  ? ' 
'G?     No 'said  he. 
So  g  was  her  tact  and  tenderness : 
the  Lord  be  g  to  me !     A  plot,  a  plot, 
till  the  g  dews  Began  to  glisten  and  to  fall : 
those  were  g  times. 
He  seems  a  g  and  a  gallant  Prince, 
Like  creatures  native  unto  g  act, 
Not  learned,  save  in  g  household  ways. 
Whose  hand  at  home  was  g  to  the  poor: 
Some  g  memory  of  my  friend ; 
Or  Love  but  play'd  with  g  lies, 
Sweet  nature  gilded  by  the  g  gleam  Of  letters, 
As  in  the  presence  ot  a,g  king, 
or  what  had  been  those  g  things, 
meet  The  morrow  mom  once  more  in  one  full  field 

Of  g  pastime, 
woman's  eyes  and  innocent,  And  all  her  bearing  g ; 
therefore  fiatter'd  him.  Being  so  g. 
And  all  her  damsels  too  were  g  to  him. 
So  for  the  last  time  she  was  g  to  him. 
Warm  with  a  g  parting  from  the  Queen, 
this  name  to  which  her  g  lips  Did  lend  such  gentle 

utterance, 
for  the  sake  Of  one  recalling  g  times. 
Household  happiness,  g  children. 
She  dropt  the  g  mask  of  motherhood. 
Watching  her  large  light  eyes  and  g  looks, 
Gradation     Regard  g,  lest  the  soul  Of  Discord 
Grade    Tho'  scaUng  slow  from  g  to  g; 
g's  Beyond  all  g's  develop'd  ? 
To  leap  the  g's  of  life  and  Ught, 
Gradual     Her  g  fingers  steal  And  touch 

while  I  walk'd  with  these  In  Marvel  at  that  g 

change, 
saner  lesson  might  he  learn  Who  reads  thy  g 
process. 
Gradually    And  g  the  powers  of  the  night, 
Graduate    See  Girl-graduates 
Graff    made  a  Gardener  putting  in  a  g. 
Grafted    Disrooted,  what  I  am  is  g  here. 

my  days  have  been  a  life-long  lie,  G  on  half  a  truth ; 
Grail    (See  also  Holy  Grail)    and  the  G  Past,  and  the 
beam  decay'd, 
A  crimson  g  within  a  silver  beam ; 
Because  I  had  not  seen  the  G, 
'  Art  thou  so  bold  and  hast  not  seen  the  G  ? ' 
I,  Galahad,  saw  the  G,  The  Holy  Grail, 
Before  a  burning  taper,  the  sweet  O  Glided  and  past, 
Could  see  it,  thou  hast  seen  the  G ; ' 


Gareth  and  L.  490 

Talking  Oak  233 

Gardener's  D.  156 

Princess  Hi  53 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  24 

„  ciii  11 

„  ex  16 

Lancelot  and  E.  1219 

Lover's  Tale  i  357 

Elednore  50 

Merlin  and  V.  62 

Maud  7  a;  28 

Merlin  and  V.  48 

120 

Last  Tournament  560 

562 

Guinevere  329 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  14 

Eajypy  103 

You  might  have  won  6 

Aylm^r's  Field  62 


240 

Princess  i  24 

ii  191 

316 

iv297 

o213 

vii  27 

318 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  37 

In  Mem.  c  4 

CXXV  I 

Ded.  of  Idylls  39 
Gareth  and  L.  316 
Geraint  and  E.  636 

Holy  GraU  324 
394 
Pelleas  and  E.  120 
122 
175 
558 

Lover's  Tale  i  456 

,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  53 

Vastness  24 

The  Ring  384 

Prog,  of  Spring  19 

Love  thou  thy  land  67 

Two  Voices  174 

Gardener's  D.  240 

In  Mem.  xli  11 

Will  Water.  26 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  19 

Prog,  of  Spring  106 
Princess,  Con.  Ill 

Merlin  and  V.  479 
Princess  ii  220 
Romney's  R.  42 


Holy  GraU  121 
155 
196 
279 
464 
694 
757 


Grail 


278 


Graspest 


Grail  (continued)    And  to  the  Holy  Vessel  of  the  G.'  Holy  Grail  840 

Grain  (com)    four-field  system,  and  the  price  of  </;  Audley  Court  di 

shower  the  fiery  g  Of  freedom  broadcast  Princess  v  421 

A  j)amphleteer  on  guano  and  on  g,  „  Con.  89 

eating  hoary  g  and  pulse  the  steeds,  Spec,  of  Iliad  21 

And  vacant  chaff  well  meant  for  g.  In  Mem.  vi  4 

grown  The  g  by  which  a  man  may  live  ?  „       Uii  8 

And  gave  all  ripeness  to  the  jr,  „  Ixxxi  11 

g  Storm-strengthen'd  on  a  wmdy  site,  Gareth  and  L.  691 

Smuttier  than  blasted  g :  Last  Tournament  305 
and  of  the  g  and  husk,  the  grape  And  ivyberry,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  50 
torpid  mummy  wheat  Of  Egypt  bore  a  ^  as  sweet 

As  that  To  Prof.  Jebh.  6 

thro'  olive-yard  and  vine  And  golden  g,  Bemeter  and  P.  Ill 

From  buried  g  thro'  springing  blade,  „             146 

heats  our  earth  to  yield  us  g  and  fruit,  Akbar's  Bream  105 

Grain  (fibre,  etc.)    Cut  Prejudice  against  they:  Love  thou  thy  land  22 

tho'  I  circle  in  the  g  Five  hundred  rings  Talking  Oak  83 

Nor  ever  lightning  char  thy  g,  „         277 

the  stem  Less  g  than  touchwood,  Princess  iv  333 

And  twists  the  g  with  such  a  roar  „              v  528 

There  dwelt  an  iron  nature  in  the  g:  „              w  50 

Too  prurient  for  a  proof  against  the  g  Merlin  and  V.  487 

Grain  (particle)    A  little  g  of  conscience  made  him  sour.'    Vision  of  Sin  218 

The  city  sparkles  hke  a  ^  of  salt.  WiU  20 

A  little  g  shall  not  be  spilt.'  In  Mem.  Ixv  4 

For  every  g  of  sand  that  nms,  „     cxvii  9 

Have  a  9  of  love  for  me,  Maud  II  ii  53 

When  weight  is  added  only  g  by  g,  Marr.  of  Geraint  526 

Not  a  9  of  gratitude  mine  I  Bespair  62 

in  the  million-millionth  of  a  y  Ancient  Sage  42 

chains  of  mountain,  g's  of  sand  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  208 

Grain  (fast  dye)    one  the  Master,  as  a  rogue  in  g  Princess,  Pro.  116 

Grained    See  Hard-grained 

Granary    find  my  garden-tools  upon  the  g 

floor :  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  45 

gamer'd  up  Into  the  granaries  of  memory —  Lover's  Tale  i  129 

Grand    He  look'd  so  g  when  he  was  dead.  The  Sisters  32 

This  same  g  year  is  ever  at  the  doors.'  Golden  Year  74 

Princess,  six  feet  high,  G,  epic,  homicidal ;  Princess,  Pro.  225 

She  look'd  as  gt  as  doomsday  and  as  grave :  „              i  187 

true  she  errs.  But  in  her  own  g  way :  „           Hi  108 

strange  Poet-princess  with  her  g  Imaginations  „                273 

Or  some  g  fight  to  kill  and  make  an  end :  „            iv  591 

wherein  were  wrought  Two  g  designs ;  „          vii  122 

he  bore  without  abuse  The  g  old  name  of  gentleman,      In  Mem.  exi  22 

A  g  political  dinner  To  half  the  squirelings  near ;  Maud  I  xx  25 

A  g  poUtical  dinner  To  the  men  of  many  acres,  „              31 

Grandchild    I  wish  to  see  My  g  on  my  knees  Bora  13 

Grander    And  roU'd  the  floods  in  ^  space,  In  Mem.  ciii  26 

Grand&lther    I  mean  your  g,  Annie :  Grandmother  23 

Whose  old  g  has  lately  died,  Maud  1x5 

Grandsire    The  boy  set  up  betwixt  his  g's  knees,  Bora  131 

sorcerer,  whom  a  far-off  g  burnt  Princess  i  6 

he  bestrode  my  G,  when  he  fell,  „  it  242 

a  greatness  Got  from  their  G's —  Batt,  of  Brunanburh  16 

Ev'n  her  G's  fifty  half  forgotten.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  41 

Grandson    To  a  g,  first  of  his  noble  line,  Maud  I  xl2 

Late,  my  g !  half  the  morning  have  I  paced  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  1 

Here  is  Locksley  Hall,  my  g,  „            213 

Not  the  Hall  to-night,  my  g\  „            237 

Grange     Upon  the  lonely  moated  g.  Mariana  8 

About  the  lonely  moated  g.  „      32 

So  pass  I  hostel,  hall,  and  g ;  Sir  Galahad  81 

so  by  tilth  and  g.  And  vines.  Princess  i  110 

nail  me  like  a  weasel  on  a  y  For  warning :  „      ii  205 

burnt  the  g,  nor  buss'd  the  milking-maid,  „       v  222 

That  ripple  round  the  lonely  g ;  In  Mem.  xei  12 

No  gray  old  g,  or  lonely  fold,  „             c  5 

Old  Fitz,  who  from  your  suburb  g.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  1 

A  height,  a  broken  g,  a  grove.  Ancient  Sage  223 

Rejoicing  in  the  harvest  and  the  g.  Bemeter  and  P.  127 

Granite    shadowy  g,  in  a  gleaming  pass ;  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  8.  4 

ebb  that  faintly  lipp'd  The  flat  red  y ;  Audley  Court  13 

Grant    '  Good  soul  I  suppose  I  ^  it  thee,  Two  Voices  38 


Grant  {continued)    '  But  if  I  g',  thou  mightst  defend  The 

thesis  Two  Voices  337 

didst  thou  g  mine  asking  with  a  smile,  Tithonus  16 

We  might  be  still  as  happy  as  God  g's  Enoch  Arden  416 

(Altho'  I  g  but  Uttle  music  there)  Sea  Breams  253 

You  g  me  license ;  might  I  use  it  ?  Princess  Hi  235 

1  g  in  her  some  sense  of  shame,  „        iv  349 

G  me  your  son,  to  nurse,  „        vi  298 

g  my  prayer.    Help,  father,  brother,  „            304 

God  g  I  may  find  it  at  last !  Maud  I  HI 

His  face,  as  I  y,  in  spite  of  spite,  „     xiii  8 

G  me  some  knight  to  do  the  battle  for  me,  Gareth  arid  L.  362 

ev'n  that  thou  g  her  none,  „  368 
g  me  to  serve  For  meat  and  drink  among  thy 

kitchen-knaves  „            444 

And  pray'd  the  King  would  g  me  Lancelot  „            856 

G  me  pardon  for  my  thoughts :  Marr,  of  Geraint  816 

if  the  Queen  disdain'd  to  gi  it !  Balin  and  Balan  191 

'  Fairest  I  g  her :  I  have  seen ;  „              356 

g  me  some  slight  power  upon  your  fate,  Merlin  and  V.  333 

And  g  my  re-reiterated  wish,  „            353 

0  g  my  worship  of  it  Words,  as  we  9  grief  tears.  Lancelot  and  E.  1187 
Only  this  G  me,  I  pray  you :  „  1217 
Queen,  if  I  g  the  jealousy  as  of  love,  „            1399 

Granted    Nor  yet  refused  the  rose,  but  g  it.  Gardener's  B.  160 

Perfectly  beautiful :  let  it  be  g  her :  Maud  I  ii  4 

As  fairest,  best  and  purest,  g  me  To  bear  it ! '  Balin  and  Balan  350 

What  should  be  g  which  your  own  gross  heart  Merlin  and  V.  916 

But  takes  it  all  for  g :  Lover's  Tale  i  157 

Sanctuary  g  To  bandit,  thief,  assassin —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  112 
Grape  (fruit)    {See  also  Father-grape)    But  pledge  me 

in  the  flowing  g.  My  life  is  full  15 

And  g's  with  bimches  red  as  blood ;  Bay-Bm.,  Sleep  P.  44 

Let  there  be  thistles,  there  are  g's ;  Will  Water.  57 

skins  of  wine,  and  piles  of  g's.  Vision  of  Sin  13 

drains  The  chalice  of  the  g's  of  God ;  In  Mem.  x  16 

bruised  the  herb  and  crush'd  the  g,  „   xxxv  23 

shun  The  foaming  g  of  eastern  France.  „  Con.  80 

when  my  father  dangled  the  g's,  Maud  I  ill 

this  wine — the  g  from  whence  it  flow'd  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  61 

dangled  a  hundred  fathom  of  g's,  V.  of  Maddune  56 

grain  and  husk,  the  g  And  ivyberry,  choose ;  Be  Prof.,  Two  6.  50 

vines  with  g's  Of  Eshcol  hugeness ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  27 

Are  figs  of  thistles  ?  or  ^'5  of  thorns  ?  Riflemen  form  /  10 

Grape  (shot)    their  masses  are  gapp'd  with  our  g —  Bef.  of  Lucknow  42 

Now  double-charge  it  with  gl  „            68 

Grape-loaded    valleys  of  g-l  vines  that  glow  B.  of  F.  Women  219 

Grape-thicken'd    in  a  bower  G-t  from  the  light,  Elednore  36 

Grapple    And  g's  with  his  evil  star ;  In  Mem.  Ixiv  8 

Grappling    airy  navies  g  in  the  central  blue ;  Locksley  Hall  124 

Grasp  (s)    A  g  Having  the  warmth  and  muscle  Aylmer's  Field  179 

To  give  him  the  g  of  fellowship ;  Maud  I  xiii  16 

g  of  hopeless  grief  about  my  heart.  Lover's  Tale  i  126 

1  clasped  her  without  fear :  her  weight  Shrank  in  my  g,  „  ii  203 
Pity  for  all  that  aches  in  the  g  of  an  idiot  power,  Bespair  43 

Grasp  (verb)    God-like,  g's  the  triple  forks.  Of  old  sat  Freedom  15 

I  will  not  cease  to  g  the  hope  I  hold  Of  saintdom,  St.  S.  Stylites  5 

his  long  arms  stretch'd  as  to  y  a  flyer :  Aylmer's  Field  588 

And  g's  the  skirts  of  happy  chance.  In  Mem.  Ixiv  6 

To  him  who  g's  a  golden  Dall,  „        cxi3 

Than  language  g  the  infinite  of  Love.  Lover's  Tale  i  484 

Grasp'd-Graspt    one  hand  grasp'd  The  mild  bull's  golden 

horn.  Palace  of  Art  119 

there  the  world-worn  Dante  grasp'd  his  song,  „          135 

And  mounted  horse  and  graspt  a  spear,  Gareth  and  L.  691 
long  black  horn  Beside  it  hanging ;  wluch  Sir  Gareth 

graspt,  „          1367 

Thus  Balin  graspt,  but  while  in  act  to  hurl,  Balin  and  Balan  368 

Queen  Graspt  it  so  hard,  that  all  her  hand  Last  Tournament  411 

her  hand  Grasp'd,  made  her  vail  her  eyes :  Guinevere  663 

I  loved  her,  graspt  the  hand  she  lov'd.  Lover's  Tale  i  750 

'  Woman ' — he  graspt  at  my  arm —  The  Wreck  120 
tiny  fist  Had  graspt  a  daisy  from  your  Mother's  grave —    The  Ring  323 

Graspest    Old  Yew,  which  g  at  the  stones  In  Mem.  ii  1 

Dark  yew,  that  g  at  the  stones  „  xxxix  4  . 


Grasping 


279 


Grave 


Grasping    g  the  pews  And  oaken  finials  Aylmer's  Fidd  822 

g  down  the  boughs  I  gain'd  the  shore.  Princess  iv  189 

jfo !  it  was  her  mother  g  her  Marr.  of  Geraint  676 

This  heard  Geraint,  and  g  at  his  sword,  Geraint  and  E.  725 

deathly-pale  Stood  g  what  was  nearest,  Lancelot  and  E.  966 

Oraspt    See  Grasp'd 
Grass    (See  also  Meadow-grass,  Oat-grass,  Sparrow-grass, 

Sword-grass)    the  dull  Saw  no  divinity  in  g,  A  Character  8 

And  seem'd  knee-deep  in  mountain  g,  Mariana  in  the  S.  42 

Make  thy  g  hoar  with  early  rime.  Two  Voices  66 

You  scarce  could  see  the  g  for  flowers.  „        453 

the  bearded  g  Is  dry  and  dewless.  Miller's  D.  245 

The  grasshopper  is  silent  in  the  g :  (Enone  26 

From  level  meadow-bases  of  deep  g  Palace  of  Aril 

above  my  head  in  the  long  and  pleasant  g.    May  Qrieen,  N.  Y's.  E.  32 
petals  from  blown  roses  on  the  g,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  2 

Heap'd  over  with  a  mound  of  g,  „  67 

thro  lush  green  g'es  bum'd  The  red  anemone.  D.  of  F.  Women  71 

A  league  of  g,  wash'd  by  a  slow  broad  stream,  Gardener's  D.  40 

So  light  upon  the  g :  Talking  Oak  88 

He  lies  beside  thee  on  the  g.  „  239 

All  g  of  silky  feather  grow —  „  269 

Or  scatter'd  blanching  on  the  g.  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  12 

'  There  I  put  my  face  in  the  g —  Edward  Gray  21 

High-elbow'd  grigs  that  leap  in  summer  g.  The  Brook  54 

the  Squire  had  seen  the  colt  at  g,  „      139 

Show'd  her  the  fairy  footings  on  the  g,  Aylmer's  Field  90 

With  neighbours  laid  along  the  g,  Lucretius  214 

babies  roll'd  about  Like  tumbled  fruit  in  g ;  Princess,  Pro.  83 

Grate  her  harsh  kindred  in  the  g :  „  iv  125 

Lay  like  a  new-fall'n  meteor  on  the  g,  „  vi  135 

she  sat,  she  pluck'd  the  g,  She  flung  it  „       Con.  31 

I  may  die  but  the  g  will  grow.  And  the  g  will 

grow  when  I  am  gone,  Window,  No  Answer  4 

Spring  is  here  with  leaf  and  g:  „  23 

And,  since  the  g'es  round  me  wave,  In  Mem.  xxi  2 

I  take  the  g'es  of  the  grave,  „  3 

And  tuft  with  g  a  feudal  tower ;  „  cxxviii  20 

From  little  cloudlets  on  the  g,  „     Con.  94 

fall  before  Her  feet  on  the  meadow  g,  Maud  7  d  26 

A  livelier  emerald  twinkles  in  the  g,  „  xviii  51 

their  feet  In  dewy  g'es  glisten'd ;  Gareth  and  L.  928 

when  he  found  the  g  witliin  his  hands  He  laugh'd ;  „  1225 

"'  '      '  Geraint  and  E.  256 

507 

Balin  and  Balan  333 

Merlin  and  V.  33 

621 

649 

Lancelot  and  E.  107 

431 

Boly  Grail  571 

794 

Last  Tournament  233 

„    .         735 

Guinevere  34 

Lover's  Tale  ii  101 

Village  Wife  32 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  13 

Tiresias  45 

Tomorrow  73 


pluck'd  the  g  There  growing  longest 

Tho'  happily  down  on  a  bank  of  g, 

grayly  draped  With  streaming  g,  appear'd, 

'  Here  are  snakes  within  the  g ; 

lived  alone  in  a  great  wild  on  g ; 

Went  back  to  his  old  wild,  and  lived  on  g, 

its  own  voice  clings  to  each  blade  of  g, 

Lay  like  a  rainbow  fall'n  upon  the  g, 

eft  and  snake.  In  g  and  burdock, 

flats,  where  nothing  but  coarse  g'es  grew; 

live  g,  Rose-campion,  bluebell,  kingcup, 

O  ay — the  winds  that  bow  the  g ! 

the  flowering  grove  Of  g'es  Lancelot  pluck'd 

Prone  by  the  dashing  nmnel  on  the  g. 

an'  they  sucks  the  muck  fro'  the  g. 

Who  live  on  milk  and  meal  and  g ; 

And  all  her  golden  armour  on  the  g, 

they  laid  this  body  they  foun'  an  the  g 

blossom  an'  spring  from  the  g, 

glory  lights  the  hall,  the  dune,  the  g ! 

Jacob's  ladder  faUs  On  greening  g, 

gold  from  each  laburnum  chain  Drop  to  the  g. 

delight  To  roll  himself  in  meadow  g 

Thy  living  flower  and  g, 

Cirass-green    graves  g-g  beside  a  gray  church-tower, 
A  gown  of  g-g  silk  she  wore, 

Grasshopp^    the  g  carolleth  clearly ; 
The  g  is  silent  in  the  grass : 

Grassy    The  plain  was  g,  wild  and  bare, 

gave  into  a  g  walk  Thro'  crowded  lilac-ambush 
And  g  barrows  of  the  happier  dead. 
By  g  capes  with  fuUer  sound  In  curves 


LocJcsley  H.,  Sixty  181 

Early  Spring  10 

To  Mary  Boyle  11 

Rorrmey's  R.  14 

Doubt  and  Prayer  6 

Circumstance  6 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  24 

Leonine  Eleg.  5 

(Enone  26 

Dying  Swan  1 

Gardener's  Z>.  Ill 

TUhonus  71 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  14 


Grassy  (continued)    I  steal  by  lawns  and  g  plots.  The  Brook  170 

thro'  many  a  g  glade  And  valley,  Marr.  of  Geraint  236 
When  we  had  reach'd  The  g  platform  on  some  hill,      lever's  Tale  i  341 
Grate  (s)    (See  also  Graate)    glimmering  vaults  with 

iron  g's,  D.  of  F.  Women  35 

rang  the  g  of  iron  thro'  the  groove,  Pelleas  and  E.  207 

Grate  (verb)     the  harsh  shingle  should  g  underfoot,  Enoch  Arden  772 

I  ^  on  rusty  hinges  here : '  Princess  i  86 

G  her  harsh  kindred  in  the  grass :  „     iv  125 

Grated    (See  also  Rib-grated)    faces  flat  against  the 

panes.  Sprays  g,  Balin  and  Balan  345 

Bhnkt  the  white  morn,  sprays  g,  „              385 

grew  So  g  down  and  filed  away  with  thought,  Merlin  and  V.  623 

Grateful     g  at  last  for  a  httle  thing:  Maud  III  vi  3 

G  to  Prince  Geraint  for  service  done,  Marr.  of  Geraint  15 

So  g  is  the  noise  of  noble  deeds  „              437 

be  g  for  the  sounding  watchword  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  198 

And  deem  me  g,  and  farewell !  The  Wanderer  16 

That  over- vaulted  g  gloom,  Palace  of  Art  54 

a  g  people  named  Enid  the  Good ;  Geraint  and  E.  963 

clouded  with  the  g  incense-fume  Tiresias  183 

Gratefollest    Hers  was  the  g  heart  I  have  found  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  32 

Gratefulness     King  was  all  f ulfill'd  with  g,  Last  Tournament  593 

By  all  the  laws  of  love  and  g.  Lover's  Tale  iv  278 

Gratify     We  would  do  much  to  g  your  Prince —  Princess  v  217 

Grating    Across  the  iron  g  of  her  cell  Beat,  Holy  Grail  81 
Struck  from  an  open  g  overhead  High  in  the  wall,       Lover's  Tale  iv  60 

As  from  the  j  of  a  sepulchre.  The  Ring  400 

Gratitude    Out  of  full  heart  and  boundless  g  Enoch  Arden  346 

This  nightmare  weight  of  g,  I  know  it ;  Princess  vi  300 

Not  a  grain  of  g  mine !  Despair  62 

G — loneliness — desire  to  keep  So  skilled  The  Ring  373 

Gratulation    and  was  moving  on  In  g.  Princess  ii  185 

Grave  (adj.)     Or  gay,  or  g,  or  sweet,  or  stern,  Palace  of  Art  91 

G,  florid,  stern,  as  far  as  eye  could  see.  Sea  Dreams  219 

a  hero  lies  beneath,  G,  solemn ! '  Princess  Pro.  213 

She  look'd  as  grand  as  doomsday  and  as  g:  „            i  187 

In  each  we  sat,  we  heard  The  g  Professor.  „           ii  371 

Farewell,  Macready ;  moral,  g,  sublime,  To  W.  C.  Macready  12 

And  that  has  made  you  g  ?  The  Ring  88 

G  mother  of  majestic  works.  Of  old  sat  Freedom  13 

Until  the  g  churchwarden  doff'd,  The  Goose  19 

G  faces  gather'd  in  a  ring.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  38 

Altho'  a  g  and  staid  God-fearing  man,  Enoch  Arden  112 

The  g,  severe  Genovese  of  old.  The  Daisy  40 

G  doubts  and  answers  here  proposed.  In  Mem.  xlviii  3 
Grave  (s)    See  also  Ocean-grave)    when  thy  g  Was 

deep,  Supp.  Confessions  85 

Over  its  g  i'  the  earth  so  chilly ;  (repeat)  A  spirit  haunts  10,  22 
the  green  that  folds  thy  g.  (repeat)         A  Dirge  6,  13,  20,  27,  34,  41,  48 

Two  g's  grass-green  beside  a  gray  church-tower,  Circumstance  6 

the  brink  Of  that  deep  g  to  which  I  go :  My  life  is  full  7 

From  winter  rains  that  beat  his  g.  Two  Voices  261 

A  shadow  on  the  g's  1  knew,  „          272 

'  From  g  to  g  the  shadow  crept :  „          274 
I  shall  he  alone,  mother,  within  the  moulder- 
ing g.                                                            May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  20 

and  upon  that  g  of  mine,  „                  21 

see  me  till  my  g  be  growing  green :  „                  43 

His  voice  was  thin,  as  voices  from  the  g ;  Lotos-Eaters  34 

and  ripen  toward  the  g  In  silence ;  „     C.  S.  51 

cord  of  love  Down  to  a  silent  g.  D.  of  F.  Women  212 

Thou  seest  all  things,  thou  wilt  see  my  g :  Tithonv^  73 

Each  pluck'd  his  one  foot  from  the  g,  Amphion  43 

By  Ellen's  g,  on  the  windy  hill.  Edward  Gray  12 

The  very  g's  appear'd  to  smile,  The  Letters  45 

drop  thy  foolish  tears  upon  my  g.  Come  not,  when,  etc.  2 
glow-worm  of  the  g  Glimmer  in  thy  rheumy  eyes.        Vision  of  Sin  153 

Till  the  g's  begin  to  move,  „          165 

tho'  she  mourn'd  his  absence  as  his  y,  Enoch  Arden  247 

it  would  vex  him  even  in  his  9,  „          303 

thought  to  bear  it  with  me  to  my  g ;  „          896 

shame  these  mouldy  Aylmers  in  their  g's:  Aylmer's  Field  396 

Above  them,  with  his  hopes  in  either  g.  „            624 

bring  Their  own  gray  hairs  with  sorrow  to  the  g —  „            777 


Grave 


280 


very  sides  of  the  ^  itself  shall  pkss,  Lucretius  256 

There  above  the  little g,  (repeat)  Princess'ii  12  ll 

that  full  voice  which  circles  round  the  g  Princess  u  IZ,  16 

cram  him  with  the  fragments  of  the  o,   '  "         ,vv  qii 

and  drank  himself  into  his  g.  rL^^Jk     r 

Drops  in  his  va^t  and  wandering^.  ?«£  ffifi 

I  take  the  grasses  of  the  g,  ''"  ^^'"-  "*  ^\ 

yeam'd  To  hear  her  weeping  by  his  o  ?  "         ^^*  a 

Or  builds  the  house,  or  digs  the  g,  "        ^^^»  * 

And  darkening  the  dark  ^'s  of  men,-  "    ^^T^^l 

I  wrong  the  g  with  fears  untrue :  "            ,  •  q 

No  Ufa  may  fail  beyond  the  g,  "            ,   % 

Unused  example  from  the  g  "     7       \i 

And  my  prime  passion  in  the  o:  "    jf^'^ia 

Had  f all'n  into^er  father's  ,, '  "  £^^  ^ 

fathers  bend  Above  more  g's,  "  *^^^??:  ^° 

with  me,  and  the  g  Divide  us  not,  "    '"^IDj'q 

the  g  That  has  to-day  its  sunny  side.  "     rff  7, 

To-day  the  g  is  bright  for  me,  "     ^'"*-  ^ 

thing  that  had  made  false  haste  to  the  g—  Maud  T  i  4. 

and  Onon  lo w  in  his  ^.  "^  ""^  .  .*.  ^^ 

Your  mother  is  mute  in  her  q  "     "*  i^ 

Perhaps  from  a  selfish  y.  "      ^^.g" 

into  a  shallow  y  they  are  thrust,  "    f?     « 

To  have  no  peace  in  the  g,  is  that  not  sad  ?  '           1  fi 

Is  It  kmd  to  have  made  me  a  y  so  rough,  "          07 

Orion's  g  low  down  in  the  west,  "  yi-r    •  i 

The  cackle  of  the  unborn  about  the  g,  Merlin  an/v  Vm 

Among  the  knightly  brasses  of  the  g's,  '^^  ^-  ??5 

I  shudder,  some  one  steps  across  mv  o  • '  'At,  •           c^ 

that  his  .should  be  a  mastery  From^^I  men,  Gu^nevere^ 

From  halfway  down  the  shadow  of  the  .,  To  the  OueeniU 

to  whom  I  made  it  o'er  his  g  Sacred  ^         %^ 

I  and  the  first  daisy  on  his  g  Zov^/;  j,.    ■ ,  ^X 

received  m  a  sweet  g  Of  eglantines,  sialet  196 

That  men  plant  over  .'5.  "          „° 

the  darkness  of  the  g,  (repeat)  "          ^q. 

The  foul  steam  of  the  g  to  thicken  by  it,  "          «4q 

till  they  fell  Half-digging  their  own  g's)  "         .f^ 

over  the  deep  g's  of  Hope  and  Fear,  "            to 

now,  will  I  go  down  into  the  g,  "         •   ^% 

pR&X'te'Z^^^,  ?Le  ,-  ^^-^  (^-  «^  ^-J  i 

I  wiU  have  them  buried  in  my..  ^'•^-  IST'^^o? 

sonie  one  standing  by  my  .  ^1  say,  Columhus  201 

a  ghasther  face  than  ever  has  haunted  a  g  TheWrerkt 

vex  you  with  wretched  words,  who  is  best  in  his  .  ?  DesZi^lot 
the  world  is  dark  with  griefs  and  .'5,                    ^        Ancient  Sale  l?i 

and  weds  me  to  my ..                    "^  nlvf^Jln 

Fiend  would  yell,  the  g  would  yawn,  ^'''  ^^"^^  f  ? 

I  seem  to  see  a  new-dug  g  up  yonder  by  the  yew !  "          qt 

hau:  was  as  white  as  the  snow  an  a  0.             ^  r««;:,rr«,«  fin 

m  wan  g  be  the  dead  boor-tree,  I'omorrotc  60 
yet  he  look'd  beyond  the  o,  T^^^v^i^.  tj  "o-  ^  cA 
I  repent  it  o'er  his  g—        '                                      LocMey  H.,  Sixty  m 

cycle-year  That  dawns  behind  the  g.  EvUonJlP, 

raise  a  wind  To  sing  thee  to  thy  g,  XlT  Ik 

sovnng  the  nettle  on  all  the  laurel'd  g's  of  the  Great :  VastZ  22 

graspt  a  daisy  from  your  Mother's  g-                       '  Th^mlnvA 

glimmers  on  the  mareh  and  on  the  1'  ^^'  ^''^  S? 

I  am  fitter  for  my  bed,  or  for  my  a,  "        f^Q 

0  the  night,  While  the  g  is  yawnii^  p"  ,       «n 

1  would  leap  into  your  g.  ^  ^'  -^'•^'"•'»  ^0 
throbs  Thro'  earth,  and  all  her  a's  p  ^"^/^,  o2 
Hush'd  as  the  heart  of  the  f  ^  '  iZTnk^oa 
I  am  dressing  the  ,  of  a  woLn  with  flowers.  ^"'^^^  'cW«  I 
your  shadow  falls  on  the  g.  i^tiarUyZ 
I  am  dressing  her  g  with  flowers.  "  ji 
crimson  with  battles,  and  hoUow  with  a's  Th^  n      "     To 

Orave     waterbreak  Above  the  goldenT^     ^  '  tE.r'^Z  ll 

like  a  wizard  pentagram  On  garden.,  The  Brook^62 


Gray 


The  Daisy  34 

Arabian  Nights  108 

W'iW  ^a<er.  248 

Com.  of  Arthur  302 

Lover's  Tale  i  358 

Tiresias  124 

EreocA  ^rdew  129 

203 

Princess,  Con.  66 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  26 

38 

40 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  1 

Marr.  of  Geraint  308 

Merlin  and  V.  180 

Princess,  Con.  59 

A'.  Farmer,  N.  S.  16 

A^ortA.  Cobbler  86 

Owd  ifoa  26 


Gravel-spread    bed  Of  silent  torrents,  g-s  ■ 
Graven    G  with  emblems  of  the  time,       ' 

tmderneath,  A  pint-pot  neatly  ..' 

on  one  side,  G  in  the  oldest  tongue 

A  graceful  thought  of  hers  G  on  my  fancy ! 

Their  names,  G  on  memorial  colmnns 
Graver    No  .  than  as  when  some  httle  cloud 

he  turn'd  The  current  of  his  talk  to  .  things 

No  .  than  a  schoolboys'  barring  out  • 

one  is  somewhat  .  than  the  other—  ' 

No !  but  the  paler  and  the  .,  Edith. 

The  .  is  the  one  perhaps  for  you 

Come,  when  no  .  cares  employ, 

'  G  cause  than  yours  is  mine  To  curse  this 
hedgerow  thief. 

Began  to  break  her  sports  with  .  fits. 
Gravest    The  .  citizen  seems  to  lose  his  head, 
Graw  (grow)    an'  proputty,  proputty  g's. 

thou  can't  .  this  upo'  watter ! ' 
Graw'd  (grew)    as  .  hall  ower  the  brick : 
Gray  (Edward)    See  Edward  Gray 
Gray  (adj.)    my  hope  is  .,  and  cold  At  heart,  Supv.  Confessions  103 

Come  from  the  woods  that  belt  the  .  hill-side,  IdeToM^rUt 

IZT^SxF^'^r'"'  \^^'  ^  '  church-tower,  ct^^Zel 

rour  .  walls,  and  four  g  towers,  r  -,/  vh^j^t* ;  1 1; 

I  Ut  ^^  ^  ^y^  ^^^'^l^  yet  At  his  own  jest-,  eyes  ^ 

g  twihght  pour'd  On  dewy  pastures,  pS'ofAr't  85 

wild  marsh-marigold  shines  like  fire  in  swamps  and  ^ 

hollows .,  71^     <-i         01 

You'll  never  see  me  more  in  the  long  .  fields  ^^  ^"''''  ^^ 

Th^rfirk^d""^  S%?  ^^^^^^'^^  *«--«' """"  ^"&wl"/218 
And  twf  i^^r^f    apathetic  end.  L^ve  and  Duty  18 

And  this  .  spirit  yearning  m  desire  m,,,^,  m 

for  this  .  shadow,  once  a  man-  Tithonus  11 

chad""^*        ^  barbarian  lower  than  the  Christian 
my  hai  Is  .  before  I  know  it.  ^mPwatfr  lit 

A  .and  gap-tooth'd  man  as  lean  as  death,  Vilionofsi7im 

On  thy  cold  .  stones,  O  Sea !  '  Brelbrmkl  2 

higbjn  heaven  behind  it  a  .  down  With  Danish  '  ' 

His^arge'.'  eyes  and  weather-beaten  face  ^"^'^  "^'^^l 

He,  shakmg  his .  head  patheticaUy,  "        714 

See  thro' the .  skirts  of  a  lifting  squall  -       "        k^ 

wf  ^^"°°''  ''''"*"^  ^^  3  eyes  upon  her,  "        lA 
!fwn    tT  ■°'^"  ^  *T®-''' '''  plain-faced  tabernacle,       Aylmer' s  Field  618 

bnng  Their  own  .  hairs  with  sorrow  to  the  grav^  ^  *  ^  t«a  010 

a  work  To  assail  this  .  preeminence  of  man  !  PriZess  Hi  234 

From  the  flaxen  curi  to  the  .  lock  a  hfe  •'  426 

and  without  Found  the  .  kings  at  parie :  "          I  ffS 

Look  you !  the .  mare  Is  ill  to  live  with,  "             i^l 

G  halls  alone  among  their  massive  groves :  "      Cor,  4.^ 

0  good  .  head  which  all  men  knew,  o^"^„  ^2'  f. 

From  Como,  when  the  light  was  .,  TheDaisu  73 

i"w*^  uT^'^li"^  9  metropolis  of  the  North.  '^1 J4 

We  shall  both  be  ..'  „/■,    "  „,,  ^^^ 

^nurses,  loving  no'thing  new ;  S^'  S"l4 

The  same  .  flats  again,  and  felt  The  same,  Ixxxvii  13 

No  .  old  grange,  or  lonely  fold,  "      '^'^^^^  ^^ 

A  .  old  wolf  and  a  lean.  „'>      ,  .     •  ..'k^ 

Not  that  .  old  wolf,  for  he  came  not  back  "^""^  ^X  S 

Sleuth-hound  thou  knowest,  and  a  r„.,.fh      /r  ^^o 

ivy-^ems  Claspt  the  .  walls'  w?th  haiiy-fibred  ^'"'''^  """^  ^^  ^^^ 

G  s^ps  and  pools,  waste  places  of  the  hern,  ^TeratfaJVi 

As  the  .  dawn  stole  o'er  the  dewy  world  ^erai,u  and  Ji.61 

This  .  King  Show'd  us  a  shrine  wherein '  Balin  n^ARnJn^  fnft 

As  that  .cricket  chirpt  of  at  our  hearth-  Medi^^Jv  \m 

seem'd  a  lovely  baleful  star  Veil'd  in  .  vapour  •  5fi? 

Had  found  a  glen,  .  boulder  and  black  tam.  La.icelot  and  E^l 

Sat  on  his  knee,  stroked  his  .  face  and  said,  -745 

aSefS  feTn^t'disTaS,  "'^"  '''  ^"^  ^'      ^^'  ^--~'  £ 

„  040 


Gray 


281 


Heart-hiding  smile,  and  g  persistent 

Guinevere  o4 

255 

603 

To  the  Queen  ii  39 


Gray  (adj.)  (continued) 
eye  I 
When  three  g  linnets  wrangle  for  the  seed : 
and  made  him  g  And  grayer, 
Rather  than  that  g  king,  whose  name,  a  ghost. 


Than  the  g  cuckoo  loves  his  name.  Lover  s  Tale  1 257 

.    G  relics  of  the  nurseries  of  the  world,  ..  f^ 

the  summit  and  the  pinnacles  Of  a  ^  steeple-  »    ^.„;,  iin 

and  That  9  beast,  the  wolf  of  the  weald.  Bait,  of  Brunanburh  110 

The  first  /streak  of  earUest  summer-dawn,  A ncient  Sage  ^^0 

for  doubtless  I  am  old,  and  think  ,  thoughts,  for^^^^^^  ^^  ^.^^^  ^^^ 

WitHne  ?  glimpse  of  sea;  Pro.  to  Gen  Haml^S 

dash'd  up  alone  Thro'  the  great  g  slope  of  men,  Heavy  Brmdejl 

Yet  tho'  this  cheek  be  9,  n     r  a  n    v^tri^^ 

G  with  distance  Edward's  fifty  summers,  On  Jm6.  Q.  Fwtorta  40 

came  On  three  g  heads  beneath  a  gleammg  rift, 

Those  g  heads.  What  meant  they 

far  As  the  g  deep,  a  landscape  which  your  eyes 

You  that  are  watching  The  g  Magician 

And  now  that  I  am  white,  and  you  are  g. 

Gray  (s)    The  level  waste,  the  rounding  g. 

An  imder-roof  of  doleful  g. 

Grow  green  beneath  the  showery  g, 

Roll'd  a  sea-haze  and  whelm'd  the  world  in  g : 

I  sleep  till  dusk  is  dipt  in  g : 

Touch  thv  dull  goal  of  joyless  g, 

like  night  and  evening  mixt  Their  dark  and  g, 

Nor  settles  into  hueless  g. 

Burst  from  a  swimming  fleece  of  wmter  g, 

Grayer   Enwound  him  fold  by  fold,  and  made  him  gray  And  g 

Gray-eyed    cold  winds  woke  the  g-e  mom 

Gray-hair'd    the  g-h  wisdom  of  the  east ; 

old,  G-h,  and  past  desire,  and  in  despair. 
Grayliiig    And  here  and  there  a  g, 
Grays     Behind  the  dappled  g. 
Graze    They  g  and  wallow,  breed  and  sleep ; 
The  steer  forgot  tog,       , ,    . ,    ^,       ^.     , 
highest-crested  helm  could  ride  Therethro  nor  g . 
They  let  the  horses  g,  and  ate  themselves, 
warhorse  left  to  g  Among  the  forest  greens. 
Year  will  g  the  heel  of  year. 
Grazing    points  Of  slander,  glancing  here  and  g  there ; 


Demeter  and  P.  83 

129 

The  Ring  150 

Merlin  and  the  G.  5 

Roses  on  the  T.  4 

Mariana  44 

Dying  Swan  4 

My  life  is  full  17 

Enoch  Arden612 

In  Mem.  Ixvii  12 

„         Ixxii  27 

Princess  vi  132 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  50 

Demeter  and  P.  20 

Guinevere  604 

Mariana  31 

Holy  Grail  453 

Last  Tournament  653 

The  Brook  58 

Talking  Oak  112 

Palace  of  Art  202 

Gardener's  D.  85 

Gareth  and  L.  674 

Geraint  and  E.  211 

Last  Tournament  490 

Poets  and  Critics  14 

Merlin  and  V.  173 


Great 

Gteat  (continued)    With  jf  contrivances  of  Power.  Love  tfwu  thy  land  6i 

on  one  Lay  a  g  water,  and  the  moon  was  full.  M.  d  Arthur  i^ 

g  brand  Made  lightnings  in  the  splendour  of  the  moon,  „         13b 

Soga.  miracle  as  yonder  hilt.  >.         l&b 

Lay  g  with  pig,  waUowing  in  sun  and  mud.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  88 

.'  »    .      ^^'.     ,  .    rr  . J  iu_  u:ii„  Golden  Yearlo 

Ulysses  64 

Tithonus  14 

Locksley  Hall  8 

182 

Godiva  31 

.»       "^^ 
Amphion  9,  13 

51 

TAe  Captain  19 

i.  of  Burleigh  30 

60 

EwocA  Arden  597 

680 


A  9  iron  collar  grinds  my  neck  ; 
Grease    See  Kitchen-grease 
Greasy    Thou  battenest  by  the  g  gleam 
Great     (See  also  Great)     G  in  faith,  and  strong 
Against  the  grief  of  circumstance 
And  thou  of  God  in  thy  g  charity) 
Emerged,  I  came  upon  the  g  Pavilion 
caught  from  thee  The  light  of  thy  g  presence ; 
Well  hast  thou  done,  g  artist  Memory, 
the  worid  Like  one  g  garden  show'd. 
But  in  a  city  glorious— A  g  and  distant  city- 
God's  g  gift  of  speech  abused 
TiU  that  g  sea-snake  under  the  sea 
What  is  there  in  the  g  sphere  of  the  earth. 
And  I  beheld  g  Here's  angry  eyes, 
in  bliss  I  shall  abide  In  this  g  mansion. 
While  this  g  bow  will  waver  in  the  sun. 
Full  of  g  rooms  and  small  the  palace  stood, 
Then  in  the  towers  I  placed  g  bells  that  swung, 
and  those  g  bells  Began  to  chime. 

In  this  g  house  so  royal-rich,  and  wide, 

In  doubt  and  g  perplexity, 

or  one  deep  cry  Of  g  wild  beasts ; 

A  g  enchantress  you  may  be ;       ,,,,.,, 

For  g  delight  and  shuddering  took  hold  of  all  my 
mind. 

And  our  g  deeds,  as  half-forgotten  things. 

spacious  times  of  g  EUzabeth  With  sounds 

As  when  a  g  thought  strikes  along  the  bram, 

'  I  had  g  beauty :  ask  thou  not  my  name : 

G  Natiire  is  more  wise  than  I : 

And  the  g  ages  onward  roll. 


St.  S.  Stylites  117 

Will  Water.  221 

Supp.  Confessions  91 

Isabel  40 

Arabian  Nights  113 

Ode  to  Memory  32 

80 

The  Poet  34 

Deserted  H.  20 

A  Dirge  44 

The  Mermaid  23 

// 1  were  loved  2 

CEnone  190 

Palace  of  Art  19 

43 

57 

129 

157 

191 

278 

283 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  30 

May  Queen,Con.  35 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  78 

D.  of  F.  Women  7 

43 

93 

To  J.  S.  35 

„        72 


the  g  echo  flap  And  bufiet  round  the  hills, 

And  see  the  g  Achilles,  whom  we  knew. 

he  seem'd  To  his  9  heart  none  other  than  a  God ! 

Did  I  look  on  g  Orion  sloping  slowly  to  the  West. 

Let  the  g  world  spin  for  ever 

He  parted,  with  g  strides  among  his  dogs. 

With  twelve  g  shocks  of  sound, 

had  I  hved  when  song  was  g  (repeat) 

Like  some  g  landslip,  tree  by  tree, 

Hoped  to  make  the  name  Of  his  vessel  g  m  story, 

Parks  and  order'd  gardens  g. 

Not  a  lord  in  all  the  county  Is  so  3  a  lord  as  he. 

Then  the  g  stars  that  globed  themselves 

a  ^  mist-blotted  light  Flared  on  him, 

That  g  pock-pitten  fellow  had  been  caught .-' 

Now  chafing  at  his  own  g  self  defied, 
scowl'd  At  their  g  lord. 

shroud  this  g  sin  from  all ! 

Then  the  g  Hall  was  wholly  broken  down, 

and  himself  Were  that  g  Angel; 

The  motion  of  the  g  deep  bore  me  on. 

When  the  g  Books  (see  Daniel  seven  and  ten) 

and  then  the  g  ridge  drew, 

that  g  wave  Returning,  while  none  mark  d  it. 

Live  the  0  life  which  all  our  greatest 

as  the  g  Sicilian  called  Calliope 

Not  follow  the  g  law  ? 

Seeing  with  how  g  ease  Nature  can  smile, 

spoils  My  bliss  in  being;  and  it  was  not  g; 

G  Nature,  take,  and  forcing  far  apart 

And  all  things  g ; 

I  wish  That  I  were  some  g  princess, 

'  And  make  her  some  g  Princess,  six  feet  high. 

Our  g  court-Galen  poised  his  gilt-head  cane, 

A  present,  a  g  labour  of  the  loom ; 

and  with  g  urns  of  flowers. 

when  we  set  our  hand  To  this  g  work, 

Lucius  Junius  Brutus  of  my  kind?    Him  you  call  g 

While  the  g  organ  almost  burst  his  pipes. 

And  your  g  name  flow  on  with  broadening  tin^ 

With  only  Fame  for  spouse  and  your  g  deeds  I'or 

Howe'e'r  you  babble,  g  deeds  cannot  die ; 

Toward  that  g  year  of  equal  mights  and  rights, 

Stared  with  g  eyes,  and  laugh'd  with  alien  lips, 

But  g  is  song  Used  to  g  ends : 

Two  a  statues,  Art  And  Science,  Caryatids, 

Bear  had  wheel'd  Thro'  a  g  arc  his  seven  slow  suns. 

Beaten  with  some  g  passion  at  her  heart, 

to-morrow  mom  We  hold  a  g  convention  : 

The  drowsy  folds  of  our  g  ensign  shake 

Bursts  of  g  heart  and  slips  in  sensual  mu^e, 

And  g  bronze  valves,  emboss'd  with  Tomyris 

there  went  up  a  ?  cry,  The  Prince  is  slam. 

Like  that  g  dame  of  Lapidoth  she  sang. 

burst  the  g  bronze  valves. 

To  lighten  this  g  clog  of  thanks, 

some  g  Nemesis  Break  from  a  darken  d  future, 

as  for  me  I  scarce  am  fit  for  your  g  plans : 

ask  for  him  Of  your  g  head— 

but  g  the  crush  was,  and  each  base, 

the  two  g  cats  Close  by  her, 

g  lords  out  and  in.  From  those  two  hosts 

Let  the  g  river  take  me  to  the  main : 

sees  a  g  black  cloud  Drag  inward  from  the  deeps, 

bowers  Drew  the  g  night  into  themselves, 

her  g  heart  thro'  all  the  faultful  Past 

Then  reign  the  world's  g  bridals, 

A  g  broad-shoulder'd  genial  Englishman, 

Why  should  not  these  g  Sirs  Give  up  theu-  parks 


Aylmer 


's  Field  256 
537 
725 
773 
846 

Sea  Dreams  27 

111 

152 

220 

233 

Lucretius  78 

93 

„   116 

„   174 

„   222 

„   245 

Princess,  Pro.  110 

134 

224 

il9 

44 

ii  26 

60 

285 

474 

„     Hi  164 

242 

254 

„      iv  74 

119 

137 

200 

213 

388 

511 

v8 

199 

365 

vi  25 

32 

75 

126 

174 

218 

314 

353 

357 

382 

„     vii  13 

36 

49 

248 

294 

Con.  85 

102 


Great 


282 


Great 


(heat    (continued)     Buey    the    G    Duke  With    an 

empire's  lamentation,  Let  us  bury  the  G  Duke 

To  the  noise  Ode  on  Well.  1 

The  last  g  Englishman  is  low.  „        18 

G  in  council  and  g  in  war,  „         30 

S  World-victor's  victor  will  be  seen  no  more.  „        42 

In  that  dread  sound  to  the  g  name,  „        71 

Was  g  by  land  as  thou  by  sea.  (repeat)  „  84,  90 

And  ever  g  and  greater  grew,  „      108 

So  jr  a  soldier  taught  us  there,                                ,  „      131 

Attest  their  g  commander's  claim  With  honour,  „      148 

reverence  and  regret  To  those  g  men  who  fought,  „      158 

All  g  self-seekers  trampling  on  the  right ;  „      187 

Let  his  g  example  stand  Colossal,  „      220 

watching  here  At  this,  our  g  solemnity.  „      244 

He  is  gone  who  seem'd  so  g. —  '  „  271 
Sounds  of  the  g  sea  Wander'd  about.  Minnie  and  Winnie  7 
Like  those  who  cried  Diana  g :  Lit.  Sqvabhles  16 
Heart,  are  you  g  enough  For  a  love  that  never 

tires  ?     O  heart,  are  you  g  enough  for  love  ?  Window,  Marr.  Mom.  17 


Calm  and  still  light  on  yon  g  plain 

In  those  g  offices  that  suit  The  full-grown  energies 

There  must  be  wisdom  with  g  Death : 

Upon  the  g  world's  altar-stairs 

Leaving  g  legacies  of  thought, 

The  g  Intelligences  fair  That  range  above 

She  darkly  feels  him  g  and  wise, 

Let  her  g  Danube  rolfing  fair  Enwind  her  isles, 

one  would  chant  the  history  Of  that  g  race, 

where  we  saw  A  g  ship  lift  her  shining  sides. 

Brings  in  g  logs  and  let  them  lie, 

I  would  the  g  world  grew  like  thee. 

By  thee  the  world's  g  work  is  heard  Beginning, 

And  the  g  J3on  sinks  in  blood. 

As  gentle ;  liberal-minded,  g,  Consistent ; 

She  would  not  do  herself  this  g  wrong. 

Like  some  of  the  simple  g  ones  gone  For  ever 

yellow  vapours  choke  The  g  city  sounding  wide ; 

praying  To  his  own  g  self,  as  I  guess ; 

And  so  there  grew  g  tracts  of  wilderness.  Com.  of 

Of  those  g  Lords  and  Barons  of  his  realm 

Made  lightnings  and  g  thunders  over  him, 

whatsoever  Merlin  did  In  one  g  annal-book, 

after,  the  g  lords  Banded,  and  so  brake  out  in  open  war.' 

And  simple  words  of  g  authority, 

So  this  g  brand  the  king  Took, 

watch'd  the  g  sea  fall.  Wave  after  wave, 

And  the  fringe  Of  that  g  breaker. 

From  the  g  deep  to  the  g  deep  he  goes.' 

so  g  bards  of  him  will  sing  Hereafter ; 

There  at  the  banquet  those  g  Lords  from  Rome, 

80  those  g  lords  Drew  back  in  wrath, 

in  twelve  g  battles  overcame  The  heathen  hordes, 

eagle-circles  up  To  the  g  Sun  of  Glory, 

at  times  the  g  gate  shone  Only, 

like  the  cross  her  g  and  goodlv  arms  Stretch'd 

and  faith  in  their  g  King,  with  pure  Affection, 

But  Mark  hath  tarnish'd  the  g  name  of  king, 

Lyonors,  A  ladjr  of  high  lineage,  of  g  lands, 

Now  two  g  entries  open'd  from  the  hall, 

take  counsel ;  for  this  lad  is  g  And  lusty. 

Till  Gareth  panted  hard,  and  his  g  heart, 

hew'd  g  pieces  of  his  armour  off  him. 

There  rides  no  knight,  not  Lancelot,  his  g  self, 

one  Of  that  g  Order  of  the  Table  Round,  Marr. 

Thro'  that  g  tenderness  for  Guinevere, 

watch  his  mightful  hand  striking  g  blows 

by  g  mischance  He  heard  but  fragments 

And  here  had  fall'n  a  g  part  of  a  tower. 

Our  hoard  is  little,  but  our  hearts  are  g.  (repeat) 

For  the  g  wave  that  echoes  round  the  worla ; 

Avenging  this  a  insult  done  the  Queen.' 

his  face  Glow'd  like  the  heart  of  a  j  fire  at  Yule, 

and  still  The  dew  of  their  g  labour, 

'  Remember  that  great  insult  done  the  Queen,' 


In  Mem.  xi  9 
xll9 

zni 

Ivlb 

Ixxxiv  35 

Ixxxv  21 

xcvii  34 

xcviii  9 

ciii  35 

40 

cvii  17 

cxiv  25 

cxxi  10 

cxxvii  16 

Con.  38 

Maud  I  x  51 

61 

//  iv  64 

v33 

Arthur  10 

65 

108 

158 

236 

261 

308 

378 

387 

411 

414 

504 

513 

518 

and  L.  22 

194 

218 

330 

426 

609 

665 

730 

1126 

1142 

1182 

Geraint  3 

30 

95 

112 

317 

,  352,  374 

420 

425 

559 

568 

571 


Gareth 


of 


Great  (continued)    fell  at  last  In  the  g  battle 

fighting  for  the  King.  Marr.  of  Geraint  596 

And  should  some  g  court-lady  say,  „  723 

As  this  g  Prince  invaded  us,  and  we,  „  747 

our  g  Queen,  In  words  whose  echo  lasts,  „  781 
Till  the  g  plover's  human  whistle  amazed  Her  heart,  Geraint  and  E.  49 

Saw  once  a  g  piece  of  a  promontory,  „  162 

I  will  tell  him  How  g  a  man  thou  art :  „  228 

While  the  g  charger  stood,  grieved  like  a  man.  „  535 

This  work  of  his  is  g  and  wonderful.  „  898 

A  thousand-fold  more  g  and  wonderful  „  914 

His  work  was  neither  g  nor  wonderful,  „  921 

There  the  g  Queen  once  more  embraced  her  friend,  ,,  947 

They  call'd  him  the  g  Prince  and  man  of  men.  „  961 

him  who  first  Brought  the  g  faith  to  Britain  Balin  and  BcAan  103 

down  that  range  of  roses  the  g  Queen  Came  „  244 

And  by  the  g  Queen's  name,  arise  and  hence.'  „  482 

By  the  g  tower — Caerleon  upon  Usk —  „  506 

I  thought  the  g  tower  would  crash  down  on  both —  „  515 

But  the  g  Queen  herself,  fought  in  her  name.  Merlin  and  V.  13 

G  Nature  thro'  the  flesh  herself  hath  made  „  50 

When  Guinevere  was  crossing  the  g  hall  „  65 

Then  fell  on  Merlin  a  g  melancholy ;  „  189 

work  the  charm  Upon  the  g  Enchanter  of  the  Time,  „  216 

'G  Master,  do  ye  love  me?' he  was  mute.  „  237 

Caught  in  a  9  old  tyrant  spider's  web,  „  259 

And  therefore  be  as  ^  as  ye  are  named,  „  336 

The  ^  proof  of  your  love;  „  354 

I  heard  the  g  Sir  Lancelot  sing  it  once,  „  385 

Then  the  g  Master  merrily  answer'd  her:  „  545 

Who  Uved  alone  in  a  ^  wild  on  grass ;  „  621 

I  thought  that  he  was  gentle,  being  g :  „  871 
he  rode  to  tilt  For  the  g  diamond  in  the  diamond 

jousts,  Lancelot  and  E.  31 
'  Then  will  ye  miss,'  he  answer'd,  'the  g  deeds  Of 

Lancelot,  „  81 

your  g  name  This  conquers :  „  150 

With  laughter  dying  down  as  the  g  knight  „  179 

The  g  and  guilty  love  he  bare  the  Queen,  „  245 

the  g  knight,  the  darling  of  the  court,  „  261 

By  the  g  river  in  a  boatman's  hut.  „  278 

'0  there,  g  lord,  doubtless,'  Lavaine  said,  „  281 

And  seeing  me,  with  a  g  voice  he  cried,  „  309 

'  Save  your  g  self,  fair  lord ; '  „  320 

And  after  muttering  '  The  g  Lancelot,'  „  421 

'  Me  you  call  g :  mine  is  the  firmer  seat,  „  446 

Of  greatness  to  know  well  I  am  not  g :  „  451 

Lancelot  gave  A  marvellous  g  shriek  and  ghastly  groan,        „  516 

Came  round  their  g  Pendragon,  saying  to  him,  „  528 

So  gf  a  knight  as  we  have  seen  to-day —  „  533 

knowing  he  was  Lancelot ;  his  g  name  Conquer'd ;  „  579 

A  sleeve  of  scarlet,  broider'd  with  g  pearls,  „  604 

flung  herself  Do\vn  on  the  g  King's  couch,  „  610 
I  deem  you  know  full  well  Where  your  g  knight 

is  hidden,  „  690 

Yet  the  g  knight  in  his  mid-sickness  made  „  878 

Up  the  g  river  in  the  boatman's  boat.  „  1038 

And  there  the  g  Sir  Lancelot  muse  at  me  ;  „  1055 

My  knight,  the  g  Sir  Lancelot  of  the  Lake.'  „  1373 

Or  sin  seem  less,  the  sinning  seeming  g?  „  1418 

In  our  g  hall  there  stood  a  vacant  chair.  Holy  Grail  167 

While  the  g  banquet  lay  along  the  hall,  „  180 

roofs  Of  our  g  hall  are  roll'd  in  thunder-smoke !  „  220 

four  g  zones  of  sculpture,  set  betwixt  „  232 

Where  twelve  g  windows  blazon  Arthur's  wars,  „  248 

Streams  thro'  the  twelve  g  battles  of  our  King.  „  250 

Knights  that  in  twelve  g  battles  splash'd  and  dyed  „  311 

All  the  g  table  of  our  Arthur  closed  „  329 

A  g  black  swamp  and  of  an  evil  smell,  „  499 

A  thousand  piers  ran  into  the  g  Sea.  „  503 

first  At  once  I  saw  him  far  on  the  g  Sea,  „  510 

With  one  g  dwelling  in  the  middle  of  it ;  „  574 

bound  and  plunged  him  into  a  cell  Of  g  piled  stones ;  „  676 

a  g  stone  slipt  and  fell.  Such  as  no  wind  could  move :  „  680 

words  Of  so  ^  men  as  Lancelot  and  our  King  „  713 


Great 

Oreat  (continued)    And  in  the  g  sea  wash  away 

my  sin.' 
Those  two  g  beats  rose  upright  like  a  man, 
G  angels,  awful  shapes,  and  wings  and  eyes. 
And  here  and  there  g  hollies  under  them ; 
And  she  was  a  g  lady  in  her  land. 
For  she  was  a  g  lady. 
g  tower  fiU'd  with  eyes  Up  to  the  summit. 
But  when  she  mock'd  his  vows  and  the  g  King, 
A  g  and  sane  and  simple  race  of  brutes 
Hath  the  g  heart  of  knighthood  in  thee  f  ail'd 
cry  of  a  3  jousts  With  trumpet-blowings  ran 
From  the  g  deep  to  the  g  deep  he  goes.' 
Sat  their  g  umpire,  looking  o  er  the  lists. 
G  brother,  thou  nor  I  have  made  the  world ; 
With  Arthur's  vows  on  the  g  lake  of  fire. 
Then  at  the  dry  harsh  roar  of  the  g  horn, 
the  g  waters  break  Whitening  for  half  a  league, 
'  Flatter  me  not,  for  hath  not  our  g  Queen 
To  make  one  doubt  if  ever  the  g  Queen 
I  swore  to  the  g  King,  and  am  forsworn, 
look'd  and  saw  The  g  Queen's  bower  was  dark,- 
I  thank  the  saints,  I  am  not  g. 
As  J  as  those  of  g  ones, 
and  himself  was  Knight  Of  the  g  Table — 
woman  in  her  womanhood  as  j  As  he  was  in  his  manhood. 
The  Dragon  of  the  g  Pendragonship,  (repeat) 
In  twelve  g  battles  ruining  overthrown. 
Far  down  to  that  g  battle  in  the  west. 
Ah  g  and  gentle  lord.  Who  wast. 
Now — ere  he  goes  to  the  g  Battle  ? 
that  day  when  the  g  light  of  heaven  Bum'd 
'  Hearest  thou  this  g  voice  that  shakes  the  world, 
on  one  Lay  a  g  water,  and  the  moon  was  full. 
g  brand  Made  lightnings  in  the  splendour  of  the  moon, 
So  ^  a  miracle  as  yonder  hilt. 
'  From  the  g  deep  to  the  g  deep  he  goes.' 
Like  the  last  echo  bom  of  a  gi  cry, 
goal  of  this  ^  world  Lies  beyond  sight : 
I  come,  g  Mistress  of  the  ear  and  eye : 
g  pine  shook  with  lonely  sounds  of  joy 

And  over  all  the  g  wood  rioting  And  climbing, 

With  that  g  crown  of  beams  about  his  brows — 

From  his  g  hoard  of  happiness  distill'd 

Alone,  and  in  the  heart  of  the  g  forest. 

G  hills  of  ruins,  and  collapsed  masses 

g  day  Peal'd  on  us  with  that  music  which  rights  all, 

By  that  g  love  they  both  had  borne  the  dead, 

G  garlands  swung  and  blossom'd ; 

at  one  end  of  the  hall  Two  g  funereal  curtains, 

while  now  the  g  San  Philip  hung  above  us  like  a 
cloud 

But  anon  the  g  San  Philip, 

We  have  won  g  glory,  my  men ! 

or  ever  that  evening  ended  a  g  gale  blew, 

could  I  wed  her  Loving  the  other  ?  do  her  that 
g  wrong  ? 

the  g  things  of  Nature  and  the  fair, 

g  Tragedian,  that  had  quench'd  herself 

Tho'  scarce  as  ^  as  Edith's  power  of  love, 

then  the  g  '  Laudamus '  rose  to  heaven. 

g  Augustine  wrote  that  none  could  breathe 

The  g  flame-banner  borne  by  Teneriffe, 

given  the  G  Khan's  palaces  to  the  Moor, 

Given  thee  the  keys  of  the  g  Ocean-sea  ? 

Only  the  ghost  of  our  g  Catholic  Queen 

From  that  g  deep,  before  our  world  begins, 

G  Tsemogora !  never  since  thine  own  Black  ridges 

when  first  the  g  Sun-star  of  morningtide, 

always  o'er  the  g  Peleion's  head  Bum'd, 

The  g  God,  ArSs,  bums  in  anger  still 

statue,  rear'd  To  some  g  citizen, 

g  God  Arte,  whose  one  bliss  Is  war, 

stars  Send  no  such  light  upon  the  ways  of  men  As 
one  g  deed. 


283 


Greatest 


Holy  Grail  806 
821 
848 

PeOeas  and  E.  27 
98 
123 
166 
252 
480 
596 
Last  Tournament  51 
133 
159 
203 
345 
438 
464 
557 
564 
661 
758 
Guinevere  199 
204 
235 
299 
398,  598 
432 
571 
638 
652 

Pass,  of  Arthur  90 
139 
180 
304 
324 

;;       445 

459 

To  the  Queen  it  59 

Lover's  Tale  i  22 

325 

403 

672 

714 

„  it  3 

65 

„        iv  64 

181 

191 

214 

The  Revenge  43 

50 

85 

114 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  168 

222 

233 

261 

Columbus  18 

52 

69 

109 

149 

187 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  27 

Montenegro  12 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  25 

Achilles  over  the  T.  28 

Tiresias  11 

83 

„      111 

162 


Great  {continued)    Flowing  with  easy  greatness  and 

touching  on  all  things  g,  Tlie  Wreck  60 

first  g  love  I  had  felt  for  the  first  and  greatest  of  men  ;  „  76 

g  storm  grew  with  a  howl  and  a  hoot  of  the  blast  <>     .   ^^\ 

after  all— the  g  God  for  aught  that  I  know ;  Despair  104 

may  the  g  God  curse  him  and  bring  him  to  nought !  ,,      106 

Thro'  the  g  gray  slope  of  men.  Heavy  Brigade  17 

With  all  the  peoples,  g  and  small.  Epilogue  20 

'  So  jr  so  noble  was  he  ! '  -Dearf  Prophet  30 

'G  \  for  he  spoke  and  the  people  heard,  ,,  33 

G  and  noble — O  yes— but  yetn-  ,.  43 

Noble  and  g—0  ay— but  then,  ^      r    j  i 

Thou  third  g  Canning,  stand  among  our  best  Eptt.  on  Stratford  1 

To  this  g  cause  of  Freedom,  drink,  my  friends,  And 

the    g   name  of    England,    round    and    round.  •, ,,   o= 

(repeat)  Hands  all  Round  11,  35 

To  this  g  name  of  England  drink,  my  friends.  „  23 

Should  this  old  England  fall  Which  Nelson  left  so  g.  The  Fleets, 

All  is  gracious,  gentle,  g  and  Queenly.  On  Jub.  Q.  Vtctorm  14 

Of  this  g  Ceremonial  And  this  year  of  her  Jubilee.  „  ^  „  ^ 

g  Earth-Mother,  thee,  the  Power  That  lifts  Demeter  and  P.  97 

coming  year's  g  good  and  varied  ills.  Prog,  of  t>prmg  93 

G  the  Master,  And  sweet  the  Magic,  Merlin  and  the  G.  15 

I  stood  Before  the  g  Madonna-masterpieces  Rotrmey  s  R.  8b 

mixt  with  the  g  Sphere-music  of  stars  n,i'^t^'^^,Ji 

As  some  g  shock  may  wake  a  palsied  limb,  St.  Telemachus  57 

'  Forbear  In  the  g  name  of  Him  who  died  for  men,       , ,     ,••  ,^ 

And  gaze  on  this  g  miracle,  the  World,  Akbar  s  Dream  122 

Ogand  gaUant  Scott,  ^a^'**'  «  ^^%l 

By  the  g  dead  pine— you  know  it—  _  y  .  -^^ 

hidden  purpose  of  that  Power  which  alone  is  g,  God  and  the  iJnrv.o 
tho'  faintly  heard  Until  the  g  Hereafter.  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C  17 

0  silent  faces  of  the  G  and  Wise,  Paiace  of  Art  195 
The  name  of  Britain  trebly  g—  You  ask  rm,  ■why,  etc  jZ 
Which  are  indeed  the  manners  of  the  g.  Walk,  to  the  MaU  6b 
g  and  small.  Went  nutting  to  the  hazels.  ^och  Arden^ 
she  perhaps  might  reap  the  applause  of  G,  Princess  in  262 
make  us  all  we  would  be,  g  and  good.'  ..  «>  o»y 
Him  who  cares  not  to  be  g.  Ode  mi  Well.  199 
Makes  former  gladness  loom  so  ^  ?  In  Mem.  xxiv  10 
Thy  kindred  with  the  3  of  old.                                               .-      .  I^^'^l^, 

1  care  not  howsoever  g  he  be,  ^  Lawelotand  E.  1069 
vet  this  grief  Is  added  to  the  griefs  the  g  must  bear,  Gmnevere  J06 
bless  your  haters,  said  the  Greatest  of  the  g ;  Locksley  H  Sixty  85 
fail  Thro'  craven  fears  of  being  g.  Hands  all  round  32 
sowing  the  nettle  on  all  the  laurel'd  graves  of  the  G;  Vastness22 

Great    Sa  like  a  g  num-cumpus  I  blubber'd  A  oHh  Cobbler  61 

While  'e  sit  like  a  g  glimmer-gowk  V Mage  Wife  38 

I  heard  9  heaps  o' the  snaw  slushin' down  OwdKoaU 

Then  'e  married  a  g  Yerl's  darter,  Church-warden,  etc.  20 

Greater    (See  also  Graater)    Art  more  thro'  Love,  and  j  n  ,    oi 

%  than  thy  years,  „    Love  and  Duty  21 

For  there  are  g  wonders  there.  Day-Dm.,  Depart.  28 

And  ,  glory  varying  to  and  fro,  "^StlwTl^ 

And  ever  great  and  g  grew,  ^de  on  well,  luo 

What  know  we  g  than  the  soul?  "  ^?2 

G  than  I-is  that  your  cry  ?  Sp^^^M  ^*«f  17 

My  shame  is  y  who  remain,  ^  InMem.cix23 

from  childhood  shape  His  action  like  the  g  ape,  ,,       exx  xx 

Behind  thee  comes  the  g  light :  r^         i'  ^  fif^%ii 

and  evermore  As  I  grew  g  grew  with  me ;  Com.  of  Arthur  352 

And,  for  himself  was  of  the  g  state,  Gareth  and  L  395 

Because  I  fain  had  given  them  g  wits :  Merlin  and  V.  496 

I  should  have  found  in  him  a  3  heart.  ,  ;'    j  ^  Vi% 

there  lives  No  g  leader.'  Lancelot  and  E.  317 

'  And  on  I  rode,  and  ^  was  my  thirst.  Holy  Grail  mi 

The  g  man,  the  g  courtesy.  Last  Tournament  &Z^ 

and  draws  The  g  to  the  lesser,  ^'"■'^"^',^oo2 

why,  the  g  their  disgrace  !  ^2/^^«r  «  ^'^^.  g°t 

A /than  all  knowledge,  beat  her  down.  Princess  vii2ZQ 

Believed  himself  a  g  than  himself.  Last  Tournament  677 

Greatest     Requiring  at  her  hand  the  g  gift,  Gardener  sD  2'^ 

The  g  sailor  since  our  world  began.  Ode  on  Well.  86 

To  thee  the  g  soldier  comes ;  "  o^ 

For  this  is  England's  g  son,  "  ^^ 


Greatest 


284 


Greener 


Greatest  {continued)     '  that  you  love  This  g  knight,  your 

pardon !  Lancelot  and  E.  669 

what  profits  me  my  name  Of  g  knight  ?  „  1414 

Alas  for  Arthur's  g  knight,  „  1419 

'  We  have  heard  of  thee :  thou  art  our  g  knight,  Holy  Grail  603 

Chancellor,  or  what  is  g  would  he  be —  Aylmer's  Field  397 

life  which  all  our  g  fain  Would  follow,  Lucretius  78 

Our  g  yet  with  least  pretence,  Ode  on  Well.  29 

as  the  g  only  are.  In  his  simplicity  „  33 

grieving  that  their  g  are  so  small,  Merlin  and  V.  833 

to  learn  this  knight  were  whole.  Being  our  g  :  Lancelot  and  E.  773 

Not  all  unhappy,  having  loved  God's  best  And  g,  „  1094 

And  calling  me  the  g  of  all  knights.  Holy  Grail  595 

My  g  hardly  will  believe  he  saw ;  „  896 

bless  your  haters,  said  the  G  of  the  great ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  85 

Greatness    And  should  your  g,  and  the  care  To  the  Queen  9 

Remembering  all  his  y  in  the  Past.  Ode  on  Well.  20 

if  to-night  our  g  were  struck  dead.  Third  of  Feb.  17 

I  leave  thy  g  to  be  guess'd ;  In  Mem.  Ixxv  4 

She  knows  not  what  his  g  is,  „     xcvii  27 

According  to  his  g  whom  she  quench'd.  Merlin  and  V.  218 

passion  of  youth  Toward  ^  in  its  elder,  Lancelot  and  E.  283 

No  g,  save  it  be  some  far-off  touch  Of  g  „  450 

one  isle.  That  knows  not  her  own  g:  To  the  Queen  ii  32 

a  g  Got  from  their  Grandsires —  Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  15 

Gone  !     He  will  achieve  his  g.  Tiresias  168 

Flowing  with  easy  g  and  touching  on  all  things  great,        The  Wreck  50 
Step  by  step  we  rose  to  g, —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  130 

Pray  God  our  g  may  not  fail  Hands  all  round  31 

increased  Her  g  and  her  self -content.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  8 

Greaves    flamed  upon  the  brazen  g  Of  bold  Sir 

Lancelot.  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  4 

g  and  cuisses  dash'd  with  drops  Of  onset ;  M.  d' Arthur  215 

g  and  cuisses  dash'd  with  drops  Of  onset ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  383 

Grecian     A  Gothic  ruin  and  a  G  house.  Princess,  Pro.  232 

Ran  down  the  Persian,  G,  Roman  lines  „  ii  130 

And  read  a  G  tale  re-told,  Which,  cast  in  later 

G  mould,  To  Master  of  B.  5 

Gree^n  (green)  (adj.)     an'  jessmine  a-dressin'  it  g,  Spinster's  S's.  105 

Greean  (s)    we  was  shaamed  to  cross  Gigglesby  G,  „  33 

Greece    fairest  and  most  loving  wife  in  G,'  QLnone  187 

Greed     Blockish  irreverence,  brainless  g —  Columbus  129 

Greedy     Come  like  a  careless  and  a  g  heir  Lover's  Tale  i  675 

Greek  (adj.)    my  ancient  love  With  the  G  woman.  (Enone2Ql 

show'd  the  house,  G,  set  with  busts :  Princess,  Pro.  11 

Greek  (s)     whilome  spakest  to  the  South  in  G  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  29 

sphere-music  as  the  G  Had  hardly  dream'd  of.  Akbar's  Dream  44 

Green  (adj.)    See  also  Dark-green,  Grass-green,  Greean, 

Light-green,  Live-green,  Pale-green,  Silver-green) 

tears  of  penitence  Which  would  keep  g  Supp.  Confessions  119 

Under  the  hollow-hung  ocean  g !  The  Merman  38 

Are  neither  g  nor  sappy ;  Amphion  90 

flourishes  G  in  a  cuplike  hollow  of  the  down.  Enoch  Arden  9 

sow'd  her  name  and  kept  it  g  Aylmer's  Field  88 

I  trust  We  are  g  in  Heaven's  eyes ;  Holy  Grail  38 

heaven  appear'd  so  blue,  nor  earth  so  g,  „       365 

forehead  vapour-swathed  In  meadows  ever  Freedom  8 

And  see  my  cedar  g,  To  Ulysses  17 

High-wall'd  gardens  g  and  old ;  Arabian  Nights  8 

From  the  g  rivage  many  a  fall  Of  diamond  rillets  „  47 

Betwixt  the  g  brink  and  the  running  foam,  Sea-Fairies  2 

Whither  away  from  the  high  g  field,  „         8 

Grow  g  beneath  the  showery  g,  My  life  is  full  17 

And  in  the  middle  of  the  g  salt  sea  Mine  be  the  strength  7 

in  the  pits  Which  some  g  Christmas  crams  with 

weary  bones.  Wan  Sculptor  14 

on  the  casement-edge  A  long  g  box  of  mignonette.  Miller's  D.  83 

In  this  g  vallev,  under  this  g  hill,  CEnone  232 

round  the  cool  g  courts  there  ran  a  row  Of  cloisters,       Palace  of  Art  25 
All  the  valley,  mother,  'ill  be  fresh  and  g  and  still.  May  Queen  37 

Don't  let  Effie  come  to  see  me  till  my  grave 

be  growing  g :  May  Qmen,  N.  Y's.  E.  43 

and  there  Grows  g  and  broad,  and  takes  no  care,   Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  28 
at  the  root  thro'  lush  g  grasses  bum'd  D.  of  F.  Women  71 

'Single  I  grew,  like  some  g  plant,  „  205 


Green  (adj.)  (continued)    To  one  g  wicket  in  a  privet 

hedge ;  Gardener's  D.  110 

With  one  g  sparkle  ever  and  anon  Dipt  Audley  Court  88 

Beyond  the  fair  g  field  and  eastern  sea.  Love  and  Duty  101 

And  dewy  Northern  meadows  g.  The  Voyage  36 

bathed  In  the  g  gleam  of  dewy-tassell'd  trees :  Princess  i  94 

'  Ye  are  g  wood,  see  ye  warp  not.  „      ii  75 

The  g  malignant  light  of  coming  storm.  „  Hi  132 

when  all  the  woods  are  g?  „  iv  107 
Started  a  g  linnet  Out  of  the  croft ;                        Minnie  and  Winnie  17 

Within  the  g  the  moulder'd  tree.  In  Mem.  xxvi  1 

Who  wears  his  manhood  hale  and  g :  „          liii  4 

So  thro'  the  g  gloom  of  the  wood  they  past,  Geraint  and  E.  195 

mist  Like  that  which  kept  the  heart  of  Eden  g  „             770 

leaves  Laid  their  g  faces  flat  against  the  panes,  Balin  and  Balan  344 

Chose  the  g  path  that  show'd  the  rarer  foot,  Lancelot  and  E.  162 

g  light  from  the  meadows  underneath  Struck  up  „             408 

Till  all  the  place  whereon  she  stood  was  g ;  „           1200 

And  g  wood- ways,  and  eyes  among  the  leaves ;  Pelleas  and  E.  139 

In  fuming  sulphur  blue  and  g,  a  fiend —  Last  Tournament  617 
gardener's  hand  Picks  from  the  colewort  a  g 

caterpillar,  Guinevere  32 

prest  together  In  its  g  sheath.  Lover's  Tale  i  153 

G  prelude,  April  promise,  glad  new-year  Of  Being,  „             281 

Rather  to  thee,  g  boscage,  work  of  God,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  129 

but  the  whole  g  Isle  was  our  own,  V.  of  Maeldune  93 

Or  the  young  g  leaf  rejoice  in  the  frost  The  Wreck  20 
G  Sussex  fading  into  blue  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  7 
'  sitting  on  g  sofas  contemplate  The  torment  of 

the  damn'd  '  Akbar's  Dream  48 
Green  (s)    (See  also  Chapel-green,  Greean,  Gold-green) 

Winnow  with  giant  arms  the  slumbering  g.  The  Kraken  10 

and  earliest  shoots  Of  orient  g.  Ode  to  Memory  18 

Shot  over  with  purple,  and  g.  Dying  Swan  20 
the  g  that  folds  thy  grave,  (repeat)         A  Dirge  6,  13,  20,  27,  34,  41,  48 

In  some  fair  space  of  sloping  g's  Palace  of  Art  106 

Effie  shall  go  with  me  to-morrow  to  the  g,  May  Queen  25 
Beneath  the  hawthorn  on  the  g                         May  Q%een,  N.  Y's.  E.  10 

branches,  fledges  with  clearest  g,  D.  of  F.  Women  59 

The  smell  of  violets,  hidden  in  the  g,  „            77 

like  a  purple  beech  among  the  g's  Edwin  Morris  84 

when  she  gamboll'd  on  the  g's  Talking  Oak  77 
All  creeping  plants,  a  wall  of  g                                 Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  45 

The  topmost  elm-tree  gather'd  g  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  8 

all  the  wood  stands  in  a  mist  of  g,  The  Brook  14 

pure  as  lines  of  g  that  streak  the  white  Princess  v  196 

That  twinkle  into  g  and  gold :  In  Mem.  xi  8 

This  round  of  g,  this  orb  of  flame,  |  „      xxxiv  5 

And  on  a  simple  village  g ;  „         Ixiv  4 

Thy  leaf  has  perish'd  in  the  g,  „      Ixxv  13 

those  fall'n  leaves  which  kept  their  g,  „        xcv  23 

feet  like  sunny  gems  on  an  English  g,  Maud  7  d  14 
damp  hill-slopes  were  quicken'd  into  g,                 '       Gareth  and  L.  184 

the  live  g  had  kindled  into  flowers,  „  185 
Breaks  from  a  coppice  gemm'd  with  g  and 

red,  Marr.  of  Geraint  339 

like  a  shoaling  sea  the  lovely  blue  Play'd  into  g,  Geraint  and  E.  689 

In  g  and  gold,  and  plumed  with  g  Merlin  and  V.  89 

And  armour'd  all  in  forest  g.  Last  Tournament  170 

good  warhorse  left  to  graze  Among  the  forest  g's,  „               491 

Modred  still  in  g,  all  ear  and  eye,  Guinevere  24 

— its  wreaths  of  dripping  g —  Lover's  Tale  i  39 

recalling  fragrance  and  the  g  Of  the  dead  spring :  „            723 

Ues  Behind  the  g  and  blue  ?  Ancient  Sage  26 

blue  of  sky  and  sea,  the  g  of  earth,  „            41 

for  a  blessin'  'ud  come  wid  the  g  ! '  Tomorrow  64 
ShaUow  skin  of  g  and  azure —                                Locksley  H.,  Sixty  208 

mantle,  every  shade  of  glancing  g.  Prog,  of  Spring  63 

earth's  g  stole  into  heaven's  own  hue.  Far — far — away  2 

as  summer-new  As  the  g  of  the  bracken  June  Bracken,  etc.  9 
Green  (verb)    g's  The  swamp,  where  humm'd  the 

dropping  snipe.  On  a  Mourner  8 

Greener     This  laurel  g  from  the  brows  Of  him  To  the  Queen  7 

might  have  danced  The  greensward  into  g  circles,  Gardener's  D.  134 

Yet  the  yellow  leaf  hates  the  g  leaf.  Spiteful  Letter  15 


Green-glimmering 


285 


Grew 


Green-glimmering    G-g  toward  the  summit, 
Crreen-glooming    g-g  twilight  of  the  grove, 
Careening    Her  dust  is  ^  in  your  leaf, 
Her  mantle,  slowly  g  in  the  Sun, 
or  dives  In  yonder  g  gleam, 
A  Jacob's  ladder  falls  On  g  grass, 


Lancelot  and  E.  483 

Pelleas  and  E.  33 

Ancient  Sage  165 

Prog,  of  Spring  11 

In  Mem.  cxv  14 

Early  Spring  10 


Greenish    except  For  g  glimmerings  thro'  the  lancets,      Aylmer's  Field  622 
the  moon  was  falling  g  thro'  a  rosy  glow,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  178 

Green-rushing    G-r  from  the  rosy  thrones  (repeat)  Voice  and  the  P.  4,  40 

Green-suited    G-s,  but  with  plumes  that  mock'd  Guinevere  22 

Greensward    danced  The  g  into  greener  circles.  Gardener's  B.  134 

flit  To  make  the  g  fresh,  Talking  Oak  90 

Greenwood    Thou  liest  beneath  the  g  tree,  Oriana  95 

Greet     to  g  Troy's  wandering  prince.  On  a  Mourner  32 

g  their  fairer  sisters  of  the  East.  Gardener's  D.  188 

To  g  the  sheriff,  needless  courtesy  !  Edwin  Morris  133 

To  meet  and  g  her  on  her  way ;  Beggar  Maid  6 

'  G  her  with  applausive  breath.  Vision  of  Sin  135 

To  9  his  hearty  welcome  heartily ;       ^  Enoch  Arden  350 

g  her,  wasting  his  forgotten  heart,  Aylmer's  Field  689 

ran  To  g  him  with  a  kiss,  Lucretius  7 

rose  a  cry  As  if  to  ^  the  king ;  Princess  v  249 

No  more  in  soldier  fashion  wiU  he  g  Ode  on  Well.  21 

thrice  as  large  as  man  he  bent  To  g  us.  In  Mem  ciii  43 

To  meet  and  g  a  whiter  sun ;  „       Con.  78 

Should  I  fear  to  g  my  friend  Maud  II  iv  85 
rejoiced  More  than  Geraint  to  g  her  thus  attiied ;    Marr.  of  Geraint  772 

'  My  lord  Geraint,  I  g  you  with  all  love ;  Geraint  and  E.  785 

the  King  himself  Advanced  to  g  them,  „            879 

but  how  ye  g  me — fear  And  faiilt  and  doubt —  Last  Tournament  517 

So  sweetly  and  so  modestly  she  came  To  g  us,  Lover's  Tale  iv  171 

rose  from  off  his  throne  to  g  Before  Columbus  5 

And  g  it  with  a  kindly  smile  ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  4 

Every  morning  here  we  g  it,  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  3 

Greeted    Maiden,  not  to  be  g  unbenignly.  Hendecasyllahics  21 

G  Geraint  full  face,  but  stealthily,  Geraint  and  E.  279 

The  Lost  one  Found  was  ^  as  in  Heaven  Balin  and  JBalan  81 

and  with  how  sweet  grace  She  g  my  return  !  „            194 

Vivien,  being  g  fair.  Would  fain  have  wrought  Merlin  and  V.  155 

For  silent,  tho'  he  g  her,  she  stood  Lancelot  and  E.  355 

'  Have  comfort,'  whom  she  g  quietly.  „            995 
thro'  open  door  Rode  Gawain,  whom  she  g 

courteously.  Pelleas  and  E.  383 

and  then  on  Pelleas,  him  Who  had  not  g  her,  „            591 

Passion-pale  they  met  And  g.  Guinevere  100 

If  g  by  your  classic  smile,  To  Prof.  Jebb  10 

Greeting    Full  cold  my  g  was  and  dry ;  The  Letters  13 

And  gets  for  g  but  a  wail  of  pain;  Lucretius  138 

Eternal  g's  to  the  dead ;  In  Mem.  Ivii  14 

foimd  the  g's  both  of  knight  and  King  Balin  and  Balan  342 

I  send  a  birthday  line  Of  gr ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  46 

Grenade    See  Hand-grenade 

Grenville  (Sir  Richard)    See  Richard,  Richard  Grenville 

Grew    {See  also  Graw'd)    G  darker  from  that 

under- flame :  Arabian  Nights  91 

mother  plant  in  semblance,  g  A  flower  all  gold,  Tlie  Poet  23 

She,  as  her  carol  sadder  g,  Mariana  in  the  S.  13 

'  He  dried  his  wings :  Hke  gauze  they  g ;  Two  Voices  13 

'  Single  I  g,  hke  some  green  plant,  D.  of  F.  Women  205 

G  pliunp  and  able-bodied ;  The  Goose  18 

we  g  The  fable  of  the  city  where  we  dwelt.  Gardener's  D.  5 

hoarded  in  herself,  6*,  seldom  seen ;  „            50 

in  praise  of  her  G  oratory.  „            57 

For  up  the  porch  there  g  an  Eastern  rose,  „          123 

Her  beauty  g ;  till  Autumn  brought  an  hour  For  Eustace,      „  207 

moimd  That  was  imsown,  where  many  poppies  g.  Dora  73 

wreath  of  all  the  flowers  That  g  about,  „     83 

Of  different  ages,  hke  twin-sisters  g,  Edwin  Morris  32 

I  g  Twice  ten  long  weary  weary  years  St.  S.  Stylites  89 

And  in  the  chase  g  wild.  Talking  Oak  126 

To  look  as  if  they  g  there.  Am/phion  80 

But  such  whose  father-grape  g  fat  Will  Water.  7 

That  she  g  a  noble  lady,  L.  of  Burleigh  75 

Faint  she  g,  and  ever  fainter,  „            81 

wam'd  that  madman  ere  it  g  too  late :  Vision  of  Sin  56 


Grew  (continued) 
change : 
1  g  in  gladness  till  I  found  My  spirits 
third  child  was  sickly-born  and  g  Yet  sicklier, 
Philip's  rosy  face  contracting  g  Careworn  and  wan ; 
Thicker  the  drizzle  g,  deeper  the  gloom ; 
Heaven  in  lavish  bounty  moulded,  g. 


The  voice  g  faint :  there  came  a  further 

Vision  of  Sin  207 

To  E.  L.  11 

Enoch  Arden  261 

486 

679 

Aylmer's  Field  107 


and  still  G  with  the  growing  note,  Sea  Dreams  213 

g  Tired  of  so  much  within  our  httle  life,  Lucretius  225 

lovelier  than  their  names,  G  side  by  side  ;  Princess,  Pro.  13 

the  brain  was  like  the  hand,  and  g  With  using ;  „  ii  150 

'  How  g  this  feud  betwixt  the  right  and  left.'  „  Hi  77 

they  were  still  together,  g  (For  so  they  said  themselves)      „  88 

I  g  discouraged.  Sir ;  but  since  I  knew  No  rock  „  153 

they  g  Like  field-flowers  everywhere !  „  251 

Sun  G  broader  toward  his  death  and  fell,  „  364 

Till  all  men  g  to  rate  us  at  our  worth,  „  iv  145 

thus  a  noble  scheme  G  up  from  seed  „  310 

there  g  Another  kind  of  beauty  in  detail  „  447 

a  clamour  ^  As  of  a  new-world  Babel,  „  486 

That  all  things  g  more  tragic  and  more  strange ;  „  vi  23 

o'er  him  g  Tall  as  a  figure  lengthen'd  „  160 

And  ever  great  and  greater  g,  Ode  on  Well.  108 

What  slender  campaniU  g  The  Daisy  13 

it  g  so  tall  It  wore  a  crown  of  light.  The  Flower  9 

And  still  as  vaster  g  the  shore  In  Mem.  ciii  25 

I  would  the  great  world  g  like  thee,  „       cxiv  25 

And  g  to  seeming-random  forms,  „    cxviii  10 

There  rolls  the  deep  where  g  the  tree.  „     cxxiii  1 

For  thee  she  g,  for  thee  she  grows  „      Con.  35 

Discussing  how  their  courtship  g,  „  97 

When  it  slowly  g  so  thin,  Maud  I  xix  20 

months  ran  on  and  rumour  of  battle  g,  „    ///  vi  29 

so  there  g  great  tracts  of  wilderness.  Com.  of  Arthur  10 

they  g  up  to  wolf-like  men,  Worse  than  the  wolves.  „  32 

and  evermore  As  I  g-  greater  g  with  me ; 
a  slope  of  land  that  ever  g,  Field  after  field. 
To  break  him  from  the  intent  to  which  he  g, 
under  cloud  that  g  To  thunder-gloom 
g  Forgetful  of  his  promise  to  the  King, 
still  she  look'd,  and  still  the  terror  g 
Ue  still,  and  yet  the  sapUng  g : 
he  g  Tolerant  of  what  he  hafi  disdain'd, 
g  So  grated  down  and  filed  away  with  thought, 
the  dark  wood  g  darker  toward  the  storm 
g  between  her  and  the  pictiu'ed  wall. 
g  so  cheerful  that  they  deem'd  her  death 
then  the  times  G  to  such  evil  that  the  holy  cup 
sound  As  from  a  distance  beyond  distance  g 
till  I  g  One  with  him,  to  beUeve  as  he  believed, 
wholesome  flower  And  poisonous  g  together, 
flats,  where  nothing  but  coarse  grasses  g ; 
With  such  a  closeness,  but  apart  there  g, 
Whereon  a  hundred  stately  beeches  g, 
g  So  witty  that  ye  play'd  at  ducks  and  drakes 
all  this  trouble  did  not  pass  but  g ; 
And  g  half -guilty  in  her  thoughts  again, 
dolorous  day  G  drearier  toward  twilight  falling. 
They  g  aweary  of  her  fellowship : 
that  my  love  G  with  myself — 
sustenance,  which,  still  as  thought,  g  large, 
and  g  again  To  utterance  of  passion. 
Why  g  we  then  together  in  one  plot  ? 
g  at  length  Prophetical  and  prescient 
and  each  heart  G  closer  to  the  other, 
a  wave  hke  the  wave  that  is  raised  by  an  earth- 
quake g, 
G  after  marriage  to  full  height  and  form  ? 
could  it  be  That  trees  g  downward, 
and  the  light  G  as  I  gazed, 
they  prest,  as  they  g,  on  each  other, 
fixt  on  mine,  till  mine  g  dark  For  ever, 
the  great  storm  g  with  a  howl  and  a  hoot 
stars  in  heaven  Paled,  and  the  glory  g. 
souls  of  men,  who  g  beyond  their  race, 


351 

428 

Gareth  and  L.  140 

1358 

Marr.  of  Geraint  49 

615 

Geraint  and  E.  165 

Merlin  and  V.  177 

622 

890 

Lancelot  and  E.  993 

1131 

Holy  Grail  57 

112 

486 

776 

794 

884 

Pdleas  and  E.  26 

Last  Tournament  343 

Guinevere  84 

„       408 

Pass,  of  Arthur  123 

Lover's  Tale  i  109 

165 

240 

546 

m23 

131 

187 

The  Revenge  115 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  171 

Columbus  50 

77 

V.  of  Maddune  64 

Tiresias  47 

The  Wreck  91 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  32 

Demeter  and  I\  140 


Grew 


286 


Grinning 


Grew  (continiied)    face  Of  Miriam  g  upon  me,  till  I  knew ;        The  Ring  185 
that  g  Blown  into  glittering  by  the  popular  breath,         Romney's  R.  48 
Grewest     Who  g  not  alone  in  power  And  knowledge.  In  Mem.  cxiv  26 

Greys     Brave  Inniskillens  and  G  Heavy  Brigade  33 

Gride    g's  and  clangs  Its  leafless  ribs  In  Mem.  cvii  11 

Grief    with  g,  not  fear,  With  hopeful  g,  Supp.  Confessions  38 

strong  Against  the  g  of  circumstance  „  92 

not  weep,  nor  let  your  g  be  wild.  May  Queen,  N.  T's.  E.  35 

and  g  became  A  solemn  scorn  of  ills.  D.  of  F.  Women  227 

In  g  I  am  not  all  unlearn'd  ;  To  J.  S.  18 

Let  G  be  her  own  mistress  still.  „       41 

Words  weaker  than  your  j  would  make  G  more.  „       65 

such  a  distance  from  his  youth  in  g,  Gardener's  D.  54 

Annie,  seated  with  her  g,  Enoch  Arden  280 

if  g's  Like  his  have  worse  or  better,  „  740 

My  g  and  solitude  have  broken  me ;  „  857 

I  am  grieved  to  learn  your  g —  Aylmer's  Field  398 

from  his  height  and  loneliness  of  g  „  632 

my  g  to  find  her  less  than  fame.  Princess  i  73 

tinged  with  wan  from  lack  of  sleep,  Or  g,  „     Hi  26 

Red  g  and  mother's  hunger  in  her  eye,  '  „    vi  146 

Rang  ruin,  answer'd  full  of  g  and  scorn.  „        333 

sidelong  glances  at  my  father's  g,  „   vii  107 

Forgive  my  g  for  one  removed,  In  Mem.,  Pro.  37 

Let  Love  clasp  G  lest  both  be  drown'd,  „  id 

That  g  hath  shaken  into  frost ! 
To  put  in  words  the  g  I  feel ; 
But  that  large  g  which  these  enfold 
Calm  as  to  suit  a  calmer  g, 
And  hush'd  my  deepest  g  of  all, 
The  lesser  g's  that  may  be  said. 
But  there  are  other  g's  within, 
And  is  it  that  the  haze  of  g 
The  voice  was  not  the  voice  of  g, 
And  by  the  measure  of  my  g  I  leave 
A  g,  then  changed  to  something  else, 

0  g,  can  g  be  changed  to  less  ? 
The  g  my  loss  in  him  had  wrought, 
A  ^  as  deep  as  life  or  thought, 
To  this  which  is  our  common  g. 
And  in  my  g  a  strength  reserved. 
Or  so  shall  g  with  symbols  play 
And  in  the  midmost  heart  of  g 
No  more  shall  wayward  g  abuse 
Ring  out  the  g  that  saps  the  mind, 
'twere  possible  After  long  g  and  pain 
By  reason  of  the  bitterness  and  g 
overtoil'd  By  that  day's  g  and  travel, 

1  have  g's  enough :  Pray  you  be  gentle, 
Thy  chair,  a  j  to  all  the  brethren, 
face  Hand-hidden,  as  for  utmost  g  or  shame; 
I  find  with  g !     I  might  believe  you  then. 
Words,  as  we  grant  g  tears. 
King  himself  could  hardly  speak  For  g, 
left  alone  once  more,  and  cried  in  g. 
Being  so  clouded  with  his  g  and  love. 
And  gulf 'd  his  g's  in  inmost  sleep ; 
he  answer'd  not,  Or  hast  thou  other  g's  ? 
nor  sought.  Wrapt  in  her  g,  for  housel 
sweet  lady,  the  King's  g  For  his  own  self, 
For  if  there  ever  come  a  g  to  me  I  cry  my  cry 
But  even  were  the  g's  of  little  ones 
yet  this  g  Is  added  to  the  g's  the  great  must  bear, 
Grieve  with  the  common  g  of  all  the  realm  ? ' 
*  this  is  all  woman's  g.  That  she  is  woman. 
Grieve  with  your  g's,  not  grieving  at  your  joys, 
Time  and  G  abode  too  long  with  Life, 
Time  and  G  did  beckon  unto  Death, 
The  grasp  of  hopeless  g  about  my  heart, 
Because  my  g  as  yet  was  newly  born 
I  was  shut  up  with  G ; 

whence  without  some  guilt  should  such  ghe? 
Behind  the  world,  that  make  our  g's  our  gains.    Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  231 
G  for  our  perishing  children,  and  never  a  moment 

for  g,  Def.  of  Luchnow  89 


Ckief  (continued)    chariots  backward,  knowing  g's 
at  hand ; 
The  g  for  ever  born  from  g's  to  be, 
With  present  g,  and  made  the  rhymes, 
With  a  g  that  could  only  be  cured, 
die  for  ever,  if  all  his  g's  are  in  vain. 


Achilles  over  ike  T.  25 

Tiresias  80 

„      196 

Despair  80 

„       82 


iv  12 

v2 

11 

„  xi  2 

„  xix  10 

;;       '"'ii 

„  xxiv  9 

„  Ixix  19 

„  Ixxv  3 

„  Ixxvii  11 

„  Ixxviii  16 

„  Ixxx 6 

^ 

„  Ixxxv  7 

52 

95 

„       Ixxxviii  7 

«;9 

„  cvi  9 

Maud  II  iv  2 

Com.  of  Arthur  209 

Geraint  and  E.  377 

707 

Balin  and  Balan  78 

Merlin  and  V.  897 

922 

Lancelot  and  E.  1188 

Holy  Grail  355 

437 

656 

Pelleas  and  E.  516 

599 

Guinevere  149 

196 

200 

203 

204 

217 

218 

679 

Lover's  Tale  i  107 

110 

126 

613 

680 

795 


g's  by  which  he  once  was  wrung  Were  never  worth      Ancient  Sage  127 

O  rosetree  planted  in  my  g,  „            163 

the  world  is  dark  with  g's  and  graves,  „             171 

You  will  not  leave  me  thus  in  g  The  Flight  85 

When  all  my  g's  were  shared  with  thee,  Pref.  Poem.  Broth.  S.  25 

with  all  its  pains,  and  g's,  and  deaths.  To  Prin.  Beatrice  2 

grieved  for  man  thro'  all  my  g  for  thee, —  Demeter  and  P.  75 

lost  in  utter  g  I  fail'd  To  send  my  life  „             109 

the  sun,  Pale  at  my  g,  drew  down  before  his  time  „             114 

0  the  g  when  yesterday  They  bore  the  Cross  Happy  47 
and  with  G  Sit  face  to  face,  To  Mary  Boyle  45 
crazed  With  the  g  that  gnaw'd  at  my  heart.  Bandit's  Death  39 
soften  me  with  g  !  Doubt  and  Prayer  9 

Grieve     heart  faints  and  my  whole  soul  g's  A  spirit  haunts  16 

1  jr  to  see  you  poor  and  wanting  help :  Enoch  Arden  406 
With  such  compelling  cause  to  g  In  Mem.  xxix  1 
g  Thy  brethren  with  a  fruitless  tear  ?  „  Iviii  9 
it  is  not  often  I  g ;  Grandmother  89 
G  with  the  common  grief  of  all  the  realm  ? '  Guinevere  217 
G  with  your  griefs,  not  grieving  at  your  joys,  „         679 

Grieved    I  am  g  to  learn  your  grief —  Aylmer's  Field  398 

and  she  g  In  her  strange  dream.  Sea  Dreams  229 

you  began  to  change — I  saw  it  and  g —  Princess  iv  299 

be  not  wroth  or  g  At  thy  new  son,  Marr.  of  Geraint  779 

the  great  charger  stood,  a  like  a  man.  Geraint  and  E.  535 

since  I  was  nurse,  had  I  been  so  g  and  so  vext !  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  45 

g  for  man  thro'  all  my  grief  for  thee, —  Demeter  and  P.  75 

Grieving    g  held  his  will,  and  bore  it  thro'.  Enoch  Arden  167 

g  that  their  greatest  are  so  small.  Merlin  and  V.  833 

Grieve  with  your  griefs,  not  g  at  your  joys,  Guinevere  679 

Grievous    He  that  only  rules  by  terror  Doeth  g  wrong.  The  Captain  2 

Where  I  will  heal  me  of  my  g  wound.'  M.  d' Arthur  264 

Where  I  will  heal  me  of  my  g  wound.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  432 

after  healing  of  his  g  wound  He  comes  again ;  „               450 

All  day  the  men  contend  in  g  war  Achilles  over  the  T.  9 

Griflftn    On  wyvem,  lion,  dragon,  g,  swan,  Holy  Grail  350 

Gnome  of  the  cavern,  G  and  Giant,  Merlin  and  the  G.  40 

Griffin-guarded    we  reached  The  g-g  gates,  AvMey  Court  15 

Grig     like  the  dry  High-elbow'd  g's  The  Brook  54 

Grim    Godiva,  wife  to  that  g  Earl,  who  ruled  In  Coventry  :  Godiva  12 

Unclasp'd  the  wedded  eagles  of  her  belt.  The  g  Earl's  gift ;          „      44 

Were  their  faces  g.  The  Captain  54 

'  Wrinkled  ostler,  g  and  thin !  Vision  of  Sin  63 

And  with  g  laughter  thrust  us  out  at  gates.  Princess  iv  556 

Lifting  his  g  head  from  my  wounds.  „        vi  272 

High  on  a  y  dead  tree  before  the  tower,  Last  Tournament  430 

g  faces  came  and  went  Before  her,  Guinevere  70 

gone  is  he  To  wage  g  war  against  Sir  Lancelot  „  193 
Every  g  ravine  a  garden,  every  blazing  desert 

till'd,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  168 

What  hast  thou  done  for  me,  g  Old  Age,  By  an  Evolution.  9 

Grimace     Caught  each  other  with  wild  g's,  Vision  of  Sin  35 

Grimed    their  foreheads  g  with  smoke,  and  sear'd.  Holy  Grail  265 

Grimly    flickering  in&g  light  Dance  on  the  mere.  Gareth  and  L.  826 
G  with  swords  that  were  sharp  from  the 

grindstone,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  41 

Grimy    G  nakedness  dragging  his  trucks  Maud  1x7 

And  couch'd  at  night  with  g  kitchen-knaves.  Gareth  and  L.  481 

Grin    g's  on  a  pile  of  children's  bones,  Maud  I  i  46 

chuckle,  and  g  a.t  a,  brother's  shame ;  „        iv  29 

Grind    A  grazing  iron  collar  ^'s  my  neck ;  St.  8.  Stylites  117 

centre-bits  G  on  the  wakeful  ear  Maud  I  i  ^ 
feet  of  Tristram  g  The  spiring  stone  that  scaled     Last  Tournament  510 

in  these  spasms  that  g  Bone  against  bone.  Columbus  220 

Tliat  g  the  glebe  to  powder !  Tiresias  95 

Grinding    I  heard  the  shingle  g  in  the  surge,  Holy  Grail  811 

Grindstone    swords  that  were  sharp  from  the  g,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  41 

Grinning    (See  also  Bare-grinning,  Deatbful-grinning) 

fool,  Who  was  gaping  and  g  by :  Maud  II  i  20 


Grinning 


287 


Ground 


Grinning  (continued)     and  tooth'd  with  g  savagery.'      Balin  and  Bcdan  197 
Grip     in  the  hard  g  of  his  hand,  Sea  Dreams  163 

An'  'e  ligs  on  'is  back  i'  the  g,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  31 

Gripe     hand  in  wUd  delirium,  g  it  hard.  Princess  vii  93 

Gript    G  my  hand  hard,  and  with  God-bless-you  went.         Sea  Dreams  160 

Each  g  a  shoulder,  and  I  stood  between ;  Holy  Grail  822 

his  strong  hands  g  And  dinted  the  gilt  dragons       Last  Tournament  181 

He  y  it  so  hard  by  the  throat  Bandit's  Death  28 

Grisly    haggard  father's  face  and  reverend  beard  Of 
g  twine. 

With  a  g  wound  to  be  drest  he  had  left  the  deck, 
Gritted    and  thou  shalt  cease  To  pace  the  g  floor, 
Griszled    a  story  which  in  rougher  shape  Came  from  a 
g  cripple, 

forth  a  g  damsel  came. 

To  me  this  narrow  g  fork  of  thine  Is  cleaner- 
fashion'd — 
Grizzlier     Albeit  g  than  a  bear,  to  ride  And  jest  with : 
Groan  (s)    exprest  By  signs  or  g's  or  tears ; 

Down  in  the  south  is  a  flash  and  a  g : 

he  but  gave  a  wrathful  g,  Saying, 

gave  A  marvellous  great  shriek  and  ghastly  g, 

'  Our  mightiest ! '  answer'd  Lancelot,  with  a  g ; 

Or  Labour,  with  a  g  and  not  a  voice, 

their  curses  and  their  g's. 

trumpets  of  victory,  g's  of  defeat ; 
Groan  (verb)    mother  who  never  has  heard  us  g\ 

We  should  see  the  Globe  we  g  in, 

g's  to  see  it,  finds  no  comfort  there. 
Groan'd     deep  brook  g  beneath  the  mill ; 

as  their  faces  drew  together,  g, 

'  No  trifle,'  g  the  husband ; 

King  Leodogran  G  for  the  Roman  legions 

G,  and  at  times  would  mutter, 

g  Sir  Lancelot  in  remorseful  pain, 

*  Black  nest  of  rats,'  he  g. 

Until  he  g  for  wrath — so  many  of  those, 

and  he  g, '  The  King  is  gone.' 

Found,  fear'd  me  dead,  and  g, 

He  g,  he  tum'd,  and  in  the  mist 

while  I  g,  From  out  the  sunset  pour'd 
Gro&nin'    Moother  was  naggin'  an'  g 
Groaning    (See  also  Groanin')    tum'd,  and  g  said, 
'  Forgive ! 

organ  almost  burst  his  pipes,  G  for  power, 

to  them  the  doors  gave  way  G, 

With  hand  and  rope  we  haled  the  g  sow, 

Kay  near  him  g  like  a  wounded  bull — 

the  fallen  man  Made  answer,  g,  '  Edyrn, 

g  laid  The  naked  sword  athwart  their  naked 
throats, 

I,  g,  from  me  flung  Her  empty  phantom : 
^^  I  heard  a  g  overhead,  and  climb'd 

Grog     But  if  thou  wants  thy  g, 

But  if  tha  wants  ony  g  tha  mun  goa  fur  it 
Cirog-shop    See  Shebeen 
Groom  (a  servant)    hung  with  g's  and  porters  on  the  bridge, 

An'  they  rampaged  about  wi'  their  g's. 
Groom  (bridegroom)    (See  also  Bridegroom)    Gives  her 
harsh  g  for  bridal-gift 

As  drinking  health  to  bride  and  g 
Groom'd    strongly  g  and  straitly  curb'd 

and  now  so  long  By  bandits  g. 
Groove    down  the  ringing  g's  of  change. 

Down  rang  the  grate  of  iron  thro'  the  g. 
Grope    g.  And  gather  dust  and  chaff. 

And  grovel  and  g  for  my  son 
Groped    g  as  blind,  and  seem'd  Always  about  to  fall, 

She  gabbled,  as  she  g  in  the  dead. 
Groping    feeble  twilight  of  this  world  G, 

the  girl's  Lean  fancy,  g  for  it, 
Gross  (adj.)    In  the  g  blackness  imderneath. 


Princess  vi  104 
The  Revenge  66 
Will  Water.  242 

Aylmer's  Field  8 
Gareth  and  L.  1114 

Merlin  and  V.  59 

Pelleas  and  E.  193 

D.ofF.  Women  284: 

Window,  Gone  8 

Geraint  and  E.  398 

Lancelot  and  E.  516 

Holy  GraU  766 

To  the  Queen  ii  55 

Columbus  68 

Vastness  8 

Despair  98 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  188 

Romney's  R.  45 

Miller's  D.  113 

Enoch  Arden  74 

Sea  Dreams  145 

Com.  of  Arthur  34 

Balin  and  Balan  173 

Lancelot  and  E.  1428 

Pelleas  and  E.  555 

Last  Tournament  183 

Pass,  of  Arthur  443 

The  Flight  23 

Death  of  (Enone  49 

Akbar's  Dream  191 

Owd  Rod  108 

Sea  Dreams  59 

Princess  ii  Alb 

„       vi  350 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  91 

Gareth  and  L.  648 

Marr.  of  Geraint  576 

Pelleas  and  E.  451 

Lover's  Tale,  ii  205 

iv  136 

North.  Cobbler  8 

113 


Godiva  2 
Village  Wife  36 


Princess  v  378 

In  Mem.,  Con.  83 

Princess  v  456 

Geraint  and  E.  193 

Locksley  Hall  182 

Pelleas  and  E.  207 

In  Mem.  Iv  17 

Rizpah  8 

Aylmer's  Field  821 

Dead  Prophet  73 

Geraint  and  E.  6 

The  Ring  336 

Supp.  Confessions  187 


G  darkness  of  the  inner  sepulchre  D.  of  F.  Women  67 

So  j;  to  express  delight,  in  praLse  of  her  Gardener's  D.  56 

It  cannot  be  but  some  g  error  lies  In  this  report,  Princess  i  69 


Gross  (adj.)  (continued)    yet  On  tiptoe  seem'd  to  touch 

upon  a  sphere  Too  g  to  tread.  Princess  vii  325 

drown  His  heart  in  the  g  mud-honey  of  town,  Maud  I  xvi  5 

What  should  be  granted  which  your  own  g  heart        Merlin  and  V.  916 

For  when  had  Lancelot  utter'd  aught  so  g  Last  Tournament  631 

Save  that  I  think  this  g  hard-seeming  world         Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  229 

You  make  our  faults  too  g,  and  thence 

maintain  To  One  who  ran  down  Eng.  1 

Gross  (s)    As  flies  the  lighter  thro'  the  g.  In  Mem.  xli  4 

Grosser    with  a  g  film  made  thick  These  heavy, 

homy  eyes.  St.  S.  Stylites  200 

song  Might  have  been  worse  and  sinn'd  in  g  lips  Princess  iv  251 

Barbarians,  g  than  your  native  bears —  „            537 

draw  water,  or  hew  wood.  Or  g  tasks ;  Gareth  and  L.  487 

but  g  grown  Than  heathen.  Pass,  of  Arthur  61 

Grossest     Love,  tho'  Love  were  of  the  g.  Merlin  and  V.  461 

Crossness     the  9  of  his  nature  will  have  weight  Locksley  Hall  48 

Grot     The  hollow  g  replieth  Claribel  20 

From  many  a  wondrous  g  and  secret  cell  The  Kraken  8 

Black  the  garden-bowers  and  g's  Arabian  Nights  78 

alleys  falling  down  to  twilight  g's,  Ode  to  Memory  107 

shadow'd  g's  of  arches  interlaced.  Palace  of  Art  51 

Grotesque    raillery,  or  g,  or  false  sublime —  Princess  iv  588 

Groun'     a  corp  lyin'  undher  g.  Tomorrow  62 

Ground  (s)  •  (See  also  Groun',  Mountain-ground)    Till 

the  air  And  the  g  Nothing  will  Die  28 

And  dew  is  cold  upon  the  g,  The  Owl  i  2 

All  the  place  is  holy  g ;  Poet's  Mind  9 

It  would  fall  to  the  g  if  you  came  in.  „          23 

And  shall  fall  again  to  g.  Deserted  House  16 

Not  that  the  g's  of  hope  were  fix'd,  Two  Voices  227 

from  the  g  She  raised  her  piercing  orbs,  D.  ofF.  Women  170 

I  keep  smooth  plats  of  fruitful  g,  The  Blackbird  3 

as  he  near'd  His  happy  home,  the  g.  Gardener's  D.  92 

And  mix'd  with  shadows  of  the  common  g !  „            135 

Dora  cast  her  eyes  upon  the  g,  Dora  89 

perish,  falling  on  the  foeman's  g,  Locksley  Hall  103 

O  Lord ! — 'tis  in  my  neighbour's  g,  Amphion  75 

To  yonder  shining  g;  St.  Agnes'  Eve  14 

vapours  weep  their  burthen  to  the  g,  Tithonus  2 

Release  me,  and  restore  me  to  the  g;  ,.72 

perfect  fan,  Above  the  teeming  g.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  18 

Gathering  up  from  all  the  lower  g ;  Vision  of  Sin  15 

And  track'd  you  still  on  classic  g,  To  E.  L.  10 

All  her  fair  length  upon  the  g  she  lay :  Princess  v  59 

Ida  spoke  not,  gazing  on  the  g,  „     vi  227 

To  dance  with  death,  to  beat  the  g,  In  Mem.  i  12 

The  chestnut  pattering  to  the  g :  „         xi  4 

here  upon  the  g,  No  more  partaker  „        xli  7 

And  hide  thy  shame  beneath  the  g.  „  Ixxii  28 

But  all  is  new  unhallow'd  g.  „      civ  12 

flatten'd,  and  crush'd,  and  dinted  into  the  g :  Maud  I  il 

all  by  myself  in  my  own  dark  garden  g,  „    Hi  10 

0  let  the  solid  g  Not  fail  beneath  my  feet  „  xi  1 
Rivulet  crossing  my  g,  „  xxi  1 
Laid  him  that  clove  it  grovelling  on  the  g.  Gareth  and  L.  972 
Death  was  cast  to  g,  and  slowly  rose.  „  1403 
Two  forks  are  fixt  into  the  meadow  g,  Marr.  of  Geraint  482 
Coursed  one  another  more  on  open  g  „  522 
And  there  they  fixt  the  forks  into  the  g,  „  548 
Then,  moving  downward  to  the  meadow  g,  Geraint  and  E.  204 
And  hurl'd  to  g  what  knight  soever  spurr'd  Balin  and  Balan  66 
Shot  from  behind  him,  run  along  the  g.  „  323 
Shot  from  behind  me,  ran  along  the  ^;  „  374 
Stumbled  headlong,  and  cast  him  face  to  g.  „            426 

1  set  thee  high  on  vantage  g,  „  534 
Then  she,  who  held  her  eyes  upon  the  g,  Lancelot  and  E.  232 
He  answer'd  with  his  eyes  upon  the  g,  „  1352 
made  the  g  Reel  under  us,  and  all  at  once,  Lover's  Tale  ii  193 
never  to  say  that  I  laid  him  in  holy  g.  Rizpah  58 
and  the  palace,  and  death  in  the  g !  Def.  of  Lveknow  24 
coffinless  corpse  to  be  laid  in  the  g,  „  80 
slowly  sinking  now  into  the  g,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  27 
ampler  hunting  g's  beyond  the  night ;  „  69 
and  you  hurl'd  them  to  the  g.  Happy  76 


Ground 


288 


Growing 


Ground  (s)  (continued)    Christ-like  creature  that  ever  stept  on 

the  g.  Charity  32 

vaults  her  skies,  From  this  my  vantage  g  MechanophiLxts  18 

Ground  (verb)    teeth  that  ?  As  in  a  dreadful  dream,         Aylmer's  Field  328 

For  '  g  in  yonder  social  mill  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  39 

He  9  his  teeth  together,  sprang  with  a  yell,  Bcdin  and  Balan  538 

Groundflame    g  of  the  crocus  breaks  the  mould  Prog,  of  Spring  1 

Ground-plan    '  Lo !  God's  likeness  —the  g-p-  Vision  of  Sin  187 

Ground-swell    a  full  tide  Rose  with  g-s,  Sea  Breams  51 

Roll  as  a  g-s  dash'd  on  the  strand,  W.  to  Alexandra  23 

Group    A  ^  of  Houris  bow'd  to  see  Palace  of  Art  102 

I  have  shadow'd  many  a  y  Of  beauties,  Talking  Oak  61 

a  9  of  girls  In  circle  waited.  Princess,  Pro.  68 

and  in  g's  they  stream'd  away.  „     Con.  105 

Group'd    Muses  and  the  Graces,  g  in  threes,  „            ii  27 

stood  her  maidens  glimmeringly  g  „         iv  190 

Crrove  {See  also  Sea-Groves)    lemon  g  In  closest  coverture 

upsprung,  Arabian  Nights  67 

From  the  g's  within  The  wild-bird's  Poet's  Mind  20 

'  I,  rooted  here  among  the  g's  Talking  Oak  181 

Wherever  in  a  lonely  g  He  set  up  Amphion  21 

Hush'd  all  the  g's  from  fear  of  wrong :  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  13 

Kept  to  the  garden  now,  and  g  of  pines,  Aylmer's  Field  550 

Thy  God  is  far  diffused  in  noble  g's  „             653 

Rose  gem-like  up  before  the  dusky  g's  Princess,  Pro.  75 

in  a  poplar  g  when  a  light  wind  wakes  „             v  13 

Gray  halls  alone  among  their  massive  g's ;  „        Con.  43 

Yet  present  in  his  natal  g.  The  Daisy  18 

For  g's  of  pine  on  either  hand,  To  F.  D.  Maurice  21 

To  rest  in  a  golden  g,  or  to  bask  in  a  summer  sky  :  Wages  9 

Burnt  and  broke  the  g  and  altar  Boadicea  2 

Uncared  for,  gird  the  windy  g.  In  Mem.  ci  13 

In  the  little  g  where  I  sit —  Maud  I  iv  2 

A  knot,  beneath,  of  snakes,  aloft,  a  g.  Marr.  of  Geraint  325 

It  seems  another  voice  in  other  g's ;  Balin  and  Balan  215 

With  young  Lavaine  into  the  poplar  g.  Lancelot  and  E.  509 

Hid  from  the  wide  world's  rumour  by  the  g  „             522 

Touch'd  at  all  points,  except  the  poplar  g,  „              617 

Lavaine  across  the  poplar  g  Led  to  the  caves :  „             804 

By  g,  and  garden-lawn,  and  rushing  brook.  Holy  Grail  230 

green-glooming  twilight  of  the  g,  Pelleas  and  E.  33 

And  all  talk  died,  as  in  a  gr  all  song  „           607 

dark  in  the  golden  g  Appearing,  Last  Tournament  379 

from  the  high  wall  and  the  flowering  g  Of  grasses  Guinevere  33 

Rode  under  g's  that  look'd  a  paradise  „      389 

all  the  low  dark  g's,  a  land  of  love !  Lover's  Tale  i  332 

A  height,  a  broken  grange,  a  g.  Ancient  Sage  223 

thro'  all  the  g's  of  olive  in  the  summer  glow,  Frater  Ave,  etc.  3 

palm  And  orange  g  of  Paraguay,  To  Ulysses  12 

Grovel    Stands  at  thy  gate  for  thee  to  g  to —  Aylmer's  Field  652 

g  and  grope  for  my  son  till  I  find  myself  Rizpah  8 

Grovelike    Once  g,  each  huge  arm  a  tree,  Aylmer's  Field  510 

GroveD'd    vmlaced  my  casque  And  g  on  my  body,  Princess  vi  28 

And  g  with  her  face  against  the  floor :  Guinevere  415 

And  while  she  g  at  his  feet,  „      581 

Grovelling    Laid  him  that  clove  it  g  on  the  ground.  Gareth  and  L.  972 

Gareth  brought  him  g  on  his  knees,  „         1124 

Grow  {See  also  Grow)    Think  my  belief  would 

stronger  g !  Supp.  Confessions  13 

g  awry  From  roots  which  strike  so  deep  ?  „               77 

in  the  rudest  wind  Never  g  sere,  Ode  to  Memory  25 

g  80  full  and  deep  In  thy  large  eyes,  Elednore  85 

and  slowly  ^  To  a  full  face,  „        91 

G  golden  all  about  the  sky ;  „       101 

G  green  beneath  the  showery  gray,  My  life  is  full  17 

And  on  my  clay  her  darnel  g;  „            22 

How  g's  the  day  of  human  power  ? '  Two  Voices  78 

'  His  sons  g  up  that  bear  his  name,  „        256 

Some  g  to  honour,  some  to  shame, —  „        257 

I  will  g  round  him  in  his  place,  G,  live,  Fatima  40 

a  light  that  g's  Larger  ana  clearer,  (Enone  108 

untU  endurance  g  Sinew'd  with  action,  „      164 

G's  green  and  broad,  and  takes  no  care,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.S.  28 

It  g's  to  guerdon  after-days :  Love  thou  thy  land  27 

She  felt  her  heart  g  prouder :  The  Goose  22 


Grow  (continued)    imtil  he  g's  Of  age  to  help  us.' 
cruel  as  a  schoolboy  ere  he  g's  To  Pity — 
that  my  soul  might  g  to  thee. 
Their  faces  g  between  me  and  my  book ; 
So  now  'tis  fitted  on  and  g's  to  me. 
Shall  g  so  fair  as  this.' 
All  grass  of  silky  feather  g — 
'  But  we  g  old.    Ah  !  when  shall  all  men's  good 
The  vast  Republics  that  may  g. 
That  g's  within  the  woodland. 
g's  From  England  to  Van  Diemen. 
patch  of  soil  To  g  my  own  plantation. 
I  g  in  worth,  and  wit,  and  sense, 
Till,  where  the  street  g's  straiter, 
forget-me-nots  That  g  for  happy  lovers. 
Watching  your  growth,  I  seem'd  again  to  g. 
And  heaps  of  living  gold  that  daily  g, 
as  by  miracle,  g  straight  and  fair — 
I  saw  my  father's  face  G  long  and  troubled 
might  g  To  use  and  power  on  this  Oasis, 
And  g  for  ever  and  for  ever, 
slowly  g's  a  glimmering  square, 
the  child  shall  g  To  prize  the  authentic  mother 
this  shall  g  A  night  of  Summer  from  the  heat, 
slight-natured,  miserable,  How  shall  men  g  ? 
in  the  long  years  liker  must  they  g ; 
Purpose  in  purpose,  will  in  will,  they  g, 
let  the  sorrowing  crowd  about  it  g, 
ever  weaker  g's  thro'  acted  crime, 
I  may  die  but  the  grass  will  g,  And  the  grass 

will  g  when  I  am  gone, 
A  beam  in  darkness  :  let  it  g. 
Let  knowledge  g  from  more  to  more. 
And  g  incorporate  into  thee. 
But  as  he  g's  he  gathers  much. 
His  isolation  g's  defined. 
How  blanch'd  with  darkness  must  I  g ! 
The  days  that  g  to  something  strange. 
And  year  by  year  the  landscape  g 
For  thee  she  grew,  for  thee  she  g's 
I  should  g  light-headed,  I  fear, 
and  ever  afresh  they  seem'd  to  g. 
But  I  know  where  a  garden  g's, 
change,  and  g  Faint  and  far-off. 
oiu'selves  shall  g  In  use  of  arms  and  manhood, 
days  will  g  to  weeks,  the  weeks  to  months, 
It  g's  upon  me  now — the  semicircle 
let  g  The  flowers  that  run  poison  in  their  veins. 
By  firth  and  lock  thy  silver  sister  g, 
But  look,  the  morning  g's  apace. 
Science  g's  and  Beauty  dwindles — 
where  the  purple  flowers  g, 


Dora  126 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  109 

St.  S.  Stylites  71 

176 

209 

Talking  Oak  244 

269 

Golden  Year  47 

Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  15 

Amphion  8 

„       83 

„     100 

WUl  Water.  41 

142 

The  Brook  173 

Aylmer's  Field  359 

655 

676 

Princess  i  59 

ii  166 

iv  16 

52 

v432 

vi53 

vii  266 

279 

305 

Ode  on  Well.  16 

Will  12 

Window,  No  Answer  4 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  24 

25 

ii  16 

„  xlv  5 

12 

Ixi  8 

„  Ixxi  11 

ci  19 

Con.  35 

Maud  I  xix  100 

//  i  28 

t'72 

Balin  and  Balan  217 

Lancelot  and  E.  63 

Guinevere  624 

Lover's  Tale  i  37 

346 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  58 

The  Flight  93 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  246 

Frater  Ave,  etc.  4 


since  your  name  will  g  with  Time,  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  13 

Young  again  you  g  Out  of  sight.  The  Ring  11 

the  long  day  of  knowledge  g's  and  warms.  Prog,  of  Spring  101 

'  Father  and  mother  will  watch  you  g ' — (repeat)   Romney's  R.  104,  106 


You  watch'd  not  I,  she  did  not  g,  she  died 

there  is  time  for  the  race  to  g. 

You,  what  the  cultured  surface  g's, 
Growest    ever  thus  thou  g  beautiful  In  silence, 

grown  In  power,  and  ever  g, 
Chrowing  (adj.  and  part.)    (See  also  A-grawin',  Ever 
growing)     Ere  the  light  on  dark  was  g. 

Don't  let  Effie  come  to  see  me  till  my  grave  be 
g  green : 

His  face  is  g  sharp  and  thin. 

g  dewy-warm  With  kisses  balmier 

g  coarse  to  sympathise  with  clay. 

gaze  On  that  cottage  g  nearer, 

May-music  g  with  the  g  light, 

a  promontory.  That  had  a  sapling  g  on  it, 

grass  There  g  longest  by  the  meadow's  edge, 

And  on  the  fourth  are  men  with  g  wings. 

And  g,  on  her  tomb. 

Thou  sawest  a  glory  g  on  the  night. 


105 

The  Dawn  20 

Mechanophilus  33 

Tithonus  43 

To  Dante  2 

Oriana  10 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  43 

D.oftheO.  Year  46 

Tithonus  58 

Locksley  Hall  46 

L.  of  Burleigh  35 

Gareth  and  L.  1080 

Geraint  and  E.  163 

257 

Holy  Grail  237 

Ancient  Sage  164 

Epit.  on  Caxton  2 


Growing 


289 


Guess'd 


I 


Growing  (adj.  or  part.)  {cotUinited)    in  the  night,  While  the 

gloom  is  g.'  Forlorn  12 

And  ever  worse  with  g  time,  Palace  of  Art  270 

The  warders  of  the  g  hour,  Love  thou  thy  land  61 

harmonies  of  law  The  g  world  assume,  England  and  Amer.  17 

Storm'd  in  orbs  of  song,  a  g  gale ;  Vision  of  Sin  25 

His  baby's  death,  her  g  poverty,  Enoch  Arden  705 

the  dull  November  day  Was  g  duller  twilight,  „           722 

and  still  Grew  with  the  g  note,  Sea  Dreams  213 

who  desire  you  more  Than  g  boys  their  manhood  ;  Princess  iv  457 

roll'd  With  music  in  the  g  breeze  of  Time,  „         vi  56 

From  g  commerce  loose  her  latest  chain,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  33 

Till  g  winters  lay  me  low ;  In  Mem.  xl  30 

Is  shadow'd  by  the  g  hour,  „         xlvi  3 

Ck)nduct  by  paths  of  g  powers,  „  Ixxxiv  31 

G  and  fading  and  g  (repeat)  Maud  I  Hi  7,  9 

delicate  spark  Of  glowing  and  g  light  „            vi  16 

Still  g  holier  as  you  near'd  the  bay,  Lover's  Tale  i  338 

Between  the  gomg  light  and  g  night  ?  „             664 

orphan  wail  came  borne  in  the  shriek  ot  a,g  wind,  The  Wreck  87 

And  we  tum'd  to  the  g  dawn,  Despair  22 
cry  of '  Forward,  Forward,'  lost  within  the  g  gloom ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  73 

Aged  eyes  may  take  the  g  glimmer  „              230 
Careless  of  our  g  kin.                                             Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  23 

Growing  (s)     body  slight  and  round,  and  like  a  pear 

In  g,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  54 

Growl     there  at  their  meat  would  g,  Com.  of  Arthur  30 

remembers  all,  and  g's  Remembering,  Gareth  and  L.  704 

Growl'd    farewell  to  my  sire,  who  g  An  answer  Princess  v  233 

so  the  ruffians  g,  Fearing  to  lose,  Geraint  and  E.  563 

Growling    g  like  a  dog,  when  his  good  bone  „              559 

lays  his  foot  upon  it.  Gnawing  and  g'.            .  „              563 

g  as  before,  And  cursing  their  lost  time,  „              575 

Grown  {See  also  Broader-grown,  Choicest-grown, 
Full  -  grown.  Half  -  grown,  Oer  -  grown. 
Slowly-grown,  Woman-grown)    cold,  and 

dead,  and  corpse-like  g  ?  Sjipp.  Confessions  17 

That  her  voice  imtuneful  g,  The  Owl  ii  6 

And  she  is  ^  so  dear,  so  dear.  Miller's  D.  170 

eyes  g  dim  with  gazing  on  the  pilot-stars.  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  87 

when  love  is  ^  To  ripeness,  To  J.  S.  14 

Now  am  I  feeble  g ;  my  end  draws  nigh ;  St.  S.  Stylites  36 

low  matin-chirp  hath  g  Full  quire.  Love  and  Duty  98 

The  maiden's  jet-black  hair  has  g,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep  B.  4 

My  beard  has  g  into  my  lap.'  „        Revival  22 

And  wake  on  science  g  to  more,  „       L'Envoi  10 

mean  Vileness,  we  are  g  so  proud —  Aylmer's  Field  756 

tho'  you  have  g  You  scarce  have  alter'd :  Princess  ii  305 

and  g  a  bulk  Of  spanless  girth,  „         vi  35 

soil,  left  barren,  scarce  had  g  The  grain  In  Mem.  liii  7 

To  which  thy  crescent  would  have  g ;  „  Ixxxiv  4 

I  myself  with  these  have  g  „     Con.  19 

a  morbid  hate  and  horror  have  g  Maud  I  vi  75 

g  too  weak  and  old  To  drive  the  heathen  Com.  of  Arthur  511 

Man  am  I  g,  &  man's  work  must  I  do.  Gareth  and  L.  116 

Ten  thousand-fold  had  g,  flash'd  the  fierce  shield,  „           1030 

now  hath  g  The  vast  necessity  of  heart  and  life.  Merlin  and  V.  924 

g  a  part  of  me :  but  what  use  in  it  ?  Lancelot  and  E.  1416 

Becomes  thee  well — art  g  wild  beast  thyself.  Last  Tournament  637 

the  red  fruit  G  on  a,  magic  oak-tree  „                745 

but  grosser  g  Than  heathen.  Pass,  of  Arthur  61 

To  what  height  The  day  had  g  I  know  not.  Lover's  Tale  Hi  9 

I  that  was  little  had  g  so  tall,  First  Quarrel  27 

I  had  g  so  handsome  and  tall —  .,          37 

they  foimd  I  had  g  so  stupid  and  still  Rizpah  49 

and  g  In  power,  and  ever  growest.  To  Dante  1 

Have  we  g  at  last  beyond  the  passions  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  93 

For  moans  will  have  g  sphere-music  The  Dreamer  29 

Growth     Huge  sponges  of  millennial  g  The  Kraken  6 
The  lavish  g's  of  southern  Mexico.                          Mine  be  the  strength  14 

G's  of  jasmine  turn'd  Their  humid  arms  D.  of  F.  Women  69 

Bear  seed  of  men  and  g  of  minds.  Love  thou  thy  land  20 

Mix'd  with  the  knightly  g  that  fringed  his  lips.  M.  d' Arthur  220 

Or  that  Thessalian  g,  Talking  Oak  292 

Watching  your  g,  I  seem'd  again  to  grow.  Aylmer's  Field  359 


Growth  {continued)     bear  a  double  g  of  those  rare  souls,  Princess  ii  180 

Is  duer  unto  freedom,  force  and  g  Of  spirit  „       iv  141 

Know  you  no  song,  the  true  g  of  your  soil,  „'           150 

In  us  true  g,  in  her  a  Jonah's  gourd,  „           311 

train  To  riper  g  the  mind  and  will :  In  Mem.  xlii  8 

How  dwarf 'd  a  ^  of  cold  and  night,  „        Ixi  7 

For  change  of  place,  like  g  of  time,  „        evil 

And  native  g  of  noble  mind ;  "       cxi  16 

the  sunshine  that  hath  given  the  man  A  g,  Balin  and  "Palan  182 

Mix'd  with  the  knightly  g  that  fringed  his  lips.  Pass,  of  Arthur  388 

Thou  didst  receive  the  g  of  pines  Lover's  Tale  i  11 

the  g's  Of  vigorous  early  days,  „           132 

say  rather,  was  my  g,  My  inward  sap,  ,'          165 

Grudge     he  that  always  bare  in  bitter  g  Merlin  and  V  6 

Grunt     meditative  g's  of  much  content,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  87 

Grunted     waked  with  silence,  g  '  Good ! '  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  4 

Grunter     tends  her  bristled  g's  in  the  sludge : '  Princess  v  27 

Guanahani    last  the  light,  the  light  On  G !  Columbus  75 

Guano     A  pamphleteer  on  g  and  on  grain,  Princess,  Con.  89 

Guard  (s)     {See  also  Woman-guard)    Encompass'd  by 

his  faithful  g.  In  Mem.  cxxvi  8 

Guard  (verb)     g  about  With  triple-mailfed  trust,  Supp.  Confessions  65 

clear-stemm'd  plantans  g  The  outlet,  Arabian  Nights  23 

Upon  the  cliffs  that  g  my  native  land,  Audley  Court  49 

enough,  Sir  !  I  can  ^  my  own.'  Aylmer's  Field  276 

Brothers,  the  woman's  Angel  g's  you.  Princess  v  410 

g  us,  g  the  eye,  the  soul  Of  Europe,  Ode  on  Well.  160 

He  bad  you  g  the  sacred  coasts.  „          172 

They  knew  the  precious  things  they  had  to  g :  Third  of  Feb.  41 

And  like  a  beacon  g's  thee  home.  In  Mem.  xvii  12 

That  g  the  portals  of  the  house ;  „       xxix  12 

So  here  shall  silence  g  thy  fame  ;  „       Ixxv  17 

Yea,  too,  myself  from  myself  I  g,  Maud  IvidO 

To  g  thee  on  the  rough  ways  of  the  world.'  Com.  of  Arthur  336 

For  hard  by  here  is  one  that  g's  a  ford —  Gareth  and  L.  1003 

'  G  it,'  and  there  was  none  to  meddle  „          1012 

the  King  Gave  me  to  g,  and  such  a  dog  am  I,  „          1014 

one  with  arms  to  g  his  head  and  yours,  Geraint  and  E.  427 

Long  since,  to  g  the  justice  of  the  King :  „           934 

Or  devil  or  man  G  thou  thine  head.'  Balin  and  Balan  553 

I  shall  g  it  even  in  death.  Lancelot  and  E.  1115 

seeing  that  the  King  must  g  That  which  he  rules,  Holy  Grail  905 

To  g  thee  in  the  wild  hour  coming  on,  Guinevere  446 

I  gr  as  God's  high  gift  from  scathe  and  wrong,  „        494 

To  g  and  foster  her  for  evermore.  „        592 

value  of  that  jewel,  he  had  to  ^  ?  Lover's  Tale  iv  153 

Out  yonder.     G  the  Redan !  Def.  of  Lucknow  36 

two  repentsint  Lovers  g  the  ring  ; '  The  Ring  198 
Guarded    {See  also  Griffin-guarded)    G  the  sacred  shield 

of  Lancelot ;  Lancelot  and  E.  4 

Fear  not :  thou  shalt  be  g  till  my  death.  Guinevere  448 

You  have  the  ring  she  g ;  The  Ring  475 

Guardian  (adj.)    My  g  angel  will  speak  out  In  Mem.  xliv  15 

Guardian  (s)    I  to  her  became  Her  g  and  her  angel.  Lover's  Tale  i  393 

you  the  lifelong  g  of  the  child.  The  Ring  54 

The  g  of  her  relics,  of  her  ring.  „      441 

Guarding     G  realms  and  kings  from  shame ;  Ode  on  Well.  68 

Guerdon  (s)    Sequel  of  g  could  not  alter  me  QSnone  153 

What  g  will  ye  ?  '     Gareth  sharply  spake,  Gareth  and  L.  830 

but  take  A  horse  and  arms  for  g ;  Geraint  and  E.  218 

'  I  take  it  as  free  gift,  then,'  said  the  boy,  '  Not  g ;  „            223 

hear  The  legend  as  in  g  for  your  rhyme  ?  Merlin  and  V.  554 

Our  g  not  alone  for  what  we  did,  Columbus  33 

Nor  list  for  g  in  the  voice  of  men.  Ancient  Sage  262 

Guerdon  (verb)     It  grows  to  g  aiter-days :  Love  thou  thy  land  27 

we  gave  a  costly  bribe  To  g  silence,  Princess  i  204 

Guess  (s)     the  golden  g  Is  morning-star  Columbus  43 

the  wildest  modem  g  of  you  and  me.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  232 

Guess  (verb)     cannot  g  How  much  their  welfare  Princess  Hi  280 

The  Power  in  darkness  whom  y/&  g;  In  Mem.  cxxiv  4 

What  art  thou  then  ?     I  cannot  g ;  „         cxxx  5 

praying  To  his  own  great  self,  as  I  ^ ;  Maud  II  v  33 

I  might  g  thee  chief  of  those,  After  the  King,  Lancelot  and  E.  183 

g  at  the  love  of  a  soul  for  a  soul  ?  Charity  30 

Guess'd     I  leave  thy  greatness  to  be  y ;  In  Mem.  Ixxv  4 


Guess'd 


290 


Gurgle 


Gaess'd  (continued)    presence  might  have  g  you  one  of 

those  Marr.  of  Geraint  431 

Now  g  a  hidden  meaning  in  his  arms,  Lancelot  and  E.  n 

Guess-work  they  g  it,  Columbus  43 

Gness-work    G-w  they  guess'd  it,  „        43 

No  g-w  !     I  W£is  certain  of  my  goal ;  „         45 

Gaest     Each  enter'd  Hke  a  welcome  g.  Two  Voices  411 

Head-waiter,  honour'd  by  the  g  Half-mused,  Will  Water.  73 

mellow  Death,  like  some  late  g,  „          239 

g,  their  host,  their  ancient  friend,  Aylmer's  Field  790 

Shone,  silver-set ;  about  it  lay  the  g's,  Princess,  Pro.  106 

You,  likewise,  oiu"  late  g's,  „              v  229 

Who  is  he  that  cometh,  like  an  honour'd  g.  Ode  on  Well.  80 

father's  chimney  glows  In  expectation  of  a  ^ ;  In  Mem.  vi  30 

Which  brings  no  more  a  welcome  g  „      xxix  5 

I  see  myself  an  honour'd  g,  „  Ixxxiv  21 

A  g,  or  happy  sister,  simg,  „  Ixxxix  26 

if  I  Conjecture  of  a  stiller  g,  „     Con.  86 

Endures  not  that  her  g  should  serve  himself.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  379 

wine  and  goodly  cheer  To  feed  the  sudden  g,  Geraint  and  E.  284 

to  thy  g,  Me,  me  of  Arthur's  Table.  Balin  and  Bdlan  379 

'  Whence  comest  thou,  my  g,  Lancelot  and  E.  181 

one  of  your  own  knights,  a  ^  of  ours,  Holy  Grail  40 

all  the  goodlier  g's  are  past  away,  Last  Tournament  158 

Was  brought  before  the  g  :  and  they  the  g's.  Lover's  Tale  iv  204 

all  The  g's  broke  in  upon  him  with  meeting  hands  „             238 


custom  steps  yet  further  when  the  g  Is  loved  and  honour'd 

This  question,  so  flung  down  before  the  g's. 

While  all  the  g's  in  mute  amazement  rose— 

'  My  g's,'  said  Julian :  '  you  are  honour'd  now 

a  ^  So  bound  to  me  by  common  love  and  loss — 

rose  up,  and  with  him  all  his  g's 

How  oft  the  Cantab  supper,  host  and  g. 

Like  would-be  g's  an  hour  too  late, 

therewithin  a  g  may  make  True  cheer 

Then  drink  to  England,  every  g ; 

Unfriendly  of  your  parted  g. 
Guide  (s)     the  silver  star,  thy  g.  Shines 

'  They  were  dangerous  g's  the  feelings — 

When  each  by  turns  was  g  to  each, 

With  you  for  g  and  master,  only  you. 

Then  were  I  glad  of  you  as  g  and  friend : 

far  away  with  good  Sir  Torre  for  g 

Alia  be  my  g  !     But  come.  My  noble  friend 
Guide  (verb)     there  is  a  hand  that  g's.' 

g  Her  footsteps,  moving  side  by  side 


244 

268 

305 

316 

344 

359 

To  W.  H.  Brookfield  4 

Tiresias  198 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  15 

Hands  all  Round  2 

The  Wanderer  4 

Tithonus  25 

Locksley  Hall  95 

In  Mem.  xxiii  13 

Merlin  and  V.  881 

Lancelot  and  E.  226 

788 

Akbar's  Dream  16 

Princess,  Con.  79 

/w  Mem.  cxiv  18 


I  have  not  made  the  world,  and  He  that  made  it  will  g.     Maud  I  iv  48 


thou.  Sir  Prince,  Wilt  surely  g  me 
and  clean  !  and  yet — God  g  them — young.' 
and  he  Will  g  me  to  that  palace,  to  the  doors 
force  to  9  us  thro'  the  days  I  shall  not  see? 

Gnided    Whose  feet  are  g  thro'  the  land, 
Which  not  alone  had  g  me, 

Gnile    pure  as  he  from  taint  of  craven  g, 
A  widow  with  less  g  than  many  a  child. 

Guileless    Till  ev'n  the  clear  face  of  the  g  King, 

Guilt    When  I  have  purged  my  g.' 
The  g  of  blood  is  at  your  door : 
To  hold  his  hope  thro'  shame  and  gr, 
May  wreck  itself  without  the  pilot's  g, 
Easily  gather'd  either  g. 
eye  which  watches  g  And  goodness, 
hasty  judger  would  have  call'd  her  g, 
subtle  beast.  Would  track  her  g  imtil  he  found, 
too-fearful  g,  Simpler  than  any  child, 
without  some  g  should  such  grief  be  ? 

Guiltless    Guilty  or  g,  to  stave  off  a  chance 
flushing  the  g  air, 

far  away  the  maid  in  Astolat,  Her  g  rival, 
Against  the  g  heirs  of  him  from  Tyre, 
Being  g,  as  an  innocent  prisoner. 

Guilty    (See  also  Half-guilty)    a  little  fault  Whereof  I 
was  not  g ; 
be  he  g,  by  that  deathless  King  Who  lived 
Touching  her  g  love  for  Lancelot, 


Balin  and  Balan  478 

Merlin  and  V.  29 

Lancelot  and  E.  1129 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  158 

In  Mem.  Ixvi  9 

„       cxiii  3 

Ode  on  Well.  135 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  182 

Guinevere  85 

Palace  of  Art  296 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  43 

Love  thou  thy  land  82 

Aylmer's  Field  716 

Princess  iv  236 

In  Mem.  xxvi  5 

Geraint  and  E.  433 

Guinevere  60 

370 

Lover's  Tale  i  795 

Geraint  and  E.  353 

Lucretius  239 

Lancelot  and  E.  746 

Tiresias  12 

Lover's  Tale  i  787 


Com.  of  Arthur  Z^ 

Gareth  and  L.  382 

Marr.  of  Geraint  25 


Guilty  (continued)    To  dream  she  could  be  g  of  foul 
act, 

G  or  guiltless,  to  stave  off  a  chance 

rooted  out  the  slothful  officer  Or  g, 

And  full  of  cowardice  and  g  shame, 

like  a  g  thing  I  creep  At  earliest  morning 

It  is  this  g  hand ! — 

Am  I  g  oi  blood  ? 

The  great  and  g  love  he  bare  the  Queen, 
Guinea    jingling  of  the  g  helps  the  hurt 
Guinearbens    praised  his  hens,  his  geese,  his  g-h ; 
Guinevere    Sir  Laimcelot  and  Queen  G  Kode 

G,  and  in  her  his  one  delight. 

G  Stood  by  the  castle  walls  to  watch  him 

Desiring  to  be  join'd  with  G ; 

Give  me  thy  daughter  G  to  wife.' 

Fear  not  to  give  this  King  thine  only  child,  G : 

return'd  Among  the  flowers.  In  May,  with  G. 

Thro'  that  great  tenderness  for  G, 

G  lay  late  into  the  morn.  Lost  in  sweet  dreams, 

G,  not  mindful  of  his  face  In  the  King's  hall, 

A  stately  queen  whose  name  was  G, 

thrice  that  morning  G  had  cUmb'd  The  giant  tower 


Some  goodly  cognizance  of  G, 

O  me,  that  such  a  name  as  G's, 

day  When  G  was  crossing  the  great  hall 

Spake  (for  she  had  been  sick)  to  G, 

G,  The  pearl  of  beauty : 

Lancelot,  when  they  glanced  at  G, 

Sir  Lancelot  at  the  palace  craved  Audience  of  G, 

And  therefore  to  our  Lady  G, 

For  fair  thou  art  and  pure  as  G, 

0  my  Queen,  my  G,  For  I  wUl  be  thine  Arthur 
'  Is  G  herself  so  beautiful  ?  ' 
Said  G,  '  We  marvel  at  thee  much, 
'  False !  and  I  held  thee  pure  as  G.' 
'  Am  I  but  false  as  G  is  pure  ? 
There  with  her  knights  and  dames  was  G. 
G  had  sinn'd  against  the  highest, 
QtJEEN  G  had  fled  the  court. 
When  that  storm  of  anger  brake  From  G, 

1  did  not  come  to  curse  thee,  G, 
yet  not  less,  0  G,  For  I  was  ever  virgin  save  for  thee, 


Marr  of  Geraint  120 

Geraint  and  E.  353 

939 

Princess  iv  348 

In  Mem.  vii  7 

Maud  II  i  4: 

a  73 

Lancelot  and  E.  245 

Locksley  Hall  105 

The  Brook  126 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  20 

Com.  of  Arthur  4 

47 

77 

139 

414 

452 

Marr.  of  Geraint  30 

157 

191 

667 

826 

Balin  and  Balan  195 

489 

Merlin  and  V.  65 

Lancelot  and  E.  78 

113 

270 

1163 

1278 

Pelleas  and  E.  44 

46 

70 

179 

522 

524 

588 

Last  Tournament  570 

Guinevere  1 

362 

533 


Guise    and  sets  before  him  in  rich  g 

Gules     Langued  g,  and  tooth'd  with  grinning 

savagery.' 
Gulf  (s)     and  brought  Into  the  g's  of  sleep. 

Sow'd  all  their  mystic  g's  with  fleeting  stars ; 

It  may  be  that  the  g's  will  wash  us  down : 

a  gr  of  ruin,  swallowing  gold. 

Or  down  the  fiery  g  as  talk  of  it. 

Nor  shudders  at  the  g's  beneath, 

A  g  that  ever  shuts  and  gapes, 

in  this  stormy  g  have  found  a  pearl 

seas  of  Death  and  sunless  g's  of  Doubt. 

naked  glebe  Should  yawn  once  more  into  the  g, 

woods  Plunged  ^  on  ^  thro'  all  their  vales 
Gulf  (verb)    Should  g  him  fathom-deep  in  brine ; 
Gulf 'd     And  g  his  griefs  in  inmost  sleep ; 
Gulf-stream    warm  g-s  of  Florida  Floats  far  away 
Gulistan    any  rose  of  G  ShaU  burst  her  veil  ■ 
Gull    laugh'd  and  scream'd  against  the  g's, 
Gull'd    break  our  bound,  and  g  Our  servants, 

Be  not  y  by  a  despot's  plea ! 
Gun    they  waited — Not  a  g  was  fired. 

Each  beside  his  g. 

Nor  ever  lost  an  English  g ; 

'  Charge  for  the  g's ! '  he  said : 

high  above  us  with  her  yawning  tiers  of  g's, 

not  arter  the  birds  wi'  'is  g, 

make  way  for  the  g !     Now  double-charge  it 
Gunner    Sabring  the  g's  there. 

Sink  me  the  ship.  Master  G — 

g  said  '  Ay,  ay,'  but  the  seamen  made  reply : 
Gurgle  (s)    as  we  sat  by  the  g  of  springs, 


„    556 
Lover's  Tale  iv  247 

Balin  and  Balan  197 

D.  of  F.  Women  52 

Gardener's  D.  262 

Ulysses  62 

Sea  Dreams  79 

Princess  Hi  287 

In  Mem.  xli  15 

„        Ixx  6 

Maud  I  xviii  42 

Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  14 

Demeter  and  P.  43 

Prog,  of  Spring  73 

In  Mem.  x  18 

Pelleas  and  E.  516 

Mine  be  the  strength  12 

Princess  iv  122 

Pelleas  and  E.  89 

Princess  iv  539 

Riflemen  form  !  9 

The  Captain  40 

52 

Oie  on  Well.  97 

Light  Brigade  6 

The  Revenge  41 

Village  Wife  41 

Def.  of  Lucknow  67 

Light  Brigade  29 

The  Revenge  89 

91 

V.  of  Maeldune  89 


Gurgle 


291 


Hair 


Gnrgle  (verb)    All  throats  that  g  sweet ! 
Gurgling    To  drench  his  dark  locks  in  the  g  wave 
Gumion     By  castle  G,  where  the  glorious  King 
Gnsh    g'es  from  beneath  a  low-hung  cloud. 
Gush'd    between  Whose  interspaces  g  in 
Gushing    g  of  the  wave  Far  far  away  did  seem 
Gust    one  warm  g,  full-fed  with  perfimie, 
will  be  chaflf  For  every  g  of  chance, 
The  g  that  round  the  garden  flew, 
An  angry  g  of  wind  Pufif'd  out  his  torch 
Anon  the  face,  as,  when  a  g  hath  blown, 
Waved  with  a  sudden  g  that  sweeping  down 
a  rougher  g  might  tumble  a  stornuer  wave. 


Talking  Oak  266 

Princess  iv  187 

Lancelot  and  E.  293 

Ode  to  Memory  71 

Lover's  Tale  i  408 

Lotos-Eaters  31 

Gardener's  D.  113 

Princess  iv  856 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  19 

Merlin  and  V.  730 

Last  Tournament  368 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  34 

The  Wreck  131 


Gustful  a  g  April  mom  That  puff'd  the  swaying  branches  Holy  Grail  14 
Gusty    She  saw  the  g  shadow  sway.  Mariana  52 

Gutted    till  he  crept  from  a  g  mine  Maud  1x9 

Guvness  (governess)  Mim  be  a  g,  lad,  or  summut,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  26 
Gozzlin'     G  an'  soakin'  an'  smoakin'  North.  Cobbler  24 

Gwydion     G  made  by  glamour  out  of  flowers,  Marr.  of  Geraint  743 

Gynseceum    Dwarfs  of  the  g,  fail  so  far  In  high  desire.  Princess  Hi  279 

Gyre    Shot  up  and  shrill'd  in  flickering  g's,  „        vii  46 

mighty  g's  Rapid  and  vast,  of  hissing  spray  Lover's  Tale  ii  197 

Gyve     the  wholesome  boon  of  g  and  gag.'  Gareth  and  L.  370 

sight  run  over  Upon  his  steely  g's ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  157 


H    too  rough  H  in  Hell  and  Heaven,  Sea  Dreams  196 

Haache  (ache)    es  be  down  wi'  their  h's  an'  their  paains :  Spinster's  S's.  108 

Haacre  (acre)    Wamt  worth  nowt  a  h,  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  39 

wi  halite  hoonderd  h  o'  Squoire's,  „  44 

wi'  a  hoonderd  h  o'  sense —  Church-warden ,  etc.  22 

Ha&fe  (half)     an'  mea  h  down  wi'  my  haay !  „  2 

Sa  I  warrants  'e  niver  said  h  wot  'e  thowt,  „  18 

Wi'  h  o'  the  chimleys  a-twizzen'd  an'  twined  Owd  Sod  22 

Ha9i-pot  (half -pot)     An'  a  h-p  o'  jam,  Spinster's  S's.  109 

Haate  (eight)    Mea,  wi'  h  hoonderd  haacre  o'  Squoire's,  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  44 

Ha3,te  (hate)    an'  we  h's  boooklarnin'  ere.  Village  Wife  24 

to  be  sewer  I  h's  'em,  my  lass,  „  31 

a-preiichin'  mea  down,  they  heve,  an'  I  h's  'em  now,  Church-warden,  etc.  53 

HaS.t«d  (hated)     a-flyin'  an'  seeiidin'  tha  A  to  see ;  Spinster's  S's.  79 

Haay  (hay)     an'  twined  like  a  band  o'  h.  Owd  Rod  22 

an'  mea  haafe  down  wi'  my  h !  Church-warden,  etc.  2 

Habit  (custom)     Idle  h  links  us  yet.  Miller's  D.  212 

Or  to  burst  all  links  of  h —  Locksley  Hall  157 

Drink  deep,  vmtil  the  h's  of  the  slave,  Princess  ii  91 

to  us,  The  fools  of  h,  sweeter  seems  In  Mem.  x  12 

Her  memory  from  old  h  of  the  mind  Went  slipping  Guinevere  379 

Habit  (riding  dress)     whether  The  h,  hat,  and  feather,  Maud  I  xx  18 

Hack    yea  to  him  Who  h's  his  mother's  throat —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  114 

Hack'd     stay  the  brands  That  h  among  the  flyers.  Com.  of  Arthur  121 

their  arms  H,  and  their  foreheads  grimed  with  smoke.     Holy  Grail  265 

H  the  battleshield,  Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  13 

Fiercely  we  h  at  the  flyers  before  us.  „  42 

Casques  were  crack'd  and  hauberks  h  The  Tourney  7 

Hades    or  the  enthroned  Persephonfe  in  H,  Princess  iv  ^9 

seen  the  serpent-wanded  power  Draw  downward 

into  H  Demeter  and  P.  26 

A  cry  that  rang  thro'  H,  Earth,  and  Heaven !  „  33 

break  The  sunless  halls  of  H  into  Heaven  ?  „  136 

shrillings  of  the  Dead  When  driven  to  H,  Death  of  CEnone  22 

Haft     all  the  h  twinkled  with  diamond  sparks,  M.  d' Arthur  56 

Struck  with  a  knife's  h  hard  against  the  board,  Geraint  and  E.  600 

all  the  h  twinkled  with  diamond  sparks,  Pass,  of  Arthur  224 

Haggard     And  shot  from  crooked  lips  a  h  smile.  Princess  iv  364 

when  she  saw  The  h  father's  face  and  reverend  beard  „      vi  103 

An  armlet  for  an  arm  to  which  the  Queen's  Is  h,     Lancelot  and  E.  1227 
'  What  is  it  ? '  but  that  oarsman's  h  face,  „  1250 

As  a  vision  Unto  a  h  prisoner,  Lover's  Tale  ii  148 

Master  scrimps  his  h  sempstress  of  her  daily 

bread,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  221 

Eve  after  eve  that  h  anchorite  Would  haunt  St.  Telemachus  12 


Hail  (s)     Where  falls  not  h,  or  rain,  or  any  snow, 

Rain,  wind,  frost,  heat,  h,  damp, 

with  rain  or  h,  or  fire  or  snow ; 

And  gilds  the  driving  h. 

Sleet  of  diamond-drift  and  pearly  h ; 

Where  falls  not  h,  or  rain,  or  any  snow, 

and  a  clatter  of  h  on  the  glass , 

h  of  Ares  crash  Along  the  sounding  walls. 
Hail  (verb)     Sets  out,  and  meets  a  friend  who  h's 
him, 

city-roar  that  h's  Premier  or  king  ! 

And  voices  h  it  from  the  brink ; 

and  all  men  h  him  for  their  king.' 

ere  he  came,  like  one  that  h's  a  ship. 


M.  d' Arthur  260 

St.  S.  Stylites  16 

Locksley  Hall  193 

Sir  Galahad  56 

Vision  of  Sin  22 

Pass,  of  Arthur  428 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  62 

Tiresias  96 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  42 

Princess,  Con.  101 

In  Mem.  cxxi  14 

Com.  of  Arthur  424 

Geraint  and  E.  540 

H  the  fair  Ceremonial  Of  this  year  olE  her  Jubilee.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  23 

Hear  thy  myriad  laureates  h  thee  monarch  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  6 

Hail  (interj.)     H,  hidden  to  the  knees  in  fern.  Talking  Oak  29 

Fair  as  the  Angel  that  said  'HI'  Aylmer's  Fidd  681 

h  once  more  to  the  banner  of  battle  unroU'd !  Maud  III  vi  42 

Prince,  Knight,  H,  Knight  and  Prince,  Gareth  and  L.  1271 

I  will  speak.     H,  royal  knight,  Balin  and  Balan  470 

King,  Who,  when  he  saw  me,  rose,  and  bade  me  h,  Holy  Grail  725 

King  espied  him,  saying  to  him,  '  H,  Bors !  „  756 

H,  King !  to-morrow  thou  shalt  pass  away.  Pass,  of  Arthur  34 

'  H  to  the  glorious  Golden  year  of  her  Jubilee ! '    On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  64 
H  ample  presence  of  a  Queen,  Prog,  of  Spring  61 

Hail'd     Walter  h  a  score  of  names  upon  her,  Princess,  Pro.  156 

And  toward  him  spurr'd,  and  h  him.  Holy  Grail  637 

Who  never  h  another — was  there  one  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  798 

and  there  h  on  our  houses  and  halls  Def.  of  Lucknow  13 

Hair     {See  also  'Aair,  'Air)     smooth'd  his  chin  and 

sleek'd  his  h,  A  Character  11 

Dressing  their  h  with  the  white  sea-flower;  The  Merman  13 

Combing  her  h  Under  the  sea.  The  Mermaid  4 

With  a  comb  of  pearl  I  would  comb  my  h;  „  11 

I  would  comb  my  h  till  my  ringlets  would  fall  „  14 

With  thj  floating  flaxen  h ;  Adeline  6 

Your  h  is  darker,  and  your  eyes  Touch'd  Margaret  49 

bright  black  eyes,  her  bright  black  h,  Kate  2 

round  her  neck  Floated  her  h  (Enone  19 

his  sunny  h  Cluster'd  about  his  temples  „       59 

From  her  warm  brows  and  bosom  her  deep  h  Ambrosial,  „    177 

her  h  Wound  with  white  roses,  slept  St.  Cecily ;  Palace  of  Art  98 

blessings  on  his  kindly  voice  and  on  his  silver  h  !      May  Queen,  Con.  13 
that  h  More  black  than  ashbuds  in  the  front 

of  March.'  Gardener's  D.  27 

A  single  stream  of  all  her  soft  brown  h  „  128 

wound  Her  looser  h  in  braid,  „  158 

leaf  and  acorn-ball  In  wreath  about  her  h.  Talking  Oak  288 

Catch  the  wild  goat  by  the  h,  Locksley  Hall  170 

His  beard  a  foot  before  him,  and  his  h  A  yard  behind.  Godiva  18 

The  maiden's  jet-black  h  has  grown,  Day-Dvi.,  Sleep  B.  4 

my  h  Is  gray  before  I  know  it.  WUl  Water.  167 

With  a  single  rose  in  her  h.  Lady  Clare  60 

One  her  dark  h  and  lovesome  mien.  Beggar  Maid  12 

H,  and  eyes,  and  limbs,  and  faces.  Vision  of  Sin  39 

This  /i  is  his :  she  cut  it  off  and  gave  it,  Enoch  Arden  894 

h  In  gloss  and  hue  the  chestnut,  (repeat)  The  Brook  71,  206 

made  The  hoar  h  of  the  Baronet  bristle  up  Aylmer's  Field  42 

His  h  as  it  were  crackling  into  flames,  „  586 

not  a  h  Ruffled  upon  the  scarfskin,  „  659 

bring  Their  own  gray  h's  with  sorrow  to  the  grave —  „  777 

Beat  breast,  tore  h,  cried  out  upon  herself  Lucretius  277 

sweet  girl-graduates  in  their  golden  h.  Princess,  Pro.  142 

combing  out  her  long  black  h  Damp  from  the  river ;  „  iv  276 

'  You  have  our  son :  touch  not  a  /t  of  his  head :  „  407 

Robed  in  the  long  night  of  her  deep  h,  „  491 

And  fingering  at  the  h  about  his  lip,  „  v  303 

and  caught  his  h.  And  so  belabour'd  him  „  340 

A  single  band  of  gold  about  her  h,  „  513 

His  face  was  ruddy,  his  h  was  gold,  The  Victim  35 

And  you  with  gold  for  h !  Window,  Spring  4 

That  sittest  ranging  golden  h  ;  In  Mem.  vi  26 

From  youth  and  babe  and  hoary  h's :  „     Ixix  10 

To  reverence  and  the  silver  h  „  Ixxxiv  32 


Hair 


292 


Half-attained 


Hair  (continued)    the  roots  of  my  h  were  stirred  By  a  shuffled 

step,  3iaud  I  i  13 

What  if  with  her  sunny  h,  „       vi  23 

and  thought  It  is  his  mother's  h.  „  //  U  70 

and  foUow'd  by  his  flying  h  Ran  hke  a  colt,  Com.  of  Arthur  321 
dark  my  mother  was  in  eyes  and  h,  And  dark  in 

h  and  eyes  am  I ;  „             327 

Broad  brows  and  fair,  a  fluent  h  and  fine,  Gareth  and  L.  464 

the  h  All  over  glanced  with  dewdrop  or  with  gem  „            928 

broken  wings,  torn  raiment,  and  loose  h,  „           1208 

and  drew  down  from  out  his  night-black  h  Balin  and  Balan  511 

A  twist  of  gold  was  round  her  h ;  Merlin  and  V.  221 

The  snake  of  gold  slid  from  her  h,  „              888 

And  set  it  in  this  damsel's  golden  h,  Lancelot  and  E.  205 

Her  bright  h  blown  about  the  serious  face  „              392 

Then  shook  his  h,  strode  off,  and  buzz'd  abroad  „              722 

— all  her  bright  h  streaming  down —  „            1156 

To  seize  me  by  the  h  and  bear  me  far,  „            1425 

Clean  from  her  forehead  all  that  wealth  of  h  Holy  Grail  150 

all  her  shining  h  Was  smear'd  with  earth,  „          209 

black-blue  Irish  h  and  Irish  eyes  Had  drawn  Last  Tournament  404 

A  low  sea-sunset  glorying  roimd  her  h  „             508 

His  h,  a  sun  that  ray'd  from  off  a  brow  „              666 

all  their  dewy  h  blown  back  Hke  flame :  Guinevere  284 

with  her  milkwhite  arms  and  shadowy  h  „        416 

Lest  but  a  A  of  this  low  head  be  harm'd.  „        447 

O  golden  h,  with  which  I  used  to  play  „        547 

Quiver'd  a  flying  glory  on  her  h,  Lover's  Tale  i  69 

A  solid  glory  on  her  bright  black  h ;  „            367 

her  h  Studded  with  one  rich  Provence  rose —  „         Hi  44 

thaw  niver  a  h  wur  awry ;  Village  Wife  84 

Harsh  red  h,  big  voice,  big  chest.  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  4 

And  his  white  h  sank  to  Ms  heels  V.  of  Maddune  118 

a  dreadful  light  Came  from  her  golden  h,  Tiresias  44 

crystal  into  which  I  braided  Edwin's  h !  The  Flight  34 

An'  yer  h  as  black  as  the  night.  Tomorrow  32 

h  was  as  white  as  the  snow  an  a  grave.  „         60 

And  that  bright  h  the  modern  sun.  Epilogue  8 

'  Thy  h  Is  golden  like  thy  Mother's,  The  Ring  103 

The  frost-bead  melts  upon  her  golden  h ;  Prog,  of  Spring  10 

one  sleek'd  the  squalid  h.  One  kiss'd  Death  of  (Enone  57 

Hair'd    See  Dark-hair'd,  Fair-hair'd,  Golden-hair'd, 

)^       Gray-hair'd,  Long-hair'd,  White-hair'd 

Hairless    A  little  glassy-headed  h  man.  Merlin  and  V.  620 

Hainu  (arm)    An'  'e  cotch'd  howd  hard  o'  my  h,  Owd  Rod  58 

wi'  my  h  hingin'  down  to  the  floor,  „        65 

Hair's-breadth    Not  even  by  one  h-b  of  heresy,  Columbus  64 

Hairshirt     '  Fast,  H  and  scourge —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  142 

Hairy-fibred     Claspt  the  gray  walls  with  h-f  arms,  Marr.  of  Geraint  323 

Haithen  (heathen)    h  kings  in  the  flesh  for  the 

Jidgemint  day,  Tomorrow  70 

Halcyon  (adj.)    and  give  His  fealty  to  the  h  hour!  The  Wanderer  12 

Halcyon  (s)    in  her  open  palm  a  A  sits  Patient —  Prog,  of  Spring  2Q 

Haldeny  (Aldemey)    pigs  didn't  sell  at  fall,  an'  wa 

lost  wer  H  cow,  Church-warden,  etc.  5 

Hale  (Francis)    See  Francis  Hale 

Hale     I  was  strong  and  h  of  body  then;  St.  S.  Stylites  29 

Who  wears  his  manhood  h  and  green :  In  Mem.  liii  4 

What  did  he  then?  not  die:  he  is  here  and  h —  -Lover's  Tale  iv  40 

Haled    With  hand  and  rope  we  h  the  groaning  sow,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  91 

The  rope  that  h  the  buckets  from  the  well,  St.  S.  Stylites  64 

And  fam  had  h  him  out  into  the  world,  Aylmer's  Field  467 

They  A  us  to  the  Princess  where  she  sat  Princess  iv  271 

h  the  yellow-ringleted  Britoness —  Boddicea  55 

Haler     and  h  too  than  I ;  Guinevere  685 

Half    (See  also  Haafe)    H  shown,  are  broken  and 

withdrawn.  Two  Voices  306 
a  friendship  so  complete  Portioned  in  halves  between  us,  Gardener's  D.  5 

My  words  were  h  in  earnest,  h  in  jest,)  „           23 

H  Ught,  h  shade.  She  stood,  „         140 

And  h  in  love,  h  spite,  he  woo'd  and  wed  Dora  39 
h  stands  up  And  bristles ;  h  has  fall'n  and  made 

a  bridge ;  Walk,  to  the  Mail  31 

I  hope  my  end  draws  nigh :  h  dead  I  am,  St.  S.  Stylites  37 
love-languid  thro'  h  tears  would  dwell  One  earnest,      Love  and  Duty  36 


Half  (continued)    H  is  thine  and  A  is  his :  it  will  be  worthy 

of  the  two.  Locksley  Rail  92 

shall  we  pass  the  bill  I  mention'd  h  an  hour  ago  ?  '   Day-Dm.,  Revival  28 
That  my  youth  was  h  divine.  Vision  of  Sin  78 

With  h  a  score  of  swarthy  faces  came.  Aylmer's  Field  191 

his  mind  H  buried  in  some  weightier  argument,  Lucretius  9 

H  child  h  woman  as  she  was.  Princess,  Pro.  101 

we  gain'd  A  little  street  h  garden  and  h  house  ;  „  i  214 

then  to  bed,  where  h  in  doze  I  seem'd  To  float  „  246 

we  stroU'd  For  h  the  day  thro'  stately  theatres  „  ii  369 

Hers  more  than  h  the  students,  all  the  love.  „  Hi  39 

bearing  in  my  left  The  weight  of  all  the  hopes  of 

h  the  world, 
but  h  Without  you ;  with  you,  whole ;  and  of  those 

halves  You  worthiest ; 
H  turning  to  the  broken  statue,  said, 
Lily  of  the  vale !  h  open'd  bell  of  the  woods ! 
H  a  league,  h  a  league,  H  a  league  onward, 
a  he  wWch  is  A  a  truth  is  ever  the  blackest  of  lies, 
Girt  by  h  the  tribes  of  Britain, 
or  h  coquette-like  Maiden, 
I  sometimes  hold  it  A  a  sin  To  put  in  words 
like  Nature,  h  reveal  And  h  conceal  the  Soul  within. 
A  shot,  ere  h  thy  draught  be  done. 
And  part  it,  giving  h  to  him. 
My  bosom-friend  and  h  of  life ; 
H  jealous  of  she  knows  not  what, 
h  exprest  And  loyal  unto  kindly  laws. 
I,  the  divided  h  of  such  A  friendship  as  had  master'd 

Time; 
And  tumbled  h  the  mellowing  pears ! 
To  count  their  memories  h  divine ; 
Believe  me,  than  in  h  the  creeds. 
These  two  have  striven  h  the  day. 
Now  h  to  the  setting  moon  are  gone.  And  h  to  the 

rising  day ; 
H  the  night  I  waste  in  sighs,  H  in  dreams  I  sorrow 
'  Thou  hast  h  prevail'd  against  me,' 
Or  whosoe'er  it  was,  or  h  the  world  Had  ventured — 
everyone  that  owns  a  tower  The  Lord  for  h  a  league. 
King  Arthur's  gift,  the  worth  oih  a,  town, 
R  fell  to  right  and  h  to  left  and  lay. 
Spring  after  spring,  for  h  a  hundred  years : 
That  have  no  meaning  h  a  league  away : 
With  h  a  night's  appliances,  recall'd 
But  his  friend  Replied,  in  A  a  whisper, 
And  the  h  my  men  are  sick. 
For  h  of  their  fleet  to  the  right  and  h  to  the  left 
And  h  of  the  rest  of  us  maim'd  for  life 
the  great  waters  break  Whitening  for  h  a 

league, 
Not  quite  so  quickly,  no,  nor  h  as  well. 
For  the  one  h  slew  the  other, 
and  her  tears  Are  h  of  pleasure,  h  of  pain — 


iv  184 

460 

593 

yi  193 

Light  Brigade  1 

Grandmother  30 

Boddicea  5 

Hendecasyllabics  20 

In  Mem.  v  1 

3 

vi  11 

XXV  12 

lix  3 

Ixl 

Ixxxv  15 

63 

Ixxxix  20 

xc  12 

xcvi  12 

cii  17 

Maud  I  xxii  23 

//  iv  23 

Gareth  and  L.  30 

64 

596 

677 

1405 

Roly  Grail  19 

556 

Lover's  Tale  iv  93 

336 

The  Revenge  6 

„  35 

77 


Last  Tournament  465 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  102 

V.  of  Maeldune  114 

Prin.  Beatrice  11 


He  married  an  heiress,  an  orphan  with  h  a  shire  of  estate, —  Charity  13 

Half-accomplish'd    A  spike  of  h-a  bells —  To  Ulysses  24 

Half  afraid    I  myself  Am  A  a  to  wear  it.  The  Ring  472 

Half-aghast    Leolin  still  Retreated  h-a,  Aylmer's  Field  330 

Half-akin    No  longer  h-a  to  brute,  In  Mem.,  Con.  133 

Half-a-league     Yon  summit  h-a-l  in  air —  Ancient  Sage  11 

Half-allowing    h-a  smiles  for  all  the  world,  Aylmer's  Field  120 

Half-amaze    rabble  in  h-a  Stared  at  him  dead,  St.  Telemachus  71 

Half-amazed    Whereat  he  stared,  replying,  h-a,  Godiva  21 

seal'd  dispatches  which  the  Head  Took  h-a,  Princess  iv  380 

mirth  so  loud  Beyond  all  use,  that,  h-a,  the 

Queen,  Last  Tournament  236 

that  h-a  I  parted  from  her,  The  Ring  436 

Half-anger'd     R-a  with  my  happy  lot,  Miller's  D.  2(X) 

Come,  I  am  hunger'd  and  h-a — meat.  Last  Tournament  719 

Half-arisen    came  upon  him  h-a  from  sleep,  Aylmer's  Field  584 

Half-ashamed    Then  h-a  and  part-amazed,  Gareth  and  L.  868 

Half-asleep     As  h-a  his  breath  he  drew.  The  Sisters  28 

And  on  me,  h-a,  came  back  That  wholesome  heat     To  E.  Fitzgerald  23 

Half-assured    their  Highnesses  Were  h-a  Columbus  60 

Half-attain'd    cope  Of  the  h-a  futurity,  Ode  to  Memory  33 


Half-awake 


293 


HaU 


Half-awake    h-a  I  heard  The  parson  taking  wide  and 

wider  sweeps,  The  Epic  13 

h-a  he  whisper'd,  '  Where  ?     O  where  ?  Pelleas  and  E.  41 

Half-awaked    sounded  as  in  a  dream  To  ears  but  h-a,  Last  Tournament  152 


Half-awaken'd    earliest  pipe  of  h-a  birds 
Half-blind    sudden  light  Dazed  me  h-b : 
Half-blinded     H-b  at  the  coming  of  a  Ught. 
Half-bold     H-b,  half-frighted,  with  dilated  eyes, 
Half-brain     All  the  full-brain,  h-b  races, 
Half-bright    Star  of  Even  Half-tamish'd  and  /*-*, 
Half-buried    H-b  in  the  Eagle's  down. 
Half-canonized    H-c  by  all  that  look'd  on  her, 
Half-cheated    rathe  she  rose,  h-c  in  the  thought 
Half-clench'd    hand  h-c  Went  faltering  sideways 
Half-closed    dropping  low  their  crimson  bells  H-c, 
Half-conscious    H-c  of  the  garden-squirt, 

H-c  of  their  dying  clay. 
Half-consent    Assumed  from  thence  a  h-c 
Half-control    for  man  can  h-c  his  doom 
Half-crazed     I,  once  h-c  for  lai^er  light 
Half-crown     Is  it  the  weight  of  that  h-c. 
Half -crush 'd    h-c  among  the  rest  A  dwarf- like  Cato 
Half-cut-down    h-c-d,  a  pasty  costly-made, 
Half-dead    And  all  things  look'd  h-d, 

H-d  to  know  that  I  shall  die.' 

Maybe  still  I  am  but  h-d  • 

fire,  That  lookt  h-d,  brake  bright, 

Under  the  h-d  sunset  glared ; 

A  stump  of  oak  h-d.  From  roots  like  some  black 
coil 

dash'd  h  d  on  barren  sands,  was  I. 
Half-deed    shall  descend  On  this  h-d,  and  shape  it 
Half-defended    Lo  their  colony  h-d ! 
Half-despised    not  look  up,  or  h-d  the  height 
Half-digging    they  fell  H-d  their  own  graves) 
Half-dipt    a  summer  moon  H-d  in  cloud : 
Half-disdain    h-d  Perch'd  on  the  pouted  blossom 
Half-diseased    '  And  the  liver  is  h-d  ! ' 
Half-disfame    what  is  Fame  in  life  but  h-d. 

Right  well  know  I  that  Fame  is  h-d, 
HaU-disrooted    A  tree  Was  h-d  from  his  place 
Half -divine     The  man  I  held  as  h-d ; 
Half-drain'd    a  flask  Between  his  knees,  h-d ; 
Half-dream    Falling  asleep  in  a  h-d ! 
Half-drooping    half  on  her  mother  propt,  H-d 
Half-dropt     With  h-d  eyelid  still. 
Half-embraced    And  h-e  the  basket  cradle-head 
Half-English    sweet  h-E  Neilgherry  air  I  panted. 
Half-entering    H-e  the  portals. 
Half-envious    H-e  of  the  flattering  hand, 
Half-face    From  the  h-f  to  the  full  eye, 
Half-faU'n    H-f  across  the  threshold  of  the  sun, 
Half-falling    h-f  from  his  knees.  Half-nestled  at  his 

heart. 
Half-foresaw    She  h-f  that  he,  the  subtle  beast, 
Half-forgotten    our  great  deeds,  as  h-f  things. 

random  rhymes.  Ere  they  be  h-f; 

Vivien  h-f  of  the  Queen 

Low  in  the  dust  of  h-f  kings, 
Half-frenzied    when,  h-f  by  the  ring. 
Half-frighted    on  the  book,  h-f,  Miriam  swore. 

Half-bold,  h-f,  with  dilated  eyes, 
Half-frighten'd    Look'd  down,  half-pleased,  h-f, 
Half-glance    With  a  h-g  upon  the  sky 
Half-grown    H-g  as  yet,  a  child,  and  vain — 
Half-guilty    grew  h-g  in  her  thoughts  again. 
Half-heard    laid  his  ear  beside  the  doors.  And  there  h-h ; 
Half-hid    Here  h-h  in  the  gleaming  wood. 
Half-hidden    and  there,  h-h  by  him,  stood. 
Half-historic    dealt  with  knights,  HaK-legend,  h-h, 
Half-hour    For  one  h-h,  and  let  him  talk  to  me ! ' 
Half-hysterical    A  half-incredulous,  h-h  cry. 
Half-incredtUous    A  h-i,  half-hysterical  cry. 
Half-invisible    H-i  to  the  view.  Wheeling 
HaU-lapt    H-l  in  glowing  gauze  and  golden  brede, 


Princess  iv  50 

„       1)12 

Com.  of  Arthur  266 

Geraint  and  E.  597 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  161 

Gareth  and  L.  1118 

Palace  of  Art  122 

Princess  i  23 

Lancelot  and  E.  340 

Merlin  and  V.  849 

Arabian  Nights  63 

Amphion  91 

In  Mem.  Iviii  7 

Princess  vii  82 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  277 

To  Ulysses  29 

Will  Water.  155 

Princess  vii  125 

Audley  Court  23 

Grandmother  34 

In  Mem,,  xxxv  16 

Maud  II.  V  99 

Gareth  and  L.  685 

800 

Last  Tournament  12 

The  Ring  309 

Ancient  Sage  89 

Boddicea  17 

Guinevere  643 

Lover's  Tale  ii  47 

Godiva  46 

Princess,  Pro.  198 

Dead  Prophet  76 

Merlin  and  V.  465 

504 

Princess  iv  186 

In  Mem.  xiv  10 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  26 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  56 

Princess  iv  368 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  90 

Sea  Dreams  289 

The  Brook  17 

Lover's  Tale  ii  123 

Lancelot  and  E.  349 

1262 

D.ofF.  Women  ^ 

Merlin  and  V.  904 

Guinevere  59 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  78 

Will  Water.  14 

Merlin  and  V.  137 

Lancelot  and  E.  1338 

The  Ring  213 

Enoch  Arden  843 

Geraint  and  E.  597 

Amphion  54 

A  Character  1 

In  Mem.  cxiv  9 

Guinevere  408 

Com.  of  Arthur  324 

Maud  I  vi  69 

Holy  Grail  754 

Princess,  Pro.  30 

The  Brook  115 

Enoch  Arden  853 

853 

Vision  of  Sin  36 

Princess  vi  134 


Half-legend    dealt  with  knights,  H-l,  half-historic, 
Half-light     In  the  h-l — thro'  the  dim  dawn — 
Half-lost    H-l  in  belts  of  hop  and  breadths 

HI  in  the  liquid  azure  bloom 

Owe  you  me  nothing  for  a  life  h-l  ? 

Some  third-rate  isle  h-l  among  her  seas  ? 

O  dear  Spirit  h-l  In  thine  own  shadow 
Half-loyal     the  glance  That  only  seems  h-l 
Half-man    He  scarce  is  knight,  yea  but  h-m, 
Half -melted    moon,  H-m  into  thin  blue  air. 


Princess,  Pro.  30 

Gareth  and  L.  1384 

Princess,  Con.  45 

Maud  I  iv  5 

Geraint  and  E.  318 

To  the  Queen  ii  25 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  39 

Last  Tournament  118 

Gareth  and  i.  1176 

Lover's  Tale  i  421 


Half-miracle    seem'd  h-m  To  those  he  fought  with,  Lancelot  and  E.  497 

Half-moulder'd    Sweeps  suddenly  all  its  h-m  chords  Lover's  Tale  i  19 

Half-muflSed     answer  which,  h-m  in  his  beard.  Princess  v  234 

Half-mused    the  guest  H-m,  or  reeling  ripe,  WiU  Water.  74 

Half-naked    H-n  as  if  caught  at  once  from  bed  Princess  iv  285 
Half-nestled    half-falling  from  his  knees,  H-n  at  his 

heart.  Merlin  and  V.  905 

Half-oblivious    (For  I  was  h-o  of  my  mask)  Princess  Hi  338 
Half-open    Thro'  h-o  lattices  Coming  in  the  scented 

breeze,  Eleanore  23 

Half-opening    balmier  than  h-o  buds  Of  April,  Tithonus  59 

Half-parted    H-p  from  a  weak  and  scolding  hinge.  The  Brook  84 
Half-pennyworth    See  A3,poth. 

Half-pleased     Look'd  down,  h-p,  half-frighten'd,  Amphion  54 

Half-possess'd     Lilia  sang :  We  thought  her  h-p.  Princess  iv  585 
Half-pot    See  Haaf-pot. 

Half-right     I  thought  her  h-r  talking  of  her  wrongs ;  Princess  v  285 

Half-sardonically    I  ask'd  him  h-s.  Edwin  Morris  59 

Half-science     The  sport  h-s,  fill  me  with  a  faith.  Princess,  Con.  76 

Half-self    my  other  heart.  And  almost  my  h-s.  Princess  i  56 

Half-shadow    And  thought, '  For  this  h-s  of  a  lie  Gareth  and  L.  323 

Half-shrouded    h-s  over  death  In  deathless  marble.  Princess  v  74 

Half-shut     With  h-s  eyes  ever  to  seem  Falling  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  55 

All  unawares  before  his  h-s  eyes.  Lover's  Tale  ii  153 

Half-shy    And  so  it  was — half-sly,  h-s.  Miller's  D.  133 

Half -sick    h-s  at  heart,  return'd.  Princess  iv  223 

Half-sickening    H-s  of  his  pension'd  afternoon,  Aylmer's  Field  461 

Half-sister     Raw  Haste,  h-s  to  Delay.  Love  thou  thy  land  96 

Half-sly    And  so  it  was — h-s,  half-shy.  Miller's  D.  133 

Half-spiritual    Then  fell  from  that  h-s  height  To  E.  Fitzgerald  19 

Hsdf-suffocated    till  I  yell'd  again  H-s,  Lucretius  58 

H-s  in  the  hoary  fell  And  many  winter'd  fleece  Merlin  and  V.  840 

Half-swallow'd    sea-foam  sway'd  a  boat,  H-s  in  it,  Holy  Grail  803 

Half-tamish'd     H-t  and  half-bright,  Gareth  and  L.  1118 

Half-thinking    h-t  that  her  lips.  Who  had  devised  Lancelot  and  E.  1287 

Half-tum'd    fixt  On  a  heart  h-t  to  stone.  Maud  I  vi  78 

Half-unconscious    I  saw  with  h-u  eye  The  Letters  15 

Half-uncut     '  She  left  the  novel  h-u  Talking  Oak  117 

Half-unwillingly    h-u  Loving  his  lusty  youthhood  Gareth  and  L.  579 

Half-views     nor  take  H-v  of  men  and  things.  Will  Water.  52 

Halfway    h  down  the  shadow  of  the  grave.  To  the  Queen  ii  6 

h-w  down  rare  saUs,  white  as  white  clouds.  Lover's  Tale  i  4 

Half-whisper'd    drawing  nigh  H-w  in  his  ear,  (Enone  186 

Half-within    Seem'd  h-w  and  half-without.  Miller's  D.  7 

Half-without    Seem'd  half-within  and  h-w,  „         7 

Half-world     yonder  morning  on  the  blind  h-w  ;  Princess  vii  352 

Half-wrench'd    H-w  a  golden  wing ;  but  now —  Holy  Grail  733 

Half-wroth    H-w  he  had  not  ended,  but  all  glad,  Balin  and  Balan  427 

Half -yolk     hast  broken  shell.  Art  yet  h-y,  „            569 

Haling    six  tall  men  h  a  seventh  along,  Gareth  and  L.  811 
TTaii  (surname)    (See  also  Everard,  Everard  Hall)    '  Nay, 

nay,'  said  H,  '  Why  take  the  style  The  Epic  34 

Here  ended  H,  and  our  last  light,  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  1 
Hall    (See  also    'All,  Banquet  -  hall.  Council  -  hall. 

Sea-hall)  the  throne  In  the  midst  of  the  h ;  The  Mermaid  22 

Round  the  h  where  I  sate,  „          26 

Gods  Ranged  in  the  h's  of  Peleus ;  (Enone  81 

'  No  voice,'  she  shriek'd  in  that  lone  h,  Palace  of  Art  258 

There  stands  a  spectre  in  your  h:  L.C.  V.  de  Vere  42 

You  pine  among  your  h's  and  towers :  „             58 

Walking  about  the  gardens  and  the  h's  M.  d' Arthur  20 

how  The  races  went,  and  who  would  rent  the  h :  Audley  Court  31 

Far-folded  mists,  and  gleaming  h's  of  mom.  Tithonus  10 
Dreary  gleams  about  the  moorland  flying  over 

Locksley  H ;  Locksley  Hall  4 


Locksley  Hall  5 

189 

193 

Godiva  17 

Day- Dm.,  Revival  7 

Sir  Galahad  81 

L.  of  Burleigh  52 

Enoch  Arden  99 


Aylmer 


's  Field  14 
36 


Han 

HsD  {continued)    Locksley  H,  that  in  the  distance  over 
looks  the  sandy  tracts, 

a  long  farewell  to  Locksley  H ! 

Let  it  fall  on  Locksley  U,  with  rain  or  hail, 

he  strode  About  the  h,  among  his  dogs 

A  sudden  hubbub  shook  the  h, 

So  pass  I  hostel,  h,  and  grange ; 

Leading  on  from  h  to  h. 

And  peacock-yewtree  of  the  lonely  H, 

The  peacock-yewtree  and  the  lonely  H, 

The  county  God — in  whose  capacious  h, 

Where  Aylmer  followed  Ayhner  at  the  H 

so  that  Rectory  and  H,  Bound  in  an  immemorial  intimacy 

At  Christmas ;  ever  welcome  at  the  H,  ' 

darken'd  all  the  northward  of  her  H. 

groves  And  princely  h's,  and  farms, 

Will  there  be  children's  laughter  in  their  h 

the  great  H  was  wholly  broken  down, 

stairs  That  climb  into  the  windy  h's  of  heaven : 

from  vases  in  the  h  Flowers  of  all  heavens, 

If  our  old  h's  could  change  their  sex, 

And  up  a  flight  of  stairs  into  the  h. 

'  We  scarcely  thought  in  our  own  h  to  hear 

Look,  our  h !     Our  statues ! — 

Yet  hangs  his  portrait  in  my  father's  h 

in  h's  Of  Lebanonian  cedar : 

A  thousand  hearts  he  fallow  in  these  h's,  And  round 
these  h's  a  thousand  baby  loves 

The  long  h  gUttei'd  hke  a  bed  of  flowers. 

With  hooded  brows  I  crept  into  the  h, 

haled  us  to  the  Princess  where  she  sat  High  in  the  h : 

from  the  illumined  h  Long  lanes  of  splendour 

A  cap  of  Tyrol  borrow'd  from  the  h, 

And  on  they  moved  and  gain'd  the  h, 

Descending,  struck  athwart  the  h. 

Love  in  the  sacred  h's  Held  carnival 

Gray  h's  alone  among  their  massive  groves ; 

And  sorrow  darkens  hamlet  and  h. 

In  this  wide  h  with  earth's  invention  stored, 

We  loved  that  h,  tho'  white  and  cold, 

Dies  off  at  once  from  bower  and  h, 

At  our  old  pastimes  in  the  h  We  gambol'd, 

Like  echoes  in  sepulchral  h's. 

And  saw  the  tumult  of  the  h's ; 

Imperial  h's,  or  open  plain  ; 

Methought  I  dwelt  within  a  h, 

The  h  with  harp  and  carol  rang. 

The  white-faced  h's,  the  glancing  rills, 

that  old  man,  now  lord  of  the  broad  estate  and  the  H, 

I  am  sick  of  the  H  and  the  hill, 

Workmen  up  at  the  H ! — 

Maud  the  dehght  of  the  village,  the  ringing  joy  of  the  H 

by  a  red  rock,  glimmers  the  ^ ; 

tree  In  the  me^ow  under  the  H ! 

Bound  for  the  H,  I  am  sure  was  he ;  Bound  for  the  H, 

On  my  fresh  hope,  to  the  H  to-night. 

And  bringing  me  down  from  the  H 

O  Rivulet,  bom  at  the  H, 

As  the  music  clash'd  in  the  h ; 

by  the  turrets  Of  the  old  manorial  h. 

and  set  him  in  the  h.  Proclaiming,  Com.  of  Arthur  229 

sang  the  knighthood,  moving  to  their  h.  503 

strength  and  wit,  in  my  good  mother's  h  Gardh  and  L.  12 

both  thy  brethren  are  m  Arthur's  h,  82 


294 


Hall 


38 

114 

415 

654 

787 

846 

Lucretius  136 

Princess,  Pro.  11 

140 

,,  ii  31 

53 

75 

239 

351 

400 
439 

iv  225 

272 

477 

601 

vi  352 

364 

„  vii  84 

Con.  43 

Ode  on  Well.  7 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  2 

The  Daisy  37 

In  Mem.  viii  6 

,,  XXX  o 

„        Iviii  2 

„  Ixxxvii  4 

„   xcviii  29 

„         ciii  5 

9 

„  Con.  113 

Maud  I  i  19 

61 

65 

70 

iv  10 

v2 

x25 

„    xix  103 

„       xxi  2 

8 

„    xxii  34 

//  iv  80 


thou  Shalt  go  disguised  to  Arthur's  h, 
a  knight  would  pass  Outward,  or  inward  to  the  h : 
Then  into  h  Gareth  ascending  heard  A  voice, 
Far  over  heads  in  that  long-vaulted  h 

This  railer,  that  hath  mock'd  thee  in  full  h 

Then  came  in  h  the  messenger  of  Mark, 

down  the  side  of  that  long  h  A  stately  pile, — 

this  was  Arthur's  custom  in  his  A ; 

and  they  sit  within  our  h. 

or  from  sheepcot  or  king's  h. 

Look  therefore  when  he  calls  for  this  in  A, 


152 
311 
317 
319 
369 
384 
404 
410 
425 
467 
583 


Hall  (continued)    past  into  the  h  A  damsel  of  hi"h 
lineage,  ^ 

She  into  h  past  with  her  page  and  cried 
Safe,  damsel,  as  the  centre  of  this  h.       ' 
Then  ere  a  man  in  h  could  stay  her, 
two  great  entries  open'd  from  the  h. 
The  most  ungentle  knight  in  Arthur's  h.' 
that  day  a  feast  had  been  Held  in  high  h. 
Hear  me— this  morn  I  stood  in  Arthur's  h 
The  champion  thou  hast  brought  from  Arthur's  h  ? 
Arise  And  quickly  pass  to  Arthur's  h, 
'  Here  is  a  kitchen-knave  from  Arthur's  h 
Where  should  be  truth  if  not  in  Arthur's  h.  In  Arthur's 

presence  ? 
What  madness  made  thee  chaUenge  the  chief  knieht  Of 

Arthurs  A  ?  '  * 

Weeping  for  some  gay  knight  in  Arthur's  h.' 
on  a  day,  he  sitting  high  in  h, 
not  mindful  of  his  face  In  the  King's  h. 
Clear  thro'  the  open  casement  of  the  h' 
The  dusky-rafter'd  many-cobweb'd  h,  ' 
because  their  h  must  also  serve  For  kitchen 
Now  here,  now  there,  about  the  dusky  h  ■   ' 
those  That  eat  in  Arthur's  h  at  Camelot. ' 
And  told  her  all  their  converse  in  the  h, 
Geraint  Woke  where  he  slept  in  the  high  h 
Thereafter,  when  I  reach'd  this  ruin'd  h,    ' 
overbore  Her  fancy  dwelhng  in  this  dusky  h 
she,  remembering  her  old  ruin'd  h, 
take  him  up,  and  bear  him  to  our  h : 
And  bore  him  to  the  naked  h  of  Doorm, 
he  lay  Down  on  an  oaken  settle  in  the  h, 
There  m  the  naked  h,  propping  his  head 
return'd  The  huge  Eari  Doorm  with  plunder  to  the  h. 
And  all  the  h  was  dim  with  steam  of  flesh : 
And  ate  with  tumult  in  the  naked  h. 
He  roll'd  his  eyes  about  the  h, 
At  this  he  turn'd  all  red  and  paced  his  h, 
And  loved  me  serving  in  my  father's  h  ■ 
strode  the  brute  Eari  up  and  down  his  h, 
all  the  men  and  women  in  the  h  Rose 
the  huge  Eari  lay  slain  within  his  h. 
and  in  their  h's  arose  The  cry  of  children 
'  I  too,'  said  Arthur,  '  am  of  Arthur's  h,  ' 
A  thrall  of  mine  in  open  h, 
Thereafter,  when  Sir  Bahn  enter'd  h, 
the  h  Of  him  to  whom  ye  sent  us,  Pellam, 
warmth  of  Arthur's  h  Shadow'd  an  angry  distance  • 
Uose-bower'd  in  that  garden  nigh  the  h. 
the  castle  of  a  King,  the  h  Of  Pellam, 
Faint  in  the  low  dark  h  of  banquet : 
Arthur's  knights  Were  hated  strangers  in  the  h) 
thou  from  Arthur's  h,  and  yet  So  simple ! 
Who,  sitting  in  thine  own  h,  canst  endure  To  mouth 
Was  dumb'd  by  one  from  out  the  h  of  Mark 
Borne  by  some  high  lord-prince  of  Arthur's  h, 
bounden  art  thou,  if  from  Arthur's  h,  To  help  the  weak 
Brother,  I  dwelt  a  day  in  Pellam's  h  • 

«^J°^®r?'°  ^^^^^  ^^^  '*'  ^"^'  Vivien  following  him, 
When  Gumevere  was  crossing  the  great  h 
but  all  was  joust  and  play,  Leaven'd  his  h. 
built  the  King  his  havens,  ships,  and  h's 
In  Arthur's  arras  h  at  Camelot :  ' 


After  the  King,  who  eat  in  Arthur's  h's 

'  Known  am  I,  and  of  Arthur's  h, 

goodliest  man  That  ever  among  ladies  ate  in  h 

mto  that  rude  h  Stept  with  all  grace,  ' 

a  chapel  and  a  A  On  massive  columns 

And  reverently  they  bore  her  into  h.  ' 

I  knew  For  one  of  those  who  eat  in  Arthur's  h  • 

In  our  great  h  there  stood  a  vacant  chair,         ' 

the  great  banquet  lay  along  the  h, 

in  the  blast  there  smote  along  the  h  A  beam  of  light 

said  Percivale,  '  the  King,  Was  not  inh: 

Ah  outraged  maiden  sprang  into  the  h 


Gareth  and  L.  587 
592 
604 
660 
665 
757 
848 
855 
916 
984 
1036 

1254 

1417 
Marr.  of  Geraint  118 
147 
192 
328 
362 
390 
401 
432 
520 
755 
785 
802 
Geraint  and  E.  254 
552 
570 
573 
581 
592 
603 
605 
610 
668 
699 
712 
731 
806 
964 
Balin  and  Balan  37 
56 
80 
95 
236 
241 
331 
343 
352 
357 
378 
437 
466 
472 
605 
Merlin  and  V.  32 
65 
146 
168 
250 

Lancelot  and  E.  184 
188 
255 
262 
405 
1266 
Holy  Grail  24 
167 
180 
186 
206 
208 


HaU 


295 


Hand 


HaU  (continued)    roofs  Of  our  great  h  are  roU'd  in  thunder- 

.smoke !  ^°^y  ^^'^'^^  ^f  ^ 

For  dear  to  Arthur  was  that  h  of  ours,  ..        222 

'  O  brother,  had  you  known  our  mighty  h,  ,.         -^^ 

Climbs  to  the  mighty  h  that  Merlin  built.  »        ^^^ 

With  many  a  mystic  symbol,  gird  the  h :  «         -^^ 

brother,  had  you  known  our  h  within,  »        ^^o 

So  to  this  h  full  quickly  rode  the  King,  ..        ^o» 

(Because  the  h  was  all  in  tumultr—  >.        ^o^ 

Shrilling  along  the  A  to  Arthur,  call'd,  ,.        ^o» 

cries  of  all  my  realm  Pass  thro'  this  h—  ..        ^^^ 

But  when  they  led  me  into  h,  behold,  ..        ^7  j 

A  slender  page  about  her  father's  h,  «        og-l-    ' 

that  they  fell  from,  brought  us  to  the  h.  „        7^|J 

Yea,  shook  this  newer,  stronger  h  of  ours,  ..        7oi 
And  up  into  the  sounding  h  I  past ;  But  nothing  in  the 

sounding  h  I  saw,  "         ^i!' 

Lancelot  left  The  h  long  silent,  '.        «^4 

and  as  he  sat  In  h  at  old  Caerleon,  Felleas  and  A.  rf 

And  spied  not  any  light  in  k  or  bower,  ,,          419 

he  Gasping, '  Of  Arthur's  A  am  I,  but  here,  ,.          514 

that  Gawain  fired  The  h  of  Merlin,  ..          o^o 

High  up  in  heaven  the  h  that  Merlin  built,  „          oM 

It  chanced  that  both  Brake  into  h  together,  „          587 

Then  a  long  silence  came  upon  the  h,  ..          WW 
Danced  like  a  wither'd  leaf  before  the  h. 

(repeat)  -^^^  Tournament  4,  J4J 

And  toward  him  from  the  h,  with  harp  in  hand,  „                     5 

Into  the  h  stagger'd,  his  visage  ribb'd  „                   o7 

warrior-wise  thou  stridest  thro'  his  h's  Who  hates  thee,   „  ou 

beheld  That  victor  of  the  Pagan  throned  in  h—  „                  66o 

stairway  to  the  h,  and  look'd  and  saw  >•        .          '&7 

rarely  could  she  front  in  h,  Or  elsewhere,  Guinevere  bJ 
Swung  round  the  lighted  lantern  of  the  A ;  And 

in  the  h  itself  was  such  a  feast  »       ^^^ 

live  To  sit  once  more  within  his  lonely  h,  ,.       49^ 

Walking  about  the  gardens  and  the  h's  Pass,  of  Arthiir  l»a 

From  his  mid-dome  in  Heaven's  airy  h's ;  Lover  s  Tale  ibb 

Is  scoop'd  a  cavern  and  a  mountain  h,  ..            51^ 

streams  Running  far  on  within  its  inmost  h's,  „         .    5^^ 

round  his  h  From  colmnn  on  to  column,  ,.        *"  1°° 

at  one  end  of  the  h  Two  great  funereal  curtains,  ,,            21^ 

rose— And  slowly  pacing  to  the  middle  h,  „            ^o 

this  last  strange  hour  in  his  own  h;  ,,     ^  " /,  il,     , ^ 

hup  to  Harmsby  and  Hutterby  H.  .     ^^''J^-  ^°zH\\l 
people  throng'd  about  them  from  the  h,               Sisters  (E.  andE.)  i&b 

sa  I  hallus  deal'd  wi'  the  H,  Village  Wife  115 

there  hail'd  on  our  houses  and  h's  Def.  ofLucknow  i.6 

princelier  looking  man  never  stept  thro'  a  Prince's  h.  The  yvreck  lb 

this  H  at  last  will  go— perhaps  have  gone.  The  Flight  27 

I  myself  so  close  on  death,  and  death  itself  in  „    c>-       * 

Lockslev  H.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  4 

In  the  A  there  hangs  a  painting—  >.            ^^ 

how  her  Uving  glory  lights  the  h,  »            ^^^ 
Here  is  Locksley  H,  my  grandson,  here  the  lion- 
guarded  gate.     Not  to-night  in  Locksley  H— 

to-morrow —  »            ^07 

Not  the  H  to-night,  my  grandson !  ..            ^^' 

Here  to-night,  the  H  to-morrow,  »            -'"^ 
Then  I  leave  thee  Lord  and  Master,  latest  Lord  of 

Locksley  H.  ^       ^    "    j  t>  -iQa 

and  break  The  sunless  h's  of  Hades  BemeterandP.  Idb 

And  yet  not  mine  the  h,  the  farm,  the  field ;  The  Ring  169 

they  know  too  that  whene'er  In  our  free  H,  Akbar  s  Dream  55 

HaU-ceiling    the  fair  ;i-c  stately-set  .^^""""^nlW 

Halleluiah  Hallowed  be  Thy  nam^-fl !  (repeat)  De  Prof^Eurruin  C.  1, 6, 9 

HaUelujah    blend  in  choric  U  to  the  Maker  Making  of  Man  « 

HaU-garden    up  in  the  high  ff-9  I  see  her  pass  Maud  I  iv  11 

Birds  in  the  high  H-g  (repeat)  ^      „        "  *"  t>  f^ 

HaU-hearths    On  the  ft-fe  the  festal  fires.  Day  Dm.,  Sleep  F.  1^ 

HaUoo    Shrilly  the  owlet  A'3;  -^Xnf^i? 

With  a  le^igthen'd  loud  h.  The  Owl  «  13 

in  the  h  Wm  topple  to  the  trumpet  down,  .^^''u/     '*  T«i 

HaUow'd    torrent  brooks  of  A  Israel  ■^- ^-^^-.^^T**- ^ 

earth  They  fell  on  became  h  evermore.  Lover  s  XaLei'i^ 


'BsSio'^A^  (continued)    my  name  has  been  A  A  memory  „,  ,    ■  ^^r 

like  the  names  of  old,  Lover  s  Tale  i  445 

Your  very  armour  h,  Frmcess  v  41d 

E  be  Thy  name— Halleluiah !  (repeat)  De  Prof.,  Human  C.  1,  5,  9 

Halo    hence  this  h  lives  about  The  waiter's  hands.  Will  Water,  llo 

boss  Of  her  own  h's  dusky  sliield ;  The  Voyage  32 

Halt  (adj.)     And  cured  some  A  and  maim'd ;  St.  S.  Stylites  IWJ 

is  there  any  of  you  h  or  maim'd  ?  ». .          142 

But,  if  a  man  were  h  or  hunch'd,  Guinevere  41 

no  man  h,  or  deaf  or  blind ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  IW 

Halt  (S)     they  made  aft;  The  horses  yell'd ;  Princess  v_  249 

The  front  rank  made  a  sudden  h ;  Lover  s  Tale  in  29 

Halt  (verb)    He  seems  as  one  whose  footsteps  h,  r  i  qrh 

rode  In  converse  till  she  made  her  palfrey  h,  Gareth  andL.liWi 

cry  '  H,'  and  to  her  own  bright  face  Accuse  her  Geramt  and  E.  110 

Progress  h's  on  palsied  feet,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  219 

Halted    hung  his  head,  and  h  in  reply,  Geramt  and  E.  811 

And  when  we  h  at  that  other  well,  ■  Merlm  and  V.  2SU 

he  look'd  at  the  host  that  had  h  Heavy  Brigade  1 

Halter    scared  with  threats  of  jail  and  h  Aylmer  s  h leld  &JU 

Halting     lookt  So  sweet,  that  h,  in  he  past,  Last  Tournament  d»» 

Halyard    Shot  thro' the  staff  or  the /i,  Def.ofLucknowb 

Hamilton     Who  are  you  ?     What !  the  Lady  H  ?  Romney  s  R.  2 

Hamlet    Two  children  in  one  h  born  and  bred ;  Circumstance  S 

many  too  had  known  Edith  among  the  h's  round,      Aybner  s  J^ield  blD 

among  their  massive  groves ;  Trim  h's ;  Princess,  <-o«- 44 

And  sorrow  darkens  h  and  hall.  Ode  on  Well.! 

But  distant  colour,  happy  h,  TheUaisy  M 

Or  where  the  kneeling  h  drains  The  chalice  In  Mem.  x  1& 

Four  voices  of  four  h's  round,  "  ^^xyiiib 

She  floats  across  the  h.  , ,  Prog,  of  Spring  40 

passing  it  glanced  upon  H  or  city,  Merlm  and  the  G.  104 

Hammer  (s)    Came  to  the  h  here  in  March—  Audley  Court  bO 

Shaking  their  pretty  cabin, /i  and  axe.  Auger 

andlaw,  Enoch  Arden  113 

sUver  h's  falUng  On  silver  anvils,  Princess  i  21b 

iron-clanging  anvil  bang'd  With  A's ;  «     '"9^ 

Thou  hear'st  the  viUage  h  clink.  In  Mem.  cxxi  15 

and  everywhere  Was  h  laid  to  hoof,  Marr.of  Geramt  25b 

Hammer  (verb)    A  at  this  reverend  gentlewoman.  Princess  in  U\i 

Hammer'd    Sons  of  Edward  with  h  brands.  Bait,  of  Brwnanburh  14 
noon  Was  clash'd  and  h  from  a  hundred 

towers,  p  .  ^«^»*«  Jl 

All  that  long  morn  the  lists  were  A  up,  t/ -^""^t^V  ?ni 

Hammergrate  (emigrate)    An'  saw  she  mun  h,  lass,  Vdlage  Wife  104 

Hammering    H  and  clinking,  chattering  stony  names  -^"7^**^  'r'  ^99 

felt  his  young  heart  ^i  in  his  ears,  Gareth  and  L.  6li 

Hammock-Shroud    His  heavy-shotted /i-5  InMeni.vil^ 

Hampden    deep  chord  which  E  smote  Will  vibrate  England  and  Amer.  19 

Han'  (hand)    Queen  wid  her  sceptre  in  sich  an  Tomorrow  35 

llllgSint  fly  pre 

Father  Molowny  he  tuk  her  in /j,'  »          ^^ 
Hand  (part  of  body)    (-See  oZso 'And,  Han',  Hond)    *:«««'       „    .    ^        o. 

T/ie  seasons  w/ie,i  to  take  Occasion  by  the  h,  To  t/ie  Qween  31 

Propt  on  thy  knees,  my  h's  upheld  In  thine,  Supp.  Confessions  70 

Claps  her  tiny  h's  above  me,  ^f}°'\^ 

When  I  would  kiss  thy /i,  ,^m         "^^ 

Thou  leddest  by  the  A  thine  infant  Hope.  Ode  to  Meinory  30 

O  cursed /i!     0  cursed  blow!  _     ,?''"'"^  oq 

Laughing  and  clapping  their  h's  between,  TheMermun  29 

Leading  his  cheek  upon  his  /^,  -^^.f  ^"7  }/8 

And  now  shake  h's  across  the  brink  -^1^2/  hfe  is  full  6 

Shake  h's  once  more :  I  cannot  sink  So  f  ai^-  »           ° 

her  wooden  walls,— lit  by  sure  h's,—  ,F'^Z''I    1 

Caeess'd  or  chidden  by  the  slender  h.  Caress  d  or  chidden  1 

And  prest  thy  h,  and  knew  the  press  retum'd,  The  Bridesmaid  12 

But  who  hath  seen  her  wave  her  h  ?  L.of  Shalott  iZ^ 

Or  answer  should  one  press  his  h's  ?  Two  Vowes  245 

On  either  h  The  lawns  and  meadow-ledges  (Enoneb 

till  thy  h  Fail  from  the  sceptre-staff.  »  ^^5 

Ev'n  on  this  h,  and  sitting  on  this  stone  ?  ^  /'.  fxf 

/I's  and  eyes  That  said,  We  wait  for  thee.  Palace  of  Art  106 

Or  hollowing  one  h  against  his  ear,  ..           jO^ 

From  one  h  droop'd  a  crocus :  one  h  grasp'd  ,.           A19 

clapt  her  h's  and  cried,  '  I  marvel  if  my  still  delight  .,           -lo9 


Hand 


296 


Hand 


Hand  (part  of  body)  {continued)     The  airy  h  confusion 

wrought,  Palace  of  Art  226 

If  time  be  heavy  on  your  h's,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  66 
sit  beside  my  bed,  mother,  and  put  your  h  in 

mine,  May  Queen,  Con.  23 

flowers  in  the  valley  for  other  h's  than  mine.  „  52 
and  sinking  ships,  and  praying  h's.                         Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  116 

Beauty  and  anguish  walking  ^  in  A  D.  of  F.  Women  15 

My  father  held  his  h  upon  his  face ;  „            107 

Shake  h's,  before  you  die.  D.  of  the  O.  Year  42 

But  with  his  h  against  the  hilt,  Love  thou  thy  land  83 

laughing,  clapt  his  h  On  Everard's  shoulder,  The  Epic  21 

either  h,  Or  voice,  or  else  a  motion  of  the  mere.  M.  d' Arthur  76 

I  will  arise  and  slay  thee  with  my  h's.'  „         132 

Then  with  both  h's  I  flung  him,  „         157 

O'er  both  his  shoulders  drew  the  languid  h's,  „        174 

those  three  Queens  Put  forth  their  h's,  „        206 

chafed  his  h's.  And  call'd  him  by  his  name,  „         209 

knowing  God,  they  lift  not  h's  of  prayer,  „        252 

Requiring  at  her  h  the  greatest  gift.  Gardener's  D.  229 

old  man  Was  wroth,  and  doubled  up  his  h's,  Bora  25 

She  bow'd  upon  her  h's,  „    103 

clapt  him  on  the  h's  and  on  the  cheeks,  „    133 

clapt  his  h  in  mine  and  sang —  Audley  Court  39 
modest  eyes,  a,h,  a.  foot  Lessening  in  perfect 

cadence,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  54 

With  h  and  rope  we  haled  the  groaning  sow,  „              91 

Again  with  h's  of  wild  rejection  '  Go  ! —  Edwin  Morris  124 

She  might  have  lock'd  her  h's.  Talking  Oak  144 

kingdoms  overset.  Or  lapse  from  h  to  h,  „          258 

should  not  plunge  His  h  into  the  bag:  Golden  Year  72 

tum'd  it  in  his  glowing  h's ;  Locksley  Hall  31 

kiss  him :  take  his  h  in  thine.  „            52 

tho'  I  slew  thee  with  my  h\  „            56 

Then  a  h  shall  pass  before  thee,  „            81 

a  heart  as  rough  as  Esau's  h,  Godiva  28 
The  page  has  caught  her  A  in  his:                            Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  29 

on  either  h  upswells  The  gold-fringed  pillow  „         Sleep  B.  21 

That  lightly  rain  from  ladies'  h's.  Sir  Galahad  12 

Nor  maiden's  h  in  mine.  ,,           20 

And,  stricken  by  an  angel's  h,  „           69 

Who  hold  their  h's  to  all,  and  cry  Will  Water.  45 

this  halo  lives  about  The  waiter's  h's,  „         114 

And  lay  your  h  upon  my  head,  Lady  Clare  55 

Dropt  her  head  in  the  maiden's  h,  „          63 

He  clasps  the  crag  with  crooked  h's ;  The  Eagle  1 

Panted  hinh  with  faces  pale.  Vision  of  Sin  19 

Bandied  by  the  h's  of  fools.  „          106 

And  the  warmth  of  h  in  h.  „          162 

But  0  for  the  touch  of  a  vanish'd  h.  Break,  break,  etc.  11 

Another  h  crept  too  across  his  trade  Enoch  Arden  110 

set  his  h  To  fit  their  little  streetward  sitting-room  „            169 

and  his  careful  h, — The  space  was  narrow, —  „            176 

caught  His  bundle,  waved  his  h,  and  went  his  way.  „            238 

Perhaps  her  eye  was  dim,  h  tremulous ;  „            242 

For  wnere  he  fixt  his  heart  he  set  his  h  „            294 

Caught  at  his  h,  and  wrung  it  passionately,  „            328 

but  her  face  had  fall'n  upon  her  h's ;  „             391 

At  Annie's  door  he  paused  and  gave  his  h,  „            447 

Shaking  a  little  like  a  drunkard's  h,  „            465 

Her  h  dwelt  lingeringly  on  the  latch,  „            519 

on  the  right  h  of  the  hearth  he  saw  Philip,  „            744 

from  her  lifted  h  Dangled  a  length  of  ribbon  „            749 

on  the  left  h  of  the  hearth  he  saw  The  mother  „            753 

Almost  to  all  things  could  he  turn  his  h.  „            813 

(Claspt  h's  and  that  petitionary  grace  The  Brook  112 

Until  they  closed  a  bargain,  h  in  h.  „         156 

Her  art,  her  h,  her  counsel  all  had  wrought  Aylmer's  Field  151 

Queenly  responsive  when  the  loyal  h  Rose  „             169 

voice  Of  comfort  and  an  open  h  of  help,  „             174 

Then  plajong  with  the  blade  he  prick 'd  his  h,  „             239 

Then  made  his  pleasure  echo,  h  to  h,  „             257 

under  his  own  hntel  stood  Storming  with  lifted  h'a,  „             332 

Is  whiter  even  than  her  pretty  h :  „             363 

and  the  h's  of  power  Were  bloodier,  „             452 


Hand  (part  of  body)  {continued)    His  face  magnetic  to 

the  h  from  which  Livid  Aylmer's  Field  626 

free  of  alms  her  h — The  h  that  robed  your  cottage-walls       „  697 

laid,  Wifelike,  her  h  in  one  of  his,  „  808 

her  own  people  bore  along  the  nave  Her  pendent  h's,  „  813 
A  pickaxe  in  her  h :                                                               Sea  Dreams  100 

Gript  my  h  hard,  and  with  God-bless-you  went.                       „  160 

A  loose  one  in  the  hard  grip  of  his  h,                                          „  163 

Left  him  one  h,  and  reaching  thro'  the  night                             „  287 

h's  they  mixt,  and  yell'd  and  round  me  drove  Lucretius  56 
unseen  monster  lays  His  vast  and  filthy  h's  upon  my  will,'  „       220 

that  sport  Went  h  inh  with  Science ;                               Princess,  Pro.  80 

The  h  that  play'd  the  patron  with  her  curls.  ,,  138 

with  long  arms  and  h's  Reach'd  out,  „  i  28 

Airing  a  snowy  h  and  signet  gem,  „  121 

I  sat  down  and  wrote.  In  such  a  A  as  when  „  236 

Lived  thro'  her  to  the  tips  of  her  long  h's,  „  ii  40 

when  we  set  our  h  To  this  great  work,  „  59 

Besides  the  brain  was  like  the  h,  „  150 

Took  both  his  h's,  and  smiling  faintly  said :  „  304 

Melissa,  with  her  h  upon  the  lock,  „  322 

Push'd  her  flat  h  agamst  his  face  and  laugh'd ;  „  366 

The  circle  rounded  under  female  h's  „  372 

one  In  this  h  held  a  volume  as  to  read,  „  455 

But  Lady  Psyche  was  the  right  h  now,  „  m  37 

Up  went  the  hush'd  amaze  of  h  and  eye.  „  138 

Dabbing  a  shameless  h  with  shameful  jest,  „  314 

Many  a  little  h  Glanced  like  a  touch  of  sunshine  „  356 

once  or  twice  she  lent  her  h,  „  iv  27 

her  heart  Palpitated,  her  h  shook,  „  389 

but  fell  Into  his  father's  h's,  ,,  402 

Render  him  up  unscathed  :  give  him  your  h :  „  408 

Whose  brains  are  in  their  h's  and  in  their  heels,  „  518 

She,  ending,  waved  her  h's:  „  522 

But  on  my  shoulder  hung  their  heavy  h's,  „  553 

And  gives  the  battle  to  his  h's :  „  580 

clapt  her  h's  and  cried  for  war,  „  590 

Lay  by  her  like  a  model  of  her  h.  „  597 

'  then  we  fell  Into  your  father's  h,  „  v  51 

push'd  by  rude  h's  from  its  pedestal,  „  58 

reach'd  White  h's  of  farewell  to  my  sire,  „  233 

now  a  wandering  h  And  now  a  pointed  finger,  „  269 

the  tender  orphan  h's  Felt  at  my  heart,  „  435 

sit  Upon  a  king's  right  h  in  thunder-storms,  „  439 

a  moment  h  to  h,  And  sword  to  sword,  „  538 

tender  ministries  Of  female  h's  and  hospitality.'  „  vi  73 

and  served  With  female  h's  and  hospitaUty.'  „  96 

prest  Their  h's,  and  call'd  them  dear  deliverers,  „  92 

in  h's  so  lately  claspt  with  yours,  „  184 

Laid  the  soft  babe  in  his  hard-mailed  h's.  „  208 

kiss  her ;  take  her  h,  she  weeps :  „  225 

the  rougher  h  Is  safer :  „  278 

Refuse  her  proffer,  lastly  gave  his  h.  „  347 

Low  voices  with  the  ministering  h  Hung  round  the  sick :     „  vii  21 

Nor  knew  what  eye  was  on  me,  nor  the  h  That  nursed  me,   „  53 

sometimes  I  would  catch  Her  h  in  wild  delirium,  „  93 

And  often  feeling  of  the  helpless  h's,  ,,  111 

touch  Came  round  my  wrist  and  tears  upon  my  h  „  138 

Or  h  in  h  with  Plenty  in  the  maize,  „  vii  201 

And  the  voice  trembled  and  the  h.  „  227 

and  her  forehead  sank  upon  her  h's,  „  247 

Stays  all  the  fair  young  planet  in  her  h's —  „  264 

Lay  thy  sweet  h's  in  mine  and  trust  to  me.'  „  366 

there  is  a  A  that  guides.'  „  Con.  79 

Now  shaking  h's  with  him,  now  him,  „  92 
will  he  greet  With  lifted  h  the  gazer  in  the  street.           Ode  on  Well.  22 

from  both  her  open  h's  Lavish  Honour  shower'd                      „  195 

with  toil  of  heart  and  knees  and  h's,                                           „  212 

upon  whose  h  and  heart  and  brain  „  239 
thou  with  thy  young  lover  hinh                             W.  to  Marie  Alex.  34 

Whose  h  at  home  was  gracious  to  the  poor :  „  37 
Strong  of  his  h's,  and  strong  on  his  legs,                           Grandmother  13 

But  marry  me  out  oih:  „  52 
For  groves  of  pine  on  either  h.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  21 
To  sit  with  empty  h's  at  home.                                            Sailor  Boy  16 


Hand 


297 


Hand 


The  Victim  8 

42 

53 

High.  Pantheism  12 

Flow,  in  cran.  wall.  3 

Boadicea  71 

79 

Window,  Letter  3 

Window,  The  Answer  1,  4 

6 


Hand  (part  of  body)  (continued)    To  Thor  and  Odin  lifted  a  h 
He  bore  but  little  game  in  h ; 
The  King  bent  low,  with  h  on  brow, 
and  nearer  than  h's  and  feet. 
I  hold  you  here,  root  and  all,  in  my  h, 
Brandishing  in  her  h  a  dart 
teat  with  rapid  unanimous  h. 
Pine  little  h's,  fine  little  feet — 
Two  little  h's  that  meet,  (repeat) 
And  loving  A'5  must  part — 

Or  Teach  a  h  thro'  time  to  catch  In  Mem.  i  7 

A  hollow  form  with  empty  h's.'  „       Hi  12 

waiung  for  &h,  Kh  that  can  be  clasp'd  „         vii  4 

And  letters  unto  trembling  h's ;  „            xl 

And  A's  so  often  clasp'd  in  mine,  „             19 

wher;  warm  h's  have  prest  and  closed,  „        xiii  7 

Should  strike  a  sudden  h  in  mine,  „       xiv  11 

Come  then,  pure  h's,  and  bear  the  head  „      xviii  9 

Her  Hs  are  quicker  unto  good :  „  xxxiii  10 

wrou^t  With  human  h's  the  creeds  of  creeds  „  xxxvi  10 

But  thou  and  I  have  shaken  h's,  „        xl  29 

I  stretdi  lame  h's  of  faith,  and  grope,  „         Iv  17 

And  reips  the  labour  of  his  h's,  „      Ixiv  26 

And  wilds  their  curls  about  his  h :  „      Ixvi  12 

He  reaci'd  the  glory  of  a  h,  „     Ixix  17 

A  h  that  points,  and  palled  shapes  „        Ixx  7 

When  the  dark  h  struck  down  thro'  time,  „   Ixxii  19 

Whate'ei  thy  h's  are  set  to  do  „     Ixxv  19 

Reach  out  dead  h's  to  comfort  me.  „    Ixxx  16 
Would  retch  us  out  the  shining  h.                                 In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  43 

How  muck  of  act  at  human  h's  „         Ixxxv  38 

all  within  ^■as  noise  Of  songs,  and  clapping  h's,  „       Ixxxvii  19 

Behold  their  brides  in  other  h's ;  „               xc  14 

The  larger  ieart,  the  kindlier  h;  „              cvi  30 

the  child  wculd  twine  A  trustful  h,  „              cix  19 

A  higher  h  must  make  her  mild,  „            cxiv  17 

I  take  the  piessure  of  thine  h.  „           cxix  12 

And  out  of  dirkness  came  the  h's  „          cxxiv  23 

Sweet  human  h  and  lips  and  eye ;  „            cxxix  6 

With  him  to  vhom  her  h  I  gave.  „            Con.  70 

in  their  h  Is  Mature  like  an  open  book ;  „                   131 

Pickpockets,  each  h  lusting  for  all  that  is  not  its  own ;  Maud  7  i  22 

or  are  moved  by  an  unseen  A  at  a  game  „      iv  26 

Ready  in  heart  and  ready  in  ^,  „          v  9 

she  touch'd  my  h  with  a  smile  so  sweet,  „       vi  12 

I  saw  the  treasured  splendour,  her  h,  „          84 

She  waved  to  me  with  her  h.  „        ix  8 

Ah  God,  for  a  man  with  heart,  head,  h,  „       x  60 

I  kiss'd  her  slender  h,  „     xii  13 

Sunn'd  itself  on  his  breast  and  his  h's.  „   xiii  13 

if  a  A,  as  white  As  ocean-foam  in  the  moon,  „     xiv  17 

To  labour  and  the  mattock-harden'd  h,  „  xviii  34 

And  given  false  death  her  h,  „          68 

It  is  this  guilty  7i! —  „     7/ t  4 

I  sorrow  For  the  A,  the  lips,  the  eyes,  „      iv  27 
And  mightier  of  his  h's  with  every  blow,                     Com.  of  Arthur  110 

But  sought  to  rule  for  his  own  self  and  h,  „            219 

h's  Of  loyal  vassals  toiling  for  their  liege.  „             281 

holy  Dubric  spread  his  h's  and  spake,  „             471 
I  could  climb  and  lay  my  h  upon  it,                                  Gareth  and  L.  50 

But  ever  when  he  reach'd  a  /» to  climb,  „            52 

And  drops  of  water  fell  from  either  h ;  „          220 

Toward  the  sunrise,  each  with  harp  in  h,  „          261 

Merlin's  h,  the  Mage  at  Arthur's  court,  „         306 

With  thine  own  h  thou  slewest  my  dear  lord,  „         352 

In  either  h  he  bore  What  dazzled  all,  „          386 

ye  know  we  stay'd  their  h's  From  war  „          421 

Accursed,  who  strikes  nor  lets  the  h  be  seen  ! '  „         435 

Gareth  leaning  both  h's  heavily  Down  „          439 

a  nostril  large  and  fine,  and  h's  Large,  fair  and  fine ! —  „          465 

Lying  or  sitting  round  him,  idle  h's,  Charm 'd ;  „          512 

and  bow  Lowly,  to  kiss  his  h,  „         549 

So  with  a  kindly  h  on  Gareth's  arm  „         578 

And  told  him  of  a  cavern  hard  at  h,  „       1189 

h  hath  fashion'd  on  the  rock  The  war  of  Time  „        1197 


Hand  (part  of  body)  (continued)    when  he  found  the 

grass  within  his  h's  He  laugh'd ;  Gareth  and  L.  1225 

Lancelot ! — thine  the  h  That  threw  me  ?  „        1241 

0  Lancelot,  Lancelot ' — and  she  clapt  her  h's —  „        1290 

waving  to  him  White  h's,  and  courtesy ;  „        1377 

Lady  Lyonors  wrung  her  h's  and  wept,  „  1395 
with  her  own  white  h's  Array'd  and  deck'd  her,         Marr.  of  Geraint  16 

and  all  flyers  from  the  h  Of  Justice,  „               36 

watch  his  mightful  h  striking  great  blows  „               95 

instinctive  h  Caught  at  the  hilt,  „             209 

White  from  the  mason's  h,  (repeat)  „    244,  408 

Came  forward  with  the  helmet  yet  in  h  „             285 

Or  it  may  be  the  labour  of  his  h's,                            .  „             341 

Frown  and  we  smile,  the  lords  of  our  own  h's ;  „             354 

And  fondling  all  her  h  in  his  he  said,  „             509 

On  either  shining  shoulder  laid  a  h,  „             518 

and  h  in  h  they  moved  Down  to  the  meadow  „             536 

There  came  a  clapping  as  of  phantom  h's.  „             566 

To  seek  a  second  favour  at  his  h's.  „             626 

and  in  her  h  A  suit  of  bright  apparel,  „             677 

Came  one  with  this  and  laid  it  in  my  h,  „             699 

Help'd  by  the  mother's  careful  h  and  eye,  „             738 

Her  by  both  h's  he  caught,  and  sweetly  said,  „             778 

our  fair  Queen,  No  h  but  hers,  should  make  „            788 

For  by  the  h's  of  Dubric,  the  high  saint,  „  838 
Far  liefer  by  his  dear  h  had  I  die,                                    Geraint  and  E.  68 

creatures  gently  born  But  into  bad  h's  fall'n.  „           192 

in  his  h  Bare  victual  for  the  mowers :  „          201 

In  the  mid-warmth  of  welcome  and  graspt  h,  „          280 

Geraint  Waving  an  angry  h  as  who  should  say  „          444 

But  lift  a  shining  h  against  the  sun,  „          473 

Nor  let  her  true  h  falter,  nor  blue  eye  Moisten,  „          512 

after  all  was  done  that  h  could  do,  She  rested,  „          517 

chafing  his  pale  h's,  and  calling  to  him.  „          582 

chafing  his  faint  h's,  and  calling  to  him ;  „          585 

Take  my  salute,'  unknightly  with  flat  h,  „          717 

reach'd  a  h,  and  on  his  foot  She  set  her  own  and  climb'd ;       „  759 

Put  h  to  h  beneath  her  husband's  heart,  „          767 

wrought  too  long  with  delegated  h's,  „          893 

set  up  a  stronger  race  With  hearts  and  h's,  „  941 
my  h  Was  gauntleted,  half  slew  him ;                          Balin  and  Balan  56 

Lancelot  with  his  h  among  the  flowers  „            259 

Saint  who  stands  with  lily  in  h  In  yonder  shrine.  „            261 

'  And  passing  gentle '  caught  his  h  away  „            371 

Then  h  at  ear,  and  hearkening  from  what  side  „            415 

white  h  whose  ring'd  caress  Had  wander'd  „  512 
The  hearts  of  all  this  Order  in  mine  h —                         Merlin  and  V.  56 

damsel  bidden  rise  arose  And  stood  with  folded  h's  „             69 

Courteous — amends  for  gauntness — takes  her  h —  „           104 

how  h  lingers  in  h !     Let  go  at  last ! —  „          106 

her  left  h  Droop  from  his  mighty  shoulder,  „          242 

And  make  a  pretty  cup  of  both  my  h's                           ^  „          275 

And  Merlin  lock'd  his  h  in  hers  (repeat)                           '  „  290,  470 

charm  Of  woven  paces  and  of  waving  h's,  (repeat)  „  330,  968 

Merlin  loosed  his  h  from  hers  and  said,  „          356 

It  lives  dispersedly  in  many  h's,  „          457 

The  wrist  is  parted  from  the  h  that  waved,  „          551 

ringing  with  their  serpent  h's,  „          578 

her  h  half-clench'd  Went  faltering  sideways  „          849 

clapt  her  h's  Together  with  a  wailing  shriek,  „  866 
some  one  put  this  diamond  in  her  h,                           Lancelot  and  E.  212 

Half-envious  of  the  flattering  h,  „              349 

So  kiss'd  her,  and  Sir  Lancelot  his  own  h,  „              389 

she  smote  her  h :  weUnigh  she  swoon'd :  „              625 

it  will  be  sweet  to  have  it  From  your  own  h ;  „              694 

slightly  kiss'd  the  h  to  which  he  gave,  „              702 

with  mine  own  h  give  his  diamond  to  him,  „              760 

His  battle-writhen  arms  and  mighty  h's  „              812 

And  laid  the  diamond  in  his  open  h.  „              827 

yet  he  glanced  not  up,  nor  waved  his  h,  „             986 

Then  gave  a  languid  h  to  each,  and  lay,  „  1032 
lay  the  letter  in  my  h  A  little  ere  I  die,  and  close 

the  7j  Upon  it;  „  1113 
Her  father  laid  the  letter  in  her  h.  And  closed  the 

h  upon  it,  and  she  died.  „            1134 


Hand 


298 


Hand  (part  of  body)  (continued)    Set  in  her  h  a  lily 

in  Her  right  h  the  lily,  m  her  left  The  letter—  1 1  «:^ 

ui  one  cold  passive  h  Received  at  once  and  laid  aside  "            1201 

Arthur  spied  the  letter  in  her  A,  "            iink 

shield  of  Lancelot  at  her  feet  Be  carven,  and  her  " 

hlyinherA. 

we  blow  with  breath,  or  touch  with  h,  v"?,,  r.^sjiil 

and  at  the  base  we  found  On  either  h,  ^'^^  ^""'^  IJJ 

The  Quest  and  he  were  in  the  h's  of  Heaven.  "         r^q 

In  colour  hke  the  fingers  of  a  A  Before  a  burning  taper,  "         693 

caught  his  A,  Held  it,  and  there,  half-hidden             ^  "         75Q 

The  sword  was  dash'd  from  out  my  h,  and  fell  "         mr 

—yea,  his  very  h  and  foot—  "          gf  ? 

straitly  nipt  the  A,  and  flung  it  from  her  •  "            Tao 

by  that  strong  ^i  of  his  The  sword  and  golden  circlet  "            169 

And  mmdful  of  her  small  and  cruel  A,  "            201 

strong  A,  which  had  overthrown  Her  minion-knights,  "            234 

Shakmg  his  h's,  as  from  a  lazar's  rag  "             017 

delegate  to  thrall  These  fighting  h's  of  mine—  "            %vt 

tame  thy  jailing  princess  to  thine  h.  "            oil 

as  a  ^  that  pushes  thro'  the  leaf  To  find  a  nest  "            4Sfi 

clench  d  His  h's,  and  madden'd  with  himself  "            Iah 

bent  h's  upon  him,  as  to  tear  him,  "            rpf 

A  cripple,  one  that  held  a  h  for  alms—  "            t% 

blid  from  my  h's,  when  I  was  leaning  out  43 

Bndge-broken,  one  eye  out,  and  one  h  off,  "            ^ 

his  strong  h's  gript  And  dinted  the  gilt  dragons  "          1 81 

See,  the  A  Wherewith  thou  takest  this,  "          iqo 

My  A— behke  the  lance  hath  dript  upon  it—  "          200 

Dagonet  with  one  foot  poised  in  his  h,  "          00^ 

Dagonet  clapt  his  h's  and  shrill'd,  "          qro 

'  Isolt  Of  the  white  h's '  they  call'd  her  •  "          qqr 

served  him  well  with  those  white  h's  "          400 

Graspt  it  so  hard,  that  all  her  ;i  was  red.     Then  cried  " 

the  Breton,  '  Look,  her  h  is  red !  41 1 

melts  within  her  A— her  h  is  hot  With  ill  desires,  "          414 

JNot  hft  a  A— not,  tho'  he  found  me  thus '  "          <s28 

And  she,  my  namesake  of  the  h's,  "          594 

Tnstram,  fondlin?  her  light  h's,  replied,  "          fioi 

Tnstram,  ever  dallying  with  her  h,  "          AOfi 

f '?in"^'l'  in ''''  ?°"'  *^'  ""'^^^'^  Guinevere  31 

Ji  smh  s,  and  eye  to  eye  Low  on  the  border  100 

and  bow'd  down  upon  her  h's  Silent,  "       158 

full  passionately.  Her  head  upon  her  h's,  "       isi 

meat  he  long'd  for  served  By  h's  unseen ;  "       266 

He  falter'd,  and  his  h  fell  from  the  harp,  "       303 

Whereat  the  novice  crying,  with  clasp'd  h's,  "       311 

He  spared  to  lift  his  h  against  the  King  "       437 

I  made  them  lay  their  h's  in  mine  and  swear  "       467 

and  laid  her  h's  about  his  feet.  "       508 

I  cannot  take  thy  h ;  that  too  is  flesh,  "       553 

Perceived  the  waving  of  his  h's  that  blest.  "       534 

Here  her  h  Grasp'd,  made  her  vail  her  eyes  •  "       662 

%h^rh'"kf''^^"^"  ^^1  helpless  /i'5,  Pass,  of  Arthur  131 

either  h.  Or  voice,  or  else  a  motion  of  the  mere.  244 

1  will  anse  and  slay  thee  with  my  h's.'  "              qm 

Then  with  both  h's  1  flung  him,  "              305 

O'er  both  his  shoulders  drew  the  languid  h's,  "             349 

those  three  Queens  Put  forth  their  h's,  "              374 

chafed  his  h's,  and  call'd  him  by  his  name,  "              s77 

knowing  God,  they  lift  not  h's  of  prayer  "              420 

fetraimng  his  eyes  beneath  an  arch  of  h,  "             454 

With  A  s  for  eaves,  uplookmg  and  almost  311 

had  the  Power  from  whose  right  h  the  light  "            497 

from  whose  left  h  floweth  The  Shadow  of  Death.  "            498 

Folding  his  h's,  deals  comfortable  words  "            7T7 

I  loved  her,  grasnt  the  h  she  lov'd,  "            «n 

he  Would  hold  the  h  of  blessing  over  them,  "            7^4 

with  mad  A  Tearing  the  bright  leaves  of  the  ivy-screen,  "          ii  39 

drew  back  His  A  to  push  me  from  him;  '              93 


Hand 


Hand  (part  of  body)  (continued)    Shrank  in  me  like  a 
snowflake  in  the  h,  ' 

One  A  she  reach'd  to  those  that  came  behind. 
And  claspt  her  h  in  his : 
And  raised  us  A  in  A.' 
But,  placing  his  true  h  upon  her  heart, 

drown'd  The  feebler  motion  underneath  his  h 

with  meeting  A's  And  cries  about  the  banquet— 

1  hen  taking  his  dear  lady  by  one  A, 

better  ha'  put  my  naked  A  in  a  hornets'  nest 

he  patted  my  h  in  his  gentle  way. 

When  I  cannot  see  my  own  h, 

Sir  Richard  bore  in  h  all  his  sick  men 

and  they  fought  us  A  to  A, 

Fall  into  the  h's  of  God,  not  into  the  h's  of  Spain  ' 

A  h  upon  the  head  of  either  child. 

Had  caught  her  h,  her  eyelids  fell- 
But  counterpressures  of  the  yielded  h 

Put  forth  cold  h's  between  us. 

The  sisters  glide  about  me  h  in  h, 

big  chest,  big  merciless  h's  ! 

she  lay  with  a  flower  in  one  h  and  her  thin  h's 
crost  on  her  breast — 

Keep  the  revolver  in  h  ! 

Better  to  fall  by  the  h's  that  they  love 

but  be  sure  that  your  A  be  as  true !       ' 

h  of  the  Highlander  wet  with  their  tears ! 

Climb  first  and  reach  me  down  thy  h. 

lifted  h  and  heart  and  voice  In  praise  to  God 

There  was  a  glimmering  of  God's  h. 

I  lead  thee  by  the  h.  Fear  not.' 

Some  over-labour' d,  some  by  their  own  h's  — 

glitter'd  o'er  us  a  sunbright  h,  ' 

and  the  sunbright  h  of  the  dawn, 

chariots  backward,  knowing  griefs  at  h  • 

And  plant  on  shoulder,  h  and  knee,        ' 

The  noonday  crag  made  the  h  bum ; 

these  blind  h's  were  useless  in  their  wars 

if  one  of  these  By  his  own  h — 

examples  reach  a  h  Far  thro'  all  years 

let  thine  own  h  strike  Thy  youthful  pulses 

This  useless  A !     I  felt  one  warm  tear  fall  upon  it. 

My  Shelley  would  fall  from  my  h's 

My  h's,  when  I  heard  him  coming  would  drop 

the  A  that  would  help  me,  would  heal  me— 

Ten  long  sweet  summer  days  upon  deck,  sitting  A  ir.  A 

of  a  A  giving  bread  and  wine, 

I  knew  that  A  too  well — 

And  she  laid  her  A  in  my  own 

books  are  scatter'd  from  A  to  A 

in  his  A  A  scroll  of  verse — 

But  in  the  A  of  what  is  more  than  man.  Or  in  man's 

h  when  man  is  more  than  man, 
— rather  than  that  h  in  mine. 
Our  dying  mother  join'd  our  h's  ■ 
but  wander  A  in  A  With  breaking  hearts 

?Xe1  SeTheTa™."''  '  ^^^^^^^  ^•'  ^^^^y  l^ 

Her  fleet  is  in  you?  A'.  ^"""^  '^^  ^"^^f  %f\  f^ 

w  thl'^'oni^r  ^?f  h  u         ,  ^^-  '■  '^-^c'ilt'i 

?h7^^tt?aU  thfgXat^^^^^^^  ^'^  ^"-*-  «•  ^-'--  6« 

Craft  with  a  bunch  of  all-heal  in  her  A 

stretch'd  my  h's  As  if  I  saw  her ;  ' 

Some  younger  A  must  have  engraven  the  ring— 


Lover's  Tale  ni  38 

48 

52 

„         iv  66 

75 

83 

238 

369 

First  Qtarrel  50 

67 

Rizpah  7 

The  Sevenge  15 

52 

90 

Sisters  (E.  md  E.)  55 

148 

163 

265 

275 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  4 

39 
Bef.  of  Lucknow  26 
53 
56 
102 
Sir  J.  Oldcasile  204 
Columbus  16 
„      142 
„       158 
„      178 
V.  of  Maeldune  84 
92 
A  chiles  over  the  T.  25 
To  E.  Fitzgerald  8 
Tiresias  35 
78 
118 
126 
156 
166 
The  Wreck  25 
27 
56 
64 
„      114 
„      145 
Despair  49 
„       93 
Ancient  Sage  5 

„       256 
The  Flight  53 

87 


What  sparkled  there  ?  whose  A  was  that  ? 
Muriel  clench'd  The  A  that  wore  it. 
Unclosed  the  A,  and  from  it  drew  the  ring 
and  the  h's  Fell  from  each  other, 
bells  that  rang  without  a  A, 
and  felt  a  gentle  A  Fall  on  my  forehead 
And  the  face.  The  A,— my  Mother.         ' 
I  took  And  chafed  the  freezing  A. 


Demeter  and  P.  9 
Fastness  12 
The  Ring  116 
238 


257 
262 
269 
380 
411 
418 
425 
452 


Hand 


299 


Happiest 


Hand  (part  of  body)  (continued)    from  her  own  h  she  had  torn 

the  rin^  The  Ring  470 

place  a  A  in  his  Like  an  honest  woman's,  Forlorn  19 

How  your  h  is  shaking !  „      38 

I  worship  that  right  h  Which  feli'd  the  foes  Happy  41 

he  was  coming  down  the  fell — I  clapt  my  A's.  „       83 

has  join'd  our  h's  of  old ;  „      93 

follow'd  line  by  line  Your  leading  h,  To  Ulysses  46 

when  we  met,  you  prest  My  h,  and  said  To  Mary  Boyle  16 

Lazarus  felt  a  vacant  h  Fill  with  his  purse.  „            31 

These  h's  of  mine  Have  helpt  to  pass  „            38 

A  clamorous  cuckoo  stoops  to  meet  her  h ;  Prog,  of  Spring  45 

while  my  h  exults  Within  the  bloodless  heart  „             83 

Your  h  shakes.     I  am  ashamed.  Romney's  E.  24 

Your  h.    How  bright  you  keep  your  marriage-ring !  „           59 

My  life  and  death  are  in  thy  h.  Death  of  QLnone  40 

One  kiss'd  his  h,  another  closed  his  eyes,  „            58 

The  man,  whose  pious  h  had  built  the  cross,  St.  Tdemachus  9 

only  let  the  h  that  rules,  With  politic  care,  Akbar's  Dream  127 

by  whatever  h's  My  mission  be  accomplish'd ! '  „           198 

and  the  weight  that  dragg'd  at  my  h ;  Bandit's  Death  39 

I  wept,  and  I  kiss'd  her  h's,  Charity  38 

And  handle  boldly  with  the  h,  Mechanophilus  3 

Dispense  with  careful  h's :  „           84 

Give  me  a  h — and  you — and  you —  The  Wanderer  15 

Hand  (of  clock)    lights  the  clock  !  the  h  points  five —  The  Flight  94 

Hand  (at  hand)     my  time  is  hard  at  h.  And  hence  I  go ;  Holy  Grail  481 

Modred  thought,  '  The  time  is  hard  at  h  '  PeUeas  and  E.  610 

Hand  (hand-writing)    such  a  A  as  when  a  field  of  corn  Princess  i  236 

Last,  Ida's  answer,  in  a  royal  h,  „      v  371 

Hand  (verb)     Hebes  are  they  to  h  ambrosia,  „    Hi  113 

those  that  h  the  dish  across  the  bar.  Gareth  and  L.  155 

cups  To  H  the  wine  to  whosoever  came —  Last  Tournament  290 
Hand    See  also  After-hands,  Bridle-hand,  Brother- 
hands,  Fair-hands,  Second-hand  Sword-hand 
Handed    {See  also  Delicate-handed,  Four-handed,  Full- 
handed,  Hom-huided,  Lily-handed)   And  h  down 

the  golden  treasure  to  him.'  Gareth  and  L.  61 

A  legend  h  down  thro'  five  or  six,  Holy  Grail  87 

one  of  those  white  sUps  H  her  cup  and  piped,  Last  Tournament  296 
Was  h  over  by  consent  of  all  To  one  who  had 

not  spoken,  Lover's  Tale  iv  271 
Handful    Two  h's  of  white  dust,  shut  in  an  urn 

of  brass !  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  68 

And  my  heart  is  a  A  of  dust,  Maud  II  v2> 

by  the  h  they  could  not  subdue ;  Def.  of  Lucknow  44 

H  of  men  as  we  were,  „              46 

Hand-grenade     we  drive  them  with  h-g's ;  „              59 

Hand-hidden    face  H-h,  as  for  utmost  grief  or  shame ;      Merlin  and  V.  897 

Hand-in-hand    claspt  h-i-h  with  thee,  If  I  were  loved  9 

Panted  h-i-h  with  faces  pale,  Vision  of  Sin  19 

Enoch  and  Annie,  sitting  h-i-h,  Enoch  Arden  69 

And  in  a  circle  h-i-h  Sat  silent,  In  Mem.  xxx  11 

A  wreath  of  airy  dancers  h-i-h  Guinevere  261 

Handkerchief    See  Kerchief 

Handle    (See  also  Door-handle,  Sword-handle)    He 

lost  the  sense  that  h's  daily  life —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  22 

That  loved  to  h  spiritual  strife,  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  54 

our  good  King  Would  h  scorn,  or  yield  you,  Gareth  and  L.  1173 

h  or  gather  the  berries  of  Peelb  !  Kapiolani  20 

And  h  boldly  with  the  hand,  Mechanophilus  3 

Handled     Enoch  took,  and  ^  all  his  limbs,  Enoch  Arden  153 

And  he  h  him  gentle  enough ;  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  15 

I  am  h  worse  than  had  I  been  a  Moor,  Columbus  107 

Handless     I  will  slice  him  h  by  the  wrist,  Pelleas  and  E.  338 

Handmaid    a  A  on  each  side  Bow'd  toward  her,  Princess  iv  275 

Handmaid-work    rest  On  Enid  at  her  lowly  h-w,  Marr.  of  Geraint  400 

Hauid-play     Hard  was  his  h-p,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  44 

Hand-promise    Molly  says  '  I'd  his  h-p.  Tomorrow  52 

Handsome    (See  also  Hansome)    I  had  grown  so  h  and  tall —    First  Quarrel  37 

'  Let  us  see  these  h  houses  L.  of  Burleigh  23 

To  let  that  h  fellow  Averill  walk  Aylmer's  Field  269 

Hand-to-mouth    Low  miserable  Uves  of  h-t-m,  Enoch  Arden  116 

Hang     Heavily  h's  the  broad  sunflower  (repeat)  A  spirit  haunts  9,  21 

Heavily  h's  the  hollyhock,  (repeat)  „           11, 23 


Hang  (continued)     Heavily  h's  the  tiger-lily,  (repeat)  A  spirit  haunts  12,  24 

the  rainbow  h's  on  the  poising  wave,  Sea-Fairies  29 

That  h's  before  her  all  the  year,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  11 

meadow-ledges  midway  down  H  rich  in  flowers,  (Enone  7 

a  statue  seem'd  To  h  on  tiptoe,  Palace  of  Art  38 

from  the  craggy  ledge  the  poppy  h's  in  sleep.  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  11 

h's  the  heavy-fruited  tree—  Locksley  Hall  163 

As  the  wind-hover  h's  in  balance,  Aylmer's  Field  321 

the  thunderbolt  H's  silent;  but  prepare :  Princess  ii  224 

Yet  h's  his  portrait  in  my  father's  hall  „            239 

Knowledge  is  knowledge,  and  this  matter  h's :  „       Hi  316 

and  the  beard-blown  goat  H  on  the  shaft,  „          iv  79 

For  it  h's  one  moment  later.  Spiteful  Letter  16 

Can  h  no  weight  upon  my  heart  In  Mem.  Ixiii  3 

To  yon  hard  crescent,  as  she  h's  „         cvii  10 

My  a,nguish  h's  hke  shame.  Maud  II  iv  74 

Charioteer  And  starry  Gemini  h  like  glorious  crowns  „       ///  vi  7 

'  A  craven  ;  how  he  h's  his  head.'  Geraint  and  E.  127 

To  h  whatever  knight  of  thine  I  fought  Last  Tournament  453 

they  would  h  him  again  on  the  cursed  tree.  Rizpah  59 

In  the  hall  there  h's  a  painting —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  13 

ladder-of-heaven  that  h's  on  a  star.  By  an  Evolution.  12 

Hang'd     (See  also  'Ang'd)     They  h  him  in  chains  for  a  show —      Rizpah  35 

To  be  h  for  a  thief — and  then  put  away —  „       36 

the  la^T^er  who  kill'd  him  and  h  him  there.  „       40 

took  and  h,  Took,  h  and  burnt— how  many —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  45 

h,  poor  friends,  as  rebels  And  burn'd  alive  as  heretics !  „             47 

whether  crown'd  for  a  virtue,  or  h  for  a  crime  ?  Despair  76 

Hangel  (angel)     He  coom'd  like  &H  o'  marcy  Oud  Rod  93 

Or  like  tother  H  i'  Scriptur  „        94 

Roa  was  as  good  as  the  H  i'  saiivin'  „        96 

Hanging    (See  also  Hingin')     Or,  clotted  into  points  and 

h  loose,  M.  d' Arthur  219 

h  there  A  thousand  shadowy-pencill'd  valleys  The  Daisy  66 

and  a  long  black  horn  Beside  it  h ;  Gareth  and  L.  1367 

Here  comes  a  laggard  h  down  his  head,  Geraint  and  E.  60 

And  raised  a  bugle  h  from  his  neck,  Pelleas  and  E.  364 

In  h  robe  or  vacant  ornament,  Guinevere  506 

Or,  clotted  into  points  and  h  loose,                        •  Pass,  of  Arthur  387 

Hannie  (Annie)     Hes  fur  Miss  H  the  heldest  Village  Wife  107 

Hanover     I  know  not  whether  he  came  in  the  H  ship,  Maud  II  v  59 

Hansome  (handsome)     Shamus  O'Shea  that  has  now 

ten  childer,  h  an'  tall,  Tomorrow  85 

Hapless     since  The  parents'  harshness  and  the  h  loves  Aylmer's  Field  616 

Happen     Forget  the  dream  that  h's  then,  Two  Voices  353 

holy  and  high,  Whatever  ^i  to  me !  Maud  II  ii  79 

I  know,  That  whatsoever  evil  h  to  me,  Marr.  of  Geraint  471 

Whatever  h's,  not  to  speak  to  me,  Geraint  and  E.  17 
the  chuch  weant  h  a  fall.                                           Church-warden,  etc.  10 

Happier     Philip,  with  something  h  than  myself.  Enoch  Arden  425 

Make  me  a  Uttle  h :  let  me  know  it :  Geraint  and  E.  317 

From  being  smiled  at  h  in  themselves —  Balin  and  Balan  163 

H  are  those  that  welter  in  their  sin,  Holy  Grail  770 

He  was  h  using  the  knife  than  in  trying  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  6 

the  dead,  as  h  than  ourselves  And  higher,  Ancient  Sage  205 

Child,  I  am  h  in  your  happiness  The  Ring  90 

I  came,  I  went,  was  h  day  by  day ;  „  348 
toll  of  funeral  in  an  Angel  ear  Sounds  h               D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  11 

And  grassy  barrows  of  the  h  dead.  Tithonus  71 

sorrow's  crown  of  sorrow  is  remembering  h  things.  Locksley  Hall  76 

Till  h  times  each  to  her  proper  hearth :  Princess  vi  303 

many  a  maiden  passing  home  Till  h  times ;  „            381 

how  shall  Britain  light  upon  auguries  h  ?  Boddicea  45 

0  happy  hour,  and  h  hours  Await  them.  In  Mem.,  Con.  65 
Then  sprang  the  h  day  from  underground;.  Gareth  and  L.  1421 
My  pride  in  h  summers,  at  my  feet.  Guinevere  536 
More  living  to  some  h  happiness.  Lover's  Tale  i  762 
Once  more — a  h  marriage  than  my  own !  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  78 
Towers  of  a  A  time,  low  down  in  a  rainbow  deep  V.  of  Maeldune  79 
Art  passing  on  thine  h  voyage  now  Sir  J.  Franklin  3 
So  drew  perchance  a  h  lot  Than  ours,  Epilogue  50 

Happiest    To-morrow  'ill  be  the  h  time  of  all  the  glad 

New-year ;  (repeat)  May  Queen  2,  42 

H  she  of  us  all,  for  she  past  from  the  night  Despair  72 

1  the  h  of  them  all.'  Pelleas  and  E.  137 


Happiness 


300 


Happy 


Happiness    Spirit  of  h  And  perfect  rest 
all  the  warmth,  the  peace,  the  h. 
Would  shatter  all  the  h  of  the  hearth, 
woman  counts  her  due,  Love,  children,  h  ?  ' 
What  h  to  reign  a  lonely  king. 
From  his  great  hoard  of  h  distill'd 
a  life  More  living  to  some  happier  h, 
One  bloom  of  youth,  health,  beauty,  h, 
tho'  the  h  of  each  in  each  Were  not  enough. 
Household  h,  gracious  children, 
I  am  happier  in  your  /(  Than  in  mine  own. 
Happt  (wrapped)     an'  h  wersens  oop  as  we  mowt. 
Happy    (See  also  'Appy,  Thrice-happy)    Christians 

with  h  countenances — 
that  h  morn  When  angels  spake  to  men  aloud, 
Thrice  h  state  again  to  be  The  trustful  infant 
and  the  h  blossoming  shore  ? 
Who  can  light  on  as  fc  a  shore  All  the  world  o'er, 
O  h  thou  that  liest  low, 
Oh  !  what  a  h  life  were  mine 
O  BEiDESMAiD,  ere  the  h  knot  was  tied, 
A  h  bridesmaid  makes  a  h  bride.' 
'  O  h  bridesmaid,  make  a  h  bride.'  (repeat) 
'  Waiting  to  strive  a  h  strife, 
from  a  h  place  God's  glory  smote  him  on  the  face.' 
Have  I  not  found  a  h  earth  ? 
She  wish'd  me  h,  but  she  thought 
Rest  in  a  fc  place  and  quiet  seats 
0  h  tears,  and  how  unlike  to  these !    O  h  Heaven,  how 

canst  thou  see  my  face  ?    Oh  earth,  how  canst  thou 

bear  my  weight  ? 
Pass  by  the  h  souls,  that  love  to  live : 
Lest  their  shrill  h  laughter  come  to  me 
h  stars  above  them  seem  to  brighten  as  they  pass ; 
many  a  worthier  than  I,  would  make  him  h  yet. 
h  fair  with  orchard-lawns  And  bowery  hollows 
sweeter  than  the  dream  Dream'd  by  a  /i  man, 
shook  his  song  together  as  he  near'd  His  h  home, 
Ah,  h  shade — and  still  went  wavering  down, 
A  thought  would  fill  my  eyes  with  h  dew ; 
Made  me  most  h,  faltering. 
Might  have  been  h :  but  what  lot  is  pure  ? 
do  not  think  yourself  alone  Of  all  men  h. 
may  rest  Some  h  future  day. 
Live  h ;  tend  thy  flowers ;  be  tended  by  My 

blessing ! 
H  days  Roll  onward,  leading  up  the  golden  year. 

'  Fly,  h  h  sails,  and  bear  the  Press ;     Fly  h 

with  the  mission  of  the  Cross ; 
Old  writers  push'd  the  h  season  back, — 
It  may  be  we  shall  touch  the  H  Isles, 
Of  h  men  that  have  the  power  to  die, 
Is  it  well  to  wish  thee  h  ? — 
Overlive  it — lower  yet — be  h ! 
mellow  moons  and  h  skies. 
Clothes  and  reclothes  the  h  plains, 
The  h  princess  follow'd  him. 
'  O  eyes  long  laid  in  h  sleep ! '     'Oh  sleep,  that 

lightly  fled  ! '     'Oh  kiss,  that  woke  thy  sleep ! ' 
when  Adam  first  Embraced  his  Eve  in  h  hour, 
Such  h  intonation. 
With  twisted  quirks  and  h  hits, 
0  hundred  shores  of  h  climes, 
The  h  Minds  upon  her  play'd, 
Move  eastward,  h  earth,  and  leave  Yon  orange 

sunset 
O,  h  planet,  eastward  go ; 
And  round  again  to  h  night, 
seven  h  years,  Seven  h  years  of  health  and  com- 
petence. 
Forward  she  started  with  a  h  cry, 
We  might  be  still  as  A  as  God  grants 
'  he  is  A,  he  is  singing  Hosanna  in  the  highest: 
Whereof  the  Apeople  strowing  cried 
In  those  (ar-ofi  seven  h  years  were  born ; 


Supp.  Confessions  50 

Enoch  Arden  761 

770 

Princess  Hi  245 

Com.  of  Arthur  82 

Lover's  Tale  i  714 

762 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  120 

220 

Vastness  24 

The  Ring  90 

Owd  Rod  112 

Supp.  Confessions  20 

24 

40 

Sea-Fairies  8 

40 

Oriana  84 

The  Merman  37 

Bridesmaid  1 

4 

„   8,  14 

Two  Voices  130 

224 

MiUer's  D.  25 

„       139 

(Enone  131 


„      235 

„      240 

„      258 

May  Queen  34 

„   Cow.  46 

M.  d' Arthur  262 

Gardener's  D.  72 

92 

132 

197 

235 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  97 

Edwin  Morris  78 

Talking  Oak  252 

Love  and  Duly  87 


Golden  Year  40 

66 

Ulysses  63 

Tithonus  70 

Locksley  Hall  43 

97 

159 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  2 

„  Depart.  8 

17 

L'Envoi  42 

Amphion  18 

Will  Water.  189 

The  Voyage  49 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  38 

Move  eastward  1 

4 

12 

Enoch  Arden  81 
151 
416 
502 
505 


Happy  [continued)     And  know  that  she  is  h.'  Enoch  Arden  719 

sweet  forget-me-nots  That  grow  for  h  lovers.  The  Brook  173 

'  Too  h,  fresh  and  fair.  Too  fresh  and  fair  „         217 

And  you  are  h :  let  her  parents  be.'  Aylmer's  Field  366 

sown  With  h  faces  and  with  holiday.  Princess,  Pro.  56 

and  read  My  sickness  down  to  h  dreams  ?  „           ii  253 

In  looking  on  the  h  Autumn-fields,  „            iv  42 

And  h  warriors,  and  immortal  names,  „            vi  93 

but  at  the  h  word  '  he  lives '  My  father  stoop'd,  „               128 

And  at  the  h  lovers  heart  in  heart —  „         vii  108 

Fill'd  thro'  and  thro'  with  Love,  a  h  sleep.  „               172 

And  find  him ;  by  the  h  threshold,  he,  „              200 

H  he  With  such  a  mother !  „               327 

turning  saw  The  h  valleys,  half  in  light,  „        Con.  41 

the  h  crowd,  The  sport  half-science,  „                75 

peacemaker  fly  To  h  havens  under  all  the  sky.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  35 

Break,  h  land,  into  earlier  flowers !  W.  to  Alexandra  10 

The  sea-kings'  daughter  aah  as  fair,  „                26 
But  marry  me  out  of  hand :  we  two  shall  be  h  still.'        Grandmother  52 

Never  jealous — not  he :  we  had  many  a  h  year ;  „           71 

And  h  has  been  my  life ;  but  I  would  not  live  it  again.               „          98 

But  distant  colour,  h  hamlet,  The  Daisy  27 

Many  and  many  a  h  year.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  48 

'  The  King  is  h  In  child  and  wife ;  The  Victim  25 

But  the  Priest  was  h.  His  victim  won :  „         61 

And  the  Priest  was  h,  „         73 

A  h  lover  who  has  come  To  look  on  her  that  loves  In  Mem.  viii  1 

The  murmur  oi  &h  Pan :  „     xxiii  12 

Rise,  h  mom,  rise,  holy  mom,  „       xxx  29 

Her  early  Heaven,  her  h  views ;  „     xxxiii  6 

How  fares  it  with  the  h  dead?  „         xliv  1 

And  grasps  the  skirts  of  h  chance,  „         Ixiv  6 

There  flutters  up  a  7i  thought,  „          Ixv  7 

sun  by  sun  the  h  days  Descend  below  the  golden  hills  „  Ixxxiv  27 

A  guest,  or  h  sister,  sung,  „  Ixxxix  26 

Ring,  h  bells,  across  the  snow :  „           cvi& 

h  birds,  that  change  their  sky  To  build  and  brood ;  „        cxv  15 

For  days  of  h  commune  dead ;  „       cxvi  14 

While  thou,  dear  spirit,  h  star,  „    cxxvii  18 

0  h  hour,  and  happier  hours  Await  them.  „      Con.  65 

O  h  hour,  behold  the  bride  With  him  to  whom  „              69 

We  wish  them  store  of  h  days.  „              84 

To  spangle  all  the  h  shores  By  which  they  rest,  „            120 

In  the  h  morning  of  life  and  of  May,  Maud  I  vl 

Go  not,  h  day,  (repeat)  „  xvii  1,  3 

Pass  the  h  news.  Blush  it  thro'  the  West ;  „           15 

And  you  fair  stars  that  crown  a  h  day  „  xviii  30 

It  seems  that  I  am  h,  that  to  me  A  livelier  emerald  „           50 

Beat,  h  stars,  timing  with  things  below,  „           81 

The  delight  of  h  laughter,  „  //  iv  29 

Would  the  h  spirit  descend,  „           81 

'  And  gladly  given  again  this  h  morn.  Marr.  of  Geraint  691 

But  o'er  her  meek  eyes  came  a  h  mist  Geraint  and  E.  769 

Tho'  pale,  yet  h,  ask'd  her  not  a  word,  „          880 

till  be  crown'd  A  h  life  with  a  fair  death,  „          968 

'  I  hold  them  h,  so  they  died  for  love :  Balin  and  Balan  581 

What  said  the  h  sire  ?  Merlin  and  V.  710 

And  as  it  chanced  they  are  h,  being  pure.'  „           745 

But  she  was  h  enough  and  shook  it  off,  Lancelot  and  E.  784 

Came  on  her  brother  with  a  /*  face  „              791 

So  that  would  make  you  h :  furthermore,  „              959 

As  h  as  when  we  dwelt  among  the  woods,  „            1036 

make  me  h,  making  them  An  armlet  for  the  roundest  arm  „  1182 

'  In  li  time  behold  our  pilot-star !  Pelleas  and  E.  63 

'  0  h  world,'  thought  Pelleas,  '  all,  meseems,  Are  h ;  „           136 

Be  h  in  thy  fair  Queen  as  I  in  mine.'  Last  Tournament  204 
Crown'd  warrant  had  we  for  the  crowning  sin 

That  made  wsh:  „             577 
the  child  of  one  I  honour'd,  h,  dead  before  thy  shame  ?      Guinevere  423 

h,  fair  with  orchard -lawns  And  bowery  hollows  Pass,  of  Arthur  430 

And  he  was  h  that  he  saw  it  not;  Lover's  Tale  i  192 

O  day  which  did  enwomb  that  h  hour,  „           485 

It  was  so  h  an  hour,  so  sweet  a  place,  „           558 

The  loved,  the  lover,  the  h  Lionel,  „           654 

Why  was  I  To  cross  between  their  h  star  and  them  ?  „           730 


Happy 


301 


Hardest 


Happy  (continued)    Him  who  loving  made  The  h  and 
the  imhappy  love, 

I  was  h  when  I  was  with  him, 

Often  I  seem'd  unhappy,  and  often  as  h  too, 

He  means  me  I'm  sure  to  be  h  with  Willy, 

Here's  to  your  h  xmion  with  my  child ! 

We  left  her,  h  each  in  each,  and  then, 

Pour'd  in  on  all  those  h  naked  isles — 

Live,  and  be  A  in  thyself,  and  serve  This  mortal 
race 

So — your  h  suit  was  blasted — 

H  children  in  a  sunbeam  sitting  on  the  ribs  of  wreck 

Poet  of  the  h  Tityrus  piping  underneath 

the  child  Is  h — ev'n  in  leaving  her ! 

We  planted  both  together,  h  in  our  marriage  mom  ? 

I  am  h,  h.     Kiss  me. 

Sing  like  a  bird  and  be  h, 

'  Here  again,  here,  here,  here,  h  year ! 

Him,  h  to  be  chosen  Judge  of  Gods, 

while  we  dwelt  Together  in  this  valley- 
h  had  I  died  within  thine  arms. 

The  morning  light  of  h  marriage  broke 

O  h  he,  and  fit  to  live.  On  whom  a  h  home  has  power     The  Wanderer  9 
Hapt     H  in  this  isle,  since  Up  the  East  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  116 

Harangue    Lady  Psyche  wQl  h  The  fresh  arrivals  Princess  ii  95 

Harass'd     the  thought  Haunted  and  h  him,  Enoch  Arden  720 

Vext  with  lawyers  and  h  with  debt :  Mavd  I  xix  22 

h  by  the  frights  Of  my  first  crew,  Columbus  67 

Harbour     and  clambering  on  a  mast  In  h,  Enoch  Arden  106 

Ev'n  in  that  h  whence  he  sail'd  before.  „  666 

to  seek  If  any  golden  h  be  for  men  Fref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  13 


Lover's  Tale  i  753 

First  Quarrel  11 

31 

RizTpdh  76 

Sister's  (E.  and  E.)  68 

219 

Columbus  174 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  15 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  5 

14 

To  Virgil  13 

Prin.  Beatrice  12 

Happy  14 

„     107 

Parnassus  14 

The  Throstle  13 

Death  of  (Enone  16 

h  then — Too 

30 
102 


Vastness  14 

Gareth  and  L.  834 

844 

Marr.  of  Geraint  281 

290 

299 

Sailor  Boy  2 

Audley  Court  86 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  25 

The  Captain  22 

The  Voyage  2 


Desolate  offing,  sailorless  h's. 

Harbourage     But  wilt  thou  yield  this  damsel  h  ? ' 
But  an  this  lord  will  yield  us  h,  Well.* 
Where  can  I  get  me  h  for  the  night  ? 
H  ?  truth,  good  truth,  I  know  not, 
'  0  friend,  I  seek  a  h  for  the  night.' 

Harbour-bar     Shot  o'er  the  seething  h-b, 

Harbour-buoy    h-b.  Sole  star  of  phosphorescence 

Harbour-mouth    Yet  waft  me  from  the  h-m, 
capes  and  islands,  Many  a  h-m, 
painted  buoy  That  tosses  at  the  h-m ; 

Hard     It  seem'd  so  h  at  first,  mother,  to  leave  the 

blessed  sun.  And  now  it  seems  as  A  to  stay.  May  Queen,  Con.  9 
The  Gods  are  h  to  reconcile :                                    Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  81 

'Tis  h  to  settle  order  once  again.  „                82 

How  h  he  breathes !  over  the  snow  I  heard  D.  of  the  0.  Year  37 
A  saying,  h  to  shape  in  act ;                                      Love  thou  thy  land  49 

But  vague  in  vapour,  h  to  mark ;  „                62 

The  blast  was  h  and  harder.  The  Goose  50 

For  how  h  it  seem'd  to  me,  When  eyes.  Love  and  Duty  35 

If  the  sense  is  h  To  alien  ears,  „             51 

H  is  my  doom  and  thine :  „             54 

'  Your  riddle  is  /s  to  read.'  Lady  Clare  76 

J?  coils  of  cordage,  swarthy  fishing-nets,  Enoch  Arden  17 

was  it  h  to  take  The  helpless  life  „        556 

*  Too  h  to  bear !  why  did  they  take  me  „         781 

0  h,  when  love  and  duty  clash !  Princess  ii  293 
all  those  h  things  That  Sheba  came  to  ask  of  Solomon.'  „  345 
'  O  h  task,'  he  cried ;  '  No  fighting  shadows  here  !  „  Hi  124 
No  rock  so  h  but  that  a  little  wave  „  154 
they  will  take  her,  they  will  make  her  h,  „  v  90 
Thus  the  h  old  King :  I  took  my  leave,  „  467 
no  tenderness — Too  h,  too  cruel :  „  516 
These  men  are  h  upon  us  as  of  old,  „  vi  198 
the  woman  is  so  h  Upon  the  woman.  „  222 
And  call  her  h  and  cold  which  seem'd  a  truth  :  „  vii  98 
you  think  I  am  /i  and  cold ;  Grandmother  17 
be  jealous  and  h  and  unkind.'  „            54 

1  found,  tho'  crush'd  to  h  and  dry.  The  Daisy  97 
O  little  bard,  is  your  lot  so  h,  Spiteful  Letter  5 
H,  h,  h  is  it,  only  not  to  tumble,  Hendecasyllabics  13 

*  It  will  be  h,'  they  say,  '  to  find  In  Mem.  xx  7 
The  words  were  h  to  imderstand.  „  Ixix  20 
'Tis  h  for  thee  to  fathom  this ;  „  Ixxxv  90 


Hard  {continued)    The  h  heir  strides  about  their  lands,  In  Mem.  xc  15 

how  h  to  frame  In  matter-moulded  forms  „     xeo  45 

'  A  h  one,  or  a  hundred,  so  I  go.  Gareth  and  L.  149 

h  by  here  is  one  will  overthrow  And  slay  thee :  „  896 

'  Old  damsel,  old  and  h,  Old,  ]j  1105 

blew  A  h  and  deadly  note  upon  the  horn.  "         1111 

Then  not  to  give  you  warning,  that  seems  h ;  Geraint  "and  E.  422 

How  h  you  look  and  how  denyingly !  Merlin  and  V.  338 

May  this  h  earth  cleave  to  the  Nadir  hell  „  349 

(Brother,  the  King  was  h  upon  his  knights)  Holy  Grail  299 

house  of  ours  Where  all  the  brethren  are  so  h,  „         618 

H  was  the  frost  in  the  field.  First  Quarrel  39 

I  felt  that  my  heart  was  h,  „  76 

So  I  knew  my  heart  was  h,  78 

But  say  nothing  h  of  my  boy,  Rizpah  22 

you  are  just  as  /i  as  a  stone.  „       80 

they  tell  me  that  the  worid  is  h,  and  harsh  of  mind. 

But  can  it  be  so  h,  so  harsh,  The  Flight  101 

come  a  witness  soon  H  to  be  confuted.  Forlorn  26 

He  gript  it  so  /*  by  the  throat  that  the  boy  Bandit's  Death  28 

That  God  would  move  And  strike  the  h,  h  rock,  Supp.  Confessions  116 
'  H  task,  to  pluck  resolve,'  I  cried,  Two  Voices  118 

he  and  I  Had  once  h  words,  and  parted,  Dora  18 

and  thought  H  things  of  Dora.  „     58 

for  you  Will  make  him  h,  ,'  153 

H  wood  I  am,  and  wrinkled  rind,  Talking  Oak  171 

bade  him  cry,  with  sound  of  trumpet,  all  The  h  condition ;  Godiva  37 
The  h  brands  shiver  on  the  steel.  Sir  Galahad  6 

Small  were  his  gains,  and  h  his  work ;  Sea  Dreams  8 

last  Gript  my  hand  h,  and  with  God-bless-you  went.  „      160 

I  found  a  h  friend  in  his  loose  accounts,  A  loose  one 

in  the  h  grip  of  his  hand,  „      162 

For  us,  we  will  not  spare  the  tyrant  one  h  word.  Third  of  Feb.  42 

That  a  calamity  fe  to  be  borne  ?  Maud  I  xiii  3 

a  ^mechanic  ghost  That  never  came  from  on  high  „     II  H  34 

Yniol  with  that  h  message  went ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  763 

The  h  earth  shake,  and  a  low  thunder  of  arms.  Lancelot  and  E.  460 

As  h  and  still  as  is  the  face  that  men  „  1251 

over  h  and  soft,  striking  the  sod  From  out  the  soft, 

the  spark  from  off  the  h,  Pelleas  and  E.  498 

h  liis  eyes ;  harder  his  heart  Seem'd ;  „  512 

Modred  thought,  '  The  time  is  h  at  band.'  „  610 

H  on  that  helm  which  many  a  heathen  sword  Pass,  of  Arthur  166 

clomb  The  last  h  footstep  of  that  iron  crag  ;  „  447 

They  found  her  beating  the  h  Protestant  doors.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  240 
I  find  h  rocks,  h  life,  h  cheer,  or  none.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  6 

Vailing  a  sudden  eyelid  with  his  h  '  Dim  Saesneg '  „  20 

Priests  Who  fear  the  king's  h  common-sense  „  66 

harlot  draws  his  clerks  Into  the  suburb — their  h  ceUbacy,        „  107 

These  h  memorials  of  our  truth  to  Spain  Columbus  196 

H  was  his  hand-play,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  44 

Beneath  a  h  Arabian  moon  And  alien  stars.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  45 
Seem'd  nobler  than  their  h  Eternities.  Demeter  and  P.  107 

An'  'e  cotch'd  howd  h  0'  my  hairm,  Owd  Rod  58 

she  loves  her  own  h  self.  Her  firm  will,  The  Ring  292 

She  clung  to  me  with  such  a  h  embrace,  „         435 

//  Romans  brawling  of  their  monstrous  games ;  St.  Telemachus  40 

And  the  h  blue  eyes  have  it  still.  Charity  10 

Hard  (heard)     I A  his  Riverence  say.  To-morrow  69 

tould  yer  Honour  whativer  I  h  an'  seen,  „        97 

Hard-breathing    cast  himself  Down  on  a  bench,  h-b.         PeUeas  and  E.  592 

Harden     watch  The  sandy  footprint  h  into  stone.'  Princess  Hi  271 

Harden'd    (See  also  Mattock-h^en'd,  War-harden'd) 

only  wrapt  in  h  skins  That  fit  him  like  his  own ;  Gareth  and  L.  1093 
His  arms  are  old,  he  trusts  the  h  skin —  „  1139 

But  lash'd  in  vain  against  the  h  skin,  „  1143 

Harder    The  blast  was  hard  and  h-  The  Goose  50 

H  the  times  were,  and  the  hands  of  power  Aylmer's  Field  452 

the  according  hearts  of  men  Seem'd  h  too ;  „  454 

Enid  answer'd,  h  to  be  moved  Than  hardest  tyrants  Geraint  and  E.  694 
but  felt  his  eyes  H  and  drier  than  a  fountain  bed  Pelleas  and  E.  507 
hard  his  eyes ;  h  his  heart  Seem'd ;  „  512 

But  a  lie  which  is  part  a  truth  is  a  A  matter  to  fight.  Grandmother  32 
Tho'  carved  in  h  stone —  Epilogue  59 

Hardest    Than  h  tyrants  in  their  day  of  power,  Geraint  and  E.  695 


Hard-grain'd 


302 


Harry 


Hard-grain'd    h-g  Muses  of  the  cube  and  square 
Hard-heaving    her  breast  R-h,  and  her  eyes 
Hardihood    Sick  for  thy  stubborn  h, 

sworn  to  vows  Of  utter  h,  utter  gentleness, 
'  My  King,  for  h  I  can  promise  thee. 
Hard-mailed    Laid  the  soft  babe  in  his  h-m  hands. 
Hardness     For  he  will  teach  him  h. 
Hard-ridden    like  a  beast  h-r,  breathing  hard. 
Hard-seeming    I  think  this  gross  h-s  world 
Hard-set    smile  a  h-s  smile,  like  a  stoic, 
Hard-won    E-iv  and  hardly  won  with  bruise 
Hardy     '  Be  not  so  h,  scullion,  as  to  slay 


Princess,  Pro.  180 

Lover's  Tale  iv  308 

In  Mem.  ii  14 

Gareth  and  L.  553 

557 

Princess  vi  208 

Dora  120 

Aylmer's  Field  291 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  229 

Maud  I  iv  20 

Lancelot  and  E.  1165 

Gareth  and  L.  980 


You  the  h,  laborious.  Patient  children  of  Albion.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  58 
EEare  {See  also  'Are)  nightly  wirer  of  their  innocent  h  Aylmer's  Field  490 
Harebell    like  an  Alpine  h  hung  with  tears  Princess  vii  115 

Harem     flings  his  bowstrung  H  in  the  sea,  Somney's  E.  135 

Hark     H  !  death  is  calling  While  I  speak  All  Things  will  Die  28 

hating  to  h  The  humming  of  the  drowsy  pulpit-drone  To  J.  M.  K.  9 
but  h  the  bell  For  dinner,  let  us  go  ! '  Princess  ii  432 

0  h,0  hear !  how  thin  and  clear,  „  iv  7 
h  the  clock  within,  the  silver  knell  Maud  I  xviii  64 
'  H  tlie  victor  pealing  there  ! '  Gareth  and  L.  1318 
'  H,  by  the  bird's  song  ye  may  learn  the  nest,'  Marr.  of  Geraint  359 
'  H  the  Phantom  of  the  house  That  ever  shrieks  Lancelot  and  E.  1022 
h  !  Nay — you  can  hear  it  yourself —                                            Rizpah  84 

Harken    mother  Ida,  h  ere  I  die.  (repeat)    (Enone  24, 35,  46,  53,  64,  77,  91, 

103, 120, 134, 151, 173, 183, 195 

1  shaU  h  what  you  say,  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  39 
Nor  h  what  the  inner  spirit  sings,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  22 
His  Baron  said  '  We  go  but  h :  Balin  and  Balan  10 
And  h  if  my  music  be  not  true.  Last  Tournament  274 
But  h !  have  ye  met  him  ?  „  529 

Harken'd    if  our  Princes  h  to  my  prayer,  Columbus  100 

Harkening    h  from  what  side  The  blindfold  rummage   Balin  and  Balan  415 

Harlot  (adj.)     Hell  burst  up  your  h  roofs-  Bellowing,  Pelleas  and  E.  466 

Harlot  (s)    Mammon  made  The  h  of  the  cities :  Aylmer's  Field  375 

h's  paint  their  talk  as  well  as  face  Merlin  and  V.  821 

and  in  this  Are  h's  like  the  crowd,  „  831 

And  hearing  '  h '  mutter'd  twice  or  thrice,  „  843 

shrieking  out '  O  fool ! '  the  h  leapt  Adown  the  forest,  „  972 

whirl  the  dust  of  h's  round  and  round  Pelleas  and  E.  470 

My  tower  is  full  of  h's,  hke  his  court,  ImsI  Tournament  81 

The  mitre-sanction'd  h  draws  his  clerks  ,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  106 

Wealth  with  his  wines  and  his  wedded  h's ;  Fastness  19 

Harlot-bride     Among  their  h-b's,  an  evil  song.  Last  Tournament  428 

Harlot-like    that  h-l  Seduced  me  from  you,  leaves  me  h-l,    Romney's  R.  115 

Harlotry     riotous  fits  Of  wine  and  h —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  101 

Harm  (s)     What  h,  undone?  deep  h  to  disobey,  M.  d' Arthur  93 

And  bites  it  for  true  heart  and  not  for  h,  Princess,  Pro.  174 

arm.  That  shielded  all  her  life  from  h  In  Mem.,  Con.  47 

a.h  no  preacher  can  heal ;  Maud  I  iv  22 

How  should  I  dare  obey  him  to  his  h  ?  Geraint  and  E.  136 

mere  chUd  Might  use  it  to  the  /*  of  anyone.  Merlin  and  V.  685 

What  h,  undone?     Deep  h  to  disobey.  Pass,  of  Arthur  261 

ruling  that  which  knows  To  its  own  h :  To  the  Queen  ii  59 

she  wrought  us  h.  Poor  soul,  not  knowing.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  184 

' No  h,Tioh'l  tum'd  again,  „  213 

can  tha  tell  ony  h  on  'im  lass  ? —  Village  Wife  19 

Not  es  I  cares  fur  to  hear  ony  h,  „  22 

weak  i'  the  hattics,  wi'out  ony  h  i'  the  legs,  „        101 

tweiint  do  tha  naw  h.  „         120 

Nor  harm  an  adder  thro'  the  lust  for  h,  Ancient  Sage  271 

there  wam't  not  a  mossel  o'  h ;  Owd  Rod  70 

Harm  (verb)     A  little  thing  may  h  a  wounded  man.  M.  d' Arthur  42 

extremes,  I  told  her,  well  might  h  The  woman's  cause.     Princess  Hi  144 

To  h  the  thing  that  trusts  him,  „        iv  248 

All  that  not  h's  distinctive  womanhood.  „       vii  274 

one  who  came  to  help  thee,  not  to  h,  Gareth  and  L.  1238 

A  little  thing  may  h  a  wounded  man ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  210 

he  was  a  child,  an'  he  came  to  h ;  First  Quarrel  23 

Nor  h  an  adder  thro'  the  lust  for  harm,  Ancient  Sage  271 

Harm'd    satire,  kin  to  charity.  That  h  not :  Princess  ii  470 

soothe,  and  h  where  she  would  heal ;  Guinevere  355 

Lest  but  a  hair  of  this  low  head  be  h.  „        447 

Harmful    Me  and  my  l»  love  go  by;  Maud  II  ii^ 


Harmless    The  rabbit  fondles  his  own  h  face, 

Plucking  the  h  wild-fiower  on  the  hill  ?— 

Elves,  and  the  h  glamour  of  the  field ; 

the  h  people  whom  we  found  In  Hispaniola's  island' 
Paradise ! 
Harmonious    And  in  the  long  h  years 
Harmonising-Harmonizing     A  music  harmonizing  our 
wild  cries, 

Make  but  one  music,  harmonising  '  Pray.' 
Harmony    (See  also  Organ-harmony)    words  adore  The 
full-flowing  h 

harmonies  of  law  The  growing  world  assume, 

O  mighty-mouth'd  inventor  of  harmonies. 

Most  loveliest,  earthly-heavenliest  h  ? 

Scarce  living  in  the  JEolian  h, 

All  your  hearts  be  in  h, 

AU  her  harmonies  echo'd  away  ? — 

the  roll  And  march  of  that  Eternal  H 
Haxmsby    hup  to  H  and  Hutterby  Hall. 
Harness     Dry  clash'd  his  h  in  the  icy  caves 

sheathing  splendours  and  the  golden  scale  Of  h, 

all  beneath  there  burns  A  jewell'd  h, 

Far  liefer  had  I  gird  his  h  on  him. 

Dry  clash'd  his  h  in  the  icy  caves 
Harold  (the  Second,  1066)     H's  England  fell  to 
Norman  swords; 

Since  English  H  gave  its  throne  a  vyife, 
Haroun  Alraschid    prime  Of  good  H  A.  (repeat) 


Aylmer's  Field  851 

Maud  II  i  3 

Pass,  of  Arthur  52 

Columbus  181 
In  Mem.  xliv  9 

Sea  Dreams  255 
Akbar's  Dream  151 


Elednore  46 

England  and  Amer.  16 

Milton  1 

Lover's  Tale  i  279 

477 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  62 

On  Master  of  B.  12 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  15 

North.  Cobbler  14 

M.  d' Arthur  186 

Princess  v  42 

Gareth  and  L.  688 

Marr.  of  Geraint  93 

Pass,  of  Arthur  354 


W.  to  Marie  Alex.  22 

24 

Arabian  Nights  11,  22,  33, 

44,  55,  66,  77,  88,  99, 

110, 121, 132, 143, 154 

Sea-Fairies  4 

Dying  Swan  32 

Kate  8 

Two  Voices  436 

Locksley  Hall  33 

Princess  iv  38 

In  Mem.  i  2 

„  Ixxxviii  9 

„  Ixxxix  27 

„         ciii  9 

cv22 

„       cxxv  2 


Harp  (s)     bosoms  prest  To  Httle  h's  of  gold ; 

With  shawms,  and  with  cymbals,  and  h's  of  gold, 

Clear  as  the  twanging  of  a  h. 

Like  an  jEolian  h  that  wakes  No  certain  air. 

Love  took  up  the  h  of  Life, 

smote  her  h,  and  sang.     '  Tears,  idle  tears. 

To  one  clear  h  in  divers  tones. 

And  I — my  h  would  prelude  woe — 

she  brought  the  h  and  flung  A  ballad 

The  hall  with  h  and  carol  rang. 

Nor  h  be  touch'd,  nor  flute  be  blown ; 

Some  bitter  notes  my  h  would  give, 

each  with  h  in  hand.  And  built  it  to  the  music  of 

their  h's.  Gareth  and  L.  261 

Arthur's  h  tho'  summer-wan,  „           1314 

0  never  h  nor  horn,  Nor  aught  we  blow  with  breath,  Holy  Grail  113 
toward  him  from  the  hall,  with  h  in  hand.  Last  Tournament  5 
and  on  shield  A  spear,  a  A,  a  bugle —  „  174 
Then  he  twangled  on  his  h.  And  while  he  twangled  „  251 
We  call  the  h  of  Arthur  up  in  heaven  ?  '  „  333 
Save  that  to  touch  a  h,  tilt  with  a  lance  „  636 
Then  Tristram  laughing  caught  the  h,  „  730 
his  hand  fell  from  the  h.  And  pale  he  turn'd,  Guinevere  303 

Harp  (verb)     to  h  on  such  a  moulder'd  string  ?  Locksley  Hall  147 

he  could  h  his  wife  up  out  of  hell.'  Last  Tournament  328 

Harped     equal  to  the  man.     They  h  on  this  ;  Princess  i  132 

Harper     Troop'd  round  a  Paynim  h  once.  Last  Tournament  322 

a  helpful  h  thou.  That  harpest  downward !  „              331 

'  0  hunter,  and  0  blower  of  the  horn,  H,  „              543 

'  Ah  then,  false  hunter  and  false  h,  „              567 

Harp'st     '  And  whither  h  thou  thine  ?  down !  „               330 

a  helpful  harper  thou,  That  h  downward !  „              332 

Harping     Now  h  on  the  church-commissioners,  The  Epic  15 

and  so  went  h  down  The  black  king's  highway,  Last  Tournament  342 

Harpy    (See  also  Church-Harpy)     harpies  miring  every  dish,    Lucretius  159 

Harried    Swarm'd  overseas,  and /t  what  was  left.  Com.  of  Arthur  9 

war-workers  who  H  the  Welshman,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  122 

Harrow'd    Sent  to  the  h  brother,  praying  him  Aylmer's  Field  607 

Harry  (Henry  VIII.)     Bluff  H  broke  into  the  spence  Talking  Oak  47 

Harry  (Christian  name)     While  H  is  in  the  five-acre  Grandmother  80 

And  H  and  Charlie,  I  hear  them  too —  „          81 

For  H  went  at  sixty,  your  father  at  sixty-five:  „          86 

1  wait,  wait,  wait  for  //. —  First  Quarrel  4 
H  and  I  were  married :  „  5 
When  fl  an'  I  were  children,  „         10 


Harry 


303 


Hate 


Church-warden,  etc.  42 

Gareth  and  L.  484 

707 

Guinevere  360 

Last  Tournament  635 

-Sir  J.  Oldcastle  96 

Dora  35 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  49 

The  Captain  13 

Lucretius  225 


Harry  (Christian  name)  {continued)    I  never  could  quarrel 

with  H —  First  Quarrel  16 

There  was  a  farmer  in  Dorset  of  H's  kin,  „  17 

So  H  was  bound  to  the  Dorsetshire  farm  „         19 

And  so  she  was  wicked  with  H;  „         26 

To  make  a  good  wife  for  H,  when  H  came  home  „         30 

And  E  came  home  at  last,  „  35 

H  went  over  the  Solent  to  see  if  work  could  be  found ;  „         44 

Before  I  quarrell'd  with  H — my  quarrel —  „  56 

For  H.  came  in,  an'  I  flung  him  the  letter  „         57 

H,  my  man,  you  had  better  ha'  beaten  me  „  72 

Mr.  U,  I  ham  wot  I  ham. 
Harry  (to  harass)    Would  hustle  and  h  him, 

Gareth  whom  he  used  To  h  and  hustle. 

and  h  me,  petty  spy  And  traitress.' 
Harrying     But  thou,  thro'  ever  h  thy  wild  beasts- 
Harry  of  Monmouth  (Henry  the  Fifth)    H  o  M,Ox 

Amurath  of  the  Ejist  ? 
Harsh    his  ways  were  h ;  But  Dora  bore  them 

A  woman  like  a  butt,  and  h  as  crabs. 

Day  by  day  more  h  and  cruel 

To  make  a  truth  less  h, 

they  tell  me  that  the  world  is  hard,  and  h  of  mind,  But 
can  it  be  so  hard,  so  h.  The  Flight  101 

Overblown  with  murmurs  h,  Ode  to  Memory  99 

Lest  the  h  shingle  should  grate  under  foot,  Enoch  Arden  772 

not  Too  h  to  your  companion  yestermorn ;  Princess  Hi  199 

or  the  meadow-crake  Grate  her  h  kindred  in  the  grass  :  „       iv  125 

bride  Gives  her  h  groom  for  bridal-gift  a  scourge ;  „        v  378 

Not  rather  dead  love's  h  heir,  jealous  pride  ?  Lancelot  and  E.  1398 

Then  at  the  dry  h  roar  of  the  great  horn, 

H  red  hair,  big  voice,  big  chest, 

and  yet  Pardon — too  h,  unjust. 
Harsher    When  was  a  h  sound  ever  heard,  ye  Muses, 

She  takes,  when  h  moods  remit, 

And  put  thy  h  moods  aside. 
Harshness    parents'  h  and  the  hapless  loves 

My  needful  seeming  h,  pardon  it. 
Hart     a  h  Taller  than  all  his  fellows,  milky-white, 

thinking  that  he  heard  The  noble  h  at  bay. 

In  these  wild  woods,  the  h  with  golden  horns. 
Harvest  (adj.)     and  in  h  time  he  died. 

in  the  h  hymns  of  Earth  The  worship  which  is 
Love, 
Harvest  (s)— reap  the  h  with  enduring  toil, 

not  been  for  these  five  years  So  full  a  h : 

his  heart  is  glad  Of  the  full  h, 

God  reaps  a  A  in  me. 

God  reaps  a  /i  in  thee. 

if  the  seedsman,  rapt  Upon  the  teeming  h, 

reaps  not  h  of  his  youthful  joys, 

Dispensing  h,  sowing  the  To-be, 

watch  her  h  ripen,  her  herd  increase, 

and  the  h  died  from  the  field, 

Robed  in  universal  h  up  to  either  pole  she 
smiles, 

AU  her  h  all  too  narrow — 

Fifty  times  the  golden  h  fallen. 

Rejoicing  in  the  h  and  the  grange. 

Homestead  and  h.  Reaper  and  gleaner. 
Harvest-field    My  brother  .James  is  in  the  h-f: 
Harvest-tool    H-t  and  husbandry. 

Hasp    {See  also  Hesp)    were  laid  On  the  h  of  the  window. 
Haste  (s)     (See  also  'Aa,ste)     Raw  H,  half-sister  to 
Delay. 

heat  Were  all  miscounted  as  malignant  h 

thing  that  had  made  false  h  to  the  grave- 
no,  not  dead  ! '  she  answer'd  in  all  h. 

the  years  of  h  and  random  youth  Unshatter'd ; 

and  tum'd  in  her  h  and  fled. 
Haste  (verb)     oh,  h.  Visit  my  low  desire ! 

leave  the  cliffs,  and  h  away  O'er  ocean-mirrors  roimded 
large. 

Haste  See  also  Post-haste 
Hasty     But  pamper  not  a  h  time,  Love  thou  thy  land  9 


Last  Tournament  438 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  4 

Columbus  199 

Trans,  of  Homer  3 

In  Mem.  xlviii  6 

lix  7 

Aylmer^s  Field  616 

Princess  ii  309 

Mart,  of  Geraint  149 

233 

Merlin  and  V.  409 

Dora  55 

Demeter  and  P.  148 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  121 

Dora  66 

„     69 

St.  S.  Stylites  148 

149 

Golden  Year  71 

Locksley  Hall  139 

Princess,  vii  289 

Maud  III  vi  25 

V.  of  Maeldune  30 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  169 

172 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  2 

Demeter  and  P.  127 

Merlin  and  the  G.  57 

The  Brook  227 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  14 

Maud  I  xiv  19 


Love  thou  thy  land  96 

Princess  iv  334 

Maud  I  i58 

Geraint  and  E.  542 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  21 

The  Wreck  62 

Ode  to  Memory  3 


In  Mem.  xii  8 


Hasty  {continued)    Or  h  judger  would  have  call'd  her 

guilt,  Geraint  and  E.  433 

And  thro'  the  /*  notice  of  the  ear  Lover's  Tale  i  615 

Hat  {See  also  'At)    grew  about,  and  tied  it  round  his  h  Dora  83 

slavish  h  from  the  villager's  head  ?  Maud  7x4 

whether  The  habit,  h,  and  feather,  „  xx  18 

Hatch     I  built  the  nest '  she  said  '  To  h  the  cuckoo.  Princess  iv  366 

Hatch'd     fancies  /*  In  silken-folded  idleness ;  „          66 

Hate  (s)     A  h  of  gossip  parlance,  and  of  sway,  Isabel  26 

the  h  of  h,  the  scorn  of  scorn.  The  Poet  3 

And  mete  the  bounds  of  h  and  love —  Two  Voices  135 

1  hated  him  with  the  h  of  hell,  The  Sisters  22 

Frantic  love  and  frantic  h.  Vision  of  Sin  150 

Hated  him  with  a  momentary  h.  Aylmer's  Field  211 

One  shriek  of  h  would  jar  all  the  hymns  Sea  Dreams  259 

far  aloof  From  envy,  h  and  pity,  Lucretius  77 

his  hopes  and  h's,  his  homes  and  fanes,  „      255 

The  common  h  with  the  revolving  wheel  Princess  vi  173 

Till  a  morbid  h  and  horror  have  grown  Maud  I  vi  75 

I  have  sworn  to  bury  All  this  dead  body  of  h,  „     xix  97 

The  fires  of  Hell  and  otH;  „  II  i  la 

I  scarce  can  ask  it  thee  for  h,  Gareth  and  L.  361 

Peace  to  thee,  woman,  with  thy  loves  and  h's !  „           373 

and  to  hate  his  kind  With  such  a  h,  Balin  and  Balan  127 

and  fain.  For  h  and  loathing,  would  have  past  „              38S 

H,  ii  H  he  perfect,  casts  out  fear.  Merlin  and  V.  41 

(For  in  a  wink  the  false  love  turns  to  /*)  „          852. 

Thereon  her  wrath  became  a  h ;  Pelleas  and  E.  224 

strike  him !  put  my  h  into  your  strokes,  „            228 

I  am  wrath  and  shame  and  h  and  evil  fame,  „            568 

My  God,  the  measure  of  my  h  for  Mark  Last  Tournament  537 

pluck'd  one  way  by  h  and  one  by  love,  „              539 

Broken  with  Mark  and  h  and  sohtude,  „              643 

his  aims  Were  sharpen'd  by  strong  h  for  Lancelot.  Guinevere  20 

'  With  what  a  h  the  people  and  the  King  Must  hate  me,'  „       157 
my  love  should  ne'er  indue  the  front  And  mask  of  H,     Lover's  Tale  i  775 

Love  passeth  not  the  threshold  of  cold  H,  And  H  „           778 

Yet  loves  and  hates  with  mortal  h's  and  loves,  Tiresias  23 
It  is  not  Love  but  H  that  weds  a  bride  against  her  will ; 

H,  that  would  pluck  from  this  true  breast  The  Flight  32 

An'  there's  h  enough,  shure.  Tomorrow  68 
look'd  the  twin  of  heathen  h.                                     Locksley  H.,  Sixty  86 

class.  Of  civic  H  no  more  to  be,  Freedom  18 

alchemise  old  h's  into  the  gold  Of  Love,  Akbar's  Dream  163 
Hate  (verb)     {See  also  Haate)     how  much  I  h  Her  presence,         (Enone  229 

my  flesh,  which  I  despise  and  h,  St.  S.  Stylites  58 

Sluiek  out,  '  I  h  you,  Enoch,'  Enoch  Arden  33 

a  height  That  makes  the  lowest  h  it,  Aylmer's  Field  173 

because  I  love  their  child  They  /»  me :  „            424 

in  the  sound  To  />  a  little  longer !  Sea  Dreams  62 

I  h,  abhor,  spit,  sicken  at  him ;  Lucretius  199 

You  men  have  done  it :  how  I  h  you  all !  Princess,  Pro.  130^ 

Yet  this  day  (tho'  you  should  h  me  for  it)            '  „            iv  341 

Until  they  h  to  hear  me  like  a  wind  „               v  98 

him  that  mars  her  plan,  but  then  would  h  „                132 

Yet  h  me  not,  but  abide  your  lot,  Spiteful  Letter  11 

Yet  the  yellow  leaf  h's  the  greener  leaf,  „            15 

How  I  h  the  spites  and  the  follies !  „            24 

Who  h  each  other  for  a  song.  Lit.  Squabbles  5 

Discuss'd  the  books  to  love  or  h.  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  34 

I  h  the  dreadful  hollow  behind  the  little  wood,  Maud  III 

Well,  he  may  Uve  to  h  me  yet.  „  xHi  4 

there  be  those  who  h  him  in  their  hearts.  Com.  of  Arthur  179 

So  many  those  that  h  him,  and  so  strong,  „             251 

good  cause  is  theirs  To  h  me,  Gareth  and  L.  821 

Being  but  knave,  I  /*  thee  all  the  more.'  „          1021 

prince  and  fool,  I  h  thee  and  for  ever.'  „         1256 

They  h  the  King,  and  Lancelot,  the  King's  friend,  „          1418 

I  h  that  he  should  linger  here ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  91 

Thy  wheel  and  thee  we  neither  love  nor  h.  (repeat)  „    349,  358 
and  to  h  his  kind  With  such  a  hate,                           Balin  and  Balan  127 

a  liar  is  he.  And  h's  thee  for  the  tribute ! '  „            608 

Queen,  if  knowing  that  I  know,  Will  h.  Merlin  and  V.  122 

do  ye  not  h  him,  ye  ?     Ye  know  yourselves :  Pelleas  and  E.  264 

I  have  slain  this  Pelleas  whom  ye  h :  „            372 


Hate 


304 


Haw 


Hate  (verb)  (continued)    he  thought — '  What,  if  she  h 

me  now  ?  Last  Tournament  496 

thou  stridest  thro'  his  halls  Who  h's  thee,  „             518 

Because  he  h's  thee  even  more  than  fears ;  „             533 

I  should  h  thee  more  than  love.'  „             600 
With  what  a  hate  the  people  and  the  King  Must  h  me,'     Guinevere  158 

but  who  h's  thee,  he  that  brought  The  heathen  Pass,  of  Arthur  151 

I  h  her — an'  I  h  you  ! '  First  Quarrel  71 

Yet  loves  and  h's  with  mortal  hates  and  loves,  Tiresias  23 

I  h  the  black  negation  of  the  bier.  Ancient  Sage  204 

morning  brings  the  day  I  h  and  fear ;  The  Flight  2 

'  Kill  your  enemy,  for  you  h  him,'  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  94 

I  h  the  rancour  of  their  castes  and  creeds,  Akbar's  Bream  65 
Hated  (adj.  and  part.)    this  world's  curse, — beloved 

but  h —  Love  and  Duty  47 
(for  Arthur's  Knights  Were  h  strangers  in  the  hall)  Balin  and  Balan  352 

with  h  warmth  of  apprehensiveness.  Lover's  Tale  i  632 

Her  presence,  h  both  of  Gods  and  men.  (Enone  229 

Thro  madness,  h  by  the  wise,  Love  and  DrUy  7 
Hated  (verb)    (See  also  Haated)    I  h  him  with  the  hate  of 

hell.  The  Sisters  22 

And  death  and  life  she  h  equally,  Palace  of  Art  265 

But  they  h  his  oppression.  The  Captain  9 

Then  thejr  look'd  at  him  they  h,  „       37 

H  him  with  a  momentary  hate.  Aylmer's  Field  211 

Men  h  learned  women :  Princess  ii  466 

They  h  banter,  wish'd  for  something  real,  „    Con.  18 

many  h  Uther  for  the  sake  Of  Gorlois.  Com.  of  Arthur  220 

And  h  this  fair  world  and  all  therein,  „           344 

They  h  her,  who  took  no  thought  of  them,  Geraint  and  E.  639 

She  h  all  the  knights,  and  heard  in  thought  Merlin  and  V.  150 

and  she  h  aU  who  pledged.  Lancelot  and  E.  744 

wail'd  and  wept,  and  h  mine  own  self.  Holy  Grail  609 

*  You  said  that  you  h  me,  Ellen,  First  Quarrel  79 

And  we  h  the  beautiful  Isle,  V.  of  Maddune  21 
And  we  h  the  Flowering  Isle,  as  we  A  the  isle  that 

was  mute,  „           52 

Till  we  h  the  Bounteous  Isle  „           92 

Troubled  the  track  of  the  host  that  we  h,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  40 

he  learnt  that  I  h  the  ring  I  wore.  The  Wreck  57 

tho'  I  think  I  h  him  less.  Bandit's  Death  17 

Hateftd    H  is  the  dark-blue  sky,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  39 

Your  falsehood  and  yoiurself  are  h  to  us :  Princess  iv  545 

Horrible,  h,  monstrous,  not  to  be  told ;  Maud  III  vi  41 

And  this  forgetfulness  was  h  to  her.  Marr.  of  Geraint  55 

Last  night  I  wasted  h  hours  Fatima  8 

Long,  ere  the  h  crow  shall  tread  The  comers  Will  Water.  235 

and  when  the  beauteous  h  isle  Return'd  upon  him,       Enoch  Arden  617 

all  the  h  fires  Of  torment,  Demeter  and  P.  151 

This  house  with  all  its  h  needs  no  cleaner  than  the  beast,         Happy  32 

in  the  heart  of  this  most  ancient  realm  A  h  voice  be 

utter'd,  Prog,  of  Spring  103 

Hater     What  room  is  left  for  a  fe  ?  Spiteful  Letter  14 

Love  your  enemy,  bless  your  h's,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  85 

Hating    H  to  wander  out  on  earth,  Supp.  Confessions  57 

h  to  hark  The  humming  of  the  drowsy  pulpit-drone  To  J.  M.  K.  9 

went  H  his  own  lean  heart  and  miserable.  Aylmer's  Field  526 

all-shamed,  h  the  life  He  gave  me,  Geraint  and  E.  852 

Hatred    h  of  her  weakness,  blent  with  shame.  Princess  vii  30 

Shall  fears  and  jealous  h's  flame  again  ?  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  41 

No  more  of  h  than  in  Heaven  itself,  Balin  and  Balan  151 

My  soul,  I  felt  my  h  for  my  Mark  Quicken  Last  Tournament  519 

Love  pledge  H  in  her  bitter  draughts.  Lover's  Tale  i  776 

National  h's  of  whole  generations,  Vastness  25 

Dark  no  more  with  human  h's  Faith  8 

Hattics  (attics)     An'  Hetty  wur  weak  i'  the  h.  Village  Wife  101 

Hauberk    shield  of  Balan  prick'd  The  h  to  the  flesh ;  Balin  and  Balan  560 

Casques  were  crack'd  and  h's  hack'd  The  Tourney  7 

Hanghtier    She  paused,  and  added  with  a  h  smile  Princess  Hi  225 

Haughtiest    Lady  Blanche  alone  Of  faded  form  and  h 

lineaments,  „        ii  448 

Imperious,  and  of  h  lineaments.  Marr.  of  Geraint  190 

Haughty    She,  flashing  forth  a  h  smile,  began :  D.  of  F.  Women  129 

My  A  jousts,  and  took  a  paramour ;  Geraint  and  E.  832 

but  she,  h,  ev'n  to  him,  Lancelot ;  Last  Tournament  562 


Haughty  (continued)    H  war-workers  who  Harried  the 

Welshman,  Bait,  of  Brunanburh  121 

Haunch    On  his  h'es  rose  the  steed.  Princess  v  493 

Haunt  (s)    The  h's  of  memory  echo  not.  Two  Voices  369 

A  A  of  ancient  Peace.  Palace  of  Art  88 
battenest  by  the  greasy  gleam  In  h's  of  hungry  sinners.  Will  Water.  222 

A  A  of  brawling  seamen  once,  Enoch  Arden  697 

I  come  from  h's  of  coot  and  hern.  The  Brook  23 

A  frequent  h  of  Edith,  Aylmer's  Field  148 

And  flood  the  h's  of  hern  and  crake ;  In  Mem.  ci  14 

The  feeble  soul,  a  A  of  fears,  „         ex  3 

cells  of  madness,  h's  of  horror  and  fear,  Maud  III  vi  2 

in  lonely  h's  Would  scratch  a  ragged  oval  Gareth  and  L.  533 

but  for  those  large  eyes,  the  h's  of  scorn,  Pdleas  and  E.  75 
there  In  h's  of  jungle-poison'd  air                         To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  31 

Haunt  (verb)     A  spirit  h's  the  year's  last  hours  A  Spirit  haunts  1 

than  whatever  Oread  h  The  knolls  of  Ida,  (Enone  74 

Whose  odours  h  my  dreams ;  Sir  Galahad  68 

Will  h  the  vacant  cup  :  Will  Water.  172 

Like  flies  that  h  a  wound,  or  deer,  Aylmer's  Field  571 

Gods,  who  h  The  lucid  interspace  of  world  Lucretius  104 

h  About  the  moulder'd  lodges  of  the  Past  Princess  iv  62 

They  h  the  silence  of  the  breast.  In  Mem.  xciv  9 

the  fihny  shapes  That  h  the  dusk,  „        xcv  11 

Evil  h's  The  birth,  the  bridal ;  „    xcviii  13 

'  Look,  He  h's  me — I  cannot  breathe —          _  Pelleas  and  E.  227 

all  that  h's  the  waste  and  wild  Mourn,            *  Pass,  of  Arthur  48 

those  three  words  would  h  him  when  a  boy.  Far — far — away  8 

anchorite  Would  h  the  desolated  fane,  St.  Telemachus  13 
Haunted  (adj.  and  part.)    (See  also  Bandit-haunted,  Martin-haunted, 

Satan-haunted)     From  old  well-heads  of  h  rills,  Eleanor e  16 

Heard  by  the  watcher  in  a  A  house,  Guinevere  73 
Was  h  with  a  jolly  ghost,  that  shook  The  curtains,    Walk,  to  the  Mail  36 

and  a  hazel  wood.  By  autumn  nutters  h,  Enoch  Arden  8 

And  h  by  the  wrangling  daw ;  In  Mem.  c  12 

h  by  the  starry  head  Of  her  whose  gentle  will  Mavd  I  xviii  22 

Haunted  (verb)     It  h  me,  the  morning  long.  Miller's  D.  69 

the  thought  H  and  harass'd  him,  Enoch  Arden  720 
still  H  us  like  her  ghost ;                                         Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  247 

ghastUer  face  than  ever  has  h  a  grave  by  night.  The  Wreck  8 

she  that  had  h  his  pathway  still.  Dead  Prophet  61 
Haunting  (adj.  and  part.)    (See  also  Boof-haunting) 
phantoms  moved  Before  him  h  him,  or  he  himself 

Moved /i  people,  Enoch  Arden  ^^ 

a  tender  Christian  hope,  H  a  holy  text.  Sea  Dreams  42 

My  h  sense  of  hollow  shows :  Princess  vii  349 

ever  h  round  the  palm  A  lusty  youth,  Gareth  and  L.  47 

but  shatter'd  nerve.  Yet  h  Julian,  Lover's  Tale  iv  106 

This  h  whisper  makes  me  faint.  In  Mem.  Ixxxi  7 

Brute  that  is  walking  and  h  us  yet.  The  Dawn  23 

Haunting  (s)     No  ghostly  h's  like  his  Highness.  Princess  ii  411 

And  out  of  h's  of  my  spoken  love,  „       vii  109 
Havelock  (Gen.  Sir  Henry)    H  baffled,  or  beaten,  or 

butcher'd  Def.  of  Lucknow  91 

Outram  and  H  breaking  their  way  through  „              96 

H's  glorious  Highlanders  answer  with  conquering  clieers,       „  99 

Blessing  the  wholesome  white  faces  of  H's  good  fusileers,       „  101 

Saved  by  the  valour  of  H,  „            104 

Haven    From  many  an  inland  town  and  h  large,  CEnone  117 

From  h's  hid  in  fairy  bowers,  The  Voyage  54 

ships  go  on  To  their  h  under  the  hill ;  Break,  break,  etc.  10 

northward  of  the  narrow  port  Open'd  a  larger  h :  Enoch  Arden  103 

Till  silent  in  her  oriental  h.  „            537 

Where  either  h  open'd  on  the  deeps,  „             671 

To  rush  abroad  all  round  the  little  h,  „            867 

That  all  the  houses  in  the  h  rang.  „            911 

while  I  breathed  in  sight  of  h,  he,  Poor  fellow.  The  Brook  157 
peacemaker  fly  To  happy  h's  imder  all  the  sky,        Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  35 

Had  built  the  King  his  h's,  Merlin  and  V.  168 

You  from  the  h  Under  the  sea-cliff.  Merlin  and  the  G.  2 

O  young  Mariner,  Down  to  the  h,  „            124 

Havock-Havoc    wrought  Such  waste  and  havock  Aylmer's  Field  640 

Made  havock  among  those  tender  cells,  Lucretius  22 

So  fierce  a  gale  made  havoc  here  of  late  Holy  Grail  729 

Haw     Nor  hoary  knoll  of  ash  and  h  In  Mem.  c  9 


Hawa-i-ee 


305 


Head 


Hawa-i-ee  (one  of  the  Sandwich  Islands)    and  freed  the  ^^     .  ,     .  _ 

people  Of  fl!  Kaptolantl 

be  mingled  with  either  on  H.  "       ^° 

and  drove  the  demon  from  H.  "       ^^ 

Hawk(s)    (5ee  aZso  Sparrow-hawk,  War-hawk)    My  gay  ,.,o^ 

young  h,  my  Rosalind :  ^  Roscdmd  34 

The  wild  h  stood  with  the  down  on  his  beak,  roet  sJ>ong  ll 

Lies  the  h's  cast,  the  mole  has  made  his  run,  Aylmer  s  Field  849 

\nd  pastime  both  of  h  and  hound,  Marr.  of  Geraintlll 

Fluttering  the  h's  of  this  crown-lusting  Une—  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  57 

Hawk  (verb)     As  when  a  hawker  Ks  his  wares.  The  Blackbird  jOi 

they  ride  away— to  h  For  waterfowl.  Merlin  and  V.  107 

Hawkard  (awkward)    An'  a  haxin'  ma  h  questions,  *^P*«*'f  ^  *  *;  ^. 

Hawker     As  when  a  /j  hawks  his  wares.  The  Blackbird  M 

This  broad-brimm'd  h  of  holy  things,  ■'■^w* /  ^  *i 

Hawk-eye    Your  h-e's  are  keen  and  bright,  .       'TtJ^ 

and  a  cheek  of  apple-blossom,  i?-e's ;  Garrt/i  and  L.  bW 

Hawking    (See  also  A-havlang)    Now /j  at  Geology  and  t-   .   ic 

schism;  ,,  ,^''*     .^'non 

Hawk-mad     Speak,  if  ye  be  not  hke  the  rest,  h-m,         Marr.  of  Geraint  280 

Hawl  (awl)    poonch'd  my  'and  wi'  the  h,  North.  Cobbler  78 

Hawmin'  (loungiifi)     an'  h  about  i'  the  laiines,  „  24 

Hawthorn  (adj.)     bury  me,  my  mother,  just  beneath 

the  /i  shade,  May  Queen,  N.Y  s.  E.  29 

that  new  life  that  gems  the  h  line ;  Prog.ofSvmig  36 

Hawthorn  (s)     Beneath  the  h  on  the  green  May  Queen,  N.  Y  s.L.lQ 

Hax'd  (asked)     An'  they  haUus  paad  what  I  h.  Village  ^tfe}^ 

\Vhen  summun  'ed  h  fur  a  son,  .   Owd  Koa  95 

Haxin'  (asking)     An'  a  /i  ma  hawkard  questions.  Spinster  sS  s.  90 

Hay    (See  also  Haay)     And  rarelv  smells  the  new-mown  h,         The  Owl  t  9 
Stuff  his  ribs  with  mouldy  h.  Vtswn  of  Sm  66 

Haze     (See  also  Sea-haze)     Spread  the  light  h  along  the  ,    r.  ^oa 

river-shores.  Gardener  sD.  264 

Purple  gauzes,  golden  h's.  Vision  of  Sin6l 

thro'  the  dripping  h  The  dead  weight  Enoch  Arden  677 

'  This  world  was  once  a  fluid  h  of  light.  Princess  ii  lib 

And  is  it  that  the  h  of  grief  In  Mem.  xxiv  9 

The  silvery  h  of  summer  drawn ;  ;' .    i  "^fof 

mingled  with  the  h  And  made  it  thicker ;  Com.  of  Arthur  4dS 

his  dream  was  changed,  the  h  Descended,  ",  ^    ,    ^i 

Far  in  the  moonlit  h  among  the  hills.  Pass,  of  Arthur  4J 

find  or  feel  a  way  Thro'  this  blind  h,  ,t.    "  j  77  moo 

heated  h  to  magnify  The  charm  of  Edith—  Sisters  (E.  and  h.)  i.^ 

Haze-hidden    to  a  height,  the  peak  U-h,  Com.  of  Arthur  4d0 

Hazel  (adj.)     about  the  may-pole  and  in  the  A  a^   Vc   jt  n 

copse,  May  Queen,  A .  x  s.  ii.  11 

deeply  dawning  in  the  dark  of  h  eyes—  LocksleyHall  28 

but  as  lissome  as  &  h  wand ;  The  Brook  W 

I  slide  by  h  covers ;  »       " j: 

Hazel  (s)     The  thick-set  ^  dies ;  ^''^'' V  f^'^     aA 

great  and  small,  Went  nutting  to  the  h's.  Enoch  Arden^ 

Down  thro'  the  whitening  h's  made  a  plunge  „        .379 

In  native  h's  tassel-hung.'  ^''r!^'  ''^  1^ 

Hazel-tree    on  the  bridge  beneath  the  h-t  ?  May  Queen  14 

Hazelwood    a /^,  By  autumn  nutters  haunted,  Enoch  Arden  I 

Hazy    Across  a /i  glimmer  of  the  west,  9,''''^7^'' ir  Ha 

Far  over  the  blue  tarns  and  h  seas,  Oare^/i  and  L.  499 

Head  (Edward)    See  Edward  Head  ^,,   -^     , 

Head  (s)  (See  also  Boat-head,  Cradle-head,  Death's-head, 
Ead,  Fountain-head,  Hattics,  Head,  Lady's-head, 
Lance-head,  Mast-head,  Shock-head,  WeU-heads)  7    a  7  « 

Madonna-wise  on  either  side  her  h  ;  Isabel^ 

Revered  Isabel,  the  crown  and  h,  j  n  • "    1  q 

Thou  wilt  never  raise  thine  h  ^  A  mrge  ly 

from  h  to  tail  Came  out  clear  plates  Two  Voices  11 

Dominion  in  the  h  and  breast.'  " 

'  The  simple  senses  crown'd  his  h :  "     „   ii. 

Beat  time  to  nothing  in  my  A  ^f%.\^-  fn 

Upon  my  lap  he  laid  his  h :  The  Sisters  17 

I  curl'd  and  comb'd  his  comely  h,  -o  1        "t  a  .A^ 

The  h's  and  crowns  of  kings ;  -P«^«f  /  ^/<  ^f 

You  put  strange  memories  in  mj  h.  J-  ^-  ^  •  <^/  ^^  '^ 

With  your  feet  above  my  h  May  Qv^een,  N.  Y  s.  E.  6Z 

i  on  his  kindly  heart  and  on  his  silver /j !  „  o/i« 

I  one  that  from  a  casement  leans  his  h,  D.  of  F.  Women  246 


Bfead  (s)  (continued)    Her  murder'd  father's  h. 
Sleep  full  of  rest  from  h  to  feet ; 
Where  faction  seldom  gathers  h, 
And  heap  their  ashes  on  the  h ; 
As  h  and  heels  upon  the  floor  They  floimder'd 
laid  his  h  upon  her  lap, 
And  May  with  me  from  h  to  heel. 
She  bow'd  down  her  h.  Remembering  the  day 
Jack,  turn  the  horses'  h's  and  home  again.' 
my  stiff  spine  can  hold  my  weary  h. 
She  sank  her  h  upon  her  arm 
a  sunny  fleck.  From  h  to  ancle  fine, 

Dropt  dews  upon  her  golden  h,  ..  — • 

shook  her  h.  And  shower'd  the  rippled  ringlets  to  her  knee ;     Godwa  46 
wide-mouth'd  h's  upon  the  spout  Had  cunning  eyes  „      56 


D.  ofF.  Women  2Q7 

To  J.  S.  75 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc. ,  13 

Love  thou  thy  land  70 

The  Goose  37 

M.  d' Arthur  208 

Gardener's  D.  81 

Dora  105 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  46 

St.  S.  Stylites  43 

Talking  Oak  207 

224 

227 


Were  shrivell'd  into  darkness  in  his  /;, 

This  proverb  flashes  thro'  his  h. 

You  shake  your  h.     A  random  string 

All-graceful  h,  so  richly  curl'd, 

power  to  turn  This  wheel  within  my  h. 

Live  long,  ere  from  thy  topmost  h 

Live  long,  nor  feel  in  /*  or  chest 

And  lay  your  hand  upon  my  h, 

Dropt  her  h  in  the  maiden's  hand. 

To  trample  round  my  fallen  h. 

Then  raised  her  h  with  lips  comprest, 

I  saw  within  my  ft  A  gray  and  gap-tooth'd  man 

In  her  left  a  human  h. 

Hollow  hearts  and  empty  h's ! 

Then  calling  down  a  blessing  on  his  h 

over  Enoch's  early-silvering  h 

He,  shaking  his  gray  h  pathetically, 

Held  his  h  high,  and  cared  for  no  man, 

'  His  h  is  low,  and  no  man  cares  for  him. 

As  when  she  laid  her  h  beside  my  own. 

those  that  held  their  h's  above  the  crowd, 

and  holds  her  h  to  other  stars, 

A  tonsured  h  in  middle  age  forlorn, 

Whose  eyes  from  under  a  pyramidal  h 

For  heart,  I  think,  help'd  h : 

made  Still  paler  the  pale  h  of  him, 

fork'd  Of  the  near  storm,  and  aiming  at  his  h, 

The  h's  of  chiefs  and  princes  fall  so  fast, 

his  own  h  Began  to  droop,  to  fall ; 

ask'd ;  but  not  a  word ;  she  shook  her  h. 

Like  her,  he  shook  his  /^. 

one  that  arm'd  Her  own  fair  h, 

moved  the  multitude,  a  thousand  h's: 

above  their  h's  I  saw  The  feudal  warrior  lady-clad; 

'  Where,'  Ask'd  Walter,  patting  Lilia's  h 

o'er  his  h  Uranian  Venus  hung, 

such  eyes  were  in  her  h,  And  so  much  grace  and  power, 

some  said  thek  h's  were  less :  Some  men's  were  small ; 

'  everywhere  Two  h's  in  council, 

axehke  edge  untumable,  our  H,  The  Princess. 

0  by  the  bright  h  of  my  little  niece. 

The  H  of  all  the  golden-shafted  firm, 

the  Muses'  h's  were  touch'd  Above  the  darkness 

says  the  Princess  should  have  been  the  H, 

The  h  and  heart  of  all  our  fair  she-world, 

He  ceasing,  came  a  message  from  the  H. 

Among  her  maidens,  higher  by  the  h, 

spoke  and  turn'd  her  sumptuous  h  with  eyes, 

'  The  H,  the  H,  the  Princess,  O  the  H ! ' 

underneath  The  h  of  Holofernes  peep'd  and  saw. 

And  partly  that  you  were  my  civil  h, 

seal'd  dispatches  which  the  H  Took  half -amazed. 

You  have  our  son  :  touch  not  a  hair  of  his  h : 

after-beauty  makes  Such  h  from  act  to  act, 

gems  and  gemlike  eyes,  And  gold  and  golden  h's ; 

Not  peace  she  look'd,  the  H  : 

'  What  fear  ye,  brawlers  ?  am  not  I  your  H  ? 

all  one  rag,  disprinced  from  h  to  heel. 

Like  some  sweet  sculpture  draped  from  h  to  foot. 

And  at  her  h  a  follower  of  the  camp, 


70 

Day-Bm.,  Arrival  15 

„  L'Envoi  1 

38 

"  Will  Water.  84 

233 

237 

Lady  Clare  55 

»  63 

Come  not,  vihen,  etc.  3 

The  Letters  19 

Vision  of  Sin  59 

138 

174 

Enoch  Arden  327 

622 

714 

848 

850 

881 

The  Brook  10 

195 

200 


A  ylmer 


s  Field  20 
475 
623 
727 
763 
834 
Sea  Dreams  116 
148 
Princess,  Pro.  33 

57 

118 

125 

i243 

m37 

147 

173 

203 

276 

405 

Hi  21 

34 
163 
168 
179 
iv  152 
176 
227 
306 
379 
407 
452 
481 
490 
498 
1)30 

57 

60 


Head 


306 


Head 


Head  (s)  {continued)    '  Lift  up  your  h,  sweet  sister :  Princess  v  64 

in  the  furrow  broke  the  ploughman's  h,  „              221 

with  each  light  air  On  our  mail'd  h's :  „              245 

Man  with  the  h  and  woman  with  the  heart :  „              449 

felt  it  sound  and  whole  from  h  to  foot,  „          vi  211 

Her  A  a  little  bent;  „              269 

Lifting  his  grim  h  from  my  wounds.  „              272 

ask  for  him  Of  your  great  h —  „              314 

That  o'er  the  statues  leapt  from  h  to  h,  „              366 

here  and  there  the  small  bright  h,  A  light  of  healing,  „          vii  58 

f ear'd  To  incense  the  H  once  more ;  „               *n 

The  gravest  citizen  seems  to  lose  his  h,  „       Con.  59 

Among  six  boys,  h  under  h,  „                83 

0  good  gray  h  which  all  men  knew,  Ode  on  Well.  35 
Hadn't  a  A  to  manage,  and  drank  himself  Grandmother  6 
we  saw  the  glisten  Of  ice,  far  up  on  a  mountain  h.  The  Daisy  36 
And  in  my  h,  for  half  the  day,  „  74 
the  singer  shaking  his  curly  h  Turn'd  as  he  sat.  The  Islet  6 
Take  the  hoary  Roman  h  and  shatter  it,  Boadicea  65 
Thy  fibres  net  the  dreamless  h,  In  Mem.  ii  3 
save  Thy  sailor — while  thy  h  is  bow'd,  „  vi  14 
Come  then,  pure  hands,  and  bear  the  h  „  xviii  9 
The  Shadow  cloak'd  from  h  to  foot,  ..  xxiii  4 
And  dippest  toward  the  dreamless  h,  ,,  xxxix  5 
God  shut  the  doorways  of  his  ft.  „  xliv  4 
When  in  the  down  I  sink  my  h,  „  Ixviii  1 
The  h  hath  miss'd  an  earthly  wreath :  ,,  Ixxiii  6 
How  pure  at  heart  and  sound  in  h,  „  xciv  1 
Their  pensive  tablets  roimd  her  h,  „  Con.  51 
And  catch  at  every  mountain  h,  „  114 
vitriol  madness  flushes  up  in  the  ruffian's  h,  Maud  I  iSl 

1  bow'd  to  her  father,  the  wrinkled  h  of  the  race  ?  „  iv  13 
walks  with  his  ft  in  a  cloud  of  poisonous  fiies.  „  54 
At  the  ft  of  the  village  street,  „  vi  10 
plucks  The  slavish  hat  from  the  villager's  ft  ?  „  a;  4 
Ah  God,  for  a  man  with  heart,  ft,  hand,  „  60 
Gorgonised  me  from  ft  to  foot  With  a  stony  British  stare.  „  xiii  21 
crest  Of  a  peacock,  sits  on  her  shining  ft,  „  xyi  17 
haunted  by  the  starry  ft  Of  her  whose  gentle  will  „  xviii  22 
Shaking  her  ft  at  her  son  and  sighing  „  xix  24 
Here  at  the  ft  of  a  tinkling  fall,  „  xxi  6 
little  ft,  sunning  over  with  curls,  „  xxii  57 
My  bird  with  the  shining  ft,  „  //  iv  45 
And  the  wheels  go  over  my  ft,  „  i)  4 
tickle  the  maggot  bom  in  an  empty  ft,  „  38 
she  is  standing  here  at  my  ft ;  „  65 
I  will  cry  to  the  steps  above  my  ft  „  101 
king  and  ft,  and  made  a  realm,  and  reign'd.  Com.  of  Arthur  19 
there  be  many  rumours  on  this  ft :  „  178 
beheld  Far  over  h's  in  that  long-vaulted  haU  Gareth  and  L.  319 
A  ft  with  kindling  eyes  above  the  throng,  „  646 
wherewithal  deck  the  boar's  ft  ?  „  1073 
Sir  Gareth's  ft  prickled  beneath  his  helm ;  „  1397 
the  women  who  attired  her  ft.  To  please  her,  Marr.  of  Geraint  62 
Sank  her  sweet  ft  upon  her  gentle  breast ;  „  527 
her  fair  ft  in  the  dim-yellow  light,  „  600 
break  perforce  Upon  a  ft  so  dear  in  thunder,  Geraint  and  E.  13 
Here  comes  a  laggard  hanging  down  his  ft,  „  60 
'  A  craven ;  how  he  hangs  his  ft.'  „  127 
Held  his  ft  high,  and  thought  himself  a  knight,  „  242 
But  one  with  arms  to  guard  his  ft  and  yours,  „  427 
There  in  the  naked  hall,  propping  his  ft,  „  581 
found  his  own  dear  bride  propping  his  ft,  „  584 
answer'd  in  low  voice,  her  meek  ft  yet  Drooping,  „  640 
The  russet-bearded  ft  roU'd  on  the  floor.  „  729 
And  hung  his  ft,  and  halted  in  reply,  „  811 
wander'd  from  her  own  King's  golden  ft,  Balin  and  Balan  513 
Or  devil  or  man  Guard  thou  thme  ft.'  „  553 
Their  h's  should  moulder  on  the  city  gates.  Merlin  and  V.  594 
Her  godlike  ft  crown'd  with  spiritual  fire,  „  837 
she  turn'd  away,  she  hung  her  ft,  „             887 

Lancelot  and  E.  54 


Head  (s)  {continued)     '  Nay,  by  mine  ft,'  said  he,  '  I 
lose  it, 
by  mine  ft  she  knows  his  hiding-place.' 
He  raised  his  ft,  their  eyes  met  and  hers  fell. 
And  mine,  as  ft  of  all  our  Table  Round, 
when  the  knights  had  laid  her  comely  ft  Low 
power  To  lay  the  sudden  h's  of  violence  flat. 
And  o'er  his  ft  the  Holy  Vessel  hung  (repeat) 
on  my  breviary  with  ease.  Till  my  ft  swims ; 
The  h's  of  all  her  people  drew  to  me, 
Make  their  last  ft  like  Satan  in  the  North. 
Working  a  tapestry,  lifted  up  her  ft, 
Lancelot,  Round  whose  sick  ft  all  night, 
fool,  said  Tristram,  '  I  would  break  thy  ft. 
sank  his  ft  in  mire,  and  slimed  themselves : 
full  passionately.  Her  ft  upon  her  hands. 
Each  with  a  beacon-star  upon  his  ft, 
and  bow'd  her  ft  nor  spake. 
Lest  but  a  hair  of  this  low  ft  be  harm'd. 
The  realms  together  under  me,  their  H, 
die  To  see  thee,  laying  there  thy  golden  ft. 
And  in  the  darkness  o'er  her  fallen  ft, 
laid  his  ft  upon  her  lap. 
And  dipping  his  ft  low  beneath  the  verge. 
Who  with  his  ft  below  the  surface  dropt 
and  dimly  knows  His  ft  shall  rise  no  more : 
When  the  effect  weigh'd  seas  upon  my  ft 
stoled  from  ft  to  foot  in  flowing  black ; 
in  Julian's  land  They  never  nail  a  dumb  ft  up  in  elm) 
on  her  ft  A  diamond  circlet, 
for  the  name  at  the  ft  of  my  verse  is  thine, 
the  boy  can  hold  up  his  ft, 
I  must  ha'  been  light  i'  my  ft — 
was  wounded  again  in  the  side  and  the  ft, 
A  hand  upon  the  ft  of  either  child, 
as  far  as  the  ft  of  the  stair. 
To  thee,  dead  wood,  I  bow  not  ft  nor  knees 
A  thousand  marks  are  set  upon  my  ft. 
that  ever  swarm  about  And  cloud  the  highest  h's, 
I  swore  I  would  strike  off  his  ft. 
like  a  golden  image  was  pollen'd  from  ft  to  feet 
Plunged  ft  down  in  the  sea, 
around  his  ft  The  glorious  goddess  wreath'd 
from  his  ft  the  splendour  went  to  heaven, 
o'er  the  great  Peleion's  ft  Bum'd, 
Or  on  your  ft  their  rosy  feet. 
This  wreath,  above  his  honour'd  ft, 
and  there  Lost,  ft  and  heart,  in  the  chances 


Lancelot  and  E.  658 
714 
1312 
1328 
1337 
Holy  Grail  310 
„  512,  520 
546 
601 
Last  Tournament  98 
129 
138 
268 
471 
Guinevere  181 
241 
310 
447 
462 
535 
583 
Pass,  of  Arthur  376 
Lover's  Tale  i  509 
636 
639 
660 
ii  85 
ii>37 
288 
To  A.  Tennyson  6 
First  Quarrel  5 
82 
The  Revenge  68 
Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  55 
In  the  Child.  Hosp.  43 
Sir  J.  Oldcastle  128 
195 
Columbus  120 
V.  of  Maddune  2 
49 
82 
Achilles  over  the  T.  4 
14 
28 
To  E.  Fitzgerald  9 
Tiresias  213 
The  Wreck  30 


She  shook  her  ft.  And  the  Motherless  Mother  kiss'd  it. 


61 

Ancient  Sage  124 

Tomorrow  79 

LocJcsley  H.,  Sixty  135 

Epilogue  47 

Bead  Prophet  55 

Demeter  and  P.  21 

83 

129 

The  Ring  313 

Happy  26 

„       81 


plunged,  and  caught,  And  set  it  on  his  ft, 
King  Had  on  his  cuirass  worn  our  Lady's  H, 
Charge  at  the  ft  of  all  his  Table  Round, 
and  tiie  h  Pierced  thro'  his  side, 


294 
304 
489 


The  palsy  wags  his  ft ; 

she  lifted  her  ft — '  He  said  he  would  meet  me 
Tumble  Nature  heel  o'er  ft, 
'  The  stars  with  ft  sublime,' 
We  needs  must  scan  him  from  ft  to  feet 
And  robed  thee  in  his  day  from  ft  to  feet — 
came  On  three  gray  h's  beneath  a  gleaming  rift. 
Those  gray  h's.  What  meant  they 
came  And  saw  you,  shook  her  ft,  and  patted  yours. 
Who  yearn  to  lay  my  loving  ft 
slant  his  bolt  from  falling  on  your  ft — 
leper  like  yourself,  my  love,  from  ft  to  heel.  „       88 

The  coals  of  fire  you  heap  upon  my  ft  Romney's  R.  141 

let  me  lean  my  ft  upon  your  breast.  „  154 

And  stand  with  my  ft  in  the  zenith,  Parnassus  6 

stared  upon  By  ghastlier  than  the  Gorgon  ft,  Death  of  CEnone  71 

Then  her  ft  sank,  she  slept,  „  78 

And  muffling  up  her  comely  ft,  „  104 

The  Christians  own  a  Spiritual  H ;  Akhar's  Dream  153 

You  have  set  a  price  on  his  ft :  Bandit's  Death  7 

do  you  doubt  me  ?    Here  is  his  ft !  „  42 

was  a  Scripture  that  rang  thro'  his  ft,  The  Dreamer  2 

Edith  bow'd  her  stately  ft,  The  Tourney  13 

Edith  Montfort  bow'd  her  ft,  „  15 

He&d  (s)     An'  'e  kep  his  ft  hoop  like  a  king,  Owd  Rod  9 

An'  the  Heagle  'as  bed  two  h's  „       25 


Head 


307 


Hear 


Head  (verb)     Heaven  Ks  the  count  of  crimes  D.  of  F.  Women  201 
to  h  These  rhymings  with  your  name,                    Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  19 

Head-blow     Some  old  h-h  not  heeded  in  his  youth  Gareth  and  L.  714 

Headed  (See  also  Bare-headed,  Brazen-headed,  Clear- 
headed, Glassy-headed,  Hoar-headed,  Hoary- 
headed,  Lean-headed,  Light-headed,  Many- 
headed,  Seven-headed,  Sharp-headed,  White- 
headed)     arrows  of  his  thoughts  were  h  And 

wing'd  with  flame,  The  Poet  11 

In  shining  draperies,  h  like  a  star,  Princess  ii  109 

Head-foremost    To  drop  h-f  in  the  jaws  In  Mem.  xxxiv  15 

Not  plunge  h  from  the  mountain  there,  Lover's  Tale  iv  41 

all  ablaze  too  plimging  in  the  lake  H-f —  The  Ring  252 

Head-heavy     thxis  he  fell  H-h ;  Last  Tournament  468 

Head-hunter    H-h's  and  boats  of  Dahomey  The  Dawn  5 

Headland     Flames,  on  the  windy  h  flare !  W.  to  Alexandra  16 

He  saw  them — h  after  h  flame  Guinevere  243 

Headless    Fly  twanging  h  arrows  at  the  hearts,  Princess  ii  402 

Headlong    and  so  hurl'd  him  h  o'er  the  bridge  Gareth  and  L.  1153 

The  damsel's  h  error  thro'  the  wood —  „             1215 

whose  inroad  nowhere  scales  Their  h  passes,  Montenegro  5 

Headstone    About  the  moss'd  h :  Claribel  12 

And  at  my  h  whisper  low,  My  life  is  full  24 

Head-waiter    0  plump  h-w  at  The  Cock,  Will  Water.  1 

H-w,  honour'd  by  the  guest  Half-mused,  „        73 

And  one  became  h-w.  „      144 

H-w  of  the  chop-house  here,  „      209 

Heagle  (eagle)     An'  the  H  'as  hed  two  heiids  Owd  Rod  25 

Heal     (See  also  All-heal)     I  will  h  me  of  my  grievous 

wound.'  M.  d' Arthur  264 

1  can  h  him.    Power  goes  forth  from  me.  St.  S.  Stylites  145 

h  me  with  your  pardon  ere  you  go.'  Princess  Hi  65 

To  spUl  his  blood  and  h  the  land :  The  Victim  44 

a  harm  no  preacher  can  h ;  Maud  I  iv  22 

h  the  world  of  all  their  wickedness !  Holy  Grail  94 

and  harm'd  where  she  would  h ;  Guinevere  355 

treat  their  loathsome  hurts  and  h  mine  own ;  „         686 

I  mil  h  me  of  my  grievous  wound.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  432 

the  hand  that  would  help  me,  would  h  me —  The  Wreck  56 

love  which  once  was  mine,  Help,  h  me.  Death  of  (Enone  46 

'  He,  whom  thou  wouldst  not  h\'  „             101 

Heal'd    To  touch  my  body  and  be  h,  St.  S.  Stylites  79 

They  say  that  they  are  h.  „         146 

He  passes  and  is  h  and  cannot  die  ' —  Gareth  and  L.  503 

he  was  h  at  once,  By  faith,  of  all  his  ills.  Holy  Grail  55 

and  all  the  world  be  h.'  „       128 
that  h  Thy  hurt  and  heart  with  unguent  and 

caress —  Last  Tournament  594 

the  woimd  that  would  not  be  h,  Def.  of  Lucknow  84 

he  h  me  with  sorrow  for  evermore.  The  Wreck  58 

blind  or  deaf,  and  then  Suddenly  h.  Ancient  Sage  176 

Healing     before  we  came.  This  craft  of  h.  Princess  Hi  320 

A  light  of  h,  glanced  about  the  couch,  „         vii  59 

while  Geraint  lay  h  of  his  hurt,  Geraint  and  E.  931 

Lancelot  might  have  seen,  The  Holy  Cup  of  h ;  Holy  Grail  655 

And  after  h  of  his  grievous  wound  Pass,  of  Arthur  450 

Health     In  glowing  h,  with  boundless  wealth,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  61 

breathing  h  and  peace  upon  her  breast :  Audley  Court  68 

Seven  happy  years  of  h  and  competence,  Enoch  Arden  82 

Now  seaward-bound  for  h  they  gain'd  a  coast,  Sea  Dreams  16 

Huge  women  blowzed  with  h.  Princess  iv  279 

I  that  have  wasted  here  h,  wealth,  and  time,  „            352 

poor  men  wealth,  Than  sick  men  h —  „             460 

As  drinking  h  to  bride  and  groom  In  Mem.,  Con.  83 

double  h,  The  crowning  cup,  the  three-times-three,  „               103 
One  bloom  of  youth,  h,  beauty.                               Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  120 

Had  set  the  blossom  of  her  h  again,  „               151 

redder  than  rosiest  h  or  than  utterest  shame,  V.  of  Maeldune  65 

life  without  sun,  without  h,  without  hope,  Despair  7 

an'  I  been  Dhrinkin'  yer  h  Tomorrow  12 

give  me  a  thrifle  to  dhrink  yer  h  in  potheen.  „         98 

I  Had  been  abroad  for  my  poor  h  The  Ring  101 

would  flower  into  full  h  Among  our  heath  „        317 

'  Muriel's  h  Had  weaken'd,  „        356 

Youth  and  H,  and  birth  and  wealth,  By  an  Evolution.  8 


Healthful     And  all  about  a  h  people  stept 

Her  countenance  with  quick  and  h  blood — 

Healthfuller    Make  their  neighbourhood  h, 

Healthly     A  h  frame,  a  quiet  mind.' 
So  h,  sound,  and  clear  and  whole, 

Heap  (s)     (See  also  Heap)     wealth  no  more  shall  rest  in 
mounded  h's, 
By  h's  of  gourds,  and  skins  of  wine. 
And  h's  of  living  gold  that  daily  grow, 
Each  hurling  down  a  A  of  things  that  rang 
crown'd  With  my  slain  self  the  h's  of  whom  I 

slew — 
I  saw  him,  after,  stand  High  on  a,h  ot  slain, 
horses  stumbling  as  they  trode  On  h's  of  ruin. 

Heap  (s)     H's  an'  h's  o'  booiiks,  I  ha'  see'd  'em. 
An  I  heiird  great  h's  o'  the  snaw 

Heap  (verb)     And  h  their  ashes  on  the  head ; 
coals  of  fire  you  h  upon  my  head 

Heaped     Of  h  hills  that  mound  the  sea, 

Heap'd-Heapt    Heap'd  over  with  a  mound  of 
grass. 
Pain  heap'd  ten-hundred-fold  to  this, 
heap'd  Their  firewood,  and  the  winds  from  off 
the  plain 


Gareth  and  L.  315 

Lover's  Tale  i  97 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  32 

Two  Voices  99 

Miller's  D.  15 

Golden  Year  32 

Vision  of  Sin  13 

Aylmer's  Field  655 

Geraint  and  E.  594 

Balin  and  Balan  178 

Lancelot  and  E.  307 

Holy  Grail  717 

Village  Wife  71 

Owd  Rod  41 

Love  thou  thy  land  70 

Romney's  R.  141 

Ode  to  Memory  98 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  67 
St.  S.  Stylites  23 

Spec,  of  Iliad  6 


heap'd  the  whole  inherited  sin  On  that  huge  scapegoat    Maud  I  xiii  41 


Heap'd  on  her  terms  of  disgrace, 
heap'd  The  pieces  of  his  armour  in  one  place, 
Tho'  heapt  in  mounds  and  ridges  all  the  sea 
Heaping    Still  h  on  the  fear  of  ill 
Heapt    See  Heap'd 

Hear     (See  also  'Ear)     at  a  burial  to  h  The  creaking 
cords  which  wound 
you  may  h  him  sob  and  sigh 
you  cannot  h  From  the  groves  within 
never  would  h  it :  your  ears  are  so  dull ; 
I  cry  aloud :  none  h  my  cries, 
I  h  the  roaring  of  the  sea. 
To  h  the  murmur  of  the  strife, 
Come  down,  come  down,  and  h  me  speak : 
I  h  what  I  would  h  from  thee ; 
Kate  will  not  h  of  lovers'  sighs. 
H  a  song  that  echoes  cheerly 
H's  little  of  the  false  or  just.' 
he  h's  His  country's  war-song  thrill  his  ears  : 
'  He  will  not  h  the  north-wind  rave, 
'  He  seems  to  ^  a  Heavenly  Friend, 
Or  from  the  bridge  I  lean'd  to  h 
H  me,  O  Earth,  h  me,  0  Hills, 
H  me,  for  I  vnll  speak, 

unheard  H  all,  and  see  thy  Paris  judge  of  Gods.' 
heard  me  not.  Or  hearing  would  not  h  me, 
mother,  h  me  yet  before  I  die.  (repeat) 
as  I  A  Dead  sounds  at  night  come  from 
H  me,  O  Earth.     I  will  not  die  alone. 
You  seem'd  to  h  them  climb  and  faU 
king  to  h  Of  wisdom  and  of  law. 
my  soul  to  h  her  echo'd  song  Throb  thro' 
that  h's  all  night  The  plunging  seas 
h  the  dully  sound  Of  human  footsteps 
h's  the  low  Moan  of  an  unknown  sea ; 
word  That  scarce  is  fit  for  you  to  h ; 
I  shall  h  you  when  you  pass, 
I  h  the  bleating  of  the  lamb. 
I  did  not  h  the  dog  howl,  mother. 
To  h  each  other's  whisper'd  speech ; 
To  h  the  dewy  echoes  calling  From  cave  to  cave 
to  h  and  see  the  far-off  sparkling  brine. 
Only  to  h  were  sweet, 
I  h  thee  not  at  all,  or  hoarse 
Ev'n  now  we  h  with  inward  strife 
like  a  horse  That  h's  the  corn-bin  open, 
h  The  windy  clanging  of  the  minster  clock ; 
'  H  how  the  bushes  echo  ! 
Yet  for  the  pleasure  that  I  took  to  h, 
blackbird  on  the  pippin  hung  To  h  him, 


II  i  14 

Geraint  and  E.  373 
Holy  Grail  798 
Two  Voices  107 


Supp.  Confessions  35 

A  spirit  haunts  5 

Poet's  Mind  19 

35 

Oriana  73 

„     98 

Margaret  23 

56 

Eleanore  141 

Kate  20 

L.  of  Shalotti  30 

Two  Voices  117 

152 

259 

295 

Miller's  D.  49 

(Enone  36 

.,      39 

„      90 

„    171 

(Enone  207, 220, 230, 245, 256 

(Enone  248 

„      257 

Palace  of  AHlO 

111 

175 

250 

275 

279 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  38 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  31 

Con.  2 

21 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  59 

94 

98 

99 

The  "Blackbird  19 

Love  thou  thy  land  53 

The  Epic  45 

Gardener's  D.  37 


228 
Audley  Court  39 


Hear 

Hear  {continued)     I  do  not  h  the  bells  upon  my  cap, 
my  ears  could  h  Her  lightest  breath ; 
About  the  windings  of  the  marge  to  h 
nor  heard  of  her,  nor  cared  to  h.  (repeat) 
I  scarce  can  h  the  people  hum 
(And  h  me  with  thine  ears,) 
And  h  me  swear  a  solemn  oath, 
that  paused  Among  her  stars  to  A  us ; 
h  These  measured  words,  my  work  of  yestermom. 
tremulous  eyes  that  fill  with  tears  To  A  me  ? 
and  could  h  the  lips  that  kiss'd  Whispering 
on  the  moorland  did  we  h  the  copses  ring. 
Thou  shalt  h  the  '  Never,  never,' 
'  0  wake  for  ever,  love,'  she  h's, 
That  lets  thee  neither  h  nor  see  : 
But  what  is  that  Ih?  a  sound 
I  A  a  noise  of  hymns : 
I  A  a  voice  but  none  are  there ; 
Let  him  h  my  song. 
H's  him  lovingly  converse. 
Before  you  h  my  marriage  vow.' 
Annie  seem'd  to  h  Her  own  death-scaffold 
H's  and  not  h's,  and  lets  it  overflow. 
Nor  ever  h  a  kindly  voice, 
'  Dead,'  clamour'd  the  good  woman,  '  h  him 
left  Their  own  gray  tower,  or  plain-faced  tabernacle 

To  A  him ; 
you  do  but  A  the  tide. 
But  wiU  you  A  my  dream. 
He,  dying  lately,  left  her,  as  I  A, 
To  A  my  father's  clamour  at  our  backs 
my  very  ears  were  hot  To  A  them : 
A  each  other  speak  for  noise  Of  clocks 
'  We  scarcely  thought  in  our  own  hall  to  A 
there  was  one  to  A  And  help  them  ? 
H  my  conditions :  promise  (otherwise  You  perish) 
then  the  Doctors  !    0  to  A  The  Doctors ! 
O  A  me,  pardon  me. 

0  hark,  0  A  !  how  thin  and  clear. 
Blow,  let  us  A  the  purple  glens  replying : 
A  A  tnmipet  in  the  distance  pealing  news 
tell  her  what  they  were,  and  she  to  A : 
we  shall  A  of  it  From  Lady  Psyche : ' 
For  thus  I  A ;  and  known  at  last  (my  work) 
we  A  You  hold  the  woman  is  the  better  man; 
A  me,  for  I  bear,  Tho'  man,  yet  human, 

1  stood  and  seem'd  to  A  As  in  a  poplar  grove 
they  hate  to  A  me  like  a  wind  Wailing 
when  I  A  you  prate  I  almost  think 
'  Amazed  am  I  to  A  Your  Highness : 
h's  his  burial  talk'd  of  by  his  friends, 
A  The  tides  of  Music's  golden  sea 
Eh ! — but  he  wouldn't  A  me — 
Harry  and  Charhe,  I  A  them  too — 
And  only  A  the  magpie  gossip 
That  it  makes  one  weary  to  A.' 
I  A  the  roll  of  the  ages, 
cannot  A  The  sullen  Lethe  rolUng  doom 
Speak  to  Him  thou  for  He  h's, 
And  the  ear  of  man  cannot  A, 
But  if  we  could  see  and  A,  this  Vision- 
Did  they  A  me,  would  they  listen, 
fl  Icenian,  Catieuchlanian,  A  (repeat) 


308 


Hear 


Edwin  Morris  56 

64 

94 

138 

St.  S.  Stylites  38 

Talking  Oak  82 

281 

I^ve  and  Duty  74 

Golden  Year  20 

Tithonus  27 

60 

Locksley  Hall  35 

83 

Day-Dm.,  Depart.  11 

„        L'Envoi  52 

Amphion  73 

Sir  Galahad  28 

30 

The  Captain  4 

L.  of  Burleigh  26 

The  Letters  8 

Enoch  Arden  174 

209 

582 

840 

Aylmer's  Field  619 

Sea  Dreams  84 

203 

Princess  i  78 

105 

135 

215 

m53 

267 

295 

421 

Hi  31 

iv  7 

11 

80 

323 

328 

347 

409 

424 

t)12 


A  it.  Spirit  of  C&sivelaitn  l    ^H%  Gods !  the  Gods 

have  heard  it. 
Till  the  victim  A  within  and  yearn  to  hurry 
I  A  the  noise  about  thy  keel ; 
I  A  the  beU  struck  in  the  night : 
And  A  the  ritual  of  the  dead. 
The  traveller  h's  me  now  and  then, 
To  A  her  weeping  by  his  grave  ? 

turn  mine  ears  and  A  The  moanings  of  the  homeless  sea, 
And  A  thy  laurel  whisper  sweet 
I  A  it  now,  and  o'er  and  o'er, 
I  A  a  wizard  music  roll, 


152 

w324 

„  vii  152 

Ode  on  Well.  251 

Grand-mother  8 

81 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  19 

The  Islet  29 

Spiteful  Letter  8 

Lit.  Squabbles  10 

High.  Pantheism  11 

17 

18 

Boddicea  8 

Boadicea  10,  34,  47 


20 

58 
In  Mem.  x  1 
2 
xviii  12 
xxi  5 
xxxi  4 
XXXV  8 
xxxvii  7 
Ivii  13 
Ixx  14 


Hear  (continued)     I  A  the  sentence  that  he  speaks; 
We  cannot  A  each  other  speak, 
hung  to  A  The  rapt  oration  flowing  free 
heart  and  ear  were  fed  To  A  him, 
I  A  a  wind  Of  memory  murmuring  the  past. 
A  The  wish  too  strong  for  words  to  name; 
And  A  the  household  jar  within. 
That  h's  the  latest  linnet  trill, 
And  sing  the  songs  he  loved  to  A. 
I  A  a  chirp  of  birds ; 
To  A  the  tidings  of  my  friend. 
And  A  at  times  a  sentinel  Who  moves  about 
A  A  deeper  voice  across  the  storm, 
I  A  thee  where  the  waters  run ; 
A  voice  as  unto  him  that  h's, 
Still !     I  will  A  you  no  more, 
I  A  the  dead  at  midday  moan. 
Did  I  A  it  half  in  a  doze  Long  since, 
Strange,  that  I  A  two  men, 
I  wish  I  could  A  again  The  chivalrous  battle-song 
The  larkspur  listens,  '  I  A,  I  A ; ' 
My  heart  would  A  her  and  beat. 
My  dust  would  A  her  and  beat. 
Do  I  A  her  sing  as  of  old, 

to  A  a  dead  man  chatter  Is  enough  to  drive  one  mad. 
I  A  A  cry  from  out  the  dawning  of  my  life, 
A  mother  weeping,  and  I  A  her  say, 
said  the  King,  '  and  A  ye  such  a  cry  ? 
To  h  him  speak  before  he  left  his  life. 
H  the  child's  story.' 
nor  sees,  nor  h's,  nor  speaks,  nor  knows. 
H  yet  once  more  the  story  of  the  child. 
H  me— this  mom  I  stood  in  Arthur's  hall, 
Than  A  thee  so  missay  me  and  revile. 
H  a  parable  of  the  knave, 
stay'd  Waiting  to  A  the  hounds  ; 
There  is  good  chance  that  we  shall  A  the  hounds 
They  would  not  A  me  speak : 
Hath  ask'd  again,  and  ever  loved  to  A ; 
thro'  the  crash  of  the  near  cataract  h's 
soldiers  wont  to  A  His  voice  in  battle. 
And  A  him  breathing  low  and  equally. 
What  thing  soever  ye  may  A,  or  see, 
I  A  the  violent  threats  you  do  not  A, 
And  ears  to  A  you  even  in  his  dreams.' 
Feeding  like  horses  when  you  A  them  feed ; 
Submit,  and  A  the  judgment  of  the  King.' 

the  judgment  of  the  King  of  kings,' 
Damsel  and  lover  ?  A  not  what  I  A.  ^„n„ 

swan-mother,  sitting,  when  she  h's  A  strange  knee  rustle  353 

1  e  scarce  can  overpraise,  will  A  and  know.  Merlin  and  V.  92 

By  Heaven  that  h's  I  tell  you  the  clean  truth,  „  343 

will  ye  A  The  legend  as  in  guerdon  for  your  rhyme  »  "  553 

And  therefore  A  my  words :  go  to  the  jousts :  Lancdotand  E.  136 

we  h  It  said  Ihat  men  go  down  before  your  spear  „  148 

as  I A  It  is  a  fair  lai^e  diamond, —  "  227 

'  H,  but  hold  my  name  Hidden,  "  415 

we  shall  A  anon.  Needs  must  we  A.'  "  635 

'  we  needs  must  A  anon  Of  him,  "  75g 

till  the  ear  Wearies  to  A  it,  "  ggg 

'Speak:  that  I  live  to  A,'  he  said,  'is  yours.'  "  928 

I A  of  rumours  flying  thro'  your  court.  '  "  1190 

'  My  lord  liege  Arthur,  and  all  ye  that  A,  "  1290 

To  A  the  manner  of  thy  %ht  and  fall ;  Pelleas  and  E.  347 

T  .n^i  7\^^^  '■  \  ?vf  '*  ^''l  ^  ^^'i  Tournament  348 

1,  and  Arthur  and  the  angels  A,  350 

lock  up  my  tongue  From  uttering  freely  what  I  freely  A  '■>   "  694 

A  the  garnet-headed  yaffingale  Mock  them :  700 

And  miss  to  A  high  talk  of  noble  deeds  Guinevere  499 

Thro'  the  thick  night  I  h  the  trumpet  559 

I  A  the  steps  of  Modred  in  the  west,  Pass  of  Arthur  59 

you  may  A  The  moaning  of  the  woman  and  the  child,   Lover's  Tale  i  519 

I  heard  and  trembled,  yet  I  could  but  A ;  570 

and  then  I  seem'd  to  A  Its  murmur,  as  the  drowning 

seaman  h's,  00  a 


In  Mem.  Ixxx  10 
Ixxxii  16 
Ixxxvii  31 
Ixxxix  23 
xcii  7 
xciii  13 
xciv  16 
clO 
cvii  24 
cxix  5 
cxxvi  3 
9 
cxxvii  3 
cxxx  2 
cxxxi  6 
Maud  Iv23 
vi  70 
vii  1 
13 
a;  53 
xxii  65 
69 
71 
II  iv  44 
1)19 
Com.  of  Arthur  332 
334 
337 
362 
Gareth  and  L.  39 
81 
100 
•     855 
945 
1008 
Marr.  of  Geraint  163 
182 
421 
436 
Geraint  and  E.  172 
174 
372 
415 
420 
429 
606 
He  A's 

799 
Balin  and  Balan  282 


Hear 


309 


Heard 


Lover's  Tale  ii  14 

iv  160 

243 

Rizpah  45 

48 

62 

82 

85 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  193 

ViUaffe  Wife  22 

70 

Def.  of  Lucknow  26 

Sir  J.  Oldcastie  42 

143 

Columbus  159 

238 

Tiresias  72 

90 

„      155 

Despair  47 

Ancient  Sage  31 

76 

The  Flight  67 

90 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  116 

262 


Hear  (continued)     Paused  in  their  course  to  h  me, 

I  say  the  bird  That  will  not  h  my  call, 

Laud  me  not  Before  my  time,  but  h  me  to  the  close. 

h  that  cry  of  my  boy  that  was  dead, 

you  know  that  I  couldn't  but  h ; 

and  mercy,  the  Lord ' — let  me  h  it  again ; 

But  I  cannot  h  what  you  say 

Nay — you  can  h  it  yourself — 

yet  she  thinks  She  sees  you  when  she  h's. 

Not  es  I  cares  fur  to  h  ony  harm, 

I  h's  es  soom  o'  thy  booiJks 

you  can  h  him — the  murderous  mole  ! 

they  came  to  h  their  preacher. 

Do  penance  in  his  heart,  God  h's  him.' 

I  shall  h  his  voice  again — 

readier,  if  the  King  would  h,  to  lead  One  last  crusade 

tum'd  upon  his  heel  to  h  My  warning 

I  can  h  Too  plainly  what  fidl  tides  of  oiiset  sap 

h,  and  tho'  I  speak  the  truth  Believe  I  speak  it, 

the  waters — you  h  them  call ! 

If  thou  would'st  h  the  Nameless, 
She  h's  the  lark  within  the  songless  egg. 
And  tho'  these  fathers  will  not  h, 
and  h  the  waters  roar, 
h  the  voices  from  the  field. 
Shall  I  h  in  one  dark  room  a  wailing, 
H's  he  now  the  Voice  that  wrong'd  him  ? 
Moon  of  married  hearts,  H  me,  you  ! 
I  h  your  Mother's  voice  in  yours. 
I  h  her  yet — A  sound  of  anger  like  a  distant  storm. 
The  storm,  you  h  Far-off,  is  Muriel — 
poor  Muriel  when  you  h  What  follows ! 
All  the  world  will  h  a  voice 
1  7t  a  charm  of  song  thro'  all  the  land, 
and  h  their  words  On  pathway'd  plains ; 
Ih  a.  death-bed  Angel  whisper  '  Hope.' 
But  1  A  no  yelp  of  the  beast, 
H  my  cataract's  Downward  thunder 
h  The  clash  of  tides  that  meet  in  narrow  seas. — 
but  we  h  Music  :  our  palace  is  awake, 
H  thy  myriad  laureates  hail  thee 
Heard    (See  also  'Eard,  Far-heard,  Half-heard,  Hard, 
Heard)     voice  of  the  bird  Shall  no  more  be  h, 
Waking  she  h  the  night-fowl  crow : 
We  h  the  steeds  to  battle  going. 
She  saw  me  fight,  she  h  me  caU, 
Hast  thou  h  the  butterflies  What  they  say 
Elsinore  H  the  war  moan  along  the  distant  sea, 
I  have  h  that,  somewhere  in  the  main. 
She  has  h  a  whisper  say. 
They  h  her  singing  her  last  song, 
H  a  carol,  mournful,  holy, 
And  h  her  native  breezes  pass, 
'  But  h,  by  secret  transport  led, 
And  oft  I  h  the  tender  dove  In  firry  woodlands 
Sometimes  I  h  you  sing  within ; 
Then  first  I  h  the  voice  of  her. 
Give  it  to  Pallas ! '  but  he  h  me  not, 
Indeed  I  h  one  bitter  word  That  scarce  is  fit 
wild  March-morning  I  h  the  angels  call ; 
wild  March-morning  I  h  them  call  my  soul, 
who  made  His  music  h  below ; 
I  h  sounds  of  insult,  shame,  and  wrong, 
Sudden  Ih  a  voice  that  cried, 
I  h  my  name  Sigh'd  forth  with  life 
h  A  noise  of  some  one  coming  thro'  the  lawn, 
We  h  the  lion  roaring  from  his  den ; 
I  h  Him,  for  He  spake,  and  grief  became 
I  h  just  now  the  crowing  cock. 
Once  h  at  dead  of  night  to  greet  Troy's  wandering 

prince,  On  a  Mourner  32 

She  h  the  torrents  meet.  Of  old  sat  Freedom  4 

half-awake  I  h  The  parson  taking  wide  and  wider  sweeps.     The  Epic  13 
What  is  it  thou  hast  seen  ?  or  what  hast  h  ? 

(repeat)  M.  d' Arthur  68,  114 


The  Ring  4 

28 

,,      118 

„      138 

„      273 

Forlorn  27 

Prog,  of  Spring  47 

82 

Romney's  R.  148 

By  an  Evolution.  19 

To  Master  of  B.  15 

Akbar's  Dream  57 

199 

„     Hymn  6 

All  Things  wiM  Die  25 

Mariana  26 

Oriana  15 

„       32 

Adeline  28 

Buonaparte  10 

//  /  were  loved  7 

L.  of  Shaiott  ii  3 

iv  26 

28 

Mariana  in  the  S.  43 

Two  Voices  214 

Miller's  D.  41 

123 

dnone  107 

„      170 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  37 

May  Queen,  Con.  25 

28 

D.  of  F.  Women  4 

19 

123 

153 

177 

222 

227 

D.  of  the  O.  Year  38 


Heard  {continued)    I  h  the  ripple  washing  in  the  reeds, 
'  I  h  the  water  lapping  on  the  crag. 
Speak  out :  what  is  it  thou  hast  h,  or  seen  ?  ' 
He  h  the  deep  behind  him,  and  a  cry  Before, 
and  h  indeed  The  clear  church-bells  ring 
Who  had  not  h  Of  Rose,  the  Gardener's  daughter  ? 
when  I  h  her  name  My  heart  was  like  a  prophet 
Born  out  of  everything  I  h  and  saw. 
Nor  h  us  come,  nor  from  her  tendance  turn'd 
all  that  night  I  h  the  watchman  peal  The  sliding  season 

all  that  night  I  h  The  heavy  clocks  knolling 
when  I  A  his  deep  '  I  will,'  Breathed, 
left  his  wife  behind ;  for  so  I  h. 
I  had  h  it  was  this  bill  that  past, 
h  with  beating  heart  The  Sweet-Gale  rustle 
nor  h  of  her,  nor  cared  to  hear, 
since  I  h  him  make  reply  Is  many  a  weary  hour ; 
That  oft  hast  h  my  vows, 
I  h  them  blast  The  steep  slate-quarry. 
Like  that  stremge  song  I  h  Apollo  sing. 
When  I  h  my  days  before  me, 
H  the  heavens  fill  with  shouting, 
She  sleeps :  her  breathings  are  not  h 
But  they  h  the  foeman's  thunder  Roaring 
Then  methought  I  ^  a  mellow  sound, 
they  that  h  it  sigh'd.  Panted  hand-in-hand 
At  last  I  A  a  voice  upon  the  slope  Cry 
Him  running  on  thus  hopefully  she  h, 
she  h,  H  and  not  h  him ; 
h  The  myriad  shriek  of  wheeling  ocean-fowl. 
He  h  the  pealing  of  his  parish  beUs ; 
h  them  talking,  his  long-bounden  tongue  Was  loosen'd. 
Because  things  seen  are  mightier  than  things  h, 


M.  d' Arthur  70 

116 

150 

184 

Ep.  30 

Gardener's  D.  51 

62 

66 

144 

182 

208 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  47 

67 

Edwin  Morris  109 

138 

Talking  Oak  25 

98 

Golden  Year  75 

Tithonus  62 

Locksley  Hall  110 

123 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep  B.  17 

The  Captain  41 

Vision  of  Sin  14 

18 

219 

Enoch  Arden  201 

205 

582 

615 

644 

766 


As  the  woman  h.  Fast  flow'd  the  current  of  her  easy  tears,    „  864 

'  Have  you  not  h  ?  '  said  Katie,  The  Brook  221 
worse  than  had  he  h  his  priest  Preach                            Aylmer's  Field  43 

H  the  good  mother  softly  whisper  '  Bless,  „            187 

And  neither  loved  nor  Uked  the  thing  he  h.  „            250 

had  Sir  Aylmer  h — Nay,  but  he  must —  „            261 

till  he  h  the  ponderous  door  Close,                  _  „            337 
thunder  from  within  the  cliiis  H  thro'  the  living  roar.      Sea  Dreams  56 

1  woke,  I  h  the  clash  so  clearly.  „        136 

often  when  the  woman  h  his  foot  Return  Lucretius  5 

for  thrice  I  h  the  rain  Rushing ;  „        26 

She  h  him  raging,  h  him  fall ;  „      276 

he  h  her  speak ;  She  scared  him ;  life !  Princess  i  185 

'  having  seen  And  h  the  Lady  Psyche.'  „      ii  211 

'  Ah — ^Melissa — you !    You  hus?'  „         331 

'  0  pardon  me  I  ^,  I  could  not  help  it,  „         332 

In  each  we  sat,  we  h  The  grave  Professor.  „         370 

like  parting  hopes  I  h  them  passing  from  me :  „      iv  173 

behind  I  h  the  pufi'd  pursuer ;  „          265 

we  h  In  the  dead  hush  the  papers  that  she  held  Rustle :  „         389 

I  h  of,  after  seen  The  dwarfs  of  presage :  „          446 

saw  the  lights  and  h  The  voices  murmuring.  „         558 

Thy  voice  is  h  thro'  rolling  drums,  „          577 

we  h  The  drowsy  folds  of  our  great  ensign  „           v7 

She  h,  she  moved.  She  moan'd,  „            71 

prated  peace,  when  first  I  h  War-music,  „          265 

h  Of  those  that  iron-cramp'd  their  women's  feet ;  „         375 

Seeing  I  saw  not,  hearing  not  Ih:  „       vil9 

My  father  h  and  ran  In  on  the  lists,  „            26 

they  h  A  noise  of  songs  they  would  not  understand :  „           39 

clamouring  on,  till  Ida  h,  Look'd  up,  „          150 

'  I've  h  that  there  is  iron  in  the  blood,  „          230 

you  had  a  heart — I  A  her  say  it —  „         234 

on  her  foot  she  hung  A  moment,  and  she  h,  „      vii  80 

I  h  her  turn  the  page ;  „          190 

I  have  h  Of  your  strange  doubts :  „          335 
His  captain's-ear  has  h  them  boom  Bellowing  victory,  Ode  on  Well.  65 

My  Lords,  we  h  you  speak  :  Third  of  Feb.  1 
Elburz  and  all  the  Caucasus  have  h;                      W.to  Marie  Alex.  13 

He  /j  a  fierce  mermaiden  cry,  _    Sailor  Boy  6 
AU  night  have  I  h  the  voice  Rave                                  Voice  and  the  P.  5 

Mad  and  maddening  all  that  h  her  Boddicea  4 


Heard 


310 


Heard 


Heard  {continued)    '  Hear  it,  Gods  !  the  Gods  have  /*  it 
a  murmur  h  aerially, 
There  I  h  them  in  the  darkness, 
When  was  a  harsher  sound  ever  h, 
I  have  h  of  thorns  and  briers. 
The  words  that  are  not  h  again. 
Before  I  h  those  bells  again  : 
We  h  them  sweep  the  winter  land  ; 
And  h  once  more  in  college  fanes 
We  h  behind  the  woodbine  veil 
The  brook  alone  far-ofi  was  h, 
And  yet  myself  have  h  him  say, 
The  roofs,  that  h  our  earUest  cry, 
h  The  low  love-language  of  the  bird 
The  flippant  put  himself  to  school  And  h  thee, 
the  world's  great  work  is  h  Beginning, 
1  h  a,  voice  '  beheve  no  more  '  And  h  an  ever-breaking 

shore 
I  h  The  shrill-edged  shriek  of  a  mother 
I  have  h,  I  know  not  whence, 
I  hno  longer  The  snowy-banded, 
I  A  no  sound  where  I  stood  But  the  rivulet 
even  then  I  h  her  close  the  door. 
All  night  have  the  roses  h  The  flute. 
For  I  h  your  rivulet  faU  From  the  lake 
That  h  me  softly  call, 
I  ^  it  shouted  at  once  from  the  top 
for  he  h  of  Arthur  newly  crown'd. 
But  h  the  call,  and  came  :   and  Guinevere 
he  h,  Leodogi'an  in  heart  Debating — 
there  was  h  among  the  holy  hymns  A  voice 
his  knights  have  h  That  God  hath  told  the  King 
h  him  Kingly  speak,  and  doubted  him  No  more 
Before  the  wakeful  mother  h  him,  went, 
we  have  h  from  our  wise  men  at  home  To  Northward, 
ascending  h  A  voice,  the  voice  of  Arthur, 
having  h  that  Arthur  of  his  grace  Had  made 
For  an  ye  A  a  music, 
I  h  thee  call  thyself  a  knave, — 
nor  have  I  h  the  voice. 
And  muffled  voices  h,  and  shadows  past ; 
nor  yet  was  h  The  world's  loud  whisper 
He  h  but  fragments  of  her  later  words, 
but  k  instead  A  sudden  sound  of  hoofs, 
thinking  that  he  h  The  noble  hart  at  bay, 
H  by  the  lander  in  a  lonely  isle, 
this  dear  child  hath  often  h  me  praise 
And  tho'  I  h  him  call  you  fairest  fair. 
And  h  one  crying  to  his  fellow,  '  Look, 
h  them  boast  That  they  would  slay  you, 
his  own  ear  had  h  Call  herself  false  : 
thought  she  h  the  wild  Earl  at  the  door, 
for  he  rode  As  if  he  A  not, 
Enid  h  the  clashing  of  his  fall, 
She  spake  so  low  he  hardly  h  her  speak, 
This  h  Geraint,  and  grasping  at  his  sword, 
tho'  mine  own  ears  h  you  yestermom — 
I  h  you  say,  that  you  were  no  tine  wife  : 
for  I  h  He  had  spoken  evil  of  me  ; 
Follow'd  the  Queen  ;  Sir  Balin  h  her  '  Prince, 
in  a  moment  h  them  pass  like  wolves  Howling  ; 
h  and  thought '  The  scream  of  that  Wood-devil 
Mark  The  Cornish  King,  had  h  a  wandering  voice, 
sat,  h,  watch'd  And  whisper'd  : 
They  h  and  let  her  be. 
and  h  in  thought  Their  lavish  comment 
I  h  the  great  Sir  Lancelot  sing  it  once, 
other  was  the  song  that  once  I  A  By  this  huge  oak, 
And  h  their  voices  talk  behind  the  wall, 
spoke  in  words  part  h,  in  whispers  part, 
Vivien,  fearing  heaven  had  h  her  oath, 
in  liLs  heart  //  murmure  '  Lo,  thou  likewise 
Elaine,  and  h  her  name  so  tost  about, 
H  from  the  Baron  that,  ten  years  before, 
she  h  Sir  Lancelot  cry  in  the  court, 


Boadicea  21 

24 

36 

Trans,  of  Homer  3 

JVindow,  Marr.  Morn.  20 

In  Mem.  xviii  20 

xxviii  16 

XXX  10 

Ixxxvii  5 

Ixxxix  50 

xcv  7 

xcviii  20 

cii  3 

10 

ex  11 

cxxi  10 

cxxiv  10 

Maud  I  ilb 

67 

„         via  9 

„        xiv  28 

„      xviii  11 

„      xxii  13 

36 

„    IlivlQ 

Com.  of  Arthur  41 

47 

140 

290 

488 

Gareth  and  L.  125 

180 

201 

317 

393 

275 

1163 

1336 

1373 

Marr.  of  Geraint  26 

113 

163 

232 

330 

434 

720 

Geraint  and  E.  59 

73 

113 

381 

452 

509 

643 

725 

740 

742 

Balin  and  Balan  57 

250 

407 

547 

Merlin  and  V.  8 

138 

146 

150 

385 

405 

631 

839 

940 

Lancelot  and  E.  55 

233 

272 

344 


Heard  {continued)     They  rose,  h  mass,  broke  fast,  and 

rode  away  :  Lancelot  and  E.  415 

She,  that  had  h  the  noise  of  it  before,  „  731 

when  she  h  his  horse  upon  the  stones,  „  980 

still  she  h  him,  still  his  picture  form'd  „  992 

the  brothers  h,  and  thought  With  shuddering,  „  1021 

chanted  snatches  of  mysterious  hymns  H  on  the 

winding  waters,  „  1408 

We  h  not  half  of  what  he  said.  Holy  Grail  43 

I  ^  a  sound  As  of  a  silver  horn  „       108 

this  Galahad,  when  he  h  My  sister's  vision,  „       139 

Galahad,  when  he  h  of  Merlin's  doom.  Cried,  „       177 

we  /j  A  cracking  and  a  riving  of  the  roofs,  „       182 

I  h  the  sound,  I  saw  the  light,  „       280 

I  saw  the  Holy  Grail  and  h  a  cry —  „       291 

'  We  have  h  of  thee  :   thou  art  our  greatest  knight,  „       603 

He  h  the  hollow-ringing  heavens  sweep  Over  him  „       678 

I  told  him  all  thyself  hast  h,  „       736 

I  h  the  shingle  grinding  in  the  surge,  „       811 

h  a  voice,  '  Doubt  not,  go  forward  ;  „       823 

But  always  in  the  quiet  house  I  h,  „       832 

I  h,  '  Glory  and  joy  and  honour  to  our  Lord  „       838 

h  the  King  Had  let  proclaim  a  tournament —  Pelleas  and  E.  10 

This  her  damsels  h,  „  200 

He  h  her  voice ;   Then  let  the  strong  hand,  „  233 

'  Thou  fool,'  she  said,  '  I  never  h  his  voice  „  255 

PeUeas  had  h  sung  before  the  Queen,  „  397 

And  h  but  his  own  steps,  and  his  own  heart  Beating,  „  416 

hast  not  h  That  Lancelot  '■ — there  he  check'd  himself  „  526 

beneath  a  winding  wall  of  rock  H  a  child  wail.         Last  Tournament  12 
he  h  The  voice  that  billow'd  round  the  barriers  „  166 

And /i  it  ring  as  true  as  tested  gold.'  „  284 

tonguesters  of  the  court  she  had  not  h.  „  393 

the  Bed  Knight  h,  and  all,  „  441 

and  I  that  h  her  whine  And  snivel,  „  449 

H  in  dead  night  along  that  table-shore,  „  463 

Nor  h  the  King  for  their  own  cries,  „  472 

h  The  hounds  of  Mark,  and  felt  the  goodly  hounds  „  502 

h  the  feet  of  Tristram  grind  The  spiring  stone  „  510 

Murmuring  a  light  song  I  had  h  thee  sing,  „  614 

H  by  the  watcher  in  a  haunted  house,  Guinevere  73 

Vivien,  lurking,  h.     She  told  Sir  Modred.  „       98 

h  the  Spirits  of  the  waste  and  weald  Moan  as  she  fled,  or 

thought  she  h  them  moan  :  „     129 

when  she  h,  the  Queen  look'd  up,  and  said,  „    164 

'  Have  we  not  h  the  bridegroom  is  so  sweet  ?  „     177 

down  the  coast,  he  h  Strange  music,  „     238 

in  the  darkness  h  his  armed  feet  Pause  by  her  ;  „     418 

H  in  his  tent  the  moanings  of  the  King  :  Pass,  of  Arthur  8 

This  h  the  bold  Sir  Bedivere  and  spake :  „  50 

Nor  any  cry  of  Christian  h  thereon,  „  128 

What  is  it  thou  hast  seen  ?  or  what  hast  h  ?  '   (repeat) 
I  h  the  ripple  washing  in  the  reeds, 
I  h  the  water  lapping  on  the  crag. 
Speak  out :   what  is  it  thou  hast  h,  or  seen  ?  ' 
He  h  the  deep  behind  him,  and  a  cry  Before, 
we  lately  h  A  strain  to  shame  us 
and  show  us  That  we  are  surely  h. 
I  too  have  h  a  sound — ^perchance  of  streams 
I  h  and  trembled,  yet  I  could  but  hear  ; 
now  first  h  with  any  sense  of  pain. 
The  hollow  caverns  h  me — the  black  brooks  Of  the 

midforest  h  me — 
H  yet  once  more  the  tolling  bell, 

I  A  a  groaning  overhead,  and  climb'd  The  moulder'd  stairs 
And  h  him  muttering,  '  So  hke,  so  like ; 
we  h  them  a-ringing  the  bell, 
For  I  h  it  abroad  in  the  fields 
you — and  what  have  you  h  ? 
'  0  mother  !  '     I  h  him  cry. 
the  first  may  be  last — I  have  h  it  in  church — 
H,  have  you  ?   what  ?  they  have  told  you 
H  !  have  you  ever  h  !  when  the  storm  on  the  doivns 
I  h  Wheels,  and  a  noise  of  welcome  at  the 

doors—  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  148 


236,  282 
238 
284 
318 
352 

To  the  Queen  it  14 

Lover's  Tale  i  365 

522 

570 

709 

a  11 

iv29 

136 

325 

First  Quarrel  21 
32 
Rizpah  13 
„  42 
„  66 
„  69 
„      71 


Heard 


311 


Heart 


Heard  {continued)    I  h  'iin  a  roomlin'  by,  VMage  Wife  122 

but  I  know  that  I  h  hini  say  '  All  very  well-        In  the  Child.  Hosp.  21 
Emmie  had /i  him.     Softly  she  caU'd  from  her  cot  „  4b 

was  a  phantom  cry  that  I  A  as  I  tost  about,  ,.  og 

The  Lord  of  the  chUdren  had /i  her,  .-  '^ 

I  h  his  voice  between  The  thunders  Columbus  145 

I  A  his  voice,  '  Be  not  cast  down.  „         lo^ 

a  hundred  who  h  it  would  rush  on  a  thousand  ^r     r  i^    7j       oa 

lances  ^- "/  Maeldune  24 

past  to  the  Isle  of  Witches  and  h  their  musical  cry—  ,,  97 


and  we  pray'd  as  we  h  him  pray, 

oft  we  two  have  h  St.  Mai-y's  chimes  ! 

cry  of  iEakidSs  Was  h  among  the  Trojans, 

Two  voices  h  on  earth  no  more  ; 

Have  h  this  footstep  fall, 

I  A  a  voice  that  said  '  Henceforth  be  blmd, 

who  h  And  h  not,  when  I  spake  of  famine, 

are  a  song  H  in  the  future  ; 

H  from  the  roofs  by  night, 

My  hands,  when  I  h  him  coming  would  drop 

I  knew  not  what,  when  I  h  that  voice, — 

brute  mother  who  never  has  h  us  groan  ! 

That  nightingale  is  h  ! 

Powers,  that  rule  Were  never  h  or  seen.' 

and  h  his  passionate  vow, 

while  I  h  the  curlews  call, 

only  h  in  silence  from  the  silence  of  a  tomb. 

Because  you  h  the  lines  I  read 

for  he  spoke  and  the  people  h, 

breathing  in  his  sleep,  E  by  the  land. 

thy  voice,  a  music  h  Thro'  all  the  yells  and 
counter-yells 

And  one  drear  sound  I  have  not  h, 

and  h  The  murmius  of  their  temples  chant- 
ing me, 

I  h  one  voice  from  all  the  three  '  We  know  not, 

So  he,  the  God  of  dreams,  who  h  my  cry, 

Voices  of  the  day  Are  h  across  the  Voices 

I  h  the  sober  rook  And  carrion  crow  cry  '  Mortgage 

I  that  h,  and  changed  the  prayer 

There  !     I  h  Our  cuckoo  call. 

My  birds  would  sing.  You  h  not. 

long  ravine  below.  She  h  a  wailing  cry, 

shouted,  and  the  shepherds  h  and  came. 

she  h  The  shriek  of  some  lost  life 

h  an  answer  '  Wake  Thou  deedless  dreamer. 

And  at  his  ear  he  A  a  whisper  '  Rome  ' 

on  to  reach  Honorius,  till  he  h  them, 

Iha.  mocking  laugh  '  the  new  KorAn  ! ' 

field  without  were  seen  or  h  Fires  of  Svittee, 

To  have  seen  thee,  and  h  thee,  and  known. 

They  h,  they  bided  their  time. 

and  /i  as  we  crouch'd  below,  The  clatter  of  arms, 

when  he  h  what  an  end  was  mine  ? 

tho'  faintly  h  Until  the  great  Hereafter. 
Heiifd     An'  I  ft  great  heaps  o'  the  snaw 
Hearer    While  thus  he  spoke,  his  h's  wept ; 

outran  The  h  in  its  fiery  course  ; 

and  all  h's  were  amazed. 

himibly  hopeful,  rose  Fixt  on  her  h's, 
Hear'st    Thou  h  the  village  hammer  clink, 

'  H  thou  this  great  voice  that  shakes  the  world. 
Hearing  (part,)     Or  h  would  not  hear  me. 

How  sweet  it  were,  h  the  downward  stream, 
H  the  holy  organ  rolling  waves  Of  sound 

fe  his  mischance,  Came,  for  he  knew  the  man 

That  shook  the  heart  of  Edith  h  him. 

Seeing  I  saw  not,  h  not  I  heard  : 

h  her  tumultuous  adversaries 

This,  Gareth  h  from  a  squire  of  Lot 

And  Gareth  h  ever  stronglier  smote, 

Not  h  any  more  his  noble  voice, 

(Who  h  her  own  name  had  stol'n  away) 

red  and  pale  Across  the  face  of  Enid  h  her  ; 

crowd,  E  he  had  a  difference  with  their  pnests, 


125 

To  W.  E.  Brookfield  3 

Achilles  over  the  T.  23 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  41 

Tiresias  27 

„       48 

„      59 

„     125 

„    140 

The  Wreck  27 

52 

Despair  98 

Ancient  Sage  20 

30 

The  Flight  83 

Lock-sley  E.,  Sixty  3 

74 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Eamley  17 

Dead  Prophet  33 

Early  Spring  24 


To  Duke  of  Argyll  7 
To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  40 

Demeter  and  P.  71 

84 

91 

The  Ring  40 

„      173 

Eappy  55 

To  Mary  Boyle  5 

19 

Death  of  CEnone  20 

56 

89 

St  Telemachus  20 

26 

77 

Akbar's  Dream  183 

195 

Bandit's  Death  4 

14 

23 

Charity  17 

Death  of  the  Duke  of  C.  16 

Owd  Boa  41 

Aylmer's  Field  722 

In  Mem.  cix  8 

Gareth  and  L.  655 

Merlin  and  V.  87 

In  Mem.  cxxi  15 

Pass,  of  Arthur  139 

(Enone  171 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  54 

D.  of  F.  Women  191 

Enoch  Arden  120 

Aylmer's  Field  63 

Princess  vi  19 

Boadicea  78 

Gareth  and  L.  531 

1141 

Marr.  of  Geraint  98 

507 

524 

Eoly  Grail  674 


Hearing  (part.)  {continued)    And  h '  harlot '  mutter'd 

twice  or  thrice. 
Hearing     (s)     Our  h  is  not  /*, 

And  in  the  h  of  the  wave. 

Yet  in  these  ears,  till  h  dies. 

Within  the  h  of  cat  or  mouse. 

But  since  her  mind  was  bent  On  h, 


Merlin  and  V.  843 

Voice  and  the  P.  35 

In  Mem.  xix^  4 

„  Ivii  9 

Maud  II  v48 

ijuu  aiiivc  iivix  ii.ui^  ..i.« ..^  V."  :,  Pelleas  and  E.  115 

even  into  my  inmost  heart  As  to  my  outward  h  :  Lover's  Tale  i  429 

nor  hope  for  a  deathless  h  !  ■^"''Tfr^ljT 

Hearsay    blamed  herself  for  telling  h  tales  :  Merhn  and  V.  951 

Hearse    Funeral  h's  rolUng  !  Forlorn  68 

Heart    (See aZso 'Art, Black-heart, Lion-heart, Woman's-  •„  r,.  « 

heart)     When  will  the  h  be  aweary  of  beating  ?     Nothing  will  Du  o 
The  cloud  fleets.  The  h  beats,  .,.  .  12 

Every  h  this  May  morning  in  joyance  is  beating    All  Ihings  will  -t^**  » 
The  ft  will  cease  to  beat ;  ,         „        '"r.     <•     •       3? 

cords  which  woimd  and  eat  Into  my  hxunan  ft,       Supp.  Lonjesswns  Ai 
And  loveth  so  his  innocent  h,  >.  52 

What  Devil  had  the /i  to  scathe  Flowers  ,.  8^ 

Albeit,  my  hope  is  gray,  and  cold  At  h,  ,.  jO* 

run  short  pains  Thro'  his  warm  h ;  »  jo^ 

0  spirit  and  h  made  desolate  !  "   r  -t-      oo 

Thro'  my  very  h  it  thrilleth  iw^«  f^ 

Upon  the  blanched  tablets  of  her  h ;  Isabel  17 

Right  to  the  fe  and  brain,  ..    ,,     ,        ^,       x     j  j  in"-     J^ 

cords  that  bind  and  strain  The  h  until  it  bleeds.     Clear-headed  i* r^endb 
my  bounding  h  entanglest  In  a  golden-netted  smile  ;  Madeline  40 

My  very  h  faints  and  my  whole  soul  grieves  A  spirit  haunts  lb 

In  the  h  of  the  garden  the  merry  bird  chants.  Poet  sMind  iZ 

Out  of  the  Uve-green  h  of  the  deUs  Sea-  Fairies  12 

My  A  is  wasted  with  my  woe,  Ormna  I 

And  pierced  thy  h,  my  love,  my  bride,  ..    4J 

Thy  ft,  my  life,  my  love,  my  bride,  ..     ** 

O  breaking  h  that  will  not  break,  "     b* 

Up  from  my  h  unto  my  eyes,  "     j^ 

Within  thy  h  my  arrow  lies,  "     °V 

Die  in  their  h's  for  the  love  of  me.  The  Mermaid  30 

Take  the  h  from  out  my  breast.  Aaetmeo 

Do  beating  h's  of  salient  springs  Keep  measure  ,.    ^o 

violet  woos  To  his  h  the  silver  dews  ?  ,,       "  .  ?« 

Encircles  aU  the  h,  and  feedeth  The  senses  Margaret  16 

The  burning  brain  from  the  true  ;*,  ....      ^^ 

And  the  h'sot  purple  hills,  Eleanore  17 

My  fe  a  charmed  slumber  keeps,  '-     ^^^ 

Her /t  is  like  a  throbbing  star.  „        ,,     ^atey 

And  either  Uved  in  either's  h  and  speech.  bormetto  -—/* 

My  hope  and  h  is  with  thee—  lo  J.M.  K.l 

But  spurr'd  at  h  with  fieriest  energy  t,       "       ,    [ 

He  thought  to  queU  the  stubborn  h's  of  oak,  Buonaparte  1 

The  A  of  Poland  hath  not  ceased  To  quiver,  Poland  6 

To  find  my  h  so  near  the  beauteous  breast  The  form,  the  form  7 

'  O  cmel  h,'  she  changed  her  tone,  Marmna  m  the  S.  69 

But  my  full  h,  that  work'd  below,  Two  Voices  U 

Nor  sold  his  h  to  idle  moans,  "         ^^^ 

A  deeper  tale  my  h  divines.  "        ^ 

His  h  forebodes  a  mystery :  "        ^ 

My  frozen  h  began  to  beat,  "         rrS 

From  out  my  sullen /i  a  power  Broke,  ..    n  fin 

And  fuU  at  h  of  trembling  hope.  Miller  s  D.  110 

Approaching,  press'd  you  h  to  h.  "         ^-^ 

And  her  h  would  beat  agamst  me,  •  ..         | ' ' 

Do  make  a  garland  for  the  h :  "        ^^° 

Round  my  true /i  thine  arms  entwine       ,  ,       ,^.      ,  "        oo^ 

still  affection  of  the  h  Became  an  outward  breathing  type,        ,,        J^a 
My  ;»,  pierced  thro' with  fierce  delight,  J'atimaO^: 

Mv  eyes  are  fuU  of  tears,  my  h  of  love,  My  ft  is  breaking, 

and  my  eyes  are  dim,  <^^one  31 

My  h  may  wander  from  its  deeper  woe.  ..      ** 

all  my  h  Went  forth  to  embrace  him  coming  ,.       o^ 

full-flowing  river  of  speech  Came  down  upon  my  ft.  „      ow 

Thou  weighest  heavy  on  the  A  within,  „r:i.  t>  i     'r  A7k 

Devil,  lai|e  in  h  and  brain.  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  5 

hollow  shades  enclosing  h's  of  flame,  .  P^ace  of  Art  241 

You  thought  to  break  a  country  h  For  pastime,        L.  C.   V.  de  ^erei 
A  h  that  doats  on  truer  charms.  ..  -•■* 


Heart 


312 


Heart 


Heart  (continued)    You  changed  a  wholesome  h  to  gall.   L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  4A 

Kind  h's  are  more  than  coronets,  „              55 

Pray  Heaven  for  a  hixman  h,  „              71 

They  say  his  /i  is  breaking,  mother —  May  Queen  22 

0  blessings  on  his  kindly  h  „  Con.  15 
music  in  his  ears  his  beating  h  did  make.  Lotos- Eaters  36 
To  lend  our  h's  and  spirits  wholly  „  C.  S.  63 
Sore  task  to  h's  worn  out  by  many  wai-s  „  86 
tho'  my  h,  Brimful  of  those  wild  tales,  D.  of  F.  Women  11 
melting  the  mighty  h's  Of  captains  and  of  kings.  „  175 
the  h  Faints,  faded  by  its  heat.  „  287 
His  memoiy  long  will  hve  alone  In  all  our  h's,  To  J.  S.  50 
Sleep  sweetlj%  tender  h,  in  peace :  „  69 
And  on  thy  h  a  finger  lays.  On  a  Mourner  11 
Teach  that  sick  h  the  stronger  choice,  „  18 
wild  h's  the  feeble  wings  That  every  sophister  Love  thou  thy  land  11 
Not  yet  the  wise  of  h  would  cease  To  hold  his  hope  „  81 
She  felt  her  h  grow  prouder  :  The  Goose  22 
The  summer  pilot  of  an  empty  h  Gardener's  D.  16 
So  blimt  in  memory,  so  old  at  h,  ,,  53 
My  h  was  Uke  a  prophet  to  my  h,  ,,  63 
we  coursed  about  The  subject  most  at  h,  „  223 
A  woman's  h,  the  h  of  her  I  loved  ;  „  230 
doors  that  bar  The  secret  bridal  chambers  of  the  h,  „  249 
h  on  one  wild  leap  Hung  tranced  from  all  pulsation,  „  259 
Make  thine  h  ready  with  thine  eyes  :  „        273 

1  beheld  her  ere  she  knew  my  h,  ,,276 
I  have  set  my  h  upon  a  match.  Bora  14 
when  his  Zi  is  glad  Of  the  full  harvest,  „  68 
gone  to  him.  But  her  h  fail'd  her ;  „  78 
'  With  all  my  h,'  Said  Francis.  Audley  Court  8 
And  all  my  h  tiun'd  from  her,  „  54 
Dipt  by  itself,  and  we  were  glad  at  h.  „  89 
I  would  have  hid  her  needle  in  my  h,  Edwin  Morris  62 
heard  with  beating  h  The  Sweet-Gale  rustle  „  109 
Until  he  plagiarised  a  h,  Talking  Oak  19 
This  girl,  for  whom  your  h  is  sick,  „  71 
with  throbbing  h  I  came  To  rest  beneath  thy  boughs  ?  „  155 
Streaming  eyes  and  breaking  h's  ?  Love  and  Duty  2 
Better  the  narrow  brain,  the  stony  h,  „  15 
Whose  foresight  preaches  peace,  my  h  so  slow  To  feel  it !  „  34 
And  to  the  want,  that  hollow'd  all  the  h,  „  61 
seem  to  lift  a  burthen  from  thy  h  And  leave  thee  freer,  „  96 
For  always  roaming  with  a  himgry  h  Ulysses  12 
and  opposed  Free  h's,  free  foreheads —  „  49 
One  equal  temper  of  heroic  h's,  „  68 
To  his  great  h  none  other  than  a  God  !  Tithonus  14 
And  bosom  beating  with  a  h  renew'd.  „  86 
with  what  another  h  In  days  far-off,  „  50 
lower  feelings  and  a  narrower  h  than  mine  !  Locksley  HaU  44 
hidden  from  the  h's  disgrace,  „  57 
tho'  my  h  be  at  the  root.  „  66 
lest  thy  h  be  put  to  proof,  „  77 
hoard  of  maxims  preaching  down  a  daughter's  h.  „  94 
Left  me  with  the  palsied  h,  „  132 
deep  h  of  existence  beat  for  ever  like  a  boy's  ?  „  140 
And  from  a  ^  as  rough  as  Esau's  hand,  Godiva  28 
That  he  upon  her  charmed  h.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  20 
Magic  Music  in  his  A  Beats  quick  and  quicker,  „  Arrival  26 
strength  of  ten.  Because  my  h  is  pure.  Sir  Galahad  4 
But  all  my  h  is  drawn  above,  „  17 
A  virgin  h  in  work  and  will.  „  24 
This  weight  and  size,  this  h  and  eyes,  „  71 
'  And  have  you  lost  your  h  ?  '  she  said ;  Edward  Gray  3 
Can  touch  the  h  of  Edward  Gray.  „  8 
'  To  trouble  the  h  of  Edward  Gray.'  „  20 
And  here  the  h  of  Edward  Gray  ! '  „  28 
And  there  the  h  of  Edward  Gray  ! '  „  36 
that  child's  h  within  the  man's  Begins  to  move  WiU  Water.  31 
I  wiU  not  cramp  my  h,  „  51 
But,  all  his  vast  h  sherris-warm'd,  „  197 
Her  h  within  her  did  not  fail :  Lady  Clare  78 
Shame  and  wrath  his  h  confounded,  The  Captain  61 
'  If  mv  h  by  signs  can  tell,  X.  of  Burleigh  2 
Thus  her  h  rejoices  greatly,  „            41 


Heart  (continued)    Shaped  her  h  with  woman's  meekness    L.  of  Burleigh  71 


Which  did  win  my  h  from  me  !  ' 

And  madly  danced  our  h's  with  joy. 

Across  the  whirlwind's  h  of  peace. 

To  waste  his  whole  h  in  one  kiss 

Pass  on,  weak  h,  and  leave  me  where  I  lie  : 

That  mock'd  the  wholesome  human  h, 

I  spoke  with  h,  and  heat  and  force, 

Every  h,  when  sifted  well. 

Hollow  h's  and  empty  heads  ! 

vulture  waits  To  tear  his  h  before  the  crowd  ! 

either  fixt  his  h  On  that  one  girl ; 

Bearing  a  lifelong  hmiger  in  his  h. 

Enoch  in  his  h  determined  all : 

But  had  no  h  to  break  his  purposes  To  Annie, 

Philip's  true  h,  which  hunger'd  for  her  peace 

For  where  he  fixt  his  h  he  set  his  hand 

He  oft  denied  his  h  his  dearest  wish. 

Out  of  full  h  and  boundless  gratitude 

Brook'd  not  the  expectant  terror  of  her  h, 

But  never  merrily  beat  Annie's  h. 

Then  the  new  mother  came  about  her  h, 

had  not  his  poor  h  Spoken  with  That, 

His  h  foreshadowing  all  calamity. 

While  in  her  h  she  yeam'd  incessantly 

James  Willows,  of  one  name  and  h  with  her. 

there  he  mellow'd  all  his  h  with  ale. 

That  shook  the  h  of  Edith  hearing  him. 

So  these  young  h's  not  knowing  that  they  loved, 

Having  the  warmth  and  muscle  of  the  h, 

And  foam'd  away  his  h  at  Averill's  ear  : 

the  according  h's  of  men  Seem'd  harder  too  ; 

fragrant  in  a.h  remembering  His  former  talks 

where  his  worldless  h  had  kept  it  warm, 

For  h,  I  think,  help'd  head  : 

Hating  his  own  lean  h  and  miserable. 

And  bad  him  with  good  h  sustain  himself- — 

down  in  flood,  and  dash'd  his  angry  h 

To  greet  her,  wasting  his  forgotten  h. 

Long  since  her  h  had  beat  remorselessly, 

from  tender  h's.  And  those  who  sorrow'd 

Whose  pious  talk,  when  most  his  h  was  dry, 

'  I  loathe  it :   he  had  never  kindly  h, 

I  had  set  my  h  on  your  forgiving  him 

what  h  had  he  To  die  of  ?  dead  ! ' 

His  angel  broke  his  h. 

bird  Makes  his  h  voice  amid  the  blaze  of  flowers : 

What  beast  has  h  to  do  it  ? 

Spout  from  the  maiden  fountain  in  her  h. 

'  0  noble  h  who,  being  strait-besieged 

And  bites  it  for  true  h  and  not  for  harm. 

And  stiU  I  wore  her  picture  by  my  h, 

my  other  h.  And  almost  my  half-self, 

with  all  my  h.  With  my  full  h  : 

think  I  bear  that  h  within  my  breast, 

A  thousand  h's  lie  fallow  in  these  halls. 

Fly  twanging  headless  arrows  at  the  h's. 

And  dear  is  sister  Psyche  to  my  h, 

when  your  sister  came  she  won  the  h  Of  Ida  ; 

I  tried  the  mother's  h. 

head  and  h  of  all  our  fair  she-world, 

My  h  beat  thick  with  passion  and  with  awe ; 

that  men  may  pluck  them  from  our  h's, 

Or  in  the  dark  dissolving  himian  h. 

Rise  in  the  h,  and  gather  to  the  eyes, 

her  h  Would  rock  the  snowy  cradle  till  I  died. 

cursing  Cyril,  vext  at  h, 

To  whom  none  spake,  half-sick  at  h,  retimi'd. 

Beaten  with  some  great  passion  at  her  h, 

block  and  bar  Your  h  with  system  out  from  mine, 

Bursts  of  great  h  and  sUps  in  sensual  mire, 

The  woman's  garment  hid  the  woman's  h.' 

Suck'd  from  the  dark  h  of  the  long  hills 

living  h's  that  crack  within  the  fire 

at  the  h  Made  for  all  noble  motion  : 


84 

The  Voyage  3 

87 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  44 

Come  not,  when,  etc.  11 

The  Letters  10 

37 

Vision  of  Sin  112 

174 

You  m,ight  have  won  36 

Enoch  Arden  39 

79 

148 

155 

272 

294 

336 

346 

493 

513 

524 

618 

683 

866 

The  Brook  76 

„    155 

Aylmer's  Field  63 

133 

180 

342 

453 

456 

471 

475 

526 

544 

633 

689 

799 

843 

Sea  Dreams  186 

200 

269 

275 

280 

Lucretius  101 

„    233 

„    240 

Princess,  Pro.  36 

174 

i38 

55 

126 

m334 

400 

402 

418 

Hi  87 

147 

163 

190 

257 

312 

iv  41 

103 

171 

223 

388 

463 

t)199 

305 

349 

379 

S83 


Heart 


313 


Heart 


i       Heart  (continued)    the  tender  orphan  hands  Felt  at  my  h, 
!  Man  with  the  head  and  woman  with  the  h  : 

i  Her  noble  h  was  molten  in  her  breast ; 

i  Win  you  the  h's  of  women  ; 

She  said  You  had  a  h — ^I  heard  her  say  it — "  Our  Ida 
has  a  h  "■ — just  ere  she  died — 

You  will  not  ?   well — no  h  have  you, 

Come  to  the  hollow  h  they  slander  so  ! 

I  cannot  keep  My  h  an  eddy  from  the  brawling  hour : 

nor  stranger  seem'd  that  h's  So  gentle, 

And  at  the  happy  lovers  h  in  h — 

And  aU  thy  h  Hes  open  unto  me. 

ill  counsel  had  misled  the  girl  To  vex  true  h's  : 

her  great  h  thro'  aU  the  faultful  Past 

two-cell'd  h  beating,  with  one  full  stroke, 

I  waste  my  h  in  signs  :   let  be. 


And  a  deeper  knell  in  the  h  be  knoU'd  ; 
What  long-enduring  h's  could  do  In  that  world- 
earthquake. 
On  with  toil  of  h  and  knees  and  hands, 
upon  whose  hand  and  h  and  brain 
Uplifted  high  in  h  and  hope  are  we, 
and  change  the  h's  of  men. 
But  h's  that  change  not, 
And  in  thy  h  the  scrawl  shall  play.' 
A  devil  rises  in  my  h, 


Princess  v  436 

449 

vi  119 

171 

234 
262 

288 
322 
„  vii  66 

108 
183 
242 
248 
307 
359 
Ode  on  Well.  59 


132 

212 

239 

254 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  44 

46 

Sailor  Boy  12 

23 


h  to  endure  for  the  life  of  the  worm  and  the  fly  ?  Wages  7 

Tear  the  noble  h  of  Britain,  Boddicea  12 

Till  she  felt  the  h  within  her  fall  and  flutter  „  81 
and  the  Shepherd  gladdens  in  his  h  :  Spec,  of  Iliad  16 
my  h  is  there  before  you  are  come.                       Window,  On  the  Hill  14 

Gone,  and  a  cloud  in  my  h,  „  Gone  6 
you  bite  far  into  the  h  of  the  house,                                    „        Winter  11 

You  have  bitten  into  the  h  of  the  earth,  „  18 
Break — you  may  break  my  h.     Faint  h  never  won —        The  Answer  8 

O  merry  my  h,  you  have  gotten  the  wings  of  love.  Ay  15 
lighten  into  my  eyes  and  my  h,  Into  my  h  and  my 

blood  !  Marr.  Morn.  15 

H,  are  you  great  enough  (repeat)  „  17, 19 
And  with  my  h  I  muse  and  say  :                                             In  Mem.  iv  4 

0  h,  how  fares  it  with  thee  now,  „                5 

But,  for  the  unquiet  h  and  brain,  „             i)  5 

but  some  h  did  break.  „            vi  8 

Doors,  where  my  h  was  used  to  beat  So  quickly  „           vii  3 

0  my  forsaken  h,  with  thee  And  this  poor  flower  „  viii  18 
And  in  my  h,  if  calm  at  all,  „  xi  15 
A  void  where  h  on  h  reposed  ;  „  xiii  6 
I,  falhng  on  his  faithful  h,  „  xviii  14 
The  darken'd  h  that  beat  no  more  ;  „  xix  2 
And  melt  the  waxen  h's  of  men.'  „  xxi  8 
And  glad  at  h  from  May  to  May  :  „  xxii  8 
Nor  could  I  weary,  h  or  limb,  „  xxv  9 
The  h  that  never  plighted  troth  „  xxvii^  10 
To  lull  mth  song  an  aching  A,  „  xxxvii  15 

1  vex  my  h  with  fancies  dim  :  „  xlii  1 
the  h  is  sick.  And  all  the  wheels  of  Being  slow.  „  .  I  3 
broke  the  peace  Of  h's  that  beat  from  day  to  day,  „  Iviii  6 
Like  some  poor  girl  whose  h  is  set  On  one  „  Za;  3 
On  some  unworthy  h  with  joy,  ,<  l^}i  7 
Can  hang  no  weight  upon  my  h  „  Ixiii  3 
You  thought  my  h  too  far  diseased ;  „  ^^i  1 
Let  this  not  vex  thee,  noble  h  !  »  Ixxix  2 
The  wrath  that  gamers  in  my  h ;  »  Ixxxii  14 
O  h,  with  kindliest  motion  warm,  ->  Ixxxv  34 
That  marry  with  the  virgin  h.  ^  108 
My  h,  tho'  widow'd,  may  not  rest  Quite  in  the  love  „  113 
in  the  midmost  h  of  grief  Thy  passion  clasps  ,>  Ixxxviii  7 
h  and  ear  were  fed  To  hear  him,  ,.  Ixxxix  22 
How  pure  at  h  and  sound  in  head,  ,>  a;cw  1 
But  when  the  h  is  full  of  din,  >.  13 
A  hunger  seized  my  h ;  I  read  Of  that  glad  year  „  xcy  21 
Their  h's  of  old  have  beat  in  tune,  ,.  ««^«  10 
He  seems  to  sUght  her  simple  h.  >.  20 
The  pulses  of  a  Titan's  h ;  ,.  cwi  32 
The  larger  h,  the  kindlier  hand ;  „        cm,  30 


Heart  {continued)     I  will  not  eat  my  h  alone, 
By  blood  a  king,  at  h  a  clown ; 
Doors,  where  my  h  was  used  to  beat  So  quickly, 
the  h  Stood  up  and  ansvver'd  '  I  have  felt.' 
And  h's  are  warm'd  and  faces  bloom, 
closed  their  gates  with  a  shock  on  my  h 
Than  the  h  of  the  citizen  hissing  in  war 
May  make  my  /i  as  a  millstone, 
passionate  h  of  the  poet  is  whirl'd  into  folly 
Keady  in  h  and  ready  in  hand, 
Kept  itself  warm  in  the  h  of  my  dreams. 
On  a  ^  half-turn'd  to  stone. 

0  h  of  stone,  are  you  flesh, 
suddenly,  sweetly,  my  h  beat  stronger 
Sick,  sick  to  the  h  of  Ufe,  am  I. 
Ah  God,  for  a  man  with  h,  head,  hand. 
Set  in  the  h  of  the  carven  gloom, 
drown  His  h  in  the  gross  mud-honey  of  town, 
Catch  not  my  breath,  O  clamorous  h, 
shook  my  h  to  think  she  comes  once  more ; 
Dear  h,  I  feel  with  thee  the  drowsy  spell. 
My  own  h's  h,  my  ownest  own,  farewell ; 
Beat  with  my  h  more  blest  than  /*  can  tell. 
And  that  dead  man  at  her  h  and  mine : 
From  him  who  had  ceased  to  share  her  h, 
A  desire  that  awoke  in  the  h  of  the  child, 
To  the  faults  of  his  h  and  mind. 
There  is  but  one  With  whom  she  has  h  to  be  gay. 
My  h  would  hear  her  and  beat. 
It  will  ring  in  my  h  and  my  ears, 
little  h's  that  know  not  how  to  forgive : 
Shall  I  nurse  in  my  dark  /», 
Courage,  poor  h  of  stone ! 
Courage,  poor  stupid  h  of  stone. — 
H's  with  no  love  for  me : 
And  my  ^  is  a  handful  of  dust, 
surely,  some  kind  h  will  come  To  bury  me, 
it  is  time,  O  passionate  h'  said  I 
'  It  is  time,  0  passionate  h  and  morbid  eye, 
the  ^  of  a  people  beat  with  one  desire ; 
flames  The  blood-red  blossom  of  war  with  a  h  of  fire, 
We  have  proved  we  have  h's  in  a  cause, 
inheritance  Of  such  a  life,  a  h, 
the  spike  that  split  the  mother's  h 
A  doubt  that  ever  smoulder'd  in  the  h's 
And  in  the  h  of  Arthur  joy  was  lord, 
when  he  heard,  Leodogran  in  h  Debating — 
bold  in  h  and  act  and  word  was  he, 
there  be  those  who  hate  him  in  their  h's. 
Bewildering  h  and  eye — 
comforted  my  h.  And  dried  my  tears. 
But  brake  his  very  h  in  pining  for  it, 
and  tourney-falls.  Frights  to  my  h ; 
Albeit  in  mine  own  h  I  knew  him  King, 
felt  his  young  h  hammering  in  his  ears, 
In  token  of  true  h  and  fealty. 
h  of  her  good  horse  Was  nigh  to  burst  with  violence 
Gareth  panted  hard,  and  his  great  h, 
lets  His  h  be  stirr'd  with  any  foolish  heat 
Sent  all  his  h  and  breath  thro'  all  the  horn, 
with  true  h  Adored  her,  as  the  stateliest 
Low  to  her  own  h  piteously  she  said : 
Our  hoard  is  little,  but  our  h's  are  great,  (repeat) 
grateful  is  the  noise  of  noble  deeds  To  noble  h's 

1  seem  to  suffer  nothing  h  or  limb, 
'  Well  said,  true  h'  replied  Geraint, 
Yniol's  h  Danced  in  his  bosom, 
Tell  her,  and  prove  her  h  toward  the  Prince.' 
their  converse  in  the  hall,  Proving  her  h : 
Glow'd  like  the  hoi  a,  great  fire  at  Yule, 
softly  to  her  own  sweet  h  she  said : 
her  h  All  overshadow'd  by  the  foolish  dream, 
felt  that  tempest  brooding  round  his  h, 
there  he  broke  the  sentence  in  his  h  Abruptly, 
great  plover's  human  whistle  amazed  Her  h, 


In  Mem.  cviii  3 

„  cxi  4 

„        cxix  1 

cxxiv  15 

Con.  82 

Maud  I  i  15 

24 

31 

ii)39 

»9 

vi  18 

78 

79 

via  8 

X  36 

60 

xiv  11 

xvi  5 

31 

xviii  10 

72 

74 

82 

xix  9 

30 

48 

68 

xxii  20 

69 

//i35 

44 

ii  55 

//  Hi  1 

5 

iv  94 

v3 

102 

III  vim 

32 

49 

53 

55 

Bed.  of  Idylls  33 

Com.  of  A  rihur  38 

64 

124 

140 

176 

179 

300 

349 

Gareth  and  L.  51 

90 

123 

322 

399 

762 

1126 

1178 

1369 

Marr.  of  Geraint  19 

85 

„    352,374 

438 

472 

474 

504 

513 

521 

559 

618 

674 

Geraint  and  E.  11 

41 

50 


Heart 


314 


Heart 


Merlin 


Heart  (continued)     Enid  ponder'd  in  her  h,  and  said : 

(repeat)  Geraint  and  E.  64,  130 

disedge  The  sharpness  of  that  pain  about  her  h :  „  190 

Here  in  the  h  of  waste  and  wilderness, 
fell  asleep,  and  Enid  had  no  h  To  wake  him, 
sadden'd  all  her  h  again. 

has  your  palfrey  h  enough  To  bear  his  armour  ? 
to  his  own  h, '  She  weeps  for  me : '  (repeat) 
As  all  but  empty  h  and  weariness 
She  felt  so  blunt  and  stupid  at  the  h : 
hand  to  hand  beneath  her  husband's  h, 
mist  Like  that  which  kept  the  h  of  Eden  green 
(With  one  main  purpose  ever  at  my  h) 
His  very  face  with  change  of  h  is  changed. 
Edyni  has  done  it,  weeding  all  his  h 
set  up  a  stronger  race  With  h's  and  hands, 
vigorously  yet  mildly,  that  all  h's  Applauded, 
spirit  of  his  youth  retum'd  On  Arthur's  h  ; 
maidens  often  laugh  When  sick  at  h, 
Brave  h's  and  clean !  and  yet — 
Mark  was  half  in  h  to  hurl  his  cup 
The  h's  of  all  this  Order  in  mine  hand — 
Who  feels  no  A  to  ask  another  boon. 
Lo  now,  what  h's  have  men ! 

brought  Her  own  claw  back,  and  wounded  her  own  h. 
Without  the  full  h  back  may  merit  well 
that  full  h  of  yours  Whereof  ye  prattle, 
The  rustiest  iron  of  old  fighters'  h's ; 
Merlin  to  his  own  h,  loathing,  said : 
colours  of  the  h  that  are  not  theirs. 
'  Stabb'd  through  the  h's  affections  to  the  h ! 
I  should  have  found  in  him  a  greater  h. 
he  let  his  wisdom  go  For  ease  of  h, 
from  his  knees,  Half-nestled  at  his  h, 
own  gross  h  Would  reckon  worth  the  taking  ? 
The  vast  necessity  of  h  and  life. 

in  his  A  Heard  murmurs  '  Lo,  thou  likewise  Lancelot  i 

a  h  Love-loyal  to  the  least  wish  of  the  Queen 
Low  to  her  own  h  said  the  lily  maid. 
She  braved  a  riotous  h  in  asking  for  it. 
reverence,  Dearer  to  true  young  h's 
To  which  it  made  a  restless  h. 
With  smiling  face  and  frowning  h, 
That  Lancelot  is  no  more  a  lonely  h. 
kept  The  one-day-seen  Sir  Lancelot  in  her  h, 
And  changed  itself  and  echo'd  in  her  h, 
And  in  her  h  she  answer'd  it  and  said, 
and  in  her  h  she  laugh'd,  Because  he  had  not  loosed  it 
her  h's  sad  secret  blazed  itself  In  the  h's  colours 
Making  a  treacherous  quiet  in  his  h, 
speak  the  wish  most  near  to  your  true  h ; 
a  stupid  h  To  interpret  ear  and  eye, 
the  heat  is  gone  from  out  my  h, 
And  parted,  laughing  in  his  courtly  h. 
in  my  h  of  h's  I  did  acknowledge  nobler. 
To  loyal  h's  the  value  of  all  gifts  Must  vary 
For  all  true  h's  be  blazon'd  on  her  tomb 
To  doubt  her  pureness  were  to  want  a  h — 
'  Ah  simple  h  and  sweet.  Ye  loved  me,  damsel, 
Arthur's  greatest  knight,  a  man  Not  after  Arthur's  h ! 
and  wrought  into  his  7j  A  way  by  love 
men's  h's  became  Clean  for  a  season, 
'  I  know  not,  for  thy  h  is  pure  as  snow.' 
I  was  lifted  up  in  h,  and  thought 
And  every  homely  secret  in  their  h's, 
that  one  only,  who  had  ever  Made  my  h  leap ; 
maiden,  all  my  h  Went  after  her  with  longing: 
And  the  Quest  faded  in  my  h. 
to  warm  My  cold  h  with  a  friend: 
Small  h  was  his  after  the  Holy  Quest : 
strove  To  tear  the  twain  asunder  in  my  h, 
and  in  her  h  She  mutter'd, '  I  have  lighted  on  a  fool,  Pdleas  and  E.  112 
his  helpless  h  Leapt,  and  he  cried,  „  130 

More  bondsman  in  his  h  than  in  his  bonds.  „  239 

thro'  his  h  The  fire  of  honour  and  all  noble  deeds  „  277 


313 
369 
445 
489 
587,  590 
652 
747 
767 
770 
831 
899 
906 
941 
957 

Balin  and  Balan  22 
498 
and  V.  29 
30 
56 
382 
442 
500 
534 
548 
574 
790 
822 
868 
873 
893 
905 
916 
925 
and  E.  54 
88 
319 
359 
419 
550 
553 
602 
747 
782 
786 
808 
836 
883 
914 
941 
1116 
1176 
1210 
1214 
1344 
1377 
1393 
1420 
Holy  Grail  10 
90 
97 
361 
552 
580 
582 
600 
619 
657 
786 


Heart  (continued)     vext  his  h,  And  marr'd  his  rest —  Pelleas  and  E.  398 

heard  but  his  own  steps,  and  his  own  h  Beating,  ,,  416 

Black  as  the  harlot's  h — hollow  as  a  skull !  „  468 

the  words  were  flash'd  into  his  h  „  503 

hard  hLs  eyes;   harder  his /i  Seem 'd;  „  512 

Peace  at  his  h,  and  gazing  at  a  star  „  559 

Hath  the  great  h  of  knighthood  in  thee  fail'd  „  596 

yeam'd  to  shake  The  burthen  off  his  h  Last  Tournament  180 

Strength  of  h  And  might  of  limb,  „  197 

It  frighted  all  free  fool  from  out  thy  h ;  „  307 

But  in  the  h  of  Arthur  pain  was  lord.  „  486 

and  felt  the  goodly  hounds  Yelp  at  his  h,  „  504 

heal'd  Thy  hurt  and  h  with  unguent  and  caress —  „  595 

meats  and  wines,  and  satiated  their  h's —  „  725 

Rankled  in  him  and  ruffled  all  his  h,  Guinevere  49 

Sing,  and  unbind  my  h  that  I  may  weep.'  „       166 

Then  to  her  own  sad  h  mutter'd  the  Queen,  „       213 

Far  on  into  the  rich  h  of  the  west : 
Sigh'd,  and  began  to  gather  h  again, 
loathsome  opposite  Of  all  my  h  had  destined  did  obtain 
could  speak  Of  the  pure  h,  nor  seem  to  glance 
Better  the  King's  waste  hearth  and  aching  h 
while  I  weigh'd  thy  h  with  one  Too  wholly  true 
For  mockery  is  the  fume  of  Uttle  h's. 
left  me  hope  That  in  mine  own  h  I  can  live  down  sin 
and  her  h  was  loosed  Within  her,  and  she  wept 
Eight  well  in  h  they  know  thee  for  the  King, 
till  all  his  h  was  cold  With  formless  fear ; 

0  Bedivere,  for  on  my  h  hath  fall'n  Confusion, 
that  takes  The  h,  and  sometimes  touches 
As  tho'  there  beat  a  h  in  either  eye ; 
deep  vault  where  the  h  of  Hope  Fell  into  dust. 
The  grasp  of  hopeless  grief  about  my  h, 
Or  from  the  after-fulness  of  my  h, 
neither  Love,  Warm  in  the  h,  his  cradle, 
Camilla  close  beneath  her  beating  h, 
Who  had  a  twofold  claim  upon  my  h, 
H  beating  time  to  h,  lip  pressing  lip, 
More  warmly  on  the  h  than  on  the  brow, 
the  naked  poisons  of  his  h  In  his  old  age.' 
my  inmost  A  As  to  my  outward  hearing : 
(A  visible  link  into  the  home  of  my  h), 
love,  soul,  spirit,  and  h  and  strength. 
Love  wraps  his  wings  on  either  side  the  h, 
words  stole  with  most  prevailing  sweetness  Into  my  h, 
And  soul  and  h  and  body  are  all  at  ease : 
My  h  paused — my  raised  eyeHds  would  not  fall, 
For  all  the  secret  of  her  inmost  h. 
For  in  the  sudden  anguish  of  her  h  Loosed 
syllables,  that  strove  to  rise  From  my  full  h. 
deals  comfortable  words  To  h's  wounded  for  ever ; 
let  my  h  Break  rather — 
There  be  some  h's  so  airily  built. 
Alone,  and  in  the  h  of  the  great  forest, 
motions  of  my  h  seem'd  far  within  me. 
Makes  the  h  tremble,  and  the  sight  run  over 
and  each  h  Grew  closer  to  the  other. 
My  h  was  cloven  with  pain ; 

1  turn'd :  my  h  Shrank  in  me, 

the  bells,  Those  marriage-bells,  echoing  in  ear  and  h — 
as  he  said,  that  once  was  loving  h's,  H's  that  had  beat 

with  such  a  love 
placing  his  true  hand  upon  her  h,  '  O,  you  warm  h,' 

he  moaned. 
It  beat — the  h — it  beat :  Faint — but  it  beat : 
Raving  of  dead  men's  dust  and  beating  h's. 
Talk  of  lost  hopes  and  broken  h  1 
Yet  glowing  in  a  A  of  ruby — 
The  beauty  that  is  dearest  to  his  h — 
'  0  my  h's  lord,  would  I  could  show  you,'  he  says, 

'  Ev'n  my  h  too.' 
To  show  you  what  is  dearest  to  my  h,  And  my  h  too. 
while  I  show  you  all  my  h.' 
I  felt  that  my  h  was  hard. 
So  I  knew  my  h  was  hard, 


244 
368 
492 
502 
524 
540 
633 
636 
667 
Pass,  of  Arthur  63 

97 
143 
Lover's  Tale  i  17 

34 

94 
126 
146 
158 
203 
210 
260 
328 
356 
428 
431 
460 
467 
554 
556 
571 
588 
702 
712 
718 
737 
803 
ii  3 

54 
156 
186 
200 
Hi  37 
iv3 

68 

75 
80 
140 
176 
196 
249 

250 
252 
353 

First  Quarrel  76 
78 


Heart 


315 


Hearth 


Heart  (continued)     But  the  night  has  crept  into  my  h,  Rtzpah  16 

But  not  the  black  h  of  the  lawyer  who  kill'd  him  „       40 

Revenge  ran  on  sheer  into  the  h  of  the  foe,  The  Revenge  33 
I  could  stamp  my  image  on  her  h  !                          Sisters  (E.  and  E)  195 

cold  h  or  none — No  bride  for  me.  „               201 

answer  of  full  h  I  had  from  her  at  first.  „               259 

But  he  sent  a  chill  to  my  /t  when  I  saw  him  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  2 
gratefuUest  h  I  have  found  in  a  child  of  her 

years —  »              ^^ 

Wan,  but  as  pretty  as  h  can  desire,  „              40 

we  were  English  in  h  and  in  limb,  Bef.  of  Lucknow  46 

Rifleman,  true  is  your  h,  •         "  j       7    ioq 

Burst  vein,  snap  sinew,  and  crack  h,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  123 

Do  penance  in  his  h,  God  hears  him.'  „               143 

lifted  hand  and  h  and  voice  In  praise  to  God  Columbus  16 

ran  into  the  h's  of  my  crew,  V.  of  Maeldwne  33 

rang  into  the  h  and  the  brain,  „            110 

all  their  h's  Were  troubled,  Achilles  over  the  T.  23 

The  boundless  yearning  of  the  Prophet's  h —  Tiresias  81 

I  never  have  wrong'd  his  h,  The  Wreck  14 

and  there  Lost,  head  and  h,  in  the  chances  of  dividend,  ,.          30 

I  closed  my  h  to  the  gloom ;  ,.           38 

the  ft  of  a  listening  crowd —  ^          47 

the  h  that  was  wise !  "          56 
what  a  h  was  mine  to  forsake  her  even  for  you.'     '  Never 

the  h  among  women,'  he  said,  »          95 

'  The  h  !  not  a  mother's  h,  ..          9  • 
for  the  h  of  the  father  will  care  for  his  own.'     *  The  h  of 

the  father  will  spurn  her,'  ,-          98 

•  The  h,  the  h\' I  kiss'd  him,  ,.        105 

Who  had  borne  my  flower  on  her  hireling  h;  ,,        143 

and  the  human  h,  and  the  Age.  Despair  40 

Struck  hard  at  the  tender  h  of  the  mother,  „       74 

And  Hope  will  have  broken  her  h,  ..       92 

And  leave  him,  blind  of  h  and  eyes.  Ancient  Sage  113 

that  world-prophet  in  the  h  of  man.  „            213 

send  the  day  into  the  darken'd  h;  "    x,,-  ,.  oq 

daughter  yield  her  life,  h,  soul  to  one —  The  Flight  2V> 

love  that  keeps  this  h  alive  beats  on  it  ..         35 

And  yet  mj[  ft  is  ill  at  ease,  •■        97 

With  breaking  h's,  without  a  friend,  ••       100 

every  h  that  loves  with  truth  is  equal  to  endure.  „      104 

set  me  h  batin'  to  music  wid  ivery  word !  Tomorrow  34 

wid  a  fe  and  a  half,  me  darlin',  ...       39 

She  that  in  her  /t  is  brooding  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  23 
Woman  to  her  inmost  h,  and  woman  to  her  tender 

feet,  "              50 

Pining  for  the  stronger  h  that  once  had  beat  ..              "^ 

Shape  your  h  to  front  the  hour,  ..            106 

men  Were  soldiers  to  her  h's  desire.  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  25 

In  the  h  of  the  Russian  hordes.  Heavy  Brigade  50 

'  The  song  that  nerves  a  nation's  h,  Epilogue  81 

The  red  '  Blood-eagle  '  of  liver  and  h ;  Dead  Prophet  71 

'  See,  what  a  little  h,'  she  said,  ..      .     ^5 

0  h,  look  down  and  up  Serene,  Early  Spring  27 
Thou  livest  in  all  h's,  Epii.  on  Gordon  6 
be  thy  h  a  fortress  to  maintain  The  day  To  Duke  of  Argyll  b 
To  all  the  loyal  h's  who  long  To  keep  Hands  all  Round  Id 
One  with  Britain,  h  and  soul !  Open  I.  andC.  Exhib.  38 
thank  thee  with  our  voice,  and  from  the  h.  To  W.  C.  Macreadyi 
a  multitude  Loval,  each,  to  the  h  of  it.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  21 
Let  the  maim'd  in  his  h  rejoice  »  ^ 
All  your  h's  be  in  harmony,  »       ,  „  ^f 

1  feel  the  deathless  h  of  motherhood  Demeter  and  r.  41 
I  thridded  the  black  h  of  all  the  woods,  ..  69 
Stirs  up  again  in  the  h  of  the  sleeper,  K.V^^^.^  o 
Moon  of  married  h's,  Hear  me,  you  !  l  "■^  ■"*'*?.^ 
Hubert  weds  in  you  The  fe  of  Love.  ..  °^ 
No  voice  for  either  spoke  within  my  h  ..  ^^q 
Shrined  him  within  the  temple  of  her  h,  -.,  ^^ 
call  thro'  this  '  lo  t'amo  '  to  the  h  Of  Miriam ;  "  Q«t 
she  makes  Her  h  a  mirror  that  reflects  but  you.'  „  dbb 
Her  h  !  1  gazed  into  the  mirror,  ..  ^"O 
flung  herself  Against  my  h,  »  ^^^ 
And  eased  her  h  of  madness  .  .  .  l<orlorn  »J 


Heart  (continued)    leper  plague  may  scale  my  skin  but 

never  taint  my  h  ;  Happy  27 

Within  the  bloodless  h  of  lowly  flowers  Prog,  of  Spring  84 

in  the  /*  of  this  most  ancient  realm  „             102 

'  Beat,  little  h — I  give  you  tliis  and  this '  Romney's  R.  1 

claspt  our  infant  daughter,  h  to  h.  „            77 

'  Beat  upon  mine,  little  h !  „            94 

'  Beat  little  h '  on  this  fool  brain  of  mine.  „          155 

The  Gods  Avenge  on  stony  h's  Death  of  (Enone  41 

I  am  poison'd  to  the  h.'  „               46 

There,  like  a  creature  frozen  to  the  h  „               73 

in  his  h  he  cried  '  The  call  of  God  ! '  St.  Telemachus  27 

thro'  all  the  nobler  h's  In  that  vast  Oval  ,,            72 

belongs  to  the  h  of  the  perfume  seller.  Akbar's  D.,  Incrip.  9 

Still  I  raised  my  h  to  heaven,  Akbar's  Dream  6 

wann'd  but  by  the  h  Within  them,  „           132 

how  deep  a  well  of  love  My  h  is  for  my  son,  „          171 

gladdening  human  h's  and  eyes.  ,,  Hymn  2 

True  gentleman,  h,  blood  and  bone,  Bandit's  Death  2 

Hush'd  as  the  h  of  the  grave,  „            26 

crazed  With  the  grief  that  gnaw'd  at  my  h,  „            39 

Men,  with  a  h  and  a  soul.  The  Dawn  18 

creeds  be  lower  than  the  h's  desire  !  Faith  5 

Heart-aflBuence    H-a  in  discursive  talk  In  Mem.  cix  1 

Heart-beat    An  earthquake,  my  loud  h-b's,  Lover's  Tale  ii  193 

Heart-broken    he  pass'd  his  father's  gate,  H-b,  Dora  51 

Heart-disease    He  suddenly  dropt  dead  of  h-d.'  Sea  Dreams  274 

'  Dead  ?  he  ?  of  h-d  ?  what  heart  had  he  To  die  of  ?                „          275 
Hearted    See  Cruel-hearted,  Eager-hearted,  Eunuch-hearted, 

Evil-hearted,  Faint-hearted,  Gentle-hearted,  Honey- 
hearted,  Human-hearted,  Icy-hearted,  Iron-hearted, 
Kindly  -  hearted,   Loyal  -  hearted.  Noblest  -hearted. 

Open  -  hearted.  Ruddy  -  hearted,  Simple  -  hearted, 
Shallow  -  hearted.  Sweet-hearted,  Tenderest-hearted, 
Traitor-hearted,  Truer-hearted 

Hearten    Cry  thro'  the  sense  to  h  trust  In  Mem.  cxyi  7 

Heart-free    From  which  I  escaped  h-f,  Maud  I  ii  11 
Hearth    (^See  aZso  Hall-hearth,  Lay-hearth)    For  surely 

now  our  household  h's  are  cold :  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  72 

'  pick'd  the  eleventh  from  this  h  The  Epic  41 

an  idle  king,  By  this  still  h,  Ulysses  2 

Keep  a  clean  h  and  a  clear  fire  for  me,  Enoch  Arden  192 

ten  years.  Since  Enoch  left  his  h  and  native  land,  „          360 

so  genial  was  the  h :  And  on  the  right  hand  of  the 

Jl  tlG  Saw  )'               |4»> 

on  the  left  hand  of  the  h  he  saw  The  mother  „          753 

Would  shatter  aU  the  happiness  of  the  h.  „          770 

warm-blue  breathings  of  a  hidden  h  Aylmer's  Field  155 

On  either  side  the  h,  indignant ;  „            288 

face  Meet  for  the  reverence  of  the  h,  ,.            333 

who  beside  your  h's  Can  take  her  place —  „            735 

strangers  at  my  h  Not  welcome,  Lucretius  15S 

Two  heads  in  council,  two  beside  the  h.  Princess  ii  173 

household  talk,  and  phrases  of  the  h,  „          315 

Man  for  the  field  and  woman  for  the  h;  „       v  447 

the  fires  of  Hell  Mix  with  hish:  ,,455 

we  will  make  it  faggots  for  the  h,  „        »t  45 

Till  happier  times  each  to  her  proper  h:  „          303. 

azure  pillars  of  the  h  Arise  to  thee ;  „     vii  216 

land  whose  h's  he  saved  from  shame  Ode  on  Well.  225 

For  by  the  h  the  children  sit  In  Mem.  xx  13 

weave  The  holly  round  the  Christmas  h ;  „          xxx  2 

weave  The  holly  round  the  Christmas  h ;  „     Ixxviii  2 

and  prey  By  each  cold  h,  .,     xcviii  18 

father  Lot  beside  the  h  Lies  Uke  a  log,  Gareth  and  L.  74 

rend  In  pieces,  and  so  cast  it  on  the  h.  ,.             401 

Rose,  and  high-arching  over-brow'd  the  h.  „             408 

rend  the  cloth  and  cast  it  on  the  h.  „            418 

labour  him  Beyond  his  comrade  of  the  h,  „            485 

But  one  was  counter  to  the  /*,  „            672 

We  lack  thee  by  the  h.'  „            754 

My  champion  from  the  ashes  of  his  h.'  „            899 

kitchen-knave  among  the  rest  Fierce  was  the  h,  „          1010 

wear  your  costly  gift  Beside  your  own  warm  h,  Mart,  of  Geraint  820 

Thus,  as  a  /i  lit  in  a  mountain  home,  Balin  and  Balan  231 


Merlin  and  V.  110 

Guinevere  524 

V.  of  Maeldune  32 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  19 

Demeter  and  P.  76 

Vastness  1 

Prog,  of  Spring  52 

Princess,  Pro.  166 

Guinevere  64 

Maud  /  i  24 


Hearth  316 

Hearth  (continued)     that  gray  cricket  chirpt  of  at 
our  h — 
Better  the  King's  waste  h  and  aching  heart 
And  the  roof  sank  in  on  the  h, 
their  hoards  and  their  h's  and  their  homes. 
The  jungle  rooted  in  his  shatter'd  h, 
Many  a  h  upon  our  dark  globe  sighs 
Make  all  true  h's  thy  home. 

Hearth-flower    The  little  h-f  Lilia. 

Heart-hiding    H-h  smile,  and  gray  persistent  eye : 

Hearthstone    hissing  in  war  on  his  own  h  ? 

Heartily     they  ran  To  greet  his  hearty  welcome  h ;  Enoch  Arden  350 

Heartless    Insolent,  brainless,  h !  Aylmer's  Field  368 

Heart-weary    H-w  and  overdone !  The  Dreamer  18 

Hearty     {See  also  'Arty)     they  ran  To  greet  his  h 

welcome  heartily ;  Enoch  Arden  350 

Heart-yearning    deep  h-y's,  thy  sweet  memories  Last  Tournament  579 

Heat  (s)    (See  also  After-heat,  'Eat,  Heat,  Hell-heat) 

hollows  of  the  fringed  hills  In  summer  h's,  Sufp.  Confessions  154 

Clear,  without  h,  undying,  Isabel  3 

Close-latticed  to  the  brooding  h,  Mariana  in  the  S.  3 

But  day  increased  from  h  to  h,  „              39 

P>om  htoh  the  day  decreased,  „              78 

That  h  of  inward  evidence,  Two  Voices  284 

Remembering  its  ancient  h.  „          423 

Throbbing  thro'  all  thy  h  and  light,  Fatima  4 

and  the  heart  Faints,  faded  by  its  h.  D.  of  F.  Women  288 

if  in  noble  h  Those  men  thine  arms  withstood,  England  and  A  mer.  6 

Rain,  wind,  frost,  h,  hail,  damp,  St.  S.  Stylites  16 

Then  added,  all  in  A :  '  What  stuff  is  this !  Golden  Year  64 

I  spoke  with  heart,  and  h  and  force.  The  Letters  37 

Or  when  some  h  of  difference  sparkled  out,  Aylmer's  Field  705 

all-generating  powers  and  genial  h  Of  Nature,  Lucretius  97 

With  animal  h  and  dire  insanity  ?  „       163 

Sun-shaded  in  the  h  of  dusty  fights)  Princess  ii  241 
under  arches  of  the  marble  bridge  Hung,  shadow'd 

from  the  h :  „            459 

while  my  honest  h  Were  all  miscounted  „        iv  333 

many  a  bold  knight  started  up  in  h,  „          v  359 

What  h's  of  indignation  when  we  heard  „             375 

I  felt  my  veins  Stretch  with  fierce  h ;  „            538 

A  night  of  Summer  from  the  h,  „         vi  54 

Where  we  withdrew  from  summer  h's  and  state,  „            245 

But  yonder,  whiff !  there  comes  a  sudden  h,  „     Con.  58 

For  life  outliving  h's  of  youth,  In  Mem.  liii  10 

mark  The  landscape  winking  thro'  the  h :  „  Ixxxix  16 

To  make  a  soUd  core  oth;  „        evii  18 

not  the  schoolboy  h,  The  blind  hysterics  „        cix  15 

tread  In  tracts  of  fluent  h  began,  „      cxviii  9 

true  blood  spilt  had  in  it  a  ^  To  dissolve  Maud  I  xix  44 

Then  Uther  in  his  wrath  and  h  besieged  Com.  of  Arthur  198 

His  heart  be  stirr'd  with  any  foolish  h  Gareth  and  L.  1178 

And  after  nodded  sleepily  in  the  h.  Geraint  and  E.  253 

Who,  with  mfld  h  of  holy  oratory,  „             866 

Took,  as  in  rival  h,  to  holy  things ;  Baiin  and  Balan  100 

forget  My  h's  and  violences  ?  „                 190 

Whom  Pellam  drove  away  with  holy  h.  „               611 

Brain-feverous  in  his  h  and  agony,  Lancelot  and  E.  854 

And  when  the  h  is  gone  from  out  my  heart,  „              1116 

thro'  the  casement  standing  wide  for  h,  „              1234 

And  earthly  h's  that  spring  and  sparkle  out  Holy  Grail  33 

And  almost  burst  the  barriers  in  their  h,  „        336 

and  thro'  a  stormy  glare,  ah  „        842 

the  h  Of  pride  and  glory  fired  her  face ;  Pelleas  and  E.  171 

in  his  h  and  eagerness  Trembled  and  quiver'd,  „            283 

a  sudden  flush  of  wrathful  h  Fired  all  the  pale  face  Guinevere  356 

the  white  h's  of  the  blinding  noons  Beat  Lover's  Tale  i  139 

Thro'  the  h,  the  drowth,  the  dust,  the  glare,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  6 

U  like  the  mouth  of  a  hell,  Def.  of  Lucknow  81 

none  could  breathe  Within  the  zone  of  h ;  Columbus  53 

with  thirst  in  the  middle-day  h.  V.  of  Maeldune  50 

That  wholesome  h  the  blood  had  lost,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  24 

the  winds  were  dead  for  h ;  Tiresias  34 

Of  the  hellish  h  of  a.  wretched  life  Despair  68 

Surm'd  with  a  summer  of  milder  h.  To  Prof.  Jebb.  8 


Heather-scented 


! 


Heat  (s)  (continued)     till  the  h  Smote  on  her  brow, 
Heat  (s)     But  the  h  druv  hout  i'  my  heyes 
Heat  (verb)     the  latter  fire  shall  h  the  deep ; 

Let  the  Sun,  Who  h's  our  earth  to  yield 

Heated    (See  also  Seventimes-heated,  Wine-heated) 

shrine-doors  burst  thro'  with  h  blasts 

came  again  together  on  the  king  With  h  faces  ; 

Where  sat  a  company  with  h  eyes, 

To  chapel ;  where  a  h  pulpiteer, 

and  from  within  Burst  thro'  the  h  buds, 

and  felt  the  blast  Beat  on  my  h  eyelids  : 

Had  made  a  h  haze  to  magnify  The  charm  of 
Edith— 

h  thro'  and  thro'  with  wrath  and  love, 

And  h  hot  with  burning  fears. 

And  h  the  strong  warrior  in  his  dreams  ; 

H  am  I  ?  you — you  wonder — 
Heath  (barren  country)    blackening  over  h  and  holt, 

Who  slowly  rode  across  a  wither'd  h. 

At  the  Dragon  on  the  h  ! 

The  Priest  went  out  by  h  and  hill ; 

Arise  in  open  prospect — h  and  hill. 

Dumb  on  the  winter  h  he  lay. 

Lightnings  flicker'd  along  the  h ; 


high 


Death  of  (Enone  97 

Owd  Rod  84 

The  Kraken  13 

Akbar's  Dream  105 

J 

D.  ofF.  Women  29 

Audley  Court  37 

Vision  of  Sin  7 

Sea  Dreams  20 

Lover's  Tale  i  320 

Hi  28 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  129 

Princess  iv  163 

In  Mem.  cxviii  22 

Marr.  of  Geraint  72 

Locksley  U.,  Sixty  151 

Locksley  Hall  191 

Vision  of  Sin  61 

72 

The  Victim  29 

Lover's  Tale  i  397 

Dead  Prophet  13 

79 

Heath  (heather)     (See  also  Heather)     lips  in  the  field  above 

are  dabbled  with  blood-red  h,  Maud  /  t  2 

And  flung  myself  down  on  a  bank  of  h,  Com.  of  Arthur  342 

all  round  was  open  space.  And  fern  and  h :  Pelleas  and  E.  29 

Among  our  h  and  bracken.  The  Ring  318 

Heathen  (adj.)     from  time  to  time  the  h  host  Swarm'd 

overseas,  Com.  of  Arthur  8 

last  a  h  horde.  Reddening  the  sun  with  smoke  „  36 

in  twelve  great  battles  overcame  The  h  hordes,  „         519 

Red  as  the  rising  sun  with  h  blood,  Lancelot  and  E.  308 

Yet  in  this  h  war  the  fire  of  God  Fills  him :  „  315 

Wasted  so  often  by  the  h  hordes.  Holy  Grail  244 

splash'd  and  dyed  The  strong  White  Horse  in  his 

own  h  blood —  „  312 

Fool,  I  came  late,  the  h  wars  were  o'er,  Last  Tournament  269 

Hard  on  that  helm  which  many  a  h  sword  Pass,  of  Arthur  166 

Burn  ?  h  men  have  borne  as  much  as  this,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  185 

Christian  love  among  the  Churches  look'd  the  twin 
of  h  hate.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  86 

Heathen  (s)    (See  also  Haithen)    Then  he  drave  The  h ; 

after,  slew  the  beast.  Com.  of  Arthur  59 

cross-hilted  sword.  Whereby  to  drive  the  h  out :  „  287 

then  or  now  Utterly  smite  the  h  underfoot,  „  423 

'  Shall  Rome  or  H  rule  in  Arthur's  realm  ?  „  485 

To  drive  the  h  from  your  Roman  wall,  „  512 

Who  drave  the  h  hence  by  sorcery  Gareth  and  L.  204 

and  fell  Against  the  h  of  the  Northern  Sea  Geraint  and  E.  969 

While  all  the  h  lay  at  Arthur's  feet.  Merlin  and  V.  144 

till  we  drive  The  h,  who,  some  say,  Lancelot  and  E.  65 

The  h  caught  and  reft  him  of  his  tongue.  ,,  273 

sand-shores  of  Trath  Treroit,  Where  many  a  h  fell ;  „  302 

The  h  are  upon  him,  his  long  lance  Broken,  Last  Tournament  87 

The  h — but  that  ever-climbing  wave,  „  92 

H,  the  brood  by  Hengist  left ;  Guinevere  16 

For  now  the  H  of  the  Northern  Sea,  „    .  135 

And  leagued  with  him  the  h,  „       155 

Godless  hosts  Of  h  swarming  o'er  the  Northern  Sea ;  „      428 

To  break  the  h  and  uphold  the  Christ,  „      470 

Lords  of  the  White  Horse,  h,  and  knights,  „      574 

but  grosser  grown  Than  h.  Pass,  of  Arthur  62 

Or  thrust  the  h  from  the  Roman  wall,  „  69 

shouts  of  h  and  the  traitor  knights,  „  113 

Nor  any  cry  of  Christian  heard  thereon,  Nor  yet  of  ^ ;  „  129 

he  that  brought  The  h  back  among  us,  „  152 

a  shame  to  speak  of  them — Among  the  h —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  111 

Heather     find  the  white  h  wherever  you  go,  Romney's  R.  108 

my  white  h  only  blooms  in  heaven  „  110 

wild  h  round  me  and  over  me  June's  high  blue,        June  Bracken,  etc.  2 
the  bracken  so  bright  and  the  h  so  brown,  „  3 

green  of  the  bracken  amid  the  gloom  of  the  h.  „  9 

Heather-scented    and  h-s  air.  Pulsing  full  man ;  Last  Tournament  691 


Heather-scented 


317 


Heaven 


Heather-scented  (continued)    on  that  clear  and  h-s  height 

The  rounder  cheek 
Heath-flower    Some  red  h-f  in  the  dew, 
Heathy     Playing  mad  pranks  along  the  h  leas, 
Heave    h  and  thump  A  league  of  street 

For  tho'  the  Giant  Ages  h  the  hill 

Which  h's  but  with  the  heaving  deep. 

Then  the  rough  Torre  began  to  h  and  move, 

Began  to  k  upon  that  painted  sea  ; 

water  began  to  h  and  the  weather  to  moan, 

ocean  on  every  side  Plunges  and  h's  at  a  bank 
Heaved  (adj.)     With  a  h  shoulder  and  a  saucy  smile, 

vessel  in  mid-ocean,  her  h  prow  Clambering, 
Heaved  (verb)     The  silver  lily  h  and  fell ; 

I  was  h  upon  it  In  darkness  : 

huge  bush-bearded  Barons  h  and  blew, 

That  only  h  with  a  summer  swell. 

Who  might'st  have  h  a  windless  flame 

the  Sun  /^  up  a  ponderous  arm  to  strike 

h  his  blade  aJoft,  And  crack'd  the  helmet 
Heaven    (See  also  'Eaven,  High-heaveo,  Hiven,  Mid- 
heaven)     And  then  one  H  receive  us  all. 

that  blue  h  which  hues  and  paves  The  other  ? 

She  could  not  look  on  the  sweet  h, 

h's  mazed  signs  stood  still  In  the  dim  tract 

Sure  she  was  nigher  to  h's  spheres, 

H  flow'd  upon  the  soul  in  many  dreaims 

the  moimtain  draws  it  from  H  above, 

the  air  Sleepeth  over  all  the  h, 

As  tho'  a  star,  in  inmost  h  set, 

Thou  from  a  throne  Momited  in  h  wilt  shoot 

H  over  H  rose  the  night. 

Rapt  after  h's  starry  flight, 

The  joy  that  mixes  man  with  H  : 

'  H  opens  inward,  chasms  yawn, 

Coming  thro'  H,  like  a  light  that  grows 

From  me,  H's  Queen,  Paris,  to  thee  king-bom, 

0  happy  H,  how  canst  thou  see  my  face  ? 
hollow'd  moons  of  gems.  To  mimic  h ; 
From  yon  blue  h's  above  us  bent 
Pray  H  for  a  human  heart, 
seem'd  to  go  right  up  to  H  and  die  among  the 

stars, 
sun  begins  to  rise,  the  h's  are  in  a  glow ; 
Beneath  a  h  dark  and  holy, 
'  H  heads  the  count  of  crimes  With  that  wild 

oath.' 
Rose  with  you  thro'  a  little  arc  Of  h, 
And  dwells  in  h  half  the  night, 
all  else  of  h  was  pure  Up  to  the  Sun, 
praLse  the  h's  for  what  they  have  ?  ' 
For  which  to  praise  the  h's  but  only  love, 
h's  between  their  fairy  fleeces  pale 
— H  knows — as  much  within ; 
Unfit  for  earth,  unfit  for  h, 
Battering  the  gates  of  h  with  storms 
H,  and  Earth,  and  Time  are  choked, 
the  saints  Enjoy  themselves  in  h, 

1  think  you  know  I  have  some  power  with  H 
I. am  whole,  and  clean,  and  meek  for  H. 
whisper'd  under  H  None  eLse  could  understand ; 
'Twere  all  as  one  to  fix  our  hopes  on  H 
which  in  old  days  Moved  earth  and  h ; 
Sees  in  h  the  light  of  London 
Saw  the  h's  fill  with  commerce. 
Heard  the  h's  fill  with  shouting, 
birds  of  Paradise  That  float  thro'  H,  and  cannot 

light? 
My  breath  to  h  like  vapour  goes  : 
Break  up  the  h's,  O  Lord ! 
All  h  bursts  her  starry  floors, 
I  yearn  to  breathe  the  airs  of  h 
And  set  in  H's  third  story. 
Shall  show  thee  past  to  H : 
With  tears  and  smiles  from  h  again 


The  Ring  350 

Rosalind  41 

Circumstance  2 

Princess  Hi  127 

Ode  on  Well.  259 

In  Mem.  xi  20 

Lancelot  and  E.  1066 

Lover's  Tale  ii  192 

The  Revenge  113 

Def.  of  Lucknow  39 

Aylmer's  Field  466 

Lover's  Tale  ii  169 

To  E.  L.  19 

Sea  Dreams  92 

Princess  v  21 

The  Daisy  12 

In  Mem.  Ixxii  13 

Gareth  and  L.  1045 

Marr.  of  Geraint  572 

Supp.  Confessions  32 

134 

Mariana  15 

Clear-headed  friend  28 

Ode  to  Memory  40 

The  Poet  31 

Poet's  Mind  32 

Elednore  39 

89 

To  J.  M.  K.  13 

Mariana  in  the  S.  92 

Two  Voices  68 

210 

304 

CEnone  108 

„      127 

„      236 

Palace  of  Ari  189 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  50 

71 

May  Queen,  Con.  40 

49 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  91 

D.  of  F.  Women  201 

To  J.  S.  27 

„      52 

Gardener's  D.  79 

102 

104 

261 

Edwin  Morris  82 

St.  S.  Stylites  3 

7 

104 

106 

143 

213 

Talking  Oak  21 

Golden  Year  57 

Ulysses  67 

Locksley  Hall  114 

!,  121 

123 

Day -Dm.,  Ep.  8 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  3 

21 

27 

Sir  Galahad  63 

Will  Water.  70 

246 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  2 


Heaven  (continued)     Blue  isles  of  h  laugh'd  between.         Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  6 

'  Cold  altar,  H  and  earth  shall  meet  The  Letters  7 
high  in  h  behind  it  a  gray  down  With  Danish 

barrows ;  Enoch  Arden  6 

sermonizing  On  providence  and  trust  in  H,  „       205 

The  breath  of  h  came  continually  „       535 

such  as  drove  her  imder  moonless  h's  ^,'      547 

lawns  And  winding  glades  high  up  like  ways  to  H,  "       573 

great  stars  that  globed  themselves  in  H,  „       597 

Which  at  a  touch  of  light,  an  air  of  h,  Aylmer's  Field  5 

Or // in  lavish  bounty  moulded,  „         107 

Like  visions  in  the  Northern  dreamer's  h's,  '„         161 

God  bless  'em :  marriages  are  made  in  H.'  „         188 
The  rain  of  h,  and  their  own  bitter  tears.  Tears,  and 

the  careless  rain  of  h,  „         428 

breathless  burthen  of  low-folded  h's  ',        612 

Shot  up  their  shadows  to  the  H  of  H's,  .,        642 

thy  brother  man,  the  Lord  from  H,  „         667 

roof  so  lowly  but  that  beam  of  H  Dawn'd  ,.         684 

past  the  living  fount  of  pity  in  H.  „         752 

if  every  star  in  h  Can  make  it  fair :  Sea  Dreams  83 

trees  As  high  as  h,  and  every  bird  that  sings :  „         102 

Dropping  the  too  rough  H  iti  Hell  and  H,  „         196 

One  shriek  of  hate  would  jar  all  the  hymns  oih:  „         259 

Slide  from  that  quiet  h  of  hers,  Lucretius  87 

stairs  That  climb  into  the  windy  halls  oih:  „         136 

vases  in  the  hall  Flowers  of  all  h's.  Princess,  Pro.  12 

Myself  too  had  weird  seizures,  H  knows  what :  „              i  14 

two  sphere  lamps  blazon'd  like  H  and  Earth  ,,              223 

to  call  down  from  H  A  blessing  on  her  labours  „          ii  478 

let  us  breathe  for  one  hour  more  in  H'  „           Hi  69 

Appealing  to  the  bolts  oi  H;  „          iv  372 

and  his  anger  reddens  in  the  h's ;  „              386 

sweet  influences  Of  earth  and  h?  „           v  192 

Like  a  Saint's  glory  up  in  A :  „              514 

And  right  ascension,  H  knows  what ;  „          vi  257 

cloud  may  stoop  from  h  and  take  the  shape  „             vii  2 

//,  Star  after  star,  arose  and  fell ;  „                 49 

But  cease  to  move  so  near  the  H's,  „              195 

Beyond  all  thought  into  the  //  of  H's.  „      Con  115 

H  flash'd  a  sudden  jubilant  ray.  Ode  on  Well.  129 
The  blue  h  break,  and  some  diviner  air                    W.  to  Marie  Alex.  43 

The  gloom  that  saddens  H  and  Earth,  The  Daisy  102 
But  thou  wert  sUent  in  h.                                                Voice  and  the  P.  7 

voice  and  the  Peak  Far  into  h  withdrawn.  „            38 

Thunder,  a  flying  fire  in  h,  Boddicea  24 

Roll'd  the  rich  vapour  far  into  the  h.  Spec,  of  Iliad  8 

when  in  h  the  stars  about  the  moon  Look  beautiful,  „             11 

immeasurable  h's  Break  open  to  their  highest,  „             14 

Be  merry  in  h,  O  larks,  and  far  away.  Window,  Ay  3 

Sleep,  gentle  h's,  before  the  prow ;  In  Mem.  ix  14 

To  bear  thro'  H  a  tale  of  woe,  „          xii  2 

Hung  in  the  shadow  of.  a.h?  „        xvi  10 

Her  early  H,  her  happy  views ;  „     xxxiii  6 

suit  The  full-grown  energies  of  h.  „          xl  20 

In  its  assumptions  up  to  /i ;  „        Ixiii  4 

starry  h's  of  space  Are  sharpen'd  to  a  needle's  end;  ,,        xxvi  3 

drank  the  inviolate  spring  Where  nighest  h,  „            xc  3 

To  scale  the  h's  highest  height,  „        cviii  7 

To  bare  the  eternal  H's  again,  „       cxxii  4 

And  high  in  h  the  streaming  cloud,  „    Con.  107 

Let  the  sweet  h's  endure,  Maud  I  xi8 

O  Maud  were  svie  of  H  If  lowliness  could  save  her.  .,      xii  19 

to  glide.  Like  a  beam  of  the  seventh  H,  ..      xiv  21 

gates  of  H  are  closed,  and  she  is  gone.  „    xviii  12 

thunder'd  up  into  //  the  Christless  code,  ,,     //  i  26 

and  the  h's  fall  in  a  gentle  rain,  ,,             41 
To  her  that  is  the  fairest  under  h,                                  Com.  of  Arthur  86 

And  dream  he  dropt  from  h :  „             183 

In  which  the  boimds  of  h  and  earth  were  lost —  „             372 

It  seem'd  in  h,  a  ship,  the  shape  thereof  „            374 

but  the  King  stood  out  in  h,  Crown'd.  „             443 

H  yield  her  for  it,  but  in  me  put  force  Gareth  and  L.  18 

And  there  was  no  gate  like  it  under  h.  „            213 

Keel  upward,  and  mast  downward,  in  the  h's,  „            254 


Heaven 


318 


Heaven 


Heaven  (continued)    peak  And  pinnacle,  and  had  made  it 

spire  to  h.  Gareth  and  L.  309 

Kather  than — 0  sweet  h\     0  fie  upon  him —  „             741 

Immingled  with  H's  azure  waverinjjly,  „            936 

*  No  star  of  thine,  but  shot  from  Arthur's  h  „          1100 

*  H  help  thee,'  sigh'd  Lynette.  .,  1357 
And  loved  her,  as  he  loved  the  light  of  H.    And 

as  the  light  of  H  varies,  Marr.  of  Geraint  5 

So  aid  me  H  when  at  mine  uttermost,  „            502 

on  open  ground  Beneath  a  troubled  h,  „            523 

Sweet  h,  how  much  I  shall  discredit  him !  „            621 

Herself  would  clothe  her  like  the  sun  in  H.  .,  784 
she  was  ever  praying  the  sweet  h's                                Oeraint  and  E.  44 

I  might  amend  it  by  the  grace  of  H,  „              53 

issuing  under  open  h's  beheld  A  little  town  ,.             196 

she  cried,  '  by  H,  I  will  not  drink  „            664 

we  love  the  //  that  chastens  us.  „            789 

The  truest  eyes  that  ever  answer'd  H,  .,  842 
Lost  one  Found  was  greeted  as  in  H  With  joy          Balin  and  Balan  81 

No  more  of  hatred  than  in  II  ..               151 

fire  of  //  has  kill'd  the  barren  cold,  „              440 

fire  of  H  is  not  the  flame  of  Hell,  (repeat)  „     443,  447, 

451,  455 

'  The  fire  of  H  is  on  the  dusty  ways.  „              448 

*  The  fire  of  //  is  lord  of  all  things  good,  „              452 

*  This  fire  of  h,  This  old  sun-worship,  „  456 
The  deathless  mother-maidenhood  of  H,  „  521 
vows  like  theirs,  that  higli  in  h  Love  most,                   Merlin  and  V.  14 

0  H's  own  white  Earth-angel,  „  80 
Was  also  Bard,  and  knew  the  starry  h's;  „  169 
By  H  that  hears  I  tell  you  the  clean  truth,  „  343 
For  men  at  most  differ  as  II  and  earth.  But  women, 

worst  and  best,  as  //  and  Hell.  „             814 

May  yon  just  h,  that  darkens  o'er  me,  „            931 

Scarce  had  she  ceased,  when  out  of  A  a  bolt  „            934 

Vivien,  fearing  h  had  heard  her  oath,  „  940 
But  who  can  gaze  upon  the  Sun  in  h?                       Lancelot  and  E,  123 

*H  hinder,'  said  the  King,  '  that  such  an  one,  „            532 

'  I  lose  it,  as  we  lose  the  lark  in  h,  .,            659 

And,  after  h,  on  our  dull  side  of  death,  ..          1382 

strength  Within  us,  better  offer'd  up  to  H.'  Holy  Grail  36 

1  trust  We  are  green  in  H's  eyes ;  „  38 
the  holy  cup  Was  caught  away  to  H,  „  58 
'  My  knight,  my  love,  my  knight  of  h,  „  157 
Pray  H,  they  be  not  smitten  by  the  bolt.'  „  221 
Feasted,  and  as  the  stateliest  under  h.  „  224 
and  never  yet  Had  h  appear'd  so  blue,  „  365 
Prick'd  with  incredible  pinnacles  into  h.  „  423 
the  h's  Open'd  and  blazed  with  thunder  „  507 
the  h's  open'd  and  blazed  again  Roaring,  „  516 
Then  fell  the  floods  of  h  drowning  the  deep.  „  533 
and  blest  be  //  That  brought  thee  here  „  616 
Quest  and  he  were  in  the  hands  of  H.  „  659 
and  the  stones  They  pitch  up  straight  toh:  „  665 
heard  the  hollow-ringing  h's  sweep  Over  him  „  678 
they  roll  Thro'  such  a  round  in  h,  „  686 
But  h  had  meant  it  for  a  sunny  one :  „  706 
clouded  h's  Were  shaken  with  the  motion  and  the  sound.  „  800 
But  if  indeed  there  came  a  sign  from  h,  „  873 
A  rosy  dawn  kindled  in  stainless  h's,  Pelleas  and  E.  72 
Or  have  the  H's  but  given  thee  a  fair  face,  „  101 
a  sacrifice  Kindled  by  fire  from  h :  „  146 
Till  the  sweet  h's  have  fill'd  it  „  510 
but  when  he  saw  High  up  in  h  the  hall  „  553 
that  young  life  Being  smitten  in  mid  h  Last  Tournament  27 
Man  was  it  who  marr'd  h's  image  in  thee  thus  ? '  .,  64 
We  call  the  harp  of  Arthur  up  in  A  ?  '  „  333 
High  on  all  hills,  and  in  the  signs  of  /«.'  „  337 
It  makes  a  silent  music  up  in  h,  „  349 
sun  that  ray'd  from  off  a  brow  Like  hillsnow  high  in  h,  .,  667 
Dropt  down  from  h  ?  wash'd  up  from  out  the  deep  ?  „  686 
A  star  in  h,  a  star  within  the  mere !  „  732 
A  blot  in  h,  the  Raven,  flying  high,  Guinevere  133 
There  came  a  day  as  still  as  h,  „  292 
But  help  me,  A,  for  surely  I  repent.  „        872 


Heaven  [continued)    seem'd  the  h's  upbreaking  thro'  the 

earth,  Guinevere  391 

I  knew  Of  no  more  subtle  master  under  h  „        478 

be  his  mate  hereafter  in  the  h's  Before  high  God.  „        637 

the  great  light  of  H  Burn'd  at  his  lowest  Pass,  of  Arthur  90 

those  who  falling  down  Look'd  up  for  h,  „            112 

mightiest  of  all  peoples  under  h?  To  the  Queen  ii  21 

trust  that  H  Will  blow  the  tempest  „               46 

P'rom  his  mid-dome  in  H's  airy  halls;  Lover's  Tale  i  66 

till  earth  And  li  pass  too,  dwelt  on  my  h,  „              72 

Waiting  to  see  some  blessed  shape  in  h,  „            312 

and  joy  In  breathing  nearer  h ;  „            389 

To  breathe  with  her  as  if  in  h  itself ;  „            391 

Thy  fires  from  h  had  touch'd  it,  „            439 

Sooner  Earth  Might  go  round  H,  „            482 

bliss  stood  round  me  like  the  light  of  H, —  „             495 

Steppetli  from  //  to  //,  from  light  to  light,  .,            512 

had  //  from  all  her  doors.  With  all  her  golden  thresholils       „  604 

whom  the  gentlest  airs  of  //  Should  kiss  „            738 

may  death  Awake  them  with  h's  music  „             761 

Bore  her  free-faced  to  the  free  airs  of  //,  „          iv  38 

winas  that,  H  knows  when,  Had  suck'd  the  fire  „            193 

Ah  h's !     Why  need  I  tell  you  all  ?—  „            200 

Down  out  o'  h  i'  Hell-fire—  North.  Cobbler  58 

melted  like  a  cloud  in  the  silent  summer  h ;  The  Revenge  14 
a  man's  ideal  Is  high  in  H,                                    Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  131 

Cold,  but  as  welcome  as  free  airs  of  h  „               197 

saved  by  the  blessing  of  //  !  Def.  of  Lu^know  104 

this  good  Wiclif  mountain  down  from  h,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  132 

the  great '  Laudamus  '  rose  to  h.  Columbus  18 

chains  For  him  who  gave  a  new  h,  „          20 

King  David  call'd  the  h's  a  hide,  „           47 

Who  took  us  for  the  very  Gods  from  H,  „        183 

Queen  of  //  who  seest  the  souls  in  Hell  „         216 

high  in  tlie  h  above  it  there  flicker'd  V.  of  Maeldune  17 

wliere  the  h's  lean  low  on  the  land,  „              83 

For  a  wild  witch  naked  as  A  „            100 

when  a  smoke  from  a  city  goes  to  h  Achilles  over  the  T.  7 

from  his  head  the  splendour  went  to  h.  „               14 

all  the  h's  flash'd  in  frost ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  22 

more  than  man  Which  rolls  the  h's,  Tiresias  22 

voice  rang  out  in  the  thunders  of  Ocean  and  H  The  Wreck  88 

No  soul  in  the  h  above.  Despair  19 

higher  still,  the  h's  Whereby  the  cloud  Ancient  Sage  12 

thou  sendest  thy  free  soul  thro'  h,  „            47 

So  dark  that  men  cry  out  against  the  H's.  „          172 

earth's  dark  forehead  flings  athwart  the  h's  „          200 

past  into  the  Nameless,  as  a  cloud  Melts  into  H.  „          234 

The  lark  has  past  from  earth  to  H  The  Flight  62 

the  blessed  H  s  are  just,  „         67 

She  ba.l  us  love,  like  souls  in  H,  „         88 
While  the  silent  H's  roll,                                         Locksley  H.,  Sixty  203 

sphere  of  all  the  boundless  H's  „               210 
the  stars  in  h  PaJed,  and  the  glory  grew.              Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  31 

Whole  h's  within  themselves,  amaze  Epilogue  56 

And  '  The  Curse  of  the  Prophet '  in  H.  Dead  Prophet  28 

Opens  a  door  in  H ;  Early  Spring  7 

Like  some  conjectured  planet  in  mid  h  To  Prin.  Beatrice  20 

cry  that  rang  thro'  Hades,  Earth,  and  H  !  Demeter  and  P.  33 

I,  Earth-Goddess,  cursed  the  Gods  of  H.  „            102 

break  The  sunless  halls  of  Hades  into  //  ?  „            136 

Mellow  moon  of  h,  Bright  in  blue.  The  Ring  1 

No  sudden  /(,  nor  sudden  hell,  for  man,  „      41 

past  and  future  mix'd  in  H  and  made  The  rosy  twilight  „     186 

suilden  fire  from  H  had  dash'd  him  dead,  Happy  83 

to  trace  On  paler  h's  the  branching  grace  To  Ulysses  15 

For  his  clear  h,  and  these  few  lanes  To  Mary  Boyle  67 

//  lours.  But  in  the  tearful  splendour  Prog,  of  Spring  40 

all  but  in  H  Hovers  The  Gleam.  Merlin  and  the  G.  118 

This  seem'd  my  lodestar  in  the  II  of  Art,  Romney's  R.  39 

roll  The  rainbow  hues  of  h  about  it —  „            51 

my  white  heather  only  blooms  in  /*                       '  „          110 

the  shout  Of  His  descending  peals  from  H,  „          127 

Human  forgiveness  touches  h,  „          159 

earth's  green  stole  in  h's  own  hue.  Far — far — aivay  2 


Heaven 


319 


Height 


Heaven  (continued)  as  the  heights  of  the  June- 
blue  h,  June  Bracken,  etc.  7 
topmost  pine  Spired  into  bluest  A,  Death  of  CEnone  69 
A  sudden  strength  from  h,  St.  Telemachus  56 
Still  1  raised  my  heart  to  h,  Akbar's  Dream  6 
Well  spake  thy  brother  in  his  hymn  to  h  „  27 
star  Should  shriek  its  claim  ' I  only  am  inh'  „  43 
mists  of  earth  Fade  in  the  noon  of /»,  -  „  97 
'  hast  <AoM  brought  us  down  a  new  Kortln  From  A  ?  „  117 
always  open-door'd  To  every  breath  from  h,  „  180 
fur  owt  but  the  Kingdom  o  H;  Church-warden,  etc.  44 
She  is  hi^h  in  the  H  of  H's,  Charity  42 
He  is  racmg  from  h  to  h  And  less  will  be  lost  The  Dreamer  21 
//  over  h  expands.  Mechanofhilus  36 
(.)  ye  H's,  of  your  boundless  nights,  God  and  the  Univ.  2 
Heaven-descended  Corrupts  the  strength  of  h-d  Will,  Will  11 
Heavenliest    See  Earthly-beavenliest 

Heavenly    '  He  seems  to  hear  a  //  Friend,  Two  Voices  295 

For  me  the  H  Bridegroom  waits,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  31 

Like  //  Hope  she  crown'd  the  sea,  The  Voyage  70 

But  Wisdom  h  of  the  soul.  In  Mem.  cxiv  22 

Dear  h  friend  that  canst  not  die,  „       cxj^ix  7 

he  defileth  h  things  With  earthly  uses  ' —  Balin  and  Balan  421 

Trusting  no  longer  that  earthly  flower  would  be  h  fruit —      Despair  35 

Once  more  the  H  Power  Makes  all  things  new.  Early  Spring  1 

For  now  the  U  Power  Makes  all  tilings  new,  „          43 

\Vhich  on  the  touch  of  h  feet  had  risen,  Death  of  CEnone  5 

Heavenly-best     Ere  she  gain  her  H-b,  Locksley  //.,  Sixty  271 

Heavenly-toned    So  h-t,  that  in  that  hour  Two  Voices  442 

Heavenly-unmeasured    H-u  or  unlimited  Love,  Lover's  Tale  i  474 

Heavenly-wise    glow  In  azure  orbits  h-w  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  38 

Heaven-sweet    H-s  Evangel,  ever-living  word.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  28 

Heavenward    glancing /j  on  a  star  so  silver-fair,  Locksley  II.,  Sixty  191 

As  mounts  the  h  altar-fire.  In  Mem.  xli  3 

Once  again  thou  flamest  h,  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  1 

Heavier    tougher,  h,  stronger,  he  that  smote  Princess  v  536 

Heaviest    roll'd  Her  h  thunder —  Lover's  Tale  i  606 

Heavily-galloping    sound  of  many  a  h-g  hoof  Geraint  and  E.  447 

Heaviness    VVhy  are  we  weigh'd  upon  with  h,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  12 

Heaving    (See  also  Hard-heaving)    Which  heaves  but 

with  the  h  deep.  In  Mem.  xi  20 
Gazed  at  the  h  shoulder,  and  the  face  Hand-hidden,  Merlin  and  V.  896 

With  his  huge  sea-castles  h  upon  the  weather  bow.  The  Revenge  24 
Heavy    (See  also  Dead-heavy,  Head-heavy)    If  time 

be  h  on  your  hands,  X.  C.  V.  de  Vere  66 

What  is  this  ?  his  eyes  are  h :  Locksley  Ilall  51 
for  this  most  gentle  maiden's  death  Right  h 

am  I ;  Lancelot  and  E.  1292 

W  as  it  was,  a  great  stone  slipt  and  fell,  Holy  Grail  680 
teach  me  yet  Somewhat  before  the  h  clod  Weighs 

on  me,  Supp.  Confessions  184 

Earthward  he  boweth  the  h  stalks  A  spirit  haunts  7 

Slide  the  h  barges  trail'd  By  slow  horses  ;  L.  ofShalott  i  20 

The  h  clocks  knolling  the  drowsy  hours.  Gardener's  D.  184 
with  a  grosser  film  made  thick  These  h,  horny  eyes.     St.  S.  Stylites  201 

Rain  out  the  h  mist  of  tears,  Love  and  Duty  43 

But  that  his  h  rider  kept  him  down.  Vision  of  Sin  4 

A  vapour  h,  hueless,  formless,  cold,  „          53 

Drink  to  h  Ignorance !  „        193 

But  on  my  shoulder  hung  their  h  hands.  Princess  iv  553 

And  blossom-fragrant  slipt  the  h  dews  „       v  243 

on  my  h  eyelids  My  anguish  hangs  Uke  shame.  Maud  II  iv  73 

Among  the  h  breathings  of  the  house,  Geraint  and  E.  402 

tliouglits  deep  and  h  as  these  well-nigh  Lover's  Tale  i  688 

Heavy-blosssom'd    Droops  the  h-b  bower,  Locksley  Hall  163 
Heavy  Brigade    charge  of  the  gallant  three  hundred, 

the  //  B]  Heavy  Brigade  1 

up  the  hill,  up  the  hill,  FoUow'd  the  //  B.  „           12 

Gallopt  the  gallant  three  hundred,  the  JI  B.  „          25 

Heavy-folded     and  swung  The  h-f  rose.  In  Mem.  xcv  59 

Heavy-fruited    hangs  the  h-f  tree —  Locksley  Hall  163 

Heavy-plunging    '  I  would  the  white  cold  h-p  foam,  D.  of  F.  Women  118 

Heavy-shotted    His  h-s  hammock-shroud  In  Mem.  vi  15 

Hebe  (adj.)     violet  eyes,  and  all  her  //  bloom.  Gardener's  D.  137 

Hebe  (s)    H's  are  they  to  hand  ambrosia,  Princess  Hi  113 


Hebe  (s)  (continued)    Cassandra,  //,  Joan,  Komney's  R.  4 
Hebrew     '  No  fair  H  boy  Shall  smile  away  my  maiden 

blame  among  The  H  mothere  ' —  D.  of  F.  Women  213 

Hector     So // spake ;  the  Trojans  roar'd  Spec,  of  Iliad  1 

Hedge  (S)     To  one  green  wicket  in  a  privet  h ;  Gardener's  D.  110 

All  round  a  h  upshoots,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  41 

He  breaks  the  h :  he  enters  there :  „           Arrival  18 

The  h  broke  in,  the  banner  blew,  „              Revival  9 

The  very  sparrows  in  the  h  Scarce  answer  Amphion  67 

Lawrence  Aylmor,  seatotl  on  a  stile  In  the  long  h,  The  Brook  198 

breath  Of  tender  air  made  trenible  in  the  h  „          202 

tho'  she  were  a  beggar  from  the  h,  Marr.  of  Geraint  230 

pick'd  a  ragged-robin  from  the  h,  „              724 

sp\ittering  thro'  the  h  of  spliiiter'd  teeth,  Last  Tournament  65 

Hedge  (verb)     laurel-shrubs  that  h  it  around.  Poet's  Mind  14 

Hedge-bottoms     But  creeiip  along  the  li-b,  Church-warden,  etc.  50 

Hedgehog    h  underneath  the  plantain  bores,  Aylmer's  Field  860 

Hedgerow     Not  sowing  /*  texts  and  passing  by,  „            171 

'  Graver  cause  than  yours  is  mine  To  curse  tliis  h 

thief,  Marr.  of  Geraint  309 

Hedge-row  (S)     whore  the  h-r  cuts  the  pathway,  Gardener's  D.  86 

Heed  (s)     Yet  take  thou  h  of  him,  for,  so  thou  pass  Gareth  and  L.  267 

And  being  found  take  h  of  Vivien.  Merlin  and  V.  529 

I  didn't  take  h  o'  them.  First  Quarrel  29 

Heed  (verb)     Why  pray  To  one  who  h's  not,  Supp.  Confessions  90 

Sliall  I  h  them  in  their  anguisli  ?  Bocidieea  9 

wliether  he  h  it  or  not,  Maud  I  iv  53 

ilow  now,  my  soul,  we  do  not  h  the  fire  ?  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  191 

What  are  men  that  He  sliould  h  us  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  201 

Heeded    '  He  h  not  reviling  tones,  2'wo  Voices  220 

AH  would  be  well — the  lover  h  not,  Aylmer's  Field  545 

Bubbled  the  nightingale  and  h  not,  Princess  iv  266 

Some  old  head-blow  not  h  in  his  youth  Gareth  and  L.  714 

Garlon  mock'd  me,  but  I  h  not.  Balin  and  Balan  606 

that  life  I  /*  not  Flow'd  from  me,  Lover's  Tale  i  596 

Heedless    a  h  and  innocent  bride —  The  Wreck  13 

Heedlessness    pleased  her  with  a  babbling  h  Guinevere  151 

Heehaw     A  jackass  h's  from  the  rick,  Amphion  71 

Heel     As  head  and  h's  upon  the  floor  2'he  Goose  37 

Sharp-smitten  with  the  dint  of  armed  h's —  M.  d' Arthur  190 

And  drove  his  h  into  the  smoulder'd  log,  „     Ep.  14 

May  with  me  from  head  to  h.  Gardener's  D,  81 

snarling  at  each  other's  h's.  Locksley  Hall  106 

a  precipitate  h.  Fledged  as  it  were  Lucretius  200 

She  trampled  some  beneath  her  horses'  h's,  Princess,  Pro.  44 

brains  are  in  their  hands  and  in  their  h's,  „          iv  518 

one  rag,  disprinced  from  head  to  h.  „             v  30 

The  virgin  marble  under  iron /i's  :  „          m  351 

And  has  bitten  the  h  of  the  going  year.  Window,  Winter  6 

a  thousantl  wants  Gnarr  at  the  h's  of  men,  In  Mem.  xcviii  17 

A  cloak  that  dropt  from  collar-bone  to  h,  Gareth  and  L.  682 

And  h  against  the  pavement  echoing,  Geraint  and  E.  271 

At  which  her  palfrey  whinnying  lifted  h,  „            533 

Drove  his  mail'd  h  athwart  the  rojfal  crown,  Balin  and  Balan  540 

And  lissome  Vivien,  holding  by  his  h.  Merlin  and  V.  238 

The  men  who  met  him  rounded  on  their  h's  Pelleas  and  E.  142 

Lancelot,  with  his  h  upon  the  fall'n,  „          580 

^Vhee^d  round  on  either  h,  Dagonet  replied.  Last  Tournament  244 

Lancelot  pluck'd  him  by  the  /*,  Guinevere  34 

Sharp-smitten  with  the  dint  of  armed  h's —  Pass,  of  Arthur  358 

And  his  white  hair  sank  to  his  h's,  V.  of  Maeldune  118 

turn'd  upon  his  ft  to  hear  My  warning  Tiresias  72 

Tumble  Nature  h  o'er  head,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  135 

I  be  leper  hke  yourself, my  love,  from  head  to  h.  Hap'py  88 

Year  will  graze  the  h  of  year,  Poets  and  Critics  14 

Hegg  (egg)     Butter  an'  h's — yis — yis.  Village  Wife  2 

an'  1  warrants  the  h's  be  as  well,  „          3 

fever  'ed  baiiked  Jinny's  'eiid  as  bald  as  one  o'  them  h's,  „      102 

But  I  sarved  'em  wi'  butter  an'  h's  „      114 

an'  they  knaw'd  what  a  h  wur  an'  all ;  „      116 

an'  they  laiiid  big  h's  es  tha  seeas ;  „      118 

Heifer     brainless  bulls,  Dead  for  one  h ! '  Balin  and  Balan  579 

Height    sponges  of  millennial  growth  and  h ;  Tlie  Kraken  6 

free  clelight,  from  any  h  of  rapitl  flight,  Rosalind  3 

'  Thou  hast  not  gain'd  a  real  ft.  Two  Voices  91 


Height 


320 


Held 


He^ht  (continued)    In  gazing  up  an  Alpine  h, 

0  sun,  that  from  thy  noonday  h  Shudderest 
Beyond,  a  line  of  h's,  and  higher 
Be  flatter'd  to  the  h. 

Which  will  not  leave  the  myrrh-bush  on  the  h ; 
To  her  full  h  her  stately  stature  draws  ; 
Op  old  sat  Freedom  on  the  h's, 

1  leave  the  plain,  I  climb  the  h ; 
fold  by  fold,  From  those  still  h's, 
When  lo  !  her  Enoch  sitting  on  a  h, 
bending  from  his  h  With  half -allowing  smiles 
Nor  dealing  goodly  counsel  from  a  h 
from  his  h  and  loneliness  of  grief 
She  rose  her  h,  and  said : 
The  rosy  h's  came  out  above  the  la^vns. 
When  storm  is  on  the  h's, 
song,  arose  Once  more  thro'  all  her  h, 
drags  me  down  From  my  fixt  h  to  mob  me 
0  maid,  from  yonder  mountain  h : 
What  pleasure  lives  in  h  (the  shepherd  sang)  In  h 

and  cold,  the  splendour  of  the  hills  ? 
He  gain  in  sweetness  and  in  moral  h, 
The  h,  the  space,  the  gloom,  the  glory ! 
They  leave  the  h's  and  are  troubled, 
'  The  deep  has  power  on  the  h,  And  the  h  has 

power  on  the  deep  ; 
And  a  h  beyond  the  h ! 
Whisper  in  odorous  h's  of  even, 
every  h  comes  out,  and  jutting  peak  And  valley. 
On  Argive's  h's  divinely  sang, 
Upon  the  last  and  sharpest  h, 
A  higher  h,  a  deeper  deep, 
all  thy  breadth  and  h  Of  foliage, 
About  empyreal  h's  of  thought. 
To  scale  the  heaven's  highest  h, 
Powers  of  the  h,  Powers  of  the  deep, 
glory  of  manhood  stand  on  his  ancient  h, 
up  to  a  /»,  the  peak  Haze-hidden, 
Sigh'd,  as  a  boy  lame-bom  beneath  a  h, 
Another  sinning  on  such  h's  with  one, 
free  flashes  from  a  h  Above  her, 
heavens  have  fill'd  it  from  the  h's 
For  once- — ev'n  to  the  h — I  honour'd  him. 
not  look  up,  or  half-despised  the  h 
To  what  h  The  day  had  gown  I  know  not. 
Grew  after  marriage  to  fuU  h  and  form  ? 
Death  from  the  h's  of  the  mosque  and  the 

palace, 
from  the  crag  to  an  imbelievable  h, 
kept  their  faith,  their  freedom,  on  the  h, 
fell  from  that  half -spiritual  h  Chill'd, 
to  scale  the  highest  of  the  h's 
In  h  and  prowess  more  than  human, 
On  one  far  h  in  one  far-shining  fire. 

far-shining  fire ' 
Force  is  from  the  h's. 
Ah,  a,  broken  grange,  a  grove. 
And,  gazing  from  this  h  alone, 
horsemen  had  gather'd  there  on  the  h, 
glancing  from  his  h  On  earth  a  fruitless  fallow, 
an  ever  opening  h.  An  ever  lessening  earth — 
on  that  clear  and  heather-scented  h 
beauty  that  endures  on  the  Spiritual  h, 
madden'd  to  the  h  By  tonguester  tricks. 
And  suffering  cloud  the  h  I  stand  upon 
Muses  have  raised  to  the  h's  of  the  mountain, 
As  he  stands  on  the  h's  of  his  life  with  a  glimpse 

of  a  A  that  is  higher, 
as  the  h's  of  the  June-blue  heaven. 
Glimmering  up  the  h's  beyond  me, 
vanish  in  your  deeps  and  h's  ? 
Height  (eight)    an'  theere — it  be  strikin'  h — 
Heighten'd    Then  the  Captain's  colour  h, 
Heightening    {See  also  Ever-heightening)    peaks  they 

stand  ever  spreading  and  h ; 


Two  Voices  362 

Fatima  2 

Palace  of  Art  82 

192 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  58 

D.ofF.  Women  102 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  1 

Sir  Galahad  57 

Vision  of  Sin  52 

Enoch  Arden  500 

Aylmer's  Field  119 

172 

632 

Princess  ii  41 

„     Hi  365 

V  348 

„      vi  160 

308 

„     vii  192 

193 

281 

The  Daisy  59 

Voice  and  the  P.  15 

21 

34 

Milton  16 

S'pec.  of  Iliad  13 

In  Mem.  xxiii  22 

„        xlvii  13 

„        Ixiii  12 

)j         LCCXXtX  O 

„  xcv  38 

„  cviii  7 

Maud  II  ii  82 

„     III  vi  21 

Com.  of  Arthur  429 

Balin  and  Balan  164 

Lancelot  and  E.  248 

647 

Pelleas  and  E.  510 

Last  Tournament  662 

Guinevere  643 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  8 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  171 

Def.  of  Lucknow  24 

V.  of  Maeldune  16 

Montenegro  2 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  19 

Tiresias  28 

„       179 

'  One  h  and  one 

„      185 

Ancient  Sage  14 

223 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  9 

Heavy  Brigade  14 

Demeter  and  P.  117 

The  Ring  45 

„      350 

Happy  37 

To  Mary  Boyle  33 

Bomney's  R.  65 

Parnassus  2 

By  an  Evolution.  20 

June  Bracken,  etc.  7 

Silent  Voices  9 

God  and  the  Univ.  1 

Spinster's  S's.  114 

The  Captain  29 

Parnassus  11 


Height-year-howd  (eight-year-old)  thou  was  a  h-y-h, 

Heir    His  son  and  h  doth  ride  post-haste, 
first  sight,  first-born,  and  h  to  all, 
I  the  h  of  all  the  ages. 
Lord  Ronald  is  ^  of  all  your  lands. 
And  I,'  said  he,  '  the  lawful  h, 
loved  As  heiress  and  not  h  regretfully  ? 
Blissful  bride  of  a  blissful  h.  Bride  of  the  h  of 

the  kings  of  the  sea— 
The  hard  h  strides  about  their  lands, 
Spum'd  by  this  h  of  the  liar — 
Moaning  and  wailing  for  an  h  to  rule  After  him, 
'  Here  is  Uther's  h,  your  king.' 
Moaning  and  wailing  for  an  h, 
cried  '  The  King  !     Here  is  an  h  for  Uther ! ' 
prince  his  h,  when  tall  and  marriageable, 
Garlon,  mine  h,  Of  him  demand  it,' 
dead  love's  harsh  h,  jealous  pride  ? 
and  tend  him  cmriously  Like  a  king's  h, 
greedy  h  That  scarce  can  wait  the  reading 
H  of  his  face  and  land,  to  Lionel. 
Against  the  guiltless  h's  of  him  from  Tyre, 
quote  Ash  oi  endless  fame — 
I  am  h,  and  this  my  kingdom. 
My  heart  is  for  my  son,  Saleem,  my  h, — 

Heiress     '  If  you  are  not  the  h  born,  (repeat) 
loved  As  h  and  not  heir  regretfully  ? 
Their  child.'     '  Our  child  ! '     'Omhl' 
■  h,  wealth.  Their  wealth,  their  h ! 
Then  comes  the  feebler  h  of  your  plan. 
He  married  an  h,  an  orphan  with  half  a  shire 

Heirless    now  a  lonely  man  Wifeless  and  h, 
whether  that  h  flaw  In  his  throne's  title 

Heirloom    H's,  and  ancient  miracles  of  Art, 

Held    That  h  the  pear  to  the  gable-wall. 

Paris  h  the  costly  fruit  Out  at  arm's-length, 
not  the  less  h  she  her  solemn  mirth. 
You  h  your  course  without  remorse, 
H  me  above  the  subject,  as  strong  gales 
My  father  h  his  hand  upon  his  face ; 
Her  rags  scarce  h  together ; 
He  A  a  goose  upon  his  arm, 
there  we  ^  a  talk.  How  all  the  old  honour 
I  mean  of  verse  (for  so  we  h  it  then), 
dropt  the  branch  she  h,  and  turning, 
h  it  better  men  should  perish  one  by  one, 
grieving  h  his  will,  and  bore  it  thro'. 

And  yet  she  h  him  on  delayingly  „  468 

Some  that  she  but  h  off  to  draw  him  on ;  „  476 

With  daily-dwindling  profits  h  the  house ;  „  696 

H  his  head  high,  and  cared  for  no  man,  „  848 

those  that  h  their  heads  above  the  crowd,  Tlie  Brook  10 

sweet  face  and  faith  H  him  from  that :  Aylmer's  Field  393 

Faded  with  morning,  but  his  purpose  h.  „  412 

as  if  he  h  The  Apocalyptic  millstone,  Sea  Breams  25 

My  master  h  That  Gods  there  are,  Lucretius  116 

She  h  it  out ;  and  as  a  parrot  turns  Princess,  Pro.  171 

He  h  his  sceptre  like  a  pedant's  wand  „  i  27 

knowledge,  so  my  daughter  h,  Was  all  in  all :  „  135 

And  h  her  round  the  knees  against  his  waist,  „  ii  363 

In  this  hand  h  a  volume  as  to  read,  „  455 

heard  In  the  dead  hush  the  papers  that  she  h  Rustle :        „  iv  390 

some  pretext  h  Of  baby  troth,  invalid,  „  v  397 

I  pored  upon  her  letter  which  I  h,  „  469 

painting  and  the  tress.  And  h  them  up :  „  vi  111 

Love  in  the  sacred  halls  H  carnival  at  will,  „  vii  85 

h  A  volume  of  the  Poets  of  her  land :  „  173 

I  H  it  truth,  with  him  who  sings  In  Mem.  i  1 

The  man  Ih  as  half-divine ;  „         xiv  10 

if  we  /*  the  doctrine  sound  For  life  outliving  „  liii  9 

Where  once  we  h  debate,  a  band  Of  youthful  friends,  „  Ixxxvii  21 

'Tis  h  that  sorrow  makes  us  wise,  „      cviii  15 

'Tis  h  that  sorrow  makes  us  wise ;  „        cxiii  1 

Thkse  to  His  Memory — since  he  h  them  dear,  Bed.  of  Idylls  1 

h  Tintagil  castle  by  the  Cornish  sea,  Com.  of  Arthur  187 


Church-warden,  etc.  33 

D.  of  the  Old  Year  31 

Gardener's  B.  189 

Locksley  Hall  178 

Lady  Clare  19 

86 

Aylmer's  Field  24 

W.  to  Alexandra  27 

In  Mem.  xc  15 

Maud  I  xix  78 

Com.  of  Arthur  207 

230 

368 

386 

Gareth  and  L.  102 

Balin  and  Balan  117 

Lancelot  and  E.  1398 

Last  Tournament  91 

Lover's  Tale  i  675 

iv  129 

Tiresias  12 

Ancient  Sage  147 

By  an  Evolution.  14 

Akbar's  Dream  171 

Lady  Clare  83,  85 

Aylmer's  Field  24 

297 

368 

Princess  Hi  237 

Charity  13 

Lancelot  and  E.  1371 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  72 

Lover's  Tale  iv  192 

Mariana  4 

Qinone  135  ' 

Palace  of  Art  215 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  45 

D.  of  F.  Women  10 

107 

The  Goose  2 

5 

The  Epic  6 

„       26 

Gardener's  D.  157 

Locksley  Hall  179 

Enoch  Arden  167 


Held 


321 


Helm 


I  h  with  these,  and  loathe  to  ask  thee 


Held  {continued) 
aught. 

A  All  in  a  gap-mouth'd  circle  his  good  mates 
a  casque ;  that  h  The  horse,  the  spear ; 
that  day  a  feast  had  been  H  in  high  hall, 
H  court  at  old  Caerleon  upon  Usk. 
caught  His  purple  scarf,  and  h,  and  said, 
Down  to  the  meadow  where  the  jousts  were  h, 
H  his  head  high,  and  thought  himself  a  knight, 
H  commune  with  herself,  and  while  she  h 
moving  back  she  h  Her  finger  up, 
(And  flll'd  a  horn  with  wine  and  A  it  to  her,) 
Edyrn,  whom  he  h  In  converse  for  a  little, 
who  h  and  lost  with  Lot  In  that  first  war, 
Flow'd  from  the  spiritual  Uly  that  she  h. 
one  had  watch' d,  and  had  not  h  his  peace : 
And  that  it  was  too  slippery  to  be  h, 
she,  who  h  her  eyes  upon  the  ground, 
noble  things,  and  h  her  from  her  sleep. 
They  that  assail'd,  and  they  that  h  the  lists. 
Ranged  with  the  Table  Round  that  h  the  lists. 
And  all  the  Table  Roimd  that  h  the  lists, 
h  her  tenderly.  And  loved  her  with  all  love 
Her  all  but  utter  whiteness  h  for  sin, 
caught  his  hand,  H  it,  and  there, 
h,  that  if  the  King  Had  seen  the  sight 
she  said,  '  Had  ye  not  h  your  Lancelot 
'  Fake !  and  I  h  thee  pure  as  Guinevere.' 
*  Have  any  of  our  Round  Table  h  their  vows  ? ' 
met  A  cripple,  one  that  h  a  hand  for  alms — 
had  h  sometime  with  pain  His  own  against  him, 


Gareih  and  L.  356 
510 
680 
848 
Marr.  of  Geraint  146 
377 
537 

Geraint  and  E.  242 
368 
452 
659 
881 

Balin  and  Balan  1 
264 

Merlin  and  V.  162 
Lancelot  and  E.  213 
232 
339 
455 
467 
499 
867 
Holy  Grail  84 
754 
903 

Pelleas  and  E.  182 

522 

„      •     533 

542 

Last  Tournament  178 


H  her  awake :  or  if  she  slept,  she  dream'd 

Had  h  the  field  of  battle  was  the  King : 

H  for  a  space  'twixt  cloud  and  wave, 

H  converse  sweet  and  low — low  converse  sweet, 

Long  time  entrancement  h  me. 

And  those  that  h  the  bier  before  my  face, 

our  house  has  h  Three  hundred  years — 

defended  the  hold  that  we  h  with  our  lives — 

we  have  h  it  for  eighty-seven ! 

when  I  ft  it  aloft  in  my  joy. 

But  pity — the  Pagan  A  it  a  vice — 

and  h  his  own  Like  an  Englishman 

were  h  for  a  while  from  the  fight. 

She  h  them  up  to  the  view ; 

I  h  you  at  that  moment  even  dearer  than  before ; 

caught  and  h  His  people  by  the  bridle-rein  of  Truth, 

'Helen    the  breasts.  The  breasts  of  H, 
Ws  Tower,  here  I  stand. 

Helicon    frog  coarser  croak  upon  our  H  ? 

Heliconian    H  honey  in  living  words, 

lands  that  lie  Subjected  to  the  H  ridge 

Hell    I  hated  him  with  the  hate  of  h, 
Struck  thro'  with  pangs  of  h. 
some,  'tis  whisper'd — ^down  in  h  Suffer  endless 

anguish,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  123 

all  h  beneath  Made  me  boil  over.  St.  S.  Stylites  170 

Deep  asRl  count  his  error.  The  Captain  3 

'  Thro'  slander,  meanest  spawn  of  H —  The  Letters  33 

Mix'd  with  cunning  sparks  of  h.  Vision  of  Sin  114 

Lightens  from  her  own  central  H —  Aylmer's  Field  761 

Dropping  the  too  rough  H  in  i7  and  Heaven,  Sea  Dreams  196 

The  mortal  soul  from  out  immortal  h,  Lucretius  263 

paints  the  gates  of  H  with  Paradise,  Princess  iv  131 

the  fires  of  H  Mix  with  his  hearth :  „        v  454 

this  French  God,  the  child  of  H,  Third  of  Feb.  7 

Into  the  mouth  of  H  Rode  the  six  hundred.  Light  Brigade  25 

Back  from  the  mouth  of  H,  »  47 

Procuress  to  the  Lords  of  H.  In  Mem.  liii  16 

And  compass'd  by  the  fires  of  fl^ ;  „  cxxvii  17 

the  passions  that  make  earth  H !  Mavd  I  x  46 

/  have  climb'd  nearer  out  of  lonely  H.  „  (cviii  80 

fires  of  H  brake  out  of  thy  rising  sun,  „      II  i  9 

The  fires  of  H  and  of  Hate ;  „  10 

Despite  of  Day  and  Night  and  Death  and  B.'  Gareth  and  L.  887 


Guinevere  75 

Pass,  of  Arthur  138 

Lover's  Tale  i  417 

541 

626 

Sisters  (E."and  E.)  52 

Def.  of  Lu^know  7 

105 

The  Wreck  33 

Despair  41 

Heavy  Brigade  18 

36 

Dead  Prophet  72 

Happy  90 

Akbar's  Dream  84 

Lucretius  61 

Helen's  Tower  1 

Trans,  of  Homer  4 

Lucretius  224 

Tiresias  26 

The  Sisters  22 

Palace  of  Art  220 


HeU  (continued)    I  was  halfway  down  the  slope  to  H,       Geraint  and  E.  791 

Whereout  the  Demon  issued  up  from  H.  Balin  and  Balan  317 

fire  of  Heaven  is  not  the  flame  of  H.  (repeat)  „    443,  447, 

451,  455 

And  dallies  with  him  in  the  Mouth  of  H.'  „            615 

May  this  hard  earth  cleave  to  the  Nadir  h  Merlin  and  V.  349 

women,  worst  and  best,  as  Heaven  and  H.  „            815 

H  burst  up  your  harlot  roofs  Bellowing,  Pelleas  and  E.  466 

'  Thou  art  false  as  H :  slay  me :  „          576 

he  could  harp  his  wife  up  out  of  h.'  Last  Tournament  328 

'  The  teeth  of  H  flay  bare  and  gnash  thee  „            444 

the  scorpion-worm  that  twists  in  h,  „            451 

leave  me  all  alone  with  Mark  and  h.  „            536 

and  I  shall  not  find  him  in  H.  Rizpah  74 

thaw  theer's  naw  drinkin'  i'  H ;  North.  Cobbler  58 

tha'll  foller  'im  slick  into  H.'  „            66 

raiike  out  H  wi'  a  small-tooth  coiimb —  Village  Wife  76 

sulphur  like  so  many  fiends  in  their  h —  Def.  of  Lucknow  33 

Heat  like  the  mouth  of  a  h,  „             81 

we  have  sent  them  very  fiends  from  H ;  Columbus  184 

seest  the  souls  in  H  And  purgatory,  „        216 

In  the  rigging,  voices  of  h —  The  Wreck  92 

spoke,  oi  aH  without  help,  without  end.  Despair  26 

this  earth  is  a  fatherless  H —  „      57 

Infinite  cruelty  rather  that  made  everlasting  H,  „      96 

H !  if  the  souls  of  men  were  immortal,  „      99 

And  so  there  were  H  for  ever !  „    101 

His  Love  would  have  power  over  H  „    102 

But  the  God  of  Love  and  of  H  together —  „    105 

and  now  I  fly  from  H,  And  you  with  me ;  The  Flight  88 
sthrames  runnin'  down  at  the  back  o'  the  glin  'ud  'a 

dhrownded  H.  Tomorrow  24 

One  shriek'd  '  The  fires  oiHl'  Dead  Prophet  80 
thence  The  shrilly  whinnyings  of  the  team  of  H,         Demeter  and  P.  44 

Gods  against  the  fear  Of  Death  and  H ;  „          142 

No  sudden  heaven,  nor  sudden  h,  for  man.  The  Ring  41 

There  is  laughter  down  in  H  Forlorn  15 

Earth  and  H  will  brand  your  name,  „      51 

blasted  to  the  deathless  fire  of  H.  Happy  84 

made  an  English  homestead  H —  To  Mary  Boyle  37 

the  dead,  who  wait  the  doom  of  H  Romney's  R.  132 

all  the  H's  a-glare  in  either  eye,  Akbar's  Dream  115 
an'  the  tongue's  sit  afire  o'  H,                                 Church-warden,  etc.  24 

a  woman,  God  bless  her,  kept  me  from  H.  Charity  4   . 

Hell-black    God  'ill  pardon  the  h-b  raven  Rizpah  39 

Hell-fire    An'  Muggins  'e  preiich'd  o'  H-f  North.  Cobbler  55 

Down  out  o'  heaven  i'  H-f —  „            58 

Hell-heat    would  dare  H-h  or  Arctic  cold.  Ancient  Sage  116 

Hellish     Drench'd  with  the  h  oorali —  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  10 

Of  the  h  heat  of  a  wretched  life  Despair  68 

Helm  (helmet)    I  am  so  deeply  smitten  thro'  the  h  M.  d' Arthur  25 

Aidless,  alone,  and  smitten  thro'  the  h.  „          41 

A  scarf  of  orange  round  the  stony  h,  Princess,  Pro.  102 

fired  an  angry  Pallas  on  the  h,  „            vi  367 
he  neither  wore  on  h  or  shield  The  golden  symbol       Com.  of  Arthur  49 

fall  battleaxe  upon  h.  Fall  battleaxe,  „          486 

h  could  ride  Theretfaro'  nor  graze :  Gareth  and  L.  673 

Then  as  he  donn'd  the  h,  and  took  the  shield  „            690 

brought  a  h  With  but  a  drying  evergreen  „          1115 

Sir  Gareth's  head  prickled  beneath  his  ft ;  „          1397 

he  clove  the  ft  As  throughly  as  the  skuU ;  „          1406 

Aim'd  at  the  ft,  his  lance  err'd ;  Geraint  and  E.  157 

cast  his  lance  aside.  And  doS'd  his  ft :  „            596 

Hard  upon  ft  smote  him,  and  the  blade  flew  Balin  and  Balan  395 

BaUn  by  the  banneret  of  his  ft  Dragg'd  him,  „            398 

upon  his  ft  A  sleeve  of  scarlet,  Lancelot  and  E.  603 

he  had  not  loosed  it  from  his  ft,  „            809 

look'd  Down  on  his  ft,  from  which  her  sleeve  had  gone.  „            982 

Beat  like  a  strong  knight  on  his  ft,  Pelleas  and  E.  23 

Even  to  tipmost  lance  and  topmost  ft.  Last  Tournament  442 

he  spake  to  these  his  ft  was  lower'd,  Guinevere  593 

the  crash  Of  battleaxes  on  shatter'd  h's,  Pass,  of  Arthur  110 

Hard  on  that  ft  which  many  a  heathen  sword  „            166 

I  am  so  deeply  smitten  thro'  the  ft  „            193 

Aidless,  alone,  and  smitten  through  the  ft. —  „            209 


Helm 


322 


Herald 


Helm  (helmet)  (continued)    her  golden  h  And  all  her  golden  armour 

on  the  grass,  Tiresias  44 

Helm  (as  of  a  boat)    She  took  the  h  and  he  the  sail ;  Merlin  and  V.  200 

but  the  man  that  was  lash'd  to  the  h  had  gone ;  The  Wreck  110 

Whatever  statesman  hold  the  h.  Hands  all  Round  20 

Or  should  those  fail,  that  hold  the  h,  Prog,  of  Spring  100 

Helm  (verb)     overbears  the  bark.  And  him  that  h's  it,     Lancelot  and  E.  486 

Helmet    The  h  and  the  helmet-feather  Burn'd  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  21 

From  imdemeath  his  h  flow'd  His  coal-black  curls  „              30 

She  saw  the  h  and  the  plume,  „              40 

out  of  stricken  h's  sprang  the  fire.  Princess  v  495 

With  Psyche's  colour  round  his  h,  „        534 

And  wears  a  h  mounted  with  a  skull,  Gareth  and  L.  639 

Gareth  there  unlaced  His  h  as  to  slay  him,  „            979 

Sat  riveting  a  A  on  his  knee,  Marr.  of  Geraint  268 

Came  forward  with  the  h  yet  in  hand  „              285 

crack 'd  the  h  thro',  and  bit  the  bone,  „              573 

Till  his  eye  darken'd  and  his  h  wagg'd ;  Geraint  and  E.  505 

then  he  bound  Her  token  on  his  h,  Lancelot  and  E.  374 

leaving  for  the  cowl  The  h  in  an  abbey  far  away  Holy  Grail  6 

And  once  the  laces  of  a  A  crack'd.  Last  Tournament  164 

Tumbling  the  hollow  h's  of  the  fallen.  Pass,  of  Arthur  132 

spear  and  h  tipt  With  stormy  light  Tiresias  113 

Flicker'd  and  bicker'd  From  hto  h,  Merlin  and  the  G.  71 

Helmet-feather    The  helmet  and  the  h-f  Bum'd  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  21 

Helmet-hidden    the  face  Wellnigh  was  h-h,  Last  Tournament  456 

Helmless     I  sit  within  a  h  bark,  In  Mem.  iv  3 

Helmsman    I  leap  on  board :  no  h  steers :  Sir  Galahad  39 

Help  (s)    without  h  I  cannot  last  till  mom.  M.  d' Arthur  26 

I  grieve  to  see  you  poor  and  wanting  h :  Enoch  Arden  406 

a  voice  Of  comfort  and  an  open  hand  of  h,  Aylmer's  Field  174 

who  promised  h,  and  oozed  All  o'er  with  honey'd 

answer  Princess  v  241 

Because  it  needed  h  of  Love :  In  Mem.  xxv  8 

For  h  and  shelter  to  the  hermit's  cave.  Gareth  and  L.  1209 

scaled  with  h  a  hundred  feet  Up  from  the  base  :  Balin  and  Balan  170 

maiden  sprang  into  the  hall  Crying  on  h :  Holy  Grail  209 

shall  I  kill  myself  ?     What  h  in  that  ?  Guinevere  621 

without  h  I  cannot  last  till  mom.  Pass,  of  Arthur  Idi 

of  a  Hell  without  h,  without  end.  Despair  26 
they  maiikes  ma  a  A  to  the  poor,                             Church-warden,  etc.  39 
Help  (verb)     {See  also  'Elp)    grace  To  h  me  of  my 

weary  load.'  Mariana  in  the  S.  30 

until  he  grows  Of  age  to  A  us.'  Dora  127 

h's  the  hurt  that  Honour  feels,  Lochsley  Hall  105 

h  me  as  when  life  begun :  ,,185 

I  cannot  h  you  as  I  wish  to  do  Unless —  Enoch  Arden  407 

H  me  not  to  break  in  upon  her  peace.  „           787 

How  could  I  A  her  ?     '  Would  I—  The  Brook  111 

Poor  fellow,  could  he  ;*  it  ?  „          158 

there  was  one  to  hear  And  h  them  ?  Princess  ii  268 

I  heard,  I  could  not  h  it,  „          332 

oh.  Sirs,  could  I  h  it,  but  my  cheek  „       Hi  45 

(God  h  her)  she  was  wedded  to  a  fool ;  „            83 

h  my  prince  to  gain  His  rightful  bride,  „          160 

H,  father,  brother,  h ;  speak  to  the  king :  „      vi  305 

one  That  whoUy  scom'd  to  h  their  equal  rights  „     vii  233 

For,  saving  that,  ye  h  to  save  mankind  Ode  on  Well.  166 

How  best  to  h  the  slender  store,  To  F.  D.  Maurice  37 

'  God  h  me !  save  I  take  my  part  Of  danger  Sailor  Boy  21 

'  H  us  from  famine  And  plague  and  strife !  The  Victim  9 

But  h  thy  foolish  ones  to  bear;  In  Mem.,  Pro.  31 

H  thy  vain  worlds  to  bear  thy  light.  „            32 

Sent  to  him,  saying  '  Arise,  and  h  us  thou  !  Com.  of  Arthur  4A 

Sweet  f eices,  who  will  h  him  at  his  need.  „            279 

friends  Of  Arthur,  who  should  h  him  at  his  need,  Gareth  and  L.  230 

'  We  sit  King,  to  h  the  wrong'd  Thro'  all  our  realm.  „            371 

unhappiness  Of  one  who  came  to  h  thee,  „          1238 

'Hea\en/t  thee,' sigh'd  Lynette.  „          1357 

name  Slip  from  my  lips  if  I  can  h  it —  Marr.  of  Geraint  446 

So  this  will  h  him  of  his  violences ! '  Balin  and  Balan  205 
bounden  art  thou,  if  from  Arthur's  hall,  To  /*  the 

weak.  ,,              473 

fl,  for  he  follows !  take  me  to  thyself !  Merlin  and  V.  82 

The  sick  weak  beast  seeking  to  h  herself  „           498 


Help  (verb)  (continued)    '  What  matter,  so  I  A  him 

back  to  life  ?  '  Lancelot  and  E.  787 

and  said,  '  Betray  me  not,  but  h —  Pelleas  and  E.  360 

If  I,  the  Queen,  May  h  them,  loose  thy  tongue,  „            600 

To  h  it  from  the  death  that  cannot  die,  Guinevere  66 

But  h  me,  heaven,  for  surely  I  repent.  „        372 
friends  Of  Arthur,  who  should  h  him  at  his  need  ? '   Pass,  of  Arthur  456 


Lover's  Tale  iv  144 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  224 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  49 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  63 

162 

De  Prof.,  Human  C.  8 

Achilles  over  the  T.  13 

The  Wreck  56 

Ancient  Sage  258 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  267 

Parnassus  3 

5 

Death  of  CEnone  46 

Dora  51 

„  lis 

Enoch  Arden  815 

Aylmer's  Field  475 

Princess  i  227 

Marr.  of  Geraint  738 

Geraint  and  E.  638 

Lancelot  and  E.  297 

1307 

1311 

The  Wreck  58 

To  Mary  Boyle  39 

Princess  vii  258 

Last  Tournament  331 

Gareth  aiid  L.  1213 

Marr.  of  Geraint  768 


Sprang  up  a  friendship  that  may  h  us  yet, 

And  A  us  to  our  joy. 

I  should  cry  to  the  dear  Lord  Jesus  to  h  me, 

given  my  hfe  To  h  his  own  from  scathe, 

I'hen  I,  God  h  me,  I  So  mock'd, 

but  Thou  wilt  A  us  to  be. 

and  sail  to  h  him  in  the  war ; 

hand  that  would  h  me,  would  heal  me — 

Let  be  thy  wail  and  h  thy  fellow  men, 

to  A  his  homelier  brother  men, 

0  Goddesses,  h  me  up  thither! 
you  wiU  h  me  to  overcome  it, 
by  thy  love  which  once  was  mine,  H,  heal  me. 

Help'd-Helpt    and  his  father  help'd  him  not. 

God,  that  help'd  her  in  her  widowhood. 

or  help'd  At  lading  and  unlading  the  tall  barks. 

For  heart,  I  think,  help'd  head : 

Came  rimning  at  the  call,  and  help'd  us  down. 

Help'd  by  the  mother's  careful  hand  and  eye. 

Yea,  would  have  help'd  him  to  it : 

And  at  Caerleon  had  he  help'd  his  lord, 

some  rough  use.  And  help'd  her  from  herself.' 

as  would  have  help'd  her  from  her  death.' 

He  helpt  me  with  death,  and  he  heal'd 

hands  of  mine  Have  helpt  to  pass  a  bucket 
Helper    Henceforth  thou  hast  a  h,  me. 
Helpful    a  h  harper  thou.  That  harpest  downward ! 
Helping    h  back  the  dislocated  Kay  To  Camelot, 

Her  mother  silent  too,  nor  h  her. 
Helpless    his  blue  eyes  All  flooded  with  the  h  wrath  of 
tears. 

The  h  life  so  wild  that  it  was  tame. 

1  felt  Thy  h  warmth  about  my  barren  breast 
And  often  feeling  of  the  h  hands, 
Than  as  a  Uttle  h  innocent  bird. 
Then  his  h  heart  Leapt,  and  he  cried, 
to  and  fro  Swaying  the  h  hands, 
tiU  h  death  And  silence  made  him  bold — 
H,  taking  the  place  of  the  pitying  God 
Would  echo  h  laughter  to  your  jest ! 
peasants  maim  the  h  horse,  and  drive  Innocent 

cattle 

She  tumbled  his  h  corpse  about. 

And  golden  grain,  my  gift  to  h  man. 
Helplessness    Enid,  in  her  utter  h. 
Helpmate    '  lo  mine  h,  one  to  feel  My  purpose 
Helpt    /See  Help'd 
Helter-skelter    H-s  nms  the  age ; 
Hem  (s)    in  her  raiment's  h  was  traced  in  flame 
Hem  (verb)    one  but  speaks  or  h's  or  stirs  his  chair. 
Hemlock    Diotima,  teaching  him  that  died  Of  h ; 

the  h,  Brow-high,  did  strike  my  forehead 

Their  nectar  smack'd  of  h  on  the  lips. 
Hen    (See  also  Guinea-hens)    we  stole  his  fruit.  His 
h's,  his  eggs ; 

praised  his  h's,  his  geese,  his  guinea-hens ; 

a  A  To  her  false  daughters  in  the  pool ; 

even  in  their  h's  and  in  their  eggs — 

Pluksh  !  !  !  the  h's  i'  the  peas ! 
Hend  (end)    theer  wur  a  A  o'  the  taail, 

buried  togither,  an'  this  wur  the  A. 

if  soil  please  God,  to  the  A. 
Hengist    Heathen,  the  brood  by  H  left ; 
Hennemy  (enemy)    Theer's  thy  A,  man,  an'  I  knaws, 

I'll  looiJk  my  A  strait  i'  the  faiice, 
Henry  (the  Third)    H's  fifty  years  are  all  in  shadow,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  39 
Hepitaph  (epitaph)     Nor  her  wi'  the  A  yonder !  Spinster's  S's.  12 

Herald  (adj.)    The  A  melodies  of  spring,  In  Mem.  xxxviii  6- 


Enoch  Arden  32 

557 

Princess  vi  202 

„      vii  111 

Lancelot  and  E.  894 

Pelleas  and  E.  130 

Pass,  of  Arthur  131 

Lover's  Tale  iv  72 

Despair  42 

To  W.  H.  Brookfkld  5 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  95 

Dead  Prophet  65 

Demeter  and  P.  Ill 

Geraint  and  E.  719 

Guinevere  485 

Poets  and  Critics  2 
Tlie  Poet  45 

Sonnet  To 5 

Princess  Hi  303 

Lover's  Tale  ii  18 

Demeter  and  P.  104 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  85 

The  Brook  126 

Princess  v  328 

Holy  Grail  560 

Village  Wife  124 

86 

90 

Spinster's  S's.  112 

Guinevere  16 

North.  Cobbler  65 

74 


Herald 


323 


Hid 


Herald  (s)    The  h  of  her  triumph,  drawing  nigh 
let  her  h.  Reverence,  fly  Before  her 
She  sent  a  h  forth.  And  bade  him  cry, 
He  thrice  had  sent  a  A  to  the  gates, 
And  all  that  mom  the  h's  to  and  fro, 
The  fe  of  a  higher  race, 

Heralded    And  h  the  distance  of  this  time ! 

Heraldry    title-scrolls  and  gorgeous  heraldries. 
Poor  old  H,  poor  old  History, 

Herb    (See  also  Garden-herbs)    For  the  Ox  Feeds  in 


(Enone  185 

Love  thou  thy  land  18 

Godiva  35 

Princess  v  332 

369 

In  Mem.  cxviii  14 

Lover's  Tale  i  562 

Aylmer's  Field  656 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  249 


I  Heresy 


the  h, 
Step  deeper  yet  in  h  and  fern, 
The  vilest  h  that  runs  to  seed 
bruised  the  h  and  crush'd  the  grape. 
For  underfoot  the  h  was  dry ; 
I  stoop'd,  I  gather'd  the  wild  h's, 
whatever  h  or  bahn  May  clear  the  blood  from 
poison, 
Hercules    My  H,  my  Roman  Antony, 

My  Eustace  might  have  sat  for  H; 
Herd  (s)     By  h's  upon  an  endless  plain. 

The  h,  wild  hearts  and  feeble  wings 

but  count  not  me  the  h  ! 

a  A  of  boys  with  clamour  bowl'd  And  stump'd 

and  as  the  leader  of  the  h  That  holds 

So  thick  with  lowings  of  the  h's, 

watch  her  harvest  ripen,  her  h  increase, 

the  hind  fell,  the  h  was  driven, 

vineyard,  hive  and  horse  and  h ; 
Herd  (verb)     I,  to  A  with  narrow  foreheads. 
Herded    thick  as  h  ewes,  And  rainbow  robes, 
Herdsman    Earth  Reels,  and  the  herdsmen  cry ; 
Here    H  comes  to-day,  Pallas  and  Aphroditfe, 

I  beheld  great  H's  angry  eyes. 

The  Samian  H  rises  and  she  speaks 

woman  is  the  better  man ;  A  rampant  h, 

the  king  along  with  him — All  h,  treason : 

a  cross  of  flesh  and  blood  And  holier.    That  was  h. 

'  H. — Penance  ?  '     '  Fast,  Hairshirt  and  scourge — 

'  H — Not  shriven,  not  saved  ? ' 

'  H.'    (My  friend  is  long  in  coming.) 

'  H ' — (Hath  he  been  here — not  found  me — 

Some  thought  it  h,  but  that  would  not  hold. 

Not  even  by  one  hair's-breadth  of  h. 

Thy  elect  have  no  dealings  with  either  h  or 
orthodoxy ; 

H  to  the  heretic,  and  religion  to  the  orthodox, 

one  of  those  Who  mix  the  wines  of  h 
Bicetic    And  burn'd  ahve  as  h's ! 

He  would  be  found  a  A  to  Himself, 

Heresy  to  the  h,  and  religion  to  the  orthodox. 
Heretical    They  said  with  such  h  arrogance 
Heritage    Will  not  another  take  their  h  ? 

Push'd  from  his  chair  of  regal  h. 

This  h  of  the  past ; 
Hermit     Knave,  my  knight,  a  h  once  was  here. 

For  help  and  shelter  to  the  h's  cave. 

now  for  forty  years  A  h,  who  had  pray'd. 

Then  came  the  h  out  and  bare  him  in, 

h,  skill'd  in  all  The  simples  and  the  science 

and  thereby  A  holy  h  ia  a,  hermitage, 

When  the  h  made  an  end, 

there  the  h  slaked  my  burning  thirst, 
Hermitage    thereby  A  holy  hermit  in  a  fe, 
Hermon    we  shall  stand  transfigured,  like  Christ  on  H  hill, 
Hem    I  come  from  haimts  of  coot  and  h, 

And  floods  the  haunts  of  h  and  crake ; 

When  the  lone  h  forgets  his  melancholy, 

swamps  and  pools,  waste  places  of  the  /*, 

Who  lost  the  h  we  slipt  her  at, 

»    h'es  tall  Dislodging  pinnacle  and  parapet 


Supp.  Confessions  151 

Talking  Oak  245 

Amphion  95 

In  Mem.  xxxv  23 

„  xcv2 

Lover's  Tale  i  342 

Death  of  (Enone  35 

Z».  ofF.  Women  150 

Gardener's  D.  7 

Palace  of  Art  74 

Love  thou  thy  land  11 

Golden  Year  13 

Princess,  Pro.  81 

vi  85 

In  Mem.  xcix  3 

Maud  III  vi  25 

Com.  of  Arthur  432 

To  Virgil  10 

Locksley  Hall  175 

Princess  iv  479 

V  529 

(Enone  85 

,,190 

Princess  Hi  115 

„         iv  411 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  50 

138 

141 

143 

147 

151 

Columbus  46 

64 

Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  7 


Hero 


Heroic,  for  a  h  Ues  beneath. 
Or  be  yourself  your  h  if  you  will.' 
I  answer'd, '  each  be  h  in  his  turn ! 
While  horse  and  h  fell, 


Akbar's  Bream  174 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  48 

182 

Akbar's  B.,  Inscrip.  8 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  15 

Aylmer's  Field  786 

Lover's  Tale  i  118 

Freedom  24 

Gareth  and  L  1196 

1209 

Lancelot  and  E.  403 

519 

861 

Holy  Grail  443 

457 

461 

443 

Happy  38 

The  Brook  23 

In  Mem.  ci  14 

Gareth  and  L.  1185 

Geraint  and  E.  31 

Lancelot  and  E.  657 

B.ofF.  Women  25 

Princess,  Pro.  212 

222 

228 

Light  Brigade  44 


Hero  {continued)    To  greet  us,  her  young  /( in  her 

arms  !  Lover's  Tale  iv  171 

as  the  bravest  A  of  song,  V .  of  Maddune  5 

Crept  to  his  North  again,  Hoar-headed  h  !  Bait,  of  Brunanburh  64 

Never  had  huger  Slaughter  of  h'es  „              111 

Herod    H,  when  the  shout  was  in  his  ears.  Palace  of  Art  219 

Heroic  (adj.)    {See  also  Mock-heroic,  True-heroic)    H, 

for  a  hero  lies  beneath.  Grave,  solemn ! '  Princess,  Pro.  212 

H  if  you  will,  or  what  you  will,  „            221 

H  seems  our  Princess  as  required —  „            230 

'  Why  take  the  style  of  those  h  times  ?  The  Epic  35 

One  equal  temper  of  h  hearts,  Ulysses  68 

So  past  the  strong  h  soul  away.  Enoch  Arden  915 

The  massive  square  of  his  h  breast,  Marr.  of  Geraint  75 

and  thou,  H  sailor-soul.  Sir  J.  Franklin  2 

golden  lyre  Is  ever  sounding  in  h  ears  H  hymns,  Tiresias  181 

Heroic  (s)     In  mock  h's  stranger  than  our  own ;  Princess,  Con.  64 

Heroine     '  Take  Lilia,  then,  for  h,'  „     Pro.  223 

When  dames  and  h's  of  the  golden  year  „           vi  64 

greatest  of  women,  island  h,  Kapiolani  Kapiolani  5 

Heroism    earn  from  both  the  praise  of  h.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  251 

Heron    the  h  rises  from  his  watch  beside  the  mere,  Happy  3 

Herse  (horse)     Fur  'e  smell'd  like  a  h  a-singein',  Owd  Boa  101 

Hesitating    Down  the  long  tower-stairs,  h :  Lancelot  and  E.  343 

Hesp  (hasp)     why  didn't  tha  h  the  gaate  ?  Village  Wife  124 

Hesper     H  is  stayed  between  the  two  peaks ;  Leonine  Lleg.  11 

False-eyed  H,  unkind,  „            16 

Large  H  glitter'd  on  her  tears,  Mariana  in  the  S.  90 

Sad  H  o'er  the  buried  sun  In  Mem.  cxxi  1 

H,  whom  the  poet  call'd  the  Bringer  home  of  all 

good  things.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  185 

All  good  things  may  move  in  H,  perfect  peoples,  „              186 

H — Venus — were  we  native  to  that  splendour  „              187 

Hesperian    Disclosed  a  fruit  of  pure  H  gold,  (Enone  66 

Hesperus    that  H  all  things  bringeth.  Leonine  Eleg.  13 

'  Meeidies  ' — '  H ' — '  Nox ' — '  Mors,'  Gareth  and  L.  1204 

Hesper-Phosphor    Sweet  H-P,  double  name  In  Mem.  cxxi  17 

Hest    Yet  I  thy  h  will  all  perform  at  full,  M.  d' Arthur  43 

Yet  I  thy  h  will  all  perform  at  full.  Pass,  of  Arthur  211 

Hetairai    girls,  H,  curious  in  their  art,  Lucretius  52 

Hetty    An'  H  wur  weak  i'  the  hattics.  Village  Wife  101 

Hew    my  arm  was  lifted  to  h  down  A  cavalier  B.  of  F.  Women  45 

draw  water,  or  h  wood.  Or  grosser  tasks ;  Gareth  and  L.  486 

Hew'd    my  race  H  Ammon,  hip  and  thigh,  B.  of  F.  Women  238 

And  h  great  pieces  of  his  armour  off  him,  Gareth  and  L.  1142 

Sympathy  h  out  The  bosom-sepulchre  of  Sympathy  ?  Lover's  Tale  ii  31 

H  the  linden  wood,  Hack'd  the  battleshield,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  12 

and  h  Like  broad  oaks  with  thunder.  The  Tourney  10 

Hewing     woodman  at  a  bough  Wearily  h.  Balin  and  Balan  295 

All  that  day  long  labour'd,  h  the  pines,  Death  of  (Enone  62 

Hewn    With  rugged  maxims  h  from  l&e ;  Ode  on  Well.  184 

the  splintering  spear,  the  hard  mail  h.  Pass,  of  Arthur  108 

Hexameter    rise  And  long  roll  of  the  H —  Lucretius  11 

These  lame  h's  the  strong-wing'd  music  Trans,  of  Homer  1 

H's  no  worse  than  daring  Germany  gave  us. 

Barbarous  experiment,  barbarous  h's.  „             5 

Heye  (eye)     But  the  heat  druv  hout  i'  my  h's  Owd  Boa  84 

Hiccup    man  coomin'  in  wi'  a  A  Spinster's  S's.  98 

Hie  Jacet    by  the  cold  H  J's  of  the  dead ! '  Merlin  and  V.  753 
Hid    {See  also  Half-hid,  'Id)    For  h  in  ringlets  day  and 

night.  Miller's  D.  173 

And  h  Excalibur  the  second  time,  M.  d' Arthur  111 

and  Dora  h  her  face  By  Mary.  Dora  15Q 

h  his  face  From  all  men,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  20 

'  I  would  have  h  her  needle  in  my  heart,  Edwin  Morris  62 

Saying,  '  I  have  h  my  feelings,  Locksley  Hall  29 

From  havens  h  in  fairy  bowers.  The  Voyage  54 

Which  h  the  Holiest  from  the  people's  eyes  Aylmer's  Field  772 

echo  like  a  ghostly  woodpecker,  H  in  the  ruins ;  Princess,  Pro.  218 

some  h  and  sought  In  the  orange  thickets :  „          ii  459 

The  woman's  garment  h  the  woman's  heart.'  „           v  305 

mimibled  it,  And  h  her  bosom  with  it ;  „          vi  214 
Woods  where  we  h  from  the  wet.                         Window,  Marr.  Morn.  6 

The  moon  is  h ;  the  night  is  still ;  In  Mem.  xaviii  2 

The  moon  is  h,  the  night  is  still;  „               civ  2 


Hid 


324 


High 


Hid  (continued)    an  Isis  h  by  the  vefl.  Mavd  I  iv  43 
more  exprest  Than  h  her,  clung  about  her  lissome 

limbs,  Merlin  and  V.  223 

and  not  with  half  disdain  E  under  grace,  Lancelot  and  E.  264 

H  from  the  wide  world's  rumour  by  the  grove  „            522 

And  h  Excalibur  the  second  time.  Pass,  of  Arthur  279 

and  falling  h  the  frame.  Lover's  Tale  iv  217 

She  feels  the  Sun  is  h  but  for  a  night,  Ancient  Sage  73 

Would  Earth  tho'  h  in  cloud  Happy  97 
left  his  dagger  behind  him.    I  found  it.    I  A  it  away.  Bandit's  Death  12 

Hidalgo    and  his  H's — shipwrecks,  famines,  Columbus  225 

Hidden  (See  also  Half-hidden,  Haze-hidden,  Helmet- 
hidden)  place  with  joy  Z?  in  sorrow:  Dying  Swan  23 
The  smell  of  violets,  h  m  the  green,  D.  of  F.  Women  77 
Gold-mines  of  thought  to  lift  the  h  ore  „  274 
Hail,  h  to  the  knees  in  fern.  Talking  Oak  29 
h  from  the  heart's  disgrace,  Locksley  Hall  57 
Lay  h  as  the  music  of  the  moon  Aylmer's  Field  102 
warm-blue  breathings  of  a  A  hearth  „  155 
'betwixt  these  two  Division  smoulders  h;  Princess  Hi  79 
her  face  Wellnigh  was  h  in  the  minster  gloom ;  Com.  of  Arthur  289 
let  my  name  Be  h,  and  give  me  the  first  quest,  Gareth  and  L.  545 
Nay,  truly  we  were  h  :  this  fair  lord,  Balin  and  Balan  507 
and  bottom  of  the  well.  Where  Truth  is  h.  Merlin  and  V.  48 
Now  guess'd  a  h  meaning  in  his  arms,  Lancelot  and  E.  17 
Lancelot  saying, '  Hear,  but  hold  my  name  H,  „  417 
know  full  well  Where  your  great  knight  is  h,  „  690 
echoes  h  in  the  wall  Rang  out  like  hoUow  woods  Pelleas  and  E.  366 
(When  first  I  learnt  thee  h  here)  Guinevere  539 
number'd  the  bones,  I  have  h  them  all.  Rizpah  10 
h  there  from  the  light  of  the  sun —  Def.  of  Lucknow  63 
Mother's  diamonds  h  from  her  there.  The  Ring  142 
And  all  the  winters  are  h.  The  Throstle  16 
A  thousand  things  are  h  still  Mechanophilus  23 
'  Some  h  principle  to  move.  Two  Voices  133 
'  A  h  hope,'  the  voice  replied :  „  441 
sitting  in  the  deeps  Upon  the  h  bases  of  the  hills.'  M.  d' Arthur  106 
And  draws  the  veil  from  h  worth.  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  4 
How  dark  those  h  eyes  must  be ! '  „  32 
See  with  clear  eye  some  h  shame  In  Mem.  li  7 
distant  hills  From  h  summits  fed  with  rills  „  ciii  7 
sitting  in  the  deeps  Upon  the  h  bases  of  the  hills.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  274 
that  sends  the  h  sun  Down  yon  dark  sea,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  33 
Son,  in  the  h  world  of  sight,  that  Uves  Tiresias  51 
Fear  not  thou  the  h  purpose  of  that  Power  God  and  the  Univ.  5 

Hide    (See  also  'Ide)    run  to  and  fro,  and  h  and  seek.  The  Mermaid  35 

for  the  tear  thou  couldst  not  h,  The  Bridesmaid  11 

'  I  cannot  h  that  some  have  striven.  Two  Voices  208 
neither  h  the  ray  From  those,  not  blind,                  Love  thou  thy  land  14 

Where  shall  I  h  my  forehead  and  my  eyes  ?  M.  d' Arthur  228 

Oh,  h  thy  knotted  knees  in  fern.  Talking  Oak  93 

H  me  from  my  deep  emotion,  Locksley  Hall  108 

H,  h  them,  mUUon-myrtled  wilderness,  Lucretius  204 

And  cavern-shadowing  laurels,  h !  „        205 

See  they  sit,  they  h  their  faces,  Boddicea  51 

Is  there  no  baseness  we  would  h?  In  Mem.  li  3 

And  h  thy  shame  beneath  the  ground.  „  Ixxii  28 

That  evermore  she  long'd  to  h  herself,  Gareth  and  L.  Ill 

will  h  with  mantling  flowers  As  if  for  pity  ? '  „          1392 

if  he  die,  why  earth  has  earth  enough  To  h  him.  GerairU  and  E.  555 

Well,  A  it,  A  It ;  I  shall  find  it  out ;  Merlin  and  V.  528 

h  it  therefore ;  go  unknown :  Win !  Lancelot  and  E.  151 

therefore  would  he  h  his  name  From  all  men,  „              580 

And  sharply  tum'd  about  to  h  her  face,  „              608 

There  will  I  h  thee,  till  my  life  shall  end,  Guinevere  114 

Would  God  that  thou  could'st  h  me  from  myself  !  ,,118 

Where  shall  I  A  my  forehead  and  my  eyes  ?  Pass,  of  Arthur  396 

Dust  to  dust— low  down— let  us  h !  Rizpah  37 
H  me.  Mother !  my  Fathers  belong'd  to  the  church  of  old.  The  Wreck  1 

I  would  h  from  the  storm  without,  „        9 

I  will  h  my  face,  I  wiU  tell  you  all.  „      12 

and  higher.  The  cloud  that  h's  it —  Ancient  Sage  12 

Marriage  will  not  h  it.  Forlorn  50 

Hideoiu    Day,  mark'd  as  with  some  h  crime,  In  Mem.  Ixxii  18 
Hideonsness    roofs  of  slated  h !                                   Locksley  H.,  Sixty  246 


Hiding    (See  also  Heart-hiding)    To  take  me  to  that 

h  in  the  hills.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  2 

Hiding-place     by  mine  head  she  knows  his  h-p.'  Lancelot  and  E.  714 
High    (See  also  Breast-high,  Brow-high)    either  babbUng 

world  of  h  and  low;  Ode  on  Well.  182 
Peak,  That  standest  h  above  all  ?  Voice  and  the  P.  10 
The  Peak  is  h  and  flush'd  „  29 
The  Peak  is  h,  and  the  stars  are  h,  „  31 
they  set  him  on  h  That  all  the  ships  Rizpah  37 
She  is  A  in  the  Heaven  of  Heavens,  Charity  42 
Some  too  h — no  fault  of  thine —  Poets  and  Critics  12 
Whether  the  h  field  on  the  bushless  Pike,  Ode  to  Memory  96 
Heaven  flow'd  upon  the  soul  in  many  dreams  Of  h  desire.  The  Poet  32 
Whither  away  from  the  h  green  field,  Sea-Fairies  8 
To  the  pale-green  sea-groves  straight  and  h,  The  Merman  19 
H  things  were  spoken  there,  unhanded  down ;  Alexander  12 
Hve  alone  unto  herself  In  her  h  palace  there.  Palace  of  Art  12 
h  shrine-doors  burst  thro'  with  heated  blasts  D.  of  F.  Women  29 
'  The  h  masts  flicker'd  as  they  lay  afloat ;  „  113 
his  forehead  like  a  rising  sun  H  from  the  dais- 
throne-  M.  d' Arthur  218 
Three  years  I  lived  upon  a  pillar,  h  Six  cubits,  St.  S,  Stylites  86 
this  h  dial,  which  my  sorrow  crowns —  „  95 
From  my  h  nest  of  penance  here  proclaim  „  167 
H  towns  on  hills  were  dimly  seen.  The  Voyage  34 
That  girt  the  region  with  h  cliS  and  lawn  :  Vision  of  Sin  47 
trees  As  A  as  heaven,  and  every  bird  that  sings :  Sea  Dreams  102 
Both  crown'd  with  stars  and  h  among  the  stars, —  „  241 
'  And  make  her  some  great  Princess,  six  feet  h,  Princess,  Pro.  224 
Or  Nymph,  or  Goddess,  at  h  tide  of  feast,  „  i  197 
At  those  h  words,  we  conscious  of  ourselves,  „  ii  67 
fail  so  far  In  h  desire,  they  know  not,  „  Hi  280 
They  haled  us  to  the  Princess  where  she  sat  H  in  the 

hall :  „            iv  272 

when  a  boy,  you  stoop'd  to  me  From  all  h  places,  „                430 

From  the  h  tree  the  blossom  wavering  fell,  „              vi  80 

trust  in  all  things  h  Comes  easy  to  him,  „           vii  329 

Or  tower,  or  h  hill-convent,  seen  The  Daisy  29 

With  many  a  rivulet  h  against  the  Sun  The  Islet  21 

Calm  and  deep  peace  on  this  h  wold,  In  Mem.  xi  5 

Did  ever  rise  from  h  to  higher ;  „        xli  2 

My  guardian  angel  will  speak  out  In  that  h  place,  „     xliv  16 

The  h  Muse  answer'd :  '  Wherefore  grieve  „      Iviii  9 

And  moving  up  from  h  to  higher,  „     Ixiv  13 

H  nature  amorous  of  the  good,  „       cix  9 

up  in  the  h  Hall-garden  I  see  her  pass  Uke  a  light ;  Mavd  I  iv  11 

For  him  did  his  h  sun  flame,  „         32 

Not  making  his  h  place  the  lawless  perch  Ded.  of  Idylls  22 

And  even  in  h  day  the  morning  star.  Com.  of  Arthur  100 

Beheld,  so  h  upon  the  dreary  deeps  „            373 

To  whom  arrived,  by  Dubric  the  h  saint,  „            453 

In  whom  h  God  hath  breathed  a  secret  thing.  „            501 

At  times  the  summit  of  the  h  city  flash'd ;  Gareth  and  L.  192 

over  all  H  on  the  top  were  those  three  Queens,  „            229 

H  nose,  a  nostril  large  and  fine,  „            465 

there  past  into  the  hall  A  damsel  of  h  lineage,  „            588 

Lyonors,  A  lady  of  h  lineage,  of  great  lands,  „             609 

rose  H  that  the  highest-crested  helm  could  ride  .,            673 

that  day  a  feast  had  been  Held  in  h  hall,  „            848 

Till  h  above  him,  circled  with  her  maids,  „          1374 

darken'd  from  the  h  light  in  his  eyes,  Marr.  of  Geraint  100 

lords  and  ladies  of  the  h  court  went  In  silver  tissue  „              662 

Geraint  Woke  where  he  slept  in  the  h  hall,  „              755 

another  gift  of  the  h  God,  Which,  maybe,  „              821 

giant  tower,  from  whose  h  crest,  they  say,  „              827 

For  bv  the  hands  of  Dubric,  the  h  saint,  „              838 

Held  his  head  h,  and  thought  himself  a  knight,  Geraint  and  E.  242 

For  once,  when  I  was  up  so  h  in  pride  „              790 

And  oft  I  talk'd  with  Dubric,  the  h  saint,  „              865 

but  when  he  mark'd  his  h  sweet  smile  In  passing,  Balin  and  Balan  160 

'  Too  h  this  mount  of  Camelot  for  me :  „              226 

Borne  by  some  h  Lord-prince  of  Arthiur's  hall,  „              466 

See  now,  I  set  thee  h  on  vantage  ground,  „              534 

And  the  h  purpose  broken  by  the  worm.  Merlin  and  V.  196 

passing  one,  at  the  h  peep  of  dawn,  „            560 


High 


325 


Highway 


il    Higb  (continued)    Till  the  h  dawn  piercing  the  royal 

i                rose  Merlin  and  V.  739 

Because  of  that  h  pleasure  which  I  had  „            877 

If  this  be  h,  what  is  it  to  be  low  ?  '  Lancelot  and  E.  1084 

from  the  h  door  streaming,  brake  Disorderly,  „            1347 

and  watch'd  The  h  reed  wave,  „            1390 

Low  as  the  hill  was  h,  and  where  the  vale  Holy  Grail  441 

And  this  h  Quest  as  at  a  simple  thing :  „        668 

Clear  as  a  lark,  h  o'er  me  as  a  lark,  „        833 

Nor  the  h  Grod  a  vision,  nor  that  One  Who  rose  again :  „        918 

h  doors  Were  softly  sunder'd,  and  thro'  these  Pelleas  and  E.  3 

I  might  have  answer'd  them  Even  before  h  God.  „          463 

he  saw  E  up  in  heaven  the  hall  that  Merlin  built,  „          553 

At  Camelot,  h  above  the  yellowing  woods.  Last  Tournament  3 

In  her  h  bower  the  Queen,  Working  a  tapestry,  „          128 

set  his  name  H  on  all  hills,  „          337 

Like  hiUsnow  h  in  heaven,  the  steel-blue  eyes,  „          667 

Climb'd  to  the  h  top  of  the  garden-wall  Ouineeere  25 

So  from  the  h  wall  and  the  flowering  grove  „        33 

H,  self-contain'd,  and  passionless,  „      406 

But  teach  h  thought,  and  amiable  words  „      481 

I  guard  as  God's  h  gift  from  scathe  and  wrong,  „      494 

And  miss  to  hear  h  talk  of  noble  deeds  „      499 

We  two  may  meet  before  h  God,  and  thou  „      564 

And  likewise  for  the  h  rank  she  had  borne,  „      695 

Till  the  H  God  behold  it  from  beyond.  Pass,  of  Arthur  16 

To  all  h  places  like  a  golden  cloud  For  ever  :  „            54 

three  whereat  we  gazed  On  that  h  day,  „          454 

his  h  hills,  with  flame  Milder  and  purer.  Lover's  Tale  i  322 

Who  scarce  can  tune  his  h  majestic  sense  „            475 

I  was  the  H  Priest  in  her  holiest  place,  „            686 

from  an  open  grating  overhead  H  in  the  wall,  „         iv  61 
that  a  man's  ideal  Is  A  in  Heaven,                         Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  131 

thaw  the  banks  o'  the  beck  be  sa  h,  Village  Wife  83 

Rifleman,  h  on  the  roof,  hidden  there  Def.  of  Liicknow  63 

what  full  tides  of  onset  sap  Our  seven  h  gates,  Tiresias  92 

Thro'  her  h  hill-passes  of  stainless  snow.  Bead  Prophet  47 
wild  heather  round  me  and  over  me  Jime's  h  blue,  June  Bracken,  etc.  2 

Been  hurl'd  so  h  they  ranged  about  the  globe  ?  St.  Telemachus  2 

High-arch'd    H-a  and  ivy-claspt.  Of  finest  Gothic  Princess,  Pro.  91 

High-built    storm  their  h-b  organs  make,  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  6 

their  h-b  galleons  came.  Ship  after  ship,  The  Revenge  58 

High-elbow'd    H-e  grigs  that  leap  in  summer  grass.  The  Brook  54 
Higher     {See  also  'Igher)     Up  h  with  the  yew-tree 

by  it.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  13 

As  never  sow  was  h  in  this  world —  „              96 

the  sensuous  organism  That  which  is  h.  Princess  ii  88 

stood  Among  her  maidens,  h  by  the  head,  „    Hi  179 

And  the  thought  of  a  man  is  h.  Voice  and  the  P.  32 

shine  ye  here  so  low  ?    Thy  ward  is  A  up :  Gareih  and  L.  1098 

Which  set  the  horror  h :  „            1394 

Broader  and  h  than  any  in  all  the  lands  !  Holy  Grail  247 

But  angled  in  the  h  pool.  Miller's  D.  64 

I  might  have  look'd  a  little  h  ;  „         140 

sure  he  was  a  foot  H  than  you  be.'  Enoch  Arden  855 

yet,  my  Lords,  not  well :  there  is  a  A  law.  Third  of  Feb.  12 

Of  their  dead  selves  to  h  things.  In  Mem.  i  4 

That  rises  upward  always  h,  „         xv  17 

Our  voices  took  a  h  range ;  „     xxx  21 

Whose  loves  in  h  love  endure  ;  „  xxxii  14 

Did  ever  rise  from  high  to  h;  „         xli  2 

A  h  height,  a  deeper  deep.  „    Ixiii  12 

And  moving  up  from  high  to  h,  „      Ixiv  13 

A  h  hand  must  make  her  mild,  „     cxiv  17 

The  herald  of  a  ft  race,  And  of  himself  in  h  place,  „  cxviii  14 

There  is  a  lower  and  aft;  ,.    cxxix  4 

I  wake  to  the  ft  aims  Of  a  land  that  has  lost  Maud  III  vi  38 

If  I  lose  it  and  myself  in  the  h  beauty,  Happy  58 

raising  her  Still  ft,  past  all  peril,  Lover's  Tale  i  394 

which  was  more  and  ft  than  all  Hope,  „            454 
but,  son,  the  source  is  ft.  Yon  summit  half-a- 
league  in  air — and  ft,  The  cloud  that  hides 
it — ft  still,  the  heavens  Whereby  the  cloud 

was  moulded.  Ancient  Sage  10 

dead,  as  happier  than  ourselves  And  ft,  „        206 


Higher  (continued)    if  thou  Lockk  ft,  then — ^perchance — thou 

mayest—  Ancient  Sage  281 

So  the  H  wields  the  Lower,  while  the  Lower  is 

thefi. 
Something  kindlier,  ft,  holier — 
a  glimpse  of  a  height  that  is  ft. 
comes  a  gleam  of  what  is  ft. 
Highering    See  Evei-highering 
Highest    And  ft,  snow  and  fire. 
And  clouds  are  ft  up  in  air, 
he  is  singing  Hosanna  in  the  ft : 
people  strowing  cried  '  Hosanna  in  the  ft ! ' 
worshipt  their  own  darkness  in  the  H  ? 
The  ft  IS  the  measure  of  the  man. 
This  flake  of  rainbow  flying  on  the  ft 
the  midmost  and  the  ft  Was  Arac : 
flush'd  At  his  ft  with  sunrise  fire ; 
immeasurable  heavens  Break  open  to  their  ft, 
The  King  is  King,  and  ever  wills  the  ft. 
On  Caer-Eryri's  ft  found  the  King, 
Arthur  in  the  ft  Leaven'd  the  world. 
The  meanest  having  power  upon  the  ft. 
Him  of  all  men  who  seems  to  me  the  A.'    '  H? 

the  father  answer'd,  echoing  '  ft  ? ' 
Daughter,  I  know  not  what  you  call  the  ft ; 
Guinevere  had  sinn'd  against  the  ft, 
Thou  art  the  ft  and  most  human  too. 
It  was  my  duty  to  have  loved  the  ft : 
We  needs  must  love  the  ft  when  we  see  it, 
thro'  what  we  feel  Within  ourselves  is  ft, 
According  to  the  H  in  the  H. 
'  The  Bright  one  in  the  ft  Is  brother  of  the  Dark 
He  Who  still  is  ft,  glancing  from  his  height 
ill-content  With  them,  who  still  are  ft. 
the  H  is  the  wisest  and  the  best, 
ere  we  reach'd  the  ft  summit  I  pluck'd  a  daisy. 
The  ft,  holiest  manhood,  thou : 
To  scale  the  heaven's  ft  height, 
What  find  I  in  the  ft  place, 
A  soul  on  ft  mission  sent. 
The  ft  virtue,  mother  of  them  all ; 
Crown'd  with  her  ft  act  the  placid  face 
that  ever  swarm  about  And  cloud  the  ft  heads, 
Forward,  till  you  see  the  ft  Human  Nature  is 
divine.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  276 

Highest-crested    rose  High  that  the  ft-c  helm  could  ride     Gareth  and  L.  673 
Highest-mounted     '  The  h-m  mind,'  he  said.  Two  Voices  79 

High-heaven    see  The  ft-ft  dawn  of  more  than  mortal  day   Ancient  Sage  284 
TTigMnnder    Havelock's  glorious  Z?'s  answer  Def  .  of  Lricknow  99 

war-harden'd  hand  of  the  H  wet  with  their  tears !  „  102 

Highlands    Sailing  under  palmy  ft  Th£  Captain  23 

Highness    Your  H  would  enroU  them  with  your  own.  Princess  i  239 

One  rose  in  all  the  world,  your  H  „        ii  51 

No  ghostly  hauntings  like  his  H.  „  411 

Your  H  might  have  seem'd  the  thing  you  say.'  „     Hi  202 

surely,  if  your  H  keep  Your  purport,  „  211 

'  Alas  your  H  breathes  full  East,'  „  231 

' pass  on ;  His  H  wakes : '  „  v5 

'  Amazed  am  I  to  hear  Your  H :  but  your  H  breaks 

with  ease  The  law  your  H  did  not  make :  „      vi  325 

these  men  came  to  woo  Your  H —  „  329 

High-set    h-s  courtesies  are  not  for  me.  Balin  and  Balan  227 

High-tempted    Of  hoar  h-t  Faith,  have  leagued 

again 
High-tide    raise  the  full  H-t  of  doubt 
High-walled    H-w  gardens  green  and  old ; 
Highway  (adj.)    dead,  become  Mere  ft  dust  ? 
Highway  (s)    There  she  sees  the  ft  near 
at  night  along  the  dusky  ft  near 
Cuts  off  the  fiery  ft  of  the  sun. 
Cut  off  the  length  of  ft  on  before, 
went  harping  down  The  black  king's  ft, 
The  ft  running  by  it  leaves  a  breadth 
down  the  ft  moving  on  With  easy  laugh te 
I  scaled  the  buoyant  ft  of  the  birds. 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  124 

160 

By  an  Evolution.  20 

FaOhQ 

Palace  of  Art  84 

Lady  Clare  2 

Enoch  Arden  503 

606 

Aylmer's  Field  643 

Princess  ii  157 

„      V  319 

256 

Voice  and  the  P.  30 

Spec,  of  Iliad  15 

Com.  of  Arthur  495 

Gareth  and  L.  500 

Merlin  and  V.  140 

195 

Lancelot  and  E.  Wll 

1080 

Last  Tournament  570 

Guinevere  649 

657 

660 

Ancient  Sage  88 

90 

Demeter  and  P.  94 

117 

129 

Faith  1 

The  Daisy  87 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  14 

„  cviii  7 

9 

„         cxiii  10 

Holy  Grail  446 

Lover's  Tale  i  216 

Co  umbus  120 


Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  10 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  178 

Arabian  Nights  8 

Love  and  Duty  11 

L.  of  ShaloU  ii  13 

Locksley  Hall  113 

Enoch  Arden  130 

673 

Last  Tournament  343 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  80 

Tiresias  199 

Prog,  of  Spring  80 


Hignorant 


326 


Hill 


Hignorant  (ignorant)    '  A  h  village  wife  as  'ud  hev  to 

be  larn'd  her  awn  plaace,' 
Hill  (snmame)    (See  also  Letty,  Letty  Hill)    millionaires, 


Village  Wife  106 


Here  lived  the  H's —  Edwin  Morris  11 

Hill    (See  also  Chalk-hill,  Clover-hill,  'HI)    Nor  the 
wind  on  the  h. 
And  hollows  of  the  fringed  h's 
ridge  Of  heaped  h's  that  mound  the  sea, 
Spring  Letters  cowslips  on  the  h  ? 
And  the  hearts  of  purple  h's, 
From  the  bosom  of  a  h. 
flee  By  town,  and  tower,  and  h,  and  cape,  and 

isle, 
new  deluge  from  a  thousand  h's 
The  willowy  h's  and  fields  among. 
The  white  chalk-quarry  from  the  h 
Before  he  mounts  the  h,  I  know  He  cometh  quickly 
a  fire  Is  poured  upon  the  h's,  , 
lovelier  Than  all  the  valleys  of  Ionian  h's. 
Paris,  once  her  playmate  on  the  h's. 
the  noonday  quiet  holds  the  h : 
Hear  me,  O  Earth,  hear  me,  O  E's, 
I  waited  underneath  the  dawning  h's, 
In  this  green  valley,  under  this  green  h, 
sounds  at  night  come  from  the  inmost  h's, 
Or  over  h's  with  peaky  tops  engrail'd, 
and  the  crowfoot  are  over  all  the  h. 
There's  not  a  flower  on  all  the  h's : 
cock  crows  from  the  farm  upon  the  h. 
His  waters  from  the  purple  h — 
reclined  On  the  h's  like  Gods  together. 
And  thunder  on  the  everlasting  h's. 
Steps  from  her  airy  h,  and  greens  The  swamp, 
Had  rest  by  stony  h's  of  Crete. 
Upon  the  hidden  bases  of  the  h's.' 
Larger  than  human  on  the  frozen  h's. 
those  that  stood  upon  the  h's  behind 
The  cuckoo  told  his  name  to  all  the  h's ; 
till  we  reach'd  The  limit  of  the  h's ; 
buffet  round  the  h's,  from  blufl  to  bluff. 
Rift  the  h's,  and  roll  the  waters, 
far  across  the  h's  they  went  In  that  new  world 
Across  the  h's,  and  far  away 
And  o'er  the  h's,  and  far  away  Beyond 
By  Ellen's  grave,  on  the  windy  h. 
High  towns  on  h's  were  dimly  seen. 
And  h's  and  scarlet-mingled  woods  Glow'd 
go  on  To  their  haven  under  the  h ; 
but  as  he  climb'd  the  h.  Just  where  the  prone  edge 
silent  water  slipping  from  the  h's, 
to  the  h.    There  he  sat  down  gazing  on  all  below ; 
By  thirty  h's  I  hurry  down, 

with  her  strong  feet  up  the  steep  h  Trod  out  a  path : 
From  h's,  that  look'd  across  a  land  of  hope, 
With  whom  I  sang  about  the  morning  h's, 
still  be  dear  beyond  the  southern  h's ; 
A  double  h  ran  up  his  furrowy  forks 
The  river  as  it  narrow'd  to  the  h's. 
They  faint  on  h  or  field  or  river : 
found  that  you  had  gone,  Ridd'n  to  the  h's, 
came  As  night  to  him  that  sitting  on  a  A 

And  hit  the  Northern  h's. 

Forgotten,  rusting  on  his  iron  h's, 

Suck'd  from  the  dark  heart  of  the  long  h's 

In  height  and  cold,  the  splendour  of  the  h's  ? 

Till  o'er  the  h's  her  eagles  flew 

tho'  the  Giant  Ages  heave  the  h  And  break  the  shore, 

and  Charlie  ploughing  the  h. 

Sown  in  a  wrinkle  of  the  monstrous  h, 

The  Priest  went  out  by  heath  and  h ; 

the  stars,  the  seas,  the  h's  and  the  plains — 

1  stand  on  the  slope  of  the  h. 

And  makes  a  silence  in  the  h's. 

But  all  the  lavish  h's  would  hum 


The  Christmas  bells  from  htoh  Answer  each  other 


All  Things  wUl  Die  26 

Supp.  Confessions  153 

Ode  to  Memory  98 

Adeline  62 

Eleanor  e  17 

Kate  5 

Mine  be  the  strength  6 

//  /  were  loved  12 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  25 

MiUer's  D.  115 

Fatima  22 

31 

CEwone2 

17 

25 

36 

47 

232 

249 

Palace  of  Art  113 

May  Queen  38 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  13 

23 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  93 

110 

D.ofF.  Women  226 

On  a  Mourner  8 

35 

M.  d' Arthur  106 

183 

Ep.  25 

Gardener's  D.  93 

Audley  Court  83 

Golden  Year  77 

Locksley  Hall  186 

Day -Dm.,  Depart.  3 

29 

Edward  Gray  12 

The  Voyage  34 

47 

Break,  break,  etc.  10 

Enoch  Arden  66 

633 

722 

The  Brook  27 

Sea  Dreams  120 

Princess  i  169 

m247 

265 

Hi  174 

196 

iv  14 

343 

574 

v44 

146 

349 

vii  194 

Ode  on  WeU.  112 

259 

Grandmother  80 

WUl  19 

The  Victim  29 

Eigh.  Pantheism  1 

Window,  On  the  Hill  9 

In  Mem.  xix  8 

xxiii  11 

xxviii  3 


Hill  (continu£d)    sound  of  streams  that  swift  or  slow 

Draw  down  jEonian  h's.  In  Mem.  xxxv  11 

whisper  sweet  About  the  ledges  of  the  h.'  „      xxxvii  8 

Or  seal'd  within  the  iron  h's?  „          Ivi  20 

A  distant  dearness  in  the  h,  „        Ixiv  19 

chequer-work  of  beam  and  shade  Along  the  h's, '  ,.      Ixxii  16 

And  h  and  wood  and  field  did  print  „       Ixxix  7 

Descend  below  the  golden  h's  With  promise  „    Ixxxiv  28 

Beyond  the  bounding  h  to  stray,  „    Ixxxix  30 

And  those  fair  h's  I  sail'd  below,  „        xcviii  2 

I  climb  the  h :  from  end  to  end  „              c\ 

Nor  quarry  trench'd  along  the  h  „               11 

memory  fades  From  all  the  circle  of  the  h's.  „           d  24 

distant  h's  From  hidden  summits  fed  with  rills  „           ciii  6 

A  single  church  below  the  h  Is  pealing,  „            civ  3 

The  h's  are  shadows,  jind  they  flow  From  form  to  form,  cxxiii  5 

spread  Their  sleeping  silver  thro'  the  h's;  „     Con.  116 

fleet  came  yonder  round  by  the  h,  Maud  I  i  49 

1  am  sick  of  the  Hall  and  the  h,  ,,            61 

Down  by  the  h  I  saw  them  ride,  „       ix  11 

Plucking  the  harmless  wild-flower  on  the  h  ? —  „      //  t  3 

saw  The  smallest  rock  far  on  the  faintest  h.  Com.  of  Arthur  99 
Men  saw  the  goodly  h's  of  Somerset,                          Marr.  of  Geraint  828 

But  not  to  goodly  h  or  yellow  sea  „            830 

all  night  long  a  cloud  clings  to  the  h,  Geraint  and  E.  691 

Men  weed  the  white  horse  on  the  Berkshire  h's  „            936 

he  saw  Fired  from  the  west,  far  on  a  h,  Lancelot  and  E.  168 

broke  The  Pagan  yet  once  more  on  Badon  h.'  ,,              280 

Among  the  tumbled  fragments  of  the  h's.'  „            1427 

a  silver  horn  from  o'er  the  h's  Blown,  Holy  Grail  109 

I  rode  on  and  found  a  mighty  h,  „          421 

a  lowly  vale,  Low  as  the  h  was  high,  „          441 

'  There  rose  a  h  that  none  but  man  could  climb,  „          489 

h,  or  plain,  at  sea,  or  flooding  ford.  „          728 

h  and  wood  Went  ever  streaming  by  him  Pelleas  and  E.  547 
set  his  name  High  on  all  h's.                                     Last  Tournament  337 

When  round  him  bent  the  spirits  of  the  h's  Guinevere  283 

on  from  h  to  h,  and  every  day  Beheld  at  noon  „        392 

Far  in  the  moonlit  haze  among  the  h's.  Pass,  of  Arthur  42 

Upon  the  hidden  bases  of  the  h's.'  „          274 

Larger  than  human  on  the  frozen  h's.  „          351 

the  vacancies  Between  the  tufted  h's,  Lover's  Tale  i  3 

pines  that  fledged  The  h's  that  watch'd  thee,  ,.            12 

muse  On  those  dear  h's,  that  never  more  will  meet  ,,            32 

Apart,  alone  together  on  those  h's.  ,,          190 

His  mountain-altars,  his  high  h's,  ,,          322 

reach'd  The  grassy  platform  on  some  A,  „          341 

how  native  Unto  the  h's  she  trod  on !  „          360 

we  came  To  what  our  people  call,  '  The  H  of  Woe.'  .,          374 

Arise  in  open  prospect — heath  and  h,  „          397 
'  let  this  be  call'd  henceforth  The  H  of  Hope ; '  and  I 

replied, '  O  sister.  My  will  is  one  with  thine ;  the  H 

of  Hope.' 
We  trod  the  shadow  of  the  downward  h ; 
Sometimes  upon  the  h's  beside  the  sea 
Chiefly  I  sought  the  cavern  and  the  h 
Great  h's  of  ruins,  and  collapsed  masses 
From  out  the  yellow  woods  upon  the  h 
wander  round  the  bases  of  the  h's, 
the  woods  upon  the  h  Waved  with  a  sudden  gust 
cheeks  as  bright  as  when  she  climb'd  the  h. 
fain  have  torrents,  lakes,  H's, 
To  take  me  to  that  hiding  in  the  h's. 
spend  my  one  last  year  among  the  h's. 
the  h's  are  white  with  rime, 
if  yonder  h  be  level  with  the  flat. 
Down  the  h,  down  the  h,  thousands  of  Russians, 


462 

515 

ii  4 

33 

65 

80 

121 

Hi  34 

47 

SisUrs  (E.  and  E.)  221 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  2 

Ancient  Sage  16 

The  Flight  4 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  111 

Heavy  Brigade  2 


up  the  h,  up  the  h,  up  the  h,  FoUow'd  the  Heavy 

Brigade.  ^^  u 
and  up  the  h,  up  the  h,  gallopt  the  gallant  three 

himdred,  .,          24 

Up  the  h,  up  the  h,  up  the  h,  out  of  the  field,  „          63 

domes  the  red-plow'd  h's  With  loving  blue ;  Early  Spring  3 
cuckoo  cries  From  out  a  phantom  h ;                  Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  20 

I  climb'd  the  h  with  Hubert  yesterday,  The  Ping  152 


HiU 


327 


Hoary 


TTill  (continiied)    we  shall  stand  transfigured,  like  Christ  on 

Hemion  h,  Happy  38 

Where  am  I  ?  snow  on  all  the  h^s  !  Romney's  R.  12 

To  wallow  in  that  winter  of  the  h's.  „            15 

I  had  been  among  the  h's,  and  brought  you  down  „            78 

But,  while  the  h's  remain.  Up  h  '  Too-slow  '  will  need  the 

whip,  Down  h  '  Too-quick,'  the  chain.  Politics  10 

Hill-convent    Or  tower,  or  high  h-c,  seen  The  Daisy  29 

Hill-fort    stonning  a  h-f  of  thieves  He  got  it ;  Aylmer's  Field  225 

Hillock    Peace  Pipe  on  her  pastoral  h  Maud  III  vi  24 

The  mortal  h,  Would  break  into  blossom  ;  Merlin  and  the  G.  107 

Hill-pass    high  h-p'es  of  stainless  snow.  Dead  Prophet  47 

Hill-side     {See  also  'Dl-Side)     woods  that  belt  the 

gray  h-s,  Ode  to  Memory  55 

The  whole  h-s  was  redder  than  a  fox.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  3 

Hill-slope     damp  h-s's  were  quickened  into  green,  Gareth  and  L.  184 

Hillsnow     a  brow  Like  h  high  in  heaven.  Last  Tournament  667 

Hilt     But  with  his  hand  against  the  A,  Love  thou  thy  land  83 

sparkled  keen  with  frost  against  the  h:  M.d'  Arthur  55 

But  when  he  saw  the  wonder  of  the  A,  „            85 

Thou  would'st  betray  me  for  the  precious  h ;  „          126 

caught  him  by  the  h,  and  branish  d  him  (repeat)  „  145, 160 

8o  great  a  miracle  as  yonder  h.  „          156 

rich  With  jewels,  elfin  Urim,  on  the  h,  Com.  of  Arthur  299 

Clash'd  his,  and  brake  it  utterly  to  the  h.  Gareth  and  L.  1148 

Caught  at  the  h,  as  to  abolish  him  :  Marr.  of  Geraint  210 

sparkled  keen  with  frost  against  the  h  :  Pass,  of  Arthur  223 

But  when  he  saw  the  wonder  of  the  h,  „            253 

Thou  would'st  betray  me  for  the  precious  h ;  „            294 

caught  him  by  the  h,  and  branish'd  him  (repeat)  „    313,  328 

So  great  a  miracle  as  yonder  h.  w            324 

Hilted    'S'ee  Oolden-Hilted 

Hind    the  h  fell,  the  herd  was  driven.  Fire  glimpsed  ;      Com.  of  Arthur  432 

the  h  To  whom  a  space  of  land  is  given  to  plow.  Holy  Grail  906 

Calling  me  thy  white  h,  and  saying  to  me  Last  Tournament  569 

Hinder    Came  all  in  haste  to  h  wrong.  Princess  iv  401 

What  h's  me  To  take  such  bloody  vengeance  „            533 

And  so,  before  the  two  could  h  him,  Gareth  and  L.  1368 

rule  the  land  Hereafter,  which  God  h.'  Lancelot  and  E.  66 

'  Heaven  h,'  said  the  King,  „             532 

Hindering    {See  also  Marriage-hindering)     Had  made  the 

pretext  of  a  A  wound,  „            582 

Hindrance     Divinely  thro'  all  h  finds  the  man  „            333 

Hindustan    Thro'  all  the  warring  world  of  R  Akbar's  Dream  26 

Hinge     The  doors  upon  their  h's  creak'd  ;  Mariana  62 

So  frequent  on  its  h  before.  [Deserted  House  8 

Half-parted  from  a  weak  and  scolding  h,  The  Brook  84 

I  grate  on  rusty  h's  here  :  '  Princess  i  86 

Hingin'  (hanging)     wi'  my  hairm  h  down  to  the  floor,  Owd  Rod  65 

TTinjian  (Indian)     Till  I  gied  'em  H  curn.  Village  Wife  118 

Hinn  (Inn)     I  started  awaay  like  a  shot,  an'  down  to 

the  H,  North.  Cobbler  69 

tha  mun  giJa  fur  it  down  to  the  H,  „          113 

out  o'  sight  o'  the  winders  o'  Gigglesby  H —  Spinsters  S's.  35 

Hint  (s)     A  Uttle  h  to  solace  woe,  A  h,  Two  Voices  433 

Like  h's  and  echoes  of  the  world  Day- Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  7 

No  h  of  death  in  all  his  frame,  In  Mem.  xiv  18 

with  shadow'd  h  confuse  A  life  that  leads  „     xxxiii  7 

A  little  flash,  a  mystic  h  ;  „         xliv  8 

And  sowing  one  ill  h  from  ear  to  ear,  Merlin  and  V.  143 

dark  sweet  h's  of  some  who  prized  him  „            159 

Hint  (verb)     Ah  pity — h  it  not  in  human  tones,  Wan  Sculptor  11 

Alone  might  h  of  my  disgrace  ;  Two  Voices  360 

laughingly  Would  h  at  worse  in  either.  Enoch  Arden  481 

We  whisper,  and  h,  and  chuckle,  Maud  I  iv  29 

Hinted    matron  saw  That  h  love  was  only  wasted  bait,            The  Ring  360 

Hip    See  Huck 

Hip  and  Thigh    my  race  Hew'd  Ammon,  hat,  D.  of  F.  Women  238 

Hire  (s)    Money — my  h — his  money —  Charity  19 

Hire  (verb)     And  h  thyself  to  serve  for  meats  Gareth  and  L.  153 
h  myself  To  serve  with  scuUions  and  with  kitchen  knaves  ;       „        169 

But  h  us  some  fair  chamber  for  the  night,  Geraint  and  E.  238 

Hired    h  himself  to  work  within  the  fields ;  Dora  38 

Nurse,  were  you  h  ?  Romney's  R.  16 

O  yes  !     I  h  you  for  a  season  there,  »          20 


Hireling    Who  had  borne  my  flower  on  her  h  heart.  The  Wreck  143 

Hispaniola     Howl'd  me  f rom  H ;  Columbus  118' 

harmless  people  whom  we  found  In  H's  island-Paradise  :  „        182 


Hiss     the  hot  h  \nd  busthng  whistle  of  the  youth 

h,  snake — I  saw  him  there^Let  the  fox  bark, 

A  A  as  from  a  wilderness  of  snakes, 
Hiss'd    h  each  at  other's  ear  What  shall  not  be 

wedded  her,'  he  said.  Not  said,  but  h  it : 

He  h,  '  Let  us  revenge  ourselves, 
Hissing     Each  h  in  his  neighbour's  ear ; 

And  dipt  in  baths  of  h  tears, 

h  in  war  on  his  own  hearthstone  ? 

geese  of  the  world  that  are  ever  h  dispraise 

h  spray  wind-driven  Far  thro'  the  dizzy  dark. 

Garlon,  h  ;   then  he  sourly  smiled. 

he,  A  '  I  have  no  sword,'  Sprang  from  the  door 

roused  a  snake  that  h  writhed  away  ; 
Hist    H  0  H,'  he  said,  '  They  seek  us  : 
Historic    See  Half-Historic 
History    boyish  histories  Of  battle, 

would  chant  the  h  Of  that  great  race. 

Now  made  a  pretty  h  to  herself 

old  writers  Have  writ  of  in  histories — 

Poor  old  Heraldry,  poor  old  H, 

kindliness  Rare  in  Fable  or  H, 

as  this  poor  earth's  pale  h  runs,^ 
Hit  (s)     With  twisted  quirks  and  happy  h's. 
Hit  (verb)     He  scarcely  h  my  humour. 

And  h  the  Northern  hills. 

dream  can  h  the  mood  Of  Love  on  earth  ? 

Some  sudden  vivid  pleasure  h  him  there. 

An'  I  A  on  an  old  deal-box 

Has  h  on  this,  which  you  will  take  My  Fitz, 
Hither     And  on  the  h  side,  or  so  she  look'd, 

But  on  the  h  side  of  that  loud  morn 
Hitting    aim'd  All  at  one  mark,  all  h  : 

h  all  we  saw  with  shafts  Of  gentle  satire. 
Hive     Audley  feast  Humm'd  like  a  A  all  round 

from  all  the  provinces,  And  fill  the  h.' 

— Wasps  in  our  good  h, 

There  the  h  of  Roman  Hars  worehip 

h  of  those  wild  bees  That  made  such  honey 

vineyard,  h  and  horse  and  herd  ; 

moment's  anger  of  bees  in  their  h  ? 
EQven  (heaven)     an'  H  in  its  glory  smiled. 

An'  sorra  the  bog  that's  in  H 

An'  tell  thim  in  H  about  Molly  Magee 
Hoalm  (Holm)     an'  Thurnaby  h's  to  plow  ! 
Hoam  (home)     I  walk'd  wi'  tha  all  the  way  h 
Hoar     Make  thy  grass  h  with  early  rime. 

brows  in  silent  hours  become  Unnaturally  h  with 
rime, 

the  lawn  as  yet  Is  h  with  rime. 

And  the  willow-branches  h  and  dank, 

made  The  h  hair  of  the  Baronet  bristle  up 

descending  from  the  sacred  peak  Of  h 
high-templed  Faith, 
Hoard  (s)     With  a  little  h  of  maxims  preaching 

a,  h  oi  tales  that  dealt  with  knights, 

Our  h  is  little,  but  our  hearts  are  great, 
(repeat) 

From  his  great  h  of  happiness  distill'd 

Struck  for  their  h's  and  their  hearths 
Hoard  (verb)     I  A  it  as  a  sugar-plum  for  Holmes.' 

That  h,  and  sleep,  and  feed, 

some  three  suns  to  store  and  h  myself, 

To  h  all  savings  to  the  uttermost, 

I  A  in  thought  The  faded  rhymes  and  scraps 
Hoarded    h  in  herself.  Grew,  seldom  seen : 
Hoarding    perhaps  the  h  sense  Gives  out  at  times 
Hoarhead    Came  on  the  h  woodman  at  a  bough 
Hoar-headed    Crept  to  his  North  again,  H-h 

hero  ! 
Hoarse    I  hear  thee  not  at  all,  or  h 
Hoary    And  h  to  the  wind. 


Marr.  of  Geraint  256 

Pelleas  and  E.  471 

St.  Telemachus  66 

Geraint  and  E.  634 

Last  Tournament  620 

Happy  63 

Princess  v  15 

In  Mem.  cxviii  23 

Maud  I  i  24 

iv  62 

Lover's  Tale  ii  198 

Balin  and  Balin  355 

Pelleas  and  E.  602 

Death  of  OSnone  88 

Princess  iv  218 

Aylmer's  Field  97 

In  Mem.  ciii  34 

Lancelot  and  E.  18 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  115 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  249 

On  Jul?.  Q.  Victoria  5 

Vastness  3 

Will  Water.  189 

Edwin  Morris  76 

Princess  v  44 

In  Mem.  xlvii  11 

Lover's  Tale  iv  178 

First  Quarrel  48 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  50 

Princess  ii  107 

Last  Tournament  56 

Aylmer's  Field  95 

Princess  ii  468 

Audley  Court  5 

Princess  ii  98 

„        iv  535 

Boddicea  19 

Holy  Grail  214 

To  VirgU  10 

Vastness  35 

Tomorrow  25 

67 

92 

N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  52 

Spinster's  S's.  32 

Two  Voices  66 

St.  S.  Stylites  166 

To  F.  D.  Maurice^ 

Dying  Swan  37 

Aylmer's  Field  42 

Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  10 
Locksley  Hall  94 
Princess,  Pro.  29 


Marr.  of  Geraint  352,  374 

Lover's  Tale  i  714 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  19 

The  Epic  43 

Ulysses  5 

,,      29 

Enoch  Arden  46 

Lover's  Tale  i  288 

Gardener's  Z)  I  9 

In  Mem.  xliv  6 

Balin  and  Balan  294 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  65 
The  Blackbird  19 
Palace  of  Art  80 


Hoary 


328 


Hold 


Hoary  (continued)     O'erflourish'd  with  the  h  clematis :  Golden  Year  63 

Set  thy  h  fancies  free  ;  Vision  of  Sin  156 

Still  makes  a  h  eyebrow  for  the  gleam  The  Brook  80 

a  h  face  Meet  for  the  reverence  of  the  hearth,  Aylmer's  Field  332 
h  Channel  Tumbles  a  billow  on  chalk  and  sand  ;     To  F.  D.  Maurice  23 

Take  the  h  Roman  head  and  shatter  it,  Boddicea  65 

And  eating  li  grain  and  pulse  the  steeds,  Sfcc.  of  Iliad  21 

From  youth  and  babe  and  h  hairs  :  In  Mem.  Ixix  10 

Nor  h  knoll  of  ash  and  haw  „            c  9 

lifted  his  voice,  and  call'd  A  h  man,  Com.  of  Arthur  145 

Then  spake  the  h  chamberlain  and  said,  „            148 

But  none  spake  word  except  the  h  Earl :  Marr.  of  Geraint  369 

Then  suddenly  addrest  the  h  Earl :  „            402 

Half-suffocated  in  the  h  fell  Merlin  and  V.  840 

And  glancing  thro'  the  h  boles,  Pelleas  and  E.  50 

From  h  deeps  that  belt  the  changeful  West,  Frog,  of  Spring  98 
h  Sheik,  On  whom  the  women  shrieking  '  Atheist '      ATchar's  Dream  90 

Hoary-headed    There  musing  sat  the  h-h  Earl,  Marr.  of  Geraint  295 

Then  sigh'd  and  smiled  the  h-h  Earl,  „             307 

Hob     wi'  my  oan  kettle  theere  o'  the  h,  Spinster's  S's.  9 

Hob-and-nob     Let  us /i-a-w  with  Death.  Vision  of  Sin  74 

H-a-n  with  brother  Death !  „           194 

Hobble    See  Hopple 

Hoed    See  Stubb'd 

Hofficer  (officer)    she  walkt  awaiiy  wi'  a  h  lad,  Village  Wife  97 

Hog     his  ploughs,  his  cows,  his  h's,  his  dogs  ;  The  Brook  125 

And  sleeker  shall  he  shine  than  any  h.'  Gareth  and  L.  460 

men  brought  in  whole  h's  and  quarter  beeves,  Geraint  and  E.  602 

H(^gish     With  colt-Uke  whinny  and  with  h  whine  St.  S.  Stylites  177 

Hold  (grasp)     shuddering  took  h  of  aU  my  mind.  May  Queen,  Con.  35 

thrice  as  sweet  As  woodbine's  fragile  h,  Talking  Oak  146 

Nor  greatly  cared  to  lose,  her  h  on  life.  Aylmer's  Field  568 

And  that  my  h  on  life  would  break  In  Mem.  xxviii  15 

from  my  h  on  these  Streams  virtue — fire —  Gareth  and  L.  1309 

of  that  token  on  the  shield  Eelax'd  his  h  :  Balin  and  Balan  370 

And  sweep  me  from  my  h  upon  the  world.  Merlin  and  V.  303 

and  their  law  Relax'd  its  h  upon  us,  Guinevere  457 

My  inward  sap,  the  h  I  have  on  earth,  lever's  Tale  i  166 
Himger  of  glory  gat  H  of  the  land.                      Batt.  of  Brunanburh  125 

Would  loose  him  from  his  h  ;  Ancient  Sage  118 

Hold  (stronghold)    new-comers  in  an  ancient  h,  Edwin  Morris  9 

calmer  hours  to  Memory's  darkest  h.  Love  and  Duty  90 

ev'n  the  lonest  h  were  all  as  free  Gareth  and  L.  598 

I  would  track  this  caitiff  to  his  h,  Marr.  of  Geraint  415 

by  bandit-haunted  h's.  Gray  swamps  and  pools,  Geraint  and  E.  30 

Eight  in  the  gateway  of  the  bandit  h,  „          774 

broke  the  bandit  h's  and  cleansed  the  land.  „          944 

Scaped  thro'  a  cavern  from  a  bandit  h,  Holy  Grail  207 

And  many  of  those  who  burnt  the  h,  „         264 

defended  the  h  that  we  held  with  our  lives —  Def.  of  Lucknow  7 

Hold  (of  a  ship)    And  the  sick  men  down  in  the  h  The  Revenge  79 

Hold  (verb)     (See  also  Howd,  'Owd)     you  that  h  A  nobler 

office  upon  earth  To  the  Queen  1 

in  mild  unrest  h's  him  beneath  in  her  breast.  Leonine  Eleg.  12 

To  h  a  common  scorn  of  death  !  Supp.  Confessions  34 

We  may  h  converse  with  all  forms  Ode  to  Memory  115 

'  Yet  how  should  I  for  certain  h.  Two  Voices  340 

For  now  the  noonday  quiet  h's  the  hiU :  CEnone  25 

H  swollen  clouds  from  raining,  D.  of  F.  Women  11 

To  A  his  hope  thro'  shame  and  guilt,  Love  thou  thy  land  82 

there  was  no  anchor,  none.  To  h  by.'  The  Epic  21 

hand  On  Everard's  shoulder,  with  '  I  /j  by  him.'  „       22 

Whereof  thLs  world's  h's  record.  M.  d' Arthur  16 

He,  by  some  law  that  h's  in  love.  Gardener's  D.  9 

h  From  thence  thro'  all  the  worlds :  „          209 

what  it  h's  May  not  be  dwelt  on  by  the  common  day,  „          270 

I  will  not  cease  to  grasp  the  hope  I  h  St.  S.  Stylites  5 

my  stiff  spine  can  h  my  weary  head,  „              43 

Is  that  the  angel  there  That  h's  a  crown  ?  „            204 

I  h  them  exquisitely  knit,  Talking  Oak  91 

h  passion  in  a  leash.  And  not  leap  forth  Love  and  Duty  40 

my  purpose  h's  To  sail  beyond  the  simset,  Ulysses  59 

Yet  h  me  met  not  for  ever  in  thine  East :  Tithonus  64 

h  thee,  when  his  passion  shall  have  spent  Locksley  Hall  49 

common  sense  of  most  shall  h  a  fretful  realm  in  awe,  „            129 


Hold  (verb)  (continued)    Who  h  their  hands  to  all,  and  cry     Will  Water.  45 

1  A  it  good,  good  things  shall  pass  :  „        205 

I  h  thee  dear  For  this  good  pint  of  port.  „        211 
Shall  h  their  orgies  at  your  tomb.                          You  might  have  won  12 

Enoch  would  h  possession  for  a  week  :  Enoch  Arden  27 

Cast  all  your  cares  on  God  ;  that  anchor  h's.  „        222 

But  let  me  h  my  purpose  till  I  die.  „        875 

and  h's  her  head  to  other  stars,  The  Brook  195 

'  0  pray  God  that  he  hup'  Aylmer's  Field  733 

but  he  that  h's  The  Gods  are  careless,  Lucretius  149 

h  Yoiu-  promise  :  all,  I  trust,  may  yet  be  well.'  Princess  ii  360 

substance  or  the  shadow  ?  will  it  A  ?  „            409 

such,  my  friend,  We  h  them  slight :  „        iv  127 

I  h  These  flashes  on  the  surface  are  not  „            252 

You  h  the  woman  is  the  better  man ;  „            410 

I  h  That  it  becomes  no  man  to  nurse  despair,  „            463 

to-morrow  mom  We  h  a  great  convention :  „            511 

yet  I  h  her,  king,  True  woman  :  Princess,  v  179 

That  h's  a  stately  fretwork  to  the  Sim,  „          vi  86 

never  in  your  own  arms  To  h  your  own,  „             178 

h  against  the  world  this  honour  of  the  land.  Third  of  Feb.  48 

For  those  are  few  sveh  as  dear ;  To  F.  D.  Maurice  46 

I  h  you  here,  root  and  all,  in  my  hand.  Flow,  in  cran.  wall  3 
Take  the  hoary  Eoman  head  and  shatter  it,  h  it 

abominable,  Boddicea  65 

I  sometimes  h  it  half  a  sin  In  Mem.  v  1 

lake  That  h's  the  shadow  of  a  lark  „          xvi  9 

I  A  it  true,  whate'er  befall ;  „     xsmii  13 

And  h's  it  sin  and  shame  to  draw  ,,     xlviii  11 

H  thou  the  good  :  define  it  well :  ,.        UH  13 

To  h  the  costliest  love  in  fee.  „      Ixxix  4 

So  A  I  commerce  with  the  dead  ;  „    Ixxxv  93 

they  that  h  apart  The  promise  of  the  golden  hours  ?  „            105 

h  An  hour's  communion  with  the  dead.  „         xciv  3 

And  h  it  solemn  to  the  past.  ,,          cv  16 

High  wisdom  h's  my  wisdom  less,  „         cxii  1 

To  h  me  from  my  proper  place,  „       cxvii  2 

And  dream  my  dream,  and  h  it  true  ;  „    cxxiii  10 

Eather  than  h  by  the  law  that  I  made,  Maud  /  i  55 

h  Awe-stricken  breaths  at  a  work  divine,  „       x  16 

Think  I  may  h  dominion  sweet,  „    xvi  12 

Arise,  my  God,  and  strike,  for  we  h  Thee  just,  „   II  i  45 

Whatever  the  Quaker  h's,  from  sin  ;  „       ■«  92 

theirs  are  bestial,  h  him  less  than  man  :  Com.  of  Arthur  181 

Hath  body  enow  to  h  his  foemen  down  ?  '  „          253 

the  good  mother  h's  me  stiU  a  child  !  Gareth  and  L.  15 

'  An  jeh  me  yet  for  child,  „              99 

h  The  King  a  shadow,  and  the  city  real :  „             265 

Eeturn,  and  meet,  and  h  him  from  our  eyes,  „            429 

the  mightiest,  h's  her  stay'd  In  her  own  castle,  „             615 

and  so  my  lance  H,  by  God's  grace,  ,.            723 

I  ^i  He  scarce  is  knight,  yea  but  half-man,  „           1175 

Some  h  that  he  hath  swallow'd  infant  flesh,  „          1342 

We  h  a  tourney  here  to-morrow  mom,  Marr.  of  Geraint  287 

How  fast  they  h  like  colours  of  a  shell  „            681 

I  ha  finger  up  ;  They  understand  :  Geraint  and  E.  337 
h  them  outer  fiends.  Who  leap  at  thee  to  tear  thee  ;     Balin  and  Balan  141 

That  honour  too  wherein  she  h's  him —  „             180 

'  I  h  them  happy,  so  they  died  for  love :  „            581 

some  few— ay,  truly— youths  that  h  Merlin  and  V.  21 
Lancelot  saying,  '  Hear,  but  h  my  name  Hidden,     Lancelot  and  E.  416 

Yet,  if  he  love,  and  his  love  h,  „           697 

some  do  h  our  Arthur  cannot  die,  „         1258 

Not  at  my  years,  however  it  h  in  youth.  „         1296 

Unproven,  h's  himself  as  Lancelot,  Holy  Grail  304 

to  h,  H  her  a  wealthy  bride  within  thine  arms,  „        620 

Or  all  but  h,  and  then — cast  her  aside,  „        622 

But  h  me  for  your  friend  :  Pdleas  and  E.  340 

Some  h  he  was  a  table-knight  of  thine —  Last  Tournament  69 

A  naked  aught — yet  swine  I  h  thee  still,  „           309 

I'll  h  thou  hast  some  touch  Of  music,  „          313 
There  h  thee  with  my  life  against  the  world.'    She 

answer'd, '  Lancelot,  wilt  thou  hmeso?  Guinevere  115 

that  strong  castle  where  he  h's  the  Queen ;  „        194 

I  h  that  man  the  worst  of  public  foes  „        512 


I 


Hold 

Hold  (verb)  (continued)     Whereof  this  world  h's 
record.  . •  ,   t  i 

'  This  is  a  charmed  dwelling  which  I  h ; 
He  Would  h  the  hand  of  blessing  over  them, 
Nay,  more,  h  out  the  lights  of  cheerfulness  ; 
some  were  doubtful  how  the  law  would  h, 
the  boy  can  h  up  his  head, 
h  them  both  Dearest  of  all  things — 
H  it  we  might — and  for  fifteen  days 
'  H  it  for  fifteen  days  ! ' 
thought  it  heresy,  but  that  would  not  h. 
some  in  yonder  city  h,  my  son, 
casket,  which  for  thee  But  h's  a  skull, 
She  that  h's  the  diamond  necklace 
h  the  Present  fatal  daughter  of  the  Past, 
Shall  we  h  them  ?  shall  we  loose  them  ? 
single  sordid  attic  h's  the  living  and  the  dead. 
Death  and  Silence  h  their  own. 
and  the  Eome  of  freemen  h's  her  place, 
I  h  Mother's  love  in  letter'd  gold. 
Whatever  statesman  h  the  helm. 


329 


Pass,  of  Arthur  184 

Lover's  Tale  i  114 

754 

807 

iv  270 

First  Quarrel  5 

Sisters  (E.  and  £.)  288 

Bef.  of  Lucknow  9 

„  105 

Columbus  46 

Ancient  Sage  82 

255 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  21 

105 

118 

222 

237 

To  Virgil  34: 

Helen's  Tower  3 

Hands  all  Round  20 


Britons,  h  your  own  !  (repeat)       Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhih.  10,  20,  30,  40 

sacred  those  Ghost  Lovers  h  the  gift.'  The  Ring  205 

should  those  fail,  that  h  the  helm,  Prog,  of  Spring  100 

H  the  sceptre,  Human  Soul,  and  rule  thy  Province  By  an  Evolution,  lb 

Will  firmly  fe  the  rein,  ,^     ,    ^°^^^^^.a 

and  mood  of  faith  may  h  its  own,  Akbar  s  Dream  5ib 

thou  knowest  I  h  that  forms  Are  needful :  ,.          If  o 

I  count  you  kind,  I  h  you  true  ;  The  Wanderer  13 

H  thine  own,  and  work  thy  will !  Poets  and  Critics  Id 

Holden     the  fair  Was  h  at  the  town  ;  Talking  Oak  lOA 

h  far  apart  Until  his  hour  should  come  ;  Com.  of  Arthur  J14 

had  h  the  power  and  gloiy  of  Spain  so  cheap  The  Revenge  106 

Holdest     quick  or  dead  thou  h  me  for  King.  Pass,  of  Arthur  161 

Holdeth    And  h  his  undimmed  forehead  far  Lover  s  Tale  i  513 

Holding    (See  also  Bawdin')    And /j  them  back  by  theii-       ^,     ,^ 

flowing  locks  The  Merman  li 

I  sit  as  God  h  no  form  of  creed.  Palace  of  Art  ^11 

mystic,  wonderful,  H  the  sword—  M.  d  ^rthurdZ 

H  the  bush,  to  fix  it  back,  Gardener  s  D.  IZTl 

H  the  folded  annals  of  my  youth  ;  ^      ,     ]'  ,     ^^ 

Stagger'd  and  shook,  h  the  branch,  Enoch  Arden  (67 

h  out  her  hly  arms  Took  both  his  hands.  Princess  n  A06 

reason  ripe  In  h  by  the  law  within,  In  Mem.  ^a^wtt  14 

And  Ussome  Vivien,  h  by  his  heel.  Merlin  and  /  •  ^38 

Arthur,  h  then  his  court  Hard  on  the  river  Lancelot  and  ii.  74 

mystic,  wonderful,  H  the  sword—  Pass,  of  Arthur  200 

evermore  H  his  golden  burthen  in  his  arms,  Lover  si  ale^vb^ 

For  h  there  was  bread  where  bread  was  none —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  201 

h,  each  its  own  By  endless  war  :  Ancient  Sage  251 
Hole    (-See  also  Augur-hole,  Eyelet-holes)    bUnd  walls  Were 

full  of  chinks  and /t's  ;  ,^    TtT  ^ 

Would  he  have  that  /i  in  his  side  ?  Maud  11  v  «^ 

rat  that  borest  in  the  dyke  Thy  h  by  night  Merlin  and  V.  113 

And  show'd  him,  like  a  vermin  in  its  h.  Last  Tournament  165 

down,  down  !  and  creep  thro'  the  h  !  Bef.  of  ^^f'^^w  lb 

Holiday     The  yoimger  people  making  h,  Enoch  Arden  6 J 

sown  With  happy  faces  and  with  h.  ^  Princess,  Pro-&o 

In  summer  suits  and  silks  of  h.  Marr.of  Geramt  173 

HoUer     fl  is  none,  my  Percivale,  than  she—  Holy  Grail  Zd^ 

Still  growing  h  as  you  near'd  the  bay,  f^f  Xii     4^  i  q« 

a  crols  of  flesh  and  blood  And  h.  ^  S^r  J.  Oldcastle  138 

Something  kindUer,  higher,  h—  Locksley  H.  Sixty  160 

Holiest  (adj.)    For  me  outpour'd  in  h  prayer—  Supp.  Confesswns  U 

The  highest,  h  manhood,  thou  :  In  Mem    Pro.U 

I  was  the  High  Priest  in  her  h  place,  Lover  s  lalei  686 

HoUest  (S)     hid  the  H  from  the  people's  eyes  Aylmer  s  Meld  TU 

Holiness     Beautiful  in  the  light  of  h.  Holy  Grail  105 

HoUow  (adj.)    h  as  the  hopes  and  fears  of  men  ?  Lurretius  180 

The  ;i  grot  repUeth  „          ^    Claribel  M 

Or  breithe  into  the  h  air,  SupP.  Confessions  58 

were  stay'd  beneath  the  dome  Of  h  boughs.—  Arabian  Nights  42 

H  smUe  and  frozen  sneer  Come  not  here.  Poet  sMind  10 

Aloud  the  ;i  bugle  blowing,  ^,     ^r       ""^11 

Would  lean  out  from  the  h  sphere  of  the  sea.  The  Mermaid  54 


Hollow-husk'd 

Hollow  (adj.)  (continued)    And  h  shades  enclosing  hearts 

of  flame,  Palace  of  Art  241 

saw  The  h  orb  of  moving  Circumstance  „          255 

brides  of  anf-ient  song  Peopled  the  h  dark,  B.  of  F.  Women  18 
Thro'  every  h  cave  and  alley  lone                          Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  103 

In  the  h  Lotos-land  to  live  and  lie  reclined  „                    109 

Bead,  mouthing  out  his  h  oes  and  aes.  The  Epic  50 

h  ocean-riiiges  roaring  into  cataracts.  Locksley  Hall  6 

H  hearts  and  empty  heads  !  Vision  of  Sin  174 

Echo  answer'd  in  her  sleep  From  h  fields  :  Princess,  Pro.  67 

The  Princess  Ida  seem'd  a  h  show,  »           *"  185 

her  maidens  glimmeiingly  group'd  In  the  h  bank.  „            iv  191 

King,  camp  and  college  tum'd  to  h  shows  ;  „             ^  478 

wan  was  her  cheek  With  h  watch,  .,           ■««■  145 

Come  to  the  h  heart  they  slander  so  !  „               •f  88 

I  love  not  h  cheek  or  faded  eye  :  >,              «"  7 

They  did  but  look  like  h  shows ;  >.              ..134 
A  h  echo  of  my  own,— A  h  forni  M'ith  empty  hands.'        In  Mem.  in  11 

And  mix  with  h  masks  of  night ;  >.       'f.^^ 

O  h  wraith  of  dying  fame,  .>  '•!;«"  1^ 

The  ruin'd  shells  of  h  towers  ?  „     ^  "r  ^"^"^  To 

comitercharm  of  space  and  h  sky,  Maud  I  ^w*  4^ 

Whereon  were  h  trampUngs  up  and  down  Gareth  and  L.  161^ 

clamour  of  the  daws  About  her  h  turret,  Geramt  and  E.  J56 

(It  lay  beside  him  in  the  h  shield),  >.             726 

In  a /i  land.  From  which  old  fires  have  broken,  „        ,  ^"'^^ 

Before  an  oak,  so  h,  huge  and  old  Merlin  and  V.d 

Closed  in  the  four  walls  oiah  tower,  (repeat)  „  209,  544 

Behind  his  ankle  twined  her  h  feet  ..          ^ 

A  snowy  penthouse  for  his  h  eyes,  ..          o^& 

Call'd  her  to  shelter  in  the  h  oak,  "          oy4 

And  in  the  h  oak  he  lay  as  dead,  "  ^  vt^ 

Rang  out  like  h  woods  at  hunting-tide.  Pelleas  and  E.  367 

Black  as  the  harlot's  heart— ;»  as  a  skull !  .".  .i    ^ 

Went  shrilling,  '  H,ha]i  delight !  Pass,  of  Arthur  33 

And  h,  h,  h  all  deUght.'  "          ^' 

TumbUng  the  h  helmets  of  the  fallen,  ..         ,j^^^ 

The  h  caverns  heard  me— the  black  brooks  Lover  s  Tale  n  11 

Then  came  on  me  The  i^  tolling  of  the  bell,  „          „P/1^ 
Watch'd  again  the  h  ridges  roaring  into  cataracts,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  Z 

fleshless  world  of  spirits,  laugh'd :  A  h  laughter  !  The  Ring  jM 
Monotonous  and  h  Uke  a  Ghost's  Denouncmg  judgment,     Gumevere  420 

crimson  with  battles,  and  h  with  graves,  The  Breamer  12 
HoUow  (S)     And  h's  of  the  fringed  hills                         Supp.  Confessions  153 

shines  Uke  fire  in  swamps  and  A',  gray,  May  Queen  31 

From  craggy  h's  pouring,  -»•  '^f/'J/T''  9«1 

And  bowery  h's  crown'd  with  summer  sea,  M.d  Arthur  263 

along  the  river-shores.  And  in  the  h's  ;  Gardener  s  B.  265 

Who  thrust  him  in  the  h's  of  his  aim,  Dora  la^ 

plump'd  the  pine  From  many  a  cloudy  h.  Amphion  48 

Nourishes  Green  in  a  cuphke  h  of  the  down.  Enoch  jrden» 

began  To  feather  towards  the  h,  (repeat)  >.    o».  ^'* 

Crept  down  into  the  h's  of  the  wood  ;  ,  "tt-  7j  ooa 

Like  echoes  from  beyond  a  h,  Aylmer  s  Field  298 

Blanching  and  billowing  inahol  it,  Lucretius  31 

strip  a  hundred  h's  bare  of  Spring,  ^'"IT^i  7  ^ 

I  HATE  the  dreadful  h  behind  the  little  wood,  Maud  1  1 1 

creep  to  the  h  and  dash  myself  down  and  die  ,.         ..  o* 

To  the  woody  h's  in  which  we  meet  "    ^j^"  |^ 

From  the  red-ribb'd /i  behind  the  wood,  "j  i  lo^ 

A  eloomy-gladed  /i  slowly  sink  To  westward—  Gareth  and  L.  .97 

laid  him  on  it  AU  in  the  h  of  his  shield,  Gerai«<  and  £.  56^ 

Last  in  a  roky  h,  beUing,  heard  The  hounds  Last  Tournament  502 

And  bowery  h's  crown'd  with  sununer  sea,  Pass,  of  Arthur  431 

Found  sUence  in  the /i's  underneath.  T^*'^*  ^o 

And  dancing  of  Fairies  In  desolate  h's,  ^^^'■'^/''^  ^H  »  ff 

Downward  thunder  in  h  and  glen,  To  Master  of  B  16 

And  fill  the  h's  between  wave  and  wave  ;  Akbar  s  Bream  161 

HoUow-banked     (As  echoes  of  the  h-b  brooks  Lovers  Tale  i  566 

HoUow-beaten    He  felt  the  h-b  mosses  thud  Balin  and  Balan  321 

HoUow'd  (adj.)     In  ;*  moons  of  gems  1^"^"''"  ^/ nl,  m 

HoUow'd  (verb)     the  want,  that  ^i  aU  the  heart,      ,  i^i;e  and  D«<2/ 61 

tho'  years  Have  h  out  a  deep  and  stormy  strait  Lover  s  1  ale  t  24 

HoUower-beUowing    h-b  ocean,  and  again  The  scarlet  Enoch  Arden  598 

HoUow-husk'd    barley-spears  Were  h-h,  Demeter  and  P.  113 


Hollow-hung 


330 


Homage 


Hollow-hung     Under  the  h-h  ocean  green  !  The  Merman  38 

Hollowing    (See  also  Fire-hollowing)    Or  h  one  hand  * 

against  his  ear,  Palace  of  Art  109 
Hollow-ringing    He  heard  the  h-r  heavens  sweep  Over  him    Holy  Grail  678 

Hollow- vaulted  look'd  to  shame  The  h-v  dark,  Arabian  Nights  12Q 
Holly  (adj.)     while  the  h  boughs  Entwine  the  cold  baptismal 

font.  In  Mem.  xxix  9 

Holly  (s)     Sick  for  the  hollies  and  the  yews  Princess,  Pro.  187 

But  this  is  the  time  of  hollies.  Spiteful  Letter  22 

0  hollies  and  ivies  and  evergreens,  „  23 
weave  The  h  round  the  Christmas  hearth  ;  In  Mem.  xxx  2 
weave  The  h  round  the  Christmas  hearth  ;  „  Ixxviii  2 
let  us  leave  This  laurel,  let  this  h  stand :  „  cv  2 
here  and  there  great  hollies  under  them  ;  Pelleas  and  E.  27 
Black  h,  and  wliite-flower'd  wayfaring-tree  !  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  130 

Holly-hoak     Before  a  tower  of  crimson  h-h's,  Princess,  Con.  82 

Hollyhock     Heavily  hangs  the  h,  (repeat)  A  spirit  haunts  11,  23 

A  summer  burial  deep  in  h's  ;  Aylmer's  Field  164 

Holly-spray  And  wearing  but  a  h-s  for  crest,  Last  Tournament  172 
Holm  (See  also  Hoalm)    soft  wind  blowing  over 

meadowy  h's  Edwin  Morris  95 

Holmes    The  parson  H,  the  poet  Everard  Hall,  The  Epic  4 

1  hoard  it  as  a  sugar-plum  for  H.'  „  43 
Holofemes  underneath  The  head  of  H  peep'd  Princess  iv  227 
Holp    h  To  lace  us  up,  tiU,  each,  in  maiden  plumes  „          i  201 

However  much  he  h  me  at  my  need.  Com.  of  Arthur  142 

Sir  Lancelot  h  To  raise  the  Prince,  Guinevere  45 

Holpen     had  I  been  h  half  as  well  By  this  King  Arthur     Com.  of  Arthur  161 

And  being  lustily  h  by  the  rest,  Lancelot  and  E.  496 

Holt    thro'  damp  h's  new-flush'd  with  may,  My  life  is  full  19 

She  sent  her  voice  thro'  all  the  h  Talking  Oak  123 

blackening  over  heath  and  h,  Locksley  Hall  191 

Of  wither'd  h  or  tilth  or  pasturage.  Enoch  Arden  675 

smeUs  a  foul-flesh'd  agaric  in  the  h,  Gareth  and  L.  747 

Holy  (See  also  Holy  Ghost,  Holy  Grail)    All  the  place  is  h 

ground  ;  Poet's  Mind  9 

H  water  will  I  pour  Into  every  spicy  flower  „          12 

Heard  a  carol,  mournful,  h,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  28 

Nor  steep  our  brows  in  slumber's  h  balm  ;  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  21 

Beneath  a  heaven  dark  and  h,  „                      91 

h  organ  rolling  waves  Of  sound  on  roof  D.  of  F.  Women  191 

invade  Even  with  a  verse  your  h  woe.  To  J.  S.  8 

Sleep,  h  spirit,  blessed  soul,  „  70 
light  that  led  The  h  Elders  with  the  gift  of  myrrh.         M.  d' Arthur  233 

more  Than  many  just  and  h  men,  St.  S.  Stylites  131 

'By  h  rood,  a  royal  beard  !  Day-Dm.,  Revival  20 

Then  desperately  seized  the  h  Book,  Enoch  Arden  495 

Haunting  a  h  text,  and  still  to  that  Returning,  Sea  Dreams  42 

o'er  the  rest  Arising,  did  his  h  oily  best,  „        195 

'  Storm,  and  what  dreams,  ye  h  Gods,  what  dreams  !  Lucretius  33 

'  Is  this  thy  vengeance,  h  Venus,  thine,  „        67 

And  h  secrets  of  this  microcosm.  Princess  Hi  313 

The  h  Gods,  they  must  be  appeased.  The  Victim  47 

The  King  was  shaken  with  h  fear ;  „          57 

lead  Thro'  prosperous  floods  his  h  urn.  In  Mem.  ix  8 

Rise,  happy  mom,  rise,  h  mom,  ,,      xxx  29 

That  h  Death  ere  Arthur  died  „       Ixxx  2 

And  He  that  died  in  H  Land  „  Ixxxiv  42 

And  woodlands  h  to  the  dead ;  „        xcix  8 

This  broad-brimm'd  hawker  of  h  things,  Maud  /  a;  41 

But  speak  to  her  all  things  h  and  high,  „    //  ii  78 

But  there  was  heard  among  the  h  hymns  Com.  of  Arthur  290 

And  h  Dubric  spread  his  hands  and  spake,  „            471 

Save  whom  she  loveth,  ov  &h  hfe.  Gareth  and  L.  622 

Whose  h  hand  hath  fashion'd  on  the  rock  „        1197 

Who,  with  mild  heat  of  h  oratory,  Geraint  and  E.  866 

King  Took,  as  in  rival  heat,  to  h  things  ;  Balin  and  Balan  100 

brought  By  h  Joseph  hither,  „            113 

boss'd  With  h  Joseph's  legend,  „  363 
King  Pellam's  h  spear.  Reputed  to  be  red  with  sinless 

blood,  ,            556 

Whom  Pellam  drove  away  with  h  heat.  „            611 

saith  not  H  Writ  the  same  ?  ' —  M  rlin  and  V.  52 

They  bound  to  h  vows  of  chastity  !  „        695 

Or  else  were  he,  the  h  king,  whose  hymns  „        765 


Holy  (continued)     FuU  many  a  h  vow  and  pure  resolve.     Lancelot  and  E.  879 

Not  knowing  he  should  die  a  h  man.  „            1429 

times  Grew  to  such  evil  that  the  h  cup  Was  caught 

away  to  Heaven,  Holy  Grail  57 

But  who  first  saw  the  h  thing  to-day  ?  '  .,67 

if  ever  h  maid  With  knees  of  adoration  wore  the  stone, 

A  h  maid ;  „           70 

glanced  and  shot  Only  to  h  things ;  „          76 

Thy  h  nun  and  thou  have  seen  a  sign —  ,,        295 

thereby  A  h  hermit  in  a  hermitage,  „        443 

at  the  sacring  of  the  mass  I  saw  The  h  elements  alone ;  ,,        463 

This  H  Thing,  fail'd  from  my  side,  „        470 

And  o'er  his  head  the  H  Vessel  hung  (repeat)  „  512, 520 

thence  Taking  my  war-hoi-se  from  the  h  man,  „        537 

And  ev'n  the  H  Quest,  and  all  but  her ;  „        610 

'  Ridest  thou  then  so  hotly  on  a  quest  So  /*,'  „        643 

so  Lancelot  might  have  seen.  The  H  Cup  of  healing  ;  „        655 

Small  heart  was  his  after  the  H  Quest :  „        657 

a  maid.  Who  kept  our  h  faith  among  her  kin  „        697 

This  vision — hast  thou  seen  the  H  Cup,  „        734 

Perhaps,  Uke  him  of  Cana  in  H  Writ,  „        762 

Then  I  spake  To  one  most  h  saint,  „        781 

And  to  the  H  Vessel  of  the  Grail.'  „        840 

Thy  h  nun  and  thou  have  driven  men  mad,  „        862 

To  h  virgins  in  their  ecstasies,  „        867 

'  Gawain,  and  blinder  unto  h  things  „        870 

To  those  who  went  upon  the  H  Quest,  „        890 

BJNG  Arthue  made  new  knights  to  fill  the  gap  Left 

by  the  H  Quest ;  Pelleas  and  E.  2 

'  Ye,  that  so  dishallow  the  h  sleep,  „          446 

sat  There  in  the  h  house  at  Almesbury  Weeping,  Guinevere  2 

Then  glancing  up  beheld  the  h  nuns  All  round  her,  „      666 

Do  each  low  office  of  your  h  house  ;  „      682 

light  that  led  The  h  Elders  with  the  gift  of  myrrh.   Pass,  of  Arthur  401 

Each  way  from  verge  to  verge  a  H  Land,  Lover's  Tale  i  337 

I  charge  you  never  to  say  that  I  laid  him  in  h  grbund.  Rizpah  58 

Now  reddest  with  the  blood  of  h  men.                         Sir  J.  Oldcastle  54 

or  such  crimes  As  h  Paul —  „          110 

how  I  anger'd  Arundel  asking  me  To  worship  H  Cross  !  „          136 

As  h  John  had  prophesied  of  me,  Columbus  21 

Ferdinand  Hath  sign'd  it  and  our  H  Catholic  queen —  „        30 

All  glory  to  the  mother  of  our  Lord,  And  H  Church,  „        63 

And  free  the  H  Sepulchre  from  thrall.  „      104 

And  own  the  h  governance  of  Rome.'  „      190 

And  ready — tho'  our  H  CathoUc  Queen,  „      228 

And  save  the  H  Sepulchre  from  thrall.  „      240 

the  H  man  he  assoil'd  us,  and  sadly  we  sail'd  away.  V.  ofMaddune  126 

As  the  H  Mother  0'  Glory  that  smiles  at  her  sleepin^ 

child —  Tomorrow  26 

Till  H  St.  Pether  gets  up  wid  his  kays  „        93 

Near  us  Edith's  h  shadow,  smiling  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  54 

My  warrior  of  the  H  Cross  and  of  the  conquering  sword,  Happy  21 

This  poor  rib-grated  dungeon  of  the  h  human  ghost,  „      31 

sway'd  the  sword  that  lighten'd  back  the  sun  of  H  land,  „      43 

You  parted  for  the  H  War  without  a  word  to  me,  „      77 

Who  reads  thy  gradual  process,  H  Spring.  Prog,  of  Spring  106 

If  it  be  a  mosque  people  murmur  the  h  prayer,    Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  4 

Holy  Ghost    the  warning  of  the  H  G,l  prophesy               St.  S.  Stylites  219 

Holy  Grail    (See  also  Grail)     Three  angels  bear  the  A  G :       Sir  Galahad  42 

Until  I  find  the  h  G.  „          84 

sweet  vision  of  the  H  G  Drove  me  from  all  vainglories.     Holy  Grail  31 
^       .         .,  ,      .  ™      „  „ .     .  .       .  g^ 

86 

92 

107 

,  117, 188 

290 

367 

438 

465 

531 

542 

779 

846 

(Enone  116 


To  whom  the  monk  :   '  The  H  G  ! — I  trust 
Spake  often  with  her  of  the  H  G, 
thought  That  now  the  H  G  would  come  again ; 
'  Sweet  brother,  I  have  seen  the  H  G : 
And  down  the  long  beam  stole  the  H  G,  (repeat) 
I,  Sir  Arthur,  saw  the  H  G,  1  saw  the  H  G 
I  knew  That  I  should  light  upon  the  //  G. 
if  I  find  the  H  G  itself  And  touch  it, 
saw  the  Grail,  The  H  G,  descend  upon  the  shrine  ; 
and  there  Dwelt,  and  I  knew  it  was  the  H  G, 
I  find  not  there  this  H  O, 
the  hope  That  could  I  touch  or  see  the  H  G 
I  saw  the  H  G,  All  paU'd  in  ciimson  samite, 
Homage    Honour,'  she  said,  '  and  h,  tax  and  toll. 


Homage 


Homage  (continued)     and  render  AU  A  to  his  own  darling,        Maud  I  .r j.  49 

Lancelot  draws  From  h  to  the  best  and  purest,  Balm  and  Balan  dTb 

knelt  In  anxious  A— knelt^what  eke  ?  >.            ^^ 

bow'd  black  knees  Of  h,  ringing  with  their  serpent  ,  rr  kth 

hands  ilieWtn  ana  K .  670 
bow'd  his  h,  bluntly  saying,  '  Fair  damsels,             Last  Tournament  206 

Home    («««aZsoHoam,"'Oajii,  Sea-home)    When  cats  run  ft  ^  i  t  a 

and  light  is  come,  ^^    ,-/oZ 

Come  down,  come  ft.  My  Rosalind :  ..      ^««,?'*'^  ^3 

The  ft  of  woe  mthout  a  tear.  Manarmtnthe  6.  ^U 

I  won  his  love,  I  brought  him  ft.  ^  f /»«  SM  14 

one,  an  EngUsh  ft— gray  twiUght  pour'd  Po^e  of  4r«  86 

For  ever  and  for  ever,  all  in  a  blessed  ft—  May  Queen,  Con.  57 

'  Our  island  ft  Is  far  beyond  the  wave  ;  M^'^^.r       "^'^ 

Then  when  I  left  my  ft.'  D.  of  F.Worr^n  120 

'  at  ft  was  little  left  And  none  abroad  :  Jhe  hpic  iM 

The  lime  a  summer  ft  of  murmurous  wings.  Uardener  ^  ^-^ 

as  he  near'd  His  happy  ft,  the  ground.  »          ^^ 

So  ft  we  went,  and  all  the  Uvelong  way  ..          |o< 

So  ft  I  went,  but  could  not  sleep  for  joy,  ..          ^ '* 

My  ft  is  none  of  yours.  "m 

I  will  have  my  boy,  and  bring  him  ft  ;  "    ^^^ 

Brought  out  a  dusky  loaf  that  smelt  of  ft,  Audiey  Court  ^^ 

And  saunter'd  ft  beneath  a  moon,  "         .   °^ 

sick  of  ft  went  overseas  for  change.  Walk,  to  the  MaU  Zi 

slowly-painful  to  subdue  this  ft  Of  sin,  my  flesh,  St.  6.  i>tylitesbl 

And  climbing  up  into  my  airy  ft,  ."            ^| ' 

•  But  as  for  her,  she  stay'd  at  ft,                         .  Talking  Oak  116 

dim  fields  about  the  ft's  Of  happy  men  Idhonus  btf 

Lay  betwixt  his  ft  and  hers  ;  L.  of  Burleigh  28 

Ancient  h's  of  lord  and  lady,  "            ^_ 

He  shall  have  a  cheerful  ft  ;  r.      i,"  ^  j     I7 

purchase  his  own  boat,  and  make  a  ft  For  Anme :  Enoch  Aroen  4/ 

He  purchased  his  own  boat,  and  made  a  ft  For  Annie,  „            o» 

So  aU  day  long  till  Enoch's  last  at  ft,  "          |^ 

And  make  him  merry,  when  I  come  ft  "          ^ 

nor  loved  she  to  be  left  Alone  at  ft,  "          ^^' 

clothes  they  gave  him  and  free  passage  ft ;  „          wu 

homeward— ft— what  ft  ?  had  he  a  ft  ?    His  ft,  -,          ob8 

he  reach'd  the  ft  Where  Annie  lived  ..          ^°| 

Back  toward  his  soUtary  ft  again,  ,  "77-  7j  1^7 

arose  the  labourers'  ft's,  ^!/Z»i«r  s  i^'teW  147 

A  breaker  of  the  bitter  news  from  ft,  "            ^^* 

his  hopes  and  hates,  his  ft's  and  fanes,  ^  .  iwcre^ttw  ^6& 

Sick  for  the  holUes  and  the  yews  of  ft—  Princess,  ^^o-.^^^ 

Not  for  three  years  to  correspond  with  ft ;  "              **  '^ 

Whose  ft  is  in  the  sinews  of  a  man,  "             '"  ^t' 

Almost  our  maids  were  better  at  their  h's,  >.               '*f  ° 

H  they  brought  her  warrior  dead :  «       .     ..''"q 

From  love  to  love,  from  ft  to  ft  you  go,  W.  to  Mane  Alex.S 

Whose  hand  at  ft  was  gracious  to  the  poor :  ^  "  j     .1,     on 

sitting  at  ft  in  my  father's  farm  at  eve :  Grandmother  yu 

endure  To  sit  with  empty  hands  at  ft.  Sailor  BoylQ 

this  pretty  ft,  the  ft  where  mother  dwells  ?  CUy  ChM.  ^ 

running  on  one  way  to  the  ft  of  my  love.  Window,  On  the  EM  8 

And  leirns  her  gone  and  far  from  ft ;  In  Mem.  vtu  4 

So  draw  him  ft  to  those  that  mourn  "           .*^.| 

And  ask  a  thousand  things  of  ft ;  "       ^^^ ,  „ 

And  like  a  beacon  guards  thee  ft.                         *  "       awiix^ 

Her  eyes  are  ft's  of  silent  prayer,  "      ^^^**  ^ 

rise  To  take  her  latest  leave  of  ft,  "            |:  g 

We  go,  but  ere  we  go  from  ft,  «  ", j  7  ^::  99 

she  went  H  with  her  maiden  posy,  ^''^  ^  ^.f, 

I  have  led  her  ft,  my  love,  "       ^"gi 

And  at  last,  when  each  came  ft,  »       jj  i„n 
By  the  ft  that  gave  me  birth, 

we  have  heard  from  our  wise  man  at  ft  To  />     ,1.      j  r  901 

Northward,  Gareth  and  L.iOl 

So  drew  him  ft;  but  he  that  fought  no  more,  t'r^^ijRXA 

Prince  had  found  her  in  her  ancient  ft ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  644 

Near  that  old  ft,  a  pool  of  golden  carp ;  ^      •  'i  „„j  7?  94 

So  the  last  sight  that  Enid  had  of  ft  Geraint  andE.J^ 

as  a  hearth  lit  in  a  mountain  ft,  ■B'^*^  "'"^  ^-^^  |^  J 

A  ft  of  bats,  in  every  tower  an  owl.  "              „, , 

the  King,  However  mild  he  seems  at  ft,  Lancelot  and  E.  dll 


331  Honest 

Home  (continued)    those  three  knights  all  set  their  faces  ft,  Pdleas  and  E.  187 


closing  round  him  thro'  the  journey  ft, 

eyes  Had  drawn  him  ft — what  marvel  ? 

That  night  came  Arthur  ft,  and  while  he  climb' d, 

boundless  ft's  For  ever-broadening  England, 

(A  visible  Unk  unto  the  ft  of  my  heart), 

within  its  inmost  halls.  The  ft  of  darkness  ; 

Solace  at  least — before  he  left  his  ft. 

found  the  dying  servant,  took  him  ft.  And  fed, 

an'  often  at  ft  in  disgrace. 

To  make  a  good  wife  for  Harry,  when  Harry  came 

ft  for  good. 
And  Harry  came  ft  at  last,  but  he  look'd  at  me 
I  have  taken  them  ft,  I  have  number'd  the  bones, 
gold  that  Solomon's  navies  carried  ft, 
for  you  know  The  flies  at  ft, 
Drove  me  and  my  good  brothers  ft  in  chains 
and  their  hearths  and  their  ft's. 
at  ft  if  I  sought  for  a  kindly  caress, 


202 

Last  Tournament  405 

755 

To  the  Queen  ii  29 

Lover's  Tale  i  431 

524 

ivl 

263 

First  Quarrel  15 


30 
35 

Rizpah  10 

Columbus  113 

119 

134 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  19 

The  Wreck  31 


Having  lands  at  ft  and  abroad  in  a  rich  West- Indian  isle ;  „        46 

When  he  spoke  of  his  tropical  ft  in  the  canes  ,,  _      71 

sail  at  last  which  brings  our  Edwin  ft.  The  Fl^ht  9^ 

To  mark  in  many  a  freeman's  ft  .    Freedom  11 

But  moving  thro'  the  Mother's  ft,  To  Prm.  Beatrice  17 

Go,  take  thine  honours  ft ;  To  W.  0.  Macready_6 


Hubert  brings  me  ft  With  April  and  the  swallow 
far  oS  an  old  forsaken  house,  Then  ft, 
then  I  pass'd  H,  and  thro'  Venice, 
but — coming  ft— And  on  your  Mother's  birthday— 
And  send  her  ft  to  you  rejoicin?. 
hurryin'4  ft,  I  found  her  not  in  house  Or  garden — 
But  chaining  fancy  now  at  ft 
Make  all  true  hearths  thy  ft. 
And  wanders  on  from  ft  to  ft ! 
On  whom  a  happy  ft  has  power  To  make 
that  which  drew  from  out  the  boundless  deep 
Turns  again  ft. 
Home-bred    flatters  thus  Our  h-b  fancies : 
Home-circle    from  her  own  ft-c  of  the  poor  They 

barr'd  her : 
Homeless    The  moanings  of  the  ft  sea. 
Seeing  the  ft  trouble  in  thine  eyes, 
ft  planet  at  length  will  be  wheel'd 
Homelier    Strove  for  sixty  widow'd  years  to  help  his 

ft  brother  men. 
Homely    Fills  out  the  ft  quickset-screens. 
And  every  ft  secret  in  their  hearts, 
Ev'n  the  ft  farm  can  teach  us  there  is  something 

in  descent, 
beat  Thro'  all  the  ft  town  from  jasper. 
Homer     But  H,  Plato,  Verulam ; 

These  lame  hexameters  the  strong-wing  d  music 

of  H! 
And  so  does  Earth ;  for  H's  fame, 
golden  Iliad  vanish,  H  here  is  H  there. 
Home-return    on  our  ft-r  the  daily  want  Of  Edith 
Homeric    faint  H  echoes,  no  thing- worth. 
Homestead    the  trampled  year,  The  smouldering  ft, 
made  an  English  ft  Hell — 
H  and  harvest.  Reaper  and  gleaner, 
Home-voyage    Less  lucky  her  h-v: 
Homicidal    six  feet  high.  Grand,  epic,  ft ; 
Homily    DistiU'd  from  some  worm-canker  d  ft ; 
Hond  (hand)     toithe  were  due,  an'  I  giei  it  in  ft ; 
Honest    Suddenly  ft,  answer'd  in  amaze, 
and  I  methinks  tiU  now  Was  ft — 
then  do  thou,  being  right  ft,  pray  That  we  may  meet 
I  too  would  still  be  ft.' 
And  knowing  every  ft  face  of  theirs 
A  square-set  man  and  ft ;  and  his  eyes, 
at  last  he  said.  Lifting  his  ft  forehead, 
Cui-sed  be  the  sickly  forms  that  err  from  ft  Nature  s 

rule! 
ft  AveriU  seeing  How  low  his  brother  s  mood 
the  woman  A  Work ; 


The  Ring  59 

156 

192 

247 

320 

444 

To  Ulysses  31 

Prog,  of  Spring  52 

The  Wanderer  8 

10 


Crossing  the  Bar  8 
In  Mem.  a;  11 

Aylmer's  Field  504 

In  Mem.  xxxv  9 

Lancelot  and  E.  1365 

Despair  83 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  267 

On,  a  Mourner  6 

Holy  Grail  552 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  26 

Columbus  83 

Princess  ii  160 

Trans,  of  Homer  1 

Epilogue  58 

Parnassus  20 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  245 

The  Epic  39 

Princess  v  128 

To  Mary  Boyle  37 

Merlin  and  the  G.  57 

Enoch  Arden  541 

Princess,  Pro.  225 

To  J.  M.  K.  6 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  11 

Geraint  and  E.  410 

486 

491 

493 

Holy  Grail  550 

703 

Enoch  Arden  388 

Locksley  HaU  61 

Aylmer's  Field  403 

Sea  Dreams  137 


Honest 


T^iTI'  -,,^^"^igl^t  '^  meanmgli  her;  ^~^*  ^^  f^ 

That  England's  A  censure  Ment  too  far;  r*,.:/    r  i^  f  o 

For,  being  of  that  A  few,                        '  7,    J''^\°J^^^-^ 

But  A  talk  and  wholesome  wine,  J-oji.n.  Maurice  5 

The  lips  of  men  with  h  praise,    '  t     n^"     1        ■   \^ 

There  hves  more  faith  in  h  doubt  '^^*''-  ^^^^^'i  ^6 

his  A  fame  should  at  least  by  me  be  maintninoH  .  "    ,^      a^wt  H 

A  Poverty,  bare  to  the  bone  •  '""•  ^^  ^^^-Hamley  16 

Like  an  /j  woman's                 '  yastness  19 

°°"'''£?hL!'^''"^'''^°°'^°°°^     Globing^  Moons  Bright      ^'"'""^  ^^ 

Globe  again,  and  make  H  Moon.  -^^^  ■^*'*^  '^ 

They  made  a  thousand  h  moons  of  one  ">  "        l^ 

^^^^^^^^,^^^"^^0  Mud-honey)    whitest ;»"  in  fairy  gardens  " 

Or  Heliconian  h  in  living  words  r  ^^^''^ore  26 

madness  of  love.  The  h  of  poison-flowers  7?^*i*!"  ^^* 

'  I  sit  and  gather  h ■  yet,  m^etSs  m    i^""^.  U''  ^^ 

wild  bees  fhat  madeLch  riS^t'realm.  ^I^^r  ^;  9?^ 

A  from  hornet-combs.  And  men  from  bea<it«  t    .  -^   ^  ^''"''^  ^^^ 

Art  with  poisonous  Astol'nTrom  F™       "  TotZZlT'-^tl 

^nd  of  promise  flowing  with  the  mUk  AM  h  M%1  "4^ 

Sleep,  little  blossom,  my  h,  my  bliss '  T          ,    ?.^^^ 

Honeycomb    A  fuU-ceU'd  A  of  eloquence    '  vf'^'^K'  ^-  f 

Honey-converse    Some  A-c  feeds  thy  m^d  '^'^^'^  fl'?.''  ^^ 

Honey'd    oozed  AU  o'er  with  A  answer  as  we  rode  ^^rfe/i«e40 

Honeymoon     But  thirty  moois,  one  SI?  that  PT'"\F"'-^^^ 

Globine  a  JK'»  Bright  as  liS!                  '  Eio^nU^,^  29 

Olobe  again,  and  make  H  M  -"'"^  ' 

They  made  a  thousand  A  m'*  of  one  ?  "        ^^ 

-"0  second  cloudless  A  was  mine.  "      Ji 

Honeysuckle    The  A  round  the  porch  has  wov'n  m  „  n"      ^oo 

Broke  from  a  bower  of  vine  and  A-  ^     -J^ay  Qw^m  29 

But  aU  about  it  flies  a  A                   "  Aylmer's  Field  156 

how  sweetly  smells  the  A  In  the  hush'd  night  ^""''^  "^'^  i^.  1278 

Honeysuckle-flower    kingcups  and  h-f's '             '  ^'•'    ^,  ^^^^ 

Hong-Kong    fl-Z,  KaSic,  fnd  all  thV^est.  ^^'f/P^^  ]? 

Homed    And  buzzings  of  the  A  hours.  /„  m.      1^^'"''  it 

Nor  drown  thyself  with  flies  in  h  win^  •  .V^'  ^*^**^  ^^ 

Honorius     to  react  H,  S  he  hear^^thTm  '  vf  "t  ?'  *'T  ^^8 
"pSie  ^'^'''  "^''  Mock-honoi)     In  A  of  the  golden      ''  ^^^^'"-^"^  77 

SomT^row  to  A,  some  to  shame,-  ^""^^^  ^^^'^^^  If, 

H,'  she  said,  '  and  homage   tax  and  toll    '  J.  wo  Voices  257 

all  the  old  A  had  from  fetmas^one    '  ^^T  "^ 

But  now  much  A  and  much  fame  wppp  ln«t  '  »^    Jp-^^^P^e  7 

Old  age  hath  yet  his  A  and  his  toil           '  '  ^-  '^  if  ^'^  ^f 

helps  the  hurt  that  B  feels              '  r    t  ,  *^'y«*^«  50 

an  l  Unt^  which  she  was  not  bom.  ^'^fH  ^".^^ 

a  snowy  hand  and  signet  gem,  '  All  A  °I  Burleigh  79 

Hose  My  A,  these  thiir  lives  '  Prtw^m  ^  122 

for  A:  every  captain  waits  Hungry  for  A.  "      "iff 

thisA,ifyewilf:    It  needs  must  be  for  A  "       '' g^ 

since  you  think  me  touch'd  In  A—  "          ^^^ 

Lti5;'z.^"sirotr?dti?t?st^^  "^^-  ^^^^^^^^  ^'^^  -  ^^«'  149.  So 

But  some  love  England  and  her  A  yet.  rur^  ,r  p  ,  ^^^ 

hold  against  the  world  this  A  of  the  land  ^'"'^  ''•^  ^'*-  ^f 

Singir^  of  Death,  and  of  H  that  cannot  die  lu"^  r     H 

Clear  A  shining  hke  the  dewv  stnr  ^       :^aM<Z  /  «  16 

yield  him  thlflarge  A  aU  tKo're ;  ^«'-^'*  "^'^  ^- 1^ 

And  did  her  A  as  the  Prince's  bride  j^          .'U           ^^^ 

And  feast  with  these  inTof  the"  Earl  •  ^r'"'  ^^  ^*"?^f'  ^^ 

ThaTte^V'^^  '^l^^  quest  0rA,'^:here  no  A  ^"^^'^  ""'^  ^'-  ?»1 

inat  /I  too  wherem  she  holds  him     fV.;o  n  ,.         ,"            '^4 

We  will  do  him  No  cSstSmSy  A             '  ^f "  '^,'f  ^f  1?  ^80 

His  A  rooted  in  dishonour  stood  '  Lancelot  and  E.  543 

'  »           876 


332 


Hoop 


To  win  his  A  and  to  make 


Honour  (s)  (continued) 
his  name, 

'Glory  and  joy  and  A  to  our  Lord  Lancelot  andE.  1362 

Sir  Pelleas  kept  the  field  With  A  •  d  ii^  ^^"■'^^  ^39 

and  thro'  his  heart  The  fire  of  A  '  i^elleas  and  E.  169 

by  the  A  of  the  Table  Round,  I  will  be  leal  to  th*.P  "            ^^^ 

this  A  after  death   Fnii^,„;.,„'.i;_  _  -.rP  ^®*^  ^  ^hee  „            342 


iiT-  7    ;  j-ouie  ivouna,  1  wili  b( 

wf .  after  death,  FoUowing  thy  will! 
White-robed  m  A  of  the  stahile^  child 
In  A  of  poor  Innocence  the  babe. 
But  now  much  A  and  much  fame  were  lost 

I^i.M    ^f/  ""''^  ^  '^"^^  i"to  the  deep, 
1  could  not  free  myself  in  A— 

r.''!  ^^^£  ^^?,''*  ^^«'  ^ove  and  H  join'd 
Go,  take  thme  h's  home  •  '' 

Honour  (verb)    his  mute  dust  I  A  and  his  hying  worth 
And  more  than  England  h's  that,  ^        *'^ 

and  A  thy  bmte  Baal 
And  A  all  the  day. 

j&  the  charge  they  made !    H  the  Light  Brigade 
loathe,  fear-but  A  me  the  more.'  ""S^ae, 

Before  a  kmg  who  A'*  his  own  word, 
'Pear  God  :  A  the  King—  ' 

To  A  his  own  word  as  if  his  God's 
Hnnnl^Z  """f*  \  ^''^*^«'  *«  ^  ^hom  I  scorn  P 
Honoi^^H^^  '^"'^  •"?"*"^1  ^°^«  and  A  toil ; 
Daid  has  A  beech  or  hme 
Myself  not  least,  but  A  of  them  all: 

lauPh'rTt^n''  l^^  ^^^•^"^•^  Half-mused, 
iaugli  d  upon  his  warrior  whom  he  loved  AnH  7. 
wamor  whom  he  loved  And  A  most  Sk  LaSceL 
beyond  the  rest,  And  A  him,  and  wi^uSit  ' 

fhi  K"?r?^  '^  *«  *^«  heighV-I  A  hinT 

ind  t'ho'°h  T  ^}'  ^^PP^'  dead  before 
And,  tho  he  loved  and  A  Lionel, 

'tou  ^e7S  F^f.f '^  '^  ^°  *^«  ""e^ost 
nnp  ti.  f ,      T  ^^^  *«  *he  uttermost: 
one  that  loved,  and  A  him, 

VVho  IS  he  that  cometh,  hke  an  A  guest 
I  see  myself  an  A  guest,  ^       ' 

IhiSM-reath,  above  his  A  head 
Honouring    A  your  sweet  faith  in  him 

A  fus  Wise  mother's  word ' 

Florence  A  thy  nativity, 

Vr.J  ^''"''  ^^'"^  ^^e  Of  Statesman, 
Hood    we  must  A  your  random  ey^, 

h^'h'^.i  T^^^fVP-*™^  °f  ^  and  hoop, 
m  hue  The  lilac,  with  a  silken  A  to  each 
keep  your  A's  about  the  face:  ' 

HoodPd°'?*??    f  ever  setting  up  their  A'*- 

A  h^tf-f"  ^^f.'t-Jiooded:  Violet-hooded) 
w«n^«,      ui^^.l  "^^ept  mto  the  haU,  '^ 

Hoodman-blmd    dance  and  song  a^d  h-b 
Hoof    his  own  blood  flows  About  his  A. 

On  bui-nish'd  hooves  his  war-horse  trode- 
A  h^Wi'^^  batter'd  with  cSiig^  A'5  • 
h  by  A  And  every  A  a  knell  to  my  deSr^   ' 
gf  °Pi"g  ^'^  bare  on  the  ridge  of  speaT' 

th^el'f  ^ThTL'  ^°r  -«- of  A  indl^hariot. 
Till    Of  the  horses  beat,  (repeat)  ' 

E-H  -^  ^''  ^/""  ^"P''  ^  the  stream, 
heard  instead  A  sudden  sound  of  h's 
and  everywhere  Was  hammer  laid  to  A, 
Not  T?.if  ""^^  ^  heavily-gaUopu^'  A 
^    ,S^  h^y^L^^e^Ti^Ttfet^li^^^ 

iSk'"1  SlTouM  r  -^f  ''^  «^  a  WX  more.' 
HOOK    u  1  bhould  A  It  to  some  useful  end 

TT««J?J^''y/'?"  Red-rent  with  A'*  of  brSle 
Hook'd    At  last  I  A  my  ankle  in  a  vh^f^     ' 

'°°'squ?ir^s''''^    '''■^'  ^'  hautlThaacre  0' 
"'™-  ^^  ''^°'^''^  "°"'  "^'  ^  h  l^aacre  0' 
Hoop    bom  In  teacup-times  of  hood  and  A, 


Xasi  Tournament  34 

147 

292 

-ra55.  of  Arthur  277 

The  Bevenge  109 

jSwiers  (E.  and  E.)  161 

To  W.  C.  Macready  6 
ti :  To  J.  S.  30 

Talking  Oak  295 
Aylmer's  Field  644 
Window,  When  16 
Xj^Ai  Brigade  53 
■Mertm  ond  F.  122 
Lancelot  and  E.  143 
•iasi  Tournament  302 
Guinevere  473 
TA«  i^%Ai  50 
-EnocA  Jrrfen  83 
Two  Foices  149 
Ta^Aiw^  Oa/fc  291 
Ulysses  15 
»'i7/  W^aier.  73 
Com.  of  Arthur  125 
„  448 

Holy  Grail  10 
Xa^i  Tournament  662 
Guinevere  423 
Lover's  Tale  iv  148 
245 
316 
Ancient  Sage  3 
0<i«  o»  ^eZ;.  80 
/»  J/em.  ;a;a7a:ii;  21 
Tiresias  213 
^  Dedication  5 
Achilles  over  the  T.  16 
_    ,,  To  Z)amfe  3 

i  0  J/arg'.  0/  Dufferin  14 
Rosalind  37 
Talking  Oak  63 
Princess  ii  17 

^7.    ,       "         358 
Akbar's  Dream  166 


With 


Princess  iv  225 
/«  J/em.  Ixxviii  12 
CMpy.  Confessions  156 
■£.  of  Shalott  Hi  29 
D.  of  F.  Women  21 
Princess  iv  173 
■^489 
.,       w  379 
l/aw<i  7/  i;  8 
Gareth  and  L.  1046 
i/arr.  0/  (Peraimf  164 
.  ..  256 

Geramt  and  E.  447 
485 
Tiresias  138 
^aZin  a«ci  i^aZaw  133 
Day-Dm.,  Moral  16 
i^oZy  Grail  211 
Princess  iv  268 

iV.  Farmer,  O.  S.  44 

Church-warden,  etc.  22 
TaZfeny  OaA:  63 


Hoop 


333 


Hope 


Hoop  (continued)    and  roll'd  His  h  to  pleasure  Edith,  Aylmer's  Field  85 

Hoot    storm  grew  with  a  howl  and  a  /i  of  the  blast  The  Wreck  91 

Hooved    See  WMte-hooved 

Hop  A  land  of  h's  and  poppy-mingled  corn,  Aylmer's  Field  31 
tower  Half-lost  in  belts  of  h  and  breadths  of  wheat ;    Princess,  Con.  45 

Hope  (s)  {See  also  'O&p)  ^ly  h  is  gray,and  cold  At  heart,  Supp.  Confessions  103 

Shall  man  live  thus,  in  joy  and  h  „              169 

without  h  of  change.  In  sleep  she  seem'd  to  walk  Mariana  29 

Thou  leddest  by  the  hand  thine  infant  H.  Ode  to  Memory  30 

the  breathing  spring  Of  H  and  Youth.  The  Poet  28 

What  h  or  fear  or  joy  is  thine  ?  Adeline  23 

My  h  and  heart  is  with  thee —  To  J.  M.  K.  1 

Light  H  at  Beauty's  caU  would  perch  and  stand,  Caress'd  or  chidden  3 

R  is  other  H  and  wanders  far,  „              10 

'  Think  you  this  mould  of  h's  and  fears  Two  Voices  28 

raise  One  h  that  warm'd  me  in  the  days  „        122 


summits  slope  Beyond  the  furthest  flights  of  h, 

'  Not  that  the  grounds  of  h  were  fix'd, 

'  A  hidden  h,'  the  voice  replied : 

Nature's  living  motion  lent  The  pulse  of  A  to  discontent 


And  full  at  heart  of  trembling  h. 

With  blessings  beyond  h  or  thought, 

'  I  was  cut  oS  from  h  in  that  sad  place. 

She  ceased  in  tears,  fallen  from  h  and  trust : 

Come  H  and  Memory,  spouse  and  bride, 

To  hold  his  h  thro'  shame  and  guilt, 

A  crowd  of  h's,  That  sought  to  sow  themselves 

say  That  my  desire,  like  all  strongest  h's. 

For  daily  h  fulfill'd,  to  rise  again 

I  will  not  cease  to  grasp  the  h  I  hold 

and  h  ere  death  Spreads  more  and  more 

'Twere  all  as  one  to  fix  our  h's  on  Heaven 

Care  and  Pleasiu«,  E  and  Pain, 

What  eyes,  like  thine,  have  waken'd  h's, 

to  me  is  given  Such  h,  I  know  not  fear ; 

And  phantom  h's  assemble ; 

For  I  had  h,  by  something  rare  To  prove  myself 

In  A  to  gain  upon  her  flight. 

Like  Heavenly  H  she  crown'd  tlie  sea, 

'  Drink  to  lofty  h's  that  cool — 

April  h's,  the  fools  of  chance ; 

'  Youthful  h's,  by  scores,  to  all. 

Cry  to  the  summit,  '  Is  there  any  h  ? ' 

It  is  beyond  all  h,  against  all  chaince. 

His  h's  to  see  his  own,  And  pace  the  sacred  old 

famiUar  fields, 
but  labour  for  himself,  Work  without  h, 
boat  that  bears  the  h  of  life  approach 
thro'  that  dawning  gleam'd  a  kindlier  h  On  Enoch 
strong  in  h's,  And  prodigal  of  all  brain-labour 
Had  golden  h's  for  France  and  all  mankind, 
saw  An  end,  a  A,  a  light  breaking  upon  him. 
Seem'd  h's  returning  rose : 

tower'd  Above  them,  with  his  h's  in  either  grave. 
Where  she,  who  kept  a  tender  Christian  h, 
within  As  hollow  as  the  h's  and  fears  of  men  ? 
his  h's  and  hates,  his  homes  and  fanes, 
hiUs,  that  look'd  across  a  land  of  h, 
H,  a  poising  eagle,  bums  Above  the  unrisen  morrow 
like  parting  h's  I  heard  them  passing  from  me : 
weight  of  all  the  h's  of  half  the  world, 
I  bore  up  in  A  she  would  be  known  : 
and  a  h  The  child  of  regal  compact, 
my  h's  and  thine  are  one : 
Uplifted  high  in  heart  and  h  are  we. 
He  rose  at  dawn  and,  fired  with  h, 
and  darkens  and  brightens  like  my  h, 
As  we  descended  following  H, 
The  light  that  shone  when  H  was  bom. 
Man  dies :  nor  is  there  h  in  dust : ' 
And  h's  and  light  regrets  that  come 
Beneath  all  fancied  h's  and  fears 
And  faintly  trust  the  larger  h. 
What  h  of  answer,  or  redress  ? 
With  so  much  h  for  years  to  come. 


185 

227 

441 

450 

MilUr's  D.  110 

237 

D.  of  F.  Women  105 

257 

On  a  Mourner  23 

Love  thou  thy  land  82 

Gardener's  D.  64 

237 

Edwin  Morris  38 

St.  S.  Stylites  5 

„      156 

Golden  Year  57 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  55 

„  U Envoi  45 

Sir  Galahad  62 

Wia  Water.  30 

165 

The  Voyage  60 

70 

Vision  of  Sin  147 

164 

199 

220 

Enoch  Arden  403 


624 

820 

830 

833 

Aylmer's  Field  446 

464 

480 

559 

624 

Sea  Dreams  41 

Lucretius  180 

255 

Princess  i  169 

.,      iv  82 

172 

184 

320 

420 

„  vii  364 

Ode  on  Well.  254 

Sailor  Boy  1 

Window,  On  the  Hill  18 

In  Mem.  xxii  11 

„         XXX  32 

„  XXXV  4 

xll 

„         xlix  13 

Iv  20 

Ivi  27 

lix  14 


Hope  (s)  continued)    The  pillar  of  a  people's  h,  In  Mem.  Ixiv  15 

What  h  is  here  for  modem  rhjone  „       Ixxvii  1 

Love,  then,  had  h  of  richer  store :  „        Ixxxi  5 

Despair  of  E,  and  earth  of  thee.  „     Ixxxiv  16 

I  remain'd,  whose  h's  were  dim,  „      Ixxxv  29 

The  mighty  h's  that  make  us  men.  „                60 

The  h  of  unaccomplish'd  years  „            xci  7 

And  h  could  never  hope  too  much,  „         cxii  11 

Yet  E  had  never  lost  her  youth  ;  „          cxxv  5 

Wild  Hours  that  fly  with  E  and  Fear,  „     cxxviii  9 

why  not.     I  have  neither  h  nor  tmst ;  Maud  I  i  30 

returns  the  dark  With  no  more  h  of  light.  „         ix  16 

brother  comes,  like  a  blight  On  my  fresh  h,  „     xix  103 

a  h  for  the  world  in  the  coming  wars —  „  ///  vi  11 

in  that  h,  dear  soul,  let  trouble  have  rest,  „             12 

his  own  blood,  his  princedom,  youth  and  h's,  Gareth  and  L.  210 

I  lived  in  h  that  sometime  you  would  come  Geraint  and  E.  839 
woi-ship  woman  as  true  wife  beyond  All  h's  of 

gaining.  Merlin  and  V.  24 

goodly  h's  are  mine  That  Lancelot  is  no  more  Lancelot  and  E.  601 

'  Yea,  lord,'  she  said,  '  Thy  h's  are  mine,'  „               607 

Said  good  Sir  Bors,  '  beyond  all  h's  of  mine,  Eoly  Grail  690 

in  the  h  That  could  I  touch  or  see  the  Holy  Grail  „        778 

tho'  ye  kill  my  h,  not  yet  my  love,  Pelleas  and  E.  303 

Leave  me  that,  I  charge  thee,  my  last  h.  Guinevere  568 


what  h?     I  think  there  was  a  h,  Except  he  mock'd  me 

when  he  spoke  of  h ;  His  h  he  call'd  it ; 
left  me  h  That  in  mine  own  heart  I  can  live 
O  Love,  O  E  !    They  come,  they  crowd  upon  me 
deep  vault  where  the  heart  of  E  Fell  into  dust, 
swathe  thyself  all  round  E's  quiet  urn  For  ever  ? 
in  that  hour  A  h  flow'd  round  me, 
which  was  less  than  E,  Because  it  lack'd  the  power 

of  perfect  E ;  But  which  was  more  and  higher 

than  all  E,  Because  all  other  E  had  lower  aim ; 
'  let  this  be  call'd  henceforth  The  Hill  of  E;'  and 

I  repUed,  '  O  sister.  My  will  is  one  with  thine ; 

the  Hill  of  H.' 
Her  maiden  dignities  of  E  and  Love — 
No  wish — no  h.    E  was  not  whoUy  dead, 
Love  could  walk  with  banish 'd  E  no  more  ? 
Love's  arms  were  wreath'd  about  the  neck  of  H,  And  E 
Love  would  die  when  E  was  gone.  And  Love  mourn'd 

long,  and  sorrow'd  after  E ; 
trod  The  same  old  paths  where  Love  had  walk'd  with  E, 
But  over  the  deep  graves  of  E  and  Fear, 
Talk  of  lost  h's  and  broken  heart ! 
if  the  h  of  the  world  were  a  he  ? 
as  if  A  for  the  garrison  hung  but  on  him ; 
faltering  h's  of  relief,  Havelock  baffled, 
God's  free  air,  and  h  of  better  things, 
drowning  h  Sank  all  but  out  of  sight, 
h  was  mine  to  spread  the  Catholic  Faith, 
Cloud-weaver  of  phantasmal  h's  and  fears, 
some  strange  h  to  see  the  nearer  God. 
'  We  are  sinking,  and  yet  there's  h: 
life  without  sun,  without  health,  without  h, 
Bright  as  with  deathless  h — 
And  E  will  have  broken  her  heart, 
being  damn'd  beyond  h  of  grace  ? 
market  frets  or  charms  The  merchant's  h  no  more 
Without  their  h  of  wings ! ' 
h  I  catch  at  vanishes  and  youth  is  turn'd 
E  was  ever  on  her  mountain, 
without  the  faith,  without  the  h, 


yours  are  h  and  youth,  but  I  Eighty  winters  leave 

the  dog 
far  from  here  is  all  the  h  of  eighty  years. 
As  all  my  h's  were  thine — 
God  the  traitor's  h  confoimd !  (repeat) 
Star  of  the  morning,  E  in  the  sunrise ; 
Yes,  for  some  wild  h  was  mine  That, 
men  have  h's,  which  race  the  restless  blood. 


630 
635 
Lover's  Tale  i  46 
94 
100 
449 


452 


462 
580 
584 
813 
815 

818 

821 

«58 

„      iv  176 

In  the  Child.  Eosp.  24 

Def.  of  Lucknow  48 

90 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  10 

Columbus  156 

230 

To  Victor  Eugo  2 

Tiresias  29 

The  Wreck  121 

Despair  7 

„      17 

,.      92 

„    109 

;       Ancient  Sage  141 

211 

The  Flight  16 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  91 

137 


'  The  miserable  have  no  medicine  But  only  E ! ' 
Beyond  aU  A  of  warmth,  Oilnone  sat  Not  moving, 


225 

254 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  26 

Eands  all  Round  10,  22,  34 

Vastness  15 

The  Ring  135 

Prog,  of  Spring  115 


Romney's  R.  150 
Death  of  (Enone  74 


Hope 


334 


Horse 


Hope  (s)  (caniinued)    blight  thy  h  or  break  thy  rest,  Faith  2 

Until  the  great  Hereafter.    Mourn  in  h !         Death  of  the  Duke  of  C.  17 


Hope  (verb)     ti-ust  and  h  till  things  should  cease, 

Named  man,  may  h  some  truth  to  find, 

I  h  my  end  draws  nigh : 

Could  h  itself  retum'd ; 

I  am.  To  that  I  /i  to  be. 

h  with  me.     Whose  shame  is  that. 

And  hope  could  never  h  too  much, 

a  debt.  That  I  never  can  h  to  pay ; 

And  the  titmouse  h  to  win  her 

H  more  for  these  than  some  inheritance 

H  not  to  make  thyself  by  idle  vows, 

and  h  The  third  night  hence  will  bring  thee 
news 

Australian  dying  h's  he  shall  return, 

H  the  best,  but  hold  the  Present 

Bid  him  farewell  for  me,  and  tell  him — H ! 

I  hear  a  death-bed  Angel  whisper  '  H.' 

E !  O  yes,  I  h,  or  fancy  that, 

nor  h  for  a  deathless  hearing ! 

As  Wisdom  h's  to  gain, 

I  A  to  see  my  Pilot  face  to  face 
Hoped    I  had  h  that  ere  this  period  closed 

Yet  he  A  to  purchase  glory,  H  to  make  the  name 
Of  his  vessel  great  in  story, 

she  heard.  And  almost  h  herself ; 

partly  that  I  A  to  win  you  back, 

loved  and  did.  And  h,  and  suffer'd. 

They  h  to  slay  him  somewhere  on  the  stream, 

where  I  h  myself  to  reign  as  king, 

cope  and  crown  Of  all  I  h  and  f ear'd  ? 

Cold  words  from  one  I  had  h  to  warm  so  far 

we  had  h  for  a  dawn  indeed, 

H  for  a  dawn  and  it  came. 
Hopeful    Fear-tremulous,  but  humbly  h, 

With  h  grief,  were  passing  sweet ! 
Hopefuller     He,  passionately  h,  would  go. 
Hopeless     hush'd  itself  at  last  H  of  answer : 

And  sweet  as  those  by  h  fancy  f eign'd 

The  grasp  of  h  grief  about  my  heart, 

it  was  all  but  a  h  case : 

And  it  was  but  a  h  case. 

Came  that '  Ave  atque  Vale '  of  the  Poet's  h  woe. 

In  aiming  at  an  all  but  h  mark 
Hoping    h,  fearing  '  is  it  yet  too  late  ? ' 
Hopple  (hobble)    Tha'd  niver  not  h  thy  tongue, 
Horace    half  in  jest.  Old  H  ? 

you,  old  popular  H,  you  the  wise  Adviser 
Horde     thine  OAvn  land  has  bow'd  to  Tartar  h's 

There  the  h  of  Roman  robbers  mock 

last  a  heathen  h.  Reddening  the  sun 

overcame  The  heathen  h's,  and  made  a  realm 

Wasted  so  often  by  the  heathen  h's, 

clash'd  with  Pagan  h's,  and  bore  them  down. 

In  the  heart  of  the  Russian  h's, 
Horder'd  (ordered)    To  be  h  about,  an'  waaked, 
Horizon     By  making  all  the  h  dark. 

A  length  of  bright  h  rimm'd  the  dark. 

With  fair  h's  boimd : 

Ev'n  to  its  last  h,  and  of  all  Who  peer'd  at  him 

My  prospect  and  h  gone. 

sometimes  on  the  h  of  the  mind  Lies  folded, 

To  change  with  her  h,  if  true  Love  Were  not 

The  faint  h's,  all  the  bounds  of  earth. 


Supp.  Confessions  31 

Two  Voices  176 

St.  S.  Stylites  37 

Talking  Oak  12 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  20 

Aylmer's  Field  717 

In  Mem.  cxii  11 

Maud  I  xix  88 

XX  29 

Ded.  of  Idylls  32 

Holy  Grail  871 

Pelleas  and  E.  356 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  70 

105 

Romney's  R.  147 

148 

158 

Parnassus  14 

Politics  4 

Crossing  the  Bar  15 

St.  S.  Stylites  17 

The  Captain  17 

Enoch  Arden  202 

Princess  iv  304 

In  Mem.,  Con.  135 

Gareth  and  L.  1419 

Lover's  Tale  i  591 

a  28 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  194 

Despair  22 

27 

Merlin  and  V.  86 

Supp.  Confessions  39 

Aylmer's  Field  419 

543 

Princess  iv  55 

Lover's  Tale  i  126 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  14 

16 

F rater  ave,  etc.  5 

The  Ring  346 

Guinevere  691 

Church-warden,  etc.  24 

Epilogue  46 

Poets  and  their  B,  5 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  23 

BoSdicea  18 

Com.  of  Arthur  36 

519 

Holy  Grail  244 

479 

Heavy  Brigade  50 

Spinster's  S's.  97 

Two  Voices  390 

Gardener's  D.  181 

WUl  Water.  66 

Aylmer's  Field  816 

In  Mem.  xxxvlii  4 

Lover's  Tale  i  49 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  226 

Far — far — away  14 


Horn    (See  also  Bugle-horn)    wave-worn  h's  of  the  echoing 

bank.  Dying  Swan  39 

one  hand  i^rasp'd  The  mild  bull's  golden  h.  Palace  of  Art  120 

Leaning  his  h's  into  the  neighbour  field.  Gardener's  D.  87 

To  where  the  bay  runs  up  its  latest  h.  Audley  Court  11 

Betwixt  the  monstrous  Ks  of  elk  and  deer,  Princess,  Pro.  23 

The  h's  of  Elfland  faintly  blowing !  „             iv  10 

A  little  space  was  left  between  the  h's,  „               207 
blast  and  bray  of  the  long  h  And  serpent-throated 

bugle,  „            V  252 


Horn  {continued)    like  a  wild  A  in  a  land  Of  echoes,  Princess  v  486 

Death  and  Morning  on  the  silver  h's,  „      vii  204 

affluent  Fortune  emj)tied  all  her  h.  Ode  on  Well.  197 

outpour'd  Their  myriad  h's  of  plenty  Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  6 

clangs  Its  leafless  ribs  and  iron  h's  Together,  In  Mem.  cvii  12 

A  golden  foot  or  a  fairy  h  Maud  II  ii  19 

blew  A  hard  and  deadly  note  upon  the  h.  Gareth  and  L.  1111 

and  a  long  black  h  Beside  it  hanging ;  .,  1366 

Sent  all  his  heart  and  breath  thro'  all  the  h.  ,,  1369 

let  blow  His  h's  for  hunting  on  the  morrow 

morn.  Marr.  of  Geraint  153 

The  noble  hart  at  bay,  now  the  far  h,  „  233 

fill'd  a  h  with  wine  and  held  it  to  her,)  Geraint  and  E.  659 

In  these  wild  woods,  the  hart  with  golden  h's.  Merlin  and  V.  409 

chased  the  flashes  of  his  golden  h's  „  427 

sent  His  h's  of  proclamation  out  „  581 

They  sit  with  knife  in  meat  and  wine  in  ^  !  „  694 

Thither  he  made,  and  blew  the  gateway  h.  Lancelot  and  E.  169 

I  heard  a  sound  As  of  a  silver  h  from  o'er  the  hills  Holy  Grail  109 

0  never  harp  nor  A,  Nor  ought  we  blow  with  breath,  „        113 

a  h,  inflamed  the  knights  At  that  dishonour  Last  Tournament  434 

Till  each  would  clash  the  shield,  and  blow  the  h.  „  436 

Then  at  the  dry  harsh  roar  of  the  great  h,  „  438 

'  O  hunter,  and  0  blower  of  the  h.  Harper,  „  542 

Made  answer,  sounding  Uke  a  distant  h.  Guinevere  249 

Hornblende    chat  tering  stony  names  Of  shale  and  h,  Princess  Hi  362 

Homed    (See  also  White-homed)     things  that  are  forked, 

,  and  h.  The  Mermaid  53 

or  fills  The  h  valleys  all  about,  Supp.  Confessions  152 

shadowing  down  the  h  flood  In  ripples.  In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  7 

Homet     better  ha'  put  my  naked  hand  in  a  h's  nest.  First  Quarrel  50 

Homet-comb    honey  from  h-c's.  And  men  from 

beasts —  Last  Tournament  357 

Homfooted    tramp  of  the  h  horse  That  grind  the  glebe  Tiresias  94 

Horn-handed    those  h-h  breakers  of  the  glebe.  Princess  ii  159 

Hornless    h  unicorns,  Crack'd  basilisks.  Holy  Grail  717 

Hompipes    move.  And  flounder  into  h.  4'''>phion  24 

Homy    with  a  grosser  film  made  thick  These  heavy,  h 

eyes.  St.  S.  Stylites  201 

Homy-nibb'd     Left  for  the  7i-n  raven  to  rend  it.       Bait,  of  Brunanburh  108 
'     ■  ■  Palace  of  Art  240 

Princess  iv  180 

Maud  II  i  24 

„  III  vi  41 

Geraint  and  E.  379 

Rizpah  39 

Despair  87 

Bandit's  Death  35 

Merlin  and  V.  748 

Godiva  59 

Aylmer's  Field  43 

603 

Lucretius  173 

Princess  v  95 

The  Victim  7 

Maud  /  i  3 

56 

vil5 

,,     xiv  35 

„IIIvi2 

Gareth  and  L.  1394 

1411 

1425 

Marr.  of  Geraint  29 

Lancelot  and  E.  2>1 

Holy  Grail  259 

Lover's  Tale  iv  62 

Def.  of  I/ucknow  88 

Despair  48 

The  Ring  451 

Aylmer's  Field  318 

Bahn  and  Balan  525 


Horrible    And  h  nightmares. 

like  a  blossom'd  branch  Rapt  to  the  h  fall : 

a  mUhon  h  bellowing  echoes  broke 

H,  hateful,  monstrous,  not  to  be  told ; 

then  Went  slipping  down  h  precipices, 

God  'ill  pardon  the  hell-black  raven  and  h  fowls  of 

the  air. 
Have  I  crazed  myself  over  their  h  infidel  writings  ? 
it  was  chain'd,  but  its  h  yell 

Horrid    And  of  the  h  foulness  that  he  wrought, 

Horror    shot  Light  h's  thro'  her  pulses : 
hail"  of  the  Baronet  bristle  up  With  h, 
days  Were  dipt  by  h  from  his  term  of  life. 
'  Can  I  not  fling  this  h  off  me  again. 
The  h  of  the  shame  among  them  all : 
Priest  in  h  about  his  altar  To  Thor  and  Odin 
ledges  drip  with  a  silent  /*  of  blood, 
nevennore  to  brood  On  a  /*  of  shatter'd  limbs 
a  morbid  hate  and  h  have  grown  Of  a  world 
Felt  a  h  over  me  creep, 
cells  of  madness,  haunts  of  h  and  fear, 
spake  no  word ;  Which  set  the  h  higher : 
To  make  a  /i  all  about  the  house, 
all  their  foolish  fears  And  h's  only  proven 
fell  Ah  on  him,  lest  his  gentle  wife, 
A  h  lived  about  the  tam. 
In  h  lest  the  work  by  Merlin  wrought, 
Drown'd  in  the  gloom  and  h  of  the  vault. 
H  of  women  in  travail  among  the  dying 
Life  with  its  anguish,  and  h's,  and  eiTors — 
the  glazed  eye  Glared  at  me  as  in  A. 

Horror-stricken    And  Leolin's  h-s  answer,  '  I 
She  lied  with  ease ;  but  h-s  he, 


Horse    (See  also  'Erse,  Herse,  War-horse) 
trail'd  By  slow  h's ; 


heavy  barges 


L.  of  Shalotti  21 


Horse 


335 


Hospital 


Horse  (continued)    like  a  h  That  hears  the  corn-bin  open, 
Francis  laid  A  damask  napkin  wrought  with  h  and 


hound, 

turn  the  h's'  heads  and  home  again.' 

a  little  dearer  than  his  h. 

The  h  and  rider  reel : 

He  rode  a  h  with  wings,  that  would  have  flown. 

Below  were  men  and  h's  pierced  with  worms, 

Enoch's  white  h,  and  Enoch's  ocean-spoil 

He  knew  her,  as  a  horseman  knows  his  h — 

The  h  he  drove,  the  boat  he  sold, 

praised  his  land,  his  h's,  his  machines  ; 

She  trampled  some  beneath  her  h's'  heels, 

twinn'd  as  h's  ear  and  eye. 

four  wing'd  h's  dark  against  the  stars ; 

Till  like  three  h's  that  have  broken  fence, 

shook  My  pulses,  till  to  A  we  got, 

'To  A' Said  Ida;  'home!  to/*!' 

(For  since  her  h  was  lost  I  left  her  mine) 

The  h's  yell'd  ;  they  clash'd  their  arms  ; 

Part  stumbled  mixt  with  floundering  h's. 

With  stroke  on  stroke  the  h  and  horseman, 

And  sword  to  sword,  and  htohwe  hung, 

While  h  and  hero  fell, 

rolling  phantom  bodies  of  h's  and  men ; 

loosed  their  sweating  h's  from  the  yoke, 

Or  kiU'd  in  falling  from  his  h. 

Yet  pity  for  a  h  o'er-driven, 

And  those  white-f avour'd  h's  wait ; 

Look,  a  A  at  the  door, 

That  he  left  his  wine  eind  h's  and  play, 

the  hoofs  of  the  h's  beat,  (repeat) 

long-lanced  battle  let  their  h's  run. 

A  h  thou  knowest,  a  man  thou  dost  not  know : 

he  had  ask'd  For  h  and  armour : 

And  the  spear  spring,  the  good  h  reel, 

Thou  get  to  h  and  foUow  him  far  away. 

Took  h,  descended  the  slope  street, 

that  held  The  h,  the  spear ; 

took  the  shield  And  mounted  h  and  graspt  a  spear, 

'  Bound  upon  a  quest  With  h  and  arms — 

heart  of  her  good  h  Was  nigh  to  burst 

Who  stood  a  moment,  ere  his  h  was  brought, 

Flee  down  the  valley  before  he  get  to  h. 

take  his  h  And  arms,  and  so  return  him  to  the  King. 

Beyond  his  h's  crupper  and  the  bridge, 

Huge  on  a  huge  red  h,  and  all  in  mail 

Push'd  h  across  the  foamings  of  the  ford, 

hoof  of  his  h  slipt  in  the  stream, 

His  h  thereon  stumbled — ay,  for  I  saw  it. 

knights  on  h  Sculptured,  and  deckt  in  slowly-waning  hues 

and  thy  good  h  And  thou  are  weary ; 

And  forage  for  the  h,  and  flint  for  fire. 

Lancelot  now  To  lend  thee  h  and  shield : 

How  best  to  manage  h,  lance,  sword  and  shield. 

High  on  a  nightblack  h,  in  nightblack  arms. 

Took  h,  and  forded  Usk,  and  gain'd  the  wood ;        Marr.  of  Geraint  161 

when  she  put  her  h  toward  the  knight,  „  200 

Prince  Had  put  his  ft  in  motion  toward  the  knight,  .,  206 

the  good  knight's  h  stands  in  the  court ; 

That  morning,  when  they  both  had  got  to  h, 

Come,  we  will  slay  him  and  will  have  his  h 

they  would  slay  you,  and  possess  your  h 

bound  the  suits  Of  armour  on  their  h's, 

Three  h's  and  three  goodly  suit  of  arms, 

bound  them  on  their  h's,  each  on  each, 

They  let  the  h's  graze,  and  ate  themselves. 

but  take  A  h  and  arms  for  guerdon ; 

stalling  for  the  h's,  and  return  With  victual 

up  the  rocky  pathway  disappear'd.  Leading  the  h, 

'  Take  Five  h's  and  their  armours ; ' 

wild  Limours,  Borne  on  a  black  h, 

'  H  and  man,'  he  said, '  All  of  one  mind  and  all  right- 
honest  friends ! 

Was  honest — paid  with  h's  and  with  arms ; 


TJie  Epic  44       Horse  (continued)     Prince,  without  a  word,  from  his  h 
fell. 
Feeding  like  h's  when  you  hear  them  feed ; 
moving  out  they  found  the  stately  h, 
then  Geraint  upon  the  h  Mounted, 
And,  gravely  smiling,  lifted  her  from  h, 
Men  weed  the  white  h  on  the  Berkshire  hills 
on  the  right  of  Balin  Balin's  h  Was  fast 
Christless  foe  of  thine  as  ever  dash'd  H  against  h ; 
We  saw  the  hoof-print  of  a  h,  no  more.' 
stall'd  his  h,  and  strode  across  the  court, 
till  his  goodly  h,  Arising  wearily  at  a  fallen  oak. 
And  there  a  h !  the  rider  ?  where  is  he  ? 
vaulted  on  his  h,  and  so  they  crash'd  In  onset, 
Balin's  h  Was  wearied  to  the  death, 
Beheld  the  Queen  and  Lancelot  get  to  h. 
Then  got  Sir  Lancelot  suddenly  to  h, 
strong  neighings  of  the  wild  white  H 
There  to  his  proud  h  Lancelot  turn'd, 
And  brought  his  h  to  Lancelot  where  he  lay. 
I  charge  you  that  you  get  at  once  to  h. 
So  all  in  wrath  he  got  to  h  and  went; 
all  wearied  of  the  quest  Leapt  on  his  h. 
Making  a  roan  h  caper  and  curvet  For  pleasure 
when  she  heard  his  h  upon  the  stones, 
splash'd  and  dyed  The  strong  White  H 
his  h  In  golden  armour  jewell'd  everywhere  : 
our  h's  stumbling  as  they  trode  On  heaps  of  ruin, 
reel'd  Almost  to  falling  from  his  h ; 
binding  his  good  ft  To  a  tree,  cast  himself  down ; 
all  of  them  On  h's,  and  the  h's  richly  trapt 
Pelleas  rose,  And  loosed  his  ft. 
Lend  me  thine  h  and  arms,  and  I  wiU  say 
Wherefore  now  thy  ft  And  armour: 
Behold  his  h  and  armour, 
he  told  us — he  that  hath  His  ft  and  armour: 
and  bound  his  ft  Hard  by  the  gates. 
And  forth  he  past,  and  mounting  on  his  h 
He  dash'd  the  rowel  into  his  ft, 
Kan  thro'  the  doors  and  vaulted  on  his  ft  And  fled : 
small  pity  upon  his  ft  had  he,  Or  on  himself, 
Tristram  round  the  gallery  made  his  ft  Caracole ; 
as  he  stretch'd  from  ft  To  strike  him, 
And  tamper'd  with  the  Lords  of  the  White  H, 
So  Lancelot  got  her  ft,  Set  her  thereon. 
And  still  at  evenings  on  before  his  ft 
who  leagues  With  Lords  of  the  White  H, 
There  were  our  h's  ready  at  the  doors — 
h's  whirl'd  The  chariots  backward, 
tramp  of  the  hornf  ooted  ft  That  grind  the  glebe 
peasants  maim  the  helpless  ft. 
Wedged  themselves  in  between  ft  and  ft, 
vineyard,  hive  and  ft  and  herd ; 
And  you  spurr'd  your  fiery  ft, 
wild  ft,  anger,  plunged  To  fling  me, 
Bring  me  my  ft— my  ft  ?  my  wings  That  I  may  soar 
the  sky. 
Horseback    Enid  was  aware  of  three  tall  knights  On  ft, 
lo,  he  sat  on  ft  at  the  door! 
„  370      Horseleech    like  the  daughters  of  the  ft,  '  Give, 

Geraint  and  E.  9      Horseman    He  knew  her,  as  a  ft  knows  his  horse — 
„  62  With  stroke  on  stroke  the  horse  and  ft. 

„  74  Three  other  horsemen  waiting, 

„  97  we  may  meet  the  horsemen  of  Earl  Doorm, 

„  124  Thousands  of  horsemen,  drew  to  the  valley — 

„  182  Thousands  of  horsemen  had  gather'd 

„  211      Hortensla    On  the  other  side  H  spoke  against  the  tax ; 

„  218  and  before  them  paused  H  pleading : 

„  239      Horticultural    a  piece  of  inmost  H  art, 

„  244      Hosanna    he  is  singing  H  in  the  highest : 

„  409  people  strowing  cried  '  H  in  the  highest ! ' 

„  458      Hospitable    Whom  all  men  rate  as  kind  and  ft : 

Hospital    their  fair  college  turn'd  to  ft ; 
„  483  She  died  of  a  fever  caught  when  a  nurse  in  a  ft  ward, 

„  486  Striking  the  ft  wall,  crashing  thro'  it, 


Audley  Court  21 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  46 

Locksley  Hali  50 

Sir  Galahad  8 

Vision  of  Sin  3 

209 

Enoch  Arden  93 

136 

609 

The  Brook  124 

Princess,  Pro.  44 

i57 

211 

a  386 

m  194 

ivim 

197 

t)250 

498 

523 

539 

Light  Brigade  44 

Boadicea  27 

Spec,  of  Iliad  2 

In  Mem.  vi  40 

„      Ixiii  1 

„    Con.  90 

Maud  I  xii  29 

„        xix  74 

//  V  8 

Com.  of  Arthur  104 

Gareth  and  L.  463 

474 

523 

584 

662 

681 

691 

709 

762 

934 

941 

955 

966 

1026 

1040 

1046 

1057 

1194 

1264 

1277 

1324 

1351 

1381 


Geraint  and  E.  508 

606 

752 

758 

883 

936 

Balin  and  Balan  28 

98 

133 

341 

424 

467 

555 

560 

Merlin  and  V.  102 

Lancelot  and  E.  159 

298- 

347 

493 

539 

563 

704 

792 

980 

Holy  Grail  312 

411 

716 

Pelleas  and  E.  24 

30 

55 

61 

345 

354 

373 

37& 

413 

45ft 

486 

539 

540 

Last  Tournament  205 

459 

Guinevere  15 

„      122 

„      256 

„      574 

Lover's  Tale  iv  385 

Achilles  over  the  T.  24 

Tiresias  94 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  95 

Heavy  Brigade  22 

To  Virgil  10 

Happy  76 

Akbar's  Dream  118 

Mechanaphilus  9 

Geraint  and  E.  57 

Guinevere  589 

Golden  Year  12 

Enoch  Arden  136 

Princess  v  523 

Geraint  and  E.  121 

492 

Heavy  Brigade  3 

14 

Princess  vii  127 

132 

HendecasyHabics  20 

Enoch  Arden  503 

506 

Princess  i  71 

„   vii  17 

Charity  41 

Def.  ofLucknow  1& 


Hospital 


336 


Hour 


Hospital  (continued)    delicate  women  who  tended  the 

h  bed,  Def.  of  Lucknow  87 

Sick  from  the  h  echo  them,  „             100 
Give  your  gold  to  the  H,                                        On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  33 
Hospitality    tender  ministries  Of  female  hands 

and  h.'  Princess  vi  73 

and  served  With  female  hands  and  h.'  „        96 

broken  into  Thro'  open  doors  and  h ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  456 

innocent  hospitalities  quench'd  in  blood,  Columbus  176 

Host    (entertainer  of  guests)    The  h  and  I  sat  round 

the  wassail-bowl,  The  Epic  5 

Enoch  was  h  one  day,  Philip  the  next,  Enoch  Arden  25 

I,  their  guest,  their  h,  their  ancient  friend,  Aylmer's  Field  790 

enter'd  an  old  hostel,  call'd  mine  h  To  council,  Princess  i  173 

We  sent  mine  h  to  purchase  female  gear ;  „        199 

'  Fair  H  and  Earl,  I  pray  you  courtesy ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  403 

Let  me  lay  lance  in  rest,  O  noble  h,  „              496 

bad  the  h  Call  in  what  men  soever  Geraint  and  E.  285 

Call  the  h  and  bid  him  bring  Charger  and  palfrey.'  „             400 

Till  issuing  arm'd  he  found  the  h  and  cried,  „             407 

the  h,  Suddenly  honest,  answer'd  in  amaze,  „             409 

How  oft  the  Cantab  supper,  h  and  guest,  To  W.  H.  BrookfiMd  4 

Host    (array  of  men)    two  h's  that  lay  beside  the  walls.  Princess  vi  383 

Remember  him  who  led  your  h's ;  Ode  on  Well.  171 

Not  ours  the  fault  if  we  have  feeble  h's —  Third  of  Feb.  38 
from  time  to  time  the  heathen  h  Swarm'd  overseas,      Com.  of  Arthur  8 

Arthur's  h  Proclaim'd  him  Victor,  Balin  and  Balan  89 

craft  of  kindred  and  the  Godless  h's  Guinevere  427 

They  summon  me  their  King  to  lead  mine  h's  „        570 

Who  slowly  paced  among  the  slumbering  h,  Pass,  of  Arthur  7 

Then  rose  the  King  and  moved  his  h  by  night,  „            79 

ever  and  anon  with  h  to  h  Shocks,  „          107 

king  was  on  them  suddenly  with  a  h.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  41 
Troubled  the  track  of  the  h  that  we  hated,           Batt.  of  Brunanburh  40 

he  look'd  at  the  h  that  had  halted  Heavy  Brigade  7 

Hostage    And  here  he  keeps  me  h  for  his  son.'  Princess  iv  405 

Hostel    So  pass  I  h,  hall,  and  grange ;                 _  Sir  Galahad  81 

enter'd  an  old  h,  call'd  mine  host  To  council,  Princess  i  173 

riding  wearily,  Found  every  h  full,  Marr.  of  Geraint  255 

And  pausing  at  a  A  in  a  marsh,  Lover's  Tale  iv  131 

A  dismal  A  in  a  dismal  land,  „            141 
There  is  one  old  E  left  us                                        Locksley  H.,  Sixty  247 

In  this  H — I  remember — I  repent  it  „              255 

Hostess    Then  stept  a  buxom  h  forth.  Princess  i  228 
Hot    (See  also  Fiery-hot,  'Ot,  Red-hot)    my  very  ears  were 

h  To  hear  them :  „         134 

And  heated  h  with  burning  fears,  In  Mem.  cxviii  22 

h  in  haste  to  join  Their  luckier  mates,  Geraint  and  E.  574 

flush'd  with  fight,  or  h,  God's  curse,  with  anger —  „           660 

H  was  the  night  and  silent ;  Pelleas  and  E.  395 

snow  on  all  the  hills !  so  h,  So  fever'd !  Romney's  R.  12 

Returning  with  h  cheek  and  kindled  eyes.  Alexander  14 

and  my  h  lips  prest  Close,  (Enone  203 

Or  rosy  blossom  in  h  ravine.  The  Daisy  32 

h  hiss  And  bustling  whistle  of  the  youth  Marr.  of  Geraint  256 

her  hand  is  h  With  ill  desires.  Last  Tournament  414 

And  leave  the  h  swamp  of  voluptuousness  Ancient  Sage  277 

Hot-and-hot    To  serve  the  h-a-h ;  WiU  Water.  228 

Hottentot    And  not  the  Kaffir,  H,  Malay,  Princess  ii  158 

Hotter    her  lynx  eye  To  fix  and  make  me  h,  „       Hi  47 

Hoagonmont    roar  of  H  Left  mightiest  of  dl  peoples        To  the  Queen  ii.  20 

Hound    (See  also  Sleath-hound)    Francis  laid  A  damask 

napkin  wrought  with  horse  and  h,  Audley  Court  21 

monstrous  males  that  carve  the  living  h,  Princess  Hi  310 

And  love  in  which  my  h  has  part.  In  Mem.  Ixiii  2 

thou  knowest,  and  gray,  and  all  the  h's ;  Gareth  and  L.  462 

stay'd  Waiting  to  hear  the  h's ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  163 

There  is  good  chance  that  we  shall  hear  the  h's :  „           182 

Cavall,  King  Arthur's  h  of  deepest  mouth,  „           186 

And  pastime  both  of  hawk  and  h,  „            711 

Who  seems  no  bolder  than  a  beaten  h ;  Geraint  and  E.  61 

weakling,  and  thrice-beaten  h :  Pelleas  and  E.  291 

or  a  traitor  proven,  or  h  Beaten,  „             439 

Like  a  dry  bone  cast  to  some  himgry  h  ?  Last  Tournament  196 

heard  The  h's  of  Mark,  and  felt  the  goodly  h's  «             503 


Hound  (continued)    my  forefather,  with  his  feet  upon 

the  h.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  28 

I,  the  finer  brute  rejoicing  in  my  h's,  By  an  Evolution.  7 

Hour    (See  also  Half-hour,  Tavern-hour)    The  winds,  as 

at  their  h  of  birth.  The  winds,  etc.  1 

The  cock  sung  out  an  h  ere  light :  Mariana  27 

but  most  she  loathed  the  h  „       77 

A  SPiEiT  haunts  the  year's  last  h's  A  spirit  haunts  1 

sick  man's  room  when  he  taketh  repose  An  h  before  death ;  „         15 

Most  delicately  A  by  A  He  canvass'd  A  Character  19 

ere  he  parted  said,  '  This  h  is  thine :  Love  and  Death  9 

So  runs  the  round  of  life  from  h  to  h.  Circumstance  9 

a  phantom  two  h's  old  Of  a  maiden  past  away,  Adeline  18 

'  Were  this  not  well,  to  bide  mine  h,  Two  Voices  76 

Who  is  it  that  could  live  an  A  ?  „        162 

'  His  face,  that  two  h's  since  hath  died ;  „        242 

So  heavenly-toned,  that  in  that  h  „       442 

I  wonder'd  at  the  bounteous  h's,  „       451 

But,  Alice,  what  an  h  was  that.  Miller's  D.  57 

And  now  those  vivid  h's  are  gone,  „       195 

Last  night  I  wasted  hateful  h's  Fatima  8 

Is  wearied  of  the  roUing  h's.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  60 
The  warders  of  the  growing  h,  Love  thou  thy  land  61 
The  lusty  bird  takes  every  h  for  dawn  :                    M.  d'  Arthur,  Ep.  11 

as  tho'  it  were  The  h  just  flown.  Gardener's  D.  83 

ere  an  h  had  pass'd,  We  reach'd  a  meadow  „          107 

heavy  clocks  knoDing  the  drowsy  h's.  „           184 

till  Autumn  brought  an  h  For  Eustace,  ,,          207 

this  whole  h  your  eyes  have  been  intent  „           269 

for  three  h's  he  sobb'd  o'er  WiUiam's  child  Dora  167 

we  met ;   one  h  I  had,  no  more  :  Edwin  Morris  104 

I,  whose  bald  brows  in  silent  h's  become  St.  S.  Stylites  165 

make  reply  Is  many  a  weary  h  ;  Talking  Oak  26 

'  An  h  had  past — and,  sitting  straight  „  109 
slow  sweet  h's  that  bring  us  all  things  good.  The  slow 

sad  h's  that  bring  us  all  things  ill,  Love  and  Duty  bl 

calmer  h's  to  Memory's  darkest  hold,  „             90 

every  h  Must  sweat  her  sixty  minutes  Golden  Year  68 

every  h  is  saved  From  that  eternal  silence,  Ulysses  26 

thy  strong  H's  indignant  work'd  their  wills,  Tithonus  18 

Made  war  upon  each  other  for  an  h,  Godiva  34 

A  pleasant  h  has  passed  away  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  2 

shall  we  pass  the  bill  I  mention'd  half  an  h  ago  ?  '  „       Revival  28 

The  Poet-forms  of  stronger  h's,  „     L' Envoi  14 

Embraced  his  Eve  in  happy  h,  „                   42 

Still  creeping  with  the  creeping  h's  St.  Agnes'  Eve  7 

To-day  I  sat  for  an  h  and  wept,  Edward  Gray  11 

Thro'  many  an  h  of  summer  suns.  Will  Water.  33 

But  for  my  pleasant  h,  'tis  gone  ;  „         179 

H's,  when  the  Poet's  words  and  looks  „        193 

Let  us  have  a  quiet  h.  Vision  of  Sin  73 

tyrant's  cruel  glee  Forces  on  the  freer  h.  „        130 

An  h  behind  ;   but  as  he  climb'd  the  hUl,  Enoch  Arden  66 

Had  his  dark  h  unseen,  and  rose  and  past  „            78 

To  find  the  precious  morning  h's  were  lost.  „          302 

remember'd  one  dark  h  Here  in  this  wood,  „          385 

That  was  your  h  of  weakness.     I  was  wrong,  „          449 

'  0  would  I  take  her  father  for  one  h ,  The  Brook  114 

He  wasted  h's  with  Averill ;  Aylmer's  Field  109 

but  so  they  wander'd,  hhjh  Gathered  the  blossom  ,,            141 

Fairer  his  talk,  a  tongue  that  ruled  the  h,  „            194 

Lightning  of  the  h,  the  pun,  ,,            441 

Some  niggard  fraction  of  an  h,  „            450 

Thro'  weary  and  yet  ever  wearier  h's,  „            828 

but  later  by  an  h  Here  than  ourselves.  Sea  Dreams  263 

crowds  that  in  an  h  Of  civic  tumult  jam  the  doors,  iMcretivs  168 

that  h  perhaps  Is  not  so  far  when  momentary  man  „        252 

till  that  h,  My  golden  work  in  which  I  told  a  truth  „        259 

And  with  that  woman  closeted  for  h's  !  '  Princess  Hi  56 

Yet  let  us  breathe  for  one  h  more  in  Heaven  '  „            69 

Its  range  of  duties  to  the  appointed  h.  „          177 

Such  head  from  act  to  act,  from  h  to  h,  „      iv  452 

0  would  I  had  his  sceptre  for  one  h  !  „          538 

1  took  it  for  an  A  to  mine  own  bed  This  morning :  „  v  434 
Sole  comfort  of  my  dark  h,  „      vi  194 


Hour 


337 


House 


Soar  {continued)    many  a  pleasant  h  with  her  that's  gone,    Princess  vi  247 

With  one  that  cannot  keep  her  mind  a.ah:  „          287 

My  heart  an  eddy  from  the  brawUng  h :  „          322 

Clomb  to  the  roofs,  and  gazed  alone  for  h's  „      vii  32 

To  wile  the  length  from  languorous  h's,  „            63 

Melts  mist-like  into  this  bright  h,  „          355 

Who  never  sold  the  truth  to  serve  the  h,  Ode  on  Well.  179 

Moum'd  in  this  golden  h  of  jubilee.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  8 

mix  the  seasons  and  the  golden  h's ;  „              36 

he  has  but  gone  for  an  h, —  Grandmother  102 

O  LOVE,  what  h's  were  thine  and  mine,  The  Daisy  1 

At  Florence  too  what  golden  h's,  „          41 

Once  in  a  golden  h  1  cast  to  earth  The  Flower  1 

Her  quiet  dream  of  life  this  h  may  cease.  Requiescat  6 
that  the  victor  H's  should  scorn  The  long  result  of  love.    In  Mem.  i  13 

" -       -         ^^          ^^.  jg 

„        xii  20 

„       xxi  13 

„       XXXV 6 

„     xxxix  6 

xl\ 

„        xliii  5 

„         xlvi  3 

10 

liU 

„       Ixxii  9 

„  Ixxxivl'i 

30 

„  Ixxxv  106 

„  Ixxxix  52 

„        xciv  4 

„         cii  14 

„  civ  6 

c»10 

„        cxi  14 

„       cxii  12 

„       cxvii  1 

„       cxxvi  4 

„  cxxviii  9 

„      Con.  65 

69 

Maud  Iiv28 

vin 

vii  3 

xviii  65 

II  i  23 

iv  14 

Com.  of  Arthur  215 

228 

357 

Gareth  and  L.  46 

132 

175 

892 

902 

1184 


wrought  At  that  last  h  to  please  him  well ; 

learn  That  I  have  been  an  h  away. 

an  h  For  private  sorrow's  barren  song. 

But  for  one  h,  O  Love,  I  strive 

To  thee  too  comes  the  golden  h  When 

Could  we  forget  the  widow'd  h 

Unconscious  of  the  slidinjg  h, 

Is  shadow'd  by  the  growing  h. 

The  fruitful  h's  of  still  increase  ; 

Ye  watch,  like  God,  the  rolling  h's 

Who  usherest  in  the  dolorous  h 

But  that  remorseless  iron  h 

And  all  the  train  of  bounteous  h's 

The  promise  of  the  golden  h's  ? 

And  buzzings  of  the  honied  h's. 

An  h's  communion  with  the  dead. 

Thy  feet  have  stray'd  in  after  h's 

That  wakens  at  this  h  of  rest 

No  more  shall  wayward  grief  abuse  The  genial  h 

and  join'd  Each  office  of  the  social  h 

In  watching  thee  from  hUih, 

■O  days  and  h's,  your  work  is  this 

Which  every  h  his  couriers  bring. 

Wild  H's  that  fly  with  Hope  and  Fear, 

O  happy  h,  and  happier  h's  Await  them. 

0  happy  h,  behold  the  bride  With  him 
cannot  be  kind  to  each  other  here  for  an  h ; 
Thro'  the  livelong  h's  of  the  dark 
Did  I  dream  it  an  h  ago, 
twelve  sweet  h's  that  past  in  bridal  white, 
For  front  to  front  in  an  /i  we  stood, 
For  one  short  h  to  see  The  souls  we  loved, 
holden  far  apart  Until  his  h  should  come  ; 
when  Merlin  (for  his  h  had  come)  Brought  Arthur 
those  first  days  had  golden  h's  for  me. 
As  glitters  gilded  in  thy  Book  of  H's. 
'*  Not  an  h.  So  that  ye  jdeld  me — 
till  an  h.  When  waken'd  by  the  wind 
'  I  fly  no  more  :  I  allow  thee  for  an  h. 
Allow  me  for  mine  h,  and  thou  wilt  find  My  fortunes 
that  h  When  the  lone  hem  forgets  his  melancholy, 

1  will  eat  With  all  the  passion  of  a  twelve  h's'  fast.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  306 
How  many  among  us  at  this  very  h  Do  forge  Geraint  and  E.  2 
O  pardon  me  !  the  madness  of  that  h,  „  346 
So  for  long  h's  sat  Enid  by  her  lord,  „  580 
And  now  their  h  has  come  ;  and  Enid  said  :  „  697 
in  that  perilous  h  Put  hand  to  hand  „  766 
Was  half  a  bandit  in  my  lawless  h,  „  795 
but  this  h  We  ride  a-hawking  with  Sir  Lancelot.  Merlin  and  V.  94 
you  which  ruin'd  man  Thro'  woman  the  first  h ;  „  363 
lay  the  redding,  one  But  one  h  old  !  „  710 
To  crop  his  own  sweet  rose  before  the  h?  '  „  725 
And  not  the  one  dark  h  which  brings  remorse,  „  763 
Joust  for  it,  and  win,  and  bring  it  in  an  h,  Lancelot  and  E.  204 
In  darkness  thro'  innumerable  h's  Holy  Grail  677 
But  never  let  me  bide  one  h  at  peace.  _  Pdleas  and  E.  387 
and  say  his  h  is  come.  The  heathen  are  ujjon  him,  Last  Tournament  86 
as  when  an  h  of  cold  Falls  on  the  mountain  „  227 
the  warm  h  returns  With  veer  of  wind,  „  230 
«pake  not  any  word,  But  bode  his  h,                                      „  386 


Hour  {continued)    And  so  returns  belike  within  an  h.  Last  Tournament  531 

To  see  thee — yearnings  ?— ay  !  for,  h  by  h,  „            583 

O  ay— the  wholesome  madness  of  an  h —  „            675 

ptarmigan  that  whitens  ere  this  h  Woos  his  own  end  ;  „            697 

Many  a  time  for  h's,  Beside  the  placid  breathings  Guinevere  68 

It  was  their  last  h,  A  madness  of  farewells.  „        102 

'  Late  !  so  late  !     What  h,  I  wonder,  now  ?  '  „        161 

an  h  or  maybe  twain  After  the  sunset,  „        237 

To  guard  thee  in  the  wild  h  coming  on,  „        446 

And  well  for  thee,  sajring  in  my  dark  h,  Pass,  of  Arthur  159 

wealthier— wealthier— ft  by  hi  To  the  Queen  ii  23 

And  wordy  truckUngs  to  the  transient  h,  „              51 

On  the  same  morning,  almost  the  same  h.  Lover's  Tale  i  198 

that  little  h  was  bound  Shut  in  from  Time,  „            437 

and  in  that  h  A  hope  flow'd  round  me,  „            448 

Else  had  the  life  of  that  deUghted  h  „            471 

0  day  which  did  enwomb  that  happy  h,  „  485 
Genius  of  that  h  which  dost  uphold  „  487 
Thy  name  is  ever  worshipp'd  among  h's  !  „  493 
It  was  so  happy  an  h,  so  sweet  a  place,  „  558 
So  died  that  h,  and  fell  into  the  abysm  „  796 
So  that  h  died  Like  odour  rapt  into  the  winged  wind  „  800 
All  thro'  the  livelong  h's  of  utter  dark,  „  810 
Well  he  had  One  golden  h —  „  iv  Q 
Would  you  had  seen  him  in  that  A  of  his  !  „               8 

1  may  not  stay,  No,  not  an  fe ;  „  116 
after  this,  An  h  or  two,  Camilla's  travail  came  Upon  her,  „  127 
Travelling  that  land,  and  meant  to  rest  a,nh;  „  133 
To  come  and  revel  for  one  h  with  him  „  182 
(I  told  you  that  he  had  his  golden  h),  „  206 
Down  to  this  last  strange  h  in  his  own  hall ;  „  358 
I'll  come  for  an  h  to-morrow.  First  Quarrel  46 
I  have  only  an  h  of  life.  Rizpah  22 
I  spent  What  seem'd  my  crowning  h,  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  124 
talk  to  'em  h's  after  h's  !  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  34 
And  the  doctor  came  at  his  h,  „  68 
when  the  wild  h  and  the  wine  Had  set  the  wits 

aflame.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  94 

I  have  not  broken  bread  for  fifty  h's.  „            199 

Once  in  an  h  they  cried,  V.  of  Maeldune  29 

nor,  in  h's  Of  civil  outbreak,  Tiresias  67 

Like  would-be  guests  an  h  too  late,  „        198 

Remembering  all  the  golden  h's  Now  silent,  „        210 

Why  should  we  bear  with  an  h  of  torture.  Despair  81 

What  rulers  but  the  Days  and  H's  Ancient  Sage  95 

The  days  and  h's  are  ever  glancing  by,  „          99 

But  with  the  Nameless  is  nor  Day  nor  H ;  „        102 

hands  point  five — O  me— it  strikes  the  h —  The  Flight  94 

a  hiccup  at  ony  h  o'  the  night !  Spinster's  S's.  98 
Shape  your  heart  to  front  the  h,  but  dream  not 

that  the  h  will  last.  Loeksley  H.,  Sixty  106 

On  this  day  and  at  this  h,  „  175 
Insects  of  an  h,  that  hourly  work  their  brother  insect 

wrong,  „              202 

the  first  dark  h  of  his  last  sleep  alone.  „              238 

Expecting  all  things  in  an  h —  Freedom  39 
breaks  into  the  crocus-purple  h  That  saw  thee  vanish.  Demeter  and  P.  50 

The  man,  that  only  lives  and  loves  an  h,  „          106 

waait  till  tha  'ears  it  be  strikin'  the  h.  Otod  Roa  18 

after  h's  of  search  and  doubt  and  threats.  The  Ring  278 

stUl  drawn  downward  for  an  h,  „       477 

And  hhj  h  unfolding  woodbine  leaves  Prog,  of  Spring  7 

Beyond  the  darker  h  to  see  the  bright,  „              88 

and  make  her  festal  h  Dark  with  the  blood  St.  Tdemachus  79 

'  wasting  the  sweet  summer  h's  '  ?  Charity  1 

I  was  close  on  that  h  of  dishonour,  „      28 

give  His  fealty  to  the  halcyon  h  !  The  Wanderer  12 

When  the  dumb  H,  clothed  in  black.  Silent  Voices  1 

Houri    A  group  of  H's  bow'd  to  see  The  djdng  Islamite,    Palace  of  Art  102 

Hourly    Daily  and  h,  more  and  more.  Eleanore  71 

And  h  visitation  of  the  blood,  Lover's  Tale  i  206 

Hourly-mellowing    summer's  h-m  change  May  breathe,  In  Mem.  xci  9 

House  (s)    {See  also  Ale-house,  Chop-house,  City-house, 

'Ouse,  Pleasure-house)    All  day  within  the  dreamy  h,      Mariana  61 

and  vacancy  Of  the  dark  deserted  h.  Deserted  Hov^e  12 


House 


338 


Household 


House  (s)  (continued)    The  h  was  bmlded  of  the  earth,      Deserted  House  15 

The  first  h  by  the  water-side,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  34 

Dead-pale  between  the /i's  high,  „       ,     „'^ 

The  h  thro'  all  the  level  shines,  Mariana  m  the  6.  ^ 

On  to  God's  h  the  people  prest :  Two  Voices  409 

To  move  about  the  h  with  joy,  Miller's  D.  95 

Li  this  great  h  so  royal-rich,  Palace  of  Art  191 

I  saw  you  sitting  in  the  h.  May  Queen,  Con.  30 
lightly  curl'd  Round  their  golden  h's,                   Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  113 

And  fill'd  the  h  with  clamour.  The  Goose  36 

nightmare  on  his  bed  When  all  the  h  is  mute.  M.  d' Arthur  178 

'  this  wonder  keeps  the  h.'    He  nodded.  Gardener's  D.  119 

So  rapt,  we  near'd  the  h;  ..         142 

He  had  been  always  with  her  in  the  h,  ^°orr 

he  left  his  father's  h.  And  hired  himself  to  work  „    37 

Then  Dora  went  to  Mary's  h,  »  110 

Then  thou  and  I  will  live  within  one  h,  ,,  125 

So  those  four  abode  Within  one  h  together ;  „  170 

Whose  h  is  that  I  see  ?  Walk,  to  the  Mail  11 

but  his  h,  for  so  they  say,  Was  haunted  „              35 

So  in  mine  earthly  h  I  am,  St.  Agnes  Eve  19 

For  I  am  of  a  numerous  h,  Will  Water.  89 

'  Let  us  see  these  handsome  h's  L.  of  Burleigh  23 

She  is  of  an  ancient  h  :  Vision  of  Sin  140 

Three  children  of  three  h's,  Enoch  Arden  11 

the  children  play'd  at  keeping  h.  „            24 

'  This  is  my  h  and  this  my  Uttle  wife.'  „            28 

So  might  she  keep  the  h  whUe  he  was  gone.  „          140 

Lords  of  his  h  and  of  his  mill  were  they ;  „          351 

'  You  have  been  as  God's  good  angel  in  our  h.  „          ^o 

The  babes,  their  babble,  Annie,  the  small  h,  „          606 

With  daily-dwindUng  profits  held  the  h ;  „          696 

So  broken— all  the  story  of  his  h.  „          704 

Far-blazing  from  the  rear  of  Philip's  h,  ,,          727 

The  latest  h  to  landward ;  »          732 

But  kept  the  h,  his  chair,  and  last  his  bed.  „          82b 

That  all  the  fe'5  in  the  haven  rang.  ,"T,-,:,oJi 

like  a  storm  he  came.  And  shook  the  h,  Aylmer  s  Field Zlb 

the  thunders  of  the  h  Had  fallen  first,  „            278 

beheld  the  Powers  of  the  H  On  either  side  the  hearth,  „            287 

The  last  remaining  pillar  of  their  h,  ..            295 

Forbad  her  first  the  h  of  Averill,  „            502 

to  spy  The  weakness  of  a  people  or  a  h,  „            570 

Your  h  is  left  unto  you  desolate  ! '  (repeat)  „    629,  797 

'  My  A  is  left  imto  me  desolate.'  »            721 

'  Our  h  is  left  unto  us  desolate '  ?  »            737 

The  deathless  ruler  of  thy  dying  h  »           661 

Who  entering  fill'd  the  h  with  sudden  light.  „            682 

when  he  felt  the  silence  of  his  h  About  him,  „            830 

Walter  show'd  the  h,  Greek,  set  with  busts :  Princess,  Pro.  10 

they  gave  The  park,  the  crowd,  the  h ;  „             94 

A  Gothic  ruin  and  a  Grecian  h,  »           232 

There  lived  an  ancient  legend  in  our  h.  »             » | 

An  old  and  strange  aSection  of  the  h.  »              1* 

He  cared  not  for  the  aSection  of  the  h ;  »              26 

A  little  street  half  garden  and  half  h;  „         . .  214 

wish'd  to  marry  ;   they  could  rule  a  A  ;  „        ."  465 

came  Upon  me,  the  weird  vision  of  our  h :  „       *^*  184 

Still  in  the  A  in  his  coffin  the  Prince  G.  of  Swamston  10 

this  pretty  h,  this  city-house  of  ours  ?  City  Child  7 

And  bread  from  out  the  h's  brought.  Spec,  of  Iliad  & 

you  bite  far  into  the  heart  of  the  h.  Window,  Winter}}. 

Dark  h,  by  which  once  more  I  stand  In  Mem.  vn  1 

Are  but  as  servants  in  a  A  ..          5^,^ 

That  guard  the  portals  of  the  h  ;  „     icxix  12 

And  home  to  Mary's  h  return'd,  ..       ^^a;t  2 

From  every  h  the  neighbours  met,  ..               9 

Should  murmur  from  the  naiTOw  A,  ,.       xxxyj 

Or  builds  the  h,  or  digs  the  grave,  »    xxxm  14 

In  that  dark  h  where  she  was  bom.  ..         *f  12 

link  thy  life  with  one  Of  mine  own  h,  „  Ixxxtv  12 

And  in  the  h  light  after  light  Went  out,  „        xcy  19 

She  knows  but  matters  of  the  h,  „     mcvi^  31 

he  told  me  that  he  loved  A  daughter  of  our  h  ;  ,,       Con.  7 

Living  alone  in  an  empty  h,  Maud  I.  vi  68 


House  (S)  (continued)  all  round  the  h  I  beheld  The  death- 
white  curtain  Maud  I  xiv  33 
sprinkled  with  blood  By  which  our  h's  are  torn  :  „  xix_  33 
Wrought  for  his  h  an  irredeemable  woe  ;  „  Hi  22 
stand  at  the  diamond  door  Of  his  A  in  a  rainbow  frill  ?  „  ii  17 
shouted  at  once  from  the  top  of  the  h ;  „  "50 
To  make  a  horror  all  about  the  h,  Gareth  and  L.  1411 
Lady  Lyonors  and  her  h,  with  dance  And  revel  „  1422 
slender  entertaiiunent  of  a  A  Once  rich,  Marr.  of  Geramt  301 
Rest !  the  good  h,  tho'  ruin'd,  ,.  378 
reverencing  the  custom  of  the  h  Geraint,  „  380 
Before  my  Enid's  birthday,  sack'd  myh;  „  458 
when  Edym  sack'd  their  h.  And  scatter'd  all  they  had  „  634 
He  foimd  the  sack  and  plunder  of  our  h  All  scatter'd 

thro'  the  h's  of  the  town ;  «  694 

Ah,  dear,  he  took  me  from  a  goodly  h,  „  708 

Yea,  and  he  brought  me  to  a  goodly  h;  "     ,  t.  oio 

Call  for  the  woman  of  the  h,'  Geraint  and  E.  jbS 

Among  the  heavy  breathings  of  the  h,  „  402 

how  suited  to  the  h  of  one  Who  loves  that  beauty  ,,  683 

mother  of  the  h  There  was  not :  Lancelot  and  E.  iTi 

wam'd  me  of  their  fierce  design  Against  my  h,  „  275 

shuddering,  '  Hark  the  Phantom  of  the  h 

this  discomfort  he  hath  done  the  h.' 

There  sat  the  lifelong  creature  of  the  h, 

saw  One  of  her  h,  and  sent  him  to  the  Queen 

and  fair  the  h  whereby  she  sat, 

h  Became  no  better  than  a  broken  shed, 

.  brought  thee  here  to  this  poor  h  of  ours 

and  out  again,  But  sit  within  the  h. 

But  always  in  the  quiet  h  I  heard, 

sat  There  in  the  holy  h  at  Ahnesbury 

Heard  by  the  watcher  in  a  haunted  h, 

Whom  he  knows  false,  abide  and  rule  the  h : 

Do  each  low  office  of  your  holy  h ; 

Modred,  imharm'd,  the  traitor  of  thine  h.' 

spake  the  King :  'My  h  hath  been  my  doom. 

But  call  not  thou  this  traitor  of  my  h 

My  h  are  rather  they  who  sware  my  vows, 

nightmare  on  his  bed  When  all  the  /i  is  mute. 

But  thou  didst  sit  alone  in  the  inner  h. 

Still  larger  moulding  all  the  h  of  thought, 

O  blossom'd  portal  of  the  lonely  h, 

Back  to  his  mother's  h  among  the  pines. 

to  the  mother's  h  where  she  was  born. 

But  all  their  h  was  old  and  loved  them  both.  And 

all  the  h  had  known  the  loves  of  both ; 
such  a  A  as  his.  And  his  was  old, 
jewels  Of  many  generations  of  his  h  Sparkled  and  flash'd^     „ 


1022 

1072 

1143 

1168 

Holy  Grail  392 

397 

617 

715 

832 

Guinevere  2 

73 

„      515 

„      682 

Pass,  of  Arthur  153 

154 

155 

157 

346 

Lover's  Tale  i  112 

241 

280 

„  iv  15 

91 

122 
202 


my  h  an'  my  man  were  my  pride. 

So  I  set  to  righting  the  h, 

our  h  has  held  Three  hundred  years — 

thick  of  question  and  reply  I  fled  the  h, 

want  Of  Edith  in  the  h,  the  garden, 

there  hail'd  on  our  h's  and  halls 

none  but  Gods  could  build  this  h  of  ours, 

To  lie,  to  lie — in  God's  own  h — 

A  door  was  open'd  in  the  h — 

To  both  our  H's,  may  they  see  Beypnd 

Deck  your  h's,  illuminate  All  your  towns 

Theere,  when  the  'ouse  wur  a  h, 

the  h  is  afire,'  she  said. 

We  saw  far  off  an  old  forsaken  h, 

being  waked  By  noises  in  the  h — 

I  found  her  not  in  h  Or  garden — 

O  the  night.  While  the  h  is  sleeping. 

This  h  with  all  its  hateful  needs 

This  worn-out  Reason  dying  in  her  h 

Lord  let  the  A  of  a  brute 

House  (verb)    That  h  the  cold  crown'd  snake ! 
H  in  the  shade  of  comfortable  roofs. 

Housed    the  children,  h  In  her  foul  den, 

those  black  foldings,  that  which  h  therein. 
Scarce  h  within  the  circle  of  this  Earth, 

Household  (adj.)    h  shelter  crave  From  winter  rains 


First  Quarrel  41 

47 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  52 

158 

246 

Def.  of  Lucknow  13 

Ancient  Sage  83 

The  Flight  52 

69 

Hands  all  Bound  27 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  18 

Owd  Rod  29 

68 

The  Ming  155 

417 

444 

Forlorn  42 

Happy  32 

Romney's  R.  145 

By  an  Evolution.  1 

(EnoneSl 

St.  S.  Stylites  107 

Com.  of  Arthur  29 

GarOh  and  L.  1380 

Lover's  Tale  i  479 

Two  Voices  260 


Household 


339 


Huge 


Honsebold  (adj.)  (continued)    For  surely  now  our  h 

hearths  are  cold  :  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  72 

Virtue,  like  a  h  god  Promising  empire  ;  On  a  Mourner  30 

Meet  adoration  to  my  h  gods,  Ulysses  42 
farmer  vext  packs  up  his  bedis  and  chairs,  And  all 

his  h  stuff ;  Walk,  to  the  Mail  40 

While  yet  she  went  about  her  h  ways,  Enoch  Arden  453 

Their  slender  h  fortunes  (for  the  man  Sea  Dreams  9 

common  vein  of  memory  Sweet  h  talk.  Princess  ii  315 

and  the  h  flower  Tom  from  the  lintel —  „        v  128 

As  daily  vexes  h  peace.  In  Mem.  xxix  2 

Moving  about  the  h  ways,  „            Ix  11 

And  hear  the  A  jar  within.  „         xciv  16 

From  h  fountains  never  dry ;  „           cix  2 

The  h  Fury  sprinkled  with  blood  Maud  I  xix  32 

Beyond  all  titles,  and  a  h  name,  Ded.  of  Idylls  42 

And  like  a  h  Spirit  at  the  walls  Beat,  Geraint  and  E.  403 

And  trustful  courtesies  of  h  life,  Guinevere  86 

Red  in  thy  birth,  redder  with  h  war.  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  53 

Which  from  her  h  orbit  draws  the  child  Prin.  Beatrice  7 

H  happiness,  gracious  children,  Vastnsss  24 

And  lured  me  from  the  h  fire  on  earth.  Eomney's  R.  40 

The  gleam  of  h  sunshine  ends.  The  Wanderer  1 

Household  (s)    Her  h  fled  the  danger.  The  Goose  54 

And  lift  the  h  out  of  poverty ;  Enoch  Arden  485 

example  follow'd.  Sir,  In  Arthur's  h?' —  Merlin  and  K.  20 

Leaving  her  h  and  good  father,  Lancelot  and  E.  14 

Housel    nor  sought.  Wrapt  in  her  grief,  for  h  Guinevere  149 

Houseless    The  h  ocean's  heaving  field.  The  Voyage  30 

Housemaid    His  daughter  and  his  h  were  the  boys :  Princess  i  190 

Hove    Then  saw  they  how  there  h  a  dusky  barge,  M.  d  Arthur  193 

Then  saw  they  how  there  h  a  dusky  barge,  Pass,  of  Arthur  361 

Hovell'd    the  poor  are  h  and  hustled  together,  Maud  /  i  34 


Hover    (See  also  Wind-hover)     all  his  life  the  charm 
did  talk  About  his  path,  and  h  near 
Wings  flutter,  voices  h  clear : 
They  come  and  sit  by  my  chair,  they  h  about  my 
bed — 


Day -Dm.,  Arrival  22 
Sir  Galahad  78 

Grandmother  83 
Maud  I  XX  28 


And  the  bird  of  prey  will  h, 
Hbver'd    wherefore  n  roimd  Lancelot,  but  when  he 

mark'd  Balin  and  Bcdan  159 

That  h  between  war  and  wantonness,  To  the  Queen  ii  44 

Hovering    h  o'er  the  dolorous  strait  To  the  other  shore,   In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  39 

and  h  round  her  chair  Ask'd,  '  Mother,  Gareth  and  L.  33 

breath  Of  her  sweet  tendance  h  over  him,  Geraint  and  E.  926 

Whenever  in  her  h  to  and  fro  The  lily  maid  Lancdot  and  E.  326 

A  vision  A  on  a  sea  of  fire,  Pelleas  and  E.  52 

Her  spirit  h  by  the  church.  The  Ring  478 

Hbveringly    h  a  sword  Now  over  and  now  under,  Lu^etius  61 

How    setting  the  how  much  before  the  h,  Golden  Year  11 

Howard    (See  also  Thomas  Howard)    I  should  count 

myself  the  cowMd  if  I  left  them,  my  Lord  H,  The  Revenge  11 

Lord  H  past  away  with  five  ships  of  war  „            13 

Howd  (hold)     whoii's  to  h  the  lond  ater  mea  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  58 

'e  could  h  'is  oan,  Owd  Rod  7 

An'  'e  cotch'd  h  hard  o'  my  hairm,  „      58 

till  'e  feeald  'e  could  h  'is  oan.  Church-warden,  etc.  19 

Howd  (old)     hes  now  be  a-grawin'  sa  h,  Village  Wife  107 

Howdin'  (holding)     Thy  Moother  was  h  the  lether,  Owd  Rod  85 

Howl  (verb)    I  did  not  hear  the  dog  h,  mother,  May  Queen,  Con.  21 

h  in  tune  With  nothing  but  the  Devil ! '  Sea  Dreams  260 

Crack  them  now  for  yourself,  and  h,  Maud  II  v  56 

fl  as  he  may.     But  hold  me  for  your  friend  :  Pelleas  and  E.  34D 

Howl  (s)    rose  the  fc  of  all  the  cassock'd  wolves.  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  158 

the  great  storm  grew  with  a  h  and  a  hoot  The  Wreck  91 

Howl  (owl)     an'  screead  like  a  R  gone  wud —  Owd  Rod  76 

Howlaby  Beck     But  I  minds  when  i'  H  B  won  daiiy  Church-warden,  etc.  27 

Howlaby  Daale    when  we  was  i'  H  D.  Owd  Rod  10 

I  wants  to  tell  tha  o'  Roa  when  we  Uved  i'  H  D.  „        19 

Hbwl'd     She  h  aloud,  '  I  am  on  fire  within.  Palace  of  Art  285 

In  blood-red  armour  sallying,  h  to  the  King,  Last  Tournament  443 

whereat  He  shrank  and  h,  and  from  his  brow  Lover's  Tale  ii  92 

!H  me  from  Hispaniola;  Columbus  118 

Howlest    And  h,  issuing  out  of  night.  In  Mem.  Ixxii  2 
Howlins    The  wind  is  A  in  turret  and 


Howling    The  wind  is  A  in  turret  and  tree. 


The  Sisters  9 


Howling  (continued)    on  her  threshold  lie  H  in 

outer  darkness.  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  16 

The  h's  from  forgotten  fields ;  In  Mem.  xli  16 

heard  them  pass  like  wolves  H ;  Bodin  and  Balan  408 

The  brute  world  h  forced  them  into  bonds.  Merlin  and  V.  744 

When  the  wolves  are  h.  Forlorn  72 

How  much    setting  the  h  m  before  the  how,  Golden  Year  11 

Howry  (dirty)    the  geU  was  as  ha.  troUope  Owd  Rod  72 

I  ears  es  'e'd  gie  fur  a  h  owd  book  Village  Wife  45 

Hubbub    A  sudden  h  shook  the  hall,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  7 

A  ^  in  the  court  of  half  the  maids  Princess  iv  476 

for  those  That  stir  this  h — you  and  you —  „          509 

clamour  of  liars  belied  in  the  h  of  lies ;  Maud  I  iv  51 

Thro'  the  h  of  the  market  I  steal,  „  II  iv  68 

Ask'd  yet  once  more  what  meant  the  h  here  ?  Marr.  of  Geraint  264 

search  and  doubt  and  threats.  And  h,  The  Ring  279 

Hubert    The  prophet  of  his  own,  my  H —  „          23 

'  Air  and  Words,'  Said  H,  „          25 

H  brings  me  home  With  April  and  of  swallow.  „          69 

What  need  to  wish  when  H  weds  in  you  The  heart  of 

Love,  and  you  the  soul  of  Truth  In  H?  „          61 

I  climb'd  the  hill  with  H  yesterday,  „        152 

Huck  (hip)     I  slither'd  and  hurted  my  h.  North.  Cobbler  19 

Huckster    This  h  put  down  war !  Maud  I  x  4A 

Huddled    The  cattle  h  on  the  lea ;  In  Mem.  xv  6 

h  here  and  there  on  moimd  and  knoll,  Geraint  and  E.  803 

An'  we  cuddled  and  h  togither,  Owd  Rod  112 

Huddling    h  slant  in  furrow-cloven  falls  Princess  vii  207 

Hue  (verb)  blue  heaven  which  h's  and  paves  The  other  ?  Supp.  Confessions  134 

Hue  (s)     H's  of  the  silken  sheeny  woof  Madeline  22 

Touch'd  with  a  somewhat  darker  h,  Margaret  50 

And  your  cheek,  whose  brilliant  h  Rosalind  39 

shapes  and  h's  that  please  me  well !  Palace  of  Art  194 

cannot  fail  but  work  in  h's  to  dim  The  Titianic 

Flora.  Gardener's  D.  170 

By  Cupid-boys  of  blooming  h —  Day-Dm.,  E'p.  10 

Moved  with  violence,  changed  in  h,  Vision  of  Stn  34 

we  know  the  h  Of  that  cap  upon  her  brows.  „          141 

hair  In  gloss  and  h  the  chestnut,  (repeat)  The  Brook  72,  207 

a  but  less  vivid  h  Than  of  that  islet  Aylmer's  Fidd  64 

Academic  silks,  in  h  The  lilac.  Princess  ii  16 

the  other  distance  and  the  h's  Of  promise ;  „       iv  86 

thoughts  that  changed  from  h  to  h,  „          210 

And  as  the  fiery  Sirius  alters  h,  „       v  262 

o'er  her  forehead  past  A  shadow,  and  her  h  changed,  „     vi  107 

And  shapes  and  h's  of  Art  divine !  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  22 

bays,  the  peacock's  neck  in  h ;  The  Daisy  14 

h's  are  faint  And  mix  with  hollow  masks  In  Mem.  Ixx  3 

The  distance  takes  a  lovelier  h,  „          cxv  6 
and  all  Lent-lily  in  h.  Save  that  the  dome  was 

purple,  Gareth  and  L.  911 

Sculptured,  and  deckt  in  slowly-waning  h's.  „          1195 

A  tribe  of  women,  dress'd  in  many  h's,  Geraint  and  E.  598 

her  h  Changed  at  his  gaze :  Balin  and  Balan  278 

Embathing  all  with  wild  and  woful  h's,  Lover's  Tale  ii  64 

And  earth  as  fair  in  h !  Ancient  Sage  24 

with  the  living  h's  of  Art.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  140 

may  roll  The  rainbow  h's  of  heaven  about  it —  Romney's  R.  51 

heaven's  own  h.  Far — far — away?  Far — far — away  2 

Hued    (See  also  Crimson-hued,  Deep-hued,  Bose-hued, 

Soberer-hued)    '  whose  flower,  H  with  the  scarlet 

of  a  fierce  sunrise.  Lover's  Tale  i  353 

Hueless    In  the  h  mosses  under  the  sea  The  Mermaid  49 

In  fold  upon  fold  of  h  cloud,  Maud  I  vi3 

Nor  settles  into  h  gray.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  50 

Huge    above  him  swell  H  sponges  of  millennial  growth  The  Kraken  6 

lie  Battening  upon  h  seaworms  in  his  sleep,  „          12 

A  h  crag-platform,  smooth  as  burnish'd  brass  Palace  of  Art  5 

whisper  of  h  trees  that  branch'd  And  blossom'd  Enoch  Arden  585 

Once  grovelike,  each  h  arm  a  tree,  Aylmer's  Field  510 

Now  striking  on  h  stumbling-blocks  of  scorn  „            538 

But  h  cathedral  fronts  of  every  age.  Sea  Dreams  218 

H  Ammonites,  and  the  first  bones  of  Time ;  Princess,  Pro.  15 

H  women  blowzed  with  health,  and  wind,  „           iv  279 

The  h  bush-bearded  Barons  heaved  and  blew,  „             v  21 


Huge 


340 


Human 


Huge  (continiied)    rode  we  with  the  old  king  across 

the  lawns  Beneath  h  trees,  Princess  v  237 

A  raiser  of  h  melons  and  of  pine,  „        Con.  87 

On  that  h  scapegoat  of  the  race,  Maud  I  xiii  42 

She  gave  the  King  his  h  cross-hilted  sword ,  Com.  of  Arthur  286 

A  h  man-beast  of  boundless  savagery.  Gareth  and  L.  637 

H  on&h  red  horse,  and  all  in  mail  „          1026 

A  h  pavilion  like  a  mountain  peak  „          1364 

The  h  pavilion  slowly  yielded  up,  „          1379 

At  this  he  hurl'd  his  h  limbs  out  of  bed,  Marr.  of  Geraint  124 
h  Earl  Doorm,  Broad-faced  with  under-fringe  of 

russet  beard,  Geraint  and  E.  536 

retum'd  The  h  Earl  Doorm  with  plunder  to  the  hall.  „            592 

Here  the  h  Earl  cried  out  upon  her  talk,  „            651 

told  How  the  A  Earl  lay  slain  within  his  hall.  „            806 

canst  endure  To  mouth  so  A  a  foulness —  Balin  and  Balan  379 

Before  an  oak,  so  hollow,  h  and  old  Merlin  and  V.  3 

other  was  the  song  that  once  I  heard  By  this  h  oak,  „          406 

seem'd  to  me  the  Lord  of  all  the  world.  Being  so  h.  Holy  Grail  415 

O  towers  so  strong,  H,  solid,  Pelleas  and  E.  464 

Glared  on  a  A  machicolated  tower  Last  Tournament  424 

{H  blocks,  which  some  old  trembling  of  the  world  Lover's  Tale  ii  45 
With  his  h  sea-castles  heaving  upon  the  weather 

bow.  The  Revenge  24 

For  a  h  sea  smote  every  soul  from  the  decks  The  Wreck  109 

Earth  so  h,  and  yet  so  bounded —  LocTcsley  H.,  Sixty  207 

and  flamed  On  one  h  slope  beyond,  St  Telemachus  8 

Gain'd  their  h  Colosseum.  „            45 

Huger    drumming  thimder  of  the  h  fall  At  distance,  Geraint  and  E.  173 

Well — can  I  wish  her  any  h  wrong  Last  Tournament  5^6 

their  fears  Are  morning  shadows  h  than  the  shapes     To  the  Queen  ii  63 

Taller  than  all  the  Muses,  and  h  than  all  the  mountain  ?     Parnassus  10 

Hugest    Nor  all  Calamity's  h  waves  confoimd,  Will  5 

place  which  now  Is  this  world's  h,  Lancelot  and  E.  76 

apples,  the  h  that  ever  were  seen,  V.  of  Maeldune  63 

Hu^'d    And  h  and  never  h  it  close  enough.  Princess  vi  212 

clung  to  him  and  h  him  close;  Merlin  and  V.  945 

vsTOught  upon  his  mood  and  h  him  close.  „            948 

Hugger-mugger  (untidy)    H-m  they  lived,  but  they 

wasn't  that  easy  to  please.  Village  Wife  117 

Hugh    '  this,'  he  said, '  was  Ws  at  Agincourt ;  Princess,  Pro.  25 

Hugly  (ugly)    But  I  niver  wur  downright  h,  Spinster's  S's.  16 

An'  a-callin'  ma  '  h '  mayhap  to  my  f  aace  „            91 

Hull    h  Look'd  one  black  dot  against  the  verge  of  dawn,     M.  d'Arthur  270 

Than  if  my  brainpan  were  an  empty  h.  Princess  ii  398 

h  Look'd  one  blaA  dot  against  the  verge  of  dawn,   Pass,  of  Arthur  438 

mark'd  the  black  h  moving  yet,  and  cried,  „            448 

Till  it  smote  on  then-  h's  and  their  sails  Th£  Beverage  116 

the  low  dark  h  dipt  under  the  smiling  main,  The  Wreck  127 

Hum  (s)    With  the  h  of  swarming  bees  Elednore  29 

Hum  (verb)    scarce  can  hear  the  people  h  About  the 

column's  base,  St.  S.  Stylites  38 

And  here  by  thee  will  h  the  bee,  A  Farewell  11 
all  the  lavish  hills  would  h  The  murmur  of  a  happy 

Pan :  In  Mem.  xxiii  11 

by  and  by  began  to  h  An  air  the  nims  Guinevere  162 

Human    Is  not  my  h  pride  brought  low  ?  Sufp.  Confessions  14 

cords  that  wound  and  eat  Into  my  h  heatrt,  >■               37 

brook  the  rod  And  chastisement  of  h  pride ;  „              108 

cuts  atwain  The  knots  that  tangle  h  creeds.  Clear-headed  friend  3 

hour  by  hour  He  canvass'd  A  mysteries,  A  Character  20 

But  more  h  in  your  moods,  Margaret  47 

Far  off  from  h  neighbourhood,  Elednore  6 

Ah  pity — hint  it  not  in  h  tones.  Wan  Sculptor  11 

How  grows  the  day  of  h  power  ? '  Two  Voices  78 

While  still  I  yeam'd  for  h  praise.  ,,      123 

Free  space  for  every  h  doubt,  »      137 

That  I  first  was  in  h  mould  ?  ,.      342 

No  life  that  breathes  with  h  breath  ,.      395 

With  cycles  of  the  h  tale  Of  this  wide  world.  Palace  of  Art  146 

hear  the  dully  sound  Of  h  footsteps  fall.  .,          276 

Pray  Heaven  for  a  h  heart,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  71 

To  mingle  with  the  h  race,  Of  old  sat  Freedom  10 

h  things  returning  on  themselves  Move  onward.  Golden  Year  25 

Beyond  the  utmost  bound  of  h  thought.  Ulysses  32 


Human  (continued)    I  dipt  into  the  future  far  as  A 
eye  could  see;  (repeat) 
song  That  mock'd  the  wholesome  h  heart, 
In  her  left  a  h  head. 
Cared  not  to  look  on  any  h  face. 
No  want  was  there  of  h  sustenance, 
He  could  not  see,  the  kindly  h  face. 
Brown,  looking  hardly  h,  strangely  clad, 
Nor  sound  of  h  sorrow  mounts  to  mar 
Or  in  the  dark  dissolving  h  heart, 
Tho'  man,  yet  h,  whatsoe'er  your  wrongs. 
Then  springs  the  crowning  race  of  h  kind. 
The  proof  and  echo  of  all  h  fame. 
Till  in  all  lands  and  thro'  all  h  story 
What  would  you  have  of  us  ?    H  life  ? 
Thou  seemest  h  and  divine. 
It  never  look'd  to  h  eyes  Since  our  first  Sun 
wrought  With  h  hands  the  creed  of  creeds 
And  render  h  love  his  dues ; 
To  point  the  term  of  h  strife, 
Nor  h  frailty  do  me  wrong, 
sweetest  soul  That  ever  look'd  with  h  eyes. 
The  perfect  flower  of  h  time ; 
What  fame  is  left  for  h  deeds  In  endless  age  ? 
But  somewhere,  out  of  h  view, 
I  know  transplanted  h  worth  Will  bloom 
How  much  of  act  at  h  hands  The  sense  of  h  will 
But  ia  dear  words  of  h  speech 
there  swims  The  reflex  of  a  A  face, 
take  what  fruit  may  be  Of  sorrow  imder  A  skies : 
Nor  dream  of  A  love  and  truth. 
That  sees  the  course  of  A  things. 


Locksley  Hall  15,  119 

The  Letters  10 

Vision  of  Sin  138 

Enoch  Arden  282 

554 

581 

638 

Lucretius  109 

Princess  Hi  312 

„        iv  425 

vii  295 

Ode  on  Well.  145 

223 

The  Victim  12 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  13 

„         xxiv  7 

„     xxxvi  10 

„    xxxvii  16 

lU 

„  Hi  8 

„         Ivii  12 

„  Ixi  4 

„      Ixxiii  11 

„        Ixxv  18 

„      Ixxxii  11 

„      Ixxxv  38 

83 

„        cviii  12 

14 

„       cxviii  3 

„      cxxviii  4 

Known  and  vmknown ;  A,  divine ;  Sweet  A  hand  and 

lips  and  eye ;  „        cxxix  5 

Whose  glory  was,  redressing  A  wrong ;  Led.  of  Idylls  9 

lent  her  fierce  teat  To  A  sucklings  ;  Com.  of  Arthur  29 

Till  the  great  plover's  A  whistle  amazed  Geraint  and  E.  49 

They  ride  abroad  redressing  A  wrongs  !  Merlin  and  V.  693 

With  such  a  fervent  flame  of  A  love,  Holy  Grail  74 

And  leaving  A  wrongs  to  right  themselves,  „        898 

Beast  too,  as  lacking  A  wit — disgraced,  Pelleas  and  E.  476 

To  ride  abroad  redressing  A  wrongs,  Guinevere  471 

Thou  art  the  highest  and  most  A  too,  „        649 

Dark  with  the  smoke  of  A  sacrifice,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  84 

Cried  from  the  topmost  summit  with  A  voices  and 

words ;  V.  of  Maeldune  28 

French  of  the  French,  and  Lord  of  A  tears ;  To  Victor  Hugo  3 

My  son,  the  Gods,  despite  of  A  prayer.  Are  slower  to 

forgive  than  A  kings.  Tiresias  9 

whose  one  bliss  Is  war,  and  A  sacrifice —  „  112 

In  height  and  prowess  more  than  A,  „  179 

we  broke  away  from  the  Christ,  our  A  brother  Despair  25 

and  the  A  heart,  and  the  Age.  „      40 

Set  the  sphere  of  all  the  boundless  Heavens  within 
the  A  eye.  Sent  the  shadow  of  Himself,  the 
boundless,  thro'  the  A  soul;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  2\Q 

Would  she  fuid  her  A  offspring  this  ideal  man  at  rest  ?        „  234 

Forward,  till  you  see  the  highest  H  Nature  is 

divine.  „  276 

As  a  lord  of  the  H  soul.  Dead  Prophet  54 

at  the  doubtful  doom  of  A  kind ;  To  Virgil  24 

sunder'd  once  from  all  the  A  race,  „        36 

too  fierce  and  fast  This  order  of  Her  H  Star,  Freedom  23 

Two  Suns  of  Love  make  day  of  A  life,  Prin.  Beatrice  1 

You  see  your  Art  still  shrined  in  A  shelves.  Poets  and  their  B.W 

I  envied  A  wives,  and  nested  birds,  Demeier  and  P.  53 

This  poor  rib-grated  dungeon  of  the  holy  A  ghost,  Happy  31 

As  dead  from  all  the  A  race  as  if  beneath  the  mould ;  „      95 

Larger  and  fuller,  like  the  A  mind !  Prog,  of  Spring  112 

On  A  faces.  And  all  around  me.  Merlin  and  the  G.  20 

H  forgiveness  touches  heaven,  and  thence —  Romney's  R.  159 

Hold  the  sceptre,  H  Soul,  By  an  Evolution.  16 

The  dust  send  up  a  steam  of  A  blood,  St.  Telemachus  53 

Every  morning  is  thy  birthday  gladdening  A  hearts 
and  eyes.  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  2 


Human 


341 


Hung 


Human  (continued)    Head-hunters  and  boats  of  Dahomey 
that  float  upon  h  blood  ! 
Neither  mourn  if  h  creeds  be  lower 
Dark  no  more  with  h  hatreds  in  the  glare 

'  Spirit,  nearing  yon  dark  portal  at  the  limit  of 
thy  h  state, 

Larger  than  h  on  the  frozen  hills. 

Larger  than  h  on  the  frozen  hills. 
Human-amorous    Her  Deity  false  in  h-a  tears; 
Human-godlike    Thine  eyes  Again  were  h-g, 
Human-hearted    The  h-h  man  I  loved. 
Humanity    amaze  Our  brief  humanities ; 

for  the  rights  of  an  equal  h, 
Human-kind    springs  the  crowning  race  of  h-k. 
Humbling    now  desired  the  h  of  their  best, 
Humid    Their  h  arms  festooning  tree  to  tree, 
Humiliated    The  woman  should  have  borne,  h, 

me  they  lash'd  and  h,  (repeat) 
Humility    late  he  learned  h  Perforce, 

she  had  f  ail'd  In  sweet  h ;  had  f ail'd  in  all ; 

memories  all  too  free  For  such  a  wise  h 

'  0  son,  thou  hast  not  true  h, 
Humm'd    swamp,  where  h  the  dropping  snipe, 

Audley  feast  H  like  a  hive 

Koundhead  rode.  And  h  a  surly  hymn. 

I  tum'd  and  h  a  bitter  song 

Her  father's  latest  word  h  in  her  ear, 
Hnmmeth    At  noon  the  wild  bee  h 
Hamming    {See  also  Hnzzin') 
drowsy  pulpit-drone 

But  while  I  past  he  was  h  an  air, 

smooth'd  The  glossy  shoulder,  h  to  himself. 

News  from  the  h  city  comes  to  it 

With  summer  spice  the  h  air  ; 
Hnmoni    And  h  of  the  golden  prime 

According  to  my  h  ebb  and  now. 

He  scarcely  hit  my  h,  and  I  said  : 

According  as  his  h's  lead. 

Lest  that  rough  h  of  the  kings  of  old  Return 
Hnmorous    he  sigh'd  Then  with  another  h  ruth 
Homorous-melancholy    You  man  of  h-m  mark, 
Hompback'd    There  by  the  h  wiUow  ; 
Hunchback    And  all  but  a  h  too  ; 
Hunch'd     fl^  as  he  was,  and  Uke  an  old  dwarf-elm 

But,  if  a  man  were  halt  or  h, 
Hundred  (adj.)    {See  also  Hoonderd,  Nineteen-hundied) 
yonder  h  million  spheres  ?  ' 

I  knit  a  h  others  new : 

A  h  winters  snow'd  upon  his  breast. 

The  daughter  of  a  ft  Earls, 

Is  worth  a  h  coats-of-arms. 

He  shines  upon  a  h  fields,  and  all  of  them  I  know, 


The  Dawn  5 

Faith  5 

»    8 

God  and  the  Univ.  4 

M.  d' Arthur  183 

Pass,  of  Arthur  351 

Lucretius  90 

Bemeter  and  P.  19 

In  Mem.  xiii  11 

Efilogue  57 

Beautiful  City  2 

Princess  vii  295 

Geraint  and  E.  637 

D.  ofF.  Women  10 

Aylmer's  Field  356 

Boddicea  49,  67 

Buona'parte  13 

Princess  vii  229 

Ode  on  Well.  249 

Holy  Grail  445 

On  a  Mourner  9 

Audley  Court  5 

Talking  Oak  300 

The  Letters  9 

Lancelot  and  E.  780 

Claribd  11 

hating  to  hark  The  h  of  the 

To  J.  M.  K.  10 

Maud  I  xiii  17 

Lancelot  and  E.  348 

Gardener's  D.  35 

In  Mem.  ci  8 

Arabian  Nights  120 

D.  of  F.  Women  134 

Edwin  Morris  76 

Day-Dm.,  Aloral  11 

Gareth  and  L.  377 

Geraint  and  E.  250 

To  W.  H.  Brookjield  9 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  31 

The  Wreck  43 

Pdleas  and  E.  543 

Guinevere  41 

In 

Two  Voices  30 

234 

Palace  of  Art  139 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  7 

16 

May  Queen,  Con.  50 


Hundred  (adj.)  {continued)    He  that  gain'd  a  h  fights,  Ode  on  Well.  96 

in  a  ft  years  it  '11  all  be  the  same.  Grandmother  47 

A  mount  of  marble,  a  ft  spires  !  The  Daisy  60 

Ay  is  Ufe  for  a  ft  years.  Window,  No  Answer  9 

A  ft  spmts  whisper  '  Peace.'  In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  16 

War  with  a  thousand  battles,  and  shaking  a  ft  thrones.       Maud  I  i48 


At  this  a  ft  bells  began  to  peal, 

Were  worth  a  ft  kisses  press'd  on  lips 

Bow  down  one  thousand  and  two  ft  times, 

I  circle  in  the  grain  Five  ft  rings  of  years — 

when  a  ft  times  In  that  last  kiss, 

Was  clash'd  and  hammer'd  from  a  ft  towers, 

Till  all  the  ft  summers  pass, 

When  will  the  ft  summers  die, 

'  I'd  sleep  another  ft  years, 

'  A  ft  summers  !  can  it  be  ? 

And  every  ft  years  to  rise  And  learn  the  world, 

O  ft  shores  of  happy  climes. 

Here  on  this  beach  a  ft  years  ago, 

And  half  a  ft  bridges. 

Hvmg  with  a  ft  shields,  the  family  tree 

To  turn  and  ponder  those  three  ft  scrolls 

they  betted  ;  made  a  ft  friends, 

That  he  would  send  a  ft  thousand  men, 

we  mist  with  those  Six  ft  maidens  clad  in  purest  white, 

Shall  strip  a  ft  hollows  bare  of  Spring, 

and  led  A  ft  maids  in  train  across  the  Park. 

And  follow'd  up  by  a  ft  airy  does, 

thro'  The  long-laid  galleries  past  a  ft  doors 


M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  29 

Gardener's  D.  151 

St.  S.  Stylites  111 

Talking  Oak  84 

Love  and  Duty  66 

Godiva  75 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  33 

49 

„  Depart.  9 

25 

L' Envoi  7 

The  Voyage  49 

Enoch  Arden  10 

The  Brook  30 

Aylmer's  Field  15 

Lucretius  12 

Princess,  Pro.  163 

i64 

a  472 

m65 

76 

87 

375 


A  ft  voices  cried,  '  Away  with  him  ! 

And  ft  winters  are  but  as  the  hands 

And  I  can  topple  over  a  ft  such. 

Came  riding  with  a  ft  lances  up  ; 

Hath  hardly  scaled  with  help  a  ft  feet 

The  ft  under-kingdoms  that  he  sway'd 

province  with  a  ft  miles  of  coast,  (repeat) 

Spring  after  spring,  for  half  a  ft  years : 

A  man  wellnigh  a  ft  winters  old, 

And  each  of  these  a  ft  winters  old, 

Scarr'd  with  a  ft  wintry  water-courses — 

Yea,  rotten  with  a  ft  years  of  death. 

Whereon  a  ft  stately  beeches  grew, 

A  ft  goodly  ones — the  Red  Knight,  he — 

whereon  There  tript  a  ft  tiny  silver  deer, 

but  Arthur  with  a  ft  spears  Rode  far, 

and  a  ft  meres  About  it, 

(As  I  have  seen  them  many  a  ft  times) 

And  kept  it  thro'  a  ft  years  of  gloom, 

He  had  only  a  ft  seamen  to  work  the  ship 

With  her  ft  fighters  on  deck, 

mountain-Uke  San  Philip  that,  of  fifteen  ft  tons 

which  our  house  has  held  Three  ft  years — 

dangled  a  ft  fathom  of  grapes. 

King,  that  hast  reign'd  six  ft  years, 

Thou  seest  the  Nameless  of  the  ft  names. 

beyond  A  ft  ever-rising  mountain  lines, 

swarm  Of  Turkish  Islam  for  five  ft  years. 

Those  three  ft  millions  under  one  Imperial 
sceptre  now, 

through  twice  a  ft  years,  on  thee. 

Who  meant  to  sleep  her  ft  summers  out 

And  more  than  half  a  ft  years  ago. 

Following  a  ft  sunsets,  and  the  sphere 

men  of  a  ft  thousand,  a  milUon  summers  away  ? 
Hundred  (s)    {See  also  'Oonderd,  Six  hundred.  Three 
hundred)    Seeing  forty  of  our  poor  ft  were  slain, 

from  fight  Before  their  dauntless  h's. 
Hundred-fold    his  love  came  back  aft-/; 
Hundredth    See  Four-hundredth 
Hundred-throated    As  'twere  a  h-t  nightingale, 
Hung    {See  also  HoUow-hung,  Low-hung,  Tassel-hung) 
thunder-clouds  that,  ft  on  high, 

H  in  the  golden  Galaxy. 

A  mighty  silver  bugle  ft, 

chestnuts  near,  that  ft  In  masses  thick  with  milky  cones.  Miller's  D.  55 

some  were  ft  with  arras  green  and  blue.  Palace  of  Art  61 

choice  paintings  of  wise  men  I  ft  The  royal  dais  round.  „  131 

H  tranced  from  all  pulsation.  Gardener's  D.  260 

golden  seal,  that  ft  From  Allan's  watch,  Dora  135 

blackbird  on  the  pippin  ft  To  hear  him,  Audley  Court  38 

stars  that  ft  Love-charm'd  to  listen  :  Love  and  Duty  74 

with  a  mute  observance  ft.  Locksley  Hall  22 

I  h  with  grooms  and  porters  on  the  bridge,  Godiva  2 

ft  upon  him,  play'd  with  him  And  call'd  him  Enoch  Arden  353 

for  Enoch  ft  A  moment  on  her  words,  „  872 

he  stood  firm  ;  and  so  the  matter  ft ;  (repeat)  The  Brook  144, 148 

capacious  hall,  H  with  a  himdred  shields,  Aylmer's  Field  15 

ft  With  wings  of  brooding  shelter  o'er  her  peace,  „  138 

His  own  forefathers'  arms  and  armour  ft.  Princess,  Pro.  24 

Thro'  the  wild  woods  that  ft  about  the  town ;  „  i  91 

And  o'er  his  head  Uranian  Venus  ft,  „  243 

Or  under  arches  of  the  marble  bridge  H,  „  ii  459 

Which  melted  Florian's  fancy  as  she  ft,  „  iv  370 

But  on  my  shoulder  ft  their  heavy  hands,  „  553 

sword  to  sword,  and  horse  to  horse  we  ft,  „  v  539 

H  round  the  sick  :  the  maidens  came,  „  vii  22 

on  her  foot  she  ft  A  moment,  and  she  heard,  „  79 

Love,  Uke  an  Alpine  harebell  A  with  tears  „  115 


Com.  of  Arthur  231 
281 

Gareth  and  L.  651 

Geraint  and  E.  539 

Balin  and  Balan  170 

Merlin  and  V.  582 

„      588, 647 

Holy  Grail  19 

85 

88 

490 

496 

Pelleas  and  E.  26 

Last  Tournament  70 

171 

420 

481 

Lover's  Tale  ii  145 

iv  195 

The  Revenge  22 

34 

40 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  53 

V.  of  Maeldune  56 

To  Dante  1 

Ancient  Sage  49 

282 

Montenegro  11 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  117 

To  W.  C.  Macready  14 

The  Ring  66 

To  Mary  Boyle  27 

St.  Telemachv^  31 

The  Dawn  25 

The  Revenge  76 

Montenegro  7 

Dora  166 

Vision  of  Sin  27 
As 

Elednore  98 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  12 

16 


Hang 


342 


'Bxaae  {continued)    Once  the  weight  and  fate  of  Europe  h.    Ode  on  Well.  240 

and  Jenny  h  on  his  arm.  Grandmother  42 

H  in  the  shadow  of  a  heaven  ?  In  Mem.  xvi  10 

h  to  hear  The  rapt  oration  flowing  free  „  Ixxxvii  31 

On  thee  the  loyal-hearted  h,  „             ex  5 

H  over  her  dying  bed —  Mavd  I  xix  36 

And  down  from  one  a  sword  was  h,  Gareth  and  L.  221 

he  loosed  a  mighty  purse,  H  at  his  belt,  Geraint  and  E.  23 

Enid  had  no  heart  To  wake  him,  but  h  o'er  him,  „          370 

And  h  his  head,  and  halted  in  reply,  ,,811 

high  on  a  branch  R  it,  and  tum'd  aside  Balin  and  Balan  433 

drawing  down  the  dim  disastrous  brow  That  o'er  him  h,       „  598 

a  troop  of  carrion  crows  H  Uke  a  cloud  Merlin  and  V.  599 

She  paused,  she  tum'd  away,  she  h  her  head,  „            887 

siu-e  I  think  this  fruit  is  h  too  high  Lancelot  and  E.  774 

o'er  her  h  The  silken  case  with  braided  blazonings,  „        1148 

o'er  his  head  the  Holy  Vessel  h  (repeat)  Holy  Grail  512,  520 
down  a  streetway  h  with  folds  of  pure  White  samite,  ImsI  Tournament  140 

the  sloping  seas  H  in  mid-heaven,  Lover's  Tale  i  4 

day  h  From  his  mid-dome  in  Heaven's  airy  haUs  ;                  „              65 

H  round  with  ragged  rims  and  burning  folds, —  „          ii  63 

H  round  with  paintings  of  the  sea,  „             168 

Took  the  edges  of  the  pall,  and  blew  it  far  Until  it  h,  „         Hi  36 

the  great  San  PhiUp  h  above  us  Uke  a  cloud  The  Bevenge  43 

as  if  hope  for  the  garrison  h  but  on  him  ;  Def.  of  Lucknow  48 

I  have  h  them  by  my  bed,  Columbus  200 

the  long  convolvulus  h;  V.  of  Maeldune  40 

The  sun  k  over  the  gates  of  Night,  Dead  Prophet  23 

The  shadow  of  a  crown,  that  o'er  him  h,  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.2 

Hungary    shall  I  shriek  it  a.  H  fail  ? 

Hunger  (s)     In  h's  and  in  thirsts,  fevers  and  cold, 
Bearing  a  lifelong  A  in  his  heart. 
Philip  with  eyes  Full  of  that  lifelong  h, 
Red  grief  and  mother's  h  in  her  eye. 
And  in  her  h  mouth'd  and  mumbled  it, 
A  h  seized  my  heart ;   I  read 
Some  dead  of  h,  some  beneath  the  scom^e, 
for  H  hath  the  EvU  eye — 
Crime  and  h  cast  our  maidens 

Hanger  (verb)     Long  for  my  life,  or  h  for  my  death, 


Maud  I  iv  46 

St.  S.  Stylites  12 

Enoch  Arden  79 

464 

Princess  m  146 

213 

In  Mem.  xcv  21 

Columbus  177 

Ancient  Sage  264 

Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  220 

Geraint  and  E.  81 


Honger'd    tme  heart,  which  h  for  her  peace  Enoch  Arden  272 

Ck)me,  I  &m  h  and  half-anger'd —  Last  Tournament  719 

Hungering    staring  wide  And  h  for  the  gilt  Lover's  Tale  iv  313 

Hnngerwom    how  weak  and  h  I  seem — leaning  on  these  ?  Gareth  and  L.  443 

Hnngry    For  always  roaming  with  a  h  heart  Ulysses  12 

Slowly  comes  a  h  people,  as  a  Uon  creeping  nigher,      Locksley  Hall  135 

greasy  gleam  In  haunts  of  h  sinners.  Will  Water.  222 

every  captain  waits  H  for  honour,  Princess  v  314 

Like  a  dry  bone  cast  to  some  h  hoimd  ?  Last  Tournament  196 

Hunt  (s)     Forgetful  of  the  falcon  and  the  h,  Marr.  of  Geraint  51 

petition'd  for  his  leave  To  see  the  h,  „            155 

her  love  For  Lancelot,  and  forgetful  of  the  h  ;  „            159 

I  but  come  hke  you  to  see  the  h,  „            179 

And  while  they  listen'd  for  the  distant  h,  „            184 

A  Uttle  vext  at  losing  of  the  h,  „            234 

Hunt  (verb)     Do  h  me,  day  and  night.'  D.  of  F.  Women  256 

Like  a  dog,  he  h's  in  dreams,  Locksley  Hall  79 

*  They  h  old  trails,'  said  Cyril  Princess  ii  390 

We  h  them  for  the  beauty  of  their  skins  ;  „           v  156 

who  will  h  for  me  This  demon  of  the  woods  ?  Balin  and  Balan  136 

not  Arthur's  use  To  Ji  by  moonlight ; '  Holy  Grail  111 

To  h  the  tiger  of  oppression  out  From  office  ;  Akbar's  Dream  158 

Hunted  (adj.)    As  himters  round  a  h  creature  draw  Aylmer's  Field  499 

Hunted  (verb)    The  swallow  stopt  as  he  A  the  fly.  Poet's  Song  9 

Hunter  (huntsman)    {See  also  Head-Hunter)    with  pufi'd 

cheek  the  belted  h  blew  Palace  of  Art  63 

As  h's  round  a  hunted  creature  draw  Aylmer's  Field  499 

Nor  her  that  o'er  her  woujided  h  wept  Lucretius  89 

the  h  rued  His  rash  intrusion,  manlike,  Princess  iv  203 

Man  is  the  h  ;  woman  is  his  game :  „       v  154 

made  Broad  pathways  for  the  h  and  the  knight  Com.  of  Arthur  61 

No  keener  h  after  glory  breathes.  Lancelot  and  E.  156 

'  0  h,  and  O  blower  of  the  horn.  Harper,  Last  Tournament  542 

'  Ah  then,  fake  h  and  false  harper,  „            567 

and  h's  race  The  shadowy  lion,  Tiresias  177 


Husband 

Hunter  (horse)    And  rode  his  h  down.  Talking  Oak  104 
Hunting    (See  also  'Untin',  Wile-hunting)    The  King  was  h 

in  the  wild  ;  The  Victim  30 

gave  order  to  let  blow  His  homs  for  h  Marr.  of  Geraint  153 

he  went  To-day  for  three  days'  h —  Last  Tournament  530 

Hunting-dress    wearing  neither  h-d  Nor  weapon,  Marr.  of  Geraint  165 

Hunting-mom    the  third  day  from  the  h-m  „            597 

Hunting-tide     Rang  out  like  hollow  woods  at  h-t.  Pelleas  and  E.  367 

Hup-on-end  (up-on-end)     An'  I  slep  i'  my  chair  h-o-e,  Owd  Rod  54 

Hupside  (upside)     an'  the  'ole  'ouse  h  down.  North  Cobbler  43 

Hurl     h  their  lances  in  the  sun  ;  Locksley  Hall  170 

Balin  graspt,  but  while  in  act  to  h,  Balin  and  Balan  368 

Mark  was  half  in  heart  to  h  his  cup  Merlin  and  V.  30 

when  he  stopt  we  long'd  to  h  together,  ^              „        420 

Twice  do  we  h  them  to  earth  Def.  of  Lucknow  58 

Gods,  To  quench,  not  h  the  thunderbolt,  Demeter  and  P.  133 

Hurl'd     the  bolts  are  h  Far  below  them  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  Ill 

And  h  the  pan  and  kettle.  The  Goose  28 

H  as  a  stone  from  out  of  a  catapult  Gareth  and  L.  965 

They  madly  h  together  on  the  bridge  ;  „         1120 

h  him  headlong  o'er  the  bridge  Down  to  the  river,  „        1153 

At  this  he  h  his  huge  Umbs  out  of  bed,  Marr.  of  Geraint  124 

Hung  at  his  belt,  and  h  it  toward  the  squire.  Geraint  and  E.  23 

h  to  ground  what  knight  soever  spurr'd  Against  us,  Balin  and  Balan  66 

h  it  from  him  Among  the  forest  weeds,  „            541 

he  h  into  it  Against  the  stronger  :  Lancelot  and  E.  462 

H  back  again  so  often  in  empty  foam,  Last  Tournament  93 

h  The  tables  over  and  the  wines,  „            474 

Leapt  on  him,  and  h  him  headlong,  Guinevere  108 

you  h  them  to  the  groimd.  Happy  76 

Been  h  so  high  they  ranged  about  the  globe  ?  St.  Telemmihus  2 

when  she  h  a  plaate  at  the  cat  Church-warden,  etc.  25 

Noble  the  Saxon  who  h  at  his  Idol  Kapiolani  4 

Hurling     Each  h  down  a  heap  of  things  that  rang  Geraint  and  E.  594 

Hurrah    we  roar'd  a  h,  and  so  The  Uttle  Revenge  The  Revenge  32 

Hurricane    like  the  smoke  in  a  A  whirl'd.  Boddicea  59 

The  h  of  the  latitude  on  him  feU,  Columbus  138 

Crash'd  like  a  h.  Broke  thro'  the  mass  Heavy  Brigade  28 

Hurried     Edith's  eager  fancy  h  with  him  Aylmer's  Field  208 

Hurry  (s)     {See  also  'Urry)     aU  three  in  h  and  fear  Ran 

to  her,  Lancelot  and  E.  1024 

Hurry  (verb)     By  thirty  hills  I  h  down.  The  Brook  27 

and  yearn  to  h  precipitously  Boddicea  58 

Hurrying    Myriads  of  rivulets  h  thro'  the  lawn,  Princess  vii  220 

Driving,  h,  marrying,  burjdng,  Maud  II  v  12 

Another  h  past,  a  man-at-arms,  Geraint  and  E.  526 

Then,  h  home,  I  found  her  not  in  house  The  Ring  444 

Hurt  (s)     helps  the  h  that  Honour  feels,  Locksley  Hall  105 

swathed  the  h  that  drain'd  her  dear  lord's  life.  Geraint  and  E.  516 

Then,  fearing  for  his  h  and  loss  of  blood,  „          777 

came  The  King's  own  leech  to  look  into  his  h  ;  „          923 

But  while  Geraint  lay  heaUng  of  his  h,  „          931 

tho'  he  caU'd  his  wound  a  Uttle  h  Lancelot  and  E.  852 

when  Sir  Lancelot's  deadly  h  was  whole,  „            904 

Like  a  king's  heir,  till  aU  his  h's  be  whole.  Last  Tournament  91 

heal'd  Thy  h  and  heart  with  unguent  and  caress —  „            595 

treat  their  loathsome  h's  and  heal  mine  own  ;  Guinevere  686 

Hurt  (verb  and  part.)     Love  is  h  with  jar  and  fret.  Miller's  D.  209 

H  in  that  night  of  sudden  ruin  and  wreck,  Enoch  Arden  564 

There  by  a  keeper  shot  at,  slightly  h,  Aylmer's  Field  548 

almost  all  that  is,  hurting  the  h —  ,,           572 

With  their  own  blows  they  h  themselves,  Princess  vi  49 

I  trust  that  there  is  no  one  h  to  death,  „          242 

H  in  his  first  tilt  was  my  son.  Sir  Torre.  Lancelot  and  E.  196 

'  But  parted  from  the  jousts  H  in  the  side,'  „            623 

h  Whom  she  would  soothe,  and  harm'd  Guinevere  354 

Hurted    I  sUther'd  and  h  my  buck.  North.  Cobbler  19 

Hurting     almost  all  that  is,  h  the  hurt —  Aylmer's  Field  572 

Husban'     at  yer  wake  Uke  h  an'  wife.  Tomorrow  82 

Husband    {See  also  Husban')     As  the  h  is,  the  wife  is :         Locksley  Hall  47 

of  what  he  wish'd,  Enoch,  your  h :  Enoch  Arden  292 

Has  she  no  fear  that  her  first  h  Uves  ?  „          806 

only  near'd  Her  h  inch  by  inch,  Aylmer's  Field  807 

'  No  trifle,'  groan'd  the  h  ;  Sea  Dreams  145 

The  field  was  pleasant  in  my  h's  eye.'  Gareth  and  L.  342 


Husband 


343 


Ida 


Hosband  (continued)    my  h's  brother  had  my  son  Thrall'd 

in  his  castle,  Gareth  and  L.  357 

Enid,  but  to  please  her  h's  eye,  Marr.  of  Geraint  11 

Put  hand  to  hand  beneath  her  h's  heart, 

I  am  thine  h — not  a  smaller  soul, 

the  widower  h  and  dead  wife  Rush'd  each  at  each 

and  dead  her  aged  h  now — 

'  This  model  h,  tliis  fine  Artist '  ! 

Her  h  in  the  flush  of  youth  and  dawn, 

crying  '  H  \'  she  leapt  upon  the  fimeral  pile, 

blade  that  had  slain  my  k  thrice  thro' 
Husbandry    with  equal  h  The  woman  were  an  equal  to 
the  man. 

Harvest-tool  and  h,  Loom  and  wheel 
Hush  (s)     we  heard  In  the  dead  h  the  papere 

in  the  h  of  the  moonless  nights. 

And  a  h  with  the  setting  moon. 

had  blown — after  long  h — at  last — 

A  dead  h  fell ;  but  when  the  dolorous  day 
Hnsb  (verb)    If  prayers  will  not  h  thee, 

'  O  h,h]'  and  she  began. 

H,  the  Dead  March  wails  in  the  people's  ears 

And  h'es  half  the  babbling  Wye, 

Let  us  h  this  cry  of  '  Forward  ' 
Hosh'd     air  is  damp,  and  h,  and  close. 

The  town  was  h  beneath  us : 

Ranges  of  glimmering  vaults  with  iron  grates,  And 
h  seragUos  -D-  of  F.  Women  36 

Up  went  the  h  amaze  of  hand  and  eye.  Princess  Hi  138 

how  sweetly  smells  the  honeysuckle  In  the  h  night,    Gareth  and  L.  1288 

H  all  the  groves  from  fear  of  wrong  :  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  13 

h  itself  at  last  Hopeless  of  answer :  Aylmer's  Field  542 

The  Wye  is  h  nor  moved  along.  And  h  my  deepest 


Geraint  and  E.  767 

Guinevere  566 

Lover's  Tale  iv  372 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  37 

Romney's  R.  124 

Death  of  (Enone  17 

105 

Bandit's  Death  34 

Princess  i  130 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  14 

Princess  iv  390 

Maud  I  i'^ 

„      xxii  18 

Gareth  and  L.  1378 

Pass,  of  Arthur  122 

Lilian  27 

Princess  ii  115 

Ode  on  Well.  267 

In  Mem.  xix  7 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  78 

A  spirit  haunts  13 

Avdley  Court  85 


grief  of  all, 

all  was  h  within,  TiU  when  at  feast  Sir  Garlon 

Here  too,  all  h  below  the  mellow  moon, 

woods  are  h,  their  music  is  no  more : 

'  Bygones  !  you  kept  yours  h,'  I  said, 

my  ravings  h  The  bird. 

Stood  round  it,  h,  or  calling  on  his  name. 

H  as  the  heart  of  the  grave. 
Husk    rent  the  veil  Of  his  old  h  : 

phantom  h's  of  something  foully  done, 

and  of  the  grain  and  h,  the  grape 
Hnsk'd    See  Hollow-Hnsk'd 
Hussy    There  was  a  girl,  a  h,  that  workt  with  him 
HasUe    Would  h  and  harry  him,  and  labour  him 

Gareth  whom  he  used  To  harry  and  h. 
HnstijDgs    That  so,  when  the  rotten  h  shake 
Hustings-liar    looking  upward  to  the  practised  h-l ; 
Hustled    h  together,  each  sex,  Uke  swine. 
Hut    a  h,  Half  h,  half  native  cavern. 

h's  At  random  scatter'd,  each  a  nest  in  bloom, 

By  the  great  river  in  a  boatman's  h. 

And  flies  above  the  leper's  h, 

Is  that  the  leper's  h  on  the  solitary  moor, 
Hutterby  HaU    hup  to  Harmsby  and  H  H. 
Huzzin'  (humming)     H  an'  maazin'  the  blessed  fealds 
Hyacinth    sweeter  still  The  wild-wood  h 

over  sheets  of  h  That  seem'd  the  heavens 
Hyades    Thro'  scudding  drifts  the  rainy  fl 
Hyaline    pine  slope  to  the  dark  h. 
Hymen    See  Mock-Hymen 

Hymn    (See  also  Death-Hymn,  'Ymn)    sound  Of  pious 
h's  and  psalms, 

Roundhead  rode,  And  humm'd  a  surly  h. 

I  hear  a  noise  of  h's  : 

.shriek  of  hate  would  jar  aU  the  h's  of  heaven  : 

The  bearded  Victor  of  ten-thousand  h's, 

ourself  have  often  tried  Valkjrrian  h's, 

mine  own  phantom  chanting  h's  ? 

But  there  was  heard  among  the  holy  h's 

there  past  along  the  h's  A  voice  as  of  the  waters, 

king,  whose  h's  Are  chanted  in  the  minster, 

She  chanted  snatches  of  mysterious  h's 


In  Mem.  xix  9 

Balin  and  Balan  346 

PeUeas  and  E.  424 

Last  TournaTTient  276 

First  Quarrel  68 

Demeter  and  P.  108 

Death  of  (Enone  66 

Bandit's  Death  26 

Two  Voices  11 

Lucretius  160 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  50 


First  Quarrel  24 

Gareth  and  L.  484 

707 

Maud  I  vi  54 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  123 

Maud  I  i  34: 

Enoch  Arden  559 

Aylmer's  Field  149 

Lancelot  and  E.  278 

Happy  4 

9 

North.  Cobbler  14 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  62 

Balin  and  Balan  271 

Guinevere  390 

Ulysses  10 

Leonine  Eleg.  10 


St.  S.  StylUes  34 

Talking  Oak  300 

Sir  Galahad  28 

Sea  Dreams  259 

Princess  Hi  352 

iv  139 

In  Mem.  cviii  10 

Com.  of  Arthur  290 

464 

Merlin  and  V.  765 

Lancelot  and  E.  1407 


Hymn  (continued)    the  nightingale's  h  in  the  dark.  First  Quarrel  34 

sounding  in  heroic  ears  Heroic  h's,  Tiresias  182 
in  the  harvest  h's  of  Earth  The  worehip  which 

is  Love,  Demeter  and  P.  148 
bore  the  Cross  before  you  to  the  chant  of  funeral  h's.  Happy  48 
For  have  the  far-off  h's  of  May,  To  Master  of  B.  10 
spake  thy  brother  in  his  h  to  heaven  Akbar's  Dream  27 
Our  h  to  the  sun.     They  sing  it.  „          203 
Hjrmn'd    h  from  hence  With  songs  in  praise  Ancient  Sage  208 
Hyperion    or  of  older  use  All-seeing  H —  Lucretius  126 
Hypocrisy     H,  I  saw  it  in  him  at  once.  Sea  Dreams  64 
B[]rpothesis     If  that  h  of  theirs  be  sound  '  Princess  iv  20 
Hsrsterical    (See  also  Half-hysterical)    That  old  h  mock- 
disease  should  die.'  Maud  III  vi  33 
Hysterics    The  blind  h  of  the  Celt :  In  Mem.  cix  16 


I    learns  the  use  of  '  / '  and  '  me,' 
Ice    /  with  the  warm  blood  mixing ; 

To  the  earth — until  the  i  would  melt 

I  bump'd  the  i  into  three  several  stars, 

goes,  like  glittering  bergs  of  i, 

an  old-world  mammoth  bulk'd  in  i, 

find  him  dropt  upon  the  firths  of  i, 

oft  we  saw  the  glisten  Of  i, 

skater  on  i  that  hardly  bears  him, 

i  Makes  daggers  at  the  sharpen'd  eaves. 

The  spires  of  i  are  toppled  down, 

'  A  doubtful  throne  is  i  on  summer  seas. 

Sworn  to  be  veriest  i  of  pureness. 

The  spear  of  i  has  wept  itself  away, 
Iceberg    sound  as  when  an  i  splits  From  cope  to  base — 
Ice-ferns    Fine  as  i-f  on  January  panes 
Icenian    Hear  /,  Catieuchlanian,  (repeat) 

the  Gods  have  heard  it,  0  /, 

Shout  /,  Catieuchlanian, 
Icicle     lance  that  spUnter'd  like  an  i. 
Icy    Day  clash'd  his  harness  in  the  i  caves 

Was  tagg'd  with  i  fringes  in  the  moon, 

Day  clash'd  his  harness  in  the  i  caves 

And  set  me  climbing  i  capes  And  glaciers, 

I'd  sooner  fold  an  i  corpse  dead  of  some  foul  disease : 

and  felt  An  i  breath  play  on  me, 

an  i  breath.  As  from  the  grating  of  a  sepulchre, 

up  the  tower — an  i  air  Fled  by  me. 

That  i  winter  silence — how  it  froze  you  

On  i  fallow  And  faded  forest,  Merlin  and  the  G.  84 

you  will  not  deny  my  sultry  throat  One  draught  of  i 

^ater.  Romney's  R.  23 

Icy-hearted    How  long  this  i-h  Muscovite  Oppress  the  region  ? '       Poland  10 
'Id  (hid)    wheer  Sally's  owd  stockin'  wur  'i,  North.  Cobbler  31 

Ida  (mountain  of  Phrygia)    There  lies  a  vale  in  /,  (Enone  1 

'  O  mother  /,  many-fountain'd  /,  (repeat)  (Enone  23,  34,  45,  172 

mother  I,  hearken  ere  I  die.  (repeat)      (Enone  24,  35,  46,  53,  64,  77,  91, 

103,  120,  134,  151,  173,  183, 
195 

whatever  Oread  haunt  The  knolls  of  /,  CEnone  75 

Whom  all  the  pines  of  /  shook  to  see  Lucretius  86 

found  Paris,  a  naked  babe,  among  the  woods  Of  /,     Death  of  (Enone  55 
Ida  (heroine  of  'The  Princess ')    let  us  know  The  Princess 


In  Mem.  xlv  6 

All  Things  will  Die  33 

Supp.  Confessions  81 

The  Epic  12 

Princess  iv  71 

„     V  148 

„  vii  206 

The  Daisy  36 

Hendecasyllabics  6 

In  Mem  cvii  7 

„  cxxvii  12 

Com.  of  Arthur  248 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  108 

Prog,  of  Spring  6 

Lover's  Tale  i  603 

Aylmer's  Field  222 

Boddicea  10,  34,  47 

21 

57 

Geraint  and  E.  89 

M.  d' Arthur  186 

St.  S.  Stylites  32 

Pass,  of  Arthur  354 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  25 

The  Flight  54 

The  Ring  131 

399 

445 

Happy  71 


/  waited : 
affianced  years  ago  To  the  Lady  I : 
and  silver  litanies,  The  work  of  /, 
She  had  the  care  of  Lady  I's  youth, 
your  sister  came  she  won  the  heart  Of  I : 
Princess  /  seem'd  a  hollow  show. 
Said  I:  'let  us  down  and  rest; ' 
'  To  horse '  Said  / ;  '  home !  to  horse ! ' 
tum'd  her  face,  and  cast  A  liquid  look  on  7, 
at  eve  and  dawn  With  /,  /,  /,  rang  the  words; 
The  mellow  breaker  murmur'd  I. 
I  lend  full  tongue,  O  noble  /, 


Princess  ii  21 

216 

478 

Hi  85 

88 

185 

iv21 

167 

369 

433 

436 

443 


Ida 


344 


lU 


Ida  (heroine  of  "  The  Princess  ")  {continued)    For  now  will 
cruel  /  keep  her  back ; 

What  dares  not  /  do  that  she  should  prize  The  soldier  ? 

is  not  /  right  ?    They  worth  it  ? 

much  that  /  claims  as  right  Had  ne'er  been  mooted, 

You  talk  almost  like  / :  she  can  talk ; 

Arac's  word  is  thrice  As  ours  with  / : 

To  learn  if  /  yet  would  cede  our  claim, 

one  glance  he  caught  Thro'  open  doors  of  I 

I's  answer,  in  a  royal  hand, 

With  Psyche's  babe,  was  /  watching  us, 

high  upon  the  palace  /  stood  With  Psyche's  babe  in  arm: 

clamouring  on,  till  /  heard,  Look'd  up. 

But  /  spoke  not,  rapt  upon  the  child. 

'  / —  'sdeath !  you  blame  the  man ;  You  wrong  yourselves — 

But  /  spoke  not,  gazing  on  the  ground, 

I  heard  her  say  it — '  Our  /  has  a  heart ' — 

But  /  stood  nor  spoke,  drain'd  of  her  force 

'  Ay  so,'  said  /  with  a  bitter  smile, 

/  with  a  voice,  that  like  a  bell  Toll'd  by  an  earthquake 

at  the  further  end  Was  I  by  the  throne. 

Then  the  voice  Of  /  sounded, 

But  sadness  on  the  soul  of  /  fell. 

When  Cyril  pleaded,  /  came  behind  Seen  but  of  Psyche ; 

and  shriek  '  You  are  not  / ; '  clasp  it  once  again.  And  call 
her  /,  tho'  I  knew  her  not, 

look  like  hollow  shows;  nor  more  Sweet  /: 

But  if  you  be  that  /  whom  I  knew. 

My  spirit  closed  with  I's  at  the  lips ; 

'  But  I,'  Said  /,  tremulously, 
TflftliftTi    /  Aphrodite  beautiful, 
'He  (hide)    fur  theere  we  was  forced  to  'i. 
Ideal  (adj.)     A  more  i  Artist  be  than  all  (repeat) 

Scjirce  other  than  my  king's  i  knight, 

/  manhood  closed  in  real  man. 

Evolution  ever  climbing  after  some  i  good, 

Would  she  find  her  human  offspring  this  i  man 
at  rest  ? 
Ideal  (s)    He  worships  your  i : '  she  replied : 

To  nurse  a  bUnd  i  like  a  girl, 

spirit  wholly  true  To  that  i  which  he  bears  ? 

a  man's  i  Is  high  in  Heaven, 

of  the  chasm  between  Work  and  I? 
IdeaUty    Infinite  / !  Immeasurable  Reality ! 
Idiot  (adj.)     Nothing  but  i  gabble ! 

Ye  mar  a  comely  face  with  i  tears. 

Pity  for  all  that  aches  in  the  grasp  of  an  i  power. 
Idiot  (s)    (See  also  Emperor-idiot)    No  pliable  i  I  to  break 


Princess  v  84 
174 
188 
202 
210 
227 
333 
343 
371 
512 
vidO 
150 
220 
221 
227 
235 
266 
316 
331 
357 
373 
vii  29 
78 

95 

135 

147 

158 

333 

(Enone  174 

Spinster's  S's.  39 

Gardener's  D.  25,  173 

Ded.  of  Idylls  7 

To  the  Queen  ii  38 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  199 

234 

Princess  ii  52 

„  m217 

In  Mem.  Hi  10 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  130 

RoTimey's  B.  64 

De  Prof.,  Human  C.  2 

Maud  II V  41 

Geraint  and  E.  550 

Despair  43 


my  vow ;  The  Ring  402 

Idioted    being  much  befool'd  and  i  Aylmer's  Field  590 

Idiotlike    mumbling,  i  it  seem'd,  Enoch  Arden  639 

Idle     Nor  sold  his  heart  to  i  moans.  Two  Voices  221 

Eyes  with  i  tears  are  wet.    /  habit  links  us  yet.  Miller's  D.  211 

It  little  profits  that  an  i  king,  Ulysses  1 

They  are  fill'd  with  i  spleen ;  Vision  of  Sin  124 

An  i  signal,  for  the  brittle  feet  Sea  Dreams  133 

'  Tears,  i  tears,  I  know  not  what  they  mean,  Princess  iv  39 

Where  i  boys  are  cowards  to  their  shame,  „     v  309 

So  bring  liim :  we  have  i  dreams :  In  Mem.  x  9 

Behold,  ye  speak  an  i  thing :  „    xxi  21 

O  me,  what  profits  it  to  put  An  i  case  ?  „  xxocv  18 

'  So  fret  not,  like  an  i  girl,  „     Hi  13 

Then  be  my  love,  an  i  tale,  „      Ixii  3 

and  show  That  life  is  not  as  i  ore,  „  cxviii  20 

As  half  but  i  brawling  rhymes,  „  Con.  23 

I^ing  or  sitting  round  him,  i  hands,  Gareth  and  L.  512 
Has  Uttle  time  for  i  questioners.'                              Marr.  of  Geraint  272 

Hope  not  to  make  thyself  by  i  vows,  Holy  Grail  871 

For  manners  are  not  i,  but  the  fruit  Guinevere  335 

And  i — and  couldn't  be  i — my  Willy —  Rizpah  27 

'  And  i  gleams  will  come  and  go,  Ancient  Sage  240 

And  i  gleams  to  thee  are  light  to  me.  „          246 

And  i  fancies  flutter  me,  I  know  not  where  to  turn ;  The  Flight  74 

Down,  you  i  tools,  Stampt  into  dust —  Romney's  R.  112 

•hadow  of  a  dream— an  »  one  It  may  be.  Akbar's  Dream  5 


Idleness    hatch'd  In  silken-folded  i ;  Princess  iv  67 

Idly     In  lieu  of  i  dallying  with  the  truth,  Lancelot  and  E.  590 

Idol    but  everywhere  Some  must  clasp  I's.  Supp.  Confessions  179 

Yet,  my  God,  Whom  call  II?  ,,180 

the  i  of  my  youth.  The  darling  of  my  manhood,  Gardener's  D.  277 

The  rosy  i  of  her  solitudes,  Enoch  Arden  90 

clasp  These  i's  to  herself  ?  Lucretius  165 

the  wild  figtree  split  Their  monstrous  i's,  Princess  iv  80 

nations  rear  on  high  Their  i  smear'd  with  blood,  Freedom  28 

And  when  they  roU  their  i  down —  „        29 

Noble  the  Saxon  who  hurl'd  at  his  /  Kapiolani  4 

Idolater    Count  the  more  base  i  of  the  two ;  Aylmer's  Field  670 

and  crush'd  The  I's,  and  made  the  people  free  ?  Gareth  and  L.  137 

Idolatry    waste  and  havock  as  the  idolatries,  Aylmer's  Field  640 

The  red  fruit  of  an  old  i—  „            762 

Idol-fires     A  wind  to  puff  your  i-f.  Love  thou  thy  land  69 

Idris     pushing  could  move  The  chair  of  I.  Marr.  of  Geraint  543 

Idyll     she  foimd  a  small  Sweet  Idyl,  Princess  vii  191 

I  consecrate  with  tears — These  I's.  Ded.  of  Idylls  5 

For  this  brief  i  would  require  Tiresias  188 

'Igher  (higher)    we  'eiird  'im  a-mountin'  oop  'i  an'  'i.  North.  Cobbler  47 

if  iver  tha  means  to  git  'i,  Church-warden,  etc.  45 

Ignoble    And  soil'd  with  all  i  use.  In  Mem.  cxi  24 

Was  noble  man  but  made  i  talk.  Lancelot  and  E.  1088 

Ignominy    hide  their  faces,  miserable  in  i !  Boddicea  51 

Ignorance    In  this  extremest  misery  Of  i,  Supp.  Confessions  8 

he  grows  To  Pity — more  from  i  than  will.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  110 

Drink  to  heavy  / !  Vision  of  Sin  193 

where  blind  and  naked  I  Delivers  brawling 

judgments.  Merlin  and  V.  664 

You  lose  yourself  in  utter  i ;  Lover's  Tale  i  79 
l^orant    {See  also  Hignorant)    /,  devising  their  own 

daughter's  death  !  Aylmer's  Field  783 

As  i  and  impolitic  as  a  beast —  Columbus  128 

Ilex    and  there  My  giant  i  keeping  leaf  To  Ulysses  18 

Biad     Let  the  golden  /  vanish,  Parnassus  20 

lUon     Troeis  and  I's  column'd  citadel,  (Enone  13 

While  /  like  a  mist  rose  into  towers.  Tithonus  63 

The  fire  that  left  a  roofless  /,  Lucretius  65 

I's  lofty  temples  robed  in  flre,  /  falling,  Rome  arising.  To  Virgil  2 

Whose  crime  had  half  unpeopled  /,  Death  of  (Enone  61 

What  star  could  burn  so  low  ?  not  /  yet.  „              83 

III  (adj.  and  adv.)     But,  Alice,  you  were  i  at  ease ;  Miller's  D.  146 

You  know  so  i  to  deal  with  time,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  63 

You  ask  me,  why,  tho'  i  at  ease.  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  1 

Good  people,  you  do  i  to  kneel  to  me.  St.  S.  Stylites  133 

The  slow  sad  hours  that  bring  us  all  things  i.  Love  and  Duty  58 

Had  you  i  dreams  ? '  Sea  Dreams  85 

'  You  jest :  i  jesting  with  edge-tools !  Princess  ii  201 

I  mother  that  I  was  to  leave  her  there,  „           v  93 

the  gray  mare  Is  i  to  live  with,  „            452 

Let  them  not  lie  in  the  tents  with  coarse  mankind, 

/  nurses ;  „          w  70 

In  part  It  was  i  counsel  had  misled  the  girl  „      vii  241 

When  i  and  weary,  alone  and  cold.  The  Daisy  96 

But  i  for  him  who,  bettering  not  with  time.  Will  10 

/  brethren,  let  the  fancy  fly  From  belt  to  belt  In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  12 

But  i  for  him  that  wears  a  crown,  „            cxxvii  9 
sadder  age  begins  To  war  against  i  uses  of  a  life,        Gareth  and  L.  1130 

And  sowing  one  i  hint  from  ear  to  ear.  Merlin  and  V.  143 

I  news,  my  Queen,  for  all  who  love  him,  Lancelot  and  E.  598 

her  hand  is  hot  With  i  desires,  Last  Tournament  415 

i  prophets  were  they  all.  Spirits  and  men:  Guinevere  272 

/  doom  is  mine  To  war  against  my  people  Pass,  of  Arthur  70 

that  within  her  womb  that  had  left  her  i  content ;  The  Revenge  51 

•  are  you  i  ? '  (so  ran  The  letter)  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  185 

•  What  profits  an  i  Priest  Between  me  and  my 

God  ?  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  144 
But  often  in  the  sidelong  eyes  a  gleam  of  all  things  i—      The  Flight  31 

And  yet  my  heart  is  i  at  ease,  „           97 

ni  (s)    Patient  of  i,  and  death,  and  scorn,  Supp.  Confessions  4 

saw  thro'  life  and  death,  thro'  good  and  i,  The  Poet  5 

heaping  on  the  fear  of  i  The  fear  of  men,  Two  Voices  107 

death — mute — careless  of  all  i's.  If  I  were  loved  10 

and  grief  became  A  solemn  scorn  of  i's.  D.  ofF.  Women  228 


m 


345 


Inactive 


fe  ID  (s)  (continued)    Then  why  not  i  for  good  ? 
)         good  Will  be  the  final  goal  of  i, 

Who  loved,  who  suffer'd  countless  i's, 

honey  of  poison-flowers  and  aU  the  measureless  ?, 

For  years,  a  measureless  i.  For  years, 

Better  to  fight  for  the  good  than  to  rail  at  the  i ; 

There  most  in  those  who  most  have  done  them  i. 

This  good  is  in  it,  whatsoe'er  of  i, 

he  was  heal'd  at  once,  By  faith,  of  all  his  i's. 

And  i's  and  aches,  and  teethings, 

so  worship  him  That  i  to  him  is  i  to  them ; 

No  i  no  good  !  such  counter-terms, 

I  meet  my  fate,  whatever  i's  betide ! 

Powers  of  Good,  the  Powers  of  /, 

Shall  we  not  thro'  good  and  i 

year's  great  good  and  varied  i's, 
in  (hill)    Wrigglesby  beck  cooms  out  by  the  'i ! 
El-content    Dwelt  with  eternal  summer,  i-c. 

I,  Earth-Goddess,  am  but  i-c 
Dl-done    It  was  i-d  to  part  you.  Sisters  fair ; 
ni-fated    /-/  that  I  am,  what  lot  is  mine 

i-f  as  they  were,  A  bitterness  to  me  ! 
migant  (elegant)     An'  sorra  the  Queen  wid  her  sceptre 

in  sich  an  i  han',  Tomorrow  35 

niimitable    lordly  music  flowing  from  The  i  years.  Ode  to  Memory  42 

Ruining  along  the  i  inane,  Lucretius  40 

l%ht  and  shadow  i,  Boddicea  42 

tUl  o'er  the  i  reed,  And  many  a  glancing  plash       Last  Tournament  421 
Illiterate    not  i ;  nor  of  those  Who  dabbling  The  Brook  92 

Dl-omen'd     Remembering  his  i-o  song.  Princess  vi  159 

'Hl-side  (hill-side)    What's  the  'eiit  of  this  little  'i-s  North.  Cobbler  6 

Dl-suited    such  a  feast,  i-s  as  it  seem'd  To  such  a  time,    Lover's  Tcde  iv  207 
Dluminate     i  AU  your  towns  for  a  festival.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  18 

Qlumined    {See  also  Long-illumined)    from  the  i  hall 


Love  and  Duty  27 

In  Mem.  liv  2 

Ivi  17 

Maud  I  iv  56 

„     //  a  49 

„  ///  vi  57 

Geraint  and  E.  877 

Lancelot  and  E.  1207 

Holy  Grail  56 

554 

652 

Ancient  Sage  250 

The  Flight  95 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  273 

Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  33 

Prog,  of  Spring  93 

A'.  Farmer,  N.  S.  53 

Enoch  Arden  562 

Demeter  and  P.  128 

Lover's  Tale  i  814 

Love  and  Duty  33 

Last  Tournament  40 


Long  lanes  of  splendour 
Dliunined  (verb)    A  fuller  light  i  all, 
Qlumineth    I  saw,  wherever  light  i, 
Ql-usage    Or  sicken  with  i-u, 
Ql-used    Chanted  from  an  i-u  race  of  men 

Francis,  muttering,  Uke  a  man  i-u, 
Qlusion    '  Confusion,  and  i,  and  relation, 

The  phantom  walls  of  this  i  fade, 
Qlyrian    /  woodlands,  echoing  falls  Of  water, 
[mage    An  i  with  profulgent  brows. 

An  i  seem'd  to  pass  the  door,  (repeat) 

Vast  i's  in  glimmering  dawn. 

Which  was  an  i  of  the  mighty  world ; 

Would  play  with  flying  forms  and  i's, 

I  fixt  My  wistful  eyes  on  two  fair  i's. 

An  i  comforting  the  mind. 

To  one  pure  i  of  regret. 

Your  mother  is  mute  in  her  grave  as  her  i  in  marble 
above ; 

finding  there  unconsciously  Some  i  of  himself — 

Full  often  the  bright  i  of  one  face, 

'  Let  her  tomb  Be  costly,  and  her  i  thereupon, 

Stamp'd  with  the  i  of  the  King ; 
I        Man  was  it  who  marr'd  heaven's  i  in  thee  thus  ? ' 
I        Which  was  an  i  of  the  mighty  world, 
j       Thine  i,  like  a  charm  of  light  and  strength 

for  tho'  mine  i.  The  subject  of  thy  power, 
1        I  could  stamp  my  i  on  her  heart ! 
!        ' I's?'  '  Bury  them  as  God's  truer  i's 
I       each  Uke  a  golden  i  was  poUen'd  from 
■  magery     Trick  thyself  out  in  ghastly  imageries 
magination    Poet-princess  with  her  grand  I's 
;        I's  calm  and  fair, 
j       The  strong  i  roU  A  sphere  of  stars 
tmaginative    Likewise  the  i  woe, 
"^magined    /  more  than  seen,  the  skirts  of  France 
magining     Nor  feed  with  crude  i's 
mbedle    the  man  became  / ;  his  one  word  was 
j  '  desolate ; ' 

imbedded    with  golden  yolks  /  and  injelUed ; 
'-mbibing    0  to  watch  the  thirsty  plants  / ! 


Princess  iv  477 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  5 

D.  of  F.  Women  14 

Princess  ■«  86 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  120 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  12 

Gareth  and  L.  287 

Ancient  Sage  181 

To  E.  L.  1 

Supp.  Confessions  145 

Mariana  in  the  jS.  65,  74 

Two  Voices  305 

M.  d' Arthur  235 

Gardener's  D.  60 

Sea  Dreams  240 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  51 

,,  cii  24 


Maud  I  iv  58 

Ded.  of  Idylls  3 

Lancelot  and  E.  882 

1340 

Holy  Grail  27 

Last  Tournament  64 

Pass,  of  Arthur  403 

Lover's  Tale  i  91 

781 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  195 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  139 

V.  of  Maddune  49 

Gareth  and  L.  1390 

Princess  Hi  274 

In  Mem.  xciv  10 

„  cxxii  6 

„        Ixxxv  53 

Princess,  Con.  48 

Love  thou  thy  land  10 

Aylmer's  Field  836 

Audley  Court  26 

Princess  ii  423 


Imbower    {See  also  Embower)    sUent  isle  i's  The  Lady 

of  Shalott.  L.  of  Shalott  i  17 

Imbower'd     /  vaults  of  piUar'd  palm,  Arabian  Nights  39 

Imbrashin'  (embracing)    /  an'  kissin'  aich  other —  Tomorrow  90 

Imitate     I's  God,  and  turns  her  face  To  every  land  On  a  Mourner  2 

Imitative    vague  desire  That  spurs  an  i  will.  In  Mem.  ex  20 

Immantled    /  in  ambrosial  dark,  „    Ixxxix  14 

Immeasurable    ToUing  in  i  sand,  Will  16 

As  one  who  feels  the  i  world.  Dedication  7 

the  i  heavens  Break  open  to  their  highest,  Spec,  of  Iliad  14 

/  ReaUty  !     Infinite  PersonaUty !  De  Prof.,  Human  C.  3 

backward,  forward,  in  the  i  sea,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  193 

Immemorial     Bound  in  an  i  intimacy,  Aylmer's  Field  39 

but  an  i  intimacy,  Wander'd  at  will,  „            136 

The  moan  of  doves  in  i  elms.  Princess  vii  221 

Immerging    i,  each,  his  urn  In  his  own  weU,  Tiresias  88 

Immersed    /  in  rich  foreshadowings  of  the  world,  Princess  vii  312 

But  when  the  Queen  i  in  such  a  trance,  Guinevere  401 

Imminent    Commingled  with  the  gloom  of  i  war,  Ded.  of  Idylls  13 

Immodesty    Accuse  her  of  the  least  i :  Geraint  and  E.  Ill 

Immolation    than  by  single  act  Of  i.  Princess  Hi  285 

Immort^    on  my  face  The  star-like  sorrows  of  i  eyes,      D.  of  F.  Women  91 

Thy  brothers  and  i  souls.  Love  thou  thy  land  8 

To  dweU  in  presence  of  i  youth,  /  age  beside  i  youth,  Tithonus  21 

and  plucks  The  mortal  soul  from  out  i  heU,  Lucretius  263 

And  happy  warriors,  and  i  names,  Princess  vi  93 

Strong  Son  of  God,  i  Love,  In  Mem.,  Pro.  1 

A  life  that  bears  i  fruit  In  those  great  offices  „          xl  18 

Or  am  I  made  i,  or  my  love  Mortal  once  more  ? '  Lover's  Tale  iv  79 

HeU  ?  if  the  souls  of  men  were  i.  Despair  99 

Thou  canst  not  prove  thou  art  i.  Ancient  Sage  62 

Immortality    feel  their  i  Die  in  their  hearts  The  Mermaid  29 

Me  only  cruel  i  Consumes :  Tithonus  5 

I  ask'd  thee,  '  Give  me  i.'  „      15 

length  of  days,  and  i  Of  thought,                    '  Lover's  Tale  i  105 

Impaled     The  King  i  him  for  his  piracy ;  Merlin  and  V.  569 

Impart    i  The  Ufe  that  almost  dies  in  me ;  In  Mem.  xviii  15 

Impassion'd    /  logic,  which  outran  The  hearer  „           cix  7 

Impearled    See  Dew-impearled 

Imperfect    Ah,  take  the  i  gift  I  bring,  „    Ixxxv  117 

accept  this  old  i  tale.  New-old,  To  the  Queen  ii  36 

Imperial    Serene,  i  Eleanore !  (repeat)  Elednore  81,  121 

come  and  go  In  thy  large  eyes,  i  Eleanore.  „                97 

And  in  the  i  palace  found  the  king.  Princess  i  113 

blazon'd  Uons  o'er  the  i  tent  Whispers  of  war,  „          v  9 

Has  given  our  Prince  his  own  i  Flower,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  4 

I  halls,  or  open  plain ;  In  Mem.  xcviii  29 
and  thine  /  mother  smile  again,  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  13 
Those  three  hundred  miUions  imder  one  I  sceptre 

now,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  117 

rhythm  sound  for  ever  of  I  Rome —  To  Virgil  32 
'  Sons,  be  welded  each  and  all,  Into  one  i 

whole.  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  37 

Some  /  Institute,  Rich  in  symbol.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  46 

Child,  those  i,  disimpassion'd  eyes  Demeter  and  P.  23 

and  in  her  soft  i  way  And  saying  gently :  The  Ring  267 

Imperial-moulded    O  i-m  form.  And  beauty  Guinevere  548 

Imperious     /,  and  of  haughtiest  lineaments.  Marr.  of  Geraint  190 

Implied     that  vague  fear  i  in  death ;  In  Mem.  xli  14 

Imply    That  to  begin  implies  to  end ;  Two  Voices  339 

Impolitic     As  ignorant  and  t  as  a  beast —  Columbus  128 

Impossible    Things  in  an  Aylmer  deem'd  i,  Aylmer's  Field  305 

Such  a  match  as  this !  /,  prodigious ! '  „            315 

And  swearing  men  to  vows  i,  Lancelot  and  E.  130 

Follows ;  but  him  I  proved  i ;  Lucretius  193 

Impotence     In  i  of  fancied  power.  A  Character  24 

Impotent    i  To  win  her  back  before  I  die —  Romney's  R.  117 

Impressions    took  FuU  easily  all  i  from  below,  Guinevere  642 

Imprison'd    Which  to  the  i  spirit  of  the  child.  Lover's  Tale  i  204 

Imprisoning    pillar'd  palm,  I  sweets,  Arabian  Nights  40 

Impulse  With  the  selfsame  i  wherewith  he  was  thrown      Mine  be  the  strength  3 

'  An  inner  i  rent  the  veil  Of  his  old  husk :  Two  Voices  10 

Impute    i  a  crime  Are  pronest  to  it,  and  i  Merlin  and  V.  825 

Imputing    Polluting,  and  i  her  whole  self,  „            803 

Inactive    lying  thus  i,  doubt  and  gloom.  Enoch  Arden  113 


Inane 


346 


Influence 


Inane    Ruining  along  the  illimitable  i, 
Inarticulate    idiotlike  it  seem'd,  With  i  rage, 
Inaudible    Alway  the  i  invisible  thought, 
Incense  (s)    Like  two  streams  of  i  free 
A  cloud  of  i  of  all  odour  steam'd 


Lucretius  40 

Enoch  Arden  640 

Lover's  Tale  ii  102 

Elednore  58 

Palace  of  Art  39 


And  that  sweet  i  rise  ?  '    For  that  sweet  i  rose  and 

never  f  ail'd,  „            44 

a  mist  Of  i  curl'd  about  her,  and  her  face  Com.  of  Arthur  288 

Roll'd  i,  and  there  past  along  the  hymns  „            464 

Absorbing  all  the  i  of  sweet  thoughts  Lover's  Tale  i  469 

Incense  (verb)    fear'd  To  i  the  Head  once  more ;  Princess  vii  17 

Incense-fume    clouded  with  the  grateful  i-f  Tiresias  183 

Incest    crowded  couch  of  i  in  the  warrens  of  the 

poor.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  224 

Inch     Why  t  by  i  to  darkness  crawl  ?  Two  Voices  200 

only  near'd  Her  husband  i  by  i,  Aylmer's  Field  807 

strain  to  make  an  i  of  room  For  their  sweet  selves  Lit.  Squabbles  9 

in  the  pause  she  crept  an  i  Nearer,  Guinevere  527 

Incited    each  i  each  to  noble  deeds.  Merlin  and  V.  414 

Incline    over  rainy  mist  i's  A  gleaming  crag  Two  Voices  188 

Till  all  thy  life  one  way  i  With  one  wide  Will  On  a  Mourner  19 

Incompetent    must  I  be  /  of  memory :  Two  Voices  375 

Incomplete    While  man  and  woman  are  still  i,     On  one  who  effec.  E.  M.  1 

Inconsiderate     And  like  an  i  boy.  In  Mem.  cxxii  14 

Incorporate    And  grow  i  into  thee.  „               ii  16 

The  i  blaze  of  sun  and  sea.  Lover's  Tale  i  409 

Incorruptible    have  bought  A  mansion  i.  Deserted  H.  21 

Increase  (s)    for  the  good  and  i  of  the  world. 

(repeat)  Edwin  Morris  44,  51,  92 

The  fruitful  hours  of  still  i ;  In  Mem.  xlvi  10 

Increase  (verb)    While  the  stars  bm-n,  the  moons  i.  To  J.  S.  71 

watch  her  harvest  ripen,  her  herd  i,  Maud  III  vi  25 

Increased  lest  brute  Power  be  i,  Poland  6 
But  day  i  from  heat  to  heat,  Mariana  in  the  S.  39 
light  i  With  freshness  in  the  dawning  east.  Two  Voices  404 
and  with  each  The  year  i.  Gardener's  D.  199 
Thy  latter  days  i  with  pence  Will  Water.  219 
His  beauty  still  with  his  years  i.  The  Victim  34 
For  them  the  light  of  life  i,  In  Mem.,  Con.  74 
i.  Upon  a  pastoral  slope  as  fair,  Maud  I  xviii  18 
7  Geraint's,  who  heaved  his  blade  aloft,  Marr.  of  Geraint  572 
that  ruling  has  i  Her  greatness  and  her  self- 
content.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  7 

Increasing    Which  with  i  might  doth  forward  flee  Mine  be  the  strength  5 

I  doubt  not  thro'  the  ages  one  i  purpose  runs,  Locksley  Hall  137 

and  Fame  again  7  gave  me  use.  Merlin  and  V.  494 

Incredible    spires  Prick'd  with  i  pinnacles  into  heaven.  Holy  Grail  423 

Incredulous    See  Half-incredulous 

In-crescent     Between  the  i-c  and  de-crescent  moon,  Gareth  and  L.  529 

Ind    sways  the  floods  and  lands  From  7  to  7,  Buonaparte  4 

Indecent    See  Ondecent 

Indeed    soldier  of  the  Cross  ?  it  is  he  and  he  i!  Happy  12 

Life,  which  is  Life  i.  Prog,  of  Spring  117 

India    all  the  sultry  palms  of  7  known,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  14 

Where  some  refulgent  sunset  of  7  Milton  13 

upon  the  topmost  roof  our  banner  in  7  blew.  Def.  of  Lucknow  72 

For  he — your  7  was  his  Fate,  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  21 

Queen,  and  Empress  of  7,  On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  6 

Indian    (See  also  Hinjian,  West-Indian)    7  reeds  blown 

from  his  silver  tongue.  The  Poet  13 

The  throne  of  7  Cama  slowly  sail'd  Palace  of  Art  115 

Fire- hollo  wing  this  in  7  fashion,  Enoch  Arden  569 

My  lady's  7  kinsman  unannounced  Aylmer's  Field  190 

My  lady's  7  kinsman  rushing  in,  „            593 

less  from  7  craft  Than  beelike  instinct  hiveward,  Princess  iv  198 

yet  the  mom  Breaks  hither  over  7  seas,  In  Mem.  xxvi  14 

gazing  like  The  7  on  a  still-eyed  snake.  Lover's  Tale  ii  189 

Praise  to  our  7  brothers,  Def.  of  Lucknow  69 

not  That  I  isle,  but  our  most  ancient  East  Columbus  80 

7  warriors  dream  of  ampler  hunting  grounds  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  69 

To  England  under  7  skies.  Hands  all  Round  17 

7,  Australasian,  African,  On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  60 

Will  my  7  brother  come  ?  Romneu's  R.  143 

wail  of  baby- wife.  Or  I  widow ;  Akbar's  Dream  197 

Indiei    Of  the  Ocean — of  the  I — Admirals  we —  Columbus  31 


Indies  (continued)     Rome's  Vicar  in  our  7  ?  Columbus  195 

Indifference    Attain  the  wise  i  of  the  wise ;  A  Dedication  8 

And  Love  the  i  to  be.  In  Mem.  xxvi  12 

Indignant    But  thy  strong  Hours  i  work'd  their  wills,  Tithonus  18 

On  either  side  the  hearth,  i ;  Aylmer's  Field  288 

and  she  returned  7  to  the  Queen ;  (repeat)       Marr.  of  Geraint  202,  414 

Indignantly    Gareth  spake  and  all  i,  Gareth  and  L.  1386 

And  yet  he  answer'd  half  i :  Merlin  and  V.  404 

Indignation    What  heats  of  i  when  we  heard  Princess  t>  375 

her  white  neck  Was  rosed  with  i:  „      vi  344 

Indistinct    muffled  booming  i  Of  the  confused  floods,         Lover's  Tale  i  637 
masses  Of  thundershaken  columns  i,  „  ii  66 

Individual  (adj.)    And  i  freedom  mute;  You  ask  me  why,  etc.  20 

Matures  the  i  form.  Love  thou  thy  land  40 

There — closing  like  an  i  life —  Love  and  Duty  79 

Individual  (s)     And  the  i  withers,  Locksley  Hall  142 

Individuality    Distinct  in  individualities,  Princess  vii  291 

Indolent    O  you  chorus  of  i  reviewers.  Irresponsible,  i 

reviewers,  Hendecasyllabics  1 

Waking  laughter  in  i  reviewers.  „  8 

All  that  chorus  of  i  reviewers.  ,,  12 

believe  me  Too  presimiptuous,  i  reviewers.  „  16 

Indoor    an'  a  trouble  an'  plague  wi'  i.  Spinster's  S's.  50 

Indrawing    Like  some  old  wreck  on  some  i  sea,  St.  Telemachus  44 

Induce    persecute  Opinion,  and  i  a  time  You  ask  me  why,  etc.  18 

Indue    His  eyes  To  i  his  lustre ;  Lover's  Tale  i  424 

my  love  should  ne'er  i  the  front  And  mask  of  Hate,  „  774 

Ineffable    Toil  and  i  weariness,  Def.  of  Lucknow  90 

Beyond  all  dreams  of  Godlike  womanhood,  7  beauty,  Tiresias  55 

Inexorable    No  saint — i — ^no  tenderness —  Princess  v  515 

fall  the  battle-axe,  unexhausted,  i.  Boddicea  56 

Infancy     In  the  silken  sail  of  i,  Arabian  Nights  2 

O'er  the  deep  mind  of  dauntless  i.  Ode  to  Memory  36 

With  those  old  faces  of  our  i  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  66 

To  ailing  wife  or  wailing  i  Aylmer's  Field  177 

flaxen  ringlets  of  our  infancies  Wander'd,  Lover's  Tale  i  234 

As  was  our  childhood,  so  our  i,  „  249 

Infant  (adj.)    Or  an  i  civilisation  be  ruled  with  rod  or 

with  knout  ?  Maud  I  iv  47 

Some  hold  that  he  hath  swallow'd  i  flesh,  Gareth  and  L.  1342 

You  claspt  our  i  daughter,  heart  to  heart.  Romney's  R.  77 

Infant  (s)    The  trustful  i  on  the  knee !  Supp.  Confessions  41 

Which  mixing  with  the  i's  blood.  „  61 

clear  Delight,  the  i's  dawning  year.  „  67 

Thou  leddest  by  the  hand  thine  i  Hope.  Ode  to  Memory  30 

And  laid  the  feeble  i  in  his  arras ;  Enoch  Arden  152 

more  than  i's  in  their  sleep.  Princess  vii  54 

Shall  we  deal  with  it  as  an  i  ?  Boddicea  33 

An  i  crying  in  the  night :  An  i  crying  for  the  light :  In  Mem.  liv  18 

shaping  an  i  ripe  for  his  birth,  Maud  I  iv  34 

gave  Thy  breast  to  ailing  i's  in  the  night,  Demeter  and  P.  56 

Infidel  (adj.)    Have  I  crazed  myself  over  their  horrible  i 

writings  ?  Despair  87 

Infidel  (s)    that  large  i  Your  Omar;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  36 

1  loathe  the  very  name  of  i.  Akbar's  Dream  70 

Infinite    (See  also  Finite-infinite)     Because  the  scale  is  i.         Two  Voices  93 
and  serve  that  7  Within  us,  as  without,  Akbar's  Dream  145 

'Mid  onward-sloping  motions  i  Palace  of  Art  247 

and  i  torment  of  flies,  Def.  of  Lucknow  82 

And  shatter'd  phantom  of  that  i  One,  De  Prof,  Two  G.  47 

7  Ideality  !     Immeasurable  Reality !    7  Personality !     „    Human  C.  2 
I  should  call  on  that  7  Love  that  has  served  us  so  well  ? 
I  cmelty  rather  that  made  everlasting  Hell,  Despair  95 

Infinity    Like  emblems  of  i.  The  trenched  Ode  to  Memory  103 

In  flagrante    Caught  i  /—what's  the  Latin  word  ? —      Walk,  to  the  Mail  34 

Inflame    twelve-divided  concubine  To  i  the  tribes  :  Aylmer's  Field  760 

Infiamed    Uke  a  rising  moon,  7  with  wrath :  Princess  i  60 

a  horn,  i  the  knights  At  that  dishonour  Last  Tournament  434 

Inflate     7  themselves  with  some  insane  delight.  Merlin  and  V.  834 

Influence    self-same  i  ControUeth  all  the  soul  Elednore  114 

'  Who  forged  that  other  i,  Two  Voices  283 

To  the  i  of  mild-minded  melancholy ;  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  64 

and  use  Her  i  on  the  mind,  Will  Water.  12 

sacred  from  the  blight  Of  ancient  i  and  scorn.  Princess  ii  169 

Twice  as  magnetic  to  sweet  i's  Of  earth  „        v  191 


Influence 


347 


Influence  {coiUmmd)    By  many  a  varying  i  and  so  long.        Princess  vi  267 

A  kuidlier  i  reign'd ;  ^_       ^-^^  20 

Or  in  tlieir  silent  i  as  they  sat,  "    (j„^  15 

Mourn  for  the  man  of  amplest  i.  Ode  <^  Well.  27 

Let  random  1 5  glance  /„  ji/^,  ^^^  3 

Inauence-ncn    t-r  to  soothe  and  save,  /rn- 14 

Infold    -See  Self-infold  "    **'*'^  ^* 

Inform    beauty  doth  i  Stillness  with  love,  Day-Dm    Sleep  B  15 

early  risen  she  goes  to  i  The  Princess :  PHncew  Hi  ti2 

Inform'd    /  the  pillar'd  Parthenon,  Freedom  3 

Infuse     Desire  in  me  to  i  my  tale  of  love  Princess  v  240 

Should  i  Kich  atar  in  the  bosom  of  the  rose.  Lover's  Tale  i  269 

Ingrav'n    (See  also  Engraven)    rind  i  '  For  the  most  fair,'  CEnone  72 

Ingress    for  your  t  here  Upon  the  skirt  Princess  v  218 

Ingroove    be  free  To  i  itself  with  that  which  flies.  Love  thou  thy  land  46 

Inhabitant    hker  to  the  t  Of  some  clear  planet  Princess  ii  35 

Inherit    Our  sons  i  us :  our  looks  are  strange  :  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  73 

The  meek  shall  t  the  earth '  The  Dreamer  2 

Inheritance    some  i  Of  such  a  life,  a  heart.  Bed.  of  Idylls  32 

And  standeth  seized  of  that  i  Gareth  and  L.  359 

Tnh  Jf"ii  f  ^-^^  ""T^  'S'i^  ''  u  ,    ■    .  ^«^^««  "'^d  E.  18 
inherited  (adj.)    heap'd  the  whole  t  sm  On  that  huge 

scapegoat  ^^^  j  ^  •  ■  •  ^ 

But  if  sm  be  sm,  not  t  fate,  xhe  Wreck  85 

tojem^    golden  yolks  Imbedded  and  i  ■  judley  Court  26 
Injured    iSee  Seeming-injured 

jtajnrira    life-long  i  burning  unavenged,  Geratn<  an<i  £.  696 

Mqt    Draw  the  vast  eyehd  of  an  i  cloud,  Merlin  and  V.  634 

Maid    Distmct  with  vmd  stars  1,  Arabian  Nights  90 
Inland    And  ripples  on  an  t  mere  ?                                 Supp.  Confessions  131 

Crunsons  over  an  t  mere,  '^^          £/eanore  42 

From  many  an  i  town  and  haven  large,  (Enone  117 

Tn}J    A   '""HSta^  ^Jf^^  <i'^«  ^^1«  Was  seen  far  t,  Lotos-Eaters  21 

Inky    deep  t  Of  braided  blooms  unmown,  Arabian  Nights  28 

SniL^   r  "^.f  S'^  ^""^  f'  ^"^^^^  Mariana  in  the  S.  8 

innungled    /  with  Heaven's  azure  wavermgly,  Gareth  and  L  936 

Inmost     Upon  the  mooned  domes  aloof  In  i  Bagdat,  Arabian  Nights  128 

flLn  1^  '^'^' .""  •'  uf ^^^°  "f *"       .  ^ielwore  89 

JJead  sounds  at  night  come  from  the  i  hiUs,  (Enone  249 

tT^    r^°  i!"*f  '^^  *-^  ^  pleasure  raZ;tiMi,  Oafc  173 

Ihen  fled  she  to  her  t  bower,  Godiva  42 

clamour  thicken'd,  mixt  with  t  terms  Princess  ii  446 
Lame  m  long  breezes  rapt  from  i  south  And  blown 

tot  north;  ^^  ^gj 

As  some  rare  little  rose,  a  piece  of  i  Horticultural  " 

„  ^'               .     ,      ,   r,            .  Hendecasyllabics  19 

wordy  snar^  to  track  Suggestion  to  her  i  cell.  /„  Mem.  xcv  32 

And  gulf  d  h>s  gnefs  in  i  sleep ;  pauas  and  E.  516 

hke  a  little  star  Were  drunk  into  the  i  blue.  Lover's  Tale  i  309 

bpoke  loudly  even  mto  my  i  heart  428 

streams  Running  far  on  within  its  i  halls,  "            523 

For  all  the  secret  of  her  i  heart,  "            533 

tight  chain  within  my  i  frame  Was  riven  in  twain :  "            595 

Woman  to  her  %  heart,  and  woman  to  her  tender  " 

T„„     ,i^*'  7     „.     ,      .     ,  ,.  ,      ,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  50 

Inn    {See  also  Hinn)    And  hghted  at  a  ruin'd  i,  and  said :  Vision  of  Sin  62 

tha  mun  goa  fur  it  down  to  the  i.  North.  Cobbler  8 

like  old-world  I  s  that  take  Some  warrior  Pro.  to  Gen.  Handey  13 

^xr-.T        •  °^^  of  flauntmg  vines  Unto  mine  i  eye.  Ode  to  Memory  49 

With  an  I  voice  the  nver  ran.  Dying  Swan  5 

Springing  done  With  a  shrill  i  sound,  Mermaid  20 

All  the  %,  all  the  outer  world  of  pain  If  7  were  loved  5 

An  1  impulse  rent  the  veil  Of  his  old  husk  :  Two  Voices  10 

nver  seaward  flow  From  the  i  land :  Lotos-Eaters  14 

JNor  darken  what  the  i  spirit  sings,  C  S  22 

Gross  darkness  of  the  i  sepulchre  Is  not  so  deadly 

^^^'^^v,  .    .      u    u       ,.  D.  of  F.  Women  <dl 

green  that  streak  the  white  Of  the  first  snowdrop's  i 

leaves ;  Princess  v  197 
when  sundown  skirts  the  moor  An  i  trouble  I  behold.     In  Mem.  xli  18 

That  stir  the  spuit's  i  deeps,  j-lii  10 

No  I  vileness  that  we  dread  ?  "             Zi  4 

His  »  day  can  never  die,  "       ij^n^ 


Instinct 


Last  Tournament  366 

Lover's  Tale  i  112 

ii  191 

95 

Def.  of  Liwknow  15 

Heavy  Brigade  33 

Pelleas  and  E.  266 

Last  Tournametit  31 

218 

291 

293 


Inner  (continued)    Made  dull  his  i,  keen  his  outer 
eye 

But  thou  didst  sit  alone  in  the  i  house, 

vessel,  as  with  i  life,  Began  to  heave 
Innermost    Flash'd  thro'  my  eyes  into  my  i  brain. 

Death  in  our  i  chamber, 
Tnniskillens     Brave  /  and  Greys 
Innocence    Affronted  with  his  fulsome  i  ? 

'  Take  thou  the  jewels  of  this  dead  i, 

Our  one  white  day  of  /  hath  past, 

small  damosels  white  as  7,  In  honour  of  poor  I 

left  the  gems  with  7  the  Queen  Lent  to  the  King  and  7 

Which  lives  with  blindness,  or  plain  i  Of 
nature,  SisUrs  (E.  and  E.)  249 

/  seethed  m  her  mother's  mflk,  VastJet^ 

^fi  rf?i'-^-    ^^^^.r^^  '°  ^"^  '  ^®^'*'  ^^PP-  Confessions  52 

The  httle  »  sou  flitted  away  ''^^och  Arden  270 

nightly  wirer  of  their  t  hare  Falter  Aylmer's  Field  490 

for  her  fresh  and  t  eyes  Had  such  a  star  691 
and  reach  its  fatling  i  arms  And  lazy  lingering 

ThJ!^^^'  i*.i    u  .  .       -..•  J  Princess  vi  138 

Then  as  a  little  helpless  t  bird,  Xa^^.z^^  ^^  ^.  394 

•WUl  the  child  kill  me  with  her  i  talk  ? '  Guinevere  214 

Why  shou  d  she  weep  ?     O  t  of  spirit-  Z<,i;er's  Tale  i  737 

Being  guiltless,  as  an  e  prisoner,  707 

Theii-  i  hospitalities  quench'd  in  blood,  Columbus  176 

a  heedless  and  i  bnde—  ^he  Wreck  13 

and  drive  7  cattle  under  thatch,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  96 

/  maidens  Garruous  chddren.  Merlin  and  the  G.  55 

Innocent  (s)     Themselves  had  wrought  on  many  an  i.       Geraint  and  E.  178 

Iimocent-arch    So  t-a,  so  cunning-simple,  Lilian  13 

Innumerable    (See  also  Numerable-innumerable)    In 

copse  and  fern  Twinkled  the  i  ear  and  tail.  The  Brook  134 

And  sated  with  the  i  rose  p^iru^ess  Hi  122 

And  murmuring  of  i  bees.'  ^j^-  222 

bark  and  blacken  i,  Boddicea  13 

/,  pitiless,  passionless  eyes,  Mavd  I  xviii  38 

Thro'  knots  and  loops  and  folds  i  Lancelot  and  E.  439 

lymg  bounden  there  In  darkness  thro'  i  hours  Holy  Grail  677 

are  these  but  symbols  of  i  man,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  195 

Innumerous    A  hspmg  of  the  i  leaf  and  dies.  Princess  v  14 

Inosculated    (For  so  they  said  themselves)  i ;  m  39 

Inquire    Who  scarcely  darest  to  i  7^  M^m.  iv  7 

Inquisition    To  these  I  dogs  and  the  devildoms  of  Spain.'      The  Revenge  12 

Inrunning    (See  also  Deep-inrunning)    And  at  the  i 

of  a  Uttle  brook  Sat  by  the  river  Lancelot  and  E.  1388 

5°^*°?^       TxA^f  themselves  with  some  i  delight,  Merlin  and  V.  834 

Insamty    With  animal  heat  and  dire  i  ?  Lucretius  163 

Roll'd  again  back  on  itself  in  the  tides  of  a  civic  i !  Beautiful  City  4 

Inscription    And  some  i  ran  along  the  front.  Princess  i  212 

How  saw  you  not  the  i  on  the  gate,  ,^      n  194 

'  for  that  i  there,  I  think  no  more  of  deadly  lurks  "          225 

I  urged  the  fierce  i  on  the  gate,  "     ,-,v  147 

^^1  'r  ^r^  ^^^M  ?"^/  ^^^^)  Talking  Oak  69 

The  liglitning  flash  of  ^  and  of  bird,  Enoch  Arden  575 

Or  eagle  s  wmg  or  ^'5  eye ;  In  Me,n.  cxxiv  6 
7  s  of  an  hour,  that  hourly  work  their  brother  i 

T    •  •j^'z""^'.!,    r.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  2(^ 

Insipid    /  as  the  Queen  upon  a  card ;  Aylmer's  Fidd  28 

Insolence    blustering  I  know  not  what  Of  i  "^  Princess  v  397 

Smelling  of  musk  and  of  i,  j^^ud  I  vi  45 

Insolent    /,  brainless,  heartless !  Aylmer's  Field  368 

/scullion  :  /  of  thee  ?  Sareth  and  L.  976 

Inspiration    Ancient  founts  of  i  well  Locksleu  Hnll  18S 

Instance    That  wilderness  of  single  i'5.  i^S'sFild  m 

But  Vivien,  deeming  Merlm  overborne  By  i,  Merlin  and  V .  mi 

^K    {,7,'«  ti"?  ^oi-ds.      .  Gareth  and  L.\2&Z 

Tncten     hr     i^lM^'l'  ^^"^  '  reverence,  Lancelot  and  E.  418 

SJflf  '^■^^"'i'sh'd  plume  Brushing  his  i,  Geraint  and  E.  360 

Instinct    of  the  moral  i  would  she  prate  Palace  of  Art  205 

And  that  mystenous  ^  wholly  died.  Enoch  Irdpr,  'i?R 

less  from  Indian  craft  Than  beelike  i  PrintessZ  199 

a  dearer  being,  all  dipt  In  Angel  i's,  „       vU  321 


Instinctive 


Instinctive    his  quick  i  hand  Causht  at  thn  hiu  i^ 

Institute    their  /  Of  which  he  Sthe  patrol*'  ^'"''■■o'f  ^''"^''^  ^09 

The  patient  leaders  of  theiTf  TaLffi^^^  ^^^'^'^^'^^  Pro.^ 

I  fenced  It  round  with  gallant  t'5,  "             ^^n 

Some  Impenal 7,  Rich  in  symbol  n     t  ^  r,"r.-      '"■^^^ 

Insufficiencies    temperate  eyes  On  glorious  i  Jnh.QVictormA& 

Insult    I  heard  sounds  oft,  shame,  a~o4  n    ^%^,T- ''''M 

We  brook  no  further  i  but  are  gone  '    ^'  ^-  "i^-  ^'''"%]^ 

'I  wiU  avenge  this  i,  noble  Queen    '  m      -P^^^^^s."*  342 

Avenging  this  great  i  done  the  Queen  '  '"■  "^  ^^"""'"^  ?i^ 

Remember  that  great  i  done  the  Qu^n,'  "                f  ^ 

Crave  pardon  for  that  i  done  the  Queen  "                ^U 

your  wretched  dress,  A  wretched  i  on  vA„  ^      •"        ,       ^^^ 

Oaths,  i,  filth,  and  monstrous  blaspheS'  P^""'''^  7^^.^-  f^S 

Inswathe    I  the  fulness  of  Etemitv  ^           '  ^V''  "•(  ^'■^^«'"  ^^^ 

Inswathed    /  sometimes  in  wanderme  mi«f  a^'J  ^'^^  ^  ^^^ 

mteUect    thorough-edged  i  To  Jart  EEr'om  crime-  '''  ''•  Vt^  1' 

Thy  kingly  z  shall  feed,                        "om  cnme,  Isabel  U 

All-subtilising  i  •  Uear-headed  friend  20 

Or  ev'n  for  i  to  reach  Thro'  memory  ^'^  ^^"^-  ^^""^  ^^ 

Seraphic  i  and  force  To  seize  and  throw  "              '"'''■  ^l 

T  ^  I^l  ""f"  \  '^*',"^*'  ^^^  ^new  thee  keen  In  i  "                "^  f 

Intellectual    And  i  throne                   -^^^^^  wt,  cxitiQ 

bow'd  myself  down  as  a  slave  to  his  i  throne  rl  "^r/'^^la 

InteUigence    The  great  I's  fair  That  rana^  ,•    ,^**  '^^''^^'^  66 

Intelligible  From  over-finenis  not  i  ^  iff  ^■''^-  ^^^^"  21 
Intend  (-See  also  Intind)  The  th&sis  wh,Vh  th^  a  ■  ^^^J,^^  "■'^d  V.  796 
Intense    '  Or  will  one  beam  be  iS      ^^  *^^  "^""^^^  '"     ^'"^  ^''^^^  338 

when  fraught  With  a  passion  so'z  m  "  ^  r  r  •  ■  ^ 

Intensity    Sonietimes,  with  most  i  Gazing,  ^'^if/^/^  "  59 

Intent  (adj.)    have  been  i  On  that  veU'd  picture-  r    a  ^^^'^^^1 

I  kept  mine  own  7  on  her                    picture—  Garrfewer's  D.  269 

Intent  (s)    almost  ere  I  knew  mine  own  i  ^  Pnncm  «  442 

eye  seem'd  full  Of  a  kind  i  to  me  Garrfmer'j  7>.  146 

But  after  ten  slow  weeks  her  fix'd  L  r^t  •   ^l!! 

fur  I  noilwaiiys  knaw'd  'is  i  •  "*  -^^^  345 

Intercl^e^  angels  rising  and  descending  met  With  i  ^""^  ^"^  ^^ 

And  frequent  i  of  foul  and  fair,  ^^"^f  "^  f '"'  1|4 

Interest    To  close  the  Vs  of  all  r     ■'''"^^^  ^rdew  533 

From  all  a  closer  i  flourish'd  ud  '^"  ''^^  ^'^'^^  ^6 

catch  The  far-off  i  of  tears  ?  Princess  vii  113 

Interfused    And  glory  of  broad  waters  ,•  r       {^J^em.  i  8 

Interlaced    shadol'dVots  of  arSs^  ''  ^^/'^  ^f  7  401 

Interlock'd    My  lady  with  her  finaer^  i  >  Palace  of  Art  51 

Intermitted    te^old  dearer  bv  thfnow.r  Of  •  Jylmer's  Field  m 

Interpret    True  love  t^'-r^hLlonr   ^^  '  "'"^^ '    ^'^^^offerai^t  Sll 

^       ^vith  such  a  stupid  heart  To  "ear  and  eve  '    r      ^'^^^'^.188 

Interpretation    a  to^e  To  blare  fte'own %!!■ '  Lancelot  and  E.  0^2 

Interpreter    7  between  the  Gods  and  men  p  ■"          .HI 

How,  in  the  mouths  of  base  i's,          '  i/w"''''*j  ?f  ^E 

Interpreting    she  broke  out  i  my  thoughts-  "^'p*'?  ""'^  ^t  Z^f 

streak'd  or  starr'd  at  i's  With  fafunn  hi^r.1.  ^noch  Arden  909 

sick  with  love.  Fainted  atV'f        ^    """^  ■^''^^'-  *  ^«^«  *'  404 

thence  at  i's  A  low  bell  tolling.  "          .?46 

Intervital    spirit's  folded  bloom  Thro' aU  its  i  rfoom  t    a}         7*??o 

Intunacy     Bound  in  an  immemorial!               ^     "  .  ^f  ^^f ""i. ?^  ^^ 

Bound,  but  an  immemorial  i  ^ylmer's  Field  39 

Intind  (intend)    an'  she  didn't  i  to  desavp  ^"           ^^^ 

Intolerable    became  Anguish  i                   '  r       tomorrow  59 

Intolerant    The  menacing  poison  of  i  priests  J/T'"  *  ^"^*  "  ^^ 

Intonation    a  tuneful  to^Ge,  Such  happw'  ^kbar's  Bream  165 

Intone    L)elicate-handed  priest  i-         ^^^  ^'  A mphion  18 

Intricate    wanderings  Of  this  most  i  Universe  j''^/  ''*'"  ^J 

In^ion    hunter  rued  His  rash  i,  manhke  J-  ^^«'-«^«'-  3 

Intuitive    i  decision  of  a  hrioht  An^i  tK^^     u    j     ,  .  Princess  iv  204 
Inutterable    KiU'd  wl  i  uSdlkiei^"""^^"'^^  "^^'t^K-       '"'^^  ^^ 

^""^t,  '  /;y«"  ^'b  a  ^««e  yom- holy  woe  ^*'"^*'*  T^  ^^  «86 

Invaded    •  Our  land  i,  'sdeath'           ^  „    ^^  •^-  S.  7 

Princess  v  276 


348 


Iron 


Invaded  (co«<»W)    for  whose  love  the  Roman  C^sar 
farst  7  Bntam,  But  we  beat  him  back.  As  this 
great  Prince  i  us,  ' 

Was  mine  a  mood  To  be  i  rudely 
Invalid    t,  since  my  will  Seal'd  not  the  bond— 
Invective    a  tide  of  fierce  7  seem'd  to  wait 
Invent    the  years  i;  Each  month  is  various 

iiut  when  did  woman  ever  yet  i  ?  ' 
Invented    Was  this  fair  charm  i  by  yourself  ? 
S3i'    ^  MiGHTY-MotJTH'D  i  of  harmonies. 
Inverted    he  heard  his  pnest  Preach  an  i  scripture 
Invested    Shpt  round,  and  in  the  dark  /you  ' 

Inveterately    Time  Were  nothing,  so  i  ' 

Invidious    Who  breaks  his  birth's  i  bar 
Inviolable    a  doubtful  lord  To  bind  them  by  i  vows 
Inviolate     And  compass'd  by  the  i  sea  '       ^  ' 

Nor  ever  drank  the  i  spring 
Invisible    And  praise  the  i  universal  Lord 
Alway  the  inaudible  i  thought  ' 

T     ./but  deathless,  waiting  still  The  edict 

£2S    Tu\  T  T^  '"'i^"*'  ^'^^  *^e  Sultan's  pardon 
Invoke    That  which  we  dare  i  to  bless  -  !'<''""" 

rTT.^'^,l'°"'u^^'^''^.  *  i^alf-consent  i  In  stiUness, 
lo  the  other  shore,  i  in  thee  """irao, 

My  mind  i  yourself  the  nearest  thing 
Involving    worlds  before  the  man  I  our^ 
inwaxd    from  the  outward  to  the  i  brought 

More  I  than  at  night  or  morn  ' 

L^^f'f ^  f  would  pass  Outward',  or  i  to  the  hall 
the  wIlP"^  PeUam's  chapel  wide  And  i  to 

the  rest  Were  crumpled  i's.    Dead  !— 

With  an  ancient  melody  Of  an  i  agony. 

Ihat  heat  of  i  evidence, 

'Weep,  weeping  dulls  the  i  pain.' 

tv  n  now  we  hear  with  i  strife 

Again  m  deeper  i  whispers  '  lost ! ' 

VVith  I  yelp  and  restless  forefoot  plies 

My  «  sap,  the  hold  I  have  on  earth 

address'd  More  to  the  i  than  the  outward  ear, 

uead  of  some  i  agony— is  it  so  ? 
Inwoven    dusky  strand  of  Death  i  here 
Inwrrapt    7  tenfold  in  slothful  shame 
r^®^*^!.®.    *J^°^  lovelier,  nobler  then  ') 
Inwrought    diaper'd  VVith  i  floweis 
Ionian    Than  all  the  valleys  of  7  hills 

And  there  the  7  father  of  the  rest ; 
10  t  amp     'It  '—and  these  diamonds-^ 

Ihis  very  ring  7  t  ? 

IT^  ^^!?  ^^  '  ^J '  ^"^  ^^  best  beloved, 
and  cned  '  I  see  him,  1 1  It' 

?f !  *?n°^*^^,;// '  *°  the  heart  Of  Miriam ; 
/  ^  aU  is  well  then.'    Muriel  fled, 
lou  love  me  still  '7  t.' 

e^ven  Ihat  ^/.' '  f^  ^^^^  ^*^^*  "^^  ^eart, 
TrS«  !u  n./r'  '^'^^e  *bree  sweet  Italian  word^ 
Iran    Alia  caU'd  In  old  7  the  Sun  of  Love  ?  ' 

Ire    The'nTJnr  ""^^  ^ ■•'  ^^I'  b"*  I  know  it- 
i.l^J^   plaintive  cry  jarr'd  on  her  i  ■ 

Ireland    oaihng  from  7,'  y  

Iris  (prismatic  colours)    ^  pVianrroc tt,    u       •  ,  , ,  ,    Last  Tournament  555 

TlTdrcWTa  night  oKS  °^^  '^  ^'^''    ^"^^^^^^  ^'^  ^^ 

Iris  (flag-flower)    gUded  winding  under  ranks  Of  i  Princess  in  27 

^^Tst^f^'v?*^'^^     Bu'tligh™t7biVtit       '^^^--24 

lrish%\f  bTai^atlVai?^?^^^^^^^^      .  .  i'^^^^-  o^efZ'^'T'! 

Irish  Bog    aisierrrkavtherhvidXSli  Last  Tournament  m 

Iron   adj.)     One  show'd  an  ionZto^^  '  Tomorrow  72 

Rangis  of  ghmrert^VaStfth'S"""       i>  f/^^^^^'  ^? 
Which  men  caU'd  AiSis  in  those  i  yeS  •  "^      ^^oTnm  35 


Marr.  of  Geraint  746 
iowr's  Ta/e  i  678 
Princess  v  398 
i«  472 
Two  Fotces  73 
Princess  ii  391 
MerZm  awd  V.  540 
if i7<o»  1 
Aylmer's  Field  44 
Princess  iv  404 
<?are<A  an<Z  Z.  227 
7re  Mem.  Ixiv  5 
Last  Tournament  688 
To  the  Queen  36 
In  Mem.  xc  2 
Oci«  Inter.  Exhib.  3 
Lover's  Tale  ii  102 
160 
lfaM<i  7  XX  38 
7w  Mem.  cxxiv  1 
Princess  Hi  191 
7w  il/em.  carara:  9 

Princess  iv  450 

i;n  82 

7«  i/em.  Ixxxiv  40 

ilferZm  and  F.  300 

Epilogue  26 

Elednore  4 

Mariana  in  the  S.  58 

Gareth  and  L.  311 

^oZto  a?Mi  Balan  406 

TAe  -Bin^  454 

Claribel  7 

Two  Foices  284 

To  y.  -S.  40 

Love  thou  thy  land  53 

Enoch  Arden  716 

Lucretius  45 

Lover's  Tale  i  166 

721 

To  JF.  a-.  Brookfield  10 

Ifawtf  7  aww'  60; 

Palace  of  Art  2Q2, 

Lover's  Tale  i  458 

Arabian  Nights  149 

OEnone  2 

Palace  of  Art  137 

Tfe  .Rinj?  70 

134 

210 

223 

234 

271 

291 

397 

„      406 

Ahbar's  Dream  87 

89 

Princess  iv  393 

Last  Tournament  555 


Iron 


349 


Isle 


Iron  (adj.)  (continued)    A  grazing  i  collar  grinds  my 

neck ;  St.  S.  Stylites  117 

7  jointed,  supple-sinew'd,  they  shall  dive,  Locksley  Hall  169 
Paled  at  a  sudden  twitch  of  Ms  i  mouth ;                   Aylmer's  Field  732 

crush  her  pretty  maiden  fancies  dead  In  i  gauntlets:  Princess  i  89 

Binds  me  to  speak,  and  O  that  i  will,  „    n  202 

Nor  would  I  %ht  with  t  laws,  „      iv  75 

Forgotten,  rusting  on  his  t  hills,  „     v  146 

he  clash'd  His  i  palms  together  with  a  cry ;  „        354 

There  dwelt  an  i  nature  in  the  grain :  „      in  50 

Her  i  will  was  broken  in  her  mind ;  „  118 
in  the  Vestal  entry  shriek'd  The  virgin  marble  under 

i  heels ;  „        351 

and  saw  Thee  woman  thro'  the  crust  of  i  moods  „  vii  342 

O  i  nerve  to  true  occasion  true.  Ode  on  Well.  37 

Till  one  that  sought  but  Duty's  i  crown  „          122 

Their  ever-loyal  i  leader's  fame,  „          229 

Or  seal'd  within  the  i  hills  ?  In  Mem.  Ivi  20 

But  that  remorseless  i  hour  Made  cypress  „    Ixxxiv  14 

An  i  welcome  when  they  rise :  „            xc  8 

and  clangs  Its  leafless  ribs  and  i  horns  „        cvii  12 

That  makes  you  tyrants  in  your  t  skies,  Maud  I  xviii  37 

That  an  i  tjTanny  now  shoiild  bend  or  cease,  „      III  vi  20 

Across  the  i  grating  of  her  cell  Beat,  Holy  Grail  81 
The  last  hard  footstep  of  that  i  crag ;                         Pass,  of  Arthur  447 

butted  with  the  shuddering  War-thunder  of  i  rams ;  Tiresias  100 


Brass  mouths  and  i  lungs 

And  I  clash  with  an  i  Truth, 
Iron  (s)    clad  in  i  burst  the  ranks  of  war. 

This  red-hot  i  to  be  shaped  with  blows. 

'  I've  heard  that  there  is  i  in  the  blood. 

But  i  dug  from  central  gloom, 

fight  my  way  with  gilded  arms,  All  shall  be  i ; ' 

That  laughs  at  i — as  our  warriors  did — 

drew  The  rustiest  i  of  old  fighters'  hearts ; 

We  brought  this  i  from  our  isles  of  gold. 
Iron-clanging    an  i-c  anvil  bang'd  With  hammers ; 
Iron-clashing    such  a  stem  and  i-c  close. 
Iron-cramp 'd    those  that  i-c  their  women's  feet; 
Iron-hearted    i-h  victors  they. 
Iron-stay'd    i-s  In  damp  and  dismal  dungeons 
Iron-worded    wall  about  thy  cause  With  i-w  proof. 
Irony    call  her  sweet,  as  if  in  i. 
Irredeemable    Wrought  for  his  house  an  i  woe ; 
Irrepressible    cloud  of  thought  Keen,  i. 
Irresponsible    /,  indolent  reviewers. 
Irreverence    Blockish  i,  brainless  greed — 
Irreverent    you  have  miss'd  the  i  doom 

A  reckless  and  i  knight  was  he. 
Irritable    being  vicious,  old  and  i. 
Is    For  was,  and  i,  and  will  be,  are  but  i ; 
Isabel    Revered  7,  the  crown  and  head, 

Crown'd  7,  thro'  all  her  placid  life, 
Iscariot    Pontius  and  7  by  my  side 
Isis     an  7  hid  by  the  veil. 
Islam    beating  back  the  swarms  Of  Turkish  I 
Islam     Polytheism  and  I  feel  after  thee. 

gleam  Than  glances  from  the  sim  of  our  7. 

Myself  am  such  in  our  7, 
Islamite    Houris  bow'd  to  see  The  dying  7, 
Island  (adj.)    '  Our  i  home  Is  far  beyond  the  wave ; 

Or  else  the  i  princes  over-bold 

bind  with  bands  That  i  queen  who  sways 

Not  once  or  twice  in  our  rough  i  story, 

Revenge  herself  went  down  by  the  i  crags 

made  your  fathers  great  In  our  ancient  i 
State, 

greatest  of  women,  i  heroine,  Kapiolani 
Island  (s)    on  the  land  Over  the  i's  free ; 

Round  an  i  there  below.  The  i  of  Shalott. 

By  the  i  in  the  river  Flowing  down  to  Camelot, 

Boat,  i,  ruins  of  a  castle, 

On  from  i  unto  i  at  the  gateways  of  the  day. 

So  they  past  by  capes  and  i's. 

The  blaze  upon  his  i  overhead ; 


Freedom  40 

The  Dreamer  6 

Princess  iv  504 

»209 

vi  230 

In  Mem.  cxviii  21 

Geraint  and  E.  22 

Merlin  and  V.  429 

574 

Columbus  3 

Princess  v  504 

Merlin  and  V.  419 

Princess  v  376 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  80 

Lover's  Tale  ii  148 

To  J.  M.  K.  9 

Princess  vii  97 

Maud  II  i  22 

Lover's  Tale  ii  165 

Hendecasyllabics  2 

Columbus  129 

Tou  might  have  won  9 

Holy  Grail  856 

Marr.  of  Geraint  194 

Princess  Hi  324 

Isabel  10 

,,      27 

St.  S.  Stylites  168 

Maud  I  iv  43 

Montenegro  11 

Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  2 

Akbar's  Dream  79 

155 

Palace  of  Art  103 

Lotos-Eaters  44 

„   C.  8.  75 

Buonaparte  3 

Ode  on  Well.  201 

The  Revenge  118 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhih.  16 

Kapiolani  5 

Sea-Fairies  26 

L.  of  Shalott  i  8 

.13 

Edwin  Morris  6 

Locksley  Hall  158 

The  Captain  21 

Enoch  Arden  595 


Island  (s)  (continued)    Thine  i  loves  thee  well,  Ode  on  Well.  85 

For  out  of  the  wa.ste  i's  had  he  come,  PeUeas  and  E.  86 

Drew  to  this  i:  Doom'd  to  the  death.  Bait,  of  Brunanburh  50 

Far  off  from  out  an  i  girt  by  foes,  Achilles  over  the  T.  8 

follow  Edwin  to  those  isles,  those  i's  of  the  Blest !  Ths  Flight  42 

I,  from  out  the  Northern  7  simder'd  once  To  Virgil  35 

shake  with  her  thunders  and  shatter  her  i,  Kapiolani  10 

'  Woe  to  this  i  if  ever  a  woman  (repeat)  „    20,  22 

Island-crag    Set  in  a  cataract  on  an  i-c,  Princess  v  347 

Island-myriads    Her  i-m  fed  from  alien  lands —  The  Fleet  12 

Island-Paradise    In  Hispaniola's  i-P !  Columbus  182 

Island-sides    Far-fleeted  by  the  purple  i-s,  Princess  vii  166 

Island-story    once  or  twice  in  our  rough  i-s,  Ode  on  Well.  201 

Not  once  or  twice  in  our  fair  i-s,  „            209 

Island-valley    To  the  i-v  of  Avilion ;  M.  d' Arthur  259 

To  the  i-v  of  Avilion ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  427 

Isle  (s)    (See  also  Bounteous  Isle,  Eden-isle,  Garden-isles, 

South -sea -isle.  World-isle)    flee  By  town,  and 


tower,  and  hill,  and  cape,  and  i 
the  silent  i  imbowers  The  Lady  of  Shalott. 
Is  there  confusion  in  the  little  i  ? 
where  the  moving  i's  of  winter  shock  By  night, 
mellow  brickwork  on  an  i  of  bowers. 
The  rentroU  Cupid  of  our  rainy  i's. 
To  whom  I  leave  the  sceptre  and  the  i — 
It  may  be  we  shall  touch  the  Happy  I's, 
Summer  i's  of  Eden  lying  in  dark -purple 
breaker  sweep  The  nutmeg  rocks  and  i's  of  clove. 
Blue  i's  of  heaven  laugh'd  between, 
over  lake  and  lawn,  and  i's  and  capes — 
And  sent  her  sweetly  by  the  golden  i's, 
stranding  on  an  i  at  mom  Rich, 
Far  in  a  darker  i  beyond  the  line ; 
beauteous  hateful  i  Retturn'd  upon  him, 
Stay'd  by  this  i,  not  knowing  where  she  lay : 
Across  a  break  on  the  mist-wreathen  i 
Thou  That  didst  uphold  me  on  my  lonely  i, 
and  battle-clubs  From  the  i's  of  palm : 
As  yet  we  find  in  barbarous  i's, 
over  them  the  tremulous  i's  of  light  SUded, 
O  saviour  of  the  silver-coasted  i, 
Maoris  and  that  7  of  Continent, 
(Take  it  and  come)  to  the  7  of  Wight; 
For  in  all  that  exquisite  i,  my  dear. 
She  desires  no  i's  of  the  blest, 

'  Fear  not,  i  of  blowing  woodland,  i  of  silvery  parapets ! 
Streams  o'er  a  rich  ambrosial  ocean  i, 
Is  dash'd  with  wandering  i's  of  night. 
Danube  rolling  fair  Enwind  her  i's, 
over  all  whose  realms  to  their  last  i, 
a  petty  king  ere  Arthur  came  Ruled  in  this  i, 
'  He  passes  to  the  7  Avilion, 
Heard  by  the  lander  in  a  lonely  i. 
Whose  bark  had  plunder'd  twenty  nameless  i's ; 
Lords  of  waste  marches,  kings  of  desolate  i's. 
Gave  him  an  i  of  marsh  whereon  to  build  ; 
And  this  new  knight.  Sir  PeUeas  of  the  i's — 
And  lord  of  many  a  barren  i  was  he — 
Scarce  any  but  the  women  of  his  i's, 
many  a  glancing  plash  and  sallowy  i. 
Farewell !  there  is  an  i  of  rest  for  thee, 
where  the  moving  i's  of  winter  shock  By  night, 
third-rate  i  half -lost  among  her  seas  ? 
throne  In  our  vast  Orient,  and  one  i,  one  i, 
All  day  I  watch'd  the  floating  i's  of  shade, 
But  work  was  scant  in  the  7, 
thou  hast  come  to  talk  our  i. 
not  That  Indian  i,  but  our  most  ancient  East 
Pour'd  in  on  all  those  happy  naked  i's — 
He  lived  on  an  i  in  the  ocean — 
And  we  came  to  the  i  in  the  ocean, 
And  we  came  to  the  Silent  7 
And  we  hated  the  beautiful  7, 
And  we  came  to  the  7  of  Shouting, 
And  we  came  to  the  7  of  Flowers : 


Mine  be  the  strength  6 

L.  of  Shalott  i  17 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  79 

M.  d'Arthur  140 

Edwin  Morris  12 

103 

Ulysses  34 

„       63 

Locksley  Hall  164 

The  Voyage  40 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  6 

Vision  of  Sin  11 

Enoch  Arden  536 

552 

605 

617 

630 

632 

783 

Princess,  Pro.  22 

m122 

m81 

Ode  on  Well.  136 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  18 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  12 

The  Islet  26 

Wages  8 

Boadicea  38 

Milton  14 

In  Mem.  xxiv  4 

„    xcviii  10 

Ded.  of  Idylls  12 

Com.  of  Arthur  6 

Gareth  and  L.  502 

Marr.  of  Geraint  330 

Merlin  and  V.  559 

Lancelot  and  E.  527 

Holy  Grail  62 

PeUeas  and  E.  17 

19 

88 

Last  Tournament  422 

Pass,  of  Arthur  35 

308 

To  the  Queen  ii  25 

31 

Lover's  Tale  ii  5 

First  Quarrel  43 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  32 

Columbus  80 

„      173 

V.  of  Maeldune  7 


11 

21 
27 
3T 


Isle 


350 


Jacobinism 


Isle  (s)  (continued)    And  we  hated  the  Flowering  /,  as 

we  hated  the  i  that  was  mute,  V.  of  Maddune  52 

And  we  came  to  the  /  of  Fruits :  „  55 

And  we  came  to  the  /  of  Fire :  „  71 

For  the  whole  i  shudder'd  and  shook  like  a  man  „  74 

and  we  past  Over  that  undersea  i,  „  77 

but  the  whole  green  /  was  our  own,  „  93 

And  we  past  to  the  /  of  Witches  „  97 

And  we  came  in  an  evil  time  to  the  I  of  the  Double  Towers,  „         105 
And  we  came  to  the  /  of  a  Saint  „         115 

He  had  lived  ever  since  on  the  /  „         116 

Go  back  to  the  I  of  Finn  „         124 

we  came  to  the  /  we  were  blown  from,  „  127 

I  landed  again,  with  a  tithe  of  my  men,  on  the  /  of  Finn.        „  130 

Hapt  in  this  i,  since  Up  from  the  East  Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  116 

and  abroad  in  a  rich  West-Indian  i ;  The  Wreck  46 

The  broad  white  brow  of  the  / —  „        135 

follow  Edwin  to  those  i's,  those  islands  of  the  Blest!  The  Flight  42 

ocean  softly  washing  all  her  warless  Ps.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  170 

His  i,  the  mightiest  Ocean-power  on  earth,  Our  own 


The  Fleet  6 

Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  4 

To  Prof.  Jebb  12 

Prog,  of  Spring  60 

Enoch  Arden  131 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  14 

Fatima  33 

Ode  on  Well.  154 

Gareth  and  L.  893 

Merlin  and  V.  570 

V.  of  Maeldune  45 

The  Voyage  33 

Aylmer's  Fidd  65 

The  Islet  15 

Geraint  and  E.  475 

Lover's  Tale  ii  173 

Palace  of  Art  197 


fair  i,  the  lord  of  every  sea — 

From  i  and  cape  and  continent. 

Blossom  again  on  a  colder  i. 

Broaden  the  glowing  i's  of  vernal  blue, 
Isle  (verb)    And  i's  a  light  in  the  offing : 
Isle-altar    From  her  i-a  gazing  down, 
Isled    And,  i  in  sudden  seas  of  light. 

Thank  Him  who  i  us  here. 

Lion  and  stoat  have  i  together. 
Isle-nurtured    i-n  eyes  Waged  such  unwilling 
Isle-side    whole  i-s  flashing  down  from  the  peak 
Islet  (See  also  Ocean-islet)    The  peaky  i  shifted  shapes, 

that  i  in  the  chestnut-bloom  Flamed  in  his  cheek ; 

A  mountain  i  pointed  and  peak'd ; 

Betwixt  the  cressy  i's  white  in  flower ; 
Isolated    came  a  broad  And  solid  beam  of  i  light, 
Isolation     '  O  God-like  i  which  art  mine, 

he  work'd  among  the  rest  and  shook  His  i  from 
him. 

remain  Orb'd  in  your  i:  he  is  dead. 

His  i  grows  defined. 
Isolt    /  the  White— Sir  Tristram  of  the  Woods— 

thou  playest  that  air  with  Queen  /, 

Before  him  fled  the  face  of  Queen  / 

BuUt  for  a  summer  day  with  Queen  / 

/,  the  daiighter  of  the  King  ?     '  /  Of  the  white  hands ' 

I  of  Britain  and  his  bride. 

And  glossy-throated  grace,  /  the  Queen. 

Softly  laugh'd  I ;  '  Flatter  me  not. 

To  whom  /,  '  Ah  then,  false  hunter  and  false  harper, 

And,  saddening  on  the  sudden,  spake  /, 

/  of  Britain  dash'd  Before  /  of  Brittany 

/  ? — I  fought  his  battles,  for  / ! 

/ !    The  name  was  ruler  of  the  dark — I  ? 

I  answer'd  '  Yea,  and  why  not  I  ? 

Then  came  the  sin  of  Tristram  and  / ; 
Israel    Wrestled  with  wandering  /, 

'  The  toiTent  brooks  of  hallow'd  / 

'  The  balmy  moon  of  blessed  / 

1  made  their  gods  of  gold, 
Issa  Ben  Mi^riftir^     I  B  M,his  own  prophet. 
Issue  (s)    Whereof  I  cateh  the  i,  as  I  hear 

Fame  for  spouse  and  your  great  deeds  For  i, 

streams  that  float  us  each  and  all  To  the  i, 

reasons  why  she  should  Bide  by  this  i  : 

Her  words  had  i  other  than  she  will'd. 

noble  i,  sons  Bom  to  the  gloiy  of  thy  name 
bsae  (verb)    To  those  that  seek  them  i  forth  ; 

Victor  from  vanquish'd  i's  at  the  last. 
Issued    ridge  Of  breaker  i  from  the  belt, 

t  in  a  court  Compact  of  lucid  marbles. 

We  i  gorged  with  knowledge, 

i  in  the  sun,  that  now  Leapt  from  the  dewy  shoulders  „         v  42 

Whence  he  i  forth  anew,  Ode  on  Well.  107 

out  from  this  /  the  bright  face  of  a  blooming  boy    Gareth  and  L.  1408 


Enoch  Arden  652 

Princess  vi  169 

In  Mem.  xlv  12 

Last  Tournament  177 

263 

363 

378 

397 

408 

509 

556 

566 

581 

588 

604 

605 

609 

Guinevere  488 

Clear-headed  friend  26 

B.  of  F.  Women  181 

185 

In  Mem.  xcvi  23 

Akbar's  Dream  75 

CEnone  248 

Princess  Hi  243 

„  iv  71 

V  326 

Merlin  and  V.  806 

Lancelot  and  E.  1371 

Day- Dm.,  Arrival  2 

Gareth  and  L.  1262 

Sea  Dreams  212 

Princess  ii  23 

388 


Issued  (continued)    As  last  they  i  from  the  world  of 

,   wood,  Marr.  of  Geraint  23& 

Whereout  the  Demon  i  up  from  Hell.  Balin  and  Balan  317 

Vext  at  a  rumour  i  from  herself  Merlin  and  V.  153 

from  the  city  gates  /  Sir  Lancelot  riding  Pelleas  and  E.  557 

Issuii^     And,  i  shorn  and  sleek.  Talking  Oak  42 

lightly  i  thro',  I  would  have  paid  her  „          194 

the  voice  Of  Ida  sounded,  i  ordinance  :  Princess  vi  373 

And  howlest,  i  out  of  night.  In  Mem.  Ixxii  2 

Geraint,  who  i  forth  That  morning,  Geraint  and  E.  8 

i  under  open  heavens  beheld  A  little  town  „          196 

i  arm'd  he  found  the  host  and  cried,  „          407 

And  i  found  the  Lord  of  Astolat  Lancelot  and  E.  173 

loud  stream,  Forth  i  from  his  portals  Lover's  Tale  i  430 

Issns     Satrap  bled  At  /  by  the  Syrian  gates,  Alexander  3 

Italian     Thy  glory  fly  along  the  /  field,  Lucretius  71 

Fair  ship,  that  from  the  /  shore  In  Mem.  ix  1 

On  a  sudden  after  two  /  years  SisUrs  (E.  and  E.)  150 

All  in  white  /  marble,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  35 

those  thi-ee  sweet  /  words,  became  a  weariness.  The  Ring  407 

Italy     I  to  the  East  And  he  for  / —  The  Brook  2 

And  now  it  teUs  of  /.  The  Daisy  90 

Florence  now  the  crown  of  /,  To  Dante  4 

Iteration    came  Her  sickUer  i.    Last  he  said,  Aylmer's  Field  299 

Ithacensian    Like  the  /  suitors  in  old  time,  Princess  iv  118 

Ivery  (every)    ye  set  me  heart  batin'  to  music  wid  i  word  !        Tomorrow  34 

Ivied    Many  a  night  from  yonder  i  casement,  Locksley  Hall  7 

warrior  from  his  i  nook  Glow  like  a  sunbeam  :  Princess,  Pro.  104 

It  look'd  a  tower  of  i  masonwork,  Merlin  and  V.  4 

Ivin'  (ivy)     An'  they  niver  'ed  seed  sich  i  Owd  Rod  26 

Sa  I  sticks  like  the  i  as  long  as  I  lives  Church-warden,  etc.  15 

Ivory  (adj.)    She  took  the  little  i  chest.  The  Letters  17 

Ivory  (s)     Laborious  orient  i  sphere  in  sphere.  Princess,  Pro.  20 

Ivory-beak'd    In  a  shallop  of  crystal  i-b,  The  Islet  12 

Ivry  (every)    I've  'ed  my  point  o'  aale  i  noight  sin'  I 

bean  'ere.  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  7 

An'  I've  'ed  my  quart  i  market-noight  for  foorty  year.  „                8 

an'  swear'd  as  I'd  break  i  stick  NoHh.  Cobbler  35 

An'  i  darter  o'  Squire's  bed  her  awn  ridin-erse  Village  Wife  35 

Ivy    (See  also  Ivin')     overhead  the  wandering  i  and  vine,  (Enone  99 

And  thro'  the  moss  the  ivies  creep,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  9 

Thorns,  ivies,  woodbine,  mistletoes,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  43 

There  is  Damley  bridge.  It  has  more  i ;  The  Brook  37 

0  hollies  and  ivies  and  evergreens,  Spiteful  Letter  23 

and  wings  Moved  in  her  i,  Marr.  of  Geraint  599 

Betwixt  the  close-set  ivies  came  Lover's  Tale  ii  172 

Ivyberry    husk,  the  grape  And  i,  choose  ;  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  51 

Ivy-clad     In  Autumn,  parcel  i-c  ;  Aylmer's  Fidd  154 

Ivy-claspt    High-arch'd  and  i-c.  Of  finest  Gothic  Princess,  Pro.  91 

Ivy-matted    Whose  i-m  mouth  she  used  to  gaze  Death  of  (Enone  2 

Ivy-net    Now  on  some  twisted  i-n.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  28 

Ivy-screen     Tearing  the  bright  leaves  of  the  i-s.  Lover's  Tale  ii  40 

Ivy-stems    monstrous  i-s  Claspt  the  gray  walls  Marr.  of  Geraint  322 

Ivytods     The  battlement  overtopt  with  i,  Balin  and  Balan  335 

Ivy-tress     Until  the  plaited  i-t  had  wound  Round  Lover's  Tale  i  618 

Ivy-wreath    briony-vine  and  i-w  Ran  forward  Amphion  29     « 

I  will    I  heard  his  deep  '  /  w,'  Breathed,  Gardener's  D.  208      ^ 

Her  sweet '  /  w  '  has  made  you  one.  In  Mem.,  Con.  56 

Before  the  first '  /  10  '  was  utter'd,  /Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  211 

Ldonian    stays  the  rolling  /  wheel,  Lucretius  261 

Ldon-like    Embracing  cloud,  I-l ;  Two  Voices  195     i 


Jacet    by  the  cold  Hie  J's  of  the  dead  ! '  Merlin  and  V.  753 

Jacinth-work    and  j-w  Of  subtlest  jewellery.  M.  d' Arthur  57 

and  j-w  Of  subtlest  jewellery.  Pass,  of  Arthur  225 

Jack     ./,  turn  the  horses'  heads  and  home  Walk,  to  the  Mail  46 

J  on  his  ale-house  bench  has  as  many  lies  as  a  Czar ;  Maud  I  ivQ 

Jackass     A  j  heehaws  from  the  rick,  Amphion  71 

Jackman    An'  my  oan  fine  J  i'  purple  Spinster's  S's.  106 

Jacobinism    after  massacre,  J  and  Jacquerie,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  157 


Jacqnerie 


351 


Jet-black 


Jacquerie    after  massacre,  Jacobinism  and  J, 
Jacyoth    chrysoprase,  J,  and  aniethyst — 
Tael     a  cymbal'd  Miriam  and  a  J, 
Jail    scared  with  threats  of  j  and  halter 
JaOer     And  the  j  forced  me  away,  (repeat) 
Jafling    And  tame  thy  /  princess  to  thme  hand. 
Jam  (s)    An'  a  haaf-pot  o'  /,  or  a  mossel  o'  meat 
Jam  (verb)    ;'  the  doors,  and  bear  The  keepers 
James    (See  also  James  Willows,  Willows)    Old  J  was  with 
me  :   we  that  day  had  been  Up  Snowdon ; 

in  mimic  cadence  answer'd  J — '  Ah,  folly  ! 

J, — you  know  him, — old,  but  full  Of  force 

She  and  J  had  quarrell'd.     Why  ? 

she  said,  no  cause ;  J  had  no  cause  :  but  when  I  prest 
the  cause,  I  leamt  that  J  had  fUckering  jealomies 
which  anger'd  her.     Who  anger'd  J  1     I  said. 

tiU  I  ask'd  If  J  were  coming.     '  Coming  every  day,' 

J  departed  vext  with  him  and  her.' 

I  saw  where  J  Made  toward  us, 

My  brother  J  is  in  the  harvest-field : 
James  (11.)    We  flung  the  burthen  of  the  second  J. 
James  Willows    (See  also  James,  Willows)     J  W,  of  one 

name  and  heart  with  her. 
Jane    And  what  do  I  care  for  J, 
Jangled     again  the  bells  J  and  clang'd : 

daws  flew  out  of  the  Towers  and  /  and  wrangled  in 

vain,  V.  of  Maeldune  109 

Jangling    j,  the  casque  Fell,  and  he  started  up  Geraint  and  E.  388 

In  clanging  cadence  /  peal  on  peal —  Lover's  Tale  in  22 

January  (adj.)     Fine  as  ice-ferns  on  J  panes  Aylmer's  Field  222 

January  (s)     woodlands,  when  they  shiver  in  J,  Boadicea  75 

Japan     From  Corrientes  to  J,  To  Ulysses  4 

Japed     — him  Who  gibed  and  / — in  many  a  merry  tale     Sir  J.  Oldcastle  91 
Jaques     Our  kindher,  trustier  J,  past  away  !  To  W.  H.  Brookfield  11 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  157 

Columbus  86 

Princess  »  511 

Ayliner's  Field  520 

Rizpah  41,  44 

Pelleas  and  E.  344 

Spinster's  S's.  109 

Lucretius  169 


Golden  Year  3 

53 

60 

The  Brook  96 


„  98 
„  106 
„  110 
„  116 
227 
Third  of  Feb.  28 

The  Brook  76 

Grandmother  51 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  53 


Jar  (s)    Love  is  hurt  with  j  and  fret 
And  hear  the  household  j  within. 

Jar  (verb)    no  mortal  motion  fs  The  blackness 

shriek  of  hate  would  /  all  the  hymns  of  heaven : 
May  j  thy  golden  dream  Of  Knowledge 

Jarr'd    something  j  ;  Whether  he  spoke  too  largely ; 
The  plaintive  cry  j  on  her  ire  ; 
He  laugh'd  ;   the  laughter  /  upon  Lynette  : 
Love  and  Honoiu"  j  Tho'  Love  and  Honour 

Jairing     Who  touch'd  a  /  lyre  at  first, 


Miller's  D.  209 

In  Mem.  xciv  16 

On  a  Mourner  26 

Sea  Dreams  259 

Freedom,  16 

Edwin  Morris  72 

Princess  iv  393 

Gareth  and  L.  1226 

Sisters  (E.  and  £.)  176 

In  Mem.  xcvi  7 


For  those  that  are  cnjsh'd  in  the  cla.sh  of  j  claims,  Maud  III  vi  44 


relic  of  Javehns  over  The  /  breaker, 
Jasmine    (See  also  Jessamine,  Jessmine) 
tum'd  Their  humid  anns 

close-set  robe  of  j  sown  with  stars : 

In  meshes  of  the  /  and  the  rose  : 
Jasmine-leaves    dawn  Upon  me  thro'  the  j-l. 
Jasper     In  the  branching  fs  under  the  sea  ; 

j,  sapphire.  Chalcedony,  emerald, 
Jaimdice    That  veil'd  the  world  with  /, 
Jamidiced    and  left  me  with  the  /  eye  ; 
Javelin     lay  many  a  man  Marr'd  by  the  j, 

rush  of  the  j's.  The  crash  of  the  charges, 

Blood-redden'd  rehc  of  J's  over  The  jarring  breaker, 


Batt.  of  Brunanburh  97 
Growths  of  j 

D.  of  F.  Women  69 

Aylmer's  Field  158 

Princess  i  219 

Margaret  68 

The  Mermaid  47 

Columbus  83 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  20 

Locksley  Hall  132 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  32 


96 


Javelining    j  With  darted  spikes  and  spUntei-s 
Jaw    The  j  is  f  aUing,  The  red  cheek  paling, 

Into  the  j's  of  Death, 

Came  thro'  the  fs  of  Death, 

in  the  fs  Of  vacant  darkness 

down-hung  The  fs  of  Death  : 
Jay     Ring  sudden  scritches  of  the  /, 

glance  the  tits,  and  shriek  the  fs, 
Jeakras   ("See  oZso  Over-jealous)   be /and  hard  and  unkind 

Never  j — not  he  :  we  had  many  a  happy  year ; 

Half  j  of  she  knows  not  what. 


Merlin  and  V.  936 

All  Things  will  Die  30 

Light  Brigade  24 

46 

In  Mem.  xxxiv  15 

Lover's  Tale  ii  205 

My  life  is  full  20 

Prog,  of  Spring  15 

Grandmother  54 

71 

In  Mem.  Ix  7 


0  to  what  end,  except  a  j  one,  And  one  to  make  me 

7  if  I  love.  Merlin  and  V.  538 

What  wonder,  being  j,  that  he  sent  His  horns  „  580 

And  made  her  good  man  j  with  good  cause.  „  605 

1  was  /,  anger'd,  vain,  Happy  66 
I  meant  to  make  you  j.    Are  you  /  of  me  now  ?  „       67 


Jealous  (continu^ed)    But  yet  your  mother's  /  temperament —      Princess  ii  338 
'tis  my  mother.  Too  /,  „         m  go 

Shall  fears  and  j  hatreds  flame  again  ?  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  41 

Sick,  am  I  sick  of  a  /  dread  ?  Maud  I  x  1 

Not  rather  dead  love's  harsh  heir,  j  pride  ?  Lancelot  and  E.  1398 

Jealousy    (See  also  Semi-jealousy)     James  had  flickering 

jealousies  The  Brook  99 

Down  with  ambition,  avarice,  pride,  J,  down  !  Maud  I  x  iS 

all  naiTOw  jealousies  Are  silent ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  16 

No  more  of  /  than  in  Paradise.'  Balin  and  Balan  152 

A  sudden  spurt  of  woman's  j, — 
And  as  to  woman's  j,  0  why  not  ? 
Foi^ve  me  ;  mine  was  j  in  love.' 
'  J  in  love  ?  '     Not  rather  dead  love's  haish  heir. 
Queen,  if  I  gi'ant  the  j  as  of  love, 
youthful  y  is  a  liar. 

Jeer     Began  to  scoff  and  j  and  babble  of  him 
point  and  /,  And  gibber  at  the  worm, 

Jehovah    Starr'd  from  J's  gorgeous  armouries, 

Jenneting    To  fret  the  summer  ;'. 

Jenny     •/,  my  cousin,  had  come  to  the  place,  and  I  knew 
right  well  That  J  had  tript  in  her  time  : 
J,  to  slander  me,  who  knew  what  J  had  been  ! 
and  J  hmig  on  his  arm. 
J,  the  viper,  made  me  a  mocking  curtsey 

Jephthia     Pale  as  the  J's  daughter, 

The  Godless  ./  vows  his  child  .     .     . 

Jeroosilim  (Jerusalem)    May  all  the  flowers  o'  J 

Jersey    I  ha'  six  weeks'  work  m  J 

Jerusalem    (See  also  Jeroosilim)     but  our  most  ancient  East 

Moriah  with  J  ;  Columbus  81 

Jess     Diet  and  seedUng,  fes,  leash  and  lure.  Merlin  and  V.  125 

Jessamine    (See  also  Jasmine,  Jessmine)    All  night  has 

the  casement  j  stirr'd  Maud  I  xxii  15 

Jessmine    (See  also  Jasmine,  Jessamine)    door-porch  wi' 

the  woodbine  an'  j  Spinster's  S's.  105 

Jest  (s)     eyes  twinkle  yet  At  his  own  j —  Miller's  D.  12 

He  was  full  of  joke  and  j,  D.  of  the  O.  Year  28 

My  words  were  half  in  earnest,  half  in  j,)  Gardener's  D.  23 

I  am  not  all  as  wrong  As  a  bitter  /  is  dear.  Vision  of  Sin  198 

The  j's,  that  flash'd  about  the  pleader's  room,  Aylmer's  Field  440 

Dabbhng  a  shameless  hand  with  shameful  /,  Princess  Hi  314 

The  j  and  earnest  working  side  by  side,  „        iv  563 

beneath  his  vaulted  palm  A  whisper'd  j  „  v  32 

and  ere  the  windy ;  Had  labour'd  down  „  272 

In  dance  and  song  and  game  and  /  ?  In  Mem.  xxix  8 

Whose  ;  among  his  friends  is  free,  „       Ixvi  10 

Or  deep  dispute,  and  graceful  j ;  „  Ixxxiv  24 

Merlin  in  our  time  Hath  spoken  silso,  not  in  /,  Com.  of  Arthur  420 

We  will  not  touch  upon  him  ev'n  in  /.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  311 

some  light  /  among  them  rose  With  laughter  dying  Lancelot  and  E.  178 
vext  he  could  not  go  :  A  /,  no  more  !  „  211 

(But  all  was  j  and  joke  among  omselves)     Then  must 


Merlin  anrf  V.  524 

537 

Lancelot  and  E.  1351 

1397 

1399 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  240 

Marr.  of  Geraint  58 

Romney's  R.  136 

Milton  6 

The  Blackbird  12 


Grandmother  25 

35 

42 

46 

Aylmer's  Field  280 

The  Flight  26 

Tomorrow  89 

First  Quarrel  88 


she  keep  it  safelier.     All  was  / 

moved  to  merriment  at  a  passing  j. 

he  was  one  of  those  who  would  break  their  j's 
on  the  dead. 

Would  echo  helpless  laughter  to  your  j  \ 

As  he  did  half  in  /,  Old  Horace  ? 

shameless  laughter.  Pagan  oath,  and  /, 
Jest  (verb)     '  You  / :  ill  jesting  with  edge-tools  ! 

grizzlier  than  a  bear,  to  ride  And  j  with  : 

Who  j  and  laugh  so  easily  and  so  well. 
Jested    while  he  j  thus,  A  thought  flash'd 

Drank  till  he  ;  with  all  ease. 

Have  j  also,  but  for  Julian's  eyes. 
Jesting    '  You  jest :  ill ;  with  edge-tools  ! 
Jesus    (See  also  Christ,  Christ  Jesus,  Lord  Jesus) 

thou  wilt  not  save  my  soul. 
Jet  (s)    (See  also  Fountain-jets) 
currents  in  one  swell 

The  fountain  pulses  high  in  sunnier  j's. 
Jet  (verb)     J  upward  thro'  the  mid-day  blossom. 
Jet-black    Leading  a  j-b  goat  white-hom'd. 

The  maiden's  j-b  hair  has  grown, 


217 
Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  121 


In  the  Child.  Hosp.  8 

To  W.  H.  Brookfield  5 

Epilogue  45 

St.  Telemachus  39 

Princess  ii  201 

Pelleas  and  E.  194 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  41 

Princess  i  194 

Geraint  and  E.  290 

Lover's  Tale  iv  223 

Princess  ii  201 

O  J,  if 

St.  S.  StylUes  46 
From  those  four  fs  four 

Palace  of  Art  33 

Prog,  of  Spring  54 

Demeter  and  P.  47 

(Enone  51 

Day- Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  4 


Jetted 

J«ttBd    A  dozen  angry  models  ;■  steam  ■ 
•  «•    *pani  in  his  blood  and  the  J~ 
J  e««     J  or  sheD,  or  starry  ore, 
the  y  That  trembles  in  her  ear : 
A  da^er,  in  rich  sheath  with  ys 
That  seem'd  a  fleet  of  ;'5  mider  me 
furs  And  fs,  gifts,  to  fetch  her  •      ' 
quoted  odes,  and  yt  five-words-long 
shone  hke  a  /  set  In  the  dark  crag^ 
made  the  single  j  on  her  brow  Bira 
A  ;,  a  ;  dear  to  a  lover's  eye  ! 
What,  has  he  found  my  /  out  ? 
And  Maud  will  wear  her  f$, 
™^  J^'t^  /"*'  elfin  Urim,  on  the  hilt, 
fled  With  Uttle  save  the  fs  they  had  on 
and  thicker  down  the  front  With  fs 
"  ^^^r?i'  ^bereupon  I  chanced  Divinely 
maid  Might  wear  as  fair  a  ;  as  is  on  earth,' 
1  had  not  won  except  for  you.  These  fs 
f  crown  of  gold  About  a  casque  all  fi  • ' 

Take  Uiou  the  fs  of  this  dead  innocoice. 
hick  win  go  With  these  rich  fs,  "^^^"^ 
And  some  with  scatterd  fs, 
what  he  brought  to  adorn  her  with.  The  Pt. 
The  value  of  that  /  he  had  to  guard  ' 


352 


■'Vweew,  Phj.  73 
The  Wreck  15 
EUaiioTe2!Q 
MiOer's  D.  171 
Aiflmer^s  Fieid  220 
Sea  I}reawul23 
iVneeMt43 
»      w377 
»     tttSSS 
„.  »      »»273 

WmdoWjOnthe  HiaS 
Maud  /  X  23 
„         xz  27 
Com.  of  Arthur  299 
Marr.  of  GeraiiU  640 
GeraiiU  and  E.  690 
Lanedot  and  E.  58 
240 
1182 
Holy  Graa  411 
iort  Toumameni  31 
46 
148 


Jovst 


Wh^f'^^  f^^?"^'?  °^  ^  ^o"*  Sparkled  "  .^ 

"^VSth^e^^SSS?;: tm^*  '■  —  o'  -^ne^.  ^^|^^' 
his  horse  In  golden  armoui /ev^^here •  ^"'^ "'^  ^  f?^ 

But,  while  he  boVd  to  kiss  W  J^^,  '  Last  Tc^^^  ^ 

himgermg  for  the  gilt  and  ;  world  About  him,  I^rT^  ^\ 

themountam  ar(«e  like  a  ;  throne  thro'  thefaagrant  ^^ 

JUgTVenice,  where  a  /,  So  far  gone  down,  ^'  "^T^l^J^.^y 

^— *V.   ^djacmth-work  Of  subtlest;.     ^  a/^vw^    « 

^^andjacmth-workOfsubUesty.         '  P«.«„f^l^oS 

Jated    their  pretty  sayinl^T'  Ls^  ^  J  T  „,~  .  .  ^'  '^'■'^*  ^61 

^jfora^sr^^tet  *^^ '""'•■     /JSr^^i^"^?? 

Jingle    /of  bits.  Shouts,  arro^  LocksUy  H   Si^  u 

JJB^tA    When  armour  clash'd  or  j  n-  T*resuts  93 

Jingfag  (adj.)    moorland  rings  With  /  bridle-reins.  V^  rTf?  *7.^ 

Two  sets  of  three  ladenwith  i  armT^^^  -^     ■  '"^  9' J?'  ^ 

Tmas    fever  ed  baaked  J'*  'ead  as  bald  ^^^  Sr^  ^** 

°"    Sot:'""  **  ^>  ^  of'Sr  The  peasant  J     "^"^  "^'^^  '^ 

Cassandra,  Hebe,  J,  Or  spinning  at  your  wheel  v^t^  **»^ 

JMDofArc     ^o  J,Alight^lSSentSe;  Z)  «/ f^^l^ 

JoaoM     ^,  as  ant  not  a 'aapoth  o' sense,          '  V  p/^  ^^^ 

thot  a  weant  niver  give  it  to  J  ^^  Farmer,  O.  S.  49 

Jo^  Dawes    as  with  his  tenant,  J  D  w^n-  *   .i    »#  -,  ^ 

John    Falling  had  let  appear  the\''«S  of  J-  ^jS'J^f'F^''^ 

T  v_^^°^y  "^  ^^  prophesied  of  me,  '^^^  ^  ^ 

John(P«ster)    ^wPwrterJohn  Co/«»*«5  21 

Join    this  byway  fs  The  turnpike  ?  jT^j.  ,„  ,.     „  ^  , 

flow  To  ;  the  brimming  river,  (repeat)  The  £^^32^^^^"?^^ 

Tho'  truths  m  manhood  darkly ,  ,     »;  ^'  ^  ^?? 

as  he  eallopd  up  To  /  them,  u         rV^'  '.""V.l 

come  hke  you  to  see  the  hunt,  Not  /  if  ""•  "^  ^'""^  ]i^ 

hot  in  haste  to  ;  Their  luckier  mates,  /?<™.-i  „"-.»  j?  l^ 

Joinl^^\^H"l^'^^«^«--fficetnie:    "^^ '^^  ^^  ^^SflJI 

fa2;thepu«ta,  And  there  weytlLn:  ^I^i^  ^im 

tboae  fau  chanties  J  at  her  side  •  ^Tvteess,  Fro.  107 

'  n  vn  66 


Joni'd(««if.«««0    and  /  Each  office  of  the  social  boar 

l>esiring  to  be  ;  with  Guinevere  •  ^^ 

for  saving  I  be  /  To  her  that  is  Uie  fairest 

were  I ;  with  her.  Then  might  we  live  together 

Then  after  I  was  ;  with  Galahad 

Love  and  Honour  ;"  to  raise  the  full  High-tide 

she  ;,  In  and  beyond  the  grave         ^^ 

he  stept,  he  stood,  nor  /  The  Achaeans— 

Our  dymg  mother  /  our  hands ; 

Fell  from  each  other,  and  were  /  again 

7  you  to  the  dead,  has  /  our  hands  of  old  • 
Jwmng    And  suck'd  the  /  of  the  stones, 
J<Hnt    And  work,  a  j  of  state, 

and  all  hk  f*  Are  full  of 'chalk  ? 

all  things  hsK  are  out  of  ;  : 

My  ;"*  are  somewhat  stiff  or  so. 

I  admire  Ts  of  cunning  workmanship 
i*^"°rT  ^°  ^''  supple-anew^'d,  they  shall  dive 
Joke     He  was  full  of  ;  and  jest,  ' 

(But^all  was  jest  and  ;  among  ourselves) 
J<^r    ^  ;  .Tear  we  shafl  not  see. 
JoDy    his  house,  for  so  they  say.  Was  haunted  with 

a  ;  ghost, 
Jon^     ^  "?  true  growth,  in  her  a  y,  gourd,  Frim^<ir-iV^ 

I  am  the  J,  the  crew  should  cast  me  into  the  deen  n^     u^. 

Joomp  (jump)     '  Billy,'  says  e  '  hev  a  »"  "-_  ^'      iri^  ^^''^  ^ 

Joompt  (jmnped)     Theerabouts  Charhe /—  fiUageWtfe^ 

Fur  tha  /  in  thvsen, 
Joseph    d«cended  from  the  Saint  Arimathaean  J 

P^^^'By  holy  J  hither,  that  same  spear    ' 
boss'd  With  holy  J^s  legend, 

^^^i^,  •^'  JO'^neyins  brought  To  Glastonbury 

I  know  Thaty  came  of  old  to  Glastonbury,        ^' 

Ihat  J  brou^t  of  old  to  Glastonbury  ^  ' 
Josbm    at  gaze  like  Ts  moon  in  Ajalon  '   ' 

f''^''  ^^^°  *  ^"'  •^»  ^™e  wtD  cry 
JOITO    dim  red  mom  had  died,  her  ;  done,  />  of  FWn,^  l\ 

before  his  ;  clas«.  He  shaU  find  the  stubborn  thistle    olV-^^aS 

And  aU  his;  to  her,  as  himself  Had  told  her    ^^    ^<^  o*  ** ett.  2fio 
(repeat) 

IBe  prosperous  in  this  /,  as  in  aO  • 

Thev  closing  round  him  thro'  the  /  home 

-  „J^j^  to^t^d  Her;  done,  glanced  at  him,' 

j2^S^  "^^l  ^  ^'^<*'  ^d  saw  the  worid  fly 
Joazneymg    Or  of  ten  ;  landward ;  ^ 

-*:^body  ;"  onward,  sick  with  toO. 
°°*V  ?^  (s)    one  might  show  it  at  a  ;  of  arms. 

And  thee,  rmne  mnocent,  the  fs,  the  wars. 

And  I  shaU  see  the  ;"5.     Thy  son  am  L 

If  tliere  chanced  a  /,  So  that  Sir  Kay  nodded 

1  et  have  I  watch  d  thee  victor  in  the  i  "        iXTT 

f -^-^"gbty  ;-*,  and  took  a  paramour  • 

And,  but  for  my  main  purpose  in  these  fs 

proven  m  his  Paynim  wars  Than  famous  fs  ■ 

no  quest  came,  but  aU  was  i  and  play  ' 

diamond  fs.  Which  Arthur  had  oidj^'d. 

Once  every  year,  a  ;  for  one  of  these : 

And  eight  years  past,  eight  fs  had  been, 

let  proclaim  a  ;  At  Camelot 

you  cannot  move  To  these  fair  ;■'*  v  ' 

Why  go  ye  not  to  these  fair  fs  ' 

therefore  hear  my  words  :  eo  to  the  T*  • 

nor  cares  For  triumph  in  oilr  mimic  wa^  the  T 

parted  from  the;"-.  Hurt  in  the^  7^^*^) 

and  sparkle  out  Among  us  in  the  ;"'*; 

bhish  d  and  brake  the  morning  of  the  ;"',, 

Arthur  had  the  ;  *  Down  in  the  flat  fidd 

the  circlet  of  the  fs  Bound  on  her  brow, 

^e  prize  Of  Tnstram  in  the  fs  of  yesteiday 

She  ended,  and  the  cry  of  a  great  fs 

one  low  roll  Of  Autumn  thunder,  4nd  the  fs  began  - 

wroth  at  Tnstram  and  the  lawlei  fs  ^^ " 


In  Mem.  eri  13 

Com.  of  ArOtur  77 

85 

r,  90 

Hoiy  "Graa  6U 
Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  177 

^  r-„         "  ^71 

AehMes  over  the  T.  15 

The  Flight  87 

The  Bing  381 

Happy  93 

Marr.  of  Geraint  3^1 

Lore  thou  thy  land  47 

Audley  Court  46 

Loeksley  HaU  133 

Day-Dtn.,  Sevival  26 

Vision  of  Sin  186 

Lodcdey  HaU  169 

D.oftheO.  Year  28 

Lancelot  and  E.  217 

D.oftheO.  Tear  20 

Walk,  to  the  MaQ  36 
Princess  it  311 


81 

Spinster's  S's.  30 
Balin  and  Balan  l(r2 
113 
363 
Holy  Graa  51 
»       60 
,    .  "     73-5 

LodkOof  Hall  160 
Bomney's  R.  47 


Marr.  of  Geraint  143,  845 
^  „  225 

PeOeas  and  E.  302 
Guinevere  406 
The  Bing  179 
£»«*  Arden  92 
Lover's  Tale  i  124 
M.  d' Arthur  108 
Gareth  and  L.  86 
166] 
51 
13 


Geratnt  and  E.  833  j 

837] 

Baltn  and  Balan  39< 

Merlin  a»d  F.  145  j 

LmmeHalmmi  E.Zl[ 

61 

67 

76  < 

80j 


.--  --~~.«u  auu  uic  lawless 
one  might  show  it  at  a  ;  of  aims, 


138 

313 

622 

Holy  Graa  3i 

PeOeas  and  E.  157 

163 

434 

ioa*  Tournament  8 

51 

153 

237 


Pass,  of  Arthur  270 


I 


Jonst 


353 


Judgment 


Joat  iTCCb)    For  pastime ;  y^a,  he  said  it :  /  can  L  GartUt  and  L.  543 

For  hcae  be  va^aij  men  to  ;  with,  „          860 

since  I  go  to  /  as  one  onknown  At  Camelot  Lancelot  and  E.  190 

be  wiD  lide,  J  for  it,  and  win,  „            2M 

That  he  migfat ;  unfaiown  of  aO,  „            583 

Joml    He  most  have  been  a  ;  king.  Dajf-Dnt.,  Sleep.  P.  40 

Jowl    Cheek  by  /,  and  knee  by  knee :  Vision  of  Sin  84 

Jaj    The  j  I  had  in  my  freewill  AH  cold,  ^^PP-  Confessions  16 

Scarce  outward  signs  of  /  arise,  „              49 

SbaB  man  fire  thos,  in  /  „            1Q9 

wild  swan's  death-hymn  took  the  soul  Of  that  waste 

place  with;  Diftm^ Swrnm 32 

What  hope  or  fear  or  /  is  thine  ?  AdtUmg  23 

aU  day  loog  you  sit  betweoi  J  and  woe,  Margartt  64 

Because  yon  are  the  soul  of  /,  Rosalind  20 

'  Twere  /,  not  fear,  daspt  hand-in-hand  If  I  tcere  loved  9 

The  /  that  mixes  man  with  Hearen :  Tico  Voices  210 

To  more  about  the  house  with  /,  Millers  D.  95 

'  There  is  no  /  but  cafan  ! '  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  23 

W9  should  come  like  ^osts  to  trouble  /.  „              74 

emptied  of  all ;,  Leaving  the  dance  and  song,  D.  of  F.  Wowun  215 

Sodi  j  as  you  have  seen  with  us,  D.  of  ike  O.  Year  17 

But  Thou  rejoice  with  liberal  /,  EngUnd  and  Awter.  11 

lark  could  scarce  get  out  his  notes  for  /,  Gardener's  D.  90 

So  home  I  went,  but  could  not  sleep  for  /,  „        174 

perfect  J,  perpfex'd  for  utterance,  „        255 

I  kMk'd  at  him  with  / :  TaHdng  Oak  106 

re^K  not  hairest  of  his  youthful  fs,  Loekdey  Hall  139 

I  muse  on  j  that  wiD  not  cease.  Sir  Galakad  65 

A  prirate  life  was  all  his  j,  Wm  Water.  129 

And  madly  danced  our  hearts  with  ;',  Ike  Voyage  3 

Lux  9ouls  that  balance  ;  and  pain.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  1 

O  /  to  the  pet^ile  and  y  to  the  throne,  W.  to  Alexandra  29 

Makine  the  little  <me  leap  for  ;.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  4 

The  Priest  befaeki  him.  And  cried  with  /,  Tke  Victim  38 

They  bring  me  aornnr  tooch'd  with  ;,  /»  Mem.  xxvm  19 

And  doubtful  fs  the  father  moTe,  „                 jj  9 

On  some  imwortfay  heart  with  /,  „              IxH  7 

Thy  passion  da^  a  secret  j :  „       Ixs^nH  8 

0  y  to  him  in  th»  letieat,  ^  „  Ixxxix  13 
As  in  the  f  onna  flash  oi  j,  „  exxH  15 
teOs  The  ;  To  ereiy  wandning  breeze ;  „  Con.  62 
And,  tho''  in  siknce,  wishing  /.  „  88 
the  ringing  ;  of  the  Hall,  Maud  I  i  70 
With  a  ;  in  wfaidh  I  cannot  rejoice,  ^  v  21 
Tliat  die  warbled  akme  in  her;!  ^  z55 
in  the  heart  of  Arthur;  was  lord.  Com.ofArtkurl2i 
Stood  round  him,  and  rejoicing  in  his ;'.  „  459 
Shame  never  made  gM  redder  than  Gareth  ;'.  Garetk  and  L.  536 
So  Gareth  past  with ;  ;  but  as  the  cur  Phickt  „  701 
Not  beat  him  back,  but  welcomed  him  with  ;'.  Marr.  of  Geraint  748 
Lost  one  Found  was  greeted  as  in  Heaven  With  ;  Balin  and  Balan  82 
Lady,  my  liege,  in  whom  I  have  my  ;,  Lancdot  and  E.  1180 

1  pray  you :  have  your  ;''*  apart.  '  „  1217 
thou  in  whom  I  have  Most ;  and  most  yffiamy,  „  1357 
Bedder  than  any  rose,  a  ;  to  me.  Holy  GraU  521 
And  each  made';  of  either ;  then  he  ask'd,  „  638 
'  Glory  and ;  and  honour  to  our  Lord  „  839 
*  I  had  forgotten  all  in  my  strong  ;  To  see  thee—  Last  ToumamentoS2 
Himself  beheld  three  spints  mad  with  ;  Guinetere  252 
feel  My  purpose  and  rejoicing  in  my  ;.'  „  486 
not  grkving  at  your  fs.  But  not  rejoicing ;  „  679 
L(Ridon  rolPd  one  tide  of  ;  thro'  aH  Her  trebled 

miDkRis,  To  the  Queen  ii  8 

great  pine  shook  with  lonely  sounds  <A  j  Later' s  Tale  i  325 

to  boui  there  came  The  ;'  of  life  in  steeimess  overcrane,  „          386 

and ;  In  breathing  nearer  heaven ;  and;  to  me,  „          388 

more  than ;'  that  I  to  her  became  Her  guudian  „          392 

Since  in  his  abeence  full  of  li^t  and ;',  „          435 

AO  ;',  to  whom  my  agony  was  a ;.  »          656 

fromcommomihoe,  Andh^oB  toonr;.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  224 

Little  gueas  what ;  can  be  got  from  a  cowslip  In  tke  CkUd,  Hosp.  36 

within  The  city  comes  a  munnur  void  of  ;',  Tiresias  101 

when  I  hdd  it  aloft  in  my  ;',  The  Wredc  33 

k  it  wen  to  widi  you  /  ?  Lodcdey  R.,  Sixty  216 


Jogr  {continued)    Wish  me  ;  ! 

this  life  of  mingled  pains  And  fs  to  me, 

workl-wfai^>ex,  mystk  pain  or ;, 
Jaytnoe    this  May  morning  in  ;  is  beating  Full 
menily ; 

To  keep  them  in  all  / :  more  than  this  I 
could  not; 
Jayfnl    led  J  to  that  pahn-planted  fountain-fed 

to  have  been  J  and  free  from  blame. 

J  came  his  speech : 

Took  ;  note  of  all  things ;, 

a  shout  More  /  than  the  city-roar  that  hails 

Whex  the  breeze  of  a  ;'  dawn  blew  free 

Cleab-hsaded  friend,  whose  /  scorn, 

'  I  sung  the  /  Paean  clear, 

by  my  life.  These  birds  hare  /  thoughts. 

A  fairy  Prince,  with  /  eyes. 

The  streets  were  fill'd  with  /  sound, 

31ute  symbols  of  a  /  mom. 

With  a  ;  spirit  I  Sir  Richard  GrenviUe  die  ! ' 
Joyinlly    You  then  /,  all  of  you, 
Joying     J  to  feel  herself  alive. 
Joyless    Touch  thy  dull  goal  of  /  gray, 

cuckoo  of  a  ;  Jime  Is  calling  out  of  doors : 

Midnight — and  ;  June  gone  by. 


The  Sing  60 
To  Mary  Boyle  50 
Far — far — away  7 

II 

AU  Things  will  Die  6 

Lancelot  and  E.  1324 

Alexander  7 

D.  of  F.  Women  80 

The  Captain  30 

Aylmer's  Fidd  67 

Princess,  Con.  101 

Arabian  Nights  1 

Clear-headed  friend  1 

Two  Voices  1^ 

Gardener's  D.  99 

Day-Dm.,  Arrival  7 

In  Mem.  xxxi  10 

„      Cm.  58 

The  Revenge  103 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  15 

Palace  of  Art  178 

In  Mem.  IxxH  27 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  3 

«  9 

Tin  the  y  birthday  came  of  a  boy  bom  happily  dead.  Charity  34 

Joyous    She  seem'd  a  part  of  j  Spring :  <^^  L.  and  Q.  G.  23 

A  y  to  dilaie,  as  toward  the  Ught.  Aylmer's  Field  77 

Then  glided  out  of  the  ;  wood  Maud  II  i  31 

JnUuit     But  anon  her  awful  ;  voice.  Dying  Swan  28 

While  all  the  younger  ones  with ;  cries  Enoch  Arden  377 

Heavoi  flash'd  a  sudden  ;  ray.  Ode  on  Wdl.  129 

Roll  and  rejoice, ;  voice,  W.  to  Alexandra  22 

All  on  a  sudden  the  garrison  utter  a  ;  shout,  Def.  of  Lueknow  98 

a  ;  challenge  to  Time  and  to  Fate ;  Vastness  21 

Before  her  skims  the  y  woodpecker.  Prog,  of  Spring  16 

Tou  should  be  j  that  you  flourish'd  here  Poets  and  their  B.  12 

Jnldee     With  pleasure  and  love  and  j :  Sea- Fairies  36 

Moum'd  in  this  golden  hour  of  ;',  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  8 

Utter  your  j,  steepk  and  spire  !  W.  to  Alexandra  17 

Crowning  year  of  her  J.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  11 

Ceremonial  Of  this  year  of  her  J.  „                 24 

And  this  year  of  her  J.  (repeat)  „           38,  51 

'  Hail  to  the  glorious  Goklen  year  of  her  J  I'  „                 65 

darkness  Dawns  into  the  J  of  the  Ages.  „                  71 
Judah    Not  least  art  thou,  thou  little  Bethkhem 

In  J,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  25 

Judge  (s)     Himself  the  j  aiKi  jury.  Sea  Dreams  175 

God,  not  man,  is  the  J  of  us  aU.  Grandmother  95 

Modred  for  want  of  worthier  was  the ;.  Gareth  and  L.  28 

I  came  into  court  to  the  J  and  the  lawyers.  Rizpah  33 

Him,  happy  to  be  chosen  J  of  Gods,  Death  of  (Enone  16 

Judge  (Tob)    and  see  thy  Paris ;  of  Gods.'  CEnone  90 

J  thou  me  by  what  I  am,  „     154 

Thy  mortal  eyes  are  frail  to  ;  of  fair,  „     158 

'  Let  the  Princess  /  Of  that '  Primeess  ii  234 

pray'd  me  not  to  j  their  cause  from  her  „      rtt  235 

bring  Him  here,  that  I  may  ;  the  ri^t,  Gareth  and  L.  380 

And  y  all  nature  from  her  feet  of  clay.  Merlin  and  V.  835 

If  one  may  j  the  Uving  by  the  dead,  Lancelot  and  E.  1368 

To  y  between  my  slander'd  self  and  me —  Columbus  125 

Judged     now  the  Priest  has  j  for  me.'  The  Victim  56 

Jndger    hasty  j  would  have  call'd  her  guilt,  Geraint  and  E.  433 

Judging    he  should  come  to  shame  thy  j  of  him.'  Gareth  and  L.  469 

as  the  base  man,  j  of  the  good,  Pdleas  and  E.  80 

Judgment    my  own  weakness  fools  My  ;',  Supp.  Confessions  137 

pick'd  offenders  from  the  mass  For  ;'.  Prineess  i  30 

You  shame  your  mothers  j  too.  „     vi  261 

He  would  not  make  his  j  blind.  In  Mem.  xevi  14 

And  shalt  abide  her  j  on  it ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  584 

Submit,  and  hear  the  j  of  the  King.'    '  He  hears 

the  y  of  the  King  of  kings,'  Geraint  and  E.  799 

naked  Ignorance  Dehvers  brawling  fs.  Merlin  and  V.  665 

Rash  were  my  j  then,  who  dean  Uik  maid  Lancelot  and  E.  239 

and  hollow  like  a  Ghost's  Doiouncing ;,  Guinevere  421 


Judgment 

Judgment  (continued)    And  fall'n  away  from  /. 
Love,  arraign'd  to  /  and  to  death, 
when  the  trumpet  of  j  'ill  sound, 
And  would  defend  his  /  well, 
Judgment  dafty    an  roarin'  hke  /  d. 
Judgment-day    (See  also  Jidgemint  day,  Judgment  daay) 

the  loud  world's  bastard  7-cZ, 
Judith    couch'd  behind  a  J,  underneath  The  head  of 
Holofemes 
But  your  J — but  your  worldling — 
Juggle    Is  a  ;■  bom  of  the  brain  ? 

and  j,  and  lie  and  cajole. 
Juice    Till  all  his  7  is  dried. 
Juiced    See  Full-juiced 
Julian    Poor  J — how  he  rush'd  away  ; 

J  came  again  Back  to  his  mother's  house 
(for  in  J's  land  They  never  nail  a  dumb  head 
but  shatter'd  nerve,  Yet  haunting  J, 
'  Stay  then  a  little,'  answer'd  J, 
For  such  a  craziness  as  J's  look'd 
Forgive  him,  if  his  name  be  J  too.' 
And  J  made  a  solemn  feast : 
Wonder'd  at  some  strange  light  in  J's  eyes 
Have  jested  also,  but  for  J's  eyes. 
Then  J  made  a  secret  sign  to  me 
younger  J,  who  himself  was  crown'd  With  roses 
When  J  goes,  the  lord  of  all  he  saw.  ' 

'My  guests,'  said  J :  '  you  are  honour'd  now 
But  J,  sitting  by  her,  answer'd  all : 
I  with  him,  my  J,  back  to  mine. 
Juliet     J,  she  So  %ht  of  foot, 

J  answer'd  laughing,  '  Go  and  see  The  Gardener's 

daughter : 
Will  you  match  My  J  ?  you,  not  you,— 
July    The  cuckoo  of  a  worse  J  Is  calling 
Jumbled    Ev'n  in  the  j  rubbish  of  a  dream, 

every  clime  and  age  J  together  ; 
Jump    See  Joomp 
Jumped    See  Joompt 
Jumping    See  A-Joompin' 
June    Their  meetings  made  December  J 
married,  when  wur  it  ?  back-end  o'  J, 
The  cuckoo  of  a  joyless  J  Is  calling 
Midnight — and  joyless  J  gone  by. 
When  I  was  in  my  J,  you  in  your  May, 
round  me  and  over  me  J's  high  blue, 
June-blue    clear  as  the  heights  of  the  J-b  heaven, 


354 


Lover's  Tale  i  103 

785 

Bizpah  57 

Tirestas  190 

Owd  Roa  110 


'5  R.  119 


Princess  iv  226 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  20 

Maud  II  a  42 

Charity  29 

Audley  Court  46 

Lover's  Tale  iv  2 
14 
36 
106 
113 
168 
175 
187 
205 
223 
284 
296 
315 
316 
340 
388 
Gardener's  D.  13 


29 

172 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  11 

Merlin  and  V.  347 

Princess,  Pro.  17 


In  Mem.  xcvii  11 

North.  Cobbler  11 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  8.  3 

9 

Roses  on  the  T.  2 

June  Bracken,  etc.  2 

7 


To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  31 

Princess  iv  142 

A  Character  15 

Sea  Dreams  175 

Poland  11 

Two  Voices  117 

To  J.  S.  31 

Lady  Clare  18 

Vision  of  Sin  111 

Tou  might  have  won  19 

Princess  ii  132 

Ode  on  Well.  169 


Jungle-poison'd    In  haunts  of  j-p  air 
Junketing    growth  Of  spirit  than  to  j  and  love. 
Juno    to  charm  Pallas  and  J  sitting  by  : 
Jury    Himself  the  judge  and  /, 
Just     Us,  O  J  and  Good,  Forgive, 

Hears  little  of  the  false  or  ;.' 

A  man  more  pure  and  bold  and  j  Was  never  bom 

'  That  all  comes  round  so  /  and  fair  : 

'  Virtue  ! — to  be  good  and  j — 

'tis  but  /  The  many-headed  beast  should 
know.' 

woman's  state  in  each,  How  far  from  j ; 

crowds  at  length  be  sane  and  crowns  be'  j. 

desires  no  isles  of  the  blest,  no  quiet  seats  of  the  j. 

And  thou  hast  made  him  :  thou  art  j 

Who  battled  for  the  Tme,  the  J, 

Arise,  my  God,  and  strike,  for  we  hold  Thee  j 

the  blessed  Heavens  are  i,  ^  „g  ^  ^        ^^ 

For  ever  and  for  ever  with  those  j  souls  and  tme—  May  Queen,  Con.  55 

A  man  more  pure  and  bold  and  7  To  J  S  31 

i^^H  ,^n,„  T.  '  ^'  '^'■^^'M"^.  ™ghty  God,  St.  S.  StyliUs  9 

and  more  Than  many  ;  and  holy  men,  131 

yJ?"^'  ^^^""i'^'' Wu''^  ^^^  '  Si^  Galahad  79 

7hv  ?^il  Z''^^  '''^".u  ^  ^^""^^  °°  ^  gi^t  "" ;         Maud  III  vi  45 

The  C^ood,  the  Tme,  the  Pure,  the  J-  Loc^' 'i:'^iZn 


In  Mem.,  Pro.  12 
Ivi  18 
Maud  II  i  45 
The  Flight  67 


Juster    A  j  epoch  has  begun. 
Justice    A  silent  court  of  j  in  his  breast 
social  tmth  shall  spread,  And  /,      ' 
No  boon  is  here.  But  j, 
According  to  the  j  of  the  King  : 
thou  hast  \;Teak'd  Ms  j  on  his  foes, 
and  all  flyers  from  the  hand  Of  J, ' 
to  guard  the  j  of  the  King : 
And  there  he  kept  the  j  of  the  King 

Him,  who  should  bear  the  sword  Of  J 

led  by  J,  Love,  and  Tmth  ; 
Love  and  J  came  and  dwelt  therein  ;  (repeat) 
Justified    seem'd  So  /  by  that  necessity 
Justify    ever  face  she  look'd  on  /  it)       ' 
Justly    How  /,  after  that  vile  term  of  yours 
Jut  (s)     By  zig-zag  paths,  and  j's  of  pointed  rock, 
based  His  feet  on  j's  of  slippery  crag 
By  zigzag  paths,  and  j's  of  pointed  rock, 
based  His  feet  on  j's  of  sUppery  crag 
Jut  (verb)    diamond-ledges  that  j  from  the  dells  • 
Juttmg    Is  7  thro'  the  rind ; 

every  height  comes  out,  and  j  peak  And  valley, 


Kay 

Epilogue  6 

Sea  Dreams  174 

In  Mem.  cxxvii  6 

Gareth  and  L.  346 

381 

1268 

Marr.  of  Geraint  37 

Geraint  and  E.  934 

956 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  88 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  161 

Akbar's  Dream  181,  194 

Geraint  and  E.  396 

Princess  v  134 

Merlin  and  V.  921 

M.  d' Arthur  50 

189 

Pass,  of  Arthur  218 

357 

The  Mermaid  40 

Ancient  Sage  122 

Spec,  of  Iliad  13 


Kate  6 
„    10 

„    14 


17 


Kaffir    And  not  the  K,  Hottentot,  Malay,  Prinreii  ii  ^ «;« 

Kalifa    One  Alia !  one  Z !                       ''  Ji^hS!^          lan 

Kapiolani(Chieftainess.  Sandwich  Islands)    greatest  of  ^^"'^  *  ^''^"'^  1^7 

women,  island  heroine,  K  v     ■  i     ■  ct 

will  the  glory  of  K  be  mingled  with  either  on  Hawa-i-ee.     ^'^^^'^^'^^^ 

Peelfe  remainmg  as  K  ascended  her  mountain  "        9r 

^araac    .Hong-Kong,  K,  and  all  the  rest.  To  Ulvsses  44 

^*®    ^?  ^rZ^^^  ^^y^t*^  ^l^^t  she  will :  For  Z  hath  an  ^ 

unbridled  tongue, 
K  hath  a  spirit  ever  strung  Like  a  new  bow 
For  K  no  common  love  will  feel ;  My  woman-soldier, 
gallant  K,  ' 

^„^-u*^  fl*^^  ri^  "^  """'^  ""^^  ™"^*-'     ^  s^th  '  the  men  are 
Karlft^ers'figr^'  ^"  ^"^^^  ^'  '"^  ^'^'  '   ^  -^  -^ 
Z  bv^  well  the  bold  and  fierce  ;  But  none  are  bold  enough 

Margaret  and  Mary,  there's  K  and  Caroline  :  Mav  O^er^ 

Katie    (See  also  Katie  WiUows.  WiUows)     '  Sweet  K,  once  I       ^  ^ 

The  Brook  74 

„  86 
„  92 
„  101 
„  119 
„  169 
„  193 
„  211 
„  214 
„  221 
„  67 
Tomorrow  12 
63 


did  her  a  good  tum, 
'  Run  '  To  K  somewhere  in  the  walks  below,  '  Run   K  ' ' 

K  never  ran  :  she  moved  To  meet  me  '       " 

less  of  sentiment  than  sense  Had  K ; 
But  K  snatch'd  her  eyes  at  once  from  mine, 

O  K,  what  I  suffer'd  for  your  sake  ! 
sun  of  sweet  content  Re-risen  in  K's  eyes 

^ru^}^^  ^I  *^®  ^°"S  ^^'^  of  Australasian  seas 
What  do  they  call  you  ?  '     '  K.' 
That  K  laugh'd,  and  laughing  blush'd 
Have  you  not  heard  ?  '  said  K,  ' 


Katie  Willows       0  darhng  K  W,  his  one  child ! 
Katty    wid  Shamus  O'Shea  at  K's  shebeen  • 

says  to  me  wanst,  at  K's  shebeen  ' 

Kay  (a  Knight  of  the  Round  Table)    Then  came  Sir  K,  the 

seneschal,  and  cried,  '   V.„.,,i,      j  r  oan 

let  ^  the  seneschal  Look  to  thy  wants,  ^"'''^  ""'^  ^^  T. 

K,  The  master  of  the  meats  and  drinks,  " 

^^^  wiL  ^T^'^  °^  ""^'^  Wan-sallow  as  the  plant 

K,    What  murmurest  thou  of  mystery  v 

But  K  the  seneschal,  who  loved  him  not 

c  ^u '.  a?  ^"^schal,  would  come  Blustering 

feo  that  Sir  K  nodded  him  leave  to  go 

so'sir  Timf^.u^'^J  him  groaning  like  a  wounded  bull- 
so  bu-  K  beside  the  door  Mutter'd  in  scom 

.  ri?-'»Tn    °^®  ^,*  ^^^^  SO  against  the  King, 

Tut,  tell  me  not,'  said  K,  '  ye  are  overfine 
look  who  comes  behind,'  for  there  was  K 


450 
452 
470 
483 
513 
520 
648 
705 
727 
732 
762 


Kay 


355 


Keep 


Kay  (a  Knight  of  the  Bound  Table)  (continued)    Knowest 

thou  not  me  ?  thy  master  ?     I  am  K.  Gareth  and  L.  753 
'  Have  at  thee  then,'  said  K  :   they  shock'd,  and  K 

Fell  shoulder-slipt,  „            758 

helping  back  the  dislocated  K  To  Camelot,  „          1213 

Arthur  tum'd  to  K  the  seneschal,  Last  Tournament  89 
Kays  (keys)    Till  Holy  St  Pether  gets  up  wid  his  k  an' 

opens  the  gate  !  Tomorrow  93 
Keaper  (keeper)     K's  it  wur ;  f o'  they  fim  'um 

theer  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  33 

Keeap  (keep)    an'  I  k^s  'im  clean  an'  bright,  North.  Cobbler  97 

I  says  to  tha  '  k  'em,  an'  welcome '  Church-warden,  etc.  36 

an'  k's  thysen  to  thysen.  „              48 

Keeaper  (keeper)    An'  k  'e  seed  ya  an  roon'd,  „             28 

Keel    round  about  the  k  with  faces  pale.  Lotos- Eaters  25 

Sweet-Gale  rustle  round  the  shelving  k  ;  Edwin  Morris  110 

The  broad  seas  swell'd  to  meet  the  k,  The  Voyage  13 

no  ruder  air  perplex  Thy  sliding  k,  In  Mem.  ix  10 

I  hear  the  noise  about  thy  k;  „         xl 

ship  sail  K  upward,  and  mast  downward,  Gareth  and  L.  254 

Light-green  with  its  own  shadow,  ktok.  Lover's  Tale  i  43 

Keen    hawk-eyes  are  k  and  bright,  K  with  triumph,  Rosalind  25 

Made  dull  his  inner,  k  his  outer  eye  Last  Tournament  366 

cloud  of  thought  K,  irrepressible.  Lover's  Tale  ii  165 

then  so  fc  to  seek  The  meanings  ambush 'd  Tiresias  4 

I  am  not  k  of  sight,  The  Ring  258 

Roof  not  a  glance  so  &  as  thine  :  Clear-headed  friend  7 

Those  spirit-thrilling  eyes  so  k  and  beautiful :  Ode  to  Memory  39 

about  the  circles  of  the  globes  Of  her  k  eyes.  The  Poet  44 

And  sparkled  k  with  frost  against  the  hilt :  M.  d' Arthur  55 

Thro'  all  yon  starlight  k,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  22 

His  o\vn,  tho'  k  and  bold  and  soldierly  Aylmer's  Field  192 

Did  the  k  shriek  '  Yes  love,  yes,  Edith,  „          582 

Pierces  the  k  seraphic  flame  From  orb  to  orb,  In  Mem.  xxx  27 

The  yule-clog  sparkled  k  with  frost,  '  „    Ixxviii  5 

And  k  thro'  wordy  snares  to  track  „        xcv  31 

can  I  doubt,  who  knew  thee  k  In  intellect,  „       cxiii  5 

And  sparkled  k  with  frost  against  the  hilt :  Pass,  of  Arthur  223 

When  frost  is  k  and  days  are  brief —  To  Ulysses  19 

Keener    No  k  hunter  after  glory  breathes.  Lancelot  and  E.  156 

The  memory's  vision  hath  a  k  edge.  Lover's  Tale  i  36 

Keenest    Still  with  their  fires  Love  tipt  his  k  darts ;      D.  of  F.  Women  173 

Keenin'  (crjring)    Him  an'  his  childer  wor  k  Tomorrow  86 

Keenlier    That  k  in  sweet  April  wakes,  In  Mem.  cxvi  2 

Keenly    glancing  all  at  once  as  fc  at  her  Marr.  of  Geraint  773 

Keep  (s)     there  is  the  k  ;   He  shall  not  cross  us  Geraint  and  E.  341 

Keep  (verb)    {See  also  KeeS,p)    tears  of  penitence  Which 

would  k  green  Supp.  Confessions  119 

So  k  where  you  are  :  you  are  foul  with  sin  ;  Poet's  Mind  36 

hearts  of  salient  springs  K  measure  with  thine  owti  ?  Adeline  27 

K's  real  sorrow  far  away.  Margaret  44 

Too  long  you  k  the  upper  skies  ;  Rosalind  35 

We  must  bind  And  k  you  fast,  „       43 

heart  a  charmed  slumber  k's,  Elednore  128 

K's  his  blue  waters  fresh  for  many  a  mile.  Mine  be  the  strength  8 

Nor  any  train  of  reason  k  :  Two  Voices  50 

Let  us  swear  an  oath,  and  k  it  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  108 

I  k  smooth  plats  of  fruitful  groimd.  The  Blackbird  3 

K  dry  their  light  from  tears  ;  Of  old  sat  Freedom  20 

'  Here,  take  the  goose,  and  k  you  warm,  The  Goose  7 

'  So  k  you  cold,  or  k  you  warm,  „        43 

k  a  thmg,  its  use  will  come.  The  Epic  42 

'  Eustace,'  I  said,  '  this  wonder  k's  the  house.'  Gardener's  D.  119 

Could  k  me  from  that  Eden  where  she  dwelt.  ,,          191 

k's  us  all  in  order  more  or  less —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  23 

that  trims  us  up,  And  k's  us  tight ;  Edwin  Morris  47 

and  try  If  yet  he  k's  the  power.  Talking  Oak  28 

to  k  My  own  fuU-tuned, —  Love  and  Duty  39 

but  that  all  Should  k  within,  door  shut,  Godiva  41 

His  state  the  king  reposing  k's.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  39 

So  A;  I  fair  thro'  faith  and  prayer  Sir  Galahad  23 

To  k  the  best  man  under  the  sun  Lady  Clare  31 

'  But  k  the  secret  for  your  life,  „            34 

'  But  fc  the  secret  all  ye  can.'  „            42 

While  we  fc  a  little  breath  !  Vision  of  Sin  192 


Keep  (verb)  (continued)    betray  the  ti-ust :    K  nothing 

sacred  :  You  might  have  won  19 

So  might  she  fc  the  house  while  he  was  gone.  Enoch  Arden  140 

K  a  clean  hearth  and  a  clear  fire  for  me,  „          192 

till  I  come  again  K  everything  shipshape,  „           220 

Not  fc  it  noble,  make  it  nobler  ?  Aylmer's  Field  386 

fc  him  from  the  lust  of  blood  That  makes  Lucretius  83 

we  fc  a  chronicle  With  all  about  him ' —  Princess,  Pro.  27 

That  love  to  fc  xis  children !  „                133 

fc  your  hoods  about  the  face ;  „             ii  358 

surely,  if  your  Highness  fc  Your  purport,  „           Hi  211 

I  broke  the  letter  of  it  to  fc  the  sense.  „            iv  338 

And  here  he  k's  me  hostage  for  his  son.'  „                405 

We  did  but  fc  yoiu*  siu^ty  for  our  son,  „               ii  25 

For  now  will  cruel  Ida  fc  her  back ;  „                  84 

she  would  not  fc  Her  compact.'  „                323 

0  if ,  I  say,  you  fc  One  pulse  that  beats  true  woman,  „  vi  179 
With  one  that  cannot  fc  her  mind  an  hour :  „  287 
What  use  to  fc  them  here — now  ?  „                304 

1  cannot  fc  My  heart  an  eddy  from  the  brawling  hour :      „  321 
willing  she  should  fc  Court-favour :  „            vii  57 
seem  to  fc  her  up  but  drag  her  down —  „                270 
make  herself  her  own  To  give  or  fc,  „               273 
fc's  his  wing'd  aflections  dipt  with  crime :  „                316 
God  bless  the  narrow  sea  which  fc's  her  off,  „         Con.  51 
And  k's  our  Britain,  whole  within  herself,  „                 52 
fc  it  ours,  O  God,  from  brute  control ;  Ode  on  Well.  159 
fc  our  noble  England  whole,  „                161 
fc  the  soldier  firm,  the  statesman  pure :    "  „                222 
thank  God  that  I  fc  my  eyes.  Grandmother  106 
Let  darkness  fc  her  raven  gloss  :  In  Mem.  i  10 
Who  fc's  the  keys  of  all  the  creeds,  „        xxiii  5 
How  dare  we  fc  our  Christmas-eve  ;  „         xxix  4 
I  strive  To  fc  so  sweet  a  thing  aHve  : '  „         xxxv  7 
'  What  fc's  a  spirit  wholly  true  „             Hi  9 
She  fc's  the  gift  of  years  before,  „       xcvii  25 
For  who  would  fc  an  ancient  form  „            cv  19 
We  fc  the  day.    With  festal  cheer,  „         cvii  21 
force,  that  fc's  A  thousand  pulses  dancing,  „       cxxv  15 
tho'  as  yet  I  fc  Within  his  court  on  earth,  „        cxxvi  6 
I  fc  but  a  man  and  a  maid,  _         Maud  I  iv  19 
I  would  not  marvel  at  either,  but  fc  a  temperate  brain  ;  „            40 
Should  Nature  fc  me  alive,  „        vi  32. 
Her  brother,  from  whom  I  fc  aloof,  „            46 
K  watch  and  ward,  (repeat)  „            58 
How  can  ye  fc  me  tether'd  to  you —  Gareth  and  L.  115 
yet  the  which  No  man  can  fc ;  „          272 
my  knighthood  fc  the  vows  they  swore,  „          602 
And  fc's  me  in  this  ruinous  castle  here,  Marr.  of  Geraint  462 
fc's  the  wear  and  polish  of  the  wave.  „            682 
dress  her  beautifully  and  fc  her  true  ' —  Geraint  and  E.  40 
not  to  speak  to  me,  And  thus  ye  fc  it !  „            79 
To  fc  them  in  the  wild  ways  of  the  wood,  „           187 
fc  a  touch  of  sweet  civility  Here  in  the  heart  „          312 
And  if  it  were  so  do  not  fc  it  back  :  „          316 
To  fc  hini  bright  and  clean  as  heretofore,  „          937 
Eats  scarce  enow  to  fc  his  pulse  abeat ;  Balin  and  Balan  105 
We  could  not  fc  him  silent,  out  he  flash'd,  Merlin  and  V.  416 
To  fc  me  all  to  your  own  self, —  „            523 
I  needed  then  no  charm  to  fc  them  mine  But  youth  „            547 
the  Queen  Might  fc  her  all  his  own :  „            585 
meaning  by  it  To  fc  the  list  low  and  pretenders  back,  „            592 
For  fc  it  like  a  puzzle  chest  in  chest,  „             654 
But  fc  that  oath  ye  sware,  ye  might,  perchance,  „            688 
Then  must  she  fc  it  safelier.     All  was  jest.  Lancelot  and  E.  218 
you  fc  So  much  of  what  is  graceful :  „          1218 
To  fc  them  in  all  joyance :  „          1324 
K  him  back  Among  yourselves.  PeUeas  and  E.  190 
take  him  to  you,  fc  him  off,  „           194 
And  if  thou  fc  me  in  thy  donjon  here,  „          242 
Vows  !   did  you  fc  the  vow  you  made  to  Mark  Last  Tournament  655 
house.  That  fc's  the  rust  of  murder  on  the  waUs —  Guinevere  74 
Not  only  to  fc  down  the  base  in  man,  „       480 
A  strain  to  shame  us  '  fc  you  to  yourselves ;  To  the  Queen  ii  15 
K  thou  thy  name  of  '  Lover's  Bay.'  Lover's  Tale  i  15 


Keep 


356 


EiU 


Keep  (verb)  (continued)    yet  in  him  k's  A  draught  of  that 

sweet  fountain  Lover's  Tale  i  140 

It  seem'd  to  k  its  sweetness  to  itself,  „            154 

Are  fashion'd  by  the  channel  which  they  k),  „            567 

And  k  yourself,  none  knowing,  to  yourself  ;  „        iv  114 
Sally  she  wesh'd  foalks'  cloaths  to  k  the  wolf  fro' 

the  door,  North.  Cobbler  29 

K  the  revolver  in  hand  !  Def.  of  Lticknow  26 

The  love  that  k's  this  heart  aUve  The  Flight  35 

Could  k  their  haithen  kings  in  the  flesh  Tomorrow  70 

To  k  our  English  Empire  whole  !  Hands  all  Round  14 

I  bad  her  k,  Like  a  seal'd  book.  The  Ring  122 

desire  to  k  So  skilled  a  nurse  about  you  always —  „        373 

How  bright  you  k  your  marriage-ring  !  Romney's  R.  59 
Keeper    (See  also  Eeaper,  Eeeaper)    There  hj  ak  shot  at, 

slightly  hurt,  Aylmer's  Field  548 

escaped  His  k's,  and  the  silence  which  he  felt,  „            839 

jam  the  doors,  and  bear  The  k's  down,  Lucretius  170 

the  k  was  one,  so  full  of  pride,  Maud  II  v  79 

not  with  such  a  craziness  as  needs  A  cell  and  k),  Lover's  Tale  iv  164 

Keeping     the  children  play'd  at  k  house.  Enoch  Arden  24 

did  Enid,  k  watch,  behold  In  the  first  shallow  Geraint  and  E.  118 

'  It  is  not  worth  the  k  :  let  it  go  :  Merlin  and  V.  396 

to  have  my  shield  In  k  till  I  come.'  Lancelot  and  E.  383 

I  said  '  You  were  k  with  her,  First  Quarrel  64 

My  giant  ilex  k  leaf  When  frost  is  keen  To  Ulysses  18 

Kelt    (See  also  Celt)    Slav,  Teuton,  K,  I  count  them  all             Epilogue  18 

Kem  (came)     An'  the  sun  k  out  of  a  cloud  Tomorrow  37 

Kemble     Ganick  and  stateUer  K,  and  the  rest  To  W.  C.  Macready  7 

Ken    to  sea,  as  far  as  eye  could  k,  Lover's  Tale  i  336 

Kendal    I  am  all  but  sure  I  have — in  K  church —  Romney's  R.  19 

Kent    lands  in  K  and  messuages  in  York,  Edwin  Morris  127 

On  capes  of  Afric  as  on  cliffs  of  K,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  17 

Kep  (kept)     '  Siver,  I  k  'um,  I  k  'lun,  my  lass,  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  23 

fur  to  kick  our  Sally  as  k  the  wolf  fro'  the  door,  North.  Cobbler  59 

I  'a  k'  thruf  thick  an'  thin  Spinster's  S's.  12 

boath  on  us  jfc  out  o'  sight  o'  the  winders  „            35 

fur,  Steevie,  tha  k'  it  sa  neat  „            77 

An'  'e  k  his  head  hoop  Uke  a  king,  Owd  Rod  9 

Sa  I  fc  i'  my  chair,  fur  I  thowt  she  was  nobbut  a-rilin'  „        74 

k  a-callin'  o'  Roa  till  'e  waggled  'is  taaU  fur  a  bit,  But 

the  cocks  k  a-crawin'  an'  crawin'  „      105 

I  it'  mysen  meeak  as  a  lamb.  Churchwarden,  etc.  41 
Kept    (See  also  Kep)     Which  k  her  throne  unshaken  still,      To  the  Queen  34 

But  good  things  have  not  k  aloof.  My  life  is  full  2 

K  watch,  waiting  decision,  CEnone  143 

this  k,  Stored  in  some  treasure-house  M.  d' Arthur  100 

on  the  leads  we  k  her  till  she  pigg'd.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  92 

But  that  his  heavy  rider  k  him  down.  Vision  of  Sin  4 

His  worst  he  k,  his  best  he  gave.  You  might  have  won  26 

this  he  k  Thro'  all  his  future  ;  Enoch  Arden  236 

Smote  him,  as  having  k  aloof  so  long.  „          274 

but  he  was  gone  Who  kit;  „          695 

put  her  Uttle  ones  to  school,  And  k  them  in  it,  „          707 

K  him  a  living  soul.  „          804 

But  k  the  house,  his  chair,  and  last  his  bed.  „          826 

His  gazing  in  on  Annie,  his  resolve,  And  how  he  k  it.  ,,          864 

sow'd  her  name  and  k  it  green  In  living  letters,  Aylmer's  Field  88 

where  his  worldless  heart  had  k  it  warm,  „            471 

yet  her  cheek  K  colour :  wondrous  !  „            506 

K  to  the  garden  now,  and  grove  of  pines,  „            550 

she,  who  k  a  tender  Christian  hope.  Sea  Dreams  41 

(I  k  the  book  and  had  my  finger  in  it)  Princess,  Pro.  53 

I  k  mine  own  Intent  on  her,  „          ii  441 

She  k  her  state,  and  left  the  drunken  king  „         Hi  229 

then,  climbing,  Cyril  k  With  Psyche,  „              354 

Saw  that  they  k  apart,  no  mischief  done ;  „          iv  340 

why  k  ye  not  your  faith  ?    O  base  and  bad  !  „            vll 

Part  sat  Uke  rocks  :  part  reel'd  but  k  their  seats :  „              496 

His  foes  were  thine  ;  he  A;  us  free  ;  Ode  on  Well.  91 

great  men  who  fought,  and  k  it  ours.  „            158 

Like  ballad-burthen  music,  k.  The  Daisy  77 

My  blood  an  even  tenor  k.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  17 

In  those  f  all'n  leaves  which  k  their  green,  „             xcv  23 

K  itself  warm  in  the  heart  of  my  dreams,  Maud  I  vi  18 


Kept  (continued)    and  k  and  coax'd  and  whistled  to — 
Wherein  she  k  them  folded  reverently 
And  k  her  off  and  gazed  upon  her  face, 
But  k  it  for  a  sweet  surprise  at  morn. 
But  Enid  ever  k  the  faded  silk. 
Because  she  k  the  letter  of  his  word. 
Like  that  which  k  the  heart  of  Eden  green 
But  k  myself  aloof  till  I  was  changed  ; 
And  there  he  k  the  justice  of  the  King 
Some  lost,  some  stolen,  some  as  reUcs  k. 
since  he  k  his  mind  on  one  sole  aim, 
Some  cause  had  k  him  simder'd  from  his  wife  : 
and  took  the  shield.  There  k  it, 
friend  Might  have  well  k  his  secret. 
k  The  one-day-seen  Sir  Lancelot  in  her  heart. 
And  faith  imf aithful  k  him  falsely  true. 
There  two  stood  arm'd,  and  k  the  door ; 
a  maid,  Who  k  our  holy  faith  among  her  kin 
Arthur  k  his  best  until  the  last ; 
a  Uon  on  each  side  That  k  the  entry. 
Sir  Pelleas  k  the  field  With  honour : 
still  he  A;  his  watch  beneath  the  wall. 
Wide  open  were  the  gates.  And  no  watch  k  ; 
this  k,  Stored  in  some  treasure-house 
But  still  I  k  my  eyes  upon  the  sky. 
And  k  it  thro'  a  himdred  years  of  gloom, 
'  Bygones  !  you  k  yom-s  hush'd,'  I  said. 
They  A:  their  faith,  their  freedom, 
saw  the  death,  but  k  the  deck, 
and  iEtna  k  her  winter  snow, 
you — you  loved  me,  k  your  word. 
k  theii-  watch  upon  the  ring  and  you. 
I  A;  it  as  a  sacred  amulet  About  me, — 
a  woman,  God  bless  her,  k  me  from  Hell. 
Kerchief    about  them,  ribbon,  glove  Or  A; ; 
Kernel     trash  '  he  said, '  but  with  a  A;  in  it. 

The  A;  of  the  shriveU'd  fruit 
Kestrel     Kite  and  k,  wolf  and  wolfkin. 
Kettle     (See  also  Kittle)     And  hurl'd  the  pan  and  A:. 

wi'  my  oan  A;  theere  o'  the  hob, 
Kex    tho'  the  rough  A;  break  The  starr'd  mosaic, 
Key     (See  also  Kays)     and  opens  but  to  golden  k's. 
With  half  a  sigh  she  tum'd  the  A;, 
Who  keeps  the  k's  of  aU  the  creeds. 
That  Shadow  waiting  with  the  k's, 
And  Uves  to  clutch  the  golden  k's. 
Cries  of  the  partridge,  hke  a  rusty  A;  Tum'd  in 

a  lock, 
'  Authority  of  the  Church,  Power  of  the  k's  ! ' — 
Given  thee  the  k's  of  the  great  Ocean-sea  ? 
and  since  The  k  to  that  weird  casket, 
The  golden  k's  of  East  and  West. 
I  felt  for  what  I  could  not  find,  the  k. 
Keys  (of  a  piano)     Tum'd  as  he  sat,  and  stmck  the  A; 
and  by  their  clash,  And  prelude  on  the  k, 
would  drop  from  the  chords  or  the  k. 
Keystone    For  barefoot  on  the  A:, 
Khan    given  the  Great  K's  palaces  to  the  Moor, 
Kick    all  women  A;  against  their  Lords 
an'  I  gied  our  Sally  a  A;, 
I  seead  that  our  Sally  went  laamed  Cos'  o'  the  A;  as 

I  gied  'er, 
Heer  wur  a  fall  fro'  a  kiss  to  a  A; 
fur  to  A;  our  Sally  as  kep  the  wolf  fro'  the  door, 
mob's  miUion  feet  Will  A;  you  from  your  place, 
I  fetcht  'im  a  k  an'  'e  went. 
Kick'd     K,  he  returns  :  do  ye  not  hate  him. 

An'  I  thowt  'at  I  A;  'im  agean,  but  I  A;  thy  Moother 
istead. 
Kid    Seethed  hke  the  A;  in  its  own  mother's  milk  ! 
ElilauSa,    wallow  in  fiery  riot  and  revel  On  K, 
Kill    eyes.  That  care  not  whom  they  A;, 

why  should  you  k  youiself  And  make  them  orphans 
monsters  only  made  to  A;  Time  by  the  fire  in 
printer.' 


Gareih  and  L.  14 
Marr.  of  Geraint  137 
519 
703 
841 
Geraint  and  E.  455 
770 
872 
956 
Merlin  and  V.  453 
626 
715 
Lancelot  and  E.  398 
593 
746 
877 
1247 
Holy  Grail  697 
763 
818 
Pelleas  and  E.  168 
223 
415 
Pass,  of  Arthur  268 
Lover's  Tale  i  572 
iv  195 
First  Quarrel  68 
Montenegro  2 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  63 
Demeter  and  P.  115 
The  Ring  290 
300 
442 
Charity  4 
Aylmer's  Field  621 
Princess  ii  395 
Ancient  Sage  121 
Boadicea  15 
The  Goose  28 
Spinster's  S's.  9 
Princess  iv  77 
Locksley  Hall  100 
The  Letters  1& 
In  Mem.  xxiii  5 
„        xxvi  15 
,,         Ixiv  10 


Lover's  Tale  ii  115 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  162 

Columbus  149 

Ancient  Sage  254 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  4 

The  Ring  440 

Tht  Islet  7 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  2 

The  Wreck  27 

Gareth  and  L.  214 

Columbus  109 

Princess  iv  412 

North.  Cobbler  36 


40 

57 

59 

The  Fleet  19 

Owd  Rod  62 

Pelleas  and  E.  264 

Owd  Rod  67 

Merlin  and  V.  869 

Kapiolani  9 

Rosalind  37 

Enoch  Arden  394 

Princess,  Pro.  204 


KiU 


357 


Kindle 


Kill  (continued)    '  K  him  now,  The  tyrant !  k  him  Princess,  Pro.  206 

K  us  with  pity,  break  us  with  ourselves —  .,           Hi  258 

some  grand  fight  to  k  and  make  an  end  :  ,,            iv  591 

tenderness,  not  yours,  that  could  not  k,  „           vi  186 

that  Which  k's  me  with  myself,  and  drags  „                307 

Mammonite  mother  k's  her  babe  for  a  burial  fee,  Maud  I  i'^ 

the  churchmen  fain  would  k  their  church,  „    II  v  28 

K  the  foul  thief,  and  wreak  me  for  my  son.'  Gareth  and  L.  363 

I  speak,  and  tho'  he  k  me  for  it,  Geraint  and  E.  137 

shivers,  ere  he  springs  and  k's.  Pelleas  and  E.  286 

tho'  ye  k  my  hope,  not  yet  my  love,  .,            303 

Christ  k  me  then  But  I  will  slice  him  „            337 

'  Will  the  child  k  me  with  her  innocent  talk  ?  '  Guinevere  214 

'  Will  the  child  k  me  with  her  foolish  prate  ?  '  „      225 
shall  I  k  myself  ?    What  help  in  that  ?     I  cannot  k  my 

sin,  If  soul  be  soul ;  nor  can  I  k  my  shame ;  .,      620 

K  or  be  kill'd,  live  or  die,  Def.  of  Lucknoto  41 

k  Their  babies  at  the  breast  for  hate  of  Spain —  Columbus  179 

'  K  you  enemy,  for  you  hate  him,'  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  94 

Mother,  dare  you  k  your  child  ?  Forlorn  37 

Kill'd    I  have  k  my  son.    I  have  k  him —  Dora  159 

Till,  k  with  some  luxurious  agony.  Vision  of  Sin  43 
latest  fox — where  started — k  In  such  a  bottom  :        Aylmer's  Field  253 

This  truthful  change  in  thee  has  k  it.  Princess  vii  350 

bees  are  still'd,  and  the  flies  are  k,  Window,  Winter  10 

Or  k  in  falling  from  his  horse.  In  Mem.  vi  40 

As  the  churches  have  k  their  Christ.  Maud  II  v  29 

I  should  not  less  have  k  him.  Geraint  and  E.  845 

fire  of  Heaven  has  k  the  barren  cold,  Balin  and  Balan  440 

K  with  a  word  worse  than  a  Ufe  of  blows  !  Merlin  and  V.  870 

K  with  vmutterable  unkindliness.'  „          886 

And  here  a  thrust  that  might  have  k,  Lancelot  and  E.  25 

AT  in  a  tilt,  come  nest,  five  summers  back,  Guinevere  321 

Gawain  k  In  Lancelot's  war.  Pass,  of  Arthur  30 

they  k  him,  they  k  him  for  robbing  the  mail.  Rizpah  34 

lawyer  who  k  him  and  hang'd  him  there.  „      40 

Kill  or  be  k,  Uve  or  die,  Def.  of  Lucknow  41 

Those  that  in  barbarian  burials  k  the  slave,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  67 

tiger  madness  muzzled,  every  serpent  passion  k,  „              167 

My  quick  tears  k  the  flower,  Demeter  and  P.  108 

'  She  has  k  him,  has  k  him,  has  k  him  '  Bandit's  Death  36 

Eillest    0  thou  that  k,  hads't  thou  known,  Aylmer's  Field  738 

Killing    and,  half  k  him  With  kisses,  Lover's  Tale  iv  377 

Kin    lift  His  axe  to  slay  my  k.  Talking  Oak  236 

I  am  well-to-do — no  k,  no  care,  Enoch  Arden  418 

shafts  Of  gentle  satire,  k  to  charity,  Princess  ii  469 

If  easy  patrons  of  their  k  Third  of  Feb.  39 

but  felt  him  mine,  Of  closest  fc  to  me  :  Gareth  and  L.  127 

Thou  that  art  her  k.  Go  hkewise ;  „          378 

Thou  shalt  give  back  their  earldom  to  thy  k.  Marr.  of  Geraint  585 

in  the  field  were  Lancelot's  kith  and  k,  Lancelot  and  E.  466 

drave  his  kith  and  k.  And  all  the  Table  Round  „            498 

little  cause  for  laughter :  his  own  k —  „            597 

His  kith  and  k,  not  knowing,  set  upon  him  ;  „            599 

Past  up  the  still  rich  city  to  his  k,  „            802 

Far  up  the  dim  rich  city  to  her  k  ;  „            845 

Lancelot's  kith  and  k  so  worship  him  Holy  Grail  651 

kept  our  holy  faith  among  her  k  In  secret,  „        697 

and  all  his  kith  and  k  Clave  to  him,  Guinevere  439 

call  My  sister's  son — no  k  of  mine,  „       573 

laid  her  in  the  vault  of  her  own  k.  Lover's  Tale  iv  39 

There  was  a  farmer  in  Dorset  of  Harry's  k,  First  Quarrel  17 

are  they  his  mother  ?  are  you  of  his  fc  ?  Eizpah  70 

noa,  not  fur  Sally's  oan  k.  North.  Cobbler  114 

and  vaulted  our  kith  and  our  k,  V.  of  Maeldune  47 

serve  This  mortal  race  thy  k  so  well,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  16 

Amy's  k  and  mine  are  left  to  me.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  56 

Kind  (adj.)     a  nature  never  k  !  Walk,  to  the  Mail  62 

K  nature  is  the  best :  „              64 

'  Her  kisses  were  so  close  and  k.  Talking  Oak  169 

love  her,  as  I  knew  her,  k  ?  Locksley  Hall  70 

But  may  she  still  be  it,  Will  Water.  IQ 

Whom  all  men  rate  as  k  and  hospitable :  Princess  ill 

we  ourselves  but  half  as  good,  as  A:,  «       »  201 

Is  it  A;  ?    Speak  to  her  I  say :  ,,      vi  248 


Kind  (adj.)  {continued)     K,  like  a  man,  was  he  ;  like  a 

man.  Grandmother  70 

Stiles  where  we  stay'd  to  be  k,  Window,  Marr.  Morn.  7 

So  fc  an  office  hath  been  done.  In  Mem.  xvii  17 

'  How  good  !  how  fc  !  and  he  is  gone.'  „         xx  20 

He  looks  so  cold :  she  thinks  him  fc.  „     xcvii  24 

we  cannot  be  fc  to  each  other  here  for  an  hour ;  Maud  I  iv  28 

Nor  her,  who  is  neither  courtly  nor  fc,  „           v  27 

her  eye  seem'd  full  Of  a  fc  intent  to  me,  „          vi  41 

Now  I  thought  she  was  fc  „        xiv  26 

And  says  he  is  rough  but  fc,  .,       xix  70 

K  ?  but  the  deathbed  desire  Spurn'd  by  this  heir  „              77 

Rough  but  fc  ?  yet  I  know  He  had  plotted  against  me  „              79 

K  to  Maud  ?  that  were  not  amiss.  „              82 

Well,  rough  but  fc ;  why  let  it  be  so  :  „              83 

Not  beautiful  now,  not  even  fc ;  „      II  v  06 

Is  it  fc  to  have  made  me  a  grave  so  rough,  „              97 

surely,  some  fc  heart  will  come  To  bury  me,  „            102 

such  a  silence  is  more  wise  than  fc.'  Merlin  and  V.  289 

And  fc  the  woman's  eyes  and  innocent,  Holy  Grail  393 

thine  is  more  to  me — soft,  gracious,  fc —  Last  Tournament  560 

May  those  h  eyes  for  ever  dwell !  Miller's  D.  220 

K  hearts  are  more  than  coronets,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  55 

And  say  to  Robin  a  fc  word,  May  Queen,  Con.  45 

But  though  we  love  fc  Peace  so  well,  Third  of  Feb.  9 

'  Yea,  my  fc  lord,'  said  the  glad  youth,  Geraint  and  E.  241 

'  Would  some  of  your  fc  people  take  him  up,  „            543 

Manners  so  fc,  yet  stately,  such  a  grace  „            861 

but  his  voice  and  his  face  were  not  fc,  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  15 

the  crew  were  gentle,  the  captain  fc  ;  The  Wreck  129 
yer  Honour's  the  thrue  ould  blood  that  always  manes 

to  be  fc,  Tomorrow  5 

Than  ha'  spoken  as  fc  as  you  did.  First  Quarrel  73 

he  was  always  fc  to  me.  „              90 
for  it's  fc  of  you,  Madam,  to  sit  by  an  old  dying 

wife.  Rizpah  21 

I  think  that  you  mean  to  be  fc,  „      81 

so  harsh,  as  those  that  should  be  fc  ?  The  Flight  102 

you  look  so  fc  That  you  will  not  deny  Somney's  R.  21 

I  coimt  you  fc,  I  hold  you  true  ;  The  Wanderer  13 
Kind  (s)    {See  also  Human-kind)    Yet  is  there  plenty 

of  the  fc.'  Two  Voices  33 

She  had  the  passions  of  her  fc,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  35 

Would  serve  his  fc  in  deed  and  word.  Love  thou  thy  land  86 

all  k's  of  thought,  That  verged  upon  them,  Gardener's  D.  70 

ever  cared  to  better  his  own  fc,  Sea  Dreams  201 

Beastlier  than  any  phantom  of  his  fc  Lucretius  196 

Lucius  Junius  Brutus  of  my  fc  ?  Princess  ii  284 

According  to  the  coarseness  of  their  fc,  „        iv  346 

there  grew  Another  fc  of  beauty  in  detail  „            448 

in  a  pleasant  fc  of  a  dream.  Grandmother  82 

Has  made  me  kindly  with  my  fc.  In  Mem.  Ixvi  7 

But  thou  and  I  are  one  in  fc,  „      Ixxix  5 

What  fc  of  Ufe  is  that  I  lead ;  „     Ixxxv  8 

I  will  not  shut  me  from  my  fc,  „        cviii  1 

and  that  of  a  fc  The  viler,  as  underhand,  Maud  1 121 

I  am  one  with  my  fc,  „  III  vi  58 

think  what  fc  of  bird  it  is  That  sings  Marr.  of  Geraint  331 

Came  purer  pleasure  unto  mortal  fc  Geraint  and  E.  765 

and  to  hate  his  fc  With  such  a  hate,  Balin  and  Balan  127 

But  kindly  man  moving  among  his  fc  :  Lancelot  and  E.  265 

Being  mirthful  he,  but  in  a  stately  fc —  „            322 

in  me  lived  a  sin.  So  strange,  of  such  a  fc,  Holy  Grail  773 

Seem'd  niy  reproach  ?     He  is  not  of  my  fc.  Pelleas  and  E.  311 

Experience,  in  her  fc  Hath  foul'd  me —  Last  Tournament  317 

chain  that  bound  me  to  my  fc.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  52 

sadness  at  the  doubtful  doom  of  human  fc ;  To  Virgil  24 

till  Self  died  out  in  the  love  of  his  fc  ;  Vastness  28 

Some  half  remorseful  fc  of  pity  too —  The  Ring  375 

Kinder    girl  Seem'd  fc  imto  Philip  than  to  him ;  Enach  Arden  42 

The  night  to  me  was  fc  than  the  day ;  Lover's  Tale  i  611 

Kindle    The  dim  curls  fc  into  sunny  rings  ;  Tithonus  54 

For  an  your  fire  be  low  ye  fc  mine  !  Gareth  and  L.  711 

leaves  i'  the  middle  to  fc  the  fire  ;  Village  Wife  72 

they  meet  And  fc  generous  purpose,  Tiresias  128 


Kindled 

Kindled  (adj.  and  part)    {See  also  AU-kindled,  Rosy- 

kindled)     Eetuming  with  liot  cheek  and  k  eyes, 
She  spake  With  k  eyes  : 
Thy  gloom  is  ifc  at  the  tips, 
And  the  Uve  green  had  k  into  flowers, 
hear  His  voice  in  battle,  and  be  k  by  it, 
her  bloom  A  rosy  dawn  k  in  stainless  heavens, 
a  sacrifice  K  by  fire  from  heaven : 
but  k  from  within  As  'twere  with  dawn. 
Mark  is  fc  on  thy  Ups  Most  gracious  ; 
And,  who,  when  his  anger  was  k. 


358 


King 


Alexander  14 

Princess  Hi  334 

In  Mem.  xxxix  11 

Gareth  and  L.  185 

Geraint  and  E.  175 

Pelleas  and  E.  72 

146 

Lover's  Tale  i  73 

Last  Tournament  561 

The  Wreck  17 


Kindled  (verb)     When  wine  and  free  companions  k  him,   Geraint  and  E.  293 


And  k  all  the  plain  and  all  the  wold. 

k  the  pyre,  and  all  Stood  roimd  it, 
Kindlier    since  man's  first  fall.  Did  k  unto  man, 

He  might  be  k  :  happily  come  the  day  ! 

For  thro'  that  dawning  gleam'd  a  k  hope 

but  k  than  themselves  To  ailing  wife 

After  an  angry  dream  this  it  glow 

A  k  influence  reign'd  ; 

And  out  of  memories  of  her  k  days, 

And  each  reflects  a  k  day  ; 

The  larger  heart,  the  k  hand ; 

And  yielding  to  his  fc  moods. 

With  all  the  k  colours  of  the  field.' 

Our  k,  trustier  Jaques,  past  away ! 

and  bum  the  k  brutes  aUve. 

Something  k,  higher,  hoUer — 

But  yoimger  k  Gods  to  bear  us  down, 
Kindliest    0  heart,  with  k  motion  warm, 

The  truest,  k,  noblest-hearted  wife 
Kindliness    She  beloved  for  a  k  Kare  in  Fable 
Kindling    And  Gareth  answer'd  her  with  k  eyes, 
(repeat) 

A  head  with  k  eyes  above  the  throng. 


Balin  and  Balan  441 

Death  of  CEnone  65 

Lancelot  and  E.  860 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  23 

Enoch  Arden  833 

Aylmer's  Field  176 

411 

Princess  vii  20 

106 

In  Mem.  c  18 

„       cvi  30 

Merlin  and  V.  174 

Last  Tournament  224 

To  W.  H.  Brookfield  11 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  96 

160 

Demeter  and  P.  131 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  34 

Romney's  R.  35 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  4 

Gareth  and  Z.  41,  62 
646 


Kindly    0  blessings  on  his  k  voice  and  on  his  silver  hair !  May  Queen,  Con.  13 


6  blessings  on  his  A;  heart  and  on  his  silver  head ! 

But  you  can  talk  !  yours  is  a  A;  vein  : 

break  In  full  and  k  blossom. 

To  vaiy  from  the  k  race  of  men. 

And  the  k  earth  shall  slumber. 

Proudly  tvuns  he  round  and  k, 

And  dwelt  a  moment  on  his  A:  face, 

He  could  not  see,  the  k  human  face,  Nor  ever  hear 
a  k  voice, 

officers  and  men  Levied  a  k  tax  upon  themselves, 

Never  one  k  smile,  one  k  word  : 

'  Nay,'  said  the  k  wife  to  comfort  him, 

'  I  loathe  it :  he  had  never  k  heart, 

A  word,  but  one,  one  little  k  word, 

Has  made  me  k  with  my  kind, 

half  exprest  And  loyal  unto  k  laws. 

To  pledge  them  with  a  k  tear, 

How  modest,  k,  all-accomplish'd,  wise, 

So  with  a  k  hand  on  Gareth's  arm 

Here  ceased  the  k  mother  out  of  breath ; 

And  all  the  k  warmth  of  Arthur's  hall 

But  k  man  moving  among  his  kind  : 

There  the  good  mother's  k  ministering, 

bear  the  sword  Of  Justice — what !  the  kingly  ifc  boy ; 

Their  k  native  princes  slain  or  slaved, 

I  sonow  for  that  k  child  of  Spain 

Thanks  to  the  fc  dark  faces  wno  fought  with  us, 

And  last  in  k  curves,  with  gentlest  fall, 

And  greet  it  with  a  k  smile  ; 

And  at  home  if  I  sought  for  a  A:  caress, 
K  landlord,  boon  companion — 

From  war  with  A;  links  of  gold, 

If,  glancing  downward  on  the  k  sphere 

smiled,  and  making  with  a  k  pinch 
Nor  ever  cheer'd  you  with  a  k  smile, 
Kindly-hearted    So  spake  the  k-h  Earl, 
Kindness     /  could  trust  Your  k. 
looking  ancient  k  on  thy  pain. 
I  think  your  ifc  breaks  me  down; 


15 

Edwin  Morris  81 
Will  Water.  24 
Tithonus  29 
Locksley  Hall  130 
L.  of  Burleigh  55 
Eiwch  Arden  326 

581 

663 

Aylmer's  Field  564 

Sea  Dreams  140 

200 

Princess  vi  258 

In  Mem.  Ixvi  7 

„    Ixxxv  16 

xc  10 

Bed.  of  Idylls  18 

Gareth  and  L.  578 

Marr.  of  Geraint  732 

Balin  and  Balan  236 

Lancelot  and  E.  265 

Lover's  Tale  iv  92 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  8& 

Columbus  174 

212 

Def.  of  Lucknow  70 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  23 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  4 

The  Wreck  31 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  240 

Epilogue  16 

Poets  and  their  B.  9 

The  Ring  314 

388 

Marr.  of  Geraint  514 

To  the  Queen  20 

Locksley  Hall  85 

Enoch  Arden  318 


Kindness  (continued)    money  can  be  repaid  ;  Not  k 
such  as  yours.' 
Soul-stricken  at  their  k  to  him, 
summer  of  his  faded  love.  Or  ordeal  by  k  ; 
more  in  k  than  in  love, 

your  brother's  love.  And  your  good  father's  k.' 
he  wrote  '  Their  k,'  and  he  wrote  no  more  ; 


Kindred  (adj.)     But  branches  current  yet  in  k  veins. 

To  black  and  brown  on  k  brows. 

To-day  they  count  as  k  souls ; 

But  each  has  pleased  a  k  eye. 
Kindred  (s)    Grate  her  harsh  k  in  the  grass : 

Thy  k  with  the  great  of  old. 

craft  of  k  and  the  Godless  hosts  Of  heathen 
Kine    Sadly  the  far  A;  loweth  : 

fields  between  Are  dewy-fresh,  browsed  by  deep- 
udder'd  A;, 

white  k  ghmmer'd,  and  the  trees  (repeat) 
King    (See  also  Sea-king,  Warrior-king)     Could  give 
the  warrior  k's  of  old, 

K's  have  no  such  couch  as  thine, 

But  the  A;  of  them  all  would  carry  me, 

'  Reign  thou  apart,  a  quiet  k, 

stay'd  the  Ausonian  A;  to  hear  Of  wisdom  and  of  law 

The  heads  and  crowns  of  k's  ; 

black-bearded  A;'*  with  wolfish  eyes, 

the  mighty  hearts  Of  captains  and  of  k's. 

kneeling,  with  one  arm  about  her  A;, 

took  it,  and  have  worn  it,  like  a  k  : 

'  It  is  not  meet.  Sir  K,  to  leave  thee  thus. 

So  strode  he  back  slow  to  the  wounded  K.  (repeat) 

if  a  A;  demand  An  act  unprofitable, 

K  is  sick,  and  knows  not  what  he  does. 

Stored  in  some  treasure-house  of  mighty  A;'5, 

Authority  forgets  a  dying  A:, 

And  lightly  went  the  other  to  the  K. 

So  sigh'd  the  K,  Muttering  and  miumuring 

three  Queens  Put  forth  their  hands,  and  took  the  7\.', 

So  like' a  shatter'd  column  lay  the  K ; 

charged  Before  the  eyes  of  ladies  and  of  k's. 

And  came  again  together  on  the  k 


Enoch  Arden  321 

Aylmer's  Field  525 

561 

Merlin  and  V.  907 

Lancelot  and  E.  945 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  36 


1 


There  came  a  mystic  token  from  the  A; 

It  little  profits  that  an  idle  A;, 

Than  those  old  portraits  of  old  A;'5, 

His  state  the  A;  reposing  keeps.    He  must  have 

been  a  jovial  k. 
And  last  with  these  the  k  awoke, 
'  Pardy,'  retum'd  the  A;, '  but  still  My  joints 
In  robe  and  crown  the  A;  stept  down, 
'  Death  is  k,  and  Vivat  Rex  ! 
No  blazon'd  statesman  he,  nor  A;. 
Like  that  long-buried  body  of  the  A;, 
Sprang  from  the  midriff  of  a  prostrate  A; — 
the  voice  that  calls  Doom  upon  k's, 
broke  The  statues,  A;  or  saint,  or  founder  fell ; 
A'  of  the  East  altho'  he  seem, 
Whose  death-blow  struck  the  dateless  doom  of  k's, 
counts  and  k's  Who  laid  about  them  at  their  wills 
being  strait-besieged  By  this  wild  k 
my  good  father  thought  a  ^•  a  A: ; 
they  saw  the  A; ;  he  took  the  gifts ; 
Tore  the  k's  letter,  snow'd  it  down, 
In  this  report,  this  answer  of  a  A;, 
'  No  !  '  Roar'd  the  rough  A;,  '  you  shall  not ; 
And  in  the  imperial  palace  found  the  k. 
without  a  star.  Not  like  a  k  : 
Thus  the  A; ;  And  I,  tho'  nettled 
show'd  the  late-writ  lettei-s  of  the  A:. 
'  If  the  A;,'  he  said, '  Had  given  us  lettere, 
The  k  would  bear  him  out :  ' 
when  the  A;  Kiss'd  her  pale  cheek, 
'  Our  A;  expects — was  there  no  precontract  ? 
kept  her  state,  and  left  the  drunken  k 
the  tumult  and  the  k's  Were  shadows ; 
old  k's  Began  to  wag  their  baldness 


Princess  ii  245 

In  Mem.  Ixxix  16 

„  xcix  19 

en 

Princess  iv  125 

In  Mem.  Ixxiv  8 

Guinevere  427 

Leonine  Eleg.  9 

Gardener's  D.  46 
In  Mem.  xcv  15,  51 

To  the  Queen  4 

A  Dirge  40 

The  Mermaid  45 

Palace  of  Art  14 

111 

152 

D.  of  F.  Women  111 

176 

270 

M.  d' Arthur  33 

40 

65,112 

95 

97 

101 

121 

147 

178 

206 

221 

225 

Audley  Court  36 

Edwin  Morris  132 

Ulysses  1 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  23 


39 

„  Revival  17 

25 

Beggar  Maid  5 

Vision  of  Sin  179 

You  might  have  won  24 

Aylmer's  Field  3 

16 

742 

Sea  Dreams  224 

Lucretius  133 

„    236 

Princess,   Pro.  30 

37 

i25 

46 

61 

70 

87 

113 

118 

162 

175 

180 

182 

ii  263 

Hi  207 

229 

iv  564 

vl8 


'  A',  you  are  free  !     We  did  but  keep  you 


King 

King  (continued) 
surety 

(thus  the  K  Roar'd)  make  yourself  a  man  to  fight 
and  without  Found  the  gray  K's  at  parte  : 
'  Not  war,  if  possible,  O  k,'  I  said, 
I  hold  her,  k,  True  woman  : 
Then  rode  we  with  the  old  k  across  the  lawns 
mfuse  my  tale  of  love  In  the  old  k's  ears, 
then  rose  a  cry  As  if  to  greet  the  k  ; 
then  took  the  k  His  three  broad  sons  ; 
Hungry  for  honour,  angry  for  his  k. 
'  Boys  ! '  shriek'd  the  old  k, 

I  told  the  k  that  I  was  pledged  To  fight  in  tourney 
sit  Upon  a  k's  right  hand  in  thunder-storms, 
the  spindUng  A:,  This  Gama  swamp'd  in  lazy  tolerance 
Thus  the  hard  old  A; :   I  took  my  leave 
I  thought  on  all  the  wrathful  k  had  said, 
A ,  camp  and  college  turned  to  hollow  shows  • 
km  bitter  scorn  Drew  from  my  neck  the  painting 
the  small  k  moved  beyond  his  wont. 
Before  these  k's  we  embrace  you  yet  once  more 
Help,  father,  brother,  help  ;  speak  to  the  k  • 
Passionate  tears  Follow'd  :  the  k  replied  not  • 
the  k  her  father  charm'd  Her  wouncfed  soul 
The  A;  is  scared,  the  soldier  will  not  fight 
More  joyful  than  the  city-roar  that  hails'Premier 

or  k  ! 
Guarding  reahns  and  k's  from  shame  ; 
And  barking  for  the  thrones  of  k's  ; 
Our  loyal  passion  for  our  temperate  k's  : 
O  silent  father  of  our  K's  to  be 
Bride  of  the  heir  of  the  k's  of  the  sea- 
Love  by  right  divine  is  deathless  k, 
'The  K  is  happy  In  child  and  wife  ; 
The  K  was  hunting  in  the  wild  ; 
The  K  retum'd  from  out  the  wild, 
The  A'  bent  low,  with  hand  on  brow, 
The  A'  was  shaken  with  holy  fear ; 
1 11  be  K  of  the  Queen  of  the  wrens 
The  fire-crown'd  k  of  the  wrens, 
flit  like  the  k  of  the  wrens  with  a  crown  of  fire 
He  play'd  at  counsellors  and  k's, 
flings  Her  shadow  on  the  blaze  of  k's  : 
By  blood  a  k,  at  heart  a  clown  ; 
Love  is  and  was  my  Lord  and  A', 
Love  is  and  was  my  K  and  Lord' 
And  play  the  game  of  the  despot  k's, 

Who  reverenced  his  conscience  as  his  A;  • 
Thou  noble  Father  of  her  K's  to  be         ' 
Leodogean,  the  K  of  Cameliard,     ' 
many  a  petty  k  ere  Arthur  came  Ruled  in  this  isle, 
iheir  A;  and  head,  and  made  a  realm,  and  reign'd 
And  wallow'd  in  the  gardens  of  the  K 
then  his  brother  k,  Urien,  assail'd  him': 
the  A  Sent  to  him,  saying,  '  Arise,  and  help  us 
tnese,  CoUeaguing  with  a  score  of  petty  k's, 
Ihis  is  the  son  of  Gorlois,  not  the  A  ;  This  is  the 

son  of  Anton,  not  the  A.' 
What  happiness  to  reign  a  lonely  k, 
when  the  A  had  set  his  banner  broad, 
now  the  Barons  and  the  k's  prevail'd,  And  now  the  A', 
leading  all  his  knighthood  threw  the  k's 

Thou  dost  not  doubt  me  A, 
I  know  thee  for  my  A  !  ' 
Debating—'  How  should  I  that  am  a  k, 
Give  my  one  daughter  saving  to  a  k,  And  a  k's  son  ?  '— 
&ir  K,  there  be  but  two  old  men  that  know : 
when  they  came  before  him,  the  K  said, 
Whenever  slander  breathed  against  the  A— 
bo^  compass'd  by  the  power  of  the  A, 
Here  IS  Uther's  heir,  your  k,'  A  hundred  voices 
cned    Away  with  him  !     No  A;  of  ours  !  a  son 
of  Gorlois  he,  Or  else  the  child  of  Anton,  and 
no  A:, 
And  while  the  people  clamour'd  for  a  k. 


359 


King 


Princess  v  24 
34 
114 
126 
179 
236 
241 
249 
268 
314 
328 
352 
439 
442 
467 
473 
478 
vil09 
265 
294 
305 
312 
345 
Con.  60 


102 
Ode  on  Well.  68 
121 
165 
Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  7 
W.  to  Alexandra  28 
W.  to  Marie  Alex.  29 
The  Victim  25 
30 
41 
53 
57 
Window,  Spring  15 
Ay  8 
16 
In  Mem,  Ixiv  23 
>,        xcviii  19 
..  cxi  4 

„  cxxvi  1 

5 
Mavd  I  x39 
Bed.  of  Idylls  8 
34 
Com.  of  Arthur  1 
5 
19 
25 
35 
43 
67 


73 
82 
101 
105 
111 
126 
130 
141 
143 
149 
166 
177 
203 


230 
235 


Vp5t!^!*^^^^■°•'■^^^y"^'  ^  *^«y  ^at  at  meat, 
Yea,  but  ye— thmk  ye  this  A:— 

.  2  ^f/  s^®  cried,  '  and  I  wiU  tell  thee  : 
Be  thou  the  A;,  and  we  wiU  work  thy  wiU 

Ihen  the  K  in  low  deep  tones 
flash  A  momentary  likeness  of 'the  A  ■ 
fehe  gave  the  A  his  huge  cross-hilted  sword, 
bo  this  great  brand  the  A;  Took 
therefore  Arthur's  sister  ?  '  asked  the  A 
this  A  IS  fau-  Beyond  the  race  of  Britons 

Ay  said  the  K,  '  and  hear  ye  such  a  cry  ? 
A  !  she  cried,  '  and  I  wiU  tell  thee  true  •  ' 
1  surely  thought  he  would  be  A;. 

two^pf7fhf/f  nf  r-''*'"^  tb«  -^.  Uther,  before  he  died  ; 

PripH  '  Th W"  ^ '  ^"^  P^''^  f «^th  to  breathe, 

cnea    I  he  AT !     Here  is  an  heir  for  Uther  ' ' 

^  ear  not  to  give  this  A  thine  only  child 

Speak  of  the  a:  ;  and  Merhn  in  our  time  Hath  spoken 

Till  these  and  all  men  hail  him  for  their  A: ' 

a  phantom  k.  Now  looming,  and  now  lost  • 

while  the  phantom  A;  Sent  out  at  times  a  voice  • 

crying    No  A:  of  ours,  No  son  of  Uther,  and  no  A;  of 

but  the  A  stood  out  in  heaven,  Crown'd. 

the  K  That  mom  was  married, 

The  Sun  of  May  descended  on  their  A' 

A  and  my  lord,  I  love  thee  to  the  death  ! ' 
fulfil  the  boimdless  purpose  of  their  K  '  ' 
Arthur's  knighthood  sang  before  the  A  •— 

Let  the  A  reign.'  (repeat)  Com.  of  Arthur  484,  487,  490 

'  Strike  for  the  K  and  live  !  his  knights  have  ^^^'  ^^^'  ^^^'  ^^ 

'  ^t^  f^^^t  ^""r?  ^ath  told  the  A  a  secret  word.    Com.  of  Arthur  488 
^i"^«  £?f  the  A  and  die  !  and  if  thou  diest,  ^ 

Ihe  AT  IS  AT, 
'The  K  wiU foUow  Christ,  and  we  the  A" 
To  wage  my  wars,  and  worship  me  their  A ; 
the  A  Drew  m  the  petty  princedoms  under  him 
as  a  false  knight  Or  evil  A;  before  my  lance 
Then  were  I  wealthier  than  a  leash  of  k's  ' 
ever  smce  when  traitor  to  the  A  He  fought 
mother,  there  was  once  a  A,  like  oure. 
the  a:  Set  two  before  him.    One  was  fair 
And  these  were  the  conditions  of  the  A  • ' 
follow  the  Christ,  the  K,  Live  pure,  speak  true 

right  wrong,  follow  the  A— 
Or  will  not  deem  him,  wholly  proven  A— Albeit  in 

mine  own  heart  I  knew  him  K, 
Life,  limbs,  for  one  that  is  not  proven  A'  ^ 
Who  should  be  A  save  him  who  makes  us  free  ?  ' 
Before  you  ask  the  K  to  make  thee  knight 
Nor  tell  my  name  to  any— no,  not  the  K'' 
city  of  Enchanter's,  built  By  fairy  K's.' 
this  K  IS  not  the  K,  But  only  changeling  out  of 

rairyland, 
come  to  see  The  glories  of  our  A  • 
Doubt  if  the  AT  be  A  at  all,  or  come  From  Fairy- 
land ;   and  whether  this  be  built  By  magic,  and 
by  fairy  K's  and  Queens  ;  •'      "&    ' 

a  Fairy  A  And  Fairy  Queens  have  builfc  the  city 
1' or  there  is  nothing  in  it  as  it  seems  Saving  the 
A  ;  tho  some  there  be  that  hold  The  A  a 
shadow,  and  the  city  real : 
for  the  K  WiU  bind  thee  by  such  vows, 
And  now  thou  goest  up  to  mock  the  K, 
ancient  k's  who  did  their  days  in  stone  ; 
As  in  the  presence  of  a  gracious  A;. 
A  Throned,  and  delivering  doom— 
The  truthful  K  will  doom  me  when  I  speak.' 
and  faith  m  their  great  A,  with  pure  Affection 
a  widow  crying  to  the  A,  '  A  boon,  Sir  A  ' 
^  A  boon.  Sir  K  !     Thine  enemy  A,  am  I 
A  boon,  Sir  a:  !     I  am  her  kinsman,  I. 


Com.  of  Arthur  238 
246 
250 
254 
259 
260 
271 
286 
308 
317 
330 
337 
339 
358 
365 
369 
385 
413 
419 
424 
430 
436 

439 
443 
455 
462 
470 
475 
481 


500 

508 

516 

Gareth  and  L.  6 

51 

76 

101 

103 

107 

117 

122 
129 
138 
145 
171 
200 

202 
244 


246 
258 


265 
269 
292 
305 
316 
320 
324 
330 
333 
351 
365 


King 


360 


King 


King  (continued)    came  Sir  Kay,  the  seneschal,  and 

cried, '  A  boon.  Sir  K  !  Gareth  and  L.  368 

Arthur, '  We  sit  K,  to  help  the  wrong'd  Thro'  all 

our  realm.  „  371 

k's  of  old  had  doom'd  thee  to  the  flames,  „  374 

that  rough  himiour  of  the  fc's  of  old  Return  „  377 
According  to  the  justice  of  the  K :  Then,  be  he 

guilty,  by  that  deathless  K  Who  lived  and  died  „  381 

name  of  evil  savour  in  the  land,  The  Cornish  k.  „  386 

Delivering,  that  his  lord,  the  vassal  k,  „  391 

Being  a  k,  he  trusted  his  liege-lord  „  396 

made  him  knight  because  men  call  him  k.  „  420 
The  k's  we  found,  ye  know  we  stay'd  their  hands 

From  war  among  themselves,  but  left  them  k's ;  „  422 

Mark  hath  tamish'd  the  great  name  of  k,  „  426 

Approach'd  between  them  toward  the  K,  „  441 

'  A  boon.  Sir  K  (his  voice  was  all  ashamed),  „  442 
To  him  the  K, '  A  goodly  youth  and  worth  a 

goodUer  boon !  „  448 

Think  ye  this  fellow  will  poison  the  K's  dish  ?  „  471 

Gareth  bow'd  himself  With  all  obedience  to  the  K,  „  488 
one  would  praise  the  love  that  linkt  the  K  And 

Lancelot — ^how  the  K  had  saved  his  life  In  battle 

twice,  and  Lancelot  once  the  K's —  „  492 

On  Caer-Eryri's  highest  f  oimd  the  K,  A  naked  babe,  „  500 

nay,  the  K's — Descend  into  the  city : '  „  539 

whereon  he  sought  The  K  alone,  and  foimd,  „  541 

the  K's  calm  eye  Fell  on,  and  check'd,  „  547 

And  uttermost  obedience  to  the  K.'  „  555 

'  My  K,  for  hardihood  I  can  promise  thee.  „  557 

K — '  Make  thee  my  knight  in  secret  ?  „  563 

Let  Lancelot  know,  my  K,  let  Lancelot  know,  „  567 
K — '  But  wherefore  would  ye  men  should  wonder 

at  you  ?  „  569 

rather  for  the  sake  of  me,  their  K,  „  571 

on  Gareth's  arm  Smiled  the  great  K,  „  579 

'  O  K,  for  thou  hast  driven  the  foe  without,  „  593 

Rest  would  I  not,  Sir  K,  wal  were  k,  „  597 

'  They  be  of  foolish  fashion,  O  Sir  K,  „  628 

such  As  have  nor  law  nor  k ;  „  632 

'  A  boon,  Sir  JST— this  quest ! '  ,,647 

K,  thou  knowest  thy  kitchen-knave  am  I,  „  649 

Thy  promise,  K,'  and  Arthur  glancing  at  him,  „  652 

she  Wted  either  arm, '  Fie  on  thee,  K  !  „  658 

Fled  down  the  lane  of  access  to  the  K,  „  661 

pavement  where  the  K  would  pace  At  simrise,  „  667 

And  out  by  this  main  doorway  past  the  K.  „  671 

and  cried, '  God  bless  the  K,  and  all  his  fellowship  ! '  „  698 

the  K  hath  past  his  time — My  scullion  knave  !  „  709 

Thence,  if  the  K  awaken  from  his  craze,  „  724 

'  Kay,  wherefore  wilt  thou  go  against  the  K,  „  727 

But  ever  meekly  served  the  K  in  thee  ?  „  729 

'  Wherefore  did  the  K  Scorn  me  ?  „  737 

In  uttermost  obedience  to  the  K.  „  833 

And  pray'd  the  K  would  grant  me  Lancelot  .<  856 

whether  she  be  mad,  or  else  the  K,  „  875 

To  crave  again  Sir  Lancelot  of  the  K.  „  882 

shame  the  K  for  only  yielding  me  My  champion  „  898 

lay  Among  the  ashes  and  wedded  the  K's  son.'  „  904 

The  K  in  utt«r  scorn  Of  thee  and  thy  much  folly  „  918 

take  his  horse  And  arms,  and  so  return  him  to  the  K.  „  956 

and  thee  the  K  Gave  me  to  guard,             /  „  1013 

and  Gareth  sent  him  to  the  K.  „  1051 

hath  not  oiu  good  K  Who  lent  me  thee,  „  1070 

thought  the  K  Scom'd  me  and  mine ;  „  1165 

Saving  that  you  mistrusted  our  good  K  „  1172 

knight  art  thou  To  the  K's  best  wish.  „  1259 

They  bate  the  K,  and  Lancelot,  the  K's  friend,  „  1418 
going  to  the  k,  He  made  this  pretext,                        Marr.  of  Oeraint  32 

K  himself  should  please  To  cleanse  this  common  sewer  „  38 

and  the  k  Mused  for  a  little  on  bis  plea,  „  41 

Forgetful  of  his  promise  to  the  K,  „  50 
these  things  he  told  the  K.    Then  the  good  K  gave 

order  to  let  blow  His  boms  „  151 

not  mindful  of  hia  face  In  the  K's  hall,  „  192 


King  {continued)    were  she  the  daughter  of  a  k,  Marr.  of  Geraint  229 

In  the  great  battle  fighting  for  the  K.  „  596 

But  this  was  in  the  garden  of  a  fc ;  „  656 

children  of  the  K  in  cloth  of  gold  Glanced  ,,  664 

I  come  the  mouthpiece  of  our  K  to  Doorm  (The 

K  is  close  behind  me)  Geraint  and  E.  796 

Submit,  and  bear  the  judgment  of  the  K.'  „  799 

'  He  hears  the  judgment  of  the  K  of  k's,'  ,,  800 

in  the  K's  own  ear  Speak  what  has  chanced ;  „  808 

Fearing  the  mild  face  of  the  blameless  K,  „  812 

the  K  himself  Advanced  to  greet  them,  „  878 

So  spake  the  K ;  low  bow'd  the  Prince,  „  920 

came  The  K's  own  leech  to  look  into  his  hurt ;  „  923 

blameless  K  went  forth  and  cast  his  eyes  „  932 

to  guard  the  justice  of  the  K :  „  934 

there  he  kept  the  justice  of  the  K  „  956 

In  battle,  fighting  for  the  blameless  K.  „  970 

Pellam  the  K,  who  held  and  lost  with  Lot  Balin  and  Balan  1 

ye  be  sent  for  by  the  K,'  They  follow'd ; 
K,  Methought  that  if  we  sat  beside  the  well, 
move  To  music  with  thine  Order  and  the  K. 
''  Sir  K'  they  brought  report '  we  hardly  found, 
the  K  Took,  as  in  rival  heat,  to  holy  things  ; 
This  gray  K  Show'd  us  a  shrine  wherein  were  wonders — 
the  K  So  prizes — overprizes — gentleness. 
I  pray  the  K  To  let  me  bear  some  token  of  his  Queen 
she  smiled  and  turn'd  her  to  the  K, 
The  crown  is  but  the  shadow  of  the  K, 
But  light  to  me  !   no  shadow,  O  my  K, 
move  In  music  with  his  Order,  and  the  K. 
court  and  K  And  all  the  kindly  warmth  of  Arthur's  hall 
Whom  all  men  rate  the  k  of  courtesy. 
Our  noble  K  will  send  thee  his  own  leech — 
stay'd  to  crave  permission  of  the  K, 
the  castle  of  a  K,  the  hall  Of  Pellam, 
found  the  greetings  both  of  knight  and  K 
and  break  the  K  And  all  his  Table.' 
Behold,  I  fly  from  shame,  A  lustful  K, 
Wilt  surely  guide  me  to  the  warrior  K, 
wander'd  from  her  own  K's  golden  head, 
'  Rise,  my  sweet  K,  and  kiss  me  on  the  lips. 
Meet  is  it  the  good  K  be  not  deceived. 

Mark  The  Cornish  K,  had  heard  a  wandering  voice.     Merlin 
My  father  died  in  battle  against  the  K, 
Thy  blessing,  stainless  K  ! 
My  father  died  in  battle  for  thy  K, 
Poor  wretch — no  friend  ! — and  now  by  Mark  the  K 
stainless  bride  of  stainless  K — 
narrow  court  and  lubber  K,  farewell ! 
the  K  Had  gazed  upon  her  blankly  and  gone  by  : 
Vivien  should  attempt  the  blameless  K. 
Had  built  the  K  his  havens,  ships,  and  halls, 
(As  sons  of  k's  loving  in  pupilage 
'  There  lived  a  A;  in  the  most  Eastern  East, 
The  K  impaled  him  for  his  piracy ; 
brutes  of  mountain  back  That  carry  k's  in  castles, 
a  wizard  who  might  teach  the  K  Some  charm. 
He  promised  more  than  ever  k  has  given, 
the  K  Pronounced  a  dismal  sentence. 
Or  like  a  k,  not  to  be  trifled  with — 
And  so  by  force  they  dragg'd  him  to  the  K.    And 

then  he  taught  the  K  to  charm  the  Queen  In 

such-wise,  that  no  man  could  see  her  more.  Nor 

saw  she  save  the  K,  who  wrought  the  charm,  „  640 

K  Made  proffer  of  the  league  of  golden  mines,  „  645 

holy  k,  whose  hymns  Are  chanted  in  the  minster,  „  765 

A  rumour  runs,  she  took  him  for  the  K,  „  776 

Arthur,  blameless  K  and  stainless  man  ?  '  „  779 

the  good  k  means  to  blind  himself,  „  783 

were  he  not  crown'd  K,  coward,  and  fool.'  „  789 

'  O  true  and  tender  !  O  my  liege  and  K  I  „  791 

the  court,  the  K,  dark  in  your  light,  „  875 

Arthur,  long  before  they  crown'd  him  K,  Lancelot  and  E.  34 

two  brothers,  one  a  k,  had  met  And  fought  „  39 

he,  that  once  was  k,  had  on  a  crown  Of  diamonds,  „  45 


and 


King 


361 


King 


ITing  {continued)    Heard  murmurs, '  Lo,  thou  likewise 
shalt  be  K.'    Thereafter,  when  a  K,  he  had  the 
gems  Pluck'd  from  the  crown. 


Lancelot  and  E.  55 


I  chanced  Divinely,  are  the  kingdom's,  not  the  K's — 

Ljincelot,  where  he  stood  beside  the  K. 

'  Sir  K,  mine  ancient  wound  is  hardly  whole, 

the  K  Glanced  first  at  him,  then  her, 

take  Their  pastime  now  the  trustful  K  is  gone  ! ' 

while  the  k  Would  listen  smiling. 

'  Arthur,  my  lord,  Arthur,  the  faultless  K, 

I  Before  a  k  who  honours  his  own  word, 

our  true  k  Will  then  allow  your  pretext, 

I  might  guess  thee  chief  of  those,  After  the  K, 

By  castle  Gumion,  where  the  glorious  K 

I  myself  beheld  the  K  Charge  at  the  head 

the  K,  However  mUd  he  seems  at  home. 

The  dread  Pendragon,  Britain's  K  of  k's, 

Until  they  f oimd  the  clear-faced  K, 

Blazed  the  last  diamond  of  the  nameless  k. 

K,  duke,  earl.  Count,  baron — 

waste  marches,  k's  of  desolate  isles, 

knights  and  it's,  there  breathes  not  one  of  you 

Wroth  that  the  K's  command  to  sally  forth 

made  him  leave  The  banquet,  and  concourse  of 

knights  and  k's. 
ridd'n  away  to  die  ?  '    So  fear'd  the  A', 
And  when  the  K  demanded  how  she  knew, 
hide  his  name  From  all  men,  ev'n  the  K, 
Then  replied  the  K :  '  Far  lovelier  in  oiu:  Lancelot 
Sxirely  his  K  and  most  familiar  friend 
flimg  herself  Down  on  the  great  K's  couch, 
O  loyal  nephew  of  our  noble  K, 
Why  slight  your  K  !  And  lose  the  quest 
'  Right  was  the  K  !  our  Lancelot ! 
there  told  the  K  What  the  K  knew, 
The  seldom-frowning  K  f rown'd. 
Obedience  is  the  courtesy  due  to  k's.' 
Some  read  the  K's  face,  some  the  Queen's, 
prize  the  diamond  sent  you  by  the  K : ' 
told  him  all  the  tale  Of  K  and  Prince, 
Until  we  found  the  palace  of  the  K. 
■  Until  I  find  the  palace  of  the  K. 
there  the  K  will  know  me  and  my  love. 
Or  come  to  take  the  K  to  Fairyland  ? 
While  thus  they  babbled  of  the  K,  the  K  Came 
Low  in  the  dust  of  half -forgotten  k's, 
Then  answer'd  Lancelot,  '  Fair  she  was,  my  K, 
*  Free  love,  so  bound,  were  freest,'  said  the  K. 
Why  did  the  K  dwell  on  my  name  to  me  ? 
'  Thou  art  fair,  my  child.  As  a  k's  son,' 
Stamp'd  with  the  image  of  the  K  ; 
crown  thee  k  Far  in  the  spiritual  city  : ' 
'  What  said  the  K  ?     Did  Arthur  take  the  vow  ?  ' 

'  Nay,  for  my  lord,'  said  Percivale, '  the  K,  Was 

not  in  hall : 
K  arose  and  went  To  smoke  the  scandalous  hive 
whence  the  K  Look'd  up,  calUng  aloud. 
Behold  it,  crying, '  We  have  still  a  K.' 
Streams  thro'  the  twelve  great  battles  of  our  K. 
to  this  hall  full  quickly  rode  the  K, 
then  the  K  Spake  to  me,  being  nearest. 
My  K,  thou  wouldst  have  sworn.' 
'  Ah,  Galahad,  Galahad,'  said  the  K, 
(Brother,  the  K  was  hard  upon  his  knights) 
it  pleased  the  K  to  range  me  close  After  Sir  Galahad) ; 
A,  Before  ye  leave  him  for  this  Quest, 
Built  by  old  k's,  age  after  age, 
K  himself  had  fears  that  it  would  fall, 
the  K  himself  could  hardly  speak  For  grief, 
'  Thereafter,  the  dark  warning  of  our  K, 
and  one  will  crown  me  k  Far  in  the  spiritual  city ; 
«ave  that  some  ancient  k  Had  built  a  way. 
Rejoicing  in  ourselves  and  in  our  K — 
Tell  me,  and  what  said  eadi,  and  what  the  K  ?  ' 
Tvords  Of  so  great  men  as%uancelot  and  our  K 


59 
85 
93 
94 
101 
115 
121 
143 
152 
184 
293 
303 
310 
424 
432 
444 
464 
527 
540 
560 

562 

568 

575 

581 

588 

592 

610 

652 

654 

665 

706 

715 

718 

727 

821 

824 

1044 

1051 

1058 

1257 

1260 

1338 

1374 

1380 

1402 

1410 

Holy  Grail  27 

„        161 


204 
213 
218 
245 
250 
258 
267 
278 
293 
299 
307 
324 
340 
341 
354 
368 
482 
501 
687 
710 
713 


King  (continued)    those  that  had  not,  stood  before  the  K,      Holy  Grail  724 

Among  the  strange  devices  of  our  k's  ;  „        730 

stood,  Until  the  K  espied  him,  saying  „        755 

Lancelot,'  ask'd  the  K, '  my  friend,  „        764 

'  O  ^  ! ' — ^and  when  he  paused,  methought  I  spied  „        767 

'  O  K,  my  friend,  if  friend  of  thine  I  be,  „        769 

But  such  a  blast,  my  K,  began  to  blow,  „        795 

Now  bolden'd  by  the  silence  of  his  K, —  „        857 

'  O  K,  my  liege^'  he  said, '  Hath  Gawain  fail'd  „        858 

'  Deafer,'  said  the  blameless  K,  „  869 
if  the  K  Had  seen  the  sight  he  would  have  sworn 

the  vow :  „        903 

the  K  must  guard  That  which  he  rules,  „        905 

spake  the  K :  I  knew  not  all  he  meant.'  „  920 
Sir  K,  All  that  belongs  to  knighthood,                            Pelleas  and  E.  8 

there  were  those  who  knew  him  near  the  K,  „            15 

to  find  Caerleon  and  the  K,  „            22 

I  Go  likewise  :  shall  I  lead  you  to  the  K  ?  '  „          107 

he  knew  himself  Loved  of  the  K :  „          154 

she  mock'd  his  vows  and  the  great  K,  „          252 

the  K  hath  boimd  And  sworn  me  to  this  brotherhood  ; '         „  448 

the  K  Hath  made  us  fools  and  liars.  „          478 

'  Is  the  K  true  ?  '  '  The  K  ! '  said  Percivale.  „  535 
To  whom  the  K, '  Peace  to  thine  eagle-borne          Last  Tournament  33 

Arm'd  for  a  day  of  glory  before  the  K.  „              55 

A  churl,  to  whom  indignantly  the  K.  „              61 

'  Tell  thou  the  K  and  all  his  liars,  „              77 

and  tend  him  curiously  Like  a  k's  heir,  „              91 

Yet  better  if  the  K  abide,  „            109 

for  the  K  has  wUl'd  it,  it  is  well.'  „            111 

the  K  Tiuu'd  to  him  saying,  '  Is  it  then  so  well  ?  „            113 

cursed  The  dead  babe  and  the  follies  of  the  K ;  „            163 

Are  winners  in  this  pastime  of  our  K.  „            199 

Dagonet,  skipping,  Arthur,  the  K's ;  „  262 
Innocence  the  Queen  Lent  to  the  K,  and  Innocence 

the  K  Gave  for  a  prize —  „            294 

'  Fear  God :  honour  the  K —  „            302 

but  when  the  K  Had  made  thee  fool,  „            305 

— but  never  a  k's  fool.'  „            324 

our  K  Was  victor  wellnigh  day  by  day,  „            334 

whether  he  were  K  by  courtesy.  Or  K  by  right —  „            341 

so  went  harping  down  The  black  k's  highway,  „            343 

is  the  K  thy  brother  fool  ?  '  „            352 

'  Ay,  ay,  my  brother  fool,  the  k  of  fools  !  „            354 

Mark  her  lord  had  past,  the  Cornish  K,  „            382 

Isolt,  the  daughter  of  the  K?  „            397 

In  blood-red  armour  sallying,  howl'd  to  the  K,  „            443 

Lo !   art  thou  not  that  eunuch-hearted  K  „            445 

Art  thou  K  ?— Look  to  thy  life  !  '  ,,454 

Nor  heard  the  K  for  their  own  cries,  „            472 

ere  I  mated  with  my  shambling  k,  „            544 

K  was  all  f ulfiU'd  with  gratefulness,  „  593 
The  man  of  men,  our  K—My  God,  the  power  Was 

once  in  vows  when  men  believed  the  K  !  „            648 

thro'  their  vows  The  K  prevailing  made  his  realm  : —  „            651 

I  swore  to  the  great  K,  and  am  forewom.  „            661 

thro'  the  flesh  and  blood  Of  our  old  K's :  „            687 

Order,  which  our  K  Hath  newly  founded,  „             741 

He  chill'd  the  popular  praises  of  the  K  Guinevere  13 

He,  reverencing  k's  blood  in  a  bad  man,  „        37 

he  was  answer'd  softly  by  the  K  And  all  his  Table.  „        44 

Beside  the  placid  breathings  of  the  K,  „        69 

Till  ev'n  the  clear  face  of  the  guileless  K,  „        85 

Before  the  people,  and  our  lord  the  K.  „        92 

(When  the  good  K  should  not  be  there)  „        97 

while  the  K  Was  waging  war  on  Lancelot :  „      155 

what  a  hate  the  people  and  the  K  Must  hate  me,'  „      157 

weigh  your  sorrows  with  our  lord  the  K's,  „       191 

the  K's  grief  For  his  own  self,  and  his  own  Queen,  „  196 
talk  at  Almesbury  About  the  good  K  and  his  wicked 

Queen,  And  were  I  such  a  K  with  such  a  Queen,  „      209 

But  were  I  such  a  K,  it  could  not  be.'  „      212 

What  canst  thou  know  of  K's  and  Tables  Roimd,  „      228 

sang  the  K  As  weUnigh  more  than  man,  „      286 

Till  he  by  miracle  was  approven  K  :  „      296 


King 


362 


Kinsman 


King  {continued)    Lancelot  or  our  lord  the  A'  ?  ' 
the  K  In  open  battle  or  the  tilting-field 
Sir  Lancelot's,  were  as  noble  as  the  K's, 
That  crown'd  the  state  pavilion  of  the  E, 
point  where  first  she  saw  the  K  Ride  toward  her 
Then  on  a  sudden  a  cry,  '  The  K.' 
She  made  her  face  a  darkness  from  the  A' : 
but  tho'  changed,  the  K's : 
He  spared  to  lift  his  hand  against  the  A' 
That  I  the  K  should  greatly  care  to  live  ; 
I  was  first  of  all  the  k's  who  drew  The  knighthood-errant 
and  swear  To  reverence  the  K,  as  if  he  were  Their 

conscience,  and  their  conscience  as  their  A', 
Better  the  K's  waste  hearth  and  aching  heart 
nay,  they  never  were  the  K's. 
They  simimon  me  their  K  to  lead  mine  hosts 
She  felt  the  K's  breath  wander  o'er  her  neck, 
The  moony  vapour  rolling  round  the  A, 
Gone,  my  lord  the  A,  My  own  true  lord  ! 
he,  the  K,  Call'd  me  polluted  : 
blessed  be  the  A,  who  hath  forgiven  My  wickedness 
Is  there  none  Will  tell  the  K  I  love  him 
broke  The  vast  design  and  purpose  of  the  A', 
wrought  the  ruin  of  my  lord  the  A.' 
Heard  in  his  tent  the  moanings  of  the  A' : 
Hail,  K  !  to-morrow  thou  shalt  pass  away. 
'  O  me,  my  A,  let  pass  whatever  wiU, 
Eight  well  in  heart  they  know  thee  for  the  A". 
brake  the  petty  k's,  and  fought  with  Rome, 
k  who  fights  his  people  fights  himself, 
rose  the  A  and  moved  his  host  by  night, 
he  that  fled  no  further  fly  the  K  ; 
pale  A  glanced  across  the  field  Of  battle : 
Had  held  the  field  of  battle  was  the  A  : 
Nor  whence  I  am,  nor  whether  I  be  K.     Behold, 

I  seem  but  A  among  the  dead.' 
'  My  A,  A  everywhere  !  and  so  the  dead  have  k's, 

There  also  will  I  worship  thee  as  A. 
Then  spake  the  A  :  '  My  house  hath  been  my  doom, 
even  while  they  brake  them,  own'd  me  K. 
That  quick  or  dead  thou  boldest  me  for  AT.     K  am 

I,  whatsoever  be  their  cry  ; 
And  uttering  this  the  A  Made  at  the  man  : 
And  took  it,  and  have  worn  it,  like  a  k  ; 
'  It  is  not  meet.  Sir  A,  to  leave  thee  thus. 
So  strode  he  back  slow  to  the  wounded  K.  (repeat) 
if  a  A;  demand  An  act  unprofitable. 
The  A  is  sick,  and  knows  not  what  he  does. 
Stored  in  some  treasure-house  of  mighty  k's, 
Authority  forgets  a  dying  k, 
And  lightly  went  the  other  to  the  A. 
sigh'd  the  K,  Muttering  and  murmuring  at  his  ear, 
three  Queens  Put  forth  their  hands,  and  took  the  A, 
So  like  a  shatter'd  column  lay  the  K  ; 
charged  Before  the  eyes  of  ladies  and  of  k's. 
and  he  groan'd, '  The  A  is  gone.' 
'  He  passes  to  be  A  among  the  dead, 
Around  a  k  returning  from  his  wars, 
thought  he  saw,  the  speck  that  bare  the  K, 
Rather  than  that  gray  k,  whose  name,  a  ghost, 
where  I  hoped  myself  to  reign  as  k,  There,  where 

that  day  I  crown'd  myself  as  k. 
But  rich  as  for  the  nuptials  of  a  k. 
The  K  should  have  made  him  a  soldier, 
an'  hallus  as  droonk  as  a  A:, 
The  k  was  on  them  suddenly  with  a  host. 
but  the  k — nor  voice  Nor  finger  raised 
to  take  the  k  along  with  him — 
So  to  this  k  I  cleaved  : 
Priests  Who  fear  the  k's  hard  common-sense 
That  was  a  miracle  to  convert  the  k. 
Does  the  k  know  you  deign  to  vLsit  him 
Before  his  people,  like  his  brother  k  ? 
the  k,  the  queen  Bad  me  be  seated,  speak, 
the  k,  the  queen,  Sank  from  their  thrones. 


Guinevere  326 
331 
351 
399 
403 
411 
417 
421 
437 
452 
460 

468 
524 
552 
570 
582 
601 
616 
619 
634 
651 
670 


Pass,  of  Arthur  8 
34 
51 
63 
68 
72 
79 
89 
126 
138 

145 

147 
154 
158 

161 
164 
201 
208 
„  233,280 
263 
265 
269 
289 
315 
346 
374 
389 
393 
448 
449 
461 
465 
To  the  Queen  ii  39 

Lover's  Tale  i  591 

iv  212 

Rizpah  28 

North.  Cobbler  27 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  41 

44 

49 

61 

66 

178 

Columbus  4 

6 

10 

14 


King  {continued)    showing  courts  and  k's  a  truth  the  babe        Columbus  37 

outbuzz'd  me  so  That  even  our  proudest  k,  „      122 

put  by,  scouted  by  court  and  k —  „      165 

tell  the  K,  that  I,  Rack'd  as  I  am  with  gout,  „      234 

And  readier,  if  the  A  would  hear,  „      238 

Each  of  them  look'd  like  a  k,  V.  of  Maeldune  3 

and  the  glories  of  fairy  k's ;  „  90 
Five  young  k's  put  asleep  by  the  sword-stroke,    Batt.  of  Brunanburh  52 

Fleeted  his  vessel  to  sea  with  the  k  in  it,  „                60 

Also  the  brethren.  A'  and  Atheling,  „               101 

0  YOU  that  were  eyes  and  light  to  the  A'  To  Prin.  F.  of  H.  1 
the  blind  A  sees  you  to-day,  „  3 
A,  that  hast  reigri'd  six  hundred  years,  To  Dante  1 
Are  slower  to  forgive  than  human  k's.  Tiresias  10 
The  madness  of  our  cities  and  their  k's.  „  71 
And  mingled  with  the  famous  k's  of  old,  „  171 
make  thy  gold  thy  vassal  not  thy  k.  Ancient  Sage  259 
Could  keep  their  haithen  k's  in  the  flesh  Tomorrow  70 
a  cat  may  looiik  at  a  A;  thou  knaws  Spinster's  S's.  34 
Assyrian  k's  would  flay  Captives  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  79 
Sons  of  God,  and  k's  of  men  in  utter  nobleness  „  122 
Teach  your  flatter'd  k's  that  only  those  who  cannot  read  „  132 
perfect  peoples,  perfect  k's.  „  186 
cried  the  k  of  sacred  song ;  „  201 
k's  and  realms  that  pass  to  rise  no  more  ;  To  Virgil  28 
Was  one  of  the  people's  k's,  Dead  Prophet  10 
The  k's  and  the  rich  and  the  poor ;  „            40 

.    shadow  of  a  likeness  to  the  k  Of  shadows,  Demeter  and  P.  16 

Three  dark  ones  in  the  shadow  with  thy  K.  „          122 

An'  'e  kep  his  head  hoop  like  a  k,  Owd  Pod  9 

Old  Empires,  dwellings  of  the  k's  of  men  ;  Prog,  of  Spring  99 

city  and  palace  Of  Arthur  the  k  ;  Merlin  and  the  G.  66 

The  k  who  loved  me.  And  cannot  die ;  „              79 

like  a  lonely  man  In  the  k's  garden,  Akbar's  Dream  21 

To  wreathe  a  crown  not  only  for  the  k  „              23 

may  not  k's  Express  Him  also  by  their  warmth  „            108 

fuiy  of  peoples,  and  Christless  frolic  of  k's,  The  Dawn  7 

'  Gallant  Sir  Ralph,'  said  the  k.  The  Tourney  6 

'  O  what  an  arm,'  said  the  k.  „          12 

'  Take  her  Sir  Ralph,'  said  the  k.  „          18 

Eing-bom    k-b,  A  shepherd  all  thy  life  but  yet  k-b,  Qinone  127 

Kingcup  (adj.)     betwixt  the  whitening  sloe  And  k  blaze,    To  Mary  Boyle  26 

Kingcup  (s)    The  gold-eyed  k's  fine ;  A  Dirge  36 

Daisies  and  k's  and  honeysuckle-flowers.'  City  Child  10 

Rose-campion,  bluebell,  k,  poppy,  Last  Tournament  234 

The  k  fills  her  footprint.  Prog,  of  Spring  59 

Kingdom    {See  also  Under-ldngdom)    divided  quite 

The  k  of  her  thought.  Palace  of  Art  228 

But  thou,  while  k's  overset.  Talking  Oak  257 
A  k  topples  over  with  a  shriek  Like  an  old 

woman,  Princess,  Con.  62 

But  either  fail'd  to  make  the  k  one.  Com.  of  Arthur  15 

are  the  k's,  not  the  King's—  Lancelot  and  E.  59 

Until  it  came  a  k's  curse  with  thee —  Guinevere  550 

More  worth  than  all  the  k's  of  this  world.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  77 

K's  and  Republics  fall,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  159 

1  am  heir,  and  this  my  k.  By  an  Evolution.  14 
fur  owt  but  the  K  o'  Heaven  ;  Church-warden,  etc.  44 

Kinghood    one  last  act  of  k  shalt  thou  see  Pass,  of  Arthur  163 

Kingless     those  three  k  years  Have  past —  Balin  and  Balan  63 

Kingliest    Thou  art  the  k  of  all  kitchen-knaves.  Gareth  and  L.  1158 

Kinglihood     The  golden  symbol  of  his  k.  Com.  of  Arthur  50 

King-like     K-l,  wears  the  crown  :  Of  old  sat  Freedom  16 

Kingly    Thy  k  intellect  shall  feed.  Clear-headed  friend  20 

With  merriment  of  k  pride,  Arabian  Nights  151 

bear  the  sword  Of  Justice — what !  the  k,  kindly  boy ;  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  88 

Kinship     A  distant  k  to  the  gracious  blood  Aylmer's  Field  62 

Kinsman    With  many  kinsmen  gay.  Will  Water.  90 

My  lady's  Indian  k  unannounced  Aylmer's  Field  190 

'  Good  !  my  lady's  k  !  good  ! '  „            198 

she,  Once  with  this  k,  ah  so  long  ago,  „            206 

My  lady's  Indian  k  rushing  in,  „            593 

Sleep,  k  thou  to  death  and  trance  In  Mem.  Ixxi  1 

'  A  boon,  Sir  King  !     I  am  her  k,  I.  Gareth  and  L.  365 

him  Whose  k  left  him  watcher  o'er  his  wife  Merlin  and  V.  706 


Kinsman 


363 


Kiss'd 


Kinsman  {continued)    Hia  k  travelling  on  his  own  affair    Merlin  and  V.  717 

but  then  A  k,  dying,  summon'd  me  to  Rome —  The  Ring  178 

him,  who  left  you  wealth,  Your  k?  „         189 

Kirtle    blood  Was  sprinkled  on  your  k,  Princess  ii  274 

Kiss  (s)    {See  also  Bride-kiss)    kiss  sweet  k'es,  and 

speak  sweet  words :  Sea- Fairies  34 

Yet  fill  my  glass  :  give  me  one  k  :  Miller's  D.  17 

The  k,  The  woven  arms,  seem  but  to  be  Weak  symbols  „        231 

once  he  drew  With  one  long  k  my  whole  soul  Fatima  20 

that  quick-falling  dew  Of  fruitful  k'es,  CEnone  205 

Seal'd  it  with  k'es  ?  water'd  it  with  tears  ?  „      234 

the  wild  k,  when  fresh  from  war's  alarms,  D.  of  F.  Women  149 

Because  the  k  he  gave  me,  ere  I  fell,  „            235 

worth  a  hundred  k'es  press'd  on  lips  Gardener's  D.  151 

k'es,  where  the  heart  on  one  wild  leap  „          259 

'  Her  k'es  were  so  close  and  kind,  Talking  Oak  169 

I  would  have  paid  her  k  for  k,  „           195 

that  last  k,  which  never  was  the  last,  Love  and  Duty  67 

k'es  balmier  than  half-opening  buds  Of  April,  Tithonus  59 
His  own  are  pouted  to  a  A; :                                    Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  31 

A  TOUCH,  a  k  !  the  charm  was  snapt.  „                Revival  1 

0  love,  for  such  another  fc ; '  „  Depart.  10 
'  O  happy  k,  that  woke  thy  sleep  ! '     '0  love, 

thy  k  would  wake  the  dead  ! '  „  19 
evermore  a  costly  k  The  prelude  to  some 

brighter  world.  „             L' Envoi  ZQ 

A  sleep  by  k'es  imdissolved,  „                           51 

1  never  felt  the  k  of  love,  Sir  Galahad  19 
'  Yet  give  one  k  to  your  mother  dear  !  Lady  Clare  49 
'  Yet  here's  a  k  for  my  mother  dear,  „  53 
To  waste  his  whole  heart  in  one  k  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  44 
Many  a  sad  k  by  day  by  night  renew'd  Enoch  Arden  161 
Never :  no  father's  k  for  me —  „  790 
that  one  k  Was  Leolin's  one  strong  rival  Aylmer's  Field  556 
and  ran  To  greet  him  with  a  k,  Lucretius  7 
httle  maid,  That  ever  crow'd  for  fc'w.'  Princess  ii  280 
'  Dear  as  remember'd  k'es  after  death,  „  iv  54 
her  mother,  shore  the  tress  With  k'es,  „  vi  114 
In  glance  and  smile,  and  clasp  and  k.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  7 
And  every  k  of  toothed  wheels,  „  cxvii  11 
She  took  the  k  sedately ;  Maud  I  xii  14 
made  my  Maud  by  that  long  loving  k,  „  xviii  58 
embraces  Mixt  with  k'es  sweeter  sweeter  „  //  iv  9 
had  been  A  clinging  k —  Merlin  and  V.  106 
I  am  silent  then,  And  ask  nok:'  „  254 
Win  !  by  this  k  you  will :  Lancelot  and  E.  152 
Yet  rosy-kindled  with  her  brother's  k —  „  393 
we  twain  Had  never  kiss'd  a  k,  or  vow'd  a  vow.  Holy  Grail  584 
Constraining  it  with  k'es  close  and  warm,  Lover's  Tale  i  468 
answering  lisp'd  To  k'es  of  the  wind,  „  545 
Love  drew  in  her  breath  In  that  close  k,  „  817 
and,  half  killing  him  With  k'es,  „  iv  378 
then  I  minded  the  fust  k  1  gied  'er  North.  Cobbler  45 
An'  I  says  '  I  mun  gie  tha  a  k,'  „  51 
I  gied  'er  a  k,  an'  then  anoother,  „  52 
Sally  gied  me  a  A;  ov  'ersen.  „  56 
Heer  wur  a  fall  fro'  a  A:  to  a  kick  „  57 
fatal  k.  Bom  of  true  life  and  love,  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  2 
k  fell  chill  as  a  flake  of  snow  on  the  cheek  :  The  Wreck  32 
Never  a  fc  so  sad,  no,  not  since  the  coming  of  man  !  Despair  60 
sowl  dead  for  a  A:  of  ye,  Molly  Magee.  Tomorrow  40 
tha  may  gie  ma  a  k,  Spinster's  S's.  31 
Before  a  fc  should  wake  her.  The  Ring  67 
then  with  my  latest  fc  Upon  them,  „  298 
That  trembles  not  to  k'es  of  the  bee  :  Prog,  of  Spring  4 

1         I  blind  your  pretty  blue  eyes  with  a  fc  !  Roviney's  R.  101 

Too  early  blinded  by  the  fc  of  death —  „          103 

his  k'es  were  red  with  his  crime,  Bandit's  Death  13 

Kiss  (verb)     When  I  would  fc  thy  hand,  Madeline  31 

If  my  lips  should  dare  to  fc  Thy  taper  fingers  „        43 

fc  sweet  kisses,  and  speak  sweet  words :  Sea- Fairies  34 
1  would  k  them  often  under  the  sea.  And  fc  them  again 

till  they  kiss'd  me  (repeat)  The  Merman  15,  34 
And  fc  away  the  bitter  words  From  off  your  rosy 

mouth.  Rosalind  50 


Kiss  (verb)  (continued)  You'll  fc  me,  my  own  mother.  May  Queen,  N.  Y.'s  E.[34i 

I  have  been  to  blame.     K  me,  my  children.'  Dora  162 

0  fc  him  once  for  me.  Talking  Oak  240 
'  O  fc  him  twice  and  thrice  for  me,  That  have  no  lips 

to  fc,  „          241 

1  fc  it  twice,  I  fc  it  thrice,  |f|  „  253 
Go  to  him  :  it  is  thy  duty  :  fc  him  :  Locksley  Hall  52 
He  stoops — to  A;  her — on  his  knee.  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  ZO 
That  I  might  fc  those  eyes  awake  !  „  L' Envoi  28 
I  fc  the  lips  I  once  have  kiss'd  ;  Will  Water.  37 
I  cry  to  thee  To  fc  thy  Mavors,  Lucretius  82 
And  fc  again  with  tears  !  Princess  ii  9 
He  reddens  what  he  k'es  :  ,.  v  165 
fc  her  ;  take  her  hand,  she  weeps  :  „  vi  225 
K  and  be  friends,  like  children  being  chid  !  „  289 
Stoop  down  and  seem  to  fc  me  ere  I  die.'  ,.  vii  150 
as  good  to  cuddle  an'  fc  as  a  lass  as  'ant  nowt  ?  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  24 
Trail  and  twine  and  clasp  and  fc,  K,  fc  ;  Window,  At  the  Wind.  4 
Drop  me  a  flower,  a  flower,  to  fc,  K,  fc —  „  11 
Farewell,  we  fc,  and  they  are  gone.  In  Mem.,  Con.  92 
flush,  and  bow  Lowly,  to  fc  his  hand,  Gareth  and  L.  549 
To  stoop  and  fc  the  tender  little  thumb,  Marr.  of  Geraint  395 
'  Rise,  my  sweet  King,  and  k  me  on  the  lips,  Balin  and  Balan  516 
tread  me  down  And  I  will  fc  you  for  it ; '  Merlin  and  V.  229 
pearls  Ran  down  the  silken  thread  to  fc  each  other  „  455 
we  fc  the  child  That  does  the  task  assign'd,  Lancelot  and  E.  828 
he  bow'd  to  fc  the  jewell'd  throat,  Last  Tournament  751 
let  us  in,  tho'  late,  to  fc  his  feet !  Guinevere  178 
ail's  of  Heaven  Should  fc  with  an  unwonted 

gentleness.  Lover's  Tale  i  739 

And  fc  her  on  the  lips.     She  is  his  no  more  :  „          iv  48 

and  I  go  down  To  fc  the  dead.'  „              50 

*  K  him,'  she  said.     '  You  gave  me  life  again.  „            172 

K  him,  and  then  Forgive  him,  „            174 

an'  fc  you  before  I  go.'  First  Quarrd  46 

Didn't  you  fc  me  an'  promise  ?  „            53 

— you'll  k  me  before  I  go  ?  '  „            80 

fc  her — if  you  will,'  I  said —  „            81 

You  wouldn't  fc  me,  my  lass,  „            86 

and  he  call'd  to  me  '  AT  me  !  '  The  Wreck  104 

I  stoopt  To  take  and  fc  the  ring.  The  Ring  132 

nurse  is  waiting.     K  me  child  and  go.  „        489 

when  I  let  him  fc  my  brow  ;  Happy  65 

I  am  happy,  happy.     K  me.  „     107 

Kiss'd     dew-impearl'd  winds  of  dawn  have  fc.  Ode  to  Memory  14 

And  kiss  them  again  till  they  fc  me  (repeat)  The  Merman  16,  35 

I  would  not  be  fc  by  all  who  would  list,  The  Mermaid  41 

And  if  you  fc  her  feet  a  thousand  years.  The  form,  the  form  13 

'  His  little  daughter,  whose  sweet  face  He  fc,  Two  Voices  254 

I  fc  away  before  they  fell.  Miller's  D.  152 

I  fc  his  eyelids  into  rest :  The  Sisters  19 

girls  all  fc  Beneath  the  sacred  bush  The  Epic  2 

So  the  women  fc  Each  other,  Dora  128 

clung  about  The  old  man's  neck,  and  fc  him  many  times.  „     164 

She  turn'd,  we  closed,  we  fc,  swore  faith,  Edwin  Morris  114 

And  found,  and  fc  the  name  she  found,  Talking  Oak  159 

She  fc  me  once  again.  „            168 

could  hear  the  hps  that  fc  Whispering  Tithonus  60 

I  kiss  the  lips  I  once  have  fc ;  Will  Water.  37 

He  turn'd  and  fc  her  where  she  stood :  Lady  Clare  82 

And  k  his  wonder-stricken  little  ones ;  Enoch  Arden  229 

and  fc  him  in  his  cot.  „          234 

as  they  fc  each  other  In  darkness,  Aylmer's  Field  430 

She  look'd  so  sweet,  he  fc  her  tenderly  „            555 

Clasp'd,  fc  him,  wail'd :  he  answer'd,  Lucretius  280 

And  fc  again  with  tears.  Princess  ii  5 

We  fc  again  with  tears.  „           14 

when  the  king  K  her  pale  cheek,  „        264 

With  that  she  fc  His  forehead,  ,,        311 

I  fc  it  and  I  read.     '  O  brother,  „     v  373 

here  she  fc  it :  then — '  All  good  go  with  thee !  „    vi  206 

I  fc  her  slender  hand,  Maud  I  xii  13 

Whom  first  she  fc  on  either  cheek,  Marr.  of  Geraint  517 

claspt  and  fc  her,  and  they  rode  away.  „              825 

K  the  white  star  upon  his  noble  front,  Geraint  and  E.  757 


Eiss'd 

Kiss'd  {continiuid)    he  tum'd  his  face  And  k  her 
climbing, 
And  k  her  with  all  pureness,  brother-like 
brow  That  o'er  him  hung,  he  k  it,  moan'd,  and 

Sp3&6  J 

lay  she  all  her  length  and  A;  his  feet, 

she  k  them  crying,  '  Trample  me,  Dear  feet, 

k  her,  and  Sir  Lancelot  his  own  hand 

A  the  hand  to  which  he  gave,  The  diamond, 

do^  the  task  assign'd,  he  k  her  face. 

And  k  her  quiet  brows,  and  saying  to  her 

he  welhiigh  k  her  feet  For  loyal  awe, 

bhe  k  me  saying,  '  Thou  art  fair,  my  child, 

we  twain  Had  never  k  a  kiss,  or  vow'd  a  vow 

i-mbraced  me,  and  so  k  me  the  first  time 

ihere  k,  and  parted  weeping : 

And  Hope  k  Love,  and  Love  drew  in  her  breath 

And  k  her  more  than  once, 

'  I  had  sooner  be  cursed  than  k ! ' 

I  k  my  boy  in  the  prison, 
I  k  'em,  I  buried  'em  all- 
Cold  were  his  brows  when  we  k  him— 
And  we  k  the  fringe  of  his  beard 
And  the  Motherless  Mother  k  it, 
'  The  heart,  the  heart ! '  I  A;  him 
we  k,  we  embraced,  she  and  I,    ' 
took  and  k  me,  and  again  Hekme; 
I  remember  how  you  k  the  miniature 
dreamer  stoopt  and  k  her  marble  brow 
A  nng  too  which  you  k,  and  I,  she  said, 
You  frown'd  and  yet  you  k  them. 
One  k  his  hand,  another  closed  his  eyes 
I  wept,  and  I  k  her  hands,  ' 

Kissin'    Imbrashin'  an'  k  aich  othe- 
Kissing     {See  also  Kissin') 
and  o'er, 
K  his  vows  upon  it  like  a  knight 
And  satisfy  my  soul  with  khen' 
our  baby  lips,  K  one  bosom, 
»"♦  5  *^e  war-harden'd  hand  of  the  Highlander 
Ki^en  adj.)    The  k  brewis  that  was  ever  supt 
Kitchen  (s)    out  of  k  came  The  thralls  in  throng. 
Thou  smellest  all  of  A;  as  before  ' 
Nay— for  thou  smeUest  of  the  k  still. 
The  savotur  of  thy  k  came  upon  me 
because  their  haU  must  also  serve  For  k 
m  the  Divil's  k  below.  ' 

Kit<^dom    lent  me  thee,  the  flower  of  k 
Kitchen-grease    thou  smellest  aU  of  k-g 
Kitchen-knave    Among  the  scullions  and  the  k-k's, 
10  serve  with  scullions  and  with  k-k's  ■ 
among  thy  k-k's  A  twelvemonth  and  a  day 
And  couch'd  at  night  with  grimy  k-k's. 
Yea,  King,  thou  knowest  thy  k-k  am  I, 
And  thou  hast  given  me  but  a  k-k.' 
beside  The  field  of  tourney,  murmuring  '  A;-A:.' 
Nor  shamed  to  bawl  himself  a  k-k 
O  fie  upon  him — His  k-k.* 
'Sir  K-k,  I  have  miss'd  the  only  way 
And  m  a  sort,  being  Arthur's  k-kl— 

k-i  aSr/^°''*^^  *■*' '  ^^^  ^"^*^  ^  ""^^ '  **^y 

'Friend,  whether  thou  be  k-k,  or  not, 
thy  much  foUy  hath  sent  thee  here  His  k-k- 
A  k-k,  and  sent  in  scorn  of  me : 
The  damsel  crying, '  Well-stricken,  k-k ! ' 
and  say  His  k-k  hath  sent  thee. 

'  Hprp  iZ^  ii  among  the  rest  Fierce  was  the  hearth. 
Here  is  a  k-k  from  Arthur's  hall  ' 

Thou  art  the  kingliest  of  aU  k-k's. 

And  tumbled  back  into  the  k-k. 
Kitchen-vassal^    Ix)w  down  thro'  villain  k-v, 
Kit«  Vhil^\    ^i-     A°^  underwent  The  sooty  yoke  of  k-v 
S£  ^S  ^.rL^^'^hr''  and  wolfkin,^ 


364 


Knaw'd 


Geraint  and  E.  761 

884 

Balin  and  Balan  598 
Merlin  and  V.  219 
226 
Lancelot  and  E.  389 
702 
829 
1150 
1172 
1409 
Holy  GraU  584 
596 
Guinevere  125 
Lover's  Tale  i  816 
iv  72 
First  Quarrel  83 
Bizpah  23 
„      55 
Def.  of  Lucknow  12 
V.  of  Maeldune  125 
The  Wreck  62 
„      105 
Despair  53 
The  Flight  23 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  12 
38 
The  Ring  114 
Happy  75 
Death  of  CEnone  58 
Charity  38 
r. .,  ,  ,  Tomorrow  90 

A  tne  rose  she  gave  me  o  er 

Gardener's  D.  176 

Aylmer's  Field  472 

Princess  v  103 

Lover's  Tale  i  238 

Def.  of  Lucknow  102 

Gareth  and  L.  781 

694 

771 

843 

993 

Marr.  of  Geraint  391 

Tomorrow  68 

Gareth  and  L.  1071 

751 

154 

170 

445 

481 

649 

659 

664 

717 

742 

787 

838 


Kite  (toy)  (continued) 
purple  fly, 
coostom  flitted  awaay  Uke  a  A;  wi'  a  brokken  string. 


Flung  ball,  flew  A;,  and  raced  the 


Princess  ii  248 
North.  Cobbler  28 


iri*«  /i^\    -a  j^    "r?;'*'^'>  w""  ana  wouiun. 
Kite  (toy)    Had  tost  his  ball  and  flown  his  k, 


860 

873 

920 

952 

970 

985 

1009 

1036 

1158 

1228 

160 

479 

Boddicea  15 


--- —  -—.- —  ».,u,uj  iitto  a  n/  wi    it  uro 

Kith    m  the  field  were  Lancelot's  k  and  kin 

drave  his  A;  and  kin.  And  aU  the  Table  Round 

His  k  and  kin,  not  knowing,  set  upon  him  • 

Lancelot  s  k  and  kin  so  worship  hun  ' 

and  aU  his  A;  and  kin  Clave  to  him 

and  vaunted  our  A;  and  our  kin,     ' 
Kitten    laugh  As  those  that  watch  a  A;  • 

i^Jlf°^®.«  f  ^\^^'^  And  paw'd  aboit  her  sandal. 

Kittle  (kettle)    ater  mea  mayhap  wi'  'is  k  o'  steam 

Knave    (5ee  aZso  Kitchen-knave)    neither  A;  nor 

clown  Shall  hold  their  oreies  v^.      ■  -l^  i. 

My  Shakespeare's  cui^e  on  &n  and  A:  ^"^  '"^^  ^''  ^''"  " 

Tf,l  T-  ™t°' J^^*  ^u*.^  ^""^  ^"*«  fantastic  tenderness.     Princess  iv  128 


Lancelot  arid  E.  466 

498 

599 

Holy  Grail  651 

Guinevere  439 

V.  of  Maeldune  47 

Merlin  and  V.  ITJ 

Princess  Hi  181 

iV.  Farmer,  0.  S.  61 


Begone !  my  k !— beUke  and  like  enow 

Well— I  will  after  my  loud  k, 

oveiBne  To  mar  stout  A;'*  with  foolish  courtesies  • ' 

But,  k,  anon  thou  shalt  be  met  with  A; 

Setting  this  A;,  Lord  Baron,  at  my  side 

Lion  and  stoat  have  isled  together.  A;,  In  time  of  flood 

slay  thee  unarm'd ;  he  is  not  knight  but  A: ' 

Thou  art  not  knight  but  A;.'    Said  Gareth,  '  Damsel, 
whether  k  or  knight,  ' 

Come,  therefore,  leave  thy  lady  hghtly.  A;.     Avoid  • 
for  It  beseemeth  not  a  A;  To  ride  with  such  a  lady  ' 

K,  when  I  watch'd  thee  striking  on  the  bridge 

thou  art  not  knight  but  k.' 

'  Parables  ?    Hear  a  parable  of  the  A;. 

knight  or  A:— The  A;  that  doth  thee  service 

n'  •      u  1  7  ^A^'  "because  thou  strikest  as  a  knight. 
Being  but  A;,  I  hate  thee  aU  the  more.'  ' 

being  but  A;,  I  throw  thine  enemies  ' 

this  strong  fool  whom  thou,  Sir  K 

Ok,  as  noble  as  any  of  aU  the  knights— 

I  heard  thee  call  thyself  a  A;,— 

but,  being  k,  Hast  mazed  my  wit : 

T    ,   ^',"}y  l^night.  a  hermit  once  was  here 

I  gloried  in  my  k.  Who  being  still  rebuked, 

Knight,  A;,  pnnce  and  fool,  I  hate  thee  and  for  ever  ' 

find  my  goodly  k  Is  knight  and  noble. 

teeming  with  hars,  and  madmen,  and  k's. 


Aylmer's  Field  84 


SoIf:^^*    ^^^^"  ^°°«'  ^XweU  striken,' 
Knaw  (know)    Doctora,  they  A;'*  nowt, 

ihaw  a  A;  5  I  haUus  voated  wi'  Squoire 

Bessy  Mams's  barne !  thaw  A:'*  she  laaid  it  to  mea. 

Do  godamoighty  k  what  a's  doing 

I'ur  they  k's  what  I  bean  to  Squoire 

a  A;  s  naw  moor  nor  a  floy ; 

Dosn't  thou  A;  that  a  man'mun  be  eather 

iks  what  maakes  tha  sa  mad 

It  s  them  as  niver  A:'*  wheer  a  meals  to  be  'ad. 

1  A;  s,  as  k's  tha  sa  well. 

Doesn't  tha  k  'er— sa  pratty, 

tha  dosn  A;  what  that  be  ?     But  I  A;'*  the  law,  I  does 

thoul'J  fhTh*^  ^?f>f  ""V  ^^™'  b"t  I  likes  oT' 

thou  A:  s  thebbe  naither  'ere  nor  theer. 

an  boooks,  as  thou  A;'*,  beant  nowt 

i  ks  that  mooch o'  sheii, 

a  cat  may  loook  at  a  king  thou  k's 

an  I  k's  It  be  aU  fur  the  best 

an  ^  one  o'  ye  dead  ye  k's  I 

I  k'sl  'ed  led  tha  a  quieter  Uf e 

but  1  A;  s  they  runs  upo'  four,— 

.  ^i?,^'!^  ma  to  A;  wot  she  died  on. 
ya  tell  d  'un  to  A;  his  awn  plaace 
Knaw  d  (Imew)     An'  I  niver  A;  whot  a  mean'd 

I  A  a  Quaaker  feller  as  often  'as  towd  ma  this : 
I"  ur  I  A:  naw  moor  what  I  did 
sa  I  A:  es  'e'd  coom  to  be  poor  • 
An'^  'e  niver  k  nowt  but  boooks, 

he^g^urln' aS;"''  ^^'''  '"'  '""'^  *  ^^^*  ^ 


713 
720 
733 
779 
854 
893 
922 

942 

957 

992 

1006 

1008 

1015 

1019 
1023 
1058 
1136 
1163 
1169 
1196 
1248 
1255 
1291 
The  Dreamer  9 


Gareth  and  L.  1135 
N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  5 
15 
21 
45 
55 
67 
N.S.Q 
17 
47 

North.  Cobbler  65 

108 

Village  Wife  15 

22 

28 

52 

108 

Spinster's  S's.  34 

52 


71 

Owd  Rod  17 

Church-warden,  etc.  6 

29 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  19 

N.  S.  19 

North.  Cobbler  38 

Village  Wife  46 

52 

116 


Enaw'd 


365 


Knew 


Knaw'd  (knew)  {continued)    ye  k  it  wur  pleasant  to  'ear,    Spinster's  S's.  21 

Koii  was  the  dog  as  k  when  an'  vvheere  Owd  Bod  8 

fur  I  noawaiiys  k  'is  intent ;  >•       61 

S^oee    The  trustful  infant  on  the  k !  Supp.  Confessions  41 

when  with  brows  Propt  on  thy  k's,  „               70 

Low  on  her  k's  herself  she  cast,  Mariana  in  the  S.  27 
He  sat  upon  the  k's  of  men  In  days  that  never 

come  again.  Two  Voices  323 

took  with  care,  and  kneeling  on  one  k,  M.  d' Arthur  173 

I  would  wish  to  see  My  grandchild  on  my  k's  before  I  die :  Dora  13 

The  boy  set  up  betwixt  his  grandsire's  k's,  „  131 
with  his  boy  Betwixt  his  k's,  his  wife  upon 

the  tilt,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  41 

Hail,  hidden  to  the  k's  in  fern,  Talking  Oak  29 

Oh,  hide  thy  knotted  k's  in  fern,  ,.            93 

0  muffle  round  thy  k's  with  fern,  „  149 
she  wander'd  round  and  round  These  knotted  k's  of  mine,  „  158 
shower'd  the  rippled  ringlets  to  her  k ;  Godiva  47 
a  flask  Between  his  k's,  half-drain'd ;  JDay-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  26 
He  stoops — to  kiss  her— on  his  A;.  „  Arrival  30 
My  Ar's  are  bow'd  in  crypt  and  shrine :  Sir  Galahad  18 
Cheek  by  jowl,  and  khy  k:  Vision  of  Sin  84 
God  bless  him,  he  shall  sit  upon  my  k's  Enoch  Arden  197 
Stout,  rosy,  with  his  babe  across  his  k's ;  >•  746 
Hers,  yet  not  his,  upon  the  father's  k,  «  760 
knelt,  but  that  his  k's  Were  feeble,  „  778 
And  rotatory  thumbs  on  silken  k's,  Aylmer's  Field  200 
And  scoimdrel  in  the  supple-sliding  k.'  Sea  Dreams  168 
And  rosy  k's  and  supple  roundedness,  Lucretius  190 
held  her  round  the  k's  against  his  waist,  Princess  n  363 
That  lent  my  k  desire  to  kneel,  ,.  iii  193 
On  one  k  KneeUng,  I  gave  it,  „  iv  469 
He  sees  his  brood  about  thy  k ;  „  582 
Set  his  child  upon  her  k —  ..  vi  14 
Knelt  on  one  k, — the  child  on  one, —  ..  91 
Trail'd  himself  up  on  one  k :  „  155 
On  with  toil  of  heart  and  k's  and  hands,  Ode  on  Well.  212 
one  about  whose  patriarchal  k  Late  the  little  children 

clung :  ,>            236 

He  stay'd  his  arms  upon  his  k :  The  Victim  54 

Who  takes  the  children  on  his  it.  In  Mem.  Ixyi  11 

At  one  dear  k  we  profier'd  vows,  „      Ixxix  13 

boys  of  thine  Had  babbled  '  Uncle '  on  my  k ;  „    Ixxxiv  13 

For  I  that  danced  her  on  my  k,  „       Con.  45 

1  leap  from  Satan's  foot  to  Peter's  k —  Gareth  and  L.  538 
Gareth,  lightly  springing  from  his  k's,  „  556 
Gareth  brought  him  grovelling  on  his  k's,  „  1124 
Sat  riveting  a  helmet  on  his  k,  Marr.  of  Geraint  268 
on  her  k's.  Who  knows  ?  another  gift  of  the  high  God,  „  820 
A  strange  k  rustle  thro'  her  secret  reeds,  [Balin  and  Balan  354 
Writhed  toward  him,  slided  up  his  fc  and  sat,  Merlin  and  V.  239 
Across  her  neck  and  bosom  to  her  k,  „  257 
bow'd  black  k's  Of  homage,  ..  577 
she  sat,  half-falling  from  his  k's.  Half-nestled  „  904 
Sat  on  his  k,  stroked  his  gray  face  Lancelot  and  E.  149 
holy  maid  With  k's  of  adoration  wore  the  stone.  Holy  Grail  71 
With  supplication  both  of  k's  and  tongue  :  .>  602 
Full  sharply  smote  his  k's,  and  smiled,  Guinevere  47 
took  with  care,  and  kneeliiig  on  one  k.  Pass,  of  Arthur  341 
an'  sattled  'ersen  o'  my  k,  North.  Cobbler  79 
My  father  with  a  child  on  either  k.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  54 
dog  that  had  loved  him  and  fawn'd  at  his  k—  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  9 
dear  Lord  Jesus  with  children  about  his  k's.)  >>  ,  ,5^ 
To  thee,  dead  wood,  I  bow  not  head  nor  k's.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  128 
plant  on  shoulder,  hand  and  k.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  8 
k  was  prest  Against  the  margin  flowers ;  Tiresias  42 
Is  feebler  than  his  it's ;  Ancient  Sage  135 
wid  her  stick,  she  was  lamed  iv  a  fc,  .  Tomorrow  77 
Rob,  coom  oop  'ere  o'  my  k.  Spinster  s  S  s.  11 
let  St«evie  coom  oop  o'  my  k.  "  67 
swept  The  dust  of  earth  from  her  k.  -Dead  Prophet  32 
Nor  ever  cared  to  set  you  on  her  k,  .    The  Bmg  386 

Knee-deep    seem'd  k-d  in  mountain  grass,  Mariana  in  the  S.  42 

Full  k-d  lies  the  winter  snow,  -D.  of  the  0.  Yearl 

Kneel    Good  people,  you  do  ill  to  fc  to  me.  St.  S.  Stylites  133 


Kneel  (continued)    in  your  looking  you  may  fc  to  God.       St.  S.  Stylites  141 

That  lent  my  knee  desire  to  fc,  Princess  iii  193 
'  Why  fc  ye  there  ?     What  evil  have  ye  %^T0ught  ?         Merlin  and  V.  67 

Will  ye  not  lie  ?  not  swear,  as  there  ye  fc,  Last  Tournament  646 

Shall  I  take  him  ?     I  fc  with  him  ?  The  Flight  49 

Who  saw  you  fc  beside  your  bier,  Happy  54 

trust  myself  forgiven  by  the  God  to  whom  I  fc.  „  86 
I  am  a  trouble  to  you,  Could  fc  for  your  forgiveness.  Romney's  R.  26 
below  the  dome  of  azure  K  adoring  Him  the 

Timeless  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  8 

Kneel'd     A  red-cross  knight  for  ever  fc  L.  ofShalott  iii  6 

^Ahat  dame  or  damsel  have  ye  fc  to  last ?  Last  Tournament  550 

Kneeler     I  loved  you  like  this  fc,  Princess  iv  296 

Kneeling    Who  fc,  with  one  arm  about  her  king,  D.  of  F.  Women  270 

took  with  care,  and  fc  on  one  knee,  M.  d' Arthur  173 

On  one  knee  K,  I  gave  it.  Princess  iv  470 

Or  where  the  fc  hamlet  drains  The  chalice  In  Mem.  x  15 
when  they  i-ose,  knighted  from  fc,  some  Were  pale     Com.  of  Arthur  263 

And  offer'd  you  it  fc :  Merlin  and  V.  276 

Lancelot  fc  utter'd,  '  Queen,  Lady,  my  liege,  Lancelot  and  E.  1179 

took  with  care,  and  fc  on  one  knee,  Pass,  of  Arthur  341 

And  fc  there  Down  in  the  dreadful  dust  Lover's  Tale  iv  66 

Knell    every  hoof  a  fc  to  my  desires,  Princess  iv  174 

a  deeper  fc  in  the  heart  be  knoll'd ;  Ode  on  Well.  59 

the  silver  fc  Of  twelve  sweet  hours  that  past  Maud  I  xviii  64 

that  low  fc  tolling  his  lady  dead —  Lover's  Tale  iv  33 

Knelt     Bow  myself  down,  where  thou  hast  fc,  Supp.  Confessions  80 

I  blest  him,  as  he  fc  beside  my  bed.  May  Queen,  Con.  16 

he  would  have  fc,  but  that  his  knees  Were  feeble,  Enoch  Arden  778 

shaken  with  her  sobs,  Melissa  fc ;  Princess  iv  290 

Florian  fc,  and  '  Come '  he  whisper'd  to  her,  „           d  63 

K  on  one  knee, — the  child  on  one, —  „          vi  91 

he  laid  before  the  throne,  and  fc.  Delivering,  Gareth  and  L.  390 

had  you  cried,  or  fc,  or  pray'd  to  me,  Geraint  and  E.  844 

fc  In  amorous  homage — fc — what  else  ?  Balin  and  Balan  508 

K,  and  drew  from  out  his  night-black  hair  „              511 

Cast  herself  down,  fc  to  the  Queen,  Merlin  and  V.  66 

camels  fc  Unbidden,  and  the  brutes  of  moimtain  back  „            575 

she  fc  Full  lowly  by  the  corners  of  his  bed,  Lancelot  and  E.  825 

and  enter'd,  and  we  fc  in  prayer.  Holy  Grail  460 

and  spake  To  Tristram,  as  he  fc  before  her,  Last  Tournament  541 

And  fc,  and  lifted  hand  and  heart  and  voice  Columbus  16 

We  have  fc  in  yovu"  know-aU  chapel  Despair  94 

where  of  old  we  fc  in  prayer,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  33 

She  fc — '  We  worship  him ' — all  but  wept —  Dead  Prophet  29 

The  topmost — a  chest  there,  by  which  you  fc —  The  Ring  112 

Knew     (See  also  Knaw'd)     Who  k  the  seasons  when  to 

take  Occasion  To  the  Queen  30 

that  fc  The  beauty  and  repose  of  faith,  Supp  Confessions  74 

tho'  I  fc  not  in  what  time  or  place.  Sonnet  To 12 

prest  thy  hand,  and  fc  the  press  retiu-n'd,  The  Bridesmaid  12 

Dreaming,  she  fc  it  was  a  dream :  Mariana  in  the  S.  49 

The  place  he  fc  forgetteth  him.'  Two  Voices  264 

A  shadow  on  the  graves  I  fc,  „          272 

And  who  that  fc  him  could  forget  Miller's  D.  3 

I  fc  your  taper  far  away,  „      109 

I  fc  you  coidd  not  look  but  well ;  „       150 

Dear  eyes,  since  first  I  fc  them  well.  „      222 

I  fc  the  flowers,  I  fc  the  leaves,  I  fc  D.  of  F.  Women  73 

Touch'd ;  and  I  fc  no  more.'  „            116 

When  she  made  pause  I  fc  not  for  delight ;  „            169 

her  who  fc  that  Love  can  vanquish  Death,  „            269 

I  fc  your  brother :  his  mute  dust  I  honour  To  J.  S.  29 

I  fc  an  old  wife  lean  and  poor,  The  Goose  1 

'  we  fc  yoiu"  gift  that  way  At  college :  The  Epic  24 

And  almost  ere  I  fc  mine  own  intent,  Gardener's  D.  146 

Requiring,  tho'  I  fc  it  was  mine  own,  „           227 

I  beheld  her  ere  she  fc  my  heart,  „           276 

You  fc  my  word  was  law,  and  yet  you  dared  Dora  98 

from  his  father's  vats,  Prime,  which  I  fc;  Audley  Court  28 

I  set  the  words,  and  added  names  I  fc.  „          61 

built  When  men  fc  how  to  build,  Edwin  Morris  7 

he  that  fc  the  names.  Long  learned  names  „           16 

since  I  fc  the  right  And  did  it ;  Love  and  Duty  29 

And  see  the  great  Achilles,  whom  we  fc,  Ulysses  64 


Knew 


366 


Knew 


Knew  (continued)    Whispering  I  k  not  what  of  wild  and  sweet,     Tithonus  61 

and  love  her,  as  Ik  her,  kind  ?  Locksley  Hall  70 

Mother- Age  (for  mine  I  k  not)  help  me  „          185 

And  she,  that  k  not,  pass'd :  Godiva  73 

We  k  the  merry  world  was  round,  TJie  Voyage  7 

she  loved  Enoch ;  tho'  she  k  it  not,  Enoch  Arden  43 

for  he  k  the  man  and  valued  him,  „        121 

He  k  her,  as  a  horseman  knows  his  horse —  „        136 

he  had  loved  her  longer  than  she  k,  „       455 

she  k  that  she  was  bound —  „        462 

simple  folk  that  k  not  their  own  minds,  „  478 
fall  beside  her  path.  She  k  not  whence ;  a  whisper  on  her 

ear.  She  i  not  what;  „       515 

Philip  thought  he  k :  Such  doubts  and  fears  „       520 

tho'  he  k  not  wherefore,  started  up  Shuddering,  „        616 

and  mjiking  signs  They  k  not  what :  „        641 

Seeking  a  tavern  whicn  of  old  he  k,  „        691 

'  Know  him  ? '  she  said  '  I  k  him  far  away.  „        846 

see  me  dead.  Who  hardly  k  me  living,  „        889 

He  k  the  man ;  the  colt  would  fetch  its  price ;  The  Brook  149 

Sir,  if  you  k  her  in  her  English  days,  „  224 
one  they  k — Raw  from  the  nursery —                          Aylmer's  Field  263 

The  girl  might  be  entangled  ere  she  k.  „            272 

but  he  had  powers,  he  A;  it :  „            393 

Nor  k  he  wherefore  he  had  made  the  cry ;  „            589 

And  all  but  those  who  k  the  living  God —  „            637 

Was  always  with  her,  whom  you  also  k.  „            711 

Poor  souls,  and  k  not  what  they  did,  „            782 

I  lost  it,  k  him  less ;  Sea  Dreams  72 

In  her  strange  dream,  she  k  not  why,  „       230 

I  had  set  my  heart  on  your  forgiving  him  Before  you  h.  „       270 

that  was  mine,  my  dream,  I  k  it —  Lucretius  43 

'  I  k  you  at  the  first :  tho'  you  have  grown  Princess  ii  305 

I  never  k  my  father,  but  she  says  „       Hi  82 

Melissa,  knowing,  saying  not  she  k :  „          148 

since  I  A;  No  rock  so  hard  but  that  a  little  wave  „          153 

I  stammer'd  that  I  k  him — could  have  wish'd  „          206 

laugh'd  with  alien  lips,  And  k  not  what  they  meant ;  „      iv  120 

She,  question'd  if  she  k  us  men,  „          231 

And  then,  demanded  if  her  mother  k,  „          233 

Then  came  these  wolves  ;  they  k  her :  „      iv  321 

We  k  not  your  ungracious  laws,  „          399 

nor  k  There  dwelt  an  iron  nature  in  the  grain :  „        vi  49 

she  nor  cared  Nor  k  it,  clamouring  on,  „          150 

I  had  been  wedded  wife,  I  k  mankind,  „  327 
Nor  k  what  eye  was  on  me,  nor  the  hand  That  nursed  me,      „       vii  53 

call  her  Ida,  tho'  I  k  her  not,  „            96 

I  saw  the  forms :  I  k  not  where  I  was :  „          133 

But  if  you  be  that  Ida  whom  I  k,  „          147 

she  A;  it,  she  had  fail'd  In  sweet  humility;  „          228 

0  good  gray  head  which  all  men  k,  Ode  on  Well.  35 
He  k  their  voices  of  old.  „  63 
They  k  the  precious  things  they  had  to  guard :  Third  of  Feb.  41 
the  soldier  k  Some  one  had  blunder'd :  Light  Brigade  11 

1  k  right  well  That  Jenny  had  tript  in  her  time :  I  k, 

but  I  would  not  tell.  Orandmother  25 

who  k  what  .Jenny  has  been !  „           35 

I  started,  and  spoke  I  scarce  k  how ;  „           43 

I  k  them  all  as  babies,  „          88 

Nor  k  we  well  what  pleased  us  most.  The  Daisy  25 

Ye  never  k  the  sacred  dust :  In  Mem.  xxi  22 

That  never  k  the  summer  woods :  „       xxvii  4 

I  know  not :  one  indeed  Ik  „         xcvi  5 

fool  Was  soften'd,  and  he  k  not  why ;  „          ex  12 

can  I  doubt,  who  k  thee  keen  In  intellect,  „        cxiii  5 

K  that  the  death-white  curtain  meant  Maud  I  xiv  37 

O,  if  she  k  it.  To  know  her  beauty  „      xvi  18 

He  k  not  whither  he  should  turn  for  aid.  Com.  of  Arthur  40 

Are  like  to  those  of  Uther  whom  we  k.  „            72 

A  red-faced  bride  who  k  herself  so  vile,  Gareth  and  L.  109 

Albeit  in  mine  own  heart  I  k  him  King,  „  123 
I  that  k  him  fierce  and  turbulent  Refused  her         Marr.  of  Geraint  447 

And  roam  the  goodly  places  that  she  k;  „            646 

she  k  That  all  was  bright ;  „             667 

Then  suddenly  she  k  it  and  rejoiced,  „            687 


Enid,  all  abash'd  she  knew  not 


Knew  (continued) 
why. 
And  k  her  sitting  sad  and  solitary. 
Except  he  surely  k  my  lord  was  dead.' 
And  since  I  k  this  Earl,  when  I  myself  Was  half 
Because  I  k  my  deeds  were  known,  I  found, 
lightly  so  return'd,  and  no  man  k. 
I  k  thee  wrong'd.     I  brake  upon  thy  rest, 
Why  had  ye  not  the  shield  I  A;  ? 
Merlin,  who  A;  the  range  of  all  their  arts. 
Was  also  Bard,  and  k  the  starry  heavens ; 
then  you  drank  And  k  no  more, 
I  felt  as  tho'  you  A;  this  cursed  charm, 
And  either  slept,  nor  k  of  other  there ; 
she  that  A;  not  ev'n  his  name  ? 

Sir  Lancelot  A:  there  lived  a  knight  Not  far  from  Camelot, 
sally  forth  In  quest  of  whom  he  k  not, 
when  the  King  demanded  how  she  A;, 
'  He  won.'     '  I  A;  it,'  she  said, 
they  talk'd,  Meseem'd,  of  what  they  A;  not ; 
A;  ye  what  all  others  know,  And  whom  he  loves.' 
there  told  the  King  What  the  King  A:, 
she  k  right  well  What  the  rough  sickness  meant,  but  what 

this  meant  She  A;  not, 
And  Lancelot  A;  the  little  clinking  sound ; 
Lancelot  A;  that  she  was  looking  at  him. 
I  A;  For  one  of  those  who  eat  in  Arthur's  hall ; 
I  k  That  I  should  light  upon  the  Holy  Grail, 
and  fell  down  Before  it,  and  I  A;  not  why, 
I  k  the  veil  had  been  withdrawn, 
and  I  A;  it  was  the  Holy  Grail, 
As  well  as  ever  shepherd  A;  his  sheep, 
'So  spake  the  King:  I  A:  not  all  he  meant.' 
there  were  those  who  A;  him  near  the  King, 
and  he  A;  himself  Loved  of  the  King : 
Some  rough  old  knight  who  k  the  wordly  way, 
Awaking  A:  the  sword,  and  tum'd  herself  To  Gawain 
He  A;  not  whence  or  wherefore : 
made  his  beast  that  better  A;  it,  swerve 


i 


Watch'd  her  lord  pass,  and  A;  not  that  she  sigh'd. 

Lancelot  k,  had  held  sometime  with  pain 

Who  A;  thee  swine  enow  before  I  came. 

He  ended :  Arthur  k  the  voice ; 

and  k  that  thou  wert  nigh.' 

he  A;  the  Prince  tho'  marr'd  with  dust, 

no  man  k  from  whence  he  came ; 

indeed  I  A;  Of  no  more  subtle  master 

merry  linnet  A;  me.  The  squirrel  A;  me. 

And  partly  made  them — tho'  he  A;  it  not. 

He  A;  the  meaning  of  the  whisper  now,  Thought  that 

he  A;  it. 
Stung  by  his  loss  had  vanish'd,  none  A;  where. 
I  A;  Some  sudden  vivid  pleasure  hit  him 
I  A;  a  man,  not  many  years  ago ; 
I  A;  another,  not  so  long  ago. 
She  never  had  a  sister.     I  A;  none. 
So  I  A;  my  heart  was  hard, 
He  was  devil  for  aught  they  A;, 
Evelyn  k  not  of  my  former  suit, 
She  died  and  she  was  buried  ere  we  A;, 
or  butcher'd  for  all  that  we  k — 
I  would  I  A;  their  speech  ; 
Thou  art  so  well  disguised,  I  A;  thee  not. 
I  k  we  should  fall  on  each  other. 
As  if  they  A:  your  diet  spares 
I  k  the  twain  Would  each  waste  each, 
these  eyes  will  find  The  men  I  A;, 
I  A;  not  what,  when  I  keard  that  voice, — 
the  days  went  by,  but  I  A;  no  more — 

0  Mother,  was  not  the  face  that  I  k. 

1  A:  that  hand  too  well — 
we  A;  that  their  light  was  a  lie — 
Nature  who  A;  not  that  which  she  bore ! 
Who  A;  no  books  and  no  philosophies, 
she  k  this  father  well ; 


Marr.  of  Geraint  765 
Geraint  and  E.  282 
721 
794 
858 
Balin  and  Balan  42 
499 
601 
Merlin  and  V.  167 
169 
277 
435 
738 
Lancelot  and  E.  29 
401 
561 
575 
622 
675 
680 
707 

887 

983 

985 

Holy  GraiZ  23 

366 

407 

522 

531 

551 

920 

Pdleas  and  E.  15 

153 

192 

489 

504 

551 

Last  Tournament  130 

178 

304 

455 

520 

Cfainevere  36 

„      289 

„      477 

Lover's  Tale  ii  15 

i;25 


43 

102 

177 

255 

262 

326 

First  Quarrel  78 

The  Revenge  108 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  205 

241 

Def.  of  Lucknow  91 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  11 

198 

V.  of  Maeldune  104 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  10 

Tiresias  68 

,,    176 

The  Wreck  52 

„      111 

„      116 

„      145 

Despair  16 

„       34 

Ancient  Sage  218 

The  Flight  87 


Knew 

Knew  (continued)    an'  none  of  the  parish  k 
at  the  host  that  had  halted  he  k  not  whv 
There  is  a  Fate  beyond  us.'     Nothing  k 
k  not  that  which  pleased  it  most, 
the  face  Of  Miriam  grew  upon  me,  tiU  I  A  • 
you  A  not  one  was  there  Who  saw  you  kneel 


367 


Knight 


Tomorrow  76 

Heavy  Brigade  7 

Demeter  and  P.  87 

The  Ring  165 

185 

Happy  53 


1  k  that  you  were  near  me  when  I  let  him  kiss  my  brow  •  " "  "  65 

I  A;  You  were  parting  for  the  war,  jorow,  „      65 

^'^:^}±  !^.^?:^  I.^  -t  whither,  _  _  Merlin  and  the  G.  ]l 


; 


What  sight  so  lured  him  thro'  the  fields  he  k 
^Tt'hat  hetr^"'  '°  '^*^^^  "^-y^"  ^-y- 

■  ^^'^o  "^  ^^°"3  ^'^o'  t^o"  canst  not  know  • 

■  (g«^«^5o  War-knife)    To  war  with  falsehood  to 

he  drove  the  k  into  his  side : 

The  k  uprising  toward  the  blow 

/am  his  dearest ! '  rush'd  on  the  k 

Struck  with  a  k^s  haft  hard  against  the  board, 

They  sit  with  k  in  meat  and  wine  in  horn ' 

Ue  was  happier  using  the  k 

broken  besides  with  dreams  of  the  dreadful  k 

by  the  pitiful-pitiless  k,~ 

ii  cured,  by  the  surgeon's  k,~ 
«•  :  i°J  ,^^  ^  £^ay  with  the  k, 

Knight    (^ee  also  feoy-knight,  Brother-knight,  Knave-knieht 
^°S;S*d  J^'^^-^^t.  TablSUS*  I'^S' 

^^^'a^ndTme^  "'^'  ^^°  ^'^^  ^^"^  ^^^  ^""^^  ""^  '"^^ 
A  red-cross  k  for  ever  kneel'd  To  a  lady  ^-  "^  ^^"^  *^  ?f 

^  and  burgher,  lord  and  dame.  "         ."*J 

li%S;i  *i^^i:-  ^-  f«-.  All  the  ^.  at  Camelot :         :        "  g 


Far — Jar — away  1 

Charity  12 
^not«n<  <Sa^e  36 

Two  Voices  131 

Lucretius  275 

TAc  FicitTO  66 

"        72 

Geratnt  and  E.  600 

Merlin  and  V.  694 

/«  <A«  CMrf.  i?os».  6 

65 

Def.  of  Lncknow  85 

Despair  80 

Charity  15 


ATo/e  21 


Sir  Bediyere,  the  last  of  aU  his  k'^. 
The  goodhest  fellowship  of  famous  it's 
the  mighty  bones  of  ancient  men,  Old  k's 
beseem'd  Thy  fealty,  nor  hke  a  noble  *:  ' 
thou,  the  latest-left  of  all  mv  k's 
every  chance  brought  out  a  noble  k. 
A  maiden  ^— to  me  is  given  Such  hope, 
O  just  and  faithful  A  of  God ' 
Kissmg  his  vows  upon  it  like  a  A; 
E '— ^^ '  ^^  ^^^P  ^  chronicle  With  all  about 

r?eud?i??n'«iit  ^^^''^  "^  '^^?  *^^'  d^^t  with  ^'5, 
A  leudal  k  in  silken  masquerade 

If  1  prove  Your  A;,  and  fight  your  battle 

m^y  a  bold  k  started  uj  in  heat,  ' 

and  all  the  good  k's  maim'd, 

bcarce  other  than  my  king's  ideal  k, 

^ut  rode  a  simple  k  among  his  it's. 

Broad  pathway^  for  the  hunter  and  the  k 

H^  new-made  i's,  to  King  Leodogran, 

Sf^H  f'/^"  ^'^^  ''^  ^"  ^^  ^'*  Knighted 
an  old  k  And  ancient  friend  of  Uth?r  • 

ttt^^^  K''  l^owever  brave  they  be- 

h^  pf  Stood  round  him,  and  rejoicing  in  his  joy. 

^  a  fi^r^  n^^-?^^^'  ^"'i  ^^^  told  the  ffing^ 

A  t  .f  A  !k  ^"^  ^^"^  """^S  before  my  lance 

A  A  of  Arthur,  working  out  his  wiU, 

^ol  Ln  t?"^  .^"/^  ^  ^  ^°"^d  pass  OutwMd, 
A  i-  nf  ?  fh ''>^\*  '^"Sed  about  the  throne, 
A  A;  of  Uther  in  the  Barons'  war 
<j^rant  me  some  A;  to  do  the  battle  for  me, 
Then  strode  a  good  k  forward,  crying 
Had  made  his  goodly  cousin,  Tristram,  k. 
The  goodly  A; !     What !  shaU  the  shield  of  Mark 
And  under  every  shield  a  k  was  named : 

nSfPv  ™?  f  ""^  ^  ^a^  done  one  noble  deed, 

make  him  k  because  men  caU  him  king. 

And  evermore  a  k  would  ride  away 

s^w  fi7»*^"'??  ^u"??.  prodigious  tale  Of  A;'^, 

■•'aw  tne  k  s  Clash  hke  the  coming  and  retiring  wave 


M.  d'Arthur  7 

15 

48 

75 

„      124 

231 

Sir  Gj'ahad  61 

79 

Aylmer's  Fidd  472 

Princess,  Pro.  27 
29 
234 
iv  595 
1)359 
..     vi  241 
Bed.  of  Idylls  7 
Com.  of  Arthur  51 
61 
137 
174 
222 
252 
458 
488 
Gareth  and  L.  5 
24 
27 
,,     .   145 
310 
328 
353 
362 
364 
394 
402 
409 
411 
420 
438 
r>,        509 
521 


Knight  {continued)     Make  me  thy  A;-in  secret ! 
Made  thee  my  k?  my  k's  are  sworn  to  vows 
'Make  thee  my  A:  in  secret' 
my  need,  a  k  To  combat  for  my  sister,  Lyonors 
three  A:'s  Defend  the  passings,  brethren,  ' 

And  pardonable,  worthy  to  be  A;— 
I  ask'd  for  thy  chief  k,  And  thou  hast  given  me 
The  most  ungentle  k  in  Arthur's  hall ' 
Sweet  lord,  how  like  a  noble  k  he  talks  ' 
he  IS  not  A:  but  knave.' 
And  Gareth  silent  gazed  upon  the  k. 
Thou  art  not  k  but  knave.'    Said  Gareth, '  Damsel 
whether  knave  or  k,  •^•"usei, 

|?d  either  A;  at  once,  Huri'd  as  a  stone 
A,  Thy  hfe  is  thine  at  her  command 
thou  art  not  A;  but  knave.' 

A:  or  knave— The  knave  that  doth  thee  service  as  fuU  k 
freS  ^  '  meseems,  as  any  k  Toward  thy  sister's 

knave,  because  thou  strikest  as  a  A: 

*u    ?^mu^  ^^  ^®^  ^^  ™'glit  be  shkmed  • 
the  A;,  That  named  himself  the  Star  of  Evening 
O  knave,  as  noble  as  any  of  all  the  k's— 
Mid,  good  faith,  I  fain  had  added— Z 
He  scarce  is  A:,  yea  but  half-man         ' 
methmks  There  rides  no  A;,  not  Lancelot,  his  great  self, 
A:  s  on  horse  Sculptured,  and  deckt  in  slo'wly-fvaning  hues, 
^  Sir  Knave,  my  A;,  a  hermit  once  was  here  «      -== 

Stay,  felon  k,  I  avenge  me  for  my  friend  ' 

Pn^w  °^  ^^*'^'^'  7^'l"^  *^'"own  by  whom  I  know  not. 
Courteous  as  any  A;— but  now,  if  A;,  ' 

K,  knave,  prince  and  fool,  I  hate  thee  and  for  ever  ' 

k  art  thou  To  the  King's  best  wish 

Prmce,  K,  HaU,  K  and  Prince, 

meriy  am  I  to  find  my  goodly  knave  Is  k  and  noble 

wTu'  .^  ^^  "0*  •  '"y  ^^^^  brethren  bad  me  do  it. 

What  madness  made  thee  challenge  the  chief  A; 

brave  Geraint,  a  A;  of  Arthur's  court 

bandit  earls,  and  caitiff  k's,  Assassin's, 

Enid  rode.  And  fifty  k's  rode  with  them 

Weeping  for  some  gay  A;  in  Arthur's  hall ' 

rode  Full  slowly  by  a  A;,  lady,  and  dwarf  • 

the  k  Had  vizor  up,  and  show'd  a  youthful  face. 

when  she  put  her  horse  toward  the  A;, 

Had  put  his  horse  in  motion  toward  the  k 
Pardon  me,  O  stranger  A; ;  ' 

the  good  k's  horse  stands  in  the  court ; 

if  he  be  the  A:  whom  late  I  saw  Ride  into  that  new 
fortress 

what  k  soever  be  in  field  Lays  claim  to 

errant  A;'s  And  ladies  came,  and  by  and  by  the 
town  Flow'd  in, 

the  A;  With  some  surprise  and  thrice  as  much  disdain 

iimd  was  aware  of  three  taU  A;'*  On  horseback, 
said  the  second,  '  yonder  comes  a  k.' 
Held  his  head  high,  and  thought  himself  a  A; 
A  A;  of  Arthur's  court,  who  laid  his  lance  In  rest 

The  voice  of  Enid,'  said  the  A: ;  ' 

I  took  you  for  a  bandit  A;  of  Doorm  • 
Now,  made  a  A;  of  Arthur's  Table  Round 
when  the  A:  besought  him,  '  FoUow  me,    ' 
Than  if  some  A;  of  mine,  risking  his  life, 
And  fifty  A;'*  rode  with  them  to  the  shores  Of  Severn 
two  strange  A;'*  Who  sit  near  Camelot  Balin  ariA  Tini.  "Tn 

chaUengmg  And  overthrowing  every  k  who  comes.  ^"^"'^  J? 

i'or  whatsoever  A;  against  us  came  "  tX- 

huri'd  to  ground  what  k  soever  spurr'd  Against  us  "  fa 

worthier  to  be  thme  Than  twenty  Bahns,  Balan  k  "  ta 

Rise,  my  true  A:.  "  "^ 

in  those  deep  woods  we  found  A  A;  "  ili 

Mid  a  transitory  word  Make  A;  or  churi  or  child  "  i  «o 

Bahn  bare  the  crown,  and  all  the  A;'*  Approved  him.  "  ^ 

not  worthy  to  be  A: ;   A  churl,  a  clown  "  '  "  ^ 

found  the  greetings  both  of  A;  and  King  "  o^o 

(for  Arthur's  k's  Were  hated  strangers  in  the  hall)  "  agf 


Gareth  and  L.  544 
552 
564 
607 
613 
654 
658 
757 
777 
922 
933 

942 

964 

982 

1006 


1015 
1020 
1043 
1089 
1136 
1162 
1176 
1182 
1194 
1196 
1220 
1233 
1250 
1255 
1258 
1270 
1292 
1409 
1416 
Marr.  of  Geraint  1 
35 
44 
118 
187 
188 
200 
206 
286 
370 

406 
486 

545 
556 
Geraint  and  E.  56 
126 
242 
775 
780 
786 
793 
807 
915 
954 


Knight 


368 


Knight 


Knight  (continued)    Hail,  royal  k,  we  break  on  thy 

sweet  rest, 
the  k,  with  whom  I  rode,  Hath  sufEer'd  mis- 
adventure, 
nor  Prince  Nor  k  am  I,  but  one  that  hath  defamed 
this  good  k  Told  me,  that  twice  a  wanton  damsel 

came. 
It  more  beseems  the  perfect  virgin  k 
She  hated  all  the  k's,  and  heard  in  thought 
some  corruption  crept  among  his  k*s, 
but  afterwards  He  made  a  stalwart  k. 
saw  The  k's,  the  court,  the  King, 
and  show'd  them  to  his  k's,  Saying, 
the  k's  Are  half  of  them  our  enemies, 
As  to  k's.  Them  surely  can  I  silence  with  all  ease, 
our  k's  at  feast  Have  pledged  us  in  this  union. 
Then  answer'd  Lancelot,  the  chief  of  k's :  (repeat) 
allow  your  pretext,  O  my  k,  As  all  for  glory ; 
He  loves  it  in  his  k's  more  than  himself  : 
dying  down  as  the  great  k  Approach'd  them  : 
Is  that  an  answer  for  a  noble  k  ? 
shame  me  not  Before  this  noble  k,' 
for,  k,  the  maiden  dreamt  That  some  one  put  this 

diamond 
To  ride  to  Camelot  with  this  noble  k  : 
slight  disparagement  Before  the  stranger  k, 
the  great  k,  the  darling  of  the  court. 
For  if  his  own  k  cast  him  down,  he  laughs  Saying, 

his  k's  are  better  men  than  he — 
knew  there  lived  a  k  Not  far  from  Camelot, 
wrathful  that  a  stranger  k  Should  do  and  almost 

overdo 
He  bore  a  A;  of  old  repute  to  the  earth, 
all  the  k's,  His  party,  cried  '  Advance 
His  party,  k's  of  utmost  North  and  West, 
'  Lo,  Sire,  our  A;,  thro'  whom  we  won  the  day. 
So  great  a  A;  as  we  have  seen  to-day — 
O  Gawain,  and  ride  forth  and  find  the  k. 
k's  and  kings,  there  breathes  not  one  of  you 
since  the  k  Came  not  to  us,  of  us  to  claim  the  prize, 
a  good  k,  but  therewithal  Sir  Modred's  brother, 
banquet,  and  concourse  of  k's  and  kings. 
Albeit  I  know  my  k's  fantastical. 
What  of  the  k  with  the  red  sleeve  ? 
Here  was  the  k,  and  here  he  left  a  shield ; 
Who  dream'd  my  k  the  greatest  k  of  all.' 
'  that  you  love  This  greatest  A:,  your  pardon  ! 
know  full  well  Where  your  great  k  is  nidden, 
the  King  knew  '  Sir  Lancelot  is  the  k.' 
the  k's  at  banquet  twice  or  thrice  Forgot  to  drink 
sweet  and  serviceable  To  noble  k's  in  sickness. 
Right  fain  were  I  to  learn  this  k  were  whole, 
Woke  the  sick  k,  and  while  he  roll'd  his  eyes 
the  great  A;  in  his  mid-sickness  made 
More  specially  should  your  good  k  be  poor. 
In  all  your  quarrels  will  I  be  your  k, 
the  King  Came  girt  with  k's  : 
Sir  Lancelot,  As  thou  art  a  k  peerless.' 
'  O  my  k,  It  will  be  to  thy  worship,  as  my  k, 
when  the  k's  had  laid  her  comely  head 
Strike  down  the  lusty  and  long  practised  k, 
My  k,  the  great  Sir  Lancelot  of  the  Lake.' 
Pure,  as  you  ever  wish  your  k's  to  be. 
what  profits  me  my  name  Of  greatest  k  ? 
Alas  for  Arthur's  greatest  k, 

'  Nay,'  said  the  it ;  'for  no  such  earthly  passion  mine, 
one  of  your  own  k's,  a  guest  of  ours. 
And  tell  thy  brother  k's  to  fast  and  pray, 
Said  Arthur,  when  he  dubb'd  him  k  ;  and  none.  In  so 

young  youth,  was  ever  made  a  k  Till  Galahad  ; 
'  My  k,  my  love,  my  k  of  heaven, 
every  k  beheld  bis  fellow's  face  As  in  a  glory,  and  all 

the  k's  arose, 
Lancelot  sware,  and  many  among  the  k's, 
there  so  oft  with  all  his  k's  Feasted, 


Balin  and  Balan  470 

475 

484 


Merlin  and  V.  22 

150 

154 

482 

875 

Lancelot  and  E.  57 

98 

108 

114 

,.  140,  187 

153 

157 

179 

201 

208 

211 

220 
235 
261 

313 
401 

468 
492 
502 
526 
529 
533 
537 
540 
543 
557 
562 
594 
621 
634 
667 


707 

736 

768 

772 

819 

878 

956 

961 

1261 

1282 

1326 

1337 

1360 

1373 

1375 

1414 

1419 

Holy  Grail  30 

40 

126 

137 
157 

191 
201 
223 


Enight  (continued)    '  Woe  is  me,  my  k's,'  he  cried.  Holy  Grail  275 

he  ask'd  us,  k  by  k,  if  any  Had  seen  it,                                        „  283 

(Brother,  the  King  was  hard  upon  his  k's)  „  299 
hath  overborne  Five  k's  at  once,  and  every  younger  k, 

Unproven,                                                                                 „  303 

K's  that  in  twelve  great  battles  splash'd                                    „  311 

how  often,  O  my  k's  Your  places  being  vacant                           „  316 

The  yet-unbroken  strength  of  all  his  k's,                                      „  326 

overthrew  So  many  k's  that  all  the  people  cried,                        „  335 

k's  and  ladies  wept,  and  rich  and  poor  Wept,                             „  353 

my  strong  lance  had  beaten  down  the  k's,                                 „  363 

calling  me  the  greatest  of  all  k's,                                                „  595 

thou  art  our  greatest  k.  Our  Lady  says  it,                                    „  603 

Saw  ye  none  beside.  None  of  your  k's  ?  '                                    „  632 

found  ye  all  your  k's  return'd,                                                     „  708 

and  when  thy  k's  Sware,  I  sware  with  them                               „  777 

Mean  k's,  to  whom  the  moving  of  my  sword                              „  790 

painting  on  the  wall  Or  shield  of  A; ;                                            „  830 

A  reckless  and  irreverent  A;  was  he,                                             „  856 

Could  all  of  true  and  noble  in  A;  and  man                                     „  882 

'  And  spake  I  not  too  truly,  O  my  k's  ?                                        „  888 

King  Aethue  made  new  k's  to  fill  the  gap                     Pelleas  and  E.  1 

'  Make  me  thy  A;,  because  I  know,  „  7 
and  Arthur  made  him  A:.     And  this  new  k.  Sir 

Pelleas  of  the  isles —  „  16 

Beat  like  a  strong  k  on  his  helm,  „  23 

Arm'd  as  ye  see,  to  tilt  against  the  k's  There  at  Caerleon,       „  65 

Three  k's  were  thereamong  ;  and  they  too  smiled,  „  96 

her  k's  And  all  her  damsefi  too  were  gracious  „  121 

Then  glanced  askew  at  those  three  k's  „  134 

and  strange  k's  From  the  four  winds  came  in :  „  147 

and  him  his  new-made  k  Worshipt,  „  154 

For  Arthur,  loving  his  young  k,  „  159 

her  look  Bright  for  all  others,  cloudier  on  her  A: —  „  177 

those  three  k's  all  set  their  faces  home,  „  187 

Some  rough  old  A;  who  knew  the  worldly  way,  „  192 

Then  calling  her  three  k's,  she  charged  them  „  219 

walking  on  the  walls  With  her  three  k's,  „  226 

Yield  me  thy  love  and  know  me  for  thy  A;.'  „  249 

her  anger,  leaving  Pelleas,  bum'd  Full  on  her  A;'5  „  290 

her  k's  Laugh'd  not,  but  thrust  him  bounden  out  of  door.      „  313 

whom  late  our  Arthur  made  K  of  his  table  ;  „  320 

I  chant  thy  praise  As  prowest  A;  and  truest  lover,  „  350 

'  Pity  on  him,'  she  answer'd,  '  a  good  A;,  „  386 

droned  her  lurdane  A;'s  Slumbering,  „  430 

and  thought, '  What !  slay  a  sleeping  A;  ?  „  448 

'  Alas  that  ever  a  k  should  be  so  false.'  „  450 

as  the  one  true  A;  on  earth.  And  only  lover ;  „  494 

either  k  Drew  back  a  space,  and  when  they  closed,  „  572 

there  with  her  k's  and  dames  was  Guinevere.  „  588 

she,  turning  to  Pelleas,  '  O  young  k,  „  595 
the  purest  of  thy  k's  May  win  them  for  the  purest   Last  Tournament^ 

everywhere  the  k's  Arm'd  for  a  day  of  glory  „  54 

A  hundred  goodly  ones — the  Red  K,  he —  „  70 

Red  K  Brake  in  upon  me  and  drave  them  „  71 
whatsoever  his  own  A;'s  have  sworn  My  k's  have 

sworn  the  counter  to  it —  „  79 

My  k's  are  aU  adulterers  hke  his  own,  „  84 

My  younger  k's,  new-made,  in  whom  your  flower  „  99 

leave  The  leading  of  his  younger  k's  to  me.  „  110 

Or  have  I  dream'd  the  bearing  of  our  k's  „  120 

He  spoke,  and  taking  all  his  younger  k's,  „  126 

a  A;  cast  down  Before  his  throne  of  arbitration  „  161 

An  ocean-sounding  welcome  to  one  k,  „  168 

O  chief  A;,  Right  arm  of  Arthur  in  the  battlefield,  „  201 

know  myself  the  wisest  k  of  all.'  „  248 

one  true  A; — Sole  follower  of  the  vows ' —  „  302 

'  K,  an  ye  fling  those  rubies  round  my  neck  „  312 

the  k's.  Glorying  in  each  new  glory,  „  335 

And  therebeside  a  horn,  inflamed  the  k's  „  434 

the  Red  K  heard,  and  all,  „  441 

Slain  was  the  brother  of  my  paramour  By  a  A;  of  thine,  „  449 

To  hang  whatever  A;  of  thine  I  fought  And  tumbled.  „  453 

k's,  who  watch'd  him,  roar'd  And  shouted  „  468 

0  Sir  K,  What  dame  or  damsel  have  ye  kneel'd  to  last  ? '      „  549 


Knight 


369 


Enight  (continued)    Far  other  was  the  Tristram 

Arthur's  kl  '  r    ,  m 

I  loved  This  knighthest  of  all  fc's  '  "  ^JV 

No  k  of  Arthur's  noblest  dealt  in  scorn  •  /'  •  ::i 

said  my  father,  and  himself  was T       '  Gmnevere^ 

every  k  Had  whatsoever  meat  he  long'd  for  "' 

bir  Lancelot,  as  became  a  noble  k 
If  ever  Lancelot,  that  most  noble  k 
Reputed  the  best  k  and  goodliest  man 
my  right  arm  The  mightiest  of  my  k's' 
hand  against  the  King  Who  made  hiin  k :  but  many 
a  k  was  slam  ;  nuuiy 

Then  othere,  foUowing  these  my  mightiest  k's 
And  miss  the  wonted  number  of  my  k's 
Lords  of  the  White  Horee,  heathen,  and  k's 


Know 


Among  his  warrmg  senses,  to  thy  k's— 
Fust  niade  and  latest  left  of  all  the  k's, 


264 
328 
345 
382 
430 


7  jrTr    """f  .«"'^''  'eit  oi  an  tne  k's, 
and  A;  5  Once  thine,  whom  thou  hast  loved 
1  o  war  a^Tainst  my  people  and  my  k's. 
And  they  my  k's,  who  loved  me  once 
shouts  of  heathen  and  the  traitor  k's 
The  goodhest  feUowship  of  famous  k's 
the  mighty  bones  of  ancient  men.  Old  k's, 
beseem'd  fhy  fealty,  nor  hke  a  noble  k : 
thou,  the  latest-left  of  all  my  k's 
every  chance  brought  out  a  noble  k. 
he  the  k  for  an  amorous  girl's  romance  ! 
-a  s  were  thwack'd  and  riven 

»«<oSf^'"'t^r  K''  u^"*^  ^"^^''i  ^  red  As  poppies 
Knighted     K  by  Arthur  at  his  crowning     ^  ^^  "^ 

when  they  rose,  A;  from  kneeling,  some  Were  nalp 

As  on  the  day  when  Arthur  k  M^n  '  ^  n    ^z.     ",  .     — 


438 
489 
498 
574 
„      640 
Pass,  of  Arthur  2 
60 
71 
73 
113 
183 
216 
243 
292 
399 
The  Wreck  44 
The  Tourney  10 
16 
Com.  of  Arthur  174 
263 


till  he  smote  the  thrall, 
^  Then  being  on  the  morrow  k, 
Knight^rrantry    old  k-e  Who  ride  abroad. 
Knighthood      leadmg  all  his  k  threw  the  kings 
And  Arthur's  k  sang  before  the  King^— ^ 
too  sang  the  k,  moving  to  their  haU     " 

A^H  f K  ^^"^  !}f  ^  ^°''  ^  ^P^*=«  Were  all  one  wiU, 
And  the  deed's  sake  my  k  do  the  deed 
80  my  k  keep  the  vows  they  swore       ' 


....-ui.u  uj  v,uiui,esy 

The  flower  of  all  their  vestal  k. 

Boldness  and  royal  k  of  the  bird 

I  swear  by  truth  and  k  that  I  gave  No  cause, 

Arthur  and  his  k  call'd  The  Pme 

borne  root  of  k  and  pure  nobleness ; 

All  that  belongs  to  k,  and  I  love  ' 

Hath  the  great  heart  of  k  in  thee  fail'd 

marking  how  the  k  mock  thee,  fool— 

My  k  taught  me  this— ay,  being  snapt— 

Kn,VhK,     ^^V^^.  ^'  "^^^  ^'leice  Had  Arthur 
&^hthood-errant    drew  The  k-e  of  this  reahn 
Kmght-knave    weU  stricken,  O  good  k-k— 

.  so jyill  my  k-k  Miss  the  full  flower 
^^iV^®  .  ^S  ^  ^"=^^  ^*P  instead  of  casque, 

say  That  out  of  naked  k  purity  Sir  Lancelot 
worship  t 
Knightly    aU  of  pure  Noble,  and  k  in  me 
and  these  Full  k  without  scorn  • 
Del^ht  our  souls  with  talk  of  A:' deeds. 
Mix  d  with  the  A;  growth  that  fringed  his  lips. 
Had  carved  himself  a  k  shield  of  wood 
Among  the  k  brasses  of  the  graves        ' 
In  any  k  fashion  for  her  sake.         ' 
the  prize  A  golden  circlet  and  a  k  sword 
•Uehght  our  souls  with  talk  of  k  deeds, 

»«{*    T  7    "^^^  *,^®  *  growth  that  fringed  his  hps, 
Kmt    Ik  a.  hundred  others  new  : 

y'u ',®jlP"®ed,  Love  with  k  brows  went  by, 

1  hold  them  exquisitely  k, 

K  land  to  land,  and  blowing  havenward 


Balin  and  Balan  155 

Pelleas  and  E.  140 

Gareth  and  L.  629 

Com.  of  Arthur  111 

481 

503 

515 

Gareth  and  L.  572 

602 


~u  y « \t  ^  """  *""^'*  ^^^y  swore,  7^ 

tL' flo^tr^f  Tthel7v37'  ''^'^°°''  ^"'^  ^ '  ^'^^^  <^^  ^«^-  S' 


508 

Merlin  and  V.  134 
Lancelot  and  E.  1297 
HoZy  G'ratY  3 
886 
Pelleas  and  E.  9 
596 
Last  Tournament  301 
658 
683 
Guinevere  461 
(?are<A  awcf  L.  1135 
1296 
Princess  iv  600 
5aKw  ajwf  5a^aw  428 

Merlin  and  V.  11 

iToZy  Grail  774 

Guinevere  39 

il/.  d' Arthur  19 

220 

^erZm  a»ii  F.  473 

752 

Lancelot  and  E.  871 

Pelleas  and  E.  12 

Pass,  o/  Jrt/iMr  187 

388 

Two  Voices  234 

Gardener's  D.  245 

Talking  Oak  91 

Golden  Year  44 


^*  ^1h"^    ^^°''  ^^""^  *  themselves  for  summer 

Some  dolorous  message  k  below  Aylmer's  Field  724 

A;  The  generations  each  with  each  •  ^^^-  ^"  ^ 

^  to  some  dismal  sandbank  far  at  «pa  t-       ,   "        ^^  ^^ 

Knitted     with  such  a  chain  OftpSptr'  Lover's  Tale  imd 

Knob    man  with  k's  and  wires  and  vials  p^^^  ^"^^^  ^^S 

Knock'd     volume,  all  of  sones    KAcv^tr.  ^  Princess,  Pro.  65 

I  k  and,  bidden,  enter°d^'                  °  '""'  ^«^%  ^ourt  58 

Knockii^    Someone  A:  there  without  ?     No'  Prmcess  iii  IZO 

KnoU    Oread  haunt  The  k's  of  Ida    '           '  Romney's  R.  142 

A;'s  That  dimpling  died  into  each  other  ^  /      ,  fEnonelS 

perch'd  about  the  k's  A  dozen  an^Jyi^odels  &"" '  ^'f  ^f^ 

From  /;  to  k,  where,  couch'd  at  eL  Pn,icm,  Pro.  72 

dusk  reveal'd  The  k's  once  more  where  **  ^'"'-  ^«'  ^^ 

Nor  hoary  k  of  ash  and  haw  That  hears  "              ^ 

rhere,  on  a  httle  k  beside  it,  stav'd  x/          x  'A      •      ''  ^ 

ford  Behind  them,  and  so  gaUop^d  up  the  k  "'■  "^  ^'"'''''  19 

'For  on  this  little  k,  if  anywhere,  ^  '                          "            168 

nuddJed  here  and  there  on  mound  and  t  n      ■  ."    ■,  -r.  ^^'■ 

The  ruinous  donjon  as  a  k  of  ^           '  Geraintar^E.  803 

KnoUd    adeeperkniuinthehearbe'A;  ^^'""odf  ^tl^lt 

KnoUing    heavy  clocks  yfc  the  drowsy  hou^  Ode  on  Well.  59 
le  S'  "^'^  ^^«-^ots)   TSteSls  fell  from      '^"'"'^'""^  ^^  '^ 

The  A;'s  that  tangle  human  creeds  m       i.     j^«r»«™«  3 

Bridesmaid,  ere  the  b^pp y  S  tied  ^^'%-J'''^'.i  /''^'^  3 

I  must  gather  k's  of  flowerl                   '  The  Bridesmaid  1 

palms  in  cluster,  k's  of  Paradise  r    7  ?^  ^J^/**  ^^ 

felt  the  fc  Clunb  in  her  throat  Lancelot  and  E.  439 

&i^*'''/c  ^7*^L*  ^  1  ^'^"^'i  ^'tl^e  noose  ;  St  s'st^Jf^ 

^otted^^SeealsoMany-lmotted)    These  A  knees  of            ^i- ^- &¥ttes  65 

^"Jbared  the  k  column  of  his  throat,  Mlrf^?f^?r''^ /t! 

KnonrbSeKirrrd^o?w\r.T^^™'  ^^ll^"! 

^Ts aSg b^s h^mitety^s"^ ^"«-  ^1  ^^4-ii:: S 

I  i  At  matins  and  at  evSng     ^  '^"^^-  ^''»^^««*«'"*  43 

and  then,  from  whence  He  A;'s  not,  "            ,?? 

r'i  hTb'y  e;^™^^  °^  ^^-'^  ^^  ^-*-  ?       ^«^^-  n 

Air  Srh'  ^K  V  '^^i'  7^  ^^y  ^"^'^e,  and  answer  M„  Uf^  if  mi  I 

All  this  hath  been  I  k  not  when  or  where.'  sZletTo   ^      I 

She  k's  not  what  the  curse  may  be,  LoiiZi:^-  « 

The  night  comes  on  that  k's  not  mom  Mn.t   ^ -.tV^^. 

I  would  have  said,  '  Thou  canst  ZTk''  ^"'"^ZT^^"  ^^  ^1 

I  wept,  '  Tho'  I  should  die,  Ik            '  ^""^  ^°'^''  f^ 

I  k  that  age  to  age  succeeds,  "        „^f 

Kl  not  Death  ?  the  outward  signs  ?  "        ^ 

He  ksa  baseness  in  his  blood  "        ^ 'V 

Of  something  done,  I  k  not  where  :  "        oqo 

^  I  see  the  end,  and  k  the  good.'  "        ^°,% 

I  may  not  speak  of  what  I  k:  "        ™^ 

The  lanes,  you  k,  were  white  with  mav  ^/^^n   "    r.  TJ^ 

I  should  k  if  it  beat  right,                     ^'  il/*/Zer's  i>.  130 

I  A;  He  Cometh  quickly  •   '  "      .     ^79 

What  this  may  be  I  A:  not,  but  I  k  ^"^'"^oE 

Verulam,  The  first  of  those  who  k.  p^j^,,  J^Z  ?66 

And  k's  not  if  it  be  thunder  ^'''"''*  °J  ^''^  ^^4 

I  k  you  proud  to  bear  your  name,  t   r    v  "^.  v      ? ^ 

I  h  you,  Clara  Vere  de  Vere,  ^'  *^-  ***  ^^''^  ^^ 

You  A:  so  ill  to  deal  with  time,  "              f  J 

I  k  not  what  was  said :  n^      ^    "      ^       "3 

I  k  The  blessed  music  'went  that  way  ^'''^  ^"*''*'  <^'"*-  ff 

a  hundred  fields,  and  all  of  them  I  k  "              f^ 

I  k  not  how,  AU  those  sharp  fancies,  n  „/•  p'V.^.    ^2 

I  wrote  I  A;  not  what  a'.  o;  i*  .Women  48 

'You  A;,'  said  Frank,  '  he  burnt  His  epic  Jh    i'  ^■-  IH 

God  A;'s ;  he  has  a  mint  of  reasons^   ^   '  ^^  ^P''  U 

King  IS  sick,  and  A:'s  not  what  he  does.  m.  d' Arthur  ll 

2a 


Know 

Know  (continued)    I  k  not :  but  we  sitting,  as  I  said  M  d' Arthur    V^  Q 

You  k  there  has  not  been  for  these  five  years  ^'"'"  «f 

may  he  never  A:  The  troubles  I  have  gone  thro' ! '  "  iaq 

shovel!  d  up  into  some  bloody  trench  Where  no  " 

one  k's  ?  a   ji      ^ 

Nay,  who  Fs  ?  he's  here  and  there  Wnlhil  ^7 1  tl 

What  k  we  of  the  secret  of  a  mem  '  '^''^^- '"  ^^'  ^""^^  ^6 

Heaven  k's— as  much  within  :  p^,„  • "  ,^      •  -^"s 

scarce  can  recognise  the  fields  I  k  ■  1?T  ^  r^"^  !n 

I  i  not  well,  For  that  the  evil  one^  come  here,  ^'^  ^^  ^'^^''''  ^ 

I  think  you  k  I  have  some  power  with  Heaven  "          iIq 

I  k  thy  ghttermg  face.  "          ^1^ 
yesterday,  you  k,  the  fair  Was  holden  at  the  town  ;       TalkiZ  Oak  101 

James,— you  k  him,— old,  but  fuU  Of  force  rS  v     ^ 

but  weU  I  k  That  unto  him  who  works,  ^"^'^'^  ^'"''  ?2 

That  hoard,  and  sleep,  and  feed,  and  k  not  me.  "  uivsseJi 

I  will  k  If  there  be  any  faith  in  man  '                   '  r  a  "m     ^It 

We  k  the  meny  world  is  round,  Thf^r,^^"''  ^ 

Weill  i,  when  I  am  gone,         '  v^f-       rT^".^ 

For  they  k  not  what  they'mean.  ^**^'*  "^-^^^  l^^ 

we  fc  the  hue  Of  that  cap  upon  her  brows.  "            ?ii 

Madam— if  I  k  your  sex,  "            ||j 

The  many-headed  beast  should  k  '                        y«,,  ^i„i,t  %  o« 
W  her,  as  a  horseman  k's  hi  horse-               "^"^  ^t  ^rj^lle 

I'll  be  back,  my  girl,  before  you  k  it.'  ^'^''^'*  Jo? 

And  yet  for  all  your  wisdom  well  kl  "          o,  f 

n  he  could  A;  his  babes  were  running  wild  "          oni 

end  of  an  avenue.  Going  we  k  not  where :  "          o=q 

1  A;  not  why— Their  voices  make  me  feel  so  solitary.'  "          qqr 

I  k  not  when  it  first  came  there,  I  k  that  it  will  out  " 

at  Jast.  . 

Perhaps  you  k  what  I  would  have  you  k—  "          ^q 

I  have  loved  you  longer  than  you  k.'  "          7^ 

If  question'd,  aught  of  what  he  cared  to  k.  "          ^1 

look  on  her  sweet  face  again  And  k  that  she  is  happy.'  "          nt 

Not  to  teU  her,  never  to  let  her  k.  (repeat)  "  yfift  nka 

must  I  not  speak  to  these  ?    They  k  me  riot.  "        '  Itt 

^  After  the  Lord  has  call'd  me  she  shall  A;,  "          im 

Did  you  k  Enoch  Arden  of  this  town  ?  '     '  Z  him  «  '  " 

she  said  '  I  knew  him  far  away.                                '  oak 

Nevertheless,  k  you  that  I  am  he  Who  married—  "          s^ 

glory  varying  to  and  fro.  We  k  not  wherefore  ;  Aulmer's  Field  U 

other,  save  for  Leolin's— Who  k's?  ^                   i It 

I  k  not,  for  he  spoke  not,  only  shower'd       "  "          ofq 

,  -J  o°*  ^'^ence  at  first,  Nor  of  what  race,  "          ioo 

r^u      -^y^^l*  That  great  pock-pitten  fellow  "          255 

.  The  girl  and  boy.  Sir,  k  their  differences  ! '  "          o?^ 

T  7  u     y""  ^  '^^^^  yo^  ™^ant  nothing.  "          tit 

Ik  her :  the  worst  thought  she  has  Is  whiter  "          Sfi2 

A  or  let  them  k  themselves  betray'd  •  "          t^f 

-no°  l?rif  ^r  """'"'  ^  ^"'*  '''  ^^  DreaJll 

nor  ft  s  He  what  he  sees ;  r^,^z.<.„,„  iqo 

O  ye-Gods,  I  k  you  careless,  Lu^ehus  1^ 

Howbeit  I  k  thou  surely  must  be  mine  "        i^ 

none  of  aU  our  blood  should  k  The  shadow  from  " 

the  substance,  p  .          .  „ 

Myself  too  had  weird  seizures,  Heaven  k's  what :  Princess  t  » 

she,  you  k  Who  wedded  with  a  nobleman  "          nl 

they  that  J  such  things— I  sought  but  peace  ;  "        ili 

and  more  We  fc  not,— only  this :  "        T^ 

0  we  feU  out  I  k  not  why,  "  ... 
let  us  k  The  Princess  Ida  waited  :  "  "9^ 
She  answer'd, '  then  ye  k  the  Prince  ?  '  "          fo 

1  A;  the  substance  when  I  see  it.  "  4? o 
^ll,^^'^lP^y<'^m^7^.    My  mother  A;'s:  "     vv/^q 

Why— these-<ire— men:'   I  shudder'd  :  '  and  you  i  it '        "  fiS 

And  she  i',  too.  And  she  conceals  it.'            ^na  you  A  it.         „  58 

She  calls  her  plagiarist;   I  A;  not  what:  "          qa 

At  no  man's  beck,  but  k  ouraelf  and  thee,  "        ^7 


370 


Know  {continued)    I  k  the  Prince,  I  prize  his  truth  • 
fail  so  far  In  high  desire,  they  k  not 
yet  we  k  Knowledge  is  knowle(%e,   ' 
I  Tears,  idle  tears,  I  k  not  what  they  mean 
K  you  no  song  of  your  own  land,'  ' 

K  you  no  song,  the  true  growth  of  your  soil 
1— you  k  It — I  will  not  boast :  ' 

We  did  not  k  the  real  light, 

I  k  Your  faces  there  in  the  crowd 

'  Tut,  you  k  them  not,  the  girls, 
something  may  be  done— I  k  not  what— 
who  A  5  ?  we  four  may  build  some  plan 
—I  myself,  What  A;  I  of  these  things  ? 
blustering  I  k  not  what  Of  insolence  and  love 
and  whereas  I  k  Your  prowess,  Arac  ' 

name  is  yoked  with  children's,  k  herself  • 
And  right  ascension.  Heaven  k's  what  •  ' 
This  nightmare  weight  of  gratitude,  I  A;  it ; 
ttiat  A;  The  woman's  cause  is  man's  : 

Alone,'  I  said,  '  from  earlier  than  I  k 
dark  gates  across  the  wild  That  no  man  A;'*. 
What  A;  we  greater  than  the  soul  ? 
who  love  best  have  best  the  grace  to  A; 
I  A;  for  a  truth,  there's  none  of  them  left 
lo  a  sweet  little  Eden  on  earth  that  I  A; 
Well— if  It  be  so,  so  it  is,  you  A;  •  ' 

I  should  A;  what  God  and  man  is  ^ 

Sr^hnH  *^^  ^^\°'.*^f,  ^^^'  ^^^^  I  ^  not  where  ! 

faomebody  k's  that  she'll  say  ay  !  (repeat) 

Thou  madest  man,  he  k's  not  why 

Our  wills  are  ours,  we  A;  not  how  • ' 

We  have  but  faith :  we  cannot  A; ; 

Ye  A;  no  more  than  I  who  wrought 

And  beckoning  unto  those  they  k  • 

But  k's  no  more  of  transient  form' 

I  A;  that  this  was  Life, — 

Half -dead  to  k  that  I  shall  die.' 

My  paths  are  in  the  fields  I  A; 

When  one  that  loves  but  A;'*  Aot,  reaps  A  truth  from 

one  that  loves  and  A;'s  ? 
(he  A;'s  not  whence)  A  little  flash, 
I  shall  A;  him  when  we  meet : 
Behold,  we  k  not  anything ; ' 
spirit  does  but  mean  the  breath  I  A;  no  more  ' 
howsoe  er  I  k  thee,  some  Could  hardly  tell 
Half  jealous  of  she  k's  not  what, 
I  A;  that  in  thy  place  of  rest 
And  then  I  A;  the  mist  is  drawn 
Death's  twin-brother,  k's  not  Death, 
Which  makes  me  sad  I  A;  not  why 
I  strive  to  paint  The  face  I  A; ; 
How  k  I  what  had  need  of  thee 
and^  Thy  hkeness  to  the  wise  below, 
1  k  thee  of  what  force  thou  art 
I  ^transplanted  human  worth  Will  bloom  to  profit 
Yet  none  could  better  k  than  I  ^         ' 

wear  the  form  by  which  I  A;  Thy  spirit 
teU  me,  doubt  is  Devil-born.  I  A;  not  • 
bfae  ks  not  what  his  greatness  is, 

tho4and  Sg?  ''  ''''  ^°"^^'  ''^^  ^«'  1^^  ^'^  - 

^u^^i™®  "•'t'  ^^^  "loiirn  with  me. 
Ihat  these  are  not  the  bells  I  A; 
Let  her  A;  her  place  ; 
But,  crying,  k's  his  father  near ; 
Did  he  fling  himself  down  ?  who  k's  ? 
who  ks?  we  are  ashes  and  dust. 
1  have  heard,  I  k  not  whence 

l\'i?aid  S£'J^^'H^'^^"'^?"  °^  "^^'^  be  the  worse 

«7v.    '7^    ,  ^"""^  *  hard-set  smile, 

Whojfc'5  the  ways  of  the  world. 

Did  I  hear  in  half  a  doze  Long  since,  I  k  not  where  ? 

inH  SA^''  ?^  went  Home  with  her  maiden  posy! 

And  she  k's  it  not :  0,  if  she  knew  it.  ^' 

10  A;  her  beauty  might  half  undo  it. 


Enow 

Princess  Hi  232 
280 
315 

iv39 
84 
150 
353 
357 
509 
«151 
228 
230 
284 
396 
403 
418 
vi257 
300 
vii  258 
311 
363 
Ode  on  Well.  265 
W.  to  Marie  Alex.  28 
Grandmother  85 
The  Islet  14 
Spiteful  Letter  19 
Flow,  in  cran.  wall  6 
Window,  Gone  7 
Letter  8,  15 


In  Mem. 


Pro.  10 
15 
21 

vin 

xiv  8 
xvi  7 
XXV  1 
XXXV  16 
a;Z31 

xlii  11 

xliv  7 

xlvii  8 

liv  13 

MS 

lix  15 

Ixl 

lxvii2 

13 

Ixviii  3 

II 

Ixx  3 

Ixxiii  3 

Ixxiv  6 

Ixxxii  11 

Ixxxv  37 

xci  5 , 

xcvi  5  i 

xcvii2^ 

31 

xcix  20 

civ  8 

cxiv  15 

cxxiv  20 

Mavd  I  i9 

32 

67 

75 

tt)20 

44 

vii  2 

xii  21 

aM^18 

19 


Enow 


371 


Enow 


Know  (continiied)    I  A;  it  the  one  bright  thing  to  save 
I  A  He  has  plotted  against  me 
Now  I  k  her  but  in  two, 
I  k  her  own  rose-garden, 
The  ghastly  Wraith  of  one  that  I  k ; 
little  hearts  that  k  not  how  to  forgive  : 
A;  Is  a  juggle  bom  of  the  brain  ? 
Who  k's  if  he  be  dead  ? 
I  k  not  whether  he  came  in  the  Hanover  ship,  But  I  k 

that  he  lies  and  listens  mute 
But  I  k  where  a  garden  grows, 
he  is  gone  :  We  k  him  now  : 
I  k  thee  for  my  King  !  ' 
'  Sir  King,  there  be  but  two  old  men  that  k 
for  ye  k  that  in  King  Uther's  time 
Who  k's  a  subtler  magic  than  his  own — 
then  the  Queen  made  answer,  '  What  A;  I  ? 
I  k  not  whether  of  himself  he  came, 
rain,  and  sim  !  and  where  is  he  who  k's  ? 
and  I  that  k,  Have  strength  and  wit, 
sees,  nor  hears,  nor  speaks,  nor  k's. 
I  k  not  thee,  myself,  nor  anything. 
'  K  ye  not  then  the  Riddling  of  the  Bards  ? 
but  I  k  thee  who  thou  art. 
ye  k  we  stay'd  their  hands  From  war 
A  horse  thou  knowest,  a  man  thou  dost  not  k  : 
'  Son,  the  good  mother  let  me  k  thee  here. 
And  one  with  me  in  all,  he  needs  must  k.' 
*  Let  Lancelot  A:,  my  King,  let  Lancelot  k, 
ye  k  this  Order  lives  to  crush  All  wrongers 
Whether  he  k  me  for  his  master  yet. 
'  Master  no  more  !  too  well  I  k  thee, 
I  k  That  I  shall  overthrow  him.' 
knight  of  Arthur,  here  lie  thrown  by  whom  I  k  not, 
'  Peradventure  he,  you  name.  May  k  my  shield. 
'  And  wherefore,  damsel  ?  tell  me  all  ye  k. 
I  k  but  one — To  dash  against  mine  enemy 
Made  answer  sharply  that  she  should  not  k. 
Arms  ?  truth  !  I  A;  not :  all  are  wanted  here 
Harbourage  ?  truth,  good  truth,  I  k  not, 
if  ye  A;  Where  I  can  light  on  arms, 
be  he  dead  I  A:  not,  but  he  past  to  the  wild  land. 
Nor  A;  I  whether  I  be  very  base  Or  very  manful, 
this  I  A;,  That  whatsoever  evil  happen  to  me. 
Look  on  it,  child,  and  tell  me  if  ye  A;  it.' 
'  Yea,  I  A;  it ;  your  good  gift, 
I  A;,  When  my  dear  child  is  set  forth  at  her  best, 
Who  k's  ?  another  gift  of  the  high  God, 
he  loves  to  A;  When  men  of  mark  are  in  his 

territory : 
I  A;,  God  k's,  too  much  of  palaces  ! 
return  With  victual  for  these  men,  and  let  us  A;.' 
Make  me  a  little  happier :  let  me  A;  it : 
I  k  Tho'  men  may  bicker  with  the  things  they  love, 
well  I  k  it — pall'd — For  I  A;  men : 
'  Yea,  my  lord,  I  A;  Your  wish. 
Falls  in  a  far  land  and  he  k's  it  not, 
I  suffer  from  the  things  before  me.  A;,  Learn 

nothing ; 
I  fain  would  k  what  manner  of  men  they  be. 
Ye  scarce  can  overpraise,  will  hear  and  k. 
knowing  that  I  A;,  Will  hate,  loathe,  fear — 
'  K  ye  the  stranger  woman  ?  ' 
did  you  A;  That  Vivien  bathed  your  feet 
However  wise,  ye  hardly  A;  me  yet.' 
I  think  ye  hardly  A;  the  tender  rhyme 
K  well  that  Envy  calls  you  Devil's  son. 
Right  well  A;  I  that  Fame  is  half-disfame, 
lake  my  counsel ;  let  me  A;  it  at  once  : 
If  ye  A;,  Set  up  the  charge  ye  A;, 
answer'd  Merlin  '  Nay,  I  k  the  tale. 
he  never  wrong'd  his  bride.     I  A;  the  tale. 
Or  whisper'd  in  the  comer  ?  do  ye  A;  it  ? 

he  answer'd  sadly,  '  Yea,  I  k  it. 
is  he  man  at  all,  who  k's  and  winks  ? 


To  which 


Maud  xvi  20 

„    xix  79 

„     XX 15 

41 

„    IIi32 

"       ..^ 

„      ii  41 

71 


«59 

72 

Bed.  of  Idylls  16 

Com.  of  Arthur  130 

149 

185 

284 

326 

346 

410 

Gareth  and  L.  11 

81 

97 

286 

291 

421 

463 

550 

566 

567 

625 

721 

756 

948 

1234 

1299 

1328 

1354 

Marr,  of  Geraint  196 

289 

290 

421 

443 

468 

470 

684 

688 

727 

821 

Geraint  and  E.  228 
236 
240 
317 
324 
331 
418 
497 

Balin  and  Balan  284 
574 
Merlin  and  V.  92 
121 
129 
283 
355 
383 
467 
504 
653 
702 
713 
730 


772 
781 


Enow  {continued)    I  k  the  Table  Round,  my  friends 

of  old  ;  Merlin  and  V.  816 

I  will  not  let  her  A; :  ,,  §23 

believe  you  then.  Who  k's  ?  once  more.  ",  923 

'  Yea,  loi-d,'  she  said,  '  ye  k  it.'                                      Lancelot  and  E.  80 

I  am  yours.  Not  Arthur's,  as  ye  A;,  „  135 

Ye  k  right  well,  how  meek  soe'er  he  seem,  „  155 

Hereafter  ye  shall  A;  me — and  the  shield —  „  192 

you  A;  Of  Arthur's  glorious  wars.'  „  284 

■  Fair  lord,  whose  name  I  A;  not —  „  360 

Such  is  my  wont,  as  those,  who  k  me,  A;.'  „  365 

That  those  who  k  should  A;  you.'  „  368 

touch  Of  greatness  to  k  weU  I  am  not  great :  „  451 

such  his  wont,  as  we,  that  k  him,  k.'  „  475 

Albeit  I  k  my  knights  fantastical,  „  594 

your  pardon  !  lo,  ye  A;  it !  „  669 

Full  simple  was  her  answer, '  What  A;  I  ?  „  671 
I  A;  not  if  I  A;  what  tme  love  is.  But  if  I  A;,  then,  if  I 

love  not  him,  I  k  there  is  none  other  I  can  love.'  „  676 

knew  ye  what  all  others  k,  „  680 

you  A;  full  well  Where  yom-  great  knight  „  689 

We  two  shall  A;  each  other.'  „  700 

by  mine  head  she  k's  his  hiding-place.'  „  714 

ye  A;  When  these  have  worn  their  tokens :  „  768 

How  k  ye  my  lord's  name  is  Lancelot  ?  '  „  797 

yea,  I  A;  it  of  mine  own  self :  „  950 

I  A;  not  which  is  sweeter,  no,  not  I.  (repeat)  „  1009, 1015 
As  when  we  dwell  upon  a  word  we  A;,  Repeating,  till 

the  word  we  k  so  well  Becomes  a  wonder,  and  we 

k  not  why,  „  1027 

And  there  the  King  will  A;  me  and  my  love,  „  1058 
Daughter,  I  A;  not  what  you  call  the  highest ;  But  this 

I  A;,  for  all  the  people  k  it,  „  1080 

K  that  for  this  most  gentle  maiden's  death  „  1291 

I  k  What  thou  hast  been  in  battle  by  my  side,  „  1357 

Unbound  as  yet,  and  gentle,  as  I  A;.'  „  1386 

if  she  will'd  it  ?  nay.  Who  k's  ?  „  1423 

'  From  our  old  books  I  A;  That  Joseph  came  of  old  Holy  Grail  59 

'  I  A;  not,  for  thy  heart  is  pure  as  snow.'  „  97 

— we  A;  not  whence  they  come ;  „  147 

ye  A;  the  cries  of  all  my  realm  Pass  thro'  this  hall —  „  315 

I  touch'd  The  chapel-doors  at  dawn  I  A; ;  „  536 

And  k's  himself  no  vision  to  himself,  „  917 
'  Make  me  thy  knight,  because  I  A;,                                   Pelleas  and  E.  7 

I  love  thee,  tho'  I  A;  thee  not.  „  43 

I  A;  That  all  these  pains  are  trials  of  my  faith,  „  245 

Yield  me  thy  love  and  A:  me  for  thy  knight.'  „  249 

Ye  A;  yourselves :   how  can  ye  bide  at  peace,  „  265 

He  could  not  love  me,  did  he  A;  me  well.  „  312 

Come,  ye  k  nothing :  here  I  pledge  my  troth,  „  341 

loose  thy  tongue,  and  let  me  A:.'  „  600 
Perchance — who  k's  ? — the  purest  of  thy  knights     Last  Tournament  49 

'  Where  is  he  who  k's  ?  „  132 

behke  I  skip  To  k  myself  the  wisest  knight  of  all.'  „  248 

Dost  thou  k  the  star  We  call  the  harp  of  Arthur  „  332 

I  A;  not  what  I  would  ' — but  said  to  her,  „  498 

k  The  ptarmigan  that  whitens  ere  his  hour  „  696 

Who  knowing  nothing  k's  but  to  obey,  Guinevere  186 

None  k's  it,  and  my  tears  have  brought  me  good  :  „  202 

What  can'st  thou  k  of  Kings  and  Tables  Round,  „  228 

'  Yea,  but  I  A; :  the  land  was  full  of  signs  „  232 

Howheit  I  A;,  if  ancient  prophecies  Have  err'd  not,  „  449 

the  wife  Whom  he  k's  false,  abide  and  rule  „  515 

claim  me  thine,  and  k  I  am  thine  husband —  „  565 

I  A;  not  what  mysterious  doom.  „  576 

'  Ye  A;  me  then,  that  wicked  one,  „  669 
Right  well  in  heart  they  A;  thee  for  the  King.              Pass,  of  Arthur  63 

Confusion,  till  I  A;  not  what  I  am,  „  144 

King  is  sick,  and  k's  not  what  he  does.  „  265 
isle,  one  isle.  That  k's  not  her  own  greatness :  if 

she  k's  And  dreads  it  we  are  fall'n. —                     To  the  Queen  II  32 
that  which  k's,  but  careful  for  itself.  And  that 

which  k's  not,  ruling  that  which  k's  „  57 

Ye  A;  not  what  ye  ask.                                                   Lover's  Tale  i  150 

young  Life  A;'s  not  when  young  Life  was  bom,  „  156 


Enow 


372 


Knowing 


Enow  (continued)    as  men  fc  not  when  they  fall  asleep 
Into  delicious  dreams, 
So  A;  I  not  when  I  began  to  love. 
k  that  whatsoe'er  Our  general  mother  meant 
These  have  not  seen  thee,  these  can  never  k  thee, 
what  use  To  k  her  father  left  us 
and  dimly  k's  His  head  shall  rise  no  more  : 
she  ask'd,  I  k  not  what,  and  ask'd. 
Did  I  love  her  ?     Ye  k  that  I  did  love  her ; 
To  what  height  The  day  had  grown  I  k  not. 
but  you  k  that  you  must  give  me  back  : 
I  will  do  your  will,  and  none  shall  A;.'     Not  k  ? 
did  her  k  her  worth.  Her  beauty  even  ? 
Beginning  at  the  sequel  k  no  more. 
Clfalice  and  salver,  wines  that,  Heaven  k's  when, 
'  six  Aveeks'  work,  Uttle  wife,  so  f ar  as  I  fc ; 
but  that  isn't  true,  you  k  ; 
I  didn't  k  well  what  I  meant, 
when  he  k's  that  I  cannot  go  ? 
Falls  ?  what  falls  ?  who  k's  ? 
what  should  you  k  of  the  night. 
And  now  I  never  shall  k  it. 
you  k  that  I  couldn't  but  hear  ; 
Sin  ?     O  yes — we  are  sinner's,  I  k — 

0  long-suffering — yes,  as  the  Lord  must  k. 
How  do  they  A;  it  ?  are  they  his  mother  ? 
I'm  sure  to  be  happy  with  Willy,  I  k  not  where. 
'  I  k  you  are  no  coward  ; 

1  k  the  song.  Their  favourite — 
I  k  you  worthy  everyway  To  be  my  son, 
only  k  they  come,  They  smile  upon  me, 
I  k  not  which  of  these  I  love  the  best. 
but  I  k  that  I  heard  him  say 
are  all  they  can  k  of  the  spring. 
How  should  he  k  that  it's  me  ? 
they  shall  k  we  are  soldiers  and  men! 
for  you  k  The  flies  at  home, 
I  k  that  he  has  led  me  all  my  life, 
We  k  we  are  nothing — 
which  I  A:  no  version  done  In  English 
as  I  A;  Less  for  its  own  than  for  the  sake 
days  of  a  larger  light  than  I  ever  again  shall  A; — 
for  a  moment,  I  scarce  A;  why. 
I  am  not  claiming  your  pity  :  I  A:  you  of  old — 
the  great  God  for  aught  that  I  k ; 
if  thou  knewest,  tho'  thou  canst  not  A; ; 
That  which  k's,  And  is  not  known. 
Who  k's  ?  or  whether  this  earth-narrow  life 
He  k's  not  ev'n  the  book  he  wrote. 
Who  k's  but  that  the  darkness  is  in  man  ? 
I  k  not  and  I  speak  of  what  has  been. 
To  one  who  A;'s  I  scorn  him. 
I  k  not  where  to  turn ; 
You  only  k  the  love  that  makes  the  world 
An'  I  didn't  A;  him  meself, 
'  Div  ye  A:  him,  Molly  Magee  ? ' 
Move  among  your  people,  k  them. 


Lover's  Tale  i  161 

163 

244 

285 

293 

638 

706 

733 

„  Hi  9 

iv  100 

120 

150 

158 

193 

First  Quarrel  45 

79 

83 

Rizpah  3 

„     12 

.,     17 

„     44 

„     48 

„    60 

■    „    67 

„    70 

„     76 

The  Revenge  8 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  2 

48 

278 

283 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  21 

37 

54 

Def.  of  Lucknow  41 

Columbus  118 

160 

De  Prof.,  Human  C.  8 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  33 

51 

The  Wreck  78 

84 

Despair  37 

„       104 

Ancient  Sage  36 


Who  k  you  but  as  one  of  those  I  fain  would  meet 


129 

148 

173 

228 

The  Flight  2Q 

74 

76 

Tomorrow  76 

78 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  266 


again,  Yet  A:  j^ou,  as  your  England  k's 
we  k  what  is  fair  without  Is  often  as  foul 

within.' 
for  all  men  k  This  earth  has  never  borne 
wise  to  A;  The  limits  of  resistance, 
you  and  yours  may  A;  From  me  and  mine, 
•We  k  not,  and  we  k  not  why  we  wail.' 
'  We  k  not,  and  we  k  not  why  we  moan.' 
*  We  k  not,  for  we  spin  the  lives  of  men,  And  not 

of  Gods,  and  A;  not  why  we  spin  ! 
I  felt  On  a  sudden  I  A:  not  what, 
thro'  the  Will  of  One  who  k's  and  rules — 
well,  you  k  I  married  Muriel  Eme. 
You  that  k  you're  dying  .  .  . 
Come  back,  nor  let  me  fc  it ! 
your  tale  of  lands  I  k  not, 
Had  I  but  known  you  as  I  A;  you  now — 


Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  21 


Dead  Prophet  67 

Epit.  on  Gordon  3 

To  Duke  of  Argyll  1 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  17 

Demeter  and  P.  62 

67 

85 

The  Ring  32 

42 

376 

Forlorn  58 

Happy  5 

To  Ulysses  35 

Romnetfs  S.  90 


Eqow  (continued)     Should  I  k  the  man  ?  Romney's  R.  144 

you  that  drive,  and  A;  your  Craft,  Politics  5 

I  A;  it,  I  A;  it,  I  A;  it.  The  Throstle  2 

He  k's  Himself,  men  nor  themselves  Akbar's  Dream  32 

they  A;  too  that  whene'er  In  our  free  Hall,  „              54 

Nay,  but  I  A;  it — his,  the  hoary  Sheik,  „              90 

By  the  great  dead  pine — you  A:  it —  Bandit's  Death  23 

Know-all     We  have  knelt  in  your  k-a  chapel  Despair  94 

Enowest    '  If  straight  thy  track,  or  if  obUque,  Thou 

A;  not.  Two  Voices  194 

'  What  is  it  thou  A;,  sweet  voice  ? '  „          440 

Thou  A;  I  bore  this  better  at  the  first,  St.  S.  Stylites  28 

whereof,  O  God,  thou  A:  all.  „              70 

Thou,  0  God,  K  alone  whether  this  was  or  no.  „              83 

O  Lord,  thou  A;  what  a  man  I  am ;  „             121 

Hard  is  my  doom  and  thine  :  thou  A;  it  all.  Love  and  Duty  54 

tell  her.  Swallow,  thou  that  A;  each,  Princess  iv  96 

'  K  thou  aught  of  Arthur's  birth  ? '  Com,,  of  Arthur  147 

and  not  k,  and  I  that  know,  Gareth  and  L.  11 
Sleuth-hound  thou  k,  and  gray,  and  all  the  hounds ; 

A  horse  thou  A;,  a  man  thou  dost  not  know :  „            462 

'  Yea,  King,  thou  k  thy  kitchen-knave  am  I,  „            649 

'  K  thou  not  me  ?  thy  master  ?  I  am  Kay.  „            753 

'  What  k  thou  of  lovesong  or  of  love  ?  „          1063 

'  What  A;  thou  of  flowers,  except,  „          1069 

'  What  k  thou  of  birds,  lark,  mavis,  „           1078 

K  thou  not  the  fashion  of  our  speech  ?  Pelleas  and  E.  100 

What  k  thou  of  the  world,  and  all  its  lights  Guinevere  343 

And  A;  thou  now  from  whence  I  come —  „        433 

thou  A;,  and  that  smooth  rock  Before  it,  Tiresias  146 

Thou  A;,  Taught  by  some  God,  Death  of  CEnone  34 

friend,  thou  k  I  hold  that  forms  Are  needful :  Akbar's  Dream  126 

thou  k  how  deep  a  well  of  love  My  heart  is  „              170 

Knowing     But,  A;  not  the  universe.  Two  Voices  230 

A;  God,  they  lift  not  hands  of  prayer  M.  d' Arthur  252 

So  spoke  I  A;  not  the  things  that  were.  Edwin  Morris  89 

k  all  Life  needs  for  life  is  possible  Love  and  Duty  85 

He  comes,  scarce  A;  what  he  seeks :  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  17 

She  fail'd  and  sadden'd  A;  it ;  Enoch  Arden  257 

Stay'd  by  this  isle,  not  A;  where  she  lay :  „          630 

Told  him,  with  annals  of  the  port.  Not  k —  „          703 

young  hearts  not  k  that  they  loved,  Aylmer's  Field  133 

kiss'd  her  tenderly  Not  k  what  possess'd  him :  „            556 

Shame  might  befall  Melissa,  A;,  Princess  Hi  148 

beauty  in  detail  Made  them  worth  A; ;  „        iv  449 

A;  Death  has  made  His  darkness  beautiful  In  Mem.  Ixxiv  11 

K  the  primrose  yet  is  dear,  „      Ixxxv  118 

And  smilest.  A:  all  is  well.  „        cxxvii  20 

K  your  promise  to  me ;  Maud  I  xxii  50 

K  I  tarry  for  thee,'  „      ///  vi  13 

K  all  arts,  had  touch'd,  Gareth  and  L.  307 

great  And  lusty,  and  A;  both  of  lance  and  sword.'  „            731 

what  ail'd  him,  hardly  A;  it  himself,  Geraint  and  E.  504 

if  A;  that  I  know,  Will  hate,  loathe,  fear —  Merlin  and  V.  121 

Should  rest  and  let  you  rest,  A;  you  mine.  „            335 

at  a  touch.  But  A;  you  are  Lancelot ;  Lancelot  and  E.  150 

at  a  touch.  But  A:  he  was  Lancelot ;  „              579 

His  kith  and  kin,  not  A:,  set  upon  him ;  „              599 

Not  A;  he  should  die  a  holy  man.  „            1429 
Beyond  my  A;  of  them,  beautiful.  Beyond  all  A;  of 

them, 
And  k  every  honest  face  of  theirs 
Not  k  they  were  lost  as  soon  as  given — 
Who  k  nothing  knows  but  to  obey, 
golden  hair,  with  which  I  used  to  play  Not  A; ! 
Mourn,  k  it  will  go  along  with  me  ? ' 
friend  slew  friend  not  A;  whom  he  slew ; 
k  God,  they  lift  not  hands  of  prayer 
keep  yourself,  none  A:,  to  yourself ; 
one  of  those  about  her  A;  me  Call'd  me  to  join 
she  wrought  us  harm.  Poor  soul,  not  A;) 
horses  whirl'd  The  chariots  backward.  A;  griefs 

at  hand ; 
K  the  Love  we  were  used  to  believe 
For  their  A;  and  know-nothing  books 


Holy  Grail  103 

550 

Last  Tournament  42 

Guinevere  186 

548 

Pass,  of  Arthur  49 

101 

420 

Lover's  Tale  to  114 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  122 

185 

Achilles  over  the  T.  25 

Despair  54 

..       93 


Knowledge 


373 


Laay 


Two  Voices  90 

172 

(Enone  133 

-   With  Pal.  of  Art  ?> 

10 

D.  of  F.  Women  9 

To  J.  S.  5 

Love  thou  thy  land  17 


Knowledge    {See  also  Self-knowledge)    In  midst  of  k, 
clream'd  not  yet. 
'  That  men  with  k  merely  play'd, 
In  k  of  their  own  supremacy/ 
And  K  for  its  beauty ;  To  — 

Beauty,  Good,  and  K,  are  three  sisters 
the  k  of  his  art  Held  me  above  the  subject. 
And  me  this  k  bolder  made. 
Make  k  circle  with  the  winds  ; 
Certain,  if  k  bring  the  sword,  That  k  takes  the 

sword  away —  „                87 

flower  of  k  changed  to  fruit  Of  wisdom.  Love  and  Duty  24 

yearning  in  desire  To  follow  A:  like  a  sinking  star,  Ulysses  31 
K  comes,  but  wisdom  lingers,  (repeat)  Locksley  Hall  141,  143 
And  newer  k,  drawing  nigh,                                       Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  51 

Like  Virtue  firm,  like  K  fair,  The  Voyage  68 

Without  the  captain's  k :  hope  with  me.  Aylmer's  Field  717 

k,  so  my  daughter  held,  Was  all  in  all :  Princess  i  135 

As  arguing  love  of  k  and  of  power  ;  „        ii  57 

K  is  now  no  more  a  fountain  seal'd :  „            90 

We  issued  gorged  with  k,  and  I  spoke :  „          388 

yet  we  know  Kiak,  and  this  matter  hangs :  „     Hi  316 

each  Disclaim'd  all  A;  of  us :  „      iv  229 

K  in  our  own  land  make  her  free,  „       v  419 

sought  far  less  for  truth  than  power  In  fc:  „    du  237 

A  greater  than  all  k,  beat  her  down.  „          238 

For  A:  is  of  things  we  see;  In  Mem.,  Pro.  22 

Let  k  grow  from  more  to  more,  „                   25 

power  to  think  And  all  my  k  of  myself ;  „             xw  16 

All  k  that  the  sons  of  flesh  Shall  gather  „  Ixxxv  27 
Who  loves  not  K?     Who  shall  rail  Against  her 

beauty  ?  „               cxiv  1 

grewest  not  alone  in  power  And  k,  „                   27 

eye  to  eye,  shall  look  On  k ;  „         Con.  130 

behold,  Without  k,  without  pity,  Mand  II  iv  53 
This  is  my  sum  of  k — that  my  love  Grew  with 

myself —  Lover's  Tale  i  164 

For  K  is  the  swallow  on  the  lake  Ancient  Sage  37 

Of  K  fusing  class  with  class.  Freedom  17 

Without  his  k,  from  him  flits  to  warn  Demeter  and  P.  89 

likeness  of  thyself  Without  thy  k,  „              93 

And  utter  k  is  but  utter  love —  The  Ring  43 

While  the  long  day  of  k  grows  and  warms,  Prog,  of  Spring  101 


Known    (See  also  Long-known,  Well-known) 

in  all  the  land, 
To  perish,  wept  for,  honour'd,  k, 
In  aftertime,  this  also  shall  be  k : 
Like  one  that  never  can  be  wholly  k, 
Much  have  I  seen  and  k ; 

having  k  me — to  decline  On  a  range  of  lower  feelings 
*  No  more  of  love  ;  your  sex  is  k : 
Not  only  to  the  market-cross  were  k, 
Have  we  not  k  each  other  all  our  lives  ?  (repeat) 
k  Far  in  a  darker  isle  beyond  the  line ; 
He  must  have  k,  himself  had  k : 
He  had  k  a  man,  a  quintessence  of  man, 
learn  a  language  k  but  smatteringly 


Or  is  she  k 

L.  ofShaloiti  26 

Two  Voices  149 

M.  d' Arthur  35 

Gardener's  D.  206 

Ulysses  13 

Locksley  Hall  43 

The  Letters  29 

Enoch  Arden  96 

„  306,  420 

604 

Aylmer's  Field  346 

388 

433 


many  too  had  k  Edith  among  the  hamlets  round,  „             614 

As  with  the  mother  he  had  never  k,  „            690 

0  thou  that  kUlest,  hadst  thou  k,  „  738 
And  whatsoever  can  be  taught  and  k  ;  Princess  ii  385 
falling  on  my  face  was  caught  and  k.  „       iv  270 

1  bore  up  in  hope  she  would  be  A; :  „  320 
public  use  required  she  should  be  A; ;  „  336 
and  k  at  last  (my  work)  And  full  of  cowardice.  „  347 
when  A;,  there  grew  Another  kind  of  beauty  „  447 
'  0  brother,  you  have  k  the  pangs  we  felt,  „  374 
And  all  the  sultry  palms  of  India  A;,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  14 
Two  dead  men  have  I  A;  In  courtesy  like  to  thee  :  G.  of  Swainston  11 
Who  makes  by  force  his  merit  A;  In  Mem.  Ixiy  9 
And  which,  tho'  veil'd,  was  k  to  me,  „  ciii  13 
And  that  dear  voice,  I  once  have  k,  „  cxvi  11 
K  and  unknown ;  human,  divine  ;  „  cxxix  5 
She  is  singing  an  air  that  is  A;  to  me,  Maud  I  v  3 
Everything  came  to  be  A;.  »  //  v  51 


Known  (continued)    And  there  be  made  k  to  the  stately 

Queen, 
Because  I  knew  my  deeds  were  k,  I  found. 
Not  wining  to  be  A;,  He  left  the  barren-beaten 

thoroughfare, 
K  as  they  are,  to  me  they  are  unknown.' 
'  K  am  I,  and  of  Arthur's  hall,  and  A;, 
Robed  in  red  samite,  easily  to  be  k, 
love  In  women,  whomsoever  I  have  k. 
make  men  worse  by  making  my  sin  k  ? 
never  have  I  A;  the  world  without, 
'  O  brother,  had  you  k  our  mighty  hall, 
'  And,  brother,  had  you  A;  our  hall  within, 

0  brother,  had  you  A;  our  Camelot, 
But  her  thou  hast  not  A; : 
he  had  A;  Scarce  any  but  the  women  of  his  isles, 
trampled  out  his  face  from  being  k, 
wish  ner  any  huger  wrong  Tlian  having  A;  thee  ? 
It  surely  was  my  profit  had  I  A; : 
In  aftertime,  this  also  shall  be  k : 
Never  yet  Before  or  after  have  I  A;  the  spring 

1  died  then,  I  had  not  k  the  death ; 
love  Shall  ripen  to  a  proverb,  unto  all  K, 
Not  know  ?  with  such  a  secret  to  be  A;. 
all  the  house  had  A;  the  loves  of  both ; 
Had  I  not  A;  where  Love,  at  first  a  fear, 
that  hast  never  k  the  embrace  of  love. 
But  the  face  I  had  A;.  0  Mother, 
That  which  knows.  And  is  not  k,  but  felt 
gain'd  a  freedom  k  to  Europe,  A;  to  all ; 
and  flows  that  can  be  k  to  you  or  me. 
A;  By  those  who  love  thee  best. 
Makes  the  might  of  Britain  k ; 
one  other  whom  you  have  not  k. 
Whose  eyes  have  k  this  globe  of  ours, 
Had  I  but  A;  you  as  I  know  you  now — 
On  those  two  k  peaks  they  stand 
To  have  seen  thee,  and  heard  thee,  and  A;, 
thousand  things  are  hidden  still.  And  not  a 

hundred  A;. 
Know-nothing    We  had  read  their  k-n  books 

For  their  knowing  and  k-n  books 
Knuckled    boy  That  A;  at  the  taw  : 
Koran    I  stagger  at  the  K  and  the  sword. 

'  hast  thou  brought  us  down  a  new  K  From  heaven  ? 

I  heard  a  mocking  laugh  '  the  new  K ! ' 
Kraken    uninvaded  sleep  The  K  sleepeth : 


Marr.  of  Geraint  607 
Geraint  and  E.  858 

Lancelot  and  E.  160 

186 

188 

433 

1294 

1417 

Holy  Grail  20 

„      225 

„      246 

„      339 

„      454 

Pelleas  and  E.  87 

Last  Tournament  470 

597 

Guinevere  658 

Pass,  of  Arthur  203 

Lover's  Tale  i  314 

496 

759 

iv  121 

123 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  170 

Tiresias  164 

The  Wreck  116 

A  ncient  Sage  86 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  129 

194 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  7 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  19 

The  Ring  55 

To  Ulysses  2 

Romney's  R.  90 

Parnassus  11 

Bandit's  Death  4 

Mechanophilus  24 

Despair  55 

93 

Will  Water.  132 

Akbar's  Dream  71 

116 

183 

The  Kraken  4 


Kypris    Ay,  and  this  K  also — did  I  take  That  popular  name      Lucretius  95 


La^y  (lady)    yon  I  a-steppin'  along  the  streeat,  North.  Cobbler  107 

But  owd  Squire's  I  es  long  es  she  lived  Village  Wife  53 

They  maakes  ma  a  graater  L  Spinster's  S's.  110 

Laaid  (laid)    tha  knaws  she  I  it  to  mea.  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  21 

Wi'  lots  o'  munny  I  by,  „        N.  S.  22 
Could'n  I  luvv  thy  muther  by  cause  o'  'er  munny 

Ihy?  „                  35 

an'  they  I  big  heggs  es  tha  seeas.  Village  Wife  118 

Laame  (lame)     An'  Lucy  wur  I  o'  one  leg,  „            99 

Laamed  (lamed)    I  seead  that  our  Sally  went  I  North.  Cobbler  39 

Laane  (lane)    an'  hawmin'  about  i'  the  I's,  „            24 

Goa  to  the  I  at  the  back,  Spinster's  S's.  6 

by  the  brokken  shed  i'  the  I  at  the  back,  „            37 

es  I  be  abroad  i'  the  I's  „          107 

Laate  (late)    fur  he  coom'd  last  night  sa  I —  Village  Wife  123 

What  maakes  'er  sal?  Spinster's  S's.  5 

what  ha  maade  our  Molly  sa  Z  ?  „          113 

I  says  to  him  '  Squire,  ya're  I,'  Owd  Rod  55 

Too  I — but  it's  all  ower  now —  „       116 

Too  I — tha  mun  git  tha  to  bed,  „      117 

Laay  (lay)    says  Parson,  and  I's  down  'is  'at,  North.  Cobbler  89 


Laazy 


374 


Lady 


Laazy  (lazy)    Them  or  thir  feythers,  tha  sees,  mun 

'a  bean  a  I  lot,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  49 

Laborious    L  orient  ivory  sphere  in  sphere.  Princess,  Pro.  20 

And,  lo !  the  long  I  miles  Of  Palace  ;  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  11 

L  for  her  people  and  her  poor —  Ded.  of  Idylls  35 
You,  the  hardy,  I,  Patient  children  of  Albion,       0?i  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  58 

Laboor  (s)    (See  also  Brain-labour)    gaze  On  the  prime 

I  of  thine  early  days :  Ode  to  Memory  94 

So  were  thy  I  little-worth.  Two  Voices  171 

A I  working  to  an  end.  „          297 

why  Should  life  all  Z  be  ?     Let  us  alone.  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  42 

Long  I  unto  aged  breath,  „                85 

the  shore  Than  I  in  the  deep  mid-ocean,  „              127 

And  rested  from  her  I's.  The  Goose  16 

discerning  to  fulfil  This  I,  Ulysses  36 

Confused  the  chemic  I  of  the  blood,  Lv/iretius  20 

A  present,  a  great  I  of  the  loom ;  Princess  i  44 

A  blessing  on  her  Vs  for  the  world.  „    ii  479 

health,  and  wind,  and  rain.  And  I.  „    iv  280 

That  all  her  I  was  but  as  a  block  „  vii  230 

Science,  Art,  and  L  have  outpour'd  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  5 

And  reaps  the  I  of  his  hands,  In  Mem.  Ixiv  26 

thy  prosperous  I  fills  The  lips  of  men  „    Ixxxiv  25 

band  Of  youthful  friends,  on  mind  and  art,  And  I,  „   Ixxxvii  23 

To  I  and  the  mattock-harden'd  hand,  Mavd  I  xviii  34 

Or  it  may  be  the  I  of  his  hands,  Marr.  of  Geraint  341 
dew  of  their  great  I,  and  the  blood  Of  their  strong 

bodies,  „            568 

Her  own  poor  work,  her  empty  I,  left.  Lancelot  and  E.  991 

Or  L,  with  a  groan  and  not  a  voice.  To  the  Queen  ii  55 

the  I  of  fifty  that  had  to  be  done  by  five,  Def.  of  Lucknow  77 

And  rough-ruddy  faces  Of  lowly  I,  Merlin  and  the  G.  60 

Labour  (verb)     No  memory  I's  longer  from  the  deep 

Gold-mines  D.  of  F.  Women  273 

Yet  since  he  did  but  I  for  himself,  Enoch  Arden  819 

would  go,  L  for  his  own  Edith,  Aylmer's  Field  420 

and  I  him  Beyond  his  comrade  of  the  hearth,  Gareth  and  L.  484 

'  Friend,  he  that  I's  for  the  sparrow-hawk  Marr.  of  Geraint  271 

As  one  that  I's  with  an  evil  dream.  Merlin  and  V.  101 

Labonr'd  (adj.  and  part)    Or  I  mine  undrainable  of  ore.  (Enone  115 

Had  I  down  within  his  ample  lungs.  Princess  v  273 

vast  designs  Of  his  I  rampart-lines.  Ode  on  Well.  105 

A  hermit,  who  had  pray'd,  I  and  pray'd,  Lancelot  and  E.  403 

Had  I  in  lifting  them  out  of  slime.  Dead  Prophet  11 

Labour'd  (verb)    I  thro'  His  brief  prayer-prelude,  Aylmer's  Field  627 

The  bosom  with  long  sighs  I ;  Princess  vii  225 
L  with  him,  for  he  seem'd  as  one  That  all  in  later,    Gareth  and  L.  1128 

AU  that  day  long  I,  hewing  the  pines,  Death  of  (Enone  62 

Labourer    woo'd  and  wed  A  I's  daughter,  Dora  40 

By  sallowy  rims,  arose  the  I's'  homes,  Aylmer's  Field  147 

year  by  year  the  I  tills  His  wonted  glebe.  In  Mem.  ci  21 

LabOTUiug    And  onward  drags  a  I  breast,  „        a;r  18 

The  giant  I  in  his  youth  ;  „    cxviii  2 

The  lusty  mowers  I  dinnerless,  Geraint  and  E.  251 

Arthur  came,  and  I  up  the  pass,  Lancelot  and  E.  47 

ever  I  had  scoop'd  himself  In  the  white  rock  „            404 

Labourless    till  the  I  day  dipt  under  the  West ;  V.  of  Maddune  86 

Laburnum  (adj.)    aU  the  gold  from  each  I  chain  Drop 

to  the  grass.  To  Mary  Boyle  11 

Laburnum  (s)     L's,  dropping-wells  of  fire.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  12 

Labyrinth    Charm'd  him  thro'  every  I  Aylmer's  Field  479 

He  thrids  the  I  of  the  mind.  In  Mem.  xcvii  21 

Labsrrinthine    following  out  A  league  of  I  darkness,  Demeter  and  P.  82 

Lace  (fabric)    The  shadow  of  some  piece  of  pointed  Z,    Lancelot  and  E. Ill 4 

books,  the  miniature,  the  I  are  hers,  The  Ring  288 

Dresses  and  l's  and  jewels  and  never  a  ring  Charity  6 

Lace  (a  cord)    burst  The  l's  toward  her  babe  ;  Princess  vi  149 

And  once  the  l's  of  a  helmet  crack'd,  Last  Tournament  164 

Lace  (verb)    holp  To  I  us  up,  till,  each,  Princess  i  202 

Laced    See  Strait-laced 

Lack  (s)    tinged  with  wan  from  I  of  sleep,  Princess  Hi  25 

Death-pale,  for  I  of  gentle  maiden's  aid.  Lancelot  and  E.  765 

'  Belike  for  I  of  wiser  company ;  Last  Tournament  245 

Lack  (verb)    We  I  not  rhymes  and  reasons,  Will  Water.  62 

We  I  thee  by  the  hearth.'  Gareth  and  L.  754 


Lack'd-Iackt    I  have  not  lack'd  thy  mild  reproof,  My  life  is  full  4 

for,  were  Sir  Lancelot  lackt,  at  least  Gareth  and  L.  738 

Because  it  lack'd  the  power  of  perfect  Hope  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  453 

angers  of  the  Gods  for  evil  done  And  expiation  lack'd  Tiresias  63 

Lackest    Asks  what  thou  I,  thought  resign'd,  Two  Voices  98 

Lacking    given  thee  a  fair  face,  L  a  tongue  ?  '  Pelleas  and  E.  102 

Beast  too,  as  I  hvmian  wit— -disgraced,  „            476 

Lack-lustre    And  a  l-l  dead-blue  eye,  A  Character  17 

Lackt    See  Lack'd 

Lactantius    Some  cited  old  L :  Columbus  49 

Lad    {See  also  Shepherd-lad)    There's  many  a  bolder  I  'ill 

woo  me  May  Queen  23 

the  shepherd  l's  on  every  side  'ill  come  „          27 

the  I  stretch'd  out  And  babbled  for  the  golden  seal,  Dora  134 

0  well  for  the  sailor  I,  That  he  sings  in  his  boat  Break,  break,  etc.  7 
Enoch  Arden,  a  rough  sailor's  I  Enoch  Arden  14 
'  Poor  I,  he  died  at  Florence,  The  Brook  35 
LeoUn's  emissary,  A  crippled  I,  Aylmer's  Field  519 
long-limb'd  I  that  had  a  Psyche  too  ;  Princess  ii  406 
Himself  would  tilt  it  out  among  the  l's  :  „  v  355 
Wam't  I  craazed  fur  the  lasses  mysen  when 

win-  a  Z  ?  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  18 
Mun  be  a  guvness,  I,  or  summut,  and  addle 

her  bread :  „                25 

Break  me  a  bit  o'  the  esh  for  his  'ead,  I,  „               41 

fair  and  fine  ! — Some  young  l's  mystery —  Gareth  and  L.  466 

an  the  I  were  noble,  he  had  ask'd  For  horse  and  armour :       „  473 

Ate  with  young  l's  his  portion  by  the  door,  „          480 

take  counsel ;  for  this  I  is  great  And  lusty,  „          730 

massacring  Man,  woman,  I  and  girl —  „  1341 
This  I,  whose  lightest  word  Is  mere  white  truth       Balin  and  Balan  517 

had  need  Of  a  good  stout  I  at  his  farm  ;  First  Quarrel  18 

poor  I,  an'  we  parted  in  tears.  „            20 

For  he  thought — there  were  other  l's —  „            38 

you  haven't  done  it,  my  I,  „            53 

1  weant  gaainsaiiy  it,  my  I,  North.  Cobbler  17 
not  hafe  ov  a  man,  my  I —  „  21 
Proud  on  'im,  like,  my  I,  an'  I  keeaps  „  97 
But  I  moant,  my  I,  and  I  weant,  „  102 
'  L,  thou  mun  cut  off  thy  taail.  Village  Wife  64 
she  walkt  awaay  wi'  a  hofficer  I,  „  97 
I  ^n^l  need  little  more  of  your  care.'  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  17 
Steevie,  my  I,  thou  'ed  very  nigh  been  Spinster's  S's.  68 
But  I  clean  forgot  tha,  my  I,  Owd  Eod  53 
wheere  thou  was  a-liggin,  my  I,  „  87 
But  sich  an  obstropidous  I —  Churchwarden,  etc.  23 
an'  'e  beal'd  to  ya  '  i  coom  hout '  „  28 
fur  thou  was  the  Parson's  I.  „            36 

Ladder    (See  also  Lether)    lean  a  I  on  the  shaft,  St.  S.  Stylites  216 

hurl  them  to  earth  from  the  l's  Def.  of  Lucknow  58 

shifting  l's  of  shadow  and  light,  Dead  Prophet  21 

A  Jacob's  I  falls  On  greening  grass.  Early  Spring  9 

Ladder-of-heaven    the  l-o-h  that  hangs  on  a  star.  By  an  Evolution.  12 

Laddie    See  Soldier-laddie 

Laden    (See  also  Barge-laden,  Lady-laden)    enchanted 

stem,  L  with  flower  and  fruit,  Lotos- Eaters  29 
Knowledge  comes,  but  wisdom  lingers,  and  he  beai-s 

a  I  breast,  Locksley  Hall  143 

came  the  children  I  with  their  spoil ;  Enoch  Arden  445 

Two  sets  of  three  I  with  jingling  arms,  Geraint  and  E.  188 

Boughs  on  each  side,  I  with  wholesome  shade.  Lover's  Tale  i  230 

soft  winds,  L  with  thistledown  and  seeds  „            ii  13 

Lading    I  and  unlading  the  tall  barks,  Enoch  Arden  816 

The  I  of  a  single  pain.  In  Mem.  xxv  11 

Lady  (adj.)     and  I  friends  From  neighbour  seats  :  Princess,  Pro.  97 

In  mine  own  I  pahns  I  cull'd  the  spring  Merlin  and  V.  273 

Lady  (s)    (See  also  Court-lady,  Laady,  Liege-lady)    The 

sweetest  I  of  the  time,  Arabian  Nights  141 

■Rise  from  the  feast  of  sorrow,  I,  Margaret  62 

In  dreaming  of  my  l's  eyes.  Kate  28 

knight  for  ever  kneel'd  To  a  Z  in  his  shield,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  7 

Before  Our  L  mmmur'd  she  ;  Mariana  in  the  S.  28 

bore  a  I  from  a  leaguer'd  town  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  47 

At  length  I  saw  a  I  within  call,  „              85 

'  No  marvel,  sovereign  I :  in  fair  field  „              97 


Lady 


375 


Laid 


charged  Before  the  eyes  of  ladies  and 

M.  d' Arthur  225 
Walk,  to  the  Mail  48 


Lady  (s)  (continued) 

of  kings. 
I  met  my  I  once :  A  woman  Uke  a  butt, 
lightly  rain  from  ladies'  hands. 
How  sweet  are  looks  that  ladies  bend 
'  And  he  shall  have  it,'  the  I  rephed, 
Ancient  homes  of  lord  and  I, 
That  she  grew  a  noble  I, 
a  phosphorescence  charming  even  My  I ; 
My  I's  Indian  kinsman  unannounced 
'  Good  !  my  I's  kinsman  !  good  ! ' 
My  I  with  her  fingers  interlock'd, 
'  A  gracious  gift  to  give  a  I,  this  ! ' 
give  this  gift  of  his  to  one  That  is  no  Z  ?  ' 
My  I's  cousin.  Half-sickening  of  his  pension'd  afternoon, 
Seized  it,  took  home,  and  to  my  I, — 
Seconded,  for  my  I  foUow'd  suit. 
My  I's  Indian  kinsman  rushing  in, 

with  these,  a  I,  one  that  arm'd  Her  own  fair  head,        Pr 
And  takes  a  I's  finger  with  all  care, 
A  talk  of  college  and  of  ladies'  rights, 
let  the  ladies  sing  us,  if  they  will. 
The  I  of  three  castles  in  that  land  : 
'  Three  ladies  of  the  Northern  empire 
are  the  ladies  of  your  land  so  taU  ?  ' 
will  do  well.  Ladies,  in  entering  here, 
We  sat :  the  L  glanced  :  Then  Florian, 
But,  dearest  L,  pray  you  fear  me  not, 
I  ceased,  and  all  the  ladies,  each  at  each, 
strange  experiences  Unmeet  for  ladies. 
Thereat  the  L  stretch'd  a  vulture  throat, 
Take  comfort :  live,  dear  I,  for  your  child  ! ' 
Ahve  with  fluttering  scarfs  and  ladies'  eyes, 
'  Your  brother,  L, — Florian, — ask  for  him 
Sleep,  little  ladies  !     And  they  slept  well. 
Wake,  httle  ladies.  The  sxm  is  aloft ! 
And  never  a  line  from  my  I  yet ! 
'  And  near  him  stood  the  L  of  the  Lake, 
A  Z  of  high  lineage,  of  great  lands. 
Who  tilt  for  I's  love  and  glory  here. 
Come,  therefore,  leave  thy  I  lightly,  knave, 
it  beseemeth  not  a  knave  To  ride  with  such  a  I. 
rode  Full  slowly  by  a  knight,  I,  and  dwarf ; 
Except  the  I  he  loves  best  be  there. 
Lays  claim  to  for  the  I  at  his  side. 
Has  ever  won  it  for  the  I  with  him, 
thou,  that  hast  no  I,  canst  not  fight.' 
errant-knights  And  ladies  came,  and  by  and  by 

the  town  Flow'd  in, 
Spake  to  the  I  with  him  and  proclaim'd, 
lords  and  ladies  of  the  high  court  went 
Sweet  I,  never  since  I  first  drew  breath 
her  ladies  loved  to  caU  Enid  the  Fair, 
the  fairest  and  the  best  Of  ladies  living 
Take  one  verse  more — the  I  speaks  it — 
The  I  never  made  unwilling  war  With  those  fine  eyes  :  „  603 

man  That  ever  among  ladies  ate  in  hall,  Lancelot  and  E.  255 

King  Had  on  his  cuirass  worn  our  L's  Head,  „  294 

'  Fair  I,  since  I  never  yet  have  worn  „  363 

Favour  of  any  I  in  the  lists,  (repeat)  „    364,  474 

L,  my  liege,  in  whom  I  have  my  joy,  „  1180 

And  to  all  other  ladies,  I  make  moan  :  „  1279 

Lancelot,  whom  the  L  of  the  Lake  Caught  „  1404 

The  knights  and  ladies  wept,  Holy  Grail  353 

Our  L  says  it,  and  we  well  beUeve :  Wed  thou  our  L, 

and  rule  over  us,  ,>  604 

Pelleas  for  his  I  won  The  golden  circlet,  Pdleas  and  E.  13 

tvun'd  the  I  roimd  And  look'd  upon  her  people  ;  „  91 

for  the  I  was  Ettarre,  And  she  was  a  great  I  in  her  land, 
gracious  to  him.  For  she  was  a  great  I. 
her  ladies  laugh'd  along  with  her. 
for  he  dream'd  His  I  loved  him, 
Pelleas  might  obtain  his  l's  love. 
Then  rang  the  shout  his  I  loved  : 
'  These  be  the  ways  of  ladies,'  Pelleas  thought, 


Sir  Galahad  12 

13 

Lady  Clare  47 

L.  of  Burleigh  31 

75 

Aylmer's  Field  117 

190 

198 

199 

240 

243 

460 

532 

558 

593 

,  Pro.  32 

173 

233 

240 

t79 

238 

ii  47 

62 

111 

333 

iv  117 

159 

363 

1)80 

509 

m313 

Minnie  and  Winnie  3 

19 

Window,  No  Answer  15 

Com.  of  Arthur  283 

Gareth  and  L.  609 

740 

957 

,'  „  959 

Marr.  of  Geraint  187 

481 

487 

490 

493 

546 
552 

662 
Geraint  and  E.  619 

962 

Balin  and  Balan  340 

Merlin  and  V.  445 


97 
123 
135 
153 
161 
171 
209 


Lady  (s)  (continued)    '  Behold  me,  L,  A  prisoner,  Pelleas  and  E.  240 

'  For  pity  of  thine  own  self.  Peace,  L,  peace  :  „            254 

He  needs  no  aid  who  doth  his  l's  will.'  „            281 

'  L,  for  indeed  I  loved  you  and  I  deem'd  you  beautiful,        „  296 
'  Why,  let  my  I  bind  me  if  she  will,  And  let  my  I  beat 

me  if  she  will :  „            334 

let  my  I  sear  the  stump  for  him,  •    „            339 

they  cried,  '  our  I  loves  thee  not.'  „            369 

crying  to  their  Z,  '  Lo  !  Pelleas  is  dead —  „            376 

ware  their  ladies'  coloius  on  the  casque,  Last  Tournament  184 

'  0  pray  you,  noble  I,  weep  no  more  ;  Guinevere  184 

Ah  sweet  I,  the  King's  grief  For  his  own  self,  „      196 

sweet  I,  if  I  seem  To  vex  an  ear  too  sad  „      314 

a  noble  knight,  Was  gracious  to  all  ladies,  „       329 

I  could  think,  sweet  I,  yours  would  be  „      352 

charged  Before  the  eyes  of  ladies  and  of  kings.  Pass,  of  Arthur  393 

Whether  they  were  his  l's  marriage-bells.  Lover's  Tale  iv  11 

For  that  low  knell  tolling  his  I  dead —  „              33 

saw  His  I  with  the  moonlight  on  her  face ;  „              57 

He  reverenced  his  dear  I  even  in  death ;  „              74 

sudden  wail  his  I  made  Dwelt  in  his  fancy :  „            149 

About  a  picture  of  his  I,  taken  Some  years  „            216 

Led  his  dear  Z  to  a  chair  of  state.  „            321 

Then  taking  his  dear  I  by  one  hand,  „            369 

yes — a  I — none  of  their  spies —  Rizpah  15 

Lady-clad    I  saw  The  feudal  warrior  l-c ;  Princess,  Pro.  119 

Lady-fern    underneath  a  plume  of  l-f.  Sang,  Balin  and  Balan  26 

La^-laden     long  Eich  galleries,  l-l.  Holy  Grail  346 
Lady  of  Sbalott    See  Shalott 

Lady's-head    The  L-h  upon  the  prow  The  Voyage  11 

Lady-sister    I  bow'd  to  his  l-s  as  she  rode  Maud  I  iv  15 

Lag    To  I  behind,  scared  by  the  cry  they  made.  Princess  v  94 

Laggard     Here  comes  a  I  hanging  down  his  head,  Geraint  and  E.  60 

La^'d     I  Hn  answer  loth  to  render  up  Princess  v  299 
Whereof  the  dwarf  I  latest,  and  the  knight  Had 

vizor  up,  Marr.  of  Geraint  188 
Laid    (See  also  La&id,  Long-laid)     L  low,  very  low, 

In  the  dark  we  must  lie.  All  Things  will  Die  21 

L  by  the  tumult  of  the  fight.  Margaret  26 

Upon  my  lap  he  I  his  head  :  The  Sisters  17 

And  I  him  at  his  mother's  feet.  „          35 

the  strong  foundation-stones  were  I  Palace  of  Art  235 
and  see  me  where  I  am  lowly  I.                      May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  30 

argent  of  her  breast  to  sight  L  bare.  D.  of  F.  Women  159 

more  the  white  goose  I  It  clack'd  and  cackled  louder.  The  Goose  23 

L  widow'd  of  the  power  in  his  eye  M.  d' Arthur  122 

I  his  head  upon  her  lap.  And  loosed  „        208 

Francis  I  A  damask  napkin  wrought  with  horse  Audley  Court  20 

and  the  winds  are  I  with  sound.  Locksley  Hall  104 

for  when  he  Z  a  tax  Upon  his  town,  Godiva  13 

'  O  eyes  long  I  in  happy  sleep  ! '  Day- Dm.,  Depart.  17 

Heb  aims  across  her  breast  she  I ;  Beggar  Maid  1 
rises  up.  And  is  lightly  I  again,  (repeat)                  Vision  of  Sin  134,  170 

And  I  the  feeble  infant  in  his  arms  ;  Enoch  Arden  152 

when  she  I  her  head  beside  my  own.  „          881 

the  Baronet  yet  had  I  No  bar  between  them  :  Aylmer's  Field  117 

or  I  his  feverous  piUow  smooth  !  „            701 

she  I,  WifeUke,  her  hand  in  one  of  his,  „            807 

With  neighbours  I  along  the  grass,  Lucretius  214 

his  bones  long  I  within  the  grave,  „        256 

I  about  them  at  their  wills  and  died ;  Princess,  Pro.  31 

pluck'd  her  Ukeness  out ;  i  it  on  flowers,  „             i  93 

The  creature  I  his  muzzle  on  your  lap,  „          ii  272 

Mock-Hymen  were  I  up  like  winter  bats,  „          iv  144 

she  I  A  feeUng  finger  on  my  brows,  „          vi  120 

L  the  soft  babe  in  his  hard-mailed  hands.  „              208 

And  others  otherwhere  they  I ;  „              378 

And  worthy  to  be  I  by  thee ;  Ode  on  Well.  94 

Be  glad,  because  his  bones  are  I  by  thine  !  „            141 

And  where  you  tenderly  Z  it  by  :  The  Daisy  100 

A  famine  after  I  them  low.  The  Victim  2 

beautiful,  when  all  the  winds  are  I,  Spec,  of  Iliad  12 

Where  he  in  English  earth  is  I,  In  Mem.  xviii  2 

They  I  him  by  the  pleasant  shore,  „           xix  3 

L  their  dark  arms  about  the  field,  (repeat)  „   xev  16,  52 


Laid 


376 


Lame-born 


Laid  (continued)    faced  the  spectres  of  the  mind  And 

I  them  :  In  Mem.  xcvi  16 

I  On  the  hasp  of  the  window,  Maud  I  xiv  18 

He  I  a  cruel  snare  in  a  pit  „    //  v  84 

Bleys  L  magic  by,  and  sat  him  down,  Com.  of  Arthur  156 

Modred  I  his  ear  beside  the  doors,  „            323 

Eagle,  I  Almost  beyond  eye-reach,  Gareth  and  L.  44 

Which  down  he  I  before  the  throne,  and  knelt,  „          390 

one  stroke  L  him  that  clove  it  groveUing  ,,          972 

Gareth  I  his  lance  athwart  the  ford  ;  „         1048 

Far  better  were  I Z  in  the  dark  earth,  Marr.  of  Geraint  97 

With  sprigs  of  summer  I  between  the  folds,  „            138 

and  everywhere  Was  hammer  I  to  hoof,  „            256 

crost  the  trencher  as  she  I  it  down :  „            396 

On  either  shining  shoulder  I  a  hand,  „            518 

bright  apparel,  which  she  I  Flat  on  the  couch,  „            678 

Came  one  with  this  and  I  it  in  my  hand,  „            699 

L  from  her  limbs  the  costly-broider'd  gift,  „             769 

one  command  1 1  upon  you,  not  to  speak  to  me,  Geraint  and  E.  78 

raised  and  I  him  on  a  litter-bier,  „            566 

I  him  on  it  All  in  the  hollow  of  his  shield,  „            568 

I  his  lance  In  rest,  and  made  as  if  to  fall  „            775 

And  all  the  penance  the  Queen  I  upon  me  „            854 

leaves  L  their  green  faces  flat  against  the  panes,  Balin  and  Balan  344 

And  I  the  diamond  in  his  open  hand.  Lancelot  and  E.  827 

Her  father  I  the  letter  in  her  hand,  „          1134 

on  the  black  decks  I  her  in  her  bed,  „          1147 

Received  at  once  and  I  aside  the  gems  ,,          1202 

when  the  knights  had  I  her  comely  head  „          1337 

made  him  hers,  and  I  her  mind  On  him.  Holy  Grail  164 

against  the  chapel  door  L  lance,  and  enter'd,  „          460 
groaning  I  The  naked  sword  athwart  their  naked 

throats,  Pelleas  and  E.  451 

he  I  His  brows  upon  the  drifted  leaf  Last  Tournament  405 

and  I  her  hands  about  his  feet.  Guinevere  528 

L  widow'd  of  the  power  in  his  eye  Pass,  of  Arthur  290 
I  his  head  upon  her  lap.  And  loosed  the  shatter'd 

casque,  „              376 

Z  it  in  a  sepulchre  of  rock  Never  to  rise  again.  Lover's  Tale  i  683 

graspt  the  hand  she  lov'd.  And  I  it  in  her  own,  „              751 

winds  L  the  long  night  in  silver  streaks  and  bars,  „          ii  112 

And  I  her  in  the  vault  of  her  own  kin.  ,,            iv  39 

never  to  say  that  1 1  him  in  holy  ground.  Rizpah  58 

we  I  them  on  the  ballast  down  below ;  The  Revenge  18 

Where  they  I  him  by  the  mast,  „          98 
this  ward  where  the  younger  children  are  I :         In  the  Child.  Hosp.  27 

we  I  him  that  night  in  his  grave.  Def.  of  Lucknow  12 

corpse  to  be  Z  in  the  ground,  „              80 

And  she  I  her  hand  in  my  own —  Despair  49 

Or  if  lip  were  I  to  lip  on  the  pillows  The  Flight  48 

an'  I  himself  imdher  yer  feet,  Tomorrow  38 

they  I  this  body  they  foim'  an  the  grass  „          73 

Whin  we  I  yez,  aich  by  aich,  „          82 

Who  I  thee  at  Eleusis,  dazed  and  dumb  Demeter  and  P.  6 

L  on  her  table  overnight,  was  gone  ;  The  Ring  277 

forgotten  by  old  Time,  L  on  the  shelf —  To  Mary  Boyle  24 

Lain     There  hath  he  I  for  ages  and  will  lie  The  Kraken  11 

fed  on  the  roses  and  I  in  the  lilies  of  life.  Maud  I  iv60 

Had  I  i!  for  a  century  dead  ;  „    xxii  72 

For  after  I  had  I  so  many  nights,  Holy  Grail  569 

Hath  I  for  years  at  rest — and  renegades,  Last  Tournament  94 

I  had  I  as  dead.  Mute,  blind  and  motionless  Lover's  Tale  i  606 

Would  I  had  I  Until  the  plaited  ivy-tress  „              617 

and  had  I  three  days  without  a  pulse  :  „            iv  34 

dark  body  which  had  I  Of  old  in  her  embrace.  Death  of  (Enone  93 

Lake    (See  also  Lava-lake)    canal  Is  rounded  to  as 

clear  a  I.  Arabian  Nights  46 

counterchanged  The  level  I  with  diamond-plots  „              85 

an  arm  Rose  up  from  out  the  bosom  of  the  I,  M.  d' Arthur  30 

Came  on  the  shining  levels  of  the  I.  „            51 

Wrought  by  the  lonely  maiden  of  the  L.  „          104 

on  a  sudden,  lo  !  the  level  I,  „          191 

O  MK,  my  pleasant  rambles  by  the  I,  (repeat)  Edwin  Morris  1,  13 

By  ripply  shallows  of  the  lisping  I,  „                98 

The  friendly  mist  of  mom  Clung  to  the  I.  „              108 


Lake  (continued)    Her  taper  glimmer'd  in  the  I  below 
She  moves  among  my  visions  of  the  I, 
then  we  crost  Between  the  I's, 
Deep  in  the  garden  I  withdrawn. 
Dreams  over  I  and  lawn,  and  isles  and  capes — • 
round  the  I  A  little  clock-work  steamer 
The  long  light  shakes  across  the  I's, 
quenching  I  by  I  and  tarn  by  tarn 
And  slips  into  the  bosom  of  the  I : 
Had  blown  the  I  beyond  his  limit. 
One  tall  Agave  above  the  I. 
some  dead  I  That  holds  the  shadow  of  a  lark 
And  long  by  the  garden  1 1  stood. 
From  the  I  to  the  meadow  and  on  to  the  wood. 
The  white  lake-blossom  fell  into  the  I 
sword  That  rose  from  out  the  bosom  of  the  I, 


Edwin  Morris  135 

144 

Golden  Year  6 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  12 

Vision  of  Sin  11 

Princess,  Pro.  70 

„  iv  3 

„         vii  40 

187 

The  Daisy  71 

84 

In  Mem.  xvi  8 

Maud  I  xxii  35 

37 

47 

Com.  of  Arthur  296 


like  an  ever-fleeting  wave.  The  Lady  of  the  L  stood  :  Gareth  and  L.  216 


Bala  I  Fills  all  the  sacred  Dee 

the  I  whiten'd  and  the  pinewood  roar'd, 

you  ride  with  Lancelot  of  the  L,' 

Than  you  believe  me,  Lancelot  of  the  L. 

'  Most  noble  lord,  Sir  Lancelot  of  the  L, 

My  knight,  the  great  Sir  Lancelot  of  the  L.' 

Lancelot,  whom  the  Lady  of  the  L  Caught 

Arthm''s  vows  on  the  great  Z  of  fire. 

an  arm  Rose  up  from  out  the  bosom  of  the  Z, 

Came  on  the  shining  levels  of  the  Z. 

Wrought  by  the  lonely  maiden  of  the  L. 

And  on  a  sudden,  lo  !  the  level  Z, 

Lower  down  Spreads  out  a  little  Z, 

ran  over  The  rippling  levels  of  the  Z, 

one  lightning-fork  Flash'd  out  the  Z ; 

thunder-sketch  Of  L  and  mountain  conquers  all  the  day. 

must  fain  have  torrents,  I's,  HiUs, 

Knowledge  is  the  swallow  on  the  Z 

Gazing  at  the  Lydian  laughter  of  the  Garda  L 
below 

And  all  ablaze  too  in  the  Z  below  ! 

all  ablaze  too  plunging  in  the  Z  Head-foremost — 

A  light  shot  upward  on  them  from  the  Z. 

The  mist  of  autumn  gather  from  your  Z, 

Your  wonder  of  the  boiling  Z ; 

With  your  own  shadow  in  the  placid  Z, 
Lake-blossom    The  white  l-b  fell  into  the  lake 
Lakelet    brook  that  feeds  this  Z  murmur'd  '  debt,' 
Lamb     '  Bring  this  Z  back  into  Thy  fold, 

in  the  flocks  The  Z  rejoiceth  in  the  year, 

live  thus,  in  joy  and  hope  As  a  young  Z, 

Nor  bird  would  sing,  nor  Z  would  bleat, 

in  the  fields  all  round  I  hear  the  bleating  of  the  I 

sweeter  is  the  young  I's  voice  to  me 

very  whitest  Z  in  all  my  fold  Loves  you : 

and  light  is  large,  and  I's  are  glad 

this  lost  Z  (she  pointed  to  the  child) 

at  once  the  lost  Z  at  her  feet  Sent  out 

saintly  youth,  the  spotless  Z  of  Christ, 

bleat  of  a  Z  in  the  storm  and  the  darkness 

The  shepherd  brings  his  adder-bitten  Z, 

I  kep'  mysen  meeak  as  a  Z, 
Lamb  (Christ)    So  shows  my  soul  before  the  L, 

I  am  written  in  the  L's  own  Book  of  Life 
Lame     (See  also  LaS,me)     abidest  Z  and  poor, 

Now  mate  is  blind  and  captain  Z, 

But,  blind  or  Z  or  sick  or  sound. 

These  Z  hexameters  the  strong-wing'd  music  of 
Homer  ! 

I  wander,  often  falling  Z, 

I  stretch  Z  hands  of  faith,  and  grope, 

Myself  would  work  eye  dim,  and  finger  Z, 

'  why  ?  said  he,  '  for  why  should  I  go  Z  ?  ' 

and  half  of  the  cattle  went  Z, 

leave  the  dog  too  Z  to  follow  with  the  cry, 
L  and  old,  and  past  his  time, 
L,  crooked,  reeling,  livid,  thro'  the  mist  Rose, 
Lame-bom    as  a  boy  l-b  beneath  a  height. 


Geraint  and  E.  929 

Merlin  and  V.  637 

Lancelot  and  E.  417 

1205 

1272 

1373 

1404 

Last  Tournament  345 

Pass,  of  Arthur  198 

219 

272 

359 

Lover's  Tale  i  534 

„  Hi  4 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  97 

100 

221 

Ancient  Sage  37 


Prater  Ave,  etc.  8 

The  Ring  84 

„       251 

.,       256 

„      329 

To  Ulysses  40 

Romney's  R.  76 

Maud  I  xxii  47 

The  Ring  171 

Supp.  Confessions  105 

156 

169 

Mariana  in  the  S.  37 

May  Queen,  Con.  2 

6 

Aylmer's  Field  361 

Lucretius  99 

Princess  iv  361 

391 

Merlin  and  V.  749 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  64 

Death  of  (Enone  38 

Church-warden,  etc.  41 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  17 

Columbus  88 

Two  Voices  197 

The  Voyage  91 

93 

Trans,  of  Homer  1 

In  Mem.  xxiii  6 

Ivll 

Marr.  of  Geraint  628 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  59 

V.  of  Maeldune  31 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  226 

227 

Death  of  (Enone  27 

Balin  and  Balan  164 


Lamech 

Lamech     But  that  of  Z  is  mine. 

Lamed    (See  also  Laamed)    my  mind  Stiunbles,  and  all 
my  faculties  are  I. 
and  a  spear  Down-glancing  I  the  charter 
she  was  I  iv  a  knee,  "    ' 

Lameness    Cured  I,  palsies,  cancers. 

Lament    floated  a  dying  swan.  And  loudly  did  I 
a  soul  I's,  which  hath  been  blest, 

Lamentation    a  I  and  an  ancient  tale  of  wron^ 
as  it  were  one  voice  an  agony  Oil  ^' 

BuBY  the  Great  Duke  With  an  empire's  I 
as  it  were  one  voice,  an  agony  Of  I,  ' 

scroll  written  over  with  I  and  woe. ' 
Laming    And  caught  the  I  bullet 


377 


Lancelot 


Mavd  II  a  48 


Lamp    (See  also  Night-lamp)    Some  yearning  toward 
the  I  s  of  night ; 
'  by  that  I,'  I  thought,  '  she  sits  ! ' 
the'  my  I  was  lighted  late, 
and  lit  L's  which  out-bum'd  Canopus. 
bum  a  fragrant  I  before  my  bones 
two  sphere  l's  blazon'd  like  Heaven  and  Earth 
above  her  droop 'd  a  I,  And  made  the  single  jewel 
.  When  all  is  gay  with  l's, 

!«  And  just  above  the  parting  was  a  I : 

L  of  the  Lord  God  Lord  everlasting 
T-«.^•iKi'*'o^^'^^*'  ^P'^  ^*"  ^^^  golden  music, 
_  lamplight     Gold  ghttermg  thro'  I  dim 
Lamp-Ut    shone  the  tent  lA  from  the  inner 
Lan  (land)    was  as  light  as  snow  an  the  V 

The  Divil  take  aU  the  black  V 
Lancaster    (-See  aZ«o  Rose  of  Lancaster)    York's  white 

rose  as  red  as  i's, 
Lance     L's  in  ambush  set ; 

Not  like  that  Arthur  who,  with  I  in  rest 
and  hurl  their  l's  in  the  sun ;  ' 

My  tough  I  thrusteth  sure, 
some  were  push'd  with  l's  from  the  rock 
And  into  fiery  splinters  leapt  the  I,  ' 

Like  light  in  many  a  shiver'd  I 
Flash  brand  and  Z,  fall  battleaxe  upon  helm 
before  my  Hf  Z  Were  mine  to  use— 
my  Z  Hold,  by  God's  grace,  he  shall  into  the  mire- 
and  knowng  both  of  I  and  sword  ' 
no  room  was  there  For  I  or  tourney-skill  • 
Gareth  laid  his  I  athwart  the  ford  • 
felt  Thy  manhood  thro'  that  wearied  I  of  thine 
ilow  best  to  manage  horse,  I,  sword  and  shield" 
Let  me  lay  I  in  rest,  0  noble  host,  ' 

A  I  that  splinter'd  like  an  icicle 
Aim'd  at  the  helm,  his  I  err'd  •  ' 
pick'd  the  I  That  pleased  him  best, 
and  the  points  of  l's  bicker  in  it 

Down  by  the  length  of  I  and  arm  beyond  The  crupper 
Came  nding  with  a  hundred  l's  up  •  ^rupper, 

cast  his  I  aside.  And  doff'd  his  helm  • 
Mn  rest  and  made  as  if  to  fall  upon  him 
he  sharply  caught  his  I  and  shield, 
\V  ith  pointed  Z  as  if  to  pierce,  a  shape 
He  burst  his  I  against  a  forest  bough 
A  score  with  pointed  Z's,  making  at  him— 
Ihe  longest  I  his  eyes  had  ever  seen 
And  every  scratch  a  I  had  made  upon  it 
Uod  Broke  the  strong  Z,  and  roU'd  his  enemy  down 
mme  is  the  firmer  seat.  The  truer  I-  ' 

toet  Z  in  rest,  strike  spur,  suddenly  move, 
Ihro  her  o^vn  side  she  felt  the  sharp  I  go  • 
such  a  tonurey  and  so  full,  So  many  Z'Aroken- 
my  strong  I  had  beaten  down  the  knights 
a^amst  the  chapel  door  Laid  I,  and  enter'd, 
she  caught  the  circlet  from  his  I 
his  long  Z  Broken,  and  his  Excalibur  a  straw 
My  hand— behke  the  I  hath  dript  upon  it— 
ii^ven  to  tipmost  I  and  topmost  hehn, 
Mit  with  a  I  Becomes  thee  well- 
Not  hke  that  Arthur  who,  with  I  in  rest 


Lucretius  123 

Lancelot  and  E.  488 

Tomorrow  77 

St.  S.  Stylites  82 

Dying  Swan  7 

D.  of  F.  Women  281 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  118 

M.  d' Arthur  201 

Ode  on  Well.  2 

Pass,  of  Arthur  369 

Despair  20 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  65 


Lance  (continued) 
die — 


would  rush  on  a  thousand  l's  and 


Two  Voices  Z^ 

Miller's  D.  114 

May  Queen,  Con.  18 

D.  of  F.  Women  146 

St.  S.  Stylites  196 

Princess  i  223 

„      iv  272 

In  Mem.  xcviii  27 

Lover's  Tale  iv  218 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  27 

Ancient  Sage  196 

A  rabian  Nights  18 

Princess  iv  26 

Tomorrow  36 

64 

Aylmer's  Field  51 
D.  of  F.  Women  28 
M.  d' Arthur  222 
Locksley  Hall  170 
Sir  Galahad  2 
Princess,  Pro.  46 
V  494 
In  Mem.  xlix  3 
Com.  of  Arthur  486 
Gareth  and  L.  6 
722 
731 
1042 
1048 
1266 
1351 
Marr.  of  Geraint  496 
Geraint  and  E.  89 
157 
179 
449 
463 
539 
595 
775 
Balin  and  Balan  287 
325 
329 
401 
411 
Lancelot  and  E.  20 
26 
447 
456 
624 
Holy  Grail  331 
363 
460 
Pelleas  and  E.  173 
Last  Tournament  87 
200 
442 
636 
Pass,  of  Arthur  390 


the  points  of  the  Russian  l's  arose  in  the  sky  • 
Ihro  the  forest  of  Z's  and  swords 


L's  snapt  in  sunder. 
Lanced    See  Long-lanced 

Lance-head    Gasping  to  Sir  Lavaine,  '  Draw  the  l-h  ■ 
Lancelot  (a  knight  of  the  Round  Table)    (See  also     ' 
Launcelot,  Lancelot-like)    brazen  greaves 
Uf  bold  Sir  L. 
'  Tii-ra  lirra,'  by  the  river  Sang  Sir  L. 
But  L  mused  a  little  space ; 
whom  he  loved  And  honour'd  most,  Sir  L 
And  L  past  away  among  the  flowers,  ' 

Then  L  standing  near,'  Sir  Seneschal, 
thme  own  fineness,  L,  some  fine  day  Undo  thee  not- 
i  ever  spake  him  pleasantly, 
the  love  that  linkt  the  King  And  L— 
King  had  saved  his  life  In  battle  twice,  and  L  once 
the  King  s— For  Z  was  the  first  in  Tournament, 
Let  L  know,  my  King,  let  L  know, 
Then,  after  summoning  L  privily, 
thy  chief  man  Sir  L  whom  he  triits  to  overthrow 
iNow  therefore  have  I  come  for  L.'  ' 

And  therefore  am  I  come  for  L.' 
Till  peacock'd  up  with  L's  noticing. 
L  said,  '  Kay,  wherefore  wilt  thou  go  against  the  Kin 
for,  were  Sir  i  lackt,  at  least  He  might  have  yielded ' 
pray  d  the  Kmg  would  grant  me  L  To  fight 
To  crave  again  Sir  L  of  the  King, 
methinks  There  rides  no  knight,  not  L, 
bir  L,  having  swum  the  river-loops — 
L  answer'd,  '  Prince,  0  Gareth— 
one  who  came  to  help  thee,  not  to  harm,  L, 
Then  Gareth,  '  Thou— Z  .'—thine  the  hand  That 

threw  me  ? 
Shamed  had  I  been,  and  sad— 0  Z— thou ! ' 

Z,  Why  came  ye  not,  when  call'd  ? 
Zsaid,  '  Blessed  be  thou.  Sir  Gareth! 
Sir  Z,  IS  hard  by,  with  meats  and  drinks 
^  Z,  Z  — and  she  clapt  her  hands- 
Said  Z,  '  Peradventure  he,  your  name, 
'Courteous  in  this,  Lord  Z,  as  in  all.' ' 
Z,  from  my  hold  on  these  Streams  virtue— 
not  shame  Even  the  shadow  of  Z  under  shield 
Uung  to  the  shield  that  Z  lent  him, 
hath  wrought  on  Z  now  To  lend  thee  horse 
O  Prince,  I  went  for  Z  first. 
The  quest  is  L's:  give  him  back  the  shield.' 
Z  on  him  urged  All  the  devisings  of  their  chivalry 
ev  n  Sir  Z  thro'  his  warm  blood  felt  Ice  strike 
At  once  Sir  L's  charger  fiercely  neigh'd  ' 

They  hate  the  King,  and  Z,  the  King's'friend 
Touching  her  guilty  love  for  Z,  ' 

and  dreaming  of  her  love  For  Z, 
wherefore  hover'd  round  Z,  but  when  he  mark'd 
How  far  beyond  him  Z  seem'd  to  move, 
Sir  Z  as  to  meet  her,  then  at  once, 

To  whom  Sir  Z  with  his  eyes  on  earth,  " 

Then  Z  with  his  hand  among  the  flowers  " 

Then  Z  lifted  his  large  eyes ;  " 

'  The  Queen  we  worship,  Z,'l,  and  all  " 

Eyes  too  that  long  have  watch'd  how  Z  draws  From  homage  " 
Which  our  high  Z  hath  so  hfted  up,  ^ 

Stoop  at  thy  will  on  Z  and  the  Queen.' 
Sir  Z  worshipt  no  unmarried  girl 
They  place  their  pride  in  Z  and  the  Queen 
We  ride  a-hawking  with  Sir  Z. 
Beheld  the  Queen  and  Z  get  to  horse. 
Is  that  the  Z  ?  goodly— ay,  but  gaunt : 
Z  will  be  gracious  to  the  rat, 
'Let  her  be,'  Said  Z  and  unhooded  castin"  off 
1  heard  the  great  Sir  Z  sing  it  once 
what  say  ye  to  Sir  Z,  friend  Traitor  or  true  » 
bir  Z  went  ambassador,  at  first, 


V.  of  Maeldune  24 
Heavy  Brigade  5 


The  Totirney  8 
Lancelot  and  E.  511 


Z.  of  Shalott  Hi  5 

36 

),  iv  51 

Com.  of  Arthur  4i8 

450 

Gareth  and  L.  461 

476 

482 

492 

494 

567 

581 

619 

623 

644 

719 

726 

738 

856 

882 

1182 

1216 

1236 

1239 


1241 
1245 
1246 
1257 
1276 
1290 
1298 
1303 
1309 
1311 
1320 
1323 
1343 
1344 
1348 
1398 
1400 
1418 
Marr.  of  Geraint  25 
159 
Balin  and  Balan  160 
172 


247 
253 
259 

277 
349 
375 
490 
536 
Merlin  and  V.  12 
25 
..  95 
102 
103 
120 
130 
385 
769 
774 


Lancelot 


378 


Lancelot 


Lancelot  (a  knight  of  the  Bound  Table)  (continued)    Not 
even  L  brave,  nor  Galahad  clean. 
Guarded  the  sacred  shield  of  L ; 
came  the  lily  maid  by  that  good  shield  Of  L, 
L  won  the  diamond  of  the  year, 
great  deeds  Of  L,  and  his  prowess  in  the  lists, 
and  they  dwelt  languidly  On  L,  where  he  stood 
'  To  blame,  my  lord  Sir  L,  much  to  blame ! 
L  vext  at  having  lied  in  vain  : 
L,  the  flower  of  bravery,  Guinevere,  The  pearl  of 

beauty : 
Then  answer'd  L,  the  chief  of  knights  :  (repeat) 
before  your  spear  at  a  touch.  But  knowing  you  are  L ; 
Then  got  Sir  L  suddenly  to  horse, 
L  marvell'd  at  the  worldless  man ; 
'So  ye  will  grace  me,'  answer'd  L, 
But  L,  when  they  glanced  at  Guinevere, 
And  L  spoke  And  answer'd  him  at  full, 
she  heard  Sir  L  cry  in  the  court. 
There  to  his  proud  horse  L  turn'd, 
yet-unblazon'd  shield.  His  brother's ;  which  he 

gave  to  L, 
So  kiss'd  her,  and  Sir  L  his  own  hand, 
Sir  L  knew  there  lived  a  knight  Not  far  from  Camelot, 
L  saying,  '  Hear,  but  hold  my  name  Hidden,  you 

ride  with  L  of  the  Lake,' 
And  after  muttering  '  The  great  L,' 
Then  L  answer'd  yoimg  Lavaine  and  said, 
L  bode  a  little,  till  he  saw  Which  were  the  weaker ; 
little  need  to  speak  Of  L  in  his  glory  ! 
But  in  the  field  were  Us  kith  and  kin, 
do  and  almost  overdo  the  deeds  Of  L ; 
Is  it  not  i  ! '     '  When  has  L  worn  Favour  of  any  lady 
A  fiery  family  passion  for  the  name  Of  L, 
they  overbore  Sir  L  and  his  chai^er, 
brought  his  horse  to  L  where  he  lay. 
my  sweet  lord  Sir  L'  said  Lavaine, 
Sir  L  gave  A  marvellous  great  shriek 
But  on  that  day  when  L  fled  the  lists. 
He  seem'd  to  me  another  L — Yea,  twenty  times 

I  thought  him  L — 
after  L,  Tristram,  and  Geraint  And  Gareth, 
L  who  hath  come  Despite  the  wound  he  spake  of, 
'  Nay,  lord,'  she  said.     *  And  where  is  Z  ?  ' 
L  told  me  of  a  common  talk  That  men  went  down 

before  his  spear  at  a  touch,  But  knowing  he 

was  L ; 

*  Far  lovelier  in  our  L  had  it  been. 
So  fine  a  fear  in  our  large  L 
That  L  is  no  more  a  lonely  heart. 

Gawain  saw  Sir  Us  azure  lions,  crown'd  with  gold, 

'  Right  was  the  King !  our  L !  that  true  man ! ' 

To  cross  our  mighty  L  in  his  loves ! 

What  the  King  knew,  '  Sir  i  is  the  knight.' 

'  The  maid  of  Astolat  loves  Sir  Z,  Sir  L  loves  the 

maid  of  Astolat.' 
But  sorrowing  L  should  have  stoop'd  so  low. 
Forgot  to  drink  to  L  and  the  Queen,  And  pledging 

L  and  the  lily  maid 
kept  The  one-day-seen  Sir  Z  in  her  heart, 
How  fares  my  lord  Sir  Z  ? ' 
Sir  Z !     How  know  ye  my  lord's  name  is  Z  ?  ' 
she  saw  the  casque  Of  Z  on  the  wall : 
Z  look'd  and  was  perplext  in  mind, 
Z  Would,  tho'  he  cali'd  his  wound  a  little  hurt 
But  when  Sir  L's  deadly  hurt  was  whole, 
She  came  before  Sir  Z,  for  she  thought 
And  Z  ever  prest  upon  the  maid 
Z  saw  that  she  withheld  her  wish, 

*  Ah,  sister,'  answer'd  Z,  '  what  is  this  ? ' 
Z  answer'd,  '  Had  I  chosen  to  wed, 
Too  courteous  are  ye,  fair  Lord  Z. 

Z  said,  '  That  were  against  me  : 
And  Z  knew  the  little  clinking  sound ; 
That  Z  knew  that  she  was  looking  at  him. 


Merlin  and  V.  805 
Lancelot  and  E.  4 
29 
68 
82 
85 
97 
102 

113 
140, 187 
150 
159 
172 
223 
270 
285 
344 
347 

380 
389 
401 

416 
421 
445 
461 
464 
466 
470 
473 
478 
487 
493 
512 
515 
525 

534 
556 
565 

572 


577 
589 
595 
602 
663 
665 
688 
707 

725 
732 

737 
747 
795 
796 
806 
838 
851 
904 
908 
911 
920 
931 
934 
972 
975 
983 
985 


Lancelot  (a  knight  of  the  Round  Table)  (continued) 
the  great  Sir  Z  muse  at  me  ; 
Z,  who  coldly  went,  nor  bad  me  one  : 


there 

Lancelot  and  E.  1055 
1057 


Seeing  it  is  no  more  Sir  L's  fault  Not  to  love  me, 

'  Is  it  for  L,  is  it  for  my  dear  lord  ? 

'  For  Z  and  the  Queen  and  all  the  world, 

the  Uttle  bed  on  which  I  died  For  L's  love, 

Sir  Z  at  the  palace  craved  Audience  of  Guinevere, 

Z  kneeling  utter'd,  '  Queen,  Lady,  my  liege, 

quicker  of  belief  Than  you  believe  me,  Z  of  the  Lake, 

while  Sir  Z  leant,  in  half  disdain  At  love. 

And  Z  later  came  and  mused  at  her, 

'  Most  noble  lord.  Sir  Z  of  the  Lake, 

Pray  for  my  soul  thou  too.  Sir  Z, 

Then  freely  spoke  Sir  Z  to  them  all : 

Z  sad  beyond  his  wont,  to  see  The  maiden  buried, 

the  shield  of  Z  at  her  feet  Be  carven. 

Who  mark'd  Sir  Z  where  he  moved  apart,  Drew 

near,  and  sigh'd  in  passing,  '  Z,  Forgive  me; 
Z,  my  Z,  thou  in  whom  I  have  Most  joy 
My  knight,  the  great  Sir  Z  of  the  Lake.' 
answer'd  Z,  '  Fair  she  was,  my  King, 
And  Z  answer'd  nothing,  but  he  went, 
Z,  whom  the  Lady  of  the  Lake  Caught 
So  groan'd  Sir  L  in  remorseful  pain, 
some  Cali'd  him  a  son  of  Z,  and  some  said 
For  when  was  Z  wanderingly  lewd  ? 
Sir  Bors,  our  L's  cousin,  sware.  And  Z  sware, 
Z  is  Z,  and  hath  overborne  Five  knights  at  once,  and 

every  younger  knight,  Unproven,  holds  himself  as  Z, 
Queen,  Who  rose  by  Z,  wail'd  and  shriek'd 
hast  thou  seen  him — Z  ? — Once,' 
Z  shouted, '  Stay  me  not !  I  have  been  the  sluggard, 
and  sorrowing  for  our  Z,  Because  his  former  madness. 
For  L's  kith  and  kin  so  worship  him 
Z  might  have  seen,  The  Holy  Cup  of  healing ; 
great  men  as  Z  and  our  King  Pass  not  from  door  to  door 
entering,  push'd  Athwart  the  throng  to  Z, 
'  Then  there  remain'd  but  Z,  for  the  rest 
Z,'  ask'd  the  King,  '  my  friend.  Our  mightiest, 
'  Our  mightiest ! '  answer'd  Z,  with  a  groan  ; 
ceasing,  Z  left  The  hall  long  silent. 
Blessed  are  Bors,  Z  and  Percivale, 
'  Nay — but  thou  errest,  Z : 

she  said,  '  Had  ye  not  held  your  Z  in  your  bower, 
hast  not  heard  That  Z ' — there  he  check'd  himself 
from  the  city  gates  Issued  Sir  L  riding 
Z,  saying,  '  What  name  hast  thou  That  ridest  here  „  562 

blaze  the  crime  of  Z  and  the  Queen.'     '  First  over 

me,'  said  Z,  '  shalt  thou  pass.'  „  570 

Z,  '  Yea,  between  my  lips — and  sharp  ;  „  577 

L,  with  his  heel  upon  the  fall'n,  „  580 

'  Rise,  weakling ;  I  am  Z ;  say  thy  say.'     And  Z 

slowly  rode  his  warhorse  back  To  Camelot,  „  582 

wonderingly  she  gazed  on  Z  So  soon  return'd,  „  589 

'  Have  ye  fought  ?  '  She  ask'd  of  Z.  „  593 

For  Arthur  and  Sir  Z  riding  once  Last  Tournament  10 

Sir  Z  from  the  perilous  nest,  „  18 

Z  won,  methought,  for  thee  to  wear.'  „  38 

Sir  Z,  sitting  in  my  place  Enchair'd  „  103 

Speak,  Z,  thou  art  silent :  is  it  well  ? '     Thereto 

Sir  Z  answer'd,  '  It  is  well :  „  107 

Arthur  rose  and  Z  foUow'd  him,  „  112 

Z,  Round  whose  sick  head  all  night,  „  137 

Z  knew,  had  held  sometime  with  pain  „  178 

Tristram  won,  and  L  gave,  the  gems,  „  190 

Tristram,  half  plagued  by  L's  languorous  mood,  „  194 

gladden  their  sad  eyes,  our  Queen's  And  L's,  „  223 

but  she,  haughty,  ev'n  to  him,  Z ;  „  563 

For  when  had  Z  utter'd  aught  so  gross  „  631 

he  that  closes  both  Is  perfect,  he  is  Z —  „  709 

his  aims  Were  sharpen'd  by  strong  hate  for  Z.  Guinevere  20 

Sir  Z  passing  by  Spied  where  he  couch'd,  „        30 

Z  pluck'd  him  by  the  heel,  „        34 

So  Sir  Z  holp  To  raise  the  Prince,  „        45 


1075 
1105 
1107 
1118 
1162 
1179 
1205 
1238 
1263 
1272 
1281 
1289 
1333 
1341 

1349 

1356 

1373 

1374 

1387 

1404 

1428 

Holy  Grail  144 

148 

200 

302 
356 
639 
643 
648 
651 
654 
713 
753 
760 
764 
766 
853 
874 
881 

Pelleas  and  E.  182 
527 
557 


Lancelot 


379 


Land 


Lancelot  (a  knight  of  the  Round  Table)  (continued)    Sir  L  told 

This  matter  to  the  Queen,  Guinevere  53 

'  0  L,  get  thee  hence  to  thine  ovvn  land,  „  88 

And  L  ever  promised,  but  remain'd,  „  93 

'  0  X,  if  thou  love  me  get  thee  hence.'  „  95 

L,  who  rushing  outward  Uonlike  Leapt  on  him,  „  107 

She  answer'd,  '  L,  wilt  thou  hold  me  so  ?  „  116 

So  L  got  her  horse,  Set  her  thereon,  „  122 

while  the  King  Was  waging  war  on  L :  „  156 

gone  is  he  To  wage  grim  war  against  Sir  L  „  193 

he  foresaw  This  evil  work  of  L  and  the  Queen  ?  '  „  307 

himself  would  say  Sir  L  had  the  noblest ;  „  320 

you  moved  Among  them,  L  or  our  lord  the  King  ? '  „  326 

'  Sir  i,  as  became  a  noble  knight,  „  328 

L's  needs  must  be  a  thousand-fold  Less  noble,  „  338 

If  ever  L,  that  most  noble  knight,  „  345 

Sir  L's,  were  as  noble  as  the  King's,  „  351 

L  came.  Reputed  the  best  knight  „  381 

not  like  him,  '  Not  like  my  L ' —  „  407 

Sir  L,  my  right  arm  The  mightiest  of  my  knights,  „  429 

Then  came  thy  shameful  sin  with  L ;  „  487 

touch  thy  lips,  they  are  not  mine.  But  L's :  „  552 

not  a  smaller  soul.  Nor  L,  nor  another.  „  567 

yeam'd  for  warmth  and  colour  which  I  found  In  L —  „  648 

and  most  human  too.  Not  L,  nor  another.  „  650 

when  we  see  it.  Not  L,  nor  another.'  „  661 
Gawain  kill'd  In  L's  war.                                                 Pass,  of  Arthur  31 
Lancelot-like     '  L-l,  she  said  '  Courteous  is  this,                  Gareth  and  L.  1302 
Lance-splintering     '  Ramp  ye  l-s  lions,  on  whom  all  spears 

Are  rotten  sticks !  „  1305 
Lancets  greenish  glimmerings  thro'  the  I,  Aylmer's  Field  622 
Land    (See  also  Lan',  Lond,  Lotos-land,  West-Saxon-land) 


4 


God  gave  her  peace ;  her  1  reposed; 

the  rainbow  forms  and  flies  on  the  I 

thou  wert  nursed  in  some  delicious  I 

Pressing  up  against  the  I, 

who  sways  the  floods  and  l's  From  Ind  to  Ind, 

And  woke  her  with  a  lay  from  fairy  I. 

That  sets  at  twilight  in  a  ?  of  reeds. 

Or  is  she  known  in  all  the  I, 

Just  breaking  over  I  and  main  ? 

gallery  That  lend  broad  verge  to  distant  l's, 

Who  paced  for  ever  in  a  glimmering  I, 

the  times  of  every  I  So  wrought, 

plunging  seas  draw  backward  from  the  I 

in  strange  l's  a  traveller  walking  slow, 

I  have  found  A  new  I,  but  I  die.' 

Nor  any  poor  about  your  l's  ? 

fair  as  little  Alice  in  all  the  I  they  say. 

And  sweet  is  all  the  I  about, 

'  Courage  ! '  he  said,  and  pointed  toward  the  I, 

In  the  afternoon  they  came  unto  a  I 

A  Z  of  streams !  some,  like  a  downward  smoke, 

river  seaward  flow  From  the  inner  I : 

A  I  where  all  things  always  seem'd  the  same  ! 

smile  in  secret,  looking  over  wasted  l's. 

In  every  1 1  saw,  wherever  light  illumineth, 

when  to  I  Bluster  the  winds  and  tides 

'  My  God,  my  I,  my  father — 

To  every  I  beneath  the  skies. 

It  is  the  I  that  freemen  till, 

The  I,  where  girt  with  friends  or  foes 

A  I  of  settled  government,  A  Z  of  just  and  old 

renown, 
Tho'  Power  should  make  from  I  to  I 
Love  thou  thy  I,  with  love  far-brought 
Would  pace  the  troubled  I,  like  Peace ; 
that  sendest  out  the  man  To  rule  by  I  and  sea, 
stood  on  a  dark  strait  of  barren  I. 
shrills  All  night  in  a  waste  I,  where  no  one  comes, 
All  the  I  in  flowery  squares, 
and  parted,  and  he  died  In  foreign  l's ; 
the  sun  fell,  and  all  the  I  was  dark,  (repeat) 
the  cliffs  that  guard  my  native  I, 
Her  voice  fled  always  thro'  the  summer  I ; 


To  the  Queen  26 

Sea-Fairies  25 

Eleanor  e  11 

„      112 

Buonajiarte  3 

Caress'd  or  chtdden  8 

14 

L.  of  Shalotti  26 

Two  Voices  84 

Palace  of  Art  30 

67 

147 

251 

277 

284 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  68 

May  Queen  7 

„  Con.  7 

Lotos-Eaters  1 

3 

10 

15 

24 

C.  S.  114 

D.  of  F.  Women  13 

37 

209 

On  a  Mourner  3 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  5 

7 


21 

Love  thou  thy  land  1 

84 

England  and  Am,er.  2 

M.  d' Arthur  10 

202 

Gardener's  D.  76 

Dora  19 

Dora  79, 109 

Audley  Court  49 

Edwin  Morris  67 


Land  (continued)    To  Vs  in  Kent  and  messuages  in 
York, 
I  will  leave  my  relics  in  your  I, 
A  babbler  in  the  I. 
nor  yet  Thine  acorn  in  the  /. 
Yet  oceans  daily  gaining  on  the  I, 
In  many  streams  to  fatten  lower  l's. 
Knit  lial,  and  blowing  havenward 
Lie  like  a  shaft  of  light  across  the  I, 
like  a  fruitful  I  reposed ; 
It  is  not  bad  but  good  I, 
Nor  for  my  l's  so  broad  and  fair ; 
Lord  Ronald  is  heir  of  all  your  l's. 
Made  a  murmur  in  the  I. 
In  all  that  I  had  never  been : 
Close  to  the  sun  in  lonely  l's. 
To  which  an  answer  peal'd  from  that  high  I, 
Enoch  at  times  to  go  by  I  or  sea ; 
Enoch  left  his  hearth  and  native  I, 
and  ran  Ev'n  to  the  limit  of  the  I, 
He  praised  his  I,  his  horses,  his  machines ; 
A  i  of  hops  and  poppy-mingled  corn, 
A  sleepy  I,  where  under  the  same  wheel 
so  sleepy  was  the  I. 

but  he  must — the  I  was  ringing  of  it — 
sole  succeeder  to  their  wealth,  their  l's, 
crashing  with  long  echoes  thro'  the  I, 
The  I  all  shambles — naked  marriages  Flash 
dream'd  Of  such  a  tide  swelling  toward  the  I, 
I  slipt  Into  a  I  all  sun  and  blossom, 
sit  the  best  and  stateliest  of  the  I  ? 
The  lady  of  three  castles  in  that  I : 
seizures  come  Upon  you  in  those  Vs, 
then  we  crost  To  a  livelier  I ; 
From  hills,  that  look'd  across  a  Z  of  hope, 
I,  he  imderstood,  for  miles  about  Was  till'd 
As  thro'  the  I  at  eve  we  went, 
are  the  ladies  of  your  I  so  tall  ?  ' 
beam  Had  slanted  forward,  falling  in  a  Z  Of  promise ; 
I  promise  you  Some  palace  in  our  I, 
we  should  find  the  I  Worth  seeing ; 
'  Know  you  no  song  of  your  own  I,' 
swallow  winging  south  From  mine  own  I, 
Strove  to  buffet  to  I  in  vain. 
Or  like  a  spire  of  I  that  stands  apart 
Some  crying  there  was  an  army  in  the  I, 
Amazed  he  fled  away  Thro'  the  dark  I, 
Upon  the  skirt  and  fringe  of  our  fair  I, 
'  Our  I  invaded,  'sdeath !  and  he  himself  Your  captive. 
Of  l's  in  which  at  the  altar  the  poor  bride 
Knowledge  in  our  own  I  make  her  free, 
like  a  wild  horn  in  a  Z  Of  echoes, 
I  go  to  mine  own  I  For  ever : 
climbs  a  peak  to  gaze  O'er  I  and  main, 
held  A  volume  of  the  Poets  of  her  I : 
Far-shadowing  from  the  west,  a  Z  of  peace ; 
Was  great  by  Z  as  thou  by  sea.  (repeat) 
FoUow'd  by  the  brave  of  other  l's 
stand  Colossal,  seen  of  every  I, 
Till  in  all  l's  and  thro'  all  human  story 
let  the  Z  whose  hearths  he  saved  from  shame 
We  broke  them  on  the  Z,  we  drove  them  on  the  seas, 
hold  against  the  world  this  honour  of  the  Z. 


Edwin  Morris  127 

St.  S.  Stylites  194 

Talking  Oak  24 

260 

Golden  Year  29 

34 

44 

49 

Locksley  Hall  13 

Amphion  6 

Lady  Clare  10 

„       19 

L.  of  Burleigh  20 

Beggar  Maid  14 

The  Eagle  2 

Vision  of  Sin  221 

Enoch  Arden  104 

360 

578 

The  Brook  124 

Aylmer's  Field  31 

33 

45 

262 

294 

338 

765 

Sea  Dreams  87 

„        101 

Lucretius  172 

Princess  i  79 

83 

110 

169 

191 

ii  1 

47 

139 

Hi  162 

171 

iv  84 

90 

185 

281 

484 

v49 

219 

276 

377 

419 


vi21& 

vii  36 

174 

Cow.  42 

Ode  on  Well.  84,  90 

194 

221 

223 

225 

Third  of  Feb.  ZO 

48 


Break,  happy  Z,  into  earlier  flowers  !  W.  to  Alexandra  10 

Melt  into  stars  for  the  l's  desire !  „  21 

Roar  as  the  sea  when  he  welcomes  the  Z,  And  welcome  her, 

welcome  the  l's  desire,  „  24 

thine  own  I  has  bow'd  to  Tartar  hordes  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  23 

Love  has  led  thee  to  the  stranger  Z,  „  31 

an'  a  nicetish  bit  o'  Z.  iV.  Farmer,  N.  S.  22 

if  thou  marries  a  good  un  I'll  leave  the  Z  to  thee.  „  56 

if  thou  marries  a  bad  un,  I'll  leave  the  I  to  Dick. —  „  58 

In  l's  of  palm  and  southern  pine ;  In  l's  of  palm,  of 

orange-blossom.  The  Daisy  2 

To  l's  of  summer  across  the  sea ;  „      92 


Land 

Land  (continued)    And  o'er  a  weary  sultry  I, 
'  The  Gods  are  moved  against  the  I.' 
To  spill  his  blood  and  heal  the  I : 
The  I  is  sick,  the  people  diseased, 
Thine  the  I's  of  lasting  summer. 
Ran  the  I  with  Roman  slaughter, 
And  travell'd  men  from  foreign  I's ; 
That  thou  hadst  touch'd  the  I  to-day. 
The  violet  of  his  native  I. 
Thro'  I's  where  not  a  leaf  was  dumb ; 
We  heard  them  sweep  the  winter  I ; 
And  thine  in  undiscover'd  I's. 
Whose  feet  are  guided  thro'  the  I, 
And  He  that  died  in  Holy  L 
And  all  the  framework  of  the  Z ; 
The  hard  heir  strides  about  their  I's, 
That  stays  him  from  the  native  / 
In  I's  where  not  a  memory  strays, 
We  live  within  the  stranger's  I, 
Ring  out  the  darkness  of  the  I, 
that  Uve  their  lives  From  I  to  I  ; 
They  melt  like  mist,  the  solid  I's, 
better  war !  loud  war  by  I  and  by  sea, 
sapphire-spangled  marriage  ring  of  the  I  ? 
To  the  death,  for  their  native  I. 
riding  at  set  of  day  Over  the  dark  moor  I, 
One  still  strong  man  in  a  blatant  I, 
I  past  him,  I  was  crossing  his  I's ; 
From  underneath  in  the  darkening  I — 
High  over  the  shadowy  I. 
Flying  along  the  I  and  the  main — 
a  I  that  has  lost  for  a  little  her  lust 
I  have  felt  with  my  native  I, 
Dear  to  thy  I  and  ours,  a  Prince  indeed, 
waging  war  Each  upon  other,  wasted  all  the  I ; 
And  thus  the  I  of  Cameliard  was  waste, 
Shall  I  not  lift  her  from  this  I  of  beasts  Up  to  my 
power  on  this  dark  I  to  lighten  it, 
a  slope  of  I  that  ever  grew.  Field  after  field, 
and  all  the  I  from  roof  and  rick, 
name  of  evil  savour  in  the  I,  The  Cornish  king, 
lady  of  high  lineage,  of  great  I's, 
and  they  past  to  their  oWn  I ; 
and  we  smile,  the  lords  of  many  I's ; 
I  know  not,  but  he  past  to  the  wild  I. 
a  dreadful  loss  Falls  in  a  far  I 
In  a  hollow  I,  From  which  old  fires  have  broken, 
pray'd  me  for  my  leave  To  move  to  your  own  I, 
I  will  weed  this  I  before  I  go. 
broke  the  bandit  holds  and  cleansed  the  I. 
and  they  past  to  their  own  I. 
And  brought  report  of  azure  I's  and  fair, 
a  silver  shadow  slipt  away  Thro'  the  dim  I ;  and 

all  day  long  we  rode  Thro'  the  dim  I 
two  fair  babes,  and  went  to  distant  I's ; 
Moaning  and  calling  out  of  other  I's, 
The  heathen,  who,  some  say,  shall  rule  the  I 
and  Prince  and  Lord  am  I  In  mine  own  I, 
Endow  you  with  broad  I  and  territory 
Estate  them  with  large  I  and  territory 
This,  from  the  blessed  I  of  Aromat — 
and  higher  than  anv  in  all  the  I's ! 
in  a  Z  of  sand  and  tnoms,  (repeat) 
wearying  in  a  Z  of  sand  and  thorns, 
his  I  and  wealth  and  state  were  here, 
thou  shalt  be  as  Arthur  in  our  I.' 
the  hind  To  whom  a  space  of  I  is  given  to  plow. 
And  she  was  a  great  lady  in  her  I. 
served  with  choice  from  air,  I,  stream,  and  sea. 
So  those  three  days,  aimless  about  the  I, 
I  Was  freed,  and  the  Queen  false, 
Tintagil,  half  in  sea,  and  high  on  I, 
Clung  to  the  dead  earth,  and  the  I  was  still, 
^d  blackening,  swallow'd  all  the  I, 
'  O  Lancelot,  get  thee  hence  to  thine  own  I, 


380 


Land 


wai  17 

The  Victim  6 
44 
„.       45 
Boddicea  43 
84 
In  Mem.  x  6 
xiv  2 
xviii  4 
xxiii  10 
XXX  10 
xl32 
Ixvi  9 
Ixxxiv  42 
,lxxxvii24: 
xc  15 
xciii  3 
civ  10 
cv  3 
cvi  31 
cxv  17 
cxxiii  7 
Maud  I  iAl 
iv  6 
t)ll 
ix  6 
a;  63 
xiii  6 
Hi  6 
40 
m38 
HI  vi  39 
58 
Ded.  of  Idylls  41 
Com.  of  Arthur  7 
20 
throne,         „  80 

93 
428 
433 
Gareth  and  L.  385 
609 
Marr.  of  Geraint  45 
353 
443 
Geraint  and  E.  497 
821 
889 
907 
944 
955 
Balin  and  Balan  168 


Merlin  and  V.  424 

707 

962 

Lancelot  and  E.  65 

917 

957 

1322 

Holy  Grail  48 

247 

„  376,  390 

420 

587 

606 

907 

Pdleas  and  E.  98 

149 

391 

Last  Tournament  338 

505 

Guinevere  8 

,.       82 

»      88 


Land  (continued)     Back  to  his  I;  but  she  to  Almesbury  Fled 
Began  to  slay  the  folk,  and  spoil  the  I.' 
the  I  was  full  of  signs  And  wonders 
sent  a  deep  sea- voice  thro'  all  the  I, 
for  all  the  I  was  full  of  life. 
Have  everywhere  about  this  I  of  Christ 
Clave  to  him,  and  abode  in  his  own  I. 
A  Z  of  old  upheaven  from  the  abyss 
That  stood  on  a  dark  strait  of  barren  I : 
All  night  in  a  waste  I,  where  no  one  comes, 
And  loyal  to  thy  I,  as  tliis  to  thee — 
The  voice  of  Britain,  or  a  sinking  I, 
Betwixt  the  native  I  of  Love  and  me. 
And  all  the  low  dark  groves,  a  I  of  love !     A  Z  of 
promise,  a  Z  of  memory,  A  I  of  promise  flowing 
with  the  milk  And  honey 
Each  way  from  verge  to  verge  a  Holy  L, 
Was  not  the  Z  as  free  thro'  all  her  ways 
when  their  faces  are  forgot  in  the  Z — 
Borne  into  ahen  I's  and  far  away, 
whole  I  weigh'd  him  down  as  ^tna  does  The  Giant 
of  Mythology :  he  would  go.  Would  leave  the  I 
for  ever, 
(for  in  Julian's  I  They  never  nail  a  dumb  head 
So  bore  her  thro'  the  solitary  Z 
And  all  the  Z  was  waste  and  soUtary : 
Heir  of  his  face  and  Z,  to  Lionel, 
myself  was  then  TraveUing  that  Z, 
A  dismal  hostel  in  a  dismal  Z, 
Before  he  left  the  Z  for  evermore ; 
Scatteringly  about  that  lonely  Z  of  his, 
self-exile  from  a  Z  He  never  would  revisit, 
question'd  if  she  came  From  foreign  I's, 
I  leave  this  Z  for  ever.' 
He  past  for  ever  from  bis  native  Z ; 
wailing,  waihng,  the  wind  over  Z  and  sea — 
'  Cast  awaay  on  a  disolut  Z  wi'  a  vartical  soon ! ' 
sick  men  from  the  Z  Very  carefully  and  slow. 
When  he  leaps  from  the"  water  to  the  Z. 
When  a  wind  from  the  I's  they  had  ruin'd 
all  the  broad  Vs  in  youi'  view 
an  niver  lookt  arter  the  I — 
Fur  we  puts  the  muck  o'  the  Z 
For  'e  warn't  not  burn  to  the  I, 
An'  'e  digg'd  up  a  loomp  i'  the  Z 
an'  'is  gells  es  belong'd  to  the  I ; 
Fresh  from  the  surgery-schools  of  France  and  of 

other  I's—  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  3 

from  the  beach  and  rioted  over  the  Z,  V.  of  Maeldune  58 

Isle,  where  the  heavens  lean  low  on  the  Z,  83 

Hunger  of  glory  gat  Hold  of  the  Z.  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  124 

m  my  wanderings  all  the  I's  that  he  Tiresias  25 

For  that  sweet  mother  Z  which  gave  them  birth  „       122 

Having  I's  at  home  and  abroad  The  Wreck  46 

warm  winds  had  gently  breathed  us  away  from  the  Z—  „         63 

Rich  was  the  rose  of  sunset  there,  as  we  drew  to  the  Z  •  '        136 

and  dogg'd  us,  and  drew  me  to  Z  ? 
fatal  neck  Of  Z  running  out  into  rock — 
all  that  suffers  on  Z  or  in  air  or  the  deep, 
I  am  left  alone  on  the  I, 

down  the  rocks  he  went,  how  loth  to  quit  the  Z ! 
without  a  friend,  and  in  a  distant  Z. 
pools  of  salt,  and  plots  of  Z— 
And  shine  the  level  I's, 
Heard  by  the  Z. 
Dominant  over  sea  and  Z. 
True  leadei-s  of  the  I's  desire ! 
On  you  will  come  the  curse  of  all  the  Z, 
island-myriads  fed  from  alien  Vs — 
And  splendours  of  the  morning  Z, 
Falls  on  the  threshold  of  her  native  I, 
of  their  flight  To  summer  I's ! 
sword  that  lighten'd  back  the  sun  of  Holy  I. 


Guinevere  127 

„    137 

„    232 

„    247 

„     259 

„    431 

„    440 

Pass,  of  Arthur  %2 

178 

370 

To  the  Queen  ii  2 

24 

Lover's  Tale  i  25 


332 
337 
662 
759 
802 


iv  17 

36 

90 

125 

129 

133 

141 

183 

185 

209 

331 

368 

387 

Eizpah  1 

North.  Cobbler  3 

The  Revenge  15 

55 

112 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  51 

VUlage  Wife  25 

32 

44 

48 

112 


your  tale  of  I's  I  know  not, 
paced  his  I  In  fear  of  worse, 


Despair  2 

„      10 

,,      45 

„      63 

The  Flight  38 

„       100 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  207 

Early  Spring  15 

24 

Helen's  Tower  2 

Hands  all  Round  26 

The  Fleet  3 

„       12 

Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  8 

Demeter  and  P.  3 

The  Ring  87 

Happy  43 


To  Ulysses  34 
To  Mary  Boyle  29 


Land 

Land  (continued)    I  hear  a  chami  of  song  thro'  all 

K*!^?^'-    .u        ,.        ,•       ..  Prog,  of  Spring  47 

basking  in  the  sultry  plains  About  a  ^  of  canes ;  „              78 

so  to  the  I's  Last  limit  I  came—  '     Merlin  and  the  G.  109 

Landaulet     An  open  /  Whirl'd  by,  which,  Sisters  (E.  and  E  )  85 

phantom  of  the  whirhng  I  For  ever  past  me  by  •  114 

Landbird    at  length  The  /,  and  the  branch  " Columhus  73 

Landed    moving  up  the  coast  they  i  him,  Enoch  Arden  665 

we  came  to  the  Isle  of  Shouting,  we  I,  V.  of  Maeldune  27 

When  1 1  agam,  with  a  tithe  of  my  men,  „             130 

So  they  row'd,  and  there  we  I —  Frater  Ave  etc  2 

Lander    Heard  by  the  I  in  a  lonely  isle,  Marr.  of  Geraint  330 

Landing    sent  a  crew  that  i  burst  away  Enoch  Ar den  ^4. 

Landing-place    Some  l-f,  to  clasp  and  say,  '  Farewell ! '      In  Mem.  xlvii  15 

Landlike    cloud  That  I  slept  along  the  deep.  ciii  56 

Landlord     Kindly  /,  boon  companion—  Locksley  H.,  Sixtu  240 

Landmark     Nor  I  breathes  of  other  days,  /„  Mem.  civ  11 

Will  see  me  by  the  I  far  away,  Demeter  and  P.  124 

Landscape     ^ or  these  alone,  but  every  i  faii-,  Palace  of  Art  89 

And  her  the  Lord  of  aU  the  I  round  Aylmer's  Field  815 

The  eternal  I  of  the  past ;  /„  Mem.  xlvi  8 

The  I  winking  thro'  the  heat :  Ixxxix  16 

II          from  end  to  end  Of  all  the  I  underneath,  ,"            c  2 

I  grow  Familiar  to  the  stranger's  child ;  "          ci  19 

Framiiig  the  mighty  I  to  the  west,  Lovers' Tale  i  406 

\          3.1  which  your  eyes  Have  many  a  time  ranged  over  The  Ring  150 

Landscape-lover    L-l,  lord  of  language  To  Virqil  5 

Landscape-painter    He  is  but  a  Z-p,  L.ofBurlJghl 

that  he  Were  once  more  than  l-p,  ^           53 

Landskip    man  and  woman,  town  And  I,  Princess  iv  446 

The  light  retreated.  The  I  darken'd,  Merlin  and  the  G.  31 

Blurr  d  ike  a  Z  m  a  ruffled  pool,—  Romney's  R.  114 

Landslip    Like  some  great  I,  tree  by  tree,  Amphion  51 

Landward    Or  often  journeying  I ;  Enoch  A  rden  92 

Ihe  latest  house  to  I :  yoo 

I  found  Only  the  I  exit  of  the  cave.  Sea  Dreams  96 
And  here  on  the  I  side,  by  a  red  rock,  glimmers 

T        ,^^-^^^}^''c    „.  .  Maud  I  iv  10 
Lane  (Muiam)    See  IWirigm,  Miriam  Lane 

Lane    (See  also  By-lane,  Laane,  Ocean-lane,  Sea-lane) 

The  I's,  you  know,  were  white  with  may.  Miller's  D  130 

like  a  I  of  beams  athwart  the  sea.  Golden  Year  50 

in  the  leafy  I's  behind  the  down,  Enoch  Arden  97 

chmbing  street,  the  mill,  the  leafy  I's,  „          607 

He  led  me  thro'  the  short  sweet-smelling  Vs  The  Brook  122 

Long/'*  of  splendour  slanted  Princess  iv  478 

iJy  glimmering  I's  and  walls  of  canvas  „              ^6 

A  light-blue  i  of  early  dawn,  /„  Mem.  cxix  7 

l-led  down  the  I  of  access  to  the  King,  Gareth  and  L.  661 

thro  I's  of  shouting  Gareth  rode  Down  the  slope  street,         „  699 

Where  under  one  long  I  of  cloudless  ail-  Balin  attd  Balan  461 

up  that  I  of  light  into  the  setting  sun.  The  Flight  40 

few  I's  of  elm  And  whispering  oak.  To  Mary  Boyle  67 

Language    (See  also  Love-language)    In  the  I  wbere- 

with  Spring  Letters  cowslips  Adeline  61 

Such  as  no  I  may  declare.'  Two  Voices  384 

To  learn  a  I  known  but  smatteringly  Aylmer's  Field  433 

Your  I  proves  you  still  the  child.  Princess  ii  58 

whose  I  rife  With  rugged  maxims  hewn  from  life ;  Ode  on  Well.  183 

A  use  in  measured  I  lies ;  in  Mem.  v  6 

And  with  no  I  but  a  cry.  „    Uy  20 

Writ  in  a  I  that  has  long  gone  by.  Merlin  and  V.  674 

Than  I  grasp  the  infinite  of  Love.  Lover's  Tale  i  484 

The  music  that  robes  it  in  I  The  Wreck  24 

thro'  that  mirage  of  overheated  I  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  113 

lord  of  I  more  than  he  that  sang  the  Works  To  Virgil  5 

in  every  1 1  hear  spoken,  people  praise  thee.  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  1 

Langued    i  gules,  and  tooth'd  with  grinning  savagery.'    Balin  and  Balan  197 

Languid    (See  also  Love-languid)    His  bow-string 

slacken'd,  I  Love,  Elednore  117 

a  I  fire  creeps  Thro'  my  veins  „        130 

The  I  light  of  your  proud  eyes  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  59 

All  round  the  coast  the  I  air  did  swoon,  Lotos-Eaters  5 

tearful  glimmer  of  the  I  dawn  On  those  long,  D.  of  F.  Women  74 

O'er  both  his  shoulders  drew  the  I  hands,  M.  d' Arthur  174 


381 


Large 


and  di7P  Tn  ;  ];,^k„      .j    •  .  '    ''"''■P^s,  Vision  of  Sm  12 

ana  due  io  I  lunbs  and  sickness;  FrineeU  vi  ^77 

And  myself  so  I  and  base.  Xw  Wfil 

Struck  me  before  the  I  fool,  Maud  I  v  18 

Pipe  on  her  pastoral  hillock  a  I  note,  " IlLl  94 

Steh'hl^  ^^""f.*"  ^T^'  "-"l^  ^'^y'  ^«««^^«^  <^^  E.  Toi 

u,      .  ^^  slioulders  drew  the  I  hands,  Pass  of  Arthur  342 

my  blood  Crept  hke  marsh  drains  thro'  all  my  I  ^ 

limbs:                                                               "^  r       >    /r  7    ••  E-o 

"""^i  ^:i':ri' '  ^^'"™°^-^'  %S  "ilo 

f hnnif    .*''\P"'Pi«  ««^- ,         ,  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  4 

r^n«2r^TH'     .'^  my  whole  soul  I'es  And  faints.  Lover's  Tale  i  267 

^^Z  /'    TJl^'f  not  steep'd  m  golden  I's,  Madeline  1 

1  he  ^  5  of  thy  love-deep  eyes  Elednore  76 

fh  ^T^  V'P  u"  ^'  S^"?"^  sickness,  Enoch  Arden  823 

S  ?.w '^   A^\^  drooping  I  wept :  Princess  vi  268 

all  for  I  and  self-pity  ran  Mme  down  my  face,  vii  1  S<> 

andoutofHeaptacry;  "            {55 

Languorous     To  wile  the  length  from  I  hours,  "        ^u  63 

T  0^1  '^*f  JJ?^"^^,  ^y  Lancelot's  I  mood.  Last  Tournament  194 

Lank       Shp-shod  waiter,  I  and  sour.  Vision  of  Sin  71 

Lantern     Swung  roimd  the  Ughted  I  of  the  hall ;  Guinevere  262 

Lap  (toiees,  etc. )     Upon  my  I  he  laid  his  head :  The  Sisters  17 

1  hose  m  whose /!'s  our  hmbs  are  nursed.  To  J  S  10 

And  fairest,  laid  his  head  upon  her  I,  M.  d' Arthur  208 

My  beard  has  grown  into  my  V  Day-Dm.,  Revival  22 

loo  ragged  to  be  fondled  on  her  I,  Aylmer's  Field  686 

creature  laid  his  muzzle  on  your  I,  Princess  ii  272 

Leapt  from  her  session  on  his  I,  Merlin  and  V.  844 

And  fairest,  laid  his  head  upon  her  I,  Pass,  of  Arthur  376 

one  soft  I  Pillow'd  us  both :  Lover's  Tale  i  235 

sat  each  on  the  I  of  the  breeze ;  V.  of  Maeldune  38 

Lap  (drink)     Till  Robby  an'  Steevie  'es  'ed  their  I  Spinster's  S's.  121 

Lap  (verb)     Lest  we  should  Z  him  up  in  cloth  of  lead,  Gareth  and  L.  A^ 

Lapidoth     Like  that  great  dame  of  L  Princess  vi  32 

Lapping     And  the  wild  water  I  on  the  crag.'  1       M.  d' Arthur  71 

1  heard  the  water  I  on  the  crag,  116 

And  the  wild  water  I  on  the  crag.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  239 

I  heard  the  water  I  on  the  crag,  „            284 

Lapse  (s)     No  I  of  moons  can  canker  Love,  In.  Mem.  xxvi  3 

But  from  my  farthest  I,  my  latest  ebb,  Lover's  Tale  i  90 
Lapse  (verb)     or  seem  To  I  far  back  in  some  confused 

dream  Sonnet  To 3 

kmgdoms  overset.  Or  I  from  hand  to  hand.  Talking  Oak  258 

Lapsed     '  But,  if  1 1  from  nobler  place,  Two  Voices  358 

But  I  into  so  long  a  pause  again  Aylmer's  Field  630 

the  bells  L  into  frightful  stillness ;  Lover's  Tale  Hi  30 

Lapsing    See  Down-lapsing 

Lapt    (See  also  Close-lapt  Half-lapt)    earth  shall  slumber, 

I  in  universal  law.  Locksley  Hall  130 

I  In  the  arms  of  leisure.  Princess  ii  167 

I  in  wreaths  of  glowworm  light  The  mellow  breaker  „      iv  435 

Lapwing    (See  also  Pewit)    I  gets  himself  another  crest ;      Locksley  Hall  18 

Lax     lay  at  wine  with  L  and  Lucumo ;  Princess  ii  129 

Larboard     Roll'd  to  starboard,  roll'd  to  I,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  106 

two  upon  the  I  and  two  upon  the  starboard  The  Revenge  48 

Larch     When  rosy  plumelets  tuft  the  I,  In.  Mem.  xci  1 

There  amid  perky  I'es  and  pine,  Maud  I.  x  20 

Lard    See  Saame 

Larded    Old  boxes,  I  with  the  steam  Will  Water.  223 

See  thou  have  not  L  thy  last,  Gareth  and  L.  1084 

Larder    And  a  whirlwind  clear'd  the  I :  The  Goose  52 

Larding    these  be  for  the  spit,  L  and  basting.  Gareth  and  L.  1082 

Large     brazen  um  In  order,  eastern  flowers  T,  Arabian  Nights  61 

L  dowries  doth  the  raptured  eye  Ode  to  Memory  72 

With  his  I  calm  eyes  for  the  love  of  me.  The  Mermaid  27 

grow  so  full  and  deep  In  thy  I  eyes,       •  Elednore  86 

Thought  seems  to  come  and  go  In  thy  I  eyes,  „        97 

L  Hesper  glitter'd  on  her  tears,  Mariana  in  the  S.  90 

From  many  an  inland  town  and  haven  I,  (Fnone  117 

A  glorious  Devil,  I  in  heart  and  brain.  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  5 

Lit  with  a  low  I  moon.  Palace  of  Art  68 

We  saw  the  I  white  stars  rise  one  by  one,  D.  of  F.  Women  223 


Large 


382 


Xarge  {continued)    And  aU  about  the  I  lime  feathers 

X  rSe  of  prospect  had  the  mother  sow,  Wam'tflfM^i,  m 

Wait :  my  faith  is  I  in  Time,                    '  ltlj„^  nf  tt 

\  earning  for  the  I  excitement  that  the  cominc.  ^^  ^""^^  ^^ 

years  would  yield,                                         "=  r    i?     tt  n -,-,■, 

Bis  ^  gray  eyes  and  'weather-beaten  face  S^  Irfenn 

Drank  the  Z  air,  and  saw,  but  scarce  believed  S^al)1lams  34 

and  light  IS  I,  and  lambs  are  glad  oeajJr earns  6i 

The    blows  rain'd  as  here  Id  everywhere  He  rode  pfSsT^ol 

But  that  I  gnef  which  these  enfold  /»    m!         i  i 

O  YntVu  ^^P-'^"'^-'  t'-^i"  To  riper  growth  '"  ""'"^-Jil] 

O  Love,  thy  province  were  not  Z,  "        ?^-M 

Nor  dare  she  trust  a  Hay,  "     T^*  J^ 

self-infolds  the  Z  results  Of  force  that  would  have  "         ''^ 

forged  a  name.  ,     ...._ 

Be  Z  and  lucid  round  thy  brow  "  '^^"^.^o 

breeze  began  to  tremble  o'er  The  I  leaves  of  the  "         ^"^ 

sycamore, 

But  thrice  as  Z  as  man  he  bent  To  greet'us.  "       f,^  fo 

i  elements  in  order  brought,          «      "  "^-  »       czm  42 

With  Z,  divine,  and  comfortable  words.  Com  ofArthTAt 

Would  yield  hun  this  Z  honour  all  the  more ;  Garl  indL  Ifl 

High  nose,  a  nostril  Z  and  fine,  and  hands  L,  fair  ^^^ 

and  line ! — 

&)Z  mirth  lived  and  Gareth  won  the  quest.  '          14?^ 

A  lair  I  diamond,  added  plam  Sir  Torre,  oon 

So  fine  a  fear  m  our  Z  Lancelot  Must  needs  have  " 

moved  my  laughter :  ^q- 

his  Z  black  eyes  Yet  larger  thro'  his  leanness,  "             834 

Estate  them  with  Z  land  and  territory  "           1099 

dawn ""  ^         ^^^  '°°^''*'  ^^^  ^^^  ^'°°™  ^  ^osy  " 

AndZt  for  those  Z  eyes,  the  haunts  of  scorn,  ^"^"^^  ""^  ^'  11 

A^T     /*''  R"""^?  °^  ^  ^'g^*  °"  ^oods  and  ways.  "         394 

|t  ?3eTY?uSIr^^°  ^  ^-  ^^-'         ^-  Tizii 

The  gain  of  such  Z  life  a^  match'd  with  ours  LJSafim 

that  Z  phrase  of  yours  '  A  Star  among  the  stars.'  %iZ,fTl 

Watehn^  her  Z  light  eyes  and  gracious  looks,  Prog  ofTvrma  19 

She  spoke  at  Z  of  many  things  M.77    >^n^i« 

f^f:'''*'^L  ^'l""  ^^«  ^^■««'  Sz-J  Verulam,  FatceZflrl    S 

rSni4arbuS?nj,^-  ^^^^'  -*°  «^^^-  ,%f ^t^^^^^^^^ 

gnmTs?^nLSr^.r^^"P-^*^^^-P'  ^^^Sf  I 
-len  mues  to  northward  of  the  narrow  port  Open'd 

a  Z  haven:                                             ^          ^  j?      i.   ^  j      t^o 

Become  the  master  of  a  Z  craft  ^nocA  Jrrfew  103 

Sflrt^^:SS;5:L^or/>  ^£st4^ 

SIX  tS'tL1hop7"  *'^*'^""'  ^-  ^--z^- j^ 

The  Z  heart,  the  kindlier  hand  •  "  •  on 
Whereof  one  seem'd  far  Z  than  her  lord,  Geraint  and  J"  122 
But  work  as  vassal  to  the  Z  love,                                   M^fl  "w  #'  2qT 

The  text  no  Z  than  the  limbs  of  fleas ;  "'^'''  "'^  ^-  SJ 
Yet  Z  thro'  his  leanness,  dwelt  upon  her,                    LancdJt  and  F  8^ 

K  Z  glimpses  Shi?  rr,r  ^K*^  "'^^^'  ^'^  Tournament  610 

a  ui  {glimpses  ot  tnat  more  than  man  rir-^„ino  9i 

Ph.M^^'  °^^^  ^  %ht  than  I  ever  again  shaU  know-  The  wZk  78 

C^  'J^l  ?vf *  P ':  il^'  ^,^^  L'°"  I°°k  no  Z  than  the  ^  ^^ 

Oat,  lill  the  Cat  thro'  that  mirage  of  overheated 

language  loom  L  than  the  Lion^-  LocTcsleu  H    Sh^u  1 12 

mmd  ?  ^''^      ™  °^  '^^^''^'■'  ^"^''®^  ^'iy'  ^ 

Has  enter'd  on  the  Z  woman-world  Of  wives  rh.  Vi^r,  ]^ 

I.  once  half-crazed  for  Z  light           "' '^"^  J'VfelQ 


Larger  (conimMei)    L  and  fuller,  like  the  human  mind ! 

But  find  their  limits  by  that  Z  li^ht 
Larger-limb'd    and  one  Is  l-l  than  you  kre 
And  every  man  were  l-l  than  I  ' 

Largess    Nor  golden  Z  of  thy  praise. 

With  shower'd  Z  of  delight  In  dance  and  song 
Largest    Await  the  last  and  Z  sense  to  make 
Lariano    The  L  crept  To  that  fair  jfort 
Lari  Maxume    Virgilian  rustic  measure  Of  L  M 

rru    ,    ^^^'^^  ^'*  closest-caroU'd  strains 

Ihe  Z  could  scarce  get  out  his  notes 

quail  and  pigeon,  Z  and  leveret  lay 

hvelier  than  a  Z  She  sent  her  voice 

His  spirit  flutters  like  a  Z, 

And  the  Z  drop  down  at  his  feet 

mom  by  morn  the  Z  Shot  up  and  shrill'd 

merry  in  heaven,  O  I's,  and  far  away. 

That  holds  the  shadow  of  a  Z 

But  ere  the  Z  hath  left  the  lea 

The  Z  becomes  a  sightless  song 

T^en  would  he  whistle  rapid  as  any  Z 
What  knowest  thou  of  birds,  Z,  mavi^  merie 

lose  It,  as  we  lose  the  Z  in  heaven  '  ' 

Clear  as  a  Z,  high  o'er  me  as  a  Z,  ' 

'"''hfi!*— ^^^'''*''''°'*^'^  ^'^  ^'^'"^  ^'^  ^^^  ^^^^  of 

the  morning  song  of  the  Z, 

Theer  wur  a  Z  a-singin'  'is  best 

heaven  above  it  there  flicker'd  a  soneless  Z 

hears  the  Z  within  the  songless  egg  ' 

The  Z  has  past  from  earth  to  Heaven 

MoUy  Magee  kem  flyin'  acrass  me,  as  light  as  a  Z 

An' the  Z  fly  out  o' the  flowers  ' 

T     1    P  ^®^£^  ^^^  ^'  S°"®  wild  to  welcome 
Larkspur    The  Z  listens, '  I  hear,  I  hear  • ' 
Lam  (learn)    I  reckons  I  'annot  sa  mooch  to  I. 
Lam  d  (learned)    L  a  ma'  bea. 

hignorant  viUage  wife  as  'ud  hev  to  be  I  her  awn 

Lash  (eyelash)  and  Ves  like  to  rays  Of  darkness 
Lash  (whip)  Doom'd  them  to  the  Z.  '*'''"*'^' 
Lash  (verb)    My  men  shaU  Z  you  from  them  like  a 


Lass 

Prog,  of  Spring  112 
Akbar's  Dream  99 
Geraint  and  E.  144 
148 
My  life  is  full  5 
In.  Mem.  xxix  7 
Ancient  Sage  180 
The  Daisy  78 
76 
Bosalind  10 
Gardener's  D.  90 
Audley  Court  24 
Talking  Oak  122 
Day-Dm.,  Arrival  29 
Poet's  Song  8 
Princess  vii  45 
Window,  Ay  'A 
In  Mem.  xvi  9 
„  Ixviii  13 
„        cxv  8 
Gareth  and  L.  505 
1078 
Lancelot  and  E.  659 
-ffoZy  Grail  833 

Lover's  Tale  i  283 

■f  iVs<  QwarreZ  33 

iVortA.  Cobbler  4& 

V.  of  Maeldune  17 

Ancient  Sage  76 

T^  i?ZiyA<  62 

Tomorrow  21 

91 

i^rog^.  of  Spring  14 

ilf  aM<i  7  xxii  65 

k^.  Farmer,  0.  S.  13 

13 


FiZZaye  IFi/e  106 

Arabian  Nights  136 

2'Ae  Captain  12. 


like  a  pedant's  wand  To  Z  offence 
war  s  avenging  rod  ShaU  Z  all  Europe  into  blood  • 
L  the  maiden  into  swooning,  ' 

Z  with  storm  the  streaming  pane  ? 
Z  the  treasons  of  the  Table  Round.' 
Ihe  breakers  Z  the  shores  • 
Lash  d    me  they  Z  and  humiliated,  (repeat) 
1,  at  the  wizard  as  he  spake  the  word, 
gareth  Z  so  fiercely  with  his  brand 
But  I  in  vain  against  the  harden'd  skin 
dishorsed  and  drawing,  I  at  each  So  often 
And  Z  It  at  the  base  with  slanting  storm  • 

Toaa    'J'-     "^"l  ^^^^  ^"^  ^  to  the  helm  had  gone- 
Lass    ;  Siver,  I  kep  'urn,  I  kep  'urn,  my  Z,  ' 

iJ  ya  momd  the  waaste,  my  Z 1^ 

Doctor's  a  'toattler,  Z, 

thou's  sweet  upo'  parson's  Z 

Warn't  I  craazed  fur  the  I'es  mys^n  when  I  wur  a  lad  ? 

P«^?f  "^  *?>'"^'""  ^^'  '^^^  ^  a  ^  as  'ant  nowt  ? 

Parson's  Z  'ant  nowt,  an  she  weant 
thou  can  luvv  thy  Z  an'  'er  munny  too, 

thy  muther  says  thou  wants  to  marry  the  Z. 
^  What  can  it  matter,  my  Z  Jf  "  ^h 

Wait  a  little,  my  Z,  (repeat) 
You  wouldn't  kiss  me,  my  Z 

My  Z,  when  I  cooms  to  die' 

OusE-KEEPEB  Sent  tha  my  Z 
Fur  '  staiite  be  i'  taale,  my  Z  •' 
can  tha  tell  ony  harm  on  ''im'z?— 
to  be  sewer  I  haiites  'em,  my  Z 

I  laugh'd  when  the  I'es  'ud  talk  0'  their  Missis's  waavs 
An'  the  Missisis  talk'd  o'  the  I'es  —  ^  ' 


Aylmer's  Field  31 
Princess  i  L. 
To  F.  D.  Maurice  3< 
Boadicea  6' 
In  Mem.  Ixxii  '. 
Pelleas  and  E.  56U 
Pre/.  Poem  Broth.  S.  2 
Boadicea  49,  67 
Com.  of  Arthur  388 
Gareth  and  L.  968 
1143 
Marr.  of  Geraint  563 
Merlin  and  V.  635 
The  Wreck  IK 
N.  Farmer,  0.  8. 


„  -V.  s.  1: 
u 

24l 
25 
33' 
37 1 
First  Quarrel  59  f 
„    74,91 
86 
North.  Cobbler  103 
Village  Wife  1 
15 
»       19 
.,        31 

..        57 


Lass 


383 


Last 


Lass  (continued)    I'es  'ed  teard  out  leaves  i'  the  middle  Village  Wife  72 

Mad  wi'  the  I'es  an'  all —  „        78 

An'  saw  she  mun  hammergrate,  I,  „      104 

call'd  me  es  pretty  es  ony  I  i'  the  Shere ;  Spinster's  S's.  13 

an'  sarved  by  my  oan  little  I,  „          103 

Iiast    A  SPIRIT  haimts  the  year's  I  hours  A  spirit  haunts  1 

And  the  year's  I  rose.  „          20 

The  I  wild  thought  of  Chatelet,  Margaret  37 

trampled  under  by  the  I  and  least  Of  men  ?  Poland  2 

whose  sweet  face  He  kiss'd,  taking  his  I  embrace,  Two  Voices  254 

To  that  I  nothing  under  earth ! '  „       333 

L  night,  when  some  one  spoke  his  name,  Fatima  15 
It  is  the  I  New-year  that  I  shall  ever  see,  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  3 
dear  the  I  embraces  of  our  wives  And  their  warm 

tears :  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  70 

Sir  Bedivere,  the  I  of  all  his  knights,  M.  d' Arthur  7 

And  I,  the  I,  go  forth  companionless,  „      236 

Hebe  ended  Hall,  and  our  I  light,  „  Ep.  1 
I  night's  gale  had  caught,  And  blown  across  the  walk.    Gardener's  D.  124 

I  beheld  her  ere  she  knew  my  heart,  My  first,  I  love ;  „  277 
That  was  the  I  drop  in  the  cup  of  gall.                      Walk,  to  the  Mail  69 

Declare  when  I  Olivia  came  To  sport  Talking  Oak  99 

In  that  I  kiss,  which  never  was  the  I,  Love  and  Duly  67 

It  was  I  summer  on  a  tour  in  Wales :  Golden  Year  2 
Roll'd  in  one  another's  arms,  and  silent  in  a  Z 

embrace.  Locksley  Hall  58 

So  all  day  long  till  Enoch's  I  at  home,  Enoch  Arden  172 

But  when  the  I  of  those  I  moments  came,  „          217 

Ev'n  to  the  I  dip  of  the  vanishing  sail  She  watch'd  it,  „          245 

But  kept  the  house,  his  chair,  and  I  his  bed.  „          826 

The  I  remaining  pillar  of  their  house,  Aylmer's  Field  295 

They  might  have  been  together  till  the  I.  „            714 

I  made  by  these  the  I  of  all  my  race,  „            791 

Ev'n  to  its  Z  horizon,  „            816 

On  him  their  I  descendant,  „            834 

And  so  I  night  she  fell  to  canvass  you :  Princess  Hi  40 

L  night,  their  mask  was  patent,  and  my  foot  „     iv  326 

The  I  great  Englishman  is  low.  Ode  on  Well.  18 

Mourn,  for  to  us  he  seems  the  I,  „          19 

Have  left  the  I  free  race  with  naked  coasts !  Third  of  Feb.  40 

What  more  ?  we  took  our  I  adieu.  The  Daisy  85 

At  that  I  hour  to  please  him  well ;  In  Mem.  vi  18 

The  I  red  leaf  is  whirl'd  away,  „           xv3 

A  merry  song  we  sang  with  him  L  year :  „       xxx  16 

Upon  the  I  and  sharpest  height,  „     xlvii  13 

Man,  her  I  work,  who  seem'd  so  fair,  „           Ivi  9 

O  I  regret,  regret  can  die  !  „  Ixxviii  17 

On  that  I  night  before  we  went  „         ciii  1 

Now  fades  the  I  long  streak  of  snow,  „         cxv  1 

While  another  is  cheating  the  sick  of  a  few  I  gasps,  Maud  /  i  43 

He  now  is  first,  but  is  he  the  I?  „      iv  36 

Whom  but  Maud  should  I  meet  L  night,  „       vi  8 

L  week  came  one  to  the  county  town,  „      x  37 

L  year,  I  caught  a  glimpse  of  his  face,  „  xiii  27 

loud  on  the  stone  The  I  wheel  echoes  away.  „  xxii  26 

Her — over  all  whose  realms  to  their  I  isle,  Ded.  of  Idylls  12 

The  I  tall  son  of  Lot  and  Bellicent,  Gareth  and  L.  1 
No  later  than  I  eve  to  Prince  Geraint —                    Marr.  of  Geraint  603 

And  this  was  on  the  I  jear's  Whitsuntide.  „        840 

So  the  I  sight  that  Enid  had  of  home  Geraint  and  E.  24 
L  night  methought  I  saw  That  maiden  Saint  Balin  and  Balan  260 
Blazed  the  I  diamond  of  the  nameless  king.                Lancelot  and  E.  444 

And  came  the  I,  tho'  late,  to  Astolat :  „            618 

High  with  the  I  line  scaled  her  voice,  „           1019 

Hither,  to  take  my  I  farewell  of  you.  „           1275 

our  Lord  Drank  at  the  I  sad  supper  with  his  own.  Holy  Grail  47 

So  for  the  I  time  she  was  gracious  to  him.  Pelleas  and  E.  175 
Would  they  have  risen  against  me  in  their  blood  At 

the  I  day  ?  ^           462 
Make  their  I  head  like  Satan  in  the  North.                Last  Tournament  96 

Then  m  the  light's  I  gUmmer  Tristram  show'd  „            739 

hither  brought  by  Tristram  for  his  I  Love-offering  „            747 

It  was  their  I  hour,  A  madness  of  fareweUs.  Guinevere  102 

Bear  with  me  for  the  I  time  while  I  show,  „      454 

Leave  me  that,  I  charge  thee,  my  I  hope.  „      568 


Last  [continued)    Then,  ere  that  I  weird  battle  in  the 
west, 

one  I  act  of  knighthood  shalt  thou  see  Yet, 

Striking  the  I  stroke  with  Excahbur. 

And  I,  the  I,  go  forth  companionless, 

slowly  clomb  The  I  hard  footstep  of  that  iron  crag ; 

Like  the  I  echo  born  of  a  great  cry, 

Down  to  this  I  strange  hour  in  his  own  hall; 

— my  quarrel — the  first  an'  the  I. 

I  had  bid  him  my  I  goodbye ; 

Plunged  in  the  I  fierce  charge  at  Waterloo, 

fur  he  coom'd  I  night  sa  laate — 

I  night  a  dream — I  sail'd  On  my  first  voyage, 

You  will  not.    One  I  word. 

yet  Am  ready  to  sail  forth  on  one  I  voyage. 

With  this  I  moon,  this  crescent — her  dark  orb 

To  that  I  deep  where  we  and  thou  are  still. 

When  the  worm  shall  have  writhed  its  I,  and  its  I  brother- 
worm  will  have  fled 

go  To  spend  my  one  I  year  among  the  hills. 

Await  the  I  and  largest  sense  to  make 

The  I  long  stripe  of  waning  crimson  gloom, 

and  so  many  dead.  And  him  the  I ; 

I  year — Standin'  here  be  the  bridge,  when  I 

here  I  month  they  wor  diggin'  the  bog, 

Leave  the  Master  in  the  first  dark  hour  of  his  I 
sleep  alone. 

Vows  that  will  last  to  the  I  deathruckle, 

I  dream'd  I  night  of  that  clear  summer  noon, 

L  year  you  sang  it  as  gladly. 

And  at  the  I  she  said : 

oft  as  needed — I,  returning  rich, 

would  work  for  Annie  to  the  I, 

I  know  that  it  will  out  at  I.    O  Annie, 

At  I  one  night  it  chanced  That  Annie  could  not  sleep, 

may  she  learn  I  lov'd  her  to  the  I,' 

'  Woman,  disturb  me  not  now  at  the  I, 

and  thou  art  I  of  the  three. 

at  I — The  huge  paviUon  slowly  yielded  up, 

of  overpraise  and  overblame  We  choose  the  I. 

Let  go  at  I ! — they  ride  away — to  hawk 

at  I  With  dark  sweet  hints  of  some  who  prized  him 

Thanks  at  I !     But  yesterday  you  never  open'd  lip, 

At  I  they  found — his  foragers  for  charms — 

At  I  she  let  herself  be  conquer'd  by  him, 

Arthur  kept  his  best  until  the  I ; 

at  the  1 1  reach'd  a  door,  A  light  was  in  the  crannies, 

at  I  They  grew  aweary  of  her  fellowship : 

But  when  at  I  his  doubts  were  satisfied, 

Lionel,  when  at  I  he  freed  himself 

And  Harry  came  home  at  I, 

old  Sir  Richard  caught  at  I, 

At  Z I  go  On  that  long-promised  visit 

at  I  their  Highnesses  Were  half-assured 

we  are  all  of  us  wreck'd  at  I — 


Pass,  of  Arthur  29 

163 

168 

404 

447 

459 

Lover's  Tale  iv  358 

First  Quarrel  56 

Bizpah  41 

Sister's  (E.  and  E.)  64 

Village  Wife  123 

Columbus  66 

„      221 

237 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  9 

25 

Despair  85 

Ancient  Sage  16 

180 

221 

Tiresias  212 

Tomorrow  1 

,.      61 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  238 

Vastness  26 

Romney's  R.  74 

The  Throstle  6 

Palace  of  Art  208 

Enoch  Arden  143 

180 

402 

489 

835 

874 

G.  of  Swainston  15 

Gareth  and  L.  1378 

Merlin  and  V.  91 

107 

158 


270 

619 

900 

Holy  Grail  763 

837 

Lover's  Tale  i  108 

„  iv  84 

379 

First  Quarrel  35 

The  Revenge  98 

SisUrs  (E.  and  E.)  187 

Columbus  59 

Despair  12 


creeds  that  had  madden'd  the  peoples  would  vanish  at  Z,  ,',       24 

shape  it  at  the  Z  According  to  the  Highest  Ancient  Sage  89 

this  Hall  at  Z  will  go—  The  Flight  27 

Brothers,  must  we  part  at  Z  ?  Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  32 

yet  at  Z,  Gratitude — loneliness —  The  Ring  372 

Man  is  quiet  at  Z  as  he  stands  on  the  heights  of 

his  life  By  an  Evolution.  19 

Last  (verb)     Weep  on :  beyond  his  object  Love  can  Z :  Wan  Sculptor  5 

What  is  it  that  will  I  ?  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  45 

without  help  I  cannot  Z  till  morn.  M.  d' Arthur  26 

should  I  prize  thee,  couldst  thou  I,  Will  Water.  203 

a  passion  that  Vs  but  a  day ;  G.  of  Swainston  9 

I Z  but  a  moment  longer.  Spiteful  Letter  12 

Dreams  are  true  while  they  Z,  High.  Pantheism  4 

Bare  of  the  body,  might  it  Z,  In  Mem.  xliii  6 

And  love  will  Z  as  pure  and  whole  „  13 

there  no  shade  can  Z  In  that  deep  dawn  „        xlvi  5 

To  raise  a  cry  that  Vs  not  long,  ,,     Ixxv  10 

matin  songs,  that  woke  The  darkness  of  our  planet,  Z,  „    Ixxvi  10 

In  words  whose  echo  Vs,  Marr.  of  Geraint  782 


Last 


384 


""^SeK^^^^  Pass.  ofAnnur  194 

A  crown  the  Singer  hopes  may  I,  ^'"'''■''  ^"If  ^^  ^f^ 

a  name  may  I  for  a  thousand  yeare  -n.nFv     T,  ^o 

As  either  love,  to  I  as  Ion- '  -?,^'','^  Pr^jAe^  59 

'  Light-more  Light-whSe  Time  shall  1 1 '  t?   •!   "  *  Tower  8 

Vows  that  wiU  zt  the  last  deXucSe  ^^^'  F^^fr^J 

world  and  all  within  it  Will  only  I  a  miAute!  '  Voice  Zkeetct 

but    Z,  AUowmg  it,  the  Prince  and  Enid  ^'oices'paU,  etc.  4 

rode,  , 

X  in  a  roky  hollow,  belUng,  heard  rff  rA^  ^''''''?lm 

A  as  by  some  one  deathbfd  often  wail  "^ J  o^XX"  m 

X  we  came  To  what  our  people  call  7^5.  ti-  V7% 

and  Z  Framing  the  mighty  landscape  to  the  west  ^    ^"^'  '  S 

Laste  Sea^t)°  I'er  Sth'^'H^'*'"^  * ''^  ^^^-^^^^      ^^^^'•^^  --^  the  ^'?i 
of  alf-   1 1  whishper  was  sweet  as  the  lilt 

Lasted    Long  as  the  daylight  L,  Bait  nf  J°'^T1 1 

Lasting     '  She  wrought  herj>eoj>le  1  good  ■  ""•  '^TnZZ''"^  f. 

Thine  the  lands  of  I  suinn^er,   ^       '  ^^  ^^^  ^j*.^*'*  f  | 

Latangor    King  Brandagoras  of  Z  /o         /7"i*^*",f? 
Latch    (^..  also  Sneck)  ^Unlifted 'was  the  clinking  I  ■      ''""•  ''^Ij^il 

When  merry  milkmaids  click  the  Z,                   ^    '  rZn^Zt 

The  door  was  off  the  / :  they  peep'd  n      \\l 

Her  hand  dwelt  lingeringly  on  the/  v      i   j  T\^ 
Late     (See<asol.,.mi^  he felmed  humility  Perforce,        ^"^t^a'S'S 

I  fear  It  IS  too  Z,  and  I  shaU  die.'  '         Af^TKiH 

'  But  I  was  borA  too  1 :  5'  f.^'''^^''  180 

not  too  Z  to  seek  a  newer  world.  Golden  Year  15 

And  he  for  Italy-too  Z-too  I :  tF^^''\^1 

Too  ripe,  too  I !  they  come  too  I  for  use.  Sea  Dreamsi 

Or  soon  or  I,  yet  out  of  season,  Lucretius  211 

'They  seek  us :  out  so  I  is  out  of  rules.  PH^ellZ  219 

You,  hkewjse,  our  I  guests,  if  so  you  will,  "'^'''  Z  ojq 

They  rise,  but  linger;  it  is  Z-  7     i^  "     ^     ^, 

the  white  rose  wSps  '  She  hi-'  M^'j^'"'--  ^ 

And  now  of  Z I  seeliim  less  and  less,  Co/.TJ/^W  sg 

for  Pnnce  Geraint,  L  also  j/^        o]  Arthur  d&b 

'Z,  Z,  Sir  Prince,'  she  said,  ^"'•'•-  "•'^  ^«-«*'*'  \f„ 

so  Z  That  I  but  come  like  you  to  see  the  hunt.  "             i7s 

And  came  at  last,  tho'  Z,  to  Astolat :  Lancelot  and  E  61 8 

So  fierce  a  gale  made  havoc  here  of  I  Holy  Grail  729 

m  herself  she  moaned  '  Too  Z,  too  Z "  rS           \V^ 

•ilsoZ!     What  hour,  I  wonder,  nowP'  Gu^neverem. 

air  the  mms  had  taught  her;  '  i,  so  Z ' '  "        T cq 

L,  I,  so  1 1  and  dark  the  night  and  chill !     Z,  Z  so  Z '  " 

but  we  can  enter  still.  '                            jgo 

?No  \]ahf  ^i/zl  ''^"?°.*  «"ter  now.  (repeat)  Guinevere  170,"l73,  176 

No  light :  so  Z    and  dark  and  chill  the  night !  Guinevere  174 

0  let  us  m,  tho'  Z,  to  kiss  his  feet !     No,  no,  too  Z '  ve        '''*'"^^'  ^^^ 
cannot  enter  now.'  '      >  •  j' 

Will  tell  the  King  I  love  him  tho'  so  Z  ?  "        %k^ 

Still  hoping,  fearing  '  is  it  yet  too  Z  ?  '  "        fioi 

1  fear  It  is  too  Z,  and  I  shaU  die.'  Pa„  of  Arthur  ^R 
'you  have  not  been  here  of  Z.  SisZsiE  aJdv\  ^l 
Like  would-be  guests  an  hour  too  Z,  "'""'  ^^-  itesial  198 
As  If  the  Z  and  early  were  but  one-1  Ancienlsaae  222 
some  of  I  would  raise  a  wind  To  sing  thee  to  thy  ^   ^^ 

BuUhen  too  Z,  too  Z.  r^'/f/!!  on 

Whole  weeks  and  months,  and  early  and  Z,  TheSistefs  10 

Now,  tho;  my  lamp  was  lighted  Z,  there's  One  wiU 

TilTmTuow  Death,  like  some  Z  guest,  ^"^teaSTbsg 

The  Z  and  ear  y  roses  from  his  wall,  Eru^ch  Arden  IS 
all  of  an  evening  Z I  climb'd  t«  the'top  of  the  garth,        GrandmoZrfl 

X,  my  grandson !  half  the  morning  have  I  pacid  '^^'^ruimother  61 

these  sandy  tracts.  r    ?  j     rr    «•  .    , 

Warless?  war  will  die  out  Z  then.     Will  it  ever  ?  Z  "^      '    '""'^  ^ 

or  soon? 

Not  to-night  in  Locksley  HaU— to-morrow— vou  " 

you  come  so  Z.  "^     ' 

But  while  my  life's  Z  eve  endures  r^  j^  i'n  jy'    •     .^ 

she  that  cam^e  to  part  the^Hfc  z.  ^^  ^^^^  %^%r:^Z 


Late-left  L-l  an  orphan  of  the  squire. 
Late-lost  A  l-l  form  that  sleep  reveals 
Later    A  Z  but  a  loftier  Annie  Lee, 

But  that  was  I,  boyish  histories  Of  battle 

One  of  our  town,  but  Z  by  an  hour  ' 

Warring  on  a  I  day, 

For  it  hangs  one  moment  Z. 

The  primrose  of  the  Z  year, 

for  he  seem'd  as  one  That  all  in  Z, 

by  great  mischance  He  heard  but  fragments  of  her 


Laugh 

Miller's  D.  34 

In  Mem.  xiii  2 

Enoch  Arden  748 

Aylmer's  Field  97 

Sea  Dreams  263 

Ode  on  Well.  102 

Spiteful  Letter  16 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  119 

Gareth  and  X.  1129 


Z  words, 
'  Late,  late,  Sir  Prince,'  she  said,-  Z  than  we ! 
This  Z  light  of  Love  have  risen  in  vain 
Which,  cast  in  Z  Grecian  mould,  ' 

Later-rising    and  one  The  l-r  Sun  of  spousal  Love 
Late-shown     thought  Of  all  my  l-s  prowess  ' 

Latest     As  noble  till  the  1  day  ! 

To  where  the  bay  runs  up  its  Z  horn, 
my  Z  rival  brings  thee  rest. 
Not  only  we,  the  Z  seed  of  Time, 
Ev'n  as  she  dwelt  upon  his  Z  words. 
The  I  house  to  landward ;  but  behind, 
my  I  breath  Was  spent  in  blessing  her 
Then  of  the  I  fox — where  started — 
Was  it  the  first  beam  of  my  Z  day  ? 
From  growing  commerce  loose  her  Z  chain, 
charms  Her  secret  from  the  Z  moon  ?  ' 
To  take  her  Z  leave  of  home. 
To  where  he  breathed  his  Z  breath. 
That  hears  the  Z  linnet  trill. 
Her  father's  Z  word  humm'd  in  her  ear. 
But  from  my  farthest  lapse,  my  I  ebb, 
There,  there,  my  I  vision— then  the  event ! 
Days  that  will  glimmer,  1  fear,  thro'  life  to  mv  I 
breath ; 

Here  we  met,  our  Z  meeting— Amy-^sixty  years 

ago- 
Then  I  leave  thee  Lord  and  Master,  Z  Lord  of 

Locksley  Hall.  gs 

And  sacred  is  the  I  word;  To  Marq.  of'hufferin  3 


Mart,  of  Geraint  IIZ 

177 
Prin.  Beatrice  16 
To  Master  of  B.  6 
Prin.  Beatrice  6 
Holy  Grail  362 
To  the  Queen  22 
Audley  Court  11 
Locksley  Hall  89 
Godiva  5 
Enoch  Arden  454 
732 
883 
Aylmer's  Field  253 
Lucretius  59 
Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  33 
In  Mem.  xxi  20 
„  xl  6 

„      xcviii  5 
„  clO 

Lancelot  and  E.  780 
Lover's  Tale  i  90 
Hi  59 

The  Wreck  78 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  n\ 


Miriam,  breaks  her  Z  earthly  link  With  me  to-dav 
then  with  my  I  kiss  Upon  them. 
Till  earth  has  roll'd  her  Z  year — 
Latest-bom    Nursing  the  sickly  babe,  her  l-b 
Latest-left     For  thou,  the  l-l  of  all  my  knights 

For  thou,  the  l-l  of  all  my  knights. 

Late-writ    show'd  the  l-w  letters  of  the  king. 

Latin  (adj.)     in  flagrante—what's  the  X  word  ?— 

As  in  the  X  song  I  learnt  at  school, 

But  as  a  X  Bible  to  the  crowd  ; 

And  then  in  Latin  to  the  X  crowd, 

Latin  (s)    And  then  in  X  to  the  Latin  crowd, 

speakmg  clearly  in  thy  native  tongue— No  L— 
Latitude    hurricane  of  the  Z  on  him  fell. 
Latter     Until  the  I  fire  shall  heat  the  deep ; 

thou  wilt  be  A  Z  Luther,  and  a  soldier-priest 

But  in  these  Z  springs  I  saw 

Thy  Z  days  increased  with  pence  Go  down  amono 

the  pots : 
And  men  the  flies  of  Z  spring, 
(For  then  was  Z  April)  and  retum'd 
Lattice  (adj.)    here  and  there  on  I  edges  Lav  Or  book 
or  lute ;  •' 


The  Ring  41 

„       29| 

To  Ulysses  2S 

Enoch  Arden  15C 

M.  d' Arthur  124_ 

Pass,  of  Arthur  2^ 

Princess  i  175 

Wcdk.  to  the  Mail  34 

Edwin  Morris  79 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  18 

31 

31 

134 

Columbus  138 

The  Kraken  13 

To  J.  M.  K.  2 

Talking  Oak  75» 

Will  Water.  21 
In  Mem.  1 1.  _ 
Com.  of  Arthur  45l\ 

Princess  ii  29^ 


^"'f«  t^  tiy^'°'  ^^^-TV'  ^"^"^  ^  t^«  ^'^^^ted  breeze,      iSr"  2? 


As  by  the  Z  you  reclmed, 

if  I  could  follow,  and  light  Upon  her  Z, 

thro'  a  Z  on  the  soul  Looks  thy  fair  face 
Lattice-blind    Backward  the  l-b  she  flung. 
Latticed    (See  also  Close-latticed)    From  the  lone 

alley's  Z  shade  Emerged, 
Laud    X  me  not  Before  my  time, 

I  cannot  Z  this  life,  it  looks  so  dark : 
Laudamus    then  the  great '  Z '  rose  to  heaven. 
Laugh  (s)    Thereto  she  pointed  with  a  Z, 

He  laugh'd  a  Z  of  merry  scorn : 


i)ay-Dm.,  Pro.  5 

Princess  iv  100 

In  Mem.  Ixx  15 

Mariana  in  the  S.  87 

Arabian  Nights  112 

Lover's  Tale  iv  242 

To  W.  H.  Brookfleld  12 

Columbus  18 

D.  ofF.  Women  159 

Lady  Clare  81 


Laugh 


385 


Laurel 


I  i 


Laugh  (s)  (continued)    a  I  Ringing  like  proven  golden 

coinage  true,  Aulmer's  Field  181 

a  light  I  Broke  from  Lynette,  Garetk  and  L.  836 

answer'd  with  a  low  and  chuckling  I:  Merlin  and  V.  780 

She  broke  into  a  little  scornful  I:  Lancelot  and  E.  120 

I  heard  a  mocking  I '  the  new  Koran  ! '  Akbar's  Dream  183 

Laugh  (verb)     We  did  so  I  and  cry  with  you,  D.  of  the  O.  Year  25 

Baby  lips  will  I  me  down :  Locksley  Hall  89 

Spy  out  my  face,  and  ;  at  all  your  fears.'  Enoch  Arden  216 

a  tale  To  I  at— more  to  Z  at  in  myself —  Lucretius  183 

she  I's  at  you  and  man :  Princess  v  116 

the  neighbours  come  and  I  and  gossip,  Grandmother  91 

Why  I  ye  ?  that  ye  blew  your  boast  Gareth  and  L.  1229 

we  maidens  often  I  When  sick  at  heart,  Bcdin  and  Balan  497 

I  As  those  that  watch  a  kitten ;  Merlin  and  V.  176 

vanish'd  by  the  fairy  well  That  I's  at  iron —  „            429 

and  cry,  '  L,  little  well ! '  „            431 

I's  Saying,  his  knights  are  better  men  Lancelot  and  E.  313 

The  wide  world  I's  at  it.  Last  Tournament  695 

Ye  would  but  Z,  If  I  should  tell  you  Lover's  Tale  i  287 

L,  for  the  name  at  the  head  of  my  verse  To  A.  Tennyson  6 

Who  jest  and  I  so  easily  and  so  well.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  41 

For  all  that  I,  and  all  that  weep  Ancient  Sage  187 

to  I  at  love  in  death !  The  Ring  231 

I's  upon  thy  field  as  well  as  mine,  Akbar's  Dream  106 

Laughable    They  would  not  make  them  Z  in  all  eyes,        Geraint  and  E.  326 

Laugh'd    over  his  left  shoulder  I  at  thee,  The  Bridesmaid  7 

The  still  voice  I.     '  I  talk,'  said  he.  Two  Voices  385 

She  spoke  and  I :  I  shut  my  sight  for  fear :  (Enone  188 

He  I,  and  I,  tho'  sleepy.  The  Epic  44 

Lightly  he  I,  as  one  that  read  my  thought.  Gardener's  D.  106 

With  heated  faces ;  till  he  /  aloud ;  A  udley  Court  37 

And  I  and  Edwin  I ;  Edwin  Morris  93 

About  me  leap'd  and  I  The  modish  Cupid  Talking  Oak  QQ 

I,  and  swore  by  Peter  and  by  Paul :  Godiva  24 

He  I  a  laugh  of  merry  scorn :  Lady  Clare  81 

Blue  isles  of  heaven  I  between.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  6 

He  I,  and  yielded  readily  to  their  wish,  Enoch  Arden  370 

And  others  I  at  her  and  Philip  too,  ,,            477 

Caught  at  and  ever  miss'd  it,  and  they  I ;  „            752 

Katie  I,  and  laughing  blush'd,  till  he  L  also.  The  Brook  214 

easily  forgives  it  as  his  own.  He  I ;  Aylmer's  Field  402 

Petulant  she  spoke,  and  at  herself  she  I ;  Princess,  Pro.  153 

something  so  mock-solemn,  that  1 1  And  Lilia  woke  „               215 

Push'd  her  flat  hand  against  his  face  and  I ;  „            H  366 

eye  To  fix  and  make  me  hotter,  till  she  I:  „            Hi  47 

Stared  with  great  eyes,  and  I  with  alien  lips,  „           iv  119 

The  little  seed  they  I  at  in  the  dark,  „             vi  34 

This  brother  had  I  her  down,  Maud  I  xixlGO 

He  I  upon  his  warrior  whom  he  loved  Com.  of  Arthur  125 

He  i  as  is  his  wont,  and  answer'd  me  „            401 

With  all  good  cheer  He  spake  and  I,  Gareth  and  L.  302 

He  I;  he  spmng.  „            537 

when  he  found  the  grass  within  his  hands  He  Z ;  „          1226 

Arthur  I  upon  him.  Balin  and  Balan  16 

Thereat  she  suddenly  I  and  shrill,  „             493 

Loud  I  the  graceless  Mark.  Merlin  and  V.  62 

I  the  father  saying,  '  Fie,  Sir  Chiu-l,  Lancelot  and  E.  200 

and  in  her  heart  she  Z,  „              808 

wives,  that  I  and  scream'd  against  the  gulls,  Pelleas  and  E.  89 

'  Ay,  that  will  I,'  she  answer'd,  and  she  I,  „            132 

Till  all  her  ladies  I  along  with  her.  „            135 

L,  and  unbound,  and  thrust  him  from  the  gate.  „            260 

And  her  knights  L  not,  but  thrust  him  bounden  out  of  door.     „  314 

under  her  black  brows  a  swarthy  one  L  shrilly.  Last  Tournament  217 

Softly  I  Isolt ;  '  Flatter  me  not,  „              556 
When  Sir  Lancelot  told  This  matter  to  the  Queen,  at 

first  she  I  Lightly,  Guinevere  54 

Then  I  again,  but  faintlier,            '  „        58 

bones  that  had  I  and  had  cried —  Rizpah  53 

Sir  Richard  spoke  and  he  I,  The  Revenge  32 

soldiers  look'd  down  from  their  decks  and  I,  „           37 

'ow  1 1  when  the  lasses  'ud  talk  Village  Wife  57 

sold  This  ring  to  me,  then  I '  the  ring  is  weird.'  The  Ring  195 

fleshless  world  of  spirits,  Z:  A  hollow  laughter!  „        228 


Laugh'd  (continued)    I  a  little  and  found  her  two —  The  Ring  337 

and  it  I  like  a  dawn  in  May.  Bandit's  Death  20 

Laughing    L  all  she  can ;  Lilian  5 

L  and  clapping  their  hands  between.  The  Merman  29 

Francis,  I,  clapt  his  hand  On  Everard's  shoulder.  The  Epic  21 
Juliet  answer'd  Z, '  Go  and  see  The  Gardener's  daughter :  Gardener's  D.  29 

Katie  laugh'd,  and  I  blush'd.  The  Brook  214 

Then  I  '  what,  if  these  weird  seizures  Princess  i  82 

I  at  things  that  have  long  gone  by.  Grandmother  92 

Gareth  I,  '  An'  he  fight  for  this,  Gareth  and  L.  1345 

He  answer'd  I,  '  Najr,  not  like  to  me.  Merlin  and  V.  618 

Whereat  Lavaine  said,  I,  '  Lily  maid,  Lancelot  and  E.  385 

And  parted,  Z  in  his  courtly  heart.  „            1176 

And  I  back  the  light,  Ancient  Sage  168 

Then  Tiistram  I  caught  the  harp,  Last  Tournament  730 

I  sober  fact  to  scorn,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  109 

whom  the  I  shepherd  bound  with  flowers ;  To  Virgil  15 

Laughingly    till  they  kiss'd  meL,l;  (repeat)  The  Merman  17,  36 

Laughing-stock    drunkard's  football,  l-s's  of  Time,  Princess  iv  517 

Laughter     Till  the  lightning  I's  dimple  Lilian  16 

crimson-threaded  lips  Silver-treble  I  trilleth :  „      24 

whose  joyful  scorn.  Edged  with  sharp  I,  Clear-headed  friend  2 

Her  rapid  Fs  wild  and  shrill.  As  I's  of  the  woodpecker  Kate  3 

With  her  I  or  her  sighs,  Miller's  D.  184 

Lest  their  shrill  happy  I  come  to  me  (Enone  258 

from  out  that  mood  L  at  her  self -scorn.  Palace  of  Art  232 

light  Of  I  dimpled  in  his  swarthy  cheek  ;  Edwin  Morris  61 

Marrow  of  mirth  and  I ;  Will  Water.  214 

Save,  as  his  Annie's,  were  a  Z  to  him.  Enoch  Arden  184 

And  I  to  their  lords :  Aylmer's  Field  498 

Will  there  be  children's  I  in  their  hall  „            787 

Dislink'd  with  shrieks  and  I :  Princess,  Pro.  70 

a  sight  to  shake  The  midriff  of  despair  with  I,  „           i  201 

and  back  again  With  I:  „          ii  462 

And  secret  I  tickled  all  my  soul.  „          iv  267 

with  grim  I  thrust  us  out  at  gates.  „             556 

slain  with  I  roU'd  the  gilded  Squire.  „            v22 

spied  its  mother  and  began  A  bUnd  and  babbling  I,  „         vi  137 

Waking  I  in  indolent  reviewers.  Hendecasyllabics  8 

The  delight  of  happy  I,  Maud  II  iv  29 

Gareth  answer'd  them  With  I,  Gareth  and  L.  209 

He  laugh'd  ;  the  I  jarr'd  upon  Lynette :  „          1226 

And  crown'd  with  fleshless  I —  „          1383 
he  moved  the  Prince  To  I  and  his  comrades  to 

applause.  Geraint  and  E.  296 

It  made  the  Z  of  an  afternoon  Merlin  and  V.  163 

some  light  jest  among  them  rose  With  I  Lancelot  and  E.  179 
Must  needs  have  moved  my  I :  now  remains  But 

little  cause  for  I :  „              596 

And  I  at  the  limit  of  the  wood,  Pelleas  and  E.  49 

Is  all  the  I  gone  dead  out  of  thee  ? —  Last  Tournament  300 

With  shrieks  and  ringing  I  on  the  sand  Lover's  Tale  Hi  32 

Crazy  with  I  and  babble  and  earth's  new  wine.  To  A.  Tennyson  2 
one  quick  peal  Of  I  drew  me  thro'  the  glimmering 

glades  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  116 

Breaking  with  I  from  the  dark  ;  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  18 

echo  helpless  I  to  your  jest !  To  W.  H.  Brookfidd  5 

moving  on  With  easy  I  find  the  gate  Tiresias  200 

As  I  over  wine,  And  vain  the  I  as  the  tears.  Ancient  Sage  184 

'  Yet  wine  and  I  friends !  „            195 

Gazing  at  the  Lydian  I  of  the  Garda  Lake  Frater  Ave,  etc.  8 

fleshless  world  of  spirits,  laugh'd :  A  hollow  I !  The  Ring  229 

There  is  I  down  in  Hell  Forlorn  15 

there  past  a  crowd  With  shameless  I,  St.  Telemachus  39 

Laughter-stirr'd    his  deep  eye  l-s  With  merriment  Arabian  Nights  150 

Launcelot    Sir  L  and  Queen  Guinevere  Rode  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  20 

Launch    L  your  vessel.  And  crowd  your  canvas.  Merlin  and  the  G.  126 

Laureate    Hear  thy  myriad  I's  hail  thee  monarch  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  6 

Laurel     There  in  a  sUent  shade  of  I  brown  Alexander  9 

The  peacock  in  his  Z  bower,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  15 

This  1  greener  from  the  brows  To  the  Queen  7 

The  twinkling  I  scatter'd  silver  lights.  Gardener's  D.  118 

she  comes  and  dips  Her  Z  in  the  wine.  Will  Water.  18 

gain'd  a  Z  for  your  brow  Of  soimder  leaf  You  might  have  won  3 

And  cavern-shadowing  I's,  hide !  Lucretius  205 

2b 


Laurel 


386 


Lawless 


Laurel  {continv^d)    Upon  a  pillar'd  porch,  the  bases  lost 

In  Z :  Princess  i  231 

the  porch  that  sang  All  round  with  I,  „         ii  23 

And  hear  thy  I  wh^per  sweet  In  Mem.  xxxvii  7 

To-night  iingather'd  let  us  leave  This  I,  ,  „                 cv2 

Just  now  the  dry-tongued  I's'  pattering  talk  *  Maud  I  xviii  8 

Came  glimmerir^  thro'  the  I's  At  the  quiet  erenfall,  „      II  iv  77 

Bard  whose  f  ame-Ut  I's  glance  To  Victor  Hugo  4 

Lightning  may  shrivel  the  I  of  Caesar,  Parnassus  4 

evergreen  Z  is  blasted  by  more  than  lightning !  „        12 

Lanrerd    sowing  the  nettle  on  all  the  I  graves  of  the  Great ;        Fastness  22 

Laurel-shrubs    the  l-s  that  hedge  it  around.  Poet's  Mind  14 

Laurence    Since  I  beheld  young  L  dead.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  28 

Lava    Claymore  and  snowshoe,  toys  in  I,  Princess,  Pro.  18 

Lavaine  (a  knight  of  the  Bound  Table)    two  strong  sons, 

Sir  Torre  and  Sir  L,  Lancelot  and  E.  174 

L,  my  younger  here.  He  is  so  full  of  lustihood,  „            202 

Before  this  noble  knight,'  said  young  L,  „            208 

'O  there,  great  lord,  doubtless,'  L  said,  „            281 

needs  must  bid  farewell  to  sweet  L.  „            341 

L  Past  inward,  as  she  came  from  out  the  tower.  „            345 

L  Eetuming  brought  the  yet-imblazon'd  shield,  „            378 

Whereat  L  said,  laughing,  '  Lily  maid,  „            385 

Abash'd  L,  whose  instant  reverence,  „            418 

So  spake  L,  and  when  they  reach'd  the  lists  „            428 

Lancelot  answer'd  young  L  and  said,  „            445 

L  gaped  upon  him  As  on  a  thing  miraculous,  „            452 

Sir  L  did  well  and  worshipfully ;  „            491 

With  young  L  into  the  poplar  grove.  „            509 

Gasping  to  Sir  L,  '  Draw  the  lance-head :  „            511 

'  Ah  my  sweet  lord  Sir  Lancelot,'  said  L,  „            512 
L  drew,  and  Sir  Lancelot  gave  A  marvellous  great 

shriek  „            515 
'  and  find  out  our  dear  L.'    '  Ye  will  not  lose  your 

wits  for  dear  L :  „            754 

'  L,'  she  cried  '  L,  How  fares  my  lord  Sir  Lancelot  ? '             „            794 

L  across  the  poplar  grove  Led  to  the  caves :  „            804 

Besought  L  to  write  as  she  devised  A  letter,  „          1103 

Lava-lake    lava-light  Glares  from  the  l-l  Kapiolani  14 

Lava-light    l-l  Glares  from  the  lava-lake  „          13 

Lave  (to  bathe)    sunshine  I's  The  lawn  by  some 

cathedral,  D.  of  F.  Women  189 

Lave  (leave)     '  An'  whin  are  ye  goin'  to  Z  me  ?  '  Tomorrow  17 

Lavender    standing  near  Purple-spiked  I :  Ode  to  Memory  110 

Lavin'  (leaving)     But  I  must  be  I  ye  soon.'  Tomorrow  13 

Laving    springs  Of  Dirce  I  yonder  battle-plain,  Tiresias  139 
Lavish  (adj.)     But  thou  wert  nursed  in  some  deUcious 

land  Of  I  lights,  Elednore  12 
The  I  growths  of  southern  Mexico.                        Mine  be  the  strength  14 

of  all  his  Z  waste  of  words  Remains  the  lean  P.  W.  The  Brook  191 

Or  Heaven  in  I  bounty  moulded,  grew.  Aylmer's  Field  107 

L  Honour  shower'd  all  her  stars.  Ode  on  Well.  196 
But  all  the  Z  hills  would  hum  The  murmur  of  a 

happy  Pan :  In  Mem.  xxiii  11 

Her  I  mission  richly  wrought,  „       Ixxxiv  34 
heard  in  thought  Their  Z  comment  when  her  name 

was  named.  Merlin  and  V.  151 
And  Z  carol  of  clear-throated  larks  Fill'd  all  the 

March  of  Ufe !—  Lover's  Tale  i  283 
Lavish  (verb)    Z  all  the  golden  day  To  make  them 

wealthier  Poets  and  their  B.  3 

Lavish'd    O  vainly  Z  love  !  Merlin  and  V.  859 
Law    (See  also  Com-laws)     Shall  we  not  look  into 

the  I's  Supp.  Confessions  172 

I's  of  marriage  character'd  in  gold  Isabel  16 

f'lving  light  To  read  those  I's ;  „      19 

ye  by  Z,  Acting  the  Z  we  live  by  without  fear;  CEnoneMl 

Circled  thro'  all  experiences,  pure  Z,  „      166 

And  reach  the  Z  within  the  I:  Two  Voices  141 
stay'd  the  Ausonian  king  to  hear  Of  wisdom  and  of  Z.  Palace  of  Art  112 

Roll'd  round  by  one  fix'd  Z.  „            256 

And  in  its  season  bring  the  Z ;  Love  thou  thy  land  32 
harmonies  of  Z  The  growing  world  assume,            England  and  Amer.  16 

He,  by  some  Z  that  holds  in  love.  Gardener's  D.  9 

in  my  time  a  father's  word  was  I,  Dora  27 


Law  (continued)    My  home  is  none  of  yours.    My  will  is  I.'  Dora  4« 

You  knew  my  word  was  Z,  and  yet  you  dared  „ 

But  there  was  I  for  us ;  Walk,  to  the  Mail  8{ 

by  Nature's  Z,  Have  faded  long  ago ;  Talking  Oak  75 

hated  by  the  wise,  to  Z  System  and  empire  ?  Love  ami  Duty  1 

dole  Unequal  I's  unto  a  savage  race,  Ulysses  i 

slumber,  lapt  in  universal  Z.  Locksley  Hall  13( 

But  I's  of  nature  were  our  scorn.  The  Voyage  9i 

Mastering  the  lawless  science  of  our  Z,  Aylmer's  Field  43i 

Not  follow  the  great  Z  ?  Lucretius  lli 

f  ulmined  out  her  scorn  of  I's  Sahque  Princess  ii  13! 

Electric,  chemic  I's,  and  all  the  rest,              '•  „           38- 

Nor  would  I  fight  with  iron  I's,  „         iv  71 

We  knew  not  your  ungracious  I's,  „           399" 

truer  to  the  Z  within  ?  „        v  189 

biting  I's  to  scare  the  beasts  of  prey  „           393 

our  sanctuary  Is  violate,  our  I's  broken :  „         w  60 

'  Our  Vs  are  broken :  let  him  enter  too.'     ^  „           317 

We  break  our  I's  with  ease,  but  let  it  be.'  „           323 
your  Highness  breaks  with  ease  The  Z  your  Highness 

did  not  make :  „            326 

Sweet  order  lived  again  with  other  I's :  „        vii  19 

and  storm'd  At  the  Oppian  Z.  „           124 

sons  of  men,  and  barbarous  Vs.  (repeat)  „   234,  256 

reverence  for  the  I's  ourselves  have  made,  „     Con.  55 

my  Lords,  not  well :  there  is  a  higher  Z.  Third  of  Feb.  12 

God  is  Z,  say  the  wise ;  High.  Pantheism  13 

For  if  He  thunder  by  I  the  thunder  is  yet  His  voice.  „                14 

L  is  God,  say  some  :  no  God  at  all,  says  the  fool ;  „                15 

In  holding  by  the  Z  within.  In  Mem.  xxxiii  14 

But  bettex  serves  a  wholesome  Z,  „          xlviii  10 

And  love  Creation's  final  Z —  ,,               Ivi  14 

For  nothing  is  that  errs  from  Z.  „            Ixxiii  8 

And  loyal  unto  kindly  Vs.  „         Ixxxv  16 

And  music  in  the  bounds  of  Z,  „       Ixxxvii  34 

And  dusty  purlieus  of  the  Z.  „        Ixxxix  12 

With  sweeter  manners,  purer  Vs.  „              cvi  16 

In  all  her  motion  one  with  Z ;  „            cxxii  8 

One  God,  one  Z,  one  element,  „         Con.  142 

Rather  than  hold  by  the  Z  that  I  made,  Maud  I  i  55 

such  As  have  nor  Z  nor  king ;  Gareth  and  L.  632 

crave  His  pardon  for  thy  breaking  of  his  Vs.  „            986 

and  whatever  loathes  a  Z :  Marr.  of  Geraint  37 

Clear'd  the  dark  places  and  let  in  the  Z,  Geraint  and  E.  943 

Deeming  our  courtesy  is  the  truest  I,  Lancelot  and  E.  712 

own  no  lust  because  they  have  no  Z !  Pelleas  and  E.  481 

He  saw  the  Vs  that  ruled  the  tournament  Last  Tournament  160 

Red  ruin,  and  the  breaking  up  of  Vs,  Guinevere  426 

and  their  I  Relax'd  its  hold  upon  us,  „        456 

wrath  which  forced  my  thoughts  on  that  fierce  I,  „        537 

some  were  doubtful  how  the  Z  would  hold,  Lover's  Tale  iv  270 

Glanced  at  the  point  of  Z,  to  pass  it  by,  „            276 

By  all  the  Vs  of  love  and  gratefulness,  „            278 

But  I  knaws  the  Z,  I  does,  Village  Wife  16 

this  changing  world  of  changeless  I,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  6 

chime  with  never-changing  L.  To  Duke  of  Argyll  11 

To  work  old  Vs  of  Love  to  fresh  results.  Prog,  of  Spring  85 

For  all  they  rule— by  equal  Z  for  all ?  Akbar's  Dream  110 

Fashion'd  after  certain  Vs ;  Poets  and  Critics  5 

Lawful    And  I,'  said  he,  '  the  Z  heir.  Lady  Clare  86 

Z  and  lawless  war  Are  scarcely  even  akin.  Maud  II  v  94 

But  free  to  stretch  his  limbs  in  I  fight,  Geraint  and  E.  754 

Lawk    L !  'ow  I  laugh'd  when  the  lasses  Village  Wife  57 
Lawless  (adj.)    running  fires  and  fluid  range  Of  I  airs,    Supp.  Confessions  148 

Mastering  the  Z  science  of  our  law,  Aylmer's  Field  435 

Confused  by  brainless  mobs  and  Z  Powers ;  Ode  on  Well.  153 

lawful  and  I  war  Are  scarcely  even  akin.  Maud  II  v  94 
Not  making  his  high  place  the  Z  perch  Of  wing'd 

ambitions,  Ded.  of  Idylls  22 

therebefore  the  I  warrior  paced  Unarm'd,  Gareth  and  L.  914 

For  in  that  realm  of  Z  turbulence,  Geraint  and  E.  521 

To  shun  the  wild  ways  of  the  I  tribe.  „              608 

when  I  myself  Was  half  a  bandit  in  my  Z  hour,  „              795 

And  wroth  at  Tristram  and  the  Z  jousts,  Last  Tournament  237 

for  me  that  sicken  at  your  Z  din,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  149 


Lawless 


387 


Lay 


Lawless  (adj.)  (continued)    Thou  leather  of  the  I  crown  As  of 

the  I  crowd  ;  Freedom  31 

Lawless  (s)     Nothing  of  the  I,  of  the  Despot,  On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  12 

Lawn  (grassy  level)    (See  also  Garden-lawn,  Orchard- 
lawns,  Terrace-lawn)     And  many  a  shadow- 
chequer'd  I 
It  springs  on  a  level  of  bowery  I, 
Or  only  look  across  the  I, 
The  Vs  and  meadow-ledges  midway  down 
Aloft  the  mountain  I  was  dewy-dark, 
In  each  a  squared  I, 
Leading  from  I  to  I. 

A  noise  of  some  one  coming  thro'  the  I, 
broad  sunshine  laves  The  I  by  some  cathedral, 
the  range  of  I  and  park : 
Flow,  softly  flow,  by  I  and  lea, 
Dreams  over  lake  and  I, 
girt  the  region  with  high  cliff  and  I : 
I's  And  winding  glades  high  up  like  ways  to  Heaven, 
I  steal  by  Vs  and  grassy  plots, 
thro'  the  bright  I's  to  his  brother's  ran, 
princely  halls,  and  farms,  and  flowing  I's, 
Gave  his  broad  I's  until  the  set  of  sun 
The  sward  was  trim  as  any  garden  I : 
others  lay  about  the  I's,  Of  the  older  sort, 
fields  Are  lovely,  lovelier  not  the  Elysian  I's, 
rosy  heights  came  out  above  the  Vs. 
rode  we  with  the  old  king  across  the  I's 
Myriads  of  rivulets  hurrying  thro'  the  I, 
the  I  as  yet  Is  hoar  with  rime,  or  spongy-wet ; 
voice  and  the  Peak  Far  over  summit  and  I, 
counterchange  the  floor  Of  this  flat  I 
lay  and  read  The  Tuscan  poets  on  the  I: 
By  night  we  Unger'd  on  the  I, 
Now  dance  the  lights  on  I  and  lea. 
And  Ulies  fair  on  a.  I; 
But  the  rivulet  on  from  the  I 
saw  deep  I's,  and  then  a  brook, 
apples  by  the  brook  Fallen,  and  on  the  ^5. 
So  on  for  all  that  day  from  I  to  I 
the  dews,  the  fern,  the  founts,  the  I's ; 
dimly-glimmering  I's  Of  that  Elysium, 
Lawn  (linen)    Slow-dropping  veils  of  thinnest  I, 

broad  earth-sweeping  paU  of  whitest  I, 
Lawrence  (Sir  Henry)    our  L  the  best  of  the  brave : 
Lawrence  Aylmer    (iSee  also  Aylmer) 

stile  In  the  long  hedge, 
Lawyer    was  a  God,  and  is  a  I's  clerk, 
Vext  with  I's  and  harass'd  with  debt : 
I  came  into  court  to  the  Judge  and  the  I's. 
But  not  the  black  heart  of  the  I  who  kill'd  him 
I  stole  them  all  from  the  I's — 
For  the  I  is  bom  but  to  murder — 
I  knaws  the  law,  I  does,  for  the  I  ha  towd  it  me. 
the  I  he  towd  it  me  That  'is  taail  were  soa  tied  up 
Lay  (s)    woke  her  \vith  a  I  from  fairy  land. 
So,  Lady  Flora,  take  my  I, 
So,  Lady  Flora,  take  my  I, 
In  I's  that  will  outlast  thy  Deity  ? 
If  these  brief  I's,  of  Sorrow  bom, 
Nor  dare  she  trust  a  larger  /, 
And  lo,  thy  deepest  I's  are  dumb 
Demand  not  thou  a  marriage  I ; 
Has  Unk'd  our  names  together  in  his  I, 
this  I — Which  Pelleas  had  heard  sung  before  the 

Queen, 
many  a  mystic  /  of  Ufe  and  death 
Adviser  of  the  nine-years-ponder'd  I, 


Lay  (verb)    (See  also  Laiy) 
the  chambers. 
An  open  scroll.  Before  him  I : 
They  should  have  stabb'd  me  where  1 1,  (repeat) 
She  loosed  the  chain,  and  down  she  I ; 


Arabian  Nights  102 
Poet's  Mind  31 
Margaret  65 
(Enone  6 
„    48 
Palace  of  Art  22 
Z>.  of  F.  Women  76 
178 
190 
The  Blackbird  6 
A  Farewell  5 
Vision  of  Sin  11 
47 
Enoch  A  rden  572 
The  Brook  170 
Aylmer's  Field  341 
654 
Princess,  Pro.  2 
95 
a  462 
Hi  342 
365 
V  236 
„      vii  220 
To  F.  D.  Maurice  41 
Voice  and  the  P.  2 
In  Mem.  Ixxxix  2 
24 
„  xcv  1 

„  cxv9 

Maud  I  xiv  2 
29 
Holy  Grail  380 
385 
Last  Tournament  373 
727 
Demeter  and  P.  150 
Lotos-Eaters  11 
Lover's  Tale  ii  78 
Def.  of  Lucknow  11 
So  L  A,  seated  on  a 

The  Brook  197 

Edwin  Morris  102 

Maud  I  xix  22 

Rizpah  33 

„       40 

„       52 

„      64 

Village  Wife  16 

29 

Caress'd  or  chidden  8 

Day -Dm.,  Moral  1 

Ep.  1 

Lucretius  72 

In  Mem.  xlviii  1 

13 

„        Ixxvi  7 

Con.  2 

Lancelot  and  E.  112 

Pelleas  and  E.  396 

Guinevere  281 

Poets  and  their  B.  6 


and  I  Upon  the  freshly-flower'd  slope. 
To  win  his  love  llin  wait : 


thick-moted  sunbeam  I  Athwart 

Mariana  78 

The  Poet  9 

Oriana  55,  60 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  16 


Miller's  D.  Ill 
The  Sisters  11 


Lay  (verb)  (continued)    L,  dozing  in  the  vale  of  Avalon,     Palace  of  Art  107 

i  there  exiled  from  eternal  God,  ^^          263 
you  may  I  me  low  i'  the  mould  and  think  no 

more  of  me.  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  4 

high  masts  flicker'd  as  they  I  afloat ;  D.  of  F.  Women  113 

And  on  thy  heart  a  finger  I's,  On  a  Mourner  11 
On  one  side  I  the  Ocean,  and  on  one  L  a  great  water,      M.  d' Arthur  11 

Where  I  the  mighty  bones  of  ancient  men,  „          47 

So  Uke  a  shatter'd  column  Hhe  King;  I        221 

Where  quail  and  pigeon,  lark  and  leveret  I,  Audley'Court  24 
L  great  with  pig,  wallowing  in  sun  and  mud.            Walk,  to  the  Mail  88 

1 1  Pent  in  a  roofless  close  of  ragged  stones ;  St.  S.  Stylites  73 

this  is  none  of  mine ;  L  it  not  to  me.  „          124 

On  the  coals  11,  A  vessel  full  of  sin :  „          169 

And  at  my  feet  she  I.  Talking  Oak  208 

but  a  moment  I  Where  fairer  fruit  of  Love  „          250 

1 1,  Mouth,  forehead,  eyelids,  Tithonus  57 

The  dewy  sister-eyelids  I.  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  4 

On  the  mossy  stone,  as  1 1,  Edward  Gray  26 

And  I's  it  thrice  upon  my  hps.  Will  Water.  19 

And  I  your  hand  upon  my  head.  Lady  Clare  55 

Leapt  up  from  where  she  I,  „          62 

In  their  blood,  as  they  I  dying.  The  Captain  55 

L  betwixt  his  home  and  hers ;  L.  of  Burleigh  28 

And  while  he  I  recovering  there,  Enoch  Arden  108 

Enoch  I  long-pondering  on  his  plans ;  „          133 

L  lingering  out  a  five-years'  death-in-life.  „          565 

Stay'd  hj  this  isle,  not  knowing  where  she  I :  „          630 

f ail'd  a  httle.  And  he  I  tranced ;  „          793 
L  hidden  as  the  music  of  the  moon                              Aylmer's  Field  102 

L  deeper  than  to  wear  it  as  his  ring —  „              122 

silenced  by  that  silence  I  the  wife.  Sea  Dreams  46 

1 1,'  said  he,  '  And  mused  upon  it,  „        107 

right  across  its  track  there  I,  „        126 

belt,  it  seem'd,  of  luminous  vapour,  I,  „        209 

I's  His  vast  and  filthy  hands  upon  my  will,  Lucretius  219 
on  the  pavement  I  Carved  stones  of  the  Abbey-ruin     Princess,  Pro.  13 

about  it  I  the  guests.  And  there  we  join'd  them :  „                106 

patting  Lilia's  head  (she  I  Beside  him)  „               125 

there  on  lattice  edges  /  Or  book  or  lute ;  „             ii  29 

spoke  of  those  That  I  at  wine  with  Lar  and  Lucumo ;  „               129 

others  I  about  the  lawns,  „               462 

court  that  I  three  parts  In  shadow,  „            Hi  20 

L  out  the  viands.'  „               347 

And  I  me  on  her  bosom,  and  her  heart  „            iv  103 

on  the  purple  footcloth,  I  The  Uly-shining  child ;  „               286 

glove  upon  the  tomb  L  by  her  like  a  model  „               597 

All  her  fair  length  upon  the  ground  she  I:  „               ti  59 

And  I  my  little  blossom  at  my  feet,  „                100 

As  in  some  mystic  middle  state  II;  „              vil8 

I's  on  every  side  A  thousand  arms  and  rushes  „                 36 

To  where  her  wounded  brethren  I;  „                 90 

L  like  a  new-fall'n  meteor  on  the  grass,  „               136 

but  he  that  I  Beside  us,  Cyril,  %,               163 

or  if  you  scorn  to  I  it.  Yourself,  „               183 

those  two  hosts  that  I  beside  the  walls,  „               383 

L  silent  in  the  muffled  cage  of  life :  „            vii  47 

I  Quite  simder'd  from  the  moving  Universe,  „                 51 

I I  still,  and  with  me  oft  she  sat :  „  91 
I  could  no  more,  but  I  like  one  in  trance,  „  151 
while  with  shut  eyes  1 1  Listening ;  „  223 
L  thy  sweet  hands  in  mine  and  trust  in  me.'  „  366 
Where  shall  we  I  the  man  whom  we  deplore  ?  Ode  on  Well.  8 
L  your  earthly  fancies  down,  „  279 
There  I  the  sweet  httle  body  Grandmother  62 
Sun-smitten  Alps  before  me  /.  The  Daisy  62 
in  his  coffin  the  Prince  of  courtesy  I.  G.  ofSwainston  10 
And  dead  men  I  all  over  the  way.  The  Victim  21 
there  at  tables  of  ebony  I,  Boadicea  61 
Till  growing  winters  I  me  low ;  In  Mem.  xl  30 
That  I  their  eggs,  and  sting  and  sing  „  1 11 
I  and  read  The  Tuscan  poets  on  the  lawn.  „  Ixxxix  23 
little  shallop  I  At  anchor  in  the  flood  below ;  „  ciii  19 
I  Sick  once,  with  a  fear  of  worse,  Maud  I  xix  72 
Was  it  he  I  there  with  a  fading  eye  ?  „       //  »  29 


Lay 

Lay  (verb)  (coniinTud)    When  he  I  dying  there 
Then  to  strike  him  and  him  I  low,  ' 

bhrunk  hke  a  f  ainr  changeling  I  the  mage  • 
I  could  chmb  and  I  my  hand  upon  it, 
t^     "^r^^  !^^y  ^^  '^ot-  But  brii^  him  here 

KfT^  f"  ^^r  ^  ^^'^  ^^°  ^  Among  the  Ses 

Half  feU  to  nght  and  half  to  left  and  ^ 

tus  pnncedom  I  Close  on  the  borders    ' 

Gmnevere  I  late  into  the  morn 

L  s  claim  to  for  the  lady  at  his  side. 

Let  me  I  lance  m  rest,  O  noble  host 

/  W.k  r^™?^"'?  ^^"^  °^  unworthiness ; 

A^'.u^^'u^^'"  ^^^2  in  the  dim-yeUow  hght 

And  tho'  she  I  dark  in  the  pool,  ^    ' 

i-md  hsten'd  brightening  as  she  Z- 

down  his  enemy  roll'd,  And  there'?  still; 

bo  I  the  man  transfixt. 

feare  To  lose  his  bone,  and  I's  his  foot  upon  it 

And  cast  him  and  the  bier  in  which  he?        ' 

yet  ?  still  and  feign'd  himself  as  dead, 

(It  j  beside  him  m  the  hollow  shield) 

And  here  n  this  penance  on  myself 

the  huge  Earl  I  slain  within  his  hall. 

But  while  Geraint  ^heahng  of  his  hurt, 

when  I  am  anno  Wh^  .,„„j  i.„  7  .,  .  ' 


388 


. — ."iu  f  ucaung  oi  ms  nun 

when  I  am  gone  Who  used  to  I  them  ' 

To  I  that  devil  would  I  the  Devil  in  me.' 
A?M  1.«\o^Jy  ^ith  slow  moans  to  where  he  I 
At  Merlin  s  feet  the  wily  Vivien  I.  '' 

While  aU  the  heathen  I  at  Arthur's  feet, 
and  he  ?  as  dead  And  lost  to  life 

7  V    f"u^^  -^J^'^  ^""^  ^^'d  bis  feet, 
J  Foot-gilt  with  aU  the  blossom-dust 
that  1 1  And  felt  them  slowly  ebbing, 
she  I  as  dead,  And  lost  aU  uie  of  lifl.- 

7^11  ^1  '1®  ■'^"."o^  o^''  be  ?  as  dead, 

VHI  *"  *beir  bones  were  bleach'd 

kJ:  \!  r^bow  faU'n  upon  the  irass, 

brought  his  horse  to  Lancelot  whWhe  L 

And  ever-tremulous  aspen-trees,  he  I. 

arms  and  mighty  hands  L  naked  on  the  wolfskin 

Z,  Speaking  a  still  good-morrow  with  her  eyes 

F.iS  uT  ,°f  "1^'  *°d  I  me  on  it.  ' 
PaU  d  all  its  length  m  blackest  samite,  I. 
Uut  fast  asleep,  and  I  as  tho'  she  smil^ 

great  banquet  I  along  the  hall  ' 

power  To  ?  the  sudden  heads  of  violence  flat, 

Frozen  bv  T^T^  ^°°^  "^  ^^^^  *^«  ^rown  earth 
8b^ ;  Th^  ^^'^fVleep  four  of  her  damsels  I : 

Si  ffihSljVt'^™^^  ''^'  ^^^  ^--' 
Uke  a  subtle  beast  Z  couchant  with  his  eves 
I  made  them  ?  their  hands  in  mine  aS  swear 
water        ^  '^'  ^'^'  """^  0°  0"«  ^  ^  ^at 
Where  Uhe  mighty  bones  of  ancient  men 
So  hke  a  shatter'd  column  I  the  Kii^  •      ' 
a  common  hght  of  eyes  Was  on  us  a? 'we  ?  • 
M,^?  hr'"^''*^*'^  ^^'  ™"d,  L  Uke  a  nTap  before  me 
fT.'J!^±Ti!!'S'^-^,^  them  1 1;'' 


Mavd  II  a  67 
r90 

Cow.  of  Arthur  363 

Gareth  and  L.  50 

379 

903 

1405 

il/arr.  of  Geraint  33 
157 
487 
496 
632 
599 
657 
733 

Geraint  and  E.  161 
166 
562 
572 
588 
726 
739 
806 
931 


Lead 


Lay  (verb)  (continued)    five-fold  thv  term  Of  ™aro  t  ?  ^■ 

I  like  the  dead  by  the  dead  ^       '     ^ '  ^^imia*  33 

and  there  in  the  boat  1 1  ^^*  Wreck  112 

i  thine  uphill  shoulder  to  the  wheel  .     ■      '^       ^^^ 

all  night  so  cahn  you  I                     '  ^  ^"^"'^  ^^ge  279 

Dumb  on  the  winter  heath  he  I  r.    T^  ^^^^^  ^ 

And  ?  on  that  funereal  boat       '  t    i^    -Uead  Prophet  13 

The  fatal  ring  I  near  her      '  ^^  ^"'•?-  "/  ^^fferin  34 

Who  yearn  to  I  my  lovir^  head  imnn  -^^i,,  i  u           -^^^  ^^^  ^^0 
iyour  Plato  for  one  St^  Hn J^^°°  ^^^^ ^"P^°"«  ^.^east., ,    Happy  26 


5aZm  OTwi  ^oZan  141 

298 
301 
592 
Merlin  and  V.  5 
144 
213 
219 
281 
436 
644 
709 
969 
Lancelot  and  E.  43 
431 
493 
524 
813 
1032 
1113 
1120 
1142 
1161 
1243 
1286 
Eoly  Grail  180 
310 
PeUeas  and  E.  31 
433 
453 
516 
Guinevere  11 
„     467 

Pass,  of  Arthur  179 
215 
389 
Lover's  Tale  i  237 
590 
607 


and  two  upon  the  starboard  I,  rp.    ^  -  • 

ateS  tt?eX^^^'^  '  ^°"°'  us  all  in  a  ring;  ^''  ^^^  fl 

Ihaf  lejsure  watching  overhead 

she  z  with  a  flower  in  one  hand 

U  At  thy  pale  feet  this  ballad 

10  I  me  m  some  shrine  of  this  old  Spain 

mdon  ?  like  a  little  sun  on  the  taT^^sand, 

S^&^%rd^er^^*^«'-^»^". 


Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  83 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  39 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alvee  19 

Columbus  207 

V.  of  Maeldune  57 

Bait,  of  Srunanburk  31 

Tiresias  22 


-J  -—"  "^  "  "V  ^"viiig  ueaa  upc 
i  your  Plato  for  one  minute  down. 
T  ..,.7       ^^"  J^^  ^^^  ^'^ost  of  the  Brute 
r^Z  ?/^^  ^  dark-green  I's  of  shade. 
Layest    O  moon,  that  I  aU  to  sleep  again 

LavtoTflln  °°'  ^-^  ^?^^  S^^«  yKelc'ome 
Laying    Z  down  an  unctuous  lease  Of  hfe 

Autumn  I  here  and  there  A  fiery  finder 

i  his  trams  m  a  poison'd  gloom  Wro^ht. 

It  fell  Like  flaws  in  summer  I  lusty  cwn  • 

/  there  thy  golden  head,  ^  " 

And  him  the  last ;  and  I  flowers 
T  !r^®°    ^"'^'  lay-women,  who  will  come, 

ftll^°T^A  J.ay-T°'  ^-«''  '"'bo  will  come, 
Lazar    And  him,  the  I,  in  his  rags  • 

Shaking  his  hands,  as  from  a  /'^  rags 
Lazarus    When  L  left  his  charnel-cave 

^  *SlS°d,^'    '"'  ">»»"  «S  .he  little''''""  '^-  "•"'  ^J  '* 
Waves  all  its  I  hhes,  and  creeps  on 
*  earmg  the  I  gossip  of  the  port,      ' 
By  this  the  I  gossips  of  the  port 
evermore  His  fancy  fled  before  the  I  wind  Returnina 
Sir  Aylmer  half  forant.  hi«  7  c^,i„      ^'^  ^teturmng. 


To  Master  of  B.  4 

The  Dawn  22 

Gardener's  D.  116 

<?are<A  ajwi  Z.  1061 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  11 

Will  Water.  243 

/w  Afem.  xcix  11 

il/atti  /  a;  8 

i¥arr.  of  Geraint  764 

Guinevere  535 

Tiresias  212 

'S'tV  y.  Oldcastle  117 

117 

/w  il/em.  ca;a;m  10 

Pelleas  and  E.  317 

/«  Afem..  ara;^i  1 

^To  Mary  Boyle  31 


Miller's  I).  73} 

Gardener's  D.  431 

^wcA  Jrtien  3351 

472J 

6571 


bir  Aylmer  half  forgot  his  ?  smile  "'a,      ,"„■      ""•• 

Shpt  o'er  those  I  lirSits  dovtnThe  wind  ^^^"^'  ^^^'^  i^S 

Ihis  Gama  swamp'd  in  I  tolerance.  p  '••  !™' 

reach  Its  fathng  innocent  arms  And  I  lingering  fingers  ^'"^'^^^^J,^ 
And  Hengths  on  boundless  shores;  gangers.  ,     1^^139 

From  a  httle  Z  lover  Who  hnf  nUir^^  Ko„      u-    j      n       ■'**  ^*^-  ^^-^  13 

Lwing    /outalifeofse'SiupptS^'^^^^^^-?   .,  S"' '/^  ^? 

Lazy-plungu«    low  dune,  an/4  sea.   '  Z  JS^Sl 


Lea 


l-rom  wandering  over  the  ? :  ^  „  -  ---r-r-  —^  \ 

Playing  mad  pranks  along  the  healthy  I's  •  ^fa-Faines  11 1 

The  sunhght  driving  dovra  the  J'  '  * '  Circumstance  2 

From  his  loud  fount  upon  the  echoing;-  jy      i.     ,-^'>^'^^nd  13 \ 


*low,  softly  flow,  by  lawn  and  l. 
From  him  that  on  the  mountain  I 
And  blight  and  famine  on  all  the  /: 
Tbe  cattle  huddled  on  the  I; 
Who  ploi^hs  with  pain  his  native  I 
But  ere  the  lark  hath  left  the  I 
Now  dance  the  lights  on  lawn  and  L 
As  the  pimpernel  dozed  on  the  Z  • 

T^»-i??'  ^<^,f"n,!  a  rainbow  on  the'?! 

Lead  (s)    on  the  I's  we  kept  her  till  she  pigg'd 
The  tempest  crackles  on  the  I's       ^^^ 
A  clog  of  I  was  round  my  feet 
Lest  we  should  lap  him  ud  in  r]nih  nf  1 

Lead  (verb)    0  !  hither  I  thy  Fee^.  ^  ^' 

These  three  alone  I  life  to  sovereign  power 

'.  fhf  ^rP-"'  P^*'f™=  ^  them  tWy^ht. 
Is  the  clanging  rookery  home  •'"«''• 

According  as  his  humours  I 

creeping  hours  That  ?  me  td  my  Lord  • 

Z  «  her  to  the  village  altar 

Take  my  brute,  and  I  him  'in. 

With  fuller  profits  I  an  easier  hfe, 

The  babe  shall  I  the  lion. 

To  I  an  errant  passion  home  again 

meant  Surely  to  I  my  Memmius  in'a  train 

we  still  may  I  The  new  light  up 

Z  out  the  pageant :  sad  and  slow, 


A  Farewell  5 
To  E.  L.  21 
The  Victim  46 
In  Mem.  ro  6 
„     Ixiv  25 
,,  Ixviii  13 
»        cxv  9 
Maud  I  xxii  48 
Com.  of  Arthur  406 
Walk,  to  the  Mail  92 
Sir  Galahad  53 
The  Letters  5 
Gareth  and  L.  430 
Ode  to  Memory  64 
CEnone  145 
St.  S.  Stylites  224 
Locksley  Hall  68 
Day-Dm.,  Moral  11 
iS^.  Agnes'  Eve  8 
Z.  0/  Burleigh  11 
Vision  of  Sin  65 
Z'mocA  ^rrfm  145 
Aylm£r's  Field  648 
Lucretius  17 
„     119 
Princess  ii  347 
0<fe  on  ^e«.  13 


Lead 


389 


Leafy 


Lead  (verb)  (continued)    I  Thro'  prosperous  floods  his  holy- 
urn. 


Or  on  to  where  the  pathway  I's ; 
A  life  that  I's  melodious  days. 


In  Mem.  ix  7 
„  xxiii  8 
„  xxxiii  8 
„  Ixxxv  8 
«)27 
Maud  II  iv  17 


Leaf  (continiud)    shall  wear  Alternate  I  and  acorn-ball         Talking  Oak  287 


L,  and  I  follow.'  (repeat) 


What  kind  of  life  is  that  1 1; 

and  I  The  closing  cycle  rich  in  good. 

It  I's  me  forth  at  evening, 

way  to  glory  I  Low  down  thro'  villain  kitchen- 

Gareth  and  L.  159 
Gareth  and  L.  746,  760,  807 
891,  990, 1053, 1156 
'  Follow,  I Z ! '  so  down  among  the  pines  He  plunged ;  Gareth  and  L.  808 
'  I Z  no  longer;  ride  thou  at  my  side ;  „  1157 

Thro'  which  he  bad  her  I  him  on,  Geraint  and  E.  29 

Go  likewise :  shall  1 1  you  to  the  King  ? '  '  X  then,' 

she  said ;  and  thro'  the  woods  they  went.  Pelleas  and  E.  107 

to  I  her  to  his  lord  Arthur,  Guinevere  383 

To  I  sweet  lives  in  purest  chastity,  „        474 

They  summon  me  their  King  to  I  mine  hosts  „       570 

that  way  my  wish  I's  me  evemaore  Still  to  believe  it —    Lover's  Tale  i  274 
Yes.    L  on  them.     Up  the  mountain  ?  Sir  J.  Oldcastie  203 

be  consecrate  to  Z  A  new  crusade  against  the  Saracen,        Columbus  102 


1 1  thee  by  the  hand,  Fear  not.' 
to  I  One  last  crusade  against  the  Saracen, 
short,  or  long,  as  Pleasure  I's,  or  Pain ; 
two  that  love  thee,  I  a  summer  life. 
Hand  of  Light  will  I  her  people, 

Leaden-colour'd    the  low  moan  of  l-c  seas. 

Leader    patient  I's  of  their  Institute 
The  I  wildswan  in  among  the  stars 
as  the  I  of  the  herd  That  holds  a  stately  fretwork 
Mourning  when  their  I's  fall, 
Lo,  the  I  in  these  glorious  wars 
Their  ever-loyal  iron  I's  fame. 
For  a  man  and  I  of  men. 
there  lives  No  greater  L' 
But  ye,  that  follow  but  the  I's  bell ' 
Ready !  take  aim  at  their  I's — 
Then  the  Norse  I,  Dire  was  his  need  of  it, 
True  I's  of  the  land's  desire ! 

Jfiftt^ing    L  a  jet-black  goat  white-hom'd, 
L  from  lawn  to  lawn, 
onward,  I  up  the  golden  year,  (repeat) 
L  on  from  hall  to  hall, 
children  I  evermore  Low  miserable  lives 
But  sorrow  seize  me  if  ever  that  light  be  my  I  star ! 
And  I  all  his  knighthood  threw  the  kings 
Enid  I  down  the  tracks  Thro'  which  he  bad  her  lead 
up  the  rocky  pathway  disappear'd,  L  the  horse, 
Arthur  Z,  slowly  went  The  marshall'd  Order 
The  I  of  his  younger  knights  to  me. 
Ever,  ever,  and  for  ever  was  the  I  light  of  man. 
Thro'  which  I  f  oUow'd  line  by  line  Your  I  hand. 

Leading-strings     be  sweet,  to  sin  in  l-s, 
aU  the  rest  are  as  yet  but  in  l-s. 

Lead-like     those  l-l  tons  of  sin, 

LmI    (See  also  Jasmfiie-Ieaves,  Rose-leaf)    Flush'd  all 

the  leaves  with  rich  gold-green,  Arabian  Nights  82 

moist  rich  smell  of  the  rotting  leaves,  A  spirit  haunts  17 

The  sun  came  dazzling  thro'  the  leaves,  L.  of  Shalott  iii  3 

The  leaves  upon  her  falling  light —  »         w  21 

'  The  memory  of  the  wither'd  I  Two  Voices  112 

I  whirl  like  leaves  in  roaring  wind.  Fatima  7 

blossom  on  the  blackthorn,  the  I  upon  the  tree.  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  8 
folded  I  is  woo'd  from  out  the  bucl  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  26 

I  knew  the  flowers,  I  knew  the  leaves,  D.  of  F.  Women  73 

Shall  sing  for  want,  ere  leaves  are  new.  The  Blackbird  23 

And,  sitting  muffled  in  dark  leaves,  Gardener's  D.  37 

In  whispers,  like  the  whispers  of  the  leaves  „  253 

dimly  rain'd  about  the  I  Twilights  of  airy  silver,  Audley  Court  81 

else  may  insects  prick  Each  I  into  a  gall)  Talking  Oak  70 

'  I  swear,  by  I,  and  wind,  and  rain,  ..  81 

When  that,  which  breathes  within  the  I,  „  187 

Thro'  all  the  summer  of  my  leaves  >.  211 

Thy  I  shall  never  fail,  nor  yet  Thine  acorn  „  259 


158 

238 

Ancient  Sage  101 

To  Prin.  Beatrice  18 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  68 

Enoch  Arden  612 

Princess,  Pro.  58 

iv  434 

m85 

Ode  on  Well.  5 

192 

229 

Maud  I  X  59 

Lancelot  and  E.  317 

Holy  Grail  298 

Def.  of  Lucknow  42 

Batt.  of  Brunanburhl5Q 

Hands  all  Round  26 

(Enone  51 

D.ofF.  Women  76 

Golden  Fear  26,  41 

L.  of  Burleigh  52 

Enoch  Arden  115 

Maud  I  iv  12 

Com.  of  Arthur  111 

Geraint  and  E.  28 

244 

Lancelot  and  E.  1331 

Last  Tournament  110 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  66 

To  Ulysses  46 

Last  Tournament  574 

The  Dawn  10 

St.  S.  Stylites  25 


Here  rests  the  sap  within  the  /, 

As  dash'd  about  the  drunken  leaves 

And  the  I  is  stamp'd  in  clay. 

Of  sounder  I  than  I  can  claim ; 

and  thatch'd  with  leaves  of  palm,  a  hut, 

gentle  shower,  the  smell  of  dying  leaves, 

dead  weight  of  the  dead  I  bore  it  down : 

touch'd  On  such  a  time  as  goes  before  the  I, 

A  lisping  of  the  innimierous  I  and  dies. 

Of  the  first  snowdrop's  inner  leaves ; 

leaves  were  wet  with  women's  tears : 

This  faded  I,  our  names  are  as  brief ; 

Yet  the  yellow  I  hates  the  greener  I, 

Brief,  brief  is  a  summer  I, 

Like  the  Zin  a  roaring  whirlwind. 

Spring  is  here  with  I  and  grass : 

And  only  thro'  the  faded  I  The  chestnut 

These  leaves  that  redden  to  the  fall ; 

The  last  red  Z  is  whii-l'd  away. 

Thro'  lands  where  not  a  Z  was  dumb ; 

In  many  a  figured  Z  enrolls  The  total  world 

That  seem'd  to  touch  it  into  Z : 

Thy  Z  has  perish'd  in  the  green. 

Thy  spirits  in  the  darkening  Z, 

In  those  f  all'n  leaves  which  kept  their  green. 

The  large  leaves  of  the  sycamore, 

park  and  suburb  under  brown  Of  lustier  leaves; 

A  fieiy  finger  on  the  leaves ; 

The  tmie  ^mits  not  flowei-s  or  leaves 

The  dead  Z  trembles  to  the  bells. 

When  the  shiver  of  dancing  leaves  is  thrown 

like  a  sudden  wind  Among  dead  leaves, 

wood  is  nigh  as  full  of  thieves  as  leaves : 

For  as  a  Z  in  mid-November  is  To  what 

as  the  worm  draws  in  the  wither'd  Z 

wealth  Of  I,  and  gayest  garlandage  of  flowers, 

leaves  Laid  their  green  faces  flat 

dim  thro'  leaves  Blinkt  the  white  mom. 

The  new  Z  ever  pushes  off  the  old. 

glittering  like  May  sunshine  on  May  leaves 

left  hand  Droop  from  his  mighty  shoulder,  as  a  Z, 

Must  our  true  man  change  like  a  Z  at  last  ? 

L  after  Z,  and  tore,  and  cast  them  off, 

green  wood-ways,  and  eyes  among  the  leaves; 

as  a  hand  that  pushes  thro'  the  Z 

Danced  like  a  wither'd  Z  before  the  hall,  (repeat)  Last  Tournament  4, 242 


Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  3 

Amphion  55 

Vision  of  Sin  82 

You  might  have  won  4 

Enoch  Arden  559 

611 

678 

The  Brook  13 

Princess  v  14 

197 

vi  39 

Spiteful  Letter  13 

15 

21 

Boadicea  59 

Window,  No  Answer  23 

In  Mem.  xi  3 

14 

XV  3 

xxiii  10 

,      xliii  11 

,      Ixix  18 

,      Ixxv  13 

,  Ixxxviii  6 

xffi)23 

55 

,    xcviii  25 

,      xcix  12 

,         cvii  5 

,     Con.  64 

Maud  I  vi  73 

Gareth  and  L.  515 

789 

Marr.  of  Geraint  611 

Geraint  and  E.  633 

Balin  arid  Balan  83 

343 

384 

442 

Merlin  and  V.  88 

243 

Lancelot  and  E.  686 

1199 

Pelleas  and  E.  139 

436 


and  yellowing  Z  And  gloom  and  gleam, 

Z  is  dead,  the  yearning  past  away :  New  Z, 

laid  His  brows  upon  the  drifted  Z  and  dream'd, 

And  rode  beneath  an  ever-showering  Z, 

And  pale  and  fibrous  as  a  wither'd  Z, 

No  bud,  no  Z,  no  flower,  no  fruit 

Tearing  the  bright  leaves  of  the  ivy-screen, 

AU  crisped  sounds  of  wave  and  Z  and  wind, 

lasses  'ed  teard  out  leaves  i'  the  middle 

without  I  or  a  thorn  from  the  bush ; 

Or  the  young  green  Z  rejoice  in  the  frost 

Her  dust  is  greening  in  your  Z, 

and  from  each  The  light  Z  falling  fast, 

Z  fell,  and  the  sun.  Pale  at  my  grief, 

and  there  My  giant  ilex  keeping  Z 

by  hour  unfolding  woodbine  leaves 

leaves  possess  the  season  in  their  turn. 

Light  again,  I  again,  life  again,  love  again,' 

All  his  leaves  FaU'n  at  length. 

Vary  Uke  the  leaves  and  flowers. 
Leafless    (See  also  Seeming-leafless)    What  ?— that  the 

bush  were  Z  ?  Lucretius  206 

wood  which  grides  and  clangs  Its  Z  ribs  and  iron  horns  In  Mem.  cvii  12 

the  branching  grace  Of  Z  elm,  or  naked  lime.  To  Ulysses  16 

Leaflet    with  hardly  a  I  between,  V.  of  Maddune  64 

Leafy    its  walls  And  chimneys  muffled  in  the  Z  vine.  Audley  Court  19 

O  flourish  high,  with  I  towers.  Talking  Oak  197 

But  in  the  Z  lanes  behind  the  down,  Enoch  Arden  97 


154 

277 

406 

492 

Lover's  Tale  i  422 

725 

ti  40 

106 

Village  Wife  72 

V.  of  Maeldune  44 

The  Wreck  20 

Ancient  Sage  165 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  2 

Demeter  and  P.  113 

To  Ulysses  18 

Prog,  of  Spring  7 

107 

The  Throstle  3 

The  Oak  11 

Poets  and  Critics  4 


Leafy 


390 


Leap'd-Leapt 


Leafy  {continued)    The  climbing  street,  the  mill,  the  I 

lanes,  Enoch  Arden  607 

Till  they  were  swaUow'd  in  the  I  bowers,  Lover's  Tale  Hi  57 
League  (s)    (See  also  Half-a-league)    For  Vs  no  other 

tree  did  mark  The  level  waste,  Mariana  43 

Flung  I's  of  roaring  foam  into  the  gorge  // 1  were  loved  13 

A  Z  of  grass,  wash'd  by  a  slow  broad  stream,  Gardener's  D.  40 

Vs  along  that  breaker-beaten  coast  Enoch  Arden  51 

Many  a  long  I  back  to  the  North.  Princess  i  168 

heave  and  thump  A  Z  of  street  in  summer  solstice  „     Hi  128 

we  rode  a  I  beyond,  And,  o'er  a  bridge  of  pinewood  „         334 

HiiLF  a  Z,  half  a  I,  Half  a  I  onward,  Light  Brigade  1 

On  Vs  of  odour  streaming  far,  In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  14 

At  the  shouts,  the  Vs  of  lights,  Maud  II  iv  21 
everyone  that  owns  a  tower  The  Lord  for  half  a  I.       Gareth  and  L.  596 

A  I  beyond  the  wood.  All  in  a  fuU-fair  manor  „            845 

A  Z  of  moimtain  full  of  golden  mines.  Merlin  and  V.  587 

King  Made  proffer  of  the  I  of  golden  mines,  „              646 

That  have  no  meaning  half  a  I  away :  Holy  Grail  556 

great  waters  break  Whitening  for  half  a  Z,  Last  Tournament  465 

And  ever  push'd  Sir  Modred,  I  by  Z,  Pass,  of  Arthur  80 

and  loud  Vs  of  man  And  welcome !  To  the  Queen  ii  9 

following  out  A  Z  of  labyrinthine  darkness,  Demeter  and  P.  82 

League  (verb)     who  Vs  With  Lords  of  the  White  Hoi-se,  Guinevere  573 

Leagued    And  I  him  with  the  heathen,  „         155 
I  again  Their  lot  with  ours  to  rove  the  world       Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  10 

League-long    l-l  roller  thimdering  on  the  reef,  Enoch  Arden  584 

Thro'  many  a  l-l  bower  he  rode.  Last  Tournament  374 
You  saw  the  l-l  rampart-fire  Flare  from  Tel-el- 

Kebir  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  27 

Leaguer    for  hours  On  that  disastrous  Z,  Princess  vii  33 

Lei^uer'd    That  bore  a  lady  from  a  Z  town ;  D.  of  F.  Women  47 

Leaky    or  prove  The  Danaid  of  a  Z  vase.  Princess  ii  340 

Leal    fain  Have  all  men  true  and  I,  Merlin  and  V.  794 

I  will  be  Z  to  thee  and  work  thy  work,  Pdleas  and  E.  343 

Lean  (adj.)    I  knew  an  old  wife  Z  and  poor.  The  Goose  1 

And  in  my  weak,  Z  arms  I  Uft  the  cross,  St.  S.  Stylites  118 

A  gray  and  gap-tooth'd  man  as  Z  as  death.  Vision  of  Sin  60 

Remains  the  Z  P.  W.  on  his  tomb :  The  Brook  193 

All  over  with  the  fat  affectionate  smile  That  makes 

the  widow  Z.  Sea  Dreams  156 

went  Hating  his  own  Z  heart  and  miserable.  Aylmer's  Field  526 

Down  from  the  Z  and  wrinkled  precipices,  Princess  iv  22 

But  still  her  lists  were  swell'd  and  mine  were  Z ;  „          319 

A  gray  old  wolf  and  a  Z.  Maud  I  xiii  28 

So  Z  has  eyes  were  monstrous ;  Merlin  and  V.  624 

And  a  Z  Order — scarce  return'd  a  tithe —  Holy  Grail  894 
Her  dear,  long,  Z,  little  arms  lying  out                   In  the  Child.  Hasp.  70 

And  tho',  in  this  Z  age  forlorn.  Epilogue  71 

Opulent  Avarice,  Z  as  Poverty ;  Vastness  20 

till  I  believing  that  the  girl's  L  fancy.  The  Ring  336 

Lean  (verb)    Z  out  from  the  hollow  sphere  of  the  sea.  The  Mermaid  54 

And  a  rose-bush  Vs  upon,  Adeline  14 

Enormous  elm-tree-boles  did  stoop  and  I  D.  of  F.  Women  57 

that  from  a  casement  Vs  his  head,  „            246 

'Tis  strange  that  those  we  Z  on  most.  To  J.  S.  9 

and  I  a  ladder  on  the  shaft,  St.  S.  Stylites  216 

'  On  that  which  Vs  to  you.  Princess  Hi  232 

but  Z  me  down,  Sir  Dagonet,  Last  Tournament  272 

And  80  thou  Z  on  our  fair  father  Christ,  Guinevere  562 

He  Vs  on  Antichrist ;  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  74 

let  me  Z  my  head  upon  your  breast.  Romney's  R.  154 

Lean'd-Leant    And  lean'd  upon  the  balcony.  Mariana  in  the  S.  88 

prudent  partner  of  his  blood  Lean'd  on  him,  Two  Voices  416 

Or  from  the  bridge  I  lean'd  to  hear  Miller's  D.  49 

o'er  him  flow'd  a  golden  cloud,  and  lean'd  Upon  him,  (Enone  105 

And  on  her  lover's  arm  she  leant.  Day -Dm.,  Depart.  1 

He  lean'd  not  on  his  fathers  but  himself.  Aylmer's  Field  56 

Once  she  lean'd  on  me.  Descending ;  Princess  iv  26 

What  reed  was  that  on  which  I  leant  ?  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  45 
Push'd  thro'  an  open  casement  down,  lean'd  on  it,  Balin  and  Balan  413 

Sir  Lancelot  leant,  in  half  disdain  At  love,  Lancelot  and  E.  1238 

all  whereon  I  lean'd  in  wife  and  friend  Pass,  of  Arthur  24 

As  I  lean'd  away  from  his  arms —  The  Wreck  102 

and  we  lean'd  to  the  darker  side —  Despair  55 


Lean'd-Leant  (contintied) 

sphere, 
Leaneth    Thou  art  light.  To  which  my  spirit  Z 
Lean-headed    L-h  Eagles  yelp  alone. 
Leaning    (See  also  A-leanin')    L  upon  the  ridged  sea, 

A  Z  and  upbearing  parasite, 

rich  fruit-bunches  Z  on  each  other — 

L  his  cheek  upon  his  hand. 

And  you  were  Z  from  the  ledge 

She,  Z  on  a  fragrant  twined  with  vine. 

Upon  her  pearly  shoulder  Z  cold, 

Robin  Z  on  the  bridge  beneath  the  hazel-tree  ? 

L  his  horns  into  the  neighbour  field, 

And  Z  there  on  those  balusters. 

There  Z  deep  in  broider'd  down  we  sank 

Gareth  Z  both  hands  heavily 

and  hungerworn  I  seem — Z  on  these  ? 

eyes  all  bright  rephed,  L  a  little  toward  him. 

And  speaking  not,  but  Z  over  him, 

when  I  was  Z  out  Above  the  river — 

L  its  roses  on  my  faded  eyes. 

The  slant  seas  Z  on  the  mangrove  copse, 
Leanness  black  eyes.  Yet  larger  thro'  his  Z, 
Leant    See  Lean'd 

Leap  (s)    heart  on  one  wild  Z  Himg  tranced  from  all 
pulsation, 

this  a  bridge  of  single  arc  Took  at  a  Z ; 

and  stirs  the  pulse  With  devil's  Vs, 

And  leave  the  name  of  Lover's  L: 
Leap  (verb)    Where  he  was  wont  to  Z  and  climb, 

In  the  middle  Vs  a  fountain 

like  a  wave  I  would  Z  From  the  diamond-ledges 

And  not  Z  forth  and  fall  about  thy  neck, 

his  spirit  Vs  within  him  to  be  gone 

and  I  the  rainbows  of  the  brooks. 

Be  still  the  first  to  Z  to  light 

I Z  on  board :  no  helmsman  steers : 

High-elbow'd  grigs  that  Z  in  summer  grass. 

To  Z  the  rotten  pales  of  prejudice. 

And  the  wild  cataract  Vs  in  glory. 

Vs  in  Among  the  women,  snares  them  by  the  score  „      v  163 

Whatever  record  Z  to  light  He  never  shall  be  shamed.    Ode  on  Well.  190 

Making  the  little  one  Z  for  joy.  To  F.  D.  Maurice 


She  lean'd  to  from  her  Spiritual 

The  Ring  484 

Lover's  Tale  i  104 

Princess  vii  211 

The  Winds,  etc.  2 

Isabel  34 

„     37 

Elednore  118 

MiUer's  D.  84 

(Enone  20 

„     140 

May  Queen  14 

Gardener's  D.  87 

Princess  Hi  119 

iv32 

Gareth  and  L.  439 

,,       .     444! 

Marr.  of  Geraint  495- 

Merlin  and  V.  477 

Last  Tournament  43 

Lover's  Tale  i  621 

Prog,  of  Spring  78 

Lancelot  and  E.  835 


Gardener's  D.  259 

Gareth  and  L.  909 

Guinevere  523 

Lover's  Tale  iv  43 

Supp.  Confessions  165 

Poet's  Mind  24 

The  Mermaid  39 

Love  and  Duty  41 

Locksley  Hall  115 

„  .171 

Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  21 

Sir  Galahad  39 

The  Brook  54 

Princess  ii  142 


To  Z  the  grades  of  life  and  light, 
But  at  his  footstep  Vs  no  more, 
And  Vs  into  the  future  chance, 
snubnosed  rogue  would  Z  from  his  counter  and  till 
the  red  man's  babe  L,  beyond  the  sea. 
many  a  darkness  into  the  light  shall  I, 
1 1  from  Satan's  foot  to  Peter's  knee — 
Who  Z  at  thee  to  tear  thee ; 
who  had  ever  Made  my  heart  Z ; 
how  her  choice  did  Z  forth  from  his  eyes ! 
When  he  Vs  from  the  water  to  the  land, 
if  the  tigers  Z  into  the  fold  unawares — 
I  would  Z  into  your  grave. 
Up  Vs  the  lark,  gone  wild  to  welcome 
Leap'd-Leapt    Then  leapt  a  trout.     In  lazy  mood 
My  mailed  Bacchus  leapt  into  my  arms. 
My  words  leapt  forth :  '  Heaven  heads  the  count 

of  crimes 
About  me  leap'd  and  laugh'd  The  modish  Cupid 
And  sixty  feet  the  fountain  leapt. 
doe  Lord  Ronald  had  brought  Leapt  up  from  where 

she  lay, 
no  one  cared  for,  leapt  To  greet  her. 
Two  Proctors  leapt  upon  us,  crying,  '  Names : ' 
Leapt  from  the  dewy  shoulders  of  the  Earth, 
And  into  fiery  splinters  leapt  the  lance, 
o'er  the  statues  leapt  from  head  to  head, 
out  of  languor  leapt  a  cry ;  Leapt  fiery  Passion 
Thought  leapt  out  to  wed  with  Thought 
Ran  like  a  colt,  and  leapt  at  all  he  saw : 
Leapt  in  a  semicircle,  and  lit  on  earth ; 
his  evil  spirit  upon  him  leapt, 


In  Mem.  xli  11 

„  Ixxxv  112 

„  cxiv\ 

Maud  I  iSi 

„     xviiSfi 

„  III  vi ' 

Gareth  and  L.  53 

Balin  and  Balan  142 

Holy  Grail  58fl 

Lover's  Tale  i  65T 

The  Revenge  55 

Def.  of  Lucknow  51 

Happy  2fl 

Prog,  of  Spring  14 

Miller's  D.  73 

D.ofF.  Women  151 


201 

Talking  Oak  68 
Day-Dm.,  Revival  T 


Lady  Clare  i 

Aylmer's  Field  688 

Princess  iv  259 

,,         1)43 

„  494 

„      vi  366 

„     vii  155 

In  Mem.  xxiii  l6i 

Com.  of  Arthur  322 

Balin  and  Balan  414 

53T 


Leap'd-Leapt 


391 


Least 


Leap'd-Leapt  (continued)    Then  leapt  her  palfrey  o'er 
the  fallen  oak, 

Leapt  from  her  session  on  his  lap, 

the  harlot  leapt  Adown  the  forest. 

Leapt  on  his  horse,  and  carolling  as  he  went 

from  the  boat  I  leapt,  and  up  the  stairs. 

his  helpless  heart  Leapt,  and  he  cried, 

shouted  and  leapt  down  upon  the  f all'n ; 

Leapt  on  him,  and  hurl'd  him  headlong. 

Leapt  like  a  passing  thought  across  her  eyes; 

My  spirit  leap'd  as  with  those  thrills  of  bliss 

Leapt  lightly  clad  in  bridal  white — 

One  has  leapt  up  on  the  breach, 

There  were  some  leaped  into  the  fire ; 

she  leapt  upon  the  funeral  pile. 
Leaping    So,  I  lightly  from  the  boat, 

The  I  stream,  the  very  wind, 

0  foUow,  I  blood, 

Then  I  out  upon  them  unseen 

And,  I  down  the  ridges  lightly, 

Pelleas,  I  up.  Ran  thro'  the  doors 

Wills  of  my  cell  were  dyed  With  rosy  colours  I  on 
the  wall ; 

Ard,  I  down  the  ridges  lightly. 
Leapt   See  Leap'd 
Learn    {See  also  Lam)     Will  I  new  things  when  I  am  not.' 


Balin  and  Balan  587 

Merlin  and  V.  844 

972 

Lancelot  and  E.  704 

Holy  Grail  819 

Pelleas  and  E.  131 

Last  Tournament  469 

Guinevere  108 

Lover's  Tale  i  70 

363 

„        Hi  44 

Def.  of  Lucknow  64 

V.  of  Maddune  76 

Death  of  Qinone  105 

Arabian  Nights  92 

Rosalind  14 

Early  Spring  25 

The  Merman  33 

M.  d' Arthur  134 

Pelleas  and  E.  538 

Holy  Grail  120 
Pass,  of  Arthur  302 

Two  Voices  63 


Gardener's  D.  239 

Dora  153 

Talking  Oak  203 

Locksley  Hall  77 

Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  8 

WUl  Water.  81 

Enoch  Arden  835 

The  Brook  142 

Aylmer's  Field  398 

433 

Sea  Dreams  181 

Princess  ii  146 

298 

„     Hi  263 

„      iv  512 

V  333 

„     vii  273 

„   Con.  79 

Ode  on  Well.  204 

In  Mem.  viii  4 

„      xii  19 

,,       xlv  6 

15 

Maud  I  iv  41 


I  at  full  How  passion  rose  thro'  circumstantial 

he  will  I  to  sUght  His  father's  memory ; 

A  thousand  thanks  for  what  1 1 

Drag  thy  memories,  lest  thou  I  it. 

And  I  the  world,  and  sleep  again ; 

Foi  since  I  came  to  live  and  I, 

Then  may  she  1 1  lov'd  her  to  the  last.' 

sent  the  bailliff  to  the  farm  To  I  the  price, 

I  am  grieved  to  I  your  grief — 

and  as  we  task  ourselves  To  Z  a  language 

I  A  man  is  Ukewise  counsel  for  himself, 

Here  might  they  I  whatever  men  were  taught: 

wonen  were  too  barbarous,  would  not  I ; 

Who  I's  the  one  pou  sto  whence  after-hands 

I  With  whom  they  deal. 

To  I  if  Ida  yet  would  cede  our  claim. 

To  give  or  keep,  to  live  and  I  and  be  All  that 

Oive  it  time  To  I  its  limbs : 

and  Vs  to  deaden  Love  of  self. 

And  Z's  her  gone  and  far  from  home ; 

and  I  That  I  have  been  an  hour  away. 

And  Vs  the  use  of  '  I '  and  '  me,' 
Had  man  to  I  himself  anew 
desire  or  admire,  if  a  man  could  I  it, 
after-years  Will  I  the  secret  of  our  Arthur's  birth.*     Com.  of  Arthur  159 
and  I  Whether  he  know  me  for  his  master  Gareth  and  L.  720 

'  If  Enid  errs,  let  Enid  I  her  fault.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  132 

'  Surely  I  will  I  the  name,'  ,,  203 

by  the  bird's  song  ye  may  I  the  nest,'  „  359 

I  will  break  his  pride  and  I  his  name,  ,,  424 

But  coming  back  he  I's  it,  Geraint  and  E.  498 

As  children  I,  be  thou  Wiser  for  f alUng !  Balin  and  Balan  75 

and  came  To  I  black  magic,  „  127 

To  I  what  Arthur  meant  by  courtesy,  „  158 

To  I  the  graces  of  their  Table,  „  238 

suffer  from  the  things  before  me,  know,  L  nothing ;  ,,  285 

make  me  wish  still  more  to  I  this  charm  Merlin  and  V.  329 

Who  have  to  I  themselves  and  all  the  world,  „  365 

we  needs  must  I  Which  is  our  mightiest,  Lancelot  and  E.  62 

i  If  his  old  prowess  were  in  aught  decay'd ;  And 

added,  '  Our  true  Arthur,  when  he  I's, 
Whence  you  might  I  his  name  ? 
So  ye  will  I  the  courtesies  of  the  court, 
fain  were  I  to  Z  this  knight  were  whole, 
bode  among  them  yet  a  little  space  Till  he  should  I  it ; 
Till  overborne  by  one,  he  I's — 
thou  remaining  here  wilt  I  the  event ; 
Must  I  to  use  the  tongues  of  all  the  world. 
He  might  have  come  to  I  Our  Wiclif 's  learning : 


583 
654 
699 
772 
922 
Holy  Grail  305 
Guinevere  577 
Sir  J.  Oldcastle  34 
64 


Learn  (continued)    haply  I  the  Nameless  hath  a  voice,  Ancient  Sage  34 

simpler,  saner  lesson  might  he  I  Prog,  of  Spring  105 

Before  1 1  that  Love,  which  is,  DouU  and  Prayer  7 

Learnable     not  I,  divine.  Beyond  my  reach.  Balin  and  Balan  175 

Learned  (adj.)     Long  I  names  of  agaric,  moss  and  fern,        Edwin  Morris  17 

Men  hated  I  women  :  Princess  ii  466 

Not  I,  save  in  gracious  household  ways,  „    vii  318 

a  I  man  Could  give  it  a  clumsy  name.  Maud  II  ii  9 

Learned  (s)    The  L  all  his  lore ;  Ancient  Sage  139 

Learned-Learnt  (verb)    (See  also  Larn'd)    late  he  learned 

humiUty  Perforce,  Buonaparte  13 

all  at  once  a  pleasant  truth  I  learn' d.  The  Bridesmaid,  9 

As  in  the  Latin  song  I  learnt  at  school,  Edwin  Morris  79 

a  saying  learnt.  In  days  far-off,  Tithonus  47 

I  learrU  that  James  had  flickering  jealousies  The  Brook  99 

'  have  you  learnt  No  more  from  Psyche's  lecture,  Princess  ii  392 

And  learnt  ?     I  learnt  more  from  her  in  a  flash,  „           397 

since  we  learnt  our  meaning  here,  „      Hi  222 

learnt.  For  many  weary  moons  before  we  came,  „           318 

We  knew  not  your  ungracious  laws,  which  learnt,  „       iv  399 

but  when  she  learnt  his  face.  Remembering  „       vi  158 

Much  had  she  learrd  in  little  time.  vii  240 

One  lesson  from  one  book  we  learn'd.  In  Mem.  Ixxix  14 

when  they  learnt  that  I  must  go  They  wept  „       ciii  17 

shall  have  learn'd  to  lisp  you  thanks.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  822 
ere  he  learnt  it,  '  Take  Five  horses  and  their 

armours  ; '  Geraint  and  E.  408 

Sir  Garlon  too  Hath  learn'd  black  magic,  Balin  and  Balan  305 

And  learnt  their  elemental  secrets.  Merlin  and  V.  632 

'He  learnt  and  warn'd  me  of  their  flerce  design  Lancelot  and  E.  274 

'  Sire,  my  Uege,  so  much  I  learnt ;  „               708 

Lied,  say  ye  ?     Nay,  but  learnt,  Last  Tournament  656 

(When  first  I  learnt  thee  hidden  here)  Guinevere  539 

and  learn'd  To  Usp  in  tune  together  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  257 

Because  she  learnt  them  with  me ;  „             292 

Had  I  not  learnt  my  loss  before  he  came  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  665 

I  learnt  the  drearier  story  of  his  life ;  „          iv  147 
I  learnt  it  first.    I  had  to  speak.                           Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  242 

he  learnt  that  I  hated  the  ring  I  wore.  The  Wreck  57 

I  scarce  have  learnt  the  title  of  your  book,  The  Ring  126 

and  woke  me  And  learn'd  me  Magic  !  Merlin  and  the  G.  14 

when  I  learn'd  my  fate.  Charity  14 

when  I  learnt  it  at  last,  I  shriek'd,  „      37 

Leammg  (part.)    I  this,  the  bridegroom  will  relent.  Guinevere  172 

I  it  (They  told  her  somewhat  rashly  as  I  think)  Lover's  Tale  iv  97 

Learning  (s)    what  was  I  unto  them  ?  Princess  ii  464 

wearing  all  that  weight  Of  I  lightly  In  Mem.,  Con.  40 

He  might  have  come  to  learn  Our  Wiclif 's  I :  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  65 

We  fronted  there  the  I  of  all  Spain,  Columbus  41 
Learnt    See  Learn'd 

Lease    laying  down  an  unctuous  I  Of  life,  WUl  Water.  243 

brooding  on  his  briefer  I  of  life,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  23 

Leash    hold  passion  in  a  I,  Love  and  Duty  40 

Diet  and  seeling,  jesses,  I  and  lure.  Merlin  and  V.  125 

Least    (See  also  Laste)     And  trampled  under  by  the  last 

and  I  Of  men  ?  Poland  2 
her  I  remark  was  worth  The  experience  of  the  wise.      Edwin  Morris  65 

Nor  ever  falls  the  I  white  star  of  snow,  Lucretius  107 

In  whose  I  act  abides  the  nameless  charm  Princess  v  70 

Our  greatest  yet  with  I  pretence.  Ode  on  Well.  29 

I  seem  to  meet  their  I  desire,  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  17 
Or  the  I  little  delicate  aquiline  curve  in  a  sensitive 
nose,  From  which  I  escaped  heart-free,  with  the 

I  little  touch  of  spleen.  Maud  I  ii  10 
to  her  own  bright  face  Accuse  her  of  the  I 

immodesty  :  Geraint  and  E.  Ill 

Love-loyal  to  the  I  wish  of  the  Queen  Lancelot  and  E.  89 

Love-loyal  to  the  I  wish  of  the  Queen,  Guinevere  126 
my  strongest  wish  Falls  flat  before  your  I  unwillingness.  Romney's  R.  72 

Myself  not  I,  but  honour'd  of  them  Ulysses  15 

Some  men's  were  small ;   not  they  the  I  of  men  ;  Princess  ii  148 

feel,  at  I,  that  silence  here  were  sin.  Third  of  Feb.  37 

'  Thou  pratest  here  where  thou  art  I ;  In  Mem.  xxxvii  2 

I  saw  the  I  of  little  stars  Down  on  the  waste.  Holy  Grail  524 

made  our  mightiest  madder  than  our  I.  „          863 


Leather 


392 


Leaving 


Leather    See  Saddle-leather 

Leave-Leave  (holiday)    with  a  month's  leaoe  given  them, 

then  'ed  gotten  wer  leave, 
Leave  (permission)    so  much  out  as  gave  us  Ho  go. 

I'll  have  I  at  times  to  play 

to  gain  it — ^your  full  I  to  go. 

Sir  Kay  nodded  him  I  to  go, 

Queen  petition'd  for  his  I  To  see  the  hunt, 

'  Thy  I !     Let  nie  lay  lance  in  rest, 

'  Have  llio  speak  ?  ' 

'  Your  I,  my  lord,  to  cross  the  room, 

free  I,'  he  said  ;  '  Get  her  to  speak  : 

my  I  To  move  to  your  own  land. 

But,  father,  give  me  Z,  an  if  he  will, 

But  left  him  I  to  stammer,'  Is  it  indeed  ? 

And  so,  I  given,  straight  on  thro'  open  door 

dare  without  your  I  to  head  These  rhymings 

saying  gently  :  '  Muriel,  by  your  Z,' 
Leave  (farewell) — took  my  I,  for  it  was  nearly  noon : 

crowd  were  swarming  now.  To  take  their  I, 

To  take  her  latest  I  of  home. 

And  thou  shalt  take  a  nobler  Z.' 

But  how  to  take  last  Z  of  all  I  loved  ? 

you  still  delay  to  take  Your  I  of  Town, 
Leave  (verb)    (See  also  Lave,  Leave)    And  1  us  rulers 
of  your  blood 

hard  at  first,  mother,  to  I  the  blessed  sun, 

Which  will  not  I  the  myn-h-bush  on  the  height ;    Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  58 

'  It  is  not  meet.  Sir  King,  to  I  thee  thus,  M.  d' Arthur  40 

it  seem'd  Better  to  I  Excalibur  conceal'd  „  62 

'  L,'  she  cried  '  O  Z  me  !  '     '  Never,  Edwin  Morris  116 

I  will  I  my  relics  in  your  land,  St.  S.  Stylites  194 

But  I  thou  mine  to  me.  Talking  Oak  200 

And  I  thee  freer,  till  thou  wake  refresh'd  Love  and  Duty  97 

To  whom  1 1  the  sceptre  and  the  isle —  Ulysses  34 

CoMBADES,  I  me  here  a  little,  Locksley  Hall  1 

L  me  here,  and  when  you  want  me,  „  2 

Eager-hearted  as  boy  when  first  he  I's  his  father's  field,        „  112 


Sea  Dreams  6 

Owd  Rod  51 

Princess  v  235 

In  Mem.  lix  11 

Gareth  and  L.  134 

520 

Mart,  of  Geraint  154 

495 

Geraint  and  E.  140 

298 

300 

888 

Lancelot  and  E.  219 

420 

Pelleas  and  E.  382 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  19 

The  Sing  268 

Princess  v  468 

„     Con.  38 

In  Mem.  xl  6 

„    Iviii  12 

Guinevere  546 

To  Mary  Boyle  2 

To  the  Queen  21 
May  Queen,  Con.  9 


I I  the  plain,  I  climb  the  height ; 
I Z  an  empty  flask  : 
And  they  Z  her  father's  roof. 

and  Z  Yon  orange  sunset  waning  slow : 

Pass  on,  weak  heart,  and  Z  me  where  I  lie : 

Nor  Z  his  music  as  of  old, 

go  this  weary  way.  And  Z  you  lonely  ? 

five  years'  death-in-life.     They  could  not  I  him. 

One  who  cried, '  L  all  and  follow  me.' 

L  us  :  you  may  go  : 

'Z  me  to  deal  with  that.' 

III  mother  that  I  was  to  Z  her  there, 
meteor  on,  and  I's  A  shining  furrow, 

Z  The  moastrous  ledges  there  to  slope, 
Will  Z  her  space  to  burgeon  out  of  all 
And  in  the  vast  cathedral  Z  him 
They  Z  the  heights  and  are  troubled, 
Z  it  gorily  quivering  ? 
Thou  wilt  not  Z  us  in  the  dust : 

I  Z  this  mortal  ark  behind, 
And  Z  the  cliffs,  and  haste  away 
L  thou  thy  sister  when  she  prays, 
But  half  my  life  I Z  behind  : 
And  what  I  see  I Z  unsaid, 

I I  thy  praises  unexpress'd 

I Z  thy  greatness  to  be  guess'd  ; 
You  Z  us :  you  will  see  the  Rhine, 
We  Z  the  well-beloved  place 
To  Z  the  pleasant  fields  and  farms ; 
And  wilt  thou  Z  us  now  behind  ?  ' 
To-night  ungather'd  let  us  Z  This  laurel, 
They  Z  the  porch,  they  pass  the  grave 
your  sweetness  hardly  rs  me  a  choice 
When  will  the  dancers  Z  her  alone  ? 
past  and  I's  The  Crown  a  lonely  splendour, 
wilt  thou  Z  Thine  ea.seful  biding  here, 
and  Z  my  man  to  me.' 


Sir  Galahad  57 

Will  Water.  164 

L.  of  Burleigh  12 

Move  eastward  1 

Come  not,  when,  etc.  11 

You  might  have  won  14 

Enoch  Arden  297 

566 

Aylmer's  Field  664 

Princess  ii  94 

„     Hi  149 

vQ'i 

„     vii  184 

211 

271 

Ode  on  Well.  280 

Voice  and  the  P.  15 

Boadicea  12 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  9 

xii  6 

8 

xxxiii  5 

Ivii  6 

Ixxiv  10 

Ixxv  1 

4 

xeoiii  1 

cii  1 

22 

ciii  48 

cv  1 

Con.  71 

Mavd  /  V  24 

xx%i  21 

Ded.  of  Idylls  48 

Gareth  and  L.  127 

477 


Leave  (verb)  {continued)    1 1  not  till  I  finish  this  fair 

quest. 
Come,  therefore,  Z  thy  lady  lightly,  knave, 
and  I's  me  fool'd  and  trick'd, 
not  Z  her,  till  her  promise  given — 
L  me  to-night :  I  am  weary  to  the  death.' 
bounding  forward  'Z  them  to  the  wolves.' 
he  rose  To  I  the  hall,  and,  Vivien  following 
To  Z  an  equal  baseness  ; 
ere  I Z  thee  let  me  swear  once  more 
made  him  Z  The  banquet, 
let  me  Z  My  quest  with  you  ; 
Before  ye  Z  him  for  this  Quest, 
Z  The  leading  of  his  younger  knights  to  me. 
an  aiTow  from  the  bush  Should  I  me  all  alone 
And  of  this  remnant  will  I Z  a  part. 
Yet  must  I Z  thee,  woman,  to  thy  shame. 
L  me  that,  I  charge  thee,  my  last  hope. 
'  It  is  not  meet.  Sir  King,  to  Z  thee  thus, 
it  seem'd  Better  to  Z  Excalibur  conceal'd 
lake,  that,  flooding,  I's  Low  banks  of  yellow 

sand  ; 
He  flies  the  event :  he  I's  the  event  to  me  : 
Would  Z  the  land  for  ever. 
And  Z  the  name  of  Lover's  Leap  : 
And  Z  him  in  the  public  way  to  die. 
I Z  this  land  for  ever.' 
.    I  am  going  to  Z  you  a  bit — 
go,  go,  you  may  Z  me  alone — 
highway  running  by  it  I's  a  breadth  Of  sward 
you  Z  'em  outside  on  the  bed — 
Or  in  that  vaster  Spain  I Z  to  Spain. 
And  Z  him,  blind  of  heart  and  eyes. 
And  Z  the  hot  swamp  of  voluptuousness 
blackthorn-blossom  fades  and  falls  and  I's  the 

bitter  sloe. 
You  wiU  not  Z  me  thus  in  grief 
if  dynamite  and  revolver  Z  you  courage 
Eighty  winters  Z  the  dog  too  lame 
L  the  Master  in  the  first  dark  hour 
Then  I Z  thee  Lord  and  Master, 
Birds  and  brides  must  Z  the  nest. 
Queen,  who  I's  Some  colder  province  in  the  North 
shadow  Z  the  Substance  in  the  brooding  light  of  noon  ? 
now  arching  I's  her  bare  To  breaths  of  balmier 


Gareth  and  L.  774 

95| 

1251 

Marr.  of  Geraint  i 

Geraint  and  E.  35| 
Balin  and  Balan  5fi 
Merlin  and  V. 

8301 

9291 

Lancelot  and  E.  5611 

Holy  Grait  ^ 
Last  Tournamett  IC 

5361 
Guinevere  ■ 

„      5111 
„     5671 
Pass,  of  Arthur  '. 

2301 

Lover's  Tde  i  534| 

iv\\ 

19j 

2M1 

3681 

First  Qtarrel  801 

Mzfah  791 

Sisters  (E.  aid  E.) '' 

In  the  Child.  Hosp. 

Colunhus  r 

Ancient  Sage  113 

277 

The  Flight  IS 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  IC 

"  238 

282 

Tht  Ring  89 


Happy'. 


Prog,  of  Spring  13 

I's  me  harlot-like.  Who  love  her  still,  Romney's  R.  116 

May  Z  the  windows  blinded,  „          14 ' 

Le&ve  (verb)    if  thou  mariies  a  good  un  I'll  I  the 

land  to  thee.  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  i 

if  thou  marries  a  bad  'un,  I'll  Z  the  land  to  Dick. —  „ 

Let's  them  inter  'eaven  easy  es  I's  Village  Wife ! 

Leaved  (left)    but  'e  Z  it  to  Charhe  'is  son,  „ 

they  Z  their  nasty  sins  i'  my  pond.  Churchwarden,  etc. 

Leaved    See  Long-leaved,  Thick-leaved 

Leaven  (s)     the  old  I  leaven'd  all :  Princess  v  ', 

Leaven  (verb)     But  now  to  Z  play  with  profit,  „      iv  14 

Of  Love  to  Z  all  the  mass,  Freedom  lij 

Leaven'd     the  old  leaven  Z  all :  Princess  v  38 

then  as  Arthur  in  the  highest  L  the  world.  Merlin  and  V.  14 

but  all  was  joust  and  play,  L  his  hall.  „            14 

Leave-taking    Low  at  l-t,  with  his  brandish'd  plume  Geraint  and  E. 

Leaving    {See  also  Lavin')     L  door  and  windows  wide  :      Deserted  House  i 

I  my  ancient  love  With  the  Greek  woman.  CEnone  26 
L  the  dance  and  song, '  L  the  olive-gardens  far 

below,  L  the  promise  of  my  bridal  bower,  D.  of  F.  Women  21fl 

L  great  legacies  of  thought,  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  T' 

And,  Z  these,  to  pass  away,  „                c  18 

Z  night  forlorn.  „               cvii ' 

who  earnest  to  thy  goal  So  early,  Z  me  behind,  „            cxiv  24 

Who  I  share  in  furrow  come  to  see  The  glories  Gareth  and  L.  2431 

ramp  and  roar  at  Z  of  your  lord  ! —  „          130TJ 

never  Z  her,  and  grew  Forgetful  of  his  promise  Marr.  of  Geraint  49 J 

so  Z  him,  Now  with  slack  rein  and  careless  Balin  and  Balan  3081 

So  I  Arthur's  court  he  gain'd  the  beach ;  Merlin  and  V.  1971 


Leaving 


393 


Left 


Leaving  (continued)     L  her  household  and  good  father,    Lancelot  and  E.  14 

I  for  the  cowl  The  helmet  in  an  abbey  Holy  Grail  5 

'  the  pale  nun,  I  spake  of  this  To  all  men  ;  „         129 

And  I  human  wrongs  to  right  themselves,  „         898 

her  anger,  I  Pelleas,  bum'd  Full  on  her  knights  Pelleas  and  E.  289 

Thieves,  bandits,  Vs  of  confusion.  Last  Tournament  95 

now  I  to  the  skill  Of  others  their  old  craft  Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  2 

L  his  son  too  Lost  in  the  carnage,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  72 

the  child  Is  happy — ev'n  ml  her  \  To  Prin.  Beatrice  12 

Leavy    Moving  in  the  I  beech.  Margaret  61 

Lebanon     O,  art  thou  sighing  for  L  Maud  I  xviii  15 

Sighing  for  L,  Dark  cedar,  „             17 

Lebanonian    in  halls  Of  L  cedar :  Princess  ii  352 

Lecher    The  I  would  cleave  to  his  lusts,  Despair  100 

Lecture  (adj.)     On  the  I  slate  The  circle  rounded  Princess  ii  371 

Lecture  (s)     A  classic  I,  rich  in  sentiment,  „          374 

'  have  you  learnt  No  more  from  Psyche's  I,  „          393 

Led    (See  also  Moon-led)     And  like  a  bride  of  old  In 

triumph  I,  Ode  to  Memory  76 

Gliding  with  equal  crowns  two  serpents  I  Alexander  6 

'  But  heard,  by  secret  transport  I,  Two  Voices  214 
light  that  I  The  holy  Elders  with  the  gift  of  myrrh.       M.  d' Arthur  232 

Fancy,  I  by  Love,  Would  play  with  flying  forms  Gardener's  D.  59 

still  we  foUow'd  where  she  I,  (repeat)  The  Voyage  59,  90 

took  him  by  the  curls,  and  I  him  in.  Vision  of  Sin  6 
I  the  way  To  where  the  rivulets  of  sweet  water  ran  ;     Enoch  Arden  641 

I  me  thro'  the  short  sweet-smelling  lanes  The  Brook  122 
Thro'  which  a  few,  by  wit  or  fortune  I,  Aylmer's  Field  438 

I I  you  then  to  all  the  Castalies  ;  Princess  iv  294 
But  I  by  golden  wishes,  „  420 
I  Threading  the  soldier-city,  „  v  6 
I  A  hundred  maids  in  train  across  the  Park.  „  vi  75 
Remember  him  who  I  your  hosts ;  Ode  on  Well.  171 
Love  has  I  thee  to  the  stranger  land,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  31 
Which  I  by  tracts  that  pleased  us  well,  In  Mem.  xxii  2 
And  I  him  thro'  the  blissful  climes,  „  Ixxxv  25 
They  wept  and  wail'd,  but  I  the  way  „  ciii  18 
I  have  I  her  home,  my  love,  Maud  I  xviii  1 
'  Lead  and  I  follow.'  Quietly  she  I.  Gareth  and  L.  1053 
L  from  the  tenitory  of  false  Limours  Geraint  and  E.  437 
answering  not  one  word,  she  I  the  way.  „  495 
across  the  poplar  grove  L  to  the  caves  :  Lancelot  and  E.  805 
like  a  flying  star  L  on  the  gray-hair'd  wisdom  Holy  Grail  453 
But  when  they  I  me  into  hall,  behold,  „  577 
loosed  his  horse,  and  I  him  to  the  light.  Pelleas  and  E.  61 
I  her  forth,  and  far  ahead  Of  his  and  her  retinue  Guinevere  384 
light  that  I  The  holy  Elders  with  the  gift  of  myrrh.  Pass,  of  Arthur  400 
I  on  with  light  In  trances  and  in  visions  :  Lover's  Tale  i  77 
I  was  I  mute  Into  her  temple  like  a  sacrifice  ;  „  684 
Then  those  who  I  the  van,  and  those  in  rear,  „  Hi  24 
whirling  rout  L  by  those  two  rush'd  into  dance,  „  55 
L  his  dear  lady  to  a  chair  of  state.  „  iv  321 
am  I  by  the  creak  of  the  chain,  Rizpah  7 
far  liever  I  my  friend  Back  to  the  pure  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  70 
In  praise  of  God  who  I  me  thro'  the  waste.  Columbus  17 
I  know  that  he  has  I  me  all  my  life,  „  160 
sometimes  wish  I  had  never  I  the  way.  „  186 
L  backward  to  the  tyranny  of  one  ?  Tiresias  76 
I  knaws  I  'ed  I  tha  a  quieter  life  Spinster's  S's.  71 
Ages  after,  while  in  Asia,  he  that  I  the  wild 

Moguls,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  81 

half-brain  races,  I  by  Justice,  Love,  and  Truth ;  „              161 

know  them,  follow  him  who  I  the  way,  „              266 

L  upward  by  the  God  of  ghosts  and  dreams,  Demeter  and  P.  5 

L  nre  at  length  To  the  city  and  palace  Merlin  and  the  G.  64 

Till,  I  by  dream  and  vague  desire.  To  Master  of  B.  17 

And  the  Vision  that  I  me  of  old.  The  Dreamer  5 

Leddest    I  by  the  hand  thine  infant  Hope.  Ode  to  Memory  30 

Ledge    (See  also  Diamond-ledge,  Meadow-ledges)    And 

you  were  leaning  from  the  I  Miller's  D.  84 

tall  dark  pines,  that  plumed  the  craggy  I  CEnone  209 

Of  I  or  shelf  The  rock  rose  clear.  Palace  of  Art  9 
from  the  craggy  I  the  poppy  hangs  in  sleep.           Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  11 

leave  The  monstrous  I's  there  to  slope,  Princess  vii  212 

About  the  I's  of  the  hill.'  In  Mem.  xxxvii  8 


Ledge  (continue    red-ribb'd  I's  drip  with  a  silent  horror 

of  blood,  Maud  I  iZ 

Athwart  the  I's  of  rock,  „  //  H  28 

on  the  window  I,  Close  underneath  his  eyes,  Lancelot  and  E.  1239 

And  a  hundred  splash'd  from  the  I's,  V.  of  Maeldune  103 

Ledger    When  only  the  I  lives,  Maud  /  i  35 

Lee  (Annie)    See  Annie,  Annie  Lee 

Leech  (blood-sucker)    swann'd  His  literary  I'es.  Will  Water.  200 

Leech  (physician)     King's  own  I  to  look  into  his  hurt ;      Geraint  and  E.  923 
King  will  send  thee  his  own  I —  Balin  and  Balan  275 

I  foi-sake  the  dying  bed  for  terror  of  his  life  ?  Happy  98 

Leering     Z  at  his  neighbour's  wife.  Vision  of  Sin  IIS 

Lees     I  will  drink  Life  to  the  I :  Ulysses  7 

Dregs  of  life,  and  I  of  man  :  Vision  of  Sin  205 

Left  (adj.)     And  over  his  I  shoulder  laugh'd  at  thee,  Bridesmaid  7 

And  on  the  I  hand  of  the  hearth  he  saw  Enoch  Arden  753 

letting  her  I  hand  Droop  from  his  mighty  shoulder.   Merlin  and  V.  242 


from  whose  I  hand  floweth  The  Shadow  of  Death 

And  he  call'd  '  L  wheel  into  line  !  ' 
Left  (s)     In  her  I  a  hiunan  head. 

left  but  narrow  breadth  to  I  and  right 

And  she  the  I,  or  not,  or  seldom  u^  ; 

'  How  grew  this  feud  betwixt  the  right  and  I.' 

Oaring  one  arm,  and  bearing  in  my  I 

here  and  there  to  I  and  right  Struck, 

To  right  ?  to  Z  ?  straight  forward  ? 
Left  (verb)    (See  also  Leaved)    And  what  is  J  to  me, 
but  Thou, 

With  silver  anchor  I  afloat. 

She  I  the  web,  she  I  the  loom. 

Beneath  a  willow  I  afloat. 

Is  this  the  end  to  be  I  alone. 

And  day  and  night  I  am  I  alone 

And  I  a  want  unknown  before  ; 

And  I  was  I  alone  within  the  bower  ; 

lock'd  in  with  bars  of  sand,  L  on  the  shore  ; 

he  set  and  I  behind  The  good  old  year. 

Then  when  1 1  my  home.' 

What  else  was  I  ?  look  here  ! ' 

flow  Of  music  I  the  lips  of  her  that  died 

She  lock'd  her  lips :  she  I  me  where  I  stood  : 

Falls  off,  and  love  is  I  alone. 

'  at  home  was  little  I,  And  none  abroad : 

moved  away,  and  I  me,  statue-like, 

I  his  father's  house.  And  hired  himself  to  work 

He  spied  her,  and  he  I  his  men  at  work. 

We  I  the  dying  ebb  that  faintly  lipp'd 

He  I  his  wife  behind  ;  for  so  I  heard. 

He  I  her,  yes.     I  met  my  lady  once  : 

till  she  was  I  alone  Upon  her  tower, 

and  now  we  I  The  clerk  behind  us, 

So  I  the  place,  I  Edwin,  nor  have  seen  Him  since, 

Yet  this  way  was  I,  And  by  this  way 

Her  father  I  his  good  arm-chair, 

'  She  /  the  novel  half-uncut  Upon  the  rosewood  shelf ; 
She  I  the  new  piano  shut : 

tho'  they  could  not  end  me,  I  me  maim'd 

my  passion  sweeping  thro'  me  I  me  dry,  L  me 
with  the  palsied  heart,  and  I  me  with  the 
jaundiced  eye ; 

I  was  I  a  trampled  orphan. 

So  I  alone,  the  passions  of  her  mind. 

My  father  I  a  park  to  me. 

He  I  a  small  plantation  ; 

We  I  behind  the  painted  buoy 

Long  lines  of  cliff  breaking  have  I  a  chasm  ; 

daily  I  The  little  footprint  daily  wash'd  away. 

(Since  Enoch  I  he  had  not  look'd  upon  her), 

ten  years  Since  Enoch  I  his  hearth 

he  who  I  you  ten  long  yeai's  ago  Should  still  be  living ; 

nor  loved  she  to  be  I  Alone  at  home, 

I  but  narrow  breadth  to  left  and  right 

Among  the  gifts  he  I  her  (possibly  He  flow'd 

And  I  the  living  scandal  that  shall  die — 

Then  I  alone  he  pluck'd  her  dagger  forth 


Lover's  Tale  i  498 

Heavy  Brigade  6 

Vision  of  Sin  138 

Enoch  Arden  674 

Princess  Hi  38 

77 

iv  183 

Holy  Grail  494 

Pelleas  and  E.  67 

Supp.  Confessions  18 

Arabian  Nights  93 

L.  of  Skalott  Hi  37 

„  ii>  7 

Mariana  in  the  S.  71 

83 

MUler's  D.  228 

(Enone  192 

Palace  of  Art  250 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  5 

D.  of  F.  Women  120 

156 

195 

241 

To  J.  S.  16 

The  Epic  19 

Gardener's  D.  161 

Dora  37 

„      86 

Audley  Court  12 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  47 

48 

98 

Edwin  Morris  96 

137 

St.  S.  Stylites  178 

Talking  Oak  103 

117 
Tithonus  20 


Locksley  Hall  131 

156 

Godiva  32 

Amphion  1 

„       20 

The  Voyage  1 

Enoch  Arden  1 

21 

273 

360 

404 

516 

674 

Aylmer's  Field  217 

444 

470 


Left 

Your  house  is  I  unto  you  desolate  ! '  (repeat) 
iMght  that  were  I  to  make  a  purer  world— 
^  My  house  is  ^  unto  me  desolate.' 

Our  house  is  I  unto  us  desolate  '  ? 
Have  not  our  love  and  reverence  I  them  bare  " 
or  one  stone  L  on  another, 

And  I  their  memories  a  world's  curse 

Still  so  much  gold  was  I ; 

from  the  gaps  and  chasms  of  ruin  I 

n    r"f  ^^"'^'  ^"'^  reaching  thro'  the  night 
^T^  ^u^^l"^  Teacher,  whom  he  held  diline. 
Ihe  fare  that  I  a  roofless  Ilion, 
if  I  go  my  work  is  I  Unfinish'd— t/ 1  go 
to  take  Only  such  cups  as  I  us  friendly- warm. 
He,  dymg  lately,  I  her,  as  I  hear, 
last  not  least,  she  who  had  I  her  place 
(what  other  way  was  I)  I  came  '  ' 

chapel  bells  CaU'd  us :  we  Z  the  walks  • 
Uhe  drunken  king  To  brawl  at  Shushan 
(i-or  smce  her  horse  was  lost  1 1  her  mine) 
With  many  thousand  matters  Uo  do 
what  was  I  of  faded  woman-slough     ' 
We  I  her  by  the  woman, 
which  she  I :  She  shall  not  have  it  back  • 
Pharos  from  his  base  Had  I  us  rock. 
I  me  m  it ;  And  others  otherwise  they  laid  • 
but  some  were  I  of  those  Held  sagest  ' 

Blanche  had  gone,  but  I  Her  child  among  us. 
And  I  her  woman,  lovelier  in  her  mood 
her  labour  was  but  as  a  block  L  in  the  quarry  • 
might  be  Z  some  record  of  the  things  we  said. 
Have  I  the  last  free  race  with  naked  coasts ' 
All  that  was  I  of  them,  L  of  six  hundred 
my  Annie  who  I  me  at  two, 
there's  none  of  them  I  alive  ; 
There  is  but  a  trifle  I  you, 
Nobbut  a  bit  on  it's  I, 
What  room  is  I  for  a  hater  ? 
if  I  to  pass  His  autumn  into  seeming-leafless  davs- 
light  gone  with  her,  and  I  me  in  shadow  here  ! 
And,  having  I  the  glass,  she  turns 
When  Lazarus  I  his  chamel-cave, 
«)U,  I  barren,  scarce  had  grown  The  grain 
But  ere  the  lark  hath  I  the  lea  I  wake 
What  fame  is  I  for  human  deeds  In  endless  a^e  ? 
As  m  the  winters  I  behind, 
I  felt  and  feel,  tho'  I  alone, 
Which  I  my  after-mom  content. 
Our  father's  dust  is  I  alone 
a  scheme  that  had  I  us  flaccid  and  drain'd 

A  ^  w?^  ^F  ^^^'^  i"^o  gold  To  a  grandson, 

And  { the  daisies  rosy. 

This  lump  of  earth  has  I  his  estate 

l-or  who  was  Z  to  watch  her  but  I  ? 

That,  if  I  uncancell'd,  had  been  so  sweet : 

Ihat  he  I  his  wine  and  horses  and  play. 

From  the  meadow  your  walks  have  I  so  sweet 

ihat  thou  art  I  for  ever  alone  • 

L  her  and  fled,  and  Other  enter'd  in. 

And  ere  it  I  their  faces, 

To  hear  him  speak  before  he  I  his  life 


394 


Left 


Aylmer's  Field  617 

„    629,797 

638 

721 

737 

785 

789 

796 

Sea  Dreams  130 

225 

287 

iMcretius  13 

65 

„      103 

„      215 

Princess  i  78 

m165 

217 


the  two  X  the  still  King,  and  passing  forth  to  breathe 

but  when  they  I  the  shrine  Great  Lords  from  Rome     ' 

and  I  m  neither  gold  nor  field.' 

thou  that  slewest  the  sire  hast  I  the  son 

war  among  themselves,  but  I  them  kings  • 

many  a  viancU,  And  many  a  costly  cate,' 

Z  The  dam.sel  by  the  peacock  in  his  pride 

And  I  them  with  God-speed 

Z  crag-carven  o'er  the  streaming  Gel^- 

Affirming  that  his  father  I  him  gold 

wIrJ  iT  fn'^^'i  ''''"^'''  *"f'  robed  herself, 
When  lat«  I  Caerieon,  our  gr«at  Queen, 


471 
Hi  229 
it)  197 
458 
»40 
113 
431 
w340 
377 
381 
vii  56 
162 
231 
Third  of  Feb.  18 
40 
Light  Brigade  48 
Grandmother  77 
85 
107 
N.  Farmer,  0.  iS.  41 
Spiteful  Letter  14 
—         A  Dedication  9 
Window,  Gone  3 
In  Mem.  vi  35 
„       xxxi  1 
>f         liii  7 
,>    Ixviii  13 
„    Ixxiii  11 
„    Ixxviii  9 
,>    Ixxxv  42 
»  ciii  4 

„  cv  5 

Maud  I  i  20 
a;  11 
,,        xii  24 
,,  xvi  1 

„       xix  10 
46 
74 
»      xxii  39 
„      II  Hi  4 
Com.  of  Arthur  201 
272 
362 
369 
476 
Gareth  and  L.  339 
360 
422 


890 

1203 

Marr.  of  Geraint  451 

737 

781 


Than  when  1 1  your  mowers 


Left  (verb)  (continued) 
dinnerless. 
Leading  the  horse,  and  they  were  I  alone. 
Enid  I  alone  with  Prince  Geraint 
Nor  I  untold  the  craft  herself  had  used  • 
and  so  I  him  stunn'd  or  dead,  ' 

There  is  not  I  the  twinkle  of  a  fin 
And  I  him  lying  in  the  public  way  : 
Not  a  hoof  I:  and  I  methinks  till  now 
But  Z  two  brawny  spearmen,  who  advanced 
and  the  two  Were  I  alone  together,  ' 

That  trouble  which  has  I  me  thrice  your  own  • 
whom  Other  I  in  charge  Long  since 
when  we  I,  in  those  deep  woods  we  found 
an  enemy  that  has  I  Death  in  the  living  waters  a 

w^ni  t"*"^  *  ^Jl^  ^  y°"*^  g*"i«  out  Had  I  iA  ashes 
Whose  kinsman  I  him  watcher  o'er  his  wife 
Z  Not  even  Lancelot  brave,  nor  Galahad  clean 
And  ending  m  a  ruin — nothing  I 


Geraint  and  E.  234 

244 

365 

393 

464 

474 

478 

485 

558 

734 

737 

„    .  '  933 

Balm  and  Balan  120 

Merlin  and  V.  147 

246 

706 

804 

883 


WW  ?  *^^,^a^*ge'i  woodland  yet  once  more  To  peace ;  gas 

He  I  It  with  her,  when  he  rode  to  tilt  ^       Lancehi  and  F^ 

He  I  the  barren-beaten  thoroughfare  J^ncelot  and  E.^ 

But  i!  her  all  the  paler,  "  \^^ 

But  I  him  leave  to  stammer  '  Is  it  indeed  ?  '  "  3, 

If  any  man  that  day  were  I  afield  "  rfi 

and  hath  I  his  prize  Ontaken,  "  ^ 

Here  was  the  knight,  and  here  he  I  a  shield  ;  "  ^.o? 

Why  ask  you  not  to  see  the  shield  he  Z,  "  X^t 

As  yon  proud  Prince  who  I  the  quest  to  me.  "  ^9 

and  being  in  his  moods  L  them,  "  '^^ 

Her  own  poor  work,  her  empty  labour,  I.  "  qqV 

But  when  they  Z  her  to  herself  again,  "  qqo 

Come,  for  you  I  me  taking  no  farewell,  "  .  IZ 

I Z  her  and  I  bad  her  no  farewell ;  "  fpA! 

Fell  mto  dust,  and  I  was  I  alone,  (repeat)  Holy  Grail  389  400  41 Q 

plowman  Z  his  plowing,  and  fell  dow^  Before  it  •  '        '      ^ 

milkmaid  I  her  milking,  and  f eU  down  Before  it. 

Was  I  alone  once  more,  and  cried  in  grief 

a  remnant  that  werej  Paynim  amid  theii^  circles, 

shattered  talbots,  which  had  I  the  stones  Raw 

Lancelot  I  The  haU  long  silent. 

And  I  me  gazing  at  a  barren  board, 

new  knights  to  fill  the  gap  L  by  the  Holy  Quest ; 

And  he  was  I  alone  in  open  field.  J'  ■*  «•" . 

There  I  it,  and  them  sleeping  • 

wu  ^i"i  bruised  And  batter'd'  and  fled  on. 

wu?  I  ,1^^"^  ^bi°b  Innocence  the  Queen 

Which  I  thee  less  than  fool, 

After  she  I  him  lonely  here  ? 

ButJ  her  all  as  easily,  and  retum'd. 


Pdleas  and  E. 
2 

45; 

5» 
Last  Tournament  29, 


warhorse  Z  to  graze  A^iong  the  forest  greens 

my  man  Hath  Z  me  or  is  dead  • ' 
her  too  hast  thou  I  To  pine  and  waste 
Heathen,  the  brood  by  Hengist  Z  • 
Modred  whom  he  I  in  charge  of  all 
come  next,  five  summers  back.  And  I  me  ; 
Ihen  that  other  Z  alone  Sigh'd, 
Had  yet  that  grace  of  courtesy  in  him  Z 
For  when  the  Roman  Z  us,  and  their  law 
For  which  of  us,  who  might  be  Z,  could  speak 
rn":.''fT..Ti"  i":T"^«-"  ,!?«-*  I  canLe  down  sin 


TLl^^^'f?'"'^^^^-  ^  -"iglitiest  of  all  peoples 
L  her  own  life  with  it ;  if    f   " 

To  know  her  father  Z  us  just  before 

Before  he  I  the  land  for  evermore  • 

Lest  there  be  none  Z  here  to  bring'her  back 

One  had  deceived  her  an'  Z  her  alone 

nay— what  was  there  Z  to  fall  ? 

but  bone  of  my  bone  was  Z 

an'  if  Sally  be  Z  aloiin, 

should  count  myself  the  coward  if  I Z  them 

hSni'^f"'  *'J1!'  P.?^'"'  ^^^^  *hey  were  not  Z  to  Spain 
be  little  of  us  Z  by  the  time  this  sun  be  set.'       ^      ' 
within  her  womb  that  had  Z  her  ill  content  • 
wound  to  be  drest  he  had  Z  the  deck  ' 


395 
403 
490 
495 
597 
Guinevere  16 
195 
322 
367 
436 
456 
501 
635 


I 


To  the  Queen  ii  21 

Lover's  Tale  i  215 

293 

iv  183 

367 

First  Quarrel  25 

Rizpah  9 

„      51 

North.  Cobbler  105 

The  Revenge  11 

20 

28 

51  V 


Left 

I*ft  (vexb)  (continued)    They  have  I  the  dooi-s  ajar ;     Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  1 
I  me  this,  Which  yet  retains  a  memory  of  its  youth  fi.^ 

We  I  her,  happy  each  in  each,  ■'  j         >  „  ou 

'Bread— Bread  I  after  the  blessing  ?  '  Sir  j  dldcastle  154 

brought  your  Princes  gold  enough  If  I  alone  !  C«  32  106 

And  we  I  the  dead  to  the  birds  v  nfMnTA^.Ta 

And  we  I  but  a  naked  rock,  ^-  "^  ^"^'^""^  36 

Alany  a  carcase  they  I  to  be  carrion,  Batt.  of  BruZnhurh  105 

L  for  the  white-tail'd  eagle  to  tear  it,  and  L  for  ^'^«««6«*'-/«  lOo 

the  homy-ribb'd  raven  to  rend  it,  107 

when  1 1  my  darling  alone.'  "j^j^    Wreck  Ql 

the  one  man  I  on  the  wreck—  '^     1 1 1 

fossil  skull  that  is  I  in  the  rocks  n'^,^^,-,  s« 

He  ;  us  weeping  in  the  woods ;  ThemJht  %l 

That  other  I  us  to  oureelves ;  Ihe  blr^U  37 

but  'a  I  me  the  work  to  do,  'ini„„fp  ' "  e>     ic 

I  was  ^within  the  shadow  sitting  on  the  wreck      LocT^Ch    Sixty  16 
Amy's  km  and  mine  are  Z  to  meT  "«/«(tey  a .,  oixty  lo 

Gone  thy  tender-natured  mother,  wearyinc  to  be 

I  alone,  ° 

But  ere  he  I  your  fatal  shore.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  33 

The  Ring  58 

„      113 

„      179 

„      188 

„      347 

„      355 

-,      476 

Happy  100 

To  Mary  Boyle  15 

Romney's  R.  129 

St.  Telemachus  50 

Bandit's  Death  12 

Charity  40 


395 


Leodogran 


For  Naples  which  we  only  I  in  May  ? 
i  to  me,  A  ring  too  which  you  kiss'd. 
He  I  me  wealth— and  while  I  journey'd  hence 
no  tear  for  him,  who  I  you  wealth  ' 

I  took,  1 1  you  there ;  ' 

of tener  I  That  angling  to  the  mother. 
With  earth  is  broken,  and  has  I  her  free 
^  /  had  been  the  leper  would  you  have'i  the  wife  ? 
i<or  ere  she  I  us,  when  we  met, 
'  Why  I  you  wife  and  children  ? 
had  I  His  aged  eyes,  he  raised  them, 
one  day  He  had  I  his  dagger  behind  him. 
bhe  has  I  me  enough  to  live  on. 
Wt    See  also  Late-left,  Latest-left. 
Leg    She  caught  the  white  goose  by  the  I 
My  right  /  chain'd  into  the  crag,         ' 
'  And,  I  and  ann  with  love-knots  gay 
And  I's  of  trees  were  limber,  ' 

Stept  forward  on  a  firmer  I, 
Callest  thou  that  thing  a  I  ? 
and  white,  and  strong  on  his  I's, 
'  Here's  a  Z  for  a  babe  of  a  week  ! ' 
Strong  of  his  hands,  and  strong  on  his  I's 
Dosn't  thou  'ear  my  'erse's  I's,  ' 

moor  sense  i'  one  o'  'is  I's  nor  in  all  thy  braains 
Lets  down  his  other  I,  and  stretching 
c/awn  shifts,  and  long  crane  I's  of  Mark— 
An  Lucy  wur  laame  o'  one  I, 
•wi'out  ony  harm  i'  the  I's, 
Ull  be  fun'  opo'  four  short  I's 
Legacy     Leaving  great  legacies  of  thought. 

Some  I  of  a  fallen  race  Alone  might  hint 
Legend    (-See  aZso  Half-legend)    Nor  these  alone 
every  I  fair 
'The  L  of  Good  Women,'  long  ago  Sung 
1  shaped  The  city's  ancient  Unto  this  :— 
The  reflex  of  a  ^  past. 
The  violet  of  a  I  blow 
There  hved  an  ancient  I  in  our  house 
I  ahnost  think  That  idiot  I  credible 
And  fading  I  of  the  past ; 
boss'd  With  holy  Joseph's  I, 
The  Z  as  in  guerdon  for  your  rhyme  ? 
A I  handed  down  thro'  five  or  six, 
Moreover,  that  weird  I  of  his  birth 
So  may  this  I  for  awhile,  ' 

And  then  he  told  their  I : 
Lot  true  ?  so  tender  should  be  true  ! 
Legendary    Glanced  at  the  I  Amazon 

aon    King  Leodogran  Groan'd  for  the  Roman  I's 
And  all  his  I's  crying  Christ  and  him, 
follow  d  up  by  her  vassal  I  of  fools  ; 
l^SOTiary     those  Neronian  legionaries  Burnt  and  broke 
f  ensh  d  many  a  maid  and  matron,  many  a  valorous  I, 


but 


The  Goose  9 

St.  S.  Stylites  73 

Talking  Oak  65 

Amphion  14 

WUl  Water.  123 

Vision  of  Sin  89 

Grandmother  2 

11 

13 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  1 

4 

Gareth  and  L.  1186 

Last  Tournament  729 

Village  Wife  99 

101 

Owd  Rod  16 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  35 

Two  Voices  359 


Palace  of  Art  125 

D.  of  F.  Women  2 

Godiva  4 

Day-Dm,.,  Pro.  11 

WUl  Water.  147 

Princess  i  5 

„    V 153 

In  Mem.  Ixii  4 

Balin  and  Balan  363 

Merlin  and  V.  554 

Holy  Grail  87 

Last  Tournament  669 

To  Prof.  Jebb  9 

The  Ring  206 

224 

Princess  ii  126 

Com.  of  Arthur  33 

Lancelot  and  E.  305 

Vastness  12 

Boddicea  1 

85 


Leisure    And  in  the  fallow  I  of  my  life 

lapt  In  the  arms  of  I, 

Mine  eyes  have  I  for  their  tears ; 
Leman    wert  lying  in  thy  new  I's  arms.' 
Lemon    I  grove  In  closest  coverture  upspi-ung 
Lend     God  in  his  mercy  I  her  grace. 

To  I  our  hearts  and  spirits  wholly 

Something  to  love  He  I's  us  ; 

Or  I  an  ear  to  Plato  where  he  says, 

m  this  frequence  can  1 1  full  tongue 

wi'  noan  to  Z  'im  a  shuvv,  ' 

That  Nature  I's  such  evil  dreams  ? 

To  I  thee  horae  and  shield  : 

I  pray  you  I  me  one,  if  such  you  have.  Blank, 


Audley  Court  77 

Princess  ii  168 

In  Mem.  xiii  16 

Last  Tournament  625 

Arabian  Nights  67 

L.  ofShalottiv53 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  63 

To  J.  S.  14 

Lucretius  147 

Princess  iv  442 

N.  Farmer,  IV.  S.  31 

In  Mem.  Iv  6 

Gareth  and  L.  1324 

Lancelot  and  E.  193 


so  did  W\Uaa  7  in  7u2  ^u      V  '  ,,.*■'  Lancelot  and  E.  193 


L  me  thine  horse  and  arms, 
her  gracious  lips  Did  I  such  gentle  utterance, 
Nor  I  an  ear  to  random  cries. 
Length    (.See  oZso  Arm's-length)    All  its  allotted 
I  of  days, 
I  of  bright  horizon  rimm'd  the  dark, 
to  such  I  of  years  should  come 
Cut  off  the  I  of  highway  on  before. 
Dangled  a  I  of  ribbon  and  a  ring  To  tempt 
With  I's  of  yellow  ringlet,  like  a  girl 
boss'd  with  I's  Of  classic  frieze,         ' 
All  her  fair  I  upon  the  ground  she  lay : 
To  wile  the  I  from  languorous  hours. 
And  lazy  I's  on  boundless  shores ; 
till  at  I  Sir  Gareth's  brand  Clash'd  his. 


Down  by  the  I  of  lance  and  arm  beyond 

and  seem'd  at  I  in  peace. 

At  I,  and  dim  thro'  leaves  Bhnkt  the  white  morn 

lay  she  all  her  I  and  kiss'd  his  feet, 

Pall'd  all  its  I  in  blackest  samite, 

wilt  at  I  Yield  me  thy  love  and  know  me 

At  I  A  lodge  of  intertwisted  beechen-boughs 

At  I  Descending  from  the  point  and  standing 

grew  at  I  Prophetical  and  prescient 

at  I  When  some  were  doubtful  how  the  law 

But  at  I  we  began  to  be  weary, 

AU  the  miUions  one  at  I 

Led  me  at  I  To  the  city  and  palace  Of  Arthur 

brought  you  down  A  I  of  staghorn-moss. 

All  his  leaves  Fall'n  at  I, 

at  I  he  touch'd  his  goal.  The  Christian  city. 
Lengthen'd     Tall  as  a  figure  I  on  the  sand 

With  a  I  loud  halloo. 
Lent  (fast)     If  it  may  be,  fast  Whole  L's, 
Lent  (verb)     Who  I  you,  love,  your  mortal  dower 
motion  I  The  pulse  of  hope  to  discontent. 
That  I  broad  verge  to  distant  lands, 
That  I  my  knee  desire  to  kneel, 
once  or  twice  she  I  her  hand, 
I,  that  have  I  my  life  to  build  up  yours, 
Still  in  the  little  book  you  I  me. 
And,  crown'd  with  all  the  season  I, 
A  willing  ear  We  I  him. 
I  her  fierce  teat  To  human  sucklings ; 
hath  not  our  good  King  Who  I  me  thee, 
Clung  to  the  shield  that  Lancelot  I  him, 
Pelleas  I  his  horse  and  all  his  arms, 
which  Innocence  the  Queen  L  to  the  King. 
I  The  sceptres  of  her  West,  her  East, 
Lenten    That  L  fare  makes  L  thought, 
Lent-Iily    and  all  L-l  in  hue, 

Thy  gay  lent-lilies  wave  and  put  them  by, 
Leodogran     L,  the  King  of  Cameliard, 

King  L  Groan'd  for  the  Roman  legions 
His  new-made  knights,  to  King  L, 
L  in  heart  Debating—'  How  should  I  that  am  a  kin'' 
lo  whom  the  King  L  replied, 
Thereat  L  rejoiced,  but  thought 
She  spake  and  King  L  rejoiced, 
..     L  awoke,  and  sent  Ulfius,  and  Brastias  and  Bedivere, 


345 

Lover's  Tale  i  457 
Politics  7 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  35 
Gardener's  D.  181 
Locksley  Hall  67 
Enoch  Arden  673 
750 
Princess  i  3 
,,     ii  24 
„      vbQ 
„  m63 
In  Mem.  Ixx  12 
Gareth  and  L.  1147 
Geraint  and  E.  463 
Balin  and  Balan  239 
384 
Merlin  and  V.  219 
Lancelot  and  E.  1142 
Pelleas  and  E  248 
Last  Tournament  dl5 
Lover's  Tale  i  410 
ii  131 
iv  269 
V.  of  Maeldune  91 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  162 
Merlin  and  the  G.  64 
Romney's  R.  79 
The  Oak  12 
St.  Telemachus  34 
Princess  vi  161 
The  Owl  ii  13 
St.  S.  Stylites  182 
Margaret  5 
Two  Voices  449 
Palace  of  Art  30 
Princess  Hi  193 
iv  27 
351 
The  Daisy  99 
In  Mem.  xxii  6 
„  Ixxxvii  31 
Com.  of  Arthur  28 
Gareth  and  L.  1071 
1320 
Pelleas  and  E.  358 
Last  Tournament  294 
To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  5 
To  E.  Fitzgerald  31 
Gareth  and  L.  911 
Prog,  of  Spring  37 
Com.  of  Arthur  1 

33     ■ 
137 


140 
160 
310 
425 
444 


Leolin 


396 


Letty 


Aylmer 


Field  57 

79 

124 

140 

184 

210 

234 

283 

318 

329 

339 

350 

360 

367 

409 

432 

493 

518 

557 

576 

Golden  Year  1 

4 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  55 

265 

QHnone  58 

Princess  ii  33 

„  ml81 

t)400 


Leolin     L,  his  brother,  living  oft  With  Averill, 
Vs  first  nui-se  was,  five  years  after, 

Would  care  no  more  for  L's  walking  with  her 

Might  have  been  other,  save  for  L's — 

Where  once  with  L  at  her  side  the  girl. 

Till  L  ever  watchful  of  her  eye, 

And  L,  coming  after  he  was  gone, 

by  the  counter  door  to  that  Which  L  open'd, 

And  L's  horror-stricken  answer, 

while  L  still  Retreated  half-aghast. 

Went  L ;  then,  his  passion  all  in  flood 

Some  one,  he  thought,  had  slander'd  L  to  him. 

L,  I  almost  sin  in  envying  you : 

But  L  cried  out  the  more  upon  them — 

Tho'  L  flamed  and  fell  again. 

So  L  went :  and  as  we  task  ourselves 

retmu'd  L's  rejected  rivals  from  their  suit 

Came  at  the  moment  L's  emissary. 

Was  L's  one  strong  rival  upon  earth  ; 

And  ci-ying  upon  the  name  of  L, 
Leonard    you  shall  have  that  song  which  L  wrote  : 

been  tjp  Snowdon  ;  and  I  wish'd  for  L  there, 

L  early  lost  at  sea  ; 

my  L,  use  and  not  abuse  your  day, 
Leopaiid  (adj.)     a  I  skin  Droop'd  from  his  shoulder, 
Leopard  (s)     two  tame  l's  couch'd  beside  her  throne, 

her  foot  on  one  Of  those  tame  Vs. 

I  tamed  my  l's  :  shall  I  not  tame  these  ? 
Leper    I  plague  may  scale  my  skin  but  never  taint  my 
heart ; 

'  Last  of  the  train,  a  moral  I,  I, 

And  flies  above  the  l's  hut, 

Is  that  the  l's  hut  on  the  solitary  moor,  Where  noble  Ulric 
dwells  forlorn,  and  wears  the  l's  weed  ? 

made  him  I  to  compass  him  with  scorn — 

be  content  Till  I  be  Z  like  yourself, 

Now  God  has  made  you  I  in  His  loving  care 

Or  if  /  had  been  the  I  would  you  have  left  the  wife  ? 
Leprous    Who  yearn  to  lay  my  loving  head  upon  your  I  breast. 

let  mine  be  I  too, 
Less  (adj.  and  adv.)     To  one  of  1  desert  allows 

But  now  they  live  with  Beauty  I  and  I, 

some  said  their  heads  were  I : 

L  welcome  find  among  us. 

Not  being  I  but  more  than  all 

And  yet  is  love  not  I,  but  more ; 

And  theirs  are  bestial,  hold  him  I  than  man  : 

And  now  of  late  I  see  him  I  and  I, 

Tells  of  a  manhood  ever  I  and  lower  ? 

Art  and  Grace  are  I  and  I : 

L  weight  now  for  the  ladder-of -heaven 
Less  (s)     O  grief,  can  grief  be  changed  to  /  ? 

From  I  and  I  to  nothing  ; 

From  I  to  I  and  vanish  into  light. 

And  I  will  be  lost  than  won. 
Lessen     Nor  will  it  I  from  to-day  ; 
Lessened    And  I  be  Z  in  his  love  ? 

great  as  Edith's  power  of  love.  Had  I, 
Lessening    a  foot  L  in  perfect  cadence, 

L  to  the  I  music,  back. 

And  crowded  farms  and  I  towers. 

At  Arthui''s  ordinance,  tipt  with  I  peak  And 
pinnacle, 

an  ever  opening  height.  An  ever  I  earth — 
(adj.)  Woman  is  the  I  man,  and  all  thy 
pa-ssions,  Locksley  Hall  151 

The  I  griefs  that  may  be  said,  In  Mem.  xx  1 

At  noon  or  when  the  I  wain  Is  twisting  „  ci  11 

to  cast  a  careless  eye  On  souls,  the  I  lords  of  doom.  „        cxii  8 

Is  comrade  of  the  I  faith  That  sees  the  course  of  human 
things.  „    cxxviii  3 

'  I  have  seen  the  cuckoo  chased  by  I  fowl,  Com.  of  Arthur  167 

Had  sent  thee  down  before  a  I  spear,  Gareth  and  L.  1244 

*  then  in  wearing  mine  Needs  must  be  I  likelihood,    Lancelot  and  E.  367 

Aa  if  some  I  god  had  made  the  world,  Pass,  of  Arthur  14 


Happy  27 
Princess  iv  222 
Happy  4 


16 

88 
91 
100 
26 
94 

To  the  Queen  6 

Caress'd  or  chidden  9 

Princess  ii  147 

354 

In  Mem.  cxi  11 

Con.  12 

Com.  of  Arthur  181 

356 

Last  Tournament  121 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  245 

By  an  Evolution.  12 

In  Mem.  Ixxviii  16 

Last  Tournament  467 

Pass,  of  Arthur  468 

The  Dreamer  22 

In  Mem.  lix  10 

;t8 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  262 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  55 

Sea  Dreams  221 

In  Mem.  xi  11 

Gareth  and  L.  308 
The  Ring  46 


Lesser  (s)    draws  The  greater  to  the  I, 
Lesson     Ketaught  the  I  thou  hadst  taught, 

Shall  we  teach  it  a  Roman  I  ? 

One  I  from  one  book  we  leam'd. 

Gracious  l's  thine  And  maxims  of  the  mud  ! 

A  simpler,  saner  I  might  he  learn 
Let     And  l's  me  from  the  saddle  ;  ' 

L's  them  inter  'eaven  easy  es  leaves 
Lethargy    for  months,  in  such  blind  lethargies 
Lethe    Some  draught  of  X  might  await 

For  she  that  out  of  L  scales  with  man 

cannot  hear  The  sullen  L  rolling  doom 

gleams  On  L  in  the  eyes  of  Death. 

the  abyss  Of  Darkness,  utter  L. 
Lethean    (If  Death  so  taste  L  springs), 
Lether  (ladder)    '  Ya  mun  run  fur  the  I. 

Sa  I  i-uns  to  the  yard  fur  a  I, 

Thy  Moother  was  howdin'  the  Z, 
Letter  (epistle)    from  her  bosom  drew  Old  l's, 

And  gave  my  l's  back  to  me. 

her  l's  too,  Tho'  far  between, 

and  read  Writhing  a  I  from  his  child, 

The  I  which  he  brought,  and  swore 

Found  a  dead  man,  a  I  edged  with  death  Beside  him, 

Tore  the  king's  I,  snow'd  it  down, 

I  can  give  you  l's  to  her  ; 

show'd  the  late-writ  l's  of  the  king. 

the  king,'  he  said, '  Had  given  us  l's, 

I  gave  the  I  to  be  sent  with  dawn  ; 

I  read— two  l's — one  her  sire's. 

Behold  your  father's  I.' 

I  pored  upon  her  I  which  I  held, 

And  with  it  a  spiteful  I 


Go,  little  I,  apace,  apace.  Fly ; 

And  l's  unto  trembling  hands  ; 

The  noble  l's  of  the  dead  : 

to  write  as  she  devised  A  I,  word  for  word ; 

Then  he  wrote  The  I  she  devised  ; 

lay  the  I  in  my  hand  A  little  ere  I  die. 

Her  father  laid  the  I  in  her  hand. 

In  her  right  the  lily,  in  her  left  The  I — 

Arthur  spied  the  I  in  her  hand, 

her  lips.  Who  had  devised  the  I,  moved  again 

an'  a  I  along  wi'  the  rest, 

— this  was  the  I — this  was  the  1 1  read — 

I  flimg  him  the  I  that  drove  me  wild, 

And  then  he  sent  me  a  I, 

'  are  you  ill  ?  '  (so  ran  The  I) 

fur  the  'tumey's  l's  they  foller'd  sa  fast ; 

I  shook  as  I  open'd  the  I — 

She  found  my  I  upon  him, 
Letter  (character)    a  tear  Dropt  on  the  l's  as  I  wrote 

sow'd  her  name  and  kept  it  green  In  living  l's. 

Along  the  l's  of  thy  name. 

In  l's  like  to  those  the  vexillary 

on  her  tomb  In  l's  gold  and  azure  ! ' 

scroll  Of  l's  in  a  tongue  no  man  could  read. 

Not  by  the  sounded  I  of  the  word, 

until  The  meaning  of  the  l's  shot  into  My  brain  ; 

is  veering  there  Above  his  four  gold  l's) 
Letter  (literal  meaning)    His  light  upon  the  I  dwells, 

I  broke  the  I  of  it  to  keep  the  sense. 

Because  she  kept  the  I  of  his  word. 
Letter  (verb)     Spring  L's  cowslips  on  the-hill  ? 
Letter'd     I  hold  Mother's  love  in  I  gold. 
Letters  (literature)     From  misty  men  of  l's  ; 

Thy  partner  in  the  flowery  walk  Of  l's, 

gilded  by  the  gracious  gleam  Of  l's, 

plaudits  from  our  best  In  modern  l's. 

Before  the  Love  of  L's,  overdone. 
Letting    fell'd  The  forest,  I  in  the  sun, 

I  her  left  hand  Droop  from  his  mighty  shoulder, 
Letty    (See  also  HUi,  Letty  Hill)    Tlie  close, '  Your  L, 
only  yours ; ' 

I  have  pai-don'd  little  L ; 


Gardener's  D.  li 

England  and  Am,er.  8 

Boddicea  32 

In  Mem.  Ixxix  14 

Merlin  and  V.  48 

Prog,  of  Spring  105 

Lancelot  and  E.  94 

VUlage  Wife  94 

St.  S.  Stylites  103 

Two  Voices  350 

Princess  vii  261 

Lit.  Squabbles  11 

Im  Mem.  xcviii  8 

Romney's  R.  53 

In  Mem.  xliv  10 

Owd  Rod  77 

82 

85 

Mariana  in  the  S.  62 

The  Letters  20 

Aylmer' s  Field  475 

517 

522 

595 

Princess  i  61 

159 

175 

181 

245 

w397 

468 

i;469 

Spiteful  Letter  2 

Window,  Letter  11 

In  Mem.  x  7 

„      xcv  24 

Lancelot  and  E.  1104 

1109 

1113 

1134 

1156 

1270 

1288 

First  Quarrel  49 

51 

57 

85 

Sisters  [E.  and  E.)  186 

Village  Wife  62 

The  Wreck  145 

Charity  23 

To  J.  S.  56 

Aylmer's  Field  81) 

In  Mem.  Ixvii  7 

Gareth  and  L.  1202 

Lancelot  and  E.  1345 

Holy  Grail  171 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)1G2 


Lover's  Tale  ii  b 

The  Ring  333 

Miller's  D.  189 

Princess  iv  338 

Geraint  and  E.  455 

Adeline  62 

Helen's  Tower  4 

Will  Water.  190 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  23 

Ded.  of  Idylls  40 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  39 

Poets  and  their  B.  13 

Com.  of  Arthur  (K) 

Merlin  and  V.  242 

Edwin  Morris  106 
140 


Letty  HiU 

LettyHUl    (See  also  Bm,  letty)    Tho' if ,  in  dancing 
after  L  H,  '  -S 

Level  (adj.)    counterchanged  The  I  lake  with  diamond 
plots 
For  leagues  no  other  tree  did  mark  The  Z  waste 
Or  opening  upon  I  plots  Of  crowned  lilies,  ' 

They  past  into  the  I  flood, 
From  I  meadow-bases  of  deep  grass 
Crisp  foam-flakes  scud  along  the  I  sand. 
And  on  a  sudden,  lo  !  the  I  lake, 
But  when  we  planted  I  feet,  and  dipt 
As  waits  a  river  I  with  the  dam  Ready  to  burst 
And  on  by  many  a  I  mead, 
range  Of  I  pavement  where  the  King  would  pace 
And  on  a  sudden,  lo  !  the  I  lake. 
And  shine  the  I  lands, 
.level  (s)     Ridged  the  smooth  I, 

It  springs  on  a  Z  of  bowery  lawn, 
The  house  thro'  all  the  I  shines. 
Came  on  the  shining  I's  of  the  lake, 
thou  shalt  lower  to  his  Z  day  by  day, 
came  On  flowery  I's  underneath  the  crag, 
waterlily  starts  and  slides  Upon  the  I 
Came  on  the  shining  I's  of  the  lake. 
The  rippling  I's  of  the  lake', 
O  yes,  if  yonder  hill  be  I  with  the  flat. 
Down  from  the  mountain  And  over  the  I, 
climb'd  from  the  dens  in  the  I  below. 
Level  (verb)     Not  to  feel  lowest  makes  them  I  all  • 
Lever    A  I  to  uplift  the  earth  ' 

Leveret    quail  and  pigeon,  lark  and  I  lay. 
Levied     L  a  kindly  tax  upon  themselves. 
Levin-brand    Then  flash'd  3.1-b; 
Lewd    when  was  Lancelot  wanderingly  I  ? 
Lewdness    I,  narrowing  envy,  monkey-spite, 
Lewes     Were  those  your  sires  who  fought  at  Z  ? 
Liana    And  cliffs  all  robed  in  I's 
Liar    {See  also  Hustings-liar,  Loiar)    I  raged  against 
the  public  I ; 
Let  the  canting  I  pack  ! 
and  slandering  me,  the  base  little  I ! 
There  the  hive  of  Roman  I's 
And  rave  at  the  lie  and  the  I, 
clamour  of  I's  belied  in  the  hubbub  of  lies  • 
Spum'd  by  this  heir  of  the  I —  ' 

wrath  shall  be  wreak'd  on  a  giant  I ; 
one  said  '  Eat  in  peace  !  a  Z  is  he, 
a  glance  will  serve — the  I's  ! 
'  What  dare  the  full-fed  I's  say  of  me  ? 
the  King  Hath  made  us  fools  and  I's. 
'i,  for  thou  hast  not  slain  This  Pelleas  ! 
'  Tell  thou  the  King  and  aU  his  I's, 
youthful  jealousy  is  a  Z. 
teeming  with  I's,  and  madmen,  and  knaves 
libation    No  vain  I  to  the  Muse,  ' 

Uberal    But  Thou  rejoice  with  I  joy. 

And  I  applications  lie  In  Art  like  Nature 

Two  in  the  I  offices  of  life,  ' 

but  come,  We  will  be  I,  smce  our  rights  are  won. 

shook  to  all  the  I  air  The  dust  and  din 

*  Liberal-minded    l-m,  great.  Consistent ; 

Libera  me,  Domine    '  L  m,  D  ! '  you  sang  the  Psalm, 

Libera  nos,  Domine    '  Ln,D  '—you  knew  not  one  was  there  ;," '  53 

Liberty      He  that  roars  for  Z  Faster  binds  Vision  of  Sin  121 

bhe  bore  the  blade  of  L.  The  Voyage  72 

Close  at  the  boundary  of  the  liberties  ;  Princess  i  172 

And  boldly  ventured  on  the  liberties.  „  205 

Not  for  three  years  to  cross  the  liberties ;  ,"        H  71 

To  compass  our  dead  sisters' Zj6er<ie5.'  "     m  288 

Thine  the  I,  thine  the  glory,  Boadicea  41 

Me  the  wife  of  rich  Prasiitagus,  me  the  lover  of  I,  48 

Libyan    '  We  drank  the  L  Sun  to  sleep,  B.  of  F.  Women  145 

^iceMe    give  you,  being  strange,  A  I :  Priwess  Hi  205 

You  grant  me  I ;  might  I  use  it  ?  235 

takes  His  I  in  the  field  of  time,  /«  Mem.  xxvii  6 


397 


Edwin  Morris  55 


Arabian  Nights  85 

Mariana  44 

Ode  to  Memory  108 

Miller's  D.  75 

Palace  of  Art! 

D.  of  F.  Women  39 

M.  d' Arthur  191 

Princess  iv  30 

473 

In  Mem.  ciii  21 

Gareth  and  L.  667 

Pass,  of  Arthur  359 

Early  Spring  15 

Arabian  Nights  35 

Poet's  Mind  31 

Mariana  in  the  S.  2 

M.  d' Arthur  51 

Locksley  Hall  45 

Princess  Hi  336 

„    iv  256 

Pass,  of  Arthur  219 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  4 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  111 

Merlin  and  the  G.  50 

The  Dawn  17 

Merlin  and  V.  828 

In  Mem.  cxiii  15 

Audley  Court  24 

Enoch  Arden  663 

Last  Tournament  616 

Holy  GraU  148 

Lucretius  211 

Third  of  Feb.  33 

The  Wreck  73 

The  Letters  26 

Vision  of  Sin  108 

Grandmother  27 

Boadicea  19 

Maud  I  im 

„  iv  51 

xix  78 

„  IIIvi45 

Balin  and  Balan  607 

Merlin  and  F.  Ill 

692 

Pelleas  and  E.  479 

490 

Last  Tournament  77 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  240 

The  Dreamer  9 

Wm  Water.  9 

England  and  Amer.  11 

Day-Dm.,  Moral  13 

Princess  ii  175 

vi  68 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  7 

Con.  38 

Happy  49 


Licensed    Should  I  boldness  gather  force. 
Lichen    I  scraped  the  I  from  it : 

And  a  morbid  eating  I  fixt  On  a  heart 

Root-bitten  by  white  I, 
Lichen-bearded    the  hall  Of  Pellam,  l-b, 
Lichen'd    I  into  colour  with  the  crags  : 
Lichen-gilded    With  turrets  l-g  like  a  rock  • 
Lidded    See  Argent-lidded 
Lidless    A  I  watcher  of  the  public  weal, 
Lie  (s)    Can  do  away  that  ancient  I ; 

'  Wilt  thou  make  everything  a  I, 

Perplexing  me  with  I's  ; 

Cursed  be  the  social  I's 

neither  capable  of  I's,  Nor  asking  overmuch 

dare  not  ev'n  by  silence  sanction  I's. 


a  I  which  IS  half  a  truth  is  ever  the  blackest  of  I's 
That  a  I  which  is  all  a  I  may  be  met  and  fought 
with  outright.  But  a  I  which  is  part  a  truth  is  a 
harder 

Or  Love  but  play'd  with  gracious  I's, 

To  fool  the  crowd  with  glorious  I's, 

and  a  wretched  swindler's  I  ? 

And  rave  at  the  I  and  the  liar. 


Lie 

In  Mem.  cxiii  13 

The  Brook  193 

Maud  I  vi  77 

Gareth  and  L.  454 

Balin  and  Balan  332 

Lancelot  and  E.  44 

Edwin  Morris  8 

Princess  iv  325 

Clear-headed  friend  15 

Two  Voices  203 

St.  S.  Stylites  102 

Locksley  Hall  60 

Enoch  A  rden  251 

Third  of  Feb.  10 


Grandmother  30 

In  Mem.  cxxv  7 

„    cxxviii  14 

Maud  I  i56 

60 


Jack  on  his  ale-house  bench  has  as  many  I's  as  a  Czar  •                      i«  Q 

clamour  of  liars  behed  in  the  hubbub  of  I's  •                  '           "            51 

In  another  month  to  his  brazen  I's,  '                              "        ^  =c 

He  fiercely  gave  me  the  I,  "     jj  •  ?g 

Who  cannot  brook  the  shadow  of  any  U  Gareth  and  L.  293 

Our  one  white  I  sits  like  a  little  ghost  297 

'  For  this  half-shadow  of  a  I  The  trustful  Kine  "            ^9^ 

HiTl"'*^'^^                   1        -u  Merli:a.^dvA 

cloaks  the  scar  of  some  repulse  with  I's  ;  gig 

I  should  suck  L's  like  sweet  wines  :  Last  Tournament  645 

Then  playfuUy  she  gave  herself  the  l~  Lover's  Tale  i  349 

and  he  never  has  told  me  a  I.  Rizvah  24 

If  the  hope  of  the  world  were  a  Z  ?  /„  the  Child.  Hosp.  24 

we  knew  that  their  light  was  a  l~  Despair  16 

To  he,  to  he— m  God's  own  house— the  blackest  of  aU  lies !     The  Flight  52 

madness  ?  written,  spoken  l's  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  108 

L  s  upon  this  side,  l's  upon  that  side,  Vaslness  5 

voices  drowning  his  own  in  a  popular  torrent  of  l's  upon  l's  •                 6 

Do  not  die  with  a  I  in  your  mouth,  '  Forlorn  57 

A  I  by  which  he  thought  he  could  subdue  Havvy  64 

To  you  my  days  have  been  a  life-long  I,  Romney'sR.  41 

more  Than  all  the  myriad  l's,  jog 

I  may  claim  it  without  a  I.  Bandit's  Death  7 

Lie  (verb)     (See  also  Lig)     In  the  dark  we  must  I.  All  Things  wUl  Die  22 

w-!k®  ^^  K^  ^^l"^  ^'"'  ^^^^  ^P"^  ^'"  ^  The  Kraken  11 

Within  thy  heart  my  arrow  l's,  Oriana  80 

dead  Imeamente  that  near  thee  I  ?  Wan  Sculptor  2 

On  either  side  the  river  Z  L.  of  SkJott  i  1 

Come  from  the  wells  where  he  did  Z.  Two  Voices  9 

to  I  Beside  the  mill-wheel  in  the  stream,  Miller's  D.  166 

I  would  I  so  light,  so  light,  jo^ 

There  l's  a  vale  in  Ida,  "  (En„ne\ 
on  her  threshold  I  Howling  in  outer 

darkness.  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  15 

God,  before  whom  ever  I  bare  The  abysmal 

Tj  "^^f^l  11  7    ,              .,  Palace  of  Art  222 

?n     ■  l.*T  I  *'°",^'  '"°*^^'"'  ^«2/  Q'^^e^,  ^'-  Y's.  E.  20 

All  night  1 1  awake,  ^  -^        t                     tn 

To  I  within  the  Light  of  God,  as  I Z  "         r^  gq 

Music  that  gentlier  on  the  spirit  l's,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  5 

For  they  I  beside  their  nectar,  jjV 

Full  knee-deep  l's  the  winter  snow,  D.  of  the  0.  Year  1 

For  the  old  year  l's  a-dymg.  t 

L  still,  dry  dust,  secure  of  change.  'Vo   T   <i  ir 

Nature,  so  far  as  in  her  l's,  Qn  aModrn'erl 

but  It  l's  Deep-meadow'd,  happy  fair  M  d'  Arthur  2fil 

nlrTfl*  T'i  the  garden  l's  A  league  of  grass.  Gardener's  D.  39 

Beyond  the  lodge  the  city  l's.  Talkie n  nni^% 

He  l's  beside  thee  on  the  grai.  ^  "^'''''^  ^f  oq 

Peace  L  hke  a  shaft  of  light  Gnld^r,"  V^^.aq 

'  Ah  folly  !  for  it  l's  so  far  away,  ^"^^'''  ^*"'^  f ? 

There  l's  the  port :  the  vessel  puffs  Ulysses  44 


Lie 


398 


Lie  (verb)  (con<mtt«rf)  Man  comes  and  tills  the  field  and  Z's  beneath,  TithonusS 


That  I  upon  her  charmed  heart, 

liberal  apphcations  I  In  Art  like  Nature, 

That  in  my  bosom  Vs. 

'  Here  I's  the  body  of  Ellen  Adair ; 

There  I's  the  body  of  Ellen  Adair  ! 

Crew  and  Captain  I ; 

Pass  on,  weak  heart,  and  leave  me  where  1 1 : 

rank  or  wealth  Might  I  within  their  compass, 

L's  the  hawk's  cast,  the  mole  has  made  his  run, 

'  Let  them  I,  for  they  have  fall'n.' 

Heroic,  for  a  hero  l's  beneath, 

some  gross  error  l's  In  this  report, 

when  we  came  where  l's  the  child  We  lost 

Here  l's  a  brother  by  a  sister  slain, 

thousand  hearts  I  fallow  in  these  halls, 

there  she  l's,  But  will  not  speak,  nor  stir.' 

'  Lift  up  your  head,  sweet  sister :  I  not  thus. 

Let  them  not  I  in  the  tents  with  coarse  mankind, 

that  there  L  bruised  and  maim'd, 

'  You  shall  not  I  in  the  tents  but  here. 

Whatever  man  l's  wounded,  friend  or  foe, 

But  l's  and  dreads  his  doom. 

Now  l's  the  Earth  all  Danae  to  the  stars,  And  all 

thy  heart  l's  open  unto  me. 
as  far  as  in  us  l's  We  two  will  serve 
in  true  marriage  l's  Nor  equal,  nor  unequal ; 
I  see  the  place  wJiere  thou  wilt  I. 
A  use  in  measured  language  l's  ; 
Where  l's  the  master  newly  dead  ; 
This  use  may  I  in  blood  and  breath, 
I  Foreshorten'd  in  the  tract  of  time  ? 
Bring  in  great  logs  and  let  them  I, 
What  profit  l's  in  barren  faith, 
There  yet  l's  the  rock  that  fell 
And  Sleep  must  I  down  arm'd. 
Here  will  1 1,  while  these  long  branches  sway, 
wilderness,  full  of  wolves,  where  he  used  to  i ; 
I  know  that  he  l's  and  listens  mute 
Lot  beside  the  hearth  L's  like  a  log, 
and  now  l's  there  A  yet-warm  corpse, 
under  this  wan  water  many  of  them  L 
There  l's  a  ridge  of  slate  across  the  ford  ; 
let  the  bodies  I,  but  bound  the  suits 
there  I  still,  and  yet  the  sapling  grew : 
Beheld  before  a  golden  altar  I 
yonder  l's  one  dead  within  the  wood, 
to  ?  Closed  in  the  four  walls  of  a  hollow  tower, 

0  did  ye  never  I  upon  the  shore, 
Down  to  the  Uttle  thorpe  that  l's  so  close, 
go  back,  and  slay  them  where  they  L' 
Never  I  by  thy  side  ;  see  thee  no  more — 

1  before  your  shrines ; 
but  it  l's  Deep-meadow'd,  happy, 
goal  of  this  great  world  L's  beyond  sight : 
on  the  horizon  of  the  mind  L's  folded. 
As  the  tree  falls  so  must  it  I. 
But  if  there  I  a  preference  eitherway, 
in  my  wanderings  all  the  lands  that  I 
in  thy  virtue  l's  The  saving  of  our  Thebes ; 
l's  all  in  the  way  that  you  walk. 
l's  Behind  the  green  and  blue  ? 
L's  the  warrior,  my  forefather, 
L's  my  Amy  dead  in  child-birth. 
Yonder  l's  our  young  sea-village — 
You  that  I  with  wasted  lungs  Waiting 
'  Who  l's  on  yonder  pyre  ?  ' 
Saw  them  I  confounded, 

Lie  (speak  falsely)    This  is  a  shameful  thing  for  men 
'  I  will  speak  out,  for  I  dare  not  I. 
and  when  only  not  all  men  I ; 

Who  can  rule  and  dare  not  I.  „         x  66 

My  scheming  brain  a  cinder,  if  1 1.'  Merlin  and  V.  933 

i  to  me  :  I  believe.     Will  ye  not  I  ?  Last  Tournament  645 

This  is  a  shameful  thing  for  men  to  I.  Pass,  of  Arthur  246 


Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  20 

Moral  13 

iSt.  Agnes'  Eve  12 

Edward  Gray  27 

35 

The  Captain  68 

Come  not,  when,  etc.  11 

Aylmer's  Field  485 

849 

Sea  Breams  228 

Princess,  Pro.  212 

i69 

mIO 

208 

400 

v51 

64 

vi  69 

72 

94 

336 

vii  154 

182 

267 

302 

Sailor  Boy  8 

In  Mem.  v.  6 

„         XX  4 

„      xlv  13 

„    Ixxvii  3 

„     cvii  17 

„      cviii  5 

Maud  lis 

41 

„    xviii  29 

„       II  V  54: 

60 

Gareth  and  L.  75 

79 

825 

1056 

Geraint  and  E.  96 

165 

Balin  and  Balan  410 

468 

Merlin  and  F.  208 

291 

Holy  Grail  547 

Pdleas  and  E.  444 

Guinevere  579 

„      681 

Pass,  of  Arthur  429 

To  the  Queen  II  60 

Lover's  Tale  i  50 

Rizpah  12 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  290 

Tiresias  25 

„     109 

Despair  112 

Ancient  Sage  25 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  28 

36 

245 

Forlorn  21 

Death  of  (Enone  95 

The  Tourney  14 

to  I.       M.  d' Arthur  78 

Lady  Clare  38 

Maud  I  i  35 


Lie  (speak  falsely)  {continued) 
not  let  thee  I. 

To  I,  to  I — in  God's  own  housi 

and  juggle,  and  I  and  cajole, 
Lied    wrong'd  and  I  and  thwarted  us — 

I  with  ease  ;  but  horror-stricken  he, 

foul  are  their  lips  ;  they  I. 

Lancelot  vext  at  having  I  in  vain : 

They  I  not  then,  who  sware, 

L,  say  ye  ?     Nay,  but  learnt, 

you  knew — you  knew  that  he  I. 
Lief    go  again  As  thou  art  I  and  dear, 

go  again,  As  thou  art  I  and  dear, 
Liefer-Liever    Far  liefer  had  I  fight  a  score  of  times 

Far  liefer  had  I  gird  his  harness 

Far  liefer  than  so  much  discredit  him.' 

Far  liefer  by  his  dear  hand  had  I  die, 

I  had  liefer  ye  were  worthy  of  my  love. 

Made  answer,  '  I  had  liefer  twenty  years 

far  liever  led  my  friend  Back  to  the  pure 

And  each  of  them  liefer  had  died 
Liege    '  Sir  and  my  I,'  he  cried, 

loyal  vassals  toihng  for  their  I. 

Gareth  dreaming  on  his  I. 

'  O  true  and  tender  !     O  my  I  and  King  ! 

she  call'd  him  lord  and  I,  Her  seer, 

'  Sire,  my  I,  so  much  I  learnt ; 
'  Lady,  my  I,  in  whom  I  have  my  joy, 

'  0  King,  my  I,'  he  said, 

Modred  smote  his  I  Hard  on  that  helm 
Liege-lady  he,  he  reverenced  his  l-l  there ; 
Liege-lord  trusted  his  l-l  Would  yield  him 
Liest    O  happy  thou  that  I  low. 

Thou  I  beneath  the  greenwood  tree, 

'  L  thou  here  so  low,  the  child  of  one  I  honour'd, 
Liest  (speakest  falsely)     'Dog,  thou  I.    I  spring  from 

loftier  lineage 
Lieth    (See  also  Low-lieth)    He  I  still :  he  doth  not 
move : 

Love  I  deep  :  Love  dwells  not  in  lip-depths. 
Lieu    In  I  of  many  mortal  flies, 

In  I  of  idly  dallying  with  the  truth, 
Liever    See  Liefer 

Life    (See  also  After-life,  Loife)     *  Her  court  was  pure  ; 
her  1  serene  ; 

the  groimd  Shall  be  fill'd  with  I  anew. 

They  light  his  little  I  alway ; 

He  hath  no  care  of  I  or  death ; 

L  of  the  fountain  there, 

Which  would  keep  green  hope's  I. 

Shall  we  not  look  into  the  laws  Of  I  and  death, 

0  weary  I !     0  weary  death  ! 
Crown'd  Isabel,  thro  all  her  placid  I, 
She  only  said  '  My  I  is  dreary,  (repeat) 
L,  anguish,  death,  immortal  love. 
Small  thought  was  there  of  l's  distress  ; 
in  after  I  retired  From  brawling  storms, 
L  in  dead  stones,  or  spirit  in  air  ; 

He  saw  thro'  I  and  death, 

L  and  Thought  have  gone  away 

L  and  Thought  Here  no  longer  dwell ; 

Thou  art  the  shadow  of  I, 

L  eminent  creates  the  shade  of  death  ; 

Thy  heart,  my  I,  my  love,  my  bride. 

Two  lives  bound  fast  in  one 

So  runs  the  round  of  I  from  hour  to  hour. 

Oh  !  what  a  happy  I  were  mine 

But  enter  not  the  toil  of  i!. 

L  shoots  and  glances  thro'  your  veins, 

Brimm'd  with  delirious  draughts  of  warmest  I. 

My  I  is  full  of  weary  days, 

ebb  into  a  former  I,  or  seem  To  lapse 

'  My  I  is  sick  of  single  sleep  : 

1  shut  my  I  from  happier  chance. 
And  not  to  lose  the  good  of  I — 


Life 

fierce  manhood  would 

Balin  and  Balan  74 
the  blackest  of  all  lies  !     The  Flight  52 


Charity  29 

Princess  iv  540 

Balin  and  Balan  525 

616 

Lancelot  and  E.  102 

Last  Tournament  650 

656 

Charity  12 

M.  d' Arthur  80 

Pass,  of  Arthur  248 

Gareth  and  L.  944 

Marr  of  Geraint  93 

629 

Geraint  and  E.  68 

Pelleas  and  E.  301 

Last  Tournament  257 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  70 

V.  of  Maeldune  6 

Com.  of  Arthur  128 

282 

Gareth  and  L.  1316 

Merlin  and  V.  791 

953 

Lancelot  and  E.  708 

1180 

Holy  Grail  858 

Pass,  of  Arthur  165 

Princess  i  188 

Gareth  and  L.  396 

Oriana  84 

„    95 

Guinevere  422 

Gareth  and  L.  960 

D.  of  the  0.  Year  10 

Lover's  Tale  i  466 

Princess  Hi  268 

Lancelot  and  E.  590 


To  the  Queen  25 

Nothing  will  Die  29 

Supp.  Confessions  46 

48 

55 

119 

173 

188 

Isabel  27 

Mariana  9,  45,  69 

Arabian  Nights  73 

Ode  to  Memory  37 

111 

A  Character  9 

The  Poet  5 

Deserted  House  1 

17 

Love  and  Death  10 

13 

Oriana  44 

Circumstance  5 

9 

The  Merman  37 

Margaret  24 

Rosalind  22 

Elednore  139 

My  life  is  full  1 

Sonnet  to 2 

The  Bridesmaid  13 

Two  Voices  54 

132 


Life 


399 


Ufe 


JMb  (continued)    The  springs  of  I,  the  depths  of  awe,'  \  Two  Voices  140 

'  To  pass,  when  L  her  light  withdraws,  „           145 

'  A  /  of  nothings,  nothing-worth,  „          331 

'  It  may  be  that  no  Z  is  found,  „          346 

'  Or  if  thro'  lower  lives  I  came —  „          364 

No  I  that  breathes  with  human  breath  „          395 
'  Tis  I,  whereof  our  nerves  are  scant,  Oh  I,  not  death, 

for  which  we  pant ;  More  I,  and  fuller,  that  I  want.'  „  397 
There's  somewhat  flows  to  us  in  Z,  Miller's  D.  21 
I'd  almost  live  my  I  again.  „  28 
For  scarce  my  I  with  fancy  play'd  „  45 
Like  mine  own  I  to  me  thou  art,  „  196 
My  other  dearer  lial,  „  217 
I  am  all  aweary  of  my  I.  (Enone  33 
A  shepherd  all  thy  I  but  yet  king-born,  „  128 
These  three  alone  lead  I  to  sovereign  power.  „  145 
push  thee  forward  thro'  a  Z  of  shocks,  „  163 
I  pray  thee,  pass  before  my  light  of  I,  „  241 
Not  less  than  I,  design'd.  Palace  of  Art  128 
And  death  and  I  she  hated  equally,  „  265 
And  sweeter  far  is  death  than  I  to  me  May  Queen,  Con.  8 
And  blessings  on  his  whole  I  long,  „  14 
things  have  ceased  to  be,  with  my  desire  of  I.  „  48 
""            ~  „              56 

LotoS' Eaters,  C.  S.  41 

69 

D.  of  F.  Women  146 

154 

210 

D.  of  the  0.  Year  12 

To  J.  S.  24 

On  a  Mourner  19 

Love  thou  thy  land  34 

56 

M.  d' Arthur  155 

244 

251 

Gardener's  D.  20 

70 

84 

98 

178 

198 

Dora  23 

Audley  Court  43,  47,  51,  55 

77 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  22 

Edwin  Morris  4 

23 

143 

St.  S.  Stylites  54 

192 

Talking  Oak  192 

213 

255 

Love  and  Duty  12 

18 

64 

79 


And  what  is  I,  that  we  should  moan  ? 
Death  is  the  end  of  I ;  ah,  why  Should  I  all 

labour  be  ? 
Dear  is  the  memory  of  our  wedded  lives, 

0  my  I  In  Egypt ! 

1  heard  my  name  Sigh'd  forth  with  I 
these  did  move  Me  from  my  bliss  of  /, 
He  hath  no  other  I  above. 
Without  whose  1 1  had  not  been. 
Tin  all  thy  I  one  way  incline 
With  L,  that,  workmg  strongly,  binds — 
Yearning  to  mix  himself  with  L. 
I  live  three  lives  of  mortal  men, 
I  have  lived  my  I,  and  that  which  I  have  done 
That  nourish  a  blind  I  within  the  brain, 
ere  he  found  Empire  for  I  ? 
made  the  air  Of  L  delicious, 
(For  those  old  Mays  had  thrice  the  I  of  these,) 
by  my  I,  These  birds  have  joyful  thoughts, 
such  a  noise  of  I  Swarm'd  in  the  golden  present, 
Love  trebled  I  within  me, 
by  my  I,  I  will  not  marry  Dora.' 
but  let  me  live  my  I.  (repeat) 
And  in  the  fallow  leisure  of  my  I 
He  lost  the  sense  that  handles  daily  I — 
in  the  dust  and  drouth  Of  city  I ! 
once  I  ask'd  him  of  his  early  I, 
in  the  dust  and  drouth  of  London  I 
and  whole  years  long,  a  Z  of  death, 
footsteps  smite  the  threshold  stairs  Of  I — 
The  I  that  spreads  in  them, 
'  I  took  the  swarming  sound  of  I — 
To  riper  I  may  magnetise  The  baby-oak  within 
Sit  brooding  in  the  ruins  of  a  I, 
The  set  gray  I,  and  apathetic  end. 
such  tears  As  flow  but  once  a  I. 
— closing  like  an  individual  I — 


knowing  all  L  needs  for  I  is  possible  to  will — 

I  will  drink  L  to  the  lees  : 

As  tho'  to  breathe  were  I.     L  piled  on  I 

Love  took  up  the  harp  of  L, 

'Tis  a  purer  I  than  thine  ; 

and  the  tumult  of  my  I ; 

Orient,  where  my  I  began  to  beat ; 

help  me  as  when  I  begun  : 

In  these,  in  those  the  I  is  stay'd. 

all  his  I  the  charm  did  talk  About  his  path, 

all  the  long-pent  stream  of  I  Dash'd  downward 

Are  clasp'd  the  moral  of  thy  I, 

and  smote  Her  I  into  the  liquor. 

A  private  I  was  all  his  joy, 

Lest  of  the  fulness  of  my  I 


86 

Ulysses  7 

«      24 

Locksley  Hall  33 

88 

110 

154 

185 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  18 

„  Arrival  21 

„  Bevival  15 

L' Envoi  55 

Will  Water.  112 

129 

163 


Will  Water.  244 

Lady  Clare  34 

L.  of  Burleigh  16 

The  Letters  36 

Vision  of  Sin  69 

116 

205 

You  might  have  won  6 

8 

23 

30 

Enoch  Arden  38 

54 

75 

116 

145 

260 

306,  420 

386 

435 

557 

730 

758 

820 


Life  {continued)    laying  down  an  imctuous  lease  Of  I, 
'  But  keep  the  secret  for  your  I, 
And  I  love  thee  more  than  I.' 
Thro'  you,  my  I  will  be  acciu-st.' 
What !  the  flower  of  Z  is  past : 
Whited  thought  and  cleanly  I  As  the  priest. 
Dregs  of  I,  and  lees  of  man  : 
A  I  that  moves^to  gracious  ends 
A  deedful  I,  a  silent  voice  : 
No  public  I  was  his  on  earth, 
The  little  I  of  bank  and  brier, 
new  warmth  of  I's  ascending  sun 
he  thrice  had  pluck'd  a  I  From  the  dread  sweep 
like  a  wounded  I  Crept  down  into  the  hollows 
Low  miserable  lives  of  hand-to-mouth. 
With  fuller  profits  lead  an  easier  I, 
And  lived  a  Z  of  silent  melancholy, 
known  each  other  all  our  lives  ?  (repeat) 
like  a  woimded  I  He  crept  into  the  shadow : 
'  Annie,  as  I  have  waited  all  my  I 
The  helpless  I  so  wild  that  it  was  tame, 
and  beats  out  his  weary  I. 
when  the  dead  man  come  to  I  beheld  His  wife 
not  Z  in  it  Whereby  the  man  could  live ; 
The  boat  that  bears  the  hope  of  I  approach  To  save 

the  Z  despair'd  of,  „  830 

His  wreck,  his  lonely  Z,  his  coming  back,  „  862 

I  in  him  Could  scarce  be  said  to  flourish,  The  Brook  11 

Flash  into  fiery  Z  from  nothing,  Aylmer's  Field  130 

thro'  the  perilous  passes  of  his  Z :  „  209 

I  lived  for  years  a  stunted  sunless  Z ;  „  357 

quintessence  of  man.  The  Z  of  all —  „  389 

Had  rioted  his  Z  out,  and  made  an  end.  „  391 

Nor  greatly  cared  to  lose,  her  hold  on  Z.  „  568 

days  Were  clipt  by  horror  from  his  term  of  Z.  „  603 

sunshine  of  the  faded  woods  Was  all  the  Z  of  it ;  „  611 

sense  Of  meanness  in  her  unresisting  Z.  „  801 

And  musing  on  the  little  lives  of  men.  Sea  Dreams  48 

Now  I  see  My  dream  was  L ;  „        137 

Bound  on  a  matter  he  of  Z  and  death :  „        151 

And  that  drags  down  his  Z :  „        177 

Live  the  great  Z  which  all  our  greatest  fain  Lucretius  78 

man  may  gain  Letting  his  own  Z  go.  „       113 

sober  majesties  Of  settled,  sweet,  Epicurean  Z.  „      218 

Tired  of  so  much  within  our  little  Z,  Or  of  so  little  in 

our  little  Z — Poor  little  Z  that  toddles  half  an  hour  „      226 

While  Z  was  yet  in  bud  and  blade.  Princess  i  32 

I !  he  never  saw  the  like  ;  „         186 

woman  ripen'd  earlier,  and  her  Z  Was  longer ;  „    ii  154 

Two  in  the  liberal  ofiices  of  Z,  „        175 

'  Well  then.  Psyche,  take  my  Z,  „        204 

I  lose  My  honour,  these  their  lives.'  „        342 

debtors  for  our  lives  to  you,  „        355 

better  blush  our  lives  away.  „     iii  68 

our  three  lives.    True — we  had  limed  ourselves  „        142 

Ere  half  be  done  perchance  your  Z  may  fail ;  „        236 

our  device  ;  wrought  to  the  Z ;  „        303 

O  Death  in  L,  the  days  that  are  no  more.*  „      iv  58 

tell  her,  brief  is  Z  but  love  is  long,  „        111 

that  have  lent  my  Z  to  build  up  yours,  „        351 

a  Z  Less  mine  than  yours :  „        426 

thousand  matters  left  to  do,  The  breath  of  Z ;  „         459 

You  saved  our  Z :  we  owe  you  bitter  thanks  ;  „        531 

Severer  in  the  logic  of  a  Z  ?  „     v  190 

Z  and  soul !     I  thought  her  half -right  „        284 

babbling  wells  With  her  own  people's  Z :  „        335 

Still  Take  not  his  Z :  ,.        407 

And  on  the  little  clause  '  take  not  his  Z : '  „        470 

'  He  saved  my  Z :  my  brother  slew  him  for  it.'  :,    vi  108 

So  those  two  foes  above  my  fallen  Z,  „        130 

Lay  silent  in  the  muffled  cage  of  Z :  „     vii  47 

with  what  Z I  had,  And  like  a  flower  „        140 

but  let  us  type  them  now  In  our  own  lives,  „        300 

heart  beating,  with  one  full  stroke,  L.'  „        308 

A  drowning  Z,  besotted  in  sweet  self,  „        314 


Life  400 

Life  (continrted)    Giv'n  back  to  7,  to  Z  indeed,  thro'  thee,       Princess  vii  345 

My  bride.  My  wife,  my  I.  „        360 

The  long  self-sacrifice  of  Z  is  o'er.  Ode  on  Well.  41 
Whose  I  was  work,  whose  language  rife  With  rugged 

maxims  hewn  from  I ;  „          183 

And  other  forms  of  I  than  ours,  „  264 
And  mixt,  as  Z  is  mixt  with  pain,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  27 
empires  branching,  both,  in  lusty  I ! —                    W.  to  Marie  Alex.  21 

now  thy  fuUer  I  is  in  the  west,  „               36 

Shadow  and  shine  is  I,  Grandmother  60 

for  the  babe  had  fought  for  his  I.  „          64 

Judge  of  us  all  when  I  shall  cease  ;  „          95 

And  happy  has  been  my  I;  „          98 

So  dear  a  I  your  arms  enfold  The  Daisy  93 
How  gain  in  Z,  as  Z  advances.                                   To  F.  D.  Maurice  39 

Her  quiet  dream  of  I  this  hour  may  cease.  Requiescat  6 

What  would  you  have  of  us  ?    Human  I  ?  The  Victim  12 

'  We  give  you  his  I.'  ,,           16 

Take  you  his  dearest,  Give  us  a  Z.'  „          28 

They  have  taken  our  son,  They  will  have  his  I.  „          50 

'  O,  Father  Odin,  We  give  you  a  I.  ,,          75 

for  the  I  of  the  worm  and  the  fly  ?  Wages  7 

the  rapid  of  I  Shoots  to  the  fall —  Dedication  3 
Ay  is  I  for  a  hundred  years.                                   Window,  No  Answer  9 

Love  wiU  come  but  once  a  I,  „               21 

Love  can  love  but  once  a  I.  „  28 
Thou  madest  L  in  man  and  brute  ;                                   In  Mem.,  Pro.  6 

Beats  out  the  little  lives  of  men.  „            ii  8 

Hath  still'd  the  I  that  beat  from  thee.  „         vi  12 

The  noise  of  I  begins  again,  „        vii  10 

And,  thy  dark  freight,  a  vanish'd  I.  „            a;  8 

An  awful  thought,  a  I  removed,  „       xiii  10 

And  how  my  I  had  droop'd  of  late,  „        xiv  14 

The  I  that  almost  dies  in  me ;  „     xviii  16 

I  know  that  this  was  L, —  „         xxv  1 

In  more  of  I  true  I  no  more  „      xxvi  11 

that  my  hold  on  I  would  break  Before  I  heard  „   xxviii  15 

And  rests  upon  the  L  indeed.  „      xxxii  8 

blest  whose  Ziws  are  faithful  prayers,  „              13 

A  I  that  leads  melodious  days.  „     xxxiii  8 

My  own  dim  I  should  teach  me  this,  „     xxxiv  1 

That  I  shall  live  for  evermore,  „                2 

A  I  that  bears  immortal  fruit  „         xl  18 

To  leap  the  grades  of  I  and  light,                 ^  „        xli  11 

But  evermore  a  Z  behind.  „         ...24 

The  total  world  since  I  began ;  ..      xliii  12 

Lest  I  should  fail  in  looking  back.  „         xlvi  4 

drown  The  bases  of  my  I  in  tears.  -,      xlix  16 

And  L,  a  Fury  slinging  flame.  „             Z  8 

And  on  the  low  dark  verge  oil  „              15 

That  I  is  dash'd  with  flecks  of  sin.  „         lii  14 

For  I  outliving  heats  of  youth,  „        Hit  10 

That  not  one  I  shall  be  destroy'd,  ,>          Uv  6 

No  I  may  fail  beyond  the  grave,  ,.            Iv  2 

So  careless  of  the  single  Z ;  „                8 

I  bring  to  Z,  I  bring  to  death :  „          IviQ 

O  Z  as  futile,  then,  as  frail !  „              25 

But  half  my  1 1  leave  behind  :  „         Ivii  6 

My  bosom-friend  and  halt  of  Z ;                           '  „          Hx  3 

Whose  I  in  low  estate  began  „         Ixiv  3 

The  shade  by  which  my  I  was  crost,  ,,        Ixvi  5 

On  songs,  and  deeds,  and  lives,  „     Ixxvii  3 

A  grief  as  deep  as  Z  or  thought,  „       Ixxx  7 

No  lower  Z  that  earth's  embrace  «    Ixxxii  3 

He  put  our  lives  so  far  apart  ,i              15 

The  Z  that  had  been  thine  below,  „    Ixxxiv  2 

should'st  link  thy  Z  with  one  Of  mine  own  bouse,  „              11 

What  kind  of  Z  is  that  I  lead ;  ,,      Ixxxv  8 

Whose  Z,  whose  thoughts  were  little  worth,  „              30 

The  footsteps  of  his  Z  in  mine ;  „              44 

A  Z  that  all  the  Muses  deck'd  „              45 

Diffused  the  shock  thro'  all  my  Z,  „              55 

And  pining  I  be  fancy-fed.  „              96 

The  full  new  Z  that  feeds  thy  breath  „    Ixxxvi  10 

Were  closed  with  wail,  resume  their  Z,  „           xc  6 


Life 


Life  {continued)    Mix  their  dim  lights,  like  Z  and  death. 
Two  partnere  of  a  married  Z — 
Her  I  is  lone,  he  sits  apart, 
By  which  our  lives  are  chiefly  proved. 
Ring  in  the  nobler  modes  of  Z, 
A  Z  in  civic  action  warm, 
live  their  lives  From  land  to  land  ; 
The  Z  re-orient  out  of  dust, 
and  show  That  Z  is  not  as  idle  ore, 
And  Z  is  darken'd  in  the  brain. 
I  sUp  the  thoughts  of  Z  and  death  ; 

0  when  her  I  was  yet  in  bud. 
That  shielded  all  her  I  from  harm 
living  words  of  Z  Breathed  in  her  ear. 
For  them  the  light  of  Z  increased, 
And,  moved  thro'  Z  of  lower  phase, 
His  who  had  given  me  Z — 0  father  !  0  God  ! 
spirit  of  murder  works  in  the  very  means  of  Z, 
Be  mine  a  philosopher's  Z 
fed  on  the  roses  and  lain  in  the  lilies  of  Z. 
Singing  alone  in  the  morning  of  Z, 
In  the  happy  morning  of  I  and  of  May, 
Sick,  sick  to  the  heart  of  I,  am  I. 
Before  my  I  has  found  What  some  have  found 
To  a  Z  that  has  been  so  sad, 
My  yet  young  Z  in  the  wilds  of  Time, 
And  made  my  Z  a  perfumed  altar-flame  ; 
More  Z  to  Love  than  is  or  ever  was 
but  live  a  Z  of  truest  breath.  And  teach  true  Z  to  fight 

with  mortal  wrongs. 
L  of  my  Z,  wilt  thou  not  answer  this  ? 
As  long  as  my  Z  endures  I  feel  I  shall  owe 
She  is  coming,  my  Z,  my  fate  ; 
That  must  have  Z  for  a  blow. 
Might  drown  all  Z  in  the  ej^e, — 
But  the  red  Z  spilt  for  a  private  blow — 
My  Z  has  crept  so  long  on  a  broken  wing 
Wearing  the  white  flower  of  a  blameless  Z. 
A  lovelier  Z,  a  more  unstain'd,  than  his  ! 
inheritance  Of  such  a  Z,  a  heart, 
light  of  her  eyes  into  his  Z  Smite  on  the  sudden, 
Travail,  and  throes  and  agonies  of  the  Z, 
Then  might  we  live  together  as  one  Z, 
A  cry  from  out  the  dawning  of  my  Z, 
hear  him  speak  before  he  left  his  Z. 
to  grace  Thy  climbing  I,  and  cherish  my  prone  year, 
and  risk  thine  all,  L,  limbs, 
how  the  King  had  saved  his  Z  In  battle  twice. 
Save  whom  she  loveth,  or  a  holy  Z. 
Good  now,  ye  have  saved  a  Z  Worth  somewhat 
And  saver  of  my  Z ; 
The  saver  of  my  Z.' 

lord  whose  Z  he  saved  Had,  some  brief  space, 
'  Take  not  my  Z :  I  yield.' 
Thy  Z  is  thine  at  her  command. 
To  war  against  ill  uses  of  a  Z,  But  these  from  all 

his  Z  arise,  and  cry, 
and  all  his  Z  Past  unto  sleep  ; 
imageries  Of  that  which  L  hath  done  with, 
drew  himself  Bright  from  his  old  dark  Z, 
Long  for  my  Z,  or  hunger  for  my  death, 

1  save  a  Z  dearer  to  me  than  mine.' 
'  Enid,  the  pilot  star  of  my  lone  Z, 
Owe  you  me  nothing  for  a  Z  half -lost  ? 
swathed  the  hurt  that  drain'd  her  dear  lord's  Z. 
'  O  cousin,  slay  not  him  who  gave  you  I.' 
set  his  foot  upon  me,  and  give  me  Z. 
hating  the  Z  He  gave  me,  meaning  to  be  rid  of  it. 
To  glance  behind  me  at  my  former  Z, 
wroxight  upon  himself  After  a  Z  of  violence, 
some  knight  of  mine,  risking  his  Z, 
crown'd  A  happy  Z  with  a  fair  death. 


1 


In  Mem.  xcv  63 

xcvii  5 

17 

ev  14 

cvi  15 

cxiii  9 

cxv  16 

cxvi  6 

cxviii  20 

cxxi  8 

cxxii  16 

Con.  33 

47 

52 

74 

125 

Maud  I  i6 

40 

„       iv  49 

60 

v6 

7 

a;  36 

„        xi  3 

13 

„    xvi  21 

.,  xviii  24 

47 

53 

59 

„    xix  86 

„  xxii  62 

„   IIi21 

„       ii  61 

«93 

„  III  vi  1 

Ded.  of  Idylls  25 

30 

33 

Com.  of  Arthur  56 

76 

91 

333 

362 

Gareth  and  L.  95 

129 

493 

622 

827 

879 

884 

888 

973 

983 


1130 

1280 

1391 

Marr.  of  Geraint  595 

Geraint  and  E.  81 

138 

306 

318 

516 

783 

850 

852 

863 

913 

915 


I  have  not  lived  my  Z  delightsomely  : 

lived  A  wealthier  Z  than  heretofore 

He  boasts  his  Z  as  purer  than  thine  own  ; 


Balin  and  Balan  60 
92 
II 


1 


Life 

Life  (continued) 
tongues 


401 


Life 


as  the  man  in  I  Was  wounded  by  blind 

Balin  and  Balan  129 


But  golden  earnest  of  a  gentler  Z !'  „  208 

I  that  fain  had  died  To  save  thy  I,  „  600 

Foul  are  their  lives ;  foul  are  their  lips ;  „  616 

My  madness  all  thy  I  has  been  thy  doom,  „  619 

World-war  of  dying  flesh  against  the  I,  Merlin  and  V.  193 

Death  in  all  I  and  lying  in  all  love,  „  194 

lost  to  I  and  use  and  name  and  fame,  (repeat)  „    214,  970 

Upon  my  I  and  use  and  name  and  fame,  „  374 

what  is  Fame  in  I  but  half-disfame,  „  465 

lay  as  dead,  And  lost  all  use  of  ^ :  „  645 

long  sleepless  nights  Of  my  long  I  „  680 

once  in  I  was  fluster'd  with  new  wine,  „  756 

How  from  the  rosy  lips  of  I  and  love,  „  846 

Kill'd  with  a  word  worse  than  a  Z  of  blows  !  „  870 

course  of  I  that  seem'd  so  flowery  to  me  „  880 

If  the  wolf  spare  me,  weep  my  I  away,  „  885 

The  vast  necessity  of  heart  and  I.  „  925 

the  one  passionate  love  Of  her  whole  I ;  „  956 

The  shape  and  colour  of  a  mind  and  I,  Lancelot  and  E.  335 

'  What  matt«r,  so  I  help  him  back  to  ^  ?  '  „  787 

Told  him  that  her  fine  care  had  saved  his  I.  „  863 

when  you  yield  your  flower  of  I  To  one  more 

fitly  yours,  „  952 

half  disdain  At  love,  I,  all  things,  „  1239 

Had  pass'd  into  the  silent  I  of  prayer,  Holy  Grail  4 

we  that  want  the  warmth  of  double  Z,  „         624 

Beyond  all  sweetness  in  a  Z  so  rich, —  „         626 

To  pass  away  into  the  quiet  I,  „         738 

Cares  but  to  pass  into  silent  I.  „        899 

To  have  thee  back  in  lusty  I  again,  Pelleas  and  E.  352 

thro'  her  love  her  I  Wasted  and  pined,  „  495 

that  young  I  Being  smitten  in  mid  heaven  Last  Tournament  26 

I  had  flown,  we  sware  but  by  the  shell —  „  270 

New  leaf,  new  I — the  days  of  frost  are  o'er :  New  I,  „  278 

All  out  like  a  long  Z  to  a  sour  end —  „  288 

Art  thou  King  ?— Look  to  thy  Z ! '  „  454 

half  a  Z  away,  Her  to  be  loved  no  moi-e  ?  „  640 

And  ti-ustful  courtesies  of  household  Z,  Guinevere  86 

There  will  I  hide  thee,  till  my  I  shall  end,  There  hold 

thee  with  my  Z  against  the  world.' 
whose  disloyal  Z  Hath  wrought  confusion 
for  all  the  land  was  full  of  Z. 
And  many  a  mystic  lay  of  Z  and  death 
Thou  hast  not  made  my  Z  so  sweet  to  me. 
For  thou  hast  spoilt  the  purpose  of  my  Z. 
To  lead  sweet  lives  in  pm-est  chastity, 
this  Z  of  mine  I  guard  as  God's  high  gift 
love  thro'  flesh  hath  wrought  into  my  Z 
Myself  must  tell  him  in  that  purer  Z, 
for  her  good  deeds  and  her  pure  Z, 
Light  was  Gawain  in  Z,  and  light  in  death 
Yet  still  my  Z  is  whole,  and  still  I  live 
tho'  I  live  three  lives  of  mortal  men, 
I  have  lived  my  Z,  and  that  which  I  have  done 
nourish  a  blind  I  within  the  brain, 

§luck'd  his  flickering  I  again  From  halfway 
oftness  breeding  scorn  of  simple  Z, 
chambers  of  the  morning  star.  And  East  of  L. 
govern  a  whole  Z  from  birth  to  death, 
floods  with  redundant  Z  Her  narrow  portals. 
On  these  deserted  sands  of  barren  Z. 
Time  and  Grief  abode  too  long  with  L, 
Death  drew  nigh  and  beat  the  doors  of  L  ; 
Yet  is  my  Z  nor  in  the  present  time. 
Between  is  clearer  in  my  I  than  all 
young  L  knows  not  when  young  L  was  bom. 
Into  delicious  dreams,  our  other  Z, 
Which  yet  upholds  my  Z,  and  evermore  Is  to  me  daily 

Z  and  daily  death  : 
Or  build  a  wall  betwixt  my  Z  and  love, 
(For  they  seem  many  and  my  most  of  Z, 
for  ever,  Left  her  own  Z  with  it ; 
He  that  gave  Her  Z,  to  me  delightedly  fulfill'd 


114 
219 
259 
281 
451 
453 
474 
493 
558 
653 
693 

Pass,  of  Arthur  56 

150 

323 

412 

419 

To  the  Queen  it  5 

53 

Lover's  Tale  i  29 

76 

84 

93 

107 

111 

116 

149 

156 

162 

168 
176 
185 
215 
224 


Life  (continued)    And  sang  aloud  the  matin-song  of  I.        Lover's  Tale  i  232 
The  stream  of  Z,  one  stream,  one  Z,  „  239 

So  what  was  earliest  mine  in  earliest  Z>  „  247 

larks  Fill'd  all  the  March  of  Z !—  „  284 

The  joy  of  Z  in  steepness  overcome,  „  386 

her  Z,  her  love.  With  my  Z,  love,  soul,  spirit,  „  459 

Else  had  the  Z  of  that  delighted  hour  „  471 

whose  right  hand  the  light  Of  L  issueth,  „  498 

that  Z  I  heeded  not  Flow'd  from  me,  „  596 

henceforth  there  was  no  Z  for  me  !  „  608 

L  was  startled  from  the  tender  love  „  616 

L  (like  a  wanton  too-officious  friend,  „  627 

As  it  had  taken  Z  away  before,  „  710 

with  heaven's  music  in  a  Z  More  living  „  761 

worth  the  Z  That  made  it  sensible.  „  799 

Ruins,  the  ruin  of  all  my  Z  and  me  !  „  ii  68 

Now  the  light  Which  was  their  Z,  „  164 

shadowing  pencil's  naked  forms  Colour  and  Z :  „  181 

That  painted  vessel,  as  with  inner  Z,  „  191 

all  at  once,  soul,  Z  And  breath  and  motion,  „  194 

She  from  her  bier,  as  into  fresher  Z,  „         Hi  42 

Glanced  back  upon  them  in  his  after  Z,  „  iv  24 

Would  you  could  toll  me  out  of  Z,  „  30 

recall'd  Her  fluttering  Z  : 
For  you  have  given  me  Z  and  love  again, 
I  learnt  the  drearier  story  of  his  Z ; 
'  Kiss  him,'  she  said.    '  You  gave  me  Z  again, 
fed,  and  cherish'd  him,  and  saved  his  Z. 
Who  thrust  him  out,  or  him  who  saved  his  Z  ?  ' 
'  body  and  soul  And  Z  and  limbs, 
some  new  death  than  for  a  Z  renew'd  ; 
All  over  glowing  with  the  sun  of  Z, 
I'll  tell  you  the  tale  o'  my  Z. 
what  I  did  wi'  my  single  Z  ? 
I  have  only  an  hour  of  Z. 
he  took  no  Z,  but  he  took  one  purse, 
wur  it  nobbut  to  saave  my  Z  ; 
half  of  the  rest  of  us  maim'd  for  Z 
And  the  Lord  hath  spared  our  lives. 
very  fountains  of  her  Z  were  chiU'd  ; 
Now  in  this  quiet  of  declining  Z, 
who  scarce  would  escape  with  her  I ; 
which  lived  True  Z,  live  on — and  if  the  fatal  kiss, 

Bom  of  true  Z  and  love,  divorce  thee  not  From 

earthly  love  and  Z —  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  2 

Frail  were  the  works  that  defended  the  hold  that 

we  held  with  our  lives — 
for  it  never  could  save  us  a  Z. 
I  find  hard  rocks,  hard  Z,  hard  cheer, 
I  would  have  given  my  Z  To  help  his  OM'n  from 

scathe,  a  thousand  lives  To  save  his  soul, 
and  Z  Pass  in  the  fire  of  Babylon  ! 
Lord  of  Z  Be  by  me  in  my  death. 
The  vast  occasion  of  our  stronger  Z — 
I  am  wiitten  in  the  Lamb's  own  Book  of  L 
I  know  that  he  has  led  me  all  my  Z, 
one.  Whose  Z  has  been  no  play  with  him 
It  was  all  of  it  fair  as  Z, 
each  taken  a  Z  for  a  Z, 
every  phase  of  ever-heightening  Z, 
yovmg  Z  Breaking  with  laughter  from  the  dark  ; 
From  death  to  death  thro'  Z  and  Z, 
I  cannot  laud  this  Z,  it  looks  so  dark  : 
Saving  his  Z  on  the  fallow  flood. 
From  the  darkness  of  I — 
if  I's  best  end  Be  to  end  well ! 
not  to  plunge  Thy  torch  of  I  in  darkness, 
Ofier  thy  maiden  Z. 
What  Z,  so  maim'd  by  night,  „       208 

My  Z  itself  is  a  wreck.  The  Wreck  5 

I  would  make  my  Z  one  prayer  „         10 

I  had  lived  a  wild-flower  Z,  „        37 

thro'  Z  to  my  latest  breath  ;  „         79 

mother's  shame  will  enfold  her  and  darken  her  I.'  „      100 

*  May  her  Z  be  as  blissfully  calm,  „      139 

2  o 


110 
147 
172 
264 
267 
283 
374 
381 

First  Quarrel  9 

59 

Bizpah  22 

„      31 

North.  Cobbler  84 

The  Bevenge  77 

93 

Sisters  (E.  and'E.)2QQ 

273 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  66 


Def.  of  Lucknow  7 
86 
Sir  J.  Oldcastle  6 

62 
123 
173 

Columbus  35 

88 

„      160 

„      224 

V.  of  Maeldune  20 

122 

De  Prof",  Two  G.  7 

17 

52 

To  W.  H.  Brookfield  12 

Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  61 

To  Prin.  F.  of  H.  2 

Tiresias  130 

159 

165 


Life 


402 


Despair  7 
„      14 


Life  {continued)    Godless  gloom  Of  a  I  without  sun 
I  am  frighted  at  I  not  death.' 

L  with  its  anguish,  and  horrors,  4„ 

and  you  saved  me,  a  valueless  I.  "      o-i 

Of  the  heUish  heat  of  a  wretched  I  "      go 

ahf^f. *^if  f ^'•t^-°*"«^,  ^  Be  yet  but  yolk,  Ancient  Sage  129 

gam  of  such  large  I  as  match'd  with  oiu:s  2S7 

lose  thy  I  by  usage  of  thy  sting  ;  "          070 

daughter  yield  her  Z,  heart,  soul  to  one-  The  Flight  28 

And  all  my  I  was  darken'd,  ^     oq 

where  summer  never  dies,  with  Love,  the  Sun  of  Z '  "          44 

an  the  face  of  the  thraithur  agin  in  1 1  TotZirmw  '^ 

ye  would  start  back  agin  into  ?,  onwrrow  50 

I  knaws  i  'ed  led  tha  a  quieter  I  Spinster's  S's.  71 

In  my  I  there  was  a  picture,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  15 

broodmg  on  his  briefer  lease  of  Z,  ,"i^tyiu 

my  I  in  golden  sequence  ran,  "                aj 

the  sacred  passion  of  the  second  I.  "                go 

^hShf^^f^H^'""  ^'"u  '""/^u  ^  ""^^"^  S^P  ^^'^^y  Brigade  23 

The  hght  of  days  when  I  begun,  Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  23 

With  stronger  I  from  day  to  day  ;  Hands  all  Round  6 

Two  Suns  of  Love  make  day  of  human  I,  To  Prin  Beatrice  1 

Mother  weeps  At  that  white  funeral  of  the  single  I  '                 9 

two  that  love  thee,  lead  a  summer  I,  '               "              i  o 
One  I,  one  flag  one  fleet,  one  Throne ! '          Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  39 

flame  of  I  went  wavermg  down  ;  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  32 

while  my  Z's  Jate  eve  endures,  1     J       jj    "' ^^ 

The  L  that  had  d^cended  re-arise,  Demeter  and  P.  30 

we  spm  the  lives  of  men.  And  not  of  Gods,  85 

Power  That  lifts  her  buried  I  from  gloom  to  bloom,  "              os 

I  fail'd  To  send  my  I  thro'  olive-yard  "            2IO 

Shalt  ever  send  thy  I  along  with  mine  "            145 

gloom  of  the  evening,  Z  at  a  close  ;  Vastness  15 

mthemiseiyofmymamedZ,  ^  S/ 136 

So  far  gone  down,  or  so  far  up  in  I,  ^  i  oo 

Made  every  moment  of  her  after  I  "      oon 

And  there  the  light  of  other  I,  "      095 

Saved  when  your  I  was  wreck'd  !  "      qqk 

That  now  their  ever-rising  I  has  dwarf 'd  "      am 

silent  brow  when  I  had  ceased  to  beat.  Hattmi  59 

snap  the  bond  that  link'd  us  i  to  Z,  ^^^  61 

leech  forsake  the  dying  bed  for  terror  of  his  I?  "98 

this  I  of  mingled  pains  And  joys  to  me.  To  Mary  Boyle  49 

long  walk  thro'  desert  I  Without  the  one.  "    55 

new  I  that  gems  the  hawthorn  line  ;  Proa  of  Svrina  '^fi 

his  fresh  Z  may  close  as  it  began,  ^rog.  oj  Spring  db 

L,  which  is  L  indeed.  "            217 

As  he  stands  on  the  heights  of  his  I  By  an  Evolution.  20 

A  whisper  from  his  dawn  of  Z  ?  Far-far-away  10 

L^ht  again,  leaf  agam  i  again,  love  again,'  The  Throstle  3 

Live  thy  L,  Young  and  old,  xhe  Oak  1 

My  I  and  death  are  in  thy  hand.  Death  of  (Enone  40 

Let  me  owe  my  I  to  thee.  40 

she  heard  The  shriek  of  some  lost  I  "              on 

lazying  out  a  Z  Of  self-suppression,  St.  Telemachus  21 

Reason  m  the  dusky  cave  of  L,  Akbar's  Dream  121 

on  this  bank  m  some  way  live  the  I  Beyond  the  bridge  144 

To  make  him  trust  his  I,  ^  'y^g  Wanderer  U 

T  «.Ji!!i^^M  °^  7^®**^  is  toward  the  Sun  of  L,  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  12 

rlifi'oc^''^    who  shced  a  red  Z-6  way  Gareth  and  L.  509 

LUelong    rose  and  past  Bearing  a  Z  hunger  in  his  heart.       Enoch  Arden  79 

Then  Philip  with  his  eyes  Full  of  that  I  hunger.  464 

tliZtlnTT^'^^l^'^      ,  InMem.xlvit 

\viihif- ^.^■^•^™"''J«  .of  ourselves,  Geraint  and  E.  3 

v\  ita  i-l  injuries  burning  unavenged,  gag 

Sfnfnf  *  7  r/  '"'^f'^'T^, «/  the  house,  Lancelot  a^  E.  1143 

?nH  ^   i  ^1°"^  "i  >*"'f ' .  ■»««•  of  Brunanburh  7 

And  you  the  I  guardian  of  the  child.  The  Eino%4. 

Lll«tS/°Fnfe^r.  *''"^"  ?  '■'  "«•  RoIney'sT  It 

Llletime     Ere  half  the  /  of  an  oak.  /„  Mem  Ixxvi  12 

Lift    Many  an  arch  high  up  did  Z,  PalacTof  ATtWi 

£ip'.^v'ro'cWr^'^''«"^P^«»'  2>.;/r/J;n27! 

L  up  thy  rocky  face,  Engla^  and  Amer.  12 


Lift  (continued)    knowing  God,  they  I  not  hands  of  prayer 
m  my  weak,  lean  arms  1 1  the  cross, 
when  I  see  the  woodman  I  His  axe  to  slay  my  kin 
seem  to  I  a  burthen  from  thy  heart 
He  I's  me  to  the  golden  doors  ; 
And  I  the  household  out  of  povertv  ; 
slowly  I's  His  golden  feet  on  those'empurpled  stairs 
I  your  natures  up  :  Embrace  our  aims  : 
To  I  the  woman's  fall'n  divinity 
fair  philosophies  That  I  the  fancy  ; 
'Z  up  your  head,  sweet  sister : 
I  thine  eyes  ;  my  doubts  are  dead, 
Could  I  them  nearer  God-Uke  state 
L  as  thou  may'st  thy  burthen'd  brows 
And  seem  to  I  the  form,  and  glow 
A  great  ship  I  her  shining  sides. 
That  we  may  I  from  out  of  dust 
Shall  I  not  I  her  from  this  land  of  beasts 
'  Blow  trumpet !  he  will  I  us  from  the  dust. 
Nor  did  she  I  an  eye  nor  speak  a  word, 
But  I  a  shining  hand  against  the  sun,  ' 
Without  the  will  to  I  their  eyes. 
Not  I  a  hand — not,  tho'  he  found  me  thus ! 
He  spared  to  I  his  hand  against  the  King 
knowing  God,  they  I  not  hands  of  prayer 
To  Z  us  as  it  were  from  commonplace, 
but  'e  niver  not  I  oop  'is  'ead  : 
and  I's,  and  lays  the  deep, 
Power  That  I's  her  buried  life 
To  thoughts  that  I  the  soul  of  men, 
I  can  but  I  the  torch  Of  Reason 
Lifted  (adj.  and  part.)    And  once  my  arm  was  I  to  hew 
down 
So  I  up  in  spirit  he  moved  away, 
from  her  I  hand  Dangled  a  length  of  ribbon 
under  his  own  lintel  stood  Storming  with  /  hands 
her  arm  I,  eyes  on  fire —  ' 

With  I  hand  the  gazer  in  the  street. 
till  the  cloud  that  settles  round  his  birth  Hath 

I  but  a  little. 
Which  our  high  Lancelot  hath  so  I  up, 
But  when  my  name  was  I  up,  the  storm  Brake 

And  I  was  I  up  m  heart,  and  thought 
Till  he,  being  I  up  beyond  himself, 
and  morn  Has  I  the  dark  eyelash  of  the  Night 
Lilted  (verb)    A  limb  was  broken  when  they  I  him  • 
I  up  A  weight  of  emblem,  ' 

At  which  she  I  up  her  voice  and  cried. 
Then  us  they  I  up,  dead  weights, 
To  Thor  and  Odin  I  a  hand  : 
And  once,  but  once,  she  I  her  eyes, 
I  his  voice,  and  call'd  A  hoary  man, 
she  I  either  arm,  '  Fie  on  thee.  King  ! 
How  the  villain  I  up  his  voice, 
L  an  arm,  and  softly  whisper'd, 
Crost  and  came  near,  I  adoring  eyes. 
At  which  her  palfrey  whinnying  I  heel 
gravely  smiling,  I  her  from  horse. 
Then  Lancelot  I  his  large  eyes  ; 
and  he  I  faint  eyes  ;  he  felt  One  near  him  ; 
and  they  I  up  Their  eager  faces, 
when  she  I  up  A  face  of  sad  appeal, 
And  the  Queen  L  her  eyes, 
L  her  eyes,  and  read  his  lineaments. 
And  noblest,  when  she  I  up  her  eyes 
sliej  up  her  eyes  And  loved  him. 
And  I  her  fair  face  and  moved  away  • 
Then  like  a  ghost  she  I  up  her  face, 
and  I  up  his  eyes  And  saw  the  barge 
Pelleas  I  up  an  eye  so  fierce  She  quail'd : 
Working  a  tapestry,  I  up  her  head, 

"P  a  face  All  over  glowing  with  the  sun 
and  Z  hand  and  heart  and  voice  In  praise  to  God 
she  I  her  head — 
Then  I  Z  up  my  eyes, 


Lifted 

M.d' Arthur  252 

St.  S.  Stylites  118 

Talking  Oak  235 

Love  and  Duty  96 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  25 

Enoch  Arden  485 

Lucretius  134 

Princess  ii  88 

„   m223 

341 

«64 

„  rM348 

Lit.  Squabbles  14 

In  Mem.  Ixxii  21 

„       Ixxxvii  37 

11  ciii  40 

»  cxxxi 5 

Com.  of  Arthur  80 

491 

Marr.  of  Geraint  528 

Geraint  and  E.  473 

Merlin  and  V.  836 

Last  Tournament  528 

Guinevere  437 

Fass.  of  Arthur  420 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  223 

Village  Wife  88 

Tiresias  22 

Demeter  and  P.  98 

To  Master  of  B.  14 

Akbar's  Dream  120 

D.  of  F.  Women  45 

Enoch  Arden  330 

749 

Aylmer's  Field  332 

Princess,  Pro.  41 

Ode  on  Well.  22 

Gareth  and  L.  ISt 
Balin  and  Balan  49 
Merlin  and  V.  5C 
Holy  Grail  3€_ 
Last  Tournament  67| 
Akbar's  Dream  20| 
Enoch  Arden  1( 
Princess  iv  I 


„    vi  3' 

The  Victim?, 

Maud  I  via  5 

Com.  of  Arthur  144 

Gareth  and  L.  657 

716 

1361 

Geraint  and  E.  304 

533 

883 

Balin  and  Balan  277 

5< 

Merlin  and  V.  11 

2L. 

Lancelot  and  E.  8< 

2^ 

256 

259 

682 

91ft 

139^ 

Pelleas  and  E.  601 ' 

Last  Tournament  129 

Lover's  Tale  iv  380 

Columbus  16 

Tomorrow  79 

Happy  82 


f 


Lifted 


403 


she  Z  up  a  voice  Of  shrill 


i  Lifted  (verb)  {continued) 
■  command, 

;  Lifting  (adj.  and  part.)    at  last  he  said,  L  his  honest 
forehead, 

See  thro'  the  gray  skirts  of  a  Z  squall 

L  his  grim  head  from  my  wounds. 

But  Gawain  I  up  his  vizor  said, 
j         I  up  mine  eyes,  I  found  myself  Alone, 
i  Lifting  (s)    I  of  whose  eyelash  is  my  lord, 

labour'd  in  I  them  out  of  sUme, 
■'Lig  (lie)     An'  'e  maade  the  bed  as  'e  I's  on  N 

An'  'e  I's  on  'is  back  i'  the  grip, 
I         Theere,  I  down — ^I  shall  hev  to  gie  one  or  tother 
j  awaay.  Spinster's  S's.  64 

Tom,  I  theere  o'  the  cushion,  „  94 

I  Liggin'  (l3ing)     and  mea  I  'ere  aloan  ?  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  1 

Light  (adj.  and  adv.)     L  Hope  at  Beauty's  call  would 

perch  and  stand, 

from  the  violets  her  I  foot  Shone  rosy-white. 

The  I  aerial  gallery,  golden-rail'd, 

'  The  I  white  cloud  swam  over  us. 

Make  bright  our  days  and  I  our  dreams, 

and  the  I  and  lustrous  curls — 

Juliet,  she  So  I  of  foot,  so  I  of  spirit — 

L  pretexts  drew  me  ; 

Spread  the  I  haze  along  the  river  shores, 

overhead  The  I  cloud  smoulders  on  the  summer  crag. 

So  I  upon  the  grass : 

*  A  I  wind  chased  her  on  the  wing, 

'  But  I  as  any  wind  that  blows 

her  palfrey's  footfall  shot  L  horrors  thro'  her  pulses : 

So  for  every  I  transgression  Doom'd  them  to  the  lash 

A I  wind  blew  from  the  gates  of  the  sim, 

Wearing  the  I  yoke  of  that  Lord  of  love, 

or  is  it  a  Z  thing  That  I,  their  guest,  their  host, 

'  That's  your  I  way  ;  but  I  would  make  it  death 

L  coin,  the  tinsel  clink  of  compliment. 

Many  a  I  foot  shone  Uke  a  jewel  set  In  the  dark  crag : 

As  in  a  poplar  grove  when  a  I  wind  wakes 

with  each  I  air  On  our  raail'd  heads  : 

Steps  with  a  tender  foot,  Z  as  on  air, 

made  me  move  As  Z  as  carrier-birds  in  air ; 

And  hopes  and  I  regrets  that  come  Make  April 

Thro'  I  reproaches,  half  exprest  And  loyal 

and  I  as  the  crest  Of  a  peacock, 

Seem'd  her  I  foot  along  the  garden  walk, 

a  I  laugh  Broke  from  L3mette, 

By  bandits  groom'd,  prick'd  their  I  ears, 

some  I  jest  among  them  rose  With  laughter 

and  like  to  coins.  Some  true,  some  I, 

'  Ay,'  said  Gawain,  '  for  women  be  so  I.' 

Her  I  feet  fell  on  our  rough  Lyonnesse, 

And  Tristram,  fondling  her  I  hands, 

Murmuring  a  I  song  I  had  heard  thee  sing, 

L  was  Gawain  in  life,  and  I  in  death  Is  Gawain, 

and  the  I  and  lustrous  curls — 

all  the  while  The  I  soul  twines  and  mingles 

The  leaves  upon  her  falling  I — 

I  must  ha'  been  I  i'  my  head — 

And  idle  gleams  to  thee  are  I  to  me. 

Molly  Magee  kem  flyin'  acrass  me,  as  Z  as  a  lark, 

fall  of  yer  foot  in  the  dance  was  as  Z  as  snow  an  the  Ian', 

and  from  each  The  Z  leaf  falling  fast,  ~ 

X  airs  from  where  the  deep, 

Watching  her  large  Z  eyes  and  gracious  looks, 
i^t  (s)    (See  also  Candle-light,  Foot-lights,  Gas- 
light, Half-light,   Lava-light,   Night-light, 
Sea-light,   Topaz-lights)    They   light    his 
little  Z  alway ; 

stood  Betwixt  me  and  the  Z  of  God  ! 

on  his  Z  there  falls  A  shadow  ; 

And  far  away  in  the  sickly  Z, 

giving  Z  To  read  those  laws  ; 

With  swifter  movement  and  in  purer  Z 
I     The  cock  sung  out  an  hour  ere  Z : 

i 


Death  of  CEnone  98 

Enoch  Arden  388 

829 

Princess  vi  272 

Pelleas  and  E.  370 

Holy  Grail  375 

Princess  v  140 

Bead  Prophet  11 

,  Farmer,  N.  S.  28 

31 


Caress'd  or  chidden  3 

CEnone 179 

Palace  of  Art  47 

D.  of  F.  Women  221 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  22 

M.  d' Arthur  216 

Gardener's  D.  14 

192 

264 

Edwin  Morris  147 

Talking  Oak  88 

125 

129 

Godiva  59 

The  Captain  11 

Poet's  Song  3 

Aylm£r's  Field  708 

789 

Princess,  Pro.  151 

ii  55 

Hi  358 

«13 

244 

m88 

In  Mem.  xxv  6 

xll 

„    Ixxxv  15 

Maud  I  xvi  16 

„        xviii  9 

Gareth  and  L.  836 

Geraint  and  E.  193 

Lancelot  and  E.  178 

Holy  Grail  26 

Pelleas  and  E.  362 

Last  Tournament  554 

601 

614 

Pass,  of  Arthur  56 

384 

Lovers  Tale  i  132 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  21 

First  QiMrrel  82 

Ancient  Sage  246 

Tomorrow  21 

36 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  2 

Early  Spring  21 

Prog,  of  Spring  19 


Supp.  Confessions  46 

110 

163 

The  Kraken  7 

Isabel  18 

,.      32 

Mariana  27 


Light  (s)  (continued)     Until  the  breaking  of  the  Z, 
Thro'  I  and  shadow  thou  dost  range, 
Whex  cats  run  home  and  Z  is  come, 
I  enter'd,  from  the  clearer  Z, 
robed  in  sof  ten'd  Z  Of  orient  state. 
The  Z  of  thy  great  presence ; 
A  pillar  of  white  Z  upon  the  wall 
FiUing  with  Z  And  vagrant  melodies 
Bright  as  Z,  and  clear  as  wind. 
In  the  windows  is  no  Z ; 
L  and  shadow  ever  wander 
What  time  the  mighty  moon  was  gathering  Z 
So  in  the  I  of  great  eternity 
Ere  the  Z  on  dark  was  growing, 
Low  thunder  and  Z  in  the  magic  night — 
Breathing  L  against  thy  face, 
gleams  of  mellow  Z  Float  by  you  on  the  verge  of 

night. 
And  faint,  rainy  I's  are  seen. 
To  pierce  me  thro'  with  pointed  Z  ; 
Of  lavish  I's,  and  floating  shades : 
in  a  bower  Grape-thicken'd  from  the  I, 
But  am  as  nothing  in  its  I : 
A  funeral,  with  plumes  and  I's  And  music. 
Some  bearded  meteor,  trailing  Z, 
And  all  the  furnace  of  the  Z 
A  living  flash  of  Z  he  flew.' 
'  Not  less  swift  souls  that  yearn  for  Z, 
Those  lonely  I's  that  still  remain, 
Nor  art  thou  nearer  to  the  Z, 
'  To  pass,  when  Life  her  Z  withdraws, 
Z  increased  With  freshness  in  the  dawning  east. 
That  these  have  never  lost  their  Z. 
I  saw  the  village  I's  below  ; 
At  last  you  rose  and  moved  the  Z, 
His  Z  upon  the  letter  dwells, 
Throbbing  thro'  all  thy  heat  and  Z, 
And,  isled  in  sudden  seas  of  Z, 
like  a  I  that  grows  Larger  and  clearer, 
I  pray  thee,  pass  before  my  Z  of  life. 
Suddenly  scaled  the  Z. 
the  I's,  rose,  amber,  emerald,  blue, 
Lit  Z  in  wreaths  and  anadems, 
spot  of  dull  stagnation,  without  Z  Or  power 
The  languid  Z  of  your  proud  eyes 
I  ran  by  him  without  speaking,  like  a  flash  of  Z. 
beneath  the  waning  Z  You'll  never  see  me 

more  May 

and  there  his  Z  may  shine — 
To  lie  within  the  Z  of  God, 
thro'  wavering  I's  and  shadows  broke, 
Lo  !  sweeten'd  with  the  summer  Z, 
To  dream  and  dream,  like  yonder  amber  Z, 
In  every  land  I  saw,  wherever  Z  illumineth, 
fill'd  with  Z  The  interval  of  sound, 
with  welcome  Z,  With  timbrel  and  with  song. 
O  me,  that  I  should  ever  see  the  Z ! 
Joan  of  Arc,  A  Z  of  ancient  France ; 
The  cricket  chirps  :  the  Z  bums  low  : 
mournful  Z  That  broods  above  the  fallen  sun, 
Above  her  shook  the  starry  I's : 
Keep  dry  their  I  from  tears  ; 
Tho'  sitting  girt  with  doubtful  Z. 
Set  in  all  I's  by  many  minds, 
Z  that  led  The  holy  Elders  with  the  gift  of  myrrh, 
and  our  last  I,  that  long  Had  wink'd 
twinkling  laurel  scatter'd  silver  I's, 
Half  Z,  half  shade.  She  stood. 
Danced  into  I,  and  died  into  the  shade  ; 
a  Z  Of  laiighter  dimpled  in  his  swarthy  cheek  ; 
If  I  may  measure  time  by  yon  slow  Z, 
'tween  the  spring  and  downfall  of  the  Z, 
They  flapp'd  my  Z  out  as  I  read  : 
What's  here  ?  a  shape,  a  shade,  A  flash  of  I. 
take  Example,  pattern :  lead  them  to  thy  I. 


Light 

Clear-headed  friend  25 

Madeline  4 

The  Owlil 

Arabian  Nights  38 

Ode  to  Memory  10 

32 

53 

The  Poet  16 

Poet's  Mind  7 

Deserted  House  6 

A  Dirge  12 

Love  and  Death  1 

12 

Oriana  10 

The  Merman  23 

Adeline  56 

Margaret  30 

„       60 

Rosalind  27 

Elednore  12 

36 

88 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  31 

Hi  26 

Mariana  in  the  S.  55 

Two  Voices  15 

67 

83 

92 

145 

404 

Miller's  D.  88 

108 

125 

189 

Fatima  4 

„      33 

CEnone  108 

„      241 

Palace  of  Art  8 

169 

186 

245 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  59 

May  Queen  18 

Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  25 

Con.  51 

59 

Lotos- Eaters  12 

„      C.  S.  32 

57 

D.  of  F.  Women  14 

171 

199 

254 

268 

D.  of  the  O.  Year  40 

To  J.  8.  50 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  3 

20 

Love  thou  thy  land  16 

35 

M.  d' Arthur  232 

Ep.  1 

Gardener's  D.  118 

140 

203 

Edwin  Morris  60 

St.  S.  Stylites  94 

110 

175 

203 

224 


Light 

Light  (s)  (continued)     '  Then  flush'd  her  cheek  with  rosy  I, 
I's  of  sunset  and  of  sunrise  mix'd 
And  point  thee  forward  to  a  distant  I, 
furrowing  into  I  the  mounded  rack, 
smit  with  freer  I  shall  slowly  melt 
And  I  shall  spread,  and  man  be  liker  man 
Lie  like  a  shaft  of  I  across  the  land, 
I's  begin  to  twinkle  from  the  rocks  : 
cold  Are  all  thy  I's,  and  cold  my  wrinkled  feet 
came  a  colour  and  a  I, 
Sees  in  heaven  the  I  of  London 
Underneath  the  I  he  looks  at. 
The  slumbrous  I  is  rich  and  warm. 
Stillness  with  love,  and  day  with  I. 
A  fuller  I  illumined  all. 
Be  still  the  first  to  leap  to  I 
And  strows  her  I's  below, 
A  I  upon  the  shining  sea — 
A  I  before  me  swims, 
A  gentle  sound,  an  awful  1 ! 
Ten  thousand  broken  I's  and  shapes, 
This  whole  wide  earth  of  I  and  shade 
And  sleep  beneath  his  pillar'd  I ! 
Dip  forward  under  starry  I, 
A  sleepy  I  upon  their  brows  and  lips — 
And  isles  a  Z  in  the  offing  : 
Started  from  bed,  and  struck  herself  a  I, 
a  great  mist-blotted  I  Flared  on  him. 
But  finding  neither  I  nor  murmur  there 
The  ruddy  square  of  comfortable  I, 
Which  at  a  touch  of  I,  an  air  of  heaven, 
A  joyous  to  dilate,  as  toward  the  I. 
An  end,  a  hope,  a  I  breaking  upon  him. 
Star  to  star  vibrates  I : 
Which  from  the  low  I  of  mortality 
Thee  therefore  with  His  I  about  thy  feet, 
entering  fiU'd  the  house  with  sudden  I. 
And  near  the  I  a  giant  woman  sat, 
— But  round  the  North,  a  I, 
on  those  cliSs  Broke,  mixt  with  awful  I 
on  the  crowd  Broke,  mixt  with  awful  I, 
and  I  is  large,  and  lambs  are  glad 
dance,  and  flew  thro'  I  And  shadow, 
when  the  college  I's  Began  to  glitter 
'  This  world  was  once  a  fluid  haze  of  I, 
'  that  we  still  may  lead  The  new  I  up. 
Before  two  streams  of  I  from  wall  to  wall, 
green  malignant  I  of  coming  storm, 
as  she  smote  me  with  the  I  of  eyes 
with  the  sun  and  moon  renew  their  I  For  ever, 
Let  there  be  I  and  there  was  I : 
all  creation  is  one  act  at  once.  The  birth  of  I : 
The  long  I  shakes  across  the  lakes, 
stood  in  your  own  I  and  darken'd  mine. 
We  did  not  know  the  real  I, 
lived  in  all  fair  I's, 

lapt  in  wreaths  of  glowworm  I  The  mellow  breaker 
All  open-mouth'd,  all  gazing  to  the  I, 
wild  birds  on  the  I  Dash  themselves  dead. 
You  would-be  quenchers  of  the  I  to  be, 
we  saw  the  I's,  and  heard  The  voices  murmuring, 
the  sudden  I  Dazed  me  half-blind  : 
A  common  I  of  smiles  at  our  disguise 
over  them  the  tremulous  isles  of  I  Slided, 
A  genial  warmth  and  I  once  more, 
till  she  not  fair  began  To  gather  I, 
small  bright  head,  A  Z  of  healing, 
silent  I  Slept  on  the  painted  walls, 
Naked,  a  double  I  in  air  and  wave. 
Sent  from  a  dewy  breast  a  cry  for  I : 
new  day  comes,  the  I  Dearer  for  night, 
The  happy  valleys,  half  in  I, 
Whatever  record  leap  to  I 
Thro'  the  long  gorge  to  the  far  I 
A  I  amid  its  olives  green ; 


404 


Light 


Talking  Oak  165 

Love  and  Duty  72 

95 

100 

Golden  Year  33 

35 


I 


Ulysses  54 

Tithonus  67 

Locksley  Hall  25 

114 

116 

Day-Dm.,  /Sleep.  B.  7 

16 

„  Revival  5 

L' Envoi  27 

8t.  Agnes'  Eve  28 

35 

Sir  Galahad  26 

41 

Will  Water.  59 

67 

The  Voyage  20 

Move  eastward,  etc.  10 

Vision  of  Sin  9 

Enoch  Arden  131 

494 

680 

687 

.  726 

Aylmer's  Field  5 

77 

480 

578 

641 

665 

682 

Sea  Dreams  98 

208 

215 

235 

Lucretius  99 

Princess,  Pro.  84 

i207 

a  116 

348 

473 

Hi  132 

192 

255 

323 

326 

iv  3 

314 

357 

430 

435 

483 

495 

536 

558 

vU 

271 

viSl 

282 

«ii24 

59 

120 

167 

253 

346 

Con.  41 

Ode  on  Well.  190 

213 

The  Daisy  30 


Marr. 


Light  (s)  (continued)    From  Como,  when  the  I  was  gray, 

And  on  thro'  zones  of  I  and  shadow  To  F. 

it  grew  so  tall  It  wore  a  crown  of  I, 

I  and  shadow  illimitable, 

The  I's  and  shadows  fly  !  Window 

I's  and  shadows  that  cannot  be  still, 

O  ^5,  are  you  flying  over  her  sweet  little  face  ? 

Gone,  and  the  I  gone  with  her. 

You  roll  up  away  from  the  I  The  blue  wood-louse, 

Fly  ;  Fly  to  the  I  in  the  valley  below — 

L,  so  low  upon  earth, 

L,  so  low  in  the  vale  You  flash  and  lighten 

Thine  are  these  orbs  of  I  and  shade  ; 

They  are  but  broken  I's  of  thee. 

Help  thy  vain  words  to  bear  thy  I. 

magic  I  Dies  off  at  once  from  bower  and  hall, 

thro'  early  I  Shall  glimmer  on  the  dewy  decks. 

Sphere  all  your  I's  around,  above  ; 

Calm  and  still  I  on  yon  great  plain 

My  blessing,  like  a  line  of  I, 

And  Fancy  I  from  Fancy  caught, 

light  The  I  that  shone  when  Hope  was  bom. 

To  leap  the  grades  of  life  and  I, 

'  Farewell !     We  lose  ourselves  in  I.' 

Like  I  in  many  a  shiver'd  lance 

Be  near  me  when  my  I  is  low, 

An  infant  crying  for  the  I : 

Or  in  the  I  of  deeper  eyes 

Recalls,  in  change  of  I  or  gloom. 

And  like  a  finer  I  in  I. 

in  the  house  I  after  I  Went  out, 

Mixt  their  dim  I's,  like  life  and  death, 

Which  makes  the  darkness  and  the  I, 

And  dwells  not  in  the  I  alone, 

The  flying  cloud,  the  frosty  I : 

Where  God  and  Nature  met  in  I ; 

Now  dance  the  I's  on  lawn  and  lea, 

Behind  thee  comes  the  greater  I : 

For  them  the  I  of  life  increased. 

To  pestle  a  poison'd  poison  behind  his  crimson  I's. 

in  the  high  Hall-garden  I  see  her  pass  like  a  I ; 

sorrow  seize  me  if  ever  that  I  be  my  leading-star  ! 

Maud  in  the  I  of  her  youth  and  her  grace, 

delicate  spark  Of  glowing  and  growing  I 

returns  the  dark  With  no  more  hope  of  I. 

Beginning  to  faint  in  the  I  that  she  loves 

To  faint  in  the  I  of  the  sun  she  loves,  To  faint  in 

his  I,  and  to  die. 
At  the  shouts,  the  leagues  of  I's, 
And  the  I  and  shadow  fleet ; 
rivulet  at  her  feet  Ripples  on  in  Z  and  shadow 
From  the  realms  of  I  and  song, 
But  the  broad  I  glares  and  beats, 
Tho'  many  a  I  shall  darken, 
many  a  darkness  into  the  I  shall  leap, 
In  that  fierce  I  which  beats  upon  a  throne, 

shone  so  close  beside  Thee  that  ye  made  One  I  together,         „  48 

Half-bUnded  at  the  coming  of  a  I.  Com,  of  Arthur  266 

Affection,  and  the  I  of  victory,  Gareth  and  L.  331 

flickering  in  a  grimly  I  Dance  on  the  mere.  „  826 

May-music  growing  with  the  growing  I,  „  1080 

Echo'd  the  walls  ;  a  I  twinkled  ;  anon  Came  I's  and  I's,         „  1370 

Beautiful  among  I's,  and  waving  to  him  „  1376 

loved  her,  as  he  loved  the  I  of  Heaven.    And  as  the 

I  of  Heaven  varies,  Marr.  of  Geraint  5 

And  darken'd  from  the  high  I  in  his  eyes,  „  100 

never  I  and  shade  Coursed  one  another  more  „  521 

her  fair  head  in  the  dim-yellow  I,  „  600 

the  red  cock  shouting  to  the  I,  Geraint  and  E.  384 

But  Z  to  me  !  no  shadow,  O  my  King,  Balin  and  Balan  207 

all  the  I  upon  her  silver  face  Flow'd  „  263 

A  Z  of  armour  by  him  flash,  „  326 

They  said  a  I  came  from  her  when  she  moved  :  Merlin  and  V.  567 

the  court,  the  King,  dark  in  your  I,  „  875 

from  the  skull  the  crown  Roll'd  into  I,  Lancelot  and  E.  51 


Tlie  Daisy 

D.  Maurice  27 

The  Flower  10 

Boddicea  42 

,  On  the  Hill  1 

7 

13 

Gone  3, 

Winter  8 

LetUr  12 

Mom.  1 

9 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  5 

19 

32 

„  via  5 

„  ix  11 

13 

„  xi  9 

„  x:vii  10 

„         xxiii  14 

,,  XXX  oa 

Xli  11 

„  xlvii  16 

„  xlix  3 

n 

liv  19 

„  Ixii  11 

„        Ixxxv  74 

„  xci  16 

„  xev  19 

.63 

„  xcvi  19 

20 

„  m2 

cxi  20 

„  cxv  9 

„         cxxi  12 

Con.  74 

Maud  /  i  44 

„        iv  11 

12 

■yl5 

„        vi  16 

„        ix  16 

„      xxii  9 


// 


,//7ot43 
46 
Ded.  of  Idylls  27 


Light 


405 


Light 


Light  (s)  (continued)    The  maiden  standing  in  the 
dewy  I. 
The  green  I  from  the  meadows  underneath 

0  damsel,  in  the  I  of  your  blue  eyes  ; 

the  blood-red  I  of  dawn  Flared  on  her  face, 

1  heard  the  sound,  I  saw  the  I, 

aU  her  form  shone  forth  with  sudden  I 

A  I  was  in  the  crannies, 

This  I  that  strikes  his  eyeball  is  not  I, 

loosed  his  horse,  and  led  him  to  the  I. 

Was  dazzled  by  the  sudden  I, 

a  moon  With  promise  of  large  I  on  woods 

And  spied  not  any  I  in  hall  or  bower, 

golden  beard  that  clothed  his  lips  with  I — 

Then  in  the  I's  last  glimmer  Tristram  show'd 

one  low  I  betwixt  them  bum'd 

*  No  I  had  we  :  for  that  we  do  repent ; 


'  No  Z  :  so  late  !  and  dark  and  chill  the  night !     O  let 

us  in,  that  we  may  find  the  M 
in  the  I  the  white  mermaiden  swam, 
What  knowest  thou  of  the  world,  and  all  its  I's  And 

shadows, 
thou  reseated  in  thy  place  of  I, 
near  him  the  sad  nuns  with  each  a  I  Stood, 
Wet  with  the  mists  and  smitten  by  the  Vs, 
That  pure  severity  of  perfect  I — 


Lancelot  and  E.  352 

408 

660 

1025 

Holy  Grail  280 

450 

838 

913 

PeUeas  and  E.  61 

105 

394 

419 

Last  Tournament  668 

739 

Guinevere  4 

..      171 


„  174 

,,  245 

„  343 

.,  525 

„  590 

„  597 

— -, .  -, „  646 

0  I  upon  the  wind,  Pass,  of  Arthur  46 
great  I  of  heaven  Bum'd  at  his  lowest  „  90 
cryings  for  the  I,  Moans  of  the  dying,  „  116 
the  I  that  led  The  holy  Elders  with  the  gift  of  myrrh.  „  400 
when,  clothed  with  living  I,  They  stood  before  his  throne  „  454 
From  less  to  less  and  vanish  into  I.  „  468 
For  when  the  outer  I's  are  darken'd  thus.  Lover's  Tale  i  35 
led  on  with  I  In  trances  and  in  visions :  „  77 
image,  like  a  chann  of  I  and  strength  „  91 
Thou  art  I,  To  which  my  spirit  leaneth  „  103 
Looking  on  her  that  brought  him  to  the  I :  „  160 
From  the  same  clay  came  into  I  at  once.  „  194 
a  common  I  of  eyes  Was  on  us  £is  we  lay  :  „  236 
till  the  morning  I  Sloped  thro'  the  pines,  „  263 
Pour  with  such  sudden  deluges  of  I  „  315 
Methought  a  I  Burst  from  the  garland  I  had  wov'n,  „  365 
A I  methought  broke  from  her  dark,  „  368 
mystic  I  flash'd  ev'n  from  her  white  robe  „  370 
a  tissue  of  I  Unparallel'd.  „  419 
Since  in  his  absence  full  of  I  and  joy,  And  giving  I  to 

others.                                                                                   „  425 

dwelling  on  the  I  and  depth  of  thine,                                       „  492 

bliss  stood  round  me  like  the  I  of  Heaven, —                          „  495 

whose  right  hand  the  I  Of  Life  issueth,                                     ,,  497 

Steppeth  from  Heaven  to  Heaven,  from  I  to  I,                        „  512 

We  past  from  I  to  dark.                                                               „  516 

eyes  too  weak  to  look  upon  the  ' ;                                           „  614 

The  white  I  of  the  weary  moon  above,                                    „  640 

Between  the  going  I  and  growing  night  ?                                  „  664 

Robed  in  those  robes  of  Z I  must  not  wear,                             „  671 

hold  out  the  I's  of  cheerfulness ;                                                 „  807 

Showers  slanting  I  upon  the  dolorous  wave.                             „  811 

what  I,  what  gleam  on  those  black  ways                                  „  812 

fused  together  in  the  tyrannous  I —                                           „  ii  67 

bliss,  which  broke  in  I  Like  morning                                         „  143 

Now  the  I  Which  was  their  life,                                               „  163 

And  solid  beam  of  isolated  I,                                                     „  ..173 

1  Of  smiling  welcome  round  her  lips —  „  iii  45 
And,  making  there  a  sudden  I,  „  iv  53 
The  I  was  but  a  flash,  and  went  again.  „  55 
Wonder'd  at  some  strange  I  in  Julian's  eyes  „  205 
him  nor  I's  nor  feast  Dazed  or  amazed,  „  310 
an'  puts  'im  back  i'  the  I.  NoHh.  Cobbler  98 
O  diviner  I,  Sisters  [E.  and  E.)  16 
Break,  diviner  l\  „  23 
dress  thy  deeds  in  I,  Ascends  to  thee  ;  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  9 
hidden  there  from  the  I  of  the  sun —  Def.  of  Lucknow  63 
Before  thy  I,  and  cry  continually —  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  85 
Her  love  of  I  quenching  her  fear  of  pain —                               „  190 


Light  (s)  {continued)    last  the  I,  the  I  On  Guanahani !  Columbus  74 

and  the  I  Grew  as  I  gazed,  „         76 

Sunless  and  moonless,  utter  I —  „         90 

Set  thee  in  I  till  time  shall  be  no  more  ?  „       150 

brooks  glitter'd  on  in  the  I  without  sound,  V.  of  Maeldune  13 

we  were  lured  by  the  I  from  afar,  „             71 

Waste  dawn  of  multitudinous-eddying  I —  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  4 

— her  dark  orb  Touch'd  with  earth's  I —  „               10 

that  one  I  no  man  can  look  upon,  „  37 
the  lost  I  of  those  dawn-golden  times,                    To  W.  H.  Brookfield  7 

0  YOU  that  were  eyes  and  I  to  the  King  To  Prin.  F.  of  H.  1 
dreadful  I  Came  from  her  golden  hair,  Tiresias  43 
spear  and  helmet  tipt  With  stormy  I  „  114 
Send  no  such  I  upon  the  ways  of  men  „  161 
Gone  into  darkness,  that  full  I  Of  friendship  !  „  202 
and  awake  to  a  livid  I,  The  Wreck  7 
in  the  Z  of  a  dowerless  smile,  „  45 
days  of  a  larger  I  than  I  ever  again  shall  know —  „  78 
we  knew  that  their  I  was  a  lie —  Despair  16 
When  the  Z  of  a  Sun  that  was  coming  „  23 
baby-girl,  that  had  never  look'd  on  the  I:  „  71 
And,  darkening  in  the  I,  Ancient  Sage  151 
And  laughing  back  the  I,  „  168 
doors  of  Night  may  be  the  gates  ot  L;  „  174 
Some  say,  the  L  was  father  of  the  Night,  And  some, 

the  Night  was  father  of  the  L,  „          247 

up  that  lane  of  I  into  the  setting  sun.  The  Flight  40 

side  by  side  in  God's  free  I  and  air,  „          81 

wid  all  the  I  an'  the  glow.  Tomorrow  67 

when  Molly  'd  put  out  the  I,  Spinster's  S's.  97 
for  ever  was  the  leading  I  of  man.                            Locksley  H.,  Sixty  66 

France  had  shown  a  Z  to  all  men,  „                89 

shriek'd  and  slaked  the  I  with  blood.  „                90 

in  that  point  of  peaceful  I?  „              190 

were  half  as  eager  for  the  I.  „  228 
L  the  fading  gleam  of  Even  ?  I  the  glimmer  of  the 

dawn  ?  „              229 

Follow  L,  and  do  the  Right—  „              277 

Whirling  their  sabres  in  circles  of  I !  Heavy  Brigade  34 

L  among  the  vanish'd  ages  ;  To  Virgil  25 

shifting  ladders  of  shadow  and  I,  Dead  Prophet  21 
The  I  of  days  when  life  begim,                              Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  23 

Thy  prayer  was  '  L — more  L—  Epit.  on  Caxton  1 
shadows  which  that  I  would  cast,  Till  shadows  vanish 

in  the  L  of  L.  „  3 
This  later  I  of  Love  have  risen  in  rain,                      To  Prin.  Beatrice  16 

1  and  genial  warmth  of  double  day.  ,.  22 
Trnst  the  Hand  of  L  will  lead  her  people.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  68 
And  the  L  is  Victor,  „  70 
And  all  the  Shadow  die  into  the  L,  Demeter  and  P.  138 
I'll  coom  an'  I'll  squench  the  I,  Owd  Rod  117 
stings  him  back  to  the  curse  of  the  I ;  Vastness  18 
A  I  shot  upward  on  them  from  the  lake.  The  Ring  256 
And  there  the  I  of  other  life,  „  295 
saw  Your  gilded  vane,  a  I  above  the  mist ' —  „  331 
'  and  the  I,'  She  said,  '  was  like  that  I ' —  „  333 
I  That  glimmers  on  the  marsh  and  on  the  grave.'  „  340 
one  betwixt  the  dark  and  I  had  seen  Her,  „  414 
soul  in  soul  and  I  in  I,  Happy  39 
in  the  brooding  I  of  noon  ?  „  99 
I,  once  half -crazed  for  larger  I  To  Ulysses  29 
Her  I  makes  rainbows  in  my  closing  eyes.  Prog,  of  Spring  46 
still-fulfilling  promise  of  a  Z  „  90 
I  retreated,  The  landskip  darken'd,  Merlin  and  the  G.  30 
Could  make  pure  I  live  on  the  canvas  ?  Romney's  R.  10 
Reflected,  sends  a  Z  on  the  forgiven.  „  161 
L  again,  leaf  again,  life  again,  love  again,'  The  Throstle  3 
star  of  eve  was  drawing  I  From  the  dead  sun,  Death  of  CEnone  64 
What  I  was  there  ?  „  84 
The  morning  I  of  happy  marriage  broke  „  102 
'i  of  the  nations  '  ask'd  his  Chronicler  Of  Akbar  Akbar's  Dream  1 
There  is  I  in  all,  And  I,  „  45 
But  find  their  limits  by  that  larger  I,  „  99 
By  deeds  a  I  to  men  ?  „  111 
But  no  such  I  Glanced  from  our  Presence  ,,        112 


Light 


406 


Like 


1 


light  (s)  (continued)  arrowing Z from  clime  to  clime,  Akbar's  Dream,  Hymn  5 

'  I  am  losing  the  I  of  my  Youth  The  Dreamer  4 

Light  (come  upon,  etc.)     Who  can  I  on  as  happy  a  shore          Sea- Fairies  40 

You  could  not  I  upon  a  sweeter  thing  :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  52 

What  should  you  give  to  I  on  such  a  dream  ?  '               Edwin  Morris  58 

He  trusts  to  I  on  something  fair  ;  Day- Dm.,  Arrival  20 

i  on  a  broken  word  to  thank  him  with.  Enoch  Arden  347 

if  I  could  follow,  and  I  Upon  her  lattice,  Princess  iv  99 

Britain  I  upon  auguries  happier  ?  Boddicea  45 

•    may  you  I  on  all  things  that  you  love.  Mart,  of  Geraint  226 

but  if  ye  know  Where  I  can  I  on  arms,  „              422 

I  should  I  upon  the  Holy  Grail.  Holy  Grail  367 

tha'll  Z  of  a  livin'  somewheers  i'  the  Wowd  Church-warden,  etc.  47 

we  shall  I  upon  some  lonely  shore,  The  Flight  89 

Light  (kindle)    I  The  light  that  shone  when  Hope  was  bom.     In  Mem.  xxx  31 

Light  (to  illuminate)    They  I  his  little  life  alway  ;  Swpp.  Confessions  46 

I  let  a  sunbeam  slip.  To  I  her  shaded  eye  ;  Talking  Oak  218 
God  within  him  I  his  face.  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  36 
L's  with  herself,  when  alone  She  sits  Maud  I  xiv  12 
and  l's  the  old  chiurch-tower.  And  Vs  the  clock !  The  Flight  93 

'Light  (to  alight)    Who  'l's  and  rings  the  gateway  bell,           In  Mem.  viii  3 

That  float  thro'  Heaven,  and  cannot  Z  ?  Day-Dm.,  Ef.  8 

Light-blue    Sweet-hearted,  you,  whose  l-h  eyes  In  Mem.  xcvi  2 

A  l-b  lane  of  early  dawn,  „        cxix  7 

Light  Brigade    Forward,  the  L  B  !  (repeat)  Light  Brigade  5,  9 

Honour  the  L  B,  „              54 

Lighted  (adj.)    (See  also  Evening-lighted,  Never- 
lighted,  Silent-lighted,  Still-l^hted)    And 

in  the  I  palace  near  L.  of  Shalott  iv  47 

Swung  round  the  I  lantern  of  the  hall ;  Guinevere  262 

Lighted  (kindled)     tho'  my  lamp  was  I  late,  May  Queen,  Con.  18 

Lighted  (shone)    from  it  I  an  all-shining  flame.  Achilles  over  the  T.  6 

Lighted  (illuminated)    I  from  below  By  the  red  race  of 

fiery  Phlegethon ;  Demeter  and  P.  27 

And  I  from  above  him  by  the  Sun  ?  ,,            31 

Lighted  (alighted)     Love  I  down  between  them  The  Bridesmaid  6 

And  Z  at  a  i-uin'd  inn,  Vision  of  Sim  62 

Gareth  overthrew  him,  I,  drew,  Gareth  and  L.  1121 

Molly  belike  may  'a  I  to-night  upo'  one.  Spinster's  S's.  7 

following  I  on  him  there.  And  shouted.  Death  of  QLnone  55 

Lighted  on     those  of  old  That  I  o  Queen  Esther,  Marr.  of  Geraint  731 

tiU  she  had  I  o  his  wound,  Geraint  and  E.  513 

II  o  the  maid.  Whose  sleeve  he  wore  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  710 
mutter'd, '  I  have  I  o  a  fool,  Pelleas  and  E.  113 
and  the  great  King,  L  o  words :  „            253 

Lighten  (illuminate)    Have  power  on  this  dark  land 

to  /  it.  Com.  of  Arthur  93 

Lighten  (to  flash)     L's  from  her  own  central  Hell —  Aylmer's  Field  761 

now  she  l's  scorn  At  him  that  mars  her  plan.  Princess  v  131 

You  flash  and  I  afar,  Window,  Marr.  Mom.  10 

0, 1  into  my  eyes  and  my  heart,  „                15 

I  thro'  The  secular  abyss  to  come,  In  Mem.  Ixxvi  5 

What  l's  in  the  lucid  east  „            cv  24 

The  brute  earth  l's  to  the  sky,  „     cxxvii  15 

Flash  upon  flash  they  I  thro'  me —  Lover's  Tale  i  51 
Listen  (to  make  lighter)     One  burthen  and  she  would 

not  I  it  ?  Aylmer's  Field  703 

To  I  this  great  clog  of  thanks.  Princess  vi  126 

Lighten'd  (flashed)    The  random  sunshine  I !  Amphion  56 

a  cloudy  gladness  I  In  the  eyes  of  each.  The  Captain  31 

stars  all  night  above  the  brim  Of  waters  I  into  view  ;       The  Voyage  26 

silver  rays,  that  I  as  he  breathed  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  296 

sword  that  I  back  the  sun  of  Holy  land,  Happy  43 

Lighten'd  (made  lighter)    but  a  dream,  yet  it  I  my  despair    Maud  III  vi  18 

Lightening    Came  I  downward,  and  so  spilt  itself  Pelleas  and  E.  426 

Lighter  (adj.)    touch  him  with  thy  I  thought.  Locksley  Hall  54 

Of  finest  Gothic  I  than  a  fire.  Princess,  Pro.  92 

My  I  moods  are  like  to  these,  In  Mem.  xx  9 

The  I  by  the  loss  of  his  weight ;  Maud  I  xvi  2 

Lighter  (s)     As  flies  the  I  thro'  the  gross.  In  Mem.  xli  4 

Lighter-footed    And  l-f  than  the  fox.  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  8 

Lightest    my  ears  could  hear  Her  I  breath  ;  Edwin  Morris  65 

Of  I  echo,  then  a  loftier  form  Than  female.  Princess  iv  215 

The  I  wave  of  thought  shall  lisp,  In  Mem.  xlix  5 

This  lad,  whose  I  word  Is  mere  white  truth  Bali/n  and  Balan  517 


Lightest  (continued)    whose  I  whisper  moved  him  more     Pelleas  and  E.  155 

Light-foot    l-f  Iris  brought  it  yester-eve,  (Enone  83 

So  saying,  l-f  Iris  pass'd  away.  Achilles  over  the  T.  1 

Light-glooming     L-g  over  eyes  divine,  Madeline  16 

Light-green     A  l-g  tuft  of  plumes  she  bore  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  2ft 

L-g  with  its  own  shadow,  keel  to  keel.  Lover's  Tale  i  43 

Light-headed    I  should  grow  l-h,  I  fear,  Maud  I  xix  1(X> 

'  0  my  child,  ye  seem  L-h,  Lancelot  and  E.  1063 

Lighthouse    with  the  gorgeous  west  the  I  shone.  Lover's  Tale  i  60 

that  night  When  the  rolling  eyes  of  the  I  Despair  9 

Lighting    I  upon  days  like  these  ?  Locksley  Hall  99 

Lightning  (adj.)     Till  the  I  laughters  dimple  Lilian  16 

Those  writhed  hmbs  of  I  speed  ;  Clear-headed  friend  23 

The  I  flash  atween  the  rains,  Rosalind  12 

The  I  flash  of  insect  and  of  bird,  Enoch  Arden  574 

Lightning  (s)    (See  also  Cross-lightnings,  Sheet-lightnings)  m 

as  the  I  to  the  thunder  Which  follows  it.  The  Poet  50 

In  the  middle  leaps  a  fountain  Like  sheet  I,  Poet's  Mind  25 

wilt  shoot  into  the  dark  Arrows  of  Vs.  To  J.  M.  K.  14 

With  thunders,  and  with  l's,  Buonaparte  6 

With  summer  l's  of  a  soul  Miller's  D.  13 

great  brand  Made  l's  in  the  splendour  of  the  moon,        M.  d' Arthur  137 

Nor  ever  I  char  thy  grain,  Talking  Oak  277 

flash  the  l's,  weigh  the  Sun.  Locksley  Hall  186 

L  of  the  hour,  the  pim,  Aylmer's  Field  441 

The  wizard  Vs  deeply  glow.  In  Mem.  cxxii  19 

That  like  a  silent  I  under  the  stars  Maud  III  vi  9 

Made  l's  and  great  thunders  over  him.  Com.  of  Arthur  108 

And  l's  play'd  about  it  in  the  storm,  Gareth  and  L.  68 

so  quick  and  thick  The  Vs  here  and  there  Holy  Grail  494 

Makes  wicked  l's  of  her  eyes,  Guinevere  520 

great  brand  Made  l's  in  the  splendour  of  the 

moon,  Pass,  of  Arthur  305 

Thunderless  Vs  striking  under  sea  To  the  Queen  ii  12 

tears,  that  shot  the  sunset  In  l's  round  me  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  443 

L's  flicker'd  along  the  heath  ;  Dead  Prophet  79 

L  may  shrivel  the  laurel  of  Caesar,  Parnassus  4 

evergreen  laurel  is  blasted  by  more  than  l\  „        12 

L^htning-fork    one  l-f  Flash'd  out  the  lake  ;  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  96 

Light-of-love     he  whom  men  call  l-o-l  ?  '  Pelleas  and  E.  361 

Lightsome     Self-balanced  on  a  Z  wing  :  In  Mem.  Ixv  8 

Light-wing'd    l-w  spirit  of  his  youth  return'd  Balin  and  Balan  21 

Like  (adj.,  adv.,  s.)     Her  heart  is  Z  a  thi-obbing  star.  Kate  9 

L  men,  I  manners  :  I  breeds  I,  they  say  :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  63 

L  to  Furies,  I  to  Graces,  Vision  of  Sin  41 

Am  I  so  Z  her  ?  so  they  said  on  board.  The  Brook  223 

and  I  a  gentleman.  And  I  a  prince  :  Princess  iv  527 

Not  I  to  I,  but  I  in  difference.  „  vii  278 

L  the  leaf  in  a  roaring  whirlwind,  I  Boddicea  59 

For  words,  I  Nature,  half  reveal  And  half  conceal  In  Mem.  v  3 

I  a  stoic,  or  Z  A  wise  epicurean,  Maud  I  iv  20 

There  is  none  I  her,  none,  (repeat)  Maud  I.  xviii  2, 13 

Not  thou,  but  I  to  thee :  „              //  iv  12 

Tell  me,  was  he  I  to  thee  ?  '  Merlin  and  V.  613 

But  up  I  fire  he  started  :  Gareth  and  L.  1123 

but  one  I  him.'     '  Why  that  I  was  he.'  Lancelot  and  E.  574 

Not  I  him,  '  Not  I  my  Lancelot ' —  Guinevere  406 

And  I  the  all-enduring  camel,  Lover's  Tale  i  136 

Made  all  our  tastes  and  fancies  I,  „            242 

X  to  a  low-hung  and  a  fiery  sky  „          ii  61 

And  heard  him  muttering,  '  So  Z,  so  Z ;  „        iv  325 

cousin  of  his  and  hers — O  God,  so  Z ! '  „            327 
says,  '  Good  !  very  Z !  not  altogether  he.'             Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  136 

What  be  the  nextun  Z  ?  can  tha  tell  Village  Wife  19 
Those  three  !  the  fourth  Was  Z  the  Son  of  God  !       Sir  J.  Oldcastle  176 

those  two  Vs  might  meet  and  touch.  Two  Voices  357 

life  !  he  never  saw  the  Z ;  Princess  i  186 

To  prick  us  on  to  combat '  i  to  Z !  ..       ■"  304 

Pass,  and  mingle  with  your  Vs.  „      vi  341 

There  was  not  his  I  that  year  in  twenty  parishes  Grandmother  12 

Not  violating  the  bond  of  Z  to  I.'  Lancelot  and  E.  241 

I  never  saw  his  Z ;  there  lives  No  greater  leader.'  „            316 

Camelot  seen  the  Z,  since  Arthur  came  ;  Holy  Grail  332 

love  will  go  by  contrast,  as  by  Vs.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  42 

Like  (verb)     How  Z  you  this  old  satire  ?  '  Sea  Dreams  198 


Like 


407 


Limb 


Like  (verb)  {continued)    we  I  them  well :  But  children  die ;     Princess  Hi  252 
/  I  her  none  the  less  for  rating  at  her  !  „         v  461 

Not  es  I  cares 'fur  to  hear  ony  harm,  but  I  I's  to  knaw.  Village  Wife  22 
Like  See  also  Artist-Like,  Beastlike,  Bell-like,  Brother-like, 
Catlike,  Chasm-like,  Childlike,  Christ-like,  Cleopatra- 
like, Colt-like,  Coquette-like,  Deathlike,  Dreamlike, 
Dryad -like.  Dwarf -like.  Eagle -hke.  Echo -like. 
Fatherlike,  Firefly-like,  Fool-like,  Frost-like,  Gem- 
like, Ghostlike,  God-like,  Grovelike,  Harlot-like, 
Idiotlike,  Ixion-like,  King-like,  Enightlike,  Lancelot- 
like, Landlike,  Lead-like,  LilyUke,  Lioness-like, 
Lionlike,  Loike,  Magnet-like,  Maidenlike,  Manlike, 
Mist  -  like.  Moonlike,  Mountain  -  like.  Nestlike, 
Oration  -  like.  Poet -hke.  Princelike,  Saint -like. 
Shadow  -  like.  Snowlike,  Soldierlike,  Star  -  like. 
Statue-like,  Sun-like,  Swanlike,  Tusklike,  Unking- 
like,  Unknightlike,  Wizard-like,  Womanlike 
Liked    more  he  look'd  at  her  The  less  he  I  her ;  Bora  35 

neither  loved  nor  I  the  thing  he  heard.  Aylmer's  Field  250 

she  I  it  more  Thjm  magic  music,  Princess,  Pro.  194 

Nor  tho'  she  I  him,  yielded  she,  „  vii  76 

But  I  ^  a  bigger  feller  to  fight  North.  Cobbler  100 

1 1  the  owd  Squire  an'  'is  gells  Village  Wife  6 

1 1  'er  the  fust  on  'em  all,  „  9 

Likelihood    Needs  must  be  lesser  I,  Lancelot  and  E.  367 

Likely     '  0  ay,'  said  Vivien,  '  that  were  I  too.  Merlin  and  V.  746 

Likm'd    he  that  teUs  the  tale  L  them.  Last  Tournament  227 

IftwnfiSS    '  Lo  !  God's  Z— the  ground-plan —  Vision  of  Sin  187 

darkening  thine  own  To  thine  own  J  ;  Aylmer's  Field  674 

Found  a  still  place,  and  pluck'd  her  I  out ;  Princess  i  92 

A  I,  hardly  seen  before.  Comes  out —  In  Mem.  Ixxiv  3 

Thy  I  to  the  wise  below,  „  7 

If  any  vision  should  reveal  Thy  I,  „  xcii  2 

A  momentary  I  of  the  King :  Com.  of  Arthur  271 

That  shadow  of  a  Z  to  the  king  Demeter  and  P.  16 

Last  as  the  Z  of  a  dying  man,  „  88 

the  I  of  thyself  Without  thy  knowledge,  „  92 

groping  for  it,  could  not  find  One  I,  The  Ring  337 

liker    light  shall  spread,  and  man  be  i!  man  Golden  Year  35 

The  Princess  ;  Z  to  the  inhabitant  Of  some  clear 

planet  Princess  ii  35 

Yet  in  the  long  years  I  must  they  grow ;  „     vii  279 

Ukest    seeing  men,  in  power  Only,  are  I  gods,  (Enone  130 

The  I  God  within  the  soul  ?  In  Mem.  Iv  4 

Idlac  (adj.)    So  Willy  and  I  were  wedded :  I  wore  a  I 

gown ;  Grandmother  57 

Lilac  (s)    And  makes  the  piu^le  I  ripe,  On  a  Mourner  7 

Academic  silks,  in  hue  The  I,  Princess  ii  17 

Idbo-ambnsh     Thro'  crowded  l-a  trimly  pruned  ;  Gardener's  D.  112 

Idlia    And  sister  L  with  the  rest.'  Princess.  Pro.  52 

And  L  with  the  rest,  and  lady  friends  „  97 

L,  wild  with  sport.  Half  child  half  woman  „  100 

'  Where,'  Ask'd  Walter,  patting  L's  head  „  125 

Quick  answer'd  L '  There  are  thousands  now  „  127 

If  there  were  many  L's  in  the  brood,  „  146 

The  Uttle  hearth-flower  L.  „  166 

and  not  for  harm.  So  he  with  L's.  „  175 

As  many  little  trifling  L's —  „  188 

Said  L  ;  '  Why  not  now  ?  '  the  maiden  Aunt.  „  208 

L  woke  with  sudden-shriUing  mirth  „  216 

'  Take  L  then,  for  heroine,'  clamour'd  he,  „  223 

So  L  sang  :  we  thought  her  half-possess'd,  „        iv  585 

With  which  we  banter'd  Uttle  L  first :  „      Con.  12 

L  pleased  me,  for  she  took  no  part  In  our  dispute  :  „  29 

L,  rising  quietly.  Disrobed  the  glinunering  statue  „  116 

Lilian    (See  also  May  Lilian)    Aibt,  fairy  L,  Flitting,  fairy  L,         Lilian  1 

^  Cruel  little  L.  „      7 

mied    The  streams  through  many  a  I  row  The  winds,  etc.  5 

Lflt    whishper  was  sweet  as  the  Z  of  a  bird  !  Tomorrow  33 

LQted    scraps  of  thimdrous  Epic  I  out  Princess  ii  375 

^Lilting    I  was  I  a  song  to  the  babe.  Bandit's  Death  20 

Lily  (adj.)    holding  out  her  I  arms  Took  both  his  hands,         Princess  ii  303 

Lily  (s)    {See  also  Gold-li^r,  Lent-lily,  Tiger-lily, 

Water-lily)     to  brush  the  dew  From  thine 

own  I,  Supp.  Confessions  85 


Lily  (s)  (continued)    Or  opening  upon  level  plots  Of 

crowned  lilies,  Ode  to  Memory  109 

Like  a  I  which  the  sun  Looks  thro'  Adeline  12 

breath  Of  the  lilies  at  simrise  ?  „        37 

Gazing  where  the  lilies  blow  L.  of  Shalott  i  7 

amaracus,  and  asphodel,  Lotos  and  lilies  :  (Enone  98 

Waves  all  its  lazy  lilies,  Gardener's  D.  42 

Pure  lilies  of  eternal  peace.  Sir  Galahad  67 

It  was  the  time  when  lilies  blow,  Lady  Clare  1 

The  silver  I  heaved  and  fell ;  To  E.  L.  19 

steamer  paddling  pUed  And  shook  the  lilies  :  Princess,  Pro.  72 

than  wear  Those  lilies,  better  blush  „           Hi  68 

violet  varies  from  the  Z  as  far  As  oak  from  elm  :  „           v  182 

,     '  Pretty  bud !     L  of  the  vale  !  „          vi  193 

Now  folds  the  I  all  her  sweetness  up,  „        vii  186 

Roses  and  lilies  and  Canterbury-bells.'  City  Child  5 

and  flung  The  lilies  to  and  fro.  In  Mem.  xev  60  ■ 

fed  on  the  roses  and  lain  in  the  Mies  of  life.  Maud  I  iv  60 

Gathering  woodland  lilies,  „        zii  7 

Maud  is  here,  here,  here  In  among  the  lilies.  „            12 

And  lilies  fair  on  a  lawn  ;  „        xiv  2 

Bright  English  I,  breathing  a  prayer  To  be  friends,  „     xix  55 

I  said  to  the  I,  '  There  is  but  one  „    xxii  19 

The  lilies  and  roses  were  all  awake,  „            51 

Queen  I  and  rose  in  one ;  „            56 

And  the  I  whispers, '  I  wait.'  „            66 " 

All  made  up  of  the  I  and  rose  That  blow  „     IIv74 

Have  I  beheld  a  I  like  yourself.  Geraint  and  E.  620 
A  walk  of  lilies  crost  it  to  the  bower :                       Balin  and  Balan  243 

white  walk  of  lilies  toward  the  bower.  „              249 

Saint  who  stands  with  I  in  hand  In  yonder  shrine.  „              261 

Flow'd  from  the  spiritual  I  that  she  held.  „  264 
Set  in  her  hand  a  I,  o'er  her  hung  The  silken 

case  Lancelot  and  E  1148 

In  her  right  hand  the  I,  in  her  left  The  letter —  „          1155 

Be  carven,  and  her  I  in  her  hand.  „           1342 

Farewell  too — now  at  last — FareweU,  fair  I.  „  1397 
spire  of  the  momitain  was  lilies  in  lieu  of  snow, 

And  the  lilies  like  glaciers  winded  down,  V.  of  Maeldune  41 

And  we  waUow'd  in  beds  of  lilies,  „            48 

Had  set  the  /  and  rose  By  all  my  ways  Ancient  Sage  156 

My  I  of  truth  and  trust —  „          160 

They  made  her  I  and  rose  in  one,  „          161 

0  slender  I  waving  there,  „  167 
Lily-avenue  A  l-a  climbing  to  the  doors  ;  Aylmer's  Field  162 
Lily-cradled  the  golden  bee  Is  l-c :  (Enone  30 
Lily-handed  No  little  l-h  Baronet  he.  Princess,  Con.  84 
Lilylike  The  I  Melissa  droop'd  her  brows ;  „  iv  161 
Lily  maid    Elaine,  the  Imoi  Astolat,  Lancelot  and  E.  2 

How  came  the  Z  to  by  that  good  shield  of  Lancelot,  „            28 

close  behind  them  stept  the  I  m  Elaine,  „          176 

1  m  Elaine,  Won  by  the  mellow  voice  „  242 
Low  to  her  own  heart  said  the  I  m,  „  319 
The  I  m  had  striven  to  make  him  cheer,  „  327 
'  L  m.  For  fear  our  people  call  you  I  min  earnest,  „  385 
Lancelot  and  the  I  m  Smiled  at  each  other,  „  738 
Then  spake  the  Z  m  of  Astolat :  „  1085 
barge  Whereon  the  il  m  of  Astolat  Lay  smiling,  „        1242 

Lily-shining    lay  The  l-s  child ;  Princess  iv  287 

Lily-white    Lord  Ronald  brought  a  l-w  doe  Lady  Clare  3 

The  l-w  doe  Lord  Ronald  had  brought  „          61 
Limb    The  strong  l's  failing ;                                        All  Things  will  Die  32 
profulgent  brows,  And  perfect  l's,                           Supp.  Confessions  146 
Those  writhed  l's  of  lightning  speed  ;                       Clear-headed  friend  23 

her  clear  and  bared  Vs  O'erthwarted  (Enone  138 
Resting  weary  l's  at  last  on  beds  of  asphodel.      Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  125 

Those  in  whose  lap  our  l's  are  nursed,  To  J.  S.  10 

Denying  not  these  weather-beaten  l's  St.  S.  Stylites  19 

Till  all  my  l's  drop  piecemeal  from  the  stone,  „  44 
coverUd  Unto  her  l's  itself  doth  mould                 Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  10 

With  naked  l's  and  flowers  and  fruit,  The  Voyage  55 

Hair,  and  eyes,  and  Vs,  and  faces.  Vision  of  Sin  39 

A  I  was  broken  when  they  lifted  him  ;  Enoch  Arden  107 

Enoch  took,  and  handled  aU  his  l's,  „          153 

Till  the  little  l's  ai'e  stronger.  Sea  Dreams  30$ 


Limb 


408 


Lineament 


Limb  (continiied)     Down  thro'  her  I's  a  drooping  languor 

wept :  Princess  vi  268 

and  due  To  languid  I's  and  sickness ;  „            377 

Give  it  time  To  learn  its  I's  :  „     Con.  79 

this  weight  of  body  and  I,  High.  Pantheism  5 

Nor  could  I  weary,  heart  or  I,  In  Mem.  xxv  9 

And  watch'd  them,  wax'd  in  every  I ;  „        ciii  30 

brood  On  a  horror  of  shatter'd  I's  Maud  I  i  56 

Dark  cedar,  tho'  thy  I's  have  here  increase  1,  „  xviii  18 

find  nor  face  nor  bearing,  I's  nor  voice,  Com.  of  Arthur  71 

nor  pang  Of  wrench'd  or  broken  I —  Gareth  and  L.  88 

and  risk  thine  all.  Life,  I's,  „          129 

Brute  bulk  of  I,  or  boundless  savagery  „        1330 

not  trust  the  I's  thy  God  hath  given,  „        1388 

At  this  he  hurl'd  his  huge  I's  out  of  bed,  Marr.  of  Geraint  124 

I  seem  to  suffer  nothing  heart  or  I,  „            472 

Laid  from  her  I's  the  costly-broider'd  gift,  „             769 

strongly  striking  out  her  I's  awoke  ;  Geraint  and  E.  380 

free  to  stretch  his  I's  in  lawful  fight,  „             754 

clxmg  about  her  lissome  I's,  In  colour  Merlin  and  V.  223 

The  text  no  larger  than  the  I's  of  fleas  ;  „             672 

Spake  thro'  the  I's  and  in  the  voice —  Holy  Grail  23 

roimd  her  I's,  mature  in  womanhood  ;  Pelleas  and  E.  73 

but  so  weary  were  his  I's,  „            513 

his  imbroken  I's  from  the  dark  field,  „            585 

Strength  of  heart  And  might  of  I,  Last  Tournament  198 

The  weight  as  if  of  age  upon  my  I's,  Lover's  Tale  i  125 

ivy-tress  had  woimd  Round  my  worn  I's,  „            619 
blood  Crept  like  marsh  drains  thro'  all  my 

languid  I's ;  „           ii  53 

'  body  and  soul  And  life  and  I's,  „        iv  283 
happier  using  the  knife  than  in  trying  to  save 

the  I,  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  6 

we  were  English  in  heart  and  in  I,  Def.  of  Lucknow  46 
Lobbing  away  of  the  I  by  the  pitiful-pitiless 

knife, —  „                85 

a  babe  in  lineament  and  I  Perfect,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  11 

I  touch'd  my  I's,  the  I's  Were  strange  Ancient  Sage  234 

Death  will  freeze  the  supplest  I's —  Happy  46 

great  shock  may  wake  a  palsied  I,  St.  Telemachus  57 

moved  but  by  the  living  I,  Akbar's  Bream  133 
Limbed    See  Broad-limbed,  FuU-limbed,  large-limbed, 

Long-limb'd,  Snow-limbed 

Limber     And  legs  of  trees  were  I,  Amphion  14 

Lime  (tree)     arching  I's  are  tall  and  shady,  Margaret  59 

Not  thrice  your  branching  I's  have  blown  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  27 

beech  and  I  Put  forth  and  feel  a  gladder  clime.'  On  a  Mourner  14 

all  about  the  large  I  feathers  low.  The  I  Gardener's  D.  47 

and  over  many  a  range  Of  waning  I  „          218 

bard  has  honour'd  beech  or  I,  Talking  Oak  291 

overhead  The  broad  ambrosial  aisles  of  lofty  I  Princess,  Pro.  87 

Up  that  long  walk  of  I's  I  past  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  15 

mUlion  emeralds  break  from  the  ruby-budded  I  Maud  I  iv  1 

Of  leafless  elm,  or  naked  I,  To  Ulysses  16 

Tjmft  (earth)     To  feed  thy  bones  with  I,  Two  Voices  326 

As  dying  Nature's  earth  and  I ;  In  Mem.  cxviii  4 

I  am  mortal  stone  and  I.  Helen's  Tower  6 

Lime  (verb)     That  every  sopbister  can  I.  Love  thou  thy  land  12 

Limed     Tme — we  had  I  ourselves  With  open  eyes,  Princess  Hi  142 

Limit    till  we  reach'd  The  I  of  the  hills  ;  Audley  Court  83 

Here  at  the  quiet  I  of  the  world,  Tithonus  7 

on  the  glimmering  I  far  withdrawn  Vision  of  Sin  223 

and  ran  Ev'n  to  the  I  of  the  land,  Enoch  Arden  578 

Twofooted  at  the  I  of  his  chain,  Aylmer's  Field  127 

Slipt  o'er  those  lazy  I's  down  the  wind  „            495 

love-whispers  may  not  breathe  Within  this  vestal  I,  Princess  ii  222 

storm  and  blast  Had  blown  the  lake  beyond  his  I,  The  Daisy  71 

The  I  of  his  narrower  fate.  In  Mem.  Ixiv  21 

No  i  to  his  distress  ;  Maud  II  v  31 

And  in  what  I's,  and  how  tenderly ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  20 

utter  purity  Beyond  the  I  of  their  bond.  Merlin  and  V.  27 

there  ye  fixt  Your  I,  oft  returning  with  the  tide.     Lancelot  and  E.  1041 

And  laughter  at  the  I  of  the  wood,  Pelleas  and-  E.  49 

As  from  beyond  the  I  of  the  world,  Pass,  of  Arthur  458 

O'erbore  the  I's  of  my  brain :  Lover's  Tale  i  689 


Limit  (continued) 
her  I, 
mortal  I  of  the  Self  was  loosed, 
to  know  The  I's  of  resistance, 
so  to  the  land's  Last  1 1  came — 


Spain  should  oust  The  Moslem  from 

Columbus  97 
A  ncient  Sage  232 
To  Duke  of  Argyll  2  \ 
Merlin  and  the  G.  110 


find  their  Vs  by  that  larger  light,  Akbar's  Dream  99 

at  the  I  of  thy  human  state,  God  and  the  Univ.  4 

Limitless    suns  of  the  I  Universe  sparkled  and  shone  in  the 


sky, 


Limn'd    Sun  himself  has  I  the  face  for  me. 
Limours    suitors  as  this  maiden  ;  first  L. 

Enter'd,  the  wild  lord  of  the  place,  L. 

Earl  L  Drank  till  he  jested  with  all  ease, 

when  the  Prince  was  merry,  ask'd  L, 

Then  rose  L,  and  looking  at  his  feet, 

toli  him  all  that  Earl  L  had  said. 

Led  from  the  territory  of  false  L 

moment  after,  wild  L,  Borne  on  a  black  horse, 

In  combat  with  the  follower  of  L, 
Limpet    And  on  thy  ribs  the  I  sticks, 
Limpin'    Molly  kem  I  up  wid  her  stick, 
Linden  (adj.)    firefly-like  in  copse  And  I  alley : 

on  the  sward,  and  up  the  I  walks, 
Linden  (s)    The  I  broke  her  ranks  and  rent 

Lindenwood     Hew'd  the  I,  Hack'd  the  battleshield,    Batt.  of  Brunanburh  12 
Line  (s)    (See  also  Lion-line,  Sea-line)    What  time 


Despair  15 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  101 

Marr.  of  Geraint  440 

Geraint  and  E.  277 

289 

297 

302 

391 

437 

457 

501 

Sailor  Boy  11 

Tomorrow  77 

Princess  i  209 

„      iv  209 

Amphion  33 


the  foeman's  I  is  broke, 
Beyond,  a  Z  of  heights,  and  higher 
tender  curving  Vs  of  creamy  spray ; 
We  past  long  I's  of  Northern  capes 
Long  I's  of  cliS  breaking  have  left  a  chasm  ; 
known  Far  in  a  darker  isle  beyond  the  I ; 
He  gave  them  I :  (repeat)    • 
Love,  let  me  quote  these  Vs, 
those  I's  of  cliffs  were  clifis  no  more. 
On  glassy  water  drove  his  cheek  in  Vs  ; 
the  Persian,  Grecian,  Roman  Vs  Of  empire, 
'  The  fifth  in  I  from  that  old  Florian, 
Vs  of  green  that  streak  the  white 
ride  with  us  to  our  Vs,  And  speak  with  Arac  : 
long  I  of  the  approaching  rookery  swerve 
Right  thro'  the  I  they  broke  ; 
Sunny  tokens  of  the  L, 
And  never  a  I  from  my  lady  yet  ! 
My  blessing,  like  a  Z  of  light, 
So  word  by  word,  and  I  by  I, 
a  grandson,  first  of  his  noble  I, 
face  is  practised  when  I  spell  the  Vs, 
Yet  is  there  one  true  I,  the  pearl  of  pearls  : 
Which  is  the  second  in  a  Z  of  stars 
High  with  the  last  I  scaled  her  voice, 
with  wandering  Vs  of  mount  and  mere. 

Breast-high  in  that  bright  I  of  bracken  stood  : 

Glorious  poet  who  never  hast  written  a  I, 

to  the  'eat  o'  the  I  ? 

We  are  six  ships  of  the  I ; 

Clean  from  our  Vs  of  defence 

Fluttering  the  hawks  of  this  crown-lusting  I — 

I  send  a  birthday  I  Of  greeting  ; 

A  hundred  ever-rising  mountain  Vs, 

Because  you  heard  the  Vs  I  read 

call'd  '  Left  wheel  into  I !  ' 

Virgil  who  would  write  ten  Vs, 

To  you  that  bask  below  the  L, 

foUow'd  Z  by  Z  Your  leading  hand, 

bucket  from  the  well  Along  the  I, 

new  hfe  that  gems  the  hawthorn  I ; 
Line  (verb)    May  bind  a  book,  may  I  a  box. 
Lineage    past  into  the  hall  A  damsel  of  high  I, 

A  lady  of  high  I,  of  great  lands, 

I  spring  from  loftier  I  than  thine  own.' 
Lineament     Every  I  divine, 

to  take  the  cast  Of  those  dead  Vs 

Of  faded  form  and  haughtiest  Vs, 

writhing  barbarous  Vs, 


Two  Voices  155 
Palace  of  Art  82 
Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  62 

The  Voyage  35  1 

Enoch  Arden  1  ^ 

605 

The  Brook  145,  150 

Sea  Dreams  181 

217 

Princess  t  116 

„       ii  130 

238 

V  196 

|„  225 

„    Con.  97 

Light  Brigade  33 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  19 

Window,  No  Answer  15 

In  Mem.  xvii  10 

„  xcv  33 

Maud  I  xl2 

Merlin  and  V.  367 

459 

509 

Lancelot  and  E.  1019 

Holy  Grail  252 

Pelleas  and  E.  56 

To  A .  Tennyson  5 

North.  Cobbler  6 

The  Revenge  7 

Def.  of  Lucknow  62 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  57 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  45 

Ancient  Sage  282 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  17 

Heavy  Brigade  6 

Poets  and  their  B.  2 

To  Ulysses  5 

45 

To  Mary  Boyle  40 

Prog,  of  Spring  36 

In  Mem.  Ixxvii  6 

Gereth  and  L.  588 

609 

961 

Eleanore  53 

Wan  Sculptor  2 

Princess  ii  448 

Boadicea  74 


Lineament 

Uneament  (continued)     Imperious,  and  of  haughtiest 
I's. 

Lifted  her  eyes,  and  read  his  I's. 

a  babe  in  I  and  limb  Perfect, 
Lined    I  And  rippled  like  an  ever-fieeting  wave, 

And  hollow  I  and  wooded  to  the  lips. 
Linen    Fares  richly,  in  fine  I, 

linger    Knowledge  comes,  but  wisdom  Vs,  and  1 1  on 
the  shoi-e, 

Knowledge  comes,  but  wisdom  Vs, 

I Z  by  my  shingly  bars ; 

To  I  here  with  one  that  loved  us.' 

And  I  weeping  on  the  marge, 

They  rise,  but  Z ;  it  is  late  ; 

brother  I's  late  With  a  roystering  company) 

rose-garden.  And  mean  to  I  in  it 

L  with  vacillating  obedience, 

I  hate  that  he  should  I  here ; 

how  hand  I's  in  hand  !     Let  go  at  last ! 

'  Why  Vs  Gawain  with  his  golden  news  ?  ' 

and  I  there  To  silver  all  the  vtdleys 

may  I,  till  she  sees  Her  maiden  coming 

I,  till  her  own,  the  babe  She  lean'd 
Unger'd    charmed  sunset  I  low  adown 

altho'  1 1  there  Till  eveiy  daisy  slept, 

but  ever  at  a  breath  She  I, 

Long  o'er  his  bent  brows  I  Averill, 

11;  all  within  was  noise  Of  songs, 

By  night  we  I  on  the  lawn. 

For  while  he  I  there, 

Gareth  awhile  I. 

L  that  other,  staring  after  him  ; 

L  Ettarre  :  and  seeing  Pelleas  droop,     • 

came  the  village  girls  And  Z  talking, 

weU  I  could  have  I  in  that  porch. 

As  if  perpetual  sunset  I  there, 

preacher's  I  o'er  his  dying  words, 
Lingereth    '  Why  I  she  to  clothe  her  heart 
Lingering    After  a  I, — ere  she  was  aware, — 

I  out  a  five-years'  death-in-life. 

L  about  the  thymy  promontories, 

and  reach  its  fatling  innocent  arms  And  lazy  I 
fingers. 

by  the  field  of  tourney  I  yet 
Lingeringly    So  I  long,  that  half-amazed 
Link  (s)     Or  to  burst  all  Vs  of  habit — 

maids,  That  have  no  I's  with  men. 

A  I  among  the  days,  to  knit  The  generations 

lost  the  I's  that  bound  Thy  changes  ; 

closer  I  Betwixt  us  and  the  crowning  race 

all  in  loops  and  Vs  among  the  dales 

(A  visible  I  unto  the  home  of  my  heart), 

seem'd  as  tho'  a  Z  Of  some  tight  chain 

From  war  with  kindly  I's  of  gold, 

breaks  her  latest  earthy  Z  With  me  to-day. 

is  making  a  new  Z  Breaking  an  old  one  ? 

that  poor  I  With  earth  is  broken, 

And  that  was  a  Z  between  us  ; 

We  return'd  to  his  cave — the  Z  was  broken — 
Link  (verb)     Idle  habit  Vs  us  yet. 

To  which  she  I's  a  truth  divine  ! 

thou  should'st  Z  thy  life  with  one 

Seems  but  a  cobweb  filament  to  Z  The  yawning 
Link'd-Linkt     Link'd  month  to  month  with  such  a  chain 

vapour  touch'd  the  palace  gate.  And  link'd  again. 

Which  else  had  link'd  their  race  with  times  to 

come — 
As  link'd  with  thine  in  love  and  fate. 
He  linkt  a  dead  man  there  to  a  spectral  bride  ; 
love  that  linkt  the  King  And  Lancelot — 
force  in  her  Link'd  with  such  love  for  me. 
Has  link'd  our  names  together  in  his  lay, 
built  a  way,  where,  link'd  with  many  a  bridge, 
broke  Fljdng,  and  link'd  again. 
She  that  link'd  again  the  broken  chain 


409 


Lionlike 


Man:  of  Geraint  190 

Lancelot  and  E.  244 

Be  Prof.,  Two  G.  11 

Gareth  and  L.  214 

Lover's  Tale  i  398 

Aylmer's  Field  659 

Locksley  Hall  141 

143 

The  Brook  180 

Princess  Hi  339 

In  Mem.  xii  12 

Con.  91 

Marid  I  xiv  14 

XX  42 

Gareth  and  L.  13 

Marr.  of  Geraint  91 

Merlin  and  V.  106 

Pelleas  and  E.  411 

Tiresias  31 

The  Ring  479 

„       483 

Lotos- Eaters  19 

Gardener's  D.  164 

Godiva  45 

Aylmer's  Field  625 

In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  18 

„  xcv  1 

Com.  of  Arthur  63 

Gareth  and  L.  172 

Lancelot  and  E.  721 

Pelleas  and  E.  178 

509 

Lover's  Tale  i  186 

The  Ring  83 

St.  Telemachus  75 

Princess  iv  105 

Enoch  Arden  268 

565 

Sea  Dreams  38 


Princess  vi  139 

Gareth  and  L.  736 

The  Ring  436 

Locksley  Hall  157 

Princess  vi  292 

In  Mem.  xl  15 

„  xli  6 

„    Con.  127 

Lancelot  and  E.  166 

Lover's  Tale  i  431 

594 

Epilogue  16 

The  Ring  47 

50 

„       475 

Bandit's  Death  16 

29 

Miller's  D.212 

In  Mem.  xxxiii  12 

„     Ixxxiv  11 

Lover's  Tale  i  376 

Tvw  Voices  167 

Vision  of  Sin  59 


Aylmer's  Field  779 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  38 

Maud  II  v  80 

Gareth  and  L.  492 

Marr.  of  Geraint  806 

Lancelot  and  E.  112 

Holy  Grail  502 

Guinevere  258 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  52 


Link'd-Linkt  (continued)    snap  the  bond  that  link'd  us  life  to  life,   Happy  61 


starved  the  wild  beast  that  was  linkt  with  thee 
Linking    and  Z  tree  to  tree, 
Linkt    See  Link'd 

Lin-lan-Ione    mellow  l-l-l  of  evening  bells 
Linnet    (See  also  Lintwliite)    Sometimes  the  Z  piped 
his  song : 
Like  I's  in  the  pauses  of  the  wind : 
Started  a  green  Z  Out  of  the  croft ; 
O  merry  the  I  and  dove, 

And  pipe  but  as  the  I's  sing  : 

The  Z  born  within  the  cage. 

That  hears  the  latest  Z  trill, 

'  What  knowest  thou  of  birds,  lark,  mavis, 
merle,  L  ? 

three  gray  I's  wrangle  for  the  seed  : 

merry  Z  knew  me.  The  squirrel  knew  me, 

The  I's  bosom  blushes  at  her  gaze. 
Lintel    and  under  his  own  Z  stood  Storming 

the  household  flower  Torn  from  the  Z — 
Lintwhite    (See  also  Linnet)     Her  song  the  Z  svveUeth, 
Lion  (adj.)     Folded  her  Z  paws,  and  look'd  to  Thebes. 
Lion  (s)     (See  also  Shield-lion)    The  Z  on  your  old 
stone  gates 

We  heard  the  Z  roaring  from  his  den  ; 

comes  a  hungry  people,  as  a  Z 

The  babe  shall  lead  the  Z. 

and  in  her  I's  mood  Tore  open, 

blazon'd  I's  o'er  the  imperial  tent 

old  Z,  gLiring  with  his  whelpless  eye, 

your  long  locks  play  the  L's  mane  ! 

Porch-pillars  on  the  I  resting, 

To  have  her  I  roll  in  a  silken  net 

A  Z  ramps  at  the  top, 

glow'd  like  a  ruddy  shield  on  the  L's  breast. 

Cover  the  l's  on  thy  shield, 

L  and  stoat  have  isled  together, 

'  Ramp  ye  lance-splintering  l's, 

prize  The  living  dog  than  the  dead  Z : 

Gawain  saw  Sir  Lancelot's  azure  l's. 

On  wyvem,  Z,  dragon,  griffin,  swan. 

For  now  there  is  a  Z  in  the  way.' 

none  Stood  near  it  but  a  Z  on  each  side 

And  the  Z  there  lay  dying. 

Was  flinging  fruit  to  l's  ; 

and  hunters  race  The  shadowy  Z, 

till  the  L  look  no  larger  than  the  Cat,  Till  the 
Cat  thro'  that  mirage  of  overheated  language 
loom  Larger  than  the  L, —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  112 

peasant  cow  shall  butt  the  '  L  passant '  „  248 

trailing  a  dead  Z  away,  One,  a  dead  man.  St.  Telemachus  47 

Lionel  The  friend,  the  neighbour,  i,  the  beloved,  The 
loved,  the  lover,  the  happy  L,  The  low-voiced, 
tender-spirited  L,  Lover's  Tale  i  653 

L,  the  happy,  and  her,  and  her,  his  bride  !  „  755 

very  face  and  form  of  L  Flash'd  „  ii  94 

but  L  and  the  girl  Were  wedded,  „  iv  13 

bid  him  come  : '  but  L  was  away —  „  101 

Heir  of  his  face  and  land,  to  L.  „  129 

And,  tho'  he  loved  and  honour'd  L,  „  148 

And  sent  at  once  to  L,  praying  him  „  180 

to  L's  loss  and  his  And  that  resolved  self-exile  „  208 

To  one  who  had  not  spoken,  L.  „  272 

Not  daring  yet  to  glance  at  L.  „  309 

I,  by  L  sitting,  saw  his  face  Fire,  „  322 

all  but  he,  L,  who  fain  had  risen,  „  361 

He  slowly  brought  them  both  to  L.  „  371 

L,  when  at  last  he  freed  himself  From  wife  and  child,  „  379 

Lioness     L  That  with  your  long  locks  play  Princess  vi  163 


By  an  Evolution.  11 
Death  of  Qinone  11 

Far — far — away  5 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  10 

Princess,  Pro.  246 

Minnie  and  Winnie  17 

Window,  Ay  13 

In  Mem.  xxi  24 

„        xxvii  3 

clO 

Gareth  and  L.  1079 

Guinevere  255 

Lover's  Tale  ii  15 

Prog,  of  Spring  17 

Aylmer's  Field  331 

Princess  v  129 

Claribel  15 

Tiresias  149 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  23 

D.  of  F.  Women  222 

Locksley  Hall  135 

Aylmer's  Field  648 

Princess  iv  380 

v9 

vi  99 

164 

The  Daisy  55 

Mavd  I  vi  29 

„  xiv  7 

„   IllviU 

Gareth  and  L.  585 

893 

1305 

Balin  and  Balan  585 

Lancelot  and.  E.  663 

Holy  Grail  350 

645 

817 

The  Revenge  96 

Tiresias  67 

„       178 


Yea,  the  cubb'd  Z ; 
Lioness-like    and  rolling  glances  l-l, 
Lion-goarded    Here  is  Locksley  Hall,  my  grandson, 

here  the  l-g  gate. 
Lion-heart    The  l-h,  Plantagenet, 
Lionlike    rushing  outward  Z  Leapt  on  him, 


Demeter  and  P.  54 
Boadicea  71 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  213 

Margaret  34 

Guinevere  107 


Lion-line 

Lion-line    Strong  mother  of  a  L-l, 
Lion-whelp    Far  as  the  portal-warding  l-w, 


410 


List 


England  and  Amer.  3 
Enoch  Arden  98 


When  the  happy  Yes  Falters  from 


Lilian  23 

Isabel  7 

Madeline  43 

A  Character  25 

Adeline  20 

Rosalind  24 

Elednore  133 

Two  Voices  250 

Miller's  D.  131 

Fatima  21 

CEnone  78 

„    203 

Palace  of  Art  111 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  44 

D.  of  F.  Women  62 

195 

241 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  23 

Love  thou  thy  land  33 

M.  d' Arthur  220 

Gardener's  D.  51 

138 

151 

158 

246 

Dora  33 

Audley  Court  69 

Talking  Oak  219 

242 

Tithonus  60 

Locksley  Hall  38 


Lip  (s)     («5ee  also  Rose-lips)     When  from  crimson-threaded  Vs 
Sweet  Vs  whereon  perpetually  did  reign 
If  my  I's  should  dare  to  kiss  Thy  taper  fingers 
With  I's  depress'd  as  he  were  meek,  J. 

Ere  the  placid  I's  be  cold  ? 
Thro'  I's  and  eyes  in  subtle  rays. 
From  thy  rose-red  l-s  my  name  Flowetli ; 
'  His  Vs  are  very  mild  and  meek  : 
Your  ripe  I's  moved  not, 

With  one  long  kiss  my  whole  soul  thro'  My  Vs, 
prest  the  blossom  of  his  Vs  to  mine, 
and  my  hot  Vs  prest  Close, 
And  from  her  Vs,  as  mom  from  Memnon, 
And  in  a  little  while  our  Vs  are  dumb, 
with  dead  Vs  smiled  at  the  twilight  plain, 
music  left  the  Vs  of  her  that  died 
She  lock'd  her  Vs :  she  left  me  where  I  stood  : 
Turning  to  scorn  with  Vs  divine 
from  Discussion's  I  may  fall  With  Life, 
knightly  growth  that  fringed  his  Vs. 
among  us  lived  Her  fame  from  I  to  I. 
doubled  his  own  warmth  against  her  Vs, 
kisses  press'd  on  Vs  Less  exquisite  than  thine.' 
stirr'd  her  Vs  For  some  sweet  answer. 
And  with  a  flying  finger  swept  my  Vs, 
answer'd  madly  ;  bit  his  Vs,  And  broke  away, 
breathing  love  and  trust  against  her  I : 
A  second  flutter'd  round  her  I 
me,  That  have  no  Vs  to  kiss, 
could  hear  the  Vs  that  kiss'd  Whispering 
at  the  touching  of  the  Vs. 
a  I  to  drain  thy  trouble  dry. 
Baby  Vs  will  laugh  me  down :  „  89 

Her  Vs  are  sever'd  as  to  speak  :  Day- Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  30 

What  Vs,  like  thine,  so  sweetly  join'd  ?  „  L'  Envoi  46 

lays  it  thrice  upon  my  Vs,  These  favour'd  Vs  of  mine  ;    Will  Water.  19 
I  kiss  the  Vs  I  once  have  kiss'd  ;  „  37 

He  to  Vs,  that  fondly  falter,  L.  of  Burleigh  9 

one  kiss  Upon  her  perfect  Vs.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  45 

Then  raised  her  head  with  Vs  comprest,  The  Letters  19 

A  sleepy  light  upon  their  brows  and  Vs —  Vision  of  Sin  9 

Wine  is  good  for  shrivell'd  Vs,  „  79 

I  cannot  praise  the  fire  In  your  eye — ^nor  yet  your  I :  „  184 

Perch'd  on  the  pouted  blossom  of  her  Vs  :  Princess,  Pro.  199 

Proud  look'd  the  Vs :  „  _  i  96 

with  her  Vs  apart,  And  all  her  thoughts  „  ii  325 

fancy  feign'd  On  Vs  that  are  for  others  ;  „  iv  56 

Stared  with  great  eyes,  and  laugh'd  with  alien  I's,  „  119 

sinn'd  in  grosser  Vs  Beyond  all  pardon —  „  251 

You  prized  my  coimsel,  lived  upon  my  Vs  :  „  293 

shot  from  crooked  Vs  a  haggard  smile.  „  364 

dying  Vs,  With  many  thousand  matters  left  to  do,  „  457 

Invective  seem'd  to  wait  behind  her  Vs,  „  472 

smiles  at  our  disguise  Broke  from  their  Vs,  „  v  272 

fingering  at  the  hair  about  his  I,  „  303 

then  he  drew  Her  robe  to  meet  his  Vs,  „  vi  156 

My  spirit  closed  with  Ida's  at  the  Vs ;  „  vii  158 

and  meek  Seem'd  the  full  Vs,  „  226 

What  whispers  from  thy  lying  I?  In  Mem.iii  4 

Would  breathing  thro'  his  Vs  impart  „      xviii  15 

And  dull'd  the  murmur  on  thy  I,  „      xxii  16 

seaJ'd  The  Vs  of  that  Evangelist.  „     xxxi  16 

dear  to  me  as  sacred  wine  To  dying  Vs  „  xxxvii  20 

What  whisper'd  from  her  lying  Z's?  „  xxxixlO 

loosens  from  the  I  Short  swallow-flights  of  song,  „    xlviii  14 

fills  The  Vs  of  men  with  honest  praise,  „  Ixxxiv  26 

could  not  win  An  answer  from  my  Vs,  „       ciii  50 

And  bless  thee,  for  thy  Vs  are  bland,  „        cxix  9 

For  tho'  my  Vs  may  breathe  adieu,  „  cxxiii  11 

Sweet  human  hand  and  Vs  and  eye ;  „     cxxix  6 

Its  Va  in  the  field  above  are  dabbled  Maud  7  t  2 

And  the  sunlight  broke  from  her  I?  „      vi  86 

And  curving  a  contumelious  I,  „  xiii  20 


Lip  (s)  (continued) 
her  Vs, 
For  the  hand,  the  Vs,  the  eyes. 
Prophet,  curse  me  the  blabbing  I, 
IModred  biting  his  thin  Vs  was  mute, 
have  I  sworn  From  his  own  Vs  to  have  it — 
Slip  from  my  Vs  if  I  can  help  it — 
Now  gnaw'd  his  under,  now  his  upper  I, 
Kise,  my  sweet  King,  and  kiss  me  on  the  Vs, 
Foul  are  their  lives  ;  foul  are  their  Vs  ; 
But  yesterday  you  never  open'd  I, 
How  from  the  rosy  Vs  of  life  and  love, 
by  what  name  Livest  between  the  Vs  ? 
the  living  smile  Died  from  his  Vs, 
Queen,  who  sat  With  Vs  severely  placid, 
her  Vs,  Who  had  devised  the  letter. 
Smiled  with  his  Vs — a  smile  beneath  a  cloud. 
In  one,  their  malice  on  the  placid  I 
'  Yea,  between  thy  Vs — and  sharp  ; 
Mark  is  kindled  on  thy  Vs  Most  gracious  ; 
golden  beard  that  clothed  his  Vs  with  light — 
Out  of  the  dark,  just  as  the  Vs  had  touch'd, 
I  cannot  touch  thy  Vs,  they  are  not  mine, 
Mix'd  with  the  knightly  growth  that  fringed 

his  Vs. 
Flicker'd  like  doubtful  smiles  about  her  Vs, 
our  baby  Vs,  Kissing  one  bosom, 
Heart  beating  time  to  heart,  I  pressing  I, 
And  hollow  lined  and  wooded  to  the  Vs, 
gracious  Vs  Did  lend  such  gentle  utterance, 
clothe  itself  in  smiles  About  his  Vs  ! 
her  Vs  were  sunder'd  With  smiles  of  tranquil  bliss, 
And  parted  Vs  which  drank  her  breath, 
light  Of  smiling  welcome  round  her  Vs — 
And  kiss  her  on  the  Vs. 
eyes  frown  :  the  Vs  Seem  but  a  gash, 
While  men  shall  move  the  Vs  : 
Or  if  I  were  laid  to  I  on  the  pillows 
ever  moulded  by  the  Vs  of  man. 
nectar  smack'd  of  hemlock  on  the  Vs, 
while  her  Vs  Were  warm  upon  my  cheek, 
Did  he  touch  me  on  the  Vs  ? 
If  the  Vs  were  touch'd  with  fire 

Lip  (verb)    circle  widens  tiU  it  I  the  marge. 

Lip-depths    Love  dwells  not  in  l-d. 

Lipp'd    faintly  I  The  flat  red  granite  ; 

Liquid    on  the  I  miiTor  glow'd  The  clear  perfection 
Purple  gauzes,  golden  hazes,  I  mazes, 
Make  I  treble  of  that  bassoon,  my  throat ; 
and  cast  A  I  look  on  Ida,  full  of  prayer. 
Half-lost  in  the  I  azure  bloom  of  a  crescent  of  sea. 


Maud  I  xvii  10 

„     II  iv  27 

v67 

Gareth  and  L.  31 

Marr.  of  Geraint  409 

44ft 

Geraint  and  E.  669 

Balin  and  Balan  516 

616 

Merlin  and  V.  271 

84ft 

Lancelot  and  E.  182 


Holy  Grail  705 

Pelleas  and  E.  432 

577 

Last  Tournament  561 

668 

752 

Guinevere  551 

Pass,  of  Arthur  388 

Lover's  Tale  i  68 

237 

260 

398 

456 

659 

ii  142 

204 

Hi  46 

„  iv  48 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  106 

Tiresias  133 

The  Flight  48 

To  Virgil  40 

Demeter  and  P.  104 

The  Ring  398 

Happy  66 

Parnassus  17 

Pelleas  and  E.  94 

Lover's  Tale  i  466 

Audley  Court  12 

Mariana  in  the  S.  31 

Vision  of  Sin  31 

Princess  ii  426 

iv  369 

Maud  I  iv  5 

When  first  the  I  note  beloved  of  men  Marr.  of  Geraint  336 

Liquor    smote  Her  life  into  the  I.  Will  Water.  112 

But  sin'  I  wur  hallus  i'  I  North.  Cobbler  27 

I  wear'd  it  o'  I,  I  did.  „  32 

Lisbon     Round  affrighted  L  drew  The  treble  works.  Ode  on  Well.  103 

Lisp     Nor  cares  to  I  in  love's  deUcious  creeds  ;  Caress'd  or  chidden  11 

Would  I  in  honey'd  whispers  of  this  monstrous  fraud !  Third  of  Feb.  36 

lightest  wave  of  thought  shall  I,  In  Mem.  xlix  5 

shall  have  learn'd  to  I  you  thanks.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  822 

leam'd  To  I  in  tune  together  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  258 

Lisp'd-lispt    Was  lispt  about  the  acacias.  Princess  vii  251 

waters  answering  lisp'd  To  kisses  of  the  wind,  Lover's  Tale  i  544 

Lispeth     The  callow  throstle  I,  Claribel  17 

Lisping    ran  By  ripply  shallows  of  the  I  lake,  Edwin  Morris  98 

A  Z  of  the  innumerous  leaf  and  dies.  Princess  v  14 

Lispt   See  Lisp'd 

Lissome    Straight,  but  as  Z  as  a  hazel  wand ;  The  Brook  70 

clung  about  her  I  limbs,  In  colour  Merlin  and  V.  223 

And  I  Vivien,  holding  by  his  heel,  „  238 

Queen  who  sat  betwixt  her  best  Enid,  and  I  Vivien,  Guinevere  28 

List  (desire)     not  be  kiss'd  by  all  who  would  I,  The  Mermaid  41 

O  maiden,  if  indeed  ye  I  to  sing,  Guinevere  165 

List  (roU  of  names)     But  still  her  Vs  were  swell'd  Princess  iv  319 

meaning  by  it  To  keep  the  I  low  Merlin  and  V.  592 


List 


411 


Little 


lost  (strip,  division)    a  comb  of  pearl  to  part  The  Vs  of 

such  a  beard  Merlin  and  V.  245 

List  (to  hear)     To  Z  a  foot-fall,  ere  he  saw  Palace  of  Art  110 

Listed    See  White-listed 

Listen    (See  also  Listhen)    O  I,  I,  your  eyes  shall  glisten 

(repeat)  Sea- Fairies  35,  37 

Whither  away  ?  I  and  stay :  „                   42 

stars  that  hung  Love-charm'd  to  I :  Love  and  Duty  75 

But  if  you  care  indeed  to  I,  hear  Golden  Year  20 

Whisper'd  '  L  to  my  despair  :  Edward  Gray  22 

'  L,  Annie,  How  merry  they  are  down  yonder  Enoch  Arden  388 

Sit,  I.'    Then  he  told  her  of  his  voyage,  „          861 

Call'd  aU  her  vital  spirits  into  each  ear  To  I :  Aylmer's  Field  202 

I !  here  is  proof  that  you  were  miss'd  :  Princess,  Pro.  177 

I  fear  you'll  I  to  tales,  Grandmother  54 

Did  they  hear  me,  would  they  I,  Boddicea  8 

They  can  but  I  at  the  gates.  In  Mem.  xciv  15 

The  larkspur  I's,  '  I  hear,  I  hear  ; '  Maud  I  xxii  65 

1  know  that  he  lies  and  Vs  mute  „  II  v  60 
That  I's  near  a  torrent  mountain-brook,  Geraint  and  E.  171 
But  I  to  me,  and  by  me  be  ruled,  „  624 
And  it  shall  answer  for  me.  L  to  it.  Merlin  and  V.  386 
while  the  King  Would  I  smiling.  Lancelot  and  E.  116 
but  I  to  me,  If  I  must  find  you  wit :  „  147 
Would  I  for  her  coming  and  regret  „  866 
To  vex  an  ear  too  sad  to  i!  to  me,  Guinevere  315 
To  speak  no  slander,  no,  nor  I  to  it,  „  472 
L's  the  muffled  booming  indistinct  Lover's  Tale  i  637 

2  how  the  birds  Begin  to  warble  The  Flight  60 
'If  he ?  yes,  he  .  .  .  lurks,  Vs,  „  71 
Your  song — Sit,  I !  Eomney's  B.  92 
L  !  we  three  were  alone  in  the  dell  Bandit's  Death  19 

Usten'd    my  hands  upheld  In  thine,  I Z  to  thy  vows,    Swpp.  Confessions  71 

I  look'd  And  I,  the  full-flowing  river  of  speech  (Enone  68 

thought  that  it  was  fancy,  and  I Z  in  my  bed.  May  Queen,  Con.  33 

from  them  clash'd  The  bells  ;  we  i  ;  Gardener's  D.  221 

The  deep  air  I  roimd  her  as  she  rode,  Godiva  54 

Amazed  and  melted  all  who  Z  to  it :  Enoch  Arden  649 

While  1 1,  came  On  a  sudden  the  weird  seizure  Princess  iv  559 

Who  spake  no  slander,  no,  nor  Z  to  it ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  10 

And  whDe  they  I  for  the  distant  hunt,  Marr.  of  Geraint  184 

Enid  I  brightening  as  she  lay ;  „-  733 
1 1,  And  her  words  stole  with  most  prevailing 

sweetness  Lover's  Tale  i  552 

that  I  niver  not  I  to  noan  !  Spinster's  S's.  8 

Listener    not  to  die  a,  I,  I  arose.  The  Brook  163 

but  every  roof  Sent  out  a  I :  Aylmer's  Field  614 

Listenest    Thou  I  to  the  closing  door.  In  Mem.  cxxi  7 
Listening  (adj.  and  part.)     L  the  lordly  music  flowing        Ode  to  Memory  41 

For  at  eventide,  I  earnestly,  A  spirit  haunts  4 

L,  whispers  '  'Tis  the  fairy  Lady  of  Shallot.'  L.  of  Shalott  i  35 

slow  dilation  roU'd  Dry  flame,  she  I ;  Princess  vi  190 

with  shut  eyes  I  lay  L  ;  then  look'd.  „       vii  224 

L  now  to  the  tide  in  its  broad-flung  Maud  I  Hi  11 

And  seen  her  sadden  I — vext  his  heart,  Pelleas  and  E.  398 

She  sat  Stiff-stricken,  I ;  Guinevere  412 

I  tiU  those  armed  steps  were  gone,  „      585 

but  in  aU  the  I  eyes  Of  those  tall  knights,  Gareth  and  L.  327 

The  I  rogue  hath  caught  the  manner  of  it.  „  778 
I  came  on  him  once  at  a  ball,  the  heart  of  a  Z  crowd—  The  Wreck  47 
Soxmding  for  ever  and  ever  thro'  Earth  and  her  I 

nations,  Parnassus  7 

Listening  (s)     lonely  Vs  to  my  mutter'd  dream,  Princess  vii  110 

Listhen  (listen)     'ud  I  to  naither  at  aU,  at  all.  Tomorrow  46 

Listless     To  be  the  long  and  I  boy  Miller's  D.  33 

L  in  all  despondence, — read  ;  Aylmer's  Field  534 

And  into  many  a  I  annulet,  Geraint  and  E.  258 

Lists    Shot  thro'  the  I  at  Camelot,  M.  d' Arthur  224 

They  reel,  they  roll  in  clanging  I,  Sir  Galahad  9 

All  that  long  mom  the  I  were  hammer'd  up.  Princess  v  368 

woke  it  was  the  point  of  noon,  The  I  were  ready.  „            483 

He  rode  the  mellay,  lord  of  the  ringing  I,  „            502 

father  heard  and  ran  In  on  the  I,  „         vi  27 

Thro'  open  field  into  the  I  they  wound  Timorously ;  „              84 

and  settling  circled  all  the  I.  Marr.  of  Geraint  547 


Lists  (continued)     tho'  her  gentle  presence  at  the  I  Marr.  of  Geraint  795 
hope  that  sometime  you  would  come  To  these 

my  Z  with  him  Geraini  and  E.  840 

Lancelot,  and  his  prowess  in  the  Z,  Lancelot  and  E.  82 

Favour  of  any  lady  in  the  Z.  (repeat)  „    364,  474 

when  they  reach'd  the  Z  By  Camelot  in  the  meadow,  „            428 

They  that  assail'd,  and  they  that  held  the  Z,  „            455 

the  Table  Round  that  held  the  Z,  (repeat)  „    467,  499 

on  that  day  when  Lancelot  fled  the  Z,  „            525 

Of  all  my  late-shown  prowess  in  the  Z,  Holy  Grail  362 

'  Queen  of  Beauty,'  in  the  Z  Cried—  Pelleas  and  E.  116 

withheld  His  older  and  his  mightier  from  the  I,  „            160 

with  cups  of  gold,  Moved  to  the  I,  Last  Tournament  143 

Sat  their  great  umpire,  looking  o'er  the  Z.  „              159 

Shot  thro'  the  Z  at  Camelot,  Pass,  of  Arthur  392 

Lit  (came  upon,  etc.)     bore  Them  earthward  till  they  I  ■              The  Poet  18 

On  the  tree-tops  a  crested  peacock  Z,                   '  (Enone  104 

And  here  we  Z  on  Aunt  Ehzabeth,  Princess,  Pro.  96 

And  wheel'd  or  Z  the  filmy  shapes  In  Mem.  xcv  10 

Leapt  in  a  semicircle,  and  Z  on  earth  ;  Baliii  and  Balan  414 

Lit  (kindled,  etc.)    Z  your  eyes  with  tearful  power,  Margaret  3 

from  her  wooden  walls, — Z  by  sure  hands,—  Buonaparte  5 

gray  eyes  Z  up  With  summer  lightnings  Miller's  D.  12 

X  up  a  torrent-bow.  Palace  of  Art  36 

L  with  a  low  large  moon.  „            68 

L  light  in  wreaths  and  anadems,  „          186 

and  Z  Lamps  which  out-burn'd  Canopus.  D.  of  F.  Women  145 

She  I  the  spark  within  my  throat.  Will  Water.  109 

Thus,  as  a  hearth  Z  in  a  mountain  home,  Balin  and  Balan  231 

Her  snule  Z  up  the  rainbow  on  my  tears.  Lover's  Tale  i  254 

itself  Z  up  There  on  the  depth  of  an  unfathom'd  woe  „            745 

After  their  marriage  Z  the  lover's  Bay,  „          iv  28 

an'  just  as  candles  was  I,  North.  Cobbler  87 

this  shore  Z  by  the  sirns  and  moons  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  38 
Lit    See  also  Crescent-Iit,  Dew-lit,  Dim-Ut,  Fame-lit, 

Lamp-lit,  Moon-lit 

Litany    solemn  psalms,  and  silver  litanies,  Princess  ii  477 

Literary    swarm'd  His  Z  leeches.  Will  Water.  200 

Lithe     bent  or  broke  The  Z  reluctant  boughs  Enoch  Arden  381 

and  made  her  Z  arm  round  his  neck  Tighten,  Merlin  and  V.  614 

Litter-bier     Yet  raised  and  laid  him  on  a  l-b,  Geraint  and  E.  566 

Little     They  light  his  Z  life  alway  ;  Supp.  Confessions  46 

Had  I  So  Z  love  for  thee  ?  „               88 

Cruel  Z  Lilian.  Lilian  1 

Like  Z  clouds  sun-fringed,  are  thine,  Madeline  17 

and  bosoms  prest  To  Z  harps  of  gold  ;  Sea- Fairies  4 

Or  when  Z  airs  arise,  Adeline  33 

L  breezes  dusk  and  shiver  L.  of  Shalott  ill 

And  Z  other  care  hath  she,  „            H  8 

'  His  Z  daughter,  whose  sweet  face  He  kiss'd.  Two  Voices  253 

'  Before  the  Z  ducts  began  To  feed  thy  bones  with  Ume,             ,,         325 

The  Z  maiden  walk'd  demm-e,  „        419 

A  Z  whisper  silver-clear,  „         428 

A  Z  hint  to  solace  woe,  „        433 

You  would,  and  would  not,  Z  one  !  Miller's  D.  134 

but  she  thought  I  might  have  look'd  a  Z  higher  ;  „         140 

A  thousand  Z  shafts  of  flame  Were  shiver'd  Fatima  17 
And  in  a  Z  while  our  lips  are  dumb.                         Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  44 

Like  a  tale  of  Z  meaning  tho'  the  words  are  strong  ;  „            119 

Storing  yearly  I  dues  of  wheat,  and  wine  and  oil ;  „            122 

Each  Z  sound  and  sight.  D.  of  F.  Women  277 

for  this  star  Rose  with  you  thro'  a  Z  arc  To  J.  S.  26 

A  Z  thing  may  harm  a  wounded  man.  M.  d'  Arthur  42 

And  in  the  compass  of  three  Z  words.  Gardener's  D.  232 

And  made  a  Z  wreath  of  all  the  flowers  That  grew  about,            Dora  82 

To  save  her  Z  finger  from  a  scratch  Edwin  Morris  63 

yet  long  ago  I  have  pardon'd  Z  Letty ;  „          140 

Or  in  the  night,  after  a  Z  sleep,  I  wake  :  St.  S.  Stylites  113 

'Tis  I  more  :  the  day  was  warm  ;  Talking  Oak  205 

and  drew  My  Z  oakling  from  the  cup,  „          231 

Life  piled  on  life  Were  all  too  Z,  Ulysses  25 

Comrades,  leave  me  here  a  Z,  Locksley  Hall  1 
With  a  Z  hoard  of  maxims  preaching  down  a  daughter's 

heart.  „         94 

'  You  would  not  let  your  I  finger  ache  For  such  as  these  ?  ' —   Godiva  22 


LitUe 


412 


Little 


Little  (continued)     The  I  wide-mouth'd  heads  upon  the  spout  Godiva  56 

Boring  a  I  auger-hole  in  fear,  Peep'd —  „  68 
and  shows  At  distance  like  a  I  wood  ;                     Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  42 

from  the  valleys  underneath  Came  I  copses  climbing.  Amphion  32 
Nor  yet  the  fear  of  I  books  Had  made  him  talk  for 

show  ;  Will  Water.  195 

She  took  the  I  ivory  chest,  The  Letters  17 
While  we  keep  a  I  breath  !                                                Vision  of  Sin  192 

A  I  grain  of  conscience  made  him  sour.'  „  218 
The  I  life  of  bank  and  brier,  You  might  have  won  30 
Annie  Lee,  The  prettiest  I  damsel  in  the  port,                 Enoch  Arden  12 

daily  left  The  I  footprint  daily  wash'd  away.  .,             22 

'  This  is  my  house  and  this  my  I  wife,'  „             28 

at  this  The  I  wife  would  weep  for  company,  „             34 

And  say  she  would  be  I  wife  to  both.  „             36 

No  graver  than  as  when  some  I  cloud  „           129 

set  his  hand  To  fit  their  I  streetward  sitting-room  „           170 

This  pretty,  puny,  weakly  I  one, —  „           195 

And  kiss'd  his  wonder-stricken  I  ones ;  „          229 

The  I  innocent  soul  flitted  away.  „          270 

'  I  may  see  her  now.  May  be  some  I  comfort ; '  „          276 

Fresh  from  the  burial  of  her  I  one,  „          281 

And  past  into  the  I  garth  beyond.  „          329 

How  Philip  put  her  I  ones  to  school,  „           706 

Flourish'd  a  I  garden  square  and  wall'd  :  ,,           734 

Uphold  me,  Father,  in  my  loneliness  A  I  longer  !  ,,           785 

To  rush  abroad  all  romid  the  I  haven,  .,          867 

the  I  port  Had  seldom  seen  a  costlier  funeral.  „          916 

By  twenty  thorps,  a  I  town,  The  Brook  29 
The  I  dells  of  cowslip,  fairy  palms,                                  Aylmer's  Field  91 

Has  often  toil'd  to  clothe  your  I  ones  ;  „           699 

(for  the  man  Had  risk'd  his  I)  like  the  I  thrift.  Sea  Dreams  10 

And  musing  on  the  I  lives  of  men,  „             48 

A  sort  of  absolution  in  the  sound  To  hate  a  I  longer  !  „             62 

broke  The  glass  with  I  Margaret's  medicine  in  it ;  „           142 

(Altho'  I  grant  but  I  music  there)  „  253 
Sleep,  I  birdie,  sleep  !  will  she  not  sleep  Without 

her "  I  birdie "  ?  „          282 

What  does  I  birdie  say  In  her  nest  at  peep  of  day  ?  „          293 

Let  me  fly,  says  I  birdie,  „          295 

Birdie,  rest  a  I  longer.  Till  the  I  wings  are  stronger.  „          297 

So  she  rests  a  I  longer.  Then  she  flies  away.  „          299 

What  does  I  baby  say.  In  her  bed  at  peep  of  day  ?  „          301 

Baby  says,  like  I  birdie,  Let  me  rise  and  fly  away.  „          303 

Baby,  sleep  a  I  longer.  Till  the  I  limbs  are  stronger,  „          305 

If  she  sleeps  a  I  longer.  Baby  too  shall  fly  away.  „  307 
Tired  of  so  much  within  our  I  life,  Or  of  so  I  in  our 

I  life —  Lucretiibs  226 

Poor  I  life  that  toddles  half  an  hour  „  228 
round  the  lake  A  I  clock-work  steamer  paddfing 

plied  Princess,  Pro.  71 

A  rosebud  set  with  I  wilful  thorns,  „             154 

The  I  hearth-flower  Lilia.  „             166 

As  many  I  trifling  Lilias — play'd  Charades  „             188 

(A  I  sense  of  wrong  had  touch'd  her  face  AVith  colour)  „            219 

A  I  dry  old  man,  without  a  star,  „         1 117 

A I  street  half  garden  and  half  house  ;  „            214 

There  above  the  I  grave,  0  there  above  the  I  grave,  „          ii  12 

O  by  the  bright  head  of  my  I  niece,  „            276 

'  The  mother  of  the  sweetest  I  maid,  „            279 

While  my  I  one,  while  my  pretty  one,  sleeps.  „           Hi  8 

Sleep,  my  I  one,  sleep,  my  pretty  one,  sleep.  „              16 

What  looks  so  I  graceful :  '  men '  „  53 
Many  a  I  hand  Glanced  like  a  touch  of  sunshine  on 

the  rocks,  „            356 

A  I  space  was  left  between  the  horns,  „        iv  207 

Upon  the  level  in  I  puffs  of  wind,  „            256 

while  We  gazed  upon  her  came  a  I  stir  About  the  doors,       „  373 

A  I  shy  at  first,  but  by  and  by  We  twain,  „           t>  45 

The  child  Ls  hers — for  every  I  fault,  „              87 

And  lay  my  I  blossom  at  my  feet,  „            100 

indeed  I  think  Our  chiefest  comfort  is  the  I  child  „            430 

And  on  the  I  clause  '  take  not  his  life : '  „            470 

The  I  seed  they  laugh'd  at  in  the  dark,  „          vi  34 

while  Psyche  ever  stole  A I  nearer,  „            133 


Little  (continued)    and  now  A  word,  but  one,  one  I 

kindly  word.  Princess  vi  258 

Her  head  a  I  bent ;  and  on  her  mouth  A  doubtful  smile        ,,  269 

bird.  That  early  woke  to  feed  her  I  ones,  „       vii  252 

With  which  we  banter'd  I  LiUa  first :  „      Con.  12 

Then  rose  a  I  feud  betwixt  the  two,  „  23 

The  I  boys  begin  to  shoot  and  stab,  „  61  ] 

and  look'd  No  I  lily-handed  Baronet  he,  „  84  ' 

Last  I  Lilia,  rising  quietly,  „  116 

For  one  about  whose  patriarchal  knee  Late  the  I 

children  clung  :  Ode  on  Well.  237 

No  I  German  state  are  we.  Third  of  Feb.  15 

And  Willy,  my  eldest-born,  is  gone,  you  say,  I  Annie  ?     Grandmother  1 
And  she  to  be  coming  and  slandering  me,  the  base  I  liar  !  ..         27 

Shadow  and  shine  is  life,  I  Annie,  flower  and  thorn.  .,         60 

There  lay  the  sweet  I  body  that  never  had  drawn  a 

breath.  „        62 

I  had  not  wept,  I  Annie,  not  since  I  had  been  a  wife  ;  „         63 

His  dear  I  face  was  troubled,  as  if  with  anger  or  pain  :  „         65 

I  look'd  at  the  still  I  body — his  trouble  had  all  been  in 

vain.  „        66 

Patter  she  goes,  my  own  I  Annie,  an  Annie  like  you  :  ,,         78 

And  in  this  Book,  I  Annie,  the  message  is  one  of  Peace.  ,,         96 

the  city  Of  I  Monaco,  basking,  glow'd.  The  Daisy  8 

Still  in  the  I  book  you  lent  me,  „       99 

Making  the  I  one  leap  for  joy.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  4 

Read  my  I  fable  :  He  that  runs  may  read.  The  Flower  17 

For  a  score  of  sweet  I  summers  or  so  ?  '  The  Islet  2 

The  sweet  I  wife  of  the  singer  said,  „        3 

To  a  sweet  I  Eden  on  earth  that  I  know,  „      14 

Dainty  I  maiden,  whither  would  you  wander  ?  (repeat)   City  Child  1,  6 
'  Far  and  far  away,'  said  the  dainty  I  maiden,  (repeat)  „  3, 8 


Minnie  and  Winnie  3 

9 

19 

Spiteful  Letter  5 

Lit.  Squabbles  6 

Victim  42 


Flow,  in  cran.  wall  4 
Boadicea  68 


Sleep,  I  ladies  !     And  they  slept  well 
Sleep,  I  ladies  !     Wake  not  soon  ! 
Wake,  I  ladies.  The  sun  is  aloft ! 

0  I  bard,  is  your  lot  so  hard, 
And  do  their  I  best  to  bite 
He  bore  but  I  game  in  hand  ; 

1  hold  you  here,  root  and  all,  in  my  hand, 

L  flower — 
dash  the  brains  of  the  I  one  out. 
As  some  rare  I  rose,  a  piece  of  inmost  Horticultural 

art,  Hendecasyllabics  19 

0  lights,  are  you  flying  over  her  sweet  I  face  ?  Window,  On  the  Hill  13 
Go,  I  letter,  apace,  apace,  The  Letter  11 
Two  I  hands  that  meet,  (repeat)  Answer  1,  4 
Look  how  they  tumble  the  blossom,  the  mad  I  tits  !  Ay  9 
Our  I  systems  have  their  day  ;  In  Mem.,  Pro.  17 
the  clock  Beats  out  the  I  lives  of  men. 
'Tis  I ;  but  it  looks  in  truth  As  if  the  quiet  bones 
For  now  her  I  ones  have  ranged  ; 
or  to  use  A  I  patience  ere  I  die  ; 
And  owning  but  a  I  art  To  lull  with  song  an  aching 

heart, 
A  I  flfish,  a  mystic  hint ; 
Abide  a  I  longer  here. 
The  I  village  looks  forlorn  ; 
When  he  was  I  more  than  boy, 
A  I  grain  shall  not  be  spilt.' 
breeze  of  song  To  stir  a  I  dust  of  praise. 
The  I  speedwell's  darling  blue. 
Whose  life,  whose  thoughts  were  I  worth, 
but  led  the  way  To  where  a  I  shallop  lay 
A  I  spare  the  night  I  loved, 
A  I  while  from  his  embrace. 
From  I  cloudlets  on  the  grass, 

1  HATE  the  dreadful  hoUow  behind  the  I  wood. 
Or  the  least  I  delicate  aquiline  curve  in  a  sensitive 

nose.  From  which  I  escaped   heart-free,  with   the 

least  I  touch  of  spleen. 
In  the  I  grove  where  I  sit — ah, 

whole  I  wood  where  I  sit  is  a  world  of  plunder  and  prey. 
However  we  brave  it  out,  we  men  are  a  I  breed. 
Because  their  natm'es  are  I,  and,  whether  he  heed  it 

or  not, 


m8 
„  xviii  5 
„  xxi  26 
„    xxxiv  12 

,,  xxxvii  14 
„  xliv  8 
„  Iviii  11 
1x9 
„  Ixii  6 
„  Ixv  4 

„  Ixxv  12 
„  Irxxiii  10 
„  Ixxxv  30 
„  ciii  19 
„  cv  15 

.,  cxvii  3 
,.  Con.  94 
Maiid  I  il 


mIO 

iv2 

24 

30 

53 


Little 

Little  (continued)     To  preach  our  poor  I  amiy  down 
He  stood  on  the  path  a  I  aside  ; 
Maud's  own  I  oak-room 
It  is  but  for  a  I  space  I  go  : 
For  stealing  out  of  view  From  a  I  lazy  lover 
Shine  out,  I  head,  sunning  over  with  curls 
The  I  hearts  that  know  not  how  to  forgive' : 
Void  of  the  I  living  wiU  That  made  it  stir  on  the  shore 
I  things  Which  else  would  have  been  past  by ! 
And  a  dewy  splendour  falls  On  the  I  flower 
That  I  come  to  be  grateful  at  last  for  a  I  thing 


413 


Little 


Mavd  I  x38 
,.  xiii  7 
,.  xiv  9 
,,  xviii  75 
XX  10 
„    xxii  57 

Maud  II  i  44 

a  14 

64 
iv  33 
///  vi  3 


He  found  me  first  when  yet  a  I  maid  :  ~  Com.  of  "Arthur  340 

Beaten  I  had  been  for  a  I  fault  Whereof  I  was  not 

guilty ;  341 

And  all  the  I  fowl  were  flurried  at  it,  Gareth  and  L  fiS 

Our  one  white  lie  sits  Uke  a  I  ghost  ^'     g^ 
As  slopes  a  wild  brook  o'er  a  I  stone,                           Marr.  of  Geraint  77 

There,  on  a  I  knoll  beside  it,  stay'd  162 

'  For  on  this  I  knoll,  if  anywhere,  "             igi 

Beheld  the  long  street  of  a  I  town  In  a  long  valley  "            242 

Has  nime  for  idle  questioners.'  "            072 

Then  rode  Geraint,  a  I  spleenful  yet,  "            293 

Our  hoard  is  I,  but  our  hearts  are  great,  (repeat)  '    3'52  S74 

To  stoop  and  kiss  the  tender  I  thumb,  "           >  ^ '^ 

It  were  but  I  grace  in  any  of  us,  "  504 
beheld  A  I  town  with  towere.  upon  a  rock,                 Geraint  "and  E.  197 

There  found  a  I  boat,  and  stept  mto  it ;  298 

■  I  saw  the  I  elf-god  eyeless  once  "            049 

'  It  is  the  I  rift  within  the  lute,  "            3^ 

•  The  I  rift  within  the  lover's  lute  Or  /  pitted  " 

speck  in  gamer'd  fruit,  000 

and  cry, '  Laugh,  I  well ! '  "            431 

A I  glassy-headed  hairless  man,  "             a^n. 

A  square  of  text  that  looks  a  I  blot,  "  gyV 
She  broke  into  a  I  scornful  laugh  :  Larwelot  "and  E.  120 
But  I,  my  sons,  and  I  daughter  fled  From  bonds  or 

death,  27« 

I  need  to  speak  Of  Lancelot  in  his  glory  !  "            4gQ 

'  Diamond  me  No  diamonds  !  for  God's  love  a,  I  " 

now  remains  But  I  cause  for  laughter :  "            507 

Utter'd  a  I  tender  dolorous  cry.  "             gii 

Lancelot  VVould,  tho'  he  caU'd  his  wound  a  I  hurt  "            852 

Then  as  a  I  helpless  innocent  bird,  "  09! 
And  bode  among  them  yet  a  I  space  Till  he  should 

learn  it ;  „„, 

And  Lancelot  knew  the  I  clinking  soimd ;  "            gas 

And  in  those  days  she  made  a  I  song,      '  "          1004 

yesternight  I  seem'd  a  curious  Z  maid  again  "          inS'S 

Then  take  the  I  bed  on  which  I  died  "           1117 

And  at  the  inrunning  of  a  Z  brook  "           1300 

A  I  lonely  church  in  days  of  yore,  jjolu  Grail  64 

I  saw  the  least  of  I  stars  Down  on  the  waste,  524 

Down  to  the  I  thorpe  that  lies  so  close,  "        547 

Must  be  content  to  sit  by  I  fires.  "         614 

so  that  ye  care  for  me  Ever  sol;  "         616 

There  was  I  beaten  down  by  I  men,  "  739 
And  I  Dagonet  on  the  morrow  mom.                        Last  Tournament  240 

And  while  he  twangled  I  Dagonet  stood  Quiet  252 

And  I  Dagonet,  skippmg,  '  Arthur,  the  King's  ;  ,             262 

And  I  Dagonet  mincmg  with  his  feet,  311 

Then  I  Dagonet  clapt  his  hands  and  shrill'd,  "            353 

Press  this  a  I  closer,  sweet,  until —  "            71s 

none  with  her  save  a  I  maid,  A  novice  :  ^Guinevere  3 

A  I  bitter  pool  about  a  stone  On  the  bare  coast.  51 

But  conamuned  only  with  the  I  maid,  "       150 

until  the  I  maid,  who  brook'd  No  silence,  "       159 

Whereat  full  willingly  sang  the  I  maid.  "       I67 

Then  said  the  I  novice  prattUng  to  her,  "       183 

But  even  were  the  griefs  of  I  ones  As  great  ",      203 

O  I  maid,  shut  in  by  nunnery  walls,  "      227 

To  whom  the  I  novice  garrulously,  "      231 

To  which  the  I  elves  of  chasm  and  cleft  Made  answer,  ','      248 


Little  (continued)     '  Yea,'  said  the  I  novice,  '  I  pray  for 

For°mokery  is  the  fume  of  I  hearts.  Guinevere  3^ 

'  Yea,  I  maid,  for  am  /  not  forgiven  ?  '  "       gSe 

A  I  thing  may  harm  a  wounded  man  ;  Pass  of  Arthur  210 

O  I  blossom,  O  mine,  and  mine  of  mine.  To  2   rlnnZonA 

Suck'd  mto  oneness  like  a  I  star  Loter^sSilm 

that  I  hour  was  bound  Shut  in  from  Time  '  4?? 

Lower  down  Spreads  out  a  I  lake,  that,  flooding  "            ^sl 

Until  It  hung,  a  I  silver  cloud  Over  the  sounding  sea.s  •  "         «."  36 

W  hen  Harry  an'  I  were  children,  he  caU'd  me  his  " 

own  I  wife ;  r  •    ^  /^          7  1  n 

God  bless  you,  my  own  I  Nell.'  ^'''^  ^^""'^  ^§ 

years  went  over  tiU  I  that  was  I  had  grown  so  tall  "            27 

I  ha  six  weeks'  work,  I  wife,  so  far  as  I  know  •  "14 

Come,  come,  I  wife,  let  it  rest !  62 
What's  the  'eat  o'  this  I  'ill-side  to  the  'eat  o'  the 

mi ,  T^                             ,         .  North.  Cobbler  & 

ihe  I  Revenge  ran  on  sheer  into  the  heart  of  the  foe.      The  Revenae  VK 

i  Revenge  ran  on  thro'  the  long  sea-lane  between.  36 

Thousands  of  their  seamen  made  mock  at  the  mad  /  craft         "  38 

Ihat  he  dared  her  with  one  I  ship  and  his  English  few  •  "         107 

An    e  bowt  Z  statutes  all-naakt  '  Villaae  Wife^ 

Here  is  the  cot  of  our  oi-phan,  our  darling,  our  n        j    ^^ 
meek  I  maid  ;                                                         7^  tj^^  child.  Hasp.  28 
L  guess  what  joy  can  be  got  from  a  cowslip  out 

of  the  field  ;  „-, 

Quietly  sleeping— so  quiet,  our  doctor  said  '  Poor  I  dear      "                41 

If  I,  said  the  wise  I  Annie,  '  was  you,  '     "                40 

'  L  children  should  come  to  me.'  "                g/j 

It's  the  I  girl  with  her  arms  lying  out  on  the 

counterpane.'                             ~  j-q 
Her  dear,  long,  lean,  I  arms  lying  out  on  the 

counterpane ;  rrri 

Not  least  art  thou  thou  I  Bethlehem  In  Judah,  Sir  j"oidcastle  24 

Nor  thou  in  Britain,  I  Lutterworth,  2& 

'  O  soul  of  I  faith,  slow  to  believe  !  Columbus  147 

warm  melon  lay  like  a  I  sun  on  the  tawny  sand,  V.  of  Maeldune  57 
My  sin  to  my  desolate  I  one  found  me  at  sea  on  a  day.      The  Wreck  86 

Ihe  dark  I  worlds  running  round  them  Despair  18 

Come,  speak  a  I  comfort !  The  Fliqht  17 

yer  laste  i  whishper  was  sweet  as  the  lilt  of  a  bird  !  Tomori-ov)  33 
An   I  sits  1  my  oan  I  parlour,  an'  sarved  by  my 

oan  I  lass,  Spinster^ s  S's.  103 

Wi'  my  oan  I  garden  outside,  ^            1Q4 
An'  the  I  gells  bobs  to  ma  hoffens  es  I  be  abroad 

i'  the  laanes,  2Q7 

You  wrong  me,  passionate  I  friend.  Epilogue  10' 

'See,  what  a  I  heart,'  she  said.  Bead  Prophet  75 

*  "?^tL^^^.  °i  ^^^'^^^^  ^'■•'"'  ^^'°''^  *«  ^^O^"*!-  Early  Spring  41 

An  I'd  clear  forgot,  I  Dicky,  Owl  Rod  64 

An  she  beald    \  a  mun  saave  I  Dick,  gi 

and  soa  I  Dick,  good-night.  "       ug 

The  I  senseless,  worthless,  wordless  babe.  The  Ring  304 

'  Muriel's  health  Had  weaken'd,  nursing  I  Miriam.  357 

This  Satan-haunted  ruin,  this  I  citv  of  sewers,  Bavvn  34 

May  I  come  a  I  nearer,  I  that  heard,  55 

A I  nearer.     Yes.  "      g7 

A  I  nearer  yet !  "    1Q4 

They  fuse  themselves  to  I  spicy  baths,  Prog.  of  Spring  33 

Beat,  I  heart— I  give  you  this  and  this  '  Romney's  R.  1 

Beat  upon  mme,  I  heart !  beat,  beat !  94 

'  Sleep,  I  blossom,  my  honey,  my  bliss  !  99 

Yes,  my  vvild ;  Poet.         ^,^.     ^  Tlie  Throstle  4: 

And  hardly  a  daisy  as  yet,  I  fnend,  n 

cried  '  Love  one  another  I  ones '  and  '  bless  '  " 

,^^0™?    w         ,         ,  ^Jcbar's  Dream  16. 

And  he  caught  my  Z  one  from  me  :  Bandit's  Death  22 

Will  you  move  a  I  that  way  ?  Chariti/  20 

And  owning  but  a  I  more  Than  beasts.  Two  Voice"  196 

Right  thro'  the  world,  '  at  home  was  I  left.  The  Evic  19 

aU  grace  Summ'd  up  and  closed  in  I ;—  Gardener's  D.  13 

but  Dora  stored  what  I  she  could  save,  Dq^^  52 
Life  piled  on  life  Were  all  too  I,  and  of  one  to  me 

L^^m^v^:  Ulysses  26. 


Little 

Little  (contimLed)     L  can  I  give  my  wife. 

And  how  they  mar  this  I  by  their  feuds. 

Or  of  so  I  in  our  I  life — 

So  I  done,  such  things  to  be, 

And  Enid  took  a  I  delicately, 

'  Wait  a  I,'  you  say, '  you  are  sure  it  '11  all  come 
right,' 

'  Wait  a  I,  my  lass,  I  am  sure  it  'ill  all  come  right ' 
Little-footed    laws  Salique  And  l-f  China, 
Littleness     a  thousand  peering  I'es, 
Little-worth    So  were  thy  labour  l-w. 
Live  (adj.)     L  chattels,  mincers  of  each  other's  fame. 

But  his  essences  turn'd  the  I  air  sick. 

And  the  I  green  had  kindled  into  flowers, 

And  glowing  in  all  colours,  the  I  grass, 

Which  half  that  autumn  night,  like  the  I  North, 
Live  (verb)    Shall  man  I  thus,  in  joy  and  hope 

Living,  but  that  he  shall  Z  on  ? 

Thou  wilt  not  ?  in  vain. 

My  friend,  with  you  to  I  alone, 

the  rainbow  I's  in  the  curve  of  the  sand  ; 

unheard  melody.  Which  I's  about  thee, 

We  would  I  merrily,  merrily. 

now  they  I  with  Beauty  less  and  less. 

His  object  I's  :  more  cause  to  weep  have  I : 


414 


Live 


L.  of  Burleigh  14 

Sea  Dreams  49 

Lucretius  227 

In  Mem.  Ixxiii  2 

Geraint  and  E.  212 


First  Quarrel  1 

91 

Princess  ii  134 

Bed.  of  Idylls  26 

Two  Voices  171 

Princess  iv  515 

Maud  I  xiii  11 

Gareth  and  L.  185 

Last  Tournament  233 

479 

Siipp.  Confessions  169 

171 

Clear-headed  friend  9 

Ode  to  Memory  119 

Sea- Fairies  27 

Elednore  65 

The  Merman  40 

Caress'd  or  chidden  9 

Wan  Sculptor  6 


To  I  forgotten,  and  love  forlorn.'  (repeat)  Mariana  in  the  S.  12,  24,  84, 96 
L  forgotten  and  die  forlorn.'  (repeat)  „  60,  72 

'  To  breathe  and  loathe,  to  I  and  sigh,  Two  Voices  104 

Who  is  it  that  could  I  an  hour  ?  „         162 

I'd  almost  I  my  life  again.  Miller's  D.  28 

Grow,  I,  die  looking  on  his  face,  Fatima  41 

I  by  law.  Acting  the  law  we  I  by  without  fear  ;  (Enone  147 

Pass  by  the  happy  souls,  that  love  to  I:  „      240 

My  soul  would  I  alone  unto  herself  Palace  of  ArtW 

I  only  wish  to  I  till  the  snowdrops  come 

again  :  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  14 

To  muse  and  brood  and  I  again  in  memory,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  65 

In  the  hollow  Lotos-land  to  I  and  lie  „  109 

His  memory  long  will  I  alone  In  all  our  hearts,  To  J.  8.  49 

But  I's  and  loves  in  every  place  ;  On  a  Mourner  5 

I I  three  lives  of  mortal  men,  M.  d' Arthur  155 
Mary,  let  me  I  and  work  with  you  :  Dora  115 
Then  thou  and  I  will  I  within  one  house,  „  125 
but  let  me  I  my  Ufe.  (repeat)  Audley  Court  43,  47,  51,  55 
St.S.  Stylites  79 

Love  and  Duty  84 

87 

Golden  Year  56 

70 

Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  56 

Wai  Water.  81 

113 

233 

237 

Lady  Clare  26 

L.  of  Burleigh  57 

Enoch  Arden  319 

806 

812 

821 

851 

Sea  Dreams  68 

95 

157 

314 

lAvcretius  78 

Princess,  Pro.  126 

i49 

ii  223 

Hi  243 

328 

iv  192 

513 

1)80 

408 


touch  my  body  and  be  heal'd,  and  I : 

L — ^yet  I — Shall  sharpest  pathos  blight  us, 

L  happy  ;  tend  thy  flowers  ; 

'Tis  like  the  second  world  to  us  that  I ; 

L  on,  God  love  us,  as  if  the  seedsman, 

And  that  for  which  I  care  to  I. 

For  since  I  came  to  I  and  learn, 

hence  thLs  halo  I's  about  The  waiter's  hands, 

L  long,  ere  from  thy  topmost  head 

L  long,  nor  feel  in  head  or  chest 

I  speak  the  truth,  as  I Z  by  bread  ! 

Here  he  I's  in  state  and  bounty, 

Enoch  I's  ;  that  is  borne  in  on  me. 

Has  she  no  fear  that  her  fii-st  hasband  I's  ?  ' 

Scorning  an  alms,  to  work  whereby  to  I. 

life  in  it  Whereby  the  man  could  I ; 

I  have  not  three  days  more  to  I ; 

there  surely  I's  in  man  and  beast  Something  divine 

'  What  a  world,'  I  thought, '  To  Zin  ! ' 

'  Have  faith,  have  faith  !     We  Z  by  faith,' 

'  His  deeds  yet  /,  the  worst  is  yet  to  come. 

L  the  great  life  which  all  our  greatest  fain 

*  ^5  there  such  a  woman  now  ?  ' 

loved  to  /  alone  Among  her  women ; 

Who  am  not  mine,  say,  I : 

yet  may  I  in  vain,  and  miss.  Meanwhile, 

And  I,  perforce,  from  thought  to  thought, 

they  cried  '  She  I's  :  * 

dismiss'd  in  shame  to  2  No  wiser  than  their  mothers, 

J,  dear  lady,  for  your  child  ! ' 

risk'd  it  for  my  own  ;  His  mother  I's : 


Live  (verb)  (continued)    the  gray  mare  Is  ill  to  {  with, 
'  Sweet  my  child,  1 1  for  thee.' 
'  he  I's  :  he  is  not  dead : 
at  the  happy  word  '  he  I's '  My  father  stoop'd. 
Ask  me  no  more,  lest  I  should  bid  thee  I ; 
What  pleasure  I's  in  height  (the  shepherd  sang) 
to  I  and  learn  and  be  All  that  not  harms 
he,  that  doth  not,  I's  A  drowning  life, 
but  I  would  not  I  it  again, 
run  oop  to  the  brig,  an'  that  thou'll  I  to  see  ; 
And  men  will  I  to  see  it. 
Dreams  are  true  while  they  last,  and  do  we  not  I  in 

dreams  ? 
For  merit  I's  from  man  to  man, 
I  trust  he  I's  in  thee. 
The  wild  unrest  that  I's  in  woe 
There  I's  no  record  of  reply. 
That  life  shall  I  for  evermore, 
A  doubtful  gleam  of  solace  Vs. 
The  grain  by  which  a  man  may  I  ? 

0  Sorrow,  wilt  thou  I  with  me 
But  I's  to  wed  an  equal  rmnd  ; 
And  I's  to  clutch  the  golden  keys. 
And  thine  effect  so  I's  in  me, 
A  part  of  mine  may  I  in  thee 
Can  trouble  /  with  April  days, 
By  which  we  dare  to  I  or  die. 
There  I's  more  faith  in  honest  doubt, 
He  told  me,  I's  in  any  crowd. 
We  I  within  the  stranger's  land, 
that  I  their  lives  From  land  to  land ; 
Yet  less  of  sorrow  I's  in  me 
seern'd  to  il  A  contradiction  on  the  tongue, 
That  friend  of  mine  who  I's  in  God, 
That  God,  which  ever  I's  and  loves. 
When  only  the  ledger  I's, 
Well,  he  may  I  to  hate  me  yet. 
In  our  low  world,  where  yet  'tis  sweet  to  I. 
Not  die  ;  but  I  a  Ufe  of  truest  breath. 
And  died  to  I,  long  as  ray  pulses  play  ; 
But  to-moiTow,  if  we  I, 
We  are  not  worthy  to  I. 
Then  might  we  I  together  as  one  life, 
power  on  this  dead  world  to  make  it  I.' 
'  Reign  ye,  and  Z  and  love, 
'  Strike  for  the  King  and  l ! 

1  the  strength  and  die  the  lust ! 
L  pure,  speak  true,  right  wrong. 
She  I's  in  Castle  Perilous  : 
ye  know  this  Order  I's  to  crush  All  wrongers 
I  to  wed  with  her  whom  first  you  love  :  Mart,  of  Geraint  227 
if  1 1,  So  aid  me  Heaven  when  at  mine  uttermost,  „  501 
if  he  I,  we  will  have  him  of  our  band ;  Geraint  and  E.  553 
we  will  I  like  two  birds  in  one  nest^  „  627 
I  A  wealthier  life  than  heretofore  Balin  and  Balan  91 
From  all  his  fellows,  I  alone,  „  126 
forget  My  heats  and  violences  ?  I  afresh  ?  „  190 
I  too  could  die,  as  now  1 1,  for  thee.'  „  583 
'  L  on.  Sir  Boy,'  she  cried.  „  584 
It  I's  dispersedly  in  many  hands.  Merlin  and  V.  457 
may  now  assure  you  mine  ;  So  I  uncharm'd.                              „          550 

0  tell  us — for  we'  I  apart — •  Lancelot  and  E.  284 

1  never  saw  his  like  :  there  I's  No  greater  leader.'  „  316 
L's  for  his  children,  ever  at  its  best  And  fullest ;  „  336 
in  daily  doubt  Whether  to  I  or  die,  „  521 
as  but  born  of  sickness,  could  not  I :  „  880 
'  Speak  :  that  1 1  to  hear,'  he  said,  '  is  yours.'  „  928 
Yet,  seeing  you  desire  your  child  to  I,  „  1095 
No  memory  in  me  l's  ;  Holy  Grail  535 
But  I  like  an  old  badger  in  his  earth,  „  629 
Long  I  the  king  of  fools  !  '  Last  Tournament  358 
True  men  who  love  me  still,  for  whom  1 1,  Guinevere  445 
I  the  King  should  greatly  care  to  Z ;  „  452 
How  sad  it  were  for  Arthur,  should  he  I,  „  496 
No,  nor  by  living  can  I Z  it  down.                                                „        623 


Princess  v  452 

ml6 

122 

128 

„  vttS 

1^ 

273 

313 

Grandmother  98 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  55 

Spiteful  Letter  18 

High.  Pantheism  4 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  35 

39 

XV  IS 

xxxi  6 

xxxiv  2 

xxxviii  8 

UUSf 

lixi 

Ixii  8 

Ixiv  10 

IxvlO 

11 

Ixxxiii  7 

Ixxxv  40 

xcvi  11 

xcviii  26 

cvS 

cxv  16 

cxvi  13 

cxxv  3 

Con.  140 

141 

Maud  7  t  35 

„         xiii  4 

„     xviii  48 

53 

66 

XX  23 

„       7/  t  48 

Com.  of  Arthur  91 

94 

472 

488 

492 

Gareth  and  L.  118 

611 

625 


Live 


415 


Livid 


live  (verb)  (corUinued) 
sin 
and  still  1 1  Who  love  thee ; 
Not  tho'  1 1  three  lives  of  mortal  men, 
In  that  I Z I  love  ;  because  I  love  1 1 : 
blight  L's  in  the  dewy  touch  of  pity 
mask  of  Hate,  who  l's  on  others'  moans, 
the  Saviour  l's  but  to  bless. 
I  to  fight  again  and  to  strike  another  blow.' 
My  God,  I  would  not  I  Save  that  I  think 
necessity  for  talk  Which  l's  with  blindness, 
she'll  never  I  thro'  it,  I  fear.' 
'  He  says  I  shall  never  I  thro'  it, 
that,  which  lived  True  life,  I  on — 
Kill  or  be  kill'd,  I  or  die, 
For  I  must  I  to  testify  by  fire. 
X,  and  be  happy  in  thyself, 

channel  where  thy  motion  l's  Be  prosperously  shaped, 
L  thou  !  and  of  the  grain  and  husk, 
Who  I  on  milk  and  meal  and  grass  ; 
that  l's  Behind  this  darkness, 
•     work'd  no  good  to  aught  that  l's, 

one  thing  given  me,  to  love  and  to  I  for, 

Wh^  should  1 1  ? 

Let  it  I  then — ay,  till  when  ? 

May  freedom's  oak  for  ever  I 

man,  that  only  l's  and  loves  an  hour, 

which  l's  Beyond  our  burial  and  our  buried  eyes, 

You  will  I  till  that  is  bom, 

leper's  hut,  where  l's  the  living-dead. 

would  he  I  and  die  alone  ? 

then  I  am  dead,  who  only  I  for  you. 

I  will  I  and  die  with  you. 

Could  make  pure  light  I  on  the  canvas  ? 

can  Music  make  you  I  Far — far — away  ? 

L  thy  Life,  Young  and  old, 

I  the  life  Beyond  the  bridge, 

I  sticks  like  the  ivin  as  long  as  I  l's 

She  has  left  me  enough  to  I  on. 

0  happy  he,  and  fit  to  I, 
Uved    I  in  cither's  heart  and  speech. 

Have  I  and  loved  alone  so  long. 
If  I  had  I — I  cannot  tell — 
You  I  with  us  so  steadily, 

1  have  I  my  life,  and  that  which  I  have  done 
nor  less  among  us  I  Her  fame  from  lip  to  lip. 
Dora  I  unmarried  till  her  death. 
The  farmer's  son,  who  I  across  the  bay. 
There  I  a  flayflint  near  ; 
Here  I  the  Hills- 
while  I Z  In  the  white  convent  down  the  valley 
I Z  up  there  on  yonder  mountain  side. 
Three  years  1 1  upon  a  pillar. 
Farewell,  like  endless  welcome,  I  and  died. 
They  said  he  I  shut  up  within  himself, 
O  had  1 1  when  song  was  great 
And  I  a  life  of  silent  melancholy, 
fell  Sun-stricken,  and  that  other  I  alone. 
Where  Annie  I  and  loved  him, 

0  had  he  Z !     In  our  schoolbooks  we  say, 
1 1  for  years  a  stunted  sunless  life  ; 
In  other  scandals  that  have  I  and  died, 

1  thought  I Z  securely  as  yourselves — 
There  Z  an  ancient  legend  in  our  house. 
L  thro'  her  to  the  tips  of  her  long  hands, 
bones  of  some  vast  bulk  that  I  and  roar'd 
You  prized  my  counsel,  Z  upon  my  lips  : 
I  in  all  fair  lights, 
equal  baseness  I  in  sleeker  times 
and  Z  but  for  mine  own. 
My  dream  had  never  died  or  Z  again. 
Sweet  order  Z  again  with  other  laws  : 
as  dearer  thou  for  faults  L  over  : 
the  sooner,  for  he  Z  far  away. 
Aurelias  Z  and  fought  and  died, 


in  mine  own  heart  I  can  I  down 

Guinevere  636 

Pass,  of  Arthur  150 

323 

Lover's  Tale  i  178 

695 

775 

Rizpah  64 

The  Revenge  95 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  228 

249 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  42 

47 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  2 

Def.  of  Lucknow  41 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  206 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  15 

19 

50 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  13 

Tiresias  51 

,,      77 

The  Wreck  35 

Despair  69 

Epilogue  63 

Hands  all  Round  5 

Demeter  and  P.  106 

The  Ring  295 

Forlorn  63 

Happy  4 

",      96 

„    108 

Romney's  R.  10 

Far — far — aivay  17 

The  Oak  1 

Akbar's  Dream  144 

Church-warden,  etc.  15 

Charity  40 

The  Wanderer  9 

Sonnet  To 14 

MUler's  D.  38 

May  Queen,  Con.  47 

D.  of  the  0.  Year  8 

M.  d' Arthur  244 

Gardener's  D.  50 

Dora  172 

Audley  Court  75 

FaZ7c.  to  the  Mail  84 

Edwin  Morris  11 

St.  S.  Stylites  61 

72 

86 

Love  and  Duty  68 

Golden  Year  9 

Amphion  9 

Enoch  Arden  260 

570 

685 

The  Brook  9 

Aylmer's  Field  357 

443 

iMcretius  210 

Princess  i  5 

a  40 

„   m294 

„    w293 

430 

„     V  385 

389 

„      vi  17 

„     vii  19 

348 

Grandmother  16 

Com.  of  Arthur  13 


Lived  (continued)     King  Who  I  and  died  for  men, 
So  large  mirth  Z  and  Gareth  won  the  quest. 
Tho'  yet  there  Z  no  proof, 
so  there  I  some  colour  in  your  cheek, 
Z  thro'  her,  who  in  that  perilous  hour 
I  in  hope  that  sometime  you  would  come 
I  have  not  Z  my  life  delightsomely : 
There  Z  a  king  in  the  most  Eastern  East, 
And  Z  there  neither  dame  nor  damsel 
Who  Z  alone  in  a  great  wild  on  grass  ; 
back  to  his  old  wild,  and  Z  on  grass, 
One  child  they  had  :  it  Z  with  her ;  she  died  ; 
And  saved  him  :  so  she  Z  in  fantasy. 
A  horror  Z  about  the  tarn, 
all  night  long  his  face  before  her  Z, 
the  face  before  her  Z,  Dark-splendid, 
There  kept  it,  and  so  Z  in  fantasy. 
Sir  Lancelot  knew  there  Z  a  knight 
Struck  up  and  Z  along  the  milky  roofs  ; 
in  me  Z  a  sin  So  strange,  of  such  a  kind. 
She  I  a  moon  in  that  low  lodge  with  him  : 
an  Abbess,  Z  For  three  brief  years, 
I  have  Z  my  life,  and  that  which  I  have  done 
So  that,  in  that  I  have  I,  do  I  live, 
how  should  I  have  I  and  not  have  loved  ? 
we  Z  together.  Apart,  alone  together  on  those  hills. 
But  many  weary  moons  I Z  alone — 
I  Scatteringly  about  that  lonely  land 
Affirming  that  as  long  as  either  Z, 
Ah — you,  that  have  Z  so  soft, 
he  Z  with  a  lot  of  wild  mates. 
Squire's  laady  es  long  es  she  Z 
long  es  she  Z I  niver  hed  none  of  'er  darters  'ere  ; 
Hugger-mugger  they  I,  but  they  wasn't 
which  Z  True  life,  live  on — 
He  I  on  an  isle  in  the  ocean — 
He  had  Z  ever  since  on  the  Isle 
I  had  Z  a  wild-flower  life. 
Our  gentle  mother,  had  she  I — 
aisier  work  av  they  Z  be  an  Irish  bog. 
But  I  couldn't  'a  Z  wi'  a  man 
that  you  have  not  Z  in  vain. 
An'  'e  sarved  me  sa  well  when  'e  Z, 
when  we  Z  i'  Howlaby  Daale, 
He  that  has  I  for  the  lust  of  the  minute, 
Z  With  Muriel's  mother  on  the  down. 
Live-green    Out  of  the  l-g  heart  of  the  dells 
Livelier     And  Z  than  a  lark  She  sent  her  voice 


Gareth  and  L.  383 

1426 

Marr.  of  Geraint  26 

Geraint  and  E.  621 

766 

839 

Balin  and  Balan  60 

Merlin  and  V.  555 

606 

621 

649 

716 

Lancelot  and  E.  27 

37 

331 

337 

398 

401 

409 

Holy  Grail  772 

Last  Tournament  381 

Guinevere  696 

Pass,  of  Arthur  412 

Lover's  Tale  i  120 

170 

189 

it  2 

iv  184 

277 

Rizpah  17 

29 

Village  Wife  53 

54 

117 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  1 

V.  of  Maeldune  7 

116 

The  Wreck  37 

The  Flight  77 

Tomorrow  72 

Spinster's  S's.  52 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  242 

Owd  Rod  11 

19 

Vastness  27 

The  Ring  147 

Sea- Fairies  12 

Talking  Oak  122 


In  the  Spring  a  Z  iris  changes  on  the  bumish'd  dove  ;    Locksley  Hall  19 


then  we  crost  To  a  Z  land 

Then  Florian,  but  no  I  than  the  dame 

Nor  less  it  pleased  in  Z  moods, 

No  Z  than  the  wisp  that  gleams  On  Lethe 

Be  quicken'd  with  a  Z  breath, 

that  to  me  A  Z  emerald  twinkles  in  the  grass, 
Liveliest    glided  thro'  all  change  Of  Z  utterance. 
Livelong     Pour  round  mine  ears  the  Z  bleat 

Past  Yabbok  brook  the  Z  night. 

Thro'  which  the  I  day  my  soul  did  pass. 

There  will  not  be  a  drop  of  rain  the  whole  of  the  I  day,    May  Queen  35 

all  the  Z  way  With  solemn  gibe  did  Eustace  Gardener's  D.  167 

break  the  Z  summer  day  With  banquet  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  31 

light  Thro'  the  Z  hours  of  the  dark  Maud  I  vi  17 

All  thro'  the  Z  hours  of  utter  dark.  Lover's  Tale  i  810 

Lively     Rapt  in  sweet  talk  or  Z,  all  on  love  Guinevere  386 

Liver  (one  who  lives)    Tnith-speaking,  brave,  good  l's,       Gareth  and  L.  424 
Liver  (organ  of  the  body)    pierces  the  Z  and  blackens  the  blood  ;  The  Islet  35 


Princess  i  110 

a  112 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  29 

„      xcviii  7 

„     cxxii  13 

Maud  I  xviii  51 

D.  of  F.  Women  168 

Ode  to  Memory  65 

Clear-headed  friend  27 

Palace  of  Art  55 


red  '  Blood-eagle  '  of  Z  and  heart ; 

'  And  the  Z  is  half-diseased  !  ' 
Liveried    dashing  runnel  in  the  spring  Had  Z 
Livest     by  what  name  L  between  the  lips  ? 

Thou  Z  in  all  hearts. 
Livid     L  he  pluck'd  it  forth, 

Many  a  Z  one,  many  a  sallow-skin- 


Dead  Prophet  71 

76 

Lover's  Tale  ii  50 

Lancelot  and  E.  1 82 

Epit.  on  Gordon  3 

Aylmer's  Field  627 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  106 


I  am  roused  by  the  wail  of  a  child,  and  awake  to  a  Z  light.     The  Wreck  7 


Livid 


416 


Loathsome 


Livid  {eoniinued)     crooked,  reeling,  I,  thro'  the  mist 

Kose, 
Livid-flickering    dazzled  by  the  l-f  fork, 
Livin'  (benefice)     I  reckons  tha'U  light  of  a  Z 
Living    (See  also  Ever-living)     L,  but  that  he  shall 
live  on  ? 

The  I  airs  of  middle  night  Died  round  the  bulbul 

A  I  flash  of  light  he  flew.' 

Natuie's  I  motion  lent  The  pulse  of  hope 

L  together  under  the  same  roof,  To 

each  a  perfect  whole  From  I  Nature, 

his  mute  dust  I  honour  and  his  I  worth  : 

And  feeding  high,  and  I  soft, 

Cursed  be  the  social  lies  that  wai-p  us  from  the 
I  truth  ! 

Pure  spaces  clothed  in  I  beams, 

That  he  who  left  you  ten  long  years  ago  Should  f-till 
he  I: 

evermore  Prayer  from  a  I  source  within  the  wiU, 

Like  fountains  of  sweet  water  in  the  sea,  Kept  him 
a  I  soul. 

Who  hardly  knew  me  I,  let  them  come. 

But  Leolin,  his  brother,  I  oft  With  Averill, 

sow'd  her  name  and  kept  it  green  In  I  letters. 

And  left  the  I  scandal  that  shall  die — 

As  if  the  I  passion  symbol'd  there  Were  I  nerves 
to  feel  the  rent ; 

And  all  but  those  who  knew  the  I  God — 

And  heaps  of  I  gold  that  daily  grow, 

Not  past  the  I  fount  of  pity  in  Heaven. 

Dead  claps  of  thunder  from  within  the  cliffs  Heard 
thro'  the  I  roar. 

(the  same  as  that  L  within  the  belt) 

Or  Heliconian  honey  in  I  words, 

a  race  Of  giants  I,  each,  a  thousand  years. 

Those  monstrous  males  that  carve  the  I  hound, 

but  I  wills,  and  sphered  Whole  in  ourselves 

Of  I  hearts  that  crack  within  the  fire 

I  believed  that  in  the  I  world  JVIy  spirit  closed 

Thy  I  voice  to  me  was  as  the  voice  of  the  dead, 

voice  of  the  dead  was  a  I  voice  to  me. 

Roves  from  the  I  brother's  face. 

With  fruitful  cloud  and  I  smoke, 

The  wish,  that  of  the  I  whole  No  life  may  fail 

Which  sicken'd  every  I  bloom, 

That  warms  another  I  breast. 

The  I  soul  was  flash'd  on  mine. 

And  drown'd  in  yonder  I  blue  The  lark  becomes 

O  I  will  that  shalt  endure 

And  the  most  I  words  of  life  Breathed  in  her  ear. 

L  alone  in  an  empty  house, 

Void  of  the  little  I  will  That  made  it  stir 

Blow  thro'  the  I  world — '  Let  the  King  reign.' 

thou  art  but  swollen  with  cold  snows  And  mine 
is  I  blood : 

gown  I  will  not  cast  aside  Until  himself  arise 
a  I  man, 

'  For  the  fairest  and  the  best  Of  ladies  I  gave  me    Balin  and  Balan  340 

'  I  better  prize  The  I  dog  than  the  dead  lion  :  „  585 

Death  in  the  I  waters,  and  withdrawn.  Merlin  and  V.  148 

who  was  yet  a  I  soul.  Lancelot  and  E.  253 

She  still  took  note  that  when  the  I  smile  Died  „  323 

'  I  never  yet  have  done  so  much  For  any  maiden  I,'  „  376 

Become  a  I  creature  clad  with  wings  ?  Hohj  Grail  519 

since  the  I  words  Of  so  great  men  as  Lancelot  and 

our  King  „  712 

fern  without  Burnt  as  a  Z  fire  of  emeralds,  Pelleas  and  E.  35 

Makers  of  nets,  and  I  from  the  sea.  „  90 

more  Than  any  have  sung  thee  I,  „  351 

Again  with  I  waters  in  the  change  Of  seasons  :  ,,511 

No,  nor  by  I  can  I  live  it  down.  Guinevere  623 

On  that  high  day,  when,  clothed  with  I  light.  Pass,  of  Arthur  454 

thro'  thy  I  love  For  one  to  whom  I  made  it  To  the  Queen  ii  34 

Scarce  I  in  the  jEolian  harmony,  Lover's  Tale  i  477 

More  I  to  some  happier  happiness,  „  762 


Death  of  Qinone  27 

Merlin  and  V.  941 

Church-warden,  etc.  47 

Sup  p.  Confessions  171 

Arabian  Nights  69 

Two  Voices  15 

449 

-,  With  Pal.  of  Art  12 

Palace  of  Art  59 

To  .J.  S.  30 

The  Goose  17 

Locksley  Hall  60 
Sir  Galahad  66 


Enoch  Arden  405 
801 


804 

889 

Aylmer's  Field  57 

89 

444 


535 
637 
655 

752 

Sea  Dreams  56 

216 

Lucretius  224 

Princess  Hi  269 

310 

iv  147 

V  379 

vii  157 

V.  of  Cauteretz  8 

10 

In  Mem.  xxxii  7 

CCXtCtX  o 

Ivl 

Ixxii  7 

Ixxxv  116 

xcv  36 

cocv  7 

cxxxi  1 

Con.  52 

Maud  I  vi  68 

„     //  ii  14 

Com.  of  Arthur  484 

Gareth  and  L.  10 

Geraint  and  E.  706 


Living  (continued)     if  Affection  L  slew  Love,  Lover's  Tale  ii  31 

And  all  the  fragments  of  the  I  rock  „          H  44 

told  the  I  daughter  with  what  love  Edith  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  253 

And  mangle  the  I  dog  that  had  loved  him  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  9 

Dead  Princess,  I  Power,  if  that,  which  lived  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  1 


Rather  to  thee,  thou  I  water. 

That  miss'd  his  I  welcome,  seem 

Wander'd  back  to  I  boyhood  while  I  heard  the 
curlews  call. 

Paint  the  mortal  shame  of  nature  with  the  I  hues 
of  Art. 

Dead,  but  how  her  I  glory  lights  the  hall, 

woods  with  I  airs  How  softly  f ann'd, 

To  share  his  I  deatli  with  him, 

A  beauty  came  upon  your  face,  not  that  of  I  men, 

woiTn,  who,  I,  made  The  wife  of  wives  a  widow-bride 

Bright  in  spring,  L  gold  ; 

Farewell,  whose  I  like  I  shall  not  find.  In  Mem.  W 

Look  how  the  I  pulse  of  Alia  beats  Thro'  all  His 
world. 

moved  but  by  the  I  limb. 

And  is  a  I  form  ? 

Draw  from  my  death  Thy  I  flower  and  grass, 

earn'd  a  scanty  I  for  himself  : 

war  stood  Silenced,  the  I  quiet  as  the  dead. 

If  one  may  judge  the  I  by  the  dead, 

molten  Into  adulterous  I, 

were  worth  Our  I  out  ? 
•     but  worn  From  wasteful  Z,  follow 'd — 

attic  holds  the  Z  and  the  dead. 
Living-dead    where  lives  the  l-d. 
Living-place     river  i-uns  in  three  loops  about  her  Z-p  ; 
Lizard    Z,  with  his  shadow  on  the  stone, 

the  golden  Z  on  him  paused, 
Lizard-point    fairest-spoken  tree  From  here  to  L-f. 
Llanberis     And  found  him  in  L : 
Llanberris     I  came  on  lake  L  in  the  dark. 
Load    grace  To  help  me  of  my  weaiy  I.' 
Loaded    See  Grape-loaded 
Loaf     a  dusky  I  that  smelt  of  home. 
Loan    aims  On  Z,  or  else  for  pledge  ; 
Loath    {See  also  Loth)     be  loath  To  part  them,  or  part 

from  them  :  Sisters  J,  E.  and  E.)  49 

Loathe     '  To  breathe  and  loathe,  to  live  and  sigh,  ~ 

I  loathe  it :  he  had  never  kindly  heart, 

and  she  Loathes  him  as  well ; 

And  I  loathe  the  squares  and  streets, 

and  loathe  to  ask  thee  aught. 

flyers  from  the  hand  Of  Justice,  and  whatever 
loathes  a  law : 

came  to  loathe  His  crime  of  traitor, 

loathe,  fear — but  honour  me  the  more.' 

whom  ye  loathe,  him  will  I  make  you  love.' 

I  loathe  her,  as  I  loved  her  to  my  shame. 

on  thine  polluted,  cries  '  I  loathe  thee  :  ' 

for  I  loathe  The  seed  of  Cadmus — 

waken  every  morning  to  that  face  I  loathe  to  see 

To  love  him  most,  whom  most  I  loathe, 

I  loathe  the  veiy  name  of  infidel. 
Loathed    but  most  she  Z  the  hour 

And  Z  to  see  them  overtax'd  • 

His  power  to  shape  :  he  Z  himself  ; 

Z  the  bright  dishonour  of  his  love, 

I  that  Z,  have  come  to  love  him. 

When  Dives  Z  the  times, 
Loather    Thou  Z  of  the  lawless  crown 
Loathing     Deep  dread  and  Z  of  her  solitude 

and  fain,  Foi-  hate  and  Z, 

to  show  His  Z  of  our  Order  and  the  Queen. 

Merlin  to  his  own  heart,  Z,  said ; 

L  to  put  it  from  herself  for  ever. 
Loathly     '  Overquiok  art  thou  To  catch  a  I  plume 

fall'n  from  the  wing 
Loathsome     What  is  I  to  the  young  Savours  well  to 

thee  and  me.  '  Vision  of  Sin  157 


Sir  J.  Oldcastle  131 
Tiresias  197 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  3 


,,  140 

181 

Early  Spring  19 

Happy  8 

51 

Ro7nney's  R.  137 

The  Oak  5 

G.  Ward  1 


Akbar's  Dream  41 

133 

Mechanophilus  16 

Doubt  and  Prayer  6 

Enoch  Arden  818 

Com.  of  Arthur  123 

Lancelot  and  E.  1368 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  109 

Tiresias  209 

Ancient  Sage  5 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  222 

Happy  4 

Gareth  and  L.  612 

CEnone  27 

Enoch  Arden  601 

Talking  Oak  264 

Golden  Year  5 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  95 

Mariana  in  the  S.  30 

Audley  Court  22 
Marr.  of  Geraint  220 


Two  Voices  104 

Sea  Dreams  2(X) 

Lucretius  200 

Maud  II  iv  92 

Gareth  and  L.  3')() 

Marr.  of  Geraint  37 

593 

Merlin  and  V.  122 

Pelleas  and  E.  390 

4cS3 

Guinevere  55  (i 

Tiresias  11 1> 

The  Flight  >S 

50 

Akbar's  Dream  70 

Mariana  77 

Godiva  9 

Lvrcretius  23 

Com.  of  Arthur  194 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  280 

To  Mary  Boyle  29 

Freedom  31 

Palace  of  Art  229 

Balin  and  Balan  388 

551 

Merlin  and  V.  790 

Lover's  Tale  i  214 

Merlin  and  V.  727 


Guinevere  490 
„      686 
Merlin  and  V.  845 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  25 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  37 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  58 

Yoxt,  might  have  won  18 

Princess  ii  322 

Lover's  Tale  ii  116 

Isabel  5 

Ode  to  Memory  16 

The  Merman  14 

The  Mermaid  32 

Adeline  57 

Vision  of  Sin  200 

Princess  iv  187 

426 

ft  164 

/«  Mem.  Ixxvii  7 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  56 

Xas<  Tournament  693 

Pa^«  o/  ^r<  249 

2>.  0/  JP.  Women  241 

Talking  Oak  144 

fiaZiw  ajid  Balan  632 
Aferiw  anti  F.  290,  470 
655 
The  Flight  33 


Loathsome 

t;ftHthaftma  (continued)    till  the  2  opposite  Of  all  my  heart 
had  destined  dad  obtain, 
And  treat  their  I  hurts  and  heal  mine  own ; 
and  stood  Stiff  as  a  viper  frozen ;  I  sight, 
How  could  I  bear  ■NWth  the  sights  and  the  I 
smells  of  disease 
Lobby    whined  in  lobbies,  tapt  at  doors, 
Loch    By  firth  and  I  thy  silver  sister  grow, 
Lock  (fastening)     Break  I  and  seal : 
Melissa,  with  her  hand  upon  the  I, 
Cries  of  the  partridge  like  a  rusty  key  Tum'd 
in  a  I, 
Lock  (of  tresses)    I's  not  wide-dispread. 

Stays  on  her  floating  I's  the  lovely  freight 
holding  them  back  by  their  flowing  I's 
I  would  fling  on  each  side  my  low-flowing  I's, 
While  his  I's  a-drooping  twined 
When  the  I's  are  crisp  and  curl'd  ; 
To  drench  his  dark  Vs  in  the  giu-gling  wave 
From  the  flaxen  curl  to  the  gray  I 
with  your  long  I's  play  the  Lion's  mane  ! 
May  serve  to  curl  a  maiden's  I's, 
Smoothing  their  I's,  as  golden  as  his  own 
jOck  (verb)    I  up  my  tongue  From  uttering  freely 
iOCk'd    salt  pool,  I  m  with  bars  of  sand, 

She  I  her  lips  :  she  left  me  where  I  stood  : 

She  might  nave  I  her  hands. 

slept  the  sleep  With  Balin,  either  I  in  either's 

arm. 
And  Merlin  I  his  hand  in  hers  (repeat) 
a  puzzle  chest  in  chest,  With  each  chest  I 
lOcket    pluck  from  this  true  breast  the  I  that  I  wear, 
locksley    Dreary  gleams  about  the  moorland  flying  over 

L  Hall ;  Locksley  Hall  4 

L  Hall,  that  in  the  distance  overlooks  the  sandy  tracts,  „  5 

a  long  farewell  to  L  Hall !  „  189 

Let  it  fall  on  L  Hall,  with  rain  or  bail,  „  193 

I  myself  so  close  on  death,  and  death  itself  in  L 

Hall.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  4 

Close  beneath  the  casement  crimson  with  the 

shield  of  L — 
Li  this  gap  between  the  sandhills,  whence  you  see 

the  L  tower. 
Here  is  L  Hall,  my  grandson,  here  the  lion-guarded 

gate.     Not  to-night  in  L  Hall — to-morrow — 
one  old  Hostel  left  us  where  they  swing  the  L  shield, 
Then  I  leave  thee  Lord  and  Master,  latest  Lord 
of  L  HaU. 
Odestar    secm'd  my  I  in  the  Heaven  of  Art, 
Odge  (s)    cross'd  the  garden  to  the  gardener's  I, 
Beyond  the  I  the  city  lies. 
They  by  parks  and  I's  going 
beyond  her  I's,  where  the  brook  Vocal, 
haunt  About  the  moulder'd  I's  of  the  Past 
A  Z  of  intertwisted  beechen-boughs 
She  lived  a  moon  in  that  low  I  with  him  : 
that  desert  I  to  Tristram  lookt  So  sweet, 
that  low  I  retum'd.  Mid-forest, 
Some  I  within  the  waste  sea-dunes, 
odge  (verb)     L  with  me  all  the  year  ! 

Odged    Vivien,  into  Camelot  stealing,  I  Low  in  the  city,  M^lin  and  V.  63 

Pdleas  and  E.  214 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  131 

Lancelot  and  E.  Ill 

Pdleas  and  E.  125 

The  Daisy  52 

Lover's  Tale  iv  138 

Enoch  Arden  748 

Princess  iv  215 

Gareth  and  L.  961 


417 


Lonely 


34 

176 

213 
247 


282 

Romney's  R.  39 

AvMey  Court  17 

Talking  Oak  5 

L.  of  Burleigh  17 

Aylm,er's  Field  145 

Princess  iv  63 

Lajt  Tournament  376 

381 

387 

488 

The  Flight  90 

Prog,  of  Spring  26 


A  priory  not  far  off,  there  I, 
and  I  with  Plato's  God, 
Odging    let  him  into  I  and  disarm'd. 

ere  they  past  to  I,  she,  Taking  his  hand, 
^odi    At  L,  rain,  Piacenza,  rain, 
oft    in  a  I,  with  none  to  wait  on  him, 
oftier    A  later  but  a  I  Annie  Lee, 
then  a  I  form  Than  female, 
I  spring  from  I  lineage  than  thine  own.' 
A  temple,  neither  Pagod,  Mosque,  nor  Church, 
But  I,  simpler, 
oftiest    a  wild  witch  naked  as  heaven  stood  on  each 

of  the  I  capes, 
otty    *  Drink  to  I  hopes  that  cool — 


Akbar's  Dream  179 

V.  of  Maeldune  100 
Vision  of  Sin  147 


Lofty  (continued)    broad  ambrosial  aisles  of  I  lime  Made 

noise  with  bees  Princess,  Pro.  87 

lUon's  I  temples  robed  in  fire.  To  Virgil  2 

Log    (See  also  YuIe-Iog)    drove  his  heel  into  the 

smoulder'd  I,  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  14 

Bring  in  great  I's  and  let  them  lie.  In  Mem.  cvii  17 

Lies  like  a  I,  and  all  but  smoulder'd  out !  Gareth  and  L.  75 

_  Dagonet  stood  Quiet  as  any  water-sodden  I  Last  Tournament  253 

Logic    Severer  in  the  Z  of  a  hfe  ?  Princess  v  190 

Impassion'd  I,  which  outran  In  Mem.  cix  7 

Loiac  (liar)     I  weant  saay  men  be  Vs,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  27 

Loife  (lite)    thaw  I  they  says  is  sweet,  „             63 

Loike  (like)    Moast  I  a  butter-bump,  „             31 

Loins    For  many  weeks  about  my  1 1  wore  St.  S.  Stylites  63 

can  this  be  he  From  Gama's  dwarfish  I  ?  Princess  v  506 

Loiter    from  pine  to  pine,  And  I's,  slowly  drawn.  (Enone  5 

1 1  round  my  cresses  ;  The  Brook  181 

With  weary  steps  I Z  on.  In  Mem.  xxxviii  1 

The  foot  that  I's,  bidden  go,—  Last  Tournament  117 

Would  often  I  in  her  balmy  blue.  Lover's  Tale  i  62 

Loiter'd    And  I  in  the  master's  field.  In  Mem,  xxxvii  23 

and  tho'  1 1  there  The  full  day  after,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  97 

Lombard    But  when  we  crost  the  L  plain  The  Daisy  49 

look'd  the  L  piles ;  „          54 

You  see  yon  L  poplar  on  the  plain.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  79 

Lond  (land)    as  I  'a  done  boy  the  I.  (repeat)  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  12,  24 

an'  I  o'  my  oan.  „               44 

whoa's  to  howd  the  I  ater  mea  „               58 

London  (adj.)    For  in  the  dust  and  drouth  of  L  life  Edwin  Morris  143 

When,  in  our  younger  L  days.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  54 

London  (s)    (See  also  Lunnon)    Sees  in  heaven  the 

light  of  L  flaring  Locksley  HaU  114 

Here,  in  streaming  L's  central  roar.  Ode  on  Well.  9 

L,  Verulam,  C^muloddne.  Boddicea  86 

Your  father  is  ever  in  L,  Maud  I  iv  59 

And  L  roll'd  one  tide  of  joy  To  the  Queen  ii  8 

Koaring  L,  raving  Paiis,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  190 

And  L  and  Paiis  and  all  the  rest  The  Dawn  10 

Lone    At  eve  the  beetle  boometh  Athwart  the  thicket  I :  Claribd  10 

never  more  Shall  I  (Enone  see  the  morning  mist  (Enone  216 

'  No  voice,'  she  shriek'd  in  that  I  hall.  Palace  of  Art  258 

Thro'  every  hollow  cave  and  alley  I  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  103 
On  a  day  when  they  were  going  O'er  the  I  expanse.        The  Captain  26 

The  bird  that  pipes  his  I  desire  Yov,  might  have  won  31 

The  I  glow  and  long  roar  (repeat)  Voice  and  the  P.  3,  39 

Her  life  is  I,  he  sits  apart.  In  Mem.  xcvii  17 

When  the  I  hem  forgets  his  melancholy,  Gareth  and  L.  1185 

'  Enid,  the  pilot  star  of  my  I  life,  Geraint  and  E.  306 

'  And  even  m  this  I  wood.  Sweet  lord,  Balin  and  Balan  528 

Perchance  in  I  Tintagil  far  from  all  Last  Tournament  392 

Till  one  I  woman,  weeping  near  a  cross,  „              493 

And  those  I  rites  I  have  not  seen.  To  Mara,  of  Dufferin  39 

Lonelier    I,  darker,  earthJier  for  my  loss.  Aylmer's  Field  750 

Loneliest    but  the  Z  in  a  lonely  sea.  Enoch  Arden  553 

The  I  ways  are  safe  from  shore  to  shore.  Last  Tournament  102 

Loneliness    Uphold  me,  Father,  in  my  I  Enoch  Arden  784 
from  his  height  and  I  of  grief  Bore  down  in  flood,     Aylmer's  Fidd  632 

Me  rather  all  that  bowery  I,  Milton  9 

'  Hast  thou  no  pity  upon  my  I  ?  Gareth  and  L.  73 

Gratitude — I — desire  to  keep  So  skilled  a  nurse  The  Ring  373 

Lonely    ancient  thatch  Upon  the  I  moated  grange.  Mariana  8 
winds  woke  the  gray-eyed  mom  About  the  I  moated  grange.      „        32 

Those  I  lights  that  still  remain,  Two  Voices  83 

Wrought  by  the  I  maiden  of  the  Lake.  M.  d' Arthur  104 

Wherever  in  a  Z  grove  He  set  up  his  forlorn  pipes,  Amphion  21 

Sometimes  on  I  moimtain-meres  I  find  a  magic  bark  ;      Sir  Galahad  37 

I  seabird  crosses  With  one  waft  of  the  wing.  The  Captain  71 

Close  to  the  sim  in  I  lands.  The  Eagle  2 

And  he  sat  him  down  in  a  Z  place.  Poet's  Song  5 

And  peacock-yewtree  of  the  i  Hall,  Enoch  ArdM^d 

And  leave  you  I  ?  not  to  see  the  world —  „          297 

but  the  loneliest  in  a  Z  sea.  „          553 

The  peacock-yewtree  and  the  I  Hall,  „          608 

when  his  I  doom  Came  suddenly  to  an  end.  „          626 

Pitying  the  I  man,  and  gave  him  it :  „         664 

2d 


Lonely 


418 


Long 


Thou  That  didst  uphold  me  on  my  I 


LoDdy  {eontiniud) 

isle, 
His  wreck,  his  I  life,  his  coming  back. 
And  I  listenings  to  my  mutter'd  dream, 
zones  of  light  and  shadow  Glimmer  away  to  the 

I  deep. 
And  a  storm  never  wakes  on  the  I  sea, 
To  breathe  thee  over  I  seas. 
That  beats  within  a  I  place, 
I  find  not  yet  one  I  thought  That  cries 
That  ripple  round  the  I  grange  ; 
No  gray  old  grange,  or  I  fold, 
/  have  climb'd  nearer  out  of  I  Hell. 
(For  often  in  I  wanderings  I  have  cursed  him 
has  past  and  leaves  The  Crown  a  I  splendour. 
What  happiness  to  reign  a  I  king, 
in  /  haimts  Would  scratch  a  ragged  oval  on  the 

sand. 
Whom  he  loves  most,  I  and  miserable. 
Heard  by  the  lander  in  a  Z  isle, 
good  damsel  there  who  site  apart,  And  seems  so  I? 
That  Lancelot  is  no  more  a  Z  heart. 
Who  might  have  brought  thee,  now  a  I  man 


To 


Enoch  Arden  783 

Princess  m  110 

F.  D.  Maurice  28 

The  Islet  33 

In  Mem.  xvii  4 

„  Ixxxv  110 

xc  23 

„        xci  12 

c5 

Mavd  I  xviii  80 

xtx  14 

Bed.  of  Idylls  49 

Com.  of  Arthur  82 

Gareth  and  L.  533 

Marr.  of  Geraint  123 

330 

'  Geraint  and  E.  300 

Lancelot  and  E.  602 

1370 


So  ?  as  you  have  been 


n 


built  with  wattles  from  the  marsh  A  little  I  church  Holy  Grail  64 

Here  one  black,  mute  midsummer  night  I  sat,  L,  Last  Tournament  613 
All  down  the  I  coast  of  Lyonnesse,  Guinevere  240 

To  sit  once  more  within  his  I  hall,  „      497 

As  of  some  I  city  sack'd  by  night.  Pass,  of  Arthur  43 

Wrought  by  the  I  maiden  of  the  Lake.  „  272 

O  blossom'd  portal  of  the  I  house.  Lover's  Tale  i  280 

great  pine  shook  with  I  sounds  of  joy  „  325 

And  thus  our  I  lover  rode  away,  „        iv  130 

who  lived  Scatteringly  about  that  I  land  of  his,  „  185 

But  /  was  the  I  slave  of  an  often-wandering  mind  ;  The  Wreck  130 

0  we  poor  orphans  of  nothing — alone  on  that  I  shore —  Despair  33 
and  we  shall  light  upon  some  I  shore.  The  Flight  89 
World-isles  in  I  skies,  Epilogue  55 
charm  of  adl  the  Muses  often  flowering  in  a  Z  woi-d  ;  To  Virgil  12 
seated  in  the  dusk  Of  even,  by  the  I  threshing-floor,  Demetet  and  P.  126 
The  I  maiden-Princess  of  the  wood.  The  Ring  65 
Her  I  maiden-Princess,  crown'd  with  flowers,  „  485 
you,  that  now  are  I,  and  with  Grief  Sit  face  to  face.   To  Mary  Boyle  45 

1  seem  no  longer  like  a  I  man  In  the  king's  garden,     Akbar's  Dream  20 
Lonest    Till  ev'n  the  I  hold  were  all  as  free  Gareth  and  L.  598 

Sir  Bors  Rode  to  the  I  tract  of  all  the  realm,  Holy  Grail  661 

Long  (adj.  and  adv.)    (See  also  Life-long)    From  the  I 

alley's  latticed  shade  Emerged, 
L  alleys  falling  down  to  twilight  grots, 
Now  is  done  thy  I  day's  work  ; 
And  I  purples  of  the  dale. 
When  the  I  dun  wolds  are  ribb'd  with  snow. 
How  I,  0  God,  shall  men  be  ridden  down, 
How  I  this  icy-hearted  Muscovite  Oppress  the  region  ?  ' 
L  fields  of  barley  and  of  rye, 
Still  moving  after  truth  I  sought, 
But  I  disquiet  merged  in  rest. 
To  be  the  I  and  listless  boy  Late-left  an  orphan 
Like  those  /  mosses  in  the* stream. 
on  the  casement-edge  A  I  green  box  of  mignonette, 
{ shadow  of  the  chair  Flitted  across  into  the  night, 
burning  drouth  Of  that  I  desert  to  the  south, 
once  he  drew  With  one  /  kiss  my  whole  soul  thro'  My  lips, 
roars  The  /  brook  falling  thro'  the  clov'n  ravine 
between  the  piney  sides  Of  this  I  glen. 
higher  All  barr'd  with  I  white  cloud  the  scornful 

crags.  Palace  of  Art  83 

Smile  at  the  claims  of  I  descent.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  52 

You'n  never  see  me  more  in  the  I  gray  fields 

at  night ;  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  26 

With  your  feet  above  my  head  in  the  I  and 

pleasant  grass.  „  32 

Give  us  I  rest  or  death,  dark  death,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  8.  53 

L  labour  unto  aged  breath,  „  85 

To  watch  the  I  bright  river  drawing  slowly  „  92 

glimmer  of  tt>«  languid  dawn  On  those  I,  rank,  D.  oj  F.  Women  75 


Arabian  Nights  112 

Ode  to  Memory  107 

A  Dirge  1 

„.      31 

Oriana  5 

Poland  1 

,,       10 

L.  of  Shalott  i  2 

Two  Voices  62 

249 

Miller's  D.  33 

48 

83 

126 

Fatima  14 

20 

(Enone% 

„      94 


Long  (adj.  and  adv.)  {continued) 

with  us,  D.  of  the  0.  Year  16 

Brightening  the  skirte  of  a  Z  cloud,  M.  d' Arthur  54 

And  the  I  ripple  washing  in  the  reeds.'  „        117 

And  the  I  glories  of  the  winter  moon.  „        192 

I  am  going  a  I  way  With  these  thou  seest —  „        256 

whispering  rain  Night  slid  down  one  I  stream  Gardener's  D.  267 

L  learned  names  of  agaric,  moss  and  fern,  Edwin  Morris  17 

Twice  ten  I  weary  weary  years  to  this,  St.  S.  Stylites  90 

Or  eke  I  dream — and  for  so  Z  a  time,  „  93 

thou  hast  suffer'd  I  For  ages  and  for  ages  ! '  „  99 

I  have  some  power  with  Heaven  From  my  I  penance  :  „  144 

The  I  mechanic  pacings  to  and  fro.  Love  and  Duty  17 

The  I  day  wanes  :  Ulysses  55 

With  the  fairy  tales  of  science,  and  the  I  result 

of  Time  ;  Locksley  Hall  12 

'  Dost  thou  love  me,  cousin  ?  '  weeping,  '  I  have  loved 

thee  i:  „  30 

a  I  farewell  to  Locksley  Hall !  „  189 

The  poplars,  in  I  order  due,  Amphion  37 

We  past  I  lines  of  Northern  capes  The  Voyage  35 

Where  those  I  swells  of  breaker  sweep  „  39 

'  Thou  art  mazed,  the  night  is  I,  Vision  of  Sin  195 

The  I  divine  Peneian  pass.  To  E.  L.  3 

L  lines  of  cliff  breaking  have  left  a  chasm  ;  Enoch  Arden  1 

higher  A  I  street  climbs  to  one  tall-tower'd  mill ;  „  5 

That  he  who  left  you  ten  I  years  ago  „        404 

Then  after  a  I  tumble  about  the  Cape  „        532 

then  winds  variable.  Then  baffling,  a  I  coui-se  of  them  ;  „        546 

lustre  of  the  I  convolvuluses  That  coil'd  around  „        576 

And  dull  the  voyage  was  with  I  delays,  „        655 

Then  down  the  I  street  having  slowly  stolen,  „        682 

his  I  wooing  her.  Her  slow  consent,  and  marriage,  „        707 

All  down  the  I  and  narrow  street  he  went  „        795 

And  there  he  told  a  I  long-winded  tale  The  Brook  138 

Katie  walks  By  the  I  wash  of  Australasian  seas  „        194 

seated  on  a  stUe  In  the  I  hedge,  „        198 

L  since,  a  bygone  Rector  of  the  place,  Aylmer's  Field  11 

crashing  with  I  echoes  thro'  the  land,  „  338 

And  his  I  arms  stretch'd  as  to  grasp  a  flyer :  „  588 

But  lapsed  into  so  Z  a  pause  again  „  630 

Ran  in  and  out  the  I  sea-framing  caves.  Sea  Dreams  33 

a  I  reef  of  gold,  Or  what  seem'd  gold  :  „        127 

He  dodged  me  with  a  I  and  loose  account.  „        149 

rise  And  I  roll  of  the  Hexameter —  Lucretius  11 

And  blasting  the  I  quiet  of  my  breast  „      162 

And  our  I  walks  were  stript  as  bare  as  brooms.  Princess,  Pro.  184 

and  with  I  arms  and  hands  Reach'd  out,  „  i  28 

Grow  I  and  troubled  like  a  rising  moon, 
there  did  a  compact  pass  L  summers  back. 
We  rode  Many  a  I  league  back  to  the  North. 
He  with  a  I  low  sibilation,  stared  As  blank  as  death 
every  turn  Lived  thro'  her  to  the  tips  of  her  I  hands, 
And  glutted  all  night  I  breast-deep  m  com. 
The  I  hall  glitter'd  like  a  bed  of  flowers. 
A  I  melodious  thunder  to  the  sound  Of  solemn 

psedms, 
'  O  I  ago,'  she  said, '  betwixt  these  two 
so  Went  forth  ui  I  retinue  following  up 
The  I  light  shakes  across  the  lakes, 
"  O  tell  her,  brief  is  life  but  love  Ls  I, 
combing  out  her  I  black  hair  Damp  from  the  river ; 
Came  in  I  breezes  rapt  from  inmost  south 
L  lanes  of  splendour  slanted  o'er  a  press 
rising  up  Robed  in  the  I  night  of  her  deep  hair, 
I  fantastic  night  With  all  ite  doings 
blast  and  bray  of  the  I  horn  And  serpent-throated  bugle, 
Suck'd  from  the  dark  heart  of  the  I  hills  roll 
All  that  I  mom  the  liste  were  hammer'd  up. 
Lioness  That  with  your  I  locks  play  the  Lion's  mane  ! 
Till  out  of  I  frustration  of  her  care. 
The  bosom  with  I  sighs  labour'd  ; 
Yet  in  the  /  years  Hker  must  they  grow  ; 
made  The  I  fine  of  the  approaching  rookery  swerve 


Let  the  1 1  procession  go. 


124 
168 
176 
n40 
387 
439 

476 

m  78 

195 

iv  3 

111 

276 

431 

478 

491 

565 

t>252 

349 

368 

vi  164 

mi  101 

225 

279 

Con.  97 

Ode  on  Well.  15 


Long 


419 


Long-enduring 


Long  (adj.  and  adv.)  {contwmed)    The  I  self-sacrifice  of  life 

is  o'er.  Ode  on  Well.  14 

Thro'  the  I  gorge  to  the  far  light  has  won  „  213 

lo  !  the  I  laborious  miles  Of  Palace  ;  Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  11 

Wheeh  'asta  bean  saw  I  and  mea  liggin'  'ere  aloan  ?  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  1 
In  those  I  galleries,  were  oiu«  ;  The  Daisy  42 

The  lone  glow  and  I  roar  (repeat)  Voice  and  the  P.  3,  39 

Draw  toward  the  I  frost  and  longest  night,  A  Dedication  11 

'  Ah,  the  I  delay.'  Window,  When  10 

Than  that  the  victor  Hours  should  scorn  The  I  result 

of  love,  In  Mem.  i  14 

once  more  I  stand  Here  in  the  Z  unlovely  street,  „  vii  2 

As  parting  with  a  I  embrace  She  enters  other  realms 

of  love;  ..  a;Z  11 

In  some  I  trace  should  slumber  on  ;  „        xliii  4 

And  in  the  I  harmonious  years  „         xliv  9 

But  with  I  use  her  tears  are  dry.  „  Ixxviii  20 

and  last  Up  that  I  walk  of  limes  I  past  „  Ixxxvii  15 

'  We  served  thee  herCj'  they  said, '  so  Z,  „       ciii  47 

L  sleeps  the  sunmier  m  the  seed  ;  „         cv26 

Now  fades  the  last  I  streak  of  snow,  „         cxv  1 

Now  rings  the  woodland  loud  and  I,  "  ...^ 

There  where  the  I  street  roars,  „     cxxiii  3 

0  true  and  tried,  so  well  and  I,  „  Con.  1 
Or  the  voice  of  the  I  sea-wave  as  it  swell'd  Maud  I  xiy  31 
In  the  I  breeze  that  streams  to  thy  delicious  East,  „  xviii  16 
Here  will  I  he,  while  these  I  branches  sway,  „  29 
Maud  made  my  Maud  by  that  I  loving  kiss,  „  58 
swell  Of  the  I  waves  that  roll  in  yonder  bay  ?  „  63 
One  I  milk-bloom  on  the  tree  ;  „  xxii  46 
And  as  ^,  O  God,  as  she  Have  a  grain  of  love  for  me,  „  //  ii  52 
After  I  grief  and  pain  To  find  the  arms  „  iv  2 
We  stood  tranced  in  I  embraces  Mixt  with  kisses  „  8 
Dead,  I  dead,  L  dead !  „  vl 
My  life  has  crept  so  Z  on  a  broken  wing  „  ///  vi  1 
Blow  trumpet,  the  I  night  hath  roll'd  away  !  Com.  of  Arthur  483 
Then  those  with  Gareth  for  so  Z  a  space  Gareth  and  L.  231 
seems  Wellnigh  as  Z  as  thou  art  statured  tall !  „  282 
For,  midway  down  the  side  of  that  I  hall  A  stately  pile, —  „  404 
Down  the  I  avenues  of  a  boundless  wood,  „  785 
Then  after  one  I  slope  was  mounted,  saw,  „  795 
Then  to  the  shores  of  one  of  those  I  loops  „  905 
and  a  I  black  horn  Beside  it  hanging ;  „  1366 
Prince  Three  times  had  blown — after  I  hush —  „  1378 
Beheld  the  I  street  of  a  little  town  In  a  I  valley,  Marr.  of  Geraint  242 
And  down  the  I  street  riding  wearily,  „  254 
Geraint  Drave  the  I  spear  a  cubit  thro'  his  breast  Geraint  and  E.  86 
sUde  From  the  I  shore-cliff's  windy  walls  to  the  beach,  „  164 
made  The  I  way  smoke  beneath  him  in  his  fear ;  „  532 
So  for  I  hours  sat  Enid  by  her  lord,  „  580 
paced  The  I  white  walk  of  lilies  toward  the  bower.  Balin  and  Balan  249 
Now  with  droopt  brow  down  the  I  glades  he  rode  ;  „  311 
Where  under  one  I  lane  of  cloudless  air  „  461 
blind  wave  feeling  round  his  I  sea-hall  In  silence  :      Merlin  and  V.  232 

1  sleepless  nights  Of  my  I  life  have  made  it  easy  to  me.  „  679 
A  I,  I  weeping,  not  consolable,  „  856 
she  stole  Down  the  I  tower-stairs,  hesitating  :  Lancelot  and  E.  343 
Far  o'er  the  I  backs  of  the  bushless  downs,  „  400 
Rode  o'er  the  I  backs  of  the  bushless  downs  To 

Camelot,  ..  789 

And  after  my  I  voyage  I  shall  rest ! '  »  1061 

And  down  the  I  beam  stole  the  Holy  Grail, 

(repeat)  Holy  Grail  117, 188 

out  of  this  she  plaited  broad  and  I  A  strong 

sword-belt,  »  152 

where  the  I  Rich  galleries,  lady-laden,  ..  345 

Then  a  I  silence  came  upon  the  hall,  Pdleas  and  E.  609 

his  I  lance  Broken,  and  his  Excahbur  a  straw.'  Last  Tournament  87 
Sir  Dagonet,  one  of  thy  I  asses'  ears,  ,.  273 

run  itself  All  out  Uke  a  I  life  to  a  sour  end —  „  288 

The  I  low  dune,  and  lazy-plunging  sea.  ..  484 

And  craven  shifts,  and  I  crane  le-gs  of  Mark —  „  729 

I  wave  broke  All  down  the  thundering  shores  of  Bude 

and  Bos  Guinevere  290 

Thro'  the  I  gallery  from  the  outer  doors  »        413 


Long  (adj.  and  adv.)  {continued)    down  the  I  wind  the 

dream  Shrill'd  ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  40 

I  mountains  ended  iii  a  coast  Of  ever-shifting  sand,  „            85 

Brightening  the  skirts  of  a  Z  cloud,  „          222 

And  the  I  ripple  washing  in  the  reeds.'  „          285 

And  the  I  glories  of  the  winter  moon.  „          360 

I  am  going  a  I  way  With  these  thou  seest —  „          424 

Down  that  I  water  opening  on  the  deep  „          466 

L  time  entrancement  held  me.  Lover's  Tale  i  626 
her  I  ringlets  moved.  Drooping  and  beaten  by  the 

breeze,  i>         . .  ""^ 

winds  Laid  the  I  night  in  silver  streaks  and  bars,  „        tt  112 

A I  loud  clash  of  rapid  marriage-bells.  „         iii  23 

I  knew  another,  not  so  I  ago,  „        i'o  262 

Who  let  her  in  ?  how  I  has  she  been  ?  Eizpah  13 

Revenge  ran  on  thro'  the  I  sea-lane  between.  The  Revenge  36 
Fur  Molly  the  I  un  she  walkt  awaay  wi'  a  hofficer 

lad.  Village  Wife  97 
Her  dear,  I,  lean,  little  arms  lying  out  on  the 

counterpane ;  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  70 

but  how  I,  O  Lord,  how  I !  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  124 

Eighteen  I  years  of  waste,  seven  in  your  Spain,  Columbus  36 

I  waterfalls  Pour'd  in  a  thunderless  plimge  V.  of  Maeldune  13 

starr'd  with  a  myriad  blossom  the  I  convolvulus  hung  ;  „            40 

And  nine  I  months  of  antenatal  gloom,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  8 
once  for  ten  I  weeks  I  tried  Your  table  of 

Pythagoras,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  14 

Ten  I  sweet  summer  days  ui)on  deck,  The  Wreck  64 

Ten  I  days  of  summer  and  sin —  >.          77 

'  Ten  I  sweet  summer  days '  of  fever,  „        147 

The  last  I  stripe  of  waning  crimson  gloom,  Ancient  Sage  221 

all  the  summer  I  we  roam'd  in  these  wild  woods  The  Flight  79 

now  thy  I  day's  work  hath  ceased,  Epit.  on  Stratford  2 

I  seed  the  beck  coomin'  down  Uke  a  I  black  snaake  i' 

the  snaw,  a,?"l^''^im 

Had  been  abroad  for  my  poor  health  so  I  The  KingHn. 

— and  there  she  paused.  And  I ;  »        335 

L  before  the  dawning.  Forlorn  54 

—the  crash  was  I  and  loud—  Happy  80 

Not  I  to  wait—  To  Map  Boyle  58 

While  the  I  day  of  knowledge  grows  and  warms.  Prog,  of  k>prtng  101 

Anon  from  out  the  I  ravine  below.  Death  of  CEnone  19 

By  the  I  torrent's  ever-deepen'd  roar,  ,,  85 
Sa  I  sticks  like  the  ivin  as  Z  as  I  lives  to  the 

owd  chuch  now,  Churchwarden,  etc.  15 

Long  (verb)     I  i  to  see  a  flower  so  before             May  Queen,  N.  ¥  s.E.  16 

sweeter  far  is  death  than  life  to  me  that  I  to  go.  „                      ?^'*V.« 

that's  aU,  and  I  for  rest ;  Grardmothet  99 

I I  to  prove  No  lapse  of  moons  In  Mem.  xxvtZ 
That  Ps  to  burst  a  frozen  bud  »  Ixxxtn  15 
1 1  to  creep  Into  some  still  cavern  deep,  Maud  II  iv  95 
a  sense  might  make  her  I  for  court  Marr.  of  Geramt  803 
L  for  my  hfe,  or  hunger  for  my  death,  Geraint  and  E.  81 
credulous  Of  what  they  I  for,  "    ,  r^  fc? 

I  To  have  thee  back  in  lusty  life  again,  PeUeas  and  h.  6^1 
Long-ann'd  To  meet  the  l-a  vines  with  grapes  To  E.  Fitzgerald  21 
Long-bearded    Stept  the  long-hair'd  l-h  solitary,  Enoch  Arden  637 

From  out  thereimder  came  an  ancient  man,  L-b,  Gareth  and  L.  241 

Long-betroth'd    Lovers  l-b  were  they  :  Lady  Clare  6 

Long-bounden    his  l-b  tongue  Was  loosen'd,  Enoch  Arden  M^ 

Long-buried    Like  that  l-b  body  of  the  king,  Aylmer  s  Fyddi 

Long-closeted    L-c  with  her  the  yestermom,  J'^'^f^.  ^'^  %^^ 

Long'd    Has  ever  truly  I  for  death.  Two  Voices  396 

Annie's  children  I  To  go  with  others,  Enoch  Arden  6bZ 

And  swore  he  I  at  college,  only  I,  Princess,  Pro.  158 

bird  of  passage  flying  south  but  I  To  follow :  „         itt  210 

I I  so  heartily  then  and  there  Maud  I  xni  15 
That  evermore  she  I  to  hide  herself,  Gareth  and  L.  Ill 
That  when  he  stopt  we  I  to  hurl  together,  Merlin  and  V.  420 
I  never  heard  his  voice  But  I  to  break  away.  Pdleas  and  E.  256 
Had  whatsoever  meat  he  I  for  served  Guinevere  265 
away  she  sail'd  with  her  loss  and  I  for  her  own  ;  The  Revenge  111 
till  we  Z  for  eternal  sleep.  ■^^??,''5  o5 

Long-enduring    Mourn  for  the  man  of  l-e  blood,  Ode  on  Well.  24 

What  l-e  hearts  could  do  In  that  world-earthquake,  „          132 


Longer 

Longer    the  I  night  is  near : 

That  he  had  lored  her  I  than  she  knew, 

So  she  rests  a  Uttle  I, 

If  she  sleeps  a  little  I, 

ripen'd  earlier,  and  her  life  Was  I ; 

I  last  but  a  moment  I. 

unto  I  heard  no  I  The  snowy-banded,  dilettante, 


420 


Look 


I 


Vision  of  Sin  196 

Enoch  Arden  455 

Sea  Dreams  299 

Princess  ii  155 

Spiteful  Letter  12 

Maud  I  viii  9 


'  I  lead  no  I ;  ride  thou  at  my  side  ;  Gareth  and  L.  1157 
but  in  scarce  I  time  Than  at  Caerleon  the  full-tided 

Usk,  Geraint  and  E.  115 

Clung  closer  to  us  for  a  i  term  Than  any  friend  Columbus  197 

Then  a  little  I  .  .  .  Forlorn  64 

Fell  on  a  shadow.  No  Z  a  shadow,  Merlin  and  the  G.  93 

And  can  no  I,  But  die  rejoicing,  „              111 

Paris,  no  I  beauteous  as  a  God,  Death  of  CEnone  25 

an  old  fane  No  I  sacred  to  the  Sun,  St.  Telemachus  7 

Doubt  no  I  that  the  Highest  is  the  wisest  Faith  1 

Longest    growing  I  by  the  meadow's  edge,  Geraint  and  E.  257 

The  I  lance  his  eyes  had  ever  seen,  Balin  and  Balan  411 

Draw  toward  the  long  frost  and  I  night,  A  Dedication  11 

Long-forgotten    Sxmg  by  a  l-f  mind.  In  Mem.  Ixxvii  12 

Long-haird    l-h  page  in  crimson  clad,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  22 

Stept  the  l-h  long-bearded  solitary,  Enoch  Arden  637 

Long-illumined    when  the  l-i  cities  flame,  Ode  on  Well.  228 

Longing  (part.)     ever  I  to  explain,  The  Brook  107 

Longing  (s)    (See  also  Love-longing)     Geraint  had  I 

in  him  evermore  Marr.  of  Geraint  394 

And  Enid  fell  in  Z  for  a  dress  „              630 

my  heart  Went  after  her  with  I :  Holy  Grail  583 

her  I  and  her  will  Was  toward  me  as  of  old  ;  „          590 

Love  and  L  dress  thy  deeds  in  light,  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  9 

Long-known    the  view  L-k  and  loved  by  me.  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  6 

Long-laid    l-l  galleries  past  a  hundred  doors  Princess  vi  375 

Long-lanced     The  l-l  battle  let  their  horses  run.  Com.  of  Arthur  104 

Long-leaved     in  the  stream  the  l-l  flowers  weep,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  10 

Long-limb'd    l-l  lad  that  had  a  Psyche  too  ;  Princess  ii  406 

Long-neck'd     From  the  l-n  geese  of  the  world  Maud  I  iv  52 

Long-pent    all  the  l-j>  stream  of  hfe  Day- Dm.,  Revival  15 

Long-pondering    Enoch  lay  l-p  on  his  plans  ;  Enoch  Arden  133 

Long-promised    I  go  On  that  l-p  visit  to  the  North.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  188 

Long-soonding    FuU  of  l-s  corridors  it  was.  Palace  of  Art  53 

Long-sufferance     Trying  his  truth  and  his  l-s,  Enoch  Arden  470 

Long-suffering    I  that  thought  myself  l-s,  Aylmer's  Field  753 

'  Full  of  compassion  and  mercy — Vs.'  Rizpah  63 

Suffering — 0  l-s — yes,  „        67 

Long-sweeping    those  l-s  beechen  boughs  Of  our 

New  Forest.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  112 

Long-tail'd     Like  l-t  birds  of  Paradise,  Day- Dm.,  Ep.  7 

Long-tormented    Thro'  the  l-t  air  Ode  on  Well.  128 

Long-vaulted    Far  over  heads  in  that  l-v  hall  Gareth  and  L.  319 

Long-windMl    her  father  came  across  With  some  l-w  tale,       The  Brook  109 

And  there  he  told  a  long  l-w  tale  „         138 

Long-wisb'd-for    Cahning  itself  to  the  l-w-f  end,  Mavd  I  xviii  5 

Long-withdrawn     Betwixt  the  black  fronts  Z-w  In  Mem.  cxix  6 

Look  (i)     Wherefore  those  dim  I's  of  thine,  Adeline  9 

Hence  that  I  and  smile  of  thine,  „      63 

He  thought  of  that  sharp  I,  mother.  May  Queen  15 

sons  inherit  us :  our  I's  are  strange :  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  73 

with  sick  and  scornful  I's  averse,  D.  of  F.  Women  101 

How  sweet  are  I's  that  ladies  bend  Sir  Galahad  13 

Hours,  when  the  Poet's  words  and  I's  Will  Water.  193 

their  eyes  Glaring,  and  passionate  I's,  Sea  Dreams  236 

A  liquid  {  on  Ida,  full  of  prayer.  Princess  iv  369 

This  /  of  quiet  flatters  thus  In  Mem.  x  10 

Treasuring  the  I  it  cannot  find,  „     xniii  19 

And  look  thy  I,  and  go  thy  way,  „        xlix  9 

The  voice  was  low,  the  I  was  briight ;  „      Ixix  15 

they  meet  thy  I  And  brighten  like  the  star  „     Con.  30 

her  I  Bright  for  aU  others,  Pdleas  and  E.  176 

large  light  eyes  and  her  gracious  I's,  Prog,  of  Spring  19 

Look  (verb)    (See  also  Looiik)    Shall  we  not  I  into 

the  laws  Of  life  and  death,  Sv^.  Confessions  172 

She  could  not  I  on  the  sweet  heaven,  Mariana  15 

How  could  1 1  upon  the  day  ?  Oriana  59 

I  should  I  like  a  lounJain  of  gold  The  Mermaid  18 


Look  (verb)  (continued)    I  in  at  the  gate  With  his  large 

calm  eyes  The  Mermaid  26 
the  sun  L's  thro'  in  his  sad  decline,  Adeline  13 
Or  only  I  across  the  lawn,  L  out  below  your  bower- 
eaves,  L  down,  and  let  your  blue  eyes  dawn  Margaret  65 
curse  is  on  her  if  she  stay  To  I  down  to  Gamelot.  L.  of  Shalott  ii  5 
With  a  glassy  countenance  Did  she  I  to  Camelot.  „  iv  14 
To  /  at  her  with  slight,  and  say  Mariana  in  the  S.  66 
To  I  into  her  eyes  and  say,  ,.  75 
L  up  thro'  night :  the  world  is  wide.  Two  Voices  24 
L  up,  the  fold  is  on  her  brow.  „  192 
L's  down  upon  the  viUage  spire  :  Miller's  D.  36 
I  knew  you  could  not  I  but  well ;  „  150 
L  thro'  mine  eyes  with  thine.  „  215 
L  thro'  my  veiy  soul  with  thine  !  „  218 
I,  the  sunset,  south  and  north,  „  241 
I  shall  I  upon  your  face  ;  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  38 
O  I !  the  sun  begins  to  lise,  „  Con.  49 
'  Come  here,  That  I  may  I  on  thee.'  D.  of  F.  Women  124 
What  else  was  left  ?  I  here  ! '  „  156 
'  Turn  and  I  on  me :  „  250 
He  cried,.'  L\  II'  Before  he  ceased  I  turn'd,  Gardener's  D.  121 
therefore  /  to  Dora  ;  she  is  well  To  Z  to  ;  Dora  15 
i  to  it ;  Consider,  William  :  „  28 
for  you  may  I  on  me.  And  in  your  looking  St.  S.  Stylites  140 
dipt  and  rose,  And  turn'd  to  Z  at  her.  Talking  Oak  132 
L  further  thro'  the  chace,  „          246 

0  might  it  come  like  one  that  l's  content.  Love  and  Duty  93 
Did  1 Z  on  great  Orion  sloping  slowly  to  the  West.  Locksley  Hall  8 
whom  to  I  at  was  to  love.  „  72 
Underneath  the  light  he  l's  at,  „  116 
No  eye  Z  down,  she  passing  ;  Godiva  40 
Nor  Z  with  that  too-earnest  eye —  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  18 
Go,  Z  in  any  glass  anil  say,  „  Moral  3 
I Z  at  all  things  as  they  are,  IVill  Water.  71 
And  he  came  to  I  upon  her,  L.  of  Burleigh  93 
As  l's  a  father  on  the  things  Of  his  dead  son,  The  Letters  23 
'■  O  !  we  two  as  well  can  I  Whited  thought  Vision  of  Sin  115 
know  I  That  I  shall  Z  upon  your  face  no  more.' 

'  Well  then,'  said  Enoch,  '  I  shall  Z  on  youre.  Enoch  Arden  212 

L  to  the  babes,  and  till  I  come  again  „          219 

Cared  not  to  I  on  any  human  face,  „          282 

'  I  cannot  Z  you  in  the  face  I  seem  so  foolish  „          315 

So  much  to  Z  to — such  a  change —  „          461 

'  If  I  might  Z  on  her  sweet  face  again  „          718 

our  pride  L's  only  for  a  moment  whole  Aylmer's  Field  2 

1  upon  her  As  on  a  kind  of  paragon  ;  Princess  i  154 
L,  our  hall !  Our  statues  ! —  „  ii  75 
since  to  Z  on  noble  fonns  Makes  noble  „  86 
Z  !  for  such  are  these  and  1.'  „  268 
blessing  those  that  Z  on  them.  „  Hi  256 
you  Z  well  too  in  your  woman's  dress  :  „  iv  529 
Begone :  we  will  not  Z  upon  you  more.  „  547 
'i.  He  has  been  among  his  shadows.'  „  »  32 
Z  up :  be  comforted :  „  66 
L  up,  and  let  thy  nature  strike  on  mine,  „  vii  351 
'  L  there,  a  garden  ! '  said  my  coUege  friend,  „  Con.  49 
strong  on  his  legs,  he  l's  Uke  a  man.  Grandmother  2 
Why  do  you  Z  at  me,  Annie  ?  „  17 
To  I  on  her  that  loves  him  well,  In  Mem.  viii  2 
And  I  on  Spirits  breathed  away,  „  xl  2 
And  Z  thy  look,  and  go  thy  way,  „  xlix  9 
The  dead  shall  Z  me  thro'  and  thro'.  „  Ii  12 
Dost  thou  Z  back  on  what  hath  been,  „  Ixiv  1 
L's  thy  fair  face  and  makes  it  still.  „  Ixx  16 
She  did  but  Z  thro'  dimmer  eyes  ;  „  cxxv  6 
eye  to  eye,  shall  Z  On  knowledge  ;  „  Con.  129 
( L  at  it)  pricking  a  cockney  ear.  Maud  I  x22 
L,  a  horse  at  the  door,  „  xii  29 
l's  Upon  Maud's  own  gai-den-gate  :  „  xiv  15 
That  I  dare  to  Z  her  way  ;  „  xvill 
we  I  at  him,  And  find  nor  face  nor  bearing.  Com.  of  Arthur  70 
beard  That  l's  as  white  as  utter  truth,  Gareth  and  L.  281 
Kay  the  seneschal  L  to  thy  wants,  „  434 
L  therefore  when  he  calls  for  this  in  hall,  „           583 


J 


Look 


421 


Look'd-Lookt 


Look  (verb)  (continued)    I  who  comes  behind,' 
(repeat) 
Shalt  not  once  dare  to  I  him  in  the  face.' 
and  I  thou  to  thyself  : 
L  on  it,  child,  and  tell  me  if  ye  know  it.' 
And  once  again  she  rose  to  2  at  it, 
Eat !     L  yourself.    Grood  luck  had  your  good  man, 
Until  my  lord  arise  and  I  upon  me  ?  ' 
I  will  not  I  at  wine  until  I  die.' 
came  The  King's  own  leech  to  I  into  his  hurt ; 


Gareth  and  L.  752, 1210 
782 
920 
Marr.  of  Geraint  684 
Geraint  and  E.  387 
617 
650 
667 
923 


L  to  the  cave 

these  be  fancies  of  the  churl,  L  to  thy  woodcraft,' 

Squire  had  loosed  them,  '  Goodly ! — I ! 

How  hard  you  I  and  how  denyingly ! 

A  square  of  text  that  I's  a  little  blot, 

For  I  upon  his  face ! — but  if  he  sinn'd, 

A  sight  ye  love  to  I  on.' 

wherefore  would  ye  I  On  this  proud  fellow  again, 

and  she,  L  how  she  sleeps — 

'  See  !  I  at  mine !  but  wilt  thou  fight 

'  L,  He  haunts  me — I  cannot  breathe — 

ye  I  amazed,  Not  knowing  they  were  lost 

cried  the  Breton, '  L,  her  hand  is  red ! 

this  I  gave  thee,  Z,  Is  all  as  cool  and  white 

Art  thou  King  ?— i  to  thy  life ! ' 

not  I  up,  or  half-despised  the  height 

face  of  old  ghosts  L  in  upon  the  battle  ; 

I  at  them.  You  lose  yourself  in  utter  ignorance  ; 

Of  eyes  too  weak  to  I  upon  the  light ; 

And  could  1 1  upon  her  tearful  eyes  ? 

would  not  I  at  her — No  not  for  months  : 

an'  I's  so  wan  an'  so  white  : 

I  had  but  to  Z  in  his  face. 

he  was  fear'd  to  Z  at  me  now. 

L  at  the  cloaths  on  'er  back. 

For  I  you  here — the  shadows  are  too  deep, 

I's  at  it,  and  says,  '  Good !  very  like  ! 

that  one  light  no  man  can  I  upon, 

I  cannot  laud  this  life,  it  Vs  so  dark  : 

I  yonder,'  he  cried,  '  a  sail ' 

I  shall  I  on  the  child  again. 

whence,  if  thou  L  higher. 

But  I,  the  morning  grows  apace, 

till  the  Lion  I  no  larger  than  the  Cat, 

O  heart,  I  down  and  up  Serene, 

from  thine  own  To  that  which  I's  like  rest. 

Why  do  you  I  so  gravely  at  the  tower  ? 

but  you  I  so  kind  That  you  will 

L,  the  sun  has  risen  To  flame  along  another  dreary 

day. 
L,  in  their  deep  double  shadow 
morning  that  Is  so  bright  from  afar ! 
L,  he  stands.  Trunk  and  bough, 
L  how  the  living  pulse  of  Alia  beats 
L  to  your  butts,  and  take  good  aims ! 


Balin  and  Balan  306 

308 

576 

Merlin  and  V.  338 

671 

761 

Lancelot  and  E.  83 

1064 

1255 

Pelleas  and  E.  127 

226 

Last  Tournament  41 

412 

415 

454 

Guinevere  643 

Pass,  of  Arthur  104 

Lover's  Tale  i  78 

614 

735 

iv  26 

First  Qttarrel  2 

16 

38 

NoHh.  Cobbler  109 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)1GS 

135 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  37 

To  W.  H.  Brookfidd  12 

The  Wreck  121 

124 

Ancient  Sage  281 

The  Flight  93 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  112 

Early  Spring  27 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  6 

The  Sing  80 

Eomney's  R.  21 


Look'd-Lobkt    (See  also  Loook'd-Loookt) 

look'd  sad  and  strange  : 
look'd  to  shame  The  hollow-vaulted  dark. 
Hast  thou  look'd  upon  the  breath  Of  the  lilies 
when  first  I  look'd  upon  your  face. 
She  look'd  down  to  Camelot. 
I  might  have  look'd  a  little  higher  ; 
And  turning  look'd  upon  your  face, 
I  look'd  athwart  the  bm-ning  drouth 
I  look'd  And  listen'd,  the  full-flowing  river 
when  I  look'd,  Paris  had  raised  his  arm. 
He  look'd  so  grand  when  he  was  dead, 
slept  St.  Cecily  ;  An  angel  look'd  at  her. 
her  face  Glow'd,  as  I  look'd  at  her. 
I  have  not  look'd  upon  you  nigh, 
when  I  look'd  again,  behold  an  arm, 
this  is  also  true,  that,  long  before  I  look'd  upon  her, 
She  look'd  :  but  all  Suffused  with  blushes — 


57 

Parnassus  13 

By  an  Evolution.  10 

The  Oak  13 

Akbar's  Dream  41 

Riflemen  form  !  16 


broken  sheds 

Mariana  5 

Arabian  Nights  125 

Adeline  36 

Sonnet  To 9 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  41 

Miller's  D.  140 

157 

Fatima  13 

(Enone67 

„       189 

The  Sisters  32 

Palace  of  Art  100 

D.  of  F.  Women  240 

To  J.  S.  33 

M.  d' Arthur  158 

Gardener's  D.  62 

153 


He  often  look'd  at  them.  And  often  thought, 
more  he  look'd  at  her  The  less  he  liked  her ; 


Dora  3 
.,  34 


Look'd-Lookt  (continued)    Mary  sat  And  look'd  with  tears  upon 

her  boy,  "            Dora  57 

I  look'd  at  him  with  joy :  Talking  Oak  106 

She  look'd  with  discontent.  „          116 

Look'd  down,  half -pleased,  half-frighten'd,  Amphion  54 

She  look'd  into  Lord  Ronald's  eyes,  Lady  Clare  79 

Then  they  look'd  at  him  they  hated.  The  Captain  37 

And  he  look'd  at  her  and  said,  L.  of  Burleigh  94 
She  look'd  so  lovely,  as  she  sway'd                              Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  40 

things  Of  his  dead  son,  I  look'd  on  these.  The  Letters  24 

then  I  look'd  up  toward  a  mountain-tract,  Vision  of  Sin  46 

And  all  men  look'd  upon  him  favourably :  Enoch  Arden  56 

Philip  look'd,  And  in  their  eyes  and  faces  „             72 

(Since  Enoch  left  he  had  not  look'd  upon  her),  „          273 

silent,  tho'  he  often  look'd  his  wish ;  „          482 

he  look'd  up.     There  stood  a  maiden  near.  The  Brook  204 

and  here  he  look'd  so  self-perplext,  „        213 

What  look'd  a  flight  of  fairy  arrows  Aylmer's  Field  94 

One  look'd  all  rosetree,  and  another  wore  „          157 

And  after  look'd  into  yourself,  „          312 

Half-canonized  by  all  that  look'd  on  her,  Princess  i  23 

hiUs,  that  look'd  across  a  land  of  hope,  „          169 

And  every  face  she  look'd  on  justify  it)  „       v  134 

then  once  more  she  look'd  at  my  pale  face  :  „      vi  115 

Look'd  up,  and  rising  slowly  from  me,  „          151 

do\vn  she  look'd  At  the  sirm'd  man  sideways,  „          156 

with  shut  eyes  I  lay  Listening  ;  then  look'd.  „     vii  224 

Who  look'd  all  native  to  her  place,  „          323 

and  look'd  the  thing  that  he  meant ;  Grandmother  45 

I  look'd  at  the  still  little  body —  „            66 

look'd  the  Lombard  piles  ;  The  Daisy  54 

And  look'd  at  by  the  silent  stars  :  Lit.  Squabbles  4 

That  ever  look'd  with  human  eyes.  In  Mem.  Ivii  12 

He  look'd  upon  my  crown  and  smiled  :  „        Ixix  16 

I  look'd  on  these  and  thought  of  thee  „  xevii  6 
and  thee  mine  eyes  Have  look'd  on  :  if  they  look'd 

in  vain,  „          cix  22 

And  how  she  look'd,  and  what  he  said,  „       Con.  99 

The  sun  look'd  out  with  a  smile  Maud  I  ix  3 

I  look'd,  and  round,  all  round  the  house  „     xiv  33 

To  have  look'd,  tho'  but  in  a  dream,  upon  eyes  „  ///  vi  16 

and  look'd  no  more — But  felt  his  young  heart  Gareth  and  L.  321 

fire,  That  lookt  half-dead,  brake  bright,  „            685 

lord  Now  look'd  at  one  and  now  at  other,  „            869 

and  Gareth  lookt  and  read — In  letters  „          1201 

'  God  wot,  I  never  look'd  upon  the  face,  „  1333 
He  look'd  and  saw  that  all  was  ruinous.  Marr.  of  Geraint  315 
dress  that  now  she  look'd  on  to  the  dress  She 

look'd  on  ere  the  coming  of  Geraint.  „              613 

still  she  look'd,  and  still  the  terror  grew  „              615 

Enid  look'd,  but  all  confused  at  first,  „  685 
not  to  goodly  hill  or  yellow  sea  Look'd  the  fair 

Queen,  „              831 

They  rode  so  slowly  and  they  look'd  so  pale,  Geraint  and  E.  35 

he  tum'd  and  look'd  as  keenly  at  her  „          430 

And  Geraint  look'd  and  was  not  satisfied.  „          435 

Once  she  look'd  back,  and  when  she  saw  him  ride  „          441 

By  having  look'd  too  much  thro'  alien  eyes,  „  892 
have  ye  look'd  At  Edym  ?  have  ye  seen  how  nobly 

changed  ?  „          896 

He  look'd  and  foimd  them  wanting ;  „          935 

It  look'd  a  tower  of  ivied  masonwork,  Merlin  and  V.  4 

when  I  look'd,  and  saw  you  following  still,  „          299 

Merlin  look'd  and  half  believed  her  tme,  „  400 
Won  by  the  mellow  voice  before  she  look'd,              Lancelot  and  E.  243 

He  look'd,  and  more  amazed  Than  if  seven  men  „            350 

Lancelot  look'd  and  was  perplext  in  mind,  „            838 

wherein  she  deem'd  she  looVd  her  best,  „            907 

and  look'd  Down  on  his  helm,  „            981 

whence  the  King  Look'd  up,  calling  aloud.  Holy  Grail  219 
large  her  violet  eyes  look'd,  and  her  bloom  A  rosy 

dawn  Pelleas  and  E.  71 

tum'd  the  lady  round  And  look'd  upon  her  people  ;  „            92 

Pelleas  look'd  Noble  among  the  noble,  „          151 

The  Queen  Look'd  hard  upon  her  lover,  „         605 


Look'd-Lookt 


422 


Loosed 


Look'd-Lookt  {continued)    He  look'd  but  once,  and 

vail'd  his  eyes  Last  Tournament  150 

that  desert  lodge  to  Tristram  lookt  So  sweet,  „              387 

look'd  and  saw  The  great  Queen's  bower  was  dark, —  „              757 

Hliich  when  she  he^,  the  Queen  look'd  up,  Guinevere  164 

the  pale  Queen  look'd  up  and  answer'd  her,  „        327 

she  look'd  and  saw  The  novice,  weeping,  „        663 
of  those  who  falling  do>vn  Look'd  up  for  heaven,      Pass,  of  Arthur  112 

But  when  I  look'd  again,  behold  an  arm,  „            326 

A  stately  moimtain  nymph  she  look'd  !  Lover's  Tale  i  359 

bridge  is  there,  that,  look'd  at  from  beneath  Seems  „            375 

looking  down  On  all  that  had  look'd  down  on  us  ;  „            388 

Look'd  forth  the  summit  and  the  pinnacles  „          ii  81 

All  that  look'd  on  her  had  pronoimced  her  dead.  „          iv  35 

look'd  No  less  than  one  divine  apology.  „            168 

look'd,  as  he  is  like  to  prove,  „            314 

but  he  looked  at  me  sidelong  and  shy.  First  Quarrel  35 

the  Lord  has  look'd  into  my  care,  Rizpah  75 

soldiers  looked  down  from  their  decks  and  laugh'd.  The  Revenge  37 

an  niver  lookt  arter  the  land —  Village  Wife  25 
can  well  believe,  for  he  look'd  so  coarse  and 

so  red.  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  7 

Each  of  them  look'd  like  a  king,  V.  of  Maeldune  3 

Down  we  look'd :  what  a  garden !  „            78 

Folded  her  lion  paws,  and  look'd  to  Thebes.  Tiresias  149 

He  look'd  at  it  coldly,  and  said  The  Wreck  34 

and  I  look'd  at  him,  first,  askance.  With  pity —  „          43 

baby-girl,  that  had  never  look'd  on  the  light :  Despair  71 

yet  he  look'd  beyond  the  grave,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  60 

look'd  the  twin  of  heathen  hate.  „              86 
You  came,  and  looT^d  and  loved  the  view              Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  5 

Then  he  look'd  at  the  host  that  had  halted  Heavy  Brigade  7 

and  a  sudden  face  Look'd  in  upon  me  The  Ring  420 

When  I  look'd  at  the  bracken  so  bright  June  Bracken,  etc.  3 

Looketh    moon  cometh.  And  I  down  alone.  Claribel  14 

Lookblg    She,  I  thro'  and  thro'  me  Lilian  10 

But,  I  fixedly  the  while,  Madeline  39 

Then  I  as  'twere  in  a  glass,  A  Character  10 

All  I  up  for  the  love  of  me.  The  Mermaid  51 

All  I  down  for  the  love  of  me.  „            55 

As  a  Naiad  in  a  well,  L  at  the  set  of  day,  Adeline  17 

Sang  I  thro'  his  prison  bars  ?  Margaret  35 

'  But  I  upward,  full  of  grace.  Two  Voices  223 

Grow,  live,  die  I  on  his  face,  Fatima  41 
I  over  wasted  lands.                                                  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  114 

And  I  wistfully  with  wide  blue  eyes  M.  d' Arthur  169 

And  in  your  I  you  may  kneel  to  God.  St.  S.  Stylites  141 

I  ancient  kindness  on  thy  pain.  Locksley  Hall  85 

Brown,  I  hardly  human,  Enoch  Arden  638 

Then  I  at  her ;  '  Too  happy,  fresh  and  fair.  The  Brook  217 

In  I  on  the  happy  Autumn-fields,  Princess  iv  42 

stood  The  placid  marble  Muses,  I  peace.  „            489 

And  I  back  to  whence  I  came.  In  Mem.  xxiii  7 

Sat  silent,  I  each  at  each.  „        xxx  12 

Lest  life  should  fail  in  I  back.  „          xlvi  4 

Now  I  to  some  settled  end,  „     Ixxxv  97 
And   Z  to  the  South,  and  fed  With  honey'd 

rain  Maud  I  xviii  20 

L,  tbinkii^  of  all  I  have  lost ;  „         II  ii  46 

Arthur,  I  downward  as  he  past.  Com.  of  Arthur  55 

slowly  spake  the  mother  I  at  him,  Gareth  and  L.  151 

Gareth  I  after  said, '  My  men,  „            296 

Not  turning  round,  nor  I  at  him,  Marr.  of  Geraint  270 

And  I  round  he  saw  not  Enid  there,  „              506 

Then  rose  Limours,  and  I  at  his  feet,  Geraint  and  E.  302 

then  he  spoke  and  said.  Not  I  at  her,  Ma-lin  and  V.  247 

•  I  once  was  I  for  a  magic  weed,  „          471 

/  at  her.  Full  courtly,  yet  not  falsely,  Lancelot  and  E.  235 

Lancelot  knew  that  she  was  I  at  him.  „            985 

I  often  from  his  face  who  read  „          1285 

/  up.  Behold,  the  enchanted  towers  of  Carbonek,  Holy  Grail  812 

M  he  lay  At  random  I  over  the  brown  earth  Pelleas  and  E.  32 

80  that  his  eyes  were  dazzled  I  at  it.  „            36 

Gawain,  /  at  the  villainy  done,  „          282 

S»t  tbdr  greftt  umpire,  I  o'er  the  lists.  Last  Toun^ment  159 


Looking  (continued)    Here  I  down  on  thine  polluted. 

And  I  wistfully  with  wide  blue  eyes 

L  on  her  that  brought  him  to  the  light : 

We  often  paused,  and,  I  back, 

I  down  On  all  that  had  look'd  down  on  us  ; 

I  roxmd  upon  his  tearful  friends. 

And  I  as  much  lovelier  as  herself 

in  the  chapel  there  I  over  the  sand  ? 

your  know-all  chapel  too  I  over  the  sand. 

I  still  as  if  she  smiled, 

I  upward  to  the  practised  hustings-liar ; 

but  wool's  I  oop  ony  how. 

With  farther  I's  on. 
Lookt    See  Look'd 
Loom  (s)    She  left  the  web,  she  left  the  I, 

A  present,  a  great  labour  of  the  I ; 

rent  The  wonder  of  the  I  thro'  warp  and  woof 

L  and  wheel  and  enginery, 

Display'd  a  splendid  silk  of  foreign  I, 

Thy  presence  in  the  silk  of  sumptuous  I's  ; 
Loom  (verb)    smoke  go  up  thro'  which  I Z  to  her 

Makes  former  gladness  I  so  great  ? 

overheated  language  I  Larger  than  the  Lion, — 
Looming    To  sail  with  Arthur  under  I  shores, 

A I  bastion  fringed  with  fire. 

a  phantom  king.  Now  I,  and  now  lost ; 
Loomp  (lump)    the  poor  in  a  Z  is  bad. 

ilui'  'e  digg'd  up  a  i!  i'  the  land 
Loon    Dish-washer  and  broach-turner,  I ! — 
Loo5k  (look)     Dubbut  I  at  the  waaste  : 

an'  fuzz,  an'  I  at  it  now — 

L  'ow  quoloty  smoiles 

L  thou  theer  wheer  Wrigglesby  beck  cooms  out 

I'll  I  my  hennemy  strait  i'  the  faace, 

an'  let  ma  I  at  'im  then, 

and  I  thruf  Maddison's  gaate ' 

Fur  a  cat  may  Z  at  a  king 
Loodk'd-Loookt  (look'd-Iookt)    I  loook'd  cock-eyed  at 
my  noase 

an'  Sally  looiJkt  up  an'  she  said. 

But  'e  niver  loollkt  ower  a  bill, 

ghoast  i'  the  derk,  fur  it  loookt  sa  white. 

But  whiniver  I  loooked  i'  the  glass 

An'  I  loookt  out  wonst  at  the  night. 
Loop    (See  also  Biver-Ioop)    a  river  Runs  in  three 
I's  about  her  living-place  ; 

Then  to  the  shore  of  one  of  those  long  I's 

aU  in  I's  and  links  among  the  dales 

Thro'  knots  and  I's  and  folds  innumerable 
Loophole    death  from  the  I's  around. 
Looping    great  fimereal  curtains,  I  down. 
Loose  (adj.)    He  dodged  me  with  a  long  and  I  account. 

I  found  a  hard  friend  in  hLs  I  accounts,  A  I  one 

torn  raiment  and  I  hair, 

one  night  I  cooms  'oam  like  a  bull  gotten  I  at 
a  f  aair. 
Loose  (verb)    that  she  would  I  The  people  : 

Let  me  I  thy  tongue  with  wine : 

'  Fear  not  thou  to  I  thy  tongue  ; 

when  they  ran  To  I  him  at  the  stables, 

/  A  flying  charm  of  blushes  o'er  this  cheek, 

growing  commerce  I  her  latest  chain, 

— dismount  and  I  their  casques 

I  thy  tongue,  and  let  me  know.' 

I  the  bond,  and  go.' 

Would  I  him  from  his  hold  ; 

Shall  we  hold  them  ?  shall  we  I  them  ? 
Loosed    She  I  the  chain,  and  down  she  lay ; 

And  I  the  shatter'd  casque, 

I  their  sweating  horses  from  the  yoke, 

and  I  him  from  his  vow. 

Sir  Gareth  I  A  cloak  that  dropt 

Gareth  I  the  stone  From  off  his  neck, 

I  his  bonds  and  on  free  feet  Set  him, 

he  Z  a  mighty  purse,  Hung  at  his  belt. 


Guinevere  555] 
Pass,  of  Arthur  337] 
Lover's  Tale  i  1601 
329 
387| 
792| 
iv  287] 
Despair  1 
„      94 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  35 
123 
Church-warden,  etc.  6 
Miller's  D.  231 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  37 

Princess  i  44 

62 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  15 

Geraint  and  E.  687 

Ancient  Sage  266 

Princess  v  130 

In  Mem.  xxiv  10 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  113 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  17 

In  Mem.  xv  20 

Com.  of  Arthur  431 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  48 

Village  Wife  48 

Gareth  and  L.  770 1 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  371 

38] 

"    N.S.5Z 

North.  Cobbler  14 

73 

Spinster's  S's. 

34 

NoHh.  Cobbler  26 


Village  Wife  51 

Spinster's  S's. 
Owd  Rod  39 

Gareth  and  L.  612 

Lancelot  and  E.\t 

Def.  of  Lucknow  79 
Lover's  Tale  iv  214 
Sea  Dreams  \A 
16 
Gareth  and  L.  12 


North.  Cobbler'. 
Godiva  37 
Vision  of  Sin  i 

Aylmer's  Field  12fl 
Princess  ii  42" 
Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  33i 
Balin  and  Balan  573 
Pelleas  and  E.  60 
To  the  Queen  iill" 
Ancient  Sage  118 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  118 
L.  of  Shalott  iv  16j 
M.  d' Arthur  2091 
Spec,  of  Iliad  I 
Gareth  and  L.  53' 


Geraint  and  E. 


Loosed 


423 


Lord 


Loosed  (continued)    I  in  words  of  sudden  fire  the  wrath    Geraint  and  E.  106 

I  the  fastenings  of  his  arms,  „            511 

And  when  the  Squire  had  I  them,  Balin  and  Balan  575 

our  bond  Had  best  be  I  for  ever  :  Merlin  and  V.  342 

Merlin  I  his  hand  from  hers  and  said,  „            356 

All  ears  were  prick'd  at  once,  all  tongues  were  I :     Lancelot  and  E.  724 

Because  he  had  not  I  it  from  his  helm,  „              809 

entering,  I  and  let  him  go.'  Holy  Grail  698 

Pelleas  rose,  And  I  his  horse,  Pdleas  and  E.  61 

Forth  spranig  Gawain,  and  I  him  from  his  bonds,  „          315 

and  her  heart  was  I  Within  her,  Guinevere  667 

And  I  the  shatter'd  casque,  Pass,  of  Arthur  377 

L  from  their  simple  thrall  they  had  flow'd  abroad,      Lover's  Tale  i  703 

/  My  captives,  feed  the  rebels  of  the  crown,  Columbus  130 

mortal  limit  of  the  Self  was  I,  Ancient  Sage  232 

Loosen    I's  from  the  lip  Short  swallow-flights  In  Mem.  xlviii  14 

/,  stone  from  stone,  All  my  fair  work  ;  Akbar's  Dream  188 

Loosen'd    Ids  long-bounden  to"ngue  Was  I,  Enoch  .irden  645 

And  shake  the  darkness  from  their  I  manes,  Tithonus  41 

The  team  is  I  from  the  wain,  In  Mem.  cxxi  5 

skirts  are  I  bv  the  breaking  storm,  Geraint  and  E.  4&Q 

Had  I  from  the  mountain.  Lover's  Tale  ii  46 

She  comes  !    The  I  rivulets  run  ;  Prog,  of  Spring  9 

Loosener    fierce  or  careless  I's  of  the  faith,  To  the  Queen  ii  52 

Looser    and  turning,  wound  Her  I  hair  in  braid.  Gardener's  D.  158 

Loov  (love)     an'  the  I  o'  God  fur  men,  North.  Cobbler  55 

I  'a  gotten  to  I  'im  agean  „            96 

L's  'im,  an'  roobs  'im,  an'  doosts  'im,  „            98 

I  l's  tha  to  maake  thysen  'appy.  Spinster's  S's.  57 

Loove  (love)    To  I  an'  obaay  the  Tommies !  „              96 

Loov'd  (loved)    fur  I Z  'er  as  well  as  afoor.  North.  Cobbler  60 

Loovin'  (loving)    '  A  faaithful  an'  I  wife  ! '  Spinster's  S's.  72 

Lop     His  wonted  glebe,  or  l's  the  glades  ;  In  Mem.  ci  22 

Who  l's  the  moulder'd  branch  away.  Hands  all  Round  8 

Lopping     L  away  of  the  limb  by  the  pitiful-pitiless 

knife,—  Def.  of  Lucknow  85 
Lord  (8)    (See  also  Liege-lord,  Pheasant-lord)    My 

i,  if  80  it  be  Thy  will.'  Supp.  Confessions  106 

O  hither,  come  hither,  and  be  our  l's,  Sea- Fairies  32 

'  L,  how  long  shall  these  things  be  ?  Poland  9 

Knight  and  biu^her,  I  and  dame,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  43 

'  Omega  !  thou  art  L,'  they  said,  Two  Voices  278 
L  over  Nature,  L  of  the  visible  earth,  L  of  the 

senses  five  ;  Palace  of  Art  179 

fall'n  in  Lyonnesse  about  their  L,  M.  d' Arthur  4 

What  record,  or  what  relic  of  my  I  „          98 

Such  a  I  is  Love,  Gardener's  D.  57 

by  the  L  that  made  me,  you  shall  pack,  Dora  31 

Have  mercy,  L,  and  take  away  my  sin.  St.  S.  Stylites  8 

0  take  the  meaning,  L:  „            21 

O  L,  L,  Thou  knowest  I  bore  this  better  „            27 

Bethink  thee,  L,  while  thou  and  all  the  saints  „          105 

L,  thou  knowest  what  a  man  I  am  ;  „           121 

O  L,  Aid  all  this  foolish  people  ;  „          222 

It  may  be  my  I  is  weary,  Locksley  Hall  53 

She  sought  her  I,  and  found  him,  Godiva  16 

robed  and  crown'd,  To  meet  her  /,  „      78 
How  say  you  ?  we  have  slept,  my  Vs.                       Day-Dm.,  Revival  21 

My  I,  and  shall  we  pass  the  bill  „              27 

That  lead  me  to  my  L  :  St.  Agnes'  Eve  8 

Break  up  the  heavens,  O  i !  „            21 

Ancient  homes  of  I  and  lady,  L.  of  Burleigh  31 

Not  a  Hn  all  the  country  Is  so  great  a  i  „            59 

'  It  is  no  wonder,'  said  the  l's,  Beggar  Maid  7 

L's  of  his  house  and  of  his  mill  Enoch  Arden  351 

reigning  in  his  place,  L  of  his  rights  „          764 

'  After  the  L  has  call'd  me  she  shall  know,  „          810 

Were  he  I  of  this.  Why  twenty  boys  and  girls  Aylmer's  Field  370 

And  laughter  to  their  l's :  „            498 

There  the  manorial  I  too  curiously  Raking  „            513 

came  a  i  in  no  wise  like  to  Baal.  „            647 

thy  brother  man,  the  L  from  Heaven,  „            667 

the  light  yoke  of  that  L  of  love,  „            708 

scowl'd  At  their  great  I.  „            725 

made  Their  own  traditions  God,  and  slew  the  L,  „            795 


Lord  (s)  (cotUimied)    And  her  the  Z  of  all  the  landscape 

round  Aylmer's  Field  815 

Remembering  her  dear  L  who  died  for  all.  Sea  Dreams  47 

But  honeying  at  the  whisper  ot  al;                             Princess,  Pro.  115 

with  those  self-styled  our  l's  ally  Your  fortunes,  „  H  65 

the  L  be  gracious  to  me !     A  plot,  „  191 

make  all  women  kick  against  their  L's  „  iv  412 

The  lifting  of  whose  eyelash  is  my  I,  „  v  140 

But  overborne  by  all  his  bearded  l's  „  356 

I  of  the  ringing  lists,  „  502 

and  the  great  l's  out  and  in,  „  vi  382 

A  Z  of  fat  prize-oxen  and  of  sheep,  „  Con.  86 

Mt  L's,  we  heard  you  speak  :  Third  of  Feb.  1 

It  was  our  ancient  privilege,  my  L's,  „  5 

my  L's,  not  well :  there  Ls  a  higher  law.  „  12 

my  L's,  you  make  the  people  muse  „  31 
And  praise  the  invisible  universal  L,  Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  3 
thou,  O  L,  art  more  than  they.                                       In  Mem.,  Pro.  20 

And  not  from  man,  O  L,  to  thee.  „  36 

her  future  L  Was  drown'd  in  passing  thro'  tlie  ford,  „  vi  38 

A  Z  of  large  experience,  „  xlii  7 

Procuress  to  the  L's  of  Hell.  „  UH  16 

To  what  I  feel  is  i  of  all,  „  Iv  19 

On  souls,  the  lesser  l's  of  doom.  „  exii  8 

Love  is  and  was  my  L  and  King,  „  cxxvi  1 

Love  is  and  was  my  King  and  L,  „  5 

old  man,  now  I  of  the  broad  estate  and  the  Hall,  Mavd  7  1 19 

eft  was  of  old  the  L  and  Master  of  Earth,  „  iv  31 

This  new-made  I,  whose  splendour  plucks  „  xZ 

To  a  Z,  a  captain,  a  padded  shape,                         .  „  29 

Go  back,  my  I,  across  the  moor,  „  xii  31 

L  of  the  pulse  that  is  Z  of  her  breast,  „  xvi  13 

What,  if  she  be  fasten'd  to  this  fool  I,  „  24 

He  came  with  the  babe-faced  I ;  „  II  i  13 

And  another,  a  Z  of  all  things,  praying  „  v  32 
L's  and  Barons  of  his  realm  Flash'd  forth                    Com.  of  Arthur  65 

make  myself  in  mine  own  realm  Victor  and  I.  „  90 

your  l's  stir  up  the  heat  of  war,  „  169 

l's  Of  that  fierce  day  were  as  the  l's  „  215 

the  l's  Have  foughten  like  wild  beasts  „  225 

but  after,  the  great  l's  Banded,  „  236 

Hath  power  to  walk  the  waters  like  our  L.  „  294 

'  King  and  my  I,  I  love  thee  to  the  death  !  '  „  470 

L's  from  Rome  before  the  portal  stood,                     ■  „  477 

at  the  banquet  those  great  L's  from  Rome,  „  504 

so  those  great  l's  Drew  back  in  wrath,  „  513 
crying  '  Let  us  go  no  further,  I.                                    Gareth  and  L.  198 

'  L,  we  have  heard  from  our  wise  man  „  201 

'  L,  there  is  no  such  city  anywhere,  „  206 

'  L,  the  gateway  is  alive.'  „  235 

reft  From  my  dead  I  a  field  with  violence  :  „  335 

my  I,  The  field  was  pleasant  in  my  husband's  eye.'  „  341 

thine  own  hand  thou  slewest  my  dear  I,  „  352 

The  woman  loves  her  I.  „  372 

Dehvering,  that  his  I,  the  vassal  king,  „  391 

The  L  for  half  a  league.  „  596 

Sweet  I,  how  like  a  noble  knight  he  talks  !  „  777 

'  They  have  bound  my  I  to  cast  him  in  the  mere.'  „  803 

But  an  this  I  will  jdeld  us  harbourage,  „  844 

the  I  Now  look'd  at  one  and  now  at  other,  „  868 

the  I  whose  life  he  saved  Had,  „  888 

'  Thou  hast  made  us  l's,  and  canst  not  put  us  down  ! '  „  1132 

Good  I,  how  sweetly  smells  the  honeysuckle  „  1287 

ramp  and  roar  at  leaving  of  your  I ! —  „  1307 
ever  yet  was  wife  True  to  her  I,                                 Mart,  of  Geraint  47 

I  cannot  love  my  I  and  not  his  name.  „  92 

Than  that  my  I  thro'  me  should  suffer  shame.  „  101 

see  my  dear  I  wounded  in  the  strife,  „  103 
'  Smile  and  we  smile,  the  l's  of  many  lands  ;  Frown 

and  we  smile,  the  l's  of  our  own  hands  ;  „  353 

l's  and  ladies  of  the  high  court  went  „  662 
save  her  dear  I  whole  from  any  wound.                        Geraint  and  E.  45 

'  I  will  go  back  a  little  to  my  I,  „  65 

That  that  my  I  should  suffer  loss  or  shame.'  „  69 

'  My  I,  I  saw  three  bandits  by  the  rock  „  72 


Lord 


424 


Lordly 


Lord  (>)  (continiud)    Whereof  one  seem'd  far  larger 
than  her  I, 
'  I  will  abide  the  coming  of  my  I, 
My  I  is  weary  with  the  fight  before. 
My  I,  eat  also,  tho'  the  fare  is  coarse, 
To  close  with  her  Vs  pleasure ; 

*  My  I,  you  overpay  me  fifty-fold.' 

*  Yea,  my  kind  <,'  said  the  glad  youth, 
to  which  She  answer'd, '  Thanks,  my  I ; ' 
the  wild  I  of  the  place,  Limours. 
Nor  cared  a  broken  egg-shell  for  her  I. 
tending  her  rough  I,  tho'  all  unask'd, 

*  My  I,  I  scarce  have  spent  the  worth  of  one  ! ' 

*  Yea,  my  I,  I  know  Your  wish, 
Then  not  to  disobey  her  I's  behest, 
Start  from  their  fallen  I's,  and  wildly  fly, 
swathed  the  hurt  that  drain'd  her  dear  I's  life. 
So  for  long  hours  sat  Enid  by  her  I, 
Until  my  I  arise  and  look  upon  me  ?  ' 
I  will  not  drink  Till  my  dear  I  arise  and  bid  me  do  it, 
'  In  this  poor  gown  my  dear  I  found  me  first, 
Except  he  surely  knew  my  I  was  dead,' 
Let  be  :  ye  stand,  fair  Z,  as  in  a  dream.'  Balin  and  Balan  258 
'£,  thou  couldst  lay  the  Devil  of  these  woods  „  298 
'i,  Why  wear  ye  this  crown-royal  upon  shield  ?  ' 
fire  of  Heaven  is  i  of  all  things  good, 
Their  brother  beast,  whose  anger  was  his  I. 
Again  she  sigh'd  '  Pardon,  sweet  I ! 
this  fair  I,  The  flower  of  all  their  vestal  knighthood, 
in  this  lone  wood,  Sweet  I,  ye  do  right  well 
angels  of  our  L's  report, 
like  a  bride's  On  her  new  I,  her  own, 
she  call'd  him  I  and  liege, 
'  Yea,  I,'  she  said, '  ye  know  it.' 
Henceforth  be  truer  to  your  faultless  I  ?  ' 
That  passionate  perfection,  my  good  I — 
In  battle  with  the  love  he  bare  his  Z, 
'  O  there,  great  I,  doubtless,'  Lavaine  said, 
at  Caerleon  had  he  help'd  his  I, 
'  Save  your  great  self,  fair  I ; ' 
'  Fair  I,  whose  name  I  know  not — 
Needs  must  be  lesser  likelihood,  noble  I, 
our  liege  I,  The  dread  Pendragon, 
L's  of  waste  marches,  kings  of  desolate  isles, 
'  L,  no  sooner  had  ye  parted  from  us, 
'  Yea,  I,'  she  said, '  Thy  hopes  are  mine,* 
'  What  news  from  Camelot,  I  ? 
Nay,  for  near  you,  fair  I,  I  am  at  rest.' 
Prince  and  L  am  I  In  mine  own  land, 
'  Is  it  for  Lancelot,  is  it  for  mv  dear  I  ? 
Nay,  by  the  mother  of  our  L  himself, 
ever  in  the  reading,  l's  and  dames  Wept, 
Fair  I,  as  would  have  help'd  her  from  her  death.' 
when  now  the  l's  and  dames  And  people, 

cup  itself  from  which  our  L  Drank  at  the  last  sad  supper  Holy  Grail  46 
thorn  Blossoms  at  Christmas,  mindful  of  our  L.  „  53 

a  hundred  winters  old,  From  our  L's  time. 

*  Nay,  for  my  I'  said  Percivale, 
I,  I  heard  the  sound,  I  saw  the  light, 
I,  and  therefore  have  we  sworn  our  vows.' 
seem'd  to  me  the  L  of  all  the  world, 
when  the  L  of  all  things  made  Himself 
blessed  L,  I  speak  too  earthlywise, 
'  Nay,  I'  said  Gawain, '  not  for  such  as  I, 
'  Glory  and  joy  and  honour  to  our  L 
And  /  of  many  a  barren  isle  was  he — 
and  remain  L  of  the  tourney. 
L,  I  was  tending  swine 


Geraint  and  E.  122 
131 
133 

208 
214 
220 
241 
264 
277 
364 
405 
411 
418 
450 
482 
516 
580 
650 
665 


721 


337 
452 
488 
497 
507 
529 

Merlin  and   F.  16 

617 

953 

Lancdot  and  E.  80 

119 

122 

246 

281 

297 

320 

360 

367 

423 

527 

576 

606 

620 

833 

916 

1105 

1230 

1284 

1311 

1346 


Watch'd  her  I  pass,  and  knew  not  that  she  sigh'd. 

and  in  her  bosom  pain  was  I. 

thank  the  Z  I  am  King  Arthur's  fool. 

Mark  her  I  had  past,  the  Cornish  King, 

in  the  heart  of  Arthur  pain  was  I. 

'  Why  weep  ye  ?  '    '  L^  she  said, 

a  doubtful  I  To  bind  them  by  inviolable  vows, 


205 
280 
285 
414 
447 
627 
741 
839 
Pdleas  and  E.  19 
163 
Last  Tournament  71 
130 
239 
320 
382 
486 
494 
687 


Lord  (s)  (continued)   tamper'd  with  the  L's  of  the  White  Horse, 
false  traitor  have  displaced  his  I, 
to  lead  her  to  his  I  Arthur, 
tho'  thou  wouldst  not  love  thy  I,  Thy  I  has  wholly 

lost  his  love  for  thee, 
leagues  With  L's  of  the  White  Horse, 
'  Gone — my  I !     Gone  thro'  my  sin  to  slay  and  to  be  slain  ! 
Gone,  my  I  the  King,  My  own  true  I ! 
Ah  great  and  gentle  I,  Who  wast, 
wife  and  child  with  wail  Pass  to  new  l's  ; 
fall'n  in  Lyonnesse  about  their  I, 
What  record,  or  what  reUc  of  my  I 
Artificer  and  subject,  I  and  slave, 
'  O  my  heart's  I,  would  I  could  show  you,' 
Julian  goes,  the  I  of  all  he  saw. 
Bible  verse  of  the  L's  good  will  toward  men — 
'  Full  of  compassion  and  mercy,  the  L  ' 
yes,  as  the  L  must  know, 
the  L  has  look'd  into  my  care, 
'  Stan'  'im  theer  i'  the  naame  o'  the  L 
for  the  glory  of  the  L. 
And  the  L  hath  spared  our  lives. 
An'  I  thowt  'twur  the  will  o'  the  L, 
thebbe  aU  wi'  the  L  my  childer. 
But  I  beant  that  sewer  es  the  L, 
where  the  works  of  the  L  are  reveal'd 
'  but  then  if  I  call  to  the  L, 
The  L  has  so  miich  to  see  to  ! 
L  of  the  children  had  heard  her, 
Judah,  for  in  thee  the  L  was  bom  ; 
L  give  thou  power  to  thy  two  witnesses  ! 
than  to  persecute  the  L,  And  play  the  Saul 
Ah  rather,  L,  than  that  thy  Gospel, 
but  how  long,  0  L,  how  long  ! 
L  of  life  Be  by  me  in  my  death. 
Chains,  my  good  I :  in  your  raised  brows 
All  glory  to  the  mother  of  our  L, 
I  saw  The  glory  of  the  L  flash  up, 
walk  within  the  glory  of  the  L 
The  L  had  sent  this  bright,  strange  dream  „        91 

O  my  I,  I  swear  to  vou  I  heard  his  voice  „      144 

Still  for  aU  that,  my  Z,  „      163 

Remember  the  words  of  the  L  when  he  told  us         V.  of  Maddune  120 
L  of  human  tears  ;  Child-lover ;  To  Victor  Hugo  3 

Athelstan  King,  L  among  Earls,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  2 

Lamp  of  the  L  God  L  everlasting,  „  27 

thanks  to  the  L  that  I  niver  not  listen'd  to  noan  !  Spinster's  S's.  8 


GrvAnevere  15 
„  216 
„      383 

„      508 

n       574 

„      612 

„      616 

„      638 

Pass,  of  Arthur  45 

173 

266 

Lover's  Tale  ii  103 

iv  250 

315 

Rizvah  61 

62 

67 

75 

North.  Cobbler  73 

The  Revenge  21 

93 

Village  Wife  II 

13 

93 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  35 

53 

57 

72 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  25 

81 

102 

119 

125 

173 

Columbus  1 

62 

82 


but,  O  L,  upo'  coomin'  down— 

my  I  is  lower  than  his  oxen  or  his  swine. 

Then  1  leave  thee  L  and  Master,  latest  L  of 

Locksley  Hall, 
they  rode  like  Victoi-s  and  L's 
As  a  Z  of  the  human  soul, 
Our  own  fair  isle,  the  I  of  every  sea — 
thy  dark  I  accept  and  love  the  Sun, 
do  you  scorn  me  when  you  tell  me,  0  my  I, 
I  replied  '  Nay,  L,  for  Art,' 
L  let  the  house  of  a  brute  to  the  soul  of  a  man, 
And  the  L — '  Not  yet :  but  make  it  as  clean 
How  loyal  in  the  following  of  thy  L  ! 
when  these  behold  their  L, 
An'  saw  by  the  Graace  o'  the  L, 
she  is  face  to  face  with  her  L, 
Priests  in  the  name  of  the  L 

Lord  (verb)    every  spoken  tongue  should  I  you. 

Lord  Jesos    (See  also  Christ,  Christ  Jesus,  Jesus) 
seek  the  Z  J  in  prayer ; 
but  the  good  L  J  has  had  his  day.' 
I  should  cry  to  the  dear  L  J  to  help  me, 
dear  L  J  with  children  about  his  knees.) 

Lordlier    assert  None  I  than  themselves 
grace  And  presence,  I  than  before  ; 

Lordliest    '  She  gave  him  mind,  the  I  Proportion, 

Lord-lover    young  l-l,  what  sighs  are  those, 

Lordly    Listening  the  I  music  flowing 


44 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  126 


282 

Heavy  Brigade  48 

Dead  Prophet  54 

The  Fleet  7 

Demeter  and  P.  137 

Happy  23 

Romney's  R.  131 

By  an  Evolution.  1 

3 

In  Mem.,  W.  H.  Ward  6 

Akbar's  Dream  142 

Church-warden,  etc.  42 

Charity  42 

The  Dawn  4 

Princess  iv  514 

to 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  18 

22 

49 

52 

Princess  ii  144 

In  Mem.  ciii  28 

Two  Voices  19 

Maud  I  xxii  29 

Ode  to  Memory  41 


Lordly 

Lotiitif(corUinued)    I  BmLT  my  soul  a  i  pleasure-house 
stL/  ^  "^^  ^"^  ®^  *^®  '  "^^'^^ 

The  lovely,  Z  creature  floated  on 
down  from  this  a  I  stairway  sloped 
They  past  on,  The  I  Phantasms  ! 
Lord-manufacturer    You,  the  L-m 
Lord  of  Astolat)    (^ee  0^50  Astolat)'  And  issuing 
found  the  Lo  A  "»uiug 

then  the  i  o  ^  :  '  Whence  comest  thou 

said  the  X  o  J,  '  Here  is  Torre's  • 

came  The  LoA  out,  to  whom  the  Prince 

10  whom  the  Z  0  ^  '  Bide  with  us. 
Lord  of  Burleigh     Z  o  5,  f air  and  free 

Deeply  moum'd  the  L  0  B, 

Lord-prince    high  l-p  of  Arthur's  hall 

Lord-territorial    You,  the  L-t, 

Lore    («««  o/so  Love-lore)    As  wild  as  ausht  of 
fairy  I;  "»        ' 

The  Learned  all  his  ^ ; 

Lose    1 1  my  colour,  1 1  my  breath, 

And  not  to  I  the  good  of  life 

Oft  I  whole  years  of  darker  mind. 

Nor  greatly  cared  to  I,  her  hold  on  life 

teu^'^.K^u^®  '•'"^i  ^"'"•'  The  woman  : 
???,"  V^^  ^^^^'  »"<!  ^  Convention, 
1 1  My  honour,  these  their  lives.' 
To  our  point :  not  war :  Lest  I^  all ' 
she  fearM  that  I  should  I  my  mind  * 

£  5  It  S-l"'-*^r'/^*^  ^'^^"^  the  world  ; 
Nor  /  the  childhke  m  the  larger  mind  • 

Ihe  gravest  citizen  seems  to  I  his  head 

1  too,  talk,  and  I  the  touch  I  talk  of     ' 

Nor  I  their  mortal  sympathy 

We  I  ourselves  in  light.'         ' 

I  shall  not  I  thee  tho'  I  die 

and  he  fears  To  I  his  bone,  and  lays  his  foot 

upon  it. 
Fearing  to  /,  and  all  for  a  dead  man 
And  /  the  quest  he  sent  you  on, 

1 1  It,  as  we  I  the  lark  in  heaven 
Sweet  father,  wiU  you  let  me  I  my  wits  ?  ' 
not  I  your  wits  for  dear  Lavaine  • 
Pleasure  to  have  it,  none ;  to  Ht,  pain  • 
^  No  man  could  sit  but  he  should  ^  Wself  • ' 

U  11  myself,  I  save  myself  ' ' 
I  will  embark  and  I  wUl  I  myself 
Not  greatly  care  to  ^ ; 
You  /  yourseH  m  utter  ignorance  : 
And  Uhy  hfe  by  usage  of  thy  sting  • 
say    that  those  who  I  can  find  ' 
All  IS  well  If  I Z  it  and  myself 
Ihey  I  themselves  and  die 
And  yet  The  world  would  I 
Losing     L  his  fire  and  active  might 
L  her  carol  I  stood  pensively 

nZ"^^  'Al^^'J^*'."  ^  ^«*h  of  these 

odes  About  this  I  of  the  child  • 

Poor  rivals  in  a  ^  game,  ' 

A  little  vext  at  I  of  the  hunt 
T  «»»     a1!?  ^  *^u  'j^ht  of  my  Youth 
Loss    Although  the  I  had  brought  us  pain,  That  I 

\  «"V^  ^/^^er ;  for  this  sir  Rose      ' 

And  but  for  daily  I  of  one  she  loved 

^  of  all  But  Enoch  and  two  others. 

Am  loneher,  darker,  earthUer  for  my  I 

An  AT  "^  n'  ^°''  ^^  *hat  wrongs  his  friend 
^A  l^^_,X°>fy^ng  cannon  thunder  his  I ; 
And  find  m  I  a  gain  to  match  ? 

Ah  sweeter  to  be  drunk  with  l, 

^  Ihou  Shalt  not  be  the  fool  of  I ' 
L  IS  common  to  the  race  ' 

That  Z  is  common  would  not  make 

Which  weep  a  I  for  ever  new, 

Thy  spirit  ere  our  fatal  I 


425 


Palace  of  Art  I 


L.  of  Burleigh  18 

Princess  vi  89 

Gareth  and  L.  669 

Lover's  Tale  ii  99 

On  Juh.  q.  Victoria  57 

Lancelot  and  E.  173 
180 
195 
627 
632 
L.  of  Burleigh  58 

91 

tfaltn  and  Balan  466 
On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  56 

Day- Dm.,  L' Envoi  12 

Ancient  Sage  139 

Elednore  137 

Two  Voices  132 

»  372 

Aylmer's  Field  568 

Princess  i  137 

»         ii  85 

341 

1)205 

vii  99 

282 

284 

„    Con.  59 

Lit.  Squabbles  17 

In  Mem.  xxx  23 

»        xlvii  16 

1.       ex  XX  16 

Geraint  and  E.  562 
_        ,    „  564 

Lancelot  and  E.  655 
659 
752 
755 
1415 
Holy  Grail  174 
178 
805 
Guinevere  495 
Lover's  Tale  i  79 
Ancient  Sage  270 
The  Ring  282 
Happy  58 
Prog,  of  Spring  35 
Romney's  R.  68 
Elednore  104 
D.  of  F.  Women  245 
Aylmer's  Field  719 
Princess  i  141 
In  Mem.  cii  19 
Marr.  of  Geraint  234 
The  Dreamer  4 
Miller's  D.  229 
To  J.  S.  25 
Walk,  to  the  Mail  94 
Enoch  Arden  549 
Aylmer's  Field  750 
Sea  Dreams  172 
Ode  on  Well.  62 
In  Mem.  i  6 
11 
ivlQ 
vi2 
5 
xiii  5 
xlil 


Lon  (continued)    His  night  of  I  is  always  there, 
lo  breathe  my  I  is  more  than  fame 
The  gnef  my  I  in  him  had  wrought' 
The  lighter  by  the  I  of  his  weight  • 
By  the  I  of  that  dead  weight,        ' 
shadow  of  His  I  drew  like  eclipse 
Than  that  my  lord  should  suffer  'l  or  shame.' 
bnid,  the  I  of  whom  hath  tum'd  me  wild— 
as  a  man  to  whom  a  dreadful  I  Falls  in  a  far  land 
ISO  pajns  hun  that  he  sickens  nigh  to  death  • 
Ihen,  fearing  for  his  hurt  and  I  of  blood 
w- u  7®"*  '^^^^^  'he  I  of  use  than  fame  •    ' 
With  /  of  half  his  people  arrow-slain  • 
dame  nor  damsel  then  Wroth  at  a  lover's  I  ■> 
Had  I  not  learnt  my  I  before  he  came  i> 
btung  by  his  I  had  vanish'd,  none  knew  where 

h?«  ^wv  tT"^'^-  ^"^  '"'^^^  *  *™«'  t«  Lionel's  I 
—his  I  Weigh'd  on  him  yet— 

guest  So  bound  to  me  by  common  love  and  l~ 

wf T  ^f K  ^f!^  T^^^  ^^''  ^  ^"^  l°ng'd  for  her  own  ; 
lost  to  the  I  that  was  mine,  ' 

and  thro'  I  of  Self  The  gain  of  such  large  life 

Moanmg  your  I'es,  O  Earth, 

Thrones  are  clouded  by  your  I 

Lost    (««eaZ5o  Half-lost.  Late-lost)'    That  these  have 
never  I  their  light. 
Her  cheek  had  I  the  rose, 
one  silvery  cloud  Had  I  his  way 
L  to  her  place  and  name ; 
Stream'd  onward,  I  their  edges, 
Fall  into  shadow,  soonest  I : 
thus  be  I  for  ever  from  the  earth, 
much  honour  and  much  fame  were  I.' 
I  the  sense  that  handles  daily  life —  ' 
have  you  I  your  heart  ?  '  she  said  ; 
And  now  we  I  her,  now  she  gleam'd 
the  precious  morning  hours  were  I. 
Phihp  gain'd  As  Enoch  I ; 
'The  ship  was  I,'  he  said  '  the  ship  was  I ! 
Enoch,  poor  man,  was  cast  away  and  I.' 
Kepeated  muttering  '  cast  away  and  i ; '  Again  in 

deeper  inward  whispers  '  Z ! ' 
slowly  I  Nor  greatly  cared  to  lose. 
Softening  thro'  aU  the  gentle  attributes  Of  his 

I  child, 
I  came  To  know  him  more,  1 1  it, 

But  now  when  all  was  I  or  seem'd  as  I 

They  I  their  weeks  ;  they  vext  the  souls  of  deans  • 

a  pillar'd  porch,  the  bases  I  In  laurel :  ' 

the  child  We  I  in  other  years, 

some  ages  had  been  I ; 

an  erring  pearl  L  in  her  bosom  : 

Wiser  to  weep  a  true  occasion  I, 

(For  since  her  horse  was  1 1  left'her  mine) 

For  this  I  lamb  (she  pointed  to  the  child) 

at  once  the  I  lamb  at  her  feet  Sent  out  a  bitter 

bleating 
'  Be  comforted  :  have  1  not  I  her  too, 
our  side  was  vanquish'd  and  my  caus'e  For  ever  I 
slip  Into  my  bosom  and  be  I  in  me.'  ' 

Nor  ever  I  an  English  gun  ; 
flying  by  to  be  I  on  an  endless  sea — 
'  Behold  the  man  that  loved  and  I, 
Something  it  is  which  thou  hast  I, 
With  my  I  Arthur's  loved  remains, 
'Tis  better  to  have  loved  and  I 
I  the  links  that  boimd  Thy  changes  • 
So  then  were  nothing  I  to  man  ;       ' 
'  Love's  too  precious  to  be  I, 
And  like  to  him  whose  sight  is  I ; 
That  Nature's  ancient  power  was  I : 
The  quiet  sense  of  something  I. 
'Tis  better  to  have  loved  and  I, 
No  visual  shade  of  some  one  I, 
Day,  when  1 1  the  flower  of  men  ; 


Lost 

In  Mem.  Ixvi  16 

n      Ixxvii  15 

).  Ixxx  6 

Maud  I  xvi2 

„     xix  99 

Ded.  of  Idylls  14 

Geraint  and  E.  69 

308 

496 

498 

,T    ,-    "  '^^^ 

Merhn  and  V.  519 

565 

607 

Lover's  Tale  i  665 

iv  102 

208 

274 

345 

The  Revenge  111 

The  Wreck  113 

Ancient  Sage  236 

The  Dreamer  17 

D.  of  ihe  Duke  of  C.  6 

Miller's  D.  88 

(Enone  18 

"93 

Palace  of  Art  264 

D.  of  F.  Women  50 

To  J.  S.  11 

M.  d' Arthur  90 

109 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  22 

Edward  Gray  3 

The  Voyage  65 

Enoch  Arden  302 

355 

393 

713 

^  ,       ,  "  "^15 

Aylmer's  Field  567 

731 

Sea  Dreams  72 

Princess,  Pro.  39 

162 

i  230 

ii  11 

153 

iv  61 

68 

197 

361 

391 
t)69 
vi  25 
vii  189 
Ode  on  Well.  97 
Wages  2 
In  Mem.  i  15 
iv  9 
ix  3 
xxvii  15 
xli  6 
xliii  9 
Ixv  3 
Ixvi  8 
Ixix  2 
Ixxviii  8 
Ixxxv  3 
xciii  5 
xcix  4 


Lost 


426 


Loud 


Lost  (continued)    With  thy  I  friend  among  the  bowers, 
Hope  had  never  I  her  youth  ; 
Dear  friend,  far  off,  my  I  desire, 
I  in  trouble  and  moving  round  Here 
Looking,  thinking  of  all  I  have  / ; 
Of  a  land  that  has  I  for  a  little  her  lust  of  gold, 
We  have  I  him  :  he  is  gone  : 
a  night  In  which  the  bounds  of  heaven  and  earth 

werei — 
a  phantom  king.  Now  looming,  and  now  I ; 
I  in  blowing  trees  and  tops  of  towers ; 
L  in  sweet  dreams,  and  dreaming  of  her  love 
enter'd,  and  were  I  behind  the  walls. 
So  sadly  I  on  that  unhappy  night ; 
Youiseif  shall  see  my  vigour  is  not  I.' 
scour'd  into  the  coppices  and  was  I, 
And  ciusing  their  I  time,  and  the  dead  man, 
your  charger  is  without.  My  palfrey  L' 
held  and  I  with  Lot  In  that  first  war, 
The  L  one  Found  was  greeted  as  in  Heaven 
I  itself  in  darkness,  till  she  cried — 
I  to  life  and  use  and  name  and  fame,  (repeat) 
and  there  We  I  him  : 
Some  I,  some  stolen,  some  as  relics  kept. 
lay  as  dead,  And  I  all  use  of  life  : 
fought  together  ;  but  their  names  were  I ; 
Else  had  he  not  I  me :  but  listen  to  me, 
Full  often  I  in  fancy,  I  his  way  ; 
waste  downs  whereon  1 1  myself, 
new  design  wherein  they  I  themselves. 
Who  I  the  hem  we  slipt  her  at, 
had  you  not  I  your  own. 
Merlm  sat  In  his  own  chair,  and  so  was  2 ; 
while  ye  follow  wandering  fires  L  in  the  quagmire 
hast  not  I  thyself  to  save  thyself  As  Galahad.' 
wandering  fires  L  in  the  quagmire  ? — I  to  me  and  gone, 


In  Mem.  cii  15      Lost  (continued)    Swallow'd  in  Vastness,  I  in  Silence,  Vaatness  34 

„       cxxv5              2  the  moment  of  their  past  on  earth,  The  Ring  4i64: 

„      cxxix  1              have  you  I  him,  is  he  fled  ?  Happy  2 

Maud  I  xxi  5               and  I  Salvation  for  a  sketch.  Romney's  R.  138 

„       //  ii  46  she  heard  The  shriek  of  some  I  life  among  the  pines,  Death  of  (Enone  90 

„     ///  vi  39               Who  all  but  I  himself  in  Alia,  Akbar's  Dream  93 

Ded.  of  Idylls  15               an'  wa  I  wer  Haldeny  cow.  Church-warden,  etc.  5 

And  less  will  be  I  than  won,  The  Dreamer  22 

Lot     '  I  might  forget  my  weaker  I ;  Two  Voices  367 

Half-anger'd  with  my  happy  I,  Miller's  D.  200 

been  happy  :  but  what  I  is  pure  ?  Walk,  to  the  Mail  97 


and  one  that,  Because  the  way  was  I. 

at  Caerleon,  but  have  I  our  way : 

i  in  a  doubt,  Pelleas  wandering  Waited, 

Among  the  roses,  and  was  I  again. 

she  cried, '  Plunge  and  be  I — 

Not  knowing  they  were  I  as  soon  as  given — 

Thy  lord  has  wholly  I  his  love  for  thee. 

city  sack'd  by  night,  When  all  is  I, 

thus  be  I  for  ever  from  the  earth, 

much  honour  and  much  fame  were  /.' 

my  I  love  Symbol'd  in  storm. 

Talk  of  I  hopes  and  broken  heart ! 

tho'  she  seem  so  Hke  the  one  you  I, 

And  if  he  be  I — but  to  save  my  soul, 

seen  And  I  and  found  again, 

or  desire  that  her  I  child  Should  earn 

fur  'e  I  'is  taail  i'  the  beck. 

Sa  'is  taail  wur  Z  an'  'is  boociks  wur  gone 

We  have  I  her  who  loved  her  so  much — 

Uim,  the  I  light  of  those  dawn-golden  times. 

Leaving  his  son  too  L  in  the  carnage, 

wholesome  heat  the  blood  had  I, 

To  be  I  evermore  in  the  main. 

and  there  Z,  head  and  heart, 

L  myself — lay  like  the  dead 

I  to  the  loss  that  was  mine, 

With  sad  eyes  fixt  on  the  I  sea-home. 

And  now  is  2  in  cloud  ; 

*  L  and  gone  and  /  and  gone  ! ' 

What  had  he  loved,  what  had  he  I, 

wor  keenin'  as  if  he  had  I  thim  all. 


Com.  of  Arthur  372 

431 

Gareth  and  L.  670 

Marr.  of  Geraint  158 

252 

689 

Geraint  and  E.  82 

534 

576 

750 

Balin  and  Balan  1 

81 

514 

Merlin  and  V.  214,  970 

433 

453 

645 

Lancelot  and  E.  40 

147 

164 

225 

441 

657 

1213 

Holy  Grail  176 

320 

456 

892 

Pelleas  and  E.  59 

66 

392 

427 

Last  Tournament  40 

42 

Guinevere  509 

Pass,  of  Arthur  44 

258 

277 

Lover's  Tale  ii  184 

iv  176 

365 

Rizpah  77 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  147 

250 

Village  Wife  86 

87 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  29 

To  W.  H.  Brookfield  7 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  73 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  24 

The  Revenge  119 

The  Wreck  30 

112 

113 

126 

Ancient  Sage  143 

224 

227 

Tomorrow  86 

Locksley  //.,  Sixty  55 


Leonard  early  /  at  sea  ;  

{  within  a  growing  gloom  ;  L,  or  only  beard  in  silence  „  73 

'L  are  the  gallant  three  hundred  Heavy  Brigade  45 

'  L  one  and  all '  were  the  words  Mutter'd  „  46 

all  fa  /  In  what  they  prophesy,  EpUogue  64 

Mi(utt  break  thro  clouded  memories  once  again  On 

U»X  I  self.  Demeter  and  P  11 

f  in  th«  gloom  of  doubta  that  darken  the  schools  ;  Vastness  11 


Ill-fated  that  I  am,  what  I  is  mine 

Would  quarrel  with  our  I ; 

I  stubb'd  'um  oop  wi'  the  I, 

Wamt  worth  nowt  a  haacre,  an'  now  theer's  I's  o 

feead, 
Wi'  I's  o'  munny  laaid  by, 
coom'd  to  the  parish  wi'  I's  o'  Varsity  debt. 
Them  or  thir  feythers,  tha  sees,  mun  'a  bean  a 

laazy  I, 

0  little  bard,  is  your  I  so  hard, 
hate  me  not,  but  abide  your  I, 
She  finds  the  baseness  of  her  I, 
To  chances  where  our  I's  were  cast 
maidens  with  one  mind  BewaiI'd  their  I ; 
let  a  passionless  peace  be  my  I, 
he  lived  with  a  Z  of  wild  mates. 
Their  I  with  ours  to  rove  the  world 
drew  perchance  a  happier  I  Than  ours, 

1  would  it  had  been  my  I  To  have  seen  thee. 


Love  and  Duty  33 

WHl  Water.  226 

Farmer,  0.  S.  32 

39 

N.  S.  22 
29 

49 

Spiteful  Letter  5 

11 

In  Mem.  Ix  6 

„       xcii  5 

„      ciii  46 

Maud  I  iv  50 

Rizpah  29 

Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  11 

Epilogue  50 

Bandits  Death  3 


fur  a  Z  on  'em  coom'd  ta-year —  Church-warden,  etc.  13 

Lot  (King  of  Orkney)    Morganore  And  L  of  Orkney.       Com.  of  Arthur  116 

L's  wife,  the  Queen  of  Orkney,  Bellicent,  (repeat) 

last  tall  son  of  L  and  Bellicent, 

where  thy  father  L  beside  the  hearth 

Till  falling  into  L's  f orgetfulness 

L  and  many  another  rose  and  fought 

Gareth  hearing  from  a  squire  of  L 

son  Of  old  King  L  and  good  Queen  Bellicent, 

held  and  lost  with  L  In  that  first  war, 

Sir  Modred's  brother,  and  the  child  of  L, 
Lot  (nephew  of  Abraham)    see  how  you  stand  Stiff  as 

L's  wife, 
Loth    (See  also  Loath)     were  much  I  to  breed  Dispute 
betwixt  myself  and  mine  : 

but  she  still  were  I,  She  still  were  I  to  yield  herself 

And  now  full  I  am  I  to  break  thy  dream, 

how  I  to  quit  the  land  ! 
Lotos-Lotus    asphodel,  Lotos  and  lilies  : 

Eating  the  Lotos  day  by  day. 

The  Lotos  blooms  below  the  barren  peak  : 

The  Lotos  blows  by  every  winding  creek  : 

Cry  to  the  lotus  '  No  flower  thou  '  ? 
Lotos-dust    the  yellow  L-d  is  blown. 
Lotos-eaters    mild-eyed  melancholy  L-e  came. 
Lotos-land    In  the  hollow  L-l  to  live 
Lotus    See  Lotos 
Load    With  a  lengthen'd  I  halloo, 

L,  I  nmg  out  the  bugle's  brays. 

From  his  I  fount  upon  the  echoing  lea : — 

Between  the  I  stream  and  the  trembling  stars. 

If  you  do  not  call  me  I  when  the  day  begins  to 
break : 

Whereof  my  fame  is  I  amongst  mankind, 

And  chanted  a  melody  I  and  sweet, 

while  the  rest  were  I  in  meri-ymaking, 

There  came  so  Z  a  calling  of  the  sea, 

he  spread  his  arms  abroad  Ciying  witli  a  I  voice  '  A 
sail !  a  sail ! 

On  that  I  sabbath  shook  the  spoiler  down  ; 

and  we  refrain  From  talk  of  battles  I  and  vain. 

For  him  nor  moves  the  I  world's  random  mock. 

Winds  are  I  and  you  are  dumb. 

Winds  are  I  and  winds  will  pass  ! 


That  makes  the  barren  branches  I ; 


190,  245 

Gareth  and  L.  1 

74 

96 

354 

531 

1231 

Balin  and  Balan  1 

Lancelot  and  E.  558 

Princess  vi  241 

i  156 

„      vii  231 

Balin  and  Balan  500 

The  Flight  38 

(Enone  98 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  60 

100 

101 

Akbar's  Dream  37 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  104 

Lotos- Eaters  27 

„    C.  S.  109 

The  Owl  ii  13 

Oriana  48 

Mine  be  the  strength  4 

(Enone  219 

May  Queen  10 

8t.  S'.  Stylites  81 

Poet's  Song  6 

Enoch  Arden  77 

910 

913 

Ode  on  Well.  123 

247 

Will  4 

Window,  No  Answer  19 

22 

In  Mem.  xv  13 


I 


Loud 


427 


^°liT;w".f^    Alfcho' the  trumpet  blew  so/.  In  Mem   xcvi  24, 

Sn  1  Jf"  ^^"^  f"!?  ^?S,  inWth  and  tent,  xS  27 

bo  I  with  voices  of  the  birds  x«ntt  ^< 

Now  rings  the  woodland  I  and  long  "          ^'^^  ? 

makes  us  /  in  the  world  of  the  dead  •  "    %Tll 

and  so  /  That  first  they  mock'd  n    ^x.   "  ^  /  1^, 

WeU-I  will  after  my  Iknave,  and  learn  "'"'''^  "^  ^-  f^^ 

L"°^  l^u*"  ^  Southwestems,  roUing  ridge  on  ridge  "          1 1 1^ 


Love 


Love  (8)Jcontmued)    spreads  above  And  veileth  7,  itself 


then  came  a  night  Still  as  the  day  was  I  • 

bo  I  a  blast  along  the  shore  and  sea 

But  on  the  hither  side  of  that  I  mom 

and  with  mirth  so  I  Beyond  all  use 

and  I  leagues  of  man  And  welcome'' 

lake  to  a  quiet  mind  in  the  I  world  ' 

and  thro'  the  arch  Down  those  I  waters 

fnr  tho       ®  TXJ^'i^^'  ^^^"^  *"  ^^^  ^nds  were  l, 

for  the  sound  Of  the  I  stream  was  pleasant 

Ihe  moanmgs  m  the  forest,  the  I  brook 

An  earthquake,  my  I  heart-beats, 

A  long  /  clash  of  rapid  marriage- bells. 

The  /  black  nights  for  us. 

Whence  the  thunderbolt  will  fall  Long  and  I 

Men  Z  against  all  forms  of  power—  ' 


Holy  Grail  683 

796 

Last  Tournament  56 

235 

To  the  Queen  ii  9 

Lover's  Tale  i  7 

59 

378 

n  35 

114 

193 

in  23 

Rizpah  6 

The  Revenge  45 

Freedom  37 


T?en^nTJ'^^>K^  storm-the  crash  was  long  and  l-HtZm 
lilytho"utJo"r?o?s^rer  ^"^^"-t-'^^'  ^^f-^f^.n^ 


Sing  thou  low  or  I  or  sweet 

Louder    a  i  one  Was  aU  but  silence- 
It  clack'd  and  cackled  I. 
Gawain  sware,  and  I  than  the  rest.' 
breakers  on  the  shore  Sloped  into  I  surf  ■ 
ir    7 \    y  rhyme  the  silent  Word 
JNo  I  than  a  bee  among  the  flowei-s, 

Loud-lung  d    And  l-l  Antibabylonianisms 

Lounging    See  Hawmin' 

Lour    whatever  tempests  I  For  ever  silent  • 

x^r,^^^r^Z''  ?V*  "^  *^^  *«^rf"J  splendour 
Louse    See  Wood-louse 

^"^  ^  mJ^i'  "^^lAfter-love,  Boy-love.  Loov.  Luw, 

A  I  still  burmng  upward, 

Life,  anguish,  death,  immortal  I, 

J  thou  bearest  The  first-bom  of  thy  genius. 

the  scom  of  scom.  The  lot  I. 

And  It  sings  a  song  of  undying  I  • 

eyes  shall  glisten  With  pleasm-e  and  I  and  jubilee  • 

L  paced  the  thymv  plots  of  ParadLse,         •■  ' 

■t'  wept  and  spread  bis  sheeny  vans 

pierced  thy  heart,  my  I,  my  bride. 

Thy  heart,  my  life,  my  I,  my  bride. 

With  his  laI^|e  calm  eyes  for  the  I  of  me. 

Die  in  their  hearts  for  the  I  of  me. 

All  looking  up  for  the  I  of  me. 

All  looking  down  for  the  I  of  me 

wJ  ''V^h  ^^^''-  ^°''"^*5  ''O  close  His  curtains. 
Who  lent  you,  I,  your  mortal  dower 
langmd  Z,  Leaning  his  cheek  upon  his  hand, 
l-or  Kate  no  common  I  will  feel  • 
Nor  cares  to  lisp  in  I's  delicious  creeds  ; 
Weep  on  :  beyond  his  object  L  can  last : 

Liu'.^?  ^^^  °^  ^'  *r«  flowing  fast.  No  tears 

of  I,  but  tears  that  L  can  die. 
Clear  i  would  pierce  and  cleave, 
Z  lighted  down  between  them  full  of  glee 

«  a'  a^  ^^^'^'  '  '""^^  "''®*^  be  tme, 
And  cruel  I,  whose  end  is  scom. 
And  mete  the  bounds  of  hate  and  I— 
And  m  their  double  I  secure, 


Poets  and  Critics  6 

Aylmer's  Field  696 

The  Goose  24 

Holy  Grail  202 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  15 

Ancient  Sage  212 

Romney's  R.  82 

Sea  Dreams  252 

Ode  on  Well.  175 
Prog,  of  Spring  40 

Leonine  Eleg.  14 

Supp.  Confessions  88 

113 

182 

Isabel  18 

Arabian  Nights  73 

Ode  to  Memory  91 

The  Poet  4 

Poet's  Mind  33 

Sea- Fairies  36 

Love  and  Death  2 


Oriana  42 

„      44 

The  Mermaid  27 

30 

51 

55 

Adeline  42 

Margaret  5 

Eleanor  e  117 

Kate  14 

Caress'd  or  chidden  11 

Wan  Sculptor  5 


//  /  were  loved  6 

TAe  Bridesmaid  6 

Mariana  in  the  S.  63 

^     "  70 

Two  Voices  l^ 

418 


But  ere  I  saw  your  eyes,  my  I, 

Such  eyes  !     I  swear  to  you,  my  I 

Iloved,  and  Mispell'd  the  fear      ' 

For  I  possess'd  the  atmosphere 

which  tme  I  spells— Tme  I  interprets— 

in  tmth  You  must  blame  L. 

L  that  hath  us  in  the  net, 

L  the  gift  is  L  the  debt. 

L  is  hurt  with  jar  and  fret. 

L  is  made  a  vague  regret. 

What  is  I  ?  for  we  forget : 

0  L,  L,  L\     O  withering  might ' 

0  Z,  O  fire  !  once  he  drew  With  one  long  kiss 
My  eyes  are  full  of  tears,  my  heart  of  I 
My  [hath  told  me  so  a  thousand  times'. 
Hath  he  not  sworn  his  I  a  thousand  times 
teavmg  my  ancient  I  With  the  Greek  wom'an 
To  wm  his  /  I  lay  m  wait  : 

1  won  his  I,  I  brought  him  home, 
he  that  shuts  L  out,  in  turn  shall  be  Shut 

out  from  L,  m  .    „7   „  ,     .. 

They  sav  he's  dying  aU  for  I,  ^ "         '  ^'^^  ^^-  "f  ^^t-  If 

gi:^^r^t.^!l^.«Pl^_i«i-est  darts;  D.of^^^ZT^l 


Two  Voices  447 

Miller's  D.  43 

87 

89 

91 

187 

192 

203 

207 

209 

210 

213 

Fatima  1 

„      19 

CEnone  31 

„    197 

»    231 

„    260 

The  Sisters  11 

14 


beams  of  X,  melting  the  mighty  hearts  Of  captains 
softly  with  a  threefold  cord  of  I  !""»"'» 

her  who  knew  that  L  can  vanquish  Death 
God  gives  us  I.    Something  to  love  He  lends  us  •  but 

when  ;  IS  grown  To  ripeness,  ' 

Falls  off,  and  I  is  left  alone. 
Love  thou  thy  land,  with  I  far-brought 
Tme  I  tum'd  round  on  fixed  poles,  L  that 

endures  not  sordid  ends. 
He,  by  some  law  that  holds  in  I, 
Such  touches  are  but  embassies  of  I 
not  your  work,  but  L's.     L,  unperceived, 
buch  a  lord  is  Z, 

Fancy,  led  by  L,  Would  play  with  flying  forms 
lor  which  to  praise  the  heavens  but  only  L  That  onlv 
/  were  cause  enough  for  praise.'  ^ 

L's  white  star  Beam'd  thro'  the  thicken'd  cedar 
the  Master,  L,  A  more  ideal  Artist  he  than  all ' 
L  at  first  sight,  first-born, 
sometimes  a  Dutch  I  For  tulips  : 
L  trebled  life  within  me, 
L,  the  third,  Between  us, 
while  I  mused,  L  with  knit  brows  went  by 
My  first,  last  i;  the  idol  of  my  youth, 
half  in  I,  half  spite,  he  woo'd  and  wed' 
all  his  I  came  back  a  hundredfold  ; 
and  not  a  room  For  I  or  money, 
breathing  I  and  tmst  against  her  lip  : 
'  My  I  for  Nature  is  as  old  as  1 ; 
three  rich  sennights  more,  my  I  for  her 
My  I  for  Nature  and  my  I  for  her, 
i  to  me  As  in  the  Latin  song  I  leamt  at  school, 
Ine  I,  that  makes  me  thrice  a  man, 
languidly  adjust  My  vapid  vegetable  l's 
Pursue  thy  l's  among  the  bowers 
This  fmit  of  thine  by  L  is  blest, 
Where  fairer  fruit  of  L  may  rest 
Of  I  that  never  found  his  earthly  close 
But  am  I  not  the  nobler  thro'  thy  I  ?    ' 
likewise  thou  Art  more  thro'  L, 
Wait,  and  L  himself  will  bring  'The  drooping  flower 
For  Z  himself  took  part  against  himself  To  warn 
us  off  and  Duty  loved  of  L~0  this  world's  cui-se. 
Could  L  part  thus  ?  v-"'ac. 

Caught  up  the  whole  of  I  and  utter'd  it 
Can  thy  I,  Thy  beauty,  make  amends    ' 
fancy  lightly  tums  to  thoughts  of  I. 
L  took  up  the  glass  of  Time, 
L  took  up  the  harp  of  Life, 
and  love  her  for  the  I  she  bore  ? 


175 
211 
269 

To  J.  S.  13 

r        ,  "      16 

Love  thou  thy  land  1 

5 
Gardener's  D.  9 
18 
24 
57 
59 

104 

165 

172 

189 

192 

198 

215 

245 

277 

Dora  39 

„    166 

Audley  Court  2 

69 

Edwin  Morris  28 

30 

31 

^     "  78 

Talking  Oak  11 

183 

199 

249 

251 

Love  and  Duty  1 

19 

21 

23 


45 
55 
82 
Tithonus  23 
Locksley  Hall  20 
31 
33 
73 


Love 


428 


Loehley  HdU  74 
Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  16 
Arrival  3 
Depart.  10 
11 
12 
20 
Sir  Galahad  19 
Edward  Gray  7 
29 
L.  of  Burleigh  15 


Lore  (■)  (oorUtnwei)  I  is  I  tor  evermoie. 
beauty  doth  inform  Stillness  with  I, 
For  I  in  sequel  works  with  f  at«, 

0  I,  for  sucn  another  kiss  ; ' 
*  O  wake  for  ever,  I,'  she  hears. 
•01,  'twas  such  as  this  and  this.' 
'  O  I,  thy  kiss  would  wake  the  dead  ! 

1  never  felt  the  kiss  of  I, 

I  no  more  Can  touch  the  heart  of  Edward  Gray, 
'  L  may  come,  and  Z  may  go, 
L  will  make  our  cottage  pleasant, 
And  he  cheer'd  her  soul  with  I. 
She  talk'd  as  if  her  I  were  dead,  The  Letters  27 

'  No  more  of  I ;  your  sex  is  known  :  „  29 

Frantic  I  and  frantic  hate.  Vision  of  Sin  150 

'  Tell  me  tales  of  thy  first  I—  „  163 

and  Enoch  spoke  his  Z,  Enoch  Arden  40 

And  mutual 7  and  honourable  toil;  „  83 

I  do  beseech  you  by  the  I  you  bear  Him  „        307 

Lord  of  his  rights  and  of  his  children's  I, —  „        764 

dream  That  L  could  bind  them  closer  Aylmer 

and  true  I  Crown'd  after  trial ; 
how  should  L,  Whom  the  cross-lightnings 
his,  a  brother's  2,  that  himg  With  wings 
and  truth  and  I  are  strength, 
Of  such  a  Z  as  like  a  chidden  child, 
A  Martin's  summer  of  his  faded  Z, 
the  hapless  Vs  And  double  death 
Wearing  the  light  yoke  of  that  Lord  of  Z, 
you  loved,  for  he  was  worthy  I. 
our  I  and  reverence  left  them  bare  ? 
Ah  Z,  there  surely  lives  in  man  and  beast 
We  remember  I  ourselves  In  our  sweet  youth  : 
As  arguing  Z  of  knowledge  and  of  power ; 
0  hara,  when  Z  and  duty  clash  ! 
a  thousand  baby  I's  Fly  twanging  headless  arrows 
half  the  students,  all  the  Z. 
angled  with  them  for  her  pupil's  I : 
every  woman  counts  her  due,  L,  children,  happiness  ?  ' 
tho'  your  Prince's  Z  were  like  a  God's, 

0  Z,  they  die  in  yon  rich  sky, 
deep  as  Z,  Deep  as  first  Z, 
cheep  and  twitter  twenty  million  I's. 
Why  lingereth  she  to  clothe  her  heart  with  Z, 
tell  her,  brief  is  life  but  I  is  long, 
to  junketing  and  Z.     i  is  it  ? 
heated  thro'  and  thro'  with  wrath  and  Z, 

1  bore  up  in  part  from  ancient  Z, 
I  want  her  Z. 

'  We  remember  Z  ourself  In  our  sweet  youth  ; 
infuse  my  tale  of  Z  In  the  old  king's  ears, 
I  know  not  what  Of  insolence  and  Z, 
Be  dazzled  by  the  wildfire  L  to  sloughs 
L  and  Nature,  these  are  two  more  terrible 
where  you  seek  the  common  Z  of  th&se. 
Pledge  of  a  Z  not  to  be  mine. 
Two  women  faster  welded  in  one  Z 
so  employ'd,  should  close  in  Z, 
L  in  tne  sacred  halls  Held  carnival  at  will,     , 
And  out  of  hauntings  of  my  spoken  Z, 
L,  like  an  Alpine  harebell  hung  with  tears 
From  barren  deeps  to  conquer  all  with  Z ; 
Fill'd  thro'  and  thro'  with  L, 
come,  for  L  is  of  the  valley,  come,  For  L  is  of  the 

valley,  come  thou  down  „  198 

make  her  as  the  man,  Sweet  L  were  slain  :  „  277 

Sweet  Z  on  pranks  of  saucy  boyhood  :  „  344 

Z  of  country  move  thee  there  at  all.  Ode  on  Well.  140 

debt  Of  boundless  Z  and  reverence  and  regret  „  157 

and  learns  to  deaden  L  of  self,  „  205 

From  Z  to  Z,  from  home  to  home  you  go,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  8 

L  by  right  divine  is  deathless  king,  „  29 

L  has  led  thee  to  the  stranger  land,  „  31 

hearts  that  change  not,  I  that  cannot  cease,  „  46 

Witit  a  Z  that  ever  will  be :  6.  of  Sioainston  14 


s  Field  41 


128 
138 
365 
541 
560 
616 
708 
712 
785 

Sea  Dreams  68 
Princess  i  122 

„  ii  57 
293 
401 

„       tn  39 

93 

245 

248 

iv  13 

56 

101 

105 

111 

142 

163 

303 

V  136 

207 

340 

,,  •  397 
441 

„  vi  165 
172 
197 
253 

„  vii  67 
84 
109 
115 
164 
172 


Love  (s)  (continued)    running  on  one  way  to  the 

home  of  my  Z, 
Birds'  Z  and  birds*  song 
Birds'  song  and  birds'  Z,  (repeat) 
Men's  song  and  men's  Z, 
And  women's  Z  and  men's  ! 
Take  my  Z,  for  I  will  come,  L  will  come  but  once 

a  life. 
Take  my  I  and  be  my  wife. 
L  can  love  but  once  a  life, 
you  have  gotten  the  wings  of  I, 
Sun  sets,  moon  sets,  L,  fix  a  day. 
Here  is  the  golden  close  of  Z, 
For  this  is  the  golden  morning  of  Z, 
For  a  Z  that  never  tires  ? 
O  heart,  are  you  great  enough  for  I  ? 
Steonq  Son  of  God,  immortal  L, 
Let  L  clasp  Grief  lest  both  be  drown'd, 
victor  Hours  should  scorn  The  long  result  of  Z, 
Poor  child,  that  waitest  for  thy  Z ! 
Phosphor,  bright  As  our  pure  Z, 
My  friend,  the  brother  of  my  Z ; 
Because  it  needed  help  of  L : 
L  would  cleave  in  twain  The  lading  of  a  single  pain 
No  lapse  of  moons  can  canker  L, 
And  L  the  indifference  to  be, 
Then  one  deep  Z  doth  supersede 
Whose  Vs  in  higher  Z  endure  ; 
But  for  one  hour,  0  Z,  I  strive 
L  would  answer  with  a  sigh. 
At  first  as  Death,  L  had  not  been, 
And  render  human  I  his  dues  ; 
She  enters  other  realms  of  I ; 
And  I  will  last  as  pure  and  whole 

0  L,  thy  province  were  not  large, 
Look  also,  L,  a  brooding  star, 

dream  can  hit  the  mood  Of  L  on  earth  ? 

And  makes  it  vassal  imto  Z : 

And  I  be  lessen'd  in  his  Z  ? 

Shall  Z  be  blamed  for  want  of  faith  ? 

For  Z  reflects  the  thing  beloved  ; 

The  Spirit  of  true  Z  repUed  ; 

Who  trusted  God  was  Z  indeed 

And  I  Creation's  final  law — 

play  As  with  the  creature  of  my  I ; 

Then  be  my  I  an  idle  tale. 

And  Z  in  which  my  hoimd  has  part, 

•  L's  too  precious  to  be  lost. 

To  utter  Z  more  sweet  than  praise. 

To  hold  the  costliest  I  in  fee. 

'  My  Z  shall  now  no  further  range  ; 

For  now  is  Z  mature  in  ear.'  ( 

L,  then,  had  hope  of  richer  store  : 

As  Unk'd  with  thine  in  Z  and  fate, 

Z  for  him  have  drain'd  My  capabilities  of  I ; 

1  woo  your  I :  I  count  it  crime  To  mourn 
A  meeting  somewhere,  I  with  I, 

If  not  so  fresh,  with  Z  as  true. 

First  Z,  first  friendship,  equal  powers. 

Quite  in  the  Z  of  what  is  gone, 

He  tasted  Z  with  half  his  mind, 

Vs  dumb  cry  defying  change  To  test  his  worth  ; 

My  I  has  talk'd  with  rocks  and  trees  ; 

Their  Z  has  never  past  away  ; 

Two  spirits  of  a  diverse  Z  Contend 

Ring  in  the  Z  of  truth  and  right, 

Ring  in  the  common  Z  of  good. 

A  Z  of  freedom  rarely  felt, 

But  mine  the  Z  that  will  not  tire,  And,  bom  of  Z, 

the  vague  desire 
fillest  all  the  room  Of  all  my  Z, 
What  is  she,  cut  from  Z  and  faith. 
Nor  dream  of  human  I  and  truth, 
Or  L  but  play'd  with  gracious  lies> 
L  is  and  was  my  Lord  and  King^ 


Love 


Window,  On  the  Hill  8 

„  Spring  1 

3,5 

7 

10 

No  Answer  20 

24 

28 

Ay\b 

When  4 

Marr.  Mom.  3 

11 

18 

19 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  1 


14 

vi28 

ix  11 

16 

XXV  8 

10 

xxvi  3 

12 

xxxii  5 

14 

XXXV  6 

13 

19 

xxxvii  16 

xll2 

xliii  13 

xlvi  13 

15 

xlvii  12 

xlviii  8 

Zi8 

10 

Zm2 

6 

Ivi  13 

14 

lix  12 

Ixii  3 

Ixiii  2 

IxvS 

Ixxvii  16 

Ixxix  4 

Ixxxi  2 

4 

5 

Ixxxiv  38 

Ixxxv  11 

61 

99 

101 

107 

114 

xc  1 

xeo21 

xcvii  1 

13 

cii  7 

m23 

24 

cix  13 

ca;18 

cxii  6 

cxiv  11 

cxviii  3 

cxxv  7 

cxxvi  1 


Love 


429 


Love 


Love  (s)  {cantinued)     L  is  and  was  my  King  and  Lord, 
The  I  that  rose  on  stronger  wings, 
My  I  involves  the  I  before ; 
My  I  is  vaster  passion  now  ; 
And  yet  is  I  not  less,  but  more ; 
Regret  is  dead,  but  I  is  more 
there  was  I  in  the  passionate  shriek,  L  for  the 

silent  thing  that  had  made  false  haste 
I  flee  from  the  cruel  madness  of  I, 
I  fear,  the  new  strong  wine  of  I, 
I  have  led  her  home,  my  I, 

Death  may  give  More  liie  to  L  than  is  or  ever  was 
L,  like  men  in  drinking-songs, 
With  dear  L's  tie,  makes  L  himself  more  dear,' 
now  by  this  my  I  has  closed  her  sight 
And  the  planet  of  L  is  on  high, 
Have  a  grain  of  I  for  me, 
Let  me  and  my  passionate  I  go  by, 
Me  and  my  hannful  i  go  by  ; 
To  find  the  arms  of  my  true  I  Roimd  me 
Hearts  with  no  I  for  me  : 

Z  of  a  peaice  that  was  full  of  wrongs  and  shames, 
May  all  I,  His  I,  unseen  but  felt, 
The  I  of  all  Thy  sons  encompass  Thee,  The  I  of  all 

Thy  daughters  cherish  Thee,  The  I  of  all  Thy 

people  comfort  Thee,  Till  God's  I  set  Thee  at  his 

side  again  ! 
Sware  on  the  field  of  death  a  deathless  /. 
Uther  cast  upon  her  eyes  of  I : 
loathed  the  bright  dishonour  of  his  I, 
Sware  at  the  shrine  of  Christ  a  deathless  I : 

I  charge  thee  by  my  I,' 
'  True  I,  sweet  son,  had  risk'd  himself 

I I  feel  for  thee,  nor  worthy  such  a  I : 
thy  I  to  me.  Thy  Mother, — I  demand.' 
I  be  blamed  for  it,  not  she,  nor  I : 
Eyes  of  pure  women,  wholesome  stars  of  I ; 
Peace  to  thee,  woman,  with  thy  l's  and  hates  ! 
one  would  praise  the  I  that  linkt  the  King 
And,  loving,  utter  faithfulness  in  I, 
And  as  for  I,  God  wot,  I  love  not  yet. 
Who  tilt  for  lady's  I  and  glory  here, 
Smile  sweetly,  thou  !  my  I  hath  smiled  on  me.' 
twice  my  I  hath  smiled  on  me.'  (repeat) 
What  knowest  thou  of  lovesong  or  of  /  ? 
A  foolish  I  for  flowers  ? 
thrice  my  I  hath  smiled  on  me.' 
Of  utter  peace,  and  I,  and  gentleness  ! 
Long  in  their  common  I  rejoiced  Geraint. 
Touching  her  guilty  I  for  Lancelot, 
dwelling  on  his  boundless  I, 
and  dreaming  of  her  I  For  Lancelot, 
I  or  fear,  or  seeking  favour  of  us, 


In  Mem.  cxxvi  5 

„       cxxviii  1 

„  cxxx 9 

10 

Con.  12 

17 

Maud  /  t  57 

„  iv  55 

vi82 

„       xviii  1 

47 

55 

61 

67 

„        xxii  8 

„    //  a  53 

77 
80 

„  iv  3 

94 

„  III  vi  40 
Bed.  of  Idylls  50 


„     52,  53,  54 
Com.  of  Arthur  132 
193 
195 
466 
Gareth  and  L.  55 
60 
83 
146 
299 
314 
373 
492 
554 
561 
740 
1001 
„  1062,1077 
1063 
1072 
1161 
1289 
Marr.  of  Geraint  23 
25 
63 
158 
,,700 
for  whose  I  the  Roman  Caesar  first  Invaded  Britain,  „  745 

'  Earl,  entreat  her  by  my  I,  „  760 

force  in  her  Link'd  with  such  I  for  me,  „  806 

Enid,  my  early  and  my  only  I,  Geraint  and  E.  307 

For  the  man's  I  once  gone  never  returns.  „  333 

lord  Greraint,  I  greet  you  with  all  i ;  >•  785 

love  you.  Prince,  with  something  of  the  I  „  788 

With  deeper  and  with  ever  deeper  I,  „  928 

bearing  in  their  common  bond  of  I,  Balin  and  Balan  150 

sought  to  win  my  I  Thro'  evil  ways :  »  474 

And  yet  hast  often  pleaded  for  my  I —  » 

'  I  hold  them  happy,  so  they  died  for  Z :  „ 

L,  if  L  be  perfect,  casts  out  fear,  Merlin  and 

flatter  his  own  wish  in  age  for  I, 
Death  in  all  life  and  lying  in  all  I, 
As  if  in  deepest  reverence  and  in  I. 
wise  in  I  Love  most,  say  least,' 
ask'd  again  :  for  see  you  not,  dear  Z, 
The  great  proof  of  your  I : 
'  In  2,  if  i  be  X,  if  i  be  ours, 
for  I  of  Grod  and  men  And  noble  deeds, 
X,  the'  L  were  of  the  grossest,  carves 


571 
581 
r.  40 
185 
194 
220 
247 
324 
354 
387 
412 
461 


Love  (s)  (continued)    rest :  and  L  Should  have  some  rest 

and  pleasure 
But  work  as  vassal  to  the  larger  I,  That  dwarfs  the 

petty  I  of  one  to  one. 
this  full  I  of  mine  Without  the  full  heart  back 
Full  many  a  Z  in  loving  youth  was  mine ; 
charm  to  keep  them  mine  But  youth  and  I ; 
How  from  the  rosy  lips  of  life  and  I, 
(For  in  a  wink  the  false  I  turns  to  hate) 

0  vainly  lavish'd  I ! 
for  what  shame  in  Z,  So  Z  be  true, 
more  in  kindness  than  in  Z, 
'  There  must  be  now  no  passages  of  I 
Merlin,  the  one  passionate  Z  Of  her  whole  life  ; 
my  Z  is  more  Than  many  diamonds,' 
great  and  guilty  Z  he  bare  the  Queen, 
In  battle  with  the  I  he  bare  his  lord, 
loved  him,  with  that  I  which  W£is  her  doom. 
'  L,  are  you  yet  so  sick  ?  ' 
And  I,  when  often  they  have  talk'd  of  Z, 

1  know  not  if  I  know  what  tixie  Z  is, 
cross  our  mighty  Lancelot  in  his  Vs  ! 
Yet,  if  he  love,  and  his  Z  hold, 
About  the  maid  of  Astolat,  and  her  Z. 
woman's  Z,  Save  one,  he  not  regarded, 
but  her  deep  Z  Upbore  her ; 

loved  her  with  all  Z  except  the  I  Of  man  and  woman 
shackles  of  an  old  Z  straiten'd  him, 
'  Your  Z,'  she  said, '  your  I — to  be  your  wife.' 
ill  then  should  I  quit  your  brother's  Z, 
This  is  not  Z :  but  l's  first  flash  in  youth, 
she  by  tact  of  Z  was  well  aware  That  Lancelot 
her  song, '  The  Song  of  L  and  Death,' 
'  Sweet  is  true  Z  tho'  given  in  vain, 
'Z,  art  thou  sweet?    then  bitter  death  must  be: 

L,  thou  art  bitter ;  sweet  is  death  to  me.    0  L, 

if  death  be  sweeter,  let  me  die. 
'  Sweet  Z,  that  seems  not  made  to  fade  away, 
'  I  fain  would  f oUow  Z,  if  that  could  be  ; 
there  the  King  will  know  me  and  my  Z, 
she  returns  his  Z  in  open  shame  ; 
And  greatest,  tho'  my  Z  had  no  return  : 
take  the  little  bed  on  which  I  died  For  Lancelot's  I, 
in  half  disdain  At  Z,  life,  all  things, 
I  loved  you,  and  my  Z  had  no  return.  And  therefore 

my  true  Z  has  been  my  death, 
loved  me  with  a  Z  beyond  all  Z  In  women. 
No  cause,  not  willingly,  for  such  a  Z : 
I  told  her  that  her  Z  Was  but  the  flash  of  youth. 
Forgive  me  ;  mine  was  jealousy  in  Z.' 
'  That  is  l's  curse  ;  pass  on,  my  Queen, 
if  what  is  worthy  I  Could  bind  him,  but  free  Z  will 

not  be  botmd.' 
'  Free  Z,  so  bound,  were  freiist,'  said  the  King. 
'  Let  I  be  free  ;  free  I  is  for  the  best : 
What  should  be  best,  if  not  so  pure  a  Z 
with  a  I  Far  tenderer  than  my  Queen's. 
'  Jealousy  in  Z  ?  '     Not  rather  dead  l's  harsh  heir, 
Queen,  if  I  grant  the  jealousy  as  of  Z, 
Speak,  as  it  waxes,  of  a  Z  that  wanes  ? 
A  way  by  Z  that  waken'd  Z  within. 
With  such  a  fervent  flame  of  human  Z, 
'  My  knight,  my  Z,  my  knight  of  heaven,  0  thou, 

my  Z,  whose  Z  is  one  with  mine. 
To  find  thine  own  first  Z  once  more — 
Being  so  clouded  with  his  grief  and  Z, 
That  Pelleas  might  obtain  his  lady's  Z, 
wilt  at  length  Yield  me  thy  Z  and  know  me 
I  had  liefer  ye  were  worthy  of  my  Z, 
tho'  ye  kill  my  hope,  not  yet  my  Z, 
this  man  loves,  If  Z  there  be  : 

Dishonour'd  aU  for  trial  of  true  Z— i  ?— we  be  all  alike  : 
thro'  her  Z  her  life  Wasted  and  pined, 
Sole  Queen  of  Beauty  and  of  Z, 
'  Free  I — ^free  field — we  love  (repeat) 


Merlin  and  V.  484 

491 
533 
546 
548 
846 
852 
859 
861 
907 
913 
955 
Lancelot  and  E.  87 
245 
246 
260 
571 
673 
676 
688 
697 
723 
840 
860 
868 
875 
933 
944 
949 
984 
1005 
1007 


1010 
1013 
1016 
1058 
1083 
1094 
1118 
1239 

1276 
1293 
1298 
1317 
1351 
1353 

1378 
1380 
1381 
1383 
1394 
1397 
1399 
1401 
Holy  GraU  11 
74 

157 

620 

656 

Pelleas  and  E.  161 

249 

301 

303 

308 

477 

495 

Last  Tournament  208 

275,  281 


Love 


430 


Love 


Love  (s)  (continued)    New  life,  new  I,  to  suit  the  newer 

day  :  New  I's  Last  Tournament  279 

Is  as  the  measure  of  my  I  for  thee.'                                 „  538 

pluck'd  one  way  by  hate  and  one  by  I,                           „  539 

my  Queen  Paramount  of  I  And  loveliness —                    „  552 

Queen  Have  yielded  him  her  I.'  „  565 
therefore  is  my  I  so  large  for  thee,  Seeing  it  is  not 

bounded  save  by  L'                                                      „  702 

an  I  tum'd  away  my  I  for  thee                                        „  705 

Rapt  in  sweet  talk  or  lively,  all  on  Z  And  sport  Guinevere  386 
the  desire  of  fame.  And  I  of  truth,  „  483 
Thy  lord  has  wholly  lost  his  I  for  thee.  „  509 
My  I  thro'  flesh  hath  wrought  into  my  life  „  558 
Past  with  thee  thro'  thy  people  and  their  I,                  To  the  Queen  ii  7 

friends — your  I  Is  but  a  burthen :  „  16 

Not  for  itself,  but  thro'  thy  living  I  „  34 
withers  on  the  breast  of  peaceful  I ;                                Lover's  Tale  i  10 

hills  that  watch'd  thee,  as  L  watcheth  L,  „  12 

Betwixt  the  native  land  of  L  and  me,  „  25 

0  L,0  Hope  !  They  come,  they  crowd  upon  me  „  46 
Here,  too,  my  I  Waver'd  at  anchor  with  me,  „  64 
Flow  back  again  into  my  slender  spring  And  first  of  I,  „  148 
neither  L,  Warm  in  the  heart,  his  cradle,  can 

remember  L  in  the  womb,  „  157 

that  my  I  Grew  with  myself —  „  164 

Or  build  a  wall  betwixt  my  life  and  I,  „  176 
As  L  and  I  do  number  equal  years,  So  she,  my  I,  is 

of  an  age  with  me.  „  195 

My  mother's  sister,  mother  of  my  I,  „  209 

nor  was  his  I  the  less  Because  it  was  divided,  „  228 

for  that  day,  L,  rising,  shook  his  wings,  „  317 

all  the  low  dark  groves,  a  lemd  of  H  „  332 

Spirit  of  L !  that  little  hour  was  bound  „  437 

her  life,  her  I,  With  my  life,  I,  soul,  spirit,  „  459 

1  could  not  speak  my  I.     L  lieth  deep  :  L  dwells 
not  in  lip-depths.     L  wraps  his  wings  on  either 

side  the  heart,  „  465 
Drunk  in  the  largeness  of  the  utterance  Of  Z ; 

but  how  should  Earthly  measure  mete  The 

Heavenly-unmeasured  or  imlimited  L,  „  473 

Than  language  grasp  the  infinite  of  L.  „  484 

sick  with  I,  Fainted  at  intervals,  „  545 

Her  maiden  dignities  of  Hope  and  L —  „  580 

the  tender  I  Of  him  she  brooded  over.  „  616 

nestled  in  this  bosom-throne  of  L,  „  624 

how  her  I  did  clothe  itself  in  smiles  „  658 

And  why  was  I  to  darken  their  pure  I,  „  727 

to  this  present  My  full-orb'd  I  had  waned  not.  „  734 

Her  I  did  murder  mine  ?    What  then  ?  „  740 

She  told  me  all  her  I :  she  shall  not  weep.  „  742 

for  I  loved  her,  lost  my  lin  L;  „  749 

till  their  I  Shall  ripen  to  a  proverb,  „  757 

One  golden  dream  of  I,  from  which  „  760 

sure  my  I  should  ne'er  indue  the  front  „  774 
Shall  L  pledge  Hatred  in  her  bitter  draughts.  And 

batten  on  her  poisons  ?     L  forbid !  „  776 
L  passeth  not  the  threshold  of  cold  Hate,  And  Hate 

18  strange  beneath  the  roof  of  L.  „  778 
O  L,it  thou  be'st  L,  dry  up  these  tears  Shed  for 

the  lot  L;  ,,780 

So  L,  arraign'd  to  judgment  and  to  death,  „  785 

when  their  I  is  wreck'd— if  L  can  wreck —  „  804 

Where  L  could  walk  with  banish'd  Hope  „  813 
L's  arms  were  wreath'd  about  the  neck  of  Hope, 

and  Hope  kiss'd  L,  and  L  „  815 
They  said  that  L  would  die  when  Hope  was  gone, 

And  L  moum'd  long,  „  818 
trod  The  same  old  paths  where  L  had  walk'd  with  Hope, 

And  Memory  fed  the  soul  of  L  with  tears.  „  821 

till  they  faded  like  my  I.  „  a  jq 

if  Affection  Living  slew  i,  and  Sympathy  hew'd  out  „  31 

I  told  him  all  my  I,  How  I  had  loved  her  „  90 
A  monument  of  childhood  and  of  I ;  The  poesy  of 

childhood ;  my  lost  I  Symbol'd  in  storm.  „  183 

My  stater,  and  my  cousin,  and  my  I,  „  m  43 


Love  (s)  (continued)   01,1  have  not  seen  you  for  so  long.    Lover 
Hearts  that  had  beat  with  such  a  I  as  mine — 
am  I  made  immortal,  or  my  I  Mortal  once  more  ?  ' 
you  have  given  me  life  and  I  again, 
the  house  had  known  the  I's  of  both  ; 
This  I  is  of  the  brain,  the  mind,  the  soul : 
that  great  I  they  both  had  borne  the  dead, 
By  all  the  laws  of  I  and  gratefulness. 
As  for  a  solemn  sacrifice  of  I — 
guest  So  bound  to  me  by  common  I  and  loss — 
And  then  began  the  story  of  his  I 
And  I,  and  boundless  thanks — 
An'  he  smiled  at  me, '  Ain't  you,  my  I  ?  First 

For  I  will  go  by  contrast,  as  by  likes.  Sisters  (E. 

L  at  first  sight  May  seem — 
Not  I  that  day  of  Edith's  I  or  mine — 
Had  I  not  known  where  X,  at  first  a  fear. 
So  L  and  Honour  jarr'd  Tho'  L  and  Honour 
L  Were  not  his  own  imperial  all-in-all. 
with  what  I  Edith  had  welcomed  my  brief  wooing 
Not  that  her  I,  Tho'  scarce  as  great  as  Edith's 

power  of  I, 
remembering  all  The  I  they  both  have  borne  me,  and 

the  1 1  bore  them  both — 
in  the  rich  vocabulary  of  L  '  Most  dearest ' 


s  Tale  iv  45 

69 

79 

110 

123 

156 

181 

278 

301 

345 

354 

382 

Quarrel  62 

and  E.)  42 

91 

142 

170 

176 

226 

253 

260 

280 
291 


In  the  Child.  Hasp.  12 
Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  3 


would  die  But  for  the  voice  of  L, 

fatal  kiss.  Born  of  true  life  and  I,  divorce  thee 

not  From  earthly  I  and  life — 

Where  L  and  Longing  dress  thy  deeds  in  light,  „                 9 
Indissolubly  married  like  our  I ;                                De  Prof.,  Two  G.  14 

Yet  loves  and  hates  with  mortal  hates  and  Vs  Tiresias  23 

that  hast  never  known  the  embrace  of  I,  „      164 

With  the  first  great  1 1  had  felt  The  Wreck  76 

'  as  in  truest  L  no  Death.'  „        80 

Knowing  the  L  we  were  used  to  believe  Despair  54 

'  Dear  L,  for  ever  and  ever,  „        58 

Infinite  L  that  has  served  us  so  well  ?  „        95 

His  L  would  have  power  over  Hell  „      102 

God  of  L  and  of  Hell  together —  „      105 
My  rose  of  I  for  ever  gone.                                               Ancient  Sage  159 


not  L  but  Hate  that  weds  a  bride  against  her  will ; 

The  I  that  keeps  this  heart  aUve 

where  summer  never  dies,  with  L,  the  Sun  of  life  ! 

And  L  is  fire,  and  bums  the  feet  „  68 

Christian  I  among  the  Churches  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  86 

Envy  wears  the  mask  of  L,  „  109 

half-brain  races,  led  by  Justice,  L,  and  Truth  ;  „  161 

Or  L  with  wreaths  of  flowers. 

Son's  I  built  me,  and  I  hold  Mother's  I  in  letter'd 

gold. 
L  IS  in  and  out  of  time, 
granite  girth  were  strong  As  either  I, 
Of  L  to  leaven  all  the  mass. 
Two  Suns  of  L  make  day  of  human  life, 
The  later-rising  Sun  of  spousal  L, 
This  later  light  of  L  have  risen  in  vain, 
Sway'd  by  each  L,  and  swaying  to  each  L, 
Will  mix  with  I  for  you  and  yours. 


The  Flight  32 
35 
44 


Epilogue  17 

Helen's  Tower  3 
5 


Freedom  19 

To  Prin.  Beatrice  1 

6 

16 

19 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  52 


harvest  hymns  of  Earth  The  worship  which  is  L,     Demeter  and  P.  149 

L  for  the  maiden,  crown'd  with  marriage,  fastness  23 

till  Self  died  out  in  the  I  of  his  kind ;  „        28 

Shall  not  my  I  last,  Moon,  with  you,  The  Ring  17 

And  utter  knowledge  is  but  utter  I —  „          43 

Hubert  weds  in  you  The  heart  of  L,  „          62 

to  laugh  at  I  in  death  !  „        231 

matron  saw  That  hint«d  I  was  only  wasted  bait,                        „        360 

but  now  my  I  was  hers  again,  „        393 

Bound  by  the  golden  cord  of  their  first  I —  „        429 

pardon,  0  my  I,  if  I  ever  gave  you  pain.  Happy  68 

be  content  TiU  I  be  leper  Tike  yourself,  my  /,  „    88 

work  old  laws  of  i  to  fresh  results.  Prog,  of  Spring  85 

Light  again,  leaf  again,  life  again,  I  again,'  The  Throstle  3 

'  L  again,  song  agam,  nest  again,  „            9 

This,  and  my  I  together,  June  Bracken,  etc.  5 

by  thy  I  which  once  was  mine,  Death  of  (Enone  45 


St.  Tdemachus  22 


73 


101 
109 
164 
170 
181,  194 
Charity  30 


Lo7e 

Love  (s)  (cofUinv^)    self-suppression,  not  of  selfless  I 
il  It  be  a  Christian  Church,  people  ring  the  beU 

from  Z  to  Thee.  r    i-      --s  ^i.a  _,    r,     r 

The  Alif  of  Thine  alphabet  of  L  '  jL    >'  ^^'^P-J^ 

'  Alia  '  savs  their  sabred  book, 'is  L  '  ^**'"' '  ^''""^  ^^ 

oi  tmth  ?^  "^^  ^'^"  ^^^  Sun  of  Z  ?  and  L  The  net 
in  the  I  of  Truth,  The  truth  of  L 
Express  bim  also  by  their  warmth  of  I 
alchemise  old  hates  into  the  gold  Of  L 
a  well  of  I  My  heart  is  for  my  son, 
L  and  Justice  came  and  dwelt  therein  ;  (repeat) 
guess  at  the  /  of  a  soul  for  a  soul  ? 

Before  I  learn  that  X,  which  is  n     i.      J  v:""  "- 

For  if  thb  earth  be  ruled  by  Perfect  L,  D  ?/£  ^Stf  7c  8 

Sleep,  Ellen  Aubrey,  I,  and  dream  of  me  '  ^  /  ^i     n^     nn 

Love  (^^b)^   (See  also  ^oi  LooJJX^V  When  I  ask  her  ^Sf  '''^''  '' 
She'll  not  teU  me  if  she  I  me  -^^^^  1 

brook  that /'«  To  purl  o'er  matted  cress  ha.  t    n^      "    ro 

thou  dearly  I  thy  ^rst  essayT  '"  '^^"^'^  f  f 

Who  is  it  Vs  me  ?  who  Z',  not  me  ?  '  y*^  il/«.«,.,w  i  q 

You  I,  remaming  peacefully  ^er»M«i  13 

And  clip  your  win^,  and  mkke  vou  I  ■  Margaret  22 

Kate  Vs  well  theTld  and^^ef      '  ^"'f^^  45 

For  ah  !  the  shght  coquette,  she  cannot  /,  The  form  the  foZ  S 

'  ?:t  m^  Thlr  fo^yotrke'^"""'  ^°  '"^"'  ^r.  ^-4  '^^ 

That  loss  but  madel^iTrmor^,  ^^^^'^  ^-  1^2 

I  shall  I  thee  weU  and  cleave  to  thee,  rp',  Tah 

K  H^,*^l^"PPy  ^'^'  '^^*  ^  to  live  :  ®"""*  IS 

viiili    ^*"^  °"  ^'  (^^^"ty  seen  In  aU  "        ^ 
YouTugt  to  prove  how  I  could  I,              ^'  ~~t  ^J^/t  "f /%? 

Those  we  /  first  are  taken  first.       '  ^^  ^-  ^-/^  ^Z'  f^ 

Somethuig  to  I  He  lends  us  ;  I  o  J.  6.  12 

But  lives  and  I's  in  every  place  •  n        i,/'        ^ 

X  thou  thy  land,  with  love  far-brought  r       H"  ¥2.'"'^'^^ 

Would  I  the  gleams  of  good  thaSke  ^"^  '^"  '^^  ^''^  ^ 
blooms  the  garden  that  I  /. 
And  told  me  I  should  I. 
'  My  girl,  1 1  you  well ; 
I  come  For  Dora  :  take  her  back  ;  she  I's  you  well. 

0?d'oak^^^re'4^  ,^  ^"'''^  ^  ^«--  --' 

God  i  us,  as  if  the  seedsman, 

and  the  wild  team  Which  I  thee 

Saying, '  Dost  thou  I  me,  cousin  ?  ' 

and  I  her,  as  I  knew  her,  kind  ? 

whom  to  look  at  was  to  I. 

and  I  her  for  the  love  she  bore  ? 

I  will  I  no  more,  no  more, 

'He  does  not  I  me  for  my  birth, 

HeJ  s  me  for  my  own  true  worth, 

rhere  is  none  1 1  like  thee.' 
And  1 1  thee  more  than  life.' 
Says  to  her  that  I's  him  weU 

0  but  she  will  I  him  truly  ! 
Fish  are  we  that  I  the  mud, 

No,  1 1  not  what  is  new  ; 
U  him  aU  the  better  for  it— 

1  do  think  They  Z  me  as  a  father :  I  am  sure  that  1 1 
tnem  as  if  they  were  mine  own  • 

Can  one  Uwice  ?  can  you  be  ever  loved 
the  days  That  most  she  I's  to  talk  of 
and  he  said  '  Why  then  I  Ht : ' 
whitest  lamb  in  all  my  fold  L's  you  • 
because  1 1  their  child  They  hate  me : 
you  then,  That  I  to  keep  us  children  ! 
Her  brethren,  tho'  they  I  her. 
When  we  fall  out  with  those  we  I 
Albeit  so  mask'd.  Madam,  1 1  the  truth  ; 
II 1  could  I,  why  this  were  she  : 
she  cned,  '  you  I  The  metaphysics  ! 


431 


Gardener's  D.  34 
64 
Dora^ 
„     143 
Audley  Court  52 
Talking  Oak  202 
Golden  Year  70 
Tithonus  40 
Locksley  Hall  30 
70 
72 
73 
Edward  Gray  31 
Lady  Clare  9 
1] 
L.  of  Burleigh  6 
16 
22 
37 
Vision  of  8in  101 
139 
Enoch  Arden  196 


412 

426 

The  Brook  226 

Aylmer's  Field  249 

362 

423 

Princess,  Pro.  133 

n54 

m8 

213 

Hi  99 

299 


^''  ^'he  lergef  ""^^    '^^^'  ''°^'  ""'^^  ^'  ^"  ^  ^^'"^ 
and  to  shame  That  which  he  says  he  l's : 
mat  I  their  voices  more  than  duty 
and  yet  they  say  that  still  You  I  her 
shards  with  catapults.  She  would  not  I  •— 
Not  ever  would  she  I  ■  but  brooding 
They  Z  us  for  it,  and  we  ride  them  down, 
one  I  s  the  soldier,  one  The  silken  priest 
she  can  be  sweet  to  those  she  l's 
X  ou  I  nor  her,  nor  me,  nor  any  • 
And  trust,  not  I,  you  less.  ' 

II  not  hollow  cheek  or  faded  eye  : 
But  hke  each  other  ev'n  as  those  who  I 

^ever,  I'rmce ;  You  cannot  I  me.' 
to  life  mdeed,  thro'  thee.  Indeed  1 1  ■ 
1^  thee :  come,  Yield  thyself  up  • 
Thme  island  l's  thee  well 
We  ^  not  this  French  God,  the  child  of  Hell, 
But  though  we  I  kind  Peace  so  well. 
But  some  I  England  and  her  honou^  yet 
Come  to  us,  Z  us  and  make  us  your  own  • 
who  I  best  have  best  the  grace  to  know  ' 
You  cannot  I  me  at  all,  if  you  I  not 
Sweetheart,  I Z  you  so  well  that  your  good  name 
To  I  once  and  for  ever.  j        &  ^^  udiue 

L  me  now,  you'll  I  me  then  : 
Love  can  L  but  once  a  life. 
To  look  on  her  that  l's  him"  well, 
Come  quick,  thou  bringest  all  1 1 
And  come,  whatever  l's  to  weep 
He  l's  to  make  parade  of  pain,  ' 
But  in  the  songs  I Z  to  sing 
When  one  that  Z'.  but  knows  not,  reaps  A  truth 

from  one  that  l's  and  knows  ? 
I  cannot  I  thee  as  I  ought 
My  spirit  loved  and  l's  him  yet. 
How  should  he  I  a  thing  so  low  ?  ' 
I  loved  thee,  Spirit,  and  I,  nor  c'an  The  soul  of 

bhakespeai-e  I  thee  more. 
'More  years  had  made  me  I  thee  more 
Discuss'd  the  books  to  I  or  hate 
Are  earnest  that  he  l's  her  yet,  ' 
He  l's  her  yet,  she  will  not  weep 
For  that,  for  all,  she  l's  him  more 
I  cannot  understand :  II.' 
shape  of  him  I  loved,  and  l  For  ever  • 
Who  l's  not  Knowledge  ? 
I  do  not  therefore  I  thee  less  : 
I  seem  to  I  thee  more  and  more, 
be  bom  and  think.  And  act  and'/. 
That  God,  which  ever  lives  and  l's, 
I  am  quite  sure  That  there  is  one  to  I  me  : 
bhould  1 1  her  so  well  if  she  (repeat) 
I  see  she  cannot  but  I  him. 


Love 


Princess  iv  47 
249 
612 
1)123 
139 
141 
157 
183 
289 
«ji260 
296 
vii  7 
292 
334 
338 
346 
363 
Ode  on  Well.  85 
Third  of  Feb.  7 
9 
46 
iV.  to  Alexandra  30 
fV.  to  Marie  Alex.  28 
Grandmother  48 
50 
Window,  Spring  8 
,,  No  Answer 21 
28 
In  Mem.  viii  2 
»  X'oii  8 

..  xviii  11 
i>  xxi  10 
»    xxxviii  7 

..         xlii  11 

'.  lit  1 

1x2 

16 


Begmnmg  to  famt  m  the  Ught  that  she  l's 
To  faint  m  the  light  of  the  sun  she  l's. 
But  she,  she  would  I  me  still ; 
wheedle  a  world  that  l's  him  not 
we  wiU  work  thy  will  Who  I  thee'.' 
c^ce  what  will,  I  I  thee  to  the  death  ! ' 
^  King  and  my  lord,  1 1  thee  to  the  death  ' ' 
Keign  ye,  and  live  and  I, 

Sweet  mother,  do  ye  /  the  child  ?  ' 
Then,  mother,  an'  ye  I  the  child,' 

Ihe  woman  l's  her  lord. 

God  wot,  1 1  not  yet.  But  1 1  shall, 

and  whom  they  could  but  I, 

I  accept  thee  aught  the  more  Or  I  thee  better 

i  cannot  I  my  lord  and  not  his  name 

in  the  sweet  face  of  her  Whom  he  l's  most 

may  you  light  on  all  things  that  you  l.  And  hve  to 
wed  with  her  whom  fiiJt  you  Z  • 

wheel  and  thee  we  neither  I  nor  hate,  (repeat) 


Ixi  11 
1)        Ixxxi  8 
»    Ixxxix  34 
..       xcvii  15 
18 
28 
36 
..  ciii  14 

i>  cxiv  1 

»        cxxx  8 
12 
,,     Con.  127 
141 
Maud  I  xi  11 
.,     xvi  26,  28 
»  xix  69 

>i  xxii  9 

11 

//  a  51 

V  39 

Com.  of  Arthur  260 

468 

470 

.,     "  472 

Oareth  and  L.  35 

37 

372 

561 

696 

767 

Mart,  of  Geraint  92 

123 

226 
.,    349,358 


Love 


432 


Love-charm'd 


Love  (verb)  {conHn%ud)    For  truly  there  are  those  who 

I  me  yet ;  Marr.  ofGeraint  461 

Except  the  lady  he  I's  best  be  there.  „  481 

I  would  the  two  Should  I  each  other :  „  792 
he  I'a  to  know  When  men  of  mark  are  in  his 

territory  :  Geraint  and  E.  228 

doth  he  I  you  as  of  old  ?  „  323 

men  may  bicker  with  the  things  they  I,  „  325 

that  this  man  Vs  you  no  more.  „  329 

But  here  is  one  who  Vs  you  as  of  old ;  „  334 

'  Earl,  if  you  I  rae  as  in  former  years,  „  355 

village  boys  Who  I  to  vex  him  eating,  „  561 

I I  that  beauty  should  go  beautifully :  „  681 

I  never  loved,  can  never  I  but  him :  „  709 
Who  I  you,  Prince,  with  something  of  the  love 

Wherewith  we  I  the  Heaven  that  chastens  us.  „  788 

A  year  ago — nay,  then  1 1  thee  not —  Balin  and  Balan  504 

vows  like  theirs,  that  high  in  heaven  L  most, 
'  O  Merlin,  do  ye  i  me  ?  '  (repeat) 
'  Great  Master,  do  ye  i  me  ? 
'  Who  are  wise  in  love  L  most,  say  least,' 
Master,  do  ye  I  my  tender  rhyme  ?  ' 
methinks  you  think  you  I  me  well ;  For  me,  1 1  you 

somewhat ;  rest : 
'  Man  dreams  of  Fame  while  woman  wakes  to  L' 
proof  against  the  grain  Of  him  ye  say  ye  I : 
However  well  ye  think  ye  I  me  now 
try  this  charm  on  whom  ye  say  ye  I.' 
My  daily  wonder  is,  I  i  at  all. 
And  one  to  make  me  jealous  if  1 1, 
must  be  to  i  thee  stUl. 

'  O  Merlin,  tho'  you  do  not  I  me,  save.  Yet  save  me  ! 
A  sight  ye  I  to  look  on.' 
who  I's  me  must  have  a  touch  of  earth  ; 
He  I's  it  in  his  knights  more  than  himself  : 

III  news,  my  Queen,  for  all  who  I  him, 
'  that  you  I  This  greatest  knight. 
But  if  I  know,  then,  iill  not  him,  I  know  there  is 

none  other  I  can  I.' 
'  Yea,  by  God's  death,'  said  he,  '  ye  I  him  well, 
knew  ye  what  all  others  know,  And  whom  he  I's.' 
For  if  you  I,  it  will  be  sweet  to  give  it ;  And  if  he  I, 

it  will  be  sweet  to  have  it 
whether  he  I  or  not,  A  diamond  is  a  diamond. 
Yet,  if  he  I,  and  his  love  hold, 
Whose  sleeve  he  wore  ;  she  I's  him ; 
'  The  maid  of  Astolat  Vs  Sir  Lancelot,  Sir  Lancelot 

Vs  the  maid  of  Astolat.' 
But  did  not  I  the  colour ; 

love  Of  man  and  woman  when  they  I  their  best, 
He  will  not  I  me :  how  then  ? 
'  I  have  gone  mad.     1 1  you : 
Sir  Lancelot's  fault  Not  to  I  me,  than  it  is  mine 

to  I  Him 
He  I's  the  Queen,  and  in  an  open  shame  : 
Yet  to  be  loved  makes  not  to  I  again  ; 
All  that  belongs  to  knighthood,  and  1 1.' 

I I  thee,  tho'  I  know  thee  not. 
win  me  this  fine  circlet,  Pelleas,  That  I  may  I  thee  ? 
on  the  morrow  knighted,  sware  To  I  one  only. 
'  To  those  who  I  them,  trials  of  our  faith, 
and  if  ye  {  me  not,  I  cannot  bear  to  dream 
this  man  I's,  If  love  there  be  : 
He  could  not  I  me,  did  he  know  me  well. 
'  Avaunt,'  they  cried, '  our  lady  I's  thee  not.' 
That  whom  ye  loathe,  him  will  I  make  you  Z.' 
He  dies  who  I's  it, — if  the  worm  be  there.' 

What  faith  have  these  in  whom  they  sware  to  I  ?  Last  Tournament  188 
'  Free  love — free  field — we  I  (repeat)  „      275,  281 

What,  if  she  I  me  still  ?  „  497 

He  find  thy  favour  changed  and  I  thee  not ' —  „  500 

I  should  hate  thee  more  than  I.'  „  600 

Did  1 1  her  ?  the  name  at  least  I  loved.  „  603 

I  say,  Sw«ar  to  me  thou  wilt  I  me  ev'n  when  old,  „  652 

my  Mul,  we  I  but  while  we  may ;  „  701 


Merlin  and  V.  15 
235,  236 
237 
248 
399 

483 
460 
488 
516 
525 
536 
539 
928 
944 

Lancelot  and  E.  83 
133 
157 
598 
668 

677 
679 
681 

692 
694 
697 
711 

725 
840 


930 


,, 

1076 

1082 

1295 

Pelleas  and  E.  9 

43 

129 

141 

210 

299 

307 

312 

369 

390 

409 

Lore  (verb)  {continued)    '  We  I  but  while  we  may.'     Well 

then,  Last  Tournament  712 

and  I  will  I  thee  to  the  death,  „              720 

'  O  Lancelot,  if  thou  I  me  get  thee  hence.'  Guinevere  95 

True  men  who  I  me  still,  for  whom  I  live,  „        445 

To  I  one  maiden  only,  cleave  to  her,  „        475 

tho'  thou  wouldst  not  I  thy  lord,  „        508 

that  my  doom  is,  I Z  thee  still.  „        559 

Let  no  man  dream  but  that  1 1  thee  „        560 

tell  the  King  1 1  him  tho'  so  late  ?  „        651 

I  must  not  scorn  myself  :  he  I's  me  still.  „        673 

Let  no  one  dream  but  that  he  I's  me  still.  „        674 

thy  life  is  whole,  and  still  I  live  Who  I  thee ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  151 

sons,  who  I  Our  ocean-empire  To  the  Queen  ii  28 

draught  of  that  sweet  fountain  that  he  I's,  Lover's  Tale  i  141 

Ye  ask  me,  friends.  When  I  began  to  I.  „              145 

So  know  I  not  when  I  began  to  I.  „              163 

In  that  I  live  1 1 ;  because  III  live :  •  „              178 

Than  the  gray  cuckoo  I's  his  name,  „              257 

I  foimd,  they  two  did  I  each  other,  .„              728 

Did  I Z  her  ?     Ye  know  that  I  did  I  her ;  „              732 

Did  1 1  her.  And  could  I  look  upon  her  „  735 
Let  them  so  I  that  men  and  boys  may  say, '  Lo  ! 

how  they  I  each  other ! '  „              756 
Deem  that  1 1  thee  but  as  brothers  do.  So  shalt  thou 

I  me  still  as  sisters  do  ;  ,,767 

had  there  been  none  else  To  Z  as  lovers,  „              771 

I  will  be  alone  with  all  1 1,  „            iv  47 

solemn  offering  of  you  To  him  you  I.'  „  119 
I'll  never  I  any  but  you,  (repeat)  First  Quarrel  22,  32,  33,  34 
I  loved  Edith,  made  Edith  I  me.                            Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  139 

I  know  not  which  of  these  1 1  the  best.  „              283 

But  you  I  Edith ;  and  her  own  true  eyes  „              284 

I  think  /  Ukewise  I  your  Edith  most.  „              293 

Better  to  fall  by  the  hands  that  they  I,  Def.  of  Lucknow  53 

Ay,  for  they  I  me  !  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  44 

Who  dost  not  I  our  England —  To  Victor  Hugo  9 

Yet  I's  and  hates  with  mortal  hates  and  loves,  Tiresias  23 

thou  art  wise  enough,  Tho'  young,  to  I  thy  wiser,  „      154 

one  thing  given  me,  to  I  and  to  Uve  for,  The  Wreck  35 

Stephen,  1 1  you,  1 1  you,  and  yet ' —  „        101 

The  wife,  the  sons,  who  I  him  best  Ancient  Sage  125 

I  swear  and  swear  forsworn  To  I  him  most.  The  Flight  50 

They  I  their  mates,  to  whom  they  sing ;  „          65 

She  bad  us  I,  like  souls  in  Heaven,  „          88 

every  heart  that  I's  with  truth  is  equal  to  endure.  „        104 

L  youi-  enemy,  bless  your  haters,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  85 

I  that  loathed,  have  come  to  I  him.  „  280 
who  I's  War  for  War's  own  sake  Is  fool,  Epilogue  30 
only  to  be  known  By  those  who  I  thee  best.  Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  8 
Who  I's  his  native  country  best.  Hands  all  Round  4 
To  Canada  whom  we  I  and  prize,  „  19 
between  The  two  that  I  thee.  To  Prin.  Beatrice  18 
Your  rule  has  made  the  people  I  Their  ruler.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  9 
man,  that  only  Uves  and  I's  an  hoxrr,  Dem^ter  and  P.  106 
Till  thy  dark  lord  accept  and  I  the  Sun,  „  137 
for  I  loved  him,  and  I  him  for  ever  :  Fastness  36 
And  bind  the  maid  to  I  you  by  the  ring  ;  The  Ring  202 
flaunted  it  Before  that  other  whom  I  loved  and  I.  „  244 
MiriEun,  if  you  I  me  take  the  ring  ! '  „  263 
if  you  cannot  I  me,  let  it  be.'  „  265 
You  I  me  still '  lo  t'amo.' — ^Muriel — no — She  cannot  I ; 

she  I's  her  own  hard  self,  „      291 

Why  had  I  made  her  I  me  thro'  the  ring,  „      391 

'  That  weak  and  watery  nature  I  you  ?  „      396 

but  now  1 1  you  most ;  Happy  29 

whisper'd  me  '  your  Ulric  I's '  „        62 

Who  I  the  winter  woods.  To  Ulysses  14 

Who  I  her  still,  and  wliimper,  Romney's  R.  117 

I I  you  more  than  when  we  maiTied.  „  157 
cried  'L  one  another  little  ones  '  Akbar's  Dream  76 
L  me  ?  0  yes,  no  doubt — how  long —  Charity  5 
And  I's  the  world  from  end  to  end.  The  Wanderer  7 

Loveable     Elaine  the  fair,  Elaine  the  I,  Lancelot  and  E.  1 

Love-obarm'd    stars  that  hung  L-c  to  listen :  Love  and  DvXy  75 


Loved 


433 


Loved 


Loved    {See  also  Loov'd,  Luw'd,  Well-loved,  Yet-loved)    Ev'n 

in  her  sight  he  I  so  well  ?  Margaret  40 

If  I  were  I,  as  I  desire  to  be,  //  /  were  loved  1 

— if  I  were  I  by  thee  ?  „  4 

1 1  thee  for  the  tear  thou  couldst  not  hide,  The  Bridesmaid  11 

Have  lived  and  I  done  so  long.  Miller's  D.  38 

1 1,  and  love  dispeU'd  the  fear  „  89 

1 1  the  brimming  wave  that  swam  Thro'  quiet  meadows  „  97 

1 1  you  better  for  your  fears,  „         149 

But  I  Z  his  beauty  passing  well.  The  Sisters  23 

silver  tongue.  Cold  February  I,  is  dry :  The  Blackbird  14 

a  sleep  They  sleep — the  men  1 1.  M.  d' Arthur  17 

we  I  the  man,  and  prized  his  work  ;  „     Ej).  8 

woman's  heart,  the  heart  of  her  1 1 ;  Gardener's  D.  230 

on  the  cheeks,  Like  one  that  I  him  :  Dora  134 

I  have  kill'd  him— but  1 1  him—  „     160 

I  At  first  hke  dove  and  dove  were  cat  and  dog         Walk,  to  the  Mail  57 
but  for  daily  loss  of  one  she  I  „  94 

and  Duty  I  of  Love —  Love  and  Duty  46 

both  with  those  That  I  me,  and  alone ;  Ulysses  9 

weeping,  '  I  have  I  thee  long.'  Locksley  Rail  30 

I  had  I  thee  more  than  ever  wife  was  I.  „  64 

No — she  never  I  me  truly :  „  74 

to  have  I  so  slight  a  thing.  „  148 

I  the  people  well,  And  loathed  to  see  them  overtax'd  ;  Godiva  8 

therefore,  as  they  I  her  well,  „         38 

*  Ellen  Adair  she  I  me  well,  Edward  Gray  9 

And  the  people  I  her  much,  L.  of  Burleigh  76 

We  I  the  glories  of  the  world,  The  Voyage  83 

And  you,  whom  once  I Z  so  well.  The  Letters  35 

But  Philip  I  in  silenoe  ;  Enoch  Arden  41 

But  she  I  Enoch ;  tho'  she  knew  it  not,  „  43 

And  her,  he  I,  a  beggar :  „  117 

To  sell  the  boat — and  yet  he  I  her  well —  „  134 

I  have  I  you  longer  than  you  know.'  „  421 

can  you  be  ever  I  As  Enoch  was  ?  „  426 

to  be  Z  A  httle  after  Enoch.'  „  428 

he  had  I  her  longer  than  she  knew,  „  455 

nor  I  she  to  be  left  Alone  at  home,  „  516 

home  Where  Annie  lived  and  I  him,  „  685 

Then  may  she  learn  1 1  her  to  the  last.'  „  835 

yet  the  brook  he  I,  For  which.  The  Brook  15 

fancies  of  the  boy.  To  me  that  I  him  ;  „  20 

he  Z  As  heiress  and  not  heir  regretfully  ?  Aylmer's  Field  23 

young  hearts  not  knowing  that  they  I,  „  133 

He  but  less  I  than  Edith,  of  her  poor  : 
He,  I  for  her  and  for  himself, 
neither  I  nor  liked  the  thing  he  heard, 
for  I  have  I  you  more  as  son  Than  brother, 
The  life  of  all — who  madly  I — and  he, 
They  I  me,  and  because  I  love  their  child 
Him  too  you  I,  for  he  was  worthy  love, 
woman  half  tum'd  roimd  from  him  she  I, 
tho'  he  I  her  none  the  less, 
the  mind,  except  it  I  them,  clasp  These  idols 

I  to  live  alone  Among  her  women  ; 
eyes  that  ever  I  to  meet  Star-sisters 
'  To  Unger  here  with  one  that  I  us.' 

I I  her.     Peace  be  with  her. 
1 1  you  Uke  this  kneeler, 
he  That  I  me  closer  than  his  own  right  eye, 
Call'd  him  worthy  to  be  I, 

if  you  I  The  breast  that  fed  or  arm  that  dandled  you. 
Dear  traitor,  too  much  I,  why  ? — why  ? — 
1 1  the  woman  :  he,  that  doth  not, 
there  was  one  thro'  whom  1 1  her, 
Ere  seen  1 1,  and  I  thee  seen. 
We  I  the  hall,  tho'  white  and  cold, 
I  walk'd  with  one  1 1  two  and  thirty  years  ago. 
Two  dead  men  have  1 1  With  a  love 

Three  dead  men  have  1 1  and  thou  art  last  of  the  three.  „  15 

I  find  him  worthier  to  be  I.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  40 

'  Behold  the  man  that  I  and  lost,  „  i  15 

With  my  lost  Arthur's  I  remains,  »  _  ix  3 

The  human-hearted  man  1 1,  m  «w»  H 


167 
179 

250 
351 
389 
423 

712 

Sea  Dreams  286 

Lucretius  4 

„       164 

Princess  i  49 

m427 

Hi  339 

iv  136 

296 

r531 

vi  6 

180 

293 

vii  313 

317 

341 

The  Daisy  37 

V.  of  Cauteretz  4 

G.  of  Swainston  13 


Loved  (continued)     1 1  the  weight  I  had  to  bear.  In  Mem.  xxv  7 
'Tis  better  to  have  I  and  lost  Than  never  to  have  I 

at  aU.  „  xxvii  15 

As  when  he  I  me  here  in  Time,  „  xliii  14 

Who  I,  who  suffered  countless  ills,  ,,  Ivi  17 

My  spirit  I  and  loves  him  yet,  „  Ix  2 

1 1  thee,  Spirit,  and  love,  „  Ixi  11 
'Tis  better  to  have  I  and  lost.  Than  never  to  have 

I  at  all—  „  Ixxxv  3 

That  I  to  handle  spiritual  strife,  „  54 

He  I  to  rail  against  it  still,  „  Ixxxix  38 

The  shape  of  him  I Z,  and  love  For  ever  :  „  ciii  14 

The  man  we  I  was  there  on  deck,  „  41 

A  httle  spare  the  night  11,  „  cv  15 

And  sing  the  songs  he  I  to  hear.  „  cvH  24 

And  I  them  more,  that  they  were  thine,  „  ex  15 

0 1  the  most,  when  most  I  feel  .  _         „  cxxix  3 

L  deeplier,  darklier  imderstood ;  „  10 

Until  we  close  with  all  we  I,  „  cxxxi  11 

told  me  that  he  Z  A  daughter  of  our  house  ;  „  Con.  6 

For  all  we  thought  and  Z  and  did,  „  134 

To  speak  of  the  mother  she  Z  Maud  I  xix  27 

one  short  hour  to  see  The  souls  we  Z,  „  //  iv  15 

I  one  only  and  who  clave  to  her — '  Ded.  of  Idylls  11 
He  laugh'd  upon  his  warrior  whom  he  I  And  honour'd 

Com.  of  Arthur  125 


most. 


Stern  too  at  times,  and  then  I Z  him  not.  But  sweet 

again,  and  then  I Z  him  well. 
Arthur  charged  his  warrior,  whom  he  Z  And  honour'd 

most. 
One,  that  had  I  him  from  his  childhood, 
I  with  that  full  love  I  feel  for  thee, 
Kay  the  seneschal,  who  I  him  not, 
And  I  her,  as  he  Z  the  light  of  Heaven. 
30  Z  Geraint  To  make  her  beauty  vary 
and  Z  her  in  a  state  Of  broken  fortunes, 
L  her,  and  often  with  her  own  white  hands 
And  Enid  Z  the  Queen,  and  with  true  heart 
tho'  he  Z  and  reverenced  her  too  much 
that  dress,  and  how  he  Z  her  in  it,  (repeat) 
Hath  ask'd  again,  and  ever  Z  to  hear  ; 
Might  well  have  served  for  proof  that  I  was  Z, 
Perhaps  because  he  Z  her  passionately. 
The  being  he  I  best  in  all  the  world. 
Not  while  they  Z  them  ; 
Enid  never  Z  a  man  but  him, 
Except  the  passage  that  he  Z  her  not ; 
And  I  me  serving  in  my  father's  hall : 

I  never  Z,  can  never  love  but  him  : 
To  these  my  lists  with  him  whom  best  you  Z ; 
with  your  own  true  eyes  Beheld  the  man  you  Z 
her  ladies  Z  to  call  Enid  the  Fair, 
I Z  thee  first.  That  warps  the  wit.' 

0  God,  that  I  had  Z  a  smaller  man  ! 
Who  Z  to  make  men  darker  than  they  are, 
My  Queen,  that  summer,  when  ye  Z  me  first, 
she  lifted  up  her  eyes  And  Z  him, 
darling  of  the  court,  L  of  the  loveliest, 
Z  her  with  aU  love  except  the  love 
'  If  I  be  Z,  these  are  my  festal  robes, 
'  I  never  Z  him  :  an  I  meet  with  him, 
it  is  my  glory  to  have  Z  One  peerless, 
having  Z  God's  best  And  greatest, 

I I  you,  and  my  love  had  no  return, 

1  me  with  a  love  beyond  all  love  In  women, 
Yet  to  be  Z  makes  not  to  love  again ; 
And  Z  thy  courtesies  and  thee,  a  man  Made  to 

be  Z; 
Thou  couldst  have  Z  this  maiden, 
to  be  Z,  if  what  is  worthy  love  Could  bind  him, 
Ye  I  me,  damsel,  surely  with  a  love 
Z  him  much  beyond  the  rest,  And  honour'd  him, 
And  since  he  Z  all  maidens, 
for  he  dream'd  His  lady  Z  him,  and  he  knew  himself 

L  of  the  King  : 


354 


447 

Gareth  and  L.  53 

83 

483 

Marr.  of  Geraint  5 

8 

12 

16 

19 

119 

„    141,843 

436 

796 

Geraint  and  E.  10 

103 

327 

363 

392 

699 

709 

840 

847 

962 

Merlin  and  V.  60 

872 

876 

Lancelot  and  E.  104 

260 

262 

868 

909 

1068 

1090 

1093 

1276 

1293 

1295 

1363 
1366 
1378 
1394 
Holy  Grail  9 
Pelleas  and  E.  40 


153 


2    E 


Loved 


434 


Lover 


Loved  (continued)    Then  rang  the  shout  his  lady  I :  Pelleas  and  E.  171 

1 1  you  and  I  deem'd  you  beautiful,  „            297 

Than  to  be  Z  again  of  you — farewell ;  „            302 

yet  him  1 1  not.  Why  ?  I  deem'd  him  fool  ?  „  308 
For  why  should  I  have  I  her  to  my  shame  ?     I 

loathe  her,  as  I Z  her  to  my  shame.  „            482 

1  never  I  her,  I  but  lusted  for  her —  „            484 

I  it  tenderly,  And  named  it  Nestling  ;  Last  Tournament  24 
And  I  him  well,  until  himself  had  thought  He  I 

her  also,  „            401 

'  Grace,  Queen,  for  being  I :  she  I  me  well.  „            602 

Did  I  love  her  ?  the  name  at  least  1 1.  „            603 

Her  to  be  i  no  more  ?  „            641 

I I  This  knightUest  of  all  knights,  „  710 
how  to  take  last  leave  of  all  I Z  ?  Guinevere  546 
Had  I  but  I  thy  highest  creatures  here  ?     It  was 

my  duty  to  have  I  the  highest :  „            656 

We  needs  must  I  the  highest  when  we  see  it,  „            660 

knights  Once  thine,  whom  thou  hast  I,  Pass,  of  Arthur  61 

And  they  my  knights,  who  I  me  once,  „              73 

Such  a  sleep  They  sleep — the  men  1 1.  „             185 

how  should  1  have  lived  and  not  have  I  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  170 

we  I  The  sound  of  one-another's  voices  „            255 

Next  to  her  presence  whom  I Z  so  well,  „            427 

Parting  my  own  I  mountains  was  received,  „            433 

Even  the  feet  of  her  I Z,  I  feU,  „            600 

The  I,  the  lover,  the  happy  Lionel,  „  654 
for  1 1  her,  lost  my  love  in  Love  ;  I,  for  1 1  her, 

graspt  the  hand  she  I,  „            749 
dream  but  how  I  could  have  I  thee,  had  there  been 

none  else  To  love  as  lovers,  I  again  by  thee.  „            770 

How  I  had  I  her  from  the  first ;  „  ii  91 
my  spirit  Was  of  so  wide  a  compass  it  took  in  All 

I  had  I,  „         .  136 

the  settled  coimtenance  Of  her  1 1,  „        iii  40 

all  their  house  was  old  and  I  them  both,  „        iv  122 

And,  tho'  he  I  and  honour'd  Lionel,  „            148 

when  the  guest  Is  I  and  honour'd  to  the  uttermost.  „            245 

one  who  I  His  master  more  than  all  on  earth  „            256 

1 1  him  better  than  play  ;  First  (Quarrel  12 

an'  1 1  him  better  than  all.  „            14 

an'  I  never  I  any  but  you ;  „  86 
mother  and  her  sister  I  More  passionately  still.      Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  44 

Only,  believing  1 1  Edith,  „            138 

Had  I  not  dream'd  1 1  her  yestermom  ?  „            169 

she  That  L  me — our  true  Edith —  „            235 

In  and  beyond  the  grave,  that  one  she  I.  „            272 

dog  that  had  I  him  and  fawn'd  at  his  knee —  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  9 

We  have  lost  her  who  I  her  so  much —  „              29 

Voice  of  the  dead  whom  we  I,  Def.  of  Luckrum  11 

freedom,  or  the  sake  of  those  they  I,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  186 
Old  Brooks,  who  I  so  well  to  mouth  my  rhymes.  To  W.  H.  Brookfield  2 

those  dawn-golden  times,  Who  I  you  well !  „  8 
a  man  men  fear  is  a  man  to  be  Z  by  the  women 

they  say.     And  I  could  have  I  him  too,  The  Wreck  18 

Seer  Whom  one  that  Z,  and  honour'd  him.  Ancient  Sage  3 

What  had  he  Z,  what  had  he  lost,  „          227 

I Z  him  then  ;  he  was  my  father  then.  The  Flight  24 

My  Edwin  I  to  call  us  then  „          80 

I Z  ye  meself  wid  a  heart  and  a  half.  Tomorrow  39 

Amy  Z  me.  Amy  fail'd  me,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  19 

All  I Z  are  vanish'd  voices,  „              252 

a  wailing, '  I  have  Z  thee  well.'  „  262 
You  came,  and  look'd  and  Z  the  view  Long-known 

and  I  by  me.  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  5 

I  that  Z  thee  since  my  day  began,  To  Virgil  38 

cried  '  Where  is  my  I  one  ?  Demeter  and  P.  60 

for  I Z  him,  and  love  him  for  ever :  Vastness  36 

He  I  my  name  not  me  ;  The  Ring  191 

flatmted  it  Before  that  other  whom  I Z  and  love.  „        244 

Miriam  Z  me  from  the  first,  „        274 

you — you  Z  me,  kept  your  word.  „        290 

all  her  talk  was  of  the  babe  she  Z ;  „        353 

I Z  you  first  when  young  and  fair,  Happy  29 

The  king  who  I  me,  And  cannot  die ;  Merlin  and  the  G.  79 


Loved  (continued)    I  by  all  the  yoimger  gown  There  at 

Balliol,  To  Master  of  B.  2 

and  he  I  to  dandle  the  child,  Bandit's  Death  15 

He  was  I  at  least  by  his  dog :  „            35 

Love-deep    languors  of  thy  l-d  eyes  Elednore  76 

Love-drunken    who  was  he  with  such  l-d  eyes  The  Ring  21 

Love-knots     leg  and  arm  with  l-k  gay,  Talking  Oak  65 

Love-language    heard  The  low  l-l  of  the  bird  In  Mem.  cii  11 

Love-langoid     eyes,  l-l  thro'  half  tears  Love  and  Duty  36 

Loveless     Sweet  death,  that  seems  to  make  us  I  clay,  Lancelot  and  E.  1014 


Lovelier    I  Than  all  the  valleys  of  Ionian  hills 

As  I  than  whatever  Oread  haunt  The  knolls  of  Ida, 

What  I  of  his  own  had  he  than  her, 

Flowers  of  aU  heavens,  and  I  than  their  names, 

these  fields  Are  lovely,  I  not  the  Elysian  lawns. 

And  left  her  woman,  I  in  her  mood 

The  distance  takes  a  I  hue, 

A  I  Ufe,  a  more  unstain'd,  than  his  ! 

'  Far  I  in  our  Lancelot  had  it  been, 

Z  than  when  firet  Her  light  feet  fell 

might  in  wreathe  (How  Z,  nobler  then  !) 

Far  I  than  its  cradle  ; 

Z  as  herself  Is  I  than  all  others — 
Loveliest    true  To  what  is  I  upon  earth.' 

I  in  all  grace  Of  movement, 

Their  feet  in  flowers,  her  Z : 

Array'd  and  deck'd  her,  as  the  Z, 

And  Z  of  all  women  upon  earth. 

darling  of  the  court,  Loved  of  the  Z, 

Most  I,  earthly-heavenliest  harmony  ? 

Turning  my  way,  the  Z  face  on  earth. 
Loveliness    Her  I  with  shame  and  with  surprise 

A  miniature  of  Z,  all  grace  Summ'd  up 

In  Z  of  perfect  deeds, 

so  pure  a  love  Clothed  in  so  pure  a  Z  ? 

Queen  Paramount  of  love  And  Z — 
Love-longing    I  thought  Laziness,  vague  l-Vs, 
Love-lore    Thou  art  perfect  in  l-l.  (repeat) 
Lovelorn    With  melodious  airs  Z, 
Love-loyal     L-l  to  the  least  wish  of  the  Queen 

L-l  to  the  least  wish  of  the  Queen, 
Lovely    (See  also  Lowly-lovely)     A  Z  time.  For  it  was 

in  the  golden  prime  Arabian  Nights  86 

Stays  on  her  floating  locks  the  Z  freight  Ode  to  Memory  16 

He  said,  '  She  has  a  I  face  ;  L.  of  Shalott  iv  52 

And  whisper  I  words,  and  use  Her  influence  Will  Water.  11 

She  look'd  so  Z,  as  she  sway'd  The  rein  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  40 

'  Look  what  a  I  piece  of  workmanship  ! '  Aylmer's  Field  237 

then  I  saw  one  Z  star  Larger  and  larger.  Sea  Dreams  93 

these  fields  Are  Z,  lovelier  not  the  Elysian  lawns,  Princess  iii  342 

The  Z,  lordly  creature  floated  on  „  vi  89 

Be  sometimes  I  Hke  a  bride.  In  Mem.  lix  6 

See  what  a  Z  shell.  Small  and  pure  as  a  pearl,  Maud  II  ii  1 

Where  like  a  shoaling  sea  the  Z  blue  Geraint  and  E.  688 

But  rather  seem'd  a  I  baleful  star  Veil'd  Merlin  and  V.  262 

and  that  clear-featured  face  Was  Z,  Lancelot  and  E.  1160 

Love-oSering     last  L-o  and  peace-ofiering  Last  Tournament  748 

Love-poem     and  this  A  mere  l-p  !  Princess  iv  126 


CEnone  1 

74 

Aylmer's  Field  22 

Princess,  Pro.  12 

„  iii  342 

„  vii  162 

In  Mem.  cxv  6 

Ded.  of  Idylls  30 

Lancelot  and  E.  589 

Last  Tournament  553 

Lover's  Tale  i  459 

530 

iv  287 

Mariana  in  the  S.  64 

CEnone  75 

Princess  vi  78 

Marr.  of  Geraint  17 

21 

Lancelot  and  E.  262 

Lover's  Tale  i  279 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  87 

D.  of  F.  Women  89 

Gardener's  D.  12 

In  Mem.  xxxvi  11 

Lancelot  and  E.  1384 

Last  Tournament  553 

SisUrs  (E.  and  E.)  128 

Madeline  9,  26 

Adeline  55 

Lancelot  and  E.  89 

Guinevere  126 


Lover    (See  also  Landscape-lover,  Truth-lover)    Two  I's 

whispering  by  an  orchard  wall ; 
Came  two  young  I's  lately  wed  ; 
my  Z,  with  whom  I  rode  subhme  On  Fortxme's 

neck  : 
And  on  her  I's  arm  she  leant, 
L's  long-betroth'd  were  they  : 
But  he  clasp'd  her  like  a  Z, 
He  like  a  Z  down  thro'  all  his  blood 
That  grow  for  happy  Vs. 
Yet  once  by  night  again  the  l's  met, 
Z  heeded  not.  But  passionately  restless 
And  at  the  happy  l's  heart  in  heart — 
As  thou  with  thy  young  I  hand  in  hand 
she  aim'd  not  at  glory,  no  Z  of  glory  she  : 
me  the  Z  of  liberty, 
A  jewel,  a  jewel  dear  to  a  l's  eye  ! 


Circumstance  4 
L.  of  Shalott  ii  34 

D.  of  F.  Women  141 

Day- Dm.,  Depart.  1 

Lady  Clare  6 

L.  of  Burleigh  67 

Enoch  Arden  659 

The  Brook  173 

Aylmer's  Field  413 

545 

Princess  vii  108 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  34 

Wages  4 

Boddicea  48 

Window,  On  the  Hill  8 


Lover 


435 


Low 


Lover  (continued)    A  happy  I  who  has  come  To  look  on  her    In  Mem.  viii  1 
From  a  Uttle  lazy  I  Who  but  claims  Maud  I  xx  10 

Come  out  to  your  own  ti"ue  I,  That  your  true  I  may 

see  Your  glory  also,  „  46 

For,  call  it  I's'  quarrels,  yet  I  know  Geraint  and  E.  324 

one  true  I  whom  you  ever  own'd,  „  344 

shall  we  strip  him  there  Your  I?  „  489 

'  The  little  rift  within  the  Vs  lute  Merlin  and  V.  393 

neither  dame  nor  damsel  then  Wroth  at  a  Vs  loss  ?  „  607 

chant  thy  praise  As  prowest  knight  and  truest  I,        Pelleas  and  E.  350 

as  the  one  true  knight  on  earth,  And  only  I ;  „  495 

The  Queen  Look'd  hard  upon  her  I,  „  605 

How  darest  thou,  if  I,  push  me  Last  Toiirnament  638 

The  loved,  the  I,  the  happy  Lionel,  Lover's  Tale  i  654 

The  blissful  I,  too.  From  liis  great  hoaixi  ,,  713 

had  there  been  none  else  To  love  as  Vs,  „  771 

And  leave  the  name  of  L's  Leap  :  „  w  42 

And  thus  our  lonely  I  rode  away,  „  130 

I  with  our  I  to  his  native  Bay.  „  155 

What  was  it  ?  for  our  I  seldom  spoke,  „  225 

The  I  answer'd,  '  There  is  more  than  one  „  241 

For  man  is  a  /  of  Truth,  Dead  Prophet  44 

souls  Of  two  repentant  L's  guard  the  ring ; '  The  Sing  198 

sacred  those  Ghost  L's  hold  the  gift.'  „         205 

Two  Vs  parted  by  a  scurrilous  tale  „         208 

as  the  bygone  I  thro'  this  ring  Had  sent  his  ciy  „         232 

on  that  day  Two  Vs  parted  „        427 

As  if — those  two  Ghost  Vs —  „        459 

L's  yet —     Miriam.     Yes,  yes  !  „         460 

you  were  than  a  Vs  fairy  dream.  To  Mary  Boyle  43 

For  Ralph  was  Edith's  I,  The  Tourney  2 

Lover's  Bay     Keep  thou  thy  name  of  'Z  B.'  Lover's  Tale  i  15 

Love-sighs     passion  seeks  Pleasance  in  l-s,  Lilian  9 

Lovesome     One  her  dark  hair  and  I  mien..  Beggar  Maid  12 

Love-song    A  l-s  I  had  somewhere  read,  '  Miller's  D.  65 

What  knowest  thou  of  I  or  of  love  ?  Gareth  and  L.  1063 

Lovest     L  thou  the  doleful  wind  Adeline  49 

I  think  thou  I  me  well.'  L.  of  Burleigh  4 

Lovetale    The  wind  Told  a  I  beside  us,  Lover's  Tale  i  543 

Loveth     And  Z  so  his  innocent  heart,  Supp.  Confessions  52 

She  I  her  own  anguish  deep  To  J.  S.  42 

she  will  not  wed  Save  whom  she  I,  Gareth  and  L.  622 

Love-whispers     Affianced,  Sir  ?  l-w  may  not  breathe  Princess  ii  221 

Loving    {See  also  A-loving,  England-loviiig,  Loovin')    '  I 

pi'omise  thee  The  fairest  and  most  I  wife  in  Greece,'  (Enone  187 

Most  I  is  she  ?  „      201 

AVhen  thy  nerves  could  imderstand  What  there  is 

in  I  tears,  Vision  of  Sin  161 

Blessing  her,  praying  for  her,  I  her  ;  Enoch  Arden  879 

I  her  As  when  she  laid  her  head  beside  my  own.  „  880 

For  she — so  lowly-lovely  and  so  I.  Aylmer's  Field  168 

Up  thro'  gilt  wires  a  crafty  I  eye,  Princess,  Pro.  172 

And  I  hands  must  part —  Window,  Answer  6 

Gray  nurses,  I  nothing  new  ;  In  Mem.  xxix  14 

Two  spirits  of  a  diverse  love  Contend  for  I  masterdom.      „  cii  8 

Maud  I  xviii  58 

Gareth  and  L.  554 

580 

1301 

Merlin  and  V.  517 

Pelleas  and  E.  159 

Lover's  Tale  iv  68 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  168 

Happy  26 

91 


Maud  made  my  Maud  by  that  long  I  kiss. 

And,  I,  utter  faithfulness  in  love, 

L  his  lusty  youthhood  yielded  to  him. 

I  the  battle  as  well  As  he  that  rides  him 

(As  sons  of  kings  I  in  pupilage 

For  Arthur,  I  his  young  knight. 

Dust,  as  he  said,  that  once  was  I  hearts, 

nay,  but  could  I  wed  her  L  the  other  ? 

Who  yearn  to  lay  my  I  head  upon  your  leprous  breast. 

Now  God  has  made  you  leper  in  His  I  care  for  both, 


domes  the  red-plow'd  hiUs  With  I  blue  ;  Early  Spring  4 

Lovingldndness    delightedly  fulfill'd  All  Ves,  Lover's  Tale  i  225 
Low  (adj.  and  adv.)    Is  not  my  human  pride  brought  I  ?   Supp.  Confessions  14 

stooping  I  Unto  the  death,  not  sunk  !  „                97 

Breathed  I  around  the  rolling  earth  The  winds,  etc.  3 

an  accent  very  I  In  blandishment,  Isabel  19 

And  ever  when  the  moon  was  I,  Mariana  49 

But  when  the  moon  was  very  I,  „        53 

The  I  and  bloomed  foliage,  Arabian  Nights  13 

oh,  haste,  Visit  my  I  desire  !  Ode  to  Memory  4 


Low  (adj.  and  adv.)  (continued)    at  first  to  the  ear  The 

warble  was  I,  Dying  Swan  24 

L  thunder  and  light  in  the  magic  night —  The  Merman  23 
my  ringlets  would  fall  L  adown,  I  adown.  From 

under  my  starry  sea-bud  crown  L  adown  The  Mermaid  15 

And  at  my  headstone  whisper  I,  My  life  is  full  24 

Heavily  the  I  sky  raining  Over  tower'd  Camelot ;  L.  of  Shalott  iv  4 

L  on  her  knees  herself  she  cast,  Mariana  in  the  S.  27 

Oh  your  sweet  eyes,  your  I  replies  :  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  29 

Lit  with  a  I  large  moon.  Palace  of  Art  68 

Her  I  preamble  all  alone,  „             174 

hears  the  I  Moan  of  an  unknown  sea ;  „            279 

Then  I  and  sweet  I  whistled  thrice  ;  Edwin  Morris  113 

Then  when  the  first  I  matin-chirp  hath  grown  Love  and  Duty  98 

L  thunders  bring  the  mellow  rain.  Talking  Oak  279 

And  all  the  I  wind  hardly  breathed  for  fear.  Godiva  55 

And  one  I  churl,  compact  of  thankless  earth,  „       66 

Gloom'd  the  I  coast  and  quivering  brine  The  Voyage  42 

L  breezes  fann'd  the  belfry  bars,  The  Letters  43 

Ever  brightening  With  a  I  melodious  thunder ;  Poet's  Mind  27 

L  voluptuous  music  winding  trembled.  Vision  of  Sin  17 

Swung  themselves,  and  in  I  tones  replied ;  „  20 
children  leading  evermore  L  miserable  lives  of 

hand-to-mouth,  Enoch  Arden  116 

And  the  I  moan  of  leaden-colour'd  seas.  „          612 

'  His  head  is  I,  and  no  man  cares  for  him.  „          850 

On  a  sudden  a  I  breath  Of  tender  air  The  Brook  201 

Somewhere  beneath  his  own  I  range  of  roofs,  Aylmer's  Field  47 

call'd  away  By  one  I  voice  to  one  dear  neighbourhood,  „            60 

on  I  knolls  That  dimpling  died  into  each  other,  „           148 

Averill  seeing  How  I  his  brother's  mood  had  fallen,  „          405 

Last,  some  I  fever  ranging  round  to  spy  „          569 

Which  from  the  I  light  of  mortaUty  „          641 

thro'  the  smoke  The  blight  of  I  desires —  „           673 

L  was  her  voice,  but  won  mysterious  way  „           695 

ever  in  it  a  ^  musical  note  Swell'd  up  and  died  ;  Sea  Dreams  210 

He  with  a  long  I  sibilation,  stared  As  blank  Princess  i  176 

Some  to  a  Z  song  oar'd  a  shallop  by,  „        ii  457 

Sweet  and  I,  sweet  and  I,  „           m  1 

L,  I,  breathe  and  blow,  „                3 

everywhere  L  voices  with  the  ministering  hand  „         vii  21 

There  to  hei-self,  all  in  I  tones,  she  read.  „             175 

The  last  great  Englishman  is  I.  Ode  on  Well.  18 

Thro'  either  babbling  world  of  high  and  I ;  „  182 
Light,  so  I  upon  earth,                                             Window,  Marr.  Morn  1 

Light,  so  I  in  the  vale  You  flash  and  lighten  afar,  „                 9 

'  What  is  it  makes  me  beat  sol?'  In  Mem.  iv  8 

Till  growing  winters  lay  me  I;  „            xl  30 

Be  near  me  when  my  light  is  I,  „                11 

on  the  I  dark  verge  of  life  The  twilight  of  eternal  day.         „  15 

How  should  he  love  a  thing  so  Z  ?  '  „           Ix  16 

Whose  life  in  I  estate  began  „           Ixiv  3 

The  voice  was  I,  the  look  was  bright ;  „        Ixix  15 

and  break  The  I  beginnings  of  content.  „     Ixxxiv  48 

Or  I  morass  and  whispering  reed,  „               c  8 

and  heard  The  I  love-language  of  the  bird  „           cii  11 

shining  daffodil  dead,  and  Orion  I  in  his  grave.  Maud  I  Hi  14 

Had  given  her  word  to  a  thing  so  I?  „        xvi  27 

More  Ufe  to  Love  than  is  or  ever  was  In  our  I  world,  „      xviii  48 

L  on  the  sand  and  loud  on  the  stone  „      xxii  25 

The  delight  of  I  replies.  „     //  iv  30 

Then  to  strike  him  and  lay  him  I,  „           v  90 

Over  Orion's  grave  I  down  in  the  west,  „      ///  vi  8 

Then  the  King  in  I  deep  tones.  Com.  of  Arthur  260 

Go  likewise  ;  lay  him  I  and  slay  him  not,  Gareth  and  L.  379 

As  Mark  would  sully  the  I  state  of  churl :  „            427 

For  an  your  fire  be  I  ye  kindle  mine  !  „             711 

I  have  not  fall'n  so  I  as  some  would  wish.  Marr.  of  Geraint  129 

Made  a  I  splendour  in  the  world,  „              598 

felt  Her  I  firm  voice  and  tender  goverrmient.  Geraint  and  E.  194 

L  at  leave-taking,  with  his  brandish'd  plume  „            359 

But  answer'd  in  I  voice,  her  meek  head  yet  Drooping,  „            640 

Faint  in  the  I  dark  hall  of  banquet :  Bcdin  and  Balan  343 

walls  Of  that  I  church  he  built  at  Glastonbuiy.  „              367 

Beneath  a  I  door  dipt,  and  made  his  feet  „              403 


Low 


436 


Loyal 


Low  (adj.  and  adv.)  (coniinued)    Crawl'd  slowly  with  / 

moans  to  where  he  lay,  Balin  and  Balan  592 

She  answer'd  with  a  I  and  chuckling  laugh  :  Merlin  and  V.  780 

we  scarce  can  sink  as  ^ :  „  813 

or  I  desire  Not  to  feel  lowest  makes  them  level  all ;  „  827 

But  into  some  I  cave  to  crawl,  and  there,  „  884 

The  I  sun  makes  the  colour  :  I  am  yours,  Lancelot  and  E.  134 

The  hard  earth  shake,  and  a  I  thunder  of  arms.  „  460 

Then  came  her  father,  saying  in  I  tones,  „  994 

If  this  be  high,  what  is  it  to  be  Z  ?  '  „  1084 

But  spake  with  such  a  sadness  and  so  I  Holy  Grail  42 

L  as  the  hill  was  high,  and  where  the  vale  Was  lowest,  „  441 

then  one  I  roll  Of  Autumn  thimder.  Last  Tournament  152 

She  lived  a  moon  in  that  I  lodge  with  him :  „  381 

out  beyond  them  flush'd  The  long  I  dune,  „  484 

that  I  lodge  retum'd.  Mid-forest,  „  488 

A I  sea-sunset  glorying  round  her  hair  „  508 

one  I  light  betwixt  them  bum'd  Guinevere  4 

'  Liest  thou  here  so  I,  the  child  of  one  I  honour'd,  „       422 

Lest  but  a  hair  of  this  I  head  be  harm'd.  „       447 

Do  each  I  office  of  your  holy  house  ;  „      682 

And  all  the  I  dark  groves,  a  land  of  love  !  Lover's  Tale  i  332 

lake,  that,  flooding,  leaves  L  banks  of  yellow  sand  ;  „  535 

Held  converee  sweet  and  I — I  converse  sweet,  „  541 

At  first  her  voice  was  very  sweet  and  I,  „  563 

for  the  sound  Of  that  dear  voice  so  musically  I,  „  708 

Unfrequent,  I,  as  tho'  it  told  its  pulses ;  „  ii  55 

thence  at  intervals  A I  bell  tolling.  „  83 

For  that  I  knell  toUing  his  lady  dead —  „  iv  33 

I  down  in  a  rainbow  deep  Silent  palaces,  V.  of  Maeldune  79 

And  his  voice  was  I  as  from  other  worlds,  „  117 

By  the  I  f  oot-Ughts  of  the  world —  The  Wreck  40 

L  warm  winds  had  gently  breathed  us  away  from  the 

land —  „        63 

I  sigh'd,  as  the  I  dark  hull  dipt  under  the  smiling  main,  „      127 

'  Is  it  fee  then  brought  sol?  '  Dead  Prophet  6 

And  behind  him,  I  in  the  West,  „  20 

You  speak  so  I,  what  is  it  ?  The  Ring  49 

A  footstep,  a  I  throbbing  in  the  walls,  „        409 

And  these  I  bushes  dipt  their  twigs  in  foam,  Prog,  of  Spring  51 

Where  I  sank  with  the  body  at  times  in  the  sloughs 

of  a  i  desire.  By  an  Evolution.  18 

Sing  thou  I  or  loud  or  swfeet.  Poets  and  Critics  6 

Some  too  I  would  have  thee  shine,  „  11 

Low  (s)     In  smnmer  heats,  with  placid  I's 

Unf  earing. 

From  the  dark  fen  the  oxen's  I 

Low  (verb)     and  the  bull  couldn't  I, 

Low-brow'd    or  safely  moor'd  Beneath  a  l-b  cavern, 

Low-built    appear'd,  l-b  but  strong  ; 

Low-couch'd    Indian  on  a  still-eyed  snake,  l-c — 

Low-cowering     L-c  shall  the  Sophist  sit ; 

Low-drooping     L-d  till  he  well-nigh  kiss'd  her  feet 

Low-dropt    nmrmur  at  the  l-d  eaves  of  sleep, 

Lower    She  breathed  in  sleep  a  I  moan. 

Calling  thyself  a  little  I '  Than  angels. 

'  Or  if  thro'  I  lives  I  came — 

And  I  voic&s  saint  me  from  above. 

On  a  range  of  I  feelings  and  a  narrower  heart 

But  I  count  the  gray  barbarian  I  than  the  Christian 

child. 
Like  a  beast  with  I  pleasures,  like  a  beast  with  / 

pains  ? 
Gathering  up  from  all  the  I  ground  ; 
And  slowly  quickening  into  I  forms ; 
We  ranging  down  this  I  track, 
No  I  Ufe  that  earth's  embrace  May  breed  with  him, 
when  most  I  feel  There  is  a  Z  and  a  higher ; 
And,  moved  thro'  life  of  I  phase. 
Tells  of  a  manhood  ever  less  and  I  ? 
Because  aU  other  Hope  had  I  aim  ; 


Lower  (continued)     So  the  Higher  wields  the  L,  while 


■8upp.  Confessions  154 

Mariana  28 

V.  of  Maeldune  18 

Lover's  Tale  i  55 

Balin  and  Balan  333 

Lover's  Tale  ii  189 

Clear-headed  friend  10 

Lancelot  and  E.  1172 

Lover's  Tale  ii  122 

Mariana  in  the  S.  45 

Two  Voices  198 

364 

St.  S.  Stylites  154 

Locksley  Hall  44 


174 

176 

Vision  of  Sin  15 

210 

In  Mem.  xlvi  1 

„      Ixxxii  3 

„        cxxix  4 

„      Con.  125 

Last  Tournament  121 

Lover's  Tale  i  455 


my  lord  is  I  than  his  oxen  or  his  swine.  Locksley  //.,  Sixty  126 

youth  and  age  are  scholars  yet  but  in  the  I  school,  „  243 

altogether  can  escape  From  the  I  world  within  him.     Making  of  Man  2 
Neither  mourn  if  human  creeds  be  I  Faith  5 


the  L  is  the  Higher 
Lower  (verb)    shalt  I  to  his  level  day  by  day, 
Fortune,  turn  thy  wheel  and  I  the  proud  ; 
Lower'd     L  softly  with  a  threefold  cord  of  love 
he  spake  to  these  his  helm  was  I, 
They  I  me  down  the  side, 
(deferentially  With  nearing  chair  and  I  accent) 
Lowest    from  a  height  That  makes  the  I  hate  it, 
Nor  ever  I  roll  of  thunder  moans, 
barbarous  isles,  and  here  Among  the  I.' 
so  Vivien  in  the  Z,  Arriving  at  a  time 
low  desire  Not  to  feel  I  makes  them  level  all ; 
And  in  the  I  beasts  are  slaying  men, 
where  the  vale  Was  I,  found  a  chapel, 
I  could  hardly  sin  agaiixst  the  I.' 
Sorrowing  with  the  sorrows  of  the  I  ! 
Is  brother  of  the  Dark  one  in  the  I, 
Low-flowing    fling  on  each  side  my  l-f  locks, 

L-f  breezes  are  roaming  the  broad  valley 
Low-folded  breathless  burthen  of  l-f  heavens 
Low-hung    gushes  from  beneath  a  l-h  cloud. 

Like  to  a  l-h  and  a  fiery  sky 
Lowing  (part.)    And  I  to  his  fellows. 
Lowing  (s)    So  thick  with  Vs  of  the  herds. 
Lowland     Toward  the  I  ways  behind  me. 
Lowlier    We  taught  him  I  moods,  when  Elsinore 
Low-lieth    Where  Claribel  l-l  (repeat) 
Lowlihead    perfect  wifehood  and  pure  I. 
Lowliness    sure  of  Heaven  If  I  could  save  her. 
Lowly  (adj.)     Or  even  a  I  cottage  whence  we  see 
When  truth  embodied  in  a  tale  Slftill  enter  in 

at  I  doors, 
or  rest  On  Enid  at  her  I  handmaid-work, 
'  And  thence  I  dropt  into  a  /  vale. 
For  I  minds  were  madden'd  to  the  height 
Within  the  bloodless  heart  of  I  flowers 
•    And  rough-ruddy  faces  Of  I  labour. 
Lowly  (s)     All  the  I,  the  destitute, 
Lowly-lovely    she — so  l-l  and  so  loving. 
Lowly-sweet    Edith,  yet  so  l-s, 
Lowness    The  I  of  the  present  state. 
Low-spoken       L-s,  and  of  so  few  words, 
Low-throned     L-t  Hesper  is  stayed  between  the  two 

peaks ; 
Low-tinkled     L-t  with  a  bell-Uke  flow 
Low-toned    So  she  l-t ;  while  with  shut  eyes  I  lay 
Low-tongued    Doth  the  l-t  Orient  Wander 
Low-voiced    The  l-^,  tender-spirited  Lionel, 
Low-wheel'd    Within  the  Z-t«  chaise. 
Loyal    (See  also  Ever-loyal,  Half-loyal,  Love-loyal, 
Mock-loyal)     She  hath  no  I  knight  and  true, 
'  The  slight  she-shps  of  I  blood. 
Queenly  responsive  when  the  I  hand 
The  I  warmth  of  Florian  is  not  cold. 
The  I  pines  of  Canada  murmur  thee. 
Our  I  passion  for  our  temperate  kings  ; 
And  I  unto  kindly  laws. 
With  a  I  people  shouting  a  battle  cry. 
Hath  ever  like  a  I  sister  cleaved  To  Arthur, — 
Of  I  vassals  toiling  for  their  liege. 
Art  thou  so  little  I  to  thy  Queen, 
'  Fain  would  I  still  be  I  to  the  Queen.' 
So  I  scarce  is  I  to  thyself. 

But  have  ye  no  one  word  of  I  praise  For  Arthur, 
But  now  my  I  worship  is  allow'd  Of  all  men  : 
Nor  often  I  to  his  word,  and  now  Wroth 
'  Prince,  O  I  nephew  of  our  noble  King, 
L,  the  dumb  old  servitor,  on  deck, 
Low-drooping  till  he  wellnigh  kiss'd  her  feet  For 

I  awe. 
To  I  hearts  the  value  of  all  gifts  Must  vary 
'  Hail,  Bors  !  if  every  I  man  and  tme  Could  see  it, 
For  I  to  the  uttermost  am  I.' 
but  the  fi-uit  Of  I  nature,  and  of  noble  mind.' 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  124 

Locksley  Hall  45 

Marr.  of  Geraint  347 

D.  of  F.  Women  211 

Gruinm'ere  593 

The  Wreck  125 

Aidmer's  Field  267 

173 

Lucretius  108 

Princess  ii  123 

Merlin  and  V.  141 

828 

Holy  Grail  234 

„  442 

Iiast  Tournament  572 

On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  27 

Demeter  and  P.  95 

The  Mermaid  32 

Leonine  Eleg.  1 

Aylmer's  Field  612 

Ode  to  Memory  71 

Lover's  Tale  ii  61 

Gardener's  D.  88 

In  Mem.  xcix  3 

Silent  Voices  5 

Buonaparte  9 

Claribel  1,  8,  21 

Isabel  12 

Maud  I  xii  20 

Ode  to  Memory  100 


In  Mem.  xxxvi  8 

Marr.  of  Geraint  400 

Holy  Grail  440 

To  Mary  Boyle  33 

Prog,  of  Spring  84 

Merlin  and  the  G.  60 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  31 

Aylmer's  Field  168 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  49 

In  Mem.  xxiv  11 

Geraint  and  E.  395 

Leonine  Eleg.  11 

The  winds,  etc.  7 

Princess  vii  223 

Adeline  51 

Lover's  Tale  i  655 

Talking  Oak  110 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  25 

Talking  Oak  57 

Aylmer's  Field  169 

Princess  ii  244 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  19 

Ode  on  Well.  165 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  16 

Maud  III  vi  35 

Com.  of  Arthur  191 

282 

Balin  and  Balan  251 

254 

256 

Blerlin  and  V.  778 

Lancelot  and  E.  110 

559 

652 

1144 


1173 

1214 

Holy  Grail  756 

Pellea.«  and  E.  212 

Guinevere  336 


I 


Loyal 


437 


Luvv 


Loyal  (continued)    O  Z  to  the  royal  in  thyself,  And  I  to 

thy  land,  To  the  Queen  ii  1 

So  Z  is  too  costly !  friends —  „              16 

The  I  to  their  crown  Are  I  to  their  own  own  far  sons,  „              27 


That  I  am  I  to  him  tUl  the  death, 

she  was  always  I  and  sweet — 

To  all  the  I  hearts  who  long  To  keep 

multitude  L.  each,  to  the  heart  of  it, 

where  the  I  bells  Clash  welcome — 

How  I  in  the  following  of  thy  Lord  ! 
Loyal-hearted    On  thee  the  l-h  hung. 
Lubber     Then,  narrow  court  and  I  King,  farewell ! 
Lucid    golden  round  her  I  throat  And  shoulder : 

The  I  outline  forming  round  thee  ; 

Gods,  who  haunt  The  I  interspace  of  world  and  world, 

issued  in  a  court  Compact  of  I  marbles, 

the  mist  is  drawn  A  I  veil  from  coast  to  coast, 

Be  large  and  I  round  thy  brow. 

What  lightens  in  the  I  east  Of  rising  worlds 

The  I  chambers  of  the  morning  star, 

yet  one  glittering  foot  disturb'd  The  I  well ; 
Lucilia     L,  wedded  to  Lucretius,  found 
Lucius  Junius  Brutus    The  L  J  B  oimj  kind  ? 
Luck    good  /  Shall  fling  her  old  shoe  after. 

Good  I  had  your  good  man, 

but  rosier  I  will  go  With  these  rich  jewels, 


Columbus  227 

Despair  49 

Hands  all  Round  13 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  21 

The  Ring  482 

In  Mem.  W.  G.  Ward  6 

In  Mem.  ex  5 

Merlin  and  V.  119 

(Enone  178 

Tithonus  53 

Lucretius  105 

Princess  ii  24 

In  Mem.  Ixvii  14 

„  xci  8 

cv  24 

Lover's  Tale  i  28 

Tiresias  42 

Lucretius  1 

Princess  ii  284 

Will  Water.  215 

Geraint  and  E.  617 

Last  Tournament  45 


Luckier    so  prosper'd  that  at  last  A  i  or  a  bolder  fisherman,    Enoch  Arden  49 


hot  in  haste  to  join  Their  I  mates, 
Lucknow  in  the  ghastly  siege  of  L— 
Lucky    Less  I  her  home-voyage  : 

For  I  rhymes  to  him  were  scrip  and  share, 
Lucretius     LtrciLiA,  wedded  to  L,  found 
Lucumo    lay  at  wine  with  Lar  and  L ; 
Lucy    An'  L  wur  laame  o'  one  leg, 

Straange  an'  unheppen  Miss  L  ! 
Lull    (while  warm  airs  I  us,  blowing  lowly) 

Perchance,  to  I  the  throbs  of  pain. 

To  I  with  song  an  aching  heart, 

11  &  fancy  trouble-tost 
Lullabies    These  mortal  I  of  pain  May  bind  a  book, 
Lull'd    Thy  tuwhits  are  I,  I  wot, 

hum  of  swarming  bees  Into  dreamful  slumber  I 

L  echoes  of  laborious  day  Come  to  you, 

And  I  them  in  my  own. 

A  fall  of  water  I  the  noon  asleep. 
Lulling     L  the  brine  against  the  Coptic  sands. 

I  random  squabbles  when  they  rise. 
Lumber    the  waste  and  I  of  the  shore, 
Luminous    his  stedfast  shade  Sleeps  on  his  I  ring.' 

A  belt,  it  seem'd,  of  I  vapour,  lay, 

meek  Seem'd  the  full  lips,  and  mild  the  I  eyes, 

L,  gemlike,  ghostlike,  deathUke, 

Holy  Grail  All  over  cover'd  with  a  I  cloud, 

Holy  Vessel  hung  Clothed  in  white  samite  or  a  Z  cloud. 
Lump  {See  also  Loomp)  This  I  of  earth  has  left  his  estate 
Lungs    labour'd  down  within  his  ample  I, 

writhings,  anguish,  labouring  of  the  I 

Brass  mouths  and  iron  I ! 

You  that  lie  with  wasted  I 
Lunnon  (London)    Squoire's  i'   L,  an' 

summun 
Lurdane    droned  her  I  knights  Slumbering, 
Lure  (s)     Diet  and  seeling,  jesses,  leash,  and  I. 

follow,  leaping  blood,  The  season's  I ! 
Lure  (verb)    splendour  fail'd  To  I  those  eyes 
Lured    When  we  have  I  you  from  above, 

him  they  I  Into  their  net  made  pleasant 

one  unctuous  mouth  which  I  him, 

L  by  the  crimes  and  frailties  of  the  court, 

Which  often  I  her  from  herself  ; 

we  were  I  by  the  light  from  afar, 

L  by  the  glare  and  the  blare, 

Earis  that  were  I  by  the  Hunger  of  glory 

Eyes  that  I  a  doting  boyhood 

My  beauty  I  that  falcon  from  his  eyry 


Geraint  and  E.  575 

Def.  of  Lucknow  4 

Enoch  Arden  541 

The  Brook  4 

Luxyretius  1 

Princess  ii  129 

Village  Wife  99 

100 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  89 

The  Daisy  105 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  15 

„  Ixv  2 

„  Ixxvii  5 

The  Owl  ii  1 

Elednore  30 

Margaret  29 

Talking  Oak  216 

Romney's  R.  83 

Buonaparte  8 

Eoly  Grail  557 

Enoch  Arden  16 

Palace  of  Art  16 

Sea  Dreams  209 

Princess  vii  226 

■  Maud  I  Hi  8 

Holy  Grail  189 

513 

Maud  I  xvi  1 

Princess  «  273 

Pass,  of  Arthur  115 

Freedom  40 

Forlorn  21 


N.  Farmer,  O.S.  57 

Pelleas  and  E.  430 

Merlin  and  V.  125 

Early  Spring  26 

St.  Telemachus  36 

Rosalind  46 

Aylmer's  Field  485 

Sea  Dreams  14 

Guinevere  136 

152 

V.  of  Maeldune  71 

73 

Bait,  of  Brunanhurh  123 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  10 

Happy  59 


Lured  (continued)     What  sight  so  I  him  thro  'the  fields     Far— far — away  1 

I  me  from  the  household  fire  on  earth.  Romney's  R.  40 

Lurid    Wrapt  in  drifts  of  I  smoke  Maud  II  iv  66 

when  now  Bathed  in  that  I  crimson —  St.  Telemachus  18 

His  face  deform'd  by  I  blotch  and  blain —  Death  of  (Enone  72 

Lurk     I  think  no  more  of  deadly  I's  therein,  Princess  ii  226 

such  as  I's  In  some  wild  Poet,  hi  Mem.  xxxiv  6 

'  There  I  three  villains  yonder  in  the  wood,  Geraint  and  E.  142 

If  he  ?  yes,  he  .  .  .  I's,  listens.  The  Flight  71 

Lurking     Balan  I  there  (His  quest  was 

unaccomphsh'd)  Balin  and  Balan  546 

Vivien,  I,  heard.     She  told  Sir  Modred.  Guinevere  98 

Luscious     Nor  roll  thy  viands  on  a  I  tongue,  Ancient  Sage  267 

Lush     at  the  root  thro'  I  green  grasses  burn'd  D.  of  F.  Women  71 

Lusitanian    father-grape  grew  fat  On  L  summers.  Will  Water.  8 

Lust     Either  from  I  of  gold",  or  like  a  girl  M.  d' Arthur  127 

Crown  thyself,  worm,  and  worship  thine  ownl's  !^    Aylmer's  Field  650 

and  keep  him  from  the  I  of  blood  Lucretius  83 

And  twisted  shapes  of  I,  unspeakable,  „         157 

For  I  or  lusty  blood  or  provender  :  „         198 

in  his  I  and  voluptuousness,  Boadicea  66 

Ring  out  the  narrowing  I  of  gold  ;  In  Mem.  cvi  26 

And  I  of  gain,  in  the  spirit  of  Cain,  Maud  I.  i  23 

feeble  vassals  of  wine  and  anger  and  I,  „     //  i  43 

land  that  has  lost  for  a  little  her  I  of  gold,  „  ///  vi  39 

live  the  strength  and  die  the  I !  Com.  of  Arthur  492 

own  no  I  because  they  have  no  law  !  Pelleas  and  E.  481 

Either  from  I  of  gold,  or  like  a  girl  Pass,  of  Arthur  295 

thro'  which  the  I,  Villany,  violence,  Colmnhus  171 

The  lecher  would  cleave  to  his  I's,  Despair  100 

craft  and  madness,  I  and  spite,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  189 

He  that  has  lived  for  the  I  of  the  minute,  Vastness  27 

wallow  in  this  old  I  Of  Paganism,  St.  Telemachus  78 

Lusted     I  never  loved  her,  I  but  I  for  her —  Pelleas  and  E.  484 

ghastliest  That  ever  I  for  a  body,  Lover's  Tale  i  648 

Lustful     A  I  King,  who  sought  to  win  my  love  Balin  and  Balan  474 

Lustier     By  park  and  suburb  under  brown  Of  I  leaves  ;     In  Mem.  xcviii  25 

Until  they  find  a  I  than  themselves.'  Balin  and  Balan  19 

Stronger  ever  born  of  weaker,  I  body,  larger 

mind  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  164 

Lustihood     He  is  so  full  of  I,  he  will  ride,  Lancelot  and  E.  203 

Lusting    I  for  all  that  is  not  its  own  ;  Maud  I  i  22 
Lustre    (See  also  Lace-lustre)    Soft  I  bathes  the  range 

of  urns  Day- Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  9 

The  I  of  the  long  convolvuluses  Enoch  Arden  576 

His  eyes  To  indue  his  I ;  Lover's  Tale  i  424 

Lustreless     one  was  patch'd  and  blurr'd  and  I  Marr.  of  Geraint  649 

Lustrous     and  the  light  and  I  curls —  AI.  d' Arthur  216 

And  all  about  him  roU'd  his  I  eyes  ;  Love  and  Death  3 

Slides  the  bird  o'er  I  woodland,  Locksley  Hall  162 

and  the  light  and  I  curls —  Pass,  of  Arthur  384 

Lusty     The  I  bird  takes  every  hour  for  dawn  :  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  11 

And  here  and  there  a  I  trout.  The  Brook  57 

For  lust  or  I  blood  or  provender  :  Lucretius  198 

A  I  brace  Of  twins  may  weed  her  of  her  folly.  Princess  v  463 

Fair  empires  branching,  both,  in  I  life  ! —  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  21 

A  I  youth,  but  poor,  who  often  saw  Gareth  and  L.  48 

Loving  his  I  youthhood  yielded  to  him.  „            580 

for  this  lad  is  great  And  I,  „            731 

it  fell  Like  flaws  in  summer  laying  I  com  :  Marr.  of  Geraint  764 

The  I  mowers  labouring  dinnerless,  Geraint  and  E.  251 

His  I  spearmen  follow'd  him  with  noise :  „            593 

Strike  down  the  I  and  long  practised  knight,  Lancelot  and  E.  1361 

till  she  long  To  have  thee  back  in  I  life  again,  Pelleas  and  E.  352 

I  might  have  stricken  a  I  stroke  for  him,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  69 

Lute  (s)     on  lattice  edges  lay  Or  book  or  I ;  Princess  ii  30 

'  It  is  the  Uttle  rift  within  the  I,  Merlin  and  V.  390 

'  The  httle  rift  within  the  lover's  I  „            393 

Lute  (verb)    That  I  and  flute  fantastic  tenderness,  Princess  iv  129 

Luther    thou  wilt  be  A  latter  L,  To  J.  M.  K.  2 

Lutterworth     Nor  thou  in  Britain,  little  L,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  26. 

Luw  (love)  (s)     Noa — -thou'U  marry  for  I —  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  12* 

fur,  Sammy,  'e  married  fur  I.  „              32 

X  ?  what's  I  ?  thou  can  luvv  thy  lass  an'  'er  munny 

too,  „              33 


Luvv 


438 


Mad 


Law  flove)  (verb)    Luw  ?  what's  luvv  ?  thou  can  I 

thy  lass  an'  'er  munny  too,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  33 
Could'n  1 1  thy  muther  hy  cause  o'  'er  munny 

laaid  by  ?  „              35 

Law'd  (loved)    fur  I Z  'er  a  vast  sight  moor  fur  it :  „             36 

Luxuriant    The  I  symmetry  Of  thy  floating  gracefulness,  Eleanore  49 

Luxurious     Till,  kill'd  with  some  I  agony,  Vision  of  Sin  43 

Luxury     And  I  of  contemplation  :  Eleanore  107 

Lychgate    to  the  I,  where  his  chariot  stood,  Aylmer's  Field  824 

By  the  l-g  was  Muriel.  The  Ring  324 

Lycian  Appraised  the  L  custom.  Princess  ii  128 
Lydian  Gazing  at  the  L  laughter  of  the  Garda  Lake  below  Frater  Ave,  etc.  8 
Lyiug  (adj.  and  part.)    See  also  A-laaid,  A-liggin',  Li^in', 

Under-lying)    Fed  thee,  a  child,  I  alone,  Eleanore  25 

I  still  Shadow  forth  the  banks  at  will :  „       109 

L,  robed  in  snowy  white  That  loosely  flew  L.  of  Shalott  iv  19 

Win  vex  thee  I  underground  ?  Two  Voices  111 

For  I  broad  awake  I  thought  of  you  May  Queen,  Con.  29 

The  Roman  soldier  found  Me  I  dead,  JD.  of  F.  Women  162 

I  robed  and  crown'd,  Worthy  a  Roman  spouse.'  „            163 

/,  hidden  from  the  heart's  disgrace,  Locksley  Hall  57 

Summer  isles  of  Eden  I  in  dark-purple  spheres  „            164 

She  I  on  her  couch  alone,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  2 

On  the  decks  as  they  were  I,  The  Captain  53 

Suffused  them,  sitting,  I,  languid  shapes,  Vision  of  Sin  12 

(His  father  I  sick  and  needing  him)  Enoch  Arden  65 

I  thus  inactive,  doubt  and  gloom.  „           113 

Found  I  with  his  urns  and  ornaments,  Aylmer's  Field  4 

I  bathed  In  the  green  gleam  of  dewy-tassell'd  trees :  Princess  i  93 

You  I  close  upon  his  temtory,  „        iv  403 

but  when  she  saw  me  I  stark,  „        vi  100 

What  whispers  from  thy  I  lip  ?  In  Mem.  Hi  4 

And  found  thee  I  in  the  port ;  „          xiv  4 

What  whisper'd  from  her  I  lips  ?  „   xxxix  10 

The  wine-flask  I  couch'd  in  moss,  „  Ixxxix  44 

What  was  ii?  &l  trick  of  the  brain  ?  Maud  II  i  37 

L  close  to  my  foot.  Frail,  „         ii  3 

his  good  mates  L  or  sitting  round  him,  Gareth  and  L.  512 

And  left  him  I  in  the  public  way  ;  Geraint  and  E.  478 

she  that  saw  him  I  unsleek,  unshorn,  Lancelot  and  E.  815 

I  bounden  there  In  darkness  thro'  innumerable  hours  Holy  Grail  676 
thou  wert  I  in  thy  new  leman's  arms.'  Last  Tournament  625 
saw  One  I  in  the  dust  at  Almesbury,  Pass,  of  Arthur  77 
Ever  the  mine  and  assault,  our  sallies,  their  I 

alarms,  Def.  of  Lucknow  75 

I've  ninety  men  and  more  that  are  I  sick  ashore.  The  Revenge  10 
little  girl  with  her  arms  I  out  on  the 

counterpane.'  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  58 

little  arms  I  out  on  the  counterpane ;  „                70 

I I  here  bedridden  and  alone,  Columbus  164 
Among  them  Muriel  I  on  her  face —  The  Ring  448 
Tell  him  you  were  I !  Forlorn  56 

Lying  (s)     Death  in  all  life  and  I  in  all  love.  Merlin  and  V.  194 

Lyings-in     aches,  and  teethings,  l-i.  Holy  Grail  554 

I^ette    '  My  name  ?  '  she  said — '  L  my  name  ;  Gareth  and  L.  607 

a  light  laugh  Broke  from  L,  „            837 

He  laugh'd ;  the  laughter  jarr'd  upon  L  :  ,.           1226 

turning  to  i  he  told  The  tale  of  Gareth,  „          1272 

'  Heaven  help  thee,'  sigh'd  L.  „          1357 

But  he,  that  told  it  later,  says  L.  „          1429 

Lynx     lier  I  eye  To  fix  and  make  me  hotter,  Princess  Hi  46 

I^x-eyes    You  needs  must  have  good  l-e  Despair  114 

Lyonesse    sea-sounding  wastes  of  L—  Merlin  and  V.  74 

Lyonnesse     Had  fallen  in  L  about  their  Lord,  M.  d' Arthur  4 

Roving  the  tra^^kless  realms  of  L,  Lancelot  and  E.  35 

Rode  Tristram  toward  L  and  the  west.  Last  Tournament  362 

Then  pressing  day  by  day  thro'  X  „              501 

light  feet  fell  on  our  rough  L,  „              554 

when  first  I  rode  from  our  rough  L,  „              664 

And  rode  thereto  from  L,  and  he  said  Guinevere  236 

All  down  the  lonely  coast  of  L,  „        240 

Back  to  the  sunset  bounil  of  L—  Pass,  of  Arthur  81 

Ha<l  fall'n  in  L  about  their  lord,  „             173 

Lyonors    a  knight  To  combat  for  my  sLster,  L,  Gareth  and  L.  608 

the  Lady  L  Had  sent  her  coming  champion,  „          1191 


Lyonors  (continued)     The  Lady  X  at  a  window  stood,  Gareth  and  L.  1375 

The  Lady  L  wrung  her  hands  and  wept,  ,,           1395 

And  stay  the  world  from  Lady  L.  „           1412 

And  Lady  L  and  her  house,  with  dance  „           1422 

Says  that  Sir  Gareth  wedded  L,  „           1428 

Lyre     voice,  a  Z  of  widest  range  Struck  by  all  passion,  D.  of  F.  Women  165 

Who  touch'd  a  jarring  I  at  firet,  In  Mem.  xcvi  7 

golden  I  Is  ever  sounding  in  heroic  ears  Tiresias  180 

Ljrrics    dismal  I,  prophesying  change  Princess  i  142 


Maade  (made)     An'  'e  m  the  bed  as  'e  ligs  on  N.  Fanner,  N.  S.  28 

scratted  my  faace  like  a  cat,  an'  it  m  'er  sa  mad  North.  Cobbler  22 

I  grabb'd  the  munny  she  m,  „            32 

what  ha  m  our  MoUy  sa  laate  ?  Spinster's  S's.  113 

An'  the  munney  they  m  by  the  war,  Owd  Rod  44 

An'  soa  they've  m  tha  a  parson.  Church-warden,  etc.  7 

pearky  as  owt,  an'  tha  m  me  as  mad  as  mad,  „            35 
Maain-glad  (main  glad)    but  I  be  m  3  to  seea  tha  so  'arty     North.  Cobbler  2 

Naay — fur  1  be  m-g,  „              9 

Maake  (make)     I  knaws  what  m's  tha  sa  mad.  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  17 

What  m's  'er  sa  laate  ?  Spinster's  S's.  5 

till  I  m's  tha  es  smooth  es  silk,  „            53 

I  loovs  tha  to  7n  thysen  'appy,  „            57 

They  7n's  ma  a  graater  Laady  „           110 

means  fur  to  m  'is  owd  aage  as  'appy  Owd  Rod  3 

The  fellers  as  m's  them  picturs,  „        23 

Doant  m  thysen  sick  wi'  the  caake.  „        34 

an'  they  m's  ma  a  help  to  the  poor,  Church-warden,  etc.  39 
Blaakin'  (making)    M  'em  goa  togither  as  they've 

good  right  to  do.  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  34 

an'  w  ma  deaf  wi'  their  shouts,  Spinster's  S's.  88 

I  'eiird  'er  a  m  'er  moan,  „          115 

Maale  (male)    by  the  fault  0'  that  ere  m —  Village  Wife  17 

Maate  (mate)    or  she  weant  git  a  m  onyhow  !  „        104 

Maay  (hawthorn-bloom)    niver  ha  seed  it  sa  white  wi'  the  M  „          80 

Maay  (month)     carpet  es  fresh  es  a  midder  o'  flowers  i'  M  Spinster's  S's.  45 

Maaziu'  (bewildering)    Huzzin'  an'  m  the  blessed  fealds    N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  62 

Macaw     add  A  crimson  to  the  quaint  AI,  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  16 

Mace     brand,  m,  and  shaft,  shield —  Princess  v  503 

Machicolated     Glared  on  a  huge  m  tower  Last  Tournament  424 

Machine    praised  his  land,  his  horses,  his  m's  ;  The  Brook  124 

Machcee    '  Tomorra,  tomorra,  M  ! '  Tomorrow  18 

Macready     Farewell,  M,  since  to-night  we  part ;  To  W.  C.  Macready  1 

Farewell,  M,  since  this  night  we  part,  „                5 

Farewell,  M ;  moral,  grave,  sublime ;  „              12 

Mad    {See  also  Clean-wud,  Hawk-mad,  Wud)    troops  of 

devils,  m  with  blasphemy,  St.  S.  Stylites  4 
Am  I  m,  that  I  should  cherish  that  which  beai-s 

but  bitter  fruit  ?  Locksley  Hall  65 

the  bailiff  swore  that  he  was  m,  The  Brook  143 

Squoire  'ull  be  sa  m  an'  all —  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  47 

I  knaws  what  maakes  tha  sa  m.  „        N.  S.  17 

M  and  maddening  all  that  heard  her  Boddicea  4 

What  matter  if  I  go  m,  Maud  I  xi  6 

to  hear  a  dead  man  chatter  Is  enough  to  drive  one  m.  „     //  v  20 

Then  Artliur  all  at  once  gone  m  replies,  Gareth  and  L.  863 
whether  she  be  m,  or  else  the  King,  Or  both  or 

neither,  or  thyself  be  m,  1  ask  not :  „            875 

your  town,  where  all  the  men  are  m ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  418 

it  makes  me  m  to  see  you  weep.  Geraint  and  E.  616 

for  I  was  wellnigh  m :  „            836 

m  for  strange  adventure,  dash'd  away.  Balin  and  Balan  289 

'  I  have  gone  m.     I  love  you  :  Lancelot  and  E.  930 

'  he  dash'd  across  me — m.  Holy  Grail  640 

holy  nun  and  thou  have  driven  men  m,  „          862 

What !  art  thou  m  ?  '  Pelleas  and  E.  537 

beheld  three  spirits  m  with  joy  Guinevere  252 

Playing  m  pranks  along  the  heathy  leas  ;  Circumstance  2 
Look  how  they  tumble  the  blossom,  the  m  little 

tits  !  Window,  Ay  9 


Mad 


439 


Made 


Mad  (continued)    with  m  hand  Tearing  the  bright  leaves 

of  the  ivy -screen,  Lover's  Tale  ii  39 

their  seamen  made  mock  at  the  m  little  craft  The  Revenge  38 

an'  it  maade  'er  sa  m  North.  Cobbler  22 

M  wi'  the  lasses  an'  all —  Village  Wife  78 

I  Stumbled  on  deck,  half  m.  The  Wreck  118 
n  bride  who  stabb'd  her  bridegroom  on  her  bridal 

night—  The  Flight  57 

L  m,  then  I  am  m,  but  sane,  „          58 

My  father's  madness  makes  me  m —  ,,          59 

I  *m  not  m,  not  yet,  not  quite —  „          60 

m  loT  the  charge  and  the  battle  were  we.  Heavy  Brigads  41 

a-yowhn'  an'  yaupin'  like  m  ;  Owd  Rod  88 
pearky  as  owt,  an'  tha  maade  me  as  m  as  m,         Church-warden,  etc.  35 

I  w»s  m,  I  was  raving-wild.  Charity  27 

HftHam     Take,  M,  this  poor  book  of  song  ;  To  the  Queen  17 

M — i  I  know  your  sex,  Vision  of  Sin  181 

so  mask'd,  M,  I  love  the  truth  ;  Receive  it ;  Princess  ii  213 

not  to  answer,  M,  all  those  hard  things  ..            345 

'  M,  he  the  wisest  man  Feasted  the  women  ,.            350 

M,  you  should  answer,  we  would  ask)  „            353 

Nay — for  it's  kind  of  you,  M,  Rizpah  21 

M,  I  beg  your  pardon  !  „      81 

Hadden     -s  tliis  a  time  to  »»  madness  Aylmer's  Field  769 

Hadden'd  (adj.  and  part.)     Now  to  the  scream  of  a  m 

beach  dragg'd  down  by  the  wave,  Maud  I  Hi  12 

cramping  creeds  that  had  to  the  peoples  Despair  24 

TiU  I  myself  was  m  with  her  cry.  The  Ring  405 

For  bwly  minds  were  m  to  the  height  To  Mary  Boyle  33 

Madden'd  (verb)     And  ever  he  mutter'd  and  m,  Maud  /  i  10 
'  I  shall  assay,'  said  Gareth  with  a  smile  That  m  her,  Gareth  and  L.  784 

and  tft  with  himself  and  moan'd  :  Pelleas  and  E.  460 

and  we  gorged  and  we  to,  V.  of  Maeldune  67 

For  one  monotonous  fancy  to  her,  The  Ring  404 

Kaddeniig    Mad  and  to  all  that  beard  her  Boddicea  4 

And  m  what  he  rode  :  Eoly  Grail  641 

Madder    made  our  mightiest  m  than  our  least.  „          863 

Haddest    Of  all  the  glad  New- Year,  mother,  the  m 

merriest  day  ;  May  Queen  3 

To-morrow  'ill  be  of  all  the  year  the  m  merriest  day,  „            43 

Maddison's    an'  loook  thruf  M  gaate  !  Spinster's  S's.  6 

Hade    (See  also  Costly-made,  Ifoade,  New-made, 

Stronger-made)     The  world  was  never  to  ;  Nothing  will  Die  30 

0  spirit-  and  heart  »w  desolate  !  Supp.  Confessions  189 
A  faiiy  sliield  your  Genius  m  Margaret  41 
My  fancy  to  me  for  a  moment  blest  The  form,  the  form  6 
while  the  tender  service  to  thee  weep,  The  Bridesmaid  10 
She  m  three  paces  thro'  the  room,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  38 
'  Is  this  the  form,'  she  m  her  moan,  Mariana  in  the  S.  33 
'  The  day  to  night,'  she  to  her  moan,  „  81 
And  weeping  then  she  m  her  moan,  „  93 
What  is  so  wonderfully  to.'  Two  Voices  6 
'  This  is  more  vile,'  he  to  reply,  „         103 

1  told  thee — hardly  nigher  to,  „  173 
play'd  In  his  free  field,  and  pastime  m,  „  320 
These  three  to  unity  so  sweet,  „  421 
wherefore  rather  I  to  choice  To  commune  „  460 
So  sing  that  other  song  I  ?«,  Miller's  D.  199 
Love  is  m  a  vague  regret.  „  210 
That  loss  but  to  us  love  the  more,  „  230 
She  to  Paris  to  Proffer  of  royal  power,  CEnone  110 
Kept  watch,  waiting  decision,  m  reply.  „  143 
I  TO  a  feast ;  I  bad  him  come  ;  The  Sisters  13 
I  TO  my  dagger  sharp  and  bright.  „  26 
To  which  my  soul  to  answer  readily  :  Palace  of  Art  17 
Four  courts  I  to.  East,  West  and  South  and  North,  „  21 
you'll  be  there,  too,  mother,  to  see  me  to  the  Queen  ;  May  Queen  26 
Last  May  we  to  a  crown  of  flowers :  „  N.  Y's.  E.  9 
Beneath  the  hawthorn  on  the  green  they  to  me 

Queen  of  May ;  „  10 
morning  star  of  song,  who  m  His  music  heard 

below  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  3 

I  TO  The  ever-shifting  currents  of  the  blood  „             132 

And  me  this  knowledge  bolder  to.  To  J.  S.  5 

To  shame  the  boast  so  often  to,  Love  thou  thy  land  71 


Made  (continued)    I  perish  by  this  people  which  I  to, —         M.  d' Arthur  22 
great  brand  M  Ughtnings  in  the  splendour  of  the  moon,  „         137 


M  me  most  happy,  faltering, 

TO  a  little  wreath  of  all  the  flowers 

half  has  fali'n  and  to  a  bridge  ; 

m  it  sweet  To  walk,  to  sit,  to  sleep, 

Man  is  to  of  solid  stuff. 

God  TO  the  woman  for  the  man, 

'  God  TO  the  woman  for  the  use  of  man, 

all  hell  beneath  M  me  boil  over. 

So  slightly,  musically  m, 

M  weak  by  time  and  fate, 

the  barking  cur  M  her  cheek  flame  : 

no  sound  is  to.  Not  even  of  a  gnat  that  sings. 

Had  m  him  talk  for  show  ; 

the  seamen  M  a  gallant  crew, 

M  a  murmur  in  the  land. 

And  a  gentle  consort  to  he. 

Like  fancy  m  of  golden  air. 

But  you  have  to  the  wiser  choice. 

That  m  the  wild-swan  pause  in  her  cloud, 

sailor's  lad  M  orphan  by  a  winter  shipwreck, 

and  TO  himself  Full  sailor ; 

and  TO  a  home  For  Annie,  neat  and  nestlike, 

The  sea  is  His :  He  to  it.' 

his  duty  by  his  own,  M  himself  theirs  ; 

Down  thro'  the  whitening  hazels  to  a  plunge 

tongue  Was  loosen'd,  till  he  to  them  understand  ; 

M  such  a  voluble  answer  promising  all, 

I  saw  where  James  M  toward  us, 

m  The  hoar  hair  of  the  Baronet  bristle  up 

bounteously  m  And  yet  so  finely, 

M  blossom-ball  or  daisy-chain, 

'  God  bless  'em  :  marriages  are  to  in  Heaven.' 

Fine  as  ice-ferns  on  January  panes  M  by  a  breath. 

Then  to  his  pleasure  echo,  hand  to  hand, 

Perplext  her,  to  her  half  forget  herself, 

much  allowance  must  be  m  for  men. 

knew  he  wherefore  he  had  to  the  cry  ; 

m  Still  paler  the  pale  head  of  him, 

I  m  by  these  the  last  of  all  my  race, 

and  m  Their  own  traditions  God, 

M  more  and  more  allowance  for  his  talk  ; 

breaking  that,  you  to  and  broke  your  dream  : 

M  Him  his  catspaw  and  the  Cross  his  tool, 

m  The  dimpled  flounce  of  the  sea-fm'below  flap, 

M  havock  among  those  tender  cells, 

it  seem'd  A  void  was  m  in  Nature  ; 

bUnd  beginnings  that  have  m  me  man, 

M  noise  with  bees  and  breeze  from  end  to  end. 

TO  the  old  wanior  from  his  ivied  nook  Glow 

They  rode  ;  they  betted  ;  to  a  hundred  friends. 

My  mother  pitying  to  a  thousand  prayers  ; 

He  always  to  a  point  to  post  with  mares  ; 

but  that  which  to  Woman  and  man. 

Have  we  not  to  ourseU  the  sacrifice  ? 

I  remember'd  one  myself  had  to, 

part  TO  long  since,  and  part  Now  while  I  sang, 

in  the  North  long  since  my  nest  is  to. 

beauty  in  detail  M  them  worth  knowing  ; 

M  at  me  thro'  the  press,  and  staggering  back 

reverence  for  the  laws  ourselves  have  ?«, 

0  the  wild  charge  they  to  ! 

Honour  the  charge  they  to  ! 

Who  TO  the  serf  a  man,  and  burst  his  chain — 

the  parson  m  it  his  text  that  week, 

Is  on  the  skull  which  thou  hast  m. 

He  thinks  he  was  not  to.  to  die  ;  And  thou  hast  to 

him  :  thou  art  just. 
And  TO  me  that  delirious  man 
m  me  move  As  light  as  carrier-birds  in  air ; 
Him  that  to  them  current  coin  ; 
When  God  hath  to  the  pile  complete  ; 
Where  thy  first  form  was  to  a  man  ; 
Has  TO  me  kindly  with  my  kind, 


Gardener's  D.  235 

Dora  82 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  32 

Edwin  Morris  39 

49 

50 

91 

St.  S.  Stylites  171 

Talking  Oak  87 

Ulysses  69 

Godiva  58 

Day  Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  20 

Wai  Water.  196 

The  Captain  6 

L.  of  Burleigh  20 

73 

The  Voyage  66 

You  might  have  won  5 

Poet's  Song  7 

Enoch  Arden  15 

53 

58 

226 

334 

379 

645 

903 

The  "Brook  117 

Aylmer's  Field  41 

74 

87 

188 

223 

257 

303 

410 

589 

622 

791 

794 

Sea  Dreams  75 

143 

190 

265 

Lu/;retius  22 

37 

246 

Princess,  Pro.  88 

104 

163 

i21 

189 

ii  144 

Hi  249 

j»88 

90 

110 

449 

•«522 

Con.  55 

Light  Brigade  51 

53 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  3 

Grandmother  29 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  8 


11 

xvi  17 

XXV  5 

xxxvi  4 

liv^ 

Ixi  10 

Irci  7 


Made 


""""VrfSSe  'in^'ZlT.''^'  -  -  ^°-  ^'^^  "-•    /«  ^-.  ^--  8 


440 


Made 


I  m  a,  picture  m  the  brain  ; 

And  tracts  of  calm  from  tempest  m 

In  that  which  m  the  world  so  fair 

flood  Of  onward  tune  shall  yet  be  w 

Her  sweet '  I  will '  has  to  you  one. 

Rather  than  hold  by  the  law  that  I  m 

/have  not  TO  the  world,  and  He  that  to  it 

&ne  TO  me  divme  amends  For  a  courtesy 

M  her  only  the  cWld  of  her  mother. 

There  were  but  a  step  to  be  m. 

And  TO  my  hfe  a  perfumed  altar-flame  • 

Maud  TO  my  Maud  by  that  long  loving 'kiss, 

.¥so  fainly  weU  With  delicate  spire  and  whorl 

Imng  wiU  That  m  it  stir  on  the  shore. 

^  "l^?-  u  ^u^  ^'y  ^'^^  ™s^  That  blow  by  nisht 
star  Which  shone  so  close  beside  Thee  that  ye 

TO  One  light  together,  ^  n  ^     ^  tj  ..    .-, 

and  TO  a  realm,  and  reign'd  freoeat^  r^        ^  /  7     .^I^^  *^ 

m  Broad  pathways  forV£ra!id  the  knighf"-  "^  ^'''"'-  ^''  ''I 
il/ head  against  him,  crying,  *-"'sUt  „  60 

M  lightnings  and  great  thunders  over  him  ° 

the  King  M  feast  for,  saying,  ' 

the  Queen  to  answer,  '  What  know  I  ? 
mingled  with  the  haze  And  to  it  thicker  • 
crush  d  The  Holators,  and  to  the  people  free  ? 
The  birds  to  Melody  on  branch, 
that  old  Seer  to  answer  playing' on  him 
and  had  to  it  spire  to  heaven. 
TO  his  goodly  cousin,  Tristram,  knight 
Kepentant  of  the  word  she  to  him  swear 
bhame  never  to  girl  redder  than  Gareth  loy 
and  TO  him  flush,  and  bow  Lowly 
^^  thee  my  knight  ?  my  knights  'are  sworn 

Ihou  hast  TO  us  lords,  and  canst  not  put  us  down  ' ' 
Always  he  TO  his  mouthpiece  of  a  page 
\^^.     converse  tiU  she  to  her  palfrey  halt. 
What  madness  to  thee  challenge  the  chief  knight 
dance  And  revel  and  song,  m  merry  over  Dealh 
wherefore  going  to  the  King,  He  to  this  pretest' 
Was  ever  man  so  grandly  w  as  he  ? 
the  strong  passion  in  her  to  her  weep 
M  answer  sharply  that  she  should  not  know 
A   sliarplv  to  the  dwarf,  and  ask'd  it  of  him 
And  TO  hira  hke  a  man  abroad  at  morn 
M  a  low  splendour  in  the  world, 
Af  her  cheek  bum  and  either  ey'elid  fall 
Which  TO  him  look  so  cloudy  and  so  cold ; 
and  suffenng  thus  he  m  Minutes  an  age  • 
And  TO  it  of  two  colours  ; 
Him  that  to  me  The  one 'true  lover  whom  you 

ever  own'd,  •' 

M  her  cheek  bum  and  either  eyelid  fall 
It  weUnigh  to  her  cheerful ; 
to  The  long  way  smoke  beneath  him  in  his  fear : 
M  but  a  single  bound,  and  with  a  sweep  of  it 
and  TO  as  if  to  fall  upon  him. 
I,  tlierefore,  to  him  of  our  Table  Round 

*"  t  ♦u^®^*''"®'^  °^  *""^^^«  battles  overhead  Stir 

and  the  Queen,  and  all  the  world  M  music 

TO  that  mouth  of  night  Whereout  the  Demon 

-WGrarlon,  hissing  ;  then  he  sourly  smiled. 

TO  his  feet  VVings  thro'  a  ghmmering  gallery, 

TO  him  quickly  dive  Beneath  the  boughs 

Nature  through  the  flesh  herself  hath  to 

It  TO  the  laughter  of  an  afternoon 

M  with  her  right  a  comb  of  pearl  to  part  The  lists 

And  TO  a  pretty  cup  of  both  my  hanc& 

M  answer  either  eyeUd  wet  with  tears  : 

And  TO  a  Gardener  putting  in  a  graS 

but  afterwards  He  to  a  stalwart  knight. 

rhen  TO  her  Queen  :  but  those  isle-nurtured  eyes 

^d  Thfr  "^  ""T^'"^  ^''^  W'th  those  fine  eTe.: 

and  rher  1?Z   ™^"  J«»>ou«.  with  good  cause^ 

ana  to  her  hthe  arm  round  his  neck  Tignten, 


Ixxx  9 

„        cxii  14 

„  cxvi  8 

„      cxxviii  6 

Con.  56 

Maud  I  i  55 

iv  48 

vil3 

„       xiii  40 

„        xiv  22 

1.      xviii  24 

58 

//  a  5 

15 

t)74 


108 
247 
326 
436 
Garelh  and  L.  137 
183 
252 
309 
394 
527 
536 
548 
552 
1132 
1337 
1360 
1416 
1423 
Marr.  of  Geraint  33 
81 
110 
196 
204 
335 
598 
775 
Gerainl  and  E.  48 
114 
292 

343 

434 
443 
531 
727 
776 
908 
Bali7i  and  Balan  87 
211 


Merlin  and 


316 
355 
403 
422 
F.  50 
163 
244 
275 
379 
479 
482 
570 
603 
605 
614 


Made  (continued)     King  M  proffer  of  the  league  of 
golden  mines, 

sleepless  nights  Of  my  long  life  have  m  it  easy 

Ihat  wreathen  round  it  »i  it  seem  his  own  • 

And  weaned  out  to  for  the  couch  and  slept' 

and  TO  A  snowy  penthouse  for  his  hoUow  evps 

crying    I  have  to  his  glory  mine,'  '  ' 

Now  TO  a  pretty  history  to  herself 

every  scratch  a  lance  had  to  upon  it 

down  they  fell  and  to  the  glen  abhoiT'd  • 

1  hither  he  to,  and  blew  the  gateway  horn 

to  a  sudden  step  to  the  gate,  and  there—  ' 

backward  by  the  wind  they  to  In  moving 
Sweet  love,  that  seems  not  to  to  fade  aw^y 
He  makes  no  friend  who  never  to  a  foe 
and  TO  him  hers,  and  laid  her  mind  On  him 
Vi^^l  ^^\*  '"  ^"'^b  ^oney  in  his  reahn.  ' 
mould  Of  Arthur,  m  by  Merlin,  with  a  crown 
crown  And  both  the  wings  are  to  of  gold         ' 
A  sign  to  maim  this  Order  which  I  m      ' 
since  your  vows  are  sacred,  being  to  ■ ' 
Rejoicing  in  that  Order  which  he  to  ' 
Lord  of  aU  things  m  Himself  Naked  of  glory 
When  the  hermit  to  an  end, 
past  thro'  Pagan  reahns,  and  to  them  mine, 
imther  I  TO,  and  there  was  I  disarm'd 

iifn  T^  °"^^'  ^^'^  ^\^  ^^^^  ^  ™y  heart  leap  ; 
And  each  to  joy  of  either  ; 

So  fierce  a  gale  to  havoc  here  of  late 

Who  m  me  sure  the  Quest  was  not  for  me  • 

TO  our  mightier  madder  than  our  least.        ' 

When  God  to  music  thro'  them 

King  Arthur  to  new  knights  t'o  fill  the  gap 

and  Arthur  to  him  knight. 

Then  Arthur  to  vast  banquets, 

•  .'"  ^^,™oan  ;  and,  darkness  fallin<- 

sight  Of  her  rich  beauty  to  him  at  one  glance 

SwF  f  K  °"'^^^^'  "^  ^""'Sht  of  his'table  ; 
only  the  King  Hath  to  us  fools  and  liars. 

AnH  pj       T  '*  P^""^^^  *h™'  *he  wound  again. 

And  Percivale  to  answer  not  a  word 

he  twitch'd  the  reins.  And  to  his  beast 

Had  TO  mock-knight  of  Arthur's  Table  Round 

Gr.IlT^h^l-J'''^  wherefore  toss  me  this     ' 

Great  brother,  thou  nor  I  have  to  the  world  ■ 

S  aSTer'^'Ti  '^'^.^f^'y  "^  ^is  horse  Caracole  ; 

M  answer     I  had  liefer  twenty  years 

I  to  it  m  the  woods,  And  heard  it  ring  as  true 

M  duU  his  inner,  keen  his  outer  eve 
up  thro'  AUoth  and  Alcor,  M  aU  above  it 
the  crowning  sm  That  to  L  happy  •  ' 

The  King  prevailing  to  his  reahn  •— 
did  you  keep  the  vow  you  to  to  Mark 

utul        '■^^^  ^^  ^ ;  but  then  their  vows- 

M  such  excuses  as  he  might 

And  from  the  sun  there  swif'tly  m  at  her 

siL'^tS?^  mournful  answer  to  the  Queen : 

s^ns  that  to  the  past  so  pleasant  to  us  : 

m  her  face  a  darkness  from  the  King  • 

"^TOSn^S  :'^  ''''''  ^^"^-^  ^«  K-8  Who 

uttering  this  the  King  M  at  the  man  : 
I  perish  by  this  people  which  I  to  - 

^'moon         ^  ^^^"^'  •"  *^«  «P'«^dour  of  the 

here  the  faith  That  to  us  rulers  ?  ^   ,.    'A         .?^ 

-I  o  the  Queen  m  19 


Merlin  and  V.  646 
680 
T35 
r36 
807 
971 
Lancelot  and  3.  18 
20 
42 
169 
391 
480 
1013 
1089 
Holy  Crail  164 
215 
239 
,i         242 
,\  297 

,|  314 

i  327 

*  447 

.1  457 

.1  478 

,;  575 

580 
638 
729 
743 
863 
878 
Pelleas  end  E.  1 
16 
147 
213 
238 
319 
479 
530 
534 
55L 
Last  Tournament  2 
195 
203 
205 
25T 
283 
287 
306 
366 
481    I 
577    I 
651 
655 
681 
Guinevere  38 
78 
341 
375 
417 

438 
451 
467 
510 
603 
655 
Pass,  of  Arthur  2 
14 
165 
190 


Made 


441 


Magic 


Made  (continued)     to  whom  I  m  it  o'er  his  grave  Sacred,  To  the  Qu^en  it  35 
attracted,  won.  Married,  m  one  with,  Looer's  Tale  i  134 

M  all  our  tastes  and  fancies  like,  „  242 

m  garlands  of  the  selfsame  flower,  „  343 

had  m  The  red  rose  there  a  pale  one —  „  695 

m  The  happy  and  the  unhappy  love,  „  752 

one  other,  worth  the  life  That  m  it  sensible —  „  800 

M  strange  division  of  its  sufEering  „         ii  128 

m  the  gromid  Reel  under  us,  „  193 

The  front  rank  w  a  sudden  halt ;  „         tit  29 

And  partly  m  them — the'  he  knew  it  not.  „  iv  25 

till  helpless  death  And  silence  m  him  bold —  „  78 

Or  am  I  m  immortal,  or  my  love  Mortal  once  more  ?  '  „  79 

things  familiar  to  her  youth  Had  m  a  sUent  answer :  „  96 

sudden  wail  his  lady  to  Dwelt  in  his  fancy :  „  149 

And  Julian  m  a  solemn  feast :  „  187 

Then  Julian  m  a  secret  sign  to  me  „  284 

answer'd  not  a  word.  Which  m,  the  amazement  more,  „  334 

he  TO  me  the  cowslip  ball,  First  Quarrel  13 

you  were  only  to  for  the  day.  Rizpah  19 

The  King  should  have  m  him  a  soldier,  „         28 

seamen  m  mock  at  the  mad  little  craft  The  Revenge  38 

gunner  said  '  Ay,  ay,'  but  the  seamen  m  reply  :  „  91 

Had  TO  a  heat«d  haze  to  magnify  The  charm  of 

Edith—  Sisters  ( E.  and  E.)  129 

he  had  seen  it  and  to  up  his  mind.  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  16 

TO  West  East,  and  sail'd  the  Dragon's  mouth,  Columbus  25 

vow  I  TO  When  Spain  was  waging  war  against  the  Moor —  „         92 

m  by  me,  may  seek  to  unbury  me,  „       206 

Who  TO  thee  unconceivably  Thyself  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  48 

for  the  bright-eyed  goddess  to  it  bum.  Achilles  over  the  T.  29 

but  TO  me  yearn  For  larger  glimpses  Tiresias  20 

The  noonday  crag  to  the  hand  bum  ;  „         35 

With  present  grief,  and  to  the  rhymes,  „      196 

I  took  it,  he  TO  it  a  cage,  The  Wreck  83 

M  us,  foreknew  us,  foredoom'd  us,  Despair  97 

'  The  years  that  m  the  stripling  wise  Ancient  Sage  111 

They  to  her  lily  and  rose  in  one,  „  161 

Only  That  which  to  us,  meant  us  to  be  mightier  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  209 
Fought  for  their  hves  in  the  narrow  gap  they 

had  TO —  Heavy  Brigade  23 

Glory  to  eaich  and  to  all,  and  the  chaise  that  they  m  !  „  65 

Which  has  w  your  fathers  great  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhih.  15 

Who  TO  a  nation  purer  through  their  art.  To  W.  C.  Macready  8 

Your  mle  has  m  the  people  love  Their  ruler.       To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  9 
have  I  TO  the  name  A  golden  portal  to  my  rhyme  :  „  15 

TO  themselves  as  Gods  against  the  fear  Dem'Uer  and  P.  141 

They  m  a  thousand  honey  moons  of  one  ?  The  Ring  22 

And  that  has  to  you  grave  ?  .,         88 

and  TO  The  rosy  twilight  of  a  perfect  day.  „       186 

M  every  moment  of  her  after  life  A  virgin  victim  .,       220 

Why  had  1  to  her  love  me  thro'  the  ring,  .,       391 

But  still  she  to  her  outcry  for  the  ring  ;  .,       403 

TO  him  leper  to  compass  him  with  scorn —  Happy  16 

I  TO  one  barren  effort  to  break  it  at  the  la-st.  „       72 

Now  God  has  m  you  leper  in  His  loving  care  „       91 

m  an  English  homestead  Hell —  To  Mary  Boyle  37 

I  might  have  to  you  once,  Romney's  R.  89 

TO  The  wife  of  wives  a  widow-bride,  „        137 

M  by  the  noonday  blaze  without,  St.  Telemacims  50 

'  Mine  is  the  one  fruit  AUa  m  for  man.'  Akbar's  Bream  40 

Adoring  That  who  m,  and  makes,  „  123 

Alphabet-of-heaven-in-man  M  vocal —  „  137 

Man  as  yet  is  being  to.  Making  of  Man  3 

'  It  is  finish'd.     Man  is  to.'  „  8 

Madeline     Ever  varying  M.  (repeat)  Madeline  3,  18,  27 

Madest    Who  m  him  thy  chosen,  TUhonus  13 

Thou  TO  Life  in  man  and  brute  ;  Thou  m  Death  ;  In  Mem.,  Pro.  6 

Thou  m  man,  he  knows  not  why,  „  10 

Madhouse    I  would  not  be  mock'd  in  a  to  !  Despair  79 

Madly    That  you  should  carol  so  to  ?  The  Throstle  8 

Madman     M  ! — to  chain  with  chains,  Buonaparte  2 

wam'd  that  to  ere  it  grew  too  late  :  Vision  of  Sin  56 

he  struck  me,  to,  over  the  face,  Maud  II  i  18 

'  Wherefore  waits  the  to  there  Naked  Gareth  and  L.  1091 


Madman  {continued)     And  like  a  m  brought  her  to  the 
court, 

A  TO  to  vex  you  with  wretched  words, 

teeming  with  liars,  and  madmen,  and  knaves. 
Madness    Then  in  to  and  in  bliss, 

From  cells  of  m  unconfined. 

Thro'  TO,  hated  by  the  wise. 

Mingle  to,  mingle  scorn  ! 

Vext  with  imworthy  to,  and  deform'd. 

Is  this  a  time  to  madden  to  then  ? 

No  TO  of  ambition,  avarice,  none  : 

The  accomplice  of  your  to  unforgiven, 

kinsman  thou  to  death  and  trance  And  m, 

the  vitriol  m  flushes  up  in  the  i-uffian's  head, 

I  flee  from  the  cioiel  m  of  love, 

Perhaps  from  to,  perhaps  from  crime. 

And  do  accept  my  to,  and  would  die 

Thro'  cells  of  to,  haimts  of  horror  and  fear, 

What  TO  made  thee  challenge  the  chief  knight 

O  pardon  me  !  the  m  of  that  hour. 

And  after  m  acted  question  ask'd  : 

break  Into  some  m  ev'n  before  the  Queen  ?  ' 

My  TO  all  thy  life  has  been  thy  doom, 

'  This  TO  has  come  on  us  for  our  sins.' 

former  to,  once  the  talk  And  scandal  of  our  table, 

A  dying  fire  of  w  in  his  eyes — 

My  TO  came  upon  me  as  of  old. 

And  in  my  to  to  myself  I  said. 

Then  in  my  to  I  essay'd  the  door ; 

And  but  for  all  my  to  and  my  sin. 

And  all  the  sacred  to  of  the  bard, 

— the  wholesome  m  of  an  hour — 

It  was  their  last  hour,  A  m  of  farewells. 

curb  The  to  of  our  cities  and  their  kings. 

My  father's  to  makes  me  mad — 

age  so  cramm'd  with  menace  ?  to  ?  written, 
spoken  lies  ? 

After  TO,  after  massacre.  Jacobinism  and  Jacquerie, 

Every  tiger  m  muzzled,  every  serpent  passion  kill'd, 

dream  of  wars  and  carnage,  craft  and  to,  lust  and  spite, 

Cast  the  poison  from  your  bosom,  oust  the  m  from 
your  brain. 

The  theft  weie  death  or  to  to  the  thief, 

And  eased  her  heart  of  m.  .  .  . 
Madonna    '  M,  sad  is  night  and  morn,' 
Madonna-masterpieces    M-m  Of  ancient  Art  in  Paris, 
Madonna-wise    M-w  on  either  side  her  head  ; 
Maeldune    '  O  M,  let  be  this  purpose  of  thine  ! 
Magazine    0  blatant  M's,  regard  me  rather — 
Mage     '  And  there  I  saw  m  Merlin, 

like  a  fairy  changeUng  lay  the  to  ; 

Merlin's  hand,  the  M  at  Arthur's  court, 
Magee  (Molly)    See  Molly,  Molly  Magee 
Maggot     tickle  the  to  born  in  an  empty  head, 

'  O  worms  and  m's  of  to-day 
Magic  (adj.)     Low  thunder  and  light  in  the  m  night — 

A  m  web  with  colours  gay. 

To  weave  the  mirror's  m  sights, 

Saw  the  heavens  fill  with  commerce,  argosies  of 
m  sails. 

The  M  Music  in  his  heart  Beats  quick  and 
quicker, 

on  lonely  mountain-meres  I  find  a  to  bark  ; 

drank  The  to  cup  that  fill'd  itself  anew. 

she  liked  it  more  Than  to  music,  forfeits, 

all  the  TO  hght  Dies  oS  at  once 

wise  man  that  ever  served  King  Uther  thro'  his 
TO  art ; 

'  I  once  was  looking  for  a  m  weed, 

red  fmit  Grown  on  a  to  oak-tree  in  mid-heaven, 

forms  which  ever  stood  Within  the  to  cirque  of 

memory,  Lover's  Tale  ii  159 

Magic  (s)     Is  there  some  w  in  the  place  ?  Will  Water.  79 

Bleys,  Who  taught  him  to  ;  Com.  of  Arthur  154 

Bleys  Laid  to  by,  and  sat  him  down,  „  156 


Marr.  of  Geraint  725 

Despair  108 

The  Dreamer  9 

Madeline  42 

Two  Voices  ill 

Love  and  Duty  7 

Vision  of  Sin  204 

Aylmer's  Field  335 

769 

Lucretius  212 

Princess  vi  276 

In  Mem.  Ixxi  2 

Maud  I  i  37 

„         iv  55 

„        xvi22 

„     xviii  44 

„     IIIvi2 

Gareth  and  L.  1416 

Geraint  and  E.  346 

813 

Balin  and  Balan  230 

619 

Holy  Grail  357 

649 

768 

787 

804 

841 

849 

877 

Last  Tournament  675 

Guinevere  103 

Tiresias  71 

The  Flight  59 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  108 
157 
167 
189 

241 

The  Ring  204 

Forlorn  82 

Mariana  in  the  S.  22 

Romney's  R.  86 

Isabel  6 

V.  of  Maeldune  119 

Hendecasyllahics  17 

Com.,  of  Arthur  280 

363 

Gareth  and  L.  306 

Maud  II  V  38 

Ancient  Sage  210 

The  Merman  23 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  2 

29 

Locksley  Hall  121 

Day- Dm.,  Arrival  26 

Sir  Galahad  38 

Aylmer's  Field  143 

Princess,  Pro.  195 

In  Mem.  viii  5 

Com.  of  Arthur  152 

Merlin  and  V.  471 

Last  Tournament  745 


Magic 


442 


Maiden 


Who  knows  a  subtler  m  than  his 


Kagic  (s)  (continued) 
own, 
and  whether  this  be  built  By  m, 
came  To  leam  black  m,  and  to  hate  his  kind 
Garlon  too  Hath  leam'd  black  m, 
their  wise  men  Were  strong  in  that  old  vi 
and  woke  me  And  leam'd  me  M  ! 
Great  the  Master,  And  sweet  the  M, 
A  barbarous  people,  Blind  to  the  m, 
For  thro'  the  M  Of  Him  the  Mighty, 
Magician    You  that  are  watching  The  gray  M 
Magaet    Repell'd  by  the  m  of  Art 

Be  needle  to  the  m  of  your  word, 
Hagnetic    His  face  m  to  the  hand 

Twice  as  m  to  sweet  influences  Of  earth 
M  mockeries  ;  not  in  vain, 
Magnetise    may  m  The  baby-oak  within. 
Magnet-like    m-l  she  drew  The  rustiest  iron 
Magnificence    (His  dress  a  suit  of  fray'd  m, 
Magnify     haze  to  m  The  charm  of  Edith — 
Magpie    And  only  hear  the  m  gossip 
Mahomet    touch'd  on  M  With  much  contempt, 
Mahratta-battle    in  wild  M-b  fell  my  father 
Maid    {See  also  Be^ar  maid.  Fair-maid,  Lily  maid, 
Milking-maid,  Milkmaid)     Even  as  a  »<,  whose 
stately  brow 
So  sitting,  served  by  man  and  m, 
IS  ever  m  or  spouse.  As  fair  as  my  Olivia, 
The  m  and  page  renew'd  their  strife. 
This  earth  is  rich  in  man  and  m  ; 
Why  come  you  drest  like  a  village  m, 
'  If  I  come  drest  like  a  village  m. 
Bare-footed  came  the  beggar  m 
'  This  beggar  m  shall  be  my  queen  !  ' 
men  and  m's  Arranged  a  country  dance, 
how  we  three  presented  M  Or  Nymph,  or  Goddess, 
'  The  mother  of  the  sweetest  little  m, 
m's  should  ape  Those  monstrous  males 
turning  to  her  m's,  '  Pitch  our  pavilion 
a  m.  Of  those  beside  her,  smote  her  harp, 
marsh-divers,  rather,  m,  Shall  croak 
A  hubbub  in  the  court  of  half  the  m's 
fling  Their  pretty  m's  in  the  running  flood, 
Mask'd  like  our  m's,  blustering  I  know  not  what 
Almost  our  m's  were  better  at  their  homes, 

0  m's,  behold  our  sanctuary  Is  violate, 
led  A  hundred  m's  in  train  across  the  Park. 

1  should  have  had  to  do  with  none  but  m's, 
we  will  scatter  all  our  m's  Till  happier  times 
With  showers  of  random  sweet  on  m  and  man. 
'  Come  down,  O  vi,  from  yonder  mountain  height : 
Perish'd  many  a  w  and  matron. 
After-loves  of  m's  and  men 
I  keep  but  a  man  and  a  m, 
For  the  m's  and  marriage-makers, 
found  me  first  when  yet  a  little  m  : 
Till  high  above  him,  circled  with  her  m's, 
'  Here  by  God's  rood  is  the  one  m  for  me.' 
And  page,  and  to,  and  squire, 
come  with  no  attendance,  page  or  m, 
Arthur  the  blameless,  pure  as  any  m, 
but  sufler'd  much,  an  orphan  m  ! 
Vivien,  like  the  tenderest-hearted  ?« 
Master,  be  not  wrathful,  with  your  m  ; 
A  TO  so  .smooth,  so  white,  so  wonderful, 
A  stainless  man  beside  a  stainless  m  ; 
Elaine,  the  hly  to  of  Astolat, 
How  came  the  lily  m  by  that  good  shield 
close  behind  them  stept  tlie  lily  to  PMaine, 
'  Such  he  for  queens,  and  not  for  simple  m's.' 
this  m  Might  wear  as  fair  a  jewel  as  is  on  earth, 
lily  m  Elaine,  Won  by  the  mellow  voice 
Ix)w  U)  her  own  heart  said  tlie  lily  w. 
The  lily  m  ha<l  striven  to  make  him  cheer. 


Lily  m,  For  fear  our  people  call  you  lily  m  In  earnest, 


Com.  of  Arthur  284 

Gareth  and  L.  248 

Balin  and  Balan  127 

305 

Holy  Grail  666 

Merlin  and  the  G.  14 

16 

26 

113 

5 

The  Wreck  22 

To  Mary  Boyle  7 

Aylmer's  Field  626 

Princess  v  191 

In  Mem.  cxx  3 

Talking  Oak  255 

Merlin  and  V.  573 

Marr.  of  Geraint  296 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  129 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  19 

Princess  ii  134 

Locksley  Hall  155 


Ode  to  Memory  13 

The  Goose  21 

Talking  Oak  34 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  13 

WUl  Water.  65 

Lady  Clare  67 

69 

Beggar  Maid  3 

16 

Princess,  Pro.  83 

i  196 

ii  279 

m  309 

345 

w37 

123 

476 

i>382 

396 

428 

vim 

76 

291 

302 

,  vii  86 

192 

Boddieea  85 

Window,  No  Answer  25 

Maud  I  iv  19 

„  XX  35 

Com.  of  Arthur  340 

Gareth  and  L.  1374 

Marr.  of  Geraint  368 

710 

Geraint  and  E.  322 

Balin  and  Balan  479 

Merlin  and  F.  71 

377 

380 

566 

737 

Lancelot  and  E.  2 

28 

176 

231 

239 

242 

319 

327 


Maid  (continued)     glittering  in  enamell'd  arms  the  m 

Glanced  at, 
till  the  to  Rebell'd  against  it, 
I  lighted  on  the  to  Whose  sleeve  he  wore  ; 
About  the  to  of  Astolat,  and  her  love. 
The  TO  of  Astolat  loves  Sir  Lancelot,  Sir  Lancelot 

loves  the  to  of  Astolat.' 
all  Had  marvel  what  the  m  might  be. 
And  pledging  Lancelot  and  the  lily  to 
the  TO  in  Astolat,  Her  guiltless  rival, 
when  the  m  had  told  him  all  her  tale, 
when  the  to  had  told  him  all  the  tale 
the  meek  m  Sweetly  forbore  liim  ever, 
simple  TO  Went  half  the  night  repeating, 
Lancelot  ever  prest  upon  the  m 
'  Nay,  noble  to,'  he  answer'd, 
full  meekly  rose  the  w,  Stript  off  the  case, 
I  seem'd  a  curious  httle  m  again, 
Then  spake  the  hly  m  of  Astolat : 

past  the  barge  Whereon  the  lily  vi  of  Astolat  Lay  smiling, 
pure  Sir  Galahad  to  upUft  the  to  ; 
I,  sometime  call'd  the  m  of  Astolat, 
if  ever  holy  to  With  knees  of  adoration  wore  the 

stone,  A  holy  to  ;  tho'  never  maiden  glow'd, 
a  m.  Who  kept  our  holy  faith  among  her  kin 
since  he  loved  all  maidens,  but  no  to  In  special, 
win  them  for  the  purest  of  my  m's.' 
and  then  the  to  herself.  Who  served  him  well 
none  with  her  save  a  little  to,  A  novice  : 
But  communed  only  with  the  little  w, 
until  the  Uttle  m,  who  brook'd  No  silence, 
Whereat  fuU  willingly  sang  the  little  to. 
'  Yea,'  said  the  to,  '  this  is  all  woman's  grief, 
'  O  little  TO,  shut  in  by  nunneiy  walls, 
said  the  m,  '  be  manners  such  fair  fruit  ? 
Than  is  the  maiden  passion  for  a  to, 
'  Yea,  Uttle  m,  for  am  /  not  forgiven  ?  ' 
those  six  m's  With  shrieks  and  ringing  laughter 
The  men  would  say  of  the  m's, 
our  darling,  our  meek  little  m  ; 
'  And  if  you  give  the  ring  to  any  to, 
bind  the  m  to  love  you  by  the  ring  ; 
if  the  ring  were  stolen  from  the  m. 
Maiden  (adj.)     There  was  no  blood  upon  her  to  robes 


Lancelot  and  E.  619 
650 
710 

723 

725 

728 

738 

745 

798 

823 

855 

898 

911 

948 

978 

1035 

1085 

1242 

1265 

1273 

Holy  Grail  70 

696 

Pelleas  and  E.  40 

Ijast  Tournament  50 

399 

Guinevere  3 

150 

159 

167 

218 

227 

337 

479 

665 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  31 

First  Quarrel  28 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  28 

The  Ring  200 

202 

203 

The  Poet  41 

The  m  splendours  of  the  morning  star  D.  of  F.  Women  55 

'  No  fair  Hebrew  boy  Shall  smile  away  my  m  blame  „  214 


385 


The  m.  blossoms  of  her  teens  Could  number 

A  TO  knight^to  me  is  given  Such  hope. 

The  TO  Spring  upon  the  plain  Came  in 

Spout  from  the  m  fountain  in  her  heart. 

then  the  to  Aunt  Took  this  fair  day  for  text. 

Said  Lilia  ;  '  Why  not  now  ?  the  to  Aunt. 

Hid  in  the  ruins  ;  till  the  to  Aunt 

was  he  to  blame  ?     And  to  fancies  ; 

we  ourself  Will  crush  her  pretty  to  fancies  dead 

till,  each,  in  to  plumes  We  rustled  : 

Her  TO  babe,  a  double  April  old. 

To  unfurl  the  to  banner  of  our  rights, 

A  TO  moon  that  sparkles  on  a  sty. 

Home  with  her  m  posy. 

May  nothing  there  her  m  grace  affright ! 

nothing  can  be  sweeter  Than  m  Maud  in  either. 

This  bare  a  to  shield,  a  casque  ; 

And  left  her  to  couch,  and  robed  heraelf, 

I  saw  That  to  Saint  who  stands  with  Uly  in  hand    Balin  and  Balan  261 

So  basliful  he !  but  all  the  to  Saints,  „  520 

point  Across  the  to  shield  of  Balan  prick'd  „  559 

All  hopes  of  gaining,  than  as  to  girl.  Merlin  and  V.  24 

all  unscarr'd  from  beak  or  talon,  brought  A 

TO  babe  ;  Last  Tournament  21 

like  a  bank  Of  to  snow  mingled  with  sparks  of  fire.  „  149 

can  Arthur  make  me  pure  As  any  to  child  ?  „  693 

Than  is  the  to  pa-ssion  for  a  maid,  Guinevere  479 

Her  TO  dignities  of  Hope  and  Love — ■  Lover's  Tale  i  580 

And  all  the  to  empire  of  her  mind,  „  589 


Talking  Oak  79 

Sir  Galahad  61 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  3 

Lucretius  240 

Princess,  Pro.  107 

208 

218 


202 

ii  110 

iv  503 

V  186 

Maud  I  xii  22 

„       xviii  71 

XX  22 

Gareth  and  L.  680 

Marr.  of  Geraint  737 


Maiden 


443 


Main 


Maiden  (adj.)  {contimied)     nor  yet  to  the  wife — to  her  m 

name  !  The  WrecJc  144 
Set  the  m  fancies  wallowing  in  the  troughs  of 

ZolaLsm, —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  145 

Her  m  daughter's  marriage  ;  Prin.  Beatrice  10 

But  ere  thy  m  bii'k  be  wholly  clad,  Prog,  of  Spring  50 

Maiden  (s)     phantom  two  hours  old  Of  a  m  past  away,  Adeline  19 


Two  Voices  419 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  15 

D.  of  F.  Women  198 

253 

M.  d' Arthur  104 

Talking  Oak  180 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  4 

Sir  Galahad  20 

Lady  Clare  63 

L.  of  Burleigh  3 


The  little  m  walk'd  demure, 

A  simple  m  in  her  flower 

of  the  waiTior  Gileadite,  A  m  pure  ; 

'  Would  I  had  been  some  m  coai^se  and  poor  ! 

Wrought  by  the  lonely  m  of  the  Lake. 

whose  touch  may  press  The  m's  tender  palm. 

The  m^s  jet-black  hair  has  grown. 

Nor  7n's  hand  in  mine. 

Dropt  her  head  in  the  m's  hand, 

M,  I  have  watch'd  thee  daily. 

And  a  village  m  she. 

A  7n  of  our  century,  yet  most  meek  ; 

There  stood  a  m  near,  Waiting  to  pass. 

more  and  more,  the  m  woman-grown, 

All  wild  to  found  an  University  For  m's, 

Six  hundred  m'5  clad  in  purest  white, 

'  O  marvellously  modest  m,  you  ! 

'  An  open-hearted  m,  true  and  pure. 

Among  her  m's,  higher  by  the  head. 

Her  college  and  her  m's,  empty  masks. 

There  stood  her  in's  glimmeringly  gi'oup'd 

All  her  m's,  watching,  said. 

Stole  a  m  from  her  place, 

many  a  m  passing  home  Till  happier  times  ; 

m's  came,  they  talk'd.  They  sang, 

m,  whither  would  you  wander  ?  (repeat) 

far  away,'  said  the  dainty  little  m,  (repeat) 

Lash  the  m  into  swooning, 

or  half  coquette-Uke  M, 

As  on  a  m  in  the  day  When  first  she  wears 

May  serve  to  curl  a  m's  locks, 

I  dwelt  within  a  hall,  And  m's  with  me  : 

The  m's  gather'd  strength  and  grace 

m's  with  one  mind  Bewail'd  their  lot ; 

m's  of  the  place,  That  pelt  us  in  the  porch 

Go  not,  happy  day.  Till  the  m  yields. 

Or  whether  it  be  the  m's  fantasy. 

Whereat  the  m,  petulant,  '  Lancelot, 

on  whom  the  m  gazed. 

set  the  horror  higher :  a  m  swoon'd  ; 

But  rose  at  last,  a  single  m  with  her,  Took  horse,  Marr.  of  Geraint  160 

sent  Her  m  to  demand  it  of  the  dwarf  ;  „  193 

Done  in  your  m's  person  to  yourself :  „  216 

Sent  her  own  m  to  demand  the  name,  „  411 

never  yet  had  woman  such  a  pair  Of  suitors  as  this  ?/i ;         „  440 

'  Mother,  a  771  is  a  tender  thing,  „  510 

Let  never  m  think,  however  fair,  „  721 

the  m  rose,  And  left  her  maiden  couch,  „  736 

call'd  her  like  that  m  in  the  tale,  „  742 

we  7ii's  often  laugh  When  sick  at  heart,  Balin  and  Balan  497 

shelter  for  mine  innocency  Among  thy  7n's  !  '  Merlin  and  V .  84 

m  dreamt  That  some  one  put  this  diamond  Lancelot  and  E.  211 

And  yield  it  to  this  m,  if  ye  wiU.'  „  229 

saw  The  m  standing  in  the  dewy  light.  „  352 

never  yet  have  done  so  much  For  any  m  Uving,'  „  376 

broider'd  with  great  pearls.  Some  gentle  m's  gift.'  „  605 

for  lack  of  gentle  m's  aid.     The  gentler-born  the  ?«,  „  765 

m,  while  that  ghostly  grace  Beam'd  on  his  fancy,  „  885 

So  in  her  tower  alone  the  m  sat :  ,.  989 

'  Is  this  Elaine  ?  '  till  back  the  m  fell,  „  1031 

Know  that  for  this  most  gentle  m's  death  „  1291 

to  see  The  711  buried,  not  as  one  unknown,  „  1334 

Thou  could 'st  have  loved  this  m,  .,  1366 

A  holy  maid  ;  tho'  never  711  glow'd.  Holy  Grail  72 

'  O  Father  !  '  ask'd  the  rn,  „  95 

sweet  w,  shore  away  Clean  from  lier  forehead  „         149 

I,  m,  round  thee,  m,  bind  my  belt.  „         159 

An  outraged  w  sprang  into  the  hall  i-        208 


The  Brook  68 

204 

Aylmer's  Field  108 

Princess  i  151 

.,       a  472 

Hi  48 

98 

179 

187 

„      iv  190 

„  vi  3 

9 

380 

„      vii  22 

City  Child  1,  6 

3,8 

Boddicea  67 

Hendecasyllabics  21 

In  Mem.  xl  3 

Ixxvii  7 

ciii  6 

27 

45 

Con.  67 

Maud  I  xvii  4 

Gareth  and  L.  874 

1246 

1281 

1394 


Maiden  (s)  {continued)     By  m's  each  a-s  fair  as  any  flower  :      Holy  Grail  576 
she  a  slender  711,  all  my  heart  Went  after  her  „        582 

And  merry  m's  in  it ;  „         746 

blew  my  merry  7n's  all  about  With  all  discomfort ;  „         748 

And  since  he  loved  all  m's,  Pelleas  and  E.  40 

'  O  7)1,  if  indeed  ye  list  to  sing,  Guinevere  165 

'  Such  as  thou  art  be  never  ?«  more  „         358 

aghast  the  m  rose.  White  as  her  veil,  „        362 

love  one  711  only,  cleave  to  her,  „         475 

Meek  7n's,  from  the  voices  crying  "  shame."  „         672 

Wrought  by  the  lonely  «i  of  the  Lake.  Pass,  of  Arthur  272 

»«'s,  wives,  And  mothere  with  their  babblers  Tiresias  102 

Crime  and  hunger  cast  our  7h's  by  the  thousantl 

on  the  street.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  220 

Love  for  the  m,  crown'd  with  marriage,  Vastness  23 

Her  7)1  coming  like  a  Queen,  The  Ring  480 

Innocent  ?«'s.  Garrulous  children,  Merlin  and  the  G.  55 

Maiden-cheek     Engirt  with  many  a  florid  ?»-e,  Princess  Hi  350 

Maidenhood    {See  also  Mother-maidenhood)    To  her, 

perpetual  ?«,  hi  Mem.vi  43 

Would  mar  their  charm  of  stainless  w.'  Bali7i  a7id  Balan  268 

To  get  me  shelter  for  my  m.  „  480 

But  that  was  in  her  earlier  w.  Holy  Grail  73 

Maidenlike    »»  as  far  As  I  could  ape  their  treble.  Princess  iv  91 

Maiden-meek     '»-w  I  pray'd  Concealment :  „     Hi  134 

Maid-mother     Or  the  ?«-m  by  a  crucifix,  Palace  of  Art  93 

Maiden-Princess    lonely  w-P  of  the  wood.  The  Ring  65 

Her  loiiply  m-P,  crown'd  with  flowers,  „         485 

Maid  of  Astolat     {See  also  Astolat)     Elaine,  the  lily 

m  o  A,  Lancelot  and  E.  2 

About  the  m  oA,  and  her  love.  „  ,723 

'  The  7n  oA  loves  Sir  Lancelot,  Sir  Lancelot  loves 

the  mo  .4.'  „  725 

Then  spake  the  lily  m  o  A  :  „  1085 

past  the  barge  Whereon  the  lily  m  o  A  Lay  smiling,  „  1242 

I,  sometime  call'd  the  7n  o  A,  „  1273 

Maid-of-hononr    The  7)i-o-h  blooming  fair  ;  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  28 

Poor  soul !  I  had  a,  711  o  h  once  ;  Princess  iv  133 

Mail  (armour)    from  head  to  tail  Came  out  clear  plates 

of  sapphire  7)1.  Two  Voices  12 

And,  ringing,  springs  from  brand  and  7)i ;  Sir  Galahad  54 

and  all  in  m  Burnish'd  to  blinding,  Gareth  and  L.  1026> 

till  he  felt,  despite  his  m.  Strangled,  „  1151 

splintering  spear,  the  hard  ?n.  hewn.  Pass,  of  Arthur  108 

Mail  (coach)     The  m  ?     At  one  o'clock.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  8 

I  fear  That  we  shall  miss  the  ?» :  „  112 

They  swore  he  dare  not  rob  the  ?«,  Rizpah  30- 

they  kiU'd  him  for  robbing  the  m.  „         34 

Mailed    {See  also  Hard-mailed,  Tiiple-mailed)    My  m 

Bacchas  leapt  into  my  arms,  D.  of  F.  Women  151 

with  each  light  air  On  our  m  heads  :  Princess  v  245 

Breaking  then-  7)i  fleets  and  armed  towers.  Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  39 

Drove  his  ?»  heel  athwart  the  royal  crown,  Bali7i  and  Balan  540^ 

Maim     A  sign  to  m  this  Order,  which  I  made.  Holy  Grail  297 

Maim'd  (adj.  and  part.)     left  me  ?»  To  dwell  in  presence  of 

immortal  youth,  Tithonus  20 

Speak  !  is  there  any  of  you  halt  or  m  ?  St.  S.  Stylites  142 

that  there  Lie  bixiised  and  m,  Pri7icess  vi  72 

and  all  the  good  knights  ?n,  „  241 

I  see  thee  m.  Mangled  :  Gareth  and  L.  132& 

with  blunt  stump  Pitch-blacken'd  sawing  the  air, 

said  the  m  churl,  Last  Tournament  67 

And  half  of  the  rest  of  us  m  for  life  The  Revenge  77 

What  fife,  so  m  by  night,  were  worth  Our  living  out  ?  Tiresias  208 

Maim'd  (s)     Antl  cured  some  halt  and  m  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  137 

Let  the  »«  in  liLs  heart  rejoice  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  36 

Maim'd  (verb)     and  him  they  caught  and  m  ;  Lancelot  a7id  E.  275 

M  me  and  maul'd,  and  would  outright  have  slain,    Last  Tournament  75 

Main  (adj.)   (iSee  also  Maain-glad)   till  Arthur  by  m  might,  Co)n.  of  Arthur  109 
And  out  by  this  m  doorway  past  the  King.  Gai-eth  and  L.  671 

And  bare  her  by  m  violence  to  the  board,  Geraint  and  E.  654 

(With  one  m  purpose  ever  at  my  heart)  „  831 

but  for  my  m  purpose  in  these  jousts,  „  837 

Could  call  him  the  m  cause  of  all  their  crime  ;  Merlin  and  V.  788 

That  was  their  m  test-question —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  155 


Main 


444 


Make 


Main  (adj.)  (cotitinued)    Fonseca  my  m  enemy  at  their 

court, 
Main  (s)    heard  that,  somewhere  in  the  m, 

Just  breaking  over  land  and  m  ? 

On  open  m  or  winding  shore  ! 

And  mighty  courteous  in  the  m — 

spire  of  land  that  stands  apart  Cleft  from  the  m, 

Let  the  great  river  take  me  to  the  m : 

climbs  a  peak  to  gaze  O'er  land  and  m, 

Blown  from  over  every  m, 

To  mingle  with  the  bounding  w  : 

I  am  sick  of  the  moor  and  the  m. 

Flying  along  the  land  and  the  m— 

out  to  open  m  Glow'd  intermingling  close  beneath 
the  sun. 

To  be  lost  evermore  in  the  m. 

hull  dipt  under  the  smiling  m, 

sea-cm-rent  would  sweep  us  out  to  the  m. 

O  will  she,  moonUke,  sway  the  m, 
Main-current    Watch  what  m-c's  draw  the  years 
Main-miracle    But  this  m-m,  that  thou  art  thou, 
Maintain     thy  heart  a  fortress  to  m  The  day 

and  thence  m  Our  darker  future. 
Maintained    should  at  least  by  me  be  m  : 
Maintaining    M  that  with  equal  husbandry 
Maintenance    all  That  appertains  to  noble  m. 
Maiise    hand  in  hand  with  Plenty  in  the  m, 

Of  olive,  aloe,  and  m  and  vine. 
Maj^ic     Grave  mother  of  m  works. 

Sees  a  mansion  more  m  Than  all  those 

Who  scarce  can  tune  his  high  m  sense 

Thou  m  in  thy  sadness  at  the  doubtful  doom  of  human 
kind; 

But  scarce  of  such  m  mien 
Majesty     New  Majesties  of  mighty  states — 

Nothing  to  mar  the  sober  majesties 

and  so  unmoved  a  m  She  might  have  seem'd  her 
statue, 
Make    (See  also  Maake,  May,  Be-make)    yield  you 
time  To  m  demand  of  Tnodern  rhyme 

and  m  The  hounds  of  freedom,  wider 

Shall  m  the  winds  blow  Round  and  roimd, 

Whose  chillness  would  m  visible 

Rain  m's  music  in  the  tree 

M's  thy  memory  confused  : 

the  wave  would  m  music  above  us  afar — 

M  a  carcanet  of  rays, 

cUp  your  wings,  and  m  you  love : 

happy  bridesmaid  m's  a  happy  bride.' 

happy  bridesmaid,  m  a  happy  bride.'  (repeat) 

'  \Vhat  drug  can  m  A  wither'd  palsy  cease  to  shake 

M  thy  grass  hoar  with  early  rime. 

'  Or  m  that  mom,  from  his  cold  crown 

'  Wilt  thou  m  everything  a  lie. 

Not  m  him  sure  that  he  should  cease  ? 

'  I  cannot  m  this  matter  plain. 

Far  thought  with  music  that  it  m's  : 

His  memory  scarce  can  m  me  sad. 

And  m's  me  talk  too  much  in  age. 

Do  m  a  garland  for  the  heart : 

'  A/  me  a  cottage  in  the  vale,'  Palace  of  Art  291 

To  m  him  trust  his  modest  worth,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  46 

many  a  worthier  than  I,  would  m  him  happy  yet.  May  Queen,  Con.  46 

what  is  life,  that  we  should  moan  ?  why  m  we 
such  ado  ?  „  56 

music  in  his  ears  his  beating  heart  did  m.  Lotos- Eaters  36 

And  m  perpetual  moan,  „  C.  S.  17 

That  mU  my  only  woe.  D.  of  F.  Women  136 

Words  weaker  than  your  grief  would  m  Grief  more.  To  J.  S.  65 

On  a  Mourner  7 

¥ou  ask  me,  why,  etc.  21 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  22 

Gardener's  D.  141 

273 

Dora  4 


Columbus  126 

//  /  were  loved  7 

Two  Voices  84 

The  Voyage  6 

Aylmer's  Field  121 

Princess  iv  282 

„         vii  13 

36 

Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  26 

In  Mem.  xi  12 

Mavd  I  i  61 

„      //  a  38 

Lover's  Tale  i  435 

The  Revenge  119 

The  Wreck  127 

Despair  51 

Mechanophilus  13 

Love  thou  thy  land  21 

De  Prof.,  Ttoo  G.  55 

To  Duke  of  Argyll  5 

To  one  who  ran  down  Eng.  1 

Maud  I  ilS 

Princess  i  130 

Marr.  of  Geraint  712 

Princess  vii  201 

The  Daisy  4 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  13 

L.  of  Burleigh  45 

Lover's  Tale  i  475 

To  Virgil  23 

Freedom  6 

Love  thou  thy  land  60 

Lucretius  217 

Lancelot  and  E.  1170 

To  the  Queen  11 

31 

Nothing  will  Die  23 

Swpp.  Confessions  59 

A  Dirge  26 

45 

The  Merman  22 

Adeline  59 

Rosalind  45 

The  Bridesmaid  4 

8, 14 

Tioo  Voices  56 

66 

85 

203 

282 

343 

438 

Miller's  D.  16 

194 

198 


Make  (continued)     To  m  him  pleasing  in  her  uncle's  eye 
let  me  have  my  boy,  for  you  Will  m  him  hard. 
To  m  me  an  example  of  mankind. 
The  love,  that  m's  me  thrice  a  man, 
But  since  I  heard  him  m  reply 
To  m  the  necklace  shine  ; 
mellow  rain,  That  m's  thee  broad  and  deep  ! 
words  That  m  a  man  feel  strong  in  speaking 

truth  ; 
How  dull  it  is  to  pause,  to  m  an  end, 
by  .slow  prudence  to  m  mild  A  rugged  people, 
Can  thy  love.  Thy  beauty,  m  amends. 
And  m  me  tremble  lest  a  saying  learnt, 
M  me  feel  the  wild  pulsation 
M  prisms  in  every  carven  glass, 
And  m  her  dance  attendance  ; 
M  Thou  thy  spirit  pure  and  clear 
Heavenly  Bridegroom  waits,  To  m  me  pure  of  sin. 
To  »i  me  write  my  random  rhymes, 
Until  the  charm  have  power  to  m  New  lifeblood 
To  m  my  blood  run  qxiicker, 

How  out  of  place  she  m's  The  violet  of  a  legend  blow 
empty  glass  That  m's  me  maudhn-moral. 
Hoped  to  m  the  name  Of  his  vessel  great  in  story, 
'  I  can  m  no  marriage  present : 
Love  will  m  our  cottage  pleasant, 
All  he  shows  her  m's  him  dearer 
I  follow  till  I  m  thee  mine.' 
sweetest  meal  she  m's  On  the  first-born 


Dora  84 
,,     153 

St.  S.  Stylites  188 

Talking  Oak  11 

25 

222 

280 


Who  m  it  seem  more  sweet  to  be 


Love  and  Duty  70 

Ulysses  22 

36 

Tvthonus  24 

47 

Locksley  Hall  109 

Day- Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  35 

A  mphion  62 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  9 

32 

Will  Water.  13 

21 

110 

146 

208 

The  Cavtain  18 

L.  of  Burleigh  13 

15 

33 

The  Voyage  64 

Vision  of  Sin  145 


You  inight  have  won  29 


And  w'a  the  purple  ulac  ripe, 

Power  should  m  from  land  to  land 

M  bright  our  days  and  light  our  dreams, 

She  sUjod,  a  sight  to  m  an  old  man  young. 

M  thine  heart  ready  with  thine  eyes  : 

'  I'll  m  tbem  man  and  wife,' 


purchase  his  own  boat,  and  m  a  home  For  Aimie  :  Enoch  Arden  47 

m  him  merry,  when  I  come  home  again.  „           199 

kill  yourself  And  m  them  orphans  quite  ?  '  „           395 

Their  voices  m  me  feel  so  solitary.'  „           397 

To  m  the  boatmen  fishing-nets,  ,,           815 

himself  could  m  The  thiiig  that  is  not  as  the  thing  The  Brook  7 

1  m  a  sudden  sally,  „          24 

Still  m's  a  hoary  eyebrow  for  the  gleam  „          80 

I  m  the  netted  sunbeam  dance  „         176 
Roaring  to  m  a  third  :                                                     Aylmer's  Field  128 

coimsel  from  a  height  That  m's  the  lowest  hate  it,  „         173 
for  your  fortunes  are  to  m.     I  swear  you  shall  not 

m  them  out  of  mine.  „         300 

every  star  in  heaven  Can  m  it  fair  :  Sea  Dreams  84 

A  trifle  m's  a  dream,  a  trifle  breaks.'  „         144 

fat  affectionate  smUe  That  m's  the  widow  lean.  „         156 

— it  m's  me  sick  to  quote  him —  „         159 

Went  both  to  m  your  dream  :  ,,         254 

m  our  passions  far  too  hke  The  discords  „         257 

m  Another  and  another  frame  of  things  Lucretius  41 

my  rich  procemion  m's  Thy  glory  fly  „           70 

blood  That  m's  a  steaming  slaughter-house  of  Rome.  „           84 

bird  M's  his  heart  voice  amid  the  blaze  of  flowers  :  „        101 

To  m  a  truth  less  harsh,  „         225 

I  would  m  it  death  For  any  male  thing  Princess,  Pro.  151 

And  sweet  as  English  air  could  m  her,  „                  155 

'  And  m  her  some  great  Princess,  „                 224 

doubt  that  we  might  m  it  worth  his  while.  „               i  184 

her  lynx  eye  To  fix  and  m  me  hotter,  „              m  47 

your  pains  May  only  m  that  footprint  „                  239 

and  m  One  act  a  phantom  of  succession  :  „                  328 

pipe  and  woo  her,  and  m  her  mine,  „              iv  115 

Would  m  aU  women  kick  against  their  Lords  „                  412 

'  And  m  us  aU  we  should  be,  great  and  good.'  „                 599 

wiU  take  her,  they  will  m  her  hard,  „                v  90 

Knowledge  in  our  own  land  m  her  free,  „                 419 

The  mother  m's  us  most — and  in  my  dream  „                 507 

let  me  m  my  dream  All  that  I  would.  „                 519 

let  her  m  hereelf  her  own  To  give  or  keep,  „            vii  272 

— why  Not  m  her  true-heroic —  „           Con.  20 

break  the  shore,  and  evermore  M  and  break,  Ode  on  Well.  261 ; 

And  you,  my  Lords,  you  m  the  people  muse  Third  of  Feb.  31 ,' 
Come  to  us,  love  us  and  m  us  your  own  :                 W.  to  Alexandra  30  | 

Armie,  will  never  m  oneself  clean.  Grandmother  36 ! 

it  m's  me  angry  now.  „          44  J 


Make 

Hake  (continued)     preacher  says,  our  sins  should  m 
us  sad  : 
That  it  m's  one  weary  to  hear.' 
And  m's  it  a  sorrow  to  be.' 
strain  to  m  an  inch  of  room  For  their  sweet  selves, 


445 


Make 


Grandmother  93 

The  Islet  29 

36 

Lit.  Squabbles  9 


m  you  evermore  Dearer  and  nearer, 

VI  the  carcase  a  skeleton, 

and  m  her  a  bower  All  of  flowers. 

Our  wills  are  ours,  to  m  them  thine. 

May  m  one  music  as  before. 

And  in  thy  wisdom  m  me  wise. 

'  What  is  it  m's  me  beat  so  low  ?  ' 

That  m's  the  barren  branches  loud  ; 

And  m's  a  silence  in  the  hills. 

And  m  them  pipes  whereon  to  blow. 

M  Apiil  of  her  tender  eyes  ; 

A  spectral  doubt  that  m's  me  cold, 

And  m's  it  vassal  unto  love  : 

winds  that  7n  The  seeming-wanton  ripple  break. 

To  «i  allowance  for  us  all. 

Could  711  thee  somewhat  blench  or  fail. 

Who  m's  by  force  his  merit  known 

Which  m's  a  desert  in  the  mind. 

Which  m's  me  sad  I  know  not  why 

Looks  thy  fair  face  and  m's  it  still. 

sire  would  m  Confusion  worse  than  death. 

But  ever  strove  to  m  it  true  : 

He  would  not  m  his  judgment  blind. 

Which  7n's  the  darkness  and  the  light. 

To  m  a  solid  core  of  heat ; 

'Tis  held  that  sorrow  m's  us  wise, 

'Tis  held  that  sorrow  m's  us  wise  ; 

To  m  old  bareness  picturesque 

Is  that  a  matter  to  m  me  fret  ? 

And  I  m  myself  such  evil  cheer, 

boundless  plan  That  m's  you  tyrants 

M  answer,  Maud  my  bliss, 

m's  Love  himself  more  dear.' 

May  God  m  me  more  wretched  Than  ever 

But  either  fail'd  to  m  the  kingdom  one. 

nor  m  myself  in  mine  own  realm  Victor 

Eower  on  this  dead  world  to  m  it  live.'  94 

ve  and  love,  and  w  the  world  Other,  "  472 

should  be  King  save  him  who  m's  us  free  ?  '  Garethand  L  137 

one  proof.  Before  thou  ask  the  King  to  m  thee  knight,  145 

Well,  we  will  m  amends.'  "  30Q 

m  him  knight  because  men  call  him  king.  "  420 

M  me  thy  knights— in  secret !  (repeat)  "    544  564 

m  demand  Of  whom  ye  gave  me  to,  the  Seneschal,  ,"  '  558 

Let  be  my  name  until  I  m  my  name  !  „  576 

To  break  her  will,  and  m  her  wed  with  him :  "  617 

mar  the  boast  Thy  brethren  of  thee  m —  "  1243 

to  m  the  terror  of  thee  more,  "  1359 

To  m  a  horror  all  about  the  house,  "  14H 

To  m  her  beauty  vary  day  by  day.  Marr.  of  Geraint  9 

thro  his  manful  breast  darted  the  pang  That  m's  a 

man,  joo 

And  we  will  m  us  merry  as  we  may.  ]]  373 

I  will  m  her  truly  my  true  wife.'  ,','  503 

for  my  strange  petition  I  will  m  Amends  ,"  817 

Mmea  Uttle  happier  :  let  me  know  it :  Gerai7it  "and  E.  317 

Ihey  would  not  m  them  laughable  in  aU  eyes,  „  326 

'  Your  sweet  faces  m  good  fellows  fools  „  399 

God's  curse,  it  m's  me  mad  to  see  you  weep.  ,"  616 

when  it  weds  with  manhood,  m's  a  man.  „'  868 

m  aU  clean,  and  plant  himself  afresh.  ','  905 

Should  m  an  onslaught  single  on  a  realm  "„  91 7 

And  m,,  as  ten-times  worthier  to  be  thine  Bali7i  aTi'd  Balan  68 

so  nch  a  fellowship  Would  m  me  wholly  blest :  ,.  148 

a  transitory  word  M  knight  or  churl  „  162 

would  she  m  My  darkness  blackness  ?  ",  192 

as  m's  The  white  swan-mother,  sitting,  ,'  352 

So  thou  be  shadow,  here  I  m  thee  ghost,'  ','  394 

same  mistrustful  mood  That  m's  you  seem  less 
°obl®  Merlin  and  F,  322 


A  Dedication  2 
Boddicea  14 
Window,  At  the  W.  5 
In  Mem.,  Fro.  16 
28 
44 
tvS 
a:ol3 
»  mx  8 

»  ««t  4 

xl8 
xli  19 
„  xl7)iii  8 

,,  xlix  10 

li  16 
M  Ixii  2 

„  Ixiv  9 

I.  Ixvi  6 

„  Ixviii  11 

„  Ixx  16 

xc  18 
.:  xcvi  8 

14 
19 
„  cvii  18 

„  cTiiii  15 

„  cxiii  1 

„        cxxviii  19 
Maud  I  xiii  2 
„  XV  2 

„        xviii  37 
57 
61 
„  xix  94 

Com.  of  Arthur  15 


Hake  (contiiiued)     Must  m  me  fear  still  more  you  are  not 
mme,  Must  m  me  yearn  still  more  to  prove  you 

mine,  And  m  me  wish  stiU  more  to  learn  Merlin  and  V.  327 

Ihat  7ns  me  passing  wrathful ;  341 

That  by  and  by  will  w  the  music  mute,  "             gqi 

fam  would  m  you  Master  of  all  vice.'  "            Tm 

charm  concluded  in  that  star  To  m  fame  nothing  "             51  % 

And  one  to  m  me  jealous  if  I  love,  "            53^ 

ringing  with  their  serpent  hands,  To  m  her  smile,  "            570 

Or  »/i  her  paler  with  a  poison'd  rose  ?  "             fji? 

Not  to  feel  lowest  7n's  them  level  all ;  "             aoa 

Who  loved  to  m  men  darker  than  they  are  "             876 

could  7n  me  stay— That  proof  of  trust—     '  "            giq 

may  m  My  scheming  brain  a  cinder,  "            oqS 

To  m  them  like  himself  :  Lancelot  "and  E.  131 

The  low  sun  m'5  the  colour  :  134 

To  7)1  her  thi-ice  as  wilful  as  before.'  "            206 

hly  maid  had  striven  to  m  him  cheer,  "            327 

sloping  down  to  m  Arms  for  his  chair,  "            437 

that  I  m  My  will  of  yours,  "            Q\k 

So  that  would  to  you  happy :  "            gga 

sweetly  could  she  m  and  sing.  "          2OO6 

Sweet  death,  that  seems  to  m  us  loveless  clay,  "          1014 

He  m's  no  friend  who  never  made  a  foe.  "          loga 

and  7n  me  happy,  making  them  An  armlet  "          1132 

Yet  to  be  loved  m's  not  to  love  again  ;  "           1295 

'God  w  thee  good  as  thou  art  beautiful,'  Holv  Grail  ISfi 

Hope  not  to  m  thyself  by  idle  vows,  ^            871 

'if  me  thy  knight,  because  I  know,  PelUas  and  E.  7 

1  will  m  thee  with  my  spear  and  sword  45 

Stammer'd  and  could  not  m  her  a  reply.  "            35 

His  neighbom''s  m  and  might :  "           151 

Open  gates.  And  I  will  m  you  merry.'  "          374 

whom  ye  loathe,  him  will  I  m  you  love.'  "          390 

And  m  them  an  thou  wilt  a  tourney-prize.'  Last  Tournament  32 

M  theu  last  head  hke  Satan  in  the  North.  93, 

Would  7n  the  world  as  blank  as  Winter-tide.  "             221 

too  much  wit  M's  the  world  rotten,  ','             247 

Than  any  broken  music  thou  canst  m.'  "             259 

It  m's  a  silent  music  up  in  heaven,  |'            34^ 

he  can  m  Figs  out  of  thistles,  "         '  355 

Arthur  m  me  pure  As  any  maiden  child  ?  "  .  '  '      692 

I  shall  never  w  thee  smile  again.'  "            752 

chance  Will  m  the  smouldering  scandal  ^       Guinevere  91 

love  of  truth,  and  all  that  m's  a  man.  433 

M's  wicked  lightnings  of  her  eyes,  "        520 

whose  vast  pity  aknost  m's  me  die  To  see  thee,  "        534 

And  m's  me  one  pollution :  "         619 

And  enter  it  and  m  it  beautiful  ?  Pass  of  Arthur  17 

To  7ft  It  wholly  thme  on  sunny  days.  Lover's  Tale  i  14 

it  m  s  a  constant  bubbhng  melody  532 

I  m  bare  of  all  the  golden  moss,  ''          ^-^  43 

M's  the  heart  tremble,  and  the  sight  run  over  ,','            155 

I  will  m  a  solemn  offering  of  you  "        {^  113 

It  m's  me  angry  yet  to  speak  of  it —  "            135, 

the  soul :   That  m's  the  sequel  pure ;  "            157 

To  m  a  good  wife  for  Harry,  First" Quarrel  30 

no  need  to  m  such  a  stir.'  g3 

You'll  m  her  its  second  mother !  [[            ji 

We  will  m  the  Spaniard  promise,  The  Eevenge  94 
birds  m  ready  for  their  bridal-time                          Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  71 

m  Ihe  veriest  beauties  of  the  work  appear  104 

that  m  our  griefs  our  gains.  "            231 

caU  nien  traitors  May  m  men  traitors.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  51 

L.est  tne  false  faith  ?»  merry  over  them  !  32 
They  said  '  Let  us  m  man  '  Dg  p^^f  "Two  G  36 
That  Lenten  fare  m's  Lenten  thought,                        To  E.  Fitzgerald  31 

I  would  m  my  hf e  one  prayer  The  Wreck  10 

Tom  theu- banquet  rehsh  ?  Ancient  Sage  IS 

What  power  but  the  bird's  could  m  This  music  in  the  bird  '  21 

What  Power  but  the  Years  that  m  And  break  the  vase  of  clay  "  91 

m  the  passing  shadow  serve  thy  will.  ' "           hq 

to  m  The  phantom  walls  of  this  illusion  fade,  "          I80 

m  thy  gold  thy  vassal  not  thy  king,  "           259 

Nor  m  a  snail's  hom  shrink  for  wantonness  ;  "          272 


Make 


446 


Man 


Hake  {continiud)    My  father's  madness  m's  me  mad —  The  Flight  59 
You  only  know  the  love  that  m's  the  world  a  world 

to  me !  „            76 
therewithin  a  guest  may  to  True  cheer                 Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  15 

must  tight  To  m  true  peace  his  own,  Epilogue  27 

The  falling  drop  will  m  his  name  „        60 

Heavenly  Power  M's  all  things  new,  (repeat)  Early  Spring  2,  44 

and  thy  will,  a  power  to  m  To  Duke  of  Argyll  9 

Two  Suns  of  Love  m  day  of  human  life,  To  Prin.  Beatrice  1 
M's  the  might  of  Britain  known  ;  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  19 
M  their  neighbourhood  healthfuller,                     On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  32 

M  it  regally  goi"geous,  „              45 

do  ye  711  your  moaning  for  my  child  ?  '  Bemeter  and  P.  65 

Globe  again,  and  m  Honey  Moon.  The  Ring  15 

she  m's  Her  heart  a  miiTor  that  reflects  „       365 

And  I  meant  to  m  you  jealous.  Happy  67 

faults  your  Poet  m's  Or  many  or  few.  To  Mary  Boyle  61 

Her  light  m's  rainbows  in  my  closing  eyes,  Prog,  of  Spring  46 

M  all  true  hearths  thy  home.  „              52 

Could  m  pure  light  Uve  on  the  canvas  ?  Romney's  R.  10 

Elead  for  my  o%vn  fame  with  me  To  m  it  deai'er.  „          56 

ut  m  it  as  clean  as  you  can.  By  an  Evolution.  3 

can  Music  m  you  Uve  Far — ^far — away  ?  Far — far — aicay  17 
You  m  our  faults  too  gross.                            To  one  who  ran  down  Eng.  1 

m  her  festal  hour  Dark  with  the  blood  St.  Telemachus  79 

Adoring  That  who  made,  and  m's,  Akbar's  Dream  123 

M  but  one  music,  harmonising '  Pray.'  „            151 

gold  Of  Love,  and  m  it  current ;  „            164 

I  could  m  Sleep  Death,  if  I  would —  Bandit's  Death  32 

when  he  promised  to  m  me  his  bride.  Charity  11 

When  I  m  for  an  Age  of  gold.  The  Dreamer  7 

Or  m's  a  friend  where'er  he  come.  The  Wanderer  6 

To  m  him  trust  his  life,  „          11 

when  the  man  will  m  the  Maker  Faith  7 

Make-believes     m-6  For  Edith  and  himself :  Aylmer's  Field  95 

Maker  (the  Creator)    For  the  drift  of  the  M  is  dark,  Maud  I  iv  43 

thou  dost  His  will.     The  M's,  Gareth  and  L.  11 

voices  blend  in  choric  Hallelujah  to  the  M  Making  of  Man  8 

when  the  man  will  make  the  M  Faith  7 
Maker    {See  also  Marriage-maker,  Shadow-maker)    M's 

of  nets,  and  living  from  the  sea.  Pelleas  and  E.  90 

Makest    '  Thou  m  thine  appeal  to  me  :  In  Mem.  Ivi  5 

And  TO  meriy  when  overthrown.  Gareth  and  L.  1270 

Thou  TO  broken  music  with  thy  bride.  Last  Tournament  264 

MftHTig    {See  also  Maakin',  Merrymaking)    M  earth  wonder.     The  Poet  52 

By  TO  all  the  horizon  dark.  Two  Voices  390 

In  firry  woodlands  to  moan  ;  Miller's  D.  42 

M  sweet  close  of  his  delicious  toils —  Palace  of  Art  185 

M  for  one  sure  goal.  „            248 

Thro'  many  agents  m  strong.  Love  thou  thy  land  39 

The  younger  people  m  holiday,  Enoch  Arden  62 

and  m  signs  They  knew  not  what :  „          640 

gulf  of  ruin,  swallowing  gold.  Not  to.  Sea  Dreams  80 

M  the  httle  one  leap  for  joy.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  A 

M  Him  broken  gleams,  and  a  stifled  splendour  High.  Pantheism  10 

to  vain  pretence  Of  gladness.  In  Mem,,  xxx  6 

to  his  high  place  the  lawless  perch  Ded.  of  Idylls  22 

TO  slide  apart  Their  dusk  wing-cases,  Gareth  and  L.  686 

good  mother  m  Enid  gay  In  such  apparel  Marr.  of  Geraint  757 

comrades  to  slowlier  at  the  Prince,  Geraint  and  E.  167 

score  with  pointed  lances,  to  at  him —  Balin  and  Balan  401 

M  a  roan  horse  caper  and  curvet  Lancelot  and  E.  792 

M  a  treacherous  quiet  in  her  heart,  „            883 

TO  them  An  armlet  for  the  roundest  ann  „           1182 

make  men  worse  by  to  my  sin  known  ?  „           1417 

m  all  the  night  a  steam  of  fire.  Guinevere  599 

And,  TO  there  a  sudden  light.  Lover's  Tale  iv  53 

M  fresh  and  fair  All  the  bowers  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  9 

i«  m  a  now  link  Breaking  an  old  one  ?  The  Ring  50 

m  with  a  kindly  pinch  Each  poor  pale  cheek  „        314 

tracks  Of  science  to  toward  Thy  Perfectness  Akbar's  Dream  29 

Or  hath  cfjme,  since  the  rn  of  the  world.  M.  d' Arthur  203 

agPH  have  gonn  to  the  m  of  man  :  Maud  I  iv  35 

thp.  sudden  to  of  sjilerulitl  names,  „    ///  ^  47 

Or  hatlt  come,  since  the  to  of  the  world.  Pass,  of  Arthur  371 


Malarian     A  flat  m  world  of  reed  and  rush  !  Lover's  Tale  iv  142 

Malay    not  the  Kaffir,  Hottentot,  M,  Princess  ii  158 

Malayan     Ran  a  M  amuck  against  the  times,  Aylmer's  Field  463 

The  cui-sed  M  crease.  Princess,  Pro.  21 

Male  (adj.)    make  it  death  For  any  m  thing  but  to  peep 

at  us.'  „  152 

I  dare  All  these  w  thunderbolts  :  „  iv  500 

Thaw  this  to  nature  to  some  touch  of  that  „  vi  306 

all  m  minds  perforce  Sway'd  to  her  ,.         vii  325 

Which  types  all  Nature's  to  and  female  plan,  On  One  who  affec.  E.  M.  3 

Male  (s)     {See  also  Maale)    maids  should  ape  Those 
monstrous  m's 

Malice    crime  of  sense  became  The  crime  of  m, 
My  TO  is  no  deeper  than  a  moat. 
In  one,  their  to  on  the  placid  lip 
phrase  that  masks  his  m  now — 

Malignant    The  green  m  light  of  coming  stomi. 

my  honest  heat  Were  all  miscounted  as  m  haste 

Malison    I  have  no  sorcerer's  to  on  me, 

Mallrin     {See  also  Mawkln)     the  swineherd's  m  in  the 
mast  ? 

MaUeor    Of  Geoffrey's  book,  or  him  of  M's, 

Mallow    set  With  wiUow-weed  and  to. 

Mammon    This  filthy  marriage-hindering  M 

Mammonite    When  a  M  mother  kills  her  babe 

Mammoth    old-world  m  bulk'd  in  ice, 

Man  {See  also  Countryman,  Half-man,  Lay-men,  Men-at-arms, 
Men-children,  Men-tommies,  Methody-man,  Serving-man, 
Watchman,  Welshman,  Woman-man,  Woodman,  Workman) 


Princess  Hi  310 

Vision  of  Sin  216 

Geraint  and  E.  340 

Pelleas  and  E.  432 

The  Flight  30 

Princess  Hi  132 

„        iv  334 

ii  410 

Last  Tournament  632 

To  the  Queen  II  42 

The  Brook  46 

Aylmer's  Field  374 

Maud  I  i45 

Princess  v  148 


As  all  men  know,  Long  ago. 

Men  say  that  Thou  Didst  die  for  me. 

Men  pass  me  by ; 

When  Angels  spake  to  men  aloud, 

where  to  Hath  moor'd  and  rested  ? 

It  is  m's  privilege  to  doubt. 

Shall  TO  live  thus,  in  joy  and  hope 

Then  once  by  to  and  angels  to  be  seen. 

As  a  sick  m's  room  when  he  taketh  repose 

riving  the  spirit  of  to.  Making  earth  wonder, 

Kate  saith  '  the  m£n  are  gilded  flies.' 

How  long,  O  God,  shall  men  be  ridden  down.  And  trampled 

under  by  the  last  and  least  Of  men  ?  Poland  1 

And  in  the  sixth  she  moulded  to.  Two  Voices  18 

And  men,  thro'  novel  spheres  of  thought  „  61 


All  Things  will  Die  39 

Supp.  Confessions  2 

19 

25 

124 

148- 

16d 

The  Krdken  14 

A  spirit  haunts  14 

The  Poet  51 

Kate  18 


101 
108 
109 
172 
176 
210 
280 
323 
327 
352 
370 

Miller's  D.  96 

(Enone  129 

„      229 

„      265 


To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  11 

19 

Palace  of  Arl  131 

155 

209 


'  He  dared  not  tarry,'  men  will  say, 

heaping  on  the  fear  of  ill  The  fear  of  men, 

'  Do  men  love  thee  ?     Art  thou  so  bound  To  men. 

That  men  with  knowledge  merely  play'd, 

this  dreamer,  deaf  and  blind,  Named  to. 

The  joy  that  mixes  m  with  Heaven  : 

'  Why,  if  TO  rot  in  dreamless  ease. 

He  sat  upon  the  knees  of  men 

till  thou  wert  also  m  : 

in  trances,  men  Forget  the  dream  that  happens  then 

'  And  men,  whose  reason  long  was  bUnd, 

And  with  the  certain  step  of  m. 

men,  in  power  Only,  are  likest  gods, 

hated  both  of  Gods  and  men. 

Rings  ever  in  her  eare  of  amied  m£n. 

friends  to  m.  Living  together  under  the 

same  roof, 
tears  Of  angels  to  the  perfect  shape  of  m 
choice  paintings  of  wise  7nen  I  hung 
once  more  like  some  sick  to  declined, 
'  I  take  possession  of  m's  mind  and  deed, 
that  good  TO,  the  clergyman,  has  told  me  words 

of  peace.  May  Queen,  Con.  12 

from  an  ill-used  race  of  men  that  cleave  the  soil,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  120 
Squadrons  and  squares  of  men  in  brazen  plates,  D.  of  F.  Women  33 
men  call'd  Aulis  in  those  iron  yeara :  „  106 

'  I  govern'd  men  by  change,  and  so  I  sway'd  All  moods.        „  130 

'TLs  long  since  1  have  seen  a  to.  „  131 

I  have  no  men  to  govern  in  this  wood  :  „  135 

'  The  TO,  my  lover,  with  whom  I  rode  sublime  „  141 

1  am  that  Rosamond,  whom  men  call  fair,  „  251 


Man 


447 


Man 


To  J.  S.  31 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  8 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  11 

Love  thou  thy  land  20 

74 

England  and  Amer.  1 

7 

The  Goose  21 

The  Epic  37 

M.  d' Arthur  3 

17 

42 


Man  (continued)     A  tn  more  pure  and  bold  and  just 
A  m  may  speak  the  thing  he  will ; 
part  by  part  to  wen  reveal'd  The  fullness 
Bear  seed  of  meii  and  growth  of  minds, 
if  Nature's  evil  star  Drive  men  in  manhood, 

0  THOU,  that  sendest  out  the  to 
in  noble  heat  Those  men  thine  arms  withstood, 
So  sitting,  served  by  m  and  maid, 
and  why  should  any  m  Remodel  models  ? 
Until  King  Arthur's  table,  m  by  m, 
They  sleep — the  7nen  I  loved. 
A  Uttle  thing  may  harm  a  wounded  m. 
mighty  bones  of  ancient  men.  Old  knights, 
is  a  shameful  thing  for  men  to  lie. 
Which  might  have  pleased  the  eyes  of  many  men. 
some  old  m  speak  in  the  af  tertime 
for  a  TO  may  fail  in  duty  twice, 

1  live  three  Uves  of  mortal  mew. 
Among  new  me^i,  strange  faces, 
are  m.en  better  than  sheep  or  goats 
we  loved  the  m,  and  prized  his  work ; 
Francis,  muttering,  like  a  m  ill-used, 
sweeter  than  the  dream  Dream'd  by  a  happy  m, 
She  stood,  a  sight  to  make  an  old  m  young, 
thought,  '  I'll  make  them  to  and  wife.' 
Then  the  old  m  Was  wroth, 
none  of  all  his  men  Dare  tell  him  Dora  waited 
He  spied  her,  and  he  left  his  men  at  work, 
when  William  died,  he  died  at  peace  With  all  men  ; 
at  once  the  old  to  burst  in  sobs  : — 
they  climg  about  The  old  m's  neck. 
And  all  the  to  was  broken  with  remorse ; 
hid  his  face  From  all  men, 
You  saw  the  m — on  Monday,  was  it  ? — 
Like  men,  like  manners  : 
What  know  we  of  the  secret  of  a  w  ? 
built  When  men  knew  how  to  build, 
God  made  the  woman  for  the  m,  (repeat) 
M  is  made  of  soUd  stuff, 
do  not  think  youreelf  alone  Of  all  men  happy. 
'  God  made  the  woman  for  the  use  of  ?», 
Show  me  the  m  hath  suffer'd  more  than  I. 
and  men  on  earth  House  in  the  shade 
Lord,  thou  knowest  what  ami  am  ;  A  sinful  m, 
and  more  Than  many  just  and  holy  men, 
by  surname  Stylites,  among  men  ; 
Speak,  if  there  be  a  priest,  a  to  of  God, 
That  love,  that  makes  me  thrice  a  m. 
To  that  TO  My  work  shall  suiswer, 
for  a  TO  is  not  as  God, 
But  then  most  Godlike  being  most  a  m. 
words  That  make  a  »n.  feel  strong  in  speaking  tioith  ; 
light  shall  spread,  and  to  be  liker  m 
when  shall  all  men's  good  Be  each  m's  rule, 
cities  of  men  And  manners,  climates, 
xmbecoming  men  that  strove  with  Gods. 
M  comes  and  tiUs  the  field  and  Ues  beneath, 
Alas  !  for  this  gray  shadow,  once  a  m — 
wealthy  men  who  care  not  how  they  give. 
Why  should  a  to  desire  in  any  way  To  vary  from  the 

kmdly  race  of  men,  „        28 

happy  men  that  have  the  power  to  die,  „         70 

In  the  Spring  a  young  m's  fancy  Locksley  Hall  20 

in  among  the  throngs  of  men :  „  116 

Men,  my  brothers,  men  the  workers,  "  „  117 

battle-flags  were  furl'd  In  the  Parliament  of  m,  „  128 

thoughts  of  men  are  widen'd  with  the  process  of 

the  suns.  „  138 

Woman  is  the  lesser  to,  „  151 

held  it  better  men  should  perish  one  by  one,  „  179 

New  men,  that  in  the  flying  of  a  wheel  Godiva  6 

Bring  truth  that  sways  the  soul  of  men  ?  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  52 

But  any  m  that  walks  the  mead,  „  Moral  9 

To  silence  from  the  paths  of  men ;  „  L'  Envoi  6 

Oh,  nature  first  was  fresh  to  Tnen,  Am/phion  57 


47 

78 

91 

107 

129 

155 

238 

250 

Ep.  8 

12 

Gardener's  D.  72 

141 

Dora  4 

„     24 

„     75 

„    86 

„  145 

„  158 

„  164 

„  165 

Walk,  to  the  MaU  21 

30 

63 

104 

Edwin  Morris  7 

„      43,50 

49 

78 

91 

St.  S.  Stylites  49 

106 

121 

131 

162 

214 

Talking  Oak  11 

Love  and  Dviy  28 

30 

31 

70 

Golden  Year  35 

47 

Ulysses  13 

„      53 

Tithonus  3 

11 

17 


Man  (continued)     My  good  blade  carves  the  casques  of  men.     Sir  Galahad  1 

child's  heart  within  the  m's  Begins  to  move  Will  Water.  31 

Which  vexes  public  men,  .,          44 

nor  take  Half  views  of  men  and  thmgs.  „          52 

This  earth  is  rich  in  m  and  maid ;  „          65 

From  misty  7nen  of  letters  ;  „         190 

To  keep  the  best  to  under  the  sun  Lady  Clare  31 

Lord  Ronald's,  When  you  are  to  and  wife.'  „           36 

If  there  be  any  faith  in  m.'  „          44 

'  The  TO  will  cleave  unto  his  right.'  „          46 

Burnt  in  each  m's  blood.  The  Captain  16 

Blood  and  brains  of  men.  „          48 

each  TO.  murmur'd,  '  O  my  Queen,  I  follow  The  Voyage  63 
A  m  had  given  all  other  bliss,                                      Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  42 


Henceforth  I  tiaist  the  to  alone, 

gray  and  gap-tooth'd  w  as  lean  as  death, 

Every  moment  dies  a  to,  (repeat) 

'  We  are  7nen  of  ruin'd  blood  ; 

All  the  windy  ways  of  men  (repeat) 

Buss  me,  thou  rough  sketch  of  m. 

Dregs  of  life,  and  lees  of  m  : 

Below  were  men  and  horses  pierced  with  woi'ms, 

But  in  a  tongue  no  to  could  understand  ; 

You  shadow  forth  to  distant  men. 

And  all  m,en  look'd  upon  him  favourably  : 

Altho'  a  grave  and  staid  God-fearing  m, 

he  knew  the  to  and  valued  him, 

Enoch  as  a  brave  God-fearing  m 

You  chose  the  best  among  us — a  strong  m  : 

To  wed  the  to  so  dear  to  all  of  them 

Surely  the  m  had  died  of  solitude. 

officere  and  men  Levied  a  kindly  tax  upon  themselves, 

Pitying  the  lonely  to,  and  gave  him  it : 
with  yet  a  bed  for  wandering  men. 
'  Enoch,  poor  m,  was  cast  away  and  lost.' 
when  the  dead  to  come  to  life  beheld  His  wife 
As  lightly  as  a  sick  m's  chamber-door, 
fife  in  it  Whereby  the  m  could  live  ; 
gentle  sickness,  gradually  Weakening  the  m, 
'  hear  him  talk  !     I  warrant,  to, 
Held  his  head  high,  and  cared  for  no  to,  he.' 
'  His  head  is  low,  and  no  to  cares  for  him. 
I  am  the  to.' 


The  Letters  31 

Vision  of  Sin  60 

'  97, 121 

99 

132,  168 

189 

205 

209 

222 

To  E.  L.  7 

Enoch  Arden  56 

112 

121 

185 

293 

484 

621 

662 
698 
713 
758 
776 
821 
825 
841 
848 
850 
852 


For  men  may  come  and  men  may  go,  (repeat)    The  Brook  33,  49,  65,  184 

He  knew  the  m  ;  the  colt  would  fetch  its  price  ;      „ 

Yes,  men  may  come  and  go  ;  and  these  are  gone,    „ 

SiE  Aylmer  Aylmer,  that  almighty  to,  Aylmer 

sons  of  men  Daughters  of  God  ; 

My  men  shall  lash  you  from  them  like  a  dog ; 

the  fierce  old  m  Follow'd, 

m  was  his,  had  been  his  father's,  friend  : 

He  had  known  a  to,  a  quintessence  of  m, 

agreed  That  much  allowance  must  be  made  for  men. 

hearts  of  men  Seem'd  harder  too  ; 

Like  flies  that  haunt  a  wound,  or  deer,  or  men, 

a  dead  m,  a  letter  edged  with  death  Beside  him, 

thy  brother  to,  the  Lord  from  Heaven, 

often  placed  upon  the  sick  to's  brow 

the  m  became  Imbecile  ;  his  one  word  was  '  desolate  ; ' 

(for  the  TO  Had  risk'd  his  little) 

Not  preaching  simple  Christ  to  simple  men, 

And  musing  on  the  little  lives  of  men, 

neither  God  nor  to  can  well  forgive, 

there  surely  lives  in  to  and  beast 

TO  is  likewise  counsel  for  himself. 

Came  men  and  women  in  dark  clusters  round, 

men  of  flesh  and  blood,  and  men  of  stone. 

Good  TO,  to  please  the  child. 

who  is  dead  ?  '     '  The  m  your  eye  pursued. 

if  there  be  A  devil  in  to,  there  is  an  angel  too, 

Then  the  to,  '  His  deeds  yet  live, 

tickling  the  brute  brain  within  the  m's 

TO  may  gain  Letting  his  own  Ufe  go. 

Gods  there  are,  for  all  m,en  so  believe. 

his  wrath  were  wreak'd  on  wretched  m. 


149 

186 

FieU  13 

44 

325 

330 

344 

388 

410 

453 

571 

595 

667 

700 

835 

Dreams  9 

21 

48 

63 

68 

182 

226 

237 

267 

272 

278 

313 

Lucretius  21 

„      112 

„      117 

„      128 


Sea 


Man 


448 


Man 


Man  (continued)    men  like  soldiers  may  not  quit  the  post 
hollow  as  the  hopes  and  fears  of  men  ? 
what  m,  What  Roman  would  be  dragg'd  in  triumph 
Those  blind  beginnings  that  have  made  me  w, 
into  m  once  more,  Or  beast,  or  bird  or  fish, 
that  hour  perhaps  Is  not  so  far  when  momentary  ?» 
carest  not  How  roughly  men  may  woo  thee  so  they  wi 
A  m  with  knobs  and  wires  and  vials  fired 
men  and  maids  Arranged  a  country  dance, 
Discuss'd  his  tutor,  rough  to  common  men, 
men  have  done  it :  how  I  hate  you  all ! 
build  Far  off  from  men  a  college  hke  a  m's,  And  I 

would  teach  them  all  that  men  are  taught ; 
never  m,  I  think,  So  moulder'd  in  a  sinecure 
what  kind  of  tales  did  men  tell  itien. 
Between  the  rougher  voices  of  the  men, 
On  a  sudden  in  the  midst  of  men  and  day, 
he  would  send  a  hundred  thousand  vien. 
Whom  all  men  rate  as  kind  and  hospitable  : 
A  little  dry  old  m,  without  a  star. 
The  woman  were  an  equal  to  the  m. 
Yet  being  an  easy  m,  gave  it : 
see  no  men.  Not  ev'n  her  brother  Arac, 
it  was  clear  against  all  rules  For  any  m.  to  go  : 
planet  close  upon  the  Sun,  Than  our  m's  earth  ; 
This  barren  verbiage,  current  among  men, 
tricks,  which  make  us  toys  of  men, 
Not  for  three  years  to  speak  with  any  men  ; 
not  of  those  that  men  desire, 
then  the  monster,  then  the  m  ; 
but  that  which  made  Woman  and  m. 
Here  might  they  learn  whatever  men  were  taught : 
Some  meal's  were  small :  not  they  the  least  of  men  ; 
thence  the  m's,  if  more  was  more  ; 
The  highest  is  the  measure  of  the  m, 
Sappho  and  others  vied  with  any  m  : 
Let  no  m  enter  in  on  pain  of  death  ? 
chanted  on  the  blanching  bones  of  men  ?  ' 
the  wisest  m  Feasted  the  woman  wisest  then. 
The  total  chronicles  of  m,  the  mind. 
Abate  the  stride,  which  speaks  of  m, 
might  a  m  not  wander  from  his  wits 
Men  hated  learned  women  : 
Girls  ? — more  Uke  men  !  ' 

Men  !  girls,  hke  men  !  why,  if  they  had  been  men 
'  men  '  (for  still  My  mother  went  revolving  on  the 

word) 
'  And  so  they  are — very  like  men  indeed — 
'  Why — these — are — men  :  '  I  shudder'd  : 
Three  times  more  noble  than  three  score  of  men, 
every  phrase  well-oil'd.  As  m's  could  be  ; 
nor  deals  in  that  Which  men  deUght  in, 
Upon  an  even  pedestal  with  to.' 
we  move,  my  friend.  At  no  m's  beck. 
To  assail  this  gray  preeminence  of  m  ! 
that  men  may  pluck  them  from  our  hearts, 
bones  of  some  vast  bulk  that  hved  and  roar'd 

Before  m  was. 
Nor  willing  Tnen  should  come  among  us. 
And  all  the  m«n  moum'd  at  his  side  : 
So  sweet  a  voice  and  vague,  fatal  to  men, 
Knaves  are  men,  That  lute  and  flute 
Till  all  men  grew  to  rate  us  at  our  worth. 
She,  question 'd  if  she  knew  us  men, 
stronger  than  men.  Huge  women  blowzed  with  health, 
men  will  say  We  did  not  know  the  real  light, 
You  hold  the  woman  is  the  better  m  ; 
I  bear,  Tho'  m,  yet  human, 
A  m  I  came  to  see  you  :  but,  indeed, 
That  many  a  famous  m  and  woman, 
more  than  poor  men  wealth,  Tlian  sick  men  health — 
That  it  l.ecomes  no  m  to  nurse  despair, 
Home  that  men  were  in  the  veiy  walk, 
Then  men  had  said — but  now — 
inake  yourself  a  m  to  fight  with  mm. 


Lucretius  148 
180 
233 
246 
248 
253 
273 
Princess,  Pro.  65 
83 
114 
130 


135 

181 

196 

245 

il5 

64 

71 

117 

131 

149 

152 

179 

m37 

54 

63 

72 

76 

119 

145 

146 

148 

151 

157 

164 

195 

199 

350 

381 

429 

440 

466 

iii  43 

49 

53 
55 
58 
109 
134 
216 
224 
227 
234 
257 

295 
318 
353 
iv  64 
128 
145 
231 
278 
356 
410 
425 
441 
445 
459 
464 
485 
533 
t)35 


Man  (continued)     what  might  that  to  not  deserve  of  me 

she  laughs  at  you  and  to  : 

M  is  the  hunter  ;  woman  is  his  game  : 

fling  defiance  down  Gagelike  to  m. 

Not  like  the  piebald  miscellany,  to, 

nor  ever  had  I  seen  Such  thews  of  men  : 

home  is  in  the  sinews  of  a  to. 

Her  that  talk'd  down  the  fifty  wisest  men  ; 

rainbow  fiying  on  the  highest  Foam  of  men's  deeds — 

lived  in  sleeker  times  With  smoother  men  : 

I  set  my  face  Against  all  men, 

Far  oif  from  men  I  built  a  fold 

sole  men  to  be  mingled  with  our  cause,  The  sole 
men  we  shall  prize  in  the  aftertime, 

this  Egypt-plague  of  men  ! 

When  the  to  wants  weight,  the  woman  takes  it  up, 

M  for  the  field  and  woman  for  the  hearth :  M  for 
the  sword  and  for  the  needle  she.     M  with  the 
head  and  woman  with  the  heart :  M  to  command 
and  woman  to  obey  ; 
large-moulded  m.  His  \Tsage  aU  agrin  as  at  a  wake, 

boats  and  bridges  for  the  use  of  men. 

down  she  look'd  At  the  arm'd  m  sideways, 

These  men  are  hard  upon  us  as  of  old, 

Ida — 'sdeath  !  you  blame  the  m  ; 

men  see  Two  women  faster  welded  in  one  love 

maids.  That  have  no  links  with  men. 

these  men  came  to  woo  Your  Highness — 

Whatever  to  hes  wounded,  friend  or  foe, 

The  common  men  with  rolling  eyes  ; 

swanns  of  men  Darkening  her  female  field  ; 

face  Peep'd,  shining  in  upon  the  wounded  m 

showers  of  random  sweet  on  maid  and  to. 

sons  of  men,  and  barbarous  laws,  (repeat) 

that  know  The  woman's  cause  is  m's  : 

For  she  that  out  of  Lethe  scales  with  to 

shares  with  to  His  nights,  his  days, 

slight-natured,  miserable,  How  shall  men  grow  ? 

For  woman  is  not  undevelopt  w.  But  divei-se  :  could 

we  make  her  as  the  to,  Sweet  love  were  slain  : 
The  TO  be  more  of  woman,  she  of  to  ; 
Till  at  the  last  she  set  herself  to  to, 
comes  the  stateUer  Eden  back  to  men  : 
Interpreter  between  the  Gods  and  men, 
mask'd  thee  from  men's  reverence  up, 
dark  gates  across  the  wild  That  no  to  knows. 
So  pray'd  the  men,  the  women  : 
men  required  that  I  should  give  throughout 
Perchance  upon  the  future  m  : 
Where  shall  we  lay  the  to  whom  we  deplore  ? 
Mourn  for  the  to  of  long-enduring  blood. 
Mourn  for  the  m  of «mplest  influence, 
0  good  gray  head  which  all  men  knew, 
0  voice  from  which  their  omens  all  men  drew, 
A  TO  of  well-attemper'd  frame. 
Thine  island  loves  thee  well,  thou  famous  to. 
With  blare  of  bugle,  clamour  of  inen, 
all  men  else  their  nobler  dreams  forget, 
great  men  who  fought,  and  kept  it  ours, 
spoke  among  you,  and  the  M  who  spoke  ; 
More  than  is  of  m's  degree  Must  be  with  us, 
On  God  and  Godhke  men  we  build  our  trust, 
any  ^vreath  that  m  can  weave  him. 
Was  there  a  to  dismay'd  ? 

Till  each  m  find  his  own  in  all  men's  good.  Ode 

And  all  men  work  in  noble  brotherhood, 
made  the  serf  a  m,  and  burst  his  chain —  W. 

Where  men  are  bold  and  strongly  say  their  say ; — 
and  change  the  hearts  of  men, 
strong  on  his  legs,  he  looks  like  a  m. 
her  father  was  not  the  to  to  save. 
Never  a  m  could  fling  him  : 
Willy  stood  up  like  a  to, 
But  he  cheer'd  me,  my  good  to, 
Kind,  like  a  to,  was  he  ;  like  a  to,  too, 


Princess  v  104 
116 
154 
178 
198 
256 
267 
294 
320 
386 
389 
390 

411 

427 
444 


447 

520 

ot47 

157 

198 

221 

252 

292 

328 

336 

360 

vii  33 

61 

86 

234,  256 

259 

261 

262 

266 

275 

280 

285 

293 

322 

343 

363 

Con.  7 

10 

109 

on  Well.  8 

24 

27 

35 

36 

74 

85 

115 

152 

158 

178 

242 

266 

277 

Light  Brigade  10 

Inter.  Exhib.  37 

38 

to  Marie  Alex.  3 

32 

44 

Grandmother  2 

10 
45 
69 
70 


Ode< 


Man 

i  Maa  (continued)    and  now  they're  elderly  mm. 
trod,  not  m,  is  the  Judge  of  us  all 
I  weant  saay  men  be  loiars, 

what  a  TO  a  bea  sewer-loy  !  ' 
a  TO  mun  be  eather  a  to  or  a  mouse  ? 
Dear  to  the  to  that  is  dear  to  God  • 
bhadows  of  three  dead  men  (repeat) 
Two  dead  men  have  I  known  In  courtesy 
J.  wo  dead  men  have  I  loved  With  a  love 

the'ttS/"""  ^^^  ^  ^''^^  ^^  *^°"  ^  ^^  of 
If  TO«i  neglect  your  pages  ? 
And  men  will  live  to  see  it. 
And  dead  men  lay  all  over  the  way 
And  the  ear  of  to  cannot  hear,  and  the  eye  of  to 

cannot  see;  j^viiu 

And  the  thought  of  a  to  is  higher 
I  should  know  what  God  and  to  is 
phantom  bodies  of  horses  and  men  • 
Men  s  song  and  men's  love,  ' 

And  women's  love  and  men's  ' 
^ter-loves  of  maids  and  men 
Thou  madest  Life  in  to  and  brute  • 
Ihou  madest  m,  he  knows  not  why 
tor  merit  hves  from  to  to  to 
And  not  from  to,  O  Lord,  to  thee. 

'  R^h  '?!ftu'"*^  "^  °"  stepping-stones 
Behold  the  TO  that  loved  and  lost. 

Beats  out  the  little  lives  of  men. 

And  traveU'd  men  from  foreign  lands  ; 

The  human-hearted  w  I  loved 

The  m  I  held  as  half-divine  •    ' 

-^d  made  me  that  delirious' to 

And  melt  the  waxen  hearts  of  men.' 

There  sat  the  Shadow  fear'd  of  m  ■ 

Behold  a  TO  raised  up  by  Christ ' 

Yet  If  some  voice  that  to  could  trust 

^  dies  :  nor  is  there  hope  in  dust  • ' 

And  darkening  the  dark  graves  of  men,— 

bo  then  were  nothing  lost  to  to  ; 

^or  here  the  to  is  more  and  more  • 

Had  TO  to  learn  himself  anew        ' 

Then  thase  were  such  as  m^n  might  scorn  • 

And  TOm  the  flies  of  latter  spring  ' 

A  sober  to,  among  his  boys 

The  grain  by  which  a  to  may  live  ? 

^,  her  last  work,  who  seem'd  so  fair, 

Where  thy  first  form  was  made  a  to  • 

As  some  divinely  gifted  to 

Of  men  and  minds,  the  dust  of  change, 

the  path  that  each  to  trod  Is  dim 

As  sometimes  in  a  dead  m's  face  ' 

A  TO  upon  a  stall  may  find  ' 

But  stay'd  in  peace  with  God  and  to. 

labour  fiEs  The  Ups  of  men  with  honest  praise 

The  mighty  hopes  that  make  us  men.     ^         ' 

Ihe  picturesque  of  to  and  to.' 

tMIh^  the  to  whose  thought  would  hold 

Ihe  dead  to  touch'd  me  from  the  past 

thousand  wants  Gnarr  at  the  heels^of  men, 

Day,  when  I  lost  the  flower  of  men  ;  ' 

Ihe  TO  we  loved  was  there  on  deck.  But  thrice  as 

large  as  to  he  bent  To  greet  us. 
Kmg  in  the  valiant  to  and  free, 
10  seize  and  throw  the  doubts  of  to  ; 
J.  he  men  of  rathe  and  riper  years  • 
May  she  mix  With  men  and  prosper  ! 
liU  at  the  last  arose  the  to  ; 
What  matters  Science  unto  men, 

Tfl^^'^^u  ^^^  '^  ^^0  springs  Hereafter, 
^or  thro'  the  questions  men  rn^y  try. 
And  hke  a  TO  in  wrath  the  heart 
What  is,  and  no  to  understands  ; 
That  reach  thro'  nature,  moulding  men. 
Kesult  m  TO,  be  bom  and  think 


449 


Orandmother  88 

95 

N.  Farmer" 0.  S.  27 

54 

N.  S.  6 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  36 

G.  of  Swainston  3,  5 

11 

13 

c  ."  15 

Sftteful  Letter  6 

18 
The  Victim  21 

High.  Pantheism  17 
Voice  and  the  P.  32 
Flow,  in  cran.  wall  6 
Boddicea  27 
Window,  Spring  7 
10 
»  No  Answer  25 
In  Mem.,  Pro.  6 
10 
35 
36 
t  3 
15 

a  8 

x6 

..  xiii  11 

..  xiv  10 

..  xvi  17 

>.  xxi  8 

..  xxii  12 

<>  xxxi  13 

>.  XXXV  1 

4 
,.  xxxix  9 
i>  xliii  9 

..  xliv  2 

»  xlv  15 

1.        xlviii  4 

no 

»  liii  2 

8 

lvi9 

Ixi  10 

»  Ixiv  2 

..  Ixxi  10 
X  Ixxiii  9 
1)  Ixxiv  1 
,.  Ixxvii  9 
>.  Ixxx  8 
„  Ixxxiv  26 
„  Ixxxv  60 
„  Ixxxix  42 
).  xciv  3 

..  xcv  34 

„  xcviii  17 
»  xcix  4 

).  ciii  41 

cvi  29 
>i  cix  6 

..  ex  2 

..  cxiv  3 

»  cxviii  12 
,.  cxx  7 

9 
>,        ex  xiv  7 

15 

22 

24 
»     Con.  126 


Man  (continued)  Whereof  the  m,  that  with  me  trod 
old  TO,  now  ord  of  the  broad  estate  and  ™he  HaU 
the  works  of  the  men  of  mind  ' 

and  when  only  not  all  men  lie'- 

?1fir!'f  *'.^''°'''  "l"^^^^'  ^•''nan  or  TO  be  the  worse 
1  keep  but  a  to  and  a  maid,  wuise. 

We  are  puppets,  il/  in  his  pride 

we  men  are  a  httle  breed.  ' 

million  of  ages  have  gone  to  the  making  of  to  • 

m  of  science  himself  is  fonder  of  glory 

desire  or  admire,  if  a  to  could  learn  it 

Strange,  that  I  hear  two  mm. 

Strong  in  the  power  that  all  men  adore 

Jior  a  TO  and  leader  of  TOcw. 

Ah  God,  for  a  TO  with  heart,  head,  hand. 

still  strong  TO  m  a  blatant  land 

^d  ah  for  a  TO  to  arise  in  me, ' 

That  the  TO  I  am  may  cease  to  be  ' 
That  old  m  never  comes  to  his  place  : 

liU  the  red  to  dance  By  his  red^cedar-tree.  And 

the  red  TO  s  babe  Leap,  beyond  the  sea. 
and  brand  His  nothingness  into  to. 
Love,  like  men  in  drinking-songs, 
that  dead  m  at  her  heart  and  mine  • 
pohtical  dinner  To  the  men  of  many  acres 
a  learned  TO  Could  give  it  a  clumsy  name 

FS.thn'P.'^^''^K'^  ?  °?  ^  ''°^*  Of  ancient  fable 
iiiver  about  me  the  dead  men  go  • 

to  hear  a  dead  to  chatter  Is  enough  to  drive  one  mad 

They  cannot  even  bury  am; 

Nor  let  any  to  think  for  the  public  good, 

He  hnkt  a  dead  to  there  to  a  spectral  bride  : 

what  will  the  old  to  say  ?  (repeat) 

But  TO  was  less  and  less,  till  Arthur  came 

they  grew  up  to  wolf-Uke  men, 

For  here  between  the  to  and  beast  we  die  ' 

Ihat  there  between  the  to  and  beast  they  die 

Arthur  said,    M's  word  is  God  in  to  • 

and  caU'd  A  hoary  to,  his  chamberlain, 

there  be  but  two  old  men  that  know  • 

and  one  Is  Merhn,  the  wise  to 

beast  and  to  had  had  their  share  of  me  • 

theiis  are  bestial,  hold  him  less  than  to  • 

there  be  those  who  deem  him  more  than  to 

her  TOm  Seeing  the  mighty  swarm  about  their  walls 

and  rear'd  him  with  her  own  ;  And  no  to  knew. 

Victor  his  men  Report  him  ' 

blade  so  bright  That  mm  are  blinded  by  it— 

King  IS  fair  Beyond  the  race  of  Britons  and  of  men. 

A  young  to  wiU  be  wiser  by  and  by ;  An  old  m's 

wit  may  wander  ere  he  die. 
Ranging  and  ringing  thro'  the  minds  of  men 
men  may  wound  him  that  he  will  not  die       ' 
and  all  men  hail  him  for  their  king  '  ' 

ye  are  yet  more  boy  than  to.' 

^"deS  "'"''  ^^^^^'^  ^^"^ '  ''"^'  ^°°^  ^^cJ^'  no  ^ 

Must  wed  that  other,  whom  no  m  desired 

SSOT  fronted  to  or  woman,  eye  to  eye— 

M  ami  grown,  a  m's  work  must  I  do 

we  have  heard  from  our  wise  to  at  home  To 

JNorthward, 
that  men  Were  giddy  gazing  there  ; 
thereunder  came  an  ancient  to.  Long-bearded 
these,  my  men,  (Your  city  moved  so  weirdly  ' 

''Tf'  fif  '^  Vl^^  ^  ^  ^^°'^<1  "ot  be  bouiid  by, 
yet  the  which  No  to  can  keep  ;  ^' 

Gareth  looking  after  said,  '  My  men. 
Give  me  to  right  her  wrong,  and  slay  the  to.' 
lived  and  died  for  men,  the  to  shaU  die  ' 
make  him  knight  because  men  call  him  king. 

2f 


Man 

In  Mem.,  Con.  137 
Maud  I  i  19 
25 
35 
75 
ivl9 
25 
30 
35 
37 
41 
54 
t)8 
vi61 
vii  5 
13 
arl4 
59 
60 
63 
67 
68 
xiii  24 

xvii  17 

xviii  40 

55 

xix  9 

aja:  32 

//  a  9 

31 
t)18 
19 
22 
45 
80 
„      83, 87 
Com.  of  Arthur  12 
32 
45 
79 
133 
145 
149 
151 
163 
181 
182 
199 
225 
249 
301 
331 

404 
416 
421 
424 
Gareth  and  L.  98 


105 
109 
112 
116 

201 
227 
240 
244 

271 
296 
366 
383 
420 


Man 


450 


Man 


Man  (continued)    a  m  of  plots,  Craft,  poisonous  counsels,   Gareth  and  L.  431 


noise  of  ravage  wrought  by  beast  and  m, 

Down  on  the  shoulders  of  the  twain,  his  men, 

then  Kay,  a  m  of  mien  Wan-sallow  as  the  plant 

A  horse  thou  knowest,  a  m  thou  dost  not  know : 

and  leave  my  m  to  me.' 

Our  noblest  brother,  and  oiu-  truest  m, 

would  ye  men  should  wonder  at  you  ? 

do  the  battle  with  him,  thy  chief  m  Sir  Lancelot 

What  the  fashion  of  the  men  ?  ' 

these  four  be  fools,  but  mighty  men, 

ere  a  m  in  hall  could  stay  her,  tum'd, 

Arthiu-'s  Tnen  are  set  along  the  wood  ; 

Saw  six  tall  men  haling  a  seventh  along, 

For  here  be  mighty  m  to  joust  with. 

The  war  of  Time  against  the  soul  of  m. 

beneath  five  figures,  armed  men, 

massacring  M,  woman,  lad  and  girl — 

Belike  he  wins  it  as  the  better  m  : 

'  Fool,  for  thou  hast,  men  say,  the  strength  of  ten, 

Was  ever  m  so  grandly  made  as  he  ? 

I  the  poor  cause  that  men  Reproach  you. 

And  how  men  slur  him,  saying  aU  his  force 

For  aU  my  pains,  poor  w,  for  all  my  pains, 

pang  That  makes  a  to,  in  the  sweet  face  of  her 

the  TO  Not  turning  round,  nor  looking  at  him. 

And  made  him  Uke  a  m  abroad  at  mom 

the  liquid  note  beloved  of  men  Came  flying 

For  TO  is  m  and  master  of  his  fate. 

yoiu-  town,  where  all  the  men  are  mad ; 

a  name  far-sounded  among  men  For  noble  deeds  ? 

since  the  proud  to  often  is  the  mean, 

Bribed  with  large  promises  the  men  who  served 

About  my  person, 
I  have  let  m  be,  and  have  their  way  ; 
But  in  this  tournament  can  no  to  tilt, 
the  fallen  to  Made  answer,  groaning, 
men  have  seen  my  fall.' 
rose  a  cry  That  Edym's  men  were  on  them, 
Edym's  men  had  caught  them  in  their  flight, 
Never  to  rejoiced  More  than  Geraint 
Men  saw  the  goodly  hills  of  Somerset, 

0  PURBLIND  race  of  miserable  men, 
M  a  TO  upon  his  tongue  May  break  it, 
like  a  to  That  skins  the  wild  beast  after  slaying  him, 
And  every  to  were  larger-Umb'd  than  I, 
And  if  I  fall,  cleave  to  the  better  m.' 
yet  the  sapling  grew :  So  lay  the  to  transfixt. 

1  will  tell  him  How  great  a  to  thou  art :  he  loves 

to  know  When  men  of  mark  are  in  his  territoi-y  : 
and  return  With  victual  for  these  men. 
Or  two  wild  men  supporters  of  a  shield, 
bad  the  host  Call  in  what  men  soever  were  his  friends, 
men  may  bicker  with  the  things  they  love, 
that  this  TO  loves  you  no  more, 
the  m's  love  once  gone  never  returns. 
He  moving  homeward  babbled  to  his  men,  How 

Enid  never  loved  a  to  but  him. 
Seeing  that  ye  are  wedded  to  a  to, 
But  at  the  flash  and  motion  of  the  to 
But  if  a  TO  who  stands  upon  the  brink 
scared  but  at  the  motion  of  the  to, 
'  Horse  and  to,'  he  said,  '  All  of  one  mind 
But  as  a  TO  to  whom  a  dreadful  loss  Falls 

freat  charger  stood,  grieved  Uke  a  to. 
earing  to  lose,  and  all  for  a  dead  m, 
cursing  their  lost  time,  and  the  dead  to, 
men  brought  in  whole  hogs  and  quarter  beeves, 
Good  luck  had  your  good  to, 
*  I  will  not  eat  Till  yonder  to  upon  the  bier  arise, 
Take  warning :  yonder  to  is  surely  dead  ; 
Until  himself  anse  a  living  to, 
all  the  men  and  women  in  the  hall  Rose  when  they  saw 

the  dead  m  rise, 
I  have  used  you  worse  than  that  dead  m ; 


Marr.  of 


437 

440 

452 

463 

477 

565 

570 

619 

627 

643 

660 

788 

811 

880 

1198 

1205 

1341 

1346 

1387 

Geraint  81 

87 

106 

116 

122 

269 

335 

336 

355 

418 

427 

449 


453 
466 
480 
575 
578 
639 
642 
771 
828 
Geraint  and  E.  1 
42 
92 
148 
152 
166 

228 
240 
267 
286 
325 
329 
333 

362 
425 
467 
472 
476 
483 
496 
535 
564 
576 
602 
617 
657 
672 
706 

731 
785 


Man  (continued)     Shriek'd  to  the  stranger  '  Slay  not 

a  dead  to  !  ' 
Were  men  and  women  staring  and  aghast, 
men  may  fear  Fresh  fire  and  ruin, 
with  your  own  true  eyes  Beheld  the  m  you  loved 
when  it  weds  with  manhood,  makes  a  m. 
The  world  will  not  beUeve  a  to  repents  : 
Full  seldom  doth  a  to  repent, 
as  now  Men  weed  the  white  horse  on  the  Berkshire 

hills 
sent  a  thousand  men  To  till  the  wastes, 
call'd  him  the  great  Prince  and  m  of  men. 


Geraint  and  E.  7791 
804| 
8231 
847 


M's  word  is  God  in  man.' 

mightier  men  than  aU  In  Arthur's  court ; 

And  lightly  so  retum'd,  and  no  to  knew. 

My  brother  and  my  better,  this  to  here,  Balan. 

A  TO  of  thine  to-day  Abash'd  us  both. 

Reported  of  some  demon  in  the  woods  Was  once  a  to, 

as  the  TO  in  life  Was  wounded  by  blind  tongues 

This  was  the  simshine  that  hath  given  the  to  A  growth. 

Whom  all  men  rate  the  king  of  courtesy. 

Then  spake  the  men  of  PeUam  crying 

Truly,  ye  men  of  Arthur  be  but  babes.' 

But  thou  art  to,  and  canst  abide  a  truth. 

Or  devil  or  to  Guard  thou  thine  head.' 

crush'd  the  m  Inward,  and  either  fell, 

I  fain  would  know  what  manner  of  men 

the  most  famous  m  of  all  those  times, 

old  TO,  Tho'  doubtful,  felt  the  flattery, 

The  m  so  wrought  on  ever  seem'd  to  He 

none  could  find  that  to  for  evermore, 

ruin'd  to  Thro'  woman  the  first  hour ; 

was  to  be,  for  love  of  God  and  men  And  noble  deeds 

Lo  now,  what  hearts  have  men  ! 

'  M  dreams  of  Fame  while  woman  wakes  to  love.' 

Fame  with  men,  Being  but  ampler  means 

for  men  sought  to  prove  me  vile, 

made  her  good  to  jealous  with  good  cause. 

new  lord,  her  own,  the  first  of  men. 

A  little  glassy-headed  hairless  m, 

sunders  ghosts  and  shadow-casting  men 

here  wa.s  the  m.     And  so  by  force  they  dragg'd  him 

In  such-\vise,  that  no  to  could  see  her  more, 

that  old  m  Went  back  to  his  old  wild. 

But  you  are  to,  you  well  can  understand 

sweet  Sir  Sagramore,  That  ardent  to  ? 

whose  whole  prey  Is  m's  good  name  : 

stainless  to  beside  a  stainless  maid  ; 

'  A  sober  to  is  Percivale  and  pure  ; 

Arthur,  blameless  King  and  stainless  m  ?  ' 

'  M  \  is  he  TO  at  all,  who  knows  and  winks  ? 

0  selfless  to  and  stainless  gentleman, 

fain  Have  all  men  true  and  leal,  aU  women  pure  ; 

For  men  at  most  difier  as  Heaven  and  earth, 

0  God,  that  I  had  loved  a  smaller  to  ! 
Who  loved  to  make  men  darker  than  they  are, 
loyal  worship  is  allow'd  Of  aU  men  : 
And  swearing  men  to  vows  impossible, 
men  go  down  before  your  spear  at  a  touch. 
Then  came  an  old,  dumb,  myriad-wrinkled  to, 
Lancelot  marvell'd  at  the  worldless  to  ; 
he  seem'd  the  goodhest  to  That  ever  among  ladies 
But  kindly  to  moving  among  his  kind  : 
Suddenly  speaking  of  the  worldless  to, 
his  knights  are  better  men  than  he — 
thro'  all  hindrance  finds  the  m  Behind  it, 
more  amazed  Than  if  seven  men  had  set  upon  him, 

1  am  not  great :  There  is  the  to.' 
that  a  m  far-off  might  well  perceive. 
If  any  to  that  day  were  left  afield. 
Strong  men,  and  wrathful  that  a  stranger  knight 
The  grace  and  versatility  of  the  to  ! 
men  went  down  before  his  spear  at  a  touch, 
would  he  hide  his  name  From  all  men, 
our  Lancelot !  that  true  to  ! ' 


941] 

9611 

Balin  and  Balan  Sl 


7G 
125 
12 
181 
251 
331 
3611 
501 
552 
56 
574 
Merlin  and  V.  1€ 
18 


72 
72 
731 
75 
77fl 
78| 
79 
79 
814 
87l 
87i 
Lancelot  and  E.  11| 
13 


26 

271 

314 


35] 
459 

45g 

468 
472 
57», 
581 


Man 


451 


Man 


JMan  (continued)    our  true  m  change  like  a  leaf  at 

last? 
since  m's  fiist  fall,  Did  kindlier  unto  m, 
the  sick  m  forgot  her  simple  blush, 
love  Of  w  and  woman  when  they  love  their  best, 
Another  world  for  the  sick  m  ; 
no  m  there  will  dare  to  mock  at  me  ; 
it  is  mine  to  love  Him  of  all  men 
never  yet  Was  noble  m  but  made  ignoble  talk, 
and  bid  call  the  ghostly  w  Hither, 
when  the  ghostly  w  had  come  and  gone, 
therefore  let  our  dumb  old  m  alone  Go  with  me, 
Oui-  bond,  as  not  the  bond  of  m  and  wife. 
Our  bond  is  not  the  bond  of  m  and  wife, 
hard  and  stiU  as  is  the  face  that  men  Shape  to  their 

fancy's  eye 
then  tum'd  the  tongueless  m  From  the  half-face 
a  m  Made  to  be  loved  ; 
now  a  lonely  m  Wifeless  and  heirless. 
To  make  men  worse  by  making  my  sin  known  ? 
Arthm-'s  greatest  knight,  a  m  Not  after  Arthur's  heart ! 
Not  knowing  he  should  die  a  holy  m. 
m  Could  touch  or  see  it,  he  was  heal'd  at  once, 
A  m  wellnigh  a  hundred  winters  old, 
all  men's  hearts  became  Clean  for  a  season, 
pale  mm,  I  spake  of  this  To  all  inen  ; 
letters  in  a  tongue  no  in  could  read. 
'  No  m  could  sit  but  he  should  lose  himself  : ' 
staring  each  at  other  like  dumb  men  Stood, 
And  in  the  lowest  beasts  are  slajring  ?««»,  And  in 

the  second  men  are  slaying  beasts.  And  on  the 

third  are  warriors,  perfect  men,  And  on  the 

fom'th  are  men  with  growing  wings, 
'  but  men  With  strength  and  will  to  right  the  wrong'd, 
m£n  and  boys  astride  On  wyvern,  lion. 
Thou  mightiest  and  thou  purest  among  men  !  ' 
but  foimd  at  top  No  m,  nor  any  voice. 
I  saw  That  m  had  once  dwelt  there  ; 
I  found  Only  one  m  of  an  exceeding  age. 
rose  a  hill  that  none  but  m  could  climb. 
Part  black,  part  whiten'd  with  the  bones  of  men, 
Taking  my  war-horse  from  the  holy  m. 
Rejoice,  small  m,  in  this  small  world  of  mine, 
phantoms  in  your  quest,  No  m,  no  woman  ?  ' 
'  All  men,  to  one  so  bound  by  such  a  vow. 
Then  said  the  monk,  '  Poor  men,  when  yule  is  cold, 
and  their  wise  men  Were  strong  in  that  old  magic 
A  square-.set  m  and  honest ; 
words  Of  so  great  men  as  Lancelot  and  our  King 
Therefore  I  communed  with  a  saintly  m, 
if  ever  loyal  m  and  true  Could  see  it. 
There  was  I  beaten  down  by  Uttle  men, 
great  beasts  rose  upright  like  a  m, 
nun  and  thou  have  driven  men  mad, 
all  of  true  and  noble  in  knight  and  m 
For  as  the  base  m,  judging  of  the  good, 
as  he  came  away,  The  m,en  who  met  hirn 
No  men  to  strike  ?     Fall  on  him  all  at  once, 
she  gazed  upon  the  m  Of  princely  bearing, 
•this  m  loves.  If  love  there  be  : 
Art  thou  not  he  whom  men  call  light-of-love  ?  ' 
I  to  your  dead  m  have  given  my  troth, 
'  Why  then  let  men  couple  at  once  with  wolves. 
M  was  it  who  marr'd  heaven's  image  in  thee 

thus?' 
honey  from  hornet-combs.  And  mew  from  beasts — 
as  from  men  secure  Amid  their  marshes. 
Men,  women,  on  their  sodden  faces, 
'  my  m  Hath  left  me  or  is  dead  ; ' 
I — ^misyoked  with  such  a  want  of  m — 
my  Mark's,  by  whom  all  men  Are  noble. 
The  greater  m,  the  greater  courtesy. 
The  m  of  men,  our  King — My  God,  the  power  Was 

once  in  vows  when  men  believed  the  King  ! 
'  If ,  is  he  m  at  all  ?  '  methought, 


Lancelot  and  E.  686 
859 
864 


874 
1053 
1077 
1088 
1099 
1101 
1127 
1191 
1206 

1251 
1261 
1363 
1370 
1417 
1419 
1429 
Holy  Grail  54 
85 
90 
130 
171 
174 
193 


234 
308 
349 
426 
428 
430 
431 
489 
500 
537 
559 
563 
565 
613 
665 
703 
713 
742 
756 
789 
821 
862 
882 
80 
142 
268 
305 
307 
361 
389 
536 


Pelleas  and  E. 


Last  Tournament  64 
358 
426 
474 
494 
571 
599 
633 

648 
H  663 


Man  {continued)    he  seem'd  to  me  no  m.  But  Michael 

trampUng  Satan  ;  Last  Tournament  672 

heather-scented  air.  Pulsing  full  m ;  „            692 

reverencing  king's  blood  in  a  bad  m,  Guinevere  37 

But,  if  a  m  were  halt  or  himch'd,  „           41 

such  a  feast  As  never  m  had  dream'd  ;  „        264 

so  glad  were  spirits  and  men  Before  the  coming  „         269 

prophets  were  they  all.  Spirits  and  men  :  „        273 

the  King  As  wellnigh  more  than  m,  „         287 

For  there  was  no  m  knew  from  whence  he  came  ;  „         289 

a  mystery  From  all  men,  like  his  birth  ;  „         298 

Were  the  most  noblj^-manner'd  men  of  all ;  „         334 

Reputed  the  best  knight  and  goodliest  ?re,  „        382 

True  7)ien,  who  love  me  stiU,  for  whom  I  live,  „         445 

glorious  company,  the  flower  of  men,  „         464 

Not  only  to  keep  down  the  base  in  m,  „         480 

love  of  truth,  and  aU  that  makes  a  m.  „        483 

I  hold  that  m  the  worst  of  public  foes  „        512 

She  like  a  new  disease,  unknown  to  men,  „        518 

Worst  of  the  worst  were  that  m  he  that  reigns  !  „        523 

no  m  dream  but  that  I  love  thee  still.  „        560 

strike  against  the  m  they  call  My  sister's  son —  „        572 
when  the  m  was  no  more  than  a  voice                            Pass,  of  Arthur  3 

in  His  ways  with  men  I  find  Him  not.  „              11 

that  these  eyes  of  men  are  dense  and  dim,  „              19 

for  the  ghost  is  as  the  m ;  „              57 

but  no  m  was  moving  there ;  „            127 

uttering  this  the  King  Made  at  the  m :  „            165 

Until  King  Arthur's  Table,  m  by  m,  „            172 

They  sleep — the  men  I  loved.  „            185 

A  little  thing  may  harm  a  woimded  m ;  „            210 
Where  lay  the  mighty  bones  of  ancient  men,  Old 

knights,  „            215 

This  is  a  shameful  thing  for  men  to  lie.  „            246 

might  have  pleased  the  eyes  of  many  men.  „            259 
some  old  m  speak  in  the  aftertime  To  all  the 

people,  „            275 

for  a  m  may  fail  in  duty  twice,  „            297 

I  live  three  lives  of  mortal  men,  „            323 

Among  new  men,  strange  faces,  „            406 

are  men  better  than  sheep  or  goats  „            418 
and  loud  leagues  of  m  And  welcome  !                              To  the  Queen  ii  9 

Ideal  manhood  closed  in  real  m,  „              38 
Or  as  men  know  not  when  they  fall  asleep                     Lover's  Tale  i  161 

as  tho'  A  m  in  some  still  garden  „            269 

we  found  The  dead  m  cast  upon  the  shore  ?  „            295 

she  answered,  '  Ay,  And  men  to  soar :  '  „            305 

A  woful  m  (for  so  the  story  went)  ,,            379 

That  men  plant  over  graves.  „            538 

like  a  vain  rich  m,  That,  having  always  prosper'd  „             715 

Let  them  so  love  that  men  and  boys  may  say,  „             756 

Beneath  the  shadow  of  the  curse  of  m,  „             790 

the  m  who  stood  with  me  Stept  gaily  forward,  „         Hi  50 

the  dreadful  dust  that  once  was  m,  „          iv  67 

dead  men's  dust  and  beating  hearts.  „            140 

when  a  m  WiU  honour  those  who  feast  with  him,  „            231 

I  knew  a  m,  not  many  years  ago  ;  „            255 

Dazed  or  amazed,  nor  eyes  of  men ;  „            311 
but  after  my  m  was  dead ;                                                 First  Quarrel  6 

The  men  would  say  of  the  maids,  „            28 

my  house  an'  my  m  were  my  pride,  „            41 

been  as  true  to  you  as  ever  a  m  to  his  wife  ;  „            60 

The  m  isn't  like  the  woman,  „             63 

Han-y,  my  m,  you  had  better  ha'  beaten  me  „            72 

Bible  verse  of  the  Lord's  good  will  toward  men —  Bizpah  61 

and  the  sea  that  'ill  moan  like  am?  „      72 
not  hafe  ov  a  m,  my  lad —                                             North.  Cobbler  21 

an'  the  loov  of  God  fur  men,  „              55 

thou'rt  like  the  rest  o'  the  men,  „              63 

Theer's  thy  hennemy,  m,  „              65 

And  the  half  my  men  are  sick.  The  Revenge  6 

I've  ninety  men  and  more  that  are  lying  „        10 

bore  in  hand  all  his  sick  men  from  the  land  „        15 

Men  of  Bideford  in  Devon,  „        17 

'  We  be  all  good  English  mew.  „        29 


Man 


452 


Man 


Man  {continued)    sick  men  down  in  the  hold  were  most 

of  them  stark  and  cold,  The  Revenge  79 

We  have  won  great  glory,  my  men  !  „            85 

stat«ly  Spanish  men  to  their  flsigship  bore  him  then,  ,,            97 

fought  for  Queen  and  Faith  like  a  valiant  m  and  true ;  „          101 

only  done  my  duty  as  a  m  is  bound  to  do  :  ,,           102 

Was  he  devil  or  m  ?     He  was  devil  for  aught  „          108 

a  m's  ideal  Is  high  in  Heaven,                                Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  130 

In  some  such  fashion  as  a  m  may  be  „              133 

Selfish,  strange !     What  dwarfs  are  men !  „              199 

an'  was  'untin'  arter  the  men,  Village  Wife  36 
every  m  die  at  his  post ! '  (repeat)                  Def.  of  Lucknow  10, 13,  52 

Handful  of  wen  as  we  were,  „                   46 

Men  wiU  forget  what  we  suffer  and  not  what  we  do.  „                    73 


Sir  J.  Oldcaslle  50 

54 

142 

150 

185 

Columbus  50 

„   152 

V.  of  Maddune  23 

31 

74 

85 

126 

128 

130 

Be  Prof.,  Two  G.  12 

16 

22 


to  call  men  traitors  May  make  men  traitors. 

reddest  with  the  blood  of  holy  men, 

nay,  let  a  m  repent.  Do  penance  in  his  heart, 

goor  m's  money  gone  to  fat  the  friar, 
eathen  men  have  borne  as  much  as  this, 
men  Walk'd  like  the  fly  on  ceilings  ? 
thou  hast  done  so  well  for  m,en,  that  men 
the  men  that  were  mighty  of  tongue 
the  men  dropt  dead  in  the  valleys 
shook  hke  a  «i  in  a  mortal  affright ; 
it  open'd  and  dropt  at  the  side  of  each  m. 
And  the  Holy  m  he  assoil'd  us. 
The  m  that  had  slain  my  father, 
landed  again,  with  a  tithe  of  my  men, 
and  prophet  of  the  perfect  m ; 
that  men  May  bless  thee  as  we  bless  thee, 
then  full-current  thro'  full  m  : 
'  Let  us  make  m '  and  that  which  should  be  m.  From 

that  one  light  no  m  can  look  upon,  „  36 

seek  If  any  golden  harbour  be  for  men  Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  13 

You  m  of  himiorous-melancholy  mark,  To  W.  H.  Brookfield  9 

England,  France,  all  m  to  be  Will  make  one  people 

ere  m's  race  be  run  :  To  Victor  Hugo  10 

lay  many  a  m  Marr'd  by  the  javeUn,  Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  31 

Men  of  the  Northland  Shot  over  shield.  „  33 

All  day  the  men  contend  in  grievous  war  Achilles  over  ike  T.  9 

airy-light  To  float  above  the  ways  of  men.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  18 

What  omens  may  foreshadow  fat«  to  m  And  woman,  Tiresias  7 

more  than  m  Which  rolls  the  heavens,  „     21 

moves  unseen  among  the  ways  of  men. 
speak  the  truth  that  no  m  may  believe.' 
While  men  shall  move  the  Ups  : 
light  upon  the  ways  of  mew  As  one  great  deed, 
wise  m's  word,  Here  trampled  by  the  populace 
these  eyes  will  find  The  men  I  knew, 
princeUer  looking  m  never  stept  thro'  a  Prince's  hall. 
And  a  m  men  fear  is  a  m  to  be  loved 
and  men  at  the  helm  of  state — 
he,  poor  m,  when  he  learnt  that  I  hated  the  ring 
felt  for  the  first  and  greatest  of  men ; 
all  but  the  m  that  was  lash'd  to  the  helm  had  gone ; 
the  one  m  left  on  the  wreck — 
kiss  so  sad,  no,  not  since  the  coming  of  m  ! 
You  have  parted  the  m  from  the  wife. 
If  every  m  die  for  ever, 
if  the  souls  of  men  were  immortal,  as  men  have  been  told,  „        99 

till  that  old  m  before  A  cavern  Ancient  Sage  6 

TO  to-day  is  fancy's  fool  As  m  hath  ever  been.  „  27 

never  spake  with  m.  And  never  named  the  Name  ' —  ,,  55 

beyond  All  work  of  m,  yet,  like  the  work  of  m, 
The  last  and  least  of  men  ; 

For  m  has  overlived  his  day 

So  dark  that  men  cry  out  against  the  Heavens. 

Who  knows  but  that  the  darkness  is  in  m  ? 

Word  Of  that  world-prophet  in  the  heart  of  m. 

But  in  the  hand  of  wnat  is  more  than  m.  Or  in  m's 
band  when  m  is  more  than  m,  Let  be  thy  wail 
and  help  thy  fellow  men. 

Nor  list  for  guerdon  in  the  voice  of  men, 

iould  her  to  come  away  from  the  m, 

an'  a  dhrame  of  a  married  m,  death  alive, 


24 

50 

133 

161 

173 

176 

The  Wreck  16 

18 

49 

57 

76 

110 

119 

Despair  60 

62 

82 


85 
114 
150 
172 
173 
213 


256 

262 

Tomorrow  20 

51 


Man  (continued)    An'  where  'ud  the  poor  m,  thin, 
bogs  whin  they  swalUes  the  m  intire  ! 
Thou  sees  that  i'  spite  o'  the  men 
alius  afear'd  of  a  m's  gittin'  ower  fond, 
That  a  m  be  a  durty  thing  an'  a  trouble 
But  I  couldn't  'a  Uved  wi'  a  m 
By  a  m  coomin'  in  wi'  a  hiccup 
'es  hallus  to  hax  of  a  m  how  much  to  spare 
she  with  all  the  breadth  of  m, 
for  ever  was  the  leading  light  of  m. 
alms  of  Blessing  m  had  coin'd  himself  a  curse  : 
France  had  shown  a  light  to  all  men,  preach'd  a 

Gospel,  all  men's  good  ; 
still,  '  your  enemy  '  was  a  m. 
Are  we  devils  ?  are  we  men  ? 
Sons  of  God,  and  kings  of  men 
to  lower  the  rising  race  of  men  ; 
no  m  halt,  or  deaf  or  blind  ; 
who  can  fancy  warless  men  ? 
are  these  but  symbols  of  innumerable  m,  M  or 

Mind  that  sees  a  shadow 
What  are  men  that  He  should  heed  us  ? 
before  her  highest,  m,  was  bom, 
offspring  this  ideal  m  at  rest  ? 
Nor  is  he  the  wisest  m,  who  never  proved 
to  help  his  homeher  brother  men, 
— ^for  m  can  half -control  his  doom 
you  and  all  your  men  Were  soldiers 
Thro'  the  great  gray  slope  of  men, 
our  men  gaUopt  up  with  a  cheer  and  a  shout. 
In  worlds  before  the  m  Involving  oiu"s — 
now  we  see.  The  m  in  Space  and  Time, 
what  they  prophesy,  our  wise  men. 


Tomorrow  65 
66 
Spinster's  S's.  11 
27 
50 
52 
98 
111 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  48 
66 
87 


94 
99 
122 
147 
163 
172 

195 

201 

„  205 

234 

244 

267 

277 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  24 

Heavy  Brigade  17 

61 

Epilogue  25 

49 

65 


all  in  vain  As  far  as  m  can  see,  except  The  m  himself 

remain ; 
That  m  can  have  no  after-morn, 
The  m  remains,  and  whatsoe'er  He  wrought 
measure  ever  moulded  by  the  lips  of  m. 
touch'd  on  the  whole  sad  planet  of  m, 
For  m  is  a  lover  of  Truth, 
Was  he  nobUer-f  ashion'd  than  other  men  ? 
Waeriob  of  God,  m's  friend, 
for  all  men  know  This  earth  has  never  borne  a 

nobler  m. 
That  m's  the  best  Cosmopolite 
That  m's  the  true  Conservative 
Men  loud  against  all  forms  of  power — 
When  all  men  starve,  the  wild  mob's  million  feet 
Men  that  in  a  narrower  day — 
when  before  have  Gods  or  men  beheld 


73 

75 

To  Virgil  40 

Dead  Prophet  39 

44 

51 

Epit.  on  Gordon  1 


Hands  all  Round  3 

7 

Freedom  37 

The  Fleet  18 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  25 

Demeter  and  P.  29 


fled  by  many  a  waste,  forlorn  of  m,  And  grieved  for 

m  thro'  all  my  grief  for  thee, — 
we  spin  the  hves  of  men,  And  not  of  Gods, 
Last  as  the  likeness  of  a  dying  m, 
m,  that  only  lives  and  loves  an  hour, 
vine  And  golden  grain,  my  gift  to  helpless  m. 
the  praise  And  prayer  of  men, 
souls  of  men,  who  grew  beyond  their  race, 
thou  that  hast  from  men.  As  Queen  of  Death, 
nor  I  iver  owad  mottal  m. 
moor  good  sense  na  the  Parliament  m  'at  stans  fur 

us  'ere, 
men  ater  supper  'ed  sung  their  songs 
Howiver  was  I  fur  to  find  my  rent  an'  to  paay  my  men  ? 
Ghost  in  M,  the  Ghost  that  once  was  M,  But  cannot 

wholly  free  itself  from  M, 
No  sudden  heaven,  nor  sudden  hell,  for  m, 
I  had  seen  the  m  but  once  ; 
till  the  m  repenting  sent  This  ring 
bad  the  m  engrave  '  From  Walter '  on  the  ring, 
as  a  m  Who  sees  his  face  in  water, 
80  fickle  are  men — the  best ! 

beauty  came  upon  your  face,  not  that  of  living  men. 
If  m  and  wife  be  but  one  flesh, 
Ulysses,  much-experienced  m. 


74 

85 

88 

106 

111 

120 

140 

142 

Owd  Rod  4 

13 
35 

47 


The  Ring  35 

41 

190 

209 

235 

369 

392 

Happy  51 

„      94 

To  Ulysses  1 


J 


Man 

""^w^^""*^^    ^®';  *^?^  °*  "^""^  ^"'i  trees,  and  flowere,      To  Ulvsses  3 
Where  «i,  nor  only  Nature  smiles ;  «,      ^  o  a  fysses  d 

K  LSL^?  !t^*^  ^^'  ^'^^  l^«^r  their  words      Pro;,,  of  Spring  si 

87 

99 

115 

Merlin  and  the  G.  106 

JRo7nney's  E.  123 

144 

%  an  EvoltUion.  2 

19 


453 


Manners 


I  too  would  teach  the  m 

dwellings  of  the  kings  of  men  ; 

men  have  hopes,  which  race  the  restless  blood 

under  the  Crosses  The  dead  m's  garden 

blacken  round  The  copse  of  every  m 

Should  I  know  the  m  ? 

And  the  m  said  '  Am  I  your  debtor  ?  ' 

M  IS  quiet  at  last  As  he  stands  on  the  heights 

While  m  and  woman  are  still  incomplete,  I  prize 

that  soul  where  m  and  woman  meet.  On  one  who  a.tf,r   V   nr  i 

thoughts  that  lift  the  soul  of  men,  Tnulf^'   /  ^\  I 

M  is  but  the  slave  of  Fate.  '  nJiTr^^  ^-  ]! 

and  forgetful  of  the  m,  ^""^  "•'  ^'"^'"'^  44 

But  every  m  was  mute  for  reverence.  "  ^ 

The  w,  whose  pious  hand  had  built  the  cross,  A  m  " 


who  never  changed  a  word  with  Ttien 

borne  along  by  that  full  stream  of  men 

trailing  a  dead  lion  away.  One,  a  dead  m. 

Christian  faces  watch  M  murder  m. 

bamer  that  divided  beast  from  m  Slipt 

In  the  great  name  of  Him  who  died  iov  men 

Dark  with  the  blood  of  m  who  murder'd  m  ' 

only  conquers  men  to  conquer  peace 

I  seem  no  longer  like  a  lonely  m 

knows  Himself,  men  nor  themselves  nor  Him 

Mme  is  the  one  fruit  AUa  made  for  «i '         ' 
men  may  taste  Swine-flesh,  drink  wine  • 
I  let  men  worship  as  they  will  ' 

By  deeds  a  light  to  men  ?        ' 
Ritual,  varying  with  the  tribes  of  men. 
and  men,  below  the  dome  of  azure  Kneel 
and  voices,  and  men  passing  to  and  fro. 
And  a  m  ruin'd  mine. 
Would  the  m  have  a  touch  of  remorse 

M^ffL  1°"k  ""^u  ^^  f >  *^^  ^°^«  of  a  soul  for  a  soul  ? 

M  with  his  brotherless  dinner  on  m 

Men,  with  a  heart  and  a  soul. 

We  are  far  from  the  noon  of  m, 

The  men  of  a  hundred  thousand, 

M  as  yet  is  being  made, 

'  It  is  finish'd.     M  is  made.' 

That  no  in  would  believe. 

To  a  just  m  and  a  wise — 

when  the  m  will  make  the  Maker 
Manage    Hadn't  a  head  to  m, 
■        How  best  to  m  horse,  lance,  sword  and  shield 
managed     I  a  m  for  Squoire  coom  Michaehnas 
Man-at-arms    Another  hunying  past,  a  m-a-a, 
Man-beast    m-b  of  boundless  savagery 
Man-breasted    strong  m-b  things  stood  from  the  sea, 
Manchester    throats  of  jI/ may  bawl 
Manchet    And  in  her  veil  enfolded,  m  bread. 
Bfender  (manner)    noa  m  o'  use  to  be  callin'  'im  Roa, 
Mane    shake  the  darkness  from  their  loosen'd  m's 
10  break  my  chain,  to  shake  my  m  • 
with  your  long  locks  play  the  Lion's  m  ! 

Man^    C^"i  n""^^"'^  ^'  ^^o^«  t^«  gJ-eat  beasts 
Maned    -S-ee  FuD-maned,  Midnight-maned 

Manehke    Beneath  a  m  mass  of  roUing  gold 
Manes  (mean)    An'  yer  Honour's  the  tl^e  ould  blood 
that  always  m  to  be  kind, 

^^  uPl'^^f?.^*'"''  P^oP^es  ti^th  and  m  peace, 

Kight  thro'  his  m  breast  darted  the  pang 

f^or  know  I  whether  I  be  very  base  Or  very  m 
Manfuhiess    he,  from  his  exceeding  m 
Man-girdled    Than  thus  m-g  here  : 
Mangle    And  m  the  living  dog  that  had  loved  him 
Mangle  (mangold)    Goan  into  m's  an'  t«nups. 
Mangled    M,  and  flatten'd,  and  cnish'd, 

I  see  thee  maim'd,  M  : 

M  to  morsels,  A  youngster  in  war  ! 
Mango    The  m  spurn  the  melon  at  his  foot  ? 


St.  Telemachitsd 
43 
48 
56 
60 
63 
80 
Akbar's  Dream  15 
20 
32 
40 
53 
66 
111 
125 
„  Hymn  7 
Bandit's  Death  24 
Charity  4 
„      17 
„      30 
The  Dawn  3 
18 
20 
25 
Making  of  Man  3 
8 
Mechanofhilus  28 
Voice  spake,  etc.  2 
Faith  7 
Grandmother  6 
Gareth  and  L.  1351 
N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  48 
Geraint  and  E.  526 
Gareth  and  L.  637 
Guinevere  246 
Third  of  Feb.  43 
Marr.  of  Geraint  389 
Owd  Rod  1 
Tithonus  41 
Princess  ii  424 
„        vi  164 
Holy  Grail  820 

Aylmer's  Field  68 


Tomorrow  5 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  49 

Marr.  of  Geraint  121 

469 

211 

Princess  v  429 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  9 

Owd  Roa  28 

Mavd  I  i7 

Gareth  and  L.  1327 

Bait,  of  Brunanburh  74 

Akbar's  Dream  39 


Mangold    See  Mangle 

Mangrove    The  slant  seas  leaning  on  the  m  consp  p         /■  c.     •      »^ 

Manhood    Nature's  evil  star  DriVe  men  in  «'  r      'T  "f  ^Vnng  76 

The  darling  of  my  m,  and  X  ™              '  ^""'n  ^^  '^^  ^"'^'^  ^^ 
who  desireVu  m';,re'Than  growing  boys  their  m  ■        ^" S""^  ""■■  f^ 

AccompUsh  thou  my  m  and  thysef  ■  '             ^'''^'''  '^.  W. 

Some  civic  m  firm  against  the  crowd—  "     ^"  ^ff 

The  highest,  holiest  m,  thou :  r    nr"      n    '  f  T 

Tho'  truths  in  m  darkly  join  ^^^  ^^^"'■'  ^'"'-  ^^ 

Who  wears  his  m  hale  and  green  •  "         '^'^f.'?*  ^ 

m  fused  with  female  grace  In  such  a  sort,  "              •    ■■  f 

glory  of  m  stand  on  his  ancient  height,  m'  ,j  7-7/'^  iJ 

So  make  thy  m  mightier  day  by  day-  •  n    ^  ^^/  T  ^ 

I  felt  Thy  m  thi-o'lhat  weaLd^lanJe'of  thine  ^"'"''^  ""^  \B 

a  prmce  whose  m  was  aU  gone.  1/         ;'^      .^^°^ 

Xn  it  weds  with  m,  maf  es  a  man.  S^STfiS 

Thy  too  fierce  m  would  not  let  thee  lie  S      Tl  1    ^^ 

kii'ShSd';^'^"  "''"'  '^  '^°"' '"^'  -'^^'  ^"^  ^' 

Name,  w,  and'a  grace,  but  scantly  thine,  "            l^t 

\  men,  save  ye  fear  The  monkish  m,  Merlin  and  V  S 

The  pretty,  popular  name  such  m  earns,  "'"^  ^vff 

oureelves  shall  grow  In  use  of  arms  and  m,  Lancelot  and  FfiA 

Friends,  thro'  your  m  and  your  fealtv  —  J-anceiot  and  E.  64 

Tells  of  a  m  ever  less  and  l™  ?      ^'  '^''''  ?'o«*r,«imm!!  97 

Who  fam  had  chpt  free  m  from  the  world—  "            7?1 

as  great  As  he  was  in  his  m,  n  "■           5^ 

Ideal  m  closed  in  real  man,  r      ^umevereZ^ 

Yet  you  in  your  mid  m—  ^  "  '''^  ^'^^'^  "  ^8 

Maniac    Time,  a  m  scattering  dust,  7     i,7^^  ,1 

Manifold    With  a  music  stralge  and  m,  nJ^'^^'^-^l 

But  m  entreaties,  many  a  tear,       '  v1T^^T\ I^ 

Thro'  m  effect  of 'simple  powe^  pZ     A^^^  ^f^ 

^     Sent  notes  of  preparation  m,  KZ^'  ?f '^P^^'^l^ 

Man-in.(Jod    God-in-man  is  one'with  m-i-G  ^Jf/  Yl  '  ?^I 

Manlrind    like  Gods  together,  careless  of  m'  Lotos  Zt   ci  HO 

Altho'  I  be  the  basest  of  m,  if  1j  V,  ;^     ? 

Whereof  my  fame  is  loud  amongst  m,  ^^  ^^  ^*y^'i%] 

To  make  me  an  example  to  m,  "         .  qZ 

m  the  thoughts  that  shake  m.  Lock,7.n  "ffnU  ir« 

Had  golden  hopes  for  France  and  aU  m,  A^lmfr'i FM  4fi! 

Let  them  not  he  in  the  tents  with  coarse  m,  Prilcefsvi^ 

I  had  been  wedded  wife,  I  knew  m,  Jrrmcess  vim 

For  saving  that,  ye  help  to  save  m  ode  onlVoll  ififi 

But  while  the  races  of  m  endure,  '"*  *'^^^^-  i?^ 

Peace  and  goodwill,  to  all  m.  7«  m  "         •••,^ 

This  bitter  seed  among  m  ;  '^''  -^''"-  ^"^"^  ^f 

Ring  in  redress  to  all  m.  "                 '^'if 

For  each  is  at  war  with  m.  "  m     ,  f"*  Jf 

Being  but  ampler  means  to  serve  m.  Merlin  a^  V  "^irq 

so  might  there  be  Two  Adams,  two  m's  Berlin  and  V.  489 
My  friend,  the  most  unworldly  of  m,'             /«  .!/„„     w'r'''w'^i 

Man^ess    when  earth  is  m  and  forlorn,    '  xSji  ^^  ^,il« 

Manhke    m  end  myself  ?-K)ur  privilege—  ^ocksley  H.,  Sixty  206 

open-work  in  which  the  hunter  medllis  rash  ^''''''''  ^^^ 

intrusion,  m,  d  •           •    .,„, 

Manly    Is  this  the  m  strain  of  Runnymede  ?  t1-^TT^\  ^2! 

Man-minded .  When  his  m-m  offs^S       '  ?£{  Jl"  ?f 

S^'^iron^ifyTllllr^^^^  ,     ^attS 

t.'r    -  *'%^«^^  -™  --*^-  al-  crew,  ''"^^•^rfer  Jlo 

Manner    (^ee  a;.o  Mander)    listening  rogue  hath  cailght  ^ 

the  m  of  it.  /^     .7        ,  ^ 

HistnTrifeiTm^t'd^h^'  r"  '^^^  ^^  '  ^^S^^^'^^^^-  5?t 

£t?Jn''7C^4irh  armtfte'vfcT'  ^^^^^^  «-^  ^-  JJ^ 

To  hear  the  m  of  thy  fight  and  fall :  "            ^ 

A  m  somewhat  fall'n  from  reverenpp t    ,  n,      "            ?*' 

Manner'd    -See  Nobly.maimer^d  Last  Tournament  \\^ 

Manners    Her  m  had  not  that  repose  T   C    V  Ao  v      an 

Like  men,  Uke  m  :  hke  breeds  hke,  they  say  :  Kind  ""'  ^^ 

nature  is  the  best :  those  m  next              ^  Walk  to  the  M.iJ  a^ 

What  are  indeed  the  m  of  the  great  *  ^"^^  ^ 

cities  of  men  And  m,  chmates,  councils,  "uivsses  14 

That  gives  the  m  of  your  countiywomen  ?  PnnS  151 


Manners 


454 


Margin 


Hamiers  {coniimied)     With  sweeter  m,  purer  laws.  In  Mem.  cvi  16 

To  noble  m,  as  the  flower  And  native  growth  „          cxi  15 

By  the  coldiiess  of  her  m,  Maud  I  xx  13 

M  so  kind,  yet  stately,  Geraint  and  E.  861 

sudden-beaming  tenderness  Of  in  and  of  nature  :     Lancelot  and  E.  329 

father's  memory,  one  Of  noblest  m,  Guinevere  319 

For  m  are  not  idle,  but  the  fruit  Of  loyal  nature,  „        335 

'  Yea,'  said  the  maid, '  be  m  such  fair  fruit  ?  „         337 

good  m  bang  thruf  to  the  tip  o'  the  taail.  Spinster's  S's.  66 

Manor     All  in  a  full-fair  m  and  a  rich,  Gareth  and  L.  846 

Manorial    There  the  m  lord  too  curiously  Aylmer's  Field  513 

Of  the  old  m  haU.  Maud  II  iv  80 

Man-shaped    cloud,  m-s,  from  mountain  peak,  To  the  Queen  ii  40 

Mansion    have  bought  A  m  incorruptible.  Deserted  House  21 

Where  this  old  m  moimted  high  Looks  down  Miller's  B.  35 

this  great  m,  that  is  built  for  me.  Palace  of  Art  19 

*  My  spacious  m  built  for  me,  „            234 

Sees  a  m  more  majestic  L.  of  Burleigh  45 

In  an  ancient  m's  crannies  and  holes  :  Maud  II  v  61 

nor  'er  i'  the  m  theer.  Spinster's  S's.  110 

Mantle  (s)    sweet  Europa's  m  blew  unclasp'd.  Palace  of  Art  117 

m's  from  the  golden  pegs  Droop  sleepily  :  Day- Din.,  Sleep.  P.  19 

His  m  ghtters  on  the  rocks —  „               Arrival  6 

her  blooming  m  torn.  Princess  vi  145 

And  spread  his  m  dark  and  cold.  In  Mem.  xxii  14 

A  faded  m  and  a  faded  veil,  Marr.  of  Geraint  135 

Then  brought  a  m  down  and  wrapt  her  in  it,  „              824 

drew  The  vast  and  shaggy  m  of  his  beard  Merlin  and  V.  256 

Then  fell  thick  rain,  plume  droopt  and  m  clung,     Last  Tournament  213 

Her  m,  slowly  greening  in  the  Sun,  Prog,  of  Spring  11 

Whose  m,  every  shade  of  glancing  green,  „              63 

Mantle  (verb)     Nor  bowl  of  wassail  m  warm  ;  In  Mem.  cv  18 

m's  all  the  mouldering  bricks —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  257 

Mantling    M  her  form  halfway.  Lover's  Tale  i  705 

will  hide  with  m  flowers  As  if  for  pity  ?  '  Gareth  and  L.  1392 

Mantovano    I  salute  thee,  M,  To  Virgil  37 

Manufacturer    See  Lord-manufacturer 

Manuscript    With  sallow  scraps  of  w.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  48 

Man-woman    m-w  is  not  woman-man.  On  one  who  affec.  E.  M.  4 

Many  (adj.)    Thou  of  the  m  tongues,  the  myriad  eyes  !     Ode  to  Memory  47 

They  have  not  shed  a  m  tears,  Miller's  D.  221 

A  sinful  soul  possess'd  of  m  gifts.  To ,  With  Pal.  of  ArtB 

Long  stood  Sir  Bedivere  Revolving  m  memories,  M.  d' Arthur  270 
Long  stood  Sir  Bedivere  Revolving  m  memories,      Pass,  of  Arthur  438 
Many  (s)    the  never-changing  One  And  ever- 
changing  M,  Akbar's  Dream  148 
Many-blossoming    m-b  Paradises,  Boddicea  43 
Many-cobweb'd    The  dusky-rafter'd  m-c  hall,  Marr.  of  Geraint  362 
Many-corridor'd    m-c  complexities  Of  Arthur's  palace  :     Merlin  and  V.  732 
Many-folded    rose  Deep-hued  and  m-f !  Balin  and  Balan  270 
Many-fountain'd    '  0  mother  Ida,  m-f  Ida,  (repeat)  (Enone  23,  34,  45,  172 
Many-headed    The  m-h  beast  should  know.'                ¥ou  might  have  won  20 
Many-knotted    There  in  the  m-k  waterflags,  AI.  d' Arthur  63 
There  in  the  m-k  waterflags.  Pass,  of  Arthur  231 
Many-shielded    Have  also  set  his  m-s  tree  ?  Aylmer's  Field  48 
Many-sided    with  all  forms  Of  the  m-s  mind,  Ode  to  Memory  116 
Many-stain'd    An  old  storm-beaten,  russet,  m-s 

PaviUon,  Gareth  and  L.  1113 

Many-tower'd    road  nms  by  To  ot-<  Camelot ;  L.  of  Shalott  i  5 
Many-winter'd    m-w  crow  that  leads  the  clanging 

rookery  home.  Locksley  Hall  68 

And  m-w  fleece  of  throat  and  chin.  Merlin  and  V.  841 

Maoris    The  M  and  that  Isle  of  Continent,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  18 

Map    Lay  Uke  a  m  before  me,  and  I  saw  There,  Lover's  Tale  i  590 

Maple    This  m  bum  itself  away  ;  In  Mem.  ci  4 

Mar    How  they  m  this  little  by  their  feuds.  Sea  Dreams  49 

mount*  to  m  Their  sacred  everlasting  cahn  !  Lucretius  109 

Nothing  to  m  the  sober  majesties  „      217 

she  lightens  scorn  At  him  that  m's  her  plan,  Princess  v  132 

whatever  tempest  m's  Mid-ocean,  In  Mem.  xvii  13 

•ye  are  overfine  To  m  stout  knaves  Gareth  and  L.  733 

Ye  ma  comely  face  with  idiot  tears  Geraint  and  E.  550 

Would  m  their  charm  of  stainless  maidenhood.'  Balin  and  Balan  268 

uke  Nature,  wouldst  not  m  By  changes  Freedom  21 

You  would  not  m  the  beauty  of  your  bride  Happy  24 


Marble  (adj.)     Broad-based  flights  of  m  stairs  Arabian  Nights  IIT 

and  on  roofs  Of  m  palaces  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  24 

Or  under  arches  of  the  to  bridge  Hung,  Princess  ii  458 

high  above  them  stood  The  placid  to  Muses,  „        iv  489 

A  column'd  entry  shone  and  m  stairs,  „         v  364 

All  up  the  TO  stair,  tier  over  tier,  Lancelot  and  E.  1248 

then  No  stone  is  fitted  in  yon  m  girth  Tiresias  135 
I  this  old  white-headed  dreamer  stoopt  and  kiss'd 

her  TO  brow.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  38 

Marble  (s)     Stiller  than  chisell'd  m,  standing  there  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  86' 


As  blank  as  death  in  m  ; 

issued  in  a  court  Compact  of  lucid  m's, 

But  I  wiU  melt  this  w  into  wax 

half-shrouded  over  death  In  deathless  to. 

The  virgin  to  under  iron  heels  : 

A  mount  of  to,  a  hundred  spires  ! 

Thy  m  bright  in  dark  appears, 

Your  mother  is  mute  in  her  grave  as  her  image  in  m 
above ; 

All  in  white  Italian  to,  looking  still 
Marbled    sands  to  with  moon  and  cloud, 
March  (s)     ebb  and  flow  conditioning  their  m, 

enjoyment  more  than  in  this  to  of  mind, 

di-ill  the  raw  world  for  the  m  of  mind, 

thou,  brother,  in  my  m'es  here  ?  ' 

For  on  their  m  to  westward,  Bedivere, 

in  the  roll  And  m  of  that  Eternal  Harmony 
March  (month)     thro'  wild  M  the  throstle  calls. 

More  black  than  ashbuds  in  the  front  of  M.' 

Came  to  the  hammer  here  in  M — 

Clash,  ye  bells,  in  the  meriy  M  air  ! 

when  the  wreath  of  M  has  blossom'd. 

Flits  by  the  sea-blue  bird  of  M  ; 

palm  On  sallows  in  the  windy  gleams  of  M  : 

clear-throated  larks  Fill'd  all  the  M  of  life  !— 


Princess  i  177 

ii  24 

„       Hi  73 

v75 

„      vi  351 

The  Daisy  &> 

In  Mem.  Ixvii  5 


Maud  I  iv  5& 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  35 

Last  Tournament  466 

Golden  Year  30' 

Locksley  Hall  165 

Ode  on  Well.  16& 

Gareth  and  L.  1034 

Pass,  of  Arthur  6- 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  15 

To  the  Queen  14 

Gardener's  D.  28 

Aiidley  Court  60- 

W.  to  Alexandra  18 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  43 

In  Mem.  xci  4 

Merlin  and  V.  225 

Lover's  Tale  i  284 


this  M  mom  that  sees  Thy  Soldier-brother's  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  Id 

How  surely  gUdest  thou  from  M  to  May,  Prog,  of  Spring  109 

March  (verb)    fight  and  w  and  countermarch,  Audley  Court  40 

M  with  banner  and  bugle  and  fife  To  the  death,  Maud  I  v  10 

that  I  w.  to  meet  thy  doom.  Guinevere  450 

Marches     And  there  defend  his  to  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  41 

past  The  to,  and  by  bandit-haunted  holds,  Geraint  and  E.  30 

move  to  your  own  land,  and  there  defend  Your  to,  „            889 

Lords  of  waste  m,  kings  of  desolate  isles,  Lancelot  and  E.  527 

March-morning     in  the  wild  M-m  I  heard  (repeat)  May  Queen,  Con.  25,  28 

March-wind    That  whenever  a  M-w  sighs  Maud  I  xxii  40 

Marcy  (mercy)     He  coom'd  like  a  Hangel  o'  to  Owd  Rod  93 

Mare    He  always  made  a  point  to  post  with  m's  ;  Princess  i  189 

Look  you  !  the  gray  to  Is  iU  to  live  with,  „       v  451 

and  the  to  brokken-kneead,  Church-warden,  etc.  4 

Marestail    The  petty  to  forest,  fairy  pines,  Aylmer's  Field  92 

Margaret     O  sweet  pale  AI,  O  rare  pale  M,  (repeat)  Margaret  1,  54 

What  can  it  matter,  AI,  „              32 

Exquisite  M,  who  can  tell  The  last  wild  thought  „              36 

There's  M  and  Mary,  there's  Kate  and  Caroline  :  May  Queen  6 

One  babe  was  theirs,  a  M,  three  years  old  :  Sea  Dreams  3 

Their  AI  cradled  near  them,  „          57 

The  glass  with  little  APs  medicine  in  it ;  „         142 

cry  Which  mixt  with  little  M's,  and  I  woke,  „        246 

Marge    round  about  the  fragrant  to  From  fluted  vase,  Arabian  Nights  59 

whistled  stiff  and  diy  about  the  m.  M.  d' Arthur  64 

we  paused  About  the  windings  of  the  to  Edwin  Alorris  94 

And  linger  weeping  on  the  to.  In  Mem.  xii  12" 

from  TO  to  TO  shall  bloom  The  eternal  landscape  „          xlvi  7 

A  rosy  warmth  from  to  to  to.  „                16- 

Sunder  the  glooming  crimson  on  the  to,  Gareth  and  L.  1365 

But  every  page  having  an  ample  to.  And  every  to 

enclosing  in  the  midst 
The  circle  widens  tUI  it  lip  the  m, 
That  whistled  stiff  and  dry  about  the  m. 
Margin  (adj.)    one  snowy  knee  was  prest  Against  the  m 

flowers ; 
Margin  (s)     By  the  m,  willow-veil'd, 
And  bear  me  to  the  m  ; 
world,  whose  to  fades  For  ever  and  for  ever 


Merlin  and  V.  669' 

Pelleas  and  E.  94 

Pass,  of  Arthur  232 

Tiresias  43- 
L.  of  Shalott  i  19 
AI.  d' Arthur  165 
Ulysses  20"  ■, 


I 


Margin 

Margin  (s)  (continued)    Comes  a  vapour  .from  the  m, 
every  m  scribbled,  crost,  and  cramm'd 
And  bear  me  to  the  m  ; 
ere  it  vanishes  Over  the  m, 
Mariam    See  Issa  Ben  Mariam 
Marian    Is  memory  with  your  M  gone  to  rest, 
Marie    (See  also  Alexandrovna,  Marie  Alexandrovna) 

Here  also  M,  shaU  thy  name  be  blest, 
Marie  Alexandrovna    (See  also  Alexandrovna,  Marie) 
From  mother  unto  mother,  stately  bride,  M  A  ! 
loyal  pines  of  Canada  murmur  thee,  M  A 
Love  by  right  divine  is  deathless  king,  M  A  ! 
Here  ako,  Marie,  shall  thy  name  be  blest,  M  A  ! 
Marigold    See  Marsh-marigold 
Mariner    Slow  sail'd  the  weary  m's  and  saw, 
M,  m,  furl  your  sails, 
listen  and  stay  :  m,  m,  fly  no  more. 
Oh  rest  ye,  brother  m's, 
My  m's,  Souls  that  have  toil'd, 
O  young  M,  Down  to  the  haven, 
Marish     thro'  the  m  green  and  still 
Marish-flowers     the  silvery  m-f  that  throng 
Marish-mosses    The  cluster'd  m-w  crept. 
Marish-pipe     With  moss  and  braided  m-p ; 
Mark  (coin)     A  thousand  m's  are  set  upon  my  head. 
Mark  (s)     (See  also  Merk)     thou,'  said  I, '  hast  missed 
thy  »n, 
he  thought  himself  A  m  for  all, 
arrows  aim'd  All  at  one  m,  all  hitting : 
push  beyond  her  m,  and  be  Procuress 
No  single  tear,  no  m  of  pain  : 
master-bowman,  he.  Would  cleave  the  m. 
loves  to  know  When  men  of  m  are  in  his  temtory 
meant  to  stamp  him  with  her  master's  m  ; 
Yon  man  of  humorous-melancholy  m, 

an'  the  m.  O'  'is  'pJiH  o'  thp  phaira  I 


455 


Marriage 


Locksley  Hall  191 

Merlin  and  V.  677 

Pass,  of  Arthur  333 

Merlin  and  the  6.  129 

To  Mary  Boyle  13 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  39 

10 
20 
30 
40 

Sea  Fairies  1 

21 

42 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  128 

Ulysses  45 

Merlin  and  the  G.  123 

Dying  Swan  18 

40 

Mariana  40 

On  a  Mourner  10 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  195 


Two  Foices  388 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  73 

Aylmer's  Field  95 

In  Mem.  liii  15 

„    Ixxviii  14 

„   Ixxxvii  30 

Geraint  and  E.  229 

Merlin  and  V.  759 

To  W.  H.  Brookfield  9 

Spinster's  S's.  100 

The  Ring  346 

452 

Happy  18 


an'  the  m  o'  'is  'ead  o'  the  chairs  . 
In  aiming  at  an  all  but  hopeless  m 
A  red  m  ran  All  round  one  fiiiger 

And  set  a  crueller  m  than  Cain's  on  him,  nappy  lo 

Hark  ( aristian  Nane)    came  in  haU  the  messenger  of  M,  Gareth  and  i  384 
shall  the  shield  of  M  stand  among  these  ?  '  ,  403 

M  hath  tamish'd  the  great  name  of  king,  "  426 

M  would  suUy  the  low  state  of  churl :  "  427 

*j!^u'^J'^  °"f  (?""  ""^  ^'^^  ^*"  o'f  ^^  ^«^w  and'Salan  437 

iSu        Romish  Kmg,  had  heard  a  wandering  voice.       Merlin  and  V  1 

(She  sat  beside  the  banquet  nearest  M),  18 

M  was  half  in  heart  to  hirrl  his  cup  "            39 

Loud  laugh'd  the  graceless  M.  ^^'            53 

Poor  wretch— no  friend  ! — and  now  by  M  the  King  "             75 

Nay — we  believe  aU  evil  of  thy  M —  "            93 

li}'^!^,!^^^^'^  ?^l'  ^¥  ^opys."^  ?i°g'  Last  Tournament  382 


heard  The  hounds  of  M,  and  felt  the  goodly  hounds 
Crying  aloud,  '  Not  M— not  M,  my  soul ! 
Catlike  thro'  his  own  castle  steals  my  M, 
my  hatred  for  my  M  Quicken  within  me. 
Let  be  thy  M,  seeing  he  is  not  thine.' 
bitten,  blinded,  marr'd  me  somehow — M  ? 
M's  way,  my  soul !— but  eat  not  thou  with  M, 
Should  leave  me  all  alone  with  M  and  hell.    My  God, 

the  measure  of  my  hate  for  M 
M  is  kindled  on  thy  Ups  Most  gracious  ; 
my  M's,  by  whom  all  men  Are  noble, 
M's  way  to  steal  behind  one  in  the  dark— For  there 

was  M : 
Broken  with  M  and  hate  and  solitude, 
'  Vows  !  did  you  keep  the  vow  you  made  to  M 
craven  shifts,  and  long  crane  legs  of  M — 
'  M's  way,'  said  M,  and  clove  him  thro'  the  brain. 
Mark  (verb)    no  other  tree  did  m  The  level  waste, 
I  wUl  stand  and  m. 
But  vague  in  vapour,  hard  to  m ; 


503 
514 
516 
519 
522 
526 
532 

536 
561 
599 


618 

643 

655 

729 

754 

Mariana  43 

To  J.  M.  K.  14 

Love  thou  thy  land  62 


m  me  and  imderstand.  While  I  have  power  to  speak.    Enoch  Arden  876 
m  me  !  for  your  fortunes  are  to  make.  Aylmer's  Field  300 

wid  m  The  landscape  winking  thro'  the  heat :  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  15 

Hither,  boy— and  m  me  well.  Balin  and  Balan  502 


Mark  (verb)  (continued)     Friend,  did  ye  m  that  fountain 

yesterday  Last  Tournament  2m 
tor  some  are  scared,  who  m,  Or  wisely  or 

M^h'ir^l^'f  11    ,  .u              .  To  the  Queen  a  AS 

M  him-he  falls     then  another,  Def.  of  Lucknow  65 

io  7ft  m  many  a  freeman's  home  Freedom  11 

Mo,J  "^7  *"  '^«^  ':'?"^  7^^^^^  8''®''*  S°"d  P>-og-  of  Spring  92 

Blark  Antony     Prythee,  fnend.  Where  is  Jlf  ^  ?  D.  of  F.  Women  140 

Mark  d     wave  Returning,  whUe  none  m  it.  Sea  Dreams  234 

Ihey  m  it  with  the  red  cross  to  the  fall.  Princess  vi  41 

Day  m  as  with  some  hideous  crime,  in  Mem.  Ixxii  18 

t^7hJ^  "J?^'  °''  '^  u°*'  "^  ^^^  ?^^'  ^'"«-  "/  ^rff^ur  53 
tor  He  m  Kay  near  hun  groaning  hke  a  wounded 

,    ,7Tv    .       ,.                  ,  Gareth  and  L.  64:7 

ana  all  that  m  him  were  aghast.  1399 

saw  me  not,  or  m  not  if  you  saw  ;  Geraint  "and  E.  870 

he  m  his  high  sweet  smile  In  passing,  Balin  and  Balan  160 

bo  m  not  on  his  right  a  cavern-chasm  312 

He  m  not  this,  but  blind  and  deaf  "              31  a 

he  m  The  portal  of  King  Pellam's  chapel  "              404 

Vivien  folio w'd,  but  he  m  her  not.  Merlin  and  V.  199 

Had  marr  d  his  face,  and  m  it  ere  his  time.  Lancelot  and  E.  247 

Wiio  m  bir  Lancelot  where  he  moved  apart,  1349 

I  m  Him  in  tbe  flowering  of  His  fields,  Pass,  of  Arthur  10 

inence  m  the  black  hull  moving  yet,  443 

Market  (adj.)     The  m  boat  is  on  the  stream.  In  Mem.  cxxi  13 
Market  (s)     (See  also  Woman-markets)     Enrich  the  m's  of 

the  golden  year.  q^i^^^  Year  46 
Lvery  gate  is  throng'd  with  suitors,  all  the  m's 

7^"^°^:  ^     •  Locksley  Hall  101 

and  bought  Quaint  monsters  for  the  m  Enoch  Arden  539 

Stumbling  across  the  m  to  his  death,  Aylmer's  Field  820 

Thro  the  hubbub  of  the  m  I  steal,  Maud  II  iv  68 

Ihe  changing  m  frets  or  charms  Ancient  Sage  140 
Pillory  Wisdom  in  your  m's,                                    Locksley  H.,  Sixty  134 

Market-cross     Not  only  to  the  m-c  were  known,  Enoch  Arden  96 

Lhaffermgs  and  chatterings  at  the  m-c.  Holy  Grail  558 

Market-gurl     the  red  cloaks  of  m-g's,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  17 

fflarket-noiglit  (night)     'ed  my  quart  ivry  m-n  N.  Farmer  OSS 

Market-place     Spiritual  in  Nature's  m-p—  Akhar's  Dream  135 

Markmg    m  how  the  knighthood  mock  thee.  Last  Tournament  301 

Markanen    then' m  were  told  of  our  best,  Def .  of  Lucknow  IQ 

Marr  d     beat  me  down  and  m  and  wasted  me,  Tithonus  19 

what  follows  !  war  ;  Your  own  work  m  :  Princess  ii  230 

Brake  on  us  at  our  books,  and  m  our  peace,  „         ^  395 

Had  m  his  face,  and  mark'd  it  ere  his  time.  Lancelot  "and  E  247 

Mashe  was,  he  seem'd  the  goodliest  man  „            254 

However  m,  of  more  than  twice  her  yeai-s,  ','            257 

M  her  friend's  aim  with  pale  tranquiUity.  ,'            733 

I  cannot  brook  to  see  your  beauty  m  Pelleas  "and  E.  298 

M  tho  it  be  with  spite  and  mockery  now,  „            327 

vext  his  heart.  And  m  his  rest —  "            399 
Man  w^  it  who  m  heaven's  image  in  thee  thus  ?  '   Last  Tournament  64 

Scratch  d,  bitten,  blinded,  m  me  somehow —  526 

he  knew  the  Prince  tho'  m  with  dust,  Guinevere  36 
lay  many  a  man  M  by  the  javelin,                        Batt.  of  Brunanburh  32 

My  beauty  m  by  you  ?  by  you  !  Happy  57 

Before  the  feud  of  Gods  had  m  our  peace,  Death  of  (Enone  32 

Marriage  (adj.)     In  sound  of  funeral  or  of  m  bells  ;  Gardener's  D  36 

And  when  my  m  mom  may  fall.  Talking  Oak  285 

I  can  make  no  m  present :  L.  of  Burleigh  13 
Heaven  and  earth  shall  meet  Before  you  hear  my 

m  vow.'                 ^    ,      ,  „  The  Letters  8 

Ihere  comes  a  sound  of  m  beUs.  43 
Demand  not  thou  a  m  lay  :  In  that  it  is  thy  m  day      In  Mem  "  Con  2 

silent  sapphire-spangled  m  ring  of  the  land  ?  Alavd  I  iv  6 

Now  over,  now  beneath  her  m  ring,  Gareth  and.  E.  259 

We  planted  both  together,  happy  in  our  m  morn,  Happy  14 

that  you,  that  I,  would  slight  our  m  oath  :  39 

Marriage  (s)    (See  also  Border-marriage)    laws  of  m  " 

character'dingold  Isabel  16 

ine  queen  of  m,  a  most  perfect  wife.  28 

I  have  wish'd  this  m,  night  and  day,  2)ora  21 

Her  slow  consent  and  m,  Enoch  Arden  708 

Ihere  was  an  Ayhner-Avenll  m  once.  Aylmer's  Field  49 


Marriage 


456 


Marvel 


Marriage  (s)  (continued)    m's  are  made  in  Heaven.'  Aylmer's  Field  188 

naked  m's  Flash  from  the  bridge,  „            765 

in  true  m  lies  Nor  equal,  nor  unequal :  Princess  vii  302 

neither  marry,  nor  are  given  In  m,  Merlin  and  V.  16 

And  m  with  a  princess  of  that  realm.  Last  Tournament  176 

And  sleek  his  m  over  to  the  Queen.  „              391 

Thy  m  and  mine  own,  that  I  should  suck  „              644 

eleventh  moon  After  their  m  lit  the  lover's  Bay,  Lover's  Tale  iv  28 

Once  more — a  happier  m  than  my  own !  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  78 
Grew  after  m  to  full  height  and  form  ?    Yet 

after  m,  that  mock -sister  there —  „            171 

that  had  sunn'd  The  morning  of  our  m,  „            244 

coimsel  me ;  this  m  must  not  be.  The  Flight  75 

Her  maiden  daughter's  m  ;  To  Prin.  Beatrice  10 

Love  for  the  maiden,  crown'd  with  to.  Fastness  23 

Had  ask'd  us  to  their  m,  and  to  share  The  Ring  430 

M  will  conceal  it  .  .  .  Forlorn  10 

Shame  and  to.  Shame  and  m,  „       31 

M  will  not  hide  it,  „       50 

Death  and  to.  Death  and  to  !  „       67 

The  morning  light  of  happy  to  broke  Death  of  CEnone  102 

Marriageable    prince  his  heir,  when  tall  and  to,  Gareth  and  L.  102 

Marriage-banquet    and  to  share  Their  m-b.  The  Ring  431 

Marriage-bell    (See  also  Marriage  (adj.))    Four  merry  bells, 

four  merry  m-b's  Lover's  Tale  Hi  21 

A  long  loud  crash  of  rapid  m-J's.  „            23 

the  bells.  Those  m^b's,  echoing  in  ear  and  heart —  „         iv  3 

Whether  they  were  his  lady's  m-b's,  „            11 

Soimds  happier  than  the  merriest  m-b.  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  11 

Marri^e-day    on  the  dark  night  of  our  m-d  The 

great  Tr^edian,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  232 

Marriage-hindering    filthy  Tti-h  Mammon  made  The 

harlot  Aylmer's  Field  374 

Marriage-maker    For  the  maids  and  m-m's,  Maud  I  xx  35 

Marriage-mom    And  move  me  to  my  to-to,  Move  eastward  11 

but  on  her  to-to  This  birthday.  The  Ring  275 

Marri^e-pillow    To  thy  widow'd  m-jt's,  Locksley  Hall  82 

Marriage-ring    (See  also  Marriage  (adj.))    That  ever  wore  a 

Christian  TO-r.  Romney's  R.  36 

How  bright  you  keep  your  m-r !  „           59 

Married    I  to  late,  but  I  would  wish  to  see  Dora  12 

Who  TO,  who  was  like  to  be,  Audley  Court  30 

'  And  are  you  to  yet,  Edward  Gray  ?  '  Edward  Gray  4 

Nevertheless,  know  you  that  I  am  he  Who  m —  Enoch  Arden  859 

I  TO  her  who  to  Philip  Ray.  „          860 

fur,  Sammy,  'e  to  fur  luw.  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  32 

the  King  That  mom  was  to,  Com.  of  Arthur  456 

Had  TO  Enid,  Yniol's  only  child,  Marr.  of  Geraint  4 

attracted,  won,  M,  made  one  with,  Lover's  Tale  i  134 

Harry  and  I  were  to  :  First  Quarrel  5 
we  were  m  o'  Christmas  day,  M  among  the  red 

berries,  „        39 

kept  yours  hush'd,'  I  said,  '  when  you  to  me !  „        68 

Mea  and  thy  sister  was  to.  North.  Cobbler  11 

Indissolubly  to  like  our  love ;  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  14 

an'  he's  to  another  wife,  Tomorow  49 

But  if  I  'ed  TO  tha,  Robby,  Spinster's  S's.  54 

Hed  I  TO  the  Tommies — O  Lord,  „            95 

and  the  charm  of  to  brows.'  CEnone  76 

Two  partners  of  a  to  life-  In  Mem.  xcvii  5 

Moon  of  TO  hearts,  Hear  me,  you !  The  Ring  3 

came  of  age  Or  on  the  day  you  to.  „      78 

That,  in  the  misery  of  my  to  life,  „    136 

Then  I  and  she  were  m  for  a  year,  „    283 

well,  you  know  I  to  Muriel  Erne.  „    376 

hovering  by  the  church,  where  she  Was  to  too,                             „    479 

sang  the  to  '  nos '  for  the  solitary  '  me.'  Hajimy  56 

I  love  you  more  than  when  we  to.  Rorrmey's  R.  157 

Then  'e  to  a  great  Yerl's  darter,  Church-warden,  etc.  20 

He  TO  an  heiress,  an  orphan  Charity  13 

I  had  cursed  the  woman  he  to,  „       24 

Marris  (Bessy)    See  Bessy  Marris. 

Marrow     M  of  mirth  and  laughter ;  Will  Water.  214 

Fool  to  the  midmost  to  of  his  bones,  Pelleas  and  E.  258 

He  withers  m  and  mind ;  Ancient  Sage  120 


Marry    Woo  me,  and  win  me,  and  to  me.  The  Mermaid  46 

'  I  cannot  to  Dora ;  by  my  life,  I  will  not  to  Dora.'  Dora  23 

where  the  waters  m — crost,  The  Brook  81 

'  he  that  marries  her  marries  her  name '  Aylmer's  Field  25 

twenty  boys  and  girls  should  to  on  it,  „           371 

learning  unto  them  ?    They  wish'd  to  to  ;  Princess  ii  465 

But  TO  me  out  of  hand :  Grandmother  52 

'  M  you,  WUly ! '  said  I,  „          53 

Thou'U  not  TO  for  munny —  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  11 

Noa — thou'll  TO  for  luw —  „              12 

'  Doant  thou  to  for  munny,  „              20 

thy  muther  says  thou  wants  to  to  the  lass,  „              37 

if  thou  marries  a  good  un  I'll  leave  the  land  to  thee.  „               56 

But  if  thou  marries  a  bad  un,  I'll  leave  the  land  to  Dick. —   „  58 

Ask  her  to  to  me  by  and  by  ?  Window,  Letter  6 

That  TO  with  the  virgin  heart.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  108 

but  neither  to,  nor  are  given  In  marriage,  Merlin  and  F.  15 

and  yet  one  Should  to,  or  all  the  broad  lands  Sister's  (E.  and  E.)  51 

Tha  thowt  tha  would  to  ma,  did  tha  ?  Spinster's  S's.  74 

when  she  comes  of  age,  or  when  She  marries ;  The  Ring  290 

Marrsdi^     could  not  ever  rue  his  to  me —  Dora  146 

Driving,  hurrying,  m,  burying,  Maud  II  v  12 

Mars    pointed  to  M  As  he  glow'd  like  a  ruddy  shield  „  ///  vi  13 

native  to  that  splendour  or  in  M,  Locksley  R.,  Sixty  187 

Marsh  (adj.)    my  blood  Crept  like  m  drains  thro'  all  my 

languid  limbs  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  53 

Marsh  (s)     wide  and  wild  the  waste  enormous  to.  Ode  to  Memory  101 
Gave  him  an  isle  of  w  whereon  to  build  ;  And  there 

he  built  with  wattles  from  the  to  Holy  Grail  62 

and  sliding  down  the  blacken'd  TO  Blood-red,  „      473 

The  wide-wing'd  sunset  of  the  misty  m  Last  Tournament  423 

as  from  men  secure  Amid  their  m,'es,  „            427 

That  sent  the  face  of  all  the  to  aloft  „            439 

And  pausing  at  a  hostel  in  a  to.  Lover's  Tale  iv  131 

light  That  glimmers  on  the  to  and  on  the  grave.'  The  Ring  341 

steaming  m'es  of  the  scarlet  cranes.  Prog,  of  Spring  75 

Marshall'd    slowly  went  The  to  Order  of  their  Table 

Round,  Lancelot  and  E.  1332 

Marsh-diver    m-d's,  rather,  maid.  Shall  croak  Princess  iv  123 

Marsh-marigold     the  wild  to-to  shines  like  fire  May  Queen  31 

Mart     labour,  and  the  changing  to.  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  23 

MarthK  (Martyr)    Wid  his  blessed  M's  an'  Saints ; '  Tomorrow  58 

an'  Saints  an'  M's  galore,  „        95 

Martial    Which  men  delight  in,  to  exercise  ?  Princess  Hi  216 

merrily-blowing  shrill'd  the  to  fife  ;  „         «  251 

And  let  the  mournful  to  music  blow ;  Ode  on  Well.  17 

A  TO  song  like  a  trumpet's  call !  Maud  I  v  5 

Martin    Roof-haunting  m's  warm  their  eggs :  Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  17 

The  fire  shot  up,  the  to  flew,  „            Revival  11 

A  M's  summer  of  his  faded  love,  Aylmer's  Field  560 

plaster'd  like  a  m's  nest  To  these  old  walls —  Holy  Grail  548 

Martin-haunted    almost  to  the  m-h  eaves  Aylmer's  Field  163 

Martyr    (See  also  Marthyr)    did  not  all  thy  m's  die  one 

death  ?  St.  S.  Stylites  50 

Charity  setting  the  to  aflame  ;  Fastness  9 

Martyrdom    arks  with  priceless  bones  of  to,  Balin  and  Balan  110 

Martyr-flames    to-/,  nor  trenchant  swords  Can  do  Clear-headed  friend  14 

Marvel  (s)     In  to  whence  that  glory  came  Upon  me,  Arabian  Nights  94 

The  m  of  the  everlasting  will.  The  Poet  7 

'  No  TO,  sovereign  lady :  D.  of  F.  Women  97 

The  TO  dies,  and  leaves  me  fool'd  and  trick'd,  Gareth  and  L.  1251 

and  all  Had  to  what  the  maid  might  be,  Lancelot  and  E.  728 

Some  little  of  this  to  he  too  saw.  Holy  Grail  216 

With  miracles  and  m's  like  to  these,  „          543 

Had  drawn  him  home — what  to  ?  Last  Tournament  405 

(what  TO — she  could  see) —  „              547 

What  TO  my  Camilla  told  me  all  ?  (repeat)  Lover's  Tale  i  557,  579 

In  TO  at  that  gradual  change,  „                Hi  19 

TO  among  us  that  one  should  be  left  alive,  Def.  of  Lucknow  78 

The  m  of  that  fair  new  nature —  Columbus  79 

Half  the  m's  of  my  morning,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  75 

Marvel  (verb)     '  I  to  if  my  still  delight  Palace  of  Art  190 

And  TO  what  possess'd  my  brain  ;  In  Mem.  xiv  16 

I  would  not  TO  at  either,  Maud  I  iv  40 

mazed  my  wit :  I  m  what  thou  art,  Gareth  and  L.  1170 


Marvel 


457 


Master 


Said  Guinevere,  '  We  m  at 


Marvel  (verb)  (continued) 
thee  much, 
Or  TO  how  in  English  air  My  yucca, 
Marvell'd    I  m  how  the  mind  was  brought 
so  that  all  My  brethren  to  greatly. 
.  Lancelot  m  at  the  wordless  man  ; 
Marvelling     Balin  m  oft  How  far  beyond 
gazing  at  a  star  And  to  what  it  was : 


Pelleas  and  E.  179 

To  Ulysses  20 

Two  Voices  458 

St.  S.  Stylites  69 

Lancelot  and  E.  172 

Balin  and  Balan  171 

Pelleas  and  E.  560 

Arabian  Nights  130 


MarveUons    that  m  time  To  celebrate  the  golden  prime 
Sir  Lancelot  gave  A  m  great  shriek  and  ghastly 

groan,  Lancelot  and  E.  516 
Most  TO  in  the  wars  your  own  Crimean  eyes        Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  11 

Hary  (Virgin)     But '  Ave  M,'  made  she  moan.  And 

'  Ave  M,'  night  and  morn,  Mariana  in  the  S.  9 

And  '  Ave  M,'  was  her  moan,  „             21 

Mary    (See  also  Mary  Morrison)    There's  Margaret  and  M, 

there's  Kate  May  Queen  6 

Then  Dora  went  to  M.    M  sat  And  look'd  Dora  56 

M,  for  the  sake  of  him  that's  gone,  „      62 

Then  Dora  went  to  M's  house,  „    110 

M  saw  the  boy  Was  not  with  Dora.  „    111 

But,  ilf,  let  me  live  and  work  with  you :  „    115 

Then  answer'd  M,  '  This  shall  never  be,  „    117 

And  Allan  set  him  down,  and  M  said :  „    139 

So  M  said,  and  Dora  hid  her  face  By  M.  „    156 

as  years  Went  forward,  M  took  another  mate ;  „    171 

And  home  to  M's  house  retum'd,  In  Mem.  xxxi  2 

So  close  are  we,  dear  M,  To  Mary  Boyle  59 

O  M,  M\     Vexing  you  with  words !  Romney's  R.  28 

M,  my  crayons !  if  I  can,  I  will.  „            88 

Mary  Morrison    (See  also  Mary)     A  labourer's  daughter,  M  M.        Dora  40 


Mash  (smash)     I  claums  an'  I  m'es  the  winder  hin, 

Mash'd  (smashed)     I  to  the  taables  an'  chairs, 

Mashin'  (smashing)     An'  their  m  their  toys  to  pieaces 

Mask  (s)    college  and  her  maidens,  empty  m's, 
(For  I  was  half -oblivious  of  my  to) 
Last  night,  their  m  was  patent, 
head  That  sleeps  or  wears  the  to  of  sleep, 
And  mix  with  hollow  m's  of  night ; 
The  genial  hour  with  m  and  mime  ; 
and  the  to  of  pure  Worn  by  this  court, 
misfeaturing  m  that  I  saw  so  amazed  me. 
Envy  wears  the  to  of  Love, 
dropt  the  gracious  to  of  motherhood, 

Mask  (verb)    m,  tho'  but  in  his  own  behoof, 
courtly  phrase  that  to's  his  maUce  now — 

Mask'd    '  Albeit  so  to.  Madam,  I  love  the  truth ; 
M  Uke  our  maids,  blustering  I  know  not  what 
That  TO  thee  from  men's  reverence  up. 

Mason    Cloud-towers  by  ghostly  m's  wrought. 
White  from  the  to's  hand,  (repeat) 

Masonwork    It  look'd  a  tower  of  ivied  m, 
What  rotten  piles  uphold  their  to, 

Masque    to  or  pageant  at  my  father's  court. 

Masquerade    A  feudal  knight  in  silken  to, 

Mass  (eucharist)    heard  to,  broke  fast,  and  rode  away : 
but  with  gorgeous  obsequies,  And  to, 
at  the  sacring  of  the  to  I  saw  The  holy  elements 
many's  the  time  that  I  watch'd  her  at  to 
people  'ud  see  it  that  wint  in  to  m — 

Mass  (aggregation)     In  m'es  thick  with  mUky  cones. 
Beneath  a  manelike  to  of  rolling  gold, 
pick'd  offendei-s  from  the  to  For  judgment. 
That  jeweU'd  to  of  millinery, 
collapsed  m'es  Of  thimdershaken  columns 
their  m'es  are  gapp'd  with  our  grape — 
and  with  golden  m'es  of  pear, 
Broke  thro'  the  to  from  below, 
Stagger'd  the  to  from  without, 
Of  iKJve  to  leaven  all  the  to, 

Massacre    or  to  whelm  All  of  them  in  one  to  ? 
all  the  pavement  stream'd  with  to  : 
dying  worm  in  a  world,  all  to,  murder,  and  wrong 


Owd  Rod  83 

North.  Cobbler  37 

Spinster's  S's.  88 

Princess  Hi  187 

338 

iv  326 

In  Mem.  xviii  10 

„  Ixx  4 

otIO 

Merlin  and  V.  35 

The  Wreck  117 

Locksley  H. ,  Sixty  109 

The  Ring  384 

Maud  I  vi  48 

The  Flight  30 

Princess  ii  213 

V  396 

„      vii  343 

In  Mem.  Ixx  5 

Marr.  of  Geraint  244,  408 

Merlin  and  V.  4 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  67 

Princess  i  198 

„  Pro.  234 

Lancelot  and  E.  415 

1336 

Holy  Grail  462 

Tomorrow  29 

74 

Miller's  D.  56 

Aylmer's  Field  68 

Princess  i  29 

Maud  /  vi  43 

Lover's  Tale  ii  65 

Def.  of  Lucknow  42 

V.  of  Maeldune  60 

Heavy  Brigade  29 

59 

Freedom  19 

Lucretius  207 

Last  Tournament  477 

Despair  32 


After  madness,  after  to, 
Massacred    moan  of  an  enemy  m, 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  157 
Boddicea  25 


Massacring    m  Man,  woman,  lad  and  girl — 
Massiest    on  his  right  Stood,  all  of  to  bronze : 
Massive    underpropt  a  rich  Throne  of  to  ore. 

Gray  haUs  alone  among  their  m  groves ; 

The  TO  square  of  his  heroic  breast, 

white  rock  a  chapel  and  a  hall  On  m  columns, 
Mast    surf  wind-scatter'd  over  sails  and  m's, 

'  The  high  to's  flicker'd  as  they  lay  afloat ; 

Over  TO  and  deck  were  scatter'd  Blood  and  brains 
of  men. 

and  clambering  on  a  to  In  harbour. 

Ruffle  thy  mirror'd  to. 

Keel  upward,  and  to  downward, 

Ev'n  to  the  swineherd's  malkin  in  the  m  ? 

TO  bent  and  the  ravin  wind  In  her  sail  roaring. 

to's  and  the  rigging  were  lying  over  the  side ; 

Where  they  laid  him  by  the  m, 

their  sails  and  their  m's  and  their  flags, 

co-mates  regather  round  the  to  ; 

With  stormy  light  as  on  a  to  at  sea, 

then  came  the  crash  of  the  to. 

fieiy  beech  Were  bearing  off  the  to, 
Master  (s)     church-harpies  from  the  to's  feast ; 

you,  not  you, — the  M,  Love, 

if  they  quarell'd,  Enoch  stronger-made  Was  m : 

the  TO  of  that  ship  Enoch  had  served  in, 

Become  the  to  of  a  larger  craft, 

Seldom,  but  when  he  does,  M  of  all. 

all  in  flood  And  m's  of  his  motion, 

LuciLiA,  wedded  to  Lucretius,  found  Her  ?ra  cold ; 

the  TO  took  Small  notice,  or  austerely. 

My  TO  held  That  Gods  there  are. 

And  one  the  Af ,  as  a  rogue  in  grain 

The  M  was  far  away : 

Where  lies  the  to  newly  dead ; 

And  loiter'd  in  the  to's  field, 

eft  was  of  old  the  Lord  and  M  of  Earth, 

M  of  half  a  servile  shire, 

one  Is  Merlin's  to  (so  they  call  him)  Blcys, 

but  the  scholar  ran  Before  the  to. 

For  Bleys,  our  MerUn's  to,  as  they  say, 

'  Old  M,  reverence  thine  own  beard 

Kay,  The  to  of  the  meats  and  drinks, 

No  mellow  to  of  the  meats  and  drinks  ! 

Whether  he  know  me  for  his  to  yet. 

Knowest  thou  not  me  ?  thy  m  ?     I  am  Kay. 

'  M  no  more  !  too  well  I  know  thee, 

Thou  hast  overthrown  and  slain  thy  w — 

And  doubling  all  his  m's  vice  of  pride, 

whistle  of  the  youth  who  scour'd  His  to's  aimour ; 

For  man  is  man  and  to  of  his  fate. 

'  Great  M,  do  ye  love  me  ?  ' 

0  my  M,  have  ye  found  your  voice  ? 

M,  be  not  wrathful  with  your  maid ; 

O  M,  do  ye  love  my  tender  rhyme  ?  ' 

Since  ye  seem  the  M  of  all  Art,  They  fain  would 
make  you  M  of  all  vice.' 

the  great  M  merrily  answer'd  her : 

smiling  as  a  to  smiles  at  one  That  is  not  of  his  school, 

0  M,  shall  we  call  him  overquick 
meant  to  stamp  him  with  her  m's  mark ; 
With  you  for  guide  and  to,  only  you, 
There  like  a  dog  before  his  m's  door ! 

1  knew  Of  no  more  subtle  m  under  heaven 
loved  His  to  more  than  all  on  earth  beside. 
His  TO  would  not  wait  until  he  died, 
should  this  first  to  claim  His  service. 
Obedient  to  her  second  to  now ; 
gate  Is  bolted,  and  the  w  gone. 
As  a  psalm  by  a  mighty  to 
M  scrimps  his  haggard  sempstress 
Leave  the  M  in  the  first  dark  hour 
Then  I  leave  thee  Lord  and  M, 
had  yielded  her  will  To  the  to. 
Great  the  M,  And  sweet  the  Magic, 


Gareth  and  L.  1340 

Balin  and  Balan  364 

Arabian  Nights  146 

Princess,  Con.  43 

Marr.  of  Geraint  75 

Lancelot  and  E.  406 

D.ofF.  Women  31 

113 

The  Captain  47 

Enoch  Arden  105 

In  Mem.  ix  7 

Gareth  and  L.  254 

Last  Tournament  632 

Lover's  Tale  ii  170 

The  Revenge  81 

98 

116 

Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  5 

Tiresias  114 

The  Wreck  92 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  4 

To  J.  M.  K.  3 

Gardener's  D.  172 

Enoch  Arden  31 

119 

144 

Aylmer's  Field  132 

340 

Lucretius  2 

7 

„     116 

Princess,  Pro.  116 

G.  of  Swainston  7 

In  Mem.  xx  4 

„  xxxvii  23 

Maud  I  iv  31 

X  10 

Com.  of  Arthur  153 

155 

360 

Gareth  and  L.  280 

451 

560 

721 

753 

756 

769 

Marr.  of  Geraint  195 

258 

355 

Merlin  and  V.  237 

269 

380 

399 

468 

545 

662 

724 

759 

881 

Pelleas  and  E.  263 

Guinevere  478 

Lover's  Tale  iv  257 

259 

265 

343 

Tiresias  201 

The  Wreck  53 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  221 

238 

282 

Dead  Prophet  64 

Merlin  and  the  G.  15 


Master 


458 


Maud 


Blaster  (s)  (continued)    M  whisper'd  '  Follow  the 

Gleam.'  Merlin  and  the  G.  33 

My  cuise  upon  the  M's  apothegm,  Bomney's  R.  37 

or  am  I  conscious,  more  Than  other  M's,  „           63 

Deak  M  in  our  classic  town,  To  Master  of  B.  1 

proclaimed  His  M  as  '  the  Sun  of  Righteousness,'        Akbar's  Bream  83 

Master  (verb)    m's  Time  indeed,  and  is  Eternal,  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  65 

break  it,  when  his  passion  w's  him.  Geraint  and  E.  43 

Master-bowman     the  7n-b,  he,  Would  cleave  the  mark.    In  Mem.  Ixxami  29 

Master-chord    the  m-c  Of  aU  I  felt  and  feel.  Will  Water.  27 

Masterdom    Contend  for  loving  m.  In  Mem.  cii  8 

Master'd     Not  m  by  some  modem  term ;  Love  thou  thy  land  30 

call  them  masterpieces  :  They  m  me.  Princess  i  146 

Or  m  by  the  sense  of  sport,  „      iv  156 

dream  involved  and  dazzled  down  And  m,  „          451 

such  A  friendship  as  had  m  Time  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  64 

Theere  !     I  ha'  m  them !  Spinster's  S's.  95 

Mastering     M  the  lawless  science  of  our  law,  Aylmer's  Field  435 

Master-passion     Brooded  one  m-j)  evermore,  Lover's  Tale  ii  60 

Masterpiece    (See  also  Madonna-masterpieces)    You 

scarce  can  fail  to  match  his  m.'  Gardener's  B.  31 

No  critic  I — would  call  them  m's  :  Princess  i  145 

Mastery    So  there  were  any  trial  of  m,  Gareth  and  L.  517 

Paynim  bard  Had  such  a  m  of  his  mysteiy  Last  Tournament  327 

Mast-head     like  the  mystic  fire  on  a  m-h,  Princess  iv  274 

Mastodon     nature  brings  not  back  the  M,  The  Epic  36 

Mast-throi^'d     M-t  beneath  her  shadowing  citadel  (Enone  118 

Mat     an'  tother  Tom  'ere  o'  the  m.  Spinster's  S's.  94 

Match  (an  equal)     '  but  thou  shalt  meet  thy  ?n.'  Gareth  and  L.  1024 

lighted  on  Queen  Esther,  has  her  m.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  731 

Match  (marriage  contract)    I  have  set  my  heart  upon  a  m.  Bora  14 

Such  a  m  as  this  !     Impossible,  Aylmer's  Field  314 

wealth  enough  was  theirs  For  twenty  m'es.  „            370 

Match  (verb)     scarce  can  fail  to  m  his  masterpiece.'  Gardener's  B.  31 

Will  you  m  My  Juliet  ?  „          171 

May  m  his  pains  with  mine ;  St.  S.  Stylites  139 

And  find  in  loss  a  gain  to  to  ?  In  Mem.  i  6 

Match'd    M  with  an  aged  wife,  Ulysses  3 

all  thy  passions,  m  with  mine,  Locksley  Rail  151 

Were  meUow  music  m  with  him.  In  Alem.  Ivi  24 

But  cither's  force  was  m  till  Yniol's  cry,  Alarr.  of  Geraint  570 

m  with  the  pains  Of  the  hellish  heat  Bespair  67 

life  as  m  with  ours  Were  Sun  to  spark —  Ancient  Sage  237 

Mate  (partner)    (See  also  Co-mate,  Maate)    Whence  shall  she 

take  a  fitting  m  ?  Kate  13 

She  cannot  find  a  fitting  m.  „     31 

Your  pride  is  yet  no  m  for  mine,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  11 

as  years  Went  forward,  Mary  took  another  m ;  Bora  171 

Feeling  from  her  m  the  Deed.  The  Brook  95 

Raw  from  the  prime,  and  crushing  down  his  m  ;  Princess  ii  121 

That  1  shall  be  thy  m  no  more,  In  Mem.  xli  20 

With  one  that  was  his  earliest  m ;  „      Ixiv  24 

his  good  m's  Lying  or  sitting  round  him,  Gareth  and  L.  511 

A  woman  weeping  for  her  murder'd  m  Geraint  and  E.  522 

hot  in  haste  to  join  Their  luckier  m's,  „           575 

'  Yet  weep  not  thou,  lest,  if  thy  m  return,  Last  Tournament  499 

be  his  m  hereafter  in  the  heavens  Guinevere  637 

Amid  thy  melancholy  m's  far-seen,  Lover's  Tale  i  489 

he  lived  with  a  lot  of  wild  m's,  Rizpah  29 

They  love  their  m's,  to  whom  they  sing ;  The  Flight  65 

likeness  to  the  king  Of  shadows,  thy  dark  m.  Bemeter  and  P.  17 

Is  he  sick  your  m  like  mine  ?  Happy  2 

Mate  (of  a  ship)     Now  m  is  blind  and  captain  lame.  The  Voyage  91 

For  since  the  m  had  seen  at  early  dawn  Enoch  Arden  631 

Mated     thou  art  m  with  a  clown,  Locksley  Hall  47 

M  with  a  squalid  savage —  „          177 

ere  I  m,  with  my  shambling  king.  Last  Tournament  544 

Material    could  she  climb  Beyond  her  own  m  prime  ?  Two  Voices  378 

Matin     By  some  wild  skylark's  m  song.  Miller's  B.  40 

And  if  the  m  songs,  that  woke  The  darkness  In  Mem.  Ixxvi  9 

'  Here  thy  boyhood  cung  Long  since  its  TO  song,  „          m  10 

Matin-chirp    low  mrc  hath  grown  Full  quire,  Love  and  Buty  98 

Matins    1  know  At  m  and  at  evensong,  Supp.  Confessions  99 

IbtiD-fong    (See  also  Matin)    when  the  first  m-s  hath 

waken'd  loud  Ode  to  Memory  68 


Matin-song  (continued)    And  sang  aloud  the  m-s  of 

hfe. 
Matron     Perish'd  many  a  maid  and  m, 

the  m  saw  That  hinted  love  was  only  wasted  bait. 
Matted    See  also  Close-matted,  Ivy-matted    To  purl  o'er 

m  cress  and  ribbed  sand. 
Matter  (s)     No  m  what  tQe  sketch  might  be ; 
A  OT  to  be  wept  with  tears  of  blood ! 
'  I  cannot  make  this  m,  plain, 
dealing  but  with  time.  And  he  with  m, 
A  goose — 'twas  no  great  to. 
we  sat  and  eat  And  talk'd  old  m's  over ; 
and  so  the  m  hung ;  (repeat) 
Bound  on  a  TO  he  of  life  and  death : 
Thro'  her  this  m  might  be  sifted  clean.' 
Knowledge  is  knowledge,  and  this  m  hangs : 
With  many  thousand  m's  left  to  do, 
lie  which  is  part  a  truth  is  a  harder  m  to  fight 
Till  you  should  turn  to  dearer  m's, 
Is  TO  for  a  flying  smile. 
Tho'  rapt  in  m's  dark  and  deep 
She  knows  but  m's  of  the  house. 
What  m  if  I  go  mad, 
Is  that  a  m  to  make  me  fret  ? 
but  my  belief  In  all  this  m^— 
'  I  have  quite  foregone  All  m's  of  this  world : 
Sick  ?  or  for  any  to  anger'd  at  me  ?  ' 
what  was  once  to  me  Mere  to  of  the  fancy, 
'  What  m,  so  I  help  him  back  to  life  ?  ' 
and  if  he  fly  us.  Small  m !  let  him.' 
Sir  Lancelot  told  This  to  to  the  Queen, 
What  to  ?  there  are  others  in  the  wood. 
Matter  (verb)    What  can  it  to,  Margaret, 
then  What  m's  Science  unto  men, 
'  What  can  it  to,  my  lass. 
We  die  ?  does  it  m  when  ? 
Does  it  TO  so  much  what  I  felt  ? 
Does  it  TO  how  many  they  saved  ? 
Does  it  m  so  much  whether  crown'd 
That  m's  not:  let  come  what  will; 
this  fine  Artist ' !  Fool,  What  m's  ? 
would  it  TO  so  much  if  I  came  on  the  street  ? 
Matter-moulded    In  to-to  forms  of  speech, 
Matting    conscious  of  ourselves.  Perused  the  m ; 
Mattock-harden'd    labour  and  the  m-h  hand. 
Mature  (adj.)     For  now  is  love  to  in  ear.' 

And  round  her  limbs,  m  in  womanhood ; 
Mature  (verb)     M's  the  individual  form. 
Mat-work    made  a  silken  to-w  for  her  feet ; 
Maud    of  the  singular  beauty  of  M ; 

M  with  her  venturous  climbings  and  tumbles 

M  the  delight  of  the  village, 

M  with  her  sweet  purse-mouth 

M  the  beloved  of  my  mother. 

It  will  never  be  broken  by  M, 

Ah  M,  you  milkwhite  fawn, 

M  with  her  exquisite  face, 

M  in  the  light  of  her  youth  and  her  grace. 

Whom  but  M  should  I  meet  ?  (repeat) 

If  M  were  all  that  she  seem'd,  (repeat) 

M  could  be  gracious  too,  no  doubt  To  a  lord, 

M,  M,  M,  M,  They  were  crying  and  calling. 

Where  was  ilf  ?  in  our  wood ; 

M  is  here,  here,  here  In  among  the  lilies. 

M  is  not  seventeen,  But  she  is  tall  and  stately. 

0  M  were  sure  of  heaven  If  lowliness  could  save  her. 
Where  is  M,  M,  M? 

M  is  as  true  as  If  is  sweet : 

M  to  him  is  nothing  akin : 

M  has  a  garden  of  roses  And  lilies 

M's  own  little  oak-room  (Which  M,  like  a  precious  stone 

looks  Upon  M's  own  garden-gate : 

Make  answer,  M  my  bliss, 

M  made  my  M  by  that  long  loving  kiss, 

1  trust  that  I  did  not  talk  To  gentle  M  in  our  walk 


Lover's  Tale  i  232 

Boddicea  85 

The  Ring  359 


Ode  to  Memory  59 

95 

Poland  14 

Two  Voices  343 

377 

The  Goose  10 

Audley  Court  29 

r/je5roofc]44,  148 

Sea  Breams  151 

Princess  i  80 

„  Hi  316 

„    w458 

Grandm.other  32 

To  F.  B.  Maurice  35 

In  Mem.  Ixii  12 

„       xcvii  19 

31 

Maud  I  xi  6 

„     xiii  2 

Com.  of  Arthur  184 

Balin  and  Balan  117 

276 

Merlin  and  V.  924 

Lancelot  and  E.  787 

Pelleas  and  E.  200 

Guinevere  54 

Lover's  Tale  iv  162 

Margaret  32 

In  Mem.  cxx  7 

First  Quarrel  59 

The  Revenge  88 

Bespair  4 

„    12 

,.    76 

The  Flight  103 

Romney's  R.  125 

Charity  8 

In  Mem.  xcv  46 

Princess  ii  68 

Maud  I  xviii  34 

In  Mem.  Ixxxi  4 

Pelleas  and  E.  73 

Love  thou  thy  land  40 

Holy  Grail  151 

Maud  I  i&l 


70 

71 

72 

w2 

iv57 

1)12 

15 

vi7,ll 

36,92 

a:  28 

xii  3 

5 

11 

15 

19 

27 

xiii  32 

38 

xiv  1 

9 

16 

xviii  57 

58 

xix  13 


Maud 


459 


Meadow-bases 


Maud  {continued)    And  M  too,  M  was  moved  To  speak 
of  the  mother 


Maud  I  xix  26 


35 
37 
40 
67 

82 
84 
85 

XX  22 
27 
37 
50 

xxi  4 


xxii  1, 3 
//  a  39 


When  only  M  and  the  brother  Hung  over  her  dying  bed- 
That  Af's  dark  father  and  mine  Had  bound  us 

On  the  day  when  M  was  bom ; 

Yet  M,  altho'  not  blind  To  the  faults 

Kind  to  M  ?  that  were  not  amiss. 

For  shall  not  M  have  her  will  ? 

For,  M,  so  tender  and  true, 

nothing  can  be  sweeter  Than  maiden  M  in  either. 

And  M  will  wear  her  jewels, 

every  eye  but  mine  will  glance  At  M  in  all  her  glory. 

Queen  M  in  all  her  splendour. 

Forgetful  of  M  and  me, 

My  M  has  sent  it  by  thee  (If  I  reatl  her  sweet  will  right) 

Come  into  the  garden,  M,  (repeat) 

Why  should  it  look  like  M  ? 
Maudlin-moral    empty  glass  That  makes  me  m-m.  Will  Water.  208 

Haul'd     Maim'd  me  and  m,  Last  Tournament  75 

Maurice    Come,  M,  come :  the  lawn  as  yet  To  F.  D.  Maurice  41 

Mavis     (See  also  Throsh)     The  clear-voiced  m  dwelleth,  Claribel  16 

'  What  knowest  thou  of  birds,  lark,  m,  merle,  Gareth  arid  L.  1078 

Mavors     cry  to  thee  To  kiss  thy  M,     ,  Lucretius  82 

Maw     let  the  wolves'  black  m's  ensepulchre  Balin  and  Balan  487 

Mawkin     (See  also  Malkin)     or  a  draggled  m,  thou,  Princess,  v  26 

Maxim    With  a  little  hoard  of  m's 

With  rugged  m's  hewn  from  life ; 

Gracious  lessons  thine  And  m's  of  the  mud  ! 
Mazume    See  Lari  Maxume 

May  (hawthorn-bloom)    (See  also  Maay)    thro'  damp 
holts  new-flush'd  with  m, 

lanes,  you  know,  were  white  with  m, 

but  with  plumes  that  mock'd  the  m, 

wid  the  red  o'  the  rose  an'  the  white  o'  the  M, 
May  (month)     (See  also  M^y)    Evei-y  heart  this  M 
morning  in  joyance  is  beating 

I'm  to  be  Queen  o'  the  M,  (repeat) 


Locksley  Hall  94 
Ode  on  Well.  184 
Merlin  and  V.  49 


My  life  is  full  19 
MUler's  D.  130 

Guinevere  22 
Tomorrow  31 


All  Things  will  Die  6 

May  Queen  4,  8,  12,  16,  20,  24, 

28,  32,  36,  40,  44 

Last  M  we  made  a  crown  of  flowers :  May  Queen  N.  Y's.  E.  9 

Beneath  the  hawthorn  on  the  green  they 

made  me  Queen  of  M ; 
and  M  from  verge  to  verge,  And  M  with  me  from 

head  to  heel. 
(For  those  old  M's  had  thrice  the  life  of  these,) 
he  touch'd  his  one-and-twentieth  M 
(It  might  be  M  or  April,  he  forgot.  The  last  of 

April  or  the  first  of  M) 
temper  amorous,  as  the  first  of  M, 
murmur'd  that  their  M  Was  passing : 
tho'  it  was  the  middle  of  M. 
Cuck-oo  ! '  was  ever  a  M  so  fine  ? 
And  glad  at  heart  from  M  to  M  : 
clothed  their  branchy  bowers  With  fifty  M's, 
In  the  happy  morning  of  life  and  of  M, 
Among  the  flowers,  in  M,  with  Guinevere. 
Far  shone  the  fields  of  M  thro'  open  door, 
The  sacred  altar  blossom'd  white  with  M, 
for  the  world  is  white  with  M  ; 
'  Blow,  for  our  Sun  is  mighty  in  his  M ! 
nightingale,  full-toned  in  middle  M. 
wild-wood  hyacinth  and  the  bloom  of  M. 
They  might  have  cropt  the  myriad  flower  of  M, 
glittering  like  M  sunshine  on  M  leaves 
the  mid  might  and  flourish  of  his  M, 
an'  all  as  merry  as  M — 
long  ago.  One  bright  M  morning  in  a  world  of 

song, 
vague  love-longings,  the  bright  M, 
Thoughts  of  the  breezes  of  M 
shall  we  find  a  changeless  M  ? 
For  Naples  which  we  only  left  m.  M? 
glidest  thou  from  March  to  M, 
When  I  was  in  my  June,  you  in  yom*  M, 
Prophet  of  the  M  time, 
display  A  tunic  white  as  M ! 


10 

Gardener's  D.  80 
84 
Enoch  Arden  57 

The  Brook  151 

Princess  i  2 

„   m463 

Grandmother  34 

Window,  Ay  IQ 

In  Mem.  xxii  8 

„       Ixxvi  14 

Maud  I  vl 

Com.  of  Arthur  452 

460 

461 

482 

497 

Balin  and  Balan  213 

271 

577 

Merlin  and  V.  88 

Lancelot  and  E.  554 

First  Quarrel  40 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  82 

128 

Def.  of  Lucknow  83 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  156 

The  Ring  58 

Prog,  of  Spring  109 

Roses  on  the  T.  2 

The  Snowdrop  7 

Prog,  of  Spring  65 


May  (month)  (continued)   For  have  the  far-off  hymns  of  M,  To  Master  of  B.  10 
and  it  laugh'd  like  a  dawn  in  M.  Bandit's  Death  20 

May  (makes)    — an  ass  as  near  as  m's  nowt —  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  39 

May-blossom     a  brow  M-h,  and  cheek  of  apple-blossom,    Gareth  and  L  589 
and  like  M-h's  in  mid  autumn —  The  Ring  255 

Maydew     In  the  M's  of  childhood,  Lover's  Tale  i  188 

Mayfly    The  M  is  torn  by  the  swallow,  Maud  I  iv  23 

Maying    See  A-maying 

May  Lilian    (See  also  Lilian)     Prythee  weep,  M  L !  (repeat)     Lilian  19, 25 
May-music     when  they  utter  forth  M-m  Gareth  and  L.  108O 

May-pole     And  we  danced  about  the  m-p  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  11 


Lover's  Tale  i  318 

Guinevere  388 

Gareth  and  L.  657 

Vision  of  Sin  31 

Princess  iv  261 

In  Alem.  cxv  2 

Vision  of  Sin  195 

Clear-headed  friend  28 
Gareth  and  L.  1170 
Pelleas  and  E.  525 

In  Mem.  xlv  6 

Day-Dm.,  Moral  9 

In  Mem.  xxviii  6 

.    c7 

„  ciii  21 

Lancelot  and  E.  106 


May-sweet    charged  the  winds  With  spiced  M-s's 

Maytime    (for  the  time  Was  m,  and  as  yet  no  sin 

May-white    pride,  wrath  Slew  the  M-w : 

Maze     gauzes,  golden  hazes,  liquid  m's, 
To  thrid  the  musky-circled  m's. 
Now  burgeons  eveiy  m  of  quick 

Mazed     '  Thou  art  m,  the  night  is  long, 

heaven's  m  signs  stood  still  In  the  dim  tract  of 

Penuel. 
but,  being  knave,  Hast  m  my  wit : 
Or  art  thou  m  with  dreams  ? 

Mazing    See  Maazin' 

Me     And  learns  the  use  of  '  I,'  and  '  m,' 

Mead     But  any  man  that  walks  the  m. 
From  far  and  near,  on  m  and  moor. 
Or  simple  stile  from  m  to  m. 
And  on  by  many  a  level  m, 
Than  of  the  myriad  cricket  of  the  m. 

Meadow  (adj.)     and  fall  before  Her  feet  on  the  m  grass,  Maud  /  «  26 

Two  forks  are  fixt  into  the  m  ground,  Marr.  of  Geraint  482 

Then,  moving  downward  to  the  m  ground,  Geraint  and  E.  204 

delight  To  roll  himself  in  m  grass  Romney's  R.  14 

Meadow  (S)    (See  also  Midder)    Thro'  quiet  m's  round  the  mill,  Miller's  D.  98 

vale  And  m,  set  with  slender  galingale ;  Lotos-Eaters  23 

reach'd  a  m  slanting  to  the  North ;  Gardener's  D.  108 

sweep  Of  m  smooth  from  aftermath  Audley  Court  14 

How  fresh  the  m's  look  Above  the  river,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  1 

A  sign  betwixt  the  m  and  the  cloud,  St.  S.  Stylites  14 

Faint  murmui's  from  the  m's  come,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  6 

And  dewy  Northern  m's  green.  The  Voyage  36 

daughter  of  our  m's,  yet  not  coarse ;  The  Brook  69 

ghost  of  one  who  bore  your  name  About  these  m's,  „        220 

the  dim  m  toward  his  treasure-trove,  Aylmer's  Field  531 

where  it  dash'd  the  reddening  m,  Lucretius  49 

'  AU  among  the  m's,  the  clover  and  the  clematis,  City  Child  9 
Oh,  the  woods  and  the  m's.                                  Window,  Marr.  Mom.  5 

M's  in  which  we  met !  „                    8 

I  come.  By  m  and  stile  and  wood,  „                   14 

Over  the  m's  and  stiles,  „                  22 

over  brake  and  bloom  And  m.  In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  4 

By  m's  breathing  of  the  past,  „             xcix  7 

I  smeU  the  m  in  the  street ;  „            cxix  4 

voice  by  the  cedar  tree  In  the  m  under  the  HaU !  Maud  I  v  2 

move  to  the  m  and  fall  before  Her  feet  on  the  meadow  grass,    „  25 

For  her  feet  have  touch'd  the  m's  „     xii  23 

From  the  lake  to  the  m  and  on  to  the  wood,  „  xxii  37 

From  the  m  your  walks  have  left  so  sweet  „          39 

She  is  walking  in  the  m,  „  II  iv  37 

She  is  singing  in  the  m  „          40 

Down  to  the  m  where  the  jousts  were  held,  Marr.  of  Geraint  537 

up  the  vale  of  Usk,  By  the  flat  m,  „              832 

a  m  gemlike  chased  In  the  brown  wild,  Geraint  and  E.  198 

grass  There  growing  longest  by  the  m's  edge,  „              257 
blossom-dust  of  those  Deep  m's  we  had  traversed.      Merlin  and  V.  283 

The  green  light  from  the  m's  underneath  Lancelot  and  E.  408 

in  the  rn's  tremulous  aspen-trees  And  poplars  „              410 

reach'd  the  lists  By  Camelot  in  the  m,  „              429 

Over  all  the  m  baked  and  bare.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  8 

Over  all  the  m's  drowning  flowers,  „              21 

Simimers  of  the  snakeless  m.  To  Virgil  19 

forehead  vapour-swathed  In  m's  ever  green ;  Freedom  8 

A  thousand  squares  of  corn  and  m.  The  Ring  149 

my  far  m  zoned  with  airy  mom ;  Prog,  of  Spring  69 

Meadow-bases    From  level  m-b  of  deep  grass  Palace  of  Art  7 


Meadow-crake 


460 


Measured 


Meadow-crake     the  m-c  Grate  her  harsh  kindred  Princess  iv  124 

Meadow  d    See  Deep-meadow'd 

Meadow-grass    (See  also  Meadow  (adj.))    come  and  go, 

mother,  upon  the  m-g,  May  Queen  33 

Across  the  silent  seeded  m-g  Pelleas  and  E.  561 

Meadow-ledges    m-l  midway  down  Hang  rich  in  flowei-s,  CEnone  6 

Meadow-sweet    waist-deep  in  m-s.  The  Brook  118 

Meadow-trenches    by  the  m-t  blow  the  faint  sweet 

cuckoo-flowers ;  May  Queen  30 

Meadowy    soft  wind  blowing  over  m  holms  And  aldere,      Edwin  Morris  95 

Drew  in  the  dewy  m  morning-breath  Of  England,  Enoch  Arden  660 
rividet  that  swerves  To  left  and  right  thro'  m  curves.         In  Mem.  c  15 

Her  pendent  hands,  and  narrow  m  face  Aylmer's  Field  813 

I  was  changed  to  wan  And  m,  Holy  Grail  572 

Meal  (ground  com)    Made  misty  with  the  floating  m.  Miller's  D.  104 

With  some  pretext  of  flneness  in  the  m  Enoch  Arden  341 

Who  live  on  milk  and  m.  and  grass ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  13 

Meal  (repast)    (See  also  Meal)    sweetest  m  she  makes 

On  the  first-born  Vision  of  Sin  145 

scarce  a  coin  to  buy  a  m  withal,  Columbus  169 

Meal  (repast)     an'  taakes  their  regular  m's.  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  46 

it's  them  as  niver  knaws  wheer  a  m's  to  be  'ad.  „                47 

Meal-sacks    The  m-s  on  the  whiten'd  floor.  Miller's  D.  101 

Mealy-mouth'd     nursed  by  m-m  philanthropies.  The  Brook  94 

Mean  (adj.)      weep  for  a  time  so  sordid  and  m,  Maud  I  v  VJ 

since  the  proud  man  often  is  the  m,  Marr.  of  Geraint  449 

thought  it  never  yet  had  look'd  so  m.  „              610 

M  knights,  to  whom  the  moving  of  my  sword  Holy  Grail  790 

that  would  sound  so  m  That  all  the  dead,  Eomney's  R.  131 

Mean  (s)     debtless  competence,  golden  m ;  Fastness  24 

Mean  (verb)    (See  also  Manes,  Mean  Means)    another  which 

you  had,  I  m  of  verse  The  Efic  26 

For  they  know  not  what  they  m.  Vision  of  Sin  126 

and  m  Vileness,  we  are  grown  so  proud —  Aylmer's  Field  755 

Whether  I  m  this  day  to  end  myself,  Lucretius  146 

'  Tears,  idle  tears,  I  know  not  what  they  m.  Princess  iv  39 

I  m  your  grandfather,  Annie :  Grandmother  23 

my  noations,  Sammy,  wheerby  I  m's  to  stick ;  iV.  Farmer,  N.  S.  57 

The  spirit  does  but  m  the  breath :  In  Mem.  Ivi  7 

her  own  rose-garden.  And  m  to  linger  in  it  Maud  7  a;ar  42 

'  What  m's  the  timiult  in  the  town  ?  '  Marr.  of  Geraint  259 

They  understand  :  nay;  I  do  not  m  blood :  Geraint  and  E.  338 

were  all  as  tame,  I  w,  as  noble,  Merlin  and  V.  608 

the  good  king  m's  to  blind  himself,  „              783 

I  do  not  m  the  force  alone —  Lancelot  and  E.  471 

Nay,  I  m  nothing :  so  then,  get  you  gone,  „              776 

What  might  she  m  by  that  ?  „              834 

He  m's  me  I'm  sure  to  be  happy  Rizpah  76 

I  think  that  you  m  to  be  kind,  „        81 

show  In  some  fifth  Act  what  this  wild  Drama  m's.  The  Play  4 

only  the  Devil  can  tell  what  he  m's.  Riflemen  form  !  25 

Mein  (verb)    she  didn't  not  solidly  m  I  wur  gawin'  Owd  Rod.  71 

Mefin'd  (meant)     An'  I  niver  knaw'd  whot  a  m  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  19 

an'  I  w  to  'a  stubb'd  it  at  fall,  Done  it  ta-year  I  m,  „               41 

Meanest  (adj.)     Better  to  me  the  m  weed  That  blows  upon  its 

mountain,  Amphion  93 

'  Thro'  slander,  m  spawn  of  Hell —  The  Letters  33 

put  on  thy  worst  and  m  dress  And  ride  with  me.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  130 

Put  on  your  worst  and  m  dress,'  „              848 

Meanest  (s)     m  having  power  upon  the  highest.  Merlin  and  V.  195 

Meaning  (part.)     life  He  gave  me,  m  to  be  rid  of  it.  Geraint  and  E.  853 

711  by  it  To  keep  the  list  low  and  pretenders  back.  Merlin  and  V.  591 
(.)/  the  print  that  you  gave  us.                               In  the  Child.  Hasp.  51 

Mftaning  (s)     So  was  their  m  to  her  words.  The  Poet  53 
Like  a  tale  of  little  m  tho'  the  words                     Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  119 

0  take  the  m,  Lord  :  St.  S.  Stylites  21 
A  m  suited  to  his  mind.  Day-I)m.,  Moral  12 
To  search  a  m  for  the  song,  „  L' Envoi  35 
And,  if  you  find  a  m  there,  „  Ep.  2 
Nor  the  m  can  divine,  L.  of  Burleigh  54 
That  was  nothing  to  her  :  No  m  there  :  Enoch  Arden  499 
Being  other — since  we  learnt  our  m  here,  Princess  Hi  222 
there's  a  downright  honest  m  in  her ;  „  v  280 
Her  secret  m  in  her  deeds,  /n  Mem.  Iv  10 

1  will  not  ask  your  m  in  it :  Geraint  and  E.  743 


Meaning  (s)  (continued)     this,  indeed,  her  voice  And  vi.     To  the  Queen  ii  20 

Now  guess'd  a  hidden  m  in  his  arms,  Lancelot  and  E.  17 

He  thinking  that  he  read  her  m  there,  „              86 

That  have  no  m  half  a  league  away  :  Holy  Grail  556 

while  they  rode,  the  m  in  his  eyes,  Pelleas  and  E.  109 

Her  words  did  of  their  m  borrow  sound.  Lovers  Tale  i  568 

until  The  m  of  the  letters  shot  into  My  brain  ;  „              m  8 

He  knew  the  m  of  the  whisper  now,  „            iv  43 

■    to  seek  The  m's  ambush'd  Tiresias  5 

Meaningless    drown'd  in  the  deeps  of  a  m  Past  ?  Vastness  34 

Meanness    sense  Of  m  in  her  unresisting  life.  Aylmer's  Field  801 

Means     Or  m  to  pay  the  voice  who  best  could  tell  Enoch  Arden  266 

The  first,  a  gentleman  of  broken  m  Princess  i  53 

spirit  of  murder  works  in  the  very  m  of  life,  Maud  I  i  40 
following  with  a  costrel  bore  The  m  of  goodly 

welcome,  Marr.  of  Geraint  387 

Because  my  m  were  somewhat  broken  into  „            455 

Being  but  ampler  m  to  serve  mankind.  Merlin  and  V.  489 

should  strike  upon  a  sudden  m  To  dig,  „             659 

Means     m's  fur  to  maake  'is  owd  aage  Owd  Rod  3 

if  iver  tha  m's  to  git  'igher,  Church-warden,  etc.  45 

Meant     (See  also  Mean'd)     We  met,  but  only  m  to  part.  The  Letters  12 

He  never  m  us  anything  but  good.  Enoch  Arden  887 
you  find  That  you  m  nothing — us  indeed  you 

know  That  you  m  nothing.  Aylmer's  Field  313 

1  should  find  he  jn  me  well ;  Sea  Dreams  153 
he  m,  he  said  he  m.  Perhaps  he  m,  or  partly  m, 

you  well.'  „          178 

'  Ay,  but  1  m  not  thee  ;  I  m  not  her,  Lucretius  85 

and  m  Surely  to  lead  my  Memmius  in  a  train  „         118 

M?     I  m?     1  have  fogotten  what  1  m:  „         121 

That  she  but  m  to  win  him  back,  „        279 

alien  lips.  And  knew  not  what  they  m  ;  Princess  iv  120 

And  vacant  chaff  well  m  for  grain.  In  Mem.  vi  4 
She  m  to  weave  me  a  snare  Of  some  coquettish  deceit,       Maud  I  vi  25 

Knew  that  the  death-white  curtain  ?»  but  sleep,  „        xiv  37 

Ask'd  yet  once  more  what  m  the  hubbub  here  ?  Marr.  of  Geraint  264 

To  learn  what  Arthur  m  by  courtesy,  Balin  and  Balan  158 

m  to  eat  her  up  in  that  wild  wood  Merlin  and  V.  260 

m  to  stamp  him  with  her  master's  mark ;  „            759 

m  once  more  perchance  to  tourney  in  it.  Lancelot  and  E.  810 

rough  sickness  w,  but  what  this  m  „            888 

(He  m  to  break  the  passion  in  her)  „          1079 

But  when  I  thought  he  m  To  crush  me.  Holy  Grail  415 

But  heaven  had  m  it  for  a  sunny  one  :  „           706 

spake  the  King :  I  knew  not  all  he  m.'  „          920 

'  The  simple,  fearful  child  M  nothing,  Guinevere  370 

Our  general  mother  m  for  me  alone.  Lover's  Tale  i  245 

and  m  to  rest  an  hour  ;  „        iv  133 

I  didn't  know  well  what  I  m.  First  Quarrel  83 

If  a  curse  m  ought,  I  would  curse  Despair  64 
m  us  to  be  mightier  by  and  by,                               Locksley  H.,  Sixty  209 

Those  gray  heads.  What  m  they  Demeter  and  P.  130 

Muriel  claim'd  and  opea'd  what  I  m  For  Miriam,  The  Ring  242 

And  I  m  to  make  you  jealous.  Happy  67 

you  knew  that  he  m  to  betray  me —  Charity  12 

Measure  (s)    (See  also  Slow-measure)    hearts  of  sahent 

springs  Keep  ?/i  Adeline  27 
I  crouch'd  on  one  that  rose  Twenty  by  m ;  St.  S.  Stylites  89 
fresh  to  men.  And  wanton  without  m  ;  Amphion  58 
Tread  a  m  on  the  stones.  Vision  of  Sin  180 
As  meted  by  his  m  of  himself,  Aylmer's  Field  316 
The  highest  is  the  m  of  the  man.  Princess  ii  157 
rich  VirgiUan  rustic  m  Of  Lari  Maxume,  The  Daisy  75 
draw  The  deepest  m  from  the  chords  :  In  Mem.  xlviii  12 
by  the  m  of  my  grief  I  leave  thy  greatness  „  Ixxv  3 
God,  the  m  of  my  hate  for  Mark  Is  as  the  m  Last  Tournament  537 
how  should  Earthly  m  mete  The  Heavenly- 
unmeasured  Lover's  Tale  i  473 
Wielder  of  the  stateliest  m  ever  moulded  To  Virgil  39 

Measure  (verb)     m  time  by  yon  slow  light,  St.  S.  Stylites  94 

in  the  flame  that  m's  Time  !  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  8 

Measured    How  many  m  words  adore  The  full-flowing 

harmony  Elednore  45 

With  m  footfall  firm  and  mild,  Two  Voices  413 


I 


Measured 


461 


Meet 


Measured  {contimied)     An  echo  from  a  m  strain,  Miller's  D.  66 

hear  These  m  words,  my  work  of  yestemiom.  Golden  Year  21 

A  use  in  m  language  lies  ;  In  Mem.  v  6 

The  m  pulse  of  racing  oars  Among  the  willows  ;  „  Ixxxvii  10 

Kun  out  your  m  arcs,  and  lead  The  closing  cycle  „          cv  27 

three  paces  m  from  the  mound,  Princess  v  1 

Measureless    honey  of  poison-flowers  and  all  the  m  ill.  Mavd  I  iv  56 

For  years,  a  m  iU,  „    //  U  49 

Measuring    JEonian  music  m  out  The  steps  In  Mem.  xcv  41 

Oft  in  mid-banquet  m  with  his  eyes  Pelleas  and  E.  150 

Meat     ("See  also  Meat)     Yea  ev'n  of  wretched  m  and  drink,       Mavd  I  xv8 


In  her  foul  den,  there  at  their  m  would  growl. 
King  Made  feast  for,  saying,  as  they  sat  at  m, 
hire  thyself  to  serve  for  m's  and  drinks 
grant  me  to  serve  For  m  and  drink 
Kay,  The  master  of  the  m's  and  drinks. 
No  mellow  master  of  the  m's  and  drinks  ! 
mighty  thro'  thy  m's  and  drinks  (repeat) 
except,  belike,  To  garnish  m's  with  ? 
Where  bread  and  baken  m's  and  good  red  wine 
Sir  Lancelot,  is  hard  by,  with  m's  and  drinks 
sit  with  knife  in  m  and  wine  in  horn  ! 
with  m's  and  vintage  of  their  best 
where  the  m's  became  As  wormwood, 
w.  Wine,  wine, — and  I  will  love  thee 
had  comforted  the  blood  With  m's  and  wines. 
Had  whatsoever  m  he  long'd  for  served 
our  lover  seldom  spoke,  Scarce  touch'd  the  m's ; 
Or  mine  to  give  him  m, 
Me&t    or  a  mossel  o'  m  when  it  beant  too  dear. 
Mechanic  (adj.)    The  long  m  pacings  to  and  fro. 
The  sad  m  exercise. 


Co7n.  of  Arthur  30 
247 

Gareth  and  L.  153 

445 

451 

560 

,.  650,  862 

1070 

1190 

1276 

Merlin  and  V.  694 

Lancelot  and  E.  266 

743 

Last  Tournament  719 

725 

Guinevere  265 

Lover's  Tale  iv  226 

Voice  spake,  etc.  8 

Spinster's  S's.  109 

Love  and  Duty  17 

In  Mem.  v  7 


A  disease,  a  hard  m  ghost  That  never  came  from  on  high,    Maud  II  ii  34 


Mechanic  (s)     see  the  raw  m's  bloody  thumbs 
Meddle     and  there  was  none  to  m  with  it. 
Meddling    Some  m  rogue  has  tamper'd  with  him — 
Medicine    glass  with  httle  Margaret's  m  in  it ; 

blush  and  smile,  a  m  in  themselves 

'  The  miserable  have  no  m  But  only  Hope  !  ' 
Meditated    while  I  m  A  wind  arose  and  rush'd 
Meditating     long  and  bitterly  m, 
Meditation    In  a  silent  m, 
Meditative    With  m  gnmts  of  much  content, 
Mediterranean    About  the  soft  M  shores, 
Medley    This  were  a  m  !  we  should  have  him 
Mee&k  (meek)     I  kep'  mysen  m  as  a  lamb, 
Mee&tin'  (meeting)    An'  when  we  coom'd  into  M, 
Meed    claiming  each  This  m  of  fairest. 

The  m  of  saints,  the  white  robe  and  the  palm. 

this  was  my  m  for  all. 
Meek  (adj.)    (See  also  Maiden-meek,  Meeak,  Mock-meek) 

With  lips  depress'd  as  he  were  m, 

'  His  hps  are  very  mild  and  m  : 

And  Dora  promised,  being  m. 

maiden  of  our  century,  yet  most  m  ; 

Him,  to  her  m  and  modest  bosom  prest  In  agony, 

thought  myself  long-suffering,  m, 

m  Seem'd  the  full  hps,  and  mild  the  limiinous  eyes, 

why  come  you  so  cruelly  m, 

Tut :  he  was  tame  and  m  enow  with  me, 

and  m  withal  As  any  of  Arthur's  best, 

O  pale,  pale  face  so  sweet  and  m, 

0  somewhere,  m,  unconscious  dove. 


Walk,  to  the  Mail  75 

Gareth  and  L.  1012 

Lancelot  and  E.  128 

Sea  Dreams  142 

Princess  vii  62 

Romney's  R.  149 

Princess  i  96 

Boddicea  35 

Elednore  105 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  87 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  30 

Princess,  Pro.  237 

Church-warden,  etc.  41 

North.  Cobbler  bZ 

(Enone  87 

St.  8.  Stylites  20 

Princess  iv  302 


A  Character  25 

Two  Voices  250 

Dora  46 

The  Brook  68 

Aylmer's  Field  416 

753 

Princess  vii  225 

Maud  I  Hi  1 

Gareth  and  L.  718 

1168 

Oriana  66 

In  Mem.  vi  25 


But  answer'd  in  low  voice,  her  m  head  yet  Drooping,  Geraint  and  E.  640 

But  o'er  her  m  eyes  came  a  happy  mist 

Yet  not  so  misty  were  her  m  blue  eyes 

And  there,  poor  cousin,  with  your  m  blue  eyes. 

Ye  know  right  well,  how  m  soe'er  he  seem, 

but  the  m  maid  Sweetly  forbore  him  ever, 

So  Arthur  bad  the  m  Sir  Percivale 

M  maidens,  from  the  voices  crying  "  shame." 

an'  'e  says  to  'im,  m  as  a  mouse, 

our  darling,  our  m  little  maid  ; 

Except  his  own  m  daughter  yield  her  life, 

but  set  no  m  ones  in  their  place  ; 


769 

772 

841 

Lancelot  and  E.  155 

855 

1264 

Guinevere  672 

VUlage  Wife  63 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  28 

The  Flight  28 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  133 


Meek  (adj.)  (continued)     patient,  and  prayerful,  to, 
Pale-blooded, 

who  am  not  m,  Pale-blooded,  prayerful. 
Meek  (s)     '  The  m  shall  inherit  the  earth  ' 

Tlie  Reign  of  the  M  upon  earth. 
Meeker    M  than  any  child  to  a  rough  nurse, 

Some  m  pupil  you  must  rind. 
Meekness    Shaped  her  heart  with  woman's  w 
Meet  (adj.)     M  is  it  changes  should  control  Our  being, 

'  It  is  not  TO,  Sir  King,  to  leave  thee  thus, 

scarce  to  For  troops  of  devils, 

I  am  whole,  and  clean,  and  to  for  Heaven. 

pay  M  adoration  to  my  household  gods, 

should  pause,  as  is  most  to  for  all  ? 

M  for  the  reverence  of  the  hearth, 

surely  rest  is  to  :  '  They  rest,'  we  said. 

Becoming  as  is  to  and  fit  A  link  among  the  days, 

nor  m  To  fight  for  gentle  damsel, 

fare  is  coaree.  And  only  m  for  mowers  ;  ' 

M  is  it  the  good  King  be  not  deceived. 

'  It  is  not  TO,  Sir  King,  to  leave  thee  thus. 
Meet  (verb)     That  clothe  the  wold  and  to  the  sky  ; 

For  those  two  Ukes  might  to  and  touch. 

I  could  TO  with  her  The  Abominable, 

blessings  on  his  whole  life  long,  until  he  to  me 
there  ! 

token  when  the  night  and  morning  to  : 

Counts  nothing  that  she  m's  with  base. 

She  heard  the  torrents  to. 

In  whom  should  w  the  offices  of  all. 

Sets  out,  and  m's  a  friend  who  hails  him, 

robed  and  crown'd.  To  w  her  lord, 

airs  of  heaven  That  often  to  me  here. 

sometimes  two  would  w  in  one, 

broad  seas  swell'd  to  to  the  keel. 

To  to  and  greet  her  on  her  way  ; 

'  Cold  altar.  Heaven  and  earth  shall  m 

year  Roll'd  itself  round  again  to  to  the  day  When 
Enoch 

Stands  Philip's  faim  where  brook  and  river  m. 

Katie  never  ran  :  she  moved  To  m  me, 

Abase  those  eyes  that  ever  loved  to  to  Star-sisters 

Not  yet  endured  to  to  her  opening  eyes, 

I  fear'd  To  to  a  cold  '  We  thank  you. 

The  next,  like  fire  he  m's  the  foe, 

to  TO  us  lightly  pranced  Three  captains  out ; 

then  he  drew  Her  robe  to  to  his  hps, 

tum'd  half-round  to  Psyche  as  she  sprang  To  to  it. 

To  TO  her  Graces,  where  they  deck'd  her 

Who  lets  once  more  in  peace  the  nations  m, 

To  TO  the  sun  and  sunny  waters. 

In  middle  ocean  m's  the  surging  shock, 

and  Spirit  with  Spirit  can  m — 

Two  little  hands  that  to,  (repeat) 

In  which  we  two  were  wont  to  to, 

I  shall  know  him  when  we  to  : 

And  envying  all  that  m  him  there. 

I  seem  to  to  theii"  least  desire, 

O  teU  me  where  the  passions  to. 

And  m's  the  year,  and  gives  and  takes 

And  imto  meeting  when  we  to, 

they  TO  thy  look  And  brighten  like  the  star 

advance  To  m  and  greet  a  whiter  sun  ; 

Whom  but  Maud  should  I  to  ?  (repeat) 

She  remembers  it  now  we  to. 

To  the  woody  hollows  in  which  we  to 

When  I  was  wont  to  to  her  In  the  silent  woody  places 

In  a  moment  we  shall  to  ; 

And  the  faces  that  one  m's, 

Return,  and  to,  and  hold  him  from  our  eyes, 
'  but  thou  shalt  to  thy  match.' 
one  might  to  a  mightier  than  himself ; 
pray  That  we  may  m  the  horsemen  of  Earl  Doorm 
shadow  from  the  counter  door  Sir  Lancelot  as  to 
TO  her,  Balin  and  Balan  247 


Last  Tournament  607 

610 

The  Dreamer  2 

25 

Lancelot  and  E.  857 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  18- 

L.  of  Burleigh  71 

Love  thou  thy  land  41 

M.  d' Arthur  40 

St.  S.  Stylites  3 

213 

Ulysses  42 

Tithonus  31 

Aylmer's  Field333 

In  Mem.  xxx  18 

xl  14 

Gareth  and  L.  1176 

Geraint  and  E.  209 

Balin  and  Balan  533 

Pass,  of  Arthur  207 

L.  of  Shalott  i  3 

Two  Voices  357 

(Enone  223 

May  Queen,  Con.  14 

22 

On  a  Mourner  4 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  4 

M.  d' Arthur  125 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  42 

Godiva  78 

Sir  Galahad  64 

Will  Water.  95 

The  Voyage  \3 

Beggar  Maid  6 

The  Letters  7 

Enoch  Arden  822 

The  Brook  38 

88 

Princess  ii  427 

ivldS 

328 

583 

t)254 

ml56 

210 

vii  168 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  4 

The  Daisy  11 

Will  8 

High.  Pantheism  11 

Window,  The  Answer  1,  4 

In  Mem.  viii  10 

„  xlvii  8 

1x8 

„    Ixxxiv  17 

„    Ixxxviii  4 

„  cxvi  3 

„         cxvii  7 

Con.  30 

78 

Maud  I  vi  7,  11 

88 

„  xxii  43 

IIiv5 

39 

93 

Gareth  and  L.  429 

1024 

1350 

Geraint  and  E.  492 


Meet 


462 


Melody 


Meet  (verb)  (continued)     m's  And  dallies  with  him  in 
the  Mouth  of  Hell.' 

Moving  to  in  him  in  the  castle  court ; 

strike  spur,  suddenly  move,  M  in  the  midst, 

we  two  May  m  at  court  hereafter  : 

'  I  never  loved  him  :  an  I  m  with  him, 

I  go  in  state  to  court,  to  m  the  Queen. 

flash'd,  as  it  were,  Diamonds  to  m  them, 

let  us  m  The  morrow  morn  once  more 

she  rose  Opening  her  arms  to  m  me, 

I  -wiU  be  thine  Arthur  when  we  m.' 

if  thou  tarry  we  shall  m  again,  And  if  we  m  again, 
some  evil  chance 

to  m  And  part  for  ever. 

that  I  march  to  m  my  doom. 

We  two  may  m  before  high  God, 

and  in  myself  Death,  or  I  know  not  what  mysterious 
doom. 

In  whom  should  m  the  oflSces  of  all, 

never  more  will  m  The  sight  that  throbs 

But  I  cannot  m  them  here. 

My  friend  should  m  me  somewhere 

My  friend  should  m  me  here.     Here  is  the  copse. 

The  city  deck'd  herself  To  m  me, 

roll'd  To  m  me  long-arm'd  vines  with  grapes 

they  m  And  kindle  generous  purpose, 

their  songs,  that  m  The  morning  with  such  music, 

I  bide  no  more,  I  m  my  fate, 

'  An'  whin  will  ye  m  me  agin  ?  ' 

I'll  m  you  agin  tomorra,'  says  he, 

shure  thin  ye'll  m  me  tomorra  ?  ' 

an'  shure  he'll  m  me  agin.' 

That  ye'll  m  your  paarints  agin 

'  He  said  he  would  m  me  tomorra  !  ' 

one  of  those  I  fain  would  m  again, 

and  I  may  m  him  soon  ; 

She  always  came  to  m  me  carrying  you. 

She  came  no  more  to  m  me, 

A  clamorous  cuckoo  stoops  to  m  her  hand  ; 

that  soul  where  man  and  woman  m, 

hear  The  clash  of  tides  that  m  in  narrow 
seas. — 

Ready,  be  ready  to  m  the  storm  !  (repeat) 

All  at  all  points  thou  canst  not  m, 
Veetiiig  (part.)     Two  strangers  m  at  a  festival ; 

A  stranger  m  them  had  surely  thought 

guests  broke  in  upon  him  with  m  hands 
Meeting  (s)     (See  also  Mee&tin')    might  I  tell  of  m's,  of 
farewells — 

A  perilous  m  imder  the  tall  pines 

And  oft  at  Bible  m's,  o'er  the  rest  Arising, 

A  m  somewhere,  love  with  love. 

Their  m's  made  December  Jime 

And  unto  m  when  we  meet. 

For  the  m  of  the  morrow. 

Have  I  misleamt  our  place  of  m  ?) 

Here  we  met,  our  latest  m — 
Meg    tavern-catch  Of  Moll  and  M, 
Melancholy  (adj.)    (See  also  Humorous-melancholy) 

Her  TO  eyes  divine. 

The  mild-eyed  m  Lotos-eaters  came. 

I  used  to  walk  This  Terrace — morbid,  m  ; 
Melancholy  (s)    Your  m  sweet  and  frail 

To  the  influence  of  mild-minded  m  ; 

And  lived  a  life  of  silent  m. 

Settled  a  gentle  cloud  of  m ; 

To  beguile  her  m  ; 

that  hour  When  the  lone  hem  forgets  his  m, 

Then  fell  on  MerUn  a  great  m  ; 

For  these  have  broken  up  my  m.' 

across  him  came  a  cloud  Of  m  severe, 
■dian     M,  with  her  hand  upon  the  lock, 

'  Ah — M — you  !    You  heard  us  ?  '  and  M, 

'  Ah,  fear  me  not '  Replied  M  ; 

came  M  hitting  all  we  saw  with  shafts 


Balin  and  Balan  614 

Lancelot  and  E.  175 

457 

698 

1068 

1124 

1237 

Holy  Grail  322 

395 

Pelleas  and  E.  47 

Guinevere  89 

97 

450 

564 

575 

Pass,  of  Arthur  293 

Lover's  Tale  i  32 

The  Revenge  5 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  1 

126 

Columbus  10 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  27 

Tiresias  127 

The  Flight  65 

95 

Tomorrow  15 

16 

18 

52 

57 

80 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  22 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  48 

The  Ring  352 

„     _    385 

Prog,  of  Spring  45 

On  one  who  effec.  E.  M.  2 

Akhar's  Dream  58 
Riflemen  form  !  13,  27 
Poets  and,  Critics  7 
Circumstance  3 
Geraint  and  E.  34 
Lover's  Tale  iv  238 

Gardener's  2).  251 

Aylmer's  Field  414 

Sea  Dreams  194 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  99 

„  xcvii  11 

„  cxvii  7 

Maud  II  iv  28 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  153 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  177 

Princess  iv  158 


Mariana  in  the  S.  19 

Lotos- Eaters  27 

The  Ring  168 

Margaret  7 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  64 

Enoch  Arden  260 

Princess  iv  570 

Maud  I  XX  3 

Gareth  and  L.  1185 

Merlin  and  V.  189 

267 

Lancelot  and  E.  325 

Princess  ii  322 

330 

343 

468 


Melissa  (continued)     approach'd  M,  tinged  with  wan  from 

lack  of  sleep.  Princess  Hi  25 

'  What  pardon,  sweet  M,  for  a  blush  ?  '  ,,66 

M  shook  her  doubtful  curls,  „             75 

Shame  might  befaU  M,  knowing,  „           148 

Cyril  kept  With  Psyche,  with  M  Florian,  „          355 

The  Ulylike  M  droop'd  her  brows  ;  „      iv  161 

M  clamour'd  '  Flee  the  death  ; '  „           166 

last  of  aU,  M  :  trust  me.  Sir,  I  pitied  her.  „          230 

white  shoulder  shaken  with  her  sobs,  M  knelt ;  „          290 

Rise  !  '  and  stoop'd  to  updrag  M :  „          367 

with  her  oft,  M  came  ;  for  Blanche  had  gone,  ,.       vii  56 

Mellay     here  and  everywhere  He  rode  the  m,  .,       v  502 

Meller  (mellow)     Fine  an'  m  'e  mun  be  by  this.  North.  Cobbler  101 

Mellow  (adj.)    (See  also  Meller,  Over-mellow)    With  m 

preludes,  '  We  are  free.'  The  winds,  etc.  4 

gleams  of  m  light  Float  by  you  on  the  verge  of  night.  Margaret  30 

The  TO  ouzel  fluted  in  the  elm  ;  Gardener's  D.  94 
a  Tudor-chimnied  bulk  Of  m  brickwork  on  an  isle  of 

bowers.  Edwin  Morris  12 

Low  thunders  bring  the  m  rain.  Talking  Oak  279 
Many  a  night  I  saw  the  Pleiads,  rising  thro'  the 

TO  shade,  Locksley  Hall  9 

TO  moons  and  happy  skies,  „           159 

Till  TO  Death,  Uke  some  late  quest.  Will  Water.  239 

Then  methought  I  heard  a  w  sound.  Vision  of  Sin  14 

And  TO  metres  more  than  cent  for  cent ;  The  Brook  5 
lapt  in  wreaths  of  glo^vworm  light  The  m  breaker 

murmur'd  Ida.  Princess  iv  436 

Were  to  music  match'd  with  him.  In  Mem.  Ivi  24 

No  to  master  of  the  meats  and  drinks  !  Gareth  and  L.  560 

Won  by  the  to  voice  before  she  look'd,  Lancelot  and  E.  244 

Here  too,  all  hush'd  below  the  m  moon,  Pelleas  and  E.  424 

I  heard  that  voice, — as  m  and  deep  The  Wreck  52 

M  moon  of  heaven.  Bright  in  blue.  The  Ring  1 

The  TO  hn-lan-lone  of  evening  bells  Far — far — away  5 

Mellow  (verb)     but  as  his  brain  Began  to  m.  Princess  i  180 

Mellow-deep     Drawn  from  each  other  m-d  ;  Elednore  67 

Mellow'd  (adj.)     The  m  reflex  of  a  winter  moon  ;  Isabel  29 

then  perhaps  The  to  murmur  of  the  people's 

praise                                                                   Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  7 

Mellow'd  (verb)     And  there  he  m  all  his  heart  with  ale.  The  Brook  155 

Mellower    All  day  the  wind  breathes  low  with  m 

tone  :  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  102 

There  cannot  come  a  to  change.  In  Mem.  Ixxxi  3 
Mellowing    (See  also  Hourly-mellowing,  Slowly-mellowing) 

into  mournful  twiUght  m,  dwelt  Full  on  the  child  ;  Princess  vi  191 

And  tumbled  half  the  to  pears  !  Im  Mem.  Ixxxix  20 

Mellowness     Touch'd  by  thy  spirit's  to,  Eleanore  103 

Melodious     Ever  brightening  With  a  low  to  thunder  ;  Poet's  Mind  27 

lowly  bent  With  m  airs  lovelorn,  Adeline  55 

whose  sweet  breath  Preluded  those  to  bursts  D.  of  F.  Women  6 

rolling  thro'  the  court  A  long  to  thunder  Princess  ii  476 

shadow'd  hint  confuse  A  life  that  leads  m  days.  In  Mem.  xxxiii  8 

like  a  golden  mist  Charm'd  amid  eddies  of  to  airs,  Lover's  Tale  i  450 

Melodist    mystic  to  Who  all  but  lost  himself  Akbar's  Dream  92 

Melody     ancient  m  Of  an  inward  agony,  Claribel  6 

Filling  with  light  And  vagrant  melodies  The  Poet  17 

They  were  modulated  so  To  an  unheard  m,  Eleanore  64 

from  Memnon,  drew  Rivers  of  melodies.  Palace  of  Art  172 

Plenty  corrupts  the  to  That  made  thee  famous  The  Blackbird  15 

Wheeling  with  precipitate  paces  To  the  m,  Vision  of  Sin  38 

nerve-dissolving  to  Flutter'd  headlong  „              44 

And  chanted  a  to  loud  and  sweet.  Poet's  Song  6 

The  herald  melodies  of  spring,  In  Mem.  xxxviii  6 

M  on  branch,  and  m  in  mid  air.  Gareth  and  L.  183 

And  talk  and  minstrel  m  entertain'd.  Lancelot  and  E.  267 

half-moulder'd  chords  To  some  old  to.  Lover's  Tale  i  20 

It  makes  a  constant  bubbling  m  That  drowns  „            532 
Moving  to  TO,  Floated  The  Gleam.                            Merlin  and  the  G.  22 

Blind  to  the  magic.  And  deaf  to  the  m,  „             27 

landskip  darken'd.  The  m  deaden'd,  „              32 

Then  to  the  to,  Over  a  wilderness  Gliding,  „             36 

Then,  with  a  m  Stronger  and  statelier,  „              62 

slowly  moving  again  to  a  m  Yearningly  tender,  „             90 


Melody 

Melody  {contimied)    Gleam  ^Ting  onward,  Wed  to 
the  m, 
All  her  melodies.  All  her  harmonies 

Melon     A  raiser  of  huge  m's  and  of  pine, 

m  lay  hke  a  little  sun  on  the  tawny  sand. 
The  mango  spum  the  m  at  his  foot  ? 

Melpomene    And  my  M  replies, 

Melt    To  the  earth — until  the  ice  would  m 


463 


Mercury 


I  wish  the  snow  would  m 

And  from  it  m  the  dews  of  Paradise 

light  shall  slowly  m  In  many  streams 

I  will  m  this  marble  into  wax 

'  embrace  me,  come.  Quick  while  I  m  ; 

M's  mist-like  into  this  bright  hour, 

M  into  stars  for  the  land's  desire  ! 

And  m  the  waxen  hearts  of  men.' 

They  m  like  mist,  the  solid  lands, 

A  warmth  within  the  breast  would  m 

A  purer  sapphire  m's  into  the  sea. 

Give  me  three  days  to  m  her  fancy, 

And  m's  within  her  hand — her  hand  is  hot 

as  a  cloud  M's  into  Heaven. 

frost-bead  m's  upon  her  golden  hair  ; 


Merlin  and  the  G.  97 

To  Master  of  B.  11 

Princess,  Con.  87 

V.  of  Maeldune  57 

Akhar's  Dream  39 

In  Mem.  xxxmi  9 

Su-pp.  Confessions  81 


May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  15 

St.  S.  StylUes  210 

Golden  Year  22 

Princess  Hi  73 

„      vi  286 

„     vii  355 

W.  to  Alexandra  21 

In  Mem.  xxi  8 

„       cxxiii  7 

„      cxxiv  13 

Maud  I  xviii  52 

Pelleas  and  E.  356 

Last  Tournament  414 

Ancient  Sage  234 

Prog,  of  Spring  10 


Melted    {See  also  Half-melted)    rites  and  foi-ms  before 

Th^  hS"^  ^^^  ^^  "^^  '"°'^-  ^f''  Poet  40 

Ihe  t\vihghtwmtomom.  Dav-Dm    Deryart  ^(^ 

^nazed  and  m  all  who  listen'd  to  it :  """^^^  Snul 

Which  OT  Flonan's  fancy  as  she  hung,  Princess  iv  370 

Till  hi    Ti.^  '",^*?  ?"T  effeminacy  ?  Marr.  of  Geraint  107 

TiU  he  m  hke  a  cloud  m  the  silent  summer  heaven  ;         The  Revenge  14 

fcank  from  their  thrones,  and  to  into  teare,  Columbui  15 

Melteth    m  m  the  source  Of  these  sad  teai^.  Lover's  STi83 

Meltmg    m  the  mighty  hearts  Of  captains  D.  ^F  Warned  175 

Member  (MJ.)    {See  also  Ciomity  Member)    The  Tory 

m's  elder  son,  •'         p„We5s    Cor,   'lO 

Memmian     Beyond  the  M  naphtha-pits,  AlexaZer4 

Memmius    Surely  to  lead  my  il/  in  a  tr^n  Lu^eS  119 

Memnon    from  il/,  drew  Rivers  of  melodies.  Palc^T^f  Art  171 

.¥  smitten  with  the  morning  Sun.'  PwLLiS  116 

Memorial  (adj.)     I  seem'd  to  move  in  old  m  tilts,  "  Jjt 

Their  names.  Graven  on  m  columns,  rJV/.«V„  ^9± 

MemonaKs)     I  stored  it  full  of  rich  m :  PW^^'Hsgi 

My  sole  to  Of  Edith-no,  the  other,-  Sisters  {K^E)  107 

nSe  a  stat^v  '*  '""  ^'^^^  ''^  ®P^^"  ^""^^  196 

Memory    Thou  de^  dawn  of  ^.  (repeat)  O?;.^''^;.^?:'^'^ 

Unto  nune  inner  eye,  Divinest  M\  "    '      '  ^ 

Well  hast  thou  done,  great  artist  M  "                         on 

Makes  thy  m  confused :  "           j  ^  •       ^ 

The  m  of  the  wither'd  leaf  Two  Voices  112 

Because  my  TO  is  so  cold,  i^oicesii^ 

The  haunts  of  to  echo  not.  "          309 
must  I  be  Incompetent  of  to  :  '  For  m  dealing  but  with 

time,                                                             ^  gyg 

His  TO  scarce  can  make  me  sad.  Miller's  D  16 

foundation-stones  were  laid  Since  my  first  m  ?  '  Palace  of  Art  236 

10  muse  and  brood  and  hve  agam  m  m.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  65 

JJear  is  the  to  of  our  wedded  hves,  69 

No  m  labours  longer  from  the  deep  J),  of  f" Women  273 

His  m  long  will  hve  alone  In  all  our  hearts.  To  J  S  49 

M  standing  near  Cast  down  her  eyes,  '     '  53 

Come  Hope  and  M  spouse  and  bride,  On  a  Mourner  23 

o    .^edivere  Revolving  many  memories,  M.  d' Arthur  270 

So  blunt  in  TO,  so  old  at  heart,  Gardener's  D.  53 

And  sure  this  orbit  of  the  to  folds  74 

while  I  mused  came  M  with  sad  eyes,  "          243 

Now  the  most  blessed  to  of  mine  age.  "          279 

he  will  learn  to  slight  His  father's  to  ;  " Dora  154 

For  calmer  hours  to  M's  darkest  hold,  Z<we  and  Duty  90 

Drug  thy  rnemones,  lest  thou  learn  it,  Locksley  hJi  77 

a  thousand  memories  roU  upon  him,  Enoch  Arden  724 

Uld  and  a  mme  of  rnemones—  Aylmer's  Field  10 

leit  tneir  memories  a  world's  curse —  nga 


Memory  (continued)    From  out  a  common  vein  of  to 
Sweet  household  talk. 
Rose  from  the  distance  on  her  m, 
And  out  of  rnem^ries  of  her  kindlier  days 
brawhng  memories  all  too  free 
From  whence  clear  m  may  begin, 
To  count  their  memories  half  divine  ; 
I  hear  a  wind  Of  m  mui-muring  the  past. 
The  m  like  a  cloudless  air, 
Or  ev'n  for  intellect  to  reach  Thro'  to 
Memories  of  bridal,  or  of  birth. 
Some  gracious  m  of  my  friend  ; 

year  by  year  our  to  fades  From  aU  the  circle  of  the  hills 
In  lands  where  not  a  m  strays, 
To  whom  a  thousand  memories  call, 
My  drooping  w  will  not  shun  The  foaming  grape 
Mix  not  TO  with  doubt,  ^  ^    f 

These  to  His  Jl/— since  he  held  them  dear, 
TO  of  that  cognizance  on  shield  Weighted 
TO  of  that  token  on  the  shield  Relax'd  his  hold  • 
No  TO  in  me  lives  ; 

Vext  her  with  plaintive  memories  of  the  child  : 
Then  ran  across  her  m  the  strange  rhyme 
sweet  memories  Of  Tristram  in  that  year  he  was 

away.' 
O  sweeter  than  aU  memories  of  thee, 
pine  and  waste  in  those  sweet  memories. 
Nor  let  me  shame  my  father's  m. 
Her  TO  from  old  habit  of  the  mind  Went  slipping  back 


Princess  ii  314 

vi  112 

vii  106 

Ode  on  Well.  248 

In  Mem.  xlv  10 

xc  12 

„  xcii  8 

„         xciv  11 

„  xcv  48 

■,        xcix  15 

c4 

«23 

„  civ  10 

,.  cxi  10 

Con.  79 

Maud  II  iv  57 

Ded.  of  Idylls  1 

Balin  and  Balan  224 

369 

Holy  Grail  535 

Last  Tournament  29 

131 

579 
585 
598 
Guinevere  318 
379 


Lover's  Tale  i  36 
129 
277 
291 
333 
335 


Sir  Bedivere  Revolving  many  memories,      " '  Pass,  of  Arthur  438 

The  m's  vision  hath  a  keener  edge.  -       •     ~  -    ^ - 

gamer'd  up  Into  the  granaries  of  to— 

Doth  question'd  to  answer  not. 

Which  are  as  gems  set  in  my  m, 

A  land  of  promise,  a  land  of  to, 

milk  And  honey  of  deUcious  memories  ! 

my  name  has  been  A  hallow'd  m  like  the  names  of  old 
A  center'd,  glory-circled  to,  ' 

Ye  cannot  shape  Fancy  so  fair  as  is  this  vi. 

At  last  she  sought  out  M,  and  they  trod 

And  M  fed  the  soul  of  Love  with  tears. 

Within  the  magic  cirque  of  to. 

Which  yet  retains  a  m  of  its  youth, 

Unvenerable  will  thy  to  be  While  men 

My  memories  of  his  briefer  day 

break  thro'  clouded  memories  once  again 

A  virgin  victim  to  his  to. 

Or  is  it  some  half  to  of  a  dream  ? 

Is  TO  with  your  Marian  gone  to  rest, 
Menace    When  was  age  so  cramm'd  with  m  ? 
Menacing    beat  back  The  to  poison  of  intolerant 

priests, 
Men-at-arms    m-a-a,  A  score  with  pointed  lances 
Men-children    gauds  m-c  swarm  to  see 


Mend    {See  also  CJlump)    How  m  the  dwellings,  of  the 

poor  ; 
Mended  (adj.)    Our  m  fortunes  and  a  Prince's 

bride : 
Mended  (verb)     Robins — a  niver  to  a  fence  : 
Mene     Wrote  '  M,  to,'  and  divided  quite 
Menial    bad  his  m's  bear  him  from  the  door, 
Menceceus    M,  thou  hast  eyes,  and  I  can  hear 
Mental    Wanting  the  m  range  ; 
Mention    seal'd  book,  all  w  of  the  ring 
Mention'd    bill  I  to  half  an  hour  ago  ?  ' 
when  the  day,  that  Enoch  to,  came, 
Men-tommies    Ye  be  wiiss  nor  the  m-t. 
Merchant    As  tho'  they  brought  but  m's'  bales, 

market  frets  or  charms  The  m's  hope  no  more  • 
Merchantman    served  a  year  On  board  a  m  ' 

Mercian    Mighty  the  M,  Hard  was  his  hand-play 
Merciful    were  any  bounteous,  to,  ' 

Merciless    big  voice,  big  chest,  big  to  hands  ! 
Mercury    as  it  were  with  M's  ankle-wing, 

M  On  such  a  morning  would  have  flung  himself 


445 
548 
820 

822 

ii  159 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  66 

Tiresias  132 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  51 

Demeter  and  P.  10 

The  Ring  221 

422 

To  Mary  Boyle  13 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  108 

Akhar's  Dream  165 

Balin  and  Balan  400 

To  W.  C.  Macready  11 


To  F.  D.  Maurice  38 

Marr.  of  Geraint  718 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  50 

Palace  of  Art  227 

Lover's  Tale  iv  260 

Tiresias  90 

Merlin  and  V.  827 

The  Ring  123 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  28 

Enoch  Arden  239 

Spinster's  S's.  93 

In  Mem.  xiii  19 

Ancient  Sage  141 

En/)ch  Arden  53 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  43 

Gareth  and  L.  423 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  4 

Lucretitis  201 

Lover's  Tale  i  300 


Mercy 


464 


Merriment 


Mercy    (See  also  Marcy)    0  God  !  my  God  !  have 
m  now. 
God  in  his  m  lend  her  grace. 
He  taught  me  all  the  m, 
Have  m,  Lord,  and  take  away  my  sin. 
Have  m,  m  :  take  away  my  sin. 
Have  m,  m  !  cover  all  my  sin. 

0  m,  m  !  wash  away  my  sin. 
And  ah  God's  «i,  what  a  stroke  was  there  ! 
His  m  choked  me. 
'  Full  of  compassion  and  m,  (repeat) 

Mere  (adj.)    M  chaff  and  draff,  much  better  burnt.' 
and  this  A  m  love-poem  ! 
M  fellowship  of  sluggish  moods, 
had  the  thing  I  spake  of  been  M  gold — 
Full  cowardly,  or  by  m  unhappiness. 
Hast  overthrown  thro'  m  unhappiness), 

1  know  not,  all  thro'  m  unhappiness— 
O  Gareth — thro'  the  m  imhappiness 
And  molten  down  in  m  uxoriousness. 
Is  melted  into  m  effeminacy  ? 
whose  lightest  word  Is  m  white  truth 
a  m  child  Might  use  it  to  the  harm  of  anyone, 
what  was  once  to  me  M  matter  of  the  fancy, 
What  I  by  w  mischance  have  brought,  my 

shield. 

M  want  of  gold — 
Mere  (s)    (See  also  Mountain-mere)    curls  And 
ripples  of  an  inland  m  ? 

Crimsons  over  an  inland  m. 

When  m's  begin  to  uncongeal. 

And  fling  him  far  into  the  middle  m  : 

Or  voice,  or  else  a  motion  of  the  m. 

and  paced  beside  the  m, 

and  drew  him  under  in  the  m.  (repeat) 

And  on  the  m  the  wailing  died  away. 

in  the  deeps  whereof  a  m,  Round  as  the  red  eye 

'  They  have  bound  my  lord  to  cast  him  in  the  m. 

and  there,  blackshadow'd  nigh  the  m, 

then  in  the  m  beside  Tumbled  it ;  oilily  bubbled 
the  m. 

flickering  in  a  grimly  light  Dance  on  the  m. 

in  her  arms  She  bare  me,  pacing  on  the 
dusky  m. 

And  fling  me  deep  in  that  forgotten  m. 

Wealthy  with  wandering  lines  of  mount  and  m, 

and  in  the  sleepy  m  below  Blood-red. 

hundred  m's  About  it,  as  the  water  Moab  saw 

star  in  heaven,  a  star  within  the  m  ! 

O  ay — the  winds  that  move  the  m.' 

And  fling  him  far  into  the  middle  m  : 

Or  voice,  or  else  a  motion  of  the  m. 

and  paced  beside  the  m, 

and  drew  him  under  in  the  m.  (repeat) 

And  on  the  m  the  wailing  died  away. 

heron  rises  from  his  watch  beside  the  m. 
Merely     Nor  in  a  m  selfish  cause — 
Merge    m '  he  said  '  in  form  and  gloss 
Merged     But  long  disquiet  m  in  rest. 

fulfill'd  itself,  M  in  completion  ? 

in  this  glory  I  had  m  The  other, 
Merides    '  Phosfhohus,'  then  '  M  ' — '  Hespebus  ' — 
Merit  (S)     For  m  lives  from  man  to  man. 

Who  makes  by  force  his  m  known 

That  were  a  public  m,  far, 

You  found  some  m  in  my  rhymes, 
Merit  (verb)    is  it  I  can  have  done  to  m  this  ? 

may  m  well  Your  term  of  overstrain'd. 
Merk  (mark)     fur  the  m's  o'  thy  shou'der  yit ; 
Merle    (See  also  Blackbird)     lark,  mavis,  m,  Linnet  ? 
Merlin    M  sware  that  I  should  come  again 

and  one  Is  M,  the  wise  man 

one  Is  M's  master  (so  they  call  him)  Bleys, 
wrote  All  things  and  whatsoever  M  did 
Deliver'd  at  a  secret  postern-gate  To  M, 


Suvf.  Confess    ns  1 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  53 

May  Queen,  Con.  17 

St.  S.  Stylites  8 

45 

84 

120 

Lancelot  and  E.  24 

Guinevere  616 

Rizpah  62,  63 

The  Epic  40 

Princess  iv  126 

In  Mem.  xxxv  21 

Gareth  and  L.  66 

768 

1059 

1234 

„       .1237 

Marr.  of  Geraint  60 

107 

Balin  and  Balan  518 

Merlin  and  V.  684 

924 

Lancelot  and  E.  189 
The  Ring  428 

Swpf.  Confessions  131 

Eleanore  42 

Two  Voices  407 

M.  d' Arthur  37 

77 

83 

„  146,161 

272 

Gareth  and  L.  798 

803 


up 


815 

827 


Lancelot  and  E.  1411 

1426 

Holy  Grail  252 

475 

Last  Tournament  481 

732 

738 

Pass,  of  Arthur  205 

245 

251 

„    814,329 

440 

Happy  3 

Two  Voices  147 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  41 

Two  Voices  2-^^ 

Gardener's  D.  239 

Lover's  Tale  i  506 

Gareth  and  L.  1204 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  35 

„  Ixiv  9 

Maud  II V  91 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  b6 

St.  S.  StyliUs  134 

Merlin  arid  V.  534 

Owd  Boa  90 

Gareth  and  L.  1078 

M.  d' Arthur  23 

Com.  of  Arthur  151 

153 

157 

214 


Merlin  (continued)     Wherefore  M  took  the  child, 

And  gave  him  to  Sir  Anton, 
when  M  (for  his  hour  had  come)  Brought  Arthur 
Yet  M  thro'  his  craft, 
'  And  there  I  saw  mage  M, 
old  M  counsell'd  him,  '  Take  thou  and  strike  ! 
Or  brought  by  M,  who,  they  say, 
For  Bleys,  our  M's  master,  as  they  say. 
And  M  ever  served  about  the  King, 
and  rode  to  M's  feet,  Who  stoop  t  and  caught 
I  met  M,  and  ask'd  him  if  these  things  were  tiiith — 
'  So  M  riddling  anger'd  me  ; 
and  M  in  our  time  Hath  spoken  also, 
drave  the  heathen  hence  by  sorcery  And  M's 

glamour.' 
To  plunge  old  M  in  the  Arabian  sea  ; 
Which  AI's  hand,  the  Mage  at  Arthur's  court. 
At  M's  feet  the  wily  Vivien  lay. 
M,  who  knew  the  range  of  all  their  arts. 
Then  fell  on  M  a  great  melancholy  ; 
And  then  she  follow'd  M  all  the  way. 
For  M  once  had  told  her  of  a  charm, 
'  O  M,  do  ye  love  me  ?  '  (repeat) 
M  lock'd  his  hand  in  hers  and  said,  (repeat) 
O,  M,  teach  it  me. 

0  M,  may  this  earth,  if  ever  I, 
M  loosed  his  hand  from  hers  and  said, 
M  look'd  and  half  beheved  her  tme. 
Then  answer'd  M  careless  of  her  words  : 
Then  answer'd  M,  '  Nay,  I  know  the  tale. 
M  answer'd,  '  Overquick  art  thou  To  catch 
M  answer'd  careless  of  her  charge, 
M  to  his  own  heart,  loathing,  said  : 
Vivien,  deeming  M  overborne  By  instance, 
'  0  M,  tho'  you  do  not  love  me,  save, 
her  M,  the  one  passionate  love  Of  her  whole  life  ; 
M,  overtalk'd  and  overworn.  Had  yielded, 
Fashion'd  by  M  ere  he  past  away, 
M  call'd  it  '  The  Siege  perilous,' 
M  sat  In  his  own  chair,  and  so  was  lost ; 
Galahad,  when  he  heard  of  M's  doom,  Cried, 
Galahad  would  sit  down  in  M's  chair. 
Which  M  built  for  Arthur  long  ago  ! 
Climbs  to  the  mighty  hall  that  M  built, 
mould  Of  Arthur,  made  by  M,  with  a  crown, 
In  horror  lest  the  work  by  M  wrought. 
And  from  the  statue  M  moulded  for  us 
that  Gawain  flred  The  hall  of  M, 
saw  High  up  in  heaven  the  hall  that  M  built, 
ran  across  her  memory  the  strange  rhyme  Of 

bygone  M, 
M's  mystic  babble  about  his  end  Amazed  me  ; 
M  sware  that  I  should  come  again 
/  am  M,  And  /  am  dying,  7  am  M  Who  follow 

The  Gleam. 
Mermaid     With  the  m's  in  and  out  of  the  rocks. 
Who  would  be  A  m  fair, 

1  would  be  a  m  fair  ; 
Mermaiden    He  heard  a  fierce  m  cry. 

And  in  the  light  the  white  m  swam, 
Merman    Who  would  be  A  m  bold, 
I  would  be  a  m  bold, 
And  all  the  mermen  under  the  sea 
and  play  With  the  mermen  in  and  out  of  the  rocks ; 
bold  merry  mermen  under  the  sea  ; 


Com.  of  Arthur  221 
228 
234 
280 
306 
347 
360 
365 
384 
398 
412 
419 

Gareth  and  L.  205 
211 
306 
Merlin  and  V.  5 
167 
189 
203 
205 
„  235,  236 
„  290,  470 
331 
345 
356 
400 
700 
713 
726 
754 
790 
800 
944 
955 
965 
Holy  GraU  168 
172 
175 
177 
181 
226 
231 
239 
259 
732 
Pelleas  and  E.  518 
553 

Last  Tournament  132 

670 

Pass,  of  Arthur  191 

Merlin  and  the  G.  7 
The  Merman  12 
The  Mermaid  2 
9 
Sailor  Boy  6 
Guinevere  245 
The  Merman  2 
8 
The  Mermaid  28 
34 
42 
Merrier    The  m,  prettier,  wittier,  as  they  talk.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  286 

Merriest    Of  all  the  glad  New-year,  mother,  the 

maddest  m  day  ;  May  Queen  3 

To-morrow  'ill  be  of  all  the  year  the  maddest  m  day,  „  43 

Sounds  happier  than  the  m  marriage-bell.  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  11 

Merrily    Chasing  each  other  m.  The  Merman  20 

All  night,  m,  m  ;  (repeat)  „      27,  30 

We  would  Uve  m,  m.  „  40 

Merrily-blowing    m-h  shrill'd  the  martial  fife  ;  Princess  v  251 

Merriment    With  m  of  kingly  pride,  Arabian  Nights  151 


Merriment 


465 


Meteorite 


And  moved  to  w  at  a  passing 


Merriment  (continued) 

jest. 
Merry    The  m  glees  are  still ; 
Ye  m  souls,  farewell. 
When  m  milkmaids  click  the  latch, 
In  the  heart  of  the  garden  the  m  bird  chants. 
For  m  brides  are  we  : 
Of  the  bold  m  mermen  under  the  sea  ; 
How  the  m  bluebell  rings 
A  m  boy  in  sun  and  shade  ?    'Aw  boy  they  call'd 

him  then, 
I  said,  '  O  Soul,  make  m  and  carouse. 
Last  May  we  made  a  crown  of  flowers  :  we 

had  a  m  day  ;  May  Queen,  N. 


Sisters  E.  and  E.  121 

All  Things  will  Die  23 

36 

The  Owl  i  8 

Poet's  Mind  22 

Sea- Fairies  33 

The  Mermaid  42 

Adeline  34 


Two  Voices  321 
Palace  of  Art  3 


Y's.  E.  9 


But  all  his  m  quips  are  o'er. 

Hark,  my  m  comrades  call  me. 

And  many  a  m  wind  was  borne, 

He  laugh'd  a  laugh  of  m  scorn  : 

We  knew  the  m  world  was  roimd, 

W'e  know  the  m  world  is  round. 

And  make  him  m,  when  I  come  home  again. 

How  m  they  are  down  yonder  in  the  wood. 

Clash,  ye  hells,  in  the  m  March  air  ! 

Be  m,  all  birds,  to-day.  Be  m  on  earth  as  you  never 
were  m  before.  Be  m  in  heaven,  O  larks,  and  far 
away.  And  m  for  ever  and  ever,  and  one  day 
more. 

O  m  the  linnet  and  dove, 

0  m  my  heart,  you  have  gotten  the  wings  of  love, 
The  m  m  bells  of  Yule. 
A  m  song  we  sang  with  him  Last  year : 
Many  a  m  face  Salutes  them — 
Go  in  and  out  as  if  at  w  play, 

1  -ear.  Fantastically  m  ; 
'  Full  m  am  I  to  find  my  goodly  knave 
And  we  wiU  make  us  m  as  we  may. 
Then,  when  the  Prince  was  m,  ask'd  Limours 
And  m  maidens  in  it ; 
And  blew  my  m  maidens  all  about 
should  ye  try  him  with  a  m  one  To  find  his  mettle. 
Open  gates,  And  I  will  make  you  m.' 
Down  in  the  cellars  m  bloated  things 
m  linnet  knew  me.  The  squirrel  knew  me. 
Four  m  bells,  four  m  marriage-beUs, 
Married  among  the  red  berries,  an'  all  as  m  as  May 
Lest  the  false  faith  make  m  over  them  ! 
in  many  a  m  tale  That  shook  our  sides — 

Merrymaking    our  friends  are  all  forsaking  The  wine 


n.  of  the  0.  Year  29 

Locksley  Hall  145 

Day- Dm.,  Depart.  14 

Lady  Clare  81 

The  Voyage  7 

95 

Enoch  Arden  199 

389 

W.  to  Alexandra  18 


Window,  Ay  1 

13 

15 

In  Mem.  xxviii  20 

„  XXX 15 

„  Con.  66 

Maud  I  xviii  31 

„        xix  101 

Gareth  and  L.  1291 

Marr.  of  Geraint  373 

Geraint  and  E.  297 

Holy  Grail  746 

748 

Pelleas  and  E.  198 

374 

Guinevere  267 

Lover's  Tale  ii  15 

Hi  21 

-    First  Quarrel  40 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  82 

91 


and  the  m. 
no  more  of  mirth  Is  here  or  m-m  sound, 
while  the  rest  were  loud  in  m-m, 
Mersey     New-comers  from  the  M, 
Meseems    '  M,  that  here  is  much  discovu-tesy. 
Is  all  as  good,  m,  as  any  knight 
My  quest,  m,  is  here. 
Mesh     In  m's  of  the  jasmine  and  the  rose  : 
Message    with  His  m  ringing  in  thine  ears. 
They  flash'd  a  saucy  m  to  and  fro 
I  brought  a  m  here  from  Lady  Blanche.' 
He  ceasing,  came  a  m  from  the  Head. 
With  m  and  defiance,  went  and  came  ; 
in  this  Book,  little  Annie,  the  m  is  one  of  Peace. 
Some  dolorous  m  knit  below 
TiU  on  mine  ear  this  m  falls, 
Yniol  with  that  hard  m  went ; 
Save  that  he  sware  me  to  a  m,  saying, 
And  waited  for  her  m,  piece  by  piece 
Messenger    Then  came  in  hall  the  m  of  Mark, 
Messuage     lands  in  Kent  and  m's  in  York, 
Met     (See  also  Chance-met)  '  And  statesmen  at  her 
council  m 
talking  to  himself,  fii-st  m  his  sight : 
Methought  that  I  had  often  m  with  you. 
They  m  with  two  so  full  and  bright— 
And  angels  rising  and  descending  m 


All  Things  will  Die  19 

Deserted  House  14 

Enoch  Arden  77 

Edwin  Morris  10 

Gareth  and  L.  853 

1017 

Balin  and  Balan  552 

Princess  i  219 

Aylmer's  Field  666 

Princess,  Pro.  78 

ii  319 

,,  lii  168 

V  370 

Grandmother  96 

In  Mem.  xii  3 

„  Ixxxv  18 

Marr.  of  Geraint  763 

Last  Tournament  76 

Lover's  Tale  iv  146 

Gareth  and  L.  384 

Edwin  Morris  127 

To  the  Queen  29 
Love  and  Death  6 

Sonnet  To 13 

Miller's  D.  86 
Palace  of  Art  143 


Met  ^continued)    When  thus  he  m  his  mother's  view,       L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  34 

(j'or  as  once  we  m  Unheedful,  Gardener's  D.  265 

I  TO  my  lady  once :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  48 
those  moments  when  we  m.  The  crown  of  all,  we 

m  to  part  no  more.'  Edwin  Morris  69 

we  TO ;  one  hour  I  had,  no  more :  „          104 

I  am  a  part  of  all  that  I  have  m ;  Ulysses  18 

M  me  walking  on  yonder  way,  Edward  Gray  2 
then  we  to  in  wrath  and  wrong.  We  m,  but  only 

meant  to  part.  The  Letters  11 

He  TO  the  baUiff  at  the  Golden  Fleece,  The  Brook  146 

Yet  once  by  night  again  the  lovers  to,  Aylmer's  Field  413 

I  TO  him  suddenly  in  the  street,  Sea  Dreams  146 

Here  Cyril  to  us.     A  little  shy  at  first.  Princess  v  44 
a  lie  which  is  all  a  lie  may  be  to  and  fought  with 

outright.  Grandmother  31 
Meadows  in  which  we  to  !                                       Window,  Marr.  Morn.  8 

And  ever  m  him  on  his  way  In  Mem.  vi  22 

And  all  we  to  was  fair  and  good,  „    xxiii  17 

If  all  was  good  and  fair  we  to,  „       xxiv  5 

From  every  house  the  neighbours  to,  „      xxxi  9 

I  m  with  scoffs,  I  to  with  scorns  „       Ixix  9 

For  other  friends  that  once  I  to  ;  „  Ixxxv  58 

Where  God  and  Nature  to  in  light ;  „       cxi  20 

Unpalsied  when  he  to  with  Death,  „  cxxviii  2 

I  TO  her  to-day  with  her  brother,  Maud  I  iv  14 

To  entangle  me  when  we  to,  „          vi  28 

blush'd  To  find  they  were  to  by  my  own ;  „         viii  7 

Alas  for  her  that  to  me,  „     //  iv  75 

I  TO  Merlin,  and  ask'd  hira  if  these  things  Com.  of  A  rthur  397 

knave,  anon  thou  shalt  be  to  with,  knave,  Gareth  and  L.  779 

Whom  Gareth  to  midstream :  no  room  was  there  „          1041 
Gareth  overthrew  him,  lighted,  drew,  There  to  him 

drawn,  „          1122 

when  they  to  In  twos  and  threes,  Marr.  of  Geraint  56 

then  descending  to  them  at  the  gates,  „              833 

M  his  f uU  frown  timidly  firm,  Geraint  and  E.  71 
m  The  scomer  in  the  castle  court,                              Balin  and  Balan  386 

Had  TO  her,  Vivien,  being  greeted  fair.  Merlin  and  V.  155 

would  often  when  they  to  Sigh  fuUy,  „             181 

here  we  to,  some  ten  or  twelve  of  us,  „             407 

two  brothers,  one  a  king,  had  to  And  fought  Lancelot  and  E  39 

And  oft  they  to  among  the  garden  yews,  „            645 

They  to,  and  Lancelot  kneeling  utter'd,  „          1179 

He  raised  his  head,  their  eyes  to  and  hers  fell,  „          1312 

M  foreheads  all  along  the  street  Holy  Grail  344 

'  And  then,  with  small  adventure  to,  „          660 

And  steps  that  to  the  breaker !  „         816 

The  men  who  to  him  rounded  on  their  heels  Pelleas  and  E.  142 

he  TO  A  cripple,  one  that  held  a  hand  for  alms —  „              541 
Flush'd,  started,  to  him  at  the  doors.                       Last  Tournament  512 

But  barken !  have  ye  met  him  ?  „              529 

And  still  they  to  and  to.     Again  she  said,  Guinevere  94 

Passion-pale  they  to  And  greeted.  „        99 

We  turn'd ;  our  eyes  m  :  hers  were  bright,  Lover's  Tale  i  441 

Parted  a  little  ere  they  to  the  floor,  „         iv  215 

their  breath  to  us  out  on  the  seas,  V.  of  Maeldune  37 

'  would  God,  we  had  never  to  ! '  The  Wreck  102 
Here  we  to,  our  latest  meeting —                             Locksley  H.,  Sixty  177 

Like  a  clown — by  chance  he  to  me —  „              256 

century's  three  strong  eights  have  to  To  Ulysses  7 

For  ere  she  left  us,  when  we  to.  To  Mary  Boyle  15 

Have  I  not  to  you  somewhere  long  ago  ?  Romney's  R.  18 

when  I  TO  you  first — when  he  brought  you ! —  Charity  9 

Metal     Bright  to  all  without  alloy.  Rosalind  21 

Metaphysics    she  cried,  '  you  love  The  to  !  Princess  Hi  300 

Mete     And  to  the  bounds  of  hate  and  love —  Two  Voices  135 

I  TO  and  dole  Unequal  laws  unto  a  savage  race,  Ulysses  3 

Meted     As  to  by  his  measure  of  himself,  Aylmer's  Field  316 

Meteor     Some  bearded  m,  trailing  light,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  26 

The  TO  of  a  splendid  season,  she,  Aylmer's  Field  205 

like  a  new-f  all'n  to  on  the  grass,  Princess  vi  135 

Now  slides  the  silent  to  on,  „      vii  184 

While  thou,  a  to  of  the  sepulchre.  Lover's  Tale  i  99 
Meteorite    and  your  fiery  clash  of  m's  ?                            God  and  the  Univ.  3 

2  G 


Methinks 


466 


Mightiest 


Methinks     m  Some  ruth  is  mine  for  thee. 

VI  There  rides  no  knight,  not  Lancelot, 
Method    M's  of  transplanting  trees 
Methody-man     '  Thou'rt  but  a  M-m,'  says  Parson, 
Methought    yet  to  I  saw  the  Holy  GraU, 

m  The  cloud  was  rifted  by  a  purer  gleam 
Metre     meUow  m's  more  than  cent  for  cent ; 

All  composed  in  a  m  of  Catullus, 

So  fantastical  is  the  dainty  m. 
Metrification    Thro'  this  to  of  Catullus, 
Metropolis    And  gray  m  of  the  North. 

Above  some  fair  m,  earth-shock'd, — 
Mettle    It  stirr'd  the  old  wife's  to  : 

try  him  with  a  merry  one  To  find  his  to,  good : 
Mew  (sea-gull)     Here  it  is  only  the  to  that  wails; 

and  wail'd  about  \vith  m's. 
Mew  (cry  of  a  cat)    M !  m ! — Bess  wi'  the  milk ! 
Mewin  (mewing)    what  art'a  to  at,  Steevie  ? 
Mexico    lavish  growths  of  southern  M. 
Michael     But  M  trampling  Satan ; 
Michael  Angelo    The  bar  of  M  A. 
Michaelmas    for  Squoire  coom  M  thutty  year. 
Microcosm    holy  secrets  of  this  m. 


Gareth  and  L.  894 

1181 

Amfhion  79 

North.  Cobbler  89 

Holy  Grail  846 

Alcbar's  Dream  11 

The  Brook  5 

Hendecasyllabics  4 

"„  10 

The  Daisy  104 

Lover's  Tale  ii  62 

The  Goose  26 

PelleasandE.  199 

Sea-Fairies  19 

Princess  iv  282 

Spinster's  S's.  113 

41 

Mine  be  thy  strength  14 

Last  Tournament  673 

In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  40 

N.  Farmer,  0.  8.  48 

Princess  Hi  313 


Mid    birds  made  Melody  on  branch,  and  melody  in 

m  air.  Gareth  and  L.  183 

In  the  m  might  and  flourish  of  his  May,  Lancelot  and  E.  554 

and  started  thro'  m.  air  Bearing  an  eagle's  nest :  Last  Tournament  14 

life  Being  smitten  in  m  heaven  with  mortal  cold  „             27 

as  a  stream  that  spouting  from  a  cliff  Fails  in  to  air,  Guinevere  609 

Like  some  conjectured  planet  in  to  heaven  Pnw.  Beatrice  20 

and  like  May-blossoms  in  to  autumn —  The  Ring  255 

Yet  you  in  your  m  manhood —  B.ajypy  47 

Mid-banqnet    in  m-b  measuring  with  his  eyes  Pelleas  and  E.  150 

Mid-channel     in  the  gurgling  wave  M-c.  Princess  iv  188 

Mid-day     Jet  upward  thro'  the  m-d  blossom.  Demeter  and  P.  47 

Midder  (meadow)    an'  the  m's  as  white,  Owd  Rod  31 

Middle  (adj.)     The  living  airs  of  to  night  Died  round  Arabian  Nights  69 

ShriU  music  reach'd  them  on  the  to  sea.  Sea-Fairies  6 

And  fling  him  far  into  the  m  mere  :  M.  d' Arthur  37 

But  Enoch  shunn'd  the  to  walk  and  stole  Up  by 

the  wall,  Enoch  Arden  738 

but  in  the  to  aisle  Reel'd,  Aylmer's  Field  818 

As  in  some  mystic  to  state  I  lay ;  Princess  vi  18 

In  TO  ocean  meets  the  surging  shock,  Will  8 

The  nightingale,  full-toned  in  m  May,  Balin  and  Balan  213 

As  the  poach'd  filth  that  floods  the  to  street,  Merlin  and  V.  798 

all  in  to  street  the  Queen  Who  rode  by  Lancelot,  Holy  Grail  355 

And  fling  him  far  into  the  to  mere :  Pass,  of  Arthur  205 

Who  toils  across  the  to  moonlit  nights.  Loner's  Tale  i  138 

with  such  sudden  deluges  of  light  Into  the  to  summer ;  „           316 

All  the  west  And  ev'n  unto  the  to  south  was  ribb'd  „           415 

And  slowly  pacing  to  the  m  hall,  „       iv  306 

For  the  Spring  and  the  m  Siunmer  sat  V.  of  Maeldune  38 

Middle  (s)     It  was  the  to  of  the  day.  Dying  Swan  8 

And  in  the  m,  of  the  green  salt  sea  Mine  be  the  strength  7 

one  great  dwelling  in  the  to  of  it ;  Holy  Grail  574 

All  in  the  m  of  the  rising  moon :  „         636 
Middle-day    each  was  as  dry  as  a  cricket,  with  thirst  in 

the  m^d  heat.  V.  of  Maeldune  50 

Mid-dome    day  hung  From  his  m-d  in  Heaven's  Lover's  Tale  i  66 

Mid-forest     that  low  lodge  retum'd,  M-f,  Last  Tournament  489 

black  brooks  Of  the  m  heard  me —  Lover's  Tale  ii  12 

Mid-beaven     Grown  on  a  magic  oak-tree  in  mrh,  Last  Tournament  745 

the  sloping  seas  Hung  in  m-h.  Lover's  Tale  i  4 
Midmost  (adj.)    in  the  m  heart  of  grief  Thy  passion 

clasps  a  secret  joy :  In  Mem.  Ixxxviii  1 
for  save  he  be  Fool  to  the  m  marrow  of  his  bones,      Pelleas  and  E.  258 

Hidmost  (s)     the  to  and  the  highest  Was  Arac :  Princess  v  256 

And  at  the  m  charging.  Prince  Geraint  Geraint  and  E.  85 

Midnight    At  m  the  moon  cometh,  Claribel  13 

Ask  the  sea  At  TO,  Supp.  Confessions  126 

At  TO  the  cock  was  crowing,  Oriana  12 

When  TO  bells  cease  ringing  suddenly,  D.  of  F.  Women  247 

rode  till  to  when  the  college  Hghts  Princess  i  207 

sitting  on  a  hill  Sees  the  midsummer,  to,  „     iv  575 


Midnight  (continued)    but  rode  Ere  to  to  her  walls. 
As  rain  of  the  midsiunmer  m  soft, 
burnt  at  to,  found  at  mom, 
M — in  no  midsummer  tune  The  breakers 
M — and  joyless  June  gone  by, 
And  thro'  this  to  breaks  the  sun 
forth  again  Among  the  wail  of  to  winds. 
On  a  to  in  midwinter  when  all  but  the  winds 
Midnight-maned    their  arch'd  necks,  to-to, 
Midnoon     It  was  the  deep  to  : 
Mid-November     For  as  a  leaf  in  m-N  is 
Mid-ocean    Than  labour  in  the  deep  m-o, 
whatever  tempest  mars  M-o,  spare  thee, 
one  A  vessel  in  m-o,  her  heaved  prow  Clambering, 
Mid-October    To  what  it  was  in  m-0, 
Midriff    Sprang  from  the  to  of  a  prostrate  king — 

shake  The  m  of  despair  with  laughter. 
Mid-sickness    great  knight  in  this  m-s  made 
Midst    Over  the  throne  In  the  m  of  the  hall ; 

And  every  maige  enclosing  in  the  m 
Midstream    Whom  Gareth  met  to  : 
Midsimmier    sitting  on  a  hill  Sees  the  to,  midnight, 
As  rain  of  the  to  midnight  soft, 
in  the  gleam  of  those  m-s  dawns, 
as  when  an  hour  of  cold  Falls  on  the  mountain 

in  TO  snows, 
Here  one,  black,  mute  to  night  I  sat.  Lonely, 
Midnight — in  no  to  tune  The  breakers  lash 
the  shores : 
Mid-thigh-deep    m-t-d  in  bulrushes  and  reed, 
Mid-warmth    In  the  m-w  of  welcome  and  grasp  t 
Midway    m  down  the  side  of  that  long  hall 
Midwinter  (adj.)     And  on  this  white  to  day — 
Midwinter  (s)     On  a  midnight  in  to  when  all  but  the 

winds 
Mien    One  her  dark  hair  and  lovesome  to. 
then  Kay,  a  man  of  to  Wan-saUow 
But  scarce  of  such  majestic  m 
Might     (See  also  Mowt)     Losing  his  fire  and  active  m 
with  increasing  to  doth  forward  flee 
O  Love,  Love,  Love  !  O  withering  to  ! 
Dehver  not  the  tasks  of  to  To  weakness, 
smote  on  aU  the  chords  with  to  ; 
Toward  that  great  year  of  equal  m's  and  rights. 
That  I  could  wing  my  will  with  w 
with  TO  To  scale  the  heaven's  highest  height. 
Her  hkewise  would  I  worship  an  I  to 


Pelleas  and  E.  413 

Lover's  Tale  i  722 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  97 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  1 

9 

21 

Demeter  and  P.  59 

The  Dreamer  1 

Deineter  and  P.  46 

(EnoneQ2 

Marr.  of  Geraint  611 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  127 

In  Mem.  xvii  14 

Lover's  Tale  ii  169 

Marr.  of  Geraint  612  ^ 

Aylmer's  Field  16 

Princess  i  201 

Lancelot  and  E.  878 

The  Mermaid  22 

Merlin  and  V.  670 

Gareth  and  L.  1041 

Princess  iv  575 

Lover's  Tale  i  722 

The  Ring  183 

Last  Tournament  228 
612  i 

Pref.  Poem.  Broth.  S.  1 
Gareth  and  L.  810 
Geraint  and  E.  280 
Gareth  and  L.  404  j 
To  Master  of  B.  9  | 

The  Dreainer  1 
Beggar  Maid  12  ] 
Gareth  and  L.  452 
Freedom  6  ! 
Elednore  104  j 
Mine  be  the  strength  5  ] 
Fatima  1  i 
Love  thou  thy  land  13 
Locksley  Hall  33 1 
Princess  iv  74 1 
In  Mem.  xli  10 1 
„  cviii  6  I 

Balin  and  Balan  185 
376 
Lancelot  and  E.  554 
Pelleas  and  E.  151 
Last  Tournament  198 
Marr.  of  Geraint  95 


TO,  Name,  manhood,  and  a  grace,  but  scantly  thine. 

In  the  mid  to  and  flourish  of  his  May, 

His  neighbour's  make  and  to  : 

Strength  of  heart  And  m  of  limb, 
Mightful     And  watch  his  to  hand  striking  great  blows 
M^htier      Because  things  seen  are  to  than  things 

heard,  Enoch  Arden  766 

And  TO  of  his  hands  with  every  blow.  Com.  of  Arthur  110 

Wave  after  wave,  each  to  than  the  last,  ,,  379 

Blow,  for  our  Sun  is  to  day  by  day  !  „ 

So  make  thy  manhood  to  day  by  day ;  Gareth  and  L.  92 

we  be  TO  men  than  all  In  Arthur's  court ;  Balin  and  Balan  33 

Did  TO  deeds  than  ekewise  he  had  done.  Last  Tournament  680 

One  twofold  to  than  the  other  was,  Lover's  Tale  i  211 

Never  with  to  glory  than  when  we  had  rear'd  thee 
on  high  Def.  of  Lucknow  3 

Has  breathed  a  race  of  m  mountaineers.  Montenegro  14 

Only  That  which  made  us,  meant  us  to  be  to 
by  and  by. 

When  one  might  meet  a  to  than  himself  ; 

withheld  His  older  and  his  to  from  the  lists, 
Mightiest     But  Arthur  to  on  the  battle-field — 

and  a  fourth  And  of  that  four  the  to, 

Then  others,  following  these  my  m  knights, 

Spain  then  the  to,  wealthiest  realm  on  earth. 

His  isle,  the  to  Ocean-power  on  earth, 

we  needs  must  learn  Which  is  our  to, 

Thou  TO  and  thou  purest  among  men  ! ' 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  209 

Gareth  and  L.  1350 

Pelleas  and  E.  160 

Gareth  and  L.  496 

615 

Guinevere  489 

Columbus  205 

The  Fleet  6 

Lancelot  and  E.  65 

Holy  GraU  426 


Mightiest 


467 


MiU 


Itiest  (cmitinued)     '  my  friend,  Our  hi,  hath  this 

Quest  avaii'd  for  thee  ?  '    '  Our  m  ! '   answer'd 

Lancelot,  with  a  groan  ;  Holy  Grail  765 

Yea,  made  our  m  madder  than  our  least.  „          863 

my  right  arm  The  m  of  my  knights,  Guinevere  430 

llty     As  when  a  m  people  rejoice  With  shawms,  Joying  Swan  31 

What  time  the  m  moon  was  gathering  light  Love  and  Death  1 

A  m  silver  bugle  hmig,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  16 

row  Of  cloist«rs,  branch'd  like  m  woods.  Palace  of  Art  26 

melting  the  m  hearts  Of  captains  and  of  kings.  D.  of  F.  Women  175 
fragments  of  her  tn  voice  Came  i*olling  on  the 

wind.  Of  old  sat  Freedom  7 

New  Majesties  of  m  States —  Love  thou  thy  land  60 

Where  lay  the  w  bones  of  ancient  men,  M.  d' Arthur  47 

Stored  in  some  treasure-house  of  m  kings,  „          101 

^Vhich  was  an  image  of  the  m  world  ;  „          235 

Let  this  avail,  just,  dreadful,  m  Grod,  St.  S.  Stylites  9 
For  the  m  wind  arises,  roaring  seaward,  and  I  go.        Lockdey  HaU  194 

To  sleep  thro'  terms  of  m  wars.  Day- Dm.,  L' Envoi  9 

The  tavern-hours  of  m  wits —  Will  Water.  191 

and  Hoods  Of  m  mouth,  we  scudded  fast,  The  Voyage  46 

Soft  fruitage,  m  nuts,  and  nourishing  roots  ;  Enoch  Arden  555 

And  m  courteous  in  the  main —  Aylmer's  Field  121 

^\Tiich  things  appear  the  work  of  m  Gods.  Lucretius  102 

I  wish  I  were  Some  m  poetess.  Princess,  Pro.  132 

Then  those  eight  m  daughters  of  the  plough  „              iv  550 

To  the  noise  of  the  mourning  of  a  m  nation.  Ode  on  Well.  4 

-1/  Seaman,  this  is  he  Was  great  by  land  „          83 

M  Seaman,  tender  and  true,  „         134 

thou  shalt  be  the  m  one  yet !  Boddicea  40 

When  TO  Love  would  cleave  in  twain  In  Mem.  xxv  10 

To  mould  a  m  state's  decrees,  „           Ixiv  11 

The  m  hopes  that  make  us  men.  „        Ixxxv  60 

I  seem  as  nothing  in  the  m  world,  Com.  of  Arthur  87 

Seeing  the  m  swarm  about  their  walls,  „            200 

'  Blow,  for  our  Sun  is  m  in  his  May  !  „            497 

And  all  these  four  be  fools,  but  m  men,  Gareih  and  L.  643 

And  m  thro'  thy  meats  and  drinks  am  I,  (repeat)  „    650,  862 

For  here  be  m  men  to  joust  with,  „            880 

four  strokes  they  struck  With  sword,  and  these  were  m ;       „  1043 


he  loosed  a  m  puise,  Hung  at  his  belt. 
But  like  a  m  patron,  satisfied 
letting  her  left  hand  Droop  from  his  m  shoulder. 
To  cross  om*  in  Lancelot  in  his  loves  ! 
His  battle-writhen  arms  and  to  hands 
'  O  brother,  had  you  known  our  m  hall. 
Climbs  to  the  m  hall  that  Merlin  built. 
•  And  I  rode  on  and  found  a  m  hill. 
Where  lay  the  m  bones  of  ancient  men. 
Stored  in  some  treasure-house  of  m  kings. 
Framing  the  m  landscape  to  the  west, 
shower'd  down  Rays  of  a  m  circle, 
in  gyres  Rapid  and  vast,  of  hissing  spray  wind-driven 
And  bearing  high  in  arms  the  m  babe, 
And  the  men  that  were  m  of  tongue 
M  the  Mercian,  Hard  was  his  hand-play, 
Thrice  from  the  dyke  he  sent  his  m  shout, 
as  mellow  and  deep  As  a  psalm  by  a  m  master 
We  founded  many  a  m  state  ; 
M  the  Wizard  Who  found  me  at  sunrise 
Bards,  that  the  m  Muses  have  raised 
You,  the  TO,  the  Fortunate, 
For  thio'  the  Magic  Of  Him  the  M, 
'•:  Jlighty-moath'd    O  m-m  inventor  of  harmonies. 
Mignonette    A  long  green  box  of  m, 
parlour-window  and  the  box  of  m, 


But  miss'd  the  m  of  Vivian-place, 
I  Jlilan    0  M,  0  the  chanting  quires, 
I  Jlild    Throbbing  in  m  imrest  holds  him  beneath 
beheld  Thy  m  deep  eyes  upraised, 
I  have  not  lack'd  thy  m  reproof, 
'  His  Ups  are  very  m  and  meek  : 
With  measured  footfall  firm  and  to. 
She  with  a  subtle  smile  in  her  m  eyes, 
one  band  grasp'd  The  m  bull's  golden  horn. 


Geraint  and  E.  22 

644 

.yerlin  and  V.  243 

Lancelot  and  E.  688 

812 

Holy  Grail  225 

231 

421 

Pass,  of  Arthur  215 

269 

Lover's  Tale  i  406 

418 

m197 

w295 

V.  of  Maeldune  23 

Bait,  of  Brunanburh  43 

Achilles  over  the  T.  30 

The  Wreck  53 

Hands  all  Round  30 

Merlin  and  the  G.W. 

Parnassus  2 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  55 

Merlin  and  the  G.  114 

Milton  1 

MUler's  D.  83 

May  Queen,  .Y.  Y's.  E.48 


Princess,  Pro.  165 

The  Daisy  57 

Leonine  Eleg.  12 

Supp.  Confessions  74 

My  life  is  full  4 

Two  Voices  250 

413 

CEnone  184 

Palace  of  Art  120 


Mild  (continued)     Beside  him  Shakespeare  bland  and  m ;    Palace  of  Art  134 

by  slow  prudence  to  make  in  A  rugged  people,  Ulysses  36 

My  mother  was  as  to  as  any  saint.  Princess  i  22 

meek  Seem'd  the  full  Ups,  and  to  the  luminous  eyes,  „    vii  226 

The  stem  were  m  when  thou  wert  by,  In  Mem.  ex  9 

A  higher  hand  must  make  her  to,  „      cxiv  17 

With  difiBculty  in  in  obedience  Driving  them  on  :  Geraint  and  E.  104 

Fearing  the  to  face  of  the  blameless  King,  ,,            812 

■Who,  with  TO  heat  of  holy  oratory,  „             866 

However  m  he  seems  at  home,  nor  cares  Lancelot  and  E.  311 

Mflder    M  than  any  mother  to  a  sick  child,  „              858 

with  flame  M  and  purer.  Lover's  Tale  i  323 

Simn'd  with  a  summer  of  to  heat.  To  Prof.  Jebh  8 

Mildew'd     Who  had  to  in  their  thousands,  Aylmer's  Field  383 

Mild-eyed     The  m-e  melancholy  Lotos-eaters  Lotos- Eaters  27 

Mild-minded     the  influence  of  m-m  melancholy  ;  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  64 

Mile     A  TO  beneath  the  cedar-wood.  Elednore  8 

Keeps  his  blue  wat«rs  fresh  for  many  a  to.  Mine  be  the  strength  8 

Ten  to's  to  northward  of  the  narrow  port  Enoch  Arden  102 

the  long  laborious  m's  Of  Palace  ;  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  11 

Flash  for  a  million  to's.  Window,  Marr.  Mom.  24 

I  was  walking  a  to.  More  than  a  to  Maud  I  ix  1 

A  m  beneath  the  forest,  Balin  and  Balan  12 

race  thro'  many  a  to  Of  dense  and  open,  „            423 

province  with  a  hundred  to's  of  coast,  (repeat)   Merlin  and  V.  588,  647 

But  for  a  TO  all  round  was  open  space,  Pdleas  and  E.  28 

flash  a  million  m's  a  day.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  204 

Glows  in  the  blue  of  fifty  to's  away.  Roses  on  the  T.  8 

Milk     (See  also  Wolf's-milk)     I  fed  you  with  the  m  of 

every  Muse  ;  Princess  iv  295 

The  TO  that  bubbled  in  the  paU,  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  51 

clean  as  blood  of  babes,  as  white  as  to  :  Merlin  and  V.  344 

Seethed  hke  the  kid  in  its  own  mother's  to  !  „            869 

TO  From  burning  spurge,  honey  from  homet^combs.  Last  Tournament  356 

land  of  promise  flowing  with  the  to  And  honey  Lover's  Tale  i  334 

Hafe  a  pint  o'  to  runs  out  Village  Wife  4 

the  babe  Will  suck  in  with  his  to  hereafter —  Columbus  38 

Who  Uve  on  to  and  meal  and  grass  ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  13 

M  for  my  sweet-arts,  Bess  !  Spinster's  S's.  1 

thou'd  not  'a  been  worth  thy  to,  „            54 

Mew  !  mew  ! — Bess  wi'  the  in  !  „          113 

Innocence  seethed  in  her  mother's  in,  Vastness  9 

nui-se  my  children  on  the  to  of  Truth,  Akbar's  Dream  162 

Milk-bloom     One  long  m-h  on  the  tree  ;  Maud  I  xxii  46 

Milkier     And  to  every  milky  sail  In  Mem.  cxv  11 

Millring    The  milkmaid  left  her  to,  and  fell  Holy  Grail  406 

Milking-maid     burnt  the  grange,  nor  buss'd  the  m-m,  Princess  v  222 

Milkmaid     When  merry  to's  click  the  latch.  The  Owl  i  8 

The  TO  left  her  milking,  and  fell  down  Holy  Grail  406 

Milk-white    opening  out  his  m-w  palm  Disclosed  a  fruit  QLnone  65 

Now  droops  the  to  peacock  like  a  ghost.  Princess  vii  180 

Ah  Maud,  you  m  fawn,  you  are  all  immeet  for  a  wife.        Maud  I  iv  57 

There  with  her  to  arms  and  shadowy  hah-  Guinevere  416 

Milky    hke  morning  doves  That  sun  their  to  bosoms  Princess  ii  103 

The  soft  and  to  rabble  of  womankind,  „      vi  309 

if  below  the  to  steep  Some  ship  of  battle  To  F.  D.  Maurice  25 

And  milkier  every  to  sail  On  ^vinding  stream  In  Mem.  cxv  11 

Struck  up  and  hved  along  the  to  roofs  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  409 

either  in  arm  Red-rent  with  hooks  of  bramble,  Holy  Grail  210 

Old  in  fables  of  the  wolf  and  sheep,  Pelleas  and  E.  196 

Milky-bell'd     A  m-b  amaryllis  blew.  The  Daisy  16 

Milky-way     this,  a  m-w  on  earth,  Aylmer's  Field  160 

Milky-white     Taller  than  all  his  fellows,  m-w,  Marr.  of  Geraint  150 

Mill     Thro'  quiet  meadows  round  the  to,  Miller's  D.  98 

The  deep  brook  groan'd  beneath  the  m  ;  ,,         113 

To  yon  old  m  across  the  wolds  ;  „        240 

long  street  climbs  to  one  taU-tower'd  to  ;  Enoch  Arden  5 

narrow  street  that  clamber'd  towsird  the  to.  „          60 

flour  From  his  tall  to  that  whistled  on  the  waste.  „        343 

Lords  of  his  house  and  of  his  to  were  they  ;  „        351 

Blanch'd  with  his  to,  they  foimd ;  ,,        367 

climbing  street,  the  to,  the  leafy  lanes,  „        607 

an'  I  runs  oop  to  the  to  ;  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  54 

'  ground  in  yonder  social  to  We  rub  each  other's 

angles  down,  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  39 


MiU 


468 


Mind 


In  the  Child.  Hosp.  14 

The  Ring  156 

Miller's  D.  50 

The  Kraken  6 

Aylmer's  Field  514 

Two  Voices  89 

Miller's  D.  1 

„       169 

Enoch  Arden  13 

804 

Maud  /  m  43 

Arabian  Nights  124 

Ode  to  Memory  35 

Two  Voices  30 

Palace  of  Art  138 

Princess  iv  101 


Mill  (cow<inM?<i)    Caught  in  a  ot  and  crush'd — 
Then  home,  and  past  the  ruin'd  m. 

Blilldam     The  m  rushing  down  with  noise, 

Millenial    Huge  sponges  of  m  growth  and  height ; 
Raking  in  that  m  touchwood-dust 

Millennimn    let  Thy  feet,  m's  hence,  be  set 

Miller    I  see  the  wealthy  m  yet, 
It  is  the  m's  daughter, 
Philip  Ray  the  m's  only  son, 
'  This  m's  wife  '  He  said  to  Miriam 

Millinery    That  jewell'd  mass  of  m, 

Million     A  m  tapers  flaring  bright 

Was  cloven  with  the  m  stars  which  tremble 

In  yonder  hundred  m  spheres  ?  ' 

A  TO  wiinkles  carved  his  skin  ; 

And  cheep  and  tmtter  twenty  m  loves. 

Over  the  world  to  the  end  of  it  Flash  for  a  m 

miles.  Window,  Marr.  Morn.  24 

A  TO  emeralds  break  from  the  ruby-budded  lime  Maud  I  iv  1 

And  a  to  horrible  bellowing  echoes  broke  „    //  i  24 

Whirl'd  for  a  to  aeons  thro'  the  vast  Waste  dawn      De  Prof.,  Two  G.  3 
wild  mob's  m  feet  Will  kick  you  from  your  place,  The  Fleet  18 

but  a  trouble  of  ants  in  the  gleam  of  a  to  million  of 

suns  ?  Vastness  4 

men  of  a  hundred  thousand,  a  to  summers  away  ?  The  Dawn  25 

joy  thro'  all  Her  trebled  m's,  To  the  Queen  ii  9 

m's  under  one  Imperial  sceptre  now,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  117 

AU  the  m's  one  at  length  with  all  the  visions  „  162 

and  her  thousands  to's,  then —  „  171 

To  those  dark  m's  of  her  realm  !  Hands  all  Round  18 

The  shriek  and  curse  of  trampled  m's,  Akbar's  Dream  190 

a  trouble  of  ants  in  the  gleam  of  a  million  m  of  suns  ?  Vastness  4 

Millionaire     New-comers  from  the  Mersey,  m's,  Edwin  Morris  10 

be  gilt  by  the  touch  of  a  to  :  Maud  I  i  66 

Britain's  one  sole  God  be  the  to  :  „   III  vi  22 

Million-millionth     to-to  of  a  grain  Which  cleft  Ancient  Sage  42 

Million-myrtled    hide  them,  to-to  wilderness,  Lucretius  204 

MiUstone     as  it  he  held  The  Apocalyptic  to.  Sea  Dreams  26 

May  make  my  heart  as  a  to,  Maud  7  i  31 

Mill-wheel     Beside  the  m-w  in  the  stream.  Miller's  D.  167 

Milton     there  was  M  Uke  a  seraph  strong.  Palace  of  Art  133 

M,  a  name  to  resound  for  ages  ;  Milton  4 

white  heather  only  blooms  in  heaven  With  M's 

amaranth.  Romney's  R.  Ill 

Mime    genial  hour  with  mask  and  to  ;  In  Mem.  cv  10 

Mimic  (adj.)     '  Ah,  folly  !  '  in  to  cadence  answer'd  James —  Golden  Year  53 
They  flash'd  a  saucy  message  to  and  fro  Between  the 


TO  stations ; 

The  TO  picture's  breathing  grace, 

nor  cares  For  triumph  in  our  m  wars, 
Mimic-Mimick  (verb)     But  I  cannot  mimick  it ; 

moons  of  gems.  To  mimic  heaven  ; 

That  we  should  mimic  this  raw  fool  the  world. 
Mimicry    Soul  of  mincing  m  ! 
Mincer    m's  of  each  other's  fame, 
Mincing    Dagonet  to  with  his  feet, 

Modulate  me,  Soul  of  m  mimicry 
Mind  (s)    (See  also  Prophet-mind)    Smoothing  the 
wearied  m  : 

When  rooted  in  the  garden  of  the  m, 

the  deep  m  of  dauntless  infancy. 

all  forms  Of  the  many-sided  to, 

And  stood  aloof  from  other  m's 

So  many  m's  did  gird  their  orbs 

Vex  not  thou  the  poet's  to  (repeat) 

Some  honey-converse  feeds  thy  m, 
'She  gave  him  to,  the  lordiest  Proportion, 

'  This  truth  within  thy  to  rehearse, 

It  spake,  moreover,  in  my  to  : 

*  The  highest-mounted  to,'  he  said, 

A  healthy  frame,  a  quiet  to.' 

That  the  whole  m  might  orb  about — 

That  bears  relation  to  the  to. 

'  That  type  of  Perfect  in  his  to 

became  Consolidate  in  to  and  frame — 


Princess,  Pro.  79 

In  Mem.  Ixxviii  11 

Lancelot  and  E.  312 

The  Owl  ii  9 

Palace  of  Art  189 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  106 

Princess  ii  425 

„      iv  515 

Last  Tournament  311 

Princess  ii  425 

Leonine  Eleg.  14 

Ode  to  Memory  26 

36 

116 

A  Character  23 

The  Poet  29 

Poet's  Mind  1,  3 

Adeline  40 

Two  Voices  19 

25 

31 

79 

99 

138 

177 

292 

366 


Mind  (s)  (continued)     Oft  lose  whole  years  of  darker  m. 
I  marvell'd  how  the  to  was  brought  To  anchor 
Two  spirits  to  one  equal  to — 
Lo,  falling  from  my  constant  to, 
with  one  to  the  Gods  Rise  up  for  reverence, 
that  I  might  speak  my  to,  And  teU  her  to  her  face 
(Beauty  seen  In  all  varieties  of  mould 

and  to)  To 

As  fit  for  every  mood  of  to, 
supreme  Caucasian  m  Carved  out  of  Natm'e 
'  I  take  possession  of  man's  to  and  deed. 
I  could  not  stoop  to  such  a  to. 


dear  old  time,  and  all  my  peace  of  m ; 


Two  Voices  372 

458 

Miller's  D.  236 

Fatvina  5 

(Enone  109 

„      227 

-,  With  Pal.  of  Art  7 

Palace  of  Art  90 

126 

209 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  20 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  6 


Con.  35 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  108 

D.  of  the  O.  Year  26 

To  J.  S.  48 

Love  thou  thy  land  20 

35 

M.  d' Arthur  60 

238 

258 

Dora  47 

Edwin  Morris  87 

Locksley  Hall  69 

165 

Godiva  32 

Day-Dm.,  Moral  12 

„       L' Envoi  48 

Will  Water.  12 

Lady  Clare  21 

L.  of  Burleigh  74 

Enoch  Arden  344 


delight  and  shuddering  took  hold  of  all  my  to, 

and  keep  it  with  an  equal  to, 

I've  half  a  m  to  die  with  you, 

common  chance  That  takes  away  a  noble  m. 

Bear  seed  of  men  and  growth  of  m's. 

Set  in  all  lights  by  many  m's, 

dividing  the  swift  to,  In  act  to  throw  : 

Among  new  men,  strange  faces,  other  m's.' 

(For  all  my  to  is  clouded  with  a  doubt) — 

'  It  cannot  be  :  my  imcle's  to  will  change  !  ' 

something  of  a  wayward  modem  to 

in  division  of  the  records  of  the  m  ? 

more  than  in  this  march  of  to, 

so  left  alone,  the  passions  of  her  to. 

A  meaning  suited  to  his  m. 

The  fulness  of  the  pensive  to  ; 

and  use  Her  influence  on  the  to, 

'  Are  ye  out  of  your  to,  my  nurse, 

her  gentle  to  was  such  That  she  grew  a  noble  lady, 

Philip  did  not  fathom  Annie's  to  : 

Annie,  there  is  a  thing  upon  my  to.  And  it  has  been 

upon  my  to  so  long,  „  399 

simple  folk  that  knew  not  their  own  m's,  „  478 

my  TO  is  changed,  for  I  shall  see  him,  „  897 

rolling  in  his  to  Old  waifs  of  rhyme.  The  Brook  198 

TO  Half  buried  in  some  weightier  argument,  Lucretius  8 

my  TO  Stumbles,  and  all  my  faculties  are  lamed.  „       122 

'  How  should  the  m,  except  it  loved  them,  „       164 

which  brought  My  book  to  m  :  Princess,  Pro.  120 

abyss  Of  science,  and  the  secrets  of  the  to  :  „  ii  177 

the  TO,  The  morals,  something  of  the  frame,  „  381 

One  TO  in  all  things :  „  Hi  91 

From  whence  the  Royal  m,  famiUar  with  her,  „  iv  235 

Our  TO  is  changed  :  we  take  it  to  ourself.'  „  362 

Give  us,  then,  your  to  at  large :  „  u  123 

prize  the  authentic  mother  of  her  to.  „  433 

Her  iron  will  was  broken  in  her  m ;  „  vi  118 

one  that  cannot  keep  her  to  an  hour  :  „  287 

still  she  fear'd  that  I  should  lose  my  m,  „  mi  99 

lose  the  childlike  in  the  larger  to  ;  „  284 

all  male  m's  perforce  Sway'd  to  her  „  325 

drill  the  raw  world  for  the  march  of  to.  Ode  on  Well.  168 

'  but  I  needs  must  speak  my  to.  Grandmother  53 

That  TO  and  soul,  according  well,  In  Mem.,  Pro.  27 

Upon  the  threshold  of  the  to  ?  „  Hi  16 

A  weight  of  nerves  without  a  m,  „  xii  7 

And  slowly  forms  the  firmer  to,  „  xviii  18 

And  weep  the  fulness  from  the  to  :  „  xxQ 

Nor  other  thought  her  to  admits  „  xxxii  2 

Tho'  following  with  an  upward  to  „  xli  21 

train  To  riper  growth  the  to  and  will :  „  xlii  8 

So  rounds  he  to  a  separate  to  „  xlv  9 

But  hves  to  wed  an  equal  m ;  „  Ixii  8 

Which  makes  a  desert  in  the  to,  „  Ixvi  6 

we  talk'd  Of  men  and  m's,  the  dust  of  change,  „  Ixxi  10 

Sung  by  a  long-forgotten  to.  „         Ixxvii  12 

The  same  sweet  forms  in  either  m.  „  Ixxix  8 

An  image  comforting  the  to,  „  Ixxxv  51 

on  TO  and  art.  And  labour,  and  the  changing  mart,  „       Ixxxvii  22 

He  tasted  love  with  half  his  to. 
He  faced  the  spectres  of  the  to  „  xm  iS 

He  thrids  the  labyrinth  of  the  to,  „  xcvii  2| 


Mind 

Mind  (s)  (continued)    those  maidens  with  one  m  Bewail'd 

their  lot ;        .  ,  ^^  ^  ^  In  Mem.  ciii  45 

King  out  the  gnef  that  saps  the  m,  ^j  9 

And  native  growth  of  noble  m ;  ]'          ^xi  16 

For  she  is  earthly  of  the  m,  ]'        ^^^  2I 
these  are  the  days  of  advance,  the  works  of  the 

men  of  m,            ,    ,      ,,     ,  Maud  I  i  25 

be  still,  for  you  only  trouble  the  m  „          »  20 
cut  o£E  from  the  m  The  bitter  springs  of  anger 

and  fear ;  .,          a;  48 

The  fancy  flatter'd  my  m,  "       ^^^  23 

So  dark  a  m  within  me  dwells,  "          ^^^  2 

To  the  faults  of  his  heart  and  m,  "      xix  68 

Strange,  that  the  m,  when  fraught  With  a  passion  ,',  //  a  58 

for  she  never  speaks  her  m,  "^         ^  Qrj 

awaked,  as  it  seems,  to  the  better  m ;  "  I IJtn  56 
inheritance  Of  such  a  life,  a  heart,  a  m  as  thine,            Ded.  of  Idylls  33 


469 


Minster 


but  aU  brave,  aU  of  one  m  with  him  ;  Coin,  of  Arthur'255 

m  my  m  1  hear  A  cry  from  out  the  dawning  „            332 

Ranging  and  ringing  thro'  the  m's  of  men,  "            416 

Across  her  w,  and  bowing  over  him,  Marr.  ofGrraint  84 

And  ever  m  her  m  she  cast  about  Geraint  and  E  '^ 

of  one  m  and  all  right-honest  friends  !  „          434 

with  her  m  all  full  of  what  had  chanced,  "          773 

My  m  involved  yourself  the  nearest  thir^g  Merlin  and  V  ^Xi 

smce  he  kept  his  to  on  one  sole  aim,  ,,          '  526 

densest  condensation,  hard  To  m  and  eye ;  ,'            579 

To  sleek  her  ruffled  peace  of  m,  "            399 

The  shape  and  colour  of  a  m  and  life,  Lancelot  "and  E.  335 

he  turn  d  Her  counsel  up  and  down  within  his  m,  „            369 

Lancelot  look'd  and  was  perplext  in  w,  [\            333 

So  cannot  speak  my  m.    An  end  to  this  !  "          i222 

made  him  hers,  and  laid  her  m  On  him.  Holy  Grail  164 

Came  like  a  driving  gloom  across  my  m.  37O 

since  her  m  was  bent  On  hearing,  Pdleas  akd  E.  114 

Went  wandenng  somewhere  darkling  in  his  m.  Last  Tournament  457 

byal  nature,  and  of  noble  m.'  Guinevere  336 

Her  memory  from  old  habit  of  the  m  379 

With  whom  he  dwelt,  new  faces,  other  m's.  Pass,  of  "drthur  5 

dividing  the  swift  m,  In  act  to  throw :  ,'            228 

Among  new  men,  strange  faces,  other  m's.'  "           406 

(For  all  my  TO  is  clouded  with  a  doubt) —  "            426 

Like  to  a  quiet  m  in  the  loud  world,  Lover's  Tale  i  7 

sometimes  on  the  horizon  of  the  m  Lies  folded,  49 

daylight  of  your  m's  But  cloud  and  smoke,  "          296 

And  all  the  maiden  empire  of  her  m,  "          539 

She  deem'd  I  wore  a  brother's  m  :  "          741 

whether  the  m,  With  some  revenge —  "       a  126 

bom  Not  from  believing  m,  but  shatter'd  nerve,  "      iv  105 

This  love  is  of  the  brain,  the  m,  the  soul :  "           155 

But  arter  I  chaanged  my  m,  North.  Cobbler  105 
he  had  seen  it  and  made  up  his  m.                        In  the  Child.  Hosp.  16 

his  m,  So  quick,  so  capable  in  soldiership.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  74 

When  he  clothed  a  naked  m  with  the  wisdom  The  Wreck  65 

/  was  the  lonely  slave  of  an  often-wandering  m  ;  ,         130 

the  blasphemy  to  my  m  lies  aU  in  the  way  Despair  112 

WTiat  Power  ?  aught  akin  to  M,  The  m  Ancient  Sage  78 

thm  m  s,  who  creep  from  thought  to  thought,  „           103 

He  withers  marrow  and  m ;  "          120 

the  world  is  hard,  and  harsh  of  m,  The  Flight  101 

for  Molly  was  out  of  her  m.  Tonwrrow  6 

nurse  of  aihng  body  and  m,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  51 

kings  of  men  m  utter  nobleness  of  m,  „             122 

lustier  body,  larger  m  ?  |'            164 

Man  or  M  that  sees  a  shadow  of  the  planner  or  the  plan  ?     "  196 

Universal  Nature  moved  by  Universal  M  ;  To  Virgil  22 

How  long  thine  ever-growing  m  Freedom  33 

died  m  the  doing  it,  flesh  without  m  ;  Fastness  27 

When  the  m  is  failing  !  Forlorn  36 

For  lowly  m's  were  madden'd  to  the  height  To  Mary  Boyle  33 

Larger  and  fuller,  like  the  human  m  !  Prog,  of  Spring  112 

of  the  m  Mine  ;  worse,  cold,  calculated.  Romney's  R.  151 
How  subtle  at  tierce  and  quart  of  m  with  m.  In  Mem.  W.  G.  Ward  5 
Now  I'U  gie  tha  a  bit  o'  my  m                                 Church-warden,  etc.  21 

M  son  this  round  earth  of  ours  Poets  and  Critics  3 


Mind  (verb)     [See  also  Moind)     I  m  him  coming  down 
tiLi6  str^^pt  "  ^^ 

m  us  of  the  time  When  we  made  bricks  in  Egypt.         ^"pfinifst  127 

fur  T^tbf  f '  "ir*  ^°^  '  ™^«  ZZbusll 

R,^f  it,  wL    -^u'    ,  K    ^    ,  Church-warden,  etc.  23 

But  I  ?«  when  1'  Howlabv  beck  won  daay  07 

^^iu,fj'  Cheerful-minded,  Liberal-minded,  Man-minded,        " 
Mild-mmded,  Myriad-minded 

Mindful     Guinevere,  not  m  of  his  face  Marr  of  Gerair,f  IQl 

Mindless    One  truth  wiU  damn  me  with  the  m  mob,  Romney's  R  120 

E""?^.  liTiS^^'-'^r''^  '^^  ^"l  '^^'  ^-^  ■■         Merlin  11  V.  loi 
fflme    (See  also  Gold-nune)    Or  labour'd  m  undrainable 

Old,  and  a  m  of  memories-  ^  vlm^sTiddll 

To  buy  strange  shares  in  some  Peruvian  m.  Sea  Bream-i  V=, 

there  is  no  such  m.  None  ;  but  a  gulf  of  ruin  78 

she  said,  '  by  working  in  the  m's  : '                 '  "         114 

Secrets  of  the  suUen  m  ode  Inter.  Exhib.  16 

tiU  he  crept  from  a  gutted  m  j^aud  7  /q 

A  league  of  mouiitain  f uU  of  golden  m's.  Merlin  and  V.  587 

Made  proffer  of  the  league  of  golden  m's,  646 

Wf?f^*"*'     ^^?^™^^'-    .  Def.ofLucknow25 

but  the  foe  sprung  his  w  many  times,  31 

m  a  moment  two  m's  by  the  enemy  sprung  "              54 

Ever  the  m  and  assault,  our  salhes,  "              75 

AU  but  free  leave  for  all  to  work  the  m's,  Columbus  133 

M,-«„i  "'"^^r,*"!?'  ^"^^  P"^^  "^""^  '■>  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  6 

Mingle    Thoi^ht  and  motion  TO,  ilf  ever.  "^                   Eleanore^ 

In^^r  rt      ^"^^a  ?u^' .  Of  old  sat  Freedom  10 

And  star-hke  m's  with  the  stars.  sir  Galahad  48 

?««      T''  ""-.1'°™  •   r,  f'^^*^  of  Sin  204 

Pass,  and  TO  with  your  likes.  PriJess  vi  341 

To  TO  with  the  bounding  mam  :  /„  Mem.  xi  12 

And  m's  all  without  a  plan  ?  ^^  20 

And  TO  all  the  world  with  thee.  "    cxxix  12 

and  TO  with  our  folk  ;  ^p^"  Qrail  549 

wherefore  shouldst  thou  care  to  to  with  it,  Last  Tournament  105 

TO  with  your  ntes  ;  Pray  and  be  pray'd  for  ;  Guinevere  680 

sou^  twines  and  to'*  with  the  growths  Lover's  Tale  i  132 

God  must  TO  with  the  game  :  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  271 

let  the  stormy  moment  fly  and  to  with  the  Past.  279 

I  would  not  TO  with  their  feasts  ;  Demet^  and  P.  103 
Mmgled    (See  also  Poppy-nungled,  Scarlet-mingled) 

Ceasing  not,  to,  unrepress'd,  Arabian  Nights  74 

D^mng  what  is  to  with  past  years,  D.  of  F.  Women  282 

a  Rose  In  roses,  to  with  her  fragrant  toil,  Gardener's  D  143 

And  ever  as  he  to  with  the  crew,  Enoch  Arden  643 

this  at  times,  she  to  with  his  drink,  Lucretius  18 

Will  rank  you  nobly,  to  up  with  me.  Princess  ii  46 

ine  sole  men  to  be  to  with  our  cause,  „  411 

TO  with  the  haze  And  made  it  thicker ;  Com.  of  Arthur  434 

And  TO  with  the  spearmen  :  Geraint  and  E-  599 

bank  Of  maiden  snow  to  with  sparks  of  fire.  Last  Tournament  149 

TO  with  dim  cries  Far  m  the  moonlit  haze  Pass,  of  Arthur  41 

TO  with  the  famous  kings  of  old,  xiresias  171 

will  the  glory  of  Kapiolam  be  to  Kapiolani  18 

this  life  of  TO  pains  And  joys  to  me,  To  Mary  Boyle  49 

Mmiature     A  to  of  loveliness.  Gardener' sD  ^ 

I  remember  how  you  kiss'd  the  to  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  12 

.   The  books,  the  TO,  the  lace  are  hers,  The  Ring  288 

Mimon     A  do^vnward  crescent  of  her  to  mouth,  Aylmer's  Field  533 

inmion-knignt    had  overthrown  Her  m-k's,  Pelleas  and  E  235 
Minister    Who  may  to  to  thee  ?    Summer  herself  should  to         Eleiinore  31 

Ministermg     Fnday  fare  was  Enoch's  to.  Enoch  Arden  100 

There  the  good  mother's  kmdly  to.  Lover's  Tale  iv  92 

everywhere  Low  voices  with  the  to  hand  Princess  vii  21 

Mmistration    for  the  power  of  to  in  her,  Guinevere  694 

Ministries    tender  to  Of  female  hands  and  hospitality.'  Princess  vi  72 

Mmneth    from  Aroer  On  Amon  unto  M.'  D  of  F   Women  239 

Minnie     M  and  Winnie  Slept  in  a  shell.  Minnie  and  Winnie  1 

Minnow     And  see  the  m's  everywhere  Miller's  D  51 

Minster  (adj.)    windy  clanging  of  the  to  clock  ;  Gardener's  D  38 
south-breeze  around  thee  blow  The  sound  of 

*"  *^«"«-  Talking  Oak  272 


Minster 


470 


Miserable 


Minster  (adj.)  (contimted)    face  Wellnigh  was  hidden 

in  the  in  gloom  ;  Com.  of  Arthur  289 

Minster  (s)     whose  hymns  Are  chanted  in  the  in,  Merlin  and  V.  766 

trees  like  the  towers  of  a  m,  The  Wreck  74 

Here  silent  in  our  M  of  the  West  Epit.  on  Stratford,  3 

mountain  stay'd  me  here,  a  m  there,  The  Ring  245 

Minster-front    on  one  of  those  dark  m-f's —  Sea  Dreams  243 

Minster-tower    bridge  Crown'd  with  the  m-Vs.  Gardener's  D.  44 

Minstrel  (adj.)     And  talk  and  m  melody  ent«rtain'd.       Lancelot  and  E.  267 

Minstrel  (s)     the  m  sings  Before  them  of  the  ten  years' 

war  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  76 

But  ring  the  fuller  m  in.  In  Mem.  cvi  20 
A  m  of  Caerleon  by  strong  storm  Blown  into  shelter     Merlin  and  V.  9 

And  every  m  sings  it  differently ;  „          458 

Mint    he  has  a  m  of  reasons :  ask.  The  Epic  33 

As  moulded  like  in  Nature's  m  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxix  6 

clean  Es  a  shillin'  fresh  fro'  the  m  Spinster's  S's.  76 

Minted    Creation  m  in  the  golden  moods  Princess  v  194 

Minuet     thro'  the  stately  m  of  those  days  :  Aylmer's  Field  207 

Minnte  (adj.)    How  exquisitely  m,  Maud  II  ii  7 

Minute  (s)    sweat  her  sixty  m's  to  the  death,  Golden  Year  69 

The  m's  fledged  with  music  : '  Princess  iv  37 

came  a  m's  pause,  and  Walter  said,  „       Con.  4 
Gone  for  a  m,  my  son,  from  this  room  into  the  next ; 

I,  too,  shall  go  in  a  w.  Grandmother  103 

For  a  m,  but  for  a  m,  Maud  I  xx  45 

and  suffering  thus  he  made  M's  an  age  :  Geraint  and  E.  115 

glancing  for  a  m,  till  he  saw  her  Pass  into  it,  „            886 

Balin  the  stillness  of  a  m  broke  Balin  and  Balan  51 

'  Stay  a  little  !     One  golden  m's  grace  !  Lancelot  and  E.  684 

An'  Dan  stood  there  for  a  m,  ToTrwrrow  22 

He  that  has  Uved  for  the  lust  of  the  m,  Vastness  27 

Lay  your  Plato  for  one  m  do^vn.  To  Master  of  B.  4 

WiU  only  last  am!'  Voice  spake,  etc.  4 

Were  nothing  the  next  m?  „              10 

Miracle    (See  also  Half-miracle,  Main-miracle)    So 

great  a  m  as  yonder  hilt.  M.  d' Arthur  156 

A  certain  m  of  symmetry.  Gardener's  D.W 

they  say  then  that  I  work'd  m's,  St.  S.  Stylites  80 

It  may  be  I  have  wrought  some  m's,  „            136 

Can  I  work  m's  and  not  be  saved  ?  „            150 

Should,  as  by  in,  grow  straight  and  fair —  Aylmer's  Field  676 

'  O  TO  of  women,'  said  the  book,  Princess,  Pro.  35 

O  TO  of  noble  womanhood ! '  „              48 

A  TO  of  design  !  Maud  II  ii  8 

wondei-s  ye  have  done  ;  M's  ye  cannot :  Gareth  and  L.  1325 

Mute  of  this  m,  far  as  I  have  read.  Holy  Grail  66 

'  Then  came  a  year  of  to  :  „         166 

With  to'5  and  marvels  Uke  to  these,  „        543 

hollow-ringing  heavens  sweep  Over  him  till  by  to —  „        679 

With  signs  and  m's  and  wonders,  Guinevere  222 

And  simple  m's  of  thy  nunnery  ?  '  „        230 

Till  he  by  to  was  approven  King :  „        296 

So  great  a  TO  as  yonder  hilt.  Pass,  of  Arthur  324 

a  very  to  Of  fellow-feeling  and  communion.  Lover's  Tale  i  250 

Heirlooms,  and  ancient  m's  of  Art,  „          iv  192 

That  was  a  to  to  convert  the  king.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  178 

this  Caiaphas-Anmdel  What  m  could  turn  ?  „            180 

art  thou  the  Prophet  ?  canst  thmi  work  M's  ?  Akbar's  Bream  118 

M's  !  no,  not  I  Nor  he,  nor  any.  „          119 

And  gaze  on  this  great  to,  the  World,  „          122 

Miraculous    gaped  upon  him  As  on  a  thing  to,  Lancelot  and  E.  453 

These  have  told  us  all  their  anger  in  to  utterances,  Boddicea  23 

Mirage    And  a  moist  to  in  desert  eyes,  Maud  I  vi  53 

finds  the  fountain  where  they  wail'd  '  Jlf  '  !  Ancient  Sage  77 
thro'  that  m  of  overheated  language                     Locksley  H.,  Sixty  113 

for  no  M  of  glory,  but  for  power  to  fuse  Akbar's  Dream  156 

Mire    great  heart  and  slips  in  sensual  to.  Princess  v  199 

by  God's  grace,  he  shall  into  the  to —  Gareth  and  L.  723 
sank  his  head  in  to,  and  slimed  themselves  :            Last  Tournament  471 

But  curb  the  beast  would  cast  thee  in  the  m,  Ancient  Sage  276 

from  wallowing  in  the  to  of  earth,  Akbar's  Dream  141 

Miriam    (iS'e«  also  Miriam  Erne,  Miriam  Lane)    '  This 

miller's  wife  '  lie  said  to  M  Enoch  Arden  805 

And  on  the  book,  half-frighted,  M  swore.  „          843 


Miriam  (continued)     M  watch'd  and  dozed  at  intervals,       Enoch  Arden  909 
Between  a  cymbal'd  M  and  a  Jael,  Princess  v  511 

My  M,  breaks  her  latest  earthly  Unk  The  Ring  47 

Your  '  Al  breaks  ' — -is  making  a  new  link  „  50 

WeU,  One  way  for  M.     Miriam.     M  am  I  not  ? 
M  youi"  Mother  might  appear  to  me. 
M  sketch'd  and  Miu-iel  threw  the  fly  ; 
and  the  face  Of  M  grew  upon  me, 
this  '  lo  t'amo  '  to  the  heart  Of  M  ; 
he  scrawl'd  A  '  3/  '  that  might  seem  a  '  Muriel '  ; 
Muriel  claim'd  and  open'd  what  I  meant  For  M, 
Muriel  and  M,  each  in  white, 
M  !  have  you  given  your  ring  to  her  ? 

0  M  ! '     M  redden'd,  Muriel  clench'd  The  hand  that 
wore  it, 

'  0  M,  if  you  love  me  take  the  ring  ! ' 

M  loved  me  from  the  first,  Not  thro'  the  ring  ; 

My  M  nodded  with  a  pitying  smile, 

And  you  my  M  born  within  the  year  ;  And  she  my 

M  dead  within  the  year. 
Promise  me,  M  not  Muriel — she  shall  have  the  ring.' 
M,  I  am  not  surely  one  of  those 
'  Muriel's  health  Had  weaken'd,  nursing  little  M. 

1  told  her  '  sent  To  M,' 
M,  on  that  day  Two  lovei-s  pai'ted  by  no  scui'rilous 

tale — 
Miriam  Erne    (See  also  Miriam)     M  E  And  Muriel  Erne — 
MiriftTti  Lane    (See  also  Miriam)    his  widow  M  L,  With 
daily-dwindling  profits 

But  M  L  was  good  and  garrulous, 

Then  he,  tho'  M  L  had  told  him  all. 

He  call'd  aloud  for  M  L  and  said 

M  L  Made  such  a  voluble  answer  promising  all, 
Miring    harpies  m  every  dish, 
Mirror    (See  also  Ocean-Mirror)    Opposed  m's  each 
reflecting  each — 

And  moving  thi'o'  a  m  clear  That  hangs 

sometimes  thro'  the  to  blue  The  knights  came 

To  weave  the  m's  magic  sights. 

He  flash'd  into  the  crystal  w. 

The  TO  crack'd  from  side  to  side  ; 

on  the  Uquid  to  glow'd  The  clear  perfection 

Without  a  TO,  in  the  gorgeous  gown  ; 

reaUties  Of  which  they  were  the  m's. 

she  makes  Her  heart  a  m.  that  reflects 

I  gazed  into  the  to,  as  a  man  Who  sees  his  face 
Mirror'd    a  favourable  speed  Ruffle  thy  to  mast. 
Mirth    Come  away  :  no  more  of  to  Is  here 

Singing  and  murmuring  in  her  feastful  m, 

not  the  less  held  she  her  solemn  m, 

in  a  fit  of  frolic  to  She  strove  to  span 

Marrow  of  to  and  laughter  ; 

I  laugh'd  And  Liha  woke  with  sudden-shrilling  m 

clamouring  etiquette  to  death,  Unmeasured  m  ; 

So  large  to  Hved  and  Gareth  won  the  quest. 

and  with  to  so  loud  Beyond  aU  use, 
Mirthful    TO  he,  but  in  a  stately  kind — 

And  m  sayings,  children  of  the  place. 
Misadventure    whom  I  rode.  Hath  suffer'd  m, 
Miscellany    Not  like  the  piebald  to,  man. 
Mischance    Seeing  all  his  own  m — 

by  m_  he  slipt  and  fell :  A  limb  was  broken 

hearing  his  m.  Came,  for  he  knew  the  man 

So  now  that  shadow  of  m  appear'd  No  graver 

touch  of  all  TO  but  came  As  night  to  him 

by  gi-eat  m  He  heard  but  fragments  of  her  later 
words. 

What  I  by  mere  m  have  brought,  my  shield. 
Mischief    they  kept  apart,  no  w  done  ; 
Miscounted    Were  aU  to  as  malignant  haste 
Miser     and  the  to  would  yearn  for  his  gold. 
Miserable    '  Ah,  to  and  unkind,  untrue. 

Hating  his  own  lean  heart  and  m. 

More  TO  than  she  that  has  a  son  And  sees  him  err 

If  she  be  small,  slight-natured,  m, 


73 
137 
159 

185 
235 
241 
242 
254 
260 

261 
263 

274 
281 

285 
294 
34a 
357 
363 

426 
146 


Enoch  Arden  695 
700 
765 
836 
902 
Lucretius  159 

Sonnet  to 11 

L.  of  Shalottii  10 

24 

29 

,,        Hi  34 

43 

Mariana  in  the  S.  31 

Marr.  of  Geraint  739 

Lover's  Tale  ii  163 

The  Ring  366 

369 

In  Mem.  ix  7 

Deserted  House  13 

Palace  of  Art  Yll 

215 

Talking  Oak  137 

Will  Water.  214 

Princess,  Pro.  216 

■wis 

Gareth  and  L.  1426 

Last  Tournament  235 

Lancelot  and  E.  322 

Holy  Grail  555 

Balin  and  Balan  476 

Princess  v  198 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  12 

Enoch  Arden  106 

120 

128 

Princess  iv  573 

Marr.  of  Geraint  112 

Lancelot  and  E.  189 

Princess  iv  340 

334 

Despair  100 

M.  d' Arthur  119 

Aylmer's  Field  526 

Princess  Hi  260 

„        vii  265 


Miserable 


471 


Mix 


Miserable  {co7itinued)     hide  their  faces,  m  in  ignominy  !  Boddicea  51 

her  Whom  he  loves  most,  lonely  and  m.  Marr.  of  Geraint  123 

'  Ah,  m  and  unkind,  untrue.  Pass,  of  Arthur  287 

'  The  m  have  no  medicine  But  only  Hope  !  '  Eomney's  R.  149 
Not  with  bUnded  eyesight  poring  over  m  books —        Locksley  Hall  172 

Low  TO  Uves  of  hand-to-mouth,  Enoch  Arden  116 

0  PURBLIND  race  of  m  men,  Geraint  and  E.  1 
Misery    Oh  !  m  !  Hark  !  death  is  calling  While 

I  speak  All  Things  will  Die  27 

In  this  extremest  m  Of  ignorance,  Supp.  Confessions  8 

'  Thou  are  so  full  of  to.  Two  Voices  2 

'  Thou  art  so  steep'd  in  to,  „          47 

step  beyond  Our  village  miseries,  Ancient  Sage  207 

in  the  to  of  my  married  life.  The  Ring  136 

Misfaith     turn  of  anger  bom  Of  your  to  ;  Merlin  and  V.  532 
Misfeaturing    strange  to  mask  that  I  saw  so  amazetl 

me,                                .  The  Wreck  117 

Misleamt     Have  I  to  our  place  of  meeting  ?)  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  153 

Blisled     ill  counsel  had  m  the  girl  Princess  vii  241 

Mismated     Not  all  to  with  a  yawning  clown,  Geraint  and  E.  426 

Miss  (s)     The  wither'd  M'es  !  how  they  prose  Amphion  81 

Miss  (verb)     Who  to  the  brother  of  your  youth  ?  To  J.  S.  59 

1  fear  That  we  shall  to  the  mail :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  112 
yet  may  live  in  vain,  and  to,  Meanwhile,  Princess  Hi  243 
Why  should  they  to  their  yearly  due  In  Mem.  xxix  15 
ye  in,'  he  answer'd,  '  the  great  deeds  Of 

Lancelot,  Lancelot  and  E.  81 
And  TO  the  wonted  number  of  my  knights.  And  m  to 

hear  high  talk  of  noble  deeds  Guinevere  498 

Missaid     rebuked,  reviled,  M  thee  ;  Gareth  and  L.  1165 

Missay    hear  thee  so  to  me  and  revile.  „            945 

Miss'd    thou,'  said  I, '  hast  to  thy  mark,  Two  Voices  388 

And  you  have  to  the  irreverent  doom  You  might  have  won  9 

Caught  at  and  ever  to  it,  Enoch  Arden  752 

But  TO  the  mignonette  of  Vivian-place,  Princess,  Pro.  165 

0  yes,  you  to  us  much.  „  169 
'  Come,  listen  !  here  is  proof  that  you  were  to  :  „  177 
For  blind  with  rage  she  to  the  plank,  „  iv  177 
Till  even  those  that  to  her  most  In  Mem.  xl  27 
The  head  hath  to  an  earthly  wreath  :  „     Ixxiii  6 

1  have  TO  the  only  way  (repeat)  Gareth  and  L.  787,  792 
TO,  and  brought  Her  own  claw  back,  Merlin  and  V.  499 
That  TO  his  living  welcome,  Tiresias  197 
he  TO  The  wonted  steam  of  sacrifice,  Demeter  and  P.  118 

Misshaping    Is  our  to  vision  of  the  Powers  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  230 

Missile     whelm'd  with  to's  of  the  wall,  Princess,  Pro.  45 

Missing    One  flash,  that,  to  all  things  else.  Merlin  and  V.  932 

Mission    '  Hast  thou  perform'd  my  to  which  I  gave  ?  M.  d' Arthur  67 

Fly  happy  with  the  to  of  the  Cross  ;  Golden  Year  43 

Her  lavish  to  richly  wrought.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  34 

A  soul  on  highest  to  sent,  „             cxiii  10 

If  this  were  all  your  to  here,  „          cxxviii  12 

On  a  blushing  to  to  me,  Maud  I  xxi  11 

Rode  on  a  m  to  the  bandit  Earl ;  Geraint  and  E.  527 

'  Hast  thou  perform'd  my  to  which  I  gave  ?  Pass,  of  Arthur  235 

My  TO  be  accomplish'd  ! '  'Akbar's  Dream  199 

Missis     An'  once  I  said  to  the  M,  North.  Cobbler  103 

the  lasses  'ud  talk  o'  their  M's  waays.  An'  the  il/'t's 

talk'd  o'  the  lasses. —  Village  Wife  57 

As  I  says  to  my  to  to-daay,  Church-warden,  etc.  25 

Missive     let  our  to  thro'.  And  you  shall  have  her  answer  Princess  v  326 
Mist    (See  also  Mind-mist,  Moming-mist)     thou  earnest 

with  the  morning  to,  (repeat)  Ode  to  Memory  12,  21 

she  deem'd  no  to  of  earth  could  duU  ,  „                   38 

As  over  rainy  to  inclines  A  gleaming  crag  Two  Voices  188 

(Enone  see  the  morning  to  Sweep  thro'  them  ;  (Enone  216 

Whose  spirits  falter  in  the  to.  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  3 

The  friendly  to  of  mom  Clung  to  the  lake.  Edwin  Morris  107 

Inswathed  sometimes  in  wandering  to,  St.  S.  Stylites  75 

Rain  out  the  heavy  to  of  tears.  Love  and  Duty  43 

Far-folded  m's,  and  gleaming  haUs  Tithonus  10 

While  lUon  hke  a  to  rose  into  towers.  „         63 

And  softly,  thro'  a  vinous  to,  WUl  Water.  39 

When  all  the  wood  stands  in  a  to  of  green.  The  Brook  14 

In  colours  gayer  than  the  morning  to,  Princess  ii  438 


Mist  (continued)     two  and  thirty  years  were  a  m  that 

rolls  away  ;  V.  of  Cauteretz  6 

The  TO  and  the  rain,  the  to  and  the  rain  !  Window,  No  Answer  1 

Answer  each  other  in  the  to.  In  Mem.  xxviii  4 

And  then  I  know  the  to  is  drawn  „         Ixvii  13 

Is  pealing,  folded  in  the  to.  „  civ  4 

They  melt  hke  to,  the  sohd  lands,  „         cxxiii  7 

turrets  half-way  down  Prick'd  thro'  the  m  ;  Gareth  and  L.  194 

(Your  city  moved  so  weirdly  in  the  to)  „  245 

o'er  her  meek  eyes  came  a  happy  to  Geraint  and  E.  769 

An  ever-moaning  battle  in  the  to.  Merlin  and  V.  192 

Or  in  the  noon  of  to  and  driving  rain,  „  636 

clave  Like  its  own  m's  to  all  the  mountain  side  :         Lancelot  and  E.  38 
light  betwixt  them  bum'd  Blurr'd  by  the  creeping  to,  Guinevere  5- 

white  TO,  hke  a  face-cloth  to  the  face,  ,,  7 

she  saw.  Wet  with  the  to's  and  smitten  by  the  lights,  „       597 

till  himself  became  as  to  Before  her,  „       604 

A  deathwhite  m  slept  over  sand  and  sea  :  Pass,  of  Arthur  95 

friend  and  foe  were  shadows  in  the  m,  „  100 

and  in  the  m  Was  many  a  noble  deed,  „  104 

Look'd  up  for  heaven,  and  only  saw  the  m ;  „  112 

labourings  of  the  lungs  In  that  close  to,  „  116 

blew  The  to  aside,  and  with  that  wind  the  tide  Rose,  „  125 

And  whiter  than  the  m  that  all  day  long  „  137 

hke  a  golden  to  Charm'd  amid  eddies  Lover's  Tale  i  449 

As  moonlight  wandering  thro'  a  to  :  „  ii  52 

That  flings  a  to  behind  it  in  the  sun —  „  iv  294 

in  the  to  and  the  wind  and  the  shower  Rizpah  68 

Thro'  the  blotting  to,  the  blinding  showei-s,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  18 

The  TO  of  autimin  gather  from  yom'  lake,  The  Ring  329 

saw  Your  gilded  vane,  a  light  above  the  vi ' —  „        331 

dead  cords  that  ran  Dark  thro'  the  to.  Death  of  (Enone  11 

crooked,  reehng,  Uvid,  thro'  the  to  Rose,  „  27 

and  in  the  to  at  once  Became  a  shadow,  „  49 

tiU  the  mortal  morning  m's  of  earth  Fade  Akbar's  Dream  96 

Mist-blotted     a  great  m-h  light  Flared  on  him,  Enoch  Arden  680 

Mistletoe     Thoms,  ivies,  woodbine,  m's,  Day-Din.,  Sleep.  P.  43 

Mist-like     Melts  m-l  into  this  bright  hour.  Princess  vii  355 

Mistress     (See  also  Missis)     Let  Grief  be  her  own  m  still.  To  J.  S.  41 

Beauty  such  a  to  of  the  world.  Gardener's  D.  58 

While  Annie  stiU  was  to  ;  Enoch  Arden  26 

No  casual  to,  but  a  wife.  In  Mem.  lix  2 

The  slowly-fading  to  of  the  world,  Com.  of  Arthur  505 

I  come,  great  M  of  the  ear  and  eye  :  Lover's  Tale  i  22 

Mistrust    never  shadow  of  to  can  cross  Between  us.       Marr.  of  Geraint  815 
shadow  of  to  should  never  cross  Betwixt  them,  Geraint  and  E.  248 

Mistrusted     Saving  that  you  m  our  good  King  Gareth  and  L.  1172 

Mistrustful    same  m  mood  That  makes  you  seem  less 

noble  Merlin  and  V.  321 

Mist-wreathen    Across  a  break  on  the  m-w  isle  Enoch  Arden  632 

Misty     (See  also  Silver-misty)     veiy  air  about  the  door 

Made  m  with  the  floating  meal.  Miller's  D.  104 

Across  the  mountain  stream'd  below  In  m  folds.  Palace  of  Art  35 

From  TO  men  of  lettei"s  ;  Will  Water.  190 

the  TO  summer  And  gray  metropolis  of  the  North.  The  Daisy  103 

He  finds  on  to  mountain-ground  His  own  vast 

shadow  In  Mem.  xcvii  2 

Wrapt  in  di-ifts  of  lurid  smoke  On  the  m  river-tide.  Maud  II  iv  67 

Yet  not  so  to  were  her  meek  blue  eyes  Geraint  and  E.  772 

I  cared  not  for  it :  a  single  to  star.  Merlin  and  V.  508 

All  in  a  to  moonshine,  unawares  Lancelot  and  E.  48 

The  wide-wing'd  sunset  of  the  to  marsh  Last  Tournament  423 

Misused     canceU'd  a  sense  to  :  Godiva  72 

Misyoked     I — to.  with  such  a  want  of  man —  Last  Tournament  571 

Mitred    while  this  to  Arundel  Dooms  our  unUcensed 

preacher  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  104 

Mitre-sanction' d    m-s  harlot  draws  his  clerks  „  106 

Mix     joy  that  m'es  man  with  Heaven  :  Two  Voices  210 

Yearning  to  to  himself  with  Life.  Love  thou  thy  land  56 

can  my  nature  longer  to  with  thine  ?  Tithonus  65 

I  myself  must  m  with  action,  Locksley  Hall  98 

So  m  for  ever  with  the  past.  Will  Water.  201 

TO  the  foaming  draught  Of  fever.  Princess  ii  251 

Speak  little  ;  to  not  with  the  rest ;  „  360 

Hebes  are  they  to  hand  ambrosia,  to  The  nectar ;  „       Hi  113 


Miz 


472 


Mob 


Mix  (eorUinued)    while  the  fires  of  Hell  M  with  his  hearth  :     Princess  v  455 

think  that  you  might  m  his  draught  with  death,  „        vi  277 

And  m  the  seasons  and  the  golden  hours  ;  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  36 

'  The  SEinds  and  yeasty  surges  m  Sailor  Boy  9 

And  m  with  hollow  masks  of  night ;  In  Mem.  Ixx  4 

O  tell  me  where  the  senses  m,  „  Ixxxviii  3 

They  m  in  one  another's  arms  „          cii  23 

May  she  m  With  men  and  prosper  !  .,          cxiv  2 

M  not  memory  with  doubt,  Maud  II  iv  57 

Of  those  who  m  all  odour  to  the  Gods  Tiresias  184 

To  m  with  what  he  plow'd  ;  Ancient  Sage  145 

senses  break  away  To  m  with  ancient  Night.'  „          153 
Will  m  with  love  for  you  and  yours.                    To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  52 

That  I  might  m  with  men,  and  hear  their  words  Prog,  of  Spring  82 

one  of  those  Who  m  the  wines  of  heresy  Akbar's  Dream  174 

M  me  this  Zone  with  that !  Mechanophilus  8 

Miz'd-Mizt    The  elements  were  kindUer  mix'd.'  Two  Voices  228 

She  mix'd  her  ancient  blood  with  shame.  The  Sisters  8 
Mix'd  with  the  knightly  growth  that  fringed  his 

Ups.  M.d' Arthur  220 

mix'd  with  shadows  of  the  common  grovmd  !  Gardener's  D.  135 

A  welcome  mix'd  with  sighs.  Talking  Oak  212 

lights  of  sunset  and  of  simrise  mix'd  Love  and  Duty  72 

In  mosses  mixt  with  violet  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  30 

Mix'd  with  cunning  sparks  of  hell.  Vision  of  Sin  114 

rain  of  heaven,  mixt  Upon  their  faces,  Aylmer's  Field  429 

on  those  cliffs  Broke,  mixt  with  awful  light  Sea  Dreams  215 

on  the  crowd  Broke,  mixt  with  awful  light,  „          235 

cry  Which  mixt  with  Uttle  Margaret's,  „          246 

And  hands  they  mixt,  and  yeU'd  Lucretius  56 

And  mixt  with  these,  a  lady,  Princess,  Pro.  32 

mixt  with  inmost  terms  Of  art  and  science  :  „            ii  446 

we  mixt  with  those  Six  hundred  maidens  „                471 

our  dreams  ;  perhaps  he  mixt  with  them  :  „           Hi  220 

Part  stumbled  mixt  with  floundering  horses.  „             v  498 

like  night  and  evening  mixt  Their  dark  and  gray,  „           vi  131 

And  mixt,  as  life  is  mixt  with  pain.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  27 

Mixt  with  myrtle  and  clad  with  vine,  Ths  Islet  19 

No — mixt  with  all  this  mystic  frame,  In  Mem.  Ixxviii  18 

He  mixt  in  all  our  simple  sports  ;  „       Ixxxix  10 

Mixt  their  dim  lights,  like  life  and  death,  „             xcv  63 

Tho'  mix'd  with  God  and  Nature  thou,  „           exxx  11 

a  world  in  which  I  have  hardly  mixt,  Maud  I  vi  76 

Mixt  with  kisses  sweeter  sweeter  „       //  iv  9 

mix'd  my  breath  With  a  loyal  people  shouting  „    III  vi  34 

wildly  fly,  Mixt  with  the  flyers.  Geraint  and  E.  483 
she  mixt  Her  fancies  with  the  sallow-rifted  glooms  Lancelot  and  E.  1001 

brambles  mixt  And  overgrowing  them,  Pelleas  and  E.  422 

Nor  with  them  mix'd,  nor  told  her  name,  Guinevere  148 
Mix'd  with  the  knightly  growth  that  fringed  his 

lips.  Pass,  of  Arthur  388 

Mixt  with  the  gorgeous  west  the  lighthouse  shone.        Lover's  Tale  i  60 

and  these  Mixt  with  her  own,  because  the  fierce  beast  Tiresias  151 

And  mixt  the  dream  of  classic  times  „        194 

past  and  future  mix'd  in  Heaven  The  Ring  186 

Black  with  bridal  favours  mixt !  Forlorn  69 

mixt  with  the  great  Sphere-music  of  stars  Parnassus  8 

mixt  herself  with  him  and  past  in  fire.  Death  of  (Enone  106 

Hizen     cast  it  on  the  m  that  it  die.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  672 

Mizmg    Ice  with  the  warm  blood  m;  All  Things  will  Die  33 

Which  m  with  the  infant's  blood,  Supp.  Confessions  61 

He  m  with  his  proper  sphere,  In  Mem.  Ix  5 

Mixt    .9ee  Mix'd 

Mizpeh    she  went  along  From  M's  tower'd  gate  D.  of  F.  Women  199 

Mnemosyne    That  claspt  the  feet  of  a  M,  Princess  iv  269 

Moab    water  M  saw  Ck)me  round  by  the  East,  Last  Tournament  482 
Moan  (s)    {See  also  Mo&n)    Heard  the  war  m  along  the 

distant  sea,  Buonaparte  10 

But '  Ave  Mary,'  made  she  m,  Mariana  in  the  S.  9 

And  '  Ave  Mary,'  was  her  m,  „              21 

'  Is  this  the  form,'  she  made  her  m,  „             33 


herm, 

She  breathed  in  sleep  a  lower  m. 
She  whisper'd,  with  a  stifled  m 
'  The  day  to  night,'  she  made  her  m. 
And  weeping  then  she  made  her  m. 


45 
57 
81 
93 


Moan  (s)  {continued)    Nor  sold  his  heart  to  idle  m's. 
In  firry  woodlands  making  m  ; 
hears  the  low  M  of  an  unkno^vn  sea  ; 
And  make  perpetual  m. 
And  the  low  m  of  leaden-colour'd  seas. 
The  m  of  doves  in  immemorial  elms, 
m  of  an  enemy  massacred. 
Is  that  enchanted  m  only  the  swell 
Crawl'd  slowly  with  low  m's  to  where  he  lay, 
And  to  all  other  ladies,  I  make  m  : 
So  made  his  m,  and,  darkness  falling, 
M's  of  the  dying,  and  voices  of  the  dead. 
But  when  that  m  had  past  for  evermore, 
mask  of  Hate,  who  Uves  on  others'  m's. 
From  under  rose  a  muffled  m  of  floods  ; 
and  the  m  of  my  waves  I  whirl. 
For  m's  wiU  have  grown  sphere-music 
Moan  (s)    I  'card  'er  a  maakin'  'er  m. 
Moan  (verb)    what  is  life,  that  we  should  m  ? 
the  deep  M's  round  with  many  voices. 
Nor  ever  lowest  roU  of  thxmder  m's, 
or  bits  of  roasting  ox  M  round  the  spit — 
'  Not  such  as  m's  about  the  retrospect, 
And  m  and  sink  to  their  rest. 
I  hear  the  dead  at  midday  m, 
heard  the  Spirits  of  the  waste  and  weald  M  as  she 

fled,  or  thought  she  heard  them  m  : 
and  the  sea  that  'ill  m  Uke  a  man  ? 
water  began  to  heave  and  the  weather  to  m, 
■  ask'd  the  waves  that  m  about  the  world 
'  We  know  not,  and  we  know  not  why  we  m.' 
M  to  myself  '  one  plunge — 
Moan'd     the  passion  in  her  m  reply 
She  heard,  she  moved.  She  m, 
And  ever  and  aye  the  Priesthood  m. 
Weighted  it  down,  but  in  himself  he  m  : 
he  kiss'd  it,  m  and  spake  ; 
All  that  had  chanced,  and  Balan  m  again, 
and  madden'd  with  himself  and  m  : 
And  in  herself  she  m  '  Too  late,  too  late  !  ' 
'  O,  you  warm  heart,'  he  m, 
'  0  Stephen,'  I  ?»,  '  I  am  coming  to  thee 
m,  I  am  fitter  for  my  bed,  or  for  my  grave, 
and  m  '  ffinone,  my  (Enone, 
Moaneth    Wherefore  he  m  thus, 
Moanin'     an'  m  an'  naggin'  agean  ; 
Moaning  (adj.  and  part.)    {See  also  Ever-moaning, 
Moanin')     Nor,  m,  household  shelter  crave 
And  circle  m  in  the  air  : 

Uther  died  himself,  M  and  wailing  for  an  heir 
Uther  in  Tintagil  past  away  M  and  wailing  for  an 

heir, 
M  '  My  violences,  my  violences  !  ' 
M  and  calling  out  of  other  lands. 
The  phantom  circle  of  a  m  sea. 
stones  Strewn  in  the  entry  of  the  m  cave  ; 
But  I  could  wish  yon  m  sea  would  rise 
I  found  myself  m  again 
Are  there  thunders  m  in  the  distance  ? 
M  your  losses,  0  Earth, 
Moaning  (s)    Yes,  as  your  m's  witness. 
The  m's  of  the  homeless  sea, 
glooms  Of  evening,  and  the  m's  of  the  wind. 
Heard  in  his  tent  the  m's  of  the  King  : 
The  m  of  the  woman  and  the  child. 
The  m's  in  the  forest,  the  loud  brook, 
do  ye  make  your  m  for  my  child  ?  ' 
And  may  there  be  no  m  of  the  bar, 
Moat    My  malice  is  no  deeper  than  a  m. 
Moated     Upon  the  lonely  m  grange. 

About  the  lonely  m  grange. 
Mob  (s)    Confused  by  brainless  m's 

m's  million  feet  Will  kick  you  from  your  place, 
One  ti-uth  will  damn  me  with  the  mindless  m, 
Mob  (verb)    From  my  fixt  height  to  m  me  up 


Two  Voices  221 

Miller's  D.  42 

Palace  of  Art  280 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  17 

Enoch  Arden  612 

Princess  vii  221 

Boddicea  25 

Maud  I  xviii  62 

Balin  and  Balan  592 

Lancelot  and  E.  1279 

Pelleas  and  E.  213 

Pass,  of  Arthur  117 

441 

Lover's  Tale  i  775 

Prog,  of  Spring  70 

The  Dreamer  13 

29 

Spinster's  S's.  115 

May  Queen,  Con.  56 

Ulysses  56 

Lucretius  108 

132 

Princess  iv  85 

Voice  and  the  P.  16 

Maud  I  vi  70 

Guinevere  130 

Rizpah  72 

The  Revenge  113 

Demeter  and  P.  64 

67 

Charity  16 

Enoch  Arden  286 

Princess  v  72 

The  Victim^ 

Balin  and  Balan  225 

598 

604 

Pelleas  and  E.  460 

Guinevere  131 

Lover's  Tale  iv  76 

The  Wreck  132 

The  Ring  432 

Death  of  (Enone  28 

Supp.  Confessions  132 

Owd  Rod  108 

Two  Voices  200  \ 

In  Mem.  xii  15] 

Com.  of  Arthur  2011 


368! 
Balin  and  Balan  435 
Merlin  and  V.  962 
Pass,  of  Arthur  81 
Lover's  Tale  Hi  2 
The  Flight  11 
The  Wreck  134 
On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  66 
The  Dreamer  17 ; 
Aylmer's  Field  749  j 
In  Mem.  xxxv  9J 
Lancelot  and  E.  10031 
Pass,  of  Arthur  81 
Lover's  Tale  i  520l 

ii  114 
Demeter  and  P.  65j 
Crossing  the  Bar  3l 
Geraint  and  E.  340J 
Mariana  8 1 
32 
Ode  on  Well.  153 

The  Fleet  18  ^i 

Romney's  R.  120 1 

Princess  vi  308a 


Mock 


473 


Molly 


I 


Mock  (adj.)     Autumn's  m  sunshine  of  the  faded  woods    Aylmer's  Field  610 
down  rolls  the  world  In  in  heroics  stranger  than  our 

own  ;  Princess,  Con.  64 

Mock  (s)    nor  moves  the  loud  world's  random  m,  Will  4 

seamen  made  m  at  the  mad  Uttle  craft  The  Revenge  38 

Mock  (verb)     I  would  m  thy  chaunt  anew ;  TJie  Owl  ii  8 

'  M  me  not !  m  me  not !  love,  let  us  go.'  The  Islet  30 

m  at  a  barbarous  adversary.  Boddicea  18 

We  m  thee  when  we  do  not  fear :  In  Mem.,  Pro.  30 

And  m  their  foster-mother  on  four  feet,  Com.  of  Arthur  31 

I  m  thee  not  but  as  thou  mockest  me,  Gareth  and  L.  289 

And  now  thou  goest  up  to  m  the  King,  „            292 

'  Is  this  thy  courtesy — to  m  me,  ha  ?  Balin  and  Balan  495 

And  no  man  there  will  dare  to  m  at  me  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  1053 

marking  how  the  knighthood  m  thee,  fool —  Last  Tournament  301 

hear  the  garnet-headed  yaffingale  M  them :  „             701 

he  never  m's.  For  mockery  is  the  fume  Guinevere  632 

Mock-disease    old  hysterical  m-d  should  die.'  Maud  III  vi  33 

Mock'd     That  m  the  wholesome  human  heart,  The  Letters  10 

That  m  him  with  rettmiing  calm,  Lucretius  25 

This  railer,  that  hath  m  thee  in  full  hall —  Gareth  and  L.  369 

first  they  m,  but,  after,  reverenced  him.  „            507 

Garlon  m  me,  but  I  heeded  not.  Balin  and  Balan  606 
he  smote  his  thigh,  and  m :  '  Right  was  the 

King  !  Lancelot  and  E.  664 

But  when  she  m  his  vows  and  the  great  King,  Pdleas  and  E.  252 

but  with  plumes  that  m  the  may,  Guinevere  22 

Except  he  m  me  when  he  spake  of  hope  ;  „      631 

I  So  m,  so  spum'd,  so  baited  two  whole  days —        Sir  J.  Oldcastle  163 

I  would  not  be  m  in  a  madhouse  !  Despair  79 

Mocker     Betwixt  the  m's  and  the  realists  :  Princess,  Con.  24 

the  m  ending  here  Tum'd  to  the  right,  Gareth  and  L.  294 

Mockery     And  my  mockeries  of  the  world.  Vision  of  Sin  202 

A  w  to  the  yeomen  over  ale,  Aylmer's  Field  497 

I  seem  A  m  to  my  own  self.  Princess  vii  337 

not  whoUy  brain,  Magnetic  mockeries  ;  In  Mem.  cxx  3 

Marr'd  tho'  it  be  with  spite  and  m  now,  Pelleas  and  E.  327 

But  these  in  earnest  those  in  m  call'd  Last  Tournament  135 

there  with  gibes  and  flickering  mockeries  „               186 

The  m  of  my  people,  and  their  bane.'  Guinevere  526 

For  m  is  the  fume  of  Httle  hearts.  „        633 

Mockest     Why  m  thou  the  stranger  Gareth  and  L.  283 

but  as  thou  m  me.  And  all  that  see  thee,  „             289 

Mock-heroic     The  sort  of  m-h  gigantesque,  Princess,  Con.  11 

Mock-honour    Did  her  m-h  as  the  fairest  fair,  Geraint  and  E.  833 

Mock-Hymen     M-if  were  laid  up  hke  winter  bats.  Princess  iv  144: 

Mocking     made  me  a  m  curtsey  and  went.  Grandmother  46 

almost  Arthur's  words — A  m  fire  :  Holy  Grail  670 

Now  m  at  the  much  ungainUness,  Last  Tournament  728 

0  the  formal  m  bow,  The  Flight  29 

1  heard  a  m  laugh  '  the  new  Kor&n  !  '  Akhar's  Bream  183 
Mocldng-wise  Sir  Garlon  utter'd  m-w ;  Balin  and  Balan  389 
Mock-knight    Had  made  m-k  of  Arthm-'s  Table 

Round,  Last  Tournament  2 

Mock-love     same  m-l,  and  this  Mock-Hymen  Princess  iv  143 

Mock-Ioyal    With  reverent  eyes  m-l.  Merlin  and  V.  157 

Mock-meek     That  m-m  mouth  of  utter  Antichrist,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  170 

Mock-sister     after  marriage,  that  m-s  there — ■  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  172 

Mock-solemn     something  so  m-s,  that  I  laugh'd  Princess,  Pro.  215 

Mode     (See  also  Man-mode)     Odalisques,  or  oracles  of  m.  Princess  ii  77 

Ring  in  the  nobler  m's  of  life,  In  Mem.  cvi  15 

Model  (adj.)     '  This  m  husband,  this  fine  Artist '  !  Romney's  R.  124 

Model  (s)     why  should  any  man  Remodel  m's  ?  The  Epic  38 

A  dozen  angry  m's  jetted  steam  :  Princess,  Pro.  73 

glove  upon  the  tomb  Lay  by  her  hke  a  m  of  her  hand.      „  iv  597 

This  mother  is  your  m.  „           vii  335 

the  giant  aisles,  Rich  in  m  and  design  ;  Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  13 

To  serve  as  m  for  the  mighty  world,  Guinevere  465 

Accomplish  that  bhnd  m  in  the  seed,  Prog,  of  Spring  114 

Modell'd     Is  but  m  on  a  skull.  Vision  of  Sin  178 

Neither  m,  glazed,  nor  framed :  „            188 

Moderate    statesman-warrior,  m,  resolute.  Ode  on  Well.  25 

Modem     To  make  demand  of  m  rhyme  To  the  Queen  11 

Not  master'd  by  some  m  term  ;  Love  thou  thy  land  30 

Perhaps  some  m  touches  here  and  there  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  6 


Modem  {continued)     King  Arthur,  like  a  m  gentleman 

Of  stateliest  port ;  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  22 

Or  something  of  a  wayward  m  mind  Dissecting 

passion.  Edtvin  Morris  87 

The  m  Muses  reading.  Amphion  76 

Cock  was  of  a  larger  egg  Than  m  poultry  drop.  Will  Water.  122 

What  hope  is  here  for  m  rhyme  To  him,  /«  Mem.  Ixxvii  1 

Full-handed  plaudits  from  our  best  In  m  letters.       To  E.  Fitzgerald  39 
your  m  amourist  is  of  easier,  earthher  make.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  18 

Something  other  than  the  wildest  m  guess  of  you 

and  me.  „  232 

And  that  bright  hair  the  m  sun.  Epilogue  8 

Modest     To  make  him  trust  his  m  worth,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  46 

hke  a  pear  In  growing,  m  eyes,  a  hand.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  54 

Him,  to  her  meek  and  m  bosom  prest  Aylmer's  Field  416 

'  0  marvellously  m  maiden,  you  !  Princess  Hi  48 

How  m,  kindly,  aU-accomplish'd,  wise.  Bed.  of  Idylls  18 

Modish    The  m  Cupid  of  the  day,  Talking  Oak  67 

Modred  (A  knight  of  the  Bomid  Table)    Gawain  and 

young  M,  her  two  sons,  Com.  of  Arthur  244 

M  laid  his  ears  beside  the  doors,  „  323 

came  With  M  hither  in  the  summertime,  Gareth  and  L.  26 

M  for  want  of  worthier  was  the  judge.  ,,  28 

M  biting  his  thin  lips  was  mute,  ,,  31 

all  in  fear  to  find  Sir  Gawain  or  Sir  if ,  .,  326 

And  M's  blank  as  death ;  „  417 

Sir  M's  brother,  and  the  child  of  Lot,  Lancelot  and  E.  558 

M  thought,  '  The  time  is  hard  at  hand.'  Pelleas  and  E.  610 

show'd  him,  hke  a  vermin  in  its  hole,  M,  a 

narrow  face  :  Last  Tournament  166 

her  cause  of  flight  Sir  M  ;  Guinevere  10 

M  still  in  green,  all  ear  and  eye.  „  24 

laugh'd  Lightly,  to  think  of  M's  dusty  fall.  Then 

■  ■■  55 

63 
103 
154 
195 
441 
443 
Pass,  of  Arthur  59 
80 

153 
165 

Princess  ii  425 

Eleanore  63 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  81 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  29 

Love  thou  thy  land  38 

A  spirit  haunts  17 

Maud  I  vi  53 

Geraint  and  E.  350 

Pelleas  and  E.  215 

Geraint  and  E.  513 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  5 

My  life  is  full  12 

Aylmer's  Field  849 

Def.  of  Lucknow  26 

Dead  Prophet  56 

Princess  iv  158 


shudder'd, 
M's  narrow  foxy  face.  Heart-hiding  smile, 
M  brought  His  creatures  to  the  basement 
that  Sir  M  had  usurp'd  the  realm. 
And  M  whom  he  left  in  charge  of  all. 
And  many  more  when  M  raised  revolt, 
clave  To  M,  and  a  remnant  stays  with  me. 
I  hear  the  steps  of  M  in  the  west. 
And  ever  push'd  Sir  M,  league  by  league, 
yonder  stands,  M,  unharm'd,  the  traitor  of 

thine  house.' 
then  M  smote  his  hege  Hard  on  that  helm 

Modulate    M  me,  Soul  of  mincing  mimicry  ! 

Modulated    They  were  m  so  To  an  unheard  melody, 

Mogul    he  that  led  the  wild  M's, 

Moind  (mind)     D'ya  m  the  waaste,  my  lass  ? 

Moist     And  m  and  dry,  devising  long. 

At  the  m  rich  smell  of  the  rotting  leaves. 

And  a  m  mirage  in  desert  eyes, 

or  the  fancy  of  it.  Made  liis  eye  m  ;  but  Enid 

fear'd  his  eyes,  M  as  they  were, 
and  m  or  dry,  Full-arm'd  upon  his  charger 

Moisten    her  true  hand  falter,  nor  blue  eye  M, 

Moisture    blew  Coolness  and  m  and  all  smells 

Mole  (animal)    The  four-handed  m  shall  scrape, 
the  m  has  made  his  run, 
you  can  hear  him — the  mm'derous  m  ! 

Mole  (on  the  skin)     Were  it  but  for  a  wart  or  a  w  ?  ' 

MoU     tavern-catch  Of  M  and  Meg, 

Molly    [See  also  Molly  Magee)     M  the  long  un  she  walkt 
awaay  wi'  a  hoflficer  lad, 
for  M  was  out  of  her  mind. 
'  M  asthore,  I'll  meet  you  agin  tomon-a,' 
Thin  M's  ould  mother,  yer  Honour, 
But  M,  begorrah,  'ud  Usthen  to  naither  at  all, 
But  M  says  '  I'd  his  hand-promise, 
'  M,  you're  manin','  he  says,  me  dear, 
But  M  kem  hmpin'  up  wid  her  stick, 
Och,  M,  we  thought,  machree. 
When  M  cooms  in  fro'  the  far-end  close 
M  beUke  may  'a  lighted  to-night  upo'  one. 
An'  M  and  me  was  agreed. 


Village  Wife  97 

Tomorrow  6 

15 

19 

46 

52 

56 

77 

81 

Spinster's  S's.  2 

7 

49 


MoUy 


474 


may  {continued)     when  M  'd  put  out  the  light,  Spinster's  S's.  97 

what  ha  niaade  our  M  sa  laate  '  i io 

Molly  Ma«ee    (5^6  0^50  Molly)    They  caU'd  her  M  M.  Tmnorrow  4 

M  M  wid  her  batchelor,  Danny  O'Roon—  «"-/•«■«;* 

M  M  kern  flyin'  acrass  me,  as  Ught  as  a  laik  "        21 

MM  wid  the  red  o'  the  rose  an'  the  white  o'  the  Mav  "        31 

Ud  a  shot  his  own  sowl  dead  for  a  kiss  of  ve  M  M  ''              "        m 

Div  ye  know  him,  MM?'                          J  >       -    •                  "to 

Danny  O'Roon  wid  his  ould  woman,  M  M  "         ee 

tell  thini  in  Hiven  about  M  M  an'  her  Danny  O'Roon,               '"         92 

Moloch    red-hot  palms  of  a  JIf  of  Tyre,  The  Dawn  9 

Mopwny    an' Father  1/ he  tuk  her  in  han',  iZor^Zd 

Molt^    ^»  on  the  waste  Becomes  a  cloud  :  '  Pri^Zivli 

Her  noble  heart  wa5  m  in  her  breast ;  r-rincessiv  U 

Athwart  a  plane  of  m  glass,  /„  x{.^    ' ,  Ti 

The  rocket  m  into  flakis  Of  crimson  ^"^  ^'"^-J^i  V, 

And  m  up,  and  roar  in  flood  ;  "    ^^2% 

And  m  do^vn  m.  mere  uxoriousness.  Marr  of  Gerni'ni  m 
SiCed  anT  beautiful  in  Past  of  act  or  place,        '  w{  frfisl 

Uittused  and  m  mto  flaky  cloud.  g4i 

m  Into  adulterous  hving,  ,&;„    7   nh^„„47.  mo 

Moly    propt  on  beds  of  amaranth  and  «,,  Zoto^ia^Ss    C  ^  2S 

Moment    brought,  At  the  m  of  thy  birth  ElednoVe  15 

m  a  m  I  would  pierce  The  blackest  files  kZ  25 

Am  came  the  tenderness  of  tears.  The  form,  the  form  9 

flower  of  each,  those  m's  when  we  met,  ^dwin  MoLs  69 

One  earnest,  earnest  m  upon  mine,  Zove  and  Duty  37 

SZ^'  ^^"^  shaken  ran  itself  Lo.^ey  nil  32 

Changed  every  m  as  we  flew.  The  Vm.nZ^t 

Glow'd  for  a  m  as  we  past.  ^  ^°'-''^^^  ff 

Every  m  dies  a  man.  Every  m  one  is  born.  Vision  of  Sin  97,  121 

when  the  last  of  those  last  m's  came,  Enoch  Arden  217 

stood  on  deck  Waving,  the  m  and  the  vessel  past  244 

Paused  for  a  m  at  an  inner  door,  "          o|o 

And  dwelt  a  m  on  his  kindly  face,  "          qof 

She  spoke  ;  and  in  one  m  as  it  were,  "          450 

Which  in  one  m,  hke  the  blast  of  doom,  "           7«q 

Enoch  hung  A  m  on  her  words,  '"          373 

our  pride  Looks  only  for  a  m  whole  and  sound  ;  Ayhner's  Field  2 

Between  his  palms  a  ot  up  and  down—  259 

That  night,  that  m,  when  she  named  "          goi 

The  fountain  of  the  m,  playing,  Pri^e^s,  Pro.  61 

and  a  m,  and  once  more  The  trumpet,  ~  407 

on  her  foot  she  hung  A  m,  and  she  heard,  "           ,„v  on 

wno  stood  a  m,  ere  his  horse  was  brought  qc{4 

But  when  they  closed— in  a  m—  "        i222 

in  a  m  heard  thenri  pass  like  wolves  Howhng  ;  Balin  and  Balan  407 

men,  in  one  to,  she  put  forth  the  charm  Merlin  and  V  967 

every  to  glanced  His  silver  arms  and  gloom'd  :  Holv  Grail  492 

m  a  TO  when  they  blazed  again  Open^g,  ^            tos 

In  m's  when  he  feels  he  cannot  die,  "          of g 

Rolling  his  eyes,  a  m  stood,  co, 

A  if "!-  ftf^"  "^  T'  l"^,  ^?^^^J:^  5  ^«*^  Tournament  26 

A  TO,  ere  the  onward  whirlwind  shatter  it.  Lover's  Tale  i  451 

Which  seeming  for  the  m  due  to  death,  s  laiei  40i 

wealth  Flash'd  from  me  in  a  to  and  I  feU  "            aaq 

This  custom '    Pausing  here  a  to,  "        ,v  2S7 

Ihe  passionate  TO  would  not  suffer  that—  "            q^A 

fly  them  for  a  to  to  fight  with  them  again.  The  Rmel 

But  never  a  to  ceased  the  fight  of  throne  and  the  ^ 

luty-three.  __ 

and  for  a  face  Gone  in  a  to— strange.  Sisters  (E  at,}'  P  \  qI 

Roar^upon  roar  in  a  to  two  mines  by  the  enemy  ^              ^  ^^ 

an^J^^r  a  to  for  grief,  ^'■^-  "-^  ■^^'»««'  54 

I  suffer  all  as  much  Aa  they  do-for  the  to.  Coywmfiw*  218 

I  thought  of  the  child  for  a  to,  to?^     z.  c5 

bear  with  an  hour  of  torture,  k  ,«  of  pain,  nZZt  It 

Gazing  for  one  peasive  TO                            '  Zo.;;./.,  //f  ^?5  g 


Monstrous 


Moment  (continued)     m  fly  and  mingle  with  the 
Past. 
All  in  a  TO  foUow'd  with  force 
to  maintain  The  day  against  the  m, 
Made  every  m  of  her  after  life  A  virgin  victim 
Gleam'd  for  a  m  in  her  own  on  earth. 
Or  lost  the  m  of  their  past  on  earth, 
Shall  flash  thro'  one  another  in  a  m 
See,  I  sinn'd  but  for  a  w. 
held  you  at  that  to  even  dearer  than  before  ; 
still'd  it  for  the  to  with  a  song 
For  one  m  afterward  A  silence  foUow'd 
then  and  there  he  was  crush'd  in  a  to  and  died 
Let  your  reforms  for  a  to  go  !  ' 

Momentary    Hated  him  with  a  m  hate. 

that  hour  perhaps  Is  not  so  far  when  m  man 
A  w  likeness  of  the  King  : 
Brought  down  a  to  brow. 
That  less  than  m  thunder-sketch 
Each  poor  pale  cheek  a  m  rose — 
when  the  to  gloom,  Made  by  the  noonday  blaze 
Mona    While  about  the  shore  of  M 
Monaco    city  Of  little  M,  basking,  glow'd. 
Monarch    m  in  their  woodland  rhyme. 
Monday    saw  the  man — on  M,  was  it  ? — 

'  0'  M  momin' '  says  he  ; 
Money    (See  also  Mooney,  Munney,  Mmmy)    and  not 
a  room  For  love  or  to. 
m  can  be  repaid  ;  Not  kindness  such  as  youre  ' 
Nor  could  he  understand  how  to  breeds, 
An'  'e  bowt  owd  to,  es  wouldn't  goa, 
The  poor  man's  to  gone  to  fat  the  friar. 
M — my  hire — his  m — 
Monk    (See  also  FeUow-monk)     '  Old  Summers,  when 
the  TO  was  fat, 
TO  and  nun,  ye  scorn  the  world's  desire. 
The  TO  Ambrosius  question'd  Percivale  • 
To  whom  the  TO  :  '  The  Holy  Grail  !— I  trust 

Nay,  TO  !  what  phantom  ?  '  answer'd  Percivale 
the  m :     From  our  old  books  I  know  That  Joseph 
inen  spake  the  to  Ambrosius,  asking  him, 
Then  said  the  w,  '  Poor  men,  when  yule  is  cold 
the  TO  :     And  I  remember  now  That  pehcan  on' 
the  casque  : 
Monkeries    absolution-seUers,  to  And  nunneries 
Monkey-spite    No  lewdness,  narrowing  envy,  m-s 
Monkish    save  ye  fear  The  TO  manhood  ' 

Monmouth  (Harry  of)    See  Harry  of  Monmouth 
Monotonous    M  and  hoUow  like  a  Ghost's 

For  one  to  fancy  madden'd  her. 
Monster    wallowing  to  spouted  his  foam-fountains 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  279 
Heavy  Brigade  20 
To  Duke  of  Argyll  6 
The  Ring  220 
297 
464 
Happy  40 
„       85 
„      90 
Romney's  R.  84 
St.  Telemachus  64 
Charity  21 
Riflemen  form  !  15 
Ayhner's  Field  211 
Lucretius  253 
Com.  of  Arthur  271 
Gareth  and  L.  653 
Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  99 
The  Ring  315 
St.  TelcTnachus  49 
Boddicea  1 
The  Daisy  8 
Akhars  D.,  Hymn  6 
Walk,  to  the  Mail  30 
Tomorrow  17 

AuMey  Court  2 

Enoch  Arden  320 

The  Brook  6 

Village  Wife  49 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  150 

Charity  19 

Talking  Oak  41 

Balin  and  Balan  445 

Holy  Grail  17 

37 

45 

5& 

203 

613 


Sir  J.  Oldcastle  93 

Lucretius  211 

Merlin  and  V.  35 


bought  Quamt  m's  for  the  market  of  those  times 
TO  lays  His  vast  and  filthy  hands  upon  my  will 
Seven-headed  m's  only  made  to  kiU  Time 
r^"^  ^  ®/^'  ^^^^  *be  man  ;  Tattoo'd  or  woaded. 

No  doubt  we  seem  a  kind  of  to  to  you  • 
These  m's  blazon'd  what  they  were         ' 
I  loom  to  her  Three  times  am:       ' 
A  TO  then,  a  dream,  A  discord. 
Ti"?  !^^^-  '"■  ""subduable  Of  any  save  of  him 
M  !  O  Prince,  I  went  for  Lancelot  first 
advanced  The  to,  and  then  paused 
Monstrous    In  bed  hke  to  apes  they  crush'd  my 

Betwixt  the  to  horns  of  elk  and  deer 

Those  m  males  that  carve  the  living  hound 

and  the  wild  figtree  split  Their  m  idols,       ' 

Ihe  Princess  with  her  to  woman-guard 

and  leave  The  m  ledges  there  to  slope, ' 

Would  hsp  in  honey'd  whispers  of  this  m  fraud  ' 

Sown  m  a  wnnkle  of  the  m  hill 

A  to  eft  was  of  old  the  Lord  and  Master  of  Earth, 

Horrible,  hateful,  to,  not  to  be  told  • 

TO  ivy-stems  Claspt  the  gray  m  alls    ' 

So  lean  his  eyes  were  m ; 


Guinevere  420 

The  Ring  404 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  107 


Enoch  Arden  539 

Lucretius  219 

Princess,  Pro.  204 

a  119 

Hi  276 

iv  345 

V  131 

In  Mem.  liri  21 

Gareth  and  L.  858 

1343 

1385 

St.  S.  Stylites  174 

Princess,  Pro.  23 

„  Hi  310 

iv  80 

562 

vii  212 

Third  of  Feb.  36 

WUl  19 

Maud  I  iv  31 

„    Illvi^l 

Marr.  of  Geraint  322 

Merlin  and  V.  624 


Pass,  of  Arthur  114 

St.  Telemachus  40 

The  Daisy  66 


Monstrous 

Monstrous  {continued)    m  blasphemies,  Sweat, 
writhings,  anguish, 
Hard  Komans  brawling  of  their  m  games  ; 
Monte  Rosa    how  phantom-fair.  Was  M  E 
Montfort  (Edith)    See  Edith,  Edith  Montfort 
Month    (See  also  Seven-months')    Each  m  is  various  to 

present  The  world  2'wo  Voice  -  74 

Link'd  m  to  m  with  such  a  chain  Of  knitted  puroort  *167 

Pl'j^^lTf'^  Th'^-n'*' ^""^  ^*'^y  ^"'^  ^**^'  '         The  Sisters  IQ 

Earn  Nv  ell  the  thrifty  m's,  Love  thou  thy  land  95 

Consider,  William  :  take  a  m  to  tliink,  Dorn  M 

before  The  m  was  out  he  left  his  father's  house  37 

?n^^^*^TJ;'''^''A^K*^"*^°'    ,  '         Walk.totheMail2 

m  one  m  They  wedded  her  to  sixty  thousand 

^^"^^^  „  ,,     .     ,         ,  Edwin  Morris  125 

and  oft  I  fall.  Maybe  for  m's,  Sf  ,<?   <ii„]AtZ  i  hq 

I  must  work  thr/m's  of  .toil',  ''■  ''T^^^^f, 

Each  m,  a  birth-day  coming  on,  i^m  rf^  qi 

Caniefloatmg  on  for  niany  a  m  and  year,  Vision  of  Sin  54 
a  ?»— Give  her  a  to— she  knew  that  she  was  bound— 

So  m  by  m  the  noise  about  their  doors,  Avl^lr's  Fidd  488 

face  to  face  With  twenty  m's  of  silence,  ^              ^'^  giS 

In  one  m,  Thro'  weary  and  yet  ever  wearier  horns  "            827 

Came,  with  a  m's  leave  given  them,  '            g"  T)ream<i  fi 

Am  hence,  a  m  hence.  ^. -^^   ^y^     ^ 

The  all-assuming  m'5  and  years  /„  3/m.  V*-^^  67 

And  tho'  the  m's,  revolving  near,  Z.  ■■  \\ 

As  nine  m's  go  to  the  shaping  an  infant  Maud  I  iv  M 

In  another  m  to  his  brazen  Ues,  !^  cf 

as  m's  ran  on  and  rumour  of  battle  grew,  "    ///^  29 

So  for  a  m  he  wrought  among  the  thralls  ;  Garethand  T   «;9^ 

weeks  to  m's.  The  m's  ^vill  add  themselves  G^^^^e  624 

would  not  look  at  her-No  not  for  m's  :  LovStTIei^4l 

nme  long  m's  of  antenatal  gloom,  bTpJo^   tL  r  I 

last  m  they  wor  diggin'  the  bog,'  ^^     "^foZZSel 

Altho  the  m's  have  scarce  begun,  j'o  Vlnsseo  22 

Monument    A  m  of  childhood  and  of  love  ;  z^  J .  rj/p  l"  1 H 

Mood     Were  fixed  shadows  of  thy  fixed  m  LA./  o 

But  more  human  in  your  m's,  MnJnZw'^ 

We  taught  him  lowUer  m's,    '  JlZnZlul 

In  lazy  m  I  watch'd  the  Httle  circles  die  ;  M^^^D  73 

xJftl  fT"^  ""  ^^ ^^^^I  ""^  ""y  ^^^  ^"^-  P<^<^^  of  Art  59 

As  fat  for  every  m  of  mmd,  •'          qq 

from  which  m  was  bom  Scorn  of  herself  ;  again 

^   from  out  that  m  Laughter  at  her  self-scorn     '  oon 

I  govern'd  men  by  change,  and  so  I  sway'd 

^^,'^-^''^     .  ""-IwsTS 

1  went  thro  many  wayward  »«'s  Dai/- Dm     P^n  a 

She  changes  with  that  m  or  this,  mil  Wate^  107 

cruel  Seem'd  the  Captain's  m  rl!  n    f  ■    ? I 

But  subject  to  the  sLon  or  the  m,  Aylner's'lldd  71 

How  low  his  brother's  m  had  faUen,  ''               '^^'^JA 

and  in  her  Uon's  m  Tore  open.  Princess  iv  S8n 

Creation  minted  in  the  golden  7n's  Of  sovereign  ^"'»'^««^  ^^  ^^ 

artists;                                                                ^  ,„. 

And  left  her  woman,  lovelier  in  her  m  "       ,,jV  i62 

saw  Thee  woman  thro'  the  crust  of  iron  m's  "            S42 

My  lighter  m's  are  Uke  to  these,  InMem  xx% 

I  envy  not  in  any  m's  The  captive  void  -.■„„•,•  ^ 

Mere  feUowship  of  sluggish  m's,  "     ^^^21 

What  vaster  dream  can  hit  the  m  Of  Love  on  earth  ?  "      xlvii  11 

she  takes,  when  harsher  m's  remit,  "       ^7,„-,v  « 

And  put  thy  harsher  m's  aside,  "          Ux7 

Nor  less  it  pleased  in  livelier  m's,  "  ixxxix  29 

am  I  raging  alone  as  my  father  raged  in  his  m  ?  Maud  I  i  53 

My  m  IS  changed,  for  it  fell  at  a  time  of  year  ///  ^  4 

coming  up  quite  close,  and  in  his  m  Geraint  "and  E.  714 
Let  not  thy  m  s  prevail,  when  I  am  gone                 Balin  and  Balan  140 

&o  when  his  m's  were  darken'd,  235 

^f^A  ^^^e  ."^ougbt  upon  his  cloudy  m  Jfer^iw  Ind  V.  156 

And  yielding  to  his  kmdher  m's,  1Y4 

Dark  in  the  glass  of  some  presageful  m,  ]]            295 


475 


Moon 


Mood  (continued)    fled  from  Arthur  s  com-t  To  break 

Not^hlH  so  strange  as  that  dark  m  of  yours  ^"'^'''  "'^^  ^^  o?f 

same  inistrustfiU  m  That  makes  you  seem  leas  noble  "            321 

such  a  ?n.  as  that,  which  lately  gloom'd  "             09= 

As  high  as  woman  in  her  selfless  m.  "            ilo 

or  a  m  Of  overstrain'd  affection,  "            ^ 

Vivien,  gathering  somewhat  of  his  m,  "             040 

wrought  upon  his  m  and  hugg'd  him  close.  "            oaZ 

Arthnr^f!?\?A*'^  was  often  hke  a  fiend,  Lancelot  "and  E.  251 

Arthur  to  the  banquet,  dark  m  m,  Past  ^ci 

tum'd  Sir  Torre,  being  in  his  m's  Left  them,  '"             70^ 

?rirtrnrh^iff  nl.^^^  iT'^?  mock-knight  Last  Tournament  1 

iiistram,  half  plagued  by  Lancelot's  languorous  m  104 

Was  mme  a  m  To  be  invaded  rudely,      ^  Lover's' Tale  i  ^77 

At  times  too  shrHhng  in  her  angrie/ m's,  Theptl  Vil 

your  opiate  then  Bred  this  black  m  ?  Bomnev'TR  62 

mtfttTtli'''''  T  ''  '^^^^  AuTs'VreL  5I 

m  s  01  tiger,  or  01  ape  :  m  v        r  n/r      n 

Moon    (^e«  also  Crescent-moon,  Honeymoon)    At  midnighl     ''^  '^ 

the  m  Cometh,  m     t,  i  tq 

The  meUow'd  reflex  of  a  winter  m  ;  ^ /"^j  iq 

Bu?  wh'/nThr  ''''  "  '''^  ^^'  ^-rZnZ  49 

cut  wnen  the  »«  was  very  low,  co 

SJ  ''^ti  k^  ""'^.u*^  "*  '^'^  gathering  light  Love  and  "Death  1 

N^eith^rmtoi'lt^a^!^'^"  "'  '^"^  ^*^^' '  ^'^  ^-^  g 

Which  the  m  about  her  spreadeth,                           "  Maraaret  20 

Breathes  low  between  the  sunset  and  the  m  ;  £^^7124 

Or  tSL  ?!"*  *^'  '"^P"",  ""T'^'  ^-  ^/  'S/'"^^"  ^'  33 

Ur  wnen  the  m  was  overhead,  v  qo 

'For  every  worm  beneath  the  m  Two  "  Voices  178 

G  eam'd  to  the  flying  m  by  fits.  i^^zi^'sT  J16 

T  f/l-fh     i''  f  ^"^  "'°™"'^  "'•  Fatima  28 

In  hoUow'd  ms  of  gems,  ■'        jgg 
It  was  when  the  m  was  setting,                                  i^^^/  Queen,  Con.  26 

FuU-faced  above  the  vaUey  stood  the  m  ;  Lotos- Eaters  7 

Between  the  sun  and  m  upon  the  shore  ;  qq 

and  in  the  m  Nightly  dew-fed ;                '  "     C  S  2^ 

Once,  like  the  m,  I  made  The  ever-shiftin"  "        •    •  ^^ 
currents                                                      "               -D.  0/ J-.  fFomeT.  132 

Far-heard  beneath  the  m.  jg^ 
bahny  m  of  blessed  Israel  Floods  all  the  deep-blue 

gloom  jg- 

the  next  m  was  roll'd  into  the  sky,  "            229 

While  the  stars  bum,  the  m's  increase.  To  J  S  71 

Lay  a  great  water,  and  the  m  was  full.  M.  d' Arthur  12 

And  in  the  m  athwart  the  place  of  tombs,  "   '                 46 

the  winter  m  Brightening  the  skirts  of  a  long  cloud  "            53 

great  brand  Made  lightnings  in  the  splendour  of   the  in  "          137 

And  the  long  glories  of  the  winter  m.  '          192 

colourless,  and  like  the  wither'd  m              ,  "          213 

for  some  three  careless  m's.  Gardener's  D  15 
rose  And  saunter'd  home  beneath  a  m,  that,  just 

In  crescent  j^      ^ourt  80 

But  thirty  m  s,  one  honeymoon  to  that,  Edwin  Morris  29 

my  beard  Was  tagg'd  with  icy  fringes  in  the  m,  St.  S.  Stylites  32 

Sun  will  run  his  orbit,  and  the  M  Her  circle.  Love  and  Duty  22 

long  day  wanes  :  the  slow  m  climbs  :  Vlvsses  55 

meUow  m's  and  happy  skies,  Lockslev  Hall  159 

stand  at  gaze  like  Joshua's  m  in  Ajalon  !  lan 

hke  a  summer  m  Half-dipt  in  cloud  :  "  Qodiva  45 

the  snows  Are  sparkUng  to  the  m  :  St.  Agnes'  Eve  2 

^  ar  ran  the  naked  m  across  The  houseless  ocean's  The  Vovaae  29 

A  thousand  m's  wiU  quiver  :  j   Vn'^^nnln  ^A 

Ab  shines  the  m  in  clouded  skies,  BeaoarMaidQ 

beneath  a  clouded  m  He  hke  a  lover  EnocTlrde^tl 
1  murmui-  under  m  and  stars  In  brambly  wildernesses  ;  The  Brook  178 
music  of  the  m  Sleeps  m  the  plain  eggs                        Aylmer's  Field  102 

tJeneatn  a  pale  and  unimpassion'd  m,  334 

father's  face  Grow  long  and  troubled  hke  a  rising  m,  PHncess  i  59 

Come  from  the  dying  m,  and  blow,                              '  Jvifi 

out  of  the  west  Under  the  silver  m  :  "           15 

with  the  sun  and  m  renew  their  Ught  For  ever,  "        255 


Moon 


476 


Moother 


Moon  (continued)    For  many  weary  m's  before  we  came,       Princess  Hi  319 

And  brief  the  m  of  beauty  in  the  South.  .,        i^  113 

I  babbled  for  you,  as  babies  for  the  m,  ^            428 

A  maiden  m  that  sparkles  on  a  sty,  "         „  186 

like  a  clouded  w  In  a  stiU  water  :  "        ^^  270 

Now  set  a  wrathful  Dian's  w  on  flame,  "            368 

Ask  me  no  more  :  the  m  may  draw  the  sea  ;  "           vii  1 

our  God  Himself  is  m  and  sun.  Qde  on  Well.  217 

The  m  like  a  nek  on  fire  was  rising  Grandmother  39 

Echo  on  echo  Dies  to  the  m.  Minnie  and  Winnie  12 

The  sun  the  m,  the  stars,  Eigh.  Pantheism  1 

when  m  heaven  the  stars  about  the  m  Spec,  of  Iliad  11 
Sun  comes,  m  comes,  Time  shps  away.     Sun  sets 

m  sets  Love,  fix  a  day  '         Window,  When  1 

charms  Her  secret  from  the  latest  m  ?  '  /«  Mem.  xxi  20 

-\o  lapse  of  vvs  can  canker  Love,  g-^vi  3 

The  m  is  hid  ;  the  night  is  still ;  "       xxviii  2 

Or  when  a  thousand  m's  shall  wane  "       Ixxvii  8 

Or  sadness  in  the  summer  m's  ?  "      Ixxxiii  8 

flung  A  ballad  to  the  brightening  m  :  ;,'    lxxxix2Q 

Ihe  saihng  m-  in  creek  and  cove  ;  ^i  16 

The  m  is  hid,  the  night  is  still ;  "             ^iv  2 

glowing  Uke  the  m  Of  Eden  on  its  bridal  bower  :                   .','       Con  27 

And  rise,  O  m,  from  yonder  down,  '              109 

hand,  as  white  As  ocean-foam  in  the  m,  Maud  I  xiv  18 

And  a  hush  with  the  setting  m.  .^      ^xii  18 

Now  half  to  the  setting  m  are  gone,  '              23 

Not  many  m's.  King  Uther  died  himself.  Com.  of  "Arthur  206 

Jietween  the  in-crescent  and  de-crescent  w,  Gareth  and  L.  529 

O  VI,  that  layest  all  to  sleep  again,  1061 
Answer'd  Sir  Gareth  graciously  to  one  Not  many 

a  TO  his  younger,  \415 

by  night  With  m  and  trembling  stars,  Marr.  of  Geraint  8 

but  three  bnef  m  s  had  glanced  away  Balin  and  Balan  154 

Ihose  twelve  sweet  m's  confused  his  fatherhood.'  Merlin  and  V  712 

All  in  the  middle  of  the  rising  m  :  Holy  GraU  636 

And  with  me  drove  the  m  and  all  the  stars  ;  .,            809 

That  kept  the  entry,  and  the  ?»  was  full.  ][            818 

the  rounded  m  Thro'  the  tall  oriel  on  the  rolling  sea.             "            830 

mitU  the  third  night  brought  a  to  Pelleas  "and  E.  393 

Here  too,  all  hush'd  below  the  mellow  to,  „            424 

their  own  darkness,  throng'd  into  the  to.  "            458 

She  Uved  a  to  in  that  low  lodge  with  him  :  Last  Tournament  381 

Far  over  sands  marbled  with  m  and  cloud,  „              466 

Beneath  a  to  unseen  albeit  at  full,  "Guinevere  6 

on  one  Lay  a  great  water,  and  the  to  was  full,  Pass  of  Arthur  180 

in  the  TO  athwart  the  place  of  tombs,  '                   „            214 

winter  to.  Brightening  the  skirts  of  a  long  cloud,  ,"            221 

great  brand  Made  lightnings  in  the  splendour  of  the  to,         ",            305 

And  the  long  glories  of  the  winter  to.  „            360 

face  was  white  And  colourless,  and  hke  the  wither'd  m  "            381 

the  to.  Half-melted  into  thin  blue  air.  Lover's' Tale  i  420 

came  in  The  white  light  of  the  weary  to  above,  „              640 

But  many  weary  m's  I  lived  alone —  ,^              a  2 

glows  and  glories  of  the  to  Below  black  fii-s,  "              no 

eleventh  to  After  their  marriage  lit  the  lover's  Bay,  ,'           iv  27 

m  Struck  from  an  open  grating  overhead  .','               59 

and  the  full  to  stares  at  the  snow.  "     Rizpah  4 

Willy — the  m's  in  a  cloud —  ^         g6 

With  this  last  to,  tliis  crescent —  De  Prof.,  Two  G  9 
ninth  to,  that  sends  the  hidden  sun  Down  yon 

dark  sea,  33 

Drew  to  this  shore  lit  by  the  suns  and  m's  "           38 

ttiLs  roaring  m  of  daffodil  And  crocus,  Pref  Son.,  19th  Cent  7 

Rejoicing  that  the  sun,  the  to,  the  stars  Tiresias  160 

and  crows  to  the  sun  and  the  to.  Despair  90 

Till  the  Sun  and  the  M  of  our  science  91 

there  was  but  a  slip  of  a  to,  Toi^ow  9 

wid  his  song  to  the  Sun  an'  the  M,  9I 

dead  as  yon  dead  world  the  to  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  174 

TO  was  falling  greenwh  thro'  a  rosy  glow,  178 

Beneath  a  hard  Arabian  m  And  alien  stars.        To  Mara,  of  Duffenn  45 

gleam  as  of  the  to.  When  first  she  peers  along  DenJter  aUd  P.  13 

dwell  hor  nine  white  m's  of  each  whole  year  120 

To  send  the  m  into  the  night  and  break  "„            I35 


Moon  (continued)    Mellow  to  of  heaven.  Bright  in  blue    ¥  of 

married  hearts  Hear  me,  you !  '               The  Ring  1 

Globing  Honey  M's  Bright  as  this.  7 

M,  you  fade  at  times  From  the  night.  "          9 

Globe  again,  and  make  Honey  M.  "        I6 

Shall  not  my  love  last,  M,  with  you,  "        13 

They  made  a  thousand  honey  m's  of  one  ?  "        22 

And  while  the  to  was  setting.  JforJom  84 

not  be  foUow'd  by  the  M  ?^  Happl  97 

Mooned     Upon  the  m  domes  aloof  In  inmost  Bastdat,  Arabian  Nights  127 

Mooney  (money)     Parson  as  hesn't  the  call,  nor  the  m.  Village  Wife  91 

Moon-faced    :Maud  the  beloved  of  my  mother,  the  m-f 

darling  of  all,—  Maud  I  i  72 

Moon-led     Their  m-l  waters  white.  Palace  of  Art  252 

Moonless    Storm,  such  as  drove  her  under  m  heavens  Enoch  Arden  547 

Gnntl  on  the  wakeful  ear  in  the  hush  of  the  m  nights,         Maud  I  i  42 

A  TO  night  with  storm—  sisters  ( E.  and  E.)  96 

M««  1^1,^^  ^""^  T'  ""u  •*''■  ligl^t-but  no  !  Columbus  90 

Moonlight     By  st^ai-shine  and  bv  m,  Oriana24 

Like  TO  on  a  falling  shower  ?  Margaret  4 

Are  a^  to  unto  sunlight,  Lockslex,  Roll  152 

A  full  sea  glazed  with  muffled  to.  Princess  i  248 

A  cypress  in  the  to  shake,  Xh-e  Daisy  82 

TO  touching  o'er  a  terrace  One  tall  Agavh  83 

When  on  my  bed  the  to  falls,  /^  Mem.  Ixvii  1 

l"rom  off  my  bed  the  m  dies  ;  10 

'  It  is  not  Arthur's  use  To  hunt  by  to  ;  '  Holy 'Grail  111 

There  in  the  shuddering  to  brought  its  face  Lovers  Tale  i  650 

1  saw  the  m  ghtter  on  their  tears —  697 

As  TO  wandering  thro'  a  mist :  "            n  52 

His  lady  with  the  to  on  her  face  ;  "            ^j,  57 

Yet  the  TO  is  the  sunlight,  •  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  182 

TWf«„  v^    ""^  *,^^  '"'  ^^^  "^^'^^  starlight  !  Merlin  and  the  G.  121 

Moonhke    glooms  of  my  dark  wiU,  M  emerged.  Lover's  Tale  i  745 

Wnni^l^  T,    '  f '  ?^^y  ^If  '"'^•n'  Mechanophilus  13 

^^L          ^^°P"¥  ?^  ^^^  "^-^  ^^"""^  ^^^bian  ^fights  27 

With  narrow  to-Z  slips  of  silver  cloud,  (Enone  218 

Far  m  the  to  haze  among  the  hills.  Pass,  of  Arthur  42 

lVln^^^°     l^.f  1°'/  *^^  ''^"t'^^^  "^  "^Shts,  Lover's  Tale  i  138 

Moon-nse    little  before  m-r  hears  the  low  Moan  Palace  of  Art  279 

Moonshme    eyes  all  wet,  in  the  sweet  m  :  Grandmother  49 

Tu,^  ""^""p?""  "P  *^®  P^^,',  >"  '"■  a  niisty  to,  Lancelot  and  E.  48 

m^wa^  •  "^  n  ^^^PO^'^J^^ng  ,™"nd  the  King,  Guineoere  601 

Moor  (adj.)     Over  the  dark  to  land,  Maud  I  ix  6 

Moor  (land)     From  far  and  near,  on  mead  and  m,  In  Mem.  xxviii  6 

Yet  oft  when  sundown  skirts  the  to  ^li  17 

I  am  sick  of  the  to  and  the  main.  Maud   I  i  61 

JNo,  there  is  fatter  game  on  the  m  ;  74 

I  bo w'd  to  his  lady-sister  as  she  rode  by  on  the  to:  "          t«  15 

Betwixt  the  cloud  and  the  to  ^^4 

And  over  the  suUen-pm-ple  to  (Look  at  it)  "           x  21 

Go  back,  my  lord,  across  the  to,  '        xii  31 

ye  meanwhile  far  over  to  and  fell  "      r7»,V  7fi 

When  I  bow'd  to  her  on  the  to.  "       xix  66 

I  will  wander  till  I  die  about  the  barren  m's.  The  Flight  56 

Is  that  the  leper's  hut  on  the  sohtary  to,  Havvv  9 
Moor  more)  Says  that  I  moiint  'a  naw  m  aale  :  N.  Farmer  OS  3 
Moor  (race  Of  people)     When  Spain  was  waging  war  against 

T        u      .  1  ?^™^®  '^^^^^  ^i*^^  Spai"  against  the  M.  Columbus  93 

1  am  handled  worse  than  had  I  been  a  M,  107 

given  the  Great  Khan's  palaces  to  the  M,  Or  clutch'd  the 
,  sacred  crown  of  Prester  John,  And  cast  it  to  the  if  :  „      109 

Moor  d    where  man  Hath  to  and  rested  ?  Supp.  Confessions  124 

MooriS  ?r^ ;^^°^*  *^^  ^?y.  °^'^«'y  "*  LovJs  Tale  i  54 

Moorland   (See  also  moot  (tA}.))  Dreary  gleams  about  the  to   Locksley  Hall  4 

Many  a  morning  on  the  to  35 

O  the  dreary,  dreary  to  !  "  40 

ghnimering  to  rings  With  jingling  bridle-reins.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  35 

Mooted    ne  er  been  to,  but  as  frankly  theirs  Princess  v  203 

°°whe^^*?'f^     5  ''f  "t'^:^  '"^  *°  '^^g  "^^  ^'^^'  S  La  50 

wnen  M  ed  gotten  to  bed,  53 

li'i'^V'/  ''"^  ^^'^^^  but  I  kick'd  thy  M  istead.  "        67 

M  ed  bean  a-naggin'  about  the  gell  0'  the  farm,  "        69 

But  il/ was  free  of 'er  tongue,  "73 


Moother 


477 


Morning 


Moother  (mother)  (continued)    Thy  M  was  howdin'  the 
lether, 

M  was  naggin'  an'  groanin'  an'  moanin' 

M  'ed  bean  sa  soak'd  wi'  the  thaw 
Moral  (adj.)    (See  also  Maudlin-moral)    Then  of  the 
m  instinct  would  she  prate 

'  Last  of  the  train,  a  m  leper,  I, 

He  gain  in  sweetness  and  in  m  height, 

'  A  m  ehUd  without  the  craft  to  rule, 

Farewell,  Macready  ;  m,  grave,  subUnie  ; 
Moral  (s)    And  if  you  find  no  m  there, 

What  m  is  in  being  fair. 

is  there  any  m  shut  Within  the  bosom 

You'd  have  my  m  from  the  song. 

Are  clasp'd  the  m  of  thy  life. 

The  m's,  something  of  the  frame, 
Morass     Or  low  m  and  whispering  reed, 
Morbid    Vex'd  with  a  m  devil  in  his  blood 

TiU  a  m  hate  and  horror  have  grown 

And  a  m  eating  lichen  fixt  On  a  heart 

'  It  is  time,  O  passionate  heart  and  m  eye, 

I  used  to  walk  This  Terrace — m,  melancholy  ; 
More    See  Moor 
Moreland  (Emma)    See  Emma  Moreland 
Mo^anore    M,  And  Lot  of  Orkney. 
Moriah    the  dead  Went  wandering  o'er  M — 

our  most  ancient  East  M  with  Jerusalem  ; 
Morion    shone  Their  m's,  wash'd  with  morning, 
Mom    (See  also  After-mom,  Chrislmas-mom,  Hunting- 
mom,    Marriage-mom,    Mum,    Summer-mom, 
Yestermom)     For    even    and    m   Ever  will  be 
Thro'  eternity. 

For  even  and  w  Ye  will  never  see  Thro' 
eternity. 

she  bow'd  Above  Thee,  on  that  happy  m 

'  Yet,'  said  I,  in  my  m  of  youth. 

Either  at  m  or  eventide. 

Till  cold  winds  woke  the  gray-eyed  m 

Eay-fringed  eyeUds  of  the  m 

amber  m  Forth  gushes  from  beneath  a  low-hung 
cloud. 

Wander  from  the  side  of  the  m. 

Thou  wert  bom,  on  a  summer  m, 

And  '  Ave  Mary,'  night  and  m, 

'  Madonna,  sad  is  night  and  m,' 

'  That  won  his  praises  night  and  m  ?  ' 

And  murmuring,  as  at  night  and  m, 

More  inward  than  at  night  or  m, 

'  The  day  to  night,  the  night  to  m, 

'  The  night  comes  on  that  knows  not  m, 

'  Or  make  that  m,  from  his  cold  crown 

Or  in  the  gateways  of  the  m. 

'  Behold,  it  is  the  Sabbath  w.' 

Each  m  my  sleep  was  broken  thro' 

in  the  dark  m  The  panther's  roar  came  muffled, 

from  her  Hps,  as  m  from  Memnon,  drew  Rivers 


Owd  Rod  85 
„  108 
„      113 

Palace  of  Art  205 

Princess  iv  222 

vii  281 

Laticelot  and  E.  146 

To  W.  C.  Macready  12 

Day-Dm.,  Moral  2 

4 

7 

„     L' Envoi  31 

55 

Princess  ii  382 

In  Mem.  c  6 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  19 

Maud  I  vi  75 

77 

„  III  vi  32 

The  Ring  168 


Com.  of  Arthur  115 

Holy  Grail  50 

Columbus  81 

Princess  v  264 


All  night  I  he  awake,  but  I  fall  asleep  at  m  ; 

The  dim  red  m  had  died, 

M  broaden'd  on  the  borders  of  the  dark, 

From  out  the  borders  of  the  m, 

without  help  I  cannot  last  till  m. 

Shot  like  a  streamer  of  the  northern  m, 

dark  East,  Unseen,  is  brightening  to  his  bridal  m 

hour  just  flown,  that  m  with  all  its  sound, 

I  come  to-morrow  m.    I  go, 

friendly  mist  of  m  Climg  to  the  lake. 

And  when  my  marriage  m  may  fall, 

Far-folded  mists,  and  gleaming  halls  of  m. 

Thou  wilt  renew  thy  beauty  m  by  m  ; 

leave  me  here  a  little,  while  as  yet  'tis  early  m  : 

The  twilight  melted  into  m. 

The  cock  crows  ere  the  Christmas  m, 

They  two  will  wed  the  morrow  m  : 

We  two  wiU  wed  to-morrow  m, 

And  perplex'd  her,  night  and  m, 


Nothing  will  Die  33 

AU  Things  will  Die  44 

Sufp.  Confessions  24 

139 

Mariana  16 

31 

Clear-headed  friend  6 

Ode  to  Memory  70 

Adeline  52 

Eleanore  7 

Mariana  in  the  S.  10 

22 

34 

46 

58 

82 

94 

Two  Voices  85 

183 

402 

Miller's  D.  39 

(Enone  213 

Palace  of  Art  171 


May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  50 

D.  of  F.  Women  61 

265 

On  a  Mourner  24 

M.  d' Arthur  26 

139 

Gardener'sD.  73 

83 

Audley  Court  70 

Edwin  Morris  107 

Talking  Oak  285 

Tithonus  10 

74 

Locksley  Hall  1 

Day-Dm.,  Depart.  16 

Sir  Galahad  51 

Lady  Clare  7 

87 

L.  of  Burleigh  78 


The  Voyage  82 

Vision  of  Sin  QQ,  120 

Enoch  Arden  181 

552 

Lucretius  24 

Princess  ii  262 

Hi  17 

72 

iv  5AQ 

V  368 

369 

423 

„         vii  45 

356 

„      Con.  91 

Grandmother  67 

In  Mem.  xi  1 

„     xicvi  13 

„      XXX  29 

„      Ixviii  8 

„  Ixxxiv  29 

„     Con.  58 

Com.  of  Arthur  456 

Gareth  and  L.  189 

855 

888 

Marr.  of  Geraint  69 

153 

157 

287 

335 

691 

703 

734 


Mom  (continued)     Nor  anchor  dropt  at  eve  or  m ; 
Have  a  rouse  before  the  m  :  (repeat) 
Ascending  tired,  heavily  slept  till  m. 
drifted,  stranding  on  an  isle  at  m  Rich, 
m  That  mock'd  him  with  returning  calm, 
'  That  on  her  bridal  m  before  she  past 
M  in  the  white  wake  of  the  morning  star 
To  tvimble,  Vulcans,  on  the  second  m.' 
to-moiTOw  m  We  hold  a  great  convention  : 
so  here  upon  the  flat  All  that  long  m 
all  that  m  the  heralds  to  and  fro, 
Between  the  Northern  and  the  Southern  m.' 
m  by  m  the  lark  Shot  up  and  shrill'd 
this  Is  m  to  more,  and  all  the  rich  to-come  Reels, 
Fair-hair'd  and  redder  than  a  windy  m  ; 
I  shall  see  him  another  m  : 
Calm  in  the  m  without  a  sound, 
ere  yet  the  m  Breaks  hither  over  Indian  seas. 
Rise,  happy  7n,  rise,  holy  m, 
Reveillee  to  the  breaking  m. 
With  promise  of  a  m  as  fair  ; 
Mute  symbols  of  a  joyful  m, 
the  King  That  m  was  married, 
Far  oS  they  saw  the  silver-misty  m 
Hear  me — this  m  I  stood  in  Arthur's  hall, 
next  m,  the  lord  whose  Ufe  he  saved  Had, 
At  last,  it  chanced  that  on  a  summer  m 
blow  His  horns  for  hunting  on  the  morrow  m. 
But  Guinevere  lay  late  into  the  m. 
We  hold  a  tourney  here  to-morrow  m, 
made  him  hke  a  man  abroad  at  m 
'  And  gladly  given  again  this  happy  m. 
kept  it  for  a  sweet  surprise  at  ?». 
as  the  white  and  glittering  star  of  m 

like  a  shoal  Of  darting  fish,  that  on  a  simimer  m       Geraint  and  E. 
Blinkt  the  white  m,  sprays  grated,  Balin  and  Balan  385 

There  m  by  m,  aiTaying  her  sweet  self  Lancelot  and  E.  906 

eve  and  m  She  kiss'd  me  saying,  „  1408 

gustful  April  m  That  puff'd  the  swaying  branches  Holy  Grail  14 

let  us  meet  The  morrow  m  once  more  in  one  full  field  „  323 

till  one  fair  m,  I  walking  to  and  fro  „  591 

But  on  the  hither  side  of  that  loud  m  Last  Tournament  56 

And  little  Dagonet  on  the  morrow  m,  „  240 

it  chanced  one  m  when  all  the  court,  Guinevere  21 

Till  in  the  cold  wind  that  forenms  the  m,  „         132 

without  help  I  cannot  last  till  m.  Pass,  of  Arthur  194 

Shot  like  a  streamer  of  the  northern  m,  „  307 

this  March  m  that  sees  Thy  Soldier- 
brother's  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  10 
we  sail'd  on  a  Friday  m —  V.  of  Maeldune  7 
The  night  was  calm,  the  m  is  calm,  The  Flight  10 
and  now  the  m  appears,  „  18 
biunt  at  midnight,  found  at  m,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  97 
planted  both  together,  happy  in  our  marriage  m  ?  Happy  14 
my  fair  meadow  zoned  with  airy  m  ;  Prog,  of  Spring  69 
m  Has  lifted  the  dark  eyelash  of  the  Night                 Akbar's  Dream  200 

Momin'     yer  Honour  ye  gev  her  the  top  of  the  m.  Tomorrow  3 

whin  are  ye  goin'  to  lave  me  ?  '     '0'  Monday  m  ' 

says  he ;  „         17 

But  airth  was  at  pace  nixt  m,  „        25 

Morning  (adj.)    Whilome  thou  earnest  with  the  m 

mist,  (repeat)  Ode  to  Memory  12,  21 

never  more  Shall  lone  (Enone  see  the  m  mist  (Enone  216 

long  ago  Sung  by  the  m  star  of  song,  D.  of  F.  Women  3 

The  maiden  splendours  of  the  m  star  „  55 

And  fluted  to  the  m  sea.  To  E.  L.  24 

To  find  the  precious  m  hours  were  lost.  Enoch  Arden  302 

when  the  m  flush  Of  passion  and  the  first  embrace  Lucretius  2 

like  m  doves  That  sim  their  milky  bosoms  Princess  ii  102 

With  whom  I  sang  about  the  m  hills,  „  247 

In  crystal  currents  of  clear  m  seas.  „  328 

In  colours  gayer  than  the  m  mist,  „  438 

Mom  in  the  white  wake  of  the  m  star  „         Hi  17 

A  Memnon  smitten  with  the  m  Sun.'  „  116 

Alpine  harebell  himg  with  tears  By  some  cold  m  glacier ;      „      vii  116 


Morning 


478 


Mortal 


Homing  (adj.)  (continued)     And  whistled  to  the  m  star.  Sailor  Boy  4 

And  you  are  his  m  star.  Windov.\  Marr.  Morn.  12 

Thro'  clouds  that  drench  the  m  star,  In  Mem.  Ixxii  22 

The  sweep  of  scythe  in  m  dew,  „        Ixxxix  18 

Who  stay  to  share  the  m  feast,  „  Con.  75 

And  even  in  high  day  the  m  star.  Com.  of  Arthur  100 

thereon  the  m  star.  And  Gareth  silent  gazed  Gareth  and  L.  932 

And  then  she  sang,  '  O  m  star '  „  996 

'  O  m  star  that  smilest  in  the  blue,  O  star,  my  m 

dream  hath  proven  true,  „  999 

'  O  birds,  that  warble  to  the  m,  sky,  „  1075 

But  that  same  strength  which  threw  the  M  Star  „  1108 

and  the  m  star  Reel'd  in  the  smoke,  Pelleas  and  E.  518 

their  feare  Are  m  shadows  huger  than  the  shapes  To  the  Queen  ii  63 
The  lucid  chambers  of  the  m  star,  Lover's  Tale  i  28 

A  m  air,  sweet  after  rain,  ran  over  „  Hi  3 

the  m,  song  of  the  lark.  First  Quarrel  33 

lark  has  past  from  earth  to  Heaven  upon  the  w 

breeze  !  The  Flight  62 

And  splendours  of  the  m  land.  Of  en.  I.  and  C.  Exhih.  8 

tiU  the  mortal  m  mists  of  earth  Fade  Akbar's  Dream  96 

The  m  light  of  happy  marriage  broke  Death  of  (Enone  102 

Uomii^  (s)    (See  also  March-morning,  Momin'  Mumin') 

Every  heart  this  May  m  in  joyance  is  beating  All  Things  will  Die  6 
Thou  comest  m  or  even  ;  she  cometh  not  m  or  even.  Leonine  Eleg.  15 
'  Still  sees  the  sacred  m  spread  Two  Voices  80 

In  her  still  place  the  m  wept :  „        275 

It  haunted  me,  the  m  long,  Miller's  D.  69 

you  had  set.  That  m,  on  the  casement-edge  „  82 

Gargarus  Stands  up  and  takes  the  m  :  (Enone  11 

Far  up  the  solitary  m  smote  The  streaks  „        55 

In  the  early  early  m  the  summer  sun  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  22 

How  sadly,  I  remember,  rose  the  m  of  the  year  !         „  Con.  3 

came  a  sweeter  token  when  the  night  and  m  meet :    „  22 

It  is  a  stormy  ?«,.'  The  Goose  44 

every  m  brought  a  noble  chance,  AI.  d' Arthur  230 

This  m  is  the  m  of  the  day,  Gardener's  D.  1 

The  northern  m  o'er  thee  shoot,  Talking  Oak  275 

m  driv'n  her  plow  of  pearl  Far  fun'owing  Love  and  Duty  99 

Many  a  m  on  the  moorland  Locksley  Hall  35 

And  in  the  m  of  the  times.  Day-Dm.,  L'  Envoi  20 

I  saw  that  every  m,  far  withdrawn  Vision  of  Sin  48 

Enoch  faced  this  m  of  farewell  Brightly  Enoch  Arden  182 

in  those  uttermost  Parts  of  the  m  ?  „  224 

that  same  m  officers  and  men  Levied  a  kindly  tax  „  662 

this  kindlier  glow  Faded  with  m,  Aylmer's  Field  412 

eyes  Had  such  a  star  of  m  in  their  blue,  „  692 

And  me  that  m  Walter  show'd  the  house,  Princess,  Pro.  10 

That  m  in  the  presence  room  I  stood  „  i  51 

shone  Their  morions,  wash'd  with  m,  .,  v  264 

I  took  it  for  an  hour  in  mine  own  bed  This  m  :  „  435 

I  mused  on  that  wild  m  in  the  woods,  „  471 

Death  and  M  on  the  silver  horns,  „         vii  204 

Like  yonder  m  on  the  bUnd  half-world ;  „  352 

the  winds  are  up  in  the  m  ?  (repeat)  Window,  On  the  HUl  5,  10,  15, 20 
For  this  is  the  golden  m  of  love,  „  Marr.  Mom.  11 

With  m  wakes  the  wUl,  and  cries.  In  Mem.  iv  15 

Never  m  wore  To  evening,  but  some  heart  „  m  7 

I  creep  At  earUest  m  to  the  door.  ,,  vii  8 

Singing  alone  in  the  m  of  life,  In  the  happy  m  of  life  and 

of  May,  Maud  I  v  6 

M  arises  stormy  and  pale,  „       ml 

Till  at  last  when  the  m  came  In  a  cloud,  „         20 

O  when  did  a  m  shine  So  rich  in  atonement  „     xix  5 

For  a  breeze  of  m  moves,  „    xxii  7 

'Tis  a  m  pure  and  sweet,  (repeat)  Maud  II  iv  31,  35 

So  with  the  m  all  the  court  were  gone.  Marr.  of  Geraint  156 

To  ride  with  him  this  m  to  the  court,  •    „  606 

And  now  this  m  when  he  said  to  her,  „  847 

Geraint,  who  issuing  forth  That  m,  Geraint  and  E.  9 

Their  chance  of  booty  from  the  m's  raid,  „  565 

Then  chanced,  one  m,  that  Sir  BaUn  sat  Balin  and  Balan  240 

Came  with  slow  steps,  the  m  on  her  face  ;  „  245 

And  all  this  m  when  I  fondled  you  :  Merlin  and  V.  286 

she  placed  where  m'a  earliest  ray  Might  strike  it,         Lancelot  and  E.  5 


Morning  (s)  (continued)  o'er  and  o'er  For  all  an  April  m,  Lancelot  and  E.  897 

ten  slow  m's  past,  and  on  the  eleventh  „           1133 

blush'd  and  brake  the  m  of  the  jousts,  Pelleas  and  E.  157 

but  rose  With  m  every  day,  and,  moist  or  dry,  „            215 

But  when  the  m  of  a  tournament.  Last  Tournament  134 

every  m  brought  a  noble  chance.  Pass,  of  Arthur  398 

On  the  same  m,  almost  the  same  hour,  Lover's  Tale  i  198 

There  came  a  glorious  m,  such  a  one  „             299 

Mercury  On  such  a  m  would  have  flung  ,,            301 

broke  in  light  Like  m  from  her  eyes —  „         ii  144 

One  m  when  the  upblown  billow  ran  Shoreward  „             178 

One  bright  May  m  in  a  world  of  song.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  82 

had  sunn'd  The  m  of  our  marriage,  „            244 

Then  in  the  gray  of  the  m  it  seem'd  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  67 

on  another  wild  m  another  wild  earthquake  Def.  of  Lucknow  61 

I  saw  your  face  that  m  in  the  crowd.  Columbus  7 

one  m  a  bird  with  a  warble  The  Wreck  81 

the  m  brings  the  day  I  hate  and  fear  ;  The  Flight  2 

waken  every  m  to  that  face  I  loathe  to  see :  „             8 

their  songs,  that  meet  The  m  with  such  music,  ,,          66 

But  look,  the  m  grows  apace,  „          93 

half  the  m  have  I  paced  these  sandy  tracts,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  1 

Half  the  marvels  of  my  m,  „               75 

Star  of  the  »n,  Hope  in  the  sunrise  ;  Vastness  15 

Given  on  the  m  when  you  came  of  age  The  Ring  77 
Why  not  bask  amid  the  senses  while  the  sun  of 

m  shines.  By  an  Evolution.  6 

Would  I  had  past  in  the  m  that  looks  so  bright  „              10 

m  of  my  reign  Was  redden'd  by  that  cloud  Akbar's  Dream  63 

Every  7n  is  thy  birthday  „        Hymn  2 

Every  m  here  we  greet  it,  „                    3 

Morning-breath    dewy  meadowy  m-b  Of  England,  Enoch  Arden  660 

Morning-mist    thro'  the  sunless  winter  m-m  In  silence        Death  of  (Enone  8 

Morning-star    (See  also  Morning  (adj.))    Sung  by  the  m  s 

of  song,  D.  of  F.  Women  3 

maiden  splendours  of  the  m  s  Shook  „              55 

Toward  the  m-s.  „            244 

And  whistled  to  the  m  s.  Sailor  Boy  4 

M-S,  and  Noon-Sim,  and  Evening-Star,  Gareth  and  L.  634 

'  Nay,  nay,'  she  said,  '  Sir  M-S.  „            918 

And  servants  of  the  M-S,  approach,  „            924 

golden  guess  Is  m-s  to  the  full  round  of  truth.  Columbus  44 

Momingtide    great  Sun-star  of  m.  Bait,  of  Bnmanburh  26 

Morris  (Edwin)    See  Edwin,  Edwin  Morris 

Morrison  (Mary)    See  Mary,  Mary  Morrison 

Morrow  (adj.)     (See  also  To-morrow)    They  two  will  wed  the 

m  morn  :  Lady  Clare  7 

blow  His  horns  for  himting  on  the  m  mom.  Marr.  of  Geraint  153 

let  us  meet  The  m  mom  once  more  in  one  full  field  Holy  Grail  323 

And  httle  Dagonet  on  the  m  mom.  Last  Tournament  240 

Morrow  (s)    (See  also  Goodmorrow,  Tomorra,  To-morrow) 

when  the  m  came,  she  rose  and  took  The  child  Dora  80 

till  the  m,  when  he  spoke.  Enoch  Arden  156 

a  poising  eagle,  burns  Above  the  imrisen  m  :  '  Princess  iv  83 

For  the  meeting  of  the  m,  Maud  II  iv  28 

As  pass  without  good  m  to  thy  Queen  ?  '  Balin  and  Balan  252 

Then  being  on  the  m  knighted,  sware  Pelleas  and  E.  140 

and  expectancy  of  worse  Upon  the  m.  Lover's  Tale  ii  152 

Mors    '  Meridies  ' — '  Hesperus  ' — '  Nox  ' — '  M,'  Gareth  and  L.  1205 

Morsel     (See  also  Mossel)     Mangled  to  m's,  A  youngster 

in  war  !  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  74 

Mortal  (adj.)    (See  also  Mortial,  Mottal)    your  m  dower  Of 

pensive  thought  Margaret  5 

'  Then  dying  of  a  m  stroke,  Two  Voices  154 

Who  sought'st  to  wreck  my  m  ark,  „         389 

Thy  m  eyes  are  frail  to  judge  of  fair, —  (Enone  158 

And  when  no  m  motion  jars  The  blackness  On  a  Mourner  26 

Not  tho'  I  live  three  lives  of  m  men,  M.  d' Arthur  155 
made  blank  of  crimeful  record  all  My  m  archives.         St.  S.  Stylites  159 

tho'  my  m  summers  to  such  length  of  years  Locksley  Hall  67 

My  spirit  beats  her  m  bars.  Sir  Galahad  46 

This  m  armour  that  I  wear,  „            70 

plucks  The  m  soul  from  out  immortal  hell,  Lucretius  263 

Her  stature  more  than  m  in  the  burst  Of  sunrise.  Princess,  Pro.  40 

The  fading  politics  of  m  Rome,  „            n  286 


Mortal 


479 


Mortal  (adj.)  (continued)    In  lieu  of  many  m  flies,  a  race  Of 

giants  living,                                                   '  r,  .           ...„„„ 

I  leave  this  m  krk  behind,  ^^T/''  "'  ^^a 

'They  do  not  die  Nor  los^  their  m  sympathy,  ^"        "23 

hardly  worth  my  while  to  choose  Of  things  iu  ,«,  "    ^^^iJl 

For  W  idsom  dealt  with  m  powers  "    "^^^^^  :^^ 

These  m  luUabies  of  pain  May  bind  a  book,  "      f^^:  % 

Intelhgencies  fair  That  range  above  our  m  state,  "    ^^22 

And  teach  true  hfe  to  fight  with  m  ^vrongs.  Maud  Ix^i  54 

nae,  ana  dream  The  m  dream  that  never  yet  was 

mine —  ^  it    7- 

Naked  of  glory  for  His  m  change,  HolTild  mI 

&o"oveThS?,'^^T  ^'  "^  ^^''^  ^-'  S?nS^,m 

J>ot  tno  1  live  three  hves  of  m  men,  />„<,.  „/•  ^w/.«^  ^9^! 

Three  cypresses,  symbols  of  m  woe, '  LovekrhTi  f^l 

forest-shadow  borne  With  more  th^n  m  swiftness,  '  ^"^^  if  g 

or  my  love  M  once  more  ? '  '  "  •    an 

^  ^S"^  "^"^  '"°°''  '*'^^''  ^  '^'''  "°''  *  ""  ^^^*  '^'  ^'^^  "  *" 

andThook  like  a  man  in  a  m  affright  •  vTh, ^f}^^  ,5 

serve  This  m  race  thy  kin  so  weSf     '  nlprlf    Tw^G  It 

our  m  veil  And  shatter'd  phantom  of  that  infinite  ^■'  ^'^  ^^  ^^ 

One, 

Yet  loves  and  hates  with  m  hates  and  loves,  "xiresms  23 

no  Nor  yet  that  thou  art  to—  j      ■    !  1^  ^o 

Have  ended  m  foes  ;  ^nci««<  Sage  63 

^"tlTin^r'^  ^^^^^  *^''  ^°  ^^^^  ^^'^  ^^  """'^  "^^"  '"  "         "^^^ 

TheTOlimitof  the  Self  was  loosed,  "        909 

mgh-heayen  dawn  of  more  than  m  day  "         9^2 

Twisted  hard  in  m  agony  with  their  offspring,  Locksleu  H  "sirtn^ 

^J^t    *"  ^           °^  "^*'™  "^^^  ^'^^^  living  hues  ^       '      ^  ^ 

But  since,  our  m  shadow,  p   •,       ^^ 

will  make  his  name  As  to  as  my  own  Epilogue  22 

I  am  TO  stone  and  lime.  rr^,    ,    'A,       "i 

The  dead  man's  garden,  The  to  hillock.  Merlin  M^Gm^ 

Tho'  their  music  here  be  to  need  the  singer  greatly  care  PPamL^S 

till  the  TO  morning  mists  of  earth  Fade  j  zV    ,^^^^  ^° 

Mortal  (s)     black  earth  ^r»v^^.  tu^      i-  ^A;6ar'5  Dream  96 

w)»tlrij*^      oiacK  eartn  yawns  :  the  to  disappears  :  Ode  on  Well  9fiq 

Mortality    from  the  low  light  of  to  Shot  up  their  ^^ 

shadows                                               ^  -   ,       ,    -r,  •  , ,  ^ . 

Morteage    sober  rook  And  carrion  crow  crv  '  1/  '  ^2/^'««: «  Frdd  641 

Mortial(mortal)    ,to  dhrame  of  a  maS  m^n,  death  alive,      ^'^^  ^^^  ^^^ 

IS  a  771  sin,  /Ti 

Mortify    i/ Your  flesh,  hke  me,  o,   /iTT^'^.^l 

Mosaic     Below  was  aU  to  choicely  plann'd  lltWrt  iS 

Mnc.c     A*^^  rough  kex  break  The  stan-'d  to,  PrileiVK 

Moses    An',  faix,  be  the  piper  0' J/  J^twces.9  ii;  78 

Moslem  (adj.)    clove  theycrescent  moon,  and  changed  it  into'^"'^"^"  '' 
Moslem  (s)    Spain  should  oust  The  M  from  her  limit,  CoFuZll  ^ 

palace,  n  r     r  ?-     7 

sometunes  the  to.  ' 

Christian  beU,  the  cry  from  off  the  vi,  Akbar'sDream  149 

M™»    ?f ^''  Tt^'  •^.^°^'  ^'  "°^  Church,  '    ^''""^  If. 

Moss    (f ««  «^«o  Maxish-mosses,  Staghorn-moss)    With  " 

blackest  TO  the  flower-pots  l/ariat,«  1 

creeping  mes  and  clambering  weeds,  Z?vmSr36 

S'ub:uS?T"ot;r'^'*'r^      .0  m7iS!9 

Diueoeu  rmgs  lo  the  m'es  underneath  ?  Adeline  35 

Like  those  long  m'es  in  the  stream.  Miller's  I)  48 

theiTof rot?'  "^"^  *^'";  *^^  '^  t'^^  ^^^  Lotos-EaeZ  C  -S  I 
With  TO  and  hVr^rn'"""'^' J"-^^""  '"y  "*y  ^^"'"^ ;    Gardener's  D.  193 

Lona  Lt^i      ^"^  mansh-pipe  ;  On  a  Mourner  10 

Long  learned  names  of  agaric,  to  and  fern,  Edwin  Morris  17 

^hlZ7^L^V't'  ^''  cream-white'mule  Sir  L.  ZdQG.  lb 

ft  w?np  fl^i  T^  refuse  patch'd  with  to.  F«ior^  of  Sin  212 

He  felt  the  hollow-beaten  m'es  thud  Balin  and  Balan  321 


Mother 


And  sitting  down  upon  the  golden 

I  make  bare  of  all  the  golden  to, 
Moss-bed    Soft  are  tho  m-b's  imder  the  sea  • 
Moss  d    wild  bee  hummeth  About  the  to  headstone  : 
Mossel  (morsel)     there  wam't  not  a  m  o'  hai-m  • 
Mossy     and  wi-ote  On  the  to  stone,  as  I  lay 
Mostly     The  words  are  to  mine  •  ' 

Moted    See  Thick-moted  ' 

Moth    (See  also  Emperor-moth)    we  as  rich  as  m's  from 
dusk  cocoons, 

That  not  a  to  with  vain  desire 

The  m  will  singe  her  wings, 
Mother  (adj.)     That  not  in  any  m  town  With  statelier 
progress 

Who  finds  the  Saviour  in  his  to  tongue. 

For  that  sweet  to  land  which  gave  them  birth 
Mother  (s)     (See  also  Earth-mother,  Foster-mother 
Maid -mother,  Moother,  Muther,  Stepmother, 

T  .Swaa-mother)    In  her  as  M,  Wife,  and  Queen  ; 

i-iike  Ihine  own  m's  when  she  bow'd 

rosy  fingei-s  play  About  his  m's  neck,  and  knows 
Nothing  beyond  his  m's  eyes. 

my  gloomed  fancy  were  As  thine,  my  in 

grave  Was  deep,  my  to,  in  the  clay  ?       ' 

answers  to  his  m's  calls  From  the  flower'd  furrow 

Af,  give  me  grace  To  help  me  of  my  weary 

'  Sweet  M,  let  me  not  here  alone 

My  TO  thought,  What  ails  the  boy  ? 

slowly  was  my  to  brought  To  yield  consent 

Ihe  doubt  my  m  would  not  see  • 

I^tT.  ^f  ^'  ."^^ny-fo.un.tain'd  Ida,  (repeat)  ^none  Z6,  54,  45   172 

TO  Ida,  barken  ere  I  die.  (repeat)     CEnone  24,  35,  46,  53,  64,  77,  91  103, 

'  0  TO,  hear  me  yet  before  I  die.  (repeat)    (Enone  201  ' 220 'lit m,' 256 


Lover's  Tale  i  540 

a  48 

The  Merman  39 

Claribel  12 

Owd  Rod  70 

Edward  Gray  26 

Princess,  Con.  3 


Princess  ii  19 

In  Mem.  liv  10 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  189 

In  Mem.  xcviii  21 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  115 

Tiresias  122 


To  the  Queen  28 
Supp.  Confessions  23 

43 


159 

Mariana  in  the  S.  29 

59 

Miller's  D.  93 

137 

^  "        154 

CEnone  23,  34,  45,  172 


as  a  TO  Conjectures  of  the  features  of  her  child 

And  laid  him  at  his  m's  feet. 

When  thus  he  met  his  m's  view, 

must  wake  and  call  me  early,  call  me  early 

dear;  (repeat) 
Of  all  the  glad  New-year,  to, 
I'm  to  be  the  Queen  o'  the  May,  to,  (repeat) 


I  sleep  so  sound  all  night,  to, 

He  thought  of  that  sharp  look,  to, 

He  thought  I  was  a  ghost,  to, 

They  say  his  heart  is  breaking,  mr— 

And  you'll  be  there,  too,  to. 

The  night-winds  come  and  go,  to, 

All  the  valley,  to,  'ill  be  fresh  and  green 

If  you're  waking  call  me  early,  call  me 
early,  m  dear,  (repeat) 

And  the  New-year's  coming  up,  to. 

But  I  shall  lie  alone,  to, 

When  you  are  warm-asleep,  to. 

When  the  flowers  come  again,  to. 

You'll  bury  me,  my  to,  just  beneath  the 
hawthorn  shade, 

I  shall  not  forget  you,  to, 

You'll  kiss  me,  my  own  to, 

You  should  not  fret  for  me,  to. 

If  I  can  I'U  come  again,  to, 

Tho'  you'll  not  see  me,  to. 

Goodnight,  sweet  m  :  call  me  before  the  day  is  bom 

It  seem'd  so  hard  at  first,  to, 

Nor  would  I  now  be  well,  to, 

I  did  not  hear  the  dog  howl,  to. 

But  sit  beside  my  bed,  to. 


CEnone  251 
The  Sisters  35 
L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  34 

May  Queen  1,  41 

3 

May  Queen  4,  8,  12,  16, 

20,  24,  28,  32, 

36,  40,  44 

May  Queen  9 

15 


smile  away  my  maiden  blame  among  The 

Hebrew  m's ' — 
Grave  m  of  majestic  works. 
Strong  TO  of  a  Lion-line, 
he  win  teach  him  hardness,  and  to  slight  His  m  • 


17 
22 
26 
33 
37 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  1,  52 

7 

20 

24 

25 


29 
31 
34 
36 
37 
38 
49 
Con.  9 
19 
21 
23 


D.  of  F.  Women  215 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  13 

England  and  Amer.  3 

Dora  121 


Mother 


480 


Mother 


Mother  (s)  (continued)     but  when  the  boy  beheld  His  m, 


Bora  138 
St.  S.  Stylites  112 


Christ,  the  Virgin  M,  and  the  saints  ; 

Her  m  tiomdled  to  the  gate  Behind  the  dappled 

grays.  Talking  Oak  111 

press  me  from  the  m's  breast.  Locksley  Hall  90 

m's  brought  Their  children,  clamoiuing,  Godiva  14 

Against  her  father's  and  m's  will :  Edward  Gray  10 

O  w,'  she  said,  '  if  this  be  true.  Lady  Clare  30 

'  Yet  give  one  kiss  to  your  m  dear  !  „  49 

'  O  m,  ?n.,  m,'  she  said,  „  51 

'  Yet  here's  a  kiss  for  my  m  dear,  My  m  dear,  if  this  be  so,      „  53 

And  bless  me,  m,  ere  I  go.'  „  56 

Every  ?n's  son — Down  they  dropt —  The  Captain  50 

m  cared  for  it  With  aU  a  m's  care  :  Enoch  Arden  262 

Then  the  new  m  came  about  her  heart,  „  524 

saw  The  m  glancing  often  toward  her  babe,  „  754 

the  girl  So  like  her  to,  „  791 

Annie,  whom  I  saw  So  like  her  m,  „  883 

from  the  plaintive  m's  teat  he  took  The  Brook  129 

My  w,  as  it  seems  you  did,  „         225 

Heard  the  good  m  softly  whisper  '  Bless,  Aylmer's  Field  187 

nature  crost  Was  m  of  the  foul  adulteries  „  376 

The  TO  flow'd  in  shallower  acrimonies :  „  563 

Yet  the  sad  to,  for  the  second  death  „  604 

As  with  the  to  he  had  never  known,  „  690 

The  childless  to  went  to  seek  her  child ;  „  829 

wail'd  and  woke  The  to,  and  the  father  suddenly 

cried. 
The  Viigin  M  standing  with  her  child 
the  child  Clung  to  the  to,  and  sent  out  a  cry 
M,  let  me  fly  away, 
lambs  are  glad  Nosing  the  m's  udder. 
For  so,  my  to  said,  the  story  ran. 
My  TO  pitying  made  a  thousand  prayers  ; 
My  TO  was  as  mild  as  any  saint, 
'  The  TO  of  the  sweetest  little  maid, 
why  should  I  not  play  The  Spartan  M  with  emotion, 
Our  TO,  is  she  weU  ?  ' 

clad  her  like  an  April  daffodilly  (Her  m's  colour) 
But  yet  your  in's  jealous  temperament — 
Rest,  rest,  on  m's  breast, 
'  0  fly,  while  yet  you  may  !     My  to  knows  : ' 
My  TO,  'tis  her  wont  from  night  to  night 
(for  still  My  to  went  revolving  on  the  word) 
So  my  TO  clutch'd  The  truth  at  once, 
'tis  my  TO,  Too  jealous,  often  fretful  as  the  wind 
my  m  still  Affirms  your  Psyche  thieved  her  theories, 
I  tried  the  m's  heart. 
And  then,  demanded  if  her  to  knew, 
and  you  me  Your  second  to  : 
she,  half  on  her  m  propt,  Half-drooping  from  her, 
dismiss'd  in  shame  to  live  No  wiser  than  their  m's, 
they  will  beat  my  girl  Remembering  her  to  : 
111  TO  that  I  was  to  leave  her  there, 
I  won  Your  to,  a  good  to,  a  good  wife, 
and  she  of  whom  you  speak.  My  to, 
M's — that,  all  prophetic  pity, 
and  what  m's  blood  You  draw  from,  fight ; 
risk'd  it  for  your  own  ;  His  m  lives  : 
cbiefest  comfort  is  the  little  child  Of  one  unworthy  m  ; 
prize  the  authentic  to  of  her  mind. 
The  TO  makes  us  most — 

good  Queen,  her  to,  shore  the  tress  With  kisses, 
spied  its  m  and  began  A  blind  and  babbling  laughter, 
So  stood  the  unhappy  to  open-mouth'd, 
Red  grief  and  m's  hunger  m  her  eye, 
hadf  The  sacred  m's  bosom,  panting, 
striking  with  her  glance.  The  w,  me,  the  child  ; 
thy  TO  prove  As  true  to  thee  as  false, 
Not  from  your  to,  now  a  saint  with  saints. 
You  shame  your  m's  judgment  too. 
Not  only  he,  but  by  my  m's  soul, 
Happy  he  With  such  a  to  ! 
This  TO  is  your  model. 


From  7ft  unto  to,  stately  bride, 


Sea  Dreams  58 
242 
245 
296 
Lucretius  100 
Princess  ill 
21 
22 
a  279 
283 
310 
325 
338 
iii  11 
29 
32 
54 
60 
79 
91 
147 
w233 
297 
367 
514 
v89 
93 
166 
193 
381 
404 
408 
431 
433 
507 
mll3 
136 
143 
146 
148 
153 
203 
233 
261 
335 
vii  328 
335 
W.  to  Marie  Alex.  9 


Mother  (s)  {continued)     '  My  to  clings  about  my  neck, 
this  pretty  home,  the  home  where  m  dwells  ? 
They  f  oimd  the  w  sitting  still ; 
The  TO  said,  '  They  have  taken  the  child 
Chop  the  breasts  from  oS  the  m, 

0  TO,  praying  God  will  save  Thy  sailor,— 
Dear  as  the  to  to  the  son, 

And  tears  are  on  the  m's  face. 

That  feed  the  m's  of  the  flock  ; 

The  shrill-edged  shriek  of  a  m 

a  Mammonite  to  kills  her  babe  for  a  burial  fee, 

Maud  the  beloved  of  my  m, 

Your  TO  is  mute  in  her  grave  as  her  image  in  marble 

above  ; 
My  TO,  who  was  so  gentle  and  good  ? 
Her  TO  has  been  a  thing  complete. 
Made  her  only  the  child  of  her  m, 
Darken'd  watching  a  to  dechne 

1  did  not  speak  Of  my  m's  faded  cheek 
Maud  was  moved  To  speak  of  the  to  she  loved 
and  thought  It  is  his  m's  hair. 

spike  that  split  the  m's  heart  Spitting  the  child, 

the  bitterness  and  grief  That  vext  his  to. 

For  dark  my  to  was  in  eyes  and  hair, 

A  m  weeping,  and  I  hear  her  say, 

in  my  good  m's  hall  Linger  with  vacillating 

obedience. 
Since  the  good  to  holds  me  stiU  a  child  ! 
,  Good  TO  is  bad  to  imto  me  ! 
'  M,  tho'  ye  count  me  stiU  the  child.  Sweet  to,  do  ye 

love  the  child  ?  ' 
'  Then,  to,  an  ye  love  the  child,' 
good  TO,  but  this  egg  of  mine  Was  finer  gold 
so  the  boy,  Sweet  to,  neither  clomb, 
TO  said, '  True  love,  sweet  son,  had  risk'd  himself 
TO,  there  was  once  a  King,  Mke  ours. 
M,  How  can  ye  keep  me  tether'd  to  you — 
To  whom  the  to  said,  '  Sweet  son, 
I  will  walk  thro'  fire,  M,  to  gain  it — 
obedience  and  thy  love  to  me.  Thy  to, — I  demand.' 
slowly  spake  the  to  looking  at  him. 
And  since  thou  art  my  to,  must  obey. 
The  m's  eye  Fxall  of  the  wistful  fear 
Before  the  wakeful  to  heard  him,  went. 
'  Son,  the  good  to  let  me  know  thee  here. 
Seem  I  not  as  tender  to  him  As  any  to  ? 
'  M,  a  maiden  is  a  tender  thing, 
arose,  and  raised  Her  to  too, 
a  costly  gift  Of  her  good  to. 
For  while  the  to  show'd  it,  and  the  two 
it  was  her  to  grasping  her  To  get  her  well  awake  ; 
Here  ceased  the  kindly  to  out  of  breath ; 
Help'd  by  the  m's  careful  hand  and  eye, 
Yniol  made  report  Of  that  good  to  making  Enid  gay 
Dared  not  to  glance  at  her  good  m's  face. 
Her  TO  silent  too,  nor  helping  her. 
Then  seeing  cloud  upon  the  m's  brow, 
'  0  my  new  m,  be  not  %vroth  or  grieved 
He  spoke  :  the  w  smiled,  but  half  in  tears, 
Pure  as  our  own  tiTie  M  is  our  Queen.' 
My  m  on  his  corpse  in  open  field  ;  (repeat) 
Seethed  hke  the  kid  in  its  own  m's  milk  ! 
TO  of  the  house  There  was  not : 
Wish'd  it  had  been  my  to,  for  they  talk'd, 
Milder  than  any  to  to  a  sick  child. 
Nay,  by  the  to  of  our  Lord  himself. 
Lady  of  the  Lake  Caught  from  his  m's  arms — 
The  highest  virtue,  to  of  them  all ; 
Sucli  as  the  wholesome  m's  tell  their  boys, 
sister  of  my  to — she  that  bore  Camilla 
My  m's  sister,  to  of  my  love, 
whatsoe'er  Our  general  to  meant  for  me  alone,  Our 

mutual  TO  dealt  to  both  of  us : 
Why  were  our  m's'  branches  of  one  stem  ? 
Back  to  his  m's  house  among  the  pines. 


Sailor  Boy  17 

City  Child  2 

The  Victimil 

43 

Boddicea  68 

In  Mem.  vi  13 

ix  19 

xl  10 

cl6 

Maud  I  i  16 

45 

72 

ii;58 

vi  67 

xiii  35 

40 

xix  8 

19 

27 

II  a  70 

Com.  of  Arthur  38 
211 
327 
334 


Gareth  and  L. 


34 

37 

42 

56 

59 

101 

114 

120 

134 

147 

151 

167 

172 

180 

550 

1284 

Marr.  of  Geraint  510 

536 

632 

636 

676 

732 

738 

757 

766 

768 

777 

779 

823 

Balin  and  Balan  617 

Merlin  and  V.  43,  73 

869 

Lancelot  and  E.  177 

674 

858 

1230 

1405 

Holy  Grail  446 

Pelleas  and  E.  197 

Lover's  Tale  i  202 

209  j 

2451 
a  25| 
iv  Ifi 


Mother 


481 


Motion 


Motber  (s)  (contimied)    All  softly  as  his  m  broke  it  to 
him — 
Back  to  the  m's  house  where  she  was  bom. 
Then  the  good  m's  kindly  ministering, 
You'll  make  her  its  second  m  ! 
'  0  m,  come  out  to  me.' 
'  O  m  ! '  I  heard  him  cry. 
'  M,  O  ml  ' — he  call'd  in  the  dark 
How  do  they  know  it  ?  are  they  his  w  ? 
their  m  and  her  sister  loved  More  passionately 

still. 
The  m  fell  about  the  daughter's  neck, 
Edith  wrote  :  '  My  m  bids  me  ask  ' 
I  told  yom-  wayside  story  to  my  m 
'  Pray  come  and  see  my  m. 
'  Pray  come  and  see  my  m,  and  farewell.' 
the  simple  m  work'd  upon  By  Edith 
The  m  broke  her  promise  to  the  dead, 
m's  garrulous  wail  For  ever  woke  the  unhappy 

Past  „  262 

Miss  Annie  were  saw  stuck  oop,  like  'er  m  afoor —  Village  Wife  59 

And  thine  Imperial  m  smile  again,  Bed.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  13 

yea  to  him  Who  hacks  his  m's  throat — denied  to  him, 

Who  finds  the  Saviour  in  his  mother  tongue.        Sir  J.  Oldcastle  114 
All  glory  to  the  m  of  our  Lord,  Colunibibs  62 

dear  m's,  crazing  Nature,  kill  Their  babies  „        179 

-honouring  his  wise  m's  word —  Achilles  over  the  T.  16 

-     ----- -  Tiresias  103 

The  Wreck  1 

»  11 

13 


Lover's  Tale  iv  31 

91 

92 

First  Quarrel  71 

Rizpah  2 

„      42 

„      47 

„      70 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  44 
164 
181 
189 
191 
196 
206 
252 


maidens,  wives,  And  m's  vnih.  their  babblers 

Hide  me,  M  !  my  Fathers  belong'd  to  the  church 

I  was  the  tempter,  M, 

He  that  they  gave  me  to,  M, 

M,  I  have  not — however  their  tongues  may  have 
babbled 

for  M,  the  voice  was  the  voice  of  the  soul ; 

but  it  coo'd  to  the  M  and  smiled. 

And  the  Motherless  M  kiss'd  it, 

M,  one  morning  a  bird  with  a  warble 

*  The  heart !  not  a  m's  heart, 

cloud  of  the  m's  shame  will  enfold  her 

M,  the  ship  stagger'd  under  a  thunderous  shock, 

the  face  I  had  known,  O  M,  was  not  the  face 

O  M,  she  came  to  me  there. 

Struck  hard  at  the  tender  heart  of  the  m. 

Better  our  dead  brute  m  who  never 

grave  would  yawn,  my  m's  ghost  would  rise — 

Our  gentle  m,  had  she  lived — 

Our  dying  m  join'd  our  hands  ; 

Thin  Molly's  ould  m,  yer  Honour, 

As  the  Holy  M  o'  Glory  that  smiles 
To  be  there  wid  the  Blessed  M, 

— ^father,  m, — be  content, 

dead  the  m,  dead  the  child. 

Gone  thy  tender-natured  m. 
Clinging  to  the  silent  m  ! 

Sun  of  dawn  That  brightens  thro'  the  M's  tender 
eyes, 

M  weeps  At  that  white  funeral  of  the  single  life. 

But  moving  thro'  the  M's  home, 

The  m  featiu-ed  in  the  son  ;  Open,  J.  and  C.  Exhib.  12 

Drove  from  out  the  m's  nest  That  yoimg  eagle  „  27 

'  Jf  ! '  and  I  was  folded  in  thine  arms.  Demeter  and  P.  22 

disimpassion'd  eyes  Awed  even  me  at  first,  thy  m —  „  24 

So  mighty  was  the  m's  childless  cry,  „  32 

And  set  the  m  waking  in  amaze 

chanting  me.  Me,  me,  the  desolate  M  ! 

Because  I  hear  your  M's  voice  in  yours. 

ring  bequeath'd  you  by  your  m,  child, 

My  M's  nurse  and  mine. 

I  ask'd  About  my  M,  and  she  said,  Thy  hair  Is  golden 

like  thy  M's,  not  so  fine.' 
Of  my  dear  M  on  your  bracket  here — 
and  I,  she  said,  I  babbled,  M,  M — 
Miriam  your  M  might  appear  to  me. 
Vext,  that  you  thought  my  M  came  to  me  ?    Or  at 
my  crying  '  ilf  ?  '  or  to  find  My  M's  diamonds  hidden  „        140 


41 

54 

60 

62 

81 

97 

100 

107 

.,        116 

148 

Despair  74 

98 

The  Flight  51 

77 

87 

Tomorrow  19 

26 

95 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  25 

36 

57 

99 

To  Prin.  Beatrice  4 

8 

17 


57 

73 

The  Ring  28 

75 
97 

103 
110 
115 
137 


Mother  (s)  (continued)    Your  M  and  step-mother — 
lived  With  Muriel's  m  on  the  dowii, 
And  on  your  M's  birthday — 
poor  M  !  And  you,  poor  desolate  Father, 
Mmiel's  m  sent,  And  sure  am  I, 
Had  graspt  a  daisy  from  your  M's  grave — 
You  scorn  my  M's  warning. 
For  Muriel  nursed  you  with  a  m's  care  ; 
but  oftener  left  That  angling  to  the  m. 
And  the  face.  The  hand, — my  M. 
larger  woman-world  Of  wives  and  m's. 
M,  dare  you  kill  your  child  ? 
I  see  the  picture  yet,  AI  and  child. 
'  Father  and  M  will  watch  you  grow  ' — (repeat) 
fair  m's  they  Dying  in  chUdbirth  of  dead  sons, 
to  be  reconciled  ? — No,  by  the  M  of  God, 
Mother-age    O  thou  wondrous  M-A  ! 

M-  A  (for  mine  I  knew  not) 
Mother-city    gain'd  the  m-c  thick  with  towers, 
Motherhood    heart  of  m  Within  me  shudder. 

She  dropt  the  gracious  mask  of  m, 
Motherless    She  was  m  And  I  without  a  father. 
M  evermore  of  an  ever-vanishing  race. 
The  m  bleat  of  a  lamb  in  the  storm 
And  the  M  Mother  kiss'd  it. 
Mother-maidenhood    deathless  m-m  of  Heaven, 
Motion    A  m  from  the  river  won  Ridged  the  smooth 

level,  Arabian  Nights  34 

Thought  and  m  mingle,  Mingle  ever.    M's  flow  To  one 


The  Ring  146 
148 
248 
302 
311 
323 
326 
349 
356 
425 
487 
Forlorn  37 
Romney's  R.  81 
„    104,  106 
Alcbar's  Dream  11 
Bandit's  Death  17 
Locksley  Hall  108 
185 
Princess  i  112 
Demeter  and  P.  41 
The  Ring  384 
Lover's  Tale  i  218 
Despair  84 
In  the  Child.  Hasp.  64 
The  Wreck  62 
Balin  and  Balan  521 


another. 

With  m's  of  the  outer  sea  : 

'  We  find  no  w  in  the  dead.' 

With  m's,  checks,  and  counterchecks. 

Nature's  living  m  lent  The  pulse  of  hope 

I  had  no  m  of  my  own. 

all  those  names,  that  in  their  m  were 

'Mid  onward-sloping  m's  infinite 

We  have  had  enough  of  action,  and  of  m  we, 

There  was  no  m  in  the  dumb  dead  air, 

Because  with  sudden  m  from  the  ground 

when  no  mortal  m  jars  The  blackness 

A  m  toiling  in  the  gloom — 

Or  voice,  or  else  a  m  of  the  mere. 
Like  those  blind  m's  of  the  Spring, 
And  her  eyes  on  all  my  m's 

Nature  made  them  blinder  m's 

No  shadow  past,  nor  m  : 

his  passions  all  in  flood  And  masters  of  his  m, 

I  thought  the  m  of  the  boimdless  deep 

The  m  of  the  great  deep  bore  me  on. 

And  then  the  m  of  the  current  ceased, 

Read  rascal  in  the  m's  of  his  back, 

faces  toward  us  and  address'd  Their  m : 

about  his  m  clung  The  shadow  of  his  sister, 

the  heart  Made  for  all  noble  m : 

All  in  quantity,  careful  of  my  m. 

That  all  thy  m's  gently  pass 

Whose  muffled  m's  blindly  drown 

As,  imto  vaster  m's  bound, 

O  heart,  with  kindliest  m  warm, 

No  dance,  no  m,  save  alone  What  lightens 

In  all  her  m  one  with  law  ; 

having  the  nerves  of  m  as  well  as  the  nerves  of  pain. 


Elednore  60 
113 
Two  Voices  279 
300 
449 
Miller's  D.  44 
Palace  of  Art  165 
247 
Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  105 
D.  of  F.  Women  65 
170 
On  a  Mourner  26 
Love  thou  thy  land  54 
M.  d' Arthur  77 
Talking  Oak  175 
Locksley  Rail  22 
150 
Enoch  Arden  710 
Aylmer's  Field  340 
Sea  Dreams  91 
111 
117 
167 
Princess  iv  552 
V  257 
.384 
Hendecasylldbics  5 
In  Mem.  xv  10 
„      xlix  15 
„      Ixiii  10 
„    Ixxxv  34 
cv23 
„      cxxii  8 
Maud  I  i  63 


In  coimter  m  to  the  clouds,  Gareth  and  L.  1315 

put  his  horse  in  m  toward  the  knight,  Marr.  of  Geraint  206 

But  at  the  flash  and  m  of  the  man  Geraint  and  E.  467 

So,  scai'ed  but  at  the  m  of  the  man,  „            476 

heavens  Were  shaken  with  the  m  and  the  sound.  Holy  Grail  801 

Or  voice,  or  else  a  m  of  the  mere.  Pass,  of  Arthur  245 

or  set  apart  Their  m's  and  their  brightness  Lover's  Tale  i  174 

And  saw  the  m  of  all  other  things ;  „              574 

m's  of  my  heart  seem'd  far  within  me,  „            H  54 

soul,  life  And  breath  and  m,  past  and  flow'd  away  „              195 

The  feebler  m  underneath  has  hand.  „            iv  83 

fated  channel  where  thy  m  lives  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  19 

2  H 


Motion 


482 


Mountain 


notion  (continued)     the  boundless  m  of  the  deep.  Ancient  Sage  194 

still  111  m  to  the  distant  gleam,  Freedom  14 

Motionless     Enoch  slumber'd  m  and  pale,  Enoch  Arden  908 

Mute,  blind  and  w  as  then  I  lay  ;  Lmer's  Tale  i  607 

Hottal  (mortal)     I  owas  owd  Koaver  moor  nor  I  iver  owad 

m  man.  Owd  Boa  4 

Motto     Blazon  your  in'es  of  blessing  W.  to  Alexandra  12 

this  for  m,  '  Rather  use  than  fame.'  Merlin  and  V.  480 

Mould  (earth)     you  may  lay  me  low  i'  the  m         May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  4 

And  render  him  to  the  m.  Ode  on  Well.  48 

and  flung  the  m  upon  your  feet,  Happy  50 

dead  from  all  the  human  race  as  if  beneath  the  m  ;  „      95 

groundflame  of  the  crocus  breaks  the  m,  Prog,  of  Spring  1 
Six  foot  deep  of  burial  m  Will  dull  their  comments  !     Romney's  E.  125 

Mould  (form)     '  Think  you  this  m  of  hopes  and  fears  Two  Voices  28 

That  I  was  fust  in  human  m  ?  „        342 
(Beauty  seen  In  all  varieties  of  m  and 

mind)  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  7 

those  That  are  cast  in  gentle  m.  To  J.  S.  4 

lovelier  in  her  mood  Than  in  her  m  that  other,  Princess  vii  163 

Those  niched  shapes  of  noble  m.  The  Daisy  38 

over  all  one  statue  in  the  m  Of  Arthur,  Holy  Grail  238 

Which,  cast  in  later  Grecian  m,  To  Master  of  B.  6 

Mould  (verb)     Unto  her  limbs  itself  doth  m  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  10 

and  m  The  woman  to  the  fuller  day.'  Princess  Hi  331 

And  m  a  generation  strong  to  move  „          v  416 

To  m  a  mighty  state's  decrees,  In  Mem.  Ixiv  11 

wrought  To  m  the  dream  ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  30 

and  the  strength  To  m  it  into  action  Tiresias  129 

Will  m  him  thro'  the  cycle-year  That  dawns  Epilogue  11 

M  them  for  all  his  people.  Akbar's  Bream  129 

Moulded    (See  also  Imperial-moulded,  Large-moulded,  Master- 
moulded,  Well-moulded)     M  thy  baby  thought.  Elednore  5 
And  in  the  sixth  she  m  man.  Two  Voices  18 
M  by  God,  and  temper'd  with  the 

tears  To  ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  18 

Heaven  in  lavish  bounty  ?»,  Aylmer's  Field  107 

As  m  Uke  in  Nature's  mint ;  In  Mem.  Ixxix  6 

And  m  in  colossal  calm.  „          Con.  16 

Be  m  by  your  wishes  for  her  weal ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  799 

from  the  statue  MerUn  m  for  us  Holy  Grail  732 

M  the  audible  and  visible  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  105 

the  heavens  Whereby  the  cloud  was  m,  Ancient  Sage  13 

stateliest  measure  ever  m  by  the  lips  of  man.  To  Virgil  40 

Moulder    cannons  m  on  the  seaward  wall ;  Ode  on  Well.  173 

That  rotting  inward  slowly  m's  all.  Merlin  and  V.  395 

Their  heads  should  m  on  the  city  gates.  „            594 

but  here  too  much  We  m —  Holy  Grail  39 

Moulder'd    (See  also  Half-moulder'd)    I  see  the  m 

Abbey-walLs,  Talking  Oak  3 
ShaU  it  not  be  scorn  to  me  to  harp  on  such  a  m 

string  ?  Locksley  Hall  147 

red  roofs  about  a  narrow  wharf  In  cluster  ;  then  a  m 

church  ;  Enoch  Arden  4 

never  man,  I  think.  So  m  in  a  sinecure  as  he  :  Princess,  Pro.  182 

About  the  m  lodges  of  the  Past  „                iv  63 

A  m  citadel  on  the  coast.  The  Daisy  28 

hath  power  to  see  Within  the  green  the  m  tree,  In  Mem.  xxvi  1 
I  heard  a  groaning  overhead,  and  climb'd  The  m 

stall's  Lover's  Tale  iv  137 

And  a  tree  with  a  m  nest  On  its  barkless  bones,  Dead  Prophet  18 

\\ho  lops  the  m  branch  away.  Hands  all  Round  8 

P'ound  m  a  chink  of  that  old  in  floor  !  '  The  Ring  280 

what  a  fuiy  shook  Those  pillare  of  a  m  faitli,  Akbar's  Dream  81 

Mouldering     mouse  Behind  the  m  wainscot  shriek'd,  Mariana  64 
Earthward  he  boweth  the  heavy  stalks  Of  the  m 

flowers  :  A  spirit  haunts  8 
But  I  shall  lie  alone,  mother,  within  the  m 

grave.                                                           May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  20 
Yet  how  often  I  and  Amy  in  the  m  aisle  have 

stood,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  31 
Prom  that  casement  where  the  trailer  mantles  all 

the  m  bricks —  „            257 

m  with  the  dull  earth's  m  sod.  Palace  of  Art  261 

hunlit  ocean  tosses  O'er  them  m.  The  Captain  70 


Mouldering  (continued)     Before  the  w  of  a  yew  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxvi  8 

Still  larger  m  all  the  house  of  thought,  Lover's  Tale  i  241 

Moulding     reach  thro'  nature,  m  men.  In  Mem.  cxxiv  24 

Mouldy    To  shame  these  m  Aylmers  in  their  graves  :  Aylmer's  Field  396 

Stuff  his  ribs  with  m  hay.  Vision  of  Sin  66 
'  Trooping  from  their  m  dens  The  chap-fallen  circle 

spreads :  „            171 

Moult    Some  birds  are  sick  and  sullen  when  they  m.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  73 

Mound  (s)     A  realm  of  pleasance,  many  a  «i,  Arabian  Nights  101 

Heap'd  over  with  a  m  of  grass,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  67 

There  sat  we  down  upon  a  garden  ?«,  Gardener's  D.  214 

and  sat  upon  a  m  That  was  unsown,  Dora  72 

took  The  child  once  more,  and  sat  upon  the  m ;  „     81 

and  gain'd  a  petty  m  Beyond  it.  Princess  iv  557 

scarce  three  paces  measured  from  the  m,  „             vl 

huddled  here  and  there  on  m  and  knoU,  Geraint  and  E.  803 

whelm  all  this  beneath  as  vast  a  m  Merlin  and  V.  656 

Tho'  heapt  in  m's  and  ridges  aU  the  sea  Holy  Grail  798 

Near  him  a  m  of  even-sloping  side,  Pelleas  amd  E.  25 

Mound  (verb)     heaped  hiUs  that  m  the  sea.  Ode  to  Memory  98 

Moimded     Ear  furrowing  into  light  the  m  rack.  Love  and  Duly  100 

'  When  wealth  no  more  shall  rest  in  vi  heaps,  Golden  Year  32 

Mount  (s)     A  m  of  marble,  a  hundred  spires  !  The  Daisy  60 

RoUing  her  smoke  about  the  Royal  m,  Gareih  and  L.  190 

Right  o'er  a  m  of  newly-fallen  stones,  Marr.  of  Geraint  361 

'  Too  lugh  this  m  of  Camelot  for  me  :  Balin  and  Balan  226 

on  the  m  Of  Badon  I  myself  beheld  the  King  Lancelot  and  E.  302 

For  all  the  sacred  m  of  Camelot,  Holy  Grail  227 

Wealthy  with  wandering  Unes  of  m  and  mere,  „          252 

Strike  on  the  M  of  Vision  !  Ancient  Sage285 
M  and  mine,  and  primal  wood  ;                         Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  6 

Moimt  (verb)     Before  he  m's  the  hill,  I  know  Fatima  22 

Nor  sound  of  human  sorrow  m's  to  mar  Lucretius  109 

As  m's  the  heavenward  altar-fire,  In  Mem.  xli  3 

never  m  As  high  as  woman  in  her  selfless  mood.  Merlin  and  V.  442 

What  did  the  wanton  say  ?     '  Not  m  as  high  ; '  „            813 

Mountain  (adj.)    why  he  Slumbers  not  hke  a  m 

tarn  ?  Supp.  Confessions  129 

And  seem'd  knee-deep  in  m  grass,  Mariana  in  the  S.  42 

0  m  brooks,  I  am  the  daughter  of  a  River-God,  (Enone  37 
Aloft  the  m  lawn  was  dewy-dark.  And  dewy  dark  aloft 

the  m  pine :  „      48 

Ah  me,  my  m  shepherd,  that  my  arms  „    202 

thro'  m  clefts  the  dale  Was  seen  far  inland,  Lotos- Eaters  20 

1  Uved  up  there  on  yonder  m  side.  St.  S.  Stylites  72 
He  watches  from  his  m  walls.  The  Eagle  5 
Like  torrents  from  a  m  source  We  rush'd  The  Letters  39 
From  him  that  on  the  m  lea  To  E.  L.  21 
Downward  from  his  7n  gorge  Stept  the  long-hair'd 

long-bearded  sohtary,  Enoch  Arden  636 

Turbia  show'd  In  i-uin,  by  the  m  road  ;  The  Daisy  6 

Now  watching  high  on  m  cornice,  „        19 

oft  we  saw  the  glisten  Of  ice,  far  up  on  a  m  head.  „        36 

A  m  islet  pointed  and  peak'd  ;  The  Islet  15 

The  fortress,  and  the  m  ridge,  In  Mem.  Ixxi  14 

And  catch  at  every  m  head,  „       Con.  114 

A  huge  pavilion  like  a  m  peak  Gareth  and  L.  1364 

Thus,  as  a  hearth  lit  in  a  m  home,  Balin  and  Balan  231 

brutes  of  m  back  That  cany  kings  in  castles,  Merlin  and  V.  576 

Like  its  own  mists  to  all  the  m  side  :  Lancelot  and  E.  38 

and  on  the  naked  m  top  Blood-red,  Holy  Grail  ¥1^ 
all  the  purple  slopes  of  m  flowei-s  Pass  under 

white.  Last  Tournament  229 

Streams  like  a  cloud,  man-shaped,  from  m  peak,  To  the  Queen  ii  40 

A  TO  nest — the  pleasure-boat  that  rock'd,  Lover's  Tale  i  42 

As  TO  streams  Our  bloods  ran  free :  „            326 

A  stately  m  nymph  she  look'd  !  „            359 

On  the  other  side  Is  scoop'd  a  cavern  and  a  to  hall,  „  51 7 
waterfalls  Pour'd  in  a  thunderless  plunge  to  the 

base  of  the  m  walls,  V.  of  Maeldune  11 

beyond  A  hundred  ever-rising  m  hues,  Ancient  Sage  282 

And  wo  will  feed  her  with  our  m  air,  The  Ring  319 

Mountain  (s)     From  the  brain  of  the  purple  m  Poet's  Mind  29 

And  the  m  draws  it  from  Heaven  above,  „          32 

Apart  ujjon  a  wi,  tho'  the  surge  If  I  were  loved  11 


Mountain 


483 


Mouse 


Mountain  (s)  (continued)    Across  the  m  stream'd  below  In 

misty  folds  Palace  of  Art  34 

The  wind,  that  beats  the  m,  To  J.  S.  1 

roll'd  Among  the  w's  by  the  winter  sea  ;  M.  d' Arthur  2 

curves  of  m,  bridge,  Boat,  island,  Edwin  Morris  5 

The  m  stirr'd  its  bushy  crown,  Amphion  25 

meanest  weed  That  blows  upon  its  m,  „         94 

The  7n  wooded  to  the  peak,  Enoch  Arden  572 

A  m,  Uke  a  wall  of  bui-s  and  thorns  ;  Sea  Dreams  119 
The  m  there  has  cast  his  cloudy  slough,  Now  towering 

o'er  him  in  serenest  air,  A  m  o'er  a  m, —  Lucretius  177 

The  m  quickens  into  Nymph  and  Faun  ;  „       187 

With  fold  to  fold,  of  m  or  of  cape  ;  Princess  vii  3 

The  facets  of  the  glorious  m  flash  The  Islet  22 

storm  Brake  on  the  in  and  I  cared  not  Merlin  and  V.  503 

A  league  of  m  full  of  golden  mines,  „            587 

And  the  caim'd  m  was  a  shadow,  „            638 

So  long,  that  m's  have  arisen  since  „            675 

they  would  pare  the  m  to  the  plain,  „            829 
Falls  on  the  m  in  midsummer  snows,                       Last  Tournament  228 

m's  ended  in  a  coast  Of  ever-shifting  sand,  Pass,  of  Arthur  85 

roll'd  Among  the  m's  by  the  winter  sea ;  „             171 

with  balanced  wings  To  some  tall  m  :  Lover's  Tale  i  303 

clefts  and  openings  in  the  m's  fiU'd  „            330 

fell  about  My  footsteps  on  the  m's.  „            372 

Beyond  the  nearest  m's  bosky  brows,  „            396 

sea  Parting  my  own  loved  in's  was  received,  „            433 

trembling  of  the  world  Had  loosen'd  from  the  m,  „          ii  46 

The  m,  the  three  cypresses,  the  cave,  „            109 

But  these,  their  gloom,  the  m's  and  the  Bay,  „          iv  16 

Not  plimge  headforemost  from  the  m  there,  „              41 
thunder-sketch  Of  lake  and  m  conquers  all  the 

day.  Sisters  ( E.  and  E. )  99 

drawn  By  this  good  Wiclif  m  down  from  heaven,     Sir  J.  Oldcastle  132 

Up  the  m  ?     Is  it  far  ?     Not  far.  „            203 

And  came  upon  the  M  of  the  World,  Columbus  26 

And  the  topmost  spire  of  the  m  V.  of  Maddune  41 

the  m  arose  like  a  jewell'd  throne  „              59 

And  the  peak  of  the  m  was  apples,  „              63 

Hope  was  ever  on  her  m,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  91 

chains  of  m's,  grains  of  sand  „            208 

Set  the  TO  aflame  to-night.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  16 

A  TO  stay'd  me  here,  a  minster  there,  The  Ming  245 

For  on  a  tropic  m  was  I  bom.  Prog,  of  Spring  67 

In  early  summers,  Over  the  to.  Merlin  and  the  G.  19 

And  wraiths  of  the  m,  „              43 

Down  from  the  m  And  over  the  level,  „              49 

Muses  have  raised  to  the  heights  of  the  to,  Parnassus  2 

Steep  is  the  to,  but  you,  you  will  help  „          5 

and  nuger  than  all  the  m  ?  „         10 

ere  the  m-  rolls  into  the  plain.  Death  of  CEnone  51 

dragg'd  me  up  there  to  his  cave  in  the  to,  Bandit's  Death  11 

Clomb  the  m,  and  flmig  the  berries,  Kapiolani  6 

vapour  in  daylight  Over  the  m  Floats,  „         17 

as  Kapiolani  ascended  her  to,  „        28 

Strow  yonder  to  flat,  Mechanophilus  6 

Quail  not  at  the  fiery  m,  Faith  3 

Mountain-altars    His  m-a,  hLs  high  bills.  Lover's  Tale  i  322 

Mountain-brook     listens  near  a  torrent  m-b,  Geraint  and  E.  171 

Mountain-cleft    came  from  out  a  sacred  m-c  Gareth  and  L.  260 

Mountain-cones     A  purple  range  of  m-c,  Lover's  Tale  i  407 

Mountain-eaves     And  shepherds  from  the  m-e  Amphion  53 

Mountaineer    breathed  a  race  of  mightier  m's.  Montenegro  14 

Mountain-gorge     in  a  seaward-gazing  m-g  Enoch  Arden  558 

Mountain-ground     He  finds  on  misty  m-g  In  Mem.  xcvii  2 

Moimtain-like     till  delay'd  By  their  m-l  San  Philip 

that,  The  Revenge  40 

Mountain-mere     Sometimes  on  lonely  m-m's  Sir  Galahad  37 

Mountain-range     uprose  the  mystic  m-r  :  Vision  of  Sin  208 

Mountain-shade     the  m-s  Sloped  downward  (Enone  21 

Moimtain-side    I  lived  up  there  on  yonder  m  s.  St.  S.  Stylites  72 

Struck  out  the  streaming  m-s,  Lucretius  29 

Like  its  own  mists  to  all  the  to  s  :  Lancelot  and  E.  38 

star-crowns  of  his  palms  on  the  deep-wooded  m-s,  The  Wreck  72 

Mountain-top    three  m-t's,  Three  silent  pinnacles  Lotos- Eaters  15 


Mountain-top  {continued)     Had  chanted  on  the  smoky 

m-t's,  Guinevere  282 

Mountain-tract     then  I  look'd  up  toward  a  m-t,  Vision  of  Sin  46 

Mountain-wall    (See  also  Mountain  (adj.))    thro'  the  m-w's 

A  rolling  organ-harmony  Sir  Galahad  74 

He  watches  Irani  his  m  w's.  The  Eagle  5 

o'er  the  m-w's  Young  angels  pass.  Early  Spring  11 

Mounted  (adj.  and  part.)    (See  also  Hfehest-mounted)  Thou 

from  a  throne  M  in  heaven  wilt  shoot  into  the  dark 

Arrows  of  lightnings.  To  J.  M.  K.  13 

Where  this  old  mansion  m  high  Looks  down  Miller's  D.  35 

what  you  will — Has  m  yonder  ;  Lucretius  127 

And  rarely  pipes  the  m  thrush  ;  In  Mem.  xci  2 

And  wears  a  helmet  m  with  a  skull,  Gareth  and  L.  639 

Then  after  one  long  slope  was  m.,  saw,  „             795 

And  he  that  bore  the  star,  when  m,  cried  „             951 

Mounted  (verb)     And,  while  day  sank  or  m  higher,  Palace  of  Art  46 

m  our  good  steeds.  And  boldly  ventured  Princess  i  204 

'  They  m,  Ganymedes,  To  tumble,  Vulcans,  „       Hi  71 

And  m  horse  and  graspt  a  spear,  Gareth  and  L.  691 

M  in  arms,  threw  up  their  caps  and  cried,  „             697 

Then  to,  on  thro'  silent  faces  rode  „             734 

Geraint  upon  the  horse  M,  and  reach'd  a  hand,  Geraint  and  E.  759 

foimd  His  charger,  m  on  him  and  away.  Balin  and  Balan  418 

Set  her  thereon,  and  to  on  his  own,  Guinevere  123 

We  TO  slowly  ;  yet  to  both  there  came  Lover's  Tale  i  385 

Mounting     (See  also  A-mountin')     Their  common 

shout  in  choiTis,  m,  Balin  and  Balan  87 

forth  he  past,  and  m  on  his  horse  Pelleas  and  E.  456 

TO  these  He  past  for  ever  from  his  native  land  ;  Lover's  Tale  iv  386 

'  This  m  wave  will  roll  us  shoreward  soon.'  Lotos- Eaters  2 

Mount  of  Blessing     And  climb  the  M  o  B,  Ancient  Sage  280 

Mourn    Over  the  pools  in  the  burn  water-gnats  murmur 

and  m.  Leonine  Eleg.  8 

'  Where  I  may  to  and  pray.  Palace  of  Art  292 

did  seem  to  m  and  rave  On  alien  shores  ;  Lotos- Eaters  32 

and  to  clamour,  m  and  sob,  St.  S.  Stylites  6 

closed  by  those  who  to  a  friend  in  vain,  Lucretius  142 

m  half -shrouded  over  death  In  deathless  marble.  Princess  v  74 

M,  for  to  us  he  seems  the  last.  Ode  on  Well.  19 

M  for  the  man  of  long-enduring  blood.  „           24 

M  for  the  man  of  amplest  influence,  „          27 

So  draw  him  home  to  those  that  m  In  vain ;  In  Mem.  ix'5 

crime  To  m  for  any  overmuch  ;  „    Ixxxv  62 

They  know  me  not,  but  m  with  me.  „      xcix  20 

all  that  haunts  the  waste  and  wild  M,  Pass,  of  Arthur  49 

silver  year  should  cease  to  to  and  sigh —  To  Mary  Boyle  57 

Neither  to  if  human  creeds  be  lower  Faith  5 

M  !     That  a  world-wide  Empire  m's  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  5 

Until  the  great  Hereafter.     M  in  iiope !  „                 17 

Moum'd     Deeply  m  the.  Lord  of  Burleigh,  L.  of  Burleigh  91 

she  m  his  absence  as  his  grave,  Enoch  Arden  247 

And  all  the  men  m  at  his  side  :  Princess  Hi  353 

M  in  this  golden  hour  of  jubilee.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  8 

Love  m  long,  and  sorrow'd  after  Hope  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  819 

tmthless  violence  m  by  the  Wise,  Vastness  5 

Mournful    Heard  a  carol,  to,  holy,  L.  of  Slialott  iv  28 

M  (Enone,  wandering  forlorn  Of  Paris,  (Enone  16 

as  TO  light  That  broods  above  the  fallen  sun.  To  J.  S.  50 

And,  into  to  twilight  mellowing,  Princess  vi  191 

Then  Violet,  she  that  sang  the  m  song,  „          318 

And  let  the  m  martial  music  blow  ;  Ode  on  Well.  17 

Ring  out,  ring  out  my  w  rhymes.  In  Mem.  cvi  19 

To  which  a  »»  answer  made  the  Queen  :  Guinevere  341 

Mourning  (part.)     I  went  m,  '  No  fair  Hebrew  boy  D.  of  F.  Women  213 

M  when  their  leaders  fall,  Ode  on  Well.  5 

And  ever  to  over  the  feud,  Maud  I  xix  31 

Mourning  (s)     in  m  these,  and  those  With  blots  of  it  Aylmer's  Field  619 

To  the  noise  of  the  to  of  a  mighty  nation,  Ode  on  Well.  4 

Mouse    m  Behind  the  mouldering  wainscot  shriek'd,  Mariana  63 

the  thin  weasel  there  Follows  the  m,  Aylmer's  Field  853 

knaw  that  a  man  mun  be  eather  a  man  or  a  to  ?  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  6 

the  shrieking  rush  of  the  wainscot  to,  Maud  I  vi  71 

Within  the  hearing  of  cat  or  m,  „      //  v  48 

an'  'e  says  to  'im,  meek  as  a  to,  Village  Wife  63 


Mouse 


484 


Move 


Monse  (continued)    Thou'd  niver  'a  cotch'd  ony  mice  Spinster's  S's.  55 

thou  be  es  'ansora  a  tabby  es  iver  patted  a  m.  „            70 

Ghoast  moastliiis  was  nobbut  a  rat  or  a  m.  Owd  Rod  38 

Mouth  (s)  (See  also  Cavern-mouth,  Harbour-mouth,  Purse- 
mouth)  bitter  words  From  off  your  rosy  m.  Rosalind  51 
smit«  him  on  the  cheek,  And  on  the  w,  Two  Voices  252 
I-  crush'd  them  on  my  breast,  my  m  ;  Fatima  12 
common  m.  So  gross  to  express  deUght,  Gardener's  D.  55 
M,  forehead,  eyelids,  growing  dewy-warm  Tiihonus  58 
steaming  flats,  and  floods  Of  mighty  w.  The  Voyage  46 
A  downward  crescent  of  her  minion  m,  Aylmer's  Field  533 
Paled  at  a  sudden  twitch  of  his  iron  m ;  „  732 
that  one  unctuous  m  which  lured  him,  Sea  Dreams  14 
And  often  told  a  tale  from  m  to  m  Princess,  Pro.  191 
Walter  warp'd  his  m  at  this  To  something  „  214 
a  twitch  of  pain  Tortured  her  m,  „  vi  106 
on  her  m  A  doubtful  smile  dwelt  „  269 
Into  the  m  of  Hell  Rode  the  six  himdred.  Light  Brigade  25 
Back  from  the  m  of  Hell,  „  47 
A  rabbit  m  that  is  ever  agape —  Maud  /  a;  31 
And  a  rose  her  m  (repeat)  „  xvii  8, 28 
deathful-gi-inning  m's  of  the  fortress,  „  ///  vi  52 
King  Arthur's  hound  of  deepest  m,  Marr.  of  Geraint  186 
made  that  m  of  night  Whereout  the  Demon  Balin  and  Balan  316 
meets  And  daUies  with  him  in  the  M  of  Hell.'  „  615 
How,  in  the  m's  of  base  interpreters,  Merlin  and  V.  795 
Rang  by  the  white  m  of  the  violent  Glem  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  288 
too  high  For  any  m  to  gape  for  save  a  queen's —  „  775 
Were  added  w's  that  gaped,  and  eyes  that  ask'd  „  1249 
An'  I  wur  down  1'  tha  w,  North.  Cobbler  77 
as  big  i'  the  m  as  a  cow,  Village  Wife  103 
Heat  like  the  m  of  a  hell,  Def.  of  Lucknow  81 
That  mock-meek  m  of  utter  Antichrist,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  170 
and  sail'd  the  Dragon's  m,  Columbus  25 
Brass  m's  and  iron  lungs  !  Freedom  40 
wt'  my  bairn  i'  'is  m  to  the  winder  Owd  Rod  92 
Do  not  die  with  a  lie  in  your  to.  Forlorn  57 
Whose  ivy-matted  m  she  used  to  gaze  Death  of  (Enone  2 

Month  (verb)     How  she  m's  behind  my  back.  Vision  of  Sin  110 

endure  To  m  so  huge  a  foulness —  Balin  and  Balan  379 
actor  m  his  last  upon  the  stage.                               Locksley  H.,  Sixty  152 

Mouth'd  (See  also  Bell-mouthed,  Gap-mouth'd,  Mealy- 
mouth'd.  Mighty-mouthed,  Open-mouth'd,  Wide- 
mouthed)    in  her  hunger  m  and  mumbled  it,  Princess  vi  213 

Mouthing    m  out  his  hollow  oes  and  aes.  The  Epic  50 

While  scandal  is  to  a  bloodless  name  The  Dawn  12 

Mouthpiece    he  made  his  to  of  a  page  Who  came  and 

went,  Gareth  and  L.  1337 

I' come  the  to  of  our  King  to  Doorm  Geraint  and  E.  796 

Move    pray — that  God  would  to  And  strike  Supp.  Confessions  115 

You  m  not  in  such  solitudes,  Margaret  45 

Or  sometimes  they  swell  and  to,  Eleanore  111 

phantom  of  a  wish  that  once  could  to,  The  form,  the  form  10 

trailing  light,  M's  over  still  Shalott.  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  27 

'  Some  hidden  principle  to  to,  Two  Voices  133 

To  TO  about  the  house  with  joy.  Miller's  D.  95 

And  there  I  to  no  longer  now.  May  Queen,  Con.  51 

these  did  to  Me  from  my  bliss  of  life,  D.  of  F.  Women  209 

He  lieth  still :  he  doth  not  to  :  D.  of  the  0.  Year  10 

some  fuU  music  seem'd  to  to  and  change  Edwin  Morris  35 

She  m's  among  my  visions  of  the  lake,  „          144 

wake  and  sleep,  but  all  things  m ;  Golden  Year  22 

M  onward,  leading  up  the  golden  year.  ,,            26 

For  ever  and  for  ever  when  I  m.  Ulysses  21 

sweetly  did  she  speak  and  to  :  Locksley  Hall  71 

Science  m's,  but  slowly  slowly,  „          134 

And  m's  not  on  the  rounded  curl.  Day-Dm.,  Sleev.  B.  8 

The  gouty  oak  began  to  to,  Amphion  23 

I  could  not  TO  a  thistle  ;  „        66 

Me  mightier  transports  to  and  thrill ;  Sir  Galahad  22 

Then  to  the  trees,  the  copses  nod,  „          77 

Begins  to  to  and  tremble.  Will  Water.  32 

And  wheresoe'er  thou  to,  good  luck  „        215 

But  thou  wilt  never  to  from  hence,  „        217 

M  eastward,  happy  earth,  Move  eastward  1 


Move  (continued)     And  to  me  to  my  marriage-mom,  Move  Eastward  11 

Till  the  graves  begin  to  to,  Vision  of  Sin  165 

A  life  that  m's  to  graciovis  ends  You  might  have  won  6 

I  TO  the  sweet  forget-me-nots  That  grow  The  Brook  172 

bough  That  moving  m's  the  nest  and  nestling,  Sea  Dreams  291 

never  creeps  a  cloud,  or  m's  a  wind,  Lucretius  106 

But  TO  as  rich  as  Emperer-moths,  Princess,  Pro.  144 

I  seem'd  to  m  among  a  world  of  ghosts,  „                 i  17 

Who  m's  about  the  Princess ;  „                    76 

whene'er  she  m's  The  Samian  Herb  rises  „            Hi  114 

enter'd  ;  found  her  there  At  point  to  to,  „                  131 

we  TO,  my  friend,  At  no  man's  beck,  „                 226 

whence  after-hands  May  to  the  world,  „                  264 

lightlier  m  The  minutes  fledged  with  music  : '  „               iv  36 

I  seem'd  to  m  among  a  world  of  ghosts  ;  „                 561 

And  mould  a  generation  strong  to  to  „               v  416 

1  seem'd  to  to  in  old  memorial  tilts,  „                  479 ' 

fangs  Shall  to  the  stony  bases  of  the  world.  „                vi  58 

cannot  speak,  nor  to,  nor  make  one  sign,  „            vii  153 

But  cease  to  to  so  near  the  Heavens,  „                 195 

m's  with  him  to  one  goal,  „                 263 

If  love  of  country  to  thee  there  Ode  on  Well.  140 

The  dark  crowd  m's,  and  there  are  sobs  „          268 

For  him  nor  to's  the  loud  world's  random  mock.  Will  4 

And  m's  his  doubtful  arms,  and  feels  In  Mem.  xiii  3 

For  I  in  spirit  saw  thee  to  „           xvii  5 

But  this  it  was  that  made  me  to  „           xxv  5 

And  doubtful  joys  the  father  to,  „             xl  9 

Should  TO  his  rounds,  and  fusing  all  „          xlvii  2 

'  Thou  canst  not  to  me  from  thy  side,  „             Hi  7 

,  My  centred  passion  cannot  to.  „            lix  9 

And  to  thee  on  to  noble  ends.  „          Ixv  12 

Her  faith  is  fixt  and  cannot  to,  „       xcvii  33 

As  down  the  garden-walks  I  to,  „            cii  6 

m  his  course,  and  show  That  life  is  not  an  idle  ore,  „      cxviii  19 

M  upward,  working  out  the  beast,  „                27 

a  sentinel  Who  m's  about  from  place  to  place,  „      cxxvi  10 

To  which  the  whole  creation  m's.  „     Con.  144 

Do  we  TO  ourselves,  or  are  moved  Maud  I  iv  26 

But  to  TO  to  the  meadow  and  fall  before  „          v  25 

For  a  breeze  of  morning  m's,  „       xxii  7 

But  only  m's  with  the  moving  eye,  „    II  ii  37 

Pass  and  cease  to  to  about !  „         iv  59 

Began  to  to,  seethe,  twine  and  curl :  Gareth  and  L.  234 

that  ev'n  to  him  they  seem'd  to  m.  „            237 

M's  him  to  think  what  kind  of  bird  it  is  Marr.  of  Geraint  331 

pushing  could  to  The  chair  of  Idris.  „              542 

When  first  I  parted  from  thee,  m's  me  yet.'  Geraint  and  E.  347 

my  leave  To  m  to  your  own  land,  „            889 
walk  with  me,  and  to  To  music  with  thine  Order      Balin  and  Balan  76 

How  far  beyond  him  Lancelot  seem'd  to  to,  „              172 

he  felt  his  being  to  In  music  with  his  Order,  „              211 

you  cannot  m  To  these  fair  jousts  ?  '  Lancelot  and  E.  79 

strike  spur,  suddenly  to.  Meet  in  the  midst,  „            456 

dream  Of  dragging  down  his  enemy  made  them  m.  „            814 

the  rough  Torre  began  to  heave  and  to,  „          1066 

In  which  as  Arthur's  Queen  I  to  and  rule :  „          1221 

Such  as  no  wind  could  to  :  Holy  Grail  681 

M  with  me  toward  their  quelling,  Last  Tournament  101 

O  ay — the  winds  that  to  the  mere.'  „              738 

in  this  battle  in  the  west  Whereto  we  m.  Pass,  of  Arthur  67 

wastes  the  narrow  realm  whereon  we  to,  „            140 

M  with  me  to  the  event.  Lover's  Tale  i  298 

The  boat  was  begirming  to  to.  First  Quarrel  21 

You  TO  about  the  Court,  I  pray  you  teQ  Columbus  222 

Whereon  the  Spirit  of  God  m's  as  he  will —  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  28 

And  m's  unseen  among  the  ways  of  men.  Tiresias  24 

While  men  shall  to  the  lips  :  „      133 

boundless  deep  That  m's,  and  all  is  gone.'  Ancient  Sage  190 
All  good  things  may  to  in  Hesper,                         Locksley  H.,  Sixty  186 

M  among  your  people,  know  them,  „              266 

draws  the  child  To  to  in  other  spheres.  To  Prin.  Beatrice  8 

Thy  power,  well-used  to  to  the  public  breast.  To  W.  C.  Macready  3 

We  to,  the  wheel  must  always  to.  Politics  1 

And  if  we  TO  to  such  a  goal  As  Wisdom  „      3 


Move 


485 


Moving 


Move  (continued)     Will  you  m  a  little  that  way  ?  Charity  20 

Moveable    some  with  gems  M  and  resettable  at  will,  Lover's  Tale  iv  199 
Moved     M  from  beneath  with  doubt  and  fear.             Suj>j>.  Confessions  138 

At  last  you  rose  and  m  the  light,  Milleis  D.  125 

Your  ripe  lips  m  not,  but  your  cheek  Flush'd  „        131 

Fronting  the  dawn  he  m  ;  CEnone  58 

Floated  the  glowing  sunlights,  as  she  to.  „    182 

bells  that  swimg,  M  of  themselves,  Palace  of  Art  130 

Its  office,  m  with  sympathy.  Love  thou  thy  land  48 

barge  \rith  oar  and  sail  M  from  the  brink,  M.  d' Arthur  266 

And  m  away,  and  left  me,  statue-like,  Gardener's  D.  161 

she  TO,  Like  Proserpine  in  Enna,  Edwin  Morris  111 

strength  which  in  old  days  M  earth  and  heaven  ;  Ulysses  67 

You  TO  her  at  your  pleasm-e.  Amvhion  60 

She  faintly  smiled,  she  hardly  m  ;  The  Letters  14 

M  with  violence,  changed  in  hue,  Vision  of  Sin  34 

So  lifted  up  in  spirit  he  m  away.  Enoch  Arden  330 
A  phantom  made  of  many  phantoms  m  Before  him 

haimting  him,  or  he  himself  M  haunting  people,  „          602 

Katie  never  ran  :  she  w  To  meet  me.  The  Brook  87 

There  m  the  multitude  a  thousand  heads  :  Princess,  Pro.  57 

for  still  we  to  Together,  „              i  56 

so  To  the  open  window  to,  „          iv  492 

Set  into  sunrise ;  then  we  m  away.  »              576 

She  heard,  she  to.  She  moan'd,  „             v  72 

Yet  she  neither  spoke  nor  m.  „             vi8 

Yet  she  neither  m  nor  wept.  „                12 

whether  m  by  this,  or  was  it  chance,  „               97 

And  to  beyond  his  custom,  Gama  said :  „              229 

So  said  the  small  king  m  beyond  his  wont.  „              265 

on  they  to  and  gain'd  the  hall,  and  there  Rested  :  „              352 

And  in  their  own  clear  element,  they  m.  „          vii  28 

I  TO  :  I  sigh'd  :  a  touch  Came  round  my  wrist,  „              137 

She  TO,  and  at  her  feet  the  volume  fell.  „              254 

Sway'd  to  her  from  their  orbits  as  they  m,  „              326 

I  TO  as  in  a  strange  diagonal,  „       Con.  27 

'  The  Gods  are  to  against  the  land.'  The  Victim  6 

The  Wye  is  hush'd  nor  to  along.  In  Mem.  xix  9 

M  in  the  chambera  of  the  blood  ;  „       xxiii  20 

We  saw  not,  when  we  to  therein  ?  „        xxiv  16 

and  TO  Upon  the  topmost  froth  of  thought.  „             Hi  3 

Had  TO  me  kindly  from  his  side,  „         Ixxx  3 

And,  TO  thro'  life  of  lower  phase,  „     Con.  125 

TO  by  an  unseen  hand  at  a  game  That  pushes  Maud  I  iv  26 

Maud  was  to  To  speak  of  the  mother  she  loved  .     „       xix  26 

and  we  see  him  as  he  to.  Bed.  of  Idylls  17 

(Your  city  to  so  weirdly  in  the  mist)  Gareth  and  L.  245 

So  the  sweet  voice  of  Enid  m  Geraint ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  334 

M  the  fair  Enid,  all  in  faded  silk,  „              366 

they  m  Down  to  the  meadow  where  the  jousts  „              536 

and  wings  M  in  her  ivy,  „              599 

thus  he  TO  the  Prince  To  laughter  Geraint  and  E.  295 

harder  to  be  to  Than  hardest  tyrants  „             694 

Was  m  so  much  the  more,  and  shriek'd  again,  „            782 

They  said  a  light  came  from  her  when  she  to  :  Merlin  and  V.  567 

Thus  they  to  away  :  she  stay'd  a  minute,  Lancelot  and  E.  390 

Must  needs  have  to  my  laughter :  „            596 

And  TO  about  her  palace,  proud  and  pale.  „            614 

And  lifted  her  fair  face  and  w  away :  „            682 

Who  had  devised  the  letter,  m  again.  „           1288 

mark'd  Sir  Lancelot  where  he  to  apart,  „          1349 

m  Among  us  in  white  armour,  Galahad.  Holy  Grail  134 

on  me  to  In  golden  armour  with  a  crown  of  gold  „          409 
when  I  m  of  old  A  slender  page  about  her  father's 

haU,  „          580 

whose  lightest  whisper  m  him  more  Pdleas  and  E.  155 

for  nothing  to  but  his  own  self,  „          417 

with  cups  of  gold,  M  to  the  lists,  Last  Tournament  143 

might  have  to  slow-measure  to  my  tune,  „              282 

ending,  he  to  toward  her,  and  she  said,  „              704 

which  had  noblest,  while  you  to  Among  them,  Guinevere  325 

rose  the  King  and  m  his  host  by  night,  Pass,  of  Arthur  79 

barge  with  oar  and  sail  M  from  the  brink,  „            434 

Thereat  once  more  he  to  about,  „            462 

M  from  the  cloud  of  unforgotten  things.  Lover's  Tale  i  48 


Moved  (continued)     By  that  name  I  m  upon  her  breath ;     Lover's  Taled  560 

rain  FeU  on  my  face,  and  her  long  ringlets  m,  „            699 

M  with  one  spirit  round  about  the  bay,  „         Hi  17 

He  TO  thro'  all  of  it  majestically —  „            iv  9 

they  are  mine — ^not  theirs — they  had  to  in  my  side.  Rizpah  54 

And  TO  to  merriment  at  a  passing  jest.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  121 

it  often  TO  me  to  tears.  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  31 

an  earthquake  always  m  in  the  hollows  V.  of  Maeldune  107 
Whatever  to  in  that  full  sheet  Let  down  to  Peter     To  E.  Fitzgerald  11 

Universal  Nature  to  by  Universal  Mind  ;  To  Virgil  22 

TO  but  by  the  living  limb,  Akhar's  Dream  133 

Movement    in  its  onward  current  it  absorbs  With  swifter  m  Isabel  32 

loveliest  in  all  grace  Of  to,  CEnone  76 

without  light  Or  power  of  to,  Palace  of  Art  246 

Movest     Nor  canst  thou  prove  the  world  thou  to  in.  Ancient  Sage  58 

Moving     (See  also  Slow-moving)     M  thro'  a  fleecy  night.  Margaret  21 

M  in  the  leavy  beech.  „         61 

TO  thro'  a  mirror  clear  That  hangs  before  her  L.  of  Shalott  ii  10 

Still  TO  after  tnith  long  sought.  Two  Voices  62 

lift  the  hidden  ore  That  glimpses,  w  up,  D.  of  F.  Women  275 

Seen  where  the  to  isles  of  winter  shock  By  night,  M.  d' Arthur  14Q 

TO  toward  the  stillness  of  his  rest.  Locksley  Hall  144 

Then  m  homeward  came  on  Annie  pale,  Enoch  Arden  149 

The  TO  whisper  of  huge  trees  that  branch'd  „          585 

Then  to  up  the  coast  they  landed  him,  „  665 
in  m  on  I  found  Only  the  landward  exit  of  the  cave.        Sea  Dreams  95 

bough  That  to  moves  the  nest  and  nestling,  „         291 

and  was  m  on  In  gratulation.  Princess   ii  184 

TO  thro'  the  uncertain  gloom,  „        iv  216 

isles  of  light  Slided,  they  to  under  shade :  „           vi  82 

lay  Quite  sunder'd  from  the  to  Universe,  „         mi  52 

M  about  the  household  ways,  In  Mem.  Ix  11 

And  TO  up  from  high  to  higher,  „         Ixiv  13 

Eternal  process  to  on,  „       Ixxxii  5 

m  side  by  side  With  wisdom,  „        cxiv  19 

And  see'st  the  to  of  the  team.  „        cxxi  16 

lost  in  trouble  and  to  round  Here  at  the  head  Maud  I  xxi  5 

But  only  moves  with  the  m  eye,  „     //  ii  37 

sang  the  knighthood,  m  to  their  hall.  Com.  of  Arthur  503 

Who,  m,  cast  the  coverlet  aside,  Marr.  of  Geraint  73 

And  m  toward  a  cedarn  cabinet,  „             136 

I  saw  you  to  by  me  on  the  bridge,  „            429 

So  m  without  answer  to  her  rest  She  found  no  rest,  „             530 

Then,  to  downward  to  the  meadow  ground,  Geraint  and  £.204 

He  to  up  with  pliant  courtUness,  „             278 

He  TO  homeward  babbled  to  his  men,  „           -362 

TO  back  she  held  Her  finger  up,  „            452 

And  m.  out  they  found  the  stately  horse,  „             752 

And  Edym  w  frankly  forward  spake :  „             784 

TO  eveiy  where  Clear'd  the  dark  places  „           ;942 

M  to  meet  him  in  the  castle  court ;  Lancelot  and  E.  175 

But  kindly  man  m  among  his  kind  :  „           :.265 

plumes  driv'n  backward  by  the  wind  they  made  In  to,  „             481 

saw  the  barge  that  brought  her  711  down,  „           1391 

thought  he  meant  To  crush  me,  m  on  me,  Holy  Grail  416 

but  TO  with  me  night  and  day,  „          471 

Mean  knights,  to  whom  the  m.  of  my  sword  „           790 

and  far  ahead  Of  his  and  her  retinue  m,  Guinevere  385 

And  TO  thro'  the  past  unconsciously,  „        402 

TO  ghostlike  to  his  doom.  „        605 

but  no  man  was  to  there  ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  12J 

Seen  where  the  m  isles  of  winter  shock  By  night,  „            308 

Thence  mark'd  the  black  hull  m  yet,  „             448 

down  the  highway  m  on  With  easy  laughter  Tiresias  199 

But  m  thro'  the  Mother's  home.  To  Prin.  Beatrice. 13 

She  TO,  at  her  girdle  clash  The  golden  keys  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  3 

Are  there  spectres  m  in  the  darkness  ?  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  67 

And  TO  each  to  music,  soul  in  soul  Happy  39 

M  to  melody.  Floated  The  Gleam.  Merlin  and  the  G.22 

slowly  TO  again  to  a  melody  Yearningly  tender,  „              90 

CEnone  sat  Not  to,  till  in  front  of  that  ravine  Death  of  CEnone  75 

Then  m  quickly  forward  till  the  heat  „              97 

The  gladiators  to  toward  their  fight,  St.  Telemachus  54 

TO  easily  Thro'  after-ages  in  the  love  of  Truth,  Akhar's  Dream  100 

But  such  a  tide  as  m  seems  asleep.  Crossing  the  Bar  5 


Mower 

Hower    and  m's  mowing  in  it : 

in  his  hand  Bare  victual  for  the  in's  : 
fare  is  coarse.  And  only  meet  for  m's  ;' 
Ate  all  the  m's'  victual  unawares, 
P'resh  \-ictual  for  these  m's  of  our  Earl ; 
serve  thee  costlier  than  with  m's'  fare.'' 
Than  when  I  left  your  m's  dinnerless. 
The  lusty  m's  labouring  dinnerless, 

Howing    and  mowers  «i  in  it : 

Mown  See  New-mown 

Mowt  (might)    M  a  bean,  mayhap,  for  she  wur  a 
bad  un, 
or  I  m  'a  liked  tha  as  well. 

Mach    After  w  waUing,  hush'd  itself  at  last 
Still  so  m  gold  was  left ; 
touch'd  on  Mahomet  With  m  contempt 
m  profit !     Not  one  word  ;  No  !  ' 

For  himself  has  done  m  better. 


486 


Murmur 


Geraint  and  E.  199 
202 
209 
215 
225 
231 
234 
251 
199 


N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  22 

Spinster's  S's.  43 

Aylmer's  Field  542 

Sea  Dreams  130 

Princess  ii  135 

vi  239 

Spiteful  Letter  4 


Much  tlnvS"-^  ?1V'?,'  '"^"^y^-  ^^  kitchen-knave :     cSV^  f  919 
Mucn-beloved    And  he  the  m-h  agam.  j„  \f^„      i-a 

Much-experienced    Ulysses,  m-7man,  Torlh.tll  ^ 

Muck    slaape  dowTi  i'  the  squad  an'  the  m :  NoHh   CobblJ%() 

Fur  we  puts  the  m  o'  the  land  an'  they  sucks  the  m 

fro  the  grass.  77  -i,       jjr . ,  „„ 

Mucky    an'  their  m  bibs,  an'  the  clats  an'  the  clouts,  SpSr'sS's  87 

Mud     {See  also  Squad)     Lay  great  with  pig,  wallowiilg        '"-P*"*'^'' * -=»  ^- »7 

m  sun  and  »«.  u/^„ji.  4   41.    1^  •,  ^o 

Fish  are  we  that  love  the  m,  ViV    f^^'^'^\n^ 

Gracious  lessons  thine  And  maxims  of  the  m  !  mZhu  aid  V  49 

Swme  m  the  m,  that  cannot  see  for  slime.  Ho  u  Grail  771 

the  cup  was  gold,  the  draught  was  m.'  Last  Tou^ament  298 

an'  the  77!.  0'  'is  boots  o'  the  staire,  SpZX'sS's^^ 

lllnH-?'''''?w  '  •?'  ^'f^^^  Evolution  in  the  m.        LocMeTu    Sixt^'m) 
Muddier      Was  it  m  than  thv  eibes  ?  r^T*  7^      '      ^  t^ 

Muddle    londatermeathot^^'frn"  quoit;                    ^  ZTer'Ts^^^ 

Muddy    clear  stream  flowing  with  a  m  one                          '  '  Uahd  SO 

Mud-honey    His  heart  in  the  gross  r/i-A  of  town,  Maud  IxJl 

Muffle    O  wi  round  thv  knees  with  fern  Tnii-i^„n  ^Ik 

Muffled    (See  also  Half-muffled)    The  panthei^s  roar  came  ,«  '''"^,2f.  ^S 

And,  sitting  m  m  dark  leaves,  Gardene7rD  % 

And  chimneys  m  in  the  leafy  vine  I^euCnuri  IQ 

watch  A  full  sea  glazed  M-ith  m  moonlight,  fZcessl2^ 

but  we  three  Sat  7«  like  the  Fates  ;  -Trtncm  t  ^48 

but  I  Lay  silent  in  the  7»  cage  of  Ufe  :  "         ""?t 

Now,  to  the  roll  of  m  drumsT  Od.  'L  win  f- 

And  standing,  m  round  with  woe,  /t  'Z.         ■  % 

Whose  m  motions  blindly  drown  The  bases  of  mv  life  '^'*' 

m  t«ars.                                                               •'  7  •    i  k 

Whereon  were  hollow  tramplings  up  and  down  And  " 

1ft  VOICGS  Ik^AIYi 

Not  m  round  ^vith  selfish  i^ticence.  SunaLVWl 

Listens  the  m  booming  indistinct  Of  the  confused  ^^ 

floods,  r       )    ^  7    •  /, 

From  under  rose  a  m  moan  of  floods  •  pZn  %^f'- '  ^l 

Muffling     And  r,^  up  her  comely  head,       '  D^aZfiZjZ 

Muggms    An'  M  'e  preach'd  o'  Hell-fir«  tjl  nl^f  ^^ 

Mulberry-faced    male  The  m-f  DictaS's  orgies  worse  ''"' zSS  S 

Mule     Her  cream-white  m  his  pastern  set :  ^j>  i  alTor  SI 

Multipbed    Thus  truth  was  7«  on  truth,  ^-    r*.  pf  ;  1^ 

The.  moved  tL  ,«,  a'tCaTdtd's  :  PrinZTro'fl 

To  cast  wise  words  among  the  m  princess,  fro.  57 

And  in  each  let  a  m  LovS  n      ^  7    ^    Tirestas  66 

Multitudinous     Phantom  wftf  women  and  childre?"/"'-^-  '^"^'"^  "« 
agonies.  ""i"c«,  t» 

Ran  the  land  with  Roman  slaughter,  m  agonies  Boadwea  26 

st.llM  Thro'  all  its  folds  the  m  beast        ^  r  • "   •     ?^ 

5?™^°'^'^°«     ^^''*"'*  ''««'"  «^  ^-^  light-  Z)«  Pro/-    rSTr  4 

Mumble    pnest,  who  to  worship  in  vour  aui^  fit?  •       h  »  7      .".^ 

Mumbled    in  her  hunger  moutfi'd  and  wli^  ?."^  ^'^''.  ^ 

m  that  white  hand  who*e  rimA? ca^'  r  7-    "^T^"^  ''^  ^13 

Mmnbbng    Muttering  and  w  idiotHke  -n    -'««,^»«9l25 

Mummy    That  her.  the  torpld't ^'htt  Of  Egypt  ^^o%''lSI 


Mmmey  (money)    An'  the  m  they  maade  by  the  war 
Munny  (money)    Thou'll  not  marry  for  w— 

soa  IS  scoors  0'  gells,  Them  as  'as  w  an'  aU— 

Doant  thou  marry  for  7/1,  but  goa  wheer  m  is  " 
An   I  went  wheer  m  war  :  an'  thy  muther  coom 

to  and,  W 1'  lots  o'  m  laaid  by, 
thou  can  luvv  thy  lass  an'  'er  7/1  too. 
Could'n  I  luvv  thy  muther  by  cause  o'  'er  m  laaid  by  ? 
lis  n  them  as  'as  7n  as  breaks  into  'ouses  an'  steals 
work  mun  a  gone  to  the  gittin'  whiniver  m  was  got. 
Peyther  ad  ammost  nowt ;  leastways  'is  m  was  'id 
1  grabb  d  the  m  she  maade, 

spirit  of  m  works  in 


Murder    (See  also  Wife-murder) 

the  very  means  of  life. 

That  keeps  the  rust  of  m  on  the  walls 

Her  love  did  m  mine  ?     What  then  ? 
For  the  lawyer  is  bom  but  to  m — 
hoyv  long  shall  the  m  last  ? 
dying  worm  in  a  world,  all  massacre,  m,  and  wrone 
M  Mould  not  veil  your  sin, 
Murder'd  J^ee  o/so  Ever-murder'd)    A  woman  weeping 


Owd  Rod  44 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.ll 

15 

20 


21 
33 
35 
45 
50 
51 
Cobbler  32 


North 


Maud  I  i4ii 

Guinevere  74 

Lover's  Tale  i  740 

Rizpah  64 

V.  of  Maeldune  123 

Despair  32 

Forlorn  49 


for  her  m  mate 
Self-starved,  they  say— nay,  m,  doubtless  dead. 
Olared  on  at  the  m  son,  and  the  murderous  father 
at  rest,  .  .   . 
Murderer    prov'n  themselves  Poisoners,  m's 
Murderous    Or  pinch  a  7/1  dust  into  her' drink 
you  can  hear  him — the  m  mole  !  ' 

and  the  m  father  at  rest,  ..." 
Muriel    (See  also  Muriel  Erne)    Far-off,  is  M—yoxxn 
stepmother's  voice, 
lived  With  M's  mother  on  the  down 
Miriam  sketch'd  and  M  threw  the  fly  • 
The  form  of  M  faded,  and  the  face  Of'Miriam 
A    Miriam  '  that  might  seem  a.'  M'  • 
M  claim'd  and  open'd  what  I  meant  For  Miriam, 
M  and  Miriam,  each  in  white. 
But  coming  nearer— ^/  had  the  ring— 
M  clench'd  The  hand  that  wore  it. 
She  glanced  at  me,  at  M,  and  was  mute. 
then- J/  standing  ever  statue-like — 
And  saying  gently  :  '  M,  by  your  leave,' 
M  fled.     Poor  M  !     Ay,  poor  M 
M  enter'd  with  it, '  See  !— Found  in  a  chink 
iVi— no— She  cannot  love  ;  she  loves  her  own  hard  self 
Promise  me,  Miriam  not  yV-«he  shall  have  the  ring  '  ' 
M  s  mother  sent.  And  sure  am  I,  by  Jlf 
By  the  lych-gate  was  M.  ' 

For  .1/  nm-sed  you  with  a  mother's  care  • 
.  f«  health  Had  weaken'd,  nursing  httle  Miriam. 

1  take  thee  M  for  my  wedded  wife  ' 

3/,  paler  then  Than  ever  you  were  in  your  cradle 
Among  them  .1/  lying  on  her  face— I  raised  her,  c'all'd 
her    M,  M  wake  !  '  .    <»    u 

Muriel  Erne    (^ee  a/so  Muriel)    Miriam  Erne  And  Jf  £— 

well,  you  know  I  married  M  E. 
Murmur  (s)     Overblown  with  m's  harsh, 
And  no  m  at  the  door. 
To  hear  the  m  of  the  strife, 
The  7«  of  the  fountain-head — 
A  7ft  '  Be  of  better  cheer.' 
There  comes  no  771  of  reply. 
And  m's  of  a  deeper  voice, 
This  m  broke  the  stillness  of  that  air 
Not  whisper,  any  m  of  complaint. 
The  m's  of  the  drum  and  fife 
Faint  m's  from  the  meadows  come. 
Made  a  w  in  the  land. 
And  they  speak  in  gentle  »7!, 
But  finding  neither  light  nor  m  there 
Came  77i'5  of  her  beauty  from  the  South, 
By  this  a  771  ran  Thro'  all  the  camp 
a  m  heard  aeriaUy, 
And  77»'s  from  the  dying  sim  : 
And  dull'd  the  77*  on  thy  lip, 


Geraint  and  E.  522 
Sir  J.  Oldcastle  60 

Bandit's  Death  33 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  168 

Merlin  and  V.  610 

Def.  of  Lucknow  26 

Bandit's  Death  33 

The  Ring  139 
148 
159 
184 
241 
242 
254 
259 
261 
264 
266 
268 
271 
279 
291 
294 
311 
324 
349 
356 
377 
431 


147 
376 
Ode  to  Memory  99 
Deserted  House  7 
Margaret  23 
Two  Voices  216 
429 
Palace  of  Art  2'^ 
On  a  Mourner  16 
Gardener's  D.  147 
St.  S.  Stylites  22 
Talking  Oak  215 
Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  6 
L.  of  Burleigh  20 
49 
Enoch  Arden  687 
Princess  i  36 
„       V 110 
Boadicea  24 
/»  Mem.  iii  8 
„      xxii  16 


Mnrmur 


487 


Music 


Munnnr  (s)  (continued) 
a  happy  Psin : 
A  single  m  in  the  breast, 
cackle  of  your  bourg  The  m  of  the  world  ! 
They  take  the  rustic  m  of  their  bourg 
m's  '  Lo,  thou  likewise  shalt  be  King.' 
and  then  I  seem'd  to  hear  Its  m, 
mellow'd  m  of  the  people's  praise 
but  never  a  m,  a  breath — 
from  within  The  city  comes  a  m  void  of  joy, 
a  flower  Had  vi's  '  Lost  and  gone 
but  a  in  of  gnats  in  the  gloom, 
thro'  her  dream  A  ghostly  m  floated. 


lavish  hills  would  hum  The  m  of 

In  Mem.  xxiii  12 

„  civ  7 

Mart,  of  Geraint  277 


419 

Lancelot  and  E.  55 

Lover's  Tale  i  635 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  7 

V.  of  Maddune  19 

Tiresias  101 

Ancient  Sage  224 

Vastness  35 

Death  of  (Enone  79 


Murmur  (verb)    in  the  bum  water-gnats  m  and  mourn.         Leonine  Eleg.  8 
At  heart,  thou  woxildest  m  still —  Supp.  Confessions  104 

And  the  nations  do  but  m,  Locksley  Hall  106 

I  m,  under  moon  and  stars  In  brambly  wildernesses  ;        The  Brook  178 


The  dove  may  m  of  the  dove, 

loyal  pines  of  Canada  m  thee. 

Should  m  from  the  narrow  house, 

the  crowd  Will  m,  '  Lo  the  shameless  ones, 

And  m  at  the  low-dropt  eaves  of  sleep, 

and  TO  down  Truth  in  the  distemce — 

will  m  thee  To  thine  own  Thebes, 

clasp  the  hands  and  to,  '  Would  to  God 

If  it  be  a  mosque  people  to  the  holy  prayer, 
Mnrmur'd    Before  Our  Lady  m  she  ; 

low  voice,  full  of  care,  M  beside  me  : 

to  Arthur, '  Place  me  in  the  barge,' 

And  sweetly  to  thine. 

m  '  Oh,  that  he  Were  once  more  that  landscape- 
painter, 

But  each  man  to,  '  O  my  Queen, 

And  double  death  were  widely  to, 

For  all  the  sloping  pasture  to, 

and  to  that  their  May  Was  passing  : 

Then  m  Florian  gazing  after  her. 

The  mellow  breaker  to  Ida. 

'  I  TO,  as  I  came  along. 

She  past ;  and  Vivien  m  after  '  Go  ! 

She  TO,  '  Vain,  in  vain  :  it  cannot  be. 

m  Arthur,  '  Place  me  in  the  bai^e.' 

when  the  bridegroom  to,  '  With  this  ring,' 
Murmurest    Who  to  in  the  foUaged  eaves 

Then  Kay,  '  What  to  thou  of  mystery  ? 
Murmuring    And  m,  as  at  night  and  mom, 

Singing  and  m  in  her  feastful  mirth. 

Muttering  and  m  at  his  ear  '  Quick, 

we  saw  the  lights  and  heard  The  voices  m. 

And  TO  of  innumerable  bees.' 

The  brooks  of  Eden  mazily  to, 

a  wind  Of  memory  m  the  past. 

field  of  toumey,  to  '  kitchen-knave.' 

one  M, '  All  courtesy  is  dead,' 

M  a  light  song  I  had  heard  thee  sing, 

A  TO  whisper  thro'  the  nunnery  ran, 

Muttering  and  m  at  his  ear,  '  Quick, 
Murmurous    lime  a  summer  home  of  m  wings. 
Mum  (mom)    lark  a-singin'  'is  best  of  a  Sunday  at  to, 
Mumin'  (morning)    An'  when  I  waak'd  i'  the  m 

D'ya  mind  the  m  when  we  was  a-walkin' 
togither, 
Muscle    Having  the  warmth  and  m  of  the  heart, 

arms  on  which  the  standing  m  sloped, 
Muscovite    How  long  this  icy-hearted  M 
Muscular    So  to  he  spread,  so  broad  of  breast. 
Muse  (s)    The  modem  M's  reading. 

No  vain  libation  to  the  M, 

The  M,  the  jolly  M,  it  is  ! 

hard-grain'd  M's  of  the  cube  and  square 

M's  and  the  Graces,  group'd  in  threes. 

And  every  M  tumbled  a  science  in. 

the  M's'  heads  were  touch'd  Above  the  darkness 

So  they  blaspheme  the  m  ! 

I  fed  you  with  the  milk  of  every  M 


Princess  Hi  105 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  19 

In  Mem.  xxxv.  2 

Lancelot  and  E.  100 

Lover's  Tale  ii  122 

Columbus  120 

Tiresias  140 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  192 

Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  4 

Mariana  in  the  S.  28 

D.  of  F.  Women  250 

M.d'AHhur  204: 

Talking  Oak  160 

L.  of  Burleigh  82 

The  Voyage  63 

Aylmer's  Field  617 

Princess,  Pro.  55 

„  ii  463 

„  Hi  97 

iv  436 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  21 

Merlin  and  V.  98 

Lancelot  and  E.  892 

Pass,  of  Arthur  372 

The  Ring  438 

In  Mem.  xcix  9 

Gareth  and  L.  470 

Mariana  in  the  S.  46 

Palace  of  Art  177 

M.  d' Arthur  179 

Princess  iv  559 

„       vii  222 

Milton  10 

In  Mem.  xcii  8 

Gareth  and  L.  664 

Last  Tournament  211 

614 

Guinevere  410 

Pass,  of  Arthur  347 

Gardener's  D.  48 

North.  Cobbler  46 

39 

Spinster's  S's.  23 

Aylmer's  Field  180 

Marr.  of  Geraint  76 

Poland  10 

Gardener's  D.  8 

Amphion  76 

Will  Water.  9 

105 

Princess,  Pro.  180 

ii  27 

399 

Hi  21 

iv  137 

295 


Mose  (s)  {continued)    above  them  stood  The  placid  marble 
M's,  looking  peace. 

0  civic  TO,  to  such  a  name, 
sound  ever  heard,  ye  M's,  in  England  ? 
'  For  I  am  but  an  earthly  M, 
high  M  answer'd  :  '  Wherefore  grieve  Thy  brethren 
A  life  that  all  the  M's  deck'd  With  gifts  of  grace, 
That  saw  thro'  all  the  M's '  walk, 
charm  of  all  the  M's  often  flowering 
the  M's  cried  \vith  a  stormy  cry 
M's  have  raised  to  the  heights  of  the  mountain, 
Taller  than  all  the  AI's, 
Astronomy  and  Geology,  terrible  M's  ! 

Muse  (verb)     I  to,  as  in  a  trance, 
While  I  m  upon  thy  face  ; 
with  downcast  eyes  we  to  and  brood. 
To  TO  and  brood  and  hve  again  in  memory, 

1  m  on  joy  that  will  not  cease, 
my  Lords,  you  make  the  people  m 
And  with  my  heart  I  to  and  say  : 
face  shine  Upon  me,  while  I  to  alone  ; 
And  there  the  gi-eat  Sir  Lancelot  to  at  me  ; 

0  my  Queen,  I  m  Why  ye  not  wear  on  arm, 
and  TO  On  those  dear  hills. 

Mused     (See  also  Half-mused)     while  they  m  Whispering 
to  each  other  half  in  fear. 
But  Lancelot  to  a  little  space  ; 
But  while  I  to  came  Memory  with  sad  eyes, 
while  I  TO,  Love  with  knit  brows  went  by, 
M,  and  was  mute. 
And  m  upon  it,  drifting  up  the  stream 

1  m  on  that  wild  morning  in  the  woods, 
Who  TO  on  all  I  had  to  tell, 
is  it  pride,  and  to  and  sigh'd  '  No  surely, 
the  King  M  for  a  little  on  his  plea, 
She  m  a  little,  and  then  clapt  her  hands 
Crept  to  her  father,  while  he  to  alone, 
Lancelot  later  came  and  w  at  her, 
while  I  m  nor  yet  endured  to  take  So  rich  a  prize 

Museth     TO  where  broad  sunsliine  laves  The  lawn 
Music    (See  also  Bridal-music,  May-music,  Sphere-music, 
Thunder-music,  War-music)     Then — while  a  sweeter 


Princess  iv  489 

Ode  on  Well.  75 

Trans,  of  Homer  3 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  13 

„  Iviii  9 

„        I xxxv  45 

„  cix  4 

To  Virgil  11 

Bead  Prophet  2 

Parnassus  2 

10 

16 

Elednore  75 

„      129 

Sonnet  To 1 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  65 

Sir  Galahad  65 

Third  of  Feb.  31 

In  Mem.  iv  4 

„     cxvi  10 

Lancelot  and  E.  1055 

Last  Tournament  35 

Lover's  Tale  i  31 

Sea- Fairies  4 

L.  of  Slialott  iv  51 

Gardener's  D.  243 

245 

The  Brook  201 

Sea  Dreams  108 

Princess  v  471 

In  Mem.  vi  19 

Maud  I  via  12 

Marr.  of  Geraint  42 

Merlin  and  V.  866 

Lancelot  and  E.  748 

1268 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  49 

D.  of  F.  Women  189 


m  viakci 
m  flowing  from  The  illimitable  years, 
led.  With  TO  and  sweet  showers  Of  festal  flowers. 
Shrill  TO  reach'd  them  on  the  middle  sea. 
With  a  TO  strange  and  manifold, 
Rain  makes  m  in  the  tree 
the  wave  would  make  to  above  us  afar — 
A  funeral,  with  plumes,  and  lights  And  to, 
overtakes  Far  thought  with  to  that  it  makes  : 
Rose  slowly  to  a  m  slowly  breathed, 
up  the  valley  came  a  swell  of  to  on  the  wind, 
up  the  valley  came  again  the  m  on  the  wind. 
The  blessed  to  went  that  way  my  soul 
TO  in  his  ears  his  beating  heart  did  make. 
There  is  sweet  ni  here  that  softer  falls 
M  that  gentlier  on  the  spirit  lies, 
M  that  brings  sweet  sleep  down  from  the  blissful  skies, 
they  find  a  to  centred  in  a  doleful  song 
who  made  His  m  heard  below  ; 
that  flow  Of  TO  left  the  lips  of  her  that  died 
Deep-chested  to,  and  to  this  result. 
To  some  full  to  rose  and  sank  the  sun, 
full  TO  seem'd  to  move  and  change 
I  scarce  have  other  to  :  yet  say  on. 
The  m  from  the  town — 
pass'd  in  to  out  of  sight. 
The  Magic  M  in  his  heart  Beats  quick 
Low  voluptuous  TO  winding  trembled, 
Then  the  m  touch'd  the  gates  and  died  ; 
Nor  leave  his  to  as  of  old. 
Lay  hidden  as  the  to  of  the  moon  Sleeps 
and  coming  fitfully  Like  broken  to, 
Broke  into  nature's  w  when  they  saw  her. 


To  the  Queen  13 

Ode  to  Memory  41 

77 

Sea- Fairies  6 

Dying  Swan  29 

A  Dirge  26 

The  Merman  22 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  B2 

Two  Voices  438 

(Enone  41 

May  Queen,  Con.  32 

36 

42 

Lotos- Eaters  36 

C.  S.  1 

5 

7 

117 

D.  of  F.  Women  4 

195 

The  Epic  51 

Edwin  Morris  34 

35 

57 

Talking  Oak  214 

Locksley  Hall  34 

Day-Dm.,  Arrival  26 

Vision  of  Sin  17 

23 

You  might  have  won  14 

Aylmer's  Field  102 

477 


Music 


488 


Mute 


Music  (continued)    I  had  one  That  altogether  went  to  m  ?    Sea  Dreams  204 
Lessening  to  the  lessening  m,  back,  And  past  into 

the  belt  and  swell'd  again  Slowly  to  m  :  „          221 

(Altho'  I  grant  but  little  m  there)  „          253 

A  m  harmonizing  our  wild  cries,  „  255 
she  liked  it  more  Than  magic  m,  forfeits,  all  the 

rest.  Princess,  Pro.  195 

lightlier  move  The  minutes  fledged  with  m : '  Princess  iv  37 

as  they  say  The  seal  does  m  ;  „          456 

Like  one  that  wishes  at  a  dance  to  change  The  m —  „          590 

With  m  in  the  growing  breeze  of  Time,  „        vi  56 

Like  perfect  m  imto  noble  words  ;  „     vii  286 

And  girdled  her  with  m.  „          327 

let  the  mournful  martial  m  blow ;  Ode  on  Well.  17 

With  banner  and  with  w,  „           81 

we  hear  The  tides  of  M's  golden  sea  „  252 
Make  m,  0  bird,  in  the  new-budded  bowers  !            W.  to  Alexandra  11 

Like  ballad-burthen  m,  kept.  The  Daisy  77 
These  lame  hexameters  the  strong-wing'd  m  of 

Homer  !  Trans,  of  Homer  1 

May  make  one  m  as  before.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  28 

With  all  the  m  in  her  tone,  „               m  10 

Were  mellow  m  match'd  %vith  him.  „              Ivi  24 

I  hear  a  wizard  m  roll,  „             Ixx  14 

Shall  ring  with  m  aU  the  same  ;  „         Ixxvii  14 

And  m  in  the  bounds  of  law,  „       Ixxxvii  34 

jEonian  m  measuring  out  The  steps  of  Time —  „              xcv  41 

At  last  he  beat  his  m  out.  „             xcvi  10 

sweep  A  m  out  of  sheet  and  shroud,  „              ciii  54 

With  festal  cheer.  With  books  and  m,  „             cvii  22 

Is  m  more  than  any  song.  „             Con.  4 

when  alone  She  sits  by  her  m  and  books  Maud  I  xiv  13 

Beat  to  the  noiseless  m  of  the  night  !  „       xviii  77 

As  the  7n  clash'd  in  the  hall ;  „        xxii  34 

To  the  sound  of  dancing  m  and  flutes  :  „  II  v  76 
Out  of  the  city  a  blast  of  m  peal'd.                                 Gareth  and  L.  238 

and  this  m  now  Hath  scared  them  both,  „          250 

And  built  it  to  the  m  of  their  hai-ps.  „          262 

For  an  ye  heard  a  m,  „          275 

seeing  the  city  is  built  To  m,  „  277 
move  To  m  with  thine  Order  and  the  King.  Balin  and  Balan  11 
Queen,  and  all  the  world  Made  m,  and  he  felt  his 

being  move  In  m  with  his  Order,  and  the  King.  „            211 

The  w  in  him  seem'd  to  change,  „            217 

the  wholesome  m  of  the  wood  Was  dumb'd  „  436 
That  by  and  by  will  make  the  m  mute.  Merlin  and  V.  391 
And  mass,  and  roUing  w,  like  a  queen.                     Lancelot  and  E.  1336 

Was  like  that  m  as  it  came  ;  Holy  Grail  115 

then  the  m  faded,  and  the  GraU  Past,  „  121 
When  God  made  m  thro'  them,  could  but  speak  His  m 

by  the  framework  and  the  chord ;  „          878 
Skip  to  the  broken  m  of  my  brains  Than  any 

broken  m  Last  Tournament  258 

'  Good  now,  what  m  have  I  broken,  fool  ?  '  „              261 

Thou  makest  broken  m  with  thy  bride,  „  264 
so  thou  breakest  Arthur's  m  too.'    '  Save  for  that 

broken  m  „             266 

And  barken  if  my  to  be  not  true.  „              274 

woods  are  hu-^h'd,  their  m  is  no  more :  „              276 

I'll  hold  thou  hast  some  touch  Of  m,  „              314 

It  makes  a  silent  m  up  in  heaven,  „              349 

he  heard  Strange  m,  and  he  paused,  Guinevere  239 
with  heaven's  m  in  a  life  More  living                            Lover's  Tale  i  761 

day  Peal'd  on  us  with  that  m  which  rights  all,  „          iv  65 

The  TO  that  robes  it  in  language  The  Wreck  24 
What  power  but  the  bird's  could  make  This  to  in  the 

bird? 
set  The  lamps  alight,  and  call  For  golden  to, 
their  songs,  that  meet  The  morning  with  such  to, 
heart  batin'  to  to  wid  ivery  word  ! 
not  the  TO  of  a  deep  ? 
thy  voice,  a  to  heard  Thro'  all  the  yells 
And  moving  each  to  to,  soul  in  soul 


if  his  young  to  w  akes  A  wish  in  you. 
Or  cataract  m  Of  falling  torrents, 


Ancient  Sage  22 
197 
The  Flight  66 
Tomorrow  34 
LocTcsley  H.,  Sixty  154 
To  Duke  of  Argyll  7 
Happy  39 
To  Mary  Boyle  63 
Merlin  and  the  G.  46 


Music  (continued)    Tho'  their  to  here  be  mortal 

can  AI  make  you  Uve  Far — ^far — away  ? 

Make  but  one  w,  harmonising  '  Pray.' 

but  we  hear  M :  our  palace  is  awake. 
Musical    many  a  fall  Of  diamond  rillets  to, 

More  TO  than  ever  came  in  one, 

ever  in  it  a  low  to  note  Swell'd  up  and  died  ; 

There  is  but  one  bird  with  a  m  throat, 

we  past  to  the  Isle  of  Witches  and  heard  their 
TO  cry — - 
Musically    winded  it,  and  that  so  to 
Musician    The  discords  dear  to  the  to. 

M,  painter,  sculptor,  critic. 
Musing    M  on  him  that  used  to  fill  it  for  her, 

And  to  on  the  little  lives  of  men. 

Or  in  the  furrow  to  stands  ; 

who  turns  a  in  eye  On  songs,  and  deeds, 

But  TO  '  Shall  I  answer  yea  or  nay  ?  ' 

There  to  sat  the  hoary-headed  Earl, 

could  not  rest  for  to  how  to  smoothe  And  sleek 

I  sat.  Lonely,  but  to  on  thee,  wondering  where. 
Musk    moss  or  to.  To  grace  my  city  rooms  ; 

Smelling  of  to  and  of  insolence. 

And  the  to  of  the  rose  is  blown. 
Musket    Death  while  we  stood  with  the  m, 
Musket-bullet    Millions  of  m-b's. 
Musket-shot    Cannon-shot,  m-s, 
Musky-circled    began  To  thrid  the  m-c  mazes, 
Musqueteer    came  with  their  pikes  and  m's, 
Mussulman    True  M  was  I  and  sworn, 

M  Who  flings  his  bowstrung  Harem  in  the  sea, 

But  in  due  time  for  every  M, 
Musty    In  TO  bins  and  chambers. 
Mute    wait  for  death — m — careless  of  all  iUs, 

When  all  the  house  is  to. 

M  with  folded  arms  they  waited — 

Here  both  were  to,  tiU  Philip  glancing  up 

Mused,  and  was  to. 

He  laugh'd  ;  and  then  was  to  ; 

his  TO  dust  I  honour  and  his  hving  worth  : 

And  individual  freedom  to  ; 

O'er  the  to  city  stole  with  folded  wings, 

her  eyes  on  all  my  motions  with  a  to  observance 

hung.  Locksley  Hail  22 

she  would  answer  us  to-day.  Meantime  be  m  :  Princess,  Hi  167 

she  saw  me  lying  stark,  Dishelm'd  and  to,  „        vi  101 

but  TO  she  glided  forth.  Nor  glanced  behind  her,  „      vii  170 

0  friends,  our  chief  state-oracle  is  to  :  Ode  on  Well.  23 
And  statued  pinnacles,  to  as  they.  The  Daisy  64 
Your  mother  is  to  in  her  grave  Maud  I  iv  58 
Modred  biting  his  thin  Ups  was  to,  Gareth  and  L.  31 
TO  As  creatures  voiceless  thro'  the  fault  of  birth,        Geraint  and  E.  26& 

1  will  kiss  you  for  it :  '  he  was  m  :  Merlin  and  V.  22& 
'  Great  Master,  do  ye  love  me  ?  '  he  was  to.  „  237 
by  and  by  will  make  the  music  to,  „  391 
With  aU  her  damsels,  he  was  stricken  to  ;  Pelleas  and  E.  251 
'  Is  the  Queen  false  ?  '  and  Percivale  was  m.  „  532 
And  most  of  these  were  to.  Last  Tournament  210 
Here  one  black,  to  midsummer  night  I  sat,  „  612 
When  all  the  house  is  to.  Pass,  of  Arthur  346 
with  an  awful  sense  Of  one  m  Shadow  watching  all.  In  Mem.  xxx  8 
M  symbols  of  a  joyful  mom,  „  Con.  58 
but  seem  M  of  this  miracle,  far  as  I  have  read.  Holy  Grail  66 
M,  blind  and  motionless  as  then  I  lay  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  607 
M,  for  henceforth  what  use  were  words  to  me  !  „  609 
I  was  led  to  Into  her  temple  Uke  a  sacrifice  ;  „  684 
We  gazed  on  it  together  In  to  and  glad 

remembrance. 
While  all  the  guests  in  to  amazement  rose- 
I  read  no  more  the  prisoner's  to  wail 
as  we  hated  the  isle  that  was  to, 
TO  below  the  chancel  stones. 
She  glanced  at  me,  at  Muriel,  and  was  to. 
Shall  the  royal  voice  be  to  ? 
But  every  man  was  m  for  reverence. 


Parnassus  18 

Far — far — away  17 

Akbar's  Dream  151 

„      _      200 

Arabian  Nights  48 

Gardener's  D.  233 

Sea  Dreams  210 

The  Islet  27 

V.  of  Maeldune  97 

Pdleas  and  E.  365 

Sea  Dreams  258 

Princess  ii  178 

Enoch  Arden  208 

Sea  Dreams  48 

In  Mem.  Ixiv  27 

„       Ixxvii  2 

Com.  of  Arthur  426 

Marr.  of  Geraint  295 

Last  Tour)iament  390 

613 

Gardener's  D.  193 

Maud  I  vi  45 

„  xxii  6 

Def.  of  Lucknow  16 

93 

34 

Princess  iv  261 

The  Revenge  53 

Arabian  Nights  9 

Romney's  R.  134 

Akbar's  Dream  24 

Will  Water.  102 

If  I  were  loved  10 

M.  d' Arthur  178 

The  Captain  39 

Enoch  Arden  440i 

The  Brook  201 

Aylmer's  Field  402 

To  J.  S.  2» 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  20 

Gardener's  D.  186 


a  186 

iv  305 

Sir  J.  OldcasOe  4 

V.  of  Maeldune  52 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  43 

The  Ring  264 

By  an  Evolution.  14 

Death  of  (Enon$  9ft 


Muther 


489 


Mythology 


Mutber  (mother)    Me  an'  thy  m,  Sammy,  'as  bean 

a-talkin'  o'  thee  ;  Thou's  bean  talkin'  to  m,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  9 

an'  thy  in  coom  to  'and,  „            21 
Could'n  I  luvv  thy  m  by  cause  o'  'er  munny 

laai'd  by  ?  „            35 

thy  m  says  thou  wants  to  many  the  lass,  „            37 

Mutmeer    breaking  their  way  through  the  fell  m's  ?        Def.  of  Lucknow  96 

Matiny    fights,  Mutinies,  treacheries —  Columbus  226 

Mutter    Groan'd,  and  at  times  would  m,  Balin  and  Balan  173 

often  TO  low  '  Vicisti  Galilsee  ' ;  St.  Telemachus  14 

Mattered    And  lonely  listenings  to  my  m  dream.  Princess  vii  110 

paw'd  his  beard,  and  m  '  catalepsy.'  „          i  20 

And  ever  he  to  and  madden'd,  Maud  7  i  10 

M  in  scorn  of  Gareth  whom  he  used  To  harry  Gareth  and  L.  706 

M  the  damsel,  '  Wherefore  did  the  King  Scorn 

me  ?  „            737 

Then  to  her  Squire  m  the  damsel '  Fools  !  Balin  and  Balan  564 

And  to  in  himself  '  Tell  her  the  charm  !  Merlin  arid  V.  809 

And  hearing  '  harlot '  to  twice  or  thrice,  „            843 

'  Him  or  death,'  she  m,  '  death  or  him,'  Lancelot  and  E.  902 

She  TO,  '  I  have  lighted  on  a  fool,  Pelleas  and  E.  113 

while  he  to,  '  Craven  crests  !     0  shame  !  ImsI  Tournament  187 

Then  to  her  own  sad  heart  to  the  Queen,  Guinevere  213 

Then  he  to  half  to  himself.  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  21 

were  the  words  M  in  our  dismay  ;  Heavy  Brigade  47 

Mattering    M  and  murmuring  at  his  ear, '  Quick,  M.  d' Arthur  179 

Francis,  to,  like  a  man  ill-used,  „         Ef.  12 

M  and  mumbling,  idiotlike  Enoch  Arden  639 

Repeated  m  '  cast  away  and  lost ; '  „           715 

thereat  the  crowd  M,  dissolved  :  Princess  iv  523 

And  TO  discontent  Cursed  me  and  my  flower.  The  Flower  7 

Peering  askance,  and  to  broken-wise.  Merlin  and  V.  100 

And  after  to  '  The  great  Lancelot,'  Lancelot  and  E.  421 

M  and  murmuring  at  his  ear,  '  Quick,  Pass,  of  Arthur  347 

heard  him  to,  '  So  hke,  so  hke  ;  Lover's  Tale  iv  325 

TO  to  himself  '  The  call  of  God  '  St.  Telemachus  42 

Mutual    And  TO  love  and  honoui-able  toil ;  Enoch  Arden  83 
with  TO  pardon  ask'd  and  given  For  stroke  and 

song.  Princess  v  46 

Our  TO  mother  dealt  to  both  of  us  :  Lover's  Tale  i  246 

Muzzle    creature  laid  his  to  on  your  lap,  Princess  ii  272 

Muzzled     Every  tiger  madness  m,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  167 

Myriad  (adj.)    Thou  of  the  many  tongues,  the  to  eyes  !      Ode  to  Memory  47 

but  heard  The  to  shriek  of  wheeUng  ocean-fowl,  Enoch  Arden  583 

I  saw  the  flaring  atom-streams  And  torrents  of  her 

TO  universe,  Lucretius  39 

These  prodigies  of  m  nakednesses,  „      156 

Tho'  world  on  world  in  to  myriads  roll  Round  us.  Ode  on  Well.  262 
have  outpom-'d  Their  to  horns  of  plenty  at  our 

feet.  Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  6 

They  might  have  cropt  the  to  flower  of  May,  Balin  and  Balan  577 

Than  of  the  to  cricket  of  the  mead,  Lancelot  and  E.  106 

Fiercely  on  aU  the  defences  our  m  enemy  fell.  Def.  of  Lucknow  35 
starr'd  with  a  to  blossom  the  long  convolvulus 

hung  ;  V.  of  Maeldune  40 

I  rose  Following  a  torrent  till  its  to  ffdls  Tiresias  37 
Far  away  beyond  her  to  coming  changes 

earth  Locksley   H.,  Sixty  231 

Britain's  m  voices  call.  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhih.  35 

more  Than  all  the  to  hes,  that  blacken  round  The 

corpse  of  every  man  Romney's  R.  122 

Hear  thy  to  laureates  hail  thee  monarch  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  6 
Nor  the  to  world,  His  shadow,  nor  the  silent 

Opener  of  the  Gate.'  God  and  the  Univ.  6 
Myriad  (s)    (See  also  Isiaiai-ISynaAs)    M's  of  topaz-lights, 

and  jacinth- work  M.  d' Arthur  57 

That  codeless  to  of  precedent,  Aylmer's  Field  436 

M's  of  rivulets  hurrying  thro'  the  lawn.  Princess  vii  220 

Against  the  m's  of  Assaye  Clash'd  Ode  on  Well.  99 

Tho'  world  on  world  in  myriad  m's  roll  Round  us,  „          262 

To  m's  on  the  genial  earth,  In  Mem.  xcix  14 

And  unto  m's  more,  of  death.  „                  16 

woodland  lilies,  M's  blow  together.  Maud  I  xii  8 

M's  of  topaz-lights,  and  jacinth-work  Pass,  of  Arthur  225 
To  serve  her  m's  and  the  State, —                       To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  24 


power  to  fuse  My  m's  into  union 

Akbar's  Dream  157 

Ode  to  Memory  118 

Boddicea  42 

Merlin  and  V.  731 

Epilogue  53 

Lancelot  and  E.  170 

M.  d' Arthur  233 

Pass,  of  Arthur  401 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  58 

Arabian  Nights  104 

The  Islet  19 

CEnone  213 

Tithonus  34 

Enoch  Arden  526 

Aylmer's  Field  695 

Lancelot  and  E.  1407 

Guinevere  576 

Madeline  24 

A  Character  20 

Adeline  1 

Alexander  11 

Two  Voices  290 

D.  of  F.  Women  262 


Myriad  (s)  (continued) 

under  one ; 
Myriad-minded    Subtle-thoughted,  to-to. 
Myriad-rolling    Thine  the  m-r  ocean, 
Myriad-room'd    Pufi'd  out  his  torch  among  the  m-r 
Myriad-worlded    Yon  m-w  way^ 
MSrriad-wrinkled    came  an  old,  dumb,  m-w  man. 
Myrrh    holy  Elders  with  the  gift  of  m. 

holy  Elders  with  the  gift  of  to. 
Myrrh-bush    leave  the  m-b  on  the  height ; 
Myrrh-Uiicket    deep  m-t's  blowing  rovmd 
Msrrtle    Mixt  with  to  and  clad  with  vine, 
Myrtled    See  Million-myrtled 
mysterious    Whose  thick  m  boughs  in  the  dark  mom 

Once  more  the  old  m  glimmer  steals 

And  that  to  instinct  wholly  died. 

Low  was  her  voice,  but  won  to  way 

She  chanted  snatches  of  to  hymns 

or  I  know  not  what  m  doom. 
Mystery    All  the  m  is  thine  ; 

hour  by  hour  He  canvass'd  human  mysteries, 

M  of  mysteries.  Faintly  smiling  AdeUne, 

Shelter'd  his  unapproached  mysteries  : 

His  heart  forebodes  a  to  : 

dissolved  the  to  Of  folded  sleep. 

in  that  to  Where  God-in-man  is  one  with 
man-in-God, 

O  m  !     What  amulet  drew  her  down  to  that  old 
oak. 

No  purple  in  the  distance,  to, 

speak  Of  thy  prevailing  mysteries  ; 

In  vastness  and  in  to, 

O  ye  mysteries  of  good, 

fair  and  fine  ! — Some  young  lad's  m — 

Then  Kay,  '  Wliat  murmurest  thou  of  to  ? 

TO  !  Tut,  an  the  lad  were  noble, 

Paynim  bard  Had  such  a  mastery  of  his  to 

And  that  his  grave  should  be  a  to 

no  shade  or  fold  of  to  Swathing  the  other. 

wailest  being  horn  And  banish'd  into  to, 

every  Faith  and  Creed,  remains  The  M. 
Mystic    That  touches  me  with  to  gleams, 

Sow'd  all  their  to  gulfs  with  fleeting  stars  ; 

Clothed  in  white  samite,  to,  wonderful, 
(Repeat) 

And  TO  sentence  spoke  ; 

Changed  with  thy  to  change,  and  felt  my  blood 

Once  more  uprose  the  to  mountain-range  : 

Shone  hke  a  to  star  between  the  less 

Bum  like  the  to  fire  on  a  mast-head,  "^ 

As  in  some  to  middle  state  I  lay  ; 

Deep-seated  in  our  m  frame, 

A  little  flash,  a  to  hint ; 

The  TO  glory  swims  away  ; 

No — mixt  with  all  this  to  frame. 

To  seek  thee  on  the  to  deeps. 

Some  pecuhar  to  grace  Made  her  only  the  child 

Clothed  in  white  samite,  m,  wonderful. 

With  many  a  m  symbol,  gird  the  hall : 

With  Merlin's  to  babble  about  his  end  Amazed 


Enoch  Arden  186 

Aylmer's  Field  506 

Princess  vi  196 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  12 

„  xcvii  7 

„  cxxviii  8 

Gareth  and  L.  466 

470 

472 

Last  Tournament  327 

Guinevere  297 

Lover's  Tale  i  182 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  42 

To  Mary  Boyle  52 

Two  Voices  380 

Gardener's  D.  262 

M.  d' Arthur  31, 144,  159 

Talking  Oak  294 

Tithonus  55 

Vision  of  Sin  2G& 

Aylmer's  Field  72 

Princess  iv  274 

vi  18 

In  Mem.  xxxvi  2 

„  xliv  8 

„  Ixvii  9 

„      Ixxviii  18 

„  cxxv  14 

Maud  I  xiii  39 

Com.  of  Arthur  285 

Holy  Grail  233 

Last  Tournament  670 
Guinevere  281 


And  many  a  m  lay  of  hfe  and  death  Had  chanted 
Clothed  in  white  samite,  m,  wonderful, 

(repeat) Pass,  of  Arthur  199,  312,  327 


A  TO  light  flash'd  ev'n  from  her  white  robe 

Henceforth  that  w  bond  betwixt  the  twins — 

To  me,  my  son,  more  to  than  myself. 

What  vague  world-whisper,  w  pain  or  joy, 

TO  melodist  Who  aU  but  lost  himself  in  AUa, 
Mystical    some  confused  dream  To  states  of  to 
similitude ; 

There  I  heard  them  in  the  darkness,  at  the  to  ceremony,      Boddicea  36 
Mythic     Or  to  Uther's  deeply-wounded  son  Palace  of  Art  105 

M3^oIogy    '  As  old  mythologies  relate.  Two  Voices  349 

weigh'd  him  down  as  .^tna  does  The  Giant  of  M  :       Lcmr's  Tale  iv  18 


Lover's  Tale  i  370 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  25Q 

Ancient  Sage  45 

Far — far — away  7 

Akbar's  Dream  92 

Sonnet  to 4 


Naail 


490 


Name 


N 


Naail  (nail)     toaner  'ed  shot  'um  as  dead  as  a  n.  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  35 

Naakt  (naked)     An'  ya  stood  cop  n  i'  the  beck,  Church-warden,  etc.  29 

Naame  (name)     '  Stan'  'im  theer  i'  the  n  o'  the  Lord  North.  Cobbler  73 
coom'd  Uke  a  Hangel  o'  inarcy  as  soon  as  'e  'eard  'is  w,       Owd  Rod  93 

Uaamed  (named)     we  n  her  '  Dot  an'  gaw  one ! '  Village  Wife  100 

Nabour  (neighbour)     An'  her  n's  an  frinds  'ud  consowl 

and  condowl  md  her,  Tomorrow  47 

Nadir    hard  earth  cleave  to  the  N  hell  Merlin  and  V.  349 

Nager  (nigger)     Thim  ould  blind  n's  in  Agypt,  Tomorrow  69 

Na^in'    Moother  was  n  an'  groanin'  an'  moanin'  an'  n 

agean  ;  Owd  Boa  108 

Nagging    See  A-naggin',  Naggin' 

Naiad    but  the  N  Throbbing  in  mild  unrest  Leonine  Eleg.  11 

faintly  smilest  still.  As  a  iV  in  a  well,  Adeline  16 

and  N's  oar'd  A  glimmering  shoulder  To  E.  L.  16 

Nail  (s)    {See  also  Finger-nail,  Naail)    The  rusted  n's  fell 

from  the  knots  Mariana  3 

seem'd  All-perfect,  finish'd  to  the  finger  n.  Edwin  Morris  22 

children  cast  their  pins  and  n's,  Merlin  and  V.  430 

Nail  (verb)    n  me  hke  a  weasel  on  a  grange  Princess  ii  205 

They  never  n  a  dumb  head  up  in  ehn).  Lover's  Tale  iv  37 

Nail'd  (adj.)     Then  with  their  n  prows  Parted  the 

Norsemen,  Batt.  of  Brunnnburh  9B 

Nail'd  (verb)    He  that  has  n  all  flesh  to  the  Cross,  Fastness  28 

Naked    (See  also  Half-naked,  Naakt,  Nigh-naked)    N  I  go, 

and  void  of  cheer :  Two  Voices  239 

As  n  essence,  must  I  be  Incompetent  of  memory :  „          374 

All  n  in  a  sultx-y  sky,  Fatima  37 

N  they  came  to  that  smooth-swarded  bower,  CEnone  95 

'  Ride  you  n  thro'  the  town,  Godiva  29 

Far  too  n  to  be  shamed !  Vision  of  Sin  190 

I  rate  your  chance  Almost  at  n  nothing.'  Princess  i  161 

N,  a  double  light  in  air  and  wave,  „    vii  167 

mighty  hands  Lay  n  on  the  wolfskin,  Lancelot  and  E.  813 

Far  ran  the  n  moon  across  The  houseless  ocean's  The  Voyage  29 

With  n  limbs  and  flowers  and  fruit,  „            55 

n  marriages  Flash  from  the  bridge,  Aylmer's  Field  765 

Have  left  the  last  free  race  with  n  coasts  !  Third  of  Feb.  40 
down  the  wave  and  in  the  flame  was  borne  A  n 

babe,  Com.  of  Arthur  384 

The  shining  dragon  and  the  n  child  „              399 

And  truth  or  clothed  or  n  let  it  be.  „              408 

A  n  babe,  of  whom  the  Prophet  spake,  Gareth  and  L.  501 

The  gay  pavilion  and  the  n  feet,  „            937 

rose-red  from  the  west,  and  all  N  it  seem'd,  „          1088 
'  Wherefore  waits  the  madman  there  N  in  open 

dayshine  ? '  „          1092 

'  Not  n,  only  wrapt  in  haiden'd  skins  „          1093 

weep  True  tears  upon  his  broad  and  n  breast,  Marr.  of  Geraint  111 

Ancl  bore  him  to  the  n  hall  of  Doorm,  Geraint  and  E.  570 

There  in  the  n  hall,  propping  his  head,  .       „               581 

And  at«  with  tumult  in  the  n  hall,  „                605 

I  smote  upon  the  n  skull  A  thrall  of  thine  Balin  and  Balan  55 

say  That  out  of  n  knightlike  purity  Merlin  and  F.  11 

But  that  where  blind  and  n  Ignorance  „            664 

Stript  off  the  case,  and  read  the  n  shield,  Lancelot  and  E.  16 
battle-writhen  arms  and  mighty  hands  Lay  n  on 

the  wolfskin,  „            813 

Stript  off  the  case,  and  gave  the  n  shield ;  „            979 

Himself  N  of  glory  for  His  mortal  change,  Eoly  Grail  448 

and  on  the  n  mountain  top  Blood-red,  „          474 

then  I  came  All  in  my  folly  to  the  n  shore,  „          793 

laid  The  n  sword  athwart  their  n  throats,  Pelleas  and  E.  452 

A  n  aught— yet  swme  I  hold  thee  still.  Last  Tournament  309 

then  They  found  a  n  child  upon  the  sands  Guinevere  293 

Above  the  n  poisons  of  his  heart  In  his  old  age.'  Lover's  Tale  i  356 

pour'd  Into  the  shadowing  pencil's  n  forms  „        ii  180 
1  had  better  ha'  put  my  n  hand  in  a  hornets'  nest.        First  Quarrel  50 

Pour'd  in  on  all  those  happy  n  isles—  Columbus  173 


Naked  (conlinued)     And  we  left  but  a  n  rock. 

For  a  wild  witch  n  as  heaven  stood 

One  n  peak — the  sister  of  the  sun 

When  he  clothed  a  n  mind  with  the  wisdom 

lest  the  n  glebe  Should  yawn  once  more 

The  scorpion  crawling  over  n  skulls ; — 

Of  leafless  elm,  or  n  lime. 

Trunk  and  bough,  N  strength. 

gliding  thro'  the  branches  over-bower'd  The  n 
Tlu'ee, 

same  who  first  had  found  Paris,  a  n  babe, 

I  stood  there,  n,  amazed 

forward — n — let  them  stare. 
Nakedness    we  shall  see  The  n  and  vacancy 

These  prodigies  of  myriad  n'es, 

Grimy  n  dragging  his  trucks  And  laying 

Is  mere  white  tl^lth  in  simple  n, 

roU'd  his  n  everyway  That  all  the  crowd 
Name  (s)     {See  also  Naame)     Wisdom,  a  n  to  shake  AU 
evil  dreams  of  power — a  sacred  n. 

From  thy  rose-red  hps  my  n  Floweth  ; 

Yet  tell  my  n  again  to  me, 

round  the  prow  they  read  her  n, 

how  thy  n  may  sound  Will  vex  thee  lying 
underground  ? 

'  His  sons  grow  up  that  bear  his  n. 

He  names  the  n  Eternity. 

Last  night,  when  some  one  spoke  his  n, 

all  those  n's,  that  in  their  motion  were 

Lost  to  her  place  and  n  ; 

I  know  you  proud  to  bear  your  n, 
' '  I  had  great  beauty :  ask  thou  not  my  n : 

when  I  heard  my  n  Sigh'd  forth  with  life 

my  crown  about  my  brows,  A  n  for  ever ! — 

The  n  of  Britain  trebly  great — 

'  Thou  hast  betray'd  thy  nature  and  thy  n, 

call'd  him  by  his  n,  complaining  loud, 

when  I  heard  her  n  My  heart  was  like  a  prophet 

The  cuckoo  told  his  n  to  all  the  hills ; 

if  I  carved  my  n  Upon  the  cliffs  that  guard 

set  the  words,  and  added  n's  I  knew. 

he  that  knew  the  n's.  Long  learned  n's 

I  spoke  her  n  alone. 

n's  Are  register'd  and  calendar'd  for  saints. 

thou,  whereon  I  carved  her  n,  (repeat) 

tell  me,  did  she  read  the  n 

found,  and  kiss'd  the  n  she  found, 

I  am  become  a  n ; 

And  built  herself  an  everlasting  n. 

n  of  wife.  And  in  the  rights  that  n  may  give. 

Hoped  to  make  the  n  Of  his  vessel  great  in  story 

in  whom  he  had  reliance  For  his  noble  n. 

What  care  I  for  anv  n  ? 


V.  of  Maeldune  54 

100 

Tiresias  30 

The  Wreck  65 

Demeter  and  P.  42 

78 

To  Ulysses  16 

The  Oak  15 

Death  of  CEnone  7 

54 

Despair  77 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  142 

Deserted  House  11 

Lucretius  156 

Maud  I  xl 

Balin  and  Balan  518 

Dead  Prophet  15 


The  Poet  46 

Elednore  133 

142 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  44 


'  N  and  fame !  to  fly  sublime  Thro'  the  courts. 
You  might  have  won  the  Poet's  n, 
but  that  n  has  twice  been  changed — 
James  Willows,  of  one  n  and  heart  with  her. 
'  Willows.'     'No ! '     '  That  is  my  n.' 


Two  Voices  110 

256 

291 

Fatima  15 

Palace  of  Art  165 

264 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  10 

D.  of  F.  Women  93 

153 

163 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  22 

M.  d' Arthur  73 

210 

Gardener's  D.  62 

93 

Audley  Court  48 

61 

Edwin  Morris  16 

68 

St.  S.  Stylites  131 

Talking  Oak  33,  97 

153 

159 

Ulysses  11 

Godiva  79 

Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  53 

The  Captain  18 

.  .    "  ^8 

Vision  of  Sin  85 


103 

You  might  have  won  1 

Enoch  Arden  859 

The  Brook  76 

212 


ghost  of  one  who  bore  your  n  About  these  meadows,  „        219 

'he  that  marries  her  marries  her  n  '  Aylmer's  Field  25 

almost  all  the  village  had  one  n;  „              35 

sow'd  her  »!.  and  kept  it  green  In  living  letters,  „              88 

The  one  transmitter  of  their  ancient  n,  „            296 

N,too,n\     Their  ancient  w !  „            377 

Fall  back  upon  a  n !  rest,  rot  in  that !  „            385 

make  a  n,  N,  fortune  too :  „            394 

And  crying  upon  the  n  of  Leohn,  „            576 

that  moment,  when  she  named  his  n,  „            581 

So  never  took  that  useful  n  in  vain.  Sea  Dreams  189 

did  I  take  That  popular  n  of  thine  to  shadow  forth  Lucretius  96 

bears  one  n  with  her  Whose  death-blow  struck  „      235 

and  lovelier  than  their  n's,  Princess,  Pro.  12 

Walter  hail'd  a  score  of  n's  upon  her,  „              156 

His  n  was  Gama ;  crack'd  and  small  his  voice,  „           i  114 

albeit  their  glorious  n's  Were  fewer,  „          «  155 


Name 


491 


Name 


Name  (s)  (continued)    great  n  flow  on  with  broadening 

time  For  ever.'  Princess  Hi  164 

chattering  stony  n's  Of  shale  and  hornblende,  „              361 

Proctor's  leapt  upon  us,  crying  '  N's :'  „          iv  259 

Swear  by  St.  something — I  forget  her  n —  „           v  293 

Whose  11  is  yoked  with  children's,  „              418 

happy  warrior's,  and  immortal  n's,  „            vi  93 

She  needs  must  wed  him  for  her  own  good  n ;  „          vii  74 

In  that  dread  sound  to  the  great  ?i.  Ode  on  Well.  71 

0  civic  muse,  to  such  a  n.  To  such  a  n  for  ages  long, 

To  such  a  n,  „            75 

Eternal  honour  to  his  n.  (repeat)  „  150, 231 
at  thy  n  the  Tartar  tents  are  stirr'd;                       W  to  Marie  Alex.  12 

Thy  n  was  blest  within  the  narrow  door ;  „                38 

Here  also,  Marie,  shall  thy  n  be  blest,  „  39 
You  cannot  love  me  at  all,  if  you  love  not  my 

good  w.'  Grandmother  48 

1  love  you  so  well  that  your  good  n  is  mine.  „  50 
My  n  in  song  has  done  him  much  wrong.  Spiteful  Letter  3 
This  faded  leaf,  our  n's  are  as  brief ;  „  13 
Milton,  a  n  to  resound  for  ages ;  Milton  4 
quiet  bones  were  blest  Among  familiar  n's  to  rest  In  Mem.  xviii  7 
We  yield  all  blessing  to  the  n  „  xxxvi  3 
Could  hardly  tell  what  n  were  thine.  „  lix  16 
.Since  we  deserved  the  n  of  friends,  „  Ixv  9 
Along  the  letters  of  thy  n,  „  Ixvii  7 
force  that  would  have  forged  an.  „  Ixxiii  16 
Another  n  was  on  the  door :  „  Ixxxvii  17 
The  grand  old  n  of  gentleman,  „  cxi  22 
Sweet  Hesper-Phosphor,  double  n  „  cxxi  17 
sign  your  n's,  which  shall  be  read,  „  Con.  57 
The  n's  are  signed,  and  overhead  Begins  the  clash  „  60 
And  my  own  sad  n  in  comers  cried,  Maud  I  vi  72 
a  learned  man  Could  give  it  a  clumsy  n.  „  U  ii  10 
the  sudden  making  of  splendid  n's,  „  Illviil 
a  household  n,  Hereafter,  thro'  all  times,  Bed.  of  Idylls  42 
Nor  shalt  thou  tell  thy  n  to  anyone.  Gareth  and  L.  156 
Not  tell  my  n  to  any — no,  not  the  King.'  „  171 
A  n  of  evil  savour  in  the  land,  „  385 
without  a  sign  Saving  the  n  beneath ;  „  415 
Mark  hath  tarnish'd  the  great  n  of  king,  „  426 
A  twelvemonth  and  a  day,  nor  seek  my  n.  „  446 
let  my  n  Be  hidd'n,  and  give  me  the  first  quest,  „  544 
Let  be  my  n  until  I  make  my  n  !  „  576 
What  is  thy  n  ?  thy  need  ?  '     '  My  n  ?  '  she  said — 

'  Lynette  my  n ;  „            605 
Forgetful  of  his  glory  and  his  n,                                   Marr.  of  Geraint  53 

I  cannot  love  my  lord  and  not  his  n.  „              92 

desired  his  n,  and  sent  Her  maiden  to  demand  it  of  the  dwarf;  „  192 

'  Surely  I  will  learn  the  n,'  „            203 

His  n  'i  but  no,  good  faith,  I  will  not  have  it :  „            405 

Sent  her  own  maiden  to  demand  the  n,  „            411 

I  will  break  his  pride  and  learn  his  n,  „            424 

Geraint,  a  n  far-sounded  among  men  „            427 

I  will  not  let  his  n  Slip  from  my  lips  „            445 

earn'd  himself  the  n  of  sparrow-hawk.  „            492 

her  n  will  yet  remain  Untamish'd  as  before ;  „            500 

(Who  hearing  her  o^vn  n  had  stol'n  away;  „            507 

'  Thy  71 ! '     To  whom  the  fallen  man  jNIade  Answer,  „            575 

A  stately  queen  whose  n  was  Guinevere,  „  667 
the  Queen's  fair  n  was  breathed  upon,  Geraint  and  E.  951 
Arthur  seeing  ask'd  '  Tell  me  your  n's ;                      Balin  and  Balan  50 

Saying  '  An  unmelodious  n  to  thee,  „                52 

realm  Hath  prosper'd  in  the  n  of  Christ,  „                99 

a  n  that  branches  o'er  the  rest,  „             182 

might,  N,  manhood,  and  a  grace,  „              377 

by  the  great  Queen's  n,  arise  and  hence.'  „             482 

O  me,  that  such  a  w  as  Guinevere's,  „             489 

And  thus  foam'd  over  at  a  rival  n :  „             567 

fought  in  her  n,  Sware  by  her —  Merlin  and  V.  13 

Their  lavish  comment  when  her  n  was  named.  „            151 

lost  to  Ufe  and  use  and  n  and  fame,  (repeat)  „  214,  970 

My  use  and  n  and  fame.  „            304 

Upon  my  life  and  use  and  n  and  fame,  „           374 

felt  them  slowly  ebbing,  n  and  fame.'  „           437 


Name  (s)  (continued)     My  n,  once  mine,  now  thine. 
But  when  my  n  was  lifted  up, 
M'liose  whole  prey  Is  man's  good  n : 
The  pretty,  popular  n  such  manhood  earns, 
Kage  like  a  tire  among  the  noblest  n's. 
Some  stain  or  blemish  in  a  w  of  note, 
she  that  knew  not  ev'n  his  n  ? 
and  by  that  n  Had  named  them, 
fought  together ;  but  their  n's  were  lost ; 
Has  link'd  our  n's  together  in  his  lay, 
your  great  n,  This  conquei-s  : 
and  by  what  ?i  Livest  between  the  lips  ? 
Elaine,  and  heard  her  n  so  tost  about, 
'  Fair  lord,  whose  71  I  know  not — 
'  Hear,  but  hold  my  n  Hidden, 
fiery  family  passion  for  the  n  Of  Lancelot, 
his  great  n  Conquer'd ;  and  therefore  would  he  hide 

his  n 
Whence  you  might  learn  his  n  ? 
How  know  ye  my  lord's  n  is  Lancelot  ?  ' 
To  win  his  honour  and  to  make  his  n, 
sons  Born  to  the  glory  of  thy  n  and  fame, 
Why  did  the  King  dwell  on  my  n  to  me  ? 
Mine  own  n  shames  me, 
profits  me  my  n  Of  greatest  knight  ? 


named  us  each  by  n,  Calhng  '  God  speed  ! ' 

the  knights.  So  many  and  famous  n's ; 

after  trumpet  blown,  her  n  And  title. 

Full  on  her  knights  in  many  an  evil  n 

'  And  oft  in  dying  cried  upon  your  n.' 

Lancelot,  saying,  '  What  n  hast  thou  That  ridest 

'  No  n,  no  w,'  he  shouted,  '  a  scourge  am  I 

but  thy  n?  '     'I  have  many  n's,'  he  cried : 

And  when  I  call'd  upon  thy  n 

set  his  n  High  on  all  hills, 

a  n  ?     Was  it  the  n  of  one  in  Brittany, 

the  sweet  n  Allured  him  first, 

n  Went  wandering  somewhere  darkling  in  his  mind. 

Of  one — his  n  is  out  of  me — the  prize. 

Did  I  love  her?  the  n  at  least  I  loved. 

Tlie  7t  was  ruler  of  the  dark — Isolt  ? 

And  once  or  twice  I  spake  thy  n  aloud. 

hers  Would  be  for  evermore  a  w  of  scorn. 

and  yield  me  sanctuary,  nor  ask  Her  n 

Nor  with  them  mix'd,  nor  told  her  n. 

And  drawing  foul  ensample  from  fair  n's. 

And  mine  will  ever  be  a  m  of  scorn. 

in  their  stead  thy  n  and  glory  cling 

'  Thou  hast  betrayed  thy  nature  and  thy  n, 

call'd  him  by  his  ti,  complaining  loud, 

Mather  than  that  gray  king,  whose  n,  a  ghost, 

Keep  thou  tliy  n  of  '  Lover's  Bay.' 

more  Than  the  gray  cuckoo  loves  his  n, 

and  my  n  was  borne  Upon  her  breath. 

Henceforth  my  n  has  been  A  hallow'd  memory  Uke 

the  7i's  of  old, 
this  n  to  which  her  gracious  lips  Did  lend  such  gentle 

utterance,  this  one  n.  In  sucli  obscure  hereafter. 
Nevertheless,  we  did  not  change  the  n. 
Thy  n  is  ever  worshipp'd  among  hours ! 
And  by  that  n  I  moved  upon  her  breath;   Dear  n, 

which  had  too  much  of  nearness  in  it 
Him  who  should  own  that  n  ? 
If  so  be  that  the  echo  of  that  n 
upon  the  sands  Insensibly  I  drew  her  n. 
And  leave  the  n  of  Lover's  Leap  : 
Forgive  him,  if  his  n  be  Julian  too.' 


Merlin  and  V.  446 
502 
729 
787 
802 
832 
Lancelot  and  E.  29 
32 
40 
112 
150 
181 
233 
360 
416 
477 

579 

654 

797 

1362 

1372 

1402 

1403 

1413 

Holy  Grail  351 

364 

Pelleas  and  E.  115 

290 

385 

563 

565 

567 

Last  Tournament  73 

336 

395 

398 


456 

546 

603 

606 

615 

Guinevere  61 

„       142 

,,       148 

„       490 

„       627 

Pass,  of  Arthur  53 

241 

378 

To  the  Queen,  ii  39 

Lover's  Tale  i  15 

257 

443 


444 

456 
464 
493 

560 
643 
644 
ii  7 
it)  42 
175 


Golden-haie'd  Ally  whose  n  is  one  with  mine.  To  A.  2'ennyson,  1 

the  n  at  the  head  of  my  vei-se  is  thine.  „           6 

May'st  thou  never  be  wrong'd  by  the  n  that  is  mine  !  „           7 

we  had  always  borne  a  good  n —  liiz-path  35 

Yet  must  you  change  your  n  :  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  69 

An  old  and  worthy  nl  „                74 

care  not  tor  a  n — no  fault  of  mine.  „                77 

city  deck'd  herself  To  meet  me,  roar'd  my  n ;  Columbus  10 


Name 


492 


Narrow 


Tiresias  121 

„       123 

„       137 

The  Wreck  5 

„     144 

Despair  52 

Ancient  Sage  49 

56 

149 

Locksley  H.  Sixty  83 

128 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  20 

Epilogue  1 

„      60 

Dead  Prophet  36 

59 


Name  (s)  (continued)    I  changed  the  n ;    San  Salvador  I 

caU'd  it ;  Columbus  75 

Hallowed  be  Thy  n— Halleluiah !  (repeat)  De  Prof.,  Human  C.  1, 5,  9 
n's  who  dare  For  that  sweet  mother  land  ^-      ■     -.^•. 

Their  n's,  Graven  on  memorial  columns, 
ring  thy  n  To  every  hoof  that  clangs  it, 
I  have  sullied  a  noble  n, 
— to  her  maiden  n  ! 

felt  as  I  spoke  I  was  taking  the  n  in  vain- 
seest  the  Nameless  of  the  hundred  n's. 
And  never  named  the  N' — 
Not  even  his  own  n. 
an  age  of  noblest  English  n's, 
and  dying  while  they  shout  her  n. 
leave  to  head  These  rhymings  with  your  n, 
will  you  set  your  n  A  star  among  the  stars, 
f  aUing  drop  will  make  his  n  As  mortal 
till  his  Word  Had  won  him  a  noble  n. 
a  n  may  last  for  a  thousand  years, 

great  n  of  England,  round  and  round,  (repeat)   Hands  all  Round  12,  36 
To  this  great  n  of  England  drink,  my  friends,  „  23 

But  since  your  n  will  grow  with  Time,  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  13 

have  I  made  the  n  A  golden  portal  to  my 

rhyme: 
and  recks  not  to  ruin  a  realm  in  her  n. 
He  loved  my  n  not  me ; 
wrote  N,  Surname,  all'as  clear  as  noon. 
Earth  and  Hell  will  brand  your  n. 
In  the  n  Of  the  everlasting  God, 
A  n  that  earth  will  not  forget 
corpse  of  every  man  that  gains  a  n ; 
aU  Stood  round  it,  hush'd,  or  calling  on  his  n. 
In  the  great  n  of  Him  who  died  for  men, 
I  loathe  the  very  n  of  infidel, 
her  n  ?  what  was  it  ?     I  asked  her. 
for  him  who  had  given  her  the  n. 
Priests  in  the  n  of  the  Lord 
scandal  is  mouthing  a  bloodless  n 
Form  in  Freedom's  n  and  the  Queen's ! 
his  truer  n  Is  '  Onward,' 


Name  (verb)    He  n's  the  name  Eternity. 
That  n  the  under-lying  dead. 
The  wish  too  strong  for  words  to  n  ; 
The  Sultan,  as  we  n  him, — 
Let  him  n  it  who  can. 

He  n's  himself  the  Night  and  oftener  Death, 
'  Perad venture  he,  you  n.  May  know  my  shield, 
since  you  n  yourself  the  simimer  fly, 
break  faith  with  one  I  may  not  n  ? 
she  spake  on,  for  I  did  n  no  wish,  (repeat) 
those  about  us  whom  we  neither  see  nor  n. 


15 

Vastness  10 

The  Bing  191 

237 

Forlorn  51 

Happy  107 

To  Ulysses  27 

Eomney's  R.  123 

Death  of  Qinone  66 

St.  Telemachus  63 

Akhar's  Dream  70 

Charity  35 

„      39 

The  Dawn  4 

„       12 

Riflemen  form  !  23 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  13 


dreamer,  deaf  and  blind,  N 


Named  {See  also  Naamed) 
man, 
ship  I  sail  in  passes  here  (He  n  the  day) 
that  moment,  when  she  n  his  name, 
would  bawl  for  civil  rights.  No  woman  n : 
Truth-teller  was  our  England's  Alfred  n ; 
under  every  shield  a  knight  was  n : 
follows,  being  n.  His  owner,  but  remembers  all, 
That  n  himself  the  Star  of  Evening, 
a  grateful  people  n  Enid  the  Good ; 
lavish  comment  when  her  name  was  n. 
therefore  be  as  great  as  you  are  n, 
n  them,  since  a  diamond  was  the  prize. 
n  us  each  by  name.  Calling  '  God  speed ! ' 
Thro'  such  a  round  in  heaven,  we  n  the  stars, 
loved  it  tenderly,  And  n  it  Nestling ; 
this  I  n  from  her  own  self,  Evelyn  ; 
And  never  n  the  Name ' — 
Drew  to  the  valley  N  of  the  shadow, 

Nameless  (adj.)    In  whose  least  act  abides  the  n  charm 
But  spoke  not,  rapt  in  n  reverie, 
Such  clouds  of  n  trouble  cross  All  night 
Your  father  has  wealth  well-gotten,  and  I  am  m  and 
poor. 


Two  Voices  291 

In  Mem.  ii  2 

xciii  14 

Maud  I  XX  A 

„  mill 

Gareth  and  L.  638 

1298 

Merlin  and  V.  369 

Lancelot  and  E.  685 

Lover's  Tale  i  578,  583 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  272 


Two  Voices  176 

Enoch  Arden  215 

Aylmer's  Field  581 

Princess  v  388 

Ode  on  Well.  188 

Gareth  and  L.  409 

703 

1090 

Geraint  and  E.  963 

Merlin  and  V.  151 

336 

Lancelot  and  E.  33 

Holy  Grail  351 

686 

Last  Tournament  25 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  270 

Ancient  Sage  56 

Merlin  and  ike  G.  87 

Princess  v  70 

„  Con.  108 

In  Mem.  iv  13 

Maud  I  iv  18 


Nameless  (adj.)  {continued)    Sick  of  a  w  fear,  Maud  II  ii  44 

Whose  bark  had  plunder'd  twenty  n  isles ;  Merlin  and  V.  559 

Blazed  the  last  diamond  of  the  n  king.  Lancelot  and  E.  444 

The  n  Power,  or  Powers,  that  rule  Ancient  Sage  29 

Nameless  (s)    If  thou  would'st  hear  the  N,  „           31 

thou  May'st  haply  leam  the  N  hath  a  voice,  „            34 

Or  even  than  the  N  is  to  me.  „            46 


Thou  seest  the  N  of  the  hundred  names.    And  if  the 

N  should  withdraw  from  all 
The  N  never  came  Among  us. 
Thou  canst  not  prove  the  N,  0  my  son, 
But  with  the  N  is  nor  Day  nor  Hour ; 
past  into  the  iV,  as  a  cloud  Melts  into  Heaven. 
A  cloud  between  the  N  and  thyseK, 


49 

54 

57 

102 

233 

278 


Namesake    Her  daintier  n  down  in  Brittany — 

And  she,  my  n  of  the  hands. 
Naming    n  each.  And  n  those,  his  friends, 

Who,  never  n  God  except  for  gain, 
Nap     'Twas  but  an  after-dinner's  n. 
Nape     the  very  n  of  her  white  neck  Was  rosed 

and  the  skull  Brake  from  the  n. 
Naphtha-pits     Beyond  the  Memmian  n-p. 
Napkin    n  wrought  with  horse  and  hound, 

like  the  common  breed  That  with  the  n  dally ; 
Naples     quite  worn  out,  Travelling  to  N. 

For  N  which  we  only  left  in  May  ? 
Narcotics  Like  dull  n's,  numbing  pain. 
Narded     N  and  swathed  and  balm'd  it 


Last  Tournament  265 

594 

The  Brook  130 

Sea  Dreams  188 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  24 

Princess  vi  343 

Lancelot  and  E.  50 

Alexander  4 

Audley  Court  21 

Will  Water.  118 

The  Brook  36 

The  Ring  58 

In  Mem.  v  8 

Lover's  Tale  i  682 


Narra  (narrow)     I  fun  that  it  warn't  not  the  gaainist 

waay  to  the  n  Gaate.  Church-warden,  etc.  12 

Narrow  (adj.)    {See  also  Earth-narrow,  Narra)    Oh !  n,n  was 

the  space,  Oriana  46 

Drawing  into  his  n  earthen  urn.  Ode  to  Memory  61 

And  fires  your  n  casement  glass,  Miller's  D.  243 

Were  shiver'd  in  my  n  frame.  Fatima  18 

With  n  moon-lit  slips  of  silver  cloud,  QSnone  218 

Better  the  n  brain,  the  stony  heart,  Love  and  Duty  15 

Hunun'd  like  a  hive  all  round  the  n  quay,  Audley  Court  5 

I,  to  herd  with  n  foreheads,  Locksley  Hall  175 

red  roofs  about  a  n  wharf  In  cluster  ;  Enoch  Arden  3 

A  n  cave  ran  in  beneath  the  cliff :  „          23 

halfway  up  The  n  street  that  clamber'd  „           60 

Ten  miles  to  northward  of  the  n  port  „         102 

and  his  careful  hand, — The  space  was  n, —  „         177 

And  left  but  n  breadth  to  left  and  right  „         674 

Down  to  the  pool  and  n  wharf  he  went,  „         690 

All  down  the  long  and  n  street  he  went  „         795 

Doubtless  our  n  world  muet  canvass  it :  Aylmer's  Field  774 

n  meagre  face  Seam'd  with  the  shallow  cares  „             813 

To  find  a  deeper  in  the  n  gloom  „             840 

God  bless  the  n  sea  which  keeps  her  off,  Princess,  Con.  51 

God  bless  the  n  seas !  „              70 

Thy  name  was  blest  within  the  n  door ;  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  38 

Till,  in  a  n  street  and  dim,  The  Daisy  22 

Should  murmur  from  the  n  house.  In  Mem.  xxxv  2 

She  sighs  amid  her  n  days,  „            Ix  10 

And  Spring  that  swells  the  n  brooks,  „       Ixxxv  70 

all  n  jealousies  Are  silent ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  16 

the  stream  Full,  n ;  Gareth  and  L.  908 

Anon  they  past  a  n  comb  wherein  „           1193 

To  me  this  n  grizzled  fork  of  thine  Merlin  and  V.  59 

Then,  n  court  and  lubber  King,  farewell !  „         119 

In  mine  own  realm  beyond  the  n  seas,  Lancelot  and  E.  1323 

Uke  a  vermin  in  its  hole,  Modred,  a  n  face :  Last  Tournament  166 

Or  elsewhere,  Modred's  n  foxy  face,  Guinevere  63 

And  wastes  the  n  realm  whereon  we  move.  Pass,  of  Arthur  140 

and  the  n  fringe  Of  curving  beach—  Lover's  Tale  i  38 

floods  with  redundant  life  Her  n  portals.  „            85 

o'erstept  The  slippery  footing  of  his  n  wit,  „          102 
Small  pity  for  those  that  have  ranged  from  the  n 

warmth  of  your  fold,  Despair  38 
Fought  for  their  lives  in  the  n  gap  they  had 

made —  Heavy  Brigade  23 

The  clash  of  tides  that  meet  in  n  seas. —  Akhar's  Dream  68 

Narrow  (verb)     tho'  the  gathering  enemy  n  thee,  Boddicea  39 


Narrow'd 


493 


Harrow'd    N  her  goings  out  and  comings  in ;  An7,»^',  v.:ja  r:m 

The  river  as  it  n  to  the  hills  Ayliner  s  Field  501 

^arroWCT^On  arrange  of  lower  feelings  and  a  n  heart  """'''  '"  ^^^ 

The  hniit  oT  his  n  fate  -£ocfo%  ^a^^  44 

Set  light  by  n  perf ectness.  ■''*  ^*"'  •  ^^*''.  ^1 
Men  that  in  a  re  day—  n  r  ^"^  ^  ,  '^^^  ^ 
the  re  The  cage,  the  more  their  fury.                 ^'''    AUa^lf^'^'l^ 

arrowest    Or  been  in  re  working  shut  7**",^*  ^'■^''''*  ^^ 

rarrowing    .Y  in  to  where  they  safSembled  'v^CofsTn  m 

round  me  drove  In  re  circles  till  I  yeU'd  aeain  T  ^ .  •     1^ 

No  lewdnes-s,  n  envy,  monkey-spite         ^  XMoreitw^  57 

Rmg  out  the  n  lust  of  gold ;  r    at"        -kl 

'  O  closed  about  by  «  nunnery-walls,  In  Mem.  cm  26 

O  shut  me  round  with  re  nmineiy-walls,  Gmnevere  342 

1      .?re\°i.^^T"4i't'^'^^  *'^  """^'^  ^'  ^  ^-p  ^  ^-^^^y  ^.  S-^.  S4 

Harrowness    Nor  ever?  or  spite,  Prog.ofSj>ring9l 

Hasty    iV  an'  snaggy  an'  shaakv  ,/^  ,-^*"*-  ^^*  1^ 

iV,  casselty  Sher !         ^'  ^,  ^f'^-  9**^«^  78 

i               they  leaved  their  n  sins  i'  my  pond  Church-warden,  etc  2 

[       Watal    And  gave  you  on  your  re  day      '  ",y              .  • 

1              Yet  present  in  his  n  Irove^  ^f  "^r^^  f2 

I      Nation    And  the  re'5  do  but  milrmur  r    A      rr'^MK^^ 

!               From  the  re'5' airy  navies  S-^p^ling  iocis^ey  ZTaZZ  106 

A  re  yet,  the  rulers  and  the  ruled—  Pw    "     n     ^o 

To  the  noise  of  the  mourning  of  a  mighty  re  Z'J''  ^^\^\ 

are  weeping,  and  breaking  on  my  resi  ?  ^    '  ^^'  "^  ^'\i 

wno  lets  once  more  in  peace  the  re's  meet  n^.  i  .     "r^  ,  •,    ": 

'  The  song  that  nerves  a  re'/heartr  %•  ^''^W 

when  the  re's  rear  on  high  Their  idol  ^Uogue  81 

Who  made  a  re  pm-er  thro4h  tl^eir  art  To  WT  5"'"^"J  ^l 

thro' Earth  and  her  listeni^  «'5  ^  0  fF.  C.  ^acreorfy  8 

Light  of  the  n's '  ask'd  hiTChr^nicler  4  vk  V''^''**"*  I 

National    iV  hatreds  of  whole  geneSm  ^^Vj^'^'l^ 

Native    on  his  light  there  falls  A  shadow^'  and  his  ''''"'  ^^ 

M  slope,  o         /-,     y.     . 
And  heard  her  re  breezes  pass                                 Supp.  Confessions  164 

Upon  the  cliffs  that^^Trrm;  re  land  ^^^rianajn  the  S.  43 

herb  that  runs  to  seed  BesiK  «  folmtain  ^"^J^  ^r''  f 

Poet's  words  and  looks  Had  yet  theirT glow-  wJP'^"''',a^. 

i^rHaSt  Krv?i  '-'^'  -' ^ ^-^'  ^-^ s-  ^^^ 

Who  look'd  all  re  to  her  place,  "        ^?.  ^gl 

The  violet  of  his  re  land  r     ,';      ^"  ^^^ 

Go  down  beside  thy  re  rill  ■^^-  ^^"  * 

Who  ploughs  with  pain  his  re  lea  "       ^f^.%5 

That  stays  him  from  the  re  land  "         ^**?'.?^ 

love-language  of  the  bird  In  re  hazels  tassel  hung  '  "         !^v  1 9 

And  re  growth  of  noble  mind-                '«»ei  "ung.  „          ^.^  12 

To  the  death,  for  their  n  land.  'W.  f  *  J? 

I  have  felt  with  my  re  land,  il/at«i  /  z,  11 

Betwkt  the  re  land  of  Love  and  me,  r^ver'^s  tHI  9^ 

how  re  Unto  the  hills  she  trod  on'  J-over  s  Taie  i  25 

I  with  our  lover  to  his  re  Bay.  "        •   ^^^ 

He  past  for  ever  from  his  re  land ;  "        *^  if ^ 

Natmty     Fair  Florence  honouring  thy  re/  Far-far-away  4 

Natura^    Embrace  her  as  my  re  good ;  7«  m.      "•*,! 

NatnfenL^trate^-Tld^^^^    And  re  dieP  ^^^^ 

Tftt^r^rork'h^-r^X^^^^^ 

Young  iV  thro'  five  cyciL  7a^'  ^V^'^I^'  f, 

InN^^r^  ^°^^  '^^J  P°^«^  At°"t  the  opening  ^""^  ^"^'^^1 J^ 

In  iV  can  he  nowhere  find.                            i^       h  "        iXo 

iv  5  living  motion  lent  The  pulse  of  hope  "        f ?^ 

each  a  perfect  whole  From  living  N,  Falace'of  Arftl 


Nature  (contmued)    Carved  out  of  TV  for  itself 
Lord  over  iV  Lord  of  the  visible  ear  h      ' 
my  bhss  of  life,  that  N  gave 
Crreat  N  is  more  wise  than  l'- 
N,  so  far  as  in  her  lies, 
English  re's,  freemen,  friends 
For  N  also,  cold  and  warm  ' 

1^'*  T-^  ^*^'"  ^""l^^  "^«"  in  manhood, 
*or  n  brings  not  back  the  Mastodon, 

Thou  hast  betray'd  thy  re  and  thy  Aame, 
To  what  she  is :  a  re  never  kind ' 
Kmd  re  IS  the  best:  those  manners  next  That  fit 
us  hke  a  re  second-hand  •  ^ 

My  love  for  iV  is  as  old  as  I  • 
My  love  for  N  and  my  love  for  her 
For  those  and  theirs,  by  N's  law 
How  can  my  re  longer  mix  with  thine  ? 


M^b^S^tt"^^^^^^^^^ 

1  am  shamed  thro'  all  my  re      ' 

N  made  them  bUnder  motions 

Here  at  least,  wliei-e  re  sickens,  nothing 

liberal  apphcatioiis  he  In  Art  like  N 

Uh,  re  hi-st  was  fresh  to  men, 

But  laws  of  re  were  our  scorn 

as  neat  and  close  as  N  packsHer  blossom 

speech  and  thought  and  re  fail'd  a  little 

«  crost  ^yas  mother  of  the  foul  adulteri^ 

iiroke  mto  re'5  music  when  they  saw  her 

for  It  seem'd  A  void  was  made  in  iV  •      ' 

all-generating  powei's  and  genial  heat  Of  N 

^e^ii^S  with  how  great  ease  N  can  smUe,      ' 

1  wy-natured  is  no  re :  ' 

the  womb  and  tomb  of  all.  Great  N 

r4>L°"';  '*'*  "P  •■  Embrace  our  aims': 

Wild  re  s  need  wise  curbs, 
but  as  frankly  theirs  As  dues  of  N. 
Ihere  dwelt  an  iron  re  in  the  grain  • 
Love  and  N,  these  are  two  more  terrible 
inaw  this  male  n  to  some  touch  of  that  Which  kills 

scales  with  man  The  shining  steps  of  N 

and  let  thy  re  strike  on  mine, 

And  ruling  by  obeying  N's  powers. 
And  aU  the  phantom,  N,  stands- 
words  hke  N,  half  reveal  And  half  conceal 

^or  tho  my  re  rarely  yields 

From  art,  from  re,  from  the  schools, 

I  o  pangs  of  re,  sins  of  will. 

Are  God  and  N  then  at  strife, 

That  N  lends  such  evil  dreams  ? 

Th  f  V>  ""^  '^  **'°*^  ^'i^  <^^aw  With  ravine, 

inat  TV  5  ancient  power  was  lost  ■ 
And  cancell'd  n's  best :  but  thou 
I  curse  not  re,  no,  nor  death ;        ' 
As  moulded  like  in  N's  mint ; 
Thou  doest  expectant  re  wrong  • 

Can  clouds  of  w  stain  The  starry  clearness 
ilign  re  amorous  of  the  good 

,^u"  ^^^r^^^  '=°^*^^^  »»  break  At  seasons 

Where  God  and  N  met  in  light  • 

As  dying  N's  earth  and  hme ; 

hands  That  reach  thro'  re,  moulding  men. 

Tho  mix'd  with  God  and  N  thou, 

^  N  hke  an  open  book ; 

For  re  is  one  with  rapine, 

in  his  force  to  be  N's  crowning  race. 

An  eye  well-practised  in  re, 

Because  their  n's  are  Uttle, 

Should  N  keep  me  aUve, 

Sweet  re  gilded  by  the  gracious  gleam 

Had  suffer'd,  or  should  suffer  any  taint  In  n  • 

Suspicious  that  her  re  had  a  taint. 


Nature 

Palace  of  Art  127 

»  179 

D.  of  F.  Women  210 

To  J.  S.  35 

Ore  a  Mourner  1 

Love  thou  thy  land  7 

37 

73 

The  Epic  36 

M.d' Arthur  Id 

fValk.  to  the  Mail  62 


Edwin  Morris  28 

31 

Talkiiig  Oak  73 

Tithonus  65 

Locksley  Hall  48 


61 

87 

148 

150 

n      T,     »  153 

JJay-Dm.,  Moral  14 
Amphion  57 
The  Voyage  84 
Enoch  Arden  178 
»  792 

Aylmer's  Field  375 
694 
Lucretius  37 
98 
„      174 
„      194 
„      245 
Princess  ii  88 
.,       V 173 
204 
ri50 
165 
306 
„    vii  262 

r>j,    r  "  351 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  40 

In  Mem.  Hi  9 

«3 


xli  13 
.        xlix  1 
livZ 
lv5 
6 
Ivi  15 
Ixix  2 
Ixxii  20 
Ixxiii  7 
Ixxix  6 
Ixxxiii  3 
Ixxxv  85 
eix  9 
cxi  7 
20 
cxviii  4 
cxxiv  24 
exxx  11 
.,   Con.  132 
Maud  I  iv  22 
33 
38 
53 
^  ,    „        viZ2 
Bed  of  Idylls  39 
Marr.  of  Geraint  32 
68 


1 — ui  J  "'  "'''"  a  laint. 

doubted  whether  daughter's  tenderness,  Or  easy  re  -,„„ 

«'s  pndeful  sparkle  in  the  blood  ed^y  re,  „  798 

Geraint  and  E.  827 


Nature 

Nature  (continued)     Like  simple  noble  n's, 
credulous 
N  thro'  the  flesh  herself  hath  made 
the  charm  Of  w  in  her  overbore  their  own : 
judge  all  n  from  her  feet  of  clay, 
tenderness  Of  manners  and  of  n :  and  she  thought 


494 


Neck 


Geraint  and  E  875 

Merlin  and  V.  50 

596 

835 


That  all  was  n,  all,  perchance  for  her 
some  discourtesy  Against  my  n : 
baseness  in  him  by  default  Of  will  and  n, 
not  idle,  but  the  fruit  Of  loyal  n, 
'  Thou  hast  betray'd  thy  n  and  thy  name, 
'  Nothing  in  n  is  unbeautiful ; 
the  great  things  of  N  and  the  fair, 
lives  with  blindness,  or  plain  innocence  Of  n. 
The  marrel  of  that  fair  new  n — 
dear  mothers,  crazing  N,  kill  Their  babies 
magnet  of  Art  to  the  which  my  n  was  drawn, 
Born  of  the  brainless  A'  who  knew  not 
Tumble  N  heel  o'er  head. 
Paint  the  mortal  shame  of  n 
see  the  highest  Human  TV  is  divine, 
seest  Univei-sal  N  moved  by  Universal  Mind ; 
Who  yet,  hke  N,  wouldst  not  mar  By  changes 
'  That  weak  and  watery  n  love  you  ? 
For  your  gentle  n  .  .  . 
My  n  was  too  proud. 
Where  man,  nor  only  N  smiles ; 
whether,  since  our  n  cannot  rest. 
Which  types  all  N's  male  and  female  plan, 
The  Spiritual  in  N's  market-place — 


Lancelot  and  E.  329 
1303 

Pelleas  and  E.  82 

Guinevere  336 

Pass,  of  Arthur  241 

Lover's  Tale  i  350 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  222 

250 

Columbus  79 

„       179 

The  Wreck  22 

Despair  34 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  135 

140 

276 

To  Virgil  22 

Freedom  21 

The  Ring  396 

Forlorn  46 

Happy  78 

To  Ulysses  39 

Prog,  of  Spring  96 

On  one  who  effec.  E.  M.  3 

Akbar's  Dream  135 


from  the  terrors  of  N  a  people  have  fashion'd  Kapiolani  1 

Let  not  all  that  saddens  N  Faith  2 

Natured    See  Best-nattired,  Noble-natured,  Tender-natured 


Nave     bore  along  the  n  Her  pendent  hands. 
Navy     From  the  nations'  aiiy  navies 

gay  n  there  should  splinter  on  it, 

sea  plunged  and  fell  on  the  shot-shatter'd  n  of 
Spain, 

gold  that  Solomon's  navies  carried  home. 
Near    now  I  think  my  time  is  n..     I  trust  it  is. 

Ride  on !  the  prize  is  n.' 

I  could  not  weep — my  own  time  seem'd  so  n. 

Yet  both  are  n,  and  both  are  dear, 

Dear,  n  and  true — no  truer  Time 

He  seems  so  n  and  yet  so  far. 

But  now  set  out :  the  moon  is  n, 

red  rose  cries,  '  She  Ls  n,  she  is  w ; ' 

Wounded  and  wearied  needs  must  he  be  n. 

And  one  was  far  apart,  and  one  was  n  : 

I  was  n  my  time  wi'  the  boy. 

Vile,  so  n  the  ghost  Himself, 

noises  in  the  house — and  no  one  n — 

The  fatal  ring  lay  n  her ; 

I  knew  that  you  were  n  me 

but  fork'd  Of  the  n  storm, 
Near'd    as  he  n  His  happy  home,  the  ground. 

So  rapt,  we  n  the  hoase  ; 

went  she  Norward,  Till  she  n  the  foe. 

only  n  Her  husband  inch  by  inch, 

n,  Touch'd,  clink'd,  and  clash'd,  and  vanish'd, 

Still  growing  holier  as  you  n  the  bay, 
Nearer     Nor  art  thou  n  to  the  light. 

Could  lift  them  n  God-like  state 

and  n  than  hands  and  feet. 

tho'  he  make  you  evermore  Dearer  and  n, 

coming  n  and  n  again  than  before — 

and  find  N  and  ever  n  Hun, 

coming  n — Muriel  had  the  ring — 

No  «  ?  do  you  sconi  me  when  you  tell  me, 

May  I  come  a  little  n,  I  that  heard, 

— a  little  n  still — He  hiss'd, 

A  little  n  ?    Yes.    I  shall  hardly  be  content 

A  little  n  yet ! 

his  n  friend  would  say,  'Screw  not  the  chord 

My  spring  is  all  the  n, 


Aylmer's  Field  812 
Locksley  Hall  124 
Sea  Dreams  131 

The  Revenge  117 

Columbus  113 

May  Queen,  Con.  41 

Sir  Galahad  80 

Grandmother  72 

The  Victim  bQ 

A  Dedication  1 

In  Mem.  xcvii  23 

Con.  41 

Maud  I  xxii  63 

Lancelot  and  E.  538 

Last  Tourna^nent  734 

First  Quarrel  82 

The  Ring  230 

417 

450 

Happy  65 

Aylmer's  Field  727 

Gardener's  D.  91 

142 

The  Captain  36 

Aylmer's  Field  806 

Sea  Dreams  134 

Lover's  Tale  i  338 

Two  Voices  92 

Lit.  Squabbles  14 

High.  Pantheism  12 

A  Dedication  3 

Def.  of  Lucknow  28 

Be  Prof.,  Two  G.  53 

The  Ring  259 

Happy  23 

„      55 

,.      62 

„      87 

«    104 

Aylmer's  Field  468 

Window,  Winter  17 


Nearer  {continued)     bubbling  melody  That  drowns 

the  n  echoes.  Lover's  Tale  i  533 

Nearest    {See  also  Gaainist)    Were  it  our  n,  Were  it  our 

dearest.  The  Victim  13 

Which  was  his  n  ?    Who  was  his  dearest  ?  „          76 

While  I,  thy  n,  sat  apart.  In  Mem.  ex  13 

the  King  Spake  to  me,  being  n,  '  Percivale,'  Holy  Grail  268 

My  mind  involved  yourself  the  n  thing  Merlin  and  V.  300 

Beyond  the  n  mountain's  bosky  brows,  Lover's  Tale  i  396 

Nearing    And  I  am  n  seventy-four,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  43 

That  he  was  n  his  own  hundred.  The  Ring  194 

'  Spirit,  n  yon  dark  portal  at  the  hmit  God  and  the  Univ.  4 

With  n  chair  and  lower'd  accent)  Aylmer's  Field  267 

Nearness    touch'd  her  thro'  that  n  of  the  first,  „            605 

Desire  of  n  doubly  sweet ;  In  Mem.  cxvii  6 

name,  which  had  too  much  of  n  in  it  Lover's  Tale  i  561 

same  n  Were  father  to  this  distance,  „          H  28 
Brother-in-law — the  fiery  n  of  it — •                         Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  173 

Neat     {See  also  Neat)     a  home  For  Annie,  n  and  nestlike,    Enoch  Arden  59 

order'd  aU  Almost  as  n  and  close  „          178 

Neat    Sally  sa  pratty  an'  n  an'  sweeiit.  North.  Cobbler  43 

sa  pratty,  an'  feat,  an'  «,  an'  sweeiit  ?  „            108 

fur,  Steevie,  tha'  kep'  it  sa  n  Spinster's  S's.  77 

Neater     Be  the  n  and  completer  ;  Maud  I  xx  20 

Neat-herds    while  his  n-h  were  abroad ;  Lucretius  88 

Nebulous     '  There  sinks  the  n  star  we  call  the  Sun,  Princess  iv  19 

Necessity    seem'd  So  justified  by  that  n,  Geraint  and  E.  396 

The  vast  n  of  heart  and  life.  Merlin  and  V.  925 

Whom  weakness  or  n  have  cramp'd  Tiresias  87 

Neck    fingers  play  About  his  mother's  n,  Supp.  Confessions  43 

locks  a-drooping  twined  Round  thy  n  in  subtle  ring  Adeline  58 

A  glowing  arm,  a  gleaming  n,  Miller's  D.  78 

I'd  touch  her  n  so  warm  and  white.  „         174 

round  her  n  Floated  her  hair  or  seem'd  to  float  (Enone  18 

I  rode  sublime  On  Fortune's  n:  D,  of  F.  Women  142 

Then  they  clung  about  The  old  man's  n,  Dora  164 

A  grazing  iron  collar  grinds  mj'  n ;  St.  S.  Stylites  117 

'  A  third  would  glimmer  on  her  n  Talking  Oak  221 

And  not  leap  forth  and  fall  about  thy  n.  Love  and  Duty  41 

Disyoke  their  n's  from  custom,  Princess  ii  143 

Drew  from  my  n  the  painting  and  the  tress,  „        vi  110 

See,  your  foot  is  on  our  n's,  „            166 

nape  of  her  white  n  Was  rosed  with  indignation :  „           343 

grew  By  bays,  the  peacock's  n  in  hue ;  The  Daisy  14 

'  My  mother  clings  about  my  «,  Sailor  Boy  17 

And  fell  in  silence  on  his  n :  In  Mem.  ciii  44 
'  Climb  not  lest  thou  break  thy  n,  I  charge  thee  by 
my  love,'  and  so  the  boy.  Sweet  mother,  neither 

clomb,  nor  break  his  n,  Gareth  and  L.  54 

A  stone  about  his  n  to  drown  him  in  it.  „          812 

Gareth  loosed  the  stone  From  off  his  n,  „          815 

Drown  him,  and  with  a  stone  about  his  w ;  „          823 

with  a  sweep  of  it  Shore  thro'  the  swarthy  n,  Geraint  and  E.  728 

Sir  Balan  drew  the  shield  from  off  his  n,  Balin  and  Balan  429 

curved  an  arm  about  his  n,  Clung  like  a  snake ;  Merlin  and  V.  241 

mantle  of  his  beard  Across  her  n  „            257 

to  kiss  each  other  On  her  white  n —  „            456 

made  her  Uthe  arm  round  his  n  Tighten,  „             614 

Her  eyes  and  n  ghttering  went  and  came ;  „            960 

a  w  to  which  the  swan's  Is  tawnier  Lancelot  and  E.  1184 

a  necklace  for  a  m  O  as  much  fairer —  „                1227 

n's  Of  dragons  clinging  to  the  crazy  walls.  Holy  Grail  346 

raised  a  bugle  hanging  from  his  n,  Pelleas  and  E.  364 

This  ruby  necklace  thrice  around  her  n,  Last  Tournament  19 

I  muse  Why  ye  not  wear  on  arm,  or  n,  or  zone  „                36 

ye  fling  those  rubies  round  my  n  „              312 

Queen  Isolt  With  ruby-circled  n,  „             364 

brother  of  the  Table  Round  Swvmg  by  the  n :  „              432 

flinging  round  her  n,  Claspt  it,  „              749 

felt  the  King's  breath  wander  o'er  her  n,  Guinevere  582 

Bent  o'er  me,  and  my  n  his  arm  upstay'd.  Lover's  Tale  i  690 

floated  on  and  parted  round  her  n,  „            704 

Trove's  arms  were  wreath'd  about  the  n  of  Hope,  „            815 

He  softly  put  his  arm  about  her  n  „          iv  71 
The  mother  fell  about  the  daughter's  n,               Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  154 


! 


Neck 


495 


Nest 


Neck  (continued)    an'  Charlie  'e  brok  'is  n,  Village  Wife  85 

on  the  fatal  n  Of  land  running  out  into  rock —  Despair  9 

Amy's  arms  about  my  n —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  13 

she  that  clasp'd  my  ?i  had  flown ;  „                 15 

their  arch'd  n's,  midnight-maned,  Demeter  and  P.  46 

I  feeald  it  drip  o'  my  71.  Owd  Rod  42 

as  if  'e'd  'a  brokken  'is  n,  „        63 

Neck-an-crop    I  coom'd  n-a-c  soomtimes  North.  Cobbler  20 

Neck'd    See  Long-neck'd 

Necklace    (See  also  Pearl-necklace)    And  I  would  be  the  n,    Miller's  D.  181 

To  make  the  n  shine ;  Talking  Oak  222 

And  fling  the  diamond  w  by.'  Lady  Clare  40 

Or  n  for  a  neck  to  which  the  swan's  Lancelot  and  E.  1184 

or  a  w  for  a  neck  0  as  much  fau-er —  „              1227 

This  ruby  n  thrice  around  her  neck,  Last  Tournament  19 

diamond  n  dearer  than  the  golden  ring,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  21 

Nectar     For  they  lie  beside  their  71,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  Ill 

Hebes  are  they  to  hand  ambrosia,  mix  The  n ;  Princess  Hi  114 

n  smack'd  of  hemlock  on  the  lips,  Demeter  and  P.  104 

Need  (s)     wasted  Ti-uth  in  her  utmost  n.  Clear-headed  friend  19 

Our  dusted  velvets  have  much  n  of  thee  :  To  J.  M.  K.  4 

And  if  some  dreadful  n  should  rise  Love  thou  thy  land  91 

vows,  where  there  was  never  n  of  vows.  Gardener's  D.  258 

As  I  might  slay  this  child,  if  good  n  were,  Princess  ii  287 

How  know  I  what  had  n  of  thee.  In  Mem.  Ixxiii  3 

What  is  thy  name  ?  thy  n  ?  '  Gareth  and  L.  605 

my  w,  a  knight  To  combat  for  my  sister,  „          607 

cruel  n  Constrain'd  us,  Marr.  of  Geraint  715 

All  to  be  there  against  a  sudden  n  ;  Geraint  and  E.  375 

Mine  is  the  larger  n,  who  am  not  meek,  Last  Tournament  610 
friends  Of  Arthur,  who  should  help  him  at  his  n  ?  '    Pass,  of  Arthur  456 

bad  w  Of  a  good  stout  lad  at  his  farm ;  First  Quarrel  17 

no  re  to  make  such  a  stir.'  „            63 

'  All  the  more  n,'  I  told  him,  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  18 

As  good  n  was — thou  hast  come  to  talk  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  32 

false  at  last  In  our  most  n,  appall'd  them,  Columbus  71 

Bread  enough  for  his  n  till  the  labourless  day  V.  of  Maeldune  86 

Then  the  Norse  leader.  Dire  was  his  n  of  it,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  56 

What  n  to  wish  when  Hubert  weds  in  you  The  Ring  61 

house  with  all  its  hateful  n's  Happy  32 

Need  (verb)     all  Life  n's  for  life  is  possible  Love  and  Duty  86 

'  Wild  natures  n  wise  curbs.  Princess  v  173 

whence  they  n  More  breadth  of  culture :  „          187 

Whether  I  n  have  fled  ?  Maud  II  ii  72 

T  n  not  tell  thee  foolish  words, —  Holy  Grail  855 

He  n's  no  aid  who  doth  his  lady's  will.'  Pelleas  and  E.  281 

I  n  Him  now.  Last  Tournament  630 

such  a  crazine&s  as  n's  A  cell  and  keeper),  Lover's  Tale  iv  164 

Ah  heavens !     Why  n  I  tell  you  all  ?—  „            201 

'  The  lad  will  n  little  more  of  your  care.'  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  17 

You  n  not  wave  me  from  you.  Happy  20 

music  here  be  mortal  n  the  singer  greatly  care  ?  Parnassus  18 

Up  hill '  Too-slow '  will  n  the  whip,  Politics  11 

I  n  no  wages  of  shame.    *  Charity  40 

Needed     With  all  that  seamen  n  or  their  wives —  Enoch  Ardeii  139 

yea  twice  or  thrice — As  oft  as  n —  „            143 

Or  thro'  the  want  of  what  it  n  most,  „             265 

voice  who  best  could  tell  What  most  it  n —  „            267 

Because  it  n  help  of  Love  :  In  Mem.  xxv  8 

I  n  then  no  charm  to  keep  them  mine  Merlin  and  V.  547 

Heedful     And  bought  them  n  books,  and  everyway,  Enoch  Arden  332 

My  n  seeming  harshness,  pardon  it.  Princess  ii  309 

Are  but  the  n  preludes  of  the  tioith  :  „      Con.  74 

thou  knowest  I  hold  that  fonns  Are  71 :  Akbar's  Dream  127 

Needing     (His  father  lying  sick  and  m  him)  Enoch  Arden  65 

Needle     '  I  would  have  hid  her  n  in  my  heart,  Edwin  Morris  62 

Man  for  the  sword  and  for  the  «  she  :  Pri7icess  v  448 

Are  sharpen'd  to  a  n's  end ;  1 71  Mem.  Ixxvi  4 

Be  n  to  the  magnet  of  your  word.  To  Mary  Boyle  7 

Needless     To  greet  the  sheriff,  n  courtesy !  Edwin  Morris  133 

Needs  (adv.)     he  n  Must  wed  that  other,  whom  no  man 

desired,  Gareth  and  L.  108 

one  with  me  in  all,  he  n  must  know.'  „            566 

I  n  must  disobey  him  for  his  good  ;  Geraint  and  E.  135 

You  n  must  work  my  work.  Merlin  and  V.  505 


Needy    Let  the  n  be  banqueted. 
Negation     I  hate  the  black  m  of  the  bier, 
Neglect     If  men  «  your  pages  ? 
Neglected    That  all  ?i  places  of  the  field 
For  thanks  it  seems  till  now  n. 


On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  35 

ATicient  Sage  204 

Spiteful  Letter  6 

Aylmer's  Field  693 

Merlin  and  V.  308 


Neighbour  (adj.)    from  all  n  crowns  Alliance  and 

allegiance,  (E7wne  124 

Leaning  his  horns  into  the  «  field,  Gardener's  D.  87 

and  lady  friends  From  n  seats :  Princess,  Pro.  98 

But  if  my  n  whistle  answers  him —  Lcyver's  Tale  iv  161 

Neighbour  (s)     (See  also  Nabour)     While  all  the  n's  shoot 

thee  roimd,  The  Blackbird  2 

And  ran  to  tell  her  n's  ;  The  Goose  14 

Yet  say  the  »»'s  when  they  call,  Amphion  5 

O  Lord  ! — 'tis  in  my  n's  ground,  „        75 

Leering  at  his  n's  wife.  Vision  of  Sin  118 

The  next  day  came  a  n.  Aylmer's  Field  251 

With  n's  laid  along  the  grass,  Lucretius  214 

Each  hissing  in  his  n's  ear ;  P7-i7icess  v  15 

the  w's  come  and  laugh  and  gossip,  Grandmother  91 

From  every  house  the  n's  met,  I71  Mem.  xxxi  9 

The  foolish  n's  come  and  go,  „            Ix  13 

measuring  with  his  eyes  His  n's  make  and  might :       Pelleas  and  E.  151 

friend,  the  «,  Lionel,  the  beloved.  Lover's  Tale  i  653 

i£  perchance  the  71's  round  May  see,  Achilles  over  the  T.  12 

Neighbourhood    Far  off  from  human  n,  Elednore  6 

As  from  some  blissful  m.  Two  Voices  430 

By  one  low  voice  to  one  dear  n,                           •  Aylmer's  Field  60 

Make  their  n  healthfuller,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  32 

Neighbouring    half  The  71  borough  with  their  Institute  Princess,  Pro.  5 

betroth'd  To  one,  a  n  Princess :  „            i  33 

Neigh'd     Lancelot's  charger  fiercely  «,  Gareth  and  L.  1400 

N  with  all  gladness  as  they  came,  Geraint  and  E.  755 

the  warhorse  m  As  at  a  friend's  voice,  Guinevere  530 

Neighing     strong  n's  of  the  wild  white  Horse  Lancelot  and  E.  298 

Nei^herry    the  sweet  half-English  N  air  The  Brook  17 

Nell     Uod  bless  you,  my  own  little  N.'  First  Quarrel  22 

Nelly     '  Our  N's  the  flower  of  'em  all.'  „             28 

But  N,  the  last  of  the  cletch,  Village  Wife  9 

iV  wur  up  fro'  the  craadle  as  big  i'  the  mouth  „        103 

an'  our  N  she  gied  me  'er  'and,  „         111 

Nelson    old  England  fall  Which  N  left  so  great.  The  Fleet  5 

Nemesis    great  N  Break  from  a  darken'd  future,  PriTicess  vi  174 

Nephew     sparrow-hawk,  My  curee,  my  w —  Marr.  of  Geraint  445 

if  the  sparrow-hawk,  this  n,  fight  „                475 

And  tilts  with  my  good  n  thereupon,  „                488 

Then  Yniol'a  n,  after  trumpet  blown,  „                551 

O  loyal  n  of  our  noble  King,  Lancelot  and  E.  652 

Neronian    those  N  legionaries  Boddicea  1 

Nerve  (s)     'Tis  life,  whereof  our  n's  are  scant, .  Two  Voices  397 

His  n's  were  wrong.     What  ails  us.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  105 

like  those,  who  clench  their  n's  to  rush  Love  and  Duty  77 

My  n's  have  dealt  with  stiffer.  Will  Water.  78 

When  thy  n's  could  understand  Vision  of  Sin  160 

Were  living  n's  to  feel  the  rent ;  A^jlmer's  Field  536 

O  iron  n  to  true  occasion  true.  Ode  on  Well.  37 

A  weight  of  n's  without  a  mind.  In  Mem.  xii  7 

blood  creeps,  and  the  71's  prick  And  tingle ;  „            12 

Where  all  the  n  of  sense  is  numb ;  „      xciii  7 

0,  having  the  n's  of  motion  as  well  as  the  n's  Maud  I  i  63 

believing  mind,  but  shatter'd  n.  Lover's  Tale  iv  105 

Nerve  (verb)     '  The  song  that  n's  a  nation's  heart.  Epilogue  81 

Nerve-dissolving    The  71-d  melody  Vision  of  Sin  44 

Nest     Fiom  my  high  n  of  penance  here  proclaim  St.  S.  Stylites  167 

huts  At  random  scatter'd,  each  a  to  in  bloom.  Aylmer's  Field  150 

bough  That  moving  moves  the  ?i  and  nesthng.  Sea  Dreams  291 

birdie  say  In  her  n  at  peep  of  day  ?  „            294 

However  deep  you  might  embower  the  n,  Pri7icess,  Pro.  147 

Father  will  come  to  l;is  babe  in  the  n,  „              Hi  13 

in  the  North  long  since  my  n  is  made.  „             iv  110 

built  the  n '  she  said,  '  To  hatch  the  cuckoo.  „                365 

We  seem  a  m  of  traitors —  „              v  426 

And  all  in  a  w  together.  Window,  Spring  16 

there  were  cries  and  clashings  in  the  n,  Gareth  a7}d  L.  70 

by  the  bird's  song  ye  may  leam  the  n,'  Marr.  of  Geraint  359 


Nest 

almost  plaster'd  like  a  maS'sV  ^'^^l?  ^J^  f -J^ 

find  an  and  feels  a  snake,  he  drew:  PelllfaS'^E  S? 

•  Black  n  of  rats,'  he  groan'd,  ^  ""^  ^-  f?J 

rL^irt^'S^J.te^SK^^^^'-^  ^-^  T.«;^.J 

A  mountain  «-the  pleasure-boat  that  rock'd.  Lover's  Tale  i  42 

better  ha'  put  my  naked  hand  in  a  hornets'  n.  fZi  Ouartel  S 

And  a  tree  with  a  moulder'd  n  nlJj  ^"^'T^  ^ 

Drove  from  out  the  mother's  n  Oven  I  andf^  %7uf  97 

Birds  and  brides  must  leave  the  n.  ^  ''•  ^^  """^  ?a5£  fa 

song  agam,  n  again,  young  again,'  rtThfj  q 

Nested  (adj.)     (See  also' i^.^ested) '  I  envied  human  ^'  ^^'""'''^  ^ 

wives,  and  n  birds,  "uukui  ,  „  ^^ 

NMted(verb)     Wherein  we  r^  sleeping  or  awake  £Sl7aUfS< 

Nestied    and  the  gilded  snake  Had  «                  '  Lover  s  Tale  i2Z\ 

Mestlike    a  home  For  Annie  npat,  nn^l  «  t-.      ,"   .    ,        * 

Nestljig    bough  That  rvfng^tSh^^^  SrtlS? 

I^d^^^rnd^^rinli^S^^^^^  XaS.faTri1 

;  Peace  to  thine^eagle-bornTSead  «',  ^''  Tournament  25 

Wet  (s)(^«e  aZso  Ivy-net,  Pishing-nets)    Love  that  hath  us       " 

in  me  w,  m'??    '    n  ono 

To-c^t^h^S4?/i^^a%Sri^  ^zfe^i 

To  have  her  ho-n  roU  in  a  siufen'.  mZTvIII 

Makers  of  ^^,  and  living  from  the  sea.  PdleasZl F  QO 

and  Love  The  n  of  truth  ? '  f^    >    n          ^2 

Net  (verb)    fibres  n  the  dreamless  head  ^*^^, '  i^'''""^.?^ 

""^^^dS  "''"  ^'^'^-^'^)    I  -ake  the  «  sunbeam       '"  ""'"•  "  ' 

Nettle    r^und  and  round  In  dung  and  ^'5!  PelUasanAE^mx 

fir  Ttu  ^hSrL^rX"^:^^^^-  x//?l  y 

New    (6V.  0^.0  Kery-new.  Spick-span-new)    Kate  hath  ?s^r f  '""'  '^ 
ever  strung  like  a  «  bow,  i-u  d  spun 

Transgress  his  ample  bound  to  some  n  crown :-  PolZdl 

hUk      «"'ge  Of  some  n  deluge  from  a  thousand 

WU.learn  «  thii^  when  I  am  not.'  ^^ tZv'Ss  m 

I  knit  a  hundred  others  n:  J-wo  y owes  bd 

With  this  old  soul  in  organs  n?  "        oq? 

I  have  found  A  n  land,  but  I  die.'  Palace  of  Art  284 

N  from  Its  silken  sheath.  jfTv  w        ^ 

Sweet  as  n  buds  in  Spring.  ^-  "^  ^-  ^^^^^ 

IhSeSiTooToi'/h'Ti'"^''"'"/'   .    .    .  TheBla^Uirili 

inere  s  a  « loot  on  the  floor,  my  fnend,  And  a  n 

Nothing  comes  to  thee  n  or  strange.  ^^  ""'"''^V^-  TT  ?! 

Se^tSTtt'SKn^i''^-     •.  Lcn>et}u>utl/{a!^'m 

rie  mougnt  ttiat  nothing  n  was  said,  rh^  v^i^  -in 

She  left  the  n  pUno  shut:  Edm^Uonu  115 

In  that  n  world  which  k  the  ofd  •    ^  '  n„„  n     ^/,2/^*«*  28 

Thr?;  sunny  decades  n  and  strSige,  ^        liTltA 

If  old  things,  there  are  n ;  Wiiiw  *      !! 

i^  stars  all  night  above  the  brim  Of  waters  vTZe  I 

'No,  I  love  not  what  is  n ;  vi.i       /e?^ ion 

And  the  »  warmth  of  life'^  ascending  sun  v      u^I'f  ^11 

Then  her  n  child  was  as  heSen^'dTThen  the  n         ""'^  ^'■'^'"  ^® 
mother  came  about  her  heart,  '  -„„ 

that  we  stiU  may  lead  The  n  l^ht  ud  t>  ■  '       ■■%i% 

those  were  graciois  times.    Thfn  S  yourn  friend :     "^T'i.l^ 


496 


New 


New  (cowtiwzteci)    I  your  old  friend  and  tried,  she  w  in  all  ? 
n  day  comes,  the  light  Dearer  for  night. 
Gray  nurses,  loving  nothing  n ; 
Shall  count  n  things  as  dear  as  old : 
The  baby  n  to  earth  and  sky. 
The  full  n  life  that  feeds  thy  breath 
But  all  is  n  unhallow'd  ground. 
With  old  results  that  look  like  n : 
But,  I  fear,  the  n  strong  wine  of  love, 
iV  as  his  title,  built  last  year. 
And  that  same  night,  the  night  of  the  n  year, 
N  things  and  old  co-twisted,  as  if  Time  Were 

nothing, 
the  n  knight  Had  fear  he  might  be  shamed  • 
n  sun  Beat  thro'  the  bhndless  casement  of  the 

room, 
Ride  into  that  n  fortress  by  your  town 
Built  that  n  fort  to  overawe  my  friends', 
She  is  not  fairer  in  n  clothes  than  old. 
'  O  my  w  mother,  be  not  wroth  or  grieved  At  thv 
n  son,  •' 

A  splendour  dear  to  women,  n  to  her,  And  therefore 

dearer ;  or  if  not  so  n, 
The  n  leaf  ever  pushes  off  the  old. 
like  a  bride's  On  her  n  lord,  her  own. 
But  once  in  life  was  fluster'd  with  n  wine, 
Meanwhile  the  n  companions  past  away 
tm  they  found  The  n  design  wherein  they  lost 

themselves. 
Not  for  me  !     For  her !  for  your  n  fancy 
King  Akthuh  made  n  knights  to  fill  the  gap 
And  this  n  knight.  Sir  Pelleas  of  the  isles— 
iV  leaf,  n  life— the  days  of  frost  are  o'er:  iV  lif e  m 
love,  to  suit  the  newer  day:  N  loves  are  sweet 

thel.nl^h^^^^'rL''''''  '?'^°'^;       ,  ^'i  Tournament  278 

A    J     ^      '  *^ioryuig  m  each  n  glory,  ooc 

And  thou  wert  lying  in  thy  n  leman's  arms.'  "  625 

bhe  like  a  n  disease,  unknown  to  men,  Guirwuerp  -sis 

to  those  With  whom  he  dwelt,  ,.  faces  other  minds.     Pass  TirL.  5 
wife  and  child  with  wail  Pass  to  n  lords ;  ^  -o-rmur  o 

Among  n  men,  strange  faces,  other  minds.' 
And  the  n  sun  rose  bringing  the  n  year 
rather  seem'd  For  some  n  death  than  for  a  life 

renew'd ; 
Crazy  with  laughter  and  babble  and  earth's  n 

wme, 
those  long-sweeping  beechen  boughs  Of  our  N 

Forest, 
fur  N  Squire  coom'd  last  night. 
Saw  Squire's  coom'd  wi'  'is  taail  in  'is  'and,  (repeat) 
an  dizen'd  out,  an'  a-buyin'  n  cloathes, 
chams  For  him  who  gave  a  n  heaven,  a  n  earth. 
The  marvel  of  that  fair  n  nature- 
Whatever  wealth  I  bought  from  that  n  yfoTlA 
be  consecrate  to  lead  A  n  ci-usade  against  the  Saracen, 
l?or  these  are  then  dark  ages,  you  see 
Eh !  tha  be  m  to  the  plaace —  ' 


Princess  iv  318 

„     vii  346 

In  Mem.  xxix  14 

xl28 

xlv  1 

Ixxxvi  10 

civ  12 

cxxviii  11 

Maud  I  vi  82 

„       X 19 

Com.  of  Arthur  209 

Gareth  and  L.  226 
1043 

Marr.  of  Geraint  70 
407 
460 

722 

779 

808 

Balin  and  Balan  442 

Merlin  and  V.  617 

756 

Lancelot  and  E.  399 

441 

1216 

Pelleas  and  E.  1 

17 


45 
406 
469 

Lover's  Tale  iv  374 

To  A.  Tennyson  2 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  113 

Village  Wife  1 

„  14, 121 

37 

Columbus  20 

79 

„      101 

„      103 

Despair  88 

Dead  the  n  astronomy'^lk  her Locksle?H'%lty'l7^^ 

And  some  ,.  Spirit  o'erbear  the  old,  ''^     ^SL  14 

?T.ZTy,!^^3'^''r'j  ^^^^"^ Makes  all  things  n,        EaZspZgl 


For  now  the  Heavenly  Power  Makes  aU  things 
iv  England  of  the  Southern  Pole  ! 
For  ten  thousand  years  Old  and  n  ? 
—is  making  a  n  link  Breaking  an  old  one  ? 
On  that  n  life  that  gems  the  hawthorn  line  • 
And  n  developments,  whatever  spark 
Sing  the  n  year  in  under  the  blue. 
'■N,n,n,n]     Is  it  then  so  w 
hast  <fe)M  brought  us  down  a  n  Kor^n  From 
heaven  ? 
I  heard  a  mocking  laugh  '  the  n  Koran ! ' 
Ihe  wonders  were  so  wildly  w. 
If  N  and  Old,  disastrous  feud', 
«Tu  ^  °^?  °^"^®f  changeth,  yielding  place  to  n. 
Whose  fancy  fuses  old  and  «, 


44 

Hands  all  Round  16 

The  Ring  20 

50 

Prog,  of  Spring  Z6 

94 

The  Throstle  5 

7 

Akbar's  Dream  116 

183 

Mechanophilus  27 

Love  thou  thy  land  77 

M.  d' Arthur  240 

In  Mem.  xvi  18 


New 


497 


Night 


Ifew  {continued)     Ring  out  the  old,  ring  in  the  «, 
'  The  old  order  changeth,  yielding  place  to  n. 
New-born    here  he  glances  on  an  eye  n-b, 

face  of  a  blooming  boy  Fi-esh  as  a  flower  n-b, 
Kew-budded    music,  O  bird,  in  the  n-b  bowers  ! 
New-caged    first  as  sullen  as  a  beast  n-c, 

these  Are  like  wild  brutes  n-c — 
New-comer     n-c's  in  an  ancient  hold, 

N-c's  from  the  Mersey,  millionaires, 
New-dug    I  seem  to  see  a  n-d  grave  up  yonder 
Newer    'Tis  not  too  late  to  seek  a  n  world. 
Yea,  shook  this  n,  stronger  hall  of  ours. 
New  life,  new  love,  to  suit  the  n  day : 
Dust  in  wholesome  old-world  dust  before  the  n 

world  begin. 
And  cast  aside,  when  old,  for  n, — 
New-faU'n    Lay  like  a  n-f  meteor  on  the  grass, 
New-flush'd    thro'  damp  holts  n-f  vidth  may, 
New  Forest     beechen  boughs  Of  our  N  F. 
Newfoundland    Than  for  his  old  N's, 
Newly-caged    Like  some  wild  creature  ji-c, 
Newly-enter'd     But  n-e,  taller  than  the  rest. 
Newly-fallen    Right  o'er  a  mount  of  n-f  stones. 
New-made    one  of  the  two  at  her  side  This  n-m  lord, 
sent  Ulfius,  and  Brastias,  and  Bedivere,  His  n-m 

knights, 
and  him  his  n-m  knight  Worshipt, 
My  younger  knights,  n-m, 
New-mown    rarely  smells  the  n-m  hay. 
Newness    the  discovery  And  n  of  thine  art 
New-old     accept  this  old  imperfect  tale,  N-o, 

All  n-o  revolutions  of  Empire — 
New-risen    on  the  roof  Of  night  n-r. 
News     N  from  the  humming  city  comes  to  it 
Expectant  of  that  n  which  never  came, 
and  no  n  of  Enoch  came, 
breaker  of  the  bitter  n  from  home. 
She  brought  strange  n. 
in  the  distance  pealing  n  Of  better, 
golden  n  along  the  steppes  is  blown. 
Pass  and  blush  the  n  Over  glowing  ships; 
Pass  the  happy  n,  Blush  it  thro'  the  West ; 
These  n  be  mine,  none  other's — 
111  n,  my  Queen,  for  all  who  love  him. 
Yet  good  n  too ;  for  goodly  hopes  are  mine 
'  What  n  from  Camelot,  lord  ? 
Came  suddenly  on  the  Queen  with  the  sharp  n. 
third  night  hence  will  bring  thee  n  of  gold.' 
'  Why  lingers  Gawain  with  his  golden  n  ?  ' 
New-wedded     But  the  n-w  wife  wasmnharm'd. 
New-world    clamour  grew  As  of  a  «-w  Babel, 
New-wreathed    The  garland  of  n-w  emprise : 
New-year     To-morrow  'ill  be  the  happiest  time  of  all  the 
glad  N-y ;  (repeat) 
Of  all  the  glad  N-y,  mother,  the  maddest  merriest 
day;  .,  3 

_i_     I  would  see  the  sun  rise  upon  the  glad  N-y. 

(repeat)  May  Queen  N.  ¥'s.  E.  2,  51 


In  Mem.  cvi  5 

Fass.  of  Arthur  408 

Lucretius  137 

Gareth  and  L.  1409 

W.  to  Alexandra  11 

Geraint  and  E.  856 

Akbar's  Dream  50 

Edwin  Morris  9 

10 

The  Flight  97 

Ulysses  57 

Holy  Grail  731 

Last  Tournament  279 

Locksley  H.  Sixty  150 

Akbar's  Dream  134 

Frincess  vi  135 

My  life  is  full  19 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  113 

Aylmer's  Field  125 

Frincess  ii  301 

Last  Tournament  169 

Marr.  of  Geraint  361 

Maud  1x3 

Com.  of  Arthur  137 

Felleas  and  E.  154 

Last  Tournament  99 

The  Owl  i  9 

Ode  to  Memory  88 

To  the  Queen  ii  37 

Vastness  30 

Arabian  Nights  130 

Gardener' s  D.  35 

Enoch  Arden  258 

361 

Aylmer's  Field  594 

Sea  Dreams  267 

Frincess  iv  81 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  11 

Maud  I  xvii  11 

15 

Gareth  and  L.  539 

Lancelot  and  E.  598 

601 

620 

730 

Felleas  and  E.  357 

411 

Charity  22 

Frincess  iv  487 

Kate  24 


May  Qu^en  2,  42 


9     It  is  the  last  N-y  that  I  shall  ever  see, 

^1     And  the  N-y's  coming  up,  mother, 

9     And  the  N-y  will  take  'em  away. 

*     And  the  N-y  blithe  and  bold,  my  friend, 
O  sweet  n-y  delaying  long ; 
O  thou,  n-y,  delaying  long, 
that  same  night,  the  night  of  the  n  y, 
And  the  new  sun  rose  bringing  the  n  y. 
April  promise,  glad  n-y  Of  Being, 
Sing  the  ny  in  under  the  blue. 

Next     '  When  the  n  moon  was  roU'd  into  the  sky, 
'  So  when,  n  mom,  the  lord  whose  Ufe  he  saved 
fight  In  n  day's  tourney  I  may  break  his  pride.' 
But  when  the  n  sun  brake  from  underground, 
'  But  when  the  n  day  brake  from  under  groimd- 
What  be  the  n  im  like  ? 
Were  nothing  the  n  minute  ? 


3 

7 

D.oftheO.  YearU 

35 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  2 

13 

Com.  of  Arthur  209 

Fass.  of  Arthur  469 

Lover's  Tale  i  281 

The  Throstle  5 

D.ofF.  Women  229 

Gareth  and  L.  888 

Marr.  of  Geraint  476 

Lancelot  and  E.  1137 

Holy  Grail  338 

Village  Wife  19 

Voice  spake,  etc,  10 


Nibb'd    See  Horny-nibb'd 

Nice    his  H  eyes  Should  see  the  raw  mechanic's  bloody 

thumbs  Walk  to  the  Mail  74 

If  I  should  deem  it  over  n —  Tiresias  191 

Nicetish     Wi'  lots  o'  munny  laiiid  by,  an'  a  n  bit  o' 

land.  N.  Farmer,  N.  8.  22 

Niched    Those  n  shapes  of  noble  mould,  The  Daisy  38 

Niece     Wilham  was  his  son,  And  she  his  n.  Dora  3 

Allan  call'd  His  n  and  said :  „   42 

by  the  bright  head  of  my  little  n,  Frincess  ii  276 

Niggard     Some  »  fraction  of  an  hour,  Aylmer's  Field  450 

Tho'  n  throats  of  Manchester  may  bawl.  Third  of  Feb.  43 

Ni^^er    See  Nager 
Nigh     Far  off  thou  art,  but  ever  n ;  In  Mem.  cxxx  13 

In  the  night,  and  n  the  dawn.  Forlorn  83 

'  My  end  draws  n ;  'tis  time  that  I  were  gone.  M.  d'  Arthur  163 

'  My  end  draws  n;  'tis  time  that  I  were  gone.  Fu»s.  of  Arthur  332 

Nigher     Sure  she  was  n  to  heaven's  spheres,  Ode  to  Memory  40 

Nigh-naked     On  the  n-n  tree  the  robin  piped  Enoch  Arden  676 

Night  {See  also  Goodnight,  Market-noight,  Noight, 
Sleeping-night,  Yesternight)  They  comfort 
him  by  n  and  day ; 

She  only  said,  '  The  n  is  dreary  (repeat) 

Upon  the  middle  of  the  n. 

Past  Yabbok  brook  the  livelong  n. 

Until  another  ninnl  enter'd, 

living  airs  of  middle  n  Died  round  the  bulbul 

crescents  on  the  roof  Of  n  new-risen, 

Nor  was  the  n  thy  shroud. 

With  a  half-glance  upon  the  sky  At  n 

All  day  and  all  n  it  is  ever  drawn 

Day  and  n  to  the  billow  the  fountain  calls : 

All  within  is  dark  as  n : 

In  the  yew-wood  black  as  n. 

All  n  the  silence  seems  to  flow 

But  at  w  I  would  roam  abroad  and  play 

Low  thunder  and  light  in  the  magic  n — 

whoop  and  cry  All  n,  merrily,  merrily ; 

But  at  M  I  would  wander  away,  away, 

wasting  odorous  sighs  All  n  long 

Moving  thro'  a  fleecy  n. 

Float  by  you  on  the  verge  of  n. 

delight  of  frolic  flight,  by  day  or  n, 

There  she  weaves  by  n  and  day  A  magic  web 

For  often  thro'  the  silent  n's  A  funeral, 

As  often  thro'  the  purple  n, 

Thro'  the  noises  of  the  n 

And  '  Ave  Mary,'  n  and  morn, 
'  Madonna,  sad  is  n  and  morn,' 

'  That  won  his  praises  n  and  morn  ?  ' 

And  murmuring,  as  at  n  and  mom. 
More  inward  than  at  n  or  morn. 


Sup  p.  Confessions  45 

Mariana  21,  57 

25 

Clear-headed  friend  27 

Arabian  Nights  37 

69 

130 

Ode  to  Memory  28 

A  Character  2 

Poet's  Mind  28 

Sea-Fairies  9 

Deserted  House  5 

Oriana  19 

„       86 

The  Merman  11 

23 

27 

The  Mermaid  31 

Adeline  44 

Margaret  21 

31 

Rosalind  47 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  1 

"       ...30 

„      Hi  24 

iv  22 

Mariana  in  the  S.  10 

22 

34 

46 

58 


'  The  day  to  n,'  she  made  her  moan,  '  The  day  to  n, 

the  n  to  morn.  And  day  and  n  I  am  left  alone  „              81 

Heaven  over  Heaven  rose  the  n.  ,,              92 

*  The  n  comes  on  that  knows  not  morn,  „              94 

Look  up  thro'  n :  the  world  is  wide.  Two  Voices  24 

Would  sweep  the  tracts  of  day  and  n.  „         69 

Some  yearning  toward  the  lamps  of  w ;  „       363 

When  April  n's  began  to  blow,  Miller's  D.  106 

Fhtted  across  into  the  n,  „         127 

I  may  seem,  As  in  the  n's  of  old,  „          166 

For  hid  in  ringlets  day  and  n,  „          173 

I  scarce  should  be  unclasp'd  at  n.  „         186 

Last  n  I  wasted  hateful  hours  Fatima  8 

Last  n,  when  some  one  spoke  his  name,  „    15 

I  hear  Dead  sounds  at  n  come  from  the  inmost  hills,  (Enone  249 

wheresoe'er  I  am  by  n  and  day,  „     267 

I  rose  up  in  the  silent  n :  The  Sisters  25 

Echoing  all  n  to  that  sonorous  flow  Falace  of  Art  27 

young  n  divine  Crown'd  dying  day  with  stars,  „         183 

that  hears  all  n  The  plunging  seas  „          250 

I  sleep  so  sound  all  n,  mother.  May  Queen  9 
never  see  me  more  in  the  long  gray  fields 

at  n ;  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  26 

2  I 


Night 


498 


Night 


Night  {ccmtinued)     All  n  I  lie  awake,  but  I  fall 
asleep  at  mom ; 
came  a  sweeter  token  when  the  n  and  morn- 
ing meet: 
Drops  in  a  silent  autumn  n. 
Sound  all  n  long,  in  falling  thro'  the  dell, 
All  n  the  splinter'd  crags  that  wall  the  dell 
'  Saw  God  divide  the  n  with  flying  flame, 
Do  hunt  me,  day  and  ».' 
The  n  is  starry  and  cold,  my  friend. 
And  dwells  in  heaven  half  the  n. 


May  Queen,  N.  ¥'s.  E.  50 

Con.  22 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  34 

D  of  F.  Women  183 

187 

225 

256 

D.  of  the  0.  YearM 

To  J.  S.  52 


M.  d' Arthur  141 

202 

249 

Gardener's  D.  124 


182 

190 

267 

Audley  Court  79 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  74 

89 

Ed/uiin  Morris  134 

St.  S.  Stylites  113 

Love  and  Duty  59 

73 

Lochsley  Hall  7 

9 

26 

78 


heard  at  dead  of  n  to  greet  Troy's  wandering  prince.    On  a  Mourner  32 

the  moving  isles  of  winter  shock  By  m, 

like  a  wind,  that  shrills  All  n  in  a  waste  land, 

voice  Rise  like  a  fountain  for  me  n  and  day. 

last  n's  gale  had  caught,  And  blown 

all  that  n  I  heard  the  watchman  peal  The  sliding 

season:  all  that  n  I  heard  The  heavy  clocks 

knolling 
and  heir  to  all,  Made  this  n  thus. 
N  slid  down  one  long  stream  of  sighing  wind, 
ere  the  n  we  rose  And  saunter'd  home 
a  cry  Should  break  his  sleep  by  n. 
By  n  we  dragg'd  her  to  the  college  tower 
I  read,  and  fled  by  n,  and  flying  tum'd : 
in  the  n,  after  a  little  sleep,  I  wake : 
brought  the  n  In  which  we  sat  together 
and  of  sunrise  mix'd  In  that  brief  n ;  the  summer  n, 
Many  a  n  from  yonder  ivied  casement, 
Many  awl  saw  the  Pleiads, 
rosy  red  flushing  in  the  northern  n. 
In  the  dead  unhappy  n,  and  when  the  rain 

at  n  along  the  dusky  highway  near  and  nearer  di'awn,  „        113 
Beyond  the  n,  across  the  day.                                    Day- Dm.,  Depart.  31 

And  perplex'd  her,  n  and  mom,  L.  of  Burleigh  78 

And  bum  the  threshold  of  the  n.  The  Voyage  18 

New  stars  all  n  above  the  brim  Of  waters  „         25 

Down  the  waste  waters  day  and  n,  „         58 

overboard  one  stormy  n  He  cast  his  body,  „         79 
elfin  prancer  springs  By  n  to  eery  warblings,            Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  34 

And  round  again  to  happy  n.  Move  eastward  12 

I  HAD  a  vision  when  the  n  was  late :  Vision  of  Sin  1 

'  Thou  art  mazed,  the  n  is  long,  „      195 

And  the  longer  n  is  near :  „       196 

seem'd,  as  in  a  nightmare  of  the  n,  Enoch  Arden  114 

Many  a  sad  kiss  by  day  by  n  renew'd  „          161 

After  a  n  of  feverous  wakefulness,  „          231 

Then  fearing  n  and  chill  for  Annie,  „          443 

one  n  it  chanced  That  Annie  could  not  sleep,  „          489 

compass'd  round  by  the  blind  wall  of  n  „          492 

Half  the  n,  Buoy'd  upon  floating  tackle  „          550 

Hurt  in  that  n  of  sudden  ruin  and  wreck,  „          564 

thii-d  n  after  this.  While  Enoch  slumber'd  „          907 
was  Edith  that  same  n ;                                               Aylmer's  Field  279 

Yet  once  by  n  again  the  lovers  met,  „            413 

rustling  once  at  n  about  the  place,  „            547 

That  n,  that  moment,  when  she  named  his  name,  „            581 

one  n,  except  For  greenish  glimmerings  „            621 

Returning,  as  the  bird  retm-ns,  at  n.  Sea  Dreams  43 

the  sea  roars  Ruin :  a  fearful  n\'  „          81 

Left  him  one  hand,  and  reacliing  thro'  the  «  Her  other,  „        287 

your  sleep  for  this  one  n  be  sound :  „        315 

'  Storm  in  the  n !  for  thrice  I  heard  the  rain  iMcretius  26 

from  some  bay-window  shake  the  n ;  Princess  i  106 

To  float  about  a  glimmering  n,  „        247 

The  circled  Iris  of  a  n  of  tears ;  „     Hi  27 

My  mother,  'tis  her  wont  from  n  to  w  „          32 

And  so  last  n  she  fell  to  canvass  you :  „          40 

Up  in  one  n  and  due  to  sudden  sun :  „    iv  312 

Robed  in  the  long  n  of  her  deep  hair,  „        491 

the  long  fantastic  n  With  all  its  doings  „        565 

came  As  n  to  him  that  sitting  on  a  hiU  „        574 

later  in  the  »  Had  come  on  Psyche  weeping :  „       v  49 

You  did  but  come  as  goblins  in  the  n,  „        220 

heavy  dews  Gathered  by  n  and  peace,  „        244 


Night  (continued)    A  w  of  Summer  from  the  heat, 
like  n  and  evening  mixt  Their  dark  and  gray, 
whole  n's  long,  up  in  the  tower, 
cloud  Drag  inward  from  the  deeps,  a  wall  of  n, 
Drew  the  great  n  into  themselves, 
Blanche  had  sworn  That  after  that  dark  n  among 
Deep  in  the  n  I  woke : 
shares  with  man  His  n's,  his  days, 
the  new  day  comes,  the  light  Dearer  for  n, 
And  gradually  the  powers  of  the  n, 
Deepening  thy  voice  with  the  deepening  of  the  n, 
Stole  the  seed  by  n. 
All  n  have  I  heard  the  voice  Rave 
Draw  toward  the  long  frost  and  longest  n, 
all  n  upon  the  bridge  of  war  Sat  glorying  ; 
Taken  the  stars  from  the  n 
All  n  below  the  darken'd  eyes ; 
AU  M  no  loider  air  perplex 
I  hear  the  bell  struck  in  the  n ; 
That  strikes  by  «  a  craggy  shelf, 
Is  on  the  waters  day  and  n. 
Is  dash'd  with  wandering  isles  of  n. 
The  moon  is  hid ;  the  n  is  still ; 
To  enrich  the  threshold  of  the  n 
Draw  forth  the  cheerful  day  from  n : 
An  infant  ci-ying  in  the  n: 
At  n  she  weeps,  '  How  vain  am  I ! 
How  dwarf'd  a  growth  of  cold  and  n. 
His  n  of  loss  is  always  there. 
I  found  an  angel  of  the  n  ; 
And  mix  with  hoUow  masks  of  n ; 
And  howlest,  issuing  out  of  n. 
Come :  not  in  watches  of  the  n. 
By  n  we  linger'd  on  the  lawn. 
Withdrew  themselves  from  me  and  n, 
Power  was  with  him  in  the  n. 
On  that  last  n  before  we  went 
The  moon  is  hid,  the  n  is  still ; 
A  little  spare  the  n  I  loved, 
The  year  is  dying  in  the  n  ; 
bank  Of  vapour,  leaving  n  forlorn. 
Bright  Phosphor,  fresher  for  the  n, 
In  the  deep  n,  that  all  is  well, 
tho'  faith  and  form  Be  sunder'd  in  the  n  of  fear ; 
All  n  the  shining  vapour  sail 
shriek  of  a  mother  divide  the  shuddering  n. 
in  the  hush  of  the  moonless  n's, 
ghostlike,  deathlike,  half  the  n  long 
Last  n,  when  the  sunset  bum'd 
nodding  together  In  some  Arabian  n  ? 
Like  a  sudden  spark  Struck  vainly  in  the  n. 
Beat  to  the  noiseless  music  of  the  n ! 
Sat  with  her,  read  to  her,  n  and  day, 
For  the  black  bat,  n,  has  flown. 
All  n  have  the  roses  heard  The  flute. 
All  n  has  the  casement  jessamine  stirr'd 
brief  n  goes  In  babble  and  revel  and  wine, 
the  rose  was  awake  all  n  for  your  sake. 
Half  the  n  I  waste  in  sighs, 
the  lily  and  rose  That  blow  by  n, 
face  of  m  is  fair  on  the  dewy  downs, 
wolf  and  boar  and  bear  Came  n  and  day, 
that  same  n,  the  n  of  the  new  year, 
on  the  n  When  Uther  in  Tintagil  past  away 
Descending  thro'  the  dismal  n — a  n 
'  Blow  trumpet,  the  long  n  hath  roll'd  away ! 
couch'd  at  n  with  grimy  kitchen-knaves, 
names  himself  the  N  and  oftener  Death, 
Slain  by  himself,  shall  enter  endless  n. 
but  at  n  let  go  the  stone.  And  rise. 
To  fight  the  brotherhood  of  Day  and  N — 
Despite  of  Day  and  N  and  Death  and  Hell.' 
smells  the  honeysuckle  In  the  hush'd  n, 
like  a  phantom  pass  ChilUng  the  n : 
doom'd  to  be  the  bride  of  N  and  Death ; 


the  fields 


Princess  vi  54 

131 

255 

m37 

49 

73 

173 

263 

347 

„  Cow  111 

V.  of  Cauteretz  2 

The  Flower  12 

Voice  and  the  P.  5 

A  Dedication  11 

Spec,  of  Iliad  9 

Window,  Gone  5 

In  Mem.  iv  14 

„  ix  9 

x2 

„      xvi  13 

„     xvii  11 

„      xxiv  4 

„    xxviii  2 

„      xxix  6 

„     XXX  30 

liv  18 

1x15 

Ixi  7 

„    Ixvi  16 

„    Ixix  14 

„        Ixx  4 

„     Ixxii  2 

„      xci  13 

„        xcv  1 

18 

„     xcvi  18 

„        dii  1 

„        civ  2 

„        cv  15 

„         cvi  3 

„       cvii  4 

„      cxxi  9 

„  cxxvi  12 

„  exxvii  2 

„  Con  111 

Maud  I  il& 

42 

„       Hi  8 

viS 

„     vii  12 

„      ix  14 

„  xviii  77 

„    xix  75 

„    xxii  2 

13 

15 

27 

49 

„  II  iv  23 

„       1)75 

„IIIvi5 

Com.  of  Arthur  24 

209 

366 

371 

48S 

Gareth  and  L.  481 

638 

642 

825 

857 

887 

1288 

133& 

1396. 


Night 


499 


Night 


ingfat  (continued)    now  by  n  With  moon  and  trembling 

stars,  Marr.  of  Geraint  7 

At  distance,  ere  they  settle  for  the  n.  „  250 

Where  can  I  get  me  harbourage  for  the  « ?  „  281 

I  seek  a  harbourage  for  the  n.'  „  299 

the  n  Before  my  Enid's  birthday,  „  457 

draw  The  quiet  n  into  her  blood,  „  532 

given  her  on  the  n  Before  her  birthday,  „  632 

n  of  fire,  when  Edym  sack'd  their  house,  ,,  634 

So  sadly  lost  on  that  unhappy  n  ;  „  689 

But  hire  us  some  fair  chamber  for  the  n,  Geraint  and  E.  238 

or  touch  at  n  the  northern  star ;  Balin  and  Balan  166 

Last  n  methought  I  saw  That  maiden  Saint  „  260 

made  that  mouth  of  n  Whereout  the  Demon  „  316 

not  the  less  by  n  The  scorn  of  Garlon,  „  382 

and  now  The  n  has  come.  „  621 

rat  that  borest  in  the  dyke  Thy  hole  by  n  Merlin  and  V.  113 

sleepless  re's  Of  my  long  life  have  made  it  easy  „  679 

thither  wending  there  that  n  they  bode.  Lancelot  and  E.  412 

There  bode  the  n :  but  woke  with  dawn,  „  846 

she  tended  him.  And  likewise  many  an:  „  851 

80  the  simple  maid  Went  half  the  n  repeating,  „  899 

this  n  I  dream'd  That  I  was  all  alone  „  1045 

lily  maid  of  Astolat  Lay  smiling,  like  a  star  in  blackest  n.    „  1243 

Who  passes  thro'  the  vision  of  the  » —  „  1406 

Hdy  Grail  108 
123 
179 


471 
569 
607 
634 
682 
685 
810 
910 

Pelleas  and  E.  138 
357 
393 
395 
473 
487 
497 


waked  at  dead  of  n,  I  heard  a  sound 

The  rosy  quiverings  died  into  the  n. 

'  Then  on  a  summer  n  it  came  to  pass, 

but  moving  with  me  n  and  day,  Fainter  by  day,  but 

always  in  the  n  Blood-red, 
For  after  I  had  lain  so  many  n's, 
but  one  n  my  vow  Burnt  me  within, 
*  One  n  my  pathway  swerving  east, 
came  a  n  Still  as  the  day  was  loud ; 
For,  brother,  so  one  »,  because  they  roll 
on  the  seventh  n  I  heard  the  shingle  grinding 
Let  visions  of  the  n  or  of  the  day  Come, 
Nor  slept  that  n  for  pleasure  in  his  blood, 
The  third  n  hence  will  bring  thee  news  of  gold.' 
third  n  brought  a  moon  With  promise  of  large  light 
Hot  was  the  n  and  silent ; 
Here  in  the  stUl  sweet  summer  n, 
bounded  forth  and  vanish'd  thro'  the  n. 
by  wild  and  way,  for  half  the  n. 

Round  whose  sick  head  all  n,  like  birds  of  prey,    Last  Tournament  138 
And  Lancelot's,  at  this  n's  solemnity 
Heard  in  dead  n  along  that  table-shore, 
that  autumn  n,  like  the  hve  North, 
The  n  was  dark ;  the  true  star  set. 
one  black,  mute  midsummer  n  1  sat. 
That  n  came  Arthur  home, 
In  the  dead  n,  grim  faces  came  and  went 
And  then  they  were  agreed  upon  a  n 
Fled  all  n  long  by  glimmering  waste  and  weald, 
This  n,  a  rumour  wildly  blown  about  Came, 
and  dark  the  n  and  chUl ! 
and  dark  and  chill  the  n ! 
that  n  the  bard  Sang  Arthur's  glorious  wars, 
Thro'  the  thick  re  I  hear  the  trumpet  blow : 
making  all  the  n  a  steam  of  fire. 
like  wild  birds  that  change  Their  season  in  the  n 
As  of  some  lonely  city  sack'd  by  n, 
rose  the  King  and  moved  his  host  by  n, 
moving  isles  of  winter  shock  By  n, 
like  a  wind  that  shrills  All  n  in  a  waste  land. 
Rise  like  a  fountain  for  me  n  and  day. 
toils  across  the  middle  moonlit  n's, 
thence  one  n,  when  all  the  winds  were  loud, 
Then  had  he  stemm'd  my  day  with  n, 
darkness  of  the  grave  and  utter  n, 
day  was  as  the  n  to  me !     The  w  to  me  was  kinder 

than  the  day ;  The  n 
Between  the  going  light  and  growing  n  ? 
sent  my  cry  Thro'  the  blank  re  to  Him 
winds  Laid  the  long  n  in  silver  streaks 


223 
463 
479 
605 
612 
755 
Guinevere  70 
96 
128 
153 
168 
174 
285 
569 
599 

Pass,  of  Arthur  39 

43 

79 

309 

370 

417 

Lover's  Tale  i  138 
378 
502 
598 

610 
664 

752 

a  112 


Night  (continued)     Comes  in  upon  him  in  the  dead  of  re.   Lover's  Tale  ii  154 

With  half  a  n's  appliances,  „          iv  93 

So  the  sweet  figure  folded  round  with  n  „            219 

the  boat  went  down  that  n — (repeat)  First  Quarrel  92 

The  loud  black  n's  for  us,  Rizpak  6 

But  the  re  has  crept  into  my  heart,  „     16 

what  should  you  know  of  the  re,  „     17 

in  the  n  by  the  churchyard  wall.  „     56 

once  of  a  frosty  n  I  sUther'd  North.  Cobbler  19 

one  n  I  cooms  'oam  like  a  bull  gotten  loose  at  a  faair,  „            33 

Ship  after  ship,  the  whole  n  long,  (repeat)  The  Revenge  58,  59,  60 

half  of  the  short  summer  re  was  gone,  „                        65 

the  n  went  down,  and  the  sun  smiled  „                        70 

fought  such  a  fight  for  a  day  and  a  re  „                        83 

cloud  that  roofs  our  noon  with  m,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  17 

A  moonless  re  with  storm —  „                96 

For  on  the  dark  re  of  our  marriage-day  „              232 

Thro'  dreams  by  re  and  trances  of  the  day,  „              274 

fur  New  Squire  coom'd  last  re.  Village  Wife  1 

and  it  gied  me  a  scare  tother  re,  „          81 

fur  he  coom'd  last  re  sa  laate —  „        123 

I  had  sat  three  re's  by  the  child —  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  59 

we  laid  him  that  re  in  his  grave.  Def.  of  Luclcnow  12 
to  be  soldier  all  day  and  be  sentinel  all  thro' 

the  n —  „              74 

Ever  the  re  with  its  coffinless  corpse  „              80 

Then  day  and  re,  day  and  n,  „             92 

that  one  re  a  crowd  Throng'd  the  waste  field  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  39 

Not  yet — not  all — last  re  a  dream —  Columbus  66 

thunders  in  the  black  Veragua  n's,  „        146 

I  send  my  prayer  by  re  and  day —  „        233 

arm'd  by  day  and  re  Against  the  Turk  ;  Montenegro  3 

One  re  when  earth  was  winter-black.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  21 

And  oldest  age  in  shadow  from  the  n,  Tiresias  104 

Heard  from  the  roofs  by  n,  „        140 

he  roll'd  himself  At  dead  of  n —  „        146 

By  re,  into  the  deeper  re !     The  deeper  re  ?  „        204 

If  re,  what  barren  toil  to  be !  „        207 

What  hfe,  so  maim'd  by  re,  „         208 

ghastlier  face  than  ever  has  haunted  a  grave  by  re,  The  Wreck  8 

leaf  rejoice  in  the  frost  that  sears  it  at  re ;  „        20 

Follow'd  us  too  that  re,  and  dogg'd  us.  Despair  2 

What  did  I  feel  that  re  ?  „         3 

but  ah  God,  that  re,  that  re  „         8 

We  had  past  from  a  cheerless  w  „      28 

for  she  past  from  the  re  to  the  re.  „      72 

She  feels  the  Sun  is  hid  but  for  a  re,  Ancient  Sage  73 

senses  break  away  To  mix  with  ancient  N."  „        153 

When  all  is  dark  as  re.'  „        170 

doors  of  N  may  be  the  gates  of  Light ;  „        174 

pass  From  sight  and  «  to  lose  themselves  „        203 

'  And  N  and  Shadow  rule  below  „        243 

Day  and  N  are  children  of  the  Sun,  „        245 
Some  say,  the  Light  was  father  of  the  N,  And  some, 

the  N  was  father  of  the  Light,  No  re  no  day ! — ■  „        247 

but  re  enough  is  there  In  yon  dark  city :  „        252 

And  past  the  range  of  N  and  Shadow —  „        283 
all  re  so  calm  you  lay.  The  re  was  calm,  the  mom 

is  calm,  The  Flight  9 

all  re  I  pray'd  with  tears,  „        17 

love  that  keeps  this  heart  aUve  beats  on  it  n  and  day —  „        35 

bride  who  stabb'd  her  bridegroom  on  her  bridal  n —  „        57 

an'  meself  remimbers  wan  re  Tomorrow  7 

But  wirrah !  the  storm  that  re —  „         23 

An'  yer  hair  as  black  as  the  re,  „        32 

a  hiccup  at  ony  hour  o'  the  re !  Spinster's  S's.  98 

hunting  grounds  beyond  the  re ;  Locksfey  H.,  Sixty  69 

and  passing  now  into  the  re ;  „            227 

sun  hung  over  the  gates  of  N,  Dead  Prophet  23 

Thou  sawest  a  glory  growing  on  the  re,  EpU.  on  Caxton  2 

FntST  pledge  our  Queen  this  solemn  w,  Hands  all  Rownd  1 

Macready,  since  this  n  we  part.  To  W.  C.  Macready  5 

bird  that  flies  All  re  across  the  darkness,  Demeter  and  P.  2 

gave  Thy  breast  to  ailing  infants  in  the  n,  „            56 

out  from  aU  the  n  an  answer  shrill'd,  ,,           61 


Night 


500 


Noble 


Wigkt  (continued)    To  send  the  moon  into  the  n  Demeter  and  P.  135 

An'  theere  i'  the  'ouse  one  n —  Owd  Rod  27 

one  n  I  wm-  sittin'  aloan,  „        29 

oop  wi'  the  windle  that  n;  „        32 

I  loookt  out  wonst  at  the  n,  „        39 

goa  that  n  to  'er  foalk  by  cause  o'  the  Christmas  Eave ;  „        52 

cocks  kep  a-crawin'  an'  crawin'  all  n,  „      106 

she  cotch'd  'er  death  o'  cowd  that  n,  „      114 

at  n  Stirs  up  again  in  the  heart  of  the  sleeper,  Fastness  17 

Moon,  you  fade  at  times  From  the  n.  The  Ring  10 

In  the  n,  in  the  n,  (repeat)  Forlorn  5,  11,  17 

Catherine,  Catherine,  in  the  n,  „                13 


Ninety  (continued)     But  I've  n  men  and  more  that  are  lying 

sick  The  Revenge  10 

With  her  hundred  fighters  on  deck,  and  her  n  sick  below ;  „  34 

fingers  were  so  stiEfen'd  by  the  frost  Of  seven  and  n 


In  the  n,  O  the  n !  (repeat) 


0  the  n  of  weeping ! 
In  the  ft,  and  nigh  the  dawn, 
remember  that  red  n  When  thirty  ricks, 
Narrowing  the  bounds  of  «.' 

1  dream'd  last  n  of  that  clear  summer  noon, 
morn  Has  lifted  the  dark  eyelash  of  the  iV 
And — well,  if  I  sinn'd  last  n. 
Black  was  the  n  when  we  crept  away — 
she  sat  day  and  n  by  my  bed. 
Was  it  only  the  wind  of  the  N 
O  ye  Heavens,  of  your  boundless  n's, 

Nightblack     High  on  a  w  horse,  in  n  arms, 

drew  down  from  out  his  n-b  hair 
Nightcap     but  alter  my  n  wur  on ; 
Night-dew    Or  n-d's  on  still  waters 
Night-fold    we  were  nursed  in  the  drear  n-f 
Night-fowl    Waking  she  heard  the  n-f  crow : 
Nightin^e     No  n  delighteth  to  prolong 

M  Sang  loud,  as  tho'  he  were  the  bird 

whisper  of  tlie  leaves  That  tremble  round  a  n — 

As  'twere  a  hundred-throated  n, 

n  thought,  '  I  have  sung  many  songs. 

Sleeps  in  the  plain  eggs  of  the  n. 

And  all  about  us  peal'd  the  n, 

at  mine  ear  Bubbled  the  n  and  heeded  not, 

in  the  bush  beside  me  chirrupt  the  n. 

N's  warbled  without, 

N's  sang  in  his  woods : 

N's  warbled  and  sang  Of  a  passion 

To  think  or  say,  '  There  is  the  n ; ' 

The  n,  full-toned  in  middle  May, 

the  n's  hymn  in  the  dark. 

That  n  is  heard ! 

n  Saw  thee,  and  flash'd  into  a  froUc 
Night-lamp    Where  the  dying  n-l  flickers. 
Night-light    n-l  flickering  in  my  eyes  Awoke  me.' 
Night-long    A  n-l  Present  of  the  Past 
Nightly    made  The  n  wirer  of  their  innocent  hare 
Nightmare  (adj.)     This  n  weight  of  gratitude, 
Nightmare  (s)     And  horrible  n's.  And  hollow  shades 

Like  one  that  feels  a  «  on  his  bed 

N  of  youth,  the  spectre  of  himself  ? 

He  seem'd,  as  in  a  »  of  the  night, 

Like  one  that  feels  a  w  on  his  bed 

the  babblings  in  a  dream  Of  n, 
Kigfat-wind    The  n-w's  come  and  go,  mother, 
Nile     shaker  of  the  Baltic  and  the  N, 
Nilns    N  would  have  rLsen  before  his  time 
Nine    N  times  goes  the  passing  bell : 

N  years  she  wrought  it,  sitting  in  the  deeps 

As  n  months  go  to  the  shaping  an  infant 

n  tithes  of  times  Face-flatterer  and  backbiter 

For  so  by  n  years'  proof  we  needs  must  leam 

N  years  she  wrought  it,  sitting  in  the  deeps 

And  n  long  mont&  of  antenatal  gloom. 

For  n  white  moons  of  each  whole  year  with 
me, 
Nine-days'    Fire  in  dry  stubble  a  n-d  wonder  flared : 
Nineteen-hundred    Tenderest  of  Roman  poets  n-h  years 

Ninety    Hose  a  nurse  of  n  years, 


2^0^077123,29,35,41,47, 

53, 59,  65,  71,  77 

Forlorn  48 

83 

To  Mary  Boyle  35 

Prog,  of  Spring  91 

Romney's  R.  74 

Akbar's  Dream  201 

Bandit's  Death  18 

25 

Charity  33 

The  Dreamer  15 

God  and  the  Univ.  2 

Gareth  atid  L.  1381 

Balin  and  Balan  511 

Village  Wife  122 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  3 

Despair  21 

Mariana  26 

Palace  of  Art  173 

Gardener's  D.  95 

-  „         254 

Vision  of  Sin  27 

Poet's  Song  13 

Aylmer's  Field  103 

Princess  i  220 

„    iv  266 

Grandmother  40 

G.  of  Swainston  1 

6 


Marr.  of  Geraint  342 

Balin  and  Balan  213 

First  Quarrel  34 

Ancient  Sage  20 

Demeter  and  P.  11 

LocJcsley  Hall  80 

Sea  Dreams  103 

In  Mem.  Ixxi  3 

Aylmer's  Field  490 

Princess  vi  300 

Palace  of  Art  2'iO 

M.  d' Arthur  177 

Love  and  Duty  13 

Enoch  Arden  114 

Pass,  of  Arthur  345 

Ancient  Sage  107 

May  Queen  33 

Ode  on  Well.  137 

D.  ofF.  Women  143 

All  Things  wiU  Die  35 

M.  d' Arthur  105 

Maud  I  iv  34 

Merlin  and  V.  823 

Lancelot  and  E.  62 

Pass,  of  Arthur  273 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  8 


Demeter  and  P.  121 
Lancelot  and  E.  735 

Frater  Ave,  etc.  6 
Princess  vi  13 


wmters, 
Nine-years-fought-for    The  n-y-f-f  diamonds : 
Nine-years-ponder'd    Adviser  of  the  n-y-p  lay, 
Ninth    Till  last,  a  n  one,  gathering  half  the  deep 

With  this  n  moon,  that  sends  the  hidden  sun 
Niobe     Upon  her  tower,  the  N  of  swine, 
Niobean    A  N  daughter,  one  arm  out, 
Nip     close  again,  and  n  me  flat, 
Nipt    n  to  death  by  him  That  was  a  God, 

n  her  slender  nose  With  petulant  thumb 

n  the  hand,  and  flung  it  from  her ; 
No     brightens  at  the  clash  of  '  Yes '  and  '  N,' 
Noaks    N  or  Thimbleby — toaner  'ed  shot  'um 

N  wur  'ang'd  for  it  oop  at  'soize — 
Noase  (nose)    1  loook'd  cock-eyed  at  my  n 

wi'  'is  glasses  athurt  'is  n, 

An'  'is  n  sa  grufted  wi'  snuff 

An'  anoother  agean  my  n. 
Noation  (notion)     Thim's  my  n's,  Sammy,  wheerby  I 

means  to  stick ; 
Nobility    O  fall'n  n,  that,  overawed, 

And  pure  n  of  temperament. 
Noble  (adj.)     As  n  till  the  latest  day  ! 

When,  soil'd  with  n  dust,  he  hears 

And  slew  him  with  your  n  birth. 

'  Tis  only  n  to  be  good. 

Resolved  on  n  things,  and  strove  to  speak, 

That  takes  away  a  n  mind. 

What  wonder,  if  in  w  heat  Those  men 

as  beseem'd  Thy  fealty,  nor  like  a  n  knight 

When  every  morning  brought  a  n  chance.  And  every 
chance  brought  out  a  n  knight. 

Some  work  of  n  note,  may  yet  be  done, 

So  the  Powers,  who  wait  On  n  deeds, 

And  beaker  brimm'd  with  n  wine. 

in  whom  he  had  rehance  For  his  n  name. 

That  she  grew  a  n  lady, 

n  wish  To  save  all  earnings  to  the  uttermost, 

Not  Tceef  it  n,  make  it  nobler  ?  fools, 

Thy  God  is  far  diffused  in  n  groves 

'  O  n  heart  who,  being  strait-besieged 

O  miracle  of  n  womanhood ! ' 

since  to  look  on  n  forms  Makes  n 

Better  not  be  at  all  Than  not  be  n. 

O  Vashti,  n  Vashti !     Summon'd  out  She  kept  her 
state, 

She  bow'd  as  if  to  veil  a  n  tear ; 

thus  a  n  scheme  Grew  up  from  seed 

O  n  Ida,  to  those  thoughts  that  wait 

No  more,  and  in  our  n  sister's  cause  ? 

at  the  heart  Made  for  all  n  motion : 

Her  n  heart  was  molten  in  her  breast ; 

she  rose  Glowing  all  over  n  shame ; 

Like  perfect  music  unto  n  words ; 

Yoked  in  all  exercise  of  n  end, 

A  gallant  fight,  a  n  princess — 

keep  our  n  England  whole. 

And  all  men  work  in  n  brotherhood. 

Those  niched  shapes  of  n  mould. 

Close  to  the  ridge  of  a  n  down. 

Tear  the  n  heart  of  Britain, 

And  dead  calm  in  that  n  breast 

The  captive  void  of  n  rage. 

And  move  thee  on  to  n  ends. 

Let  this  not  vex  thee,  n  heart ! 

The  n  letters  of  the  dead : 

join'd  Each  office  of  the  social  hour  To  n  manners,  as 
the  flower  And  native  growth  of  n  mind ; 

was  a  n  type  Appearing  ere  the  times 

To  a  grandson,  first  of  his  n  line. 

And  n  thought  be  freer  imder  the  sun. 


The  Ring  240 

Lancelot  and  E.  1167 

Poets  and  their  B.  6 

Com.  of  Arthur  380 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  33 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  99 

Princess  iv  371 

Merlin  and  V.  350 

Edwin  Morris  101 

Gar'.th  and  L.  749 

Pelleas  and  E.  133 

Ancient  Sage  71 

N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  35 

36 

North.  Cobbler  26 

Village  Wife  38 

39 

Church-warden,  etc.  26 


N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  57 

Third  of  Feb.  35 

Marr.  of  Geraint  212 

To  the  Queen  22 

Two  Voices  152 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  48 

54 

D.ofF.  Women  42 

To  J.  S.  48 

England  and  Amer.  6 

M.  d' Arthur  75 


230 

Ulysses  52 

Godiva  72 

Day-Dm  ,  Sleep  P.  36 

The  Captain  58 

L.  of  Burleigh  74 

Enoch  Arden  85 

Aylmer's  Field  386 

653 

Princess,  Pro.  36 

48 

«  86 

94 

Hi  228 

289 

w309 

443 

V  312 

384 

vi  119 

*«»  160 

286 

361 

Con.  19 

Ode  on  Well.  161 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  38 

The  Daisy  38 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  16 

Boddicea  12 

In  Mem.  xi  19 

„       xxvii  2 

to)  12 

„      Ixxix  2 

xcv  24 


„        cxi  15 

„    Con.  138 

Maud  I  xl2 

„  ///  vi 


1 


Noble 


501 


Nodded 


Noble  (adj.)  (continued)    We  have  proved  we  have  hearts  in 

a  cause,  we  are  n  still,  Mavd  III  vi  55 

Thou  n  Father  of  her  Kings  to  be.  Bed.  of  Idylls  34 

But  thou  art  closer  to  this  n  prince,  Com.  of  Arthur  314 

When  some  good  knight  had  done  one  n  deed,  GareiJi  and  L.  411 

Tut,  an  the  lad  were  n,  „  473 

All  kind  of  service  with  a  n  ease  „  489 

'  Lynette  my  name  ;  n ;  my  need,  a  knight  „  607 

Sweet  lord,  how  like  a  n  knight  he  talks !  „  777 

Or  sit  beside  a  n  gentlewoman.'  „  867 

O  knave,  as  n  as  any  of  all  the  knights —  „        1136 

Missaid  thee :  n  I  am ;  and  thought  the  King  „        1165 

Then  tum'd  the  n  damsel  smiHng  at  him,  „        1188 

'  Nay,  n  damsel,  but  that  I,  the  son  „        1230 

merry  am  I  to  find  my  goodly  knave  Is  knight  and  n.  „        1292 

0  «  Lancelot,  from  my  hold  on  these  Streams  virtue —  „        1309 

'  O  n  breast  and  all-puissant  anns,  Marr.  of  Geraint  86 

Not  hearing  any  more  his  n  voice, 
'  Yea,  n  Queen,'  he  answer'd, 
now  thinking  that  he  heard  The  n  hart  at  bay, 
Greraint,  a  name  far-sounded  among  men  For  n  deeds  ? 
So  grateful  is  the  noise  of  «  deeds  To  «  hearts 
Let  me  lay  lance  in  rest,  O  n  host, 
'  This  n  prince  who  won  our  earldom  back, 
all  That  appertains  to  n  maintenance. 
See  ye  take  the  charger  too,  A  n  one.' 
she  Kiss'd  the  white  star  upon  his  n  front, 
Such  fine  reserve  and  n  reticence. 
Like  simple  w  natures,  credulous 
Our  n  King  will  send  thee  his  own  leech — • 
Not,  doubtless,  all  uneam'd  by  n  deeds. 
Our  n  Arthur,  him  Ye  scarce  can  overpraise, 
'  She  is  too  n '  he  said  '  to  check  at  pies. 
That  makes  you  seem  less  n  than  yoinself , 
for  love  of  God  and  men  And  n  deeds,  the  flower  of  all 

the  world.     And  each  incited  each  to  n  deeds, 
such  a  n  song  was  that. 

were  aU  as  tame,  I  mean,  as  n,  as  their  Queen 
Is  that  an  answer  for  a  n  knight  ? 
shame  me  not  Before  this  n  knight,' 
To  ride  to  Camelot  with  this  n  knight : 
full  Of  n  things,  and  held  her  from  her  sleep. 
'  Fair  lord,  whose  name  I  know  not — n  it  is, 
Needs  must  be  lesser  likelihood,  n  lord. 
And  ride  no  more  at  random,  n  Prince ! 
O  loyal  nephew  of  our  n  King, 
to  be  sweet  and  serviceable  To  n  knights  in  sickness, 
'  Nay,  n  maid,'  he  answer'd,  '  ten  times  nay ! 
Was  n  man  but  made  ignoble  talk. 
'  Most  n  lord.  Sir  Lancelot  of  the  Lake, 
Wifeless  and  heirless,  n  issue,  sons  Born 
This  chance  of  n  deeds  will  come  and  go 

Unchallenged, 
So  strange,  of  such  ,a  kind,  that  all  of  pure  iV, 
All  of  true  and  n  in  knight  and  man 
and  Pelleas  look'd  N  among  the  n, 
fire  of  honour  and  all  n  deeds  Flash'd, 
O  n  vows !     O  great  and  sane  and  simple  race 
By  n  deeds  at  one  with  n  vows, 
by  whom  all  men  Are  n, 
'  0  pray  you,  n  lady,  weep  no  more ; 
FuU  many  a  n  war-song  had  he  sung, 
'  Sir  Lancelot,  as  became  a  n  knight, 
fruit  Of  loyal  nature,  and  of  n  mind.' 
Less  n,  being,  as  aU  rumour  runs, 


I 


178 
233 
428 
437 
496 
619 
712 
Geraint  and  E.  556 
757 
860 
875 
Balin  and  Balan  275 
471 
Merlin  and  V.  91 
126 
322 

413 

433 

608 

Lancelot  and  E.  201 

208 

220 

339 

360 

367 

633 

652 

768 

948 

1088 

1272 

1371 

Holy  Grail  318 

774 

882 

Pelleas  and  E.  152 

278 

479 

Last  Tournament  123 

600 

Guinevere  184 

278 

328 

336 

339 


If  ever  Lancelot,  that  most  n  knight.  Were  for  one 

hour  less  n  than  himself,  „         345 

Sir  Lancelot's,  were  as  w  as  the  King's,  „        351 

And  worship  her  by  years  of  n  deeds,  „        476 

And  miss  to  hear  high  talk  of  n  deeds  „        499 

and  in  the  mist  Was  many  a  n  deed.  Pass,  of  Arthur  105 

as  beseem'd  Thy  fealty,  nor  Uke  a  n  knight :  „  243 
When  every  morning  brought  a  n  chance,  And 

every  chance  brought  out  a  n  knight.  m            398 

And  bearing  on  one  arm  the  n  babe,  Lover's  Tale  iv  370 


Noble  (adj.)  [continued)     and  was  n  in  birth  as  in 

worth,  V.  of  Maeldune  3 

I  have  sullied  a  n  name.  The  Wreck  5 

to  crown  with  song  The  warrior's  n  deed —  Epilogue  37 

'  So  great  so  n  was  he ! '  Dead  Prophet  30 

till  his  Word  Had  won  him  a  n  name.     N !  he  sung,  „          36 

Great  and  n — O  yes — but  yet —  „           43 

N  and  great — 0  ay — but  then,  „           49 

To  all  our  n  sons,  the  strong  New  England  Hands  all  Round  15 

Where  n  Ulric  dwells  forlorn,  Happy  10 

But  come.  My  n  friend,  my  faithful  counsellor,  Akbar's  Dream  18 

N  the  Saxon  who  hurl'd  at  his  Idol  Kapiolani  4 

Noble  (s)     Where  the  wealthy  n's  dwell.'  L.  of  Burleigh  24 

The  n  and  the  convict  of  Castile,  Columbus  117 
Nobleman    she,  you  know.  Who  wedded  with  a  n  from 

thence :  Princess  i  77 

Noble-natured     the  boy  Is  n-n.  Gareth  and  L.  468 

Nobleness     With  such  a  vantage-ground  for  n !  Aylmer's  Field  387 

And  much  I  praised  her  m.  Princess,  Pro.  124 

That  you  trust  me  in  your  own  n.  Lancelot  and  E.  1195 

Some  root  of  knighthood  and  pure  n  ;  Holy  Grail  886 

the  wines  being  of  such  n —  Lover's  Tale  iv  222 
kings  of  men  in  utter  n  of  mind,                             LocTcsley  H.,  Sixty  122 

Nobler     am  I  not  the  n  thro'  thy  love  ?  Love  and  Duty  19 

Not  keep  it  noble,  make  it  n.  ?  Aylmer's  Field  386 

Balmier  and  n  from  her  bath  of  storm,  Lucretius  175 

And  since  the  n  pleasure  seems  to  fade.  „        230 

as  to  slay  One  n  than  thyself.'  Gareth  and  L.  981 

A  something — was  it  n  than  myself  ? —  Pelleas  and  E.  310 

might  in  wreathe  (How  lovelier,  n  then !)  Lover's  Tale  i  459 

Seem'd  n  than  their  hard  Eternities.  Demeter  and  P.  107 

O  you  that  hold  A  n  office  upon  earth  To  the  Queen  2 

A  n  yearning  never  broke  her  rest  The  form,  the  form  2 

'  But,  if  I  lapsed  from  n  place,  Two  Voices  358 

As  emblematic  of  a  m  age ;  Princess  ii  127 

Tbo'  all  men  else  their  n  dreams  forget.  Ode  on  Well.  152 

There  must  be  other  n  work  to  do  „             256 

And  thou  shalt  take  a  n  leave.'  In  Mem.  Iviii  12 

He  past;  a  soul  of  n  tone :  In  Mem.lx  1 

Ring  in  the  n  modes  of  life,  „          cvi  15 

Are  breathere  of  an  ampler  day  For  ever  n  ends.  „        cxviii  7 

The  fair  beginners  of  a  w  time,  Com.  of  Arthur  457 

how  can  Enid  find  A  n  friend  ?  Marr.  of  Geraint  793 

in  my  heart  of  hearts  I  did  acknowledge  n.  Lancelot  and  E.  1211 

This  earth  has  never  borne  a  n  man.  Epit.  on  Gordon  4 

thro'  all  the  n  hearts  In  that  vast  Oval  St.  Telemachus  72 

Noblest     Truest  friend  and  n  foe ;  Princess  vi  7 

The  n  answer  unto  such  Is  perfect  stillness  Lit.  Squabbles  19 

but  he.  Our  n  brother,  and  our  truest  man,  Gareth  and  L.  565 

let  Lancelot  know.  Thy  n  and  thy  truest ! '  „  568 
let  her  tongue  Rage  hke  a  fire  among  the  n  names,  Merlin  and  V.  802 
goodliest  man  That  ever  among  ladies  ate  in  hall, 

And  n,  Lancelot  and  E.  256 
one  Of  n  manners,  tho'  himself  would  say  Sir 

Lancelot  had  the  noblest ;  Guinevere  319 

But  pray  you,  which  had  n,  while  you  moved  „        325 

here  in  Edward's  time,  an  age  of  n  EngUsh  names,      Locksley  H.,  Sixty  83 

All  that  is  w,  aU  that  is  basest.  Fastness  32 

One  of  our  n,  our  most  valorous,  Geraint  and  E.  910 

noble  it  is,  I  well  beUeve,  the  n —  Lancelot  and  E.  361 

knight  of  Arthur's  n  dealt  in  scorn ;  Guinevere  40 

would  say  Sir  Lancelot  had  the  n ;  „        320 

Noblest-hearted     truest,  kindliest,  n-h  wife  Romney's  R.  35 

Noblier-fashion'd    Was  he  n-f  than  other  men  ?  Dead  Prophet  51 

Nobly     have  ye  seen  how  n  changed  ?  Geraint  and  E.  897 

Nobly-manner'd    Were  the  most  n-m  men  of  all ;  Guinevere  334 

Nod  (s)     And  flooded  at  our  n.  D.  of  F.  Women  144 

With  frequent  smile  and  n  departing  Marr.  of  Geraint  515 

an'  she  gev  him  a  frindly  n,  Tomorrow  58 

Nod  (verb)     Glares  at  one  that  w's  and  winks  Locksley  Hall  136 

Then  moves  the  trees,  the  copses  n,  Sir  Galahad.  77 

Nodded    The  parson  smirk'd  and  n.  The  Goose  20 

He  n,  but  a  moment  afterwards  He  cried.  Gardener's  D.  120 

And  Walter  n  at  me ;  '  He  began,  Princess,  Pro.  200 

Florian  n  at  him,  I  frowning ;  „           iv  159 


Nodded 


502 


Northern 


Nodded  (corUinued)    Doubted,  and  drowsed,  n  and  slept,  Com.  of  Arthur  427 

Sir  Kay  n  him  leave  to  go,  «      -       -  - 

And  after  n  sleepily  in  the  heat. 

Miriam  «  with  a  pitying  smile, 
Nodding    n,  as  in  scorn,  He  parted, 

Viziers  n  together  In  some  Arabian  night  ? 

Then  her  father  n  said,  '  Ay,  ay, 
Noight  (nigbt)     I've  'ed  my  point  o'  aale  ivry  n 
Noit    Showing  a  shower  of  blood  in  a  field  n, 
Noise    Thro'  the  n's  of  the  night 

Blowing  a  n  of  tongues  and  deeds. 

The  milldam  rushing  down  with  n, 

n  of  some  one  coming  thro'  the  lawn, 

So  all  day  long  the  n  of  battle  roU'd 

with  n's  of  the  northern  sea. 

such  a  n  of  Ufe  Swarm'd  in  the  golden  present, 

There  rose  a  «.  of  striking  clocks, 

I  bear  a  w  of  hymns : 

month  by  month  the  n  about  their  doors. 

Made  n  with  bees  and  breeze  from  end  to  end. 

scarce  could  hear  each  other  speak  for  n  Of  clocks 
and  chimes, 

compass'd  by  two  armies  and  the  n  Of  arms ; 

A  w  of  songs  they  would  not  imderstand : 

To  the  n  of  the  mourning  of  a  mighty  nation, 

far  from  n  and  smoke  of  town, 

Made  the  n  of  frosty  woodlands. 

The  n  of  life  begins  again, 

I  hear  the  n  about  thy  keel ; 

Whose  youth  was  full  of  foolish  n. 

Autumn,  with  a  w  of  rooks, 

all  within  was  n  Of  songs,  and  clapping  hands, 

u  of  ravage  wrought  by  beast  and  man, 

out  of  town  and  valley  came  a  n 

So  grateful  is  the  n  of  noble  deeds 

lusty  spearmen  f ollow'd  him  with  n : 

Scared  by  the  n  upstarted  at  our  feet, 

poplars  made  a  w  of  falling  showers. 

poplars  with  their  n  of  falling  showers, 

She,  that  had  heard  the  n  of  it  before, 

some  doubtful  n  of  creaking  doors. 

So  all  day  long  the  n  of  battle  roU'd 

with  n's  of  the  Northern  Sea. 

N's  of  a  current  narrowing, 

n  of  faUing  weights  that  never  fell, 

being  waked  By  n's  in  the  house — 
Noised    do  the  deed.  Than  to  be  n  of.' 
Noiseful     Feom  n  arms,  and  acts  of  prowess 
Noiseless     a  n  riot  underneath  Strikes  tlux)ugh  the  wood, 

Or  like  to  n  phantoms  flit : 

Beat  to  the  n  music  of  the  night ! 
Noisy    I  wander'd  from  the  n  town, 

I  cast  them  in  the  n  brook  beneath. 
None    There  is  n  like  her,  n.  (repeat) 

N  like  her,  n. 
Nook    odd  games  In  some  odd  n's  like  this ; 

^  made  the  old  warrior  from  his  ivied  n 
Noon     At  n  the  wild  bee  hummeth 

fire  Would  rive  the  slumbrous  summer  n 

Till  now  at  n  she  slept  again, 

from  beyond  the  n  a  fire  Is  pour'd  upon  the  hills, 

Hither  came  at  n  Mournful  (Enone, 


On  corpses  three-months-old  at  n  she  came, 
Sun-steep'd  at  n,  and  in  the  moon 
In  those  old  days,  one  summer  n, 
till  n  no  foot  should  pace  the  street, 
the  shameless  n  Was  clash'd  and  hammer'd 
I  took  my  leave,  for  it  was  nearly  n : 
ere  I  woke  it  was  the  point  of  n, 
pensive  tendance  in  the  all-weary  n's. 
Climb  thy  thick  n,  disastrous  day; 
What  stays  thee  from  the  clouded  n's. 
At  n  or  when  the  lesser  wain 
That  must  be  made  a  wife  ere  n  ? 
But  now.set  out :  the  n  is  near, 


Gareth  and  L.  520 

Geraint  and  E.  253 

Thu  Bing  281 

Godiva  30 

Maud  I  vii  11 

Lancelot  and  E.  110 

N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  7 

Last  Tournament  433 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  22 

Two  Voices  206 

Miller's  D.  50 

D.  of  F.  Women  178 

M.  d' Arthur  1 

141 

Gardener's  D.  178 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  2 

Sir  Galahad  28 

Aylmer's  Field  488 

Princess,  Pro.  88 

i  215 

1)345 

„  vi  40 

Ode  on  Well.  4 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  13 

Boadicea  75 

In  Mem.  vii  10 

x\ 

„  liii  3 

„     Ixxxv  71 

„  Ixxxvii  18 

Gareth  and  L.  437 

Mart,  of  Geraint  247 

437 

Geraint  and  E.  593 

Merlin  and  V.  422 

Lancelot  and  E.  411 

523 

731 

Guinevere  72 

Pass,  of  Arthur  170 

309 

LocTcsley  H.,  Sixty  154 

The  Ring  410 

417 

Gareth  and  L.  573 

Holy  Grail  1 

Lucretius  185 

In  Mem.  xx  16 

Maud  I  xviii  11 

In  Mem.  Ixix  5 

Lover's  Tale  ii  41 

Maud  I  xviii  2,  13 

7 

The  Epic  9 

Princess,  Pro.  104 

Clarihel  11 

Supp.  Confessions  11 

Mariana  in  the  S.  41 

Fatima  30 

(Enone  15 

Palace  of  Art  243 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  29 

M.  d' Arthur  29 

Godiva  39 

74 

Princess  v  468 

482 

„     vii  102 

In  Mem.  Ixxii  26 

„       Ixxxiii  5 

ctll 

Con.  26 

41 


Noon  [continued)    at  the  point  of  n  the  huge  Earl 
Doorm, 
Or  in  the  n  of  mist  and  driving  rain, 
Riding  at  n,  a  day  or  twain  before, 
Beheld  at  n  in  some  dehcious  dale 
In  those  old  days,  one  summer  n, 
the  white  heats  of  the  blinding  n's 
When  first  we  came  from  out  the  pines  at  n, 
cloud  that  roofs  our  n  with  night, 
and  the  owls  are  whooping  at  n. 
To  vex  the  n  with  fiery  gems. 
Name,  surname,  all  as  clear  as  n, 
in  the  brooding  light  of  w  ? 
I  dream'd  last  night  of  that  clear  summer  n, 
A  fall  of  water  lull'd  the  n  asleep, 
mists  of  earth  Fade  in  the  n  of  heaven, 
We  are  far  from  the  n  of  man, 

Noonday    now  the  n  quiet  holds  the  hill : 
Made  by  the  n  blaze  without, 
O  sun,  that  from  thy  n  height 
shone  the  N  Sun  Beyond  a  raging  shallow. 
And  thrice  as  blind  as  any  n  owl, 
The  n  crag  made  the  hand  burn ; 


Geraint  and  E.  536 

Merlin  and  V.  636 

Pdleas  and  E.  20 

Guinevere  393 

Pass,  of  Arthur  197 

Lover's  Tale  i  139 

310 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  17 

Despair  89 

Ancient  Sage  265 

The  Ring  237 

Happy  99 

Romney's  R.  74 

83 

Akbar's  Dream  97 

The  Dawn  20 

(Enone  25 

St.  Telemachv^  50 

Fatima  2 

Gareth  and  L.  1027 

Holy  Grail  866 

Tiresias  35 


Noon-Sun    Morning-Star,  and  N-S,  and  Evening-Star,      Gareth  and  L.  634 

Noorse  (nurse)    N  ?  thourt  nowt  o'  a  w :  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  2 

Noose    Twisted  as  tight  as  I  could  knot  the  n ;  St.  S.  Stylites  65 

Norland    loud  the  N  whirlwinds  blow,  Oriana  6 

When  N  winds  pipe  down  the  sea,  „     91 

Norman  (adj.)     And  simple  faith  than  iV  blood.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  56 

Harold's  England  fell  to  N  swords ;  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  22 

Norman  (s)    Saxon  and  N  and  Dane  are  we,  W.  to  Alexandra  3 

For  Saxon  or  Dane  or  N  we,  „             31 
Norse    Then  the  N  leader,  Dire  was  his  need  of  it,     Batt.  of  Brunanburh  56 

Norsemen    nail'd  prows  Parted  the  N,  „                 94 

Nortb     by  day  or  night.  From  N  to  South,  Rosalind  48 

For  look,  the  sunset,  south  and  n.  Miller's  D.  241 
Four  courts  I  made.  East,  West  and  South  and  N,        Palace  of  Art  21 

In  the  n,  her  canvas  flowuig.  The  Captain  27 

But  round  the  N,  a  light,  A  belt.  Sea  Dreams  208 

Many  a  long  league  back  to  the  N.  Princess  i  168 
Princess  rode  to  take  The  dip  of  certain  strata  to  the  N.         „     Hi  170 

And  dark  and  true  and  tender  is  the  N.  „         iv  98 

But  in  the  N  long  since  my  nest  is  made.  „          110 

And  brief  the  sun  of  summer  in  the  N,  „          112 

And  blown  to  inmost  n ;  „           432 

And  gray  metropolis  of  the  N.  The  Daisy  104 

To  N,  South,  East,  and  West ;  Voice  and  the  P.  14 

Thine  the  N  and  thine  the  South  Boadicea  44 

Fiercely  flies  The  blast  of  N  In  Mem.  cvii  1 

and  fly  Far  into  the  N,  and  battle,  Maud  III  vi  37 

two  that  out  of  n  had  f ollow'd  him :  Gareth  and  L.  679 

knights  of  utmost  N  and  West,  Lancelot  and  E.  526 

founded  my  Round  Table  in  the  N,  Last  Tournament  78 

Make  their  last  head  like  Satan  in  the  N.  „              98 

and  sharply  tum'd  N  by  the  gate.  „             128 

half  that  autumn  night,  hke  the  live  N,  „            479 

And  shook  him  thro'  the  n.  Pass,  of  Arthur  70 

came  A  bitter  wind,  clear  from  the  N,  „             124 

that  true  N,  whereof  we  lately  heard  To  the  Queen  ii  14 

I  go  On  that  long-promised  visit  to  the  N.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  188 

somewhere  in  the  N,  as  Rumour  sang  Sir  J.  OldcasUe  56 

Crept  to  his  N  again,  Hoar-headed  hero !  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  64 

Not  here !  the  white  N  has  thy  bones ;  Sir  J.  Franklin  1 

leaves  Some  colder  province  in  the  N  The  Ring  481 

roll  her  N  below  thy  deepening  dome,  Prog,  of  Spring  49 

drank  the  dews  and  drizzle  of  the  N,  „              81 

Northern    Floats  far  away  into  the  N  seas  Mine  be  the  strength  13 

Shot  Uke  a  streamer  of  the  n  mom,  M.  d' Arthur  139 
isles  of  winter  shock  By  night,  with  noises  of  the  » 

sea.  „         141 

The  n  morning  o'er  thee  shoot.  Talking  Oak  275 

Like  visions  in  the  N  dreamer's  heavens,  Aylmer's  Field  161 

seen  the  rosy  red  flushing  in  the  n  night.  Locksley  Hall  26 
We  past  long  lines  of  N  capes  And  dewy  N  meadows 

green.  The  Voyage  35 


I 


Northern 


503 


Novelist 


Horthem  (corUinued)    For  on  my  cradle  shone  the  N  star.  Princess  i  4 

Three  ladies  of  the  N  empire  pray  Your  Highness  „        238 

The  terrace  ranged  along  the  N  front,  „  in  118 

*  Peace,  you  young  savage  of  the  N  wild !  „        247 

And  hit  the  N  hills.  „       «  44 

Between  the  A^  and  the  Southern  morn.'  „        423 

We  might  discuss  the  N  sin  To  F.  D.  Maurice  29 

Dip  down  upon  the  n  shore.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  1 

fell  Against  the  heathen  of  the  N  Sea  Geraint  and  E.  969 

or  touch  at  night  the  n  star ;  Balin  and  Balan  166 

And  peak'd  wings  pointed  to  the  N  Star.  Holy  GraU  240 

For  now  the  Heathen  of  the  N  Sea,  Guinevere  135 

Godless  hosts  Of  heathen  swarming  o'er  the  N  Sea ;  „         428 

Shot  like  a  streamer  of  the  n  mom,  Pass,  of  A  rthur  307 

isles  of  winter  shock  By  night,  with  noises  of  the  N 


Sea. 


309 

To  Virgil  35 

V.  of  Maeldune  72 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  33 

Lancelot  and  E.  482 

Com.  of  Arthur  113 

Enoch  Arden  102 

Aylmer's  Field  415 

Gareth  and  L.  202 

Ancient  Sage  202 

Two  Voices  259 

The  Captain  35 

Princess  iv  575 

Maud  I  ii  10 

Gareth  and  L.  465 

590 

749 

Last  Tournament  59> 

Lucretius  100 

Gareth  and  L.  465 

Merlin  and  V.  849 

Edwin  Morris  105 

M.  d' Arthur  89 

Aylmer's  Field  67 

Lancelot  and  E.  323 

Pass,  of  Arthur  257 


I,  from  out  the  N  Island  sunder'd  once 

peak  sent  up  one  league  of  fire  to  the  N  Star ; 
Northland    Men  of  the  N  Shot  over  shield. 
North-sea    as  a  wild  wave  in  the  wide  N-s, 
Northumberland    Claudias,  and  Clariance  of  N, 
Northward    Ten  miles  to  n  of  the  narrow  port 

gines  That  darken'd  all  the  n  of  her  Hall, 
eard  from  our  wise  man  at  home  To  N, 

and  yonder — out  To  n — 
North-wind     '  He  will  not  hear  the  n-w  rave, 
Norward    Stately,  lightly,  went  she  N, 
Norway    N  sun  Set  into  simrise ; 
Nose    {See  also  Noase)    aquiline  curve  in  a  sensitive  n, 

High  n,  a  nostril  large  and  fine, 

and  lightly  was  her  slender  n  Tip-tilted 

nipt  her  slender  n  With  petulant  thumb 

his  n  Bridge-broken,  one  eye  out, 
Nodng    N  the  mother's  udder, 
Nostril    High  nose,  a  n  large  and  fine, 

breaths  of  anger  puff 'd  Her  fairy  n  out ; 
Note  (billet)    sent  a  n,  the  seal  an  EUe  vous  suit, 
Note  (notice)    a  precious  tiling,  one  worthy  n, 

Took  joyful  n  of  all  things  joyful, 

took  n  that  when  his  living  smUe  Died 

Surely  a  precious  thing,  one  worthy  n, 
Note  (as  of  music)    (See  also  Flute-notes)    The  single 
n  From  that  deep  chord 

'  A  quinsy  choke  thy  cursed  n !  ' 

lark  scarce  get  out  his  n's  for  joy, 

a  low  musical  n  Swell'd  up  and  died ; 

still  Grew  with  the  growing  n,  and  when  the  n  Had 
reach'd 

never  out  of  tune  With  that  sweet  n; 

(Consonant  chords  that  shiver  to  one  n  ; 

And  his  compass  is  but  of  a  single  n. 

And  one  is  glad ;  her  n  is  gay, 

And  one  is  sad ;  her  n  is  changed. 

Some  bitter  n's  my  harp  would  give. 

Peace  Pipe  on  her  pastoral  hillock  a  languid  n, 

blew  A  hard  and  deadly  n  upon  the  horn. 

liquid  n  beloved  of  men  Comes  flying 

a  n  so  thin  It  seems  another  voice 

but  one  plain  passage  of  few  n's. 

Sent  n's  of  preparation  manifold, 

Till  at  thy  chuckled  n. 
Note  (distinction)    Some  work  of  noble  n,  may  yet  be  done,  Ulysses  52 

Some  stain  or  blemish  in  a  name  of  n,  Merlin  and  V.  832 

Nothing    {See  also  Know-nothing,  Nowt)    Of  him  that 

viter'd  n  base ;  To  the  Queen  8 

Never,  oh !  never,  n  will  die ;  Nothing  will  Die  8 

iV  will  die.    iV  will  die;  „  13 

N  was  bom ;  N  will  die ;  „  36 

and  knows  N  beyond  his  mother's  eyes.  8u/pp.  Confessions  44 

n  here.  Which,  from  the  outward  to  the  inward  brought,       Elednore  3 

For  in  thee  Is  n  sudden,  n  single ;  „        57 

But  am  as  «  in  its  light :  „        88 

From  that  fiirst  n  ere  his  birth  To  that  last  n  imder 
earth  ! '  Two  Voices  332 

Beat  time  to  «  in  my  head  Miller's  D.  67 


England  and  Amer.  18 
The  Goose  29 
Gardener's  D.  90 
Sea  Dreams  210 


213 

232 

Princess  Hi  90 

Tlie  Islet  28 

In  Mem.  xxi  25 

27 

„  cxxv  2 

Maud  III  vi  24 

Gareth  and  L.  1111 

Marr.  of  Geraint  336 

Balin  and  Balan  214 

Lancelot  and  E.  895 

Lover's  Tale  i  207 

Early  Spring  37 


Nothing  {continued)    N  comes  to  thee  new  or  strange. 
Counts  n  that  she  meets  with  base, 
He  thought  that  n  new  was  said,  or  else  Something 

so  said  'twas  n — 
'  There  now — that's  « ! ' 

pilot  of  an  empty  heart  Unto  the  shores  of  n  ! 

n  else  For  which  to  praise  the  heavens 

where  nature  sickens,  n. 

That  was  n  to  her  : 

wood  stands  in  a  mist  of  green.  And  n  perfect : 

Saw  from  his  windows  n  save  his  own — 

Flash  into  fiery  life  from  n, 

howl  in  tune  With  n  but  the  Devil ! ' 

N  to  mar  the  sober  majesties 

N  but  this ;  my  very  ears  were  hot  To  hear  them : 

I  rate  your  chance  Almost  at  naked  n.' 

there  is  n  upon  earth  More  miserable 

n  can  bereave  him  Of  the  force  he  made  his 
own 

So  then  were  n  lost  to  man ; 

That  n  walks  with  aimless  feet ; 

I  care  for  n,  all  shall  go. 

For  n  is  that  errs  from  law. 

From  form  to  form,  and  n  stands ; 

May  n  there  her  maiden  grace  afifright ! 

n  can  be  sweeter  Than  maiden  Maud  in  either. 

N  but  idiot  gabble  ! 

I  seem  as  n  in  the  mighty  world, 

and  the  solid  earth  became  As  n. 

For  there  is  m  in  it  as  it  seems  Saving  the 
King; 

and  all  wmg'd  n's  peck  him  dead ! 

Who  pipe  of  n  but  of  sparrow-hawks ! 

Owe  you  me  n  for  a  life  half- lost? 

empty  heart  and  weariness  And  sickly  n ; 

Fame  that  follows  death  is  w  to  us ; 

charm  concluded  in  that  star  To  make  fame  n. 

there  was  n  wild  or  strange, 

»i  Poor  Vivien  had  not  done  to  win  his  trust 

And  ending  in  a  ruin — n  left, 

And  every  voice  is  n. 

'  Of  all  this  will  In;'  and  so  fell, 

she,  too,  Fell  into  dust  and  n, 

'  A^  in  nature  is  unbeautiful ; 

That  seeming  something,  yet  was  n, 

But  say  n  hard  of  my  boy. 

We  feel  we  are  n — 

We  know  we  are  n — 
Nothingness    Teach  me  the  n  of  things. 

Redeem'd  it  from  the  charge  of  ii— 

to  burn  and  brand  His  n  into  man. 
Nothing-worth    '  A  Ufe  of  nothings,  n-w. 

Were  faint  Homeric  echoes,  n-w, 
Notice    A  n  faintly  understood, 

master  took  Small  n,  or  austerely. 

Till  w  of  a  change  in  the  dark  world 

«.  of  a  hart  Taller  than  all  his  fellows, 

thro'  the  hasty  n  of  the  ear  Frail  life 

but  send  me  n  of  him  When  he  returns, 

Suddenly  came  her  n  and  we  past. 
Noticed    I  n  one  of  his  many  rings 
Noticing    peacock'd  up  with  Lancelot's  n. 
Notion    {See  also  Noation)    The  boy  might  get  a  n  into 

him  ;  _  Aylmer's  Field  271 

Nourish    That  n  a  bUnd  life  within  the  brain,  M.  d' Arthur  251 

That  n  a  bUnd  life  within  the  brain.  Pass,  of  Arthur  419 

Nourishing    Here  about  the  beach  I  wander'd,  n  a  youth 


To  J.  S.  74 
On  a  Mourner  4 

The  Epic  30 

M  d' Arthur,  Ep.  13 

Gardener's  D.  17 

103 

Locksley  Hall  153 

Enoch  Arden  498 

The  Brook  15 

Aylmer's  Field  21 

130 

Sea  Dreams  261 

Lucretius  217 

Princess  i  134 

161 

Hi  259 

Ode  on  WeU.  272 

In  Mem.  xliii  9 

„         liv  5 

„     '     Ivi  4 

„     Ixxiii  8 

cxxiii  6 

Maud  I  xviii  71 

XX  21 

//  V  41 

Com.  of  Arthur  87 

443 


Gareth  and  L.  264 

Marr.  of  Geraint  275 

279 

Geraint  and  E.  318 

653 

Merlin  and  V.  464 

513 

860 

862 

883 

Lancelot  and  E.  108 

967 

Holy  Grail  397 

Lover's  Tale  i  350 

iv  104 

Rizpah  22 

De  Prof.,  Human  C.  6 

8 

A  Character  4 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  7 

Maud  I  xviii  40 

Two  Voices  331 

The  Epic  39 

Two  Voices  431 

Lucretius  8 

Princess  vii  250 

Marr.  of  Geraint  149 

Lover's  Tale  i  615 

iv  116 

154 

Maud  II  ii  68 

Gareth  and  L.  719 


sublime 
Soft  fruitage,  mighty  nuts,  and  n  roots  ; 

Novel  (adj.)    '  And  men,  thro'  n  spheres  of  thought 
when  his  passion  shall  have  spent  its  n  force. 
And  breathes  a  n  world,  the  while 
some  n  power  Sprang  up  for  ever  at  a  touch. 

Novel  (s)     '  She  left  the  n  half -uncut 

Novelist    n,  reaUst,  rhymester. 


Locksley  Hall  11 

Enoch  Arden  555 

Two  Voices  61 

Locksley  Hall  49 

In  Mem.  Ixii  9 

„       cxii  9 

Talking  Oak  117 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  139 


November 


504 


Oak 


November    (See  also  Mid-November)    N  dawns  and  dewy- 
glooming  downs,  Enoch  Arden  610 

N  day  Was  growing  duller  twilight,  „  721 

Novice    none  with  her  save  a  little  maid,  Aw:  Guinevere  4 

sang  the  n,  while  full  passionately,  „      180 

said  the  little  n  prattluig  to  her,  „      183 

To  whom  the  little  n  garrulously, 

To  whom  the  n  garrulously  again 

the  n  crying,  with  clasp'd  hands, 

said  the'Uttle  n, '  I  pray  for  both  ; 

and  saw  The  n,  weeping,  suppliant. 
Now    '  Thens  '  and  *  Whens  '  the  Eternal  N : 
Now-recover'd    brought  From  Solomon's  n-r  Ophir 
Nowt  (nothing)     Noorse  ?  thourt  «  o'  a  noorse  : 

Doctors,  they  knaws  n,  fur  a  says  what's  nawways 
true: 

N  at  all  but  bracken  an'  fuzz, 

Wam't  worth  n  a  haacre.         . 

Parson's  lass  'ant  n,  an'  she  weant  'a  n  when  'e's  dead, 

an  ass  as  near  as  mays  n — 

Feyther  'ad  ammost  n ; 

I  'a  M  but  Adam's  wine  : 

The  gells  they  counts  fur  n, 

knaw'd  n  but  boooks,  an'  boociks,  as  thou  knaws, 
beant  n. 

niver  done  n  to  be  shaamed  on, 

not  nowadaays — good  fur  n — 

Yit  I  beant  sich  a  iV  of  all  N's 

They  says  'at  he  coom'd  fra  n — 
Nox    '  Mehidies  ' — '  Hesperus  ' — '  N  ' — '  Moes,' 
Nudd     answer,  groaning, '  Edym,  son  of  N  ! 

'  Then,  Edym,  son  of  N,'  replied 

Beholding  it  was  Edym  son  of  N, 
NnJl    icily  regular,  splendidly  n, 
Nmnb  (adj.)     Where  all  the  nerve  of  sense  is  n ; 
Numb  (verb)     And  n's  the  Fury's  ringlet-snake, 
Nmnber  (s)    And  o'er  the  n  of  thy  years. 

And  miss  the  wonted  n  of  my  knights, 

numberless  n's,  Shipmen  and  Scotsmen. 
Number  (verb)    Whose  troubles  n  with  his  days : 

That  n's  forty  cubits  from  the  soil. 

Could  n  five  from  ten. 

Love  and  I  do  «  equal  years, 
Number'd    n  o'er  Some  thrice  three  years : 

I  have  n  the  bones, 
Numberest    tho'  thou  n  with  the  followers 
Numberless    n  numbers,  Shipmen  and  Scotsmen. 
Numbing    Like  dull  narcotics,  n  pain. 
Num-cumpus    So  like  a  great  n-c  I  blubber'd 
Numerable-innumerable    Among  the  n-i  Sun, 
Numerous    For  I  am  of  a  «  house. 
Nun    monk  and  n,  ye  scorn  the  world's  desire, 

'  A  woman,'  answer'd  Percivale,  '  a  w, 

N  as  she  was,  the  scandal  of  the  Court, 

leaving  the  pale  n,  I  spake  of  this  To  all  men  ; 

saw  it,  as  the  n  My  sister  saw  it ; 

Thy  holy  n  and  thou  have  seen  a  sign — 

Thy  holy  n  and  thou  have  driven  men  mad, 

she  spake  There  to  the  n's,  and  said, 

many  a  week,  unknown,  among  the  n's ; 

hum  An  air  the  n's  had  taught  her ; 

Our  simple-seeming  Abbess  and  her  n's, 

the  good  n's  would  check  her  gadding  tongue 

near  him  the  sad  n's  with  each  a  light  Stood, 

Then  glancing  up  beheld  the  holy  n's 

Wear  black  and  white,  and  be  a  w  like  you. 
Nunnery  (adj.)    '  O  little  maid,  shut  in  by  w  walls. 
Nunnery  (s)    monkeries  And  nunneries, 

And  simple  miracles  of  thy  n  ?  ' 

A  murmuring  whisper  thro'  the  n  ran. 
Nunnery-walls    {See  also  Nunnery  (adj.)) 
by  narrowing  n-w, 

0  shut  me  round  with  narrowing  n-w. 
Nuptial    But  rich  as  for  the  n's  of  a  king. 


231 

276 

311 

349 

664 

Ancient  Sage  104 

Columbus  112 

N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  2 

5 

38 

39 

N.  S.  25 

39 

51 

North.  Cobbler  5 

Village  Wife  18 

52 
Owd  Boa  10 

78 

79 

Church-warden,  etc.  17 

Gareth  and  L.  1205 

Marr.  of  Geraint  576 

579 

Geraint  and  E.  781 

Maud  I  ii  6 

In  Mem.  xciii  7 

Lucretius  262 

In  Mem.  Ixvii  8 

Guinevere  498 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  54 

Two  Voices  330 

St.  S.  Stylites  91 

Talking  Oak  80 

Lover's  Tale  i  195 

In  Mem.  Con.  9 

Rizfah  10 

Aylmer's  Field  663 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  54 

In  Mem.  v  8 

North.  Cobbler  61 

Be  Prof.,  Two  G.  4A 

Will  Water.  89 

Balin  and  Balan  445 

Holy  Grail  68 

„         78 

„      129 

„      198 

„      295 

,,      862 

Guinevere  139 

147 

163 

309 

313 

590 

666 

677 

227 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  94 

Guinevere  230 

410 

0  closed  about 

342 

671 

Lover's  Tale  iv  212 


Nurse  (s)     (See  also  Noorse)     In  there  came  old  Alice  the  n,    Lady  Clare  13 


Nurse  (s)  (continued)    said  Alice  the  n,  (repeat)  Lady  Clare  17, 23, 33, 41, 45 

'  Are  ye  out  of  your  mind,  my  n,  my  n?'  Lady  Clare  21 

And  told  him  all  her  n's  tale.  „        80 

Leolin's  first  n  was,  five  years  after,  hers :  Aylmer's  Field  79 

my  n  would  tell  me  of  you ;  Princess  iv  427 

Rose  a  w  of  ninety  years,  „          vi  13 

Let  them  not  lie  in  the  tents  with  coarse  mankind,  111  n's ;        „  70 

Gray  n's,  loving  nothing  new ;  In  Mem,  xxix  14 

That  watch'd  her  on  her  n's  arm,  „         Con.  46 

And  tended  her  like  a  n.  Maud  I  xix  76 

Meeker  than  any  child  to  a  rough  n,  Lancelot  and  E.  857 
dirty  n.  Experience,  in  her  kind  Hath  f  oul'd  me —     Last  Tournament  317 

N,  I  must  do  it  to-morrow ;  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  42 

Never  since  I  was  n,  had  I  been  so  grieved  „                45 

That  day  my  n  had  brought  me  the  child.  The  Wreck  59 

I  wrote  to  the  n  Who  had  borne  my  flower  on  her 
hireUng  heart ;  and  an  answer  came  Not  from 

the  n—  „       142 

n  of  ailing  body  and  mind,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  51 

Your  n  is  here !     Miriam.     My  Mother's  n  The  Ring  96 

woman  came  And  caught  me  from  my  n.  „      118 

Poor  n !     I  bad  her  keep,  „      121 

third  September  birthday  with  your  n,  „      130 

desire  to  keep  So  skilled  a  n  about  you  always —  „      374 

I  cried  for  n,  and  felt  a  gentle  hand  „      418 

Your  n  is  waiting.     Kiss  me  child  and  go.  „      489 

N,  were  you  hired  ?  Romney's  R.  16 

caught  when  a  w  in  a  hospital  ward.  Charity  41 

Nurse  (verb)    To  w  a  blind  ideal  like  a  girl,  Princess  Hi  217 

it  becomes  no  man  to  n  despair,  „        iv  464 

Grant  me  your  son,  to  n,  „        vi  298 

Shall  I  n  in  my  dark  heart,  Maud  II  ii  55 

You'll  have  her  to  n  my  child.  First  Quarrd  70 

To  n  my  children  on  the  milk  of  Truth,  Akbar's  Bream  162 

Nursed    Thou  wert  not  n  by  the  waterfall  Ode  to  Memory  51 

wert  n  in  some  delicious  land  Of  lavish  lights,  Elednore  11 

Those  in  whose  laps  our  limbs  are  n.  To  J.  S.  10 

And  n  by  mealy-mouth'd  philanthropies,  The  Brook  94 

The  wrath  I  n  against  the  world :  Princess  v  437 

And  n  by  those  for  whom  you  fought,  „        vi  95 

nor  the  hand  That  n  me,  „      vii  54 

she  had  n  me  there  from  week  to  week  :  „          239 

n  at  ease  and  brought  to  understand  Maud  I  xviii  35 

and  his  wife  N  the  young  prince,  Com.  of  Arthur  224 

we  were  n  in  the  drear  night-fold  Besfair  21 

Muriel  n  you  with  a  mother's  care ;  The  Ring  349 

She  watch'd  me,  she  n  me,  she  fed  me,  Charily  33 

Nurseling    This  n  of  another  sky  The  Baisy  9& 

Nursery    one  they  knew — Raw  from  the  n —  Aylmer's  Field  264 

In  our  young  n  still  unknown.  Princess  iv  332 

Gray  relics  of  the  nurseries  of  the  world,  Lover's  Tale  i  290 

Nursing    '  Muriel's  health  Had  weaken'd,  n  little  Miriam.        The  Ring  357 

Annie  pale,  N  the  sickly  babe,  Enoch  Arden  150 

N  a  child,  and  turning  to  the  warmth  Aylmer's  Field  185 

Nurtured    See  Isle-nurtured 

Nut    if  the  n's  '  he  said  '  be  ripe  again :  Enoch  Arden  45& 

mighty  n's,  and  nourishing  roots ;  „          555 

As  fancies  like  the  vermin  in  a  m  Princess  vi  263 

Nutmeg    The  «  rocks  and  isles  of  clove.  The  Voyage  40 

Nutter     hazlewood.  By  autumn  n's  haunted,  Enoch  Arden  8 

Nutting    great  and  small.  Went  n  to  the  hazels.  „          64 

long'd  To  go  with  others,  n  to  the  wood,  „         363^ 

Nymph    (See  also  Wood-nymph)    mountain  quickens  into 

N  and  Faun ;  Lucretivs  18T 

presented  Maid  Or  N,  or  Goddess,  Princess  i  197 

how  hke  a  w,  A  stately  mountain  n  she  look'd !  Lover's  Tale  i  358 

Where  n  and  god  ran  ever  round  in  gold —  „         iv  19T 


0    mouthing  out  his  hollow  oes  and  aes.  The  Epic  50> 

Oak    (See  also  Baby-oak,  Brother-oak)    He  thought  to  quell 

the  stubborn  hearts  of  o,  Buona/iarte  1- 


Oak 


505 


Ocean 


Oak  (continued)    I  turn  to  yonder  o. 
To  yonder  o  within  the  field  I  spoke 
Broad  0  of  Snmner-chace, 
Old  0, 1  love  thee  well ; 
For  never  yet  was  o  on  lea 
The  gouty  o  began  to  move, 
Parks  with  o  and  chestnut  shady, 
What  amulet  drew  her  down  to  that  old  o, 
violet  varies  from  the  lily  as  far  As  o  from  elm ; 
when  the  winds  of  winter  tear  an  o 
Ere  half  the  lifetime  of  an  o. 
Before  a  gloom  of  stubborn-shafted  o's, 
Arising  wearily  at  a  fallen  o, 
Then  leapt  her  palfrey  o'er  the  fallen  o, 
Before  an  o,  so  hollow,  huge  and  old 
song  that  once  I  heard  By  this  huge  o, 
Call'd  her  to  shelter  in  the  hollow  o, 
struck,  Furrowing  a  giant  o, 
And  in  the  hollow  o  he  lay  as  dead, 
A  stump  of  o  half-dead, 
May  freedom's  o  for  ever  live 
tew  lanes  of  elm  And  whispering  o. 
Young  and  old,  Like  yon  o, 
hew'd  Like  broad  o's  with  thunder. 

Oaken    With  breezes  from  our  o  glades, 
And  Uke  an  o  stock  in  winter  woods, 
And  0  finials  till  he  touch'd  the  door ; 
The  three  decker's  o  spine 
he  lay  Down  on  an  o  settle  in  the  hall. 

Oakling    drew  My  little  o  from  the  cup, 

Oak-^oom    Maud's  own  little  o-r 

Oak-tree    But  the  solemn  o-t  sigheth. 
An  o-t  smoulder'd  there. 


Talking  Oak  8 

13 

30 

202 

,,       243 

Amphion  23 

L.  of  Burleigh  29 

Aylmer's  Field  507 

Princess  v  183 

Boadicea  77 

In  Mem.  Ixxvi  12 

Geraint  and  E.  120 

Baiin  and  Balan  425 

587 

Merlin  and  V.  3 

„      406 

„      894 

.,      936 

„      969 

Last  Tournament  12 

Mands  all  Round  5 

To  Mary  Boyle  68 

The  Oak  3 

The  Tourney  11 

Elednore  10 

Golden  Tear  62 

Aylmer's  Field  823 

Maud  II  a  27 

Geraint  and  E.  573 

Talking  Oak  231 

Maud  I  xiv  9 

Claribel  4 

Gareth  and  L.  402 


red  fruit  Grown  on  a  msigic  o-t  in  mid-heaven,  Last  Tournament  745 

'0am  (liome)    one  night  I  cooms  'o  like  a  bull  North.  Cobbler  33 

'e  were  that  outdacioua  at  'o.  Village  Wife  75 

boath  slink  t  'o  by  the  brokken  shal  i^inster's  S's.  37 

Oan  (own)  wi'  the  Divil's  o  team.  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  62 

an'  'e's  the  Divil's  o  sen.'  North.  Cobbler  76 

An'  Squire,  his  o  very  sen,  »            91 

noa,  not  fur  Sally's  o  kin.  „          114 

So  I  sits  i'  my  o  armchair  wi'  my  o  kettle  Spinster's  S's.  9 

fro'  my  o  two  'oonderd  a-year.  «        58 

'ere  i'  my  o  blue  chaumbcr  to  me.  ,,        80 

'ud  'a  let  me  'a  hed  my  o  waiiy,  „       101 

An'  I  sits  i'  my  o  little  parlour,  an'  sarved  by  my  o 

little  lass,  Wi'  my  o  httle  garden  outside,  an'  my 

o  bed  o'  sparrow-grass,  An'  my  o  door-poorch  wi' 

the  woodbine  ,,       103 

'  thank  God  that  I  hevn't  naw  cauf  o'  my  o.'  „       117 

An'  I'd  voiit  fur  'im,  my  o  sen,  Owd  Rod  14 

Oap  (hope)     An'  I  'o's  es  'e  beiint  boooklam'd :  Village  Wife  23 

es  I  o'5  es  thou'll  'elp  me  a  bit,  „          65 

sewer  an'  sartin  'o  o  the  tother  side ;  „           92 

Oar     weary  seem'd  the  sea,  weary  the  o,  Lotos-Eaters  41 

wind  and  wave  and  o  ;  „  C.  S.  127 

barge  with  o  and  sail  Moved  from  the  brink,  M.  d' Arthur  265 

stirr'd  with  languid  pulses  of  the  o,  Gardener's  D.  41 

The  measured  pulse  of  racing  o's  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  10 

barge  with  o  and  sail  Moved  from  the  brink,  Pass,  of  Arthur  433 

Oar'd    Naiads  o  A  glimmering  shoulder  To  E.  L.  16 

Some  to  a  low  song  o  a  shallop  by.  Princess  ti  457 

the  dead,  O  by  the  dumb,  went  upward  Lancelot  and  E.  1154 

Oaring    O  one  arm,  and  bearing  in  my  left  Princess  iv  \d& 

Oarless     unlaborious  earth  and  o  sea ;  To  Virgil  20 

Oarsman    o's  haggard  face,  As  hard  and  still  Lancelot  and  E.  1250 

Oasis    foimtain-f^  Ammonian  0  in  the  waste.  Alexander  8 

My  one  O  in  the  dust  and  drouth  Of  city  life !  Edwin  Morris  3 

they  might  grow  To  use  and  power  on  this  0,  Princess  ii  167 

Oat    (See  also  WboaXa)    had  the  wild  o  not  been 

sown.  In  Mem.  liii  6 
Oat-grass    On  the  o-g  and  the  sword-grass,           May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  28 

Oath    Let  us  swear  an  o,  and  keep  it  Lotos-Eaiers,  C.  S.  108 
Heaven  heads  the  count  of  crimes  With  that 

wildo.'  D.  of  F.  Women  2QI2 


Oath  (continued)     And  hear  me  swear  a  solemn  o.  Talking  Oak  281 

Cophetua  sware  a  royal  o :  Beggar  Maid  15 

since  my  o  was  ta'en  for  public  use,  Princess  iv  337 

Your  0  is  broken :  we  dismiss  you :  „       360 

But  keep  that  o  ye  sware,  Merlin  and  V.  688 

Vivien,  fearing  heaven  had  heard  her  o,  „  940 

O's,  insult,  filth,  and  monstrous  blasphemies.  Pass,  of  Arthur  114 

that  you,  that  I,  would  slight  our  marriage  o :  Happy  89 

laughter.  Pagan  o,  and  jest,  St.  Telemachus  39 

Obaay    (obey)     To  loove  an'  o  the  Tommies !  Spinster's  S's.  96 

Obedience    Seeing  o  is  the  bond  of  rule.  M.  d' Arthur  94 

Linger  with  vacillating  o,  Gareth  and  L.  13 

Of  thine  o  and  thy  love  to  me,  „         146 

bow'd  himself  With  all  o  to  the  King,  „         488 

And  uttermost  o  to  the  King.'  „         555 

For  uttermost  o  to  make  demand  „         558 

In  uttermost  o  to  the  King.  „  833 

But  silently,  in  all  o,  Marr.  of  Geraint  767 

With  difificulty  in  mild  o  Driving  them  on :  Geraint  and  E.  104 

O  is  the  courtesy  due  to  kings.'  Lancelot  and  E.  718 

Seeing  o  is  the  bond  of  rule.  Pass  of  Arthur  262 

bankrupt  of  all  claim  On  your  o,  Romney's  R.  71 

Obedient    most  valorous,  Sanest  and  most  o :  Geraint  and  E.  911 

0  to  her  second  master  now ;  Lover's  Tale  iv  343 
Obeisance  curtseying  her  o,  let  us  know  Princess  ii  20 
Obelisk  o's  Graven  with  emblems  of  the  time,  Arabian  Nights  107 
Obey    (See  also  Oba&y)     A  courage  to  endure  and  to  o ;  Isabel  25 

'  Will  be  o  when  one  commands  ?  Two  Voices  244 

well  to  o  then,  if  a  king  demand  An  act  un- 
profitable, M.  d' Arthur  95 
Man  to  command  and  woman  to  o ;  Princess  v  450 
And  since  thou  art  my  mother,  must  o.  Gareth  and  L.  167 
'  I  charge  thee,  ask  not,  but  o.'  Mart,  of  Geraint.  133 
How  should  I  dare  o  him  to  his  harm  ?                       Geraint  and  E.  136 

1  swear  it  would  not  ruflBe  me  so  much  As  you 

that  not  0  me.  „  151 

that  ye  speak  not  but  o.'  „  417 

I  know  Your  wish,  and  would  o ;  „  419 

Almost  beyond  me :  yet  I  would  o.'  „  423 

Rise  therefore ;  robe  yourself  in  this :  o.'  „  685 

Who  knowing  nothing  knows  but  to  o,  Guinevere  186 

well  to  o  then,  if  a  king  demand  An  act  un- 
profitable. Pass,  of  Arthur  263 

race  to  command,  to  o,  to  endure,  Def.  of  Lucknow  47 

Who  shaped  the  forms,  o  them,  Akbar's  Dream  143 

Obey'd     '  I  have  o  my  imcle  until  now,  Dora  59 

and  they  wheel'd  and  o.  Heavy  Brigade  6 

Object    beyond  his  o  Love  can  last :  His  o  lives :  Wan  Sculptor  5 

bum'd  upon  its  o  thro'  such  tears  Love  and  Duty  63 

Oblique     '  If  straight  thy  track,  or  if  o,  Two  Voices  193 

Oblivion     With  all  forgiveness,  all  o.  Princess  vi  295 

Oblivious    See  Half-oblivious 
Obscure    In  some  o  hereafter,  might  inwreathe 
Obscurity    I  faint  in  this  o,  (repeat) 
Obsequies     Nor  meanly,  but  with  gorgeous  o. 
Observance    with  a  mute  o  himg. 

He  compass'd  her  with  sweet  o's 

To  compass  her  with  sweet  o's, 
Obstinacy    At  which  the  warrior  in  his  o, 
Obstinate    See  Stunt 
Obstreperous    See  Obstropulous 
Obstropulous  (obstreperous)  But  sich  an  o  lad — 
Obtain     Pelleas  might  o  his  lady's  love, 

all  my  heart  had  destined  did  o, 
Obtain'd    second  suit  o  At  first  with  Psyche. 
Occasion     seasons  when  to  take  O  by  the  hand, 

written  as  she  found  Or  made  o, 

Wiser  to  weep  a  true  o  lost, 

O  iron  nerve  to  true  o  true. 

Elusion,  and  o,  and  evasion '  ? 

A  little  at  the  vile  o,  rode. 

The  vast  o  of  our  stronger  life — 
Ocean    (See  also  lllid-ocean)    Under  the  hollovr-hung 
0  green ! 

On  one  side  lay  the  O, 


Lover's  Tale  i  458 

Ode  to  Memory  6,  44,  123 

Lancelot  and  E.  1335 

Locksley  Hall  22 

Marr.  of  Geraint  48 

Geraint  and  E.  39 

454 


Church-icarden,  etc.  23 

Pdleas  and  E.  161 

Guinevere  492 

Princess  vii  71 

To  the  Queen  31 

Aylmer's  Field  478 

Princess  iv  68 

Ode  on  Well.  37 

Gareth  and  L.  288 

Marr.  of  Geraint  235 

Columbus  35 

The  Merman  38 
M.  d' Arthur  11 


<Ocean 


506 


Ccean  (continued)     Yet  o's  daily  gainine  on  thp  lanH  r^y^.     v       o« 

There  the  sunlit  o  tosses              ""S  on  tne  Jand,  Golden  Year  29 

The  houseless  o's  heaving  field,  TheCaptam  69 

The  hollower-bellowing  o,  P  ^\^  ^T^'i2 

Now  pacing  mute  hvo's  rim ;  Enoch  Arden  598 

Or  ohve-hoaiy  caoem  o-  ^^^  ^''^^^  ^1 

In  middle  o  meets'  the  surging  shock,  "  rirnjl 

Cataract  brooks  to  the  o  run,  7,.     T;*!  ,^ 

Thine  the  myriad-rolling  o,  l^^l'^'^ll 

Charm,  as  a  wanderer  out  in  0,  ^",f  r"  f I 

Streams  o'er  a  rich  ambrosial  0  isle,  '''"'"*  J? 

By  which  thev  rest,  and  o  sounds,  7^  ,!/,„    ^"     nif 

As  on  a  dull  day  in  an  O  oavp  ^^  Mem.,  ton.  121 

On  one  side  lay  the  O  ^''^'^  T^  ^-  ^^^ 

as  o  on  every  side  Pliiiges  and  heaves  n  f "  "//''' ''^''  ^P 

Chains  for  the  Admiral^of  the  O  -  ^'^-  "/^f  ^^^^  38 

Chains !  we  arc  Admirals  of  the  0  Columbus  19 

Of  the  0-of  the  Indies-Admirals  we—  "         o? 

He  hved  on  an  isle  in  the  o—  ^  „ .  ,.  ", ,     "^^ 

And  we  came  to  the  isle  in  the  0  ^  Maeldwne  7 

silent  o  always  broke  on  a  silent  shore  "          1  % 

voice  rang  out  in  the  thunders  of  0  and  Heaven  Th.  u/     7  H 

Dash  back  that  r)  with  a  pier  Merlin  and  the  ^.  in 

tS     ^vho  love  Ourie  With  her  boundless  ^^<^^hanophnus  5 

Ocean-fo^^  as  white  As  o-f  in  the  moon  ^^  M.?^'^  ^'  ?« 

Ocean-fowl    myriad  shriek  of  wheeling T-f  v      a^  i  '''^ll 

ocean-islet    about  their  o-i's  flash  The  faces  «e  fJ'reeA;  Id^ 

Ocean-lane    FaU  from  his  O-l  of  fire  7,/V7''''  \^i 

Ocean-mirror    O'er  o-m'5  rounded  large,  rtuT^'-l 

Ocean-plain    Sailest  the  placid  o-p's  ^"  ^^""-  "^-^  I 

Ocean-power    the  mightiest  O-j,  on  earth,  n.  vil^  I 

Ocean-ndge    hollow  o-r'*  roarhig  into  cataracts  t    /itH^ 

Ocean-roU    Tho'  thine  o-r  of  rhfthm  sound  ^'r^%  -^fJ 

Ocean-sea    Given  thee  the  keys  of  the  great  0-s  ?  rl'  ^P^  !n 

Ocean-smelling    ocean-spoil  In  os  osfer  ,.  Co  W«s  149 

Ocean-sounding    o-s  wekome  to  one  kSght  La,t  rZf  "^^It 

Ocean-spoU    o-s  In  ocean-smelling  osie?^^    '  ^'^  pZT^'f  ^q! 

Ochone    but  we  hard  it  cryin"  O ' '  Eno^h  Arden  94 

O'clock     'Tis  nearly  twelve  0.         '  TJ^f^Tr'^^f 

The  mail  ?     At  one  o  ri/  ■(,   ^  ^;  -^  ^'""  "^^ 

How  goes  the  time  ?  '  'Tis  five  0  '^^'wnufr^  o 

October    .See  Mid-October  »'i«  Wafer.  3 

1^'^  •  ?,'T/°"'^  ^  ^°™«^  of  tl^e  brain.  Muler's  h  S 

or  dmndled  down  to  some  0  games  In  some  0  nooks  like  ^^ 

Odd  (S)     And  strength  against  all  o's  n  r        /ty^H^'J, 

^      It  was  full  of  ^d  o^an^ends  Bahnand  Balan  183 

Ode     then.  Sir,  awful  .'.  she  wrote  First  Quarrel  49 

o'5  About  this  losing  of  the  child ;  ^'''^'''  '  j^ 

t\AiJ^''^^it'''  ^"^  J^^«^  five-words-long  "      ,-,•  o^ 

0dm    To  Thor  and  0  lifted  a  hand  •  Thl  vl-     I 

'  O,  Father  0,  We  give  you  a  hie.  ^'^^  ^"''^^Vj 

Odorous     wasting  0  siglis  AU  night  long  AdpNr,At 

the  amorous,  0  wind  Breathes  low^  Ehd^oZ\f^ 

Wlusper  in  o  heights  of  even.  mT     i« 

Odour    fed  the  time  With  0  j    ,.     ^r-^^^l^ 

A  cloud  of  incense  of  aU  o  steam'd  pfcS  g 

wtS.tu-nTmrdrtiL^^"  "fiffl 

An'd  flU"n7o  of  thrs^acfo'^'alr''"''"^  *^  "^         .  ^^'/^i^^ 

that  hour  died  Like  0  ?apt  iKhe  winged  wind  ^''"" '  ^"^'  ^  S? 

those  who  mix  all  o  to  tfie  Gods            'fe^a  ^^na  „            801 

aJnone    Mournful  ffi,  wandering  forlorn  ^^rmas  184 

My  own  CE,  Beautif ul-brow'd  ffi  ^"^"^  l^ 

fZ^^:^  ^caTetrut '---  ^^  ,,^    ,i    2' 


OUy 


(Enone  (continued)    CE,  by  thy  love  which  once  was  mine 
cc  sat  Not  moving,  ' 

ghostly  murmur  floated,  '  Come  to  me  CE  ' 
I  can  wrong  thee  now  no  more,  CE,  my  CE' 

0  er-brunming    Would  drop  from  his  o-b  love ' 

0  er-driven    Yet  pity  for  a  horse  o-d 

O  erflourish'd    0  with  the  hoary  clematis  • 

O  erflow    O's  thy  cakner  glances 

O'er-grown    TiU  that  o-g  Barbarian  in  the  East 


.i?ol?:f  ?)^K.i^!,^?.-- I- _^-  -^  -l^elp  to  crack;        Maulfffd 


Death  ofCEnone  45 

74 

80 

81 

bufp.  Confessions  113 

In  Mem.  Ixiii  1 

Golden  Year  63 

Madeline  33 

Poland  7 


29 


O'erlook'st    0  the  tumult  fromXfar 
0  ershadow    His  love,  unseen  but  felt,  o  Thee, 
O  erstept    hath  0  The  slippery  footing 
O^I'J^warted    0  with  the  brazen-headed  spear 
Offal    btench  of  old  o  decaying, 

pelt  your  o  at  her  face. 
Offence    To  save  the  0  of  charitable 

like  a  pedant's  wand  To  lash  0, ' 

without  0,  Has  link'd  our  names  together 

an  tha  weant  be  taakin'  o, 
Offend    Your  finer  female  sense  o's 

RKff    f'^^''^  K'  ^™'"  *^®  ™^  Por  judgment. 

Offer  s)     I  trample  on  your  o's  and  on  you: 

Offer  (verb)    I  o  boldly:  we  wiU  seat  you  highest • 
1  would  o  this  book  to  you, 

Offer'd    then  and  there  had  0  something  more 
JNot  ev  n  a  rose,  were  0  to  thee  ?  ' 

cup  of  both  my  hands  And  o  you  it  kneelin"  • 
better  o  up  to  Heaven.'  ° ' 

Offering    ('^^e  aZso  Love-offering.  Peace-offering)    brin.' 
me  o's  of  fruit  and  flowers :  " 

dress  the  victim  to  the  o  up. 
I  will  make  a  solemn  o  of  you 
Office     O  you  that  hold  A  nobler  o  upon  earth 
a  joint  of  state,  that  plies  Its  o. 
In  whom  should  meet  the  o's  of  all 
decent  not  to  fail  In  o's  of  tenderness. 
Two  in  the  Hberal  o's  of  hfe. 
With  books,  with  flowers,  with  Angel  o's. 
So  kind  an  0  hath  been  done, 
Her  o  there  to  rear,  to  teach,' 
In  those  great  o's  that  suit  The  full-grown  energies 
join  d  Each  .  of  the  social  hour  To  noble  mannfr? 
If  all  your  o  had  to  do  With  old  results 
touch  of  their  o  might  have  sufficed 
Do  each  low  0  of  your  holy  house  •  ' 
In  whom  should  meet  the  o's  of  all 
all  o  s  Of  watchful  care  and  trembUng  tenderness 
joins  us  once  again,  to  his  either  o  trSe  • 
n«  """*^he  tiger  of  oppression  out  From  o ; 
Officer    (See  also  Hofflcer)    o's  and  men  Levied  a 
Kinuly  tax 
an  0  Rose  up,  and  read  the  statutes. 
_^  We  rooted  out  the  slothful  o 
Officious    See  Too-officious 
Offing    And  isles  a  light  in  the  o : 
Desolate  0,  sailorless  harbours 
Offset    man-minded  o  rose  To  cha^e  the  deer 
Offsprmg    with  their  o,  born-unborn 
AV'ould  slie  find  her  human  o       ' 
Often-ransack'd    To  think  that  in  our  o-r  world 

TiSf'"*^    ^  "^^  *^^  ^°"^^^  ^^""^^  °f  ^"  "-«'• 
Ogress     '  petty  0,'  and  '  ungrateful  Puss  ' 
Oil    realms  of  upland,  prodigal  in  0, 

pure  quintessences  of  precious  o's 

little  dues  of  wheat,  and  wine  and  0  • 

Or  burn'd  in  fire,  or  boil'd  in  0 
njiM^'i'S  '^'^'f  i'?g,''.on  aU  their  stony  creeds. 

Bun         ^^"-°"^)    That  0  and  curl'd  Assyrian 
Oilily    o  bubbled  up  the  mere. 
Oily    lower  down  The  bay  was  o  calm  • 

o'er  the  rest  Arising,  did  his  holy  o  best. 

and  0  courte.sies  Our  formal  compact 


In  Mem.  cxxvii  19 

Ded.  of  Idylls  bl 

Lover's  Tale  i  101 

CEnone  139 

-De/,  of  Lucknow  82 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  134 

Enoch  Arden  342 

Princess  i  28 

Lancelot  and  E.  Ill 

Church-warden,  etc.  21 

Bay-Dm.,  L' Envoi  2 

Princess  i  29 

„    iv  546 

„    Hi  159 

June  Bracken,  etc.  4 

The  Brook  147 

Lucretius  69 

Merlin  and  V.  276 

Holy  Grail  36 


St.  S.Stylites  128 
Princess  iv  130 
Lovtr's  Tale  iv  118 
To  the  Queen  2 
Love  thou  thy  land  48 
M.  d' Arthur  125 
Ulysses  41 
Princess  ii  175 
vii  26 
In  Mem.  xvii  17 
xl  13 
19 
).  cxi  14 

„    cxxviii  10 
Maud  II  V  27 
Guinevere  682 
Pass,  of  Arthur  293 
Lover's  Tale  i  225 
Happy  106 
Akbar's  Dream  159 

Enoch  Arden  662 

Princess  ii  68 

Geraint  and  E.  938 

Enoch  Arden  131 

Vastness  14 

Talking  Oak  51 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  98 

234 

Sea  Dreams  129 


I 


The  Wreck  130 

Princess,  Pro.  157 

Palace  of  Art  79 

187 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  122 

*S^  S.  Stylites  52 

Akbar's  Dream  160 


Maud  I  vi44 

Gareth  and  L.  816 

Audley  Court  86 

iiSea  Dreams  195 

Princess  i  164 


Old 


Old    {See  also  Hovfd,  New^M,  Onid,  Owd.  World- 

old)     The  0  earth  Had  a  birth,  jj,  rhi^n.     v;  n-   orr 

And  the  o  earth  must  die  ^*"^^  ^*^^  -^**  37 

^  l^T  g"™"er'd  thro'  the  doors,  0  footsteps  "                ^^ 

trod  the  upper  floors,  O  voices  called  her 

from  without. 

High-waUed  gardens  green  and  o  •  j       Mariana  QQ 

From  o  well-heads  of  haunted  rilk  Arabian  lights  8 

rismg,  from  her  bosom  drew  O  letters  tij     ■        ^ieanore  16 
^An  inner  impulse  rent  the  veil  Of  S  o  husk  •        ^"'"^IV^l^-  ^-  ?? 

Pam  rises  up,  o  pleasures  pall  ■'  ^'^  ^''*''^*  ^^ 

'  As  o  mythologies  relate,        "  "        164 

With  this  o  soul  in  organs  new '  "        ^^^ 

Three  fingers  round  the  o  silver  cud k^  ■„  " ,       ^^^ 

Where  this  o  mansion  mounted  high  ^^^^^  ^-  P 

1  o  yon  o  mill  across  the  wolds :  "        „?5 

The  hon  on  your  o  stone  gates  r  r  V  /J  v    ^ 

The  good  o  year,  the  dear  o  timA  at     Ti'^'^-  "*  ^*'"«  23 

With%hose  0  fac'es  of  oJi^rcy  ^«y  ««««n,  iV.  Y's.E.  6 

methought  that.I  had  wande^d^ar  In  an  o  y^oo^^'ntTvp-J-  ^^ 
And  the  o  year  is  dead.  wuou.     u.  oj  Ji.  Women  54 

For  the  0  year  lies  a-dying.  n     ^A'   ^    t,  ^^^ 

O  year,  you  must  not  diej  ^-  "•' ^  ^-  ^  <^«''  5 

O  year,  you  shall  not  die.  (repeat)  »          ^  „5 

t>  year,  you  must  not  go ;  ..9,  24 

O  year,  you  shall  not  go.  »              1^ 

O  year,  if  you  must  die.  ••              18 

0  year,  we'll  dearly  rae  for  you :  "  ^7 
A  land  of  just  and  o  renown  v  .  i  " ,  ^3 
If  New  and  O,  disastrous^ud  You  ash  me,  why  ete.  10 

1  KNEW  an  o  wife  lean  and  poor,  ^'  ^^^!^^  ^"'^  " 
It  stirr'd  the  o  wife's  mettle  •  "^  ^''''**  1 

How  aU  the  o  honour  had  from  Christmas  gone  ri"7r  -^^ 

In  those  0  days,  one  summer  noon,             ^  '               t^  I'^\^^%1 

and  mighty  bones  of  ancient  men,  0  knights  '  ^  ^'^''''  f. 

^o  might  some  0  man  speak  in  the  af tertime'  "        , ^ 

For  now  I  see  the  true  o  times  are  dead,  "        ^ 

The  o  order  changeth,  yielding  place  to  new,  "        ^ 

So  blunt  m  memory,  so  o  at  h^rt  /^    j     ",    r.^^ 

?5:  ^'?H°'''  ^  ^^^*  ^  '"^^^^  ^  0^^  young.  ^'^'■*"^'-  *  ^-,5? 

Then  they  clung  about  The  0  man's  nickT  "  n       1^ 

New  things  and  o,  himself  and  her  n^  71  .   .1.  ■^fr".!^ 

still  The  same  0  sore  breaks  out  ^'^*- '"  '**  ^^«^  ^^ 

'My  love  for  Nature  is  as  0  as  I ;  jp^   '■'    ,,      .   P 

The  good  o  Summers,  year  by  year  l'^^?  •'^"i;'"'*  28 

;  O  Smmners,  M-hen  the^monk  S  f at  ^'^^^"^  ^"-^  39 

;^%ut%yOf%oi^e'anfcl^^^^^^^^^  ^"''"^"'^  '^^  <'olden  Year  % 

^j/^^i^"^^'^  *J?^  ^^?Py  ««^on  back,-  "          ^ 

you  and  I  are  o ;  O  age  Itiath  yet  his  honour  tji         ?n 

We  are  not  now  that  strength'^which  in  c  d^ys  ^^^"*"  f. 

Once  more  the  0  mysterious  glimmer  steals  t  -.r.  "      ^^ 

O,  I  see  thee  0  and  formal  r    ,^*<^«««34 

Than  those  o  portraits  of  o  kin^rs  7.        Locksley  Hall  93 

In  that  new  world  wWch  ts  th?J-  Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  23 

O  wishes,  ghosts  of  broken  plans, '  "     j^  •„  SrV^ot 

If  o  things,  there  are  new ;  "^"^  Water.  29 

Shall  fling  her  o  shoe  after.  "        ^^ 

In  there  came  0  Ahce  the  nurse            '  t  :,    'X,     ^^^ 

The  o  Earl's  daughter  died T my  breast  •  ^'  ^^''  1% 

I  am  0,  but  let  me  drink;            •>'       ^'^.  Vo-^f 

?o?  Wl!  '^'.^^  Jt"««  P^t^^b'd  with  moss.  ^"'"'^  ''^  %^i 

^or  Enoch  parted  with  his  0  sea-friend  t?      i."a  :,     .? 

And  pace  the  sacred  o  familiar  fiS'  ^"^'^  ^'^"^  ^^ 

bo  propt,  worm-eaten,  ruinously  0,    '  "          ^^5 

OPhihp;aU  about  the  fields  you  caught  t^'1  n     i^^l 

Than  for  his  o  Newfoundland's,                    '  "          Jf 

T?^  f^beaaant-lords,  These  partridge-breeders  "          qI? 

Thwarted  by  one  of  these  0  father-fools,  "          f^ 

What  amulet  drew  her  down  to  that  o  oak,  So  o  "          fm 

O  there  The  red  fruit  of  an  o  idolatry-     '         '  "          ^^ 


507 


One  babe  was  theirs,  a  .Margaret,  three 


Old  (continued) 
years  o: 
How  like  you  this  0  satire  ? 
And  that  was  o  Sir  Ralph's  at  Ascalon  : 

Tf  nnr     h  u      ^fj^^  ^  P"^*^  ^"^  ^^^  t^at  rang 
if  our  o  halls  could  change  their  sex 
An  0  and  strange  affection  of  the  ho^e 
A  httle  dry  o  man,  without  a  star 

?fcffK*^'"'r^''i'  ^°'^''^'  '^a"''!  n»ne  host 

The  fifth  m  hne  from  that  o  Florian 
(The  gaunt  o  Baron  with  his  beetle  brow 
she  past  From  all  her  0  companions, 
Ihey  hunt  0  trails '  said  Cyril  '  very  well  • 
But  when  I  dwelt  upon  your  o  affiance 
trim  our  sails,  and  let  0  bygones  be 

It  was  not  thus,  O  Princess,  in  0  days- 
I  your  o  friend  and  tried,  she  new  in  all  ? 
wlnle  now  the  two  o  kmgs  Began  to  wag 

I  wi  fhf  ^r^  A  ^"''"u^."^  tbeir  shadows ! 

1  would  the  0  God  of  war  himself  were  dead. 

Then  rode  we  with  the  o  king  across  the  lawns 

n^use  my  tale  of  love  In  the^«  king's  ears. 
Boys!    shriek'd  the  o  king,  but  vlinlier  ' 

the  o  leaven  leaven'd  all  • 

Thus  the  hard  0  king :  I  took  my  leave 

1  seem  d  to  move  in  o  memorial  tilts 

Up  started  from  my  side  The  o  hon  ' 
O  studies  fail'd ;  seldom  she  spoke  • 

kingdom  topples  oyer  ,vith  a  shriek  Like  an  0  woman 

This  fine  0  world  of  ours  is  but  a  child  "-"'"d". 

And  sombre,  o,  colonnaded  aisles 

aU  my  chUdren  have  gone  before  me,  I  am  so  o  ■ 

Ah,  there's  no  fool  hke  the  0  one—        •*""""• 

But  stay  with  the  0  woman  now  • 

(>  Yew,  which  graspest  at  the  stones 

Whose  fancy  fuses  o  and  new 

o"i«fTr^f """  f  Philosophy  On  Argive  heights 
C  Sisters  of  a  day  gone  by. 
At  our  o  p^times  in  the  hall  We  gambol'd 
O  warder  of  these  buried  bones  '      ' 

How  often  shall  her  0  fireside    ' 

ShaU  count  new  things  as  dear  as  0: 
iJoes  my  o  friend  remember  me  ?  ' 
wherefore  wake  The  0  bitterness  again 
My  o  affection  of  the  tomb,  (repeat)     ' 
While  now  we  sang  0  songs  that  peal'd 
^o  gray  o  grange,  or  lonely  fold 
King  out  o  shapes  of  foul  disease  • 
Ihe  grand  o  name  of  gentleman, 
With  o  results  that  look  like  new  • 
To  make  o  bareness  picturesque   ' 
But  that  0  man  now  lord  of  the  broad  estate 
dark  0  place  vvill  be  gilt  by  the  touch  of  a  miUionaire  • 
Whose  0  grandfather  has  lately  died  "'"^onaire . 

Ihat  o  man  never  comes  to  his  place  • 
A  gray  o  wolf  and  a  lean. 
An  o  song  vexes  my  ear  • 

^"nf'it^."'^®''  ^y  *^°  *""et«  Of  tbe  o  manorial  haU 

nul  ^u\^'%  ^O^''"'  ^°^  ^^  ^^™«  "°t  back 
But  what  will  the  0  man  say  ? 

For  what  wiU  the  0  man  say 

That  0  hysterical  mock-disease  should  die  ' 

lll"^'  l^^^"  ^^  ^"*  *'^«  «  ™en  that  know:  And 
each  is  twice  as  0  as  I  • 

^^  S,%^«,bim  to  Sir  Anton,  an  o  knight 
but  o  Merhn  counseU'd  him,  '  Take  thou  and  strike 
An  0  man'.s  wit  may  wander  ere  he  die 
And  echo'd  by  0  folk  beside  their  fires  ' 
W  "^  Tk'^^J  '^bangeth,  yielding  place  to  new  • 
Seeing  that  ye  be  grown  too  weak  and  o       ' 
10  plunge  0  Merlm  in  the  Arabian  sea : 
New  things  and  o  co-twisted, 
Then  that  o  Seer  made  answer  playing  on  him 
0  Master,  reverence  thine  ow/beard  That  looks 


Old 


Sea  Breams  3 

Princess,  Pro.  26 
104 
121 
140 
il3 
117 
173 
a  238 
240 
263 
390 
m  139 
TO  69 
292 
318 
»18 
34 
145 
236 
241 
328 
386 
467 
479 
vi  99 
vii  31 
Con.  63 
77 
Tfie  Daisy  56 
Grandmother  18 
44 
108 
In  Mem.  ii  1 
.,      xvi  18 
i>  xxiii  21 
„   xxix  13 
1.       XXX  5 
>]    xxxix  1 
xl  22 
28 
„     Ixiv  28 
„  Ixxxiv  47 
In  Mem.  Ixxxv  75,  77 
In  Mem.  xcv  13 
c5 
.,        cvi  25 
"        cxi  22 
,,  cxxviii  11 
19 
Maud  I  i  19 
66 
>i         X  5 
»    xiii  24 
28 
„  //n47 
iv  80 
«;53 
83 
87 
„IIIm33 

Com.  of  Arthtir  149 
222 
306 
405 
417 
509 
511 
and  Z.  211 
226 
262 
280 


Gareth 


Old 


508 


Old 


Old  (caniiniied)    Or  carol  some  o  roundelay,  and  so  loud    Gareth  and  L.  506 
The  fashion  of  that  o  knight-errantry  Who  ride  abroad,        „  629 

Some  o  head-blow  not  heeded  in  his  youth  „  714 

Art  thou  not  o  ? '     '  O,  damsel,  o  and  hard,  0,  with  the 

might  and  breath  „  1105 

'  O,  and  over-bold  in  brag !  „  1107 

An  0  storm-beaten,  russet,  many-stain'd  Pavilion,  ,.  1113 

And  arm'd  him  in  o  arms,  and  brought  a  helm  „  1115 

His  arms  are  o,  he  trusts  the  harden'd  skin —  „  1139 

son  Of  o  King  Lot  and  good  Queen  Bellicent,  „  1231 

Held  court  at  o  Caerleon  upon  Usk.  Marr.  of  Geraint  146 

Who  being  vicious,  o  and  irritable,  „  194 

'  Arms,  indeed,  but  o  And  rusty,  o  and  rusty,  „  477 

But  that  o  dame,  to  whom  full  tenderly  „  508 

slowly  drew  himself  Bright  from  his  o  dark  life,  „  595 

Near  that  o  home,  a  pool  of  golden  carp ;  „  648 

She  is  not  fairer  in  new  clothes  than  o.  „  722 

For  o  am  I,  and  rough  the  ways  and  wild ;  „  750 

And  all  that  week  was  o  Caerleon  gay,  „  837 

But  she,  remembering  her  o  ruin'd  hall,  Geraint  and  E.  254. 

Her  suitor  in  o  years  before  Geraint,  „  276 

some,  whose  souls  the  o  serpent  long  had  drawn  Down,         „  632 

From  which  o  fires  have  broken,  men  may  fear  „  822 

'  0  friend,  too  o  to  be  so  young,  depart,  Balin  and  Balan  17 

'  O  fabler,  these  be  fancies  of  the  churl,  „  307 

and  o  boughs  AVhined  in  the  wood.  „  385 

'  0  priest,  who  miimble  worship  in  your  buire — 0  monk 

and  nun,  ,,  444 

This  o  sim-worship,  boy,  will  rLse  again,  „  457 

Before  an  oak,  so  hoUow,  huge  and  o  Merlin  and  V.  3 

That  o  true  filth,  and  bottom  of  the  well,  „  47 

With  such  a  fixt  devotion,  that  the  o  man,  „         183 

Caught  in  a  great  o  tyrant  spider's  web. 
Less  0  than  I,  yet  older,  for  my  blood 
drew  The  rustiest  iron  of  o  fighters'  hearts ; 
that  o  man  Went  back  to  his  o  wild, 
Came  to  her  o  perch  back,  and  settled  there, 
passing  gayer  youth  For  one  so  o, 
Then  came  an  o,  dumb,  myriad-wrinkled  man. 
He  bore  a  knight  of  o  repute  to  the  earth, 
learn  If  his  o  prowess  were  in  aught  decay'd  ; 
The  shackles  of  an  o  love  straiten'd  him. 
Beyond  mine  o  belief  in  womanhood, 
therefore  let  our  dumb  o  man  alone  Go  with  me. 
Loyal,  the  dumb  o  servitor,  on  deck. 
Then  rose  the  dvimb  o  servitor,  and  the  dead, 
'  From  our  o  books  I  know  That  .Joseph  came  of  old 
had  you  known  our  Camelot,  Built  by  o  kings,  age 

after  age,  so  o 
till  the  dry  o  trunks  about  us,  dead, 
plaster'd  like  a  martin's  nest  To  these  o  walls — 
Delight  myself  with  gossip  and  o  wives, 
But  Uve  hke  an  o  badger  in  his  earth. 
Were  strong  in  that  o  magic  which  can  trace 
For  every  fiery  prophet  in  o  times, 
as  he  sat  In  hall  at  o  Caerleon,  the  high  doors 
Strange  as  to  some  o  prophet  might  have  seem'd 
Some  rough  o  knight  who  knew  the  worldly  way, 
O  milky  fables  of  the  wolf  and  sheep, 
That  ail  the  o  echoes  hidden  in  the  wall 
like  an  o  dwarf-elm  That  turns  its  back  on  the  salt  blast,       „  543 

'  May  God  be  with  thee,  sweet,  when  o  and  gray.      Last  Tournament  627 
'  May  God  be  with  thee,  sweet,  when  thou  art  o,  „  629 

Swear  to  me  thou  wilt  love  me  ev'n  when  o,  „  652 

fail'd  to  trace  him  thro'  the  flash  and  blood  Of  our  o  kings  :     „  687 

Her  memory  from  o  habit  of  the  mind  Guinevere  379 

some  beheld  the  faces  of  o  ghosts  Look  in  Pass,  of  ArthurlOS 

In  those  o  days,  one  summer  noon,  „  197 

0  knights,  and  over  them  the  sea-wind  sang  Shrill,  „  216 

So  might  some  o  man  speak  in  the  aftertime  „  275 

For  now  I  see  the  true  o  times  are  dead,  „  397 

'  The  o  order  changeth,  yielding  place  to  new,  „  407 

accept  this  o  imperfect  tale.  New-old,  To  the  Queen,  ii  36 

half-moulder'd  chords  To  some  o  melodv,  Lover's  Tale  i  20 

Above  the  naked  poisons  of  his  heart  Iii  his  o  age.'  „  357 


259 
556 
574 
648 
903 
928 

Lancelot  and  E.  170 

492 

584 

875 

955 

1127 

1144 

1153 

Eoly  Grail  59 

340 
495 
549 
553 
629 
666 
876 
Pelleas  and  E.  3 
51 
192 
196 
366 


Old  (continued)    they  trod  The  same  o  paths  where 
Love  had  walk'd 
(Huge  blocks,  which  some  o  trembUng  of  the  world 
But  all  their  house  was  o  and  loved  them  both. 
And  his  was  o,  has  in  it  rare  or  fair 
An'  I  hit  on  an  o  deal-box  that  was  push'd 
it's  kind  of  you.  Madam,  to  sit  by  an  o  dying  wife. 
I  can't  dig  deep,  I  am  o — 

0  Sir  Richard  caught  at  last. 
An  0  and  worthy  name ! 

1  walked  with  our  kindly  o  doctor  as  far 
Stench  of  o  offal  decaying, 
on  the  palace  roof  the  o  banner  of  England  blew 
Some  cited  o  Lactantius : 
■ike  an  o  friend  false  at  last  In  our  most  need, 
I  am  not  yet  too  o  to  work  his  will — 
To  lay  me  in  some  shrine  of  this  o  Spain, 
Going  ?     I  am  0  and  sUghted : 
Of  others  their  o  craft  seaworthy  still. 
Such  as  0  writers  Have  writ  of  in  histories — 
O  FiTZ,  who  from  your  suburb  grange, 
0  friends  outvaluing  all  the  rest. 
But  we  o  friends  are  still  aUve, 
till  that  0  man  before  A  cavern 

and  Ughts  the  o  church-tower.  And  lights  the  clock  !  The  Flight  93 

our  o  England  may  go  down  in  babble  at  last.         Locksley  H.,  Sixty  8 


Lover's  Tale  i  821 

„        ii  45 

„      iv  122 

203 

First  Quarrel  48 

Eizpah  21 

„       56 

The  Revenge  98 

Sisters  (E.  and  E,)  74 

In  the  Child  Hosp.  43 

Bef.  of  Lucknow  82 

106 

Columbus  49 

70 

„      161 

,.      207 

„      241 

Pref.  Son  19th  Cent.  3 

Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  114 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  1 

40 

42 

Ancient  Sage  6 


I  this  0  white-headed  dreamer  stoopt  and  kiss'd 

0  Assyrian  kings  would  flay  Captives  whom  they 
caught  in  battle — 

teU  them  '  o  experience  is  a  fool,' 

Bring  the  o  dark  ages  back  without  the  faith, 

1  am  0,  and  think  gray  thoughts,  for  I  am  gray : 
Lame  and  o,  and  past  his  time. 
There  is  one  o  Hostel  left  us 
Poor  0  Heraldry,  poor  o  History,  poor  o  Poetry, 
In  the  common  deluge  drowning  o  poUtical 

common-sense ! 
Poor  o  voice  of  eighty  crying  after  voices 
0  Horace  ?     '  I  will  strike '  said  he 
And  he  sung  not  alone  of  an  o  sun  set. 
Should  this  o  England  fall 


That  0  strength  and  constancy 

0  poets  foster'd  under  friendlier  skies,  0  Virgil 

who  would  write  ten  lines, 
And  you,  o  popular  Horace,  you  the  wise 
and  all  these  o  revolutions  of  earth ; 
P'or  ten  thousand  years  O  and  new  ? 
is  making  a  new  Unk  Breaking  an  o  one  ? 
Garrulous  o  crone. 
We  saw  far  off  an  o  forsaken  house. 
And  in  yon  arching  avenue  of  o  elms, 
Found  in  a  chink  of  that  o  moulder'd  floor ! ' 
(Our  o  bright  bird  that  still  \s  veering  there 
So,  following  her  o  pastime  of  the  brook, 
forgotten  mine  own  rhyme  By  mine  o  self.  As  I 

shall  be  forgotten  by  o  Time, 
To  work  0  laws  of  Love  to  fresh  results, 
0  Empires,  dwellings  of  the  kings  of  men ; 
slower  and  fainter,  0  and  weary, 
What  hast  thou  done  for  me,  grim  0  Age, 
Ever  as  of  o  time. 
Live  thy  Life,  Young  and  o, 
Rear'd  on  the  tumbled  ruins  of  an  o  fane 
Like  some  o  wreck  on  some  iiidrawing  sea, 
Rome  no  more  should  wallow  in  this  o  lust 
was  not  Alia  call'd  In  o  Inln  the  Sun  of  Love  ? 
A  voice  from  o  Ivkn  !     Nay,  but  I  know  it — 
And  cast  aside,  when  o,  for  newer, — 
alchemise  o  hates  into  the  gold  Of  Love, 
Could  give  the  warrior  kings  of  o. 
Seeking  a  tavern  which  of  o  he  knew, 
Ring  out  the  o,  ring  in  the  new, 
sayings  from  of  o  Ranging  and  ringing 
kings  of  0  had  doom'd  thee  to  tlie  flames, 
humour  of  the  kings  of  o  Return  upon  me ! 


38 

79 
131 
137 
155 
227 
247 
249 

250 

251 

Epilogue  46 

Dead  Prophet  41 

The  Fleet  4 

Open  I.  and  C.  Exhih.  14 


Poets  and  their  B.  1 

5 

Fastness  29 

The  Ring  20 

51 

120 

155 

172 

280 

332 

354 

To  Mary  Boyle  22 

Prog,  of  Spring  85 

99 

Merlin  and  the  G.  100 

By  an  Evolution.  9 

The  Snowdrop  3 

The  Oak  2 

St.  Telemachus  6 

44 

78 

Akbar's  Dream  87 

89 

134 

163 

To  the  Queen  4 

Enoch  Arden  691 

In  Mem.  cvi  5 

Com.  of  Arthur  415 

Gareth  and  L.  374 

377 


Old 


509 


One 


I 


Old  (continued)    Stir,  as  they  stirr'd  of  o,  Balin  and  Baian  89 

The  new  leaf  ever  pushes  off  the  o.  „  442 

Many  a  time  As  once — of  o —  Merlin  and  V,  136 

I  know  the  Table  Round,  my  friends  of  o ;  „  816 

I  know  That  Joseph  came  of  o  to  Glastonbury,  Holy  Grail  60 

every  evil  thought  I  had  thought  of  o,  „      372 

when  I  moved  of  o  A  slender  page  about  her  father's  hall,  „      580 

her  longing  and  her  will  Was  toward  mo  as  of  o ;  „       591 

Joseph  brought  of  o  to  Glastonbury  ?  '  „       735 

My  madness  came  upon  me  as  of  o,  „      787 

Shone  Uke  the  countenance  of  a  priest  of  o  PeUeas  and  E.  144 

Arise,  go  forth  and  conquer  as  of  o.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  6i 

A  land  of  o  upheaven  from  the  abyss  „  82 

my  name  has  been  A  hallow'd  memory  like  the 
names  of  o, 

I  WISH  I  were  as  in  the  years  of  o, 

mingled  with  the  famous  kings  of  o, 

my  Fathers  belong'd  to  the  church  of  o, 

not  claiming  your  pity :  I  know  you  of  o — 

has  join'd  our  hands  of  o ; 

body  which  had  lain  Of  o  in  her  embrace. 

And  the  Vision  that  led  me  of  o. 
Olden    a  valorous  weapon  in  o  England ! 
Older    others  lay  about  the  lawns.  Of  the  o  sort. 

And  he  that  told  the  tale  in  o  times 

Less  old  than  I,  yet  o,  for  my  blood 

withheld  His  o  and  his  mightier  from  the  Usts, 
Oldest     Behind  yon  whispering  tuft  of  o  pine, 

Graven  in  the  o  tongue  of  all  this  world. 

And  o  friend,  your  Uncle,  wishes  it, 

each  of  them  boasted  he  sprang  from  the  o  race 
upon  earth. 

And  o  age  in  shadow  from  the  night, 

one  Their  o,  and  the  same  who  first 

Whereon  their  o  and  their  boldest  said, 
Old-fashion'd    See  owd-farran'd 
Old-recurring    o-r  waves  of  prejudice  Resmooth 
Old-world    o-w  trdns,  upheld  at  court 

like  an  o-w  mammoth  bulk'd  in  ice. 

Dust  in  wholesome  o-w  dust 

And  now — like  o-w  inns  that  take 
Old  Year    And  the  o  v  is  dead. 

For  the  o  y  lies  a-dying. 

O  y,  you  must  not  die ; 

O  y,  you  shall  not  die.  (repeat) 

O  y,  you  must  not  go ; 

O  y,  you  shall  not  go. 

O  y,  if  you  must  die. 

0  y,  we'll  dearly  rue  for  you : 
'Ole  (whole)     an'  the  'o  'ouse  hupside  down. 
Oleander     Where  o's  flush'd  the  bed 
Olive    (a  girl's  name)    WiU  I  to  O  plight  my  troth, 
Olive  (tree)     the  year  in  which  our  o's  fail'd. 

Of  o,  aloe,  and  maize  and  vine. 

A  light  amid  its  o's  green ; 

Peace  sitting  under  her  o, 

to  me  thro'  all  the  grovas  of  o 
Olive-gardens    '  Leaving  the  o-g  far  below, 
Olive-glade     There  in  a  secret  o-g  I  saw 
Olive-hoary    Or  o-h  cape  in  ocean ; 
Olive-silvery    Sweet  Catullus's  all-but-island,  o-s 

Sirmio ! 
Olivet    crown'd  The  purple  brows  of  0. 
Olive-yard    o-y  and  vine  And  golden  grain, 
Olivia    maid  or  spouse.  As  fair  as  my  0, 

1  saw  Your  own  0  blow, 
Declare  when  last  0  came  To  sport 

Olympian    Ghost  of  Pindar  in  you  RolI'd  an  0 ; 
Omar    that  large  infidel  Your  0 ;  and  your  0  drew 

Full-handed  plaudits 
Omega     '0 !  thou  art  Lord,'  they  said. 
Omen    from  which  their  o's  all  men  drew, 

What  o's  may  foreshadow  fate  to  man  And  woman, 
Omen'd    See  ni-omen'd 
Ondecent  (indecent)     an'  saayin'  o  things,  Spinster's  S's.  90 


Lover's  Tale  i  445 

Tiresias  1 

„    171 

The  Wreck  1 

Despair  37 

Happy  93 

Death  of  (Enone  94 

The  Dreamer  5 

Kapiolani  4 

Princess  ii  463 

Gareth  and  L.  1427 

Merlin  and  V.  556 

Pdleas  and  E.  160 

(Enone  88 

Com.  of  Arthur  302 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  47 

V.  of  Maeldune  4 

Tiresias  104 

Death  of  (Enone  53 

100 

Princess  Hi  240 

Day-Dm.,  Ep.  9 

Princess  v  148 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  150 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  13 

D.ofF.  Women  248 

D.oftheO.  Year  5 

6 

9,  24 

15 

18 

27 

43 

North.  Cobbler  42 

The  Daisy  33 

Talking  Oak  283 

Princess  i  125 

The  Daisy  4 

,,      30 

Maud  I  i  33 

Prater  Ave,  etc.  3 

D.ofF.  Women  211 

Tiresias  39 

The  Daisy  31 

Prater  Ave,  etc.  9 

In  Mem  xxxi  12 

Demeter  and  P.  110 

Talking  Oak  35 

76 

99 

To  Prof.  Jebb.  4 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  37 
Two  Voices  278 
Ode  on  Well.  36 
Tiresias  7 


One    (See  also  Wan,  Won,  Wonn)    We  were  two 

daughters  of  o  race :  The  Sisters  1 

By  0  low  voice  to  o  dear  neighbourhood,  Aylmer's  Field  60 

The  0  transmitter  of  their  ancient  name,  „             296 

that  0  kiss  Was  Leolin's  o  strong  rival  „             556 

Never  o  kindly  smile,  o  kindly  word :  „            564 

Never  since  our  bad  earth  became  o  sea,  „            635 

or  o  stone  Left  on  another,  „            768 

his  o  word  was  '  desolate ; '  „            836 

then  I  saw  o  lovely  star  Larger  and  larger.  Sea  Dreams  93 

'  With  all  his  conscience  and  o  eye  askew  ' —  „          180 

Without  0  pleasure  and  without  o  pain,  Lucretius  269 

And  there  we  took  o  tutor  as  to  read :  Princess,  Pro.  179 

Yet  let  us  breathe  for  o  hour  more  in  Heaven '  „             Hi  69 

On  0  knee  Kneehng,  I  gave  it,  which  she  caught,  „            iv  469 

My  o  sweet  child,  whom  I  shall  see  no  more !  „               v92 

My  babe,  my  sweet  Aglaia,  my  o  child :  „                101 

her  o  fault  The  tenderness,  not  yours,  „            m  185 

To  o  deep  chamber  shut  from  sound,  „                376 

for  on  o  side  arose  The  women  up  in  wild  revolt,  „           vii  122 

His  nights,  his  days,  moves  with  him  to  0  goal,  „                263 

And  save  the  o  true  seed  of  freedom  sown  Ode  on  Well.  162 

But  the  0  voice  in  Europe :  we  must  speak ;  Third  of  Feb.  16 

For  us,  we  will  not  spare  the  tyrant  0  hard  word.  „  42 
That  0  fair  planet  can  produce,                                   Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  24 

0  tall  Agave  above  the  lake.  The  Daisy  84 
Yet  o  lay-hearth  would  give  you  welcome                To  F.  D.  Maurice  11 

Or  later,  pay  o  visit  here,  „               45 

There  is  but  0  bird  with  a  musical  throat.  The  Islet  27 

May  make  0  music  as  before.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  28 

Make  0  wreath  more  for  Use  and  Wont,  „         xxix  11 

Of  0  mute  Shadow  watching  all.  „            xxx  8 

Then  0  deep  love  doth  supersede  „          xxxii  5 

But  for  0  hour,  0  Love,  I  strive  „       .    xxxv  6 

That  not  o  life  shall  be  destroy 'd,  „  Ud  q 
At  o  dear  knee  we  proffer'd  vows,  0  lesson  from 

o  book  we  learn'd,  „        Ixxix  13 

They  mix  in  o  another's  arms  „            cH  23 

Whereat  those  maidens  with  o  mind  „           dii  45 

0  God,  o  law,  o  element.  And  o  far-off  divine  event,  „        Con.  142 

1  know  it  the  0  bright  thing  to  save  Maud  I  xvi  20 
To  save  from  some  sUght  shame  o  simple  girl.  „  xviii  45 
O  long  milk-bloom  on  the  tree ;  „  xxii  46 
For  o  short  hour  to  see  The  souls  we  loved,  „  //  iv  14 
But  is  ever  the  0  thing  silent  here.  „  v  68 
To  catch  a  friend  of  mine  0  stormy  day ;  „  85 
And  the  heart  of  a  people  beat  with  o  desire ;  „  ///  vi  49 
O  light  together,  but  has  past  and  leaves  Ded.  of  Idylls  48 
Then  might  we  live  together  as  o  life,  And  reigning 

with  0  will  in  everything  Com.  of  Arthur  91 

Give  my  o  daughter  saving  to  a  king,  „             143 

In  o  great  annal-book,  where  after-years  „             158 

'  Few,  but  all  brave,  aU  of  o  mind  with  him ;  „            255 

That  men  are  blinded  by  it — on  0  side,  „            301 

Arthur  and  his  knighthood  for  a  space  Were  all  0  will,  „            516 

only  0  proof.  Before  thou  ask  the  King  Gareth  and  L.  144 

Our  o  white  he  sits  like  a  little  ghost  „            297 

When  some  good  knight  had  done  0  noble  deed,  „            411 

At  o  end  o,  that  gave  upon  a  range  Of  level  pavement  „            666 


Then  after  o  long  slope  was  mounted,  saw, 
in  a  moment — at  o  touch  Of  that  skill'd  spear. 
But  with  0  stroke  Sir  Gareth  split  the  skull. 
In  a  long  valley,  on  o  side  whereof, 
And  on  o  side  a  castle  in  decay, 
'  Here,  by  God's  grace,  is  the  o  voice  for  me.' 
'  Here  by  God's  rood  is  the  o  maid  for  me.' 
o  command  I  laid  upon  you,  not  to  speak  to  me, 
The  0  true  lover  whom  you  ever  own'd. 
The  pieces  of  his  armour  in  o  place, 
answering  not  o  word,  she  led  the  way. 
(With  o  main  purpose  ever  at  my  heart) 
o  side  had  sea  And  ship  and  sail  and  angels 
The  whole  wood-world  is  0  full  peal  of  praise. 
Where  imder  0  long  lane  of  cloudless  air 
And  sowing  0  ill  hint  from  ear  to  ear. 


795 

1222 

1404 

Marr.  of  Geraint  243 

245 

344 

368 

Geraint  and  E.  77 

344 

374 

495 

831 

Balin  and  Balan  364 

450 

461 

Merlin  and  V.  143 


One 

One  {continued)    And  knew  no  more,  nor  eave  mp 
o  poor  word ;  ^ 

Take  o  verse  more— the  lady  speaks  itr-this  • 
Yet  IS  there  0  true  hne,  the  pearl  of  pearls: 
Kead  but  o  book,  and  ever  reading  grew 
And  smce  he  kept  his  mind  on  o  sole  aim 

b^t"  ^Zl.Tf^  ^"'^  ^'^  returning  foundNot  two 

And  not  the  o  dark  hour  wliich  brings  remorse 
But  have  ye  no  o  word  of  loyal  praise  For  Arthur 
I  will  go.     In  truth,  but  o  thing  now—         "°"'^' 
send  O  flash,  that,  missing  all  things  else 
the  0  passionate  love  Of  her  whole  life  • 
m  o  nioment,  she  put  forth  the  charm  ' 
Carved  of  o  emerald  center'd  in  a  sun  Of  silver 

rays, 

'Stay  a  little !    0  golden  minute's  grace ! 

l-ull  often  the  bright  unage  of  o  face 

and  o  morn  it  chanced  He  found  her'in  among 

Aiid  1  must  die  for  want  of  o  bold  word  ' 

This  was  the  o  discourtesy  that  he  used.' 

^,.^/=old  passive  hand  Received  at  once 

With  o  sharp  rapid,  where  the  crisping  white 

there  I  found  Only  o  man  of  an  exceeding  age 

And  gateways  m  a  glory  like  o  pearl— 

With  o  great  dwelling  in  the  middle  of  it  • 

tiU  o  fair  mom,  I  walking  to  and  fro 

O  n^ht  my  pathway  swerving  east,  I  saw 

J^  or  brother,  so  o  night,  because  they  roll 

knightly  in  me  twined  and  clung  Round  that  o  sin 

But  never  let  me  bide  o  hour  at  peace 

A  rose,  o  rose,  and  this  was  wontlrous  fair  0  rose 

a  rose  that  gladden'd  earth  and  sky,  O  rose  mv 

^   rose,  that  sweeten'd  all  mine  air—  '     ^ 

O  rose  a  rose  to  gather  by  and  by,  O  rose,  a  rose 

to  gather  and  to  wear,  ,  <i  ios.e, 

O  rose  my  rose ;  a  rose  that  will  not  die,—  "  2r^ 

Save  that  0  rivulet  from  a  tiny  cave  "  T^t 

h'^n. '^R ^-f^^u'  f  ^^^  ^  ^"^^  J^n^^ht  on  earth,  "  til 

&nTLS"K/f.?.^:^.TK.-i-^  <>  ^-d  off,    Ust  TournameJU 

162 
168 
218 
285 
302 
493 
539 
612 
„    .        716 
Qumevere  4 
„      2] 
„    475 
"    619 
Pass,  of  Arthur  118 
156 
163 
197 
341 
410 
439 
460 
To  the  Queen  ii  8 
31 
Lover's  Tale  i  17 


510 


One 


Merlin  and  V.  277 
445 
459 
622 
626 


708 
763 
778 
918 
932 
955 
967 

Lancelot  and  E.  295 
684 
882 
922 
927 
988 
1201 
Eoly  Grail  381 
431 
527 
574 
591 
634 
685 
775 
Pelleas  and  E.  387 


401 


then  o  low  roll  Of  Autumn  thunder. 
An  ocean-sounding  welcome  to  o  knight 
Our  o  white  day  of  Innocence  hath  past' 
But  Dagonet  with  o  foot  poised  in  his  hand, 
*  ear  God:  honour  the  King— his  o  true  knight- 
o      ",  '°?e  woman,  weeping  near  a  cross. 
So,  pluck'd  0  way  by  hate  and  o  by  love 
Here  o  bl^k,  mute  midsummer  night  I  sat 

«  w  r  'l^'^f  -"^^"Z  ^''"^^  The  warm  white  apple 

o  low  light  betwixt  them  burn'd  ^^ 

For  thus  it  chanced  o  mom  when  all  the  court 

10  love  0  maiden  only,  cleave  to  her 

And  makes  me  o  pollution :  he,  the  King 

as  by  some  0  deathbed  after  wail  Of  suffering. 

Who  hath  but  dwelt  beneath  a  roof  with  me 

o  last  act  of  kinghood  shalt  thou  see  Yet, 

in  those  old  days,  o  summer  noon 

Then  took  with  care,  and  kneeling  on  o  knee 

wi  t"  ^u"'?  T,^'."  ^^^"''^  (^OTvn^t  the  world. 

Sn^      '^v"  ^^^^^  dot  against  tLe  verge  of  dawn, 

Sounds,  as  if  some  fair  city  were  o  voice 

And  London  roU'd  o  tide  of  joy  thro' 

^^m!^'°"^  *'"  T  ''^^  ^"«"t'  and  o  isle,  o  isle, 
sometmies  touches  but  o  string  That  quivers,  ' 
The  stream  of  hfe,  o  stream,  o  life,  o  blood.  6 

sustenance,  ' 

this  o  name.  In  some  obscure  hereafter, 
C^olden  dream  of  love,  from  which  m4y  death 
WBy  grew  we  then  together  in  o  plot  ?    Why  fed 
we  from  o  fountain  ?   drew  o  sun  ?    Whv  were 
our  mothers'  branches  of  o  stem  ^ 

Brooded  o  master-passion  evermore 

Mo'^TL'W."'^^"*^^  upblown  billow  ran 
Mo>ed  witl,  0  spirit  round  about  the  bay, 


239 
457 
760 


n23 

60 

178 

Hi  17 


One  (continued)    her  hair  Studded  with  o  rich 
Provence  rose — 
2lr^^'^^^  she  reach'd  to  those  that  came  behind. 
Well  he  had  0  golden  hour— of  triumph  shall  I  sav? 
at  o  end  of  the  haU  Two  great  funereal  curtains 
And  bearmg  on  o  arm  the  noble  babe 
he  took  no  hfe,  but  he  took  o  purse. 
An'  o  night  I  cooms  'oam  hke  a  bull 
he  dared  her  with  o  httle  ship  and  his  English  few  • 
when  o  quick  peal  Of  laughter  drew  me 
all  O  bloom  of  youth,  health,  beauty,  happiness 
An  Lucy  wur  laame  o'  o  leg, 
And  she  lay  with  a  flower  in  o  hand 
that  0  night  a  crowd  Throng'd  the  waste  field 
Wot  even  by  o  hair's-breadth  of  heresy 
Am  ready  to  sail  forth  on  o  last  voyage, 
to  lead  O  last  crusade  against  the  Saracen 
May  send  o  ray  to  thee ! 
For  the  peak  sent  up  o  league  of  fire 
For  the  o  half  slew  the  other. 
From  that  o  hght  no  man  can  look  upon, 
WiU  make  o  people  ere  man's  race  be  run  • 
Oast  at  thy  feet  o  flower  that  fades  away. 
O  night  when  earth  was  winter-black, 
— not  0  bush  was  near — 

o  snowy  knee  was  prest  Against  the  margin  flowers  • 
great  God  Ar6s,  whose  o  bliss  Is  war,  ' 


X       ,  >   """ovy  w  ijiioa  io  war, 

bend  no  such  hght  upon  the  ways  of  men  As  o  great  deed 
On  o  far  height  in  o  far-shiniHg  fire. 
O  height  and  o  far-shining  fire ' 
I  would  make  my  life  o  prayer  for  a  soul 
go  To  spend  my  o  last  year  among  the  hills. 

Th!;^..    '"Y'^  "/^F  ^^yo"'^  0"r  village  miseries, 
Those  three  hundred  millions  under  o  Imperial 

sceptre  now. 
There  is  o  old  Hostel  left  us 
With  o  gray  glimpse  of  sea ; 
Welcome,  welcome  with  o  voice ' 
0  hfe,  0  flag,  o  fleet,  o  Throne ! '  ' 
By  0  side-path,  from  simple  truth  ■ 
And  o  drear  sound  I  have  not  heard, 
O  full  voice  of  allegiance, 
and  I  heard  o  voice  from  aU  the  three 
K, "?.""  "obbut  hev'  o  glass  of  aale. 
An  theere  i'  the  'ouse  o  night- 
Well,  O  way  for  Miriam. 
0  silent  voice  Came  on  the  wind, 
O  year  without  a  storm,  or  even  a  cloud  • 
JMay,  you  were  my  o  solace  ;  only—         ' 
o  day  came  And  saw  you,  shook  her  head, 
groping  for  it,  could  not  find  O  likeness, 
^or  o  monotonous  fancy  madden'd  her 
A  red  mark  ran  All  round  o  finger  pointed  straight, 
Who  never  caught  o  gleam  of  Se  beauty  *    ' 

If  man  and  wife  be  but  o  flesh 
Might  I  crave  0  favour  ? 
Lay  your  Plato  for  o  minute  down 
but  the  goodly  view  Was  now  o  blank, 
flamed  On  o  huge  slope  beyond 
l;or  o  moment  afterward  A  silence  follow'd 
Ihen  0  deep  roar  as  of  a  breaking  sea. 
Mine  IS  the  o  fruit  Alia  made  for  mail.' 
Make  but  o  music,  haimonising  "  Prav  " 

0  Alia!  o  KaUfa!  ^ 

1  had  0  brief  summer  of  bUss 
there  o  day  He  had  left  his  dagger  behind  him 
Moan  to  myseH  '  o  plunge-thTn  quiet  for  e^ore 
And  o  clear  call  for  me  !  'cmiuri. 
For  that  the  evil  o's  come  here,  and  sav 

A  rose,  but  0,  none  other  rose  had  I 
No  rose  but  o— what  other  rose  had  I? 
^^^^^^^er- changing   0    And   ever  -  changing 

But  o  was  counter  to  the  hearth 
But  never  a  o  so  gay, 


Lover's  Tale  Hi  45 
48 
).  iv  6 

213 
370 
Rizpah  31 
North.  Cobbler  33 
The  Revenge  107 
Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  115 
120 
Village  Wife  99 
In  the  Child.  Hosp.  39 
Sir  J.  Oldcastle  39 
Columbus  64 
„       237 
„       239 
Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  14 
V.  of  Maeldune  72 
114 
De  Prof.,  Two  G.  37 
To  Victor  Hugo  11 
To  Dante  7 
To  E.  Fitzgerald  21 
Tiresias  36 
42 
,,      111 
„      162 
„      185 
„      186 
The  Wreck  10 
Ancient  Sage  16 
206 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  117 

247 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  8 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  1 

39 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  28 

^     r       "  40 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  22 

Demeter  and  P.  84 

Owd  Rod  20 

„       27 

The  Ring  73 

„      153 

„       284 

„      310 

,,      312 

„      337 

„      404 

,,      453 

Happy  60 

,.       94 

Romney's  R.  70 

To  Master  of  B.  4 

Death  of  CEnone  4 

St.  Telemachus  8 

64 

67 

Akbar's  Dream  40 

151 

167 

Bandit's  Death  9 

11 

'  Charity  16 

Crossing  the  Bar  2 

St.  S.  Stylites  98 

Pelleas  and  E.  400 

407 


Akbars  Dream  147 

Gareth  and  L.  672 

Poet's  Song  14 


One 


511 


Open-mouth' d 


One  (conlimied)    Why  were  we  o  in  all  things,  save  in 
that  Where  to  have  been  o  had  been  the  cope  and 


crown 

0  with  Britain,  heart  and  soul ! 
One-day-seen    The  o-d-s  Sir  Lancelot  in  her  heart, 
One-sided    '  O  dull,  o-s  voice,'  said  I, 
Only  (adj.)    His  o  child,  his  Edith,  whom  he  loved 

'  We  have  his  dearest.  His  o  son ! ' 
Fear  not  to  give  this  King  thine  o  child, 
when  her  son  Beheld  his  o  way  to  glory 

1  have  miss'd  the  o  way  (repeat) 
Had  niaiTied  Enid,  Yniol's  o  child. 

Onset    greaves  and  cuisses  dash'd  with  drops  Of  o  ; 

A  day  of  o's  of  despair ! 

Rings  to  the  roar  of  an  angel  o — 

and  so  they  crash'd  In  o, 

greaves  and  cuisses  dash'd  with  drops  Of  o ; 
Onslaught    make  an  o  single  on  a  realm 
Onward  (adj.  and  adv.)    Still  o ;  and  the  clear  canal  Is 

rounded  Arabian  Nights  45 

Till  in  its  o  current  it  absorbs  Isabel  31 

fiery -hot  to  burst  All  barriers  in  her  o  race  For  power.   In  Mem.  exiv  14 


Lover's  Tale  ii  26 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  38 

Lancelot  and  E.  Til 

Two  Voices  202 

Aylmer's  Field  23 

The  Victim  64 

Com.  of  Arthur  413 

Gareth  and  L.  159 

„     787,792 

Marr.  of  Qeraint  4 

M.  d' Arthur  216 

Ode  on  Well.  124 

Milton  8 

Balin  and  Balan  556 

Pass,  of  Arthur  384 

Geraint  and  E  917 


vast  eddies  in  the  flood  Of  o  time 

A  moment,  ere  the  o  whirlwind  shatter  it, 

But  in  the  o  current  of  her  speech. 
Onward  (s)     his  truer  name  Is  '  O,' 
Onward-sloping     '  Mid  o-s  motions  infinite 
'Oonderd  (hundred)    an'  thin  my  two  'o  a-year 

wellnigh  purr'd  ma  awaay  fro'  my  oan  two  'o  a-year.  „  58 

Oorali    Drench'd  with  the  hellish  o —  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  10 


„       cxxviii  6 

Lover's  Tale  i  451 

565 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  14 

Palace  of  Art  2^1 

Spinster's  S's.  12 


Ooze  (s)     For  I  was  drench'd  with  o, 
Ooze  (verb)     bloat  himself,  and  o  All  over 
Oozed    0  All  o'er  with  honey'd  answer 
Opal    gayer  colours,  like  an  o  warm'd. 
Open  (adj  )    The  costly  doors  flung  o  wide, 

Showering  thy  gleaned  wealth  into  my  o  breast 

An  0  scroll.  Before  him  lay : 

Wide,  wild,  and  o  to  the  air, 

Thro'  the  o  gates  of  the  city  afar, 

Her  0  eyes  desire  the  truth. 

More  softly  round  the  o  wold, 

On  o  main  or  winding  shore ! 

Were  o  to  each  other ; 

voice  Of  comfort  and  an  o  hand  of  help, 

Follows  the  mouse,  and  all  is  o  field. 

we  had  limed  ourselves  With  o  eyes, 

and  in  her  lion's  mood  Tore  o, 

so  To  the  0  window  moved, 

one  glance  he  caught  Thro'  o  doors  of  Ida 

Thro'  o  field  into  the  lists  they  wound 

And  all  thy  heart  Ues  o  unto  me. 

He,  on  whom  from  both  her  o  hands 

immeasurable  heavens  Break  o  to  their  highest, 

But  o  converse  is  there  none, 

Imperial  halls,  or  o  plain ; 

in  their  hand  Is  Nature  like  an  o  book ; 

lords  Banded,  and  so  brake  out  in  o  war.' 

'  Wherefore  waits  the  madman  there  Naked  in  o 
dayshine? ' 

rang  Clear  thro'  the  o  casement  of  the  hall, 

Thro'  o  doors  and  hospitality ; 

Coursed  one  another  more  on  o  ground 

And  i.ssuing  under  o  heavens  beheld 

Painted,  who  stare  at  o  space,  nor  glance 

I  smote  upon  the  naked  skull  A  thrall  of  thine  in  o 


Princess  v  28 

Sea  Dreams  154 

Princess  v  241 

Merlin  and  V.  950 

Arabian  Nights  17 

Ode  to  Memory  23 

The  Poet  8 

Dying  Swan  2 

34 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  17 

To  J.  S.  2 

The  Voyage  6 

Aylmer's  Field  40 

174 

„  853 

Princess  Hi  143 

iv  381 

492 

V  343 

„  viM 

„       vii  183 

Ode  on  Well.  195 

Spec,  of  Iliad  15 

in  Mem.  xx  17 

„    xcviii  29 

„    Con.  132 

Com.  of  Arthur  237 

Gareth  and  L.  1092 

Marr.  of  Geraint  328 

456 

522 

Geraint  and  E.  196 
268 


hall,  Balin  and  Balan  56 

under  o  blue  Came  on  the  hoarhead  woodman  „            293 

Push'd  thro'  an  o  casement  down,  „            413 

My  mother  on  his  corpse  in  o  field ;  (repeat)  Merlin  and  V.  43,  73 

And  laid  the  diamond  in  his  o  hand.  Lancelot  and  E.  827 
He  loves  the  Queen,  and  in  an  o  shame :  And  she 

returns  his  love  in  o  shame ;  „           1082 

But  for  a  mile  all  round  was  o  space,  Pelleas  and  E.  28 

And  he  was  left  alone  in  o  field.  „          208 

straight  on  thro'  o  door  Rode  Gawain,  „          382 


Open  (adj.)  (continued)    Wide  o  were  the  gates,  And  no 

watch  kept ;  Pelleas  and  E.  414 

'  Nay,  fool,  said  Tristram,  '  not  in  o  day.'  Last  Tournament  347 

huge  machicolated  tower  That  stood  with  o  doors,  „              425 

but  sprang  Thro'  o  doors,  and  swording  right  and  left         „  473 

In  o  battle  or  the  tilting-field  (repeat)  Guinevere  330,  332 

o  flower  tell  What  sort  of  bud  it  was.  Lover's  Tale  i  151 

Arise  in  o  prospect — heath  and  hill,  „             397 

Forthgazing  on  the  waste  and  o  sea,  „        ii  177 

moon  Struck  from  an  o  grating  overhead  „  iv  60 
An  0  landaulet  Whirl'd  by,  which,  after  it  had 

past  me,  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  85 
Rip  your  brothers'  vices  o,                                       Locksley  H.,  Sixty  141 

We  often  walk  In  o  sun,  The  Ring  328 

There,  the  chest  was  o — all  The  sacred  relics  „        446 

The  door  is  o.     He !  is  he  standing  at  the  door,  Happy  11 

And  in  her  o  palm  a  halcyon  sits  Patient —  Prog,  of  Spring  20 

Wait  till  Death  has  flung  them  o,  Faith  7 

Open  (s)     race  thro'  many  a  mile  Of  dense  and  o,  Balin  and  Balan  424 

Open  (verb)     Heaven  o's  inward,  chasms  yawn.  Two  Voices  304 

Uke  a  horse  That  hears  the  corn-bin  o,  The  Epic  45 

and  o's  but  to  golden  keys.  Locksley  Hall  1(X> 

o  to  me.  And  lay  my  little  blossom  at  my  feet,  Princess  v  99 

'  O  dewy  flowers  that  o  to  the  sun,  Gareth  and  L.  1066 

The  wayside  blossoms  o  to  the  blaze.  Balin  and  Balan  449 

To  dig,  pick,  o,  find  and  read  the  charm :  Merlin  and  V.  660 

0  gates.  And  I  will  make  you  merry.'  Pelleas  and  E.  373 
The  golden  gates  would  o  at  a  word.                     Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  145 

He  would  o  the  books  that  I  prized.  The  Wreck  21 
Till  Holy  St.  Pether  gets  up  wid  his  kays  an'  o's  the 

gate !  Tomorrow  93 

O's  a  door  in  Heaven  ;  Early  Spring  7 

Open-door'd    Once  rich,  now  poor,  but  ever  o-d.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  302 

always  o-d  To  every  breath  from  heaven,  Akbar's  Dream  179 
Open'd  (adj.)     Lily  of  the  vale !  half  o  bell  of  the  woods !       Princess  vi  193 

Open'd  (verb)     Thy  dark  eyes  o  not,  Elednore  1 

northward  of  the  narrow  port  0  a  larger  haven :  Enoch  Arden  103 

Where  either  haven  o  on  the  deeps,  „            671 

With  one  small  gate  that  o  on  the  waste,  „            733 

Crept  to  the  gate,  and  o  it,  „            775 

counter  door  to  that  Which  Leohn  o,  Aylmer's  Field  283 

Books  (see  Daniel  seven  and  ten)  Were  o,  Sea  Dreams  153 

gate  shone  Only,  that  o  on  the  field  below :  Gareth  and  L.  195 

Now  two  great  entries  o  from  the  hall,  „            665 

But  yesterday  you  never  o  lip.  Merlin  and  V.  271 

0  his  arms  to  embrace  me  as  he  came,  Holy  Grail  417 

all  the  heavens  0  and  blazed  with  thunder  „          508 

the  heavens  o  and  blazed  again  Roaring,  „          516 

Sat  by  the  walls,  and  no  one  o  to  him.  Pelleas  and  E.  217 

0  on  the  pines  with  doors  of  glass.  Lover's  Tale  i  41 
door  for  scoundrel  scum  I  o  to  the  West,  Columbus  171 
it  0  and  dropt  at  the  side  of  each  man,  V.  of  Maddune  85 

1  shook  as  I  o  the  letter —  The  Wreck  145 
A  door  was  o  in  the  house —  The  Flight  69 
Muriel  claim'd  and  o  what  I  meant  For  Miriam,  The  Ring  242. 
And  bolted  doors  that  0  of  themselves:  „        413 

Opener    nor  the  silent  0  of  the  Gate.'  God  and  the  Univ.  & 

Open-hearted     '  An  o-h  maiden,  true  and  pure.  Princess  Hi  98 
Opening  (adj.  and  part.)    {See  also  Half-opening)    o  upon 

level  plots  Of  crowned  Ulies,  Ode  to  Memory  108- 

in  front  The  goi^es,  o  wide  apart,  CEnone  12 

and  o  out  his  milk-white  palm  „      65 

The  cloudy  porch  oft  o  on  the  Sun  ?  Love  and  Duty  9 

struck  it  thnce,  and,  no  one  o,  Enter'd ;  Enoch  Arden  279 

o  this  I  read  Of  old  Sir  Ralph  a  page  or  two  Princess,  Pro.  120 

Not  yet  endured  to  meet  her  o  eyes,  „             iv  195 

and  she  rose  O  her  arms  to  meet  me,  Holy  Grail  395 

in  a  moment  when  they  blazed  again  0,  „          524 

long  water  o  on  the  deep  Somewhere  Pass,  of  Arthur  46S 

in  the  end,  0  on  darkness,  Lover's  Tale  ii  125 

an  ever  o  height.  An  ever  lessening  earth —  The  Ring  45 

Opening  (s)     About  the  o  of  the  flower,  Two  Voices  161 

we  saw  The  clefts  and  o's  in  the  mountains  Lover's  Tale  i  330 

Open-mouth'd     AU  o-m,  all  gazing  to  the  light,  Princess  iv  483 

So  stood  the  unhappy  mother  o-m,  „    vi  143 


openness 


512 


Orgies 


Openness    Till  taken  with  her  seeming  o 
Open-work    o-w  in  which  the  hunter  rued 
Operation    Thy  scope  of  o,  day  by  day, 
Ophir    brought  From  Solomon's  now-recover'd  O 
Opiate    Then  bring  an  o  trebly  strong, 

fumes  Of  that  dark  o  dose  you  gave  me. 

Has  your  o  then  Bred  this  black  mood  ? 
Opinion    banded  unions  persecute  0, 
Oppian    and  storm'd  At  the  0  law. 
Opposed    0  mirrors  each  reflecting  each — 

and  o  Free  hearts,  free  foreheads — 

fifty  there  0  to  fifty, 
Opposite    loathsome  o  Of  all  my  heart 
Opposition    Yet  not  with  brawling  o  she. 

Thro'  solid  o  crabb'd  and  gnarl'd. 

we  four  may  build  some  plan  Foursquare  to  o.' 
Oppress    icy-hearted  Muscovite  O  the  region  ?  ' 
Oppression     But  they  hated  his  o, 

himt  the  tiger  of  o  out  From  office ; 
Opulence    barbarous  o  jewel-thick  Sunn'd  itself 

In  a  world  of  arrogant  o, 
Opulent    Or  beast  or  bird  or  fish,  or  o  flower: 

A  less  diffuse  and  o  end, 

0  Avarice,  lean  as  Poverty  ; 
Oracle    (See  also  State-oracle)    Sleek  Odalisques,  or  o's  of 
mode. 

Apart  the  Chamian  0  divine 
Orange  (adj.)    leave  Yon  o  sunset  waning  slow : 

some  hid  and  sought  In  the  o  thickets  : 

Made  cypress  of  her  o  flower. 

And  0  grove  of  Paraguay, 
Orange  (s)    past  Into  deep  o  o'er  the  sea, 

A  scarf  of  o  round  the  stony  helm, 
Orange-bloom    Soldier-brother's  bridal  o-b 
Orange-blossom    In  lands  of  palm,  of  o-b, 
Orange-flower    (See  also  Orange  (adj.))    When  first  she 

wears  her  o-fl 
Oration    hung  to  hear  The  rapt  o 
Oration-like    and  rolling  words  O-l. 
Orator    Stood  up  and  spake,  an  aSluent  o. 

Gloet  of  warrior,  glory  of  o, 

Charm  us,  0,  till  the  Lion  look 
Oratory    in  praise  of  her  Grew  o. 

Who,  with  mild  heat  of  holy  o, 
Orb  (s)    ambrosial  o's  Of  rich  fruit-bunches 

So  many  minds  did  gird  their  o's  with  beams. 

Should  slowly  round  his  o, 

saw  The  hollow  o  of  moving  Circumstance 

She  raised  her  piercing  o's, 

Storm'd  in  o's  of  song. 

And  here  he  stays  upon  a  freezing  o 

Than  if  the  crowded  0  should  cry 

Thine  are  these  o's  of  light  and  shade ; 

From  0  to  o,  from  veil  to  veil.' 

This  round  of  green,  this  o  of  flame, 

her  dark  o  Touch'd  with  earth's  light — 

Glance  at  the  wheeling  0  of  change, 
Orb  (verb)    That  the  whole  mind  might  o  about — 

o's  Between  the  Northern  and  the  Southern 
mom.' 

And  o  into  the  perfect  star  We  saw  not, 
Orb'd    (See    also    Full-orb'd)    remain    0    in    you 

isolation : 
Orbit    this  o  of  the  memory  folds  For  ever 

The  Sun  will  run  his  o, 

Sway'd  to  her  from  their  o's  as  they  moved, 

circuits  of  thine  o  round  A  higher  height. 

In  azure  o's  heavenly-wise ; 

from  her  household  o  draws  the  child 
Orchard  (adj.)    Two  lovers  whispering  by  an  o  wall; 

birds  Begin  to  warble  yonder  in  the  budding  o  trees ! 
Orchard  (s)    on  a  slope  of  o,  Francis  laid  A  damask 
napkin 

a  stream  That  flash'd  across  her  o 
1  whipt  him  for  robbing  an  o  once 


Princess  iv  300 

203 

Prog,  of  Spring  111 

Columbus  112 

In  Mem.  Ixxi  6 

Romney's  B.  31 

61 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  18 

Princess  vii  124 

Sonnet  To 11 

Ulysses  48 

Princess  v  484 

Guinevere  491 

Enoch  Arden  159 

Princess  Hi  126 

V  231 

Poland  11 

The  Captain  9 

Akbar's  Dream,  158 

Maud  I  xiii  12 

Despair  78 

Lv/:retius  249 

Tiresias  189 

Fastness  20 


Princess  ii  77 

Alexander  10 

Move  eastward  2 

Princess  ii  460 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  15 

To  Ulysses  12 

Mariana  in  the  S.  26 

Princess,  Pro.  102 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  11 

The  Daisy  3 


In  Mem.  xl  4 

„  Ixxocvii  32 

Princess  v  373 

„    iv  291 

Wages  1 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  112 

Gardener's  D.  57 

Geraint  and  E.  866 

Isabel  36 

The  Poet  29 

Elednore  91 

Palace  oj  Art  255 

D.  of  F.  Women  171 

Vision  of  Sin  25 

Lucretius  139 

Lit.  Squabbles  15 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  5 

„         XXX  28 

„        xxxiv  5 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  9 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  3 

Two  Voices  138 


Princess  v  422 
In  Mem.  xxiv  15 

Princess  vi  169 

Gardener's  D.  74 

Love  and  Duty  22 

Princess  vii  326 

In  Mem.  Ixiii  11 

„      Ixxxvii  38 

To  Prin.  Beatrice  7 

Circumstance  4 

The  Flight  61 

Audley  Court  20 

Holy  Grail  593 

Rizpah  25 


Orchard-lawns    happy  fair  with  o-l  And  bowery 
hollows 

happy,  fair  with  o-l  And  bowery  hollows 
Orchis     Bring  o,  bring  the  foxglove  spire, 
Ordain'd    diamond  jousts,  WMch  Arthur  had  o. 
Ordeal    faded  love.  Or  o  by  kindness ; 
Order  (arrai^ement,  etc.)    fluted  vase,  and  brazen 
urn  In  o, 

all  things  in  o  stored, 

-'Tis  hard  to  settle  o  once  again. 

old  0  changeth,  yielding  place  to  new. 

That  keeps  us  all  in  o  more  or  less-— 

sitthig  well  in  o  smite  The  sounding  furrows ; 

Eye,  to  which  all  o  festers. 

The  poplars,  in  long  o  due, 

What  for  o  or  degree  ? 

But  till  this  cosmic  o  everywhere 

Sweet  o  lived  again  with  other  laws : 

Large  elements  in  o  brought. 
Order  (fraternity)    I  beheld  From  eye  to  eye  thro'  all 
their  O 

And  all  this  0  of  thy  Table  Round 

ye  know  this  0  lives  to  crush  All  wrongers 

Of  that  great  0  of  the  Table  Round, 

move  To  music  with  thine  0  and  the  King. 

Then  Balan  added  to  their  O  lived 

move  In  music  with  his  0,  and  the  King. 

to  show  His  loathing  of  our  0  and  the  Queen. 

hearts  of  all  this  0  in  mine  hand — 

marshall'd  0  of  their  Table  Round, 

A  sign  to  maim  this  0  which  I  made. 

Rejoicing  in  that  0  which  he  made.' 

And  a  lean  0 — scarce  retum'd  a  tithe — 

collar  of  some  0,  which  our  King  Hath  newly 
founded, 

Claspt  it,  and  cried  '  Thine  0,  O  my  Queen ! ' 

In  that  fair  0  of  my  Table  Roimd, 

old  0  changeth,  yielding  place  to  new. 

This  o  of  Her  Human  Star, 
Order  (command)    King  gave  o  to  let  blow  His 
horns 

Give  ye  the  slave  mine  o  to  be  bound, 
Order  (verb)     She  will  o  all  things  duly, 
Order'd    (See  also  Careless-order'd,  Horider'd)    And  o 
words  asunder  fly. 

Parks  and  o  gardens  great. 

As  all  were  o,  ages  since. 

having  o  all  Almost  as  neat  and  close 

Days  o  in  a  wealthy  peace, 
Ordering    you,  that  have  the  o  of  her  fleet. 
Ordinance    '  God's   o  Of  Death  is  blown  in  every 
wind ; ' 

Or  pass  beyond  the  goal  of  o 

voice  Of  Ida  sounded,  issuing  o  : 

and  everywhere  At  Arthur's  o, 
Ore    a  rich  Throne  of  the  massive  o, 

Jewel  or  shell,  or  starry  o. 

Or  labour'd  mine  undrainable  of  o. 

to  lift  the  hidden  o  That  glimpses, 

and  show  That  life  is  not  as  idle  o. 
Oread    whatever  0  haimt  The  knolls  of  Ida, 

here  an  0,  how  the  stm  delights  To  glance 

And  I  see  ray  0  coming  down. 
Organ    With  this  old  soul  in  o's  new  ? 

Hearing  the  holy  o  rolling  waves  Of  sound 

While  the  great  o  almost  bui-st  his  pipes. 

The  storm  their  high-built  o's  make, 

psalm  by  a  mighty  master  and  peal'd  from  an  o,- 
roll 
Organ-harmony    A  rolling  o-h  Swells  up. 
Organism    Makes  noble  thro'  the  sensuous  o 
Organ-pipes     Near  gilded  o-p,  her  hair 
Organ-voice    God-gifted  o-v  of  England, 


M.  d' Arthur  262 

Pass,  of  Arthur  ^^ 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  9 

Lancelot  and  E.  32 

Aylmer's  Field  561 

Arabian  Nights  61 

Palace  of  Art  87 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  82 

M.  d' Arthur  240 

Walk.  U  the  Mail  23 

Ulysses  58 

Locksley  Hall  133 

Amphion  37 

Vision  of  Sin  86 

Lucretius  250 

Princess  vii  19 

In  Mem.  cxii  13 

Com.  of  Arthur  270 

474 

Gareth  and  L.  625 

Marr.  of  Geraint  3 

Balin  arid  Balan  77 

91 

212 

551 

Merlin  and  V.  56 

Lancelot  and  E.  1332 

Holy  Grail  297 

327 

894 

Last  Tournament  741 

750 

Guinevere  463 

Pass,  of  Arthur  408 

Freedom  28 

Marr.  of  Geraint  152 

PeUeas  and  E.  270 

L.  of  Burleigh  39 

Day-Dm.,  Pro.  20 

L.  of  Burleigh  30 

Day  Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  54 

Enoch  Arden  177 

In  Mem.  xlvi  11 

The  Fleet  16 


Orgies     Shall  hold  their  o  at  your  tomb. 
The  mulberry-faced  Dictator's  o 


To  J.  S.  45 

Tithonus  30 

Princess  vi  373 

Gareth  and  L.  308 

Arabian  Nights  146 

Elednore  20 

CEnone  115 

D.  of  F.  Women  274 

In  Mem.  exviii  20 

CEnone  74 

Lucretius  188 

Maud  I  xvi  8 

Two  Voices  393 

D.  of  F.  Women  191 

Princess  ii  474 

In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  6 

The  Wreck  53 
Sir  Galahad  75 
Princess  ii  81 
Palace  of  Art  9& 
Milton  3 
You  might  have  won  12 
Lucretiiis  64 


Oriana 


513 


Outbuzz'd 


Oriana    My  heart  is  wasted  with 

my  woe,  0.  (repeat)  Oriana  2,  4,  7,  9, 11,  13, 16, 18,  20,  22,  25, 

27,  29,  31, 34, 36, 38,  40,  43, 45,  47, 

49, 52, 54, 56,  58,  61,  63, 65,  67,  70, 

72, 74,  76, 79, 81,  83,  85,  88, 90, 92, 

94,  97, 99 

Oriel    She  sat  betwixt  the  shining  O's,  Palace  of  Art  159 

thro'  the  topmost  O's'  coloured  flame  „            161 

The  beams,  that  thro'  the  0  shine,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  34 

All  in  an  o  on  the  summer  side,  Lancelot  and  E.  1177 

moon  Thro'  the  tall  o  on  the  rolling  sea.  Holy  Grail  831 

Oriel-embowering     Brake  from  the  vast  o-e  vine  Lancelot  and  E.  1198 

Orient  (adj.)     (See  also  Re-orient)    Tall  o  shrubs,  and 

obelisks  Arabian  Nights  107 

but  robed  in  soften'd  light  Of  o  state.  Ode  to  Memory  11 

and  earliest  shoots  Of  o  green,  „              18 

Sunn'd  by  those  o  skies ;  The  Poet  42 

Laborious  o  ivory  sphere  in  sphere.  Princess,  Pro.  20 

To  where  in  yonder  o  star  In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  15 

Orient  (s)     Doth  the  low-tongued  0  Wander  fi-om  the  side 

of  the  mom,  Adeline  51 

Deep  in  yonder  shining  0,  Locksley  Hall  154 

Came  furrowing  all  the  o  into  gold.  Princess  Hi  18 

and  her  throne  In  our  vast  O,  To  the  Queen  ii  31 

There  is  a  custom  in  the  0,  friends —  Lover's  Tale  iv  230 

Oriental    Till  silent  in  her  o  haven.  Enoch  Arden  537 

flattering  thy  childish  thought  The  o  faii-y  brought,  Elednare  14 
shower'd  His  o  gifts  on  everyone  And  most  on 

Edith  :  Aylmer's  Field  214 

Your  O  Eden-isles,  To  Ulysses  38 

Orion    great  0  sloping  slowly  to  the  West.  Lodcsley  Hall  8 

shining  daffodil  dead,  and  0  low  in  his  grave.  Maud  I  Hi  14 

Over  O's  grave  low  down  in  t.he  west,  „     ///  vi  8 

Orkney     Morganore,  And  Lot  of  O.  Com.  of  Arthur  116 

Lot's  wife,  the  Queen  of  O,  (repeat)  „      190,  245 

Ornament    Found  lying  with  bis  urns  and  o's,  Aylmer's  Field  4 

And  darkling  felt  the  sculptured  o  Merlin  and  V.  734 

In  hanging  robe  or  vacant  o,  Guinevere  506 

read  Some  wonder  at  our  chamber  o's.  Columbus  2 

Institute,  Rich  in  symbol,  in  o.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  47 

Orphan  (adj.)     His  wife,  an  unknown   artist's  o 

child—  Sea  Dreams  2 

Made  o  by  a  winter  shipwreck,  Enoch  Arden  15 

there  the  tender  o  hands  Felt  at  my  heart.  Princess  v  435 

'  None  wrought,  but  suffer'd  much,  an  o  maid  !  Merlin  and  V.  71 

When  her  o  wail  came  borne  in  the  shriek  The  Wreck  87 

Orphan  (s)     Late-left  an  o  of  the  squire,  Miller's  D.  34 

And  for  this  o,  I  am  come  to  you :  Dora  64 

I  was  left  a  trampled  o,  Locksley  Hall  156 

kill  yourself  And  make  them  o's  quite  ?  '  Enoch  Arden  395 

Here  is  the  cot  of  our  o,  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  28 

O  we  poor  o's  of  nothing —  Despair  33 

an  o  with  half  a  shire  of  estate, —  Charity  13 

Orphan-boy    Oh  !  teach  the  o-b  to  read,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  69 

Orphan'd    So  were  we  bom,  so  o.  Lover's  Tale  i  218 

Orphan-girl     Or  teach  the  o-g  to  sew,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  70 

O'Roon  (Danny)    See  Danny,  Danny  O'Roon 

Orthodox    Our  o  coroner  doubtless  will   find   it  a 

felo-de-se.  Despair  115 

Heresy  to  the  heretic,  and  religion  to  the  o,  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  8 

Orthodoxy    Thy  elect  have  uo  dealings  with  either 

heresy  or  o ;  „                7 

O'Shea  (SIuuuus)    See  Shamus,  Shamus  O'Shea 

Osier     ocean-spoil  In  ocean-smelling  o,  Enoch  Arden  94 

Ostler     '  Wrinkled  o,  grim  and  thin !  Vision  of  Sin  63 

Ostleress     A  plump-arm'd  0  and  a  stable  wench  Princess  i  226 

'Ot  (hot)     '  Summat  to  drink — sa'  'o  ?  '  North.  Cobbler  5 

Other    (See  also  Tothet)     And  little  o  care  hath  she,  L.  of  Shalottii  8 

There  is  no  o  thing  express'd  Two  Voices  248 

'  Who  forged  that  o  influence,  „          283 

He  hath  no  o  life  above.  D.  of  the  0.  Fear  12 

Among  new  men,  strange  faces,  o  minds.'  M.  d'Arthur  238 

and  with  what  o  eyes  I  used  to  watch —  Tithonus  51 

'  Some  0  race  of  AveriUs  ' — prov'n  or  no,  A  ylmer's  Field  54 

became  in  o  fields  A  mockery  to  the  yeomen  „            496 


Other  (continued)    o  frowas  than  those  That  knit 
themselves 
last,  my  o  heart.  And  ahnost  my  half-self, 
And  thus  (what  o  way  was  left)  I  came.' 
Sweet  order  lived  again  with  o  laws  : 
On  the  0  side  Hortensia  spoke  against  the  tax 
Follow'd  by  the  brave  of  o  lands. 
One  writes,  that '  O  friends  remain,' 
But  there  are  o  griefs  within, 
Nor  0  thought  her  mind  admits 
She  enters  o  realms  of  love ; 
With  larger  o  eyes  than  ours, 
the  while  His  o  passion  wholly  dies. 
To  the  o  shore,  involved  in  thee, 
O  sacred  essence,  o  form. 
For  0  friends  that  once  I  met ; 
Behold  their  brides  in  o  hands ; 
Nor  landmark  breathes  of  o  days. 
And  silent  under  o  snows : 
But  I  was  bom  to  o  things. 
.     Had  one  fair  daughter,  and  none  o  child ; 
Lets  down  his  o  leg,  and  stretching, 
Three  o  horsemen  waiting,  wholly  arm'd. 
It  seems  another  voice  in  o  groves ; 
And  when  we  halted  at  that  o  well. 
Why  will  ye  never  ask  some  o  boon  ? 
That  0  fame.  To  one  at  least. 
Moaning  and  calling  out  of  o  lands. 
She  might  have  made  this  and  that  o  world 
A  mocking  fire :  '  what  o  fire  than  he, 
'  Or  hast  thoU  o  griefs  ? 
Among  new  men,  strange  faces,  o  minds.' 
And,  like  all  o  friends  i'  the  world, 
fall  asleep  Into  delicious  dreams,  our  o  life. 
On  the  0  side  Is  scoop'd  a  cavern 
And  saw  the  motion  of  all  o  things ; 
had  never  seen  it  once.    His  o  father  you ! 
For  he  thought — there  were  a  lads — 
Fresh  from  the  surgeiy-schools  of  France  and 

of  0  lands — 
For  every  o  cause  is  less  than  mine. 
And  his  voice  was  low  as  from  o  worlds. 
Was  he  nobUer-f  ashion'd  than  o  men  ? 
And  there  the  light  of  o  life,  which  lives 

0  songs  for  o  worlds ! 
Ottoman     Emperor,  0,  which  shall  win : 
Ought    Sweet  is  it  to  have  done  the  thing  one  o, 

1  cannot  love  thee  as  I  o, 
Ould  (old)    yer  Honour's  the  thrue  o  blood 

Thin  Molly's  o  mother,  yer  Honour, 
best  he  could  give  at  o  Donovan's  wake-.— 

Thim  0  blind  nagers  in  Agjrpt,  „         69 

Danny  O'Roon  wid  his  o  woman,  Molly  Magee.  „        88 

'Onse  (house)     theer's  a  craw  to  pluck  wi'  tha,  Sam : 

yon's  parson's  'o —  N.  Farmer,  N.  S,  5 

Tis'n  them  as  'as  munny  as  breaks  into  'o's  an' 

steals,  „  45 

swear'd  as  I'd  break  ivry  stick  O'  furnitur  'ere  i' 

the  'o,  NoHh.  Cobbler  36 

an'  the  'ole  'o  hupside  down.  „  42 

'  When  theer's  naw  'ead  to  a  '0  Village  Wife  17 

or  the  gells  'all  goa  to  the  '0,  „  64 

'e  wur  bum  an'  bred  i'  the  'o.  Spinster's  S's.  69 

An'  the  stink  o'  'is  pipe  i'  the  'o,  „  100 

a  roabin'  the  'o  like  a  Queean,  „  106 

Straange  an'  owd-farran'd  the  'o,  Owd  Rod  21 

An'  theere  i'  the  'o  one  night —  „        27 

Theere,  when  the  'o  wur  a  house,  „        29 

an'  dussn't  not  sleeap  i'  the  'o,  „        37 

'Ouse-keeper  (housekeeper)    '0-k  sent  tha  my  lass.  Village  Wife  1 

Oust    0  the  madness  from  your  brain.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  241 

Ousted    From  mine  own  earldom  foully  o  me ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  459 

Outbreak    nor,  in  hours  Of  civil  o,  Tiresias  68 

Outbum'd    lit  Lamps  which  o  Canopus.  D.  of  F.  Women  146 

Outbuzz'd    o  me  so  That  even  om-  prudent  king,  Columbus  121 

2k 


Aylmer's  Field  723 

Princess  i  55 

„      ii  217 

„      vii  19 

126 

Odi'  on  Well.  194 

In  Mem.  vi  1 

„  XX  11 

„      xxxii  2 

xl  12 

Ii  15 

„       Ixii  10 

„  Ixxxiv  40 

„    Ixxxv  35 

58 

„  xa  14 

„         civ  11 

cv& 

„       cxx  12 

Com.  of  Arthur  2 

Gareth  and  L.  1186 

Geraint  and  E.  121 

Balin  and  Balan  215 

Merlin  and  V.  280 

375 

505 

962 

Lancelot  and  E.  873 

Holy  Grail  670 

Pelleas  and  E.  599 

Pass,  of  A  rthur  406 

Lover's  Tale  i  108 

162 

516 

574 

iv  174 

First  Quarrel  38 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  3 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  188 

V.  of  Maeldwne  117 

Dead  Prophet  51 

The  Rmg  295 

Parnassus  19 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  32 

Princess  v  67 

In  Mem.  Hi  1 

Tomorrow  5 

19 

42 


Outcry 


514 


Overthrew 


Outcry    still  she  made  her  o  for  the  ring ; 
Oatdacious  (audacious)    'e  were  that  o  at  'oiim, 
Out-door    eyes,  An  o-d  sign  of  all 
Outer    With  motions  of  the  o  sea : 

All  the  inner,  all  the  o  world  of  pain 
on  her  threshold  lie  Howling  in  o 

darkness.  To 

Where,  three  times  slipping  from  the  o  edge, 
And  I  from  out  the  boundless  o  deep 
And  one  would  pierce  an  o  ring, 
hold  them  o  fiends,  Who  leap  at  thee  to  tear 

thee; 
Made  duU  his  inner,  keen  his  o  eye 
feet  Thro'  the  long  gallery  from  the  o  doors 
chsifed  breakers  of  the  o  sea  Sank  powerless. 
For  when  the  o  lights  are  darken'd  thus, 
And  mellow'd  echoes  of  the  o  world — 
From  the  o  day.  Betwixt  the  close-set  ivies 
Outfloweth    the  gUmmering  water  o : 
Outland    Sir  Valence  wedded  with  an  o  dame : 
Outlast     lays  that  will  o  thy  Deity  ? 
Outleam    to  o  the  filthy  friar. 
Outlet     clear-stemm'd  platans  guard  The  o. 
Outline     The  lucid  o  forming  round  thee ; 

Is  given  in  o  and  no  more. 
Outlive     and  the  foe  may  o  us  at  last — 
Outliving    For  life  o  heats  of  youth, 
Outpour 'd    o  Their  myriad  horns  of  plenty 
Outraged     An  o  maiden  sprang  into  the  hall 
Outrageous     And  pelted  with  o  epithets, 
Outram  (Sir  James)     O  and  Havelock  breaking  their 

way 
Outran  o  The  hearer  in  its  fiery  coiu"se ; 
Outredden    o  All  voluptuous  garden-roses. 
Outside    j'ou  leave  'em  o  on  the  bed — 
Outstript    He  still  o  me  in  the  race  ; 
Out-tore    another  wild  earthquake  o-t 
Outward  (adj.)    Scarce  o  signs  of  joy  arise. 
Know  I  not  Death  ?  the  o  signs  ? 
Became  an  o  breathing  type, 
Perplext  his  o  purpose,  till  an  hour. 
My  o  circling  air  wherewith  I  breathe, 
even  into  my  inmost  heart  As  to  my  o  hearing : 
More  to  the  inward  than  the  o  ear, 
that  only  doats  On  o  beauty. 
Outward  (adv.)     a  knight  would  pass  0,  or  inward  to 

the  hall : 
Outward  (s)    from  the  o  to  the  inward  brought, 
Outwelleth    The  slumbrous  wave  o. 
Outworks    Thro'  all  the  o  of  suspicious  pride ; 
Outworn    Of  forms  o,  but  not  to  me  o, 

till  this  0  earth  be  dead  as  yon  dead  world  the 
moon? 
Ouzel    The  mellow  o  flut«d  in  the  elm ; 
Oval     the  nobler  hearts  In  that  vast  0 
Ovation    To  rain  an  April  of  o 
Over-acting    her  brain  broke  With  o-a, 
Overawe     Built  that  new  fort  to  o  my  friends. 
Overawed    0  fall'n  nobility,  that,  o, 

Am  I  to  be  o  By  what  I  cannot  but  know 
Overbalancing    strike  him,  o  his  bulk. 
Overbear    o's  the  bark.  And  him  that  helms  it, 
Overblame    of  overpraise  and  o  We  choose  the  last. 
Overblown    0  with  murmurs  harsh, 
Overboard    o  one  stormy  night  He  cast  his  body, 
Over-bold    island  princes  o-h  Have  eat  our  substance, 
And  again  seem'd  o ; 
'  Old,  and  o-b  in  brag  ! 
Overbore    contrasting  brightness,  o  Her  fancy 
charm  Of  nature  in  her  o  their  own : 
they  0  Sir  Lancelot  and  his  charger. 
Overborne    o  by  all  his  bearded  lords 

Vivien,  deeming  Merlin  o  By  instance, 
and  hath  o  Five  knights  at  once. 
Tin  0  by  one,  he  learns — and  ye, 


The  Ring  403 

Village  Wife  75 

Holy  Grail  704 

Eleanor e  113 

If  I  were  loved  5 

-,  With  Pal.  ofAHlQ 

The  Epic  11 

Sea  Dreams  88 

In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  27 

Balin  and  Balan  141 

Last  Tournament  366 

Guinevere  413 

Lover's  Tale  i  8 

35 

208 

„    a  171 

Leonine  Eleg.  9 

Merlin  and  V.  714 

Lucretius  72 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  118 

Arabian  Nights  24 

Tithonus  53 

In  Mem.  v  12 

Def.  of  Lucknow  52 

In  Mem.  liii  10 

Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  5 

Holy  Grail  208 

Ayhner's  Field  286 

Def.  of  Lucknow  96 

In  Mem.  cix  7 

Ode  on  Well.  207 

In  the  Child.  Hosf.  56 

In  Mem.  xlii  2 

Def.  of  Lucknow  61 

Supp.  Confessions  49 

Two  Voices  270 

Miller's  D.  226 

Gareth  and  L.  175 

Lover  s  Tale  i  167 

429 

721 

The  Ring  164 

Gareth  and  L.  311 

Elednore  4 

Claribel  18 

Isabel  24 

Lover's  Tale  i  797 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  174 

Gardener's  D.  94 

St.  Telemachus  73 

Princess  vi  66 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  236 

Marr.  of  Geraint  460 

Third  of  Feb.  35 

Maud  II  ii  40 

Last  Tournament  460 

Lancelot  and  E.  485 

Merlin  and  V.  90 

Ode  to  Memory  99 

The  Voyage  79 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  75 

Maud  I  xiv  24 

Gareth  and  L.  1107 

Marr.  of  Geraint  801 

Merlin  and  V.  596 

Lancelot  and  E.  486 

Princess  v  356 

.]/erlin  and  V.  800 

Holy  Grail  302 

305 


Overbower'd    gliding  thro'  the  branches  o  The  naked  Three,  Death  of  (Enone  6 

Over-bright    Eyes  not  down-dropt  nor  o-h,  Isabel  1 

Overbrow'd    high-arching  o  the  hearth.  Gareth  and  L.  408 

Overcame     Did  more,  and  imderwent,  and  o,  Godiva  10 

in  twelve  great  battles  o  The  heathen  hordes.  Com.  of  Arthur  518 

and  then  Me  too  the  black- wing'd  Azrael  o,  Akbar's  Dream  186 

Overcome     Bred  will  in  me  to  o  it  or  fall.  Princess  v  351 

who  wUl  come  to  all  I  am  And  o  it ;  Lancelot  and  E.  449 

but  you,  you  wiU  help  me  to  o  it,  Parnassus  5 

Overdo     almost  o  the  deeds  Of  Lancelot ;  Lancelot  and  E.  469 

Overdone    Heart-weary  and  o !  The  Dreamer  18 

Overdrest    See  A-Dallackt. 

Overfine     '  ye  are  o  To  mar  stout  knaves  Gareth  and  L.  732 

Overfineness     From  o-f  not  inteUigible  Merlin  and  V.  796 

Overflow  (S)     Rain'd  thro'  my  sight  its  o.  Two  Voices  45 

Overflow  (verb)     all  the  markets  o.  Locksley  Hall  101 

Hears  and  not  hears,  and  lets  it  o.  Enoch  Arden  209 

Somewhile  the  one  must  o  the  other ;  Lover's  Tale  i  501 

Overflow'd     dissolving  sand  To  watch  them  n,  Enoch  Arden  20 

Overflowing    the  lovely  freight  Of  o  blooms,  Ode  to  Memory  17 

o  revenue  Wherewith  to  embellish  state,  CEnone  112 

Over-full    and  o-f  Of  sweetness.  Lover's  Tale  i  271 

Overgrowing    brambles  mixt  And  o  them,  Pelleas  and  E.  423 

Overhead    Or  when  the  moon  was  o,  L.  of  Shallott  ii  33 

Those  banners  of  twelve  battles  o  Balin  and  Balan  88 

arrow  whizz'd  to  the  right,  one  to  the  left.  One  o ;  „            420 

moon  Struck  from  an  open  grating  o  Lover's  Tale  iv  60 

watching  o  The  aerial  poplar  wave.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  83 

beheld  A  blood-red  awning  waver  o,  St.  Telemachus  52 

Overheated     Cat  thro'  that  mirage  of  o  language  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  113 

Over-jealous    has  he  not  forgiven  me  yet,  his  o-j  bride,  Happy  6 


Over-labour'd    Some  o-l,  some  by  their  o\\n  hands. 
Overlaid    o  With  narrow  moon-lit  slips 
Overlive    0  it — lower  yet — be  happy! 
Overlived     For  man  has  o  his  day  And, 
Overlook    0  a  space  of  flowers. 

And  0  the  chace ; 

And  0  the  lea, 

in  the  distance  o's  the  sandy  tracts, 
Over-mellow    full-juiced  apple,  waxing  o-m. 
Overmuch     Nor  asking  o  and  taking  less, 

I  count  it  crime  To  mourn  for  any  o  ; 
Overnight  Laid  on  her  table  o,  was  gone ; 
Overpay  '  My  Lord,  you  o  me  fifty-fold.' 
Overpower'd    o  quite,  I  cannot  veil,  or  droop 

and  had  yielded  her  will  To  the  master,  as  o, 
Overpraise    of  o  and  overblame  We  choose  the  last 

Our  noble  Arthur,  him  Ye  scarce  can  o. 
Overprize  King  So  prizes — o's — gentleness. 
Overquick    o  To  crop  his  own  sweet  rose 

'  0  art  thou  To  catch  a  loathly  plume  fall'n 
Overrode    boy  Paused  not,  but  o  him. 
Over-roll    o-r  Him  and  his  gold ; 
Overseas    sick  of  home  went  o  for  change. 

late  From  o  in  Brittany  return'd. 

But  then  what  foUy  had  sent  him  o 

And  fly  to  my  strong  castle  o : 
Overset     But  thou,  while  kingdoms  o, 
Overshadow'd     All  o  by  the  foolish  dream. 
Over-smoothness    some  self-conceit.  Or  o-s : 
Overstep    by  that  larger  Ught,  And  o  them, 
Overstrain'd    or  a  mood  Of  o  affection, 

may  merit  well  Your  term  of  o. 
Overstream'd     And  o  and  silvery-streak 'd 
Overtake    o's  Far  thought  with  music 
Overtaken    she  stay'd,  and  o  spoke. 

Flying,  but,  o,  died  the  death  Themselves 
Overtaik'd    MerUn,  o  and  overworn.  Had  yielded, 
Overtax'd     And  loathed  to  see  them  o ; 
Overthrew    down  we  swept  and  charged  and  o. 

Gareth  o  him,  lighted,  drew.  There  met  him  drawn 
and  0  him  again. 

And  0  the  next  that  follow'd  him, 
King,  duke,  earl,  Count,  baron — whom  he  smote, 
heo. 


Columbus  178 

(Enone  217 

Locksley  Hall  97 

Ancient  Sage  150 

L.  of  Shalott  i  16 

Talking  Oak  94 

198 

Locksley  Hall  5 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  33 

Enoch  Arden  252 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  62 

The  Ring  277 

Geraint  and  E.  220 

Elednore  86 

Dead  Prophet  64 

Merlin  and  V.  90 

92 

Balin  and  Balan  184 

Merlin  and  V.  724 

726 

Pelleas  and  E.  545 

Columbus  139 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  24 

Last  Tournament  Yl^ 

394 

Guinevere  113 

Talking  Oak  257 

Marr.  of  Geraint  675 

Edwin  Morris  75 

Akbar's  Dream  100 

Alerlin  and  V.  ."^22 

535 

The  Islet  20 

Two  Voices  437 

Gareth  and  L.  764 

Geraint  and  E.  177 

Merlin  and  V.  965 

Godiva 

Ode  on  Well. 


Gareth  and  L.  Ill 
Geraint  and  E.  465 

Lancelot  and  E.  4fi5 


P 


Overthrew 


515 


Own 


Overthrew  {continued)     o  So  many  knights  that  all  the 
people  cried, 

Pelleas  o  them  as  they  dash'd  Against  him 

down  they  went,  And  Pelleas  o  them 

by  those  he  o  Be  bounden  straight, 

Pelleas  o  them,  one  to  three ; 
Overthrow  (s)     quick !  by  o  Of  these  or  those, 
Overthrow  (verb)     Lancelot  whom  he  trusts  to  o, 

hard  by  here  is  one  will  o  And  slay  thee : 

I  know  That  I  shall  o  him.' 

0  My  proud  self,  and  my  purpose  three  years  old, 
\\'hether  me  likewise  ye  can  o.' 

Overthrower     And  o  from  being  overthrown. 
Overthrowing  (part.)     challenging  And  o  every  knight 
Overthrowing  (s)     With  o's,  and  with  cries, 

By  o  me  you  threw  me  higher. 
Overtkurown     And  Uke  a  warrior  o ; 

And  0  was  Gorloi's  and  slain. 

Thou  hast  o  and  slain  thy  master — 

Or  some  device,  hast  foully  o). 

Hath  0  thy  brother,  and  hath  his  arms.' 

Hast  0  thro'  mere  unhappiness), 

'  Shamed  and  o,  And  tumbled  back 

To  call  him  shamed,  who  is  but  o  ? 

And  overthrower  from  being  o. 

And  makest  merry  when  o. 

1  have  never  yet  been  o,  And  thou  hast  o  me. 
Or  I  or  he  have  easily  o.' 
strong  hand,  which  had  o  Her  minion-knights, 
'  And  thou  hast  o  him  ?  '     '  Ay,  my  Queen.' 
In  twelve  great  battles  ruining  o. 

Overtoil'd    o  By  that  day's  grief  and  travel, 
Overtopt    The  battlement  o  with  ivytods, 
Over-tragic     Deem  this  o-t  drama's  closing  curtain  is 

the  pall ! 
Overtrailed     Half  o  with  a  wanton  weed, 
Overtrue     '  O  ay,'  said  Vivien,  '  o  a  tale. 
Overtrust     wink  no  more  in  slothful  o. 
Overtam     Behold  me  o  and  trample  on  him. 
Overtum'd    (See  also  Skelpt)    schemed  and  wrought 

Until  I  0  him ; 
Over-vaulted    That  o-v  grateful  gloom, 
Overwhelm'd    shook  And  almost  o  her, 
Over-wise     has  written :  she  never  was  o-w,  (repeat) 
Overworn     But  all  he  was  is  o.' 

Merlin,  overtalk'd  and  o,  Had  yielded. 
Overwrought    that  his  brain  is  o : 

being  so  o,  Suddenly  strike  on  a  sharper  sense 
Owa  (owe)     Fur  I  o's  owd  Roaver  moor 
Owad  (owed)    nor  I  iver  o  mottal  man. 
Owd  (old)     A  mowt  'a  taaen  o  Joanes, 

Doctor's  a  'toattler,  lass,  an  a's  hallus  i'  the  o 
taale; 

I  could  fettle  and  clump  o  booots 

wheer  Sally's  o  stockin'  wur  'id, 

an'  draggle  taail'd  in  an  o  turn  gown, 

I  liked  the  o  Squire  an'  'is  geUs 

new  Squire's  coom'd  wi'  'is  taail  in  'is  'and,  an'  o 
Squire's  gone,  (repeat) 

'e'd  gie  fur  a  howry  o  book  thutty  pound  an'  moor, 

An'  'e'd  wrote  an  o  book,  his  awn  sen, 

fur  an  o  scratted  stoan. 

An'  'e  bowt  o  money,  es  wouldn't  goii. 

But  0  Squire's  laady  es  long  es  she  lived 

moast  on  'is  o  big  booiiks  feteh'd  nigh  to  nowt  at  the  saale 

Siver  the  mou'ds  rattled  down  upo'  poor  o  Squire  i' 
the  wood, 

I  didn't  not  taake  it  kindly  ov  o  Miss  Armie 

I  means  fur  to  maake  'is  o  aage  as  'appy  as  iver  I  can, 

I  owas  0  Roaver  moor  nor  I  iver  owad  mottal  man. 

afoor  thou  was  gotten  too  o, 

an'  I  thowt  o'  the  good  o  times  'at  was  goan, 

an'  clemm'd  o  Roa  by  the  'ead, 

Sa  I  sticks  like  the  ivin  as  long  as  I  Uves  to  the  o 

chuch  now,  Church-warden,  etc.  15 


Holi/  Grail  334 

Pelleas  and  E.  221 

230 

235 

287 

Frincess  v  316 

Gareth  and  L.  620 

896 

949 

Geraint  and  E.  848 

Balin  and  Balan  40 

Gareth  and  L.  1263 

Balin  and  Balan  13 

In  Mem.  cxiii  19 

Geraint  and  E.  792 

Two  Voices  150 

Com.  of  Arthur  197 

Gareth  and  L.  769 

998 

1037 

1059 

1227 

1260 

1263 

1270 

Marr.  of  Geraint  588 

Balin  and  Balan  36 

Pelleas  and  E.  234 

594 

Guinevere  432 

Geraint  and  E.  376 

Balin  and  Balan  335 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  62 

Lover's  Tale  i  525 

Merlin  and-  V.  720 

Ode  on  Well.  170 

Geraint  and  E.  843 

830 

Palace  of  Art  54 

Enoch  Arden  530 

Grandmother  3,  105 

In  Mem.  i  16 

Merlin  and  V.  965 

Locksley  Hall  53 

Maud  II  a  62 

Owd  Rod  4 

4 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  49 

North.  Cobbler  13 

31 

41 

VUlage  Wife  6 


14,  121 
45 
46 
47 
49 
53 
73 


95 

109 

Ou;d  Rod  3 

4 

5 

„      43 

„      99 


'Owd  (hold)     Fur  1  couldu"t  'o  'auds  off  gin.  North.  Cobbler  84 

pockets  as  fuU  o'  my  pippins  as  iver  they'd  'o.      Church-warden,  etc.  34 

Owd-farran'd  (old-fashioned)     Straange  an'  o-f  the  'ouse,  Owd  Rod  21 

Owe     {See  also  Owa)     we  o  you  bitter  thanks :  Princess  iv  531 

I  feel  J  shall  o  you  a  debt,  Maud  I  xix  87 

forget  That  I  o  this  debt  to  you  „  90 

0  you  me  nothing  for  a  life  half -lost  ?  Geraint  and  E.  318 
ask  your  boon,  for  boon  I  o  you  thrice.  Merlin  and  V.  306 
To  you  and  yours,  and  still  would  o.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  20 
Let  me  o  my  life  to  thee.                                                Death  of  (Enone  42 

Owed  {See  also  Owad)  Whole  in  ourselves  and  o  to  none.  Princess  iv  148 
how  dear  a  debt  We  o  you,  and  are  owng 

yet  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  19 

Owing     and  are  o  yet  To  you  and  yours,  „  19 

Owl    {See  also  Eagle-owl,  Glinuner-gowk,  Howl)    The 

white  0  in  the  belfry  sits,    (repeat)  The  Owl  i  7,  14 

1  drown'd  the  whoopings  of  the  o  St.  S.  Stylites  33 
bats  wheel'd,  and  o's  whoop'd,  Frincess,  Con.  110 
An  0  whoopt :  '  Hark  the  victor  pealing  there ! '  Gareth  and  L.  1318 
A  home  of  bats,  in  every  tower  an  o.  Balin  and  Balan  336 
the  o's  WaiUng  had  power  upon  her,  Lancelot  and  E.  ICKX) 
thrice  as  blind  as  any  noonday  o.  Holy  Grail  866 
and  the  o's  are  whooping  at  noon,  Despair  89 

0  the  night,  When  the  o's  are  waiUng !  Forlorn  30 
Owlby  He'll  niver  swap  0  an'  Scratby  Church-warden,  etc.  44 
Owlet  shrilly  the  o  halloos ;  Leonine  Eleg.  6 
Owl-whoop  o-w  and  dorhawk- whirr  Awoke  me  not.  Lover's  Tale  ii  116 
Own  (adj.)     {See  also  Oan)     to  brush  the  dew  From 

thine  o  lily,  Supp.  Confessions  85 

till  his  0  blood  flows  About  his  hoof.  „  155 

1  see  his  gray  eyes  twinkle  yet  At  his  o  jest —  Miller's  D.  12 
My  o  sweet  Alice,  we  must  die.  „  18 
You'll  kiss  me,  my  o  mother,  and  forgive  me 

ere  I  go ;  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  34 

Once  thro'  mine  o  doors  Death  did  pass ;  To  J.  S.  19 

And  tho'  mine  o  eyes  fill  with  dew,  „        37 

She  loveth  her  o  anguish  deep  „        42 

So  spake  he,  clouded  with  his  o  conceit,  M.  d' Arthur  110 

His  0  thought  drove  him,  like  a  goad.  „  185 

It  may  be,  for  her  o  dear  sake  but  this,  Edwin  Morris  141 

But  in  these  latter  springs  I  saw  Your  o  Olivia  blow.  Talking  Oak  76 
This  is  my  son,  mine  o  Telemachus,  Ulysses  33 

Upon  my  proper  patch  of  soil  To  grow  my  o  plantation.  Amphion  1(X) 
He  loves  me  for  my  o  true  worth,  Lady  Clare  11 

I  buried  her  like  my  o  sweet  child,  „  27 

He  not  for  his  o  self  caring  but  her,  Enoch  Arden  165 

while  Annie  seem'd  to  hear  Her  o  death-scaffold  rising,         „  175 

'  Take  your  o  time,  Annie,  take  your  o  time.'  ,,  466 

Her  o  son  Was  silent,  tho'  he  often  look'd  his  wish  ;  ,,  481 

And  his  o  children  tall  and  beautiful,  „  762 

And  following  our  o  shadows  thrice  as  long  The  Brook  166 

bearing  hardly  more  Than  his  o  shadow  in  a  sickly 

sun.  Aylmer's  Field  30 

Somewhere  beneath  his  o  low  range  of  roofs,  „  47 

Him,  glaring,  by  his  o  stale  devil  sjjurr'd,  „  290 

under  his  o  Hntel  stood  Storming  with  lifted  hands,  „  331 

would  go.  Labour  for  his  o  Edith,  and  return  „  420 

Burst  his  o  wyvem  on  the  seal,  and  read  „  516 

went  Hating  his  o  lean  heart  and  miserable  „  526 

Now  chafing  at  his  o  great  self  defied,  „  537 

left  Their  o  gray  tower,  or  plain-faced  tabernacle,  „  618 

And  worshipt  their  o  darkness  in  the  Highest  ?  „  643 

Crown  thyself,  worm,  and  worship  thine  o  lusts ! —  „  650 

darkening  thine  own  To  thine  o  likeness ;  „  674 

Is  not  our  o  child  on  the  narrow  way,  „  743 

earth  Lightens  from  her  o  central  Hell —  „  761 

Who,  thro'  their  o  desire  accompUsh'd,  bring  Their  o 

gray  hairs  with  sorrow  to  the  grave —  „  776 

but  sat  Ignorant,  devising  their  o  daughter's  death  !  „  783 

and  made  Their  o  traditions  God,  and  slew  the  Lord,  „  795 

Then  her  o  people  bore  along  the  nave  Her  pendent 

hands,  „  812 

Fought  with  what  seem'd  my  o  uncharity ;  Sea  Dreams  73 

Nor  ever  cared  to  better  his  o  kind,  „        201 

His  0  forefathers'  arms  and  annour  hung.  Princess,  Pro.  24 


{ 


Own 


616 


Own 


Ovm(aAj.)  {continued)    a  lady,  one  that  arm'd  Her  o  fair    ^^^^^^^  p^^  33       °^ 

'  We  scarcely  thought  in  our  0  hall  to  hear  ..          **  ^^ 

what  follows  ?  war ;  Your  0  work  marr'd :  "...  ^^ 

true  she  errs,  But  in  her  o  grand  way :  "       *"  ^ 

That  we  might  see  our  0  work  out,  "              ' 

'  Know  you  no  song  of  your  0  land,'  she  said,  ..          *^  °* 

What  time  I  watch'd  the  swallow  winging  south  From  ^ 

mine  0  land,  "            o(^c 

And  partly  conscious  of  my  o  deserts,  .-            ^"a 

You  stood  in  your  o  Ught  and  darken'd  mine.  „            |^^ 

Om-  o  detention,  why,  the  causes  weigh'd,  ..         '"  '^^'^ 

Or  by  denial  flush  her  babbling  wells  With  her  0  people  s  ^^^ 

And  Knowledge  m  our  0  land  make  her  free,  ,.            ^19 

he  That  loved  me  closer  than  his  0  right  eye,  „            p^a 

With  their  0  blows  they  hurt  themselves,  ..          ^^^ 

all  dabbled  with  the  blood  Of  his  o  son,  »            ^^ 

0  let  me  have  him  with  my  brethren  here  In  our  o  ^^^ 
palace:  "            177 

never  in  your  0  arms  To  hold  your  own,  ..            ^' ' 

1  go  to  mine  0  land  For  ever :  "  „,. 
Now  had  you  got  a  friend  of  your  o  age,  .-  ^^^ 
to  wait  upon  him,  Like  mine  0  brother.  ..  .f  ^^ 
And  in  their  0  clear  element,  they  moved.  ..  ^^  ^° 
She  needs  must  wed  him  for  her  0  good  name ;  „  <* 
'  Dear,  but  let  us  type  them  now  In  our  0  lives,  „  ^ 
I  seem  A  mockery  to  my  0  self .  ^f"^„  jj.-r  d. 
Has  given  our  Pnnce  his  0  imperial  Flower,  H  .  to  Mane  Alex.^ 
Yet  thine  0  land  has  bow'd  to  Tartar  hordes  „  '^^ 
And  he  died,  and  I  could  not  wee^^my  0  time  g^„,^amother  72 

seem  d  so  near.                                    .      •    ,•,  78 

Patter  she  goes,  my  o  little  Annie,  an  Annie  hke  you :  „         . '° 

My  0  dim  We  should  teach  me  this,               ^       .  In  Mem.  xxxiv  I 

When  thou  should'st  hnk  thy  life  with  one  Of  mine  ^^^^^  ^^ 

o  house,                     ,                      ,  ,  "           rnrii  3 

His  0  vast  shadow  glory-crown  d ;  "        ^VT'  ^ 

But  mine  o  phantom  chanting  hymns  ?  ,  ^^  ^  „  'W^,,!^  !■  24 
heart  of  the  citizen  hissing  in  war  on  his  0  hearthstone  ?  Maud  Ii  M 
But  arose,  and  all  by  myself  in  my  0  dark  garden  ground,       „      tw  i" 

finer  politic  sense  To  mask,  tho'  but  m  his  0  behoof,  „      vt  |o 

How  prettily  for  his  0  sweet  sake                ^  u  n    *  f  „i      "           fi2 

For  often  a  man's  0  angry  pride  Is  cap  and  bells  for  a  fool.     „  o| 

And  my  0  sad  name  in  comers  cried,  "           ' 

Down  too,  down  at  your  0  fireside,  "         .   „ 

Maud's  0  Uttle  oak-room  "           ,  g 

looks  Upon  Maud's  0  garden-gate :  "           g^ 

Running  down  to  my  o  dark  wood ;  "      •••  74 

My  0  heart's  heart,  my  ownest  own,  farewell ;  ..  a^»»  ^^ 

For  I  know  her  0  rose-garden,  "           ^g 

Come  out  to  your  o  true  lover,  "49 

and  render  All  homage  to  his  0  darhng,  "            .g 

My  0  dove  with  the  tender  eye  ?  '         «  33 

praying  To  his  o  great  self,  as  I  guess ;  '^i^i.^.^  or 

^erVbrood  lost  or  dead,  lent  her  fierce  teat  Co«i.  0/  Arthur  28 

nor  make  myself  in  mine  0  realm  Victor  and  lord.  „              o^ 

for  each  But  sought  to  rule  for  his  0  self  and  hand,  „            ^i» 
Bound  them  by  so  strait  vows  to  his  0  self. 
But  thou  art  closer  to  this  noble  prince.  Being  his  0 

J                •    1.            J  »i                      Ol'J 

AlbeH  iTmk^e  0  heart  I  knew  him  King  Oareth  and  L.  123 

Her  0  true  Gareth  was  too  pnncely-proud  " 

swearing  he  had  glamour  enow  In  his  0  blood,  ,. 

'  Old  Master,  reverence  thine  0  beard  That  looks  as  white       „          ^ 

With  thine  0  hand  thou  slewest  my  dear  lord,  ..          ^^ 

see  thou  to  it  That  thine  0  fineness,  Lancelot,  ..          *' " 
holds  her  stay'd  In  her  0  castle,                ■■  .    , ,  1 

often  with  her  0  white  hands  Array'd  and  deck  d  /3^,-„/ 1 « 

her,  as  the  loveUest,  Next  after  her  0  self,  Marr.  of  Oeramt  ^ 

and  they  past  to  their  0  land ;  "85 

Low  of  her  0  heart  piteously  she  said :  "            „,  . 

Frown  and  we  smile,  the  lords  of  our  0  hands ;  »            ^ 

then  have  I  sworn  From  his  0  Ups  to  have  it —  ..            ^ 

Queen  Sent  her  0  maiden  to  demand  the  name,  ..            ^^1 

Kaised  my  o  town  against  me  in  the  night  «            '*°' 


(adj.)  (continued)    From  mine  0  earldom  toully 

ousted  me ;  ,     ,    ,  „  \ 

(Who  hearing  her  0  name  had  stoi  n  away) 
but  lay  Contemplating  her  0  unworthiness ; 
And  softly  to  her  0  sweet  heart  she  said  : 
made  comparison  Of  that  and  these  to  her  0  faded  self 
So  sadly  lost  on  that  unhappy  night ;  Your  0  good  gift ! 
Or  whether  some  false  sense  in  her  0  self 
child  shaU  wear  your  costly  gift  Beside  your  0  warm 

hearth,  .  ,  .   ^i      1      . 

to  her  0  bright  face  Accuse  her  of   the  least  ^  p  nn 

immodesty:  ^        ,.  ^    ,^       .         Geratnt  and  E.  l^ 

That  she  could  speak  whom  his  0  ear  had  heard  ..  ^^^ 

I  call  mine  0  self  wild.  But  keep  a  touch  of  sweet  civihtj 

At  this  the  tender  sound  of  his  0  voice 

And  their  0  Earl,  and  their  0  souls,  and  her. 

And  found  his  0  dear  bride  propping  his  head. 

And  said  to  bis  0  heart,  '  She  weeps  for  me : ' 

And  say  to  his  0  heart,  '  She  weeps  for  me.' 

Not  tho'  mine  0  ears  heard  you  yestermorn— 

in  the  King's  0  ear  Speak  what  has  chanced ; 

with  your  0  true  eyes  Beheld  the  man  you  loved 

ve  pray'd  me  for  my  leave  To  move  to  your  0  land, 

came  The  King's  0  leech  to  look  into  his  hurt ; 

and  they  past  to  their  o  land. 

ask'd  To  bear  her  0  crown-royal  upon  shield, 

Our  noble  King  will  send  thee  his  0  leech — 

Who  sitting  in  thine  0  hall,  canst  endure 

Had  wander'd  from  her  0  King's  golden  head. 

Pure  as  our  0  true  Mother  is  our  Queen.' 
,  Be  thine  the  bahn  of  pity,  0  Heaven's  0  white  Earth  ^^  ^  ^ 

angel,  ..,.,,  isv; 

at  times  Would  flatter  his  o  wish  m  age  for  love,  „  100 

In  mine  0  lady  palms  I  cuU'd  the  spring  "  ^no 

brought  Her  0  claw  back,  and  wounded  her  0  heart.  ..  ^^ 


Marr.  of  Geraint  459 
507 
533 
618 
652 
690 
800 

820 


311 

348 
577 
584 
587 
590 
740 
808 
846 


923 

955 
Balin  and  Balan  200 
274 
378 
513 
617 


His  kinsman  travelling  on  his  0  affair 
To  crop  his  o  sweet  rose  before  the  hour  ? 
Then  Merlin  to  his  0  heart,  loathing,  said : 
Who  wouldst  against  thine  0  eye-witness  fain 
Seethed  Hke  the  kid  in  its  o  mother's  milk ! 
What  should  be  granted  which  your  0  gross  heart 
All  the  devices  blazon'd  on  the  shield  In  their  0 

tinct,  „    ,  X  •      -J 

clave  Like  its  o  mists  to  all  the  mountain  side : 
When  its  0  voice  cUngs  to  each  blade  of  grass, 
I  Before  a  King  who  honours  his  o  word. 
For  if  his  o  knight  cast  him  down,  he  laughs 
Low  to  her  o  heart  said  the  lily  maid. 
So  kiss'd  her,  and  Sir  Lancelot  his  0  hand, 
Dearer  to  true  young  hearts  than  their  0  praise, 
and  a  spear  Prick'd  sharply  his  o  cuirass, 
his  0  kin— 111  news,  my  Queen, 
it  will  be  sweet  to  have  it  From  your  o  hand ; 
And  with  mine  0  hand  give  his  diamond  to  hiin, 
His  0  far  blood,  M'hich  dwelt  at  Camelot ; 
she  should  ask  some  goodly  gift  of  him  For  her  0  self 

or  hers ;  •         ,     j 

and  Prince  and  Lord  am  I  In  mine  0  land, 
and  such  a  tongue  To  blare  its  o  interpretation- 
Most  common :  yea,  I  know  it  of  mine  0  self  :  And  you 

yourself  will  smile  at  your  0  self  Hereafter, 
only  the  case.  Her  o  poor  work,  her  empty  labour,  left. 
There  surely  I  shall  speak  for  mine  0  self, 
these,  as  I  trust  That  you  trust  me  in  your  0  nobleness, 
In  mine  0  reabn  beyond  the  narrow  seas. 
Mine  0  name  shames  me,  seeming  a  reproach. 
Yet  one  of  your  0  knights,  a  guest  of  ours. 
And  once  by  mfeadvertence  MerUn  sat  In  his  0  chair, 
dyed  The  strong  White  Horse  in  his  o  heathen  blood — 
But  wail'd  and  wept,  and  hated  mine  0  self, 
but  0  the  pity  To  find  thine  0  first  love  once  more— 
Where  saving  his  0  sisters  he  had  known 
*  For  pity  of  thine  0  self.  Peace,  Lady,  peace : 
And  heard  but  his  0  steps,  and  his  0  heart  Beating,  for 
nothing  moved  but  his  0  self,  And  his  0  shadow. 


717 

;;      725 

790 
793 
869 
916 

Lancelot  and  E.  10 
38 
107 

1^ 
313 
319 
389 
419 
489 
597 
694 
760 


913 
917 
943 

950 

991 

1125 

1195 

1323 

1403 

Holy  Grail  40 

176 

312 

609 

620 

Pelleas  and  E.  87 

25o 

416 


J 


Own 


517 


Paay 


Own  (adj.)  (continued)  towers  that,  larger  than  them- 
selves In  their  o  dai'kness,  Pdlms  and  E.  458 
And  whatsoever  his  o  knights  have  sworn  Last  TourtMment  79 
Nor  heard  the  King  for  their  o  cries,  „  472 
Catlike  thro'  his  o  castle  steals  my  Mark,  „  516 
ptarmigan  that  whitens  ere  his  hour  Woos  his  o  end ;  ..  698 
and  cast  thee  back  Thine  o  small  saw,  „  712 
'  0  Lancelot,  get  thee  hence  to  thine  o  land,  Guinevere  88 
the  King's  grief  For  his  o  self,  and  his  o  Queen,  „  197 
Then  to  her  o  sad  heart  mutter'd  the  Queen,  „  213 
Shame  on  her  o  garrulity  garrulously,  „  312 
In  open  battle  or  the  tilting-field  Forbore  his  o  advantage, 

and  the  King  In  open  battle  or  the  tilting-field  Forbore 

his  0  advantage, 
fearful  child  Meant  nothing,  but  my  o  too-fearful  guilt, 
kith  and  kin  Clave  to  him,  and  abode  in  his  o  land. 
To  honour  his  o  word  as  if  his  God's, 
do  thou  for  thine  o  soul  the  rest. 

and  mine  o  flesh.  Here  looking  down  on  thine  polluted, 
Gone,  my  lord  the  King,  My  o  true  lord ! 
That  in  mine  o  heart  I  can  live  down  sin 
So  spake  he,  clouded  \n\h  his  o  conceit, 
His  o  thought  drove  him  like  a  goad. 
The  loyal  to  their  crown  Are  loyal  to  their  o  far 

sons, 
That  knows  not  her  o  greatness : 
ruling  that  which  knows  To  its  o  harm : 
In  thine  o  essence,  and  delight  thyself 
pleasure-boat  that  rock'd,  Light-green  with  its  o 

shadow. 
Loathing  to  put  it  from  herself  for  ever.  Left  her 

o  life  with  it ; 
Till,  drunk  with  its  o  wine,  and  over-full  Of  sweetness, 

and  in  smelling  of  itself,  It  fall  on  its  o  thorns — 
Parting  my  o  loved  mountains  was  received. 
Yet  bearing  round  about  him  his  o  day. 
As  from  a  dismal  dream  of  my  o  death, 
till  they  fell  Half-digging  their  o  graves) 
And  laid  her  in  the  vault  of  her  o  kin. 
as  her  o  reproof  At  some  precipitance  in  her  burial. 
Then,  when  her  o  true  spirit  had  return'd, 
And  crossing  her  o  picture  as  she  came, 
thence  Down  to  this  last  strange  hour  in  his  o  hall ; 
^Vhen  Hany  an'  I  were  children,  he  call'd  me  his  o 

little  wife; 
God  bless  you,  my  o  little  Nell.' 
When  I  cannot  see  my  o  hand,  but  am  led  by  the  creak 

of  the  chain,  Rizpah  7 

I  told  them  my  tale,  God's  o  truth —  „    34 

if  true  Love  Were  not  his  o  imperial  all-in-all.      Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  227 
A  second — this  I  named  from  her  o  self,  Evelyn ;  „  270 

mellow'd  murmur  of  the  people's  praise  From 

thine  o  State,  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  8 

Yet  art  thou  thine  o  witness  that  thou  bringest 

Not  peace,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  35 

I  am  written  in  the  Lamb's  o  Book  of  Life  Columbus  88 

Tho'  quartering  your  o  royal  arms  of  Spain,  „        115 

Some  over-labour'd,  some  by  their  o  hands, —  „        178 

in  that  flight  of  ages  which  are  God's  0  voice  to  justify 

the  dead—  „        203 

O  dear  Spirit  half-lost  In  thine  o  shadow  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  40 

With  power  on  thine  o  act  and  on  the  world.  „  56 

never  since  thine  o  Black  ridges  drew  the  cloud  Montenegro  12 

Went  to  his  own  in  his  o  West-Saxon-land,        Batt.  of  Brunanburh  103 
All  day  the  men  contend  in  grievous  war  From 

their  o  city,  Achilles  over  the  T.  10 


Own  (adj.)  {continued)     Except  his  o  meek  daughter  yield  lier 

life.  The  Flight  28 

To  lie,  to  lie — in  God's  o  house — the  blackest  of  all  lies !  „  52 

Arise,  my  o  true  sister,  come  forth !  the  world  is  wide.  „  96 

'Ud  'a  shot  his  o  sowl  dead  for  a  kiss  of  ye,  ]Molly  Magee.   Tomorrow  40 


331 
370 
440 
473 
545 
555 
617 
636 

Pass,  of  Arthur  218 
353 

To  Ike  Queen  ii  28 

32 

59 

Lover's  Tale  i  13 

43 

215 

271 
433 
510 

748 
ii  47 
iv  39 
106 
108 
286 
358 

First  Quarrd  10 
22 


which  our  trembling  fathers  call'd  The  God's  o  son.  Tiresias  17 

immerging,  each,  his  urn  In  his  o  well,  „         89 

yet  if  one  of  these  By  his  o  hand —  „      118 

will  murmur  thee  To  thine  o  Thebes,  „      141 

let  thine  o  hand  strike  Thy  youthful  pulses  into  rest  „       156 
And  pity  for  our  o  selves  on  an  earth  that  bore  not  a 

flower ;  Despair  44 

And  pity  for  our  o  selves  till  we  long'd  for  eternal  sleep.  „      46 

wilt  dive  Into  the  Temple-cave  of  thine  o  self,  Ancient  Sage  32 


Yer  Honour's  o  agint,  he  says  to  me  wanst. 

Demos  end  in  working  its  o  doom. 

strip  your  o  foul  passions  bare ; 

Gone  at  eighty,  mine  o  age, 

When  our  o  good  redcoats  sank  from  sight. 

And  who  loves  War  for  War's  o  sake  Is  fool. 

Our  0  fair  isle,  the  lord  of  every  sea- 


63 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  114 

141 

281 

Heavy  Brigade  42 

Epilogue  30 

The  Fleet  7 


What  is  it  all,  if  we  all  of  us  end  but  in  being  our  o  corpse- 
coffins  at  last.  Fastness  33 

That  he  was  nearing  his  o  hundred.  The  Ring  194 

She  cannot  love ;  she  loves  her  o  hard  self,  „        292 

Till  from  her  o  hand  she  had  torn  the  ring  „        470 

forgotten  mine  o  rhyme  By  mine  old  self,  I'o  Mary  Boyle  21 

or  came  of  your  o  will  To  wait  on  one  so  broken,  Romney's  R.  16 

Her  sad  eyes  plead  for  my  o  fame  with  me  „  55 

With  your  o  shadow  in  the  placid  lake,  „  76 

As  where  earth's  green  stole  into  heaven's  o  hue.        Far — far — away  2 

For  a  woman  ruin'd  the  world,  as  God's  o  scriptures  tell,  Charity  3 

every  dawn  Struck  from  him  his  o  shadow  on  to 
Rome. 

Issa  Ben  Mariam,  his  o  prophet,  cried 
Own  (s)    darkening  thine  o  To  thine  own  likeness ; 

never  in  your  own  arms  To  hold  your  o, 

My  own  heart's  heart,  my  ownest  o,  farewell ; 

at  which  his  o  began  To  pulse  with  such  a 
vehemence 

Went  to  his  o  in  his  own  West-Saxon-land, 

and  will  be  his,  his  o  and  only  o, 
Own  (verb)     better  than  to  o  A  crown,  a  sceptre, 

'  He  o's  the  fatal  gift  of  eyes, 

o  one  port  of  sense  not  flint  to  prayer, 

everyone  that  o's  a  tower  The  Lord  for  half  a 
league. 

That  0  no  lust  because  they  have  no  law ! 

The  Christians  o  a  Spiritual  Head ; 
Own'd    one  of  my  co-mates  0  a  rough  dog. 

The  one  true  lover  whom  you  ever  o, 

yourself  have  o  ye  did  me  wrong. 

nor  tasted  flesh.  Nor  o  a  sensual  wish, 

while  they  brake  them,  o  me  King. 
Owner    follows,  being  named.  His  o, 
Ownest    My  own  heart's  heart,  my  o  own, 
Owning    o  but  a  little  more  Than  beasts, 

earthly  Muse,  And  o  but  a  little  art 
Ox    For  the  0  Feeds  in  the  herb. 

From  the  dark  fen  the  oxen's  low  Came 

The  passive  oxen  gaping. 

Reel'd,  as  a  footsore  o  in  crowded  ways 

roasting  o  Moan  round  the  spit — 

oxen  from  the  city,  and  goodly  sheep 

my  lord  is  lower  than  his  oxen  or  his  swine. 

May  seem  the  black  o  of  the  distant  plain. 
Ozlip     As  cowslip  unto  o  is, 


St.  Telemachus  33 

Akbar's  Dream  75 

Aijlmer's  Field  673 

Princess  villS 

Maud  I  xviii  74 

Lover's  Tale  iv  81 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  103 

Happy  7 

Ode  to  Memory  120 

Two  Voices  286 

Princess  vi  182 

Gareth  and  L.  595 

Pelleas  and  E.  481 

Akbar's  Dream  153 

Gareth  and  L.  1011 

Geraint  and  E.  344 

Merlin  and  V.  316 

628 

Pass,  of  Arthur  158 

Gareth  and  L.  704 

Maud  I  xviii  74 

Two  Voices  196 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  14 

Supp.  Confessions  150 

Mariana  28 

Amphion  72 

Aylmer's  Field  819 

Lucretius  131 

Spec,  of  Iliad  4 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  126 

To  one  ran  down  Eng.  4 

Talking  Oak  107 


Paaid  (paid)    easy  es  leaves  their  debts  to  be  p.  Village  Wife  94 

An'  they  hallus  p  what  I  hax'd,  „        115 

Paail  (pail)    wi'  her  p's  fro'  the  cow.  Spinster's  S's.  2 

ye  shant  hev  a  drop  fro'  the  p.  „          65 

Paain  (pain)    Sam,  thou's  an  ass  for  thy  p's :  N.  Farmer,  iV.  S.  3 

an  am'd  naw  thanks  fur  'er  p's.  Village  Wife  12 

es  be  down  wi'  their  haaches  an'  their  p's :  Spinster's  S's.  108 

Paarint  (parent)    afther  her  p's  had  inter'd  glory,  Tomorrow  53 

That  ye'll  meet  your  p's  agin  „        57 

Paay  (pay)    find  my  rent  an'  to  p  my  men  ?  Dud  Rod  47 

'  can  ya  p  me  the  rent  to-night  ? '  „        57 


Pace 


518 


Pain 


Pace  (s)    She  made  three  p's  thro'  the  room, 

Wheeling  with  precipitate  p's  To  the  melocl3-, 
scarce  three  p's  measured  from  the  mound, 
forth  they  rode,  but  scarce  three  p's  on, 
Roimd  was  their  p  at  first,  but  slacken'd  soon 
she  went  back  some  p's  of  return. 
With  woven  p's  and  with  waving  anias, 
Of  woven  p's  and  of  waving  hands,  (repeat) 
ten  or  twelve  good  p's  or  more. 

Pace  (verb)     Would  p  the  troubled  land, 
till  noon  no  foot  should  p  the  street, 
thou  shalt  cease  To  p  the  gritted  floor, 
p  the  sacred  old  familiar  fields, 
cram  our  ears  with  wool  And  so  p  by  : 
pavement  where  the  King  would  p  At  sunrise. 


L.  of  Shalotl  in  38 

Vision  of  Sin  37 

Princess  v  1 

Geraint  and  E.  19 

33 

70 

Merlin  and  V.  207 

„    330,968 

Def.  of  Lucknow  62 

Love  thou  thy  land  84 

Godiva  39 

Will  Water.  242 

Enoch  Arden  625 

Princess  iv  66 

Gareth  and  L.  667 


He  seem'd  to  p  the  strand  of  Brittany  Last  Tournament  407 
Paced     {See  also  Subtle-paced)     Love  p  the  thymy  plots 

of  Paradise,                                                 "  Love  and  Death  2 

I  wonder'd,  while  I  p  along :  Two  Voices  454 

Who  p  for  ever  in  a  gUmmering  land.  Palace  of  Art  67 

and  p  beside  the  mere,  31.  d' Arthur  83 

he  rose  and  p  Back  toward  his  solitary  home  Enoch  Arden  793 

forth  they  came  and  p  the  shore.  Sea  Dreams  32 

out  we  p,  I  fii-st,  and  following  thro'  the  porch  Princess  ii  21 

So  saying  from  the  court  we  p,  „     Hi  117 

Where  p  the  Demigods  of  old,  „          343 

I  p  the  terrace,  till  the  Bear  had  wheel'd  „     iv  212 

p  the  shores  And  many  a  bridge,  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  11 

p  a  city  all  on  fire  With  sun  and  cloth  of  gold,  Co7n.  of  Arthur  479 

the  lawless  warrior  p  Unai-m'd,  Gareth  and  L.  914 

he  turn'd  all  red  and  p  his  hall,  Geraint  and  E.  668 

and  p  The  long  white  walk  of  lilies  Balin  and  Balan  248 
feet  unmortised  from  their  ankle-bones  Who  p  it, 

ages  back :  Merlin  aiid  V.  553 

Then  p  for  coolness  in  the  chapel-yard ;  „              757 

Bedivere,  Who  slowly  p  among  the  slumbering  host,    Pass,  of  Arthur  7 

and  p  beside  the  mere,  „          251 

How  oft  with  him  we  p  that  walk  of  limes,  To  W.  H.  BrooJcfield  6 

half  the  morning  have  I  p  these  sandy  tracts,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  1 

and  p  his  land  In  fear  of  worse,          '  To  Mary  Boyle  29 

By  tbe  long  torrent's  ever-deepen'd  roar,  P,  Death  of  (Enone  86 

Pacing  (part.)     P  with  downward  eyelids  pure.  Two  Voices  420 

And  some  one  p  there  alone.  Palace  of  Art  66 

Walking  up  and  p  down,  L.  of  Burleigh  90 

so  p  till  she  paused  By  Florian ;  Princess  ii  302 

p  staid  and  still  By  twos  and  threes,  „           435 

Now  p  mute  by  ocean's  rim ;  The  Daisy  21 

in  her  arms  She  bare  me,  p  on  the  dusky  mere.  Lancelot  and  E.  1411 

Tristram,  p  moodily  up  and  down,  Last  Tournament  654 

And  slowly  p  to  the  middle  hall,  Lover's  Tale  iv  306 

Pacing  (s)     long  mechanic  p's  to  and  fro.  Love  and  Duty  17 

his  foot  Return  from  p's  in  the  field,  Lucretius  6 

Pack  (s)     wolf  within  the  fold  !     Ap  ot  wolves  !  Princess  ii  191 

Pack  (verb)     by  the  Lord  that  made  me,  you  shall  p,  Dora  31 

farmer  vext  f's  up  his  beds  and  chairs,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  39 

Let  the  cantmg  liar  p  !  Vision  of  Sin  108 

neat  and  close  as  Nature  p's  Her  blossom  Enoch  Arden  178 

Pack'd     (For  they  had  p  the  thing  among  the  beds,)  Walk,  to  the  Mail  44 

were  p  to  make  your  crown,  Princess  iv  543 

Pad     An  abbot  on  an  ambling  p,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  20 

Padded     P  round  with  flesh  and  fat,  Vision  of  Sin  177 

To  a  lord,  a  captain,  a  p  shape,  Maud  7  a;  29 

Paddling    round  the  lake  A  little  clock-work  steamer  p 

plied  Princess,  Pro.  71 

Padlock'd     each  chest  lock'd  and  p  thirty-fold.  Merlin  and  V.  655 

Padre     And  when  the  Goan  P  quoting  Him,          •  Akbar's  Dream  74 

Paean    '  I  sung  the  joyful  P  clear.  Two  Voices  127 
Pagan  (adj.)    past  tliro'  P  realms,  and  made  them  mine.  And 

clash'd  with  P  hordes.  Holy  Grail  478 

funeral  bell  Broke  on  my  P  Paradise,  Tiresias  193 

P  oath,  and  jest,  Hard  Romans  brawling  St.  Telemachus  39 

Pagan  (s)     till  our  good  Arthur  broke  The  P  Lancelot  and  E.  280 

But  pity — the  P  held  it  a  vice —  Despair  41 

beheld  That  victor  of  the  P  throned  in  hall—  Last  Tournament  665 

Paganism    wallow  in  this  old  lust  Of  P,  St.  Telemachus  79 


Page  (boy)     Or  long-hair'd  p  in  crimson  clad,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  22 

The  J)  has  caught  her  hand  in  his :  Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  29 

The  maid  and  p  renew'd  their  strife,  „  Revival  13 

She  into  hall  past  with  her  p  and  cried,  Gareth  and  L.  592 

he  made  his  mouthpiece  of  a  ^  Who  came  and  went,  „  1337 

And  p,  and  maid,  and  squire,  Marr.  of  Geraint  710 

You  come  with  no  attendance,  p  or  maid,  Geraint-and  E.  322 

A  slender  p  about  her  father's  hall.  Holy  Grail  581 

Page  (of  a  book)     I  will  turn  that  earlier  p.  Locksley  Hall  107 

And  trust  me  while  I  turn'd  the  p,  To  E.  L.  9 

a  p  or  two  that  rang  With  tilt  and  tourney ;  Princess,  Pro.  121 

I  heard  her  turn  the  p ;  „  vii  190 

If  men  neglect  your  p's  ?  Spiteful  Letter  6 

passing,  turn  the  p  tnat  tells  A  grief,  In  Mem.  Ixxvii  10 

0  ay,  it  is  but  twenty  p's  long.  But  every  p  having 
an  ample  marge. 

But  you  will  turn  the  p's. 
Pageant    meisque  or  p  at  my  father's  court. 

Lead  out  the  p :  sad  and  slow. 
Pageantry    All  the  p,  Save  those  six  virgins 
Pagod     temple,  neither  P,  Mosque,  nor  Church, 
Paid    (See  also  Paaid,  Ped)     there  was  la\v  for  us; 
We  p  in  person. 

1  would  have  p  her  kiss  for  kiss, 
respect,  however  slight,  was  p  To  woman, 
P  with  a  voice  flying  by  to  be  lost 
p  our  tithes  in  the  days  that  are  gone, 
— p  with  horses  and  with  arms ; 
And  the  people  p  her  well. 

Pail     (See  also  Paail)     The  milk  that  bubbleil  in  the  p,  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  51 
where  it  ghtter'd  on  her  p,  Holy  Grail  405 

Pain  (s)    (See  also  Paain)     run  short  p's  Thro'  his 


Merlin  and  V.  668 

The  Ring  127 

Princess  i  198 

Ode  on  Well.  13 

Lover's  Tale  ii  83 

Akbar's  Dream  178 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  86 

Talking  Oak  195 

Princess  ii  136 

Wages  2 

Maud  II  V  23 

Geraint  and  E.  486 

Dead  Prophet  78 


warm  heart ; 
You  care  not  for  another's  p's. 
All  the  inner,  all  the  outer  world  of  p 
Than  once  from  dread  of  p  to  die. 
P  rises  up,  old  pleasures  pall. 
'  Yet  hadst  thou,  thro'  enduring  p, 
Wilt  thou  find  passion,  p  or  pride  ? 
Thy  p  is  a  reality.' 

I  least  should  breathe  a  thought  of  p. 
Although  the  loss  had  brought  us  p. 
Trouble  on  trouble,  p  on  p, 
I  started  once,  or  seem'd  to  start  in  p, 
With  what  dull  p  Compass'd, 
'  Weep,  weeping  dulls  the  inward  p.' 
rose,  Slowly,  with  p,  reclining  on  his  arm, 
P  heap'd  ten-hundred-fold  to  this, 
May  match  his  p's  with  mine ; 
With  slow,  faint  steps,  and  much  exceeding  p, 
sting  of  shrewdest  p  Ran  shrivelling  thro'  me, 
one  blind  cry  of  passion  and  of  p, 
looking  ancient  kindness  on  thy  p. 
woman's  pleasure,  woman's  p — 
like  a  beast  with  lower  p's  ! 
Care  and  Pleasure,  Hope  and  P, 
Like  souls  that  balance  joy  and  p, 
A  band  of  p  across  my  brow ; 
And  gets  for  greeting  but  a  wail  of  p ; 
Without  one  pleasure  and  without  one  p. 
Let  no  man  enter  in  on  />  of  death  ?  ' 
your  p's  May  only  make  that  footprint  upon  sand 
I  clamber'd  o'er  at  top  with  p, 
a  twitch  of  p  Tortured  her  mouth, 
and  draw  The  sting  from  p ; 
Peace,  it  is  a  day  of  p  (repeat) 
Ours  the  p,  be  his  the  gain  ! 
And  mixt,  as  life  is  mixt  with  p, 
troubled,  as  if  with  anger  or  p  : 
peace,  so  it  be  free  from  p. 
Perchance,  to  lull  the  throbs  of  p. 
Like  dull  narcotics,  numbing  p. 
And  I  should  tell  him  all  my  p. 
That  dies  not,  but  endures  witli  p. 
He  loves  to  make  parade  of  p, 


Supp.  Confessions  161 

Rosalind  19 

If  I  were  loved  5 

Two  Voices  105 

164 

166 

243 

387 

Miller's  D.  26 

229 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  84 

D.  of  F.  Women  41 

277 

To  J.  S.  40 

M.  d' Arthur  168 

St.  S.  Stylites  23 

139 

183 

198 

Love  and  Duty  80 

Locksley  Hall  85 

149 

176 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  55 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  1 

The  Letters  6 

Lucretius  138 

„        269 

Princess  ii  195 

,,      Hi  238 

iv  208 

„       vi  105 

vii  64 

Ode  on  Well.  235,  238 

241 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  27 

Grandmother  65 

9Ti 

The  Daisy  1051 

In  Mem.  v%\ 

„      xiv  13] 

„  xviii  17| 

„     xxi  IC 


Pain 


519 


Palace-doorway 


Pain  (s)  {continued)     The  lading  of  a  single  p,  In  Mem.  xxv  11 

This  year  I  slept  and  woke  with  p,  „    xxviii  13 

I  would  set  their  p's  at  ease.  „        Ixiii  8 

Who  ploughs  with  p  his  native  lea  „       Ixiv  25 

These  mortal  lullabies  of  p  „      Ixxvii  5 

No  single  tear,  no  mark  of  p :  „  Ixxviii  1 4 

Some  painless  sympathy  with  p  ?  '  „    Ixxxv  88 

nerves  of  motion  as  well  as  the  nerves  of  p,  Maud  I  i  63 

possible  After  long  grief  and  p  To  find  the  arms  „    //  iv  2 

Pass,  thou  deathlike  type  of  p,  „           58 

And  my  bones  are  shaken  with  p,  „          v  5 

Sun,  that  wakenest  all  to  bliss  or  p,  Gareth  and  L.  1060 

all  my  p's,  poor  man,  for  all  my  p's,  Marr.  of  Geraint  116 

p  she  had  To  keep  them  in  the  wild  ways  Geraint  and  E.  186 

sharpness  of  that  p  about  her  heart :  „             190 

and  down  he  sank  For  the  pure  p,  Lancelot  and  E.  518 

sweet  is  death  who  puts  an  end  to  p :  „             1008 

Pleasure  to  have  it,  none ;  to  lose  it,  p ;  „             1415 

So  groan'd  Sir  Lancelot  in  remorseful  p,  „             1428 

I  climb'd  a  thousand  steps  With  p :  Holy  Grail  836 

I  know  Tliat  all  these  p's  are  trials  of  my  faith,  Pdleas  and  E.  246 
had  held  sometime  with  p  His  own  against  him,    Last  Tournament  178 

and  in  her  bosom  p  was  lord.  „              239 

in  the  heart  of  Arthur  p  was  lord.  „              486 

rose.  Slowly,  with  p,  reclining  on  his  ann.  Pass,  of  Arthur  ^ZQ 

now  first  heard  with  any  sense  of  p.  Lovers  Tale  i  709 

suffering  view'd  had  been  Extremest  p;  „         m  130 

My  heart  was  cloven  with  p ;  „             200 

And  they  blest  him  in  their  p,  The  Revenge  20 
Patient  of  p  tho'  as  quick  as  a  sensitive  plant       In  the  Child.  Hosp.  30 

Her  love  of  light  quenching  her  fear  of  p —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  190 

I  am  rack'd  with  p's.  Columbus  199 

and  wrench'd  with  p's  Gain'd  in  the  service  „         235 

p  Of  this  divisible-indivisible  world  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  42 

I  had  now — with  him — been  out  of  my  p.'  The  Wreck  128 

match'd  with  the  p's  Of  the  hellish  heat  Despair  67 

hour  of  torture,  a  moment  of  p,  „      81 

short,  or  long,  as  Pleasure  leads,  or  P ;  Ancient  Sage  101 

The  plowman  passes,  bent  with  p,  „           144 
whose  p's  are  hardly  less  than  ours  !                      Loclcsley  H.,  Sixty  102 

or  p  in  every  peopled  sphere  ?  „              197 

Thy  glorious  eyes  were  dimm'd  with  p  Freedom  10 

with  all  its  p's,  and  griefs,  and  deaths.  To  Prin.  Beatrice  2 

her  tears  Are  half  of  pleasure,  half  of  p —  „             11 

P,  that  has  crawl'd  from  the  corpse  of  Pleasure,  Fastness  17 

pardon,  O  my  love,  if  I  ever  gave  you  p.  Happy  68 

life  of  mingled  p's  And  joys  to  me.  To  Mary  Boyle  49 

world-whisper,  mystic  p  or  joy.  Far — far — away  7 
Pain  (verb)     (See  also  Paain)    p's  him  that  he  sickens 

nigh  to  death ;  Geraint  and  E.  499 

Pain'd    P,  and,  as  bearing  in  myself  the  shame  Aylmer's  Field  355 

Her  crampt-up  sorrow  p  her,  „            800 
Painful    (See  also  Slowly-painful)     Full  oft  the  riddle  of 

the  p  earth  Palace  of  Art  213 

Completion  in  a  p  school ;  Love  thou  thy  land  58 

Till  out  of  p  phases  wrought  In  Mem.  Ixv  6 

Painless    Some  p  .sympathy  with  pain  ? '  „     Ixxxv  88 

Paint     '  When  will  you  p  like  this  ?  '  Gardener's  D.  22 

And  p  the  gates  of  Hell  with  Paradise,  Princess  iv  131 

I  strive  to  p  The  face  I  know ;  In  Mem.  Ixx  2 

And  every  dew-drop  p's  a  bow,  „    cxxii  18 

harlots  p  their  talk  as  well  as  face  Merlin  and  V.  821 

Behind  it,  and  so  p's  him  that  his  face,  Lancelot  and  E.  334 

P  the  mortal  shame  of  nature  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  140 

Painted  (adj.)    (See  also  Point-painted)    We  left  behind 

the  p  buoy  The  Voyage  1 

those  fixt  eyes  of  p  ancestors  Staring  for  ever  Aylmer's  Field  832 

Her  gay-furr'd  cats  a  p  fantasy.  Princess  Hi  186 

sUent  light  Slept  on  the  p  walls,  „      vii  121 

So  like  a  p  battle  the  war  stood  Silenced,  Com.  of  Arthur  122 

Or  two  wild  men  supporters  of  a  shield,  P,  Geraint  and  E.  268 
when  all  at  once  That  p  vessel,  as  with  inner  life. 

Began  to  heave  upon  that  p  sea ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  191 

Painted  (verb)     Eustace  p  her.  And  said  to  me,  Gardener's  D.  20 

a  couple,  fair  As  ever  painter  p,  Aylmer's  Field  106 


Painter    (See  also  Landscape-painter)    sorrowest  thou, 

pale  P,  for  the  past.  Wan  Sculptor  3 

a  couple,  fair  As  ever  p  painted,  Aylmer's  Field  106 

Musician,  p,  sculptor,  critic.  Princess  ii  178 

As  when  a  p,  poring  on  a  face,  Lancelot  and  E.  332 

'  Take  comfort  you  have  won  the  P's  fame,'  liomney's  R.  43 

Wrong  there !    The  v's  fame  ?  „          48 

Painting  (part)    p  some  dead  friend  from  memory  ?  Wan  Sculptor  4 

And  then  was  p  on  it  fancied  arms,  Merlin  and  V.  474 

Good,  I  am  never  weary  p  you.  Romney's  R.  3 

Painting  (s)    with  choice  p's  of  wise  men  I  hung  Palace  of  Art  131 

Drew  from  my  neck  tlie  p  and  the  tress.  Princess  vi  110 

p  on  the  wall  Or  shield  of  knight ;  Holy  Grail  829 

Hung  round  with  p's  of  the  sea,  Lover's  Tale  ii  168 

In  the  hall  there  hangs  a  p —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  13 

Pair    we  went  along,  A  pensive  p,  Miller's  D.  164 

saw  the  p,  Enoch  and  Annie,  sitting  Enoch  Arden  68 

welded  in  one  love  Than  p's  of  wedlock  ;  Princess  vi  254 

His  craven  p  Of  comrades  making  slowlier  Geraint  and  E.  166 

like  that  false  p  who  tum'd  Flying,  „             176 

With  a  low  whinny  toward  the  p :  „             756 

Palace  (adj.)     '  Yet  pull  not  down  my  p  towers,  Palace  of  Art  293 

High  up,  the  topmost  p  spire.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  48 

In  p  chambers  far  apart.  „          Sleep  B.  18 

When  that  cold  vapour  touch'd  the  p  gate.  Vision  of  Sin  58 

clocks  Throbb'd  thunder  thro'  the  p  floors.  Princess  vii  104 

Nor  waves  the  cypress  in  the  p  walk ;  „          177 

sound  ran  Thro'  p  and  cottage  door.  Bead  Prophet  38 

Palace  (s)     (See  also  Sunuuer-palace)     And  in  the  lighted 

p  near  L.  of  Shalott  iv  47 

unto  herself  In  her  high  p  there.  Palace  of  Art  12 

gaze  upon  My  p  with  unblinded  eyes,  „           42 

Full  of  great  rooms  and  small  the  p  stood,  „            57 

in  dark  comers  of  her  p  stood  Uncertain  shapes ;  „          237 
forms  that  pass'd  at  windows  and  on  roofs  Of 

marble  p's ;  D.  of  F.  Women  24 

The  p  bang'd,  and  buzz'd  and  clackt,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  14 

And  from  the  p  came  a  child  of  sin.  Vision  of  Sin  5 

Which  rolling  o'er  the  p's  of  the  proud,  Aylmer's  Field  636 

.4nd  in  the  imperial  p  found  the  king.  Princess  i  113 

I  promise  you  Some  p  in  oiu-  land,  „     Hi  162 

took  this  p ;  but  even  from  the  first  „      iv  313 

we  this  night  should  pluck  your  p  down  ;  „          414 

who  goes  ?  '      '  Two  from  the  p '  I.  „           v  3 

All  on  this  side  the  p  ran  the  field  „          361 

high  upon  the  p  Ida  stood  With  Psyche's  babe  „       vi  30 

with  my  brethren  here  In  our  own  p :  „          124 

Was  it  for  this  we  gave  our  p  up,  „          244 

the  long  laborious  miles  Of  P ;  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  12 

Or  p,  how  the  city  gUtter'd,  The  Daisy  47 

Fairily-delicate  p's  shine  Mixt  with  myrtle  The  Islet  18 

Lo  the  p's  and  the  temple,  Boddicea  53 

Burst  the  gates,  and  bum  the  p's,  „        64 

Camelot,  a  city  of  shadowy  p's  And  stately,  Gareth  and  L.  303 

And  he  will  have  thee  to  his  p  here,  Geraint  and  E.  230 

And  into  no  Earl's  p  will  I  go.  „            235 

I  know,  God  knows,  too  much  of  p's !  „            236 

hundred  miles  of  coast,  A  p  and  a  princess,  Merlin  and  V.  589 

hundred  miles  of  coast,  The  p  and  the  princess,  „            648 

many  corridor'd  complexities  Of  Arthur's  p :  „             733 

moved  about  her  p,  proud  and  pale.  Lancelot  and  E.  614 

Until  we  found  the  p  of  the  King.  „            1044 

UntU  I  find  the  p  of  the  King.  „            1051 

he  Will  guide  me  to  that  p,  to  the  doors.'  „            1129 

Sir  Lancelot  at  the  p  craved  Audience  of  Guinevere,  „            1162 

of  Arthur's  p  toward  the  stream,  „            1178 

And  all  the  broken  p's  of  the  Past,  Lover's  Tale  ii  59 
Death  from  the  heights  of  the  mosque  and  the  p,      Def.  of  Lucknow  24 

given  the  Great  Khan's  p's  to  the  Moor,  Columbus  109 

down  in  a  rainbow  deep  Silent  p's,  V.  of  Maeldune  80 

Thro'  many  a  p,  many  a  cot,  Demeter  and  P.  55 

A  galleried  p,  or  a  battlefield,                                 •  The  Ring  246 

To  the  city  and  p  Of  Arthur  the  king ;  Merlin  and  the  G.  65 

our  p  is  awake,  and  mom  Has  lifted  Akbar's  Dream  200 

Palace-doorway    On  to  the  p-d  sliding,  paused.  Lancelot  and  E.  1246 


Palace-front 


520 


Palm 


Falace-front    p-/  Alive  with  flattering  scarfs  Princess  v  508 

Palace-gate    (See  also  Palace  (adj.))    youth  came  riding 

toward  a  p-g,  Vision  of  Sin  2 

Palace-walls     Where  all  about  your  p-w  To  the  Queen  15 

Fleeting  betwixt  her  column'd  p-w,  St.  Telemaehus  37 

Palate     Whither  beneath  the  p,  D.  of  F.  Women  287 

Pale  (adj.)    (See  also  Dead-pale,  Deathly-pale,  Death-pale, 

Passion-pale)     Then  her  cheek  was  p  and  thinner       Lockdey  Hall  21 

P  he  turn'd  and  red,  The  Captain  62 

P  again  as  death  did  prove :  L.  of  Burleigh  66 

Then  moving  homeward  came  on  Annie  p,  Enoch  Arden  149 

Enoch  slumber'd  motionless  and  p,  „           908 

P,  for  on  her  the  thunders  of  the  house  Aylmer's  Field  278 

P  as  the  Jephtha's  daughter,  „            280 

Beneath  a  p  and  unimpassion'd  moon,  „            334 

how  p  she  had  look'd  Darling,  to-night !  „            379 

made  Still  paler  the  p  head  of  him,  „            623 

seem'd  he  saw  no  p  sheet-lightnings  from  afar,  „            726 

when  the  king  Kiss'd  her  p  cheek.  Princess  ii  264 

'  P  one,  blush  again :  ,,       Hi  67 

some  red,  some  p,  All  open-mouth'd,  ,,      iv  482 

raised  the  cloak  from  brows  as  p  and  smooth  „         v  73 

Dishelm'd  and  mute,  and  motionlessly  p,  „      vi  101 

And  then  once  more  she  look'd  at  my  p  face :  „          115 

P  was  the  perfect  face ;  ,,     vii  224 

Come ;  let  us  go  :  your  cheeks  are  p ;  In  Mem.  Ivii  5 
P  with  the  golden  beam  of  an  eyelash  dead  on  the 

cheek,  Passionless,  p,  Maud  I  Hi  3 

ever  as  p  as  before  Growing  and  fading  „           6 

Morning  arises  stormy  and  p,  „       vi  1 

some  Were  p  as  at  the  passing  of  a  ghost.  Com.  of  Arthur  264 
red  and  p  Across  the  face  of  Enid  hearing  her ;      Marr.  of  Geraint  523 

when  the  p  and  bloodless  east  began  To  quicken  „              534 

They  rode  so  slowly  and  they  look'd  so  p,  Geraint  and  E.  35 

Had  ruth  again  on  Enid  looking  p :  „            203 

Femininely  fair  and  dissolutely  p.  „            275 

and  at  his  side  all  p  Dismounting,  „            510 

And  chafing  his  p  hands,  and  calling  to  him.  „            582 

I  never  yet  beheld  a  thing  so  p.  „            615 

and  beholding  her  Tho'  p,  yet  happy,  .,            880 

break  her  sports  with  graver  fits,  Turn  red  or  p.  Merlin  and  V.  181 
The  p  blood  of  the  wizard  at  her  touch  Took  gayer 

colours,  „            949 
moved  about  her  palace,  proud  and  p.                     Lancelot  and  E.  614 

Marr'd  her  friend's  aim  with  p  tranquiUity.  „              733 

how  p !  what  are  they  ?  flesh  and  blood  ?  „            1256 

Brake  into  hall  together,  worn  and  p.  Pelleas  and  E.  587 

When,  p  as  yet,  and  fever-worn.  To  the  Queen  ii  4 

sun,  P  at  my  grief,  drew  down  before  his  time  Demeter  and  P.  114 

are  faint  And  p  in  Alla's  eyes,  .ikbar's  Dream  11 

Bramble  roses,  faint  and  p,  A  Dirge  30 

O  p,  p  face  so  sweet  and  meek,  Oriana  66 

O  SWEET  p  Margaret,  O  rare  p  Margaret,  (repeat)  Margaret  1,  54 

Of  pensive  thought  and  aspect  p,  „            6 

0  sorrowest  thou,  p  Painter,  for  the  past.  Wan  Sculptor  3 
The  p  yellow  wooc^  were  waning,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  2 
And  round  about  the  keel  with  faces  p.  Dark  faces 

p  against  that  rosy  flame,  Lotos  Eaters  25 

To  whom  replied  King  Arthur,  faint  and  p :  M.  d' Arthur  72 

At  this  p  taper's  earthly  spark,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  15 

Panted  hand-in-hand  with  faces  p,  Vision  of  Sin  19 

'  Then  leaving  the  p  nun,  I  spake  of  this  Holy  Grail  129 

And  p  he  turn'd,  and  reel'd,  and  would  have  fall'n,  Guinevere  304 

Then  the  p  Queen  look'd  up  and  answer'd  her,  „        327 

wrathful  heat  Fired  all  the  p  face  of  the  Queen,  „        357 

Rose  the  p  Queen,  and  in  her  anguish  found  „        586 

the  p  King  glanced  across  the  field  Of  battle :  Pass,  of  Arthur  126 

To  whom  replied  King  Arthur,  faint  and  p :  „              240 

its  wreaths  of  dripping  green — Its  p  pink  shells —  Lover's  Tale  i  40 

And  p  and  fibrous  as  a  wither'd  leaf,  „          422 

dewy  touch  of  pity  had  made  The  red  rose  there  a  p  one —  „  696 
The  bridesmaid  p,  statuteUke,  passionless —       Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  212 

1  lay  At  thy  p  feet  this  ballad  of  the  deeds  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  20 
Then  his  p  face  twitch'd ;  '  O  Stephen,  The  Wreck  101 
J  have  scared  you  p  with  my  scandalous  talk,  Despair  111 


Pale  (adj.)  (continued)     as  this  poor  earth's  p  history  runs, —         Vastness  3 

Each  poor  p  cheek  a  momentary  rose —  The  Ring  315 

Pale  (s)     By  bridge  and  ford,  by  park  and  p.  Sir  Galahad  82 

To  leap  the  rotten  p's  of  prejudice.  Princess  ii  142 

break  At  seasons  thro'  the  gilded  p  :  In  Mem.  cxi  8 

Nor  ever  stray'd  beyond  the  p :  Holy  Grail  21 

Pale-blooded     patient,  and  prayerful,  meek,  P-h,  Last  Tournament  608 

who  am  not  meek,  P-h,  prayerful.  „             611 

Paled     P  at  a  sudden  twitch  of  his  iron  mouth ;  Aylmer's  Field  732 

stars  in  heaven  P,  and  the  glory  grew.  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  32 

Pale-green    p-g  sea-groves  straight  and  high,  The  Merman  19 

Paleness     a  p,  an  hour's  defect  of  the  rose,  Maaid  I  iiS 

Paler    made  Still  p  the  pale  head  of  him,  Aylmer's  Field  623 

Or  made  her  p  with  a  poison'd  rose  ?  Merlin  and  V.  611       ' 

But  left  her  all  the  p,  when  Lavaine  Lancelot  and  E.  378      \ 

but  the  child  Is  p  than  before.  The  Ring  327      ^ 

Muriel,  p  then  Than  ever  you  were  in  your  cradle,  „       431 

No !  but  the  p  and  the  graver,  Edith.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  38 

to  trace  On  p  heavens  the  branching  grace  To  Ulysses  15 

Palest     Between  two  showers,  a  cloth  of  p  gold,  Gareth  and  L.  389 

Palfrey    there  she  found  her  p  trapt  Godiva  51 

her  p's  footfall  shot  Light  horrors  „      58 

In  converse  till  she  made  her  p  halt,  Gareth  and  L.  1360 

and  cried,  '  My  charger  and  her  p  ; '  Marr.  of  Geraint  126 

Call  the  host  and  bid  him  bring  Charger  and  p.'        Geraint  and  E.  401 

has  your  p  heart  enough  To  bear  his  armour  ?  „            489 

At  which  her  p  whinnying  hfted  heel,  „             533 

your  charger  is  without,  My  p  lost.'  „            750 

Then  leapt  her  p  o'er  the  fallen  oak,  Balin  and  Balan  587 

Palisade    our  walls  and  our  poor  p's.  Def.  of  Lucknow  55 

Pall  (s)    pass  the  gate  Save  vmder  p  with  bearers.  Aylmer's  Field  827 

Warriors  carry  the  warrior's  p,  Ode  on  Well.  6 

This  truth  came  borne  with  bier  and  p,  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  1 

upbare  A  broad  earth-sweeping  p  of  whitest  lawn.       Lover's  Tale  ii  78 

Took  the  edges  of  the  p,  and  blew  it  far  „        Hi  35 

and  forget  The  darkness  of  the  p.'  Ancient  Sage  198 

drama's  closing  curtain  is  the  p  !  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  62 

and  I  and  you  will  bear  the  p ;  „              281 

Pall  (verb)     Pain  rises  up,  old  pleasures  p.  Two  Voices  164 

Pallas     (See  also  Pallas  Athene)     when  they  wish  to  charm 

P  and  Juno  sitting  by :  A  Character  15 

Herb  comes  to-day,  P  and  Aphrodite,  (Enone  86 

P  where  she  stood.  Somewhat  apart,  „    137 

'  O  Paris,  Give  it  to  P ! '  „    170 

There  stood  a  bust  of  P  for  a  sign,  Princess  i  222 

Now  fired  an  angry  P  on  the  hehn,  „     vi  367 

some  wild  P  from  the  brain  Of  Demons  ?  In  Mem.  cxiv  12 

P  flung  Her  fringed  segis,  Achilles  over  the  T.  3 

and  P  far  away  Call'd ;  „              17 

blunt  the  curse  Of  P,  hear,  Tiresias  155 

Pallas  Athene    saw  P  A  chmbing  from  the  bath  „         40 
Palled  (adj.)     p  shapes  In  shadowy  thoroughfares  of 

thought ;  In  Mem.  Ixx  7 

Pall'd  (draped)     P  all  its  length  in  blackest  samite,  Lancelot  and  E.  1142 

AU  p  in  crimson  samite.  Holy  Grail  847 

Pall'd  (stale)     well  I  know  it — p — For  I  know  men  :  Geraint  and  E.  331 

Pallid     On  her  p  cheek  and  forehead  came  a  colour  Locksley  Hall  25 

Palling     grew  To  thunder-gloom  p  all  stars,  Gareth  and  L.  1359 

Palm  (of  the  hand)     Fold  thy  p's  across  thy  breast,  A  Dirge  2 

'  His  p's  are  folded  on  his  breast :  Two  Voices  247 

opening  out  his  milk-white  p  Disclosed  (Enone  65 

Caught  in  the  frozen  p's  of  Spring.  The  Blackbird  24 

he  smote  His  p's  together,  and  he  cried  M.  d' Arthur  87 

may  press  The  maiden's  tender  p.  Talking  Oak  180 

Between  his  p's  a  moment  up  and  down —  Aylmer's  Field  259 

Bow'd  on  her  p's  and  folded  up  from  wrong,  Princess  iv  288 

some  one  sent  beneath  his  vaulted  p  A  whisper'd  jest  „        v  31 

he  clash'd  His  iron  p's  together  with  a  cry ;  „         354 

nor  more  Sweet  Ida :  p  to  p  she  sat :  „    vii  135 

What  time  his  tender  p  is  prest  In  Mem.  xlv  2 

In  mine  own  lady  p's  I  cuU'd  the  spring  Merlin  and  V.  273 

clench'd  her  fingers  till  they  bit  the  j>,  Lancelot  and  E.  ^611 

he  smote  His  p's  together,  and  he  cned  Pass,  of  Arthur  255 

The  rough  brier  tore  my  bleeding  p's ;  Lover's  Tale  H  18 

Screams  of  a  babe  in  the  red-hot  p's  of  a  Moloch  of  Tyre,       The  Dawn  2 


Palm 

(of  the  hand)  (continued)    in  her  open  p  a 

halcyon  sits  Patient — 

I  (sailow-bloom)    In  colour  like  the  satin-shining  p 
1  (tree)     (See  also  Coco-pahn)     Imbower'd  vaults  of 
pillar'd  p, 

the  solemn  p's  were  ranged  Above, 

And  many  a  tract  of  p  and  rice, 

and  the  yellow  down  Border'd  with  p, 

The  p's  and  temples  of  the  South. 

the  white  robe  and  the  p. 

Breadths  of  tropic  shade  and  p's 

these  be  p's  Whereof  the  happy  people 

built,  and  thatch'd  with  leaves  of  p,  a  hut, 

Among  the  p's  and  ferns  and  precipices ; 

Uttle  dells  of  cowsUp,  fairy  p's, 

battle-clubs  From  the  isles  of  p : 

To  brawl  at  Shushan  underneath  the  p's.' 

all  the  sultry  p's  of  India  known. 

In  lands  of  p  and  southern  pine ;  In  lands  of  p  of 
orange-blossom,  ' 

Not  the  dipt  p  of  which  they  boast ; 

Above  the  valleys  of  p  and  pine.' 

Betwixt  the  p's  of  paradise. 

a  p  As  glitters  gilded  in  thy  Book  of  Hours. 

was  ever  haunting  round  the  p  A  lusty  youth 

from  the  diamond  foimtain  by  the  p's,  ' 

not  those  aUen  p's, 

the  high  star-crowns  of  his  p's 

by  the  p  And  orange  grove  of  Paraguay, 

Your  cane,  your  p,  tree-fern,  bamboo, 

p  Call  to  the  cypress  '  I  alone  am  fair '  ? 
Palm-planted    p-p  fountain-fed  Ammonian  Oasis 
Pahn-tree     '  Under  the  p-t.'    That  was  nothing  to  her  • 

Under  a  p-t,  over  lum  the  Sun  : 
Palmwood    crimson-hued  the  stately  p's 
Palmy    Sailing  under  p  highlands 

Fairer  than  Rachel  by  the  p  well, 
Pahnyrene    with  the  P  That  fought  Aurehan, 
Palpitated    tempestuous  treble  throbb'd  and  p ; 

r,  her  hand  shook,  and  we  heard  In  the  dead  hush 
Palpitation    blissful  p's  in  the  blood. 
Palsied    Left  me  with  the  p  heart. 


521 


Pardon 


Prog,  of  Spring  20 
Merlin  and  V.  224 


Arabian  Nights  39 

79 

Palace  of  Art  114: 

Lotos-Eaters  22 

i'oii  ask  me,  why,  etc.  28 

St.  S.  Sti/lites  20 

Locksley  Hall  160 

Enoch  Arden  504 

559 

593 

Aylmer's  Field  91 

Princess,  Pro.  22 

Hi  230 

ir.  to  Marie  Alex.  14 


The  Dauy  2 

,.      26 

The  Islet  23 

In  Mem.,  Con.  32 

Oareth  and  L.  45 

47 

Lover's  Tale  i  137 

Columbus  78 

The  Wreck  72 

To  Ulysses  11 

36 

Akbar's  Dream  37 

Alexander  7 

Enoch  Arden  498 

501 

Milton  15 

The  Captain  23 

Aylmer's  Field  679 

Princess  ii  83 

Vision  of  Sin  28 

Princess  iv  389 

28 

Locksley  Hall  132 


among  the  gloommg  alleys  Progress  halts  on  p  feet.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  219 
As  some  arpaf,  shnr-V  mcTr  maVc  .>  »,  i:~u       '^  r,.  ^,„  ,  )  ""•^'J/  "^^ 


As  some  great  shock  may  wake  a  p  limb 
Palsy    A  wither'd  p  cease  to  shake  ?  '  ' 

Cured  lameness,  palsies,  cancers. 

wife  or  wailing  infancy  Or  old  bedridden  »,— 

p,  death-in-life,  And  wretched  age — 

The  p  wags  his  head ; 
Palter    to  dodge  and  p  with  a  public  crime  ? 
Palter'd     Nor  p  with  Eternal  God  for  power  • 
Pamper     But  p  not  a  hasty  time,  ' 

And  p  him  with  papmeat,  if  ye  will. 
Pamphleteer     A  p  on  guano  and  on  grain. 
Pan  (a  god)     The  murmur  of  a  happy  P  • 
Pan  (a  vessel)     And  hurl'd  the  p  and  kettle. 


Pane    {See  also  Window-pane) 

the  frost  is  on  the  p : 


St.  Telemachus  57 

Two  Voices  57 

St.  S.  Stylites  82 

Aylmer's  Field  178 

Lu^etius  154 

Ancient  Sage  124 

Third  of  Feb.  24 

Ode  on  Well.  180 

Love  thou  thy  land  9 

Pelleas  and  E.  195 

Princess,  Con.  89 

In  Mem.  xxiii  12 

The  Goose  28 


I  peer 'd  athwart  the  chancel  p 
Fine  as  ice-ferns  on  January  p's 
Oh  is  it  the  brook,  or  a  pool,  or  her  window  p 
And  never  a  glimpse  of  her  window  p !  ' 

And  lash  with  storm  the  streaming  p  ? 
The  prophet  blazon'd  on  the  p's ; 
Laid  their  green  faces  flat  against  the  p's, 
thro'  the  pines,  upon  the  dewy  p  Falling, 
stars  went  down  across  the  gleaming  p  "" 
small  black  fly  upon  the  p  ' 

Pang    Struck  thro'  with  p's  of  hell. 

Thrice  multiplied  by  superhuman  p's, 
I  felt  a  p  within 

Whence  follows  many  a  vacant  p  ; 
brother,  y^ou  have  known  the  p's  we  felt, 
rack'd  with  p's  that  conquer  trust ; 
To  p's  of  nature,  sins  of  will, 


The  blue  fly  sung  in  the  p ;        Mariana  63 
May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  13 


The  Letters  3 

Aylmer's  Field  222 

Window,  On  the  Hill  4 

No  Answer  3 

In  Mem.  Ixxii  4 

„    Ixxxvii  8 

Balin  and  Balan  344 

Lover's  Tale  i  264 

The  Flight  13 

To  one  who  ran  down  Eng.  3 

Palare  of  AH  220 

St.  S.  Stylites  11 

Talking  Oak  234 

Princess  ii  403 

„      V  374 

In  Mem,.  I  6 

liv  3 


Vrngicontinued)     nor  p  Of  wrench'd  or  broken  Hnib—       Gareth  and  L  87 

Right  thro'  his  manful  breast  darted  the  p  Marr.  of  Geraint  121 

The  p— which  while  I  weigh'd  thy  heart  Guinevere  540 

Panic     and  a  boundless  p  shook  the  foe.  Achilles  over  the  T  18 

Pamc-Stricken     p-s,  Uke  a  shoal  Of  darting  fish,  Geraint  and  E.  468 

Pansy     eyes  Darker  than  darkest  pansies.  Gardener's  D.  27 

Fant    life,  not  death,  for  which  we  p  ;  Two  Voices  398 

Panted     as  he  walk'd,  King  Arthur  p  hard,  M.  d' Arthur  176 

P  hand-in-hand  with  faces  pale,  Vision  of  Sin  19 

sweet  half-English  Neilgherry  air  I  p.  The  Brook  18 

F  from  weary  sides  '  King,  you  are  free  !  Princess  v  24 

Gareth  p  hard   and  his  great  heart,  Gareth  and  L.  1126 

n     i.f       rJTr "^  ^  ^'"S  Arthur  p  hard,  Pass,  of  Arthur  344 

Panther     The  p's  roar  came  muffled,  (Enone  214 

A  p  sprang  across  her  path.  Death  of  (Enone  m 

fantrng     p,  burst  The  laces  toward  her  babe ;  Princess  vi  148 

Pantomime     Nor  flicker  down  to  brainless  p.  To  W   C  Macready  10 

Pap     their  bottles  o'  p,  an'  theii  mucky  bibs,  Spinster's  S's.  87 

Papal     Prick  d  by  the  P  spur,  we  rear'd.  Third  of  Feb.  27 

Faper     ihere  at  a  board  by  tome  and  p  sat.  Princess  ii  32 

heard  In  the  dead  hush  the  p's  that  she  held  Rustle  •  '     iv  390 

sack'd  My  dwelling,  seized  upon  my  p's,  Columbus  130 

a  scrap,  dipt  out  of  the  '  deaths  '  in  a  p,  fell.  The  Wreck  146 

S*pH"^,p  "^^^■^^"^^^i'^.^  ^elJ^'  (Enone  175 

Papist     1  ban  P  unto  Saint.  Talking  Oak  16 

Papmeat     And  pamper  him  with  p,  if  ye  will,  Pelleas  and  E.  195 

Parable    second  brother  in  their  fool's  p—  Gareth  and  L.  1004 

P  s:'     Hear  a  p  of  the  knave.  jqOS 

Parachute     And  dropt  a  faiiy  p  and  past :  Princess  Pro  76 

Parade    He  lov^  to  make  p  of  pain,  in  Mem.  xxi  10 
Paradise    (See  also  Island-Paradise)    Love  paced  the 

thymy  plots  of  P,  x^^g  „^  ^g^,;^  3 

Or  thronging  all  one  porch  of  P  PaUce  of  Art  101 

And  from  it  melt  the  dews  of  P,  St.  S.  Stylites  210 

pahns  in  cluster,  knots  of  P.  Locksley  Hall  160 

Like  long-tail'd  birds  of  P  Day-Dm.  Ev  7 

And  paint  the  gates  of  Hell  with  P,  Princess  iv  131 

dipt  In  Angel  instmcts,  breathing  P  ^i  321 

many-blossoming  P's                          '  Boddicea  43 

Ihis  earth  had  been  the  P  in  Mem.  xxiv  6 

shook  Betwixt  the  palms  of  p.  ^,        Qq„   32 

And  the  valleys  of  P.  Maud  I  xxii  44 

since  high  in  P  O'er  the  four  rivers  Geraint  and  £.763 

No  more  of  jealousy  than  in  P.'  Palin  and  Balan  152 

i\  ow  talking  of  their  woodland  p.  Last  Tournament  726 

groves  that  look'd  a  p  Of  blossom,  Guinevere  389 

I  stood  upon  the  stairs  of  P.  Sisters  (E.  and  E  )  144 

And  saw  the  rivers  roU  from  P  !  Cohmhus  27 

^  fi!'  o^^*  ^  u.  f^""^  ■  ^-  "f  Maeldune  78 

and  the  P  trembled  away.  g2 

Broken  on  my  Pagan  P,  "Tiresias  193 

'  P  there  !  '  so  he  said,  but  I  seem'd  in  P  then  The  Wreck  75 

In  earth's  recm-ring  P.  n^en's  Tower  12 

A  silken  cord  let  down  from  P,  Akbar's  Dream  139 

Paragon    look  upon  her  As  on  a  kind  of  p ;  Princess  i  155 

Paraguay    palm  And  orange  grove  of  P,  To  Vlvsses  12 

Paramount    Tristram,  '  Last  to  my  Queen  P,  Here 

now  to  my  Queen  P  Last  Tournament  551 

Paramour     iMy  haughty  jousts,  and  took  a  p  ;  Geraint  and  E.  832 

Por^w^'h''^       fn'?.*^f',°^-"'y?        ,         .  Last  Tournament  44fi 

Parapet     heroes  tall  Dislodging  pinnacle  and  p  D  of  F   Women  26 

isle  of  silvery  p's!  Boddicea^S 

bet  every  gilded  p  shuddermg ;  Lancelot  and  E.  299 

gilded  ps  were  crown'd  With  faces,  Pdhas  and  E.  165 

Parasite     A  leaning  and  upbearing  p,  Isabel  34 

l^^%  ^y"^  clear  away  the  p  forms  Prir^cess  vii  269 

Parcel     Portions  and  fs  of  the  dreadful  Past.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S  47 

Parcel-bearded    p-6  with  the  traveller's-joy  In  Autumn,  Aylmer's  Field  153 

Parcell  d    the  broad  woodland  p  into  farms ;  R4.7 

Parch'd    p  and  wither'd,  deaf  and  blind,  "     PatiinaQ 

p  with  dust ;  Or,  clotted  into  points  M.  d' Arthur  218 

V^J  "^'^^i^"    J  ^'''  f  dotted  into  points  Pass,  of  Arthur  386 

Fard     a  wild  and  wanton  p.  Eyed  like  the  evening  star,  (Enone  199 

Pardon  (s)    heal  me  with  your  p  ere  you  go.'        ^  Princess  Hi  05 

\\  hat  p,  sweet  Melissa,  for  a  blush  ? '  „            66 


Pardon 


522 


Faidon  (s)  (cotitinued)  and  sirm'd  in  grosser  lipsBeyond  all  p 
with  mutual  p  ask'd  and  given  For  stroke 
I  crave  your  p,  O  my  friend ; 
^vith  the  Sultan's  p,  I  am  all  as  well  delighted, 
Thy  p ;  I  but  speak  for  thine  avail, 
'  Full  p,  but  I  follow  up  the  quest, 
crave  His  p  for  thy  breaking  of  his  laws, 
and  now  thy  p,  friend, 
Crave  p  for  that  insult  done  the  Queen, 
Grant  me  p  for  my  thoughts 


Princess  iv  252 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  100 

Maud  I  XX  39 

Gareih  and  L.  883 


986 

1166 

Marr.  of  Geraint  583 

816 


Your  p,  child.     Your  pretty  sports  have  brighten'd  Merlin  and  V.  304 


your  p !  lo,  ye  know  it !     Speak  therefore 

tlazzled  by  the  sudden  light,  and  crave  P : 

^ladam,  I  beg  yoiu:  p  ! 

Nay,  your  p,  cry  your  'forward,' 

Your  p,  O  my  love,  if  I  ever  gave  you  pain. 
Pardon  (verb)     '  Pray  stay  a  little :  p  me; 

I  cared  not  for  it.     0  p  me, 

and  I  (P  me  saying  it)  were  much  loth  to  breed 

My  needful  seeming  harshness,  p  it. 

'  O  p  me  I  heard,  I  could  not  help  it, 

Yet  mine  in  part.     O  hear  me,  p  me. 

P,  I  am  shamed  That  I  must  needs  repeat 

We  p  it ;  and  for  your  ingress  here 

'  P  me,  O  stranger  knight ; 

O  p  me  !  the  madness  of  that  hour. 

Again  she  sigh'd  '  P,  sweet  lord  ! 

sin  in  words  Perchance,  we  both  can  p : 

God  'ill  p  the  hell-black  raven 

God  p  all — Me,  them,  and  all  the  world — 

and  yet  P — too  harsh,  unjust. 
Pardonable    '  Rough,  sudden.  And  p, 
Pardon'd     I  have  p  little  Letty ; 
Pardoner    at  P's,  Summoners,  Friars, 
Pare     would  p  the  mountain  to  the  plain, 
Parent     (See  also  Paarint)     and  their  p's  underground) 

Till  after  our  good  p's  past  away 

.\nd  you  are  happy :  let  her  p's  be.' 

sell  her,  those  good  p's,  for  her  good. 

The  p's'  harshness  and  the  hapless  loves 

do  not  doubt  Being  a  watchfiil  p, 
Paris  (city  of)     Roarbg  London,  raving  P, 


Lancelot  and  E.  669 

Pelleas  and  E.  106 

Rizpah  81 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  225 

Happy  68 

The  Brook  210 

Aylmers  Field  244 

Princess  i  156 

„       a  309 

331 

„       Hi  31 

51 

V  218 

Marr.  of  Geraint  286 

Geraint  and  E.  346 

Balin  and  Balan  497 

Lancelot  and  E.  1189 

Rizpah  39 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  168 

Columbus  199 

Gareth  and  L.  654 

Edwin  Morris  140 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  92 

Merlin  and  V.  829 

Aylmer's  Field  83 

358 

366 

483 

616 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  SI 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  190 


Madonna-masterpieces  Of  ancient  Art  in  P,  or  in 

Rome.  Romney's  R.  87 

And  London  and  P  and  all  the  rest  The  Dawn  10 

Paris  (son  of  Priam)     (Enone,  wandering  forlorn  Of  P,  Qinone  17 

Beautiful  P,  evil-hearted  P,  „         50 

Hear  all,  and  see  thy  P  judge  of  Gods.'  „        90 

She  to  P  made  Proffer  of  royal  power,  „       110 

From  me.  Heaven's  Queen,  P,  to  thee  king-born,  „      127 

P  held  the  costly  fruit  Out  at  arm's-length,  ,.      135 

And  P  ponder'd,  and  I  cried,  '  O  P,  Give  it  to  Pallas  ! '  „      169 

when  I  look'd,  P  had  raised  his  arm,  „       189 

P,  himself  as  beauteous  as  a  God.  Death  of  (Enone  18 

on  a  sudden  he,  P,  no  longer  beauteous  as  a  God,  „              25 

who  first  had  foxmd  P,  a  naked  babe,  „              54 

Parish  (adj.)     He  heard  the  pealing  of  his  p  bells ;  Enoch  Arden  615 

To  him  that  fluster'd  his  poor  p  wits  Aylmer's  Field  521 

Parish  (s)    like  that  year  in  twenty  p'es  round.  Grandmother  12 

"e  coom'd  to  the  p  wi'  lots  o'  Varsity  debt,  I\'.  Farmer,  N.  S.  29 

An'  all  o'  the  wust  i'  the  p —  Village  Wife  34 

an'  none  of  the  p  knew.  Tomorrow  76 

Haafe  of  the  p  runn'd  oop  Owd  Rod  115 

I  bean  chuch-warden  i'  the  p  fur  fifteen  year.  Church-warden,  etc.  8 

Parish-clerks     Friars,  bellringers,  P-c —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  160 

Park     the  range  of  lawn  and  p  :  The  Blackbird  6 

The  wUd  wind  rang  from  p  and  plain.  The  Goose  45 

voice  thro'  all  the  holt  Before  her,  and  the  p.  Talking  Oak  124 

My  father  left  a  p  to  me,  Amphion  1 

By  bridge  and  ford,  by  p  and  pale,  Sir  Galahad  82 

They  by  p's  and  lodges  going  L.  of  Burleigh  17 

P's  with  oak  and  chestnut  shady,  „             29 

P'a  and  order'd  gardens  great,  „             30 

lay  Carved  stones  of  the  Abbey-ruin  in  the  p,  Princess,  Pro.  14 

Down  thro'  the  p:  strange  was  the  sight  „               54 


Park  [continued)     they  gave  The  p,  the  crowd,  the  house  ; 
A  himdred  maids  in  train  across  the  P. 
Give  up  their  p's  some  dozen  times  a  year 
tides  of  chariots  flow  By  p  and  suburb 
To  range  the  woods,  to  roam  the  p. 


Part 

Princess,  Pro.  94 

vi  76 

„     Con.  103 

In  Mem.  xcviii  24 

Con.  96 


from  the  deluged  p  The  cuckoo  of  a  worse  July  Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  10 

Parlance     A  hate  of  gossip  p,  Isabel  26 

Parle  (s)  Found  the  gray  kings  at  p  :  Princess  vWA 
Parle  (verb)  wakeful  portress,  and  didst  p  with  Death, —  Lover's  Tale  i  113 
Parliament  (adj.)     moor  good  sense  na  the  p  man  'at 

stans  fur  us  'ere,  Owd  Roa  13 

Parliament  (s)     fiu-l'd  In  the  P  of  man,  Locksley  Hall  128 

A  potent  voice  of  P,  In  Mem.  cxiii  11 

Parlour  I  sits  i'  my  oan  httle  p.  Spinster's  S's.  103 
Parlour-window    rosebush  that  I  set  About  the  p-w  May  Queen,  A\  Y's.  E.  48 

Parma    Of  rain  at  Reggio,  rain  at  P ;  The  Daisy  51 

Parnassus     On  thy  P  set  thy  feet.  In  Mem.  xxxvii  6 

Parrot     Whistle  back  the  p's  call,  Locksley  Hall  171 
The  p  in  his  gilded  wires.                                         Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  16 

The  p  scream'd,  the  peacock  squall'd,  „              Revival  12 

p  turns  Up  thro'  gilt  wires  a  crafty  loving  eye,  Princess,  Pro.  171 

Parsee     Buddhist,  Christian,  and  P,  Akbar's  Dream  25 

Parson     The  p  smirk'd  and  nodded.  The  Goose  20 

The  p  Holmes,  the  poet  Everard  Hall,  The  Epic  4 

The  p  taking  wide  and  wider  sweeps,  „        14 

At  which  the  P,  sent  to  sleep  with  sound,  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  3 

'P,'  said  I,'  you  pitch  the  pipe  too  low :  Edwin  Morris  52 

the  p  made  it  his  text  that  week,  Grandmother  29 

P's  a  bean  loikewoise,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  9 

But  P  a  cooms  an'  a  goas,  „              25 

p  'ud  nobbut  let  ma  aloan,  „              43 

•  yon's  p's  'ouse — Dosn't  thou  knaAV  „      N.  S.  5 

thou's  sweet  upo'  p's  lass —  „              11 

P's  lass  'ant  nowt,  „              25 

'  Thou'rt  but  a  Methody-man,'  says  P,  North.  Cobbler  89 

An'  P  as  hesn't  the  call,  nor  the  mooney.  Village  Wife  91 

An'  soa  they've  maade  tha  a  p.  Church-warden,  etc.  7 

ther  mun  be  p's  an'  all,  „                  9 

fur  thou  was  the  P's  lad.  „                36 

An'  P  'e  'ears  on  it  all,  ,,                37 

But  P  'e  ^vill  speak  out,  ,.                 43 

Part  (adv.)     a  lie  which  is  p  a  truth  Grandmother  32 

spoke  in  words  p  heard,  in  whispers  p.  Merlin  and  V.  839 

P  black,  p  whiten'd  with  the  bones  of  men.  Holy  Grail  500 

Part  (s)     they  had  their  p  Of  sorrow :  Miller's  D.  223 

seems  a  p  of  those  fresh  days  to  me ;  Edwin  Morris  142 

Love  himself  took  p  against  himself  Love  and  Duty  45 

I  am  a  p  of  all  that  I  have  met ;  Ulysses  18 

fitted  to  thy  petty  p,  Locksley  Hall  93 

She  seem'd  a  p  of  joyous  Spring :  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  23 

I  will  tell  him  tales  of  foreign  p's,  Enoch  Arden  198 

in  those  uttermost  P's  of  the  morning  ?  „            224 

And  been  himself  a  p  of  what  he  told.  Aylmer's  Field  12 

a  p  Falling  had  let  appear  the  brand  of  John —  „            508 

p  were  drown'd  within  the  whirling  brook :  Princess,  Pro.  47 

As  p's,  can  see  but  p's,  now  this,  now  that,  „          Hi  327 

p  made  long  since,  and  p  Now  while  I  sang,  ,.             iv  90 

P  sat  like  rocks :  p  reel'd  but  kept  their  seats :  „            v  496 

P  roU'd  on  the  earth  and  rose  again  and  drew :  „               497 

P  stumbled  mixt  with  floundering  horses.  „                498 

for  she  took  no  p  In  our  dispute :  „         Con.  29 

'  God  help  me !  save  I  take  my  p  Of  danger  Sailor  Boy  21 

And  love  in  which  my  hound  has  p.  In  Mem.  Ixiii  2 

A  p  of  mine  may  live  in  thee  „          Ixv  11 

Can  take  no  p  away  from  this :  „     Ixxxv  68 

A  p  of  stillness,  yearns  to  speak :  „                78 

The  freezing  reason's  colder  p,  „      cxxiv  14 

when  the  fourth  p  of  the  day  was  gone,  Geraint  and  E.  55 

'  Him,  or  the  viler  devil  who  plays  his  p,  Balin  and  Balan  300 

Now  grown  a  p  of  me :  Lancelot  and  E.  1416 

of  this  remnant  wUl  I  leave  a  p,  Guinevere  444 

is  also  past — p.     And  all  is  past,  „        542 
low  converse  sweet.  In  which  our  voices  bore  least  p.    Lover's  Tale  i  542 

I  seem'd  the  only  p  of  Time  stood  still ;  „           573 

but  were  a  p  of  sleep,  „       ii  117 


Part 


523 


Pass 


Part  (s)  (continued)    I  would  play  my  p  with  the  young  The  Wreck  39 

realist,  rhymester,  play  your  p,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  139 

She  crouch'd,  she  tore  him  p  from  p,  Dead  Prophet  69 

Part  (to  part  company)     The  crown  of  all,  we  met  to  p 
no  more.' 

I  too  must  p :  I  hold  thee  dear 

I  trow  they  did  not  p  in  scorn : 

We  met,  but  only  meant  to  p. 

We  too  must  p :  and  yet  how  fain 

one  soft  word  and  let  me  p  forgiven.' 

'  Let  us  p :  in  a  hundred  years 

At  last  must  p  with  her  to  thee ; 

I  must  tell  her  before  we  p, 

For  years,  for  ever,  to  p-^ 

nor  could  I  p  in  peace  Till  this  were  told.' 

to  meet  And  p  for  ever. 

Brothers,  must  we  p  at  last  ? 


for  a  season  there,  And  then  we  p ; 

Fahewell,  Macready,  since  to-mght  we  p ; 

Farewell,  Macready,  since  this  night  we  p, 

Could  Love  p  thus  ? 

And  loving  hands  must  p — 

star  of  morn  P's  from  a  bank  of  snow, 

No — AVe  could  not  p. 


Edwin  Morris  70 

WUl  Water.  211 

Lady  Clare  5 

The  LetUrs  12 

Princess  vi  199 

219 

Grandmother  47 

In  Mem.,  Con.  48 

Maud  I  xvi  33 

„      //  a  50 

Co)n.  of  Arthur  393 

Guinevere  98 

Open  I.  atid  C.  Exhib.  32 


Bomney's  R.  21 

To  W.C.  Macready  1 

5 

Love  and  Duty  55 

Window,  The  Answer  6 

Marr.  of  Geraint  735 

The  Ring  321 


Part  (to  divide)     thorough-edged  intellect  to  p  Error  from  crime ;   Isabel  14 


ere  the  falling  axe  did  p  The  burning  brain 

To  put  together,  p  and  prove. 

Can  I  p  her  from  herself. 

And  p  it,  giving  half  to  him. 

Her  care  is  not  to  v  and  prove ; 

a  comb  of  pearl  to  p  The  lists  of  such  a  beard 

It  was  ill-done  to  p  you,  Sisters  fair ; 

be  loath  To  p  them,  or  p  from  them : 

I  mun  p  them  Tommies — 

While  she  vows  '  till  death  shall  p  us,' 

she  that  came  to  p  them  all  too  late, 
Partake    Then  Yniol,  '  Enter  therefore  and  p 
Partaker    No  more  p  of  thy  change. 
Part-amazed    Then  half-ashamed  and  p-a. 
Parted  (adj.)     Or  thro'  the  p  silks  the  tender  face 

And  p  lips  which  drank  her  breath, 

Unfriendly  of  your  p  guest. 
Parted  (parted  company)   ere  he  p  said,  '  This  hour  is  thine 

Had  once  hard  words,  and  p, 

p,  with  great  strides  among  his  dogs. 

We  p  :  sweetly  gleam'd  the  stars, 

Enoch  p  with  his  old  sea-friend, 

'  Here,  by  this  brook,  we  p ; 

the  week  Before  I  p  with  poor  Edmund ; 

They  p,  and  Sir  Aylmer  Ayhner  watch'd. 

A  littfe  after  you  had  p  with  him, 

and  beckon'd  us :  the  rest  P ; 

Gareth  ere  he  p  flash'd  in  arms. 

madness  of  that  hour,  WTien  first  I  p  from  thee, 

rose  without  a  word  and  p  from  her : 

Who  p  with  his  own  to  fair  Elaine : 

'  Lord,  no  sooner  had  yep  from  us, 

'  But  p  from  the  jousts  Hurt  in  the  side,' 

He  spake  and  p.     Wroth,  but  all  in  awe, 

'  Farewell,  sweet  sister,'  p  all  in  teare. 

And  p,  laughing  in  his  courtly  heart. 

then  slowly  to  her  bower  P, 

rode  to  the  divided  way.  There  kiss'd,  and  p  weeping 

poor  lad,  an'  we  p  in  tears 


when  we  p,  Edith  spoke  no  word, 
I  p  from  her,  and  I  went  alone. 
You  p  for  the  Holy  War  without  a  word  to  me, 
Parted  (divided)     '  my  friend — P  from  her — 
friend  from  friend  Is  oftener  p, 
one  at  other,  p  by  the  shield. 
The  wrist  is  p  from  the  hand  that  waved, 
We  cried  when  we  were  p ; 
And  floated  on  and  p  round  her  neck, 
P  a  little  ere  they  met  the  floor, 
with  their  nail'd  prows  P  the  Norsemen, 


Margaret  38 

Two  Voices  134 

Locksley  Hall  70 

In  Mem.  xxv  12 

„         xlviii  5 

Merlin  and  V.  244 

Lover's  Tale  i  814 

Sisters  [E.  and  E.)  50 

Spinster's  S's.  92 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  24 

The  Ring  216 

Marr.  of  Geraint  300 

In  Mem.  xli  8 

Gareth  and  L.  868 

Princess  vii  60 

Lover's  Tale  ii  204 

The  Wanderer  4 

Love  and  Death  9 

Dora  18 

Godiva  31 

The  Letters  41 

Enoch  Arden  168 

The  Brook  1 

78 

Ayhner's  Field  277 

Sea  Dreams  273 

Princess  ii  183 

Gareth  and  L.  689 

Geraint  and  E.  347 

Merlin  and  V.  742 

Lancelot  and  E.  381 

576 

622 

719 

1152 

1176 

Last  Tournament  239 

Guinevere  125 

First  Quarrel  20 


Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  215 

The  Ring  437 

Happy  77 

Princess  v  76 

In  Mem.  xcviii  15 

Geraint  and  E.  269 

Merlin  and  V.  551 

Lover's  Tale  i  253 

704 

iv  215 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  94 


Parted  (divided)  {continued)    You  have  p  the  man  from  the  m  ife.    Despair  62 

rove  no  more,  if  we  be  p  now  !  Tlie  Flight  84 

Two  lovers  p  by  a  scurrilous  tale  The  Ring  208 

storm  Had  p  from  his  comrade  in  the  boat,  „        308 

on  that  day  Two  lovers  p  by  no  scurrilous  tale —  „        427 

Parthenon     Inform'd  the  pillar'd  P,  Freedom  3 

Parting  (adj.  and  part.)     As  p  with  a  long  embrace  In  Mem.  xl  11 

nigh  the  sea  P  my  own  loved  mountains  lever's  Tale  i  433 

But  cast  a  p  glance  at  me,  you  saw,  „            iv  4 

I  knew  You  were  p  for  the  war,  Happy  74 

hke  p  hopes  I  heard  them  passing  from  me  :  Princess  iv  172 

and  regret  Her  p  step,  and  held  her  tenderly,  Lancelot  and  E.  867 

Parting  (s)     Their  eveiy  p  was  to  die.                  "  In  Mern.  xcvii  12 

Warm  with  a  gracious  p  from  the  Queen,  Pelleas  and  E.  558 

And  just  above  the  p  was  a  lamp  :  Lover's  Tale  iv  218 

Partner    prudent  p  of  his  blood  Lean'd  on  him,  Two  Voices  415 

Thy  p  in  the  nowery  walk  Of  letters,  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  22 

Two  p's  of  a  married  life —  „             xemi  5 

Partridge     Cries  of  the  p  hke  a  rusty  key  Lover's  Tale  ii  115 

Partridge-breeder    These  p-b's  of  a  thousand  years,  Ayhner's  Field  382 

Party  (adj.)     And  ancient  forms  of  p  strife  ;  In  Mem.  cvi  14 

0  scorner  of  the  p  cry  That  wanders  Freedom  25 
Party  (s)     two  parties  still  divide  the  world —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  77 

All  parties  work  together.  Will  Water.  56 

'  Drink,  and  let  the  parties  rave  :  Vision  of  Sin  123 

being  lustily  holpen  by  the  rest.  His  p, —  Lancelot  and  E.  497 

knights.  His  p,  cried  '  Advance  and  take  thy  prize  „              503 

His  p,  knights  of  utmost  North  and  West,  „  526 
Kivals  of  realm-ruining  p,                                       Locksley  H.,  Sixty  120 

Party-secret    betraying  HLs  p-s,  fool,  to  the  press ;  Maud  II  v  35 

Pass  (s)     (See  also  Hill-pass)    shadowy  granite,  in  a 

gleaming  p;  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  4 

The  long  divine  Peneian  p.  To  E.  L.  3 

Snatch'd  thro'  the  perilous  p'es  of  his  life  :  Aylmer's  Field  209 

the  strait  and  dreadful  p  of  death.  Com.  of  Arthur  395 

never  dream'd  the  p'es  would  be  past '  Gareth  and  L.  1413 

never  dream'd  the  p'es  could  be  past.'  „            1420 

Arthur  came,  and  labouring  up  the  p,  Lancelot  and  E.  47 

And  soUtary  p'es  of  the  wood  Last  Tournament  361 

Hath  folded  m  the  p'es  of  the  world.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  78 

wet  black  p'es  and  foam-churning  chasms —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  9 

inroad  nowhere  scales  Their  headlong  p'es,  Montenegro  5 

from  every  vale  and  plain  And  garden  p,  To  Mary  Boyle  10 

Pass  (verb)     Men  p  me  by  ;  Supp.  Confessions  19 
red  cloaks  of  market  girls,  P  onward  from  Shalott.      L.  of  Shalott  ii  18 

And  heard  her  native  breezes  p,  Mariana  in  the  S.  43 

An  image  seem'd  to  p  the  door,  (repeat)  „        65,  74 

To  p,  when  Life  her  light  withdraws,  Two  Voices  145 

Can  he  p,  and  we  forget  ?  Miller's  D.  204 

P  by  the  happy  souls,  that  love  to  live :  (Enone  240 

1  pray  thee,  p  before  my  light  of  life,  „  241 
the  Uvelong  day  my  soul  did  p.  Palace  of  Art  55 
stars  above  them  seem  to  biighten  as  they  p  :  May  Queen  34 
I  shall  hear  you  when  you  p.  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  31 
I  THOUGHT  to  p  away  before,  „  Con.  1 
my  desire  is  but  to  p  to  Him  that  died  for  me.  „  20 
'  P  freely  thro' :  the  wood  is  all  thine  own,  D.  of  F.  Wotnen  83 
Once  thro'  mine  own  doors  Death  did  p  ;  To  J.  S.  19 
Did  never  creature  p  So  slightly.  Talking  Oak  86 
Or  p  beyond  the  goal  of  ordinance  Tithonus  30 
Then  a  hand  shall  p  before  thee,  Locksley  Hall  81 
Till  all  the  hundred  summers  p,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  33 
That  strove  in  other  days  to  p,  „  Arrival  10 
My  lord,  and  shall  we  p  the  bill  „  Revival  27 
To  p  with  all  our  social  ties  „  L' Envoi  5 
So  p  I  hostel,  hall,  and  grange  ;  Sir  Galahad  81 
I  hold  it  good,  good  things  should  p  :  Will  Water.  205 
P  on,  weak  heart,  and  leave  me  where  I  lie  :  Come  not,  lohen,  etc.  11 
And  p  his  days  in  peace  among  his  own.  Enoch  Arden  147 
Annie,  the  ship  I  sail  in  p'es  here  „  214 
P  from  the  Danish  barrow  overhead ;  .  „  442 
let  my  query  p  Unclaim'd,  The  Brook  104 
There  stood  a  maiden,  near  Waiting  to  p.  „  205 
But  nevermore  did  either  p  the  gate  Aylmer's  Field  826 
sides  of  the  grave  itself  shall  p,  Lucretius  257 


Pass 


there  did  a  compact  f  Long  summers 

Princess  i  123 

,.      a  232 

V  A 

91 

.,      vi  341 

Bequiescat  7 

Voice  and  the  P.  28 


s  (verb)  (continued) 

back, 
and  p  With  all  fair  theories  only  made  to  gild 
he  said, '  p  on  ;  His  Highness  wakes : ' 
she  wiU  p  me  by  in  after-life 
P,  and  mingle  with  your  likes. 
Her  peaceful  being  slowly  p'es  by 
the  voice,  the  peak,  the  star  P, 


if  left  to  p  His  autumn  into  seeming-leafless  days- 
Winds  are  loud  and  winds  will  p  !  "~ 
That  all  thy  motions  gently  p 
The  salt  sea-water  p'es  by, 
And  p'es  into  gloom  a^ain. 
I  shall  p  ;  my  work  will  fail. 
We  p  :  the  path  that  each  man  trod 
That  these  things  p,  and  I  shall  prove 
And,  leaving  these,  to  p  away, 


A  Dedication  9 

Window,  No  Answer  22 

In  Mem.  xv  10 

,,  xix  6 

,.    xxxix  12 

„  Ivii  8 

„      Ixxiii  9 

„    Ixxxv  98 

cl9 


in  the  drifts  that  p  To  darken  on  the  roUing  brine  „  cvii  13 

They  leave  the  porch,  they  p  the  grave  „  Con.  71 

But  sweeps  away  as  out  we  p  ,,  95 

And  p  the  silent-Ughted  town,  „  112 

I  see  her  p  like  a  light ;  Maud  I  iv  11 

P  and  blush  the  news  Over  glowing  ships  ;  ,,  xvii  11 

P  the  happy  news.  Blush  it  thro'  the  West ;  „  15 

And  trying  to  f  to  the  sea ;  „  xxi  7 

P,  thou  deathlike  type  of  pain,  „  II  iv  58 

P  and  cease  to  move  about !  „  59 


Guinevere  Stood  by  the  castle  walls  to  watch  him  p ;  Com.  of  Arthur  48 

and  sign'd  To  those  two  sons  to  p,  ,,            319 

he  will  not  die,  But  p,  again  to  come ;  „             422 

Gareth  was  too  princely-proud  To  p  thereby ;  Gareth  and  L.  162 

so  thou  p  Beneath  this  archway,  „            267 

P  not  beneath  this  gateway,  „            273 

a  knight  would  p  Outward,  or  inward  to  the  hall :  „            310 

'  He  p'es  to  the  Isle  AviUon,  „            502 

He  p'es  and  is  heal'd  and  cannot  die ' —  „            503 

jeweU'd  harness,  ere  they  p  and  fly.  „             688 

For  whom  we  let  thee  p.'  „            917 

And  quickly  p  to  Arthur's  hall,  „            984 

Else  yon  black  felon  had  not  let  me  p,  „          1293 

like  a  phantom  p  Chilling  the  night :  „          1335 

until  we  p  and  reach  That  other,  Geraint  and  E.  6 

Wait  here,  and  when  he  p'es  fall  upon  him.'  „          129 

they  wiU  fall  upon  you  while  ye  p.'  „           145 

glancing  for  a  minute,  till  he  saw  her  P  into  it,  „          887 
WUt  thou  undertake  them  as  we  p,                            Balin  and  Balan  14 

As  p  without  good  morrow  to  thy  Queen  ?  '  „            252 

'  Yea  so  '  she  said,  '  but  so  to  p  me  by —  „            255 

and  p  And  vanish  in  the  woods ;  „            326 

heard  them  p  Uke  wolves  Howling ;  „            407 
He  must  not  p  uncared  for.                                        Lancelot  and  E.  536 

Only  ye  would  not  p  beyond  the  cape  „              1039 

I  cried  because  ye  would  not  p  Beyond  it,  „              1042 

that  I  may  p  at  last  Beyond  the  poplar  „              1049 

so  let  me  p,  My  father,  howsoe'er  I  seem  to  you,  „              1091 

But  that  he  p'es  into  Fairyland.'  „              1259 

'  That  is  love's  curse ;  p  on,  my  Queen,  forgiven.'  „              1353 

Who  p'es  thro'  the  vision  of  the  night —  „              1406 

'  Then  on  a  summer  night  it  came  to  p,  Holy  Grail  179 

cries  of  all  my  realm  P  thro'  this  hall^  „        316 

the  street  of  those  Who  watcb'd  usp;  „        345 
go  forth  and  p  Down  to  the  little  thorpe 
P  not  from  door  to  door  and  out  again, 
resolve  To  p  away  into  the  quiet  life, 
Cares  but  to  p  into  the  sUent  life. 
And  p  and  care  no  more, 
like  a  poisonous  wind  I  p  to  blast 
'  First  over  me,'  said  Lancelot, '  shalt  thou  p.' 
Watch'd  her  lord  p,  and  knew  not  that  she 

sigh'd.  Last  Tournament  130 

purple  slopes  of  mountain  flowers  P  under  white,  „              230 

one  will  ever  shine  and  one  will  p.  „              737 

all  this  trouble  did  not  p  but  grew ;  Guinevere  84 

1  waged  His  wars,  and  now  I  p  and  die.  Pass,  of  Arthwr  12 

God  my  Christ — I  p  but  shall  not  die.'  „            28 


524  Passing 

Pass  (verb)  [continued)     King !     To-morrow  tnou  shalt  p 

away.  Pass,  of  Arthur  M 

wife  and  child  with  wail  P  to  new  lords ;  ,.45 

'  O  me,  my  King,  let  p  whatever  will,  „  51 

but  as  yet  thou  shalt  not  p.  „  55 

one  last  act  of  knighthood  shalt  thou  see  Yet,  ere  I  p.'  „  164 

'  He  p'es  to  be  King  among  the  dead,  „  449 

Somewhere  far  off,  p  on  and  on,  ,,  467 

To  p  my  hand  across  my  brows.  Lover's  Tale  i  31 

And  mine  with  one  that  will  not  p,  till  earth  And 

71 

286 

470 

481 

.,       iv  63 

276 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  53 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  61 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  21 

124 

Ancient  Sage  144 

202 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  182 

206 

Epilogue  64 

To  Virgil  28 

Early  Spring  12 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  69 

Happy  104 

To  Mary  Boyle  39 

Parnassus  15 

Making  of  Man  4 

.     Poets  and  Critics  8 

Doubt  and  Prayer  3 

Enoch  Arden  650 

Geraint  and  E.  392 

Merlin  and  V.  913 

Lancelot  and  E.  895 


II 


546 
714 
738 


Pelleas  and  E.  11 
569 
571 


heaven  p  too, 

P  we  then  A  term  of  eighteen  years. 

So  that  they  p  not  to  the  shrine  of  sound 

Which  p  with  that  which  breathes  them  ? 

'  It  was  my  wish,'  he  said,  '  to  p,  to  sleep. 

Glanced  at  the  point  of  law,  to  p  it  by. 

Three  hundred  years — will  p  collaterally ; 

but  I  thought  that  it  never  would  p. 

with  his  hard  '  Dim  Saesneg '  p'es, 

and  life  P  in  the  fire  of  Babylon  ! 

The  plowman  p'es,  bent  with  pain, 

but  p  From  sight  and  night  to  lose  themselves 

and  the  sun  himself  will  p. 

Many  an  jEon  too  may  p        • 

Earth  p'es,  all  is  lost  In  what  they  prophesy, 

kings  and  realms  that  p  to  rise  no  more ; 

o'er  the  mountain-walls  Young  angels  p. 

Till  the  thunders  p,  the  spectres  vanish, 

Your  plague  but  p'es  by  the  touch. 

helpt  to  p  a  bucket  from  the  well 

p  on  !  the  sight  confuses — 

aeon  after  aeon  p  and  touch  him  into  shape  ? 

Some  will  p  and  some  will  pause. 

From  sin  thro'  sorrow  into  Thee  we  p 

clothes  they  gave  him  and  free  p  home ; 

Except  the  p  that  he  loved  her  not ; 

There  must  be  now  no  p'es  of  love 

That  has  but  one  plain  p  of  few  notes, 

Will  sing  the  simple  p  o'er  and  o'er 
Passant    cow  shall  butt  the  '  Lion  p ' 
Pass'd    See  Past 

Passenger  Should  see  thy  p's  in  rank 
Passest  thou  p  any  wood  Close  vizor, 
Passeth     shadow  p  when  the  tree  shall  fall. 

Love  p  not  the  threshold  of  cold  Hate, 
Passin'     when  they  seeas  ma  a  p  boy, 
Passing     (See  also  Passin')     P  the  place  where  each 
must  rest, 

each  in  p  touch'd  with  some  new  grace 

In  p,  with  a  grosser  film  made  thick 

No  eye  look  down,  she  p ; 

She  p  thro'  the  summer  world  again, 

Not  sowing  hedgerow  texts  and  p  by, 

as  not  p  thro'  the  fire  Bodies,  but  souls — 

and  murmur'd  that  their  May  Was  p : 

like  parting  hopes  I  heard  them  p 

many  a  maiden  p  home  Till  happier  times ; 

Nine  times  goes  the  p  bell : 

P  with  the  weather. 

Was  drown'd  in  p  thro'  the  ford, 

p,  turn  the  page  that  tells  A  grief. 

Nor  feed  with  sighs  a  p  wind  : 

The  shade  of  p  thought,  the  wealth  Of  words 

With  never  an  end  to  the  stream  of  p  feet, 

Arthur,  p  thence  to  battle,  felt  Travail, 

and  p  forth  to  breathe, 

'  Ana  p  gentle '  caught  his  hand  away 

That  makes  me  p  wrathful ; 

And  p  one,  at  the  high  peep  of  dawn,  „ 

I  fear  My  fate  or  folly,  p  gayer  youth  For  one  so  old,  „ 

sigh'd  in  p  '  Lancelot,  Forgive  me;  Lancelot  and  E. 

Three  against  one :  and  Gawain  p  by. 

He  saw  not,  for  Sir  Lancelot  p  by 

Leapt  like  a  p  thought  across  her  eyes ; 

that  p  lightly  Adown  a  natural  stair 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  248 

In  Mem.  xiv  6 

Last  Tournament  534 

Love  and  Death  14 

Lover's  Tale  i  778 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  53 

Two  Voices  410 

Gardener's  D.  204 

St.  S.  Stylites  200 

Godiva  40 

Enoch  Arden  534 

Aylmer's  Field  171 

671 

Princess  ii  464 

„       iv  173 

„      vi  380 

All  Things  icill  Die  35 

Windov;,  Spring  6 

In  Mem.  vi  39 

„    Ixxvii  10 

„       cviii  4 

„    Con.  102 

Maud  II  V  11 

Com.  of  Arthur  75 

369 

Balin  and  Balan  371 

Merlin  and  V.  341 

560 

927 

1350 

Pelleas  and  E.  274 

Guinevere  30 

Lover's  Tale  i  70 

526 


Passing 


525 


Past 


Passing  (continued)     ships  of  the  world  could  stare  at  him, 

p  by.  Bizfah  83 
And  moved  to  meiriment  at  a  p  jest.                   Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  121 

Art  p  on  thine  happier  voyage  now  Sir  J.  Franklin  3 

But  make  the  p  shadow  serve  thy  will.  Aiicient  Sage  110 
and  p  now  into  the  night ;                                        Locksley  H.,  Sixty  227 

poor  old  Poetry,  p  hence,  „              249 

p  thro'  at  once  from  state  to  state,  Demeter  and  P.  7 
clatter  of  arms,  and  voices,  and  men  p  to  and  fro.       Bandit's  Death  24 

p  souls  thro'  fire  to  the  fire.  The  Dawn  4 

The  p  of  the  sweetest  soul  In  Mem.  Ivii  11 

some  Were  pale  as  at  the  p  of  a  ghost,  Com.  of  Arthur  264 
And  o'er  it  are  three  p's,  and  three  knights  Defend 

the  p's,  Gareth  and  L.  613 

he  mark'd  his  high  sweet  smile  In  p,  Balin  and  Balan  161 
In  p  it  glanced  upon  Hamlet  or  city,                       Merlin  and  the  G.  103 

Passion     {See  also  Master-passion)     When  my  p  seeks 

Pleasance  Lilian  8 

By  veering  p  fann'd,  Madeline  29 

And  those  whom  p  hath  not  blinded,  Ode  to  Memwry  117 

In  thee  all  p   becomes  passionless,  Elednore  102 

the  soul  and  sense  Of  P  gazing  upon  thee.  „       116 
A  ghost  of  p  that  no  smiles  restore —                       The  form,  the  form  11 

Wilt  thou  find  p,  pain  or  pride  ?  Two  Voices  243 

She  had  the  p's  of  her  kind,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  35 

lyre  of  widest  range  Struck  by  all  p,  D.  of  F.  Women  166 

How  p  rose  thro'  circumstantial  grades  Gardener's  D.  240 

I  ask^d  him  of  his  early  life,  And  his  first  p ;  Edxoin  Morris  24 

something  of  a  wayward  modem  mind  Di.ssecting  p.  „              88 

For  when  my  p  first  began,  Talking  Oak  9 

hold  p  in  a  leash.  And  not  leap  forth  Love  and  Duty  40 

In  one  blind  cry  of  p  and  of  pain,  „           80 

p  shall  have  spent  its  novel  force,  Locksley  Hall  49 

I  triiunph'd  ere  my  p  sweeping  thro'  me  „          131 

my  foolish  p  were  a,  target  for  their  scorn :  ^          „          146 

and  all  thy  p's,  match'd  with  mine,  ,,          151 

There  the  p  s  cramp'd  no  longer  „          167 

p's  of  her  mind.    As  winds  from  all  the  compass  Godiva  32 

He  spoke;  the  p  in  her  moan'd  repljr  Enoch  Arden  286 

where  a  p  yet  unborn  perhaps  Lay  hidden  Ayhner's  Field  101 

his  p's  all  in  flood  And  masters  of  his  motion,  „            339 

living  p  symbol'd  there  Were  living  nerves  „            535 

make  our  p's  far  too  like  The  discords  Sea  Dreams  257 

flush  Of  p  and  the  first  embrace  had  died  Lucretius  3 

To  lead  an  errant  p  home  again.  „      17 

My  heart  beat  thick  with  p  and  with  awe ;  Princess  Hi  190 

How  much  their  welfare  is  a «  to  us.  .,            281 

She  ended  with  such  p  that  the  tear,  .,          iv  59 

rhythm  have  dash'd  The  p  of  the  prophetess ;  ,.             140 

Beaten  with  some  great  p  at  her  heart,  ..            388 

Leapt  fiery  P  from  the  brinks  of  death  ;  „        vii  156 

loyal  p  for  our  temperate  kings ;  Ode  on  Well.  165 

sang  Of  a  p  that  lasts  but  a  day ;  G.  of  Swainston  9 

My  centred  p  cannot  move,  In  Mem  lix  9 

His  other  p  wholly  dies,  ,,        Ixii  10 

my  p  hath  not  swerved  To  works  of  weakness,  „    Ixxxv  49 

And  my  prime  p  in  the  grave :  „              76 

O  tell  me  where  the  p's  meet,  „  Ixxxviii  4 

Thy  p  clasps  a  secret  joy :  „                 8 

And  p  pure  in  snowy  bloom  Thro'  all  the  years  „         cix  11 

My  love  is  vaster  p  now ;  „      cxxx  10 

Put  down  the  p's  that  make  earth  Hell !  Maud  /  a;  46 

mind,  when  fraught  With  a  p  so  intease  „  II  ii  59 

the  strong  p  in  her  made  her  weep  Marr.  of  Geraint  110 

all  the  p  of  a  twelve  hours'  fast.'  „             306 

So  burnt  he  was  with  p,  crying  out,  „             560 

break  it,  when  his  p  masters  him.  Geraint  and  E.  43 

With  more  exceeding  p  than  of  old :  ,.            335 

And  all  in  p  uttering  a  dry  shriek,  „           461 

His  p  half  nad  gauntleted  to  death,  Balin  and  Balan  220 

I,  that  flattering  my  true  p,  saw  The  knights.  Merlin  and  V.  874 

Till  now  the  storm,  its  burst  of  p  spent,  „            961 

sweet  and  sudden  p  of  youth  Toward  greatness  Lancelot  and  E.  282 

A  fiery  family  p  for  the  name  Of  Lancelot,  477 

Crush'd  the  wild  p  out  against  the  floor  „              742 


Passion  {continued)  To  blunt  or  break  her  p.' 
(He  meant  to  break  the  p  in  her) 
To  break  her  p,  some  discourtesy 
My  brother  ?     was  it  earthly  p  crost  ?  ' 
'  Nay,'  said  the  knight ;  '  for  no  such  p  mine, 
sent  the  deathless  p  in  her  eyes  Thro'  him. 
Than  is  the  maiden  p  for  a  maid, 
and  grew  again  To  utterance  of  p. 
As  I  of  mine,  and  my  first  p. 
I  spoke  it — told  her  of  my  p. 
For  the  p  of  battle  was  in  us. 
Till  the  p  of  battle  was  on  us, 
my  boy-phrase  '  The  P  of  the  Past.' 
the  sacred  p  of  the  second  life, 
at  last  beyond  the  p's  of  the  primal  clan  ? 
strip  your  own  foul  p's  bare ; 
every  serpent  p  kill'd. 


Lancelot  and  E.  974 

1079 

1302 

Holy  Grail  29 

30 

"       163 

Guinevere  479 

Lover's  Tale  i  547 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  67 

146 

V.  of  Maeldune  96 

111 

Ancient  Sage  219 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  68 

93 

141 

167 


Passionate     and  show'd  their  eyes  Glaring,  and  p  looks.        Sea  Dreams  236 

P  tears  FoUow'd :  Princess  vi  311 

there  was  love  in  the  p  shriek,  Maud- 1  i  57 

p  heart  of  the  poet  is  whirl'd  into  folly  and  vice.  ,,        iv  39 

A  p  ballad  gallant  and  gay,  „           v  ^ 

there  rises  ever  a  p  cry  From  underneath  „      II  i  5 

And  there  rang  on  a  sudden  a  p  cry,  „            33 

Let  me  and  my  p  love  go  by,  „        H  77 

But  there  rings  on  a  sudden  a  p  cry,  iv  47 

'  It  is  time,  it  is  time,  0  p  heart,'  ..  ///  vi  30 

'  It  is  time,  O  p  heart  and  morbid  eye,  „            32 
So  p  for  an  utter  purity  Beyond  the  limit  of  their  bond.  Merlin  and  V.  26 

Her  God,  her  Merlin,  the  one  p  love  „            955 

That  p  perfection,  my  good  lord —  *          Lancelot  and  E.  1 22 

Went  on  in  p  utterance :  Guinevere  611 

The  p  moment  would  not  suffer  that —  Lover's  Tale  iv  356 

P  girl  tho'  I  was,  an'  often  at  home  in  disgrace,  First  Quarrel  15 

Back  to  that  p  answer  of  full  heart  Sisters  {E  and  E.)  259 

tone  so  rough  that  I  broke  into  p  tears,  The  Wreck  122 

and  heard  his  p  vow.  The  Flight  83 

the  follies,  furies,  curses,  p  tears,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  39 

You  wrong  me,  p  little  friend.  Epilogue  10 

0  you  with  your  p  shriek  for  the  rights  Beautiful  City  2 

Passionately     Then  suddenly  and  p  she  spoke :  Lancelot  and  E.  929 

while  full  p,  Her  head  upon  her  hands,  Guinevere  180 

Passion-flower     He  is  claspt  by  a  p-f.  Maud  I  xiv  8 

splendid  tear  From  the  p-f  at  the  gate.  „     xxii  60 

And  the  red  p-f  to  the  cliffs,  V.  of  Maeldune  39 

Passionless     In  thee  all  passion  becomes  p,  Eleanore  102 

P  bride,  divine  Tranquillity,  Lucretius  266 

P,  pale,  cold  face,  star-sweet  Maud  I  Hi  4 

Where  if  I  cannot  be  gay  let  a  p  peace  be  my  lot,                   „        iv  50 

Innumerable,  pitiless,  p  eyes,  „    xviii  38 

The  bridesmaid  pale,  statuelike,  p —  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  212 

High,  self-contain'd,  and  p,  Guinevere  406 

Passion-pale    P-p  they  met  And  greeted..  „          99 

Passive    The  p  oxen  gaping.  Amphion  72 

Worried  hLs  p  ear  with  petty  wrongs  Enoch  Arden  352 

when  he  cea.sed,  in  one  cold  p  hand  Lancelot  and  E.  1201 

p  sailor  wrecks  at  last  In  ever-silent  seas ;  Ancient  Sage  136 

Passport     no  false  p  to  that  easy  realm,  Aylmer's  Field  183 

Past  (adj.)     {See  also  Past  (verb)    Strange  friend,  p,  present, 

and  to  be ;  In  Mem.  cxxix  9 

all  experience  jp  became  Consolidate  in  mind  Two  Voices  365 

Desirmg  what  is  mingled  with  p  years,  D.  of  F.  Women  282 

She  took  the  body  of  my  p  delight,  Lover's  Tale  i  681 

Past  (adv.)     seem  to  nicker  p  thro'  sun  and  shade,  Ancient  Sage  100 

Past  (prep.)     Lame  and  old,  and  p  his  time,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  227 
Give  me  your  prayers,  for  he  is  past  your  prayers,     Aylmer's  Field  751 

Not  past  the  living  fount  of  pity  in  Heaven.  „             752 

For  it  was  past  the  time  of  Easterday.  Gareth  and  L.  186 

when  old  and  gray.  And  past  desire ! '  Last  Tournament  628 

old,  Gray-hair'd,  and  past  desire,  „            653 

wind,  and  past  his  ear  Went  shrilling.  Pass  of  Arthur  32 

raising  her  Still  higher,  past  all  perU,  Lover's  Tale  i  394 

to  be  sewer  it  be  past  'er  time.  Spinster's  S's.  5 

Then  home,  and  past  the  ruin'd  mill.  The  Ring  156 

Now  past  her  feet  the  swallow  circling  flies,  Prog,  of  Spring  44 


Past 


526 


Past-Pass' d 


Past  ipnp.)  (emUintud)    Yoke  of  the  Earth  weut  wailingly 

past  bhx\  The  Drfamtr  3 

Past  (s)    fiiv.  From  the  fountains  of  the  />,  Ode  to  MetHorjf  2 

sorrowest  thou,  pale  Fainter,  for  the  /•,  IVan  Si^nlptor  3 

P  and  Preseoit-,  ^vound  in  one,  MiUtr's  D.  197 

far-biought  Fiom  out  the  storied  P,  Loit  thou  thy  land  2 

For  ail  we  f>  of  Time  rereals  „                50 

in  the  flying  of  a  wheel  Cry  down  the  p,  Godiva  7 

So  mix  for  ever  with  the  p,  WiU  H'o/«f.  201 

bitvi's-eye-view  of  all  the  unsjracious  p ;  Princess  ii  125 

haunt  About  the  moulderM  lodges  of  the  P  „        »c  63 

let  the  p  be  v ;  „            76 

great  hejirt  thro'  all  tlie  f aultful  P  Princess  vii  848 

all  the  i>  Melts  mist^like  into  this  bright  hour,  „          354 

RemeiUDeriHij  all  his  givatjiess  in  the  P.  Ode  on  Fr«H.  20 

That  sets  the  p  in  this  rt>hef  ?  In  Mem.  xxiv  12 

Or  that  the  p  will  always  win  A  glory  „                13 

And  silent  traces  of  tiie  p  „          xiiU  7 

The  eternal  landscape  of  the  p ;  „           jdvi  8 

And  fadim;  legend  of  the  p :  .,           Isii  4 

A  night-long  l^resont  of  the  P  ..           Uxi  3 

>vind  Of  niojuory  niunnuring  the  ».  „           xcii  8 

The  deavi  man  tbuch'd  me  from  the  p,  .,          oftf  34 

By  meadows  breathing  of  the  />,  .,          jW*  7 

And  hold  it  solenm  to  the  p.  „            cv  16 

Thou,  like  my  present  and  my  p,  „        cxri  19 

Then  let  her  "fancy  flit  across  the  p,  Marr.  of  Geraint  645 

sins  that  maile  tlie  d  so  pleasant  to  us :  Ouinetere  375 

And  moving  thro'  tne  p  unconsiMously,  „        403 

Even  now  the  Goddess  of  the  P,  Loter's  Tale  i  16 

The  I'resent  is  the  vassal  of  the  P:  .,119 

The  beautiful  in  P  of  act  or  place,  „          135 

And  all  the  broken  palaces  of  the  P,  „         •»  59 
mother's  garrxilous  wail  For  ever  woke  the 

unhappv  P  again,  •^•.slars  ( £.  and  £.)  263 

and  suffer  the  /*  to  be  P.'  V.  of  Jdaddune  124 
mindful  of  the  »,  Our  true  co- mates 

regatlier  Prtf.  Son.  19th  Cent.  4 

would  scatter  tlie  gliosts  of  the  P,  Despair  23 

can  I  breathe  divoroeil  from  the  P?  „      113 

statesman's  brain  that  sway'd  tlie  p  Ancient  Safe  134 

In  mv  bov-phrase  '  The  Passion  of  the  P.'  »            219 

doubtless'of  a  fooUsh  /> :  Ltdcdey  if.,  Sixtjf  7 

hold  tlie  Present  fatal  daughter  of  the  P,  .,            105 

moment  fly  and  mingle  with  the  P.  ,.            279 

This  heritage  of  the  p ;  Freedom  24 
Sharers  of  our  glorious  p.                                 Open,  L  and  C.  EsAib.  31 

drown'd  in  the  deeps  of  a  meaiiingless  P '?  Fatness  34 

And  D  and  future  mis'd  in  Heaven  The  Sin^  186 

kst  tne  moment  of  their  p  on  earth,  „        464 

winter  of  the  Present  for  the  summer  of  the  P ;  ^«VP!f  70 

I  smn  at  a  field  in  the  P,  By  em  Bwolmbo*.  17 

Extras  in  the  P,  but  close  to  me  to-day  JtoMS  ontM*  T.6 

Her  P  became  her  Present-,  Death  of  (Enone  14 

Past-Pass'd  (v«rb)     Of  a  maiden  post  away,  Adeline  19 

and  past  Into  deep  orange  o'er  the  sea,  Mariana  in  the  S.  25 

They  piiA'  into  the  level  flood,  MOler's  D.  75 

That  into  stilhiess  past  again,  „        227 

When  I  past  by,  a  wild  iuid  wanton  pard,  (Enomt  199 

you  must  comfort  her  when  I  am  p<u(  away.  May  Qmmm,  Con.  44 

forms  that  Mus'^  at  windo^rs  and  on  roofs  D.  of  F.  Woman  S3 

^  Glory  to  God,'  she  sang,  and  pa^  afar,  „              848 

Beneath  the  sacred  bush  and  ^ast  away —  Tht  Efie  S 

an  hour  hai.1  pass'd.  We  reach  d  a  meadow  Gardetur^s  D.  107 

One  after  one,  tliro'  that  still  garvien  pitss'd ;  „            201 

be  pass'd  his  father's  gate,  Ueart-brokot,  Dora  50 

when  the  fanneryass^ into  the  field  ..    85 

Then  be  tum'd  ^  face  and  pass'd —  ..  151 
y«M'4  tiuo'  aD  The  pillar'd  dusk  of  sounding 

STcamores,  AndUy  Court  15 

I  bad  heaivl  it  was  this  bill  that  paM,  Wedk.  to  IJU  MaQ  67 

'  An  hour  had  past— and,  sitting  stnug^t  Tedkin§  Oak  109 

tmnbting,  pass'd  in  music  out  of  si^t.  LoeisUy  Hedl  34 

And  she,  that  knew  not,  pass'd:  OoHtm  73 

A  pleasant  hour  has  pmsaed  away  Dmif-Dm^  /Va.  3 


Past-Pass'd  (vab)  (coiUmiMd)    The  reflex  of  a  legend  past.  Day- Dm.,  Pn>.  II 

ShiUl  show  thee  past  to  Heaven :  WiU  Water.  246 

So  they  past  by  capes  and  islaniis.  The  Captain  21 

We  past  long  lines  of  Xortliem  capes  The  Voyagt-  '^5 

Glow'd  for  a  moment  as  we  past.  „ 

What !  the  flower  of  life  is  past :  Vision  of  Sin 

He  pass'd  by  the  town  and  out  of  the  street^  Poet's  Sony  _ 

when  the  da\m  of  rosy  childhoo^i  past,  Enoeh  Jrden  37 

past  Bearing  a  lifeJong  hunger  in  his  heart.  ..            78 

the  moment  and  the  vessel  past.  ..          244 

Past  thro'  the  solitarj-  room  in  front,  ..          277 

And  ^i.</  into  the  little  garth  beyond.  ..          329 

o'er  his  covmtenance  Xo  shadow  pa^,  Enoeh  Arden  710 

So  past  the  strong  heroic  soul  away.  „  915 
Rose  from  the  clay  it  work'd  in  as  she  past,              Aylmter's    Fieid  170 

Sir  Ayhner  p<%st.  And  neither  lovet.1  nor  like^l  „             249 

Till  after  our  good  parents  past  away  ..            ;i"i!=; 

Then  drank  and  past  it ;  tiU  at  length  ..             ! 

and  with  her  the  race  of  Aylmer,  ptist.  ,.            -3 

fMst  In  simshine:  right  across  its  track  Sea  Dreams  1: 

Aud  past  into  the  belt  and  swell'd  ;igaiu  „             2: 
he  {Hist  To  turn  and  ponder  those  three  hundred  scrolls       Lueretius 

And  dropt  a  fairy  parachute  and  pust.  Princess,  Pro.  Ti> 

I  rose  and  past  Thro'  the  wild  woods  „              i  P  ' 

She  once  had  oast  that  way ;  ,.              1> 

we  past  an  aroi.  Whereon  a  Avoman-statue  rose  ,.              2i 

hastily  we  past,  ^Vnd  up  a  flight  of  stairs  „            it  . 

she  ptist  From  all  her  old  companions,  ,,              2(32 

was  it  chance.  She  past  my  way.  ..            pi  98 

o'er  her  foreliead  past  A  shadow,  ..              106 

her  face  A  little  flush'd,  and  she  past  on ;  ,,           rii  SI 

there  past  by  the  gate  of  the  fann,  Willy, —  Grandmoth^  41 

trifle  left  you,  when  I  shall  have  tHwl  away.  „          l~ 

we  iHtst  Fiom  Como,  when  the  light  was  gray.  The  Daisy 

And  after  Autunm  past  A  Dedication 

He  past;  a  soul  of  nobler  tone :  In  Mem.  Ix  I 

I  paH  beside  the  reverend  walls  ,.  Ixxxvii  1 

Up  that  long  walk  of  limes  I  pitst  ..              1 ' 

But  if  they  came  who  past  away,  ,.         jx  1 

Their  love  has  never  past  a>vay ;  ..     jtrvii  1 

as  I  found  when  her  carriage  past,  Mawd  I  ii  o 

1  past  him,  I  was  crossing  his  lands ;  „       xUi  o 

But  while  I  past  he  was  hiumning  an  air,  .,            17 

Of  twelve  sweet  hours  that  past  in  bridal  white,  .,    jtriii  ivi 

Which  else  would  have  been  past  by !  „  //  ii  tv> 
has  past  and  leaves  The  Crown  a  lonely  splendour.  Ded.  of  IdMs  4S 
But  Arthur,  looking  downward  as  he  past.                    Com.  of  Arthur  55 

And  Lancelot  past  away  among  the  flowers,  ,.            40*^ 

there  p<i.<<  along  tlie  hyinns  A  voice  as  of  the  waters,  „            4(. 

In  scornful  stiUness  gazing  as  they  past ;  ..41 
break  his  \-ery  heart  in  puiing  for  it.  And  past  away.'   Gareth  and  L.  •>> 

Tum'd  to  the  right,  and  past  along  the  plain ;  „              2;^o 

while  she  past,  CJame  yet  another  widow  „              34;^ 

He  rose  and  post ;  then  Kay,  a  man  of  mien  „              45- 

jMtst  into  the  hall  A  damsel'of  high  lineage,  „              5S7 

:>he  into  hall  p>kct  with  her  page  and  cried,  ,.              5P- 

past  The  weirvi  white  gj»te.  and  paused  without,  „              tx 

And  out  by  tliis  main  doorway  past  the  King.  „              oT 
Gareth  rode  Down  the  slope  street,  anti  past  without 

the  gate.  „              100 

So  Gareth  past  with  iov ;  „              701 

tire  King  hath  past  his'time —  „              109 

Anon  Uiey  past  a  narrow  comb  wherein  »            119o 

and  all  his  life  Past  into  sleep ;  „             1381 

mufflevi  voices  hearvl,  and  shallows  past ;  „            13To 

They  never  drvam'd  the  passes  woiud  be  pas*,'  ..            1413 

They  never  dreamM  the  passes  could  be  past.'  „  142li 
and  they  pa.<<  to  their  own  land ;                                  Marr.  ofGiraint  45 

like  a  shadow,  past  the  people's  talk  ..              ?- 

Prince,  sis  Enivl  p<%si  him.  fain  To  follow,  .,            37 

1  know  not,  but  he  past  to  the  wild  land.  „            4^ 
they  pti,<f  The  marvhes,  and  by  bandit-haunted  holds,  Geratnt  and  E.  ~ 

thro'  the  gre^i  gloom  of  the  wood  they  pa^,  »            1^' 

And  many  peut,  but  none  regarded  her,  „            oiX> 

and  past  away.  But  left  two  orawny  spearmen,  „            557 


Fast-Pass'd 


527 


Path 


Past-Pass'd  (verb)  {continued)    And  past  to  Enid's  tent ;  Geraint  and  E.  922 
So  past  the  days.  „  930 

they  past  With  Arthur  to  Caerleon  upon  Usk.  „  945 

and  they  past  to  their  own  land.  „  955 

those  three  kingless  years  Have  past —  Balin  and  Balan  64 

so  turning  side  by  side  They  past,  „  280 

Past  eastward  from  the  falling  sun.  „  320 

For  hate  and  loathing,  would  have  past  him  by ;  „  388 

She  past ;  and  Vivien  murmur'd  after  '  Go !  Merlin  and  V.  98 

eight  years  past,  eight  jousts  had  been,  Lancelot  and  E.  67 

Past  inward,  as  she  came  from  out  the  tower.  „  346 

Meanwhile  the  new  companions  past  away  „  399 

Arthur  to  the  banquet,  dark  in  mood.  Past,  „  565 

Past  to  her  chamber,  and  there  flung  herself  „  609 

Thence  to  the  court  he  past ;  „  706 

Past  up  the  still  rich  city  to  his  kin,  „  802 

past  beneath  the  weirdly-sculptured  gates  .,  844 

and  past  Down  thro'  the  dim  rich  city  to  the  fields,  „  846 

past  In  either  twilight  ghost-Uke  to  and  fro  ,.  848 

ten  slow  mornings  past,  and  on  the  eleventh  „  1133 

Past  like  a  shadow  thro'  the  field,  „  1140 

Diamonds  to  meet  them,  and  they  past  away.  .,  1237 

slowly  past  the  barge  Whereon  the  lily  maid  1241 

Had  pass'd  into  the  silent  life  of  prayer.  Holy  Grail  4 

the  Grail  Past,  and  the  beam  decay'd,  „      122 

Fashion'd  by  Merlin  ere  he  past  away,  „      168 

none  might  see  who  bare  it,  and  it  past. 
showers  of  flowers  Fell  as  we  past ; 
thence  I  past  Far  thro'  a  ruinous  city, 
past  thro  Pagan  realms,  and  made  them  mine, 
the  sweet  Grail  GUded  and  past. 
And  up  into  the  sounding  hall  I  past ; 
and  the  sweet  smell  of  the  fields  Past, 
reach 'd  Caerleon,  ere  they  past  to  lodging,  she, 
he  past.  And  heard  but  his  own  steps, 
forth  he  past,  and  mounting  on  his  horse 
with  mortal  cold  Past  from  her ; 
that  imhappy  child  Past  in  her  barge : 
When  all  the  goodlier  guests  are  past  away, 
Our  one  white  day  of  fiinocence  hath  past. 
The  leaf  is  dead,  the  yearning  past  away : 
Isolt  With  ruby-circled  neck,  but  evermore  Past, 
Mark  her  lord  had  past,  the  Cornish  King, 
lookt  So  sweet,  that  halting,  in  he  past, 
but  turning,  paM  and  gain'd  TintagU, 
he  past.  Love-loyal  to  the  least  wish 
while  he  past  the  dim-Ut  woods, 
(When  first  I  learnt  thee  hidden  here)  is  past. 
is  also  past — in  part.     And  all  is  past,  the  sin 
past  To  where  beyond  these  voices  there  is  peace, 
when  that  moan  had  past  for  evermore, 
Past  with  thee  thro'  thy  people  and  their  love, 
breathless  body  of  her  good  deeds  past. 
We  past  from  light  to  dark. 
Past  thro'  into  his  citadel,  the  brain, 
when  the  woful  sentence  hath  been  past, 
did  strike  my  forehead  as  I  past ; 
They  past  on.  The  lordly  Phantasms !  in  their  floating 

folds  They  past 
past  and  flow'd  away  To  those  unreal  billows : 
Suddenly  came  her  notice  and  we  past. 
Past  thro'  his  visions  to  the  bimal ; 
mounting  these  He  past  for  ever  from  his  native  land ; 
in  the  pleasant  times  that  had  past. 


190 
349 

428 
478 


827 

Pdleas  and  E.  6 

125 

415 

456 

Last  Tournament  28 

45 

158 

218 

277 

365 

382 

388 

504 

Guinevere  125 

251 

539 

542 

697 

441 

To  the  Queen  ii  7 

Lover's  Tale  i  217 

516 

631 

788 

ii  19 


98 

195 

„        iv  154 

357 

387 

First  Quarrel  55 


Lord  Howard  past  away  with  five  ships  of  war  The  Revenge  13 

Whirl'd  by,  which,  after  it  had  past  me,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  86 

whirUng  landaulet  For  ever  past  me  by :  ,,115 

The  morning  of  our  marriage,  past  away :  „            244 
past  to  this  ward  where  the  younger  children  are 


laid: 

and  Emmie  had  past  away, 
but  only  a  whisper  that  past : 
On  them  the  smell  of  burning  had  not  past. 
and  we  past  Over  that  undersea  isle. 
And  we  past  to  the  Isle  of  Witches 


In  the  Child.  Hasp.  27 

72 

Def.  of  Lv^Tcnow  50 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  Yll 

V.  of  Maeldwne  76 

„        97 


Past-Pass'd  (verb)  {continued)    So  saying,  light-foot  Iris 

pass'd  a.vf?LY.  Achilles  over  the  T.  1 

light  to  the  King  tifl  he  past  away  To  Prin.  F.  of  H.  1 

win  all  praise  from  all  Who  past  it,  Tiresias  84 

past,  in  sleep,  away  By  night,  „     203 

and  past  Over  the  range  and  the  change  The  Wreck  69 

I  remember  I  thought,  as  we  past,  Despair  11 

We  had  past  from  a  cheerless  night  „      28 

I  had  past  into  perfect  quiet  at  length  „      66 

for  she  past  from  the  night  to  the  night.  „      72 

past  into  the  Nameless,  as  a  cloud  Melts  into  Heaven.  Ancient  Sage  233 

And  past  the  range  of  Night  and  Shadow —  „          283 

One  golden  curl,  his  golden  gift,  before  he  past  away.         The  Flight  36 

The  lark  has  past  from  earth  to  Heaven  „        62 

and  thy  shadow  past  Before  me,  crying  Demeter  and  P.  93 

breath  that  past  With  all  the  cold  of  winter.  The  Ring  32 

then  I  pass'd  Home,  and  thro'  V^enice,  ,,       191 

And  gave  it  me,  who  pass'd  it  down  her  own,  „       270 

spoke  no  more,  but  tum'd  and  pass'd  away.  „      342 

A  cold  air  pass'd  between  us,  „      380 

the  grating  of  a  sepulchre.  Past  over  both.  „      401 

face  Look'd  in  upon  me  like  a  gleam  and  pass'd,  ,,      420 

Would  I  had  past  in  the  morning  By  an  Evolution.  10 

She  waked  a  bird  of  prey  that  scream'd  and  past ;     Death  of  (Enone  87 

mixt  herself  with  him  and  past  in  fire.  „            106 

there  past  a  crowd  With  shameless  laughter,  St.  Telemachus  38 

Pastern    cream-white  mule  his  p  set :  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  31 

Pastime    play'd  In  his  free  field,  and  p  made.  Two  Voices  320 

You  thought  to  break  a  country  heart  For  p,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  4 

Why  took  ye  not  your  p  ?  Love  and  Duty  28 

At  our  old  p's  in  the  hall  In  Mem.  xxx  5 

he  beats  his  chair  For  p,  „      Ixvi  14 

in  a  tilt  For  p ;  yea,  he  said  it :  Gareth  and  L.  543 

And  p  both  of  hawk  and  hound,  Marr.  of  Geraint  711 

who  take  Their  p  now  the  trustful  King  is  gone  ! '    Lancelot  and  E.  101 

in  one  full  field  Of  gracious  p.  Holy  Grail  324 

Are  winners  in  this  p  of  our  King.  Last  Tournament  199 

following  her  old  p  of  the  brook.  The  Ring  354 

Pastor     being  used  to  find  her  p  texts,  Aylmer's  Field  Q06 

Pastoral    Nor  p  rivulet  that  swerves  To  left  and  right  In  Mem.  c.  14 

Upon  a  p  slope  as  fair,  Maud  I  xviii  19 

and  Peace  Pipe  on  her  p  hillock  a  languid  note,  „      ///  vi  24 

Pasturage     wither'd  holt  or  tilth  or  p.  Enoch  Arden  675 

Pasture    Thro'  crofts  and  p's  wet  with  dew  Two  Voices  14 

gray  twilight  pour'd  On  dewy  p's,  dewy  trees,  Palace  of  Art  86 

In  tracts  of  p  sunny-warm,  „          94 

For  all  the  sloping  p  murmur'd.  Princess,  Pro.  55 

Silvery  willow,  P  and  plowland.  Merlin  and  the  G.  54 

Pasturing    He  pointed  out  a  p  colt,  and  said :  The  Brook  136 

Pasty    half -cut-down,  a  p  costly-made,  Audley  Court  23 

what  stick  ye  round  The  p  ?  Gareth  and  L.  1073 

Pat    p  The  girls  upon  the  cheek,  Talking  Oak  43 

Patch  (s)    Or  while  the  p  was  worn ;  „          64 

Upon  my  proper  p  of  soil  Amphion  99 

Patch  (verb)     three  castles  p  my  tatter'd  coat  ?  Princess  ii  416 

Patch'd    and  refuse  p  with  moss.  Vision  of  Sin  212 

one  was  p  and  blurr'd  and  lustreless  Marr.  of  Geraint  649 

Patent     Last  night,  their  mask  was  p.  Princess  iv  326 

Paternoster    See  Pather 

Path    (See  also  Forest-path,  Side-path)     why  dare  P's 

in  the  desert  ?  Supp.  Confessions  79 

He,  stepping  down  By  zig-zag  p's,  M.  d' Arthur  50 

Till  all  the  p's  were  dim,  Talking  Oak  298 

the  charm  did  talk  About  his  p,  TJay-Dm.,  Arrival  22 

To  silence  from  the  p's  of  men ;  L'Envoi  6 

footstep  seem'd  to  fall  beside  her  p,  Enoch  Arden  514 

up  the  steep  hill  Trod  out  a  p :  Sea  Dreams  121 

you  planed  her  p  To  Lady  Psyche,  Princess  iv  315 

The  p  of  duty  was  the  way  to  gloiy :  (repeat)  Ode  on  Well.  202,  210 

has  won  His  p  upward,  and  prevail'd,  „                   214 

The  p  of  duty  be  the  way  to  glory :  „                   224 

The  p  by  which  we  twain  did  go.  In  Mem,  xxii  1 

where  the  p  we  walk'd  began  To  slant  „                 9 

My  p's  are  in  the  fields  I  know,  „           xl  31 

The  p  we  came  by,  thorn  and  flower,  „          xlvi  2 


Path 


528 


Pavilion 


Path  (continued)     When  all  our  p  was  fresh  with  dew, 

the  p  that  each  man  trod  Is  dim, 

Conduct  by  f's  of  growing  powers, 

He  stood  on  the  p  a  little  aside ; 

And  wildernesses,  perilous  p's. 

As  not  to  see  before  them  on  the  p, 

Sideways  he  started  from  the  p,  and  saw, 

ran  the  counter  p,  and  found  His  charger, 

Chose  the  green  p  that  show'd  the  rarer  foot, 

Darken'd  the  common  p : 

He,  stepping  down  By  zigzag  p's. 

The  p  was  perilous,  loosely  strown  with  crags : 

they  trod  The  same  old  p's  where  Love 

Yet  trod  I  not  the  wildnower  in  my  p, 

my  p  was  clear  To  win  the  sister. 

A  panther  sprang  across  her  p, 

same  p  our  true  forefathers  trod ; 
Father  (Paternoster)     singin'  yer  '  Aves '  an'  '  P's  ' 
Pathos    Shall  sharpest  p  blight  us. 
Pathway    disgraced  For  ever — thee  (by  p  sand-erased) 

where  the  hedge-row  cuts  the  p,  stood, 

a  well-worn  p  courted  us  To  one  green  wicket 

May  beat  a  p  out  to  wealth  and  fame. 

Or  on  to  where  the  p  leads  ; 

made  Broad  f^s  for  the  hunter  and  the  knight 

And  down  a  rocky  p  from  the  place 

And  up  the  rocky  p  disappear'd. 

Becomes  the  sea-cuff  p  broken  short, 

'  One  night  my  p  swerving  east. 

Follow  you  the  Star  that  lights  a  desert  p, 

she  that  had  haunted  his  p  still, 
Pathway'd     and  hear  their  words  On  p  plains ; 
Patience     '  Have  p,'  I  repUed,  '  ourselves  are  full 

P !  Give  it  time  To  learn  its  limbs : 

use  A  Uttle  p  ere  I  die ; 

P — let  the  dying  actor  mouth  his  last 

Steel  me  \vith  p ! 
Patient  (adj.)    P  of  ill,  and  death,  and  scorn, 

I  had  been  a  p  wife : 

P  on  this  tall  pillar  I  have  borne 

p  leaders  of  their  Institute  Taught  them 

A  p  range  of  pupils ; 

howsoever  p,  Yniol's  heart  Danced  in  his  bosom, 

And  howsoever  p,  Yniol  his. 

crying,  '  Praise  the  p  saints, 

p,  and  prayerful,  meek,  PaJe-blooded, 

P  of  pain  tho'  as  quick  as  a  sensitive  plant 

in  her  open  palm  a  halcyon  sits  P — 

P  children  of  Albion, 

She  said  with  a  sudden  glow  On  her  p  face 

And  yet  be  p — Our  Playwright  may  show 
Patient  (s)     blabbing  The  case  of  his  p — 
Patriarchal    For  one  about  whose  p  knee 
Patriot    0  P  Statesman,  be  thou  wise  to  know 
Patriot-soldier    let  the  p-s  take  His  meed 
Patron    Sir  Aylmer  half  forgot  his  lazy  smile  Of  p 

Institute  Of  which  he  was  the  p. 

hand  that  play'd  the  p  with  her  curls. 

A  p  of  some  thirty  charities, 

If  easy  f's  of  their  kin  Have  left  the  last  free  race 

like  a  mighty  p,  satisfied  With  what  himself 
Patted     he  p  my  hand  in  his  gentle  way, 

thou  be  es  'ansom  a  tabby  es  iver  p  a  mouse. 

shook  her  head,  and  p  yours, 
Patter    P  she  goes,  my  own  little  Annie, 
Pattering    P  over  the  boards,  (repeat) 

The  chestnut  p  to  the  ground : 

Jast  now  the  dry-tongued  laurels'  p  talk 
Pattern    let  them  take  Example,  p : 

Can't  ye  taake  p  by  Steevie  ? 
Patting    Ask'd  Walter,  p  Lilia's  head 
Panl  (Saint)     laugh'd,  and  swore  by  Peter  and  by  P: 

Like  P  with  beasts,  I  fought  with  Death ; 

play  the  Saul  that  never  will  be  P. 

or  such  crimes  As  holy  P — a  shame  to  speak 


In  Mem.  Ixviii  6 

„       Ixxiii  9 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  31 

Maud  I  xiii  7 

Geraint  and  E.  32 

773 

Balin  and  Balan  324 

417 

Lancelot  and  E.  162 

Pdleas  and  E.  550 

Pass,  of  An].  >ir  218 

Lover's  Tale  i  384 

821 

a  20 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  202 

Death  of  (Enone  89 

Doubt  and  Prayer  4k 

Tomorrow  96 

Love  and  Duty  85 

Alexander  5 

Gardener's  D.  86 

109 

Aylmer' s  Field  439 

In  Mem.  xxiii  8 

Com.  of  Arthur  61 

Geraint  and  E.  200 

243 

Merlin  and  V.  882 

Holy  Grail  634 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  275 

Dead  Prophet  61 

Prog,  of  Spring  83 

Princess,  Con.  72 

78 

In  Mem.  xxxiv  12 

Locksley  II.,  Sixty  152 

Doubt  and  Prayer  9 

Supp.  Confessions  4 

Dora  147 

St.  S.  Stylites  15 

Princess,  Pro.  58 

a  104 

Marr.  of  Geraint  504 

707 

Last  Tournament  217 

607 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  30 

Prog,  of  Spring  21 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  59 

Charity  36 

The  Play  3 

Maud  II  V  37 

Ode  on  Well.  236 

To  Duke  of  Argyll  1 

Epilogue  32 

Aylmer' s  Field  198 

Princess,  Pro.  6 

138 

„      Con.  88 

Third  of  Feb.  39 

Geraint  and  E.  644 

First  Quarrel  67 

Spinster's  S's.  70 

The  Ring  313 

Grandmother  78 

„       77,  79 

In  Mem.  xi  4 

Maud  I  xviii  8 

St.  S.  StyliUs  224 

Spinster's  S's.  65 

Princess,  Pro.  125 

Godiva  24 

In  Mem.  cxx  4 

Sir  J.  OldcasUe  103 

110 


Paul's  (Cathedral)     down  by  smoky  P's  they  bore. 
Pause  (s)     and  a  sweep  Of  richest  p's. 

And,  in  the  p's  of  the  wind. 

When  she  made  p  I  knew  not  for  delight ; 

But  lapsed  into  so  long  a  p  again 

Like  linnets  in  the  p's  of  the  wind : 

Went  sorrowing  in  a  p  I  dared  not  break ; 

There  came  a  minute  s  p,  and  Walter  said. 

He  paused,  and  in  the  p  she  crept  an  inch  Nearer, 
Pause  (verb)     The  breezes  p  and  die, 

stream  Along  the  cliff  to  fall  and  p  and  fall  did  seem 

How  dull  it  is  to  p,  to  make  an  end, 

goal  of  ordinance  Where  all  should  p. 

That  made  the  wild-swan  p  in  her  cloud, 

'  Yet  p,'  I  said :  '  for  that  inscription 

'  Decide  not  ere  you  p. 

turn  to  fall  seaward  again,  P's, 

in  the  darkness  heard  his  armed  feet  P  by  her ; 


J 


Will  Water.  1 

Elednore  66 

Miller's  D.  122 

D.  of  F.  Women  169 

Aylmer's  Field  630 

Princess,  Pro.  246 

vii  249 

Con.  4 

Guinevere  527 

Claribd  2 

Lotos-Eaters  9 

Ulysses  22 

Tithonus  31 

Poet's  Song  7 

Princess  ii  225 

„       Hi  156 

Geraint  and  E.  116 

Guinevere  419 


P !  before  you  sound  the  trumpet 

Some  will  pass  and  some  will  p. 
Paused    Among  the  tents  I  p  and  sung, 

p,  And  dropt  the  branch  she  held, 

we  p  About  the  windings  of  the  marge 

that  p  Among  her  stars  to  hear  us ; 

But  we  nor  p  for  fruit  nor  flowers. 

p ;  and  he.  Who  needs  would  work  for  Annie 

P  for  a  moment  at  an  inner  door. 

At  Annie's  door  he  p  and  gave  his  hand, 

So  still,  the  golden  lizard  on  him  p, 

p  Sir  Ayhner  reddening  from  the  itorm 

so  pacing  till  she  p  By  Florian  ; 

She  p,  and  added  with  a  haughtier  smile 

before  them  p  Hortensia  pleading : 

She  turn'd ;  she  p  ;  She  stoop'd  ; 

We  p  :  the  winds  were  in  the  beech : 

past  The  weird  white  gate,  and  p  without, 

advanced  The  monster,  and  then  p, 

often  when  I  p  Hath  ask'd  again. 

She  p,  she  turn'd  away,  she  hmig  her  head, 

P  by  the  gateway,  standing  near  the  shield 

On  to  the  palace-doorway  sliding,  p. 

'  O  King ! ' — and  when  he  p, 

— there  he  check'd  himself  and  p. 

the  boy  P  not,  but  overrode  him, 

he  heard  Strange  music,  and  he  p. 

He  p,  and  in  the  pause  she  crept  an  inch  Nearer, 

We  often  p,  and,  looking  back. 

We  p  amid  the  splendour. 

My  heart  p — my  raised  eyeUds  would  not  fall, 

P  in  their  course  to  hear  me, 

Before  the  board,  there  p  and  stood, 

and  there  she  p.  And  long ; 

p — and  then  ask'd  Falteringly, 
Pausing    He  p,  Arthur  answer'd,  '  0  my  knight. 

And  p  at  a  hostel  in  a  marsh, 

This  custom '    P  here  a  moment, 

Pave     blue  heaven  which  hues  and  p's 
Pavement    from  the  p  he  half  rose.  Slowly, 

on  the  p  lay  Carved  stones  of  the  Abbey-ruin 

p  where  the  King  would  pace  At  sunrise. 

And  heel  against  the  p  echoing, 

heap  of  things  that  rang  Against  the  p, 

all  the  p  stream'd  with  massacre : 

from  the  p  he  half  rose.  Slowly, 

Nor  in  this  p  but  shall  ring  thy  name 
Pavilion     I  came  upon  the  great  P  of  the  Caliphat 

'  Pitch  our  p  here  upon  the  sward ; 

I  stood  With  Florian,  cursing  Cyril,  vext  at  heart,  In  the  p  :  „       iv  172 

bright  With  pitch'd  p's  of  his  foe,  Com.  of  Arthur  97 

on  the  further  side  Arose  a  silk  p,  Gareth  and  L.  910 

The  gay  p  and  the  naked  feet,  „  937 

old  storm-beaten,  russet,  many-stain'd  P,  „  1114 

A  huge  p  like  a  mountain  peak  „  1364 

at  last — The  huge  p  slowly  yielded  up,  „  1379 

But  found  a  silk  p  in  a  field,  Holy  Grail  745 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  116 

Poets  and  Critics  8 

Two  Voices  125 

Gardener's  D.  156 

Edwin  Morris  93 

Love  and  Duty  73 

The  Voyage  56 

Enoch  Arden  179 

278 

447 

601 

Aylmer's  Field  321 

Princess  ii  302 

„       Hi  225 

„       vii  131 

154 

In  Mem.  xxx  9 

Gareth  and  L.  663 

1385 

Marr.  of  Geraint  435 

Merlin  and  V.  887 

Lancelot  and  E.  394 

1246 

Holy  Grail  767 

Pelleas  and  E.  527 

545 

Guinevere  239 

527 

Lover's  Tale  i  329 

414 

571 

„  ii  14 

iv  307 

The  Ring  334 

Death  of  (Enone  94 

Lancelot  and  E.  1326 

Lover's  Tale  iv  131 

237 

Supp.  Confessions  134 

M.  d' Arthur  167 

Princess,  Pro.  13 

Gareth  and  L.  667 

Geraint  and  E.  271 

595 

Last  Tournament  471 

Pass,  of  Arthur  335 

Tiresias  137 

Arabian  Nights  114 

Princess  Hi  346 


Pavilion 


529 


Peace-offering 


Pavilion  {continued)    then  this  gale  Tore  my  p  from  the 
tenting-pin, 


Holy  GraU  Ul 


three  p's  rear'd  Above  the  bushes,  gilden-peakt :        Pelleas  and  E.  428 

The  silk  p's  of  King  Arthur  raised  Guinevere  394 

That  crown'd  the  state  p  of  the  King,  „        399 

Pavilion'd    See  Clood-paTilion'd 

Paw     Folded  her  lion  p's,  and  look'd  to  Thebes.  Tiresias  149 

Paw'd    p  his  beard,  and  mutter'd  '  catalepsy.'  Princess  i  20 

Kittenlike  he  roll'd  And  p  about  her  sandal.  „  Hi  182 

Pay     {See  also  Paay)    p  Meet  adoration  to  my  household  gods,      Ulysses  41 

clamouring,  '  If  we  p,  we  starve ! '  Godiva  15 

'  If  they  p  this  tax,  they  starve.'  „      20 

half-crown.  Which  I  shall  have  to  p  ?  WUl  Water.  156 

Or  means  to  p  the  voice  who  best  could  tell  Enoch  Arden  266 
a  voice,  with  which  to  p  the  debt  Of  boundless  love     Ode  on  Well.  156 

Or  later,  p  one  visit  here.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  45 

Nor  p  but  one,  but  come  for  many,  „                47 

a  debt.  That  I  never  can  hope  to  p ;  Maud  I  xix  88 

No  tribute  will  we  p : '  Com.  of  Arthur  513 

Will  p  thee  all  thy  wages,  and  to  boot.  Gareth  and  L.  1005 

And  I  will  p  you  worship  ;  Merlin  and  V.  228 

This  father  p's  his  debt  vdih  me,  The  Flight  20 

With  a  purse  to  p  for  the  show.  Dead  Prophet  8 

Paynim     But  rather  proven  in  his  P  ware  Balin  and  Batan  38 

a  renmant  that  were  left  P  amid  their  circles.  Holy  Grail  664 

Troop'd  round  a  P  harper  once,  Last  Tournament  322 

thy  P  bard  Had  such  a  mastery  of  his  mystery  „              326 

Pea    'ere  a  bean  an'  yonder  a  p  ;  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  46 

Pluksh !  !  !  the  hens  i'  the  p's^l  Village  Wife  124 

Peace     God  gave  her  p  ;  her  land  reposed ;  To  the  Queen  26 

And  Thou  and  p  to  earth  were  bom.  Supp.  Confessions  26 

a  world  of  p  And  confidence,  day  after  day ;  „               29 

A  haunt  of  ancient  P.  Palace  of  Art  68 

And  let  the  world  have  p  or  wars,  „        182 
the  dear  old  time,  and  all  my  p  of  mind ;         May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  6 

good  man,  the  clergyman,  has  told  me  words  of  p.     „  Con.  12 
Is  there  any  p  In  ever  climbing  up                        Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  49 

The  place  of  him  that  sleeps  in  p.  To  J.  S.  68 

Sleep  sweetly,  tender  heart,  in  p :  „      69 

Would  pace" the  troubled  land,  like  P  ;  Love  thou  thy  land  84 

when  William  died,  he  died  at  p  With  all  men;  Dora  144 

breathing  health  and  p  upon  her  breast :  Audley  Court  68 

Whose  foresight  preaches  p,  Love  and  Duty  34 

cross  thy  thoughts  Too  sadly  for  their  p,  „            89 

universal  P  Lie  like  a  shaft  of  light  Golden  Year  48 

Pure  lilies  of  eternal  p,  Sir  Galahad  67 

Across  the  whirlwind's  heart  of  p,  The  Voyage  87 

And  pass  his  days  in  p  among  his  own.  Enoch  Arden  147 

Philip  "s  true  heart,  which  hunger'd  for  her  p  „          272 

all  the  warmth,  the  p,  the  happiness,  „          761 

Help  me  not  to  break  in  upon  her  p.  „           787 

sleeps  in  p  :  and  he,  poor  Philip,  The  Brook  190 

wounded  p  which  each  had  prick'd  to  death.  Aylmer's  Field  52 

hung  With  wings  of  brooding  shelter  o'er  her  p,  „            139 

Jilted  I  was :  I  say  it  for  your  p.  „            354 

Prince  of  p,  the  Mighty  God,  „            669 

The  things  belonging  to  thy  p  and  ours  !  „            740 

I  sought  but  p ;  No  critic  I —  Princess  i  144 

'  p !  and  why  should  I  not  play  The  Spartan  Mother  „      ii  282 

lead  The  new  light  up,  and  culminate  in  p,  „         348 

'  P,  you  young  savage  of  the  Northern  wild  !  „     Hi  247 

P  be  with  her.     She  is  dead.  „      iu  136 

marble  Muses,  looking  p.     Not  p  she  look'd,  „         489 

P !  there  are  those  to  avenge  us  and  they  come :  „         501 

resolder'd  p,  whereon  Follow'd  his  tale.  „        v  47 

one  The  silken  priest  of  p,  one  this,  „          184 

heavy  dews  Gather'd  by  night  and  p,  „         244 

but  other  thoughts  than  P  Burnt  in  us,  „         245 

I  that  prated  p,  when  first  I  heard  War-music,  „         265 

boys  Brake  on  us  at  our  books,  and  marr'd  our  p,  „         395 

found  fair  p  once  more  among  the  sick.  „     vii  44 

plighted  troth,  and  were  at  p.  „            83 

Far-shadowing  from  the  west,  a  land  of  p ;  „  Con.  42 

P,  his  triumph  will  be  sung  Ode  on  Well.  232 

P,  it  is  a  day  of  pain  (repeat)  „  235,  238 


tetuoe  {continued)     But  though  we  love  kind  P  so  well,  Third  of  Feb.  9 

Who  lets  once  more  in  p  the  nations  meet.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  4 

The  works  of  p  with  works  of  war.  „             28 

And  p  be  yours,  the  p  of  soul  in  soul !  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  47 

Between  your  peoples  truth  and  manful  p,  „               49 

mine  in  a  time  of  p,  (repeat)  Grandmother  89,  94 

in  this  Book,  little  Annie,  the  message  is  one  of  P.             „               96 

And  age  is  a  time  of  p,  so  it  be  free  from  pain,  „                97 

passes  by  To  some  more  perfect  p.  Requiescat  8 

Calm  and  deep  p  on  this  high  wold.  In  Mem.  xi  5 

Calm  and  deep  p  in  this  wide  air,  „              13 

P  and  goodwill,  goodwill  and  p,  P  and  goodwill,  „    xxiiii  11 

As  daily  vexes  household  p,  „       xxix  2 

'Twere  best  at  once  to  sink  to  p,  „    xxxiv  13 

Days  order'd  in  a  wealthy  p,  ,.       xlvi  11 

P ;  come  away  :  the  song  of  woe  „          Ivii  1 

P ;  come  away :  we  do  him  wrong  To  sing  so  wildly :  ..                3 

idly  broke  the  p  Of  hearts  that  beat  from  day  to  day,  „        Iviii  5 

But  stay'd  in  p  with  God  and  man.  „       Ixxx  8 

A  hundred  spirits  whisper 'P.'  .,  Ixxxvi  16 

and  shake  The  pillars  of  domestic  p.  ,.         xc  20 

My  spirit  is  at  p  with  all.  „         xciv  8 

Ring  in  the  thousand  years  of  p.  „         cvi  28 

Why  do  they  prate  of  the  blessings  of  P?  Maud  7  i  21 

Is  it  p  or  war  ?    Civil  war,  as  I  think,  „            27 

P  sitting  imder  her  olive,  „            33 

P  in  her  vineyard — yes ! —  „            36 

Is  it  p  or  war  ?  better,  war !  „            47 

if  I  cannot  be  gay  let  a  passionless  p  be  my  lot,  „        iv  50 

P,  angry  spirit,  and  let  him  be  !  „     xiii  44 

For  I  thought  the  dead  had  p,  „    //  v  15 

To  have  no  p  in  the  grave,  „            16 

and  P  Pipe  on  her  pastoral  hiUock  „  ///  vi  23 

love  of  a  p  that  was  full  of  wrongs  „            40 

For  the  p,  that  I  deem'd  no  p,  is  over  and  done,  „            50 

fruitful  strifes  and  rivalries  of  p —  Ded.  of  Idylls  38 

nor  could  I  part  in  p  Till  this  were  told.'  Com.  of  Arthur  393 

P  to  thee,  woman,  with  thy  loves  and  hates  !  Gareth  and  L.  373 

as  if  the  world  were  one  Of  utter  p,  and  love,  „  1289 
fought  Hard  with  himself,  and  seem'd  at  length  in  p.  Balin  and  Balan  239 

one  said  '  Eat  in  p  !  a  liar  is  he,  „               607 

'  P,  child  !  of  overpraise  and  overblame  Merlin  and  V.  90 

one  had  watch'd,  and  had  not  held  his  p  :  „          162 

sunn'd  The  world  to  p  again :  „          639 

To  sleek  her  ruffled  p  of  mind,  „          899 

if  I  schemed  against  thy  p  in  this,  „          930 

ravaged  woodland  yet  once  more  To  p  ;  „          964 

saying,  '  P  to  thee,  Sweet  sister,'  Lancelot  and  E.  996 

'  P,'  said  her  father,  '  0  my  child,  „           1062 

For  pity  of  thine  own  self,  P,  Lady,  p  :  Pelleas  and  E.  254 

Ye  know  yourselves :  how  can  ye  bide  at  p,  „              265 

But  never  let  me  bide  one  hour  at  p.'  „              387 

P  at  his  heart,  and  gazing  at  a  star  „              559 

'  P  to  thine  eagle-borne  Dead  nestling.  Last  Tournament  33 

past  To  where  beyond  these  voices  there  is  p.  Guinevere  698 

wife  and  friend  Is  traitor  to  my  p.  Pass,  of  Arthur  25 

thou  bringest  Not  p,  a  sword,  a  fire.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  36 

crowd's  roar  feU  as  at  the  '  P,  be  still ! '  Columbus  13 

Might  sow  and  reap  in  p,  Epilogue  13 

must  fight  To  make  true  p  his  own,  „     27 

P,  let  it  be  !  for  I  loved  him,  Vastness  36 

Where  stood  the  sheaf  of  P  :  The  Ring  247 

Before  the  feud  of  Gods  had  marr'd  our  p.  Death  of  (Enone  32 

only  conquers  men  to  conquer  p,  Akbar's  Dream  15 

Truth  and  P  And  Love  and  Justice  came  „           180 

Truth,  P,  Love  and  Justice  came  and  dwelt  therein,  „           193 

Peaceful    Her  p  being  slowly  passes  by  Requiescat  7 

thro'  the  p  court  she  crept  And  whisper'd :  Merlin  and  V.  139 

'  Mine  enemies  Pursue  me,  but,  O  p  Sisterhood,  Guinevere  140 

And  withers  on  the  breast  of  p  love ;  Lover's  Tale  i  10 
My  close  of  earth's  experience  May  prove  as  p  as  his  own.  Tiresias  217 
in  that  point  of  p  light  ?                                          Locksley  H.,  Sixty  190 

Peacefuller    when  a  balmier  breeze  curl'd  over  a  p  sea.  The  Wreck  133 

Peacemaker    let  the  fair  white-wing'd  p  fly  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  34 

Peace-offering    last  Love-offering  and  p-o  Last  Tournament  748 

2l 


Peach 


530 


Peer 


Peach    Solved  in  the  tender  blushes  of  the  p  ; 

Peacock    On  the  tree-tops  a  crested  p  ht, 
The  p  in  his  laurel  bower, 
The  parrot  scream'd,  the  p  squall'd, 
And  smooth'd  a  petted  p  down  with  that : 
Now  droops  the  milkwhite  p  like  a  ghost, 
campanili  grew  By  bays,  the  p's  neck  in  hue ; 
bright  and  light  as  the  crest  Of  a  p, 
placed  a  «>  in  his  pride  Before  the  damsel, 
left  The  aamsel  by  the  p  in  his  pride, 

Peacock'd    p  up  with  Lancelot's  noticing. 

Peacock -yewtree    And  f-y  of  the  lonely  Hall, 
Th  e  f-y  and  the  lonely  Hall, 

Peak    (See  also  Bosom-peak,  Eagle-peak)    Twin  p's 
shadow'd  with  pine  slope 
Hesper  is  stayed  between  the  two  p's ; 
Some  blue  p's  in  the  distance  rose, 
between  The  snowy  p  and  snow-white  cataract 
high  on  every  p  a  statue  seem'd  To  hang 
Lotos  blooms  below  the  barren  p : 
By  p's  that  flamed,  or,  all  in  shade, 
The  mountain  wooded  to  the  p, 
climbs  a  p  to  gaze  O'er  land  and  main, 
The  voice  and  the  P  (repeat) 
Hast  thou  no  voice,  O  P, 
'  I  am  the  voice  of  the  P, 
The  valley,  the  voice,  the  p,  the  star  Pass, 
P  is  high  and  flush'd  At  his  highest 
P  is  high,  and  the  stai-s  are  high, 
every  height  comes  out,  and  jutting  p 
As  over  Sinai's  p's  of  old, 
the  budded  p's  of  the  wood  are  bow'd 
up  to  a  height,  the  p  Haze-hidden, 
Stream'd  to  the  p,  and  mingled  with  the  haze 
tipt  with  lessening  p  And  pinnacle, 
A  huge  pavilion  like  a  mountain  p 
sighs  to  see  the  p  Sun-flush'd, 
a  cloud,  man-shaped,  from  mountain  p, 
isle-side  flashing  down  from  the  p 
the  p  of  the  mountain  was  apples. 


Prog,  of  Spring  34 

(Enone  104 

Day -Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  15 

„  Revival  12 

Princess  ii  456 

„      vii  180 

The  Daisy  14 

Maud  I  xvi  17 

Gareih  and  L.  850 

870 

719 

Enoch  Arden  99 

608 

Leonine  Eleg.  10 

11 

Dying  Swan  11 

(Enone  211 

Palace  of  Art  31 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  100 

The  Voyage  41 

Enoch  Arden  572 

Priticess  vii  35 

Voice  and  the  P.  1,31 

9 

11 

27 

29 

31 

Spec,  of  Iliad.  13 

In  Mem.  xcvi  22 

Maud  I  vi  4 

Com.  of  Arthur  429 

435 

Gareth  and  L.  308 

1364 

Balin  and  Balan  165 

To  the  Queen  ii  40 

V.  of  Maeldune  45 

63 


p  sent  up  one  league  of  fire  to  the  Northern  Star ;  „           72 

For  some,  descending  from  the  sacred  p  Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  9 

One  naked  p — the  sister  of  the  sun  Tiresias  30 

two  known  p's  they  stand  ever  spreading  Parnassus  11 

Had  the  fierce  ashes  of  some  fiery  p  St.  Telemachus  1 

Peak'd     A  mountain  islet  pointed  and  p ;  The  Islet  15 

Feakt    See  Gilden-peakt 

Peaky    Or  over  hills  with  p  tops  engrail'd,  Palace  of  Art  113 

The  p  islet  shifted  shapes.  The  Voyage  33 

Peal  (s)     P  after  p,  the  British  battle  broke,  Buonaparte  7 

With  p's  of  genial  clamour  sent  Will  Water.  187 

A  single  p  of  beUs  below.  In  Mem.  civ  5 

whole  wood-world  is  one  full  p  of  praise.  Balin  and  Balan  450 

In  clanging  cadence  jangling  p  on  p —  Lover's  Tale  Hi  22 
p  Of  laughter  drew  me  thro'  the  glimmering  glades  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  115 

Then  a  p  that  shakes  the  portal —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  263 

Peal  (verb)    sweet  church  bells  began  to  p.  Two  Voices  408 

At  this  a  hundred  bells  began  to  p,  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  29 

the  watchman  p  The  sliding  season :  Gardener's  D.  182 

shout  Of  His  descending  p's  from  Heaven,  Romney's  R.  127 

Peal'd    an  answer  p  from  that  high  land.  Vision  of  Sin  221 

And  all  about  us  p  the  nightingale,  Princess  i  220 

old  songs  that  p  From  knoll  to  knoll,  In  Mem.  xcv  13 

Out  of  the  city  a  blast  of  music  p.  Gareth  and  L.  238 

close  upon  it  p  A  sharp  quick  thunder.'  Holy  Grail  695 

the  full  city  p  Thee  and  thy  Prince  !  To  the  Qu^en  ii  26 

till  the  great  day  P  on  us  with  that  music  Lover's  Tale  iv  65 

and  whenever  their  voices  p  V.  of  Maeldune  29 

thunder  of  God  p  over  us  all  the  day,  „           113 

and  p  from  an  organ, —  The  Wreck  53 

Pealing    He  heard  the  p  of  his  parish  bells ;  Enoch  Arden  615 

trumpet  in  the  distance  p  news  Of  better,  Princess  iv  81 

single  church  below  the  hill  Is  v.  In  Mem.  civ  4 

wild  voice  p  up  to  the  sunny  sty,  Maud  I  v  13 

'  Hark  the  victor  p  there ! '  Gareth  and  L.  1318 


Pear    That  held  the  p  to  the  gable- wall. 

body  slight  and  round,  and  like  a  p  In  growing, 
tumbled  half  the  mellowing  p's  ! 
and  with  golden  masses  of  p, 
Pearky  (pert)     An'  thou  was  as  p  as  owt. 
Pearl    a  brow  of  p  Tress'd  with  redolent  ebony, 
In  a  golden  curl  With  a  comb  of  p, 
With  a  comb  of  p  I  would  comb  my  hair ; 
morning  driv'n  her  plow  of  p  Far  furrowing 
Forth  streaming  from  a  braid  of  p : 
now  a  rain  of  p's,  Or  steep-up  spout 
shook  and  fell,  an  erring  p  I^ost  in  her  bosom : 
When  Time  hath  sunder'd  shell  from  p.' 
in  this  stonny  gulf  have  found  a  p 
In  gloss  of  satin  and  glimmer  of  p's. 
Small  and  pure  as  a  p, 


Mariana  4 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  53 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  20 

V.  of  Maeldune  60 

Church-warden,  etc.  35 

Arabian  Nights  137 

The  Mermaid  7 

10 

Love  and  Duty  99 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep  B.  6 

Princess,  Pro.  62 

iv  60 

In  Mem.  Hi  16 

Maud  I  xviii  42 

„  xxii  55 

//  ii  2 


Made  with  her  right  a  comb  of  p  to  part  The  lists 
burst  in  dancing,  and  the  p's  were  spilt ; 
But  nevermore  the  same  two  sister  p's 
Yet  is  there  one  true  line,  the  p  of  p's : 
Guinevere,  The  p  of  beauty : 
'  A  red  sleeve  Broider'd  with  p's' 
wore  the  sleeve  Of  scarlet,  and  the  p's  ; 
sleeve  of  scarlet,  broider'd  with  great  p's, 
carved  and  cut,  and  half  the  p's  away, 
So  pray  you,  add  my  diamonds  to  her  p's; 
gateways  in  a  glory  like  one  p — 
For  I  have  flung  thee  p's  and  find  thee  swine.' 
since  I  care  not  for  thy  p's.     Swine  ? 
The  Gospel,  the  Priest's  p,  flung  down  to  swin 
.   and  those  twelve  gates,  P — 

Pearl-necklace     Is  like  the  fair  p-n  of  the  Queen, 

Pearly     Upon  her  p  shoulder  leaning  cold. 
Sleet  of  diamond-drift  and  p  hail ; 

Peasant  (adj.)    Till  the  p  cow  shall  butt  the  '  Lion 
passant ' 

Peasant  (s)  arts  of  war  The  p  Joan  and  others  ; 
When  the  wild  p  rights  himself, 
p's  maim  the  helpless  horse,  and  drive 

Pebble     Counting  the  dewy  p's,  fix'd  in  thought ; 
I  babble  on  the  p's. 
Counting  the  dewy  p's,  fix'd  in  thought ; 

Peck    all  wing'd  nothings  p  him  dead  ! 

Peculiar    When  thy  p  difference  Is  cancell'd 
Each  garlanded  with  her  p  flower 
Some  p  mystic  grace  Made  her 
And  a  p  treasure,  brooking  not  Exchange 

Ped  (paid)     he  p  me  back  wid  the  best 

Pedant    held  his  sceptre  like  a  p's  wand 

Pedestal  Upon  an  even  p  with  man.' 
push'd  by  rude  hands  from  its  p, 
seat  you  sole  upon  my  p  Of  worship^ 

Peele     that  P  the  Goddess  would  wallow 
handle  or  gather  the  berries  of  P ! 
climb  to  the  dwelling  of  P  the  Goddess ! 
None  but  the  terrible  P  remaining 
crying  '  I  dare  her,  let  P  avenge  hei'self ' ! 

Peep  (s)     birdie  say  In  her  nest  at  p  of  day  ? 
baby  say.  In  her  bed  at  p  of  day  ? 
passing  one,  at  the  high  p  of  dawn, 

Peep  (verb)     For  any  male  thing  but  to  p  at  us. 


Merlin  and  V.  244 

452 

454 

459 

Lancelot  a)id  E.  114 

373 

502 

604 

807 

1224 

Holy  Grail,  527 

Last  Tournament  310 

314 

•    Sir  J.  Oldcastle  116 

Columbus  87 

Merlin  and  V.  451 

(Enone  140 

Vision  of  Sin  22 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  248 

Princess  ii  163 

„       iv  385 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  95 

M.  d' Arthur  84 

The  Brook  42 

Pass,  of  Arthur  252 

Marr.  of  Geraint  275 

Two  Voices  41 

Gardener's  D.  202 

Maud  I  xiii  39 

Lover's  Tale  i  447 

Tomorrow  42 

Princess  i  27 

„    Hi  224 

i;58 

Merlin  andV.  878 

Kapiolani  8 

„        20 

22 

28 

32 

Sea  Dreams  294 

302 

Merlin  and  V.  560 

.  ,  __„  ,.  j_  Princess,  Pro.  152 

Peep'd-peept    peep'd,  and  saw  The  boy  set  up  betwixt  Dora  130 

Peep'd, — but  his  eyes,  before  they  had  their  will,  (iodiva  69 

underneath  The  head  of  Ilolofernes  peep'd  Princess  iv  227 

thro'  the  parted  silks  the  tender  face  Peep'd,  „       vii  61 

Two  bright  stars  Peep'd  into  the  shell.  Minnie  and  Winnie  14 

Peept  the  winsome  face  of  Edith  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  260 

Peer  (s)     Could  find  no  stateher  than  his  p's  Two  Voices  29 

'  Forerun  thy  p's,  thy  time,  „         88 

Regard  the  weakness  of  thy  p's :  Love  thou  thy  land  24 

drunk  delight  of  battle  with  my  p's,  Ulysses  16 

in  sight  of  Collatine  And  all  his  p's,  Lucretius  239 

Surprise  thee  ranging  with  thy  p's.  In  Mem.  xliv  12 

Thy  spirit  in  time  among  thy  p's ;  „  xci  6 

to  yield  thee  grace  beyond  thy  p's.'  Last  Tournament  7 


II 


Peer 

Peer  (s)  {continued)    their  claim  to  be  thy  p's  • 
Feet  (verb)    not  to  pry  and  p  on  vour  reserve' 
she  p's  along  the  tremulous  deep,  ' 

Peerage    the  savage  yells  Of  Uther's  v  died, 
Pfter  d    Or  from  the  crevice  p  about. 

I  p  athwart  the  chancel  pane  And  saw  the  altar 
and  of  all  Who  p  at  him  so  keenly, 
I  p  thro'  tomb  and  cave, 
Peereth    The  frail  bluebell  p  over 
Peering    thro'  the  portal-arch  P  askance, 

Before  a  thousand  p  littlenesses, 
Peerless    my  glory  to  have  loved  One  p, 
As  thou  art  a  knight  p.' 
(Those  p  flowers  which  in  the  rudest  wind 
Peewit    See  Pewit 
P^    The  mantles  from  the  golden  p's 

'  Let  me  screw  thee  up  a  p : 
Pelelan    came  Into  the  fair  P  banquet-hall 
Peleion    o'er  the  great  P's  head  Bum'd,     ' 
Peleus     Gods  Ranged  in  the  balls  of  P; ' 
Pelf    dropt  the  goose,  and  caught  the  p, 
Pelican    I  saw  The  p  on  the  casque 

I  remember  now  That  p  on  the  casque : 
Pellam    P  the  King,  who  held  and  lost  with  Lot 
P,  once  A  Christless  foe  of  thine 
till  castle  of  a  King,  the  hall  Of  P, 
Then  spake  the  men  of  P  crying 
mark'd  The  portal  of  King  P's  chapel 
P's  feeble  cry  '  Stay,  stay  him ! 
King  P's  holy  spear.  Reputed  to  be  red  with 

smless  blood, 
'  Brother,  I  dwelt  a  day  in  P's  hall : 
Whom  P  drove  away  with  holy  heat. 
PeUeas  (a  Knight  of  the  Eound  Table)    and  thro'  these 
a  youth,  P, 
had  P  for  his  lady  won  The  golden  circlet, 
this  new  knight.  Sir  P  of  the  isles— 
and  slowly  P  drew  To  that  dim  day. 
It  seem'd  to  P  that  the  fern  without  Burnt 
P  rose.  And  loosed  his  horse, 

P  gazing  thought,  '  Is  Guinevere  herself  so  beautiful  ? 
so  did  P  lend  All  the  young  beauty  of  his  own  soul 
And  win  me  this  fine  circlet,  P, 
'  O  happy  world,'  thought  P, 
P  look'd  Noble  among  the  noble, 
P  might  obtain  his  lady's  love, 
all  day  long  Sir  P  kept  the  field  With  honour: 
and  seeing  P  droop.  Said  Guinevere, 
knights  aU  set  their  faces  home,  Sir  P  follow'd 
These  be  the  ways  of  ladies,'  P  thought 
P  overthrew  them  as  they  dash'd  Against  him 
they  went.  And  P  overthrew  them  one  by  one  • 
Nay,'  said  P,  '  but  forbear ; 
And  P  overthrew  them,  one  to  three ; 
first  her  anger,  leaving  P,  bum'd  Full 
P  answer'd,  '  Lady,  for  indeed  I  loved  you 
P  answer'd,  '  0,  their  wills  are  hers 
P  lent  his  horse  and  all  his  arms, 
I  have  slam  this  P  whom  ye  hate : 
'  Lo  !     Pis  dead— he  told  us— 
Lost  in  a  doubt,  P  wandering  Waited 
t^  lay— Which  P  had  heard  sung  before  the  Queen, 
did  P  man  utter  shame  Creep  with  his  shadow 
the  poor  P  whom  she  caU'd  her  fool  ? 
'  Liar,  for  thou  hast  not  slain  This  PI 
her  ever-veering  fancy  tum'd  To  P 
fared  it  with  Sir  P  as  with  one  Who  gets  a  wound 
P,  leapmg  up.  Ran  thro'  the  doors  and  vaulted 
weagr  steed  of  P  floundering  flung  His  rider, 
bu-  P  m  bnef  while  Caught  his  unbroken  Umbs 
then  on  P,  him  Who  had  not  greeted  her 
■nien  she,  turning  to  P,  '  O  young  knight, 
P  hf  ted  up  an  eye  so  fierce  She  quail'd  • 
Pelt    p  me  with  starry  spangles  and  shells, 
That  p  us  in  the  porch  with  flowers. 


531 


To  Victor  Hugo  6 

Princess  iv  419 

Demeter  and  P.  14 

Com.  of  Arthur  257 

Mariana  65 

The  Letters  3 

Aylmer's  Field  817 

Demeter  and  P.  70 

A  Dirge  37 

Merlin  and  V.  100 

Ded.  of  Idylls  26 

Lancelot  and  E.  1091 

1282 

Ode  to  Memory  24 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep  P.  19 

Vision  of  Sin  87 

(Enone  225 

Achilles  over  the  T.  28 

(Enone  81 

The  Goose  13 

Holy  Grail  635 

700 

Balin  and  Balan  1 

96 

332 

337 

405 

420 

556 
605 
611 

Pdleas  and  E.  5 
13 


In  Mem 


17 
29 
34 
60 
69 
82 
128 
136 
151 
161 
168 
178 
188 
209 
221 
230 
280 
287 
289 
296 
324 
358 
372 
377 
392 
397 
440 
474 
491 
494 
528 
538 
574 
584 
590 
595 
601 
The^Merman  28 
Con.  68 


People 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  134 

Aylmer's  Field  286 

To  E.  L.  6 

St.  S.  Stylites  68 

101 

144 

n       ■     -  ^67 

Geraint  and  E.  739 

854 


Pelt  (continued)    p  your  offal  at  her  face. 
«   "*°„r.  ,"^  P  with  outrageous  epithets. 
Pen    With  such  a  pencil,  such  a  p, 
Penance    Betray'd  my  secret  p, 

prate  Of  p's  I  cannot  have  gone  thro' 

power  mth  Heaven  From  my  long  p  •' 

From  my  high  nest  of  p  here  proclaim 

And  here  I  lay  this  p  on  myself. 

And  all  the  p  the  Queen  laid  upon  me  or^ 

TiltofthiS  T^J^ll  '^^p^^  ^^  '^^'  -^  V-    ^y.  ^--^  Si 

aeiesy. — i^.'-         l^ast,  Hairshirt  ,c/~  /  n/z/r-^orf^  i/ii 

Do  p  in  his  heart,  God  hears  him.'  '^^  ^^'^«*<^«  jfl 

^'"^^,jfl'^''',^^^F's-Venee)    Or  that  eternal  want  of  p,    Will  Water  4^ 

Thy  latter  daj's  increased  with  p  ^'                       o7n 

IS  it  shilUns  an' « ?  ,v   p          "  ,.   ^-^ix 

Even  in  dreams  to  the  chink  of  his  p,  '^^  ^''^Man^  /'  11 

Pencil    Came,  drew  your  p  from  Tou  n    ^^  ^^  B 

wave  of  such  a  breast^As  nTve^p  drew  Gardener's  D.26 

Into  the  shadowing  p's  naked  forms  t^.^^    t^";      -nn^ 

Pencill'd    See  Shadowicill'd.  iS-pencill'd  '"  '  ^"'^  "  '^^ 
Pendent    (See  also  Roof-pendent)    Her  p  hands,  and 

narrow  meagre  face  //„7.„w„  /'•  ;j  oio 

With  many  a  p  bell  and  fragrant  star,  AiofmtJf^ 

^n=roS  Sg5a?J!t^nf  ^  ^^  ^^^^  xfrLlST^ 

Kntr^ff^oJg'^di^Spl^r  ^^"^  ^'  '''''^''        ^-'-T  T'  f  1 

Pension    title,  place,  or  touch  Of  p,  Lov^  thou  7hu  tr,^'A 

Pens  on'd     Half-sickening  of  his  p'^kternoon,  AuI^I'IVmSx 

Pensive    Of  p  thought  and  aspect  pale,  ''         M„t\ 

A  p  pair,  and  you  were  gay  Miller's  nffU 

The  fulness  of  the  p  mind  :  n„,,  j-,T  T'  ^  ^-  •  ,| 

Edith,  whose  p  bea\ty,  perfect  else,  ''A^Js^Teld  70 

YetfL  f  ^f  •'"  ""  '^'  ""■^'■*'"^y  "•'°"«'  PrZess^riQ2 

I  et  feels,  as  in  a  p  dream,  t^  T\r       ?  ■   VS 

Their  p  tablets  round  her  head,  ^'^  Mem.lxtv  17 

Gazing  for  one  p  moment  on  that  founder  Locksley  H    Si^v%9. 

Pent    (^.«a;.oLong.pent)     I  lay  P  in  a  roofless  close         s7J:styUUsll 

fretful  a.s  the  wind  P  in  a  crevice :  Princess  M  81 

Pentagram    Some  figure  hke  a  wizard  p  ThT Brook  lol 

Pentecost    Hereafter  thou,  fulfilling  P,  si^  J  OldZt/i^i 

Penthouse     A  snowy  p  for  his  hollow  eyes,  MerLandV^m 

Penuel     In  the  dim  tract  of  P.  rietrhtZ.Jf  ■    Ion 

People     ^She  wrought  her  p  lasting  good;  Totfe^l'^i  S 

Broad-based  upon  her  p's  will,  ""^  ^"^^'*  B 

As  when  a  mighty  p  rejoice  With  shawms,  U.ina  Swan  31 

And  up  and  down  the  p  go,  T,%^i  II  -i 

On  to  God's  house  the;!,rest:  Twivtif/m 

rhe  j>  here,  a  bea^t  of  burden  slow,  Palace  of  Art  149 

I  perish  by  this  p  which  I  made,-'  Md'Arthtr  22 

speak  m  the  aftertime  To  all  the  p,  "     ^'^^'^^'l  j?^ 

aU  the  p  cried,  '  Arthur  is  come  again :  "   p«  oo 

x'siir/tX  t  CTsahit'  *'^  •^"'""^'  '"^' ''  '■  ^^i 

Good  p,  you  do  ill  to  kneel  to  me,  "             \zl 

O  Lord,  Aid  all  this  foolish  p ;  "            t)9,t 

If  •. wT  P^dence  to  make  mild  A  rugged  p,  "  Ulussestl 

With  the  standards  of  the  p's           ^^      ^'  LocksleuHnn4l 

Slowly  comes  a  hungry  p,  ^''"'  ''"■'  "^°"  \^ 

loved  the  «  well.  And  loathed  to  see  them  overtax'd ;  "    Godi^al 

but  that  she  would  loose  The  p :  uoatia  o 

happy  p  strowing  cried  '  Hosanna  ArdenbZ 

or  he  himself  Moved  haunting  p,  "          ^ 

p  talk'd— that  it  was  wholly  wise  Auh,„..--^'v;.i^  oaS 

p  talk'd-The  boy  might  get  a  notion  ^^^'"''  '  ^  ''^  Ifr, 

Ibe  weakness  of  a  p  or  a  house,  "              f^J; 

To  speak  before  the  p  of  her  child,  "              %^ 

hid  the  Holiest  from  the  p's  eyes  "               l^g 


People 


532 


Pereivale 


People  {continued)    her  own  p  bore  along  the  nave  Her 

pendent  hands,  Aylmer's  Field  812 

until  the  set  of  sun  Up  to  the  p :  Princess,  Pro.  3 

were  there  any  of  our  p  there  In  want  of  peril,  „        ii  266 

babbling  wells  With  her  own  p's  life  :  ,,         v  335 

All  p  said  she  had  authority —  „        vi  238 

To  let  the  p  breathe  ?  „    Con.  104 

And  a  reverent  p  behold  The  towering  car,  Ode  on  Well.  54 
thro'  the  centuries  let  a  p's  voice  In  full  acclaim, 

A  p's  voice.  The  proof  and  echo  of  all  human 

fame,  A  p's  voice,  when  they  rejoice  „           142 

A  p's  voice !  we  are  a  p  yet.  „          151 

Betwixt  a  p  and  their  ancient  throne,  „          163 

the  Dead  March  wails  in  the  p's  ears :  ,,          267 

you,  my  Lords,  you  make  the  p  muse  Third  of  Feb.  31 

0  joy  to  the  p  and  joy  to  the  throne,  W.  to  Alexandra  29 
thrones  and  p's  are  as  waifs  that  swing,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  26 
Between  your  p's  truth  and  manful  peace,  „  49 
A  princely  p's  awful  princes.  The  Daisy  39 
came  a  flower.  The  p  said,  a  weed.  The  Flower  4 
all  the  p  cried,  '  Splendid  is  the  flower.'  „  16 
again  the  p  Call  it  but  a  weed.  „  23 
A  PLAGUE  upon  the  p  fell,  The  Victim  1 
So  thick  they  died  the  p  cried,  „  5 
The  land  is  sick,  the  p  diseased,  „  45 
her  p  all  around  the  royal  chariot  Boddicea  73 
Lest  I  fall  unawares  before  the  p,  Hendecasyllahics  7 
more  and  more  the  p  throng  The  chairs  In  Mem.  xxi  15 
The  pillar  of  a  p's  hope,  „  Ixiv  15 
Whate'er  the  faithless  p  say.  „  xcvii  16 
a  loyal  p  shouting  a  battle  cry,  Mavd  III  vi  35 
heart  of  a  p  beat  with  one  desire ;  „  49 
Laborious  for  her  p  and  her  poor —  Ded.  of  Idylls  35 
The  love  of  all  Thy  p  comfort  Thee,  ^  „  54 
And  while  the  p  clamour 'd  for  a  king,  '  Com.  of  Arthur  22ib 
Bright  with  a  shining  p  on  the  decks,  „  376 
crush'd  The  Idolaters,  and  made  the  p  free  ?  Gareth  and  L.  137 
p  stept  As  in  the  presence  of  a  gracious  king.  „  315 
around  him  slowly  prest  The  p,  „  694 
by  and  by  the  p,  when  they  met  In  twos  and  threes,  Marr.  of  Geraint  56 
this  she  gather'd  from  the  p's  eyes :  „  61 
Then,  like  a  shadow,  past  the  p's  talk  „  82 
'  \\'ould  some  of  your  kind  p  take  him  up,  Geraint  and  E.  543 
a  grateful  p  named  Enid  the  Good ;  „  963 
The  p  call'd  him  Wizard ;  Merlin  and  V.  170 
The  p  call  you  prophet:  let  it  be:  „  317 
With  loss  of  half  his  p  arrow-slain ;  „  565 
For  fear  our  p  call  you  Uly  maid  Lancelot  and  E.  386 
Of  whom  the  p  talk  mysteriously,  „  425 
this  I  know,  for  all  the"  p  know  it,  „  1081 
when  now  the  lords  and  dames  And  p,  „  1347 
till  the  p  in  far  fields.  Wasted  so  often  Holy  Grail  243 
overthrew  So  many  knights  that  all  the  p  cried.  „  335 
The  heads  of  all  her  p  drew  to  me,  „  601 
And  found  a  p  there  among  their  crags,  „  662 
tum'd  the  lady  round  And  look'd  upon  her  p ;  Pelleas  and  E.  92 
there  before  the  p  crown'd  herself :  „  174 
scandal  break  and  blaze  Before  the  p,  Guinevere  92 
*  With  what  a  hate  the  p  and  the  Kmg  „  157 
The  mockery  of  my  p,  and  their  bane.'  ,.  526 
To  poor  sick  p,  richer  in  His  eyes  Who  ransom'd  us,  „  684 
And  with  him  many  of  thy  p,  Pass,  of  Arthur  60 
To  war  against  my  p  and  my  knights.  „  71 
The  king  who  fights  his  p  fights  himself.  „  72 
Where  fragments  of  forgotten  p's  dwelt,  „            84 

1  perish  by  this  p  which  I  made, —  „           190 

?jeak  in  the  aftertime  To  all  the  p,  „          276 

iast  with  thee  thro'  thy  p  and  their  love.  To  the  Queen  ii  7 

Left  mightiest  of  all  p's  under  heaven  ?  „            21 

To  what  our  p  call '  The  HiU  of  Woe.'  Lover's  Tale  i  374 

If  you  go  far  in  (The  country  p  rumour)  „  519 
p  throng'd  about  them  from  the  hall.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  156 
p't  praise  From  thine  own  State,                         Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  7 

rose  from  off  his  throne  to  greet  Before  his  p,  Colv/mhus  6 

harmless  p  whom  we  found  In  Hispaniola's  „      181 


People  (continued)    This  creedless  p  wiU  be  brought  to  Christ   Columbus  189 


three  of  the  gentlest  and  best  of  my  p, 

0  smallest  among  p's  1 

make  one  p  ere  man's  race  be  run : 

creeds  that  had  madden'd  the  p's 

p  'ud  see  it  that  wint  in  to  mass — 

perfect  p's,  perfect  kings. 

Move  among  your  p,  know  them. 

With  all  the  p's,  great  and  small, 

for  evermore.     Let  the  p  die.' 

a  careless  p  flock'd  from  the  fields 

Was  one  of  the  p's  kings, 

for  he  spoke  and  the  p  heard. 

And  all  the  p  were  pleased ; 

And  the  p  paid  her  well. 

Your  rule  has  made  the  p  love  Their  ruler 

Glorying  in  the  glories  of  her  p, 

Hand  of  Light  wiU  lead  her  p, 

My  p  too  were  scared  with  eerie  sounds, 

A  barbarous  p,  Blind  to  the  magic, 

O  God  in  every  temple  I  see  p  that  see  thee,  and 

in  every  language  I  hear  spoken,  p  praise  thee.  Akhars  D.,  Inscrip.  1 
If  it  be  a  mosque  p  murmur  the  holy  prayer,  and  if  it  be 

a  Christian  Church,  p  ring  the  bell  from  love  to  Thee.  „         4 

drive  A  p  from  their  ancient  fold  Akbar's  Dream  61 

held  His  p  by  the  bridle-rein  of  Truth.  „  85 

Mould  them  for  all  his  p.  „  129 

a  p  have  fashion'd  and  worship  a  Spirit  of  Evil,  Kapiolani  1 

and  freed  the  p  Of  Hawa-i-ee !  „  6 

A  p  beheving  that  Peele  the  Goddess  „  8 

One  from  the  Sunrise  Dawn'd  on  His  p,  „        25 

Godless  fury  of  p's.  The  Dawn  7 

Till  the  p's  all  are  one.  Making  of  Man  7 

Peopled  (adj.)    eyes  Run  thro'  the  p  gallery  which  half 

round  Lancelot  and  E.  430 

Is  there  evil  but  on  earth  ?  or  pain  in  every  p 

sphere?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  197 

Peopled  (verb)    P  the  hollow  dark,  like  biu'ning  stars,     D.  of  F.  Women  18 


V.  of  Maeldune  81 

Montenegro  9 

To  Victor  Hugo  11 

Despair  24 

Tomorrow  74 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  186 

266 

Epilogvs  20 

Dead  Prophet  4 

7 

10 
33 
74 
78 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  9 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  26 

68 

The  Ring  408 

Merlin  and  the  G.  25 


Peptics     Or  do  my  p  differ  ? 
Peradventure    '  P  he,  you  name.  May  know 
Perceive    a  man  far-off  might  well  p, 
Perceived    And  I  p  no  touch  of  change, 

P  the  waving  of  the  hands  that  blest. 
Perceiving    He,  p,  said :  '  Fair  and  dear  cousin, 

P  that  she  was  but  half  disdain'd. 
Perch  (s)    lawless  p  Of  wing'd  ambitions, 

Came  to  her  old  p  back,  and  settled 
Perch  (verb)    Light  Hope  at  Beauty's  call  would  p 
Perch'd    P  like  a  crow  upon  a  three-legg'd  stool, 

p  about  the  knolls  A  dozen  angrjr  models 

P  on  the  pouted  blossom  of  her  lips : 

all  that  walk'd,  or  crept,  or  p,  or  flew. 

P  on  the  shrouds,  and  then  fell  fluttering 


WUl  Water.  80 

Gareth  and  L.  1298 

Lancelot  and  E.  458 

In  Mem.  xiv  17 

Guinevere  584 

Geraint  and  E.  823 

Merlin  and  V.  179 

Ded.  of  Idylls  22 

Merlin  and  V.  903 

Caress'd  or  chidden  3 

Audley  Court  45 

Princess,  Pro.  72 

199 

Last  Tournament  367 

The  Wreck  82 


Pereivale  (a  Knight  of  the  Bound  Table)    What  say  ye 

then  to  fair  Sir  P  Merlin  and  V.  lil 

'  A  sober  man  is  P  and  pure ;  „  755 

So  Arthur  bad  the  meek  Sir  P  Lancelot  and  E.  1264 

acts  of  prowess  done  In  tournament  or  tilt,  Sir  P,  Holy  Grail  2 

45 

68 

106 

205 

268 

296 

306 

337 

425 

564 

633 

711 

861 

„      874 

Pelleas  and  E.  501 

a 


The  monk  Ambrosius  question'd  P : 

'  Nay,  monk  !  what  phantom  ? '  answer'd  P. 

'  A  woman,'  answer'd  P,  '  a  nun, 

'  0  my  brother  P,'  she  said,  '  Sweet  brother, 

my  lord,'  said  P,  '  the  King,  Was  not  in  hall: 

the  King  Spake  to  me,  being  nearest,  '  P,' 

Hoher  is  none,  my  P,  than  she — 

What  are  ye  ?     Galahads  ? — no,  nor  P's ' 

Shouting,  '  Sir  Galahad  and  Sir  P ! ' 

these  Cried  to  me  climbing,  '  Welcome,  P  ! 

Sir  P:  AU  men,  to  one  so  bound  by  such  a  vow, 

'  Yea  so,'  said  P :  '  One  night  my  pathway  swerving  east, 

answer'd  P :  '  And  that  can  I,  Brother, 

But  as  for  thine,  my  good  friend  P, 

Blessed  are  Bors,  Lancelot  and  P, 

Beside  that  tower  where  P  was  cowl'd. 

But  P  stood  near  him  and  repUed, 


ll 


Percivale 


533 


Persia 


FttCivale  (continued)    '  Is  the  Queen  false  ?  '  and  P 
was  mute. 
And  F  made  answer  not  a  word. 
'Is  the  King  true  ?  '     '  The  King ! '  said  F. 

Perdition     '  /  am  on  the  Perfect  Way,  AH  else  is  to  p.' 

Perennial    p  effluences,  Whereof  to  all  that  draw  the 
wholesome  air, 

P»fect  (adj.)     (See  also  AU-perfect)     And  p  rest  so 
inward  is ; 
An  image  with  profulgent  brows,  And  p  limbs. 
Of  p  wifehood  and  pure  lowUhead. 
The  queen  of  marriage,  a  most  p  wile. 
Thou  art  p  in  love-lore,  (repeat) 
pure  law,  Commeasure  p  freedom.' 
temper'd  with  the  tears  Of  angels  to  the  p 

shape  of  man.  To- 

each  a  p  whole  From  Uving  Nature, 
I  can  but  count  thee  p  gain, 
Reading  her  p  features  in  the  gloom, 
in  sighs  With  p  Joy,  perplex'd  for  utterance, 
a  hand,  a  foot  Lessemng  in  p  cadence, 
And  that  which  shapes  it  to  some  p  end. 
but  ever  dwells  A  p  form  in  p  rest, 
wide  earth  of  light  and  shade  Comes  out  a  p  round, 
that  reach  To  each  his  p  pint  of  stout, 


Felleas  and  E.  532 
534 
535 

Akbar's  Bream  35 

Lover's  Tale  i  499 

Supp.  Confessions  51 

146 

Isabel  12 

„      28 

Madeline  9,  26 

(Enone  167 

,  With  Fal.  of  Art  19 

Falace  of  Art  58 

198 

Gardener's  D.  175 

255 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  55 

Love  and  Duty  26 

Day-Diii.,  Sleep.  B.  24 

Will  Water.  68 

115 


drooping  chestnut-buds  began  To  spread  into  the  p 

fan,  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  17 

To  waste  his  whole  heart  in  one  kiss  Upon  her  p  lips.  „  45 

Visions  of  a  p  State :  Vision  of  Sin  148 

When  all  the  wood  stands  in  a  mist  of  green.  And 

nothing  p :  The  Brook  15 

Edith,  whose  pensive  beauty,  p  else,  Aylmer's  Field  70 

only,  if  a  dream.  Sweet  dream,  be  p.  Frincess  vii  149 

Pale  was  the  p  face ;  „  224 

Like  p  music  unto  noble  words ;  „  286 

they  grow,  The  single  pure  and  p  animal,  „  306 

Not  p,  nay,  but  full  of  tender  wants,  „  319 

Her  peaceful  being  slowly  passes  by  To  some  more  p  peace.  Requiescat  8 
Is  p  stillness  when  they  brawl.  Lit.  Squabbles  20 

As  pure  and  p  as  I  say  ?  In  Mem.  xxiv  2 

And  orb  into  the  p  star  We  saw  not,  „  15 

hiunan  hands  the  creed  of  creeds  In  loveliness  of  p  deeds,    „    xxxvi  11 


The  p  flower  of  human  time ; 

He  too  foretold  the  p  rose. 

It  more  beseems  the  p  virgin  knight 

As  Love,  if  Love  be  p,  casts  out  fear.  So  Hate,  if 
Hate  be  p,  casts  out  fear. 

then  her  shape  From  forehead  down  to  foot,  p — 

And  on  the  third  are  warriors,  p  men, 

but  he  that  closes  both  Is  p,  he  is  Lancelot — ■ 

That  pure  severity  of  p  h'ght — 

Because  it  lack'd  the  power  of  p  Hope ; 

a  babe  in  Uneament  and  limb  P, 

I  had  past  into  p  quiet  at  length 

All  good  things  may  move  in  Hesper,  p  peoples 
p  kings. 

and  made  The  rosy  twilight  of  a  p  day. 

'  /  am  on  the  F  Way,  All  else  is  to  perdition.' 

For  if  this  earth  be  ruled  by  P  Love, 
Perfect  (s)     '  That  type  of  P  in  his  mind  In  Natm-e 
Perfection    The  clear  p  of  her  face. 

Dead  p,  no  more ;  nothing  more. 

That  passionate  p,  my  good  lord — 
Perfectly    P  beautiful :  let  it  be  granted  her : 
Perfectness    Set  light  by  narrower  p. 

To  die  in  gazing  on  that  p  Which  I  do  bear 

science  making  toward  Thy  F  Are  blinding  desert 
sand; 
Perfect-pure    For  see,  how  p-p ! 
Perfect-sweet    Frowns  p-s  along  the  brow 
Perform    Yet  I  thy  best  will  all  p  at  full. 

Yet  I  thy  best  wiU  all  p  at  fuU, 
Perform'd    '  Hast  thou  p  my  mission  which  I  gave  ? 

'  Hast  thou  p  my  mission  which  I  gave  ? 


Ixi  4 
.,      Con.  34 
Merlin  and  V.  22 

40 

Lancelot  and  E.  642 

Holy  Grail  236 

Last  Tournament  709 

Guinevere  646 

Lover's  Tale  i  453 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  12 

66 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  186 

The  Ring  187 

Akbar's  Dream  34 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  8 

Two  Voices  2m 

Mariana  in  the  S.  32 

Maud  I  ii  7 

Lancelot  and  E.  122 

Maud  I  ii  4 

In  Mem.  cxii  4 

Lover's  Tale  i  88 

Akbar's  Dream  29 

Balin  and  Balan  266 

Madeline  15 

M.  d' Arthur  43 

Pass,  of  Arthur  211 

M.  d' Arthur  67 

Pass,  of  Arthur  235 


Perfume  (adj.)     belongs  to  the  heart  of  the  p  seller.    Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  9 


Perfume  (s)     As  p  of  the  cuckoo-flower  ? 

one  wann  gust,  fuU-fed  with  p, 

P  and  flowers  faU  in  showers. 

And  fluctuate  all  the  stiU  p, 
Perfumed     And  made  my  life  a  p  altar-flame ; 
Peril     A  carefuUer  in  p,  did  not  breathe 

any  of  our  people  there  In  want  or  p, 

the  rest  Spake  but  of  sundry  p's  in  the  storm 

raising  her  StiU  higher,  past  aU  p. 

That  they  had  the  better  In  p's  of  battle 
Perilous    Snatch'd  thro'  the  p  passes  of  his  life : 

A  p  meeting  under  the  taU  pines 

Trembled  in  p  places  o'er  a  deep : 

make  her  long  for  court  And  all  its  p  glories : 

And  wildernesses,  p  paths,  they  rode : 

Nor  dared  to  waste  a  p  pity  on  him : 

who  in  that  p  hour  Put  hand  to  hand 

And  Merlin  call'd  it  '  The  Siege  p,'  F  for  good  and  ill ;    Holy  Grail   172 

The  path  was  p,  loosely  strown  with  crags :  Lover's  Tale  i  384 

Above  the  p  seas  of  Change  and  Chance ;  „  806 

But  in  p  phght  were  we,  The  Revenge  75 

Clove  into  p  chasms  our  walls  Def.  of  Lucknow  55 

we  took  to  playing  at  battle,  but  that  was  a  p  play,    V.  of  Maeldune  95 
Period    Devolved  his  rounded  p's. 

I  had  hoped  that  ere  this  p  closed 
Perish    To  p,  wept  for,  honour'd,  known, 

Lest  she  should  fail  and  p  utterly, 

TiU  they  p  and  they  suffer — 

I  ^  by  this  people  which  I  made,— 

F  in  thy  seli-contempt ! 

I  had  been  content  to  p, 

better  men  should  p  one  by  one, 

then  it  fails  at  last  And  p'es  as  I  must ; 

promise  (otherwise  You  p)  as  you  came. 

Fools  prate,  and  p  traitors. 

1  p  by  this  people  which  I  made, — 

could  I  p  While  thou,  a  meteor  of  the  sepulchre. 

Thy  Thebes  shall  f  aU  and  p, 
Perish'd     I  remember  one  that  p  : 

'  They  p  in  their  daring  deeds.' 

Not  yet  had  p,  when  his  lonely  doom 

F  many  a  maid  and  matron. 

Thy  leaf  has  p  in  the  green, 

Now  the  Rome  of  slaves  hath  p. 
Perishing    Grief  for  our  p  children. 
Perky    (See  also  Pearky)     There  amid  p  larches  and  pine, 
Permanence    Be  flx'd  and  froz'n  to  p : 
Permission     He  craved  a  fair  p  to  depart, 

Nor  stay'd  to  crave  p  of  the  King, 
Permit    F  me,  friend,  I  prythee. 
Perpetual     And  make  p  moan. 

May  p  youth  Keep  dry  their  light  from  tears ; 

Blanch'd  in  our  annals,  and  p  feast. 

To  her,  p  maidenhood. 

As  if  p  sunset  linger'd  there. 

On  their  p  pine,  nor  round  the  beech  ; 
Perplex    many  things  p.  With  motions, 

no  ruder  air  p  Thy  sliding  keel, 
Perplex'd-Perplext    (See  also  Self-perplext) 
perplex'd  for  utterance. 

And  perplex'd  her,  night  and  mom, 
Perplext  her,  made  her  half  forget  herself, 
Ferplext  in  faith,  but  pure  in  deeds, 

But  he  vext  her  and  perplext  her 
Perplext  his  outward  purpose,  till  an  hour, 
Lancelot  look'd  and  was  perplext  in  mind, 
Perplexing    P  me  with  lies ; 
Perplexity     In  doubt  and  great  p, 
Perplext    See  Perplex'd 
Persecute    Should  banded  union  p  Opinion, 
than  to  p  the  Lord,  And  play  the  Saul 
Persecutor     '  bless  '  Whom  ?  even  '  your  p's  ' ! 
Persephone    or  the  enthroned  P  in  Hades, 

P !  Queen  of  the  dead  no  more — 
Persia    arm  debased  The  throne  of  P, 


perfect  Joy, 


Margaret  8 

Gardener' s  D.  113 

Sir  Galahad  11 

In  Mem.  xcv  56 

Maud  I  xviii  24 

Enoch  Arden  50 

Princess  ii  267 

Holy  Grail  761 

Lover's  Tale  i  394 

Bait,  of  Brunanburh  85 

Aylmer's  Field  209 

414 

Sea  Dreams  11 

Marr.  of  Geraint  804 

Geraint  and  E.  32 

525 

766 


A  Character  18 

St.  S.  Stylites  17 

Two  Voices  149 

Falace  of  Art  221 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  123 

M.  d' Arthur  22 

Locksley  Hall  96 

103 

179 

Lucretius  265 

Frincess  ii  296 

Balin  and  Balan  530 

Pass,  of  Arthur  190 

Lover's  Tale  i  98 

Tiresias  116 

Locksley  Hall  71 

Day-Dm.,  Arrival  14 

Enoch  Arden  626 

Boddicea  85 

In  Mem.  Ixxv  13 

To  Virgil  33 

Def.  of  Lucknow  89 

Maud  I  x2Q 

Two  Voices  237 

Marr.  of  Geraint  40 

Balin  and  Balan  288 

Lover's  Tale  i  30 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  17 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  19 

Frincess  vi  63 

In  Mem,,  vi  43 

The  Ring  83 

Prog,  of  Spring  32 

Two  Voices  299 

In  Mem.  ix  9 


Gardener's  D.  255 

L.  of  Burleigh  78 

Aylmer's  Field  303 

In  Mem.  xcvi  9 

Maud  I  XX  Q 

Gareth  and  L.  175 

Lancelot  and  E.  838 

St.  S.  Stylites  102 

Palace  of  Art  219, 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  17 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  102 

Akbar's  Dream  77 

Princess  iv  439 

Demeter  and  P.  1 7 

Alexander  2 


Lover's  Tale  iv  231 

Arabian  Nights  134 

Princess  ii  130 

Lover's  Tale  iv  347 

Felleas  and  E.  218 

Guinevere  64 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  86 

Gareth  and  Z.  165 

Mart,  of  Geraint  216 

454 

544 

Maud  I  X  33 

Enoch  Arden  474 

Palace  of  Art  223 

De  Prof.,  Human  C.  4 

Faith  4 

Maud  I  X  b& 

Aylmer's  Field  418 

Princess  ii  68 

(Sea  Breams  15 

A/at«Z  /  i  44 

Talking  Oak  229 


Persia  534 

Persia  (continued)    a  custom  in  the  Orient,  friends, — I 
reatl  of  it  in  P — 

Persian  (adj.)    Gazed  on  tlie  P  girl  alone, 
Kan  down  the  P,  Grecian,  Koman  lines 

Persian  (s)    in  his  behalf  Shall  I  exceed  the  P, 

Persistence     p  tnm'd  her  scorn  to  wrath. 

Persistent     Heart-hiding  smile,  and  gray  f  eye : 

Person    law  for  us ;  Wo  paid  in  p. 

'  The  thrall  in  p  may  be  free  in  souJ, 
Done  in  your  maiden's  p  to  yourself : 
promises  the  men  who  served  About  my  p, 
Yniol's  rusted  aims  Were  on  his  princely  p, 

Personal     And  therefore  splenetic,  p,  base, 
Began  to  chafe  as  at  a  p  wrong. 

PersonaJity    The  abysmal  deeps  of  P, 
Inuneasurable  Reality !  Infinite  P ! 

Pert    See  Pearky 

Pest     rending  earthquake,  or  the  famine,  or  the  p  ! 

Persuade     I  might  p  myself  then 

Persuasion    P,  no,  nor  death  could  alter  her : 

Perused    conscious  of  ourselves,  P  the  matting  ; 

Peruvian    To  buy  strange  shares  in  some  P  mine. 

Pestle     To  p  a  poison'd  poison 

Pet  (fit  of  peevi^ess)       But  in  a  p  she  started  up. 

Petal     (See  also  Rose-petal)     p'«  from  blown  roses  on 

the  gi-ass,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  2 

two  dewdi'ops  on  the  p  shake  To  the  same  sweet  air,        Princess  vii  68 
'  Now  sleeps  the  crimson  p,  „        176 

Tip-tilted  like  the  p  of  a  flower ;  Gareth  and  L.  591 

Peter    (See  also  Pether)     laugh'd,  and  swore  by  P  and  by  Paul :   Godiva  24 
'  P  had  the  brush,  My  P,  first : '  Aylmer's  Field  254 

I  leap  from  Satan's  foot  to  P's  knee —  Gareth  and  L.  538 

sheet  Let  down  to  P  at  his  prayers  ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  12 

Rome  of  Caesar,  Rome  of  P,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  88 

Peter's-pence     '  Ere  yet,  in  scorn  of  P-p,  Talking  Oak  45 

Pether  (Peter)     Till  Holy  St.  P  gets  up  wid  his  kays  Tomorrow  93 

Petition     make  a  wild  p  night  and  day,  Princess  v  97 

At  thy  new  son,  for  my  p  to  her.  Marr.  of  Geraint  780 

for  my  strange  p  I  will  make  Amends  „  817 

Petitionary     (Claspt  hands  and  that  p  grace  The  Brook  112 

Petition'd     P  too  for  him.  Princess  vi  320 

Queen  p  for  his  leave  To  see  the  hunt,  Marr.  of  Geraint  154 

Petted     And  smoothed  a  p  peacock  down  with  that :  Princess  ii  456 

Pettish     And  p  cries  awoke,  and  the  wan  day  Last  Tournament  214 

Petty     O,  I  see  thee  old  and  formal,  fitted  to  thy  p  part,      Locksley  Hall  93 
Worried  his  passive  ear  with  p  wrongs  Enoch  Arden  352 

The  p  marestail  forest,  fairy  pines,  Aylmer's  Field  92 

A  p  railway  ran  :  a  fire-balloon  Princess,  Pro.  74 

And  '  p  Ogress,'  and  '  ungrateful  Puss,'  „  157 

We  cross'd  the  street  and  gain'd  a  p  mound  „  iv  557 

Ah  God !  the  p  fools  of  rhyme  Lit  Squabbles  1 

And  weave  their  p  cells  and  die.  In  Mem.  I  12 

Let  cares  that  p  shadows  cast,  „        cv  13 

The  p  cobwebs  we  have  spun :  „    cxxiv  8 

For  many  a  p  king  ere  Arthur  came  Com.  of  Arthur  5 

Drew  all  their  p  princedoms  under  him,  „  18 

Colleaguing  with  a  score  of  p  kings,  „  67 

Drew  in  the  p  princedoms  under  hirn,  „  517 

That  dwarfs  the  p  love  of  one  to  one.  Merlin  and  V.  492 

And  brake  the  p  kings,  and  fought  with  Rome,  Pass,  of  Arthur  68 

Petulance     Seer  Would  watch  her  at  her  p.  Merlin  and  V.  175 

Petulancy    for  her  fault  she  wept  Of  p ;  „  953 

Petulant    She  brook'd  it  not ;  but  wrathful,  p,  Lucretius  14 

nipt  her  slender  nose  With  p  thumb  Gareth  and  L.  750 

Whereat  the  maiden,  p, '  Lancelot,  „  1246 

Petulantly    p  she  said,  '  Ay  well—  „  1273 

Pew     grasping  the  p'*  And  oaken  finials  Aylmer's  Field  822 

Pewit     (See  also  Lapwing)     Returning  like  the  p,  Will  Water.  230 

Phalanx     Into  that  p  of  the  summer  spears  Aylmer's  Field  111 

Phantasm    white-eyed  p's  weeping  tears  of  blood,  Palace  of  Art  23Q 

updrawTi  A  fashion  and  a  p  of  the  form  Lover's  Tale  i  646 

■niey  paat  on.  The  lordly  P's !  „  ii  99 

'^^tantasmal    Cloud-weaver  of  p  hopes  and  fears.  To  Victor  Hugo  2 

kantom  (adj.)     Thou  shalt  hear  the  '  Never,  never,' 

whisper'd  by  the  p  years,  Locksley  Hall  83 


Philip 


Phantom  (adj.)  (continued)    And  p  hopes  assemble ;  Will  Water.  30 

The  p  husks  of  something  foully  done,  Lucretius  160 

P  sound  of  blows  descending,  moan  of  an  enemy  massacred, 

P  wail  of  women  and  children,  multitudinous  agonies.  Boddicea  25 
Bloodily  flow'd  the  Tamesa  rolling  p  bodies  of  horses  and 

men  ;  Then  a  p  colony  smoulder'd  on  the  refluent  estuary ;     „        27 


a  p  king.  Now  looming,  and  now  lost 
while  the  p  king  Sent  out  at  times  a  voice  ; 
There  came  a  clapping  as  of  p  hands, 
far  away  The  p  circle  of  a  moaning  sea. 
there  was  a  p  cry  that  I  heard  as  I  tost  about, 
yet  No  phantoms,  watching  from  a  p  shore 
The  p  walls  of  this  illusion  fade, 
star  that  gUdest  yet  this  p  shore  ; 

Far  oS  a  p  cuckoo  cries  From  out  a  p  hill;    Pref  Poem,  Broth.  Son.  19 
Phantom  (s)     a  p  two  hours  old  Of  a  maiden  past  away,  Adeline  18 


Com.  of  Arthur  430 
436 

Marr.  of  Geraint  566 

Pass,  of  Arthur  87 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  63 

Ancient  Sage  179 

181 

To  Virgil  26 


The  p  of  a  wish  that  once  could  move. 

The  p  of  a  silent  song, 

P's  of  other  fonns  of  rule, 

A  p  made  of  many  p's  moved  Before  him 

Beastlier  than  any  p  of  his  kind 

and  make  One  act  a  p  of  succession  : 

'  And  all  the  p.  Nature,  stands — 

Or  like  to  noiseless  p's  flit : 

But  mine  own  p  chanting  hymns  ? 

That  abiding  p  cold. 

Till  I  saw  the  dreary  p  arise  and  fly 

But  watch'd  him  have  I  like  a  p  pass 

'  Hark  the  P  of  the  house  That  ever  shrieks 

The  p  of  a  cup  that  comes  and  goes  ?  ' 

'  Nay,  monk  !  what  p  ?  '  answer'd  Percivale. 

To  whom  I  told  my  p's,  and  he  said : 

Glad  that  no  p  vext  me  more. 

Came  ye  on  none  but  p's  in  your  quest. 

And  women  were  as  p's. 

Who  seem'd  the  p  of  a  Giant  in  it, 

P ! — had  the  ghasthest  That  ever  lusted  for  a  body, 

I,  groaning,  from  me  flung  Her  empty  p : 

The  p  of  the  whirling  landaulet 

shatter'd  p  of  that  infinite  One, 

And  all  the  p's  of  the  dream, 

and  yet  No  p's,  watching  from  a  phanton  shore 


and  as  the  p  disappears, 

and  that  rich  p  of  the  tower  ? 
Phantom-fair     How  faintly-flush'd,  how  p-f. 
Phantom-warning    Should  prove  the  p-w  true. 
Pharaoh    May  P's  darkness,  folds  as  dense 
Pharisee     These  P's,  this  Caiaphas- Arundel 
Pharos     roar  that  breaks  the  P  from  his  base 
Phase     act  Of  immolation,  any  p  of  death, 

out  of  painful  p's  wrought  There  flutters 

And,  moved  thro'  life  of  lower  p, 

every  p  of  ever-heightening  life, 
Pheasant-lord    old  p-l's,  These  partridge-breeders 
Phenomenon     Arbaces,  and  P,  and  the  rest, 
Philanthropies     And  nursed  by  mealy-mouth'd  p, 
Phihp     (See  also  Philip  Ray)     Enoch  was  host  one  day 
the  next, 

then  would  P,  his  blue  eyes  All  flooded 

But  P  loved  in  silence ;  and  the  girl  Seem'd  kinder  unto  P 

P  stay'd  (His  father  lying  sick  and  needing  him) 

P  look'd,  And  in  their  eyes  and  faces  read  his  doom ; 

P's  true  heart,  which  hunger'd  for  her  peace 

P  standing  up  said  f  alteringly  '  Annie, 

P  ask'd  '  Then  you  will  let  me,  Annie  ?  ' 

P  put  the  boy  and  girl  to  school, 

P  did  not  fathom  Annie's  mind : 

P  was  her  children's  all-in-all ; 

call'd  him  Father  P.     P  gain'd  As  Enoch  lost ; 

they  begg'd  For  Father  P  (as  they  call'd  him) 

'  Come  with  us  Father  P '  he  denied ; 

So  P  rested  with  her  well-content ; 

P  sitting  at  her  side  forgot  Her  presence, 

P  coming  somewhat  closer  spoke. 

God  reward  you  for  it,  P, 


The  form,  the  form  1(.» 

Miller's  n.  71 

Love  thou  thy  land  59 

Enoch  Arden  602 

Lucretius  196 

Princess  iii  329 

In  Mem.  iii  9 

„       XX  16 

„    cviii  10 

Maud  II  iv  55 

„    ///  vi  36 

Gareth  and  L.  1335 

Lancelot  and  E.  1022 

Holy  Grail  44 

45 

„       444 

„      538 

„       562 

„       566 

Guinevere  602 

Lover's  Tale  i  647 

ii  206 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  114 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  47 

tiresias  195 

Ancient  Sage  179 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  253 

The  Ring  253 

The  Daisy  65 

In  Mem.  xcii  12 

Aylmer's  Field  771 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  179 

Princess  vi  339 

„      iii  285 

In  Mem.  Ixv  6 

„  Con.  125 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  7 

Aylmer's  Field  381 

The  Brook  162 

94 

P 

Enoch  Arden  25 
31 


41 
64 

72 
272 
284 
322 
331 
344 
348 
354 
365 
368 
376 
384 
398 
425 


PhUip 


535 


Pig 


Philip  {continued)   '  dear  P,  wait  a  while  :  If  Enoch  comes- 

P  sadly  said  '  Annie,  as  I  have  waited  all  my  life 

till  P  glancing  up  Beheld  the  dead  flame 

P  with  his  eyes  Full  of  that  lifelong  hunger, 

Some  thought  that  P  did  but  trifle  with  her : 

And  others  laugh'd  at  her  and  P  too, 

P's  rosy  face  contracting  grew  Careworn  and  wan ; 

P  thought  he  knew : 

Then  her  good  P  was  her  all-in-all, 

How  P  put  her  Uttle  ones  to  school, 

and  marriage,  and  the  birth  Of  P's  child : 

Far-blazing  from  the  rear  of  P's  house, 

P's  dwelhng  fronted  on  the  street, 

P,  the  slighted  suitor  of  old  times, 

And  say  to  P  that  I  blest  him  too ; 

Till  last  by  P's  farm  I  flow 

P's  farm  where  brook  and  river  meet. 

P  chatter'd  more  than  brook  or  bird  ;  Old  P ; 

And  push'd  at  P's  garden-gate. 

in  I  went,  and  call'd  old  P  out  To  show  the  farm : 

And  with  me  P,  talking  still ; 

when  they  follow'd  us  from  P's  door. 

Poor  P,  of  all  his  lavish  wast«  of  words 
Philip  Ray    (See  also  Philip)     P  R  the  miller's  only  son, 

I  married  her  who  married  P  R. 
Philosopher     Be  mine  a  p's  life 
Philosophy     Aflirming  each  his  own  p — 

fair  philosophies  That  lift  the  fancy ; 

And  many  an  old  p  On  Argive  heights 

For  fear  divine  P  Should  push  beyond  her  mark, 

I  have  had  my  day  and  my  philosophies — 

Science,  p,  song — 

knew  no  books  and  no  philosophies, 

What  the  philosophies,  all  the  sciences, 

each  p  And  mooci  of  faith  may  hold 

When  fine  Philosophies  would  fail. 
Philtre    brew'd  the  p  which  had  power, 
Phlegethon     By  the  red  race  of  fiery  P ; 
Phcenix     A  fiery  p  rising  from  the  smoke, 
Phosphor    till  P,  bright  As  our  pure  love. 

Bright  P,  fresher  for  the  night. 
Phosphorescence    star  of  p  in  the  calm. 

Broke  with  a  p  charming  even  My  lady ; 
Phosphorus    '  P,'  then  '  Mehidies  ' — '  Hesperus  ' — 
Phra-bat    P-b  the  step ;  your  Pontic  coast ; 
Phra-Chai    P-C,  the  Shadow  of  the  Best, 
Phrase     (See  also  Boy-phrase)     In  p's  here  and  there  at 


Enoch  Arden  430 

434 

440 

463 

475 

477 

486 

520 

525 

706 

709 

727 

731 

745 

886 

The  Brook  31 

38 

51 

83 

120 

164 

167 

191 

Enoch  Arden  13 

860 

Maud  I  iv  49 

Lucretius  216 

Princess  Hi  340 

In  Mem.  xxiii  21 

„  liii  14 

Last  Tournament  319 

The  Wreck  51 

Ancient  Sage  218 

Vastness  31 

Akbar's  Dream  55 

140 

Lucretius  16 

Demeter  and  P.  28 

The  Ring  339 

In  Mem.  ix  10 

„      cxxi  9 

Audley  Court  87 

Aylmer's  Field  116 

Gareth  and  L.  1204 

To  Ulysses  42 

41 


random, 

liousehold  talk,  and  p's  of  the  hearth, 
every  p  well-oil'd.  As  man's  could  be ; 
Fair  speech  was  his  and  delicate  of  p. 
Fair  speech  was  his,  and  delicate  of  p. 
courtly  p  that  masks  bis  malice  now — 
that  large  p  of  yoxirs  '  A  Star  among  the  stars,' 
flashing  out  from  many  a  golden  p ; 
Have  added  fulness  to  the  p 


Aylmer's  Field  434 

Princess  ii  315 

„     Hi  133 

leaver's  Tale  i  719 

iv  273 

The  Flight  30 

Epilogue  41 

To  Virgil  8 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  11 


Physician     a  vile  p,  blabbing  The  case  of  his  patient —  Maud  II  v  36 

Piacenza    At  Lodi,  rain,  P,  rain.  The  Daisy  52 

Piano     She  left  the  new  p  shut:  Talking  Oak  119 

Pibroch     Dance  to  the  p ! — saved  !  Def.  of  Lucknow  103 

Pick  (s)     Click  with  the  p,  coming  nearer  and  nearer       Def.  of  Lucknow  28 

Pick  (verb)     p  the  faded  creature  from  the  pool,  Marr.  of  Geraint  671 

p  the  vicious  quitch  Of  blood  and  custom  Geraint  and  E.  903 

To  dig,  p,  open,  find  and  read  the  charm :  Merlin  and  V.  660 

P's  from  the  colewort  a  green  caterpillar,  Guinevere  32 

Pickaxe     A  p  in  her  hand :  Sea  Dreams  100 

wait  till  the  point  of  the  p  be  thro' !  Def.  of  Lucknow  27 

Pick'd     '  p  the  eleventh  from  this  hearth  The  Epic  41 

p  offenders  from  the  mass  For  judgment.  Princess  i  29 

Hath  p  a  ragged-robin  from  the  hedge,  Marr.  of  Geraint  724 

p  the  lance  That  pleased  him  best,  Geraint  and  E.  179 

Pickpocket    P's,  each  hand  lusting  for  all  Maud  /  i  22 

Picnic    Let  us  p  there  At  Audley  Court.'  Audley  Court  2 

Pictur  (s)     The  fellers  as  maakes  them  p's,  Owd  Rod  23 

Fictur  (verb)     to  p  the  door-poorch  theere,  Owd  Rod  24 


Picture     (See  also  Pictur)     with  wide  blue  eyes  As  in  a  p.    M.  d' Arthur  170 

eyes  have  been  intent  On  that  veil'd  p —  Gardener's  D.  270 

More  like  a  p  seemeth  all  Than  those  old  portraits  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  22 

still  I  wore  her  p  by  my  heart,  Princess  i  38 

The  mimic  js's  breathing  grace.  In  Mem.  Ixxviii  11 

I  make  a  p  in  the  brain ;  „            Ixxx  9 

still  his  p  form'd  And  grew  between  her  Lancelot  and  E.  992 

with  wide  blue  eyes  As  in  a  p.  Pass,  of  Arthur  338 

and  fell  Slanting  upon  that  p,  Lover's  Tale  ii  175 

About  a  p  of  his  lady,  taken  Some  years  before,  „          iv  216 

And  crossing  her  own  p  as  she  came,  „               286 

for  Emmie,  you  see.  It's  all  in  the  p  there :  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  50 

In  my  life  there  was  a  p,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  15 

I  used  To  prattle  to  her  p —  The  Ring  116 

I  see  the  p  yet,  Mother  and  child.  Romney's  R.  80 

Pictured     From  yearlong  poring  on  thy  p  eyes.  Princess  vii  340 

And  grew  between  her  and  the  p  wall.  Lancelot  and  E.  993 

Picturesque     The  p  of  man  and  man.'  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  42 

To  make  old  bareness  p  And  tuft  with  grass  „         cxxviii  19 

Picus    snared  P  and  Faunus,  rustic  Gods  ?  Lucretius  182 

Pie     too  noble '  he  said  '  to  check  at  p's.  Merlin  and  V.  126 

Pieace  (piece)     An'  their  mashin'  their  toys  to  p's  Spinster's  S's.  88 

Piebald     Not  like  the  p  miscellany,  man.  Princess  v  198 

Piece     (See  also  Pieace)    Look  what  a  lovely  p  of 

workmanship ! '  Aylmer's  Field  237 

a  rough  p  Of  earljf  rigid  colour,  „           280 

All  over  earthy,  hke  a  p  of  earth,  Sea  Dreams  99 

earthquake  in  one  day  Cracks  all  to  p's, —  Lucretius  252 

charr'd  and  wrinkled  p  of  womanhood,  Princess  v  61 

Cut  the  Roman  boy  to  p's  Boddicea  66 

a  p  of  inmost  Horticultural  art,  Hendecasyllabics  19 

I  see  in  part  That  all,  as  in  some  p  of  art,  In  Mem.  cxxviii  23 

to  rend  the  cloth,  to  rend  In  p's,  Gareth  and  L.  401 

hew'd  great  p's  of  his  armour  off  him,  „          1142 

And  high  above  a  p  of  turret  stair,  Marr.  of  Geraint  320 

Saw  once  a  great  p  of  a  promontory,  Geraint  and  E.  162 

heap'd  The  p's  of  his  ai-mour  in  one  place,  „            374 

his  cheek  Bulge  with  the  unswallow'd  p,  „             631 

shadow  of  some  p  of  pointed  lace,  Lancelot  and  E.  1174 

p  by  p  I  learnt  tne  drearier  story  Lover's  Tale  iv  146 

a  single  p  Weigh'd  nigh  four  thousand  Castillanos  Columbus  135 

Pieced     I  slept  again,  and  p  The  broken  vision :  Sea  Dreams  109 

Piecemeal     Till  all  my  limbs  drop  p  St.  S.  Stylites  44 
surely  would  have  torn  the  child  P  among  them,      Com.  of  Arthur  218 

if  thou  doubt,  the  beasts  Will  tear  thee  p.'  Holy  Grail  825 

Pied    Then  all  the  dry  p  things  that  be  The  Mermaid  48 

Pier     A  thousand  p's  ran  into  the  great  Sea.  Holy  Grail  503 

Dash  back  that  ocean  with  a  p,  Mechanophilus  5 

Pierce     Yet  could  not  all  creation  p  A  Character  5 

watching  stiU  To  p  me  thro'  with  pointed  light ;  Rosalind  27 

p  The  blackest  files  of  clanging  fight,  Kate  25 

Clear  Love  would  p  and  cleave,  //  /  were  loved  6 

Pointed  itself  to  p,  but  sank  down  shamed  Lucretius  63 

p's  the  liver  and  blackens  the  blood ;  The  Islet  35 

P's  the  keen  seraphic  flame  From  orb  to  orb.  In  Mem.  xxx  27 

And  one  would  p  an  outer  ring,  „     Ixxxvii  27 

With  pointed  lance  as  if  to  p,  a  shape,  Balin  and  Balan  325 

Ascending,  p  the  glad  and  songful  air,  Demeter  arid  P.  45 

Pierced     p  thy  heart,  my  love,  my  bride,  Oriana  42 

heart,  p  thro'  with  fierce  delight,  Fatima  34 

Below  were  men  and  horses  p  with  worms.  Vision  of  Sin  209 

wander  from  his  wits  P  thro  with  eyes,  Princess  ii  441 

maybe  p  to  death  before  mine  eyes,  Marr.  of  Geraint  104 
same  spear  Wherewith  the  Roman  p  the  side  of 

Christ.  Balin  and  Balan  114 

and  the  head  P  thro'  his  side,  Lancelot  and  E.  490 

thro'  those  black  walls  of  yew  Their  talk  had  p,  „              970 

thro'  the  wind  P  ever  a  child's  cry :  Last  Tournament  17 

dying  now  P  by  a  poison'd  dart.  Death  of  (Enone  34 

Piercing    the  high  dawn  p  the  royal  rose  Merlin  and  V.  739 

from  the  ground  She  raised  her  p  orbs,  D.  of  F.  Women  171 

Pierian    fire  from  off  a  pure  P  altar,  Parnassus  17 

Piaro     and  he  stabb'd  my  P  with  this.  Bandit's  Death  10 

For  he  reek'd  with  the  blood  of  P;  „            13 

Pig    great  with  p,  wallowing  in  sun  and  mud.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  88 


Pig  536 


Pinnacle 


Pig  {continued)    An'  p's  didn't  sell  at  fall, 
Pigeon    quail  and  p,  lark  and  leveret  lay, 

p's,  who  in  session  on  their  roofs  Approved  him, 

Like  any  p  will  I  cram  his  crop, 
Pigg'd    on  the  leads  we  kept  her  till  she  p. 
Pigmy    That  shriek  and  sweat  in  p  wars 

and  p  spites  of  the  village  spire ; 
Pike  (fish)     but  Charlie  'e  cotch'd  the  p, 
Pike  (hill)     high  field  on  the  bushless  P, 
Pike  (weapon)    when  his  baiUff  brought  A  Chartist  p. 
;^     as  prompt  to  spring  against  the  p's, 
M    came  with  their  p's  and  musqueteers, 
^    the  p's  were  all  broken  or  bent. 
Pile  (s)    skins  of  wine,  and  p's  of  grapes. 

iook'd  the  Lombard  p's ; 

When  God  hath  made  the  p  complete ; 

Timour-Mammon  grins  on  a  p  of  children's  bones, 

side  of  that  long  haU  A  stately  p, — 

find  What  rotten  p's  uphold  their  mason-work, 

built  their  shepherd-prmce  a  funeral  p ; 

she  leapt  upon  the  funeral  p, 
PUe  (verb)    Should  p  her  barricades  with  dead. 
Piled    Life  p  on  life  Were  all  too  httle, 

Among  p  arms  and  rough  accoutrements, 

plunged  him  into  a  cell  Of  great  p  stones ; 
Pilgnmage     '  P's  ? '     '  Drink,  bagpipes, 
Piluig     P  sheaves  in  uplands  airy. 
Pillar    (See  also  Porch-pillars)    A  p  of  white  light  upon 
the  wall 

Patient  on  this  tall  p  I  have  borne 

Three  years  I  lived  upon  a  p, 

I,  Simeon  of  the  p,  by  surname  Stylites, 

slid  From  p  unto  p,  until  she  reach'd  The  gateway ; 

glimmering  shoulder  under  gloom  Of  cavern  p's ; 

The  last  remaining  p  of  their  house, 

ample  awnings  gay  Betwixt  the  p's, 

Her  back  against  a  p,  her  foot  on  one 

As  comes  a  p  of  electric  cloud, 

azure  p's  of  the  hearth  Arise  to  thee : 

The  p  of  a  people's  hope, 

shake  The  p's  of  domestic  peace. 

A  p  stedfast  in  the  storm. 

Who  shall  fix  Her  p's  ? 

And  sat  by  a  p  alone ; 

two  p's  which  from  earth  uphold  Our  childhood, 

Tether'd  to  these  dead  p's  of  the  Church — 

a  smoke  who  was  once  a  p  of  fire, 

shook  Those  p's  of  a  moulder'd  faith, 
Pillar'd    Imbower'd  vaults  of  p  palm, 

star  shot  thro'  the  sky  Above  the  p  town. 

pass'd  thro'  all  The  p  dusk  of  sounding  sycamores. 

And  sleep  beneath  his  p  light ! 

before  us  into  rooms  which  gave  Upon  a  p  porch, 

thy  fresh  and  virgin  soul  Inform'd  the  p  Parthenon, 
Pillar-punishment     For  not  alone  this  p-p, 

Pillory    P  Wisdom  in  your  markets,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  134 

Pillow    (See  also  Marriage-pillow)     Dripping  with  Sabsean 

spice  On  thy  p,  Adeline  54: 

Fancy  came  ana  at  her  p  sat,  Caress' d  or  chidden  5 

Turn  thee,  turn  thee  on  thy  p :  Locksley  Hall  86 

The  gold-fringed  p  lightly  prest:  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B._22 


Church-warden,  etc.  5 

Audley  Court  24 

The  Brook  127 

Gareth  arid  L.  459 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  92 

Lit.  Squabbles  2 

Fastness  25 

Village  Wife  43 

Ode  to  Memory  96 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  71 

Princess  Hi  286 

The  Revenge  53 

.  .   "        .    ^ 
Vision  of  Sin  13 

The  Daisy  54 

In  Mem.  liv  8 

Maud  I  i  46 

Gareth  and  L.  405 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  67 

Death  of  CEnone  63 

105 

In  Mem.  cxxvii  8 

Ulysses  24 

Princess  v  55 

Holy  Grail  676 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  148 

L.  ofShalottiM 


Ode  to  Memory  53 

St.  S.  Stylites  15 

86 

161 

Godiva  50 

To  E.  L.  18 

Aylmer's  Field  295 

Princess  ii  26 

„     Hi  180 

i;524 

„  ,  vii  216 

In  Mem.  Ixiv  15 

xc  20 

,,        cxiii  12 

,,  cxiv  4 

Maud  I  via  2 

Lover's  Tale  i  220 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  121 

Despair  29 

Akbar's  Dream  81 

Arabian  Nights  39 

Palace  of  Art  124 

Audley  Court  16 

The  Voyage  20 

Princess  i  230 

Freedom  3 

St.  S.  Stylites  60 


Ii 


or  laid  his  feverous  p  smooth ! 

smooth  my  p,  mix  the  foaming  draught 

Or  if  lip  were  laid  to  lip  on  the  p's  of  the  wave. 
Pillow'd    one  soft  lap  P  us  both : 
Pilot  (adj.)     '  Enid,  the  p  star  of  my  lone  life. 
Pilot  (s)     The  summer  p  of  an  empty  heart 

The  p  of  the  darkness  and  the  dream. 

P's  of  the  purple  twilight. 

May  wreck  itself  without  the  p's  guilt, 

But,  your  example  p,  told  her  all. 

I  hope  to  see  my  P  face  to  face 
Pilot-star    (See  also  Pilot  (adj.))     eyes  grown  dim 
with  gazing  on  the  p-s's. 

'  In  happy  time  behold  our  p-s ! 


Aylmer's  Field  701 

Princess  ii  251 

The  Flight  48 

Lover's  Tale  i  236 

Geraint  and  E.  306 

Gardener's  D.  16 

Audley  Court  72 

Locksley  Hall  122 

Aylmer's  Field  716 

Princess  Hi  137 

Crossing  the  Bar  15 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  87 
Pelleas  and  E.  63 


Pimpernel     As  the  p  dozed  on  the  lea ;  Maud  I  xxii  48 

Pin     Where  children  cast  their  p's  and  nails,  Merlin  and  V.  43i 

Pinch    And  p  their  brethren  in  the  throng.  Lit.  Squabbles 

Or  p  a  murderous  dust  into  her  drink,  Merlin  and  V.  610 

making  with  a  kindly  p  Each  poor  pale  cheek  The  Ring  314 

Pindar     Ghost  of  P  in  you  RoU'd  an  Olympian ;  To  Prof.  J  ebb  3 

Pine  (a  tree)     black-stemm'd  p's  only  the  far  river  shines.     Leonine  Eleg.  2 

Twin  peaks  shadow'd  with  p  slope  to  the  dark  hyaline.  „          10 

A  gleaming  crag  with  belts  of  p's.  Two  Voices  189 

creeps  from  p  to  p.  And  loiters,  CEnone  4 

And  dewy  dark  aloft  the  mountain  p :  „     49 

within  the  cave  Behind  yon  whispering  tuft  of  oldest  p,  „    88 

away  my  tallest  p's.  My  tall  dark  p's,  ,,  208 

Up-clomb  the  shadowy  p  above  the  woven  copse.  Lotos-Eaters  18 

sweet,  stretch'd  out  beneath  the  p.  „  C.  S.  99 

sweating  rosin,  plump'd  the  p  Amphion  47 

Fantastic  plume  or  sable  p ;  The  Voyage  44 

The  petty  marestail  forest,  fairy  p's,  Aylmer's  Field  92 

A  perilous  meeting  under  the  tall  p's  „            414 

and  above  them  roar'd  the  p.  „            431 

Kept  to  the  garden  now,  and  grove  of  p's,  „            550 

Whom  all  the  p's  of  Ida  shook  to  see  Lucretius  86 

No  larger  feast  than  under  plane  or  p  „       213 

standing  like  a  stately  P  Set  in  a  cataract  Princess  v  346 

cease  To  glide  a  sunbeam  by  the  blasted  P,  „      vii  196 

her  eagles  flew  Beyond  the  Pyrenean  p's.  Ode  on  Well.  113 

And  loyal  p's  of  Canada  murmur  thee,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  19 

In  lands  of  palm  and  southern  p ;  The  Daisy  2 

Garrulous  under  a  roof  of  p :  To  F.  D.  Maurice  20 

For  groves  of  p  on  either  hand,  „                  21 

Above  the  valleys  of  palm  and  p.'  The  Islet  23 

•  king  of  the  wrens,  from  out  of  the  p  !  Window,  Ay  8 

There  amid  perky  larches  and  p,  Maud  I  x  20 

slender-shafted  P  Lost  footing,  fell,  Gareth  and  L_.  3 

thro'  tops  of  many  thousand  p's  „           796 

so  down  among  the  p's  He  plunged ;  „          808 

but  three  Fled  thro'  the  p's ;  „           814 

p's  that  fledged  The  hills  that  watch'd  thee.  Lover's  Tale  i  11 

open'd  on  the  p's  vnth  doors  of  glass,  „            41 

till  the  morning  light  Sloped  thro'  the  p's,  „          264 

When  first  we  came  from  out  the  p's  at  noon,  „          310 

great  p  shook  with  lonely  sounds  of  joy  ,■          325 

Back  to  his  mother's  house  among  the  p's.  „        iv  15 

the  p  shot  aloft  from  the  crag  V.  of  Maeldune  16 

Or  watch  the  waving  p  which  here  To  Ulysses  25 

On  their  perpetual  p,  nor  round  the  beech ;  Prog,  of  Spring  32 

day  long  labour'd,  hewing  the  p's.  Death  of  (Enone  62 

topmost  p  Spired  into  bluest  heaven,  „              68 

shriek  of  some  lost  life  among  the  p's,  ,,              90 

under  the  bridge  By  the  great  dead  p —  Bandit's  Death  23 

Pine  (fruit)     A  raiser  of  huge  melons  and  of  p.  Princess,  Con.  87 

Pine  (verb)     You  p  among  your  halls  and  towers:  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  58 

p's  in  sad  experience  worse  than  death,  Princess  vii  315 

To  p  in  that  reverse  of  doom.  In  Mem.  Ixxii  6 

her  too  hast  thou  left  To  p  and  waste  Last  Tournament  598 

Pined     thro'  her  love  her  Ufe  Wasted  and  p,  Pelleas  and  E.  496 

Pinewood     o'er  a  bridge  of  p  crossing.  Princess  Hi  335 

the  lake  whiten'd  and  the  p  roar'd.  Merlin  and  V.  637 

Thy  breath  is  of  the  p ;  Lover's  Tale  i  23 

Piney    lost  his  way  between  the  p  sides  CEnone  93 

Pining    brake  his  very  heart  in  p  for  it,  Gareth  and  L.  57 

And  p  Ufe  be  fancy-fed.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  96 

P  for  the  stronger  heart  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  58 

Pink     P  was  the  shell  within,  Minnie  and  Winnie  5 

The  tender  p  five-beaded  baby-soles,  Aylmer's  Field  186 

ye  said  I  wur  pretty  i'  p's.  Spinster's  S's.  17 

its  wreaths  of  dripping  green — Its  pale  p  shells —  Lover's  Tale  i  40 

Pinnace     And  a  p,  hke  a  flutter'd  bird.  The  Revenge  2 

Piimacle     Three  silent  p's  of  aged  snow,  Lotos-Eaters  16 

iieroes  tall  Dislodging  p  and  parapet  D.  of  F.  Women  26 

.Vnd  statued  p's,  mute  as  they.  The  Daisy  64 

tipt  with  lessening  peak  And  p,  Gareth  and  L.  309 

spires  Prick'd  with  incredible  p's  into  heaven.  Holy  Grail  423 

summit  and  the  p's  Of  a  gray  steeple —  Lover's  Tale  ii  81 

ablaze  With  creepers  crimsoning  to  the  p's.  The  Ring  82 


Pint 

it    (See  also  Point)     Go  fetch  a  p  of  port : 
The  p,  you  brought  me,  was  the  best 
No  p  of  white  or  red  Had  ever  half  the  power 
To  each  his  perfect  p  of  stout, 
I  hold  thee  dear  For  this  good  p  of  port. 
Wouldn't  a.  pa'  sarved  as  well  as  a  quart  ? 
Pini-pot    underneath,  A  p-p,  neatly  graven. 
Pioneer    and  the  dark  p  is  no  more ; 
Pious     with  sound  Of  p  hymns  and  psalms, 
The  Sabbath,  p  variers  from  the  church. 
Whose  p  talk,  when  most  his  heart  was  dry 
The  man,  whose  p  hand  had  built  the  cross,' 
«p      A  thousand  p's  eat  up  your  sparrow-hawk ! 
«pe  (cask)     the  best  That  ever  came  from  p 
Pipe  (musical)    (^ee  o^so  Organ-pipes)    'you  pitch  the 
p  too  low : 
He  set  up  his  forlorn  p's, 
great  organ  ahnost  burst  his  p's, 
earliest  p  of  half-awaken'd  birds  To  dying  ears 
make  them  p's  whereon  to  blow.  ' 

Pipe  (tobacco)    (See  also  Cross-pipes)     An'  the  stink  o' 

^s  pr  the  'ouse, 
Kpe  (verb)     Norland  winds  p  down  the  sea 
tufted  plover  p  along  the  faUow  lea,      ' 
The  bird  that  p's  his  lone  desire 
I  would  p  and  trill.  And  cheep  and  twitter 
riy  to  her,  and  p  and  woo  her, 
children  call,  and  I  Thy  shepherd  p. 
And  p  but  as  the  linnets  sing : 
And  rarely  p's  the  mounted  thrush  ; 
Where  now  the  seamew  p's, 
and  the  Devil  may  p  to  his'own. 
Peace  P  on  her  pastoral  hillock 
W  ho  p  of  nothing  but  of  sparrow-hawks ' 
«pe    See  also  Marish-pipe,  Water-pipes 
Piped    Sometimes  the  linnet  p  his  song  • 

Ou  the  nigh-naked  tree  the  robin  pDisconsoIate 
song  on  every  spray  Of  birds  that  p  their        ' 

Valentines, 
those  white  shps  Handed  her  cup  and  p 
Pipmg    That  with  his  p  he  may  gain 

Like  birds  of  passage  p  up  and  down, 
lityrus  p  underneath  his  beechen  bowers  • 
Pippm    while  the  blackbird  on  the  p  hung       ' 

pockets  as  full  o'  my  p's  as  iver  they'd  'owd 
ftque    feigmng  p  at  what  she  caU'd  ' 

ftracy    King  impaled  him  for  his  p  • 
Pu-ate    A  tawny  p  anchor'd  in  his  port. 

And  since  the  p  would  not  yield  her  up, 
Rrouetted    Young  ashes  p  down 
Ksh    Spat— p— the  cup  was  gold, 
Pit    (See  also  Naphtha-pits)    p's  Which  some  green 
l^hnstmas  crams 
Have  scrambled  past  those  p's  of  fire 
m  the  ghastly  p  long  since  a  body  wi  found, 
fled  from  the  place  and  the  p  and  the  fear  ' 
lately  died.  Gone  to  a  blacker  p, 
He  laid  a  cruel  snare  in  a  p 
comes  to  the  second  corpse  in  the  « "> 
Pitch    you  p  the  pipe  too  low : 

'  P  our  paviUon  here  upon  the  sward  • 
i>!*.if  *v,"®f  '^^t^  f  "P  straight  to  heaven :' 
fttch-blacken  d  stump  P-b  sawing  the  air. 
Pitch  d(ad]  and  part)     Arthur  reach'd  a  field-of-battle 

bright  With  p  pavihons  of  his  foe, 
!>.•*  /.,  ,  ''^^  ^'^^  ^^*1«  Perilous  on  flat  field, 
fttched  (verb)    and  p  His  tents  beside  the  forest. 
Wtcher    sets  her  p  underneath  the  spring 
Piteous    p  was  the  cry :  i-      s. 

TK.u  ""^^xT'  ^^^  "PO"  him  A  p  glance, 
nthy    Who  spoke  few  words  and  «, 
Pitied    trust  me,  Sir,  I  p  her. 

ni^J?^*  ^^®  ^"®®"  herself,  and  p  her: 
Pitiful    shall  we  care  to  be  p  ? 

P  sight,  wrapp'd  in  a  soldier's  cloak, 


537 


Place 


WUl  Water.  4 

75 

82 

115 

212 

NoHh.  Cobbler  99 

WUl  Water.  248 

Def.  of  Lticknow  29 

St.  S.  Stylites  34 

Sea  Dreams  19 

186 

St.  Telemachus  9 

Marr.  of  Geraint  274 

WUl  Water.  76 


Edwin  Morris  52 

Amphion  22 

Princess  ii  474 

»  iv  50 

In  Mem.  xxi  4 


Spinster's  S's.  100 

, ,      _  Oriana  91 

Mau  Queen,  .Y.  Y's.  E.  18 

You  might  have  won  31 

Princess  iv  100 

115 

„     vii  218 

In  Mem.  xxi  24 

<>  xci  2 

I.  cxv  13 

Maud  I  ilQ 

„  III  vi  24: 

Marr.  of  Geraint  279 


Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  10 
Enoch  Arden  676 

Princess  v  239 

Last  Tournament  296 

In  Mem.  xxi  11 

Holy  GraU  146 

To  VirgU  14 

Audley  Court  38 

Church-warden,  etc.  34 

Princess  iv  587 

Merlin  and  V.  569 

558 

568 

Amphion  27 

Last  Tournament  298 

Wan  Sculptor  13 

-S^  ;S.  Stylites  184 

i¥aMrf  /  z  5 

64 

xQ 

„  II V  84 

88 

Edwin  Morris  52 

Princess  Hi  346 

^oZy  G'ratZ  665 

Last  Tournament  67 


Cow.  of  Arthur  97 

<yare<;8  awii  Z.  1362 

Com.  of  Arthur  51 

Enoch  Arden  207 

Princess  vi  142 

Aylmer's  Field  284 

Princess,  Con.  94 

»  w  230 

Lancelot  and  E.  1269 

Boddicea  32 

Princess  v  56 


^^'^'kJIiff^  Lopping  away  of  the  hmb  by  the  p-p 

Pitil^  V%  aZ.o  Pitiful-pitiless)    all  her  p  avarice  ^*-^'  ""'^  «!"$'"'"'  «n 

Innmnerable,  p,  passionless  eyes,        ^  '  Mn^T"^-  -^2 

Beneath  a  p  rush  of  Autumn  mik  ^»5^.r;Sti  ^?2S? 

Scribbled  or  carved  upon  the  p  stone :  stlOlA^' 

Pitt  J"'  r  ?  ""'  ?.''  ."^^  a^ywhere^in  this  'p  world  of  ours !  '  SS  43 

Pitted     Or  from  the  tmy  p  target  blew  4. 7       >    p^,^  „^ 

Or  httle  p  speck  in  gLner'd  f ru7  ^2/;«»«r'.  Arfrf  93 
Pity(s)     (^./a^i'.Self-pfty)    ffisbooks-the  more  the    ^^'•^--^^•3^4 

P,  so  I  said —  y    7,     ^ 

a  schoolboy  ere  he  grows  To  P~  m  11.  ..^^  Pf^l^K  ^^ 

each  other  for  an  hourrTill  p  won  ^"^^- '"  '^'^f  ^^^ 

Annie  could  have  wept  for  p  of  him  •  p„^,j,  j"!,      ,f'5 

Nor  save  for  p  was  it  hard  to  take    '  ^"""'^  ^'^'''  ^^^ 

Not  past  the  hvii^  fount  of  p  in  Heaven.  Jy^mer's  Field  fi 

P,  the  violet  on  the  tyrant's  grave.  ^ytmer  s  n  leld  7o J 

Who  first  wrote  satire,  with  no  v  in  it  t.     n            0^0 

far  aloof  From  envy  hate  and  p!  Indite  "/."X'?? 

Kill  us  with  p,  break  us  with  ourselves-  PrW  Sv  2^.8 

aU  prophetic  p,  fling  Their  pretty  maids  '*  "  S^? 

Yet  p  for  a  horse  o'er-driven,  r„  5',       ,^.V?| 

\yithout  knowledge,  without  p,  M^iTr^^'-o 

'Hast  thou  no  p  upon  my  loneliness ?  G^^taldL  ?S 

hide  with  mantlmg  flowers  As  if  for  p  ?  '  "''''  ioqo 

Nor  dared  to  waste  a  perilous  p  on  him :  Geraint  and  V  %i 

Instead  of  scornful  p  or  pure  scorn,  "'^  ^-  f  1 

Be  thine  the  bahn  of  p,  m.  r"     j  rr  o^ 

the  p  To  find  thine  o^A  first  love  once  more-  mVSfaU  61 

^  of  thine  own  self,  Peace,  Lady,  peace :  PelleasandF  tl 

P  on  him,'  she  answer'd,  '  a  good  knight,  ""^  ^-  1% 

small  p  upon  his  horse  had  he,  "            ^^^ 

I,  whose  vast  p  ahnost  makes  me  die  Guinevere  534 

The  night  in  p  took  away  my  day,  T^vZ^^nfl-  «i  o 

Lives   n  the  cfewy  touch  of  p  had  made  ^^  '  ^''^'  '  f^. 

Terrible  p,  if  one  so  beautiful  Prove,  "        ,•   000 

look'd  at  him,  first,  askance.  With  v—  tL  m     i  a, 

Nay,  but  I  am  not'claiming'your  p^  ^KZ"'"^  H 

But  p-the  Pagan  held  it  a  vice-  ^''^'**'"  ^, 

P  for  all  that  aches  in  the  grasp  of  an  idiot  power,  "        ik 

And  p  for  our  own  selves  (repeat)  "  j^ .    Jf. 

P  for  all  that  suffers  on  land  or  in  air  "      '  f  V 

Some  half  remorseful  kind  of  p  too—  rh^  v\-^„  tn- 

on  stony  hearts  a  fruitless  prayer  For  v.  T)pnihni(vT^    \% 

Pity  (verb)     ratlier  pray  for  those  and  p  them,  ATne^^Tdlf. 

Ah  p  -hint  It  not  m  hmnan  tones,             '  JvZ  Sr^ntt    \^ 

did  they  p  me  suppUcating  ?          '  ^^"'''  ^^^?^?^  ^\ 
there  the  Queen  herself  will  p  me,                             Lancelot  andi'm^t 

Came  out  of  her  p  womanhood,  xr    '\  P  .^\ 

taking  the  place  of  the  p  God  that  should  be !  DesLt  42 

My  Miriam  nodded  with  a  p  smile,  rif  pfj!,  9«T 

Plaace  (place)    afoor  I  coom'd  to  the  p.  jy  Pa^t  o^^qI 

hev  to  be  larn'd  her  awn  p,'  ^  ^^'  v^Z'w-f\li 

Eh !  tha  be  new  to  the  p-  ^^*^^?^',  ^'-^^,106 

ya  tell'd  'im  to  knaw  his  awn  v  Ch.     ,'^?'"*S  »" '  ^^-  ^ 

Plaaia  (plain)     thaw  soom  'ud  'a  tl?owt  ma  p,  An'  I   ^^^'•^'*-«'«'-'^«^.  ^^'^^  29 
wasn't  sa  p  i' pink  ribbons,  <i^i^^t.  ■>    cj     1^ 

But  niver  not  speak  p  out,  Ch^.SfT  I'  ^f'  ^^ 

Plaate  (plate)     when  she  hurl'd  a  p  at  the  cat  ^^^^'^h-warden,  etc.  49 

I  gits  the  p  fuller  o'  Soondays  "  Jn 

Place  (s)    (-S-ee  a(5o  Dwelling-place,  Hiding-place,  Landing-      " 
place,  Livmg-place,  Market-place,  Plaace,  Resting- 
place,  Sumner-place,  Vivian-place)    Her  temple  and 
her  p  of  birth,  e„       n    t     ■ 

I  think  that  pride  hath  now  no  p  Nor  sojourn  ^^"  ^"^f'^'^^'^i  ^3 

A  goodly  p,  a  goodly  time,  (repeat)  ArabianNinhu  -Xi    tl 

Apart  from  p,  withholding  time,  Arabian  lights  31,  53 

Entranced  with  that  p  and  time,  "  ^^ 

Sole  star  of  all  that  p  and  time,  "  ,^^ 

All  the  v  is  holy  ground ;  "p„^,,    „ .  ^^j^ 

swan's  <5eath-hymn  took  the  soul  Of  that  waste  p  Dying  Swln'22 


Place 


538 


Placid 


Place  (s)  {continued}    The  battle  deepen'd  in  its  p, 

in  its  p  My  heart  a  channed  slumber 

tho'  I  knew  not  in  what  time  or  p, 

He  pray'd,  and  from  a  happy  p 

The  p  he  knew  forgetteth  him.' 

In  her  still  p  the  morning  wept : 

'  But,  if  I  lapsed  from  nobler  p, 

Passing  the  p  where  each  must  rest, 

I  will  grow  round  him  in  his  p, 

who  have  attain'd  Rest  in  a  happy  p 

'  What !  is  not  this  my  p  of  strength,' 

Lost  to  her  p  and  name ; 

The  flower  ripens  in  its  p, 

Spoke  slowly  in  her  p. 

'  I  was  cut  off  from  hope  in  that  sad  p. 

The  p  of  him  that  sleeps  in  peace. 

But  lives  and  loves  in  every  p ; 

There  in  her  p  she  did  rejoice, 

Nor  toil  for  title,  p,  or  touch  Of  pension, 

in  the  moon  athwart  the  p  of  tombs, 

rising  bore  him  thro'  the  p  of  tombs. 

old  order  changeth,  yielding  p  to  new. 

In  that  still  p  she,  hoarded  in  herself, 

Then,  in  that  time  and  p,  I  spoke  to  her, 

in  that  time  and  p  she  answer'd  me, 

he's  abroad  :  the  p  is  to  be  sold. 

purple  beech  among  the  gi'eens  Looks  out  of  p : 

So  left  the  p,  left  Edwin, 

'Tis  the  p,  and  all  around  it. 

The  rhymes  are  dazzled  from  their  p 

The  fountain  to  his  p  returns 

Here  all  things  in  their  p  remain. 

And  alleys,  faded  f's, 

Is  there  some  magic  in  the  p  ? 

How  out  of  p  she  makes  The  violet 

Then  they  started  from  their  p's, 

And  he  sat  him  down  in  a  lonely  p, 

Would  Enoch  have  the  p  ? 

Moved  haunting  people,  things  and  p's, 

Flared  on  him,  and  he  came  upon  the  p. 

And  him,  that  other,  reigning  in  his  p, 

served.  Long  since,  a  bygone  Rector  of  the  p, 

i-ustling  once  at  night  about  the  p, 

all  neglected  p's  of  the  field  Broke 

who  beside  your  hearths  Can  take  her  p — 

Trembled  in  perilous  p's  o'er  a  deep  : 

something  it  should  be  to  suit  the  p, 

something  made  to  suit  with  Time  and  p. 

Found  a  still  p,  and  pluck'd  her  likeness  out ; 

They  fed  her  theories,  in  and  out  of  p 

last  not  least,  she  who  had  left  her  p, 

I  find  you  here  but  in  the  second  p, 

A  tree  Was  half-disrootod  from  his  p 

To  push  my  rival  out  of  p  and  power. 

you  stoop'd  to  me  From  all  high  p's, 

Stole  a  maiden  from  her  p, 

work  no  more  alone  !     Our  p  is  much : 

Who  look'd  all  native  to  her  p, 

Jenny,  my  cousin,  had  come  to*  the  p, 

Faib  is  her  cottage  in  its  p, 

I  see  the  p  where  thou  wilt  lie. 

From  out  waste  p's  comes  a  cry, 

And  all  the  p  is  dark, 

and  feels  Her  p  is  empty,  fall  like  these; 

rest  And  in  the  p's  of  his  youth. 

It  was  but  unity  of  p 

And  so  may  P  retain  us  still, 

will  speak  out  In  that  high  p, 

I  know  that  in  thy  p  of  rest 

Again  our  ancient  games  had  p, 

Tliy  8weetne<>s  from  its  proper  p  ? 

That  beats  within  a  lonely  p, 

I  find  no  p  that  does  not  breathe 

We  leave  the  well-beloved  p 

For  change  of  p,  like  growth  of  time, 


Oriana  51 
Ele&nore  127 

Sonnet  To 12 

Two  Voices  224 

264 

275 

358 

410 

Fatima  40 

CEnone  131 

Palace  of  Art  233 

264 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  36 

D.  ofF.  Women  92 

105 

To  J.  S.  68 

On  a  Mourner  5 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  5 

Love  thou  thy  land  25 

M.  d'Arthur  46 

175 

240 

Gardener's  D.  49 

226 

231 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  16 

Edwin  Morris  85 

137 

Locksley  Hall  3 

Day-Dm.,  Pro.  19 

,.  Sleep  P.  11 

53 

Amphion  86 

Will  Water.  79 

146 

Vision  of  Sin  33 

Poet's  Song  5 

Enoch  Arden  125 

604 

681 

763 

Aylmer's  Field  11 

547 

693 

736 

Sea  Breams  11 

Princess,  Pro.  211 

231 

i92 

i  129 

,,  ii  165 

„  Hi  157 

iv  186 

335 

430 

vi  9 

vii  267 

323 

Grandmother  25 

Requiescat  1 

Sailor  Boy  8 

In  Mem.  Hi  7 

.,       via  7 

„       xiii  4 

xviii  8 

„       xlii  3 

5 

xliv  16 

„      ItbH  2 

In  Mem  Ixxviii  10 

„  Ixxxiii  6 

Ixxxv  110 

c  3 

„  cii  1 

evil 


Place  (s)  (continued)     Ring  out  false  pride  in  p  and  blood, 
\Vhat  find  I  in  the  highest  p. 

Let  her  know  her  p ; 

To  hold  me  from  my  proper  p. 

And  of  himself  in  higher  p, 

Thy  p  is  changed ;  thou  art  the  same. 

Who  moves  about  from  p  to  p, 

maidens  of  the  p.  That  pelt  us  in  the  porch 

if  I  fled  from  the  p  and  the  pit  and  the  fear  ? 

The  dark  old  p  will  be  gilt  by  the  touch 

That  old  man  never  comes  to  his  p  : 

In  the  silent  woody  p's  By  the  home 

Not  making  his  high  p  the  lawless  perch 

old  order  changeth,  yielding  p  to  new  ; 

To  find,  at  some  p  I  shall  come  at,  arms 

roam  the  goodly  p's  that  she  knew ; 

swamps  and  pools,  waste  p's  of  the  hern, 

And  down  a  rocky  pathway  from  the  p 

Enter'd,  the  wild  lord  of  the  p,  Limoure. 

heap'd  The  pieces  of  his  armour  in  one  p, 

Clear'd  the  dark  p's  and  let  in  the  law, 

the  p  which  now  Is  this  world's  hugest, 

The  sound  not  wonted  in  a  p  so  still 

all  the  p  whereon  she  stood  was  green ; 

my  knights,  Your  p's  being  vacant  at  my  side. 

And  mirthful  sayings,  children  of  the  p. 

Sir  Lancelot,  sitting  in  my  p  Enchair'd 

Than  thou  reseated  in  thy  p  of  light, 

glory  cling  To  all  high  p's  like  a  golden  cloud 

in  the  moon  athwart  the  p  of  tombs, 

rising  bore  him  thro'  the  p  of  t<Jmbs. 

old  order  changeth,  yielding  p  to  new, 

nor  in  the  present  time.  Nor  in  the  present  p. 

Thl^lst  forward  on  to-day  and  out  of  p ; 

The  beautiful  in  Past  of  act  or  p, 

a  p  of  burial  Far  lovelier  than  its  cradle ; 

But  taken  with  the  sweetness  of  the  p, 

To  centre  in  this  p  and  time. 

It  was  so  happy  an  hour,  so  sweet  a  p, 

I  was  the  High  Priest  in  her  holiest  p, 

every  bone  seem'd  out  of  its  p — 

Have  I  misleamt  om-  p  of  meeting  ?) 

perils  of  battle  On  p's  of  slaughter — 

taking  the  p  of  the  pitying  God 

but  set  no  meek  ones  in  their  p  ; 

and  the  Rome  of  freemen  holds  her  p, 

mob's  milUon  feet  Will  kick  you  from  your  p, 

and  give  p  to  the  beauty  that  endures, 

glimmer  of  relief  In  change  of  p. 

from  out  our  bourne  of  Time  and  P 
Place  (verb)     foremost  in  thy  various  gallery  P  it, 

murmur'd  Arthur,  '  P  me  in  the  barge,' 

p  their  pride  in  Lancelot  and  the  Queen. 

murmur'd  Arthur,  '  P  me  in  the  barge.' 

And  p  them  by  themselves  ; 

p  a  hand  in  his  Like  an  honest  woman's. 

Few  at  first  will  p  thee  well ; 
Placed     in  the  towers  I  p  great  bells 

often  p  upon  the  sick  man's  brow  Cool'd  it, 

they  p  a  peacock  in  his  pride  Before  the  damsel. 

And  over  these  is  p  a  silver  wand, 

And  over  these  they  p  the  silver  wand, 

And  p  them  in  this  ruin ; 

p  where  morning's  eariiest  ray  Might  strike  it, 

p  My  ring  upon  the  finger  of  my  bride. 
Placid    In  summer  heats,  with  p  lows  Unfearing, 

Crown'd  Isabel,  thro'  all  her  p  life. 

Ere  the  p  lips  be  cold  ? 

high  above  them  stood  The  p  marble  Muses, 

Sailest  the  p  ocean-plains  With  my  lost  Arthur's  loved 
remains. 

To  feel  once  more,  in  p  awe, 

while  the  Queen,  who  sat  With  lips  severely  p, 

their  malice  on  the  p  lip  Froz'n  by  sweet  sleep, 

Beside  the  p  breathings  of  the  King, 


In  Mem.  cvi  2 1 

cviii  9 

cxiv  15 

cxvii  2 

cxviii  15 

cxxi  20 

cxxvi  10 

Con.  67 

Alaud  /  i  64 

66 

„  xiii  24 

„  //  iv  6 

Bed.  of  Idylls  22 

Com.  of  Arthur  509 

Marr.  of  Geraint  219 

646 

Geraint  and  E.  31 

200 

277 

374 

94:3 

Lancelot  and  E.  75 

818 

1200 

Holy  Grail  317 

555 

Last  Tournament  103 

Guinevere  525 

Pass,  of  Arthur  54 

214 

343 

408 

Lover's  Tale  i  117 

123 

135 

529 

531 

552 

558 

686 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  13 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  153 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  86 

Despair  42 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  133 

To  Virgil  34  1 

The  Fleet  19 

Happy  36  j 

To  Mary  Boyle  48  j 

Crossing  the  Bar  13 1 

Ode  to  Memory  85l 

M.  d'Arthur  2041 

Merlin  and  V.  25 1 

Pass,  of  Arthur  312] 

Lover's  Tale  i  173 

Forlorn  19  j 

Poets  and  Critics  10 

Palace  of  Art  129 1 

Aylmer's  Field  700] 

Gareth  and  L.  850J 

Marr.  of  Geraint  4831 

5491 

6431 

Lancelot  and  E.  5| 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  21S 

Supp.  Confessions  1541 

Isabel  27| 

Adeline  201 

Princess  iv  489] 


In  Mem.  ix  2j 

„    cxxii  5J 

Lancelot  and  E.  740j 

Pelleas  and  E.  432| 

Guinevere  < 


Placid 


539 


Lover's  Tale  i216 

Ancient  Sage  133 

Romney's  R.  76 

Lover's  Tale  iv  75 

Talking  Oak  19 

Princess  Hi  94 


Placid  {continued)     Crown'd  with  her  highest  act  the 
p  face 
The  p  gleam  of  sunset  after  storm  ! 
With  your  own  shadow  in  the  p  lake, 

Placing    p  his  tme  hand  upon  her  lieart, 

Plagiarised     Until  he  p  a  heart, 

Plagiarist    calls  her  p  ;  I  know  not  what : 

Plague  (s)     {See  also  Egypt-plague)     Blight  and 

famme,  p  and  earthquake.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  115 

Remember  what  a  v  of  ram ;  The  Daisy  50 

A  F  upon  the  people  f  eU  The  Victim  1 

Help  us  from  famine  And  p  and  strife  !  10 

when  I  spake  of  famine,  p,  Tiresias  60 

an'  a  trouble  an'  p  wi'  indoor.  Spinster's  S's  50 

to  stay.  Not  spread  the  p,  the  famine ;  Bemeter  and  P.  134 

leper  p  may  scale  my  skin  but  never  taint  my  heart :  Havvu  27 

\ourp  but  passes  by  the  touch.  104 

Plague  (vCTb).    began  To  vex  and  p  her.  Guin^ere  68 

tnou  their  tool,  set  on  to  p  And  play  upon,  359 

Plagued    P  her  with  sore  despair.  Palace  of  Art  224 

woildly-wise  begetters,  p  themselves  A  ylmer's  Field  482 

P  with  a  flittmg  to  a,nd  fro,  '     Maud  II  ii  33 

\v  e  that  are  p  with  dreams  of  somethuig  sweet  Holy  Grail  625 

Pini.  ?-^^?"'<  «7?n'^'.*'''"  P  ^^  Lancelot's  Last  TouAament  194 

Plam  (ad]  )       Will  thirty  seasons  render  p  Two  Voices  82 

bhould  that  p  fact,  as  taught  by  these,  281 

'  I  cannot  make  this  matter  p,  "        343 

Sleeps  in  the  p  eggs  of  the  mghtingale.  Aylmer's  Field  103 

1  hat  has  but  one  p  passage  of  few  notes,  Lancelot  and  E.  895 

who  hmiself  Besought  me  to  be  p  and  blunt,  „            1301 

Which  lives  with  bhndness,  or  p  innocence  Sisters  (E."and  E.)  249 

Plo,-«  fo^  garments  p  or  rich,  and  fitting  close  Akbar's  Dream  131 

Flam  (s)    {See  also  Battle-plam,  Ocean-plain)    The  p  was 

Tn  =^^'  7^^  ^nd  bare,  Dyi     ^^„„  1 

To  stoop  the  cowslip  to  the  p's,  Rosalind  16 

By  herds^  upon  an  endless  p,  Palace  of  Art  74 

flroves  of  swme  That  range  on  yonder  p.  200 

with  dead  lips  smiled  at  the  twilight  p,  D.  of  F.  Women  62 

The  wild  wind  rang  from  park  and  p,  The  Goose  45 

.She  glanced  across  the  p  ;  Talking  Oak  166 

on  the  ringing  p's  of  Avmdy  Troy.  fjlysses  17 

Clothas  and  reclothes  the  happy  fs,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  2 

I  leave  the  p   I  chmb  the  height ;  Sir  Galahad  57 

The  maiden  Spnng  upon  the  p  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  3 

And  fleeter  now  she  skimm'd  the  p's  32 

M  f  f^  ringing  lists   And  all  the  p,-  Pri;i:ess  v  503 

And  had  a  cousin  tumbled  on  the  p,  ^i  319 

But  when  we  crost  the  Lombard  p  The  Daisy  49 

the  stai-s,  the  seas,  the  hi  Is  and  the  p's-  High.  Pantheism  1 

winds  from  off  the  p  RoU'd  the  nch  vapom-  Spec,  of  Iliad  7 

A  thousand  on  the  p  ;  10 
brightens  and  darkens  down  on  the  p.                  Window,  On  the  Hill  2 

Calm  and  stiU  light  on  yon  great  p  In  Mem.  xi  9 

Imperial  halls,  or  open  p  ;  j.^^  29 

The  brook  shall  babble  down  the  p,  "        ci  10 

when  their  feet  were  planted  on  the  p  Gareth  and  L.  187 

l-um  d  to  the  right,  and  past  along  the  p  ;  295 

gazing  oyer  p  and  wood ;  ''             ggg 

'  O  trefoil,  sparkling  on  the  rainy  p,  "          2159 

kindled  all  tte  p  and  all  the  wold.  Balin  and  Balan  441 

while  they  rode  together  down  the  p.  Merlin  and  V.  123 

sunlight  on  the  p  behind  a  shower :  ,             403 

they  would  pare  the  mountain  to  the  p,  "            829 

Returning  o^er  the  p  that  then  began  Holy  Grail  217 

niU,  or  p,  at  sea,  or  flooding  ford.  728 

On  some  vast  p  before  a  setting  sun,  Gumevere  77 

1  ou  see  yon  Lombard  poplar  on  the  p.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  79 

bloom  from  every  vale  and  p  To  Mary  Boyle  9 

summer  basking  m  the  sultry  p's  Prog,  of  Spring  77 

hear  their  words  On  pathway'd  p's;  83 

Nor  always  on  the  p,  "Politics  2 
the  black  ox  of  the  distant  p.                        On  one  who  ran  down  Enq.  4 

ere  the  mountain  rolls  into  the  p,  Death  of  CEnone  51 
Plain    See  also  Plaam 


Plain-faced    gray  tower,  or  p-f  tabernacle. 

Plainness     Nay,  the  p  of  her  dresses  ? 

Plaintive    Then  from  the  p  mother's  teat  he  took 

The  p  cry  jarr'd  on  her  ire ; 

'  Yet  blahie  not  thou  thy  p  song,' 

Vext  her  with  p  memories  of  the  child  • 
Plaited  (adj.)    With  p  alleys  of  the  trailing  rose 

Falsehood  shall  bare  her  p  brow  :        '  ' 

Until  the  p  ivy-tress  had  wound 


Planted 

Aylmer's  Field  618 

Mavd  I  XX  14 

The  Brook  129 

Princess  iv  393 

In  Mem.  Hi  5 

Last  Tournament  29 

Ode  to  Memory  106 

Clear-headed  friend  11 

pSif^/T^^  'she-p'broad"and"l^  A  strong  sword-belt,  ^miy^Grlil  152 

Plan  (s)    (See  also  Ground-plan)    Old  wishes,  ghosts  of 

broken  p's,  ^--jj  „^         „„ 

Enoch  lay  long-pondering  011  his  p's ;  Enoch  ArdenV^'\ 

comes  the  feebler  heiress  of  your  p,  Princtsiii  237 

Dismiss  me,  and  I  prophesy  your  p,  ^"''''''  ^  §1 

Ihe  p  was  mme.     I  built  the  nest.'  "             qck 

she  lightens  scorn  At  him  that  mars  her  p  "         ■»  m 

build  some  p  Foursquare  to  opposition.'  "            230 

I  scarce  am  fit  for  your  great  p's  :  "         ^,-  oi  e 

The  world-compelling  p  was  tkne,-  Qde  Inter.  Exhib.  10 

And  mmgles  all  without  a  p  ?  In  Mem   xvi  20 

the  boundless  p  That  makes  you  tyrants  MaudTxviU  le 

a  shadow  of  the  planner  or  the  p  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  196 

Pl«n^™rf  '  "?  •  '  ?"^  ^^'r^^  V'  .  ^«  °^  ^hl  affec.  E.^M  I 

Plan  (verb)     whde  I  p  and  p,  my  hair  Is  gray  Will  Water  1fi7 

pS    S'^^r^     Athwart|pofmolTe/glass,  iImIxIu 

Plane  (tree)     under  p  or  pine  With  neighbours  Lucretius  21-^ 

beneath  an  emerald  p  Sits  Diotima,  Pri^ssiii  301 

had  our  wine  and  chess  beneath  the  p's,  princess  m  Ml 

Planed    you  p  her  path  To  Lady  Psyche,  "        i' o j^ 

Planet     I  breathed  In  some  new  p  :  Edwin  Morris  lit 

?.'.,^h?.P^/^?^*''^''1  ^"^ '      ,  -''iove  eastward  4 

inhabitant  Of  some  clear  p  close  upon  the  Sun,  Princess  ii  36 

eddied  into  suns,  that  wheeling  cast  The  p's ■  iio 

all  the  fair  young  p  in  her  hands—  "     ^,jj  264 

That  one  fair  p  can  produce,  Qde  Inter  "Prhih  9X 

songs,  that  woke  Th^e  darkness  of  our  p.  In  Mem  I xt  it 

Whereof  the  man,  that  with  me  trod  This  p,  Con  138 

Our  p  is  one  the  suns  are  many,  "Maud  I  iv  45 

And  the  p  of  Love  is  on  high,  ^.^  v  g 

A  p  equal  to  the  sun  Which  cast  it.  To  E  FitzaeraJd  S^i 

homeless  p  at  length  will  be  wheel'd  DeZah-  83 

earthquakes  of  the  p's  dawning  years.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  40 

All  theu-  p's  whirling  round  them,  204 

nta  Ln  °"  *^^-  ^^l^^^d  p  of  man,  Bead  Prophet  39 

Like  some  conjectured  p  in  mid  heaven  To  Prin.  Beatrice  20 

Many  a  p  by  many  a  sun  may  roU  Vastnei',  2 

Plank     bhnd  with  rage  she  miss'd  the  p,  Princess  iv  111 

shape  It  p  and  beam  for  roof  and  floor,  w  A 

Pl«nn'r%'^fPP''^  ^^n"^  down  the  p  /„  Mem.  xiv  7 

Plann  d     Below  was  all  mosaic  choicely  p  Palace  of  Art!  d.k 

?&,>  a  shadow  of  the  p  or  the  pU'f  LoclcsteyH.%X  ^ 

Plant  (S)     Like  to  the  mother  p  in  semblance.  The  Poet  23 

frost  m  your  breath  Which  -would  blight  the  p's.  Poet's  Mind  18 

'  SWlP^?  tlT  '"^^^:■  *^'  P  ^''=^'"''-  ^»«  Voices  268 

Single  I  grew  like  some  green  p,  n,  of  F.  Women  205 
All  creeping  p's,  a  wall  of  green'                            Day-Jm.   Sleep  P% 

to  watch  the  thirsty  p's  Imbibing  !  "^  Princess  ii^ 
Wan-sal  ow  as  the  p  that  feels  itself  Root-bitten         Gareth  and  L.  453 

They  will  but  sicken  the  sick  p  the  more.  Lover's  Tale  i  766 
quick  as  a  sensitive  p  to  the  touch  ;                      In  the  Child.  Hosp  30 

Planf  fvi!?!,^  P  f^  ^  t^^^l^lossom  choicest-grown  Akbar's  Dream  22 

Plant  (verb)     i'.  thou  no  dusky  cypress- tree.  My  life  is  fu/f  V^ 

We  p  a  soUd  foot  into  the  Time,  PriLessv  415 

I  go  to  p  it  on  his  tomb,  InMemvUiA 

make  alT  clean,  and  p  himself  afresh.  GeraltaZ  £.9! 

Ihat  men  p  over  graves.  Lover'i  TnU  v  ^98 

And  p  on  shoulder,  hand  and  knee,  ToE  FitfaerlldH 

Plantagenet    The  lion-heart,  P,  A/J™/ ^! 

Plantain    hedgehog  underneath  the  p  bores,  Aylmer's  Field  do 

HeTf  t       %^  ''^'''  '^'  ^^''^^'  ^"^"^^  WamtotheMaul 

To  grow^my  own  p.  ^mp/^io^  20 

^^Sp./fh^if ff  f al°^-»Janted)     But  when  we  p  level  feet.    Princess  iv  30 
when  their  feet  were  p  on  the  plain  Gareth  and  L.  187 


Planted 

Planted  {continued)    I  was  p  now  in  a  tomb  • 
O  rosetree  p  in  my  grief,  ' 

off  the  tree  We  p  both  together, 
Plash    p  of  rains,  and  refuse  patch'cl  with  moss 

™any  a  glancing  p  and  sallowy  isle 
Plash  d    the  tide  P,  sapping  its  worn  ribs : 
Haster    alum  and  p  are  sold  to  the  poor 
Plaster  d    almost  p  like  a  martin's  nest 
Plat    I  keep  smooth  p's  of  fruitful  ground 
Platan    clear-stemm'd  p's  guard  The  outlet 
the  thick-leaved  p's  of  the  vale. 


540 


Pleasant 


The  Wreck  37 

Ancient  Sage  163 

Happy  14 

Vision  of  Sin  212 

Last  Tournament  422 

Lover's  Tale  i  56 

MavA  /  i  39 

Holy  Grail  548 

The  'Blackbird  3 

Arabian  Nights  23 

Princess  Hi  175 


Plate  (^..  also  Plaate)  Came  out  clear  p's  of  sannhire  mail  rZnV  •"  ^lo 
Squadrons  and  squares  of  men  in  bLzen  J^^^"'    tofF^wZZ  II 

Lay  your  P  for  one  minute  down,  TnUnZ  ""t*^^^ 

Platform    (^6.  aZs.  Crag-platform)    reach'd  The  grassy    ^'^  ^«^^^'- ^/ ^- 4 

?)  on  some  hill,                                              &  <^'">y  ,    ^,    .„., 

Plato    P  the  wise,  and  large-brow'd  Verulam,  ^pZcI  ofVt  SS 

Or  lend  an  ear  to  P  where  he  savs  Jraiace  oj  Art  lb3 

But  Homer,  P,  VeruUm              ^  '  Lucretius  147 

man's  ideal  Is  high  in  Heaven,  and  lodged  with  "''''''  "  ^^ 

Plaudit    Omar  drew  Full-handed  p'.  r«  i^>i^- i^J 

^^'^'fh^  t  (f-.-^n^tt'^y)     ^*  ^^t.  t™d  out  with  p      TdllTolim 

That  he  shouts  with  his  sister  at  « '  ^'  TiZ,„v  u     V     /^ 

But  now  to  leaven  p  with  profit  "^ '  PktZt'iful 

Go  in  and  out  as  if  at  merry  p,  mITIt      ■■  •  qV 

That  he  left  his  mne  and  horfes  and  p,  ^"""^  ^  ^^^  f, 

bhe  is  weary  of  dance  and  p.'  "             ■■  '* 

w  "^If  joust  and  p,  Leaven'd  his  hall.  Merlin  an/vVA 

Would  watch  her  at  her  petulance,  and  p  "^  ^-  ]f. 

Iloved  him  better  than  ?? ;             '         '''  ,.            i/o 

He  said  it  ...  in  the  »  1  he  Flight  22 

Play  (verb)    fingers  pAbourhis  mother's  neck,  6W  ~&f«/S 

Hither,  come  hither  and  frolic  and  ?> ;  ^^'  SpnvTZl  T« 

at  night  I  would  roam  abroad  and  l  ThTu.          I? 

Vt*  n^eidsisn  S^h'^^-r-'  £  ^^^i= 

'm  me^rt  Sa^nce^a^r        "  ''""  "^^  ^^  ^^  ^^^^  g 

Would  p  with  flying  foLs  and  images,  G^dJnSTn  60 

'  P  me  no  tricks,'  said  Lord  Ronald:  (repeat)  Sy  Clare  i'  75 

ll^iZil^rS'^'rruf^'T'Z'  I           u  ^yi^er'sFilhll 

with  your  long  locks  p  the  Lion's  m^ne !  "       H  {ii 

And  m  thy  heart  the  scrawl  shaU  p.'  s,^lor  BouaI 

dart  again,  and  p  About  the  prowf  i^Mem  xii  17 

The  tender-pencil'd  shadow  p.  '"^           xUx  12 

I'll  have  leave  at  times  to  29  "      ^"»  |f 

You  wonder  when  my  fancies  p  "         ,     •  i 

He  p's  with  threads,  he  beats  his  chair  "             \  t 

Or  so  shaU  grief  with  symbols  p  "    i^^^it 

For  him  she  p's,  to  him  she  si4s  "     SgQ 

It  circles  round,  and  fancy  p's  "     ^^"  «? 

And  p  the  game  of  the  despot  kings,  MaudTx  39 

died  to  hve,  long  as  my  pulses  p  •  •-  «« 

■      rthe''vJrH^.'rt'°?'t^**'"™"y°"««'  Garetha:nrL%f2 

there  hi  set^hTmil^?i^'  ^^""""^  P''^^''  ^^'^^''^  ^'^'^  ^  515 

Abbess  and  he^nl  Vn^^"''  ^^'     ,  ^'^'^'>^  ''^  ^-  646 

iiDoess  ana  ner  nuns.  To  p  upon  me,'  Guinevere  310 

set  on  to  plague  And  ^  upon,  and  harry  me,  ^^mevere  310 

0  golden  hair,  with  which  I  used  to  p  "  V^r, 
begins  to  p  That  air  which  pleased  her  Uver's  "Tale  t"  20 

tell  Kin"  FpTilinanrl  ,„»,,.    V      -tiT'  "''^  ''•  iJldcastle  103 

ten  IV  ng  rerainand  who  p's  with  me,  Columhi<t  19% 

1  would  ^  my  part  with  the  young  Th^wUf^ 
reahst,  rhymester,  «  vour  cart  r  77  ■{''■^  ^^/^ckjid 
^d  felt  a;  icy  b^eLCorme.  ^^'"^^"^^  f^'/S  ^9 
tor  I  used  to  p  with  the  knife,  rf'^^H 

Play'd      That  men  with  knowledge  merely  p.  ^.o  fS Jl 


Play'd  (continued)    when  thy  father  p  In  his  free  field 
^or  scarce  my  hfe  with  fancy  p  ' 

Here  p,  a  tiger,  roUing  to  and  fro 
with  the  time  we  p,  We  spoke  of  other  things  • 
here  she  came,  and  round  me  «, 
The  happy  winds  upon  her  p, 

?u-'^Ti^^  *^^  ^^s*^  *"d  lumber  of  the  shore 

the  children  p  at  keeping  house.  ' 

p  with  him  And  call'd  him  Father  Philip 

hand  that  p  the  patron  with  her  curls 

p  Charades  and  riddles  as  at  Christmas  here 

^  the  beam  Of  the  East,  that  p  upon  them,' 

He  p  at  counsellors  and  kings 

P  A  chequer-work  of  beam  and  shade  Along  the  hills 

Love  but  p  with  gracious  hes,  ' 

I  p  with  the  girl  when  a  child ; 

I  have  p  with  her  when  a  child ; 

And  hghtnings  p  about  it  in  the  storm 

And  only  wondering  wherefore  p  upon'- 

and  took  the  word  and  p  upon  it 

the  lovely  blue  P  into  green,        '  „„_ 

&ytbui??n  tfre-'"'  ^^'^'^^^  '''^'  r^'^'f^^  ^-  ^ 

crisping  white  P  ever  back  upon  the  sloping  wave  HoiTI^I  -f^ 

ye  p  at  ducks  and  drakes  With  Arthur's  vows        Tn^t  r      ^         f  o?? 
when  we  p  together,  I  loved  him  '^  Tournament  344 

p  with  The  children  of  Edward. 

Playest    thou  p  that  air  with  Queen  Isolt, 

pHi    'p  *^  ^^  *^"  Crouch'd  fawning  in  the  weed. 

naymg    P  mad  pranks  along  the  heathy  leas  • 
p  with  the  blade  he  prick'd  his  hand         ' 

Th.n'Ih'^f^'^'^S'^  '"^''^.'  ^""^  "°^  ^  ^'ain  of  pearls, 
inen  that  old  Seer  made  answer  p  on  him 
And  we  took  to  p  at  ball. 
And  we  took  to  p  at  battle, 
foam  m  the  dusk  came  p  about  our  feet 
Waymate    Pans,  once  her  p  on  the  hills 
Doubled  her  own,  for  want  of  p's 

P^s^v^lf^n'^^i^^  ^^y/  "^^'^'''^  ^™ong  them, 
Playwnght  Our  P  may  show  In  some  fifth  Act 
Plea     King  Mused  for  a  little  on  his  » 

Be  not  guU'd  by  a  despot's  « ' 
Pleached    6'ee  Self-pleached 
Plead    let  her  p  in  vain ; 

twice  I  sought  to  p  my  cause 

when  I  return,  will  p  for  thee,  (repeat) 

iNot  all  in  vain  may  p 

Pino-Sl''  ^A uf ^^^  ?  ^°^  ™y  o^  fame  with  me 
Pleaded     Although  I  p  tenderly 

on  a  day  When  Cyril  p,  Ida  came  behind 

And  yet  hast  often  p  for  my  love 

Pleader    jests,  that  flash'd  about  the  p's  room, 
Pleadest    What  if  Thou  p  still,  ' 

Pleading    a  sound  Like  sleepy'counsel  p  ■ 

before  them  paused  Hortensia  p- 
Pleasance    my  passion  seeks  P  in  love-sighs 
A  realm  of  p,  many  a  mound  ' 

Pleasant    And  all  at  once  a  p  truth  I  learn'd, 
Before  I  dream'd  that  p  dream— 
With  your  feet  above  my  head  in  the  long 
,    and  p  grass.  ^     ^,^^ 

Beat  quicker,  for  the  time  Is  p,  and  the  woods 
and  ways  Are  p, 
0  ME,  my  p  rambles  by  the  lake,  (repeat) 
Well— were  it  not  a  p  thing 
A  p  hour  has  passed  away 
By  many  p  ways. 
But  for  my  p  hour,  'tis  gone ; 
Love  will  make  our  cottage  p 
made  p  by  the  baits  Of  gold  and  beauty 
A  V  game,  she  thought : 
teU  me  p  tales,  and  read  My  sickness 
Ofi    "ft"^  '^  ^  ^°"^  ^^^^^  h®'  ♦'h*<''s  gone. 


Two  Voices  319 

Miller's  D.  45 

Pomace  0/ Jr<  151 

Gardener's  D.  221 

Talking  Oak  133 

'S'jT-  i.  anc^  Q.  G.  38 

jEreoc/i  Jrieji  15 

24 

353 

Princess,  Pro.  138 

188 

V  259 

/m  J/ew.  Ixiv  23 

„      ^a;a;M  14 

„         cxxv  7 

^¥aM«f  /  i  68 

,.     OT  87 

Gareth  and  L.  68 

.      »        1252 

Geraint  and  E.  291 


-Firsf  Quarrel  12 
£a«.  0/  Brunanburh  91 
ias<  Tournament  263 
CEwo»e200 
Circumstance  2 
Aylmer's  Field  239 
Princess,  Pro.  61 
Gareth  and  L.  252 
F.  0/  Maeldune  94 
95 
Despair  50 
(Enone  17 
Aylmer's  Field  81 
Z>ga<A  0/  (Enone  59 
T/ie  P%  3 
Jfa/T.  ofGeraint  42 
Riflemen  form!  9 


-Bnoc,^  Jrien,  166 

Princess  iv  552 

G'are^A  awcZ  i.  987,  1052 

Epilogue  80 

Romney's  R.  55 

Miller's  D.  135 

Princess  vii  78 

-Bo/iw  a/i<^  PaZajj  571 

Aylmer's  Field  440 

(Swyp.  Confessions  94 

Amphion  74 

Princess  vii  132 

Lilian  9 

Arabian  Nights  101 

TAe  Bridesmaid  9 

Miller's  D.  46 

ilfa^  Qweew,  iV.  Z's.  £.  32 


0»i  a  Mourner  13 

Edwin  Morris  1,  13 

Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi3 

Pro.  2 

Will  Water.  34 

179 

X.  of  Burleigh  15 

Aylmer's  Field  486 

Princess,  Pro.  194 

M  252 

i)z  247 


§!^M''r^s;';S»p„r.-s-r°'-—  «^^riS 


/«.  Mem.  via  9 


ai 


Pleasant 


541 


Plighted 


Pleasant  {continued)     They  laid  him  by  the  p  shore,  In  Mem.  xix  3 

To  leave  the  p  fields  and  farms ;  „       cii  22 

Yet,  for  the  field  was  p  in  our  eyes,  Gareth  and  L.  337 

The  field  was  p  in  my  husband's  eye.'  „          342 

'  Have  thy  p  field  again,  „           343 

Thou  hast  a  p  presence.  ,,         1065 

My  twelvemonth  and  a  day  were  p  to  me.'  Holy  GraU  750 

The  sins  that  made  the  past  so  p  to  us :  Guinevere  375 

Oh !  p  breast  of  waters,  quiet  bay.  Lover's  Tale  i  6 

A  portion  of  the  p  yesterday,  „        122 

for  the  soimd  Of  the  loud  stream  was  p,  „      m  35 

Those  were  the  p  times,  First  Quarrel  41 

in  the  p  times  that  had  past,  „  55 
I  had  past  into  perfect  quiet  at  length  out  of  p  dreams.         Despair  66 

but  ye  knaw'd  it  wur  p  to  'ear,  Spinster's  S's.  21 

So  in  this  p  vale  we  stand  again,  Demeter  and  P.  34 

Pleasantry     From  talk  of  war  to  traits  of  p —  Lancelot  and  E.  321 
Please    {See  also  Please)    Too  fearful  that  you  should  not  p.  Miller's  D.  148 

0  shapes  and  hues  that  p  me  well !  Palace  oj  Art  194 
She  could  not  p  hei'self .  Talking  Oak  120 
My  gifts,  when  gifts  of  mine  could  p ;  The  Letters  22 
Edith  whom  his  pleasure  was  to  p,  Aylmer's  Field  232 
sea-furbelow  flap.  Good  man,  to  p  the  child.  Sea  Dreams  267 
betwixt  them  both,  to  p  them  both,  Princess,  Con.  25 
At  that  last  hour  to  p  him  well ;  In  Mem.  ri  18 
thinking '  this  will  p  him  best,'  „  31 
here  is  truth,  but  an  it  p  thee  not,  Gareth  and  L.  256 
Enid,  but  to  p  her  husband's  eye,  Marr.  of  Geraint  11 
the  King  himself  should  p  To  cleanse  „  38 
To  p  her,  dwelling  on  his  boundless  love,  „  63 
put  off  to  p  me  this  poor  go^vn,  Geraint  and  E.  679 

1  find  that  it  always  can  p  Our  children,  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  51 
I  fail'd  to  p  him,  however  I  strove  to  p —  The  Wreck  28 
Does  it  p  you  ?  The  Ring  26 
Still  would  you — if  it  p  you — sit  to  me  ?  Romney's  R.  73 

Please     but  they  wasn't  that  easy  to  p.  Village  Wife  117 
Pleased    {See  also  Half-pleased,  Well-pleased)    newness 

of  thine  art  so  p  thee,  Ode  to  Memory  88 

It  p  me  well  enough.'  The  Epic  34 

might  have  p  the  eyes  of  many  men.  M.  d' Arthur  91 

him  We  p  not — he  was  seldom  p :  The  Voyage  74 

A  song  that  p  us  from  its  worth ;  You  might  have  won  22 

saying  that  which  p  him,  for  he  smiled.  Enoch  Arden  151 

'  but  it  p  us  not :  in  truth  We  shudder  Princess  Hi  308 

And  maybe  neither  p  myself  nor  them.  „      Con.  28 

But  Lilia  p  me,  for  she  took  no  part  In  our  dispute :  „              29 

Nor  knew  we  well  what  p  us  most.  The  Daisy  25 

But  since  it  p  a  vanish'ci  eye.  In  Mem.  viii  21 

Which  led  by  tracts  that  p  us  well,  ..            xxii  2 

Like  one  with  any  trifle  p.  „            Ixvi  4 

They  p  him,  fresh  from  brawling  courts  ,.      Ixxxix  11 

Nor  less  it  p  in  livelier  moods,  ..                 29 

But  each  has  p  a  kindred  eye,  ,,              c  17 

pick'd  the  lance  That  p  him  best,  Geraint  and  E.  180 

whoUy  p  To  find  him  yet  unwounded  after  fight,  .,            370 

Was  in  a  manner  p,  and  turning,  stood.  „            456 

(For  thus  it  p  the  King  to  range  me  close  Holy  Grail  307 

Who  p  her  with  a  babbhng  heedlessness  Guinevere  151 

might  have  p  the  eyes  of  many  men.  Pass,  of  Arthur  259 

begins  to  play  That  air  which  p  her  first.  Lovers  Tale  i  21 

And  all  the  people  were  p ;  Dead  Prophet  74 
Shakespeare's  bland  and  universal  eye  Dwells  p,   To  W.  C.  Macready  14 

knew  not  that  which  p  it  most.  The  Ring  165 

Pleasing     To  make  him  p  in  her  uncle's  eye.  Dora  84 

Pleasurable     Ev'n  such  a  wave,  but  not  so  p.  Merlin  and  V.  294 

Pleasure  (s)     With  p  and  love  and  jubilee :  Sea-  Fairies  36 

Pain  rises  up,  old  p's  pall.  Two  Voices  164 

What  p  can  we  have  To  war  with  evil?  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  8.  48 

own  anguish  deep  More  than  much  p.  To  J.  S.  43 

Valuing  the  giddy  p  of  the  eyes.  M.  d' Arthur  128 

Yet  for  the  p  that  I  took  to  hear,  Gardener's  D.  228 

into  my  inmost  ring  A  p  I  discem'd,  Talking  Oak  174 

woman's  p,  woman's  pain —  Locksley  Hall  149 

Like  a  beast  with  lower  p's,  „            176 

C!ome,  Care  and  P,  Hope  and  Pain,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  55 


Pleasure  (s)  (coK<tnM«rf)     I  will  take  my  p  there :  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  ^2 

You  moved  her  at  your  p.  Amphion  60 

Built  for  p  and  for  state.  L.  of  Burleigh  32 

not  to  see  the  world — For  p  ? —  Enoch  Arden  298 

Worried  his  passive  ear  with  petty  wrongs  Or  p's  „            353 

Edith  whom  his  p  was  to  please,  "  Aylmer's  Field  232 

Then  made  his  p  echo,  hand  to  hand,  „              257 

since  the  nobler  p  seems  to  fade,  Lucretius  230 

Without  one  p  and  without  one  pain,  „         269 

What  p  lives  in  height  (the  shepherd  sang)  Princess  vii  193 

Some  p  from  thine  early  years.  In  Mem.  iv  10 

That  so  my  p  may  be  whole ;  „         Ixxi  8 

And  fulsome  P  clog  him,  and  drown  Maud  I  xvi  4 

nor  a  vantage-ground  For  p ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  24 

Merlin,  who,  they  say,  can  walk  Unseen  at  p —  Com.  of  Arthur  348 

thy  charge  Is  an  abounding  p  to  me.  Gareth  and  L.  982 

desire  To  close  with  her  lord's  p ;  Geraint  and  E.  214 

Came  purer  p  unto  mortal  kind  Than  lived  thro'  her,  „            765 

Should  have  some  rest  and  p  in  himself.  Merlin  and  V.  485 

Should  have  small  rest  or  p  in  herself,  ..            490 

she  had  her  p  in  it,  „             604 

Because  of  that  high  p  which  I  had  „            877 

For  p  all  about  a  field  of  flowers :  Lancelot  and  E.  793 

P  to  have  it,  none ;  to  lose  it,  pain ;  „          1415 

Nor  slept  that  night  for  p  in  his  blood,  Pelleas  and  E.  138 

on  love  And  sport  and  tilts  and  p,  Guinevere  387 

It  would  have  been  my  p  had  I  seen.  „          659 

Valuing  the  giddy  p  of  the  eyes.  Pass,  of  Arthur  296 

Some  sudden  vivid  p  hit  him  there.  Lover's  Tale  iv  178 

And  I  more  p  in  your  praise.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  56 

short,  or  long,  as  P  leads,  or  Pain ;  Ancient  Sage  101 

her  tears  Are  half  of  p,  half  of  pain —  To  Prin.  Beatrice  11 

P  who  flaunts  on  her  wide  downway  Vastness  16 

Pain,  that  has  crawl'd  from  the  corpse  of  P,  „        17 

Pleasure  (verb)     roU'd  His  hoop  to  p  Edith,  Aylmer's  Field  85 

Pleasiue-boat     A  mountain  nest — the  p-b  that  rock'd,  Lover's  Tale  i  42 

Pleasure-house    I  built  my  soul  a  lordly  p-h,  Palace  of  Art  1 

Pledge  (s)     giving  safe  p  of  fruits.  Ode  to  Memory  18 

tell  Of  difference,  reconcilement,  p's  given,  Gardener's  D.  257 

P  of  a  love  not  to  be  mine.  Princess  vi  197 

arms  On  loan,  or  else  for  p ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  220 

Pledge  (verb)     But  p  me  in  the  flowing  grape.  My  life  is  full  15 

I  p  her  not  in  any  cheerful  cup,  Wan  Sculptor  9 

I  p  her,  and  she  comes  and  dips  Will  Water.  17 

I  p  her  silent  at  her  board ;  „          25 

We  did  but  talk  you  over^  p  you  all  In  wassail ;  Princess,  Pro.  185 

To  p  them  with  a  kindly  tear.  In  Mem.  xc  10 

here  I  p  my  troth,  Pelleas  and  E.  341 

Love  p  Hatred  in  her  bitter  draughts,  Lover's  Tale  i  116 

FiKST  p  our  Queen  this  solemn  night.  Hands  all  Round  1 

Pledged     p  To  fight  in  tourney  for  my  bride.  Princess  v  352 

our  knights  at  feast  Have  p  us  in  this  union,  Lancelot  and  E.  115 

and  she  hated  all  who  p.  „             744 

Queen,  Who  fain  had  p  her  jewels  Columbus  229 

Pledgest     Who  p  now  thy  gallant  son ;  In  Mem.  vi  10 

Pledging     p  Lancelot  and  the  lily  maid  Lancelot  and  E.  738 

Pleiads     Many  a  night  I  saw  the  P's,  Locksley  Hall  9 

Plenteousness     Set  in  this  Eden  of  all  p,  Enoch  Arden  561 

Plenty    Yet  is  there  p  of  the  kind.'  Two  Voices  33 

P  corrupts  the  melody  That  made  thee  famous  once,    The  Blackbird  15 

hand  in  hand  with  P  in  the  maize,  Princess  vii  201 

Their  myriad  horns  of  p  at  our  feet.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  6 

boy  Will  have  p :  so  let  it  be.'  (repeat)  Maud  I  vii  8,  16 

Pliable     No  p  idiot  I  to  break  my  vow ;  The  Ring  402 

Pliant    like  the  p  bough  That  moving  moves  the  nest  Sea  Dreams  290 

He  moving  up  with  p  courtliness,  Geraint  and  E.  278 

Plied    round  the  lake  A  little  clock-work  steamer 

paddling  p  Princess,  Pro.  71 

p  him  with  his  richest  wines,  „            i  174 

Plight  (s)    nor  by  p  or  broken  ring  Bound,  Aylmer's  Field  135 

But  in  perilous  p  were  we.  The  Revenge  75 

Plight  (verb)     I  to  thee  my  troth  did  p,  Oriana  26 

Will  I  to  Olive  p  my  troth,  Talking  Oak  283 

Plighted  (adj.)     Of  early  faith  and  p  vows ;  In  Mem.  xcvii  30 

Pl^hted  (verb)     p  troth,  and  were  at  peace.  Princess  vii  83 


PUghted 


542 


Plunging 


Plighted  (verb)  (cowimwed)  The  heart  that  never  p  troth    In  Mem.  xxvii  10 

Plot  (conspiracy)     A  p,  a  p,  a  p,  to  ruin  all ! '    '  No  p,  no  p,'  Princess  ii  192 

man  of  p's,  Cvait,  poisonous  counsels,  Gareth  and  L.  431 

for  fine  p's  may  fail,  '  Merlin  and  V.  820 

Plot  (of  ground)    (See  also  Diamond-plot)    Or  opening 

upon  level  p's  Of  crowned  lilies.  Ode  to  Memory  108 

Love  paced  the  thymy  p's  of  Paradise,  Love  and  Death  2 

I  steal  by  la\vns  and  grassy  p's,  The  Brook  170 

That  all  the  turf  was  rich  in  p's  Marr.  of  Geraint  660 

Why  grew  we  then  together  in  one  p  ?  Lover's  Tale  ii  23 

pools  of  salt,  and  p's  of  land —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  207 

Plot  (verb)     That  he  p's  against  me  still.  Maiid  I  xix  81 

Plotted     He  has  p  against  me  in  this,  „  80 

Plough-Plow  (s)     and  morning  driv'n  her  plow  of  pearl      Love  and  Duly  99 

He  praised  his  ploughs,  his  cows,  his  hogs.  The  Brook  125 

stood  Eight  daughters  of  the  plough.  Princess  iv  278 

Then  those  eight  mighty  daughters  of  the  plough  „  550 

and  those  eight  daughters  of  the  plough  „         v  339 

an'  runn'd  plow  thruff  it  an'  all,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  42 

We  could  sing  a  good  song  at  the  Plow,  (repeat)  North.  Cobbler  18 

The  steer  fell  dowTi  at  the  plow  V.  of  Maeldune  30 

take  the  suffrage  of  the  plow.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  118 

an  raaved  slick  thruf  by  the  plow —  Owd  Rod  28 

Plough-Plow  (verb)     an'  Thumaby  hoalms  to  pZow !       i\'.  Farmer,  O.  S.  52 

Who  ploughs  with  pain  his  native  lea  In  Mem.  Ixiv  25 

To  whom  a  space  of  land  is  given  to  plow.  Holy  Grail  907 

And  plow  the  Present  like  a  field,  Mechanophilu^  31 

Ploughing     and  Charlie  p  the  hill.  Grandmother  80 

Ploughnmn     in  the  furrow  broke  the  p's  head.  Princess  v  221 

Plover     tufted  p  pipe  along  the  fallow  lea.  May  Queen,  X.  ¥'s.  E.  18 

There  let  the  wind  sweep  and  the  p  cry ;  Come  not,  when,  etc.  5 

great  p's  human  whistle  amazed  Her  heart,  Geraint  and  E.  49 

Why  wail  you,  pretty  p  ?  Happy  1 

Plow     See  Plough 

Plow'd     (.See  also  Red-plow'd)     To  mix  with  what  he  p ;     Ancient  Sage  145 
Plowing     The  plowman  left  his  p,  and  fell  down  Holy  Grail  404 

Plowland     Silvery  wiUow,  Pasture  and  p,  Merlin  aiid  the  G.  54 

Plowman     The  p  left  his  plowing,  and  fell  down  Holy  Grail  404 

The  p  passes,  bent  with  pain,  Ancient  Sage  144 

Plowmen.  Shepherds,  have  I  found,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  121 

Plowshare     it  smote  the  p  in  the  field,  Holy  Grail  403 

Pluck     '  Hard  task,  to  p  resolve,'  I  cried.  Two  Voices  118 

I  \iill  p  it  from  my  bosom,  Locksley  Hall  66 

p's  The  mortal  soul  from  out  immortal  hell,  Lucretius  262 

that  men  may  p  them  from  our  hearts.  Princess  Hi  257 

this  night  should  p  your  palace  down  ;  „         iv  414 

theer's  a  craw  to  p  wi'  tha,  Sam :  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  5 

I  p  you  out  of  the  crannies.  Flower  in  cran.  wall  2 

whose  splendour  p's  The  slavish  hat  Maud  1x3 

'  to  p  the  flower  in  season ; '  So  says  Merlin  and  V.  722 

So,  brother,  p  and  spare  not.'  Lover's  Tale  i  351 

p  from  this  true  breast  the  locket  that  I  wear,  The  Flight  33 

P  the  mighty  from  their  seat,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  133 

Pluck'd-Pluckt     Devils  pluck'd  my  sleeve,  St.  S.  Stylites  171 

in  a  pet  she  started  up,  And  pluck'd  it  out,  Talking  Oak  230 

Each  pluck'd  his  one  foot  from  the  grave  Amphion  43 

he  thrice  had  pluck'd  a  life  From  the  dread  sweep  Enoch  Arden  54 

when  the  children  pluck'd  at  him  to  go,  „  369 

left  alone  he  pluck'd  her  dagger  forth  Aylmer's  Field  470 

hand  from  which  Livid  he  pluck'd  it  forth,  „  627 

Found  a  still  place,  and  pluck'd  her  likeness  out ;  Princess  i  92 

And  pluck'd  the  ripen'd  ears,  „         ii  2 

she  pluck'd  the  grass.  She  flung  it  from  her,  „  Con.  31 

I  pluck'd  a  daisv,  I  gave  it  you.  The  Daisy  88 

afi  the  cur  Pluckt  from  the  cur  he  fights  with,  Gareth  and  L.  702 

■nluck'd  the  grass  There  growing  longest  Geraint  and  E.  256 

bone  Seems  to  he  pluck'd  at  by  the  village  boys  „  560 

he  had  the  gems  Pluck'd  from  the  crown,  Lancelot  and  E.  57 

each  as  each.  Not  to  be  pluck'd  asunder ;  Holy  Grail  777 

touch  or  see  the  Holy  Grail  They  might  be  pluck'd 

asunder.  "  „  780 

Tliat  save  they  could  be  pluck'd  asunder,  „  782 

pluck'd  one  wav  by  bate  and  one  by  love.  Last  Tournament  539 

lAncelot  pluyck^d  him  by  the  heel,  Guinevere  34 

Prince  Who  scarce  had  pluck'd  his  flickering  life  To  the  Queen  ii  5 


Plucking    P  the  harmless  wild-flower  on  the  hill  ?- 

Pluckt    See  Pluck'd 

Pluksh    f !  !  !  the  hens  i'  the  peiis ! 

Plum    (See  also  Sugar-plum)    Glowing  with  all- 
colour'd  p's 

Plumage    Conjecture  of  the  p  and  the  form ; 

Plume     A  funeral,  with  p's  and  lights 
She  saw  the  helmet  and  the  p. 
From  spur  to  p  a  star  of  tournament, 
Kuffles  her  pure  cold  p. 
Fantastic  p  or  sable  pine ; 
A  light-green  tuft  of  p's  she  bore 
The  slender  coco's  drooping  crown  of  p's, 
till,  each,  in  maiden  p's  We  rustled : 
all  about  were  birds  Of  sunny  p  in  gilded 

trellis-work ; 
brandish'd  p  Brushing  his  instep, 
underneath  a  p  of  lady-fern.  Sang, 
p  fall'n  from  the  wing  Of  that  foul  bird 
from  spur  to  p  Red  as  the  rising  sun 
Their  p's  driv'n  backward  by  the  wind 
shower  and  shorn  p  Went  down  it. 
fell  thick  rain,  p  droopt  and  mantle  clung, 
.storm  and  cloud  Of  shriek  and  p, 
but  with  p's  that  mock'd  the  may, 
From  spur  to  p  a  star  of  tournament, 
Kuflfles  her  pure  cold  p. 

Plumed     pines,  that  p  the  craggy  ledge 
Empanoplied  and  p  We  enter'd  in, 
a  shatter'd  archway  p  with  fern ; 
green  and  gold,  and  p  with  green 

Plumelet     When  rosy  p's  tuft  the  larch. 

Plummet     Two  p's  dropt  for  one  to  sound 

Plump     Grew  p  and  able-bodied ; 
O  P  head-waiter  at  The  Cock, 
One  shade  more  p  than  common ; 
blue  wood-louse,  and  the  p  dormouse. 
As  well  as  the  p  cheek — 

Plump-arm'd    A  p-a  Ostleress  and  a  stable  wench 

Plump'd    sweating  rosin,  p  the  pine 

Plmnper     And  cramm'd  a  p  crop ; 

Plunder  (s)     is  a  world  of  p  and  prey. 

He  found  the  sack  and  p  of  our  house 
Earl  iJooiTn  with  p  to  the  hall. 

Plunder  (verb)     I  camiot  steal  or  p,  no  nor  beg : 

Plvmder'd     bark  had  p  twenty  nameless  isles ; 

Plunge  (s)     thro'  the  whitening  hazels  made  a  p 
waterfalls  Pour'd  in  a  thunderless  p 
'  one  p — then  quiet  for  evermore.' 


Maud  II  i  3 

Village  Wife  124 

V.  of  Maeldune  60 

Marr.  of  Geraint  333 

L.  of  Shalott  m31 

Hi  40 

M.  d' Arthur  223 

268 

The  Voyage  44 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  26 

Enoch  Arden  574 

Princess  i  202 

Mart,  of  Geraint  659 

Geraint  and  E.  359 

Balin  and  Balan  26 

Merlin  and  V.  727 

Lancelot  and  E.  307 

480 

Last  Tournament  155 

213 

441 

Gtdnevere  22 

Pass,  of  Arthur  391 

436 

(Enone  209 

Princess  v  483 

Marr.  of  Geraint  316 

Merlin  and  V.  89 

In  Mem.  xci  1 

Princess  ii  176 

The  Goose  18 

Will  Water.  1 

150 

Window,  Winter  9 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  184 

Princess  i  226 

Amphion  47 

Will  Water.  124 

Maud  I  iv  24 

Marr.  of  Geraint  694 

Geraint  and  E.  592 

487 

Merlin  and  V.  559 

Enoch  Arden  379 

V.  of  Maeldune  14 

Charity  16 


Plunge  (verb)     should  not  p  His  hand  into  the  bag :  Golden  Year  71 

nor  rather  p  at  once.  Being  troubled,  Lucretius  151 

river  sloped  To  p  in  cataract.  Princess  Hi  291 

To  p  old  Merlin  in  the  Arabian  sea ;  Gareth  and  L.  211 

and  the  sword  That  made  it  p's  thro'  the  wound  Pelleas  and  E.  530 

she  cried,  '  F  and  be  lost — ill-fated  as  they  were.  Last  Tournament  40 

Not  p  headforemost  from  the  mountain  there.  Lover's  Tale  iv  41 

P's  and  lieaves  at  a  bank  that  is  daily  devour'd  Def.  of  Lucknow  39 

fearing  not  to  p  Thy  torch  of  life  Tiresias  158 

Plunged    p  Among  the  bulrush-beds,  M.  d' Arthur  134 

but  woman-vested  as  I  was  P ;  Princess  iv  182 

P  in  the  battery-smoke  Right  thro'  the  line  Light  Brigade  32 

slowly  ro.se  and  p  Roaring,  Com.  of  Arthur  381 

so  down  among  the  pines  He  p ;  Gareth  and  L.  809 

And  down  the  shingly  scaur  he  p,  iMncelot  and  E.  53 

Seized  him,  and  bound  and  p  him  into  a  cell  Holy  Grail  675 

p  Among  the  bulrush  beds,  I'ass.  of  Arthur  302 
sea  p  and  fell  on  the  shot-shatter'd  navy  of  Spain,  The  Revenge  117 
P  in  the  last  fierce  charge  at  Waterloo,                  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  64 

P  liead  down  in  the  sea,  V.  of  Maeldune  82 

crest  of  the  tides  P  on  the  ves.sel  The  Wreck  90 

P  up  and  down,  to  and  fro.  Heavy  Brigade  31 

woods  P  gulf  on  gulf  thro'  all  their  vales  Prog,  of  Spring  73 

wild  horse,  anger,  p  To  fling  me,  Akbar's  Dream  118 

Plunging    (See  also  Heavy-plunging,  Lazy-plunging) 

peoples  p  thro'  the  thunder-storm  ;  Locksley  Hall  126 


Plunging 


543 


Poison'd 


Plunging  (continued)  p  seas  draw  backward  from  the  land  Palace  of  Art  251 

all  ablaze  too  p  in  the  lake  Head-foremost —  The  Jiing  251 

p  down  Thro'  that  disastrous  glory,  St.  Telemachus  28 

Ply    joint  of  state,  that  plies  Its  office,  Love  thou  thy  land  47 

plies  His  function  of  the  woodland :  Lucretius  45 

Foach'd     As  the  p  filth  that  floods  the  middle  street,       Merlin  and  V.  798 

Pocket     I  fmi  thy  p's  as  full  o'  my  pippins  Church-warden,  etc.  34 

Pock-pitten     That  great  p-p  feUow  Aylmer's  Field  256 

Poem     {See  also  Love-poem)     Look,  I  come  to  the 

test,  a  tiny  p  Hendecasyllabics  3 

Poesy     And  this  poor  flower  of  p  In  Mem.  viii  19 

The  p  of  childhood ;  Lovers  Tale  ii  184 

all  the  sciences,  p,  vailing  voices  of  prayer  ?  Fastness  31 

Poet    Thb  p  in  a  golden  chme  was  born,  The  Poet  1 

But  one  poor  p's  scroll,  „      55 

Vex  not  thou  the  p's  mind  (repeat)  Poet's  Mind  1,  3 

The  parson  Holmes,  the  p  Everard  Hall ,  The  Epic  4 

and  the  p  Uttle  urged,  „      48 

sing  Like  p's,  from  the  vanity  of  song  ?  Gardener's  D.  100 

days  were  brief  Whereof  the  p's  talk.  Talking  Oak  186 

A  tongue-tied  P  in  the  feverous  days,  Golden  Year  10 

Are  but  as  p's'  seasons  when  they  flower,  „             28 

this  is  truth  the  p  sings,  Locksley  Hall  75 

To  prove  myself  a  p :  Will  Water.  166 

Hours,  when  the  P's  words  and  looks  „         193 

You  might  have  won  the  P's  name.  You  might  liave  won  1 

doom  Of  those  that  wear  the  P's  crown :  „              10 

For  now  the  P  cannot  die,  „              13 

The  rain  had  fallen,  the  P  arose.  Poet's  Song  1 

fair  As  ever  painter  painted,  p  sang,  Ayltners'  Field  106 

P's,  whose  thoughts  enrich  the  blood  Princess  ii  181 

held  A  volume  of  the  P's  of  her  land :  „     vii  174 

such  as  lurks  In  some  wild  P,  In  Mem.  xxxiv  7 

read  The  Tuscan  p's  on  the  lawn  :  „     Ixxxix  24 

passionate  heart  of  the  p  is  whirl'd  Maud  I  iv  39 

take  withal  Thy  p's  blessing,  To  the  Queen  ii  46 

Glorious  p  who  never  hast  written  a  line.  To  A .  Tennyson  5 

word  of  the  P  by  whom  the  deeps  The  Wreck  23 

The  p  whom  his  Age  would  quote  Ancient  Sage  146 

Hesper,  whom  the  p  call'd  the  Bringer  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  185 

P  of  the  happy  Tityrus  piping  underneath  To  Virgil  13 

P  of  the  poet-satyr  whom  the  laughing  shepherd  „      15 

blackbirds  have  their  wills.  The  p's  too.  Early  Spring  48 
True  p,  surely  to  be  found  When  Truth  Pref.  Poem,  Broth.  Son  15 
'  Ave  atque  Vale '  of  the  P's  hopeless  woe,  Tenderest  of 

Roman  p's  Prater  Ave,  etc.  5 

Old  p's  foster'd  under  friendlier  skies.  Poets  and  their  B.  1 

Had  swampt  the  sacred  p's  with  themselves.  „             14 

faults  your  P  makes  Or  many  or  few,  To  Mary  Boyle  61 

P,  thai  evergreen  laurel  is  blasted  Parnassus  12 

Yes,  my  mid  little  P.  The  Throstle  4 

But  seldom  comes  the  p  here.  Poets  and  Critics  15 

Poetess     The  ancient  p  singeth,  Leonine  Eleg.  13 

I  wish  I  were  Some  mighty  p.  Princess,  Pro.  132 

Poet-forms     The  P-/ of  stronger  houi-s.  Day -D ru.,  L' Envoi  \<i 

Poetic     More  strong  than  all  p  thought ;  In  Mem.  xxxvi  12 

Poetically     '  What ,  if  you  drest  it  up  p  ! '  Princess,  Con.  6 

Poet-like     P-l  he  spoke.  Edwin  Morris  27 

Rather,  O  ye  Gods,  P-l,  Lucretius  93 

Poet-princess    P-p  with  her  grand  Imaginations  Princess  Hi  273 

Poetry     poor  old  P,  passing  hence,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  249 

Poet-satyr     Poet  of  the  p-s  To  Virgil  15 

Point  (s)     clotted  into  p's  and  hanging  loose,  M.  d' Arthur  219 

sail  with  Arthur  under  looming  shores,  P  after  p ;  „         Ep.  18 

slowly,  creeping  on  from  p  to  p :  Locksley  Rail  134 

And  now,  the  bloodless  p  reversed.  The  Voyage  71 

talking  from  the  p,  he  drew  him  in,  The  Brook  154 

To  our  p :  not  war :  Lest  I  lose  all.'  Princess  v  204 

touch'd  upon  the  p  Where  idle  boys  are  cowards  „         308 

In  conflict  with  the  crash  of  shivering  p's,  „         491 

oration  flowing  free  From  p  to  p,  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  33 

'  Nay,  not  a  p  :  nor  art  thou  victor  here.  Gareth  and  L.  1055 

and  the  p's  of  lances  bicker  in  it.  Geraint  and  E.  449 

p  Across  the  maiden  shield  of  Balan  Balin  and  Balan  558 

and  faintly-venom'd  p's  Of  slander.  Merlin  and  V.  172 


Point  (s)  {continued)     It  buzzes  fiercely  round  the  p ;        Merlin  and  V.  432 

Touch'd  at  all  p's,  except  the  poplar  grove,  Lancelot  and  E.  617 

that  p  where  first  she  saw  the  King  Guinevere  403 

clotted  into  p's  and  hanging  loose.  Pass,  of  Arthur  387 

Descending  from  the  p  and  standing  both,  Lover's  Tale  i  411 

Confined  on  p's  of  faith,  „         a  ISQ 

Glanced  at  the  p  of  law,  to  pass  it  by,  „        iv  276 

wait  till  the  p  of  the  pickaxe  be  thro' !  Bef.  of  Lucknow  27 

Still — could  we  watch  at  all  p's  ?  „            49 

the  p's  of  the  foam  in  the  dusk  came  Despair  50 
in  that  p  of  peaceful  hght  ?                                      Locksley  H.,  Sixty  190 

p's  of  the  Russian  lances  arose  in  the  sky  ;  Heavy  Brigade  5 

All  at  all  p's  thou  canst  not  meet,  Poets  and  Critics  7 

Point  (verb)    p  thee  forward  to  a  distant  hght,  Love  and  Duty  95 

p  you  out  the  shadow  from  the  truth  !  Princess  i  84 

p  to  it,  and  we  say.  The  loyal  warmth  of  Florian  „  H  243 

To  p  the  term  of  human  strife,  In  Mem.  1 14 

A  hand  that  p's,  and  palled  shapes  „        Ixx  7 

And  then  p  out  the  flower  or  the  star  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  175 

An'  'e  p's  to  the  bottle  o'  gin,  North.  Cobbler  90 

lights  the  clock  !  the  hand  p's  five—  The  Flight  94 

p  and  jeer,  And  gibber  at  the  worm,  Romney's  R.  136 

Point  (pint)     I've  'ed  my  p  o'  ajile  ivry  noight  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  7 

Pointed  (adj.)    {See  also  Clear-pointed,  Sharp-pointed)    To 

pierce  me  thro'  with  p  light ;  Rosalind  27 

By  zig-zag  paths,  and  juts  of  p  rock,  M.  d' Arthur  50 

And  sketching  with  her  tender  p  foot  The  Brook  102 

with  now  a  wandering  hand  And  now  a  p  finger.  Princess  v  270 

A  mountain  islet  p  and  peak'd ;  The  Islet  15 

With  p  lance  as  if  to  pierce,  a  shape,  Balin  and  Balan  325 

A  score  with  p  lances,  making  at  him —  „             401 

The  shadow  of  some  piece  of  p  lace,  Lancelot  and  E.  1174 

By  zigzag  paths,  and  juts  of  p  rock,  Pass,  of  Arthur  218 

Pointed  (verb)     '  Courage^  '  he  said,  and  p  toward  the 

land,  Lotos-Eaters  1 

Thereto  she  p  with  a  laugh,  D.  of  F.  Women  159 

He  p  out  a  pasturing  colt.  The  Brook  136 

I  follow'd ;  and  at  top  She  p  seaward :  Sea  Dreayns  122 

P  itself  to  pierce,  but  sank  down  shamed  Lucretius  63 

p  on  to  where  A  double  hill  ran  up  Princess  Hi  173 

For  this  lost  lamb  (she  p  to  the  child)  „         iv  361 

I  tarry  for  thee,'  and  p  to  Mars  Maud  III  vi  13 

Stood  one  who  p  toward  the  voice.  Com.  of  Arthur  438 

held  Her  finger  up,  and  p  to  the  dust.  Geraint  and  E.  453 

Are  scatter 'd,'  and  he  p  to  the  field,  „            802 

rose  And  p  to  the  damsel,  and  the  dooi-s.  Lancelot  and  E.  1263 

peak'd  wings  p  to  the  Northern  Star.  Holy  Grail  240 

she  p  downward,  '  Look,  He  haunts  me —  Pelleas  and  E.  226 

red  mark  ran  All  round  one  finger  p  straight.  The  Ring  453 

and  p  to  the  West,  St.  Telemachus  25 

Pointing    p  to  his  drunken  sleep,  Locksley  Hall  81 

one  was  p  this  way,  and  one  that,  Pelleas  and  E.  58 

Point-painted     eyes  had  ever  seen,  P-p  red ;  Balin  and  Balan  412 

Poise    In  crystal  eddies  glance  and  p,  Miller's  D.  52 

Poised     {See  also  Equal-poised)     court-Galen  p  his  guilt- 
head  cane.  Princess  i  19 
A  doom  that  ever  p  itself  to  fall.  Merlin  and  V.  191 
Dagonet  with  one  foot  p  in  his  hand.  Last  Tournament  285 

Poising    And  the  rainbow  hangs  on  the  p  wave,  Sea-Fairies  29 

a  p  eagle,  bums  Above  the  unrisen  morrow : '  Princess  iv  82 

Poison  (s)     Drew  forth  the  p  with  her  balmy  breath,     D.  of  F.  Women  271 

Full  of  weak  p,  turnspits  for  the  clown.  Princess  iv  516 

To  pestle  a  poison'd  p  behind  his  crimson  liglits.  Maud  /  i  44 

The  flowers  that  nm  p  in  their  veins.  Lover's  Tale  i  347 

naked  p's  of  his  heart  In  his  old  age.'  „         356 

And  batten  on  her  p's  ?  Love  forbid  !  „         777 
Cast  the  p  from  your  bosom,                                   Locksley  H.,  Sixty  241 

or  shedding  p  in  the  fountains  of  the  Will.  „                   274 

balm  May  clear  the  blood  from  p,  Death  of  CEnone  36 

menacing  p  of  intolerant  priests,  Akbar's  Dream  165 

Poison  (verb)     now  we  p  our  babes,  poor  souls  !  Maud  II  v  63 

Think  ye  this  fellow  will  p  the  King's  dish  ?  Gareth  and  L.  471 

devil's  leaps,  and  p's  half  the  young.  Guinevere  522 

Poison'd  (adj.  and  part)    {See  also  Jungle-poison'd)    To 

pestle  a  p  poison  behind  his  crimson  lights.  Maud  I  iH 


Poison'd 


544 


Poor 


Poison'd  (adj.  and  part.)  (continued)    laying  his  trains  in  a  p 

gloom  Wrought,  Maud  1x8 

Or  make  her  paler  with  a  p  rose  ?  Merlin  and  V.  611 

with  her  flying  robe  and  her  p  rose;  Fastness  16 

Struck  by  a  p  arrow  in  the  fight,  Death  of  (Enone  26 

I  am  dying  now  Pierced  by  a  p  dart.  „             34 

I  am  p  to  the  heart.  „            46 

Poison'd  (verb)     an'  I  doubts  they  p  the  cow.  Church-warden,  etc.  16 

an'  it  p  the  cow.  „               54 

Poisoner    prov'n  themselves  P's,  murderers.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  IfiP 

Poison-flowers    The  honey  of  p-f  Maud  I  iv  56 

Poisoning    scorn  of  Garlon,  p  all  his  rest,  Balin  and  Balan  383 

Poisonous    each  man  walks  with  his  head  in  a  cloud  of 

p  flies.  Maud  I  iv  54 

Craft,  p  counsels,  wayside  ambushings —  Gareth  and  L.  432 

untU  the  wholesome  flower  And  p  grew  together,  Roly  Grail  776 

And  like  a  p  wind  I  pass  to  blast  And  blaze  Felleas  and  E.  569 

On  Art  with  p  honey  stol'n  from  P'rance,  To  the  Queen  ii  56 

in  every  berry  and  fruit  was  the  p  pleasure  of  wine ;     V.  of  Maeldune  62 

Poland     heart  of  P  hath  not  ceased  To  quiver,  Poland  3 

Shall  I  weep  if  a  P  fall  ?  Maud  I  iv  46 

Polar     Is  twisting  roimd  the  p  star  ;  In  Mem.  ci  12 

P  marvels,  and  a  feast  Of  wonder,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  20 

Pole     (See  also  May-pole)     True  love  turn'd  round  on 

fixed  p's,  Love  thou  thy  land  5 

Betwixt  the  slumber  of  the  p's,  In  Mem.  xcix  18 

Straat  as  a  p  an'  clean  as  a  flower  North.  Cobbler  44 

happier  voyage  now  Toward  no  earthly  p.  Sir  J.  Franklin  4 

up  to  either  p  she  smiles,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  169 

That  wheel  between  the  p's.  Epilogue  21 

New  England  of  the  Southern  P  !  Hands  all  round  1 6 

Polish     keeps  the  wear  and  p  of  the  wave.  Marr.  of  Geraint  682 
Polish'd    The  p  argent  of  her  breast  to  sight  Laid 

bare.                                                            '  D.  of  F.  Women  158 
Thy  care  is,  under  p  tins.  Will  Water.  227 
Politic    Who  wants  the  finer  p  sense  Maud  I  vi  47 
With  p  care,  with  utter  gentleness,  Akbar's  Dream  128 
Political     A  grand  p  dinner  To  half  the  squirelings  Maud  I  xx  25 
A  grand  p  dinner  To  the  men  of  many  acres,  „         31 
In  the  common  deluge  drowning  old  p  common- 
sense!  Locksley  E.,  Sixty  25Q 
Politics     At  wine,  in  clubs,  of  art,  of  p ;  Princess,  Pro.  161 
The  fading  p  of  mortal  Rome,  „         ii  286 
Raving  p,  never  at  rest —                                '  Fastness  3 
Pollen'd    golden  image  was  p  head  to  feet  F.  of  Maeldune  49 
Pollio    Chanter  of  the  P,  To  Firgil  17 
Polluted     Lest  he  should  be  p.  Balin  and  Balan  108 
Here  looking  down  on  thine  p,  Guinevere  555 
he,  the  King,  Call'd  me  p  :  „       620 
Scream  you  are  p  .  .  .  Forlorn  28 
Polluting     P,  and  imputing  her  whole  self.  Merlin  and  F.  803 
Pollution     And  makes  me  one  p :  Guinevere  619 
Polypi    enormous  p  Winnow  with  giant  arms  The  Kraken  9 
Polytheism    P  and  IsMm  feel  after  thee.  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  2 
And  vaguer  voices  of  P  Make  but  one  music.  Akbar's  Dream  150 
Pomp    At  civic  revel  and  p  and  game,  (repeat)  Ode  on  Well.  147,  227 
Pond     cutting  eights  that  day  upon  the  p,  The  Epic  10 
an'  stood  By  the  claay'd-oop  p,  Spinster's  S's.  24 
I  plumpt  foot  fust  i'  the  p ;  „             28 
An'  'e  niver  not  fish'd  'is  awn  p's,  FUlage  Wife  43 
to  my  p  to  wesh  thessens  theere —  Church-warden,  etc.  14 
Fur  they  wesh'd  their  sins  i'  my  p,  ..                 16 
they  leaved  their  nasty  sins  i'  my  p,  ,,54 
Ponder    p  those  three  hundred  scrolls  Lucretius  12 
Ponder'd    (See  also  Nine-years-ponder'd)    Paris  p,  and  I 

cried  '  O  Paris,  (Enone  169 

Enid  p  in  her  heart,  and  said  :  (repeat)  Geraint  and  E.  64,  130 
Pondering    See  Long-pondering 

Ponderous     till  he  heard  the  p  door  Close,  Aylmer's  Field  337 

Our  p  squire  will  give  A  grand  political  diimer  Maud  I  xx  24 

Sun  Heaved  up  a  p  arm  to  strike  the  fifth,  Gareth  and  L.  1045 

Pontic     Phra-bat  the  step  ;  your  P  coast ;  To  Ulysses  42 

Pontius     P  and  Iscariot  by  my  side  St.  S.  Stylites  168 

Poodle     a  score  of  pugs  And  p's  yell'd  Edwin  Morris  120 

Wheer  the  p  runn'd  at  tha  once,  Spinster's  S's.  38 


Pool    Over  the  p's  in  the  burn  water-gnats 

Draw  down  into  his  vexed  p's  Supp 

marish-flowers  that  throng  The  desolate  creeks  and 
p's  among. 

But  angled  in  the  higher  p. 

sleepy  p  above  the  dam,  The  p  beneath  it 

Touching  the  sullen  p  below  : 

Flash  in  the  p's  of  whirling  Simois. 

salt  p,  lock'd  in  with  bars  of  sand, 

and  the  bulrush  in  the  p. 

Down  to  the  p  and  narrow  wharf  he  went, 

a  hen  To  her  false  daughters  in  tlie  p  ; 

is  a  straight  staff  bent  in  a  p  ; 

the  brook,  or  a  p,  or  her  window  pane, 

That  breaks  about  the  dappled  p's  : 

dreams  Of  goodly  supper  in  the  distant  p. 

Near  that  old  home,  a  p  of  golden  carp  ; 

Among  his  bumish'd  brethren  of  the  p  ; 

Among  her  bumish'd  sisters  of  the  p  ; 

And  tho'  she  lay  dark  in  the  p, 

pick  the  faded  creature  from  the  p. 

Gray  swamps  and  p's,  waste  places 

sUpt  and  fell  into  some  p  or  stream, 

A  little  bitter  p  about  a  stone 

p's  of  salt,  and  plots  of  land — 

That  glances  from  the  bottom  of  the  p, 

Blurr'd  like  a  landskip  in  a  ruffled  p, — 
Poonch'd  (punched)     an'  p  my  'and  wi'  the  hawl. 
Poop  (pup)     an'  seeam'd  as  blind  as  a  p, 
Poor  (adj.)     Take,  Madam,  this  p  book  of  song  ; 

But  one  p  poet's  scroll,  and  with  his  word 

owning  but  a  little  more  Than  beasts,  abidest  lame 
and  p, 

'  Would  I  had  been  some  maiden  coarse  and  p  ! 

I  KNEW  an  old  wife  lean  and  p. 

She  in  her  p  attire  was  seen  : 

I  grieve  to  see  you  p  and  wanting  help  : 

had  not  his  p  heart  Spoken  with  That, 

'  Ay,  ay,  p  soul '  said  Miriam,  '  fear  enow  ! 

'  P  lad,  he  died  at  Florence,  quite  worn  out, 

the  week  Before  I  parted  with  p  Edmund  ; 

P  fellow,  could  he  help  it  ? 

and  he,  P  Phihp,  of  all  his  lavish  waste  of  words 

A  splendid  presence  flattering  the  p  roofs 

So  they  talk'd,  P  children,  for  their  comfort : 

To  him  that  fluster'd  his  p  parish  wits 

p  child  of  shame  The  common  care  whom  no  one  cared  for 

long-sufEering,  meek.  Exceeding  '  p  in  spirit ' — 

P  souls,  and  knew  not  what  they  did. 

All  my  p  scrapings  from  a  dozen  years 

And  my  p  venture  but  a  fleet  of  glass 

Nor  like  p  Psyche  whom  she  drags  in  tow.' 

'  P  boy,'  she  said,  '  can  he  not  read — no  books  ? 

P  soul !     I  had  a  maid  of  honour  once  ; 

O  more  than  p  men  wealth,  Than  sick  men  health 

Of  lands  in  which  at  the  altar  the  p  bride 

P  weakling  ev'n  as  they  are.' 


Leonine  Eleg.  8 
Confessions  133 

Dying  Swan  41 

Miller's  D.  64 

99 

244 

(Enone 206 

Palace  of  Art  249 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  28 

Enoch  Arden  690 

Princess  v  329 

High.  Pantheism  16 

Window,  On  the  HUl  4 

In  Mem.  xlix  4 

Gareth  and  L.  1187 

Marr.  of  Geraint  648 

650 

655 

657 

671 

Geraint  and  E.  31 

Lancelot  and  E.  214 

Guinevere  51 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  207 

The  Ring  371 

Romney's  R.  114 

North.  Cobbler  78 

Owd  Roil  101 

To  the  Queen  17 

The  Poet  55 

Two  Foices  197 

D.  of  F.  Women  253 

The  Goose  1 

Beggar  Maid  10 

Enoch  Arden  406 

618 

=,    .      807 

The  Brook  35 

78 

158 

191 

Aylmer's  Field  175 

427 

521 

687 

754 

782 

Sea  Dreams  77 

Princess  Hi  103 
214 
„       iv  133 
459 
„       V  377 
„      w310 
And  some  are  pretty  enough.  And  some  are  p  indeed  ;    The   Flower  22 
And  this  p  flower  of  poesy  Which  Uttle  cared  In  Mem.  viii  19 

Like  some  p  girl  whose  heart  is  set  On  one  .,  1x3 

But  he  was  rich  where  I  was  p,  „      Ixxix  18 

P  rivals  in  a  losing  game,  „  cii  19 

Your  father  has  wealth  well-gotten,  and  I  am  nameless 

and  p.  Maud  I  iv  1^ 


An  eye  well-practised  in  nature,  a  spirit  bounded  and  p  ; 

To  preach  our  p  little  army  down, 

I  noticed  one  of  his  many  rings  (For  he  had  many,  p  worm) 

Courage,  p  heart  of  stone  ! 

Courage,  p  stupid  heart  of  stone. — 

Except  that  now  we  poison  our  babes,  p  souls  ! 

there  was  ever  hauntmg  round  the  palm  A  lusty 

youth,  but  p. 
Am  I  the  cause,  I  the  p  cause  that  men  Reproach 

you, 
a  house  Once  rich,  now  p,  but  ever  open-door'd.' 


38 

a;  38 

7/M69 

Hi  1 

5 

V&3 


Gareth  and  L.  48 

Marr.  of  Geraint  87 
302 


Poor 


545 


Port 


Poor  (adj.)  {continued)   At  least  put  off  to  please  me  this  p 
gown, 
'  In  this  p  gown  my  dear  lord  found  me  first, 
In  this  p  gown  I  rode  with  him  to  court, 
In  this  p  gown  he  bad  me  clothe  myself. 
And  this  p  gown  I  will  not  cast  aside 
And  there,  p  cousin,  with  your  meek  blue  eyes, 
P  wretch — no  friend  ! — 
And  knew  no  more,  nor  gav^e  me  one  p  word  ; 
More  specially  should  your  good  knight  be  p, 


Geraint  and  E.  679 
698 
700 
702 
705 
841 
Merlin  and  V.  75 
277 

^  _,         _,  ^  ,  Lancelot  and  E.  956 

only  the  case^  Her  own  p  work,  her  empty  labour  left.  „  991 

More  specially  were  he,  she  wedded,  p,  „  1321 

Then  said  the  monk,  '  P  men,  when  yule  is  cold,  Holy  Grail  613 

blest  be  Heaven  That  brought  thee  here  to  this  p  house 

of  ours  „  617 

I,  the  p  Pelleas  whom  she  call'd  her  fool  ?  Pelleas  and  E.  474 

In  honour  of  p  Innocence  the  babe.  Last  Tournament  292 

To  p  sick  people,  richer  in  His  eyes  Guinevere  684 

P  Julian — how  he  rush'd  away  ;  Lover's  Tale  iv  2 

p  lad,  an'  we  parted  in  tears.  First  Quarrel  20 

Seeing  forty  of  our  p  hundred  were  slain,  The  Revenge  76 

— she  wrought  us  harm,  P  soul,  not  knowing)     Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  185 
sa  I  knaw'd  es  'e'd  coom  to  be  p  ;  Village  Wife  46 

Siver  the  mou'ds  rattled  down  upo'  p  owd  Squii-e 

i'  the  wood,  „  95 

Quietly  sleeping — so  quiet,  our  doctor  said  '  P 

Uttle  dear.  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  41 

that  some  broken  gleam  from  our  p  earth 

May  touch  thee,  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  18 

Clove  into  perilous  chasms  our  walk  and  our  p 

palisades.  Def.  of  Lucknow  55 

hang'd,  p  friends,  as  rebels  And  burn'd  alive  as 

heretics  !  Sir  J.  Odlcastle  47 

The  p  man's  money  gone  to  fat  the  friar.  „  150 

my  «  thanks  !     I  am  but  an  alien  and  a  Genovese.  Columbus  242 

A  clearer  day  Than  our  p  twilight  dawn  on  earth —  Tiresias  206 

0  we  p  orphans  of  nothing —  Despair  33 

And  we,  the  p  earth's  dying  race.  Ancient  Sage  178 

An'  where  'ud  the  p  man,  thin,  cut  his  bit  o'  turf 

for  the  fire  ?  Tomorrow  65 

Wheer  the  p  wench  drowndid  hersen,  black  Sal,  Spinster's  S's.  25 

But  fur  thy  bairns,  p  Steevie,  a  boimcin'  boy  an'  a  gell.  „  83 

P  old  Heraldry,  p  old  History,  p  old  Poetry, 

passing  hence,  Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  249 

P  old  voice  of  eighty  crying  after  voices  that  have  fled  !       „  251 

she  cotch'd  'er  death  o'  cowd  that  night,  p  soul,  Owd  Roa  114 

— as  this  p  earth's  pale  history  runs, —  Vastness  3 

you  and  I  Had  been  abroad  for  my  p  health  so  long  The  Ring  101 

P  nurse  !     Father.     I  bad  her  keep.  Like  a  seal'd  book, 

all  mention  of  the  ring,  ,,        121 

P  Muriel !     Father.    Ay,  p  Muriel  when  you  hear 

What  follows !  „        272 

0  p  Mother  !     And  you,  p  desolate  Father,  and  p  me,  „        302 

Each  p  pale  cheek  a  momentary  rose —  „        315 

that  p  luik  With  earth  is  broken,  and  has  left  her  free,  „        475 

This  p  rib-grated  dungeon  of  the  holy  human  ghost,  Happy  31 

StDl  you  wave  me  off — p  roses — must  I  go —  „      101 

Poor  (s)     Nor  any  p  about  yoiu-  lands  ?  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  68 

He  but  less  loved  than  Edith,  of  her  p  :  Aylmer's  Field  167 

Last  from  her  own  home-circle  of  the  p  ,,  504 

Whose  hand  at  home  was  gracious  to  the  p  :  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  37 

Taake  my  word  for  it,  Sammy,  the  p  in  a  loomp 

is  bad.  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  48 

How  mend  the  dwellings,  of  the  p  ;  To  F.  D.  Maurice  38 

Ring  out  the  feud  of  rich  and  p.  In  Mem.  cvi  11 

When  the  p  are  hovell'd  and  hustled  together,  Maud  /  i  34 

chalk  and  alum  and  plaster  are  sold  to  the  p  for  bread,  „  39 

Laborious  for  her  people  and  her  p —  Ded.  of  Idylls  35 

knights  and  ladies  wept,  and  rich  and  p  Wept,  Holy  Grail  353 

When  I  goas  fur  to  coomfut  the  p  Spinster's  S's.  108 

crowded  couch  of  incest  in  the  warrens  of  the  p.   Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  224 
Served  the  p,  and  built  the  cottage,  „  268 

The  kings  and  the  rich  and  the  p  ;  Dead  Prophet  40 

Call  yoiu-  p  to  regale  with  you.  On  Jul).  Q.  Victoria  30 

an'  they  maakes  ma  a  help  to  the  p,  Church-warden,  etc.  39 


Pope     And  rail'd  at  all  the  P's,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  165 

Poplar  (adj.)     As  in  a  ^  grove  when  a  light  wind  wakes  Princess  v  13 


Lancelot  and  E.  509 

617 

804 

Leonine  Eleg.  4 

Mariana  41 

55 

76 

Ode  to  Memory  56 

Amphion  37 

In  Mem.  Ixxii  3 

Lancelot  and  E.  411 

523 

1040 

1050 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  79 

110 

V.  of  Maeldune  15 

Balin  and  Balan  30 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  11 

Dora  73 

Princess  v  29 

Last  Tournament  234 

V.  of  Maeldune  43 

Spinster's  S's.  78 

The  Tourney  17 

Aylmer's  Field  31 

Lover's  Tale  i  352 

Boddicea  7 

Tiresias  174 

Vastness  14 


With  young  Lavame  into  the  p  grove. 
Touch'd  at  all  points,  except  the  p  grove, 
Lavaine  across  the  p  grove  Led  to  the  caves  : 
Poplar  (s)    by  the  p  tall  rivulets  babble  and  fall. 
Hard  by  a  p  shook  alway. 
The  shadow  of  the  p  fell  Upon  her  bed, 
sound  Which  to  the  wooing  wind  aloof  The  p  made 
The  seven  ebns,  the  p's  four 
The  p's,  in  long  order  due. 
With  blasts  which  blow  the  p  white, 
And  p's  made  a  noise  of  falling  showers, 
wide  world's  rumour  by  the  grove  Of  p's 
not  pass  beyond  the  cape  That  has  the  p  on  it 
Beyond  the  p  and  far  up  the  flood, 
You  see  yon  Lombard  p  on  the  plain. 
And  by  the  p  vanish'd — 
the  p  and  cypress  unshaken  by  storm 
Poplartree    left  Of  Balan  Balan's  near  a  p. 
Poppy    from  the  craggy  ledge  the  p  hangs  in  sleep. 

moimd  That  was  imsown,  where  many  poppies  grew 

More  crumpled  than  a  p  from  the  sheath, 

bluebell,  kingcup,  p,  glanced  About  the  revels. 

Thro'  the  fire  of  the  tulip  and  p, 

sa  much  es  a  p  along  wi'  the  wheat, 

and  flush'd  as  red  As  poppies 

Poppy-mingled     A  land  of  hops  and  p-m  com, 

Poppy-stem    Ev'n  the  dull-blooded  p-s. 

Populace    call  us  Britain's  barbarous  p's, 

Here  trampled  by  the  p  underfoot, 

famishing  p,  wharves  forlorn  ; 

Popular    did  I  take  That  p  name  of  thine  to  shadow  forth         Lucretius  96 

The  pretty,  p  name  such  manhood  earns.  Merlin  and  V.  787 

for  this  He  chill'd  the  p  praises  of  the  King  Guinevere  13 

these  are  the  new  dark  ages,  you  see,  of  the  p  press.  Despair  88 

in  a  p  torrent  of  lies  upon  lies  ;  Vastness  6 

Blown  into  glittering  by  the  p  breath,  Romney's  R.  49 

And  you,  old  p  Horace,  you  the  wise  Poets  and  their  B.  5 

Porch    {See  also  Door-poorch)     By  garden  p'es  on 

the  brim,  Arabian  Nights  16 

Or  thronging  all  one  p  of  Paradise  Palace  of  Art  101 

honeysuckle  roimd  the  p  has  wov'n  its  wavy  bowers.        May  Queen  29 

For  up  the  p  there  grew  an  Eastern  rose.  Gardener's  D.  123 

The  cloudy  p  oft  opening  on  the  Sun  ?  Love  and  Duty  9 

'  Dark  p,'  1  said,  '  and  silent  aisle,  The  Letters  47 

Strode  from  the  p,  tall  and  erect  again.  Aylmer's  Field  825 

into  rooms  which  gave  Upon  a  pillar'd  p.  Princess  i  230 

p  that  sang  AU  round  with  laurel,  „        ii  22 

Then  summon'd  to  the  p  we  went.  „     Hi  178 

That  pelt  us  in  the  p  with  flowers.  In  Mem.,  Con.  68 

They  leave  the  p,  they  pass  the  grave  „  71 

I  could  have  linger'd  in  that  p.  Lover's  Tale  i  186 

Porch-pillars     P-p  on  the  lion  resting.  The  Daisy  55 

Pore    dote  and  p  on  yonder  cloud  In  Mem.  xv  16 

Pored     I  p  upon  her  letter  which  I  held.  Princess  v  469 

Poring'    p  over  miserable  books —  Lochsley  Hall  172 

Now  p  on  the  glowworm,  now  the  star.  Princess  iv  211 

'  From  yearlong  p  on  thy  pictured  eyes,  „       vii  340 

As  when  a  painter,  p  on  a  face,  Lancelot  and  E.  332 

he  was  p  over  his  Tables  of  Trade  The  Wreck  26 

Porphyry     Nor  winks  the  gold  fin  in  the  p  font :  Princess  vii  178 

Port  (demeanour)     modem  gentleman  Of  stateliest  p  ;  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  23 

Port  (harbour)     There  lies  the  p  ;  the  vessel  puffs  Ulysses  44 

Annie  Lee,  The  prettiest  Uttle  damsel  in  the  p,  Enoch  Arden  12 

Ten  miles  to  northward  of  the  narrow  p  „  102 

before  she  sail'd,  Sail'd  from  this  p.  „  125 

Fearing  the  lazy  gossip  of  the  p,  „  335 

Then  all  descended  to  the  p,  „  446 

By  this  the  lazy  gossips  of  the  p,  „  472 

Told  him,  with  other  annals  of  the  p,  „  702 

And  when  they  buried  him  the  little  p  „  916 

To  that  fair  p  below  the  castle  Of  Queen  Theodolind,         The  Daisy  79 

And  found  thee  lying  in  the  p  ;  In  Mem.  xiv  4 

A  tawny  pirate  anchor'd  in  his  p,  Merlin  and  V.  558 

2   M 


Port 

Pwt  (wine)     Go  fetch  a  pint  of  -p  : 
But  tho'  the  p  surpasses  praise, 
I  hold  thee  dear  For  this  good  pint  of  p. 
Portal    crimson'd  all  Thy  presence  and  thy  p'5, 
found  at  length  The  garden  p's. 
That  guard  the  v's  of  the  house  ; 
And  doubt  beside  the  p  waits, 
Lords  from  Rome  before  the  p  stood, 
mark'd  The  p  of  King  Pellam's  chapel 
With  chasni-Uke  -p's  open  to  the  sea, 
saw  the  postern  p  also  wide  Yawning  ; 
floods  with  redundant  life  Her  narrow  p's. 
O  blossom'd  p  of  the  lonely  house, 
Forth  issuing  from  his  p's  in  the  crag 
Half -entering  the  p's. 
Then  a  peal  that  shakes  the  p — 
the  name  A  golden  p  to  my  rhyme  : 
'  Spirit,  neanng  yon  dark  p  at  the  limit 
Portal-arch     thro'  the  f-a  Peering  askance. 
Portal-warding     Far  as  the  p-w  lion-whelp, 
Porter     /  hung  with  grooms  and  p's  on  the  bridge 
Portion     P's  and  parcels  of  the  dreadful  Past. 
At«  with  yoimg  lads  his  p  by  the  door, 
carves  A  p  from  the  solid  present, 
A  p  of  the  pleasant  yesterday, 
Portion'd     P  in  halves  between  us, 
Portly     His  double  chin,  his  p  size, 
Portrait    Than  those  old  f's  of  old  kings. 
Yet  hangs  his  p  in  my  father's  hall 
p  of  his  friend  Drawn  by  an  artist. 
Portress     At  break  of  day  the  College  P  came  : 
A  wakeful  p,  and  didst  parle  with  Death, — 
Portugal     Was  blackening  on  the  slopes  of  P, 
I  will  p  him  or  will  die. 
What  souls  p  themselves  so  pure, 
slay  you,  and  p  your  horse  And  armour, 
s'd    (See  also  Half-possess'd,  Self-possess'd) 
thing  which  p  The  darkness  of  the  world. 
For  love  p  the  atmosphere, 
sinful  soul  p  of  many  gifts,  To 

kiss'd  her  tenderly  Not  knowing  what  p  him : 
And  marvel  what  p  my  brain  ; 
A  rainy  cloud  p  the  earth, 
The  silent  snow  p  the  earth. 
Possession    '  I  take  p  of  man's  mind  and  deed. 
Enoch  would  hold  p  for  a  week  : 
reading  of  the  will  Before  he  takes  p  ? 
Possible    all  Life  needs  for  life  is  p  to  will — 
O  that  'twere  p  After  long  gnef  and  pain 
Ah  Christ,  that  it  were  p  For  one  short  hour 
Post  (s)    {See  also  Sign-post,  Woman-post) 
by  the  Gods : 
thro'  twenty  p's  of  telegraph  They  flash'd 


546 


Power 


Will  Water.  4 

77 

212 

Tithonvs  57 

Princess  iv  200 

In  Mem.  xxix  12 

„         xdv  14 

Com.  of  Arthur  477 

Balin  and  Balan  405 

Holy  Grail  815 

Pelleas  and  E.  420 

Lover's  Tale  i  85 

280 

430 

m123 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  263 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  16 

God  and  the  Univ.  4 

Merlin  and  V.  99 

Enoch  Arden  98 

,  Godiva  2 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  47 

Gareth  and  L.  480 

Merlin  and  V.  462 

Lover's  Tale  i  122 

Gardener's  D.  5 

Miller's  D.  2 

Day- Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  23 

Princess  ii  239 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  134 

Princess  ii  15 

Lover's  Tale  i  113 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  62 

Fatima  39 

In  Mem.  xxxii  15 

Geraint  and  E.  74 

some- 


Arabian  Nights  71 

Miller's  D.  91 

With  Pal.  of  Art.  3 

Aylmer's  Field  556 

In  Mem.  xiv  16 

,,  XXX  O 

„      Ixxviii  3 

Palace  of  Art  209 

Enoch  Arden  27 

Lover's  Tale  i  677 

Love  and  Duty  86 

Maud  II  iv  1 

13 

quit  the  p  Allotted 

Lucretius  148 
Princess,  Pro.  77 


Ponr'd  {continued)  P  back  into  my  empty  soul  and  frame  D.  of  F.  Women  78 
her  soft  brown  hair  P  on  one  side  :  Gardener's  D.  129 

For  me  the  torrent  ever  f  And  glisten'd —  To  E.  L.  13 

I  had  p  Into  the  shadowmg  pencil's  Lover's  Tale  ii  179 

avarice,  of  your  Spain  P  in  on  aU  those  happy  naked 


Def.  of  Lucknow  10,  13,  52 
Princess  i  189 
PeUeas  and  E.  420 
Com.  of  Arthur  213 
D.  of  the  0.  Year  31 
Princess  v  424 
Maud  I  xii  22 


isles — 

waterfalls  P  in  a  thimderless  plimge 

From  out  the  sunset  p  an  alien  race, 
Pouring    brooks  of  hallow'd  Israel  From  craggy 
hoUows  p, 

And  England  p  on  her  foes. 

foimtains  in  the  brain,  Still  p  thro', 
Poussetting    P  with  a  sloe-tree  : 
Pou  sto     one  P  s  whence  af terhands  May  move 
Pouted     His  own  are  p  to  a  kiss  : 

Perch'd  on  the  p  blossom  of  her  lips  : 
Poverty    And  lift  the  household  out  of  p  ; 

His  baby's  death,  her  growing  p. 


every  man  die  at  his  p  !  (repeat) 
Post  (verb)     made  a  point  to  p  with  mares  ; 
Postern    the  p  portal  also  wide  Yawning ; 
Postem-gate    Deliver'd  at  a  secret  f-g  To  Merlin, 
Posi-haste    His  son  and  heir  doth  nde  p-h, 
Postscript    came  a  p  dash'd  across  the  rest. 
Posy     went  Home  with  her  maiden  p, 
Pot     {See  also  Flower-pot,  Pint-pot)     Thy  latt«r  days 

increased  with  pence  Go  down  among  the  p's :  Will  Water.  220 

an'  'e  got  a  brown  p  an'  a  boan,  Village  Wife  48 

Potato    .S'«eTaate 
Potent     A  p  voice  of  Parliament,  In  Mem.  cxiii  11 

No  sound  is  breathed  so  p  to  coerce,  Tiresias  120 

Potheen     give  me  a  thrifle  to  dhrink  yer  health  in  p.  Tomorrow  98 

Potherbs    rights  or  wrongs  like  p's  in  the  street.  Princess  v  459 

Poultry    a  larger  egg  Than  modem  p  drop,  Will  Water.  122 

Pounced     the  bird  Who  p  her  quarry  Merlin  and  V.  135 

Pound     wedded  her  to  sixty  thousand  p's,  Edwin  Morris  126 

Pour     P  round  mine  ears  the  livelong  bleat  Ode  to  Memory  65 

Holy  water  will  I  p  Into  every  spicy  flower  Poet's  Mind  12 

Pour'd     beyond  the  noon  a  fire  Is  p  upon  the  hills,  Fatima  31 

gray  twilight  p  On  dewy  pastures,  Palace  of  Art  85 


Columbus  173 
V.  of  Maeldune  14 
Akbar's  Dream  192 

D.  of  F.  Women  182 

Ode  on  Well.  117 

Lover's  Tale  i  84 

Amphion  44 

Princess  Hi  263 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  31 

Princess,  Pro.  199 

Enoch  Arden  485 

705 


honest  P,  bare  to  the  bone  ;   Opulent  Avarice,  lean  as  P ;     Fastness  19 

Powder     and  the  p  was  all  of  it  spent ;  The  Revenge  80 

That  grind  the  glebe  to  p  !  Tiresias  95 
Power     {See  also  Ocean-power)     arms,  or  p  of  brain,  or 

birth  To  the  Queen  3 

In  impotence  of  fancied  p.  A  Charci,cter  24 

a  name  to  shake  All  evil  dreams  of  p — •  The  Poet  47 

fill  the  sea-halls  with  a  voice  of  p  ;  The  Merman  10 

What  lit  your  eyes  with  tearful  p,  Margaret  3 

Mine  be  the  p  which  ever  to  its  sway  Mine  be  the  strength  9 

lest  brute  P  be  increased,  Poland  6 

That  once  had  p  to  rob  it  of  content.  The  form,  the  form  8 

How  grows  the  day  of  human  p  ?  '  Two  Voices  78 

'  If  Nature  put  not  forth  her  p  ,.           160 

From  out  my  sullen  heart  a  p  Broke,  ..           443 

She  to  Paris  made  Proffer  of  royal  p,  (Enone  111 

StiU  she  spake  on  and  still  she  spake  of  p,  ..     121 

P  fitted  to  the  season  ;  .,     123 

seeing  men,  in  p  Only,  are  likest  gods,  „     129 

so  much  the  thought  of  p  Flatter'd  his  spirit ;  ,.     136 

three  alone  lead  life  to  sovereign  p.  ..     145 

Yet  not  for  p  {p  of  herself  Would  come  uncall'd  for)  ..     146 

without  light  Or  p  of  movement,  Palace  of  Art  246. 

P  should  make  from  land  to  land  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  21 

Thro'  future  time  by  p  of  thought.  Love  thou  thy  land  4 

sea  and  air  are  dark  With  great  contrivances  of  P.  „              64 


Laid  widow'd  of  the  p  in  his  eye 

you  know  I  have  some  p  with  Heaven 

P  goes  forth  from  me. 

Among  the  p's  and  princes  of  this  world, 

and  try  If  yet  he  keeps  the  p. 

happy  men  that  have  the  p  to  die. 

So  the  P's,  who  wait  On  noble  deeds. 

The  Federations  and  the  P's  ; 

Until  the  charm  have  p  to  make  New  lifeblood 

halt  the  p  to  turn  This  wheel  wthin  my  head. 

Faster  binds  a  tyrant's  p  ; 

'  He  had  not  wholly  quench'd  his  p  ; 

understand.  While  I  have  p  to  speak. 

Turning  beheld  the  P's  of  the  House 

but  he  had  p's,  he  knew  it : 

and  the  hands  of  p  Were  bloodier, 

the  philtre  which  had  p,  they  said, 

and  check'd  His  p  to  shape  : 

all-generating  p's  and  genial  heat  Of  Nature, 

And  so  much  grace  and  p,  breathing  down 

arguing  love  of  knowledge  and  of  p  ; 

might  grow  To  use  and  p  on  this  Oasis, 

organ  almost  burst  his  pipes.  Groaning  for  p. 

To  push  my  rival  out  of  place  and  p. 

Autmnn,  dropping  fruits  of  p  ; 

sought  far  less  for  truth  than  p  In  knowledge : 

side  by  side,  full-summ'd  in  all  their  p's, 

— and  perhaps  they  felt  their  p. 

And  gradually  the  p's  of  the  night, 

Confused  by  brainless  mobs  and  lawless  P's  ; 

Nor  palter'd  with  Eternal  God  for  p  ; 


M.  d' Arthur  12 
St.  S.  Stylites  14 
14 
181 
Talking  Oak '. 
Tiihonus  7fl 
Godiva  71 
Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  I5 
Will  Water.  ~ 

Vision  of  Sin  12 

211 

Enoch  Arden  87l 

Aylmer's  Field  28 

39 

43 

Lucretius  '. 

"     ..^^ 

Princess  ii  38 

57 

167 

475 

,,        iv  335 

,.  vi  55 

.,       vii  236 

288 

..      Con.  13 

111 

Ode  on  Well.  153 

180 


Power 


547 


Praise 


Power  (continued)     Round  us,  each  with  different  p's.  Ode  on  Well.  263 

And  ruling  by  obeying  Nature's  p's,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  40 

Son  of  him  with  whom  we  strove  for  p —  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  1 

is  He  not  all  but  that  which  has  p  to  feel  High.  Pantheism  8 

all  we  have  p  to  see  is  a  straight  staff  „  16 
•  The  deep  has  p  on  the  height,  And  the  height  has 

p  on  the  deep  ;  Voice  and  the  P.  21 

To  Sleep  I  give  my  p's  away ;  In  Mem.  iy  1 

And  stunn'd  me  from  my  p  to  think  „        xm  15 

The  chairs  £ind  thrones  of  civil  p  ?  ,,        xxi  16 

p  to  see  Within  the  green  the  moulder'd  tree,      /  „        xxvi  6 

With  gatber'd  p,  yet  the  same,  „       xxx  26 

For  Wisdom  dealt  with  mortal  f's,  ,,      xxxvi  5 

When  all  his  active  p's  are  still,  „       Ixiv  18 

That  Nature's  ancient  p  was  lost :  „        Ixix  2 

Hath  p  to  give  thee  as  thou  wert  ?  .,        Ixxv  8 

Conduct  by  patlis  of  growing  p^s,  ..  Ixxxiv  31 

First  love,  first  friendship,  equal  -p's,  „  Ixxxvlffl 

with  p  and  grace  And  music  in  the  bounds  of  law,  .,  Ixxxvii  33 

P  was  with  him  in  the  night,  „      xeoi  18 

some  novel  p  Sprang  up  for  ever  at  a  touch,  ,,        cxii  9 

burst  All  barriers  in  her  onward  race  For  p.  „      cxiv  15 

Who  grewest  not  alone  in  p  „              26 

The  P  in  darkness  whom  we  guess  ;  „      cxxiv  4 

To  shift  an  arbitrary  p,  „  cxxviii  17 

To  feel  thee  some  diffusive  p,  „       cxxx  7 

And  thou  art  worthy  ;  full  of  p  ;  „     Con.  37 

Strong  in  the  p  that  aJl  men  adore,  Maud  /  a?  14 

Cold  fires,  yet  with  p  to  bum  and  brand  „    xviii  39 

P's  of  the  height,  P's  of  the  deep,  „  //  ii  82 
Have  p  on  this  dark  land  to  Ughten  it.  And  p  on 

this  dead  world  to  make  it  live.'  Com.  of  Arthur  93 

P's  who  walk  the  world  Made  lightnings  „            107 

So,  compass'd  by  the  p  of  the  King,  „            203 

Hath  p  to  walk  the  waters  like  our  Lord.  „            294 

Am  much  too  gentle,  have  not  used  my  p  :  Marr.  of  Geraint  467 

dearer  by  the  p  Of  intermitted  usage ;  „            810 

Ye  are  in  my  p  at  last,  are  in  my  p.  Geraint  and  E.  310 

I  will  make  use  of  all  the  p  I  have.  „            345 

out  of  lier  there  came  a  p  upon  him  ;  ,,             613 

Than  hardest  tyrants  in  their  day  of  p,  „             695 

Disband  himseU,  and  scatter  all  his  p's,  ,.             798 

'  and  lo,  the  p's  of  Doorm  Are  scatter'd,'  „            801 

wealth  of  beauty,  thine  the  crown  of  p,  Merlin  and  V.  79 

The  meanest  having  p  upon  the  highest,  „           195 

grant  me  some  slight  p  upon  your  fate,  „           333 

I  will  not  yield  to  give  you  p  Upon  my  life  „          373 

F'aith  and  unfaith  can  ne'er  be  equal  p's  :  „  388 
Giving  you  p  upon  me  thro'  this  charm,  That  you 

might  play  me  falsely,  having  p,  „          514 

Have  turn'd  to  tyrants  when  they  came  to  p)  .,           518 

learnt  their  elemental  secrets,  p's  And  forces  ;  .,           632 

like  a  ghost  without  the  p  to  speak.  Lancelot  and  E.  919 

the  owls  WaiUng  had  p  upon  her,  „          1001 

p  To  lay  the  sudden  heads  of  violence  flat.  Holy  Grail  309 

Drew  me,  with  p  upon  me,  till  I  grew  „  486 
My  God,  the  p  Was  once  in  vows  when  men 

beheved  Last  Tournament  648 

the  P's  that  tend  the  soul,  Guinevere  65 

her  beauty,  grace  and  p.  Wrought  as  a  charm  upon  them,  „       143 

And  for  the  p  of  ministration  in  her,  „      694 

And  have  not  p  to  see  it  as  it  is  :  Pass,  of  Arthur  20 

Laid  widow'd  of  the  p  in  his  eye         .  „          _  290 

Becaase  it  lack'd  the  p  of  perfect  Hope  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  453 

P  from  whose  right  hand  the  light  Of  Life  issueth,  „            497 

tho'  mine  image,  The  subject  of  thy  p,  „             782 

an'  the  p  ov  'is  Graace,  North.  Cobbler  73 

But  she  wur  a  p  o'  coomfut,  „              79 

had  holden  the  p  and  glory  of  Spain  so  cheap  The  Revenge  106 
misshaping  vision  of  the  P's  Behind  the  world.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  230 

scarce  as  great  as  Edith's  p  of  love,  „  261 
Dead  Princess,  living  P,  if  that,                       Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  1 

Lord  give  thou  p  to  thy  two  witnesses  !  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  81 

^  Authority  of  the  Church,  P  of  the  keys  !  '—  „             162 

By  quiet  fields,  a  slowly-dying  p,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  24 


Power  (continued)    With  p  on  thine  own  act  and  on  the 

world.  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  56 

and  grown  In  p,  and  ever  growest,  To  Dante  2 
upon  me  flash'd  The  p  of  prophesying — ^but  to  me  No  p —     Tiresias  57 

no  p  on  Fate,  Theirs,  or  mine  own  !  ,,        63 

This  p  hath  work'd  no  good  to  aught  that  lives,  „        77 

Pity  for  all  that  aches  in  the  grasp  of  an  idiot  p,  Despair  43 

His  Love  would  have  p  over  HeU  „    102 

What  p  but  the  bird's  could  make  This  music  Ancient  Sage  21 

The  nameless  P,  or  P's,  that  rule  „          29 

'  What  P  ?  aught  akin  to  Mind,  „           78 

Or  P  as  of  the  Gods  gone  bhnd  „          80 

'  What  P  but  the  Years  that  make  .,  91 
P's  of  Good,  the  P's  of  111,                                     Locksley  H.,  Sixty  273 

Heavenly  P  Makes  all  things  new,  (repeat)  Early  Spring  1,  43 

thy  will,  a  p  to  make  This  ever-changing  world  To  Duke  of  Argyll  9 

Men  loud  against  all  forms  of  p —  Freedom  37 

thunders  often  have  confessed  Thy  p.  To  W.  C.  Macready  3 

serpent-wanded  p  Draw  downward  into  Hades  Demeter  and  P.  25 

P  That  lifts  her  buried  life  from  gloom  „            97 

Thro'  manifold  effect  of  simple  p's —  Prog,  of  Spring  86 

banners  blazoning  a  P  That  is  not  seen  Akbar's  Dream  137 

but  for  p  to  fuse  My  myriads  into  union  „          156 

Call'd  on  the  P  adored  by  the  Christian,  Kapiolani  32 

On  whom  a  happy  home  has  p  The  Wanderer  10 

purpose  of  that  P  which  alone  is  great,  God  atid  the  Univ.  5 

Praay'd  (prayed)     howsiver  they  p  an'  p.  Village  Wife  93 

Practice    run  My  faith  beyond  my  p  into  his  :  Edwin  Morris  54 

I  had  not  stinted  p,  O  my  God.  St.  S.  Stylites  59 

workman  and  his  work,  That  p  betters  ?  '  Princess  Hi  299 

What  p  howsoe'er  expert  In  fitting  aptest  words  In  Mem.  Ixxv  5 

The  sin  that  p  burns  into  the  blood,  Merlin  and  V.  762 

Nor  yet  forgot  her  p  in  her  fright,  „          947 

Practise     And  do  not  p  on  me,  Geraint  and  E.  356 

Practised     (See  also  WeU-practised)     inasmuch  as  you 

have  p  on  her,  Aylmer's  Field  302 

I  find  Your  face  is  p  when  I  spell  the  Unes,  Merlin  and  V.  367 

Strike  down  the  lusty  and  long  p  knight,  Lancelot  and  E.  1360 
Truthful,  trustful,  looking  upward  to  the  p  hustings- 
liar  ;                                                                         Locksley  H.,  Sixty  123 

Praise  (S)     Blew  his  own  p's  in  his  eyes,  A  Clmracter  22 

Nor  golden  largess  of  thy  p.  My  life  is  full  5 

She  still  would  take  the  p,  and  care  no  more.  The  form,  the  form  14 

'  That  won  his  p's  night  and  morn  ?  '  Mariana  in  the  S.  34 

While  still  I  yeam'd  for  human  p.  Two  Voices  123 

But  he  is  chill  to  p  or  blame.  „          258 

neither  count  on  p  :  Love  thou  thy  land  26 

express  delight,  in  p  of  her  Grew  oratory.  Gardener's  D.  56 

That  only  love  were  cause  enough  for  p.'  ,,           105 

She  broke  out  in  p  To  God,  Dora  112 

But  yield  not  me  the  p  :  St.  8.  Stylites  185 

And  others,  passing  p.  Talking  Oak  58 

But  tho'  the  port  surpasses  p.  Will  Water  77 

In  p  and  in  dispraise  the  same.  Ode  on  Well.  73 
after  p  and  scorn.  As  one  who  feels  the  immeasurable 

world,  A  Dedication  6 

The  p  that  comes  to  constancy.'  In  Mem.  xxi  12 

Had  surely  added  p  to  p.  „       xxxi  8 

I  leave  thy  p's  unexpress'd  „        Ixxv  1 

To  stir  a  little  dust  of  p.  „               12 

fills  The  lips  of  men  with  honest  p,  ,,  Ixxxiv  26 

whole  wood-world  is  one  full  peal  of  p.  Balin  and  lialan  450 

have  ye  no  one  word  of  loyal  p  For  Arthur,  Merlin  and  V.  778 

Dearer  to  true  young  hearts  than  their  own  p,  Lancelot  and  E.  419 

silent  life  of  prayer,  P,  fast  and  alms  ;  Holy  Grail  5 

to  prayer  and  p  She  gave  herself,  „           76 

From  prime  to  vespers  will  I  chant  thy  p  Pelleas  and  E.  349 

He  chill'd  the  popular  p's  of  the  King  Gtunevere  13 

he  was  loud  in  weeping  and  in  p  Of  her.  Lover's  Tale  ii  87 
Should  earn  from  both  the  p  of  heroism.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  251 
murmur  of  the  people's  p  From  thine  own 

State,  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  7 

P  to  our  Indian  brothers,  Def.  of  Lucknow  69 

In  p  to  God  who  led  me  thro'  the  waste.  Columbus  17 

And  I  more  pleasure  in  your  p.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  56 


Praise 


648 


Prayer 


Praise  (s)  (continued)    win  all  p  from  all  Who  past  it, 

to  slight  p  but  suffer  scorn  ; 

the  p  And  prayer  of  men, 

in  p  of  Whom  The  Christian  bell, 

'  All  p  to  Alia  by  whatever  hands 
Praise  (verb)    p  the  heavens  for  what  they  have  ?  ' 

nothing  else  For  which  to  p  the  heavens 

And  p  thee  more  in  both 

'  No,  I  cannot  p  the  fire  In  your  eye — 

And  p  the  invisible  ujiiversal  Lord, 

one  would  p  the  love  that  linkt  the  King 

child  hath  often  heard  me  p  Your  feats  of  arms, 

crying,  '  P  the  patient  saints. 

You  p  when  you  should  blame 

in  every  language  I  hear  spoken,  people  p  thee. 
Praised    One  p  her  ancles,  one  her  eyes, 

He  p  his  land,  his  horses,  his  machines  ;  He  p  his 
ploughs,  his  cows,  his  hogs,  his  dogs  ;  He  p  his 
hens,  his  geese,  his  guinea-hens ; 

p  the  waning  red,  and  told  The  vintage — 

And  much  I  p  her  nobleness. 

Then  they  p  him,  soft  and  low, 

But  if  I  p  the  busy  io-vm, 

p  him  to  his  face  with  their  courtly 
Praiang  Sipt  wine  from  silver,  p  God, 
Pranced    lightly  p  Three  captains  out ; 

a  hundred  gamboU'd  and  p  on  the  wrecks 
Prancer    she  whose  elfin  p  sprmgs  By  night 
Prank     Plajong  mad  f'a  along  the  heathy  leas ; 

must  play  such  p's  as  these. 

Sweet  love  on  p  s  of  saucy  boyhood  : 
Prasutagus    Me  the  wife  of  rich  P, 
Prate  (s)     child  kill  me  with  her  foolish  p  ?  ' 
Prate  (verb)     of  the  moral  instinct  would  she  p 

p  Of  penances  I  cannot  have  gone  thro', 

we,  that  p  Of  rights  and  wrongs, 

Boy,  when  I  hear  you  p  I  ahnost  think 

Whj^  do  they  p  of  the  blessings  of  Peace  ? 

Fools  p,  and  perish  traitors. 
Prated    I  that  p  peace,  when  first  I  heard 
Pratest    '  Thou  p  here  where  thou  art  least ; 
Prattle    full  heart  of  yours  Whereof  ye  p. 

Hers  was  the  prettiest  p, 

I  used  To  p  to  her  picture — 
Prattling     P  the  primrose  fancies  of  the  boy, 

Then  said  the  Uttle  novice  p  to  her. 

Unmannerly,  with  p  and  the  tales 

And  once  my  p  Edith  ask'd  him  '  why  ?  ' 
Pratty  (pretty)    sa  p  an'  neat  an'  sweeat, 

smile  o'  the  sun  as  danced  in  'er  p  blue  eye  ; 

sa  p,  an'  feat,  an'  neat,  an'  sweeat  ? 
Pray    While  I  do  p  to  Thee  alone, 

Why  p  To  one  who  heeds  not, 

I  woiUd  p — that  God  would  move  And  strike 

P,  AUce,  p,  my  darling  wife, 

I  p  thee,  pass  before  my  light  of  life, 

'  Where  I  may  mourn  and  p. 

P  Heaven  for  a  human  heart, 

P  for  my  soul.     More  things  are  wrought 

fast  ^Vhole  Lents,  and  p. 

p  them  not  to  quarrel  for  her  sake, 

0  rather  p  for  those  and  pity  them, 
p  Your  Highness  would  enroll  them  with  your  own. 

Yet  I  p  Take  comfort :  live,  dear  lady, 
So  I  p  you  tell  the  truth  to  me. 
take  thus  and  p  that  he  Who  wrote  it, 
Leave  thou  thy  sister  when  she  p's, 
p  That  we  may  meet  the  horsemen  of  Earl  Doorm, 

I  p  you  of  your  courtesy.  He  being  as  be  is, 
P  you  be  gentle,  p  you  let  me  be  : 
Yea,  God,  I  p  you  of  your  gentleness, 

1  p  the  King  To  let  me  bear  some  token 
I  p  you  lend  me  one,  if  such  you  have, 
let  ine  hence  I  p  you.' 
P  for  my  soul,  and  yield  me  burial. 


Tiresias  83 

To  Duke  of  Argyll  4 

Demeter  and  P.  119 

Akbar's  Dream  148 

198 

Gardener's  D.  102 

104 

Talking  Oak  290 

Vision  of  Sin  183 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  3 

Gareth  and  L.  492 

Marr.  of  Geraint  434 

Last  Tournament  217 

Epilogue  4 

Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  1 

Beggar  Maid  11 


# 


The  Brook  124 

Aylmer's  Field  406 

Princess,  Pro.  124 

„  vi  5 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  37 

The  Revenge  99 

Will  Water.  127 

Princess  v  254 

V.  of  Maeldune  102 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  33 

Circumstance  2 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  64 

Princess  vii  344 

Boddicea  48 

Guinevere  225 

Palace  of  Art  205 

St.  S.  Stylites  100 

Godiva  7 

Princess  v  152 

Maud  7  t  21 

Balin  and  Balan  530 

Princess  v  265 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  2 

Merlin  and  V.  549 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  31 

The  Ring  116 

The  Brook  19 

Guinevere  183 

„      316 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  58 

North  Cobbler  43 

50 

108 

Supp.  Confessions  12 


115 

Miller's  D.  23 

CEnone  241 

Palace  of  AH  292 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  71 

M.  d' Arthur  247 

St.  S.  Stylites  182 

Enoch  Arden  35 

Aylmer's  Field  775 

Princess  i  238 

vl9 

The  Victirn  48 

A  Dedication  4 

In  Mem.  xxxiii  5 

Geraint  and  E.  491 

641 

708 

710 

Balin  and  Balan  187 

Lancelot  and  E.  193 

770 

1280 


Pray  (continued)     P  for  my  soul  thou  too.  Sir  Lancelot,  Lancelot  andE.  1281 

P  for  thy  soul  ?     Ay,  that  will  I.  „           1395 

I  p  him,  send  a  sudden  Angel  down  To  seize  me  „          1424 
brother,  fast  thou  too  and  p.  And  tell  thy  brother 

knights  to  fast  and  p.  Holy  Grail  125 

P  for  him  that  he  scape  the  doom  of  fire,  Guinevere  347 

said  the  Uttle  novice,  '  I  p  for  both  ;  „       349 

P  and  be  pray'd  for ;  „        681 

P  for  my  soul.     More  things  are  wrought  Pass,  of  Arthur  415 

O — to  p  with  me — yes —  Rizpah  15 
P  come  and  see  my  mother.                                    Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  191 

'  P  come  and  see  my  mother,  and  farewell.'  „              196 

to  p  Before  that  altar — rso  I  think ;  ,,               238 
and  I  p  for  them  all  as  my  own : '                           In  the  Child.  Hosp.  19 

I  p  you  tell  King  Ferdinand  who  plays  with  me,  Columbus  222 

and  we  pray'd  as  we  heard  him  p,  V.  of  Maeldune  125 

I  pray'd — '  my  child  ' — for  I  still  coidd  p —  The  Wreck  138 

P  God  our  greatness  may  not  fail  Hands  all  Round  31 
To  p,  to  do — To  p,  to  do  according  to  the  prayer,         Akbar's  Dream  7 

Make  but  one  music,  harmonising  'P.'  „          151 

wines  of  heresy  in  the  cup  Of  counsel — so — I  p  thee —  „         175 

Let  blow  the  trumpet  strongly  while  I  p.  Doubt  and  Prayer  10 

Pray'd     (See  also  Praay'd)     He  p,  and  from  a  happy  place 

God's  glory  smote  Two  Voices  224 

With  all  my  strength  I  p  for  both,  May  Queen,  Con.  31 

p  him,  '  If  they  pay  this  tax,  they  starve.'  Godiva  20 
then  he  p  '  Save  them  from  this,  whatever  comes 

to  me.'  Enoch  Arden  117 

And  while  he  p,  the  master  of  that  ship  „          119 

P  for  a  blessing  on  his  wife  and  babes  „          188 

P  for  a  sign  '  my  Enoch  is  he  gone  ?  '  „          491 

dug  His  fingers  into  the  wet  earth,  and  p.  „          780 

yet  maiden-meek  I  p  Concealment :  Princess  Hi  134 

She  p  me  not  to  judge  their  cause  „      vii  235 

So  p  the  men,  the  women :  „       Con.  7 

So  p  him  well  to  accept  this  cloth  of  gold,  Gareth  and  L.  398 

p  the  King  would  grant  me  Lancelot  To  fight  „          856 

had  you  cried,  or  knelt,  or  p  to  me,  Geraint  and  E.  844 

when  of  late  ye  p  me  for  my  leave  „            888 

A  hermit,  who  had  p,  labour'd  and  p,  Lancelot  and  E.  403 

and  she  p  and  fasted  all  the  more.  Holy  Grail  82 

she  p  and  fasted,  till  the  sun  Shone,  „        98 

and  myself  fasted  and  p  Always,  „      130 

Fasted  and  p  even  to  the  uttermost,  „      132 

Who  scarce  had  p  or  ask'd  it  for  myself —  „      691 

Pray  and  be  p  for ;  Guinevere  681 

He  waked  for  both :  he  p  for  both  Lover's  Tale  i  227 
By  Edith  p  me  not  to  whisper  of  it.                      Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  207 

I  p  them  being  so  calumniated  Columbus  123 

and  we  p  as  we  heard  him  pray.,  V.  of  Maeldune  125 

I  p — '  my  child ' — for  I  stiU  could  pray —  The  Wreck  138 

all  night  I  p  with  tears.  The  Flight  17 

Fasted  and  p,  Telemachus  the  Saint.  St.  Telemachus  11 

I  p  against  the  dream.  Akbar's  Dream  7 

And  we  p  together  for  him.  Charity  39 

Prayer     For  me  outpour'd  in  hohest  p —  Sv/pp.  Confessions  72 

Prevail'd  not  thy  pure  p's  ?  „              89 

In  deep  and  daily  p's  would'st  strive  „            101 

If  p's  will  not  hush  thee,  Lilian  27 
More  things  are  wrought  by  p  Than  this  world 

dreams  of.                         '  M.  d' Arthur  247 

knowing  God,  they  hft  not  hands  of  p  „          252 

Battering  the  gates  of  heaven  with  storms  of  p,  St.  S.  Stylites  7 

with  hoggish  whine  They  burst  my  p.  „        178 

So  keep  I  fair  thro'  faith  and  p  A  virgin  heart  Sir  Galahad  23 

Rejoicing  at  that  answer  to  his  p.  Enoch  Arden  127 

evermore  P  from  a  living  source  within  the  will,  „          801 

Give  me  your  p's,  for  he  is  past  your  p's,  Aylmer's  Field  751 

My  mother  pitying  made  a  thousand  p's ;  Princess  i  21 

A  liquid  look  on  Ida,  full  of  p,  „    iv  369 

one  port  of  sense  not  fiint  to  p,  „    vi  182 

grant  my  p.     Help,  father,  brother,  help ;  „        304 

Blazon  your  mottoes  of  blessing  and  p  !  W.  to  Alexandra  12 

my  p  Was  as  the  whisper  of  an  air  In  Mem.  xvii  2 

Her  eyes  are  homes  of  silent  p,  „    xxxii  1 


Prayer 


549 


Prayer  (continued)   Thrice  blest  whose  lives  are  taithf  ul  p's.  In  M'm  xxxii  13 

Who  built  him  fanes  of  fruitless  p,  i^i  12 

breathing  a  p  To  be  friends,  to  be  reconciled !  Maud  I  xix  55 

iNot  a  bell  was  rung,  not  a  p  was  read ;  II  v  24: 

weary  her  ears  with  one  continuous  p,  Gareih  and  L.  19 

only  breathe  Short  fits  of  p,  Oeraint  and  E.  155 

silent  life  of  j>,  Praise,  fast,  and  alms ;  Holy  Grail  4 

to  p  and  praise  She  gave  herself,  irg 

'  might  it  come  To  me  by  p  and  fasting  ? '  96 

and  enter'd,  and  we  knelt  in  p.  "      4gQ 

And  so  wear  out  in  abnsdeed  and  in  p  Gtdnevere  687 
More  things  are  wrought  by  p  Than  this  world 

dreams  of.  Pass,  of  Arihur  il5 

knowing  God,  they  hft  not  hands  of  p  420 

p  of  many  a  race  and  creed,  and  clime—  To  the  Queen,  ii  11 

That  stnke  acro^  the  soul  m  p,  iter's  Tale  i  364 

to  seek  the  Lord  Jesus  m  p ;  /„  the  Child.  Hosp.  18 

good  woman,  can  p  set  a  broken  bone  ? '  20 

if  our  Princes  harken'd  to  my  p,  Columhus  100 

I  send  my  p  by  night  and  day—  233 

sheet  Let  down  to  Peter  at  his  p's ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  12 

(jods,  despite  of  human  p.  Are  slower  to  forgive  Tiresias  9 

I  would  make  my  life  one  p  The  Wreck  10 

where  of  old  we  knelt  in  p,  Loclslei,  H.,  Sixty  33 

Thy  p  was  '  Light-more  Light-  Epit.  on  Caxton  1 

the  praise  And  p  of  men,  Demeter  and  P.  120 

all  the  sciences,  poesy,  varying  voices  of  p  ?  Vastness  31 

I  that  heard,  and  changed  the  p  Happy  55 

on  stony  hearts  a  fruitless  p  For  pity.  Death  of  (Enone  41 

If  It  be  a  mosque  people  murmur  the  holy  p,  Akbar's  D.,  InscHp.  4 

To  pray,  to  do  accorcfing  to  the  p,  Akbar's  Dream  8 

out  the  p  s,  i  hat  have  no  successor  in  deed  9 

Prayerful    patient,  and  p,  meek.  Pale-blooded,  '  Last  Tournament  607 

who  am  not  meek,  PaJe-blooded,  p.  611 

Prayer-prelude    labour'd  thro'  His  brief  p-p,  Aylmer's  Field  628 

Praying    P  all  I  can.  If  prayers  wiU  not  hush  thee,  LUian  26 
and  sinking  ships,  and  p  hands.                              Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  116 

teU  her  that  I  died  Blessing  her,  p  for  her,  Enoch  Arden  879 

my  latest  breath  Was  spent  in  blessing  her  and  p  for  her  884 

P  ^"5  To  speak  before  the  people  of  her  child,  Aylmer's  Field  607 

p  God  will  save  Thy  sailor,-  /„  nfg^  ^i  13 

another,  a  lord  of  all  things,  p  Maud  1 1  v  32 

she  was  evej-  p  the  sweet  heavens  To  save  Geraint  and  E.  44 
T  ^f^^y  that  great  love  they  both  had  borne  the 

*if  *  '    V,      T  ,         ,  Lover's  Tale  iv  180 

p  that  when  I  from  hence  Shall  fade  Tiresias  214 

When  I  was  p  in  a  storm—  Happy  80 

Preach     {See  also  Preach)     I  will  not  even  p  to  you.  To  J.S  39 

Whose  foresight  p'es  peace,  Love  and  Duty  34 

h^lT'^A  ^?P«".«nce  p'e...  Will  Water,  m 

he  heard  his  priest  P  an  inverted  scripture,  Aylmer's  Field  44 

Yet  who  would  p  It  as  a  truth  %  Mem.  liii  11 

io  p  our  poor  little  army  down,  Maud  I  x  38 

i^l'A         1^  ^^^  ^'^  P,  ^"?  '^°'^"'  Church-Warden,  etc.  52 

Preach  d    p  An  universal  culture  for  the  crowd,  Princess  Pro  108 

Is  It  you,  that  p  in  the  chapel  Despair  1 

p,  -^J;,      J^f'J^^  "^^K^  S"""? '  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  89 

Preach'd  An'  Muggms  'e  p  o'  Hell-fire  N^h.  Cobbler  55 
«eacher    {See  also  Wichf-preacher)    when  the  p's 

cadence  flow'd  Softening  Aylmer's  Field  729 

p  says,  our  sins  should  make  us  sad  :  Grandmother  93 

WK^^?v. "°  ?  It''  ^^*^ '  ^^««*^  I  ^«  22 

Why  there  ?  they  came  to  hear  their  p.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  42 

Burnt  too,  my  faithful  p,  Beverley  !  80 

Dooms  our  unlicensed  p  to  the  flame,  "          105 

p's  linger'd  o'er  his  dying  words,  St.  Telekachus  75 
rteaching    {See  also  A-preachin')    p  down  a  daughter's 

^r^^f^^'"*:      ^    nu  ■  ..      ■      ,  Locksley  Hall  94 

Not  p  simple  Christ  to  simple  men.  Sea  Dreams  21 

Preamble    prolong  Her  low  p  all  alone,  Palace  of  Art  174 

tricks  and  foolenes,  O  Vivien,  the  p  ?  Tlf erZm  avitZ  F.  266 

rrecantion  Creeps  no  p  used,  among  the  crowd,  Guinevere  519 
Prec^ent    slowly  broadens  down  From  p  to  p :       You  ask  me,  why,  etc  12 

I  hat  codeless  mynad  of  p,  Aylmer's  Field  436 


Precedent  (continued)    Swallowing  its  p  in  victory 
Precinct    did  I  break  Your  p ; 

What,  in  the  p's  of  the  chapel-yard. 
Precious    pure  quintessences  of  p  oils  In  hoUow'd 
moons  of  gems. 

Surely  a  p  thing,  one  worthy  note, 

Thou  wouldst  betray  me  for  the  p  hilt ; 

All  p  things,  discover'd  late. 

To  find  the  p  morning  hours  were  lost. 

They  knew  the  p  things  they  had  to  guard : 

Lo  their  p  Roman  bantling. 

Such  p  relics  brought  by  thee ; 

With  '  Love's  too  p  to  be  lost, 

(Which  Maud,  like  a  p  stone 

To  dissolve  the  p  seal  on  a  bond. 

Surely  a  p  thing,  one  worthy  note, 

Thou  wouldst  betray  me  for  the  p  hilt ; 

The  clear  brow,  bulwark  of  the  p  brain. 

The  p  crystal  into  which  I  braided  Edwin's  hair ! 


Presence 

Lover's  Tale  i  763 

Princess  iv  422 

Merlin  and  V.  751 

Palace  of  AH  187 

M.  d' Arthur  89 

126 

Day-Dm.,  Arrival  1 

Enoch  Arden  302 

Third  of  Feb.  41 

Boadicea  31 

In  Mem.  xvii  18 

,.  Ixv  3 

Maud  I  xiv  10 

„       xix  45 

Pass,  of  Arthur  257 

294 

Lover's  Tale  i  130 

The  Flight  34 


Precipice     Among  the  palms  and  ferns  and  p's ;  Enoch  Arden  593 

Bown  from  the  lean  and  wrmkled  p's,  Princess  iv  22 

breakers  boom  and  blanch  on  the  p's,  Boadicea  76 

P^^^-l^r*'  ^^^^'"^  down  horrible  p's,  Geraint  and  E.  379 

Precipitancy     Bearing  all  down  m  thy  p —  Gareth  and  L  8 

Precipitate    Wheehng  with  p  paces  To  the  melody,  Vision  of  Sin  37 

such  a  p  heel,  Fledged  as  it  were  Lucretius  "m 

Precipitous    sweep  Of  some  p  rivulet  to  the  wave,  Enoch  Arden  587 

Precontract       Our  kmg  expects— was  there  no  p  ?  Princess  Hi  207 

as  to  p  5,  we  move,  my  friend.  At  no  man's  beck  226 

/  wed  with  thee  !    /  bound  by  p  Your  bride,  '"        iv  541 

lagg'd  in  answer  loth  to  render  up  My  p,  "         ^  300 

Predoom'd     most  P  her  as  unworthy.  Lancelot  and  E.  729 

Preeminence     To  assail  this  gray  p  of  man !  Princess  Hi  234 

Preter    each  p's  his  separate  claim,  7^  j|/g^  ^^  ig 

Reference     But  if  there  lie  a  p  eitherway,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  290 

Prejudice     Cut  P  against  the  gram  :  Love  thou  thy  land  22 

To  leap  the  rotten  pales  of  p.  Princess  ii  142 

old-recumng  waves  of  p  Resmooth  to  nothing  :  m  240 
Prelude  (s)    {See  also  Prayer-prelude)    With  mellow  p's, 

'  We  are  free.'  j'^e  winds  etc  4 

But  with  some  p  of  disparagement,  Read,  The  Epic  49 

1  his  p  has  prepared  thee.  Gardener's  D  272 

The  p  to  some  brighter  world.  Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  40 

Are  but  the  needful  p's  of  the  truth  :  Princess  Con  74 

Green  p,  April  promise  glad  new-year  Lover's  Tale  i  281 

Oftentimes  The  vision  had  fair  p,  ^  124 

by  their  clash   And  p  on  the  keys.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  2 

Was  p  to  the  tyranny  of  aU  ?  Tiresias  74: 

Prelude  (verb)     And  I— my  harp  would  p  woe—  In  Mem.  Ixxxviii  9 

Preluded    sweet  breath  P  those  melodious  B  of  F   Women  6 

Premier    city-roar  that  hails  P  or  king!  Princess,  Con.  102 

Prepare    hutp:  I  speak  ;  it  falls.'  ^-j  224 

^""^Sfu^   -7^^  prelude  has  p  thee.  Gardener's  D.  272 

The  rites  p  the  victim  bared  The  Victim  65 

day  p  The  daily  burden  for  the  back.  /„  Mem.  xxv  3 

let  there  be  p  a  chanot-bier  To  take  me  Lancelot  and  E.  1121 

Presage     after  seen  The  dwarfs  of  t, :  Princess  iv  447 

No  p  but  the  same  mistrustful  mood  Merlin  and  V.  321 

Presageiul     Dark  m  the  glass  of  some  p  mood,  „            295 

That  three-days-long  p  gloom  of  yours  "             320 

Prescient    at  length  Prophetical  and  p  Lover's"Tale  ii  132 

Presence  (adj.)    That  morning  in  the  p  room  I  stood  Princess  i  51 

Presence  (s)     The  light  of  thy  great  p ;  ode  to  Memory  32 

all  the  full-faced  p  of  the  Gods  (Enone  80 

I  hate  Her  p,  hated  both  of  Gods  and  men.  229 

To  dwell  in  p  of  immortal  youth,  TithZi-iio  91 

crimson'd  all  Thy  p  and  thy  portals,  57 

PhiUp  sitting  at  her  side  forgot  Her  p,  Enoch  Arden  385 

A  splendid  p  flattering  the  poor  roofs  Aylmer's  Field  175 

Your  p  will  be  sun  m  wmter.  To  F  D  Maurice  3 

gather'd  strength  and  grace  And  p,  /,,  Mem.  ciii  28 

m  his  p  I  attend  To  hear  the  tidings  cxxvi  2 

As  m  the  p  of  a  gracious  king.  Gareth  and  L.  316 

splendour  of  the  p  of  the  King  Throned,  „            320 


Presence 


550 


Pretty 


Presence  (s)  (continued)     Thou  hast  a  pleasant  v.  Gareth  and  L.  1065 

trulh  if  not  in  Arthur's  hall,  In  Arthur's  p  ?  „           1255 

faded  from  the  p  into  years  Of  exile — '  Balin  and  Balan  156 

by  your  state  And  v  might  have  guess'd  Marr.  ofGeraint  431 

her  gentle  j>  at  the  lists  Might  well  have  served  „              795 
by  thy  state  And  p  I  might  guess  thee  chief  of  those,  Lancelot  and  E.  183 

Ev'n  in  the  p  of  an  enemy's  fleet,  Guinevere  279 
Nor  yet  endured  in  p  of  His  eyes  To  indue  his  lustre  ;     Lover's  Tale  i  423 

Next  to  her  p  whom  I  loved  so  well,  „          427 

or  fold  Thy  p  in  the  silk  of  sumptuous  looms ;  Ancient  Sage  266 

Hail  ample  p  of  a  Queen,  Prog,  of  Spring  61 

Glanced  from  our  P  on  the  face  of  one,  Akbar's  Dream  113 

Present  (adj.)     Yet  p  in  his  natal  grove.  The  Daisy  18 

The  lowness  of  the  p  state,  In  Mem.  xociv  11 

Strange  friend,  past,  p,  and  to  be  ;  „        cxxix  9 
Yet  is  my  life  nor  in  the  p  time,  Nor  in  the  p  place.   Lovei-'s  Tale  i  116 

depth  Between  is  clearer  in  my  life  than  all  Its  p  flow.  „             150 

With  p  giief ,  and  made  the  rhymes,  Tiresias  ]  96 

Present  (gift)     '  I  can  make  no  marriage  p  :  L.  of  Burleigh  \d 

Tost  over  all  her  p's  petulantly  :  Aylmers  Field  235 

A  p,  a  great  labour  of  the  loom  ;  Princess  i  44 

Present  (time)     To  glorify  the  p  ;  Ode  to  Memory  3 

Where  Past  and  P,  wound  in  one.  Miller's  D.  197 
used  Within  the  P,  but  transfused  Thro'  future 

time  Love  thou  thy  land  3 

noise  of  lite  Swarm'd  in  the  golden  p,  Gardener's  D.  179 

When  I  clung  to  all  the  p  Locksley  Hall  14 

A  night-long  P  of  the  Past  In  Mem.  Ixxi  3 

But  in  the  p  broke  the  blow.  „    Ixxxv  56 

Thou,  like  my  p  and  my  past,  „      cxxi  19 

carves  A  portion  from  the  solid  p,  Merlin  and  V.  462 

The  P  is  the  vassal  of  the  Past :  Lmer's  Tale  i  119 

to  this  p  My  fuU-orb'd  love  has  waned  not.  ,,             733 

clear-eyed  Spirit,  Being  blunted  in  the  P,  „         ii  131 
hold  the  P  fatal  daughter  of  the  Past,                   Locksley  H.,  Sixty  105 

In  the  whiter  of  the  P  Happy  70 

Her  Past  became  her  P,  Death  of  CEnone  14 

And  plow  the  P  like  a  field,  Meclmnophilus  31 

Present  (verb)     To  the  young  spirit  p  Ode  to  Memory  73 

Each  month  is  various  to  p  The  world  Two  Voices  74 

With  purpose  to  p  them  to  the  Queen,  Lancelot  and  E.  69 

Presented    p  Maid  Or  Nymph,  or  Goddess,  Princess  i  196 

Presentiment     But  spiritual  p's.  In  Mem.  xcii  14 

Preserve    P  a  broad  approach  of  fame,  Ode  on  Well.  78 

Ftess  (newspapers,  etc.)    '  Fly,  happy  sails,  and  bear  the  P  ;    Golden  Year  42 

That  our  free  p  should  cease  to  brawl.  Third  of  Feb.  3 

His  party-secret,  fool,  to  the  p  ;  Maud  II  v  35 

dark  ages,  you  see,  of  the  popular  p,  Despair  88 

the  p  of  a  thousand  citias  is  prized  The  Dawn  14 

Press  (pressure)     and  knew  the  p  retmn'd,  Bridestnaid  12 

Press  (throng)    slanted  o'er  a  p  Of  snowy  shoulders,  Princess  iv  478 

Made  at  me  thro'  the  p,  „        v  522 

Press  (verb)     answer  should  one  p  his  hands  ?  Two  Voices  245 

whose  touch  may  p  The  maiden's  tender  pabn.  Talking  Oak  179 

p  me  from  the  mother's  breast.  Locksley  Hall  90 

P'es  his  without  reproof  :  L.  of  Burleigh  10 

and  so  p  in,  perforce  Of  multitude,  Lucretius  167 

For  they  p  in  from  all  the  provinces,  Princess  ii  97 

Nor  did  her  father  cease  to  p  my  claim,  „      vii  87 

'  P  this  a  little  closer,  sweet.  Last  Tournament  718 

Press'd-Prest    prest  thy  hand,  and  knew  the  press 

retum'd,  The  Bridesmaid  12 

bosoms  prest  To  little  haips  of  gold ;  Sea-Fairies  3 

On  to  God's  house  the  people  prest :  Two  Voices  409 

Approaching,  press'd  you  heart  to  heart.  Miller's  D.  160 

He  prest  the  blossom  of  his  lips  to  mine,  CEnone  78 

my  not  lips  prest  Close,  close  to  thine  „    203 

kisses  press'd  on  lips  Less  exquisite  than  thine.'  Gardener's  D.  151 
The  gold-fringed  pillow  lightly  prest:                     Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  22 

the  daughter  prest  upon  her  To  wed  the  man  Enoch  Arden  483 

when  I  prest  the  cause,  I  learnt  that  James  The  Brook  98 

to  her  meek  and  modest  bosom  prest  In  agony,  Aylmer's  Field  416 

I  prest  my  footsteps  into  his,  Lucretius  1 18 

closer  prest,  denied  it  not :  Princess  iv  232 

She  prest  and  prest  it  on  me —  „         v  283 


Press'd-Prest  {continued)    prest  Their  hands,  and  call'd  them 


dear  deliverers, 
where  warm  hands  have  prest  and  closed. 
What  time  his  tender  pahn  is  prest 
around  him  slowly  prest  The  people. 
All  round  her  prest  the  dark, 
And  Lancelot  ever  prest  upon  the  maid 
Full  of  the  vision,  prest : 
prest  together  In  its  green  sheath. 
And  they  prest,  as  they  grew,  on  each  other. 


Princess  vi  91 
In  Mem.  xiii  ' 

xlv  2  M 

Gareth  and  L.  693    I 

Balin  a7id  Balan  262    ' 

Lancelot  and  E.  911 

Holy  Grail  267 

Lover's  Tale  i  152    -, 

F.  of  Maeldune  64    i 


one  snowy  knee  was  prest  Against  the  margin  flowers  ;  Tiresias  42 

when  we  met,  you  prest  My  hand,  and  said  To  Mary  Boyle  15 

Pressing    P  up  against  the  land,  Eleanore  112 

Yet  p  on,  tho'  all  in  fear  to  find  Sir  Gawain  Gareth  and  L.  325 

Then  p  day  by  day  thro'  Lyonnesse  Last  Tournament  501 

Heart  beating  time  to  heart.  Up  p  hp,  Lover's  Tale  i  260 

Pressure     '  Yet  seem'd  the  p  thrice  as  sweet  Talking  Oak  145 

in  days  of  difl&culty  And  p,  Enoch  Arden  255 

I  take  the  p  of  thine  hand.  In  Mem.  cxix  12 

Prest    See  Press'd 

PresterJohn    Or  clutch'd  the  sacred  crown  of  P  J,  Columbus  110 

Presumptuous    dishonourable,  base,  P  !  Aylmer's  Field  293 

nor  believe  me  Too  p,  indolent  reviewers.  Hendecasyllabics  16 

Presumptuously     as  he  deem'd,  p :  Balin  and  Balan  222 

Pretence    Our  greatest  yet  with  least  p.  Ode  on  Well.  29 

making  vain  p  Of  gladness,  hi  Mem.  xxx  6 

Pretender    To  keep  the  list  low  and  p's  back.  Merlin  and  V.  592 

Pretext     Light  p's  drew  me  ;  Gardener's  D.  192 

With  some  p  of  fineness  in  the  meal  Enoch  Arden  341 

some  p  held  Of  baby  troth,  invalid,  Princess  v  397 

going  to  the  King,  He  made  this  p,  Marr.  of  Geraint  33 

'  And  with  what  face,  after  my  p  made,  Lancelot  and  E.  141 

our  true  king  Will  then  allow  your  p,  „              153 

Had  made  the  p  of  a  hindering  wound,  „              582 

when  he  leams.  Will  well  allow  my  p,  „              586 

Prettier    Eveljn  is  gayer,  wittier,  p.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  36 

The  merrier,  p,  wittier,  as  they  talk,  „              286 

Prettiest     '  Which  was  p,  Best-natured  ?  '  Princess  i  233 

The  p  little  damsel  in  the  port,  Enoch  Arden  12 
Hers  was  the  p  prattle,                                            In  the  Child.  Hasp.  31 

Prettily    How  p  for  his  own  sweet  sake  Maud  I  vi  51 

Pretty     {See  also  Pratty)     Have  all  his  p  young  ones 

educated,                                           '  Enoch  Arden  146 

Shaking  their  p  cabin,  hammer  and  axe,  „          173 

This  p,  puny,  weakly  little  one, —  „           195 

-  A  p  face  is  well,  and  this  is  well,  Edwin  Morris  45 

What  is  their  p  saying  ?  Aylmer's  Field  353 

worst  thought  she  has  Is  whiter  even  than  her  p  hand :  „          363 

'  P  were  the  sight  If  our  old  halls  Princess,  Pro.  139 

Will  crush  her  p  maiden  fancies  dead  „                i  88 

While  my  little  one,  while  my  p  one,  sleeps.  „               Hi  8 

Sleep,  my  little  one,  sleep,  my  p  one,  sleep.  „                  16 

nor  p  babes  To  be  dandled,  no,  „             iv  146 

Their  p  maids  in  the  running  flood,  v  382 

'  P  bud !    Lily  of  the  vale !  „            vi  192 

Whither  from  this  p  home.  City  Child  2 

Whither  from  this  p  house,  „          7 

'  O  that  ye  had  some  brother,  p  one.  Com.  of  Arthur  335 

'  Are  these  your  p  tricks  and  fooleries,  Merlin  and  V.  265 

And  made  a  p  cup  of  both  my  hands  „            275 

Your  p  sports  have  brighten'd  all  again.  ,.            305 

'  Thou  read  the  book,  my  p  Vivien !  .,            667 

The  p,  popular  name  such  manhood  earns,  .,             787 

Now  made  a  p  history  to  herself  Lancelot  and  E.  18 

Handed  her  cup  and  piped,  the  p  one.  Last  Tournament  296 

'  your  p  bud,  So  blighted  here,  The  Ring  316 

Why  wail  you,  p  plover  ?  Happy  1 

All  mine  from  your  p  blue  eyes  to  your  feet,  Romney's  R.  96 

And  I  blind  your  p  blue  eyes  with  a  kiss  !  „           101 

P  enough,  very  p !  but  I  was  against  it  Grandmother  7 

And  some  are  p  enough.  The  Flower  21 
Wan,  but  as  p  as  heart  can  desire,                         In  the  Child.  Hasp.  40 

call'd  me  es  p  es  ony  lass  i'  the  Shere ;  Spinster's  S^s.  13 

An'  thou  be  es  ^  a  Tabby,  .,            14 

ye  said  I  wur  p  V  pinks,  „            17 


Pretty 


561 


Priest 


Pretty  {continued)     Niver  wur  p,  not  I, 

Thaw  it  wam't  not  me  es  wui-  p, 

P  anew  when  ya  dresses  'em  cop, 
PrevaO    Let  her  work  p. 

Let  not  thy  moods  p,  when  I  am  gone 
Prevail'd     But  why  P  not  thy  pure  prayers  ? 

has  won  His  path  upward,  and  p, 

And  now  the  Barons  and  the  kings  p, 

'  Thou  hast  half  p  against  me,' 

p  So  far  that  no  caress  could  win 
Prevailing     P  in  weakness,  the  coronach  stole 

not  worthy  ev'n  to  speak  Of  thy  p  mysteries ; 

And  her  words  stole  with  most  p  sweetness 

The  King  p  made  his  realm : — 
Prey  (s)     And  stared,  with  his  foot  on  the  p, 

biting  laws  to  scare  the  beasts  of  p 

The  seeming  p  of  cyclic  storms, 

little  wood  where  I  sit  is  a  world  of  plunder  and  p. 

Bound  on  a  foray,  roUing  eyes  of  p, 

bird  of  rapine  whose  whole  p  Is  man's  good  name : 

Beneath  the  shadow  of  some  bird  of  p ; 


Spinster's  S's  21 

22 

.85 

In  Mem.  cxiv  4 

Balin  and  Balan  140 

Supp.  Confessions  89 

Ode  on  Well.  214 

Com.  of  Arthur  105 

Gareth  and  L.  30 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  251 

Dying  Swan  26 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  12 

Lover's  Tale  i  553 

Last  Tournament  651 

Poet's  Song  12 

Princess  v  393 

In  Mem.  cxviii  11 

Maud  I  iv  24 

Geraint  and  E.  538 

Merlin  and  V.  728 

Pelleas  and  E.  608 


his  p  Lay  deeper  than  to  wear  it  as 


Kound  whose  sick  head  all  night,  like  birds  of  p,   Last  Tournament  138 

Prey  (verb)     and  p  By  each  cold  hearth,  In  Mem.  xcviii  17 

Price     four-field  system,  and  the  p  of  gi'ain  ;  Audley  Court  34 

learn  the  p,  and  what  the  p  he  ask'd,  The  Brook  142 

tlie  colt  would  fetch  its  p ;  „          149 

to  give  at  last  The  p  of  naif  a  realm,  Lancelot  and  E.  1164 

a  robe  Of  samite  without  p,  Merlin  and  V.  222 

Ev'n  by  the  p  that  others  sot  upon  it.  Lover's  Tale  iv  152 

You  have  set  a  p  on  his  head :  Bandit's  Death  7 

Priceless     Rich  arks  with  p  bones  of  martyrdom,  Balin  and  Balan  110 

Stared  at  the  p  cognizance,  and  thought  „            430 

A  p  goblet  with  a  p  wine  Arising,  Lover's  Tale  iv  227 

Prick     insects  p  Each  leaf  into  a  gall)  Talking  Oak  69 

To  p  us  on  to  combat  '  Like  to  like !  Princess  v  304 

the  blood  creeps,  and  the  nerves  p  In  Mem.  I  2 

plimges  thro'  the  wound  again,  ijid  p's  it  deeper :      Pelleas  and  E.  531 

they  p's  clean  thruf  to  the  skin —  Spinster's  S's.  36 

Prick'd    p  with  goads  and  stings  ;  Palace  of  Art  150 


like  a  horse  That  hears  the  corn-bin  open,  p  my  ears  ;  The  Epic  45 

peace  which  each  had  p  to  death.  -   '       '    '^    "  "- 

playing  with  the  blade  he  p  his  hand, 

while  each  ear  was  p  to  attend  A  tempest, 

P  by  the  Papal  spur,  we  rear'd, 

half-way  down  P  thro'  the  mist ; 

And  Gareth  crying  p  against  the  cry ; 

p  their  light  ears,  and  felt  Her  low  firm  voice 

Geraint,  who  being  p  In  combat  with  the  follower 

of  Limours, 
I  was  p  with  some  reproof, 
p  The  hauberk  to  the  flesh ; 
couch 'd  their  spears  and  p  their  steeds, 
and  a  spear  P  sharply  his  own  cuirass, 
All  ears  were  p  at  once, 
P  with  incredible  pinnacles  into  heaven. 

Phcking    (Look  at  it)  p  a  cockney  ear. 

Pitickle  (s)    The  f  urzy  p  fire  the  dells, 

Prickle  (verb)    P  my  skin  and  catch  my  breath. 

Prickled    Gareth 's  head  p  beneath  his  helm ; 

Prickly     His  charger  trampling  many  a  p  star 

Pride    Is  not  my  human  p  brought  low  ? 

And  chastisement  of  human  p ;  That  p,  the  sin 

of  devils,  „  108 

I  think  that  p  hath  now  no  place  Nor  sojourn  in  me.  „  120 

all  the  outworks  of  suspicious  p ;  Isabel  24 

With  merriment  of  kingly  p,  Arabian  Nights  151 

'  Self-blinded  are  you  by  your  p :  Two  Voices  23 

waste  wide  Of  that  abyss,  or  scornful  p !  „  120 

Wilt  thou  find  passion,  pain  or  p  ?  „  243 

on  herself  her  serpent  p  had  curl'd.  Palace  of  Art  257 

Your  p  is  yet  no  mate  for  mine,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  11 

my  brand  Excalibur,  Which  was  my  p :  M.  d' Arthur  28 

old  Sir  Robert's  p.  His  books —  Audley  Court  58 

shame  and  p.  New  things  and  old,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  60 

our  p  Looks  only  for  a  moment  whole  Aylmer's  Field  1 


Aylmer's  Field  52 
239 

Princess  vi  280 

Third  of  Feb.  27 

Gareth  and  L.  194 

1221 

Geraint  and  E.  193 

500 

890 

Balin  and  Balan  559 

Lancelot  and  E.  479 

489 

724 

Holy  Grail  423 

Maud  I  x22 

Two  Voices  71 

Maud  I  xiv  36 

Gareth  and  L.  1397 

Marr.  of  Geraint  313 

Supp.  Confessions  14 


Pride  {continued) 
his  ring — 
taking  p  in  her.  She  look'd  so  sweet, 
a  time  for  these  to  flaunt  their  p  ? 
your  Princess  cramm'd  with  erring  p, 
welcome  Russian  flower,  a  people's  p, 
Ring  out  false  p  in  place  and  blood. 
The  proud  was  half  disarm'd  of  p, 
The  fire  of  a  foolish  p  flash'd 
We  are  puppets,  Man  in  his  p, 
often  a  man's  own  angry  p  Is  cap  and  bells 
thought,  is  it  p,  and  mused  and  sigh'd 
'  No  surely,  now  it  cannot  be  p.' 
Down  with  ambition,  avarice,  p, 
I  to  cry  out  on  p  Who  have  won  her  favour ! 
Fool  that  I  am  to  be  vext  with  his  p ! 
For  the  keeper  was  one,  so  full  of  p, 
shame,  p,  wrath  Slew  the  May-white : 
placed  a  peacock  in  his  p  Before  the  damsel, 
The  damsel  by  the  peacock  in  his  p. 
And  doubling  all  his  master's  vice  of  p, 
Then  wiU  I  fight  him,  and  will  break  his  p, 
fight  and  break  his  p,  and  have  it  of  him. 
That  I  will  break  his  p  and  learn  his  name, 
Refused  her  to  him,  then  his  p  awoke ; 
But  that  his  p  too  much  despises  me : 
In  next  day's  tourney  I  may  break  his  p.' 
My  p  is  broken :  men  have  seen  my  fall.' 
my  p  Is  broken  down,  for  Enid  sees  my  fall ! ' 
For  once,  when  I  was  up  so  high  in  p 
They  place  their  p  in  Lancelot  and  the  Queen, 
dead  love's  harsh  heir,  jealous  p  ? 
the  heat  Of  p  and  glory  fired  her  face ; 
My  p  in  happier  summers,  at  my  feet. 
To  whom  my  false  voluptuous  p, 
my  brand  Excalibur,  Which  was  my  p : 
my  house  an'  my  man  were  my  p, 
Sir  Richard  cried  in  his  English  p, 
hesn't  the  call,  nor  the  mooney,  but  hes  the  p, 
I  have  only  wounded  his  p — 
he  sail'd  the  sea  to  crush  the  Moslem  in  his  p ; 
Prideful     My  nature's  p  sparkle  in  the  blood 
Priest     {See  also  Soldier-priest)     Speak,  if  there  be  a  p, 
a  man  of  God, 
As  the  p,  above  his  book  Leering 
his  p  Preach  an  inverted  scripture, 
'  Gash  thyself,  p,  and  honour  thy  brute  Baal, 
one  The  silken  p  of  peace,  one  this,  one  that, 
with  music,  with  soldier  and  with  p, 
The  P  in  horror  about  his  altar 
The  P  went  out  by  heath  and  hill ; 
He  seem'd  a  victim  due  to  the  p.    The  P  beheld  him. 
For  now  the  P  has  judged  for  me.' 
the  P  was  happy,  (repeat) 
This  faith  has  many  a  purer  p, 
Dehcate-handed  p  intone ; 
p,  who  mumble  worship  in  your  quire — 
he  had  a  difference  with  their  p's, 
Shone  hke  the  countenance  of  a  p  of  old 
I  was  the  High  P  in  her  hohest  place, 
for  your  P  Labels — to  take  the  king  along  with 

him — 
P's  Who  fear  the  king's  hard  common-sense 
Runs  in  the  rut,  a  coward  to  the  P. 
The  Gospel,  the  P's  pearl,  flung  down  to  swine— 
What  profits  an  ill  P  Between  me  and  my  God  ? 
that  proud  P,  That  mock-meek  mouth  of  utter 

Antichrist,  „  169 

I  am  damn'd  already  by  the  P  „  200 

Bantering  bridesman,  reddening  p,  Forlorn  33 

when  The  P  pronounced  you  dead,  Happy  50 

P,  who  join'd  you  to  the  dead,  „      93 

he  buried  you,  the  P ;  the  P  is  not  to  blame,  „    105 

The  menacing  poison  of  intolerant  p's,  Akbar's  Dream  165 

I  will  find  the  P  and  confess.  Bandit's  Death  18 


Aylmer's  Field  121 

554 

770 

Princess  Hi  102 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  6 

In  Mem.  cvi  21 

„  ex  6 

Maud  I  iv  16 

25 

Vi61 

„     via  12 

13 

a;  47 

„       xii  17 

xiii  5 

„    //  V  79 

Gareth  and  L.  656 

850 

870 

Marr.  of  Geraint  195 

221 

416 

424 

448 

464 

476 

578 

589 

Geraint  and  E.  790 

Merlin  and  V.  25 

Lancelot  and  E.  1398 

Pelleas  and  E.  172 

Guinevere  536 

641 

Pass,  of  Arthur  196 

First  Quarrel  41 

The  Revenge  82 

Village  Wife  91 

The  Wreck  14 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  29 

Geraint  and  E.  827 

St.  S.  Stylites  214 

Vision  of  Sin  117 

Aylmer's  Field  43 

644 

Princess  v  184 

Ode  on  Well.  81 

The  Victim  7 

29 

36 

56 

„    61,73 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  3 

Maud  I  via  11 

Balin  and  Balan  444 

Holy  GraU  674 

Pelleas  and  E.  144 

Lover^s  Tale  i  686 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  48 
65 
78 
116 
144 


Priest 


552 


Princely 


Priest  (continued)    P's  in  the  name  of  the  Lord  passing  souls     The  Dawn  4 

Priest^     O  P  in  the  vaults  of  Death,  In  Mem.  Hi  2 

Priesthood    ever  and  aye  the  P  moan'd,  The  Victim  23 

What  said  her  P  ?  Kapiolani  19 

BafHed  her  p,  Broke  the  Taboo,  „          29 

Primal  grown  at  last  beyond  the  passions  of  the  p  clan  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  93 

Mount  and  mine,  and  p  wood ;  Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  6 

Prime  (adj.)     On  the  p  labour  of  thine  early  days :  Ode  to  Memory  94 

P,  which  I  knew;  and  so  we  sat  and  eat  Audley  Court  28 

While  the  p  swallow  dips  his  wing,  Edwin  Morris  145 

Better  to  clear  p  forests,  heave  and  thump  Princess  Hi  127 

And  my  p  passion  in  the  grave :  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  76 

from  p  youth  Well-known  well-loved.  Lover's  Tale  ii  175 

Butter  I  warrants  be  p,  Village  Wife  3 

Prime  (s)    golden  p  Of  good  Haroun 

Alraschid.  Arabian  Nights  10,  21,  32,  43,  54,  65, 

76,  87, 98,  109,  120,  131,  142,  153 

gray  p  Make  thy  grass  hoar  with  early  rime.  Two  Voices  65 

coiUd  she  climb  Beyond  her  own  material  p?  „        378 

Raw  from  the  p,  and  crushing  down  his  mate ;  Princess  ii  121 

about  my  barren  breast  In  the  dead  p:  „        vi  203 

we  fought  for  Freedom  from  our  p,  Third  of  Feb.  23 

And  at  the  spiritual  p  Rewaken  In  Mem.  xliii  15 

Dragons  of  the  p,  That  tare  each  other  „            Ivi  22 

The  colours  of  the  crescent  p?  „           cxvi  4 

shook  his  wits  they  wander  in  his  p —  Gareth  and  L.  715 

From  p  to  vespers  will  I  chant  thy  praise  Pelleas  and  E.  349 

Primrose  (adj.)     Prattling  the  p  fancies  of  the  boy,  The  Brook  19 

Primrose  (s)     p  yet  is  dear,  The  p  of  the  later  year.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  118 

Prince    (See  also  Lord-prince,  Shepherd-prince)    eke 

the  island  p's  over-bold  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  75 

to  greet  Troy's  wandering  p,  On  a  Mourner  33 

Among  the  powers  and  p's  of  this  world,  St.  S.  Stylites  187 
And  bring  the  fated  fairy  P.                                   Day-Dm.,  Sliep.  P.  56 

A  fairy  P,  with  joyful  eyes,  „               Arrival  7 

P  of  peace,  the  Mighty  God,  Aylmer's  Field  669 

heads'of  cliiefs  and  p's  fall  so  fast,  „            763 

and  be  you  The  P  to  win  her !  Princess,  Pro.  226 

'  Then  follow  me,  the  P,'  I  answer'd,  „                227 

A  p  I  was,  blue-eyed,  and  fair  in  face,  „                 i  1 

'  You  do  us,  P,'  he  said,  „                120 

would  you  had  her,  P,  with  all  my  heart,  „                126 

She  answer'd,  '  then  ye  know  the  P?'  „             ii  49 

in  me  behold  the  P  Your  countryman,  „                214 

'  O  Sir,  O  P,  I  have  no  country  none ;  „                218 

be  swerved  from  right  to  save  A  p,  a  brother  ?  „                291 

help  my  p  to  gain  His  rightful  bride,  „           Hi  160 

I  know  the  P,  I  prize  his  truth :  „                232 

tho'  your  P's  love  were  like  a  God's,  „                248 

'  Fair  daiighter,  when  we  sent  the  P  your  way  „            iv  398 

and  like  a  gentleman,  And  like  ap:  „                 528 

Arranged  the  favour,  and  assumed  the  P.  „                602 

you  could  not  slay  Me,  nor  your  p:  ,.               v  66 

He  seems  a  gracious  and  a  gallant  P,  „                213 

We  would  do  much  to  gratSy  your  P —  „                217 

But  let  your  P  (our  royal  word  upon  it,  „                224 

embattled  squares.  And  squadrons  of  the  P,  „                247 

P,  she  can  be  sweet  to  those  she  loves,  „                289 

and  bore  down  a  P,  And  Cyril,  one.  „                518 

Cyril  seeing  it,  push'd  against  the  P,  „                533 

there  went  up  a  great  cry,  The  P  is  slain.  „              vi  26 

on  to  the  tents :  take  up  the  P.'  „                279 

That  you  may  t«nd  upon  him  with  the  p.'  „                315 

but  the  P  Her  brother  came ;  „                344 

Never,  P ;  You  cannot  love  me.'  „          vii  337 

Has  given  our  P  his  own  imperial  Flower,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  4 

A  princely  people's  awful  p's,  The  Daisy  39 

in  his  coffin  the  P  of  courtesy  lay.  G.  of  Swainston  10 

a  P  indeed,  Beyond  all  titles,  Ded.  of  Idylls  41 

his  wife  Nursed,  the  young  p,  and  rear'd  him  Com.  of  Arthur  224 

thou  art  closer  to  tins  noble  p,  „             314 

p  his  heir,  when  tall  and  marriageable,  Gareth  and  L.  102 

P,  thou  Shalt  go  disguised  to  Arthur's  hall,  „            152 

Lancelot  answer'd,  '  P,  O  Gareth—  „          1236 

Knight,  knave,  p  and  fool,  I  hate  thee  and  for  ever.'  „          1255 


Prince  (continued)     P,  Knight,  Hail,  Knight  and  P,  Gareth  and  L.  1270 

'  Nay,  P,'  she  cried,  '  God  wot,  „          1332 

0  P,  I  went  for  Lancelot  first,  „          1343 

the  P  Three  times  had  blown —  „          1377 

A  tributary  p  of  Devon,  Marr.  of  Geraint  2 

Allowing  it,  the  P  and  Enid  rode,  „              43 

As  of  a  p  whose  manhood  was  all  gone,  „              59 

Low  bow'd  the  tributary  P,  and  she,  „             174 

'  Late,  late.  Sir  P,'  she  said,  ,,            177 

P  Had  put  his  horse  in  motion  toward  the  knight,  „             205 

The  P's  blood  spirted  upon  the  scarf,  „            208 

'  Farewell,  fair  P,'  answer'd  the  stately  Queen.  „            224 

P,  as  Enid  past  him,  fain  To  follow,  „             375 

and  while  the  P  and  Earl  Yet  spoke  together,  „            384 

and  prove  her  heart  toward  the  P.'  „            513 

Loudly  spake  the  P,  '  Forbear :  „            555 

'  This  noble  p  who  won  our  earldom  back,  „            619 

But  being  so  beholden  to  the  P,  „            623 

P  had  found  her  in  her  ancient  home ;  „             644 

While  ye  were  talking  sweetly  with  your  P,  „             698 

Our  mended  fortunes  and  a  P's  bride :  „             718 

the  P  Hath  pick'd  a  ragged-robin  from  the  hedge,  „            723 

might  shame  the  P  To  whom  we  are  beholden ;  „            726 

we  beat  him  back,  As  this  great  P  invaded  us,  „            747 

And  did  her  honour  as  the  P's  bride,  „             835 

pair  Of  comrades  making  slowlier  at  the  P,  Geraint  and  E.  167 

'  Ye  will  be  all  the  wealthier,'  cried  the  P.  „            221 

P  had  brought  his  errant  eyes  Home  from  the  rock,  „            245 

thus  he  moved  the  P  To  laughter  and  his  comrades  „            295 

when  the  P  was  merry,  ask'd  Limours,  „            297 

the  stout  P  bad  him  a  loud  good-night.  „             361 

P,  without  a  word,  from  his  horse  fell.  „            508 

love  you,  P,  with  something  of  the  love  „             788 

'  Follow  me,  P,  to  the  camp,  „             808 

till  he  saw  her  Pass  into  it,  turn'd  to  the  P,  „             887 

'  P,  when  of  late  ye  pray'd  me  for  „             888 

So  spake  the  King :  low  bow'd  the  P,  „             920 

call'd  him  the  great  P  and  man  of  men.  „            961 

'  P,  Art  thou  so  little  loyal  to  thy  Queen,  Balin  and  Balan  250 

P,  we  have  ridd'n  before  among  the  flowers  „              272 

thou.  Sir  P,  Wilt  surely  guide  me  to  the  warrior  King,       „  477 

nor  P  Nor  knight  am  I,  „              483 

a  P  In  the  mid  might  and  flourish  of  his  May,  Lancelot  and  E.  553 

to  whom  the  P  Reported  who  he  was,  „              627 

ride  no  more  at  random,  noble  P !  „              633 

P  Accorded  with  his  wonted  courtesy,  „               63.7 

'  P,  O  loyal  nephew  of  our  noble  King,  j,               651 

yon  proud  P  who  left  the  quest  to  me.  „              762 

told  him  all  the  tale  Of  King  and  P,  „              824 

P  and  Lord  am  I  In  mine  own  land,  „              916 

And  there  the  heathen  P,  Arviragus,  Holy  Grail  61 

he  knew  the  P  tho'  marr'd  with  dust,  Guinevere  36 

Sir  Lancelot  holp  To  raise  the  P,  „        46 

the  P  Who  scarce  had  pluck'd  his  flickering  life  To  the  Queen  ii  4 

fuUcity  peal'd  Thee  and  thy  P!  „            27 

Like  to  the  wild  youth  of  an  evil  p.  Lover's  Tale  i  354 

if  our  P's  harken'd  to  my  prayer,  Columbus  100 

brought  your  P's  gold  enough  If  left  alone !  „         105 

native  p's  slain  or  slaved,  „        174 
A  princelier  looking  man  never  stept  thro'  a  P's  hall.        The  Wreck  16 

now  Your  fairy  P  has  found  you,  The  Ring  69 

One  raised  the  P,  one  sleek'd  the  squahd  hair.  Death  of  CEnone  57 

Princedom    Drew  all  their  petty  p's  under  him.  Com.  of  Arthur  18 

the  King  Drew  in  the  petty  p's  under  him,  „            517 

In  his  own  blood,  his  p,  youth  and  hopes,  Gareth  and  L.  210 

his  p  lay  Close  on  the  borders  of  a  territory,  Marr.  of  Geraint  33 

Forgetful  of  his  p  and  its  cares.  „              54 

Princelier    A  p  looking  man  never  stept  thro'  a  Prince's 

hall.  The  Wreck  16 

Princelike    thro'  these  P  his  bearing  shone ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  545 

Princely     And  p  halls,  and  farms,  and  flowing  lawns,  Aylvier's  Field  654 

A  p  people's  awful  princes.  The  Daisy  39 

Yniol's  rusted  arms  Were  on  his  p  person,  Marr.  of  Geraint  544 

she  gazed  upon  the  man  Of  p  bearing,  Pelleas  and  E.  306 
So  p,  tender,  truthful,  reverent,  pure —                 D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  4 


Princely-proud 


553 


Profit 


Princely-proud     too  f-p  To  pass  thereby ;  Gareth  and  L.  162 

Princess    {See  also  Maiden-Rcincess,  Poet-princess)    The 
happy  p  follow'd  him. 

I  wish  That  I  were  some  great  p, 

'  And  make  her  some  great  P,  six  feet  high, 

Heroic  seems  our  P  as  required — 

betroth'd  To  one,  a  neighbouring  P : 

Who  moves  about  the  P ; 

beauty  compass'd  in  a  female  form,  The  P ; 

edge  imtumable,  our  Head,  The  P.' 

'  Let  the  P  judge  Of  that '  she  said : 

the  P  should  have  been  the  Head, 

early  risen  she  goes  to  inform  The  P : 

Not  like  your  P  cramm'd  with  erring  pride. 

My  p,  0  my  p !  true  she  errs, 

'  That  afternoon  the  P  rode  to  take  The  dip 

but  with  some  disdain  Answer'd  the  P, 

'  The  Head,  the  Head,  the  P,  O  the  Head ! ' 

They  haled  us  to  the  P  where  she  sat  High  in  the  hall : 

It  was  not  thus,  0  P,  in  old  days : 

She  ceased :  the  P  answer'd  coldly,  '  Good : 

The  P  with  her  monstrous  woman-guard, 

She  was  a  p  too :  and  so  I  swore. 

A  gallant  nght,  a  noble  p — 

Like  our  wild  P  with  as  wise  a  dream 

Or  at  thy  coming,  P,  everywhere, 

I  full  oft  shall  dream  I  see  my  p 

In  such  apparel  as  might  well  beseem  His  p, 

hundred  miles  of  coast,  A  palace  and  a  p, 

hundred  miles  of  coast,  The  palace  and  the  p. 

The  P  of  that  castle  was  the  one. 

And  tame  thy  jailing  p  to  thine  hand. 

And  marriage  with  a  p  of  that  realm. 

Dear  P,  living  Power,  if  that. 
Principle    '  Some  hidden  p  to  move, 

P's  are  rain'd  in  blood ; 
Print  (s)    (See  also  Hoof-print,  Jewel-print) 
p  Of  the  golden  age — 

(Meaning  the  p  that  you  gave  us. 
Print  (verb)     hiU  and  wood  and  field  did  p 
Prior    Archbishop,  Bishop,  P's,  Canons, 
Priory    sought  A  p  not  far  off,  there  lodged. 
Prism    Make  p's  in  every  carven  glass. 
Prison  (adj.)     Sang  looking  thro'  his  p  bars  ? 


Prison  (s)    {See  also  Shadow-prison) 
Flowers  to  these  '  spirits  in  p ' 


Day-Dm.,  Depart.  8 

Princess,  Pro.  134 

224 

230 

i33 

76 

a  35 

204 

234 

„  in  34 

63 

102 

107 

169 

iv  62 

176 

271 

292 

359 

562 

V  295 

Con.  19 

69 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  42 

Marr.  of  Geraint  752 

759 

Merlin  and  V.  589 

648 

Holy  Grail  578 

Pelleas  and  E.  344 

Last  Tournament  176 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  1 

Two  Voices  133 

Love  thou  thy  land  80 

take  the 

Maud  I  i  29 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  51 

In  Mem.  Ixxix  7 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  160 

Pelleas  and  E.  214 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  35 

Margaret  35 

I  kiss'd  my  boy  in  the  p,     Rizpah  23 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  37 


My  p,  not  my  fortress,  fall  away !  Doubt  and  Prayer  12 

Prison'd    P,  and  kept  and  coax'd  and  whistled  to —  Gareth  and  L.  14 

Prisoner     and  himself  The  p  at  the  bar.  Sea  Dreams  176 

A  p,  and  the  vassal  of  thy  will ;  Pelleas  and  E.  241 

Being  guiltless,  as  an  innocent  p,  Lover's  Tale  i  787 

As  a  vision  Unto  a  haggard  p,  „         ii  148 

I  read  no  more  the  p's  mute  wail  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  4 

Private     A  p  life  was  all  his  joy.  Will  Water.  129 

'  Is  this  an  hour  For  p  sorrow's  barren  song,  In  Mem.  xxi  14 

For  I  never  whisper'd  a  p  affair  Maud  II  v  47 

But  the  red  life  spilt  for  a  p  blow —  „             93 

Privet  (adj.)     To  one  green  wicket  in  a  p  hedge ;  Gardener's  D.  110 

Privet  (s)     white  as  p  when  it  flowers.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  56 

Privilege     manlike  end  myself  ? — our  p —  Lucretius  232 

It  was  our  ancient  p,  my  Lords,  Third  of  Feb.  5 

Prize  (s)    {See  also  Toumey-prize)    Ride  on !  the  p  is  near.'    Sir  Galahad  80 

read  and  earn  our  p,  A  golden  brooch :  Princess  Hi  300 

The  p  of  beauty  for  the  fairest  there.  Marr.  of  Geraint  485 

He  felt,  were  she  the  p  of  bodily  force,  ..              541 

two  years  past  have  won  for  thee,  The  p  of  beauty.'  „              555 

tho'  ye  won  the  p  of  fairest  fair,  ,,              719 

shook  her  pulses,  crying  '  Look,  a  p !  Geraint  and  E.  123 

since  a  diamond  was  the  p.  Lancelot  and  E.  33 

Proclaiming  his  the  p,  who  wore  the  sleeve  Of  scarlet,  „            501 

'  Advance  and  take  thy  p  The  diamond ; '  „            503 

Prize  me  no  p's,  for  my  p  is  death !  „             506 

left  his  p  Untaken,  crying  that  his  p  is  death.'  „            530 

Will  deem  this  p  of  ours  is  rashly  given :  „            541 

Came  not  to  us,  of  us  to  claim  the  p,  „            544 


Prize  (s)  (continued)     with  you  ?  won  he  not  your  p  ? '   Lancelot  and  E.  573 

bore  the  p  and  could  not  find  The  victor,  •      „            629 

'  Your  p  the  diamond  sent  you  by  the  King : '  „            821 

the  p  A  golden  circlet  and  a  knightly  sword,  Pelleas  and  E.  11 

Saving  the  goodly  sword,  his  p,  „             359 

p  Of  Tristram  in  the  jousts  of  yesterday.  Last  Tournament  7 

Irmocence  the  King  Gave  for  a  p —  „             295 

Of  one — his  name  is  out  of  me — the  p.  If  p  she  \Aere —         „  546 

I  mused  nor  yet  endured  to  take  So  rich  a  p,  Lover's  Tale  Hi  50 

Prize  (verb)     should  I  p  thee,  couldst  thou  last.  Will  Water.  203 

I  know  the  Prince,  I  p  his  truth :  Princess  Hi  233 

What  dares  not  Ida  do  that  she  should  p  The  soldier?  „          v  174 

sole  men  we  shall  p  in  the  af  tertime,  ,,             412 

p  the  authentic  mother  of  her  mind.  ..              433 

what  the  King  So  p's — overprizes — gentleness.  Balin  and  Balan  184 

'  I  better  p  The  living  dog  than  the  dead  lion :  „                584 

prized  him  more  Than  who  should  p  him  Merlin  and  V.  160 

P  me  no  prizes,  for  my  prize  is  death !  Lancelot  and  E.  506 

To  Canada  whom  we  love  and  p.  Hands  all  Round  19 

my  friend.  To  p  your  various  book,  To  Ulysses  47 

I  p  that  soul  where  man  and  woman  On  one  who  effec.  E.  M.  2 

Prized     Or  else  we  loved  the  man,  and  p  his  work ;  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  8 

You  p  my  counsel,  lived  upon  my  lips :  Princess  iv  293 

p  him  more  Than  who  should  prize  him  Merlin  and  V.  159 

No  sisters  ever  p  each  other  more.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  43 

He  would  open  the  books  that  I  p.  The  Wreck  21 

is  p  for  it  smells  of  the  beast.  The  Dawn  14 

Prize-oxen     A  lord  of  fat  p-o  and  of  sheep.  Princess,  Con.  86 

Process     widen'd  with  the  p  of  the  suns.  Lochsley  Hall  138 

Eternal  p  moving  on.  In  Mem.  Ixxxii  5 

Who  reads  thy  gradual  p.  Holy  Spring.  Prog,  of  Spring  106 

Procession     Let  the  long  long  p  go.  Ode  on  Well.  15 

I  came  upon  The  rear  of  a  p,  Lover's  Tale  ii  75 

Proclaim     From  my  high  nest  of  penance  here  p  St.  S.  Stylites  167 

'  P  the  faults  he  would  not  show  You  might  have  won  1 7 

For  many  and  many  an  age  p  Ode  on  Well.  226 

let  p  a  joiLSt  At  Camelot,  Lancelot  and  E.  76 

the  King  Had  let  p  a  tournament—  Pelleas  and  E.  11 

Proclaim'd     Spake  to  the  lady  with  him  and  p,  Marr.  of  Geraint  552 

Arthur  s  host  P  him  Victor,  and  the  day  was  won.    Balin  and  Balan  90 

p  His  Master  as  '  the  Sun  of  Righteousness,'  Akbar's  Dream  82 

Proclaiming    P  Enoch  Arden  and  his  woes ;  Enoch  Arden  868 

P  social  truth  shall  spread.  In  Mem.  cxxvii  5 

set  him  in  the  hall,  P,  '  Here  is  Uther's  heir.  Com.  of  Arthur  230 

P  his  the  prize,  who  wore  the  sleeve  Of  scarlet,  Lancelot  and  E.  501 

Proclamation    sent  His  horns  of  p  out  Merlin  and  V.  581 

Proctor     he  had  breathed  the  P's  dogs ;  Princess,  Pro.  113 

prudes  for  p's,  dowagers  for  deans,  „              141 

Two  P's  leapt  upon  us,  crying,  '  Names : '  „          iv  259 

Procm'ess     P  to  the  Lords  of  Hell.  In  Mem.  liii  16 

Prodigal     Behind  Were  realms  of  upland,  p  in  oil,  Palace  of  Art  79 

And  p  of  all  brain-labour  he,  Aylmer's  Field  447 

Prodigies     These  p  of  myriad  nakednesses,  Lucretius  156 

Prodigious    a  match  as  this !     Impossible,  p  ! '  Aylmer's  Field  315 

Or  Gareth  telling  some  p  tale  Of  knights,  Gareth  and  L.  508 

Produce  (s)     P  of  your  field  and  flood.  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  5 

Produce  (verb)    That  one  fair  planet  can  p,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  24 

Profess    seeing  they  p  To  be  none  other  (repeat)      Last  Tournament  82,  85 

Professor    we  heard  The  grave  P.  Princess  ii  371 

Sat  compass'd  with  p's :  ,,          444 

Proffer  (s)    She  to  Paris  made  P  of  royal  power,  .      (Enone  111 

nor  did  mine  own  Refuse  her  p,  Princess  vi  347 

Made  p  of  the  league  of  golden  mines,  Merlin  and  V.  646 

Proffer  (verb)    p  these  The  brethren  of  our  blood  Princess  vi  70 

Proffer'd    At  one  dear  knee  we  p  vows,  In  Mem.  Ixxix  13 

For  howsoe'er  at  first  he  p  gold,  Gareth  and  L.  336 

Profile    Less  p !  turn  to  me — three-quarter  face.  Romney's  R.  98 

Profit  (s)     (See  also  Sell-profit)     With  fuller  p's  lead  an 

easier  life,  Enoch  Arden  145 

With  daily-dwindling  p's  held  the  house ;  „            696 

But  now  to  leaven  play  with  p,  Princess  iv  149 

The  Lady  Blanche :  much  p  !  „      vi  239 

Will  bloom  to  p,  otherwhere.  In  Mem.  Ixxxii  12 

What  p  lies  in  barren  faith,  „              cviii  5 

It  surely  was  my  p  had  I  known :  Quineiere  658 


Profit 


554 


Prophet 


Profit  (verb)     It  little  p's  that  an  idle  king,  Ulysses  1 

what  p's  it  to  put  An  idle  case?  In  Mem.  xxxv  17 

what  p's  me  my  name  Of  greatest  knight  ?  Lancelot  and  E.  1413 

What  p's  an  ill  Priest  Between  me  and  my  God  ?     Sir  J.  Oldcastle  144 

Profound    Passionless,  pale,  cold  face,  star-sweet  on  a  gloom  p ;   Maud  I  Hi  4 

Profulgent     An  image  with  p  brows,  Supp.  Confessions  145 

Progress     Our  p  falter  to  the  woman's  goal.'  Princess  vi  127 

With  statelier  p  to  and  fro  In  Mem.  xcviii  22 

P  halts  on  palsied  feet,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  219 

Project    p  after  p  rose,  and  all  of  them  were  vain ;  The  Flight  14 

Prolong    p  Her  low  preamble  all  alone.  Palace  of  Art  173 

Promenaded    With  cypress  p,  Amphion  38 

Promise  (s)    (See  also  Hand-promise)    Leaving  the  p 

of  my  bridal  bower,  D.  of  F.  Women  218 

for  the  p  that  it  closed :  Locksley  Hall  14 

the  crescent  p  of  my  spirit  „  187 

With  words  of  p  in  his  walk,  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  23 

'  I  am  bound :  you  have  my  p — in  a  yeai' :  Enoch  Arden  437 

stood  once  more  before  her  face.  Claiming  her  p.  „  458 

falling  in  a  land  Of  p ;  Princess  ii  140 

hold  Your  p :  all,  I  trust,  may  yet  be  well.'  „  361 

other  distance  and  the  hues  Oi  p;  „  iv  87 

With  p  of  a  mom  as  fair ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  29 

The  p  oE  the  golden  hoiux  ?  „        Ixxxv  106 

Knowing  your  p  to  me ;  Maud  I  xxii  50 

Thy  p.  King,'  and  Arthur  glancing  at  him,  Gareth  and  L.  652 

Forgetful  of  his  p  to  the  King,  Mart:  of  Geraint  50 

Bribed  with  large  p's  the  men  who  served  ,.  453 

Woke  and  bethought  her  of  her  p  given  „  602 

He  would  not  leave  her,  till  her  p  given —  „  605 

Made  p,  that  whatever  bride  I  brought,  „  783 

Pelleas  might  obtain  his  lady's  love.  According  to 

her  p,  Pelleas  and  E.  162 

And  thou  hast  given  thy  p,  „  245 

With  p  of  large  light  on  woods  and  ways.  „  394 

Green  prelude,  April  p,  glad  new-year  Lover's  Tale  i  281 

A  land  of  p,  a  land  of  memory,  „  333 

A  land  of  p  flowing  with  the  milk  And  honey  „  334 

mother  broke  her  p  to  the  dead,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  252 

p  of  blossom,  but  never  a  fruit !  V.  of  Maddune  51 

but  the  p  had  faded  away ;  Despair  27 

Be  truer  to  your  p.  To  Mary  Boyle  5 

The  still-fulfilling  p  of  a  light  Prog,  of  Spring  90 

Promise  (verb)  p  thee  The  fairest  and  most  loving  wife  in  Greece,'  (Enone  186 
p  (otherwse  You  perish)  as  you  came,  Princess  ii  295 

who  miaht  have  shamed  us:  p,  all.'  „  299 

I  p  you  Some  palace  in  our  land,  „     Hi  161 

Kmg,  for  hardihood  I  can  p  thee.  Gareth  and  L.  Sol 

'  Now  all  be  dumb,  and  p  all  of  you  Lover's  Tale  iv  351 

Didn't  you  kiss  me  an'  p  ?  First  Quarrel  53 

We  will  make  the  Spaniard  p,  The  Revenge  94 

P  me,  Miriam  not  Muriel — she  shall  have  the  ring.'  The  Ring  293 

Promise-bounden    awed  and  p-h  she  forbore,  Enoch  Arden  869 

Promised  (adj.)    (See  also  Long-promised)     Full  to  the 

banks,  close  on  the  p  good.  Maud  I  xviii  6 

Promised  (verb)     And  Dora  p,  being  meek.  Dora  46 

and  once  again  She  p.  Enoch  Arden  906 

she  p  that  no  force,  Persuasion,  no,  Aylmer's  Field  417 

What  could  we  else,  we  p  each ;  Princess  ii  300 

who  p  help,  and  oozed  All  o'er  with  honey'd  answer  „         v  241 

she  p  then  to  be  fair.  Maud  I  i  68 

He  p  more  than  ever  king  has  given,  Merlin  and  V.  586 

She  ceased  :  her  father  p ;  Lancelot  and  E.  1130 

those  who  knew  him  near  the  King,  And  p  for  him :     Pelleas  and  E.  16 
Lancelot  ever  p,  but  remain'd,  Guinevere  93 

'  You  p  to  find  me  work  near  you.  First  Quarrel  52 

an'  'e  p  a  son  to  she,  Owd  Rod  95 

fur  I  p  ya'd  niver  not  do  it  agean.  Church-warden,  etc.  32 

when  he  p  to  make  me  his  bride,  Charity  11 

Promising    like  a  household  god  P  empire ;  On  a  Mourner  31 

Miriam  Lane  Made  such  a  voluble  answer  p  all,  Enoch  Arden  903 

Promontory    Lingering  about  the  thymy  promontories,  Sea  Dreams  38 

Who  seems  a  p  of  rock.  Will  6 

winds  of  winter  tear  an  oak  on  a  p.  Boddicea  77 

Saw  once  a  great  piece  of  a  p,  Geraint  and  E.  162 


Prompt     as  p  to  spring  against  the  pikes,  Princess  Hi  286 

Prone   Just  where  the  p  edge  of  the  wood  began  (repeat)    Enoch  Arden  67, 373 

falUng  p  he  dug  His  Angel's  into  the  wet  earth,  „                  779 

Against  the  rush  of  the  aii"  in  the  p  swing,  Aylmer's  Field  86 

She  veil'd  her  brows,  and  p  she  sank.  Princess  v  107 

Thy  climbing  life,  and  cherish  my  p  year,  Gareth  and  L.  95 

p  from  off  her  seat  she  fell,  Guinevere  414 

in  p  flight  By  thousands  down  the  crags  Montenegro  7 

Pronest    that  most  impute  a  crime  Are  p  to  it.  Merlin  and  V.  826 

Pronounce     Nor  can  p  upon  it  If  one  should  ask  Maud  I  xx  16 

Pronounced     the  King  P  a  dismal  sentence.  Merlin  and  V.  591 

All  that  look'd  on  her  had  p  her  dead.  Lover's  Tale  iv  35 

himself  p  That  my  rich  gift  is  wholly  mine  „            349 

and  when  The  Priest  p  you  dead,  Happy  50 

Prooemion     my  rich  p  makes  Thy  glory  fly  Lucretius  70 

Proof     To  arm  in  p,  and  guard  about  Supp.  Confessions  65 

wall  about  thy  cause  With  iron-worded  p,  To  J.  M.  K.  9 

lest  thy  heart  be  put  to  p,  Locksley  Hall  77 

train  Of  flowery  clauses  onward  to  the  p  Lucretius  120 

'  Come,  hsten  !  here  is  p  that  you  were  miss'd :  Princess,  Pro.  177     j 

If  we  could  give  them  surer,  quicker  p —  „            m  282     ' 

The  p  and  echo  of  all  human  fame.  Ode  on  Well.  145 

go  then,  an  ye  must:  only  one  p,  Gareth  and  L.  144 

the  p  to  prove  me  to  the  quick ! '  „            150 

Tho'  yet  there  lived  no  p,  Marr.  of  Geraint  26 

Might  well  have  served  for  p  that  I  was  loved,  „              796 

As  p  of  trust.     O  Merlin,  teach  it  me.  Merlin  and  V.  331 

The  great  p  of  your  love :  „             354 

pi-urient  for  a  p  against  the  grain  „            487 

p  of  trust — so  often  ask'd  in  vain  !  „            920 

by  nine  years'  p  we  needs  must  learn  Lancelot  and  E.  62 

a  p  That  I — even  I — at  times  Romney's  R.  92 

Proofless     Spleen-bom,  I  think,  and  p.  Merlin  and  V.  702 

Prop     falls  A  creeper  when  the  p  is  broken,  Aylmer's  Field  810 

Proper     Upon  my  p  patch  of  soil  To  grow  my  own  plantation.      Amphion  99 

His  p  chop  to  each.  Will  Water.  116 

this  is  p  to  the  clown,  Tho'  smock'd,  or  furr'd  Princess  iv  246 

Till  happier  times  each  to  her  p  hearth :  „        vi  303 

To  shroud  me  from  my  p  scorn.  In  Mem.  xxvi  16 

He  mixing  with  his  p  sphere,  „              Ix  5 

Thy  sweetness  from  its  p  place  ?  „       Ixxxiii  6 

your  work  is  this  To  hold  me  from  my  p  place,  „           cxvii  2 

Property    See  Proputty 

Prophecy     If  aught  of  p  be  mine.  Clear-headed  friend  8 

At  last  She  rose  upon  a  wind  of  p  Princess  ii  171 

They  might  not  seem  thy  prophecies.  In  Mem.  xcii  13 

For  the  p  given  of  old  And  then  not  understood,  Maud  II  v  42 

A  prophet  certain  of  my  p,  Marr.  of  Geraint  814 

Or  was  there  sooth  in  Arthur's  p.  Holy  Grail  709 

if  ancient  prophecies  Have  err'd  not,  Guinevere  449 

Prophesied     Approvingly,  and  p  his  rise:  Aylmer's  Field  474 

I  have  p — Strike,  thou  art  worthy  Gareth  and  L.  1137 

As  holy  John  had  p  of  me,  Columbus  21      i 

Prophesy     i  p  that  I  shall  die  to-night,  .SV.  S.  Stylites  220 

Dismiss  me,  and  I  p  your  j)lan.  Princess  iv  354      ' 

all  is  lost  In  what  they  p,  Epilogue  65 

Prophesying    p  change  Beyond  all  reason :  Princess  i  142 

upon  me  flash'd  The  power  of  p—  Tiresias  57      ' 
Prophet    (See  also  World-prophet)    My  heart  was  hke  a 

p  to  my  heart.  Gardener's  D.  63 

Is  there  no  p  but  the  voice  that  calls  Aylmer's  Field  741 

Cries  ' Come  up  hither,'  as  a  p  to  us?  „              743 

fire  on  a  masthead,  P  of  storm :  Princess  iv  275 

The  p's  blazon'd  on  the  panes ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  8 

P,  curse  me  the  blabbing  Up,  Maud  II  v  57 

A  naked  babe,  of  whom  the  P  spake,  Gareth  and  L.  501 

A  p  certain  of  my  prophecy,  Marr.  of  Geraint  814 

The  people  call  you  p  :  let  it  be :  Merlin  and  V.  317 

think  I  show  myself  Too  dark  a  p :  Holy  Grail  322 

For  every  fiery  p  in  old  times,  „          876 

Was  I  too  dark  a  p  when  I  said  „          889 

to  some  old  p  might  have  seem'd  A  vision  Pelleas  and  E.  51 

ill  p's  were  they  all.  Spirits  and  men :  Guinevere  272 

The  p  and  the  chariot  and  the  steeds,  Lover's  Tale  i  307 

Or  p  s  of  them  in  his  fantasy,  „           iv  12 


11 


Prophet 


555 


^Prophet  (continued)    and  p  of  the  perfect  man  • 
rtie  p  s  beacon  bum'd  in  vain,  ' 


Proved 


_    _  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  12 

And-'  ThelW  of-ihe  P '  ST'ljeaven.  IrJ^AS/S 

Tho'  a  p  should  have  his  due,  Prophet  28 

since  he  would  sit  on  a  P's  seat,  "            to 

t^he  tore  the  P  after  death,  ■            ^^ 

The  p  of  his  own,  my  Hubert—  W'    „■      LI 


2'Ae;  Throstle  10 

Akbars  Dream  75 

82 

117 

Meckanophiltis  25 

Princess  iv  140 

Boddicea  37 

Making  of  Man  6 

Princess  v  381 

Lover's  Tale  ii  132 

0/  o/d  sa/  Freedom  6 

Boddicea  16 

Two  Voices  20 

Lover's  Tale  iv  251 

/w  J/«rt.  arWii  3 

Geraint  and  E.  581 

584 

Princess  ii  415 


Farmer,  N/S.  2 
3 


Never  a  p  so  crazy ! 

Issa  Ben  Mariam,  his  own  «, 

he,  That  other,  p  of  their  fall, 

art  <AoM  the  P?  canst  thou  work  Miracles?  ' 

had  some  p  spoken  true  Of  aU  we  shall  achieve 
>plietess    have  dash'd  The  passion  of  the  » • 

sang  the  terrible  p'e3,  ' 

j    ftophet-eye    P-e's  may  catch  a  glory 
ftophetic    Mothei-s,— that,  all  p  pity 
Prophetical    at  length  P  and  prescient 
Prophet-mind    Self-gather'd  in  her  p-m 
Pi-opitiated    Tai-anis  hep. 
Proportion    gave  .him  mind,  the  loi-diest  P 
Propose    I  p  to-night  To  show  you  ' 

Proposed    Grave  doubts  and  answere  here  v 
Propping    in  the  naked  haU,  p  his  head. 

And  found  his  own  dear  bride  p  his  head 
Proprietress     Is  she  The  sweet  «  a  shadow  ?  Princess  ii  41^^ 

she,  half  on  her  mother  p,  Half-droopine  from  her        -^'^'*^**'''     -ol^ 
I    ^'*'»°*g^;^5«^>     ^-P.Ahat'swST'elT'em'  "  *' ^^^ 

:  ^>  P,  P— Sam,  thou's  an  ass  for  thy  paains  • 

J^,  p — woa  then  woa — 
But  p,  p  sticks,  an'  p,  p  graws. 
\Voa  then,  p,  wiltha?— 
P,  p's  ivrjthing  'ere, 

Coom  oop,  p,  p— that's  what  I  'ears  'im  saav— 
\.  P,  p— canter  an'  canter  awaay. 
Prose  (s)     I  will  work  in  p  and  rhyme. 
Let  raffs  be  rife  in  p  and  rhyme 

£l^!  "'■"^^  T  M^^y^P.  ^'^'"  ^'oo^^s  of  travell'd  seamen 
Proserpme  Like  P  in  Enna,  gathering  flowera :  ' 
Prospect    Large  range  of  p  had  the  mother  sow 

My  p  and  horizon  gone.  ' 

Ai-ise  in  open  p— heath  and  hill 
"OSPer     While  yon  sun  p's  in  the  blue. 

And  the  third  time  may  p, 

and  thought  He  scarce  would  p 

May  she  mix  With  men  and  p ! 

I  p,  circled  with  thy  voice ; 

And  the  third  time  may  p,' 
Prosper'd    throve  and  p :  sh  three  yeara  She  p  • 

sop  that  at  last  A  luckier  or  a  bolder  fisterman, 

H  1^ '  -^'^lu  '■''"*^  °^  ^^"<=y  boys  Brake  on  us 

iiath  p  in  the  name  of  Christ 

nch  man,  That,  having  always  p  in  the  world 
Prospenty    return  In  such  a  sunliht  of  «  ' 

^^^fr^,?^    ^^^'^  ^'^^■*''  P  floods  his  holy  urn 

While  now  thy  p  labour  fills 
Be  p  in  this  journey,  as  in  all  ■ 

Now  with  p  auguries  Comes  at  last 
Prostrate    Sprang  from  the  midriff  of  a  p  king- 
Protector    call'd  him  dear  p  in  her  fright, 
Protestant    found  her  beating  the  hard  P  doors.        c', 

So  nS^ri/Tn-^''^"^,'  "^^  «°'"«  P)'  '«l>at  is  this? 
S  ^T^^      falhng,  p  of  our  cause.  Die 


Proud  (adj.)    {See  also  Princely-pro^^ 
to  bear  your  name. 
Too  p  to  care  from  whence  I  came, 
langmd  l^ht  of  your  p  eyes  Is  wearied 
Ke  p  of  those  strong  sons  of  thine 
Ihought  her  p,  and  fled  over  the  sea; 
Iheir  ancient  name !  tliey  might  be  p  • 


I  know  you  p 


16 
39 
43 

59 
60 
Talking  Oak  289 
WiU  Water.  61 
■A  mphion  81 
Edwin  Morris  112 
Walk,  to  the  Mail  93 
In  Mem.  xxxviii  4 
Lover's  Tale  i  397 
The  Blackbird  22 
M.  d' Arthur  130 
Princess  Hi  76 
hi  Mem.  cxiv  3 
„     cxxx  15 
Pass,  of  Arthur  298 
Palace  of  Art  211 
Enoch  Arden  48 
Princess  v  394 
Balin  and  Balan  99 
Lover's  Tale  i  716 
Aylmer's  Field  421 
/w  il/ew.  ix  8 
„  Ixxxiv  25 
il/arr.  o/  Geraint  225 
Om  Jm6.  Q.  Victoria  9 
Aylmer's  Field  16 
Merlin  and  V.  946 
•Sisters  (£.  a«rf  £.)  240 
"^ '  Z?o/y  6Vai^  270 

Princess  iv  505 

X.  C.  V.  de  Vere  10 

12 

59 

England  and  Amer.  4 

Edward  Gray  14 

Aylmer's  Field  378 


Alymer's  Field  756 

Princess  i  96 

„  wi300 

Sailor  Boy  7 

ilf  awrf  7  j'lj  17 

A^ortA.  CoiiZer  97 

Freedom  30 

Happy  78 


Proud  (adj.)  {continued)    and  mean  Vileness,  we  are 
grown  so  p —  ' 

P  look'd  the  Ups : 

and  this  p  watchword  rest  Of  equal  • 
'  O  boy,  tho'  thou  art  young  and  p  ' 
you  wrong  your  beauty,  believe  it,  in  being  so  p  • 
P  on  'im,  hke,  my  lad,  ^  ""  /' , 

Of  saner  worship  sanely  p  ; 
My  nature  was  too  p. 
three  of  these  P  in  their  fantasy  call  themselves 

tne  Day,  „ 

And  since  the  p  man  often  is  the  mean  lu  ^'''"^^'' "'^^  .^-  633 

overthrow  My  ^  self,  and  m?  purpose  t'hree  years  ^''"'-  "^  ''''''''''  ^"^ 
There  to  his  p  horee  Lancelot  tum'd  Geraint  and  E.  849 

And  moved  aUt  her  pS°*  p"Sd  'pale  ^"'"'^''^ '"'''  ^-  ^fj 

As  yon  p  Prince  who  left  the  quest  to  me.  "  ^H 

vvherefore  would  ve  look  On  this  p  fellow  again  "  ^13 

Against  the  p  archbishop  Arundel—  ^      '         si.  7"nir,     }^a 

that  p  Priest,  That  mock-meek  mouth  of  utter  .VnticSfst    ^^^""'^^^i 
Slender  warrant  Imdi/e  to  hep  of  The  welcomV«„«^f  ft      "    t,     }^t 

Prove    To  put  together,  part  and  p,  rJ%  ^P"'',  22 

To  feel,  altho'  no  ti^ngue  can  p  ^'^'^  ^'"'''  ]^ 

You  sought  to  p  how  I  could  love,  T   r  v  Lv    ^ 

P  me  what  it  is  I  would  not  do.'  ^-  ^-  ^-  '^f.  /"^  II 

To  p  myself  a  poet :  „.  ■„    ^odiva  27 

Pale  again  as  death  did  p :  r     i  i^'^/^^z.^f! 

I  fain  would  p  A  father  to  your  children  •  If  ''\Y^P^\  ^f 

She  must  p  tme :  for,  brother                  "  .  I'*"'^  ^:^^^,^  ^10 

caU  him,  love.  Before  you  plim  rogue  ^yl^er's  Fteld  364 

Your  language  p's  you  stilf  the  chUd^    '  ^'p^ZT'-  ^11 

or  p  The  Danaid  of  a  leaky  vase,  ^'^''"''''  "^^ 

I  p  Your  knight,  and  fight  your  battle,  "       •   t^. 

may  thy  mother  p  As  true  to  thee  as  false,  "      Z  %}^ 

no  tmer  Time  hunself  Can  p  you,  4  n'J^-    ,■     % 

Beheving  where  we  cannot  pf  /«m         i^""? 

I  long  to  p  No  lapse  of  moons  ^"^  ^"''^•'  ^'•^•.  * 

Her  care  is  not  to  part  and  p ;  "           f  ^.'??  ^ 

and  I  shaU  p  A  meeting  somewhere  "      ,  ^*^"  ^ 

Should  p  the  phantom-warning  true.  "           '^f-  rt 

Let  Science  p  we  are,  and  then  "         ^"*    f 

Or  thou  wilt  p  their  tool.  ,'>     ,  /*.*,? 

'  WeU,  if  it  p  a  girl,  the  bov  ^^"'"^  ^  ^^ ?? 

'  Well,  if  it  p  a  gu-1,  my  boy  "         *'**,  \ 

the  proof  to  p  me  to  the  quick ! '  a„^^.t,  "   ,  ^   i  It. 

and  p  her  heart  toward  tlie  Prince.'  Ma^lwrat  Jf? 

I  someway  p  such  force  in  her  Link'd  with  such  love  ^    ''""''  gS 

That  he  might  p  her  to  the  uttermost,  Gerair^t  ar,d  V  t^ 

Shall  I  not  rather  ;,  the  woree  for  these  ?  Bdi^ aid  fait  IS 

We  go  to  p  it.     Bfde  ye  here  the  while.'  Merit  Hv  fl 

make  me  yearn  still  more  to  p  you  mine,  ""''''  ""^  \^l 

Ihat  I  should  p  it  on  you  unawares,  "             o^?^ 

What  other?  for  men  sought  top  me  vile,  "            Jon 

For  tho' you  should  not  p  it  upon  me,  "            ta^ 

All— aU— the  wish  to  p  him  wholly  hers.'  "            a«i 

They  p  to  him  his  work  •  r        j  . "     ,  -r.  °"^ 

P  No  surer  than  our  falcon  yesterday,  ■^'*''^"'  '^'^  ^-  iff 

Yea  let  her  p  me  to  the  uttermost,  PeUe"  a«A  TP  9?? 

bok'd  as  he  IS  like  to  p.  When  Julian  goes,  Ms  meiv  f fl 

Temble  pity,  if  one  so  beautiful  P,              '  ^over  s  1  ale  tv  dU 

May  p  as  peaceful  as  his  own.  /f'-      •     %?% 

Thou  canst  not  p  the  Nameless,  0  my  son.  Nor  canst  ''""'"'*    ^^ 
thou  p  the  world  thou  movest  in.  Thou  canst  not  p 
that  thou  art  body  alone,  Nor  canst  thou  v  that 

thou  art  spirit  alone,  j      •    .  o 

Nor  canst  thou  p  that  thou  art  both  in  one :  ^"''''''  ^'^^  f, 

Ihou  canst  not  p  thou  art  immortal  "          «i 

*^  '  Lucretius  193 


Proved 


556 


Puff'd 


Proved  (continued)     By  which  our  lives  are  chiefly  p, 

The  truths  that  never  can  be  p 

nor  p  Since  that  dark  day  a  day  like  this; 

We  have  p  we  have  hearts  in  a  cause, 

p  him  everyway  One  of  our  noblest, 

that  also  have  we  p ; 

Nor  is  he  the  wisest  man  who  never  p  himself  a 
fool. 
Proven    See  Prov'n 

Provence    hair  Studded  with  one  rich  P  rose — 
Provender     For  lust  or  lusty  blood  or  p : 
Proverb     This  p  flashes  thro'  his  head, 

till  their  love  Shall  ripen  to  a  p, 
Providence    sermonizing  On  p  and  trust  in  Heaven, 
Province     they  press  in  from  all  the  p's, 

O  Love,  thy  p  were  not  large, 

tho'  they  sought  Thro'  all  the  p's 

p  ■with  a  hundred  miles  of  coast,  (repeat) 

leaves  Some  colder  p  in  the  North 

and  rule  thy  P  of  the  brute. 
Proving    converse  in  the  hall,  P  her  heart : 

this  cftrsed  charm.  Were  p  it  on  me, 

nothing  worthy  p  can  be  proven. 


Prov'n    '  Not  p '  Averill  said,  or  laughingly  '  Some  other 
race  of  Averills ' — p  or  no,  What  cared  he  ? 

and  a  laugh  Ringing  like  p  golden  coinage  true, 

who  hath  p  him  King  Uther's  son  ? 

Ask'd  me  to  tilt  with  him,  the  p  knight. 

Not  p,  who  swept  the  dust  of  ruin'd  Rome 

But  justice,  so  thy  say  be  p  true. 

the  first  quest :  he  is  not  p. 

O  stai',  my  morning  dream  hath  p  true, 

And  horrors  only  p  a  blooming  boy. 

But  rather  p  in  his  Paynim  wars  Than  famous 
jousts ;  but  see,  or  p  or  not, 

or  a  traitor  p,  or  hound  Beaten, 

only  p  themselves  Prisoners,  murderers. 

nothing  worthy  proving  can  be  p, 

Re-volution  has  p  but  E-volution 
Prow    shake  The  sparkling  flints  beneath  the  p. 

round  about  the  p  she  wrote  The  Lady  of  Shalott. 

round  the  p  they  read  her  name.  The  Lady  of  Shalott 

Lady's-head  upon  the  p  Caught  the  shrill  salt, 

Now  nearer  to  the  p  she  seem'd 

Sleep,  gentle  heavens,  before  the  p ; 

dart  again,  and  play  About  the  p, 

vessel  in  mid-ocean,  her  heaved  p  Clambering, 

chains  for  him  Who  push'd  his  p's 

their  nail'd  p's  Parted  the  Norsemen, 
Prowess    whereas  I  know  Yom*  p,  Arac, 

great  deeds  Of  Lancelot,  and  his  p  in  the  lists. 

His  p  was  too  wondrous. 

learn  If  his  old  p  were  in  aught  decay'd ; 

acts  of  p  done  In  toiu-nament  or  tilt, 

thought  Of  all  my  late-shown  p  in  the  lists, 

Thou  thoughtest  of  thy  p  and  thy  sins  ? 

here  and  there  a  deed  Of  p  done 

In  height  and  p  more  than  human, 


In  Mem.  cv  14 

„    cxxxi  10 

Con.  7 

Maud.  Ill  vi  55 

Geraint  and  E.  909 

Balin  and  Balan  34 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  244 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  45 

Lucretius  198 

Day- Dm.,  Arrival  15 

Lover's  Tale  i  758 

Enoch  Arden  205 

Princess  ii  97 

In  Mem.  xlvi  13 

Marr.  of  Geraint  730 

Merlin  and  V.  588,  647 

The  Ring  481 

By  an  Evolution.  16 

Mart,  of  Geraint  521 

Merlin  and  V.  436 

Ancient  Sage  66 


Aylmer's  Field  53 

182 

Com.  of  Arthur  69 

Gareth  and  L.  27 

135 

346 

582 

1000 

1425 

Balin  and  Balan  38 

PeUeas  and  E.  439 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  167 

Ancient  Sage  66 

Beautiful  City  3 

Arabian  Nights  52 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  8 

44 

The  Voyage  11 

67 

In  Mem.  ix  14 

„       xii  18 

Lover's  Tale  ii  169 

Columbus  24 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  93 

Princess  v  404 

Lancelot  and  E.  82 

542 

584 

Roly  Grail  1 

„      362 

„     455 

Guinevere  459 

Tiresias  179 


Prowest    I  chant  thy  praise  As  p  knight  and  truest  lover,   Pelleas  and  E.  350 

Prowling    While  the  Fiend  is  p.  Forlorn  66 

Proxy-wedded    p-w  with  a  bootless  calf  Princess  i  34 

Pmde    p's  for  proctors,  dowagers  for  deans,  „  Pro.  141 

Prudence     a  p  to  withhold ;  Isabel  15 

by  slow  p  to  make  mild  A  rugged  people,  Ulysses  36 

Let  not  your  p,  dearest,  drowse,  Princess  ii  339 

Prudent    The  p  partner  of  his  blood  Two  Voices  415 

these  outbuzz'd  me  so  That  even  our  v  king,  Columbus  122 

Pruned     Thro'  crowded  lilac-ambush  trimly  p ;  Gardener's  D.  112 

Prurient    v  for  a  proof  against  the  grain  Merlin  and  V.  487 

'  In  filthy  sloughs  they  roll  a  p  skin.  Palace  of  Art  201 

Prussian    Last,  the  P  trumpet  blew ;  Ode  on  Well.  127 

Pry    not  to  p  and  peer  on  your  reserve,  Princess  iv  419 

Psalm    with  sound  Of  pious  hymns  and  jp'*,  St.  S.  Stylites  34 

sound  Of  solemn  p  s,  and  silver  litanies.  Princess  ii  477 

Who  roll'd  the  p  to  wintry  skies,  In  Mom.  Ivi  11 


Psalm  (continued)     As  a  p  by  a  mighty  master 

'  Libera  me,  Domine ! '  you  sang  the  P, 
Psyche    Two  widows,  Ladjr  P,  Lady  Blanche ; 

'  Lady  Blanche '  she  said,  '  And  Lady  P.' 

Which  was  prettiest,  Best-natured  ?    '  Lady  P.' 

with  your  own.  As  Lady  P's  pupils. ' 

Lady  P  will  harangue  The  fresh  arrivals 

back  again  we  crost  the  court  To  Lady  P's : 

'  Well  then,  P,  take  my  life, 

'  having  seen  And  heard  the  Lady  P.' 

'  Are  you  that  Lady  P,'  I  rejoin'd, 

'  Are  you  that  P,'  Florian  added ; 

are  you  That  P,  wont  to  bind  my  throbbing  brow, 

are  you  That  brother-sister  P,  both  in  one  ? 

You  were  that  P,  but  what  are  you  now  ? '  (repeat) 

'  You  are  that  P,'  Cyril  said, 

'  Are  you  that  Lady  P,'  I  began, 

'  Are  you  that  P,'  Florian  ask'd. 

Then  Lady  P,  '  Ah — Melissa — you  ! 

WWle  P  watch'd  them,  smiling, 

you  learnt  No  more  from  P's  lecture, 

The  long-limb'd  lad  that  had  a  P  too ; 

And  dear  is  sister  P  to  my  heart. 

To  rail  at  Lady  P  and  her  side. 

Herself  and  Lady  P  the  two  arms ; 

Lady  P  was  the  right  hand  now. 

Lady  P  will  be  crush'd ; 

ASirms  your  P  thieved  her  theories. 

Nor  like  poor  P  whom  she  drags  in  tow.' 

then,  climbing,  Cyril  kept  With  P, 

P  flush 'd  and  wann'd  and  shook  ; 

demanded  if  her  mother  knew,  Or  P, 

She  sent  For  P,  but  she  was  not  there ; 

she  call'd  For  P's  child  to  cast  it  from  the  doors ; 

And  where  are  P,  Cyril  ?  both  are  fled  : 

you  planed  her  path  To  Lady  P, 

'  We  thank  you,  we  shall  hear  of  it  From  Lady  P : ' 

later  in  the  night  Had  come  on  P  weeping : 

With  P's  babe,  was  Ida  watching  us. 

With  P's  colour  round  his  helmet, 

after  him  Came  P,  sorrowing  for  Aglaia. 

high  upon  the  palace  Ida  stood  With  P's  babe  in  arm 

while  P  ever  stole  A  Uttle  nearer. 

Who  turn'd  half-round  to  P  as  she  sprang 

'  Come  hither.     0  P,'  she  cried  out. 

But  P  tended  Florian :  with  her  oft,  Melissa  came ; 

second  suit  obtain'd  At  first  with  P. 

Ida  came  behind  Seen  but  of  P : 
Ptarmigan     know  The  p  that  whitens  ere  his  hour 
Public     I  raged  against  the  p  Uar ; 

No  p  life  was  his  on  earth. 

Drink  we,  last,  the  p  fool, 

A  hdless  watcher  of  the  p  weal. 

But  p  use  required  she  should  be  known ;   And 
since  my  oath  was  ta'en  for  p  use, 

Till  p  wrong  be  crumbled  into  dust. 

They  call'd  me  in  the  p  squares 

Not  let  any  man  think  for  the  p  good. 

Friend,  to  be  struck  by  the  p  foe. 

That  were  a  p  merit,  far, 

And  left  him  lying  in  the  p  way ; 

not  the  King's — For  p  use : 

I  hold  that  man  the  worst  of  p  foes 

And  leave  him  in  the  p  way  to  die. 

or  flamed  at  a  p  wrong. 

Thy  power,  well-u  sed  to  move  the  p  breast. 

That  wanders  from  the  p  good, 
Pucker'd    And  shoals  of  p  faces  drive ; 
Puddin'     beslings  p  an'  Adam's  wine ; 
Puddled    '  So  p  as  it  is  with  favouritism.' 
Pufl  (s)     Upon  the  level  in  little  p's  of  wind, 
Pufl  (verb)     A  wind  to  p  your  idol-fires, 

the  vessel  p's  her  sail : 
Puff'd  (adj.)     Where  with  p  cheek  the  belted  hunter 

behind  I  heard  the  p  pursuer ; 


The  Wreck  53 

Happy  49 

Princess  i  128 

233 

234 

240 

ii  95 

101 

204 

211 

237 

246 

250 

254 

255,  277 

256 

261 

269 

330 

365 

393 

406 

418 

Hi  33 

35 

37 

63 

92 

103 

355 

ivlGO 

234 

237 

238 

241 

316 

329 

v50 

512 

534 

vi29 

31 

132 

209 

285 

vii55 

72 

79 

Last  Tournment  697 

The  Letters  26 

You  might  have  won  23 

Vision  of  Sin  149 

Princess  iv  325 


336 

Ode  on  Well.  167 

In  Mem.  Ixix  11 

Maud  II V  45 

89 

91 

Geraint  and  E.  478 

Lancelot  and  E.  60 

Guinevere  512 

Lover's  Tale  iv  261 

The  Wreck  68 

To  W.C.  Macready  3 

Freedom  26 

In  Mem.  Ixx  10 

North.  Cobbler  112 

Princess  Hi  146 

„      iv  256 

Love  thou  thy  land  69 

Ulysses  44 

Palace  of  Art  63 

Princess  iv  265 


Puff'd 


557 


Pure 


Puff'd  (verb)     angry  gust  of  wind  P  out  his  torch  Merlin  and  V.  731 

breaths  of  anger  p  Her  fairy  nostril  out ;  „           848 

morn  That  p  the  swaying  branches  into  smoke  Holy  Grail  15 

Pug     a  score  of  ji's  And  poodles  yell'd  Edwin  Morris  119 

Puissance    of  her  brethren,  youths  of  p ;  Princess  i  37 

Puissant  (See  also  All-puissant)    rountl  The  warrior's  f 

shouldere  Pallas  flung  Achilles  over  the  T.3 

Pull     '  Yet  p  not  down  my  palace  towers,  Palace  of  Art  293 

P  off,  p  off,  the  brooch  of  gold.  Lady  Clare  39 

tears  that  make  the  rose  P  sideways.  In  Mem.  Ixxii  11 

Pulpit-drone     humming  of  the  drowsy  p-d  To  J.  M.  K.  10 

Pulpiteer    To  chapel ;  where  a  heated  p,  Sea  Dreams  20 

Pulsation     Hung  tranced  from  all  p,  Gardener's  D.  260 

Make  me  feel  the  wild  p  Locksley  Hall  109 

The  wild  p  of  her  wuigs ;  In  Mem.  xii  4 

The  deep  p's  of  the  world,  „       xcv  40 

Pulse     lent  The  p  of  hope  to  discontent.  Two  Voices  450 

Shall  strike  within  thy  p's,  like  a  God's,  (Enone  162 

stirr'd  with  languid  p's  of  the  oar.  Gardeners  D.  41 

And  her  whisper  throng'd  my  p's  Locksley  Hall  36 

her  palfrey's  footfall  shot  Light  horrors  thro'  her  p's  :  Godiva  59 

lent  my  desire  to  kneel,  and  shook  My  p's,  Princess  Hi  194 

you  keep  One  p  that  beats  true  woman,  „       vi  180 

p's  at  the  clamouring  of  her  enemy  Boildicea  82 

My  p's  therefore  beat  again  For  other  friends  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  57 

And  every  p  of  wind  and  wave  Recalls,  „               73 

measured  p  of  racing  oars  Among  the  willows ;  ,,  Ixxxvii  10 

The  p's  of  a  Titan's  heart ;  „         ciii  32 

force,  that  keeps  A  thousand  p's  dancing,  „       cxxv  16 

my  p's  closed  their  gat«s  with  a  shock  Maud  /  i  15 

Lord  of  the  p  that  is  lord  of  her  breast,  „     xvi  13 

died  to  live,  long  as  my  p's  play ;  „   xviii  66 

Is  it  gone  ?  my  p's  beat —  „    II  i  36 

shook  her  p's,  crying,  '  Look,  a  prize !  Geraint  and  E.  123 

and  stirs  the  p  With  devil's  leaps,  Guinevere  521 

With  its  true-touched  p's  in  the  flow  Lover's  Tale  i  205 

And  faints,  and  hath  no  p,  no  breath —  „           268 

Unfrequent,  low,  as  tho'  it  told  its  p's ;  „         ii  55 

had  lam  three  days  without  a  p :  „         iv  34 

strike  Thy  youthful  p's  into  rest  Tiresias  157 

tho'  every  p  would  freeze,  The  Flight  53 

Look  how  the  living  p  of  AUa  beats  Akbar's  Dream  41 

Poise  (vegetable)    eating  hoary  grain  and  p  the  steeds,        Spec,  of  Iliad  21 

Pnlse  (verb)     began  To  p  with  such  a  vehemence  Lover's  Tale  iv  82 

fountain  p's  high  in  sunnier  jets,  Prog,  of  Spring  54 

Poising    (See  also  Red-pulsing)     heather-scent«d  air, 

P  fuU  man ;  Last  Tournament  692 

Pommel    dash'd  the  |>  at  the  foremost  face,  Balin  and  Balan  402 

Pnn     the  p,  the  scurrilous  tale, —  Aylmer's  Field  441 

Ponched    See  Poonch'd 

Ponisbment    See  Pillar-punishment 

Pony     This  pretty,  p,  weakly  little  one, —  Enoch  Arden  195 

Pup    See  Poop 

Popil    Some  meeker  p  you  must  find,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  18 

with  your  own,  As  Lady  Psyche's  p's.'  Princess  i  240 

A  patient  range  of  p's ;  „     ii  104 

angled  with  them  for  her  p's  love :  „      Hi  93 

Popilage    sons  of  kings  loving  in  p  Merlin  and  V.  517 

Poppet     P  to  a  father's  threat,  Locksley  Hall  42 

We  are  p's,  Man  in  his  pride,  Maud  I  iv  25 

Poppy    bUnd  and  shuddering  puppies,  The  Brook  130 

PorblJnd     O  P  race  of  miserable  men,  Geraint  and  E.  1 

Poichase    Yet  he  hoped  to  p  glory.  The  Captain  17 

To  p  his  own  boat,  and  make  a  home  For  Annie :  Enoch  Arden  47 

We  sent  mine  host  to  p  female  gear ;  Princess  i  199 

Purchased     p  his  own  boat,  and  made  a  home  For  Annie,     Enoch  Arden  58 

Pure     {See  also  Perfect-pure)     '  Her  court  was  p  ;    her 

life  serene  ;  To  the  Queen  25 

But  why  Prevail'd  not  thy  p  prayers  ?  Supp.  Confessions  89 

P  vestal  thoughts  in  the  translucent  fane  Isabel  4 

Of  perfect  wifehood  and  p  lowhhead.  „    12 

P  silver,  underpropt  a  rich  Throne  Arabian  Nights  145 

As  p  and  true  as  blades  of  steel.  Kate  16 

Pacing  with  downward  eyelids  p.  Two  Voices  420 

Disclosed  a  fruit  of  p  Hesperian  gold,  (Enone  66 


Pore  (continued)    p  law,  Commeasure  perfect  freedom.' 


(Enone  166 
And  p  quintessences  of  precious  oils  Palace  of  Art  187 

daughter  of  the  warrior  Gileadite,  A  maiden  p ;       D.  of  F.  Women  198 
A  man  more  p  and  bold  and  just  To  J.  S.  31 

May  He  within  Himself  make  p !  M.  d' Arthur  245 

Ruffles  her  p  cold  plume,  and  takes  the  flood  „  268 

all  else  of  heaven  was  p  Up  to  the  Sun,  Gardener's  D.  79 

Gown'd  in  p  white,  that  fitted  to  the  shape —  „  126 

but  what  lot  is  p  ?  Walk,  to  the  Mail  97 

mysterious  glimmer  steals  From  thy  p  brows,  and 

from  thy  shoulders  p,  Tithonus  35 

Make  Thou  my  spirit  p  and  clear  St.  Agnes'  Eve  9 

To  make  me  p  of  sin.  „  32 

Because  my  heart  is  f.  Sir  Galalmd  4 

P  spaces  clothed  in  hving  beams,  P  hlies  of  eternal  peace,         „        66 
otherwhere  P  sport :  ~ 

'  An  open-hearted  maiden,  true  and  p. 
But  p  as  lines  of  green  that  streak  the  white 
Is  not  our  cause  p  ? 
The  single  p  and  perfect  animal, 
Which  he  has  worn  so  p  of  blame. 
And  p  as  he  from  taint  of  craven  guile, 
And  keep  the  soldier  firm,  the  statesman  p : 
till  Phosphor,  bright  As  our  p  love. 
Come  then,  p  hands,  and  bear  the  head 
As  p  and  perfect  as  I  say  ? 
What  souls  possess  themselves  so  p. 
Her  faith  thro'  form  is  p  as  thine, 
And  love  will  last  as  p  and  whole 
How  p  at  heart  and  soimd  in  head, 
Perplext  in  faith,  but  p  in  deeds, 
To  one  p  image  of  regret. 
And  passion  p  in  snowy  bloom 
Flow  thro'  our  deeds  and  make  them  p. 
Small  and  p  as  a  pearl, 
'Tis  a  morning  p  and  sweet,  (repeat) 
(For  I  cleaved  to  a  cause  that  I  felt  to  be  p  and  true), 


shyly  glanced  Eyes  of  p  women, 

with  p  Affection,  and  the  light  of  victory, 

And  p  nobility  of  temperament, 

Arthur  the  blameless,  p  as  any  maid, 

P  as  our  own  true  Mother  is  our  Queen.' 

and  the  mask  of  p  Worn  by  this  court, 

'  This  Arthiu:  p ! 

There  is  no  being  p.  My  cherub ; 

And  as  it  chanced  they  are  happy,  being  p.' 

'  A  sober  man  is  Percivale  and  p ; 

Have  all  men  true  and  leal,  all  women  p ; 

and  down  he  sank  For  the  p  pain, 

Full  many  a  holy  vow  and  p  resolve. 

And  p  Sir  Galahad  to  uplift  the  maid ; 

Delicately  p  and  marvellously  fair, 

P,  as  you  ever  wish  your  knights  to  be. 

if  not  so  p  a  love  Clothes  in  so  p  a  loveUness  ? 

Whom  Arthur  and  his  knighthood  caU'd  The  P, 

'  I  know  not,  for  thy  heart  is  p  as  snow.' 

of  such  a  kind,  that  all  of  p  Noble, 

Some  root  of  knighthood  and  p  nobleness ; 

For  fair  thou  art  and  p  as  Guinevere, 

P  on  the  virgin  forehead  of  the  dawn ! 

'  False !  and  I  held  thee  p  as  Guinevere.' 

'  Am  I  but  false  as  Guinevere  is  p  ? 

can  Arthur  make  me  p  As  any  maiden  child  ? 

could  speak  Of  the  p  heart. 

Her  station,  taken  everywhere  for  p. 

Hereafter  in  that  world  where  all  are  p 

That  p  severity  of  perfect  light — 

Then  she,  for  her  good  deeds  and  her  p  life, 

May  He  within  himself  make  p ! 

Ruffles  her  p  cold  plume,  and  takes  the  flood 

Into  a  clearer  zenith,  p  of  cloud. 

And  why  was  I  to  darsen  their  p  love, 

Fill'd  all  with  p  clear  fire. 

That  makes  the  sequel  p  ; 

Back  to  the  p  and  universal  church, 


Princess,  Pro.  81 

Hi  98 

v  196 

403 

„  vii  306 

Ode  on  Well.  72 

135 

222 

In  Mem.  ix  11 

„         xviii  9 

xxiv  2 

„      xxxii  15 

,,       xxxiii  9 

xliii  13 

„  xciv  1 

xcvi  9 

cii  24 

,,  cix  11 

„       cxxxi  4 

Maud  II  ii  2 

„  iv  31,  35 

„  ///  vi  31 

Gareth  and  L.  314 

330 

Marr.  of  Geraint  212 

Balin  and  Balan  479 

617 

Merlin  and  V.  35 

49 

51 

745 

755 

794 

Lancelot  and  E.  518 

879 

1265 

1369 

1375 

1383 

Holy  Grail  3 

97 

„      773 

„       886 

Pelleas  and  E.  44 

505 

522 

524 

Last  Tournament  692 

Guinevere  502 

517 

562 

646 

693 

Pass,  of  Arthur  413 

436 

Lover's  Tale  i  514 

727 

„         ii  146 

iv  157 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  71 


Pure 

The  Good,  the  True  the  P,  the  Just-  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  71 

lest  the  stream  should  issue  p.  '       ^j^J 

Could  make  p  light  live  on  the  canvas  ?  Romneu's  R  10 
hps  were  touch'd  with  fire  from  off  a  p  Pierian  altar,         Parnassu^  17 

Pnroijl^'"'''^ ^'  ^""^TvJ  *ri*'^"^'  .J-e^erent,  p~  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  4 
Porelier    on  him  breathed  Far  p  in  his  rushings  to 

^^/S?  ""''  ^'*\^^'  brother-like,  atZtlSi^.f^ 

To  doubt  her  p  were  to  want  a  heart-  Lancelot  and  E.  1377 

Purer    With  swifter  movement  and  in  p  light  Tinh^J  <<9 

And  fill'd  the  breast  with  p  breath.^  ^  W'/K  I 

^ahtfw^*''^"/.'i^^'      ,  Locksley  Hall  88 

Eight  that  were  left  to  make  a  p  world-  JyZmer'*  keZci  638 

This  faith  has  many  a  p  pnest,  „          ^^^^  g 

With  sweeter  manners,  p  laws.  cw  16 

A  p  sapphire  melts  into  the  sea.  j^'^nd  I  xvni  52 

Came  p  pleasure  unto  mortal  kind  Geraint  and  E.  765 

He  boasts  his  life  as  p  than  thine  own ;  Balin  and  Balan  104 

with  flame  Milder  and  p.  Lovers  Tale  i  323 

Who  made  a  nation  p  through  their  art.  To  W.  C.  Macready  8 

Purest    Six  hundred  maidens  clad  in  p  white,  Frincess  ii  472 

There  swung  an  apple  of  the  p  gold,  Marr.  of  Geraint  170 

1  have  seen ;  but  best,  Best,  p?  ogy 

From  homage  to  the  best  and  p,  "              ^jq 

Thou  mightiest  and  thou  p  among  men ! '  Hoh/  Grail  426 
the  p  of  thy  knights  May  win  them  for  the  p  of 

W^Ju'^^'^u'      u     ..      o  Last  Tournament  49 

Art  thou  the  p,  brother  ?  2 oo 

Purgatory    seest  the  souls  in  HeU  And  p,  (i;^^  ,,bus  217 

Pulled     \\  hen  I  have  p  my  gudt.'  Palace  of  Art  296 

whom  The  wholesome  realm  is  p  of  otherwhere,  Last  Tournament  96 

S^n).     h  r"u';  ^"^  -1?  "^r/.^^-^  '°"''  Guinevere  561 

Puritanic     but  all-too-ful  in  bud  For  p  stays :  Talking  Oak  60 

Punty    such  a  fmLsh'd  chasten'd  p.  Isabel  41 

Who  wove  coarse  webs  to  snare  her  p,  ^yZmer's  /'teirf  780 

That  out  of  naked  kiughtlike  p  jl/er^,-,,  „„^  p_  ^ 

r?o  passionate  for  an  utter  p  26 

5SS^/„^-''wc'*^f*^^*;^'''^^^-     „  .,  f^i  Mem.  Ixxxii  12 

Purple  (adj.)    (.See  a/so  Dark-purple,  Sullen-purple)  A 

pillar  of  white  light  upon  the  wall  Of  p  cliffs.  Ode  to  Memory  54 

rrom  the  brain  of  the  p  mountain  PoeVs  iMind  29 

Kare  broidry  of  the  p  clover.  ^  /)j^„^  3g 

In  the  p  twilights  under  the  sea  ;  The  Mermaid  44 

And  the  hearte  of  p  hills,  Elednore  17 

Asoft«„thro'thepmght,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  24 

Ihe  p  flower  droops :  the  golden  bee  Is  hly-cradled :  (Enone  29 

river  drawing  slowly  His  waters  from  the  p  hill—  Lotos-Eaters,  C  S  93 

And  makes  the  p  lilac  ripe,  On  a  Mourner  7 

-ru  .  r'.'""''''  for  the  p  seas.  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  4 

That  like  a  p  beech  among  the  greens  Edivin  Morris  84 
I'llots  of  the  p  twilight,  dropping  down  ^v■ith  costly 

\}j^^:u                ,  .  Locksley  Hall  122 

Across  the  p  coverlet,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  3 

far  away  Beyond  their  utmost  p  rim,  (repeat)  „        Depart  6  30 

.P  gauzes  golden  hazes,  liquid  mazes,  I'isionof  Sin  31 

Hung  ball,  fiew  kite,  anc  raced  the  p  fly.  Princess  ii  248 

Blow,  let  us  hear  the  p  glens  replying :  ;«  1 1 

And  tumbled  on  the  p  footcloth,  "           286 

and  she  Far-fleeted  by  the  p  island-sides,  "      ^i  \qq 

And  steenng  now,  from  a  p  cove,  The  Daisy  20 

Kolling  on  their  p  couclies  in  their  tender  effeminacy.  Boddicea  62 
A  solemn  gladness  even  crown'd  The  p  brows  of 

<a„„J^.u  '.111                         ,  ^w  Mem.  xxxi  12 

have  that  the  dome  was  p,  and  above.  Crimson,  Gareth  and  L.  912 

A  p  scarf,  at  either  enfl  whereof  Marr.  of  Geraint  169 

And  seeing  one  so  gay  in  p  silks.  ojwratnt  loy 


558 


Pursued 


Purple  (adj.)  (continued)    but  Yniol  caught  His  p  scarf, 

.  '*"^,}^^{,'^'       ,            ^  Marr.  of  Geraint  317 

And  all  the  p  slopes  of  mountam  flowers  Last  Tournament  229 

Hlhng  with  p  gloom  the  vacancies  Lover's  Tale  i  2 

A  p  range  of  moimtam-cones,  4^7 

dragonfly  Shot  by  me  like  a  flash  of  p  fire.  "        ii\q 
Pot  amber,  dangled  a  hundred  fathom  of  grapes,      V.  of  Maddune  56 

fallen  every  p  Caesar's  dome—  •'  To  ViraU  30 
When  he  spoke  of  his  tropical  home  in  the  canes  by 

the  p  tide,  •'           ^^^  ^r^^^^  71 
There  beneath  the  Roman  ruin  where  the  p  flowers 

grow,  Prater  Ave  etc  4 

"^ti^dUXuhTdai^: '"'  ^"^°'  ^'  y^"°^^-  ^^7  It- 1; 

palfrey  trapt  In  p  blazon'd  with  amiorial  gold.  Godwa  52 

n,      H   ^^K"'  *^-?  '^/stance  mystery,  P,i„,,s5  m  196 

Or  red  wth  spirited  p  of  the  vats,  .^u  202 

thistle  bursting  Into  glossy  fs,  Qde  on  Well.  207 

The  p  from  the  distance  dies,  /«  Mem.  xxxviU  3 

And  blossom  in  p  and  red  Maud  I  xxii  74 

In  crimsons  and  in  ps  and  m  gems.  Marr.  of  Geraint  10 

Purple-frosty     Behind  a  p-f  bank  /„  Me,„   „,,-,■  o 

Purple-skirted    the  p-s  robe  Of  twilight  The  Vovam  21 

Purple-spiked    standing  near  P-5  lavender :  Ode  to  3IeJ>y  110 

surely,  if  your  Highness  keep  Your  p,  Pnncess  Hi  212 

de  ays  his  p  till  thou  send  To  do  the  battle  Gareth  and  L.  618 

V\  hen  all  the  p  of  my  throne  hath  fail'd,  l^ass  of  Arthur  160 

Purpose    I  dimly  see  My  far-off  doubtful  p, '  ^  SinZ  251 

my  p  liolds  To  sail  beyond  the  sunset,            •  Ulvsses  59 

He  will  answer  to  the  p,  Locksle.f/al  55 

one  increasing  p  runs,  •'         ^gl; 

Enoch  set  A  p  evermore  before  his  eyes,  Enoch  Arden  45 

iiut  had  no  heart  to  break  his  p's  To  Annie  •  155 

But  let  me  hold  my  p  till  I  die                       '  "             ant 

Faded  with  morning  but  his  p  held.  Aylmers  Field  412 

T Tnrf        , .clench  d  his  p  Uke  a  blow  !  Prmcess  v  306 

Unshaken,  chnging  to  her  p,  344 

That  like  a  broken  p  waste  in  air :  "      ..,v  214 

/■  m  p,  will  in  will,  they  grow,  "           305 

Such  splendid  p  in  his  eyes,  y ,,  .,/,„,.  i^^  jq 

i.SiTK^^n,^^^''^    ,    .  Maud  III  vi  59 

SiS   *^f  boundless  p  of  their  King  ! '  Com.  of  Arthur  475 

1  lep  ext  lus  outward  p,  tiU  an  hour,  Gareth  and  L.  175 

An  fVTt ""*""  ^  ^''■^''  ^^-  ™y  '^^^^^^  ^'^'•««'»^  ^'>d  E.  831 

Ana,  but  for  my  main  p  m  these  joasts,  8S7 

and  my  p  three  years  old,  "'            §49 

And  the  high  p  broken  by  the  worm.  Merlin  and  V.  196 

?n,    ifn    .  P"f  «"^  tf ^f  •"  to  the  Queen,  Laiu^elot  and  E.  69 

tor  thou  hast  spoilt  the  p  of  my  life.  Guinevere  453 

lo  mine  helpmate,  one  to  feel  My  p  and  rejoicing  486 

The  vast  design  and  p  of  the  King.              •-        s  "670 

lest  the  gems  Should  blind  my  p,  Pass,  of  Arthur  321 

Maeldune,  let  be  this  p  of  thine  !  V  of  Maddune  119 

everywhere  they  meet  And  kindle  generous  p,  '    "'  "  Twesias  128 

Stately  p's,  valour  in  battle,  Vasfnei<!  7 

Her  firm  wiU,  her  fix'd  p.  ThS 293 

tes.  not  thou  the  hidden  p  God  atithedlSt 

Purposed    p  with  ourself  Never  to  wed.  Princei^,  ii  fin 

S^     lic.^        '"f  "'^'^  ^r'"^  ^'^^y  SpiJter's  S's.  58 

he  took  no  life,  but  he  took  one  p,  Rizvah -il 

With  a  p  to  pay  for  the  show.     ^'  DeadPrSJl 

Pnri!™onir'M  ^T'-^'\  ^^''^  *"  P-  ^^  Mary  Bollf 32 

Pursue    /  thy  loves  among  the  bowers  Talkina  Oak  199 

;t  n?r "'■'  "^  "^''  ^''  ^  P^^-^^^"!  Sisterhood,  G^lZ^^  Z 

P„rc„i^              P"'*y/f  •'^°"  '^  P  "°  '"«'•''  -P^w-  «/  Arthur  88 

wno  IS  deati  .■'         1  he  man  your  eye  p.  272 


Pursued 


559 


Pnrsned  (continued)    on  a  sudden  rush'd  Among  us,  out  of 

breath,  as  one  j>.  Princess  iv  375 

For  that  small  charm  of  feature  mine,  p —  Merlin  and  V.  76 

he  p  her,  calling,  '  Stay  a  little !  Lancelot  and  E.  683 

Pnrsner     behind  I  heard  the  puft'd  p ;  Princess  iv  265 

There  the  p  could  pursue  no  more.  Pass,  of  Arthur  88 

Pursuit    body  half  flung  forward  in  p,  Aylmer's  Field  587 

Pursuivant     burst  A  spangled  p,  Balin  and  Balan  47 

Posh     (See  also  Shuw)     p  thee  forward  thro'  a  life  of  shocks,      (Enone  163 


P  off,  and  sitting  well  in  order  smite 

To  p  my  rival  out  of  place  and  power, 

Here,  p  them  out  at  gates.' 

No  will  p  me  down  to  the  worm, 

Should  p  beyond  her  mark, 

That  p'es  us  off  from  the  board. 

Did  he  p,  when  he  was  uncurl'd. 

The  new  leaf  ever  p^es  oS  the  old. 

as  a  hand  that  p'es  thro'  the  leaf 

p  me  even  In  fancy  from  thy  side, 

drew  back  His  hand  to  p  me  from  him ; 
Posh'd    behold  thy  bride,  '  She  p  me  from  thee. 

Old  M'rit«rs  p  the  happy  season  back, — 

And  p  at  Philip's  garden-gate. 

some  were  p  with  lances  from  the  rock, 

child  P  her  flat  hand  against  his  face 

but  p  alone  on  foot  (For  since  her  horse  was  lost 

so  from  her  face  They  p  us,  down  the  steps, 

And  p  by  rude  hands  from  its  pedestal, 

r5Til  seeing  it,  p  against  the  Prince, 

So  p  them  all  unwilling  toward  the  gate. 

P  hoi-se  across  the  foamings  of  the  ford, 

door,  P  from  without,  drave  backward 

Hath  p  aside  his  faithful  wife, 

P  thro'  an  open  casement  down,  lean'd  on  it, 

Sir  Bors,  on  entering,  p  Athwart  the  throng 

thought,  Why  have  I  p  him  from  me  ? 

ever  p  Sir  Modred,  league  by  league, 

p  me  back  again  On  these  deserted  sands 

P  from  his  chair  of  regal  heritage, 

deal-box  that  was  p  in  a  comer  away, 

chains  for  him  Who  p  his  prows  into  the  setting  sun, 

a  wing  p  out  to  the  left  and  a  ^ving  to  the  right. 

But  she — she  p  them  aside. 

Has  p  toward  our  faintest  sun 
Pushing    p  could  move  The  chair  of  Idiis. 

p  his  black  craft  among  them  all, 
Puss     '  petty  Ogress,'  and  '  ungrateful  P,' 
Put    To  p  together,  part  and  prove, 

P's  forth  an  arm,  and  creeps  from  pine  to  pine, 

and  p  your  hand  in  mine, 

P  fortli  and  feel  a  gladder  cUme.' 

'  Bring  the  dress  and  p  it  on  her. 

Now  let  me  p  the  boy  and  girl  to  school : 

Philip  p  the  boy  and  girl  to  school. 

But  she— she  p  him  off — 

Suddenly  p  her  finger  on  the  text, 

How  Philip  p  her  Uttle  ones  to  school, 

after  that  P  on  more  calm  and  added  suppliantly : 

He  p  our  lives  so  far  apart 

This  huckster  p  down  war ! 

p  force  To  weary  her  ears  with  one  continuous  prayer.     Gareth  and  L.  18 
Thou  hast  made  us  lords,  and  canst  not  p  as  down ! '  „         1132 

p  on  thy  worst  and  meanest  dress  Marr.  of  Geraint  130 

when  she  p  her  horse  towai'd  the  knight,  .,  200 

Prince  Had  p  his  horse  in  motion  toward  the  knight,  ..  206 

P  on  your  worst  and  meanest  dress,'  „  848 

At  least  p  off  to  please  me  this  poor  gown,  Geraint  and  E.  679 

'  Thou  shalt  p  the  crown  to  use.  Balin  and  Balan  202 

in  one  moment,  she  p  forth  the  charm  Merlin  and  V.  967 

P''s  his  own  baseness  in  him  by  default  Pdleas  and  E.  81 

strike  him !  p  my  hate  into  your  strokes,  „  228 

Loathing  to  p  it  from  herself  for  ever.  Lover's  Tale  i  214 

He  softly  p  his  arm  about  her  neck  „  iv  71 

l,)etter  ha'  p  my  naked  hand  in  a  hornets'  nest.  First  Quarrel  50 

To  be  hang'd  for  a  thief — and  then  p  away —  Bizpah  36 


Ulysses  58 

Princess  iv  335 

548 

Window,  No  Answer  10 

In  Mem.  liii  15 

Maud  I  iv  27 

„     //  a  18 

Balin  and  Balan  442 

Pelleas  and  E.  436 

Last  Tournament  638 

Lover's  Tale  ii  93 

Love  and  Duty  50 

Golden  Year  66 

The  Brook  83 

Princess,  Pro.  46 

ii  366 

iv  196 

555 

•b58 

533 

Gureth  and  L.  212 

1040 

Geraint  and  E.  273 

Balin  and  Balan  106 

413 

Holy  Grail  752 

Pelleas  and  E.  307 

Pass,  of  Arthur  m 

Lovers  Tale  i  92 

118 

First  Quarrel  48 

Columbus  24 

Heavy  Brigade  15 

Dead  Prophet  58 

I'o  Ulysses  23 

Marr.  of  Geraint  542 

Merlin  and  V.  563 

Princess,  Pro.  157 

Two  Voices  134 

Qinone  4 

May  Queen,  Con.  23 

On  a  Mourner  15 

L.  of  Burleigh  95 

Enoch  Arden  312 

331 

460 

497 

706 

Princess  vi  215 

In  Mem.  Ixxxii  15 

Maud  I  X  44 


Put  (continued)  never  p  on  the  black  cap  except  for 

But  I  p's  it  inter  er  'ands 

an'  p's  'im  back  i'  the  light. 

Fur  we  p's  the  muck  o'  the  lemd 

'  Emmie,  you  p  out  yom-  arms, 

but  she  p  thim  all  to  the  door. 

when  Molly  'd  p  out  the  light. 

Her  that  shrank,  and  p  me  from  her, 

Thy  gay  lent-lilies  wave  and  p  them  by, 

They  p  him  aside  for  ever, 

may  tnere  be  no  moaning  of  the  bar,  When  I  p 
to  sea. 
Putting    And  made  a  Gardener  p  in  a  graff, 
Puzzle    keep  it  like  a  p  chest  in  chest. 

That  was  a  p  for  Annie. 
P.  W.     Remains  the  lean  P.  W.  on  his  tomb  : 
Pyebald     three  p's  and  a  roan. 
Pyramid    The  Khodope,  that  built  the  p. 
Pyramidal     Whose  eyes  from  under  a  p  head 
ftrre    ware,  and  filial  faith,  and  Dido's  p ; 

The  p  he  burnt  in.' — 

The  woman,  gliding  toward  the  p, 

kindled  the  p,  and  all  Stood  roimd  it, 

ask'd  Falteringly,  '  W^ho  lies  on  yonder  p  ?  ' 

'  Who  burns  upon  the  p  ? ' 
Pyrenean  Beyond  the  P  pines, 
IVthagoras     weeks  I  tried  Your  table  of  P, 


Quay 

the  worst       Rizpah  65 

North.  Cobbler  72 

98 

Village  Wife  32 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  56 

Tomorrow  44 

Spinster's  S's.  97 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  264 

Prog,  of  Spring  37 

Charity  25 

out 

Crossing  the  Bar  4 

Merlin  and  V.  479 

654 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  55 

The  Brook  192 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  114 

Princess  ii  82 

Aylmer's  Field  20 

To  Virgil  4 

The  Ring  340 

To  Master  of  B.  18 

Death  of  CEnone  65 

95 

99 

Ode  on  Well.  113 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  15 


Q 

Quaaker  (Quaker)     I  knaw'd  a  Q  feller  as  often  'as 

towd  ma  this :  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  19 

Quagmire    foUow  wandering  fires  Ix)st  in  the  j !  (repeat)  Holy  Grail  320,  892 
Quail  (s)    (J  and  pigeon,  lark  and  leveret  lay,  Audley  Court  24 

Quail  (verb)     Q  not  at  the  fiery  mountain,  Faith  3 

Quail'd     an  eye  so  fierce  She  q  ;  Pelleas  and  E.  602 

Quaint     bought  Q  monsters  for  the  market  of  those  times,   Enoch  Arden  b3Q 
as  (?  a  four-in-hand  As  you  shall  see —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  113 

A  crimson  to  the  q  Macaw,  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  16 

Quaker   (See  also  Quaaker)   Whatever  the  Q  holds,  from  sin ;  Maud  II  v  92 
Quality    See  Quoloty 
Quantity     All  in  q,  careful  of  my  motion, 
Quarrel  (s)     Why  ?     What  cause  of  <;  ? 

' father. 


I  remember  3,ql  had  with  your 

For,  call  it  lovers'  q's,  yet  I  know 

In  all  your  q's  will  I  be  your  knight. 

my  q — the  first  an'  the  last. 

I  am  sorry  for  all  the  q 
Quarrel  (verb)     With  time  I  ^nll  not  q : 

Would  q  with  our  lot ; 

And  pray  them  not  to  q  for  her  sake, 

I  never  could  q  with  Harry — 
Quarrell'd    She  and  James  had  q. 

if  they  q,  Enoch  stronger-made  Was  master : 

Before  I  q  with  Harry — 

Had  q,  till  the  man  repenting  sent  This  ring 
Quarried     From  scarped  cliff  and  q  stone 

Among  the  q  downs  of  Wight, 
Quarry    (See  also  Chalk-quarry)    but  as  a  block  Left  m 

the  q ;  Princess  mi  231 

Nor  q  trench'd  along  the  hill  In  Mem.  c  11 

the  bird  Who  pounced  her  q  and  slew  it.  Merlin  and  V.  135 

Quart     I've  'ed  my  q  ivry  market-noight  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  8 

Wouldn't  a  pint  a'  sarved  as  well  as  a  g  ?  North.  Cobbler  99 

Quarter     What  is  it  now  ?     A  g  to.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  10 

men  brought  in  whole  hogs  and  q  beeves,  Geraint  and  E.  602 

Quartering    q  your  own  royal  arms  of  Spain,  Columbus  115 

Quarter-sessions     A  q-s  chairman,  abler  none ;  Princess,  Con.  90 

Quay     Humm'd  like  a  hive  all  round  the  narrow  q,  Audley  Court  5 

From  rock  to  rock  upon  the  glooming  q,  „  84 

And  I  went  down  unto  the  q,  In  Mem.  xiv  3 

I  walked  with  him  down  to  the  q.  First  Quarrel  20 


Hendecasyllabics  5 

The  Brook  97 

Grandmother  21 

Geraint  and  E.  324 

Lancelot  and  E.  961 

First  Quarrel  56 

87 

Will  Water.  206 

226 

Enoch  Arden  35 

First  Quarrel  16 

The  Brook  96 

Enoch  Arden  30 

First  Quarrel  56 

The  Ring  209 

In  Mem.  Ivi  2 

To  Ulysses  32 


Queean 


560 


Queen 


Spinster's  S's.  76 

106 

Maud  I  xxii  53 

56 

To  the  Queen  28 

Isabel  28 

Buonafarte  3 

(Enone  127 

Palace  of  Art  108 

.  C.  V.  de  Vere  19 


Queean  (Queen)     wi'  a  bran-new  'ead  o'  the  Q, 

a  roabin'  the  'ouse  like  a  Q. 
Queen  (adj.)     Q  rose  of  the  rosebud  garden  of  girls, 

Q  lily  and  rose  in  one ; 
Queen  (S)    (See  also  Queefin)    In  her  as  Mother,  Wife 
and  Q ; 

q  of  marriage,  a  most  perfect  wife. 

bind  with  bands  That  island  q  who  sways 

From  me,  Heaven's  Q,  Paris,  to  thee  king-born, 

And  watch'd  by  weeping  q's. 

For  were  you  q  of  all  that  is, 

I'm  to  be  Q  o'  the  May,  mother,  I'm  to  be  Q  o' 

the  May.  May  Queen  4,  8,  12,  16,  20,  24,  28,  32,  36,  40,  44 

you'll  be  there,  too,  mother,  to  see  me  made  the  Q ;         May  Queen  26 

on  the  green  they  made  me  Q  of  May ;  May  Queen,  N.  ¥'s.  E.  10 

A  q,  with  swarthy  cheeks  and  bold  black  eyes,         B.  of  F.  Women  127 

'  I  died  a  Q.     The  Roman  soldier  found  Me  lying  dead,  „  161 

Three  Q's  with  crowns  of  gold —  M.  d' Arthur  198 

those  three  Q's  Put  forth  their  hands,  „         205 

each  man  murmur'd,  '  O  my  Q,  The  Voyage  63 

'  This  beggar  maid  shall  be  my  q ! '  Beggar  Maid  16 

Insipid  as  the  Q  upon  a  card ;  Aylmer's  Field  28 

thoughts  would  swarm  as  bees  about  their  q.  Princess  i  40 

from  the  Q's  decease  she  brought  her  up.  „     lii  86 

good  Q,  her  mother,  shore  the  tress  With  kisses,  ,.    vi  113 

'  Ah  fool,  and  made  myself  a  Q  of  farce !  ..   vii  243 

You  my  q  of  the  wrens !     You  the  q  of  the  wrens —    Window,  Spring  12 

I'll  be  King  of  the  Q  of  the  wrens,  „  15 

Lot's  wife,  the  Q  of  Orkney,  Bellicent,  (repeat) 

One  falling  upon  each  of  those  fair  q's, 

the  Q  made  answer,  '  What  know  I  ? 

Lancelot,  to  ride  forth  And  bring  the  Q ; — 

They  gazed  on  all  earth's  beauty  in  their  Q, 

the  Q  replied  with  drooping  eyes, 

and  may  thy  Q  be  one  with  thee, 

Q,  who  long  had  sought  in  vain  To  break  him 

so  the  Q  believed  that  when  her  son 

High  on  the  top  were  those  three  Q's, 

built  By  magic,  and  by  fairy  Kings  and  Q's ; 

King  And  Fairy  Q's  have  built  the  city, 

good  Q,  Repentant  of  the  word  she  made  him  swear, 

Q  herself,  Grateful  to  Prince  Geraint 

And  Enid  loved  the  Q,  and  with  true  heart 

But  when  a  nmiour  rose  about  the  Q, 

Q  petition'd  for  his  leave  To  see  the  hunt, 

'  Yea,  noble  Q,'  he  answer'd, 

and  she  return'd  Indignant  to  the  Q ;  (repeat) 

'  I  will  avenge  this  insult,  noble  Q, 

'  Farewell,  fair  Prince,'  answer'd  the  stately  Q. 

Q  Sent  her  own  maiden  to  demand  the  name. 

Avenging  this  great  insult  done  the  Q.' 

'  Remember  that  great  insult  done  the  Q,' 

Crave  pardon  for  that  insult  done  the  Q, 

And  there  the  Q  forgave  him  easily. 

there  be  made  known  to  the  stately  Q, 

came  A  stately  Q  whose  name  was  Guinevere, 

His  princess,  or  indeed  the  stately  Q, 

our  great  Q,  In  words  whose  echo  lasts, 

our  fair  Q,  No  hand  but  hers, 

Look'd  the  fair  Q,  but  up  the  vale  of  Usk, 

there  the  Q  array'd  me  like  the  sxm : 

all  the  penance  the  Q  laid  upon  me 

And  you  were  often  there  about  the  Q, 

great  Q  once  more  embraced  her  friend, 

Q's  fair  name  Wcis  breathed  upon. 

But  this  worship  of  the  Q, 

pray  the  King  To  let  me  bear  some  token  of  his  Q 

if  the  Q  disdain'd  to  grant  it ! 

'  No  shadow '  said  Sir  Balin  '  0  my  Q, 

the  Q,  and  all  the  world  Made  music, 

break  Into  some  madness  ev'n  before  the  Q  ? ' 

the  great  Q,  Came  with  slow  steps. 


Follow'd  the  Q ;  Sir  Balin  heard  her  '  Prince,  Art  thou 
80  little  loyal  to  thy  O,  As  pass  without  good  morrow 
to  thy  Q?- 


Com.  of  Arthur  190,  245 
276 
326 
449 
463 
469 
473 
Gareih  and  L.  139 
158 
229 
248 
259 
526 
Marr.  of  Geraint  14 
19 
24 
154 
178 
„  202,  414 
215 
224 
410 
425 
571 
583 
592 
607 
667 
759 
781 
787 
831 
Geraint  and  E.  701 
854 
869 
947 
951 
Balin  and  Balan  179 
188 
191 
206 
210 
230 
244 


250 


Queen  (s)  (continued)     '  Fain  would  I  still  be  loyal  to 

the  Q . '  Balin  and  Balan  254 

'  Q  ?  subject  ?  but  I  see  not  what  I  see.  „  281 

'  The  Q  we  worship,  Lancelot,  I,  and  all,  „  349 

by  the  great  Q's  name,  arise  and  hence.'  „  482 

Stoop  at  thy  will  on  Lancelot  and  the  Q.'  „  536 

His  loathing  of  our  Order  and  the  Q.  „  551 

This  fellow  hath  wrought  some  foulness  with  his  Q :  „  565 

Pure  as  our  own  true  Mother  is  our  Q.'  „  617 

no  unmarried  girl  But  the  great  Q  herself.  Merlin  and  V.  13 

They  place  their  pride  in  Lancelot  and  the  Q.  „  25 

Cast  herself  down,  knelt  to  the  Q,  „  66 

Q  who  stood  All  glittering  hke  May  sunshine 
Beheld  the  Q  and  Lancelot  get  to  horse, 
our  wise  Q,  if  knowing  that  I  know, 
when  the  Q  demanded  as  by  chance 
But  Vivien  half-forgotten  of  the  Q 
hke  the  fair  pearl-necklace  of  the  Q, 
made  her  Q :  but  those  isle-nutured  eyes 
Some  charm,  which  being  wrought  upon  the  Q 
I  mean,  as  noble,  as  their  Q  was  fair ! 
then  he  taught  the  King  to  charm  the  Q 
that  conrunerce  with  the  Q,  I  ask  you. 
With  purpose  to  present  them  to  the  Q, 
'  Are  you  so  sick,  my  Q,  you  cannot  move 
And  the  Q  Lifted  her  eyes, 
Love-loyal  to  the  least  wish  of  the  Q 
ye  were  not  once  so  wise,  My  Q, 
Shall  I  appear,  O  Q,  at  Camelot, 
said  the  Q,  '  A  moral  child  without  the  craft 
. '  Such  be  for  q's,  and  not  for  simple  maids.' 
And  only  q's  are  to  be  coimted  so, 
great  and  guilty  love  he  bare  the  Q, 
Then  when  he  saw  the  Q,  embracing  ask'd, 
the  Q  amazed,  '  Was  he  not  with  you  ? 
Ill  news,  my  Q,  for  all  who  love  him, 
Some  read  the  King's  face,  some  the  Q's, 
old  dame  Came  suddenly  on  the  Q  with  the  sharp  news. 
Forgot  to  drink  to  Lancelot  and  the  Q, 
Q,  who  sat  With  lips  severely  placid. 
For  any  mouth  to  gape  for  save  a  q's — 
And  there  the  Q  herself  will  pity  me, 
He  loves  the  Q,  and  in  an  open  shame : 
'  For  Lancelot  and  the  Q  and  all  the  world, 
deck  it  h'ke  the  Q's  For  richness,  and  me  also  like  the  Q 
I  go  in  state  to  court,  to  meet  the  Q. 
sent  him  to  the  Q  Bearing  hLs  wish,  whereto  the  Q 
agreed 

£iece  of  pointed  lace.  In  the  Q's  shadow, 
lancelot  kneeling  utter'd,  '  Q,  Lady, 
but,  my  Q,  I  hear  of  rumours  flying  thro'  your  court, 
half  tum'd  away,  the  Q  Brake  from  the  vast  oriel- 
embowering  vine 
In  which  as  Arthur's  Q  I  move  and  rule : 
An  armlet  for  an  arm  to  which  the  Q's  Is  haggard, 
the  wild  Q,  who  saw  not,  burst  away  To  weep 
Look  how  she  sleeps — the  Fairy  Q,  so  fair ! 
And  last  the  Q  herself,  and  pitied  her: 
said  the  Q,  (Sea  was  her  wrath,  yet  working  after  storm) 
'  Q,  she  would  not  be  content  Save  that  I  wedded  her, 
And  mass,  and  rolling  music,  like  a  q. 
the  Q,  Who  mark'd  Sir  Lancelot  when  he  moved  apart, 
'  This  is  love's  curse ;  pass  on,  my  Q,  forgiven.' 
with  a  love  Far  tenderer  than  my  Q's. 
Q,  if  I  grant  the  jealousy  as  of  love, 
in  middle  street  the  Q,  Who  rode  by  Lancelot, 
So  to  the  Gate  of  the  three  Q's  we  came, 
O  my  Q,  my  Guinevere, 
her  name  And  title,  '  Q  of  Beauty,' 
My  Q,  he  had  not  won.'     Whereat  the  Q,  As  one 

whose  foot  is  bitten  by  an  ant, 
Pelleas  had  heard  sung  before  the  Q, 
and  wail'd,  '  Is  the  Q  false?  ' 
Warm  with  a  gracious  parting  from  the  Q, 
blaze  the  crime  of  Lancelot  and  the  Q.' 


87 
102 
121 
128 
137 
451 
570 
584 
608 
641 
770 

Lancelot  and  E.  69 

79 

83 

89 

104 

142 

145 

231 

238 

245 

570 

572 

598 

727 

730 

737 

739 

775 

1059 

1082 

1107 

1118 

1124 

1168 
1175 
1179 
1189 

1197 
1221 
1226 
1244 
1255 
1269 
1308 
1314 
1336 
1348 
1353 
1395 
1399 
Holy  Grail  355 

358 
PeUeas  and  E.  46 

116 

183 
397 
532 
558 
570 


Queen 


661 


Quest 


(s)  {continued)     '  Ay,  my  Q,'  he  said.     '  And  thou 

hast  overthrown  him  ? '     '  Ay,  my  QJ 
If  I,  the  Q,  May  help  them,  loose  thy  tongue, 
The  Q  Look'd  hard  upon  her  lover, 
Then  gave  it  to  his  Q  to  rear :  the  Q  But  coldly 

acquiescing, 
O  my  Q,  I  muse  Why  ye  not  wear  on  arm, 
Only  to  yield  my  Q  her  own  again  ? 
In  her  high  bower  the  Q,  Working  a  tapestry, 
each  thro'  worship  of  their  Q  White-robod  in  honour 
Let  be  thy  fair  Q's  fantasy. 
Be  happy  in  thy  fair  Q  as  I  in  mine.' 
Q  of  Beauty  and  of  love,  behold  This  day  mj  Q  of 

Beauty 
sad  eyes,  our  Q's  And  Lancelot's, 
Beyond  all  use,  that,  half-amazed,  the  Q, 
ijems  which  Innocence  the  Q  Lent  to  the  King, 
the  land  Was  freed,  and  the  Q  false, 
smoothe  And  sleek  his  marriage  over  to  the  Q. 
Q  Graspt  it  so  hard,  that  all  her  hand  was  red. 
glossy-throated  grace,  Isolt  the  Q. 
hath  not  our  great  Q  iMy  dole  of  beauty  trebled? ' 
the  great  Q  Have  yielded  him  her  love.' 
'  Grace,  Q,  for  being  loved : 
First  mainly  thro'  that  sullying  of  our  Q — 
'  Not  so,  my  Q,'  he  said, 
Claspt  it  and  cried  '  Thine  Order,  O  my  Q ! ' 
look'd  and  saw  The  great  Q's  bower  was  dark, — 
Q  who  sat  betwixt  her  best  Enid, 
Sir  Lancelot  told  This  matter  to  the  Q, 
Love-loyal  to  the  least  wish  of  the  Q, 
the  stately  Q  abode  For  many  a  week, 
when  she  heard,  the  Q  look'd  up, 
when  first  she  came,  wept  the  sad  Q. 
Round  that  strong  castle  where  he  holds  the  Q; 
For  his  own  self,  and  his  own  Q, 
About  the  good  King  and  his  wicked  Q,  And  were  I 

such  a  King  with  such  a  Q, 
Then  to  her  own  sad  heart  mutter'd  the  Q, 
ere  the  coming  of  the  Q.'  (repeat) 
Then  thought  the  Q  within  herself  again, 
Before  the  coming  of  the  sinful  Q.' 
Then  spake  the  Q  and  somewhat  bitterly. 
This  evil  work  of  Lancelot  and  the  Q  ?  ' 
thought  the  (?  '  Lo  !  they  have  set  her  on, 
the  pale  Q  look'd  up  and  answer'd  her. 
To  which  a  mournful  answer  made  the  Q : 
Such  as  they  are,  were  you  the  sinful  Q.' 
Fired  all  the  pale  face  of  the  Q, 
stood  before  the  Q  As  tremuloasly  as  foam 
when  the  Q  had  added  '  Get  thee  hence,' 
But  when  the  Q  immersed  in  such  a  trance. 
Rose  the  pale  Q,  and  in  her  anguish 
and  he  gave  them  charge  about  the  Q, 
Three  q's  with  crowns  of  gold  : 
those  three  Q's  Put  forth  their  hands, 
be  yon  dark  Q's  in  yon  black  boat. 
But  thou,  my  Q,  Not  for  itself, 
'  I  have  fought  for  Q  and  Faith 
es  wouldn't  goa,  wi'  good  gowd  o'  the  Q, 
the  king,  the  q  Bad  me  be  seated, 
king,  the  q.  Sank  from  their  thrones, 
Ferdinand  Hath  sign'd  it  and  our  Holy  Catholic  q — 
but  our  Q  Recall'd  me, 
our  prudent  king,  our  righteous  q — 
ghost  of  our  great  Catholic  Q  Smiles  on  me, 
Q  of  Heaven  who  seest  the  souls  in  Hell 
ready — tho'  our  Holy  Catholic  Q, 
sorra  the  Q  wid  her  sceptre  in  sich 
stood  up  strait  as  the  Q  of  the  world — 
FtBST  pledge  our  Q  this  solemn  night, 
Since  our  Q  assumed  the  globe,  the  sceptre. 
Q,  and  Empress  of  India, 
Q,  as  true  to  womanhood  as  Queenhood, 
Persephone  !    Q  of  the  dead  no  more — 


Pdleas  and  E.  593 
599 
604 

Last  Tournament  22 
35 
106 
128 
146 
197 
204 

208 
222 
236 
293 
339 
391 
410 
509 
557 
564 
602 
682 
744 
750 
758 
Guinevere  27 
54 
126 
146 
164 
182 
194 
197 

209 

213 

,.  223,  233 

224 

270 

271 

307 

308 

327 

341 

353 

357 

363 

366 

401 

586 

591 

Pass,  of  Arthur  366 

373 

452 

To  the  Queen  ii  33 

The  Bevenge  101 

Village  Wife  49 

Columbus  10 

14 

30 

58 

„      122 

„       187 

„      216 

„      228 

Tomorrow  35 

79 

Hands  all  round  1 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  3 

6 

25 

Demeter  and  P.  18 


Queen  (s)  {continued) 
Death, 
Her  maiden  coming  like  a  Q, 
Hail  ample  presence  of  a  Q, 
Form  in  Freedom's  name  and  the  Q's  ! 

Queen-city    To  change  our  dark  Q-c,. 

Queenhood     with  all  grace  Of  womanhood  and  q. 


thou  that  hast  from  men,  As  Q  of 

Demeter  and  P.  143 

The  Ring  480 

Prog,  of  /Spring  61 

Riflemen  farm  !  23 

To  Mary  Boyle  65 

Marr.  of  Geraint  176 


Queen,  as  true  to  womanhood  as  Q, 
Queenly     All  is  gracious,  gentle,  great  and  Q. 
Quell    He  thought  to  q  the  stubborn  hearts  of  oak, 

his  great  self.  Hath  force  to  q  me.' 

scream  of  that  Wood-devil  I  came  to  q\' 

My  yucca,  which  no  winter  q's, 
Quelling    Move  with  me  toward  their  q, 
Quench    and  q  The  red  God's  anger, 

Gods,  To  q,  not  hurl  the  thunderbolt, 
Quench'd     had  not  wholly  q  his  power ; 

The  fame  is  q  that  I  foresaw. 

According  to  his  greatness  whom  she  q. 

that  had  q  herself  In  that  assumption 

Their  innocent  hospitalities  q  in  blood. 

All  diseases  q  by  Science, 
Quencher    You  would-be  q's  of  the  light  to  be, 
Quenching    q  lake  by  lake  and  tarn  by  tarn 

love  of  light  q  her  fear  of  pain — 
Query    let  my  q  pass  Unclaim'd, 

Answer'd  all  queries  touching  those  at  home 

He  put  the  self-same  q, 

To  all  their  queries  answer'd  not  a  word. 
Quest     When  I  went  forth  in  q  of  truth, 

name  Be  hidd'n,  and  give  me  the  first  q, 

'  I  have  given  him  the  first  q : 

'  A  boon.  Sir  King,  this  q  ! ' 

'  Bound  upon  a  q  With  horse  and  arms — 

'  Damsel,  the  q  is  mine. 

I  leave  not  till  I  finish  this  fair  q,  Or  die  therefore, 

'  The  q  is  mine ;  thy  kitchen-knave  am  I, 

'  Go  therefore,'  and  so  gives  the  q  to  him — 

'  Full  pardon,  but  I  follow  up  the  q, 

Not  fit  to  cope  your  q. 

boundless  savagery  Appal  me  from  the  q.' 

The  q  is  Lancelot's :  give  him  back  the  shield.' 

So  large  mirth  lived  and  Gareth  won  the  q. 

we  rode  upon  this  fatal  q  Of  honour, 

So  claim'd  the  q  and  rode  away, 

(His  q  was  unaccomplish'd) 

My  q,  meseems,  is  here. 

And  no  q  came,  but  all  was  joust  and  play, 

cease  not  from  your  q  until  ye  find.' 

to  sally  forth  In  q  of  whom  he  knew  not, 

Rode  with  his  diamond,  wearied  of  the  q, 

Reported  who  he  was,  and  on  what  q  Sent, 

And  lose  the  q  he  sent  you  on, 

let  me  leave  My  q  with  you  ; 

all  wearied  of  the  q  Leapt  on  his  horse, 

ye  shall  go  no  more  On  q  of  mine, 

Lest  I  be  found  as  faithless  in  the  q  As  yon  proud 
Prince  who  left  the  q  to  me. 

the  q  Assign'd  to  her  not  worthy  of  it, 

ride  A  twelvemonth  and  a  day  in  q  of  it. 

Before  ye  leave  him  for  this  Q, 

and  cried,  '  This  Q  is  not  for  thee.'  (repeat) 

'  I  am  not  worthy  of  the  Q ; ' 

Came  ye  on  none  but  phantoms  in  your  q, 

I  f alter'd  from  my  q  and  vow  ? 

And  the  Q  faded  in  my  heart. 

And  ev'n  the  Holy  Q,  and  all  but  her ; 

'  Ridest  thou  then  so  hotly  on  a  q  So  holy. 

Small  heart  was  his  after  the  Holy  Q : 

Q  and  he  were  in  the  hands  of  Heaven. 

and  scoff'd  at  him  And  this  high  Q 

And  those  that  had  gone  out  upon  the  Q, 

but  now — the  Q,  This  vision — 

'  Gawain,  was  this  Q  for  thee  ?  ' 

Who  made  me  sure  the  Q  was  not  for  me ; 


On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  25 

14 

Buonaparte  1 

Gareth  and  L.  1183 

Balin  and  Balan  548 

To  Ulysses  21 

Last  Tournament  101 

Tiresias  157 

Demeter  and  P.  133 

Vision  of  Sin  217 

In  Mem.  Ixxiii  5 

Merlin  and  V.  218 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  233 

Columbus  176 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  163 

Princess  iv  536 

„      vii  40 

Sir  J.  Oldrastle  190 

The  Brook  lOi 

Aylmer's  Field  465 

Marr.  of  Geraint  269 

Lover's  Tale  iv  333 

Supp.  Confessions  141 

Gareth  and  L.  545 

582 

647 

708 

745 

774 

861 

864 

886 

1174 

1331 

1344 

1426 

Geraint  and  E.  703 

Balin  and  Balan  138 

547 

552 

Merlin  and  V.  145 

Lancelot  and  E.  548 

561 

616 

628 

655 

691 

703 

717 

761 
824 
Holy  GraU  197 
325 
„  374,  378 
386 
562 
568 
600 
610 
642 
657 
659 
668 
722 
733 
740 
743 

2n 


Quest 


562 


Quivering 


Qaest  (continued)    For  I  was  much  awearied  of  the  Q :  Holy  Grail  744 

nath  this  Q  avail'd  for  thee  ? '  ,,765 

all  My  q  were  but  in  vain ;  „          783 

and  this  Q  was  not  for  me.'  „          852 

'  Hath  Gawain  fail'd  in  any  q  of  thine  ?  '       ,,          859 

To  those  who  went  upon  the  Holy  Q,  „          890 

to  fill  the  gap  Left  by  the  Holy  Q ;  Pelleas  and  E.  2 
Qaestion  (s)    (See  also  Test-question)    with  q  unto  whom 

'twere  due :  GEnone  82 

And,  smiling,  put  the  q  by.  Day-Dm.,  Bevival  32 

yovu"  q  now,  Which  touches  on  the  workman  Princess  Hi  321 

But  then  this  q  of  your  troth  remains :  „          v  279 

overthrow  Of  these  or  those,  the  q  settled  die.'  „            317 

In  many  a  subtle  q  versed,  In  Mem.  xcvi  6 

Nor  thro'  the  q's  men  may  try,  „       cxxiv  7 

Fixing  full  eyes  of  q  on  her  face.  Com.  of  Arthur  312 

And  aJEter  madness  acted  q  ask'd :  Geraint  and  E.  813 
the  q  rose  About  the  founding  of  a  Table  Round,       Merlin  and  V.  410 

This  q,  so  flung  down  before  the  guests,  Lover's  Tale  iv  268 

in  the  thick  of  q  and  reply  I  fled  the  house.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  157 

An'  a  haxin'  ma  hawkard  q's,  Spinster's  S's.  90 

Question  (verb)     'Twere  well  to  q  him,  and  try  Talking  Oak  27 

*  Thou  art  but  a  mid-goose  to  q  it.'  Gareth  and  L.  36 
To  q,  why  The  sons  before  the  fathers  die.          To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  46 

Question')!     Doth  q  memory  answer  not.  Lover's  Tale  i  277 

or  could  answer  him,  tl  q,  Enoch  Arden  654 

She,  q  if  she  knew  us  men.  Princess  iv  231 

q  any  more  Save  on  the  further  side  ;  Com.  of  Arthur  396 

A  voice  clung  sobbing  till  he  q  it.  Last  Tournament  759 
then  some  other  q  if  she  came  From  foreign  lands.     Lover's  Tale  iv  330 

Questioner     Has  little  time  for  idle  q's.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  272 
Quick  (adj.)     (See  also  Too-quick)    — they  say  that 

women  are  so  q —  Enoch  Arden  408 

The  q  lark's  closest-caroU'd  strains,  Rosalind  10 

And  my  thoughts  are  as  q  and  as  q,  Window,  On  the  Hill  12 

With  thy  q  tears  that  make  the  rose  In  Mem.  Ixxii  10 

his  q,  instinctive  hand  Caught  at  the  hilt,  Marr.  of  Geraint  209 

Thus,  after  some  q  burst  of  sudden  wrath,  Balin  and  Balan  216 

so  q  and  thick  The  lightnings  here  and  there  Holy  Grail  493 

and  close  upon  it  peal'd  A  sharp  q  thunder.'  „           696 

Her  countenance  with  q  and  healthful  blood —  Lover's  Tale  i  97 

Q  blushes,  the  sweet  dwelling  of  her  eyes  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  165 

At  once  The  bright  q  smile  of  Evelyn,  „                243 

oiu"  q  Evelyn — The  merrier,  prettier,  „                 285 

Patient  of  pain  tho'  as  g-  as  a  sensitive  plant  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  30 

So  q,  so  capable  in  soldiership.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  75 

Then,  after  one  q  glance  upon  the  stars,  Akbar's  Dream  3 

We  are  twice  asq\'  Princess,  Pro.  137 

A  q  bnmette,  well-moulded,  falcon-eyed,  „             ii  106 

For  some  cry  '  Q  '  and  some  cry  '  Slow,'  Politics  9 

Quick  (living)    That  q  or  dead  thou  boldest  me  for  King.   Pass,  of  Arthur  161 

Quick  (quickset)     Rings  Eden  thro'  the  budded  q's,  In  Mem.  Ixxxviii  2 

Now  bm-geons  every  maze  of  q  „               cxv  2 

Quick  (to  the  quick)     I  myself,  A  Tory  to  the  q,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  81 

the  proof  to  prove  me  to  the  q ! '  Gareth  and  L.  150 

Quicken    mountain  q's  into  Nymph  and  Faun ;  Lucretius  187 

bloodless  east  began  To  q  to  the  sun,  Marr.  of  Geraint  535 

Yovir  wailing  will  not  q  him :  Geraint  and  E.  549 

felt  my  hatred  for  my  Mark  Q  within  me.  Last  Tournament  520 

Qnicken'd     Be  q  with  a  Uvelier  breath.  In  Mem.  cxxii  13 

Quickening    slowly  q  into  lower  forms ;  Vision  of  Sin  210 

Quicker    Her  hands  are  q  unto  good :  In  Mem.  xxxiii  10 

If  we  could  give  them  surer,  q  proof —  Princess  Hi  282 

It  may  be,  I  am  q  of  belief  Than  you  believe  me,   Lancelot  and  E.  1204 

Quick-fallW    9-/  dew  Of  fruitful  kisses,  (Enone  204 

Quickset-screens     Fills  out  the  homely  q-s.  On  a  Mourner  6 

Quiet  (adj.)     Q,  dispassionate,  and  cold,  A  Character  28 

As  waves  that  up  a  g  cove  Rolling  slide,  Eleanore  108 

A  healthy  frame,  a  q  mind.'  Two  Voices  99 

Then  said  the  voice,  in  q  scorn,  „          401 

wave  that  swam  Thro'  q  meadows  round  the  mill,  Miller's  D.  98 

Rest  in  a  happy  place  and  q  seats  Above  the  thunder,  (Enone  131 

'  Reign  thou  apart,  a  q  king.  Palace  of  Art  14 

With  q  eyes  unfaithful  to  the  truth,  Love  and  Duty  94 

Here  at  the  q  limit  of  the  world,  Tithonus  7 


Quiet  (adj,)  (continued)    till  he  find  The  q  chamber  far 

apart.  Day-Dm.,  Arrived  28 

Let  us  have  a  q  hour.  Vision  of  Sin  73 

Than  aught  they  fable  of  the  q  Gods.  Lucretius  55 

pines  of  Ida  shook  to  see  Slide  from  that  q  heaven  of  hers,  „  87 
from  some  bay-window  shake  the  night ;  But  all  was  q :  Princess  i  107 
Her  q  dream  of  life  this  hour  may  cease.  Eequiescat  6 

She  desires  no  isles  of  the  blest,  no  q  seats  of  the  just,  Wages  8 

As  if  the  q  bones  were  blest  Among  familiar  names  In  Mem.  xviii  6 
The  q  sense  of  something  lost.  „      Ixxviii  8 

'  I  watch  thee  from  the  q  shore ;  „      Ixxxv  81 

Below  me,  there,  is  the  village,  and  looks  how  q  and 

small !  Maud  I  iv  1 

Be  mine  a  philosopher's  life  in  the  q  woodland  ways,  ..  49 

Came  glimmering  thro'  the  laurels  At  the  q  evenfall,  ..  //  iv  78 

Me,  that  was  never  a  q  sleeper  ?  „       ■«  98 

painted  battle  the  war  stood  Silenced,  the  living  q  as 

the  dead,  Com.  of  Arthur  123 

ever  fail'd  to  draw  The  q  night  into  her  blood,  Marr.  of  Geraint  532 
And  kiss'd  her  q  brows,  and  saying  to  her  Lancelot  and  E.  1150 

my  fresh  but  fixt  resolve  To  pass  away  into  the  q  life,  Holy  Grail  738 
But  always  in  the  q  house  I  heard,  „  832 

Oh !  pleasant  breast  of  waters,  q  bay.  Like  to  a  g' 

mind  in  the  loud  world.  Lover's  Tale  i  6 

Didst  swathe  thyself  all  round  Hope's  q  urn  For  ever  ?  „        100 

All  this  Seems  to  the  q  daylight  of  your  minds  But 

cloud  and  smoke,  „        296 

Why  did  you  sit  soq?  Rizpah  14 

Quietly  sleeping — so  q,  our  doctor  said  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  41 

It  was  all  of  it  fair  as  life,  it  was  all  of  it  as  </  as  death,    V.  of  Maeldune  20 

Silent  palaces,  q  fields  of  eternal  sleep !  „  80 

By  q  fields,  a  slowly-dying  power,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  24 

All  so  q  the  ripple  would  hardly  blanch  into  spray  The  Wreck  137 

Naay,  but  the  claws  o'  tha !  q !  Spinster's  S's.  36 

Man  is  q  at  last  As  he  stands  on  the  heights  By  an  Evolution.  19 

Quiet  (s)     For  now  the  noonday  q  holds  the  hill :  CEnone  25 

Divided  in  a  graceful  q — paused.  Gardener's  D.  156 

And  blasting  the  long  q  of  my  breast  Lucretius  162 

This  look  of  q  flatters  thus  In  Mem.  a;  10 

Making  a  treacherous  q  in  his  heart,  Lancelot  and  E.  883 

Moan  to  myself  '  one  plunge — then  q  for  evermore.'  Charity  16 

Quieted     Three  with  good  blows  he  q,  Gareth  and  L.  813 

I  was  q,  and  slept  again.  The  Ring  421 

Quieter    but  I  knaws  I  'ed  led  tha  a  q  life  Spinster's  S's.  71 

Quince     As  hardly  tints  the  blossom  of  the  q  Balin  and  Balan  267 

Quinquenniad     Or  gay  q's  would  we  reap  Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  23 

Quinsy     '  A  q  choke  thy  cursed  note ! '  The  Goose  29 

Quintessence     As  with  the  q  of  flame,  Arabian  Nights  123 

pure  q's  of  precious  oils  In  hoUow'd  moons  Palace  of  Art  187 

The  flower  and  q  of  change.  Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  24 

He  had  known  a  man,  a  </  of  man,  Aylmer's  Field  388 

Quintus  Calaber    Q  C  Somewhat  lazily  handled  To  Master  of  B.  7 

Quip     But  all  his  merry  q's  are  o'er.  D.  of  the  0.  Year  29 

Tristram,  waiting  for  the  q  to  come.  Last  Tournament  260 

Quire     low-matin  chii-p  hath  grown  Full  q.  Love  and  Duty  99 

O  Milan,  O  the  chanting  q's.  The  Daisy  57 

priest,  who  mumble  worship  in  your  q —  Balin  and  Balan  444 

Quirk     With  twisted  q's  and  happy  hits,  Will  Water.  189 

Quit  (leave)     q  the  post  Allotted  by  the  Gods  :  Lucretius  148 

how  loth  to  q  the  land  !  The  Flight  38 

Wilt  neither  q  the  widow'd  Crown  To  Prin.  Beatrice  15 

Quit  (repay)     ill  then  should  I  q  your  brother's  love,       Lancelot  and  E.  944 

Quitch     the  vicious  q  Of  blood  and  custom  Geraint  and  E.  903 

Quiver     heart  of  Poland  hath  not  ceased  To  q,  Poland  4 

Willows  whiten,  aspens  q,  L.  of  Shalott  i  10 

A  thousand  moons  will  q  ;  A  Farewell  14 

sometimes  touches  but  one  string  That  q's.  Lover's  Tale  i  18 

Quiver'd     Her  eyelid  q  as  she  spake.  Millers  D.  144 

bright  death  q  at  the  victim's  throat ;  .  D.  of  F.  Women  115 

Trembled  and  q,  as  the  dog,  Pelleas  and  E.  284 

Q  a  flying  glory  on  her  hair.  Lover's  Tale  i  69 

Quivering    sets  all  the  tops  q —  Lucretius  186 

Gloom'd  the  low  coast  and  q  brine  The  Voyage  42 

Tear  the  noble  heart  of  Britain,  leave  it  gorily  q?  Boadicea  12 

The  rosy  q's  died  into  the  night.  Holy  Grail  123 


Quoit 


563 


Bagged 


Princess  in  215 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  53 

Church-warden,  etc.  39 

Sea  Dreams  159 

181 

Princess  ii  377 

Akbar's  Bream  74 


Quoit    Q,  tennis,  ball — no  games  ? 
Qaoloty  (quality)    Loocik  'ow  q  smoiles 

Fur  Q's  hall  my  friends, 
Quote    — it  makes  me  sick  to  q  him — 

Love,  let  me  q  these  lines,  that  you  may  learn 
Quoted    q  odes,  smd  jewels  five-words-long 
Quoting    And  when  the  Goan  Padie  q  Him, 


R 


Raake  (rake)    r  out  Hell  wi'  a  small-tooth  coamb —  Village  Wife  76 

Raate  (rate)     I  ^vtw  niver  agin  the  r.  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  16 

;m'  agean  the  toithe  an'  the  r.  Church-warden,  etc.  11 

Raated  (scolded)    Sally  she  tum'd  a  tongue-banger,  an' 


r  ma, 
Raatin  (scolding)     Hobby  I  gied  tha  a  i- 
Raaved  (tore)     an'  r  an'  rembied  'mn  out. 
Raaved  (torn)     an'  r  slick  thruf  by  the  plow — 
Raavin'  (raving)    fire  was  a-raagin'  an'  r 
Rabbit  (adj.)     A  r  mouth  that  is  ever  agape — 
Rabbit  (s)    The  r  fondles  his  own  harmless  face. 
Rabble    soft  and  milky  r  of  womankind, 
h^    frantic  r  in  half -amaze  Stared  at  him  dead. 
Race  (of  persons)    (See  also  Border-race) 
to  her  r — 

Who  took  a  wife,  who  rear'd  his  r. 

Some  legend  of  a  fallen  r  Alone  might  hint 

We  were  two  daughters  of  one  r : 

Chanted  from  an  ill-used  r  of  men 

my  r  Hew'd  Ammon,  hip  and  thigh. 

To  iningle  with  the  human  r, 

Unequal  laws  unto  a  savage  r. 

To  vary  from  the  kindly  r  of  men, 

she  shall  resir  my  dusky  r. 

'  Some  other  r  of  Averills  ' — 

Nor  of  what  r,  the  work ; 

and  with  her  the  r  of  Aylnter,  past. 

Which  else  had  link'd  their  r  with  times  to  come — • 

I  made  by  these  the  last  of  all  my  r. 

And  those  who  sorrow'd  o'er  a  vanish'd  r, 

a  r  Of  giants  living,  each,  a  thousand  years. 

Then  spiings  the  crowning  r  of  humankind. 

while  the  r's  of  mankind  endure. 

Have  left  the  last  free  r  with  naked  coasts  ! 

That '  Loss  is  common  to  the  r ' — 

Comes  out — to  some  one  of  his  r : 

Will  shelter  one  of  stranger  r. 

Of  that  great  r,  which  is  to  be, 

The  herald  of  a  higher  r. 

And  throned  r's  may  degrade ; 

Betwixt  us  and  the  crowning  r 

her  father,  the  wrinkled  head  of  the  r  ? 

in  his  force  to  be  Nature's  crowning  r. 

At  war  with  myself  and  a  wretched  r. 

On  that  huge  scapegoat  of  the  r, 

Strike  dead  the  whole  weak  r  of  venomous  worms, 


North.  Cobbler  23 

Spinster's  S's.  48 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  32 

Owd  Boa  28 

„      110 

Maud  I  X  31 

Aylmer's  Field  851 

Princess  vi  309 

St.  Telemachus  71 

Becomes  dishonom' 

Two  Voices  255 

328 

359 

The  Sisters  1 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  120 

n.  of  F.  Women  237 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  10 

Ulysses  4 

Tithonus  29 

Locksley  Hall  168 


Beyond  the  r  of  Britons  and  of  men. 

0  PUEBLiND  r  of  miserable  men, 
in  their  chairs  set  up  a  stronger  r  ' 
strange  sound  of  an  adulterous  r, 

Our  r  and  blood,  a  renmant  that  were  left 

great  and  sane  and  simple  r  of  brutes 

The  prayer  of  many  a  r  and  creed,  and  chme — 

Strong  with  the  strength  of  the  r 

Spain  once  the  most  chivalric  r  on  earth, 

1  WAS  the  chief  of  the  r — 

boEksted  he  sprang  from  the  oldest  r  upon  earth, 
serve  This  mortal  r  thy  kin  so  well, 
breathed  a  r  of  mightier  mountaineers, 
one  of  these,  the  r  of  Cadmus — 
Motherless  evermore  of  an  ever-vanishing  r, 
we,  the  poor  earth's  dying  r, 
for  since  our  dying  r  began. 


Aylmer's  Field  54 

224 

577 

779 

791 

844 

Princess  Hi  268 

vii  295 

Ode  on  Well.  219 

Third  of  Feb.  40 

In  Mem.  vi  2 

„      Ixxiv  4 

„  cii  4. 

„       ciii  35 

„  cxviii  14 

„  cxxviii  7 

„  Con.  128 

Maud  I  iv  13 

33 

a;  35 

„     xiii  42 

„     //  i  46 

Corn,  of  Arthur  331 

Geraint  and  E.  1 

940 

Holy  Grail  80 

663 

Pelleas  and  E.  480 

To  the  Queen  ii  11 

Def.  of  Lucknow  47 

Columbus  204 

V.  of  Maeldune  1 

>•  4 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  16 

Montenegro  14 

Tireslas  134 

Despair  84 

Ancient  Sage  178 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  65 


Race  (of  persons)  (continued)  Far  among  the  vanish'd  r's,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  79 

to  lower  the  rising  r  of  men ;  ,,               147 

All  the  full-brain,  half-brain  r's,  „               161 

a  single  r,  a  single  tongue —  „              165 

I  would  the  rising  r  were  half  as  eager  „              228 

sxmder'd  once  from  all  the  human  r.  To  Virgil  36 

souls  of  men,  who  grew  beyond  their  r,  Demeter  and  P.  140 

may  roll  with  the  dust  of  a  vanish'd  r.  Vastness  2 

As  dead  from  all  the  human  r  Happy  95 

I  cull  from  every  faith  and  r  Akbar's  Dream  68 

when  creed  and  r  Shall  bear  false  witness,  „            97 

From  out  the  sunset  pom''d  an  alien  r,  „          192 

there  is  time  for  the  r  to  grow.  The  Dawn  20 

but,  while  the  r's  flower  and  fade.  Making  of  Man  5 

Race  (course  of  life,  etc.)     Till  all  my  widow'd  r  be  run ;        In  Mem.  ix  18 

Till  all  my  widow'd  r  be  run.  „       xvii  20 

He  still  outstript  me  in  the  r ;  „         xlii  2 

burst  All  barriers  in  her  onward  r  For  power.  „      cxiv  14 

make  one  people  ere  man's  r  be  run :  To  Victor  Hugo  11 

And  I  would  that  my  r  were  mn.  The  Dreamer  8 

Or  ever  your  r  be  run  !  „        30 

Race  (stream)     By  the  red  r  of  fiery  Phlegethon ;  Demeter  and  P.  28 

Race  (verb)     and  r  By  all  the  fountains  :  Princess  iv  262 

r  thro'  many  a  mile  Of  dense  and  open,  Balin  and  Balan  423 

and  hmiters  r  The  shadowy  lion,  Tiresias  177 

hopes,  which  r  the  restless  blood.  Prog,  of  Spring  115 

Raced    flew  kite,  and  r  the  purple  fly.  Princess  ii  248 

Thro'  all  the  camp  and  inward  r  the  scouts  „        v  111 

Races    and  how  The  r  went,  and  who  would  rent  the  hall :  AucUey  Court  31 

Raceth     And  r  freely  with  his  fere,  Supp.  Confessions  158 

Rachel     Fairer  than  R  by  the  pahny  well,  Aylmer's  Field  679 

Racing    Clouds  that  are  r  above.  Window,  On  the  Hill  6 

measured  pulse  of  r  oars  Among  the  willows ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  10 

He  is  r  from  heaven  to  heaven  The  Dreamer  21 

Rack     furrowing  into  light  the  mounded  r,  Love  and  Duty  100 

As  if  'twere  drawn  asunder  by  the  r.  Lover's  Tale  ii  57 

save  breaking  my  bones  on  the  r  ?  By  an  Evolution.  9 

Rack'd    frame  Is  r  with  pangs  that  conquer  trust ;  In  Mem.  I  6 

I  am  r  with  pains.  Columbus  199 

that  I,  JK  as  I  am  with  gout,  „          235 

Radiate     where  the  passions  meet.  Whence  r :  In  Mem.  Ixxxviii  5 

Raff     Let  r's  be  rife  in  prose  and  rhyme.  Will  Water.  61 

Rafter     slew  Till  all  the  r's  rang  with  woman-yells.  Last  Tournament  476 

Boardings  and  r's  and  doors —  Def.  of  Lucknow  67 

Rafter'd    See  Dnsky-rafter'd 

Rag  (torn  clothes)     Her  r's  scarce  held  together ;  The  Goose  2 

and  throng,  their  r's  and  they  The  basest,  Lucretius  170 

all  one  r,  disprinced  from  head  to  heel.  Princess  v  30 

And  him,  the  lazar,  in  his  r's :  In  Mem.  cxxvii  10 
put  your  beauty  to  this  flout  and  scorn  By  dressing 

it  in  r's  ?  Geraint  and  E.  676 

this  poor  gown.  This  silken  r,  „            680 

Shaking  his  hands,  as  from  a  lazar's  r,  Pelleas  and  E.  317 

Rag  (stone)     hornblende,  r  and  trap  and  tuff.  Princess  Hi  362 

Rage  (s)     His  early  r  Had  force  to  make  me  rhyme  Miller's  D.  192 

With  inarticulate  r,  and  making  signs  Enoch  Arden  640 

For  blind  with  r  she  miss'd  the  plank.  Princess  iv  177 

And  I  remain  on  whom  to  wreak  your  r,  „        350 

The  captive  void  of  noble  r,  In  Mem.  xxvii  2 

her  bi-other  ran  in  his  r  to  the  gate,  Maud  II  i  12 

that  chain'd  r,  which  ever  yelpt  within,  Balin  and  Balan  319 

so  blind  in  r  that  unawares  He  burst  his  lance  „               328 

and  dash'd  herself  Dead  in  her  r :  Tiresias  153 

your  faith  and  a  God  of  eternal  r,  Despair  39 

call  him  dotard  in  your  r?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  9 

This  thing,  that  thing  is  the  r.  Poets  and  Critics  1 

Rage  (verb)     a  flame  That  r's  in  the  woodland  far 

below,  Balin  and  Balan  234 

E  like  a  fire  among  the  noblest  names.  Merlin  and  V.  802 

Raged     I  r  against  the  pubUc  Mar ;  The  Letters  26 

am  I  raging  alone  as  my  father  r  in  his  mood  ?  Mav^  I  i  53 

Rageful    Slowly  and  conscious  of  the  r  eye  That 

watch'd  him,  Aylmer's  Field  336 

Nor  thou  be  r,  like  a  handled  bee,  Ancient  Sage  269 

Ragged    The  r  rims  of  thunder  brooding  low.  Palace  of  Art  75 


Bagged 


564 


Raised 


Bagged  (continued)     Pent  in  a  roofless  close  of  r  stones ;       St.  S.  Stylites  74 

babe  Too  r  to  be  fondled  on  her  lap,  Aylmer's  Field  686 

haunts  Would  scratch  a  r  oval  on  the  sand,  Gareth  and  L.  534 

Hung  round  with  r  rims  and  burning  folds, —  Lover's  Tale  ii  63 

Upon  the  morrow,  tliro'  the  r  walls,  „  152 
Ragged-robin  Hath  pick'd  a  r-r  from  the  hedge,  Marr.  of  Geraint  724 
Raging    (See  also  A-raagin')     The  wind  is  r  in  tun-et  and 

tree.  The  Sisters  21 

shot  at,  slightly  hurt,  R  retum'd :  Aylmer's  Field  549 

She  heard  him  r,  heard  him  fall ;  Lucretius  276 

am  I  r  alone  as  my  father  raged  in  his  mood  ?  Maud  I  i  53 

shone  the  Noonday  Sun  Beyond  a  r  shallow.  Gareth  and  L.  1028 

Raid     chance  of  booty  from  the  morning's  r,  Geraint  and  E.  565 

Rail  (s)     take  their  leave,  about  the  garden  r's.  Princess,  Con.  38 

In  such  discourse  we  gain'd  the  garden  r's,  „                  80 

Rail  (verb)     To  r  at  Lady  Psyche  and  her  side.  „             Hi  33 

He  loved  to  r  against  it  still,  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  38 

Who  shall  r  Against  her  beauty  ?  „                cxiv  1 

fight  for  the  good  than  to  r  at  the  ill ;  Maud  III  vi  57 

For  that  did  never  he  whereon  ye  r,  Gareth  and  L.  728 

if  she  had  it,  would  she  r  on  me  To  snare  the  next, 

and  if  she  have  it  not  So  will  she  r.  Merlin  and  V.  810 

Then  she  began  to  r  so  bitterly,  Pelleas  and  E.  250 

they  r  At  me  the  Zoroastrian.  Akbar's  Dream  103 

R  at '  Blind  Fate  '  with  many  a  vain  '  Alas ! '  Doubt  and  Prayer  2 

Rail'd    (See  also  Golden-rail'd)    stUl  she  r  against  the 

state  of  things.  Princess  Hi  84 

r  at  those  Who  call'd  him  the  false  son  Guinevere  287 

And  r  at  all  the  Popes,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  165 

Railer     This  r,  that  hath  mock'd  thee  in  full  hall —  Gareth  and  L.  369 
Railing     r  at  thine  and  thee.                                              Balin  and  Balan  119 

Raillery    feigning  pique  at  what  she  call'd  The  r.  Princess  iv  588 

Railway    In  the  steamship,  in  the  r,  Locksley  Hall  166 

A  petty  r  ran :  a  fire-balloon  Rose  gem-like  Princess,  Pro.  74 

A  r  there,  a  tunnel  here,  Mechanophilus  7 

Raiment    in  her  r's  hem  was  traced  in  flame  The  Poet  45 

In  diverse  r  strange  :  Palace  of  Art  168 

In  r  white  and  clean.  St.  Agnes'  Eve  24 

A  woman-post  in  flying  r.  Princess  iv  376 

Loosely  robed  in  flying  r,  Boddicea  37 

three  fair  girls  In  gilt  and  rosy  r  came :  Gareth  and  L.  927 

His  arms,  the  rosy  r,  and  the  star,  „            938 

broken  wings,  torn  r  and  loose  hair,  „          1208 

Rain  (s)    (See  cdso  River-rain)    E  makes  music  in  the  tree  A  Dirge  26 

VVash'd  with  stiU  r's  and  daisy  blossomed ;  Circumstance  7 

The  lightning  flash  atween  the  r's,  Rosalind  12 

From  winter  r's  that  beat  his  grave.  Two  Voices  261 

Autumn  r's  Flash  in  the  pools  of  whirling  Simois.  CEnone  205 

With  shadow-streaks  of  r.  Palace  of  Art  76 

There  will  not  be  a  drop  of  r  May  Queen  35 

Where  falls  not  hail,  or  r.  or  any  snow,  M.  d' Arthur  260 

beneath  a  whispering  r  Night  slid  down  Gardener's  D.  266 

R,  wind,  frost,  heat,  hail,  damp,  St.  S.  Stylites  16 

'  I  swear,  by  leaf,  and  wind,  and  r.  Talking  Oak  81 

Low  thunders  bring  the  meUow  r,  „          279 

when  the  r  is  on  the  roof,  Locksley  HaU  78 

with  r  or  haU,  or  fire  or  snow ;  „           193 

Bullets  fell  bke  r ;  The  Captain  46 

With  ashy  r's,  that  spreading  made  The  Voyage  43 

Came  in  a  sun-Ut  fall  of  r.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  4 

Old  plash  of  r's,  and  refuse  patch'd  with  moss.  Vision  of  Sin  212 

The  r  had  fallen,  the  Poet  arose.  Poet's  Song  1 
The  r  of  heaven,  and  their  own  bitter  tears,  Tears, 

and  the  careless  r  of  heaven,  Aylmer's  Field  428 

for  thrice  I  heard  the  r  Rushing ;  Lucretius  26 

A  twisted  snake,  and  now  a  r  of  pearls.  Princess,  Pro.  62 

blowzed  with  health,  and  wind,  and  r,  ,,          iy  279 

Remember  what  a  plague  of  r ;  The  Daisy  50 

01  r  at  Reggio,  r  at  Parma ;  At  Lodi,  r,  Piacenza,  r.  „          51 
The  mist  and  the  r,  the  mist  and  the  r !                Window,  No  Answer  1 

And  ghastly  thro'  the  drizzling  r  In  Mem.  vii  11 

A  flower  beat  with  r  and  wind,  „         viii  15 

That  takes  the  simshine  and  the  r's,  „            x  14 

flakes  Of  crimson  or  in  emerald  r.  „      xcviii  32 

and  fed  With  honey'd  r  and  delicate  air,  Maud  I  xviii  21 


Rain  (s)  (continued)     and  the  heavens  fall  in  a  gentle  r,  Maud  II  i  41 

'  R,  r,  and  sun  !  a  rainbow  in  the  sky!  Com.  of  ArtMir  403 

R,  r,  and  sun  !  a  rainbow  on  the  lea !  „              406 

R,  sun,  and  r !  and  the  free  blossom  blows ;  „              409 

Sun,  r,  and  sun !  and  where  is  he  who  knows?  ,.              410 

0  rainbow  with  three  colours  after  r,  Gareth  and  L.  1160 
Before  the  useful  trouble  of  the  r :  Geraint  and,  E.  771 
Or  in  the  noon  of  dust  and  driving  r,  Merlin  and  V.  636 
Then  fell  thick  r,  plume  droopt  and  mantle  climg,  Last  Tournament  213 
faUs  not  hail,  or  r,  or  any  snow.  Pass,  of  Arthur  428 
and  the  r  Had  fall'n  upon  me.  Lover's  Tale  i  622 
few  drops  of  that  distressful  r  Fell  on  my  face,  „  698 
As  ?•  of  the  midsummer  midnight  soft,  „  722 
A  morning  air,  sweet  after  r,  „  Hi  3 
An'  be  took  three  turns  in  the  r.  First  Quarrel  75 

1  find  myself  drenched  with  the  r.  Rizfah  8 
Beneath  a  pitiless  rush  of  Autumn  r  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  237 
That  trees  grew  downward,  r  fell  upward,  Columbus  50 
the  tundher,  an'  r  that  fell.  Tomorrow  23 
And  o'er  thee  streams  the  r,                              Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son.  14 

Rain  (verb)     R  out  the  heavy  mist  of  tears.  Love  and  Duty  43 

That  lightly  r  from  ladies'  hands.  Sir  Galahad  12 

To  r  an  April  of  ovation  round  Their  statues.  Princess  vi  66 

bullets  would  r  at  our  feet —  Def.  of  Lucknow  21 

Rainbow  (adj.)     And  r  robes,  and  gems  and  gemlike  eyes,      Princess  iv  480 

Of  his  house  in  a  ?■  frill  ?  Maud  II  ii  17 

may  roll  The  r  hues  of  heaven  about  it —  Romney's  R.  51 

Rainbow  (s)     the  r  forms  and  flies  on  the  land  Sea-Fairies  25 

And  the  r  lives  in  the  curve  of  the  sand ;  „            27 

And  the  r  hangs  on  the  poising  wave,  „            29 

.    Between  the  r  and  the  sun.  Margaret  13 

Broke,  like  the  r  from  the  shower.  Two  Voices  444 

leap  the  r's  of  the  brooks,  Locksley  Hall  171 

Flung  the  torrent  r  round :  Vision  of  Sin  32 

This  flake  of  r  flying  on  the  highest  Princess  v  319 

'  Rain,  rain,  and  sun !  a  r  in  the  sky  !  Com.  of  Arthur  403 

Rain,  rain,  and  sun !  a  r  on  the  lea !  „              406 

0  r  with  three  colours  after  rain,  Gareth  and  L.  1160 
Lay  like  a  r  fall'n  upon  the  grass,  Lancelot  and  E.  431 
Her  smile  lit  up  the  r  on  my  tears.  Lover's  Tale  i  254 
low  down  in  a  r  deep  Silent  palaces,  V.  of  Maeldune  79 
Her  light  makes  r's  in  my  closing  eyes,  Prog,  of  Spring  46 

Rain'd     R  thro'  my  sight  its  overflow.  Two  Voices  45 

Principles  are  r  in  blood ;  Love  thou  thy  land  80 

dimly  r  about  the  leaf  Twilights  of  airy  silver,  Andley  Court  81 

and  there  r  a  ghastly  dew  Locksley  Hall  123 

a  giant's  flail.  The  large  blows  r,  Princess  v  501 

mine  down  r  Their  spirit-searching  splendours.  Lover's  Tale  ii  146 

Raining     Heavily  the  low  sky  r  L.  of  Shalott  iv  4 

Hold  swollen  clouds  from  r,  D.  of  F.  Women  11 

Rain-rotten     R-r  died  the  wheat,  Demeter  and  P.  112 

Rainy     And  faint,  r  fights  are  seen,  Margaret  60 

As  over  r  mist  incfines  A  gleaming  crag  Two  Voices  188 

The  rentroll  Cupid  of  our  r  isles.  Edwin  Morris  103 

Thro'  scudding  drifts  the  r  Hyades  Vext  the  dim  sea :  Ulysses  10 

The  sunny  and  r  seasons  came  and  went  Enoch  Arden  623 

A  r  cloud  possess'd  the  earth,  In  Mem.  xxx  3 

'  0  trefoil,  sparkling  on  the  r  plain,  Gareth  and  L.  1159 

and  thro'  the  tree  Rush'd  ever  a  r  wind,  Last  Tournament  16 

Raise    Thou  wilt  never  r  thine  head  A  Dirge  19 

1  could  r  One  hope  that  warm'd  me  Two  Voices  121 
R  thy  soul;  Make  thine  heart  ready  with  thine 

eyes  :  the  time  Is  come  to  r  the  veil.  Gardener's  D.  272 

Most  can  r  the  flowers  now,  The  Flower  19 

To  r  a  cry  that  lasts  not  long.  In  Mem.  Ixxv  10 

Sir  Lancelot  holp  To  r  the  Prince,  Guinevere  46 

and  could  r  such  a  battle-cry  V.  of  Maeldune  23 

Tho'  some  of  late  would  r  a  wind  '            Freedom  35 

R  a  stately  memorial,  On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  44 

R  me.     I  thank  you.  Romney's  R.  60 

Raised  (adj.)     in  your  r  brows  I  read  Some  wonder  Columbus  1 

my  r  eyelids  would  not  fall,  Lover's  Tale  i  571 

Raised  (verb)     when  I  r  my  eyes,  above  They  met  Miller's  D.  85 

I  look'd,  Paris  had  r  his  ann,  CEnone  189 

She  r  her  piercing  orbs,  D.  of  F.  Women  171 


Raised 


565 


Ran 


Raised  (verb)  (continued)  Then  r  her  head  with  lips  comprest,    The  Letters  19 

When  Annie  would  have  r  him  Enoch  said  Enoch  Arden  232 

'  You  r  your  arm,  you  tumbled  down  and  broke  Sea  Dreams  141 

r  the  bUnding  bandage  from  his  eyes  :  Princess  i  244 

At  the  word,  they  r  A  tent  of  satin,  „     Hi  347 

And  r  the  cloak  from  brows  as  pale  „         v  73 

They  are  r  for  ever  and  ever,  Voice  and  the  P.  23 

Not  r  for  ever  and  ever,  „              25 

Behold  a  man  r  up  by  Christ !  In  Mem.  xxxi  13 

R  my  own  towii  against  me  in  the  night  Marr.  of  Geraint  457 

arose,  and  r  Her  mother  too,  „              535 

Yet  r  and  laid  him  on  a  Utter-bier,  Geraint  and  E.  566 

He  r  his  eyes  and  saw  The  tree  that  shone  Merlin  and  V.  938 

He  r  his  head,  their  eyes  met  and  hers  fell,  Lancelot  and  E.  1312 

And  r  a  bugle  hanging  from  his  neck,  Pelleas  and  E.  364 

The  silk  paviUons  of  King  Arthur  r  Guinevere  394 

And  many  more  when  Modred  r  revolt,  „        441 

And  r  us  hand  in  hand.'  lever's  Tale  iv  66 

He  r  her  softly  from  the  sepulchre,  „                 85 

she  r  an  eye  that  ask'd  '  Where  ?  '  •                „                94 
a  wave  Uke  the  wave  that  is  r  by  an  earthquake 

grew.  The  Revenge  115 

but  ever  we  r  thee  anew,  Def.  of  Lucknow  5 

nor  voice  Nor  finger  r  against  him —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  45 

r  the  school,  and  drain'd  the  fen.  Locksleij  H.,  Sixty  268 

I  r  her,  call'd  her  '  Muriel,'  The  Ring  449 

the  mighty  Muses  have  r  to  the  heights  Parnassus  2 

One  r  the  Prince,  one  sleek'd  the  squalid  hair,  Death  of  (Enone  57 

had  left  His  aged  eyes,  he  r  them,  <S'^  Telemachu^  51 

Still  I  r  my  heart  to  heaven,  AJcbar's  Dream  6 

Raiser    A  r  of  huge  melons  and  of  pine,  Princess,  Con.  87 

Raising    Annie  seem'd  to  hear  Her  own  death-scaffold  r,    Enoch  Arden  175 

r  her  Still  higher,  past  all  peril.  Lover's  Tale  i  393 

Rake  (s)     brag  to  his  fellow  r's  of  his  conquest  Charity  18 

Rake  (verb)     (See  also  Raake)    Nor  will  she  r :  there  is 

no  baseness  in  her.'  Merlin  and  V.  127 

Raked     And  r  in  golden  barley.  Will  Water.  128 
Rake-ruin'd    r-r  bodies  and  souls  go  down  in  a  common 

wreck.  The  Dawn  13 

Raking     R  in  that  millennial  touchwood-dust  Aylmer's  Field  514 

Ralph     And  that  was  old  Sir  R's  at  Ascalon  :  Princess,  Pro.  26 

there  was  R  himself,  A  broken  statue  propt  „                 98 

I  i-ead  Of  Old  Sir  R  a  page  or  two  „                121 

or  R  Who  shines  so  in  the  corner;  „                144 

For  which  the  good  Sir  R  had  burnt  them  all —  „                236 

'  Sir  R  has  got  your  coloius  :  „           iv  594 

Disrobed  the  glimmering  statue  of  Sir  R  „       Con.  117 

R  would  fight  in  Edith's  sight.  For  R  was  Edith's  lover,  The  Tourney  1 

R  went  down  like  a  fire  to  the  fight  „          3 

'  Gallant  Sir  R,'  said  the  king.  ,.          6 

'  Take  her  Sir  R,'  said  the  king.  „         18 

Ram  (sheep)     rs  and  geese  Troop'd  round  a  Paynim 

harper  Last  Tournament  321 

Ram  (battering-ram)    shuddering  War-thunder  of  iron  r's ;        Tiresias  100 

Ramble    O  me,  my  pleasant  r's  by  the  lake,  (repeat)  Edwin  Morris  1,  13 

Rambling     And  oft  in  r's  on  the  wold.  Miller's  D.  105 

Ramp     A  Uon  r's  at  the  top,  Maud  I  xiv  7 

'  jR  ye  lance-splintering  lions,  Gareth  and  L.  1305 

Yea',  r  and  roar  at  leaving  of  your  lord  ! —  „             1307 

Uoiis,  crown'd  with  gold,  R  in  the  field,  Lancelot  and  E.  664 

Rampaged     An'  they  r  about  wi'  their  grooms.  Village  Wife  36 

Rampant     A  r  heresy,  such  as  if  it  spread  Princess  iv  411 

Rampart    ranged  r's  biight  From  level  meadow-bases  Palace  of  Art  6 

few,  but  more  than  wall  And  r,  Tiresias  126 

Rampart-lines    designs  Of  his  labour'd  r-l.  Ode  on  Well.  105 

Ran    (See  also  Roon'd,  Rmm'd)    marble  stairs  R  up  with 

golden  balustrade,  Arabian  Nights  118 

words  did  gather  thunder  as  they  r.  The  Poet  49 

With  an  inner  voice  the  river  r.  Dying  Swan  5 

Young  Nature  thro'  five  cycles  r,  Tioo  Voices  17 

r  Their  course,  till  thou  wert  also  man :  „        326 

in  many  a  wild  festoon  R  riot,  QLnonc  101 
round  the  cool  green  courts  there  r  a  row  Of  cloistci-s,   Palace  of  Art  25 

I  r  by  him  without  speaking,  May  Queen  18 

And  r  to  tell  her  neighbours  ;  The  Goose  14 


Ran  (continued)     R  Gaffer,  stumbled  Gammer.  The  Goose  34 

Then  quickly  rose  Sir  Bedivere,  and  r,  M.  d' Arthur  133 

I  boated  over,  r  My  craft  aground,  Edwin  Morris  108 

sting  of  shrewdest  pain  R  shrivelling  thro'  me,  St.  S.  Stylites  199 

'  Then  r  she,  gamesome  as  the  colt,  Talking  Oak  121 

r  itself  in  golden  sands.  Locksley  Hall  32 

And  feet  that  )•,  and  doors  that  clapt,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  3 

R  forward  to  his  rhyming,  Amphion  30 

Far  r  the  naked  moon  across  The  Voyage  29 

In  curves  the  yellowing  river  r,  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  15 

R  into  its  giddiest  whirl  of  sound.  Vision  of  Sin  29 

A  narrow  cave  r  in  beneath  the  cliff :  Enoch  Arden  23 

And  merrily  ;•  the  years,  seven  happy  years,  „             81 

they  r  To  greet  his  hearty  welcome  heartily  ;  „          349 

and  r  Ev'n  to  the  limit  of  the  land,  „          577 

where  the  rivulets  of  sweet  water  r ;  „          642 

and  all  round  it  r  a  walk  Of  shingle,  „          736 

'  Run,  Katie! '     Katie  never  r  :  The  Brook  87 

And  r  thro'  all  the  coltish  chronicle,  „       159 

when  they  r  To  loose  him  at  the  stables,  Aylmer's  Field  125 

r  By  sallowy  rims,  arose  the  labourers'  homes,  „            146 

Wife-hunting,  as  the  rumour  r,  „             212 

thro'  the  bright  lawns  to  his  brother's  r,  „            341 

he  r  Beside  the  river-bank :  ,,             450 

R  a  Malayan  amuck  against  the  times,  „            463 

R  in  and  out  the  long  sea-framing  caves.  Sea  Dreams  33 

ever  as  their  shrieks  R  highest  up  the  gamut,  „        233 

and  r  To  greet  him  with  a  kiss,  Imcretius  6 

r  in.  Beat  breast,  tore  hair,  cried  out  „    276 

A  petty  railway  ?• :  a  fire-balloon  Rose  gem-like  Princess,  Pro.  74 

For  so,  my  mother  said,  the  story  r.  „               ill 

And  some  inscription  r  along  the  front,  „                212 

R  down  the  Persian,  Grecian,  Roman  lines  „            ii  130 

A  double  hill  r  up  its  furrowy  forks  „           Hi  174 

a  murmur  r  Thro'  all  the  camp  and  inward  raced  „             v  110 

on  this  side  the  palace  r  the  field  „                361 

My  father  heard  and  r  In  on  the  lists,  „             vi  26 

languor  and  self-pity  r  Mine  down  my  face,  „          vii  139 

R  the  land  with  Roman  slaughter,  Boddicea  84 

crying,  '  How  changed  from  where  it  r  In  Mem.  xxiii  9 

We  talk'd :  the  stream  beneath  us  r,  „    Ixxxix  43 

his  high  sun  flame,  and  his  river  billowing  r,  Maud  I  iv  32 

And  never  yet  so  warmly  r  my  blood  ,,       xviii  3 

her  brother  r  in  his  rage  to  the  gate,  „      //  i  12 

months  r  on  and  rumour  of  battle  grew,  „  ///  vi  29 

but  the  scholar  r  Before  the  master.  Com.  of  Arthur  154 

R  Uke  a  colt,  and  leapt  at  all  he  saw :  „              322 

out  I  r  And  flung  myself  down  on  a  bank  of  heath,  „               342 

There  r  a  treble  range  of  stony  shields, —  Gareth  and  L.  407 

children  in  their  cloth  of  gold  R  to  her,  Marr.  of  Geraint  669 

A  walk  of  roses  r  from  door  to  door ;  Balin  and  Balan  242 

Shot  from  behind  him,  r  along  the  ground.  „               323 

r  the  counter  path,  and  found  His  charger,  „               417 

sister  pearls  R  down  the  silken  thread  Merlin  and  V.  455 

R  to  the  Castle  of  Astolat,  Lancelot  and  E.  167 

So  r  the  tale  like  fire  about  the  court,  „               734 

For  when  the  blood  r  lustier  in  him  again,  „              881 

all  three  in  hurry  and  fear  R  to  her,  „             1025 

Uke  a  serpent,  r  a  scroll  Of  letters  Holy  Grail  170 

A  thousand  piers  r  into  the  gi-eat  Sea.  „          503 

And  with  exceeding  swiftness  r  the  boat,  „          514 

Up  r  a  score  of  damsels  to  the  tower ;  Pelleas  and  E.  368 

And  down  they  r.  Her  damsels,  „             375 

Pelleas,  leaping  up,  R  thro'  the  doors  „            539 
With  trumpet-blowings  r  on  all  the  ways  From 

Camelot                                                 '  Last  Tournament  52 

Then  r  across  her  memory  the  strange  rhyme  „            131 

straddUng  on  the  butts  While  the  wine  r :  Guinevere  269 

A  murmuring  whisper  thro'  the  nunnery  r,  ,,        410 

Then  quickly  rose  Sir  Bedivere,  and  r,  '  Pass,  of  Arthur  301 

As  mountain  streams  Our  bloods  r  free:  Lover's  Tale  i  327 

R  amber  toward  the  west,  and  nigh  the  sea  „            432 

I  r  down  The  steepy  sea-bank,  „           H  73 

upblown  billow  r  Shoreward  beneath  red  clouds,  „            178 

r  over  The  rippling  levels  of  the  lake,  „           m  3 


Ran 


566 


Rank 


Ran  {cantinued)     Where  nymph  and  god  r  ever  round  in 

gold —  Lover's  Tale  iv  197 

and  so  The  little  Revenge  r  on  l^he  Revenge  33 

Kevenge  r  on  thro'  the  long  sea-lane  between.  „           36 
'  are  you  ill  ? '  (so  r  The  letter)                                Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  185 

r  Surging  and  swaying  aU  round  us,  Def.  of  Lucknow  37 

r  uito  the  hearts  of  my  crew,  V.  of  Maeldune  33 

fig  r  up  from  the  beach  and  rioted  over  the  land,  „              58 

By  all  my  ways  where'er  they  r,  Ancient  Sage  157 

my  life  in  golden  sequence  r,  Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  47 

sound  r  Thxo'  palace  and  cottage  door,  Dead  Prophet  37 

red  mark  r  All  round  one  finger  pointed  straight.  The  Ring  452 

dead  cords  that  r  Dark  thro'  the  mist.  Death  of  (Enone  10 

Slipt,  and  r  on,  and  flung  himself  between  St.  Telemachus  61 

In  that  vast  Oval  r  a  shudder  of  shame.  „           73 

Rancorous     A  wounded  thing  with  a  r  crj',  Maud  /  a;  34 

Rancour    hate  the  r  of  their  castes  and  creeds,  Akbar's  Dream  65 
Random  (adj.)     (See  also  Seeming-random)     But  we  must 

hood  your  r  eyes,  Rosalind  37 

A  r  arrow  from  the  brain.  Two  Voices  345 

A  r  string  Your  finer  female  sense  offends.  Day -Dm.,  L' Envoi  1 
As  dash'd  about  the  drunken  leaves  The  r  sunshine 

lighten'd!  Amphion  56 

To  make  me  write  my  r  rhymes,  Will  Water.  13 

He  flash'd  his  r  speeches,  „       198 

Whistling  a  r  bar  of  Bonny  Doon,  The  BrooJc  82 
Balmier  and  nobler  from  her  bath  of  storm,  At  r  ravage  ?     Lucretius  176 

As  if  to  close  with  CyrU's  r  wish :  Princess  Hi  101 

I  give  you  all  The  r  scheme  as  wildly  as  it  rose :  „       Con.  2 

For  him  nor  moves  the  loud  world's  r  mock.  Will  4 

And  answering  now  my  r  stroke  In  Mem.  xxxix  2 

Let  r  influences  glance,  „           xlix  2 

With  all  his  rout  of  r  followers,  Geraint  and  E.  382 

but  had  ridd'n  a  r  roimd  To  seek  him,  Lancelot  and  E.  630 

Or  lulling  r  squabbles  when  they  rise.  Holy  Grail  557 

deed  Of  prowess  done  redress'd  a  r  wrong.  Guinevere  459 
Along  the  years  of  haste  and  r  youth  Unshatter'd :  De  Prof.   Two  G.  21 

Nor  lend  an  ear  to  r  cries.  Politics  7 
Random  (s)     as  he  lay  At  r  looking  over  the  brown  earth    Pelleas  and  E.  32 

Random-blown     sank  Down  on  a  drift  of  foliage  r-b ;  Last  Tournament  389 

Rang     The  bridle  bells  r  merrily  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  13 

The  wild  wind  r  from  park  and  plain.  The  Goose  45 

based  His  feet  on  juts  of  slippery  crag  that  r  M.  d' Arthur  189 

So  these  were  wed,  and  merrily  r  the  bells,(repeat)  Enoch  Arden  80,  511 

shrill'd  and  r,  Till  this  was  ended,  ,.                 175 

Merrily  r  the  bells  and  they  were  wed  ,,                 512 

That  aU  the  houses  in  the  haven  r.  .,                 911 

a  page  or  two  that  r  With  tilt  and  tourney ;  Princess,  Pro.  121 

with  this  our  banquets  r ;  „             i  132 

for  still  my  voice  R  false :  „           iv  121 

With  Ida,  Ida,  Ida,  r  the  woods ;  „                433 

R  ruin,  answer'd  full  of  grief  and  scorn.  „            vi  333 

and  r  Beyond  the  bourn  of  sunset ;  .,         Con.  99 

And  the  ringers  r  with  a  will.  Grandmother  58 

And  roimd  us  all  the  thicket  r  In  Mem.  xxiii  23 

Then  echo-like  our  voices  r ;  „         xxx  13 

The  hall  with  harp  and  carol  r.  „             ciii  9 

there  r  on  a  sudden  a  passionate  cry,  Maud  II  i  33 

r  Clear  thro'  the  open  ca.sement  of  the  hall,  Marr.  of  Geraint  327 

things  that  r  Against  the  pavement,  Geraint  and  E.  594 

R  by  the  white  mouth  of  the  violent  Glem ;  Lancelot  and  E.  288 

Then  r  the  shout  his  lady  loved :  Pelleas  and  E.  171 

Down  r  the  grate  of  iron  thro'  the  groove,  „            207 

old  echoes  hidden  in  the  wall  R  out  ,.             367 

Till  all  the  raft«rs  r  with  woman-yells.  Last  Tournament  476 

based  His  feet  on  juts  of  slippery  crag  that  r  Pass,  of  Arthur  357 

There  r  her  voice,  when  the  full  city  To  the  Queen  ii  26 

r  into  the  heart  and  the  brain,  V.  of  Maeldune  110 

So  r  the  clear  voice  of  ^Eakides ;  Achilles  over  the  T.  21 

a  voice  r  out  in  the  thunders  of  Ocean  and  Heaven  The  Wreck  88 

'  Forward '  r  the  voices  then,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  77 

ciy  that  r  thro'  Hades,  Earth,  and  Heaven !  Demeter  and  P.  33 

Weird  whispers,  belLs  that  r  without  a  hand,  The  Ring  411 

r  out  all  down  thro'  the  dell,  Bandit's  Death  36 

was  a  Scripture  that  r  thro'  his  head,  The  Dreamer  2 


Rang  (continued)     R  the  stroke,  and  sprang  the  blood.  The  Tourney  9 

Range  (s)    (See  also  Mountain-range)    storm  Of 

running  fires  and  fluid  r  Supp.  Confessions  147 

And  r  of  evil  between  death  and  birth,  //  /  were  loved  3 

Below  the  r  of  stepping-stones,  Miller's  D.  54 

R's  of  glimmering  vaults  with  iron  grates,  D.  of  F.  Women  35 

a  lyre  of  widest  r  Struck  by  all  passion,  „           165 

the  r  of  lawn  and  park :  The  Blackbird  6 
over  many  a  r  Of  waning  Ume  the  gray  cathedral 

towers.  Gardener's  D.  217 

Large  r  of  prospect  had  the  mother  sow.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  93 

On  a  r  of  lower  feehngs  Locksley  Hall  44 

Soft  lustre  bathes  the  r  of  urns  Day -Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  9 

o'er  them  many  a  flowing  r  Of  vapour  „         Depart.  21 

Somewhere  beneath  his  own  low  r  of  roofs,  Aylmer's  Field  47 

A  patient  r  of  pupils ;  Princess  ii  104 

the  day  fled  on  thro'  all  Its  r  of  duties  Hi  177 

Rhymes  and  rhjrmes  in  the  r  of  the  times !  Spiteful  Letter  9 

Our  voices  took  a  higher  r;  In  Mem.  xxx  21 

O,  therefore  from  thy  sightless  r  „         xciii  !> 

There  ran  a  treble  r  of  stony  shields, —  Gareth  and  L.  407 

that  gave  upon  a  r  Of  level  pavement  „           666 

down  that  r  of  roses  the  great  Queen  Came  Balin  and  Balan  244 

Merlin,  who  knew  the  r  of  all  their  arts.  Merlin  and  V.  167 

impute  themselves.  Wanting  the  mental  r ;  „             827 

A  purple  r  of  mountain-cones.  Lover's  Tale  i  407 

past  Over  the  r  and  the  change  of  the  world  The  Wreck  70 

past  the  r  of  Night  and  Shadow —  Ancient  Sage  283 

after  his  brief  r  of  blameless  days,  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  9 

Range  (verb)     So  let  the  wind  r ;  Nothing  will  Die  32 

So  let  the  warm  winds  r.  All  Things  will  Die  42 

Thro'  light  and  shadow  thou  dose  r,  Madeline  4 

'  Not  less  the  bee  would  r  her  cells,  Two  Voices  70 

droves  of  swine  That  r  on  yonder  plain.  Palace  of  Art  200 

Forward,  forward  let  us  r,  Locksley  Hall  181 

That  r  above  the  region  of  the  wind,  Princess,  Con.  112 

'  My  love  shall  now  no  further  r ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxi  2 

That  r  above  our  mortal  state,  „    Ixxxv  22 

To  r  the  woods,  to  roam  the  park,  „      Con.  96 
it  pleased  the  King  to  r  me  close  After  Sir  Galahad) ;       Holy  Grail  307 

To  course  and  r  thro'  all  the  world.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  120 

Is  it  well  that  while  we  r  with  Science,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  217 

The  fairy  fancies  r.  Early  Spring  39 

Ranged  (adj.)     r  ramparts  bright  From  level  meadow-bases  Palace  of  Art  6 

Than  all  the  r  reasons  of  the  world.  Pelleas  and  E.  156 

Ranged  (verb)     the  solemn  palms  were  r  Above,  Arabian  Nights  70 

presence  of  the  Gods  R  in  the  halls  of  Peleus ;  Qinone  81 

I  r  too  high :  what  draws  me  down  Will  Water.  153 

As  down  the  shore  he  r,  Enoch  Arden  588 

gain'd  The  terrace  r  along  the  Northern  front.  Princess  Hi  118 

For  now  her  Httle  ones  have  r ;  In  Mem.  xxi  26 

tall  knights,  that  r  about  the  throne,  Gareth  and  L.  328 

R  with  the  Table  Round  that  held  the  lists,  Lancelot  and  E.  467 

And  a  hxmdred  r  on  the  rock  V.  of  Maeldune  101 

Small  pity  for  those  that  have  r  Despair  38 

R  like  a  storm  or  stood  like  a  rock  Heavy  Brigade  56 
He  fain  had  r  her  thro'  and  thro',                        To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  23 

your  eyes  Have  many  a  time  r  over  when  a  babe.  The  Ring  151 

so  high  they  r  about  the  globe  ?  St.  Telemachus  2 

Ranging    My  fancy,  r  thro'  and  thro',  Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  34 

some  low  fever  r  round  to  spy  The  weakness  Aylmer's  Field  5&.) 

That  sittest  r  golden  hair ;  In  Mem.  vi  2(i 

Surprise  thee  r  with  thy  peers.  „     xliv  12 

We  r  down  this  lower  track,  „       xlvi  1 

R  and  ringing  thro'  the  minds  of  men.  Com.  of  Arthur  416 

Rank  (adj.)     long,  r,  dark  wood-walks  drench'd  in 

dew,  D.  of  F.  Women  75 

Rank  (line)     When  the  r's  are  roll'd  in  vapour,  Locksley  Hall  104 

The  linden  broke  her  r's  Amphion  33 

And  clad  in  iron  burst  the  r's  of  war.  Princess  iv  50 1 

Should  see  thy  passengers  in  r  In  Mem.  xiv  6 

glided  winding  under  r's  Of  iris,  „     ciii  23 

The  front  r  made  a  sudden  halt ;  Lover's  Tale  Hi  29 

Rank  (social  station)     To  all  duties  of  her  r:  L.  of  Burleigh  72 

Whatever  eldest-born  of  r  or  wealth  Might  lie  Aylmer's  Field  484 


Rank 


567 


Raw 


Rank  (social  station)  (continued)    heart  is  set  On  one  whose  r 

exceeds  her  own.  In  Mem.  Ix  4 

lip  or  down  Along  the  scale  of  r'5,  „       cxi  2 

likewise  for  the  h^h  r  she  had  borne,  Guinevere  695 

Rank  (verb)     r  you  nobly,  mingled  up  with  me.  Princess  ii  46 

She  might  not  r  with  those  detestable  „     v  457 

)•  with  the  best,  Garrick  and  statelier  Kemble,       To  W.  C.  Macready  6 

Rank'd    made  me  dream  I  r  with  him.  In  Mem.  xlii  4 

Rankled    R  in  him  and  ruffled  all  his  heart,  Guinevere  49 

Ransack'd    See  Often-ransack'd 

Ransom 'd  (adj.)     Thy  r  reason  change  repUes  In  Mem.  Ixi  2 

Ransomd  (verb)    richer  in  His  eyes  Who  r  us,  Guinevere  685 

Raphael    I  am  not  R,  Titan — no  Romney's  R.  46 

Rapid  (adj.)    Whose  free  delight,  from  any  height  of  r  flight,        Rosalind  3 
Her  r  laughters  wild  and  shrill,  Kate  3 

Cla-sh  the  darts  and  on  the  buckler  beat  with  r  unanimous 

hand,  Boadicea  79 

gyres  R  and  vast,  of  hissing  spray  wind-driven  Lover's  Tale  ii  198 

A  long  loud  clash  of  r  marriage- bells.  „  Hi  23 

Rapid  (s)     as  the  r  of  life  Shoots  to  the  fall —  A  Dedication  3 

then  a  brook,  With  one  sharp  r,  Holy  Grail  381 

Rapine    For  nature  is  one  with  r,  Maud  7  w  22 

the  wing  Of  that  foul  bird  of  r  Merlin  and  V.  728 

and  the  ways  Were  fiU'd  with  r,  Guinevere  458 

Rapt    So  tranced,  so  r  in  ecstasies,  Elednore  78 

R  after  heaven's  starry  flight.  Two  Voices  68 

gnuited  '  Good ! '  but  we  Sat  r :  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  5 

So  r,  we  near'd  the  house ;  Gardener's  D.  142 

seedsman,  r  Upon  the  teeming  harvest,  Golden  Year  70 

And,  r  thro'  many  a  rosy  change,  Day-Dm.,  Depart.  23 

I  all  r  in  this,  '  Come  out,'  he  said,  Princess,  Pro.  50 

peal'd  the  nightingale,  R  in  her  song,  ,.  i  221 

They  stood,  so  r,  we  gazing,  came  a  voice,  „  ii  318 

Intent  on  her,  who  r  in  glorious  dreams,  „  442 

She  r  upon  her  subject,  ho  on  her :  ,.         Hi  304 

R  to  the  horrible  fall :  „  iv  180 

Came  in  long  breezes  r  from  inmost  south  „  431 

Ida  spoke  not,  r  upon  the  child.  ..  vi  220 

we  sat  But  spoke  not,  r  in  nameless  reverie,  Con.  108 

'  R  from  the  fickle  and  the  frail  In  Mem.  xxx  25 

r  below  Thro'  all  the  dewy-tassell'd  wood,  ,.        Ixxxvi  5 

Who,  but  hung  to  hear  The  r  oration  flowing  free  ,.     Ixxxvii  32 

Tho'  r  in  matters  dark  and  deep  „         xcvii  19 

So  r  I  was,  they  could  not  win  An  answer  ,,  ciii  49 

R  in  the  fear  and  in  the  wonder  of  it ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  529 

R  in  this  fancy  of  his  Table  Round,  Lancelot  and  E.  129 

r  By  all  the  sweet  and  sudden  passion  of  youth  ..  281 

ii  on  his  face  as  it  if  were  a  God's.  ..  356 

R  in  sweet  talk  or  lively,  Guinevere  386 

Like  odour  r  into  the  winged  wind  Lover's  Tale  i  801 

car  Of  dark  Aidoneus  rising  r  thee  hence.  Demeter  and  P.  39 

Raptured    Large  dowries  doth  the  r  eye  Ode  to  Memory  72 

Ewe    wintertide  shall  star  The  black  earth  with 

brilliance  r.  „  20 

wreaths  of  floating  dark  upcurl'd,  R  sunrise  flow'd.  The  Poet  36 

R  broidry  of  the  purple  clover.  A  Dirge  38 

0  r  pale  Margaret,  (repeat)  Margaret  2,  55 

1  had  hope,  by  something  r  To  prove  myself  a  poet :      Will  Water.  165 
" -     -  -  ...  .  Princess  ii  180 

The  Daisy  53 

Hendecasyllabics  19 

Lover's  Tale  i  4 

ii  162 

iv  203 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  5 

To  J.  S.  25 

Lancelot  and  E.  162 

Poets  and  Critics  16 

Aylmer's  Field  230 

Sea  Dreams  167 

The  Captain  10 

The  Islet  10 

Princess  iv  204 

Lancelot  and  E.  239 

To  Marq.  of  Diifferin  2 


Should  bear  a  double  growth  of  those  r  souls, 
stem  and  sad  (so  r  the  smiles  Of  sunlight) 
As  some  r  little  rose,  a  piece  of  inmost 
half-way  down  r  sads.  White  as  white  clouds, 
to  reassume  The  semblance  of  those  r  realities 
r  or  fair  Was  brought  before  the  guest : 
R  in  Fable  or  History, 

Barer    Your  loss  is  r ;  for  this  star 

Chose  the  green  path  that  show'd  the  r  foot, 
And  the  Critic's  r  still. 

Rascal    Tiunbled  the  tawny  r  at  his  feet, 
Read  r  in  the  motions  of  his  back. 

Rash    Stern  he  was  and  r ; 

With  a  crew  that  is  neither  rude  nor  r, 
the  hxmter  rued  His  r  intrusion,  manUke, 
R  were  my  judgment  then. 
At  times  her  steps  are  swift  and  r  ; 


Rash  (continued)     Not  swift  or  r,  when  late  she  lent 

The  sceptres  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  5 

Rashness     if  I  should  do  This  r,  Two  Voices  392 

Rason  (reason)     there's  r  in  aU  things,  yer  Honour,  Tomorrow  6 

Rat     tapt  at  doors.  And  rummaged  like  a  r  :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  38 

And  curse  me  the  British  vermin,  the  r  ;  Maud  II  v  58 

Ah  little  r  that  borest  in  the  dyke  Merlin  and  V.  112 

Lancelot  will  be  gracious  to  the  r,  „  120 

'  Black  nest  of  r's'  he  groan'd,  Pelleas  and  E.  555 

Ghoast  moastUns  was  nobbut  a  r  or  a  mouse.  Owd  Rod  38 

Rate     (See  also  Raate,  Third-rate)     Whom  all  men  r  as 

kind  and  hospitable  :  Princess  i  71 

I  r  your  chance  Almost  at  naked  nothing.'  „         160 

Till  all  men  grew  to  r  us  at  our  worth,  ..    iv  145 

we  did  not  r  him  then  This  red-hot  iron  „      v  208 

Whom  all  men  r  the  king  of  courtesy.  Balin  and  Balan  257 

Rated    (See  also  Raated)    must  have  r  her  Beyond  all 

tolerance  Aylmer's  Field  380 

such  a  one  As  all  day  long  hath  r  at  her  child,  Gareth  and  L.  1285 

Rathe  (early)     The  men  of  r  and  riper  years :  In  Mem.  ex  2 

Till  r  she  rose,  half-cheated  m  the  thought  Lancelot  and  E.  340 

Ratify     every  voice  she  talk'd  with  r  it.  Princess  v  133 

Rating    (See  also  Raatin)     like  her  none  the  less  for  r  at  her  !         „        461 

Rattl^    Siver  the  mou'ds  r  down  upo'  poor  owd  Squire        Village  Wife  95 

Ravage    from  her  bath  of  storm.  At  random  r  ?  Lucretius  176 

noise  of  r  wrought  by  beast  and  man,  Gareth  and  L.  437 

Ravaged     left  the  r  woodland  yet  once  more  To  peace  ;     Merlin  and  V.  963 

Rave    Let  t^iem  r.  (repeat)      "  A  Dirge  4,  7, 11, 14, 18,  21, 

25,  28,  32,  35,  39,  42,  49 
But  let  them  r.  A  Dirge  46 

'  He  wiU  not  hear  the  north-wind  r.  Two  Voices  259 

did  seem  to  mourn  eind  r  On  alien  shores  ;  Lotos-Eaters  32 

For  blasts  would  rise  and  r  and  cease,  The  Voyage  85 

'  Drink,  and  let  the  parties  r :  Vision  of  Sin  123 

My  father  r's  of  death  and  vireck.  Sailor  Boy  19 

I  heard  the  voice  R  over  the  rocky  bar.  Voice  and  the  P.  6 

I  roar  and  r  for  I  faU.  „  12 

And  r  at  the  lie  and  the  Uar,  ah  God,  as  he  used  to  r.         Maud  I  i60 
about  the  shuddering  wreck  the  death- white  sea  should  r.    The  Flight  47 
Raved     (See  also  Raaved)     nor  r  And  thus  foam'd  over 

at  a  rival  name  :  Balin  and  Balan  566 

Raven  (adj.)     Let  darkness  keep  her  r  gloss  :  In  Mem.  i  10 

knew  not  that  which  pleased  it  most.  The  r  ringlet  or  the 

gold  ;  The  Ring  166 

Raven  (s)     Bark  an  answer,  Britain's  r  !  Boadicea  13 

For  a  r  ever  croaks,  at  my  side,  Maud  I  vi  57 

A  blot  in  heaven,  the  R,  "flying  high,  Croak'd,  Guinevere  133 

God  'ill  pardon  the  hell-black  r  Rizpah  39 

Left  for  the  homy-nibb'd  r  to  rend  it,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  108 

at  the  croak  of  a,  R  who  crost  it.  Merlin  and  the  G.  24 

Ravening    Again  their  r  eagle  rose  In  anger.  Ode  on  Well.  119 

Ravine  (mountain-gorge)  brook  f alUng  thro'  the  clov'n  r  In  cataract  Qinone  8 

wilt  thou  snare  ium  in  the  white  r.  Princess  vii  205 

Or  rosy  blossom  in  hot  r,  The  Daisy  32 

Beyond  a  bridge  that  spann'd  a  dry  r  :  Marr.  of  Geraint  246 

Across  the  bridge  that  spann'd  the  dry  r.  „  294 

Every  grim  r  a  garden,  Loeksley  H.,  Sixty  168 

from  out  the  long  r  below  She  heard  a  wailing  cry.  Death  of  (Enone  19 

in  front  of  that  r  Which  drowsed  in  gloom,  „  75 

Ravine  (rapine)     red  in  tooth  and  claw  With  r,  In  Mem.  Ivi  16 

Raving    (See  also  Raavin')     The  wind  is  r  in  turret  and  tree.  The  Sisters  27 

Now  with  dug  spur  and  r  at  himself,  Balin  and  Balan  310 

R  of  dead  men's  dust  and  beating  hearts.  Lover's  Tale  iv  140 

tears  kill'd  the  flower,  my  r's  hush'd  The  bird,  Demeter  and  P.  108 

Roaring  London,  r  Paris,  Loeksley  H.,  Sixty  190 

R  poUtics,  never  at  rest—  Vastness  3 

Raving-wild     I  was  mad,  I  was  r-w.  Charity  27 

Raw    nor  wed  R  Haste,  half-sister  to  Delay.  Love  thou  thy  land  96 

Should  see  the  r  mechanic's  bloody  thumbs  Walk,  to  the  Mail  15 

That  we  should  mimic  this  r  fool  the  world,  „  106 

one  they  knew — R  from  the  nursery —  Aylmer's  Field  264 

R  from  the  prime,  and  crushing  down  his  mate  ;  Princess  ii  121 

And  drill  the  r  world  for  the  march  of  mind,  Ode  on  Well.  168 

shatter'd  talbots,  which  had  left  the  stones  R,  Holy  Grail  720 

'  I  have  lighted  on  a  fool,  R,  yet,  so  stale  !  '  Pelleas  and  E.  114 


Ray 


568 


Bead 


Ray  (Philip)    See  Philip,  Philip  Ray 

Ray  (s)     lashes  like  to  r's  Of  darkness, 
Make  a  carcanet  of  r's. 
Thro'  lips  and  eyes  in  subtle  r's. 
neither  hide  the  r  From  those,  not  blind, 
Heaven  flash'd  a  sudden  jubilant  /, 
Flame-colour,  vert  and  azure,  in  three  r's, 
gay  with  gold  In  streaks  and  r's, 
where  morning's  earliest  r  Might  strike  it, 
emerald  center'd  in  a  sun  Of  silver  r's, 
shower'd  down  R's  of  a  mighty  circle. 
May  send  one  r  to  thee  ! 


Arabian  Nights  136 

Adeline  59 

Rosalind  24 

Love  thou  thy  land  14 

Ode  on  Well.  129 

Co7n.  of  Arthur  275 

Gareth  and  L.  911 

Lancelot  and  E.  5 

296 

Lover's  Tale  i  418 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  14 


a  r  red  as  blood  Glanced  on  the  strangled  face —  Bandit's  Death  31 

Ray  (verb)  R  round  with  flames  her  disk  of  seed,  In  Mem.  ci  6 
Ray'd  His  hair,  a  sun  that  r  from  off  a  brow  Last  Tournament  666 
Ray-fringed    R-f  eyelids  of  the  morn  Roof                      Clear-headed  friend  6 

Raze     and  r  The  blessed  tomb  of  Christ ;  Columbus  98 
Reach  (s)  {See  also  Eye-reach)  Beside  the  river's  wooded  r.  In  Mem.  Ixxi  13 
not  leamable,  divine.  Beyond  my  r.                          Balin  and  Balan  176 

Reach  (verb)     And  r  the  law  within  the  law  :  Two  Voices  141 

example  to  mankind.  Which  few  can  r  to.  St.  S.  Stylites  189 

r  To  each  his  perfect  pint  of  stout,  Will  Water.  114 
r  its  fatling  innocent  arms  And  lazy  lingering  fingers.       Princess  vi  138 

Deeper  than  those  weird  doubts  could  r  me,  „         vii  51 

Or  r  a  hand  thro'  time  to  catch  In  Mem.  i  7 

And  r  the  glow  of  southern  skies,  „        xii  10 

When  Science  r'es  forth  her  arms  ,,       xxi  18 

R  out  dead  hands  to  comfort  me.  „      Ixxx  16 

Would  r  us  out  the  shining  hand,  ,,  Ixxxiv  43 

Thy  spirit  up  to  mine  can  r  ;  „    Ixxxv  82 

Or  ev'n  for  intellect  to  r  „        xcv  47 

came  the  hands  That  r  thro'  nature,  „    cxxiv  24 

until  we  pass  and  r  That  other,  Geraint  and  E.  6 

Climb  first  and  r  me  down  thy  hand.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  204 

examples  r  a  hand  Far  thro'  aU  years,  Tiresias  126 
Earth  may  r  her  earthly- worst,                              Locksley  H.,  Sixty  233 

In  summer  if  I  r  my  day —  To  Ulysses  9 

but  echo'd  on  to  r  Honorius,  St.  Telemachus  76 

Reach'd    music  r  them  on  the  middle  sea.  Sea- Fairies  6 

For  ere  she  r  upon  the  tide  L.  of  Shalott  iv  33 

We  r  a  meadow  slanting  to  the  North  ;  Gardener's  D.  108 

till  I  r  The  wicket-gate,  „          212 

and  set  out,  and  r  the  farm.  Dora  129 

we  r  The  griffin-guarded  gates,  Audley  Court  14 

till  we  r  The  Umit  of  the  hiUs  ;  „             82 

until  she  r  The  gateway  :  Godiva  50 

he  r  the  home  Where  Annie  lived  and  loved  him,  Enoch  Arden  684 

we  r  A  mountain,  like  a  wall  of  burs  and  thorns  ;  Sea  Dreams  118 

when  the  note  Had  /  a  thunderous  fulness,  „         214 

and  with  long  arms  and  hands  R  out.  Princess  i  29 

we  dropt.  And  flying  r  the  frontier :  „           109 

I  would  have  r  you,  had  you  been  Sphered  „      iv  437 

he  r  White  hands  of  farewell  to  my  sire,  „       y  232 

ere  we  r  the  highest  summit  I  pluck'd  a  daisy,  The  Daisy  87 

And  r  the  ship  and  caught  the  rope.  Sailor  Boy  3 

Mayst  seem  to  have  r  a  purer  air.  In  Mem.  xxxiii  2 

He  r  the  glory  of  a  hand,  „            Ixix  17 

When  Arthur  r  a  field-of -battle  Com.  of  Arthur  96 

But  ever  when  he  r  a  hand  to  climb,  Gareth  and  L.  52 

went  her  way  across  the  bridge.  And  r  the  town,  Marr.  of  Geraint  384 

Thereafter,  when  I  r  this  ruin'd  hall,  „            785 

r  a  hand,  and  on  his  foot  She  set  her  own  Geraint  and  E.  759 

when  they  r  the  camp  the  King  himself  „          878 

Then  they  r  a  glade,  Balin  and  Balan  460 
when  they  r  the  lists  By  Camelot  in  the  meadow,    Lancelot  and  E.  428 

But  when  ye  r  The  city,  Holy  Grail  707 

O,  when  we  r  The  city,  „          715 

at  the  last  Ira  door,  A  light  was  in  the  crannies,  „          837 
And  when  they  r  Caerleon,  ere  they  past  to  lodging,  Pelleas  and  E.  124 

r  The  grassy  platform  on  some  hill,  Lover's  Tale  i  340 

One  hand  she  r  to  those  that  came  behind,  „           Hi  48 

Bflai^hing    r  thro'  the  night  Her  other.  Sea  Dreams  287 

One  r  forward  drew  My  burthen  from  mine  arms  ;  Princess  iv  191 

Read    {See  also  ReSd)    giving  light  To  r  those  laws  ;  Isabel  19 

And  round  the  prow  they  r  her  name,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  44 


Read  {continued)     That  r  his  spirit  blindly  wise.  Two  Voices  287 

A  love-song  I  had  somewhere  r,  Miller's  D.  65 

Oh  !  teach  the  orphan-boy  to  r,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  69 

I  R,  before  my  eyehds  dropt  their  shade,  D.  of  F.  Women  1 

R,  mouthing  out  his  hollow  oes  and  aes.  The  Epic  50 

it  was  the  tone  with  which  he  r —  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  5 

laugh'd,  as  one  that  r  my  thought.  Gardener's  D.  106 

Who  r  me  rhymes  elaborately  good,  Edwin  Morris  20 

I  r,  and  fled  by  night,  and  flying  tum'd  :  „           134 

They  flapp'd  my  light  out  as  I  r  :  St.  S.  Stylites  175 

But  tell  me,  did  she  r  the  name  Talking  Oak  153 

They  r  Botanic  Treatises,  Amphion  11 

They  r  in  arbours  dipt  and  cut,  „         85 

'  Your  riddle  is  hard  to  r.'  Lady  Clare  76 

I  r  and  felt  that  I  was  there  :  To  E.  L.  8 

And  in  their  eyes  and  faces  r  his  doom  ;  Enoch  Arden  73 

In  those  two  deaths  he  r  God's  warning  '  wait.'  „        571 

and  r  Writhing  a  letter  from  his  child,  Aylmer's  Field  516 

r ;  and  tore.  As  if  the  hving  passion  „            534 

R  rascal  in  the  motions  of  his  back.  Sea  Dreams  167 

I  r  Of  old  Sir  Ralph  a  page  or  two  Princess,  Pro.  120 

We  seven  stay'd  at  Christmas  up  to  r ;  „              178 

And  there  we  took  one  tutor  as  to  »• :  „               179 

an  officer  Rose  up,  and  r  the  statutes,  „             ii  69 

r  My  sickness  down  to  happy  dreams  ?  „              252 

In  this  hand  held  a  volume  as  to  r,  „              455 

'  can  he  not  r — no  books  ?  „         Hi  214 

r  and  earn  our  prize,  A  golden  brooch :  „              300 

Regarding,  while  she  r,  „          iv  382 

on  to  me,  as  who  should  say  '  R,'  and  I  r — two  letters —    „  397 

So  far  I  r  ;  And  then  stood  up  and  spoke  „              417 

I  kiss'd  it  and  Ir.  „           v  373 

the  maidens  came,  they  talk'd.  They  sang,  they  r  :  „           vii  23 

to  herself,  all  in  low  tones,  she  r.  „              175 

once  more,  as  low,  she  r :  „              191 

R  my  little  fable  :   He  that  runs  may  r.  The  Flower  17 

Which  he  may  r  that  binds  the  sheaf.  In  Mem.  xxxvi  13 

as  he  lay  and  r  The  Tuscan  poets  on  the  lawn  :  .,      Ixxxix  23 

I  r  Of  that  glad  year  which  once  had  been,  ,,            xcv  21 

He  r's  the  secret  of  the  star,  „         xcvii  22 

Now  sign  your  names,  which  shall  be  r,  „         Con.  57 

echo  of  something  R  with  a  boy's  delight,  Maud  I  vii  10 

Sat  with  her,  r  to  her,  night  and  day,  „        xix  75 

(If  I  r  her  sweet  will  right)  .,        xxilQ 

Not  a  bell  was  rung,  not  a  prayer  was  r  ;  .,      II  v2i 

Gareth  lookt  and  r — In  letters  Gareth  and  L.  1201 

R  but  one  book,  and  ever  reading  grew           •  Merlin  and  V.  622 

To  dig,  pick,  open,  find  and  r  the  charm  :  „             660 

Thou  r  the  book,  (repeat)  ,.  667,  676 
And  none  can  r  the  text,  not  even  I ;   And  none  can 

r  the  comment  but  myself ;  ,,             681 

Stript  off  the  case,  and  r  the  naked  shield,  Lancelot  and  E.  16 

He  thinking  that  he  r  her  meaning  there,  „               86 

Lifted  her  eyes,  and  r  his  lineaments.  ,.             244 

Some  r  the  King's  face,  some  the  Queen's,  „            727 

Stoopt,  took,  brake  seal,  and  r  it ;  „          1271 

Thus  he  r ;  And  ever  in  the  reading,  „           1283 

looking  often  from  his  face  who  r  To  hers  „           1285 

Mute  of  this  miracle,  so  far  as  I  have  r.  Holy  Grail  66 

ran  a  scroll  Of  letters  in  a  tongue  no  man  could  r.  ,.  171 
which  oftentime  I  r,  Who  r  but  on  my  breviary  with  ease,  „  544 
There  is  a  custom  in  the  Orient,  friends — I  r  of  it  in 


Persia- 
tlais  was  the  letter  I  r — 

And  r  me  a  Bible  verse  of  the  Lord's  good  will 
I  r  no  more  the  prisoner's  mute  wail 
Who  r's  of  begging  saints  in  Scripture  ?  ' 
in  your  raised  brows  I  r  Some  wonder 
Who  r's  your  golden  Eastern  lay. 
We  had  r  their  know-nothing  books 
banquet  relish  ?  let  me  r. 
R  the  wide  world's  annals,  you, 
that  only  those  who  cannot  r  can  rule. 
Because  you  heard  the  lines  I  r 
A  storm-worn  signpost  not  to  be  r, 


Lover's  Tale  iv  231 

First  Quarrel  51 

Rizpah  61 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  4 

151 

Columbus  1 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  32 

Despair  55 

Ancient  Sage  18 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  104 

132 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  17 

Dead  Prophet  17 


f 


Bead 


569 


Bear'd 


Bead  (continued)    Take,  r  !  and  be  the  faults  your  Poet 

makes  To  Mary  Boyle  61 

Who  r's  thy  gradual  process,  Holy  Spring.  Prog,  of  Spring  106 

And  r  a  Grecian  tale  re- told,  To  Master  of  B.  5 

Bead    a  r's  wonn  sannin  a  weeak,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  28 

'E  r's  of  a  sewer  an'  sartan  'oap  Village  Wife  92 

like  fur  to  hev  soom  soort  of  a  sarvice  r.  Owd  Rod  12 

Beader    make  them  wealthier  in  his  r's'  eyes  ;  Poet's  and  their  B.  4 

Beadier     And  r,  if  the  King  would  hear,  Columbus  238 

Beadin'     Fur  atween  'is  r  an'  writin'  Village  Wife  40 

Beading     (See  also  Beadin')     R  her  perfect  features  in 

the  gloom.  Gardener's  D.  175 

The  modem  Muses  r.  AmphionlQ 

Yet  bitterer  from  his  r's :  Aylmers  Field  553 

Read  but  one  book,  and  ever  r  grew  Merlin  and  V.  622 

And  ever  in  the  r,  lords  and  dames  Lancelot  and  E.  1284 

heir  That  scarce  can  wait  the  r  of  the  will  Lover's  Tale  i  676 

Beady    Make  thine  heart  r  with  thine  eyes  :  Gardener's  D.  273 

I  waited  long  ;  My  brows  are  r.  St.  S.  Stylites  206 

The  lists  were  r.     Empanoplied  Princess  v  483 

And  r,  thou,  to  die  with  him.  In  Mem.  cxxi  2 

ever  r  to  slander  and  steal ;  Matid  I  iv  19 

R  in  heart  and  r  in  hand,  „  v  9 

R  to  burst  in  a  colour'd  flame  ;  „  vi  19 

I  for  three  days  seen,  r  to  fall.  Merlin  and  V.  296 

And  while  she  made  her  r  for  her  ride,  Lancelot  and  E.  779 

and  a  barge  Be  r  on  the  river,  „  1123 

R  to  spring,  waiting  a  chance  :  Guinevere  12 

Stands  in  a  wind,  r  to  break  and  fly,  „       365 

There  were  our  horses  r  at  the  doors —  Lover's  Tale  iv  385 

R  !  take  aim  at  their  leaders —  Def.  of  Lucknow  42 

R,  be  r  against  the  storm  !  (repeat)  Riflemen  form  /  6,  20 

^,  be  r  to  meet  the  storm  !  (repeat)  „  13,  27 

Form,  be  /  to  do  or  die  !  „  22 

Beal     Keeps  r  sorrow  far  away.  Margaret  44 

'  Thou  hast  not  gain'd  a  r  height.  Two  Voices  91 

At  half  thy  r  worth  ?  Will  Water.  204 

men  will  say  We  did  not  know  the  r  light.  Princess  iv  357 

They  hated  banter,  wish'd  for  somethi^  r,  „      Con.  18 

some  there  be  that  hold  The  King  a  shadow,  and 

the  city  r : 
Ideal  manhood  closed  in  r  man, 
Thy  frailty  counts  most  r, 

Bealist     Betwixt  the  mockers  and  the  r's  : 
novelist,  r,  rhymester,  play  your  part, 

Beality     Thy  pain  is  a  r.' 

The  semblance  of  those  rare  realities 
Immeasurable  R  !     Infinite  Personality  ! 

Bealm     A  r  of  pleasance,  many  a  mound, 

Behind  Were  r's  of  upland,  prodigal  in  oil 

shall  hold  a  fretful  r  in  awe, 

Were  no  false  passport  to  that  easy  r. 

Guarding  r's  and  kings  from  shame  ; 

She  enters  other  r's  of  love  ; 

From  the  r's  of  light  and  song, 

over  aU  whose  r's  to  their  last  isle. 


and  made  a  r,  and  re^'d.  (repeat) 
Lords  and  Barons  of  his  r  Flash'd  forth 


Gareth  and  L.  266 

To  the  Queen  ii  38 

Ancient  Sage  51 

Princess,  Con.  24 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  139 

Two  Voices  387 

Lover's  Tale  ii  162 

De  Prof.,  Human  C.  3 

Arabian  Nights  101 

Palace  of  Art  79 

Locksley  Hall  129 

Aylmer's  Field  183 

Ode  on  Well.  68 

Iv  Mem.  xl  12 

Maud  II  iv  82 

Bed.  of  Idylls  12 

Com.  of  Arthur  19,  519 

65 


make  myself  in  my  own  r  Victor  and  lord.  „                      89 

lest  the  r  should  go  to  wrack.  „                    208 

So  that  the  r  has  gone  to  wrack :  „                   227 

Shall  Rome  or  Heathen  rule  in  Arthur's  r  ?  „                    485 
swept  the  dust  of  ruin'd  Rome  From  off  the 

threshold  of  the  r,  Gareth  and  L.  136 

'  We  sit  King,  to  help  the  wrong'd  Thro'  all  our  r.  „            372 

wastest  moorland  of  our  r  shall  be  Safe,  „             603 

this  Order  lives  to  crush  All  wrongers  of  the  R.  „            626 

cleanse  this  common  sewer  of  all  his  r,  Marr.  of  Geraint  39 

For  in  that  r  of  lawless  turbulence,  Geraint  and  E.  521 

cleanse  this  common  sewer  of  all  my  r,  „             895 

Should  make  an  onslaught  single  on  a  »•  „             917 

his  r  restored  But  render'd  tributary,  Balin  and  Balan  2 

seeing  that  thy  r  Hath  prosper'd  in  the  name  of  Christ,  „            98 

Roving  the  trackless  r's  of  Lyonnesse,  Lancelot  and  E.  35 

snare  her  royal  fancy  with  a  boon  Worth  half  her  r,  „            72 


Bealm  (continued)  Even  to  the  half  my  r  beyond  the  seas,    Lancelot  and  E.  958 

to  give  at  last  The  price  of  half  a  r,  „        1164 

In  mine  own  r  beyond  the  narrow  seas,  „        1323 

shrine  which  then  in  all  the  r  Was  richest,  „         1330 

wikL  bees  That  made  such  honey  in  his  r.  Holy  Grail  215 

for  ye  know  the  cries  of  all  my  r  „         315 

past  thro'  Pagan  r's,  and  made  them  mine,  ,,         478 

Rode  to  the  lonest  tract  of  all  the  r,  „         661 

wholesome  r  is  purged  of  otherwhere.  Last  Tournament  96 

Or  whence  the  fear  lest  this  my  r,  „            122 

And  marriage  with  a  princess  of  that  r,  „             176 

The  King  prevaihng  made  his  r : —  „             651 

so  the  r  was  made ;  but  then  their  vows —  „             681 

Sir  Modred  had  usurp'd  the  r,  Guinevere  154 

King's  grief  For  his  own  self,  and  his  own  Queen,  and  r,  „      197 

Grieve  with  the  common  grief  of  all  the  r?  '  „       217 

what  has  fall'n  upon  the  r?  '  „       275 
kings  who  drew  The  knighthood-errant  of  this  r  and  all 

The  r's  together  under  me,  „       461 

all  my  r  Reels  back  into  the  beast.  Pass  of  Arthur  25 

And  wastes  the  narrow  r  whereon  we  move,  „             140 

From  sunset  and  simrise  of  all  thy  r.  To  the  Queen  ii  13 

There  in  my  r  and  even  on  my  throne.  Lover's  Tale  i  593 

Like  sounds  without  the  twilight  r  of  dreams,  „             ii  120 
and  all  our  breadth  of  r,                                       Bed.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  8 

mightiest,  wealthiest  r  on  earth,  Columbus  205 

Nay — tho'  that  r  were  in  the  wrong  Epilogue  34 

kings  and  r's  that  pass  to  rise  no  more  ;  To  Virgil  28 

To  those  dark  millions  of  her  r  !  Hands  all  Round  18 

recks  not  to  ruin  a  r  in  her  name.  Vastness  10 

all  her  r  Of  sound  and  smoke.  To  Mary  Boyle  65 

in  the  heart  of  this  most  ancient  r  Prog,  of  Spring  102 

Bealm-ruining     Rivals  of  r-r  party,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  120 

Beap     Sow  the  seed,  and  r  the  harvest  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  121 

To-morrow  yet  would  r  to-day.  Love  thou  thy  land  93 

God  r's  a  harvest  in  me.  St.  S.  Stylites  148 

God  r's  a  harvest  in  thee.  „             149 

r's  not  harvest  of  his  youthful  joys,  Locksley  Hall  139 

r  The  flower  and  quintessence  of  change.  Bay-Bm.,  L' Envoi  23 

perhaps  might  r  the  applause  of  Great,  Princess  Hi  262 

r's  A  truth  from  one  that  loves  and  knows  ?  In  Mem.  xlii  11 

And  r's  the  labour  of  his  hands,  „       Ixiv  26 

Might  sow  and  r  in  peace,  Epilogue  13 

r  with  me,  Earth-mother,  in  the  harvest  Bemeter  and  P.  147 

I  r  No  revenue  from  the  field  of  unbelief.  Akbar's  Bream  66 

Reap'd     the  reapers  r  And  the  sun  fell,  (repeat)  Bora  78,  108 

Beaper    Only  r's,  reaping  early  L.  of  Shalott  i  28 

And  by  the  moon  the  r  weary,  „             33 

one,  the  r's  at  their  sultry  toil.  Palace  of  Art  77 

the  r's  reap'd  And  the  sun  fell,  (repeat)  Bora  78,  108 

Once  more  the  r  in  the  gleam  of  dawn  Bemeter  and  P.  123 

Homestead  and  harvest,  R  and  gleaner,  Merlin  and  the  G.  58 

Beaping     Only  reapers,  r  early  L.  of  Shalott  i  28 

men  tlie  workers,  ever  r  something  new :  Locksley  Hall  117 

Bear  (s)     Far-blazing  from  the  r  of  Philip's  house,  Enoch  Arden  727 

I  came  upon  The  r  of  a  procession.  Lover's  Tale  ii  75 

those  who  led  the  van,  and  tliose  in  r,  „         Hi  24 

Bear  (verb)    she  shall  r  my  dusky  race.  Locksley  Hall  168 

Her  office  there  to  r,  to  teach.  In  Mem.  xl  13 

Then  gave  it  to  his  Queen  to  r  :  Last  Tournament  22 

Thou — when  the  nations  r  on  high  Freedom  27 

Bear'd     heart  to  scathe  Flowers  thou  hadst  r —  Supp.  Confessions  84 

Freedom  r  in  that  augiist  sunrise  The  Poet  37 

Who  took  a  wife,  who  r  his  race.  Two  Voices  328 

ring  To  tempt  the  babe,  who  r  his  creasy  arms,  Enoch  Arden  751 

One  r  a  font  of  stone  And  drew.  Princess,  Pro.  59 

and  your  statues  R,  sung  to,  when,  „           v  414 

Prick'd  by  the  Papal  spur,  we  r.  Third  of  Feb.  27 

r  him  with  her  own  ;   And  no  man  knew.  Com.  of  Arthur  224 
three  pavilions  r  Above  the  bushes,  gilden-peakt :      Pelleas  and  E.  428 

than  when  we  had  r  thee  on  high  Bef.  of  Lucknoio  3 

a  statue,  r  To  some  great  citizen,  Tiresias  82 

And  dying  rose,  and  r  her  arms.  The  Ring  222 

remembering  the  gay  playmate  r  Among  them,  Beath  of  CEnone  59 
sunset  glared  against  a  cross  R  on  the  tumbled  ruins    St.  Telemachxis  6 


Bear'd 


570 


Red 


Rear'd  (continued)     stone  by  stone  Ira  sacred  fane,         Akbar's  Dream  177 

Reason  (s)     (See  also  Bason)     Nor  any  train  of  r  keep  :  Two  Voices  50 

'  The  end  and  the  beginning  vex  His  r  :  „         299 

'  And  men,  whose  r  long  was  blind,  „         370 

He  utter'd  rhyme  and  r,  The  Goose  6 

God  knows  :  he  has  a  mint  of  r's  :  The  Epic  33 

We  lack  not  rhymes  and  r's.  Will  Water.  62 

'  There  is  no  r  why  we  should  not  wed.'  Enoch  Arden  508 

For  save  when  shutting  r's  up  in  rhythm,  Liicretius  223 

prophesying  change  Beyond  all  r  :  Princess  i  143 

■  worthy  r's  why  she  should  Bide  by  this  issue  ;  „        v  325 

With  r's  dra^vn  from  age  and  state,  „            357 
Dark  is  the  world  to  thee  :   thyself  art  the  r  why  ;      High.  Pantheism  7 

See  thou,  that  countest  r  ripe  In  Mem.  xxxiii  13 

Thy  ransom'd  r  change  replies  „                Ixi  2 

art  r  why  I  seem  to  cast  a  careless  eye  On  souls,  „               cxii  6 

The  freezing  r's  colder  part,  „          cxxiv  14 

And  r  in  the  chase  :  Com.  of  Arthur  168 

Albeit  I  give  no  r  but  my  wish,  Marr.  of  Geraint  761 

(No  r  given  her)  she  could  cast  aside  „            807 

Than  all  the  ranged  r's  of  the  world.  Pelleas  and  E.  156 

A  crueller  r  than  a  crazy  ear,  Lover's  Tale  iv  32 

with  goodly  rhyme  and  r  for  it —  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  92 

And  not  without  good  r,  my  good  son —  „              287 
Slender  r  had  He  to  be  glad  of  The  clash             Batt.  of  Brunanburh  76 

This  worn-out  R  dying  in  her  house  Romney's  R.  145 

I  can  but  lift  the  torch  Of  R  Akbar's  Dream  121 

And  let  not  R  fail  me,  Doubt  and  Prayer  5 

Must  my  day  be  dark  by  r,  God  and  the  Univ.  2 

Reason  (verb     Their's  not  to  r  why,  Li^ht  Brigade  14 

I  am  but  a  fool  to  r  with  a  fool —  Last  Tournament  271 

Reave     like  are  we  to  r  him  of  his  crown  Gareth  and  L.  419 
Rebel  (adj.)     if  the  r  subject  seek  to  drag  me  from  the 

throne,  By  an  Evolution.  15 

Rebel  (S)     Fire  from  ten  thousand  at  once  of  the  r's         Def.  of  Lucknow  22 

hang'd,  poor  friends,  as  r's  And  bum'd  alive  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  47 

loosed  My  captives,  feed  the  r's  of  the  crown,  Columbus  131 

Rebell'd     till  the  maid  R  against  it,  Lancelot  and  E.  651 

Rebellion     thirty-nine — Call'd  it  r —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  47 

Rebloom'd     Gather'd  the  blossom  that  r,  Aylmer's  Field  142 

Reboant    the  echoing  dance  Of  r  whirlwinds,  Supp.  Confessions  97 

Rebuke     eighty  winters  freeze  with  one  r  Ode  on  Well.  186 

Rebuked     I  so  r,  reviled,  Missaid  thee  ;  Gareth  and  L.  1164 

Who  being  still  r,  would  answer  still  „           1249 

Recall     Gods  themselves  cannot  r  their  gifts.'  Tithonus  49 

R's,  in  change  of  light  or  gloom,  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  74 

Recall'd     half  a  night's  appliances,  r  Her  fluttering  life  :      Lover's  Tale  iv  93 

but  our  Queen  R  me,  Columbus  59 

Receive     And  then  one  Heaven  r  us  all.  Supp.  Confessions  32 

but  whoso  did  r  of  them.  And  taste,  Lotos- Eaters  30 

Make  broad  thy  shoulders  to  r  my  weight,  AI.  d' Arthur  164 

I  love  the  truth  ;    Rit;  Princess  ii  214 

God  accept  him,  Christ  r  him.  Ode  on  Well.  281 

R,  and  yield  me  sanctuary,  Guinevere  141 

Make  broad  thy  shoulders  to  r  my  weight,  Pass,  of  Arthur  332 

Thou  didst  r  the  growth  of  pines  Lover's  Tale  i  11 

Received     I  stood  like  one  that  had  r  a  blow  :  Sea  Dreams  161 

R  and  gave  him  welcome  there  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  24 

And  many  a  costly  cate,  r  the  three.  Gareth  and  L.  849 

R  at  once  and  laid  aside  the  gems  Lancelot  and  E.  1202 

in  her  white  arms  R,  and  after  loved  it  tenderly,     Last  Tournament  24 

was  r,  Shorn  of  its  strength,  Lover's  Tale  i  433 

Is  presently  r  in  a  sweet  grave  Of  eglantines,  „              528 

R  unto  himself  a  part  of  blame,  „              786 

Reciting    One  walk'd  r  by  herself.  Princess  ii  454 

Reck     And  if  ye  slay  him  I  r  not :  Pelleas  and  E.  269 

r's  not  to  ruin  a  realm  in  her  name.  Fastness  10 

Reckless     A  r  and  irreverent  knight  was  he,  Holy  Grail  856 

Reckling    there  lay  the  r,  one  But  one  hour  old  !  Merlin  and  V.  709 

Reckon     I  r's  I  'annot  sa  mooch  to  larn.  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  13 

summim  I  r's  'ull  'a  to  wroite,  „                57 

gross  heart  Would  r  worth  the  taking  ?  Merlin  and  V.  917 

I  r's  tha'll  light  of  a  livin'  Church-warden,  etc.  47 

Reckoning    '  Thy  r,  friend  ?  '  and  ere  he  learnt  it,  Geraint  and  E.  408 

Reclined    On  silken  cushions  half  r  ;  Elednore  126 


Reclined  (continued)     In  the  hollow  Lotos-land  to  live 

and  he  r  On  the  hills  Lotos-  Eaters,  C.  8.  109 

As  by  the  lattice  you  r,  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  5 

Reclining     Slowly,  with  pain,  r  on  his  arm,  M.  d' Arthur  168 

Slowly,  with  pain,  r  on  his  arm.  Pass,  of  Arthur  336 

Reclothes    Clothes  and  r  the  happy  plains,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  2 

Recognise    scarce  can  r  the  fields  I  know  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  40 

Recollect    We  do  but  r  the  dreams  that  come  Lucretius  35 

Unruffling  waters  r-c  the  shape  Of  one  Last  Tournament  369 

Reconunenced     A  little  ceased,  but  r.  Two  Voices  318 

Poor  fellow,  could  he  help  it  ?  r.  The  Brook  158 

I  r  ;  '  Decide  not  ere  you  pause.  Princess  Hi  156 

r,  and  let  her  tongue  Rage  like  a  fire  Merlin  and  V.  801 

Reconcile     The  Gods  are  hard  to  r  :  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  81 

Reconciled     Nor  did  mine  own,  now  r  ;  Priticess  vii  88 

To  be  friends  for  her  sake,  to  be  r  ;  Maud  I  xix  50 

breathing  a  prayer  To  be  friends,  to  be  r  !  „  56 

but  I — to  be  r  ? — No,  Bandit's  Death  16 

Reconcilement    difference,  r,  pledges  given.  Gardener's  D.  257 

Quick  while  I  melt ;  make  r  sure  Princess  vi  286 

Record     Whereof  this  world  holds  r.  M.  d' Arthur  16 

What  r,  or  what  relic  of  my  lord  „  98 

shaping  faithful  r  of  the  glance  That  graced  Gardener's  D.  177 

Sponged  and  made  blank  of  crimeful  r  St.  S.  Stylites  158 

in  division  of  the  r's  of  the  mind  ?  Locksley  Hall  69 

Were  caught  within  the  r  of  her  wrongs,  Princess  v  143 

Whatever  r  leap  to  light  He  never  shall  be  shamed.      Ode  on  Well.  190 
might  be  left  some  r  of  the  things  M'e  said.  Third  of  Feb.  18 

There  lives  no  r  of  reply.  In  Mem.  xxxi  6 

What  r  ?  not  the  sinless  years  That  breathed  „  Hi  11 

Whereof  this  world  holds  r.  Pass,  of  Arthur  184 

What  r,  or  what  relic  of  my  lord  „  266 

Recorded     each  at  other's  ear  What  shall  not  be  r —        Geraint  and  E.  635 

Recover'd    See  Now-recover'd 

Recovering    And  while  he  lay  r  there,  Enoch  Arden  108 

Recrost     my  feet  r  the  deathf ul  ridge  Holy  Grail  534 

Rector    Long  since,  a  bygone  R  of  the  place,  Aylmer's  Field  11 

Rectory      And  Averill  Averill  at  the  R  Thrice  over  ;   so 

that  R  and  Hall,  Bound  in  an  immemorial  intimacy,  „  37 

Recurring    (See  also  Old-recurring,  Still-recurring)     R  and 

suggesting  still !  Will  14 

And  be  found  of  angel  eyes  In  earth's  r  Paradise.         Helen's  Tower  12 

Red  (adj.)    (See  also  Blood-red,  Rose-red)    The  r 

cheek  paling.  The  strong  limbs  failing  ;  All  Things  will  Die  31 

Some  r  heath-flower  in  the  dew,  Rosalind  41 

And  the  r  cloaks  of  market  girls,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  17 

One  seem'd  all  dark  and  r — a  tract  of  sand,  Palace  of  Art  65 

Before  the  r  cock  crows  from  the  farm  upon 

the  hiU,  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  23 

charmed  sunset  linger'd  low  adown  In  the  r  West :  Lotos-Eaters  20 

The  dim  r  mom  had  died,  her  journey  done,  D.  of  F.  Women  61 

at  the  root  thro'  lush  green  grasses  bum'd  The  r  anemone.     „  72 

We  left  the  dying  ebb  that  faintly  lipp'd  The  flat  r 

granite  ;  Audley  Court  13 

And  grapes  with  bunches  r  as  blood  ;  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  44 

Pale  he  tum'd  and^.  The  Captain  62 

r  roofs  about  a  narrow  wharf  In  cluster ;  Enoch  Arden  3 

When  the  r  rose  was  redder  than  itself.  And  York's 

white  rose  as  r  as  Lancaster's,  Aylmer's  Field  50 

0  there  The  r  fruit  of  an  old  idolatry —  „  762 

Fluctuated,  as  flowers  in  storm,  some  r,  some  pale.  Princess  iv  482 

perforce  He  yielded,  wroth  and  r,  with  fierce  demur  :  „         v  358 

They  mark'd  it  with  the  r  cross  to  the  fall,  „  vi  41 

R  grief  and  mother's  hunger  in  her  eye,  „  146 

Or  r  with  spirted  purple  of  the  vats,  ..       vii  202 

A  r  sail,  or  a  white  ;  and  far  beyond,  „     Con.  47 

The  last  r  leaf  is  whirl'd  away.  In  Mem.  xv  3 

Tho'  Nature,  r  in  tooth  and  claw  With  ravine,  .,         Ivi  15 

The  r  fool-fury  of  the  Seine  Should  pile  her  barricades  „     cxxvii  7 

here  on  the  landward  side,  by  a  r  rock,  glimmers  the 

Hall ;  Maud  I  iv  10 

Has  a  broad-blown  comeliness,  r  and  white,  „         xiii  9 

Till  the  r  man  dance  By  his  r  cedar-tree.  And  the  r 

man's  babe  Leap,  „       xvii  17 

The  r  rose  cries, '  She  is  near,  she  is  near  ; '  „      xxii  63 


Red 


571 


Reef 


Red  (adj.)  (continued)     The  day  comes,  a  dull  r  ball  \^'rapt  in 

drifts  3Iaud  II  iv  65 

But  the  r  life  spilt  for  a  private  blow —  „       '    ■«  93 

r  berries  charm  the  bird,  And  thee,  mine  innocent,  Gareth  and  L.  85 
who  shced  a  r  life-bubbling  way  Thro'  twenty  folds  ,.  509 

Round  as  the  r  eye  of  an  Eagle-owl,  „  799 

Huge  on  a  huge  r  horse,  and  all  in  maU  Bumish'd  to 

bUnding,  „         1026 

Where  bread  and  baken  meats  and  good  r  wine  Of 

Southland,  „        1190 

than  r  and  pale  Across  the  face  of  Enid  hearing  her  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  523 
Which  was  the  r  cock  shouting  to  the  light,  Geraint  and  E.  384 

At  this  he  tum'd  all  r  and  paced  his  hall,  „  668 

longest  lance  his  eyes  had  ever  seen,  Point- 
painted  r  ;  Balin  and  Balan  412 
Reputed  to  be  r  with  sinless  blood,  „  557 
Turn  r  or  pale,  would  often  when  they  met  Sigh 

fully,  ^  Merlin  and  V.  181 

from  spur  to  plume  R  as  the  rising  sun  with  heathen 

blood,  Lancelot  and  E.  308 

■  A  r  sleeve  Broider'd  with  pearls,'  „  372 

And  shot  r  fire  and  shadows  thro'  the  cave,  ..  414 

who  sat  Robed  in  r  samite,  easily  to  be  known,  ,.  433 

What  of  the  knight  with  the  r  sleeve  ?  „  621 

up  a  slope  of  garden,  all  Of  roses  white  and  r,  Pelleas  and  E.  422 

in  one,  R  after  revel,  droned  her  lurdane  knights  „  430 

R  Knight  Brake  in  upon  me  and  drave  them  to 

his  tower  ;  Last  Tournament  71 

See,  the  hand  Wherewith  thou  takest  this,  is  r  ! '  „  193 

till  his  Queen  Graspt  it  so  hard,  that  all  her  hand  M'as  r.       „  411 

Then  cried  the  Breton,  '  Look,  her  hand  is  r  !  „  412 

the  R  Knight  heard,  and  all,  „  441 

r  dream  Fled  with  a  shout,  and  that  low  lodge  return'd,  487 

tide  within  R  with  free  chase  and  heather-scented  air,  „  691 

'  but  the  r  fruit  Grown  on  a  magic  oak-tree  in  mid-heaven,       ,.  744 

R  ruin,  and  the  breaking  up  of  laws,  Guinevere  426 

blight  Lives  in  the  de^vy  touch  of  pity  had  made  The 

r  rose  there  a  pale  one —  Lover's  Tale  i  696 

One  morning  when  the  upblown  billow  ran  Shoreward 

beneath  r  clouds,  „  ii  179 

Married  among  the  r  berries,  an'  all  as  merry  as 

May —  First  Quarrel  40 

Harsh  r  hair,  big  voice,  big  chest,  big  merciless 

hands  !  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  4 

for  he  look'd  so  coarse  and  so  r,  „  7 

R  in  thy  birth,  redder  with  household  war.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  53 

Redder  to  be,  r  rose  of  Lancaster —  „  55 

And  the  r  passion-flower  to  the  cliffs,  V.  of  Maeldune  39 

And  r  with  blood  the  Crescent  reels  from  fight  Montenegro  6 

strike  Thy  youthful  pulses  into  rest  and  quench  The  r 

God's  anger,  Tiresias  158 

wi'  a  niced  r  faace,  an'  es  clean  Es  a  shillin'  Spinster's  S's.  75 

The  r  '  Blood-eagle  '  of  Uver  and  heart ;  Dead  Prophet  71 

Fell — and  flash'd  into  the  R  Sea,  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  44 

lighted  from  below  By  the  r  race  of  fiery  Phlegethon ;  Demeter  and  P.  28 
Then  I  seed  at  'is  faace  wur  as  r  as  the  Yule-block  Oicd  Rod  56 

A  r  mark  ran  All  round  one  finger  pointed  straight.  The  Ring  452 

I  well  remember  that  r  night  When  thirty  ricks. 

All  flaming,  "  To  Mary  Boyle  35 

but  close  to  me  to-day  As  this  r  rose,  Roses  on  the  T.  7 

his  kisses  were  r  with  his  crime,  Bandit's  Death  13 

and  a  ray  r  as  blood  Glanced  on  the  strangled  face —  „  31 

An'  'e  tom'd  as  r  as  a  stag-tuckey's  wattles.  Church-warden,  etc.  31 

flush'd  as  r  As  poppies  when  she  crown'd  it.  The  Tourney  16 

Bed  (s)     {See  also  Bose-red)     As  I  have  seen  the  rosy  r 

flushing  in  the  northern  night.  Locksley  Hall  26 

No  pint  of  white  or  r  Had  ever  half  the  power  to  turn  Will  Water.  82 
Blues  and  r's  They  talk'd  of  :  Aylmer's  Field  251 

praised  the  waning  r,  and  told  The  vintage —  „  406 

And  bickers  into  r  and  emerald.  Princess  v  263 

Who  tremblest  thro'  thy  darkhng  r  In  Mem.  xcix  5 

And  blossom  in  purple  and  r.  Maud  I  xxii  74 

Breaks  from  a  coppice  gemm'd  with  green  and  r,  Marr.  of  Geraint  339 
'  Come  to  us,  O  come,  come '  in  the  stormy  r  of  a  sky  V.  of  Maeldune  98 
Molly  Magee,  wid  the  r  o'  the  rose  an'  the  white  o'  the  May,     Tomorrow  31 


Red  (s)  (continued)     R  of  the  Dawn  !  (repeat)  The  Dawn  1,  6,  21 

Is  it  turning  a  fainter  r  ?  The  Dawn  22 

Redan     Out  yonder.     Guard  the  R  !  Def.  of  Lucknow  36 

Redcap     The  r  whistled  ;  and  the  nightingale  Gardener's  D.  95 

Redcoat     our  own  good  r's  sank  from  sight.  Heavy  Brigade  42 

Red-cross    A  r-c  knight  for  ever  kneel'd  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  6 

Redden    cheek  begins  to  r  thro'  the  gloom,  Tithonus  37 

Sad  as  the  last  which  r's  over  one  Princess  iv  46 

and  his  anger  r's  in  the  heavens ;  „          386 

He  r's  what  he  kisses  :  „       v  165 

These  leaves  that  r  to  the  fall ;  In  Mem.  xi  14 

he  r's,  cannot  speak.  So  bashful,  he  !  Balin  and  Balan  519 

Redden'd     r  with  no  bandit's  blood  :  Aylmer's  Field  597 

And  this  was  what  had  r  her  cheek  Maud  I  xix  65 

R  at  once  with  sinful,  Balin  and  Balan  558 

Miriam  r,  Muriel  clench'd  The  hand  that  wore  it.  The  Ring  261 

The  ring  of  faces  r  by  the  flames  Death  of  CEnone  92 

r  by  that  cloud  of  shame  when  I  .  .  .  Akbar's  Dream  64 

Reddening    Sir  Aybner  r  from  the  storm  within,  Aylmer's  Field  322 

And  r  in  the  furrows  of  his  chin,  Princess  vi  228 

heathen  horde,  R  the  sun  with  smoke  and  earth         Co7n.  of  Arthur  37 

She  r,  '  Insolent  scuUion  :  I  of  thee  ?  Gareth  and  L.  976 

He,  r  in  extremity  of  delight,  Geraint  and  E.  219 

And  where  it  dash'd  the  r  meadow,  Lucretius  49 

Bantering  bridesman,  r  priest.  Forlorn  33 

Redder     When  the  red  rose  was  r  than  itself,  Aylmer's  Field  50 

The  whole  hill-side  was  r  than  a  fox.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  3 

Fair-hair'd  and  r  than  a  windy  mom  ;  Princess,  Con.  91 

Shame  never  made  girl  r  than  Gareth  joy.  Gareth  and  L.  536 

R  than  any  rose,  a  joy  to  me.  Holy  Grail  521 

r  with  household  war.  Now  reddest  with  the  blood 

of  holy  men,  R  to  be,  red  rose  of  Lancaster —        Sir  J.  Oldcastle  53 

r  than  rosiest  health  or  than  utterest  shame,  V.  of  Maeldune  65 

Reddest     Now  r  with  the  blood  of  holy  men,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  54 

Redeem     that  From  which  I  would  r  you  :  Princess  iv  508 

Redeem'd     R  it  from  the  charge  of  nothingness —  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  7 

Red-faced     But  r-f  war  has  rods  of  steel  and  fire ;  Princess  v  118 

A  r-f  bride  who  knew  herself  so  vile,  Gareth  and  L.  110 

Red-hot     This  r-h  iron  to  be  shaped  with  blows.  Princess  v  209 

Screams  of  a  babe  in  the  r-h  palms  of  a  Moloch  of 

Tyre,  The  Dawn  2 

Redolent     brow  of  pearl  Tressed  with  r  ebony,  Arabian  Nights  138 

Redound     not  without  r  Of  use  and  glory  to  yourselves  Princess  ii  42 

Red-plow'd     domes  the  r-p  hills  With  loving  blue  ;  Early  Spring  3 

Red-pulsing     R-p  up  thro'  Ahoth  and  Alcor,  Last  Tournament  480 

Red-rent     arm  R-r  with  hooks  of  bramble,  Holy  Grail  211 

Redress     ^^'hat  hope  of  answer,  or  r  ?  In  Mem.  Ivi  27 

Ring  in  r  to  all  mankind.  „         cvi  12 

Redress'd    prowess  done  r  a  random  wrong.  Guinevere  459 

Redressing     Whose  glory  was,  r  human  wrong ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  9 

Than  ride  abroad  r  women's  ^vrong,  Gareth  and  L.  866 

They  ride  abroad  r  human  wrongs !  Merlin  and  V.  693 

To  ride  abroad  r  human  wrongs,  Guinevere  471 

Red-ribb'd    r-r  ledges  drip  with  a  silent  horror  of  blood,  Maud  I  i3 

From  the  r-r  hollow  behind  the  wood,  „  //  i  25 

Red  Sea     and  flash'd  into  the  R  S,  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  44 

Redundant    floods  with  r  life  Her  narrow  portals.  Lover's  Tale  i  84 

Reed     Like  Indian  r's  blown  from  his  silver  tongue,  The  Poet  13 

the  wavy  swell  of  the  soughing  r's.  Dying  Swan  38 

That  sets  at  twiUght  in  a  land  of  r's.  Caress'd  or  chidden  14 

'  I  heard  the  ripple  washing  in  the  r's,  M.  d' Arthur  70 

And  the  long  ripple  washing  in  the  r's.'  „           I17 

What  r  was  that  on  which  I  leant  ?  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  45 

Or  low  morass  and  whispering  r,  „                   c  6 

ranks  Of  iris,  and  the  golden  r ;  „             ciii  24 

And  mid-thigh-deep  in  bulrushes  and  r,  Gareth  and  L.  810 

strange  knee  rustle  thro'  her  secret  r's,  Balin  and  Balan  354 

and  watch'd  The  high  r  wave,  Lancelot  and  E.  1390 

Rode  far,  till  o'er  the  illimitable  r.  Last  Tournament  421 

'  I  heard  the  ripple  washing  in  the  r's.  Pass,  of  Arthur  238 

And  the  long  ripple  washing  in  the  r's.'  „              285 

A  flat  malarian  world  of  r  and  rush !  Lover's  Tale  iv  142 

Reed-tops     And  took  the  r-t  as  it  went.  Dying  Swan  10 

Reedy    Came  up  from  r  SimoLs  all  alone.  Qinone  52 

Reef     league-long  roller  thundering  on  the  r,  Enoch  Arden  584 


Reef 


572 


Rejoice 


Reef  (continued)     Down  in  the  water,  a  long  r  of  gold,  Sea  Dreams  127 

Wreck'd  on  a  »•  of  visionary  gold.'  „  139 

In  roarings  round  the  coral  r.  In  Mem.  xxxvi  16 

Reek'd     For  he  r  with  the  blood  of  Piero ;  Bandit's  Death  13 

Reel     The  horse  and  rider  r :  They  r,  they  roll  in  clanging 


lists, 

We  felt  the  good  ship  shake  and  r, 

Earth  R's,  and  the  herdsmen  cry  ; 

R's,  as  the  golden  Autumn  woodland  r's 

When  all  my  spirit  r's  At  the  shouts, 

the  spear  spring,  and  good  horse  r, 

R  back  into  the  beast,  and  be  no  more  ?  ' 

all  my  realm  R's  back  into  the  beast, 

made  the  ground  R  under  us,  and  all  at  once, 

My  brain  had  begun  to  r — 

Backward  they  r  like  the  wave, 

red  with  blood  the  Crescent  r's  from  fight 

song-built  towers  and  gates  R, 

r's  not  in  the  storm  of  warring  words, 
ReeI'd     but  in  the  middle  aisle  R, 

part  r  but  kept  their  seats  : 

M  from  the  sabre-stroke  Shatter'd  and  sunder'd 

and  r  Almost  to  falling  from  his  horse  ; 

and  the  morning  star  R  in  the  smoke. 

And  pale  he  turn'd,  and  r, 

backward  r  the  Trojans  and  allies ; 

foeman  surged,  and  waver'd,  and  r 
Reeling    Garlon,  r  slowly  backward,  fell. 

Arise  and  fly  The  r  Faun, 

crooked,  r,  fivid,  thro'  the  mist  Rose, 
Re-father'd    stoop'd,  r-f  o'er  my  wounds. 
Refectory    Told  us  of  this  in  our  r, 
Reflect    For  love  r's  the  thing  beloved ; 

And  each  r's  a  kindlier  day  ; 

makes  Her  heart  a  mirror  that  r's  but  you.' 
Reflected    R,  sends  a  light  on  the  forgiven. 
Reflecting    Opposed  mirrors  each  r  each — 
Reflex    The  mellow'd  r  of  a  winter  moon ; 

The  r  of  a  beauteous  form. 

The  r  of  a  legend  past, 

swims  The  r  of  a  human  face. 

depth  of  an  unfathom'd  woe  R  of  action. 
Refluent     a  phantom  colony  smoulder'd  on  the  r  estuary  ; 
Reform    R,  White  Rose,  Bellerophon, 

Let  your  r's  for  a  moment  go  ! 
Refraction    And  such  r  of  events 
Refrain    we  r  From  talk  of  battles  loud  and  vain, 
Refrain'd    r  From  ev'n  a  word, 
Refresh'd    leave  thee  freer,  till  thou  wake  r 
Reft    r  From  my  dead  lord  a  field  with  violence  : 


Sir  Galahad  8 

The  Voyage  15 

Princess  v  529 

„      vii  357 

Maud  II  iv  20 

Gareih  and  L.  523 

Last  Tournament  125 

Pass,  of  Arthur  26 

Lover's  Tale  ii  194 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  60 

Def.  of  Lucknow  43 


Tiresias  99 

Ancient  Sage  70 

Aylmer's  Field  819 

Princess  v  496 

Light  Brigade  35 

Pelleas  and  E.  23 

519 

Guinevere  304 

Achilles  over  the  T.  31 

Heavy  Brigade  62 

Balin  and  Balan  397 

In  Mem.  cxviii  26 

Death  of  (Enone  27 

Princess  vi  129 

Holy  Grail  41 

In  Mem.  Hi  2 

cl8 

The  Ring  366 

Romneij's  R.  161 

Sonnet  To 11 

Isabel  29 

Miller's  D.  77 

Day-Dm.,  Pro.  11 

In  Mem.  cviii  12 

Lover's  Tale  i  747 

Boadicea  28 

The  Brook  161 

Riflemen  form  !  15 

In  Mem.  xcii  15 

Ode  on  Well.  246 

Marr.  of  Geraint  213 

Love  and  Duty  97 

Gareih  and  L.  334 


he  r  us  of  it  Perforce,  and  left  us  neither  gold  nor  field. 


338 


heathen  caught  and  r  him  of  his  tongue. 

that  was  r  of  his  Folk  and  his  friends 
Refulgent    Where  some  r  sunset  of  India 
Refuse  (s)     and  r  patch'd  mth  moss. 
Refuse  (verb)     nor  did  mine  own  R  her  proffer, 
Refused     Nor  yet  r  the  rose,  but  granted  it, 

R  her  to  him,  then  his  pride  awoke ; 

I  r  the  hand  he  gave. 
Refusing    and  thou  r  this,  Unvenerable 
Regal    and  a  hope  The  child  of  r  compact, 

Of  freedom  m  her  r  seat  Of  England ; 

Push'd  from  his  chair  of  r  heritage. 
Regale    Call  your  poor  to  r  with  you. 
Regally    Make  it  r  gorgeous. 
Regard    R  the  weakness  of  thy  peers : 

R  gradation,  lest  the  soul  Of  Discord 

O  blatant  Magazines,  r  me  rather — 
Regarded     Bedivere  Remorsefully  r  thro'  his  tears, 

daughters  in  (he  pool ;  for  none  R ; 

And  many  past,  but  none  r  her, 

woman's  love.  Save  one,  he  not  r, 

Bedivere  Remorsefully  r  thro'  his  tears, 
Regarding     Droops  both  his  wings,  r  thee, 

any  one,  R,  well  had  deem'd  he  felt  the  tale 


Lancelot  and  E.  273 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  69 

Milton  13 

Vision  of  Sin  212 

Princess  vi  347 

Gardener's  D.  160 

Marr.  of  Geraint  448 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  256 

Tiresias  131 

Princess  iv  421 

In  Mem.  cix  14 

Lover's  Tale  i  118 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  30 

45 

Love  thou  thy  land  24 

67 

Hendeca.iyllabics  17 

M.  d' Arthur  171 

Princess  v  330 

Geraint  and  E.  520 

Lancelot  and  E.  842 

Pass,  of  Arthur  339 

Eleanor  e  119 

Enoch  Arden  711 


Regarding  (continued)    silent  we  with  blind  surmise  R,  Princess  iv  382 

Regather    co-mates  r  round  the  mast ;  Pref.  Sm.  19th  Cerit.  5 

Reggio    Of  rain  at  R,  rain  at  Parma ;  The  Daisy  51 

Region    How  long  this  icy-hearted  Muscovite  Oppress  the  r  ?  '      Poland  11 

Within  this  r  I  subsist,  You  ask  me,  tvhy,  etc.  2 

girt  the  r  with  high  cliff  and  lawn :  Vision  of  Sin  47 

That  range  above  the  r  of  the  wind,  Princess,  Con.  112 

No  wing  of  wind  the  r  swept.  In  Mem.  Ixxviii  6 

To  the  r's  of  thy  rest '  ?  Maud  II  iv  88 

Gawain  the  while  thro'  all  the  r  round  Lancelot  and  E.  615 

fail'd  to  find  him,  tho'  I  rode  all  round  The  r :  „              710 

saw  Beneath  her  feet  the  r  far  away.  Lover's  Tale  i  395 

Register'd    Are  r  and  calendar'd  for  saints.  St.  S.  Stylites  132 

Regret  (s)     Love  is  made  a  vague  r.  Miller's  D.  210 

Deep  as  first  love,  and  wild  with  all  r ;  Princess  iv  57 

debt  Of  boundless  love  and  reverence  and  r  Ode  on  Well.  157 

So  seems  it  in  my  deep  r.  In  Mem.  viii  17 

And  chains  r  to  his  decease,  ,,         xxix  3 

hopes  and  light  r's  that  come  Make  April  .,             xl  7 

0  last  r,  r  can  die !  .,  Ixxviii  17 
To  one  pure  image  of  r.  „  cii  24 
and  my  r  Becomes  an  April  violet,  „  cxv  18 
Is  it,  then,  r  for  buried  tmie  That  keenlier  ,,  cxvi  1 
Not  all  r :  the  face  will  shine  Upon  me,  .,  9 
embalm  In  dying  songs  a  dead  r,  „  Con.  14 
R  is  dead,  but  love  is  more  „  17 
no  r's  for  aught  that  has  been,  Vastness  23 

Regret  (verb)     and  r  Her  parting  step,  Lancelot  and  E.  866 

Regular     Faultily  faultless,  icily  r,  _                    Maud  I  ii  6 
Them  as  'as  coats  to  their  backs  an'  taiikes  their 

}  meaLs.  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  46 

Rehearse     '  This  truth  within  thy  mind  r,  Two  Voices  25 
Reign  (verb)     lips  whereon  perpetually  did  r  The  summer  calm         Isabel  7 

1  shall  r  for  ever  over  all.'  Love  and  Death  15 
'  R  thou  apart,  a  quiet  king.  Palace  of  Art  14 
you  shall  r  The  head  and  heart  of  all  our  fair  she- 
world,  Princess  Hi  162 

Then  r  the  world's  great  bridals,  „        vii  294 

the  wise  who  think,  the  wise  who  r.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  32 

0  Soul,  the  Vision  of  Him  who  r's  ?  High.  Pantheism  2 

What  happiness  to  r  a  lonely  king.  Com.,  of  Arthur  82 

same  child,'  he  said,  '  Is  he  who  r's ;  „             393 

'  R  ye,  and  live  and  love,  „  472 
'  Let  the  King  r.'  (repeat)                    Com.  of  Arthur  484,  487,  490,  493, 

496,  499,  502 

the  worst  were  that  man  he  that  r's  !  Guinevere  523 

where  I  hoped  myself  to  r  as  king.  Lover's  Tale  i  591 

^V'llen  only  Day  should  r.'  Ancient  Sage  244 

Reign  (s)     morning  of  my  r  Was  redden'd  by  that  cloud   Akbars  Dream  63 

The  R  of  the  Meek  upon  earth.  The  Dreamer  25 

Reign'd     A  kindlier  influence  r  ;  Princess  vii  20 

and  made  a  realm,  and  r.  (repeat)  Com.  of  Arthttr  19,  519 

King,  that  hast  r  six  hundred  years,  To  Dante  1 

when  Athens  r  and  Rome,  Freedom  9 

Reigning    hmi,  that  other,  r  in  his  place,  Enoch  Arden  763 

And  r  with  one  will  in  everything  Com.  of  Arthur  92 

Rein    (See  also  Bridle-rein)    sway'd  The  r  with  dainty 

finger-tips.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  41 

with  slack  r  and  careless  of  himself,  Balin  and  Balan  309 

he  twitch'd  the  r's,  And  made  his  beast  Pelleas  and  E.  550 

Will  firmly  hold  the  r,  Politics  6 

Rein'd     Edyrn  r  his  charger  at  her  side,  Geraint  and  E.  820 

Re-inspired     With  youthful  fancy  r-i,  Ode  to  Memory  114 

Reissuing     whence  r,  robed  and  crown'd,  Godiva  77 

Rejected     He  should  not  be  r.  Aylmer's  Field  422 

return'd  Leolin's  r  rivals  from  their  suit  So  often,  „           493 

Rejection     with  hands  of  wild  r  '  Go  !  ' —  Edwin  Morris  124 

Rejoice     As  when  a  mighty  people  r  Dying  Sican  31 

Than  him  that  said  '  i?  !  r  !  '  Two  Voices  462 

There  in  her  place  she  did  r,  Of  old  sat  Freedom  5 

But  Thou  r  with  liberal  joy,  England  and  Amer.  11 

Thus  lier  heart  r's  greatly,  L.  of  Burleigh  41 

A  jjeople's  voice,  when  they  r  At  civic  revel  Ode  on  Well.  146 

Roll  and  r,  jubilant  voice,  W.  to  Alexandra  22 

O  Soul,  and  let  us  r,  High.  Pantheism  13 


Rejoice 


573 


Remember 


Rejoice  (contiiiued)     I  have  thee  still,  and  I  r  ; 
With  a  joy  in  which  I  cannot  r, 
R,  small  man,  in  this  small  world  of  mine, 
young  green  leaf  r  in  the  frost 
In  your  welfare  we  r, 
Let  the  maim'd  in  his  heart  r 

Rejoiced    Thereat  Leodogran  r, 

She  spake  and  King  Leodogran  r. 
Long  in  their  common  love  r  Geraint. 
Then  suddenly  she  knew  it  and  r, 
while  the  women  thus  r,  Geraint  Woke 


In  Mem.  cxxx  14 

Maud  Iv2l 

Holy  Grail  559 

The  Wreck  20 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  2 

On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  36 

Com.  of  Arthur  310 

425 

Man:  of  Geraint  23 

687 

754 


771 

Enoch  Arden  127 

Com.  of  Arthur  459 

Holy  Grail  327 

687 

Guinevere  486 

„       680 

Tiresias  160 

Demeter  and  P.  127 

The  Ring  320 

Merlin  and  the  G.  112 

By  an  Evolution.  7 

Akbar's  Dream,  182 

Two  Voices  Z^Q 

In  Mem.  Ixxviii  19 
Gareth  and  L.  287 


Never  man  r  More  than  Geraint  to  greet  her 
Rejoicing     R  at  that  answer  to  his  prayer. 
Stood  round  him,  and  r  in  his  joy. 
R  in  that  Order  which  he  made.' 
R  in  ourselves  and  in  our  King — 
one  to  feel  ^ly  purpose  and  r  in  my  joy.' 
not  grieving  at  your  joys.  But  not  r ; 
thou  R  that  the  sun,  the  moon, 
R  in  the  harvest  and  the  grange. 
And  send  her  home  to  you  r. 
And  can  no  longer,  But  die  r, 
I,  the  finer  brute  r  in  my  hounds. 
But  \\hile  we  stood  r,  I  and  thou. 
Relate     As  old  mythologies  r. 
Relation    That  bears  r  to  the  mind. 
Her  deep  r's  are  the  same, 
'  Confusion,  and  illusion,  and  r. 
Relaxed     memory  of  that  token  on  the  sliield  R  his 

hold  :  Balin  and  Balan  370 

and  their  law  R  its  hold  upon  us,  Guinevere  457 

Release  (S)     can't  be  long  before  I  find  r  ;  May  Queen,  Con.  11 

Release  (verb)     R  me,  and  restore  me  to  the  ground  ;  Tithonus  72 

A  nd  let  who  will  r  him  from  his  bonds.  Pelleas  and  E.  294 

Released     I  arose,  and  I  r  The  casement.  Two  Voices  403 

Relent     learning  this,  the  bridegroom  will  r.  Guinevere  172 

Reliance     Those,  in  whom  he  had  r  The  Captain  57 

Relic     ^^'hat  record,  or  what  r  of  my  lord  M.  d' Arthur  98 

I  \\\\\  leave  my  r's  in  your  land,  St.  S.  Stylites  194 

Sucli  precious  r's  brought  by  thee  ;  In  Mem.  xvii  18 

Some  lost,  some  stolen,  some  as  r's  kept.  Merlin  and  V.  453 

What  record,  or  what  r  of  my  lord  Pass,  of  Arthur  266 

Gray  r's  of  the  nurseries  of  the  world,  Lover's  Tale  i  290 

Blood-redden'd  r  of  Javelins  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  95 

guardian  of  her  r's,  of  her  ring.  The  Ring  441 

sacred  r's  tost  about  the  floor —  „         447 

Relief     on  thy  bosom,  (deep-desired  r  !)  Love  and  Duty  42 

That  sets  the  past  in  this  r  ?  In  Mem.  xxiv  12 

In  verse  that  brings  myself  r,  „            Ixxv  2 

Demanding,  so  to  bring  r  „          Ixxxv  6 

faltering  hopes  of  r,  Havelock  baffled,  Def.  of  LucJcnow  90 

glimmer  of  r  In  change  of  place.  To  Mary  Boyle  47 

Rel^on     Each  r  says,  '  Thou  art  one,  without 

equal.'  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  3 

and  *•  to  the  orthodox,  „                   8 

Relish     Had  r  fiery-new,  Will  Water.  98 

Re-listen    seems,  as  I  r-l  to  it.  Prattling  The  Brook  18 

Relive     Can  I  but  r  in  sadness  ?  Locksley  Hall  107 

Reluctant     bent  or  broke  The  lithe  r  boughs  Enoch  Arden  381 

Remade     R  the  blood  and  changed  the  frame.  In  Mem.,  Con.  11 

Remain    there  Uke  a  sun  r  Fix'd —  Elednore  92 

Those  lonely  lights  that  still  r.  Two  Voices  83 

Let  what  is  broken  so  r.  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  80 

And  what  r's  to  tell.  Talking  Oak  204 

and  of  one  to  me  Little  r's  :  Ulysses  26 

R's  the  lean  P.  W.  on  his  tomb  :  The  Brook  192 

we  must  r  Sacred  to  one  another.'  Aylmer's  Field  425 

I  r  on  whom  to  wreak  your  rage.  Princess  iv  350 

But  then  this  question  of  your  troth  r's  :  „          v  279 

r  Orb'd  in  your  isolation  :  „        vi  168 

As  long  as  we  r,  we  must  speak  free,  Third  of  Feb.  13 

One  writes,  that '  Other  friends  r,'  In  Mem.  vi  1 

And  what  to  me  r's  of  good  ?  „              42 

And  what  are  they  when  these  r  „     Ixxvi  15 

My  shame  is  greater  who  r,  „        cix  23 


Remain  (continued)     her  name  will  yet  r  Untarnish'd 

as  before  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  500 

now  r's  But  Uttle  cause  for  laughter  :  Lancelot  and  E.  596 

and  r  Lord  of  the  tourney.  Pelleas  and  E.  162 
others  who  r.  And  of  the  two  first-famed  for  courtesy — •     Guinevere  322 

I  shared  with  her  in  whom  myself  r's.  Lover's  Tale  i  248 

But  still  the  clouds  r  ;  '  Ancient  Sage  241 

except  The  man  himseM  r ;  '         Epilogue  70 

The  man  r's,  and  whatsoe'er  He  wrought  „       75 

every  Faith  and  Creed,  r's  The  Mystery.  To  Mary  Boyle  52 

But,  while  the  hills  r,  Politics  10 
Remain'd    r  among  us  In  our  young  nursery  still 

unknown,  Princess  iv  331 

I  r,  whose  hopes  were  dim.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  29 

the  two  r  Apart  by  all  the  chamber's  width,  Geraint  and  E.  264 

Balan  warn'd,  and  went ;  Bahn  r  :  Balin  and  Balan  153 

Pierced  thro'  his  side,  and  there  snapt,  and  r.  Lancelot  and  E.  490 

there  that  day  r,  and  toward  even  „             977 

there  I  woke,  but  still  the  wish  r.  „          1048 

'  Then  there  r  but  Lancelot,  Holy  Grail  760 

Lancelot  ever  promised,  but  r,  Guinevere  93 

Remaineth    The  rest  r  unreveal'd  ;  In  Mem.  xxxi  14 

Remaining     You  love,  r  peacefully,  Margaret  22 

R  betwixt  dark  and  bright :  „         28 

Than  cry  for  strength,  r  weak,  Two  Voices  95 

R  utterly  confused  with  fears.  Palace  of  Art  269 

The  two  r  found  a  fallen  stem  ;  Enoch  Arden  567 

The  last  r  pillar  of  their  hoase,  Aylmer's  Field  295 

r  there  Fixt  Uke  a  beacon-tower  Priyicess  iv  492 

And  thou  r  here  wilt  learn  the  event ;  Guinevere  577 

eyes  R  fixt  on  mine,  Tiresias  47 

None  but  the  terrible  Peele  r  Kapiolani  28 

Remains     With  my  lost  Arthur's  loved  ■>-,  In  Mem.  ix  3 

Re-make    gathering  at  the  base  R's  itself,  Guinevere  610 

Remand    r  it  thou  For  calmer  hours  Love  and  Duty  89 

Remark     her  least  r  was  worth  The  experience  Edwin  Morris  65 

Remark'd     r  The  lusty  mowers  labouring  Geraint  and  E.  250 

Remble  (remove)     a  niver  r's  the  stoans.  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  60 

Rembled  (removed)     an'  raaved  an'  r  'um  out.  „              32 

Remedy     There  is  one  r  for  all.  (repeat)  Two  Voices  165,  201 

Remember     {See  also  Remimber)     As  one  before,  r  much,        „  356 

For  you  r,  you  had  set.  Miller's  D.  81 

How  sadly,  I  r,  rose  the  morning  of  the  year  !  May  Queen,  Con.  3 

The  times  when  I  r  to  have  been  Joyiul  B.  of  F.  Women  79 

Oh  yet  but  I  r,  ten  years  back —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  50 

I  r  one  that  perish'd  :  Locksley  Hall  71 

Such  a  one  do  I  r,                                                  _  „               72 

I  r,  when  I  think.  That  my  youth  was  half  divine.  Vision  of  Sin  77 

how  should  the  child  R  this  ?  '  Enoch  Arden  234 

We  r  love  ourselves  In  our  sweet  youth  :  Princess  i  122 

'  We  r  love  ourseU  In  our  sweet  youth  ;  „       v  207 

R  him  who  led  your  hosts  ;  Ode  on  Well.  171 

yet  r  all  He  spoke  among  you,  „           177 

Ira  quarrel  I  had  with  your  father,  Grandmother  21 

R  what  a  plague  of  rain  ;  The  Daisy  50 

R  how  we  came  at  last  To  Como ;  „             69 

'  Does  my  old  friend  r  me  ?  '  In  Mem.  Ixiv  28 

That  yet  r's  his  embrace,  „    Ixxxv  111 

I  r  the  time,  for  the  roots  of  my  hair  Maud  I  i  13 

She  r's  it  now  we  meet.  „        vi  88 

I  r,  I,  When  he  lay  dying  there,  „    //  ii  66 

but  r's  all,  and  growls  Remembering,  Gareth  and  L.  704 

'  R  that  great  insult  done  the  Queen,'  Marr.  of  Geraint  571 

Dost  thou  r  at  Caerleon  once —  Balin  and  Balan  503 

'  And  I  r  now  That  pelican  on  the  casque  :  Holy  Grail  699 

neither  Love,  Warm  in  the  heart,  his  cradle,  can  r 


Love  in  the  womb. 
Once  or  twice  she  told  me  (For  I  r  all  things) 
She  r's  you.     Farewell. 
Nay  you  r  our  Emmie  ; 
I  bad  them  r  my  father's  death, 
I  r  I  thought,  as  we  past, 
I  r  how  you  kiss'd  the  miniature 
r  how  the  course  of  Time  will  swerve, 
In  this  Hostel — I  r — 


Lover's  Tale  i  158 

346 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  190 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  33 

V.  of  Maeldune  70 

Despair  11 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  12 

235 

255 


Remember 


574 


Replied 


Remember  (continued)    They  still  r  what  it  cost  them  here,      The  Ring  201 

I  r  once  that  being  waked  By  noises  in  the  house —  „      416 

I  brought  you,  you  r,  these  roses,  Happy  73 

I  well  r  that  red  night  When  thirty  ricks,  To  Mary  Boyle  35 

I  r  it,  a  proof  That  I —  Romney's  R.  92 

Bememberable     Bear  witness,  that  r  day.  To  the  Queen  ii  3 

Remember'd  (adj.)     '  Dear  as  r  kisses  after  death,  Princess  iv  54 

Remember'd  (verb)    I  r  Everard's  college  fame  The  Epic  46 

and  r  one  dark  hour  Here  in  this  wood,  Enoch  Arden  385 

She  r  that :  A  pleasant  game.  Princess,  Pro.  193 

I  r  one  myself  had  made,  „               iv  88 

Then  I  r  that  burnt  sorcerer's  curse  „              v  475 

Then  he  r  her,  and  how  she  wept ;  Geraint  and,  E.  612 

I — even  I — at  times  r  you.  Romney's  R.  93 

Then  I  r  Arthur's  warning  word.  Holy  Grail  598 

Rememberest    for  thou  r  how  In  those  old  days,  M.  d' Arthur  28 

thou  r  well — one  summer  dawn —  Balin  and  Balan  505 

for  thou  r  how  In  those  old  days,  Pass,  of  Arthur  196 

thou  r  what  a  fury  shook  Those  pillars  Akbar's  Bream  80 

Remembering     R  its  ancient  heat.  Two  Voices  423 

R  the  day  when  first  she  came,  Bora  106 

crown  of  sorrow  is  r  happier  things.  Locksley  Hall  76 

fragrant  in  a  heart  r  His  former  talks  with  Edith,      Aylmer's  Field  456 

R  her  dear  Lord  who  died  for  all.  Sea  Breams  47 

R  how  we  three  presented  Maid  Or  Nymph,  Princess  i  196 

they  will  beat  my  girl  R  her  mother  :  „         v  89 

R  his  ill-omen'd  song,  „      vi  159 

i?  all  his  greatness  in  the  Past.  Ode  on  Well.  20 

R  all  the  beauty  of  that  star  Which  shone  Bed.  of  Idylls  46 

but  remembers  all,  and  growls  R,  Gareth  and  L.  705 

R  when  first  he  came  on  her  Drest  in  that  dress,    Marr.  of  Geraint  140 

R  how  first  he  came  on  her,  „              842 

But  she,  r  her  old  ruin'd  ball,  Geraint  and  E.  254 

some  token  of  his  Queen  Whereon  to  gaze,  r  her —    Balin  and  Balan  189 

R  that  dark  bower  at  Camelot,  „              526 

r  Her  thought  when  first  she  came,  Guinevere  181 

r  all  The  love  they  both  have  borne  me,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  279 

while  r  thee,  I  lay  At  thy  pale  feet  Bed.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  19 

R  all  the  golden  hours  Now  silent,  Tiresias  210 

r  the  gay  playmate  rear'd  Among  them,  Beath  of  (Enone  59 

Remembrance     In  mute  and  glad  r.  Lover's  Tale  ii  186 

Remerging     R  in  the  general  Soul,  In  Mem.  xlvii  4 

Remimber  (remember)     an'  meself  r's  wan  night  Tomorrow  7 

Remiss     "  She  had  not  found  me  so  r  ;  Talking  Oak  193 

Remit     She  takes,  when  harsher  moods  r.  In  Mem.  xlviii  6 

Remnant    a  r  that  were  left  Paynim  amid  their  circles,  Holy  Grail  663 

and  a  r  stays  with  me.    And  of  this  r  wiU  I  leave  a  part,        Guinevere  443 

Remodel    why  should  any  man  R  models  ?  The  Epic  38 

Remorse    You  held  your  course  without  r,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  45 

all  the  man  was  broken  with  r ;  Bora  165 

At  once  without  r  to  strike  her  dead,  Geraint  and  E.  109 

not  the  one  dark  hour  which  brings  r.  Merlin  and  V.  763 

Dead  ! — and  maybe  stung  With  some  r.  The  Ring  454 

For  never  had  I  seen  her  show  r —  „        457 

Would  the  man  have  a  touch  of  r  Charity  17 

Bemorsefnl    To  whom  r  Cyril, '  Yet  I  pray  Take  comfort :        Princess  v  79 

So  groan'd  Sir  Lancelot  in  r  pain,  Lancelot  and  E.  1428 

Some  half  r  kind  of  pity  too —  The  Ring  375 

Remorseless     But  that  r  iron  hour  Made  cypress  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  14 

Remote     Beside  r  Shalott.  (repeat)  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  9,  18 

Remove    See  Remble 

Removed    [See  also  Rembled)    Forgive  my  grief  for  one  r.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  37 

An  awful  thought,  a  life  r,  „             xiii  10 

Rend    cried  to  r  the  cloth,  to  r  In  pieces,  Gareth  and  L.  400 

r  the  cloth  and  cast  it  on  the  hearth.  „            418 

Left  for  the  homy-nibb'd  raven  to  r  it,  Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  108 

Bender     '  Will  thirty  seasons  r  plain  Two  Voices  82 

left  me,  statue-Uke,  In  act  to  r  thanks.  Gardener's  B.  162 

R  him  up  unscathed  :  Princess  iv  408 

I  lagg'd  in  answer  loth  to  r  up  My  precontract,  „         v  299 

R  thanks  to  the  Giver,  (repeat)  Ode  on  Well.  44,  47 

And  r  him  to  the  mould.  „              48 

And  /  human  love  his  dues  ;  In  Mem.  xxxvii  16 

and  r  All  homage  to  his  own  darhng,  Maud  I  xx  48 

I  gave  the  diamond  :  she  will  r  it ;  Lancelot  and  E.  713 


Render  (continued)    Forgetting  how  to  r  beautiful  Her 

countenance  Lover's  Tale  i  96 

Render'd     She  r  answer  high  :  B.  of  F.  Women  202 

Survive  in  spirits  r  free.  In  Mem.  xxxviii  10 

in  my  charge,  which  was  not  r  to  him  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  452 

Arthur's  wars  were  r  mystically,  Lancelot  and  E.  801 

Arthur's  wars  are  r  mystically.  Holy  Grail  359 

Rendering     Not  r  true  answer,  as  beseem'd  Thy  fealty,  M.  d' Arthur  74 

Nor  r  true  answer,  as  beseem'd  Thy  fealty.  Pass,  of  Arthur  242 

Rending     And  r,  and  a  blast,  and  overhead  Thunder,  Holy  Grail  184 

the  veil  Is  r,  and  the  Voices  of  the  day  The  Ring  39 

or  the  r  earthquake,  or  the  famine,  or  the  pest !  Faith  4 

Renegade     and  r's,  Thieves,  bandits.  Last  Tournament  94 

Renew     Would  God  r  me  from  my  birth  Miller's  B.  27 

wilt  r  thy  beauty  morn  by  morn  ;  Tithonus  74 

with  the  sun  and  moon  r  their  light  Princess  Hi  255 

Renew'd     (See  also  Self-renew'd)     And  bosom  beating  with 

a  heart  r.  Tithonus  36 

The  maid  and  page  r  their  strife,  Bay-Bm.,  Revival  13 

a  wish  r.  When  two  years  after  came  a  boy  Enoch  Arden  88 

Many  a  sad  kiss  by  day  by  night  r  „          161 

Then  her  new  child  was  as  herself  r,  „          523 

seem'd  For  some  new  death  than  for  a  Ufe  r  ;  Lover's  Tale  iv  374 

Renown     Of  me  you  shall  not  win  r :  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  2 
A  land  of  just  and  old  r.                                      You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  10 

Speak  no  more  of  his  r.  Ode  on  Well.  278 
Who  might  have  chased  and  claspt  R                 To  Marq.  of  Bufferin  29 
Renowned    See  Far-renowned 

Rent  (tearing)     Were  Uving  nerves  to  feel  the  r  ;  Aylmer's  Field  536 

Rent  (money)     Howiver  was  I  fur  to  find  my  r  Owd  Rod  47 

'  can  ya  paay  me  the  r  to-night  ?  '  „         57 

Rent  (tore)     '  An  inner  impulse  r  the  veil  Two  Voices  10 

r  The  woodbine  wreaths  that  bind  her,  Amphion  33 

r  The  wonder  of  the  loom  thro'  warp  and  woof  Princess  i  61 

Rent  (hire)   how  The  races  went,  and  who  would  r  the  hall :  Audley  Court  31 

Rent  (torn)    See  Red-rent 

Rentroll     The  r  Cupid  of  our  rainy  isles.  Edwin  Morris  103 

Re-orient    The  life  r-o  out  of  dust.  In  Mem.  cxvi  6 

Repaid     money  can  be  r  ;  Not  kindness  Enoch  Arden  320 

Repast     For  brief  r  or  afternoon  repose  Guinevere  395 

And  sitting  down  to  such  a  base  r.  Lover's  Tale  iv  134 

Repay     Why  then  he  shall  r  me —  Enoch  Arden  310 

He  will  r  you  :  money  can  be  repaid  ;  „          320 

Repeal     '  Ride  you  naked  thro'  the  town.  And  I  r  it ; '  Godiva  30 

Repeat     I  must  needs  r  for  my  excuse  Princess  Hi  52 

Repeated     R  muttering  '  cast  away  and  lost ; '  Enoch  Arden  715 

Repeating    roll'd  his  eyes  upon  her  R  all  he  wish'd,  „          905 

simple  maid  Went  half  the  night  r,  '  Must  I  die  ?  '    Lancelot  and  E.  899 

R,  till  the  word  we  know  so  well  Becomes  a  wonder,  „          1028 

Repell'd     R  by  the  magnet  of  Art  The  Wreck  22 

Repent     I  r  me  of  all  I  did  :  Edward  Gray  23 

voice  that  calls  Doom  upon  kings,  or  in  the 

waste  '  R'  ?  Aylmer's  Field  742 

The  world  will  not  believe  a  man  r's  :  Geraint  and  E.  900 

FuU  seldom  doth  a  man  r,  „            902 

'  No  light  had  we  :  for  that  we  do  r ;  Guinevere  171 

But  help  me,  heaven,  for  surely  I  r.  „      372 

let  a  man  r,  Do  penance  in  his  heart,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  142 

I  r  it  o'er  his  grave —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  255 

I  repented  and  r,  Happy  85 

Repentance     what  is  true  r  but  in  thought —  Guinevere  373 

Repentant     R  of  the  word  she  made  him  swear,  Gareth  and  L.  527 

'  The  souls  Of  two  r  Lovers  guard  the  ring  ; '  The  Ring  198 

Repented     they  have  told  you  he  never  r  his  sin.  Rizpah  69 

I  r  and  repent,  Happy  85 

Repenting    till  the  man  r  sent  This  ring      '  The  Ring  209 

Replied     Thereto  the  silent  voice  r  ;  Two  Voices  22 

He  sang  his  song,  and  I  r  with  mine  :  Audley  Court  56 

Swung  themselves,  and  in  low  tones  r  ;  Vision  of  Sin  20 

And  she  r,  her  duty  was  to  speak.  Princess  Hi  151 

Passionate  tears  Follow'd  :  the  king  r  not :  „          vi  312 

The  Spirit  of  true  love  r  ;  In  Mem.  Hi  6 

To  whom  the  Queen  r  with  drooping  eyes.  Com.  of  Arthur  469 

Silent  awhile  was  Gareth,  then  r,  Gareth  and  L.  164 

Then  r  the  King  :  '  Far  lovelier  in  our  Lancelot  Laiicelot  and  E.  588 


Replied 


575 


Rest 


Pelleas  and  E.  523 

Lover's  Tale  iv  336 

Claribel  20 

Two  Voices  7 

CEnone  143 

Palace  of  Art  286 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  22 

29 

Talking  Oak  25 

Bay- Dm.,  Revival  30 

Enoch  Arden  286 

Zi^Ai  Brigade  13 

/re  Mem.  xxxi  6 

„  Za;i  2 

MaM<i  //  iv  30 

Geraint  and  E.  811 

Merlin  and  V.  895 

Pelleas  and  E.  85 

TAe  Revenge  91 

.SMfers  (i;.  arwZ  £.)  157 

i.  o/  Burleigh  5 

TAe  5rooA:  22 

/w  Mem.  xxxvii  9 

Jf  awrf  //  Hi  7 

Garetfe  aW  i.  863 

Princess  iv\l 

i  70 

In  Mem.  xiv  1 

J/arr.  of  Geraint  756 

Balin  and  Balan  94 

168 

Merlin  and  V.  16 

Cow.  o/  Arthur  250 

Garg<A  aw(^  Z.  1338 


Replied  (continued)     Percivale  stood  near  him  and  r, 

his  friend  R,  in  half  a  whisper, 
Beplieth    The  hollow  grot  r 
Beply  (s)     To  which  the  voice  did  urge  r ; 

Kept  watch,  waiting  decision,  made  r. 

There  comes  no  murmur  of  r. 

And  my  disdain  is  my  r. 

Oh  your  sweet  eyes,  your  low  replies : 

But  since  I  heard  him  make  r 

In  courteous  words  retum'd  r : 

He  spoke  ;  the  passion  in  her  moan'd  r 

Their's  not  to  make  r. 

There  lives  no  record  of  r, 

Thy  ransom'd  reason  change  replies 

The  delight  of  low  replies. 

And  hung  his  head,  and  halted  in  r, 

having  no  r.  Gazed  at  the  heaving  shoulder, 

Stammer'd,  and  could  not  make  her  a  r. 

gurmer  said  '  Ay,  ay,'  but  the  seamen  made  r : 

in  the  thick  of  question  and  r 
Reply  (verb)     She  replies,  in  accents  fainter, 

and  the  brook,  why  not  ?  replies. 

And  my  Melpomene  replies. 

Care  not  thou  to  r  : 

Arthur  aU  at  once  gone  mad  replies, 
Repl3ring     Blow,  let  us  hear  the  purple  glens  r  : 
Report  (s)     In  this  r,  this  answer  of  a  king. 

If  one  should  bring  me  this  r, 

when  Yniol  made  r  Of  that  good  mother 

'  Sir  King  '  they  brought  r  '  we  hardly  found, 

And  brought  r  of  azure  lands  and  fair, 

angels  of  our  Lord's  r. 
Report  (verb)     Victor  his  men  R  him  ! 
Reported    still  r  him  As  closing  in  himself 

a  woodman  there  R  of  some  demon  in  the  woods   Balin  and  Balan  124 

R  who  he  was,  and  on  what  quest  Sent,  Lancelot  and  E.  628 

Reporting     R  of  his  vessel  China-bound,  Enoch    irden  122 

Repose    sick  man's  room  when  he  taketh  r  A  spirit  haunts  14 

Her  manners  had  not  that  r  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  39 

For  brief  repast  or  afternoon  r  Guinevere  395 

God  gave  her  peace  ;  her  land  r  ;  To  the  Queen  26 

centuries  behind  me  like  a  fruitful  land  r  ;  Locksley  Hall  13 

A  void  where  heart  on  heart  r  ;  In  Mem.  xiii  6 

Reposing     His  state  the  king  r  keeps.  Day- Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  39 

Repression    what  sublime  r  of  himself,  Ded.  of  Idylls  19 

Reproach  (s)    you  may  worship  me  without  r ;  St.  S.  Stylites  193 

all  these  things  fell  on  her  Sharp  as  r.  Enoch  Arden  488 

Thro'  light  r'es,  half  exprest  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  15 

He  never  spake  word  of  r  to  me,  Lancelot  and  E.  124 

Mine  own  name  shames  me,  seeming  a  r,  „  1403 

Seem'd  my  r  ?     He  is  not  of  my  kind.  Pelleas  and  E.  311 

found  my  letter  upon  him,  my  wail  of  r  and  scorn  ;  Charity  23 

Reproach  (verb)     the  poor  cause  that  men  R  you,  Marr.  of  Geraint  88 

Reproachful    Had  floated  in  with  sad  r  eyes,  The  Ring  469 

Reprobation     Election,  Election  and  R — ■  Rizpah  73 

Reproof     I  have  not  lack'd  thy  mild  r,  My  life  is  full  4 

Presses  his  without  r:  L.  of  Burleigh  10 

I  was  prick'd  with  some  r,  Geraint  and  E.  890 

her  own  r  At  some  precipitance  in  her  burial.  Lover's  Tale  iv  106 

Reprove    Was  it  gentle  to  r  her  For  stealing  Maud  I  xx  8 

'  A  welfare  in  thine  eye  r's  Our  fear  Holy  Grail  726 

Republic     The  vast  R's  that  may  grow,  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  15 

Aroused  the  black  r  on  his  elms,  Aylmer's  Field  529 

Revolts,  r's,  revolutions,  Princess,  Con.  65 

And  crown'd  R's  crowning  common-sense,  To  the  Queen  ii  61 

Kingdoms  and  R's  fall,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  159 

Repulse     cloaks  the  scar  of  some  r  with  lies  ;  Merlin  and  V.  818 

Repulsed     being  r  By  Yniol  and  yourself,  Geraint  and  E.  828 

Repute     bore  a  knight  of  old  r  to  the  earth,  Lancelot  and  E.  492 

Reputed     R  to  be  red  with  sinless  blood,  Balin  and  Balan  bbl 

R  the  best  knight  and  goodUest  man,  Guinevere  382 

ReQUest     then  at  my  r  He  brought  it ;  The  Epic  47 

'  To  what  r  for  what  strange  boon,'  Merlin  and  V.  264 

Require     I  should  r  A  sign  !  8v/pp.  Confessions  9 

For  this  brief  idyll  would  r  A  less  diffuse  Tiresias  188 


Required    Heroic  seems  our  Princess  as  r —  Princess,  Pro.  230 

But  pubUc  use  r  she  should  be  known ;  „            iv  336 

The  men  r  that  I  should  give  throughout  Princess  Con.  10 

whom  He  trusted  all  things,  and  of  him  r  His 

coimsel :  Com.  of  Arthur  146 

Requiring     R,  tho'  I  knew  it  was  mine  own,  Gardener's  D.  227 

R  at  her  hand  the  greatest  gift,  „            229 

Re-reiterated     And  grant  my  r-r  wish.  Merlin  and  V.  353 

Re-risen    content  R-r  in  Katie's  eyes.  The  Brook  169 

Rescue    Flights,  terrors,  sudden  r's,  Aylmer's  Field  99 

Rescued     diamonds  that  I  r  from  the  tam,  Last  Tournament  37 

You  r  me — yet — was  it  well  That  you  came  Despair  4 

Reseated    thou  r  in  thy  place  of  light,  Guinevere  525 

Resembles    And  so  my  wealth  r  thine.  In  Mem.  Ixxix  17 

Reserve     not  to  pry  and  peer  on  yoiu-  r.  Princess  iv  419 

Such  fine  r  and  noble  reticence,  Geraint  and  E.  860 

Reserved    from  a  binn  r  For  banquets,  Aylmer's  Field  405 

And  in  my  grief  a  strength  r.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  52 

Resettable    gems  Moveable  and  r  at  will.  Lover's  Tale  iv  199 

Resign'd    Asks  what  thou  lackest,  thought  r,  Two  Voices  98 

I  pray'd  for  both,  and  so  I  felt  r.  May  Queen,  Con.  31 

Resistance     to  know  The  limits  of  r,  To  Duke  of  Argyll  2 

Resmooth    waves  of  prejudice  R  to  nothing  :  Princess  Hi  241 

Resolder'd    r  peace,  whereon  FoUow'd  his  tale.  „            v  47 

Resolute     The  statesman-warrior,  moderate,  r.  Ode  on  Well.  25 

Resolution     Dispersed  his  r  like  a  cloud.  Lancelot  and  E.  884 

Resolve  (s)     '  Hard  task,  to  pluck  r,'  1  cried,  Two  Voices  118 

Assurance  only  breeds  r.'  „          315 

His  r  Upbore  him,  and  firm  faith,  Enoch  Ardeti  799 

His  gazing  in  on  Annie,  his  r,  „          863 

Full  many  a  holy  vow  and  pure  r.  Lancelot  and  E.  879 

my  fresh  but  fixt  r  To  pass  away  into  the  quiet  life.  Holy  Grail  737 

Resolve  (verb)     turn  thee  round,  r  the  doubt ;  In  Mem.  xliv  14 

Nor  can  my  dream  r  the  doubt :  „      Ixviii  12 

Resolved  (adj.)    But  he  was  all  the  more  r  to  go,  Lover's  Tale  iv  179 


and  that  r  self-exile  from  a  land  He  never  would  revisit. 


209 


Resolved  (verb)    start  in  pain,  R  on  noble  things,  D.  of  F.  Women  42 

Here  she  woke,  R,  sent  for  him  and  said  Enoch  Arden  507 

Resort     To  which  I  most  r,  (repeat)  Will  Water.  2,  210 

Resound     And  solemn  chaunts  r  between.  Sir  Galahad  36 

Milton,  a  name  to  r  for  ages  ;  Milton  4 

Respeck  (respect)     but  I  r's  tha  fur  that ; '  North.  Cobbler  90 

fur  I  r's  tha,'  says  'e ;  „               92 

Respect    (See  also  Respeck)     some  r,  however  slight,  was 

paid  To  woman,  Prhicess  ii  136 

Response     Then  did  my  r  clearer  fall :  Two  Voices  34 

Responsive     Queenly  r  when  the  loyal  hand  Aylmer's  Field  169 

Rest  (remainder)     Proportion,  and,  above  the  r.  Two  Voices  20 

'  These  words,'  I  said,  '  are  like  the  r  ;  „           334 

And  there  the  Ionian  father  of  the  r  ;  Palace  of  Art  137 

while  the  r  were  loud  in  merry-making,  Enoch  Arden  77 

But  oft  he  work'd  among  the  r  and  shook  „          651 

Arbaces,  and  Phenomenon,  and  the  r.  The  Brook  162 

o'er  the  r  Arising,  did  his  holy  oily  best,  Sea  Dreams  194 

who  this  way  runs  Before  the  r —  Lucretius  192 

And  sister  Liha  with  the  r.'  Princess,  Pro.  52 

Liha  with  the  r,  and  lady  friends  „                97 

'  He  began,  The  r  would  follow,  each  in  turn ;  ,,              201 

So  I  began.  And  the  r  follow'd :  „              244 

and  beckon'd  us  :  the  r  Parted ;  „          H  182 

Speak  little ;  mix  not  with  the  r ;  „              360 

Electric,  chemic  laws,  and  all  the  r,  „              384 

Arriving  all  confused  among  the  r  ,,          iv  224 

half-crush'd  among  the  r  A  dwarf-like  Cato  cower'd  „        vii  125 

nor  can  I  weep  for  the  r ;  Grandmother  19 

Perchance,  perchance,  among  the  r,  In  Mem.,  Con.  87 

the  r  Slew  on_and  biu-nt,  crying,  Com.  of  Arthur  438 


among  the  r  Fierce  was  the  hearth, 
Speak,  if  ye  be  not  hke  the  r,  hawk-mad, 
a  name  that  branches  o'er  the  r, 
eats  And  uses,  careless  of  the  r ; 
And  being  lustily  holpen  by  the  r. 


Gareth  and  L.  1009 
Marr.  of  Geraint  280 
Balin  and  Balan  182 

Merlin  and  V.  463 
Lancelot  and  E,  496 


one,  a  fellow-monk  among  the  r,  Ambrosius,  loved  him 

much  beyond  the  r,  Holy  Grail  8 

Gawain  sware,  and  louder  than  the  r.'  „        202 


Rest 


576 


Rested 


My  sister's  vision,  and  the  r, 


Rest  (remainder)  (continued) 

to  Bors  Beyond  the  r  : 

the  r  Spake  but  of  sundry  perils  in  the  storm  ; 

Thy  brotherhood  in  me  and  all  the  r. 

But  newly-enter'd,  taller  than  the  r, 

And  trebling  all  the  r  in  value — 

an'  a  letter  along  wi'  the  r, 

thou'rt  like  the  r  o'  the  men, 

And  the  r  they  came  aboard  us, 

half  of  the  r  of  us  maim'd  for  life 

brain  that  could  think  for  the  r ; 

Old  friends  outvaluing  all  the  r. 

An'  Shamus  along  wid  the  r, 

fur  I  stuck  to  tha  moor  na  the  r, 

r  Who  made  a  nation  purer  through  their  art. 

the  r  Were  crumpled  inwards. 

London  and  Paris  and  all  the  r 
Best  (repose)     happiness  And  perfect  r  so  perfect  is  ; 

In  sweet  dreams  softer  than  unbroken  r 

Fold  thine  arms,  turn  to  thy  r. 

There  is  no  r  for  me  below, 

Nor  unhappy,  nor  at  r, 

A  nobler  yearning  never  broke  her  r 

But  long  disquiet  merged  in  r. 

heart  would  beat  against  me,  In  sorrow  and  in  r 

Floated  her  hair  or  seem'd  to  float  in  r. 

who  have  attain'd  if  in  a  happy  place 

I  kiss'd  his  eyelids  into  r  : 

and  the  weary  are  at  r. 

all  things  else  have  r  from  weariness  ? 

AU  things  have  r  :  (repeat) 

Give  us  long  r  or  death. 

Sleep  full  of  r  from  head  to  feet ; 

Had  r  by  stoyy  hills  of  Crete. 

Thou  wouldst  have  caught  me  up  into  thy  r, 

And  shadow'd  all  her  r — 

yonder  ivied  casement,  ere  I  went  to  r, 

turn  thee  on  thy  pillow  :  get  thee  to  thy  r  again. 

my  latest  rival  brings  thee  r. 

moving  toward  the  stillness  of  his  r. 

A  perfect  form  in  perfect  r. 

That  her  spirit  might  have  r. 

With  a  nation  weeping,  and  breaking  on  my  r  ? 

tired  a  little,  that's  all,  and  long  for  r  ; 

And  moan  and  sink  to  their  r. 

And  waves  that  sway  themselves  in  r. 

Nor  any  want-begotten  r. 

surely  r  is  meet :  '  They  rest,'  we  said, 

I  know  that  in  thy  place  of  r 

That  wakens  at  this  hour  of  r 

To  the  regions  of  thy  r  '  ? 

in  that  hope,  dear  soul,  let  trouble  have  r, 

Half  disarray'd  as  to  her  r, 

moving  mthout  answer  to  her  r  She  found  no  r, 

scorn  of  Garlon,  poisoning  all  his  r, 

royal  knight,  we  break  on  thy  sweet  r, 

I  brake  upon  thy  r.  And  now  fuU  loth  am  I 

Arriving  at  a  time  of  golden  r, 

charm  so  taught  will  charm  us  both  to  r. 

and  Love  Should  have  some  r  and  pleasure 

Should  have  small  r  or  pleasure  in  herself, 

B.  must  you  have.'     '  No  r  for  me,' 

'  Nay,  for  near  you,  fair  lord,  I  am  at  r.' 

And  found  no  ease  in  turning  or  in  r  ; 

vext  his  heart,  And  marr'd  liis  r — 

Hath  lain  for  years  at  r — 

Farewell !  there  Ls  an  isle  of  r  for  thee. 

But  I  had  been  at  r  for  evermore. 

and  we  thought  her  at  r, 

as  he  rose  from  his  r, 

strike  Thy  youthful  pulses  into  r 

I  would  that  I  were  gather'd  to  my  r, 

let  me  weep  my  fill  once  more,  and  cry  myself  to  r  !  To 

r  ?  to  rest  and  wake  no  more  were  better  r  for  me,  The  Flight  6 

human  oSspring  this  ideal  man  at  r  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  234 


Holy  Grail  272 

653 

760 

Pelleas  and  E.  322 

Last  Tournament  169 

Lover's  Tale  iv  200 

First  Quarrel  49 

North.  Cobbler  63 

The  Revenge  52 

77 

Def.  of  Lucknow  20 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  40 

Toinorrow  44 

Spinster's  S's,  51 

To  W.  C.  Macready  7 

The  Ring  453 

The  Dawn  10 

Supp.  Confessions  51 

Ode  to  Menmory  29 

A  Dirge  3 

Oriana  3 

Adeline  4 

The  form,  the  form  2 

Tico  Voices  249 

AlUler's  D.  178 

CEnone  19 

„    131 

The  Sisters  19 

May  Queen,  Con.  60 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  14 

15,  51 

53 

To  J.  S.  75 

On  a  Mourner  35 

St.  S.  Stylites  18 

Talking  Oak  226 

Locksley  Hall  7 

86 

89 

144 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  24 

L.  of  Burleigh  100 

Ode  on  Well.  82 

Grandmother  99 

Voice  and  the  P.  16 

In  Mem.  xi  18 

„  xxvii  12 

„     XXX 18 

„      Ixvii  2 

„         civ  6 

Mavd  II  iv  88 

„    III  vi  12 

Marr.  of  Geraint  516 

530 

Balin  and  Baian  383 

470 

499 

Merlin  and  V.  142 

332 

485 

490 

Lancelot  and  E.  832 

833 

901 

Pelleas  and  E.  399 

Last  Tournament  94 

Pass,  of  Arthur  35 

Lover's  Tale  i  625 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  40 

V.  of  Maeldune  85 

Tiresias  157 

170 


Rest  (repose)  {continued)    To  that  which  looks 
like  r. 

Raving  pohtics,  never  at  r — 

Is  memory  with  your  Marian  gone  to  r, 

and  the  murderous  father  at  r,  .  .  . 

blight  thy  hope  or  break  thy  r. 
Rest  (s)     Go  thou  to  r,  but  ere  thou  go  to  r 

Now  both  are  gone  to  r. 
Rest  (verb)     '  The  doubt  would  r,  I  dare  not  solve 

Passing  the  place  where  each  must  r, 

his  shadow  on  the  stone,  R's  like  a  shadow, 

r  thee  sure  That  I  shall  love  thee  well 

Oh  r  ye,  brother  mariners, 

came  To  r  beneath  thy  boughs,  (repeat) 

Where  fairer  fruit  of  Love  may  r 

wealth  no  more  shall  r  in  mounded  heaps, 

I  cannot  r  from  travel : 

Here  r's  the  sap  within  the  leaf, 

And  I  desire  to  r. 

Who  will  not  let  his  ashes  r  ! 

and  sighing  '  Let  me  r  '  she  said  : 

Fall  back  upon  a  name  !  r,  rot  in  that  ! 

Birdie,  r  a  little  longer. 

So  she  r's  a  Mttle  longer, 

Sleep  and  r,  sleep  and  r, 

R,  r,  on  mother's  breast, 

Said  Ida  ;  '  let  us  down  and  r  ;  ' 

and  this  proud  watchword  r  Of  equal ; 

There  he  shall  r  for  ever 

To  r  in  a  golden  grove. 

To  r  beneath  the  clover  sod. 

Among  famihar  names  to  r 

I  sing  to  him  that  r's  below, 

'  They  r,'  we  said,  '  their  sleep  is  sweet,' 

And  r's  upon  the  Life  indeed. 

In  endless  age  ?     It  r's  with  God. 

My  heart,  tho'  widow'd,  may  not  r 

Who  r  to-night  beside  the  sea. 

spangle  all  the  happy  shores  By  which  they  r, 

so  should  he  r  with  her.  Closed  in  her  castle 

R  would  I  not.  Sir  King,  an  I  were  king, 
I  nor  mine  R  :  so  my  knighthood  keep  the  vows 


Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son  6 
Vastness  3 
To  Mary  Boyle  13 
Bandit's  Death  33 
Faith  2 
Marr.  of  Geraint  512 
To  W.  H.  Brookfield  8 
Two  Voices  313 
410 
(Enone  28 
„       159 
Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  128 
Talking  Oak  36,  156 
251 
Golden  Year  32 
Ulysses  6 
Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  3 
Come  not,  when,  etc.  10 
You  might  have  won  28 
Enoch  Arden  375 
Aylmer's  Field  385 
Sea  Dreams  297 
299 
Princess  Hi  9 
11 
iv  21 
„    vii  300 
Ode  on  Well.  51 
Wages  9 
In  Mem.  x  13 
„        xviii  7 
„  xxi  1 

„       XXX  19 
„      xxxii  8 
,.    Ixxiii  12 
„  Ixxxv  113 
„     Con.  76 
121 
Gareih  and  L.  162 
597 
602 
R  !  the  good  house,  tho'  ruin'd,  Marr.  of  Geraint  378 

eye  rove  in  following,  or  r  On  Enid  „  399 

I  felt  That  I  could  r,  a  rock  in  ebbs  and  flowS;  ..  812 

therefore,  I  do  r,  A  prophet  certain  of  my  prophecy,  „  813 

but  to  r  awhile  within  her  court ;  Geraint  and  E.  855 

Should  r  and  let  you  r,  knowing  you  mine.  Merlin  and  V.  335  j 

r  :  and  Love  Should  have  some  rest  and  pleasure  „  484 


after  my  long  voyage  I  shall  r  ! 
'  I  will  r  here,'  I  said, 
as  who  should  say,  '  R  here  ; ' 
So  shook  him  that  he  could  not  r, 
but  here,  Here  let  me  r  and  die,' 
could  not  r  for  musing  how  to  smoothe 
'  to  pass,  to  sleep,  To  r,  to  be  with  her — 
stricling  fast,  and  now  Sitting  awhile  to  r. 
Travelling  that  land,  and  meant  to  r  an  hour  ; 
Come,  come,  little  wife,  let  it  r  ! 
couldn't  be  idle — my  Willy — he  never  could  r. 
At  times  our  Britain  cannot  r. 
To  rest  ?  to  r  and  wake  no  more, 
He  r's  content,  if  his  young  music 
whether,  since  our  nature  cannot  r, 
And  here  no  longer  can  I  r ; 
Rested     where  man  Hath  moor'd  and  r  ? 
And  r  from  her  labours. 
So  Philip  r  with  her  well-content ; 
There  Enoch  r  silent  many  days, 
and  gain'd  the  hall,  and  there  R  : 
But  r  with  her  sweet  face  satisfied  ; 
She  r,  and  her  desolation  came  Upon  her, 
He  r  well  content  that  all  was  well. 
But  r  in  her  fealty,  till  he  crown'd 
Nor  r  thus  content,  but  day  by  day. 


Lancelot  and  E.  1061 

Holy  Grail  385 

396 

Pelleas  and  E.  412 

515 

Last  Tournament  390 

Lover's  Tale  iv  64 

88 

133 

First  Quarrel  62 

Rizpah  27 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  1 

The  Flight  6 

To  Mary  Boyle  63 

Prog,  of  Spring  96 

The  Wanderer  2 

Su/pp.  Confessions  125 

The  Goose  16 

Enoch  Arden  376 

699 

Princess  vi  353 

Marr.  of  Geraint  776 

Geraint  and  E.  518 

952 

967 

Lancelot  and  E.  13  i 


Rested 


577 


Returning 


Rested  (continued)     Wander'd,  the  while  we  r  :  Lover's  Tale  i  235 

Arthur  the  blameless  jR  The  Gleam.  Merlin  and  the  G.  74 

Resteth     but  r  satisfied,  Looking  on  her  Lover's  Tale  i  159 
Resting    R  weary  limbs  at  last  on  beds  of  asphodel.  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  125 

Porch-pillars  on  the  lion  r,  The  Daisy  55 
Resting-place     come  again,  mother,  from  out 

my  r-p ;  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  37 

Restless     But  passionat«ly  r  came  and  went,  Aylmer's  Field  546 

and  r  forefoot  plies  His  function  of  the  woodland :  Lucretius  45 
swaying  upon  a  r  elm  Drew  the  vague  glance  of 

Vivien,  Balin  and  Balan  463 

To  which  it  made  a  r  heart,  he  took,  Lancelot  and  E.  550 

And  men  have  hopes,  which  race  the  r  blood.  Prog,  of  Spring  115 

Restore    ghost  of  passion  that  no  smiles  r —  The  form,  the  form  11 

Release  me,  and  r  me  to  the  ground ;  Tithonus  72 

Restored     tho'  he  built  upon  the  babe  r ;  Princess  vii  75 

had  his  realm  r  But  render'd  tributary,  Balin  and  Balan  2 
Restrain'd     Restrain'd  him  with  all  manner  of  device,        Pelleas  and  E.  204 

Restrain'd  himself  quite  to  the  close —  Lover's  Tale  iv  10 

Restraining    Fierier  and  stormier  from  r,  Balin  and  Balan  229 

Restraint     I  spoke  without  restraint.  Talking  Oak  14 

Result  (s)     The  slow  r  of  winter  showers :  Two  Voices  452 

Deep-chested  music,  and  to  this  r.  The  Epic  51 

from  age  to  age  With  much  the  same  r.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  80 

and  the  long  r  of  Time ;  Locksley  Hall  12 

But  for  some  true  r  of  good  All  parties  Will  Water.  55 

victor  Hours  should  scorn  The  long  r  of  love,  In  Mem.  i  14 

self-infolds  the  large  r's  Of  force  „    Ixxiii  15 

And  that  serene  r  of  all.'  „    Ixxxv  92 

With  old  r's  that  look  like  new ;  „  cxxviii  11 

O,  the  r's  are  simple ;  Merlin  and  V.  684 

work  old  laws  of  Love  to  fresh  r's,  Prog,  of  Spring  85 

Result  (verb)    R  in  man,  be  bom  and  think,  In  Mem.,  Con.  126 

Resume    r  their  life.  They  would  but  find  „                  xc  6 

Retain     And  so  may  Place  r  us  still,  „                xlii  5 

Which  yet  r's  a  memory  of  its  youth,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  66 

Betake     stands  Vacant,  but  thou  r  it,  Balin  and  Balan  79 

Betaught     R  the  lesson  thou  hadst  taught,  England  and  Amer.  8 

Reticence     Such  fine  reserve  and  noble  r,  Geraint  and  E.  860 

Not  muffled  round  with  selfish  r.  Merlin  and  V.  337 
Down  with  R,  down  with  Reverence —                   Locksley  H.,  Sixty  142 

Retinae    The  dark  r  reverencing  death  Aylmer's  Field  842 

and  so  Went  forth  in  long  r  following  up  Princess  Hi  195 

and  far  ahead  Of  his  and  her  r  moving,  Guinevere  385 

Retire     How  oft  we  saw  the  Sun  r.  The  Voyage  17 

And  last  the  dance; — till  Ir:  In  Mem.,  Con.  105 

Retired     in  after  life  r  From  brawling  storms,  Ode  to  Memory  111 

I  saw  the  snare,  and  I  r  :  L.  C.V.  de  Vere  6 
Retiring     Ever  r  thou  dost  gaze  On  the  prime  labour        Ode  to  Memory  93 

knights  Clash  like  the  coming  and  r  wave,  Gareth  and  L.  522 

Be-told     And  read  a  Grecian  tale  r-t.  To  Master  of  B.  5 

Retreat     Ah,  for  some  r  Deep  in  yonder  Locksley  Hall  153 

0  joy  to  him  in  this  r.  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  13 
Retreated    Leolin  still  R  half-aghast,  Aylmer's  Field  330 

The  light  r,  The  landskip  darken'd.  Merlin  and  the  G.  30 
Retreating    up  and  down  Advancing  nor  r.                 Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  179 
Retrospect     '  Not  such  as  moans  about  the  r.  Princess  iv  85 
yet  in  r  That  less  than  momentary  thunder- 
sketch  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  98 
Return  (s)    (See  also  Home-return)    Then  she  went  back 

some  paces  of  r,  Geraint  and  E.  70 

with  how  sweet  grace  She  greeted  my  r !  Balin  and  Balan  194 

tho'  my  love  had  no  r :  Lavicelot  and  E.  1094 

1  loved  you,  and  my  love  had  no  r,  „            1276 
Return  (verb)     I  may  »■  with  others  there  Palace  of  Art  ^5 

some  one  said,  '  We  will  r  no  more ; '  Lotos-Eaters  43 

'  I  go,  but  I  ?• :  I  would  I  were  The  pilot  Audley  Court  71 
The  fountain  to  his  place  r's                                   Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  11 

to  r  When  others  had  been  tested)  Aylmer's  Field  218 

and  r  In  such  a  sunlight  of  prosperity  „             420 

Returning,  as  the  bird  r's,  at  night.  Sea  Dreams  43 

heard  his  foot  R  from  pacings  in  the  field,  Lucretius  6 

back  r  To  where  the  body  sits,  In  Mem.  xii  18 

How  often  she  herself  r,  „           xl  24 

But  Death  r's  an  answer  sweet :  „        Ixxxi  9 


Return  (verb)  (continued)  r's  the  dark  With  no  more  hope  of  light.  Maud  I  ix  15 

humour  of  the  kings  of  old  R  upon  me  !  Gareth  and  L.  378 

R,  and  meet,  and  hold  him  from  our  eyes,  „              429 

take  his  horse  And  arms,  and  so  r  him  to  the  King.  „              956 

Myself,  when  I  r,  will  plead  for  thee,  (repeat)  „    987, 1052 

r,  and  fetch  Fresh  victual  for  these  mowers  Geraint  and  E.  224 

and  r  With  victual  for  these  men,  „            239 

For  the  man's  love  once  gone  never  r's.  „            333 

'  Fly,  they  will  r  And  slay  you ;  ]]            743 

And  as  the  cageling  newly  flown  r's,  Merlin  and  V.  901 

They  prove  to  him  his  work  :  win  and  r.'  Lancelot  and  E.  158 

Rise  and  take  This  diamond,  and  deliver  it,  and  r,  „              546 

And  she  r's  his  love  in  open  shame ;  „            1083 

Many  of  you,  yea  most,  R  no  more:  Holy  Grail  321 

He  will  r  no  more.'  Pelleas  and  E.  259 

Kick'd,  he  r's :  do  ye  not  hate  him,  ye  ?  „            264 

the  warm  hour  r's  With  veer  of  wind.  Last  Tournament  230 

weep  not  thou,  lest,  if  thy  mate  r,  „               499 

And  so  r's  belike  within  an  hour.  „               531 

She  is  his  no  more — The  dead  r's  to  me.  Lover's  Tale  iv  49 

And  you  shall  give  me  back  when  he  r's.'  „             112 

When  he  r's,  and  then  will  I  r,  „            117 

If  we  should  never  more  r.  The  Flight  99 

Australian  dying  hopes  he  shall  r,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  70 

Retum'd     prest  thy  hand,  and  knew  the  press  r,  The  Bridesmaid  12 

One  went,  who  never  hath  r.  To  J.  S.  20 

And  so  r  unfarrow'd  to  her  sty.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  100 

Could  hope  itself  r ;  Talking  Oak  12 

'  Pardy,'  r  the  King,  '  but  still  My  joints  Day-Dm.,  Revival  25 

In  courteous  words  r  reply :  „                30 

when  the  beauteous  hateful  isle  R  upon  him,  Enoch  Arden  618 

round  again  to  meet  the  day  When  Enoch  had  r,  „            823 

r  Leolin's  rejected  rivals  from  their  suit  Aylmer's  Field  492 

by  a  keeper  shot  at,  slightly  hurt.  Raging  r:  "  „            549 

To  whom  none  spake,  half-sick  at  heart,  r.  Princess  iv  223 

The  King  r  from  out  the  wild.  The  Victim  41 

And  home  to  Mary's  house  r.  In  Mem.  xxxi  2 

divine  amends  For  a  courtesy  not  r.  Maud  I  vi  14 
pathways  for  the  htmter  and  the  knight  And  so  r.       Com.  of  Arthur  62 

r  Among  the  flowers,  in  May,  with  Guinevere.  „            451 
she  r  Indignant  to  the  Queen;  (repeat)             Marr.  of  Geraint  201,  413 

the  boy  r  And  told  them  of  a  chamber,  Geraint  and  E.  260 

till  she  woke  the  sleepere,  and  r :  „            404 

r  The  huge  Earl  Doomi  with  plunder  to  the  hall.  „            591 

In  converse  for  a  little,  and  r,  „            882 

spirit  of  his  youth  r  On  Arthur's  heart ;  Balin  and  Balan  21 

And  lightly  so  r,  and  no  man  knew.  „                42 

till  their  embassage  r.  „                93 

Full  courtly,  yet  not  falsely,  thus  r :  Lancelot  and  E.  236 

after  two  days'  tarriance  there,  r.  „            569 

r  To  whence  I  came,  the  gate  of  Arthur's  wars.'  Holy  Grail  538 

talk  And  scandal  of  our  table,  had  r ;  „           650 

reach'd  The  city,  found  ye  all  your  knights  r,  „           708 

scarce  r  a  tithe —  „          894 

these  r.  But  still  he  kept  his  watch  Pelleas  and  E.  222 

Then  tum'd,  and  so  r,  and  groaning  „            451 

she  gazed  on  Lancelot  So  soon  r,  „            590 
Tristram — late  From  overseas  in  Brittany  r.           Last  Tournament  175 

one  that  in  them  sees  himself,  r;  „                370 

But  left  her  all  as  easily,  and  r.  „                403 

and  that  low  lodge  r.  Mid-forest,  „                488 

Had  been,  their  wont,  a-maying  and  r,  Guinevere  23 

'  Perchance,'  she  said,  '  r.'  Lover's  Tale  i  581 

Then,  when  her  own  true  spirit  had  r,  „       iv  108 
Then  I  r  to  the  ward ;                                                In  the  Child.  Hosp.  44 

wept  with  me  when  I  r  in  chains,  Columbus  231 

She  in  wrath  R  it  on  her  birthday,  The  Ring  212 

We  r  to  his  cave — the  link  was  broken — ■  Bandit's  Death  29 

Returning    from  the  secret  shrine  R  with  hot  cheek  Alexander  14 

human  things  r  on  themselves  Move  onward.  Golden  Year  25 

And  thee  r  on  thy  silver  wheels.  Tithonus  76 

R  hke  the  pewit.  Will  Water.  230 

As  oft  as  needed — last,  r  rich,  Enoch  Arden  143 

His  fancy  fled  before  the  lazy  wind  R,  „            658 

Seem'd  hope's  r  rose :  Aylmer's  Field  559 

2  o 


Retnrning 


678 


Rhyme 


Betnrning  (contimied)    That  mock'd  him  with  r  calm, 

still  to  that  R,  as  the  bird  returns, 

that  great  wave  R,  while  none  mark'd  it. 

And  last,  r  from  afar, 

and  on  r  found  Not  two  but  three  ? 

R  brought  the  yet-vmblazon'd  shield. 

To  Astolat  r  rode  the  three. 

Your  limit,  oft  r  with  the  tide. 

R  o'er  the  jjlain  that  then  began  To  darken 

Aroimd  a  king  r  from  his  wars. 
Reveal    gorges,  opening  wide  apart,  r  Troas 

For  all  the  past  of  Time  r's 

Nor  to  r  it,  till  you  see  me  dead.' 

words,  like  Nature,  half  r  And  half  conceal 

A  lat«-lost  form  that  sleep  r's, 

If  any  vision  should  r  Thy  Ukeness, 

Who  shall  now  r  it  ? 
Beveal'd    first  r  themselves  to  English  air, 

part  by  part  to  men  r  The  fullness  of  her  face — 

R  their  shining  windows : 

A  whisper  half  r  her  to  herself. 

Of  contort  clasp'd  in  truth  r ; 

A  lifelong  tract  of  time  r ; 

doubtful  dusk  r  The  knolls  once  more  where, 

where  the  works  of  the  Lord  are  r 
Revealing    R's  deep  and  clear  are  thine 
Reveillee    blew  R  to  the  breaking  morn. 
Revel    given  to  starts  and  bursts  Of  r ; 

At  civic  r  and  pomp  and  game,  (repeat) 

night  goes  In  babble  and  r  and  wine. 

with  dance  And  r  and  song,  made  merry  over  Death,  Gareth  and  L.  1423 

Red  after  r,  droned  her  lurdane  knights  Slumbering,  Pelleas  and  E.  430 

kingcup,  poppy,  glanced  About  the  r's,  Last  Tournament  235 

To  come  and  r  for  one  hour  with  liim  Lover's  Tale  iv  182 

wallow  in  fiery  riot  and  r  On  Kilauea,  Kapiolani  8 

Revelling     bagpipes,  r,  devil's-dances,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  149 

Revenge    Therefore  r  became  me  well.  The  Sisters  5 

Womanlike,  taking  r  too  deep  for  a  transient  WTong  Maud  I  Hi  5 


Lucretius  25 

Sea  Dreams  43 

234 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  46 

Merlin  and  V.  708 

Lancelot  and  E.  379 

905 

1041 

Holy  Grail  217 

Pass,  of  Arthur  461 

(Enone  12 

Love  thou  thy  land  50 

Enoch  Arden  839 

In  Mem.  v  3 

„     xiii  2 

„    xcii  1 

Forlorn  8 

Elednore  2 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  11 

Gardener's  D.  220 

Aylmer's  Field  144 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  22 

„  xlm  9 

„  xcv  49 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  35 

Madeline  10 

In  Mem.  Ixviii  8 

Princess  i  55 

Ode  on  Well.  147,  227 

Maud  I  xxii  28 


whether  the  mind.  With  some 
Revenge  (ship)    so  The  little  R  ran  on  sheer 

R  ran  on  thro'  the  long  sea-lane  between. 

mann'd  the  R  with  a  swarthier  aUen  crew, 

R  herself  went  down  by  the  island  crags 
Revenge  (verb)     He  hiss'd,  '  Let  us  r  ourselves. 
Revenue    overflowing  r  Wherewith  to  embellish 

I  reap  No  r  from  the  field  of  unbeUef . 
Revere    Whom  we  see  not  we  r ;  We  r. 

We  r,  and  while  we  hear  The  tides  of  Music's 
Revered     R,  beloved, — 0  you  that  hold 

R  Isabel,  the  crown  and  head, 

flattering  the  poor  roofs  R  as  theirs 
Reverence  (s)    (See  also  Self-reverence) 
to  r  closed 

with  one  mind  the  Gods  Rise  up  for  r. 

But  let  her  herald,  R,  fly  Before  her 

To  all  the  people,  winning  r. 

Meet  for  the  r  of  the  hearth, 

Have  not  our  love  and  r  left  them  bare? 

With  some  cold  r  worse  than  were  she  dead. 

That  mask'd  thee  from  men's  r  up. 

Some  r  for  the  laws  ourselves  have  made, 

to  pay  the  debt  Of  boundless  love  and  r 

But  more  of  r  in  us  dwell ; 

I  had  such  r  for  his  blame. 

To  r  and  the  silver  hair ; 

In  r  and  in  charity. 

As  if  in  deepest  r  and  in  love. 

With  no  more  sign  of  r  than  a  beard. 

Abash'd  Lavaine,  whose  instant  r, 

A  manner  somewhat  f aU'n  from  r — 

To  all  the  people,  winning  r. 

Down  with  Reticence,  down  with  R — 

But  every  man  was  mute  for  r. 
Uevarence  (verb)    swear  To  r  the  King,  as  if  he  were  Their 
conscience, 


Lover's  Tale  ii  127 

The  Revenge  33 

36 

110 

118 

Happy  63 

(Enone  112 

Akbar's  Dream  67 

Ode  on  Well.  245 

251 

To  the  Queen  1 

Isabel  10 

Aylmer's  Field  176 

A  thousand  claims 

To  the  Queen  27 

(Enone  110 

Love  thou  thy  land  18 

M.  d' Arthur  108 

Aylmer's  Field  333 

785 

Princess  v  92 

„  vii  343 

„  Con.  55 

Ode  on  Well.  157 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  26 

lie 

Ixxxiv  32 

„  cxiv  28 

Merlin  and  V.  220 

279 

Lancelot  and  E.  418 

Last  Tournament  119 

Pass,  of  Arthur  276 

Locksley  U.,  Sixty  142 

Death  of  (Enone  96 

Guinevere  468 


Reverenced    he,  he  r  his  liege-lady  there ;  Princess  i  188 

'  Who  r  his  conscience  as  his  king ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  8 

first  they  mock'd,  but,  after,  r  him.  Gareth  and  L.  507 

Then  tho'  he  loved  and  r  her  too  much  Marr.  of  Geraint  119 

He  r  his  dear  lady  even  in  death ;  Lover's  Tale  iv  74 

Reverencing    The  dark  retinue  r  death  Aylmer's  Field  842 

SeU-reverent  each  and  r  each.  Princess  vii  290 

And  r  the  custom  of  the  house  Geraint,  Marr.  of  Geraint  380 

He,  r  king's  blood  in  a  bad  man,  Guinevere  37 

Reverend    Than  hammer  at  this  r  gentlewoman.  Princess  Hi  129 

when  she  saw  The  haggard  father's  face  and  r  beard  „        vi  103 

1  past  beside  the  r  walls  In  which  of  old  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  1 

Reverent    [See  also  Self-reverent)    mighty  r  at  our  grace 


Holy  Cfrail  702 

Merlin  and  V.  157 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  A 

Ode  on  Well.  54 

Princess,  Con.  108 

In  Mem.  Ixxii  6 

Will  Water.  159 

The  Voyage  71 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  200 

Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  36 

Vision  of  Sin  159 


was  he: 
With  r  eyes  mock-loyal,  shaken  voice. 
So  princely,  tender,  truthful,  r,  pure — 
a  r  people  behold  The  towering  car. 
Reverie    rapt  in  nameless  r, 
Reverse    To  pine  in  that  r  of  doom, 
Reversed    I  sit,  my  empty  glass  r, 

And  now,  the  bloodless  point  r, 
Reversion    R  ever  dragging  Evolution  in  the  mud. 
Revert     Perforce  wiU  still  r  to  you ; 
Reverting     '  Change,  r  to  the  years. 
Reviewer     O  you  chorus  of  indolent  r's,  Irresponsible, 

indolent  r's,  Hendecasyllabics  1 

Waking  laughter  in  indolent  r's.  „                8 

All  that  chorus  of  indolent  r's.  .,              12 

Too  presumptuous,  indolent  r's.  „              16 

Revile     hear  thee  so  missay  me  and  r.  Gareth  and  L.  945 

Reviled     Rode  on  the  two,  reviler  and  r ;  „            794 

Shamed  am  I  that  I  so  rebuked,  r,  Missaid  thee ;  ,.           1164 

And  when  r,  hast  answer'd  graciously,  „           1269 

tongue  that  all  thro'  yesterday  R  thee,  .,          1323 

Reviler    Rode  on  the  two,  r  and  reviled ;  „            794 

Reviling    '  He  heeded  not  r  tones.  Two  Voices  220 

Revisit    from  a  land  He  never  would  r.  Lover's  Tale  iv  210 

Revolt     arose  The  women  up  in  wild  r.  Princess  vii  123 

R's,  repubUcs,  revolutions,  „       Con.  65 

And  many  more  when  Modred  raised  r,  Guinevere  441 

Revolution     Revolts,  repubhcs,  r's,  Princess,  Con.  65 

and  all  these  old  r's  of  earth ;  All  new-old  r's  of  Empire —    Vastness  29 

R-v  has  proven  but  E-volution  Beautiful  City  3 

Revolve     In  the  same  circle  we  r.  Two  Voices  314 

Revolver     Keep  the  r  in  hand !  Def.  of  Lu^know  26 

if  dynamite  and  r  leave  you  courage  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  107 

Revolving     stood  Sir  Bedivere  i?  many  memories,  M.  d' Arthur  210 

to  rise  again  R  toward  fulfilment,  Edwin  Morris  39 

(for  still  My  mother  went  r  on  the  word)  Princess  Hi  54 

common  hate  with  the  r  wheel  Should  drag  you  down,  „       vi  173 

And  tho'  the  months,  r  near.  In  Mem.  xcii  11 

stood  Sir  Bedivere  R  many  memories.  Pass,  of  Arthur  438 

r  in  myself  The  word  that  is  the  symbol  Ancient  Sage  230 

Rewaken    R  with  the  dawning  soul.  In  Mem.  xliii  16 

Reward     God  bless  you  for  it,  God  r  you  Enoch  Arden  424 

fain  would  I  r  thee  worshipfully.  Gareth  and  L.  829 

Rex     '  Death  is  king,  and  Vivat  R  !  Vision  of  Sin  179 

Rtaeumatis  (rheumatism)   I  wur  down  wi'  the  r  then —  Church-warden,  etc.  14 

Rheumy     Glimmer  in  thy  r  eyes.  Vision  of  Sin  154 

Rhine     You  leave  us :  you  will  see  the  R,  In  Mem.  xcviii  1 

Rhodope     The  R,  that  built  the  pyramid.  Princess  ii  82 

Rhyme  (s)     2'o  make  demand  of  modem  t  To  the  Queen  11 

With  weary  sameness  in  the  r's.  Miller's  D.  70 

He  utter'd  r  and  reason,  The  Goose  6 

Wlio  read  me  r's  elaborately  good,  Edwin  Morris  20 

I  will  work  in  prose  and  r.  Talking  Oak  289 

The  r's  are  dazzled  from  their  place  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  19 

To  make  me  write  my  random  r's.  Will  Water.  13 

Let  raffs  be  rife  in  prose  and  r,  „          61 

We  lack  not  r's  and  reasons,  „          62 

lucky  r's  to  him  were  scrip  and  share.  The  Brook  4 

'  O  babbling  brook,  says  Edmund  in  his  r,  „       21 

rolling  in  his  mind  Old  waifs  of  r,  „     199 

and  r's  And  dismal  lyrics,  Princess  i  141  ] 

R's  and  r's  in  the  range  of  the  times !  Spiteful  Letter  9 ' 


Rhyme 


579 


Richer 


Rhyme  (S)  (continued)     Ah  God  !  the  petty  fools  of  r  Lit.  Squabbles  1 

For  it's  easy  to  find  a  r.  (repeat)  Window,  Ay  6,  12 

What  hope  is  here  for  modem  r  In  Mem.  Ixxvii  1 

Ring  out,  ring  out  my  mournful  r's,  „            cvi  19 

As  half  but  idle  brawling  r's,  „         Con.  23 

I  think  ye  hardly  know  the  tender  r  Merlin  and  V.  383 

Master,  do  ye  love  my  tender  r  ? '  .,              399 

Vivien,  when  you  sang  me  that  sweet  r,  „              434 

this  r  Is  like  the  fair  pearl-necklace  of  the  Queen,  ,,              450 

so  is  it  with  this  r :  „              456 

The  legend  as  in  guerdon  for  your  r  ?  „              554 

This  tender  r,  and  evermore  the  doubt,  Pelleas  and  E.  410 
ran  across  her  memory  the  strange  r  Of  bygone 

Merlin,  Last  Tournament  131 

therewithal  came  on  him  the  weird  r.  Pass,  of  Arthur  444 

The  faded  r's  and  scraps  of  ancient  crones.  Lover's  Tale  i  289 
with  goodly  r  and  reason  for  it —  Sister's  (E.  and  E.)  92 
who  loved  so  well  to  mouth  my  r's.                      To  W.  H.  Brookfield  2 

You  found  some  merit  in  my  r's.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  55 

With  present  grief,  and  made  the  r's,  Tiresias  196 

louder  than  thy  r  the  silent  Word  Ancient  Sage  212 
the  name  A  golden  portal  to  my  r :                     To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  16 

forgotten  mine  own  r  By  mine  old  self.  To  Mary  Boyle  21 

A  r  that  flower'd  betwixt  the  whitening  sloe  „             25 

hail  thee  monarch  in  their  woodland  r.  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  6 

Bhyme  (verb)    force  to  make  me  r  in  youth,  Miller's  D.  193 

a  happier  lot  Than  ours,  who  r  to-day.  Epilogue  51 

Rhymester    novelist,  realist,  r,  play  your  part,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  139 

Rhjrming    R  forward  to  his  r,  Amphion  30 
leave  to  head  These  r's  with  your  name.             Pro.  to  Gen.  Hainley  20 

Rhsrthm    For  save  when  shutting  reasons  up  in  r,  Lucretius  22Z 

into  r  have  dash'd  The  passion  of  the  prophetess ;  Princess  iv  139 

Tho'  thine  ocean-roll  of  r  sound  for  ever  To  Virgil  31 

Rib  (s)    sawn  In  twain  beneath  the  r's ;  St.  S.  Stylites  53 

Stuff  his  r's  with  mouldy  hay.  Vision  of  Sin  66 

Rotting  on  some  wild  shore  with  r's  of  wreck,  Princess  v  147 

And  so  belabour'd  him  on  r  and  cheek  „          341 

And  on  thy  r's  the  limpet  sticks.  Sailor  Boy  11 

clangs  Its  leafless  r's  and  iron  horns  In  Mem.  cvii  12 

white  breast-bone,  and  barren  r's  of  Death,  Gareth  and  L.  1382 

Clung  but  to  crate  and  basket,  r's  and  spine.  Merlin  and  V.  625 

tide  Plash'd,  sapping  its  worn  r's ;  Lover's  Tale  i  56 

sitting  on  the  r's  of  wreck.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  14 

Rib  (verb)    r  and  fret  The  broad-imbased  beach,         Su/pp.  Confessions  127 

Ribald     Me  the  sport  of  r  Veterans,  Boddicea  50 

Then  with  a  r  twinkle  in  his  bleak  eyes —  The  Ring  199 

Riband     She  takes  a  r  or  a  rose ;  In  Mem.  vi  32 

Ribb'd     long  dun  wolds  are  r  with  snow,  Oriana  5 
his  visage  r  From  ear  to  ear  with  dogwhip-weals.     Last  Tournament  57 

was  r  Aiid  barr'd  with  bloom  on  bloom.  Lover's  Tale  i  415 

R3)bed     (See  also  Red-ribb'd)     To  purl  o'er  matted 

cress  and  r  sand,  Ode  to  Memory  59 

her  echo'd  song  Throb  thro'  the  r  stone ;  Palace  of  Art  176 

Ribbon     Dangled  a  length  of  r  and  a  ring  Enoch  Arden  750 

blots  of  it  about  them,  r,  glove  Or  kerchief ;  Aylmer's  Field  620 

wasn't  sa  plaain  i'  pink  r's,  Spinster's  S's.  17 

Rib-grated    r-g  dungeon  of  the  holy  human  ghost,  Happy  31 

Rice     many  a  tract  of  palm  and  r.  Palace  of  Art  Hi 

Rich    (See  also  Influence-rich,  Royal-rich,  Smnmer-rich) 

A  spring  r  and  strange,  Nothing  will  Lie  22 

flower-bells  and  ambrosial  orbs  Of  r  fruit-bunches  Isabel  37 

Flush'd  all  the  leaves  with  r  gold-green,  Arabian  Nights  82 

underpropt  a  r  Throne  of  the  massive  ore,  ,,            145 

At  the  moist  r  smell  of  the  rotting  leaves,  A  spirit  haunts  17 

and  meadow-ledges  midway  down  Hang  r  in  flowers,  (Enone  7 

And  three  r  sennights  more,  my  love  for  her.  Edwin  Morris  30 

The  slumbrous  light  is  r  and  warm,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  7 

This  earth  is  r  in  man  and  maid ;  Will  Water.  65 

And  many  a  slope  was  r  in  bloom  To  E.  L.  20 

returning  r.  Become  the  master  of  a  larger  craft,  Enoch  Arden  143 

Annie — for  I  am  r  and  well-to-do.  „            311 

stranding  on  an  isle  at  mom  R,  „            553 

A  dagger,  in  r  sheath  with  jewels  on  it  Aylmer's  Field  220 

Forgetful  how  my  r  prooemion  makes  Lucretius  70 

But  move  as  r  as  Emperor-moths,  Princess,  Pro.  144 


Rich  (continued)    swell  On  some  dark  shore  just  seen 

that  it  was  r.  Princess  i  249 

And  we  as  r  as  moths  from  dusk  cocoons,  „  ii  19 

A  classic  lecture,  r  in  sentiment,  „  374 

I  stored  it  full  of  r  memorial :  „         v  391 

Immersed  in  r  foreshadowings  of  the  world,  ,,      vii  312 

Disrobed  the  glimmering  statue  of  Sir  Ralph  From 

those  r  silks,  „  Con.  118 

R  in  saving  common-sense,  Ode  on  Well.  32 

R  in  model  and  design ;  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  13 

r  Virgilian  rustic  measure  Of  Lari  Maxume,  The  Daisy  lb 

Me  the  wife  of  r  Prasutagus,  Boddicea  48 

Streams  o'er  a  r  ambrosial  ocean  isle,  Milton  14 

RoU'd  the  r  vapour  far  into  the  heaven.  Spec,  of  Iliad  8 

But  he  was  r  where  I  was  poor.  In  Mem.  Ixxix  18 

and  lead  The  closing  cycle  r  in  good.  „  cv  28 

Ring  out  the  feud  of  r  and  poor,  „  cvi  11 

R  in  the  grace  all  women  desire,  Mavd  I  x  13 

a  morning  shine  So  ■>  in  atonement  as  this  „       xix  6 

Voice  in  the  r  dawn  of  an  ampler  day —  Ded.  of  Idylls  36 

r  With  jewels,  elfin  Urim,  on  the  hilt,  Com.  of  Arthur  298 

r  in  emblem  and  the  work  Of  ancient  kings  Gareth  and  L.  304 

The  shield  of  Gawain  blazon'd  r  and  bright,  „  416 

All  in  a  full-fair  manor  and  a  r,  „  846 

house  Once  r,  now  poor,  but  ever  open-door'd.'      Marr.  of  Gmaint  302 
That  all  the  turf  was  r  in  plots  that  look'd  „  660 

With  store  of  r  apparel,  sumptuous  fare,  „  709 

R  arks  with  priceless  bones  of  martyrdom,  Balin  and  Balan  110 

so  r  a  fellowship  Would  make  me  wholly  blest :  „  147 

Past  up  the  still  r  city  to  his  kin,  Lancelot  and  E.  802 

Far  up  the  dim  r  city  to  her  kin ;  „  845 

across  the  fields  Far  into  the  r  city,  „  891 

and  me  also  like  the  Queen  In  all  I  have  of  r,  „  1120 

And  all  the  dim  r  city,  roof  by  roof.  Holy  Grail  228 

So  strange,  and  r,  and  dim ;  „  342 

R  galleries,  lady-laden,  weigh'd  the  necks  „  346 

The  knights  and  ladies  wept,  and  r  and  poor  Wept,  ,,  353 

Beyond  all  sweetness  in  a  life  so  r, —  „  626 

sight  Of  her  r  beauty  made  him  at  one  glance  Pelleas  and  E.  238 

but  rosier  luck  will  go  With  these  r  jewels.  Last  Tournament  46 

Far  on  into  the  r  heart  of  the  west :  Guinevere  244 

infuse  R  atar  in  the  bosom  of  the  rose,  Lover's  Tale  i  270 

like  a  vain  r  man,  That,  having  always  prosper'd  „  715 

her  hair  Studded  with  one  r  Provence  rose —  „         Hi  45 

while  I  mused  nor  yet  endured  to  take  So  r  a  prize,  „  50 

such  a  feast  So  r,  so  strange,  and  stranger  ev'n  than 

r,  But  r  as  for  the  nuptials  of  a  king.  „         iv  211 

He  brings  and  sets  before  him  in  r  guise  „  247 

That  my  r  gift  is  wholly  mine  to  give.  „  350 

And  in  the  r  vocabulary  of  Love  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  291 

Having  lands  at  home  and  abroad  in  a  r  West-Indian 

isle ;  The  Wreck  46 

R  was  the  rose  of  simset  there,  „         136 

Strong  in  will  and  r  in  wisdom,  Edith,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  49 

The  kings  and  the  r  and  the  poor ;  Dead  Prophet  40 

R  in  symbol,  in  ornament,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  47 

Their  r  ambrosia  tasted  aconite.  Demeter  and  P.  105 

stood  between  The  tower  and  that  r  phantom  of  the 

tower  ?  The  Ring  253 

full  thanks  to  you  For  your  r  gift,  To  Ulysses  34 

Fair  garments,  plain  or  r,  and  fitting  close  Akbar's  Dream  131 

Richard     (See  also  Richard  Grenville)     Sir  R  bore  in  hand 

all  his  sick  men  The  Revenge  15 

Good  Sir  R,  tell  us  now,  „  26 

And  Sir  R  said  again  :  '  We  be  all  good  English  men.  „  29 

Sir  R  spoke  and  he  laugh'd,  „  32 

Sir  R  cried  in  his  Engl^h  pride,  „  82 

old  Sir  R  caught  at  last,  „  98 

Richard  Grenville    (See  also  Richard)    At  Flohes  in  the 

Azores  Sir  R  G  lay,  The  Revenge  1 

Then  spake  Siv  R  G :  „  8 

With  a  joyful  spirit  I  Sir  22  G  die  ! '  „        103 

Richard  (king)     That  traitor  to  King  R  and  the  tmth,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  171 

Richer    Love,  then,  had  hope  of  r  store  :  In  Mem.  Ixxxi  5 

And  many  of  these  in  r  arms  than  he.  Com.  of  Arthur  52 


Richer 


580 


Riding-borse 


Richer  {continued)    as  a  faith  once  fair  Was  r  than 

these  diamonds —  Lancelot  and  E.  1229 

she  set  A  banquet  r  than  the  day  before  By  me  ;  Holy  Grail  589 

r  in  His  eyes  Who  ransom'd  us,  Guinevere  684 

Richest     and  a  sweep  Of  r  pauses,  Elednore  66 

fetch'd  His  r  beeswing  from  a  binn  reserved  Aylmer's  Field  405 

call'd  mine  host  To  council,  plied  him  with  his  r  wines,    Princess  i  174 

And  those  five  years  its  r  field.  In  Mem.  xlvi  12 

that  shrine  which  then  in  all  the  realm  Was  r,  Lancelot  and  E.  1331 

Richest-toned    voice  the  r-t  that  sings,  In  Mem.  Ixxv  7 

Richness     deck  it  like  the  Queen's  For  r,  Lancelot  and  E.  1119 

Rick     A  jackass  heehaws  from  the  r,  Amphion  71 

the  r  Flames,  and  his  anger  reddens  Princess  iv  385 

The  moon  like  a  r  on  fire  was  rising  Grandmother  39 

and  all  the  land  from  roof  and  r.  Com.  of  Arthur  433 

When  thirty  r^s.  All  flaming.  To  Mary  Boyle  36 

Rick-fire    years  ago,  In  r-f  days,  „              28 

Rid     If  both  be  slain,  I  am  r  of  thee  ;  Gareth  and  L.  790 

Ridden    {See  also  Hard-ridden)    How  long,  O  God,  shall  men 

be  r  down,  Poland  1 

found  that  you  had  gone,  R  to  the  hills.  Princess  iv  343 

Half  r  off  with  by  the  thing  he  rode,  Geraint  and  E.  460 
we  have  r  before  among  the  flowers  In  those 

fair  days — ■  Balin  and  Balan  272 

added  wound  to  wound.  And  r  away  to  die  ?  '  Lancelot  and  E.  568 

had  r  a  random  roimd  To  seek  him,  „             630 

'  Then  Sir  Bors  had  r  on  Softly,  Holy  Grail  647 

Riddle     Dissolved  the  r  of  the  earth.  Two  Voices  170 

in  seeking  to  undo  One  r,  and  to  find  the  true,  „           233 

oft  the  r  of  the  painful  earth  Flash'd  Palace  of  Art  213 

'  Your  r  is  hard  to  read.'  Lady  Clare  76 

Charades  and  r's  as  at  Christmas  here.  Princess,  Pro.  189 

God  unknits  the  r  of  the  one.  Lover's  Tale  i  181 

Riddhng    So  Merlin  r  anger'd  me  ;  Com.  of  Arthur  412 

'  Know  ye  not  then  the  R  of  the  Bards  ?  Gareth  and  L.  286 

Ride  (s)     while  she  made  her  ready  for  her  r,  Lancelot  and  E.  779 

'  Alas,'  he  said,  '  your  r  hath  wearied  you.  „             831 

Ride  (verb)     His  son  and  heir  doth  r  post-haste,  D.  of  the  O.  Year  31 

'  R  you  naked  thro'  the  town,  Godiva  29 

Then  by  some  secret  shrine  I  r  ;  Sir  Galahad  29 

R  on !  the  prize  is  near.'  „             80 

All-arm'd  I  r,  whate'er  betide,  „             83 

They  love  us  for  it,  and  we  r  them  down.  Princess  v  157 

r  with  us  to  our  lines,  And  speak  with  Arac :  „          225 

Down  by  the  hill  I  saw  them  r,  Maud  I  ix  11 

Lancelot,  to  r  forth  And  bring  the  Queen  ; —  Com.  of  Arthur  448 

And  evermore  a  knight  would  r  away.  Gareth  and  L.  438 

helm  could  r  Therethro'  nor  graze :  ,,             673 

Than  r  abroad  redressing  women's  wrong,  „             866 

beseemeth  not  a  knave  To  r  with  such  a  lady.'  „             959 

The  buoy  that  r's  at  sea,  „           1146 

'  I  lead  no  longer  ;  r  thou  at  my  side  ;  „           1157 

There  r's  no  knight,  not  Lancelot,  „           1182 

loving  the  battle  as  well  As  he  that  r's  him.'  „          1302 

Seeing  he  never  r's  abroad  by  day  ;  „          1334 

And  r  with  him  to  battle  and  stand  by,  Marr.  of  Geraint  94 

'  I  will  r  forth  into  the  wilderness  ;  ,.            127 

put  on  thy  worst  and  meanest  dress  And  r  with  me.'  ,,            131 

tho'  I  r  unann'd,  I  do  not  doubt  To  find,  „             218 

knight  whom  late  I  saw  R  into  that  new  fortress  ,,            407 

Shalt  r  to  Arthur's  court,  and  coming  there,  „            582 

To  r  with  him  this  morning  to  the  court,  ,.            606 

I  can  scarcely  r  with  you  to  court,  „             749 

That  she  r  with  me  in  her  faded  silk.'  „             762 

I  charge  thee  r  before,  Geraint  and  E.  14 

when  she  saw  him  r  More  near  by  many  a  rood  „            441 

'  Then,  Enid,  shall  you  r  Behind  me.'  „             750 

Hath  leam'd  black  magic,  and  to  r  unseen.  Balin  and  Balan  305 

Up  then,  r  with  me  !     Talk  not  of  shame  !  „              522 

We  r  a-hawking  with  Sir  Lancelot.  Merlin  and  V.  95 

they  r  away — to  hawk  For  waterfowl.  „            107 

r,  and  dream  The  mortal  dream  „            116 

R,  r  and  dream  until  ye  wake —  „             118 

They  r  abroad  redressing  human  wrongs !  „             693 

he  will  r,  Joust  for  it,  and  win,  Lancelot  and  E.  203 


Ride  (verb)  {continued)  To  r  to  Camelot  with  this  noble 

knight :  Lancelot  and  E.  220 

you  r  with  Lancelot  of  the  Lake,'  ,.  417 

rise,  O  Gawain,  and  r  forth  and  find  the  knight.  ,.  537 

And  r  no  more  at  random,  noble  Prince  I  ..  633 

r  A  twelvemonth  and  a  day  in  quest  of  it,  Holy  Grail  196 

I  have  been  the  sluggard,  and  I  r  apace,  „  644 

we  are  damsels-errant,  and  we  r,  Arm'd  as  ye  see,        Pelleas  and  E.  64 
grizzlier  than  a  bear,  to  r  And  jest  with :  „  193 

saw  the  King  R  toward  her  from  the  city,  Guinevere  404 

To  r  abroad  redressing  human  wrongs,  „       471 

r  highly  Above  the  perilous  seas  of  change  Lover's  Tale  i  805 

war  R's  on  those  ringing  axles  !  Tiresias  93 

Rider     The  horse  and  r  reel :  Sir  Galahad  8 

But  that  his  heavy  r  kept  him  down.  Vision  of  Sin  4 

r's  front  to  front,  until  they  closed  .  Princess  v  490 

there  a  horse  !  the  r  ?  where  is  he  ?  Balin  and  Balan  467 

steed  of  Pelleas  floundering  flung  His  r,  Pelleas  and  E.  575 

Ridest     '  R  thou  then  so  hotly  on  a  quest  Holy  Grail  642 

That  r  here  so  blindly  and  so  hard  ?  '  Pelleas  and  E.  564 

Rideth     who  always  r  arm'd  in  black,  Gareth  and  L.  636 

Ridge     (See  also  Ocean-ridge)     his  r's  are  not  curls  And 

ripples  of  an  inland  mere  ?  Supp.  Confessions  130 

sand-built  r  Of  heaped  hills  that  mound  the  sea,         Ode  to  AlemoryQl 
A  faint-blue  r  upon  the  right. 
Across  the  r,  and  paced  beside  the  mere, 
And,  leaping  down  the  r's  lightly. 
But  the  other  swiftly  strode  from  r  to  r. 
Or  shp  between  the  r's, 
a  ?■  Of  breaker  issued  from  the  belt, 
and  then  the  great  r  drew, 
storm  Of  galloping  hoofs  bare  on  the  r  of  spears 
Close  to  the  r  of  a  noble  down. 
The  fortress,  and  the  mountain  r, 
There  Ues  a  r  of  slate  across  the  ford ; 
Southwestems,  rolling  r  on  r. 
And  climb'd  upon  a  fair  and  even  r, 
my  feet  recrost  the  deathful  r  No  memory 
heapt  in  mounds  and  r's  all  the  sea  Drove 
Across  the  r,  and  paced  beside  the  mere. 
And,  leaping  down  the  r's  lightly. 
But  the  other  swiftly  strode  from  r  to  r, 
On  that  sharp  r  of  utmost  doom  ride  highly 
that  brave  soldier,  down  the  terrible  r 
r's  drew  the  cloud  and  brake  the  storm 
he  Subjected  to  the  Heliconian  r 
Watch'd  again  the  hollow  r's 
we  saw  your  soldiers  crossing  the  r, 
Ridged  (adj.)     Leaning  upon  the  r  sea, 

bleat  Of  the  thick-fleeced  sheep  from  wattled  folds. 

Upon  the  r  wolds.  Ode  to  Memory  67 

sharp  clear  twang  of  the  golden  chords  Runs  up  the 

r  sea.  Sea-Fairies  39] 

Ridged  (verb)     R  the  smooth  level,  Arabian  Nights  35: 

Ridging    {See  also  Slowly-ridging)    The  Biscay,  roughly 

r  eastward, 
Ridin-erse  (riding-horse)     iviy  darter  o'  Squire's  hed  her 

awn  r-e 
Riding    Stopt,  and  then  with  a  r  whip 
The  kmghts  come  r  two  and  two : 
A  youth  came  r  toward  a  palace-gate. 
He  found  the  bailiff  r  by  the  farm, 
r  in,  we  call'd ;   A  plump-arm'd  Ostleress 
r  at  set  of  day  Over  the  dark  moor  land,  Rapidly 

r  far  away.  She  waved  to  me 
And  down  the  long  street  r  wearily. 
Then  r  close  behind  an  ancient  churl. 
Then  r  further  past  an  armourer's, 
but  r  first,  I  hear  the  violent  threats 
Came  r  with  a  hundred  lances  up  ; 
R  at  noon,  a  day  or  twain  before, 
from  the  city  gates  Issued  Sir  Lancelot  r  airily, 
For  Arthur  and  Sir  Lancelot  r  once 
Scarlett  and  Scarlett's  three  hundred  were  r  by 
Riding-horse    See  Ridin-erse 


Mariana  in  the  S.  5 

31.  d' Arthur  83 

134 

181 

The  Brook  28 

Sea  Dreams  211 

220 

Priticess  v  489 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  16 

In  Mem.  Ixxi  14 

Gareth  and  L.  1056 

1145 

Marr.  of  Geraint  239 

Holy  Grail  534 

798 

Pass,  of  Arthur  251 

302 

349 

Lover's  Tale  i  805 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  63 

Montenegro  13 

Tiresias  26 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  2 

Bandit's  Death  21 

The  Winds,  etc.  2 


Enoch  Arden  5291 

Village  Wife  35] 

Maud  I  xiii  18 1 

L.  of  Shalott  a  25  j 

Vision  of  Sin  T 

The  Brook  15 

Princess  i  2251 

Maud  I  ix5i\ 
Marr.  of  Geraint  25 
261 
26 
Geraint  and  E.  4191 
5391 
Pelleas  and  E. 

557 

Last  Tournament  IC 

Heavy  Brigade '. 


Rife 


581 


Ring 


Eife     With  dinning  sound  my  ears  are  r,  Elednore  135 

Let  raffs  be  r  in  prose  and  rhyme,  WUl  Water.  61 

language  r  With  rugged  maxims  hewn  from  life ;  Ode  on  Wdl.  183 

Bifle-buUet    Death  from  their  r-b's,  Def.  of  Luchww  1-t 

Rifleman     R,  true  is  your  heart,  „                56 

R,  high  on  the  roof,  hidden  there  „                63 

Storm,  Storm,  Riflemen  form!  (repeat)  Riflemen  form!  5,  19 

Riflemen,  Riflemen,  Riflemen  form !  (repeat)  „  7, 14,  21,  28 

Form,  Form,  Riflemen  Form !  (repeat)  „           12,  26 

Rift  (s)     '  It  is  the  little  r  within  the  lute,  Merlin  and  V.  390 

'  The  little  r  within  the  lover's  lute  „              393 

gray  heads  beneath  a  gleaming  r.  Demeter  and  P.  83 

Flattery  gilding  the  r  in  a  throne ;  Fastness  20 

Rift  (verb)     R  the  hills,  and  roll  the  waters,  Locksley  Hall  186 

Rifted    (See  also  Sallow-rifted)    methought  The  cloud 

was  r  by  a  purer  gleam  Akbar's  Dream  78 

Rigging    masts  and  the  r  were  lying  over  the  side ;  The  Revenge  81 
storm  grew  with  a  howl  and  a  hoot  of  the  blast  In  the  r.     The  Wreck  92 
Right  (adj.  and  adv.)     {See  also  Ebilf-right)     whose  strong 

r  arm  debased  The  throne  of  Persia,  Alexander  1 

The  r  ear,  that  is  fiU'd  with  dust.  Two  Voices  116 

And  I  should  know  if  it  beat  r,  Miller's  D.  179 

Time  will  set  me  r.'  Edwin  Morris  88 

My  r  leg  chain'd  into  the  crag,  St.  S.  Stylites  73 
For,  am  I  r,  or  am  I  wrong,  (repeat)                  Day-Dm.,  U Envoi  29,  33 

And  on  the  r  hand  of  the  hearth  he  saw  Philip,  Enoch  Arden  744 

But  Lady  Psyche  was  the  r  hand  now,  Princess  Hi  37 

is  not  Ida  r  ?    They  worth  it  ?  „           188 

And  so  I  often  told  her,  r  or  wrong,  ,,           288 

And,  r  or  wrong,  I  care  not :  „           290 

she  may  sit  Upon  a  king's  r  hand  in  thunderstorms,  „           439 

he  That  loved  me  closer  than  his  own  r  eye,  „           531 

And  r  ascension.  Heaven  knows  what ;  „      vi  257 

she  turns  Once  more  to  set  a  ringlet  r ;  In  Mem.  vi  36 

I  cannot  see  the  featiu-es  r,  „        Ixx  1 

And  this  wise  world  of  ours  is  mainly  r.  Geraint  and  E.  901 
'  R  was  the  King !  our  Lancelot !  that  true  man ! ' 

'  And  r  was  I,'  Lancelot  and  E.  665 

In  her  r  hand  the  lily,  in  her  left  The  letter —  „  1155 
Power  from  whose  r  hand  the  light  Of  Life  issueth.     Lover's  Tale  i  497 

'  you  are  sure  it  '11  all  come  r,'  First  Quarrel  1 
'  Wait  a  little,  my  lass,  I  am  sure  it  '11  all  come  r.' 

(repeat)  „       74, 91 

Steevie  be  r  good  manners  bang  thruf  Spinster's  S's.  66 

It  still  were  r  to  crown  with  song  Epilogue  36 

Death  for  the  r  cause,  death  for  the  wrong  cause.  Fastness  8 

I  worship  that  r  hand  Which  fell'd  the  foes  Happy  41 

Ri{^t  (s)     who  stand  now,  when  we  should  aid  the  r —  Poland  13 

because  r  is  r,  to  follow  r  Were  wisdom  (Enone  149 

hers  by  r  of  f  ull-accomplish'd  Fate ;  Palace  of  Art  207 
Who  wi-ench'd  their  r's  from  thee !                            England  and  Amer.  5 

since  I  knew  the  r  And  did  it ;  Love  and  Duty  29 

we,  that  prate  Of  r's  and  wrongs,  Godiva  8 
And  in  the  r's  that  name  may  give,                         Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  54 

'  The  man  will  cleave  unto  his  r.'  Lady  Clare  46 

reigning  in  his  place.  Lord  of  his  r's  Enoch  Arden  764 

A  talk  of  college  and  of  ladies'  r's.  Princess,  Pro.  233 

be  swerved  from  r  to  save  A  prince,  „             ii  290 

Toward  that  great  year  of  equal  mights  and  r's,  „              iv  74 

To  unfurl  the  maiden  banner  of  our  r's,  „                503 

What  have  you  done  but  r  ?  „                d  65 

As  trutliful,  much  that  Ida  claims  as  r  „                 202 

throat's  would  bawl  for  civU  r's.  No  woman  named :  „                387 

With  claim  on  claim  from  r  to  r,  „                417 

r's  or  wrongs  like  potherbs  in  the  street.  „                459 

We  will  be  liberal,  since  our  r's  are  won.  „              vi  68 

whoUy  scom'd  to  help  their  equal  r's  „           vii  233 

AH  great  self-seekers  trampling  on  the  r :  Ode  on  Well.  187 

only  thirsting  For  the  r,  „  204 
Maakin'  'em  goa  togither  as  they've  good  r  to  do.  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  34 
At  you,  so  careful  of  the  r.                                         To  F.  D.  Maurice  10 

Ring  in  the  love  of  truth  and  r,  In  Mem.  cvi  23 

mine  by  a  r,  from  birth  till  death.  Maud  I  xix  42 

a  war  would  arise  in  defence  of  the  r,  „     ///  vi  19 

in  the  space  to  left  of  her,  and  r,  Gareth  and  L.  224 


Right  (s)  (continued)   mocker  ending  here  Turn'd  to  the  r,    Gareth  and  L.  295 


Would  shape  himself  a  r ! ' 

bring  him  here,  that  I  may  judge  the  r, 

mark'd  not  on  his  r  a  cavern-chasm 

on  his  r  Stood,  all  of  massiest  bronze  : 

Made  with  her  r  a  comb  of  pearl  to  part  The  lists 

lightnings  here  and  there  to  left  and  r  Struck, 

To  r  ?  to  left  ?  straight  forward  ? 

a-s  one  That  doest  r  by  gentle  and  by  churl. 
King  by  courtesy,  Or  King  by  r — 

What  r's  are  his  that  dare  not  strike 

Had  Arthur  r  to  bind  them  to  himself  ? 

For  half  of  their  feet  to  the  r 

but  sane,  if  she  were  in  the  r. 

Follow  Light,  and  do  the  R — 

The  ring  by  r,  she  said,  was  hers  again 

for  the  r's  of  an  equal  humanity, 

I  still  would  do  the  r  Thro'  all  the  vast  dominion 
Right  (verb)     When  the  wild  peasant  r's  himself, 

to  fight,  to  struggle,  to  r  the  wrong — 

'  Bound  am  I  to  r  the  wrong'd, 

strength  and  will  to  r  the  wrong'd. 

And  leaving  human  Avrongs  to  r  themselves. 
Righteous     Not  void  of  r  self-applause, 

That  even  our  prudent  king,  our  r  queen — 
Righteousness    yonder  shines  The  Sun  of  R, 

proclaimed  His  Master  as  '  the  Sun  of  R,' 
Rightful     help  my  prince  to  gain  His  r  bride. 
Right-honest     '  All  of  one  mind  and  all  r-k  friends ! 
Righting    So  I  set  to  r  the  house, 
Rigid    a  rough  piece  Of  early  r  colour, 
Rigtree  (beam)     when  the  r  was  tummlin'  in — 
Riled     Eh  but  the  moor  she  r  me. 

Fur  if  iver  thy  feyther  'ed  r  me 
Rill     Like  sunshine  on  a  dancing  r, 

From  old  well-heads  of  haimted  r's. 

Not  any  song  of  bird  or  sound  of  r ; 

'  Go  down  beside  thy  native  r. 

From  hidden  summits  fed  with  r's 

The  white-faced  halls,  the  glancing  r's, 

round  with  ragged  r's  and  burning  folds, — 
Rillet    fall  Of  diamond  r's  musical, 
Rim    ragged  r's  of  thunder  brooding  low, 

Beyond  their  utmost  purple  r,  (repeat) 

the  r  Changed  every  moment  as  we  flew. 

ran  By  sallowy  r's,  arose  the  labourers'  homes. 

Now  pacing  mute  by  ocean's  r ; 

Roll'd  into  light,  and  turning  on  its  r's 
Rime     Make  thy  grass  hoar  with  early  r. 


348 
380 

Balin  and  Balan  312 

363 

Merlin  and  F.  244 

Holy  Grail  494 

Pelleas  and  E.  67 

Last  Tournament  74 

342 

527 

684 

The  Revenge  35 

The  Flight  58 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  277 

The  Ring  394 

Beautiful  City  2 

Akbar's  Dream  13 

Princess  iv  385 

Wages  3 

Gareth  and  L.  804 

Holy  Grail  309 

898 

Two  Foices  146 

Columbus  122 

Enoch  Arden  504 

Akbar's  Dream  83 

Princess  Hi  161 

Geraint  and  E.  484 

First  Quarrel  47 

Aylmer's  FieM  281 

Owd  Rod  115 

North.  Cobbler  30 

Church-warden,  etc.  41 

Rosalind  29 

Elednore  16 

D.  ofF.  Women  66 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  5 

,,  ciii  7 

Con.  113 

Lover's  Tale  ii  63 

Arabian  Nights  48 

Palace  of  Art  75 

Day-Dm.,  Depart.  6,  30 

The  Foyage  27 

Aylmer's  Field  147 

The  Daisy  21 

Lancelot  and  E.  51 

Two  Foices  66 


brows  in  silent  hours  become  Unnaturally  hoar  with  r,   St.  S.  Stylites  166 


To  F.  D.  Maurice  42 

The  Flight  4 

Gardener's  D.  181 

(Enone  72 

Talking  Oak  171 

Ancient  Sage  122 


the  lawn  as  yet  Is  hoar  with  r, 

the  hiUs  are  white  with  r. 
Rimm'd    length  of  bright  horizon  r  the  dark. 
Rind    gleaming  r  ingrav'n  '  For  the  most  fair,' 

Hard  wood  I  am,  and  wrinkled  r, 

Is  jutting  thro'  the  r ; 
Rinded  See  Golden-rinded 
Ring  (encompass)     my  followers  r  him  roimd :  Geraint  and  E.  336 

Ring  (s)     (See  also  Marriage-ring)     locks  a-drooping  twined 

Round  thy  neck  in  subtle  r  Adeline  58 

his  stedfast  shade  Sleeps  on  his  luminous  r.'  Palace  of  Art  16 

they  drew  into  two  burning  r's  All  beams  of  Love,  D.  of  F.  Women  174 

Five  hundred  r's  of  years —  Talking  Oak  84 

And  even  into  my  inmost  r  A  pleasure  I  discern'd,  „  173 


The  dim  curls  kindle  into  sunny  r's ; 
Grave  faces  gather'd  in  a  r. 
Closed  in  a  golden  r. 
And  gave  the  trinkets  and  the  r's, 
Enoch's  golden  r  had  girt  Her  finger, 
Dangled  a  length  of  ribbon  and  a  r 
fragile  bindweed-bells  and  briony  r's ; 
Lay  deeper  than  to  wear  it  as  his  r — 
nor  by  plight  or  broken  r  Bound, 
I'll  stake  my  ruby  r  upon  it  you  did.' 
a  thousand  r's  of  Spring  In  every  bole. 


Tithonus  54 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  38 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  27 

The  Letters  21 

Enoch  Arden  157 

750 

The  Brook  203 

Aylmer's  Field  122 

135 

Princess,  Pro.  170 

V  237 


Ring 


582 


Now  over,  now  beneath  her  marriafrp  r  /o      •      ''  /!**  ^ 

Spanish  fleet  with  broken  siHpf^I^     '  ^         „  •       Geramt  and  E.  259 

he  learnt  thatl  hated  thf rl  wZ  "  '^'^'^^  ^^fri^'^z-^^^ 

diamond  necklace  dearer  than  the  golden  r  LorUlJn    J'f  ol 

Pnnce  has  found  you,  take  this  r  -Locksleij  H.,  Sixty  21 

This  r  bequeath'd  you  by  your  mother, 

Ihe  ris  doubly  yours. 

A  r  too  which  you  kiss'd, 

Like  a  seal'd  book,  aU  mention  of  the  r 

while  I  stoopt  To  take  and  kiss  the  r    ' 

Ihis  very  r  lo  t'amo? 

S  Jf^f''  *°  ™^'  *>"  i^"g^'^  '  tlie  r  is  weird.' 
souls  Of  two  repentant  Lovers  guard  the  r  • ' 

And  If  you  give  the  r  to  any  maid, 
And  bind  the  maid  to  love  you  by  the  r;  And  if  the 

r  were  stolen  from  the  maid      " 
sent  This  r 'lo  t'amo '  to  his  best  beloved, 
half-frenzied  by  the  r.  He  wildly  fought 
drew  the  r  From  his  dead  finger 

^J^fhP^^""^  '°''^'  *V"'  *^i«  '•  Had  sent  his  cry 
bad  the  man  engrave  '  From  Walter '  on  the  r 

fa^M^'^^'^J'^'"^  ?'f^  '^^^^  engraven  the  ;_ 
took  the  r,  and  flaunted  it  Before  that  other 
But  commg  nearer— Muriel  had  the  r—'  0  Miriam  '  have 
^   you  given  your  r  to  her  ?  ^^""am .  nave 

•    p  Miriam   if  you  love  me  take  the  r  " 
Unclosed  the  hand,  and  from  it  drew  the  r 
Mimm  loved  me  from  the  first.  Not  thro'  the  r;  but  on 
SroThaTr""™'  ™«  ^^^^^^^^^''   death-dky."i^S 
Mjr  too  when  she  comes  of  age 
Minam  not  Muriel-she  shall  have  the  r.' 
But  kept  their  watch  upon  the  r  and  you. 
i?.ver  since  You  sent  the  fatal  r'~ 
Aor  ever  ceased  to  clamour  for  the  r;  Why  had  I  sent 
Iw  thf  ;:*  '°  '^^  ^    ^'^y  ^^^  I  made  Lr  love^'r^e 
The  r  by  right,  she  said,  was  hers  again. 
But  still  she  made  her  outcry  for  the  r  ■ 
when  the  bridegroom  murmur'd,  '  With  this  r  ' 
The  guardian  of  her  relics,  of  her  r 
Ine  fatal  r  lay  near  her  • 
had  stolen,  worn  the  r— Then  torn  it  from  her  finser 

vr^'  °r  ^^l^  ^^^  ^^d  torn  the  r  In  frSt,        ' 
You  have  the  r  she  guarded  • 
saw  The  r  of  faces  redden'd  by  the  flames 
and  never  a  r  for  the  bride 
Ring  (to  resound,  etc.)     How  the  merry  bluebell  r's 
R  sudden  scntches  of  the  jay 

V"ul^,?  ^^.®''  "1  ^^^  ears  of  armed  men. 
church-bells  r  in  the  Christmas-morn 

il  wT"^  ^1"^-    ^^^  ^*^^'  f°^g«t  to  graze, 
aid  we  hear  the  copses  r  »  s        , 

^e  shrill  beU  r's,  the  censer  swings. 

When  all  the  ghmmering  moorlanl  Vs 

""' Aylme?s      '  ""^  ^™  '^°  '^^™^  *^""^  ™«^dy 
J?>  to  the  roar  of  an  angel  onsetr- 
hghts  and  r's  the  gateway  bell, 
Shall  r  with  music  all  the  same  • 
R  out,  wild  bells,  to  the  wild  sky, 
R  out,  wild  bells,  and  let  him  die. 

^"ow^       '  '  '"  ^^^  "^'^'  ^'  ^''PPy  b^"^'  across  the 
^  out  the  false,  r  in  the  true, 
R  out  the  grief  that  saps  the  mind, 

manEnd        °^  "'^  ^"^  P""'"'  ^  ^'^  '^^'^"^  ^  all 
■R  out  a  slowly  dying  cause, 
«  m  the  nobler  modes  of  life, 


Rioted 


The  Ring  69 
75 
79 
114 
123 
132 
133 
195 
198 
200 

202 
210 
213 
217 

232 
236 
238 
243 

259 
263 
269 


275 
289 
294 
300 
362 


389 

394 

403 

439 

441 

450 

455 

470 

„      475 

Death  of  CEnone  92 

Charity  6 

Adeline  34 

My  life  ii  full  20 

(Enone  265 

M.  d'Arthur,  Ep.  31 

Gardener's  D.  85 

LocMey  Hall  35 

Sir  Galahad  35 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  35 

Aylmer's  Field  395 

Milton  8 

In  Mem.  viii  3 

Ixxvii  14 

cvi  1 

4 


11 
13 
15 


Ring  (to  resound,  ete.)  {continued)    R  out  the  want  the 

care,  the  sm,                                                    '  j    ,, 

R  out,  r  out  my  mournful  rhymes  '''*  ^^''^-  "'^  ]l 

But  r  the  fuller  minstrel  in.  "  '"              ^^ 

R  out  false  pride  in  place  and  blood,  "              9? 

of  good        °^  ^"^^^  ^^  "^^*'  ^  ''^  *^^  common  love         " 

^W°f'^'^5P%°^^.°"i'^''^^«;  ^  out  the  narrowing  "  ^^ 

ust  of  gold,-  i?  out  the  thousand  wars  of  old,  R  in 
the  thousand  years  of  peace, 
i?  in  the  vahant  man  and  free  "  i% 

R  ouMhe  darkness  of  the  land,  R  in  the  Christ  that  is  " 

Now  r's  the  woodland  loud  and  lorn?  "              ^\ 

r's  to  the  yell  of  the  trampled  wife,  Mn,,^  t'^-^I 

Ts  Even  in  dreams  to  the  chink  of  his  pence,  ^  1 40 

It  will  r  m  my  heart  and  my  ears,  ''it-H 

And  the  woodland  echo  r's;  "        -^  qo 

But  there  r's  on  a  sudden  a  passionate  cry  "        '*  i? 

FolSilJsLrdron^C'n't^f-'  '  ^^^^o^na^r^nt^ 

m  this  pavement  but  shall  ^^T/rme  '"''"  T^wS^flf? 

R  little  bells  of  change  From  word  to  word  PnJJT-      .i 

If  It  be  a  Christian  Church,  people  r1he  beli  from  ^""^'  ^^'''''  ^^ 

love  to  Thee,  ji,i.    >    n    t 

Ringdove     In  which  the  swarthy  r  sat  Akbars  B.,  Inscrtp.  4 

xuugmg    |oee  aiso  A-nnging,  Hollow-rmging)  When 

midnight  bells  cease  r  suddenly,  Z>  «f  7<'   IF.         9 it 

when  the  bells  were  r,  Allan  call'd  "^  ^-  ^"T**  ^!I 

m  the  r  of  thine  ears ;  r    i.  7     t^^.  !^ 

^'oVcha^'e'*  """'^^  'P'"  ^''  '""'  ^^°^'"  *^  '^  g'-°°^<'« 
And,  r,  springs  from  brand  and  mail  •  e;  n  1  j.  if? 

With  blissful  treble  r  clear.  '  «•    r*"^  ^/"'^"^  ^4 

Once  likewise,  in  the  r  of  his  ears  %^-  T^  ^J  ^\B 

R  like  proven'golden  coinage  tme,  AylZXpfZ  til 

but  he  must— the  land  was  r  of  it—  ^  ^'^^"^  Ex 

with  His  message  r  in  thine  ears,  "  i^ 

-baaint  s-daay— they  was  r  the  bells.  iv  Farmer    V  .<?  T^ 

I' tSo^le'tty?  ^'^  ^'"^^'  *'^^  ^  ^""^  °^  *'-  Hal,;  ^"^T^i"/;  g 
Clamour  and  rumble,  and  r  and  clatter,  "    rT!  ]2 

Raiiging  and  r  thro'  the  minds  of  men.  Com  of  ArthLVA 

r  with  their  serpent  hands,  m'i  ■        It/  r  J« 

f -f ;«  the  faLy  had  updrawn  A  fashion  zS/^f^fi  12 

Surely  the  pibroch  of  Europe  is  r  jtTZ  t     I      ^ 

Far  on  the  r  plains  of  windy  Troy  ^'^^  "^  ^^.f  ""^  ?^ 

He  rode  the  meUay,  lord  of  the  /lists  p  •    ^''%}1 

those  six  maids  ;,^^h  shrieis  and  .tughter  on  the  '^'■"""  '  '"^ 

sand  Threw  down  the  bier;  r^,.^^',  t  7    •••  o« 

Rin.S'*  "  T^"^*  ."'  -^^^  ^^'i^^  °"  those  r  axles !  ''''''  '  Ss'Z  II 

Rmglet    comb  my  hair  till  my  r's  would  fall  The  Me^ZZ  l! 

Tie  up  the  r's  on  your  cheek :  vwmnawi  14 

For  hid  in  r's  day  and  night,  mw/^^T\  -o 

bab!- PP^  ^'  ^^^'  '"^y  ^^'^^^  The  r's  waving  ^'"'^  '  ^^  ^'^ 

shower'd  the  rippled  r's  to  her  knee  •  Talking  Oak  178 

Her  full  black  r's  downward  roU'd  n       n        „,'^''<^*^'«  47 

Blowing  the  r  from  th^toaid          '  -D«i/-i>m.,  Sleep.  B.  12 

With  le^ngths  of  °ydliw  r  like'a  giri  ^''  ^^  ";''.«•  ^-  ^^.^ 

turns  Once  more  to  set  a  r  right  r   ^-J.^^^''^  \i 

Ere  childhood's  flaxen  r  turn'd    '  ^'^  ^^ "  ^*  ?f 

flaxen  r's  of  our  infancies  Wander'd,  Lover's  TalTi^f A 

Fell  on  my  face,  and  her  long  r's  moved,  '  '  ^"^'  '  f^t 

The  raven  r  or  the  gold ;  ^^r    j,.      o99 

Rmgleted    6Ve  Yellow-rmgleted  The  Ring  16b 

wallow  in  fiery  r  and  revel  On  Kilaneii  oMrwammi  426 


Rioted 


583 


Risen 


Rioted  {continued)    r  in  the  city  if  C)inobeline  ! 

There  they  dwelt  and  there  they  r ; 

and  r  over  the  land, 
Rioting    over  all  the  great  wood  r  And  climbing, 
Riotous    show'd  A  r  confluence  of  watercourses 

She  braved  a  r  heart  in  asking  for  it. 

fling  Thy  royalty  back  into  the  r  fits 
Rip     S  your  brothers'  vices  open. 


Boddicea  60 
63 

V.  of  Maddune  58 

Lover's  Tale  i  403 

Lticretius  30 

Lancelot  and  E.  359 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  100 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  141 


Ripe    Your  r  hps  moved  not,  but  your  cheek  Flush'd  Miller's  D.  131 

when  time  was  r,  The  still  affection  „           224 

I  was  r  for  death.  D.  of  F.  Women  208 

And  makes  the  purple  lilac  r,  On  a  Mourner  7 

Made  r  in  Sumner-chace :  Talking  Oak  40 

Till  all  be  r  and  rotten.  Will  Water.  16 

Half-mused,  or  reeling  r,  „            74 

'  Yes,  if  the  nuts '  he  said  '  be  r  again :  Enoch  Arden  459 

Too  r,  too  late !  they  come  too  late  Sea  Dreams  67 

See  thou,  that  countest  reason  r  In  Mem.  xxxiii  13 

Appearing  ere  the  times  were  r,  „         Con.  139 

you  may  call  it  a  little  too  r,  Maud  I  ii9 

shaping  an  infant  r  for  his  birth,  „        iv  34 

Ripen    flower  r's  in  its  place,  R's  and  fades,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  36 
and  r  toward  the  grave  In  silence ;  r,  fall,  and 

cease :  „                 51 

The  unnetted  black-hearts  r  dark,  The  Blackbird  7 

watch  her  harvest  r,  her  herd  increase,  Maud  III  vi  25 

till  their  love  Shall  r  to  a  proverb,  Lover's  Tale  i  758 

Ripen'd     And  pluck'd  the  r  ears,  Princess  ii  2 

But  woman  r  earlier,  and  her  life  „        154 

Ripeness    but,  when  love  is  grown  To  r,  To  J.  S.  15 

And  gave  all  r  to  the  grain.  In  Mem.  Ixxxi  11 

Riper    r  fife  may  magnetise  The  baby-oak  within.  Talking  Oak  255 

Not  first,  and  third,  which  are  a  r  first  ?  Sea  Dreams  66 

train  To  i  growth  the  mind  and  will :  In  Mem.  xlii  8 

The  men  of  rathe  and  r  years :  „          cx2 

Ripple  (s)     his  ridges  are  not  curls  And  r's  Swpp.  Confessions  131 

watch  the  crisping  r's  on  the  beach,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  61 

'  I  heard  the  r  washing  in  the  reeds,  M.  d' Arthur  70 

And  the  long  r  washing  in  the  reeds.'  „          117 

Stared  o'er  the  r  feathering  from  her  bows :  Enoch  Arden  544 

The  seeming-wanton  r  break,  In  Mem.  xlix  11 

shadowing  down  the  homed  flood  In  r's,  „       Ixxxvi  8 

'  I  heard  the  r  washing  in  the  reeds,  Pass,  of  Arthur  238 

And  the  long  r  washing  in  the  reeds.'  „              285 

so  quiet  the  r  would  hardly  blanch  into  spray  The  Wreck  137 

Slight  r  on  the  boundless  deep  Ancient  Sage  189 

that  one  r  on  the  boundless  deep  „           191 

Ripple  (verb)     That  r  round  the  lonely  grange ;  In  Mem.  xci  12 

rivulet  at  her  feet  R's  on  in  light  and  shadow  Maud  II  iv  42 

Rippled    the  r  ringlets  to  her  knee ;  Godiva  47 

which  was  lined  And  r  like  an  ever-fleeting  wave,        Gareth  and  L.  215 

Rippling    ran  over  The  r  levels  of  the  lake,  Lover's  Tale  Hi  4 

Ripply    and  ran  By  r  shallows  of  the  lisping  lake,  Edwin  Morris  98 

Rise  (s)     (See  also  Moon-rise)     I  turning  saw,  throned 

on  a  flowery  r,  D.  of  F.  Women  125 

Approvingly,  and  prophesied  his  r :  Aylmer'a  Field  414 

upon  the  r  And  long  roll  of  the  Hexameter —  Lucretius  10 
Rise  (verb)     In  roaring  he  shall  r  and  on  the  surface  die.        The  Kraken  15 

How  could  I  r  and  come  away,  Oriana  57 

R  from  the  feast  of  sorrow,  lady,  Margaret  62 

Pain  r's  up,  old  pleasures  paU.  Two  Voices  164 

all  day  long  t«  fall  and  r  Upon  her  balmy  bosom,  Miller's  D.  182 

with  one  mind  the  Gods  R  up  for  reverence.  CEnone  110 

I  will  r  and  go  Down  into  Troy,  „      261 

And  that  sweet  incense  r  ?  '  Palace  of  Art  44 
I  would  see  the  sun  r  (repeat)  May  Qv^en,  N.  Y's.  E.  2,  51 
sweeter  is  the  yoimg  lamb's  voice  to  me 

that  cannot  r,                                                         „  Con.  6 

O  look  !  the  sun  begins  to  r,                                     „  49 

threshold  of  the  sun.  Never  to  r  again.  D.  of  F.  Women  64 

We  saw  the  large  white  stars  r  one  by  one,  „              223 

And  if  some  dreadful  need  should  r  Love  thou  thy  land  91 

let  thy  voice  R  Uke  a  fountain  for  me  M.  d' Arthur  249 

to  r  again  Revolving  toward  fulfilment,  Edwin  Morris  38 

and  the  shadows  r  and  fall.  Locksley  Hall  80 


Rise  (verb)  (continued)   And  every  hundred  years  to  r    Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  7 

For  blasts  would  r  and  rave  and  cease.  The  Voyage  85 

and  r  To  glass  herself  in  dewy  eyes  Move  eastward  6 

Are  but  dust  that  r's  up,  (repeat)  Vision  of  Sin  133, 169 

Till  thy  drooping  courage  r,  „                  152 

Let  me  r  and  fly  away.  Sea  Dreams  304 

The  Samian  Here  r's  and  she  speaks  Princess  Hi  115 

R  in  the  heart,  and  gather  to  the  eyes,  „          iv  41 

R ! '  and  stoop'd  to  updrag  Melissa :  „            366 

they  r  or  sink  Together,  dwarf'd  or  godlike,  „       vii  259 

A  devil  r's  in  my  heart,  Sailor  Boy  23 

That  men  may  r  on  stepping-stones  In  Mem.  i  3 

And  see  the  sails  at  distance  r,  „      xii  11 

To-night  the  winds  begin  to  r  „        xvl 

cloud  That  r's  upward  always  higher,  „           17 

R,  happy  mom,  r,  holy  mom,  „    xxx  29 

When  crown'd  with  blessing  she  doth  r  .„         xl  5 

Did  ever  r  from  high  to  higher ;  „        xli  2 

If  any  vague  desire  should  r,  „     Ixxx  1 

An  iron  welcome  when  they  r:  „         xc8 

of  events  As  often  r's  ere  they  r.  „    xcii  16 

But  served  the  seasons  that  may  r ;  „     cxiii  4 

R  in  the  spiritual  rock,  „   cxxxi  3 

They  r,  but  linger ;  it  is  late ;  „  Con.  91 

And  r,  0  moon,  from  yonder  down,  ,,          109 

and  thought  he  would  r  and  speak  And  rave  Maud  I  i  59 

And  there  r's  ever  a  passionate  cry  „      II  i  5 

Then  I  r,  the  eavedrops  fall,  „        iv  62 

but  at  night  let  go  the  stone,  And  r,  Gareth  and  L.  826 

if  he  r  no  more,  I  will  not  look  at  wine  Geraint  and  E.  666 

R  therefore ;  robe  yourself  in  this :  „            685 

Rose  when  they  saw  the  dead  man  r,  „            732 

and  crying,  '  Sirs,  R,  follow  !  Balin  and  Balan  48 

R,  my  true  knight.  „                 75 

This  old  sun-worship,  boy,  will  r  again,  „              457 

'  R,  my  sweet  King,  and  kiss  me  on  the  hps,  „              516 

R ! '  and  the  damsel  bidden  r  arose  Merlin  and  V.  68 
r,  O  Gawain,  and  ride  forth  and  find  the  knight.        Lancelot  and  E.  536 

R  and  take  This  diamond,  and  deliver  it,  „            545 

To  r  hereafter  in  a  stiller  flame  „          1319 

lulling  random  squabbles  when  they  r.  Holy  Grail  557 

'  R,  weakling ;  I  am  Lancelot ;  Pelleas  and  E.  582 

but  r.  And  fly  to  my  strong  castle  overseas :  Guinevere  112 

yet  r  now,  and  let  us  fly,  „        120 

r — I  hear  the  steps  of  Modred  in  the  west,  Pass,  of  Arthur  58 

let  thy  voice  R  hke  a  fountain  for  me  „            417 
from  the  woods  That  belt  it  r  three  dark,  tall 

cypresses,—  Lover's  Tale  i  536 

and  dimly  knows  His  head  shall  r  no  more :  „            639 

laid  it  in  a  sepulchre  of  rock  Never  to  r  again.  „            684 

that  strove  to  r  From  my  full  heart.  „             711 

then  I  seem'd  To  r,  and  through  the  forest-shadow  „          ii  72 

I  could  not  r  Albeit  I  strove  to  follow.  „              97 

An'  the  wind  began  to  r.  First  Quarrel  89 

My  Willy  'ill  r  up  whole  Rizpah  57 

wish  yon  moaning  sea  would  r  and  burst  the  shore,  The  Flight  11 

my  mother's  ghost  would  r —  „          51 

kings  and  realms  that  pass  to  r  no  more ;  To  Virgil  28 

heron  r's  from  his  watch  beside  the  mere,  Happy  3 

in  their  turn  thy  warblers  r  on  wing.  Prog,  of  Spring  108 

once  again  we  see  thee  r.  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  1 
Risen    (See  also  New-risen,  Re-risen)    Nilus  would 

have  r  before  his  time  D.  of  F.  Women  143 

Dora  would  have  r  and  gone  to  him,  Dora  77 

thus  early  r  she  goes  to  inform  The  Princess :  Princess  Hi  62 

Has  r  and  cleft  the  soil,  „        m  35 

those  twin  brothers,  r  again  and  whole ;  „      vii  89 

She  might  have  r  and  floated  when  I  saw  her.  Holy  Grail  100 

sun  is  rising,'  tho'  the  sun  had  r.  „          408 

they  have  r  against  me  in  their  blood  Pelleas  and  E.  461 

Lionel,  who  fain  had  r,  but  fell  again.  Lover's  Tale  iv  361 

nay  but  thirty-nine  have  r  and  stand,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  83 
Have  we  r  from  out  the  beast,                                 Locksley  H.,  Sixty  148 

This  later  light  of  Love  have  r  in  vain,  To  Prin.  Beatrice  16 

Henceforth,  as  having  r  from  out  the  dead,  Demeter  and  P.  144 


Risen 


584 


Rivulet 


Risen  (continued)    Not  r  to,  she  was  bolder.  The  Ring  361 

Look,  the  sun  has  r  To  flame  along  Romney's  R.  57 

vines  Which  on  the  touch  of  heavenly  feet  had  /,        Death  of  CEnone  5 

Risest     R  thou  thus,  dim  dawn,  again,  In  Mem.  Ixxii  1 

R  thou  thus,  dim  dawn,  again,  „          xcix  1 

Rising    {See  also  Ever-rising,  Later-rising)    r,  from  her 

bosom  drew  Old  letters,  Mariana  in  the  S.  61 

angels  r  and  descending  met  With  interchange  Palace  of  Art  143 

And  of  the  r  from  the  dead,  „            206 

lest  the  soul  Of  Discord  race  the  r  wind ;  Love  thou  thy  land  68 

r  bore  him  thro'  the  place  of  tombs.  M.  d' Arthur  175 

made  his  forehead  like  the  r  sun  High  „           217 

r  thro'  the  mellow  shade,  Locksley  Hall  9 

Rto  no  fancy-flies.  Vision  of  Sin  102 

R,  falling,  like  a  wave,  „  125 
I  saw  my  father's  face  Grow  long  and  troubled  like  a  r 

moon,  Princess  i  59 

r  up  Robed  in  the  long  night  of  her  deep  hair,  „      iv  490 

Look'd  up,  and  r  slowly  from  me,  „      vi  151 

Last  Uttle  Lilia,  r  quietly,  „  Con.  116 

The  moon  like  a  rick  on  fire  was  r  Grandmother  39 

And  r  up,  he  rode  to  Arthur's  court,  Marr.  of  Geraint  591 

And  r  on  the  sudden  he  said,  '  Eat !  Geraint  and  E.  614 

Azure,  an  Eagle  r  or,  the  Sun  In  dexter  chief ;  Merlin  and  V.  475 

raise  the  Prince,  who  r  twice  or  thrice  Guinevere  46 

Will  draw  me  to  the  r  of  the  sun.  Lover's  Tale  i  27 

for  that  day  Love,  r,  shook  his  wings,  „            317 

roll  R  and  f  aUing—  The  Wreck  54 

the  car  Of  dark  Aidoneus  r  rapt  thee  hence.  Demeter  and  P.  39 

fiery  phoenix  r  from  the  smoke.  The  Ring  339 

O  r  worlds  by  yonder  wood.  In  Mem.  cv  25 

Thou  standest  in  the  r  sun,  „    cxxx  3 

And  on  the  downs  a  r  fire  :  „  Con.  108 

And  half  to  the  r  day ;  Maud  I  xxii  24 

The  fires  of  Hell  brake  out  of  thy  r  sim,  „          II  id 

but  thought '  The  sun  is  r,'  tho'  the  sun  had  risen.  Holy  Grail  408 

All  in  the  middle  of  the  r  moon :  „        636 

And  r  bore  him  thro'  the  place  of  tombs.  Pass,  of  Arthur  343 

made  his  forehead  like  a  r  sun  High  „  385 
to  lower  the  r  race  of  men ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  147 
Yet  I  would  the  r  race  were  half  as  eager  for  the 

light.  „                228 

Risk     and  r  thine  all.  Life,  limbs,  Gareth  and  L.  128 

Risk'd     (for  the  man  Had  r  his  little)  Sea  Dreams  10 

Take  not  his  life :  he  r  it  for  my  own ;  Princess  v  407 

sweet  son,  had  r  himself  and  climb'd,  Gareth  and  L.  60 

Risking    some  knight  of  mine,  r  his  Ufe,  Geraint  and  E.  915 

Rite    r's  and  forms  before  his  burning  eyes  The  Poet  39 

and  with  solemn  r's  by  candle-light —  Princess  v  292 

Worthy  of  our  gorgeous  r's,  Ode  on  Well.  93 

The  r's  prepared,  the  victim  bared.  The  Victim  65 

mingle  with  your  r's ;  Pray  and  be  pray'd  for ;  Guinevere  680 
And  those  lone  r's  I  have  not  seen.                      To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  39 

Ritual     And  hear  the  r  of  the  dead.  In  Mem.  xviii  12 
all  else  Form,  R,  varying  with  the  tribes  of  men.       Akbar's  Dream  125 

Rivage     From  the  green  r  many  a  fall  Arabian  Nights  47 

Rival  (adj.)     Which  fann'd  the  gardens  of  that  r  rose       Aylmer's  Field  455 

the  King  Took,  as  in  r  heat,  to  holy  things ;  Balin  and  Balan  100 

nor  raved  And  thus  foam'd  over  at  a  r  name :  „              567 

He  wildly  fought  a  r  suitor,  The  Ring  214 

Rival  (s)     my  latest  r  brings  thee  rest.  Locksley  Hall  89 

Leolin's  rejected  r's  from  their  suit  Aylmer's  Field  493 

Leolin's  one  strong  r  upon  earth ;  „            557 

wrathful,  petulant.  Dreaming  some  r,  Lucretius  15 

To  push  my  r  out  of  place  and  power.  Princess  iv  335 

Poor  r's  in  a  losing  game.  In  Mem.  cii  19 

far  away  the  maid  in  Astolat,  Her  guiltless  r,  Lancelot  and  E.  746 
R's  of  realm- ruining  party,                                    Locksley  H.,  Sixty  120 

Rivalries    fruitful  strifes  and  r  of  peace —  Bed.  of  Idylls  38 

Drove  me  from  all  vainglories,  r.  Holy  Grail  32 

Riven    within  my  inmost  frame  Was  r  in  twain :  Lover's  Tale  i  596 

Knights  were  thwack'd  and  r.  The  Tourney  10 

River    CEeably  the  blue  r  chimes  in  its  flowing  All  Things  willj)ie  1 
Thoro'  the  crack-stemm'd  pines  only  the  far  r  shines.     Leonine  Eleg.  2 

down  a  broad  canal  P'rom  the  main  r  sluiced,  Arabian  Nights  26 


River  (continued)    A  motion  from  the  r  won  Ridged  the 

smooth  level,  Arabian  Nights  34 

Flowing  like  a  crystal  r ;  Poet's  Mind  6 

With  an  inner  voice  the  r  ran.  Dying  Swan  5 

One  willow  over  the  r  wept,  „        14 

Like  some  broad  r  rushing  down  alone,  Mine  be  the  strength  2 

On  either  side  the  r  lie  Long  fields  L.  of  Shalott  i  1 

By  the  island  in  the  r  Flowing  down  to  Camelot.  „  13 

From  the  r  winding  clearly,  „  31 

There  the  r  eddy  whirls,  „         it  15 

From  the  bank  and  from  the  r  He  flash'd  „       Hi  33 

'  Tirra  Urra,'  by  the  r  Sang  Sir  Lancelot.  „  35 

And  down  the  r's  dim  expanse  „        iv  10 

full-flowing  r  of  speech  Came  down  upon  my  heart.  CEnone  68 

one,  a  full-fed  r  windmg  slow  By  herds  Palace  of  Art  73 

drew  R's  of  melodies.  „  172 

They  saw  the  gleaming  r  seaward  flow  Lotos-Eaters  14 

long  bright  r  drawing  slowly  His  waters  „  C.  S.  92 

How  fresh  the  meadows  look  Above  the  r.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  2 

willows  two  and  two  By  r's  gallopaded.  Ampkion  40 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  15 

A  Farewell  6 

The  Brook  32,  48,  64, 183 

37 

Aylmer's  Field  768 

Princess  i  171 

206 

Hi  172 

196 

290 

iv  14 

178 

277 

473 

vii  13 

Ode  on  Well.  50 

W.  to  Alexandra  19 

In  Mem.  Ixxi  13 

„  ciii  8 

Maud  I  iv  32 

Gareth  and  L.  611 

906 

1154 

Geraint  and  E.  764 

Lancelot  and  E.  75 

•  278 

1038 

1122 

1389 

Holy  Grail  800 

Last  Tournament  44 

Columbus  27 

Merlin  and  the  G.  52 

Aylmer's  Field  451 

Mariana  in  the  S.  6 

54 

Aylmer's  Field  454 

Qinone  38 

Gareth  and  L.  1025 

1216 

Merlin  and  V.  958 

Gardener's  D.  264 

Charity  15 

CEnone  114 

Mavd  II  iv  67 

Lover's  Tale  ii  188 

Marr.  of  Geraint  268 

The  Poet  51 

Holy  Grail  183 

Leonine  Eleg.  4 

May  Queen  39 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  29 

A  Farewell  1 


In  curves  the  yellowing  r  ran, 

A  rivulet  then  a  r : 

To  join  the  brimming  r,  (repeat) 

there  the  r :  and  there  Stands  PhiHp's  farm 
where  brook  and  r  meet. 

Runs  in  a  r  of  blood  to  the  sick  sea. 

Set  in  a  gleaming  r's  crescent-curve, 

We  foUow'd  up  the  r  as  we  rode, 

and  the  r  made  a  fall  Out  yonder ; ' 

The  r  as  it  narrow'd  to  the  hills. 

we  came  to  where  the  r  sloped  To  plunge 

They  faint  on  hill  or  field  or  r : 

miss'd  the  plank,  and  roli'd  In  the  r. 

combing  out  her  long  black  hair  Damp  from  the  r ; 

As  waits  a  r  level  with  the  dam  Ready  to  burst 

Let  the  great  r  take  me  to  the  main  : 

That  shines  over  city  and  r. 

Flash,  ye  cities,  in  r's  of  fire ! 

Beside  the  r's  wooded  reach, 

A  r  sliding  by  the  wall. 

his  high  sun  flame,  and  his  r  billowing  ran, 

a  r  Runs  in  three  loops  about  her  living-place ; 

Wherethro'  the  serpent  r  coil'd,  they  came. 

Down  to  the  r,  sink  or  swim. 

O'er  the  four  r's  the  first  roses  blew, 

holding  then  his  court  Hard  on  the  r 

By  the  great  r  in  a  boatman's  hut. 

Up  the  great  r  in  the  boatman's  boat. 

prepared  a  chariot-bier  To  take  me  to  the  r,  and  a 
barge  Be  ready  on  the  r. 

Sat  by  the  r  in  a  cove,  and  watch'd 

and  all  the  sand  Swept  hke  a  r, 

when  I  was  leaning  out  Above  the  r — 

saw  the  r's  roU  from  Paradise  ! 

streaming  and  shining  on  Silent  r. 
River-bank    he  ran  Beside  the  r-b : 
River-bed     An  empty  r-b  before. 

The  r-b  was  dusty-white ; 
River-breeze     the  soft  r-b,  Which  fann'd  the  gardens 
River-God     I  am  the  daughter  of  a  R-G, 
River-loop    So  when  they  touch'd  the  second  r-l, 

Lancelot,  having  swum  the  r-l's — 
River-rain    Snapt  in  the  rushing  of  the  r-r 
River-shore    Spread  the  light  haze  along  the  r-s's, 

creep  down  to  the  r-s, 
River-sunder'd    r-s  champaign  clothed  with  com, 
River-tide    On  the  misty  r-t. 
Riveted     the  eye  Was  r  and  charm-bound, 
Riveting    Sat  r  a  helmet  on  his  knee. 
Riving    r  the  spirit  of  man, 

A  cracking  and  a  r  of  the  roofs. 
Rivulet     Down  by  the  poplar  tall  r's  babble  and  fall. 

r  in  the  flowery  dale  ill  merrily  glance  and  play. 

Now  by  some  tinkling  r. 

Flow  down,  cold  r,  to  the  sea, 


Rivulet 


585 


Robby 


Rivulet  (continiud)    A  r  then  a  river :  A  Farewell  6 

By  dancing  r's  fed  his  flocks  To  E.  L.  22 

sweep  Of  some  precipitous  r  to  the  wave,  Enoch  Arden  587 

where  the  r's  of  sweet  water  ran ;  „           642 

Myriads  of  r's  hurrying  thro'  the  lawn,  Priticess  vii  220 

With  many  a  r  high  against  the  Sun  The  Islet  21 

Nor  pastoral  r  that  swerves  In  Mem.  c  14 

But  the  r  on  from  the  lawn  Running  down  Maud  I  xiv  29 

R  crossing  my  ground,  „          xxi  1 

O  R,  bom  at  the  Hall,  „                8 

For  I  heard  your  r  fall  From  the  lake  „       xxii  36 

the  r  at  her  feet  Ripples  on  in  light  and  shadow  „     //  iv  41 

Fled  like  a  glittering  r  to  the  tarn :  Lancelot  and  E.  52 

one  r  from  a  tiny  cave  Came  lightening  Pelleas  and  E.  425 

She  comes !     The  loosen'd  r's  run ;  Prog,  of  /Spring  9 
RoS  (dog's  name)     (See  also  Boaver)     Naay,  noa  mander  o'  use 

to  be  callin'  'im  E,  R,  R,  Owd  Rod  1 

An'  R  was  the  dog  as  knaw'd  „         8 

Fur  I  wants  to  tell  tha  o'  R  „       19 

Then  I  caU'd  out  R,  R,  R,  „      91 

R  was  as  good  as  the  Hangel  i'  saavin'  a  son  „      96 

'  I  mun  gaw  up  agean  fur  jf?.'  „      97 

an'  clemm'd  owd  R  by  the  'ead,  „       99 

a-callin'  o'  R  till  'e  waggled  'is  taail  „     105 

An'  I  browt  R  round,  „     113 

Roabin'  (robing)     a  r  the  'ouse  Uke  a  Queean.  Spinster's  S's.  106 
Road     (See  also  Cross-road)     thro'  the  field  the  r  runs  by 

To  many-tower'd  Camelot ;  L.  of  Shcdott  i  4 

Walking  the  cold  £ind  starless  r  of  Death  Uncomforted,  (Enone  259 

and  stood  by  the  r  at  the  gate.  Grandmother  38 

Out  into  the  r  I  started,  and  spoke  „        .  43 

In  ruin,  by  the  mountain  r ;  The  Daisy  6 

And  at  a  sudden  swerving  of  the  r,  Geraint  and  E.  506 

Roam     at  night  I  would  r  abroad  and  play  The  Merman  11 

Too  long  you  r  and  wheel  at  will ;  Rosalind  36 

see  thee  r,  with  tresses  unconfined,  Elednore  122 

we  will  no  longer  r.'  Lotos-Eaters  45 

To  those  that  stay  and  those  that  r,  Sailor  Boy  14 

Henceforth,  wherever  thou  may'st  r,  In  Mem.  xvii  9 

All  winds  that  r  the  twilight  came  „     Ixxix  11 

To  range  the  woods,  to  r  the  park,  „      Con.  96 

And  r  the  goodly  places  that  she  knew ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  646 

Boam'd     the  hill  Where  last  we  r  together.  Lover's  Tale  ii  34 

For  while  we  r  along  the  dreary  coast,  „        iv  145 

all  the  summer  long  we  r  in  these  wild  woods  The  Flight  79 

Roaming    Low-flowino  breezes  are  r  Leonine  Eleg.  1 

For  always  r  with  a  hungry  heart  Ulysses  12 

A  white-hair'd  shadow  r  Uke  a  dream  Tithonus  8 

Roan     three  pyebalds  and  a  r.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  114 
Roar  (s)     (See  also  City-roar)     The  panther's  r  came  mufHed,       CEnone  214 

Heard  thro'  the  Uving  r.  Sea  Breams  56 

'  but  this  tide's  r,  and  his,  „          250 

twists  the  grain  with  such  a  r  that  Earth  Reels,  Princess  v  528 

The  r  that  breaks  the  Pharos  from  his  base  „      vi  339 

Here,  in  streaming  London's  central  r.  Ode  on  Well.  9 

The  lone  glow  and  long  r  (repeat)  Voice  and  the  P.  3,  39 

Rings  to  the  r  of  an  angel  onset—  Milton  8 

in  its  broad -flung  shipwrecking  r,  Maud  I  Hill 

whereout  was  roll'd  A  r  of  riot.  Last  Tournament  426 

Then  at  the  dry  harsh  r  of  the  great  horn,  „                438 

So  shook  to  such  a  r  of  all  the  sky,  „                621 

whom  the  r  of  Hougoumont  Left  mightiest  To  the  Queen  ii  20 
R  upon  r  in  a  moment  two  mines  by  the  enemy        Def.  of  Lucknow  54 

while  I  spoke  The  crowd's  r  fell  Columbus  13 
My  brain  is  full  of  the  crash  of  wrecks,  and  the  r  of  waves,    The  Wreck  4 

thro'  the  r  of  the  breaker  a  whisper.  Despair  13 

By  the  long  torrent's  ever-deepen'd  r,  Death  of  CEnone  85 

Then  one  deep  r  as  of  a  breaking  sea,  St.  Telemachus  67 

Roar  (verb)     below  them  r's  The  long  brook  CEnone  7 

r  rock-thwarted  under  bellowing  caves.  Palace  of  Art  71 

'  He  that  r's  for  Uberty  Faster  binds  Vision  of  Sin  127 

the  sea  r's  Ruin :  a  fearful  night ! '  Sea  Dreams  80 

once  or  twice  I  thought  to  r,  Princess  ii  423 

R's  as  the  sea  when  he  welcomes  the  land,  W.  to  Alexandra  24 

I  r  and  rave  for  I  fall.  Voice  and  the  P.  12 


Boar  (verb)  (continued)     And  r  from  yonder  dropping  day :      In  Mem.  xv  2 

There  where  the  long  street  r's,  „    cxxiii  3 

Well  r's  the  storm  to  those  that  hear  „    cxxvii  3 

And  molten  up,  and  r  in  flood ;  „             13 
ye  seem  agape  to  r !     Yea,  ramp  and  r  at  leaving 

of  your  lord ! —  Gareth  and  L.  1306 

?•  An  ocean-sounding  welcome  to  one  knight.  Last  Tournament  167 

the  crowd  would  r  For  blood,  for  war,  Tiresias  64 

and  hear  the  waters  r,  And  see  the  ships  The  Flight  90 

Now  thy  Forum  r's  no  longer,  To  Virgil  29 

Roar'd     and  above  them  r  the  pine.  Aylmer's  Field  431 

'  No  ! '  R  the  rough  king,  Princess  i  87 

bones  of  some  vast  bulk  that  lived  and  r  „     Hi  294 

(thus  the  King  R)  make  j^ourself  a  man  „         v  35 

R  as  when  the  roaring  breakers  boom  Boddicea  76 

So  Hector  spake ;  the  Trojans  r  applause ;  Spec,  of  Iliad  1 

He  from  beyond  the  roaring  shallow  r,  Gareth  and  L.  1033 

the  lake  whiten'd  and  the  pinewood  r.  Merlin  and  V.  637 

r  And  shouted  and  leapt  down  upon  the  fall'n ;  Last  Tournament  468 
Sir  Richard  spoke  and  he  laugh'd,  and  we  r  a  hurrah.     The  Revenge  32 

To  meet  me,  r  my  name ;  Columbus  10 

Roarin'     an  r  like  judgment  daay.  Owd  Roa  110 

Roaring     (See  also  Roarin')     In  r  he  shall  rise  and  on  the 

surface  die.  The  Kraken  15 

I  hear  the  r  of  the  sea,  Oriana  98 

The  wind  is  r  in  turret  and  tree.  The  Sisters  15 

We  heard  the  hon  r  from  his  den ;  D.  of  F.  Women  222 

ocean-ridges  r  into  cataracts.  Locksley  Hall  6 

mighty  wind  arises,  r  seaward,  „         194 

heard  the  f oeman's  thunder  R  out  their  doom ;  The  Captain  42 

R  to  make  a  third :  Aylmer's  Field  128 

And  the  r  of  the  wheels.  Maud  II  iv  22 

slowly  rose  and  plunged  R,  Com.  of  Arthur  382 

He  from  beyond  the  r  shallow  roar'd,  Gareth  and  L.  1033 

the  heavens  open'd  and  blazed  again  R,  Holy  Grail  517 

mast  bent  and  the  ravin  wind  In  her  sail  r.  Lover's  Tale  ii  111 

And  the  storm  went  r  above  us.  The  Wreck  106 

Flung  leagues  of  r  foam  into  the  gorge  //  7  were  loved  13 

I  whirl  like  leaves  in  r  wind.  Fatima  7 

plague  and  earthquake,  r  deeps  and  fiery  sands,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  115 

High  over  r  Temple-bar,  Will  Water.  69 

Bows  all  its  ears  before  the  r  East ;  Princess  i  237 

I  take  my  part  Of  danger  on  the  r  sea.  Sailor  Boy  22 

Like  the  leaf  in  a  r  whirlwind,  Boddicea  59 

Roar'd  as  when  the  r  breakers  boom  and  blanch  „         76 

Than  if  with  thee  the  r  wells  In  Mem.  x  17 

In  r's  round  the  coral  reef.  „  xxxvi  16 

up  thy  vault  with  r  sound  Climb  thy  thick  noon,  „    Ixxii  25 

in  this  r  moon  of  daffodil  And  crocus,  Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  7 

W^atch'd  again  the  hollow  ridges  r  into  cataracts,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  2 

R  London,  raving  Paris,  „              190 

Roasting     or  bits  of  r  ox  Moan  round  the  spit —  Lucretius  131 
Boaver  (dog's  name)     (See  also  Boa)     Fur  I  owas  owd 

R  moor  nor  I  iver  owad  mottal  man.  Oiod  Rod  4 

Wi'  R  athurt  my  feeat,  „       30 

cat  wur  a-sleeaping  alongside  R,  „       33 

I  fun  it  was  R  a-tuggin'  an'  tearin'  my  slieave.  ,.       60 

I  thowt  it  was  R  a-tuggin'  an'  tearin'  me  ,.       66 

R  was  theere  i'  the  chaumber  a-yowlin'  an'  yaupin'  ,,       88 
Bob  (name  of  man  and  cat)    (See  also  Bobby)    Tommy 

the  second,  an'  Steevie  an'  R.  Spinster's  S's.  10 

R,  coom  oop  'ere  o'  my  knee.  „               11 

Rob  (verb)     once  had  power  to  r  it  of  content.  The  form,  the  form-  8 

They  swore  that  he  dare  not  r  the  mail,  Rizpah  30 

Bobb'd    r  the  farmer  of  his  bowl  of  cream :  Princess  v  223 

Bobber     There  the  horde  of  Roman  r's  Boddicea  18 

an  onslaught  single  on  a  realm  Of  r's,  Geraint  and  E.  918 

Bobbing     I  whipt  him  for  r  an  orchard  once  Rizpah  25 

they  kill'd  him  for  r  the  mail.  '                    „       34 

Bobby  (name  of  man  and  cat)    (See  also  Bob)    but  R  I 

seed  thrut  ya  theere.  Spinster's  S's.  14 

R,  I  niver  'a  liked  tha  sa  well,  „              29 

R  wur  fust  to  be  sewer,  (repeat)  „        42,  69 

ii!,  I  thowt  o'  tha  all  the  while  .,              43 

R  I  gied  tha  a  raiitin  that  sattled  „              48 


Bobby 


586 


Rode 


Robby  (name  of  man  and  cat)  {continued)    But  if  I  'ed 

married  tha,  R,  Spinster's  S's.  54 

R,  git  down  wi'tha,  wilt  tha  ?  „              67 

Theere!    Set  it  down!     Now  5!  „            119 

Till  R  an'  Steevie  'es  'ed  their  lap  „            121 

Robe  (s)     no  blood  upon  her  maiden  r's  The  Poet  41 

She  threw  her  royal  r's  away.  Palace  of  Art  290 

(With  that  she  tore  her  r  apart,  D.  of  F.  Women  157 

the  white  r  and  the  palm.  St.  S.  Stylites  20 

As  these  white  r's  are  soil'd  and  dark,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  13 

How  oft  the  purple-skirted  r  The  Voyage  21 

In  r  and  crown  the  king  stept  down,  Beggar  Maid  5 

wove  A  close-set  r  of  jasmine  sown  with  stars :  Aylmer's  Field  158 

whirl'd  her  white  r  like  a  blossom'd  branch  Princess  iv  179 

rainbow  r's,  and  gems  and  gemlike  eyes,  „            480 

he  drew  Her  r  to  meefc  his  lips,  „        vi  156 

Her  falser  self  slipt  from  her  like  a  r,  „       vii  161 

Till  slowly  worn  her  earthly  r,  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  33 

In  a  cold  white  r  before  me,  Mattd  II  iv  19 

a  r  Of  samite  without  price,  Merlin  and  V.  221 

down  his  r  the  dragon  writhed  in  gold,  Lancelot  and  E.  435 

'  If  I  be  loved,  these  are  my  festal  rs,  „              909 

'  Take  thou  my  r,'  she  said,  Holy  Grail  449 

In  hanging  r  or  vacant  ornament,  Guinevere  506 

A  mystic  light  flash'd  ev'n  from  her  white  r  Lover's  Tale  i  370 

Robed  in  those  r's  of  light  I  must  not  wear,  „             671 

throwing  down  his  r's,  And  claspt  her  hand  in  his  :  „         Hi  51 

with  her  flying  r  and  her  poison'd  rose ;  Fastness  16 

Robe  (verb)     Rise  therefore ;  r  yourself  in  this :  Geraint  and  E.  685 

The  music  that  r's  it  in  language  The  Wreck  24 

Robed    (See  also  White-robed)    but  r  in  soften'd  light  Of 

orient  state.  Ode  to  Memory  10 

Lying,  r  in  snowy  white  That  loosely  flew  L.  of  Shalott  iv  19 
lying  r  and  croMii'd,  Worthy  a  Roman  spouse.'       D.  of  F.  Women  163 

reissuing,  r  and  crown'd.  To  meet  her  lord,  Godiva  77 

hand  that  r  your  cottage-walls  with  flowers  Aylmer's  Field  698 

And  r  the  shoulders  in  a  rosy  silk,  Princess,  Pro.  103 

R  in  the  long  night  of  her  deep  hair,  „             iv  491 

Loosely  r  in  flying  raiment,  Boddicea  37 

r  herself,  Help'd  by  the  mother's  careful  hand  Marr.  of  Geraint  737 

And  r  them  in  her  ancient  suit  again,  „                770 

R  in  red  samite,  easily  to  be  known,  Lancelot  and  E.  433 

R  in  those  robes  of  light  I  must  not  wear,  Lover's  Tale  i  671 

cliffs  all  r  in  lianas  that  dropt  The  Wreck  73 
R  in  universal  harvest  up  to  either  pole                Locksley  H.,  Sixty  169 

Ilion's  lofty  temples  r  in  fire,  To  Virgil  2 

r  thee  in  his  day  from  head  to  feet —  Demeter  and  P.  21 

Robert     old  Sir  R's  pride.  His  books —  Audley  Court  58 

slight  Sir  R  with  his  watery  smile  Edwin  Morris  128 

Robin  (bird)     In  the  spring  a  fuller  crimson  comes  upon 

the  r's  breast ;  Locksley  Hall  17 

On  the  nigh-naked  tree  the  r  piped  Enoch  Arden  676 

careful  r's  eye  the  delver's  toil,  Marr.  of  Geraint  774 

careful  r's  eye  the  delver's  toil ;  Geraint  and  E.  431 

Robin  (Christian  name)     But  R  leaning  on  the  bridge  May  Queen  14 

And  say  to  i2  a  kind  word,  „  Con.  45 

Robin    See  Ragged-robin 

Robing    See  Roabin' 

Robins  (surname)     Or  a  mowt  'a  taaen  young  R —  7\^  Farmer,  0.  S.  50 

"Saw,  nor  a  moant  to  if? —  „               60 

Rock  (S)     And  strike  the  hard,  hard  r,  Supp.  Confessions  116 

the  mermaids  in  and  out  of  the  r's.  The  Merman  12 

the  mermen  in  and  out  of  the  r's  ;  The  Mermaid  34 

Of  ledge  or  shelf  The  r  rose  clear.  Palace  of  Art  10 

or  a  sound  Of  r's  thrown  down,  „          282 

zig-z£^  paths,  and  juts  of  pointed  r,  M.  d' Arthur  50 

and  leveret  lay,  Like  fossils  of  the  r,  Audley  Court  25 

as  we  sank  From  r  to  r  upon  the  glooming  quay,  „             84 

upon  a  r  With  turrets  lichen-gilded  Uke  a  r :  Edwin  Morris  7 

forged  a  thousand  theories  of  the  r's,  „          18 

he  struck  his  staff  against  the  r's  Golden  Year  59 

lights  begin  to  twinkle  from  the  r's  :  Ulysses  54 

His  mantle  glitters  on  the  r's —  Day- Dm.,  Arrival  6 

The  nutmeg  r's  and  isles  o!  clove.  "   The  Voyage  40 

To  him  who  sat  upon  the  r's,  To  E.  L.  23 


Rock  (s)  {continued)    Is  there  no  stoning  save  with 

flint  and  r  ?  Aylmer's  Field  746 

on  the  foremost  r's  Touching,  Sea  Dreams  51 

some  were  push'd  with  lances  from  the  r,  Princess,  Pro.  46 

The  morals,  something  of  the  frame,  the  r,  „            ii  382 

No  r  so  hard  but  that  a  little  wave  ,.           Hi  154 

Glanced  like  a  touch  of  svmshine  on  the  r's,  „                357 

Each  was  Uke  a  Druid  r ;  .,            iv  280 

Part  sat  like  r's  :  part  reel'd  but  kept  their  seats  :  „             v  496 

Pharos  from  his  base  Had  left  us  r.  „            vi  340 

for  Willy  stood  Uke  a  r.  Grandmother  10 

Who  seems  a  promontory  of  r,  Will  6 

along  the  valley,  by  r  and  cave  and  tree,  V.  of  Cauteretz  9 

My  love  has  talk'd  with  r's  and  trees ;  In  Mem.  xcvii  1 

Nor  runlet  tinkling  from  the  r ;  ,.              c  13 

Rise  in  the  spiritual  r,  „        cxxxi  3 

There  yet  lies  the  r  that  fell  with  him  Maud  I  i  S 

by  a  red  r,  glimmers  the  Hall ;  ..       iv  10 

Athwart  the  ledges  of  r,  „  //  ii  28 

smallest  r  far  on  the  faintest  liiU,  Com.  of  Arthur  99 

As  being  all  bone-shatter'd  on  the  r.  Yielded  ;  Gareth  and  L.  1050 

narrow  comb  wherein  Were  slabs  of  r  with  figures,  „            1194 

Whose  holy  hand  hath  fashion'd  on  the  r  „             ll97 

a  r  in  ebbs  and  flows,  Fixt  on  her  faith.  Marr.  of  Geraint  812 
knights  On  horseback,  wholly  arm'd,  behind  a  r  In 

shadow,  Geraint  and  E.  51 

I  saw  three  bandits  by  the  r  „              72 

A  little  to^vn  with  towers,  upon  a  r,  .,            197 

Prince  had  brought  his  errant  eyes  Home  from  the  r,  „            246 

gleam'd  on  r's  Roof-pendent,  sharp  ;  BcUin  and  Balan  314 

In  the  white  r  a  chapel  and  a  haU  Lancelot  and  E.  405 

Shape  to  their  fancy's  eye  from  broken  r's  „          1252 

A  castle  like  a  r  upon  a  r.  Holy  Grail  814 

Far  down  beneath  a  winding  waU  of  r  Last  Tournament  11 

zigzag  paths,  and  juts  of  pointed  r,  Pass,  of  Arthur  218 

Thro'  the  r's  we  wound  :  Lover's  Tale  i  324 

walls  of  battlemented  r  Gilded  with  broom,  „              399 

Shut  in  the  secret  chambers  of  the  r  „              521 

laid  it  in  a  sepulchre  of  r  Never  to  rise  again.  „               683 

And  all  the  fragments  of  the  Uving  r  „            ii  44 

I  find  hard  r's,  hard  Ufe,  hard  cheer,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  6 

And  we  left  but  a  naked  r,  V.  of  Maeldune  54 

And  a  himdred  ranged  on  the  r  „             101 

that  smooth  r  Before  it,  altar-fashion'd,-  Tiresias  146 

as  if  she  had  struck  and  crash'd  on  a  r  ;  The  Wreck  108 

neck  Of  land  running  out  into  r—  Despair  10 

skull  that  is  left  in  the  r's  „        86 

How  slowly  down  the  r's  he  went,  The  Flight  38 

Ranged  Uke  a  storm  or  stood  Uke  a  r  Heavy  Brigade  56 

When  seated  on  a  r,  and  foot  to  foot  Romney's  R.  75 

Rock  (verb)     0  r  upon  thy  towery-top  Talking  Oak  265 

r  the  snowy  cradle  till  I  died.  Princess  iv  104 

The  blind  wall  r's,  and  on  the  trees  In  Mem.,  Con.  63 

Rock'd     R  the  fuU-foUaged  elms,  „           xcv  58 

A  mountain  nest — the  pleasure-boat  that  r.  Lover's  Tale  i  42 

Rocket     Rush  to  the  roof,  sudden  r,  W.  to  Alexandra  20 

The  r  molten  into  flakes  In  Mem.  xcviii  31 

Rocking    (See  also  Scarce-rocking)     R  with  shatter'd  spars,     Buanaparte  11 

Then  Ughtly  r  baby's  cradle  Enoch  Arden  194 

Rock-throne    rough  r-t  Of  Freedom  !  Montenegro  9 

Rock-thwarted     r-t  under  bellowing  caves.  Palace  of  Art  71 

Rocky     Lift  up  thy  r  face,  England  and  A  mer.  12 

Dash'd  on  every  r  square  Their  surging  charges  Ode  on  Well.  125 

How  richly  down  the  r  dell  The  Daisy  9 

For  all  along  the  vaUey,  down  thy  r  bed,  V.  of  Cauteretz  7 

I  heard  the  voice  Rave  over  the  r  bar.  Voice  and  the  P.  6 

And  down  a  r  pathway  from  the  place  Geraint  and  E.  200 

And  up  the  r  pathway  disappear'd,  „            243 

Rod     I  must  brook  the  r  And  chastisement  Supp.  Confessions  107 

red-faced  war  has  r's  of  steel  and  fire  ;  Princess  y  118 

war's  avenging  r  Shall  lash  aU  Europe  To  F.  D.  Maurice  33 

be  ruled  with  r  or  with  knout  ?  Maud  I  iv  47 

Tho'  Sin  too  oft,  when  smitten  by  Thy  r,  Doubt  and  Prayer  1 

Rode     Ere  I  r  into  the  fight,  Oriana  21 

He  r  between  the  barley-sheaves,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  ~ 


Rode 


587 


Roll 


Rode  {continued)    As  he  r  down  to  Camelot :  (repeat)  L.  ofShalott  14,  23,  32 

And  as  he  r  his  armour  nmg,  „                      17 

The  man,  my  lover,  with  whom  I  r  sublime  D.  of  F.  Women  141 

And  r  his  humt«r  down.  Talking  Oak  104 

And  far  below  the  Koundhead  r,  „           299 

Then  she  r  forth,  clothed  on  with  chastity  :  Godiva  53 

The  deep  air  listen'd  round  her  as  she  r,  „      54 

she  r  back,  clothed  on  with  chastity  :  „      65 

R  thro'  the  coverts  of  the  deer,  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  21 

He  r  a  horse  with  wings,  that  would  have  flown.  Vision  of  Sin  3 

Who  slowly  r  across  a  wither'd  heath,  „             61 

They  r  ;  they  betted  ;  made  a  hundred  friends.  Princess,  Pro.  163 

We  r  Many  a  long  league  back  to  the  North.  ..               i  167 

foUow'd  up  the  river  as  we  r.  And  r  till  midnight  ..                  206 

'  That  afternoon  the  Princess  r  to  take  ..             Hi  169 

I  r  beside  her  and  to  me  she  said :  „                   197 

we  r  a  league  beyond.  And,  o'er  a  bridge  of  pinewood  334 

Then  r  we  with  the  old  king  across  the  lawns  ,.               v  236 

All  o'er  with  honey'd  answer  as  we  r  ..                  242 

Back  r  we  to  my  father's  camp,  „                 331 

as  here  and  everywhere  He  r  the  mellay,  „                 502 

but  Arac  r  him  down  :  And  Cyril  seeing  it,  ,.                 532 
E  the  six  hundred,  (repeat)                                 Light  Brigade  4,  8,  17,  26 

Boldly  they  r  and  well,  ..                            23 

Then  they  r  back,  but  not  Not  the  six  hundred.  ..                           37 

I  bow'd  to  his  lady-sister  as  she  r  by  on  the  moor ;  Mavd  I  iv  15 

one  of  the  two  that  r  at  her  side  Boimd  for  the  Hall,  „           x  24 

r  a  simple  knight  among  his  knights,  Covi.  of  Arthur  51 

Smit«  on  the  sudden,  yet  r  on,  ,.               57 

thinking  as  he  r,  '  Her  father  said  ,.              78 

A  naked  babe,  and  r  to  Merlin's  feet,  „            384 

Gareth  r  Down  the  slope  street,  Gareth  and  L.  699 

thro'  silent  faces  r  Down  the  slope  city,  ..             734 

R  on  the  two,  re  viler  and  reviled  ;  ,.            794 

Suddenly  she  that  r  upon  his  left  ,.          1319 

r  In  converse  till  she  made  her  palfrey  halt,  „          1359 
Prince  and  Enid  r.  And  fifty  knights  r  with  them,  Marr.  of  Geraint  43 

there  r  Full  slowly  by  a  knight,  lady,  ,.            186 

r,  By  ups  and  downs,  thro'  many  a  grassy  glade  „            235 

And  onward  to  the  fortress  r  the  three,  „            251 

Then  r  Geraint,  a  little  spleenful  yet,  „            293 

Then  r  Geraint  into  the  castle  court,  „            312 

all  unarm'd  I  r,  and  thought  to  find  Arms  „            417 

And  rising  up,  he  r  to  Arthur's  court,  „             591 

claspt  and  kiss'd  her,  and  they  r  away.  „            825 

forth  they  r,  but  scarce  three  paces  on,  Geraint  and  E.  19 

And  wildernesses,  perilous  paths,  they  r:  .,32 

They  r  so  slowly  and  they  look'd  so  pale,  „              35 

for  he  r  As  if  he  heard  not,  „            451 

Half  ridden  off  with  by  the  thing  he  r,  ..             460 

And  so  r  on,  nor  told  his  gentle  wife  ,.            503 

S  on  a  mission  to  the  bandit  Earl ;  „             527 

In  this  poor  gown  I  r  with  him  to  court,  .,            700 

now  we  r  upon  this  fatal  quest  Of  honour,  ,.             703 

east  her  arms  About  him,  and  at  once  they  r  away.  ..             762 

Tho'  thence  I  r  all-shamed,  hating  the  life  „            852 

for  a  space  they  r,  And  fifty  knights  r  with  them  „             953 

So  claim'd  the  quest  and  r  away,  Balin  and  Balan  138 

and  r  The  skyless  woods,  but  under  open  blue  .,              292 

with  droopt  brow  down  the  long  glades  he  r  ;  „               311 

damsel-errant,  warbling,  as  she  r  The  woodland  alleys,        ..  438 

the  knight,  with  whom  I  r.  Hath  suffer'd  misadventure,      „  475 

Yet  while  they  r  together  down  the  plain,  Merlin  and  V.  123 

of  old — among  the  flowers — they  r.  ,.             136 

and  all  day  long  we  r  Thro'  the  dim  land  ,,            424 

He  left  it  with  her,  when  he  r  to  tilt  Lancelot  and  E.  30 

They  rose,  heard  mass,  broke  fast,  and  r  away  :  „            415 

all  the  region  round  R  with  his  diamond,  „             616 

A  true-love  ballad,  lightly  r  away.  „             705 

fail'd  to  find  him,  tho'  I  r  all  round  The  region  :  „             709 

R  o'er  the  long  backs  of  the  bushless  downs  „            789 

To  Astolat  returning  r  the  three.  „            905 

Nor  bad  farewell,  but  sadly  r  away.  „            987 

to  this  hall  full  quickly  r  the  King,  Holy  Grail  258 

And  in  he  r,  and  up  I  glanced,  „          262 


Bode  (continued)     Queen,  Who  r  by  Lancelot,  wail'd  and 

shriek'd  Holy  Grail  356 

'  And  on  I  r,  and  when  I  thought  my  thirst  „          379 

on  I  r,  and  greater  was  my  thirst.  „          401 

I  r  on  and  found  a  mighty  hUl,  „           421 

And  in  the  strength  of  this  I  r,  „          476 

And  maddening  what  he  r :  ,,          641 

Sir  Bors  R  to  the  lonest  tract  of  aU  the  realm,  ,.          661 

while  they  r,  the  meaning  in  his  eyes,  Pelleas  and  E.  109 

straight  on  thro'  open  door  R  Gawain,  ,,              383 

but  r  Ere  midnight  to  her  walls,  „              412 

R  till  the  star  above  the  wakening  sun,  „              500 

Lancelot  slowly  r  his  warhorse  back  To  Camelot,  „              583 

Down  the  slope  city  r,  and  sharply  turn'd  Last  Tournament  127 

R  Tristram  toward  Lyonnesse  and  the  west.  .,              362 

Thro'  many  a  league-long  bower  he  r.  „               374 

Arthur  with  a  hundred  spears  R  far,  „              421 

Arthur  waved  them  back.     Alone  he  r.  ,,              437 

And  r  beneath  an  ever-showering  leaf,  „              492 

when  first  I  r  from  our  rough  Lyonnesse,  „               664 

and  then  they  r  to  the  divided  way,  Guinevere  124 

And  r  thereto  from  Lyonnesse,  and  he  said  That  as  he 

r,  an  hour  or  maybe  twain  „        236 

R  imder  groves  that  look'd  a  paradise  „        389 

There  r  an  armed  warrior  to  the  doors.  „         409 

And  then  he  r  away  ;  but  after  this,  Lover's  Tale  iv  126 

And  thus  our  lonely  lover  r  away,  „             130 

and  he  r  on  ahead,  as  he  waved  his  blade  Heavy  Brigade  9 

R  flashing  blow  upon  blow,  „          32 

they  r  like  Victors  and  Lords  „          48 

They  r,  or  they  stood  at  bay —  „          51 

Thou's  r  of  'is  back  when  a  babby,  Owd  Rod  5 

you  my  girl  R  on  my  shoulder  home —  The  Ring  322 

Roger  Acton     Burnt — good  Sir  i?  A,  my  dear  friend  !     Sir  J.  Oldcastle  79 

R(^e    unctuous  mouth  which  lured  him,  r,  Sea  Dreams  14 

do  not  call  him,  love.  Before  you  prove  him,  r,  „          171 

And  one  the  Master,  as  a  r  in  grain  Princess,  Pro.  116 

A  r  of  canzonents  and  serenades.  „              iv  135 

snubnosed  r  would  leap  from  his  counter  and  till,  Maud  I  i  51 

listening  r  hath  caught  the  manner  of  it.  Gareth  and  L.  778 

these  caitiff  r's  Had  wreak'd  themselves  on  me  ;  „             819 

Some  meddling  r  has  tamper'd  with  him —  Lancelot  and  E.  128 

Roisterer     midmost  of  a  rout  of  r's,  Geraint  and  E.  274 

Roky     Last  in  a  r  hollow,  belling.  Last  Tournament  502 

Roll  (s)     (See  also  Ocean-roll)     upon  the  rise  And  long  r  of  the 

Hexameter —  Lucretius  11 

Nor  ever  lowest  r  of  thunder  moans,  „         108 

Now,  to  the  r  of  muffled  drums,  Ode  on  Well.  87 

R  of  cannon  and  clash  of  arms,  „             116 

I  hear  the  r  of  the  ages.  Spiteful  Letter  8 

then  one  low  r  Of  Autumn  thunder.  Last  Tournament  152 

Rush  of  Suns,  and  r  of  systems,  God.  and  the  Univ.  3 
no  discordance  in  the  r  And  march                        D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  14 
Roll  (verb)     (See  also  Over-roll)     '  In  filthy  sloughs  they 

r  a  prurient  skin,  Palace  of  Art  201 

trees  began  to  whisper,  and  the  wind  began  to  r.  May  Queen,  Con.  27 

'  This  mounting  wave  will  r  us  shoreward  soon.'  Lotos- Eaters  2 

And  the  great  ages  onward  r.  To  J.  S.  72 

R  onward,  leading  up  the  golden  year.  Golden  Fear  41 

r  the  waters,  flash  the  lightnings,  Locksley  Hall  186 

the  gates  R  back,  and  far  within  St.  AgneS'  Eve  30 

They  reel,  they  r  in  clanging  lists,  Sir  Galahad  9 

There  did  a  thousand  memories  r  upon  him,  Enoch  Arden  724 

r  thy  tender  arms  Round  him,  Lucretius  82 

Our  echoes  r  from  soul  to  soul.  Princess  iv  15 

r  The  torrents,  dash'd  to  the  vale  :  „       v  349 

r  the  torrent  out  of  dusky  doors  :  „     vii  208 

down  r's  the  world  In  mock  heroics  „    Con.  63 

world  on  world  in  myriad  myriads  r  Ode  on  Well.  262 

R  and  rejoice,  jubilant  voice,  W.  to  Alexandra  22 

R  as  a  ground-swell  dash'd  on  the  strand,  „              23 

And  howsoever  this  wild  world  may  r,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  48 

two  and  thirty  years  were  a  mist  that  r's  away ;  V.  of  Cauteretz  6 

You  r  up  away  from  the  light  Window,  Winter  8 

I  hear  a  wizard  music  r,  In  Mem.  ixx  14 


RoU 


588 


Roman 


Roll  (verb)  {continued)     And  r  it  in  another  course, 
The  strong  imagination  r  A  sphere 
There  r's  the  deep  where  grew  the  tree. 
To  have  her  lion  r  in  a  silken  net 
swell  Of  the  long  waves  that  r  in  yonder  bay  ? 
and  the  war  r  down  like  a  wind, 
and  when  the  surface  r's, 
sea  r's,  and  all  the  world  is  warm'd  ?  ' 
because  they  r  Thro'  such  a  round  in  heaven. 
The  yeare  will  r  into  the  centuries, 
more  than  man  Which  r's  the  heavens, 
r  Rising  and  falling — 
Nor  r  thy  viands  on  a  luscious  tongue 
and  r  their  ruins  down  the  slope. 
While  the  silent  Heavens  r, 
And  when  they  r  their  idol  down — 
may  r  with  the  dust  of  a  vanish'd  race. 
To  r  her  North  below  thy  deepening  dome, 
delight  To  r  himself  in  meadow  grass 
may  r  The  rainbow  hues  of  heaven  about  it — 
and  r  my  voice  from  the  summit, 
ere  the  mountain  r's  into  the  plain. 
Well  if  it  do  not  r  our  way. 

Boll'd    the  tumult  of  their  acclaim  is  r 
And  all  about  him  r  his  lustrous  eyes  ; 
And  all  the  war  is  r  in  smoke.' 
I  r  among  the  tender  flowers  : 
R  round  by  one  fix'd  law. 
R  to  starboard,  r  to  larboard, 
R  on  each  other,  rounded,  smooth'd, 
Whirl'd  by  the  wind,  had  r  me  deep  below, 
'  When  the  next  moon  was  r  into  the  sky, 
So  all  day  long  the  noise  of  battle  r 
R  in  one  another's  arms. 
When  the  ranks  are  r  in  vapour. 
Her  full  black  ringlets  downward  r, 
R  a  sea-haze  and  whelm'd  the  world 
as  the  year  R  itself  round  again 
once  again  he  r  his  eyes  upon  her 
and  r  His  hoop  to  pleasure  Edith, 
babies  r  about  Like  tumbled  fruit  in  grass  ; 
Kittenhke  he  r  And  paw'd  about  her  sandal, 
miss'd  the  plank,  and  r  In  the  river, 
slain  with  laughter  r  the  gilded  Squire, 
giant,  Arac,  r  himself  Thrice  in  the  saddle. 
Part  r  on  the  earth  and  rose  again  and  drew  : 
r  With  music  in  the  growing  breeze  of  Time, 
her  eye  with  slow  dilation  r  Dry  flame, 
the  sound  of  the  sorrowing  anthem  r 
Better  the  waste  Atlantic  r  On  her  and  us 
R  the  rich  vapour  far  into  the  heaven. 
Who  r  the  psalm  to  wintry  skies, 
And  r  the  noods  in  grander  space. 
And  a  sullen  thimder  is  r ; 
R  incense,  and  there  past  along  the  hymns 
the  long  night  hath  r  away  ! 
down  his  enemy  r,  And  there  lay  still ; 
He  r  his  eyes  about  the  hall. 
The  russet-bearded  head  r  on  the  floor, 
a  forethought  r  about  his  brain, 
anJr  his  enemy  down.  And  saved  him  : 
from  the  skull  the  crown  R  into  light, 
he  r  his  eyes  Yet  blank  from  sleep, 
roofs  Of  our  great  hall  are  r  in  thunder-smoke  ! 
whereout  was  r  A  roar  of  riot. 
So  all  day  long  the  noise  of  battle  r 
And  London  r  one  tide  of  joy 
threshold  clashing,  r  Her  heaviest  thunder — 
And  we  r  upon  capes  of  crocus 
r  To  meet  me  long-arm'd  vines  with  grapes 
whence  he  r  himself  At  dead  of  night — 
And  r  them  around  Uke  a  cloud, — 
And  r  his  nakedness  everyway 
once  had  r  you  round  and  round  the  Sun, 
Ghost  of  Pindar  in  you  R  an  Olympian  ; 


In  Mem.  cxiii  16 

„         cxxii  6 

„       cxxiii  1 

Maud  Ivi29 

„      xviii  63 

„    IIIvi54: 

Com.  of  Arthur  293 

Holy  Grail  672 

685 

Guinevere  626 

Tiresias  22 

The  Wreck  53 

Ancient  Sage  267 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  138 

203 

F.reedom  29 

Vastness  2 

Prog,  of  Spring  49 

Romney's  R.  14 

50 

Parnassus  6 

Death  of  (Enone  51 

Riflemen  form  !  4 

Dying  Swan  33 

Love  and  Death  3 

Two  Voices  156 

Fatima  11 

Palace  of  Art  256 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  106 

D.  of  F.  Women  51 

119 

229 

M.  d' Arthur  1 

Locksley  Hall  58 

104 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  12 

Enoch  Arden  672 

822 

904 

Aylmer's  Field  84 

Princess,  Pro.  82 

Hi  181 

iv  177 

«22 

274 

497 

vi  55 

189 

Ode  on  Well.  60 

Third  of  Feb.  21 

Spec,  of  Iliad  8 

In  Mem.  Ivi  11 

„  ciii  26 

Maud  II  iv  49 

Com.  of  Arthur  464 

483 

Geraint  and  E.  160 

610 

729 

Merlin  and  V.  230 

Lancelot  and  E.  26 

51 

819 

Holy  Grail  220 

Last  Tournament  425 

Pass,  of  Arthur  170 

To  the  Queen  ii  8 

Lover's  Tale  i  605 

V.  of  Maeldune  47 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  26 

Tiresias  145 

Heavy  Brigade  40 

Dead  Prophet  15 

Poets  and  their  B.  10 

To  Prof.  J  ebb  4 


Boll'd  {continued)     Till  earth  has  r  her  latest  year —  To  Ulysses  28 

R  again  back  on  itself  in  the  tides  Beautiful  City  4 

E  them  over  and  over.  The  Tourney  5 

Roller     league-long  r  thundering  on  the  reef,  Enoch  Arden  584 

slowly-ridging  r's  on  the  chfEs  Clash'd,  Lover's  Tale  i  57 

RoUest    r  from  the  gorgeous  gloom  In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  2 

Rolling    {See  also  Crimson-rolling,  Far-rolling,  Myriad-rolling) 

waves  that  up  a  quiet  cove  R  slide,  Elednore  109 

r  to  and  fro  The  heads  and  crowns  Palace  of  Art  151 

R  a  slumbrous  sheet  of  foam  below.  Lotos-  Eaters  13 

holy  organ  r  waves  Of  sound  on  roof  and  floor  D.  of  F.  Women  191 

her  mighty  voice  Came  r  on  the  wind.  Of  old  sat  Freedom  8 
r  as  in  sleep,  Low  thunders  bring  the  mellow  rain,         Talking  Oak  278 

Enoch  r  his  gray  eyes  upon  her,  Enoch  Arden  844 

and  r  in  his  mind  Old  waifs  of  rhyme,  The  Brook  198 

Breathed  low  around  the  r  earth  The  winds,  etc.  3 

Is  wearied  of  the  r  hours.  L.  C.   V.  de  Vere  60 

A  r  stone  of  here  and  everywhere,  Audley  Court  78 

A  r  organ-harmony  Swells  up.  Sir  Galahad  75 

Beneath  a  manelike  mass  of  r  gold,  Aylmer's  Field  68 

And  r  as  it  were  the  substance  of  it  ,,             258 

Which  r  o'er  the  palaces  of  the  proud,  „            636 

Who  still'd  the  r  wave  of  GaUlee  !  „            709 

And  there  was  r  thunder  ;  Sea  Dreams  118 

That  stays  the  r  Ixionian  wheel,  Lucretius  261 

r  thro'  the  court  A  long  melodious  thimder  Princess  ii  475 

Over  the  r  waters  go,  „           Hi  5 

Thy  voice  is  heard  thro'  r  drums,  „        iv  577 

and  r  words  Oration-like.  ,.          v  372 

in  the  centre  stood  The  common  men  with  r  eyes  ;  ,,        vi  360 

fishes  turn'd  And  whiten'd  all  the  r  flood  ;  I'he  Victim  20 

Ye  watch,  Uke  God,  the  r  hours  In  Mem.  Ii  14 

And  thunder-music,  r,  shake  The  prophet  .,  Ixxxvii  7 

Let  her  great  Danube  r  fair  Enwind  her  isles,  „      xcviii  9 

To  darken  on  the  r  brine  That  breaks  the  coast.  ,,        cvii  14 

Thy  voice  is  on  the  r  air  ;  „       cxxx  1 

And,  star  and  system  r  past,  „    Con.  122 

In  drifts  of  smoke  before  a  r  wind.  Com.  of  Arthur  434 

And  mass,  and  r  music,  like  a  queen.  Lancelot  and  E.  1336 

wrapt  In  unremorseful  folds  of  r  Are.  Holy  Grail  261 

Thro'  the  tall  oriel  on  the  r  sea.  „          831 
Ught  of  heaven  Burn'd  at  his  lowest  in  the  r  year.       Pass  of  Arthur  91 

And  r  far  along  the  gloomy  shores  „             134 

When  the  r  eyes  of  the  lighthouse  there  Despair  9 

or  the  r  Thunder,  or  the  rending  earthquake.  Faith  3 

sullen  Lethe  r  doom  On  them  and  theirs  Lit.  Squabbles  11 

R  on  their  purple  couches  Boddicea  62 

R  her  smoke  about  the  Royal  mount,  Gareth  and  L.  190 

Southwesterns,  r  ridge  on  ridge,  „           1145 

Bound  on  a  foray,  r  eyes  of  prey,  Geraint  and  E.  538 

when  they  clash'd,  R  back  upon  BaUn,  Balin  and  Balan  562 

R  his  eyes,  a  moment  stood,  Pelleas  and  E.  581 

The  moony  vapour  r  round  the  King,  Guinevere  601 

Funeral  hearses  r  !  Forlorn  68 

r  of  dragons  By  warble  of  water.  Merlin  and  the  G.  44 

R  her  anger  Thro'  blasted  valley  Kapiolani  11    ' 

Roman  (adj.)     My  Hercules,  my  R  Antony,  D.  of  F.  Women  150 

The  R  soldier  found  Me  lying  dead,  „            161    , 

lying  robed  and  crown'd.  Worthy  a  R  spouse.'  „            164 

and  the  R  brows  Of  Agrippina.  Princess  ii  84 

the  Persian,  Grecian,  R  lines  Of  empire,  „          130 

their  foreheads  drawn  in  R  scowls,  „     vii  129 

What  R  strength  Turbla  show'd  In  ruin,  The  Daisy  5 

Blacken  round  the  R  carrion,  Boddicea  14 

horde  of  R  robbers  mock  at  a  barbarous  adversary.  „        18 

hive  of  R  liars  worship  an  emperor-idiot.  „         19 

Lo  their  precious  R  bantling,  „         31 

Shall  we  teach  it  a,  R  lesson  ?  „        32 

Tho'  the  R  eagle  shadow  thee,  „        39 

Take  the  lioary  R  head  and  shatter  it,  „         65 

Cut  the  R  boy  to  pieces  in  his  lust  „        66 

Ran  the  land  with  R  slaughter,  „         84 

King  Leodogran  Groan'd  for  the  R  legions  Com.  of  Arthur  34 

To  drive  the  heathen  from  your  R  wall,  „        512 
for  whose  love  the  R  Caesar  first  Invaded  Britain,  Mart,  of  Geraint  745 


Roman 


589 


Root 


Boman  (adj.)  (continued)    Or  thrust  the  heathen  from 

the  K  wall,  Pass,  of  Arthur  69 

M  ViHGiL,  thou  that  singest  To  Virgil  1 
There  beneath  the  R  ruin  where  the  purple  flowers  grow,  Frater  ave,  etc.  4 

Tenderest  of  R  poetsmineteen-hundred  years  ago,  „                 6 

Roman  (S)     What  R  would  be  dragg'd  in  triumph  thus  ?  Lucretiiis  234 

Wherewith  the  R  pierced  the  side  of  Christ.  Balin  and  Balan  114 

For  when  the  R  left  us,  and  their  law  Guinevere  456 

Hard  R's  brawUng  of  their  monstrous  games  ;  St.  Telemachus  40 

Romance    Victob  in  Drama,  Victor  in  R,  To  Victor  Hugo  1 

he  the  knight  for  an  amorous  girl's  r  !  The  Wreck  44 

Rome     a  steaming  slaughter-house  of  R.  Lucretius  84 

The  fading  politics  of  mortal  R,  Princess  ii  286 

Such  is  R,  and  this  her  deity  :  Boddicea  20 

Abroad,  at  Florence,  at  R,  Maud  I  xix  58 

Great  Lords  from  R  before  the  portal  stood,  Com.  of  Arthur  411 

Shall  R  or  Heathen  rule  in  Arthur's  realm  ?  „             485 

at  the  banquet  those  great  Lords  from  R,  .,            504 

and  Arthur  strove  with  R.  „             514 
who  sv  ept  the  dust  of  ruin'd  R  From  off  the  threshold   Gareth  and  L.  135 

brake  the  petty  kings,  and  fought  with  R,  Pass,  of  Arthur  68 

brands  that  once  had  fought  with  R,  „          133 

And  own  the  holy  governance  of  R.'  Columbus  190 

R's  Vicar  in  our  Indies  ?  „      195 
R  of  Caesar,  R  of  Peter,                                              Locksley  H.,  Sixty  88 

Ihon  falling,  R  arising,  To  Virgil  3 

somid  for  ever  of  Imperial  R —  „        32 
Now  the  R  of  slaves  hath  perish'd,  and  the  R  of  freemen 

holds  her  place,  „        33 

when  Athens  reign'd  and  R,  Freedom  9 

kinsman,  dying,  summon'd  me  to  R —  The  Ring  178 

Of  ancient  Art  in  Paris,  or  in  R.  Romney's  R.  87 

at  his  ear  he  heard  a  whisper  '  R'  St.  Telemachus  26 

struck  from  his  own  shadow  on  to  R.  „          33 

decreed  That  jR  no  more  should  wallow  „          78 

and  R  was  a  babe  in  arms,  The  Dawn  9 

Ronald    Lord  R  brought  a  lily-white  doe  Lady  Clare  3 

Lord  R  is  heir  of  all  your  lands,  ,.           19 

And  all  you  have  wiU  be  Lord  R's,  ,.          35 

lily-white  doe  Lord  R  had  brought  Leapt  up  ,.          61 

Down  stept  Lord  R  from  his  tower :  .,          65 

'  Play  me  no  tricks,'  said  Lord  R,  (repeat)  ,.    73,  75 

She  look'd  into  Lord  R's  eyes,  „           79 

Roob  (rub)     Loovs  'un,  an'  r's  'im,  an'  doosts  'im,  North.  Cobbler  98 

Ay,  r  thy  whiskers  agean  ma.  Spinster's  S's.  81 

Rood    '  By  holy  r,  a  royal  beard  !  Day-Dm.,  Revival  20 

'  Here  by  God's  r  is  the  one  maid  for  me.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  368 

More  near  by  many  a  r  than  yestermom,  Geraint  and  E.  442 

by  God's  r,  I  trusted  you  too  much.'  Merlin  and  V.  376 

Roof  (s)    (See  also  Convent-roof,  Under-roof)    The  sparrow's 

chirrup  on  the  r,  Mariana  73 

Hundreds  of  crescents  on  the  r  Arabian  Nights  129 

Living  together  under  the  same  r.  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  12 

And  round  the  r's  a  gilded  gallery  Palace  of  Art  29 
the  r  and  crown  of  things  ?                                        Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  24 

and  on  r's  Of  marble  palaces  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  23 

organ  rolhng  waves  Of  sound  on  r  and  floor  „          192 

House  in  the  shade  of  comfortable  r's,  St.  S.  Stylites  107 
The  r's  of  Sumner-place  !  (repeat)                         Talking  Oak  32,  96,  152 

And  on  the  r  she  went,  „                        114 

and  when  the  rain  is  on  the  r.  Locksley  Hall  78 

Flew  over  r  and  casement :  Will  Water.  1.34 

And  they  leave  her  father's  r.  L.  of  Burleigh  12 

When  beneath  his  r  they  come.  „             40 

red  r's  about  a  narrow  wharf  In  cluster  ;  Enoch  Arden  3 

in  session  on  their  r's  Approved  him,  The  Brook  127 

Somewhere  beneath  his  own  low  range  of  r's,  Aylmer's  Field  47 

presence  flattering  the  poor  r's  Revered  as  theirs,  „           175 

but  every  r  Sent  out  a  listener  :  „           613 

The  r  so  lowly  but  that  beam  of  Heaven  „           684 

Flaying  the  r's  and  sucking  up  the  drains.  Princess  v  525 

there  on  the  r's  Like  that  great  dame  „        vi  31 

shape  it  plank  and  beam  for  r  and  floor,  „             46 

Clomb  to  the  r's,  and  gazed  alone  „       vii  32 

Rush  to  the  r,  sudden  rocket,  W.  to  Alexandra  20 


Roof  (s)  (continued)     I  climb'd  the  r's  at  break  of  day  ;  The  Daisy  61 

Garmlous  under  a  r  of  pine  :  To  F.  D.  Maurice  20 

The  r's,  that  heard  our  earliest  cry,  In  Mem.  cii  3 

With  tender  gloom  the  r,  the  wall ;  „    Con.  118 

and  all  the  land  from  r  and  rick,  Com.  of  Arthur  433 

Struck  up  and  lived  along  the  milky  r's  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  409 

A  cracking  and  a  riving  of  the  r's.  Holy  Grail  183 

r's  Of  our  great  hall  are  roU'd  in  thunder-smoke  !  „           219 

And  all  the  dim  rich  city,  r  by  r,  „          228 

r's  Totter'd  toward  each  other  in  the  sky,  „          342 

Hell  burst  up  your  harlot  r's  Bellowing,  Pelleas  and  E.  466 

hath  but  dwelt  beneath  one  r  with  me.  Pass,  of  Arthur  156 

Hate  is  strange  beneath  the  r  of  Love.  Lover's  Tale  i  779 

Flying  at  top  of  the  r's  Def.  of  Luchiow  4 

topmost  r  our  banner  of  England  blew,  (repeat)  .,  6, 30, 45, 60, 94 

Rifleman,  high  on  the  r,  ,.                        63 

topmost  r  our  banner  in  India  blew.  „                        72 

And  ever  aloft  on  the  palace  r  ,.                     106 

Without  a  r  that  I  can  call  mine  own,  Columbus  168 

And  the  r  sank  in  on  the  hearth,  V.  of  Maeldune  32 

Ruddy  thro'  both  the  r's  of  sight,  Tiresias  3 

Heard  from  the  r's  by  night,  „     140 

r's  of  slated  liideousness  !  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  246 

rummle  down  when  the  r's  gev  waay,  Owd  Rod  109 

Was  all  ablaze  with  crimson  to  the  r,  The  Ring  250 
women  shrieking  '  Atheist '  flung  Filth  from  the  r,      Akbar's  Dream  92 

Roof  (verb)     R  not  a  glance  so  keen  as  thine  :  Clear-headed  friend  7 

cloud  that  r's  our  noon  with  night.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  17 

Boof'd     (See  also  Booft)     R  the  world  with  doubt  and  fear,         Elednore  99 

Roof-haunting     R-h  martins  warm  their  eggs  :  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  17 

Roofless     I  lay  Pent  in  a  r  close  of  ragged  stones  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  74 

The  fire  that  left  a  r  Ihon,  Lucretius  65 

Roof-pendent    gleam'd  on  rocks  R-p,  sharp  ;  Balin  and  Balan  315 

Rooft    See  Bracken-rooft 

Roof-tree     now  for  me  the  r-t  fall.  Locksley  Hall  190 

Rook     building  r  'ill  caw  from  the  windy  tall  elm- 
tree,  May  Queen,  N.  ¥'s.  E.  17 

The  r's  are  blown  about  the  skies  ;  In  Mem.  xv  4 

And  Autumn,  with  a  noise  of  r's,  „  Ixxxv  71 

a  clamour  of  the  r's  At  distance,  Marr.  of  Geraint  249 

I  heard  the  sober  r  And  carrion  crow  The  Ring  173 

Rookery    leads  the  clanging  r  home.  Locksley  Hall  68 

long  line  of  the  approaching  r  swerve  Princess,  Con.  97 

Room  (apartment)    (See  also  Oak-room,  Sitting-room) 

close.  As  a  sick  man's  r  A  spirit  haunts  14 

She  made  three  paces  thro'  the  r,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  38 

pass,  Well-pleased,  from  r  to  r.  Palace  of  Art  56 

Full  of  great  r's  and  small  the  palace  stood,  „            57 

moss  or  musk.  To  grace  my  city  r's  ;  Gardener's  D.  194 

There  was  silence  in  the  r  ;  Dora  157 

and  not  a  r  For  love  or  money.  Audley  Coiirt  1 

Past  thro'  the  solitary  r  in  front,  Enoch  Arden  277 

jests,  that  flash'd  about  the  pleader's  r,  Aylmer's  Field  440 

That  morning  in  the  presence  r  I  stood  Princess  i  51 

r's  which  gave  Upon  a  piUar'd  porch,  „         229 

And  shuddering  fled  from  r  to  r,  „    vi  370 

from  this  r  into  the  next ;  Grandmother  103 

To  see  the  r's  in  which  he  dwelt.  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  16 

thro'  the  blindless  casement  of  the  r,  Marr.  of  Geraint  71 

'  Your  leave,  my  lord,  to  cross  the  r,  Geraint  and  E.  298 

And  glimmer'd  on  his  armour  in  the  r.  „             386 

shadow  still  would  ghde  from  r  to  r,  Guinevere  504 

It  was  a  r  Within  the  summer-house  Lover's  Tale  ii  166 

I  hear  in  one  dark  r  a  wailing,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  262 

Room  (space)     seem'd  no  r  for  sense  of  wrong  ;  Tvio  Voices  456 

What  r  is  left  for  a  hater  ?  Spiteful  Letter  14 

strain  to  make  an  inch  of  r  For  their  sweet  selves.  Lit.  Squabbles  9 

fiUest  all  the  r  Of  all  my  love.  In  Mem.  cxii  5 

no  r  was  there  For  lance  or  toumey-skill :  Gareth  and  L.  1041 

Room'd    See  Myriad-room'd 

Roomlin'  (nunbUng)     I  heard  'im  a  r  by.  Village  Wife  122 

Roon'd  (ran)     An'  keeaper  'e  seed  ya  an  r,  Churchwarden,  etc.  28 

Root    grow  awry  From  r's  which  strike  so  deep  ?  Supp.  Confessions  78 

Cleaving,  took  r,  and  springing  forth  The  Poet  21 

at  the  r  thro'  lush  green  grasses  burn'd  D.  of  F.  Woinen  71 


Root 


590 


Rose 


Boot  (continued)     whose  r  Creeps  to  the  garden  water- 
pipes  beneath,  B.  of  F.  Women  205 

The  fat  earth  feed  thy  branchy  r,  Talking  Oak  273 

tho'  my  heart  be  at  the  r.  Locksley  Hall  66 

And  scirrhous  r's  and  tendons.  Amphion  64 

Soft  fruitage,  mighty  nuts,  and  nourishing  r's  ;  Enoch  Arden  555 

fixt  As  are  the  r's  of  earth  and  base  of  aU ;  Princess  v  446 

hold  you  here,  r  and  all,  in  my  hand.  Flow,  in  cran.  wall.  3 

What  you  are,  r  and  all,  „  5 

Thy  r's  are  wrapt  about  the  bones.  In  Mem.  ii  4 

By  ashen  r's  the  violets  blow.  „      cxv  4 

for  the  r's  of  my  hair  were  stirr'd  Maud  7  z  13 

Some  r  of  knighthood  and  pure  nobleness  ;  Holy  Grail  886 

r's  Uke  some  black  coil  of  carven  snakes,  iMst  Tournament  13 

Adown  a  natural  stair  of  tangled  r's,  Lover's  Tale  i  527 

His  winter  chills  him  to  the  r,  Ancient  Sage  119 

Boot-bitten     B-b  by  white  lichen,  Gareih  and  L.  454 

Booted    \See  also  Fast-rooted,  Serpent-rooted)    When  r 
in  the  garden  of  the  mind, 

'  I,  r  here  among  the  groves 

night  and  day,  and  r  in  the  fields. 

He  r  out  the  slothful  ofi&cer  Or  guilty. 

His  honour  r  in  dishonour  stood, 

jungle  r  in  his'  shatter'd  hearth, 
Bootless    evermore  Seem'd  catching  at  a  r  thorn, 
Bope     With  hand  and  r  we  haled  the  groaning  sow, 

I  wore  The  r  that  haled  the  buckets 

.Vnd  reach'd  the  ship  and  caught  the  r. 

Torn  as  a  sail  that  leaves  the  r  is  torn  In  tempest : 
Bosa  (Monte)     how  phantom-fair,  Was  Monte  R, 
Bosalind    bring  me  my  love,  R. 

where  is  my  sweet  R  ? 

My  R,  my  R,  (repeat) 

bold  and  free  As  you,  my  falcon  R. 

Come  down,  come  home,  my  R,  My  gay  young  ha-(vk, 
my  R: 

bind  And  keep  you  fast,  mv  R,  Fast,  fast,  my  wild- 
eyed  i?,  "  .,  43 

face  again,  My  R  in  this  Arden —  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  119 

Bosamond    I  am  that  R,  whom  men  call  fair,  D.  of  F.  Women  251 

Bosary  (rose-garden)     Thick  rosaries  of  scented  thorn,    Arabian  Nights  106 
Bosary  (string  of  beads)    amber,  ancient  rosaries, 
Bose  (adj.)     the  lights,  r,  amber,  emerald,  blue, 
Eose  (Christian  name)     Who  had  not  heard  Of  R,  the 
19    Gardener's  daughter  ? 

but  she,  a  i?  In  roses, 

R,  on  this  terrace  fifty  years  ago. 

Two  words  '  My  R  '  set  aU  your  face  aglow, 
Rose  (flower,  colour)    (See  also  Baby-rose,  Garden- 
rose)    With  plaited  alleys  of  the  trailing  r. 

And  the  year's  last  r. 

Bramble  r's,  faint  and  pale. 

Some  spirit  of  a  crimson  r  In  love  with  thee 

Wearing  the  r  of  womanhood. 

Her  cheek  had  lost  the  r, 

her  hair  Wound  with  white  r's,  slept  St.  Cecily  ; 

petals  from  blown  r's  on  the  grass, 

up  the  porch  there  grew  an  Eastern  r, 

but  she,  a  Rose  In  Ps, 

'  Ah,  one  r.  One  r,  but  one. 

Nor  yet  refused  the  r,  but  granted  it. 

Kissing  the  r  she  gave  me  o'er  and  o'er, 


Ode  to  Memory  26 

Talking  Oak  181 

Com.  of  Arthur  24 

Geraint  and  E.  938 

Lancelot  and  E.  876 

Demeter  and  P.  76 

Geraint  and  E.  378 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  91 

St.  S.  Stylites  64 

Sailor  Boy  3 

Holy  Grail  212 

The  Daisy  66 

Leonine  Eleg.  14 

16 

Rosalind  1,  5 

18 


33 


Princess,  Pro.  19 
Palace  of  Art  169 

Gardener's  D.  52 

142 

Roses  on  the  T.  1 

3 

Ode  to  Memory  106 

A  spirit  haunts  20 

A  Dirge  30 

Adeline  41 

Two  Voices  417 

(Enone  18 

Palace  of  Art  99 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  2 

Gardener's  D.  123 

143 

149 

160 

176 


then  for  r's,  moss  or  musk.  To  grace  my  city  rooms ; 


193 


shut  Within  the  bosom  of  the  r  ? 

With  a  single  r  in  her  hair. 

God  made  Himself  an  awful  r  of  dawn,  (repeat) 

The  late  and  early  r's  from  his  wall, 

the  red  r  was  redder  than  itself, 

York's  white  r  as  red  as  Lancaster's, 

Which  fann'd  the  gardens  of  that  rival  r 

Seem'd  hope's  returning  r : 

The  wilderness  shall  blossom  as  the  r. 

Not  ev'n  a  r,  were  offer'd  to  thee  ? 

In  meshes  of  the  jasmine  and  the  r : 

as  tho'  there  were  One  r  in  all  the  world, 


Day- Dm.,  Moral  8 

Lady  Clare  60 

Vision  of  Sin  50,  224k 

Enoch  Arden  339 


Aylmer 


s  Field  50 

51 

455 

559 

649 

Lucretius  69 

Princess  i  219 

„        ii  51 


Bose  (flower,  colour)  (continued)  And  sated  with  the  in- 
numerable r.  Princess  Hi  122 
any  r  of  Gulistan  Shall  burst  her  veil :  „  iv  122 
Before  me  shower'd  the  r  in  flakes ;  „  264 
there's  no  r  that's  half  so  dear  to  them  „  v  159 
R's  and  UUes  and  Canterbury-bells.'  City  Child  5 
some  rare  little  r,  a  piece  of  inmost  Horticultural 

art,  Hendecasyllabics  19 
R,  r  and  clematis,  (repeat)                         Window,  At  the  Window  3,  10 

She  takes  a  riband  or  a  r  ;  In  Mem.  vi  32 

quick  tears  that  make  the  r  Pull  sideways,  .,     Ixxii  10 

May  breathe,  with  many  r's  sweet,  „        xci  10 

and  swung  The  heavy-folded  r,  and  flung  The  lilies  „        xcv  59 

And  every  thought  breaks  out  a  r.  ,,     cxxii  20 

He  too  foretold  the  perfect  r.  „     Con.  34 

an  hour's  defect  of  the  r,  Maud  I  ii  8 

You  have  but  fed  on  the  r's  ,,          iv  60 

Maud  has  a  garden  of  r's  „          xiv  1 

R's  are  her  cheeks.  And  a  r  her  mouth  (repeat)  „  xvii  7,  27 

'  Ah,  be  Among  the  r's  to-night.'  „        xxi  13 

And  the  musk  of  the  r  is  blown.  „        xxii  6 

All  night  have  the  r's  heard  The  flute,  „              13 

I  said  to  the  r,  '  The  brief  night  goes  In  babble  „              27 

But  mine,  but  mine,'  so  I  sware  to  the  r,  „              31 

the  soul  of  the  r  went  into  my  blood,  „              33 

the  r  was  awake  all  night  for  your  sake,  „               49 

The  lilies  and  r's  were  all  awake,  „              51 

Queen  r  of  the  rosebud  garden  of  girls,  „              53 

Queen  Uly  and  r  in  one ;  „              56 

The  red  r  cries  '  She  is  near,  she  is  near  ; '  „              63 

the  white  r  weeps,  '  She  is  late ; '  „              64 

All  made  up  of  the  lily  and  r  .,      II  v  74 

I  almost  fear  they  are  not  r's,  but  blood ;  .,               78 

O'er  the  four  rivers  the  first  r's  blew,  Geraint  and  E.  764 

A  walk  of  r's  ran  from  door  to  door  ;  Balin  and  Balan  242 

down  that  range  of  r's  the  great  Queen  Came  „              244 

'  Sweeter  to  me '  she  said  '  this  garden  r  „              269 

make  her  paler  with  a  poison'd  r  ?  Merlin  and  V.  611 

To  crop  his  own  sweet  r  before  the  hour  ?  '  ,,            725 

Till  the  high  dawn  piercing  the  royal  r  „             739 

Redder  than  any  r,  a  joy  to  me.  Holy  Grail  521 

'  A  worm  within  the  r.'  Pelleas  and  E.  399 
'  A  r,  but  one,  none  other  r  had  I,  A  r,  one  r,  and 

this   was   wondrous   fair.    One   r,    a   r  that 

gladden'd  earth  and  sky.  One  r,  my  r,  that 

sweeten'd  all  mine  air —  „            400 
'  One  r,  a  r  to  gather  by  and  by.  One  r,  a  r,  to  gather 

and  to  wear,  No  r  but  one — what  other  r  had  I  ? 

One  r,  my  r  ;  a  r  that  will  not  die, —  „             405 

slope  of  garden,  all  Of  r's  white  and  red,  „            422 

and  so  spilt  itself  Among  the  r's,  .,            427 

colour  and  the  sweetness  from  the  r.  Lover's  Tale  i  172 

infuse  Rich  atar  in  the  bosom  of  the  r,  ,,              270 

Leaning  its  r's  on  my  faded  eyes.  „               621 

made  The  red  r  there  a  pale  one —  „              696 

hair  Studded  with  one  rich  Provence  r —  „           Hi  45 

who  himself  was  crown'd  With  r's,  „          iv  297 

my  r,  there  my  allegiance  due.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  59 

the  blush  Of  miUions  of  r's  V.  of  Maeldune  44 

Rich  was  the  r  of  simset  there.  The  Wreck  136 

Youth  began  Had  set  the  lily  and  r  Ancient  Sage  156 

My  r  of  love  for  ever  gone,  „          159 

They  made  her  Uly  and  r  in  one,  „           161 

Molly  Magee,  wid  the  red  o'  the  r  Tomorrow  31 

Feed  the  budding  r  of  boyhood  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  143 

Fifty  times  the  r  has  flower'd  and  faded,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  1 

with  her  flying  robe  and  her  poison'd  r  ;  Vastness  16 

Each  poor  pale  cheek  a  momentary  r —  The  Ring  315 

My  r's — win  he  take  them  now —  Happy  13 

The  r's  that  you  east  aside —  „      22 

I  brought  you,  you  remember,  these  r's,  „      73 

you  wave  me  off^ — poor  r's — must  I  go —  „     101 

gather  the  r's  whenever  they  blow,  Romney's  R.  107 

close  to  me  to-day  As  this  red  r,  Roses  on  the  R.  7 

Prophet  of  the  r's.  The  Snowdrop  8 


Rose 


591 


Rose 


Shall  the  r  Cry  to  the 


Rose  (flower,  colour)  {continued) 
^  lotus  '  No  flower  thou '  ? 
Rose  (verb)     Some  blue  peaks  in  the  distance  r, 

Heaven  over  Heaven  r  the  night. 

At  last  you  r  and  moved  the  light, 

And  r,  and,  with  a  silent  grace  Approaching, 

R  slowly  to  a  music  slowly  breathed, 

R  feud,  with  question  unto  whom  'twere  due 

I  r  up  in  the  silent  night : 

Of  ledge  or  shelf  The  rock  r  clear, 

that  sweet  incense  r  and  never  fail'd. 

Here  r,  an  athlete,  strong  to  break  or  bind 

How  sadly,  I  remember,  r  the  morning  of 
the  year ! 

this  star  R  with  you  thro'  a  little  arc 

so  that  he  r  With  sacrifice, 

arm  R  up  from  out  the  bosom  of  the  lake, 

Then  quickly  r  Sir  Bedivere,  and  ran, 

r  an  arm  Clothed  in  white  samite,  mystic, 

from  the  pavement  he  half  r.  Slowly, 

from  them  r  A  cry  that  shiver'd  to  the  tingling  stars, 

she,  that  r  the  tallest  of  them  all  And  fairest. 

And  up  we  r,  and  on  the  spur  we  went. 

but  I  r  up  Full  of  his  bliss, 

passion  r  thro'  circumstantial  grades 

she  r  and  took  The  child  once  more, 

ere  the  night  we  r  And  saunter'd  home 

To  some  full  music  r  and  sank  the  sun, 

I  crouch'd  on  one  that  r  Twenty  by  measure  ; 

When  his  man-minded  offset  r  To  chase  the  deer 

flower,  she  touch'd  on,  dipt  and  r, 

we  two  r.  There — closing  hke  an  individual  life — 

While  Ilion  like  a  mist  r  into  towers. 

There  r  a  noise  of  striking  clocks, 

R  a  ship  of  France. 

So  fresh  they  r  in  shadow'd  swells 

R  again  from  where  it  seem'd  to  faU, 

r  and  past  Bearing  a  lifelong  hunger 

Enoch  r.  Cast  his  strong  arms 

She  r,  and  fixt  her  swimming  eyes  upon  him, 

r  And  sent  his  voice  beneath  him  thro'  the  wood. 

r  And  paced  Back  toward  his  soUtary  home  again 

He  woke,  he  r,  he  spread  his  arms  abroad 

full  wiUingly  he  r  : 

R  from  the  clay  it  work'd  in  as  she  past. 

Darkly  that  day  r  : 

a  full  tide  R  with  ground-swell, 

a  fire-balloon  R  gem-hke  up  before 

I  r  and  past  Thro'  the  wild  woods 

Whereon  a  woman-statue  r  with  wings 

She  r  her  height,  and  said  : 

an  officer  R  up,  and  read  the  statutes, 

She  r  upon  a  wind  of  prophecy  Dilating  on  the  futme  ; 

We  r,  and  each  by  other  drest  with  care 

Stirring  a  sudden  transport  r  and  fell. 

on  a  tripod  in  the  midst  A  fragrant  flame  r, 

There  r  a  shriek  as  of  a  city  sack'd  ; 

there  r  A  hubbub  in  the  court  of  half  the  maids 

I  beheld  her,  when  she  r  The  yesternight, 

among  them  r  a  cry  As  if  to  greet  the  king ; 

On  his  haunches  r  the  steed. 

Part  roll'd  on  the  earth  and  r  again  and  drew  : 

R  a  nurse  of  ninety  years, 

and  a  day  R  from  the  distance  on  her  memory, 

He  r,  and  while  each  ear  was  prick'd 

nor  seem'd  it  strange  that  soon  He  r  up  whole, 

from  mine  arms  she  r  Glowing  all  over  noble  shame  ; 

I  give  you  all  The  random  scheme  as  wildly  as  it  r  : 

Then  r  a  Uttle  feud  betwixt  the  two. 

And  yet  to  give  the  story  as  it  r, 

But  that  there  r  a  shout : 

a  shout  r  again,  and  made  The  long  line 

Again  their  ravening  eagle  r  Ode  on  Well.  119 

He  r  at  dawn  and,  fired  with  hope.  Sailor  Boy  1 

While  I  r  up  against  my  doom,  In  Mem.  cxxii  2 


Akbar's  Bream  36 

Dying  Swan  11 

Mariana  in  the  S.  92 

Miller's  D.  125 

159 

(Enone  41 

„      82 

The  Sisters  25 

Palace  of  Art  10 

45 

153 


May  Queen,  Con.  3 

To  J.  S.  26 

On  a  Mourner  33 

M.  d' Arthur  30 

133 

143 

167 

198 

207 

Gardener's  D.  32 

210 

240 

Dora%Q 

Audley  Court  79 

Edwin  Morris  34 

St.  S.  Stylites  88 

Talking  Oak  51 

131 

Love  and  Duty  78 

Tithonu^  63 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  2 

The  Captain  28 

The  Letters  46 

Vision  of  Sin  24t 

Enoch  Arden  78 

227 

325 

443 

793 

912 

The  Brook  121 

Aylmer's  Field  170 

609 

Sea  Dreams  51 

Princess,  Pro.  75 

i90 

210 

ii  41 


171 

Hi  19 

iv29 

34 

165 

475 

fl75 

248 

493 

497 

vi  13 

112 

m280 

vii  65 

159 

Con.  2 

23 

26 

36 


Rose  (verb)  (continued)  The  love  that  r  on  stronger  wings.  In  Mem.  cxxviii  1 
when  they  r,  knighted  from  kneeling.  Com.  of  Arthur  263 

voices,  slowly  r  and  plimged  Roaring,  „  381 

And  all  at  once  all  round  him  r  in  fire,  „  389 

He  r,  and  out  of  slumber  calling  two  Gareth  and  L.  178 

That  r  between  the  forest  and  the  field.  „  191 

Lot  and  many  another  r  and  fought  Against  thee,  „  354 

R,  and  high-arching  overbrow'd  the  hearth.  „  408 

He  r  and  past ;  then  Kay,  a  man  of  mien  „  452 

Sir  Gareth  caU'd  him  from  where  he  r,  „  645 

r  High  that  the  highest-crested  helm  „  672 

Baron  set  Gareth  beside  her,  but  at  once  she  r.  „  852 

Fell,  as  if  dead  ;  but  quickly  r  and  drew,  „  967 

Death  was  cast  to  ground,  and  slowly  r.  „  1403 

But  when  a  rumour  r  about  the  Queen,  Marr.  of  Geraint  24 

But  r  at  last,  a  single  maiden  with  her,  „  160 

from  the  mason's  hand,  a  fortress  r ;  „  244 

r  a  cry  That  Edyrn's  men  were  on  them,  „  638 

the  maiden  r.  And  left  her  maiden  couch,  „  736 

Then  r  Limours,  and  looking  at  his  feet,  Geraint  and  E.  302 

Anon  she  r,  and  stepping  lightly,  „  373 

And  once  again  she  r  to  look  at  it,  „  387 

R  when  they  saw  the  dead  man  rise,  „  732 

Then  Balin  r,  and  Balan,  Balin  and  Balan  43 

His  arm  half  r  to  strike  again,  but  fell :  „  223 

Dishorsed  himself,  and  r  again,  and  fled  Far,  ,, 

He  r,  descended,  met  The  scorner  in  the  castle  court. 
And  Balin  r,  '  Thither  no  more  !  ,, 

he  r  To  leave  the  hall,  and,  Vivien  following  Merlin  and 

r  Fixt  on  her  hearer's,  „ 

then  I  r  and  fled  from  Arthur's  court  „ 

It  was  the  time  when  first  the  question  r 
He  r  without  a  word  and  parted  from  her  :  „ 

she  dislink'd  herself  at  once  and  r, 
some  light  jest  among  them  r  With  laughter 
r  And  drove  him  into  wastes  and  solitudes 
rathe  she  r,  half-cheated  in  the  thought 
They  r,  heard  mass,  broke  fast,  and  rode  away 
Then  flash'd  into  wild  tears,  and  r  again. 
Then  r  Elaine  and  glided  thro'  the  fields, 
full  meekly  r  the  maid,  Stript  off  the  case, 
Then  r  the  dumb  old  servitor, 
and  r  And  pointed  to  the  damsel, 
and  she  r  Opening  her  arms  to  meet  me, 
'  There  r  a  hill  that  none  but  man  could  chmb, 
so  that  I  r  and  fled.  But  wail'd  and  wept, 
when  he  saw  me,  r,  and  bad  me  hail, 
two  great  beasts  r  upright  like  a  man, 
nor  that  One  Who  r  again  : 
Pelleas  r.  And  loosed  his  horse,  Pelleas  and  E.  60 

but  r  With  morning  every  day,  „  214 

they  r  up,  and  bound,  and  brought  him  in.  „  288 

Arthur  r  and  Lancelot  foUow'd  him.  Last  Tournament  112 

She  r,  and  set  before  him  all  he  will'd ;  „  723 

Behind  him  r  a  shadow  and  a  shriek —  „  753 

aghast  the  maiden  r.  White  as  her  veil,  Guinevere  362 

Then  r  the  King  and  moved  his  host  by  night,  Pass,  of  Arthur  79 

and  with  that  wind  the  tide  R,  „  126 


Lancelot  and  E. 


330 


483 
F.  31 


297 
410 
742 
909 
178 
251 
340 
415 
613 
843 
978 
1153 
1262 
Holy  Grail  394 
489 
608 
725 
821 
919 


an  arm  R  up  from  out  the  bosom  of  the  lake, 

Then  quickly  r  Sir  Bedivere,  and  ran, 

r  an  arm  Clothed  in  white  samite,  mystic, 

from  the  pavement  he  half  r,  Slowly, 

from  them  r  A  cry  that  shiver'd  to  the  tingling  stars, 

she,  that  r  the  tallest  of  them  aU  And  fairest, 

the  new  sun  r  bringing  the  new  year. 

Whence  r  as  it  were  breath  and  steam  of  gold, 

The  fancy  stirr'd  him  so  He  r  and  went, 

While  aU  the  guests  in  mute  amazement  r — 

then  r  up,  and  with  him  all  his  guests 

he  r  upon  their  decks,  and  he  cried  : 

she  r  and  fled  Beneath  a  pitiless  rush 

Then  r  the  howl  of  all  the  cassock'd  wolves. 

Who  r  and  doom'd  me  to  the  fire. 

Whom  once  he  r  from  off  his  throne  to  greet 

then  the  great '  Laudamus  '  r  to  heaven. 


198 
301 
311 
335 
366 
375 


Lover's  Tale  i  402 

iv  52 

305 

359 

The  Revenge  100 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  236 

Sir  J.  OldcasUi  158 

172 

Columbus  5 

18 


Rose 


592 


Rough 


Rose  (verb)  (continued)   each  man,  as  he  r  from  his  rest,      V.  of  Maeldune  85 
They  r  to  where  their  sovran  eagle  sails,  Montenegro  1 

Then  r  Achilles  dear  to  Zeus  ;  Achilles  over  the  T.  2 

I  r  Following  a  torrent  till  its  myriad  falls  Tiresias  36 

he  r  as  it  were  on  the  wings  of  an  eagle  The  Wreck  69 

project  after  project  r,  and  all  of  them  were  vain  ;  The  Flight  14 

Celtic  Demos  r  a  Demon,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  90 

Step  by  step  we  r  to  greatness, —  „  130 

truckled  and  cower'd  When  he  r  in  his  wrath.  Bead  Prophet  63 

And  dying  r,  and  rear'd  her  arms.  The  Ring  222 

then  she  r.  She  clung  to  me  with  such  a  hard  embrace,  „        434 

From  under  r  a  muffled  moan  of  floods  ;  Frog,  of  Spring  70 

crooked,  reeling,  livid,  thro'  the  mist  R,  Death  of  (Enone  28 

She  r  and  slowly  down,  „  84 

Rose-blowing    Creeping  thro'  blossomy  rushes  and  bowers 

of  r-b  bushes.  Leonine  Eleg.  3 

Rosebud  (adj.)     Queen  rose  of  the  r  garden  of  girls,  Mavd  I  xxii  53 

Rosebud  (s)     Where  on  the  double  r  droops  Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  47 

A  r  set  with  little  wilful  thorns,  Frincess,  Fro.  154 

Rose-bush     And  a  r-h  leans  upon,  Adeline  14 

to  train  the  r  that  I  set  About  the 

parlom'-window  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  47 

Rose-campion     R-c,  bluebell,  kingcup,  JLast  Tournament  234 

Rose-carnation     And  many  a  r-c  feed  In  Mem.  ci  7 

Rosed     darken'd  in  the  west.  And  r  in  the  east :  Sea  Dreams  40 

her  white  neck  Was  r  with  indignation  :  Princess  vi  344 

Rose-garden     For  I  know  her  own  r-g,  Maud  I  xx  41 

Rose-hued     Flowing  beneath  her  r-h  zone  ;  Arabian  Nights  140 

Rose-leaf    Letting  the  rose-leaves  fall :  Claribel  3 

Like  a  r-l  I  will  crush  thee,  Lilian  29 

Rose-lips     Thy  r-l  and  full  blue  eyes  Adeline  7 

Rosemary     the  boar  hath  rosemaries  and  bay.  Gareth  and  L.  1074 

Rose  of  Lancaster    (See  also  Lancaster,  Roses)     Ro  L, 

Ked  in  thy  birth.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  52 

Redder  to  be,  red  r  o  L —  „  55 

Rose-petal     dust  of  the  r-p  belongs  to  the  heart  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  9 

Rose-red  (adj.)     soon  From  thy  r-r  Ups  my  name  Floweth  ;        Eleanore  133 

down  the  long  beam  stole  the  Holy  Grail,  R-r  with 

beatings  in  it.  Holy  Grail  118 

from  the  star  there  shot  A  r-r  sparkle  to  the  city,  „  530 

Rose-red  (s)     beyond  a  bridge  of  treble  bow,  All  in  a 

r-r  from  the  west,  Gareth  and  L.  1087 

Roses  (Wars  of  the  Roses)     civil  wars  and  earlier  too 

Among  the  R,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  76 

Rosetree    One  look'd  all  r,  and  another  wore  Aylmer's  Field  157 

0  r  planted  in  my  grief.  Ancient  Sage  163 

Rosewood     '  She  left  the  novel  half -uncut  Upon  the 

r  shelf  ;  Talking  Oak  118 

Rosier     but  r  luck  will  go  With  these  rich  jewels.  Last  Tournament  45 

taller  indeed,  R  and  comelier,  thou —  „  710 

Rosiest     And  all  of  them  redder  than  r  health  V.  of  Maeldune  65 

Rosin     And,  sweating  r,  plump'd  the  pine  Amphion  47 

Rosy     AVho  lets  his  r  fingers  play  About  his  mother's 

neck,  Supp.  Confessions  42 

kiss  away  the  bitter  words  From  off  your  r  mouth.  Rosalind  51 

When  Sleep  had  bound  her  in  his  r  band,  Caress'd  or  chidden  6 

Thro'  r  taper  fingers  drew  Her  streaming  curls        Mariana  in  the  S.  15 
Winds  all  the  vale  in  r  folds.  Miller's  D.  242 

With  r  slender  fingers  backward  drew  (Enone  176 

Ganymede,  his  r  thigh  Half-buried  in  the  Eagle's 

down.  Palace  of  Art  121 

Dark  faces  pale  against  that  r  flame.  Lotos- Eaters  26 

'  Then  flush'd  her  cheek  with  r  light.  Talking  Oak  165 

Coldly  thy  r  shadows  bathe  me,  Tithonus  66 

As  I  have  seen  the  r  red  flushing  in  the  northern 

night.  Locksley  Hall  26 

And,  rapt  thro'  many  a  r  change,  Day-Dm.,  Depart.  23 

But  when  the  dawn  of  r  childhood  past,  Enoch  Arden  37 

came  a  boy  to  be  The  r  idol  of  her  solitudes,  „  90 

Philip's  r  face  contracting  grew  Careworn  and  wan  ;  „  486 

.Stout,  r,  with  his  babe  across  his  knees ;  „  746 

This  had  a  r  sea  of  gillyflowers  About  it ;  Aylmer's  Field  159 

And  r  knees  and  supple  roundedness,  Lucretius  190 

And  robed  the  shoulders  in  a  r  silk.  Princess,  Fro.  103 

A  r  blonde,  and  in  a  college  gown,  „  ii  323 


Rosy  (continued)    all  The  r  heights  came  out  above 

the  lawns. 
Or  r  blossom  in  hot  ravine. 
Green-rushing  from  the  r  thrones  of  dawn  ! 

(repeat) 
A  r  warmth  from  marge  to  marge. 
When  r  plumelets  tuft  the  larch. 
And  left  the  daisies  r. 
R  is  the  West,  R  is  the  South,  (repeat) 
three  fair  girls  In  gilt  and  r  raiment  came  : 
His  arms,  the  r  raiment,  and  the  star. 
How  from  the  r  hps  of  life  and  love. 
With  r  colours  leaping  on  the  wall ; 
The  r  quiverings  died  into  the  night. 


Frincess  Hi  365 
The  Daisy  32 

Voice  and  the  P.  4,  40 

In  Mem.  xlvi  16 

„  xci  1 

Maud  I  xii  24 

„     xvii  5,  25 

Gareth  and  L.  927 

938 

Merlin  and  V.  846 

Holy  Grail  120 

123 

Felleas  and  E.  72 

502 


her  bloom  A  r  dawn  kindled  in  stainless  heavens, 
Glanced  from  the  r  forehead  of  the  dawn 
himself  was  crown'd  With  roses,  none  so  »•  as 

himself —  Lover's  Tale  iv  297 

Or  on  your  head  their  r  feet,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  9 

the  moon  was  faUing  greenish  thro'  a  r  glow,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  178 

made  The  r  twilight  of  a  perfect  day.  The  Ring  187 

From  off  the  r  cheek  of  waking  Day.  Akbar's  Drea7n  202 

Rosy-bright     There  all  in  spaces  r-b  Mariana  in  the  S.  89 

Rosy-kindled     r-k  with  her  brother's  kiss —  Lancelot  and  E.  393 

Rosy-tinted     In  tufts  of  r-t  snow  ;  Two  Voices  60 

Rosy-white    her  light  foot  Shone  r-w,  QLnone  180 

Rot     '  Why,  if  man  r  in  dreamless  ease,  Two  Voices  280 

Fall  back  upon  a  name  !  rest,  r  in  that !  Aylmer's  Field  385 

Rotatory     And  r  thumbs  on  silken  knees,  „            2(X) 

Rotted     my  thighs  are  r  with  the  dew  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  41 

There  the  smouldering  fire  of  fever  creeps  across 

the  r  floor,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  223 

Rotten     (See  also  Rain-rotten)     Till  all  be  ripe  and  r.  Will  Water.  16 

When  the  r  woodland  drips,  Vision  of  Sin  81 

To  leap  the  r  pales  of  prejudice.  Princess  ii  142 

when  the  r  hustings  shake  In  another  month  Maud  I  vi  54 

on  whom  all  spears  Are  r  sticks  !  Gareth  and  L.  1306 

r  branch  Snapt  in  the  rushing  of  the  river-rain  Merlin  and  V.  957 

Yea,  r  with  a  hundred  years  of  death,  Holy  Grail  496 

seeing  too  much  wit  Makes  the  world  r.  Last  Tournament  247 

What  r  piles  uphold  their  mason-work,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  67 

Better  a  r  borough  or  so  Than  a  r  fleet  Riflemen  form  !  17 

Rotting     At  the  moist  rich  smell  of  the  r  leaves,  A  spirit  haunts  17 

'  At  least,  not  r  hke  a  weed.  Two  Voices  142 

R  on  some  wild  shore  with  ribs  of  wreck,  Frincess  v  147 

That  r  inward  slowly  moulders  all.  Merlin  and  V.  395 

Rough     The  fllter'd  tribute  of  the  r  woodland.  Ode  to  Memory  63 

And  from  a  heart  as  r  as  Esau's  hand,  Godiva  28 

Buss  me,  thou  r  sketch  of  man.  Vision  of  Sin  189 

And  Enoch  Arden,  a  r  sailor's  lad  Enoch  Arden  14 

How  many  a  r  sea  had  he  weather'd  in  her  !  „           135 

a  r  piece  Of  early  rigid  colour,  Aylmer's  Field  280 

befool'd  and  idioted  By  the  r  amity  of  the  other,  „            591 

Dropping  the  too  r  H  in  Hell  and  Heaven,  Sea  Dreams  196 

But  your  r  voice  (You  spoke  so  loud)  „          280 

That  ever  butted  his  r  brother-brute  Lucretius  197 

Discuss'd  his  tutor,  r  to  common  men.  Princess,  Fro.  114 

but '  No  !  '  Roar'd  the  r  king,  '  you  shall  not ;  .,                  t  87 

tho'  the  r  kex  break  The  starr'd  mosaic,  .,                iv  77 

At  length  my  Sire,  his  r  cheek  wet  with  tears,  „                 v  23 

Among  piled  arms  and  r  accoutrements,  „                    55 

These  were  the  r  ways  of  the  world  till  now.  „             vii  257 

Not  once  or  twice  in  our  r  island  story.  Ode  on  Well.  201 

Fabric  r,  or  fairy-fine.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  18 

And  says  he  is  r  but  kind,  Maud  I  xix  70 

R  but  kind  ?  yet  I  know  He  has  plotted  against  me  .,                79 

Well,  r  but  kind ;  why  let  it  be  so :  ,,                83 

Is  it  kind  to  have  made  me  a  grave  so  r,  ,,        //  v  97 

To  guard  thee  on  the  r  ways  of  the  world.'  Com.  of  Arthur  336 

Last  that  r  humour  of  the  kings  of  old  Gareth  and  L.  377 

'  R,  sudden.  And  pardonable,  worthy  to  be  knight — •  „             653 

nor  r  face,  or  voice.  Brute  bulk  of  limb,  „           1329 

For  old  am  I,  and  r  the  ways  and  wild  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  750 

Then  tending  her  r  lord,  tho'  all  unask'd,  Geraint  and  E.  405 

In  lieu  of  this  r  beast  upon  my  sliield,  Balin  and  Balan  196 


1 


Rough 


593 


Royal 


Bough  (continued)     And  one  was  r  with  wattling,  Balin  and  Balan  366 

Meeker  than  any  child  to  a  r  nurse,  Lancelot  and  E.  857 

she  knew  right  well  What  the  r  sickness  meant,  „              888 

I  pray  you,  use  some  r  discourtesy  „              973 

Then  the  r  Torre  began  to  heave  and  move,  „            1066 

I  might  have  put  my  wits  to  some  r  use,  „  1306 
r  crowd,  Hearing  he  had  a  difference  with  their  priests.  Holy  Grail  673 
E  wives,  that  laugh'd  and  scream'd  against  the 

gulls,  Pelleas  and  E.  89 

Some  r  old  knight  who  knew  the  worldly  way,  „            192 

Her  light  feet  fell  on  our  r  Lyonnesse,  Last  Tournament  554 

when  first  I  rode  from  our  r  Lyonnesse,  „              664 

The  r  brier  tore  my  bleeding  palms  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  18 

In  a  tone  so  r  that  I  broke  into  passionate  tears.  The  Wreck  122 

r  rock-throne  Of  Freedom  !  Montenegro  9 

Bongher    Here  is  a  story  which  in  r  shape  Aylmer's  Field  7 

women  sang  Between  the  r  voices  of  the  men,  Princess,  Pro,  245 

the  r  hand  Is  safer :  „           w  278 

whenever  a  r  gust  might  tumble  a  stormier  wave,  The  Wreck  131 

Roughest    A  cloth  of  r  web,  and  cast  it  down,  Gareth  and  L.  683 

Rough-redden'd     R-r  with  a  thousand  winter  galos,  Enoch  Arden  95 

Rough-ruddy    And  r-r  faces  Of  lowly  labour.  Merlin  and  the  G.  59 

Rough-thicketed     E-t  were  the  banks  and  steep  ;  Gareth  and  L.  907 

Round  (adj.)    And  o'er  it  many,  r  and  small,  Mariana  39 

We  knew  the  merry  world  was  r.  The  Voyage  7 

We  know  the  merry  world  is  r,  „          95 

For  so  the  whole  r  earth  is  every  way  M.  d' Arthur  254 

A  body  slight  and  r,  and  like  a  pear  Walk,  to  the  Mail  53 

Her  r  white  shoulder  shaken  with  her  sobs,  Princess  iv  289 

For  so  the  whole  r  earth  is  every  way  Pass,  of  Arthur  422 

E  was  their  pace  at  first,  but  slacken'd  soon  :  Geraint  and  E.  33 

Round  (adv.)    Shall  make  the  winds  blow  E  and  r,  Nothing  will  Die  24 

flashing  r  and  r,  and  whirl'd  in  an  arch,  M.  d' Arthur  138 

I'd  clasp  it  r  so  close  and  tight.  Miller's  D.  180 

And  '  while  the  world  runs  r  and  r,'  Palace  of  Art  13 

r  and  r  A  whirlwind  caught  and  bore  us  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  196 

Hands  all  r !  (repeat)  Hands  all  Pound  9,  21,  33 

great  name  of  England,  r  and  r.  (repeat)  „                  12,  36 

And  all  her  glorious  empire,  r  and  r.  „                        24 

An'  the  dogs  was  a-yowlin'  all  r,  Owd  Eod  107 

flashing  r  and  r,  and  whirl'd  in  an  arch,  Pass,  of  Arthur  306 

Round  (prep.)    once  had  roll'd  you  r  and  r  the  Sun,  Poets  and  their  B.  10 

Round  (s)     runs  the  r  of  life  from  hour  to  hour.  Circumstance  9 

Like  the  tender  amber  r,  Margaret  19 

The  dark  r  of  the  dripping  wheel.  Miller's  D.  102 

in  the  r  of  Time  Still  father  Truth  ?  Ixrve  and  Duty  4 

To  yonder  argent  r ;  St.  Agnes' Eve  1& 

Comes  out  a  perfect  r.  Will  Water.  68 

This  r  of  green,  this  orb  of  flame.  In  Mem.  xxxiv  5 

Shovdd  move  his  r's,  and  fusing  all  „           xlvii  2 

slowly  breathing  bare  The  r  of  space,  „        Ixxxvi  5 

they  roll  Thro'  such  a  r  in  heaven,  Holy  Grail  686 

BoODd  (verb)    Should  slowly  r  his  orb,  Elednore  91 

So  r's  he  to  a  separate  mind  In  Mem.  xlv  9 

r  A  higher  height,  a  deeper  deep.  „     Ixiii  11 

Bonnded  (adj.  and  part.)    clear  canal  Is  r  to  as  clear  a 

lake.  Arabian  Nights  46 

Devolved  his  r  periods.  A  Character  18 

Roll'd  on  each  other,  r,  smooth'd,  D.  of  F.  Women  51 
Sweet  faces,  r  arms,  and  bosoms  prest  To  little  harps 

of  gold ;  Sea-Fairies  3 
o'er  her  r  form  Between  the  shadows  of  the  vine-bunches      (Enone  180 

r,  smooth'd,  and  brought  Into  the  gulfs  of  sleep.  D.  of  F.  Women  51 

And  moves  not  on  the  r  curl.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  8 

O'er  ocean-mirrors  r  la:^e,  In  Mem.  xii  9 

vizoring  up  a  red  And  cipher  face  of  r  foolishness,  Gareth  and  L.  1039 

only  the  r  moon  Thro'  the  tall  oriel  on  the  rolling  sea.     Holy  Grail  830 
Bounded  (verb)    slowly  r  to  the  east  The  one  black 

shadow  Mariana  in  the  S.  79 

•  And  r  by  the  stillness  of  the  beach  Audley  Court  10 

The  men  who  met  him  r  on  their  heels  Pelleas  and  E.  142 

Roundedness    rosy  knees  and  supple  r,  Lu^etius  190 

Ronndel    glorious  r  echoing  in  our  ears,  Merlin  and  V.  426 

Roundelay    Twice  or  thrice  his  r,  (repeat)  The  Owl  i  11, 12 

Or  carol  some  old  r,  Gareth  and  L.  506 


Roundelay  (continued)    To  dance  without  a  catch,  a  r 

To  dance  to.'  Last  Tournament  250 

Rounder    softer  all  her  shape  And  r  seem'd :  Princess  vii  137 

The  r  cheek  had  brighten'd  into  bloom.  The  Eing  351 
Roundest    making  them  An  armlet  for  the  r  arm  on 

earth,  Lancelot  and  E.  1183 

Roundhead     And  far  below  the  E  rode,  Talking  Oak  299 

Rounding    The  level  waste,  the  r  gray.  Mariana  44 
Round  Table    (See  also  Table,  Table  Round)    But  now 

the  whole  E  T  is  dissolved  M.  d' Arthur  234 

'  Have  any  of  our  i?  T  held  their  vows  ? '  Pelleas  and  E.  533 

Have  founded  my  jB  T  in  the  North,  Last  Tournament  78 

The  glory  of  our  iJ  T  is  no  more.'  (repeat)  „       189,  212 

But  now  the  whole  E  T  ia  dissolved  Pass,  of  Arthur  402 

Rouse  (s)     Have  a  r  before  the  mom :  (repeat)  Vision  of  Sin  96,  120 

Rouse  (verb)     From  deep  thought  himself  he  r's,  L.  of  Burleigh  21 

Roused    has  r  the  child  again.  Sea  Dreams  281 

I  am  r  by  the  wail  of  a  child.  The  Wreck  7 

r  a  snake  that  hissing  writhed  away ;  Death  of  (Enone  88 

Rout  (s)     a  r  of  saucy  boys  Brake  on  us  at  our  books.  Princess  v  394 

Down  on  a  r  of  craven  foresters.  Gareth  and  L.  841 

And  midmost  of  a  r  of  roisterers,  Geraint  and  E.  274 

With  all  his  r  of  random  followers,  „            382 

And  blindly  rush'd  on  all  the  r  behind.  „            466 

whirling  r  Led  by  those  two  rush'd  into  dance.  Lover's  Tale  Hi  54 

Rout  (verb)     O  sound  to  r  the  brood  of  cares.  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  17 

Rove    How  young  Columbus  seem'd  to  r.  The  Daisy  17 

E's  from  the  living  brother's  face,  In  Mem.  xxxii  7 

Let  his  eye  r  in  following,  Marr.  of  Geraint  399 

Their  lot  with  ours  to  r  the  world  about ;  Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  11 

Wild  woods  in  which  we  r  no  more.  The  Flight  84 

Roved    While  I  r  about  the  forest,  Boddicea  35 

I  r  at  random  thro'  the  town.  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  3 

Wild  woods  in  which  we  r  with  him,  The  Flight  83 

Rover    and  thou  hast  been  a  r  too.  Last  Tournament  543 

Roving    When  after  r  in  the  woods  Miller's  D.  58 

E  the  trackless  realms  of  Lyonnesse,  Lancelot  and  E.  35 

Row  (s)     The  streams  through  many  a  lilied  r  The  Winds,  etc.  5 

rotmd  the  cool  green  courts  there  ran  a  r  Of  cloisters.    Palace  of  Art  25 

like  white  sea-birds  in  a  r,  V.  of  Maeldune  101 

Row  (verb)     taught  me  how  to  skate,  to  r,  Edwin  Morris  19 

he  can  steer  and  r,  and  he  WiU  guide  me  Lancelot  and  E.  1128 

E  us  out  from  Desenzano,  to  your  Sirmione  r !  Frater  ave,  etc.  1 

Row'd    and  how  I  r  across  And  took  it,  M.  d' Arthur  32 

Arthur  r  across  and  took  it —  Com.  of  Arthur  298 

and  how  I  r  across  And  took  it,  Pass,  of  Arthur  200 

So  they  r,  and  there  we  landed —  Frater  ave,  etc.  2 

Rowel     He  dash'd  the  r  into  his  horse,  Pelleas  and  E.  486 

Rowing     '  Who,  r  hard  against  the  stream,  Two  Voices  211 

Royal  (adj.)     (See  also  Crown-royal)    Victoria, — since  your 

R  grace  To  the  Queen  5 

With  r  frame-work  of  wrought  gold ;  Ode  to  Memory  82 

Died  the  sound  of  r  cheer;  L.  of  Shalott  iv  48 

She  to  Paris  made  Profier  of  r  power,  CEnone  111 

paintings  of  wise  men  I  hung  Tae  r  dais  round.  Palace  of  Art  132 

She  threw  her  r  robes  away.  „            290 

'  By  holy  rood,  a  r  beard !  Day-Dm.,  Eevival  20 

Cophetua  sware  a  r  oath :  Beggar  Maid  15 

From  whence  the  E  mind,  familiar  with  her,  Princess  iv  235 

(om'  r  word  upon  it.  He  comes  back  safe)  „         v  224 

Last,  Ida's  answer,  in  a  r  hand,  „            371 

Till  her  people  all  around  the  r  chariot  agitated,  Boddicea  73 

He  set  his  r  signet  there ;  In  Mem.  cxxv  12 

Break  not,  for  thou  art  E,  but  endure,  Ded.  of  Idylls  45 

For  this  an  Eagle,  a  r  Eagle,  laid  Gareth  and  L.  44 

Rolling  her  smoke  about  the  E  mount,  „           190 

r  crown  Sparkled,  and  swaying  upon  a  restless  elm  Balin  and  Balan  462 

Hail,  r  knight,  we  break  on  thy  sweet  rest,  „              470 

Drove  his  mail'd  heel  athwart  the  r  crown,  „              540 

Boldness  and  r  knighthood  of  the  bird  Merlin  and  V.  134 

Till  the  high  dawn  piercing  the  r  rose  „            739 

but  meaning  all  at  once  To  snare  her  r  fancy  Lancelot  and  E.  71 

Tho'  quartering  your  own  r  arms  of  Spain,  Columbus  115 

Shall  the  r  voice  be  mute  ?  By  an  Evolution.  14 

Royal  (s)     0  loyal  to  the  r  in  thyself,  To  the  Queen  ii  1 

2  p 


Royal-born 

Koyal-bom    a  cotter's  babe  is  r-h  by  right  divine ;      Locksley  H.,  Sixty  125 

Royal-nch    So  r-r  and  wide.'  Palace  of  Art  20 

this  great  house  so  r-r,  and  wide,  jgj 

Royalty    fling  Thy  r  back  into  the  riotous  fits  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  100 

Eoysteruig    her  brother  lingers  late  With  a  r  company)  Mand  I  xiv  15 

Knb     (See  also -Rtxlb)     We  r  each  other's  angles  down,     In  Mem.  Ixxxix  40 


594 


Rule 


Bobbed    And  yawn'd,  and  r  his  face, 

Bnbbish    Or  cast  as  r  to  the  void, 
Ev'n  in  the  jumbled  r  of  a  dream, 

Rubric    set  your  thoughts  in  r  thus 

Ruby  (adj.)    I'll  stake  my  r  ring  upon  it  you  did.' 
With  a  satin  sail  of  a  r  glow. 
This  r  necklace  thrice  around  her  neck, 
in  the  light's  last  glimmer  Tristram  show'd  And 
swung  the  r  carcanet. 

Ruby  (s)     a  carcanet  Of  r  swaying  to  and  fro, 
an  ye  fling  those  rubies  round  my  neck 
These  be  no  ruiies,  this  is  frozen  blood, 
Yet  glowing  in  a  heart  of  r — 

Ruby-budded    break  from  the  r-h  lime 

Ruby-chain    show'd  them  both  the  r-c, 

Ruby-circled    Queen  Isolt  With  r-c  neck, 


Day-Dm.,  Revival  19 

In  Mem.  liv  7 

Merlin  and  V.  347 

Princess  Hi  50 

„  Pro.  170 

The  Islet  13 

Last  Tournament  19 

740 

7 

312 

413 

Lover's  Tale  iv  196 

Maud  I  iv  1 

Last  Tournament  409 

364 


Rud^    (See  aZso  Rough-ruddy)    His  r  cheek  upon  my  breast.  The  Sisters  20 


By  and  by  The  r  square  of  comfortable  light, 

i?  and  white,  and  strong  on  his  legs. 

His  face  was  r,  his  hair  was  gold, 

As  he  glow'd  like  a  r  shield  on  the  Lion's  breast. 

R  thro'  both  the  roofs  of  sight. 

Ruddy-hearted    Our  ehntree's  r-h  blossom-flake 

Rude    sketches  r  and  faint. 

'  As  these  r  bones  to  us,  are  we  to  her 
And  push'd  by  r  hands  from  its  pedestal, 
With  a  crew  that  is  neither  r  nor  rash, 
into  that  r  hall  Stept  with  all  grace, 
Who  will  not  hear  denial,  vain  and  r 
He  fought  the  boys  that  were  r, 

Ruder    All  night  no  r  air  peiplex  Thy  sliding  keel, 

Rudest    (Those  peerless  flowei's  which  in  the  r  wind 

Rue     Old  year,  we'll  dearly  r  for  you : 

He  could  not  ever  r  his  marrying  me — 
May  r  the  bargain  made.' 

Rued    the  hunter  r  His  rash  intrusion, 
But  I  r  it  arter  a  bit, 

RufiSan  (adj.)    mine  of  r  violators ! 

RnfBan  (s)    vitriol  madness  flushes  up  in  the  r's  head, 
so  the  r'«  growl'd,  Fearing  to  lose, 
r's  at  their  ease  Among  their  harlot-brides, 

RufSe    R's  her  pure  cold  plume,  and  takes  the  flood 
R  thy  mirror'd  mast, 
I  swear  it  would  not  r  me  so  much 
As  the  sharp  wind  that  r's  all  day  long 
R's  her  pure  cold  plume,  and  takes  the  flood 

Ruffled  (adj.)     To  sleek  her  r  peace  of  mind, 
Blurr'd  like  a  landskip  in  a  r  pool, — 

Ruffled  (verb)    not  a  hair  R  upon  the  scarfskin, 
Kankled  in  him  and  r  all  his  heart, 

Rugged     And  r  barks  begin  to  bud, 

by  slow  prudence  to  make  mild  A  r  people, 
With  r  maxims  hewn  from  life ; 

Ruin  (s)    (See  also  Abbey-ruin)     Boat,  island,  r's  of  a 
castle, 
Sit  brooding  in  the  r's  of  a  life, 
crash  of  r,  and  the  loss  of  all  But  Enoch 
Hurt  in  that  night  of  sudden  r  and  wreck, 
By  that  old  bridge  which,  half  in  r's  then, 
Sat  shuddering  at  the  r  of  a  world ; 
but  a  gulf  of  r,  swallowing  gold, 
the  sea  roars  R :  a  fearful  night ! ' 
from  the  gaps  and  chasms  of  r  left 
but  satiated  at  length  Came  to  the  r's, 
echo  like  a  ghostly  woodpecker.  Hid  *i  the  r's ; 
A  Gothic  r  and  a  Grecian  house, 
when  the  crimson-rolling  eye  Glares  r 
Rang  r,  answer'd  full  of  grief  and  scorn. 


Enoch  Arden  726 

Grandmother  2 

The  Victim  35 

Maud  III  vi  14 

Tiresias  3 

To  Mary  Boyle  3 

Aylmer's  Field  100 

Princess  Hi  296 

v58 

The  Islet  10 

Lancelot  and  E.  262 

Lover's  Tale  i  628 

First  Quarrel  14 

In  Mem.  ix  9 

Ode  to  Memory  24 

D.oftheO.  Year  43 

Dora  146 

Princess  i  74 

„     iv  203 

Spinster's  S's.  51 

Boadicea  50 

Maud  I  i  37 

Geraint  and  E.  563 

Last  Tournament  427 

M.  d' Arthur  268 

In  Mem.  ix  7 

Geraint  and  E.  150 

Guinevere  50 

Pass,  of  Arthur  436 

Merlin  and  V.  899 

Romney's  R.  114 

Aylmer's  Field  660 

Guinevere  49 

My  life  is  full  18 

Ulysses  37 

Ode  on  Well  184 

Edwin  Morris  6 

Love  and  Duty  12 

Enoch  Arden  549 

564 

The  Brook  79 

Sea  Dreams  30 

79 

81 

225 

Princess,  Pro.  91 

218 

232 

iv  495 

vi  333 


Ruin  (s)  (continued)  Roman  strength  Turb'ia  show'd  In  r,  The  Daisy  6 
And  placed  them  in  this  r ;  Mart,  of  Geraint  643 
rnen  may  fear  Fresh  fire  and  r.  Geraint  and  E.  823 
And  ending  m  a  r— nothmg  left.  Merlin  and  V.  883 
our  horses  stumbling  as  they  trode  On  heaps  of  r.  Holy  Grail  717 
Red  r,  and  the  breakmg  up  of  laws,  Guinevere  426 
Which  wrought  the  r  of  my  lord  the  King.'  689 
Great  hills  of  r's,  and  coUapsed  masses  Lover's  Tale  ii  65 
K  s,  the  r  of  all  my  life  and  me !  gg 
and  roll  their  r '5  down  the  slope.  Locksley  h"  Sixty  138 
beneath  the  Koman  r  where  the  purple  flowers  grow,  Prater  ave,  etc  4 
He  that  wrought  my  ,--  Forlorn2 
Ihis  featan-haunted  r,  this  little  city  of  sewers,  Happy  34 
Rear'd  on  the  tumbled  r's  of  an  old  fane  St.  Telemachus  6 
and  there  Gaze  at  the  r,  14 
.  from  the  r  arose  The  shriek  and  curse  Akbar's  Dream  189 
Rum  (verb)  A  plot,  a  plot,  a  plot,  to  r  aU ! '  Princess  ii  192 
for  fear  This  whole  foundation  r,  Sil 
heiress  of  your  plan,  And  takes  and  r's  all ;  "  Hi  238 
recks  not  to  r  a  realm  in  her  name.  Fastness  10 
Ruin'd  (adj.  and  part.)  (See  also  RBke-nan'A)  Tho' watch- 
ing from  a  r  tower  Xwo  Voices  77 
I  wish  that  somewhere  in  tie  r  folds,  (Enone  221 
So  saying,  from  the  r  shrine  he  stept  M.  d' Arthur  45 
And  hghted  at  a,  r  inn,  and  said :  Vision  of  Sin  62 
R  trunks  on  wither'd  forks,  93 
'  We  are  men  of  r  blood ;  "  99 
^ !  r !  the  sea  roars  Ruin :  a  fearful  night ! '  Sea  Dreams  80 
The  r  shells  of  hollow  towers  ?  /«  Aiem.  Ixxvi  16 
Or  r  chrysalis  of  one.  ^_  Ixxxii  8 
flying  gold  of  the  r  woodlands  drove  thro'  the  air.  "Maud  I  i  12 
Rest !  the  good  house,  tho'  r,  O  my  son,  Marr.  of  Geraint  378 
who  swept  the  dust  of  r  Rome  From  off  the  threshold  Gareth  and  L.  135 
But  she,  remembering  her  old  r  hall,  Geraint  and  E.  254 
ho  saying  froni  the  r  shrine  he  stept.  Pass,  of  Arthur  213 
And  r  \yh}m,  by  him  jy  j^  77 
Over  ail  this  r  world  of  ours.  Sisters  (E  andE  )  22 
I  saw  the  tiger  in  the  r  fane  Spring  from  his  f aUen  God,  Demeier  and  P.  79 
Ihen  home,  and  past  the  r  mill.  The  Rinq  156 
Ruin'd  (verb)     And  stirr'd  tliis  vice  in  you  which  r  man 

Thro'  woman  the  first  hour :  Merlin  and  V.  362 

i'or  a  woman  r  the  world,  as  God's  own  scriptures  tell 

.  .    And  a  manr  mine,  '             charity  3 

Ruuung  (See  also  Reahn-ruuung)  R  along  the  illimitable  inane,    Lucretius  40 

_  In  twelve  great  battles  r  overthrown.  Guinevere  432 

Rumous     He  look'd  and  saw  that  all  was  r.  Marr.  of  Geraint  315 

And  keeps  me  in  this  r  castle  here,  452 

The  r  donjon  as  a  knoll  of  moss,  Balin  and  Balan  334 

And  thence  I  past  Far  thro'  a  r  city,  Holy  Grail  429 

Rule  (s)     royal  power,  ample  r  Unquestion'd,  (Enone  111  • 

Phantoms  of  other  forms  of  r.  Love  thou  thy  land  59 

beemg  obedience  is  the  bond  of  r.  M  d' Arthur  94 

when  sliall  all  men's  good  Be  each  man's  r.  Golden  Year  48 

err  from  honest  Nature's  r !  Locksley  Hall  61 

Averrmg  it  was  clear  agamst  all  r's  Princess  i  178 

ihey  seek  us  :  out  so  late  is  out  of  r's.  iv  219 

I  beant  a-gawin'  to  break  my  r.  N.  Farrier,  0.S.4 

I  weant  break  r's  fur  Doctor,  gy 

Seeing  obedience  is  the  bond  of  r.  Pass,  of  Arthur  262 

Your  r  ha^  made  the  people  love  Their  ruler.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  9 

Rule  (verb)     May  you  v  us  long.  To  the  Queen  20 

sendest  out  the  man  To  r  by  land  and  sea,  England  andAmer.  2 

I  should  come  again  To  r  once  more-  M.  d' Arthur  24 

xlE  tnat  only  r  s  by  terror  The  r     t   ■    -i 

she  That  taught  the  Sabine  how  to  r,  ptLTsTuiQ 

wish  d  to  marry :  they  could  r  a  house ;  4^1 

But  they  my  troubled  spirit  r.  In  Mem."xxviii  17 

O  Sorrow,  wilt  thou  r  my  blood,  zL  -5 

Who  can  r  and  dare  not  lie.  "  A/«,,/7  T  -y  «'« 

'Who  is  he  That  he  should  r  us?  Com.lffnL  69 

Moaning  and  wailing  for  an  heir  to  r  After  him,  207 

sought  to  r  for  his  own  self  and  hand,  "            219 

'Shall  Rome  or  Heathen  r  in  Arthur's  realm ?  "            4s'; 

Then  Gareth,' Here  he  r's.  Gareth  and  L   1354 

heathen,  who,  some  say,  shall  r  the  land  Lancelot  and  E.  65 


Role 


595 


Running 


Sole  (verb)  (continued)  'Amoral  child  without  the  craft  to  r,  Lancelot  a^idE.  146 


as  Arthur's  Queen  I  move  and  r : 

Wed  thou  our  Lady,  and  r  over  us, 

King  must  guard  That  which  he  r's, 

he  knows  false,  abide  and  r  the  house : 

I  should  come  again  To  r  once  more ; 

The  nameless  Power,  or  Powers,  that  r 

Night  and  Shadow  r  below 

only  those  who  camiot  read  can  r. 

Or  Might  would  r  alone ; 

thro'  the  Will  of  One  who  knows  and  r's — 

and  r  thy  Providence  of  the  brute. 

For  all  they  r — by  equal  law  for  all  ? 

only  let  the  hand  that  r's.  With  politic  care, 

Power  That  is  not  seen  and  r's  from  far  away — 
Ruled    captain  of  my  dreams  R  in  the  eastern  sky. 

grim  Earl,  who  r  In  Coventry  : 

Fairer  his  talk,  a  tongue  that  r  the  hour, 

A  nation  yet,  the  rulers  and  the  r — 

There  they  r,  and  thence  they  wasted 

infant  civilisation  be  r  with  rod  or  with  knout? 

many  a  petty  king  ere  Arthur  came  R  in  this  isle, 

listen  to  me,  and  by  me  be  r. 

He  saw  the  laws  that  r  the  tournament 

if  this  earth  be  r  by  Perfect  Love, 
Ruler     A  nd  leave  us  r's  of  your  blood 

The  deathless  r  of  thy  dying  house 

A  nation  yet,  the  r's  and  the  ruled — 

The  name  was  r  of  the  dark — Isolt  ? 

here  the  faith  That  made  as  r's  ? 

What  r's  but  the  Days  and  Hours 

Unprophetic  r's  they — 

Your  rule  has  made  the  people  love  Their  r. 


1221 

Holy  Grail  605 

906 

Guinevere  515 

Fass.  of  Arthur  192 

Aiicient  Sage  29 

243 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  132 

Epilogue  29 

The  Ring  42 

By  an  Evolution.  16 

Akhar's  Dream  110 

127 

138 

D.  ofF.  Women  264 

Godiva  12 

Aylmer's  Fidd  194 

Princess,  Con.  53 

Boadicea  54 

Maud  I  iv  47 

Com.  of  Arthur  6 

Geraint  and  E.  624 

ImsI  Tournament  160 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  8 

To  the  Queen  21 

Aylmer's  Field  661 

Princess,  Con.  53 

Last  Tournament  606 

To  the  Queen  ii  19 

Ancient  Sage  95 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  26 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  10 


Ruling     And  r  by  obeying  Nature's  powers,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  40 

Dreams  r  when  wit  sleeps !  Balin  and  Balan  143 

r  that  which  knows  To  its  own  harm :  To  the  Qu^en  ii  58 

To  one,  that  r  has  increased  Her  greatness  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  7 

Rumble    {See  also  Ruimnle)   Clamour  and  r,  and  ringing  and 

clatter,  Maud  II  v  13 

Rambled     And  round  the  attics  r,  The  Goose  46 

Rumbling    See  Roomlin' 

Rummage    from  what  side  The  blindfold  r  Balin  and  Balan  416 

Rummaged     tapt  at  doors,  And  r  like  a  rat :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  38 

Rummle  (rumble)     I  eard  the  bracks  an'  the  baulks  r  down      Owd  Rod  109 


Rumour    empty  breath  And  r's  of  a  doubt  ? 
Wife-hunting,  as  the  r  ran,  was  he : 
down  the  wind  With  r. 
With  r  of  Prince  Arac  hard  at  hand, 
let  the  turbid  streams  of  r  flow 
months  ran  on  and  r  of  battle  grew. 
Sir,  there  be  many  r's  on  this  head : 
But  when  a  r  rose  about  the  Queen, 
Vext  at  a  r  issued  from  herself 
A  r  runs,  she  took  him  for  the  King, 
Hid  from  the  wide  world's  r  by  the  grove 
I  hear  of  r's  flying  thro'  your  court, 
let  r's  be :  When  did  not  r's  fly  ? 
This  night,  a  r  wildly  blo^vn  about  Came, 
Less  noble,  being,  as  all  r  runs, 
but  empty  breath  And  r's  of  a  doubt  ? 
somewhere  in  the  North,  as  R  sang 

Bun  (s)     so  quick  the  r,  We  felt  the  good  ship 

Lies  the  hawk's  cast,  the  mole  has  made  his  r. 

Run  (verb)    r  short  pains  Thro'  his  warm  heart ; 
When  cats  r  home  and  light  is  come, 
trenched  waters  r  from  sky  to  sky ; 
R's  up  the  ridged  sea. 
And  then  the  tears  r  down  my  cheek. 
So  r's  the  round  of  life  from  hour  to  hour, 
would  r  to  and  fro,  and  hide  and  seek, 
r  thro'  every  change  of  sharp  and  flat ; 
And  thro'  the  field  the  road  r's  by 
Thro'  the  wave  that  r's  for  ever  By  the  island 
'  while  the  world  r's  round  and  round,' 
r  before  the  fluttering  tongues  of  fire ; 


M.  d' Arthur  100 

Aylmer's  Field  212 

496 

Princess  v  112 

Ode  on  Well.  181 

Maud  III  vi  29 

Com.  of  Arthur  11^ 

Marr.  of  Geraini  24 

Merlin  and  V.  153 

776 

Lancelot  and  E.  522 

1190 

1193 

Guinevere  153 

339 

Pass,  of  Arthur  268 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  56 

The  Voyage  14 

Aylmer's  Field  849 

Supp.  Confessions  161 

The  Owl  i  1 

Ode  to  Memory  104 

Sea-Fairies  39 

Oriana  69 

Circum,stance  9 

The  Mermaid  35 

Caress'd  or  chidden  4 

L.  of  Shalott  i  4 

12 

■  Palace  of  Art  13 

D.  of  F.  Women  3() 


Run  (verb)  (continued)  where  the  bay  r's  up  its  latest  horn.    Audley  CouH  11 

can  r  My  faith  beyond  my  practice  into  his :  Edwin  Mon-is  53 

The  Sun  will  r  his  orbit,  Love  and  Duty  22 

one  increasing  purpose  r's,  Locksley  Hall  137 

they  shall  dive,  and  they  shall  r,  „            169 

The  vilest  herb  that  r's  to  seed  Amphion  95 

Against  its  fountam  upward  r's  Will  Water.  35 

To  make  my  blood  r  quicker,  „         110 

Where  the  bloody  conduit  r's,  Vision  of  Sin  144 

he  clamour'd  from  a  casement,  '  R '  The  Brook  85 

'  R,  Katie ! '     Katie  never  ran :  „           87 

R's  in  a  river  of  blood  to  the  sick  sea.  Aylmer's  Field  768 
enter'd  one  Of  those  dark  caves  that  r  beneath  the 

chffs.  Sea  Dreams  90 

who  this  way  r's  Before  the  rest —  Lucretius  191 
Feyther  r  oop  to  the  farm,  an'  I  r's  oop  to  the  mill ;    N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  54 

An'  I'll  r  oop  to  the  brig,  „              55 

He  that  r's  may  read.  The  Flower  18 

Cataract  brooks  to  the  ocean  r.  The  Islet  17 

'  The  stars,'  she  whispers,  '  blindly  r ;  In  Mem.  Hi  5 

Till  all  my  widow'd  race  be  r ;  „         ix  18 

Till  all  my  widow'd  race  be  r.  „      xvii  20 

So  r's  my  dream  :  but  what  am  1  ?  ,,       liv  17 

R  out  your  measured  arcs,  „        cv  27 

For  every  grain  of  sand  tliat  r's,  „      cxvii  9 

I  hear  thee  where  the  waters  r ;  „      cxxx  2 

And  letting  a  dangerous  thought  r  wild  Maud  I  xix  52 

long-lanced  battle  let  their  horses  r.  Com.  of  Arthur  104 
a  river  R's  in  three  loops  about  her  living-place ;         Gareth  and  L.  612 

these  be  for  the  snare  (So  r's  thy  fancy)  „           1082 

Shot  from  behind  me,  r  along  the  ground ;  Balin  and  Balan  374 

rumour  r's,  she  took  him  for  the  King,  Merlin  and  V.  776 

let  his  eyes  R  thro'  the  peopled  gallery  Lancelot  and  E.  430 

being  snapt — We  r  more  counter  to  the  soul  Last  Tournament  659 

being,  as  all  nunour  r's,  The  most  disloyal  friend  Guinevere  339 

flowers  that  r  poison  in  their  veins.  Lover's  Tale  i  347 

the  sight  r  over  Upon  his  steely  gyves ;  „         ii  156 

r's  out  when  ya  breaks  the  shell.  Village  Wife  4 

It  is  charged  and  we  fire,  and  they  r.  Def.  of  Lucknow  68 

R's  in  the  rut,  a  coward  to  the  Priest.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  78 

make  one  people  ere  man's  race  be  r:  To  Victor  Hugo  11 

as  I  saw  the  white  sail  r.  And  darken,  The  Flight  39 
May  we  find,  as  ages  r.                                        Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  11 

but  1  knaws  they  r's  upo'  four, —  Owd  Rod  17 

'  Ya  mun  r  fur  the  lether.  "              „        77 

Sa  I  r's  to  the  yard  fur  a  lether,  „        82 

as  this  poor  earth's  pale  history  r's, —  Vastness  3 

She  comes !     The  loosen'd  rivulets  r ;  Prog,  of  Spring  9 

And  I  would  that  my  race  were  r.  The  Dreamer  8 

Or  ever  your  race  be  r!  „          30 

Helter-skelter  r's  the  age ;  Poets  and  Critics  2 

Rung    Loud,  loud  r  out  the  bugle's  brays,  Oriana  48 

And  as  he  rode  his  armour  r,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  17 

The  distant  battle  flash'd  and  r.  Two  Voices  126 

Not  a  bell  was  r,  not  a  prayer  was  read ;  Maud  II  v  24 

Runlet     And  r's  babbling  down  the  glen.  Mariana  in  the  S.  44 

Nor  r  tinkling  from  the  rock ;  In  Mem.  c  13 

Runn'd  (ran)     an'  r  plow  thruff  it  an'  all,  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  42 

An'  'e  niver  r  arter  the  fox.  Village  Wife  41 

An'  sarvints  r  in  an'  out,  „            56 

the  poodle  r  at  tha  once,  an'  thou  r                '  Spinster's  S's.  38 

an'  the  Freea  Traade  r  'i  my  'ead,  Owd  Rod  54 

Haafe  o'  the  parish  r  oop  „       115 

Runnel    The  babbling  r  crispeth,  Claribd  19 

dashing  r  in  the  spring  Had  liveried  Lover's  Tale  ii  49 

fallen  Prone  by  the  dashing  r  on  the  grass.  „           101 

Runnin'    sthrames  r  down  at  the  back  o'  the  gUn  Tomorrow  24 

Running    (See  also  Runnin')    Him  r  on  thus  hopefully 

she  heard,  Enoch  Arden  201 

know  his  babes  were  r  wild  Like  colts  „            304 

While  you  were  r  down  the  sands,  Sea  Dreams  265 
Of  r  fires  and  fluid  range  Oi  lawless  airs,               Supp.  Confessions  147 

Betwixt  the  green  brink  and  the  r  foam,  Sea-Fairies  2 

a  stable  wench  Came  r  at  the  call.  Princess  i  227 

The  second  was  my  father's  r  thus :  „      iv  406 


Running 


596 


Sable 


Bmuiing  (continued)  fling  Their  pretty  maids  in  the  r  flood,      Princess  v  382 


All  r  on  one  way  to  the  home  of  my  love, 
You  are  all  r  on,  and  I  stand  on  the  slope 
jR  down  to  my  own  dark  wood ; 
for  r  sharply  with  thy  spit  Down  on  a  rout 
And  r  down  the  Soul,  a  Shape  that  fled 
B  too  vehemently  to  break  upon  it. 
and  by  fountains  r  wine. 


Window,  On  the  Hill  8 

9 

Maud  I  xiv  30 

Gareth  and  L.  840 

1207 

Marr.  of  Geraint  78 

Last  Tournament  141 


perchance  of  streams  R  far  on  within  its  imnost  halls,    Lover's  Tale  i  523 


the  mad  little  craft  R  on  and  on, 

highway  r  by  it  leaves  a  breadth  Of  sward 

r  out  below  Thro'  the  fire 

neck  Of  land  r  out  into  rock — 

dark  Uttle  worlds  r  round  them  were  worlds 

r  after  a  shadow  of  good ; 

Bimiiyiuede    Is  this  the  manly  strain  of  R? 

Bush  (s)     thro'  blossomy  r'es  and  bowers 
the  r  of  the  air  in  the  prone  swing, 
the  shrieking  r  of  the  wainscot  mouse, 
Follow'd  a  r  of  eagle's  wings, 
A  flat  malarian  world  of  reed  and  r ! 
Beneath  a  pitiless  r  of  Autumn  rain 
The  r  of  the  javelins, 
R  of  Suns,  and  roll  of  systems. 

Bush  (verb)     those,  who  clench  their  nerves  to  r 
To  r  abroad  all  round  the  little  haven, 
A  thousand  arms  and  r'es  to  the  Sun. 
R  to  the  roof,  sudden  rocket, 
would  r  on  a  thousand  lances  and  die — 

Bush'd    And  out  spirits  r  together 
We  r  into  each  other's  arms. 
A  wind  arose  and  r  upon  the  South, 
on  a  sudden  r  Among  us,  out  of  breath, 
/  am  his  dearest ! '  r  on  the  knife. 
And  blindly  r  on  all  the  rout  behind, 
thro'  the  tree  R  ever  a  rainy  wind, 
B  into  dance,  and  hke  wild  Bacchanals 
whirling  rout  Led  by  those  two  r  into  dance, 
Poor  JuUan — how  he  r  away ; 
R  each  at  each  with  a  cry. 

Boshing    (See  also  GreeD-rushing,  Upward-rushing) 
shadow  r  up  the  sea. 
Like  some  broad  river  r  down  alone, 
The  nulldam  r  down  with  noise, 
whisper  of  the  south-wind  r  warm, 
Far  purelier  iii  his  r's  to  and  fro, 
My  lady's  Indian  kinsman  r  in, 
A  r  tempest  of  the  wrath  of  God 
for  thrice  I  heard  the  rain  R ; 
r  battle- bolt  sang  from  the  three-decker 
we  rode  Thro'  the  dim  land  against  a  r  wind, 
rotten  branch  Snapt  in  the  r  of  the  river-rain 
Lancelot,  who  r  outward  honlike  Leapt  on  him, 
Blaze  by  the  r  brook  or  silent  well, 
the  storm  r  over  the  down, 
I  am  flimg  from  the  r  tide  of  the  world 


The  Revenge  39 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  80 

V.  of  Maeldune  42 

Despair  10 

18 

92 

Third  of  Feb.  34 

Leonine  Eleg.  3 

Aylmer's  Field  86 

Maud  I  vi  71 

Last  Tournament  417 

Lover's  Tale  iv  142 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  237 

Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  88 

God  and  the  Univ.  3 

Love  and  Duty  77 

Enoch  Arden  867 

Princess  vi  37 

W.  to  Alexandra  20 

V.  of  Maeldune  24 

Locksley  Hall  38 

The  Letters  40 

Princess  i  97 

„      iv  374 

The  Victim  72 

Geraint  and  E.  466 

Last  Tournament  16 

Lover's  Tale  iii  25 

55 

iv2 

373 

The 

Rosalind  11 

Mine  he  the  strength  2 

Miller's  D.  50 

Locksley  Hall  125 

Aylmer's  Field  458 

593 

757 

iMcretius  27 

Maud  I  ibO 

Merlin  and  V.  425 

957 

Guinevere  107 

400 

Rizpah  6 

The  Wreck  6 


hellish  heat  of  a  wretched  life  r  back  thro'  the  veins  ? 


Bushy    Or  dimple  in  the  dark  of  r  coves, 

Eusset    She  clad  herself  in  a  r  gown. 

An  old  storm-beaten,  r,  many-stain'd  Pavilion, 
Broad-faced  with  uncler-fringe  of  r  beard. 
And  took  his  r  beard  between  his  teeth ; 

Busset-bearded    The  r-b  head  roll'd  on  the  floor. 

Bussia    R  bursts  our  Indian  barrier, 


Despair  68 


Ode  to  Memory  60 

Lady  Clare  bl 

Gareth  and  L.  1113 

Geraint  and  E.  537 

713 

729 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  115 


Bnssian  (adj.)    And  welcome  ii  flower,  a  people's  pride,    IV.  to  Marie  Alex.  6 

the  points  of  the  R  lances  arose  in  the  sky ;  Heavy  Brigade  5 

In  the  heart  of  the  R  hordes,  „            50 

Bussian  (s)     Cossack  and  R  Reel'd  Light  Brigade  34 

thousands  of  R's,  Thousands  of  horsemen.  Heavy  Brigade  2 

Bust  (s)     fearing  r  or  soilure  fashion'd  for  it  Lancelot  and  E.  7 

That  keeps  the  r  of  murder  on  the  walls —  Guinevere  74 

Bust  (verb)    lest  we  r  in  ease.  Love  thou  thy  land  42 

To  r  imbumish'd,  not  to  shine  in  use !  Ulysses  23 

the  cannon-bullet  r  on  a  slothful  shore,  Maud  III  vi  26 

Busted  (adj.)     The  r  nails  fell  from  the  knots  Mariana  3 


Busted  (adj.)  (continued)    Yniol's  r  arms  Were  on  his 

princely  person. 
Busted  (verb)     when  the  bracken  r  on  their  crags, 
Bustle    Not  by  the  weU-known  stream  and  r  spire, 

that  in  the  garden  snared  Picus  and  Faunus,  r  Gods  ? 

We  dropt  with  evening  on  a  r  town 


43M 
0»1 


Marr.  of  Geraint  5' 

Edwin  Morris  lOO" 

The  Brook  188 

Lucretius  182 

Princess  i  170 


a  r  tower  Half-lost  in  belts  of  hop  and  breadths  of  wheat;     „    Con.  44 
The  rich  Virgilian  r  measure  Of  Lari  Maxume,  The  Daisy  75 


Ye  think  the  r  cackle  of  your  bourg 
They  take  the  r  murmur  of  their  bourg 
sound  and  honest,  r  Squire, 

Bustiest    drew  The  r  iron  of  old  fighters'  hearts ; 

Busting    Forgotten,  r  on  his  iron  hills. 

Bustle  (verb)     Sweet-Gale  r  round  the  shelving  keel ; 


Marr.  of  Geraint  276 

419 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  239 

Merlin  and  V.  574 

Princess  v  146 

Edwin  Morris  110 


heard  In  the  dead  hush  the  papers  that  she  held  R :        Princess  iv  391 


A  strange  knee  r  thro'  her  secret  reeds. 
Bustle  (s)     Past,  as  a  r  or  twitter  in  the  wood 
Bustled    each,  in  maiden  plumes  We  r : 
Bustling    r  thro'  The  low  and  bloomed  foUage, 

And  r  once  at  night  about  the  place. 
Busty     Anchors  of  r  fluke,  and  boats  updrawn ; 

Ah,  let  the  r  theme  alone ! 

I  think  they  should  not  wear  our  r  gowns, 

I  grate  on  r  hinges  here : 

but  old  And  r,  old  and  r,  Prince  Geraint, 

Cries  of  the  partridge  like  a  r  key 
But    same  old  r  would  deepen  year  by  year ; 

Runs  in  the  r,  a  coward  to  the  Priest. 
Buth  (proper  name)     Fairer  than  R  among  the  fields  of 

corn, 
Buth    methinks  Some  r  is  mine  for  thee. 

r  began  to  work  Against  his  anger  in  him, 

Geraint  Had  r  again  on  Enid  looking  pale : 

Then  with  another  humorous  r  remark'd 
Buthless    As  r  as  a  baby  with  a  worm, 

And  gathering  r  gold — 

r  Mussulman  Who  flings  his  bowstrung  Harem  in  the 
sea, 
Bye     Long  fields  of  barley  and  of  r. 


8 


Saailor  (sailor)    what  s's  a'  seean  an'  a'  doon ; 
Saaint's-daay  (Saints-day)    S-d — they  was  ringing  the 

bells. 
Saale  (sale)     fetch'd  nigh  to  nowt  at  the  s, 
Saame  (lard)     An'  I  niver  puts  s  i'  my  butter, 
Saatan  (Satan)    Uke  S  as  fell  Down  out  o'  heaven 
Saave  (save)    wur  it  nohbut  to  s  my  life ; 

I  may  s  mysen  yit.' 

she  heald  '  Ya  mun  s  little  Dick, 
Saavin'  (saving)    in  s  a  son  fur  me. 
Saay  (say)    use  to  s  the  things  that  a  do. 

I  thowt  a  'ad  summut  to  s, 

I  weant  s  men  be  loiars, 

— that's  what  I  'eai-s  'em  s. 

— that's  what  I  'ears  'im  s — 

Feyther  'ud  s  I  wiu;  \igly  es  sin, 

when  they  'evn't  a  word  to  s. 
Saayin'  (saying)    an'  wur  niver  sa  nigh  s  Yis. 

an'  s  ondecent  things, 
Sabsean    Dripping  with  S  spice 
Sabbath  (adj.)    '  Behold,  it  is  the  S  mom.' 
Sabbath  (s)    Half  God's  good  s. 

The  s's  of  Eternity,  One  s  deep  and  wide— 

fixt  the  S.    Darkly  that  day  rose : 

woke,  and  went  the  next,  The  S, 

On  that  loud  s  shook  the  spoiler 
Sabbath-drawler    art  no  s-d  of  old  saws, 
Sabine    she  That  taught  the  S  how  to  rule. 
Sable    Fantastic  plume  or  s  pine ; 

The  towering  car,  the  s  steeds : 


Balin  and  Balan  354 

Last  Tournament  365 

Princess  i  203 

Arabian  Nights  12 

Aylmer's  Field  547 

Enoch  Arden  18 

WUl  Water.  177 

Princess,  Pro.  143 

i  86 

Marr.  of  Geraint  478 

Lover's  Tale  ii  115 

Aylmer's  Field  34 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  78 

Aylmer's  Field  680 

Gareth  and  L.  895 

Geraint  and  E.  101 

203 

250 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  108 

Columbus  135 


Romney's  E.  134 
L.  of  Shalott  i  2  , 


North.  Cobbler  4r\ 


N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  13 

Village  Wife  73 

119 

North.  Cobbler  57 

84 

Village  Wife  66 

Owd  Rod  81 

96 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  6 

19 

27 

N.  S.  2 

59 

Spinster's  S's.  15 

102 

32 

90 

Adeline  53 

Two  Voices  402 

To  J.  M.  K.  11 

Si   Agnes'  Eve  ^Z 

Aylmer's  Field  609 

Sea  Dreams  19 

Ode  on  Well.  123 

To  J.  M.  K.  5 

Princess  ii  79 

The  Voyage  44 

Ode  on  Well.  55 


Sabre 


597 


Saddening 


Sabre    Flash'd  all  their  s's  bare, 

Sway'd  his  s,  and  held  his  own 
'" '  *'  Whirling  their  s's  in  circles  of  light ! 
Sabre-stroke    Eeel'd  from  the  s-s 
Sabring    S  the  gunners  there, 


Light  Brigade  27 
Heavy  Brigade  18 

34 
Light  Brigade  35 

29 


Sack  (bag)    {See  also  Meal-sacks)    With  bag  and  s  and 

basket,  Enoch  Arden  63 

cling  together  in  the  ghastly  s —  Aylmer's  Field  764 

sweating  underneath  a  s  of  com,  Marr.  of  Geraint  263 

Sack  (pillage)     found  the  s  and  plunder  of  our  house  „  694 

Sack'd    rose  a  shriek  as  of  a  city  s ;  Princess  iv  165 

night  Before  my  Enid's  birthday,  s  my  house ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  458 
night  of  fire,  when  Edym  s  their  house,  „  634 

As  of  some  lonely  city  s  by  night,  Pass,  of  Arthur  43 

who  s  My  dwelling,  seized  upon  my  papers,  Columbiis  129 

Sacrament    DeUver  me  the  blessed  $;'  St.  S.  Stylites  218 

Sacred    a  s  name  And  when  she  spake,  The  Poet  4.7 

tho'  her  s  blood  doth  drown  The  fields,  Poland  4 

'  Still  sees  the  s  morning  spread  Two  Voices  80 

girls  all  kiss'd  Beneath  the  s  bush  and  past  away —  The  Epic  3 

And  either  s  unto  you.  Day-Dm.,  Ep.  12 

betray  the  trust :  Keep  nothing  s :  You  might  have  won  19 

face  All-kindled  by  a  still  and  s  fire,  Enoch  Arden  71 

And  pace  the  s  old  familiar  fields,  „  625 

we  must  remain  S  to  one  another.'  Aylmer's  Field  426 

to  mar  Their  s  everlasting  calm !  iMcretius  110 

s  from  the  blight  Of  ancient  influence  and  scorn.  Princess  ii  168 

and  half  The  s  mother's  bosom,  „        vi  148 

Love  in  the  s  halls  Held  carnival  at  will,  „        vii  84 

He  bad  you  guard  the  s  coasts.  Ode  on  Well.  172 

Mid-ocean,  spare  thee,  s  bark ;  In  Mem.  xvii  14 

Ye  never  knew  the  s  dust :  „  xxi  22 

Oh,  s  be  the  flesh  and  blood  „      xxxiii  11 

(And  dear  to  me  as  s  wine  To  dying  lips  „      xxxvii  19 

0  s  essence,  other  form,  „  Ixxxv  35 
Come  sliding  out  of  her  s  glove,  Maud  I  vi  85 
The  s  altar  blossom'd  white  with  May,  Com.  of  Arthur  461 
And  o'er  her  breast  floated  the  s  fish ;  Gareth  and  L.  223 
They  came  from  out  a  s  mountain-cleft  „  260 
south-west  that  blowing  Bala  lake  Fills  all  the  s  Dee.  Geraint  and  E.  930 
Guarded  the  s  shield  of  Lancelot ;  Lancelot  and  E.  4 
Then  came  on  him  a  sort  of  s  fear,  „  354 
For  all  the  s  mount  of  Camelot,  Holy  Grail  227 
Go,  since  your  vows  are  s,  „  314 
And  all  the  s  madness  of  the  bard,  „  877 
whom  I  made  it  o'er  his  grave  S,  To  the  Qu^en  ii  36 
A  s,  secret,  unapproached  woe,  Unspeakable  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  679 
Or  clutch'd  the  s  crown  of  Prester  John,  Columbus  110 
descending  from  the  s  peak  Of  hoar  high-templed 

Faith,  Pref.  Poem  19th  Cent.  9 

Felt  within  themselves  the  s  passion  of  the  second 

life.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  68 

What  are  men  that  He  should  heed  us  ?  cried  the 

king  of  s  song ;  „  201 

Had  swampt  the  s  poets  with  themselves.  Poets  and  their  B.  14 

And  s  is  the  latest  word ;  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  37 

So  s  those  Ghost  Lovers  hold  the  gift.'  The  Ring  205 

1  kept  it  as  a  s  amulet  About  me, —  „  442 
The  s  rehcs  tost  about  the  floor —  „  447 
What  be  those  crown'd  forms  high  over  the  s  fountain  ?  Parnassus  1 
What  be  those  two  shapes  high  over  the  s  foimtain,  „  9 
an  old  fane  No  longer  s  to  the  Sim,  St.  Telemachus  7 
Yet '  Alia,'  says  their  s  book,  '  is  Love,'  Ahhar's  Dream  73 
That  stone  by  stone  I  rear'd  a  s  fane,                                      „           177 

fiicrifice  (s)  (See  also  Self-sacrifice)  so  that  he  rose  With  s,  On  a  Mourner  34 
To  blow  these  s's  thro'  the  world—  Aylmer's  Field  758 

Have  we  not  made  ourself  the  s  ?  Princess  Hi  249 

Against  the  flame  about  a  s  Pelleas  and  E.  145 

let  mute  Into  her  temple  Uke  a  s ;  Lover's  Tale  i  685 

As  for  a  solemn  s  of  love —  „        iv  301 

Dark  with  the  smoke  of  human  s,  Sir  J,  Oldcastle  84 

flight  of  birds,  the  flame  of  s,  Tiresias  6 

Is  war,  and  human  s —  „    112 

miss'd  The  wonted  steam  of  s,  Demeter  and  P.  119 

Sacrifice  (verb)     to  thy  worst  self  s  thyself,  Aylmer's  Field  645 


Sacring    And  at  the  s  of  the  mass  I  saw  Holy  Grail  462 

Sad     Looks  thro'  in  his  s  decline,  Adeline  13 

The  broken  sheds  look'd  s  and  strange :  Mariana  5 

'  Madonna,  s  is  night  and  morn,'  Mariana  in  the  S.  22 

His  memory  scarce  can  make  me  s.  Miller's  D.  16 

'  I  was  cut  off  from  hope  in  that  s  place,  D.  of  F.  Women  105 

But  while  I  mused  came  Memory  with  s  eyes.  Gardener's  D.  243 

The  slow  s  hours  that  bring  us  all  things  ill,  Love  and  Duty  58 
Full  of  s  experience,  moving  toward  the  stillness  of 

his  rest.  Locksley  Hall  144 

Many  a  s  kiss  by  day  by  night  renew'd  Enoch  Arden  161 

Set  her  s  will  no  less  to  chime  with  his,  „            248 

'  Favour  from  one  so  s  and  so  forlorn  As  I  am ! '  „            287 

That  after  all  these  s  uncertain  years,  „            415 

Too  fresh  and  fair  in  our  s  world's  best  bloom,  The  Brook  218 

Yet  the  s  mother,  for  the  second  death  Aylmer's  Field  604 

'  Not  s,  but  sweet.'  Sea  Dreams  106 

I  am  s  and  glad  To  see  you,  Florian.  Princess  ii  306 

talk'd  The  trash  that  made  me  sick,  and  almost  5  ? '  „            394 

S  as  the  last  which  reddens  over  one  That  sinks  „          iv  46 

So  s,  so  fresh,  the  days  that  are  no  more.  „              48 

s  and  strange  as  in  dark  summer  dawns  „              49 

So  s,  so  strange,  the  days  that  are  no  more  „              53 

shone  Thro'  glittering  drops  on  her  s  friend.  „        vi  283 

Or  pines  in  s  experience  worse  than  death,  „       vii  315 

Lead  out  the  pageant :  s  and  slow,  Ode  on  Well.  13 

says,  our  sins  should  make  us  s  :  Grandmother  93 

stem  and  s  (so  rare  the  smiles  Of  sunlight)  The  Daisy  53 

The  s  mechanic  exercise.  In  Mem.  v  7 

And  one  is  s ;  her  note  is  changed,  „     xxi  27 

In  those  s  words  I  took  farewell :  „      Iviii  1 

Which  makes  me  s  I  know  not  why  „  Ixviii  11 

S  Hesper  o'er  the  buried  sim  And  ready,  „      cxxi  1 

And  niy  own  s  name  in  comers  cried,  Maud  I  vi  72 

To  a  life  that  has  been  so  s,  „       xi  13 
Than  nursed  at  ease  and  brought  to  understand  A  5 

astrology,  „    xviii  36 

To  have  no  peace  in  the  grave,  is  that  not  s  ?  „    II  vlQ 

And  s  was  Arthur's  face  Taking  it.  Com.  of  Arthur  305 

and  s  At  times  he  seem'd,  and  s  with  him  was  I,  „            352 
Shamed  had  I  been,  and  s — 0  Lancelot — thou ! '       Gareth  and  L.  1245 

Before  her  birthday,  three  s  years  ago,  Marr.  of  Geraint  633 

And  knew  her  sitting  s  and  solitary.  Geraint  and  E.  282 

Art  thou  s  ?  or  sick  ?  Balin  and  Baian  274 

The  s  sea-sounding  wastes  of  Lyonnesse —  Merlin  and  V.  74 

when  she  lifted  up  A  face  of  s  appeal,  „            234 

Because  I  saw  you  s,  to  comfort  you.  „            441 

Till  all  her  heart's  s  secret  blazed  itself  Lancelot  and  E.  836 

s  chariot-bier  Past  like  a  shadow  thro'  the  field,  „            1139 

And  Lancelot  s  beyond  his  wont,  „            1333 
which  our  Lord  Drank  at  the  last  s  supper  with  his  own.  Holy  Grail  47 

and  there,  with  slow  s  steps  Ascending,  Last  Tournament  143 

Come — let  us  gladden  their  s  eyes,  „              222 
remembering  Her  thought  when  first  she  came,  wept 

the  s  Queen.  Guinevere  182 

Then  to  her  own  s  heart  mutter'd  the  Queen,  „        213 

To  vex  an  ear  too  s  to  listen  to  me,  „        315 

rather  think  How  s  it  were  for  Arthur,  „        496 

And  near  him  the  s  nuns  with  each  a  Ught  Stood,  „        590 

it  melteth  in  the  source  Of  these  s  tears.  Lover's  Tale  i  784 

S,  sweet,  and  strange  together —  „        iv  304 

With  s  eyes  fixt  on  the  lost  sea-home.  The  Wreck  126 

For  he  touch'd  on  the  whole  s  planet  of  man,  Dead  Prophet  39 

Had  floated  in  with  s  reproachful  eyes.  The  Ring  469 

Her  s  eyes  plead  for  my  own  fame  with  me  Romney's  R.  55 

Sadden    The  gloom  that  s's  Heaven  and  Earth,  The  Daisy  102 

He  s's,  all  the  magic  light  In  Mem.  viii  5 

While  he  that  watch'd  her  s,  Marr.  of  Geraint  67 

And  seen  her  s  listening —  Pelleas  and  E.  398 

Let  not  all  that  s's  Nature  Faith  2 

Sadden'd    She  fail'd  and  s  knowing  it ;  Enoch  Arden  257 

Told  Enid,  and  they  s  her  the  more :  Marr.  of  Geraint  64 

s  all  her  heart  again.  Geraint  and  E.  445 

Saddening    And  s  in  her  childless  castle,  Gareth  and  L.  528 

And,  s  on  the  sudden,  spake  Isolt,  Last  Tournament  581 


Sadder 

Sadder    She,  as  her  carol  s  grew, 
Poor  Fancy  5  than  a  single  star, 
s  age  begins  To  m  ar  against  iU  uses  of  a  life, 

Saddle    Arac,  roU'd  himself  Thrice  in  the  s, 
I  so  shook  him  in  the  s,  he  said. 
And  lets  me  from  the  s ; ' 
Then  crush'd  the  s  with  his  thiglis, 
drew  The  foe  from  the  s  and  threw 

Saddle-bow     A  cavalier  from  off  his  s-b. 
But  M  hen  it  glitter'd  o'er  the  s-b, 

Saddle-leather    Thick-jewell'd  shone  the  s-l 

Sadness    Can  I  but  relive  in  s  ?  ' 

memories  roll  upon  him.  Unspeakable  for  s 
But  s  on  the  soul  of  Ida  fell. 
Or  s  in  the  summer  moons  ? 
s  flings  Her  shadow  on  the  blaze  of  kings : 
spake  with  such  a  s  and  so  low  We  heard  not 
Thou  majestic  in  thy  s  at  the  doubtful  doom 
All  her  tale  of  s, 
may  there  be  no  s  of  farewell. 


598 


Sail 


Marian-a  in  the  S.  13 

Caress'd  or  chidden  13 

Gareth  and  L.  1129 

Princess  v  275 

Gareth  and  L.  29 

Lancelot  and  E.  94 

Pelleas  and  E.  459 

Heavy  Brigade  54 

D.  of  F.  Women  46 

Gareth  and  L.  1119 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  20 

Locksley  Hall  107 

Enoch  Arden  725 

Princess  vii  29 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  8 

„         xcviii  18 

Holy  Grail  42 

To  Virgil  23 

Forlorn  80 

Crossing  the  Bar  11 


Saesn^    VaiUng  a  sudden  eyelid  with  his  hard  '  Dim  S ' 

Qo*o     P-^*^^'      ,    ,        , ,    .,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  21 

Safe     givmg  s  pledge  of  fruits,  Qde  to  Memory  18 

<S,  damsel,  as  the  centre  of  this  hall.  Gareth  and  L  604 

The  loneliest  ways  are  s  from  shore  to  shore.  Last  Tournament  102 

00  all  the  ways  were  s  from  shore  to  shore,  485 
(our  royal  word  upon  it,  He  comes  back  s)  Princess  v  225 
might  be  s  our  censures  to  withdraw ;  Third  of  Feb.  11 

Safer     the  rougher  hand  Is  s :  Princess  vi  279 

Sagest    some  were  left  of  those  Held  5,  382 

Sagramore    What  say  ye  then  to  sweet  Sir  S,  Merlinand  V.  721 

Sa^b     At  once  the  costly  S  yielded  to  her.  Aylmer's  Field  233 

Said     1  s  that    all  the  years  invent ;  Two  Voices  73 
when  I  have  s  goodnight  for  evermore,           May  Queen,  N.  Y's  E  41 

1  know  not  what  was  s ;  ^^  (^P,^  34 
He  thought  that  nothing  new  was  s,  or  else  Something 

so  5 'twas  nothing-  TheEficZO 

Eustace  painted  her,  And  s  to  me.  Gardener's  D.  21 

And  if  I  s  that  Fancy,  led  by  Love,  ,             59 

he  s  That  he  was  wrong  to  cross  his  father  '    "Dora  147 

Tis  s  he  had  a  tuneful  tongue,  Amvhicm  17 

Cruel  cruel  the  words  Is  !  Edward  Gray  17 

She  told  me  all  her  friends  had  s ;  The  Letters  25 

?J^u-^'®  ^.Yf  f  You  chose  the  best  among  us—  Enoch  Arden  292 

Ihis  miller's  wife '  He  s  to  Miriam  805 

life  m  hmi  Could  scarce  be  s  to  flourish.  The  Brook  12 

so  hke  her  ?  so  they  s  on  board.  223 

wid  he  meant,  he  5  he  meant.  Sea  Dreams  178 

J^or  so,  my  mother  s,  the  story  ran.  Princess  i  11 

He  s  there  was  a  compact ;  that  was  true :  „          47 

I  s  no.  Yet  being  an  easy  man,  "         143 

some  s  their  heads  were  less :  "     a  247 

it  .shall  be  s,  These  women  were  too  barbarous,  "        297 

much  I  might  have  s,  but  that  my  zone  "         420 

(For  so  they  s  themselves)  inosculated ;  "     m  89 

I  thought  on  all  the  wrathful  king  had  s,  "     «  473 

so  it  seem'd,  or  so  they  s  to  me,  "      ^  22 

She  s  you  had  a  heart —  "        234 

All  people  s  she  had  authority—  "         238 

all,  they  s,  a.s  earnest  as  the  close  ?  "  Con  21 

left  some  record  of  the  things  we  s.  Third  of  Feb.  18 

for  he  .seldom  *  me  nay :  Grandmother  69 

I  thowt  a  s  whot  a  owt  to  'a  s  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  20 

thaw  summun  s  it  m  'aaste :  27 

The  people  5  a  weed  The  Flower  4 

bomebody  s  that  she'd  say  no ;  (repeat)  Window,  Letter  7,  14 

The  le-sser  griefs  that  may  be  s,  /^  Mem.  xx  1 

And  all  hes  of  things  divme,  „  a:xxvii  18 

To  dying  lips  is  all  lie  s),  20 

Could  I  have  s  while  he  was  here,  "     ixxxi  1 

*  The  dawn,  the  dawn,'  and  died  away ;  "       xcv60 

Whatever  I  have  s  or  sung,  "      ^j-^yg  j 

And  how  she  look'd,  and  what  he  s,  "     Con  99 

*low  strange  was  m  hat  slie  s,  Maud  I  zix  34 
whether  there  were  truth  in  anything  S  by  these  three,  Com .  of  Arthur  243 


Saii  (continued)    For  pastime ;  yea,  he  s  it :  joust  can  I.   Gareth  and  L.  543 

You  «  your  say ;  Mine  answer  was  my  deed.  „             1174 

She  told  him  all  that  Earl  Limours  had  s,  Geraint  and  E  391 

I  haves.     Not  so— not  all.  Balin  and  Balan  69 

s  a  light  came  from  her  when  she  moved  :  Merlin  and  V  567 

What  s  the  happy  sire  ?  '  /tjq 
we  hear  it  s  That  men  go  down  before  your  spear    Lanceloiand  E.  148 

1  s  Ihat  if  I  went  and  if  I  fought  and  won  it  215 

one  5  to  the  other,  '  Lo !     What  is  he  ?  ]]              47Q 

being  weak  in  body  s  no  more ;  "              330 

We  heard  not  half  of  what  he  s  ]^oly  Grail  43 

asking  him,  '  What  s  the  King  ?  204 

what  s  each,  and  what  the  King  ?  "         71Q 

one  most  holy  saint,  who  wept  and  s,  "         731 

Was  I  too  dark  a  prophet  when  Is  "        qqq 

There  she  that  seem'd  the  chief  among  them  s,  Pelleas  and  E  62 

I  know  not  what  I  would  '—but  s  to  her.  Last  Tournament  498 

went  io-day  for  three  days'  hunting — as  lie  s —  „               53Q 

But  openly  she  spake  and  s  to  her,  Guinevere  226 

So  s  my  father,  and  himself  was  knight  234 

and  he  s  That  as  he  rode,  "        236 

So  s  my  father — yea,  and  furthermore,  "        250 

S  the  good  nuns  would  check  her  gadding  tongue  "         313 

as  he  s,  that  once  was  loving  hearts,  Lover's  Tale  iv  68 

An  once  I  s  to  the  Missis,  js'^rth.  Cobbler  103 

Mlss  Annie  she  s  it  ^vur  draains,  Village  Wife  11 

This  tongue  that  wagg'd  They  s  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  15 

and  I  heard  a  voice  that  s  Tiresias  48 

'  He  s  he  would  meet  me  tomorra ! '  Tomorrow  80 

ye  s  I  wur  pretty  i'  pinks  Spinster's  S's.  17 

She  s,  that  you  and  I  Had  been  abroad  The  Ring  100 

He  s  it  .  .     in  the  play  Romney's  R.  150 
Sa  I  warrants  e  niver  s  haafe  wot  'e  thowt,          Church-warden,  etc.  18 

She  s  with  a  sudden  glow  On  lier  patient  face  Charity  35 

Q  ,A  ^Aif^'  ^ c '  ^A^i'-'^o  ?i'  •  Kapiolani  19 
Said  (Abu)    See  Abu  Said 

Sail  (s)     And  the  whirring  s  goes  round,  (repeat)  The  Owl  i  4 

In  the  silken  s  of  infancy,  Arabian  Nights  2 

come  hither  and  furl  your  s's,  Sea-Fairies  16 

JNlariner,  mariner,  furl  your  s  s,  2I 

surf  wind-scatter'd  over  s's  and  masts,  D  of  F   Women  31 

barge  with  oar  and  s  Moved  from  the  brink,  M  d' Arthur  265 

'Fly,  happy  happy  s's,  and  bear  the  Press  ;  Golden  Year  42 

the  vessel  puffs  her  s :  jji          44 

argosies  of  magic  ss,  Locksleii  Hall  121 

Dry  sang  tlie  tackle,  sang  the  s :  The  Voyage  10 

And  never  s  of  ours  was  furl'd,  81 

whence  were  those  that  drove  the  s  "86 

to  the  last  dip  of  the  vanLshing  s  Enoch  Arden  245 

waiting  for  a  5 :  ISo  s  from  day  to  day,  „            590 

scarlet  shafts  of  sunrise — but  no  s.  "            599 

Crying  with  a  loud  voice  '  A  s !  a  5  !  "            913 

all  the  s's  were  darken 'd  in  the  west.  Sea  Dreams  39 

boat  Tacks   and  the  slacken'd  s  flaps.  Princess  ii  186 

Silver  s  s  all  out  of  the  west  jjj  14 

'  Fresh  as  the  first  beam  glittering  on  a  s,  "         {^  44 

trim  our  s's,  and  let  old  bygones  be,  "              69 

the  seas  ;  A  red  s,  or  a  white ;  "     Con  47 

With  a  satin  s  of  a  ruby  glow,  fhe  Islet  13 

And  see  the  s  s  at  distance  rise,  j^  Mem.  xii  1 1 

glance  about  the  approaching  s's,  ^iii  18 

And  milkier  every  milky  s  "       ^^  n 

far-off  s  is  blown  by  the  breeze  Maud  I  iv  4 

And  white  s's  flying  on  the  yellow  sea ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  829 

one  side  had  sea  And  ship  and  s  and  angels  Balin  and  Balan  365 

She  took  the  helm  and  he  the  s ;  Merlin  and  V.  200 

Torn  as  as  that  leaves  the  rope  Holy  Grail  212 

had  he  set  the  s,  or  liad  the  boat  Become  5I8 

the  barge  with  oar  and  s  Moved  from  the  brink,       Pass,  of  Arthur  433 

fu       w',7^y  '^°'''"  '''"'^. ^'*'  Lov^'^  Tale  i  4 

the  s  Will  draw  me  to  the  rising  of  the  smi,  26 

the  ravin  wind  In  her  s  roaring.  "       n  171 

Took  the  breath  from  our  s's,  and  we  stay'd.  The  Revenge  42 

Till  It  smote  on  their  hulls  and  their  s's  lift 

look  yonder,'  he  cried,  'as'  The  Wreck  121 


1 


SaU 


599 


Sallow-skin 


SbQ  (s)  (continued)    as  I  saw  the  white  s  run,  And  darken 
And  sunshine  on  that  s  at  last 


The  Flight  39 

92 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  17 

Ulysses  60 

iSir  Galahad  44 

The  Voyage  8 

16 

96 

Enoch  Arden  214 

In  Mem.  cxxv  13 

„       Con.  Ill 

Gareth  and  L.  253 

Columbus  237 

Montenegro  1 

Achilles  overihe  T.  13 

Hands  alt  Round  29 


fttil  (verb)     s  with  Arthur  under  looming  shores, 
piurpose  holds  To  s  beyond  the  sunset, 
On  sleeping  wings  they  s. 
And  we  might  s  for  evermore. 
We  seem'd  to  s  into  the  Sun ! 
And  we  may  s  for  evermore. 
Annie,  the  ship  I  s  in  passes  here 
Abiding  with  me  till  I  s 
All  night  the  shining  vapour  s 
I  have  seen  the  good  ship  s  Keel  upward, 
ready  to  s  forth  on  one  last  voyage. 
They  rose  to  where  their  sovran  eagle  s's, 
and  s  to  help  them  in  the  war ; 
We  sail'd  wherever  ship  could  s, 

Sail'd    (See  also  Full-sail'd,  Silken-sail'd)    Slow  s  the 

weary  mariners  and  saw,  Sea-Fairies  1 

throne  of  Indian  Cama  slowly  s  Palace  of  Art  lib 

weeks  before  she  s,  S  from  this  port.  Enoch  Arden  124 

prosperously  s  The  ship  '  Good  Fortune,'  „  527 

in  that  harbour  whence  he  s  before.  „  666 

s,  Full-blown,  before  us  into  rooms  Princess  i  228 

And  those  fair  hilLs  I  «  below.  In  Mem.  xcviii  2 

And  he  s  away  from  Flores  The  Revenge  23 

away  she  s  with  her  loss  and  long'd  for  her  own ;  „  111 

made  West  East,  and  s  the  Dragon's  mouth,  Columbus  25 

I  s  On  my  first  voyage,  harass'd  by  the  frights  „        66 

— we  s  on  a  Friday  mom —  V.  of  Maeldune  7 

we  s  away,  (repeat)  „  26,  70, 114 

and  we  s  with  our  wounded  away.  „  36 

and  in  anger  we  s  away.  „  54 

and  away  we  s,  and  we  past  Over  that  undersea  isle,  „  76 

we  slew  and  we  s  away.  ,,  96 

and  hastily  s  away.  „  10-1 

Saint  who  had  s  with  St.  Brendan  of  yore,  „  115 

and  sadly  we  s  away.  ,.  126 

he  s  the  sea  to  crush  the  Moslem  in  his  pride;        Locksley  U.,  Sixty  29 
We  s  wherever  ship  could  sail,  Hands  all  Round  29 

Sailest    S  the  placid  ocean-plains  In  Mem.  ix  2 

Sailing    (See  also  A-sailing)    S  under  pahny  highlands 
Far  wthin  the  South. 
With  here  a  blossom  *, 
S  along  before  a  gloomy  cloud 
The  s  moon  in  creek  and  cove ; 
iS'  from  Ireland. 

Sailor  (adj.)    O  well  for  the  s  lad. 


The  Captain  23 

The  Brook  56 

Sea  Dreams  124 

In  Mem.  ci  16 

Last  Tournament  555 

Break,  break,  etc.  7 

Enoch  Arden  204 


In  s  fashion  roughly  sermonizing  On  providence 
Gone  our  s  son  thy  father,  Leonard  early  lost  at 

sea ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  55 

Sailor  (s)     (See  also  Sa&Qor)    S's  bold  and  true.  The  Captain  8 

And  Enoch  Arden,  a  rough  s's  lad  Enoch  Arden  14 

and  made  himself  Full  s;  „            54 

A  shipwreck'd  s,  waiting  for  a  sail :  „           590 

The  greatest  s  since  our  world  began.  Ode  on  Well.  86 

praying  God  will  save  Thy  s, —  In  Mem.  vi  14 

I  see  the  s  at  the  wheel.  „            a;  4 

Thou  bring'st  the  5  to  his  wife,  „               5 

passive  s  Avrecks  at  last  In  ever-silent  seas ;  Ancient  Sage  136 

Desolate  as  that  s,  whom  the  storm  Had  parted  The  Ring  307 

Sailorless     Desolate  offing,  s  harbours,  Fastness  14 

Sailor-sonl     and  thou,  Heroic  s-s,  Sir  J.  Franklin  2 

Saint  (s)     (See  also  Francis  of  Assisi)     meed  of  s's,  the 

white  robe  and  the  palm.  St.  S.  Styliies  20 

Who  may  be  made  a  s,  if  I  fail  here  ?  „             48 

thou  and  all  the  s's  Enjoy  themselves  „           105 

To  Christ,  the  Virgin  Mother,  and  the  s's;  „           112 

The  silly  people  take  me  for  a  s,  „          127 

Are  register'd  and  calendar'd  for  s's.  „           132 

It  may  be,  no  one,  even  among  the  s's,  „           138 

This  is  not  told  of  any.     They  were  s's.  „           151 

Yea,  crown'd  a  s.     They  shout,  '  Behold  as!'  „           153 

I  am  gather'd  to  the  glorious  s's.  „          197 

Ah !  let  me  not  be  fool'd,  sweet  s's :  ,,          212 

Than  Papist  unto  6'.  Talking  Oak  16 


Saint  (s)  (continued)    statues,  king  or  s,  or  foimder  fell ;        Sea  Dreams  224 

My  mother  was  as  mild  as  any  s.  Princess  i  22 

Swear  by  S  something —  „      v  293 
Like  a  S's  glory  up  in  heaven :  but  she  No  s — 

inexorable — no  tenderness —  „         514 

your  mother,  now  a  s  with  s's.  „     vi  233 

arrived,  by  Dubric  the  high  s.  Com.  of  Arthur  453 

For  by  the  hands  of  Dubric,  the  high  s,  Marr.  of  Geraint  838 

oft  I  talk'd  with  Dubric,  the  high  s,  Geraint  and  E.  865 

descended  from  the  S  Arimathsean  Joseph ;  Balin  and  Balan  101 

I  saw  That  maiden  S  who  stands  with  lily  „                261 

scarce  could  spy  the  Christ  for  S's,  „               409 

but  all  the  maiden  S's,  „                520 

the  good  s  Arimathsean  Joseph,  joumejdng  Holy  Grail  50 

larger,  tho'  the  goal  of  all  the  s's —  „        528 

I  spake  To  one  most  holy  s,  „        781 

crying,  '  Praise  the  patient  s's.  Last  Tournament  217 

I  thank  the  s's,  I  am  not  great.  Guinevere  199 

Who  wast,  as  is  the  conscience  of  a  s  „         639 

Who  reads  of  begging  s's  in  Scripture  ?  '  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  151 

And  we  came  to  the  Isle  of  a  iS  V,  of  Maeldune  115 

Wid  his  blessed  Marthyrs  an'  S's;'  Tomorrow  58 

an'  S's  an'  Marthyrs  galore,  „         95 

I  cried  to  the  S's  to  avenge  me.  Bandit's  Death  14 

But  thanks  to  the  Blessed  S's  „              40 

Saint  (verb)     lower  voices  s  me  from  above.  St.  S.  Stylites  154 

St.  Brendan    See  Brendan 

St.  Cecily    See  CecUy 

St.  Francis  of  Assisi    See  Francis  of  Assisi 

St.  Paul    See  Paul 

Saintdom    grasp  the  hope  I  hold  Of  s,  St.  S.  Stylites  6 

Saint-like     women  smile  with  s-l  glances  Supp.  Confessions  22 

Saintly     The  s  youth,  the  spotless  lamb  of  Christ,  Merlin  and  V.  749 

Therefore  I  communed  with  a  s  man.  Holy  Grail  742 

Saint's-day    See  Saaint's-daay 

Saitll     s  not  Holy  Writ  the  same  ?  '—  Merlin  and  V.  52 

He,  that  $  it,  hath  o'erstept  Lover's  Tale  i  101 

Sake     '  Yet  must  I  love  her  for  your  s ;  Miller's  D.  142 

Nor  would  I  break  for  your  sweet  s  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  13 

for  his  s  I  bred  His  daughter  Dora :  Dora  19 

for  the  s  of  him  that's  gone,  (repeat)  Dora  62,  70,  94 

for  your  s,  the  woman  that  he  cliose,  „                  63 

may  be,  for  her  own  dear  s  but  this,  Edwin  Morris  141 

pray  them  not  to  quarrel  for  her  s,  Enoch  Arden  35 

for  Annie's  s.  Fearing  the  lazy  gossip  „          334 

for  God's  s,'  he  answer'd,  '  both  our  s's,  „          509 

Katie,  what  I  suffer'd  for  your  s !  The  Brook  119 

How  prettily  for  his  own  sweet  s  Maud  I  vi  51 

To  be  friends  for  her  s,  to  be  reconciled ;  „      xix  50 

And  for  your  sweet  s  to  yours ;  „            91 

the  rose  was  awake  all  night  for  your  s,  „    xxii  49 

rather  for  the  s  of  me,  their  King,  Gareth  and  L.  571 

the  deed's  s  my  knighthood  do  the  deed,  „            572 

for  the  deed's  s  have  I  done  the  deed,  „             832 

Balan  answer'd  '  For  the  s  Of  glory ;  Balin  and  Balan  32 

And  were  it  only  for  the  giver's  s.  Lover's  Tale  iv  364 

freedom,  or  the  s  of  those  they  loved.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  186 

I  know  Less  for  its  own  than  for  the  s  To  E.  Fitzgerald  52 

sorrow  that  I  bear  is  sorrow  for  his  s.  The  Flight  64 

will  you  sicken  for  her  s?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  17 

God  stay  me  there,  if  only  for  your  s,  Romney's  R.  34 

for  my  s.  According  to  my  word  ? '  „           129 

Sal     (See  also  Sally)     black  S,  es  'ed  been  disgraaced  ?       Spinster's  S's.  25 

Salamanca    Were  you  a.tS?    No.  Columbus  40 

Sale    See  Stale 

Saleem     heart  is  for  my  son,  S,  my  heir, —  Akbar's  Dream  171 

on  the  sudden,  and  with  a  cry  ' S'  „              184 

Salient     beneath  Its  s  springs,  and  far  apart,  Supp.  Confessions  56 

Do  beating  hearts  of  s  springs  Keep  measure  Adeline  26 

Salique     fulmined  out  her  scorn  of  laws  S  Princess  ii  133 

Sallow  (adj.)    (See  also  Wan-sallow)    With  s  scraps  of 

manuscript.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  48 

Sallow  (s)     satin-shining  pahn  On  s's  Merlin  and  V.  225 

Sallow-rifted     the  s-r  glooms  Of  evening,  Lancelot  and  E.  1002 

Sallow-skin    Many  a  livid  one,  many  a  s-s —  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  106 


Sallowy 


600 


Sand 


Sallowy    ran  By  s  rims,  arose  the  labourers'  homes,         Aylmer's  Field  147 
And  many  a  glancing  plash  and  s  isle.  Last  Tournament  422 

Sally  (proper  name)    (See  also  Sal)    to  's  chooch  af  oor 

moy  S  wiir  dead,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  17 

Waait  till  our  S  cooms  in,  North.  Cobbler  1 

That  S  she  tum'd  a  tongue-banger,  „  23 

S  she  wesh'd  f oalks'  deaths  to  keep  the  wolf  fro'  the  door,        „  29 

wheer  S's  owd  stockin'  wur  'id,  „  31 

an'  I  gied  our  S  a  kick,  „  36 

I  seead  that  our  S  went  laamed  Cos'  o'  the  kick  as  I  gied  'er,    „  39 

An' S  wur  sloomy  an'  draggle  „  41 

then  I  minded  our  S  sa  pratty  an'  neat  an'  sweeat,  „  43 

'  I  mun  gie  tha  a  kiss,'  an'  S  says  '  Noa,  thou  moant,'  „  51 

gied  'er  a  kiss,  an'  then  anoother,  an'  S  says  '  doant ! '  „  52 

upo'  coomin'  awaay  iS  gied  me  a  kiss  ov  'ersen.  „  56 

fur  to  kick  oiu:  S  as  kep  the  wolf  fro'  the  door,  „  59 

an'  S  loookt  up  an'  she  said,  '  I'll  upowd  it  tha  weant  „  62 

'  That  caps  owt,'  says  S,  an'  saw  she  begins  to  cry,  „  71 

'  S,'  says  I,  '  Stan'  'im  theer  i'  the  naame  o'  the  Lord  „  72 

An'  S  she  tell'd  it  about,  an'  foalk  „  81 

an'  if  aS  be  left  aloan,  „  105 

'Ere  be  our  S  an'  Tommy,  an'  we  be  a-goin  to  dine,  .,  Ill 

weant  shed  a  drop  on  'is  blood,  noa,  not  fur  S's  oan  kin.       „  114 

Sally  (a  rush)     I  make  a  sudden  s,  The  Brook  24 

our  sallies,  their  lying  alarms,  Def.  of  Lucknow  75 

Sally  (verb)     the  cave  From  which  he  sallies,  Balin  and  Balan  132 

all  at  once  should  s  out  upon  me,  Geraint  and  E.  149 

Wroth  that  the  King's  command  to  s  forth  Lancelot  and  E.  560 

Sallying    s  thro'  the  gate,  Had  beat  her  foes  Princess,  Pro.  33 

s  thro'  the  gates,  and  caught  his  hair,  „  v  340 

In  blood-red  armour  s,  howl'd  to  the  King,  Last  Tournament  443 

Saloon     Or,  in  a  shadowy  s,  Elednore  125 

Salt  (adj.)     And  in  the  middle  of  the  green  s  sea  Mine  be  the  strength  7 

A  still  s  pool,  lock'd  in  with  bars  of  sand,  Palace  oj  Art  249 

The  s  sea-water  passes  by.  In  Mem.  xix  6 

old  dwarf-elm  That  turns  its  back  on  the  s  blast,       Pelleas  and  E.  544 

Salt  (s)     stony  drought  and  steaming  s ;  Mariana  in  the  S.  40 

Caught  the  shrill  s,  and  sheer'd  the  gale.  The  Voyage  12 

By  shards  and  scurf  of  s.  Vision  of  Sin  211 

The  city  sparkles  Hke  a  grain  of  s.  Will  20 

she  has  neither  savour  nor  s,  Maud  I  ii2 

pools  of  s,  and  plots  of  land —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  207 

Salute  (s)     Take  my  s,'  unknightly  with  flat  hand,  Geraint  and  E.  717 

Salute  (verb)     Many  a  merry  face  S's  them —  In  Mem.,  Con.  67 

I  s  thee,  Mantovano,  To  Virgil  37 

Salvation    and  lost  S  for  a  sketch.  Romney's  B.  139 

Salve    Our  Britain  cannot  s  a  tyrant  o'er.  Third  of  Feb.  20 

Salver    fruitage  golden-rinded  On  golden  s's,  Elednore  34 

Chalice  and  s,  wines  that.  Heaven  knows  when.         Lover's  Tale  iv  193 

Sam    (See  also  Sammy)    S,  thou's  an  ass  for  thy 

paa'ins :  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  3 

theer's  a  craw  to  pluck  wi'  tha,  S:  „  5 

Same      (See  also  Self-same)     In  the  s  circle  we  revolve.        Two  Voices  314 

Living  together  under  the  s  roof,  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  12 

and  stiU  The  s  old  sore  breaks  out  from  age  to  age 

With  much  the  s  result.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  79 

and  that  s  song  of  his  He  told  me ;  Golden  Year  7 

This  s  grand  year  is  ever  at  the  doors.'  „  74 

A  sleepy  land,  where  under  the  s  wheel  The  s  old  rut  Aylmer's  Field  33 
thunders  of  the  house  Had  fallen  first,  was  Edith 

that « night ;  „  279 

Then  she  told  it,  having  dream'd  Of  that  s  coast.  Sea  Dreams  207 

So  stood  that  s  fair  creature  at  the  door.  Princess  ii  329 

Would  this  s  mock-love,  and  this  Mock-Hymen  „        iv  143 

Than  when  two  dewdrops  on  the  petal  shake  To  the  5 

sweet  air,  „        vii  69 

The  s  sweet  forms  in  either  mind.  In  Mem.  Ixxix  8 

For  us  the  s  cold  streamlet  curl'd  „  9 

and  all  about  The  s  gray  flats  again,  „     Ixxxvii  13 

and  that  s  night,  the  night  of  the  new  year,  Com.  of  Arthur  209 

'  And  this  s  child,'  he  said,  '  Is  he  who  reigns ;  „  392 

Then  that  s  day  there  past  into  the  hall  Gareih  and  L.  587 

But  that  s  strength  which  threw  the  Morning  Star  „  1108 

that  s  spear  Wherewith  the  Roman  pierced  the 
side  of  Christ.  Balin  and  Balan  113 


Same  (continued)    '  What,  wear  ye  still  that  s 

crown-scandalous  ? '  Balin  and  Balan  390 
for  early  that  s  day,  Scaped  thro'  a  cavern  from  a 

bandit  hold,  Holy  Grail  206 

stood  beside  thee  even  now,  the  s.  Balin  and  Balan  613 

and  felt  The  s,  but  not  the  s ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  14 

saith  not  Holy  Writ  the  s?' —  Merlin  and  V.  52 

Sameness    With  weary  s  in  the  rhymes,  Miller's  D.  70 

Samian    whene'er  she  moves  The  S  Herh  rises  Princess  Hi  115 

Samite    Clothed  in  white  s,  mystic,  wonderful,  (repeat)        M.  d' Arthur  31, 

144,  159 

Clothed  in  white  5,  mystic,  wonderful.  Com.  of  Arthur  285 

a  robe  Of  s  without  price,  Merlin  and  V.  222 

King,  who  sat  Robed  in  red  s,  Lancelot  and  E.  433 

Pall'd  all  its  length  in  blackest  s,  „            1142 

Clothed  in  white  s  or  a  luminous  cloud.  Holy  Grail  513 

All  pall'd  in  crimson  s,  „        847 

hung  with  folds  of  pure  White  s,  Last  Tournament  141 
Clothed  ia  white  s,  mystic,  wonderful,  (repeat)        Pass,  of  Arthur  199, 

312,  327 
Sammy    (See  also  Sam)    Me  an'  thy  muther,  iS,  'as 

bean  a-talkin  y.  Farmer,  N.  S.  9 

fur,  S,  'e  married  fur  luvv.  „              32 

an',  S,  I'm  blest  If  it  isn't  the  saame  oop  yonder,  „              43 

Taake  my  word  for  it,  S,  „              48 

Thim's  my  noations,  S,  wheerby  I  means  to  stick ;  „              57 

Sanctimonious   as  a  rogue  in  grain  Veneer'd  with  s  theory.  Princess,  Pro.  117 

Sanction    dare  not  ev'n  by  silence  s  lies.  Third  of  Feb.  10 

Sanction'd    See  Mitre-sanction'd 

Sanctities     And  darken'd  s  with  song.'  In  Mem.  xxxvii  24 

Sanctuary    crowds  in  colmnn'd  sanctuaries ;  D.  of  F.  Women  22 

behold  our  s  Is  violate,  our  laws  broken :  Princess  vi  59 

So  was  their  s  violated,  „       vii  16 

For  I  will  draw  me  into  s,  Guinevere  121 

yield  me  s,  nor  ask  Her  name  to  whom  ye  yield  it,  „        141 

S  granted  To  bandit,  thief,  assassin —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  112 

Sand    purl  o'er  matted  cress  and  ribbed  s,  Ode  to  Memory  59 

rainbow  Uves  in  the  curve  of  the  s ;  Sea-Fairies  27 

the  brine  against  the  Coptic  s's.  Buonaparte  8 

In  glaring  s  and  inlets  bright.  Mariana  in  the  S.  8 

to  where  the  sky  Dipt  down  to  sea  and  s's.  Palace  of  Art  32 

seem'd  all  dark  and  red — a  tract  of  s,  „            65 

salt  pool,  lock'd  in  with  bars  of  s,  „          249 

sat  them  down  upon  the  yellow  s,  Lotos-Eaters  37 

roaring  deeps  and  fiery  s's,  „  C.  S.  115 

foam-flakes  scud  along  the  level  s,  D.  of  F.  Women  39 
Should  fill  and  choke  with  golden  s —                You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  24 

I  might  as  well  have  traced  it  in  the  s's ;  Audley  Court  50 

ran  itself  in  golden  s's.  Locksley  Hall  32 

By  s's  and  steaming  flats,  and  floods  The  Voyage  45 

in  the  chasm  are  foam  and  yeUow  s's ;  Enoch  Arden  2 

built  their  castles  of  dissolving  s  „           19 

All  s  and  cUff  and  deep-inrunning  cave.  Sea  Dreams  17 

now  on  s  they  walk'd,  and  now  on  cUff,  „          37 

While  you  were  running  down  the  s's,  „        265 

May  only  make  that  footprint  upon  s  Princess  Hi  239 

Tall  as  a  figure  lengthen'd  on  the  s  „        vi  161 

suck  the  blinding  splendour  from  the  s,  „        vii  39 

Tumbles  a  billow  on  chalk  and  s ;  To  F.  D.  Maurice  24 

Toihng  in  immeasureable  s,  WUl  16 

'  The  s's  and  yeasty  surges  mix  In  caves  Sailor  Boy  9 

For  every  grain  of  s  that  runs,  In  Mem.  cxvii  9 

Low  on  the  s  and  loud  on  the  stone  Maud  I  xxii  25 

a  tap  Of  my  finger-nail  on  the  s,  „        II  H  22 

scratch  a  ragged  oval  on  the  s,  Garetk  and  L.  534 

Come  slipping  o'er  their  shadows  on  the  s,  Geraint  and  E.  471 

the  s  danced  at  the  bottom  of  it.  Balin  and  Balan  27 

touching  Breton  s's,  they  disembark'd.  Merlin  and  V  202 

Glass'd  in  the  sUppery  s  before  it  breaks  ?  „            293 

in  a  land  of  s  and  thorns,  (repeat)  Holy  Grail  376,  390 

wearying  in  a  land  of  s  and  thorns.  „                 420 

and  all  the  s  Swept  hke  a  river,  „                 799 

Far  over  s's  marbled  with  moon  and  cloud,  Last  Tournament  466 

They  found  a  naked  child  upon  the  s's  Guinevere  293 

mountains  ended  in  a  coast  Of  ever-shifting  s.  Pass,  of  Arthur  86 


I 


Sand 


601 


Sap 


Sand  {continued)    On  the  waste  s  by  the  waste  sea  they 

closed.  Pass  of  Arthur  92 

A  deathwhite  mist  slept  over  s  and  sea :  „  95 

these  deserted  s's  of  barren  life.  Lover's  Tale  i  93 

heats  of  the  blinding  noons  Beat  from  the  concave  s ;  „  140 

leaves  Low  banks  of  yellow  s ;  „  535 

upon  the  s's  Insensibly  I  drew  her  name,  „        ..ji^ 

shrieks  and  ringing  laughter  on  the  s  „       in  32 

melon  lay  like  a  little  sim  on  the  tawny  s,  V.  of  Maddune  57 

and  pranced  on  the  wrecks  in  the  s  below,  „  102 

that  bay  with  the  colour'd  s —  The  Wreck  135 

in  the  chapel  there  looking  over  the  s  ?  Despair  1 

'  Lightly  step  over  the  s's !  ,,      47 

his  boat  was  on  the  s ;  The  Flight  37 

chains  of  mountains,  grains  of  s  Locksleij  H.,  Sixty  208 

airs  from  where  the  deep,  All  down  the  s,  Early  Spring  22 

dash'd  half  dead  on  barren  s's,  The  Ring  309 

I  know  not,  your  Arabian  s's ;  To  Ulysses  35 

Are  bhnding  desert  s ;  Akbar's  Bream  30 

Sandal  (shoe)     he  roll'd  And  paw'd  about  her  s.  Princess  Hi  182 

Sandal  (wood)     toys  in  lava,  fans  Of  s,  „      Pro.  19 

Sandal'd    See  Silken-sandal'd 

Sandbank    some  dismal  s  far  at  sea.  Lover's  Tale  i  809 

Sand-built    a  s-b  ridge  Of  heaped  hills  Ode  to  Memory  97 

Sand-erased    disgraced  For  ever — thee  (thy  pathway  s-e)  Alexander  5 

Sandhill    In  this  gap  between  the  s's,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  176 

Sand-shore     the  waste  s-s's  of  Trath  Treroit,  Lancelot  and  E.  301 

Sandy    Locksley  Hall,  that  in  the  distance  overlooks  the 

s  tracts,  Locksley  Hall  5 

I  make  the  netted  sunbeam  dance  Against  my  s  shallows.  The  Brook  177 
and  watch  The  s  footprint  harden  into  stone.'  Princess  Hi  270 

on  5  beaches  A  milky-beU'd  amaryllis  blew.  The  Daisy  15 

Unloved,  by  many  a  s  bar,  In  Mem.  ci  9 

half  the  morning  have  I  paced  these  s  tracts,  Locksley  H.,  Siscty  1 

Sane    I  woke  s,  but  well-nigh  close  to  death  Princess  vii  119 

0  great  and  s  and  simple  race  of  brutes  PeUeas  and  E.  480 

Till  crowds  at  length  be  s  Ode  on  Well.  169 

but  s,  if  she  were  in  the  right.  The  Flight  58 

Saner    Of  s  worship  sanely  proud ;  Freedom  30 

A  simpler,  s  lesson  might  he  learn  Prog,  of  Spring  105 

Sanest    valorous,  S  and  most  obedient :  Geraint  and  E.  911 

Sang     (See  also  Sing'd)     S  looking  thro'  his  prison  bars  ?  Margaret  35 

'  Tirra  Urra,'  by  the  river  S  Sir  Lancelot.  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  36 

'  Ah,'  she  s,  '  to  be  all  alone,  (repeat)  Mariana  in  the  S.  11,  23 

S  to  the  stillness,  till  the  mountain-shade  (Enone  21 

they  s,  '  Our  island  home  Is  far  beyond  the  wave ;  Lotos-Eaters  44 

'  Glory  to  God,'  she  s,  and  past  afar,  D.  of  F.  Women  242 

and  over  them  the  sea-wind  s  Shrill,  M.  d' Arthur  48 

nightingale  S  loud,  as  tho'  he  were  the  bird  of  day.      Gardener's  D.  96 
clapt  his  hand  in  mine  and  s —  AuMey  Court  39 

He  5  his  song,  and  I  replied  with  mine :  „  56 

So  s  we  each  to  either,  Francis  Hale,  »  74 

An  angel  stand  and  watch  me,  as  I  5.  St.  S.  Stylites  35 

s  to  me  the  whole  Of  those  three  stanzas  Talking  Oak  134 

Dry  s  the  tackle,  s  the  sail :  The  Voyage  10 

a  couple,  fair  As  ever  painter  painted,  poet  s,  Aylmer's  Field,  106 

sway'd  The  cradle,  while  she  s  this  baby  song.  Sea  Dreams  292 

So  s  the  gallant  glorious  chronicle ;  Princess,  Pro.  49 

the  women  s  Between  the  rougher  voices  of  the  men,  „  244 

Beyond  all  reason :  these  the  women  s ;  „  i  143 

thro'  the  porch  that  s  All  roimd  with  laurel,  „  H  22 

With  whom  I  s  about  the  morning  hills,  „  247 

maid,  Of  those  beside  her,  smote  her  harp,  and  s.  „  iv  38 

the  tear.  She  s  of,  shook  and  fell,  „  60 

part  made  long  since,  and  part  Now  while  I  s,  „  91 

bo  Lilia  s :  we  thought  her  half-possess'd,  „  585 

Like  that  great  dame  of  Lapidoth  she  s.  „  vi  32 

Violet,  she  that  s  the  mournful  song,  ,  318 

maidens  came,  they  talk'd.  They  s,  they  read :  „  vii  23 

What  pleasure  Uves  in  height  (the  shepherd  s)  „  193 

something  in  the  ballads  which  they  s,  „       Con.  14 

Nightingales  s  in  his  woods :  G.  of  Swainston  6 

Nightingales  warbled  and  s  Of  a  passion  „  8 

in  flying  raiment,  s  the  terrible  prophetesses,  Boddicea  37 

many  an  old  philosophy  On  Argive  heights  divinely  s,    In  Mem.  xxiii  22 


Sang  (coniinued)    A  merry  song  we  s  with  him  Last  year : 

impetuously  we  s :  In  Mem.  xxx  15 

we  s :  '  They  do  not  die  Nor  lose  their  mortal  sympathy,    „  22 

While  now  we  s  old  songs  that  peal'd  „          xcv  13 

They  s  of  what  is  wise  and  good  And  graceful.  „          ciii  10 

In  the  centre  stood  A  statue  veil'd,  to  which  they  s;  „                 12 

s  from  the  three-decker  out  of  the  foam,  Maud  I  i  50 

Birds  in  our  wood  s  Ringing  thro'  the  valleys,  „       xii  9 

Arthur's  knighthood  s  before  the  King: —  Com.  of  Arthur  481 

s  the  knighthood,  moving  to  their  hall.  „            503 

And  then  she  s,  '  0  morning  star '  Gareth  and  L.  995 

the  song  that  Enid  s  was  one  Of  Fortune  Marr.  of  Geraint  345 

From  underneath  a  plume  of  lady-fern,  S,  Balin  and  Balan  27 

they  drank  and  some  one  s.  Sweet-voiced,  „                85 
But,  Vivien,  when  you  s  me  that  sweet  rhyme,  I  felt   Merlin  and  V.  434 

And  s  it :  sweetly  could  she  make  and  sing.  Lancelot  and  E.  1006 

Then  Tristram  laughing  caught  the  harp,  and  s :  Last  Tournament  730 

Whereat  full  willingly  s  the  little  maid.  Guinevere  167 

So  s  the  novice,  while  full  passionately,  „        180 

8  Arthur's  glorious  wars,  and  s  the  King  „        286 

then,  he  s,  The  twain  together  well  might  change  „        300 

and  over  them  the  sea-wind  s  Shrill,  Pass,  of  Arthur  216 

And  s  aloud  the  matin-song  of  hfe.  Lover's  Tale  i  232 

If  somewhere  in  the  North,  as  Rumour  s  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  56 

And  we  s  of  the  triumphs  of  Finn,  V.  of  Maeldune  88 

more  than  he  that  s  the  Works  and  Days,  To  Virgil  6 

I  s  the  song,  '  are  bride  And  bridegroom.'  The  Ring  25 

'  Libera  me,  Domine  ! '  you  s  the  Psalm,  Happy  49 

And  s  the  married  '  nos  '  for  the  solitary  '  me.'  „      56 

Wed  to  the  melody,  S  thro'  the  world  ;  Merlin  and  the  G.  98 

Last  year  you  s  it  as  gladly.  The  Throstle  6 

Sanguine    S  he  was  :  a  but  less  vivid  hue  Aylmer's  Field  64 

s  Lazarus  felt  a  vacant  hand  Fill  with  his  purse.  To  Mary  Boyle  31 

Sank     I  s  In  cool  soft  turf  upon  the  bank,  Arabian  Nights  95 

And,  while  day  s  or  mounted  higher,  Palace  of  Art  46 

Her  slow  fuU  words  s  thro'  the  silence  drear,  D.  of  F.  Women  121 
as  we  s  From  rock  to  rock  upon  the  glooming  quay,      Audley  Court  83 

To  some  full  music  rose  and  s  the  sun,  Edwin  Morris  34 

She  s  her  head  upon' her  arm  Talking  Oak  207 

Tho'  at  times  her  spirit  s:  L.  of  Burleigh  70 

s  As  into  sleep  again.  Aylmer's  Field  591 

but  s  down  shamed  At  all  that  beauty  ;  Lucretius  63 

leaning  deep  in  broider'd  down  we  s  Our  elbows  :  Princess  iv  32 

but  again  She  veil'd  her  brows,  and  prone  she  s,  „       v  107 

And  down  dead-heavy  s  her  curls,  „      vi  147 

after  s  and  s  And,  into  mournful  twilight  mellowing,  „          190 

I  s  and  slept,  Fill'd  thro'  and  thro'  with  Love,  „     vii  171 

voice  Choked,  and  her  forehead  s  upon  her  hands,  „          247 

A  bitter  day  that  early  s  In  Mem.  cvii  2 

show'd  themselves  against  the  sky,  and  s.  Marr.  of  Geraint  240 

8  her  sweet  head  upon  her  gentle  breast ;  „              527 
half  his  blood  burst  forth,  and  down  he  s  For  the 

pure  pain,  Lancelot  and  E.  517 

s  Down  on  a  drift  of  foliage  random-blown  ;  Last  Tournament  388 

s  his  head  in  mire,  and  slimed  themselves  :  „             471 

breakers  of  the  outer  sea  (S  powerless,  Lover's  Tale  i  9 

s  his  body  with  honour  down  into  the  deep.  The  Revenge  109 

king,  the  queen,  S  from  their  thrones,  Columbus  15 

when  drowning  hope  S  all  but  out  of  sight,  „         157 

And  the  roof  s  in  on  the  hearth,  V.  of  Maeldune  32 

And  his  white  hair  5  to  his  heels  „            118 
till  the  glorious  creature  aS  to  his  setting.              Bait,  of  Brunanburh  30 

when  our  good  redcoats  s  from  sight,  Heavy  Brigade  42 

Where  I  s  with  the  body  at  times  By  an  Evolution.  18 

Became  a  shadow,  s  and  disappear'd.  Death  of  (Enone  50 

Then  her  head  s,  she  slept,  „              78 

San  Philip    delay'd  By  their  mountain-hke  S  P  The  Revenge  40 

the  great  S  P  hung  above  us  Uke  a  cloud  „          43 

But  anon  the  great  S  P,  she  bethought  „          50 

San  Salvador     I  changed  the  name  -,8  81  call'd  it ;  Columbus  76 

Sap  (s)     '  The  s  dries  up  :  the  plant  declines.  Two  Voices  268 

But  yet  my  s  was  stirr'd  :  Talking  Oak  172 

Here  rests  the  s  within  the  leaf,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  3 

say  rather,  was  my  growth.  My  inward  s.  Lover's  Tale  i  166 

Sap  (verb)     Ring  out  the  grief  that  s's  the  mind,  In  Mem.  cvi  9 


Sap 


602 


Sat 


Sap  (verb)  (continued)     and  s's  The  fealty  of  our  friends,  Guinevere  520       Sat 

tides  of  onset  s  Our  seven  high  gates,  Tiresias  91 

Sapience     And  glean  your  scatter 'd  s.'  Princess  it  259 

Sapless    staring  eye  glazed  o'er  with  s  days.  Love  mid  Duty  16 

Sapling     a  promontory,  That  had  a  *  growing  on  it,         Geraint  and  E.  163 

And  there  lie  still,  and  yet  the  s  grew  :  „             165 

Sapphire  (adj.)     Came  out  clear  plates  of  s  mail.  Two  Voices  12 

Sapphire  (s)     A  purer  s  melts  into  the  sea.  Maud  I  xviii  52 

from  jasper,  s,  Chalcedony,  emerald,  Columbus  83 

Siapphire-spaiigled     The  silent  s-s  marriage  ring  Maud  I  iv  6 

Sappho     arts  of  grace  S  and  othei"s  Princess  ii  164 

Sapping     tide  Plash'd,  s  its  worn  ribs  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  56 

Sappy     Are  neither  green  nor  s  ;  A  m/phion  90 

And  when  the  s  field  and  wood  My  life  %s  full  16 

Saracen    to  lead  A  new  crusade  against  the  6',  Columbus  103 

to  lead  One  last  cnjsade  against  the  S,  „        239 

Sardius    s,  Chrysolite,  beryl,  topaz,  „          84 

Sardonic^    See  Half-sardonically 

Sardonyx     Beneath  branch-work  of  costly  s  Palace  of  Art  95 

Chalcedony,  emerald,  s,  sardius.  Chrysolite,  Columbus  84 
Sarmin  (sermon)     But  'e  reads  wonn  s  a  weeak,             N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  28 

Sartin-sewer  (certain-sure)    S-s  I  bea,  „               59 

Sarve  (serve)     — an'  it  «'s  ye  right.  Spinster's  S's.  121 
Sarved  (served)     Wouldn't  a  pint  a'  s  as  mcII  as  a 

quart  ?  North.  Cobbler  99 

But  I  s  'em  wi'  butter  an'  heggs  Village  Wife  114 

an'  s  by  my  oan  little  lass.  Spinster's  S's.  103 

An'  'e  s  me  sa  well  when  'e  lived,  Owd  Bod  11 

Sarvice  (service)    like  fur  to  hev  sooni  soort  of  a  s  read.  „          12 

Sarvint  (servant)     An'  s's  runn'd  in  an'  out,  Village  Wife  56 

Sassenach     '  Goin'  to  cut  the  S  whate  '  Tomorrow  14 

■  niver  crasst  over  say  to  the  S  whate  ;  „         48 

that's  betther  nor  cuttin'  the  iS  whate  „         94 
Slat     (See  also  Siate)    Fancy  came  and  at  her  pillow  5,    Caress'd  or  chidden  5 

He  s  upon  the  knees  of  men  In  days  Two  Voices  323 

I  ceased,  and  s  as  one  forlorn.  „         400 

I  came  and  s  Below  the  chestnuts,  Miller's  D.  59 

As  near  this  door  you  s  apart,  „           158 

With  down-dropt  eyes  I  s  alone  :  (Enone  57 

panther's  roar  came  muffled,  while  I  s  Low  in  the  valley.  „    214 

S  smiling,  babe  in  arm.  Palace  of  Art  96 

She  s  betwixt  the  shining  Oriels,  „           159 

Flash'd  thro'  her  as  she  s  alone,  „          214 

They  s  them  down  upon  the  yellow  sand,  Lotos- Eaters  37 
we  s  as  God  by  God  :  '  D.  of  F.  Women  142 
Of  old  s  Freedom  on  the  heights,                               Of  old  sat  Freedom  1 

and  I  s  round  the  wassail-bowl.  The  Epic  5 
waked  mth  silence,  grunted  '  Good  !  '  but  we  S 

rapt :  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  5 

Eustace  might  have  s  for  Hercules  ;  Gardener's  D.  7 

There  s  we  down  upon  a  garden  mound,  „          214 

Mary  s  And  look'd  with  tears  upon  her  boy,  Dora  56 

and  s  upon  a  mound  That  was  unsown,  „     72 

took  The  child  once  more,  and  s  upon  the  mound  ;  „     81 

so  we  s  and  eat  And  talk'd  old  matters  over  ;  Audley  Court  28 

In  which  the  swarthy  ringdove  s.  Talking  Oak  293 

the  night  In  which  we  s  together  and  alone,  Love  and  Duty  60 

Wherever  he  s  down  and  sung  Amphion  19 

To-day  I  s  for  an  hour  and  wept,  Edward  Gray  11 

Where  s  a  company  with  heated  eyes.  Vision  of  Sin  7 

Narrowing  in  to  where  they  s  assembled  „           16 

To  him  who  s  upon  the  rocks.  To  E.  L.  23 

And  he  s  him  down  in  a  lonely  place.  Poet's  Song  5 

S  often  in  the  sea  ward -gazing  gorge,  Enoch  Arden  589 

There  he  s  down  gazing  on  all  below  ;  „          723 

S  anger-charm'd  from  sorrow,  soldier-like,  Aylmer's  Field  728 

gentle  hearted  wife  S  shuddering  at  the  ruin  Sea  Dreams  30 

S  at  Ills  table  ;  drank  his  costly  wines  ;  ,.           74 

And  near  the  light  a  giant  woman  s,  ,.          98 

and  I  s  down  and  wrote.  In  such  a  liand  Princess  i  235 

There  at  a  board  by  tome  and  paper  5,  „        ii  32 

There  s  along  the  forms,  like  morning  doves  „          102 

We  s :  the  Lady  glanced :  „           111 

fawn  Came  Hying  while  you  s  beside  the  well  ?  .,           271 

In  each  we  s,  we  heard  The  grave  Professor.  „          370 


(continued)     S  compass'd  with  professors  : 

but  we  three  S  muffled  like  the  Fates  ; 

haled  us  to  the  Princess  where  she  s  Higli  in  the  hall : 

up  she  s.  And  raised  the  cloak  from  brows 

Part  s  like  rocks  :  part  reel'd  but  kept  their  seats  : 

I  lay  still,  and  with  me  oft  she  s  : 

by  axe  and  eagle  s,  With  all  their  foreheads 

palm  to  palm  she  s  :  the  dew  Dwelt  in  tier  eyes. 

Or  in  their  silent  influence  as  they  s, 

she  s,  she  pluck'd  the  grass.  She  flung  it  from  her. 

But  we  went  back  to  the  Abbey,  and  s  on, 

we  s  But  spoke  not,  rapt  in  nameless  reverie, 

Turn'd  as  he  s,  and  struck  the  keys 

all  night  upon  the  bridge  of  war  S  glorying  ; 

S  fifty  in  the  blaze  of  burning  fire  ; 

There  s  the  Shadow  fear'd  of  man  ; 

I  myself,  who  s  apart  And  watch'd  them. 

While  I,  thy  nearest,  s  apart, 

And  s  by  a  pillar  alone  ; 

S  with  her,  read  to  her,  night  and  day, 

Bleys  Laid  magic  by,  and  s  him  down,  and  wrote 

All  things 
King  Made  feast  for,  saying,  as  they  s  at  meat, 
and  Arthur  s  Crown'd  on  the  dais, 
S  down  beside  him,  ate  and  then  began. 
Enid  woke  and  s  beside  the  couch, 
iS  riveting  a  helmet  on  his  knee. 
There  musing  s  the  hoary-headed  Earl, 
So  for  long  hours  s  Enid  by  her  lord, 
none  spake  word,  but  all  s  down  at  once, 
'  Tell  me  your  names  ;  why  s  ye  by  the  weU  ?  ' 
Methought  that  if  we  s  beside  the  well, 
they  s,  And  cup  clash 'd  cup  ; 
Balin  s  Close-bower'd  in  that  garden  nigh  the  hall 
saw  The  fountain  where  they  s  together, 
(She  s  beside  the  banquet  nearest  Mark), 
Among  her  damsels  broidering  s,  heard, 
slided  up  his  knee  and  s, 
And  found  a  fair  young  squire  who  s  alone, 
while  she  s,  half-falling  from  his  knees. 
King,  who  s  Robed  in  red  samite. 
There  from  his  charger  down  he  slid,  and  s, 
then  from  where  he  s  At  Arthur's  right. 
Queen,  who  s  With  lips  severely  placid, 
S  on  liis  knee,  stroked  his  gray  face 
So  in  her  tower  alone  the  maiden  s  : 
There  s  the  lifelong  creature  of  the  house, 
S  by  the  river  in  a  cove, 
and  as  they  s  Beneath  a  world-old  yew-tree, 
once  by  misadvertence  Merlin  s  In  his  own  chair, 
as  there  we  s,  we  heard  A  cracking  and  a  riving 
and  fair  the  house  whereby  she  s, 
there  s  Arthur  on  the  da"is-throne, 
and  as  he  s  In  hall  at  old  Caerleon, 
each  one  s,  Tho'  served  with  choice  from  air, 
Full-arm'd  upon  his  charger  all  day  long  S  by  the  walls,         „  217 

children  s  in  white  with  cups  of  gold.  Last  Tournament  142 


Princess  ii  444 

467 

iv  271 

•b72 

.496 

„         vii  91 

128 

135 

„      Con.  15 

31 

106 

107 

The  Islet  7 

Spec,  of  Iliad  10 

20 

In  Mem.  xxii  12 

,.        ciii  29 

„  ex  13 

Maiid  I  via  2 

„        xix  75 


Com.  of  Arthur  156 

247 

257 

Gareth  and  L.  872 

Marr.  of  Geraint  79 

268 

295 

Geraint  and  E.  580 

604 

Balin  and  Balan  50 

65 

84 

240 

291 

Merlin  and  V.  18 

138 

239 

472 

904 

Lancelot  and  E.  432 

510 

551 

739 

749 

989 

1143 

1389 

Holy  Grail  12 

175 

182 

392 

721 

Pelleas  and  E.  2 

148 


I 


S  their  great  umpire,  looking  o'er  the  lists. 

them  that  round  it  s  with  golden  cups 

Down  in  a  casement  s,  A  low  sea-sunset  glorying 

Drain'd  of  her  force,  again  she  s. 

Here  one  black,  mute  midsummer  night  I  s, 

s  There  in  the  holy  house  at  Almesbury  Weeping 

saw  the  Queen  who  s  betwixt  her  best  Enid, 

Low  on  the  border  of  her  couch  they  s 

She  s.  Stiff-stricken,  listening  ; 

And  lo,  he  s  on  horseback  at  the  door  ! 

All  day  I  s  within  the  cavern-mouth, 

day  waned  :  Alone  I  s  with  her  : 

I  CAME  one  day  and  s  among  the  stones 

1  never  8  at  a  costlier  ; 

s  as  if  in  chains — to  whom  he  said  : 

I  had  s  three  nights  by  the  child — 

s  each  on  the  lap  of  the  breeze  ; 

as  we  s  by  the  gurgle  of  springs, 


159 

289 

507 

540 

612 

Guinevere  1 

27 

„       101 

.,       411 

„      589 

Lover's  Tale  ii  37 

140 

Hi  1 

twl88 

362 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  59 

V.  of  Maeldune  38 


Sat 


603 


Saver 


Sat  (continued)     once  when  I  S  all  alone,  revolvint;  Ancient  Sage  230 

I  s  beside  her  dying,  and  she  gaspt :  The  Ring  287 

I  s  beneath  a  soUtude  of  snow  ;  Prog,  of  Spring  71 

CEnone  s  within  the  cave  from  out  Death  of  (Enone  1 

CEnone  s  Not  moving,  „            74 

He  stumbled  in,  and  s  Blinded  ;  St.  Telemachus  48 

she  s  day  and  night  by  my  bed.  Charity  33 
SataD    (See  also  Saatan)     '  "S  take  The  old  women  and  their 

shadows  !  Princess  v  33 

I  leap  from  S's  foot  to  Peter's  knee —  Gareth  and  L.  538 

Or  some  black  wether  of  St.  S's  fold.  Merlin  and  V.  750 

Where  one  of  S's  shepherdesses  caught  „             758 

Make  their  last  head  hke  S  in  the  North.  Last  Tournament  98 

But  Michael  trampUng  S ;  „            673 

A  stranger  as  welcome  as  »S —  Charity  26 

Satan-haunted    This  S-h  ruin,  this  little  city  of  sewers,  Happy  34 

Sate  (sat)     Round  the  hall  where  I  s.  The  Mermaid  26 

Sate  (to  gratify)     things  fair  to  s  my  various  eyes  !  Palace  of  Art  193 

Sated     And  s  with  the  innumerable  rose,  Princess  Hi  122 

Satiate    Nor  Arac,  s  with  his  victory.  „        vii  90 

Satiated    but  s  at  length  Came  to  the  ruins.  „       Pro.  90 

an  anger,  not  by  blood  to  be  s.  Boddicea  52 

With  meats  and  wines,  and  «  their  hearts —  Last  Tournament  725 

Satin  (adj.)     dipt  Beneath  the  s  dome  and  enter'd  in.  Princess  iv  31 

With  a  5  sail  of  a  ruby  glow.  The  Islet  13 

Satin  (s)     A  tent  of  s,  elaborately  wrought  Princess  Hi  348 

In  gloss  of  J!  and  gUmmer  of  pearls,  Matid  I  xxii  55 

Satin-shining    In  colour  like  the  s-s  palm  Merlin  and  V.  224 

Satin-wood     Erect  behind  a  desk  of  s-w,  Princess  n  105 

Satire    How  like  you  this  old  s  ?  '  Sea  Dreams  198 

Who  first  wrote  s,  with  no  pitj'  in  it.  „          202 

.shafts  Of  gentle  s,  kin  to  charity,  Prin<-ess  ii  469 

Satisfied     Look  to  thy  wants,  and  send  thee  s —  Gareth  and  L.  434 

But  rested  with  her  sweet  face  s  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  776 

And  Geraint  look'd  and  was  not  s.  Geraint  and  E.  435 

s  With  what  himself  had  done  so  graciously,  „              644 

But  when  at  la.st  his  doubts  were  s,  Lover's  Tale  iv  84 

Satisfy     And  »■  my  soul  with  kissing  her  :  Princess  v  103 

Satrap     when  her  S  bled  At  Issus  by  the  Syrian  gates,  Alexander  2 

Sattle  (settle)     An'  s  their  ends  upo  stools  Owd  Boa  24 

Sattled  (settled)     an'  s  'ersen  o'  my  knee,  North.  Cobbler  79 

I  gied  tha  a  raatin  that  s  thy  coortin  o'  me.  Spinster's  S's.  48 

Saturate    Tho'  soak'd  and  s,  out  and  out,  Will  Water.  87 

foul  adulteries  That  s  soul  with  body.  Aylmer's  Field  377 

Saturn    while  S  wliirLs,  his  stedfast  shade  Palace  of  Art  15 

Satyr    A  s,  a  s,  see — Follows  ;  Lucretius  192 

Glorifj'ing  clown  and  s  •  Princess  v  187 

Satyr-shape     Or  in  his  coarsest  S-s  In  Mem,,  xxxv  22 

Saucy     With  a  heaved  shoulder  and  a  s  smile,  Aylmer's  Field  466 

They  flash'd  a  s  message  to  and  fro  Princess,  Pro.  78 

till  a  rout  of  s  boys  Brake  on  as  at  our  books,  „           v  394 

forced  Sweet  love  on  pranks  of  s  boyhood  :  „        vii  344 

Saul    plaj'  the  S  that  never  will  be  Paui.  Sir  .1.  Oldcastle  103 

Saunter     to  those  that  s  in  the  broad  Aylmer's  Field  744 

Saunter'd     we  rose  And  s  home  beneath  a  moon,  Audley  Court  80 

(adj.)     1  mete  and  dole  Unequal  laws  unto 

a  s  race,  Ulysses  4 
I  will  take  some  s  woman,  she  shall  rear  my  dusky 

race.  LocJcsley  Hall  168 
For  I  was  near  him  when  the  s  yells  Of  Uther's 

peerage  died.  Com.  of  Arthur  256 

Balin,  '  the  S  ' — that  addition  thine —  Balin  and  Balan  53 

here  I  dwell  S  among  the  s  woods,  here  die —  „             486 

Chaste,  frugal,  s,  arm'd  by  day  and  night  Montenegro  3 

(s)     Mated  with  a  squalid  s —  Locksley  Ha.ll  177 

Peace,  you  young  s  of  the  Northern  wild  !  Princess  Hi  247 

A  huge  man-beast  of  boundless  s.  Gareth  and  L.  637 

Brute  bulk  of  limb,  or  boundless  s  „           1330 

and  tooth'd  with  grinning  s.'  Balin  and  Balan  197 

Save     (See  also  Saave)     who  can  s  But  wiU  not  ?  Supp.  Confessions  90 

And  s  me  lest  I  die  ?  '  Palace  of  Art  288 

died  To  s  her  father's  vow  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  196 

Dora  stored  wliat  little  she  could  s,  Dora  52 

To  s  her  little  finger  from  a  scratch  Edxcin  Morris  63 

Jesus,  if  thou  wilt  not  s  my  soul,  St.  S.  Stylites  46 


Save  (continued)     To  s  from  shame  and  thrall :  Sir  Galahad  16 
And  vex  the  unhappy  dust  thou  wouldst  not  s.      Come  not,  when,  etc.  4 

wish  To  s  all  earnings  to  the  uttermost,  Enoch  Arden  86 

be  pray'd  '  S  them  from  this,  whatever  comes  to  me.'  „         118 

To  s  the  offence  of  charitable,  „        342 

hope  of  life  approach  To  s  the  life  despair'd  of,  „        831 

(I  thought  1  could  have  died  to  s  it)  Sea  Dreams  134 

be  swerved  from  right  to  s  A  prince,  a  brother  ?  Princess  ii  290 

And  s  the  one  true  seed  of  freedom  Ode  on  Well.  162 

For,  saving  that,  ye  help  to  5  mankind  „             166 

But  as  he  s's  or  serves  the  state.  „             2(X> 

her  father  was  not  the  man  to  s,  Grandmother  5 

0  mother,  praying  God  will  s  Tliy  sailor, —  In  Mem.  vi  13 
And,  influence-rich  to  sooth  and  s,  „  Ixxx  14 
If  lowliness  could  s  her.  Maud  I  xii  20 

1  know  it  the  one  bright  thing  to  s  My  yet  young  life  „  xvi  20 
To  s  from  some  slight  shame  one  simple  girl.  „  xviii  45 
a  monster  unsubduable  Of  any  s  of  him  whom  I 

call'd —  Gareth  and  L.  859 

S  that  the  dome  was  purple,  and  above,  Crimson,  „            912 

To  s  her  dear  lord  whole  from  any  wound.  Geraint  and  E.  45 

I  s  a  life  dearer  to  me  than  mine.'  „  138 
Truly  s  for  fears,  My  fears  for  thee,                           Balin  and  Balan  146 

I  that  fain  had  died  To  s  thy  life,  „              600 

I  fly  to  thee.     S,  s  me  thou —  Merlin  and  V.  78 

Merlin,  tho'  you  do  not  love  me,  s.  Yet  s  me  !  '  „           944 

'  S  your  great  self,  fair  lord  ;  '  Lancelot  and  E.  320 

'  If  I  lose  myself,  I  s  myself  !  '  Holy  Grail  178 

Thou  hast  not  lost  thyself  to  s  thyself  As  Galahad.'  „           456 

And  s  it  even  in  extremes,  Guinevere  67 

To  s  his  blood  from  scandal,  „       514 

S  for  some  whisper  of  the  seething  seas.  Pass,  of  Arthur  121 

And  all  the  senses  weaken'd,  s  in  that.  Lover's  Tale  i  127 

s  in  that  Where  to  have  been  one  had  been  „             ii  26 

but  to  s  my  soul,  that  is  all  your  desire  :  Rizpah  77 
happier  using  the  knife  than  in  trying  to  s  the 

limb.  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  6 

for  it  never  could  s  us  a  life.  Def.  of  Lucknoio  86 

before  their  Gods,  And  wailing  '  S  us.'  Tiresias  106 

to  the  Faith  that  s's.  The  Wreck  3 
would  you  s  A  madman  to  vex  you  with  wretched 

words.  Despair  107 

Pierced  by  a  poison'd  dart.     S  me.  Death  of  (Enone  34 

Take  it,  and  s  me  from  it  !  Bandit's  Death  38 

darken'd  with  doubts  of  a  Faith  that  s's,  The  Dreamer  11 

Saved     Who  may  be  s  ?  who  is  it  may  be  s  ?  St.  S.  Stylites  47 

Can  1  work  miracles  and  not  be  s  ?  „             150 

It  cannot  be  but  that  I  shall  be  s  ;  „             152 

every  hour  is  s  From  that  eternal  silence,  Ulysses  26 

'  Thou  shalt  not  be  s  by  works  :  Vision  of  Sin  91 

'  A  sail !  a  sail !     I  am  s  ; '  Enoch  Arden  914 

you  may  yet  be  s,  and  therefore  fly  :  Princess  Hi  64 

You  s  our  life  :  we  owe  you  bitter  thanks :  „      iv  531 

'  He  s  my  life  :  my  brother  slew  him  for  it.'  „      vi  108 

let  the  land  whose  hearths  he  s  from  shame  Ode  on  Well.  225 

how  the  King  had  s  his  life  In  battle  twice, —  Gareth  and  L.  493 

Good  now,  ye  have  s  a  life  Worth  somewhat  „             827 

the  lord  whose  life  he  s  Had,  some  brief  space,  „             888- 

There  was  I  broken  down  ;  there  was  I  s  :  Geraint  and  E.  851 

and  roll'd  his  enemy  down,  And  s  him  :  Lancelot  and  E.  27 

Told  him  that  her  fine  care  had  s  his  life.  „            863 

That  s  her  many  times,  not  fail —  To  the  Queen  ii  62 

fed,  and  cherish'd  him,  and  s  his  life.  Lover's  Tale  iv  264 

Who  thrust  him  out,  or  him  who  s  his  hfe  ?  '  „              267 

service  of  the  one  so  s  was  due  All  to  the  saver —  „              279 

Dance  to  the  pibroch  ! — s  !  we  are  s  ! —  Def.  of  Lucknow  103 

S  by  the  valour  of  Havelock,  s  „             104 

'  Heresy — Not  shriven,  not  s  ?  '  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  144 

they  had  s  many  hundreds  from  wreck —  Despair  10 

Does  it  matter  how  many  they  s  ?  „         12 

and  you  s  me,  a  valueless  life  „         61 

S  when  your  life  was  wreck'd  !  The  Ring  305 

Saver     And  s  of  my  life  ;  Gareth  and  L.  879 

The  s  of  my  life.'  „  884 
service  of  the  one  so  saved  was  due  All  to  the  s —     Lover's  Tale  iv  280 


Saving 


604 


Saw 


Saving  {See  also  Saavin')  For,  s  that,  ye  help  to  save  mankind  Ode  on  Well.  166 

for  s  I  be  join'd  To  her  that  is  the  fairest  Com.  of  Arthur  85 

S  that  you  mistrusted  our  good  King  Gareth  and  L.  1172 

wrought  some  fury  on  myself,  S  for  Balan  :  Balin  and  Balan  63 

O  brother,  s  this  Sir  Galahad,  Holy  Grail  561 

^Vhere  s  hjs  own  sisters  he  had  known  Pelleas  and  E.  87 

S  his  life  on  the  fallow  flood.  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  61 

in  thy  virtue  lies  The  s  of  our  Thebes  ;  Tiresias  110 

S  women  and  their  babes,  Loclcsley  H.,  Sixty  64 

Savings     To  hoard  all  5  to  the  uttermost,  Enoch  Arden  46 

Saviour    0  God  Almighty,  blessed  S,  „        782 

0  s  of  the  silver-coasted  isle,  Ode  on  Well.  136 
She  bows,  she  bathes  the  S's  feet  In  Mem.  xxxii  11 
the  S  lives  but  to  bless.  Rizpah  64 
Who  finds  the  (S  in  his  mother  tongue.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  115 

Savour  (s)    she  has  neither  s  nor  salt,  Maud  I  ii2 

A  name  of  evil  s  in  the  land,  Gareth  and  L.  385 

The  s  of  thy  kitchen  came  upon  me  „            993 

Savour  (verb)    S's  well  to  thee  and  me.  Vision  of  Sin  158 

1  s  of  thy — virtues  ?  fear  them  ?  no.  Merlin  and  V.  39 
Saw  (maxim)    Thou  art  no  sabbath-drawler  of  old  s's.           To  J.  M.  K.  5 

Not  clinging  to  some  ancient  s  ;  Love  thou  thy  land  29 

and  cast  thee  back  Thine  own  small  s,  Last  Tournament  712 

SawJ(sow)     s's  'ere  a  bean  an'  yonder  a  pea ;  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  46 

Saw  (tool)     May  never  s  dismember  thee.  Talking  Oak  261 

Shaping  their  pretty  cabin,  hammer  and  axe.  Auger 

and  s,  Enoch  Arden  174 

Saw  (verb)  (See  also  Seead,  Seea'd,  Seed,  See'd)  She  s  the  gusty 

shadow  sway.  Mariana  52 

I  s  him — in  his  golden  prime,  Arabian  Nights  153 

that  the  duU  S  no  divinity  in  grass,  A  Character  8 
He  s  thro'  life  and  death,  thro'  good  and  ill.  He  s  thro' 

his  own  soul.  The  Poet  5 

Slow  sail'd  the  weary  mariners  and  s,  Sea-Fairies  1 

She  s  me  fight,  she  heard  me  call,  Oriana  32 

they  s  thee  from  the  secret  shrine  Alexander  13 

She  s  the  water-lUy  bloom,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  39 

She  s  the  helmet  and  the  plume,  „                40 

'  To-day  I  s  the  dragon-fly  Come  from  the  wells                 Two  Voices  8 

'  To  search  thro'  all  I  felt  or  s,  „      139 

S  distant  gates  of  Eden  gleam,  „      212 

But  ere  I  s  your  eyes,  my  love,  Miller's  D.  43 

I  5  the  village  lights  below ;  „        108 

Sometimes  I  s  you  sit  and  spin ;  „        121 

To  list  a  foot-fall,  ere  he  s  The  wood-nymph,  Palace  of  Art  110 

standing  s  The  hollow  orb  of  moving  Circimistance  „            254 

nothing  s,  for  her  despair,  But  dreadful  time,  „            266 

1  s  the  snare,  and  I  retired  :  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  6 

To-night  I  s  the  sun  set :  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  5 

I  s  you  sitting  in  the  house,  „         Con.  30 

They  s  the  gleaming  river  seaward  flow  Lotos-Eaters  14 

I  5,  wherever  light  Ulumineth,  D.  of  F.  Women  14 

I  s  crowds  in  column'd  sanctuaries ;  „              22 

At  length  I  s  a  lady  within  call,  „              85 

I  turning  s,  throned  on  a  flowery  rise,  „            125 

We  s  the  large  white  stars  rise  one  by  one,  „            223 

'  S  God  divide  the  night  with  flying  flame,  „            225 

Ere  I  s  her,  who  clasp'd  in  her  last  trance  „            266 

But  when  he  s  the  wonder  of  the  hilt,  M.  d' Arthur  85 

I  never  s.  Nor  shall  see,  here  or  elsewhere,  „          153 

Bom  out  of  everything  I  heard  and  s.  Gardener's  D.  66 

I,  that  whole  day,  S  her  no  more,  „          164 

Mary  s  the  boy  Was  not  with  Dora.  Dora  111 

You  s  the  man — on  Monday,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  30 

in  these  latter  springs  I  5  Yoiu"  own  Olivia  blow,  Talking  Oak  75 

s  The  dim  curls  kindle  into  sunny  rings ;  Tithonus  53 

Many  a  night  I  s  the  Pleiads,  Locksley  Hall  9 

S  the  Vision  of  the  world,  (repeat)  „    16,  120 

S  the  heavens  fill  with  commerce,  „          121 

she  s  The  white-flower'd  elder-thicket  Godiva  62 

And  see  the  vision  that  I  s,  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  14 

in  a  court  he  s  A  something-pottle-bodied  boy  WUl  Water.  130 

Than  all  those  she  s  before  :  L.  of  Burleigh  46 

How  oft  we  s  the  Sun  retire.  The  Voyage  17 

He  8  not  far :  his  eyes  were  dim  :  „          75 


Saw  (verb)  {continued)    And  s  the  altar  cold  and  bare. 
I  s  with  half-imconscious  eye  She  wore  the  colours 
I  s  that  every  morning,  far  withdrawn 
I  s  within  my  head  A  gray  and  gap-tooth'd  man 
s  the  pair,  Enoch  and  Annie,  sitting  hand-in-hand. 
She  s  him  not :  and  while  he  stood  on  deck 
All  these  he  s  :  but  what  he  fain  had  seen 
if  griefs  Like  his  have  worse  or  better,  Enoch  s. 
he  s  Philip,  the  slighted  suitor  of  old  times, 
s  The  mother  glancing  often  toward  her  babe, 
and  s  the  babe  Hers,  yet  not  his, 
he  s  Death  dawning  on  him,  and  the  close  of  all. 
And  tell  my  daughter  Annie,  whom  I  s 
I  s  where  James  Made  toward  us, 
grizzled  cripple,  whom  I  s  Sunning  himself 
S  from  his  windows  nothing  save  his  own — 
thro'  every  labyrinth  till  he  s  An  end. 
Broke  into  nature's  music  when  they  s  her. 
5  No  pale  sheet-lightnings  from  afar, 
that  they  s,  the  sea. 
Hyprocrisy,  I  s  it  in  him  at  once, 
then  1  s  one  lovely  star  Larger  and  larger. 
Methought  I  never  s  so  fierce  a  fork — 
I  s  the  flaring  atom-streams  And  torrents 
Half-suffocated,  and  sprang  up,  and  s — 
I  s  The  feudal  warrior  lady-clad  ; 
they  s  the  king  ;  he  took  the  gifts  ; 
I  s  my  father's  face  Grow  long  and  troubled 
life  !  he  never  s  the  like  ; 
How  s  you  not  the  inscription  on  the  gate, 
turning  roimd  we  s  The  Lady  Blanche's  daughter 
Melissa  hitting  all  we  s  with  shafts  Of  gentle  satire, 
'  Who  ever  s  such  wild  barbarians  ? 
s  The  soft  white  vapour  streak  the  crowned  towers 
began  to  change — I  s  it  and  grieved — 
S  that  they  kept  apart,  no  mischief  done  ; 
we  s  the  lights  and  heard  The  voices  murmuring, 
when  we  s  the  embattled  squares, 
and  I  s  That  equal  baseness  lived  in  sleeker  times 
and  s  the  palace-front  Ahve  with  fluttering  scarfs 
Seeing  I  s  not,  hearing  not  I  heard  :  Tho',  if  I  s  not, 

yet  they  told  me  all 
when  she  s  me  lying  stark,  Dishelm'd  and  mute, 
when  she  s  The  haggard  father's  face 
she  s  them,  and  a  day  Rose  from  the  distance 
I  s  the  forms  :  I  knew  not  where  I  was  : 
s  Thee  woman  thro'  the  cnist  of  iron  moods 
turning  s  The  happy  valleys,  half  in  light, 
And  there  we  s  Sir  Walter  where  he  stood, 
he  turn'd,  and  I  s  his  eyes  all  wet, 
crossing,  oft  we  s  the  glisten  Of  ice. 
For  I  in  spirit  s  thee  move 
We  s  not,  when  we  moved  therein  ? 
And  s  the  tumult  of  the  haUs  ; 
He  brought  an  eye  for  aU  he  «  ; 
That  s  thro'  all  the  Muses'  walk  ; 
Wrapt  in  a  cloak,  as  I  s  him, 
1  s  the  treasured  splendour,  her  hand, 
Down  by  the  hill  I  s  them  ride. 
Yet  I  thought  I  s  her  stand. 
Till  I  5  the  dreary  phantom  arise  and  fly 
She  s  him  not,  or  mark'd  not,  if  she  s, 
he  5  The  smallest  rock  far  on  the  faintest  hill, 
'  And  there  I  s  mage  Merlin, 
Ran  like  a  colt,  and  leapt  at  all  he  s  : 
nodded  and  slept,  and  s,  Dreaming,  a  slope  of  land 
s  The  splendour  sparkling  from  aloft, 
they  s  the  silver-misty  morn  Rolling  her  smoke 
s  nor  one  Nor  other,  but  in  all  the  listening  eyes 
Gareth  s  The  shield  of  Gawain  blazon'd  rich 
s  the  knights  Clash  like  the  coming  and  retiring  wave, 
s  without  the  door  King  Arthur's  gift, 
s,  Bowl-shaped,  thro'  tops  of  many  thousand  pines 
horse  thereon  stumbled — ay,  for  I  s  it. 
and  when  he  s  the  star  Gleam, 


The 
Aylmer 


The  Letters  4 

.  .      "  15 

Vision  of  Sin  48 

59 

Enoch  Arden  i 

243 

580 

741 

744 

753 

759 

831 

882 

Brook  116 

s  Field  8 

21 

479 

694 

725 

Sea  Dreams  36 

64 

93 

Lucretius  28 

38 

58 

Princess,  Pro.  118 

t46 

58 

186 

m194 

320 

468 

Hi  42 

343 

11)299 

340 

558 

w246 

384 

508- 

viVd 
100 
102 
111 

vii  133 

341 

Cow.  40 

81 

Grandmother  49 

The  Daisy  Z5 

In  Mem.  ocvii  5 

„        xxiv  16 

„     Ixxxvii  4 

„      Ixxxix  9 

„  cix  4 

Maud  I  i59 

„       vi  84 

ix  11 

„    Hi  38 

„IIIvi36 

Com.  of  Arthur  53 

98 

280 

322 

427 

Gareth  and  L.  48 

189 

326 

415 

521 

676 

795 

1057 

1218 


Saw 


605 


Saw 


Saw  (verb)  (continued)  s  That  Death  was  cast  to  ground,    Gareth  and  L.  1402 
He  look'd  and  s  that  all  was  ruinous.  Marr.  of  Geraint  315 

For  if  he  be  the  knight  whom  late  Is  „  406 

I  s  you  moving  by  me  on  the  bridge,  „  429 

For  this  dear  child,  because  I  never  s,  „  497 

And  looking  round  he  s  not  Enid  there,  „  506 

Men  s  the  goodly  hilis  of  Somerset,  „  828 

By  the  flat  meadow,  till  she  s  them  come ;  „  832 

I  5  three  bandits  by  the  rock  Waiting  to  fall  on  you,  Geraint  and  E.  72 
S  once  a  great  piece  of  a  promontory,  „  *162 

When  now  they  s  their  bulwark  fallen,  „  168 

In  former  days  you  s  me  favourably.  ,,  315 

when  she  s  him  ride  More  near  by  many  a  rood  „  441 

turning  round  she  s  Dust,  and  the  points  of  lances  .,  448 

Who  s  the  chargers  of  the  two  that  fell  ,.  481 

Rose  when  they  s  the  dead  man  rise,  „  732 

But  s  me  not,  or  mark'd  not  if  you  s  ;  ,.  870 

for  a  minute,  till  he  s  her  Pass  into  it,  „  886 

he  s  not  whence.  Strikes  from  behind.  Balin  and  Balan  130 

We  s  the  hoof-print  of  a  horse,  no  more.'  .,  133 

once  he  s  the  thrall  His  passion  half  had  gauntleted  „  219 

As  if  he  s  not,  glanced  aside,  „  248 

Last  night  methought  I  s  That  maiden  Saint  „  260 

s  The  foimtain  where  they  sat  together,  „  290 

I  s  the  flash  of  him  but  yestereven.  „  303 

s.  With  pointed  lance  as  if  to  pierce,  a  shape,  „  324 

That  5  to-day  the  shadow  of  a  spear,  ,,  373 

in  simple  nakedness,  jS  them  embrace :  „  519 

'  I  s  the  little  elf-god  eyeless  once  Merlin  and  V.  249 

I  look'd,  and  s  you  following  still,  „  299 

gloom'd  Your  fancy  when  ye  s  me  following  you,  „  326 

Because  1 5  you  sad,  to  comfort  you.  „  441 

He  5  two  cities  in  a  thousand  boats  „  561 

men  Became  a  crystal,  and  he  s  them  thro'  it,  „  630 

Nor  s  she  save  the  King,  who  wrought  the  charm,  „  643 

s  The  knights,  the  court,  the  King,  „  874 

since  he  s  The  slow  tear  creep  from  her  closed  eyelid  „  905 

raised  his  eyes  and  s  The  tree  that  shone  white-listed  „  938 

s  Fired  from  the  west,  far  on  a  hill,  Lancelot  and  E.  167 

„  306 

316 

351 

461 

670 

662 

794 

805 

„  815 

920 

1167 

1173 

1244 

1391 

Holy  Grail  67 

100 

156 

198 

216 

262 

280 

282 

290 

380 

429 

462 


I  s  him,  after,  stand  High  on  a  heap  of  slain, 

I  never  s  his  like  :  there  lives  No  greater  leader.' 

s  The  maiden  standing  in  the  dewy  light. 

till  he  s  Which  were  the  weaker ; 

when  he  s  the  Queen,  embracing  ask'd, 

Gawain  s  Sir  Lancelot's  aziure  lions, 

Whom  when  she  s, '  Lavaine,'  she  cried, 

there  first  she  s  the  casque  Of  Lancelot  on  the  wall : 

Then  she  that  s  him  lying  unsleek,  unshorn, 

Lancelot  s  that  she  withheld  her  wish, 

s  One  of  her  house,  and  sent  him  to  the  Queen 

s  with  a  sidelong  eye  The  shadow  of  some  piece 

wild  Queen,  who  s  not,  burst  away  To  weep 

s  the  barge  that  brought  her  moving  down, 

But  who  first  s  the  holy  thing  to-day  ?  ' 

She  might  have  risen  and  floated  when  I  s  her. 

s  the  bright  boy-knight,  and  bound  it  on  him, 

found  and  s  it,  as  the  nvm  My  sister  s  it ; 

Some  little  of  this  marvel  he  too  s, 

s  The  golden  dragon  sparkling  over  all : 

I  heard  the  sound,  I  s  the  light, 

I  sware  a  vow  to  follow  it  till  I  s.' 

s  the  Holy  Grail,  I  5  the  Holy  Grail 

8  deep  lawns,  and  then  a  brook, 

I  s  That  man  had  once  dwelt  there  ; 

I  s  The  holy  elements  alone  ; 

but  he,  '  «S  ye  no  more  ?     I,  Galahad,  s  the  Grail, 

The  Holy  Grail, 
I  s  the  fiery  face  as  of  a  child  That  smote  itself 
At  once  I  s  him  far  on  the  great  Sea, 
If  boat  it  were — I  s  not  whence  it  came, 
again  Roaring,  I  5  him  like  a  silver  star — 
I  s  the  least  of  little  stars  Down  on  the  waste, 
I  s  the  spiritual  city  and  all  her  spires 
8  ye  none  beside.  None  of  your  knights  ?  ' 
I  s  The  pelican  on  the  casque  of  our  Sir  Bors 


464 
466 
510 
515 
517 
524 
526 
631 
634 


Saw  (verb)  {continued)     Who,  when  he  s  me,  rose,  and  bad 

me  hail, 
tum'd  to  whom  at  first  He  s  not, 
I  may  not  speak  of  it :  I  s  it ; ' 
But  nothing  in  the  sounding  hall  I  s, 
yet  methought  I  s  the  Holy  Grail, 
I  had  sworn  1  s  That  which  I  s  ;  but  what  I  s  was 

veil'd  And  cover'd  ; 
And  as  ye  s  it  ye  have  spoken  truth. 
My  greatest  hardly  will  beUeve  he  s  ; 
but  s  Near  him  a  mound  of  even-sloping  side, 
glancing  thro'  the  hoary  boles,  he  s. 
She  that  s  him  cried,  '  Damsels — 
But  s  the  postern  portal  also  wide  Yawning ; 
hiss,  snake — I  s  him  there — 
he  s  High  up  in  heaven  the  hall  that  Merlin  built. 
He  glanced  and  s  the  stately  galleries. 
He  s  the  laws  that  ruled  the  tournament 
as  the  water  Moab  s  Come  rovmd  by  the  East, 
look'd  and  s  The  great  Queen's  bower  was  dark, — 
s  the  Queen  who  sat  betwixt  her  best  Enid, 
and  more  than  this  He  s  not. 
He  s  them — headland  after  headland  flame 
the  golden  days  In  which  she  s  him  first. 
Came  to  that  point  where  first  she  s  the  King 
she  s,  Wet  with  the  mists  and  smitten  by  the  lights, 
she  look'd  and  s  The  novice,  weeping, 
I  5  One  lying  in  the  dust  at  Almesbury, 
since  he  s  not  whom  he  fought. 
Look'd  up  for  heaven,  and  only  s  the  mist ; 
But  when  he  s  the  wonder  of  the  hilt, 
I  never  s,  Nor  shaU  see,  here  or  elsewhere, 
s,  Straining  his  eyes  beneath  an  arch  of  hand, 
thought  he  s,  the  speck  that  bare  the  King, 
Before  he  s  my  day  my  father  died.  And  he  was 

happy  that  he  5  it  not ; 
looking  back,  we  s  The  clefts  and  openings 
she  s  Beneath  her  feet  the  region  far  away, 
And  s  the  motion  of  all  other  things  ; 
I  s  There,  where  I  hoped  myself  to  reign 
I  s  the  moonlight  glitter  on  their  tears — 
But  cast  a  parting  glance  at  me,  you  s, 
he  s  His  lady  with  the  moonlight  on  her  face ; 
when  I  s  her  (and  I  thought  him  crazed, 
Julian  goes,  the  lord  of  all  he  s. 
I,  by  Lionel  sitting,  s  his  face  Fire, 
s  The  bridesmaid  pale,  statuelike, 
when  I  s  him  come  in  at  the  door, 
we  s  the  rivers  roll  from  Paradise  ! 
and  I  s  The  glory  of  the  Lord  flash  up, 
I  s  that  we  could  not  stay, 
I  s  him  and  let  him  be. 
He  s  not  his  daughter — he  blest  her : 
meanings  ambush'd  under  all  they  s, 
There  in  a  secret  olive-glade  I  s  Pallas  Athene 
mask  that  I  s  so  amazed  me, 
I  s  that  a  boat  was  nearing  us — 
as  I  s  the  white  sail  run.  And  darken, 
who  5  the  death,  but  kept  the  deck. 
You  s  the  league-long  rampart-fire 
A  sudden  nightingale  S  thee, 
crocus-purple  hour  That  s  thee  vanish. 
I  s  the  tiger  in  the  ruin'd  fane 
but  trace  of  thee  I  s  not ; 
I  never  s  it  yet  so  all  ablaze 
stretch'd  my  hands  As  if  I  s  her ; 
We  s  far  off  an  old  forsaken  house, 
And  s  the  world  fly  by  me  Hke  a  dream, 
one  day  came  And  s  you,  shook  her  head, 
and  once  we  only  s  Your  gilded  vane, 
the  matron  s  That  hinted  love  was  only  wasted  bait 
Who  s  you  kneel  beside  your  bier. 
And  him  I  s  but  once  again. 


Holy  Grail  725 
752 
759 
828 
846 

850 

880 

896 

Pelleas  and  E.  24 

50 
188 
420 
471 
552 
Last  Tournament  145 
160 
482 
757 
Guinevere  27 

30 
243 
381 
403 
596 
663 
Pass,  of  Arthur  76 

99 
112 
253 
321 
463 
465 

Lover's  Tale  i  191 

329 

394 

574 

590 

697 

„  iv  4 

56 

163 

315 

322 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  211 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  2 

Columbus  27 

81 

V.  of  Maeldune  35 

128 

To  Prin.  F.  of  H.  3 

Tiresias  5 

„      39 

The  Wreck  117 

123 

The  "Flight  39 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  63 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  27 

Demeter  and  P.  12 

51 

79 

81 

The  Ring  81 

„       117 

„       155 

„       180 

„      313 

„      330 

„      359 

Happy  54 

79 


I  s  bejjrond  their  silent  tops  The  steaming  marshes    Prog,  of  Spring  74 
I  s,  whenever  In  passing  it  glanced  upon  Merlin  and  the  G.  102 


Saw 


606 


Say 


Saw  (verb)  (continued)    she  s  Him,  climbing  toward  her 

with  the  golden  fruit,  Death  of  (Enone  14 

and  s  The  ring  of  faces  redden'd  by  the  flames  „              91 

Thou,  thou — I  s  thee  fall  before  me,  Akbar's  Dream  185 
on  a  sudden  we  s  your  soldiei-s  crossing  the  ridge,       Bandit's  Death  21 

An'  s  by  the  Gi"aace  o'  the  Lord,  Church-warden,  etc.  42 

S  them  lie  confounded.  The  Tourney  14 

Sawdust     Or  elbow-deep  in  s,  slept.  Will  Water.  99 

Sawest     Who  never  «  Caerleon  upon  Usk —  Balin  and  Balan  570 

Thou  s  a  gloi-y  growing  on  the  night,  Epit.  on  Caxton  2 

Sawing     stump  Pitch-blacken'd  s  the  air,  Last  Tournament  67 

Sawn     s  In  twain  beneath  the  ribs  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  52 

Saxon    (See  also  West-Saxons,  West-Saxon-land)    S 

and  NoiTiian  and  Dane  are  we,  W.  to  Alexandra  3 

For  S  or  Dane  or  Norman  we,  „          31 
S  and  Angle  from  Over  the  broad  billow            Batt.  of  Brunanburh  118 

Noble  the  S  who  hurl'd  at  his  Idol  Kapiolani  4 

Say  (s)     (See  also  Sa&y)     Give  me  my  fling,  and  let  me 

say  my  s.'  Aylmer's  Field  399 

men  are  bold  and  strongly  say  their  s : —  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  32 

Say  thou  thy  s,  and  I  will  do  my  deed.  Gareth  and  L.  901 

You  said  your  s ;  Mine  answer  was  my  deed.  „             1174 

I  am  Lancelot ;  say  thy  s.'  Pelleas  and  E.  582 

Say  (verb)     May  children  of  our  children  s,  To  the  Queen  23 

Men  s  that  Thou  Didst  die  for  me,  Supp.  Confessions  2 

still  as  I  comb'd  I  would  sing  and  s,  The  Mermaid  12 

What  they  s  betwixt  their  wings  ?  Adeline  29 

She  has  heard  a  whisper  s,  L.  of  Skalott  ii  3 

she  s's  A  fire  dances  before  her,  (Enone  263 

but  I  care  not  what  they  s.  May  Queen  19 

They  s  he's  dying  all  for  love,  „        21 

They  s  liis  heart  is  breaking,  mother —  „        22 
I  shall  hearken  what  you  s,                               May  Queen,  N.  ¥'s.  E.  39 

And  s  to  Robin  a  kind  word,  „                       Con.  45 

Yet  something  I  did  wish  to  s:  To  J.  S.  60 

Is  this  enough  to  s  That  my  desire.  Gardener's  D.  236 

He  s's  that  he  will  never  see  me  more.'  Dora  116 

I  scarce  have  other  music :  yet  s  on  Edwin  Morris  57 

They  s  that  they  are  heal'd.  St.  S.  Stylites  146 

I  do  not  s  But  that  a  time  may  come —  „             189 

S  thou,  whereon  I  carved  her  name.  Talking  Oak  33 

Will  some  one  s,  Then  why  not  ill  for  good  ?  Love  and  Duty  27 

How  s  you  ?  we  have  slept,  my  lords.  Day-Dm.,  Revival  21 

As  who  shall  s  me  nay :  Will  Water.  92 

S's  to  her  that  loves  him  well,  L.  of  Burleigh  22 

She  was  more  fair  than  words  can  s :  Beggar  Maid  2 

And  s  she  would  be  little  wife  to  both.  Enoch  Arden  36 

still  foreboding  '  what  would  Enoch  s  ?  '  „          253 

Him  and  his  children  not  to  s  me  nay —  „           308 

they  s  that  women  are  so  quick —  „          408 

And  s  to  Philip  that  I  blest  him  too ;  „          886 

Far  as  we  tiuck  ourselves — I  s  that  this —  Aylmer's  Field  306 

And  you  shall  s  that  having  spoken  with  me,  „            311 

JUted  I  was :  I  s  it  for  your  peace.  „            354 

Give  me  my  fling,  and  let  me  s  my  say.'  „            399 

How  many  will  s  '  forgive,'  Sea  Dreams  60 

What  does  little  birdie  s  In  her  nest  „        293 

What  does  little  baby  s.  In  her  bed  at  peep  of  day  ?  „        301 

No  matter ;  we  will  s  whatever  comes.  Princess,  Pro.  239 

1,  Who  am  not  mine,  s,  live  :  „             ii  223 

She  s's  the  Princess  should  have  been  the  Head,  „            Hi  34 

in  the  second  place.  Some  s  the  thii-d —  „                158 

Your  Highness  might  have  seem'd  the  thing  you  s.'  „                202 

S  to  her,  1  do  but  wanton  in  the  South,  „            iv  109 

and  to  shame  That  which  he  s's  he  loves :  „                249 

let  me  s  but  this.  That  many  a  famous  man  and  woman,     „  444 

as  they  s  The  seal  does  music ;  „                455 

when  they  s  The  chUd  is  hers ;  .          „              vSQ 

and  yet  they  s  that  still  You  love  ber.  „                122 

How  s  you,  war  or  not  ? '  „                124 

neither  seem'd  there  more  to  5 :  „                330 

8  one  soft  word  and  let  me  part  forgiven.'  „           vi  219 

said  you  had  a  heart — I  heard  her  s  it —  „                234 

Far,  how  far  no  tongue  can  s.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  30 

men  are  bold  and  strongly  s  their  say : —  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  32 


Say  (verb)  (continued)     and  Willy,  you  s,  is  gone.  Grandmother  8  ,i 

S's  that  I  moant  'a  naw  moor  aale :  iV.  Farmer,  0.  /S.  3  | 
Doctors,  they  knaws  nowt,  fur  a  s's  what's  naw- 

ways  true :  ,.              5 ' 

an'  a  s's  it  easy  an'  freea  ,,             25 

S's  to  thessen  naw  doubt '  what  a  man  a  bea  sewer-loy ! '       ,.  54 

Sin'  I  mun  doy  I  mun  doy,  thaw  loife  they  s's  is  sweet,          ..            63 

thy  muther  s's  thou  wants  to  many  the  lass,  .,  N.  S.  31 

Somebody  said  that  she'd  s  no  ;  (repeat)  Window,  Letter  7,  14 

'  As  pure  and  perfect  as  I  s  ?  In  Mem.  xxiv  2 

Whatever  fickle  tongues  may  s.  ..         xxvi  4 

Or  so  methinks  the  dead  would  s ;  „    Ixxxv ! 

Except,  like  them,  thou  too  canst  s,  ,,         xciv  7 

Whate'er  the  faithless  people  s.  ..      xcvii  16 

And  yet  myself  have  heard  him  s,  „    xcviii  20 

They  s,  The  solid  earth  whereon  we  tread  „      cxviii  7 

One  s's,  we  are  villains  all.  Maud  I  ilT  . 

And  s's  he  is  rough  but  kind,  „     xix  70 

0  then,  what  then  shall  Is?—  „  92 
what  will  the  old  man  s  ?  (repeat)  Maud  II  v  83,  87 
But  s,  these  four.  Who  be  they  ?  Gareth  and  L.  626 
'  S  thou  thy  say,  and  1  will  do  my  deed.  „  901 
tell  him  wliat  I  think  and  what  they  s.  Marr.  of  Geraint  90 
ye  look  so  scared  at  what  I  s :  Geraint  and  E.  339 
what  s  ye,  shall  we  strip  him  there  Your  lover  ?  „  488 
Enid  could  not  s  one  tender  word,  „  746 
some  do  s  that  our  Sir  Garlon  too  Hath  leam'd 

black  magic,  Balin  and  Balan  304 

'  Who  are  wise  in  love  Love  most,  s  least,'  Merlin  and  V.  248 

Yet  you  are  wise  who  s  it ;  „             252 

'  S's  she  not  well  ?  and  there  is  more—  „            450 

proof  against  the  grain  Of  him  ye  s  ye  love  :  „            488 

Should  try  this  chann  on  whom  ye  s  ye  love.'  „            525 

What  dare  the  full-fed  bars  s  of  me  ?  „            692 

'  O  ay,  what  s  ye  to  Sir  Valence,  „             705 

What  s  ye  then  to  sweet  Sir  Sagramore,  „             721 

What  s  ye  then  to  fair  Sir  Percivale  „             747 

'  0  ay ;  what  s  ye  to  Sir  Lancelot,  „             769 

What  did  the  wantons?  „             812 

heathen,  who,  some  s,  shall  rule  the  land  Lancelot  and  E.  65 

1  might  s  that  1  had  seen.'  ,,  427 
if  1  could  believe  tlie  things  you  .9  ,,  1097 
For  so  they  s,  these  books  of  ours,  Holy  Grail  65 
Our  Lady  s's  it,  and  we  well  believe :  „  604 
and  yet  I  should  be  shamed  to  s  it —  Pelleas  and  E.  189 
I  will  s  That  1  have  slain  thee.  „  345 
Blowing  liis  bugle  as  who  should  s  him  nay.'  „  381 
I  am  Lancelot ;  s  thy  say.'  „  582 
and  s  My  tower  is  full  of  harlots,  Uke  his  court.  Last  Tournament  80 
s  My  knights  are  all  adulterers  like  his  own,  „  83 
and  s  his  hour  is  come.  The  heathen  are  upon  him,  ,,  86 
Swine,  s  ye  ?  swine,  goats,  asses,  rams  and  geese  ,,  321 
Lied,  s  ye  ?  Nay,  but  learnt,  „  656 
himself  would  s  Sir  Lancelot  had  the  noblest ;  Guinevere  319 
Not  to  break  in  on  what  I  s  by  word  Or  whisper,  Love's  Tale  iv  352 
The  men  would  s  of  the  maids.  First  Quarrel  28 
But  s  nothing  hard  of  my  boy,  Rizpah  22 
he  had  something  further  to  s,  „  43 
I  charge  you  never  to  s  that  I  laid  him  „  58 
You  s  that  you  can  do  it  as  willingly  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  70 


but  I  know  that  I  heard  him  s 

'  He  s's  I  shall  never  live  thro'  it, 

S  that  His  day  is  done !     Ah  why  should  we  care 

what  they  s  ? 
What  did  he  s.  My  frighted  Wiclif-preacher 
Then  some  one  standing  by  my  grave  will  s, 
is  a  man  to  be  loved  by  the  women  they  s. 
'  Tho'  some  have  gleams  or  so  they  s 
^vrite  ten  lines,  they  s.  At  dawn, 
s  That  here  the  torpid  mummy  wheat 
What  did  she  s  ? 
and  seem'd  to  s  '  Again.' 
You  s  your  body  is  so  foul — 
Yet '  Alia,'  s's  their  sacred  book,  '  is  Love,' 
What  am  I  doing,  you  s  to  me, 


In  the  Child.  Hasp.  21 
47 


Sir 


71 

J.  Oldcastle  37 

Columbus  209 

The  Wreck  18 

Ancient  Sage  214 

Poets  and  their  B.  2 

To  Prof.  Jebb  4 

Tlie  Ring  99 

The  Ring  154 

Happy  25 

Akbar's  Dream  73 

Charity  1 


Sayest 


607 


Scatter 


Sayest     'Tis  Kate — She  s  what  she  will :  Kate  6 

as  thou  s,  a  Fairy  King  And  Fairy  Queens  Gareth  atid  L.  258 

as  thou  s,  it  is  enchanted,  son,  „  263 

Sajnng  (part.)     (See  also  Saayin')     s  that  which  pleased  him, 

for  he  smiled.  Enoch  Arden  757 

S  this,  The  woman  half  tuni'd  round  Sea  Dreams  285 

and  I  (Pardon  me  s  it)  were  much  loth  Princess  i  156 

So  s  from  the  com-t  we  paceti,  „      Hi  117 

Shame  might  befall  Melissa,  knowing,  *  not  she  knew :  „  148 

S  in  odour  and  colour,  '  Ah,  be  Among  the  roses  Mavd  I  xxi  12 

King  Made  feast  for,  s,  as  they  sat  at  meat,  Com.  of  Arthur  247 

s  this  the  seer  Went  thro'  the  strait  „  394 

s  thou  wert  basely  born.  Gareth  and  L.  355 

Reproach  you,  s  all  your  force  is  gone  ?  Marr.  of  Geraint  88 

s  all  his  force  Is  melted  into  mere  effeminacy  ?  „  106 

So  s,  from  the  carven  flower  above,  Lancelot  atid  E.  549 

hopes  are  mine,'  and  s  that,  she  choked,  ,.  607 

<S  which  she  seized.  And,  thro'  the  casement  „  1233 

s  to  me  That  Guinevere  had  sinn'd  against  the 

liighest.  Last  Tournament  569 

ev'n  in  s  this.  Her  memory  from  old  habit  Guinevere  378 

And  well  for  thee,  s  in  my  dark  hour,  Pass,  of  Arthur  159 

What  am  I  5  ?  and  what  are  you  ?  Eizvah  11 

So  s,  light-foot  Iris  pass'd  away.  Achilles  over  the  T.  1 

What  art  thou  s  ?     '  And  was  not  Alia  Akbar's  Bream  8Q 

Sasiag  (s)     A  s,  hard  to  shape  in  act ;  Love  thou  thy  land  49 

a  s  learnt.  In  days  far-off,  Tithonus  47 

What  is  their  pretty  s  ?  jilted,  is  it?  Aylmer's  Field  353 

dark  s's  from  of  old  Ranging  and  ringing  Com.  of  Arthur  415 

thy  foul  s's  fought  for  me :  Gareth  and  L.  1 180 

And  mirthful  s's,  children  of  the  place,  Holy  Grail  555 

a  s  that  anger'd  her.  Last  Tournament  628 

Scabbard    when  she  show'd  the  wealthy  s,  Aylmer's  Field  236 

Scaffold    (See  also  Death-scaffold)    S's,  still  sheets  of 

water,  D.  of  F.  Women  34 

Scald    That  let  the  bantling  s  at  home,  Princess  v  458 

Scale  (for  weighing)    fortunes,  justlier  balanced,  s  with  s,'  „      ii  66 

takes  it  up.  And  topples  down  tlie  s's ;  „      v  445 

While  slowly  falling  as  a  s  that  falls,  Marr.  of  Geraint  525 

Scale  (graduated  series)     Along  the  s  of  ranks,  thro'  all,  In  Mem.  cxi  2 

Scale  (of  armour)     splendours  and  the  golden  s  Of  harness,        Princess  v  41 

Scale  (proportion)     Because  the  s  is  infinite.  Two  Voices  93 

Scale  (verb)    she  that  out  of  Lethe  s's  with  man  Princess  vii  261 

To  s  the  heaven's  highest  height.  In  Mem.  cviii  7 

to  s  the  highest  of  the  heights  With  some  strange  hope         Tiresias  28 
The  leper  plague  may  s  my  skin  Hafpy  27 

Scaled     Suddenly  *  the  light.  Palace  of  Art  8 

And  s  in  sheets  of  wasteful  foam.  Sea  Dreams  53 

Shall  find  the  toppling  crags  of  Duty  s  Ode  on  Well.  215 

s  with  help  a  hundred  feet  Up  from  the  base :         Baiin  and  Balan  170 
High  with  the  last  line  s  her  voice,  Lancelot  and  E.  1019 

The  spiring  stone  that  s  about  her  tower,  Last  Tournament  511 

I  s  the  buoyant  liighway  of  the  birds.  Prog,  of  Spring  80 

Scaling    Tho'  s  slow  from  grade  to  grade ;  Two  Voices  174 

But  after  s  half  the  weary  down,  Enoch  Arden  372 

crag  and  tree  S,  Sir  Lancelot  from  the  perilous  nest.   Last  Tournament  18 

Scalp     From  s  to  sole  one  slough  and  crust  St.  S.  Stylites  2 

Beat  into  my  s  and  my  brain,  Maud  II  v  10 

Scan     I  s  him  now  Beastlier  than  any  phantom  Lucretius  195 

We  needs  must  «  him  from  head  to  feet  Dead  Prophet  55 

Scandal     Begins  the  s  and  the  cry :  You  might  have  won  16 

Old  s's  buried  now  seven  decads  deep  In  other  s's 
that  have  Uved  and  died.  And  left  the  living  s 
that  shall  die —  Aylmer's  Field  442 

You'll  have  no  s  while  you  dine.  To  F.  D.  Maurice^  17 

like  a  city,  with  gossip,  s,  and  spite ;  Maud  I  iv  8 

Nun  as  she  was,  the  s  of  the  Court,  Holy  Grail  78 

once  the  talk  And  s  of  our  table,  had  retum'd ;  ,,        650 

To  spy  some  secret  s  if  he  might,  Guinevere  26 

make  the  smouldering  s  break  and  blaze  Before  the  people,       „        91 
To  save  his  blood  from  s,  „      514 

him  The  causer  of  that  s,  fought  and  fell ;  The  liing  215 

While  s  is  mouthing  a  bloodless  name  The  Dawn  12 

Scandalous     (See  also  Crown-scandalous)     To  smoke  the 

s  hive  of  those  wild  bees  Holy  Grail  214 


Scandalous  (continued)  I  have  scared  you  pale  with  my  5  talk.     Despair  111 

Scant     'Tis  hfe,  whereof  our  nerves  are  5,  Two  Voices  397 

But  work  was  s  in  the  Isle,  First  Quarrel  43 

Scanty     Gain'd  for  her  own  a  s  sustenance,  Enoch  Arden  259 

Thus  earn'd  a  s  living  for  himself :  „          818 

Scape     who  may  slay  or  s  the  three,  Gareth  and  L.  641 

Pray  for  him  that  he  s  the  doom  of  fire,  Guinevere  347 

Scaped    <S'  thro'  a  cavern  from  a  bandit  hold,  Holy  Grail  207 

'Scaped  (escaped)     by  this  way  I  's  them.  St.  S.  Stylites  179 

Scapegoat     On  that  huge  s  of  the  race,  Maud  I  xiii  42 

Scar    O  sweet  and  far  from  cliff  and  s  Princess  iv  9 

cloaks  the  s  of  some  repulse  with  lies ;  Merlin  and  V.  818 

Scarce     upon  the  game,  how  s  it  was  This  season ;  AvMey  Court  32 

I  s  can  ask  it  thee  for  hate,  Gareth  and  L.  361 

He  s  is  knight,  yea  but  half-man,  „           1176 

But  s  could  see,  as  now  we  see,  Epilogue  48 

But  s  of  such  majestic  mien  Freedom  6 

I  s  have  learnt  the  title  of  your  book.  The  Ring  126 

saw  you  kneel  beside  your  bier,  and  weeping  s  could  see ;        Happy  54 

Altho'  the  months  have  s  begun.  To  Ulysses  22 

we  s  can  spell  The  Alif  of  Thine  alphabet  Akbar's  Dream  30 

Scarce-believable    many  a  s-h  excuse,  Enoch  Arden  469 

Scarce-credited    S-c  at  first  but  more  and  more,  „            648 

Scarce-rocking    S-r,  her  full-busted  figure-head  „            543 

Scare    a-  church-harpies  from  the  master's  feast ;  To  J.  M.  K.  3 

Why  wilt  thou  ever  s  me  with  thy  tears,  Tithonus  46 

To  *■  the  fowl  from  fruit :  Princess  ii  228 

biting  laws  to  s  the  beasts  of  prey  „        »  393 

You  cannot  s  me ;  nor  rough  face,  Gareth  and  L.  1329 

shadow  of  my  spear  had  been  enow  To  s  them  from 

me  once ;  Holy  Grail  792 

Scarecrow     Empty  s's,  1  and  you !  Vision  of  Sin  94 

Scared    (See  also  Skeard)     '  0  '  she  cried,  its'  as  it  were,       Enoch  Arden  430 

But  s  with  threats  of  jail  and  halter  Aylmer's  Field  520 

he  heard  her  speak  ;  She  s  him  ;  Princess  i  186 

To  lag  behmd,  s  by  the  ciy  they  made,  „          v  94 

The  king  is  s,  the  soldier  will  not  fight,  „    Con.  60 

and  this  music  now  Hath  s  them  both,  Gareth  and  L.  251 

foemen  5,  like  that  false  pair  who  tum'd  Geraint  and  E.  176 

Nor  need  ye  look  so  s  at  what  1  say :  „              339 

So,  s  but  at  the  motion  of  the  man,  „              476 

beauteous  beast  «S'  by  the  noise  upstarted  Merlin  and  V.  422 

some  are  s,  who  mark,  Or  wisely  or  unwisely,  To  the  Queen  ii  48 

Do  you  think  1  was  s  by  the  bones  ?  Rizpah  55 

I  have  s  you  pale  with  my  scandalous  talk.  Despair  111 

that  the  foalk  be  sa  s  at.  Spinster's  S's.  24 

My  people  too  were  s  with  eerie  sounds.  The  Ring  408 

Scarf    One  sitting  on  a  crimson  s  unroU'd  ;  D.  of  F.  Wometi  126 

Dark  as  a  funeral  s  from  stem  to  stern,  M.  d' Arthur  194 

A  A-  of  orange  romid  the  stony  helm,  Princess,  Pro.  102 

palace-front  Alive  with  fluttering  s's  and  ladies'  eyes,        „  v  509 

A  purple  s,  at  either  end  whereof  Marr.  of  Geraint  169 

Prince's  blood  spirted  upon  the  s,  „                208 

Yniol  caught  His  purple  s,  and  held,  „                377 

Dark  as  a  funeral  s  from  stem  to  stern.  Pass,  of  Arthur  362 

Scarfskin    not  a  hair  Ruffled  upon  the  s,  Aylmer's  Field  660 

Scarlet  (adj.)    The  sunrise  broken  into  s  shafts  Enoch  Arden  592 

and  again  The  s  shaftjS  of  sunrise — but  no  sail.  „             599 

and  fulminated  vVgainst  the  s  woman  and  her  creed ;       Sea  Dreams  23 

her  s  sleeve,  Tho'  carved  and  cut,  Lancelot  and  E.  806 

The  steaming  marshes  of  the  .9  cranes,  Prog,  of  Spring  75 

Scarlet  (s)     who  wore  the  sleeve  Of  s,  and  the  pearls ;     Lancelot  and  E.  502 

upon  his  helm  A  sleeve  of  s,  broider'd  „              604 

Hued  with  the  s  of  a  fierce  sunrise.  Lover's  Tale  i  353 

crimson  and  s  of  berries  that  flamed  V.  of  Maeldune  61 

Scarlet-mingled     And  hills  and  s-m  woods  The  Voyage  47 

Scarlett     S  and  S's  three  hundred  were  riding  by  Heavy  Brigade  4 

Scarlett's  Brigade    three  hundred  ot  S  B\'  „            45 

Scarped     From  s  cliff  and  quarried  stone  In  Mem.  Ivi  2 

Scarr'd    S  with  a  hundred  wintry  watercourses —  Holy  Grail  490 

Scathe     What  Devil  had  the  heart  to  s  Supp.  Confessions  83 

as  God's  high  gift  from  s  and  wrong,  Guinevere  494 

given  my  life  To  help  his  own  from  s,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  63 

Scathed    down  in  a  furrow  s  with  flame :  The  Victim  22 

Scatter    we  will  s  all  our  maids  Till  happier  times  Primcss  vi  302 


Scatter 


608 


Scorn 


Scatter     {continued)     S  the  blossom  under  her  feet !  W.  to  Alexandra  9 

Disband  himself,  and  s  all  his  powers,  Geraini  and  E.  798 

would  s  the  ghosts  of  the  Past,  Despair  23 

s's  on  her  throat  the  sparks  of  dew,  Prog,  of  Spring  58 

Scattered    {See  also  Wind-scatter'd)    '  Tho'  thou  wert  s  to 

the  wind.  Two  Voices  32 

The  twinkhng  laurel  s  silver  lights.  Gardener's  D.  118 

Or  s  blanching  on  the  grass.  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  12 

were  s  Blood  and  brains  of  men.  The  Captain  47 

huts  At  random  s,  each  a  nest  in  bloom.  Aylmer's  Field  150 

dear  diminutives  S  all  over  the  vocabulary  „            540 

And  glean  your  s  sapience '  Princess  ii  259 
Yet  how  to  bind  the  5  scheme  of  seven  Together  in  one 

sheaf  ?  „      Con.  8 

A  thresher  \vith  his  flaD  had  s  them.  Gareth  and  L.  842 

And  s  all  they  had  to  all  the  winds :  Marr.  of  Geraint  635 

AU  s  thro'  the  houses  of  the  town ;  „              695 

strown  With  gold  and  s  coinage,  Geraint  and  E.  26 

'  and  lo,  the  powers  of  Doorm  Are  s,'  „          802 

One  from  the  bandit  s  in  the  field,  „          818 

He  lightly  s  theirs  and  brought  her  off  Merlin  and  V.  564 

And  some  with  s  jewels,  Last  Tournament  148 

books  are  s  from  hand  to  hand —  Despair  93 

Her  dauntless  army  5,  and  so  small.  The  Fleet  11 

band  will  be  s  now  their  gallant  captain  is  dead.  Bandit's  Death  41 

Scattering    {See  also  Ever-scattering)    Time,  a  maniac  s  dust,  In  Mem.  I  7 

Scaur     down  the  shingly  s  he  plunged,  Lancelot  and  E.  53 

Scene    all  but  sicken  at  the  shifting  s's.  The  Play  2 

Scent     I  s  it  twenty-fold.'  Gareth  and  L.  995 

Scented    {See  also  Heather-scented)    Thick  rosaries  of  s 

thorn,  Arabian  Nights  106 

Thro'  half-open  lattices  Coming  in  the  s  breeze,  Elednore  24 

Sceptre    A  crown,  a  s,  and  a  throne !  Ode  to  Memory  121 

To  whom  I  leave  the  s  and  the  isle —  Ulysses  34 

He  held  his  s  hke  a  pedant's  wand  Princess  i  27 

0  would  I  had  his  s  for  one  hour !  „  iv  538 
sorra  the  Queen  wid  her  s  in  sich  an  iUigant  ban',  Tomorrow  35 
millions  under  one  Imperial  s  now,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  117 
lent  The  s's  of  her  West,  her  East,  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  6 
Since  our  Queen  assumed  the  globe,  the  s.  On  Jut.  Q.  Victoria  3 
Hold  the  s.  Human  Soul,  By  an  Evolution.  16 

Sceptre-staff    till  thy  hand  Fail  from  the  s-s.  (Enone  126 
Scheme    noble  s  Grew  up  from  seed  we  two  long  since 

had  sown ;  Princess  iv  309 

She  ask'd  but  space  and  f airplay  for  her  s ;  „       v  282 

1  give  you  aU  The  random  s  as  wildly  as  it  rose :  „  Con.  2 
how  to  bind  the  scatter'd  s  of  seven  Together  „  8 
s  that  had  left  us  flaccid  and  drain'd.  Maud  /  i  20 
When  the  s's  and  all  the  systems,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  159 

Schemed     s  and  wrought  Until  I  overtum'd  him ;  Geraint  and  E.  829 

That  if  I  s  against  thy  peace  in  this,  Merlin  and  V.  930 

Scheming     At  your  simple  s  .  .  .  Forlorn  16 

Schism     Now  hawking  at  Geology  and  s ;  The  Epic  16 

Scholar    {See  also  Scholard)    but  the  s  ran  Before  the 

master,  Com.  of  Arthur  154 

Youthful!  youth  and  age  are  s's  yet  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  243 

Scholard  (scholsur)     Fur  Squire  wur  a  Varsity  5,  Village  Wife  25 

Fur  thou  be  a  big  s  now  Church-warden,  etc.  22 

School     {See  also  Sorgery-school)     Completion  in  a 

painful  s ;  Love  thou  thy  land  58 

I  was  at  s — a  college  in  the  South :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  83 

As  in  the  Latin  song  I  learnt  at  s,  Edwin  Morris  79 

Thro'  the  courts,  the  camps,  the  s's,  Vision  of  Sin  104 

Now  let  me  put  the  boy  and  girl  to  5 :  Enoch  Arden  312 

Then  Philip  put  the  boy  and  girl  to  s,  „            331 

How  Philip  put  her  little  ones  to  s,  „            706 

For  there  are  s's  for  all.'  Princess  Hi  305 

From  art,  from  nature,  from  the  s's,  In  Mem.  xlix  1 

The  flippant  put  himself  to  s  „         ex  10 

smiles  at  one  That  is  not  of  his  s,  nor  any  s  Merlin  and  V.  663 

scholars  yet  but  in  the  lower  s,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  243 

raised  the  s,  and  drain'd  the  fen.  „               268 

lost  in  the  gloom  of  doubts  that  darken  the  s's ;  Vastness  11 

Schoolbooks     In  our  s  we  say,  The  Brook  9 

Schoolboy  (adj.)  not  the  s  heat,  The  blind  hysterics  of  the  Celt :  In  Mem.  cix  15 


Schoolboy  (s)     As  cruel  as  a  s  ere  he  grows  To  Pity —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  109 

No  graver  than  a  s's'  barring  out ;  Princess,  Con.  66 

School'd     whom  Gideon  s  with  briers.  Buonaparte  14 
Science    (See  also  Half-science)    truths  of  S  waiting  to  be 

caught —  Golden  Year  17 

With  the  fairy  tales  of  s,  Locksley  Hail  12 

S  moves,  but  slowly  slowly,  „          134 

And  wake  on  s  grown  to  more,  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  10 

Mastering  the  lawless  s  of  our  law,  Aylmer's  Field  435 

so  that  sport  Went  hand  in  hand  with  S ;  Princess,  Pro.  80 

Two  plummets  dropt  for  one  to  sound  the  abyss  Of  s,         „  ii  177 

And  every  Muse  tumbled  a  s  in.  „               399 

mixt  with  inmost  terms  Of  art  and  s :  „              447 

Two  great  statues.  Art  And  S,  „          iv  201 

Where  S,  Art,  and  Labour  have  outpour'd  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  5 

When  S  reaches  forth  her  arms  In  Mem.  xxi  18 

Let  S  prove  we  are,  and  then  What  matters  S  imto  men,      „  cxx  6 

man  of  s  himself  is  fonder  of  glory,  Maud  I  iv  37 

gleam  Of  letters,  dear  to  S,  dear  to  Art,  Ded.  of  Idylls  40 

The  simples  and  the  s  of  that  time,  Lancelot  and  E.  862 

touching  on  all  things  great,  S,  philosophy,  song —  The  Wreck  51 

Till  the  Sun  and  the  Moon  of  our  s  Despair  91 

All  diseases  quench 'd  by  S,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  163 

Is  it  well  that  while  we  range  with  S,  „              217 

S  grows  and  Beauty  dwindles —  „              246 

Fifty  years  of  ever-brightening  S !  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  53 

What  the  philosophies,  all  the  s's,  Vastness  31 

tracks  Of  s  making  toward  Thy  Perfectness  Akbar's  Dream  29 

Scion     Nor  cared  for  seed  or  s !  A  mphion  12 

Scirrhous     And  s  roots  and  tendons.  „          64 

Scoff  (s)     I  met  with  s's,  I  met  with  scorns  In  Mem.  Ixix  9 

Scoff  (verb)     Began  to  s  and  jeer  and  babble  of  him        Marr.  of  Geraint  58 

Scoff'd     and  s  at  him  And  this  high  Quest  Holy  Grail  667 

Scolded    See  Raated 

Scolding     {See  also  Baatin')     Half-parted  from  a  weak  and 

s  hinge,  The  Brook  84 

Scoop'd    had  s  himself  In  the  white  rock  a  chapel  Lancelot  and  E.  404 

On  the  other  side  Is  s  a  cavern  Lover's  Tale  i  517 

Scoor  (score)     an'  soa  is  s's  o'  gells,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  14 

Scope     shall  have  s  and  breathing  space  Locksley  Hall  167 

Scorch'd    Shot  out  of  them,  and  s  me  that  I  woke.  Lucretius  66 
Score     {See  also  Scoor)     Colleaguing  with  a  s  of  petty 

kings.  Com.  of  Arthur  67 

and  his  winters  were  fifteen  s,  V.  of  Maeldune  116 
Scorn  (s)     {See  also  Self-scorn)     Patient  of  ill,  and 

death,  and  s,  Sv/pp.  Confessions  4 

To  hold  a  common  s  of  death !  „                34 

Cleae-headed  friend,  whose  joyful  s.  Clear-headed  friend  1 

Dower'd  with  the  hate  of  hate,  the  s  of  s.  The  Poet  3 

'  And  cruel  love,  whose  end  is  s,  Mariana  in  the  S.  70 

Then  said  the  voice,  in  quiet  s.  Two  Voices  401 

Were  wisdom  in  the  s  of  consequence.'  CEnone  150 

from  which  mood  was  born  S  of  herself ;  Palace  of  Art  231 

grief  became  A  solemn  s  of  ills.  D.  of  F.  Women  228 

Turning  to  s  with  Mps  divine  The  falsehood  Of  old  sat  Freedom  23 

'  Ere  yet,  in  s  of  Peter's-pence,  Talking  Oak  45 

passion  were  a  target  for  their  s :  Locksley  Hall  146 

Shall  it  not  be  s  to  me  „            147 

nodding,  as  in  s,  He  parted,  with  great  strides  Godiva  30 

I  trow  they  did  not  part  in  s :  Lady  Clare  5 

He  laugh'd  a  laugh  of  merry  s :  „          81 

But  laws  of  nature  were  our  s.  The  Voyage  84 

Mingle  madness,  mingle  s !  Vision  of  Sin  204 

bent  as  he  was  To  make  disproof  of  s,  Aylmer's  Field  446 

striking  on  huge  stumbling-blocks  of  s  „             538 

From  envy,  hate  and  pity,  and  spite  and  s,  Lucretius  77 

She  fulmined  out  her  s  of  laws  Salique  Princess  ii  133 

sacred  from  the  blight  Of  ancient  ii^uence  and  s.  „            169 

'  lest  some  classic  Angel  speak  In  s  of  us,  „         Hi  71 

she  lightens  s  At  him  that  mars  her  plan,  „         v  131 

but  brooding  turn  The  book  of  s,  Princess  v  142 

the  king  in  bitter  s  Drew  from  my  neck  „      vi  109 

answer'd  full  of  grief  and  s.  „          333 

and  after  praise  and  s.  As  one  who  feels  A  Dedication  6 

To  shroud  me  from  my  proper  s.  In  Mem.  xxvi  16 


I 


Scorn 


609 


Scrubbed 


Scorn  (s)  (co7itmued    I  met  with  scoffs,  I  met  with  s's  In  Mem.  Ixix  9 

You  say,  but  with  no  touch  of  s,  „            xcvi  1 

Why  then  my  s  might  well  descend  „      cxxviii  21 

With  a  glassy  smile  his  brutal  s —  Maud  I  vi  49 

Sir  Kay  beside  the  door  Mutter'd  in  a-  of  Gareth  Gareth  and  L.  706 

The  King  in  utter  s  Of  thee  and  thy  much  folly  „             918 
'  A  kitchen-knave,  and  sent  in  s  of  me :  Such  fight 

not  I,  but  answer  s  with  s.  „            952 

Would  handle  s,  or  yield  you,  „          1173 

put  your  beauty  to  this  flout  and  s  Geraint  and  E.  675 

Instead  or  scornful  pity  or  pure  s,  „            859 

The  s  of  Garlon,  poisoning  all  his  rest,  Balin  and  Balan  383 

those  large  eyes,  the  haunts  of  s,  Pelleas  and  E.  75 

persistence  tum'd  her  s  to  wrath.  „            218 

Gawain  answer'd  kindly  tho'  in  s,  „            333 

and  these  Full  knightly  without  s ;  Guinevere  39 

No  knight  of  Arthur's  noblest  dealt  in  s ;  „        40 

S  was  allow'd  as  part  of  his  defect,  .               „        43 

hers  Would  be  for  evermore  a  name  of  s.  „        61 

And  mine  will  ever  be  a  name  of  s.  „       627 

Softness  breeding  s  of  simple  life,  To  the  Queen  ii  53 

to  love  and  to  live  for,  glanced  at  in  s !  The  Wreck  35 

shaft  of  s  that  once  had  stung  Ancient  Sage  131 
laughing  sober  fact  to  s,                                          Locksley  H.,  Sixty  109 

Not  only  to  slight  praise  but  suffer  «  ;  To  Duke  of  Argyll  4 

made  him  leper  to  compass  him  with  s —  Happy  16 

my  wail  of  reproach  and  s ;  Charity  23 

Scorn  (verb)     or  if  you  s  to  lay  it,  Yourself,  Princess  vi  183 

'  They  that  s  the  tribes  and  call  us  Boadicea  7 

victor  Hours  should  s  The  long  result  of  love,  In  Mem.  i  13 

Then  these  were  such  as  men  might  s :  „  xlviii  4 

Scom'd,  to  be  scom'd  by  one  that  I  s,  Maud  I  xiii  1 

'  Wherefore  did  the  King  S  me?  Gareth  and  L.  738 

'  Girl,  for  I  see  ye  s  my  courtesies,  Geraint  and  E.  671 

monk  and  nun,  ye  s  the  world's  desire,  Balin  and  Balan  445 

touching  fame,  howe'er  ye  s  my  song.  Merlin  and  V.  444 

— we  s  them,  but  they  sting.'  Lancelot  and  E.  139 

look  On  this  proud  fellow  again,  who  s's  us  all  ?  '  „            1065 

I  must  not  s  myself :  he  loves  me  still.  Guinevere  673 

To  one  who  knows  I  s  him.  The  Flight  29 

whom  most  I  loathe,  to  honovu"  whom  Is?  ,,50 

You  s  my  Mother's  warning.  The  Ring  326 

do  you  s  me  when  you  tell  me,  O  my  lord,  Happy  23 

Scom'd     cursed  and  s,  and  bruised  with  stones :  Two  Voices  222 

Comfort  ?  comfort  s  of  devils  ?  Locksley  Hall  75 

s  to  help  their  equal  rights  Against  the  sons  Princess  vii  233 

S,  to  be  s  by  one  that  I  scorn,  Maud  I  xiii  1 

and  thought  the  King  S  me  and  mine ;  Gareth  and  L.  1166 

And  doubtful  whether  I  and  mine  be  s.  „            1253 

Scomer    not  a  s  of  your  sex  But  venerator,  Princess  iv  422 
He  rose,  descended,  met  The  s  in  the  castle  court,  Balin  and  Balan  387 

0  A-  of  the  party  ciy  That  wanders  Freedom  25 

Scornful     waiste  wide  Of  that  abyss,  or  s  pride  !  Two  Voices  120 

All  barr'd  with  long  white  cloud  the  s  crags.  Palace  of  Art  83 

But  she,  with  sick  and  s  looks  averse,  B.  of  F.  Women  101 

In  i  stillness  gazing  as  they  past ;  Com.  of  Arthur  478 

Instead  of  s  pity  or  pure  scorn,  Geraint  and  E.  859 

She  broke  into  a  httle  «  laugh :  Lancelot  and  E.  120 

Scorning    He  utter'd  words  of  s ;  The  Goose  42 

Enoch  set  himself,  S  an  alms,  to  work  Enoch  Arden  812 

and  they  too  smOed,  S  him ;  Pelleas  and  E.  97 

Scorpion     s  crawling  over  naked  skulls  ; —  Demeter  and  P.  78 

Scorpion-worm    Sware  by  the  s-w  that  twists  Last  Tournament  451 

Scotsman     Bow'd  the  spoiler.  Bent  the  S,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  21 

There  was  the  S  Weary  of  war.  „                35 

numberless  numbers,  Shipmen  and  Scotsmen.  „                55 

Scott  (Sir  Walter)     0  great  and  gallant  S,  Bandit's  Death  1 

Scoundrel  (adj.)    seeing  what  a  door  for  s  scmn  I  open'd  to 

the  West,  Columbus  170 

Scoundrel  (s)     stammering  '  s '  out  of  teeth  that  Aylmer's  Field  328 

And  s  in  the  supple-sliding  knee.'  Sea  Dreams  168 

Scour    to  scream,  to  burnish,  and  to  s.  Princess  iv  520 

Scour'd    whistle  of  the  youth  who  s  His  master's 

armour ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  257 

And  s  into  the  coppices  and  was  lost,  Geraint  and  E.  534 


Scourge    Mortify  Your  flesh,  like  me,  with  s's  St.  S.  Stylites  180 

bride  Gives  her  harsh  groom  for  bridal-gift  a  s ;  Princess  v  378 

'  a  s  am  I  To  lash  the  treasons  of  the  Table  Round.'  Pelleas  and  E.  565 

'  Heresy. — Penance  ?     '  Fast,  Hairshirt  and  s —        Sir  J.  Oldcastle  142 

some  beneath  the  s.  Some  over-labour'd,  Columbus  177 

The  slave,  the  s,  the  chain ;  Freedom  12 

Scoui^ed     AureUus  Emrys  would  have  s  thee  dead,  Gareth  and  L.  375 

Scouring     told  him,  s  still,  '  The  sparrow-hawk  ! '  Marr.  of  Geraint  260 

Scout     inward  raced  the  s's  With  nmiour  Priticess  v  111 

is  it  true  what  was  told  by  the  s,  Def.  of  Lucknow  95 

Scouted     put  by,  s  by  court  and  king —  Columbus  165 

Scowl     foreheads  drawn  in  Roman  s's.  Princess  vii  129 

Scowl'd     s  At  their  great  lord.  Aylmer's  Field  724 

Scrambled    Have  s  past  those  pits  of  fire,  St.  S.  Stylites  184 

Scrap     s's  of  thundrous  Epic  lilted  out  Princess  ii  375 

faded  rhymes  and  s's  of  ancient  crones.  Lover's  Tale  i  289 

With  sallow  s's  of  manuscript.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  48 

a  s,  clipt  out  of  the  '  deaths '  in  a  paper,  fell.  The  Wreck  146 

Scrape    The  four-handed  mole  shall  s.  My  life  is  full  12 

Scraped     (See  also  Scrawm'd)     I  s  the  lichen  from  it :  The  Brook  193 

Scraping     With  strumming  and  with  s,  Amphion  70 

All  my  poor  s's  from  a  dozen  years  Of  dust  Sea  Dreams  77 

Scratby     niver  swap  Owlby  an'  S  Church-warden,  etc.  44 

Scratch  (s)     save  her  little  finger  from  a  s  Edwin  Morris  63 

And  eveiy  s  a  lance  had  made  upon  it,  Lancelot  and  E.  20 

Scratch  (verb)     And  s  the  very  dead  for  spite :  Lit.  Squabbles  8 

Would  s  a  ragged  oval  on  the  sand,  Gareth  and  L.  534 

They  would  s  him  up —  Rizpah  59 

Scratch'd    {See  also  Scratted)    S,  bitten,  blinded, 

marr'd  me  Last  Tournament  526 

Scratted  (scratched)    he  scrawm'd  an'  s  my  f  aace  like  a  cat  North.  Cobbler  22 

'e  gied — I  be  fear'd  fur  to  tell  tha  'ow  much — fur  an 

owd  s  stoan.  Village  Wife  47 

Scrawl     in  thy  heart  the  s  shall  play.'  Sailor  Boy  12 

Scrawl'd     The  butler  drank,  the  steward  s,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  10 

s  A  '  Miriam '  that  might  seem  a  '  Muriel ' ;  The  Ring  240 

Scrawm'd  (scraped)     he  s  an's  cratted  my  faace  like  a  cat,  North.  Cobbler  22 

Scream  (s)     Now  to  the  s  of  a  madden'd  beach  Maud  1  Hi  12 

s  of  that  Wood-devil  I  came  to  quell !  '  Balin  and  Balan  548 

S's  of  a  babe  in  the  red-hot  palms  The  Dawn  2 

Scream  (verb)     To  tramp,  to  s,  to  burnish.  Princess  iv  520 

Let  the  fierce  east  s  thro'  your  eyelet-holes,  Pelleas  and  E.  469 

S  you  are  polluted  ...  ■  Forlorn  28 

Scream'd    The  parrot  s,  the  peacock  squall'd,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  12 

wives,  that  laugh'd  and  s  against  the  gulls,  Pelleas  and  E.  89 

waked  a  bird  of  prey  that  s  and  past ;  Death  of  (Enone  87 

Screead  (shriek'd)     an'  s  like  a  Howl  gone  wud —  Owd  Rod  76 

Screen    (See  also  Ivy-screen,  Quickset-screens)    neither 

of  them  stands  behind  the  s  of  thy  truth.  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  7 

Screw     '  Let  me  s  thee  up  a  peg :  Vision  of  Sin  87 

'*S  not  the  chord  too  sharply  lest  it  snap.'  Aylmer's  Field  469 

Scribbled     every  margin  s,  crost,  and  cramm'd  Merlin  and  V.  677 

S  or  carved  upon  the  pitiless  stone ;  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  5 

Scrimp    Master  s's  his  haggard  semptress  of  her  daily 

bread,  ~ Locksley  H.,  Sixty  221 

Scrip     lucky  rhymes  to  him  were  s  and  share.  The  Brook  4 

Scriptur  (scripture)     them  words  be  i'  S —  Owd  Rod  15 

Or  hke  tother  Hangel  i'  S  „        94 

Scripture    (See  also  Scriptur)     he  heard  his  priest  Preach 

an  inverted  s,  Aylmer's  Field  44 

Who  reads  of  begging  saints  in  S?'  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  151 

woman  ruin'd  the  world,  as  God's  own  s's  tell.  Charity  3 

was  a  S  that  rang  thro'  his  head.  The  Dreamer  2 

Scritch     Ring  sudden  s'es  of  the  jay.  My  life  is  full  20 

Scroll    (See  also  Title-scroll)     An  open  s.  Before  him  lay :  The  Poet  8 

But  one  poor  poet's  s,  „      55 

ponder  those  three  hundred  s's  Left  by  the  Teacher,  Lucretiiis  12 

The  seal  was  Cupid  bent  above  a  s.  Princess  i  242 

she  crush'd  The  s's  together,  made  a  sudden  turn  „      iv  394 

Sun  In  dexter  chief ;  the  s  '  I  follow  fame.'  Merlin  and  V.  476 

like  a  serpent,  ran  a  s  Of  letters  Holy  Grail  170 

fiery  s  written  over  with  lamentation  and  woe.  Despair  20 

in  his  hand  A  s  of  verse —  Ancient  Sage  6 

Scroob'd  (scrubbed)     es  it  couldn't  be  s  awaay.  Village  Wife  39 

Scrubbed    See  Scroob'd 

2q 


Scruple 


610 


Scruple    bi-akest  thro'  the  s  of  inv  bond  t  ,c^  v                .  roo 

Scud    foam-flakes  .  along  the  levXand,  ^f  oTT^Jf^ 

««.  ^f^  *nf  g?P  Glimmer'd  the  streaming  . :  ^     Hol^GTnT^9 

Scudded    Of  mighty  mouth,  we  5  fast,  %V^i7^^1 

Scudding     Thro'  s  drifts  the  rainv  Hvades  Vpvf  fj,»  a-  "^  f;o2/a?e  46 
Scullery    whinny  shrills  From  Se  to  .           '^*  *^'  ^"'^  '^^^  >  •  ^^^^^^^  10 

Scullion  (adj.)     the  King  hath  past  his  time-Mv  5  Princess  v^% 

knave !                                                      *  /-.      , 

Scumon(s)    Among  the  s'.  and  the  kitchen-knaves  ^^'''^h  and  L.  710 

To  serve  with  5'^  and  with  kitchen-knaves ;       '  "             J?^ 

What  doest  thou,  «,  m  my  fellowship  ?  "             ii" 

Sir  /S,  canst  thou  use  that  spit  of  thine '  "            iS? 

1  accept  thee  aught  the  more,  S             '  "            i^i 

She  reddening, '  Insolent  5 :  I  of  thee  ?  "            ^ 

amlnfl^  "w  ''^  e^'^y-  *'  ^  ^  «^^y  One  nobler  "            ^n 

Sculptor    Wan  S,  weepest  thou  to  take  the  cast  w    "  i-    7  .     ? 

Musician,  painter,  s,  critic,  more  T  ^"^  &'c^ptorl 

Sculpture    some  sweet  .  dipped  from  head  to  foot,  PHncls'^v  57 

And  four  great  zones  of  s,  set  betwixt  TJnlTr     lo^o 

Sculptured    (^a.  <^so  Weirdly^sculptured)    knights  on  ^"^^  ^''"^  232 

horse  xS,  and  deckt  in  slowly-wanine  hues  «^«.<fc      j  r   nnr 

And  darkhng  felt  the  s  ornament  .f  7^  "'*'^/-  ^^^^ 

Scum    scurf  of  fait,  and /of  droTs  ^«-^?'*  «f  ^^- 734 

a  door  for  scoundrel  s  I  open'd  to  the  West  Vision  of  Sm  211 

Scurf    .  of  salt,  and  scum  of  dross,                    *'  p.,.  polnmbus  170 

Scurrilous    Lightning  of  the  hour,  the  pun  the  s  tale  /J      '  %^T^  ^}}. 

Two  lovei.  par  Jd  by  a  .  tale  Ha7quarreU'd,'''''~  ^^'T/.  Sf  1^8 

Two  lovers  parted  by  no  s  tale—  J-ne  nmg  jm 

Scurvy    Cholera,  s,  and  fever,  r,^-.  ^ .  ^  "7         ol 

S^etar    bright  and  sharp  As  edges  of  the  ..  ^'^^  '^  ^^Zl  ?| 

Scythe    The  sweep  of  s  in  morning  dew  r„  m.      7       ■    }a 

'Sd  Ji?''  ^'rt''=^'<'  '^^  «"".b'^^«  on^he  turning  .,  S.£raS"r25| 
Sdeath    'Our  land  mvaded,  '5!  and  he  hin^elf  Your 
captive,  yet  my  father  wills  not  war :  And  's  ' 

myself,  what  care  I,  war  or  no  ?                   '     '  d  •            nn., 

I  say  she  flies  too  high,'.!  whatofthat?  I'rincess  v  276 

A— and  with  solemn  rites  by  candle-light—  "          5^9 

at  once  Decides  it,  's  !  against  my  father's  will.'  "         §i 

*  !  but  we  will  send  to  her,'  "         ^° 

,Wa— 's !  you  blame  the  man ;  "       •  ^£* 

Saa     .9'!;i7^"'l^°°"«'' fight  thrice  o'er  than  see  it.'  "     "si 
sea    ("See  a^5o  North-sea,  Ocean-sea,  Red  Sea)     And 

compass'd  by  the  inviolate  s.'  r^  ,i„  n  oa 
Ask  the  s  At  midnight,  o„_  ^''  '*/  «^«««  36 
Far,  far  beneath  inlhe  abysmal  .,                         '^'^^^  ^^^L^^^ 

Leaning  upon  the  ridged  s,  n       ■  I^""  I 

Down-caroUing  to  thi  crisped  s  ^^  '""*^*'  ^^-  f 

ridge  Of  heaped  hills  that  mound  the  s  nj.  4    aV'          J^ 

Shrill  music  reach'd  them  on  the  middle  .  ^^'  %  ^T^  ^l 

clover-hiU  swells  High  over  the  full-toned  s  •  Sea-FairiesQ 

When  Norland  winds  pipe  down  the  5,        ^  Oria„^  Q? 

I  hear  the  roaring  of  the  5  Cnarea  91 

Singing  alone  Under  the  s\  r,,    ,.  »      ^^ 

I  would  kiss  them  of  ten  ukder  the  .,  (repeat)  ^^'  Merman  5 

Soft  are  the  moss-beds  under  the  s ;  "    ^^'  So 

Combing  her  hair  Under  the  s,  tj,^  ,}'        .f% 

TiU  that  great  sea-snake  under  the  s  ^^^  ^^'^^  5 

WhnI  ?f ™^''  "?'^^'  *^®  *  '^""^'i  feel  their  immortality  "          28 

)yA°u®f^,'?'7^P'^^^'"enighestthe*.  ^          "          SS 

Of  the  bold  merry  mermen  under  the  s ;  "          ao 

In  the  purple  twilights  under  the  s ;  "          tf 

In  the  branching  jaspers  under  the  s ;  "          J? 

In  the  hueless  mosses  under  the  s  "          ^L 

Would  lean  out  from  the  hollow  sphere  of  the  s,\  "          ^4 

Your  spirit  IS  the  calmed  5,                                  ''  j^"        ,  gf 

The  shadow  rushing  up  the  s  Margaret  25 

With  motions  of  thi  outer  ,  : '  ^f  ^^^^^ " 

And  in  the  middle  of  the  ereen  salt  ,  1  f  •  7.  ft^'^^^^  113 
Floats  far  awav  into  the  ffihemV.                     '"'^'^^  ^'  '^  ''''''^M 

ii/Jsinore  Heard  the  war  moan  alone  the  distant  «  r„"  ,  ,« 
and  past  Into  deep  orange  o'er  th^.,  ^'''''^  ''  Marian^iHTs  26 
There  came  a  sound  as  of  the  «  •                                ^y^ariana  tn  tfie  iS.  Jfa 

wled  in  sudden  «'«  of  light,  My  heart,  "p„„«>    It 

In  cataract  after  cataract  to  the  5.  SXe  9 


(cow<mwe<f)    to  where  the  sky  Dipt  down  to  5  and  s^nric    P7        .-    .     „„ 
Or  m  a  clear-waU'd  city  on  the  s  *  -^"^'^^  ''•^  ^'"^  ^2 

plunging  s's  draw  backward  from  the  land  "  oil 

hears  the  low  Moan  of  an  unknown  s  •  "  ^51 

but  evermore  Most  weary  seem'd  the 's  r  .    "^       ^80 

Vaulted  o'er  the  dark-blue  s  '  Lotos- Eaters  41_ 

wallowing  monster  spouted  his  foam-fountains  in  th^  .         "     ^*  ^\  S 
As  thunder-drops  fail  on  a  sleeping  .  r^*'.^'"'  "^  *5>  of  F  W  ]%  ' 

And  languish  for  the  purple  s's  v        •(  ^-  ^T^**  122 

And  round  them  5  and  air  are  dark  t  "''i"'^'  f  ^'?'  ^-  ^ 

thou  sendest  out  the  man  To  rule  by  land  and  .    ^J  ^^^  '^^  i^"^  ^ 
The  s's  that  shock  thy  base  '  '  -Ew^^awi  and  Amer.  2 

battle  roll'd  Among  the  mountains  by  the  winter  5  • 
north^nf  ^^  "^^*'  ^*^  "°^^  ^<^e    ' 

And  bowery  hollows  crown'd  with  summer  s 

ahghted  from  the  boat  And  breathing  of  the  s. 

The  s  wastes  all :  but  let  me  live  my  life 

my  heart  turn'd  from  her,  as  a  thorn  Turns  from  the  s 

Beyond  the  fair  green  fieW  pnri  ^^.^^r^  .  "™  ^'^^J 


J  It.    V  ■    ^'""'  ""^i)  aj5  a  morn  iu: 
Beyond  the  fair  green  field  and  eastern  s 
like  a  lane  of  beams  athwart  the  s 
the  ramy  Hyades  Vext  the  dim  s  ■' 
There  gloom  the  dark  broad  s's 
lying  m  dark-purple  spheres  of  s. 
A  light  upon  the  shining  s— 
Thought  her  proud,  and  fled  over  the  s  • 

Ihe  broad  s's  swell'd  to  meet  the  keel 
At  times  the  whole  s  bum'd,  ' 

Like  Heavenly  Hope  she  crown'd  the  s 
JbLow  down,  cold  rivulet,  to  the  s 

A    J  yinJ^ed  s  beneath  him  crawls  ■ 
And  fluted  to  the  morning  s.  ' 

On  thy  cold  gray  stones,  0  S  I 
At  the  foot  of  thy  crags  O  S  • 

Fnnl*^^  ^'T'^  'r^P  °f  *he  down-Streaming  s's  : 

i.noeh  was  abroad  on  wrathful  s's 

bnoch  at  times  to  go  by  land  or  s'- 

many  a  rough  s  had  he  weather'd  in  her  ' 

the  s  IS  His,  The  s  is  His  :  He  made  it.'  " 

but  the  lonehest  in  a  lonely  s. 

And  the  low  moan  of  leaden-colour'd  s's 

Like  fountains  of  sweet  water  in  the  s 

Ihere  came  so  loud  a  calling  of  the  s  ' 

By  the  long  wa^h  of  Australasian  s's ' 

Ihis  had  a  rosy  s  of  gillyflowers 

Never  since  our  bad  earth  became  one  s 

Huns  in  a  river  of  blood  to  the  sick  s     ' 

mth  a  month's  leave  given  them,  to  the  s  : 

feliaU  Babylon  be  cast  into  the  s  • 

that  they  saw,  the  s.  ' 

the  s  roars  Ruin  :  a  fearful  night '  ' 

A  full  s  glazed  with  muffled  moonlight 

crystal  currents  of  clear  morning  s's    ' 

Wind  of  the  western  s,  (repeat) 

Blot  out  the  slope  of  s  from  verge  to  shore, 
the  «  s  ;  A  red  sail,  or  a  white  ; 
(rod  bless  the  narrow  s  which  keeps  her  off 
(jod  bless  the  narrow  s's  '  ' 

Was  great  by  land  as  thou  by  s.  (repeat) 
roughly  set  His  Briton  in  blo"W  s's        ' 
whfle  we  hear  The  tides  of  Music's  golden  s 
broke  them  on  the  land,  we  drove  them  on  the  s's 
Sea-king's  daughter  from  over  the  s 

R^nl^f  .K^  l"^^^*}  \^  welcomes  the  land, 
Bnde  of  the  heir  of  the  kings  of  the  s— 
voices  of  our  universal  s  On  capes 
10  lands  of  summer  across  the  s  ■ 
I  take  my  part  Of  danger  on  the 'roaring  s 
Singmg,    And  shall  it  be  over  the  s's 
a  storni  never  wakes  on  the  lonely  s. 
Sounds  of  the  great  s  Wander'd  about 
flying  by  to  be  lost  on  an  endless  s— 
oalm  on  the  s's,  and  silver  sleep, 
10  breathe  thee  over  lonely  s's 


15 
-¥.  d' Arthur  2 

141 

263 

AvMey  Court  8 

51 

55 


Love  and  Duty  101 
Golden  Year  50 
Ulysses  11 
,.      45 
Locksley  Hall  164 
'S'^.  Agnes'  Eve  35 
Edward  Gray  14 
The  Voyage  IZ 
51 
70 
A  Farewell  1 
The  Eagle  4 
To  E.  L.  24 
Break,  break,  etc.  2 
14 
Enoch  Arden  55 
91 
104 
135 
225 
553 
612 
803 
910 
The  Brook  194 
Aylmer's  Field  159 
635 
768 
Sea  Dreams  6 
28 
36 
80 
Princess  i  248 
„      a  328 
„     Hi  2,  4 
„        vii  1 
38 
„   Con.  46 
51 
70 
Ode  on  Well.  84,  90 
155 
252 
Third  of  Feb.  30 
W.  to  Alexandra  1 
24 
28 
W.  to  Marie  Alex.  16 
The  Daisy  92   '] 
Sailor  Boy  22 
The  Islet  9 
..33 
Minnie  and  Winnie  7 
Wages  2 
In  Mem.  xi  17 
„         xvii  4 


Sea 


611 


Seal 


Sea  (continued)     Breaks  hither  over  Indian  s's,  In  Mem.  xxvi  14 

The  meanings  of  the  homeless  s,  „  xxxv  9 

From  belt  to  belt  of  crimson  s's  „        Ixxxvi  13 

The  conscience  as  a  5  at  rest :  „  xdv  12 

flew  in  a  dove  And  brought  a  suimnons  from  the  s :         „  ciii  16 

On  winding  stream  or  distant  s ;  ,,  cxv  12 

The  stillness  of  the  central  s.  „  cxxiii  4 

Who  rest  to-night  beside  the  s.  „  Con.  76 

better,  war  !  loud  war  by  land  and  by  s,  Mavd  I  iil 

liquid  azure  bloom  of  a  crescent  of  s,  „  iv  5 

Over  blowing  s's,  Over  s's  at  rest,  .,     xvii  13 

the  red  man's  babe  Leap,  beyond  the  s.  „  20 

A  purer  sapphire  melts  into  the  s.  „  xviii  52 

And  trying  to  pass  to  the  s ;  „       xxi  7 

shock  Of  cataract  s's  that  snap  „  //  ii  26 

While  I  am  over  the  s  \  „  76 

Far  into  the  North,  and  battle,  and  s's  of  death.  „  [II  vi  37 

held  Tintagil  castle  by  the  Cornish  s,  Com.  of  Arthur  187 

'  A  doubtful  throne  is  ice  on  summer  s's.  „  248 

two  Dropt  to  the  cove,  and  watch'd  the  great  s  fall,  „  378 

Descending  in  the  glory  of  the  s's —  „  400 

To  plunge  old  Merlin  in  the  Arabian  s  ;  Gareth  and  L.  211 

Far  over  the  blue  tarns  and  hazy  s's,  „  499 

The  buoy  that  rides  at  5,  and  dips  and  springs  „  1146 

And  white  sails  flying  on  the  yellow  s  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  829 

But  not  to  goodly  hill  or  yeUow  s  „  830 

like  a  shoaling  s  the  lovely  blue  Play'd  into  green,    Geraint  and  E.  688 
fell  Against  the  heathen  of  the  Northern  8 
Brought  the  great  faith  to  Britain  over  s's  ; 
one  side  had  s  And  ship  and  sail  and  angels 
All  fighting  for  a  woman  on  the  s. 
Even  to  the  half  my  realm  beyond  the  s's, 
(S  was  her  wrath,  yet  working  after  storm) 
In  mine  own  realm  beyond  the  narrow  s's, 
A  thousand  piers  rsin  into  the  great  S. 
At  once  I  saw  him  far  on  the  great  S, 
Strike  from  the  s  ;  and  from  the  star  there  shot 
And  the  s  rolls,  and  all  the  world  is  warm'd  ?  ' 
On  hiU,  or  plain,  at  s,  or  flooding  ford. 
So  loud  a  blast  along  the  shore  and  5, 
heapt  in  mounds  and  ridges  all  the  s  Drove  like  a  cataract, 
And  in  the  great  s  wash  away  my  sin.' 
With  chasm-like  portals  open  to  the  s, 
moon  Thro'  the  tall  oriel  on  the  rolling  s. 
A  vision  hovering  on  a  s  of  fire,  PeUeas  and  E.  52 

Makers  of  nets,  and  living  from  the  s.  „  90 

served  with  choice  from  air,  land,  stream,  and  s,  „  149 

flush'd  The  long  low  dune,  and  lazy-plunging  s.     Last  Tournament  484 
gain'd  TintagU,  half  in  s,  and  high  on  land,  „  505 

westward-smiling  s's  Watch'd  from  this  tower.  „  587 

For  now  the  Heathen  of  the  Northern  S,  Guinevere  135 

strong  man-breasted  things  stood  from  the  s,  „        246 

Of  dark  Tintagil  by  the  Cornish  s  ;  „        294 

Godless  hosts  Of  heathen  swarming  o'er  the  Northern  S ;         „        428 
The  phantom  circle  of  a  moaning  s.  Pass,  of  Arthur  87 

On  the  waste  sand  by  the  waste  s  they  closed.  „  92 

deathwhite  mist  slept  over  sand  and  s :  „  95 

Save  for  some  whisper  of  the  seething  s's,  „  121 

battle  roll'd  Among  the  mountains  by  the  winter  s  ;  „  171 

isles  of  winter  shock  By  night,  with  noises  of  the 

Northern  S. 
And  bowery  hoUows  crown'd  with  summer  s, 
Thimderless  lightnings  striking  under  s 
Some  third-rate  isle  half -lost  among  her  s's  ? 
the  sloping  s's  Himg  in  mid-heaven, 
breakers  of  the  outer  s  Sank  powerless, 
down  to  s,  and  far  as  eye  could  ken, 
The  incorporate  blaze  of  sun  and  s. 
nigh  the  s  Parting  my  own  loved  moimtains 
the  effect  weigh'd  s's  upon  my  head  To  come  my  way  ! 
Above  the  perilous  s's  of  Change  and  Chance  ; 
Knit  to  some  dismal  sandbank  far  at  s, 
Sometimes  upon  the  hills  beside  the  s 
Hung  round  with  paintings  of  the  s, 
Forthgazing  on  the  waste  and  open  s. 


Balin  and  Balan  103 

364 

Merlin  and  V.  562 

Lancelot  and  E.  958 

1309 

1323 

Holy  Grail  503 

510 

529 

672 

728 

796 

798 

806 

815 

831 


„ 

309 

,, 

431 

^0  the  Queen  ii  12 

„ 

25 

Lover's 

TdeiZ 

„ 

8 

„ 

336 

» 

409 

432 

I         '1 

660 

,, 

806 

„ 

809 

„ 

m4 

„ 

168 

„ 

177 

Sea  (continued)     Began  to  heave  upon  that  painted  s  ;        Lovers  Tale  i  192 
a  httle  silver  cloud  Over  the  sounding  s's  :  „         Hi  37 

an'  I  thought  of  him  out  at  s.  First  Quarrel  89 

wailing,  wailing,  the  wind  over  land  and  s —  Rizpah  1 

the  s  that  'ill  moan  like  a  man  ?  „       72 

'  Spanish  ships  of  war  at  s  !  The  Revenge  8 

stars  came  out  far  over  the  summer  s,  .,  56 

sun  smiled  out  far  over  the  summer  s,  ,,  70 

And  a  day  less  or  more  At  s  or  ashore,  „  87 

s  plunged  and  fell  on  the  shot-shatter'd  navy  of  Spain,  „        117 

the  wind  Still  westward,  and  the  weedy  s's —  Columbus  72 

The  s's  of  our  discovering  over-roll  Him  „      139 

same  chains  Bound  these  same  bones  back  thro'  the  Atlantic  s,   „      214 
blast  blew  us  out  and  away  thro'  a  boimdless  s.  V.  of  Maeldune  10 

their  breath  met  us  out  on  the  s's,  „  37 

from  the  sky  to  the  blue  of  the  s ;  „  46 

Plunged  head  down  in  the  s,  „  82 

sends  the  hidden  sim  Down  yon  dark  s,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  34 

In  s's  of  Death  and  sunless  gulfs  of  Doubt.        Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  14 
Fleeted  his  vessel  to  s  with  the  king  in  it,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  60 

With  stormy  light  as  on  a  mast  at  s,  Tiresias  114 

a  huge  s  smote  every  soul  from  the  decks  of  The  Falcon  The  Wreck  109 
a  balmier  breeze  curl'd  over  a  peacefuller  s,  „        133 

she  is  all  alone  in  the  s  ;  Despair  63 

blue  of  sky  and  s,  the  green  of  earth.  Ancient  Sage  41 

sailor  wrecks  at  last  In  ever-silent  s's ;  „  137 

wish  yon  moaning  s  would  rise  and  burst  the  shore,  The  Flight  11 

about  the  shuddering  wreck  the  death-white  s  should  rave,      „  47 

he  sail'd  the  s  to  crush  the  Moslem  in  his  pride  ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  29 
Leonard  early  lost  at  s ;  „  55 

backward,  forward,  in  the  immeasureable  s,  „  193 

With  one  gray  glimpse  of  s  ;  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  8 

Like  drops  of  blood  in  a  dark-gray  s.  Heavy  Brigade  43 

unlaborious  earth  and  oarless  s  ;  To  Virgil  20 

Dominant  over  s  and  land.  Helen's  Tower  2 

Our  own  fair  isle,  the  lord  of  every  s —  The  Fleet  7 

Glorying  between  s  and  sky.  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  18 

And  drew  him  over  s  to  you —  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  22 

I  climb'd  on  all  the  cliffs  of  all  the  s's,  Demeter  and  P.  63 

Trade  flying  over  a  thousand  s's  Fastness  13 

Spring  slides  hither  o'er  the  Southern  s.  Prog,  of  Spring  2 

slant  s's  leaning  on  the  mangrove  copse,  „  76 

Mussulman  Who  flings  his  bowstrung  Harem  in  the  s,  Romney's  R.  135 
Like  some  old  wreck  on  some  indrawing  s,  St.  Telemachus  44 

Then  one  deep  roar  as  of  a  breaking  s,  „  67 

clash  of  tides  that  meet  in  narrow  s's. —  Akbar's  Dream  58 

in  blood-red  cataracts  down  to  the  s  !  Kapiolani  12 

When  I  put  out  to  s.  Crossing  the  Bar  4 

Sea-bank    I  ran  down  The  steepy  s-b,  Lover's  Tale  ii  74 

Seabird    And  the  lonely  s  crosses  The  Captain  71 

ranged  on  the  rock  hke  white  s-b's  in  a  row,  V.  of  Maeldune  101 

Sea-blue     FUts  by  the  s-b  bird  of  March  ;  In  Mem.  xci  4 

Sea-bud     under  my  starry  s-b  crown  The  Mermaid  16 

Sea-castle    huge  s-c's  heaving  upon  the  weather  bow.  The  Revenge  24 

Sea-cataract    and  fell  In  vast  s-c's —  Sea  Dreams  54 

Sea-circle    first  indeed  Thro'  many  a  fair  s-c,  Enoch  Arden  542 

Sea-cliff    the  s-c  pathway  broken  short.  Merlin  and  V.  882 

You  from  the  haven  Under  the  s-s.  Merlin  and  the  G.  3 

Sea-current    s-c  would  sweep  us  out  to  the  main.  Despair  51 

Sea-dune    Some  lodge  within  the  waste  s-d's.  The  Flight  90 

Sea-flower     Dressing  their  hair  with  the  white  s-f ;  The  Merman  13 

Sea-foam      in  the  s-f  sway'd  a  boat,  Half-swallow'd  in  it,      Holy  Grail  802 
Sea-framing    Ran  in  and  out  the  long  s-f  caves,  Sea  Dreams  33 

Sea-friend     Enoch  parted  with  his  old  s-f,  Enoch  Arden  168 

Sea-furbelow    dimpled  flounce  of  the  s-f  flap.  Sea  Dreams  266 

Sea-grove    the  pale-green  s-g's  straight  and  high.  The  Merman  19 

Sea-hall    fill  the  s-h's  with  a  voice  of  power ;  „  10 

bUnd  wave  feeling  round  his  long  s-h  In  silence  :        Merlin  and  V.  232 
Sea-haze     Roll'd  a  s-h  and  whelm'd  the  world  Enoch  Arden  672 

Sea-home    eyes  flxt  on  the  lost  s-h.  The  Wreck  126 

Seeking    S-k-s  daughter  from  over  the  sea,  W.  to  Alexandra  1 

The  S-k's'  daughter  as  happy  as  fair,  „  26 

Seal    s,  that  hung  From  Allan's  watch,  Dora  135 

She  sent  a  note,  the  s  an  Elle  vous  suit,  Edwin  Morris  105 

Break  lock  and  s  :  betray  the  trust :  You  might  have  won  18 


Seal 


612 


Second 


Seal  {continued)     Burst  his  own  wyvem  on  the  s, 
The  s  was  Cupid  bent  above  a  scroll, 
Claspt  on  her  s,  my  sweet ! 
To  dissolve  the  precious  5  on  a  bond, 
Stoopt,  took,  brake  s,  and  read  it ; 
it  was  a  bond  and  s  Of  friendship, 


Aylmer's  Field  516 

Princess  i  242 

Window,  The  Answer  2 

Maud  I  xix  45 

Lancelot  and  E.  1271 

Lover's  Tale  ii  181 


Seal  (an  animal)    follow  you,  as  they  say  The  s  does  music  ;  Princess  iv  456 

Sea-lane     Revenge  ran  on  thro'  a  long  s-l  between.  The  Revenge  36 

Seal'd     Thro'  the  s  ear  to  which  a  louder  one  Was  all 

but  silence —  Aylmer's  Field  696 

iS  it  with  kisses  ?  water'd  it  with  tears  ?  CEnone  234 

This  I  s  :  The  seal  was  Cupid  bent  above  a  scroll,  Princess  i  241 

Knowledge  is  now  no  more  a  fountain  s  :  „        ii  90 
Delivering  5  dispatches  which  the  Head  Took  half-amazed,     „      iv  379 

since  my  will  S  not  the  bond —  „       v  399 

Ask  me  no  more  :  thy  fate  and  mine  are  s  :  „       vii  11 

or  something  s  The  hps  of  that  Evangelist.  In  Mem.  xxxi  15 

Or  s  within  the  iron  hills  ?  „             Ivi  20 

S  her  mine  from  her  first  sweet  breath.  Maud  I  xix  41 
I  bad  her  keep.  Like  a  s  book,  all  mention  of  the  grin,       The  Ring  123 

Sea-light    with  a  wild  s-l  about  his  feet,  Guinevere  242 

Sea-line     And  fixt  upon  the  far  s-l ;  The  Voyage  62 

Back  to  the  dark  s-l  Looking,  Maud  11  ii  45 

Seaman     prose  O'er  books  of  travell'd  seamen,  Amphion  82 

the  seamen  Made  a  gallant  crew.  The  Captain  5 
set  Annie  forth  in  trade  With  all  that  seamen  needed     Enoch  Arden  139 

get  you  a  s's  glass,  Spy  out  my  face,  „           215 

A  haunt  of  brawUng  seamen  once,  „           697 

Mighty  S,  this  is  he  Was  great  by  land  Ode  on  Well.  83 

Mighty  S,  tender  and  true,  „           134 
seem'd  to  hear  Its  muiinur,  as  the  drowning  s  hears,  Lover's  Tale  i  635 

only  a  hundred  seamen  to  work  the  ship  The  Revenge  22 

seamen  made  mock  at  the  mad  Uttle  craft  „          38 

the  gimner  said  "  Ay,  ay,'  but  the  seamen  made  reply  :  „          91 

Seam'd    S  with  the  shallow  cares  of  fifty  years  :  Aylvier's  Field  814 

S  with  an  ancient  swordcut  on  the  cheek,  Lancelot  and  E.  258 

Chink'd  as  you  see,  and  s —  Lover's  Tale  i  131 

Sleamew     Where  now  the  s  pipes.  In  Mem.  cxv  1^< 

Sear  (adj.)     {See  also  Sere)    And  woods  are  5,  And  fires 

burn  clear,  Window,  Winter  3 

Sear  (verb)     And  let  my  lady  s  the  stump  for  him,  Pelleas  and  E.  339 

leaf  rejoice  in  the  frost  that  s's  it  at  night ;  The  Wreck  20 

Search  (S)     burst  away  In  s  of  stream  or  fount,  Enoch  Arden  635 

To  seek  him,  and  had  wearied  of  the  s.  Lancelot  and  E.  631 

went  in  s  of  thee  Thro'  many  a  palace,  Demeter  and  P.  54 

after  hours  of  s  and  doubt  and  threats.  The  Ring  278 

Search  (verb)     '  To  s  thro'  all  I  felt  or  saw,  Two  Voices  139 

To  s  a  meaning  for  the  song.  Day  Dm.,  L' Envoi  35 

But  it  is  thou  whom  I  s  from  temple  to  temple.  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  6 

Searching    See  Spirit-searching 

Sear'd    S  by  the  close  ecHptic,  Aylmer's  Field  193 

foreheads  grimed  with  smoke,  and  s.  Holy  Grail  265 

Searer     The  woods  are  all  the  s,  Window,  Winter  14 

Sea-smoke    upjetted  in  spirts  of  wild  s-s.  Sea  Dreams  52 

Sea-snake    Till  that  great  s-s  imder  the  sea  The  Mermaid  23 

Season    knew  the  s's  when  to  take  Occasion  To  the  Queen  30 

'  Win  thirty  s's  render  plain  Two  Voices  82 

Power  fitted  to  the  s  ;  CEnone  123 

And  in  its  s  bring  the  law  ;  Love  thou  thy  land  32 

It  is  a  stormy  s.'  The  Goose  8 

I  heard  the  watchman  peal  The  sliding  s  :  Gardener's  D.  183 
Then  touch'd  upon  the  game,  how  scarce  it  was  This  s  ;  Audley  Court  33 

Are  but  as  poets'  s's  when  they  flower.  Golden  Year  28 

Thro'  all  the  s  of  the  golden  year.  „          36 

Old  writers  push'd  the  happy  s  back, —  „          66 

In  divers  s's,  divers  climes ;  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  18 

We  circle  with  the  s's.  Will  Water.  64 

The  sunny  and  the  rainy  s's  came  and  went  Enoch  Arden  623 

But  subject  to  the  s  or  the  mood,  Aylmer's  Field  71 

The  meteor  of  a  splendid  s,  „          205 

yet  out  of  s,  thus  I  woo  thee  roughly,  Lucretius  271 

the  cube  and  square  Were  out  of  s  :  Princess,  Pro.  181 

And  mix  the  s's  and  the  golden  hours ;  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  36 

The  s's  bring  the  flower  again.  In  Mem.  ii  5 

And,  crown'd  with  all  the  s  lent.  „     xxii  6 


Season  {continued)     No  joy  the  blowing  s  gives, 
break  At  s's  thro'  the  gilded  pale  : 
But  served  the  s's  that  may  rise  ; 
Like  things  of  the  s  gay,  like  the  bountiful  s  bland, 
That  blow  by  night,  when  the  s  is  good, 
Fixt  in  her  will,  and  so  the  s's  went. 
'  to  pluck  the  flower  in  s,' 
aU  men's  hearts  became  Clean  for  a  s, 
with  living  waters  in  the  change  Of  s's  : 
birds  that  change  Their  s  in  the  night 
such  a  one  As  dawns  but  once  a  s. 
Banner  of  England,  not  for  a  s, 
leaves  possess  the  s  in  their  turn, 

0  yes  !     1  hired  you  for  a  s  there, 
Season'd    Which  bears  a  s  brain  about, 
Season-earlier    cool  as  these,  Tho'  s-e. 
Sea-sounding    sad  s-s  wastes  of  Lyonesse — 
Sea-sunset    s-s  gloryuig  romid  her  hair 
Seat  (s)    downward  to  her  s  from  the  upper  cliff- 
Rest  in  a  happy  place  and  quiet  s's 

had  cast  the  curtains  of  their  s  aside — 

and  lady  friends  From  neighbour  s's  : 

part  reel'd  but  kept  their  s's  : 

no  quiet  s's  of  the  just, 

freedom  in  her  regal  s  Of  England  ; 

mine  is  the  firmer  s,  The  truer  lance  : 

prone  from  off  her  s  she  fell, 

Pluck  the  mighty  from  their  s, 

since  he  would  sit  on  a  Prophet's  s, 

1  sprang  from  my  s,  I  wept. 
Seat  (verb)    we  will  s  you  highest : 

To  s  you  sole  upon  my  pedestal  Of  worship- 
Then  waving  as  a  sign  to  s  ourselves, 
Seated  {See  also  Deep-seated)   but  Annie,  s  with  her  grief,  Enoch  Arden2S0 
Then,  s  on  a  serpent-rooted  beech.  The  Brook  135 

Laurence  Aylmer,  s  on  a  stile  In  the  long  hedge,  „      197 


In  Mem.  xxxviii  5] 
„  cxi  8 1 

„  cxiii  4J 

Maud  I  iv  3] 
„  7/i;7SJ 
Merlin  and  V.  188 
7231 
Holy  Grail  915 
Pelleas  and  E.  5123 
Pass,  of  Arthur  393 
Lover's  Tale  i  3001 
Def.  of  Lucknow  11 
Prog,  of  Spring  1071 
Romney's  R.  201 
Will  Water.  851 
Balin  and  Balan  274l 
Merlin  and  V.  74l 
Last  Tournament  508] 
CEnone  22 
„      131 
Aylmer's  Field  803 
Princess,  Pro.  98 
V  496 
Wages  8 
In  Mem.  cix  14 
Lancelot  and  E.  446 
Guinevere  414 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  133  i 
Dead  Prophet  53  j 
Charity  37  ' 
Princess  Hi  159 
Merlin  and  V.  878 
Lover's  Tale  iv  320  ' 


the  king,  the  queen  Bad  me  be  s, 

he  was  s — speaking  aloud  To  women, 

Angel  s  in  the  vacant  tomb. 

Blessing  his  field,  or  s  in  the  dusk  Of  even. 

When  s  on  a  rock,  and  foot  to  foot 
Seating    And,  s  Gareth  at  another  board, 
Sea-viUage    Yonder  lies  our  young  s-v — 
Sea-voice    sent  a  deep  s-v  thro'  all  the  land, 
Seaward    Your  cannons  moulder  on  the  s  wall ; 
Seaward-bound    s-b  for  health  they  gain'd  a  coast. 
Seaward-gazing    in  a  s-g  mountain-gorge  They  built, 

all  day  long  Sat  often  in  the  s-g  gorge. 
Sea-water    The  salt  s-w  passes  by. 
Sea-wave    voice  of  the  long  s-w  as  it  swell'd 
Sea-wind    and  over  them  the  s-w  sang  Shrill, 

and  over  them  the  s-w  -sang  Shrill, 

sounds  of  joy  That  came  on  the  s-w. 
Sea-wold    On  the  broad  .f-w's  in  the  crimson  shells, 
Scaworm    lie  Battening  upon  huge  s's 
Sea-worthy    The  vessel  scarce  s-w  ; 

Of  others  their  old  craft  s  stUl, 
Second  (adj.)     A  s  voice  was  at  mine  ear, 

Is  bodied  forth  the  s  whole. 

And  hid  Excalibur  the  s  time, 

'Tis  like  the  s  world  to  us  that  live  ; 

And  o'er  her  s  father  stoopt  a  girl, 

Yet  the  sad  mother,  for  the  s  death 


Columbus  11 1 
The  Wreck  48 1 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  278  j 
Demeter  and  P.  125  j 
Romney's  R.  75] 
Gareth  and  L.  871 1 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  245  j 
Guinevere  247ij 
Ode  on  Well.  173 
Sea  Dreams  Ifl 
Enoch  Arden  558 
5891 
In  Mem.  xix  6j 
Maud  I  xiv  31 
M.  d' Arthur  ■ 
Pass,  of  Arthur  21fl 
Lover's  Tale  i  326 
The  Mermaid  i 

The  Kraken  IS 

Enoch  Arden  * 

Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent,^ 

Two  Voices  •" 

Love  thou  thy  land  i 

M.  d' Arthur  111 

Golden  Year  i 

Enoch  Arden  10, 

Aylmer's  Field  i 


But  when  the  s  Christmas  came,  escaped  His  keepers. 

Is  it  so  tine  that  s  thoughts  are  best  ?  Sea  Drearns 

I  find  you  here  but  in  the  s  place.  Princess  Hi  151 

and  you  me  Your  s  mother : 

'  The  s  two  :  they  wait,' he  said, '  pass  on  ; 

Less  prosperously  the  s  suit  obtain'd  At  first  with  Psyche.    „        vii  71 

We  flung  the  burthen  of  the  s  James.  Third  of  Feb.  28* 

And  unto  me  no  s  friend.  In  Mem.  vi  44 

Beyond  the  s  birth  of  Death.  „        xlv  16 

If,  in  thy  s  state  sublime,  „          Ixi  1 

She  is  the  s,  not  the  first  ,,      cxiv  16 

When  he  comes  to  the  s  corpse  in  the  pit  ?  Maud  II  v  88 


Second 


613 


See 


Garelh  and  L.  1004 

1025 

Marr.  of  Geraint  626 

Fass.  of  Arthur  250 

279 

Lover's  "Tale  iv  343 

First  Quarrel  71 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  269 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  68 

The  Ring  382 

Lover's  Tale  iv  324 

Walk  to  the  Mail  65 

Frincess  ii  443 


Second  (adj.)  {co^Uinued)  The*  brother  in  their  fool's 
parable — 
So  when  they  touch'd  the  s  river-loop, 
To  seek  a  s  favour  at  his  hands. 
Then  went  Sir  Bedivere  the  s  time 
And  hid  Excalibur  the  s  time, 
Obedient  to  her  s  master  now ; 
You'll  make  her  its  5  mother  ! 
and  in  the  s  year  was  bom  A  s — 
Felt  within  themselves  the  sacred  passion  of  the 

*■  life. 
No  s  cloudless  honeymoon  was  mine. 

Second  (s)    ashes  and  all  fire  again  Thrice  in  a  s, 

Second-hand    fit  us  like  a  natme  s-h  ; 

Second-sight    The  s-s  of  some  Astraean  age, 

Secret  (adj.)     From  many  a  wondrous  grot  and  s  cell  The  Kraken  8 

Only  they  saw  thee  from  the  s  shrine  Alexander  13 

and  close  it  up  With  s  death  for  ever,  Wan  Sculptor  13 

and  made  appear  StiU-lighted  in  a  s  shrine,  Mariana  in  the  S.  18 

'  Yet,'  said  the  s  voice,  '  some  time,  Sooner  or  later,  Two  Voices  64 

'  But  heard,  by  s  transport  led,  „         214 
doors  that  bar  The  s  bridal  chambers  of  the  heart,      Gardener's  D.  249 

Then  by  some  s  shrine  I  ride  ;  Sir  Galahad  29 
S  wrath  like  smother'd  fuel  Burnt  in  each  man's  blood.     The  Captain  15 

And  s  laughter  tickled  all  my  soul.  Princess  iv  267 

considering  everywhere  Her  s  meaning  in  her  deeds.  In  Mem.  Iv  10 

A  A-  sweetness  in  the  stream,  „       Ixiv  20 

Thy  passion  clasps  a  s  joy  :  „  Ixxxviii  8 

all  as  soon  as  bom  Deliver'd  at  a  s  postern-gate  Com.  of  Arthur  213 

She  answer'd,  '  These  be  s  things,'  „            318 

That  God  hath  told  the  King  a  s  word.  „            489 

In  whom  high  God  hath  breathed  a  s  thing.  „            501 

A  strange  knee  rustle  thro'  her  s  reeds,  Balin  and  Balan  354 

This  fair  wife-worship  cloaks  a  s  shame  ?  „              360 

To  spy  some  s  scandal  it  he  might,  Guinevere  26 

Shut  in  the  s  chambers  of  the  rock.  Lover's  Tale  i  521 

and  not  rather  A  sacred,  s,  imapproached  woe,  ,,            679 

Then  Juhan  made  a  s  sign  to  me  ,,        iv  284 

strange  dream  to  me  To  mind  me  of  the  s  vow  I  made        Columbus  92 

There  in  a  s  olive-glade  I  saw  PaUas  Athene  Tiresias  39 

Wild  flowers  of  the  s  woods.  The  Flight  82 

Patient — the  s  splendour  of  the  brooks.  Frog,  of  Spring  21 

Secret  (s)    {See  also  Party-secret)    What  know  we  of 

the  s  of  a  man  ?  Walk,  to  the  Mail  104 

On  s's  of  the  brain,  the  stars,  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  11 

'  But  keep  the  s  for  your  life,  Lady  Clare  34 

'  But  keep  the  5  all  ye  can.'  „            42 

'  Woman,  I  have  a  s — only  swear,  Enoch  Arden  837 

abyss  Of  science,  and  the  s's  of  the  mind  :  Princess  ii  177 

the  snake,  My  s,  seem'd  to  stir  within  my  breast ;  „       Hi  44 

And  holy  s's  of  this  microcosm.  „          313 

S's  of  the  sullen  mine,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  16 

charnis  Her  s  from  the  latest  moon  ?  '         •  In  Mem.  xxi  20 

And  all  the  s  of  the  Spring  „       xxiii  19 

He  reads  the  s  of  the  star,  „       xcvii  22 
after-years  Will  learn  the  s  of  our  Arthur's  birth.'    Com.  of  Arthur  159 

learnt  their  elemental  s's,  powers  And  forces  ;  Merlin  and  V.  632 

familiar  friend  Might  well  have  kept  his  s.  Lancelot  and  E.  593 

her  heart's  sad  s  blazed  itself  In  the  heart's  colours  „            836 

And  every  homely  «  in  their  hearts,  Holy  Grail  552 

kept  our  holy  faith  among  her  kin  In  s,  „          698 

For  all  the  s  of  her  inmost  heart,  Lover's  Tale  i  588 

Not  know  ?  with  such  a  s  to  be  known.  „          iv  121 

and  the  s  of  the  Gods.  Tiresias  8 

Secretest    with  echoing  feet  he  threaded  The  s  walks 

of  fame ;  The  Poet  10 

Sect     I  care  not  what  the  s's  may  brawl.  Palace  of  Art  210 

To  cleave  a  creed  in  s's  and  cries,  In  Mem.  cxxviii  15 

every  splinter'd  fraction  of  a  «  Will  clamour  Akbar's  Dream  33 

Seonlar    on  whom  The  s  emancipation  turns  Of  half  this 

world,  Frincess  ii  289 

lighten  thro'  The  s  abyss  to  come,  In  Mem.  Ixxvi  6 

Seoure     And  in  their  double  love  s,  Two  Voices  418 

Lie  still,  dry  dust,  s  of  change.  To  J.  S.  76 

as  from  men  s  Amid  their  marshes.  Last  Tournament  426 


Secure  {continued)    look  down  and  up.  Serene,  s,  Early  Spring  28. 
Sedate     The  chancellor,  s  and  vain,  l)ay-pm.\Remval  29 
Sedge     whisper'd  '  Asses'  ears,'  aVnong  the  5,  '  Princess  ii  113 
Seduced     harlot-Uke  S  me  from  you,  Romney's  R.  116 
See     {See  also  Seea)    S  !  our  friends  are  all  forsaking  All  Things  will  Die  18 
For  even  and  morn  Ye  will  never  s  Thro'  etemity.  „              45 
Hither,  come  hither  and  s  ;  Sea- Fairies  28 
thro'  the  windows  we  shall  s  The  nakedness  Deserted  House  10 
I  s  thy  beauty  gradually  unfold,  Elednore  70 
I  seem  to  s  Thought  folded  over  thought,  „          83 
I  s  thee  roam,  with  tresses  imconfined,  .,        122 
as  far  onas  eye  could  s.  //  I  were  loved  14 
Thine-eyes  so  wept  that  they  could  hardly  s  ;  The  Bridesmaid  2 
There  she  s's  the  highway  near  L.  of  SJwlott  ii  13 
Like  to  some  branch  of  stars  we  s  „        Hi  11 
'  Still  s's  the  sacred  morning  spread  Two  Voices  80 
'  I  «  the  end,  and  know  the  good.'  „        432 
You  scarce  could  s  the  grass  for  flowei's.  ,.        453 
I  s  the  wealthy  miller  yet,  Miller's  D.  \ 
In  yonder  chair  I  s  him  sit,  „          9 
I  s  his  gray  eyes  twinkle  yet  At  liis  own  jest —  „       '.  11 
And  s  the  minnows  everywhere  In  crystal  eddies  „         51 
The  doubt  my  mother  would  not  s  ;  „       154 
and  s  thy  Paris  judge  of  Gods.'  CEnone  90 
never  more  Shall  lone  (Enone  s  the  morning  mist  Sweep 
thro'  them  ;  never  s  them  overlaid  With  narrow  moon- 
lit slips  „    216 

0  happy  heaven,  how  canst  thou  s  my  face  ?  „    236 

1  dimly  s  My  far-off  doubtful  purpose,  „     250 

0  the  Earl  was  fair  to  s  !  (repeat)  The  Sisters  6,  12, 18,  24,  30,  36 
Houris  bow'd  to  s  The  dying  Islamite,  Palace  of  Art  102 
Which  you  had  hardly  cared  to  s.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  32 
whom  think  ye  should  I  s.  May  Queen  13 
you'll  be  there  too,  mother,  to  s  me  made  the  Queen ;  „          26 

1  would  s  the  sun  rise  upon  the  glad  New- 
year,  (repeat)  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  2,  51 

It  is  the  last  New- Year  that  I  shall  ever  s,  ,,                          3 

never  s  The  blossom  on  the  blackthorn,  „                            7 

I  long  to  s  a  flower  so  before  the  day  I  die.  „                         16 

never  s  me  more  in  the  long  gray  fields  „                          26 

And  you'll  come  sometimes  and  s  me  „                         30 

Tho'  you'll  not  s  me,  mother,  „                         38 

s  me  carried  out  from  the  threshold  of  the  door  ;  ,,                          42 

Don't  let  Effie  come  to  s  me  ,,  43 
hear  and  s  the  far-off  sparkling  brine,                     Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  98 

Waiting  to  s  me  die.  D.  of  F.  Women  112 

0  me,  that  I  should  ever  s  the  light !  „  254 
He  will  not  s  the  dawn  of  day.  D.  of  the  0.  Year  11 
A  jolUer  year  we  shall  not  s.  „  20 
To  s  him  die,  across  the  waste  „                30 

1  will  s  before  I  die  The  palms  and  temples  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  27 
Watch  what  I  s,  and  Ughtly  bring  thee  word.'  M.  d' Arthur  44 
I  s  thee  what  thou  art,  „  123 
'  Now  s  I  by  thine  eyes  that  this  is  done.  ,.  149 
Nor  shall  s,  here  or  elsewhere,  till  I  die,  ,,  154 
now  I  s  the  true  old  times  are  dead,  „  229 ' 
If  thou  should'st  never  s  my  face  again,  ,.  246 
in  itself  the  day  we  went  To  s  her.  Gardener's  D.  76 
I  would  wish  to  s  My  grandchild  on  my  knees  before  I  die  :  Dora  12 
he  may  s  the  boy.  And  bless  him  „  69 
Allan  said,  '  I  s  it  is  a  trick  Got  up  betwixt  you  „  95 
But  go  you  hence,  and  never  s  me  more.'  .,  100 
He  says  that  he  will  never  s  me  more.'  „  116 
Whose  house  is  that  Is?  Walk,  to  the  Mail  11 
eyes  Should  s  the  raw  mechanic's  bloody  thumbs  „  75 
I  s  the  moulder'd  Abbey-walls,  Talking  Oak  3 
when  I  s  the  woodman  lift  HLs  axe  to  slay  my  kin,  „  235 
Then  not  to  dare  to  «  !  Love  and  Duty  38 
And  s  the  great  Achilles,  whom  we  knew.  Ulysses  64 
Thou  seest  all  things,  thou  wilt  s  my  grave :  Tithonus  73 
far  as  himian  eye  could  s  ;  (repeat)  Locksley  Hall  15, 119 
O,  I  s  thee  old  and  formal,  „  93 
S's  in  heaven  the  light  of  London  „  114 
O,  I  s  the  crescent  promise  „  187 
And  loathed  to  s  them  overtax'd  ;  Godiva  9 


See 


614 


See 


See  (continued)    heads  upon  the  spout  Had  cunning  eyes  to  s  :       Godiva  57      See 
To  s  you  dreaming — and,  bemnd,  Day- Dm.,  Pro.  7 

And  s  the  vision  that  I  saw,  „  14 

That  lets  thee  neither  hear  nor  s  :  „   L' Envoi  52 

And  wasn't  it  a  sight  to  s,  Amphion  49 

'  Let  us  s  these  handsome  houses  L.  of  Burleigh  23 

S's  whatever  fair  and  splendid  „  27 

S's  a  mansion  Ynore  majestic  „  45 

S  that  sheets  are  on  my  bed  ;  Vision  of  Sin  68 

To  s  his  children  leading  evermore  Enoch  Arden  115 

'  Surely,'  said  Philip,  '  I  may  s  her  now,  „  275 

not  to  s  the  world — For  pleasure  ? — 
I  grieve  to  s  you  poor  and  wanting  help  : 
'  Yes,  if  the  nuts '  he  said  '  be  ripe  again  :  Come  out  and  s.' 
what  he  fain  had  seen  He  could  not  s, 
His  hopes  to  s  his  owti, 
Enoch  yeam'd  to  s  her  face  again  ; 
S  thro'  the  gray  skirts  of  a  lifting  squall 
Not  to  reveal  it,  tiU  you  s  me  dead.' 
'  S  your  bairns  before  you  go  ! 
I  charge  you  now.  When  you  shall  5  her. 
But  if  my  children  care  to  s  me  dead, 
for  I  shall  s  him,  My  babe  in  bliss : 
when  you  s  her — but  you  shall  not  s  her — 
Uke  one  that  s's  his  own  excess, 
Now  I  s  My  dream  was  Life  ; 
Grave,  florid,  stem,  as  far  as  eye  could  s, 
Whom  all  the  pines  of  Ida  shook  to  s 
nor  knows  he  what  he  s's  ; 
he  s's  not,  nor  at  all  can  tell 
they  s  no  men.  Not  ev'n  her  brother  Arac, 
I  am  sad  and  glad  To  s  you,  Florian. 
I  know  the  substance  when  I  s  it. 
She  s's  herself  in  every  woman  else, 
he  could  not  s  The  bird  of  passage  flying 
More  miserable  than  she  that  has  a  son  And  s's  him  err 
That  we  might  s  our  own  work  out, 
As  parts,  can  s  but  parts,  now  this, 
A  man  I  came  to  s  you  : 
He  s's  his  brood  about  thy  knee ; 
My  one  sweet  child,  whom  I  shall  s  no  more  ! 
I  know  not  what — and  ours  shall  s  us  friends. 
'  8  that  there  be  no  traitors  in  your  camp  : 
S  now,  tho'  yourself  Be  dazzled  by  the  wildfire 
yet  she  s's  me  fight.  Yea,  let  her  s  me  fall ! 
I  would  sooner  fight  thrice  o'er  than  s  it.' 
'  But  s  that  some  one  with  authority 
s  how  you  stand  Stiff  as  Lot's  wife, 
now  should  men  s  Two  women  faster  welded 
and  s's  a  great  black  cloud  Drag  inward  from  the  deeps. 
Far  on  in  summers  that  we  shall  not  s  : 
Whom  we  s  not  we  revere  ; 
S,  empire  upon  empire  smiles  to-day, 
Perhaps  I  shall  s  him  the  sooner, 
Willy, — he  didn't  s  me, — 

I  shall  s  him  another  mom :  „  67 

for  I  couldn  abear  to  s  it.  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  64 

run  oop  to  the  brig,  an'  that  thou'll  live  to  s  ;  „  N.  S.  55 

Godfather,  come  and  s  your  boy :  To  F.  D.  Maurice  2 

It  s's  itself  from  thatch  to  base  Requiescat  3 

I  s  the  place  where  thou  wilt  he.  Sailor  Boy  8 

And  men  will  live  to  5  it.  Spiteful  Letter  18 

all  we  have  power  to  s  is  a  straight  staff  High.  Pantheism  16 

and  the  eye  of  man  cannot  s;  „  17 

if  we  could  s  and  hear,  this  Vision —  „  18 

S  they  sit,  they  hide  their  faces,  Boadicea  51 

For  kjiowledge  is  of  things  we  «  ;  In  Mem.,  Pro.  22 

For  he  will  s  them  on  to-night ;  „  m  33 

My  Arthur,  whom  I  shall  not  s  „  ix  17 

I  s  the  cabin-window  bright ;  „  a;  3 

1 8  the  sailor  at  the  wheel.  „  4 

And  s  the  sails  at  distance  rise,  „  xii  11 

Tears  of  the  widower,  wlien  he  s's  A  late-lost  form  „  xiii  1 

Should  s  thy  passengers  in  rank  „  xiv  6 

The  dust  of  him  I  shall  not  s  „  xvii  19 


297 

406 

460 

581 

624 

717 

829 

839 

870 

878 

888 

897 

Ayhner's  Field  309 

400 

Sea  Dreams  136 

219 

Lu^etius  86 

„      132 

Princess  i  152 

m307 
413 

Hi  110 
209 
261 
270 
327 

iv  441 
582 
v8S 
228 
425 
440 
516 

m226 
236 
240 
252 

vii36 

Ode  on  Well.  234 

245 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  33 

Grandmother  16 

42 


(continued)    spirits  sink  To  s  the  vacant  chair.  In  Mem.  xx  Ifl 

bore  thee  where  I  could  not  s  „        xxii  11 

s  Within  the  green  the  moulder 'd  tree,  „          xxvi  81 

that  eye  foresee  Or  s  (in  Him  is  no  before)  „                10 

And  &ids  '  I  am  not  what  I  s,  „            xlv  7 

8  with  clear  eye  some  hidden  shame  „              li  7 

I  cannot  s  the  features  right,  „           Ixx  1 

I  s  thee  what  thou  art,  and  know  „        Ixxiv  6 

But  there  is  more  than  I  can  s,  „                 9 

I  s  thee  sitting  crown'd  with  good,  „      Ixxxiv  5 

I  s  their  unborn  faces  shine  „                19 

I  s  myself  an  honour'd  guest,  „                21 

To  s  the  rooms  in  which  he  dwelt.  „  Ixxxvii  16 

I  shall  not  s  thee.     Dare  I  say  „         xciii  1 

He  s's  himself  in  all  he  s's.  „         xcvii  4 

You  leave  us  :  you  will  s  the  Rhine,  „        xcviii  1 

I  have  not  seen,  I  will  not  s  Vienna  ;  ,,11 

For  those  that  here  we  s  no  more  ;  „          cw  10 

I  s  Betwixt  the  black  fronts  „          cxix  5 

That  s's  the  course  of  human  things.  „      cxxviii  4 

I  s  in  part  That  all,  as  in  some  piece  ,,                22 

I  s  her  pass  Uke  a  light ;  Maud  I  iv  11 

And  I  s  my  Oread  coming  down,  „          xvi  8 

I  s  her  there,  Bright  English  lily,  „        xix  54 

I  s  she  cannot  but  love  him,  „              69 

your  true  lover  may  s  Your  glory  also,  „         a;*  47 

8  what  a  lovely  shell,  „       II  ii  1 

For  one  short  hour  to  s  The  souls  we  loved,  „          iv  14 

8,  there  is  one  of  us  sobbing,  „  v  30 
we  s  him  as  he  moved.  How  modest,  Ded.  of  Idylls  17 
shout  of  one  who  s's  To  one  who  sins,                        Com.  of  Arthur  117 

but  turn  the  blade  and  ye  shall  s,  „            303 

now  of  late  I  s  him  less  and  less,  „  356 
nor  s's,  nor  hears,  nor  speaks,  nor  knows.                      Gareth  atid  L.  81 

And  I  shall  s  the  jousts.  „            166 

come  to  s  The  glories  of  our  King :  „            243 

thou  mockest  me,  And  all  that  s  thee,  „            290 

For  s  ye  not  how  weak  and  hungerwom  I  seem —  „            443 

but  5  thou  to  it  That  thine  own  fineness,  „            475 

and  s  Far  as  thou  mayest,  he  be  nor  ta'en  nor  slain.'  „            585 

S  to  the  foe  within !  bridge,  ford,  beset  By  bandits,  „            594 

8  that  he  fall  not  on  thee  suddenly,  „            921 

8  thou  crave  His  pardon  for  thy  breaking  of  his  laws.  „            985 

8  thou  have  not  now  Larded  thy  last,  „          1083 

S  now,  sworn  have  I,  „          1292 

I  s  thee  maim'd.  Mangled :  „  1326 
And  s  my  dear  lord  wounded  in  the  strife,               Marr.  of  Geraint  103 

I  s  her  Weeping  for  some  gay  knight  in  Arthur's  hall.'        „  117 

Queen  petition'd  for  his  leave  To  s  the  hunt,  „              155 

I  but  come  like  you  to  s  the  hunt,  „              179 

To  noble  hearts  who  s  but  acts  of  wrong :  „              438 

Nor  can  s  elsewhere,  anything  so  fair.  „              499 

my  pride  Is  broken  down,  for  Enid  s's  my  fall ! '  „              590 

while  she  thought '  They  will  not  s  me,'  „              666 

I  s  my  princess  as  I  s  her  now,  „  752 
That  other,  where  we  s  as  we  are  seen !                          Geraint  and  E.  7 

Yourself  shall  s  my  vigour  is  not  lost.'  „            82 

how  Ls  it  I  s  you  here  ?  „          309 

I  s  with  joy.  Ye  sit  apart,  „          320 

What  thing  soever  ye  may  hear,  or  s,  Or  fancy  „          415 

I  s  the  danger  which  you  cannot  s :  „          421 

it  makes  me  mad  to  s  you  weep.  „          616 

'  Girl  for  I  s  ye  scorn  my  courtesies,  „          671 

For  s  ye  not  my  gentlewomen  here,  „          682 

Which  s's  the  trapper  coming  thro'jthe  wood.  „          724 

eyes  As  not  to  s  before  them  on  the  path,  „  773 
but  s,  or  proven  or  not,                                               Balin  and  Bodan  39 

*  Let  who  goes  before  me,  s  He  do  not  fall  behind  me :  „            134 

sighs  to  s  the  peak  Sun-flush'd,  „            165 


emblems  drew  mine  eyes — away :  For  s,  how  perfect- 
pure! 
'  Queen  ?  subject  ?  but  I  s  not  what  I  s. 
they  fail  to  s  This  fair  wife-worship 
8,  yonder  lies  one  dead  within  the  wood. 
8  now,  I  set  thee  high  on  vantage  groimd, 


266 
281 
359 
468 
534 


See 

See  {continued)  S  what  I  s,  be  tbou  where  I  have  been, 
I  scarce  can  s  thee  now.    Goodnight ! 
I  s  thee  now  no  more. 

Nor  could  he  s  but  him  who  wrought  the  charm 
s  you  not,  dear  love.  That  such  a  mood  as  that, 
that  no  man  could  s  her  more, 
S's  what  his  fair  bride  is  and  does, 
s  Her  godlike  head  crown'd  with  spiritual  fire, 
ask  you  not  to  s  the  shield  he  left, 
an  ye  will  it  let  me  s  the  shield.' 
'  Going  ?  and  we  shall  never  s  you  more, 
to  s  your  face,  To  serve  you, 
•  Not  to  be  with  you,  not  to  s  your  face — 
To  s  that  she  be  buried  worshipfully.' 
to  s  The  maiden  buried,  not  as  one  unknown, 
if  a  man  Could  touch  or  s  it,  he  was  heal'd 
for  thou  Shalt  s  what  I  have  seen, 
none  might  s  who  bare  it,  and  it  past. 
But  since  I  did  not  s  the  Holy  Thing, 
What  go  ye  into  the  wilderness  to  s  ? ' 
one  hath  seen,  and  all  the  blind  wiU  s. 
what  thy  sister  taught  me  first  to  s, 
thou  shalt  s  the  vision  when  I  go.' 
On  either  hand,  as  far  as  eye  could  5, 
Which  never  eyes  on  earth  again  shall  s. 
if  ever  loyal  man  and  true  Could  s  it, 
cannot  s  for  slime.  Slime  of  the  ditch : 
could  I  touch  or  s  the  Holy  Grail 
Being  too  blind  to  have  desire  to  s. 
'S\  look  at  mine!  but  wilt  thou  fight 
Content  am  I  so  that  I  s  thy  face  But  once  a  day 
from  the  vermin  that  he  s's  Before  him. 
Vex  not  yourself :  ye  will  not  5  me  more.' 
Thus  to  be  bounden,  so  to  s  her  face. 
Let  me  be  bounden,  I  shall  s  her  face ; 
S,  the  hand  Wherewith  thou  takest  this, 
Tuwhoo !  do  ye  s  it  ?  do  ye  s  the  star  ? ' 
'  Nay,  nor  will :  I  «  it  and  hear, 
shape  Of  one  that  in  them  s's  himself, 
forgotten  all  in  my  strong  joy  To  s  thee— 
Who  s  your  tender  grace  and  stateliness. 
sworn  never  to  s  him  more.  To  s  him  more.' 
pity  almost  makes  me  die  To  s  thee. 
Never  he  by  thy  side ;  s  thee  no  more — 
I  might  s  his  face,  and  not  be  seen.' 
so  she  did  not  s  the  face, 
now  I  s  thee  what  thou  art. 
We  needs  must  love  the  highest  when  we  s  it. 
And  have  not  power  to  s  it  as  it  is : 
because  we  s  not  to  the  close ; — 
one  last  act  of  knighthood  shalt  thou  s 
Watch  what  I  s,  and  lightly  bring  thee  word.' 
I  s  thee  what  thou  art, 
'  Now  s  I  by  thine  eyes  that  this  is  done. 
Nor  shall  s,  here  or  elsewhere,  till  I  die, 
now  I  s  the  true  old  times  are  dead, 
thou  should'st  never  s  my  face  again, 
S,  sirs.  Even  now  the  Goddess  of  the  Past, 
Chink'd  as  you  s,  and  seam'd — 
Waiting  to  s  some  blessed  shape  in  heaven. 
From  that  time  forth  I  would  not  s  her  more ; 
in  her  you  s  That  faithful  servant 
to  s  if  work  could  be  found ; 
When  I  cannot  s  my  own  hand. 
Couldn't  s  'im,  we  'eard  'im  .       ^ 

'  Doesn't  tha  s  'im,  she  axes,  '  fur  I  can  s  'im  ? 
For  s — this  wine — the  grape  from  whence 
That  time  I  did  not  s. 
when  she  thought  I  did  not  s — 
The  Lord  has  so  much  to  s  to ! 
and  we  went  to  a  to  the  child, 
perchance  the  neighbours  round  May  s, 
Whom  yet  I  s  as  there  you  sit 
strange  hope  to  s  the  nearer  God. 
eyes,  that  cannot  s  thine  own,  S  this, 


615 


Seed 


Balin  and  Balan  572 
621 

624 
Merlin  and  V.  212 
324 
642 
782 
836 
Lancelot  and  E.  653 
661 
926 
938 
946 
1329 
1333 
Holy  Orail  55 
160 
190 
281 
287 
313 
469 
484 
498 
532 
757 
771 
779 
872 

Pelleas  and  E.  127 
243 
285 
304 
326 
331 

Last  Tournament  192 

346 

348 

370 

583 

Guinevere  190 

376 

535 

579 

588 

595 

648 

660 

Pass,  of  Arthur  20 

21 

163 

212 

291 

317 

322 

397 

414 

Lover's  Tale  i  15 

131 

312 

„  ii  1 

„      iv  341 

First  Quarrel  44 

Rizpah  7 

North.  Cobbler  47 

49 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  61 

90 

166 

In  the  Child  Hasp.  57 

68 

Achilles  over  the  T.  13 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  5 

Tiresias  29 

108 


See  {continued)    S,  we  were  nursed  in  the  drear  night-fold 
s's  and  stirs  the  surface-shadow 


Despair  21 
Ancient  Sage  38 
72 
81 
283 
The  Flight  8 
91 


s's  the  Best  that  glimmers  thro'  the  Worst, 
Who  s  not  what  they  do  ? ' 

s  The  high-heaven  dawn  of  more  than  mortal  day 
waken  every  morning  to  that  face  I  loathe  to  s : 
And  5  the  ships  from  out  the  West 

I  seem  to  s  a  new-dug  grave  up  yonder  by  the  yew !  „        98 

people  'ud  s  it  that  wint  in  to  mass—  Tom^yrrmo  74 

Thou  s's  that  i'  spite  o'  the  men  Spinster  s  S  s.  11 
guide  us  thro'  the  days  I  shall  not  s  ?                   Locksley  H.,  Sixty  158 

whence  you  s  the  Locksley  tower,  »                |7o 

and  even  where  you  s  her  now —  «                17» 

We  should  s  the  Globe  we  groan  in,  „                loo 

Man  or  Mind  that  s's  a  shadow  ..                l»o 

those  about  us  whom  we  neither  s  nor  name,  „                ^7J 

s  the  highest  Human  Nature  is  divine.  „                ■^76 

But  scarce  could  s,  as  now  we  s.  Epilogue  ^ 

all  in  vain  As  far  as  man  can  s,  x.     :,  t>  "  i  .  co 

Shall  we  s  to  it,  I  and  you  ?  -»««*  Prophet  52 

'  S,  what  a  little  heart,'  she  said,  »            75 

both  our  Houses,  may  they  s  Beyond  the  borough  Hands  ail  Mound  Zl 
those  gilt  gauds  men-children  swarm  to  s.           To  W.  C.  Macready  11 

For  s,  thy  foot  has  touch'd  it ;  Bemeter  and  P.  48 


124 
149 

Owd  Rod  87 

The  Ring  144 

148 


223 

279 

328 

364 

370 

479 

Happy  19 

„      54 

„      85 

To  Ulysses  17 

Prog,  of  Spring  29 

88 


Will  s  me  by  the  landmark  far  away, 
s  no  more  The  Stone,  the  Wheel, 
I  couldn't  s  iuT  the  smoake 
not  shown  To  dazzle  all  that  s  them  ? 
that  s's  A  thousand  squares  of  com  and  meadow, 
and  cried  '  I  s  him,  lo  t'amo,  lo  t'amo.' 
'  s ! — Found  in  a  chink  of  that  old  moulder'd  floor ! 
and  s  beneath  our  feet  The  mist  of  autumn 
In  all  the  world  my  dear  one  s's  but  you— 
as  a  man  Who  s's  his  face  in  water, 
till  she  s's  Her  maiden  coming  like  a  Queen, 
He  s's  me,  waves  me  from  him. 
and  weeping  scarce  could  s ; 
S,  I  sinn'd  but  for  a  moment. 
And  s  my  cedar  green,  and  there  My  giant  ilex 
gladly  s  I  thro'  the  wavering  flakes 
Beyond  the  darker  hour  to  s  the  bright. 
The  best  in  me  that  s's  the  worst  in  me.  And  groans  ,    t.   .. 

to  s  it,  finds  no  comfort  there.  ^V"-^  *  ^-  T5 

S,  there  is  hardly  a  daisy.  ^ , ,     The  Throstle  12 

0  God  in  every  temple  I  s  people  that  s  thee,  Akbar  s  D.,  Inscrip.  1 
once  again  we  s  thee  rise.  «  ^^"t?  \ 
Sm,  do  you  s  this  dagger?  ^  Bandit  s  Death  5 
He  s's  not  her  Uke  anywhere  in  this  pitiless  world  Charity  4^ 
And  s  and  shape  and  do.                                             ^  Mechanophilus'k 

1  hope  to  s  my  Pilot  face  to  face  Crossing  the  Bar  i& 
Seea  (see)     when  they  s's  ma  a  passin'  boy, 

if  tha  s's  'im  an'  smeUs  'im 

I  browt  what  tha  s's  stannin'  theer, 
Seea'd  (saw)    S  her  todaay  goa  by — 
Seead    I  s  that  our  Sally  went  laamed 

S  nobbut  the  smile  o'  the  sun 
Seead  (seed)    an'  some  on  it  down  i'  s. 
Seeadin'  (seeding)    wool  of  a  thistle  a-flyin'  an  s  tha 

haated  to  see ; 
Seeam  (seem)     'E  s's  naw  moor  nor  watter, 
Seeam'd  (seemed)    an'  s  as  blind  as  a  poop. 
Seed    (See  also  Arrow-seed,  Seead)    having  sown  some 

generous  s,  ^'""'  Voices  143 

Sow  the  s,  and  reap  the  harvest  Lotos-Eaters,  C.S.  121 

Bear  s  of  men  and  growth  of  minds.  Love  thou  thy  land  20 

That  sought  to  sow  themselves  like  winged  s's,  Gardener  s  D.  05 

Not  only  we,  the  latest  s  of  Time, 

Nor  cared  for  s  or  scion ! 

The  vilest  herb  that  runs  to  s 

But  in  my  words  were  s's  of  fire. 

and  thus  a  noble  scheme  Grew  up  from  s 

the  s,  The  little  s  they  laugh'd  at  in  the  dark, 

save  the  one  true  s  of  freedom  sown 

Once  in  a  golden  hour  I  cast  to  earth  a  s. 

thieves  from  o'er  the  wall  Stole  the  s  by  night. 


N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  53 

North.  Cobbler  66 

70 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  13 

North.  Cobbler  39 

50 

N.  Farrn^,  0.  S.  40 

Spinster's  S's.  79 

North.  Cobbler  76 

Owd  Rod  101 


Godiva  5 

Amphion  12 

95 

The  Letters  28 

Princess  iv  310 

„        vi  33 

Ode  on  Well.  162 

The  Flower  2 

12 


Seed 

Seed  (continued)    For  all  have  got  the  s. 

And  finding  that  of  fifty  s's 

This  bitter  s  among  mankind ; 

Ray  romid  with  flames  her  disk  of  5, 

Long  sleeps  the  summer  in  the  s ; 

is  but  s  Of  what  in  them  is  flower 

three  gray  linnets  wrangle  for  the  s : 

winds,  Laden  with  thistledown  and  s's 

Eastern  gauze  With  s's  of  gold — • 

for  I  loathe  The  s  of  Cadmus — 

Daughter  of  the  s  of  Cain, 

Accomplish  that  blind  model  in  the  s, 
Seed  (saw)     nor  'e  niver  not  s  to  owt, 

but  Robby  I  s  thruf  ya  theere. 

Fur  I  s  that  Steevie  wur  coomin', 

fur  I  s  that  it  couldn't  be, 

Fur  I  s  the  beck  coomin'  down 

I  s  at  'is  faace  wur  as  red  as  the  Yule-block 

then  I  s  'er  a-cryin',  I  did. 

'at  summun  s  i'  the  flaame, 

Ay,  an'  ya  s  the  Bishop. 

An'  keeaper  'e  s  ya  an  roon'd, 
Seed  (seen)    I  niver  ha  s  it  sa  white  wi'  the  Maay 

An'  they  niver  'ed  s  sich  ivin' 
See'd  (saw)     white  wi'  the  Maay  es  I  s  it  to-year- 


616 


The  Flower  20 

In  Mem.  Iv  11 

„  xc  4 

„  ci  6 

ot26 

„  Con.  135 

Guinevere  255 

Lover's  Tale  ii  13 

,,       iv  292 

Tiresias  117 

Forlorn  39 

Prog,  of  Spring  114 

Village  Wife  51 

Spinster's  S's.  14 

40 

47 

Owd  Rod  40 

56 

80 

94 

Church-warden,  etc.  17 

28 

Village  Wife  80 

Owd  Rod  26 

Village  Wife  80 


See'd  (seen)  boooks,  I  ha'  s  'em,  belong'd  to  the  Squire,  „        71 

Seeded     Across  the  silent  s  meadow-grass  Borne,  Pelleas  and  E.  561 
Seeding    See  Seeadin' 

Seedling    as  Nature  packs  Her  blossom  or  her  s,  Enoch  Arden  179 

Seedsman    s,  rapt  Upon  the  teeming  harvest.  Golden  Year  70 

Seeing     (See  also  All-seeing)     S  all  his  own  mischance —   L.  of  Shalott  iv  12 

s  men,  in  power  Only,  are  likest  gods,  (Enone  129 

s  not  That  Beauty,  Good,  and  Knowledge,  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  9 

AveriU  s  How  low  his  brother's  mood  had  fallen,       Aylmer's  Field  403 

we  should  find  the  land  Worth  s ;  Princess  Hi  172 

S  I  saw  not,  hearing  not  I  heard :  „          vi  19 

s  either  sex  alone  Is  half  itself,  „       vii  301 

And  oiu"  s  is  not  sight.  Voice  arid  the  P.  36 

S  his  gewgaw  castle  shine,  Maud  I  x  18 
her  men,  S  the  mighty  swarm  about  their  walls.       Com.  of  Arthur  200 

S  that  ye  be  grown  too  weak  and  old  „            511 

s  the  city  is  built  To  music,  Gareth  and  L.  276 

s  he  hath  sent  us  cloth  of  gold,  „            428 

s  who  had  work'd  Lustier  than  any,  „             695 

And  s  now  thy  words  are  fair,  „          1181 

S  he  never  rides  abroad  by  day ;  „          1334 

And  all  the  three  were  silent  s,  „          1362 

And  s  them  so  tender  and  so  close,  Marr.  of  Geraint  22 

And  s  one  so  gay  in  purple  silks,  „            284 

And  s  her  so  sweet  and  serviceable,  „            393 

s  I  have  sworn  That  I  will  break  his  pride  „            423 

Danced  in  his  bosom,  s  better  days.  „            505 

Then  s  cloud  upon  the  mother's  brow,  „            777 

Arthur  s  ask'd  '  Tell  me  your  names  ;  Balin  and  Balan  49 

s  that  thy  realm  Hath  prosper'd  in  the  name  of  Christ,  „              98 

Balin  first  woke,  and  s  that  true  face,  „            590 

And  s  me,  with  a  great  voice  he  cried,  Lancelot  and  E.  309 

s  that  ye  forget  Obedience  is  the  courtesy  „            717 

iS  it  is  no  more  Sir  Lancelot's  fault  „          1075 

Yet,  s  you  desire  your  child  to  live,  „          1095 

S  I  never  stray'd  beyond  the  cell,  Holy  Grail  628 

s  that  the  King  must  guard  That  which  he  rules,  „          905 

and  s  Pelleas  droop.  Said  Guinevere,  Pelleas  and  E.  178 

80  went  back,  and  s  them  yet  in  sleep  „            445 

s  they  profess  To  be  none  other  (repeat)  Last  Tournament  82,  85 

s  too  much  wit  Makes  the  world  rotten,  „                 246 

Let  be  thy  Mark, » he  is  not  thine.'  „                 522 

Flatter  me  rather,  s  me  so  weak,  „                 642 

<S  it  is  not  bounded  save  by  love.'  „                 703 

S  forty  of  our  poor  hundred  were  slain,  The  Revenge  76 

8  what  a  door  for  scoundrel  scum  I  open'd  Cdvmbus  170 

Seek    When  my  passion  s's  Pleasance  Lilian  8 

What  wantest  thou  ?  whom  dost  thou  s,  Oriana  71 

We  would  run  to  and  fro,  and  hide  and  s.  The  Mermaid  35 

And  seem  to  find,  but  still  to  s.  Two  Voices  96 


Seek  (continued)    I  s  a  warmer  sky, 

"Tis  not  too  late  to  s  a  newer  world. 

to  s,  to  find,  and  not  to  yield. 

To  those  that  s  them  issue  forth ; 

He  comes,  scarce  knowing  what  he  s's : 

'  O  s  my  father's  court  with  me, 

childless  mother  went  to  s  her  child ; 

'  Hist  0  Hist,'  he  said,  '  They  s  us : 

where  you  s  the  common  love  of  these. 

He  s's  at  least  Upon  the  last 

s  A  friendship  for  the  years  to  come. 

But  s's  to  beat  in  time  with  one 

To  s  thee  on  the  mystic  deeps, 

And  so  that  he  find  what  he  went  to  s, 

I  will  s  thee  out  Some  comfortable  bride 

twelvemonth  and  a  day,  nor  s  my  name. 

S,  tiU  we  find.' 

I  s  a  harbourage  for  the  night.' 

To  s  a  second  favour  at  his  hands. 

had  ridd'n  a  random  round  To  s  him, 

my  craven  s's  To  wreck  thee  villainously : 

'  to  s  the  Lord  Jesus  in  prayer ; 

made  by  me,  may  s  to  unbury  me, 

sworn  to  s  If  any  golden  harbour 

then  so  keen  to  s  The  meanings  ambush'd 


Seem 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  26 
Ulysses  57 
„      70 
Day -Dm.,  Arrival  2 
17 
Depart.  27 
Aylmer's  Field  829 
Princess  iv  219 
„      vill2 
In  Mem.  xlvii  12 
„       Ixxxv  79 
115 
„         cxxv  14 
Maud  I  xvi  3 
Gareth  and  L.  93 
446 
1279 
Marr.  of  Geraint  299 
626 
Lancelot  and  E.  631 
Last  Tournament  548 
In  the  Child.  Hosp.  18 
Columbus  206 
Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  12 
Tiresias  4 
the  rebel  subject  5  to  drag  me  from  the  throne.        By  an  Evolution.  15 
Seeker    See  Self-seeker 

Seeki]^    in  s  to  undo  One  riddle,  Two  Voices  232 

S  a  tavern  which  of  old  he  knew,  Enoch  Arden  691 

For  love  or  fear,  or  s  favour  of  us,  Marr.  of  Geraint  7(X) 

weak  beast  s  to  help  herself  By  striking  Merlin  and  V.  498 

Seeling    Diet  and  s,  jesses,  leash  „  125 

Seem    (See  also  Seeam)     And  children  all  s  full  of 

Thee !  Supp.  Confessions  21 

things  that  s.  And  things  that  be,  „  173 

I  s  to  see  Thought  folded  over  thought,  Elednore  83 

or  s  To  lapse  far  back  in  some  confused  dream  Sonnet  To 2 

'  He  s's  to  hear  a  Heavenly  Friend,  Two  Voices  295 

'  Moreover,  something  is  or  s's,  „  379 

So  sweet  it  s's  with  thee  to  walk.  Miller's  D.  29 

It  s's  in  after-dinner  talk  „  31 

I  may  s.  As  in  the  nights  of  old,  ,,        165 

would  s  to  award  it  thine,  CEnone  73 

Howe'er  it  be,  it  s's  to  me,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  53 

And  now  it  s's  as  hard  to  stay.  May  Queen,  Con.  10 

0  sweet  and  strange  it  s's  to  me,  „  53 
s  to  mourn  and  rave  On  alien  shores ;  Lotos-Eaters  32 
It  s's  I  broke  a  close  with  force  and  anns  :  Edwin  Morris  131 
She  s's  a  part  of  those  fresh  days  to  me ;  ,,  142 
So  s's  she  to  the  boy.  Talking  Oak  108 
'  So  strange  it  s's  to  me.  Lady  Clare  52 
Evermore  she  s's  to  gaze  On  that  cottage                      L.  of  Burleigh  34 

1  s  so  foolish  and  so  broken  down.  Enoch  Arden  316 
s's,  as  I  re-listen  to  it.  The  Brook  18 
My  mother,  as  it  s's  you  did,  „  225 
I  s  to  be  ungraciousness  itself.'  Aylmer's  Field  245 
King  of  the  East  altho'  he  s,  Lucretius  133 
s's  some  unseen  monster  lays  His  vast  and  filthy  hands  219 
since  the  nobler  pleasure  s's  to  fade.  230 
I  would  be  that  for  ever  which  I  s.  Princess  H  257 
Methinks  he  s's  no  better  than  a  girl ;  „  Hi  218 
7  s  no  more :  I  want  forgiveness  too :  „  vi  290 
That  s  to  keep  her  up  but  drag  her  down —  „  vii  270 
I  s  A  mockery  to  my  own  self.  ,,  336 
Mourn,  for  to  us  he  s's  the  last.  Ode  on  Well.  19 _ 
Who  s's  a  promontory  of  rock,  WiU  ft 
tho'  He  be  not  that  which  He  s's  ?  High.  Pantheism  3' 
So  s's  it  in  my  deep  regret,  In  Mem.  viii  17 
I  s  to  meet  their  least  desire,  „  Ixxxiv  17 
I  s  to  love  thee  more  and  more.  „  cxxx  12 
It  s's  that  I  am  happy,  Maud  I  xviii  50 
undercurrent  woe  That  s's  to  draw —  „  84 
indeed  He  s's  to  me  Scarce  other  Ded.  of  Idylls  6 
I  s  as  nothing  in  the  mighty  world.  Com.  of  Arthur  87 
there  is  nothing  in  it  as  it  s's  Saving  the  King ;          Gareth  and  L.  264 


Seem 


617 


Seem'd 


{continued)     s's  Wellnigh  as  long  as  thou  art 

statured  tall !  Gareth  and  L.  281 

see  ye  not  how  weak  and  hungerworn  I  s —  „            444 

S  I  not  as  tender  to  him  As  any  mother  ?  „          1283 

ye  s  agape  to  roar !  „           1306 

For  tho'  it  s's  my  spurs  are  yet  to  win.  Mart,  of  Geraint  128 

Who  s's  no  bolder  than  a  beaten  hound ;  Geraint  and  E.  61 

who  sits  apart,  And  s's  so  lonely  ? '  ,,            300 

It  s's  another  voice  in  other  groves  ;  Balin  and  Balan  215 

s's  a  flame  That  rages  in  the  woodland  far  below,  „              233 

For  thanks  it  s  till  now  neglected,  Merlin  and  V.  308 

makes  you  s  less  noble  than  yourself,  „              322 

since  ye  s  the  Master  of  all  Art,  „              468 

That  s  a  sword  beneath  a  belt  of  three,  „              510 

wreathen  round  it  made  it  s  his  own ;  .,               735 

My  father,  howsoe'er  I  s  to  you,  Lancelot  and  E.  1092 

but  s  Mute  of  this  miracle.  Holy  Grail  65 

Until  this  earth  he  walks  on  s's  not  earth,  „        912 

mine  the  blame  that  oft  I  s  as  he  Last  Tournament  115 

the  glance  That  only  s's  half-loyal  to  command, —  „              118 

Behold,  I  s  but  King  among  the  dead.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  146 

(For  they  s  many  and  my  most  of  life.  Lover's  Tale  i  185 

All  this  S's  to  the  quiet  daylight  of  your  minds  „            296 

S's  but  a  cobweb  filament  to  link  „            376 

tho'  she  s  so  like  the  one  you  lost,  „        iv  365 
eyes  frown :  the  lips  S  but  a  gash.                         Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  107 

s  Like  would-be  guests  an  hour  too  late,  Tiresias  197 

brain  was  drunk  with  the  water,  it  s's ;  Despair  65 

s  to  flicker  past  thro'  sun  and  shade,  Ancient  Sage  100 

I  s  to  see  a  new-dug  grave  up  yonder  The  Flight  98 

s's  to  me  now  like  a  bit  of  yisther-day  Tomorrow  8 
The  days  that  s  to-day,                                          Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  24 

A  '  Miriam '  that  might  s  a  '  Muriel ' ;  The  Ring  241 
May  s  the  black  ox  of  the  distant  plain.      To  one  tcho  ran  down  Eng.  4 

I  s  no  longer  like  a  lonely  man  Akbar's  Dream  20 

But  such  a  tide  as  moving  s's  asleep.  Crossing  the  Bar  5 
Seem'd     {See  also  See&m'd)     In  sleep  she  s  to  walk  forlorn,         Mariana  30 

s  to  shake  The  sparkling  flints  Arabian  Nights  51 

there  s  Hundreds  of  crescents  on  the  roof  „            128 

And  s  knee-deep  in  mountain  grass,  Mariana  in  the  S.  42 

Such  s  the  whisper  at  my  side  :  Two  Voices  439 

There  s  no  room  for  sense  of  wrong ;  „          456 

S  half -within  and  half -without.  Miller's  D.  7 

Floated  her  hair  or  s  to  float  in  rest.  (Enone  19 

on  every  peak  a  statue  s  To  hang  on  tiptoe,  Palace  of  Art  37 

One  s  all  dark  and  red — a  tract  of  sand,  „             65 

You  s  to  hear  them  climb  and  fall  „            70 

without  light  Or  power  of  movement,  s  my  soul,  „          246 

It  s  so  hard  at  first,  mother,  May  Queen,  Con.  9 

s  to  go  right  up  to  Heaven  and  die  „                   40 

In  which  it  s  always  afternoon.  Lotos-Eaters  4 

A  land  where  all  things  s  the  same  !  „          24 

And  deep-asleep  he  s,  yet  all  awake,  „          35 

Most  weary  s  the  sea,  weary  the  oar,  .,          41 

I  started  once,  or  s  to  start  in  pain,  D.  of  F.  Women  41 

in  her  throat  Her  voice  s  distant.  To  J.  S  55 

there  s  A  touch  of  something  false,  Edwin  Morris  73 

'  Yet  s  the  pressure  thrice  as  sweet  Talking  Oak  145 

how  hard  it  s  to  me,  When  eyes.  Love  and  Duty  35 

he  s  To  his  great  heart  none  other  than  a  God !  Tithonus  13 

We  s  to  sail  into  the  Sun !  The  Voyage  16 

Now  nearer  to  the  prow  she  s  „          67 

She  s  a  part  of  joyous  Spring :  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  23 

Rose  again  from  where  it  s  to  fail.  Vision  of  Sin  24 

the  girl  S  kinder  unto  Philip  than  to  him ;  Enoch  Arden  42 

He  s,  as  in  a  nightmare  of  the  night,  „           114 

while  Annie  s  to  hear  Her  own  death-scaffold  raising,  „          174 

for  Enoch  s  to  them  Uncertain  as  a  vision  „          355 

A  footstep  s  to  fall  beside  her  path,  „          514 

There  often  as  he  watch'd  or  s  to  watch,  „          600 

idiotlike  it  s,  With  inarticulate  rage,  „          639 

it  s  he  saw  No  pale  sheet-lightnings  from  afar,  Aylmer's  Field  725 

Fought  with  what  s  my  own  imcharity ;  Sea  Dreams  73 

That  s  a  fleet  of  jewels  under  me,  „        123 

for  it  s  A  void  was  made  in  Nature ;  Lucretius  36 


Seem'd  (continued)     I  s  to  move  among  a  world  of  ghosts,        Princess  i  17 

the  snake.  My  secret,  s  to  stir  within  my  breast ;  „     Hi  44 

I  s  to  move  among  a  world  of  ghosts ;  „     iv  561 

neither  s  there  more  to  say :  „      v  330 

and  s  to  charm  from  thence  The  wrath  „         436 

I  s  to  move  in  old  memorial  tilts,  „         479 

Yet  it  s  a  dream,  I  dream'd  Of  fighting.  „        492 

For  so  it  s,  or  so  they  said  to  me^  „      vi  22 

pitying  as  it  s,  Or  self-involved ;  „         157 

nor  s  it  strange  that  soon  He  rose  up  whole,  „     vii  64 

meek  S  the  full  lips,  and  mild  the  luminous  eyes,  „        226 

Had  ever  s  to  wrestle  with  burlesque,  „  Con.  16 

He  is  gone  who  s  so  great.—  Ode  on  Well.  271 

That  s  to  touch  it  into  leaf :  In  Mem.  Ixix  18 

The  gentleness  he  .s  to  be,  „          cxi  12 

Best  s  the  thing  he  was,  and  join'd  „                 13 

tho'  there  often  s  to  hve  A  contradiction  „          cxxv  3 

If  Maud  were  all  that  she  s,  (repeat)  Maud  I  vi  36,  92 

S  her  light  foot  along  the  garden  walk,  „            xviii  9 

Ever  and  ever  afresh  they  s  to  grow.  .,           II  i  28 

sad  At  times  he  s,  and  sad  with  him  was  I,  Com.  of  Arthur  853 

high  upon  the  dreary  deeps  It  s  in  heaven,  „            374 

it  s  The  dragon-boughts  and  elvish  emblemings  Gareth  and  L.  232 

that  ev'n  to  him  they  s  to  move.  „            237 

all  Naked  it  s,  and  glowing  in  the  broad  „          1088 

for  he  s  as  one  That  all  in  later,  „           1128 

so  Gareth  s  to  strike  Vainly,  .,           1133 

s  The  dress  that  now  she  look'd  on  Marr.  of  Geraint  612 

But  evermore  it  s  an  easier  thing  Geraint  and  E.  108 

Whereof  one  s  far  larger  than  her  lord,  ,,            122 

and  s  So  justified  by  that  necessity,  „             395 

How  far  beyond  him  Lancelot  s  to  move,  Balin  and  Balan  172 

The  music  m  him  s  to  change,  „              217 

fought  Hard  with  himself,  and  s  at  length  in  peace.  „               239 

Ev'n  when  they  s  imloveable.  Merlin  and  V.  176 

The  man  so  wrought  on  ever  s  to  lie  „            208 

s  a  lovely  baleful  star  Veil'd  in  gray  vapour ;  „             262 

You  s  that  wave  about  to  break  upon  me  „            302 

course  of  life  that  s  so  flowery  to  me  „            880 

he  s  the  goodliest  man  That  ever  among  ladies  Lancelot  and  E.  254 

He  s  to  me  another  Lancelot —  „              534 

When  some  brave  deed  s  to  be  done  in  vain,  Holy  Grail  274 


s  to  me  the  Lord  of  all  the  world, 

s  Shoutings  of  all  the  sons  of  God  : 

in  a  dream  I  s  to  climb  For  ever : 

It  s  to  Pelleas  that  the  fern  without 

have  s  A  vision  hovering  on  a  sea  of  fire, 

she  that  s  the  chief  among  them  said, 

She  might  have  s  a  toy  to  trifle  with, 

S  my  reproach  ?     He  is  not  of  my  kind. 

hard  his  eyes  ;  harder  his  heart  S  ; 

S  those  far-rolling,  westward-smiling  seas, 

he  s  to  me  no  man.  But  Michael  trampling  Satan 

from  the  dawn  it  s  there  came. 

It  s  to  keep  its  sweetness  to  itself.  Yet  was  not 

the  less  sweet  for  that  it  s  ? 
the  sunshine  s  to  brood  More  warmly 
s  a  gossamer  filament  up  in  air, 
I  died  then,  I  had  not  s  to  die, 
I  s  the  only  part  of  Time  stood  still, 
then  it  s  as  tho'  a  link  Of  some  tight  chain 
and  then  I  s  to  hear  Its  murmur. 
The  spirit  s  to  flag  from  thought  to  thought, 
motions  of  my  heart  s  far  within  me, 
then  I  s  To  rise,  and  through  the  forest-shadow 
at  his  feet  I  s  to  faint  and  fall, 
it  s  By  that  which  foUow'd — 
Found,  as  it  s,  a  skeleton  alone, 
such  a  feast,  ill-suited  as  it  s  To  such  a  time, 
S  stepping  out  of  darkness  with  a  smile, 
veil,  that  s  no  more  than  gilded  air, 
cry,  that  rather  s  For  some  new  death 
Often  I  s  unhappy,  and  often  as  happy  too, 
We  s  like  ships  i'  the  Channel 
to  be  found  Long  after,  as  it  s. 


414 

508 

836 

Pdleas  and  E.  34 

51 

62 

76 

311 

513 

Last  Tournament  587 

;  „  672 

Pass,  of  Arthur  457 

Lover's  Tale  i  154 

327 

413 

494 

573 

594 

634 

n  51 

54 

71 

96 

iv21 

139 

207 

220 

290 

373 

First  Quarrel  31 

42 

SisUrs  (E.  and  E.)  Ill 


Seem'd 


618 


Seen 


Seem'd  {continued)   I  spent  What  s  my  crowning  hour,   Sisters  (E.  and  E. )  124 
every  bone  s  out  of  its  place —  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  13 

it  s  she  stood  by  me  and  smiled,  „                67 

s  at  first '  a  thing  enskied  '  To  E.  Fitzgerald  16 

I  s  in  Paradise  then  With  the  first  great  love  The  Wreck  75 

For  He  spoke,  or  it  s  that  He  spoke,  Despair  26 

.S  nobler  than  their  hard  Eternities.  Demeter  and  P.  107 

voice  Came  on  the  wind,  and  s  to  say  '  Again.'  The  Ring  154 

s  my  lodestar  in  the  Heaven  of  Art,  Eomney's  R.  39 

cry,  that  s  at  first  Thin  as  the  batlike  Death  of  (Enone  20 

Seemest    thou  art  not  who  Thou  s,  Gareth  and  L.  291 
Seeming    {See  also  Hard-seeming)    My  needful  s  harshness, 

pardon  it.  Princess  ii  309 

Till  taken  with  her  s  openness  „       iv  300 

The  s  prey  of  cyclic  storms.  In  Mem.  cxviii  11 

Which  s  for  the  moment  due  to  death.  Lover's  Tale  i  508 

He  falling  sick,  and  s  close  on  death,  „          iv  258 

This  double  5  of  the  single  world  ! —  Ancient  Sage  105 
$  stared  upon  By  ghastlier  than  the  Gorgon  head.      Death  of  Qinone  70 

Seeming-bitter    words  are  s-h,  Sharp  and  few,  but  s-h  Rosalind  30 
Seemimg-deathless    Here  we  stood  and  claspt  each 

other,  swore  the  s-d  vow.  .  .  .  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  180 

Seeming-genial    Or  s-g  venial  fault,  WUl  13 

Seeming-injured    The  s-i  simple-hearted  thing  Merlin  and  V.  902 

Seeming-leafless    pass  His  autimin  into  s-l  days —  A  Dedication  10 

Seeming-random    grew  to  s-r  forms.  In  Mem.  cxviii  10 

Seeming-wanton    make  The  s-w  ripple  break,  „            xlix  11 

Seen    {See  also  Far-seen,  One-day-seen,  Seed,  See'd)  Then 

once  by  man  and  angels  to  be  s.  The  Krdken  14 

And  faint,  rainy  lights  are  s,  Margaret  60 
But  who  hath  s  her  wave  her  hand  ?    Or  at  the 

casement  s  her  stand  ?  L.  of  Shalott  i  24 
(Beauty  s  In  all  varieties  of  mould  and 

mind)  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  6 

thro'  mountain  clefts  the  dale  Was  s  far  inland.  Lotos- Eaters  21 

'Tis  long  since  I  have  s  a  man.  D.  of  F.  Women  131 

Such  joy  as  you  have  s  with  us,  D.  of  the  0.  Year  17 

Two  years  his  chair  is  s  Empty  before  us.  To  J.  S.  22 

What  is  it  thou  hast  s  ?  (repeat)  M.  d' Arthur  68, 114 

what  is  it  thou  hast  heard,  or  s  ? '  „                 150 

from  his  youth  in  grief.  That,  having  s,  forgot  ?  Gardener's  D.  55 

You  should  have  s  him  wince  Walk,  to  the  Mail  71 

nor  have  s  Him  since,  nor  heard  of  her,  Edwin  Morris  137 

I  have  s  some  score  of  those  Fresh  faces.  Talking  Oak  49 

Much  have  I  s  and  known  ;  Ulysses  13 

As  I  have  s  the  rosy  red  flushing  Locksley  Hall  26 
glimpsing  over  these,  jast  s,  High  up,                   Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  47 

High  towns  on  hills  were  dimly  s,  The  Voyage  34 

She  in  her  poor  attire  was  s  :  Beggar  Maid  10 

Faint  as  a  figure  s  in  early  dawn  Enoch  Arden  357 

what  he  fain  had  s  He  could  not  see,  ,.          580 

For  since  the  mate  had  s  at  early  dawn  ,.          631 

Because  things  s  are  mightier  than  things  heard,  ,,          766 

If  you  could  tell  her  you  had  s  him  dead,  „          808 

little  port  Had  seldom  s  a  costlier  funeral.  ..          917 

Squire  had  s  the  colt  at  grass,  The  Brook  139 

He  must  have  s,  himself  had  s  it  long  ;  Aylmer's  Field  345 

she  herself  Had  s  to  that :  ,,          805 

Or,  maybe,  I  myself,  my  bride  once  s,  Princess  i  72 

some  dark  shore  just  s  that  it  was  rich.  ,.          249 

'  having  s  And  heard  the  Lady  Psyche.'  „      ii  210 

As  bottom  agates  s  to  wave  and  float  „          327 

after  5  The  dwarfs  of  presage :  ,.      iv  446 

nor  ever  had  I  s  Such  thews  of  men :  „       v  255 

So  often  that  I  speak  as  having  s.  ,.        vi  21 

Ida  came  behind  (S  but  of  Psyche  :  „      vii  79 

Ere  s  I  loved,  and  loved  thee  s,  ,.          341 

Imagined  more  than  s,  the  skirts  of  France.  „   Con.  48 

World-victor's  victor  will  be  s  no  more.  Ode  on  Well.  42 

Colossal,  s  of  every  land,  „          221 

s  A  light  amid  its  olives  green  ;  The  Daisy  29 

Whom  we,  that  have  not  s  thy  face.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  2 

If  Death  were  s  At  first  as  Death,  „       xxxvl9i 

How  many  a  father  have  I  s,  „           liii  1 

A  likeness,  hardly  a  before,  „        Ixxiv  3 


Seen  {continued)  I  have  not  s,  I  will  not  see  Vienna  ;  In  Mem.  xcviii  H 

0  earth,  what  changes  hast  thou  s  !  „       cxxiii  I 
(for  her  eyes  were  downcast,  not  to  be  s)  Maud  I  ii  i 
Shall  I  believe  him  ashamed  to  be  s  ?  „     xiii  I 
'  I  have  s  the  cuckoo  chased  by  lesser  fowl,               Com.  of  Arthur  Ifl 
And  gone  as  soon  as  s.                                                             „  377 
'  Son,  I  have  s  the  good  ship  sail  Keel  upward,            Gareth  and  L.  25 
Accursed,  who  strikes  nor  lets  the  hand  be  s  !  ' 
have  I  watch'd  thee  victor  in  the  joust.  And  s  thy  way.'       „          1357| 
milky-white.  First  s  that  day :                                  Marr.  of  Geraint  151 
Tho'  having  s  all  beauties  of  our  time. 
My  pride  is  broken :  men  have  s  my  fall.' 
She  never  yet  had  s  her  half  so  fair ; 
That  other,  where  we  see  as  we  are  s  ! 
have  ye  s  how  nobly  changed  ? 
Far  s  to  left  and  right ; 
'  Fairest  I  grant  her :  I  have  s  ; 
The  longest  lance  his  eyes  had  ever  s, 

1  for  three  days  s,  ready  to  fall. 
You  should  have  s  him  blush  ; 
Him  have  I  s :  the  rest,  his  Table  Round, 
'  One,  One  have  I  s — that  other, 
I  might  say  that  I  had  s.' 
So  great  a  knight  as  we  have  s  to-day — 
peradventure  had  he  s  her  first  She  might  have  made 
'  O  brother,  I  have  s  this  yew-tree  smoke, 
'  Sweet  brother,  I  have  s  the  Holy  Grail : 
the  vision  may  be  s  By  thee  and  those, 
for  thou  shalt  see  what  I  have  s, 
Because  I  had  not  s  the  Grail, 
as  I  have  s  it  more  than  once, 
'  Art  thou  so  bold  and  hast  not  s  the  Grail  ?  ' 
knight  by  knight,  if  any  Had  s  it, 
'  Lo  now,'  said  Arthur, '  have  ye  s  a  cloud  ? 
never  yet  Had  Camelot  s  the  like,  since  Arthur  came 
'  Where  is  he  ?  hast  thou  s  him — Lancelot  ? — 
well  had  been  content  Not  to  have  s,  so  Lancelot 

might  have  s.  The  Holy  Cup 
— ^hast  thou  s  the  Holy  Cup, 
thou  hast  s  the  Grail ; ' 
For  these  have  s  according  to  their  sight. 
if  the  King  Had  s  the  sight  he  would  have  sworn 
ye  have  s  what  ye  have  s.' 

thou  hast  s  me  strain'd  And  sifted  to  the  utmost, 
And  s  her  sadden  listening — vext  his  heart, 
for  I  have  s  him  wan  enow  To  make  one  doubt 
I  might  see  his  face,  and  not  be  s.' 
It  would  have  been  my  pleasure  had  I  s. 
What  is  it  thou  hast  s  ?  (repeat) 
what  is  it  thou  hast  heard,  or  s  ?  ' 
Hehe  far  away,  s  from  the  topmost  cliff. 


These  have  not  s  thee,  tliese  can  never  know  thee 
(As  I  have  s  them  many  a  hundred  times) 
Would  you  had  s  him  in  that  hour  of  his  ! 

0  love,  I  have  not  s  you  for  so  long. 
He,  but  for  you,  had  never  s  it  once. 
We  should  be  s,  my  dear  ; 
and  half  to  the  left  were  s, 
passion,  s  And  lost  and  found  again, 
an  which  was  a  shaame  to  be  s  ; 

1  never  had  s  him  before, 
he  had  s  it  and  made  up  his  mind, 
apples,  the  hugest  that  ever  were  s, 
be  blind,  for  thou  hast  s  too  much, 
This  wealth  of  waters  might  but  s  to  draw 
that  rule  Were  never  heard  or  «.' 
Here  where  yer  Honour  s  her — 
I  tould  yer  Honour  whativer  I  hard  an'  s, 
I  have  s  her  far  away — 
in  the  wars  your  own  Crimean  eyes  had  s  ; 
eyes  Have  s  the  loneliness  of  earthly  thrones. 
And  those  lone  rights  I  have  not  s, 
eyes  That  oft  had  s  the  serpent-wanded  power 
Stranger  than  earth  has  ever  s  ; 
I  had  s  the  man  but  once  ; 


578 
7411 
Geraint  and  E.  Ti 
8971 

Balin  and  Balan  '. 

35ftJ 
411 
Alerlin  and  V.  296 
481  j 

Lancelot  and  E.  185  ' 
423  i 
427 
533' 
872  I 
Holy  Grail  18  ' 
107 
127 
160 1 
196 
273 
279 
284 
286 
332 


654* 
734 

757 
875 
904 
919 

Pelleas  and  E.  247 

398 

Last  Tournament  563 

Guinevere  588 

659 

Pass,  oj   Arthur  236,  282 

318 

Lover's  Tale  i  1 


285 
ii  145 

„  iv8 

45 

173 

Rizpah  5 

The  Revenge  35 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  146 

VUlage  Wife  50 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  1 

16 

V.  of  Maeldune  63 

Tiresias  49 

Ancient  Sage  9 

30 

Tomorrow  9 

97 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  166 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  12 

To  Prin.  Beatrice  14 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  39 

Demeter  and  P.  25 

The  Ring  38 

.,        190 


Seen 


619 


SeU 


Seen  (cmtinued)    one  betwixt  the  dark  and  light  had  s  Her,    The  Ring  414 

never  had  I  s  her  show  remorse—  "        ^ ' 

But  s  upon  the  silent  brow  ^ ,  ^    ,  HapPV  f. 

-a  sun^but  dimly  s  Here,  ^Icbar's  Dreamdb 

That  is  not  s  and  rules  from  far  away—  "          !:^° 

were  s  or  heard  Fires  of  Suttee,  -    „     "T^ 

To  have  s  thee,  and  heard  thee,  and  known.  r^'''?tl^  «  •   it 

SeSr    Like  some  bold  s  in  a  trance,  i.  "(.'^'^J^/'kl^ 

Seer    Then  that  old  <S  made  answer  playmg  on  hiin  Gareth  and  L.  ZbZ 

S  replied, '  Know  ye  not  then  the  Riddlmg  of  the  Bards  ?      „  ^85 

the  is  Would  watch  her  at  her  petulance,  Merlm  aiid  V.  174 

Her  s,  her  bard,  her  sUver  stai-  of  eve,  ...           »o* 

From  out  his  ancient  city  came  s.  ^  ^j^ncient  SageZ 
Seest    Thou  pleadest  still,  and  s  me  drive                      Supv.Confesswns^^ 

Thou  s  the  Nameless  of  the  hundred  names.  ^««j«t  Sage  49 

Seest    Watch  what  thou  s,  and  lightly  bring  me  word.'  M.  d  Arthur  6b 

I  am  going  a  long  way  With  these  thou  s—  ..         f2^ 

s  all  thinS,  thou  wUt  see  my  grave:  /f%TJi 

Watch  %vhat  thou  «,  and  lightly  brmg  me  word.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  20b 

I  am  going  a  long  way  With  these  thou  s—  ..           ./S? 

s  Universe  Nature  moved  by  Universal  Mmd  ;  To  Virgil  21 

See'st    And  .  the  moving  of  the  team.  r^'IZ/T'il 

Seethe     Began  to  move,  5,  twine  and  curl :  GarrtA  ar^  i.  234 

Seeded    Shke  the  kid  in  its  own  mother's  milk  !  MerZm  a«^  F.  869 
sSthing    when  the  suige  was.  free,                           ^"'"^"^'^iL  £o,l 

Shot  o'er  the  s  harbour-bar,  ?  ]wL^  191 

Save  for  some  whisper  of  the  s  seas.  Pass,  of  ^^t^ur  IZl 

Seine    The  red  fool-fury  of  the -S  ^"phZssTA 

Seize    '  *'  the  strangers  '  is  the  cry.  rnncess  %v  ^^u 

To  .  and  thro#  the  doubts  of  man  ;  ^W^^Tj  '  ,  1^ 

But  sorrow  s  me  if  ever  that  light  ^l^vA  I  ivll 

To  s  me  by  the  hair  and  bear  me  far,  Lancelot  and  h.  14^& 

Seized    tUl  at  last  a  fever  «  On  William,  aI^jZ^M^ 

Then  desperately  s  the  holy  Book,  i^noch  Ardm  495 

S  it,  took  home,  and  to  my  lady,-  Aylmer  s  Ff^Jf 

Me   hey  .  and  me  they  tortured,  E         'lf\ 

A  hunger  .  my  heart ;  I  read  ^nMem  xcv2\ 

And  standeth  s  of  that  inheritance  ,^ ^""'^r  ^"^  •  ;  fi7Q 

therewithal  one  came  and  s  on  her,              .  Mfl"--  ?/  e^'?*^'  673 
suddenlv  s  on  her.  And  bare  her  by  mam  violence     Geraint  and  h.  b&rf 

I  should  have  slain  your  father,  s  yourself.  ,  /'    j  p  A7fi 

a  furv  s  them  aU,  A  fiery  family  passion  Lancelot  and  /i.  4/b 

Saying  which  she  s.  And,  thro' the  casement  ,.         .-i^^g 

There  fever  5  upon  him:               .  ^'^  /  %,7  fi?5 

.S  him,  and  boiiid  and  plunged  him  Holy  failjl^ 

They  s  me  and  shut  me  up  :  1?"  i  qn 

who  sack'd  My  dweUing,  s  upon  my  papers,  i^w  SL  S 

and  5  one  another  and  slew;  r  7  •  "^  ?  Sr  dS 
s  thereupon  Push'd  thro'  an  open  casement     Balm  and  Balan  41/ 

.„    Myself  too  had  weird  s'5.  Princess  lU 

what,  if  these  weird  s's  come  Upon  you  ..      ... -.^i 

On  a  sudden  my  strange  s  came  Upon  me,  ..     "^  ^°^ 

came  On  a  sudden  the  weird  s  and  the  doubt :  ,      ''  j  ^  7i^ 

Seldom-frowning    The  s-/ King  frown'd,  ^T^r    iiu'iiA 
ffis^  "z^S-self,  Sel  Wolld-self )  Smote  the  chord  of  8,  Lochsl^EalUZ 

Half  fearful  that,  with  s  at  strife,  W'  *«  f^^^T-  161 

He  not  for  his  o^-n  s  caring  but  her,  FTtuviTd  537 

chafing  at  his  own  great  s  defied,  ^2/^'««'-  ^  -f^*^''^  ^37 

And  to  thy  worst  s  sacrifice  thyself,  "            Rdfi 

with  thy  worst  s  hast  thou  clothed  thy  God.  .            ^o 

We  touch  on  our  dead  s,  i'rincess  m  ^^i 

Her  falser  s  shpt  from  her  Uke  a  robe,  ..      ^^  ^"^ 

lives  A  dro\vning  life,  besotted  m  sweet  5,  ..            ^^3 

I  seem  A  mockery  to  my  own  s.  "     .  ,,  ^^^ 

learns  to  deaden  Love  of  s,                     .           ^  ^        '^tr     /iLVn 
strain  to  make  an  inch  of  room  For  their  sweet  selves,   Lit.  SluMles  10 

stepping-stones  Of  their  dead  selves  -*«      ^i  8 

transient  form  In  her  deep  s,  "        ,  ..  „ 

fusing  all  The  skirts  of  s  agam,  "     y^^^^ 

praymg  To  his  own  great  s,  as  I  gue.ss  ;  f  a  It  At 

Bound  them  by  so  strait  vows  to  his  own  .,  ^r-jLtfTlSi 
There  rides  no  knight,  not  Lancelot,  his  great  s,        Gareth  and  L.  1182 

fool'd  Of  others,  is  to  fool  one's  s.  "           -,10 

after  her  own  5,'in  all  the  court.  Marr.  of  Geramt  18 

that  and  these  to  her  own  faded  s  "            "^-^ 


Self  (continued)    whether  some  false  sense  in  her  own  s  Marr.  of  Geraint  800 

overthrow  My  proud  s,  and  my  purpose  Geramt  and  Jl.  »4y 
crown'd  With  my  slain  s  the  heaps  of  whom  I 

glg^ Balm  and  Balan  178 

To  keep  me  all  to  your  own  s,—  Merlin  and  V.  523 

imputing  her  whole  s.  Defaming  and  defacing,  ,  /'    ^  t;.  oliX 

'  Save  your  great  s,  fair  lord  ; '  Lancelot  and  L.  320 

There  mom  by  mom,  arraying  her  sweet  s  ..            900 

There  surely  I  shall  speak  for  mine  own  s,  ..          li^ 

wail'd  and  wept,  and  hated  mine  own  s,  Uoly  GraU  wy 

for  nothing  moved  but  his  own  s,  Pelleas  and  E.  417 

the  King's  grief  For  his  own  s,  Guinevere  197 

judge  between  my  slander'd  s  and  me—  LoLunibus  1^0 

dive  into  the  Temple-cave  of  thine  own  s,  Ancient  '5a?e  32 

mortal  limit  of  the  S  was  loosed,  .-          ^^^ 

thro'  loss  of  S  The  gain  of  such  large  life  ^      ,    "     ,  i,  ,? 

memories  once  again  On  thy  lost  s.  Demeter  ai^  P.  11 

while  I  communed  with  my  tmest  s.  The  King  181 

she  loves  her  own  hard  5,             .        , ,  a.    1  f      "7?    /Jw 

forgotten  mine  own  rhyme  By  mine  old  s,  To  Mary  Boyle  22 

Into  the  common  day,  the  sounder  s.  Romneys  R.  66 

Rose,  like  the  wraith  of  his  dead  s,  Death  of(Enone2S 

Self-applause     Not  void  of  righteous  s-a.  Two  Voices  14b 

Self-balanced    S-b  on  a  lightsome  wing  :  In  Mein.  1^8 

Self-blinded    '  S-h  are  you  by  your  pride  :  Two  Vowes  26 

Self-conceit    some  s-c,  Or  over-smoothness  :  Edwm  Morris  U 

Self-contain'd    High,  5-c,  and  passionless,  Guinevere  my 

Self-contempt    Perish  in  thy  s-c  !  Locksley  Hall  9b 
Self-content    increased  Her  greatness  and  her  s-c.     To  Marg.  ofDuffertnS 

Self-control    '  Self -reverence  self-knowledge,  s-c,  ULnone  ifi 

With  faith  that  comes  of  s-c,  Jn  Mem  cxxxi9 

Self-darken'd    S-d  in  the  sky,  descending  slow  !  Prog,  of  Spring  28 

W' hich  drowsed  in  gloom,  s-d  from  the  west,  Beath  of  (Lnone  7b 

Self-distrust     It  is  my  shyness,  or  my  s-d,  Edwin  Morris  86 

Self-exile    that  resolved  s-e  from  a  land  Lover  s  Tale  iv  209 

Self-gather'd    S-g  in  her  prophet-mind.  Of  old  sat  Freedom  6 

Self-Mold    s-i'/the  large  results  Of  force  In  Mem  lxxinl5 

Self-involved    Which  all  too  dearly  s-i,  Bay-Bm.,  L  ^nvoi\^ 

dull  and  s-i.  Tall  and  erect,  Aylnier  s  Field  118 

pitying  as  it  seem'd.  Or  s-i  ;  Princess  vi  158 

Selfidi    NSr  in  a  merely  s  cause-  Two  I  o^es  147 
I  was  left  a  trampled  orphan,  and  a  s  micle's  ward.    Locksley  Hall  15b 

Which  made  a  s  war  begin  ;  To  F.  D  Maurice  30 

Perhaps  from  a  s  grave.  fl"''^JS"\l^ 

Not  muffled  round  with  s  reticence.  .    Merlm  and  V .  66  i 

S  strange  !     What  dwarfs  are  men  !  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  19S 

Self-knowledge    SeH-reverence,  s-A:,  self-control,  ^Tv]^ 

Selfless    As  high  as  woman  in  her  s  mood.  Merlm  and  V.  443 

O  s  man  and  stainless  gentleman,  ,     cu    rr  ,"        /      00 
lazving  out  a  Ufe  Of  self-suppression,  not  of  s  love.'    St.  TelemachusJZ 

Self-pen)le1t    look'd  so  s-p.  That  Katie  laugh'd.  The  Brook  2^ 

Self-pity    for  languor  and  5-p  ran  Mine  down  my  face.  Princess  vn  ^9 

And  sweet  s-f,  or  the  fancy  of  it,  Geramt  andE.  3^ 

Self-pleached    Round  thee  blow,  s-p  deep,  ADxrge^ 

Self-possess'd    neither  s-f  Nor  startled,  Garden^s  D.  154 

Self-profit    judge  of  fair,  Unbias'd  by  s-p,  (Enone-m 

Self-renew'd    ^d  freshness  ever  s-r.                 ^  Lover's  Tale  1 106 

Self-reverence    S-r,  self-knowledge,  self-control,  .  (Enone  144 

Self-reverent    S-r  each  and  reverencing  each.  Princess  vn  290 

Self-sacrifice    The  long  s-s  of  Ufe  is  o'er.  OdeonWell.il 

And  aU  her  sweet  s-s  and  death.  Sisters  {E.and  E.)  255 

Self-same    s-s  influence  ControUeth  all  the  soul  £  Wore  114 
With  the  s  impulse  wherewith  he  was  thrown         Mine  be  the  strength  6 

That  we  may  die  the  s-s  day.  ^fZ^^'lt 
when  to  land  Bustler  the  winds  and  tides  the  s-s  way,    D.  of  F.  Women  ^ 

He  put  the  s-s  query,  but  the  man  Marr.  of  Geraint  269 

He  took  the  s  track  as  Balan,  Balm  and  Balan  290 

Under  the  s  aspect  of  the  stars.  Lover  s  Tale  1 199 

And  mine  made  garlands  of  the  s  flower,  "  .    .  .  o5^ 

Self-scorn    Laughter  at  her  s-s.               ,.,     -  ^,  ^^''  "Ljj'/  fs? 

Self-seeker    All  great  s-s's  tramplmg  on  the  right :  Ode  on  Welt.  187 

Self-starved    S-s,  they  say— nay,  murder'd,  Sir  J.Oldcastle  60 

Self-styled    those  s-s  our  lords  ally  Your  fortunes,  Princess  u  tt&i 

Self-suppression    lazying  out  a  Ufe  Of  s-s,  St.  Telemachus  22 

SeU    To  s  the  boat— and  yet  he  loved  her  Enoch  Arden  134 


SeU 


620 


Sensuous 


Sell  (continued)  And  yet  to  s  her — then  with  what  she  brought  Enoch  Arden  137 


AyJmer's  Field  483 
Church-warden,  etc.  5 

Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  9 

The  Poet  23 

Lover's  Tale  ii  162 

Balin  and  Balan  414 

Lover's  Tale  i  37 

Aylmer's  Field  189 

Lover's  Tale  iv  281 


5  her,  those  good  parents,  for  her  good 
An'  pigs  didn't  s  at  fall, 

Seller    iSee  also  Absolution-seller)    belongs  to  the 
heart  of  the  perfume  s. 

Semblance    I^ike  to  the  mother  plant  in  s, 
edict  of  the  will  to  reassume  The  s 

Semicircle    Leapt  in  a  s,  and  lit  on  earth  ; 

the  s  Of  dark-blue  waters  and  the  narrow  fringe 

Siemi- jealousy    A  flash  of  s-j  clear'd  it  to  her. 

Siemi-smile    s-s  As  at  a  strong  conclusion — 

Sempstress    Master  scrimps  his  haggard  s  of  her  daily 

bread,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  221 

Sen  (self)     'E  seeams  naw  moor  nor  watter,  an'  'e's 

the  Divil's  oan  s.'  North.  Cobbler  76 

An'  Squire,  his  oan  very  s,  walks  do^vn  fro'  the  'AH  to  see,     „  91 

An'  'e'd  wrote  an  owd  book,  his  awn  s,  Village  Wife  46 

An'  I'd  voat  fur  'im,  my  oan  s,  if  'e  could  but  stan  fur  the 

Shere.  Owd  Rod  14 

Send — I  s  you  here  a  sort  of  allegory,  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  1 

fear'd  To  s  abroad  a  shrill  and  terrible  cry,  Enoch  Arden  768 

he  would  s  a  hundred  thousand  men,  Princess  i  64 

unless  you  s  us  back  Our  son,  „    iv  415 

'Sdeath  !  but  we  will  s  to  her,'  „     v  324 

You  s  a  flash  to  the  sim.  Window,  Marr.  Mum.  2 

But  s  it  slackly  from  the  string  ;  In  Mem,.  Ixxxvii  26 

and  s  thee  satisfied —  Gareth  and  L.  434 

delays  his  purport  till  thou  s  To  do  the  battle  with  him,         „  618 

they  s  That  strength  of  anger  thro'  mine  arms,  „  947 

render'd  tributary,  fail'd  of  late  To  s  his  tribute  ;       Balin  and  Balan  4 

I  undertake  them  as  we  pass.  And  s  them  to  thee  ? '  „  15 

King  will  s  thee  his  own  leech —  ,,  275 

s  One  flasli,  that,  missing  all  things  else,  Merlin  and  V.  931 

of  us  to  claim  the  prize,  Ourselves  will  s  it  after.      Lancelot  and  E.  545 

This  wiU  he  s  or  come  for  : 

I  pray  him,  5  a  sudden  Angel  down 

If  God  would  s  the  vision,  well : 

she  s  her  delegate  to  thrall  These  fighting  hands 

S  !  bid  him  come  ; '  but  Lionel  was  away — 

but  s  me  notice  of  him  When  he  returns, 

you  used  to  s  her  the  flowers  ; 

May  s  one  ray  to  thee  ! 

I  s  my  prayer  by  night  and  day — 

ninth  moon,  that  s's  the  hidden  sun 

I  s  a  birthday  line  Of  greeting  ; 

(S  no  such  light  upon  the  ways  of  men 

s  the  day  into  the  darken'd  heart ; 

S  the  drain  into  the  fountain, 

'  S  them  no  more,  for  evermore. 

I  fail'd  To  s  my  life  thro'  olive-yard 

To  s  the  moon  into  the  night  and  break 

Shalt  ever  s  thy  life  along  with  mine 


635 

1424 

Holy  Grail  658 

Pelleas  and  E.  336 

Lover's  Tale  iv  101 

116 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  33 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  14 

Columbus  233 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  33 

To  E.  FUzgerald  45 

Tiresias  161 

Ancient  Sage  261 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  144 

Bead  Prophet  3 

Demeter  and  P.  1 10 

135 

145 


bad  the  man  engrave  '  From  Walter '  on  the  ring,  and  s  it —  The  Ring  236 

And  s  her  home  to  you  rejoicing.  „        320 

and  s  A  gift  of  slenderer  value,  To  Ulysses  47 

Take  then  this  spring-flower  I  s.  To  Mary  Boyle  19 

Reflected,  s's  a  light  on  the  forgiven.  Romney's  R.  161 

dust  s  up  a  steam  of  human  blood,  St.  Telemachus  53 

Sendest     O  Thoct,  that  s  out  the  man  To  rule  England  and  Amer.  1 

^    when  thou  s  thy  free  soul  thro'  heaven.  Ancient  Sage  47 

Seneschal    Then  came  Sir  Kay,  the  s,  and  cried,  Gareth  and  L.  367 

let  Kay  the  s  Look  to  thy  wants,  „            433 

'  Sir  S,  Sleuth-hound  thou  knowest,  and  gray,  „            461 

But  Kay  the  s,  who  loved  him  not,  „            483 

Sir  Kay,  the  s,  would  come  Blustering  upon  them,  „            513 

S,  No  mellow  master  of  the  meats  and  drinks  !  „            559 

page,  and  maid,  and  squire,  and  5,  Marr.  of  Geraint  710 

Arthur  tum'd  to  Kay  the  s.  Last  Tournament  89 

Sennight     three  rich  s's  more,  my  love  for  her.  Edwin  Morris  30 

(See  also  Conunon-sense)     did  all  confound  Her  s ;  Mariana  77 

feedeth  The  s's  with  a  still  delight  Margaret  17 

Controlleth  all  the  soul  and  s  Eleaiwre  115 

Is  cancell'd  in  the  world  of  s  ?  '  Two  Voices  42 

Unmanacled  from  bonds  of  s,  „        236 

*  The  sunple  s's  crown'd  his  head  :  „        277 


Sense  [continued)     By  which  he  doubts  against  the  s  ? 
There  seem'd  no  room  for  s  of  wrong  ; 
Lord  of  the  s's  five  : 
Slowly  my  s  undazzled. 
Flutter'd  about  my  s's  and  my  soul ; 

Or  have  they  any  s  of  why  they  sing  ? 

He  lost  the  *  that  handles  daily  life — 

weigh'd  Upon  my  brain,  my  s's  and  my  soul ! 

If  the  s  is  hard  To  alien  ears, 

the  common  s  of  most  shall  hold 

cancell'd  a  s  misused  : 

Your  liner  female  s  offends. 

I  grow  in  worth,  and  wit,  and  s, 

it  was  a  crime  Of  s  avenged  by  s 

crime  of  s  became  The  crime  of  malice, 

less  of  sentiment  than  s  Had  Katie  ; 

a  s  Of  meanness  in  her  imresisting  life. 

And  such  a  s,  when  first  I  fronted  him, 

s  of  wrong  had  touch'd  her  face  With  colour) 

Or  master'd  by  the  s  of  sport, 

1  broke  the  letter  of  it  to  keep  the  s. 

I  grant  in  her  some  s  of  shame, 

'  Nay,  nay,  you  spake  but  s  '  Said  Gama. 

Love  to  sloughs  That  swallow  common  s. 

Or  own  one  port  of  s  not  flint  to  prayer. 

My  haunting  s  of  hoUow  shows  : 

Some  s  of  duty,  something  of  a  faith, 

Joanes,  as  'ant  not  a  'aapoth  o'  s, 

moor  s  i'  one  o'  'is  legs  nor  in  all  thy  braa'ins. 

Unf etter'd  by  the  s  of  crime, 

an  awful  s  Of  one  mute  Shadow  watching  all. 

the  hoarding  s  Gives  out  at  times 

Drug  down  the  blindfold  s  of  wrong 

The  quiet  s  of  something  lost. 

The  s  of  human  will  demands 

O  tell  me  where  the  s's  mix, 

Where  all  the  nerve  of  s  is  nimib  ; 

Cry  thro'  the  s  to  hearten  trust 

Who  wants  the  finer  politic  s 

Suddenly  strike  on  a  sharper  s 

sent  him  from  his  s's  :  let  me  go.' 

whether  some  false  s  in  her  own  self 

such  a  s  might  make  her  long  for  court 

with  every  s  as  false  and  foul 

conscience  of  a  saint  Among  his  warring  s's, 

and  shadowing  S  at  war  with  Soul, 

all  the  s's  weaken'd,  save  in  that, 

scarce  can  tune  his  high  majestic  s 

No  longer  in  the  dearest  s  of  mine — 

Entering  all  the  avenues  of  s 

And  now  first  heard  with  any  s  of  pain. 

Falling  in  whispers  on  the  s, 

A  shameful  s  as  of  a  cleaving  crime — 

face  was  flash'd  thro'  s  and  soul 

Scarce  feels  the  s's  break  away 

Await  the  last  and  largest  s 

soul  and  s  in  city  slime  ? 

moor  good  s  na  the  Parliament  man 

His  crime  was  of  the  s's  ; 

Why  not  bask  amid  the  s's 

wi'  a  hoonderd  haiicre  o'  s — 
Senseless     0  s  cataract.  Bearing  all  down  in  thy 
precipitancy — 

The  little  s,  worthless,  wordless  babe, 
Sensible    worth  the  life  That  made  it  s. 
Sensitive    Or  the  least  little  delicate  aquiline  curve  in 
a  s  nose. 

Patient  of  pain  tho'  as  quick  as  a  s  plant  to 
the  touch  ; 
Sensual     Bursts  of  great  heart  and  slips  in  s  mire, 

Arise  and  fly  The  reeling  Faun,  the  s  feast ; 

For  such  a  supersensual  s  bond 

Nor  own'd  a  s  wish. 
Sensuous    Makes  noble  thro'  the  s  organism 

Be  near  me  when  the  s  frame  Is  rack'd 


Two  Voices  2l 

456 

Palace  of  Art  180 

D.  of  F.  Women  177 

Gardener's  D.  67 

101 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  22 

Love  and  Duty  44 

51 

Locksley  Hall  129 

Godiva  72 

Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi2 

Will  Water.  41 

Vision  of  Sin  214 

215 

The  Brook  91 

Aylmer's  Field  800 

Sea  Dreams  70 

Princess,  Pro.  219 

iv  156 

338 

349 

t)206 

442 

vi  182 

vii  349 

Con.  54 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  49 

N.  S.  4 

In  Mem.  xxvii  7 

,,  XXX  7 

,,  xliv  6 

„  Ixxi  7 

„      Ixxviii  8 

,,      Ixxxv  39 

„    Ixxxviii  3 

„  xciii  7 

,,  cxvi  7 

Maud  I  vi47 

„  nam 

Gareth  and  L.  71 

Marr.  of  Geraint  800 

803 

Merlin  and  V.  797 

Guinevere  640 

To  the  Queen  ii  37 

Lover's  Tale  i  127 

475 

587 

630 

709 

720 

794 

Sisters  (E.and  E.)  109 

Ancient  Sage  152 

180 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  218 

Owd  Rod  13 

Romney's  R.  151 

By  an  Evolution.  6 

Church-warden,  etc.  22 

Gareth  and  L.  7 

The  Ring  304 

Lover's  Tale  i  800 

Maud  I  ii  10 


8^ 


In  the  Child.  Hosp.  30 

Princess  v  199 

In  Mem.  cxviii  26 

Merlin  and  V.  109 

628 

Princess  ii  87 

In  Mem.  1 5 


Sent 


621 


Serpent 


Sent    s  it  them  by  stealth,  nor  did  they  know  Who  s  it ;  Dora  53 

She  s  a  note,  the  seal  an  Elle  vous  suit,  Edivin  Morris  105 

She  s  her  voice  thro'  all  the  holt  Talking  Oak  123 

She  s  a  herald  forth,  And  bade  hini  cry,  Godiva  35 

With  peals  of  genial  clamour  s  Will  Water.  187 

yet  he  s  Gifts  by  the  children,  Enoch  Arden  337 

s  his  voice  beneath  him  thro'  the  wood.  „          444 

s  for  him  and  said  wildly  to  him  „          507 

And  s  her  sweetly  by  the  golden  isles,  ,,          536 

They  s  a  crew  that  landing  burst  away  „          634 

he  «  the  bailiff  to  the  farm  To  learn  The  Brook  141 

S  to  the  liarrow'd  brother,  praying  him  Aylmer's  Field  607 

but  every  roof  <S  out  a  listener  :  .,           614 

S  like  the  twelve-divided  concubine  „          759 

s  out  a  ciy  Which  mixt  with  little  Margaret's,  Sea  Dreams  245 

My  father  s  ambassadors  with  furs  Princess  i  42 

We  s  mine  host  to  purchase  female  gear ;  „           199 

I  gave  the  letter  to  be  s  with  dawn  ;  „          245 

s  For  Psyche,  but  she  was  not  there  ;  „      iv  236 

s  for  Blanche  to  accuse  her  face  to  face ;  „          239 

S  out  a  bitter  bleating  for  its  dam  ;  „          392 

when  we  s  the  Prince  your  way  We  knew  not  „          398 

some  one  s  beneath  his  vaulted  palm  .,         u  31 

foutnd  He  thrice  had  s  a  herald  to  the  gates,  „          332 

S  from  a  dewy  breast  a  cry  for  light :  „     mi  253 

A  soul  on  highest  mission  s.  In  Mem.  cxiii  10 

My  Maud  has  s  it  by  thee  Mavd  I  xxi  9 

the  King  S  to  him,  saying,  '  Arise,  Com.  of  Arthur  44 

he  s  Ulfius,  and  Brastias,  and  Bedivere,  „            135 

Died  but  of  late,  and  s  his  cry  to  me,  „            361 

while  the  phantom  king  S  out  at  times  a  voice  ;  „            437 

Leodogran  awoke,  and  s  Ulfius,  and  Brastias  and  Bedivere,      „  444 

That  s  him  from  his  senses  :  let  me  go.  Gareth  and  L.  71 

seeing  he  hath  s  us  cloth  of  gold,  „            428 

s.  Between  the  in-crescent  and  de-crescent  moon,  „            528 

s  her  wish  that  I  would  yield  thee  thine.  „            551 

thy  much  folly  hath  s  thee  here  His  kitchen-knave  :  „            919 

'  A  kitchen-knave,  and  s  in  scorn  of  me  :  „            952 

and  say  His  kitchen-knave  hath  s  thee.  „            985 

and  Gareth  s  him  to  the  King.  „          1051 

Had  s  her  coming  champion,  waited  him.  „           1192 

Had  s  thee  down  before  a  lesser  spear,  „          1244 

S  all  liis  heart  and  breath  thro'  aU  the  horn.  „           1369 

s  Her  maiden  to  demand  it  of  the  dwarf  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  192 

S  her  own  maiden  to  demand  the  name,  „              411 

S  forth  a  sudden  sharp  and  bitter  cry,  Geraint  and  E.  722 

s  a  thoiisand  men  To  tiU  the  wastes,  „            941 

ye  be  s  for  by  the  King,'  They  follow'd  ;  Balin  and  Balan  48 

wrath  S  me  a  three-years'  exile  from  thine  eyes.  ,.              59 

the  hall  Of  him  to  whom  ye  s  us,  Pellam,  „              96 
being  jealous,  that  he  s  His  horns  of  proclamation 

out  Merlin  and  V.  580 

Reported  who  he  was,  and  on  what  quest  S,  Lancelot  and  E.  629 

And  lose  the  quest  he  s  you  on,  „              655 

'  Your  prize  the  diamond  s  you  by  the  King  :  '  „              821 

the  tale  Of  King  and  Prince,  the  diamond  s,  „              824 

and  toward  even  S  for  his  shield :  „              978 

he  saw  One  of  her  house,  and  s  him  to  the  Queen  „             1168 

'  For  on  a  day  she  s  to  speak  with  me.  Holy  Grail  101 

She  s  the  deathless  passion  in  her  eyes  „          163 

S  hands  upon  him,  as  to  tear  him,  Pelleas  and  E.  521 

golden  grove  Appearing,  s  his  fancy  back  Last  Tournament  380 

then  what  folly  had  s  him  overseas  „              394 

That  s  the  face  of  all  the  marsh  aloft  „              439 

the  voice  about  his  feet  S  up  an  answer,  „              761 

s  a  deep  sea-voice  thro'  all  the  land,  Guinevere  247 

S  notes  of  preparation  manifold,  Lover's  Tale  i  207 

and  s  his  soul  Into  the  songs  of  birds,  „            320 

s  my  cry  Thro'  the  blank  night  to  Him  „            751 

8  such  a  flame  into  his  face,  >>        i'»  177 

s  at  once  to  Lionel,  praying  him  By  that  great  love  „            180 

he  s,  an'  the  father  agreed  ;  First  Quarrel  18 

And  then  he  s  me  a  letter,  „            85 


Sent  {continued)     But  he  s  a  chill  to  my  heart 
The  Lord  had  s  this  bright, 
They  s  me  out  his  tool,  Bovadilla, 
we  have  s  them  very  fiends  from  Hell ; 
Thrice  from  the  dyke  he  s  his  mighty  shout, 
S  the  shadow  of  Himself, 
Sons  and  brothers  that  have  s, 


In  the  Child.  Hosp.  2 

Columbus  91 

127 

184 

Achilles  over  the  T.  30 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  211 

oen.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  3 


Better  have  s  Our  Edith  thro'  the  glories 
'OusE-KEEPEE  s  tha  my  lass, 


Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  224 
Village  Wife  1 


the  man  repenting  s  This  ring  "  lo  t'amo  "  to  his  best 

beloved,  And  s  it  on  her  birthday.  The  Ring  209 

Had  s  liLS  cry  for  her  forgiveness,  „         233 

Muriel's  mother  s,  And  sure  am  I,  „        311 

'Ever  since  You  s  the  fatal  ring ' — I  told  her  '  s  To  Miriam,'    „        362 

Why  had  I  s  the  ring  at  first  to  her  ?  „         390 

s  him  charr'd  and  blasted  to  the  deathless  fire  Happy  84 

I  s  him  a  desolate  wail  and  a  curse,  Charity  14 

I  s  him  back  what  he  gave, —  „       19 

Sentence     And  mystic  s  spoke  ;  Talking  Oak  294 

I  hear  the  s  that  he  speaks  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxx  10 

there  he  broke  the  s  in  his  heart  Abruptly,  Geraint  and  E.  41 

the  King  Pronounced  a  dismal  s,  Merlin  and  V.  591 

when  the  woful  s  hath  been  past,  Lover's  Tale  i  788 

Sentiment     less  of  s  than  sense  Had  Katie  ;  The  Brook  91 

A  classic  lecture,  rich  in  s.  Princess  ii  374 

Sentinel     And  hear  at  times  as  In  Mem.  cxxvi  9 

to  be  soldier  all  day  and  be  s  all  thro'  the  night —    Def.  of  Lucknow  74 

Separate    So  rounds  he  to  a  s  mind  In  Mem.  xlv  9 

That  each,  who  seems  a  s  whole,  „        xlvii  1 

and  is  Eternal,  s  from  fears  :  „    Ixxocv  66 

And  each  prefers  his  s  claim,  „         cii  18 

And  all  the  s  Edens  of  this  earth.  Lover's  Tale  i  551 

September    on  your  third  8  birthday  The  Ring  130 

Your  fifth  S  birthday.  „        423 

Sepulchral     Like  echoes  in  s  haUs,  In  Mem.  Iviii  2 

Sepulchre    {See  also  Bosom-sepulchre)    Gross  darkness  of 

the  inner  s  D.  of  F.  Women  67 

While  thou,  a  meteor  of  the  s,  Lover's  Tale  i  99 

laid  it  in  a  s  of  rock  Never  to  rise  again.  „            683 

He  raised  her  softly  from  the  s,  „         iv  85 

There  came  two  voices  from  the  S,  Columbus  95 

And  free  the  Holy  S  from  thrall.  „       104 

And  save  the  Holy  8  from  thrall.  „       240 

icy  breath.  As  from  the  grating  of  a  s.  The  Ring  400 

Sequel    8  of  guerdon  could  not  alter  me  To  fairer.  Qinone  153 

'  The  s  of  to-day  unsolders  all  M.  d' Arthur  14 

Of  love  that  never  found  his  earthly  close.  What  s  ?      Love  and  Duty  2 

For  love  in  s  works  with  fate,  Day- Dm.,  Arrival  3 

I  shudder  at  the  s,  but  I  go.'  Princess  ii  236 

the  s  of  the  tale  Had  touch'd  her ;  „      Con.  30 

'  The  s  of  to-day  unsolders  all  Pass,  of  Arthur  182 

the  soul :   That  makes  the  s  pure  ;  Lover's  Taleiv  157 

Beginning  at  the  s  know  no  more.  ,,              158 

Sequence     And  in  the  fatal  s  of  this  world  Ancient  Sage  274 

for  forty  years  my  lite  in  golden  s  ran,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  47 

SeragUo    iron  grates,  And  hush'd  s's.  D.  of  F.  Women  36 

Seraph     there  was  Milton  like  a  s  strong.  Palace  of  Art  133 

Pontius  and  Iscariot  by  my  side  Show'd  like  fair  s's.  St.  S.  Stylites  169 

Seraphic    Pierces  the  keen  s  flame  From  orb  to  orb,  In  Mem.  xxx  27 

8  intellect  and  force  To  seize  and  throw  the  doubts  „          cix  5 

Sere     {See  also  Sear)     in  the  rudest  wind  Never  grow  s.    Ode  to  Memory  25 

Shrank  one  sick  willow  s  and  small.  Mariana  in  the  S.  53 

And,  tho'  thy  violet  sicken  into  s.  Prog,  of  Spring  25 

Serenade     A  rogue  of  canzonets  and  s's.  Princess  iv  135 

Serene     '  Her  court  was  pure  ;  her  life  s  ;  To  the  Queen  25 

8  with  argent-lidded  eyes  Amorous,  Arabian  Nights  135 

8,  imperial  Eleanore.  (repeat)  Elednore  81,  121 

My  mother,  looks  as  whole  as  some  s  Princess  v  193 

And  that  s  result  of  all.'  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  92 

O  heart,  look  down  and  up  *S,  secure,  Early  Spring  28 

Serenest     Now  towering  o'er  him  in  s  air,  Lucretius  178 

Serf     Who  made  the  s  a  man,  and  burst  his  chain —  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  3 

Serious    Her  bright  hair  blown  about  the  s  face  Lancelot  and  E.  392 

Sermon    See  Sarmin 

Sermonizing    In  sailor  fashion  roughly  s  Enoch  Arden  204 

Serpent  (adj.)     Back  on  herself  her  s  pride  had  curl'd.        Palace  of  Art  257 

in  whom  all  evil  fancies  clung  Like  s  eggs  together,     Enoch  Arden  480 


Serpent 


622 


Set 


Serpent  (adj.)  {continued)    Wherethro'  the  s  river  coil'd, 

they  came.  Gareth  and  L.  906 

ringing  with  their  s  hands,  Merlin  and  V.  578 
Every  tiger  madness  muzzled,  every  s  passion 

kUl'd,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  167 
all  the  s  vines  Which  on  the  touch  of  heavenly  feet 

had  risen,  Death  of  CEnone  4 

Serpent  (s)     Gliding  with  equal  crowns  two  s's  led  Alexander  6 

Like  birds  the  charming  s  draws.  In  Mem.  xxxiv  14 

Nor  cared  the  s  at  thy  side  „                ex  7 

whose  souls  the  old  5  long  had  drawn  Dowti,  Geraint  and  E.  632 

like  a  s,  ran  a  scroll  Of  letters  Holy  Grail  170 

Let  the  trampled  5  show  you  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  242 

The  s  coil'd  about  his  broken  shaft,  Demeter  and  P.  77 

Serpent-rooted    seated  on  a  s-r  beech.  The  Brook  135 

Serpent-throated    long  horn  And  s-t  bugle.  Princess  v  253 

Se^ent-wanded    s-w  power  Draw  downward  into  Hades  Demeter  and  P.  25 

Servant    (See  also  Sarvint)    rummaged  like  a  rat :  no 

s  stay'd  :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  38 

and  gull'd  Our  s's,  wrong'd  and  lied  Princess  iv  540 

Are  but  as  s's  in  a  house  In  Mem.  xx  3 

s's  of  the  Morning-Star,  approach,  Gareth  and  L.  924 

He  had  a  faithful  s,  one  who  loved  Lover's  Tale  iv  256 

Who  found  the  dying  s,  took  him  home,  „              263 

That  faithful  s  whom  we  spoke  about,  „              342 

Serve     (See  also  Sarve)     Would  s  his  kind  in  deed  and 

word,  Love  thou  thy  land  86 

Who'd  s  the  state  ?  for  if  I  carved  my  name  Audley  Court  48 

To  s  the  hot-and-hot ;  Will  WaUr.  228 

I'll  s  you  better  in  a  strait ;  '             Princess  i  85 

all  things  s  their  time  Toward  that  great  year  „      iv  73 

fellow-worker  be.  When  time  should  s ;  „        309 

We  two  will  s  them  both  in  aiding  her —  „  vii  268 

Who  never  sold  the  truth  to  s  the  hour,  Ode  on  Well.  179 

But  as  he  saves  or  s's  the  state.  „            200 

But  better  s's  a  wholesome  law,  In  Mem.  xlviii  10 

May  s  to  curl  a  maiden's  locks,  „           Ixxvii  7 

hire  thyself  to  s  for  meats  and  drinks  Gareth  and  L.  153 

thou  shalt  s  a  twelvemonth  and  a  day.'  „            157 

s  with  scullions  and  with  kitchen-knaves ;  „            170 
grant  me  to  s  For  meat  and  drink  among  thy 

kitchen-knaves  „            444 

'  So  that  ye  do  not  s  me  sparrow-hawks  Marr.  of  Geraint  304 

Endures  not  that  her  guest  should  s  himself.'  „              379 

because  their  hall  must  also  s  For  kitchen,  „              390 

s  thee  costlier  than  with  mowers'  fare.'  Geraint  and  E.  231 

attendance,  page  or  maid.  To  s  you —  „            323 

a  glance  \dU  s — the  liars !  Merlin  and  V.  Ill 

Being  but  ampler  means  to  s  mankind,  „             489 

to  see  your  face.  To  s  you,  Lancelot  and  E.  939 

To  s  as  model  for  the  mighty  world,  Guinevere  465 

Had  died  almost  to  s  them  any  way,  Lover's  Tale  iv  124 

0  how  could  I  s  in  the  wards  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  24 

s  This  mortal  race  thy  kin  so  well,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  15 

make  the  passing  shadow  s  thy  wiU.  Ancient  Sage  110 
To  s  her  myriads  and  the  State, —                       To  Mara,  of  Dufferin  24 

and  s  that  Infinite  Within  us,  Akbar's  Dream  145 

Served    (See  also  Sarved)     So  sitting,  s  by  man  and  maid.        The  Goose  21 

or  fruits  and  cream  S  in  the  weeping  elm ;  Gardener's  D.  195 

he  s  a  year  On  board  a  merchantman,  Enoch  Arden  52 

master  of  that  ship  Enoch  had  s  in,  „          120 

s.  Long  since,  a  bygone  Rector  of  the  place,  Aylmer's  Field  10 

and  s  With  female  hands  and  hospitality.'  Princess  vi  95 

'  We  s  thee  here,'  they  said,  '  so  long.  In  Mem.  ciii  47 

But  s  the  seasons  that  may  rise ;  „         cxiii  4 

'  If  I  in  aught  have  s  thee  well.  Com.  of  Arthur  138 

s  King  Uther  thro'  his  magic  art ;  „              151 

Merlin  ever  s  about  the  King,  Uther,  „              365 

But  ever  meekly  s  the  King  in  thee  ?  Gareth  and  L.  729 
Bribed  with  large  promises  the  men  who  s  About 

my  person,  Marr.  of  Geraint  453 

Might  well  have  s  for  proof  that  I  was  loved,  „              796 

s  a  little  to  disedge  The  sharpness  Geraint  and  E.  189 

one  sat,  Tho'  s  with  choice  from  air,  Pelleas  and  E.  149 
Who  8  him  well  with  those  white  hands  of  hers,    Last  Tournament  400 


Served  (continued)     They  s  their  use,  their  time ; 
meat  he  long'd  for  s  By  hands  unseen ; 
Infinite  Love  that  has  s  us  so  well  ? 
S  the  poor,  and  built  the  cottage. 
Dead,  who  had  s  his  time. 


Last  Tournament  676 

Guinevere  265 

Despair  95 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  268 

Dead  Prophet  9 


Service     (See  also  Sarvice)     while  the  tender  s  made  thee 

weep.  The  Bridesmaid  10 

'  to  find  Another  s  such  as  this.'  In  Mem.  xx  8 

All  kind  of  s  with  a  noble  ease  Gareth  and  L.  489 

knave  that  doth  thee  s  as  full  knight  „          1016 

Grateful  to  Prince  Geraint  for  s  done,  Marr.  of  Geraint  15 

s  done  so  graciously  would  bind  The  two  together ;  „            790 

did  him  s  as  a  squire ;  Geraint  and  E.  406 

(I  speak  as  one  Speaks  of  a  s  done  him)  „              848 

Now  weary  of  my  s  and  devoir,  Lancelot  and  E.  118 

Such  s  have  ye  done  me,  that  I  make  My  will  „              915 

vain  and  i"ude  With  profier  of  unwish'd-for  s's)  Lover's  Tale  i  629 

should  this  first  master  claim  His  s,  „  iv  266 
The  s  of  the  one  so  saved  was  dye  AU  to  the 

saver—  „            279 

Gain'd  in  the  s  of  His  Highness,  Columbus  236 

Serviceable     And  seeing  her  so  sweet  and  s,  Alarr.  of  Geraint  393 

to  be  sweet  and  s  To  noble  knights  in  sickness,  Lancelot  and  E.  767 

Servile     and  s  to  a  shrewish  tongue  !  Locksley  Hall  42 

Master  of  half  a  s  shire,  Maud  I  x  10 

Serving    And  loved  me  s  in  my  father's  hall :  Geraint  and  E.  699 

to  splinter  it  into  feuds  S  his  traitorous  end ;  Guinevere  19 

Serving-man    As  just  and  mere  a  s-m  Will  Water.  151 

there  brake  a  s  Flying  from  out  of  the  black  wood,  Gareth  and  L.  801 

Servitor    Loyal,  the  dumb  old  s,  Lancelot  and  E.  1144 

Then  rose  the  dumb  old  s,  and  the  dead,  „              1153 

Session    in  s  on  their  roofs  Approved  him.  The  Brook  127 

Leapt  from  her  s  on  his  lap,  Merlin  and  V.  844 

Set  (adj.)     The  s  gray  life,  and  apathetic  end.  Love  and  Duty  18 

One  s  slow  bell  will  seem  to  toU  The  passing  In  Mem.  Ivii  10 

Set  (s)    with  others  of  our  s.  Five  others :  Princess,  Pro.  8 

0  wretched  s  of  sparrows,  one  and  all,  Marr.  of  Geraint  278 
Two  s's  of  three  laden  with  jingling  arms,  Geraint  and  E.  188 
with  s  of  sun  Their  fires  flame  thickly,  Achilles  over  the  T.  10 

Set  (verb)     (See  also  Sit)     The  sun  is  just  about  to  s,  Margaret  58 

As  tho'  a  star,  in  inmost  heaven  s,  Elednore  89 

That  s's  at  twilight  in  a  land  of  reeds.  Garess'd  or  chidden  14 

be  s  In  midst  of  knowledge.  Two  Voices  89 

'  Why  not  s  forth,  if  I  should  do  This  rashness,  „          391 

you  had  s,  That  morning,  on  the  casement-edge  Miller's  D.  81 

Many  suns  arise  and  s.  „  205 
To-night  I  saw  the  sun  s :  he  s                          May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  5 

S  in  ail  lights  by  many  minds,  Love  thou  thy  land  35 

1  have  s  my  heart  upon  a  match.  Dora  14 
I  will  s  him  in  my  uncle's  eye  Among  the  wheat ;  ..67 
women  kiss'd  Each  other,  and  s  out,  „  129 
saw  The  boy  s  up  betwixt  his  grandsire's  knees,  ,,  131 
Allan  s  him  down,  and  Mary  said:  ,,  139 
I  s  the  words,  and  added  names  I  knew.  Audley  Court  61 
S's  out,  and  meets  a  friend  who  hails  him,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  42 
Time  will  s  me  right.'  Edwin  Morris  88 
They  s  an  ancient  creditor  to  work :  „  130 
all  the  current  of  my  being  s's  to  thee.'  Locksley  Hall  24 
promise  of  my  spirit  hath  not  s.  „  187 
He  s  up  his  forlorn  pipes,  Amphion  22 
You  s  before  chance-comers,  WUl  Water.  6 
And  s  in  Heaven's  third  story,  „  70 
S  thy  hoary  fancies  free ;  Vision  of  Sin  156 
Enoch  s  A  purpose  evermore  before  his  eyes,  Enoch  Arden  44 
s  Annie  forth  in  trade  With  all  that  seamen  „  138 
s  his  hand  To  fit  their  little  streetward  sitting-room  „  169 
village  girl.  Who  s's  her  pitcher  underneath  the  spring,  „  207 
S  her  sad  will  no  less  to  chime  with  his,  „  248 
He  s  himself  beside  her,  saying  to  her :  „  290 
where  he  fixt  his  heart  he  s  his  hand  „  294 
Suddenly  s  it  wide  to  find  a  sign,  „  496 
S  in  this  Eden  of  all  plenteousness,  „  561 
Enoch  s  himself.  Scorning  an  alms,  to  work  „  811 
fairy  foreland  s  With  willow-weed  and  mallow.  The  Brook  45 
Have  also  s  his  many-shielded  tree  ?  Aylmer's  Field  48 


Set 


623 


Settle 


Stt  (verb)  {continued)    He  never  yet  had  s  his  daughter 

forth  Aylvier's  Field  347 

and  one  was  s  to  watch  The  watcher,  „            551 

'  S  them  up !  they  shall  not  fall ! '  Sea  Breams  227 

I  had  s  my  heart  on  your  forgiving  him  „          269 

s's  aU  the  tops  quivering —  Lucretius  186 

show'd  the  house,  Greek,  s  with  busts :  Princess,  Pro.  11 

rosebud  s  with  Uttle  wilful  thorns,  „              154 

S  in  a,  gleaming  river's  crescent-curve,  „           i  171 

when  we  s  our  hand  To  this  great  work,  „            ii  59 

Till  toward  the  centre  s  the  starry  tides,  „              117 

You  need  not  s  your  thoughts  in  rubric  „           Hi  50 

but  we  S  forth  to  climb ;  „              354 

foot  shone  like  a  jewel  s  In  the  dark  crag :  „              358 

Blow,  bugle,  blow,  s  the  wild  echoes  flying,  (repeat)  „        iv  5,  17 

Norway  svm  S  into  sunrise ;  „              576 

iS  in  a  cataract  on  an  island-crag,  „           v  347 

I  s  my  face  Against  all  men,  „              388 

S  his  child  upon  her  knee —  „           vilA 

Till  at  the  last  she  s  herself  to  man,  „        vii  285 

and  roughly  s  His  Briton  in  blown  seas  Ode  on  Well.  154 

Sun  s's,  moon  s's,  Window,  When  3 

Once  more  to  s  a  ringlet  right ;  In  Mem.  vi  36 

Since  our  first  Sun  arose  and  s.  „       xxiv  8 

That  s's  the  past  in  this  relief  ?  „              12 

On  thy  Parnassus  s  thy  feet,  „    xxxvii  6 

And  s  thee  forth,  for  thou  art  mine,  „        lix  13 

Like  some  poor  girl  whose  heart  is  s  „           IxZ 

I  would  s  their  pains  at  ease.  „       Ixiii  8 

Whate'er  thy  hands  are  s  to  do  „     Ixxv  19 

And  in  a  moment  s  thy  face  „     Ixxvi  2 

His  credit  thus  shall  s  me  free ;  „     Ixxx  13 

my  feet  are  s  To  leave  the  pleasant  fields  „        cii  21 

S  light  by  narrower  perfectness.  „        cxii  4 

She  s's  her  forward  countenance  And  leaps  „       cxiv  6 

He  s  his  royal  signet  there ;  „     cxxv  12 

But  now  s  out :  the  noon  is  near,  „     Con.  41 

make  my  heart  as  a  millstone,  s  my  face  as  a  flint,  Maud  /  i  31 

8  in  the  heart  of  the  carven  gloom,  „    xiv  11 

He  s's  the  jewel-print  of  youi"  feet  „  xxii  41 

Till  God's  love  s  Thee  at  his  side  again !  Bed.  of  Idylls  55 

So  when  the  King  had  s  his  banner  broad.  Com.  of  Arthur  101 
Brought  Arthur  forth,  and  s  him  in  the  hall, 

Proclaiming,  „              229 

thereupon  the  King  S  two  before  him.  Oareth  and  L.  104 

Southward  they  s  their  faces.  „            182 

s  To  turn  the  broach,  draw  water,  or  hew  wood,  „            485 

Arthur's  men  are  s  along  the  wood ;  „            788 

Gareth  loosed  his  bonds  and  on  free  feet  S  him,  „            818 

and  the  Baron  s  Gareth  beside  her,  „            851 

,       further  wrong  Than  s  him  on  his  feet,  „            955 

Which  s  the  horror  higher :  „          1394 
and  s  foot  upon  his  breast.                                        Mart,  of  Geraint  574 

When  my  dear  child  is  s  forth  at  her  best,  „              728 

in  charge  of  whom  ?  a  girl :  s  on.'  Oeraint  and  E.  125 

then  s  down  His  basket,  „            209 

on  his  foot  She  s  her  own  and  climb'd ;  „            760 

s  his  foot  upon  me,  and  give  me  life.  „            850 

in  their  chairs  s  up  a  stronger  race  „            940 

Lest  we  should  s  one  truer  on  his  throne.  Balin  and  Balan  7 

beside  The  carolling  water  s  themselves  again,  „            44 

s  himself  To  learn  what  Arthur  meant  by  courtesy,  „          157 

See  now,  I  js  thee  high  on  vantage  gi'ound,  „          534 

after  that,  she  s  herself  to  gain  Him,  Merlin  and  V.  165 

If  ye  know,  S  up  the  charge  ye  know,  w            703 

and  caught,  And  5  it  on  his  head,  Lancelot  and  E.  54 

And  5  it  in  this  damsel's  golden  hair,  „            205 

S  every  gilded  parapet  shuddering ;  „            299 

more  amazed  Than  if  seven  men  had  s  upon  him,  m            351 

in  the  costly  canopy  o'er  him  s,  „            443 

kith  and  kin,  not  knowing,  s  upon  him ;  w            599 

he  s  himself  to  play  upon  her  With  sallying  wit,  „            646 

8  in  her  hand  a  Uly,  o'er  her  hung  The  silken  case  „          1148 

s  betwixt  With  many  a  mystic  symbol.  Holy  Grail  232 

s  the  sail,  or  had  the  boat  Become  a  living  creature  „        518 


Set  (verb)  (continued)     while  I  tarried,  every  day  she  s  A 

banquet  Holy  Grail  588 

s  his  name  High  on  all  hills,  Last  Tournament  336 

ye  s  yourself  To  babble  about  him,  „              339 

and  s  me  far  In  the  gray  distance,  „              639 

She  rose,  and  s  before  hSm  all  he  will'd ;  „              723 

Lancelot  got  her  horse,  8  her  thereon,  Guinevere  123 

thought  the  Queen  '  Lo !  they  have  s  her  on,  „        308 

thou  their  tool,  s  on  to  plague  And  play  upon,  „        359 

Which  are  as  gems  s  in  my  memory,  Lover's  Tale  i  291 

Ev'n  by  the  price  that  others  s  upon  it,  „        iv  152 

He  brings  and  s's  before  him  in  rich  guise  „            247 

So  I  s  to  righting  the  house.  First  Quarrel  47 

they  s  him  so  high  That  all  the  ships  Rizpah  37 

little  of  us  left  by  the  time  this  sun  be  s.'  The  Revenge  28 

Had  s  the  blossom  of  her  health  again.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  151 

will  she  never  s  her  sister  free  ? '  „               218 

good  woman,  can  prayer  s  a  broken  bone  ?  '  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  20 

hour  and  the  wine  Had  s  the  wits  aflame.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  95 

A  thousand  marks  are « upon  my  head.  „             195 

8  thee  in  light  till  time  shall  be  no  more  ?  Columbus  150 

s  me  climbing  icy  capes  And  glaciers.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  25 

Had  s  the  Uly  and  rose  By  all  my  ways  Ancient  Sage  156 

s  The  lamps  alight,  and  call  For  golden  music,  „           195 

some  that  never  s,  but  pass  From  sight  and  night  „          202 

ye  s  me  heart  batin'  to  music  wid  ivery  word !  Tomorrow  34 

ye'U  niver  s  eyes  an  the  face  „        50 

stick  oop  thy  back,  an'  s  oop  thy  taail.  Spinster's  S's.  31 

as  if  they  was  s  upo'  springs,  „            89 

Theere !    8  it  down !     Now  Robby !  „          118 

but  s  no  meek  ones  in  their  place ;  Lodksley  H.,  Sixty  133 

8  the  feet  above  the  brain  „              136 

iS  the  maiden  fancies  wallowing  „              145 

S  the  sphere  of  all  the  boundless  Heavens  „              210 

Not  this  way  will  you  s  your  name  Epilogue  1 

8  the  moimtain  aflame  to-night,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  16 

And  s  the  mother  waking  in  amaze  Bemeter  and  P.  57 

an'  s's  'im  agean  the  wall,  Owd  Rod  82 

Nor  ever  cared  to  s  you  on  her  knee.  The  Ring  386 

And  s  a  crueller  mark  than  Cain's  on  him,  Happy  18 

— ^from  the  bush  we  both  had  s —  „     102 

pine  which  here  The  warrior  of  Caprera  s,  To  Ulysses  26 

'  My  Rose  '  s  all  your  faces  aglow,  Roses  on  the  T.  3 

s  his  face  By  waste  and  field  and  town  St.  Telemachus  29 

You  have  s  a  price  on  his  head :  Bandit's  Beath  7 

caUs  to  them  '  8  yourselves  free ! '  Kapiolani  3 

Set    See  also  Close-set,  Deep-set,  Hard-set,  High-set,  Silver- 
set,  Solid-set,  Stately-set,  Stiff-set,  Thick-set 

s  round  thy  first  experiment  Ode  to  Memory  81 

It  was  when  the  moon  was  s,  May  Queen,  Con.  26 
s  wide  the  doors  that  bar  The  secret  bridal  chambers     Gardener's  B.  248 

s  the  how  much  before  the  how.  Golden  Year  11 

at  s  forth  The  Biscay,  roughly  ridging  eastward,  Enoch  Arden  528 

Music's  golden  sea  8  toward  eternity,  Ode  on  Well.  253 

And  in  the  s  thou  art  fair.  In  Mem.  cxxx  4 

8  this  knave.  Lord  Baron,  at  my  side.  Gareth  and  L.  854 

Who  push'd  his  prows  into  the  s  sun,  Columbus  24 

And  a  hush  with  the  s  moon.  Maud  I  xxii  18 

Now  half  to  the  s  moon  are  gone,  „                23 

On  some  vast  plain  before  a  s  sun,  Guinevere  77 

Down  those  loud  waters,  hke  a  s  star.  Lover's  Tale  i  59 
s,  when  Even  descended,  the  very  sunset  aflame ;      V.  of  Maeldune  66 

glorious  creature  Sank  to  his  s.  Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  30 

up  that  lane  of  light  into  the  s  sun.  The  Flight  40 

Charity  s  the  martyr  aflame ;  Fastness  9 

his  The  words,  and  mine  the  s.  The  Ring  24 

And  while  the  moon  was  s.  Forlorn  84 

Those  cobras  ever  s  up  their  hoods —  Akbar's  Bream  166 

Settle  (s)     Down  on  an  oaken  s  in  the  haU,  Geraint  and  E.  573 

Settle  (verb)    (See  also  Sattle)    'Tis  hard  to  s  order 

once  again.  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  8.  82 

the  cloud  that  s's  round  his  birth  Hath  lifted  Gareth  and  L.  130 

ere  they  s  for  the  night.  Marr.  of  Geraint  250 

s's,  beaten  back,  and  beaten  back  S's,  Merlin  and  V.  371 
Nor  s's  into  hueless  gray,                                     To  Marq.  of  Bufferin  50 


Settled  624 

Settled     {See  also  Sattled)     A  land  of  s  government,    You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  9 
Until  I  woke,  and  found  him  s  down  2'he  Epic  17 

seem  but  to  be  Weak  symbols  of  the  s  bliss.  Miller's  D.  233 

wheeling  round  The  central  wish,  until  we  s  there.      Gardener's  D.  225 
And  loosely  s  into  form.  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  12 

Nothing  to  mar  the  sober  majesties  Of  s,  sweet.  Epicurean 


Shadow 


life.  Lucretius  218 

s  in  her  eyes,  The  green  malignant  light  Princess  Hi  131 

on  my  spirits  S  a  gentle  cloud  of  melancholy ;  „         iv  570 

by  overthrow  Of  these  or  those,  the  question  s  die.'  „         v  317 

Now  looking  to  some  s  end.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  97 

to  her  old  perch  back,  and  s  there.  Merlin  and  V.  903 

Waiting  to  see  the  s  countenance  Of  her  I  loved,         Lover's  Tale  Hi  39 

Settling     s  circled  all  the  lists.  Marr.  of  Geraint  547 

Seven  (adj.)     The  s  elms,  the  poplars  four  Ode  to  Memory  56 

s  happy  yeare,  S  happy  years  of  health  and  competence,  Enoch  Arden  82 
In  those  f  ar-oS  s  happy  years  were  born ;  „  686 

till  the  Bear  had  wheel'd  Thro'  a  great  arc  his  s  slow 

suns.  Princess  iv  213 

and  more  amazed  Than  if  s  men  had  set  upon  him,  La^icelot  and  E.  351 
thro'  the  gap  The  s  clear  stars  of  Arthur's  Table 

Round —  Holy  Grail  684 

Across  the  s  clear  stars — 0  grace  to  me —  „  692 

S  days  I  drove  along  the  dreary  deep,  „  808 

S  strong  Earls  of  the  army  of  Anlaf  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  53 

I  can  hear  Too  plainly  what  full  tides  of  onset  sap  Our 

s  high  gates,  Tiresias  92 

His  fingers  were  so  stiffen'd  by  the  frost  Of  s  and  ninety 

winters.  The  Ring  240 

Seven  (s)     It  should  'a  been  'ere  by  s.  Spinster's  S's.  114 

Sevenfold    Would  slowly  trail  himself  s  The  Mermaid  25 

and  so  We  forged  a  s  story.  Princess,  Pro.  202 

Seven-headed    S-h  monsters  only  made  to  kiU  Time  „  204 

Seven-months'      A  s-m  babe  had  been  a  truer  gift.  Merlin  and  V.  711 

Seventeen    petitionary  grace  Of  sweet  s  The  Brook  113 

Maud  is  not  s,  Maud  I  xii  15 

Seventh    Like  a  beam  of  the  s  Heaven,  down  to  my  side,  „        xiv  21 

on  the  s  night  I  heard  the  shingle  grinding  Holy  Grail  810 

Seventimes-heated    a  heat  As  from  a  s-h  furnace,  „        843 

Seventy    S  yeai-s  ago,  my  darling,  s  years  ago.  (repeat)  Grandmother  24,  56 
Hallus  aloan  wi'  'is  boooks,  thaw  nigh  upo'  s  year.   _    Village  Wife  27 

Seventy-five    While  you  have  touch'd  at  s-f, 

Seventy-four    And  I  am  nearing  s-f, 

Seventy-seven    To  you  that  are  s-s, 

Several    I  bump'd  the  ice  into  three  s  stars, 

Sever'd    Her  lips  are  s  as  to  speak : 

Severe    The  grave,  s  Genovese  of  old. 

across  him  came  a  cloud  Of  melancholy  s, 

Severer    S  in  the  logic  of  a  life  ? 

Severity    That  pure  s  of  perfect  light — 

Severn    The  Danube  to  the  S  gave 
There  twice  a  day  the  S  fills ; 
fifty  knights  rode  with  them,  to  the  shores  Of  S, 

and  they  past  to  their  own  land ; 
fifty  knights  rode  with  them  to  the  shores  Of  S, 
and  they  past  to  their  own  land. 

Seville    Let  us  bang  these  dogs  of  iS', 

Sew     Or  teach  the  orphan  girl  to  s. 

Sewer    cleanse  this  common  s  of  all  his  realm, 
cleanse  this  common  s  of  all  my  realm, 
with  the  drainage  of  your  s ; 


Or  the  foulest  s  of  the  town — 
this  little  city  of  s's, 

Sewer  (sure)     But  I  beant  that  s  es  the  Lord, 
Naay  to  be  5  it  be  past  'er  time. 
I  wur  s  that  it  couldn't  be  true ; 
Robby  wur  fust  to  be  s, 

Sex    '  No  more  of  love ;  your  s  is  known : 
Madam — if  I  know  your  s, 
If  our  old  halls  could  change  their  s, 
not  a  scomer  of  your  s  But  venerator, 
She  wrongs  herself,  her  s,  and  me, 
either  s  alone  Is  haU  itself, 
hustled  together,  each  s,  like  swine, 

Sha&ky  (shaky)    Nasty  an'  snaggy  an'  s, 


To  E.  Fitzgerald  44 

43 

June  Bracken,  etc.  6 

The  Epic  12 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  30 

The  Daisy  40 

Lancelot  and  E.  325 

Princess  -u  190 

Guinevere  646 

In  Mem.  xix  1 

5 

Marr.  of  Geraint  45 

Geraint  and  E.  955 

The  Revenge  30 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  70 

Marr.  of  Geraint  39 

Geraint  and  E.  895 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  143 

Dead  Prophet  48 

Happy  34 

VUlage  Wife  93 

Spinster's  S's.  5 

20 

69 

The  Letters  29 

Vision  of  Sin  181 

Princess,  Pro.  140 

iv  422 

V  117 

„  vii  301 

Maud  /  i  34 

North.  Cobbler  78 


Shaame  (shame)     an  which  was  a  s  to  be  seen ;  Village  Wife 

Shaamed  (ashamed)     I  be  hafe  s  on  it  now,  North.  Cobbler  17 

we  was  s  to  cross  Gigglesby  Greean,  Spinster's  S's.  33 

niver  done  nowt  to  be  s  on,  Owd  Rod  10 

Shackle     The  s's  of  an  old  love  straiten'd  him,  Lancelot  and  E.  875 

Shadda  (shadow)     Shamus  O'Shea  was  yer  s.  Tomorrow  38 
Shade    (See  also  Mountain-shade)    From  the  long  alley's 

latticed  s  Arabian  Nights  112 

Life  eminent  creates  the  s  of  death ;  Love  and  Death  13 

Your  soiTow,  only  sorrow's  s,  Margaret  43 

lavish  lights,  and  floating  s's :  Elednore  12 

There  in  a  silent  s  of  laurel  brown  Alexander  9 

'  Let  me  not  cast  in  endless  s  Two  Voices  5 

A  merry  boy  in  sun  and  s?  „        321 
when  in  the  chestnut  s  I  found  the  blue  Forget-me-not.    Miller's  D.  201 

Untouch'd  with  any  s  of  years,  „        219 

stedfast  s  Sleeps  on  his  luminous  ring.'  Palace  of  Art  15 

And  hollow  s's  enclosing  hearts  of  flame,  „          241 
You'll  bury  me,  my  mother,  just  beneath 

the  hawthorn  s,  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  29 


J 


I  BEAD,  before  my  eyelids  dropt  their  s, 

A  cedar  spread  his  dark-green  layers  of  s. 

trembled  on  her  waist — Ah,  happy  s — 

Half  light,  half  s.  She  stood. 

Danced  into  light,  and  died  into  the  s ; 

House  in  the  s  of  comfortable  roofs, 

What's  here  ?  a  shape,  a  s, 

'  Yet,  since  I  first  could  cast  a  s, 

rising  thro'  the  mellow  s, 

Breadths  of  tropic  s  and  pahns  in  cluster. 

This  whole  wide  earth  of  light  and  s 

One  s  more  plump  than  common ; 

By  peaks  that  flamed,  or,  all  in  s. 

As  fast  she  fled  thro'  sun  and  s, 

Slided,  they  moving  under  s : 

Thine  are  these  orbs  of  light  and  s ; 

there  no  s  can  last  In  that  deep  dawn 

What  slender  s  of  doubt  may  flit. 

The  s  by  which  my  life  was  crost, 

play'd  A  chequer-work  of  beam  and  s 

No  visual  s  of  some  one  lost, 

And  every  span  of  s  that  steals. 

The  sport  of  random  sun  and  s. 

A  s  falls  on  us  like  the  dark 

The  s  of- passing  thought, 

And  touch  with  s  the  bridal  doors, 

never  light  and  s  Coursed  one  another 

our  fortune  swerved  from  sun  to  s, 

behold  In  the  first  shallow  s  of  a  deep  wood, 

There  is  no  s  or  fold  of  mystery 

Boughs  on  each  side,  laden  with  wholesome  s. 

All  day  I  watch'd  the  floating  isles  of  s, 

seem  to  flicker  past  thro'  sun  and  s, 

and  yet  no  s  of  doubt, 

mantle,  every  s  of  glancing  green, 

And  hght,  with  more  or  less  of  s, 

a  glory  slowly  gaining  on  the  s. 
Shaded    (See  also  Sun-shaded)    To  light  her  s  eye ; 
Shading    that  other  gazed,  S  his  eyes 
Shadow  (s)    (See  also  Citron-shadow,  Forest-shadow, 
Half-shadow,  Shadda,  Surface-shadow)      on 
his  hght  there  falls  A  s ; 

Were  fixed  s's  of  thy  fixed  mood. 

She  saw  the  gusty  $  sway. 

The  5  of  the  poplar  fell  Upon  her  bed, 

Thro'  hght  and  s  thou  dost  range, 

S's  of  the  silver  birk  Sweep  the  green 

Light  and  s  ever  wander  O'er  the  green 

Thou  art  the  s  of  life. 

The  s  passeth  when  the  tree  shall  fall. 

The  s  rushing  up  the  sea, 

S's  of  the  world  appear. 

'  I  am  half -sick  of  s  s,' 

With  one  black  s  at  its  feet, 

The  one  black  s  from  the  wall. 


D.  of  F.  Women  1 

Gardener's  D.  116 

132 

140 

203 

St.  S.  Stylites  107 

202 

Talking  Oak  85 

Locksley  Hall  9 

160 

Will  Water.  67 

150 

The  Voyage  41 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  37 

Princess  vi  82 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  5 

„  xlvi  5 

,,         xlviii  7 

„  Ixvi  5 

,.       Ixxii  15 

„  xciii  5 

„       cxvii  10 

„       Con.  24 

93 

102 

117 

Marr.  of  Geraint  521 

714 

Geraint  and  E.  119 

Lover's  Tale  i  182 

230 

„  ii  5 

Ancient  Sage  100 

235 

Prog,  of  Spring  63 

Akbar's  Dream  46 

Making  of  Man  6 

Talking  Oak  218 

Lover's  Tale  i  306 


Supp.  Confessions  164 

Isabel  9 

Mariana  52 

55 

Madeline  4 

A  Dirge  5 

„      12 

Love  and  Death  10 

14 

Rosalind  11 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  12 

35 

Mariana  in  the  S.  1 

80 


Shadow 


625 


Shadow 


Shadow  (s)  (continued)  S's  thou  dost  strike,  Embracing 
A  5  oil  the  graves  I  knew, 
'  From  grave  to  grave  the  s  crept : 
Sometimes  your  s  cross'd  the  bUnd. 
s  of  the  chair  Flitted  across  into  the  night, 
mth  his  s  on  the  stone,  Kests  like  a  s, 
Between  the  s's  of  the  vine-bimches 
thro'  wavering  lights  and  s's  broke, 
The  s's  flicker  to  and  fro  : 
Fall  into  s,  soonest  lost : 
s  of  the  flowers  Stole  all  the  golden  gloss, 
mix'd  with  s's  of  the  common  groimd ! 
Shoidd  my  S  cross  thy  thoughts  Too  sadly 
wbite-hair'd  s  roaming  like  a  dream 
Alas !  for  this  gray  s,  once  a  man — 
Coldly  thy  rosy  s's  bathe  me, 
and  the  s's  rise  and  fall. 
Thro'  the  s  of  the  globe  we  sweep 
Faint  s's,  vapours  lightly  curl'd, 
s's  of  the  convent-towers  Slant  down 
And  waves  of  s  went  over  the  wheat. 
So  now  that  s  of  mischance  appear'd 
Uke  a  wounded  life  He  crept  into  the  s : 
o'er  his  countenance  No  s  past,  nor  motion : 
following  our  own  s's  thrice  as  long 
Than  his  own  s  in  a  sickly  sum. 
Shot  up  their  s's  to  the  Heaven  of  Heavens, 
That  knit  themselves  for  summer  s, 
dance,  and  flew  thro'  light  And  s, 
Seven  and  yet  one,  like  s's  in  a  dream. — 
biunt  Because  he  cast  no  s, 
should  know  The  s  from  the  substance,  and  that 

Should  come  to  fight  with  s's  and  to  fall. 
And  feel  myself  the  s  of  a  dream. 
To  point  you  out  the  s  from  the  truth ! 
inscription  ran  along  the  front.  But  deep  in  s : 
do  I  chase  The  substance  or  the  s  ? 
Well,  Are  castles  s's  ? 
Is  she  The  sweet  proprietress  as? 
Descended  to  the  court  that  lay  three  parts  In  s, 
As  flies  the  s  of  a  bird,  she  fled. 
'  O  hard  task,'  he  cried ;  '  No  fighting  s's  here ! 
And  I  myself  the  s  of  a  dream. 
Our  weakness  somehow  shapes  the  s.  Time ; 
But  in  the  s  will  we  work, 

cataract  and  the  tumult  and  the  kings  Were  s's ; 
He  has  been  among  his  s's.' 
Satan  take  The  old  women  and  their  s's ! 
all  about  his  motion  clung  The  s  of  his  sister, 
one  should  fight  with  s's  and  should  fall ; 
To  dream  myself  the  s  of  a  dream : 
o'er  her  forehead  past  A  s,  and  her  hue  changed, 
S  and  shine  is  life,  httle  Annie, 
And  on  thro'  zones  of  light  and  s 
S's  of  three  dead  men  (repeat) 
light  and  s  illimitable, 
T^E  lights  and  s's  fly  ! 
winds  and  lights  and  s's  that  cannot  be  still, 
and  left  me  in  s  here ! 
s  of  a  lark  Hung  in  the  s  of  a  heaven  ? 
There  sat  the  (S  fear'd  of  man ; 
The  S  sits  and  waits  for  me. 
The  S  cloak'd  from  head  to  foot. 
That  S  waiting  with  the  keys, 
Of  one  mute  S  watching  aU. 
The  tender-pencil'd  s  play. 
My  Arthur  foxmd  your  s's  fair. 
His  own  vast  s  glory-crown'd ; 
Her  s  on  the  blaze  of  kings : 
Let  cares  that  petty  s's  cast, 
hills  are  s's,  and  they  flow  From  form  to  form, 
I  saw  her  stand,  A  s  there  at  my  feet, 
A  s  flits  before  me.  Not  thou,  but  like  to  thee : 
And  the  light  and  s  fleet ; 
rivulet  at  her  feet  Ripples  on  in  light  and  s 


cloud.  Two  Voices  194 

272 

274 

Miller's  B.  124 

126 

(Enone  27 

„    181 

Lotos-Eaters  12 

D.oitheO.  Tear  39 

To  J.  S.  11 

Gardener's  D.  129 

135 

Love  and  Duty  88 

Tithonv^  8 

„      11 

„      66 

Locksley  Hall  80 

183 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  5 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  5 

Poet's  Song  4 

Enoch  Arden  128 

387 

710 

The  Brook  166 

Aylmer's  Field  30 

642 

724 

Princess,  Pro.  85 

229 

i1 


18 

84 

213 

n409 

414 

415 

m21 

96 

125 

188 
330 
331 

iv565 

v33 

34 

258 

476 

481 

vi  107 

Grandmother  60 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  27 

G.  of  Swainston  3,  5 

Boddicea  42 

Window,  On  the  Hill  1 

7 

„  Gone  3 

In  Mem.  xvi  9 

„      xxii  12 

20 

„       xxiii  4 

„      xxvi  15 

„         XXX  8 

„       xlix  12 

„    Ixxxix  6 

„       xcvii  3 

„    xcviii  19 

cvl3 

„     cxxiii  5 

Maud  Hi  39 

„        iv  11 

36 

42 


Shadow  (s)  (continued)    The  s  still  the  same ,  Maud  II  iv  72 

the  s  flits  and  fleets  And  will  not  let  me  be ;  „  90 

The  s  of  His  loss  drew  Uke  ecUpse,  Ded.  of  Idylls  14 

hold  The  King  a  s,  and  the  city  real :  Gareth  and  L.  266 

Who  cannot  brook  the  s  of  any  he.'  „  293 

Even  the  s  of  Lancelot  under  shield.  „  1311 

And  muffled  voices  heard,  and  s's  past ;  „  1373 

Then,  like  a  s,  past  the  people's  talk  Marr.  of  Geraint  82 

Thy  wheel  and  thou  are  s's  in  the  cloud ;  „  357 

Among  the  dancing  s's  of  the  birds,  „  601 

That  never  s  of  mistrust  can  cross  Between  us.  „  815 

wholly  arm'd,  behind  a  rock  In  s,  Geraint  and  E.  58 

That  s  of  mistrust  should  never  cross  „  248 

Come  sUpping  o'er  their  s's  on  the  sand,  „  471 

And  spake  no  word  imtil  the  s  tum'd ;  Balin  arid  Baian  45 

The  crown  is  but  the  s  of  the  King,  Aiid  this  a  s's 

s,  let  him  have  it, 
'  No  s '  said  Sir  Balin.  '  0  my  Queen,  But  light  to 

me !  no  s,  O  my  King, 
all  in  s  from  the  counter  door  Sir  Lancelot 
then  the  s  of  a  spear,  Shot  from  behind  hun, 
'  Eyes  have  I  That  saw  to-day  the  s  of  a  spear, 
So  thou  be  s,  here  I  make  thee  ghost,' 
And  Uke  a  silver  s  sUpt  away 
And  the  caim'd  moimtain  was  a  s, 
shot  red  fire  and  s's  thro'  the  cave. 
Past  like  a  s  thro'  the  field, 
s  of  some  piece  of  pointed  lace,  In  the  Queen's  s, 
s  of  my  spear  had  been  enow  To  scare  them 
once  the  s  of  a  bird  Flying,  and  then  a  fawn ; 
beneath  the  s  of  those  towers  A  villainy, 
nothing  moved  but  his  own  self.  And  his  own  s. 
Creep  with  his  s  thro'  the  court  again. 
Beneath  the  s  of  some  bird  of  prey  ; 
the  world  Is  flesh  and  s — 
Behind  him  rose  a  s  and  a  shriek — ■ 
A  ghastly  something,  and  its  s  flew 
the  world,  and  aU  its  lights  And  s's. 
Thy  s  still  would  ghde  from  room  to  room, 
The  s  of  another  cleaves  to  me, 
friend  and  foe  were  s's  in  the  mist. 
From  halfway  down  the  s  of  the  grave, 
their  fears  Are  morning  s's  huger  than  the  shapes 
Light-green  with  its  own  s,  keel  to  keel, 
from  whose  left  hand  floweth  The  S  of  Death, 
We  trod  the  s  of  the  downward  hill ; 
To  stand  a  s  by  their  shining  doors, 
Beneath  the  s  of  the  curse  of  man, 
look  you  here — the  s's  are  too  deep, 
from  out  This  s  into  Substance — 
Dashing  the  fires  and  the  s's  of  dawn 
sun  and  moons  And  all  the  s's. 
Spirit  half-lost  In  thine  own  s 
S/ctSs  bpap — dream  of  a  s,  go — God  bless  you, 
sick  For  s — not  one  bush  was  near — 
And  oldest  age  in  s  from  the  night. 
The  daisy  will  shut  to  the  s, 
worm  in  the  dust  and  the  s  of  its  desire — 
nmning  after  a  s  of  good  ; 

all  thy  world  Might  vanish  like  thy  s  in  the  dark. 
But  make  the  passing  s  serve  thy  will. 
Her  s  crown'd  with  stars — 
Themselves  but  s's  of  a  shadow-world. 
Night  and  S  rule  below  When  only  Day  should  reign.' 
past  the  range  of  Night  and  S — 

I  was  left  within  the  s  sitting  Locksley  H. 

Near  us  Edith's  holy  s,  „ 

Man  or  Mind  that  sees  as  „ 

Set  the  s  of  Himself,  the  boimdless, 
But  since,  our  mortal  s. 
Golden  branch  amid  the  s's, 
shifting  ladders  of  s  and  light. 
But  not  the  s's  which  that  light  would  cast,  Till 

s's  vanish  in  the  Light  of  Light.  Epit.  on  Caxton  3 

Henry's  fifty  years  are  all  in  s.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  39 

2r 


203 

206 

246 

322 

373 

394 

Merlin  and  V.  423 

„  638 

Lancelot  and  E.  414 

1140 

1174 

Holy  Grail  791 

Pelleas  and  E.  38 

276 

418 

441 

608 

Last  Tournament  316 

753 

Guinevere  79 

344 

504 

618 

Pass,  of  Arthur  100 

To  the  Queen  ii  6 

63 

Lover's  Tale  i  43 

499 

515 

731 

790 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  103 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  6 

V.  of  Maeldune  99 

De  Prof.,  Two  0.  39 

40 

To  W.  H.  Brookfield  13 

Tiresias  36 

„      104 

The  Wreck  38 

Despair  30 

92 

Ancient  Sage  52 

110 

201 

239 

243 

283 

Sixty  16 

54 

196 

211 

Epilogue  22 

To  Virgil  27 

Dead  Prophet  21 


Shadow 


626 


Shakespeare 


Shadow  (s)  (continued)    That  s  of  a  likeness  to  the  king 

Of  s's,  Dermter  and  P.  16 

and  thy  s  past  Before  me,  crying  „              93 

So  the  S  wail'd.  „            101 

Three  dark  ones  in  the  s  with  thy  King.  „            122 

And  all  the  S  die  into  the  Light,  „            138 

Slander,  her  s,  sowing  the  nettle  Vastness  22 

Strike  upward  thro'  the  s  ;  The  Ring  372 

s  leave  the  Substance  in  the  brooding  light  of  noon  ?  Hapfti  99 

Phra-Chai,  the  iS  of  the  Best,  To  Ulysses  41 

O'er  his  uncertain  s  droops  the  day.  Prog,  of  Spring  8 

the  valley  Named  of  the  s.  Merlin  and  the  G.  87 

Fell  on  the  s.  No  longer  a  s,  „             92 

With  your  own  s  in  the  placid  lake,  Romney's  R.  76 

double  s  the  crown'd  ones  all  disappearing  !  Parnassus  13 

Became  a  s,  sank  and  disappear'd.  Death  of  (Enone  50 

dawn  Struck  from  him  his  own  s  St.  Telemachus  33 

s  of  a  dream — an  idle  one  It  may  be.  Akbar's  Bream  5 

your  5  falls  on  the  grave.                         "  Charity  20 

^1  about  him  s  still,  but,  Making  of  Man  5 

Who  was  a  s  in  the  brain,  Mechanophilus  15 

Nor  the  myriad  world,  His  s,  God  and  the  Univ.  6 
s  of  a  cro'ivn,  that  o'er  him  hung.  Has  vanish'd 

in  the  s  cast  by  Death.  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  2 

His  s  darkens  earth :  „              13 

SSiadoW  (verb)     Let  Thy  dove  S  me  over,  Supp.  Confessions  181 

S  forth  thee  : — the  world  hath  not  another  Isabel  38 

tree  Stands  in  the  sun  and  s's  all  beneath,  Love  and  Death  11 

S  forth  the  banks  at  will :  Eleanor e  110 

And  s  all  my  soul,  that  I  may  die.  (Enone  242 

And  s  Sumner-chace  !  Talking  Oak  150 

You  s  forth  to  distant  men.  To  E.  L.  7 

s  forth  The  all-generating  powers  Lucretius  96 

Tho'  the  Roman  eagle  s  thee,  Boddicea  39 

Shadow-castdng    sunders  ghosts  and  s-c  men  Merlin  and  V.  629 

Shadow-chequer'd     And  many  a  s-c  lawn  Arabian  Nights  102 

Shadow'd    (See  also  Faintly-abadow'd,  Softly-shadow'd) 

Twin  peaks  s  with  pine  slope  Leonine  Eleg.  10 

I  have  s  many  a  group  Of  beauties,  Talking  Oak  61 

And  s  all  her  rest —  „          226 

Hung,  s  from  the  heat :  Princess  ii  459 

warmth  of  Arthur's  hall  S  an  angry  distance  :  Balin  and  Balan  237 

whom  waitest  thou  With  thy  soften'd,  s  brow,  Adeline  46 

And  s  coves  on  a  sunny  shore,  Eleanore  18 

So  fresh  they  rose  in  s  swells  The  Letters  46 
Nor  thou  with  s  hint  confuse  A  life  that  leads 

melodious  days.  In  Mem.  xxxiii  7 

Is  s  by  the  growing  hour,  „              xlvi  3 
Sbadowii^  (adj.  and  part.)    (See  also  Cavern-shadowing, 
Europe-shadowing,  Far-shadowing)    All  along  the 

s  shore,  Eleanore  41 

Mast-throng'd  beneath  her  «  citadel  (Enone  118 

s  down  the  champaign  till  it  strikes  On  a  wood,  Princess  v  526 

s  down  the  homed  flood  In  ripples,  In  Mem.  Ixxxvi  7 

And  s  bluS  that  made  the  banks,  In  Mem.  ciii  22 

S  the  snow-limb'd  Eve  from  whom  she  came.  Maud  I  xviii  28 

pour'd  Into  the  s  pencil's  naked  forms  Lover's  Tale  ii  180 

Far  from  out  the  west  in  s  showers.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  7 
Shadowing  (s)    for  spite  of  doubts  And  sudden 

ghostly  s's  Princess  iv  572 

Shadow-like     Vanish'd  s-l  Gods  and  Goddesses,  Kapiolani  26 

Shadow-maker    S-m,  shadow-slayer,  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  5 

ffladow-prison     Her  breast  as  in  a  s-p,  Lover's  Tale  iv  58 

Shadow-slayer     Shadow-maker,  s-s,  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  5 

Shadow-streak    With  s-s's  of  rain.  Palace  of  Art  76 

Shadow-world    Themselves  but  shadows  of  a  s-w.  Ancient  Sage  239 

Shadowy    faintest  sunlights  flee  About  liis  s  sides  :  The  Kraken  5 

S,  dreaming  Adeline  ?  (repeat)  Adeline  10,  39 

Or,  in  a  .«  saloon,  Eleanore  125 

Up-clomb  the  s  pine  above  the  woven  copse.  Lotos-Eaters  18 

walls  Of  s  granite,  in  a  gleaming  pass  ;  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  4 

palled  shapes  In  s  thorouglifares  of  thought ;  In  Mem.  Ixx  8 

High  over  the  s  land.  ,               Maud  II  i  40 

Camelot,  a  city  of  s  palaces  And  stately,  Gareth  and  L.  303 

There  with  her  milkwhite  arms  and  s  hair  Guinevere  416 


Shadowy  (continued)     and  hunters  race  The  s  lion,  Tiresias  178 

s  warrior  glide  Along  the  silent  field  of  Asphodel.      Demeter  and  P.  152 

once  a  flight  of  s  fighters  crost  The  disk,  St.  Telemachus  23 

Shadowy-pencill'd     A  thousand  s-p  valleys  And  snowy  dells     The  Daisy  67 

Shady     arching  limes  are  tall  and  s,  Margaret  59 

Parks  with  oak  and  chestnut  s,  L.  of  Burleigh  29 

Shaft    (See  also  Spear-shaft)     With  shrilling  s's  of 

subtle  wit.  Clear-headed  frieiid  13 

to  fling  The  winged  s's  of  truth.  The  Poet  26 

A  thousand  little  s's  of  flame  Fatinm  17 

Betwixt  the  slender  s's  were  blazon'd  Palace  of  Art  167 

lean  a  ladder  on  the  s.  And  climbing  up  St.  S.  Stylites  216 

And  shrill'd  his  tinsel  s.  Talking  Oak  68 
universal  Peace  Lie  like  a  s  of  light  across  the  land.        Golden  Year  49 

sunrise  broken  into  scarlet  s's  Enoch  Arden  592 

again  The  scarlet  s's  of  sunrise — but  no  sail.  „          599 

s's  Of  gentle  satire,  kin  to  charity.  Princess  ii  468 

the  beard-blowTi  goat  Hang  on  the  s,  „         iv  79 

brand,  mace,  and  s,  and  shield^  „         v  503 

To  silver  all  the  valleys  with  her  s's — ■  Tiresias  32 

serpent  coil'd  about  his  broken  s,  Demeter  and  P.  77 
Shafted    See  Golden-shafted,  Slender-shafted,  Stubborn-shafted 
Shaggy    drew  The  vast  and  s  mantle  of  his  beard 

Across  her  neck  Merlin  and  V.  256 

Shake     The  sun-lit  almond-blossom  s's —  To  the  Queen  16 

seemed  to  s  The  sparkling  flints  Arabian  Nights  51 

name  to  s  All  evil  dreams  of  power —  The  Poet  46 

And  now  s  hands  across  the  brink  My  life  is  full  6 

S  hands  once  more  :  I  cannot  sink  So  far —  „              8 

A  wither'd  palsy  cease  to  s  ?  '  Two  Voices  57 

S  hands,  before  you  die.  D.  of  the  0.  Year  42 

s  the  darkness  from  their  loosen'd  manes,  Tithonus  41 

in  the  thoughts  that  s  mankind.  Locksley  Hall  166 

You  s  your  head.     A  random  string  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  1 

Twang  out,  my  fiddle  !  s  the  twigs  !  Amphion  61 

Swells  up,  and  s's  and  falls.  Sir  Galahad  76 

We  felt  the  good  ship  s  and  reel.  The  Voyage  15 

from  some  bay-window  s  the  night ;  Princess  i  106 

a  sight  to  s  The  midriff  of  despair  with  laughter,  „          200 

To  break  my  chain,  to  s  my  mane  :  „       ii  424 

The  long  light  s's  across  the  lakes,  „          iv  3 

The  drowsy  folds  of  our  great  ensign  s  „           v  8 

two  dewdrops  on  the  petal  s  To  the  same  sweet  air,                „      vii  68 

A  cypress  m  the  moonlight  s,  The  Daisy  82 

s  The  prophet  blazon'd  on  the  panes  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  7 

and  s  The  pillars  of  domestic  peace.  „              xc  19 

That  so,  when  the  rotten  hustings  s  Maud  I  vi  54 

The  slender  acacia  would  not  s  „        xxii  45 

For  a  tumult  s's  the  city,  „       II  iv  50 

Shall  s  its  threaded  tears  in  the  wind  no  more.  „     ///  vi  28 

whatsoever  stonns  May  s  the  world,  Com.  of  Arthur  293 

s  them  aside,  Dreams  ruling  when  wit  sleeps  !  Balin  and  Balan  142 

hard  earth  s,  and  a  low  thunder  of  anns.  Lancelot  and  E.  460 

As  we  s  off  the  bee  that  buzzes  at  us ;  „              785 

now  yeam'd  to  s  The  burthen  off  his  heart  Last  Tournament  179 

shook  beneath  them,  as  the  thistle  s's  Guinevere  254 

this  great  voice  that  s's  the  world,  Pass,  of  Arthur  139 

shook  'em  off  as  a  dog  that  s's  his  ears  The  Revenge  54 

Then  a  peal  that  s's  the  portal —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  263 

Your  hand  s's.     I  am  ashamed.  Romney's  R.  24 

or  s  with  her  thunders  and  shatter  her  island,  Kapiolani  10 

Shaken     I  am  too  forlorn,  Too  s :  Supp.  Confessions  136 

s  with  a  sudden  storm  of  sighs —  Locksley  Hall  27 

Every  moment,  lightly  s,  ran  itself  „            32 

Her  round  white  shoiUder  s  with  her  sobs,  Princess  iv  289 

in  a  royal  hand.  But  s  here  and  there,  „         v  372 

The  King  was  s  with  holy  fear ;  Tlie  Victim  57 

That  grief  hath  s  into  frost !  In  Mem.  iv  12 

But  thou  and  I  have  s  hands,  ,,        xl29 

And  my  bones  are  s  with  pain,  Maud  II  v  b 

With  reverent  eyes  mock-loyal,  s  voice,  Merlin  and  V.  157 

clouded  heavens  Were  s  with  the  motion  Holy  Grail  801 

so  lay.  Till  s  by  a  dream,  that  Gawain  fired  Pelleas  and  E.  517 

Shaker     O  s  of  the  Baltic  and  the  Nile,  Ode  on  Well.  137 

Shakespeare     Beside  him  8  bland  and  mild  ;  Palace  of  Art  134 


Shakespeare 


627 


Shame 


Shakespeare  {continued)    My  S's  cui-se  on  clown  and 

knave  You  might  ham  won  27 

The  soul  of  S  love  thee  more.  In  Mem.  Ixi  12 

•  a  thing  enskied '  (As  S  has  it)  To  E.  Fitzgerald  17 

Our  S's  bland  and  univereal  eye  Dwells  pleased,  To  W.  C.  Maeready  13 

Shakest    s  in  thy  fear :  there  yet  is  time :  Gareth  and  L.  940 

Shaking    jS  their  pretty  cabin,  hammer  and  axe,  Enoch  Arden  173 

S  a  little  like  a  drunkard's  hand,  .,             465 

He,  s  his  gray  head  pathetically,  ,,             714 

the  singer  s  his  curly  head  Tum"d  as  he  sat,  The  Islet  6 

thousand  battles,  and  s  a  hundred  thrones  Maud  I  i  '^ 

S  her  head  at  her  son  and  sighing  „     xix  24 

S  his  hands,  as  from  a  lazar's  rag,  Pelleas  and  E.  317 

it  is  coming— s  the  walls —  Rizpah  85 

How  your  hand  is  s  !  Forlorn  38 

Shaky  See  Shaaky 

Shale    stony  names  Of  s  and  hornblende,  Princess  Hi  362 

Shallop     Anight  my  s,  rustling  thro'  Arabian  Nights  12 

My  s  thro'  the  star-strown  calm,  „              36 
A-  iiitteth  silken-sail'd  Skimming  down  to  Camelot:       X.  of  Shalott  i  22 

Some  to  a  low  song  oar'd  a  s  by.  Princess  ii  457 

In  a  s  of  crystal  ivory-beak'd,  The  Islet  12 

To  where  a  little  s  lay  In  Mem.  ciii  19 
Shallow  (adj.)     Vex  not  thou  the  poet's  mind  With  thy  s  wit :  Poet's  Mind  2 

Seam'd  with  the  s  cares  of  fifty  years :  Aylmers  Field  814 

For  into  a  s  grave  they  are  thrust,  Maud  iiv  Q 
Came  quickly  flashing  thro'  the  s  ford  Behind 

them,  Marr.  of  Geraint  167 

In  the  firet  s  shade  of  a  deep  wood,  Geraint  and  E.  119 

S  skin  of  green  and  azure —  Lockdey  H.,  Sixty  208 

Shallow  (s)     And  s's  on  a  distant  shore,  Mariana  in  the  S.  7 

ran  By  ripply  s's  of  the  lisping  lake,  Edwin  Morris  98 

sunbeam  dance  Against  my  sandy  s's.  The  Brook  177 

shone  the  Noonday  Sun  Beyond  a  raging  s.  Gareth  and  L.  1028 

He  from  beyond  the  roaring  s  roar'd,  „            1033 

And  she  athwart  the  s  shrill'd  again,  „             1035 
Shallower    Nature  made  them  blinder  motions  bounded 

in  a  s  brain :  Locksley  Hall  150 

The  mother  fiow'd  in  s  acrimonies :  Aylmer's  Field  563 

Shallow-hearted    O  my  cousin,  s-h !     O  my  Amy,  Locksley  Hall  39 

Shalott     The  island  of  S.  L.  of  Shalott  i  9 

The  Lady  of  S.  (repeat)  L.  of  Shalott  i  18,  27 ;  ii  9,  27,  36 ; 

Hi  45;  iv9,  18,  27,  36,  45,  54 

•    'Tis  the  faiiy  Lady  of  iS.'  L.  of  Shalott  i  36 

.'   red  cloaks  of  market  girls.  Pass  onward  from  S.  „          ii  18 

Beside  remote  S.  (repeat)  „     Hi  9,  18 

bearded  meteor,  trailing  light.  Moves  over  still  S.  „              27 

Shambles    The  land  all  s — naked  marriages  Aylmer's  Field  765 

Shambling    For,  ere  I  mated  with  my  s  king.  Last  Tournament  544 

Shame  (s)     {See  also  Shaame)     The  flush  of  anger'd  5                 Madeline  32 

Some  grow  to  honour,  some  to  s, —  Two  Voices  257 

She  mix'd  her  ancient  blood  with  s.  The  Sisters  8 

Inwrapt  tenfold  in  slothful  s,  Palace  of  Art  262 

<    I  heard  sounds  of  insult,  s,  and  wroiig,  B.  of  F.  Women  19 

'    Her  loveliness  with  s  and  with  surprise  „                89 

To  hold  his  hope  thro'  s  and  guilt.  Love  thou  thy  land  82 

What  betwixt  s  and  pride.  New  things  and  old,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  60 

To  save  from  s  and  thrall :  Sir  Galahad  16 

Sold  him  unto  s.  The  Captain  60 

8  and  wrath  his  heart  confounded,  „            61 

As  it  were  with  s  she  blushes,  L.  of  Burleigh  83 

'  Sit  thee  down,  and  have  no  s,  Vision  of  Sin  83 

bearing  in  myself  the  s  The  woman  should  have 

borne,  Aylmer's  Field  355 

The  poor  child  of  s  The  common  care  „            687 

Whose  s  is  that,  if  he  went  hence  with  s?  „            718 

iS  might  befall  Melissa,  knowing.  Princess  Hi  147 

So  much  a  kind  of  s  within  me  wrought,  •.,        iv  194 

And  full  of  cowardice  and  guilty  s,  .,            348 

I  grant  in  her  some  sense  of  s,  she  flies ;  ..            349 

dismiss'd  in  s  to  live  No  wiser  than  their  mothers,  ..            513 

The  horror  of  the  s  among  them  all :  ,            "95 

Where  idle  boys  are  cowards  to  their  s,  „            309 

And  hatred  of  her  weakness,  blent  with  s,  „        vii  30 

Glowing  all  over  noble  s ;  Princess  vii  160 


Shame  (s)  {continued)    Guarding  reahiis  and  kings  from  s ;   Ode  mi  Wdl.  68 
land  whose  hearths  he  saved  from  s  „  225 

A  touch  of  s  upon  her  cheek :  In  Mem.  xxxvii  10 

holds  it  sin  and  s  to  draw  The  deepest  measure  „  xlviii  11 

See  with  clear  eye  some  hidden  s  „  HI 

And  hide  thy  s  beneath  the  ground.  „  Ixxii  28 

My  s  is  greater  who  remain,  „  cix  23 

chuckle,  and  grin  at  a  brother's  s ;  Maud  I  iv  29 

save  from  some  slight  s  one  simple  girl.  ,,      xvHi  45 

My  anguish  hangs  like  s.  „     //  iv  74 

peace  that  was  fifll  of  wrongs  and  s's,  „   III  vi  40 

How  can  ye  keep  me  tether'd  to  you — *S'.  Gareth  and  L.  115 

as  is  a  s  A  man  should  not  be  bound  by,  „  270 

S  never  made  girl  redder  than  Gareth  joy.  „  536 

s,  pride,  wrath  Slew  the  May-white :  „  656 

Who  will  cry  s  ?  „  942 

For  this  were  s  to  do  him  fm-ther  wrong  ,.  954 

Care  not  for  s :  „  1006 

Than  that  my  lord  thro'  me  should  suffer  s.  Marr.  of  Geraint  101 

Than  that  my  lord  should  suffer  loss  or  s.'  Geraint  and  E.  69 

That  causer  of  his  banishment  and  s,  Balin  and  Balan  221 

This  fair  wife-worship  cloaks  a  secret  s?  „  360 

I  fly  from  s,  A  lustful  King,  „  473 

My  violence,  and  my  villainy,  come  to  s.'  „  492 

Up  then,  ride  with  me !     Talk  not  of  s !  „  523 

Do  these  more  s  than  these  have  done  themselves.'  „  524 

And  5,  could  s  be  thine,  that  s  were  mine.  Merlin  and  V.  448 

The  s  that  cannot  be  explained  for  s.  „  698 

for  what  s  in  love.  So  love  be  true,  „  861 

face  Hand-hidden,  as  for  utmost  grief  or  s ;  „  897 

He  loves  the  Queen,  and  in  an  open  s :  And  she 

returns  his  love  in  open  s ;  Lancelot  and  E.  1082 

did  Pelleas  in  an  utter  s  Creep  Pelleas  and  E.  440 

For  why  should  I  have  loved  her  to  my  s?  „  482 

I  loathe  her,  as  I  loved  her  to  my  s.  „  483 

'  I  am  wrath  and  s  and  hate  and  evil  fame,  „  568 

while  he  mutter'd,  '  Craven  crests !     O  s !  Last  Tournament  187 

dreading  woi-se  than  s  Her  warrior  Tristram,  „  384 

'Mine  be  the  s  ;  mine  was  the  sin :  Guinevere  112 

Mine  is  the  s,  for  I  was  wife,  „        119 

S  on  her  own  garrulity  garrulously,  „        312 

happy,  dead  before  thy  s  ? 
must  I  leave  thee,  woman,  to  thy  s. 
nor  can  I  kill  my  s ; 

Meek  maidens,  from  the  voices  crying  '  s.' 
left  her  alone  with  her  sin  an'  her  s, 
an'  she — in  her  s  an'  her  sin — 
The  blast  aiad  the  burning  s 
then  put  away — isn't  that  enough  s  ? 
drew  back  with  her  dead  and  her  s. 
— thy  s,  and  mine.  Thy  comrade — 
s  to  speak  of  them — Axnong  the  heathen — 
redder  than  rosiest  health  or  than  utterest 
flung  from  the  rushing  tide  of  the  world  as  a  waif  of  s, 
mother's  s  will  enfold  her  and  darken  her  life.' 
glory  and  s  dying  out  for  ever  in  endless  time. 
Paint  the  mortal  s  of  nature 
S  and  marriage,  iS  and  marriage. 
In  that  vast  Oval  ran  a  shudder  of  s. 
Was  redden'd  by  that  cloud  of  s  when  I  .  .  . 
1  need  no  wages  of  s. 
Is  it  S,  so  few  should  have  climb'd 
Shame  (verb)    look'd  to  s  The  hollow-vaulted  dark, 
To  s  the  boast  so  often  made, 
'  O  Lady  Clare,  you  s  your  worth  ! 
To  s  these  moioldy  Aylmers  in  their  graves : 
'  Or  surely  I  shall  s  myself  and  him.' 
Some  mighty  poetess,  I  would  s  you  then, 
to  s  That  which  he  says  he  loves : 
You  s  your  mother's  judgment  too. 
Lest  he  should  come  to  s  thy  judging  of  him.' 
s  the  King  for  only  yielding  me  My  champion  „  898 

S  me  not,  s  me  not.  „  1137 

one  that  will  not  s  Ever  the  shadow  of  Lancelot  „  1310 

were  ye  shamed,  and,  worse,  might  s  the  Piince     Marr.  of  Geraint  726 


423 
511 
622 

672 

First  Quarrel  25 

69 

Rizpah  18 

„      36 

The  Revenge  60 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  101 

110 

V.  of  Maeldune  65 

The  Wreck  6 

100 

Despair  75 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  140 

Forlorn  31 

St.  Telemachus  73 

Akbar's  Bream  64 

Charity  40 

The  Dawn  17 

Arabian  Nights  125 

Love  thou  thy  land  71 

Lady  Clare  66 

Aylmer's  Field  396 

734 

Princess,  Pro.  132 

iv  248 

vi  261 

Gareth  and  L.  469 


Shame 


628 


Sharp 


Lancelot  and  E.  207 

1403 

Holy  Grail  567 

!  Guinevere  318 

To  the  Queen  ii  15 

Mechanofhilus  22 

Locksley  Hall  148 

Vision  of  Sin  190 

Lucretius  63 

Princess  Hi  51 

Ode  on  Well.  191 

Gareth  and  L.  717 

1044 

1164 

1180 

1227 

1245 

1260 

Mart,  of  Geraint  726 

Balin  and  Balan  431 

Pelleas  and  E.  189 

Guinevere  111 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  99 

Eomney's  R.  112 

M.  d' Arthur  78 

Princess  Hi  314 

Com.  of  Arthur  205 

Merlin  and  V.  861 

Guinevere  487 


Shame  (verb)  (continued)    '  Nay  father,  nay  good 

father,  s  me  not 
Mine  own  name  s's  me, 
my  brother,  Why  wilt  thou  s  me  to  confess 
Nor  let  me  s  my  father's  memory, 
whereof  we  lately  heard  A  strain  to  s  us 
Our  sons  will  s  our  own ; 
Shamed    (See  also  AU-shamed)    I  am  «  thro'  all  my 
nature 
Far  too  naked  to  be  s ! 
but  sank  down  s  At  all  that  beauty ; 
Pardon,  I  am  s  That  I  must  needs  repeat 
He  never  shall  be  s. 
Nor  s  to  bawl  himself  a  kitchen-knave, 
the  new  knight  Had  fear  he  might  be  s  ; 
S  am  I  that  I  so  rebuked, 
S !  care  not !  thy  foul  sayings  fought  for  me : 
she  ask'd  him,  '  S  and  overthrown, 
S  had  I  been,  and  sad — 0  Lancelot — thou ! ' 
O  damsel,  be  you  wise  To  call  him  s, 
Then  were  ye  s,  and,  worse, 
'  I  have  5  thee  so  that  now  thou  shamest  me, 
and  yet  I  should  be  s  to  say  it — 
'  The  end  is  come,  And  I  am  s  for  ever ; ' 
8  in  their  souls, 
a  child  Had  s  me  at  it — 
Shameful    This  is  a  s  thing  for  men  to  lie. 
Dabbling  a  shameless  hand  with  s  jest. 
And  with  a  s  swiftness  : 
Or  seeming  s — for  what  shame  m  love. 
Then  came  thy  s  sin  with  Lancelot ; 
in  his  agony  conceives  A  s  sense  as  of  a  cleaving 

crime —  Lover's  Tale  i  794 

Shamefiilness    Arthur  were  the  child  of  s,  Com.  of  Arthur  239 

Shameless     Ah  s  !  for  he  did  but  sing  A  song  You  might  have  won  21 

s  noon  Was  clash'd  and  hammer'd  from  a  hundred  towers,     Godiva  74 

will  she  fling  herself,  S  upon  me  ?  Luxretius  203 

Dabbling  a  s  hand  with  shameful  jest,  Princess  Hi  314 

'  Lo  the  s  ones,  who  take  Their  pastime  Lancelot  and  E.  100 

Anon  there  past  a  crowd  With  s  laughter,  St.  Telemachus  39 

Shamest    shamed  thee  so  that  now  thou  s  me,  Balin  and  Balan  431 

Shamns     (See  also  Shamus  O'Shea)     An'  S  along  wid  the 

rest, 
Shamns  O'Shea    (See  also  Shamus)    Dhrinkin'  yer  health 
wid  S  O'S 

An'  S  O'S  was  yer  shadda, 

S  O'S  that  has  now  ten  childer. 
Shape  (s)    A  gleaming  s  she  floated  by, 

A  cloud  that  gather'd  s : 

tears  Of  angels  to  the  perfect  s  of  man.      To 

O  s's  and  hues  that  please  me  well ! 

in  dark  comers  of  her  palace  stood  Uncertain  s's ; 

So  s  chased  s  as  swift  as, 

Gown'd  in  pure  white,  that  fitted  to  the  s — 

What's  here  ?  a  s,  a  shade. 

Ten  thousand  broken  lights  and  s's, 

The  peaky  islet  shifted  s's, 

SufEused  them,  sitting,  lying,  languid  s's, 

Here  is  a  story  which  in  rougher  s 

In  such  a  s  dost  thou  behold  thy  God. 

And  twisted  s's  of  lust,  unspeakable, 

cloud  may  stoop  from  heaven  and  take  the  s 

Titanic  s's,  they  cranun'd  The  forum, 

softer  all  her  s  And  rounder  seem'd : 

And  s's  and  hues  of  Art  divine  ! 

Those  niched  s's  of  noble  mould, 

palled  s's  In  shadowy  thoroughfares 

And  wheel'd  or  lit  the  filmy  s's 

The  s  of  him  I  loved,  and  love 

Ring  out  old  s's  of  foul  disease ; 

with  the  shocks  of  doom  To  s  and  use. 

To  a  lord,  a  captain,  a  padded  s, 

a  ship,  the  s  thereof  A  dragon  wing'd, 

S  that  fled  With  broken  wings, 

With  pointed  lance  as  if  to  pierce,  a  s. 


Tomorrow  44 


12 

38 

85 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  39 

CEnone  42 

With  Pal.  of  Art  19 

Palace  of  Art  194: 

238 

D.  of  F.  Women  37 

Gardener's  D.  126 

St.  S.  Stylites  202 

Will  Water.  59 

The  Voyage  33 

Vision  of  Sin  12 

Aylmer's  Field  7 

657 

Lucretius  157 

Princess  vii  2 

.,       124 

„       136 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  22 

The  Daisy  38 

In  Mem.  Ixx  7 

„      xcv  10 

„      ciii  14 

„       cvi  25 

„  cxviii  25 

Maud  I  x29 

Com.  of  Arthur  374 

Gareth  and  L  1207 

Balin  and  Balan  325 


Shape  (s)  (continued)   The  s  and  colour  of  a  mind  and  life,    Lancelot  and  E.  335 

her  s  From  forehead  down  to  foot,  perfect —  „              641 

around  Great  angels,  awful  s's,  and  wings  and  eyes.  Holy  Grail  848 

slender  was  her  hand  and  small  her  s ;  Pelleas  and  E.  74 

Unruffling  waters  re-collect  the  s  Last  Tournament  369 
morning  shadows  huger  than  the  s's  That  cast  them,  To  the  Queen  ii  63 

Waiting  to  see  some  blessed  s  in  heaven.  Lover's  Tale  i  312 

shadows  of  dawn  on  the  beautiful  s's,  V.  of  Maeldune  99 

two  s's  high  over  the  sacred  fountain,  Parnassus  9 

s  with  wings  Came  sweeping  by  him,  St.  Telemachus  24 

The  s  with  wings.  „              38 

aeon  pass  and  touch  him  into  s  ?  Making  of  Man  4    ; 

Shape  (verb)     thoughts  Do  s  themselves  within  me,  (Enone  247   ', 

A  saying,  hard  to  s  in  act ;  Love  thou  thy  land  49    \ 

that  which  s's  it  to  some  perfect  end.  Love  and  Duty  26    « 

To  s  the  song  for  your  delight  Day- Dm.,  Ep.  6 

and  check'd  His  power  to  s :  Lucretius  23 

Our  weakness  somehow  s's  the  shadow,  Time ;  Princess  Hi  330 

s  it  plank  and  beam  for  roof  and  floor,  „           m  46 

And  s  the  whisper  of  the  throne  ;  In  Mem.  Ixiv  12 

Then  fancy  s's,  as  fancy  can,  „         Ixxx  5 

s  His  action  like  the  greater  ape,  „         cxx  10 

Like  clouds  they  s  themselves  and  go.  „       cxxiii  8 

Would  s  himself  a  right ! '  Gareth  and  L.  348 

face  that  men  S  to  their  fancy's  eye  Lancelot  and  E.  1252 

But  had  not  force  to  s  it  as  he  would,  Pass,  of  Arthur  15 

Ye  cannot  s  Fancy  so  fair  as  is  this  Lover's  Tale  i  547 

Was  my  sight  drunk  that  it  did  s  to  me  „            642 

Virtue  must  s  itself  in  deed,  Tiresias  86 

and  s  it  at  the  last  According  to  the  Highest  Ancient  Sage  89 

S  yoiu-  heart  to  front  the  hour,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  106 

You  that  s  for  Eternity,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  43 

And  see  and  s  and  do.  Mechanofhilus  4 
Shaped    (See  also  Bow-shaped,  Man-shaped)    s  The  city's  ancient 

legend  into  this  : — ■  Godiva  3 

S  her  heart  with  woman's  meekness  L.  of  Burleigh  71 

This  red-hot  iron  to  be  s  with  blows.  Princess  v  209 

s,  it  seems,  By  God  for  thee  alone,  Lancelot  and  E.  1366 

foot  was  on  a  stool  *S  as  a  dragon ;  Last  Tournament  672 

S  by  the  audible  and  visible,  Lover's  Tale  ii  104 

motion  hves  Be  prosperously  s,  De  Prof.,  Two  6.  20 

Who  s  the  forms,  obey  them,  Akbar's  Dream  143 

Shaping     '  By  s  some  august  decree.  To  the  Queen  33 

'  Here  sits  he  s  wings  to  fly :  Two  Voices  289 

s  faithful  record  of  the  glance  That  graced  Gardener's  D.  177 

And  one  the  s  of  a  star ;  In  Mem.  ciii  36 

s  an  infant  ripe  for  its  birth,  Maud  I  iv  34 

S  their  way  toward  Dyflen  again,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  98 

Shard     By  s's  and  scurf  of  salt.  Vision  of  Sin  211 

dash'd  Your  cities  into  s's  with  catapults,  Princess  v  138 

Share  (s)     rhymes  to  him  were  scrip  and  s.  The  Brook  4 

To  buy  strange  s's  in  .some  Peruvian  mine.  Sea  Dreams  15 

0  then  to  ask  her  of  my  s's,  „  115 
Then  beast  and  man  had  had  their  s  of  me :  Com.  of  Arthur  163 
Who  leaving  s  in  furrow  come  to  see  Gareth  and  L.  243 
dividend,  consol,  and  s —  The  Wreck  30 

Share  (verb)     Now  could  you  s  your  thought ;  Princess  vi  252 

s's  with  man  His  nights,  his  days,  „      vii  262 

Who  stay  to  s  the  morning  feast.  In  Mem.,  Con.  75 

him  who  had  ceased  to  s  her  heart,  Maud  I  xix  30 

For  ye  shall  s  my  earldom  with  me,  girl,  Geraint  and  E.  626 

and  to  s  Their  marriage-banquet.  The  Ring  430 

To  s  his  Uving  death  with  him,  Happy  8 

Shared    one  sorrow  and  she  s  it  not  ?  Aylmer's  Field  102 

1  s  with  her  in  whom  myself  remains.  Lover's  Tale  i  248 
all  my  griefs  were  s  with  thee,  Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  25 

Sharer    S's  of  our  glorious  past.  Open.  I  and  C.  Exhib.  31 

Sharp  (adj.)     Edged  with  slaughter,  cuts  atwain  Clear-headed  frieiuL  2 

When  the  s  clear  twang  of  the  golden  chords  Sea-Fairies  38 

S  and  few,  but  seeming-bitter  From  excess  Rosalind  31 

bright  and  s  As  edges  of  the  seymetar.  Kate  11 

And  utterly  consumed  with  s  distress,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S  13 

I  made  my  dagger  s  and  bright.  The  Sisters  26 
He  thought  of  that  s  look.  Mother,  I  gave  him 

yesterday.  May  Queen  15 


Sharp 


629 


SheU 


Sharp  (adj.)  (continiied)     All  those  s  fancies,  by  down- 

lapsmg  thought  D.  of  F.  Women  49 

With  that  s  soimd  the  white  dawn's  creeping  beams,  „            261 

His  face  is  growing  s  and  thin.  D.  of  the  0.  Year  46 

all  these  things  fell  on  her  S  as  reproach.  Enoch  Arden  488 

dying,  gleam'd  on  rocks  Roof-pendent,  s ;  Balin  and  Balan  315 

s  breaths  of  anger  puff'd  Her  fairy  nostril  out ;  Merlin  and  V.  848 

Thro'  her  own  side  she  felt  the  s  lance  go ;  Lancelot  and  E.  624 

dame  Came  suddenly  on  the  Queen  with  the  s  news.  „               730 

With  one  s  rapid,  where  the  crisping  white  Holy  Grail  381 

close  upon  it  peal'd  A  s  quick  thimder.'  „         696 

As  the  s  wind  that  ruffles  all  day  long  Guinevere  50 

On  that  s  ridge  of  utmost  doom  ride  highly  Lover's  Tale  i  805 

S  is  the  fire  of  assault,  Def.  of  Luckrww  57 

'  Ya  mun  saave  httle  Dick,  an'  be  s  about  it  an'  all,'  Owd  Rod  81 

Sharp  (s)     thro'  every  change  of  s  and  flat ;  Caress'd  or  chidden  4 

In  little  s's  and  trebles,  The  Brook  40 

Sharpen'd    Are  s  to  a  needle's  end ;  In  Mem.  Ixxvi  4 

and  ice  Makes  daggers  at  the  s  eaves,  „          cvii  8 

his  aims  Were  s  by  strong  hate  for  Lancelot.  Guinevere  20 

Sharper    she  was  s  than  an  eastern  wind,    .  A  udley  Court  53 

Suildenly  strike  on  a  s  sense  For  a  shell,  Maud  II  ii  63 

Sharpest    Upon  the  last  and  s  height.  In  Mem.  xlvii  13 

Shall  s  pathos  blight  us,  knowing  all  Love  and  Duty  85 

Sharp-headed    busy  fret  Of  that  s-h  worm  begins  Swpp.  Confessions  186 

Sharpness     s  of  that  pain  about  her  heart :  Geraint  and  E.  190 

Sharp-pointed    He !  where  is  some  s-p  thing  ?  The  Flight  72 

Sharp-smitten    S-s  with  the  dint  of  armed  heels —  M.  d' Arthur  190 

S-s  witli  the  dint  of  armed  heels —  Pass,  of  Arthur  358 

Shatter     And  s,  when  the  storms  are  black,  England  and  Amer.  13 

Would  s  all  the  happiness  of  the  hearth.  Enoch  Arden  770 

Take  the  hoary  Roman  head  and  s  it,  Boddicea  65 

ere  the  onward  whirlwind  s  it.  Lover's  Tale  i  451 

shake  with  her  thimders  and  s  her  island,  Kapiolani  10 

Shatter'd    {See  also  Still-shatter'd)    Spars  were  splinter'd, 

decks  were  s.  The  Captain  45 

>S  into  one  earthquake  in  one  day  Lucretius  251 

arms  were  s  to  the  shoulder  blade.  Princess  vi  52 

from  the  sabre-stroke  S  and  sunder'd.  Light  Brigade  36 

some  were  sunk  and  many  were  s.  The  Revenge  61 

Rocking  with  s  spars,  with  sudden  fires  Flamed  over:      Buonaparte  11 

And  loosed  the  s  casque,  and  chafed  his  hands,  M.  d' Arthur  209 

So  like  a  s  column  lay  the  King ;  „          221 

And  these  are  but  the  s  stalks.  In  Mem.  Ixxxii  7 

On  a  horror  of  s  limbs  and  a  wretched  swindler's  lie  ?  Maud  I  i56 

Here  stood  a  s  archway  plumed  with  fern ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  316 

And  one  with  s  fingers  dangling  lame.  Last  Tournament  60 

the  crash  Of  battleaxes  on  s  helms.  Pass,  of  Arthur  110 

-\nd  loosed  the  s  casque,  and  chafed  his  hands,  „            377 

So  like  a  s  column  lay  the  King ;  „             389 

a  stream  Flies  with  a  s  foam  along  the  chasm.  Lover's  Tale  i  383 

Gilded  with  broom,  or  s  into  spires,  „          400 

but  s  nerve,  Yet  haimting  JuUan,  „       iv  105 

And  s  phantom  of  that  infinite  One,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  47 
Wrecked — your  train :  or  all  but  wreck'd  Pas 

wheel?  a  vicious  boy  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  215 

The  jungle  rooted  in  his  s  hearth,  Demeter  and  P.  76 

Spuming  a  s  fragment  of  the  God,  St.  Telemachus  16 
Shattering    (See  also  Shrine-shattering)    plunge  in  cataract, 

s  on  black  blocks  Princess  Hi  291 

The  s  tnmipet  shrUleth  high.  Sir  Galahad  5 

I  rode,  S  all  evil  customs  everywhere.  Holy  Grail  477 

Shaw  (show)     an'  'e  s's  it  to  me.  North.  Cobbler  85 

Shawm     With  s's,  and  with  cymbals,  Dying  Swan  32 

Sheaf    {See  also  Antmnn-shead!,  Barley-sheaves)    Piling 

sheaves  in  uplands  airy,  L.  of  Shalott  i  34 

In  front  they  bound  the  sheaves.  Palace  of  Art  78 

The  vaiying  year  with  blade  and  s  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  1 
bind  the  scatter'd  scheme  of  seven  Together  in  one  s  ?  Princess,  Con.  9 

Which  he  may  read  that  binds  the  s.  In  Mem.  xxxvi  13 

And  whirl  the  ungarner'd  s  afar,  „         Ixxii  23 

Where  stood  the  s  of  Peace :  The  Ring  247 

Shear     I  did  but  s  a  feather,  Princess  v  541 
Sheath    (^See  oZso  Blower-sheath)    New  from  its  silken  .9.    D.  of  F.  Women  60 

A  dagger,  in  rich  s  with  jewels  on  it  Aylmer's  Field  220 


Sheath  (continued)    More  ciiunpled  than  a  poppy  from  the  s.    Princess  v  29 
tearing  out  of  s  The  brand,  Sir  Balin  with  a 

fiery  '  Ha !  Balin  and  Balan  392 

when,  prest  together  In  its  green  s.  Lover's  Tale  i  153 

Sheathe     To  draw,  to  s  a  useless  sword.  In  Mem.  cxxviii  13 

Sheathing    To  s  splendours  and  the  golden  scale  Princess  v  41 

Sheba     That  S  came  to  ask  of  Solomon.'  „     ii  346 

For  Solomon  may  come  to  S  yet.'  „        349 

Shebeen  (grog-shop)     wid  Shamus  O'Shea  at  Katty's  s ;  Tomorrow  12 

he  says  to  me  wanst,  at  Katty's  s,  „        63 

Shed  (s)     broken  s's  look'd  sad  and  strange :  Mariana  5 

Became  no  better  than  a  broken  s,  Holy  Grail  398 

boath  shnkt  'oam  by  the  brokken  s  Spinster's  S's.  37 

An'  tha  squeedg'd  my  'and  i'  the  s,  „            39 

Shed  (verb)     They  have  not  s  a  many  tears,  Miller's  D.  221 

Yet  tears  they  s :  they  had  their  part  „        223 

I  thought  that  all  the  blood  by  SyUa  s  Lucretius  47 

dry  up  these  tears  S  for  the  love  of  Love ;  Lover's  Tale  i  781 

I  weant  s  a  drop  on  'is  blood.  North.  Cobbler  114 

since  Sylvester  s  the  venom  of  world-wealth  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  166 

Shedding     s  poison  in  the  fountains  of  the  Will.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  274 

Sheeny     And  many  a  s  summer-morn,  Arabian  Nights  5 

Hues  of  the  silken  s  woof  Madeline  22 

Love  wept  and  spread  his  s  vans  for  flight ;  Love  and  Death  8 

Sheep     Uvelong  bleat  Of  the  thick-fleeced  s  Ode  to  Memory  66 

are  men  better  than  s  or  goats  M.  d' Arthur  250 

A  lord  of  fat  prize-oxen  and  of  s.  Princess,  Con.  86 

oxen  from  the  city,  and  goodly  s  In  haste  they  drove,    Spec,  of  Iliad  4 

As  well  as  ever  shepherd  knew  his  s,  Holy  Grail  551 

Old  milky  fables  of  the  wolf  and  s,  Pelleas  and  E.  196 

are  men  better  than  s  or  goats  Pass,  of  Arthur  418 

Sheepcot     or  from  s  or  king's  hall,  Gareth  and  L.  467 

Sheepwalk     Or  s  up  the  windy  wold ;  In  Mem.  c  8 

Sheer     Revenge  ran  on  s  into  the  heart  of  the  foe,  The  Revenge  33 

Stock-still  for  s  amazement.  Will  Water.  136 

Sheer-astomided    And  s-a  were  the  charioteers  Achilles  over  the  T.  26 

Sheer'd    Caught  the  shrill  salt,  and  s  the  gale.  The  Voyage  12 

Sheet  (adj.)    In  the  middle  leaps  a  fountain  Like  s  lightning,   Poet's  Mind  25 

Sheet  (s)     I  wrapt  his  body  in  the  s.  The  Sisters  34 

Rolling  a  slimibrous  s  of  foam  below.  Lotos-Eaters  13 

Scaffolds,  still  s's  of  water,  D.  of  F.  Women  34 

See  that  s's  are  on  my  bed ;  Vision  of  Sin  68 

falls  Of  water,  s's  of  summer  glass.  To  E.  L.  2 

And  scaled  in  s's  of  wasteful  foam,  Sea  Dreams  53 

A  music  out  of  s  and  shroud.  In  Mem.  ciii  54 

s's  of  hyacinth  That  seem'd  the  heavens  Guinevere  390 

Whatever  moved  in  that  fuU  s  To  E  Fitzgerald  11 

Sheeted    See  Silver-sheeted 

Sheet-lightnings    saw  No  pale  s-l  from  afar,  Aylmer's  Field  726 

Sheik     but  I  know  it — his,  the  hoary  S,  Akbar's  Dream  90 

Shelf     Of  ledge  or  s  The  rock  rose  clear.  Palace  of  Art  Q 

Upon  the  rosewood  s ;  Talking  Oak  118 

With  s  and  comer  for  the  goods  and  stores.  Enoch  Arden  171 

That  strikes  by  night  a  craggy  s.  In  Mem.  xvi  13 

see  your  Art  still  shrined  in  himian  shelves,  Poets  and  their  B.  11 

Laid  on  the  s —  To  Mary  Boyle  24 

Shell    (See  also  Egg-shell)    A  walk  Avith  vary-colour'd  s's    Arabian  Nights  57 

They  freshen  the  silvery-crimson  s's,  Sea-Fairies  13 

pelt  me  with  starry  spangles  and  s's,  The  Merman  28 

broad  sea-wolds  in  the  crimson  s's,  The  Mermaid  36 

Jewel  or  s,  or  starry  ore,  Elednore  20 

when  the  s  Divides  threefold  to  show  the  fmit 

(repeat)  The  Brook  72,  207 

the  bird,  the  fish,  the  s,  the  flower,  Princess  ii  383 

Storm'd  at  with  shot  and  s  (repeat)  Light  Brigade  22,  43 

Minnie  and  Winnie  Slept  in  a  s.  Minnie  and  Winnie  2 

Fink  was  the  s  within.  Silver  without ;  „                 5 

stars  Peep'd  into  the  s.  „               14 

Should  toss  ',vith  tangle  and  with  s's.  In  Mem.  x  20 

Time  hath  sunder'd  s  from  pearl.'  ,.       Hi  16 

The  ruin'd  s's  of  hollow  towers  ?  „  Ixxvi  16 

See  what  a  lovely  s,  Maud  II  ii  1 

For  a  s,  or  a  flower,  little  things  „        64 

How  fast  they  hold  like  colours  of  a  s  Marr.  of  Geraint  681 

hast  broken  s,  Art  yet  half -yolk,  Balin  and  Balan  568 


SheU 

Shell  (cantinued) 
the  s — 

its  wreaths  of  dripping  green— 

iiins  out  when  ya  breaks  the  s 

crashing  thro'  it,  their  shot  and  their  s, 

Be  yet  but  yolk,  and  forming  in  the  s  ? 

s  must  break  before  the  bird  can  fiy. 
Shelley  My  S  would  fall  from  my  hands 
Shelter  (s)     Nor,  moaning,  household  s  crave 

No  branchy  thicket  s  yields  ; 

\vings  of  brooding  s  o'er  her  peace, 

For  help  and  s  to  the  hermit's  cave. 

To  get  me  s  for  my  maidenhood. 

by  strong  storm  Blown  into  «  at  Tintagil, 

O  yield  me  s  for  mine  innocency 
Shelter  (verb)     WiU  s  one  of  stranger  race. 

Call'd  her  to  s  in  the  hollow  oak, 
Shelter'd    Oracle  divine  S  liis  unapproached  mysteries 

'  O  Walter,  I  have  s  here 

While  I  s  in  this  archway  from  a  day 
Sheltering    you  sit  Beneath  your  s  garden-tree. 
Shelving    The  Sweet-Gale  mstle  round  the  s  keel ; 
Shepherd     the  s  who  watcheth  the  evening  star. 

A  s  all  thy  life  but  yet  king-born. 

All  me,  my  mountain  s, 

And  s's  from  the  mountain-eaves 

pleasure  lives  in  height  (the  s  sang) 

the  children  call,  and  I  Thy  s  pipe, 

stars  Shine,  and  the  S  gladdens  m  his  heart : 

As  well  as  ever  s  knew  his  sheep, 

The  S,  when  I  speak.  Vailing  a  sudden  eyelid 

Plowmen,  S's,  have  I  found, 

the  laughing  s  bound  with  flowers ; 

to  thee  The  «  brings  his  adder-bitten  lamb, 

and  of  the  s's  one  Their  oldest, 

shouted,  and  the  s's  heard  and  came. 
Shepherd-d(^     Barketh  the  s-d  cheerly ; 
Shepherdess    one  of  Satan's  s'es  caught 
Shepherd-lad    Sometimes  a  curly  s-l, 
Shepherd-prince    built  their  s-p  a  funeral  pile ; 
Shere  (shire)     afoor  'e  coom'd  to  the  s. 

but  'e  dosn'  not  coom  fro'  the  s ; 

call'd  me  es  pretty  es  ony  lass  i'  the  S ; 

if  'e  could  but  stan  fur  the  S. 
Sheriff     token  from  the  king  To  greet  the  s, 
Sherris-warm'd     But,  all  his  vast  heart  s-w, 
She-slip     '  The  slight  s-s's  of  loyal  blood, 
She'SOciety    long'd,  All  else  was  well,  for  s-s. 
She-world    head  and  heart  of  all  our  fair  s-w, 
Shiah     wamis  the  blood  of  S  and  Sunnee, 
Shield    A  faiiy  s  your  Genius  made 

red-cross  knight  for  ever  kneel'd  To  a  lady  in  his  s, 

Of  her  OM'n  halo's  dusky  $ ; 

in  whose  capaciou.s  hall.  Hung  with  a  hundred  s's, 

silver  sickle  of  that  month  Became  her  golden  s, 

brand,  mace,  and  shaft,  and  s — 

Close  by  her,  like  supportei-s  on  a  s, 

like  a  ruddy  s  on  the  Lion's  breast. 

since  he  neither  wore  on  helm  or  s 

shall  the  s  of  Mark  stand  among  these  ? ' 

There  ran  a  treble  range  of  stony  s's, — 

And  imder  every  s  a  knight  was  named : 

The  s  was  blank  and  bare  without  a  sign 

s  of  Gawain  blazon'd  rich  and  bright, 

Cover  the  lions  on  thy  s. 

This  bare  a  maiden  s,  a  casque ; 

took  the  s  And  moimted  horse  and  graspt  a  spear, 

These  arm'd  him  in  blue  arms,  and  gave  a  s  Blue  also, 

Till  Gareth's  s  was  cloven ; 

Thy  s  is  mine — ^farewell ; 

flash'd  the  fierce  5,  All  sun ; 

And  gave  a  s  whereon  the  Star  of  Even 

'  Peradventure  he,  you  name,  May  know  my  s. 

Gareth,  wakening,  fiercely  clutch  d  the  s ; 

Even  the  shadow  of  Lancelot  under  s. 


630 


Shine 


life  had  flown,  we  sware  but  by 

Last  Tournament  270 

Its  pale  pink  s's —         Lover's  Tale  i  40 

Village  Wife  4 

Def.  of  Lucknow  18 

Ancient  Sage  130 

154 

The  Wreck  25 

Two  Voices  260 

Sir  Galahad  58 

Ayhner's  Field  139 

Gareth  and  L.  1209 

Balin  and  Balan  480 

Merlin  and  V.  10 

83 

In  Mem.  cii  4 

Merlin  and  V.  894 

:  Alexander  11 

Talking  Oak  37 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  259 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  6 

Edwin  Morris  110 

Dying  Swan  35 

(Eno7ie  128 

„      202 

Amphion  53 

Princess  vii  193 

218 

Spec,  of  Iliad  16 

Holy  Grail  551 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  19 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  121 

To  Virgil  16 

Death  of  (Enone  38 

52 

56 

Leonine  Eleg.  5 

Merlin  and  V.  758 

L.  of  Shalott  a  21 

Death  of  (Enone  63 

A'.  Farmer,  N.  S.  28 

Village  Wife  23 

Spinster's  S's.  13 

Owd  Rod  14 

Edviin  Morris  133 

WUl  Water.  197 

Talking  Oak  57 

Princess,  Pro.  159 

„  Hi  163 

Akbar's  Dream  107 

Margaret  41 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  7 

The  Voyage  32 

Aylmer's  Field  15 

Princess  i  102 

V  503 

„      vi  358 

Maud  III  vi  14 

Com.  of  Arthur  49 

Gareth  and  L.  403 

407 

409 

414 

416 

585 

680 

690 

931 

971 

988 

1030 

1117 

1299 

1304 

1311 


1 


726 
Balin  and  Balan  196 
200 
224 
287 
338 
369 
429 
481 
539 
550 
559 
601 
Merlin  and  V.  473 
Lancelot  and  E.  4 


Shield  (continued)   Clung  to  the  5  that  Lancelot  lent  him,    Gareth  and  L.  131 
wrought  on  Lancelot  now  To  lend  thee  horse  and  s :  „  1324 

give  him  back  the  s.'  „  1344 

How  best  to  manage  horse,  lance,  sword  and  s,  „  1351 

Or  two  wild  men  supporters  of  a  s,  Geraint  and  E.  267 

nor  glance  The  one  at  other,  parted  by  the  s.  „  269 

All  in  the  hollow  of  his  s,  „  569 

(It  lay  beside  him  in  the  hollow  s). 
In  lieu  of  this  rough  beast  upon  my  s. 
To  bear  her  own  crown-royal  upon  s, 
memory  of  that  cognizance  on  «  Weighted  it  down, 
he  sharply  caught  his  lance  and  s, 
Why  wear  ye  this  crown-royal  upon  s  ?  ' 
Thro'  memory  of  that  token  on  the  s 
Balin  drew  the  s  from  oH  his  neck, 
I  charge  thee  by  that  crown  upon  thy  s, 
and  cast  on  earth,  the  s. 
And  tramples  on  the  goodly  s  to  show 
s  of  Balan  prick'd  The  hauberk  to  the  flesh ; 
Why  had  ye  not  the  s  I  knew  ? 
carved  himself  a  knightly  s  of  wood. 
Guarded  the  sacred  s  of  Lancelot ; 
devices  blazon'd  on  the  s  In  their  own  tinct,  „  9 

Stript  off  the  case,  and  read  the  naked  s,  „  16 

How  came  the  hly  maid  by  that  good  s  „  28 

I  by  mere  mischance  have  brought,  my  s.  „  189 

— and  the  s — I  pray  you  lend  me  one,  „  192 

And  so,  God  wot,  his  s  is  blank  enough.  ,.  197 

'  This  s,  my  friend,  where  is  it  ?  '  „  345 

Returning  brought  the  yet-unblazon'd  s,  „  379 

to  have  my  s  In  keeping  till  I  come.'  „  382 

standing  near  the  s  In  silence,  „  394 

Then  to  her  tower  she  climb'd,  and  took  the  s,  „  397 

Here  was  the  knight,  and  here  he  left  as;  „  634 

Why  ask  you  not  to  see  the  s  he  left,  „  653 

But  an  ye  will  it  let  me  see  the  s.'  „  661 

when  the  s  was  brought,  and  Gawain  saw  „  662 

and  toward  even  Sent  for  his  s :  full  meekly  rose  the 

maid,  Stript  off  the  case,  and  gave  the  naked  s ;  „  978 

His  very  s  was  gone ;  only  the  case,  ,,  990 

let  the  s  of  Lancelot  at  her  feet  Be  carven,  „         1341 

painting  on  the  wall  Or  s  of  knight ;  Holy  Grail  830 

and  on  s  A  spear,  a  harp,  a  bugle —  Last  Tournament  173 

and  on  the  boughs  a  s  Showing  a  shower  of  blood  ,.  432 

Till  each  would  clash  the  s,  and  blow  the  horn.  ..  436 

JNIen  of  the  Northland  Shot  over  s.  Batt.  of  Bnmanburh  34 

with  the  s  of  Locksley — there,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  34 

one  old  Hostel  left  us  where  they  swing  the  Locksley  s,  „  247 

~ Pass,  of  Arthur  1(B 


Shield-breaking    S-b's,  and  the  clash  of  brands, 
Shielded    (See  also  Many-shielded)    That  s  all  her  life 

from  harm 
Shielding    The  gentle  wizard  cast  a  s  arm. 
Shield-lion    His  blue  s-l's  cover'd — 
Shield-wall     Brake  the  s-w, 
Shift    As  winds  from  all  the  compass  « 

We  fret,  we  fume,  would  s  our  skins, 

glance  and  s  about  her  slipperj'  sides, 

To  s  an  arbitrary  power, 

craven  s's,  and  long  crane  legs  of  Mark — 
Shifted    She  «  in  her  elbow-chair. 

The  peaky  islet  s  shapes. 
Shifting    (See  also  Ever-shifting)     With  s  ladders  of 
shadow  and  light. 

You  all  but  sicken  at  the  s  scenes. 
Shillin'     is  it  shillins  an'  pence  ? 

clean  Es  a  shillin'  fresh  fro'  the  mint 
Shimmering    The  s  glimpses  of  a  stream ;  the  seas ; 
Shine  (s)   (See  also  Star-shine)   With  spires  of  silver  s.' 

Shadow  and  s  is  life,  little  Annie, 
Shine  (verb)     Thoro'  the  black-stemm'd  pines  only  the  far 

river  s's.  Leonine  Eleg.  2 

waterfall  Which  ever  sounds  and  s's  Ode  to  Memory  52 

Mariana  in  the  S.  2 


In  Mem.,  Con.  47 

Merlin  and  V.  908 

Gareth  and  L.  1217 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  11 

Godiva  33 

Will  Water.  225 

LiLcretius  189 

In  Mem.  cxxviii  17 

Last  Tournament  729 

The  Goose  27 

The  Voyage  33 

Dead  Prophet  21 

The  Play  2 

N.  Farmer,  X.  S.  42 

Spinster's  S's.  76 

Princess,  Con.  46 

D  ofF.  Women  188 

Grandmother  60 


The  house  thro'  all  the  level  s's, 

'  Sometimes  a  little  comer  s's, 

the  wild  marsh-marigold  s's  like  fire 


Two  Voices  187 
May  Queen  31 


Shine 


631 


Shiver'd 


Shine  (verb)  (contimied)    the  summer  sun  'ill  s, 
He  s's  upon  a  hundred  fields, 
and  there  his  light  may  s — 
That  her  fair  form  may  stand  and  s, 
To  make  the  necklace  s ; 
To  rust  unbumish'd,  not  to  s  in  use  ! 
S's  in  those  tremulous  eyes  that  fill  with  tears 
The  beams,  that  thro'  the  Oriel  s, 
As  s's  the  moon  in  clouded  skies, 
yonder  s's  The  Sim  of  Righteousness, 
he  would  only  5  among  the  dead  Hereafter ; 
or  Ralph  Who  s's  so  in  the  corner ; 
That  s's  over  city  and  river, 
Fairily-deUcate  palaces  *■ 
the  stars  S,  and  the  Shepherd  gladdens 
I  see  their  unborn  faces  s 
Not  all  regret :  the  face  will  s 
Seeing  his  gewgaw  castle  s. 
But  now  s  on,  and  what  care  I, 
O  Avhen  did  a  morning  s  So  rich  in  atonement 
S  out,  little  head,  sunning  over  with  curls, 
s  in  the  sudden  making  of  splendid  names, 
as  s's  A  field  of  charlock  in  the  sudden  sun 
-\nd  sleeker  shall  he  s  than  any  hog.' 
that  layest  all  to  sleep  again,  S  sweetly : 
brother-star,  why  s  ye  here  so  low  ? 
three  colours  after  rain,  S  sweetly : 
tell  her,  she  s's  me  down : 
And  one  will  ever  s  and  one  ^vill  pass. 
And  s  the  level  lands. 


May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  22 

Con.  50 

51 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  21 

Talking  Oak  222 

Ulysses  23 

Tithonus  26 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  34 

Beggar  Maid  9 

Enoch  Arden  503 

Lucretius  129 

Princess,  Pro.  145 

Ode  on  Well.  50 

The  Islet  18 

Spec,  of  Iliad  16 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  19 

„  cxvi  9 

Maud  1x1% 

„   xviii  41 

„       xix  5 

„    xxii  57 

..///t«47 

Gareth  and  L.  387 

460 

1062 

1097 

1161 

Lancelot  and  E.  1225 

Last  Tournament  737 

Early  Spring  15 

once  more  in  vamish'd  glorj-  s  Thy  stars  of  celandine.     Prog,  of  Spring  38 


Shining  (continued)  Clear  hououi-  s  like  the  dewy  star  Of 


while  the  sun  of  morning  s's.  By  an  Evolution.  6 

Some  too  low  would  have  thee  s,  Poets  and  Critics  11 

Shined    an'  'e  s  like  a  sparkle  0'  fire.  North.  Cobbler  48 

Sbingle     and  all  round  it  ran  a  walk  Of  s,  Enoch  Arden  737 

Lest  the  harsh  s  should  grate  underfoot,  „            772 

Waves  on  a  diamond  s  dash.  The  Islet  16 

After  sod  and  s  ceased  to  fly  Behind  her,  Gareth  and  L.  761 

I  heard  the  s  grinding  in  the  surge.  Holy  Grail  811 

again  the  stormy  surf  Crash'd  in  the  s :  Lover's  Tale  Hi  54 

Shingly     I  linger  by  my  s  bars ;  Tfie  Brook  180 

As  of  a  broad  brook  o'er  a  s  bed  Brawling,  Marr.  of  Geraint  248 

And  down  the  s  scaur  he  plunged,  Lancelot  and  E.  53 

Shining    (See  also  Far-sliining,  Lily-shining,  Satin-shining, 

Silver-shining)     And  the  clear  spirit  s  thro'.  Supp.  Confessions  76 

Droops  blinded  with  his  s  eye :  Fatima  38 

She  sat  betwixt  the  s  Oriels,  Palace  of  Art  159 

Came  on  the  s  levels  of  the  lake.  M.  d' Arthur  51 

Reveal'd  their  s  windows :  Gardener's  D.  220 

This  dull  chrysalis  Cracks  into  s  wings,  St.  S.  Stylites  156 

All,  for  some  retreat  Deep  in  yonder  s  Orient,  Locksley  Hall  154 

A  summer  crisp  with  s  woods.  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  8 

To  yonder  s  ground  ;  St.  Agnes'  Eve  14 

A  light  upon  the  s  sea —  ,,              35 

In  s  draperies,  headed  Uke  a  star.  Princess  ii  109 
turn'd  her  sumptuous  head  with  eyes  Of  s  expectation 

fixt  on  mine.  „         iv  153 

The  sleek  and  s  creatures  of  the  chase,  ,.         v  155 

tender  face  Peep'd,  s  in  upon  the  womided  man  ..         vii  61 

leaves  A  s  furrow,  as  thy  thoughts  in  me.  „            185 
she  that  out  of  Lethe  scales  with  man  The  s  steps  of 

Nature,  ,.  262 
Are  close  upon  the  s  table-lands  Ode  on  Well.  216 
Would  reach  us  out  the  s  hand,  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  43 
Unloved,  the  sun-flower,  s  fair,  „  _  ci  5 
to  where  we  saw  A  great  ship  lift  her  s  sides.  „  ciii  40 
All  night  the  s  vapoiir  sail  And  pass  the  silent- 
lighted  town,  „  Con.  Ill 
The  s  daffodil  dead,  and  Orion  low  in  his  grave.  Maud  I  Hi  14 
crest  Of  a  peacock,  sits  on  her  s  head,  „  xvill 
Go  not,  happy  day.  From  the  s  fields,  „  xvii  2 
My  bird  with  the  s  head,  „  //  iv  45 
s  daffodil  dies,  and  the  Charioteer  And  starry  Gemini  „     ///  vi  6 


dawn, 

S  in  arms,  '  Damsel,  the  quest  is  mine. 
But  lift  a  s  hand  against  the  sun, 
far  up  the  s  flood  Until  we  found  the  palace 
for  all  her  s  hair  Was  smear'd  with  earth, 
'  I  found  Him  in  the  s  of  the  stars. 
Came  on  the  s  levels  of  the  lake. 
To  stand  a  shadow  by  their  s  doors. 
And  streaming  and  s  on  Silent  river, 
Ship     and  sinking  s's,  and  praying  hands, 
did  we  watch  the  stately  s's, 
Rose  a  s  of  France. 
'  Chase,'  he  said ;  the  s  flew  forward, 
We  felt  the  good  s  shake  and  reel, 
'  A  s  of  fools,'  he  shriek 'd  in  spite, 
'  A  s  of  fools,'  he  sneer'd  and  wept, 
stately  s's  go  on  To  their  haven  under  the  hill ; 
master  of  that  s  Enoch  had  served  in, 
Annie,  the  s  I  sail  in  passes  here 
s  was  lost,'  he  said,  '  the  s  was  lost ! 
prosperously  sail'd  The  s  '  Good  Fortune,' 


Another  s  (She  wanted  water)  blown  by  baffling  winds, 


Gareth  and  L.  329 

745 

Geraint  and  E.  473 

Lancelot  and  E.  1043 

Holy  Grail  209 

Pass,  of  Arthur  9 

219 

Lover's  Tale  i  731 

Merlin  and  the  G.  51 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  116 

Locksley  Hall  37 

The  Captain  28 

33 

The  Voyage  15 

77 

78 

Break,  break,  etc.  9 

Enoch  Arden  119 

214 

393 

528 


Some  s  of  battle  slowly  creep, 

reach'd  the  s  and  caught  the  rope, 

many  a  fire  between  the  s's  and  stream 

Fair  s,  that  from  the  ItaUan  shore 

A  great  s  lift  her  shining  sides. 

blush  the  news  Over  glowing  s's ; 

whether  he  came  in  the  Hanover  s, 

a  s,  the  shape  thereof  A  dragon  wing'd, 

I  have  seen  the  good  s  sail  Keel  upward, 

ere  he  came,  like  one  that  hails  a  s, 

one  side  had  sea  And  s  and  sail  and  angels 

Had  built  the  King  his  havens,  s's. 

As  the  tall  s,  that  many  a  dreary  year 

We  seem'd  hke  s's  i'  the  Channel  " 

s's  of  the  world  could  stare  at  him, 

'  Spanish  s's  of  war  at  sea ! 

for  my  s's  are  out  of  gear, 

We  are  six  s's  of  the  line ; 

past  away  with  five  s's  of  war  that  day, 

only  a  hundred  seamen  to  work  the  s  and  to  fight, 

S  after  s,  the  whole  night  long,  (repeat) 

Sink  me  the  s.  Master  Gunner — sink  her, 

dared  her  with  one  httle  s  and  his  English  few ; 

s  stagger'd  under  a  thunderous  shock, 

and  the  s  stood  still, 

on  Edwin's  s,  with  Edwin,  ev'n  in  deatli, 

And  see  the  s's  from  out  the  West 

We  sail'd  wherever  s  could  sail, 
Shipcrew    Fell  the  s's  Doom'd  to  the  death. 
Shipman    numbers,  Shipmen  and  Scotsmen. 
Shipshape     Keep  eveiytning  s,  for  I  must  go. 
Shipwreck    Made  orphan  by  a  winter  s, 

s's,  famines,  fevers,  fights.  Mutinies, 

Quail  not  at  the  fiery  mountain,  at  the  s, 
Shipwreck'd    A  s  sailor,  waiting  for  a  sail : 

Like  a  s  man  on  a  coast  Of  ancient  fable 


ToF. 


627 


D.  Maurice  26 

Sailor  Boy  3 

Spec,  of  Iliad  n 

In  Mem.  ix  1 

„     ciii  40 

Maud  I  xvii  12 

II  v  59 

Com.  of  Arthur  Sl'i 

Gareth  and  L.  253 

Geraint  and  E.  540 

Balin  and  Balan  365 

Merlin  and  F.  168 

Lover's  Tale  i  808 

First  Quarrel  42 

Kizpah  38 

The  Revenge  3 

5 

7 

13 

22 

Z  58,  59, 60 


Bright,  with  a  s  people  on  the  decks. 
The  s  dragon  and  the  naked  child 


Com.  of  Arthur  316 
399 


Shipwrecking 

s  roar. 
Shire     (See  also  Shere)     A  sign  to  many  a  staring  s 

Master  of  half  a  servile  s, 

an  oiphan  with  half  a  s  of  estate, — 

see  Beyond  the  borough  and  the  .« ! 
Shiver    Little  breezes  dusk  and  s 

The  hard  brands  s  on  the  steel, 

And  here  thine  aspen  s ; 

Consonant  chords  that  s  to  one  note ; 

woodlands,  when  they  s  in  Januarj-, 

the  s  of  dancing  leaves  Ls  thro^vn 

Thorns  of  the  crown  and  s's  of  the  cross, 

s's,  ere  he  springs  and  kills. 

why,  you  s  tho'  the  wind  is  west 
Shiver'd     Were  s  in  my  narrow  frame. 


107 

The  Wreck  107 

115 

The  Flight  46 

91 

Hands  all  Round  29 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  22 

55 

Enoch  Arden  220 

15 

Columbus  225 

Faith  3 

Enoch  Arden  590 

Maud  II  ii  31 


Listening  now  to  the  tide  in  its  broad-flung 

Will' Water.  139 

Maud  I  X  10 

Charity  13 

Hands  all  Round  28 

L.  of  Shalott  ill 

Sir  Galahad  6 

A  Farewell  10 

Princess  Hi  90 

Boddicea  75 

Maud  I  vi  73 

Balin  and  Balan  111 

Pelleas  and  E.  286 

The  Ring  29 

Fatima  18 


Shiver' d 


632 


Shook 


Sbiver'd  (continited)    A  cry  that  s  to  the  tingling  stars,        M.  d' Arthur  199 

Like  light  in  many  a  s  lance  In  Mem.  xlix  3 

And  s  brands  that  once  had  fought  with  Rome,        Pass,  of  Arthur  133 

A  cry  that  s  to  the  tingling  stars,  „  367 

Shivering    crack  of  earthquake  s  to  your  base  Pelleas  and  E.  465 

In  conflict  with  the  crash  of  s  points.  Princess  v  491 

Shoal     And  s's  of  pucker'd  faces  drive ;  In  Mem.  Ixx  10 

panic-stricken,  like  a  s  Of  darting  fish,  Geraint  and  E.  468 

Shoaling    Where  like  a  s  sea  the  lovely  blue  Play'd  into 

green. 
Shock  (s)    push  thee  forward  thro'  a  life  of  s's, 

With  twelve  great  s's  of  sound, 

whom  the  electric  s  Dislink'd  with  shrieks 

In  middle  ocean  meets  the  surging  5, 

Or  has  the  s,  so  harshly  given. 

Diffused  the  s  thro'  all  my  life. 

The  steps  of  Time — the  ss  of  Chance — 

With  thousand  s's  that  come  and  go, 

And  batter'd  with  the  s's  of  doom 

When  all  that  seems  shall  suffer  s, 

my  pulses  closed  their  gates  with  a  s 

the  s  Of  cataract  seas  that  snap 

In  those  brain-stunning  s's,  and  tourney-falls, 

burthen  off  his  heart  in  one  full  s 

ever  and  anon  with  host  to  host  S's, 

What  s  has  fool'd  her  since,  that  she  should  speak 

that  s  of  gloom  had  faU'n  Unfelt, 

Above,  below,  S  after  s, 

ship  stagger 'd  imder  a  thunderous  s, 

suddenly  s  upon  s  Stagger'd  the  mass 

great  s  may  wake  a  pakied  limb, 
Shock  (verb)     Must  ever  s,  like  armed  foes, 

The  seas  that  s  thy  base ! 

where  the  moving  isles  of  winter  s  By  night, 

you  wiU  s  him  ev'n  to  death, 

Meet  in  the  midst,  and  there  so  fiu-iously  S, 

And  felt  the  boat  s  earth,  and  looking  up, 

where  the  moving  isles  of  winter  s  By  night, 
Shock'd    (See  also  E^th-shock'd) 
anvil 

they  5,  and  Kay  Fell  shoulder-slipt, 

at  fiery  speed  the  two  S  on  the  central  bridge, 

when  strength  is  s  With  torment, 

And  they  s  on  each  other  and  butted  each  other 
Shock-head    The  s-h  willows  two  and  two 
Shod    See  Slip-shod,  Wet-shod 
Shoe    Shall  fling  her  old  s  after. 

and  s's  wi'  the  best  on  'em  aU, 

Why  'edn't  tha  wiped  thy  s's  ? 
Shone    S  out  their  crowning  snows. 

Thick-jeweU'd  s  the  saddle-leather, 

from  the  violets  her  light  foot  S  rosy-white, 

s,  the  silver  boss  Of  her  own  halo's  dusky  shield ; 

on  the  bumish'd  board  Sparkled  and  s ; 

8  like  a  mystic  star 

near  his  tomb  a  feast  S,  silver-set ; 

For  on  my  cradle  5  the  Northern  star. 

a  light  foot  s  like  a  jewel  set  In  the  dark  crag  : 

No  bigger  than  a  glow-worm  s  the  tent 

s  Their  morions,  wash'd  with  morning, 

A  column'd  entry  s  and  marble  stairs, 

and  s  Thro'  glittering  drops  on  her  sad  friend. 

light  that  s  when  Hope  was  bom. 

star  Which  s  so  close  beside  Thee 

Far  s  the  fields  of  May  thro'  open  door, 

at  times  the  great  gate  s  Only, 

and  s  far-off  as  shines  A  field  of  charlock 

in  the  stream  beneath  him  s  Inmingled  with  Heaven's 
azure 

s  the  Noonday  Sun  Beyond  a  raging  shaUow. 
Half-tamish'd  and  half-bright,  his  emblem  s, 
thro'  these  Princelike  his  bearing  s ; 
so  thickly  s  the  gems. 
Past  like  a  shadow  thro'  the  field,  that  s  Full- 
summer,  Lancelot  and  E.  1140 


688 

(Enone  163 

Godiva  74 

Princess,  Pro.  69 

WillQ 

In  Mem.  ocvi  11 

Ixxxv  55 

xcv  42 

cxiii  17 

cxviii  24 

cxxxi  2 

Maud  I  il5 

„  II  a  25 

Gareth  and  L.  89 
Last  Tournament  180 
Pass,  of  Arthur  108 
To  the  Queen  ii  22 
Lover's  Tale  i  505 
Tiresias  98 
The  Wreck  107 
Heavy  Brigade  58 
St.  Telemachus  57 
Love  thou  thy  land  78 
England  and  Amer.  15 
M.  d' Arthur  140 
Princess  Hi  212 
Lancelot  and  E.  458 
Holy  Grail  812 
Pass,  of  Arthur  ^0% 
S,  like  an  iron-clanging 

Princess  v  504 
Gareth  and  L.  758 
963 
Lover's  Tale  ii  150 
V.  of  Maeldune  108 
Amphion  39 

WUl  Water.  216 

North.  Cobbler  13 

Spinster's  S's.  46 

Dying  Swan  13 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  20 

(Enone  180 

The  Voyage  31 

Enoch  Arden  743 

Aylmer's  Field  72 

Princess,  Pro.  106 

i4 

„  Hi  358 

„  iv  25 

t>263 

364 

vi  282 

In  Mem.  xxx  32 

Ded.  of  Idylls  47 

Com.  of  Arthur  460 

Gareth  and  L.  194 

387 

935 

1027 

1118 

Marr.  of  Geraint  545 

Geraint  and  E.  693 


6891 

Pelleas  and  E.  144| 

Lover's  Tale  i  60  J 

ii  158 1 

Despair  15 1 

,,        IT 

Mariana  41  ] 

The  Poet  56] 

Dying  Swan  15 1 

D.  of  F.  Women  56j 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  3] 

Gardener's  D.  91. 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  38i 


Shone  (continvM)    sun  S,  and  the  wind  blew,  thro'  her.  Holy  Grail  99 1 

all  her  form  s  forth  with  sudden  light  „        450  J 

In  silver  armour  suddenly  Galahad  s  Before  us, 

like  bright  eyes  of  familiar  friends,  In  on  him  s 

his  face  S  like  the  countenance  of  a  priest 

with  the  gorgeous  west  the  lighthouse  s, 

so  those  fair  eyes  S  on  my  darkness, 

suns  of  the  limitless  Universe  sparkled  and  s  in  the  sky, 

but,  however  they  sparkled  and  s. 
Shook    Hard  by  a  poplar  5  alway, 

and  with  his  word  She  s  the  world. 

And  s  the  wave  as  the  wind  did  sigh ; 

splendours  of  the  morning  star  S  in  the  stedfast 
blue. 

Above  her  s  the  starry  lights : 

But  s  his  song  together  as  he  near'd 

a  joUy  ghost,  that  s  The  curtains, 

'  I  s  him  down  because  he  was  The  finest  on  the  tree.    Talking  Oak  237' 

she  s  her  head,  And  shower'd  the  rippled  ringlets  Godiva  46 

A  sudden  hubbub  s  the  haU,  Day -Dm.,  Revival  7 

I  s  her  breast  with  vague  alarms —  The  Letters  38 

s  And  almost  overwhelm'd  her,  Enoch  Arden  529 

work'd  among  the  rest  and  s  His  isolation  from  him.  „  651 

Stagger'd  and  s,  holding  the  branch,  „  767 

s  the  heart  of  Edith  hearing  him.  Aylmer's  Field  63 

like  a  storm  he  came.  And  s  the  house,  „  216' 

but  not  a  word ;  she  s  her  head.  Sea  Dreams  116' 

Like  her,  he  s  his  head.  ,,  148: 

Whom  all  the  pines  of  Ida  s  to  see  Lucretius  86 

clock-work  steamer  paddling  plied  And  s  the  lilies :      Princess,  Pro.  72 

s  aside  The  hand  that  play'd  the  patron  „  137 

And  5  the  songs,  the  whispers,  „  i  98 

Melissa  s  her  doubtful  curls,  and  thought  „  Hi  76 

my  knee  desire  to  kneel,  and  s  My  pulses,  „  193' 

O'er  it  s  the  woods.  And  danced  the  colour, 

the  tear,  She  sang  of,  s  and  fell. 

Psyche  flush'd  and  wann'd  and  s ; 

Palpitated,  her  hand  s,  and  we  heard  In  the  dead  hush 

Not  long ;  I  s  it  off ;  for  spite  of  doubts 

s  the  branches  of  the  deer  From  slope  to  slope 

On  that  loud  sabbath  s  the  spoiler 

And  s  to  aU  the  Hberal  air 

brighten  Uke  the  star  that  s  Betwixt  the  palms 

s  my  heart  to  think  she  comes  once  more ; 

Then  I  so  s  him  in  the  saddle. 

So  s  his  wits  they  wander  in  his  prime — 

And  s  his  drowsy  squire  awake  and  cried. 

And  s  her  pulses,  crying,  '  Look,  a  prize  ! 

She  s  from  fear,  and  for  her  fault  she  wept 

Then  5  his  hair,  strode  off, 

But  she  was  happy  enough  and  s  it  off. 

While  he  spoke  She  neither  blush'd  nor  s, 

wild  with  wind  That  s  her  tower, 

s  this  newer,  stronger  haU  of  ours. 

So  s  him  that  he  could  not  rest, 

So  s  to  such  a  roar  of  aU  the  sky. 

That  n  beneath  them,  as  the  thistle  shakes 

And  s  him  thro'  the  north. 

for  that  day  Love,  rising,  s  his  wings, 

great  pine  s  with  lonely  sounds  of  joy 

yot  it  s  me,  that  my  frame  would  shudder, 

a  strong  sympathy  S  aU  my  soul : 

s  and  throbb  d  From  temple  unto  temple. 

She  s,  and  cast  her  eyes  down, 

And  a  dozen  times  we  s  'em  off 

in  many  a  merry  tale  That  s  our  sides — 

For  the  whole  isle  shudder'd  and  s 

and  a  boundless  panic  s  the  foe. 

She  s  her  head,  And  the  Motherless  Mother  kiss'd  it, 

ship  stagger'd  under  a  thunderous  shock.  That  s  us 

asunder,  „      108 

I  s  as  I  open'd  the  letter —  „      145 

Fires  that  s  me  once,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  41 

s  her  head,  and  patted  yours.  And  smiled,  The  Ring  313 

what  a  fury  s  Those  pillars  of  a  moulder'd  faith,  ^kbar's  Dream  8 


160 

389 

571 

Con.  98 

Ode  on  Well.  123 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  7 

Ccn.  31 

Maud  I  xviii  10 

Gareth  and  L.  29; 

715: 

Marr.  of  Geraint  125! 

Geraint  and  E.  12 

Merlin  and  V.  952 

Lancelot  and  E.  72 

78 

96 

102i 

Holy  GraU  731 

Pelleas  and  E.  412 

Last  Tournament  621 

Guinevere  254 

Pass,  of  Arthur  70 

Lover's  Tale  i  317 

325 

„  ii  56 

89 

„  tit  7 

iv  329 

The  Revenge  54 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  92 

V.  of  Maeldune  74 

Achilles  over  the  T.  18 

The  Wreck  61 


Shoot 


633 


Shot 


?     Shoot  (s)     and  earliest  s's  Of  orient  green,  Ode  to  Memory  17 

Shoot  (verb)     Life  s's  and  glances  thro'  your  veins,  Rosalind  22 

s  into  the  dark  Arrows  of  lightnings.  To  J.  M.  K.  13 

I  would  s,  howe'er  in  vain,  Two  Voices  344 

While  all  the  neighbours  s  thee  round.  The  Blackbird  2 

The  northern  morning  o'er  thee  s,  Talking  Oak  275 

At  times  a  carven  craft  would  s  The  Voyage  53 

The  little  boys  begin  to  s  and  stab,  Princess,  Con.  61 

as  the  rapid  of  life  S's  to  the  fall —  A  Dedication  4 
iS  your  stars  to  the  firmament,                                On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  17 
Shore  (s)    (See  also  River-shore,  Sand-shore,  Table- 
shore)     And  the  blue  wave  beat  the  s ;              All  Things  will  Die  43 

and  the  happy  blossoming  s  ?  Sea-Fairies  8 

Who  can  Ught  on  as  happy  a  s  All  the  world  o'er,  „          40 

And  shadow'd  coves  on  a  sunny  s,  Elednore  18 

All  along  the  shadowing  s,  „        41 

And  shallows  on  a  distant  s,  Mariana  in  the  S.  7 

lock'd  in  with  bars  of  sand.  Left  on  the  s ;  Palace  of  Art  250 

mourn  and  rave  On  alien  s's ;  Lotos-Eaters  33 

Between  the  sun  and  moon  upon  the  s ;  ,.38 

the  s  Than  labour  in  the  deep  mid-ocean,  „  C.  S.  126 

The  crowds,  the  temples,  waver'd,  and  the  .s ;  D.  of  F.  Women  114 

To  sail  with  Arthur  under  looming  s's,  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  17 

pilot  of  an  empty  heart  Unto  the  s's  of  nothing !  Gardener's  D.  17 

on  *,  and  when  Thro'  scudding  drifts  Ulysses  9 

0  the  barren,  barren  s  !  Locksley  Hall  40 

wisdom  lingers,  and  I  linger  on  the  s,  „          141 

On  open  main  or  winding  s !  The  Voyage  6 

0  hundred  s's  of  happy  cUmes,  „          49 

Among  the  waste  and  lumber  of  the  s,  Enoch  Arden  16 

As  down  the  s  he  ranged,  or  all  day  long  588 

and  fill'd  the  s's  With  clamour.  „          635 

By  s's  that  darken  with  the  gathering  wolf,  Aylmer's  Field  767 

forth  they  came  and  paced  the  s,  Sea  Dreams  32 
Swept  with  it  to  the  s,  and  enter'd  one  Of  those  dark 

caves  „        89 

Here  than  ourselves,  spoke  with  me  on  the  s ;  „      264 

swell  On  some  dark  s  just  seen  that  it  was  rich.  Princess  i  249 

grasping  down  the  boughs  I  gain'd  the  5.  .,       iv  189 

Rotting  on  some  wild  s  with  ribs  of  wreck,  „       v  147 

Blot  out  the  slope  of  sea  from  verge  to  s,  .,      vii  38 

heave  the  hill  And  break  the  s.  Ode  on  Well.  260 

While  about  the  s  of  Mona  Boadicea  1 

Fair  ship,  that  from  the  Italian  s  In  Mem.  ix  1 

They  laid  him  by  the  pleasant  s,  „           xix  3 

'  The  sound  of  that  forgetful  s  „       xxxv  14 

Yet  turn  thee  to  the  doubtful  s,  „            Ixi  9 

And  lazy  lengths  on  boundless  s's ;  „         Ixx  12 

Dip  down  upon  the  northern  s,  „     Ixxxiii  1 

To  the  other  s,  involved  in  thee,  „     Ixxxiv  40 

'  I  watch  thee  from  the  quiet  s ;  „      Ixxxv  81 

paced  the  s's  And  many  a  bridge,  „  Ixxxvii  11 

And  still  as  vaster  grew  the  s  „         ciii  25 

The  boat  is  drawn  upon  the  s ;  „         cxxi  6 

And  heard  an  ever-breaking  s  „      cxxiv  11 

To  spangle  all  the  happy  s's  „     Con.  120 

More  than  a  mile  from  the  s,  Maud  I  ix  2 

That  made  it  stir  on  the  s.  „     //  ii  15 

Nor  the  canon-bullet  rust  on  a  slothful  s,  „  IIIin26 

Then  to  the  s  of  one  of  those  long  loops  Gareth  and  L.  905 
fifty  knights  rode  with  them,  to  the  s's  Of  Severn,  \Marr.  of  Geraint  44 
fiftv  knights  rode  with  them  to  the  s's  Of  Severn,     Geraint  and  E.  954 

0  did  ye  never  lie  upon  the  s.  Merlin  and  V.  291 
in  the  four  loud  battles  by  the  s  Of  Duglas ;  Lancelot  and  E.  289 

1  came  AU  in  my  folly  to  the  naked  s.  Holy  Grail  793 
So  loud  a  blast  along  the  s  and  sea,  „  769 
in  the  flat  field  by  the  s  of  Usk  Holden :  Pelleas  and  E.  164 
The  loneliest  ways  are  safe  from  s  to  s.  Last  Tournament  102 
all  the  ways  were  safe  from  s  to  s,  „  485 
the  thundering  s's  of  Bude  and  Bos,  Guinevere  291 
death  Or  deathlike  swoon,  thus  over  all  that  s,  Pass,  of  Arthur  120 
And  rolling  far  along  the  gloomy  s's  „  134 
we  foimd  The  dead  man  cast  upon  the  s  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  295 
sometimes  on  the  s,  upon  the  sands  „  ii  6 
the  breakers  on  the  s  Sloped  into  louder  surf :  „         Hi  14 


Shore  (s)  (continued)    About  the  soft  Mediterranean  s's,     Sir  J.  OldcasUe  30 

came  happily  to  the  s.  Columbus  141 

and  there  on  the  s  was  he.  (repeat)  V.  of  Maeldune  9,  127 

ocean  always  broke  on  a  silent  s,  „                  12 

our  world  is  but  the  bounding  s —  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  31 

Drew  to  this  .<  lit  by  the  suns  „                38 

fleeted  far  and  fast  To  touch  all  s's,  Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  2 

alone  on  that  lonely  s —  Despair  33 

No  phantoms,  watching  from  a  phantom  s  Ancient  Sage  179 

wish  yon  moaning  sea  would  rise  and  burst  the  s,  The  Flight  11 

we  shall  light  upon  some  lonely  s,  „          89 

star  that  gildest  yet  this  phantom  s ;  To  Virgil  26 

The  breakers  lash  the  s's :  Pref.  Son.  Broth.  S.  2 
But  ere  he  left  your  fatal  s,                                  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  33 

Shore  (verb)     good  Queen,  her  mother,  s  the  tress  Princess  vi  113 

with  a  sweep  of  it  S  thro'  the  swarthy  neck,  Geraint  and  E.  728 

Shore-cliff    From  the  long  s-c's  windy  walls  „            164 

a  hall  On  massive  columns,  like  a  s  cave,  Lancelot  and  E.  406 

Shoreward    wave  will  roll  us  s  soon.'  Lotos-Eaters  2 

upblown  billow  ran  S  beneath  red  clouds.  Lover's  Tale  ii  179 

Shorn     And,  issuing  s  and  sleek,  Talking  Oak  42 

and  shower  and  s  plume  Went  down  it.  Last  Tournament  155 

S  of  its  strength,  into  the  sympathy  Lover's  Tale  i  434 

Short    (See  also  Fiery-short)     run  s  pains  Thro'  his 

warm  heart ;  Supp.  Confessions  161 

He  led  me  thro'  the  s  sweet-smelling  lanes  The  Brook  122 
But  rather  loosens  from  the  lip  S  swallow-flights  of 

song.  In  Mem.  xlviii  15 

For  one  s  hour  to  see  The  souls  we  loved,  Maud  II  iv  14 

only  breathe  S  fits  of  prayer,  Geraint  and  E.  155 

when  half  of  the  s  summer  night  was  gone,  The  Revenge  65 

Up,  get  up,  the  time  is  s.  Forlorn  73 

Why  should  I  so  disrelish  that  s  word  ?  Romney's  R.  11 

Shot  (s)    (See  also  Bow-shot,  Cannon-shot,  Musket-shot, 

Stone-shot)    Storm'd  at  with  s  and  shell  (repeat)    Light  Brigade  22,  43 

A  s,  ere  half  thy  draught  be  done.  In  Mem.  vi  11 

an'  I  started  awaay  like  a  s.  North.  Cobbler  69 

crashing  thro'  it,  their  s  and  their  shell,  Def.  of  Lucknow  18 

Shot  (verb)     S  thro'  and  thro'  with  cunning  words.  Clear-headed  friend  17 

Momently  s  into  each  other.  Madeline  23 

S  over  with  purple,  and  green,  and  yellow.  Dying  Swan  20 
flying  star  s  thro'  the  sky  Above  the  pillar'd  town.      Palace  of  Art  123 

S  on  the  sudden  into  dark.  To  J.  S.  28 

S  like  a  streamer  of  the  northern  morn,  M.  d' Arthur  139 

S  thro'  the  lists  at  Camelot,  „          224 

Be  s  for  sixpence  in  a  battle-field,  Audley  Court  41 

her  palfrey's  footfall  s  Light  horrors  Godiva  58 

The  fire  s  up,  the  martin  flew,  Day-Dm.  Revival  11 

chmbing  up  the  valley ;  at  whom  he  s :  Aylmer's  Field  228 

There  by  a  keeper  s  at,  slightly  hurt,  „            548 

S  up  their  shadows  to  the  Heaven  of  Heavens,  „             642 

jS  out  of  them,  and  scorch'd  me  that  I  woke.  Lucretius  66 

S  sidelong  daggers  at  us.  Princess  ii  450 

And  s  from  crooked  lips  a  haggard  smile.  .,         iv  364 

and  s  A  flying  splendour  out  of  brass  and  steel,  „        vi  364 

S  up  and  shrill'd  in  flickering  gyres,  „         vii  46 

toaner  'ed  s  'una  as  dead  as  a  naail.  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  35 

S  o'er  the  seething  harbour-bar.  Sailor  Boy  2 

but  s  from  Arthur's  heaven  With  all  disaster  Gareth  and  L.  1100 

star  s :  '  Lo,'  said  Gareth,  '  the  foe  falls  ! '  „             1317 

shadow  of  a  spear,  S  from  behind  him,  Balin  arid  Balan  323 

S  from  behind  me,  run  along  the  ground ;  „              374 

s  red  fire  and  shadows  thro'  the  cave,  Lancelot  and  E.  414 

glanced  and  s  Only  to  holy  things  ;  Holy  Grail  75 

from  the  star  there  s  A  rose-red  sparkle  to  the  city,  „         529 

thy  vanity  so  s  up  It  frighted  all  free  fool  Last  Tournament  306 

S  like  a  streamer  of  the  northern  morn.  Pass,  of  Arthur  307 

S  thro'  the  lists  at  Camelot,  „              392 

and  s  forth  Boughs  on  each  side,  Lover's  Tale  i  229 

And  s  itself  into  the  singing  winds ;  „            369 

that  s  the  sunset  In  lightnings  roimd  me ;  „            442 

The  meaning  of  the  letters  s  into  My  brain ;  „            H  8 

dragonfly  S  by  me  like  a  flash  of  purple  fire.  „              17 

An'  'e  niver  not  s  one  'are.  Village  Wife  42 

5  thro'  the  staff  or  the  halyard,  Def.  of  Lucknow  5 


Shot 


634 


Show'd 


Shot  (verb)  (continued))    pine  s  aloft  from  the  crag  V.  of  Maeldune  16 

Men  of  the  Northland  S  over  shield.  Ball,  of  Brunanhurh  34 

"Ud  'a  s  his  own  sowl  dead  Tomorrow  40 

A  light  s  upward  on  them  from  the  lake.  The  Ring  256 

Shotted    See  Heavy-shotted 

Shoulder    over  his  left  s  laugh'd  at  thee,  The  Bridesmaid  7 

a  leopard  skin  Droop'd  from  his  s,  (Enone  59 

Upon  her  pearly  s  leaning  cold,  „     140 

golden  round  her  lucid  throat  And  .« :  ..179 

From  off  her  s  backward  borne  :  Palace  of  Art  118 

clapt  his  hand  On  Everard's  s,  The  Epic  22 

Make  broad  thy  s's  to  receive  my  weight,  M.  d' Arthur  164 

O'er  both  his  s's  drew  the  languid  hands,  „          174 

From  thy  pure  brows,  and  from  thy  s's  pure,  TitJiomis  35 

Till  over  thy  dark  s  glow  Thy  silver  sister-world,  Move  eastward  5 

Naiads  oar'd  A  glimmering  s  To  E.  L.  17 

With  a  heaved  s  and  a  saucy  smile,  Ayhner's  Field  466 

Among  the  honest  s's  of  the  crowd,  Sea  Dreams  166 

And  robed  the  s's  in  a  rosy  silk.  Princess,  Pro.  103 

Her  round  white  s  shaken  with  her  sobs,  ..            iv  289 

lanes  of  splendour  slanted  o'er  a  press  Of  snowy  s's,         .,  479 

But  on  my  s  hung  their  heavy  hands,  „                553 

Leapt  from  the  dewy  s's  of  the  Earth,  .,               v  43 

Down  on  the  s's  of  the  twain,  his  men,  Gareth  and  L.  440 

On  either  shining  s  laid  a  hand,  Marr.  of  Geraint  518 

and  the  squire  Chafing  his  s :  Geraint  and  E.  27 

letting  her  left  hand  Droop  from  his  mighty  s.  Merlin,  and  V.  243 

Gazed  at  the  heaving  s,  and  the  face  Hand-hidden,  „            896 

Lancelot  tum'd,  and  smooth'd  The  glossy  s,  Lancelot  and  E.  348 

Each  gript  a  s,  and  I  stood  between ;  Holy  Grail  822 

Make  broad  thy  s's  to  receive  mj  weight,  Pass,  of  Arthur  332 

O'er  both  his  s's  drew  the  langmd  hands,  „              342 

warrior's  puissant  s's  Pallas  flung  Achilles  over  the  T.  3 

And  plant  on  s,  hand  and  knee.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  8 

lay  thine  uphill  s  to  the  wheel.  Ancient  Sage  279 

fur  the  merk's  0'  thy  s  yit ;  Owd  Rod  90 

you  my  girl  Rode  on  my  s  home —  The  Ring  322 

Shoulder  Blade     {See  also  Blade)     arms  were  shatter'd  to 

the  s  b.  Princess  vi  52 

Shoulder'd    (See  also  Broad-shoulder'd)    Then  we  s  thro' 

the  swarm,  AudleyCourt9 

in  the  cellars  merry  bloated  things  S  the  spigot,  Guinevere  268 

Shoulder-slipt     they  shock'd,  and  Kay  Fell  s-s,  Gareth  and  L.  759 

Shout  (s)     Herod,  when  the  s  was  in  his  ears,  Palace  of  Art  219 

shall  the  braggart  s  For  some  blind  glimpse  Love  and  Duty  5 

But  that  there  rose  a  s :  Princess,  Con.  36 

a  s  rose  again,  and  made  The  long  line  „                  96 

a  s  More  joyfid  than  the  city-roar  „                 100 

And  caught  once  more  the  distant  s.  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  9 

At  the  s's,  the  leagues  of  lights,  Maud  II  iv  21 

And  s's,  and  clarions  shrilling  unto  blood.  Com.  of  Arthur  103 

voice  As  dreadful  as  the  s  of  one  who  sees  „              II7 

s's  Ascended,  and  there  brake  a  servingman  Gareth  and  L.  800 

whereupon  Their  connmon  s  in  chorus,  Balin  and  Balan  87 

Then  rang  the  s  his  lady  loved :  Pelleas  and  E.  171 

the  red  dream  Fled  with  a  s.  Last  Tournament  488 

s's  of  heathen  and  the  traitor  knights.  Pass,  of  Arthur  113 

on  a  sudden  the  garrison  utter  a  jubilant  s,  Def.  of  Lucknow  98 

from  the  dyke  he  sent  his  mighty  s,  Achilles  over  the  T.  30 

jingle  of  bits,  S's,  arrows,  Tiresias  94 

an'  maakin'  ma  deaf  wi'  their  s's,  Spinster's  S's.  88 

gaUopt  up  with  a  cheer  and  a  s,  Heavy  Brigade  61 

the  s  Of  His  descending  peak  from  Heaven,  Romney's  R.  126 

Shout  (verb)    hark !  they  s  '  St.  Simeon  Stylites.'  St.  S.  Stylites  146 

They  s,  '  Behold  a  saint ! '  „              153 

That  he  s's  with  his  sister  at  plaj^ !  Break,  break,  etc.  6 

S  Icenian,  Catieuchlanian,  s  Uorstanian,  Boddicea  57 

djring  while  they  s  her  name.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  128 

Shouted    Till  I  struck  out  and  s ;  Princess  v  540 

But  I  heard  it  s  at  once  from  the  top  Maud  11  v  50 

Then  the  third  brother  s  o'er  the  bridge,  Gareth  and  L.  1096 

Lancelot  s,  '  Stay  me  not !  Holy  Grail  643 

'  No  name,  no  name,'  he  «,  '  a  scourge  am  I  Pelleas  and  E.  565 

roar'd  And  s  and  leapt  down  upon  the  fall'n ;  Last  Tournament  469 

Till  they  s  along  with  the  shouting  V.  of  Maeldune  34 


Shouted  (continued)  standing,  s,  and  Pallas  far  away    Achilles  over  the  T.  17 

lighted  on  him  there,  And  s.  Death  of  (Enone  56 

Shouting     Heard  the  heavens  fill  with  s,  Locksley  Hall  123 

With  a  loyal  people  s  a  battle  cry,  Maud  III  vi  35 
thro'  lanes  of  s  Gareth  rode  Down  the  slope  street,     Gareth  and  L.  699 

Which  was  the  red  cock  s  to  the  light,  Geraint  and  E.  384 

S,  '  Sir  Galahad  and  Sir  Percivale ! '  Holy  Grail  337 

seem'd  S's  of  aU  the  sons  of  God :  „          509 

and  s's  and  soundings  to  arms,  Def.  of  Lucknow  76 

And  we  came  to  the  Isle  of  S,  V.  of  Maeldune  27 

And  the  s  of  these  wild  birds  ,,             33 

Till  they  shouted  along  with  the  s  „              34 

Shove    See  Shuw 

Shovell'd     s  up  into  some  bloody  trench  Audley  Court  42 

Show  (s)     Thou  comest  not  with  s's  of  flaunting  vines       Ode  to  Memory  48 

Had  made  him  talk  for  s ;  Will  Water.  196 

Princess  Ida  seem'd  a  hollow  s.  Princess  Hi  185 

camp  and  college  turn'd  to  hollow  s's ;  .,         v  478 

They  did  but  look  like  hollow  s's ;  '                .,       vii  134 

My  haunting  sense  of  hollow  s's :  .,            349 

hang'd  him  in  chains  for  a  s —  Rispah  35 

With  a  purse  to  pay  for  the  s.  Dead  Prophet  8 

Show  (verb)  (See  also  Shaw)  Nor  canst  thou  s  the  dead  are  dead.  Two  Voices  267 

Some  one  might  s  it  at  a  joust  of  arms,  M.  d' Arthur  102 

S  me  the  man  hath  sufier'd  more  than  I.  St.  S.  Stylites  49 

That  s  the  year  is  tum'd.  Talking  Oak  176 

and  s's  At  distance  like  a  little  wood ;  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  41 

And  all  that  eke  the  years  will  s,  „            L'Envoi  13 

s  you  slips  of  all  that  grows  Amphion  83 

So  s's  my  soul  before  the  Lamb,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  17 

Shall  s  thee  past  to  Heaven  :  Will  Water.  246 

All  he  s's  her  makes  him  dearer :  L.  of  Burleigh  33 

'  Proclaim  the  faults  he  would  not  s  :  You  might  have  won  17 

Divides  threefold  to  s  the  fruit  within.  (Repeat)  The  Brook  73,  208 

call'd  old  Philip  out  To  s  the  farm :  „                121 

into  Darnley  chase  To  s  Sir  Arthur's  deer.  „                133 

'  S  me  the  books ! '  Sea  Dreams  148 

these  I  thought  my  dream  would  s  to  me,  Lucretius  51 

and  s  That  life  is  not  as  idle  ore.  In  Mem.  cxviii  19 

That  will  s  itself  without.  Maud  II  iv  61 

To  s  that  who  may  slay  or  scape  the  three,  Gareth  and  L.  641 
to  s  His  loathing  of  our  Order  and  the  Queen.         Balin  and  Balan  550 

think  I  s  myself  Too  dark  a  prophet :  Holy  Grail  321 

babble  about  him,  all  to  s  your  wit- — •  Last  Tournament  340 

Bear  with  me  for  the  last  time  while  I  s,  Guinevere  454 

Some  one  might  s  it  at  a  joust  of  arms,  Pass,  of  Arthur  270 

and  s  us  That  we  are  surely  heard.  Lover's  Tale  i  364 

he  brings  And  s's  them  whatsoever  he  accounts  ,.        iv  233 

'  O  my  heart's  lord,  would  I  could  s  you,'  he  says,  ..            250 

I  propose  to-night  To  s  you  what  is  dearest  to  my  heart,      ,,  252 

while  I  s  you  all  my  heart.'  „             353 

s  us  that  "the  world  is  wholly  fair.  Ancient  Sage  182 

Let  the  trampled  serpent  s  you  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  242 

never  had  I  seen  her  s  remorse —  The  Ring  457 

Our  Playwright  may  s  In  some  fifth  Act  The  Play  3 

I  will  s  it  you  by-and-by.                                      •  Bandit's  Death  8 

Show'd     the  world  Like  one  great  garden  s.  The  Poet  34 

One  s  an  iron  coast  and  angry  waves.  Palace  of  Art  69 

for  he  s  me  all  the  sin.  May  Queen,  Con.  17 
Pontius  and  Iscariot  by  my  side  S  like  fair  seraphs.    St.  S.  Stylites  169 

S  her  the  fairy  footings  on  the  grass,  Aylmer's  Field  90 

And  when  she  s  the  wealthy  scabbard,  „            236 

s  their  eyes  Glaring,  and  passionate  looks.  Sea  Breams  235 

and  s  A  riotous  conflnence  of  watercourses  Lucretius  29 

s  the  hou.se,  Greek,  set  with  busts :  Princess,  Pro.  10 

s  the  late-writ  letters  of  the  king.  „           i  175 

He  s  a  tent  A  stone-shot  off :  „             v  53 

What  Roman  strength  Turbia  s  The  Daisy  5 

Who  s  a  token  of  distress  ?  In  Mem.  Ixxviii  13 

And  s  him  in  the  fountain  fresh  „           Ixxxv  26 

knight  Had  visor  up,  and  s  a  youthful  face,  Marr.  of  Geraint  189 

s  themselves  against  the  sky,  and  sank.  „             240 

For  while  the  mother  s  it,  „             636 

And  A-  an  empty  tent  allotted  her,  Geraint  and  E.  885 

This  gray  King  6'  us  a  shrine  Balin  and  Balan  109 


i 


Show'd 


635 


Shrill 


Sbow'd  {continued)     This  woodman  s  the  cave  From 

which  he  sallies,  Balin  and  Balan  131 
iiems  Pluck'd  from  the  crown,  and  s  them  to  his 

knights,  Lancelot  and  E.  57 

Chose  the  green  path  that  s  the  rarer  foot,  ,,            162 

And  s  him,  like  a  vermin  in  its  hole.  Last  Tournament  165 

And  s  them  both  the  ruby-chain,  ,,              409 

in  the  light's  last  gUmmer  Tristram  s  .,               739 

s  he  drank  beyond  his  use  ;  Lovers  Tale  iv  228 

.<;  Turning  my  way,  the  loveliest  face  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  86 

Shower  (s)    (See  also  Thunder-shower)    sweet  s's  Of 

festal  flowers.  Ode  to  Memory  77 

These  in  every  s  creep  Thro'  the  green  A  Dirge  33 

Like  moonlight  on  a  falling  s  ?  Margaret  4 

like  the  rainbow  from  the  s,  Two  Voices  444 

The  slow  result  of  winter  s's :  „           452 

1  thirsted  for  the  brooks,  the  s's  :  Fatima  10 

I'll  take  the  s's  as  they  fall,  Amphion  101 

Perfume  and  flowers  fall  in  s's,  Sir  Galahad  11 

The  gentle  s,  the  smell  of  dying  leaves,  Ensch  Arden  611 

s's  of  random  sweet  on  maid  and  man.  Princess  vii  86 

Briton  in  blown  seas  and  storming  s's.  Ode  on  Well.  155 

A'  and  stonn  and  blast  Had  blown  the  lake  The  Daisy  70 

daisy  close  Her  crimson  fringes  to  the  s  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxii  12 

Sweet  after  s's,  ambrosial  air,  „          Ixxxvi  1 

in  the  sudden  sun  Between  two  s's,  Gareth  and  L.  389 

Was  cared  as  much  for  as  a  suiiuner  s  ;  Geraint  and  E.  523 

Like  sunlight  on  the  plain  behind  a  s  :  Merlin  and  V.  403 

poplars  made  a  noise  of  falling  s's.  Lancelot  and  E.  411 

poplars  with  their  noise  of  falling  s's,  ,.               523 

s's  of  flowers  Fell  as  we  past ;  Holy  Grail  348 

and  s  and  shorn  plume  Went  down  it.  Last  Tournament  155 

with  Queen  Isolt  Against  a  s,  .,              379 

Showing  a  s  of  blood  in  a  field  noir,  „               433 

the  wind  and  the  s  and  the  snow.  Rizpah  68 

from  out  the  west  in  shadowuig  s's,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  7 

Thro'  the  blotting  mist,  the  blinding  s's,  „               18 

Stony  s's  Of  that  ear-stunning  hail  of  ArSs  Tiresias  95 

from  a  day  of  driving  s's —  Loeksley  H.,  Sixty  259 

Before  them  fleets  the  s.  Early  Spring  13 

a  s  of  stones  that  stoned  him  dead,  St.  Telemachus  68 

Shower  (verb)     Down  s  the  gambolUng  waterfalls  Sea- Fairies  10 

,s-  the  tiery  grain  Of  freedom  broadcast  Princess  v  421 

>S"'a-  slanting  light  upon  the  dolorous  wave.  Lover's  Tale  i  811 

Shower 'd  (adj.)     To  enrich  the  threshold  of  the  night  With 

s  largess  of  delight  In  Mem.  xxix  7 

Shower'd  (verb)    s  the  rippled  ringlets  to  her  knee ;  Godiva  47 
5  His  oriental  gifts  on  everyone  And  most  on  Edith  :    Aylmer's  Field  213 

Before  me  s  the  rose  in  flakes  ;  Princess  iv  264 

Lavish  Honour  s  all  her  stars.  Ode  on  Well.  196 

.-!  down  Kays  of  a  mighty  circle,  Lover's  Tale  i  417 

Showerful     in  a  s  spring  Stared  at  the  spate.  Gareth  and  L.  2 

Showering    {See  also  Ever-showering)    -S  thy  gleaned 

wealth  into  my  open  breast  Ode  to  Memory  23 

^  wide  Sleet  of  diamond-drift  and  pearly  hail ;  Viiion  of  Sin  21 

fountains  spouted  up  and  s  down  In  meshes  Princess  i  218 

Showery    Grow  green  beneath  the  s  gray.  My  life  is  full  17 

dew'd  with  s  drops,  Up-clomb  the  shadovy  pine  Lotos- Eaters  17 

last,  she  ftxt  A  s  glance  upon  her  aunt.  Princess,  Con.  33 

Showing    (.S'ee  a^so  A-Shawin')    (S  a  gaudy  summer-morn,      Palace  of  Art  62 

she  pointed  with  a  laugh,  S  the  aspick's  bite.)  D.  of  F.  Women  160 

A'  a  shower  of  blood  in  a  field  noir,  Last  Tournament  433 

Not  only  s  ?  and  he  himself  pronounced  Lover's  Tale  iv  349 

And  5  them,  souls  have  wings  !  Dead  Prophet  12' 

Shown     (See  also  Late-shown)     Half  s,  are  broken  and 

withdrawn.  Two  Voices  306 

and  s  the  tmth  betimes,  That  old  true  filth,  Merlin  and  V.  46 

after  he  hath  s  him  gems  or  gold.  Lover's  Tale  iv  246 

France  had  s  a  light  to  all  men,  Loeksley  H.,  Sixty  89 

not  s  To  dazzle  all  that  see  them  ?  The  Sing  143 

Shrank     -V  one  sick  willow  sere  and  small.  Mariana  in  the  S.  53 

Enid  s  far  back  into  herself,  Geraint  and  E.  607 

his  charger  at  her  side,  She  s  a  little.  „            821 

and  he  s  and  wail'd,  '  Is  the  Queen  false  ?  '  Pelleas  and  £'.531 

He  s  and  howl'd,  and  from  his  brow  drew  back  Lover's  Tale  ii  92 


Shrank  (continued)     her  weight  S  in  my  grasp,  Lover's  Tale  ii  203 

I  tum'd :  my  heart  S  in  me,  „           Hi  38 

Her  that  s,  and  put  me  from  her,  Loeksley  H.,  Sixty  264 

Shrew     woodland  thing.  Or  s,  or  weasel,  Gareth  and  L.  749 

Shrewdest    a  sting  of  s  pain  Ran  shrivelling  thro'  me,        St.  S.  Stylites  198 

Shrewdness    nor  compensating  the  want  By  s,  Enoch  Arden  251 

Shrewish     Puppet  to  a  father's  threat,  and  servile  to  a 

s  tongue  !  Loeksley  Hall  42 

Shriek  (s)     (See  also  Flittermoase-shriek)    myriad  s  of 

wheeling  ocean-fowl,  Enoch  Arden  583 

the  keen  s  '  Yes  love,  yes,  Edith,  yes,'  Aylmer's  Field  582 

their  s's  Ran  highest  up  the  gamut,  Sea  Dreams  232 

One  s  of  hate  would  jar  all  the  hymns  of  heaven  :  „         259 

Dislink'd  with  s's  and  laughter  :  Princess,  Pro.  70 

yonder,  s's  and  strange  experiments  „                 235 

the  whispers,  and  the  s's  Oi  the  wild  woods  together  ;        .,  i  98 

There  rose  a  s  as  of  a  city  sack'd  ;  „            iv  165 

another  s,  '  The  Head,  the  Head,  the  Prmcess,  „                 175 

A  kingdom  topples  over  with  &  s  „          Con.  62 

The  siirill-edged  s  of  a  mother  Matid  I  i  16 

there  was  love  in  the  passionate  s,  „          57 

And  all  in  passion  uttering  a  dry  s,  Geraint  and  E.  461 

Unearthlier  than  all  s  of  bird  or  beast,  Balin  and  Balan  545 

clapt  her  hands  Together  with  a  wailing  s.  Merlin  and  V.  867 

Lancelot  gave  A  marvellous  great  s  Lancelot  and  E.  516 
upward-rushing  storm  and  cloud  Of  s  and 

plume.  Last  Tournament  AAl 

Behind  him  rose  a  shadow  and  a  s — •  „             753 

s's  and  ringing  laughter  on  the  sand  Lover's  Tale  Hi  32 

wail  came  borne  in  the  s  of  a  growing  wind.  The  Wreck  87 

s  for  the  rights  of  an  equal  humanity.  Beautiful  City  2 

she  heard  The  s  of  some  lost  life  Death  of  QLnone  90 

arose  The  s  and  curse  of  trampled  niiUions,  Akbar's  Dream  190 

Shriek  (verb)     if  any  came  near  I  would  call,  and  s.  The  Mermaid  38 

»S  out  '  I  hate  you,  Enoch,'  Enoch  Arden  33 

and  s  '  You  are  not  Ida  ;  '  Princess  vii  94 

That  s  and  sweat  in  pigmy  wars  Lit.  Squabbles  2 

shall  I  s  if  a  Hungary  fail  ?  Maud  I  iv  46 

That  ever  s's  before  a  death,'  Lancelot  and  E.  1023 

and  s's  After  the  Christ,  Pass,  of  Arthur  110 

glance  the  tits,  and  s  the  jays.  Prog,  of  Spring  15 

If  every  single  star  Should  s  its  claim  A  kbar's  Dream  43 

Shriek'd     (See  also  Screead)    mouse  Behind  the  mouldering 

wainscot  s,  Mariana  64 

'  No  voice,'  she  s  in  that  lone  hall,  Palace  of  Art  258 

Again  they  s  the  burthen — '  Him  !  '  Edwin  Morris  123 

'  A  ship  of  fools,'  he  s  in  spite.  The  Voyage  77 

For  sideways  up  he  swmig  his  arms,  and  s  Sea  Dreams  24 

s  That  she  but  meant  to  win  him  back,  Lucretius  278 

Daintily  she  s  And  wi-ung  it.  Princess,  Pro.  175 

'  Boys  !  '  s  the  old  king,  .,               ■;;  328 

s  The  virghi  marble  under  iron  heels :  „              vi  350 

Yell'd  and  s  between  her  daughters  (repeat)  Boddicea  6,  72 

s  against  his  creed —  In  Mem.  Ivi  16 

His  helmet  as  to  slay  him,  but  she  s,  Gareth  and  L.  979 

*S'  to  the  stranger,  '  Slay  not  a  dead  man  !  '  Geraint  and  E.  779 

moved  so  much  the  more,  and  s  again,  „             782 

s  out  '  Traitor '  to  the  unhearing  wall,  Lancelot  and  E.  612 

Who  rode  by  Lancelot,  wail'd  and  s  aloud.  Holy  Grail  356 

The  words  of  Arthur  flying  s,  arose,  Last  Tournament  139 

Who  s  and  wail'd,  the  three  whereat  we  gazed  Pass,  of  Arthur  ^^ 

Aloud  she  s  :  My  heart  was  cloven  with  pain  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  199 

s  and  slaked  the  light  with  blood.  Loeksley  H.,  Sixty  90 

s,  and  started  from  my  side —  „            264 

One  s  '  The  fires  of  Hell  !  '  Dead  Prophet  80 

when  I  learnt  it  at  last,  I  s.  Charity  37 

Shrieking    fell  The  woman  s  at  his  feet,  Aylmer's  Field  811 

And  s  '  /  am  his  dearest,  I —  The  Victim  71 

And  the  s  rush  of  the  wainscot  mouse,  Maud  I  vi  71 
s  out '  O  fool  !  '  the  harlot  leapt  Adown  the  forest,   Merlin  and  V.  972 

On  whom  the  women  s  "  Atheist  "  flung  Filth  Akbar's  Dream  91 

Shrift     And  number'd  bead,  and  s.  Talking  Oak  46 

Wrapt  in  her  grief,  for  housel  or  for  s,  Guinevere  149 

Shrike     the  sparrow  spear'd  by  the  s,  Maud  I  iv  23 

Shrill  (adj.)     And  the  s  winds  were  up  and  away,  Mariana  50 


ShriU 


636 


Sairill  (adj.)  (continued)    S  miisic  reach'd  them  on  the  middle 

Springing  alone  With  a  s  inner  sound,  ThfMer^M  20 

Her  rapid  laughters  wild  and  s,  Mermmd  <iU 

Lest  their  s  happy  laughter  come  to  me  (Enot^R 

over  them  the  sea-wind  sang  iS",  chiU  m  ^TH     ac^ 

The  s  beU  rings,  the  censer  swiW  Si  ril''^.  If 

2  Y'^t'-^^^  ."P"'^  *^«  prZ^aught  the  .  salt,          fl/rlt  ll 

and  fear'd  To  send  abroad  a  s  and  terrible  cry,  Enoch  Arden7e>i 

wind  that  .',  All  night  in  a  waale  Ld.  P„.  ^.P'^SZ  fi 

s  and  rang.  Till  this  was  ended,  Flthl  ?    ^  7^ 

merrily-blowing  .the  martial  fife  ;  Pri^lf^.^i 

Shot  up  and  s  in  flickering  gyres,  J"nncess  v  ^bl 

And  she  athwart  the  shallow  s  again,  Gareth  ««>  r  "im^ 

she  tower'd  her  bells,  Tone  mide?  tone,  s  ;  Mefunaidvf4 

Dagonet  clapt  hs  hands  and  s  ^wem^i  a»jd  '^•1^^ 

down  the  Jg  wind  the  dream'^  ;  Pa^TS 'g 

all  the  night  an  answer  s,  n!L?       il  t] 

arilleth    The  shattering  tninpet  s  high,  sZTlifX 
Shrilling    (^..aZ.o  Sudden-shriUing)    n%t  her  slender  nose       "  '''^"^"'^  ' 

she'l^'WrnedU^V-b  and  finger,  V  Hence!  «ar..fe  a.^  z.  750 

S^^t^^Lmoo.,  --^SBi 

Thin  35  the  batlike  .'s  of  the  Dead  Death  of  (vl7Jt^ 

„    ,,^ind  of  the  Night  s  out  Desolation  and  wrong  The^feTZ  15 

Shnlly     The  5  whmnyings  of  the  team  of  HeU,    ^  BMrandP^ 

Shrme  ^(^^«e  a/50  Altar-shrine)    By  Bagdat's  i'.  of  fretted  ^ 

From  one  censer  in  one  s,  ^"'^^^.  NigMsl 

they  saw  thee  from  the  secret  s  Al!tnT/f  \l 

Still-lighted  in  a  secret  s,  Mnri.Jf  T  I  }l 

Going  before  to  some  far  s,  ^"Z^  '^  *^'  '^-  }^ 

from  the  min'd  .  he  stept  And  in  the  moon  %'  TjtZl  i 

And  you  may  carve  a  s  about  my  dust.  Si.  S  ^SflOS 

My  knees  are  bow'd  in  crypt  and  s  :  s]:  rnilJA 

Then  by  some  secret  s  I  ri5e  ;  ^''^  ^"^"^^  H 

The  desecrated  s,  the  trampled  year,  PW  J^,.  „  1 97 

two  Sware  at  the  s  of  Christ  a  deathless  love :  Com  of  Arthur  466 

when  they  left  the  s  Great  Lords  from  Rome  ^              !?« 

bhow  d  us  a  «  wherein  were  wonders—  Balin  an/  Jinln,,  1  no 

Saint  who  stands  with  lily  in  hand  In  yonder  ,.  ^''^''''  Jfi2 

but  while  he  stared  about  the  s,  "              T^o 

STe  hS'pVm^'^  ''^  ^\^^^  ^^^^"^  ^^  ™^^*'  Lancelot  and  E.  1330 

The  Holy  Grail,  descend  upon  the  s  :  Holy  Grail  465 

he  before  your  5's  ;  Do  each  low  office  O^inlvZe  681 

1"°?!.  the  ruin'd  5  he  stept.  And  in  the  moon  Pass.  TlrthZ  213 

So  that  they  pass  not  to  the  s  of  sound.  Iter's  TalTi  470 

lay  me  m  some  s  of  this  old  Spain,  Colulul  207 

m.  •  ^^"'"^  !^?",*  *^^'''  *'*  b«^o^«  "i^''-  Gods,  r  vSL  105 

Shrined    Methinks  my  friend  is  richly  5  ;  In  Mem  Mil 

iS  him  within  the  temple  of  her  heart.  The  Rina  2iq 

anne-doore    ..-rf  burst  thro'  with  heated  blasts  D.  of  F  Women  29 

ame-shattenng    ^-s  earthquake,  fire,  flood,  thunderbolt,    ^      fiS  6? 

Shru±     It  would  s  t«  the  earth  if  you  came  in.  '    Poet's  MiZ  V! 

Smite,  5  not,  spare  not.  ,c,    <^%Jii  cl 

nor  s  For  fear  our  solid  aim  be  dissipated  Pri!Siii  2S 

her  small  goodman  S's  in  his  arm-chair  ^««ce5s  tn  265 

Nor  make  a  snail's  horn  s  for  wantonness  ;  ^»«;{e«<  SaZ  279 

Shnve    let  me  s  me  c  ean,  and  die  '  t„J:J^4      j^Jld. 

« mTzaalf  TVT/x  ««♦  *«        1       ., '  ,  Lancelot  and  E.  1100 

«  "lyseu  iNo,  not  to  an  Apostle.'  «fv«    7   m^     /?    iV^ 

Shrivel    Lightning  may  .  the^laurel  of  C^ar.  *""  '^  ^/SL'^I 


Shut 


Shrivell'd    Were  5  into  darkness  in  his  head, 

Wme  is  good  for  5  lips, 

Is  5  in  a  fruitless  fire, 
.  J^ernel  of  the  s  fruit  Is  jutting  thro'  the  rind  • 
StoveUmg    sting  of  shrewdest  pain  Ran  s  thro'  me 
Shnven      Heresy— Not  s,  not  saved  ?  ' 
Shroud  (s)    (See  also  Hammock-shroud)    Nor  was  the 
night  thy  s. 

A  music  out  of  sheet  and  s, 
^\,.^}a'^  "^^^  ^  Tf -^'^  plaintively  sweet  Perch'd  on  the  s's.     The  Wreck  82 

shroSia  "'rs-f^sii""" '""'  "'■  *"" ' "" '»»'""  ^'"'i<^3^o 

Shrub     (-See  aZso  Laurel-shrubs)     TaU  orient  s's,  and 

obelisks 
Shrunk    *S'  like  a  fairy  changeling  lay  the  ma^e  • 

s  by  usage  into  commonest  commonplace"!  ' 
Sntreet  (street)    whiniver  ye  walkt  in  the  s 
Shudder  (s)     her  child  !— a  s  comes  Across  me  • 

In  that  vast  Oval  ran  a  s  of  shame. 
Shudder  (verb)    I  s  at  the  sequel,  but  I  go.' 

We  s  but  to  dream  our  maids  should  ape 

Nor  s's  at  the  gulfs  beneath, 

0  ye  stars  that  s  over  me, 
'  I  s,  some  one  steps  across  my  grave  • ' 
So  let  me,  if  you  do  not  s  at  me,         ' 
yet  it  shook  me,  that  my  frame  would  s 
heart  of  motherhood  Within  me  s,  ' 

1  s  at  the  Christian  and  the  stake  ; 
Shudder'd    s,  lest  a  cry  Should  break  his  sleep 

Why— these— are— men  :  '  I  s  • 

all  dabbled  with  the  blood  Of  his  own  son,  s 

Yet  I  s  and  thought  like  a  fool 

Then  s,  as  the  village  wife  who  cries 

For  the  whole  isle  s  and  shook 
Shudderest    S  when  I  strain  my  sight, 
Shuddering    delight  and  s  took  hold  of  all  my  mind 

he  knew  not  wherefore,  started  up  *S,  ' 

from  the  plaintive  mother's  teat  he  took  Her  blind 

Safs  at  thTmIn  of  a  world  ;  ??/  t°f^  ^^ 

And  s  fled  from  room  to  room,  pL^I^'^'.^r. 

Set  everv  elided  naranet  <!  •  r       P/^ncess  m  3v0 

and  thnnX  WJf^      P?r     ,'  .,,     r,,.  Lancelot  and  E.  299 

ami  thought  With  s.    Hark  the  Phantom  1099 

There  in  the  s  moonlight  brought  its  face  Lover's' Tale  ifm 

till  one  of  them  Said,  s,  '  Her  ipectre  ! '  '  ^  '^  ,-'  ^ 

shrill-edged  shriek  of  a  mother  divide  the  s  night.  Maud  I  iW 

In  the  s  dawn,  behold,  ^  mauu  1  1 10 

bruised  and  butted  with  the  s  War-thunder  of  iron  rams  •      "         '" 
Sh^mcTt     1  ""'"^f  *^^  death-white  sea  should  rave,  'The  Flight  47 

IS^^.     "'  *^^  T°*i°^  ™y  h^^^  ^«'«  stirr'd  By  a  s  step,        Maud  I  i  14 
Shim     on  our  dead  self,  nor  s  to  do  it,  ^'    PrZcess  iii  221 

fl^':^^.''!§.Z'^'.7  r","°t  '  .Ti^«  foaming  grape     In  mZ.    Cc^79 


Godiva  70 

§  Vision  of  Sin  79 

In  Mem.  liv  11 

Ancient  Sage  121 

St.  S.  Stylites  199 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  144 

Ode  to  Memwy  28 
In  Mem.  ciii  54 


Arabian  Nights  107 
Com.  of  Arthur  363 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  76 
Tomorrow  37 
(Enone  253 
St.  Telemachu^  73 
Princess  ii  236 
„     Hi  309 
In  Mem.  xli  15 
Com.  of  Arthur  83 
Guinevere  57 
675 
Lover's  Tale  ii  56 
Demeter  and  P.  42 
Akbar's  Dream  72 
Walk,  to  the  Mail  73 
Princess  Hi  58 
„      vi  105 
Mawa!  /  xiv  38 
Guinevere  56 
F.  0/  Maeldune  74 
Fatima  3 
-¥a^  Qtteen,  Co».  35 
Enoch  Arden  617 


s  the  wild  ways  of  the  lawless  tribe. 

do  not  s  To  speak  the  wish  most  near  to  your 

tme  heart ; 
Would  s  to  break  those  bounds  of  courtesy 
did  not  s  to  smite  me  in  worse  way 
Nor  s  to  call  me  sister,  ' 

She  used  to  s  the  wailing  babe, 

Shunn'd     But  Enoch  s  the  middle  walk 

thence  That  which  he  better  might  have  s, 

nor  broke,  nor  s  a  soldier's  death, 

had  not  s  the  death.  No,  not  the  soldier's  : 

Shushan    brawl  at  S  underneath  the  palms  ' 


I  s  my  life  from  happier  chance 


Geraint  and  E.  608 

Lancelot  and  E.  913 

1220 

Guinevere  435 

676 

The  Ring  358 

Enoch  Arden  738 

740 

Princess,  Pro.  38 

V  178 

Hi  230 

Two  Voices  54 

(Enone  188 


Shut  (See  also  Half-shut) 
I  s  my  sight  for  fear  1 
And  he  that  s's  Love  out,  in  turn  shall  be 

o  out  from  Love,  rn il-m.  t>  i     t   j  ^-ia 

^  up  as  in  a  crumbling  tomb,  '  ^  fJf/  f  f%lt 

7^r^;^SS-£^d  „.„d„„  .a„u    "%H 


Shut 


637 


Side 


Day- Dm.,  Moral  7 

Amphion  87 

Aylmer's  Field  565 

Princess  vi  376 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  30 

In  Mem.  xxiii  1 

xxviii  8 

„         XXXV  20 

„  xliv  4 

,,  Ixx  6 

„  cviii  1 

Guinevere  '2Z1 

671 

Lover's  Tale  i  438 

521 

680 

Rizpah  46 

T/je  FrecA;  38 

Deserted  House  9 

Liicretius  223 

iY.  Farmer,  N.  S.  31 

Edward  Gray  13 

Princess  v  45 

Window,  Letter  2 

10 

Fm<  Quarrel  35 

Edwin  Morris  86 

Princess  i  176 

Lucretius  93 


Shut  (continued)     is  there  any  moral  s  Within  the 
bosom  of  the  rose  ? 
By  squares  of  tropic  summer  s 
gentle  creature  s  from  all  Her  charitable  use, 
To  one  deep  chamber  s  from  sound, 
an'  'e  'ant  got  s  on  'em  yet. 
Now,  sometimes  in  my  sorrow  s. 
Were  s  between  me  and  the  soimd : 
Or  been  in  narrowest  working  s, 
God  s  the  doorways  of  his  head. 
A  gulf  that  ever  s's  and  gapes, 
I  will  not  s  me  from  my  kind, 
'  O  little  maid,  s  in  by  nimnery  walls, 
s  me  round  with  narrowing  nunnery-walls, 
little  hour  was  bound  S  in  from  Time, 
S  in  the  secret  chambers  of  the  rock. 
I  was  s  up  with  Grief ; 
They  seized  me  and  s  me  up  : 
The  daisy  will  s  to  the  shadow, 

Shatter    Close  the  door,  the  s's  close, 

Shuttiiig    when  s  reasons  up  in  rhythm, 

Shuw  (Shove)     wi'  noan  to  lend  'im  a  s. 

Shy    (iSee  also  Half-shy)     '  S  she  was,  and  I  thought 
her  cold ; 
A  little  s  at  first,  but  by  and  by  We  twain. 
Fine  of  the  fine,  and  s  of  the  s  ? 
Ay  or  no,  from  s  of  the  s  ? 
but  he  look'd  at  me  sidelong  and  s, 

Shyness    It  is  my  s,  or  my  self-distrust, 

Sibilation    He  with  a  long  low  s,  stared 

Sicilian    as  the  great  S  called  Calliope 

Sick  (adj.)    {See  also  Half-sick)    thought, '  My  life  is  s 

of  single  sleep  :  The  Bridesmaid  13 

'  I  am  half  s  of  shadows,'  L.  of  Shalott  ii  35 

'  S  art  thou — a  divided  will  Still  heaping  Two  Voices  106 

King  is  s,  and  knows  not  what  he  does.  M.  d' Arthur  97 

s  of  home  went  overseas  for  change.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  24 

This  girl,  for  whom  your  heart  is  s,  Talking  Oak  71 

half  the  crew  are  s  or  dead,  The  Voyage  92 

bUnd  or  lame  or  s  or  sound,  „  93 

but  I  am  s  of  Time,  And  I  desire  to  rest.  Come  not,  when,  etc.  9 

(His  father  lying  s  and  needing  him)  Enoch  Arden  65 

As  lightly  as  a  s  man's  chamber-door,  „  776 

— it  makes  me  s  to  quote  him —  Sea  Dreams  159 

<S  for  the  hollies  and  the  yews  of  home —  Princess,  Pro.  187 

you  that  talk'd  The  trash  that  made  me  5,  ..  ii  394 

Were  you  s,  ourself  Would  tend  upon  you.  „  Hi  320 

The  land  is  s,  the  people  diseased.  The  Victim  45 

S  for  thy  stubborn  hardihood.  In  Mem.  ii  14 

heart  is  s.  And  all  the  wheels  of  Being  slow.  „  Z  3 

I  am  s  of  the  Hall  and  the  hiU,  I  am  s  of  the  moor  Maud  7  t  61 

S,  am  I  s  of  a  jealous  dread  ?  „  x  1 

S,  s  to  the  heart  of  life,  am  I.  „  36 

his  essences  tum'd  the  Uve  air  s,  ,,     xiii  11 

S  once,  with  a  fear  of  worse,  „     xix  73 

8  oi  a,  nameless  fear,  „   //  it  44 

Art  thou  sad  ?  or  s  ?  Balin  and  Balan  274 

/S  ?  or  for  any  matter  anger'd  at  me  ?  'I  „  276 

we  maidens  often  laugh  When  s  at  heart,  „  498 

Spake  (for  she  had  been  s)  to  Guinevere,  '  Are  you 

80  s,  my  Queen,  you  cannot  move  Lancelot  and  E.  78 

'  Stay  with  me,  I  am  s ;  „  87 

'  Love,  are  you  yet  so  s  ?  '  „  571 

sound  not  wonted  in  a  place  so  still  Woke  the 

s  knight,  „  819 

Milder  than  any  mother  to  a  5  child,  „  858 

And  the  s  man  forgot  her  simple  blush,  „  864 

that  other  world  Another  world  for  the  s  man  ;  „  874 

for  what  force  is  yours  to  go  So  far,  being  s  ?  „  1064 

all  too  faint  and  s  am  I  For  anger :  „  1086 

King  is  s,  and  knows  not  what  he  does.  Pass,  of  Arthur  265 

Floats  from  his  s  and  flbned  eyes,  Swpf.  Confessions  166 

As  a  s  man's  room  when  he  taketh  repose  A  spirit  haunts  14 

steady  glare  Shrank  one  s  willow  sere  and 

small.  Mariana  in  the  S.  53 


Sick  (adj.)  {continued)     And  here  once  more  like  some  s 

man  declined,  Palace  of  Art  155 

But  she,  with  s  and  scornful  looks  averse,  D.  of  F.  Women  101 

Teach  that  s  heart  the  stronger  choice.  On  a  Mourner  18 

How  often  placed  upon  the  s  man's  brow  Aylmer's  Field  700 

Euns  in  a  river  of  blood  to  the  s  sea.  „             768 

The  s  weak  beast  seeking  to  help  herself  Merlin  and  V.  498 
Eound  whose  s  head  all  night,  like  birds  of  prey.   Last  Tournament  138 

and  distribute  dole  To  poor  s  people,  Guinevere  684 

A  body  journeying  onward,  s  with  toil.  Lover's  Tale  i  124 

lisp'd  To  kisses  of  the  wind,  that,  s  with  love,  „              545 

They  will  but  sicken  the  s  plant  the  more.  „               766 

He  falling  s,  and  seeming  close  on  death,  „          iv  258 

And  the  half  my  men  are  s.  The  Revenge  6 

But  I've  ninety  men  and  more  that  are  lying  s  ashore.             ,.          10 

But  Sir  Richard  bore  in  hand  all  his  s  men  ,,           15 

s  men  down  in  the  hold  were  most  of  them  stark  and  cold,       „  79 

Some  birds  are  s  and  suUen  when  they  moult.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  73 

and  s  For  shadow — not  one  bush  Tiresias  35 

in  amaze  To  find  her  s  one  whole  ;  Demeter  and  P.  58 

Doant  maake  thysen  s  wi'  the  caake.  Owd  Bod  34 

Is  he  s  your  mate  like  mine  ?  Happy  2 

Sick  (s)     Low  voices  with  the  ministering  hand  Hung 

round  the  s  :  Princess  vii  22 

And  found  fair  peace  once  more  among  the  s.  ,,            44 

cheating  the  s  of  a  few  last  gasps,  Mavd  I  i  43 
With  her  hundred  fighters  on  deck,  and  her  ninety  s 

below  ;  The  Revenge  34 

S  from  the  hospital  echo  them,  Def.  of  Lv^know  100 

Sicken    Here  at  least,  where  nature  s's,  Locksley  Hall  153 

I  hate,  abhor,  spit,  s  at  him  ;  Lucretius  199 

Or  s  with  ill-usage,  Princess  v  86 

'  A  time  to  s  and  to  swoon,  In  Mem.  xxi  17 

loss  So  pains  him  that  he  s's  nigh  to  death ;  Geraint  and  E.  499 

They  will  but  s  the  sick  plant  the  more.  Lover's  Tale  i  766 

will  you  s  for  her  sake  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  17 

that  s  at  your  lawless  din,  „            149 

tho'  thy  violet  s  into  sere,  Prog,  of  Spring  25 

all  but  s  at  the  shifting  scenes.  The  Play  2 

Sicken'd     Which  s  every  living  bloom.  In  Mem.  Ixxii  7 

successful  war  On  all  the  youth,  they  s  ;  Merlin  and  V.  572 

by  and  by  she  s  of  the  farce,  The  Ring  383 

Sickening    {See  also  Half-sickening)    But  s  of  a 

vague  disease,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  62 

once  again  the  s  game  ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  127 

Sickle     ere  the  silver  s  of  that  month  •     Princess  i  101 

Sicklier    sickly-born  and  grew  Yet  s,  Enoch  Arden  262 
Like  echoes  from  beyond  a  hollow,  came  Her  s 

iteration.  Aylmer's  Field  299 

Sickly     And  far  away  into  the  s  light,  The  Kraken  7 
Cursed  be  the  s  forms  that  err  from  honest  Nature's 

rule  !  Locksley  Hall  61 

Bore  him  another  son,  a  s  one  :  Enoch  Arden  109 

Nursing  the  s  babe,  her  latest-bom.  „          150 

But  for  the  third,  the  s  one,  who  slept  „          230 
bearing  hardly  more  Than  his  own  shadow  in  a  s  sun.     Aylmer's  Field  30 

Sickly-bom     Now  the  third  child  was  s-h  Enoch  Arden  261 

Sickness    {See  also  Mid-sickness)     '  Some  turn  this  s  yet 

might  take.  Two  Voices  55 

a  languor  came  Upon  him,  gentle  s,  Enoch  Arden  824 

and  read  My  s  down  to  happy  dreams  ?  Princess  ii  253 

and  due  To  languid  limbs  and  s  ;  „    vi  377 

serviceable  To  noble  knights  in  s,  Lancelot  and  E.  768 

as  but  born  of  s,  could  not  Uve :  „              880 

she  knew  right  well  What  the  rough  s  meant,  „              888 

Side      {See   also    Cliff-side,    Fountain-side,    Hill-side, 
Island-sides,  Mountain-side,  Water-side)    faintest 

sunlights  flee  About  his  shadowy  s's  :  The  Kraken  5 

Madonna-wise  on  either  s  her  head  ;  Isabel  6 

Six  columns,  three  on  either  s,  Arabian  Nights  144 

and  Thought  have  gone  away  S  by  s.  Deserted  House  2 

Wander  from  the  s  of  the  mom,  Adeline  52 

the  couple  standing  s  by  s,                      •  The  Bridesmaid  5 

On  either  s  the  river  he  Long  fields  L.  of  Shalott  i  1 

The  mirror  crack'd  from  s  to  s ;  „         Hi  43 


Side 

Side  (continued)     Such  seem'd  the  whisper  at  my  s:  Two  Voices  439 

^^^Pi"^y  '''  ^*  """f  ^°"^  ^'®"-  ^'wwe  93 

And  Effie  on  the  other  s.  May  Queen,  Con.  24 

and  thrust  The  dagger  thro'  her  s.'  D.  of  F.  Women  260 

I  hved  up  there  on  yonder  mountain  s.  St.  S.  Stylites  72 
On  one  s  lay  the  Ocean,  and  on  one  Lay  a  great 

water,  ^    d' Arthur  11 

That  only  by  thy  s  Will  I  to  Olive  plight  Talking  Oak  282 

clamber  d  half  way  up  The  counter  s  ;  Golden  Year  7 

Had  cast  upon  its  crusty  s  jj^m  Water  103 

S  by  s  beneath  the  water  Crew  and  Captain  lie ;  The  Captain  67 

Fading  slowly  from  his  s:  l.  of  Burleigh  86 

Phihp  sitting  at  her  s  forgot  Her  presence,  Enoch  Arden  384 

On  either  s  the  hearth,  indignant ;  Aylmer's  Field  288 

To  glance  and  shift  about  her  slippery  s's,  Lucretius  189 

The  very  s  s  of  the  grave  itself  shall  pass,  .,        257 

With  that  he  drove  the  knife  into  his  s :  275 

lovelier  than  their  names,  Grew  s  hy  s  ;  Princess]  Pro.  13 

Whichever  s  be  Victor,  ^^            ^^  231 

To  rail  at  Lady  Psyche  and  her  5.  "             m  33 

That  when  our  s  was  vanquish'd  and  my  cause  "              m  24 

and  fain  had  slept  at  his  s.  Chandmother  74 

phould  still  be  near  us  at  our  s?  /^  Mem.  li  2 

'  Thou  canst  not  move  me  from  thy  s,  ,^         'i{i  7 

A  great  ship  left  her  shining  s's.  "      cm  40 

Up  the  s  I  went.  And  fell  in  silence  "            43 

moving  s  hy  s  With  wisdom,  "     ^xiv  19 

grave  That  has  to-day  its  sunny  5.  "    Qon  72 

And  here  on  the  landward  s,  Maud  I  iv  10 

ror  a  raven  ever  croaks,  at  my  s,                             •  .^          j,j  57 

There  were  two  at  her  s,  ]|            i^  q 

Was  not  one  of  the  two  at  her  s  ','             ^  2 

For  one  of  the  two  that  rode  at  her  s  "              24 

To  the  sweeter  blood  by  the  other  s  ;  '.'       xiii  34 

of  the  seventh  Heaven,  down  to  my  s,  ,,        xiv  21 

Would  he  have  that  hole  in  liis  s  ?  ,       II  v%2 

Up  to  my  throne,  and  s  by  s  with  me  ?  Com.  of  Arthur  81 

At  once  from  either  s,  with  trumpet-blast,  „             102 
Not  ever  to  be  question'd  any  more  Save  on  the 

further  s ;  307 

Wept  from  her  s's  as  water  flowing  away  ;  Gareih'and  L.  217 

midway  down  the  s  of  that  long  hall  A  stately  pile, —  .,             404 

Setting  this  knave,  Lord  Baron,  at  my  s.  „             854 

on  the  further  s  Arose  a  silk  pavilion,  ']            909 

lead  no  longer  ;  ride  thou  at  my  5  ;  ^           II57 

'Not  at  my  5.     I  charge  thee  ride  before,  GerairU  and  E.  14 

Bow  d  at  her  5  and  utter'd  whisperingly :  „          305 
so  turning  s  by  s  They  past,                                        Balin  and  "Salan  279 

one  s  had  sea  And  ship  and  sail  and  angels  „              364 

barkening  from  what  s  The  blindfold  rummage  ",              415 
Like  its  own  mists  to  all  the  mountain  s  :                    Lancelot  and  E.  38 

and  the  head  Pierced  thro'  his  s,  „            490 

He  up  the  s,  sweating  with  agony,  \]            494 

parted  from  the  jousts  Hurt  in  the  s,'  ,','             623 

Thro'  her  own  s  she  felt  the  sharp  lance  go  ;  ",            624 

All  in  an  oriel  on  the  summer  s,  ,"          1177 

thou  hast  been  in  battle  by  my  s,  "           1353 

after  heaven,  on  our  dull  s  of  death,  [[           1382 

Your  places  being  vacant  at  my  s,  Holy  Grail  317 

fail  d  from  my  s,  nor  come  Cover'd,  „          470 

Stood  near  it  but  a  lion  on  each  s  [          817 

Near  him  a  mound  of  even-sloping  s,  Pelleas  "and  E.  25 

from  her  s  Restrain'd  him  with  all  manner  of  device,  ..          203 

and  he  call'd,  '  I  strike  upon  thy  s —  „          279 
on  the  hither  s  of  that  loud  morn                               Last  Tournament  56 

push  me  even  In  fancy  from  thy  s,  „             639 

Never  lie  by  thy  s  ;  see  thee  no  more—  Guinevere  579 
On  one  s  lay  the  Ocean,  and  on  one  Lay  a  great 

wat«r.  Pass,  of  Arthur  179 

dunplings  of  the  wave.  That  blanch'd  upon  its  s.         Lover's  Tale  i  45 

and  shot  forth  Boughs  on  each  s,  230 

On  the  other  s,  the  moon.  Half-melted  '^          420 

Ix)ve  wraps  his  wings  on  either  5  the  heart,  ..          467 

On  the  other  s  Is  scoop'd  a  cavern  516 

they  are  mine— not  theirs— they  had  moved  in  my  s.  'uizpah  54 


638 


Sighed 


de  (continued)     was  womided  again  in  the  s  and  the 

SpanS  fleet  with  broken  s's  ^^  ^''"^^  f. 

masts  and  the  rigging  were  lying  over  the  s\  81 

sewer  an'  sartan  'oiip  o'  the  tother  s  ;  VUlanp  WHo  q9 

as  ocean  on  every  5  Plunges  Bef  oflucLow  ^l 

aU  took  s  s  with  the  Towers,  y.  of  Maeldune  11 1 

swept  in  a  cataract  off  from  her  s's,  ^  TheTZlQn 

They  lower'd  me  down  the  s,  ,  9? 

you  bawl'd  the  dark  s  of  your  faith  /),.™«; .  -'^q 

and  we  lean'd  to  the  darker  s—  i^cspau  6^ 

Cleave  over  to  the  sunnier  s  of  doubt,  Ancieni  Sage  68 

When  he  will  tear  me  from  your  s,  Th,.  Vlinht  tq 

Wild  flowers  blowing  s  by  /  ^  '*^''^  f. 

shriek'd,  and  started  from  my  s—  Locksley  H. ,  Sixt,,  264 

Lies  upon  tins  s,  hes  upon  that  s,  I'n.tll,.  Tk 

die  with  him  s  by  5  ?  Ha        H 

my  fa.ithful  counsellor,  Sit  by  my  s.  Akhars  Dream  19 

tho'  sitting  close  at  his  s.  ChnZZ  W 

Sided    AVe  Many-sided  C/«,r%  22 

Sidelong     And  *■  glances  at  my  father's  grief,  Prmcess  vii  107 
saw  with  a  .s  eye  The  shadow  of  some  piece  of 

pointed  lace,  Lancelot  a>,d  E.  1113 

but  he  look  d  at  me  s  and  shy,  pi,,t  f^^,,,,^  35 

But  often  in  the  s  eyes  a  gleam  of  aU  things  ill—  The  Fliaht  31 

Side-path     By  one  s-p,  from  simple  truth  ;  To  Mara,  of  Dufferin  28 

admg    W  heedling  and  s  with  them  !  /.„•„,,,,  ^  15^ 

Sidled     1  s  awaay  an'  awaay  Svinstef'<!  <*?'<  28 

Siege    in  the  ghastly  s  of  Lucknow—  DefofLncknowl 

Merlin  call'd  it '  The  ^  perilous,'  Vo%otuil2 

§L'^A'^,°\^^*!l'i^l/V^^r*'     u       u  Com.  of  Arthur  311 

Sifted     (And  heedfuUy  I  s  all  my  thought)  St.  'S.  Stylites  56 

L  very  heart,  ^vhens  well,  p,-,,-^„  ^/g^^  ^^^ 

rhro  her  this  matter  might  be  s  clean.'  Princess  i  80 

thou  hast  seen  me  strain'd  And  s  to  the  utmost,        Pelleas  and  E.  248 

Mgn  (s)     (See  also  Love-sighs)     wasting  odorous  s's  All 

night  long  ideline  43 

Kate  will  not  hear  of  lovers'  s's.  K^e  ^ 

With  her  laughter  or  her  s's.  Miller's  D  184 

!nVw?T*''f\7*''''*     ,     ,.  D.  of  F.  Women  109 

m  s  s  Which  perfect  Joy  perplex'd  Gardener's  D.  254 

A  welcome  mix'd  with  s's.  Talki^ig  Oak  212 

shaken  with  a  sudden  storm  of  s's~  Lo.Mey  Hall  27 

With  half  a  s  she  tum'd  the  key,  The  Letters  18 

from  my  breast  the  involuntary  s  Brake,  Princess  Hi  191 

Ihe  bosom  with  long  s's  labour'd  ;  ~j,-  225 

Love  would  answer  with  a  s,  /^  Mem.  zxxv  13 

JNorfeed  with  s's  a  passing  wind:  cviii  i 

And  in  my  thoughts  with  scarce  as  "          cj-ix  11 

young  lord-lover,  what  s's  are  those,  Maud  I  xxii  29 

Half  the  night  I  waste  in  s's,  //  i^  23 

songs,  S's,   and  slow  smiles,  and  golden  " 

cvi,  /  '^^°'1"''"'=^           ,        ,  .  Lancelot  a,id  E.  649 

^  .S^  <  1  ^'°''  "'*y  ^'fu'  1"P  ««b  and  s  A  spirit  haunts  5 

'" T^.  hn    ** i'"'"'''  ,^f  ^\l  ^l"d,d'd  s  ■  Dying  Swan  15 

To  breatlie  and  loathe  to  hve  and  s.  Two  Voices  104 

But  here  wi  1  s  thine  alder  tree,  a  Fareoell  9 

bhe  s  s  anud  her  narrow  days,  /^  .j/g™   7»  in 

and  s  The  full  new  life  that  feeds  thy  breath  '     ixxxvi  9 

That  whenever  a  iMarch-wind  s's  Mavld  I  xxii  40 
s  s  to  see  the  peak  Sun-flush'd,                                   Balin  and  Balan  165 

would  o  ten  when  they  met  S  fully.  Merlin  a-,id  V.  182 

to  s,  and  to  stretch  and  yawn,  y.  of  Maeldune  91 

s  s  after  many  a  vanish'd  face,  Vastness  1 

^i^^A       r''\  u'°'^f  ""^^^  ^  ™°"™  ^"^  *—  To  Mary  Boyle  57 
Slghd     when  I  heard  my  name  S  forth  with  life             D.  of  F.  Wovmi  154 
bo  s  the  King,  Muttering  and  murmuring  at  his 

^\-T'\    ,^        1  -^  ^^-  d' Arthur  178 

te    ^^^  '^f  "^  '*k'  Vision  of  Sin  18 

Cold  ev  n  to  her,  she  s  ;  p^^^eis  vi  102 

1  s .  a  touch  Came  round  my  wrist,  ^i  137 

Long  have  I  s  for  a  calm :  j)„  j,^  /  •;  j 

thought,  is  it  pride,  and  mused  and  s  i^a  12 


Sigh'd 


639 


Silence 


Sigh'd  (continued)     They  s  for  the  dawn  and  thee.  Maud  I  xxii  52 

A-  and  smiled  the  hoary-headed  Earl,  Marr.  of  Geraint  307 

came  upon  him,  and  he  s  ;  Geraint  and  E.  249 

jS,  as  a  boy  lame-bom  beneath  a  height,  Balin  and  Balan  164 

s  '  Was  I  not  better  there  with  him  ?  '  „              291 

anon  S  all  as  suddenly.  „              494 

.\gain  she  a-  *  Pardon,  sweet  lord !  „              496 

*•  in  passing,  '  Lancelot,  Forgive  me  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  1350 

and  knew  not  that  she  s.  Last  Tournament  130 

S,  and  began  to  gather  heart  again,  Guinevere  368 

s  to  find  Her  journey  done,  glanced  at  liim,  „         404 
So  s  the  King,  Muttering  and  murmuring  at  his 

ear.  Pass,  of  Arthur  346 

1  s,  as  the  low  dark  hull  dipt  The  Wreck  127 

but  I  wept  alone,  and  s  Happy  69 

Sigheth     But  the  solemn  oak-tree  s,  Clarihel  4 

Sighing    the  winter  winds  are  wearily  s:  D.  of  the  O.  Year  2 

all  her  force  Fail'd  her;  ands,  '  Let  me  rest '  she 

said  :  Enoch  Arden  375 

by  them  went  The  enamour'd  air  s.  Princess  vi  79 

S  she  spoke  '  I  fear  They  will  not.'  „     vii  297 

again  s  she  spoke  :  '  A  dream  That  once  was  mine  !  „           309 

O,  art  thou  s  for  Lebanon  Maud  I  xviii  15 

S  for  Lebanon,  Dark  cedar,  „                   17 

Shaking  her  head  at  her  son  and  s  „           xix  24 

tum'd  S,  and  feign'd  a  sleep  imtil  he  slept.  Lancelot  and  E.  842 


S  weariedly,  as  one  Who  sits  and  gazes 


Last  Tournament  156 


Sight    (See  also  Second-sight)     talking  to  himself,  first 
met  his  s : 
While  blissful  tears  blinded  my  s 
Even  in  her  .?  he  loved  so  well  ? 
I  cannot  veil,  or  droop  my  5, 
To  weave  the  mirror's  magic  s's, 
Rain'd  thro'  my  s  its  overflow. 
Shudderest  when  I  strain  my  5, 
Bursts  into  blossom  in  his  s. 
I  shut  my  s  for  fear  : 
where'er  she  tum'd  her  s  The  airy  hand  coofusion 

wrought, 
polish'd  argent  of  her  breast  to  s 
tell  o'er  Each  little  sound  and  s. 
a  s  to  make  an  old  man  young. 
Love  at  first  s,  first-bom. 
But  not  a  creature  was  in  s  : 
trembling,  pass'd  in  music  out  of  s. 
And  wasn't  it  a  s  to  see. 
How  fresh  was  every  s  and  sound 
while  I  breathed  in  s  of  haven, 
out  of  s,  and  sink  Past  earthquake — 
in  s  of  Collatine  And  all  his  peers, 
strange  was  the  s  to  me  ; 
Strange  was  the  s  and  smacking  of  the  time ; 
'  Pretty  were  the  s  If  our  old  halls  could  change 
a  «  to  shake  The  midriff  of  despair  with  laughter, 
Pitiful  s,  wrapp'd  in  a  soldier's  cloak. 
And  our  seeing  is  not  s. 
like  to  him  whose  .<  is  lost ; 
Forgot  his  weakness  in  thy  s. 
by  this  my  love  has  closed  her  s 
So  the  last  s  that  Enid  had  of  home 
and  stood  Stiff  as  a  viper  frozen  ;  loathsome  s. 
As  je  love  to  look  on.' 
and  the  sorrow  dimm'd  her  s, 
these  have  seen  according  to  their  s. 
that  if  the  King  Had  seen  the  s 
the  s  Of  her  rich  beauty  made  him  at  one  glance 
goal  of  this  great  world  Lies  beyond  s  : 
s  that  throbs  and  aches  beneath  my  touch, 
Was  my  s  drunk  that  it  did  shape  to  me 
vamsh'd  from  my  «  Beneath  the  bower 
and  the  s  run  over  Upon  his  steelj'  gyves  ; 
the  s  of  this  So  frighted  our  good  friend, 
till  the  Spaniard  carne  in  s, 
Love  at  first  s  May  seem — 
How  could  I  bear  with  the  s's 


Love  and  Death  6 

Oriana  23 

Margaret  40 

Eleanore  87 

L.  of  Shalott  a  29 

Two  Voices  45 

Fatima  3 

„    35 

(Enone  188 

Palace  of  Art  225 

D.  of  F.  Women  158 

277 

Gardener's  D.  141 

189 

Talking  Oak  167 

Locksley  Hall  34 

Amphion  49 

The  Voyage  5 

The  Brook  157 

Lucretius  152 

238 

Princess.  Pro.  54 

89 

139 

i  200 

1)56 

Voice  and  the  P.  36 

In  Mem.  Ixvi  8 

„  ex  4l 

Maud  I  xviii  67 

Geraint  and  E.  24 

Merlin  and  V.  845 

Lancelot  and  E.  83 


Holy  Grail  875 

904 

Pelleasand  £.237 

To  the  Queen  ii  60 

Lover's  Tale  i  33 

642 

m42 

156 

iv  382 

The  Revenge  23 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  91 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  25 


Sight  (continued)     hope  Sank  all  but  out  of  s,  Columbus  157 

flourish'd  up  beyond  s,  V.  of  Maeldune  15 

Ruddy  thro'  both  the  roofs  of  s,  Tiresias  3 

Son,  in  the  hidden  world  of  s,  „       51 

but  pass  From  s  and  night  to  lose  themselves  Ancient  Sage  203 

boath  on  us  kep  out  o'  s  o'  the  winders  Spinster's  S's.  35 

our  own  good  redcoats  sank  from  s.  Heavy  Brigade  42 

She  clear'd  her  s,  she  arose.  Dead  Prophet  31 

Young  again  you  grow  Out  of  s.  The  Ring  12 

I  am  not  keen  of  s,  .,         258 

Nor  ever  let  you  gambol  in  her  s,  „        387 

pass  on  !  the  s  confuses —  Parnassus  15 

What  s  so  lured  him  thro'  the  fields  Far — far — away  1 

Kalph  would  fight  in  Edith's  s.  The  Tourney  1 

Sighted     {See  also  Far-sighted)     we  have  s  fifty-three  !  '  The  Revenge  3 

Sightless     O,  therefore  from  thy  s  range  In  Mem.  xciiiQ 

in  yonder  living  blue  The  lark  becomes  a  s  song.  „            cxv  8 

Sign  (s)     I  should  require  A  s  !  Supp.  Confessions  10 

Scarce  outward  s's  of  joy  arise,  „              49 
And  heaven's  mazed  s's  stood  still                           Clear-headed  friend  28 

Know  I  not  Death  ?  the  outward  s's  ?  Two  Voices  270 

and  I  will  tell  the  s.  May  Queen,  Con.  24 

I  thought,  I  take  it  for  a  s.  „                      38 

By  s's  or  groans  or  tears  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  284 

For  surer  s  had  follow'd,  either  hand,  M.  d' Arthur  76 

A  s  betwixt  the  meadow  and  the  cloud,  St.  S.  Stylites  14 

A  s  to  many  a  staring  shire  Will  Water.  139 

'  If  my  heart  by  s's  can  tell,  L.  of  Burleigh  2 

Pray'd  for  a  s  '  my  Enoch  is  he  gone  ?  '  Enoch  Arden  491 

Suddenly  set  it  wide  to  find  a  s,  „          496 

and  making  s's  They  knew  not  what :  „           640 

And  swang  besides  on  many  a  windy  s —  Aylmer's  Field  19 

There  Stood  a  bust  of  PaUas  for  a  s,  Princess  i  222 

And  cannot  speak,  nor  move,  nor  make  one  s,  „    vii  153 

Till  the  Sun  drop,  dead,  from  the  s's.'  ..          245 

I  waste  my  heart  in  s's :  let  be.  „          359 

Are  they  not  s  and  symbol  High,  Pantheism  6 
shield  was  blank  and  bare  without  a  s  Saving  the 

name  beneath ;  Gareth  and  L.  414 

With  no  more  s  of  reverence  than  a  beard.  Merlin  and  V.  279 

Thy  holy  nun  and  thou  have  seen  a  s —  Holy  Grail  295 

A  s  to  maim  this  Order  which  I  made.  ,.          297 

An  out-door  s  of  all  the  warmth  within,  „          704 

if  indeed  there  came  a  s  from  heaven,  „          873 

on  all  hills,  and  in  the  s's  of  heaven.'  Last  Tournament  337 

With  s's  and  miracles  and  wonders,  Guinevere  222 

Or  what  of  s's  and  wonders,  but  the  s's  „        229 

the  land  was  full  of  s's  And  wonders  „        232 

Not  even  thy  wise  father  with  his  s's  „        274 

For  surer  s  had  follow'd,  either  hand.  Pass,  of  Arthur  244 

Or  wisely  or  unwisely,  s's  of  storm.  To  the  Queen  ii  49 

Then  Julian  made  a  secret  s  to  me  Lover's  Tale  iv  284 

Then  waving  us  a  s  to  seat  ourselves,  „            320 

this  fleshly  s  That  thou  art  thou—  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  40 

And  yet  what  s  of  aught  that  lies  Ancient  Sage  25 
that  take  Some  warrior  for  a  s                              Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  14 
Sign  (verb)     Now  s  your  names,  which  shall  be  read,         /w  Mem.,  Con.  57 

Signal     An  idle  s,  for  the  brittle  fleet  Sea  Dreams  133 

Sign'd     The  names  are  s,  and  overhead  In  Mem.,  Con.  60 

s  To  those  two  sons  to  pass,  and  let  them  be.  Com.  of  Arthur  318 

Ferdinand  Hath  .s-  it  and  our  Holy  Catholic  queen —  Columbus  30 

Signet  (adj.)     Airing  a  snowy  hand  and  s  gem,  Princess  i  121 

Signet  (s)     He  set  his  royal  s  there ;  In  Mem.  cxxv  12 

Sign-post     storm-wom  s-p  not  to  be  read,  Dead  Prophet  17 

Silence  (s)     All  night  the  s  seems  to  flow  Oriana  86 

And  crystal  s  creepmg  down.  Two  Voices  86 

One  deep,  deep  s  all ! '  Palace  of  Art  260 
and  ripen  toward  the  grave  In  s ;                          ■  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  52 

Her  slow  full  words  sank  thro'  the  s  drear,  D.  of  F.  Women  121 

That  only  s  suiteth  best.  To  J.  S.  64 

Thro'  s  and  the  trembling  stars  On  a  Mourner  28 

And  waked  with  s,  grunted  '  Good  ! '  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  4 

There  was  s  in  the  room ;  Dora  157 

every  hour  is  saved  From  that  eternal  s,  Ulysses  27 

ever  thus  thou  growest  beautiful  In  s,  Tithonus  44 


Silence 


640 


Silent 


Silence  (s)  (continued)     To  s  from  the  paths  of  men ;     Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  6 

But  Philip  loved  in  s ;  Enoch  Arden  41 

let  my  query  pass  Unclaim'd,  in  flushing  s,  The  Brook  105 

Vocal,  with  here  and  there  a  s,  Aylmer's  Field  146 

face  to  face  With  twenty  months  of  s,  „            567 

a  louder  one  Was  all  but  s —  „             697 

he  felt  the  s  of  his  house  About  him,  „            830 

escaped  His  keepers,  and  the  s  which  he  felt,  „             839 

And  silenced  by  that  s  lay  the  wife.  Sea  Dreams  46 

him  we  gave  a  costly  bribe  To  guerdon  s,  Princess  i  204 

We  dare  not  ev'n  by  s  sanction  lies.  Third  of  Feb.  10 

We  feel,  at  least,  that  s  here  were  sin,  „            37 

S,  till  I  be  silent  too.  In  Mem.  xiii  8 

And  makes  a  s  in  the  hills.  „          xix  8 

And  s  foUow'd,  and  we  wept.  „       xxx  20 

So  here  shall  s  guard  thy  fame ;  „      Ixxv  17 

They  haimt  the  s  of  the  breast,  „        xciv  9 

And  strangely  on  the  s  broke  „        xcv  25 

And  fell  in  s  on  his  neck :  „        eiii  44 

And,  tho'  in  s,  wishing  joy.  „     Con.  88^ 

Till  a  s  fell  with  the  waking  bird,  Maud  I  xxii  17 

I  wish  Your  warning  or  your  s  ?  Geraint  and  E.  77 

Debating  his  command  of  s  given,  ..            366 

Then  breaking  his  command  of  s  given,  ,.            390 

In  s,  did  him  service  as  a  squire ;  ,,            406 

blind  wave  feeling  round  his  long  sea-hall  In  s :         Merlin  and  V.  233 

let  me  think  S  is  wisdom :  ,,              253 

such  a  s  is  more  wise  than  kind.'  ..              289 

grew  darker  toward  the  storm  In  s,  ,,              891 

Dark -splendid,  speaking  in  the  s,  Lancelot  and  E.  338 

standing  near  the  shield  In  s,  „              395 

Now  bolden'd  by  the  s  of  his  King, —  Holy  Grail  857 

Then  a  long  s  came  upon  the  haU,  Pelleas  and  E.  609 

little  maid,  who  brook'd  No  s,  brake  it,  Guinevere  160 

I  cry  my  cry  in  s,  „         201 

howsoever  much  they  may  desire  S,  ,,        207 

then  came  s,  then  a  voice,  „        419 

after  wail  Of  suffering,  s  follows.  Pass,  of  Arthur  119 

They  stood  before  his  throne  in  s,  „              455 

till  helpless  death  And  s  made  him  bold —  Lover's  Tale  iv  73_ 

Evelyn  clung  In  utter  s  for  so  long.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  217 

Found  s  in  the  hollows  underneath.  Tiresias  38 

only  heard  in  s  from  the  s  of  a  tomb.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  74 

Death  and  S  hold  their  own.  „              237 

Swallow'd  in  Vastness,  lost  in  S,  Vastness  34 

And  found  a  corpse  and  5,  The  Ring  217 

That  icy  winter  s — how  it  froze  you  Happy  71 

In  s  wept  upon  the  flowerless  earth.  Death  of  CEnone  9 

A  s  foUow'd  as  of  death,  St.  Telemachus  65 

then  once  more  a  s  as  of  death.  „            69 

Silence  (verb)    ever  widening  slowly  s  all.  Merlin  and  V.  392 

Them  surely  can  I  s  with  all  ease.  Lancelot  and  E.  109 

Silenced     s  by  that  silence  lay  the  wife.  Sea  Dreams  46 

S  for  ever — craven — a  man  of  plots,  Gareth  and  L.  431. 

Silent    {See  also  All-silent,  Ever-silent)     Losing  his  Are  and 

active  might  In  a  s  meditation,  Elednore  105 

There  in  a  «  shade  of  laurel  brown  Alexander  9 

And  the  s  isle  imbowers  The  Lady  of  Shalott.  L.  of  Shalott  i  17 

For  often  thro'  the  s  nights^A  funeral,  „          ii  30 

iS  into  Camelot.  „          iw  41_ 

And  s  in  its  dusty  vines :  Mariana  in  the  S.  4. 

And  deepening  thro'  the  s  spheres  „                91 

Thereto  the  s  voice  replied ;  Two  Voices  22 
'  Still  sees  the  sacred  morning  spread  The  s  summit 

overhead.  „          81 

The  phantom  of  a  s  song.  Miller's  D.  71 

And  rose,  and,  with  a  s  grace  Approaching,  „        159 

The  grasshopper  is  s  in  the  grass :  CEnone  26 

0  s  faces  of  the  Great  and  Wise  Palace  ofArt  195 
Three  s  pinnacles  of  aged  snow,  Lotos-Eaters  16 
Drops  in  a  s  autumn  night.  „  C.  S.  34 
Lower'd  softly  with  a  threefold  cord  of  love  Down 

to  a  s  grave.  D.  of  F.  Women  212 

1  rose  up  in  the  s  night :  The  Sisters  25 
a  s  cousm  stole  Upon  us  and  departed :  Edwin  Morris  115 


Silent  (continued)     I,  whose  bald  brows  in  5  hours  become 

Unnaturally  hoar  with  rime,  St.  S-  Stylites  165 

Roll'd  in  one  another's  arms,  and  s  in  a  last  embrace.  Locksley  Hall  58 
He  gazes  on  the  s  dead :  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  13 

I  pledge  her  s  at  the  board ;  WUl  Water.  25 

And  watch'd  by  s  gentlemen,  „        231 

'  Dark  porch,'  I  said,  '  and  s  aisle.  The  Letters  47 

A  deedful  life,  a  s  voice :  You  might  have  won  8 

And  lived  a  life  of  s  melancholy.  Enoch  Arden  260 

Her  own  son  Was  s,  tho'  he  often  look'd  his  wish ;  „  482 

Till  s  in  her  oriental  haven.  „  537 

The  s  water  slipping  from  the  hiUs,  „  633 

There  Enoch  rested  s  many  days.  „  699 

and  ever  bears  about  A  s  court  of  justice  in  his  breast.  Sea  Dreams  174 
Too  often,  in  that  s  court  of  yours —  „  183 

Why  were  you  s  when  I  spoke  to-night  ?  „  268 

question'd  if  she  knew  us  men,  at  first  Was  s ;  Princess  iv  232 

s  we  with  blind  surmise  Regarding,  „  381 

glaring  with  his  whelpless  eye,  S;  „        vi  100 

stood  Erect  and  s,  striking  with  her  glance  „  152 

all  s,  save  When  armour  clash'd  or  jingled,  „  362 

Lay  s  in  the  muffled  cage  of  life :  „        m  47 

s  light  Slept  on  the  painted  walls,  „  120 

Now  slides  the  5  meteor  on,  and  leaves  „  184 

Or  in  their  s  influence  as  they  sat,  „     Con.  15 

Thro'  all  the  s  spaces  of  the  worlds,  „  114 

His  voice  is  «  in  your  council-hall  Ode  on  Well.  174 

and  whatever  tempests  lour  For  ever  s ;  even  if  they 

broke  In  thunder,  s ;  „  176 

0  s  father  of  our  Kings  to  be  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  7 
.    Where  oleanders  flush'd  the  bed  Of  s  torrents.  The  Daisy  34 

1  stood  among  the  s  statues,  „  63 
And  look'd  at  by  the  s  stars :  Lit.  Squabbles  4 
But  thou  wert  s  in  heaven.  Voice  and  the  P.  7 
So  the  s  colony  hearing  her  tumultuous  adversaries  Boadicea  78 
Silence,  till  I  be  s  too.  In  Mem.  xiii  8 
Sat  s,  looking  each  at  each.  „  xxx  12 
Her  eyes  are  homes  of  s  prayer,  „  xxxii  1 
And  s  traces  of  the  past  Be  aU  the  colour  of  the  flower :  „  xliii  7 
The  s  snow  possess 'd  the  earth,  „  Ixxviii  3 
And  s  under  other  snows :  „  ev  6 
The  red-ribb'd  ledges  drip  with  a  s  horror  of  blood,  Maud  I  i3 
Love  for  the  s  thing  that  had  made  false  haste  to  the 

grave —  „  58 

The  s  sapphire-spangled  marriage  ring  of  the  land  ?  ,,        iv  6 

When  I  was  wont  to  meet  her  In  the  s  woody  places  „    II  iv  6 

But  is  ever  the  one  thing  s  here,  „        v  68 

That  like  a  s  Ughtning  under  the  stars  „  ///  vi  9 

he  is  gone :  We  know  him  now :  all  narrow  jealousies 

Are  s ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  17 

on  thro'  s  faces  rode  Down  the  slope  city,  Gareth  and  L.  734 

And  Gareth  s  gazed  upon  the  knight,  „  933 

S  the  s  field  They  traversed.  „  1313 

And  all  the  three  were  s  seeing,  „  1362 

Worn  by  the  feet  that  now  were  s,  Marr.  of  Geraint  321 

Her  mother  s  too,  nor  helping  her,  „  768 

I  am  s  then.  And  ask  no  kiss ; '  Merlin  and  V.  253 

We  could  not  keep  him  s,  „  416 

For  s,  tho'  he  greeted  her,  she  stood  Rapt  on  his 

face  Lancelot  and  E.  355 

from  his  face  who  read  To  hers  which  lay  so  s,  „  1286 

Had  pass'd  into  the  s  life  of  prayer.  Holy  Grail  4 

Lancelot  left  The  haU  long  s,  „        854 

Cares  but  to  pass  into  the  s  life.  „        899 

Hot  was  the  night  and  s ;  Pelleas  and  E.  395 

Across  the  s  seeded  meadow-grass  Borne,  „  561 

Speak,  Lancelot,  thou  art  s :  Last  Tournament  107 

It  makes  a  s  music  up  in  heaven,  „  349 

With  s  smiles  of  slow  disparagement ;  Guinevere  14 

bow'd  down  upon  her  hands  S,  until  the  little  maid,  „      159 

Blaze  by  the  rushing  brook  or  s  weU.  „      400 

witness,  too,  the  s  cry,  The  prayer  of  many  a  race 

and  creed.  To  the  Queen  ii  10 

one  string  That  quivers,  and  is  s.  Lover's  Tale  i  18 

till  the  things  f  amiUar  to  her  youth  Had  made  a  s  answer :        „        iv  96 


Silent 


641 


Silver 


The  Revenge  14 


of  Maeldune  11 

80 

Tiresias  211 

Ancient  Sage  212 

Tomorrovj  84 


Silent  (continued)    Till  he  melted  like  a  cloud  in  the  s 
summer  heaven ; 

we  came  to  the  S  Isle  that  we  never  had  touch'd  at 
before,  Where  a  s  ocean  always  broke  on  a  s 
shore,  V. 

low  down  in  a  rainbow  deep  S  palaces, 

Rememberinfi;  all  the  golden  hours  Now  s, 

But  louder  than  thy  rhyme  the  s  Word 

Sorra  the  s  throat  but  we  hard  it  cryin'  *  Ochone ! ' 

Fires  that  shook  me  once,  but  now  to  s  ashes 
fall'n  away.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  41 

Clinging  to  the  s  mother !     Are  we  devils  ?  ,.  99 

While  the  s  Heavens  roll,  and  Suns  along  their 

fiery  way,  „  203 

S  echoes  !    You,  my  Leonard,  use  and  not  abuse 

your  day,  „  265 

But  thou  art  s  underground,  Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  13 

Here  s  in  our  Minster  of  the  West  Epit.  on  Stratford  3 

Along  the  5  field  of  Asphodel.  Demeter  and  P.  153 

But  seen  upon  the  s  brow  when  life  has  ceased  to  beat.  Sappy  52 

I  saw  beyond  their  s  tops  The  steaming  marshes       Prog,  of  Spring  74 

And  streaming  and  shining  on  S  river.  Merlin  and  the  G.  52 

For  out  of  the  darkness  iS  and  slowly  The  Gleam,  „  82 

The  s  Alphabet-of-heaven-in-man  Made  vocal —       Akbar's  Dream  136 

iS  Voices  of  the  dead,  Silent  Voices  4 

Call  me  rather,  s  voices,  „  7 

Nor  the  myriad  world,  His  shadow,  nor  the  s 
Opener  of  the  Gate.' 
Snent-creeping    s-c  winds  Laid  the  long  night 
Silent-lighted    And  pass  the  s-l  town. 
Silently     But  s,  in  all  obedience, 
Silent -speaJdng    on  the  silence  broke  The  s-s  words, 
Silk  (adj.)     s  star-broider'd  coverUd  Unto  her  limbs 

and  on  the  further  side  Arose  a  s  pavilion. 

But  found  a  s  pavilion  in  a  field, 

s  pavilions  of  King  Arthur  raised  For  brief  repast 
Silk  (s)     And  trod  on  s,  as  if  the  winds 

s's,  and  fruits,  and  spices,  clear  of  toll, 

A  gown  of  grass-green  s  she  wore. 

And  robed  the  shoulders  in  a  rosy  s. 

She  brought  us  Academic  s's, 

thro'  the  parted  s's  the  tender  face  Peep'd, 

statue  of  Sir  Ralph  From  those  rich  s's. 

Then  she  bethought  her  of  a  faded  s. 

In  summer  suit  and  s's  of  holiday. 

And  seeing  one  so  gay  in  purple  s's. 

Moved  the  fair  Enid,  all  in  faded  s, 

AU  staring  at  her  in  her  faded  s : 

That  she  ride  with  me  in  her  faded  s.' 

But  Enid  ever  kept  the  faded  s, 

And  tearing  off  her  veil  of  faded  s 

Display'd  a  splendid  s  of  foreign  loom, 

fearing  rust  or  soiliu"e  fashion'd  for  it  A  case  of  s, 


God.  and  the  Univ.  6 

Lover's  Tale  tt  111 

In  Mem.,  Con.  112 

Marr.  of  Geraint  767 

In  Mem.  xcv  26 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  9 

Gareth  and  L.  910 

Holy  Grail  745 

Guinevere  394 

A  Character  21 

Golden  Tear  45 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  24 

Princess,  Pro.  103 

„  ii  16 

vii  60 

Con.  118 

Marr.  of  Geraint  134 

173 

284 

366 

617 

762 

841 

Geraint  and  E.  514 

687 

Lancelot  and  E.  8 


Figs  out  of  thistles,  s  from  bristles.  Last  Tournament  356 

fold  Thy  presence  in  the  s  of  simiptuous  looms :  Ancient  Sage  266 

till  I  maakes  tha  es  smooth  es  s.  Spinster's  S's.  53 

spice  and  her  vintage,  her  s  and  her  com ;  Vastness  13 

Silken     Hues  of  the  s  sheeny  woof  Madeline  22 
breeze  of  a  joyful  dawn  blew  free  In  the  s  sail  of 

infancy,  Arabian  Nights  2 

We'll  bind  you  fast  in  s  cords,  Rosalind  49 

On  s  cushions  half  reclined ;  Elednore  126 

New  from  its  s  sheath.  D.  of  F.  Women  60 

'  Her  eyeUds  dropp'd  their  s  eaves.  Talking  Oak  209 

And  rotatory  thumbs  on  s  knees,  Aylmer's  Field  200 

A  feudal  knight  in  s  masquerade.  Princess,  Pro.  234: 

in  hue  The  lUac,  with  a  s  hood  to  each,  „              ii  17 

one  The  s  priest  of  peace,  one  this,  „             v  184 

In  s  fluctuation  and  the  swarm  Of  female  whisperers :       „  vi  355 

To  have  her  lion  roll  in  a  s  net  Mavd  I  vi  29 

from  out  the  s  curtain-folds  Bare-footed  Gareth  and  L.  925 

This  s  rag,  this  beggar-woman's  weed :  Geraint  and  E.  680 

Ran  down  the  s  thread  to  kiss  each  other  Merlin  and  V.  455 
o'er  her  hung  The  s  case  with  braided  blazonings,  Lancelot  and  E.  1149 

Which  made  a  s  mat-work  for  her  feet ;  Holy  Grail  151 


Silken  (continued)  In  its  green  sheath,  close-lapt  in  s  folds.  Lover's  Tale  i  153 

A  s  cord  let  down  from  Paradise,  Akbar's  Dream  139 

Silken-folded    fancies  hatch'd  In  s-f  idleness ;  Princess  iv  67 

Silken-sail'd    The  shallop  flitteth  s-s  L.  of  Shalott  i  22 

Silken-sandal'd    She  tapt  her  tiny  s-s  foot :  Princess,  Pro.  150 

Silk-soft     In  s-s  folds,  upon  yielding  down,  Elednore  28 

Silky     All  grass  of  s  feather  grow —  Talking  Oak  269 

Silver  (adj.)     but  a  most  s  flow  Of  subtle-paced  counsel  Isabel  20 

With  s  anchor  left  afloat,  Arabian  Nights  93 

Like  Indian  reeds  blown  from  his  s  tongue.  The  Poet  13 

Shadows  of  the  s  birk  Sweep  the  green  A  Dirge  5 

Would  curl  roimd  my  s  feet  silently.  Mermaid  50 

the  violet  woos  To  his  heart  the  s  dews?  Adeline  32 

from  his  blazon'd  baldric  slung  A  mighty  s  bugle 

hung,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  16i 

Three  fingers  round  the  old  s  cup —  Miller's  D.  10 

The  wind  sounds  like  as  wire,  Fatitna  29 

With  narrow  moon-lit  slips  of  s  clouJ,  (Enone  218 

Moved  of  themselves,  with  s  sound ;  Palace  of  Art  130 

0  blessings  on  his  kindly  voice  and  on  his  s  hair !    May  Queen,  Con.  13 

0  blessings  on  his  kindly  heart  and  on  his  s  head !  15 
A  golden  bill !  the  s  tongue.  The  Blackbird  13 
momently  The  twinkling  laurel  scatter'd  s  lights.  Gardener's  D.  118 
The  s  fragments  of  a  broken  voice,  „  234 
High  up,  in  s  spikes !  Talking  Oak  276 
Close  over  us,  the  s  star,  thy  guide,  Tithonus  25 
And  thee  returning  on  thy  s  wheels.  „  76 
Glitter  hke  a  swarm  of  fire-flies  tangled  in  a  s  braid.  Locksley  Hall  10 
The  s  vessels  sparkle  clean.  Sir  Galahad  34 
s  boss  Of  her  own  halo's  dusky  shield ;  The  Voyage  31 
Till  over  thy  dark  shoulder  glow  Thy  s  sister-world,  Move  eastward  6 
on  the  swell  The  s  lilv  heaved  and  fell ;  To  E.  L.  19 
s  sickle  of  that  month  Became  her  golden  shield,  Princess  i  101 
like  s  hammers  falling  On  s  anvils,  „  216 
sound  Of  solemn  psalms,  and  s  litanies,  ,,  ii  477 
S  sails  all  out  of  the  west  Under  the  s  moon :  „  Hi  14 
caU'd  On  flying  Time  from  all  their  s  tongues —  ,,  m  105 
nor  cares  to  walk  With  Death  and  Morning  on  the  «  horns,  „  204 
Pink  was  the  shell  within,  S  without ;  Mirmie  and  Winnie  6 
Calm  on  the  seas,  and  s  sleep.  In  Mem.  xi  17 
As  slowly  steak  a  s  flame  „  Ixvii  6 
To  reverence  and  the  s  hair ;  „  Ixxxiv  32 
Or  into  s  arrows  break  The  sailing  moon  in  creek  and  cove ;  „  ci  15 
s  knell  Of  twelve  sweet  hours  that  past  Maud  I  xviii  64 
And  over  these  is  placed  a  s  wand,  Marr.  of  Geraint  483 
And  over  these  they  placed  the  s  wand,  „  549 
went  In  s  tissue  talking  things  of  state ;  ,,  663 
-And  all  the  Ught  upon  her  s  face  Flow'd                  Balin  and  Balan  263 

And  hke  a  s  shadow  sUpt  away  Thro'  the  dim  land ;  Merlin  and  V.  423 
Her  seer,  her  bard,  her  s  star  of  eve,  „  954 

one  emerald  center'd  in  a  sim  Of  s  rays,  Lancelot  and  E.  296 

1  heard  a  sound  As  of  a  s  horn  from  o'er  the  hills  Holy  Grail  109 
Stream'd  thro'  my  cell  a  cold  and  s  beam,  „  116 
wove  with  s  thread  And  crimson  in  the  belt  a  strange 

device,  A  crimson  grail  within  a  s  beam ;  „  154 

In  s  armour  suddenly  Galahad  shone  Before  us,  „  458 

for  every  moment  glanced  His  s  arms  and  gloom'd :  „  493 

I  saw  him  like  a  s  star —  „  517 

-  There  tript  a  hundred  tiny  s  deer.  Last  Tournament  171 

Laid  the  long  night  in  s  streaks  and  bars,  Lover's  Tale  ii  112 

blew  it  far  Until  it  himg,  a  little- s  cloud  Over  the 

sounding  seas :  „         Hi  36 

Smoothing  their  locks,  as  golden  as  his  own 

Were  s,  ■  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  57 

By  firth  and  loch  thy  s  sister  grow,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  58 

S  crescent-curve.  Coming  soon.  The  Ring  13 

The  s  year  shoidd  cease  to  mourn  and  sigh —  To  Mary  Boyle  57 

Silver  (s)  million  tapers  flaring  bright  From  twisted  s's  Arabian  Nights  125 
Six  coliunns,  three  on  either  side,  Pure  s,-  „  145 

Twilights  of  airy  s,  Audley  Court  82 

Sipt  wine  from  s,  praising  God,  Will  Water.  127 

cups  and  s  on  the  bumish'd  board  Sparkled  and 

shone ;  Enoch  Arden  742 

spread  Their  sleeping  s  thro'  the  hills ;  In  Mem.,  Con.  116 

bars  Of  black  and  bands  of  s.  Lover's  Tale  iv  59 

2  s 


Silver 


642 


Sin 


Silver  (verb)    linger  there  To  s  all  the  valleys  Tiresias  32 

Silver-chiming   from  the  central  fountain's  flow  Fall'n  s-c,  Arabian  Nights  51 
Silver-chorded    Her  warm  breath  floated  in  the  utterance 

Of  s-c  tones :  Lover's  Tale  ii  142 

Silver-clear     A  little  whisper  s-c,  Two  Voices  428 

Silver-coasted    0  saviour  of  the  s-c  isle,  Ode  on  Well.  136 

Silver-fair    glancing  heavenward  on  a  star  so  s-f,       Locksley  R.,  Sixty  191 
SUver-green     All  s-g  with  gnarled  bark :  Mariana  42 

SUvering    See  Early-dlvering 

SUver-misty    they  saw  the  s-m  mom  Rolling  her  smoke    Gareth  and  L.  189 
Silver-set    near  his  tomb  a  feast  Shone,  s-s ;  Princess,  Pro.  106 

Silver-sbeeted    curving  roimd  The  s-s  bay :  Lover's  Tale  ii  76 

SUver-shining    s-s  armour  starry-clear ;  Holy  Grail  511 

Silver-smiling    s-s  Venus  ere  she  fell  Lover's  Tale  i  61 

Silver-treble    S-t  laughter  trilleth :  Lilian  24 

Silvery    (See  also  Olive-silvery)    s  marish-flowers  that 

throng  The  desolate  creeks  Dying  Swan  40 

Whose  s  spikes  are  nighest  the  sea.  The  Mermaid  37 

one  s  cloud  Had  lost  his  way  between  Qinone  92 

With  many  a  s  waterbreak  Above  the  golden  gravel,         The  Brook  61 

'  Fear  not,  isle  of  blowing  woodland,  isle  of  s  parapets  !        Boadicea  38 

all  the  s  gossamers  That  twinkle  into  green  and  gold :       In  Mem.  xi  7 

o'er  the  sky  The  s  haze  of  summer  drawn ;  „       xcv  4 

S  willow,  Pasture  and  plowland,  Merlin  and  the  G.  53 

Long  as  the  s  vapour  in  daylight  Kapiolani  16 

Silvery-crimson    They  freshen  the  s-c  shells,  Sea-Fairies  13 

Silvery-streak'd    overstream'd  and  s-s  The  Islet  20 

Simeon    (See  also  Simeon  Stylites,  Stylites)     '  Fall  down, 

O  S :  thou  hast  suffer'd  St.  S.  Stylites  99 

Courage,  St.  S !     This  dull  chrysalis  Cracks  ,,  155 

I,  S  of  the  pillar,  by  surname  StyUtes,  among  men  ;  I,  »S',         ,,  161 

I,  S,  whose  brain  the  sunshine  bakes ;  „  164 

Simeon  Stylites    (See  also  Simeon,  Stylites)    hark !  they 

shout 'St.  ^S^f.'  „  147 

Similitude     dream  To  states  of  mystical  s  ;  Sonnet  To 4 

Simois     Came  up  from  reedy  S  all  alone.  CEnone  52 

Flash  in  the  pools  of  whirUng  S.  „     206 

Simper    s  and  set  their  voices  lower,  Maud  I  x  15 

Simple  (adj.)    (See  also  Cunning-simple)     '  The  s  senses 

crown'd  his  head :  Two  Voices  277 

Not  s  as  a  thing  that  dies.  „  288 

A  s  maiden  in  her  flower  Is  worth  a  hundred 

coats-of-arms.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  15 

And  s  faith  than  Norman  blood.  „  56 

As  s  folk  that  knew  not  their  own  minds,  Enoch  Arden  478 

Not  preaching  s  Christ  to  s  men.  Sea  Dreams  21 

And  on  a  s  village  green ;  In  Mem.  Ixiv  4 

He  mixt  in  all  our  s  sports ;  „  Ixxxix  10 

He  seems  to  slight  her  s  heart.  „     xcvii  20 

Or  s  stile  from  mead  to  mead,  „  c  7 

Like  some  of  the  s  great  ones  gone  For  ever  Maud  /  a;  61 

To  save  from  some  slight  shame  one  s  girl.  „    xviii  45 

But  rode  a  s  knight  among  his  knights.  Com.  of  Arthur  51 

And  s  words  of  great  authority,  „  261 

Enid  easily  believed,  Like  s  noble  natures,  Geraint  and  E.  875 

thou  from  Arthur's  hall,  and  yet  So  s  !  Balin  and  Balan  358 

Is  mere  white  truth  in  s  nakedness,  „  518 

O,  the  results  are  s ;  a  mere  child  Might  use  it  Merlin  and  V.  684 

'Such  be  for  queens,  and  not  for  s  maids.'  Lancelot  and  E.  231 

Full  s  was  her  answer,  '  What  know  I  ?  „  671 

In  the  heart's  colours  and  on  her  s  face ;  „  837 

And  the  sick  man  forgot  her  s  blush,  „  864 

Will  sing  the  s  passage  o'er  and  o'er  „  896 

so  the  s  maid  Went  half  the  night  repeating,  „  898 

'  Ah  s  heart  and  sweet,  Ye  loved  me,  damsel,  „  1393 

And  this  high  Quest  eis  at  a  s  thing :  Holy  Grail  668 

0  great  and  sane  and  s  race  of  brutes  Pelleas  and  E.  480 

So  dame  and  damsel  cast  the  s  white.  Last  Tournament  232 

signs  And  s  miracles  of  thy  nunnery  ? '  Guinevere  230 

'  The  s,  fearful  child  Meant  nothing,  „        369 

For  L  being  s,  thought  to  work  His  will.  Pass,  of  Arthur  22 

And  Softness  breeding  scorn  of  s  life.  To  the  Queen  ii  53 

Loosed  from  their  s  thrall  they  had  flow'd  abroad,      Lover's  Tale  i  703 
told  it  me  all  at  once,  as  s  as  any  child,  First  Quarrel  58 

Because  the  a  mother  work'd  upon  By  Edith      Sisters  (E.  ami  E.)  206 


Simple  (adj.)  (continued)     By  one  side-path,  from 

s  truth ;  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  28 

Thro'  manifold  effect  of  s  powers —  Prog,  of  Spring  86 

A  s,  saner  lesson  might  he  learn  „            105 

There  is  laughter  down  in  Hell  At  your  s  scheming  .  .  .        Forlorn  16 

Simple  (s)     the  hermit,  skill'd  in  all  The  s's  Lancelot  and  E.  862 

Simple-hearted    seeming-injured  s-h  thing  Merlin  and  V.  902 

Simpler    guilt,  S  than  any  child,  Guinevere  371 

A  temple,  neither  Pagod,  Mosque,  nor  Church,  But 

loftier,  s,  always  open-door'd  Akhar's  Dream  179 

Simple-seeming    Our  s-s  Abbess  and  her  nuns,  Guinevere  309 

Simphcity     In  his  s  sublime.  Ode  on  Well.  34 

Sin  (s)     my  s  was  as  a  thorn  Among  the  thorns  Supp.  Confessions  5 

That  pride,  the  s  of  devils,  stood  Betmxt  me  ..              109 

and  my  s's  Be  unremember'd,  „               181 

you  are  foul  with  s ;  Poet's  Mind  36 

What  is  it  that  will  take  away  my  s.  Palace  of  Art  287 

for  he  show'd  me  all  the  s.  May  Queen,  Con.  17 

From  scalp  to  sole  one  slough  and  crust  of  s,  St.  S.  Stylites  2 

Have  mercy,  Lord,  and  take  away  my  s.  „              8 

Than  were  those  lead-like  tons  of  s,  ,.            25 

Have  mercy,  mercy :  take  away  my  s.  „            45 

subdue  this  home  Of  s,  my  flesh,  „            58 

Have  mercy,  mercy !  cover  all  my  s.  „             84 

0  mercy,  mercy !  wash  away  my  s.  ..  120 
A  sinful  man,  conceived  and  born  in  s :  ..  122 
On  the  coals  I  lay,  A  vessel  full  of  s :  „  170 
S  itself  be  found  The  cloudy  porch  Love  and  Duly  8 
To  make  me  pure  of  s.  St.  Agnes'  Eve  32 
from  the  palace  came  a  child  of  s.  Vision  of  Sin  5 
shroud  this  great  s  from  all!  Aylmer's  Field  11  ii 

■    the  s  That  neither  God  nor  man  can  well  forgive.  Sea  Dreams  62 

The  s's  of  emptiness,  gossip  and  spite  Princess  ii  92 

We  feel,  at  least,  that  silence  here  were  s,  Third  of  Feb.  37 

says,  our  s's  should  make  us  sad :  Grandmother  93 

An'  a  towd  ma  my  s's,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  11 

We  might  discuss  the  Northern  s  To  F.  D.  Maurice  29 

The  wages  of  s  is  death :  Wages  6 

Forgive  what  seem'd  my  s  in  me ,  In  Mem.,  Pro.  33 

1  sometimes  hold  it  half  as  „  v  1 
Thou  fail  not  in  a  world  of  s,  „  xxxiii  15 
And  holds  it  s  and  shame  to  draw  ,,  xlviii  11 
That  life  is  dash'd  with  flecks  of  s.  „  Hi  14 
To  pangs  of  nature,  s's  of  will,  „  liv  3 
Ring  out  the  want,  the  care,  the  s,  „  cvi  17 
And  heap'd  the  whole  inherited  s  Maud  I  xiii  41 
Not  touch  on  her  father's  s :  „  xix  17 
Whatever  the  Quaker  holds,  from  s  ;  „  II  v  92 
that  best  blood  it  is  a  s  to  spill.'  Gareth  and  L.  600 
The  s  that  practice  burns  into  the  blood.  Merlin  and  V.  762 
She  with  a  face,  bright  as  for  s  forgiven,  Lancelot  and  E.  1102 
Such  s  in  words  Perchance,  „  1188 
To  make  men  worse  by  making  my  s  known  ?    Or 

s  seem  less,  the  sinner  seeming  great  ?  „               1417 

S  against  Arthm-  and  the  Table  Roimd,  Holy  Grail  79 
'  And  he  to  whom  she  told  her  s's,  or  what  Her  all  but 

utter  whiteness  held  for  s. 
Holy  Grail  would  come  again ;  But  s  broke  out. 
'  This  madness  has  come  on  us  for  our  s's.' 
thoughtest  of  thy  prowess  and  thy  s's  ? 
Happier  are  those  that  welter  in  their  s, 
in  me  lived  a  s  So  strange,  of  such  a  kind, 
twined  and  clung  Roimd  that  one  s. 
And  in  the  great  sea  wash  away  my  s.' 
And  but  for  all  my  madness  and  my  s. 
Twine  round  one  s,  whatever  it  might  be. 
If  here  be  comfort,  and  if  ours  be  s,  Crown'd 

warrant  had  we  for  the  crowning  s 
'  Mine  be  the  shame ;  mine  was  the  s : 
The  s's  that  made  the  past  so  pleasant 
and  as  yet  no  s  was  dream'd,) 
the  s  wnich  thou  hast  sinn'd. 
Then  came  thy  shameful  s  with  Lancelot ; 
Then  came  the  s  of  Tristram  and  Isolt ; 
As  in  the  golden  days  before  thy  s. 


83 

93 

357 

455 
770 

„  •  772 
775 
806 

849 

88H 

Last  Tournament  575 
Guinevere  112 
375 
388 
455 
487 
488 
500 


I 


Sin 


643 


Single 


Sin  (S)  {continued)     And  all  is  past,  the  s  is  sinn'd,  Guinevere  543 

Gone  thro'  my  s  to  slay  and  to  be  slain !  „        613 

I  cannot  kill  my  s.  If  soul  be  soul ;  „         621 

in  mine  own  heart  I  can  live  down  s  „         636 

alone  with  her  s  an'  her  shame,  First  Quarrel  25 

an'  she — in  her  shame  an'  her  s — -  .,             69 

•S  ?    O  yes — we  are  sinners,  I  know —  Eizpah  60 

they  have  told  you  he  never  repented  his  «.  ,,      69 

trouble,  the  strife  and  the  s,  V.  of  Alaeldune  129 

driven  by  storm  and  s  and  death  to  the  ancient  fold.  The  Wreck  2 

prayer  for  a  soul  that  died  in  his  s,  „        10 

Ten  long  days  of  summer  and  s —  „        77 

But  if  s  be  5,  not  inherited  fate,  „        85 

My  s  to  my  desolate  Uttle  one  found  me  „        86 

'  The  wages  of  s  is  death,'  „        93 

I  cried,  '  for  the  s  of  the  wife,  „        99 

be  never  gloom'd  by  the  curse  Of  a  s,  „      140 

death  aUve,  is  a  mortial  s.'  Tomorrow  51 

Feyther  'ud  saay  I  wur  ugly  es  s.  Spinster's  S's.  15 
Shall  we  sin  our  fathers'  s,                               Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  24 

Murder  will  not  veil  your  s.  Forlorn  49 

For  bolder  s's  than  mine,  Romney's  R.  133 

Fur  they  wesh'd  their  s's  i'  my  pond,  Church-warden,  etc.  16 

Tha  mun  tackle  the  s's  o'  the  Wo'ld,  „                  46 

leaved  their  nasty  s's  i'  my  pond,  „                  54 

Tho'  S  too  oft,  when  smitten  by  Thy  rod,  Doubt  and  Prayer  1 

From  s  thro'  sorrow  into  Thee  we  pass  „                3 

Sin  (verb)    s  against  the  strength  of  youth !  Locksley  Hall  59 

LeoUn,  I  almost  «  in  envjring  you  :  Aylmer's  Field  360 

of  one  who  sees  To  one  who  s's,  Com.  of  Arthur  118 

is  your  beauty,  and  I  s  In  speaking,  Lancelot  and  E.  1186 

I  could  hardly  s  against  the  lowest.'  Last  Tournament  572 

If  this  be  sweet,  to  s  in  leading-strings,  „                574 
Shall  we  5  our  fathers'  sin.                                Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  24 

Simu    As  over  S's  peaks  of  old.  In  Mem.  xcvi  22 

Sbie    Of  s  and  arc,  spheroid  and  azimuth.  Princess  vi  256 

Smecore    So  moulder'd  in  a  s  as  he :  „    Pro.  182 

Sinew    home  is  in  the  s's  of  a  man,  „         v  267 

Burst  vein,  snap  s,  and  crack  heart.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  123 

Sinew-corded    supple,  s-c,  apt  at  arms ;  Princess  v  535 
Sinew'd    (See  also  Supple-sinew 'd)    imtil  endurance 

grow  S  with  action,  CEnone  165 

'Sinful     A  s  soul  possess'd  of  many  gifts.  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  3 

A  s  man,  conceived  and  bom  in  sin :  St.  S.  Stylites  122 

Kedden'd  at  once  with  s,  for  the  point  Balin  and  Balan  558 
so  glad  were  spirits  and  men  Before  the  coming  of  the 

s  Queen.'  Guinevere  270 

Such  as  they  are,  were  you  the  s  Queen.'  „        353 

Sing    it  s's  a  song  of  undying  love ;  Poet's  Mind  33 

We  will  s  to  you  aU  the  day :  Sea-Fairies  20 

1  would  sit  and  s  the  whole  of  the  day ;  The  Merman  9 

I  would  s  to  myself  the  whole  of  the  day ;  The  Mermaid  10 

still  as  I  comb'd  I  would  s  and  say,  „            12 

Than  but  to  dance  and  s,  be  gaily  drest.  The  form,  the  form  3 

Nor  bird  would  s,  nor  lamb  would  bleat,  Mariana  in  the  S.  37 

Sometimes  I  heard  you  s  within ;  Miller's  D.  123 

Ah,  well — but  s  the  foolish  song  I  gave  you,  ,.            161 

So  s  that  other  song  I  made,  „             199 

To  s  her  songs  alone.  Palace  of  Art  160 

Nor  barken  what  the  inner  spirit  s's,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  22 

the  minstrel  s's  Before  them  of  the  ten  years'  war  „                76 

O  BLACKBiBD !  s  me  something  well :  The  Blackbird  1 

Take  warning !  he  that  will  not  s  „            21 

Shall  s  for  want,  ere  leaves  are  new,  „            23 

Think  you  they  s  Like  poets,  Gardener's  D.  99 

have  they  any  sense  of  why  they  5  ?  „            101 

pits  of  fire,  that  still  S  in  mine  ears.  St.  S.  Stylites  185 

Like  that  strange  song  I  heard  Apollo  s,  Tithonus  62 

this  is  truth  the  poet  s's,  Locksley  Hall  75 

Not  even  of  a  gnat  that  s's.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  21 

Ah  shameless !  for  he  did  but  s  A  song  You  might  have  won  21 

That  he  s's  in  his  boat  on  the  bay !  Break,  break,  etc.  8 

For  he  s's  of  what  the  world  will  be  Poet's  Song  15 

and  every  bird  that  s's :  Sea  Breams  102 

well  then,  sleep,  And  I  will  s  you  '  birdie.'  „            284 


Sing  (continued)     let  the  ladies  s  us,  if  they  will,  Princess,  Pro.  240 

'  Let  some  one  s  to  us :  hghtlier  move  „              iv  36 

as  far  As  I  could  ape  their  treble,  did  I  s.  „                 92 

I  hear  them  too — they  s  to  their  team :  Grandmother  81 

0  skill'd  to  s  of  Time  or  Eternity,  Milton  2 

1  HELD  it  truth,  with  him  who  s's  In  Mem.  i  1 
I  s  to  him  that  rests  below,  „  xxi  1 
I  do  but  5  because  I  must,  „  23 
And  pipe  but  as  the  linnets  s:  „  24 
But  m  the  songs  I  love  to  s  „  xxxviii  7 
Then  are  these  songs  I  s  of  thee  „  11 
That  lay  their  eggs,  and  sting  and  s  „  Z 11 
we  do  him  wrong  To  s  so  wildly  :  „  Ivii  4 
And  in  that  solace  can  I  s,  „  Ixv  5 
Or  voice  the  richest-toned  that  s's,  „  Ixxv  7 
For  him  she  plays,  to  him  she  s's  „  xcvii  29 
As  one  would  s  the  death  of  war,  ..  ciii  33 
And  s  the  songs  he  loved  to  hear.  ,,  cvii  24 
To  the  baUad  that  she  s's.  Maud  II  iv  43 
Do  I  hear  her  s  as  of  old,  „  44 
so  great  bards  of  him  will  s  Hereafter ;  Com.  of  Arthur  414 

0  birds  that  warble  as  the  day  goes  by,  S  sweetly :  Gareth  and  L.  1077 
That  s's  so  dehcately  clear,  Marr.  of  Geraint  332 

1  heard  the  great  Sir  Lancelot  s  it  once.  Merlin  and  V.  385 
And  every  minstrel  s's  it  differently ;  „  458 
Will  s  the  simple  passage  o'er  and  o'er  Lancelot  and  E.  896 
sweetly  could  she  make  and  s.  „  1006 
one  hath  sung  and  all  the  dumb  will  s.  Holy  Grail  301 
Murmuring  a  light  song  I  had  heard  thee  s.  Last  Tournament  614 
'  O  maiden,  if  indeed  ye  list  to  s,  S,  Guinevere  165 
We  could  s  a  good  song  at  the  Flow,  (repeat)  North.  Cobbler  18 
Bullets  would  s  by  our  foreheads,  Def.  of  Lucknow  21 
They  love  their  mates,  to  whom  they  s  ;  The  Flight  65 
To  s  thee  to  thy  grave.  Freedom  36 
My  birds  would  s.  You  heard  not.  To  Mary  Boyle  18 
S  like  a  bird  and  be  happy,  Parnassus  14 
S  the  new  year  in  under  the  blue.  The  Throstle  5 
Our  hymn  to  the  sun.  They  s  it.  Akbar's  Dream  203 
S  thou  low  or  loud  or  sweet,  Poet  and  Critics  6 

Singe     The  moth  will  s  her  wings,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  189 

Sing'd  (sang)     But,  arter,  we  s  the  'ymn  togither  North.  Cobbler  54 

Singei     singe  her  wings,  and  s  return,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  189 

Singeing    See  A-singein' 

Singer    The  sweet  Uttle  wife  of  the  s  said, 

the  s  shaking  his  curly  head  Tum'd  as  he  sat, 
A  crown  the  S  hopes  may  last, 
here  the  S  for  his  Art  Not  all  in  vain  may  plead 
their  music  here  be  mortal  need  the  s  greatly  care  ? 

Singest    Roman  Virgil,  thou  that  s 
Thou  that  s  wheat  and  woodland, 

Singeth    The  ancient  poetess  s, 

Singin'  (singing)     An'  s  yer  'Aves '  an'  '  Fathers  ' 

Singing    (See  also  A-singin',  Singin')    S  alone  Under 

the  sea,                             •  The  Merman  4 

A  mermaid  fair,  S  alone.  The  Mermaid  3 

And  s  airy  trifles  this  or  that,  Caress'd  or  chidden  2 

They  heard  her  s  her  last  song,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  26 

S  in  her  song  she  died,  „              35 

S  and  murmuring  in  her  feastful  mirth.  Palace  of  Art  177 

And  s  clearer  than  the  crested  bird  D.  of  F  Women  179 

he  is  s  Hosanna  in  the  highest :  Enoch  Arden  502 

S,  '  And  shall  it  be  over  the  seas  The  Islet  9 

And  we  with  s  cheer'd  the  way,  In  Mem.  xxii  5 

She  is  s  an  air  that  is  known  to  me,  Maud  I  v3 

S  alone  in  the  morning  of  life,  „             6 

S  of  men  that  in  battle  array,  „             8 

S  of  Death,  emd  of  Honour  that  cannot  die,  „          16 

She  is  s  in  the  meadow  And  the  rivulet  at  her  feet  ,,  //  iv  40 

thro'  the  open  casement  of  the  hall,  S  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  329 

Half  whistling  and  half  s  a  coarse  song,  Geraint  and  E.  528 

voice  s  in  the  topmost  tower  To  the  eastward  :  Holy  Grail  834 

And  shot  itself  into  the  s  winds  ;  Lovers  Tale  i  369 
S  '  Hail  to  the  glorious  Golden  year                    On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  64 

Single     For  in  thee  Is  nothing  sudden,  nothing  s  ;  Eleanore  57 
Poor  Fancy  sadder  than  a  s  star,                            Caress'd  or  chidden  13 


The  Islet  3 

6 

Epilogue  38 

79 

Parnassus  18 

To  Virgil  1 

9 

Leonine  Eleg.  13 

Tomorrow  96 


Single 


644 


Sister 


I  (continued)  And  thought, '  My  life  is  sick  of  s  sleep  :   The  Bridesmaid  13 
'  *S  I  grew,  like  some  green  plant,  Z>.  of  F.  Women  205 

induce  a  time  When  s  thought  is  civil  crime,     You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  19 
4"  note  From  that  deep  chord  which  Hampden 

smote  England  and  Amer.  18 

A  s  stream  of  all  her  soft  brown  hair  Gardener's  D.  128 

And  spake  not  of  it  to  a  s  soul,  St.  8.  Stylites  66 

With  a  s  rose  in  her  hair.  Lady  Clare  60 

That  wilderness  of  s  instances,  Aylmer's  Field  437 

a  cave  Of  touchwood,  with  a  s  flourishing  spray.  „  512 

than  by  s  act  Of  immolation.  Princess  Hi  284 

made  the  s  jewel  on  her  brow  Bum  like  the  mystic  fire         „        iv  273 
A  s  band  of  gold  about  her  hair,  „         v  513 

The  s  pure  and  perfect  animal,  „       vii  306 

And  his  compass  is  but  of  a  s  note,  The  Islet  28 

Be  tenants  of  a  s  breast.  In  Mem.  xvi  3 

Love  would  cleave  in  twain  The  lading  of  a  s  pain,  ,,       xxv  11 

So  careless  of  -the  s  life  ;  „  /■«  8 

No  s  tear,  no  mark  of  pain  :  „  Ixxmii  14 

And  take  us  as  a  s  soul.  „  Ixxxiv  44 

A  s  church  below  the  hill  Is  pealing,  ,.  civZ 

A  s  peal  of  bells  below,  .,  5 

A  s  murmur  in  the  breast,  ,,  7 

this  a  bridge  of  s  arc  Took  at  a  leap  ;  Gareth  and  L.  908 

But  rose  at  last,  a  s  maiden  with  her,  Marr.  of  Geraint  160 

Made  but  a  s  bound,  and  with  a  sweep  of  it  Geraint  and  E.  727 

Should  make  an  onslaught  s  on  a  realm  ,.  917 

a  s  misty  star,  Which  is  the  second  in  a  line  of 

stars  Merlin  and  V.  508 

a  s  glance  of  them  WiU  govern  a  whole  life  Lover's  Tale  i  lb 

'  What  can  it  matter,  my  lass,  what  I  did  wi'  my  s 

life  ?  First  Quarrel  59 

a  s  piece  Weigh'd  nigh  four  thousand  Castillanos  Columbus  135 

His  fathers  have  slain  thy  fathers  in  war  or  in  s 

strife,  V.  of  Maeldune  121 

This  double  seeming  of  the  s  world  ! —  Ancient  Sage  105 

Earth  at  last  a  warless  world,  a  s  race,  a  s 

tongue —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  165 

There  a  s  sordid  attic  holds  the  living  and  the  dead.  „  222 

Mother  weeps  At  that  white  funeral  of  the  s  life,  Prin.  Beatrice  9 

If  every  s  star  Should  shriek  its  claim  Akbar's  Dream  42 

Singleness     Arthur  boxmd  them  not  to  s  Merlin  and  V.  28 

Singular    I  have  Jieard,  I  know  not  whence,  of  the  s  beauty 

of  Maud  ;  Mattd  I  i  67 

Sink    I  cannot  s  So  far — far  down,  My  life  is  full  8 

And  while  he  s's  or  swells  Talking  Oak  270 

wholly  out  of  sight,  and  s  Past  earthquake —  Lucretius  152 

'  There  s's  the  nebulous  star  we  call  the  Sun,  Princess  iv  19 

That  s's  with  all  we  love  below  the  verge ;  „  47 

they  rise  or  s  Together,  dwarf 'd  or  godlike,  „     vii  259 

And  moan  and  s  to  their  rest.  Voice  and  the  P.  16 

And  s  again  into  sleep.'  „  24 

And  staggers  blindly  ere  she  s  ?  In  Mem.  xvi  14 

So  much  the  vital  spirits  s  ,.  xx  18 

'Twere  best  at  once  to  s  to  peace,  „      xxxiv  13 

When  in  the  down  I  s  my  head,  ,,        Ixviii  1 

And  the  great  Mon  s's  in  blood,  „     cxxvii  16 

A  gloomy-gladed  hollow  slowly  s  To  westward —         Gareth  and  L.  797 
Down  to  the  river,  s  or  swim,  „  1154 

we  scarce  can  s  as  low  :  Merlin  and  V.  813 

By  fire,  to  s  into  the  abyss  again ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  83 

S  me  the  ship.  Master  Gunner — s  her,  split  her  in 

twain  !  The  Bevenge  89 

s  Thy  fleurs-de-lys  in  slime  again.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  98 

Sinking    and  s  ships,  and  praying  hands.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  116 

To  follow  knowledge  hke  a  s  star,  Ulysses  31 

The  voice  of  Britain,  or  a  s  land.  To  the  Queen  ii  24 

I  kiss'd  him,  I  clung  to  the  s  form,  The  Wreck  105 

'  We  are  s,  and  yet  there's  hope :  „        121 

slowly  s  now  into  the  groimd,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  27 

and  s  with  the  s  wreck,  „  64 

Sinless    their  s  faith,  A  maiden  moon  that  sparkles  on  a 

sty,  Princess  v  185 

not  the  s  years  That  breathed  beneath  the  Syrian  blue  :      In  Mem.  Hi  11 
Reputed  to  be  red  with  s  blood,  Balin  and  Balan  557 


I 


Sinn'd     I  have  s,  for  it  was  all  thro'  me  Dora 

Alas,  my  child,  I  s  for  thee.'  Lady  Clare  50 

s  in  grosser  lips  Beyond  all  pardon —  Princess  iv  251 

And  that  he  s  is  not  believable  ;  Merlin  and  V.  760 

but  if  he  s,  The  sin  that  practice  burns  „  761 

Guinevere  had  s  against  the  highest.  Last  Tournament  570 

Ev'n  for  thy  sake,  the  sin  which  thou  hast  s.  Guinevere  455 

drawing  foul  ensample  from  fair  names,  S  also,  „        491 

And  all  is  past,  the  sin  is  s,  „        543 

And  in  the  flesh  thou  hast  s  ;  „        554 

S  thro'  an  animal  vileness.  The  Wreck  42 

thunders  of  Ocean  and  Heaven  '  Thou  hast  s.' 

See,  I  s  but  for  a  moment. 

And — well,  if  I  s  last  night, 

Siimer    I  am  a  s  viler  than  you  all. 

In  haunts  of  hungry  s's, 

Thou  hast  been  a  s  too  : 

Or  sin  seem  less,  the  s  seeming  great  ? 

Sin  ?     0  yes — we  are  s's,  I  know — 

Sinning     Another  s  on  such  heights  with  one, 

Slipt    S  wine  from  silver,  praising  God, 

Sir    these  great  S's  Give  up  their  parks 

Sire    to  die  For  God  and  for  my  s  ! 

That  we  are  wiser  than  our  s's. 

I  read — two  letters — one  her  s's. 

At  length  my  S,  his  rough  cheek  wet  with  tears, 

reach'd  White  hands  of  farewell  to  my  s, 

'  0  S,'  she  said,  '  he  Uves  : 

then  brake  out  my  s.  Lifting  his  grim  head 

Were  those  your  s's  who  fought  at  Lewes  ? 

yet-loved  s  would  make  Confusion  worse 

thou  that  slewest  the  s  hast  left  the  son. 

What  said  the  happy  5  ? 

Siren    0  sister,  S's  tho'  they  be,  were  such 

Sirius    as  the  fiery  S  alters  hue, 

Sirmio    '  0  venusta  S  \'  ' 

all-but-island,  olive-silvery  S  ! 
Sirmione     Eow  us  from  Desenzano,  to  your  S  row  ! 
Sister  (adj.)     same  two  s  pearls  Ran  down  the  silken 

thread 
Sister  (s)     {See  also  Brother-sister,  Foster-sister,  Half-sister, 
Lady-sister,  Mock-sister,  Star-sisters,  Twin-sister)    Thy 
s  smiled  and  said,  '  No  tears  for  me  ! 

three  s's  That  doat  upon  each  other.  To , 

To  greet  their  fairer  s's  of  the  East. 

Stole  from  her  s  Sorrow. 

Sleep,  Ellen,  folded  in  thy  s's  arm, 

he  shouts  with  his  s  at  play  ! 

'  I  have  a  s  at  the  foreign  court, 

'  My  s.'    '  Comely,  too,  by  all  that's  fair,' 

she  cried,  '  My  brother  !  '     '  Well,  my  s.' 

O  s.  Sirens  tho'  they  be,  were  such  As  chanted 

Here  lies  a  brother  by  a  s  slain, 

when  your  s  came  she  won  the  heart  Of  Ida  : 

To  compass  our  dear  s's'  Uberties.' 

Shall  croak  thee  s,  or  the  meadow-crake 

'  Lift  up  your  head,  sweet  s  : 

all  about  his  motion  clung  The  shadow  of  his  s, 

and  in  our  noble  s's  cause  ? 

My  s's  crying,  '  Stay  for  shame  ; ' 

Old  s's  of  a  day  gone  by. 

Leave  thou  thy  s  when  she  prays, 

A  guest,  or  happy  s,  sung, 

Has  not  his  s  smiled  on  me  ? 

Hath  ever  like  a  loyal  s  cleaved  To  Arthur, — 

closer  to  this  noble  prince.  Being  his  own  dear  s ; ' 

'  And  therefore  Arthur's  $  ?  '  ask'd  the  King. 

a  knight  To  combat  for  my  s,  Lyonors, 

as  any  knight  Toward  thy  s's  freeing.' 

Among  her  bumish'd  s's  of  the  pool ; 

Would  call  her  friend  and  s,  sweet  Elaine, 

'  Ah  s,'  answer'd  Lancelot,  '  what  is  this  ?  ' 


Happy  85 

Bandit's  Death  18 

St.  S.  Stylites  135 

Will  Water.  222 

Vision  of  Sin  92 

Lancelot  and  E.  1418 

Riepah  60 

Lancelot  and  E.  248 

Will  Water.  127 

Princess,  Con.  102 

D.  of  F.  Women  232 

Love  thou  thy  land  72 

Princess  iv  397 

«23 

233 

„      vi  122 

271 

Third  of  Feb.  33 

In  Mem.  xc  18 

Gareth  and  L.  360 

Merlin  and  V.  710 

Princess  ii  198 

V  262 

Frater  Ave,  etc.  2 

1 

Merlin  and  V.  454 


The  Bridesmaid  3 

With  Pal.  of  Art  10 

Gardener's  D.  188 

256 

Audley  Court  63 

Break,  break,  etc.  6 

Princess  i  75 

„      ii  114 

188 

198 

208 

Hi  87 

288 

,.      iv  124 

vM 

258 

312 

Sailor  Boy  18 

In  Mem.  xxix  13 

„         xxxiii  5 

„      Ixxxix  26 

Maud  I  xiii  45 

Com.  of  Arthur  191 

315 

317 

Gareth  and  L.  608 

1018 

Marr.  of  Geraint  655 

Lancelot  and  E.  865 

931 


came  her  brethren  saying,  '  Peace  to  thee.  Sweet  s,' 

To  whom  the  gentle  s  made  reply, 

'  S,  farewell  for  ever,'  and  again  '  Farewell,  sweet  s,' 


997 
1073 
1151 


Sister 


645 


Sitting 


(s)  (cordinued)   no  further  off  in  blood  from  me  Than  s  ;  Holy  Grail  70 

My  s's  vision,  fill'd  me  with  amaze  ;  „        140 

'  S  or  brother  none  had  he ;  „        143 

I  found  and  saw  it,  as  the  nun  ]\^y  s  saw  it ;  „        199 

Hath  what  thy  s  taught  me  first  to  see,  ,,        469 
Where  saving  his  own  s's  he  had  known                         Pelleas  and  E.  87 

I  must  strike  against  the  man  they  call  My  s's  son —  Guinevere  573 


Nor  shun  to  call  me  s,  dwell  with  you  ; 

The  s  of  my  mother — she  that  bore  Camilla 

My  mother's  s,  mother  of  my  love, 

I  repUed,  '  O  s.  My  will  is  one  with  thine  ; 

So  shalt  thou  love  me  still  as  s's  do  ; 

It  was  ill-done  to  part  you,  S's  fair ; 

My  s,  and  ray  cousin,  and  my  love. 

She  never  had  as.     I  knew  none. 

Mea  an'  thy  s  was  married. 

No  s's  ever  prized  each  other  more. 

mother  and  her  s  loved  More  passionately  still, 

The  younger  s,  Evelyn,  enter'd — 

The  s's  closed  in  one  another's  arms. 

Yet  so  my  path  was  clear  To  win  the  s. 

'  \Vhat,  will  she  never  set  her  s  free  ?  ' 

The  s's  glide  about  me  hand  in  hand. 

By  firth  and  loch  thy  silver  s  grow. 

One  naked  peak — the  s  of  the  sun 

do  not  sleep,  my  s  dear  ! 

Ah,  clasp  me  in  your  arms,  s, 

Speak  to  me,  s  ;  counsel  me  ; 

Arise,  my  own  true  s,  come  forth  ! 

S's,  brothers — and  the  beasts — 
Sister-eyelids    The  dewy  s-e  la,j. 
Sisterhood    0  peaceful  S,  Receive, 
Sister-world    glow  Thy  silver  s-w, 
Sit    Low-cowering  shall  the  Sophist  s  ; 

The  white  owl  in  the  belfry  s's.  (repeat) 

I  would  s  and  sing  the  whole  of  the  day  ; 

all  day  long  you  s  between  Joy  and  woe, 

Nor  care  to  s  beside  her  where  she  s's — 

'  Here  s's  he  shaping  wings  to  fly : 

In  yonder  chair  I  see  him  s, 

'  by  that  lamp,'  I  thought,  '  she  s's  ! ' 

Sometimes  I  saw  you  s  and  spin  ; 

I .«  as  God  holding  no  form  of  creed. 

But  s  beside  my  bed,  mother, 

to  s,  to  sleep,  to  wake,  to  breathe.' 

S  with  their  wives  by  fires, 

S  brooding  in  the  nuns  of  a  life, 

Here  s's  the  Butler  with  a  flask 

I  5,  my  empty  glass  reversed, 

'  S  thee  down,  and  have  no  shame, 

God  bless  him,  he  shall  s  upon  mj  knees 

S,  listen.'     Then  he  told  her  of  his  voyage, 

(S  down  again  ;  mark  me  and  understand, 

Where  s  the  best  and  stateliest  of  the  land  ? 

if  I  might  s  beside  your  feet.  And  glean 

beneath  an  emerald  plane  S's  Diotima, 

I  will  go  and  s  beside  the  doors, 

she  may  s  Upon  a  king's  right  hand  in  thunderstorms, 

To  s  a  star  upon  the  sparkling  spire  ; 

upon  the  skirts  of  Time,  S  side  by  side. 

They  come  and  s  by  my  chair, 

To  s  with  empty  hands  at  home. 

See  they  s,  they  hide  their  faces, 

I  s  within  a  helmless  bark, 

back  return  To  where  the  body  s's. 

For  by  the  hearth  the  children  s 

The  Shadow  s's  and  waits  for  me. 

Alone,  alone,  to  where  he  s's, 

But,  he  was  dead,  and  there  he  s's. 

And  we  shall  s  at  endless  feast. 

Her  life  is  lone,  he  s's  apart, 

But  on  her  forehead  s's  a  fire  : 

In  the  Uttle  grove  where  I  s — 

And  the  whole  little  wood  where  I  s 

Why  s's  he  here  in  his  father's  chair  ? 


676 

Lover's  Tale  i  202 

209 

462 

768 

814 

Hi  43 

iv  326 

North.  Cobbler  11 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  43 

44 

152 

155 

203 

218 

275 

Sir  .J.  Oldcastle  58 

Tiresias  30 

The  Flight  1 

5 

75 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  102 

Day- Dm.,  Pro.  4 

Guinevere  140 

Move  eastward  6 

Clear-headed  friend  10 

The  Owl  i  7,  14 

The  Mertnan  9 

Margaret  63 

Wan  Scid-ptor  10 

Two  Voices  289 

Miller's  D.  9 

..      114 

„      121 

Palace  of  Art  211 

May  Queen,  Con.  23 

Edwin  Morris  40 

St.  S.  Stylites  108 

Love  and  Duty  12 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  25 

Will  Water.  159 

Vision  of  Sin  83 

Enoch  Arden  197 

861 

„     .      876 

Lucretius  172 

Princess  ii  258 

Hi  302 

■e96 

438 

vii  197 

288 

Grandmother  83 

Sailor  Boy  16 

Boddicea  51 

In  Mem.  iv  3 

,,      xii  19 

,,      XX 13 

.,    xxii  20 

.,    xxiii  3 

•  1    ccxxtt  o 

xlvii  9 

,,   xcvii  17 

,,      cxiv  5 

Maud  I  iv  2 

24 

„     xiii  23 


Sit  (continued)    when  alone  She  s's  by  her  musfe  and  books 
s's  on  her  shining  head.  And  she  knows  it  not 
Our  one  white  lie  s's  like  a  little  ghost 
Arthur,  '  We  s  King,  to  help  the  wrong'd 
and  they  s  within  our  hall. 
Why  s  ye  there  ?    Rest  would  I  not, 

0  s  beside  a  noble  gentlewoman.' 
and  speak  To  your  good  damsel  there  who  s's 

apart, 

1  see  with  joy.  Ye  s  apart. 
He  s's  unarm'd  ;  I  hold  a  finger  up  ; 
strange  knights  Who  s  near  Camelot  at  a  fountain- 


Maud  I  xiv  13 
xvi  17 
Gareth  and  L.  297 
371 
425 
596 
867 

Geraint  and  E.  299 
321 
337 


side, 

let  them  s.  Until  they  find  a  lustier 
■  Fair  Sirs,'  said  Arthur,  '  wherefore  s  ye  here  ?  ' 
song  that  once  I  heard  By  this  huge  oak,  simg 

nearly  where  we  s : 
I  s  and  gather  honey ;  yet,  methinks. 
They  s  with  knife  in  meat  and  wine  in  horn  ! 
'  No  man  could  s  but  he  should  lose  himself : ' 
Galahad  would  s  down  in  MerUn's  chair. 
Must  be  content  to  s  by  little  fires. 
But  s  within  the  house. 
Who  s's  and  gazes  on  a  faded  fire, 
To  s  once  more  within  his  lonely  hall. 
But  thou  didst  s  alone  in  the  inner  house, 
Why  did  you  s  so  quiet  ? 

kind  of  you.  Madam,  to  s  by  an  old  dying  wife. 
S  thysen  down  fur  a  bit : 
Naay  s  down — naw  'urry — sa  cowd  ! — 
While  'e  s  like  a  great  glimmer-gowk 
Who  s's  beside  the  blessed  Virgin 
Whom  yet  I  see  as  there  you  s 
I  will  s  at  your  feet,  I  will  hide  my  face. 
So  I  s's  i'  my  oan  armchair 
Or  s's  wi'  their  'ands  afoor  'em, 
I  s's  i'  my  oan  Uttle  parlour, 
since  he  would  s  on  a  Prophet's  seat, 
and  with  Grief  S  face  to  face, 
in  her  open  palm  a  halcyon  s's  Patient — 
To  s  once  more  ?    Cassandra, 
would  you — if  it  please  you — s  to  me  ? 
Your  song — S,  listen  ! 

my  faithful  counsellor,  S  by  my  side. 

an'  s's  o'  the  Bishop's  throan. 
Sit  (set)     an'  the  tongue's  s  afire  o'  Hell, 
Site    Storm-strengthen'd  on  a  windy  s, 
Sittest    That  s  ranging  golden  hair ; 
Sittin'     an'  a  s  'ere  o'  my  bed. 

one  night  I  wur  s  aloan. 
Sitting     (See  also  Sittin')     wish  to  charm  Pallas  and 
Juno  s  by : 

A  merman  bold,  S  alone, 

s,  burnish'd  without  fear  The  brand, 

on  this  hand,  and  s  on  this  stone  ? 

I  saw  you  s  in  the  house. 

One  s  on  a  crimson  scarf  imroU'd  ; 

Tho'  s  girt  with  doubtful  light. 

So  s,  served  by  man  and  maid, 

s  in  the  deeps  Upon  the  hidden  bases  of  the  hills.' 

but  we  s,  as  I  said.  The  cock  crew  loud  ; 

And  said  to  me,  she  s  with  us  then. 

And,  s  muffled  in  dark  leaves, 

s  straight  Within  the  low-wheel'd  chaise. 

Push  off,  and  s  well  in  order  smite 

Suffused  them,  s,  lying,  languid  shapes, 

Enoch  and  Annie,  s  hand-in-hand, 

Philip  s  at  her  side  forgot  Her  presence, 

When  lo  !  her  Enoch  s  on  a  height, 

s  all  alone,  his  face  Would  darken. 

As  night  to  him  that  s  on  a  hill 

I  am  oftener  s  at  home  in  my  father's  farm 

They  found  the  mother  s  still ; 

I  see  thee  s  crown'd  with  good, 

Peace  s  uiider  her  olive, 


Balin  and  Balan  11 
18 
31 

Merlin  and  V.  406 

601 

694 

Holy  Grail  174 

181 

614 

715 

Last  Tournament  157 

Guinevere  497 

Lover's  Tale  i  112 

Bizpah  14 

„      21 

Village  Wife  5 

20 

38 

Columbus  232 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  5 

The  Wreck  12 

Spinster's  S's.  9 

86 

103 

Dead  Prophet  53 

To  Mary  Boyle  46 

Prog,  of  Spring  20 

Romney's  E.  4 

:.     73 

92 

Akbar's  Dream  19 

Church-warden,  etc.  20 

24 

Gareth  and  L.  692 

In  Mem.  vi  26 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  9 

Owd  Boa  29 


A  Character  15 

The  Merman  3 

Two  Voices  128 

(Enone  233 

May  Queen,  Con.  30 

D.  of  F.  Women  126 

Love  thou  thy  land  16 

The  Goose  21 

M.  d' Arthur  105 

Ep.  9 

Gardener's  D.  21 

37 

Talking  Oak  109 

Ulysses  58 

Vision  of  Sin  12 

Enoch  Arden  69 

384 

500 

Sea  Dreams  12 

Princess  iv  574 

Grandmother  90 

The  Victim  Zl 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  5 

Maud  I  i  33 


Sitting 


646 


SkuU 


Sitting  {continued)    am  I  s  here  so  stunn'd  and  still,  Maud  II  i  2 

his  good  mates  Lying  or  s  round  him,  Gareth  and  L.  512 
There  on  a  day,  he  s  high  in  hall,                              Marr.  of  Geraint  147 

And  knew  her  s  sad  and  solitary.  Geraint  and  E.  282 

Balin  and  Balan  s  statuelike,  Balin  and  Balan  24 

as  makes  The  white  swan-mother,  s,  „            353 

s  in  thine  own  hall,  canst  endure  To  mouth  ,,            378 
Sir  Lancelot,  s  in  my  place  Enchair'd  to-morrow.  Last  Tournament  103 

s  in  the  deeps  Upon  the  hidden  bases  of  the  hills.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  273 

And  s  down  upon  the  golden  moss.  Lover's  Tale  i  540 

now  striding  fast,  and  now  nS  awhile  to  rest,  ..            iv  88 

And  s  down  to  such  a  base  repast,  „              134 

There  is  more  than  one  Here  s  who  desires  it.  „              242 

I,  by  Lionel  s,  saw  his  face  Fire,  .,              322 

But  Juhan,  s  by  her,  answer'd  all :  „ .            340 
The  face  of  one  there  s  opposite.                              Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  88 

summer  days  upon  deck,  s  hand  in  liand —  The  Wreck  64 
children  in  a  sunbeam  s  on  the  ribs  of  wreck.         Locksley  H.,  Sixty  14 

left  within  the  shadow  s  on  the  wreck  alone.  „              16 

Who  '  s  on  green  sofas  contemplate  The  tonnent  Akbar's  Bream  48 

wife  was  m3iarm'd,  tho'  s  close  to  his  side.  Charity  22 

Sitting-room    To  fit  their  little  streetward  s-r  Enoch  Arden  170 

Six    S  columns,  three  on  either  side,  Arabian  Nights  144 

high  S  cubits,  and  three  years  on  one  of  twelve  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  87 

'  And  make  her  some  great  Princess,  s  feet  high,  Princess,  Pro.  224 

S  hundred  maidens  clad  in  purest  white,  „              ii  472 

S  thousand  years  of  fear  have  made  you  „              iv  507 

Among  s  boys,  head  under  head,  and  look'd  „           Con.  83 

And  s  feet  two,  as  I  think,  he  stands ;  Maud  I  xiii  10 

Saw  s  tall  men  haling  a  seventh  along,  Gareth  and  L.  811 

S  stately  virgins,  all  in  white,  upbare  Lover's  Tale  ii  11 

Save  those  s  vii^:ins  which  upheld  the  bier,  „                84 

those  s  maids  With  shrieks  and  ringing  laughter  „           Hi  31 

An'  he  wrote  '  I  ha'  s  weeks'  work,  little  wife.  First  Quarrel  45 

I  ha'  s  weeks'  work  in  Jersey  an'  go  to-night  „          88 

We  are  s  ships  of  the  line  ;  The  Revenge  1 

King,  that  hast  reign'd  s  hundred  years.  To  Dante  1 
S  foot  deep  of  burial  mould  Will  dull  their  comments  !     Romney's  R.  125 
Six  hundred     Rode  the  s  h.  (repeat)                         Light  Brigade  4,  8,  17,  26 

rode  back,  but  not  Not  the  s  /*.  „  •                        38 

All  that  was  left  of  them.  Left  of  s  h.  „                           49 

Honoiu;  the  Light  Brigade,  Noble  s  h\  „                            55 

Sixpence     Be  shot  for  s  in  a  battle-field,  Audley  Court  41 
Sixty     in  one  month  They  wedded  her  to  s  thousand 

pounds,  Edwin  Morris  126 
when  every  hour  Must  sweat  her  s  minutes  to  the 

death,  Golden  Year  69 

And  s  feet  the  fountain  leapt.  Day-Dm.,  Revival  8 
Here  we  met,  our  latest  meeting — Amy — s  years 

ago —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  111 

Strove  for  s  widow'd  years  to  help  his  homeher 

brother  men,  „              267 

thro'  this  midnight  breaks  the  sun  Of  s  years 

away,                                                              Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son.  22 

Size    His  double  chin,  his  portly  s,  Miller's  D.  2 

This  weight  and  s,  this  heart  and  eyes.  Sir  Galahad  71 

For  often  fineness  compensated  s  ;  Princess  ii  149 

Skate     taught  me  how  to  s,  to  row,  to  swim,  Edwin  Morris  19 

Skater     Like  the  s  on  ice  that  hardly  bears  him,  Hendecasyllabics  6 

Ske^rd  (scared)     an'  tellin'  me  not  to  be  s,  Owd  Rod  85 

Skeleton    make  the  carcase  a  s,  Boadicea  14 

And  bears  a  s  figured  on  his  anns,  Gareth  and  L.  640 

Flash'd  the  bare-grinning  s  of  death  !  Merlin  and  V.  847 

unawares  Had  trodden  that  crown'd  s,  Lancelot  and  E.  49 

Gaunt  as  it  were  the  s  of  himself,  (repeat)  „    764,  816 

Not  from  the  s  of  a  brother-slayer.  Last  Tournament  47 

Found,  as  it  seem'd,  a  s  alone.  Lover's  Tale  iv  139 

But  that  half  *,  like  a  barren  ghost  The  Ring  227 

Skelpt  (overturned)    she  s  ma  haafe  ower  i'  the  chair,  Owd  Rod  76 

Sketch    (See  also  Thunder-sketch)     No  matter  what  the  s 

might  be  ;  Ode  to  Memory  95 

Buss  me,  thou  rough  5  of  man,  Vision  of  Sin  189 

s'es  rude  and  faint.  Aylmer's  Field  100 

and  lost  Salvation  for  a  s.  Romney's  R.  139 

Sketdl'd    Miriam  s  and  Muriel  threw  the  fiy ;  The  Ring  159 


Sketcher     I  was  a  s  then  ;  See  here,  Edwin  Morris  ' 

Sketching    s  with  her  slender  pointed  foot  The  Brook  10 

Skifi    drive  Thro'  utter  dark  a  full-sail'd  s,  Supp.  Confessions ! 

Skill    {See  also  Toumey-skill)     Nor  mine  the  sweetness 

or  the  s.  In  Mem.  ex  1% 

with  force  and  s  To  strive,  to  fashion,  ,.      cxii 

fill  up  the  gap  where  force  might  fail  With  s  and 
fineness.  Gareth  and  L.  13 

And  might  of  limb,  but  mainly  use  and  s,  Last  Tournament  1£ 

now  leaving  to  the  s  Of  others  their  old  craft      Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent. 

As  we  surpass  our  fathers'  s,  Mechanophilus  "^ 

Skill'd    O  s  to  sing  of  Time  or  Eternity,  Milton  1 

in  a  moment — at  one  touch  Of  that  s  spear,  Gareth  and  L.  12 

the  hermit,  s  in  all  The  simples  and  the  science        Lancelot  and  E.  86 

to  keep  So  s  a  nurse  about  you  always — ■ 
Skim    dip  Their  wings  in  tears,  and  s  away. 

Before  her  s's  the  jubilant  woodpecker, 
Sikimm'd    fleeter  now  she  s  the  plains 
Sirimming    S  down  to  Camelot : 

Among  my  s  swallows  ; 
Skin  (s)     (See  also  Sallow-skin)     a  leopard  s  Droop'd  from  his 
shoulder, 

A  million  wrinkles  carved  his  s  ; 

'  In  filthy  sloughs  they  roll  a  prurient  s, 

a  s  As  clean  and  white  as  privet  when  it  flowers. 

a  scratch  No  deeper  than  the  s  : 

Until  the  ulcer,  eating  thro'  my  s. 

We  fret,  we  fume,  would  shift  our  s's, 

s's  of  wine,  and  piles  of  grapes. 

Tattoo'd  or  woaded,  winter-clad  in  s's, 

hunt  them  for  the  beauty  of  their  s's  ; 

Prickle  my  s  and  catch  my  breath, 

wrapt  in  harden'd  s's  That  fit  him  like  his  own  ; 

His  arms  are  old,  he  trusts  the  harden'd  s — 

But  lash'd  in  vain  against  the  harden'd  s, 

the  s  Clung  but  to  crate  and  basket, 

he  was  all  wet  thro'  to  the  s, 

they  pricks  clean  thruf  to  the  s — ■ 

Shallow  s  of  green  and  azm-e — 

'  Small  blemish  upon  the  s  ! 

The  leper  plague  may  scale  my  s 
Skin  (verb)     like  a  man  That  s's  the  wild  beast  after 

slaying  him,  Geraint  and  E.  93 

Skip     '  Why  s  ye  so,  Sir  Fool  ?  '  (repeat)  Last  Tournament  9,  243 

belike  I  s  To  know  myself  the  wisest  knight  ,.  247 

S  to  the  broken  music  of  my  brains  ,.  258 

Arthur  and  the  angels  hear,  And  then  we  s.'  „  351 

Skipping     Dagonet,  s,  '  Arthur,  the  King's ;  „  262 

Skipt     But  when  the  twangling  ended,  s  again  ;  And 

being  ask'd,  '  Why  s  ye  not,  Sir  Fool  ?  ' 
Skirt    (s)     Brightening  the  s's  of  a  long  cloud, 

thro'  the  gray  s's  of  a  lifting  squall 

thro'  warp  and  woof  From  s  to  s  ; 

your  ingress  here  Upon  the  s  and  fringe  of  our  fair  land 

upon  the  s's  of  Time,  Sit  side  by  side. 

Imagined  more  than  seen,  the  s's  of  France. 

fusing  all  The  s's  of  self  again. 

And  grasps  the  s's  of  happy  chance, 

s's  are  loosen'd  by  the  breaking  storm, 

the  gloomy  s's  Of  Celidon  the  forest ; 

Tho'  somewhat  draggled  at  the  s. 

Brightening  the  s's  of  a  long  cloud. 
Skirt  (verb)     oft  when  sundown  s's  the  moor 
Skirted    See  Purple-skirted 
Skull    Is  but  modell'd  on  a  s. 

thy  foot  Is  on  the  s  which  thou  hast  made. 

And  wears  a  hehnet  mounted  with  a  s, 

with  one  stroke  Sir  Gareth  split  the  s. 

clove  the  helm  As  throughly  as  the  s  ; 

I  smote  upon  the  naked  s  A  thrall  of  thine  in 
open  hall, 

and  the  s  Brake  from  the  nape,  and  from  the  s  the 

crown  Roll'd  into  light,  Lancelot  and  E.  49 

Black  as  the  harlot's  heart — hollow  as  a  s  !  Pelleas  and  E.  468 

fossil  s  that  is  lett  in  the  rocks  Despair  86 


The  Ring  3Ti 

In  Mem.  xlviii  1€ 

Prog,  of  Spring  16 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  32 

L.  of  Shalott  i  23 

The  Brook  175 


CEnone  58 

Palace  of  Art  138 

201 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  55 

Edwin  Morris  64 

St.  S.  StylUes  67 

WUl  Water.  225 

Vision  of  Sin  13 

Princess  ii  120 

V  156 

Maud  I  xiv  36 

Gareth  and  L.  1093 

1139 

1143 

Merlin  and  V.  624 

First  Quarrel  76 

Spinster's  S's.  36 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  208 

Dead  Prophet  66 

Happy  27 


255 

M.  d' Arthur  54 

Enoch  Arden  829 

Princess  i  63 

..       V  219 

,.    vii  287 

.,   Cow.  48 

In  Mem.  xlvii  3 

„  Ixiv  6 

Geraint  and  E.  459 

Lancelot  and  E.  291 

Last  Tournament  219 

Pass,  of  Arthur  222 

.    In  Mem.  xli  17 

Vision  of  Sin  178 
In  Mem.,  Pro.  8 

Gareth  and  L.  639 
1404 
1407 

Balin  and  Balan  55 


SknU 

SkuU  (continued)    which  for  thee  But  holds  a  s, 
whin  I  crackd  his  s  for  her  sake,    ^ 
tower  of  eighty  thousand  human  s  s, 
scorpion  crawling  over  naked  s's  ;— 

Sky    wind  be  aweary  of  blowing  Over  the  s  .-' 
south  winds  are  blowing  Over  the  s. 
Vv'hen  thickest  dark  did  trance  the  s, 
trenched  waters  ran  from  5  to  s  ; 
WrrH  a  half -glance  upon  the  s 
Sunn'd  by  those  orient  skies  ; 
And  white  against  the  cold- white  5, 
Thou  comest  atween  me  and  the  skies, 
When  thou  gazest  at  the  skies  ? 
Stoops  at  all  game  that  wiiag  the  skies, 
Too  long  you  keep  the  upper  skies  ; 
Grow  golden  all  about  the  s  - 
That  clothe  the  wold  and  meet  the  s ; 
Heavily  the  low  s  raining 
The  skies  stoop  down  in  their  desire  ; 
All  naked  in  a  sultry  s, 
to  where  the  s  Dipt  down  to  sea  and  sands. 
Sole  as  a  flying  star  shot  thro'  the  s 
violet,  that  comes  beneath  the  skies. 
Music  that  brings  sweet  sleep  down  from  the 

blissful  skies. 
Hateful  is  the  dark-blue  s, 
the  next  moon  was  roU'd  into  the  s, 
Ruled  in  the  eastern  s. 
To  every  land  beneath  the  skies, 


647 


Ancient  Sage  255 

Tomorrow  41 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  82 

Demeter  and  P.  78 

Nothing  will  Die  4 

All  Things  will  Die  4 

Mariana  18 

Ode  to  Memory  104 

A  Character  1 

The  Poet  42 

Dying  Swan  12 

Oriana  75 

Adeline  50 

Rosalind  4 

„       35 

Elednore  101 

L.  of  Shalott  i  3 

„  iv  4 

Fatima  32 

37 

Palace  of  Art  31 

123 

May  Queen,  Con.  5 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  7 

39 

D.  of  F.  Women,  229 

264 

On  a  Mourner  3 


Sky  (continued)    Like  to  a  low-hung  and  a  fiery  s 
The  snow  and  the  s  so  bright — 
Far  from  out  a  s  for  ever  bright, 
or  a  deluge  of  cataract  skies, 
brought  out  a  broad  s  Of  dawning  over — 
from  the  s  to  the  blue  of  the  sea ; 
O  come,  come  '  in  the  stormy  red  of  a  s 
ship  stood  still,  and  the  skies  were  blue, 
sparkled  and  shone  in  the  s. 
How  summer-bright  are  yonder  skies, 
blue  of  s  and  sea,  the  green  of  earth, 
points  of  Russian  lances  arose  in  the  s  ; 
World-isles  in  lonely  skies. 
From  skies  of  glass  A  Jacob's  ladder 
now  to  these  unsummer'd  skies 
To  Eiigland  under  Indian  skies. 
Glorying  between  sea  and  s, 
Old  poets  foster'd  imder  friendlier  skies, 
Self-darken'd  in  the  s,  descending  slow  ! 
once  were  gayer  than  a  dawning  s 
in  thine  ever-changing  skies. 
— not  a  star  in  the  s — 
my  wings  That  I  may  soar  the  s, 
Far  as  the  Future  vaults  her  skies, 
A  Voice  spake  out  of  the  skies 
Skylark     By  some  wild  s's  matin  song, 
and  rode  The  s  woods. 


10  every  lailU  ueueauu  u"':  ofvioo,  -                       J      oc 

I  seek  a  warmer  s,  And  I  wUl  see  before  I  die    You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  26 

whatever  s  Bear  seed  of  men  and  growth  of  .i    7     j  lo 

•^ j^  Love  tliou  thy  land  ii) 

meUow  moons  and  happy  skies,  Locksley  M?  159 

He  travels  far  from  otVr  skies-  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  b 

pure  and  clear  As  are  the  frosty  skies,  St.  Agnes   Eve  10 

The  clouds  are  broken  in  the  s,  Sir  Galahad  13 

As  shines  the  moon  in  clouded  skies,  ^^^eggarMaidQ 

Flutter'd  headlong  from  the  *.  V'^^^V'  "/  ^^V'  f^ 

0  love,  they  die  in  yon  rich  s,  ^""""V^M^ 

When  your  sfci«s  change  again  :  ,  ,    "r  i,l  q= 

To  happy  havens  under  all  the  s.  Ode  Inter  Exhih.  35 

This  nV^eling  of  another  .  The  ^a«y  98 

or  to  bask  in  a  summer  s  :  "  «K^?  ^ 

A  web  is  wov'n  across  the  s  ;  In  Mem.  m  6 

And  reach  the  glow  of  southern  skies,  -.        ^*  -^^ 

The  rooks  are  blown  about  the  skies ;  "           ^-  « 

Thro'  circles  of  the  bounding  s,  "         ^*  ^ 

Tho'  always  under  alter'd  skies  "   xxxmn  ^ 

The  baby  new  to  earth  and  s,  ■'         /^?^  | 

Who  roll'd  the  psalm  to  wintry  skies,  -         *^*.  |^ 

For  pastime,  dreaming  of  the  s  ;  "       '•^  ^* 

And  sow  the  s  with  flying  boughs,  "          Lit 

o'er  the  s  The  silvery  haze  of  suimner  drawn  ;  „         xcv  o 

And  bats  went  roimd  in  fragrant  skies,  -                ^ 

Where  first  we  gazed  upon  the  s  ;  "          "'^  ^ 

Ring  out,  wUd  bells,  to  the  wild  s,  "      ™;^14 

Of  sorrow  under  human  skies :               .„       .  .       j  "      ^Z 1^ 

happy  birds,  that  change  their  s  To  build  and  brood  ;  ,.        cxv  15 

The  brute  earth  hghtens  to  the  s,  u'JTl  T^ 

m\d  voice  pealing  up  to  the  sunny  s,  Jsii  ^7 

makes  you  tyrants  in  your  iron  sfctes,  ••    ^^mii  01 

The  countercharm  of  space  and  hollow  s,  ■■            ?^ 

On  a  bed  of  dafiodil  5,                      ,  "       jrfi, 

dawn  of  Eden  bright  over  earth  and  s,  »      ^i^^^° 

p'elentg'tLt:Sf?ilt^d  calm.  Free  .  and  stars  :  Com.  of  Arthur  392 

■  Rain,  rain,  and  sun  !  a  rainbow  in  the  s  !  ,,            *^^ 

'  0  birds,  that  warble  to  the  mormng  s,  ^"""'^tp.rLt^m 

show'd  themselves  against  the  s,  and  sank.  ^/^J.  fjf  If, 

stormy  crests  that  smoke  against  the  skies,  "^'^'^S^'g.f  7  tit 

Totter'd  toward  each  other  m  the  s,  p.nlZXl  f  402 

One  rose,  a  rose  that  gladden'd  earth  and  s,  Pelleas  and  E  402 

So  shook  to  such  a  roir  of  all  the  s.  Last  Tournament  621 

White  as  white  clouds,  floated  from  s  to  s.  Lover  s  Tale  i  5 

But  stiU  I  kept  my  eyes  upon  the  s.  ,.04^ 


Slain 

Lover's  Tale  ii  61 

Bizpah  83 

.Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  19 

Def.  of  Lucknow  81 

Columbus  77 

V.  of  Maeldune  46 

98 

The  Wreck  115 

Despair  15 

Ancient  Sage  23 

41 

Heavy  Brigade  5 

Epilogue  55 

Early  Spring  8 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son.  17 

Hands  all  Round  17 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhih.  18 

Poets  and  their  B.  1 

Prog,  of  Spring  28 

Death  of  CEnone  12 

Akhar's  D.,  Hymn  4 

Bandit's  Death  25 

Mechanophilus  10 

17 

Voice  spake,  etc.  1 

Miller's  D.  40 

_  Balin  and  Balan  293 

ffl^'pe  (SLap?'siipp^?)  "  s'doWn  i'  the  squad  an'  the        ^^^^   ^^^^^^  ^ 

Slab     Were  s's  of  rock  with  figures,  Gareth  and  L.  1194 

.S  after  s,  their  faces  forward  all,  ..          ^^ 

Slack     Now  with  s  rein  and  careless  of  himself.  Balm  and,  Balan  duy 

Slacken    I  saw  it  and  grieved— to  s  and  to  cool ;  Princess  iv  299 

Slacken'd    His  bow-string  s,  languid  Love,  „¥^'^'^^.^.  iti 

till  as  when  a  boat  Tacks,  and  the  s  sail  flaps,  Princess  ^^  18b 

Round  was  their  pace  at  first,  but  s  soon  :  Geramt  and  E.  66 

Slag    foreground  black  with  stones  and  s's.  Palace  oj  Art  SI 

Slain    («See  oZso  Arrow-slain)     With  thine  own  weapon 

^^    art  thou  s  ^wo  Voices  311 

Here  lies  a  brother  by  a  sister  s.  Princess  ii  208 

s  with  laughter  roU'd  the  gilded  Squire.  „           v  J2 

went  up  a  great  cry.  The  Prince  is  s.  -          «*  -f » 

make  her  as  the  man.  Sweet  Love  were  s  :  „       vii  Ml 

And  overthrown  was  Gorlois  and  s.  Com.  of  Arthur  197 

Far  as  thou  mayest,  he  be  nor  ta'en  nor  s.'  Gareth  and  L.  ^b 

S  by  himself,  shall  enter  endless  night.  .^            6^ 

Thou  hast  overthrown  and  s  thy  master—  „            '  w 

n  both  be  s,  I  am  rid  of  thee ;              ^ ,  "          ,/^ 

but  have  ye  s  The  damsel's  champion  ?  •■     ,  ^^"^ 

the  huge  Earl  lay  s  within  his  hall.  Geraint  and  E.  806 

I  should  have  s  your  father,  "            »^° 

foully  s  And  villainously  !  Balm  and  Balan  135 

had  I  crown'd  With  my  s  self  the  heaps  of  whom 

I  slew "                • 

'  Lo  !  he  hath  s  some  brother-knight,  „    ,.  "      ,  rr  ^^ 

As  after  furious  battle  turfs  the  s  Merlm  and  /•  657 

And  each  had  s  his  brother  at  a  blow  ;  Lancelot  and  E.il 

I  saw  him,  after,  stand  High  on  a  heap  of  s,  „  „      "     ,  t.  oVI 

I  will  say  That  I  have  s  thee.  Pelleas  and  E.  34b 

I  have  s  this  Pelleas  whom  ye  hate :  "            ^'-^ 
'  Liar,  for  thou  hast  not  s  This  Pelleas  !  here  he 

stood,  and  might  have  s  Me  and  thyself.'  „            490 

he  shrieked, '  my  will  is  to  be  s,'  t    .  ^    "           .It 
Maim'd  me  and  maul'd,  and  would  outright  have  s.  Last  I  oumamentlb 

S  was  the  brother  of  my  paramour  By  a  knight  „            448 

but  many  a  knight  was  s  ;  Guinevere  438 

thro'  my  sin  to  slay  and  to  be  s  !  «        o^^ 

Slew  him,  and  all  but  s  himself,  he  fell.  -^"^^-J?/  i™"*"  ^S^ 

Seeing  forty  of  our  poor  hundred  were  s.  The  Revenge  7b 

Their  kindly  native  princes  s  or  slaved,  Columbus  174 

s  my  father  the  day  before  I  was  born.  V.  of  Maeldune^ 

s  thy  fathers  in  war  or  in  single  strife,  ,,            1^1 

Thy  fathers  have  s  his  fathers,  >-            |^ 

Thy  father  had  s  his  father,  m            |^ 

The  man  that  had  s  my  father.  »            '-^^ 


Slain  648 

Slaia  (continued)     S  by  the  sword-edge —  Bait,  of  Brunanburh  113 

blade  that  had  s  my  husband  thrice  thro'  his  breast.  Bandit's  Death  34 

Slake    *  Let  her  go !  her  thirst  she  s's  Vision  of  Sin  143 

Slaked    the  hermit  s  my  burning  thirst,  Holy  Grail  461 

shriek'd  and  s  the  ught  with  blood.  LocksUy  H.,  Sixty  90 

Slander  (s)    Thee  nor  carketh  care  nor  s ;  A  Dirge  8 

'  Thro'  s,  meanest  spawn  of  Hell —  The  Letters  33 

And  women's  s  is  the  worst,  „          34 

sins  of  emptiness,  gossip  and  spite  And  s.  Princess  ii  93 

The  civic  s  and  the  spite ;  In  Mem.  cvi  22 

spake  no  s,  no,  nor  listen'd  to  it ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  10 

Whenever  s  breathed  against  the  King —  Com.  of  Arthur  177 

He  sow'd  a  s  in  the  common  ear,  Marr.  of  Geraint  450 

vivid  smiles,  and  faintly- venom'd  points  Of  s,  Merlin  and  V.  173 

these  are  s's :  never  yet  Was  noble  man  Lancelot  and  E.  1087 

To  speak  no  s,  no,  nor  listen  to  it,  Guinevere  472 

S,  her  shadow,  sowing  the  nettle  Fastness  22 

Slander  (verb)    Ciome  to  the  hollow  heart  they  s  so  !  Princess  vi  288 

Jenny,  to  s  me,  who  knew  what  Jenny  had  been !  Grandmother  35 

ever  ready  to  s  and  steal ;  Maud  I  iv  19 

£9ander'd    he  thought,  had  s  Leolin  to  him.  Aylmer's  Field  350 

To  judge  between  my  s  self  and  me —  Columbus  125 

Slandering    And  she  to  be  coming  and  s  me,  Grandmother  27 

SlanderoQS    All  for  a  s  story,  that  cost  me  many  a  tear.  .,            22 

Slant    8  down  the  snowy  sward,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  6 

That  huddling  s  in  furrow-cloven  falls  Princess  vii  207 

To  s  the  fifth  autumnal  slope.  In  Mem.  xxii  10 

That  God  would  ever  s  His  bolt  from  falling  Happy  81 

The  s  seas  leaning  on  the  mangrove  copse.  Prog,  of  Spring  76 

Slanted    a  beam  Had  s  forward,  falling  in  a  land  Of  promise ;  Princess  ii  139 

Long  lanes  of  splendour  s  o'er  a  press  ,,      iv  478 

Slanting    reach'd  a  meadow  s  to  the  North ;  Gardener's  D.  108 

On  every  s  terrace-lawn.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  10 

And  lash'd  it  at  the  base  with  s  storm ;  Merlin  and  V.  635 

Showers  s  light  upon  the  dolorous  wave.  Lover's  Tale  i  811 

and  fell  S  upon  that  picture,  „        ii  175 

Slap    See  Slaape 

Slate    On  the  lecture  s  The  circle  rounded  Princess  ii  371 

lies  a  ridge  of  s  across  the  ford ;  Gareth  and  L.  1056 

Slated     roofs  of  s  hideousness  !  Lochsley  H.,  Sixty  246 

Slate-qnarry    I  heard  them  blast  The  steep  s-q,  Golden  Fear  76 

Slaughter     Dismal  error  !  fearful  s  !  The  Captain  65 

Had  beat  her  foes  with  s  from  her  waUs.  Princess,  Pro.  34 

drove  her  foes  with  s  from  her  walls,  „            123 

Ran  the  land  with  Roman  s,  Boddicea  84 

In  perils  of  battle  On  places  of  s —  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  86 

Never  had  huger  <S  of  heroes  ,,                  112 

Slaughter-honse    makes  a  steaming  s-h  of  Rome.  Lucretius  84 

Slav    S,  Teuton,  Kelt,  I  count  them  all  My  friends  Epilogue  18 

Slave    Of  child,  and  wife,  and  s ;  Lotos-Eaters  40 

Drink  deep,  until  the  habits  of  the  s.  Princess  ii  91 

And  play  the  s  to  gain  the  tyranny.  „      iv  132 

For  ever  s's  at  home  and  fools  abroad.'  „          521 

— or  brought  her  chain'd,  as,  „       v  139 

if  ye  fail.  Give  ye  the  5  mine  order  Pelleas  and  E.  270 

Artificer  and  subject,  lord  and  s,  Lover's  Tale  ii  103 

bow'd  myself  down  as  a  5  to  his  intellectual  throne.  The  Wreck  66 

/  was  the  lonely  s  of  an  of  ten- wandering  mind ;  „        130 

who  bought  me  for  his  s  :  The  Flight  19 

Those  that  in  barbarian  burials  kill'd  the  s,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  67 

Now  the  Rome  of  s's  hath  perish'd,  To  Virgil  33 

The  s,  the  scourge,  the  cham ;  Freedom  12 

Man  is  but  the  s  of  Fate.  Death  of  (Enone  44 

Three  s's  were  trailing  a  dead  lion  away,  St.  Telemachus  47 

no  s's  of  a  four-footed  will  ?  The  Dawn  18 

wearied  of  AutocratSj  Anarchs,  and  S's,  The  Dreamer  10 

Slaved    Their  kindly  native  princes  slain  or  s,  Columbus  174 

Slavish    plucks  The  s  hat  from  the  villager's  head  ?  Maud  I  x  A 

Slay    I  will  arise  and  s  thee  with  my  hands.'  M.  d' Arthur  132 

I  see  the  woodman  lift  His  axe  to  s  my  kin.  Talking  Oak  236 

As  I  might  s  this  child,  if  good  need  were.  Princess  ii  287 

Within  me,  that  except  you  s  me  here,  „        iv  453 

you  could  not  s  Me,  nor  your  prince :  „           «  65 

Give  me  to  right  her  wrong,  and  s  the  man.'  Gareth  and  L.  366 

lay  him  low  and  s  him  not,  „            379 


Sleep 


Slay  ^continued)  To  show  that  who  may  s  or  scape  the  three,  Gareth  and  L.  641 

hard  by  here  is  one  will  overthrow  And  s  thee :  „            897 

See  that  he  fall  not  on  thee  suddenly,  And  s  thee  unarm'd :     „  923 

Gareth  there  unlaced  His  helmet  as  to  s  him,  „            979 

as  to  s  One  nobler  than  thyself.'  „            J 

and  crying,  '  Knight,  S  me  not :  „           1410 

hoped  to  s  him  somewhere  on  the  stream,  „          1419 
we  will  s  him  and  will  have  his  horse  And  armour,      Geraint  and  E. 

they  would  s  you,  and  possess  your  horse  And  armour,  „            74 

'  Fly,  they  will  return  And  s  you ;  „           749 

Shriek'd  to  the  stranger  '  S  not  a  dead  man ! '  „          779 

'  O  cousin,  s  not  him  who  gave  you  life.'  „          783 

I  thought  mjr  thirst  Would  s  me.  Holy  Grail  380 

And  if  ye  s  him  I  reck  not :  Pelleas  and  E.  269 

It  may  be  ye  shall  s  him  in  his  bonds.'  .,             273' 

'  I  will  go  back,  and  s  them  where  they  lie.'  „             444 

'  What !  s  a  sleeping  knight  ?  „            448 

'  Thou  art  false  as  Hell :  s  me :  „            57flj 

'(S  then,'  he  shriek'd,  '  my  will  is  to  be  slain,'  „            578* 

Begin  to  s  the  folk,  and  spoil  the  land.'  Guinevere  137 

Gone  thro'  my  sin  to  s  and  to  be  slain !  „        61S 

I  will  arise  and  s  thee  with  my  hands.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  300 

drew  His  sword  on  his  fellow  to  s  him,  V.  of  Maeldune  68 

Freedom,  free  to  s  herself,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  128 

Slayer    See  Brother-slayer,  Shadow-slayer 

Slaying     For,  be  he  wroth  even  to  s  me,  Geraint  and  E.  67 

That  skins  the  wild  beast  after  s  him,  „             93 

Sleeap  (sleep)     an'  dussn't  not  s  i'  the  'ouse,  Owd  Rod  37 

Sleeapin  (sleeping)    an'  s  still  as  a  stoan,  „        30 

Sleek  (adj.)     With  chisell'd  features  clear  and  s.  A  Character  30 

And,  issuing  shorn  and  s.  Talking  Oak  42 

S  Odalisques,  or  oracles  of  mode.  Princess  ii  77 

The  s  and  shining  creatures  of  the  chase,  „      v  155 

Sleek  (verb)    To  s  her  ruffled  peace  of  mind.  Merlin  and  V.  899 

And  s  his  marriage  over  to  the  Queen.  Last  Tournament  391 

Sleek'd    smooth'd  his  chin  and  s  his  hair,  A  Character  11 

one  s  the  squalid  hair.  One  kiss'd  his  hand.  Death  of  (Enone  57 

Sleeker    s  shall  he  shine  than  any  hog.'  Gareth  and  L.  460 

and  all  the  world.  Had  been  the  s  for  it :  Lancelot  and  E.  250 

equal  baseness  lived  in  s  times  With  smoother  men :  Princess  v  385 

Sleep  (s)     in  her  first  s  earth  breathes  stilly :  Leonine  Eleg.  7 

dreamless,  uninvaded  s  The  Kraken  sleepeth :  The  Kraken  3 

lie  Battening  upon  huge  seaworms  in  his  s,  „          12 

In  s  she  seem'd  to  walk  forlorn,  Mariana  30 

as  in  s  I  sank  In  cool  soft  turf  upon  the  bank,  Arabian  Nights  95 

From  his  coiled  s's  in  the  central  deeps  The  Mermaid  24 

S  had  bound  her  in  Ms  rosy  band,  Caress'd  or  chidden  6 

'  My  Ufe  is  sick  of  single  s :  The  Bridesmaid  13 

She  breathed  in  s  a  lower  moan,  .  Mariana  in  the  S.  45 

Each  morn  my  s  was  broken  thro'  Miller's  D.  39 

Softer  than  s — all  things  in  order  stored.  Palace  of  Art  87 
Music  that  brings  sweet  s  down  from  the  blissful 

skies.  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  7 

from  the  craggy  ledge  the  poppy  hangs  in  s.  „               11 

and  brought  Into  the  gulfs  of  s.  D.  of  F.  Women  52 

'  We  drank  the  Libyan  Sun  to  s,  „            145 

dissolved  the  mystery  Of  folded  s.  „            263 

than  I  from  s  To  gather  and  tell  o'er  „            275 

Such  a  s  They  sleep — the  men  I  loved.  M.  d' Arthur  16 

yet  in  s  I  seem'd  To  sail  with  Arthur  „    Ep.  16 

And  in  her  bosom  bore  the  baby,  S.  Gardener's  D.  268 

lest  a  cry  Should  break  his  s  by  night.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  74 

Or  in  the  night,  after  a  little  s,  I  wake :  St.  S.Stylites  113 

But,  roUing  as  in  s.  Low  thunders  Talking  Oak  278 

pointing  to  his  dnmken  s,  locksley  Hall  81 

'  O  eyes  long  laid  in  happy  s ! '  Day-Dm.,  Depart.  17 

'  O  happy  s,  that  lightly  fled ! '  „                       18 

' O  happy  kiss,  that  woke  thy  si'  ,,                        19 

So  sleeping,  so  aroused  from  s  „         L'Envoi  21 
Yet  sleeps  a  dreamless  s  to  me ;  A  s  by  kisses 

undissolved,  „                       50 

Charier  of  s,  and  wine,  and  exercise,  Aylmer's  Field  448 

And  came  upon  him  half-arisen  from  s,  „            584 

rough  amity  of  the  other,  sank  As  into  s  again.  „            592 

He  also  sleeps — another  s  than  ours.  Sea  Dreams  310 


Sleep 


649 


Sleepy 


(s)  {continued)  let  your  s  for  this  one  night  be  sound :    Sea  Dreams  315 
Echo  answer'd  in  her  s  From  hollow  fields:  Princess,  Pro.  66 

tinged  with  wan  from  lack  of  s,  „  Hi  25 

hand  That  nursed  me,  more  than  infants  in  their  s.  „  vii  54 

Fill'd  thro'  and  thro'  with  Love,  a  happy  s.  „  172 

And  sink  again  into  s.'  Voice  and  the  P.  24 

To  S  I  give  my  powers  away ;  In  Mem.  iv  1 

Calm  on  the  seas,  and  silver  s,  „      xi  17 

A  late-lost  form  that  s  reveals, 
That  sleeps  or  wears  the  mask  of  s, 
'  They  rest,'  we  said, '  their  s  is  sweet,' 
If  S  and  Death  be  truly  one, 
S,  Death's  twin-brother,  times  my  breath ;  S,  Death's 

twin-brother,  knows  not  Death, 
That  foolish  s  transfers  to  thee. 
(S,  kinsman  thou  to  death  and  trance 
And  S  must  he  down  arra'd. 
Knew  that  the  death-white  curtain  meant  but  6-, 
thought  like  a  fool  of  the  s  of  death. 

0  moon,  that  layest  all  to  s  again, 
and  all  his  life  Past  into  s ; 
'  Sound  s  be  thine ! 
and  slept  the  s  With  Balin, 
full  Of  noble  things,  and  held  her  from  her  s 
he  roU'd  his  eyes  Yet  blank  from  s, 
and  feign'd  a  s  until  he  slept, 
malice  on  the  placid  lip  Froz'n  by  sweet  s, 
went  back,  and  seeing  them  yet  in  s  Said,  '  Ye,  that 

so  dishallow  the  holy  s,  Your  s  is  death,'  „  445 

And  gulf'd  his  griefs  in  inmost  5 ;  ,,  516 

Such  a  s  They  sleep — the  men  I  loved.  Pass,  of  Arthur  184 

but  were  a  part  of  s,  Lover's  Tale  ii  117 

And  murmur  at  the  low-dropt  eaves  of  s,  „  122 

wind  from  the  lands  they  had  ruin'd  awoke  from  s,      The  Revenge  112 
My  s  was  broken  besides  with  dreams  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  65 

Silent  palaces,  quiet  fields  of  eternal  si  V.  of  Maeldune  80 

past,  in  s,  away  By  night,  Tiresias  203 

till  we  long'd  for  eternal  s.  Despair  46 

first  dark  hour  of  his  last  s  alone.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  238 

Is  breathing  in  his  s,  Early  Spring  23 

in  s  I  said  '  All  praise  to  Alia  Akbar's  Dream  197 

1  could  make  »S  Death,  if  I  would —  Bandit's  Death  32 
Sleep  (verb)     {See  also  Sleeap)     Ox  Feeds  in  the  herb, 

and  s's,  Supp.  Confessions  151 

I  s  forgotten,  I  wake  forlorn.'  Mariana  in  the  S.  36 


xiii  2 
.  xviii  10 
.  XXX  19 
,    xliii  1 


,.  I  xviii  2 

16 

,,     Ixxi  1 

Maud  I  i  41 

xiv  37 

38 

Gareth  and  L.  1061 

1281 

1282 

Balin  and  Balan  631 

Lancelot  and  E.  339 

820 

842 

Pelleas  and  E.  433 


'  Thine  anguish  will  not  let  thee  s, 

'  Go,  vexed  Spirit,  s  in  trust ; 

his  stedfast  shade  S's  on  his  luminous  ring.' 

They  graze  and  wallow,  breed  and  s ; 

I  s  so  sound  all  night,  mother. 

The  place  of  him  that  s's  in  peace. 

S  sweetly,  tender  heart,  in  peace : 

S,  holy  spirit,  blessed  soul, 

S  till  the  end,  true  soul  and  sweet. 

8  full  of  rest  from  head  to  feet ; 

Such  a  sleep  They  s — the  men  I  loved. 

home  I  went,  but  coxild  not  s  for  joy, 

'  S,  Ellen  Aubrey,  s,  and  dream  of  me : 

S,  Ellen,  folded  in  thy  sister's  arm, 

*  S,  Ellen,  folded  in  EmiUa's  arm  ; 
'  S,  breathing  health  and  peace  upon  her  breast : 
S,  breathing  love  and  trust  against  her  lip  : 
S,  Ellen  Aubrey,  love,  and  dream  of  me.' 
To  walk,  to  sit,  to  s,  to  wake,  to  breathe.' 
'  We  s  and  wake  and  s,  but  all  things  move ; 
and  s,  and  feed,  and  know  not  me. 
Each  baron  at  the  banquet  s's, 
She  s's :  her  breathings  are  not  heard 
She  s's :  on  either  hand  upsweUs 
She  s's,  nor  dreams,  but  ever  dwells 

*  I'd  s  another  hundred  years, 
And  learn  the  world,  and  s  again ; 
To  s  thro'  terms  of  mighty  wars. 
Yet  s's  a  dreamless  sleep  to  me ; 
And  s  beneath  his  pillar'd  light ! 


Two  Voices  49 

115 

Palace  of  Art  16 

202 

May  Queen  9 

To  J.  S.  68 

69 

70 

73 

75 

M.  d' Arthur  17 

Gardener's  D.  174 

Audley  Court  62 

63 

65 

68 

69 

73 

Edwin  Morris  40 

Golden  Year  22 

Ulysses  5 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  37 

Sleep.  B.  17 

21 

23 

Depart.  9 

L'Envoi  8 

9 

50 

The  Voyage  20 


Sleep  (verb)  {continued)     '  Wake  him  not;    let  him  s ;  Enoch  Arden  233 

one  night  it  chanced  That  Annie  could  not  s,  „             490 

My  dearest  brother,  Edmund,  s's,  The  Brook  187 

s's  in  peace :  and  he.  Poor  PhiUp,  „        190 

S's  in  the  plain  eggs  of  the  nightingale.  Aylmer's  Field  103 
S,  little  birdie,  s !  will  she  not  s  Without  her  '  little 

birdie '  ?  well  then,  s,  And  I  will  sing  you  '  birdie.'      Sea  Dreams  282 

Baby,  s  a  little  longer,  „          305 

If  she  s's  a  little  longer,  „          307 
'  She  s's ;  let  us  too,  let  all  evil,  s.    He  also  s's — another 

sleep  than  ours.  ,.          309 

And  I  shall  s  the  sounder ! '  ,,312 

While  my  Uttle  one,  while  my  pretty  one,  s's.  Princess  Hi  8 

S  and  rest,  s  and  rest,  „             9 

S,  my  little  one,  s,  my  pretty  one,  s.  „           16 

'  Now  s's  the  crimson  petal,  „  vii  176 

S,  little  ladies !     And  they  slept  well.  Minnie  and  Winnie  3 

S,  little  ladies !     Wake  not  soon !  „                9 

Behold  me,  for  I  cannot  s.  In  Mem.  vii  6 

S,  gentle  heavens,  before  the  prow ;  „       ix  14 

S,  gentle  winds,  as  he  s's  now,  „            15 

That  s's  or  wears  the  mask  of  sleep,  „    xviii  10 

I  s  till  dusk  is  dipt  in  gray :  .,    Ixvii  12 

Long  s's  the  summer  in  the  seed ;  ..        cv26 

Whatever  wisdom  s  with  thee.  .,    cviii  16 

Yet  how  much  wisdom  s's  with  thee  ..      cxiii  2 

I  come  once  more ;  the  city  s's ;  .,      cxix  3 

and  s  Encompass'd  by  his  faithful  guard,  ,,     cxxvi  7 

soimd  cause  to  s  hast  thou.  Gareth  and  L.  1282 

Dreams  ruling  when  wit  s's !  Balin  and  Balan  143 

Look  how  she  s's — the  Fairy  Queen,  Lancelot  and  E.  1255 

Such  a  sleep  They  s — the  men  I  loved.  Pass,  of  Arthur  184 

'  It  was  my  wish,'  he  said,  '  to  pass,  to  s,  Lover's  Tale  iv  63 

'  Do  I  wake  or  s  ?  „               78 

do  not  s,  my  sister  dear !     How  can  you  s  ?  The  Flight  1 

who  ?  who  ?  my  father  s's !  „      69 

s's  the  gleam  of  dying  day.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  42 

meant  to  s  her  hundred  summers  out  The  Ring  66 

'  S,  Uttle  blossom,  my  honey,  my  bliss  !  Romney's  R.  99 

I  blind  your  pretty  blue  eyes  with  a  kiss !    <S ! '  „          102 

then  he  yawn'd,  for  the  -wretch  could  s,  Bandit's  Death  30 

Sleeper     That  watch  the  s's  from  the  wall.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  24 

Me,  that  was  never  a  quiet  s  ?  Maud  II  v  98 

Beat,  till  she  woke  the  s's,  Geraint  and  E.  404 

Stirs  up  again  in  the  heart  of  the  s,  Vastness  18 

Sleepeth     uninvaded  sleep  The  Kraken  s :  The  Kraken  4 

when  the  air  S  over  all  the  heaven,  Eleanor e  39 

Sleepin'     As  the  Holy  Mother  o'  Glory  that  smiles  at  her 

s  child —  Tomorrow  26 

Sleeping    {See  also  A-sleeapin',  Sleeapin,  Sleepin')    you 

were  s  ;  and  I  said,  '  It's  not  for  them :  May  Queen,  Con.  37 

And  s,  haply  dream  her  arm  is  mine.  Audley  Court  64 

As  thunder-drops  fall  on  a  s  sea :  D.  of  F.  Women  122 

So  s,  so  aroused  from  sleep  Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  21 

On  s  wings  they  sail.  Sir  Galahad  44 

while  the  two  were  s,  a  full  tide  Rose  Sea  Dreams  50 

Their  s  silver  thro'  the  hills ;  In  Mem.,  Con.  116 

on  a  summer  morn  (They  s  each  by  either)  Marr.  of  Geraint  70 

You  thought  me  s,  but  I  heard  you  say,  Geraint  and  E.  741 

Not  dead ;  he  stirs ! — but  s.  Balin  and  Balan  469 

A  stone  is  flung  into  some  s  tarn,  Pelleas  and  E.  93 

'  What !  slay  a  s  knight  ?  „          448 

There  left  it,  and  them  s ;  „          453 

There  came  on  Arthur  s,  Gawain  kill'd  Pass,  of  Arthur  30 

and  in  the  s  mere  below  Blood-red.  Roly  Grail  475 

Wherein  we  nested  s  or  awake.  Lover's  Tale  i  231 

Quietly  s — so  quiet,  our  doctor  said  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  41 

And  stir  the  s  earth,  and  wake  The  bloom  Ancient  Sage  93 

Are  you  s  ?  have  you  forgotten  ?  The  Flight  1 

While  the  house  is  s.  Forlorn  42 

Who  found  me  at  sunrise  S,  Merlin  and  the  G.  13 

Sleeping-night    That  was  my  s-w.  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  61 

Sleepy    The  s  pool  above  the  dam.  Miller's  D.  99 

He  laugh'd  and  I,  tho'  s,  like  a  horse  The  Epic  44 

a  soimd  Like  s  counsel  pleading ;  Amphivn  74 


Sleepy 

Sleepy  (continued)     A  s  light  upon  their  brows  and  lips—      Vision  of  Sin  9 

A  s  land  where  under  the  same  wheel  Aylmer's  Field  33 

so  5  was  the  land.  45 

Sleet    frost,  heat  hail  damp,  and  .-,  and  snow ;  St.  s".  Stylites  16 

«w™     /  ^'^T^'^c'r '^^  and  pearly  hail ;  vision  of  Sin  22 

Sleeve     (See  also  Slieave)     Devils  pluck'd  my  s,  St.  S.  Stylites  171 

A  red  s  Broider'd  ^vith  pearls,'  Lancelot  and  E.  372 

nis  the  prize,  who  wore  the  s  Of  scarlet,  501 

upon  his  helm  A  s  of  scarlet,  '"               604 

What  of  the  knight  with  the  red  s?  "              §21 

he  wore  your  s :  Would  he  break  faith  with  one  "              684 

but  I  hghted  on  the  maid  Whose  s  he  wore ;  7II 

her  scarlet  s,  Tho'  carved  and  cut,  '               goe 

Down  on  his  helm,  from  which  her  s  had  gone  989 

^'®°  w'.u^'^^^^^'P  ""^  chidden  by  the  s  hand,  ^  Caress'dor  chidden  1 

With  rosy  s  fingers  backward  drew  CEnone  176 

Betwixt  the  s  shafts  were  blazon'd  fair  Palac  of  Art  167 

s  stream  Along  the  cliff  to  fall  and  pause  Lo)os-Eaters  8 

The  s  coco's  drooping  crown  of  plumes,  Enoch  Arden  574 

And  sketching  ^ith  her  s  pointed  foot  The  Brook  102 

Their  s  household  fortunes  (for  the  man  Sea  Dreams  9 

What  5  campanili  grew  By  bays.  The  Daisy  13 

How  best  to  help  the  s  store.  To  F.  D.  Mauriee  37 

What  s  shade  of  doubt  may  flit,  /„  Mem.  xlviii  7 

I  kiss  d  her*  hand,  Maudlxiild 

1  he  s  acacia  would  not  shake  xxii  45 

lightly  was  her  s  nose  Tip-tilted  like  the  petal  of  a 

•^fr""'            w.u          ,          ,  Gareth  and  L.  591 

nipt  her  s  nose  With  petulant  thumb  and  finger,  .             749 

Crimson,  a  s  banneret  fluttering.  913 

The  5  entertainment  of  a  house  Once  rich,  Marr.  of  Geraint  300 

s  sound  As  from  a  distance  beyond  distance  Roly  Grail  111 

A  s  page  about  her  father's  hall.  And  she  a  s  maiden,  581 

And  s  was  her  hand  and  small  her  shape ;  Pelleas  and  E.  74 

How  back  again  unto  my  s  spring  Lover's  Tale  i  147 
*  warrant  had  He  to  be  proud  of  The  welcome  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  66 

S  reason  had  He  to  be  glad  of  The  clash  76 

^u  f^^^wu'^'m?  *^*'''^>         .  ^««««^  Sage  167 
Ihat  all  the  Thrones  are  clouded  by  your  loss. 

Were  s  solace.  jr)_  gf  ^;^g  d^j^  of  C  1 

Slenderer    and  send  A  gift  of  s  value,  mine.  To  Ulysses  48 

fflender^afted    A  s-s  Pine  Lost  footing,  fell,  Gareth  and  L.  3 

alep  (slept)     Ihou  si' the  chaumber  above  us,  Owd  Rod  49 

geU  o'  the  farm  'at  s  wi'  tha  51 

An'  I  5  i'  my  chair  hup-on-end,  ,"'         54 

An'  I  s  i'  my  chair  agean  '"         65 

Slept     (See  also  Slep)     A  sluice  with  blacken'd  waters  5,  Manana  38 

Adown  to  where  the  water  s.  Arabian  Nights  30 

The  tangled  water-courses  s,  Dying  Swan  19 

1  111  now  at  noon  she  s  again,  Mariana  in  the  S.  41 

louch  d  by  his  feet  the  daisy  s.  Two  Voices  276 

s  St.  Cecily ;  An  angel  look'd  at  her.  Palace  of  Art  99 

I  bnger  d  there  TiU  every  daisy  s.  Gardener's  D.  165 

How  say  you  ?  we  have  s,  my  lords.  Day-Dm.,  Revival  21 

Or  elbow-deep  m  sawdust,  s.  Will  Water  99 

Ascending  tired,  heavily  s  tiU  morn.  Enoch  Arden  181 

for  the  third,  the  sickly  one,  who  s  230 

she  closed  the  Book  and  s :  When  lo !  "            499 

s,  woke,  and  went  the  next.  The  Sabbath,  Sea  Dreams  18 

up  the  stream  In  fancy,  till  I  s  again,  „           109 

'  Your  own  will  be  the  sweeter,'  and  they  s.  "          318 

Her  maiden  babe,  a  double  April  old,  Aglaia  s.  Princess  ii  111 

sUent  light  S  on  the  painted  walls,  ^i  121 

I  sank  and  s,  Fill'd  thro'  and  thro'  with  Love,  "            171 

and  fain  had  s  at  his  side.  Gramlmother  74 

Of  Queen  Theodohnd,  where  we;* ;  The  Daisy  80 

Or  hardly  s,  but  watch'd  awake  81 

Minnie  and  Winnie  -S  in  a  shell.  Minnie  and  Winnie  2 

Sleep,  little  ladies !     And  they  s  well.  4 

This  year  Is  and  woke  with  pain,  In  Mem.  xxviii  13 

But  over  all  things  brooding  s  „         ta;xviii  7 

God  8  finger  touch'd  him,  and  he  s.  „         i:,cxv  20 

That  landhke  s  along  the  deep.  ciii  56 

and  s,  and  saw.  Dreaming,  a  slope  of  land  Com" of  Arthur  427 

Geraint  Woke  where  he  s  in  the  high  haU,  Alarr.  of  Geraint  755 


650 

Slept  (continued)     and  s  the  sleep  With  Balin 
wearied  out  made  for  the  couch  and  s,     ' 
And  either  s,  nor  knew  of  other  there ; 
yielded,  told  her  all  the  charm,  and  s. ' 
when  they  gam'd  the  cell  wherein  he  s, 
and  feign'd  a  sleep  imtil  he  s. 
s  that  night  for  pleasure  in  his  blood, 
if  she  s,  she  dream'd  An  awful  dream ; 
A  deathwhite  mist  s  over  sand  and  sea : 
he  pray'd  for  both :  he  s  Dreaming  of  both : 
we  s  In  the  same  cradle  always,  face  to  face. 
I  was  quieted,  and  s  again. 
Then  her  head  sank,  she  s, 
he  s  Ay,  till  dawn  stole  into  the  cave, 
Sleuth-hound    S-h  thou  knowest,  and  gray. 
Slew     And  s  him  with  your  noble  birth, 
tho'  I  s  thee  with  my  hand  ! 
own  traditions  God,  and  s  the  Lord, 
S  both  his  sons :  and  I,  shall  I, 
'  He  saved  my  hfe :  my  brother  5  him  for  it.' 
5  the  beast,  and  fell'd  The  forest, 
the  rest  S  on  and  burnt,  crying, 
pride,  wrath  S  the  May-white  : 
and  stunn'd  the  twain  Or  s  them, 
tho'  he  s  them  one  by  one, 
my  hand  Was  gauntleted,  half  s  him ; 
With  my  slain  self  the  heaps  of  whom  I  s— 
Who  pounced  her  quarry  and  s  it. 
will  ye  let  him  in  ?     He  s  him ! 
s  Till  all  the  rafters  rang  with  woman-yells, 
friend  s  friend  not  knowing  whom  he  s ; 
S  him,  and  all  but  slain  himself,  he  fell.' 
if  Affection  Living  s  Love, 
drove  them,  and  smote  them,  and  *■, 
and  seized  one  another  and  s ; 
and  ever  they  struck  and  they  s  ; 
we  s  and  we  sail'd  away. 
Forthe  one  half  s  the  other, 
aS'  with  the  sword-edge  There  by  Brunanburh, 
blanch  the  bones  of  whom  she  s, 
kill'd  the  slave,  and  s  the  wife 
Struck  with  the  sword-hand  and  s, 
Slewest    thine  own  hand  thou  s  my  dear  lord. 

Which  thou  that  s  the  sire  hast  left  the  son. 
Slice     I  will  s  him  handless  by  the  wrist. 
Sliced     who  s  a  red  life-bubbling  way 
Slid    The  sullen  answer  s  betwixt : 

Night  s  down  one  long  stream  of  sighing  wind 
Another  s,  a  sunny  fleck,  ' 

like  a  creeping  sunbeam,  s  From  pillar  unto  pillar 
The  snake  of  gold  s  from  her  hair. 
There  from  his  charger  down  he  s, 
S  from  my  hands,  when  I  was  leaning 
Slide    waves  that  up  a  quiet  cove  Rolling  s, 
S  the  heavy  barges  trail'd 
I  fear  to  s  from  bad  to  worse. 
S's  the  bird  o'er  lustrous  woodland, 
As  down  dark  tides  the  glory  s's, 
I  s  by  hazel  covers ; 
I  shp,  I  s,  I  gloom,  I  glance, 
S  from  that  ^uiet  heaven  of  hers, 
as  the  waterhly  starts  and  s's  Upon  the  level 
Now  s's  the  silent  meteor  on, 
S  from  the  bosom  of  the  stars, 
that  making  s  apart  Their  dusk  wing-cases, 
5  From  the  long  shore-cliff's  windy  walls 
Spring  s's  hither  o'er  the  Southern  sea, 
Slided    over  them  the  tremulous  isles  of  light  aS" 
Writhed  toward  him,  s  up  his  knee  and  sat' 
S  The  Gleam — 


Sliding 

Balin  and  Balan  631 
Merlin  and  V.  736 
738 
966 
Lancelot  and  E.  811 
842 
Pelleas  and  E.  138 
Guinevere  75 
Pass,  of  Arthur  95 
Lover's  Tale  i  227 
258 
The  Ring  421 
Death  of  CEnone  78 
Bandit's  Death  30 
Gareth  and  L.  462 
L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  48 
Locksley  Hall  56 
Aylmer's  Field  795 
Princess  ii  288 
vi  108 
Com.  of  Arthur  59 
439 
Gareth  and  L.  657 
Geraint  and  E.  92 
918 
Balin  and  Balan  57 
178 
Merlin  and  V.  135 
Pelleas  and  E.  379 
Last  Tournament  475 
Pass,  of  Arthur  101 
169 
Lover's  Tale  ii  31 
Def.  of  Lucknow  71 
V.  of  Maeldune  34 


Sliding    (See  also  Supple-sliding)    all  that  night  I  heard 


96 

114 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  9 

Tiresias  150 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  67 

Heavy  Brigade  52 

Gareth  and  L.  352 

360 

Pelleas  and  E.  338 

Gareth  and  L.  509 , 

Two  Voices  226 

Gardener's  D.  2671 

Talking  Oak  2S 

Godiva  ■  _ 

Merlin  and  V.  88fi 

Lancelot  and  E.  51C 

Last  Tournament 

Elednore  1091 

L.  of  Shalott  i  20| 

Two  Voices  231 J 

Locksley  Hall  1621 

Sir  Galahad  47  f 

The  Brook  1711 

1741 

Lucretius  87  j 

Princess  iv  255  j 

„      vii  1841 

In  Mem.  xvii  16i 

Gareth  and  L.  686] 

Geraint  and  E.  163] 

Prog,  of  Spring  2  j 

Princess  vi  82] 

Merlin  and  V.  2391 

Merlin  and  the  G.  61 1 


the  watchman  peal  The  s  season : 
And  o'er  them  many  a  s  star, 
Dream  in  the  s  tides. 
AH  night  no  ruder  air  perplex  Thy  s  keel 


Gardener's  D.  183 

Day-Dm.,  Depart.  13 

Requiescat  4 

In  Mem.  ix  V 


II 


Sliding 


651 


Slope 


J  (continued)     Unconscious  of  the  s  hour, 

A  river  s  by  the  wall. 

Come  s  out  of  her  sacred  glove, 

Went  s  down  so  easily,  and  fell. 

On  to  the  palace-doorway  s,  paused. 

and  s  down  the  blacken'd  marsh  Blood-red, 
Slieave  (sleeve)     Roaver  a-tuggin'  an'  tearin'  my  s. 
Slight  (adj.)     '  You're  too  s  and  fickle,'  I  said, 

S  was,  his  answer  '  Well — I  care  not  for  it : ' 

When  some  respect,  however  s,  was  paid  To  woman 

for  such,  my  friend.  We  hold  them  s : 

No  doubt,  for  s  delay,  remain'd  among  us 

We  are  fools  and  s ; 

How  dimly  character'd  and  s, 

To  save  from  some  s  shame  one  simple  girl. 

S,  to  be  crush'd  with  a  tap  Of  my  finger-nail 

For  ah !  the  s  coquette,  she  cannot  love, 

'  The  s  she-slips  of  loyal  blood, 

A  body  s  and  round,  and  like  a  pear  In  growing. 

And  s  Sir  Robert  with  his  watery  smile 

She  play'd  about  with  s  and  sprightly  talk, 

For,  grant  me  some  s  power  upon  your  fate, 

Flush'd  slightly  at  the  s  disparagement 

I  am  not  made  of  so  s  elements. 

and  death  at  our  s  barricade, 

S  ripple  on  the  boimdless  deep  That  moves. 

Future  glimpse  and  fade  Thro'  some  s  spell, 
SUght  (s)    To  look  at  her  with  s,  and  say 

bare  in  bitter  grudge  The  s's  of  Arthur  and  his  Table, 
Slight  (verb)     and  yet  you  dared  To  s  it. 

he  will  teach  ham  hardness,  and  to  s  His  mother ; 

he  will  learn  to  s  His  father's  memory ; 

Wherefore  5  me  not  wholly. 

He  seems  to  s  her  simple  heart. 

A  song  that  s's  the  coming  care, 

Why  s  your  King,  And  lose  the  quest 

I,  would  s  our  marriage  oath : 
Slighted    saw  Philip,  the  s  suitor  of  oUl  times. 

Going  ?     I  am  old  and  s : 
SUghter     Yours  has  been  a  s  ailment. 

Near  us  Edith's  holy  shadow,  smiling  at  the  s  ghost 
Slightest     The  s  air  of  song  shall  breathe 
Shghtly     Flush'd  s  at  the  slight  disparagement 
Slight-natured     If  she  be  small,  s-m,  miserable. 
Slime    That  tare  each  other  in  their  s, 

that  cannot  see  for  s,  S  of  the  ditch : 

sink  Thy  fleurs-de-lys  in  s  again, 

soul  and  sense  in  city  s  ? 

labour'rl  in  lifting  them  out  of  s. 
Slimed    snake-hke  s  his  victim  ere  he  gorged ; 

And  sank  his  head  in  mire,  and  s  themselves 
Slink    As  boys  that  s  From  ferule 

a  coward  s's  from  what  he  fears  To  cope  with, 
SUp  (s)    (See  also  She-sIip)    narrow  moon-ht  s's  of  silver  cloud 

And  show  you  s's  of  all  that  grows 

Bursts  of  great  heart  and  s's  in  sensual  mire, 

those  white  s's  Handed  her  cup  and  piped, 

there  was  but  a  s  of  a  moon, 
Slip  (verb)     Could  s  its  bark  and  walk. 

'  Sometimes  I  let  a  sunbeam  s, 

Or  s  between  the  ridges, 

I  »',  I  slide,  I  gloom,  I  glance, 

to  s  away  To-day,  to-morrow,  soon : 

And  s  at  once  all-fragrant  into  one. 

And  s's  into  the  bosom  of  the  lake : 

and  s  Into  my  bosom  and  be  lost  in  me.' 

Sun  comes,  moon  comes,  Time  s's  away. 

I  s  the  thoughts  of  life  and  death ; 

I  will  not  let  his  name  S  from  my  Ups 

and  by  and  by  S's  into  golden  cloud. 
Slipper     fit  to  wear  your  5  for  a  glove 


In  Mem.  xliii  5 

„  ciii  8 

Maud  I  m  85 

Gareth  and  L.  1224 

Lancelot  and  E.  1246 

Holy  Grail  473 

Owd  Rod  60 

Edward  Gray  19 

Aylmer's  Field  238 

,       Princess  ii  136 

iv  127 

331 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  29 

„  Ixi  6 

Maud  I  xviii  45 

II  ii  21 

The  form,  the  form  12 

Talking  Oak  57 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  53 

Edwin  Morris  128 

Merlin  and  V.  171 

333 

Lancelot  and  E.  234 

Guinevere  510 

Def.  of  Lucknow  15 

Ancient  Sage  189 

Early  Spring  32 

Mariana  in  the  S.  66 

Merlin  and  V.  7 

Dora  99 

„  120 

„  153 

Hendecasyllabics  15 

In  Mem.  xcvii  20 

„  xcix  10 

Lancelot  and  E.  654 

Happy  89 

Enoch  Arden  745 

Columbus  241 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  17 

54 

In  Mem.  xlix  7 

Lancelot  and  E.  234 

PriTicess  vii  265 

In  Mem.  Ivi  23 

Holy  Grail  771 

Sir  J.  bldcastle  99 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  218 

Dead  Prophet  11 

Sea  Dreams  193 

Last  Tournament  471 

Princess  v  37 

Pelleas  and  E.  438 

(Enone  218 

Amphion  83 

Princess  v  199 

Last  Tournament  295 

Tomorrow  9 

Talking  Oak  188 

217 

The  Brook  28 

Princess  ii  296 

vii  70 

187 

188 

Window,  When  2 

In  Mem.  cxxii  16 

Marr.  of  Geraint  446 

736 

Geraint  and  E.  623 


Slippery  (continued)    And  that  it  was  too  s  to  be  held, 

as  he  based  His  feet  on  juts  of  s  crag 

hath  o'erstept  The  s  footing  of  his  narrow  wit. 
Slipping    The  s  thro'  from  state  to  state. 

three  times  s  from  the  outer  edge. 

The  silent  water  s  from  the  hills, 

and  then  Went  s  down  horrible  precipices, 

Come  s  o'er  their  shadows  on  the  sand. 

Went  s  back  upon  the  golden  days 
Slip-shod     '  S-s  waiter,  lank  and  sour, 
Slipt     (See  also  Shoulder-slipt)     'Tis  gone :  a  thousand 
such  have  s 

The  snake  s  under  a  spray. 

And  s  aside,  and  like  a  wounded  fife 

by  mischance  he  s  and  fell : 

Till  half-another  year  had  s  away. 

She  s  across  the  summer  of  the  world, 

S  into  ashes,  and  was  found  no  more. 

S  o'er  those  lazy  limits  down  the  wind 

out  I  s  Into  a  land  all  sun  and  blossom. 

And  I  s  out :   but  whither  will  you  now  ? 

S  round  and  in  the  dark  invested  you. 

And  blossom-fragrant  s  the  heavy  dews 

Her  falser  self  s  from  her  like  a  robe. 

The  hoof  of  his  horse  s  in  the  stream, 

like  a  silver  shadow  s  away  Thro'  the  dim  land ; 

the  braid  S  and  imcoil'd  itself, 

And  s  and  fell  into  some  pool  or  stream, 

Who  lost  the  hern  we  s  her  at, 

Lightly,  her  suit  allow'd,  she  s  away, 

At  once  she  s  like  water  to  the  floor. 

Heavy  as  it  was,  a  great  stone  s  and  fell, 

S,  and  ran  on,  and  flung  himself  between 
Slit    And  Uther  s  thy  tongue : 
Shther'd     I  s  an'  hurted  my  buck. 

Sloe     blackthorn-blossom  fades  antl  falls  and  leaves  the 
bitter  s, 

betwixt  the  whiteniiig  s  And  kingcup  blaze, 
Sloe-tree     Poussetting  with  a  s-t : 

Sloomy  (sluggish)     An'  Sally  wur  s  an'  draggle  _  „.  ,„.  ^„„„,„  ,^ 

Slope  (adj.)    when  the  crisp  s  waves  After  a  tempest,   Supp.  Confessions  126 

Took  horse,  descended  the  s  street,  Gareth  and  L.  662 

thro  lanes  of  shouting  Garetli  rode  Down  the  s  street,  .,  700 

on  thro'  silent  faces  rode  Down  the  s  city,  [\  735 

Down  the  «  city  rode,  and  sharply  tum'd  Last  Tournament  127 

Slope  (s)     (See  also  Hill-slope)     his  native  s,  Where 


Lancelot  and  E.  213 

Pass,  of  Arthur  357 

Lover's  Tale  i  102 

Two  Voices  351 

The  Epic  11 

Enoch  Arden  633 

Geraint  and  E.  379 

471 

Guinevere  380 

Vision  of  Sin  71 

Will  Water.  181 

Poet's  Song  10 

Enoch  Arden  75 

106 

471 

531 

Aylmer's  Field  6 

495 

Sea  Dreams  100 

Princess  iv  240 

404 

v243 

„       vii  161 

Gareth  and  L.  1046 

Merlin  and  V.  423 

889 

Lancelot  and  E.  214 

657 

778 

830 

Holy  Grail  680 

St.  Telemachus  61 

Gareth  and  L.  376 

North.  Cobbler  19 

The  Flight  15 

To  Mary  Boyle  25 

Amphion  44 

North.  Cobbler  41 


SUppery     (See  also  Slafipe)     as  he  based  His  feet  on  juts 

of  s  crag  M.  d'ArtMir  189 

To  glance  and  shift  about  her  s  sides,  Lucretius  189 

Glass'd  in  the  s  sand  before  it  breaks  ?  Merlin  and  V.  293 


he  was  wont  to  leap 
And  on  the  s,  an  absent  fool. 
Upon  the  freshly-flower'd  s. 
The  downward  5  to  death. 
There,  on  a  s  of  orchard,  Francis  laid 
At  last  I  heard  a  voice  upon  the  s 
And  many  a  s  was  rich  in  bloom 
drew,  from  butts  of  water  on  the  s, 
Blot  out  the  s  of  sea  from  verge  to  shore, 
we  climb'd  The  s  to  Vivian-place, 
From  s  to  s  thro'  distant  ferns, 
and  I  stand  on  the  s  of  the  hill, 
Follow  them  down  the  s  ! 
To  slant  the  fifth  autumnal  s, 
Becomes  on  Fortune's  crowning  s 
Upon  a  pastoral  s  as  fair, 
on  the  s  The  sword  rose,  the  hind  fell, 
after  one  long  s  was  mounted,  saw,  Bowl-shaped, 
I  was  halfway  down  the  s  to  Hell, 
up  a  s  of  garden,  all  Of  roses  white  and  red, 
purple  s's  of  mountain  flowers  Pass 
Was  blackening  on  the  s's  of  Portugal, 
and  roll  their  ruins  down  the  s. 
Thro'  the  great  gray  s  of  men, 

and  flamed  On  one  huge  s  beyond,  _„  ^ „™w.,„o  ^ 

Slope  (verb)    peaks  shadow'd  with  pine  s  to  the  dark  hyaline.  LeoniniEleg\o 
the  summits  s  Beyond  the  furthest  flights  Two  Voices  184 

swimming  vapour  s's  athwart  the  glen,  (Enone  3 

leave  The  monstrous  ledges  there  to  s,  Princess  vii  212 


Sujyp.  Confessions  164 

Miller's  D.  62 

112 

D.  ofF.  Women  16 

Audley  Court  20 

Vision  of  Sin  219 

To  E.  L.  20 

Princess,  Pro.  60 

vii  38 

Con.  40 

99 

Window,  On  the  Hill  9 

16 

In  Mem.  xxii  10 

„  Ixiv  14 

Maud  I  xviii  19 

Co7n.  of  Arthur  431 

Gareth  and  L.  795 

Geraint  and  E.  791 

Pelleas  and  E.  421 

Last  Tournament  229 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  62 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  138 

Heavy  Brigade  17 

St.  Telemachus  8 


Slope 


652 


Small 


Slope  (verb)  (continued)    That  s  thro'  darkness  up  to  God,  In  Mem.  Iv  16 

As  s's  a  wild  brook  o'er  a  little  stone,  Marr.  of  Geraint  77 

Sloped     the  mountain-shade  S  dovraward  to  her  seat  CEnone  22 

we  came  to  where  the  river  s  To  plunge  Princess  Hi  290 

do^vn  from  this  a  lordly  stairway  s  Oareth  and  L.  669 

arms  on  which  the  standing  muscle  s,  Marr.  of  Geraint  76 

till  the  morning  light  S  thro'  the  pines,  Lover's  Tale  i  264 

breakers  on  the  shore  S  into  louder  surf :  „         Hi  15 
Sloping    (See  also  Even-sloping,  Onward-sloping)    Was  s 

toward  his  western  bower.  Mariana  80 

s  of  the  moon-lit  sward  Was  damask-work,  Arabian  Nights  27 

great  Orion  s  slowly  to  the  West.  Locksley  Hall  8 

s  down  to  make  Arms  for  his  chair,  Lancelot  and  E.  437 

In  some  fair  space  of  s  greens  Palace  of  Art  106 

For  all  the  s  pasture  murmur'd,  sown  Princess,  Pro.  55 

Who,  smitten  by  the  dusty  s  beam,  Marr.  of  Geraint  262 

crisping  white  Play'd  ever  back  upon  the  s  wave.  Holy  Grail  382 

the  s  seas  Hung  in  mid-heaven.  Lover's  Tale  i  3 

Slot     But  at  the  .«  or  fewmets  of  a  deer,  Last  Tournament  371 

Sloth     But  stagnates  in  the  weeds  of  s;  In  Mem.  xxvii  11 

Slothful     Inwrapt  tenfold  in  s  shame.  Palace  of  Art  2Q2 

But  wink  no  more  in  s  overtrust.  Ode  on  Well.  170 

Nor  the  cannon-bullet  rust  on  a  s  shore,  Maud  III  vi  26 

He  rooted  out  the  s  officer  Or  guilty,  Geraint  and  E.  938 

Slough     (See  also  Woman-slough)     '  In  filthy  s's  they  roll 

a  prurient  skin.  Palace  of  Art  201 

From  scalp  to  sole  one  s  and  crust  of  sin,  St.  S.  Stylites  2 

mountain  there  has  cast  his  cloudy  s,  Lucretius  177 
dazzled  by  the  wildfire  Love  to  s's  That  swallow 

common  sense,  Princess  v  441 

times  in  the  s's  of  a  low  desire,  By  an  Evolution.  18 
Slow    (See  also  Too-slow)    The  s  clock  ticking,  and  the  sound     Mariana  74 

So  full,  so  deep,  so  s,  Eleanore  95 

The  s  result  of  mnter  showers :  Two  Voices  452 

The  s  wise  smile  that,  round  about  Miller's  D.  5 

Her  s  full  words  sank  thro'  the  silence  drear,  D.  of  F.  Women  121 

Nor  swift  nor  s  to  change,  but  firm :  Love  thou  thy  land  31 

A  league  of  grass,  wash'd  by  a  s  broad  stream,  Gardener's  D.  40 

If  I  may  measure  time  by  yon  s  light,  St.  S.  Stylites  94 

I  hardly,  with  s  steps.  With  s,  faint  steps,  „          182 

my  heart  so  s  To  feel  it !  Love  and  Duty  34 
The  s  sweet  hours  that  bring  us  all  things  good,  The 

A"  sad  hours  that  bring  us  all  things  ill,  ,.             57 

by  s  prudence  to  make  mild  A  rugged  people,  Ulysses  36 

The  long  day  wanes :  the  s  moon  climbs :  ,,      55 
his  long  wooing  her.  Her  s  consent,  and  marriage,        Enoch  Arden  708 

By  s  approaches,  than  by  single  act  Princess  Hi  284 
tiU  the  Bear  had  wheel'd  Thro'  a  great  arc  his  seven  s 

suns.  ,,        iv  213 

At  first  her  eye  with  s  dilation  roU'd  ,,        vi  189 

Lead  out  thei  pageant :  sad  and  s,  Ode  on  Well.  13 

The  sound  of  streams  that  swift  or  s  In  Mem.  xxxv  10 

And  all  the  wheels  of  Being  s.  „                 I A 

One  set  s  bell  will  seem  to  toll  „           Ivii  10 

With  s  steps  from  out  An  old  storm-beaten,  Gareth  and  L.  1112 

the  great  Queen  Came  with  s  steps,  Balin  and  Balan  245 

Here  her  s  sweet  eyes  Fear-tremulous,  Merlin  and  V.  85 

The  s  tear  creep  from  her  closed  eyeUd  yet,  „            906 

Sighs,  and  s  smiles^  and  golden  eloquence  Lancelot  and  E.  649 

But  ten  5  mornings  past,  and  on  the  eleventh  „          1133 

Then  with  a  s  smile  tum'd  the  lady  round  Pelleas  and  E.  91 

Spread  the  s  smile  thro'  all  her  company.  ,,            95 

and  there,  with  s  sad  steps  Ascending,  Last  Tournament  143 

With  silent  smiles  of  s  disparagement ;  Guinevere  14 

Methought  by  s  degrees  the  sullen  bell  ToU'd  quicker,  Lover's  Tale  Hi  13 

Some  thro'  age  and  s  diseases,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  46 

.Ionian  Evolution,  swift  or  s,  Thro'  all  the  Spheres —  The  Ring  44 

But  after  ten  s  weeks  her  fix'd  intent,  „        345 

Slow-arching    crest  of  some  s-a  wave,  Last  Tournament  462 

Slow-develop'd    A  s-d  strength  awaits  Completion  Love  thou  thy  land  57 

Slow-dropping    S-d  veils  of  thinnest  lawn,  Lotos-Eaters  11 

Slower     Are  s  to  forgive  than  human  kings.  Tiresias  10 

And  s  and  fainter,  Old  and  weary,  Merlin  and  the  G.  99 

Slow-falling     westward — under  yon  «-/star,  Akhar's  Dream  152 

Sk>w-fiaming    Would  seem  s-f  crimson  fires  Palace  of  Art  50 


Slowly     Ring  out  a  s  dying  cause,  •      In  Mem.  cm  . 

out  of  the  darkness  Silent  and  s  Merlin  and  the  G.  8S 
Slowly-dying    (See  also  Slowly)     and  winks  behind 

a  s-d  fire.  Locksley  Hall  ISfil 

By  quiet  fields,  a  s-d  power,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  241 

Slowly-fading    The  s-f  mistress  of  the  world.  Com.  of  Arthur  505| 
Slowly-grown    if  our  s-g  And  crown'd  Republic's 

crowning  common-sense.  To  the  Queen  ii  i 

Slowly-mellowing     thro'  the  s-m  avenues  Last  Tournament  3601 

Slowly-painful    More  s-j>  to  subdue  this  home  Of  sin,  St.  S.  Stylites  57| 

Slowly-ridging    The  s-r  rollers  on  the  cUffs  Clash'd,  Lovers  Tale  iS)i\ 

Slowly-thickening     I  see  the  s-t  chestnut  towers  Prog,  of  Sf  ring  42  j 

Slowly-waning     and  deckt  in  s-w  hues.  Gareth  and  L.  1195  i 

Slow-measure     have  moved  s-m  to  my  tune.  Last  Tournament  2823 

Slow-moving    S-m  as  a  wave  against  the  wind.  Lover's  Tale  iv  293'| 

Slow-worm     s-w  creeps,  and  the  thin  weasel  Aylmer's  Field  852 

Sludge     tends  her  bristled  grunters  in  the  s  : '  Princess  f  27j 

Sluggard     I  have  been  the  s,  and  I  ride  apace.  Holy  Grail  644l 
Sluggish     (See  also  Sloomy)     Mere  fellowship  of  s  moods.  In  Mem.  xxxv  2Xi 

Sluice     A  s  with  blacken'd  waters  slept,  Mariana  38] 

Sluiced     canal  From  the  main  river  s,  Arabian  Xighls  283 

Slumber  (s)     hum  of  swarming  bees  Into  dreamful  s  lull'd.  Eleanore  30| 


2.281 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  2M 

12 

The  Voyage  '. 

In  Mem.  xcix  18 

Maud  I  Hi  2] 

The  Flight  9] 

Supp.  Confessions  1291 

Locksley  Hall  130  j 

In  Mem.  xliii  4  J 

Arabian  Nights  79) 

Enoch  Ardeii 

The  ErakenlQ\ 

Pelleas  and  E.  431 1 

Pass,  of  Arthur  7 

Claribel  18 

Supp.  Confessions  11  ] 

Lotos- Eaters  13  i 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  7  . 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  15 1 

Princess  i  163 1 

Marr.  of  Geraint  106  J 

Maud  /  i  331 

Owd  Bod  41 1 


in  its  place  My  heart  a  charmed  s  keeps. 

Nor  steep  our  brows  in  s's  holy  balm  ; 

surely,  s  is  more  sweet  than  toil, 

As  thro'  the  s  of  the  globe 

Betwixt  the  s  of  the  poles, 

Breaking  a  s  in  which  all  spleenful  folly 

I  envied  your  sweet  s, 

Slumber  (verb)    S's  not  like  a  mountain  tarn  ? 
And  the  kindly  earth  shall  s. 
In  some  long  trance  should  s  on  ; 

Slumber'd    the  garden-bowers  and  grots  S  : 
While  Enoch  s  motionless  and  pale. 

Slumbering  Winnow  with  giant  arms  the  s  green. 
Red  after  revel,  droned  her  lurdane  knights  S, 
Who  slowly  paced  among  the  s  host. 

Slumbrous    The  s  wave  outwelleth, 

if  a  bolt  of  fire  Would  rive  the  s  summer  noon 
RolUng  a  s  sheet  of  foam  below. 
The  s  light  is  rich  and  warm. 

Slung     from  his  blazon'd  baldric  s 

Slur    seem'd  to  s  With  garrulous  ease 

how  men  s  him,  saying  all  his  force  Is  melted 

Slurring    and  s  the  days  gone  by, 

Slushin'     s  down  fro'  the  bank  to  the  beck, 

Slut    See  Trollope 

Sly    -S««  Half-sly 

Smack'd     Their  nectar  s  of  hemlock  on  the  Ups,  De  meter  and  P.  104  , 

Smacking     the  sight  and  s  of  the  time  ;  Princess,  Pro.  89  j 

Small     o'er  it  many,  round  and  s,  Mariana  39 , 

Nothing  but  the  s  cold  worm  Fretteth  A  Dirge  9J 

A  STILL  s  voice  spake  unto  me.  Two  Voices  1 J 

Then  to  the  still  s  voice  I  said  ; 
He  left  a  s  plantation  ;  A  mphion  20  ] 

great  and  s.  Went  nutting  to  the  hazels.  Enoch  Arden  63 

With  one  s  gate  that  open'd  on  the  waste,  733  : 

For  which  his  gains  were  dock'd,  however  s  :  S  were 

his  gains,  Sea  Dreams  7  } 

the  master  took  jS  notice,  or  austerely,  Lucretius  8 

His  name  was  Gama  ;  crack'd  and  s  his  voice,  Princess  i  114  i 

heads  were  less  :  Some  men's  were  «  ;  „      ii  148 1 

her  s  goodman  Shrinks  in  his  aim-chair  „        v  453  j 

So  said  the  s  king  moved  beyond  his  wont.  „      vi  265  \ 

here  and  there  the  s  bright  head,  „       vH  58 1 

she  found  a  s  Sweet  Idyl,  „  190  j 

If  she  be  s,  slight-natured,  „  265 1 

When  one  s  touch  of  Charity  Could  hf t  Lit.  Squabbles  13 

the  village,  and  looks  how  quiet  and  s  !  Maiid  I  iv  1 . 

S  and  pure  as  a  pearl,  „    //  ii  2  ' 

S,  but  a  work  divine,  ,,  23 . 

by  Mark  the  King  For  that  s  charm  of  feature  mine,  Merlin  and  V.  76 
grieving  that  their  greatest  are  so  s,  „        833 

Rejoice,  s  man,  in  this  s  world  of  mine,  Holy  Grail  559 

S  heart  was  his  after  the  Holy  Quest :  „        657 


Small 


653 


Smile 


SmaU  {contimied) '  And  then,  with  s  adventure  met,  Sir  Bors    Holy  Grfi^f 


And  slender  was  her  hand  and  s  her  shape  ; 
and  if  he  fly  us,  S  matter  !  let  him.' 
And  mindful  of  her  s  and  cruel  hand, 
s  pity  upon  his  horse  had  he. 
The  twelve  s  damosels  white  as  Innocence, 
and  cast  thee  back  Thine  own  s  saw, 
s  violence  done  Rankled  in  him  and  ruffled 
But  let  my  words,  the  words  of  one  so  s, 
Of  that  s  bay,  which  out  to  open  main 
The  s  sweet  face  was  flush'd, 
With  all  the  peoples,  great  and  s, 
'  S  blemish  upon  the  skin  ! 
Her  dauntless  army  scatter'd,  and  so  s, 
At  times  the  s  black  fly  upon  the  pane 
Smaller    0  God,  that  I  had  loved  a  s  man  ! 
Hid  under  grace,  as  in  a  s  time, 
I  am  thine  husband — not  a  s  soul. 
When  I  was  s  than  the  statuette 
Smallest    he  saw  The  s  rock  far  on  the  faintest  hill, 

O  s  among  peoples  ! 
Smash    (See  also  Mash)     S  the  bottle  to  smithers, 
Smashed    See  Mash'd 
Smashing    '""'''•  Mashin' 
Smear'd    shiniui^  hair  Was  s  with  earth. 

Their  idol  s  with  blood, 
Smell  (s)    moist  rich  5  of  the  rotting  leaves. 
The  s  of  violets,  hidden  in  the  green. 
The  gentle  shower,  the  s  of  dying  leaves, 
A  great  black  swamp  and  of  an  evil  s, 
and  the  sweet  s  of  the  fields  Past, 
wind  Came  wooingly  with  woodbine  s's. 
blew  Coolness  and  moisture  and  all  s's  of  bud  And 

foUage 
and  the  loathsome  s's  of  disease 
On  them  the  s  of  burning  had  not  past, 
sympathies,  how  frail.  In  sound  and  s  ! 
Smell"  (verb)     rarely  s's  the  new-mown  hay, 
I  s  the  meadow  in  the  street ; 
as  one  That  s's  a  foul-flesh'd  agaric  m  the  holt,  _ 
liow  sweetly  s's  the  honeysuckle  In  the  hush'd  night, 
if  tha  seeas  'im  an'  s's  'im 
is  prized  for  it  s's  of  the  beast,     . 
Smell'd    Fur  'e  s  Uke  a  herse  a-singein', 
Smellest    thou  s  all  of  kitchen-grease. 
Thou  s  all  of  kitchen  as  before.' 
Nay— for  thou  s  of  the  kitchen  still. 
Smelling    (See  also  Ocean-smelling,  Sweet-smelling) 
musk  and  of  insolence, 
over-full  Of  sweetness,  and  in  s  of  itself. 
It    Hesperian  gold.  That  s  ambrosially, 
S  of  the  coming  siunmer,  as  one  large  cloud 
Brought  out  a  dusky  loaf  that  s  of  home,        ^ 
Imile  (s)    deep  and  clear  are  thine  Of  wealthy  ss 

%vho  may  know  Whether  s  or  frown  be  fleeter  f 
Whether  s  or  frown  be  sweeter. 
Thy  s  and  frown  are  not  aloof  From  one  another, 
heart  entanglest  In  a  golden-netted  s  ; 
Hollow  s  and  frozen  sneer  Conie  not  here. 
Wherefore  those  faint  s's  of  thine. 
Wherefore  that  faint  s  of  thine. 
Hence  that  look  and  s  of  thine. 
The  very  s  before  you  speak, 
Comes  out  thy  deep  ambrosial  s. 
ghost  of  passion  that  no  s's  restore — 
The  slow  wise  s  that,  round  about 
She  with  a  .subtle  s  in  her  mild  eyes. 
She,  flashing  forth  a  haughty  s, 
slight  Sir  Eobert  with  his  watery  s 
thou  grant  mine  asking  with  a  s. 
With  one  s  of  still  defiance 
With  tears  and  s's  from  heaven  again 
With  half-allowing  s's  for  aU  the  world, 
Sir  Aylmer  half  forgot  his  lazy  s  Of  patron 
With  a  heaved  shoulder  and  a  saucy  s, 


Pelleas  and  E.  74 

200 

201 

540 

Last  Tournament  291 

712 

Guinevere  48 

„       185 

Lover's  Tale  i  435 

The  Wreck  60 

Epilogue  20 

Dead  Prophet  66 

The  Fleet  11 

To  One  who  ran  down  Eng.  3 

Merlin  and  V.  872 

Lancelot  and  E.  264 

Guinevere  566 

The  Ring  109 

Com.  of  Arthur  99 

Montenegro  9 

North.  Cobbler  104 


SmUe  (s)  (continued)    Never  one  kindly  s,  one  kindly  ^.  , ,  k„. 

\por(i .  Aylmer' s  Field  564 

with  the  fat  affectionate  s  That  makes  the  widow  lean.     Sea  Dreams  155 


Eoly  Grail  210 

Freedom  28 

A  spirit  haunts  17 

D.  ojF.  Women  77 

Enoch  Arden  611 

Holy  Grail  499 

Pelleas  and  E.  5 

Lover's  Tale  ii  36 

„  Hi  5 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  25 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  177 

Early  Spring  36 

The  Owl  i  9 

In  Mem.  cxix  4 

Gareth  and  L.  747 

1287 

North.  Cobbler  66 

The  Dawn  14 

Owd  Mod  101 

Gareth  and  L.  751 

771 

843 

iSof 

Maud  I  vi  45 

Lover's  Tale  i  272 

CEnone  67 

Gardener's  D.  78 

Audley  Court  22 

but 

Madeline  11 

19 

41 

Poet's  Mind  10 

Adeline  21 

38 

63 

Margaret  14 

Elednore  74 

The  form,  the  form  11 

Miller's  D.  5 

(Enone  184 

D.  of  F.  Women  129 

Edwin  Morris  128 

Tithonus  16 

The  Captain  59 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  2 

Aylmer' s  Field  120 

197 

466 


s  that  like  a  wrinkling  wind  On  glassy  water 
She  paused,  and  added  with  a  haughtier  s 
shot  from  crooked  lips  a  haggard  s. 
s,  that  look'd  A  stroke  of  cruel  sunshine 
common  light  of  s's  at  our  disguise 
doubtful  s  dwelt  like  a  clouded  moon 
'  Ay  so,'  said  Ida  with  a  bitter  s, 
blush  and  s,  a  medicine  in  themselves 

(so  rare  the  s's  Of  sunlight) 

Is  matter  for  a  flying  s. 

In  glance  and  s,  and  clasp  and  kiss, 

I  know  it,  and  smile  a  hard-set  s, 

touch'd  my  hand  with  a  s  so  sweet. 

And  s  as  sunny  as  cold. 

And  her  s  were  all  that  I  dream'd. 

And  her  s  had  all  that  I  dream'd. 

But  a  s  could  make  it  sweet,  (repeat) 

With  a  glassy  s  his  brutal  scorn — 

Perhaps  the  "s  and  tender  tone 

The  sun  look'd  out  with  as 

'  I  shall  assay,'  said  Gareth  with  a  s  That  madden  d  ,  ^  „oo 

j^gP  Gareth  and  L.  78o 

'  Turn,  Fortune,  turn  thy  wheel  with  s  or  frown  ;    Marr.  of  Geraint  350 


Princess  i  115 

,.     Hi  225 

..      iv  364 

523 

„       V  271 

,.      vi  270 

316 

„       vii  62 

The  Daisy  53 

In  Mem.  Ixii  12 

„     Ixxxiv  7 

Maud  I  iv20 

vi  12 

24 

37 

93 

„  I  vi  39,  95 

49 

.63 

ix  3 


515 

Balin  and  Balan  160 

Merlin  and  F.  172 

Lancelot  and  E.  323 

374 


With  frequent  s  and  nod  departing  found, 

when  he  mark'd  his  high  sweet  s  In  passing, 

sUght  and  sprightly  talk.  And  vivid  s's, 

when  the  living  s  Died  from  his  lips, 

he  bound  Her  token  on  his  helmet,  with  a  s 

Sighs,  and  slow  s's,  and  golden  eloquence 

Smiled  with  his  lips — a  s  beneath  a  cloud, 

with  a  slow  s  turn'd  the  lady  round 

With  silent  s's  of  slow  disparagement ; 

Heart-hiding  s,  and  gray  persistent  eye : 

Flicker'd  like  doubtful  s's  about  her  lips, 

when  I  wept.  Her  s  lit  up  the  rainbow  on  my  tears, 

her  love  did  clothe  itself  in  s's  About  his  lips  j 

her  Hps  were  sunder'd  With  s's  of  tranquil  bliss,         ^ 

bond  and  seal  Of  friendship,  spoken  of  with  tearful  s  s  ; 

stepping  out  of  darkness  with  a  s. 

adding,  with  a  s,  The  first  for  many  weeks — 

Seead  nobbut  the  s  0'  the  sun 

The  bright  quick  s  of  Evelyn, 

and  the  s,  and  the  comforting  eye — 

And  greet  it  with  a  kindly  s  ; 

bask'd  in  the  light  of  a  dowerless  s, 

But  wakes  a  dotard  s.' 

The  cruel  s,  the  courtly  phrase  that  masks 

If  greeted  by  your  classic  s, 
Miriam  nodded  with  a  pitying  s. 

Nor  ever  cheer'd  you  with  a  kindly  s, 

in  the  tearful  splendour  of  her  s's 
Smile  (verb)    (See  also  Smoile)    women  s  with 
saint-like  glances 

8  at  the  claims  of  long  descent. 

Where  they  s  in  secret,  looking  over  wasted 
lands. 

But  they  s,  they  find  a  music  centred 

'  No  fair  Hebrew  boy  Shall  s  away  my  maiden 
blame 

He  will  not  s — not  speak  to  me  Once  more. 

Did  they  s  on  him. 

The  very  graves  appear'd  to  s, 

Seeing  with  how  great  ease  Nature  can  s, 

empire  upon  empire  s's  to-day, 

I  know  it,  and  s  a  hard-set  smile, 

S  sweetly,  thou  !  my  love  hath  smiled  on  me. 

S  and  we  s,  the  lords  of  many  lands  ; 

Frown  and  we  s,  the  lords  of  our  own  hands ; 

8  at  him,  as  he  deem'd,  presumptuously : 

To  make  her  s,  her  golden  ankle-bells. 

smiUng  as  a  master  s's  at  one  That  is  not  of  his  school,         ,.  662 

you  yourself  will  s  at  your  own  self  Lancelot  and  E.  951 


Holy  Grail  705 

Pelleas  and  E.  91 

Guinevere  14 

„      .64 

Lover's  Tale  i  68 

254 

658 

ii  143 

182 

ir  220 

280 

North.  Cobbler  50 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  243 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  12 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  4 

The  Wreck  45 

Ancient  Sage  132 

The  Flight  30 

To  Prof.  Jebb.  10 

The  Ring  281 

388 

Prog,  of  Spring  41 

Supp.  Confessions  22 
L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  52 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  114 
117 

D.  of  F.  Women  214 

To  J.  8.  21 

The  Captain  56 

The  Letters  45 

Lucretius  174 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  33 

Maud  I  iv  20 

Gareth  and  L.  1001 

Marr.  of  Geraint  353 

354 

Balin  and  Balan  222 

Merlin  and  V.  579 


Smile 


654 


Smoke 


Smile  (verb)  {continued)  I  shall  never  make  thee  s  agam.'  Last  Tournament  762 

They  s  upon  me,  till,  remembering  all  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  279 

How  she  would  s  at  'em,  play  with  'em,  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  34 
thine  Imperial  mother  s  again,                          Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  13 

ghost  of  our  great  Catholic  Queen  S's  on  me,  Columbus  188 

s's  at  her  sleepin'  child —  Tomorrow  26 

up  to  either  pole  she  s's,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  169 

Where  man,  nor  only  Nature  s's  ;  To  Ulysses  39 

Smiled    who  s  when  she  was  torn  in  three  ;  Poland  12 

Thy  sister  s  and  said,  '  No  tears  for  me  !  The  Bridesmaid  3 

And  now  and  then  he  gravely  s.  Two  Voices  414 

He  s,  and  opening  out  his  milk-white  palm  (Enone  65 

And  somewhat  grimly  s.  Palace  of  Art  136 

At  me  you  s,  but  unbeguiled  I  saw  the  snare,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  5 

with  dead  hps  s  at  the  twilight  plain,  D.  of  F.  Women  62 

She  faintly  s,  she  hardly  moved  ;  The  Letters  14 

that  which  pleased  him,  for  he  s.  Enoch  Arden  757 

He  look'd  upon  my  crown  and  s  :  In  Mem.  Ixix  16 

Has  not  his  sister  «  on  me  ?  Maud  I  xiii  45 
with  a  kindly  hand  on  Gareth's  arm  S  the  great 

King,        "  Gareth  and  L.  579 

Smile  sweetly,  thou  !  my  love  hath  s  on  me.'  ..            1001 

twice  my  love  hath  s  on  me.'  (repeat)  ..  1062,  1077 

thrice  my  love  hath  s  on  me.'  ,,             1161 

Then  sigh'd  and  s  the  hoary-headed  Earl,  Marr.  of  Geraint  307 

He  spoke  :  the  mother  s,  but  half  in  tears,  „             823 

Then  like  a  stormy  sunlight  s  Geraint,  Geraint  and  E.  480 

From  being  s  at  happier  in  themselves —  Balin  and  Balan  163 

Whereat  she  s  and  tum'd  her  to  the  King,  ,,              201 

Garlon,  hissing ;  then  he  sourly  s.  „              355 

Sunnily  she  s  '  And  even  in  this  lone  wood,  „              528 
till  he  sadlj'  s  :  '  To  what  request  for  what  strange 

boon,'  Merlin  and  T'.  263 

S  at  each  other,  while  the  Queen,  Lancelot  and  E.  739 

But  fast  asleep,  and  lay  as  tho'  she  s.  „           1161 

S  with  his  hps — a  smile  beneath  a  cloud,  Holy  Grail  705 

and  they  too  s.  Scorning  him  ;  Pelleas  and  E.  96 

Full  sharply  smote  his  knees,  and  s,  Guinevere  47 

An'  he  s  at  me,  '  Ain't  you,  my  love  ?  First  Quarrel  62 

the  sun  s  out  far  over  the  summer  sea.  The  Revenge  70 

An'  Squire  'e  s  an'  'e  s  (repeat)  Village  Wife  61,  88 

an'  'e  s,  fur  'e  hedn't  naw  friend,  „                89 
it  seeni'd  she  stood  by  me  and  s.                            In  the  Child.  Hosp.  67 

it  coo'd  to  the  Mother  and  s.  The  Wreck  60 

an'  Hiven  in  its  glory  s,  Tomorrow  25 

looking  stUl  as  if  she  s,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  35 

shook  her  head,  and  patted  yours.  And  s,  The  Ring  314 

Smiler    Thou  faint  s,  Adeline  ?                               .  Adeline  48 

Smilest     Thou  s,  but  thou  dost  not  speak,  Oriana  68 

Thou  that  faintly  5  stQl,  Adeline  15 

And  s,  knowing  all  is  well.  In  Mem.  cxxiiii  20 

'  O  morning  star  that  s  in  the  blue,  Gareth  and  L.  999 
Smiling    (See  also  A-smilin',  Silver-smiling,  Westward-smiling) 

S,  never  speaks  :  Lilian  12 

S,  frowning,  evennore,  (repeat)  Madeline  8,  25 

Faintly  s  Adeline,  Adeline  2 

Thought  folded  over  thought,  s  asleep,  Elednore  84 

Sat  s,  babe  in  arm.  Palace  of  Art  96 

Eustace  tum'd,  and  s  said  to  me,  Gardener's  D.  97 

And,  s,  put  the  question  by.  Day-Dm.,  Revival  32 

And  one  said  s  '  Pretty  were  the  sight  Princess,  Pro.  139 

Took  both  hLs  hands,  and  s  faintly  said  :  „               ii  304 

While  Psyche  watch'd  them,  s,  „                 365 

but  s  '  Not  for  thee,'  she  said,  „              iv  121 

Then  tum'd  the  noble  damsel  s  at  him,  Gareth  and  L.  1188 

And,  gravely  s,  lifted  her  from  horse,  Geraint  and  E.  883 

And  Vivien  answer'd,  s  scornfully,  Merlin  and  V.  37 

And  Vivien  aaswer'd  .<  saucily,  (repeat)  ,,    268,  651 

And  Vivien  answer'd  s  mournfully :  (repeat)  ,.    311,  438 

And  Vivien  answer'd  s  as  in  wrath :  „            526 

And  s  as  a  master  smiles  at  one  That  is  not  of  his  school,     „  662 

while  the  king  Would  listen  s.  Lancelot  and  E.  116 

'  So  ye  will  grace  me,'  answer'd  Lancelot,  8  a  moment,  ..            224 

with  s  face  arose.  With  s  face  and  frowning  heart,  ..            552 

past  the  barge  Whereon  the  lily  maid  of  iitolat  Lay  s,  „          1243 


Smiling  (continued)  To  whom  Sir  Tristram  s, '  I  am  here.   Last  Touniament  521 
made  garlands  of  the  selfsame  flower.  Which  she 


took  s 
a  light  Of  s  welcome  round  her  lips — 
s  at  the  shghter  ghost. 
s  downward  at  this  eartlilier  earth  of  ours, 
as  the  low  dark  hull  dipt  vmder  the  s  main, 
Smirk'd     The  parson  s  and  nodded. 
Smit    s  with  frefer  light  shall  slowly  melt 
S  with  exceeding  sorrow  unto  Death. 
Smite     Tho'  one  should  s  him  on  the  cheek, 
8,  shrink  not,  spare  not. 
his  footsteps  s  the  threshold  staii-s  Of  life — 
sitting  well  in  order  s  The  sounding  furrows  ; 
*S'  on  the  sudden,  yet  rode  on, 
Utterly  s  the  heathen  underfoot, 
This  air  that  s's  his  forehead  is  not  air  But  vision 
That  did  not  shim  to  s  me  in  worse  way, 
Smither  (piece)    Smash  the  bottle  to  s's. 
Smitten    (See  also  Sharp-smitten,  Sun-smitten) 
deeply  s  thro'  the  helm 
Aidless,  alone,  and  s  thro'  the  helm. 
A  Memnon  s  with  the  morning  Sun.' 
Who,  s  by  the  dusty  sloping  beam. 
Then  from  the  s  surface  flash'd,  as  it  were, 
Pray  Heaven,  they  be  not  s  by  the  bolt.' 
And,  when  I  would  have  s  them, 
young  life  Being  s  in  mid  heaven  with  mortal 

cold 
Wet  with  the  mists  and  s  by  the  lights, 
I  am  so  deeply  s  thro'  the  helm 
Aidless,  alone,  and  s  thro'  the  helm — • 
Tho'  Sin  too  oft,  when  s  by  Thy  rod, 
Smoake  (smoke)     I  couldn't  see  fur  the  s 
Smoakin'  (smoking)     Guzzhn'  an'  soakin'  an'  s 

An'  s  an'  thinkin'  o'  things — 
Smock'd    Tho'  s,  or  furr'd  and  purpled, 
Smoile  (smile)    Looiik  'ow  quoloty  s's 
Smoke  (s)    (See  also  Sea-smoke,  Smoake,  Thunder-smoke, 
Water-smoke)     With  thunders,  and  with  lightnings, 
and  with  s, — 
-^nd  all  the  war  is  roll'd  in  s.' 
And  like  a  downward  s,  the  slender  stream 
A  land  of  streams  !  some,  hke  a  downward  s, 
Beneath  its  drift  of  s  ; 
thro'  the  s  The  blight  of  low  desires— 
A  s  go  up  thro'  which  I  loom  to  her 
Athwart  the  s  of  burning  weeds. 
Where,  far  from  noise  a,nd  s  of  town, 
like  the  s  in  a  hurricane  whirl'd. 
With  fruitful  cloud  and  living  s, 
streets  were  black  with  s  and  frost, 
Wrapt  in  drifts  of  lurid  s 

Reddening  the  sun  with  «  and  earth  with  blood. 
In  drifts  of  s  before  a  rolUng  wind, 
walks  thro'  fire  will  hardly  heed  the  s. 
Ilolling  her  s  about  the  Royal  mount, 
'  Out  of  the  s,  at  once  I  leap  from  Satan's  foot 
Out  of  the  s  he  came,  and  so  my  lance  Hold, 
if  the  King  awaken  from  his  craze.  Into  the  s  again.' 


Lover's  Tale  i  344 

»  Hi  46 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  54 

183 

The  Wreck  127 

The  Goose  20 

Golden  Year  33 

Lover's  Tale  i  601 

Two  Voices  251 

St.  S.  Stylites  181 

191 

Ulysses  58 

Com.  of  Arthur  51 

423 

-        Holy  Grail  914 

Guinevere  435 

North.  Cobbler  104 

I  am  so 

M.  d' Arthur  25 

41 

Princess  Hi  116 

Marr.  of  Gerainf  262 

Lancelot  and  E.  1236 

Holy  Grail  221 

823 

Last  Tournament  27 

Guinevere  597 

Pass,  of  Arthur  193 

209 

Doubt  and  Prayer  1 

Owd  Rod  87 

North.  Cobbler  24 

Owd  Rod  34 

Princess  iv  247 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  53 


Buonaparte  6 

Two  Voices  156 

Lotos- Eaters  8 

10 

Talking  Oak  6 

Aylmer's  Field  672 

Princess  v  130 

„     vii  358 

F.  D.  Maurice  13 

Boddicea  59 

In  Mem.  xxxix  3 

„  Ixix  3 

Maud  II  iv  66 

Com.  of  Arthur  37 

4M 

Gareth  and  L.  143 

190 

537 

722 

725 


To 


puff'd  the  swaying  branches  into  s  Holy  Grail  15 

their  foreheads  grimed  with  s,  and  sear'd,  „          265 

the  morning  star  Reel'd  in  the  s,  Pelleas  and  E.  519 

daylight  of  your  minds  But  cloud  and  s.  Lover's  Tale  i  297 

Dark  thro'  the  s  and  the  sulphur  Def.  of  Lucknow  33 

Dark  with  the  s  of  human  sacrifice,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  84 

when  a  s  from  a  city  goes  to  heaven  Achilles  over  the  T.  7 

He  is  only  a  cloud  and  a  s  Despair  29 

'  A  fiery  phoenix  rising  from  the  s,  The  Ring  339 

all  her  realm  Of  sound  and  s.  To  Mary  Boyle  66 

s  of  war's  volcano  burst  again  From  hoary  deeps  Prog,  of  Spring  97 
Smoke  (verb)     The  long  way  s  beneath  him  in  his  fear  ;  Geraint  and  E.  532 

stormy  crests  that  s  against  the  skies,  Lancelot  and  E.  484 

I  have  seen  this  yew-tree  s.  Spring  after  spring.  Holy  Grail  18 

went  To  s  the  scandalous  hive  of  those  wild  bees  „        214 


Smoking 


655 


Snipe 


Smoking    See  Smoakiii' 

Smoky     Right  dowii  by  s  Paul's  they  bore,  H'ill  Water.  141 

Had  chanted  on  the  s  mountain-tops,  Guinevere  282 

Smooth    motion  from  the  river  won  Ridged  the  s 

level,  Arabian  Nights  35 
A  huge  crag-platform,  s  as  bumish'd  brass  I  chose.         Palace  of  Art  5 

I  keep  s  plats  of  fruitful  groimd,  2'he  Blackbird  3 

so  by  many  a  sweep  Of  meadow  s  from  aftermath  Audley  Court  14 

And  raised  the  cloak  from  brows  as  pale  and  s  Princess  v  73 

A  maid  so  s,  so  white,  so  wonderful.  Merlin  and  V.  566 

thou  knowest,  and  that  s  rock  Before  it,  Tiresias  146 
let  ma  stroak  tha  down  till  I  maakes  tha  es  s  es 

silk.  Spinster's  S's.  53 

Smooth-cut     One  was  of  s-c  stone,  V.  of  Maeldune  106 

Smooth'd     He  s  his  chin  and  sleek'd  his  hair,  A  Character  11 

KoU'd  on  each  other,  rounded,  s,  D.  of  F.  Women  51 

And  5  a  petted  peacock  down  with  that :  Princess  ii  456 

Lancelot  tum'd,  and  s  The  glossj'  shoulder,  Lancelot  and  E.  347 

Smoothe    s  my  pillow,  mix  the  foaming  draught  Princess  ii  251 
could  not  rest  for  musing  how  to  s  And  sleek 

his  marriage  Last  Tournament  390 

Smoother     equal  baseness  lived  in  sleeker  times  With  s  men  :  Princessv386 

Smooth-faced    s-f  snubnosed  rogue  would  leap  from  his 

counter  Jlaud  I  i  51 

Smoothness    See  Over-smoothness 

Smooth-swarded     Naked  they  came  to  that  s-s  bower,  (Enone  95 

Smote  God's  glory  s  him  on  the  face.'  Two  Voices  225 
solitary  morning  s  The  streaks  of  virgin  snow.  (Enone  55 
note  From  that  deep  chord  which  Hampden  s  England  and  Amer.  19 
he  s  His  palms  together,  and  he  cried  aloud,  M.  d' Arthur  86 
wither'd  moon  S  by  the  fresh  beam  of  the  springing  east ;  „  214 
I  5  them  with  the  cross  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  173 
s  on  all  the  chords  with  might ;  Locksley  Hall  33 
S  the  chord  of  Self,  that,  trembling,  „  34 
and  s  Her  life  into  the  liquor.  Will  Water.  Ill 
S  him,  as  having  kept  aloof  so  long.  Enoch  Arden  274 
as  she  s  me  with  the  light  of  eyes  Princess  Hi  192 
maid,  Of  those  beside  her,  s  her  harp,  and  sang.  .,  iv  38 
I  s  him  on  the  breast ;  he  started  up  ;  ,,  164 
tougher,  heavier,  stronger,  he  that  s  „  v  536 
s  Flame-colour,  vert  and  azure,  in  three  rays,  Com.  of  Arthur  274 
Gareth  hearing  ever  stronglier  s,  Gareth  and  L.  1141 
liea^nly-gaUoping  hoof  S  on  her  ear,  Geraint  and  E.  448 
However  lightly,  s  her  on  the  cheek.  „  718 
Arthur  lightly  s  the  brethren  down,  Balin  and  Ralan  41 
I  s  upon  the  naked  skull  A  thrall  of  thine  ..  55 
being  knighted  till  he  s  the  thrall,  -  155 
Hard  upon  helm  s  him,  and  the  blade  flew  ,.  395 
duke,  earl.  Count,  baron — whom  he  s,  he  over- 
threw. Lancelot  and  E.  465 
Thereon  she  s  her  hand :  •■  625 
Ramp  in  the  field,  he  s  his  thigh,  and  mock'd  :  ..  664 
and  down  they  flash'd,  and  s  the  stream.  „  1235 
in  the  blast  there  s  along  the  haU  Holy  Grail  186 
And  where  it  s  the  plowshare  in  the  field,  ..  403 
face  as  of  a  child  That  s  itself  into  the  bread,  „  467 
Full  sharply  s  his  knees,  and  smiled,  Guinevere  47 
Modred  s  his  liege  Hard  on  that  helm  Pass,  of  Arthur  165 
he  s  His  palms  together,  and  he  cried  aloud :  „  254 
wither'd  moon  S  by  the  fresh  beam  of  the  springing 

east ;  „          .  382 

chiUness  oi  the  sprinkled  brook  S  on  my  brows,  Lover's  Tale  i  634 

Till  it  s  on  their  hulls  and  their  sails  The  Revenge  116 

drove  them,  and  5  them,  and  slew,  Def.  of  Lucknow  71 

s,  and  still'd  Thro'  all  its  folds  Tiresias  14 

a  huge  sea  s  every  soul  from  the  decks  The  Wreck  109 

till  the  heat  S  on  her  brow,  Beath  of  (Enone  98 

Smotber'd    Secret  wrath  Uke  s  fuel  The  Captain  15 

Smoulder    light  cloud  s's  on  the  simimer  crag.  Edwin  Morris  147 

'  betwixt  these  two  Division  s's  hidden  ;  Princess  Hi  79 

Where  s  their  dead  despots  ;  "      .  "  ^^ 

Smoulder'd     phantom  colony  s  on  the  refluent  estuary  ;  Boddicea  28 

And  drove  his  heel  into  the  s  log,  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  14 

Lies  like  a  log,  and  all  but  s  out !  Gareth  and  L.  75 

An  oak-tree  s  there.  »          402 


Smouldering    and  out  of  every  s  town  Cries  to  Thee, 

The  s  homestead,  and  the  household  flower 

some  evil  chance  Will  make  the  s  scandal  break  and 
blaze 

There  the  s  fire  of  fever  creeps  across  the  rotted 
floor. 
Smuttier    S  than  blasted  grain : 
Snaake  (snake)     like  a  long  black  a-  i'  the  snaw, 
Snaggy     Nasty  an'  s  an'  shaaky, 
SnaU     bedmate  of  the  s  and  eft  and  snake. 

Nor  make  a  s's  horn  shrink  for  wantonness  ; 
Snake    (See  also  Binglet-snake,  Sea-snake,  Snaike) 
house  the  cold  crown'd  s  ! 

The  s  slipt  under  a  spray, 

fomitain  of  the  moment,  playing,  now  A  twisted  s, 

at  these  words  the  s.  My  secret, 

look'd  A  knot,  beneath,  of  s's,  aloft,  a  grove. 

'  Here  are  s's  within  the  grass  ; 

curved  an  arm  about  his  neck.  Clung  like  a  s  ; 

The  s  of  gold  slid  from  her  hair, 

bedmate  of  the  snail  and  eft  and  s, 

find  a  nest  and  feels  a  s,  he  drew  : 

hiss,  « — I  saw  him  there — 

roots  like  some  black  coil  of  carven  s's, 

the  gilded  s  Had  nestled  in  this  bosom-throne 

like  The  Indian  on  a  still-eyed  s, 

roused  a  s  that  hissing  writhed  away  ; 

A  hiss  as  from  a  wilderness  of  s's, 
Snakeless    Summers  of  the  s  meadow. 
Snake-like    s-l  sUmed  his  victim  ere  he  gorged  ; 
Snap     Kate  s's  her  fingers  at  my  vows  ; 

'  Screw  not  the  chord  too  sharply  lest  it  s.' 

cataract  seas  that  s  The  three  decker's  oaken  spine 

The  vow  that  binds  too  strictly  s's  itself — 

Burst  vein,  s  sinew,  and  crack  heart, 

s  the  bond  that  link'd  us  life  to  life, 
Snapt    A  TOUCH,  a  kiss  !  the  charm  was  s 

branch  S  in  the  rushing  of  the  river-rain 

Pierced  thro'  his  side,  and  there  s, 

being  s — ^We  run  more  counter  to  the  soul 

vows  that  are  s  in  a  moment  of  fire  ; 

Lances  s  in  sunder. 
Snare  (s)     I  saw  the  s,  and  I  retired  : 

Rapt  in  her  song,  and  careless  of  the  s. 

thro'  wordy  s's  to  track  Suggestion 

She  meant  to  weave  me  a  s 

He  laid  a  cruel  s  in  a  pit  To  catch  a  friend 

these  be  for  the  s  (So  runs  thy  fancy) 
Snare  (verb)     wove  coarse  webs  to  s  her  purity, 

s's  them  by  the  score  Flatter'd  and  fluster'd. 

Nor  wilt  thou  s  him  in  the  white  ravine, 

would  she  rail  on  me  To  s  the  next. 

To  s  her  royal  fancy  with  a  boon 
Snared    in  the  garden  s  Picus  and  Faunus, 

And  s  the  squirrel  of  the  glen  ? 
Snarl'd    S  at  and  cursed  me. 
Snarling    s  at  each  other's  heels. 

And  little  King  Charley  s. 
Snatch  (s)  She  chanted  s'es  of  mysterious  hymns 
Snatch  (verb)     And  s  me  from  him  as  by  violence  ; 
Snatch'd     Katie  s  her  eyes  at  once  from  mine, 

S  thro'  the  perilous  passes  of  his  life  : 

But  s  a  sudden  buckler  from  the  Squire, 

And  s  her  thence  ; 
Snaw  (snow)     we  may  happen  a  fall  o'  s — 

like  a  long  black  snaake  i'  the  s, 

An'  I  heard  great  heaps  o'  the  s 
Sneck  (latch)     thy  chaumber  door  wouldn't  s  ; 
Sneer    Hollow  smile  and  frozen  s  Come  not  here. 

He  seldom  crost  his  child  without  a  s  ; 
Sneer'd    '  A  ship  of  fools,'  he  s  and  wept. 
Sneeze    S  out  a  full  God-bless  you 
Sniffin'    Thou'll  goa  s  about  the  tap 

I  weant  goa  s  about  the  tap.' 
Snipe    swamp,  where  humm'd  the  dropping  s, 


Poland  5 
Princess  ii  128 

Guinevere  91 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  223 

Last  Tournament  305 

Owd  Rod  40 

North.  Cobbler  78 

Holy  Grail  570 

Ancient  Sage  272 

That 

CEnone  37 

Poet's  Song  10 

Princess,  Pro.  62 

„  Hi  43 

Marr.  of  Geraint  325 

Merlin  and  V.  33 

242 

888 

Holy  Grail  570 

Pelleas  and  E.  437 

471 

Last  Tournament  13 

Lover's  Tale  i  623 

ii  189 

Beath  of  (Enone  88 

St.  Telemxichus  66 

To  Virgil  IQ 

Sea  Breams  193 

Kate  19 

Aylmer's  Field  469 

Maud  II  ii  26 

Last  Tournament  657 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  123 

Happy  61 

Bay-Bm.,  Revival  1 

Merlin  and  V.  958 

Lancelot  and  E.  490 

Last  Tournament  658 

Vastness  26 

The  Tourney  8 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  6 

Princess  i  221 

In  Mem.  xcv  31 

Maud  I  vi  25 

„       //  V  84 

Gareth  and  L.  1081 

Aylmer's  Field  780 

Princess  •«  163 

„     vii  205 

Merlin  and  V.  811 

Lancelot  and  E.  71 

Lucretius  181 

Princess  ii  249 

Merlin  and  the  G.  28 

Locksley  Hall  106 

Maud  I  xii  30 

Lancelot  and  E.  1407 

Geraint  and  E.  357 

Tlie  Brook  101 

Aylmer's  Field  209 

Balin  and  Balan  554 

Last  Tournament  384 

Village  Wife  21 

Owd  Rod  40 

41 

64 

Poet's  Mind  10 

Aylmer's  Field  562 

The  Voyage  78 

Edwin  Morris  80 

NorOi.  Cobbler  64 

67 

On  a  Mourner  9 


Snivel 


656 


Soft 


Snivel     I  that  heard  her  whine  And  s,  Last  Tournament  450 

Snorin'     '  What  arta  s  theere  fur  ?  Otvd  Boa  68 
Snow    {See  also  Snaw)    rites  and  form  before  his  burning 

eyes  Melted  like  s.  The  Poet  40 

Shone  out  their  crowning  s's.  Dying  Swan  13 

When  the  long  dun  wolds  are  ribb'd  with  s,  Oriana  5 

thorn  will  blow  In  tufts  of  rosy-tinted  s ;  Two  Voices  60 

solitary  morning  smote  The  streaks  of  virgin  s.  (Enone  56 

And  highest,  s  and  fire.  Palace  of  Art  84 
I  wish  the  s  would  melt  and  the  sun  come 

out  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  15 

Three  silent  pinnacles  of  aged  s,  Lotos- Eaters  16 

Full  knee-deep  Ues  the  winter  s,  D-  of  the  0.  Year  1 

over  the  s  I  heard  just  now  the  crowing  cock.  „              37 

Where  falls  not  hail,  or  rain,  or  any  s,  M.  d' Arthur  260 

wind,  frost,  heat,  hail,  damp,  and  sleet,  and  s  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  16 

with  rain  or  hail,  or  fire  or  s  ;  Locksley  Hall  193 

Deep  on  the  convent-roof  the  s's  St.  Agnes'  Eve  1 

The  streets  are  dumb  with  s.  Sir  Galahad  52 

Nor  ever  falls  the  least  white  star  of  s,  Lucretius  107 

like  the  flakes  In  a  fall  of  s,  ,,167 

From  flower  to  flower,  from  5  to  s  :  In  Mem.  xxii  4 

The  silent  s  possess'd  the  earth,  .,      Ixxviii  3 

And  silent  vmder  other  s's :  ..             cv  6 

Ring,  happy  bells,  across  the  s :  ..            cvi  6 

Now  fades  the  last  long  streak  of  s,  „           cxv  1 

yet  thou  art  but  swoUen  with  cold  s's  Gareth  and  L.  9 

glittering  star  of  mom  Parts  from  a  bank  of  s,  Marr.  of  Geraint  735 

'  I  know  not,  for  thy  heart  is  pure  as  s.'  Holy  Grail  97 

like  a  bank  Of  maiden  s  mingled  with  sparks  Last  Tournament  149 

cold  Falls  on  the  mountain  in  midsummer  s's,  „            228 

Where  falls  not  hail,  or  rain,  or  any  s.  Pass,  of  Arthur  428 

Uke  cold  s,  it  melteth  in  the  source  Lover's  Tale  i  783 

and  the  full  moon  stares  at  the  s.  Eiz-pah  4 

the  wind  and  the  shower  and  the  s.  ..         68 

The  s  and  the  skjf  so  bright —  ..         83 

moimtain  was  lihes  in  lieu  of  s,  V.  of  Maeldune  41 

kiss  fell  chill  as  a  flake  of  s  on  the  cheek  :  The  Wreck  32 

And  cap  our  age  with  s  ?  '  Ancient  Sage  98 

was  as  light  as  s  an  the  Ian',  Tomorrow  36 

hair  was  as  white  as  the  s  an  a  grave.  „        60 

high  hill-passes  of  stainless  5,  Dead  Prophet  47 

blanching  apricot  like  s  in  s.  Prog,  of  Spring  30 

I  sat  beneath  a  solitude  of  s ;  „            71 

Where  am  I  ?  s  on  all  the  hills  !  Romney's  E.  12 

I  have  climb'd  to  the  s's  of  Age,  By  an  Evolution.  17 

Snow-cold    Over  her  s-c  breast  and  angry  cheek  CEnone  142 

Snowdon    we  that  day  had  been  Up  S  ;  Golden  Year  4 
Snowdrop     to  live  till  the  s's  come  again  :            May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  14 

To  die  before  the  s  came,  „                         Con.  4 

Or  this  first  s  of  the  year  St.  Agnes'  Eve  11 

the  white  Of  the  first  s's  inner  leaves  ;  Princess  v  197 

The  s  only,  flowering  thro'  the  year,  Last  Tournament  220 

Like  s's,  pure  !  Early  Spring  30 

Wavers  on  her  thin  stem  the  s  cold  Prog,  of  Spring  3 

Snow'd     A  hundred  winters  s  upon  his  breast,  Palace  of  Art  139 

Tore  the  king's  letter,  s  it  down,  Princess  i  61 

Snowflake    like  a  s  in  the  hand.  Lover's  Tale  Hi  38 
Snowlike    Down  to  the  s  sparkle  of  a  cloth                Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  117 

Snow-limb'd    the  s-l  Eve  from  whom  she  came.  Mavd  I  xviii  28 

Snowshoe    Claymore  and  5,  toys  in  lava.  Princess,  Pro.  18 

Snow-wldte    The  snowy  peak  and  s-w  cataract  (Enone  211 

Snowy     Lying,  robed  in  s  white           _  L.  of  Shalott  iv  19 

between  The  s  peak  and  snow-white  cataract  (Enone  211 

Slant  down  the  s  sward,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  6 

Fair  gleams  the  s  altar-cloth.  Sir  Galahad  33 

Airing  a  s  hand  and  signet  gem,  Princess  i  121 

And  s  summits  old  in  story :  „          iv2 

Would  rock  the  s  cradle  till  I  died.  „          104 

as  flies  A  troop  of  s  doves  athwart  the  dusk,  „          168 

Long  lanes  of  splendour  slanted  o'er  a  press  Of  s  shoulders,    „  479 

And  s  dells  in  a  golden  air,  The  Daisy  68 

And  up  the  s  Splugen  drew,  „          86 

And  passion  pure  in  s  bloom  In  Mem.  cix  11 

made  A  s  penthouse  for  his  hollow  eyes,  Merlin  and  V.  808 


Snowy  (continued)    one  s  knee  was  prest  Against  the  margin 

flowers ;  Tiresias  42 

Snowy-banded    The  s-b,  dilettante,  Mavd  I  viii  10 

Snubnosed    smooth-faced  s  rogue  would  leap  from  his 

counter  „  i  51 

Snuff    An'  'is  noase  sa  grufted  wi'  s  Village  Wife  39 

Soaber  (sober)    Thaw  thou  was  es  s  es  daay,  Spinster's  S's.  75 

Soak    City  children  s  and  blacken  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  218 

Soak'd    Tho'  s  and  saturate,  out  and  out.  Will  Water.  87 

Soak'd    Moother  'ed  bean  sa  s  wi'  the  thaw  Owd  Rod  113 

Soakin'     Guzzlin'  an'  s  an'  smoakin'  North.  Cobbler  24 

Soaking    (See  also  Soakin')    I  s  here  in  winter  wet —  To  Ulysses  6 

Soar    she  answered,  '  Ay,  And  men  to  s  :  '  Lover's  Tale  i  305 

my  wings  That  I  may  s  the  sky,  Mechanophilus  10 

Soaring    from  my  vapour-girdle  s  forth  Prog,  of  Spring  79 

Sob  (s)     all  at  once  the  old  man  burst  in  s's  : —  Dora  158 

shaken  with  her  s's,  Melissa  knelt ;  Princess  iv  289 

dark  crowd  moves,  and  there  are  s's  Ode  on  Well.  268 

her  false  voice  made  way,  broken  with  s's  :  Merlin  and  V.  857 

And  bluster  into  stormy  s's  and  say,  Lancelot  and  E.  1067 

Sob  (verb)    hear  him  s  and  sigh  In  the  walks  ;  A  spirit  haunts  5 

and  to  clamour,  mourn  and  s,  St.  S.  Stylites  6 

Sobb'd    for  three  hours  he  s  o'er  William's  chUd  Dora  167 

And  s,  and  you  s  with  it,  Princess  ii  273 

he  s  and  he  wept.  And  cursed  himself  ;  Bandit's  Death  29 

Sobbing    See,  there  is  one  of  us  s,  Maud  II  v  30 

A  voice  clung  s  till  he  question'd  it.  Last  Tournament  759 

Set  up  an  answer,  s,  '  I  am  thy  fool,  .,  761 

Sober    (See  also  Soaber)    Nothing  to  mar  the  s  majesties 

Of  settled,  Lucretius  217 

That  s  freedom  out  of  which  there  springs  Ode  on  Well.  164 

A  s  man,  among  his  boys.  In  Mem.  liii  2 

'  A  s  man  is  Percivale  and  pure  ;  Merlin  and  V.  755 

Envy  wears  the  mask  of  Love,  and,  laughing 

s  fact  to  scorn,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  109 

I  heard  the  s  rook  And  carrion  crow  cry  The  Ring  173 

Soberer-hued    Autumn-changed,  S-h  Gold  again.  The  Oak  9 

Sober-suited    That  s-s  Freedom  chose.  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  6 

Social    Cursed  be  the  s  wants  that  sin  against  the 

strength  of  youth  !  Locksley  Hall  59 

Cursed  be  the  s  lies  that  warp  us  from  the  living 

truth !  „  60 

To  pass  with  all  our  s  ties  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  5 

'  Have  patience,'  I  replied,  '  ourselves  are  full 

Of  s  wrong  ;  Princess,  Con.  73 

For  '  ground  in  yonder  s  mill  We  rub  each  other's 

angles  down,  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  39 

and  ioin'd  Each  office  of  the  s  hour  „  cxi  14 

Proclaiming  s  truth  shall  spread,  „  cxxvii  5 

Society    See  She-society 

Socratic     Or  threaded  some  S  dream  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  36 

Sod     The  blackness  round  the  tombing  s.  On  a  Mourner  27 

mouldering  with  the  dull  earth's  mouldering  s,  Palace  of  Art  261 

To  rest  beneath  the  clover  s,  In  Mem.  x  13 

after  s  and  shingle  ceased  to  fly  Behind  her,  Gareth  and  L.  761 

And  over  hard  and  soft,  striking  the  s  Pelleas  and  E.  498 

nor  the  s  Draw  from  my  death  Thy  living  flower      Doubt  and  Prayer  5 

£!odden    Men,  women,  on  their  s  faces.  Last  Tournament  474 

Sofa     And  broider'd  s's  on  each  side  :  Arabian  Nights  19 

Who  '  sitting  on  green  s's  contemplate  Akbar's  Dream  48 

Soft     (See  also  Silk-Soft)     as  in  sleep  I  sank  In  cool  s 

turf  upon  the  bank,  Arabian  Nights  96 

S  are  the  moss-beds  luider  the  sea  ;  The  Merman  39 

things  that  are  forked,  and  homed,  and  s.  The  Mermaid  53 

A  single  stream  of  all  her  s  brown  hair  Pour'd  on 

one  side  :  Gardener's  D.  128 

The  s  wind  blowing  over  meadowy  holms  Edwin  Morris  95 

thro'  s  degrees  Subdue  them  to  the  useful  and  the  good.  Ulysses  37 
A  s  air  fans  the  cloud  apart ;  Tithonus  32 

S  lustre  bathes  the  range  of  urns  On  every 

slanting  terrace-lawn.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  9 

S  fruitage,  mighty  nuts,  and  nourishing  roots  ;  Enoch  Arden  555 

half -embraced  the  basket  cradle-head  With  one  s  arm,  Sea  Dreams  290 
saw  The  s  white  vapour  streak  the  crowned  towers  Princess  Hi  344 
and  so  Laid  the  s  babe  in  his  hard-mailed  hands.  „         vi  208 


i 


Soft 


657 


Solent 


Soft  (continued)    Say  one  s  word  and  let  me  part  forgiven.'   Princess  vi  219 

The  s  and  milky  rabble  of  womajakind,  309 
glow  Of  your  s  splendours  that  you  look  so  bright  ?      Mavd  I  xviii  79 

massacring  Man,  woman,  lad  and  girl — ^yea,  the  s 

babe  !  Gareth  and  L.  1341 
And  over  hard  and  s,  striking  the  sod  From  out  the 

s,  the  spark  from  off  the  hard,  Pelleas  and  E.  498 

And  thine  is  more  to  me — s,  gracious,  kind —  Last  Tournament  560 

one  s  lap  Pillow'd  us  both  :  Lover's  Tale  i  235 

As  rain  of  the  midsummer  midnight  s,  ..              722 

s  winds,  Laden  with  thistledown  and  seeds  of  flowers,  ii  12 

Ah — you,  that  have  hved  so  s,  Bizpah  17 

Hallus  a  s  un  Squire  !  an'  'e  smiled.  Village  Wife  89 

About  the  s  Mediterranean  shores.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  30 
Tha  thowt  tha  would  marry  ma,  did  tha  ?  but  that 

wuT  a  bit  ower  s,  Spinster's  S's.  74 

She  tum'd,  and  in  her  s  imperial  way  The  Ring  267 

Soften     And  s  as  if  to  a  girl,  Mavd  /  a;  16 

Steel  me  with  patience  !  s  me  with  grief  !  Doubt  and  Prayer  9 

Solten'd    but  robed  in  s  light  Of  orient  state.  Ode  to  Memory  10 

whom  waitest  thou  With  thy  s,  shadow'd  brow,  Adeline  46 

Like  s  airs  that  blowing  steal.  Two  Voices  406 

and  the  brazen  fool  Was  s.  In  Mem.  ex  12 

Softening    S  thro'  all  the  gentle  attributes  Aylmer's  Field  730 

Softer    'S  than  sleep — aU  things  in  order  Palace  of  Art  87 

'  who  could  think  The  s  Adams  of  your  Academe,  Princess  ii  197 

and  s  aU  her  shape  And  rounder  seem'd :  ,,      vii  136 

When  the  far-off  sail  is  blown  by  the  breeze  of  a  s 

clime,  Maud  I  iv  4: 

Softly-shadow'd    Glows  forth  each  s-s  arm  Bay-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  13 

Softness    S  breeding  scorn  of  simple  life.  To  the  Queen  ii  53 

Soil  (s)    Fast-rooted  in  the  fruitful  s.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  38 

ill-used  race  of  men  that  cleave  the  s,  „            120 

That  numbers  forty  cubits  from  the  s.  St.  S.  Stylites  91 

Upon  my  proper  patch  of  s  Amphion  99 

Know  you  no  song,  the  true  growth  of  your  s,  Princess  iv  150 

Has  risen  and  cleft  the  s,  „          vi  35 

The  s,  left  barren,  scarce  had  grown  In  Mem.  liii  7 

three  were  clad  hke  tillers  of  the  s.  Gareth  and  L.  181 

Gareth,  '  We  be  tillers  of  the  s,  „            242 

Soil  (verb)    evil  thought  may  s  thy  children's  blood ;  Ancient  Sage  275 

Soil'd    When,  s  with  noble  dust,  he  hears  Two  Voices  152 

As  these  white  robes  are  s  and  dark,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  13 

And  s  with  aU  ignoble  use.  In  Mem.  cxi  24 

Soiling    s  another,  Annie,  will  never  make  Grandmother  36 

Soilure     fearing  rust  or  s  fashion'd  for  it  Lancelot  and  E.  7 

'Soize  (assize)     Noaks  wur  'ang'd  for  it  oop  at 's —  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  36 

Solace  (s)     Vain  s  !     Memory  standing  near  To  J.  S.  53 

Nay,  but  Nature  brings  thee  s  ;  Locksley  Hall  87 

A  doubtful  gleam  of  s  lives.  In  Mem.  xxxviii  8 

And  in  that  s  can  I  sing,  „               Ixv  5 

From  bis  great  hoard  of  happiness  distill'd  Some 

drops  of  s  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  715 

S  at  least — before  he  left  his  home.  „              iv  7 

In  his  own  well,  draw  s  as  he  may.  Tiresias  89 

Nay,  you  were  my  one  s  ;  The  Ring  310 

Were  tender  s.     Yet  be  comforted  ;  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  7 

Solace  (verb)     A  little  hint  to  s  woe.  Two  Voices  433 

Solaced    Whom  Averill  s  as  he  might,  Aylmer's  Field  343 

Sold     {See  also  Sowd)     Himself  imto  himself  he  s  :  A  Character  26 

Nor  s  his  heart  to  idle  moans.  Two  Voices  221 

he's  abroad  :  the  place  is  to  be  s.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  16 

S  him  unto  shame.                                          '  The  Captain  60 

s  her  wares  for  less  Than  what  she  gave  in  buying 

what  she  s  :  Enoch  Arden  255 

The  horse  he  drove,  the  boat  he  s,  „          609 

'  That  was  the  four-year-old  I  s  the  Squire.'  The  Brook  137 

Where  ovu*  Caucasians  let  themselves  be  s.  Aylmer's  Field  349 

never  s  the  truth  to  serve  the  hour.  Ode  on  Well.  179 

chalk  and  alum  and  plaster  are  s  to  the  poor  for  bread,      Maud  7  i  39 

being  s  and  s  had  bought  them  bread  :  Mart,  of  Geraint  641 

S  the  crown-farms  for  all  but  nothing,  Columbus  132 

nearing  his  own  himdred,  s  This  ring  to  me.  The  Ring  194 

SoUan    he,  the  fierce  S  of  Egypt,  Columbus  98 

Chddier  (adj.)     No  more  in  s  fashion  wiU  he  greet  Ode  on  Well.  21 


Soldier  (s)    (See  also  Patriot-soldier,  Woman-soldier) 

The  Roman  s  found  Me  lying  dead,  D.  ofF.  Women  161 

men  like  s's  may  not  quit  the  post  Lucretius  148 

nor  broke,  nor  shunn'd  a  s's  death,  Princess,  Pro.  38 

Pitiful  sight,  wrapp'd  in  a  s's  cloak,  „             v  56 
The  s?     No :  What  dares  not  Ida  do  that  she  should 

prize  The  s  ?  „              173 

not  shvmn'd  the  death,  No,  not  the  s's :  „              179 

one  loves  the  s,  one  The  silken  priest  ..              183 

The  king  is  scared,  the  s  will  not  fight,  „       Con.  60 

banner  and  with  music,  with  s  and  with  priest,  Ode  on  Well.  81 

To  thee  the  greatest  s  comes ;  ..          88 

So  great  a  s  taught  us  there,  ..        131 

And  keep  the  s  firm,  the  statesman  pure :  „        222 

the  s  knew  Some  one  had  blunder'd :  Light  Brigade  11 

were  the  s's  wont  to  hear  His  voice  in  battle,  Geraint  and  E.  174 

The  King  should  have  made  him  a  s,  Rizpah  28 

Thousands  of  their  s's  look'd  down  The  Revenge  37 

that  brave  s,  down  the  terrible  ridge  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  63 

they  shall  know  we  are  s's  and  men  !  Def.  of  Lucknow  41 

to  be  s  all  day  and  be  sentinel  all  thro'  the  night —  „              74 

Were  s's  to  her  heart's  desire,  Pro,  to  Gen.  Hamley  25 

My  s  of  the  Cross  ?  it  is  he  and  he  indeed !  Happy  12 

we  saw  your  s's  crossing  the  ridge.  Bandit's  Death  21 

Soldier-brother    S-b's  bridal  orange-bloom  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  11 

Soldier-city    led  Threading  the  s-c,  Princess  v  7 

Soldier-laddie    violin  Struck  up  with  S-l,  „  Pro.  86 

Soldierlike    anger-charm'd  from  sorrow,  s,  Aylmer's  Field  728 

Soldierly    His  own,  tho'  keen  and  bold  and  s  „            192 

Soldier-priest    A  latter  Luther,  and  a  s-p  To  J.  M.  K.  2 

Soldier^p    mind.  So  quick,  so  capable  in  s.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  75 

Sole  (adj.)    S  star  of  aU  that  place  and  time,  Arabian  Nights  152 

Thy  s  delight  is,  sitting  still.  The  Blackbird  10 

S  star  of  phosphorescence  in  the  calm,  Audley  Court  87 

The  s  succeeder  to  their  wealth,  their  lands,  Aylmer's  Field  294 

you  The  s  men  to  be  mingled  with  our  cause,  Princess  v  411 

The  s  men  we  shall  prize  in  the  aftertime,  „          412 

S  comfort  of  my  dark  hour,  when  a  world  „      vi  194 

Nor  Britain's  one  s  God  be  the  millionaire :  Mavd  III  vi  22 

And  since  he  kept  his  mind  on  one  s  aim,  Merlin  and  V.  626 

To  seat  you  s  upon  my  pedestal  Of  worship —  „            878 

S  Queen  of  Beauty  and  of  love.  Last  Tournament  208 

his  one  true  knight — S  follower  of  the  vows ' —  „              303 

And  I  stood  s  beside  the  vacant  bier.  Lover's  Tale  Hi  58 

My  s  memorial  Of  Edith — no,  the  other, —         Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  107 

Sole  (s)    (See  also  Baby-sole)    From  scalp  to  s  one  slough 

and  crust  St.  S.  Stylites  2 

Solecism    Chimeras,  crotchets,  Christmas  s's,  Princess,  Pro.  203 
Solemn    (See  also  Mock-solemn)     But  the  s  oak-tree  sigheth,        Claribel  4 

the  s  palms  were  ranged  Above,  Arabian  Nights  79 

Yet  not  the  less  held  she  her  s  mirth,  Palace  of  Art  215 

and  grief  became  A  s  scorn  of  ills.  D.  of  F.  Women  228 

With  s  gibe  did  Eustace  banter  me  Gardener's  D.  168 

And  hear  me  swear  a  s  oath,  Talking  Oak  281 

And  s  chaunts  resound  between.  Sir  Galahad  36 

Heroic,  for  a  hero  Ues  beneath,  Grave,  s ! '  Princess,  Pro.  213 

At  last  a  s  grace  Concluded,  „            H  452 

Of  s  psalms,  and  silver  litanies,  „                477 

'Sdeath — and  with  s  rites  by  candle-light —  „             v  292 

And  drove  us,  last,  to  quite  a  s  close —  „         Con.  17 
Too  comic  for  the  s  things  they  are.  Too  s  for  the 

comic  touches  in  them,  „                 67 

For  such  a  wise  himiility  As  befits  a  s  fane:  Ode  on  Well.  250 

A  s  gladness  even  crown'd  The  purple  brows  of  Olivet.  In  Mem.  xxxi  11 

O  s  ghost,  0  crowned  soul !  „       Ixxxv  36 

And  hold  it  s  to  the  past.  „             cv  16 

And  I  wiU  make  a  s  offering  of  you  Lover's  Tale  iv  118 

And  Julian  made  a  s  feast :  „              187 

Well  then — our  s  feast — we  ate  and  drank,  „              221 

decked  them  out  As  for  a  s  sacrifice  of  love —  „              301 

FiHST  pledge  our  Queen  this  s  night,  Hands  all  Round  1 

Solemnity    watching  here  At  this,  our  great  s.  Ode  on  Well.  244 

And  Lancelot's,  at  this  night's  s  Last  Tournament  223 

Solemnly    And  s  as  when  ye  sware  to  him,  „              647 

Solent    Harry  went  over  the  S  to  see  if  work  First  Quarrel  44 

2   T 


Solid 


658 


Solid    This  excellence  and  s  form  Of  constant 

He  has  a  s  base  of  temperament :  "'         •    9^4 

We  plant  a  s  foot  into  the  Time,  "          I  i]t 

lo'makeT:  co^eTf  h'S  ""^'^  ''  '"'^^  ^"'^  ^™^'    ^f -^-^^^^^  5 

They  say  The .  earth  whereon  we  tread  ^^           f^ill 

They  melt  like  mist,  the  s  lands,  "      ,5!JJJ  n 

O  let  the  s  ground  Not  fail  beneath  my  feet  Mavdl  Ji  1 

and  the  5  earth  became  As  nothing.  Com  ofAHhLli9 

And  s  turrets  topsy-turvy  in  air:    '  GareHrSl  IS 

carves  A  portion  from  the  s  present,  mZuu  a^  V  462 

O  towers  so  string,  Huge,  s,  v%Tn.  T^  v  Ta^ 

your  flower  Waits  to  be  5  fruit  of  golden  deeds,    iJtToZZlnSu  JS 

stood  As  glory  on  her  bright  black  hair ;  Lover's  Talei  367 

came  a  broad  And  5  beam  of  isolated  light  ,!•  1 7Q 

«  ,.  J^!?  '^^"  o^  *  fl^^  t^at  comes  between  "    Ha-nZjV, 

Solid-set     But  like  a  statue  5-5,  In  Mem    Co     ^^ 

Solitary  (adj.)     Far  up  the  s  morning  smote  The  streaks  of  "'      **' 

virgm  snow.  ,t-,          ^.j- 

Past  thro'  the  s  room  in  front,  Enoch  ArTen%77 

Their  voices  make  me  feel  so  s.'  ^"^  zLi- 

paced  Back  toward  his  s  home  again,  ""            70! 

And  knew  her  sitting  sad  and  s.  Geraintand  E.  282 

And  there  among  the  s  downs,  ia^,^^^  „„^  jf  ^^ 

Bound  upon  s  adventure,  saw  Low  down  Pelleas  and  E  275 

^d.  passes  of  the  wood  Rode  Tristram  LastiZZifnt  fl 

l<ar  on  a  s  trumpet  blew.  /a,  •            con 

So  bore  her  thro^  the  5  land  LcS^lTT'-  ^on 

And  all  the  land  was  waste  and  . :  ^'' '  ^"^'  ^\|^ 

Is  that  the  leper's  hut  on  the  *  moor,  "   //„.^,,  o 

And  sang  the  married  '  nos '  for  the  s  '  me.'  -aappy  » 

Ever  as  of  old  time,  S  firstling.  e       i'       , 

i^HS  ^"Vn^^'P*  *''  long-hair'd%ng-bearded  .,  E^^chATAl 

Solitude    You  move  not  m  such  s's,  MaraZpfAk 

?h'^Prn^''^H  T^  l?**^^'^  °^  ^""  '  PcdaJe  of  A  J  2f9 

The  rosy  idol  of  her  s's,  v^^„%  a  j     n^ 

Surely  the  man  had  died  of  s.  ^'^  ArdenQ^ 

My  grief  and  s  have  broken  me ;  "         ofi 

Sol  J^     Tir.fM?X^  ^""^  ^^^  r^/'e  ,  ^«^<  Tournament  643 

ror  *S  may  come  to  Sheba  yet.'  340 
had  I  brought  From  S's  now-recover'd  Ophir  all  The 

SoLjfaee    league  of  street  in  summer  s  down,  PnS  iii  128 

Soluble    More  s  is  this  knot,  By  gentleness  princess  iit  1^8 

Solve     '  The  doubt  would  rest,  I  dare  not  s.  Two  Voices  313 

'But  5  me  first  a  doubt.     I  knew  a  man,  LoveTsT^Z  254 

^^"^    IV"  ^i^l  ^^^^^'^  ^'^'^^^s  o*  tb«  peach  ^ci  0/  S^l  34 

^"""^r^A  Thridding  the  5  boskage  of  the  wood,  D.  ofFVoZ^ut 

And  s,  old,  colonnaded  aisles.  •'    TheZfJ^t 

The  s  close  of  that  voluptuous  day,  Q^ineZe^ 

T  ..^^en.f ."•aspect,  however  shght,  was  paid  To  woman,  Princess  ii  136 

Like  s  wild  creature  newly-caged,  oryi 

Than  s  strong  bond  which  is  to  be.  /„  Mem  ra^^»•  16 

Grant  me  s  knight  to  do  the  battle  for  me,  GarethZdL  362 

J^    '^*l^'?  that  she'd  say  no ;  (repeat)  Window,  Letter  7  14 

S  knows  that  she'll  say  ay !  (repeat)  c'  jr 

s,  surely,  some  kind  heart  will  come  "  u^,,^  //  °\?^ 

Somerwt    Men  saw  the  goodly  hills  of -S,  Mart,  of  Oemint  828 

Something    (See  also  Sammat)    And  s  iil  the  dark-  ^- oj  ueratnt  ti^s 

3  S'ror'ess'd  The  darkness  of  the  world.  '^^SVaS'^i'?! 

."irvfr^TorsLr '  ^^°''  ^-  ^-'i 

^^d\&SVspli^to^;i°^«'  ^  '-"^  ^^'  -^-^«,  ,.,^  e,/i 

S^foT^e^lenTusT  '  ^^"=  ^I^H 


Son 


Something  (continued)    Yet  s  I  did  \vish  to  say  • 
or  eLse  S  so  said  'twas  nothing— 
Or  this  or  s  like  to  this  he  spoke 

'  C^''h  ^f^^^f  ^/  ?'?''^  *°^  ^^^^ly;  tl^at  there 
seem  d  A  touch  of  s  false, 

A-  more,  A  bringer  of  new  things ; 
s  ere  the  end.  Some  work  of  noble  note 
men  the  workers,  ever  reaping  s  ' 

He  trusts  to  light  on  s  fair ; 
I  had  hope,  by  s  rare 
Philip,  with  s  happier  than  myself. 
A  divme  to  warn  them  of  their  foes  • 
The  phantom  husks  of  s  foully  done 
Shall  seem  no  more  a  s  to  himself     ' 
Ah,  were  I  s  great !  ' 

iind  chiefly  you  were  born  for  s  great 
And  there  is  s  in  it  as  you  say : 
s  may  be  done— I  know  not  what— 
Swear  by  St.  s— I  forget  her  name- 
to  think  I  might  be  s  to  thee, 
s  wild  within  her  breast, 
we  believe  him  S  far  advanced  in  State, 
o  It  IS  which  thou  hast  lost, 
And  s  written,  s  thought ; 
'TIS  well ;  'tis  s ;  we  may  stand 
But  thou  art  tum'd  to  s  strange 
have  grown  To  s  greater  than  before  • 
Is  It  an  echo  of  s  Read  with  a  boy's  delight 
none  of  us  thought  of  a  5  beyond  ' 

siui  there  swiftly  made  at  her  A  ghastly  5, 
That  seeming  s,  yet  was  nothing. 
And  s  weu^d  and  wild  about  it  aU : 
he  had  s  further  to  say, 
We  feel  we  are  s — 
teach  us  there  is  s  in  descent. 
S  kmdUer,  higher,  hoher — 
^  other  than  the  wildest  modem  guess 
Sometlung-pottle-bodied    in  a  court  he  saw  A  s-v-b  bov       w^n  w.,.    ^h^ 

Ha!  ha!     They  think  that  I  am  5.  o/   c   e^',-,     3. 

Felt  ye  were  s,  yea,  and  by  vour  state  ^4          >  f^^-'^'*''  H^ 

Or  this,  or  .  hke^o'this,  /spTe  "'"''  ""'"zovS^ZTi  m 

one  is  .deeper  than  the  other,  As  one  is  s  graver  "^ 


To  J.  S.  60 

Tfie  Epic  31 

Edwin  Morris  41 


72 

Ulysses  27 

„      51 

Locksley  HaU  117 

Day -Dm.,  Arrival  20 

Will  Water.  165 

Enoch  Arden  425 

Sea  Dreams  69 

Lucretius  160 

254 

Princess,  Pro.  131 

iv  307 

V  211 

227 

293 

vi  201 

vii  237 

Ode  on  Well.  275 

In  Mem.  iv  9 

«i20 

■ .    xviii  1 

xli  5 

„  Con.  20 

Maud  I  vii  9 

„     xix  47 

Guinevere  79 

Lover's  Tale  iv  104 

224 

Eizpah  43 

De  Prof.,  Human  C.  1 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  26 

160 

232 


than  the  other — 
you  have  dared  S  perhaps  in  comin"  ? 
tho  s  finer  than  their  own. 
Somewhere    Have  I  not  met  you  s  long  ago  ' 
son      His  s  s  grow  up  that  bear  his  name! 
Or  mythic  Uther's  deeply-wounded  s 
Our  s  s  inherit  us :  our  looks  are  strange  • 
His  s  and  heir  doth  ride  post-haste 
Be  proud  of  those  strong  s's  of  thine 
VViIliam  was  his  5,  And  she  is  niece. 
Allan  caU'd  his  5,  and  said,  '  My  s :  I  married  late 
if  you  speak  with  him  that  was  mv  s  ' 

I  have  tiU'd  my  ,.     I  have  kiU'd  him-but  I  loved 

iiini — my  dear  s. 
Francis  Hale,  The  farmer's  s, 
O  my  s's,  my  s's,  I,  Simeon  of  the  pillar, 
Ihis  IS  my  s,  mme  own  Telemachus, 
(jallant  s's  of  EngUsh  freemen 
Every  mother's  s— Down  they  dropt— 

On  fh    fl  ^  /l*^^'  ''^^^^  ^'^'"gs  Of  his  dead  s, 

On  the  first-born  of  her  s's. 

Philip  Ray  the  miller's  only  s. 

Bore  him  another  4,  a  sickly  one  • 

Her  own  s  Was  silent,  tho'  he  often  look'd  his  wish 

Her  .,  who  stood  beside  her  tall  and  stroi, 

So  hke  her  mother,  and  the  boy,  mv  s  ' 

tell  my  s  that  I  died  blessing  hmi 

One  whom  the  strong  s's  of  the  world  despise; 

«  s  of  men  Daughters  of  God ; 


Sisters  (E.  aiid  E.)25 

Columbus  242 

By  an  Evolution.  13 

Romney's  R.  18 

Two  Voices  256 

Palace  of  Art  lOS 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  73 

D.oftheO.  TearZl 

England  and  Amer.  4 

Dora  2 

„    10  J 

„   43I 

,=  159 

Audley  Court  75 

St.  S.  Stylites  160 

Ulysses  33 

The  Captain  7 

50 

The  Letters  24 

Vision  of  Sin  146 

Enoch  Arden  13 

109 

481 

756 

791 

885 

The  Broek  3 

Aylmer's  Field  44 


Son 


659 


Soa(co,Uinued)     for  I  have  loved  you  more  a^  s  Than     ^  ,^  ^.^^  35I 

brother,  "                     ggg 

Bom  of  a  viUage  girl,  carpenter  s  s,  ••            -gs 

but  some,  ^'5  of  the  glebe  with  other  frowns  ^           T^^ 

visiting  the  .,-the  5  A  Walter  too,-  i'rincess,  rro^^ 

Slew  both  his  s's :  and  I,  shaU  1,  "        ...  „q^ 

she  that  has  as  And  sees  him  err:          ^  "        i«  405 

And  here  he  keeps  me  hostage  for  his  s.  "        ^"^ 

'You  have  ours:  touch  not  a  hair  of  his  head :  „            ^' 

unless  you  send  us  back  Our  s,  on  the  instant,  „            *^« 

We  did  but  keep  you  surety  for  our  s,  »            gRfl 

then  took  the  kuig  His  three  broad  ss;  "        „i  105 

dabbled  with  the  blood  Of  his  own  s,  «        "'  ^ 

were  half  fool'd  to  let  you  tend  our  s,  ..             ^gg 

O  sire,  Grant  me  your  s,  to  nurse,  »         ••234 

Against  the  s's  of  men,  and  barbarous  laws.  »      wt  ^o^ 
^or  blame  Too  much  the  s's  of  men  and  barbarous  laws ;      „     ^^^^256 

The  Tory  member's  elder  s,  ,  "    ^  ,/  ^ 

thanks  to  the  Giver,  England,  for  thy  s.  Ode  on  Well.  45 

For  this  is  England's  greatest  s,  rhi^/nf  Feh  44 

What  England  was,  shaU  her  true  s's  forget  ?  T/wrd  0/  ^g^44 
S  of  him^ith  whom  we  strove  for  power-             W.  ^^^^^^iol 

Gone  for  a  minute,  my  s,  ^^^  j,^.^  49 

They  have  taken  our  s,  g^ 

We  have  his  dearest.  His  only  s !  -            ^ 

Strong  S  of  God,  immortal  Love,  ^^i  Mem.,  rro.^^^ 

Who  pledgest  now  thy  gallant  s;  "           ix  19 

Dear  as  the  mother  to  the  s,  "      ,         07 

All  knowledge  that  the  s's  of  flesh  -     ^^^f^  "' 

Yea,  tho'  their  s's  were  none  of  these,  .. 

Shaking  her  head  at  her  s  and  sighing  ^««J  ^^J^  ^* 

Who  dares  foreshadow  for  an  only  s  Ded.oJ  Idylls  ^ 

Or  how  should  England  dreaming  of  ftw  s  s  " 

The  love  of  all  Thy  s's  encompass  Thee,  „t" Arthur  43 

Who  cried, 'He  is  not  Other's  s'-  Com.  of  Arthur  ^ 

who  hath  proven  him  King  Uther  s  s .''  "              ' 

This  is  the  s  of  Gorlois,  not  the  King ;  "              „^ 

This  is  the  s  of  Anton,  not  the  King.   ^  "            144 

daughter  saving  to  a  king.  And  a  king  s  s .-'  —  ,. 

Hold  ye  this  Arthur  for  King  Uther  s  s  .•'  '.             ^^2 

— but  a  s  she  had  not  borne.  "             000 
s  of  Gorlois  he.  Or  else  the  child  of  Anton, 

Or  bom  the  s  of  Gorlois,  after  death.  Or  Uther  s  s,  ^^ 

and  bom  before  his  time,                 ^  "            044 

Gawain  and  young  Modred,  her  two  s  s,  " 

and  sign'd  To  those  two  s's  to  pass,  '■ 

No  s  of  Uther,  and  no  king  of  ours ;  "    and.  L  \ 

The  last  taU  s  of  Lot  and  Belhcent,  ««»•«««  "'^  ^-J, 

'  True  love,  sweet  s,  had  risk'd  himself                   ^  "           q« 

Stay,  my  best  s !  ye  are  yet  more  boy  than  man.  „          »o 

'  Sweet  s,  for  there  be  many  who  deem  him  not,  ,.         J^ 

lifted  but  a  little.    Stay,  sweet  s.'  "        ^^ 

Found  her  s's  will  unwaveringly  one,  "        j, 

when  her  s  Beheld  his  only  way  to  glory  » 

Thy  s  am  I,  And  since  thou  art  my  mother,  ..        ^^ 

saying,  '  Who  be  ye,  my  s's  ?  '  "        0=0 

'  A',  I  have  seen  the  good  ship  sail  Keel  upward,  ,.        ^^ 

And  Fairy  Queens  have  built  the  city,  s  ;  "        ^^ 

as  thou  sayest,  it  is  enchanted,  s,  "        „„ 

my  husband's  brother  had  my  s  Thrall'd  m  his  castle,  „        d&7 

thou  that  slowest  the  sire  hast  left  the  s.    ^  " 

Kill  the  foul  thief,  and  wreak  me  for  my  s.  ..        ^^ 

Arms  for  her  s,  and  loosed  him  from  his  vow.  ,.        o?" 

'  6f,  the  good  mother  let  me  know  thee  here,  »        ^ 

lay  Among  the  ashes  and  wedded  the  King  s  s.  "      li^n 

s  Of  old  King  Lot  and  good  Queen  Belhcent,  /3  "  ,„,  9Q8 
'Whither,  fair  s  ?  '  to  whom  Geraint  rephcd.            Mart,  of  Geratnt  298 

Rest!  the  good  house,  tho'  ruin'd,  0  my  s,  ..              ^'o 

be  not  wroth  or  grieved  At  thy  new  s,  .. 

Know  weU  that  Envy  calls  you  Devil's  s,  M erUn  anay.'^i 

And  then  did  Envy  caU  me  Devil  s  s :  "            *| ' 

^tf.:^'.S°tli?Ta"S  Sir  L.v.i™,  i:.~*,'k«<  E.  m 

Hurt  in  bis  first  tilt  with  my  s,  "            „_„ 

But  I,  my  s's  and  little  daughter  fled  «            '''" 


Son  {continued)     furthennore  Our  s  is  with  him ; 
s's  Bom  to  the  gloiy  of  thy  name  and  fame, 
'  Thou  art  fair,  my  child.  As  a  king's  s,' 
but  some  CaJl'd  him  a  s  of  Lancelot, 
'  0  s,  thou  hast  not  true  humility, 
seem'd  Shoutings  of  all  the  s's  of  God : 
Who  call'd  him  the  false  s  of  Gorlois : 
strike  against  the  man  they  call  My  sister's  s — 
Are  loyal  to  their  own  far  s's. 
And  grovel  and  grope  for  my  s 
I'll  none  of  it,  said  my  s. 
know  you  worthy  every^vay  To  be  my  s, 
my  good  s — Is  yet  untouch'd : 
but  'e  leaved  it  to  Charlie  'is  s. 
An'  'e  calls  fur  'is  s. 
But  Squire  wur  afear'd  o'  'is  s, 
Sa  feyther  an'  s  was  buried  togither, 
the  fourth  Was  like  the  S  of  God! 
we,  We  and  our  s's  for  ever, 
was  it  otherwise  With  thine  own  S  ?  ' 
Stay,  my  s  Is  here  anon :  my  s 
To  younger  England  in  the  boy  my  s. 
S's  of  Edward  with  hammer'd  brands. 
Leaving  his  s  too  Lost  in  the  camage, 
my  s,  who  dipt  In  some  forgotten  book 
My  s,  the  Gods,  despite  of  human  prayer, 
fathers  call'd  The  Gods  own  s. 
S,  in  the  hidden  world  of  sight. 


Song 

Lancelot  and  E.  636 

1371 

1410 

Holy  Grail  144 

445 

509 

Guinevere  288 

573 

To  the  Queen  ii  28 

Bizvah  8 

„    32 

(Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  49 

287 

Village  Wife  42 

62 

I  63 

90 

Sir  J.  Oldoastle  176 

Columbus  29 

154 

218 

To  Victor  Hugo  14 

Batt.  0/  Brunanhurh  14 

72 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  46 

Tiresias  9 

»      17 
..      51 


My  s.  No  sound  is  breathed  so  potent  to  coerce, 

Thither,  my  s,  and  there  Thou, 

the  s's  of  a  winterless  day. 

one  s  had  forged  on  his  father  and  fled, 

but,  s,  the  source  is  higher, 

I  am  wearied  of  our  city,  s. 

To  me,  my  s,  more  mystic  than  myself, 

Thou  canst  not  prove  the  Nameless,  O  my  s, 

nay  my  s.  Thou  canst  not  prove  that  I, 

But  some  in  yonder  city  hold,  my  s. 

The  wife,  the  s's,  who  love  him  best 

My  s,  the  world  is  dark  with  griefs  and  graves. 

If  utter  darkness  closed  the  day,  my  s— 

more,  my  s  !  for  more  than  once  when  I  Sat  all  alone, 

such  counter-terms,  my  s.  Are  border-races, 


„    119 
„    163 

The  Wreck  74 

Despair  69 

Ancient  Sage  10 

15 

45 

57 

63 

82 

125 

171 

199 

229 

250 


Gone  our  "sailor  s  thy  father,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  b^ 

S's  of  God,  and  kings  of  men  ^     ,     ^  „      ,     /;  d       tH 

To  all  our  noble  s's,  the  strong  New  England  Hands  all  Koundlb 

S's  and  brothers  that  have  sent,  Oyen  I.  and  C.  hxhib.6 

The  mother  featured  in  the  s  ;  "of 

Britain  fought  her  s's  of  yore —  «  ^ 

•  S's,  be  welded  each  and  all,  t"r,  tt    ■    '^ 

why  The  s's  before  the  fathers  die,  To  Marq.  ofDuffenn  47 

summun  'ed  hax'd  fur  a  s,  an'  'e  promised  a  s  Owd  Koa  9& 

i'  saavin'  a  s  fur  me.  , "       ^ 

Tell  my  s— O  let  me  lean  my  head  upon  your  breast.   Bomneys  K.  Ib6 
Dying  in  childbirth  of  dead  s's.  AUar  s  Dream  12 

heart  is  for  my  s,  Saleem,  mine  heir,—  »  V*}: 

watch'd  my  s.  And  those  that  foUow'd,  ..  AO' 

In  a  while  I  bore  him  a  s,  Band'U  s  Death  15 

Glared  on  at  the  murder'd  s,  ,,    i.    "  i,-;     oS 

Our  s's  will  shame  our  own  ;  Mechanophilus  22 

Song  (Se  ealso  Battle-song,  Death-song,  Dnnking-«)ng, 
Love-song,  Matin-song,  War-song)  Take,,  Madam, 
this  poorbook  ofs;  To  the  Queen  17 

Her  s  the  lintwhite  sweUeth,  „  ^,*"  ,7-  i  qq 

And  it  sings  a  s  of  undying  love  ;  Poet  s  Mind  66 

Were  flooded  over  with  eddying  s.  Dy^nf  ^waw  42 

What  s's  below  the  waning  stars  .  o?T«  ■  on 

Hear  a  s  that  echoes  cheerly  L.  of  Shalott  i  60 

They  heard  her  singing  her  last  s,  »  **  ^ 

Singing  in  her  s  she  died,  •>      .      ^ 

The  woods  were  flU'd  so  full  with  s,  .      ^«;^,fT*n  .n 

sleep  was  broken  thro'  By  some  wild  skylark's  matin  s.  MUler  s  D.  W 
The  phantom  of  a  silent  s,  >•  71 

Ah,  well— but  sing  the  fooUsh  s  I  gave  you,  .,        loi 

So  sing  that  other  s  I  made,  »•        ^^-^ 


Song 


660 


200 

216 

Gardener's  D.  91 

100 

Audley  Court  56 

57 

Edwin  Morris  79 

Golden  Year  1 

7 

Tithonus  62 

Lockdey  Hall  41 

84 

Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  31 

35 

i^p.  6 

Amphion  9,  13 

50 

The  Captain  4 

<Sir  X.  and  Q.  G.  10 

T^je  Letters  9 

Vision  of  Sin  25 

J"ow  mi^/ii  ^w  TOo«  22 

Poet's  Song  13 

i^wocA  Arden  797 

/Sga  Dreams  292 

Lucretitis  134 

Princess,  Pro.  241 

247 


,  (continued)    and  build  up  all  My  sorrow  with  my  s,  (Ewowe  40 

there  the  world-worn  Dante  grasp'd  his  s,  Palace  of  AH  135 

To  sing  her  s  s  alone.  jgQ 

More  than  my  soul  to  hear  her  echo'd  s  .'  175 

they  find  a  music  centred  in  a  doleful  s  Lotos- Eaters   C  S  111 

Sung  by  the  morning  star  of  s,  j).  of  F.  Women  3 

far-renowned  brides  of  ancient  s  Peopled  the  hollow  dark,  17 

Not  any  s  of  bird  or  sound  of  rill ;  66 

With  timbrel  and  with  s. 

Leaving  the  dance  and  s, 

shook  his  s  together  as  he  near'd  His  happy  home, 

Like  poets,  from  the  vanity  of  s  ? 

He  sang  his  s,  and  I  replied  with  mine  : 

I  found  it  in  a  volume,  all  of  s's, 

in  the  Latin  s  I  learnt  at  school, 

you  shall  have  that  s  which  Leonard  wrote : 

and  that  same  s  of  his  He  told  me  ; 

Like  that  strange  s  I  heard  Apollo  sing, 

falser  than  all  s's  have  sung, 

And  a  s  from  out  the  distance 

You'd  have  my  moral  from  the  s, 

To  search  a  meaning  for  the  s, 

To  shape  the  s  for  your  delight 

had  I  hved  when  s  was  great  (repeat) 

When,  ere  his  s  was  ended. 

Let  him  hear  my  s. 

Sometimes  the  Unnet  piped  his  s  : 

I  tum'd  and  humm'd  a  bitter  s 

Storm'd  in  orbs  of  s,  a  growing  gale  ; 

A  s  that  pleased  us  from  its  worth  ; 

nightingale  thought,  '  I  have  sung  many  s's, 

As  tho'  it  were  the  burthen  of  a  s, 

sway'd  The  cradle,  while  she  sang  this  baby  s. 

girt  With  s  and  flame  and  fragrance, 

time  to  time,  some  ballad  or  a  s 

And  here  I  give  the  story  and  the  s's. 

And  shook  the  s's,  the  whispers,  ,  ^  ^^ 

about  us  peal'd  the  nightingale,  Rapt  in  her  s,  ],'  221 

Some  to  a  low  s  oar'd  a  shallop  by,  „  a  457 

'  Know  you  no  s  of  your  own  land,'  "  j^  s4 

But  great  is  s  Used  to  great  ends :  ]]  I37 

for  s  Is  duer  unto  freedom,  "  ^40 

Know  you  no  s,  the  true  growth  of  your  soil,  ''  150 

I  dragg'd  my  brains  for  such  a  s,  „'  154 

the  s  Might  have  been  worse  and  sinn'd  ",  250 

pardon  ask'd  and  given  For  stroke  and  s,  "  «  47 

a  s  on  every  spray  Of  birds  that  piped  "  238 

noise  of  s's  they  would  not  understand :  "  vi40 

Remembering  his  ill-omen'd  s,  \]  I59 

Then  Violet,  she  that  sang  the  moumfid  s,  "  318 

And  ever-echoing  avenues  of  s.  Ode  on  Well.  79 

My  name  in  s  has  done  him  much  wrong.  Spiteful  Letter  3 

W  ho  hate  each  other  for  a  s,  fa.  Squabbles  5 

Gloet  of  warrior,  glory  of  orator,  glory  of  s,  Wages  1 

Birds  love  and  birds'  s  Window,  Spring  1 

Birds'  s  and  birds'  love,  (repeat)  ,.  3  5 

Men's  s  and  men's  love,  []  '  7 

Ay  is  the  s  of  the  wedded  spheres,  "  ]Vo  Answer  7 

I  brim  with  sorrow  drowning  s.  In  Mem.  xix  12 

I'or  private  sorrow's  barren  s,  xxi  14 

Or  breaking  into  s  by  fits,  I  a;xiii  2 

In  dance  and  s  and  game  and  jest  ?  „  xxix  8 

A  merry  s  we  sang  with  him  Last  year :  '  xxx  15 

To  lull  with  s  an  aching  heart,  „      xxxvii  15 

And  darken'd  sanctities  with  s.'  „  24 

But  in  the  s's  I  love  to  sing  "       xxxviii  7 

Ihen  are  these  s's  1  sing  of  thee  „  n 

Short  swallow-flights  of  s,  "        xlviii  15 

The  slightest  air  of  s  shall  breathe  "  xlix  7 

'  Yet  blame  not  thou  thy  plaintive  s,'  ',]  m  5 

the  s  of  woe  Is  after  all  an  earthly  s :  "  Mi  1 

And  round  thee  with  the  breeze  of  s  "         Ixxv  11 

if  the  matin  s's,  that  woke  The  darkness  "  Ixxvi  9 

With  fifty  Mays,  thy  s's  are  vain  ;  14 

who  turns  a  musing  eye  On  s's,  and  deeds.  ,','         Ixxvii  3 


^ng  {continued)  And  dance  and  s  and  hoodman-bhnd.    In  Mem.  Ixxviii  12 

And  flood  a  fresher  throat  with  s.  ,.        Ixxxiii  16 

all  within  was  noise  Of  s's,  and  clapping  hands,  '.        Ixxxvii  19 

we  sang  old  s's  that  peal'd  From  knoll  to  knoll,  ,.              xev  13 

With  sport  and  s,  in  booth  and  tent,  \.         xcviii  28 

A  s  that  slights  the  coming  care,  [^           xcix  10 

'  Here  thy  boyhood  sung  Long  since  its  matin  s.  "              cii  10 

Be  neither  s,  nor  game,  nor  feast ;  „               ^^21 

And  sing  the  s's  he  loved  to  hear.  "             ^sti  24 

The  lark  becomes  a  sightless  s.  ''               ^xv  8 

the  s's,  the  stirring  air,  The  life  re-orient  'I             cxvi  5 

And  if  the  s  were  full  of  care,  ''             ^xxv  9 

He  breathed  the  spirit  of  the  s ;  "                    jq 

Is  music  more  than  any  s.  "              q^^  4 

In  dying  s's  a  dead  regret,  "                   ^4 

Which  makes  appear  the  s's  I  made  "                    2I 

A  martial  s  like  a  trumpet's  call !  "     Maud  I  v5 

An  old  s  vexes  my  ear  ;  jj  ^j  4^ 

descend.  From  the  realms  of  light  and  s,  "      j^  82 

Gawain  went,  and  breaking  into  s  Sprang  out.  Com.  of  Arthur  320 
with  dance  And  revel  and  s,  made  merry  over 

Tf  ^r*^'^  ,,        ,^  ^^  .,  Gareth  and  L.  1423 
It  chanced  the  s  that  Enid  sang  was  one  Of 

,    ^oj*^""^,,                    ,           ^  Marr.  of  Geraint  345 

by  the  bird's  s  ye  may  learn  the  nest,'  „              359 

Half  whistling  and  half  singing  a  coarse  s,  GerairU  and  E.  528 

Sweet-voiced,  a  s  of  welcome,  Balin  and  Balan  86 
other  was  the  s  that  once  I  heard  By  this  huge  oak,  Merlin  and  V  405 

And  mto  such  a  s,  such  fire  for  fame,  „            417 

there  We  lost  him  :  such  a  noble  s  was  that.  "            433 

,   howe'er  ye  scorn  my  s.  Take  one  verse  more —  ][            444 

So  says  the  s,  '  I  trow  it  is  no  treason.'  '              723 

Or  sung  in  s  !     0  vainly  lavish'd  love  !  "            859 

graces  of  the  court,  and  s's.  Sighs,  Lancelot  "and  E.  648 

m  those  days  she  made  a  Httle  s,  1004 

call'd  her  s  '  The  S  of  Love  and  Death,'  "          1005 

'  Taliessin  is  our  fullest  throat  of  s.  Holy  Grail  300 

And  aU  talk  died,  as  in  a  grove  aU  s  Pelleas  and  E  607 

a  wire  as  niusically  as  thou  Some  such  fine  s—  Last  Tournament  324 

Among  their  harlot-brides,  an  evil  s.  428 

Murmuring  a  light  s  I  had  heard  thee  sing,  "             614 

But  even  in  the  middle  of  his  s  He  falter'd,  Guinevere  302 

and  sent  his  soul  Into  the  s's  of  birds,  Lover's  Tale  i  321 

the  morning  s  of  the  lark,  pij-gt  Quarrel  33 

We  could  sing  a  good  s  at  the  Plow,  (repeat)  North.  Cobbler  18 

I  know  the  s.  Their  favourite—  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  2 

One  bright  May  morning  in  a  world  of  s,  82 

brave  in  the  fight  as  the  bravest  hero  of  s,  V.  of  Maeldune  5 

And  we  chanted  the  s's  of  the  Bards  „            90 

are  a  s  Heard  in  the  future  ;  Tiresias  124 
touching  on  all  things  great.  Science,  philosophy,  s—         The  Wreck  51 

some  treasure  of  classical  s,  67 

With  s's  in  praise  of  death.  Ancient  Sage  209 

their  s^s,  that  meet  The  morning  with  such  music,  The  Flight  65 

wid  his  s  to  the  Sun  an'  the  Moon,                -,  Tomorrow  91 
cried  the  king  of  sacred  s  ;                                     Locksletf  H.,  Sixty  201 

to  crown  with  s  The  warrior's  noble  deed—  Evihaue  36 

But  S  will  vanish  in  the  Vast ;  40 

And  deed  and  s  ahke  are  swept  Away,  ]'         67 

'  The  s  that  nerves  a  nation's  heart,  "        81 

flash'd  into  a  frolic  of  s  And  welcome  ;  Demeter  ojm?  P  12 

sung  their  s's  an'  'ed  'ed  their  beer,  Qwd  Boa  35 

1  sang  the  s,    are  bride  And  bridegroom.'  The  Ring  25 

sprmg-flower  I  send.  This  s  of  spring,  To  Mary  Boyle  20 

I  hear  a  charm  of  s  thro'  all  the  land.  Prog,  of  Spring  47 

with  a  s  Which  often  echo'd  in  me,  Romney's  R.  84 

Your  s— Sit,  hsten  !     I  remember  it,  91 

Other  s's  for  other  worlds  !  Par^ssus  19 

Love  again,  s  again,  nest  again.  The  Throstle  9 

I  was  lilting  a  s  to  the  babe,  Ba'ndit's  Death  20 

he  answer'd  her  wail  with  a  s—  The  Dreamer  16 
Song-built    Shock  after  shock,  the  s-h  towers  and  gates  Reel,       Tiresias  98 

Songful    Ascending,  pierce  the  glad  and  s  air,  Demeter  and  P.  45 
Bongless    high  m  the  heaven  above  it  there  flicker'd  a 

^^^^^^  V.  of  Maeldune  n 


Songless 


661 


Soaght 


Songless  (continued)    She  hears  the  lark  within  the  s  egg,     Ancient  Sage  76 

Songster    Catullus,  whose  dead  s  never  dies  ;  Poets  and  their  B.  8 

Sonorous     Echoing  all  night  to  that  s  flow  Palace  of  Art  27 

Soon    There  will  come  a  witness  s  Forlorn  25 

Will  it  ever  ?  late  or  s  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  173 
Soon  (sun)     '  Cast  awaay  on  a  disolut  land  wi'  a 

vartical  s  !  '  North.  Cobbler  3 

Soonday  (Sunday)     I  gits  the  plaate  fuller  o'  S's  Church-warden,  etc.  40 

Sooner    I'd  s  fold  an  icy  corpse  dead  The  Flight  54 

Soort  (sort)     Naw  s  o'  koind  o'  use  to  saay  the  things     N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  6 

like  fur  to  hev  soom  s  of  a  sarvice  read.  Owd  Boa  12 

Sootflake    (The  s  of  so  many  a  summer  still  Sea  Dreams  35 

Sooth    Good  s  !     I  hold  He  scarce  is  knight,  Gareth  and  L.  1175 

'  for  in  s  These  ancient  books —  Holy  Grail  540 

Or  was  there  s  in  Arthur's  prophecy,  „          709 

Soothe    How  shoidd  I  s  you  anyway,  To  J.  S.  58 

iS  him  with  thy  finer  fancies,  Locksley  Hall  54 

One  spiritual  doubt  she  did  not  s  ?  Aylmer's  Field  704 

0  for  thy  voice  to  s  and  bless  !  In  Mem.  Ivi  26 
And,  influence-rich  to  s  and  save,  „  Ixxx  14 
hurt  Whom  she  would  s,  Guinevere  355 

Soothed     This  fiat  somewhat  s  himself  Aylmer's  Field  26 

Sooty    underwent  The  s  yoke  of  kitchen-vassalage  ;  Gareth  and  L.  479 

SopMst     Low-cowering  shall  the  S  sit ;  Clear-headed  friend  10 

Dark-brow'd  s,  come  not  anear  ;  Poet's  Mind  8 

Sophister     That  every  s  can  lime.  Love  thou  thy  land  12 

Sorcerer    Some  s,  whom  a  far-off  grandsire  burnt  Princess  i  6 

1  have  no  s's  malison  on  me,  „  H  410 
I  remember'd  that  burnt  s's  curse  „   v  475 

Sorcery    drave  the  heathen  hence  by  s  And  Merlin's 

glamour.'  Gareth  and  L.  204 

Whom  thou  by  5  or  unhappiness  Or  some  device,  „            997 

Device  and  s  and  imhappmess —  ,,          1235 

Sordid    Love,  that  endures  not  s  ends,  Love  thou  thy  land  6 

Till  I  well  could  weep  for  a  time  so  s  and  mean,  Maud  I  v  17 
There  a  single  s  attic  holds  the  living  and  the 
dead.                                                                    Locksley  H.,  Sixty  222 

Sore  (adj.)    {See  also  Foot-sore)     Plagued  her  with  s 

despair.  Palace  of  Art  224 

S  task  to  hearts  worn  out  by  many  wars  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  86 

Sore  (s)    old  s  breaks  out  from  age  to  age  Walk,  to  the  Mail  79 

Sorrow  (S)     waste  place  with  joy  Hidden  in  s  :  Flying  Swan  23 

delight  Of  dainty  s  without  sound,  Margaret  18 

Your  s,  only  s's  shade.  Keeps  real  5  far  away.  ..        43 

Rise  from  the  feast  of  s,  lady,  .,        62 

'  Whatever  crazy  s  saith.  Two  Voices  394 

her  heart  would  beat  against  me.  In  s  and  in  rest :  Miller's  D.  178 

they  had  their  part  Of  s  :  .,        224 

build  up  all  My  s  with  my  song,  (Enone  40 

Still  from  one  s  to  another  thrown  :  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  18 

The  star-like  s's  of  immortal  eyes,  D.  of  F.  Women  91 

Stole  from  her  sister  S.  Gardener's  D.  256 

this  high  dial,  which  my  s  crowns —  St.  S.  Stylites  95 

a  s's  crown  of  s  is  remembering  Locksley  Hall  76 

When  you  came  in  my  s  broke  me  down  ;  Enoch  Arden  317 

Had  you  one  s  and  she  shared  it  not  ?  Aylmer's  Field  702 

Sat  anger-charm'd  from  s,  soldier-like,  ..            728 

Their  own  gray  hairs  with  s  to  the  grave —  ..             777 

Her  crampt-up  s  pain'd  her,  „            800 

Nor  sound  of  human  s  mounts  to  mar  Lucretius  109 

And  s  darkens  hamlet  and  hall.  Ode  on  Well.  7 

And  makes  it  a  5  to  be.'  The  Islet  36 

0  S,  cruel  fellowship.  In  Mem.  Hi  1 
Or  s  such  a  changeling  be  ?  „          xvi  4 

1  brim  with  s  drowning  song.  „  xix  12 
For  private  s's  barren  song,  „  xxi  14 
Now,  sometimes  in  my  s  shut,  .,  xxiii  1 
They  bring  me  s  touch'd  with  joy,  „  xxviii  19 
But  S — ^fixt  upon  the  dead,  „  xxxix  8 
If  these  brief  lays,  of  S  bom,  „  xlviii  1 
Ay  me,  the  s  deepens  down,  „  xlix  14 
O  S,  wilt  thou  live  with  me  No  casual  mistress,  ,,  lix  1 
O  S,  wilt  thou  rule  my  blood,  „  5 
O  s,  then  can  s  wane  ?  „  I  xxviii  15 
Delayest  the  s  in  my  blood,  „  Ixxxiiil^ 


Sorrow  (s)  {continued)     trust  in  things  above  Be  dimm'd 

of  s.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  10 

take  what  fruit  may  be  Of  s  under  human  skies  :  cviii  14 

'Tis  held  that  s  makes  us  wise,  ..                  15 

'Tis  held  that  s  makes  us  wise ;  ..           cxiii  1 

Yet  less  of  s  lives  in  me  ,,          cxvi  13 

Would  there  be  s  for  me  ?  Mavd  I  i57 

But  s  seize  me  if  ever  that  light  ..        iv  12 

and  the  s  dimm'd  her  sight,  Lancelot  and  E.  889 

Comfort  your  s's ;  for  they  do  not  flow  Guinevere  188 

weigh  your  s's  with  our  lord  the  King's,  191 

Stay'd  on  the  cloud  of  s  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  255 

Smit  with  exceeding  s  imto  Death.  ..              601 

s  of  my  spirit  Was  of  so  wide  a  compass  ..          ii  134 

chiefly  to  my  s  by  the  Church,  Columbus  56 

he  heal'd  me  with  s  for  evermore.  The  Wreck  58 

the  s  that  I  bear  is  s  for  his  sake.  The  Flight  64 


Sorrowing  with  the  s's  of  the  lowest ! 

From  sin  thro'  s  into  Thee  we  pass 
Sorrow  (verb)     who  most  have  cause  to  s  for  her- 

And  he  should  s  o'er  my  state 

I  feel  it,  when  I  s  most ; 

I  s  after  The  delight  of  early  skies  ; 

In  a  wakeful  doze  I  s  For  the  hand, 
Sorrow'd    those  who  s  o'er  a  vanish'd  race, 

I  felt  it,  when  I  s  most. 

Love  moum'd  long,  and  s  after  Hope  ; 
Sorrowest    0  s  thou,  pale  Painter,  for  the  past. 
Sorrowing    after  him  Came  Psyche,  s  for  Aglaia. 

Went  s  in  a  pause  I  dared  not  break  ; 

s  Lancelot  should  have  stoop'd  so  low, 

and  s  for  our  Lancelot, 

And  let  the  s  crowd  about  it  grow, 

And  the  sound  of  the  s  anthem  roll'd 

S  with  the  sorrows  of  the  lowest ! 
Sorry    an'  s  when  he  was  away, 

I  am  s  for  all  the  quarrel  an'  s 


On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  27 

Doubt  and  Prayer  3 

Aylmer's  Field  678 

In  Mem.  xiv  15 

„       xxvii  14 

Maud  II  iv  24 

26 

Aylmer's  Field  844 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  2 

Lover's  Tale  i  819 

Wan  Sculptor  3 

Princess  vi  29 

..     vii  249 

Lancelot  and  E.  732 

Holy  Grail  648 

Ode  on  Well.  16 

60 

On  Jub.  Q.   Victoria  27 

First  Quarrel  11 

87 


Sort    {See  also  Soort)    older  s,  and  murmur'd  that  their 

May  Princess  ii  463 

fused  with  female  grace  In  such  a  s.  In  Mem.  cix  18 

'  Ay,  truly  of  a  truth.  And  in  a  s,  Gareth  and  L.  838 

Sottin'     '  jS  thy  braains  Guzzlin'  an'  soiikin'  North.  Cobbler  23 

Soudan    Now  somewhere  dead  far  in  the  waste  S,  Efit.  on  Gordon  2 

Soughing     And  the  wavy  swell  of  the  s  reeds,  Dying  Swan  38 

Sought    Still  moving  after  truth  long  s.  Two  Voices  62 

You  s  to  prove  how  I  could  love,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  21 

I  s  to  strike  Into  that  wondrous  track  D.  of  F.  Women  278 

That  s  to  sow  themselves  like  winged  seeds.  Gardener's  D.  65 

She  s  her  lord,  and  found  him,  Godiva  16 

s  and  foimd  a  witch  Who  brew'd  the  philtre  Liuyretius  15 

I  s  but  peace  ;  No  critic  I — •  Princess  i  144 

grace  Concluded,  and  we  s  the  gardens :  ..      ii  453 

some  hid  and  s  In  the  orange  thickets  :  ..           459 

twice  I  s  to  plead  my  cause,  iv  552 
and  I — I  s  for  one — All  people  said  she  had  authority —         ..      vi  237 

s  far  less  for  truth  than  power  In  knowledge :  ..     vii  236 

one  that  s  but  Duty's  iron  crown  Ode  on  Well.  122 

whereon  he  s  The  King  alone,  and  found,  Gareth  and  L.  540 

when  they  s  and  foimd,  Sir  Gareth  drank  and  ate,  „          1279 

though  they  s  Thro'  all  the  provinces  Marr.  of  Geraint  729 

after,  when  we  s  The  tribute,  answer'd  Balin  and  Balan  115 

And  Arthur,  when  Sir  Balin  s  him,  said  .,              198 

King,  who  *  to  win  my  love  Thro'  evil  ways :  ,,              474 
a  wanton  damsel  came,  And  s  for  Garlon  at  the 

castle-gates,  „              610 

And  Vivien  ever  s  to  work  the  charm  Merlin  and  V.  215 

What  other  ?  for  men  s  to  prove  me  vile,  ,.            495 

darkness  falling,  s  A  priory  not  far  off,  Pelleas  and  E.  213 

s  To  make  disruption  in  the  Table  Roimd  Guinevere  16 

nor  s.  Wrapt  in  her  grief,  for  housel  ,,         148 

At  last  she  s  out  Memory,  and  they  trod  Lover's  Tale  i  820 

Chiefly  I  s  the  cavern  and  the  hill  „          ii  33 

Hath  s  the  tribute  of  a  verse  from  me.  To  Dante  5 

at  home  if  I  s  for  a  kindly  caress,  I'he  Wreck  31 

The  Count  who  s  to  snap  the  bond  Happy  61 


Sought'st 


662 


Soul 


Sought'st    Who  s  to  wreck  my  mortal  ark, 
Soul    (See  also  Sailor-soul,  Sowl)    Ye  merry  s's, 
farewell. 

Wounding  Thy  s. — That  even  now, 

My  very  heart  faints  and  my  whole  s  grieves 

He  saw  thro'  his  own  s. 

Heaven  flow'd  upon  the  s  in  many  dreams 

swan's  death-hymn  took  the  s  Of  that  waste  place 

Because  you  are  the  s  of  joy, 

Controlleth  all  the  s  and  sense  Of  Passion 

'  Good  s  !  suppose  I  grant  it  thee, 

'  Not  less  swift  s's  that  yeani  for  light, 

'  When,  wide  in  s  and  bold  of  tongue, 

With  this  old  s  in  organs  new  ? 

gray  eyes  lit  up  With  summer  lightnings  of  a  s 

Look  thro'  my  very  s  with  thine  ! 

drew  With  one  long  kiss  my  whole  s  thro'  My  lips, 

My  whole  s  waiting  silently, 

Beautiful-brow'd  QSnone,  my  own  s, 

Pass  by  the  happy  s's,  that  love  to  live  : 

And  shadow  jJl  my  s,  that  I  may  die. 

(For  you  will  miderstand  it)  of  a  s,  A 
sinful  s  To 

I  BUILT  my  s  a  lordly  pleasure-house, 

'  O  S,  make  merry  and  carouse,  Dear  s,  for  all  is  well, 

My  s  would  live  alone  imto  herself 

To  which  my  s  made  answer  readily  : 

Thro'  which  the  livelong  day  my  s  did  ipass, 

fit  for  every  mood  And  change  of  my  still  s. 

More  than  my  s  to  hear  her  echo'd  song  Throb 


without  light  Or  power  of  movement,  seem'd  my  s, 


Two  Vokes  389 

All  Things  will  Die  36 

Swpf.  Confessions  7 

A  spirit  haunts  16 

The  Poet  6 

31 

Dying  Swan  21 

Rosalind  20 

Elednore  115 

T^oo  Voices  38 

67 

124 

393 

Miller's  D.  13 

218 

Fatima  20 

36 

(Enone  71 

..    240 

„    242 

•,  With  Pal.  of  Art  2 

Palace  of  Art  1 

3 

11 

17 

55 

60 

175 

246 


Ode: 


March-morning  I  heard  them  call  my  s. 

music  went  that  waj^  my  s  will  have  to  go. 

ever  and  for  ever  with  those  just  s's  and  true — 

Pour'd  back  into  my  empty  s  and  frame 

As  when  a  s  laments,  which  hath  been  blest, 

Since  that  dear  s  hath  fall'n  asleep. 

Sleep,  holy  spirit,  blessed  s, 

Sleep  till  the  end,  true  s  and  sweet. 

Thy  brothers  and  immortal  s's. 

All  but  the  basis  of  the  s. 

lest  the  s  Of  Discord  race  the  rising  wind  ; 

Delight  our  s's  with  talk  of  knightly  deeds, 

never  see  my  face  again.  Pray  for  my  s. 

Flutter'd  about  my  senses  and  my  s  ; 

Raise  thy  s  ;  Make  thine  heart  ready 

O  Jesus,  if  thou  wilt  not  save  my  s. 

And  spake  not  of  it  to  a  single  s. 

Three  winters,  that  my  s  might  grow  to  thee, 

O  my  s,  God  reaps  a  harvest  in  thee. 

In  wliich  the  gloomy  brewer's  s  Went  by  me, 

weigh'd  Upon  my  brain,  mj^  senses  and  my  s  ! 

S's  that  have  toil'd,  and  Mrought, 

Bring  truth  that  sways  the  s  of  men  ? 

May  my  s  follow  soon  ! 

So  shows  my  s  before  the  Lamb, 

And  he  cheer'd  her  s  with  love. 

Like  s's  that  balance  joy  and  pain. 

The  little  innocents  flitted  away. 

Kept  him  a  living  s. 

'  Ay,  ay,  poor  s  '  said  Miriam,  '  fear  enow  ! 

So  past  the  strong  heroic  s  away. 

adulteries  That  saturate  s  with  body. 

may  s  to  s  Strike  thro'  a  finer  element 

as  not  passing  thro'  the  fire  Bodies,  but  s's — 

Poor  s's,  and  knew  not  what  they  did, 

'  Was  he  so  bound,  poor  s  ?  ' 

The  mortal  s  from  out  immortal  hell, 

thus :  s  flies  out  and  dies  in  the  air.' 

they  vext  the  s's  of  deans ; 

Should  bear  a  double  growth  of  those  rare  s's, 

Modulate  me,  S  of  mincing  mimicry  ! 

Our  echoes  roll  from  s  to  s. 

Poor  s  !  I  had  a  maid  of  honour  once  ; 

And  secret  laugliter  tickled  all  my  s. 


May  Queen,  Con.  28 

42 

55 

D.  of  F.' Women  IS 

281 

To  J.  S.  34 

70 

73 

Love  thou  thy  land  8 

44 

67 

M.  d'Arthir  19 

247 

Gardener's  D.  67 

272 

St.  S.  Stylites  46 

66 

71 

148 

Talking  Oak  55 

Lffoe  and  Duly  44 

Ulysses  46 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  52 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  4 

17 

L.  of  Burleigh  68 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  1 

Enoch  Arden  270 

804 

807 

915 

Aylmer's  Field  377 

578 

672 

782 

Sea  Dreams  169 

Lucretius  263 

274 

Princess,  Pro.  162 

a  180 

425 

iv  15 

138 

267 


SJoul  (continued)     And  satisfy  my  s  with  kissing  her  : 
life  and  s  !  I  thought  her  half-right 
Not  only  he,  but  by  my  mother's  s, 
king  her  father  charm'd  Her  wounded  s  with  words 
But  sadness  on  the  s  of  Ida  fell. 
He  shall  not  blind  his  s  with  clay.' 
guard  the  eye,  the  s  Of  Europe, 
What  know  we  greater  than  the  s  ? 
peace  be  yours,  the  peace  of  s  in  s  ! 
O  S,  the  Vision  of  Him  who  reigns  ? 
O  S,  and  let  us  rejoice. 
That  mind  and  s,  according  well. 
And  half  conceal  the  S  within. 
What  s's  possess  themselves  so  pure. 
So  that  still  garden  of  the  s's 
Rewaken  with  the  dawning  s. 
Remerging  in  the  general  S, 
Eternal  form  shall  still  divide  The  eternal  s 
The  likest  God  within  the  s  ? 
The  passing  of  the  sweetest  s 
He  past ;  a  s  of  nobler  tone  : 
The  s  of  Shakespeare  love  thee  more. 
Sweet  s,  do  with  me  as  thou  wilt ; 
thro'  a  lattice  on  the  s  Looks  thy  fair  face 
Hadst  thou  such  credit  with  the  s  ? 
Fade  wholly,  while  the  s  exults^ 
And  take  us  as  a  single  s. 

0  solemn  ghost,  O  crowned  s  ! 
The  living  s  was  flash'd  on  mine. 
To-day  they  count  as  kindred  s's  ; 
The  feeble  s,  a  haunt  of  fears, 
On  s's,  the  lesser  lords  of  doom. 
A  s  on  highest  mission  sent. 
But  Wisdom  heavenly  of  the  s. 
A  sphere  of  stars  about  my  s. 
And  all  we  flow  from,  s  in  s. 
A  s  shall  draw  from  out  the  vast 
the  s  of  the  rose  went  into  my  blood, 
For  she,  sweet  s,  had  hardly  spoken  a  word. 
For  one  short  hour  to  see  The  s's  we  loved, 

and  weep  My  whole  s  out  to  thee.  „  98 

'  The  thrall  in  person  may  be  free  in  s,  Gareth  and  L.  165 

The  war  of  Time  against  the  s  of  man.  ..  1198 

running  down  the  S,  a  Shape  that  fled  „  1207 

their  own  Earl,  and  their  own  s's,  and  her.  Geraint  and  E.  577 

whose  s's  the  old  serpent  long  had  drawn  ,,  632 

when  he  died,  his  s  Became  a  Fiend,  Balin  and  Balan  128 

sweet  s,  that  most  impute  a  crime  Are  pronest  to  it.  Merlin  and  V.  825 
For  agony,  who  was  yet  a  Uving  s.  Lancelot  and  E.  253 

Pray  for  my  s,  and  yield  me  burial.  „  1280 

Pray  for  my  s  thou  too.  Sir  Lancelot,  ..  1281 

Pray  for  thy  s  ?  Ay,  that  will  I.  „  1395 

As  tho'  it  were  the  beauty  of  her  s  :  Pelleas  and  E.  79 

the  young  beauty  of  his  own  s  to  hers,  „  83 

Crying  aloud,  '  Not  Mark — ^not  Mark,  my  s  !  Last  Tournament  514 

My  s,  I  felt  my  hatred  for  my  Mark  „  519 

Mark's  way,  my  s  ! — but  eat  not  thou  with  Mark,  „  532 

He  answer'd,  '  O  my  s,  be  comforted  !  „  573 

We  run  more  counter  to  the  s  thereof  ,.  659 

my  s,  we  love  but  while  we  may ;  ,.  701 

all  for  thee,  my  s.  For  thee,  „  742 

Henceforward  too,  the  Powers  that  tend  the  s,  Guinevere  65 

do  thou  for  thine  own  s  the  rest.  ,.       545 

Perchance,  and  so  thou  purify  thy  s,  ..       561 

know  I  am  thine  husband — not  a  smaller  s.  Nor 

Lancelot,  ..      566 

1  cannot  kill  my  sin,  If  s  be  s  ;  „  622 
Delight  our  s's  with  talk  of  knightly  deeds.  Pass,  of  Arthur  187 
never  see  my  face  again,  Pray  for  my  s.  „  415 
and  shadowing  Sense  at  war  with  S,  To  the  Queen  ii  37 
withdraw  themselves  Quite  into  the  deep  s.  Lover's  Tale  i  82 
light  s  twines  and  mingles  with  the  growths  „  132 
which  my  whole  s  languishes  And  faints,  .,  267 
Why  in  the  utter  stillness  of  the  s  ,.  276 
and  sent  his  s  Into  the  songs  of  birds,                                     „  320 


Princess  v  103 

284 

m335 

346 

vii  29 

331 

Well.  160 

265 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  47 

High.  Pantheism  2 

13 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  27 

V  4 

xxxii  15 

xliii  10 

16 

xlvii  4 

7 

Iv  4 

Ivii  11 

Ixl 

Ixi  12 

„  Ixv  1 

Ixx  15 

Ixxi  5 

Ixxiii  14 

Ixxxiv  44 

Ixxxv  36 

„  xcv  36 

xcix  19 

,,  ex  3 

„  cxii  8 

,.         cxiii  10 

„  cxiv  22 

„  cxxii  7 

cxxxi  12 

Con.  123 

Maud  I  xxii  33 

//  i  11 

„  iv  15 


Soul 


663 


Sound 


Sonl  {continued)    That  strike  across  the  s  in  prayer,  Lover's  Tale  i  364 

my  life,  love,  s,  spirit,  and  heart  and  strength.  ,.             460 

And  s  and  heart  and  body  are  all  at  ease  :     .  556 

Come  like  an  angel  to  a  damned  s,  „            673 

Memory  fed  the  s  of  Love  with  tears.  ..             822 

a  strong  sympathy  Shook  all  my  s  :  „          ii  89 

all  at  once,  s,  life  And  breath  and  motion,  ,.            194 

This  love  is  of  the  brain,  the  mind,  the  s:  ..       iv  156 

'  body  and  s  And  life  and  limbs,  282 
but  to  save  my  s,  that  is  all  your  desire  :  Do  you  think 

I  care  for  my  s  Rizpah  77 

face  was  flash 'd  thro'  sense  and  5  Sisters  (E.  and  £.)109 

— wrought  us  harm.  Poor  s,  not  knowing)  ..              185 

a  thousand  lives  To  save  his  s.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  64 

How  now,  my  s,  we  do  not  heed  the  fire  ?  191 

'  O  s  of  Uttle  faith,  slow  to  believe  !  Cohi  mbus  147 

who  seest  the  s's  in  Hell  And  purgatory,  ..        216 

Shamed  in  their  s's.  Batt.  of  Bninanburh  99 

make  my  life  one  prayer  for  a  s  that  died  in  his  sin,  The  Wreck  10 

for  Mother,  the  voice  was  the  voice  of  the  s  ;  ..54 

the  sun  of  the  s  made  day  in  the  dark  .,           55 

a  huge  sea  smote  every  s  from  the  decks  .,        109 

No  s  in  the  heaven  above,  no  s  on  the  earth  below,  Despair  19 

Come  from  the  brute,  poor  s's — no  s's—  ..        36 

if  the  s's  of  men  were  mimortal,  99 

thou  sendest  thy  free  s  thro'  heaven.  Ancient  Sage  47 

daughter  yield  her  life,  heart,  s  to  one —  The  Flight  28 

She  bad  us  love,  Uke  s's  in  Heaven,  „  88 
shadow  of  Himself,  the  boimdless,  thro'  the 

human  s  ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  211 

s  and  sense  in  city  slime  ?  ..              218 

Worthier  s  was  he  than  I  am,  ,.              239 

count  them  all  My  friends  and  brother  s's,  Epilogue  19 

And  showing  them,  s's  have  wings  !  Dead  Prophet  12 

As  a  lord  of  the  Human  s,  „            54 

While  yet  thy  fresh  and  virgin  s  Freedom  2 

Till  every  S  be  free  ;  „  20 
One  with  Britain,  heart  and  s  !  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  38 
A  s  that,  watch'd  from  earliest  youth,                 To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  25 

And  s's  of  men,  who  grew  beyond  their  race,  Demeter  and  P.  140 
cotch'd  'er  death  o'  cowd  that  night,  poor  s,  i'  the  straw.  Owd  Rod  114 

and  you  the  s  of  Truth  In  Hubert  ?  The  Ring  62 

'  The  s's  Of  two  repentant  Lovers  guard  the  ring  ;  '  „        197 

wall  of  solid  flesh  that  comes  between  your  s  and  mine,  Happy  35 

s  in  s  and  light  in  light,  ..      39 

So  wed  thee  with  my  s,  that  I  may  mark  Prog,  of  Spring  92 

Lord  let  the  house  of  a  brute  to  the  s  of  a  man.  By  an  Evolution.  1 

my  s  uncertain,  or  a  fable,  ..                5 

Hold  the  sceptre,  Human  S,  „  16 
prize  that  s  where  man  and  woman  meet.         On  One  wJio  Eff.  E.  M.  2 

thoughts  that  lift  the  s  of  men.  To  Master  of  B.  14 

And  bravest  s  for  counsellor  and  friend.  Akbar's  Dream  69 

guess  at  the  love  of  a  s  f or  a  s  ?  Charity  30 

passing  s's  thro'  fire  to  the  fire,  The  Dawn  4 

bodies  and  s's  go  down  in  a  common  wreck,  ..      13 

Men,  with  a  heart  and  a  s,  ■•       18 

Soul-stricken    S-s  at  their  kindness  to  him,  Aylmer's  Field  525 

Sound  (adj.)     So  healthy,  s,  and  clear  and  whole,  Miller's  D.  15 

What  ails  us,  who  are  s.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  105 

But,  blind  or  lame  or  sick  or  s.  The  Voyage  93 

Looks  only  for  a  moment  whole  and  s  ;  Aylmer's  Field  2 

let  your  sleep  for  this  one  night  be  s  :  Sea  Dreams  315 

If  that  hypothesis  of  theirs  be  s  '  Princess  iy  20 

felt  it  s  and  whole  from  head  to  foot,  -.      vi  211 

Or,  if  we  held  the  doctrine  s  In  Mem.  liii  9 

How  pure  at  heart  and  s  in  head,  ..         xdv  1 

■  S  sleep  be  thine  !  s  cause  to  sleep  hast  thou.  Gareth  and  L.  1282 

Worthier  .soul  was  he  than  I  am,  s  and  honest,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  239 

Sound  (s)     the  s  Which  to  the  wooing  wind  aloof  Mariana  74 

Full  of  the  city's  stilly  s,  Arabian  Nights  103 

no  more  of  mirth  Is  here  or  merry-making  s.  Deserted  House  14 

Springing  alone  With  a  shrill  inner  s,  The  Mermaid  20 

Of  dainty  sorrow  without  s,  Margaret  18 

With  dinning  s  my  ears  are  rife,  Elednore  135 

Died  the  s  of  royal  cheer ;  L.  of  Shalott  iv  48 


Sound  (s)  {eontinuedi    There  came  a  s  as  of  the  sea ;  Mariana  in  the  8.  8 

I  hear  Dead  s's  at  night  come  from  the  inmost  hills,  (Enone  246 

a  s  Rings  ever  in  her  ears  of  armed  men.  „      264 

Moved  of  themselves,  with  silver  s  ;  Palace  of  Art  130 

seem'd  to  hear  the  dully  s  Of  human  footsteps  fall.  „            275 

or  a  s  Of  rocks  thrown  down,  „            281 

With  s's  that  echo  still.  D.  of  F.  Women  8 

I  heard  s's  of  insult,  shame,  and  wrong,  „              19 

Not  any  song  or  bird  or  s  of  rill ;  „              66 

and  fill'd  with  light  The  interval  of  s.  ..             172 

Hearing  the  holy  organ  rolling  waves  Of  s  ..             192 

With  that  sharp  s  the  white  dawn's  creeping  beams,  ..            261 

and  tell  o'er  Each  httle  s  and  sight.  „  277 
Parson,  sent  to  sleep  with  s,  And  waked  with  silence,  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  3 

That  with  the  s  I  woke,  and  heard  „            30 

In  s  of  funeral  or  of  marriage  bells ;  Gardener's  D.  36 

hour  just  flown,  that  mom  with  all  its  s,  ,,          83 

Delighted  with  the  freshness  and  the  s.  Edwin  Morris  99 

with  s  Of  pious  hymns  and  psalms,  St.  S.  Stylites  33 

■  I  took  the  swarming  s  of  life —  Talking  Oak  213 

south-breeze  around  thee  blow  The  s  of  minster  bells.  ,,          272 

and  the  winds  are  laid  with  s.  Locksley  Hall  104 

And  bade  him  cry,  with  s  of  trumpet,  Godiva  36 

With  twelve  great  shocks  of  s,  „  74 
no  s  is  made.  Not  even  of  a  gnat  that  sings.         Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  20 

a  s  Like  sleepy  counsel  pleading  ;  Amphion  73 

A  gentle  s,  an  awful  light !  Sir  Galahad  41 

How  fresh  was  every  sight  and  s  The  Voyage  5 

By  grassy  capes  with  fuller  s  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  14 

There  comes  a  s  of  marriage  bells.  The  Letters  48 

Then  methought  I  heard  a  mellow  s.  Vision  of  Sin  14 

Ran  into  its  giddiest  whirl  of  s,  ,,            29 

And  the  s  of  a  voice  that  is  still !  Break,  break,  etc.  12 

and  find  A  sort  of  absolution  in  the  s  Sea  Dreams  61 

Nor  s  of  human  sorrow  mounts  to  mar  Lucretius  109 

melodious  thunder  to  the  s  Of  solemn  psalms.  Princess  ii  476 

hundred  doors  To  one  deep  chamber  shut  from  s,  ..        vi  376 

That  afternoon  a  s  arose  of  hoof  And  chariot,  379 
and  sweet  is  every  s.  Sweeter  thy  voice,  but  every  s 

is  sweet ;  „       vii  218 

Let  the  s  of  those  he  wrought  for,  Ode  on  Well.  10 

the  s  of  the  sorrowing  anthem  roU'd  ..            60 

In  that  dread  s  to  the  great  name,  „             71 

compass'd  round  with  turbulent  s.  Will  7 

S's  of  the  great  sea  Wander'd  about.  Minnie  and  Winnie  7 

Phantom  s  of  blows  descending,  Boddicea  25 

When  was  a  harsher  s  ever  heard.  Trans,  of  Homer  3 

Calm  is  the  mom  without  a  s,  In  Mem.  xi  1 

door  Were  shut  between  me  and  the  s  :  ..     xxviii  8 

The  streets  were  fill'd  with  joyful  s,  ..     xxxi  10 

The  s  of  streams  that  swift  or  slow  ..     xxxv  10 

'  The  s  of  that  forgetful  shore  ..              14 

And  up  thy  vault  with  roaring  s  .,     Ixxii  25 

0  s  to  rout  the  brood  of  cares,  ,.  Ixxxix  17 
and  growing  upon  me  without  a  s,  Maud  I  Hi  7 

1  heard  no  s  where  I  stood  But  the  rivulet  „  xiv  28 
To  the  s  of  dancing  music  and  flutes :  „  II  v  76 
and  the  s  was  good  to  Gareth's  ear.  Gareth  and  L.  312 
but  heard  instead  A  sudden  s  of  hoofs,  Marr.  of  Geraint  164 
the  tender  s  of  his  own  voice  And  sweet  self-pity,  Geraint  and  E.  348 
s  of  many  a  heavily-galloping  hoof  Smote  on  her  ear,  „  447 
Such  a  s  (for  Arthur's  knights  Were  hated  strangers  Balin  and  Balan  351 
s  not  wonted  in  a  place  so  stiU  Woke  the  sick 

knight,  Lancelot  and  E.  818 

Lancelot  knew  the  little  clinking  s ;  „              983 

And  the  strange  s  of  an  adulterous  race.  Holy  Grail  80 

I  heard  a  s  As  of  a  silver  horn  from  o'er  the  hills  „        108 

slender  s  As  from  a  distance  beyond  distance  grew  „        111 

I  heard  the  s,  I  saw  the  light,  „        280 

heavens  Were  shaken  with  the  motion  and  the  s.  „        801 

Suddenly  waken'd  with  a  s  of  talk  Pelleas  and  E.  48 

but  a  s  Of  Gawain  ever  coming,  and  this  lay —  „            395 

'  A  s  is  in  his  ears '  ?  Last  Tournament  116 

S's,  as  if  some  fair  city  were  one  voice  Pass,  of  Arthur  460 

we  loved  The  s  of  one-anothers  voices  Lover^s  Tale  i  256 


Sound 


664 


Space 


Soand  (s)  {continued)  great  pine  shook  with  lonely  s's  of  joy  Lover's  Tale  i  325 

So  that  they  pass  not  to  the  shrine  of  s.     '  .,            470 

I  too  have  heard  a  s —  ..            522 

Her  words  did  of  their  meaning  borrow  s,  „            568 

With  such  a  s  as  when  an  iceberg  spUts  „            603 

for  the  s  Of  that  dear  voice  so  musically  low,  „            707 

for  the  s  Of  the  loud  stream  was  pleasant,  ,.          ii  34 

All  crisped  s's  of  wave  and  leaf  and  wind,  .,            106 

Like  s's  without  the  twilight  realm  of  dreams,  ..            120 

No  s  is  breathed  so  potent  to  coerce,  Tiresias  120 

sweet  s  ran  Thro'  palace  and  cottage  door,  Dead  Prophet  37 

sympathies,  how  frail,  In  s  and  smeU !  Early  Spring  36 

one  drear  s  I  have  not  heard,  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  40 

A  s  of  anger  like  a  distant  storm.  The  Ring  119 

My  people  too  were  scared  with  eerie  s's,  „        408 

all  her  realm  Of  5  and  smoke.  To  Mary  Boyle  66 

A  s  from  far  away,  No  louder  than  a  bee  Bomney's  R.  81 

What  s  was  dearest  in  his  native  dells  ?  Far — far — away  4 

These  is  a  5  of  thunder  afar.  Riflemen  form!  \ 

Be  not  deaf  to  the  s  that  warns,  „              8 

Too  full  for  s  and  foam,  Crossing  the  Bar  6 

Sound  (verb)     the  waterfall  Which  ever  s's  and  shines       Ode  to  Memory  52 
how  thy  name  may  s  Will  vex  thee  lying  imderground  ?    Two  Voices  110 

The  wind  s's  hke  a  silver  wire,  Fatima  29 

iS  all  night  long,  in  falling  thro'  the  dell,  D.  of  F.  Women  183 

when  you  want  me,  s  upon  the  bugle-horn.  Lochsley  Hall  2 

Like  strangers'  voices  here  they  s.  In  Mem.  civ  9 

<S  on  a  dreadful  trumpet,  summoning  her ;  Geraint  and  E.  383 

rhythm  5  for  ever  of  Imperial  Rome —  To  Virgil  32 

that  would  s  so  mean  That  all  the  dead,  Romney's  if.  131 

S's  happier  than  the  merriest  marriage-bell.  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  11 

Sound  (fathom)    Two  plummets  dropt  for  one  to  s  the 

abyss  Of  science  Princess  ii  176 

Sonnded    [See  also  Far-sounded)    Then  the  voice  Of  Ida  s, 

issuing  ordinance :  „       vi  373 

from  the  castle  a  cry  S  across  the  court,  Balin  and  Balan  400 

The  sudden  trumpet  s  as  in  a  dream  Last  Tournament  151 

bound  Not  by  the  s  letter  of  the  word,  Sisters  (E.  and  E  )  162 

thunder  of  the  brook  S  '  CEnone ' ;  Death  of  (Enone  24 

Sounder    Of  s  leaf  than  I  can  claim ;  You  might  have  won  4 

I  have  stumbled  back  again  Into  the  common  day, 

the  s  self.  Romney's  R.  33 

Sounding  {See  also  Long-sounding,  Ocean-«ounding,  Sea- 
sounding)  my  merry  comrades  call  me,  s  on  the 
bugle-horn,  Locksley  Hall  145 
Breathing  and  s  beauteous  battle,  Princess  v  161 
The  great  city  s  wide ;  Maud  II  iv  64 
Made  answer,  s  Uke  a  distant  horn.  Guinevere  249 
and  shoutings  and  s's  to  arms,  Def.  of  Lucknow  76 
The  pillar'd  dusk  of  s  sycamores,  Audley  Court  16 
and  sitting  well  in  order  smite  The  s  furrows ;  Ulysses  59 
into  the  s  hall  I  past ;  But  nothing  in  the  s  hall  I  saw.  Holy  Grail  827 
a  Uttle  silver  cloud  Over  the  s  seas :  Lover's  Tale  Hi  37 
ear-stunning  hail  of  Ar6s  crash  Along  the  s  walls.  Tiresias  97 
while  the  golden  lyre  Is  ever  s  in  heroic  ears  ,,  181 
Well  be  grateful  for  the  s  watchword  '  Evolution ' 

here,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  198 

and  alarms  S  '  To  arms !  to  arms ! '  Prog,  of  Spring  104 

S  for  ever  and  ever  thro'  Earth  Parnassus  7 

'  S  for  ever  and  ever  ?  '  pass  on !  „      15 

Soar    '  Slip-shod  waiter,  lank  and  s,  Vision  of  Sin  71 

A  Uttle  grain  of  conscience  made  him  s.'  „        218 

Come,  thou  art  crabb'd  and  s :  Last  Tournament  272 

All  out  Uke  a  long  life  to  a  s  end —  „              288 

Source    A  teardrop  trembled  from  its  s.  Talking  Oak  161 

Like  torrents  from  a  mountain  s  The  Letters  39 

Prayer  from  a  Uving  s  within  the  wUl,  Enoch  Arden  801 

The  very  s  and  fount  of  Day  In  Mem.  xxiv  3 

it  melteth  in  the  s  Of  these  sad  tears.  Lover's  Tale  i  783 

but,  son,  the  5  is  higher.  Ancient  Sage  10 

Soured    she  s  To  what  she  is :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  61 

South    by  day  or  night,  From  North  to  S,  Rosalind  48 

Warmly  and  broadly  the  s  winds  are  blowing  All  Things  will  Die  3 

For  look,  the  sunset,  s  and  north,  Miller's  D.  241 

Of  that  long  desert  to  the  s.  Fatima  14 


South  {continued)    Four  courts  I  made.  East,  West  and  S 

and  North,  Palace  of  Art  21 

The  palms  and  temples  of  the  S.  You  ask  me,  why  28 

I  was  at  school — a  college  in  the  S :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  83 

Sailing  imder  palmy  highlands  Far  within  the  S.  The  Captain  24 

As  fast  we  fleeted  to  the  S :  The  Voyage  4 

Came  murmurs  of  her  beauty  from  the  8,  Princess  i  36 

That  bright  and  fierce  and  fickle  is  the  8,  „      iv  97 

Say  to  her,  I  do  but  wanton  in  the  8,  „        109 

And  brief  the  moon  of  beauty  in  the  8.  .,        113 

long  breezes  rapt  from  inmost  s  „        431 

My  fancy  fled  to  the  8  again.  The  Daisy  108 

To  North,  8,  East,  and  West ;  Voice  and  the  P.  14 

Thine  the  North  and  thine  the  8  Boadicea  44 

Down  in  the  s  is  a  flash  and  a  groan :  Window,  Gone.  8 

Rosy  is  the  West,  Rosy  is  the  8,  (repeat)  Maud  I  xvii  6,  26 

And  looking  to  the  8,  and  fed  With  honey'd  rain  „            xviii  20 

All  the  west  And  ev'n  imto  the  middle  s  Lover's  Tale  i  415 

Who  whilome  spakest  to  the  8  in  Greek  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  29 

'  From  the  8  I  bring  you  balm,  Prog,  of  Spring  66 

Storm  in  the  8  that  darkens  the  day !  Riflemen,  form  !  2 

South-breeze    The  fuU  s-h  aroimd  thee  blow  Talking  Oak  271 

Southern    The  lavish  growths  of  s  Mexico.  Mine  he  the  strength  14 

Would  stiU  be  dear  beyond  the  s  hills :  Princess  ii  265 

Between  the  Northern  and  the  8  mom.'  „         v  423 

In  lands  of  palm  and  s  pine ;  The  Daisy  2 

And  reach  the  glow  of  s  skies.  In  Mem.  xii  10 

New  England  of  the  8  Pole !  Hands  all  Round  16 

So  fair  in  s  sunshine  bathed.  Freedom  5 

Fair  Spring  slides  hither  o'er  the  8  sea.  Prog,  of  Spring  2 

Southland    meats  and  good  red  wine  Of  8,  Gareth  and  L.  1191 

Soilth-sea-isle    imder  worse  than  8-s-i  taboo,  Princess  Hi  278 

Southward    S  they  set  their  faces.  Gareth  and  L.  182 

South-west    the  s-w  that  blowing  Bala  lake  Geraint  and  E.  929 

South-western    loud  S's,  roUing  ridge  on  ridge,  Gareth  and  L.  1146 

South-wind    whisper  of  the  s-w  rushing  warm,  Locksley  Hall  125 

Sovereign    These  three  alone  lead  lite  to  s  power.  (Enone  145 

Creation  minted  in  the  golden  moods  Of  s  artists ;  Princess  v  195 

Slovran    They  rose  to  where  their  s  eagle  sails,  Montenegro  1 

Sow  (s)     He  had  a  s,  sir.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  86 

With  hand  and  rope  we  haled  the  groaning  s,  ..                91 

Large  range  of  prospect  had  the  mother  s,  „               93 

As  never  s  was  higher  in  this  world —  „                96 

all  the  swine  were  s's.  And  all  the  dogs ' —  Princess  i  192 

Sow  (verb)     {See  also  Saw)     He  s's  himself  on  every  wind.    Two  Voices  294 

8  the  seed,  and  reap  the  harvest  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  8.  121 

sought  to  s  themselves  Uke  winged  seeds.  Gardener's  D.  65 

and  s  The  dust  of  continents  to  be ;  In  Mem.  xxxv  11 

And  s  the  sky  with  flying  boughs,  „          Ixxii  24k 

Might  s  and  reap  in  peace,  Epilogue  13 

Sowd  (sold)     why  shouldn't  thy  boooks  be  s  ?  Village  Wife  69 

Sow'd    8  all  their  mystic  gulfs  with  fleeting  stars ;  Gardener's  D.  262 

s  her  name  and  kept  it  green  In  Uving  letters,  Aylmer's  Field  88 

S  it  far  and  wide  By  every  town  and  tower.  The  Flower  13 

He  s  a  slander  in  the  common  ear,  Marr.  of  Geraint  450 

Sow-droonk  (very  drunk)    Soa  s-d  that  tha  doesn  not 

touch  thy  'at  to  the  Squire ; '  North.  Cobbler  25 

Sowing    s  hedgerow  texts  and  passing  by,  Aylmer's  Field  171 

Dispensing  harvest,  s  the  To-be,  Princess  vii  289 

And  s  one  ill  hint  from  ear  to  ear.  Merlin  and  V.  143 

s  the  nettle  on  aU  the  laurel'd  graves  of  the  Great ;  Vastness  22 

Sow!  (soul)     'Ud  'a  shot  his  own  s  dead  Tomorrow  40 

Sown     But,  having  s  some  generous  seed.  Two  Voices  143 

another  wore  A  close-set  robe  of  jasmine  s  with 

stars :  Aylmer's  Field  158 
murmur'd,  s  With  happy  faces  and  with  holiday.         Princess,  Pro..  55 

Grew  up  from  seed  we  two  long  since  had  s ;  „          iv  310 

save  the  one  true  seed  of  freedom  s  Ode  on  Well.  162 

iS  in  a  wrinkle  of  the  monstrous  hiU,  Will  19 

That  had  the  wild  oat  not  been  s,  In  Mem.  liii  6 

Among  the  dead  and  s  upon  the  wind —  Merlin  and  V.  45 
Space    {See  also  Breathing-space)    Oh  !  narrow,  narrow  was 

the  s,  Oriana  46 

Overlook  a  s  of  flowers,  L.  of  Shalott  i  16 

But  Lancelot  mused  a  Uttle  s;  „         iv  51 


Space 


665 


Spake 


pace  (contimied)    all  in  s's  rosy-bright  Large  Hesper 

glitter'd  Mariana  in  the  S.  89 

P'ree  s  for  every  human  doubt.  Two  Voices  137 

In  some  fair  s  of  sloping  greens  Lay,  Palace  of  Art  106 
Hath  time  and  s  to  work  and  spread.                 Tou  ask  me,  why,  etc.  16 

The  ever-silent  s's  of  the  East,  Tithonus  9 

shall  have  scope  and  breathing  s  Locksley  Hall  167 

Pinre  s's  clothed  in  living  beams,  Sir  Galahad  66 

The  s  was  narrow,—  having  order'd  all  Enoch  Arden  177 

little  s  was  left  between  the  horns,  Princess  iv  207 

ask'd  but  s  and  fairplay  for  her  scheme ;  .,        v  282 

leave  her  s  to  burgeon  out  of  all  Within  her —  „     mi  271 

Thro'  all  the  silent  s's  of  the  worlds,  „  Con.  114 

The  height,  the  s,  the  gloom.  The  Daisy  59 
starry  heavens  of  s  Are  sharpen'd  to  a  needle's  end ;    In  Mem.  Ixxvi  3 

slowly  breathing  bare  The  round  of  s,  „      Ixxxm  5 

And  roll'd  the  floods  in  grander  s,  „          ciii  26 

And  whispers  to  the  worlds  of  s,  „       cxacvi  11 

countercharm  of  s  and  hollow  sky,  Maud  I  xviii  43 

It  is  but  for  a  little  5 1  go :  „                75 

And  after  these  King  Arthur  for  a  s,  Com.  of  Arthur  16 

Arthur  and  his  knighthood  for  a  s  Were  all  one  will,  „            515 

And  in  the  s  to  left  of  her,  and  right,  Gareth  and  L.  224 

Gareth  for  so  long  a  s  Stared  at  the  figures,  „            231 

some  brief  s,  convey'd  them  on  their  way  „            889 

Then  for  a  s,  and  under  cloud  that  grew  ,,          1358 

Painted,  who  stare  at  open  s,  Geraint  and  E.  268 

Thence  after  tarrying  for  a  s  they  rode,  „            953 

bode  among  them  yet  a  little  s  Lancelot  and  E.  921 

the  hind  To  whom  a  s  of  land  is  given  to  plow.  Holy  Grail  907 

But  for  a  mile  all  round  was  open  s,  Pelleas  and  E.  28 

Then  at  Caerleon  for  a  s —  „            176 

and  either  knight  Drew  back  a  s,  „            573 

Held  for  a  s  'twixt  cloud  and  wave.  Lover's  Tale  i  417 

finite-infinite  s  In  finite-infinite  Time —  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  45 

wiU  be  wheel'd  thro'  the  silence  of  s.  Despair  83 

triumphs  over  time  and  s,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  75 

The  man  in  S  and  Time,  Epilogue  49 

s  Of  blank  earth-baldness  clothes  itself  afresh,  Demeter  and  P.  48 

Fill  out  the  s's  by  the  barren  tiles.  Prog,  of  Spring  43 

Spacious    A  s  garden  full  of  flowering  weeds,     To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  4 

'  My  s  mansion  built  for  me,  Palace  of  Art  234 

The  s  times  of  great  Elizabeth  D.  of  F.  Women  7 

And  flowing  odour  of  the  «  air,  Lover's  Tale  i  478 

Spade    death  while  we  stoopt  to  the  s,  Def.  of  Lucknow  16 

Spain    To  these  Inquisition  dogs  and  the  devildoms  of  S.'    The  Revenge  12 

that  they  were  not  left  to  S,  „            20 

not  into  the  hands  of  jS  ! '  „            90 

had  holden  the  power  and  glory  of  S  so  cheap  „          106 

sea  plunged  and  fell  on  the  shot-shatter'd  navy  of  S,  ,,          117 

more  empire  to  the  kings  Of  S  than  all  battles !  Columbus  23 

Eighteen  long  years  of  waste,  seven  in  your  S,  „        36 

We  fronted  there  the  learning  of  all  8,  „        41 

thought  to  turn  my  face  from  S,  „        57 

When  S  was  waging  war  against  the  Moor —  „        93 

I  strove  myself  with  S  against  the  Moor.  „        94 

if  S  should  oust  The  Moslem  from  her  limit,  „        96 

Blue  blood  of  S,  Tho'  quartering  your  own  royal  arms  of  S,  „      114 

blue  blood  and  black  blood  of  S,  „      116 

S  Pour'd  in  on  all  those  happy  naked  isles —  „      172 

Their  babies  at  the  breast  for  hate  of  S —  „      180 

hard  memorials  of  our  truth  to  S  „       196 

S  once  the  most  chivalric  race  on  earth,  S  „      204 
To  lay  me  in  some  shrine  of  this  old  S,  Or  in  that  vaster 

S  I  leave  to  S.  „      207 

I  sorrow  for  that  kindly  child  of  S  „      212 

8  in  his  blood  and  the  Jew —  The  Wreck  15 

No !  father,  8,  but  Hubert  brings  me  home  The  Ring  59 

{pake    When  angels  s  to  men  aloud,  Sv/pp.  Confessions  25 

He  5  of  beauty :  that  the  dull  Saw  no  divinity  in  grass,    A  Character  7 

He  s  of  virtue :  not  the  gods  More  purely,  „        13 

when  she  s,  Her  words  did  gather  thunder  The  Poet  48 

A  STILL  small  voice  s  unto  me.  Two  Voices  1 

It  s,  moreover,  in  my  mind :  „         31 

Again  the  voice  s  unto  me :     .  „        46 


(continuMi)    Her  eyelid  quiver'd  as  she  s.  Miller's  D.  144 

Still  she  s  on  and  stiU  she  s  of  power,  (Enone  121 

She  s  some  certain  truths  of  you.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  36 

and  if  his  fellow  s.  His  voice  was  thin,  Lotos-Eaters  33 
I  heard  Him,  for  He  s,                                               D.  of  F.  Women  227 

So  s  he,  clouded  with  his  own  conceit,  M.  d' Arthur  110 

And  s,  '  Be  wise :  not  easily  forgiven  Are  those.  Gardener's  D.  247 

And  s  not  of  it  to  a  single  soul,  St.  S.  Stylites  66 

While  I  s  then,  a  sting  of  shrewdest  pain  „            198 

some  one  s :  '  Behold  !  it  was  a  crime  Vision  of  Sin  213 

whUe  they  s,  I  saw  my  father's  face  Princess  i  58 

And  on  the  fourth  I  s  of  why  we  came,  .,         119 

companion  yestermorn ;  Unwillingly  we  s.'  „    Hi  200 

'  but  to  one  of  whom  we  s  Your  Highness  „        201 

She  s  With  kindled  eyes :  „        333 

To  whom  none  s,  half-sick  at  heart,  „    iv  223 

Stood  up  and  s,  an  affluent  orator.  „        291 

roughly  s  My  father,  '  Tut,  you  know  them  not,  .,     ■»  150 

To  such  as  her !  if  Cyril  s  her  true,  .,        168 

'  Nay,  nay,  you  s  but  sense '  „        206 

So  Hector  s ;  the  Trojans  roar'd  applause ;  Spec,  of  Iliad  1 

Yea,  tho'  it  s  and  made  appeal  In  Mem.  xcii  4 

Yea,  tho'  it  s  and  bared  to  view  „                9 

Dumb  is  that  tower  which  s  so  loud,  ,,    Con.  106 

s  no  slander,  no,  nor  listen'd  to  it ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  10 

Then  s  the  hoary  chamberlain  and  said,  Com.  of  Arthur  148 

when  he  s  and  cheer'd  his  Table  Round  „              267 

s  sweet  words,  and  comforted  my  heart,  „              349 

Lash'd  at  the  wizard  as  he  s  the  word,  „              388 

She  s  and  King  Leodogran  rejoiced,  ,,              425 

holy  Dubric  spread  his  hands  and  s,  „              471 

had  the  thing  I  s  of  been  Mere  gold —  Gareth  and  L.  65 

But  slowly  5  the  mother  looking  at  him,  „           151 

Gareth  s  Anger'd,  '  Old  Master,  „          279 

With  all  good  cheer,  He  s  and  laugh'd,  „          302 

Nay,  for  he  s  too  f ool-Uke :  „          472 

Lancelot  ever  5  him  pleasantly,  „           482 

A  naked  babe,  of  whom  the  Prophet  s,  „          501 

when  the  damsel  s  contemptuously,  „          806 

Gareth  sharply  s,  '  None  !  for  the  deed's  sake  .,          831 

So  she  s.     A  league  beyond  the  wood,  „          845 

Sir  Gareth  s,  '  Lead,  and  I  follow.'  „          890 

He  s ;  and  all  at  fiery  speed  the  two  Shock'd  „          962 

s  '  Methought,  Knave,  when  I  watch'd  thee  striking  „          991 
advanced  The  monster,  and  then  paused,  and  s  no  word.       „        1385 

But  Gareth  s  and  all  indignantly,  „        1386 

he  s  no  word;  Which  set  the  horror  higher :  „        1393 
But  none  s  word  except  the  hoary  Earl :                  Marr.  of  Geraint  369 

So  s  the  kindly-hearted  Earl,  .,              514 

8  to  the  lady  with  him  and  proclaim'd,  ..               552 

Loudly  s  the  Prince,  '  Forbear :  „              555 
He  s,  and  past  away.  But  left  two  brawny  spearmen,     Geraint  and  E.  557 

none  s  word,  but  all  sat  down  at  once,  .,            604 

She  s  so  low  he  hardly  heard  her  speak,  „            643 
5,  '  Go  thou  with  him  and  him  and  bring  it  to  us,       Balin  and  Balan  5 

And  s  no  word  until  the  shadow  turn'd ;  .,              45 

Then  s  the  men  of  Pellam  crying  '  Lord,  „            337 

Sir  Balin  s  not  word,  But  snatch'd  „            553 

he  kiss'd  it,  moan'd  and  s ;  „            598 

8  (for  she  had  been  sick)  to  Guinevere,  Lancdot  and  E.  78 

He  never  s  word  of  reproach  to  me,  „            124 

hath  come  Despite  the  wound  he  s  of,  „            566 

He  s  and  parted.     Wroth,  but  all  in  awe,  „            719 

Then  s  the  lily  maid  of  Astolat :  „          1085 

Arthur  s  among  them,  '  Let  her  tomb  Be  costly,  „          1339 

8  thro'  the  limbs  and  in  the  voice —  Holy  Grail  23 

But  s  with  such  a  sadness  and  so  low  „          42 

8  often  with  her  of  the  Holy  Grail,  „          86 

leaving  the  pale  nun,  I  s  of  this  To  all  men ;  „        129 

as  she  s  She  sent  the  deathless  passion  in  her  eyes  „        162 

Then  s  the  monk  Ambrosius,  „        203 

King  8  to  me,  being  nearest,  '  Percivale,'  „        268 

'  While  thus  he  s,  his  eye,  dwelling  on  mine,  „        485 

Sir  Bors  it  was  Who  s  so  low  and  sadly  „        701 

the  rest  8  but  of  simdry  perils  in  the  storm ;  „        761 


Spake 


666 


Sparrow-hawk 


Spake  (continued)  Then  I  s  To  one  most  holy  saint,  who  wept  Holy  Grail  780 

'  And  s  I  not  too  truly,  O  my  knights  ?  ..         888 

s  the  King:  I  knew  not  all  he  meant.'  920 

and  when  she  s  to  him,  Stammer'd,  Pelleas  and  E.  84 

Yet  with  good  cheer  he  s,  '  Behold  me.  Lady,  ,.          240 

She  s  ;  and  at  her  will  they  couch'd  their  speai"s,  ..           273 

While  thus  he  s,  she  gazed  upon  the  man  ..           305 

then  s :  '  Eise,  weakling ;   I  am  Lancelot ;  ,,           581 
saw  the  laws  tha;  ruled  the  tournament  Broken,  but 

s  not ;  Last  Tournament  161 

Tristram,  s  not  any  word,  But  bode  his  hour,  ,,              385 

and  s  To  Tristram,  as  he  knelt  before  her,  .,              540 

And,  saddening  on  the  sudden,  5  Isolt,  ..              581 

once  or  twice  I  s  thy  name  aloud.  615 

while  she  s.  Mindful  of  what  he  brought  ,,               714 
when  she  came  to  Almesbury  she  s  There  to  the  nuns,      Guinevere  138 

But  openly  she  s  and  said  to  her,  .,        226 

To  play  upon  me,'  and  bowed  her  head  nor  s.  ..        310 

As  at  a  friend's  voice,  and  he  s  again :  .,        531 

while  he  s  to  these  his  helm  was  lower'd,  ,.         593 

Except  he  mock'd  me  when  he  s  of  hope ;  ,.        631 

Arthur  woke  and  call'd,  '  Who  s  ?  Pass,  of  Arthur  46 

This  heard  the  bold  Sir  Bedivere  and  s:  ..50 

Then  s  King  Arthur  to  Sir  Bedivere :  (repeat)  65,  136 

Then  s  the  bold  Sir  Bedivere :  ..147 

Then  s  the  King :  '  My  house  hath  been  my  doom.  ..            154 

So  s  he,  clouded  with  his  own  conceit,  „            278 


she  s  on,  for  I  did  name  no  wish,  (repeat) 

ask'd,  Unanswer'd,  since  I  s  not ; 

Or  this,  or  somewhat  like  to  this,  I  s. 

Within  the  summer-house  of  which  I  s, 

Then  s  Sir  Richard  Grenville : 

he  s  to  me,  '  0  Maeldune,  let  be  this  purpose 

when  I  s  of  famine,  plague. 


Lover's  Tale  i  578,  583 
707 

772 

a  167 

The  Revenge  8 

V  .of  Maeldune  119 

Tiresias  60 


never  s  with  man,  And  never  named  the  Name ' —         Ancient  Sage  55 

Well  s  thy  brother  in  his  hymn  to  heaven  Akbar's  Bream  27 

A  Voice  s  out  of  the  skies  Voice  spake,  etc.  1 

Spake  (speak)     She  began  to  s  to  herself,  Tomorrow  54 

Spakest    he  were  the  swine  thou  s  of,  Holy  Grail  885 

Who  whilome  s  to  the  South  in  Greek  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  29 

Spakin'  (speaking)     Heb,  that  yer  Honour  was  s'  to  ?  Tomorrow  1 

Span  (s)     every  s  of  shade  that  steals.  In  Mem.  cxvii  10 

Span  (verb)     She  strove  to  s  my  waist :  Talking  Oak  138 

li^an    {See  also  Spick-span-new) 

Spangle  (s)     the  s  dances  in  bight  and  bay,  Sea-Fairies  24 

They  would  pelt  me  with  starry  s's  and  shells,  The  Merman  28 

Spangle  (verb)     To  s  aU  the  happy  shores  In  Mem.,  Con.  120 

Spangled    {See  also  Sapphire-spangled)    Flung  inward 

over  s  floors,  Arabian  Nights  116 
from  a  fringe  of  coppice  round  them  burst  A  s 

pursuivant,  Balin  and  Balan  47 

Spaniard    till  the  S  came  in  sight,  The  Revenge  23 

We  will  make  the  S  promise,  „            94 

Spanish    '  S  ships  of  war  at  sea !  ..3 

Four  galleons  drew  away  From  the  S  fleet  that  day,  ..            47 

8  fleet  with  broken  sides  lay  round  us  ..            71 

stately  S  men  to  their  flagship  bore  him  then,  ,,            97 

wives  and  children  S  concubines,  Columbus  175 

Spank  (strike)     An'  'e  s's  'is  'and  into  mine,  North.  Cobbler  92 

Spanless     and  grown  a  bulk  Of  s  girth,  Princess  vi  36 

Spann'd     Beyond  a  bridge  that  5  a  dry  ravine :  Marr.  of  Geraint  246 

Across  the  bridge  that  s  the  dry  ravine.  „              294 

Spar    Rocking  with  shatter'd  s's,  Buonaparte  11 

S's  were  splinter'd^  (repeat)  The  Captain  45,  49 

Buoy'd  upon  floating  tackle  and  broken  s's,  Enoch  Arden  551 

Spare  (adj.)     But  far  too  s  of  flesh.'  Talking  Oak  92 

Except  the  s  chance-gift  of  those  that  came  St.  S.  Stylites  78 

Spare  (verb)     But,  if  thou  s  to  fling  Excalibur,  M.  d' Arthur  131 

Smite,  shrink  not,  s  not.  St.  S.  Stylites  181 

one  little  kindly  word,  Not  one  to  s  her :  Princess  vi  259 

we  will  not  s  the  tyrant  one  hard  word.  Third  of  Feb.  42 
whatever  tempest  mars  Mid-ocean,  s  thee,  sacred  bark ;  In  Mem.  xvii  14 

And  yet  I  «  tnem  sympathy,  „       Ixiii  7 

A  little  s  the  night  I  loved,  „          cv  15 

If  the  wolf  s  me,  weep  my  life  away,  Merlin  and  V.  885 


Spare  (verb)  {continued)    But,  if  thou  s  to  fling  Excalibur,  Pass,  of  Arthur  299 

So,  brother,  pluck  and  s  not.'  Lover's  Tale  i  351 

As  if  they  knew  your  diet  s's  To  E.  Fitzgerald  10 
hallus  to  hax  of  a  man  how  much  to  s  or  to  spend;  Spinster's  S's.  Ill 

S  not  now  to  be  bountiful,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  29 

Spared    Yet,  tho'  I  s  thee  all  the  spring,  The  Blackbird  9 

and  they  s  To  ask  it.  Guinevere  144 

He  s  to  Uft  his  hand  against  the  King  „         437 

And  the  Lord  hath  s  our  hves.  The  Revenge  93 

Hast  s  the  flesh  of  thousands,  Happy  IT 

Sparhawk    {See  also  Sparrow-hawk)    Sometimes  the  s, 

wheel'd  along.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  VI 

Sparing    S  not  any  of  Those  that  with  Anlaf ,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  45 

Spark     the  haft  twinkled  with  diamond  s's,  M.  d' Arthur  5t> 

As  this  pale  taper's  earthly  s,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  L") 

She  lit  the  s  within  my  throat.  Will  Water.  lOtt 

Mix'd  with  cunning  s's  of  hell.  Vision  of  Sin  114 

a  delicate  s  Of  glowing  and  growing  light  Maud  I  vi  LJ 

Like  a  sudden  s  Struck  vainly  in  the  night,  „        ix  13 

a  s  of  will  Not  to  be  trampled  out.  „   //  H  56 

the  soft,  the  s  from  oS  the  hard,  Pelleas  and  E.  499 

snow  mingled  with  s's  of  fire.  Last  Tournament  149 

the  haft  twinkled  with  diamond  s's.  Pass,  of  Arthur  224 

match 'd  with  ours  Were  Sun  to  5 — •  Ancient  Sage  238 

scatters  on  her  throat  the  s's  of  dew.  Prog,  of  Spring  58 
new  developments,  whatever  s 
Will  my  tiny  s  of  being  wholly  vanish 

Sparkle  (s)     That  sent  a  blast  of  s's  up  the  flue : 
With  one  green  s  ever  and  anon 


Caught  the  s's,  and  in  circles, 
Like  s's  in  the  stone  Avanturine. 


94 

God  and  the  Univ.  1 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  15 

Audley  Court  88 

Vision  of  Sin  30 

Gareth  and  L.  930 

make  My  nature's  prideful  s  in  the  blood  Geraint  and  E.  827 

from  the  star  there  shot  A  rose-red  s  to  the  city,  Holy  Grail  53o 

an'  'e  shined  like  a  s  o'  fire.  North.  Cobbler  48 

to  the  snowUke  s  of  a  cloth  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  117 

Sparkle  (verb)     I  wake :  the  chill  stars  s ;  St.  S.  Stylites  114 

The  silver  vessels  s  clean.  Sir  Galahad  34 

And  s  out  among  the  fern.  The  Brook  25 

stretch'd  forefinger  of  all  Time  S  for  ever :  Princess  ii  379 

A  maiden  moon  that  s's  on  a  sty,  „       v  186 

The  city  s's  like  a  grain  of  salt.  Wiil  20 

wont  to  glance  and  s  like  a  gem  Of  fifty  facets ;         Geraint  and  E.  294 
while  she  watch'd  their  arms  far-off  S,  Lancelot  and  E.  396 

heats  that  spring  and  s  out  Among  us  Holy  Grail  33 

Sparkled    shield.  That  s  on  the  yellow  field,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  8 

And  s  keen  with  frost  against  the  hilt :  M.  d' Arthur  55 

From  Allan's  watch,  and  s  by  the  fire.  Dora  136 

cups  and  silver  on  the  bumish'd  board  S  and  shone ;  Enoch  Arden  743 
when  some  heat  of  difference  s  out,  Aylmer's  Field  705 

The  yule-log  s  keen  with  frost,  In  Mem.  Ixxviii  5 

royal  crown  S,  and  swaying  upon  a  restless  elm      Balin  and  Balan  463 
pride  and  glory  fired  her  face ;  her  eye  S ;  Pelleas  and  E.  173 

And  s  keen  with  frost  against  the  hilt :  Pass,  of  Arthur  223 

jewels  Of  many  generations  of  his  house  S  and  flash'd.  Lover's  Tale  iv  300 
s  and  shone  in  the  sky,  Despair  15 

but,  however  they  s  and  shone,  „      17 

What  s  there  ?  whose  hand  was  that  ?  The  Ring  257 

Sparkling    the  snows  Are  s  to  the  moon :  St  Agnes'  Eve  2 

The  s  flints  beneath  the  prow.  Arabian  Nights  52 

who  often  saw  The  splendour  s  from  aloft,  Gareth  and  L.  49 

Only  to  hear  and  see  the  far-off  s  brine,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  98 

'  0  trefoil,  s  on  the  rainy  plain,  Gareth  and  L.  1159 

and  saw  The  golden  dragon  s  over  all :  Holy  Grail  263 

To  sit  a  star  upon  the  s  spire ;  Princess  vii  197 

Sparkling-fresh    hue  Is  so  s-f  to  view,  Rosalind  40 

Sparrow     The  s's  chirrup  on  the  roof,  Mariana  73 

very  s's  in  the  hedge  Scarce  answer  Amphion  67 

And  swallow  and  s  and  throstle,  Windoto,  Ay  14 

the  s  spear'd  by  the  shrike,  Maud  I  iv  23 

O  wretched  set  of  s's,  one  and  all,  Marr.  of  Geraint  278 

Sparrow-grass    an'  my  oan  bed  o'  s-g,  Spinster's  S's.  104 

Sparrow-hawk    (See  also  Sparhawk)    Who  told  him, 

scouring  still,  '  The  s-h  ! '  Marr.  of  Geraint  260 

Who  answer'd  gruffly,  '  Ugh !  the  s-h.'  ..  265 

'  P'riend,  he  that  labours  for  the  s-h  „  27 


li 


Sparrow-hawk 


667 


Speak 


Sparrow-hawk  (continued)    '  A  thousand  pips  eat  up 
your  s-h ! 

Who  pipe  of  nothing  but  of  s-h's  ! 

'  So  that  ye  do  not  serve  me  s-h's 

To  curse  this  hedgerow  thief,  the  s-h : 

'  This  s-h,  what  Ls  he  ?  tell  me  of  him. 

The  second  was  your  foe,  the  s-h, 

if  the  s-h,  this  nephew,  fight  In  next  day's  tourney 

And  over  that  a  golden  s-h, 

Has  earn'd  himself  the  name  of  s-h. 

And  over  that  the  golden  s-h. 
Spartan    play  The  S  Mother  with  emotion, 
Spasm     in  these  s's  that  grind  Bone  against  bone. 

The  tiger  s's  tear  his  chest. 
Spat    S — pish — the  cup  was  gold, 
Spate    in  a  showerful  spring  Stared  at  the  s. 
Spawn     '  Thro'  slander,  meanest  s  of  Hell— 
Spe^     (See  also  Spake,  Speak)     Hark  !  death  is 
caUing  While  I  s  to  ye, 

Smiling,  never  s's  ? 

kiss  sweet  kisses,  and  s  sweet  words : 

Thou  smilest,  but  thou  dost  not  s, 

The  very  smile  before  you  s, 

Come  down,  come  down,  and  hear  me  s : 

If  one  but  s's  or  hems  or  stirs  his  chair, 

'Twere  better  not  to  breathe  or  s. 

And  on  the  mouth,  he  will  not  s. 

'  I  may  not  s  of  what  I  know.' 

But  when  at  last  I  dared  to  s, 

Hear  me,  for  I  will  s,  and  build  up  all 

for  it  may  be  That,  while  I  s  of  it, 

that  I  might  s  my  mind.  And  tell  her  to  her  face 

Tho'  I  cannot  s  a  word.  May  Queen,  xY 

And  then  did  something  s  to  me — 

Resolved  on  noble  things,  and  strove  to  s, 

*  Still  strove  to  s  :  my  voice  was  thick 

And  tread  softly  and  s  low. 

And  tho'  his  foes  s  ill  of  him, 

S  out  before  you  die. 

He  will  not  smile — not  s  to  me  Once  more. 

A  man  may  s  the  thing  he  will ; 

some  old  man  s  in  the  aftertime  To  all  the  people, 

.*?  out :  what  is  it  thou  hast  heard, 

if  you  s  with  him  that  was  my  son, 

.S'  ?  is  there  any  of  you  halt  or  maim'd  ? 

let  him  s  his  wish. 

S,  if  there  be  a  priest,  a  man  of  God, 

To  alien  ears,  I  did  not  s  to  these — 

was  it  not  well  to  s.  To  have  spoken  once  ? 

s,  and  s  the  truth  to  me, 

sweetly  did  she  s  and  move  : 

0  Lady  Floha,  let  me  s  : 
Her  Ups  are  sever'd  as  to  s  : 
S  a  Uttle,  Ellen  Adair  ! ' 
Said  Lady  Clare  '  that  ye  s  so  wild  ?  ' 
'  I  s  the  truth  :  you  are  my  child. 

1  s  the  truth,  as  I  live  by  bread  ! 
'  I  will  s  out,  for  I  dare  not  lie. 
And  they  s  in  gentle  murmur, 
I  came  to  s  to  you  of  what  he  wish'd, 
'  Tired,  Annie  ?  '  for  she  did  not  s  a  word. 
Should  still  be  living  ;  well  then — let  me  s  : 
Lets  none,  who  s's  with  Him,  seem  all  alone. 
But  turning  now  and  then  to  s  with  him. 
My  children  too  !  must  I  not  s  to  these  ? 
mark  me  and  understand.  While  I  have  power  to  s. 


Marr.  of  Geraint  274 

279 

304 

309 

404 

444 

475 

484 

492 

550 

Princess  ii  283 

Columbus  220 

Ancient  Sage  123 

Last  Tournament  298 

Gareth  and  L.  3 

The  Letters  33 

All  Things  wUl  Die  29 

Lilian  12 

Sea-Fairies  34 

Oriana  68 

Margaret  14 

56 

Sonnet  to 5 

Two  Voices  94 

252 

435 

Miller's  D.  129 

(Enone  39 

„       43 

„     227 

Y's.  E.  39 

Con.  34 

B.  of  F.  Women  42 

109 

D.  of  the  O.  Year  4 

22 

45 

To  J.  S.  21 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  8 

M.  d'AHhur  107 

150 

Z)ora  43 

St.  S.  Stylites  142 

144 

214 

Love  and  Duty  52 

55 

Locksley  Hall  23 

71 

Day-Dm.,  Pro.  1 

„  Sleef.  P.  30 

Edward  Gray  24 

Lady  Clare  22 

24 

26 

38 

L.  of  Burleigh  49 

Enoch  Arden  291 

390 

405 

620 

755 

788 

877 


To  s  before  the  people  of  her  child,  Aylmer's  Field  608 

Friends,  I  was  bid  to  s  of  such  a  one  ..             677 

— of  him  I  was  not  bid  to  s —  „             710 

'  Love,  forgive  him  :  '  but  he  did  not  s  ;  Sea  Dreams  45 

My  tongue  Trips,  or  I  s  profanely.  Lucretius  74 

yet,  to  s  the  truth,  I  rate  your  chance  Princess  i  160 

Had  given  us  letters,  was  he  bound  to  s  ?  „          181 

he  heard  her  s  ;  She  scared  him  ;  life  !  „           185 

scarce  could  hear  each  other  s  for  noise  „          215 


Speak  (continued)     Not  for  three  years  to  s  with  any  men  ;        Princess  ii  72 

my  vow  Binds  me  to  s,  and  O  that  iron  will,  „           202 

but  prepare :  I  s ;  it  falls.'  ,.          224 

S  little  ;  mix  not  with  the  rest ;  ,.           360 

Abate  the  stride,  which  s's  of  man,  ..          429 

some  classic  Angel  s  In  scorn  of  us,  „       Hi  70 

she  s's  A  Memnon  smitten  with  the  morning  Sun.'  ..           115 

And  she  replied,  her  duty  was  to  s,  ,.          151 

s,  and  let  the  topic  die.'  ..          205 

That  surely  she  will  s  ;  if  not,  then  I :  ..       iv  344 

made  a  sudden  turn  As  if  to  s,  „           395 

there  she  lies.  But  will  not  s,  nor  stir.'  ,.          v  52 

and  she  of  whom  you  s.  My  mother,  ..           192 

ride  with  us  to  our  lines.  And  s  with  Arac  :  .,           226 

So  often  that  I  s  as  having  seen.  ..        vi  21 

Or  s  to  her,  your  dearest,  ..           185 

yet  s  to  me,  Say  one  soft  word  and  let  us  part  forgiven.'  218 

Is  it  kind  ?     S  to  her  I  say  :  249 

Help,  father,  brother,  help  ;  s  to  the  king  :  ..          305 

cannot  s,  nor  move,  nor  make  one  sign,  vii  153 
S  no  more  of  his  renown.  Ode  on  V/ell.  278 
My  Lords,  we  heard  you  s  :                                                 Third  of  Feb.  1 

As  long  as  we  remain,  we  must  s  free,  ..             13 

But  the  one  voice  in  Europe  :  we  must  s  ;  ..16 
let  her  s  of  you  weU  or  ill ;                                                    Grandmother  51 

'  but  I  needs  must  s  my  mind,  „  53 
S  to  Him  thou  for  He  hears.  High.  Pantheism  11 
They  should  s  to  me  not  without  a  welcome,  Hendecasyllabics  11 
And  I  can  s  a  little  then.                                                     /„  Mem.  xix  16 

Who  s  their  feeling  as  it  is,  ..             ^^  5 

And  sometimes  harshly  will  he  s :  ..            xxi  6 

Behold,  ye  s  an  idle  thing :  ..                 2I 

Urania  s's  with  darken'd  brow  :  ..       xxxvii  1 

'  I  am  not  worthy  ev'n  to  s  .,                 n 

My  guardian  angel  will  s  out  In  that  high  place,  „         xliv  15 

Nor  s  it,  knowing  Death  has  made  ,.       Ixxiv  11 

I  hear  the  sentence  that  he  s's  ;  „       Ixxx  10 

We  cannot  hear  each  other  s.  .,     Ixxxii  16 

A  part  of  stillness,  yearns  to  s  :  ..      Ixxxv  78 

Still  s  to  me  of  me  and  mine  :  „         cxvi  12 

thought  he  would  rise  and  s  And  rave  at  the  lie  Maud  I  i  59 

But  this  is  the  day  when  I  must  s,  „        xvi  7 

I  am  sure  I  did  but  s  Of  my  mother's  faded  cheek  "     xix  18 

To  s  of  the  mother  she  loved  As  one  scarce  less  forlorn,  „            27 

Chid  her,  and  forbid  her  to  s  To  me,  „            63 

But  s  to  her  all  things  holy  and  high,  ,"    //  H  75 

for  she  never  s's  her  mind,  ",  ^  67 
as  he  s's  who  tells  the  tale—                                         Com.  of  "Arthur  95 

speech  ye  s  yourself,  '  Cast  me  away  !  '  „             304 

hear  him  s  before  he  left  his  life.  "            362 

S  of  the  Kmg ;  '|  42^ 
nor  sees,  nor  hears,  nor  s's,  nor  knows.                            Gareth  and  L.  81 

Live  pure,  s  true,  right  wrong,  „          ng 

And  heard  him  Kingly  s,  and  doubted  him  ,'           125 

King  will  doom  me  when  Is.'  \]          324 

My  deeds  will  s  :  it  is  but  for  a  day.'  ''          577 

I  but  s  for  thine  avail.  The  saver  of  my  life.'  .','  ggs 
I  am  the  cause,  because  I  dare  not  s                            Marr.  of  Geraint  89 

Thou  art  not  worthy  ev'n  to  s  of  him  ; '  ..             199 

S,  if  ye  be  not  like  the  rest,  hawk-mad,  ,.            280 

S  !  '     Whereat  the  amiourer  turning  all  amazed  „            282 

They  would  not  hear  me  s :  ^^             421 

Nor  s  I  now  from  foolish  flattery ;  "             433 

Nor  did  she  lift  an  eye  nor  s  a  word,  528 
Whatever  happens,  not  to  s  to  me,                                 Geraint  and  E.  17 

If  he  would  only  s  and  tell  me  of  it.'  „              54 

I  laid  upon  you,  not  to  s  to  me,  ,'               73 

That  she  could  s  whom  his  own  ear  had  heard  „            H3 

Needs  must  I  s,  and  tho'  he  kill  me  for  it,  ',[            137 

'  Have  I  leave  to  s  ?  '     He  said,  .'            140 

and  s  To  your  good  damsel  there  who  sits  apart,  j]            298 

'  Get  her  to  s  :  she  doth  not  s  to  me.'  „            301 

Ye  sit  apart,  you  do  not  s  to  him,  ^'            321 

dumbly  s's  Your  story,  that  this  man  loves  you  ,"            328 

Good,  s  the  word  :  my  followers  ring  him  round :  „            336 


Speak 

(continued)    s  but  the  word  :  Or  s  it  not  • 
that  ye  «  not  but  obey.'  ' 

spake  so  low  he  hardly  heard  her  s, 
in  the  King's  own  ear  S  what  has  chanced  • 
(1  5  as  one  S's  of  a  service  done  him) 
Nor  did  I  care  or  dare  to  s  with  you, 
Bound  are  they  To  s  no  evil. 
I  will  s.    Hail,  royal  knight, 
he  reddens,  cannot  s,  So  bashful,  he  ' 
And  we  will  s  at  first  exceeding  low. 
Take  one  verse  more— the  lady  s's  it- 
let  her  ejes  S  for  her,  glowing  on  him. 
Urged  him  to  5  against  the  truth, 
for  to  s  him  true,  Ye  know  right  well 
little  need  to  s  Of  Lancelot  in  his  glory  ' 
S  therefore :  shall  I  waste  myself  in  vain  ^  ' 
lo  s  the  wish  most  near  to  your  true  heart : 
.But  iike  a  ghost  without  the  power  to  s. 
^  Delay  no  longer,  s  your  wish, 
S :  that  I  live  to  hear,'  he  said, 


668 


Geraint  and  E.  342 
417 
643 
809 
847 
871 
Balin  and  Balan  146 


Speech 


^'Isjfda^TAtJitri'"^"™"-  ,i-'»-^.  z-m 


519 
532 

Merlin  and  V.  445 
616 

Lancelot  and  E.  92 
154 
463 
670 
914 
919 
924 
928 


Suddenly  s  of  the  wordless  man. 
Dark-splendid,  s  in  the  silence, 
<b  a  still  good-morrow  with  her  eyes 
Your  beauty  is  your  beauty,  and  I  sin  In  5, 
00  s,  and  here  ceasing. 
Not  s  other  word  than  '  Hast  thou  won  ? 
And  s  clearly  in  thy  native  tongue— 
s  aloud  To  women,  the  flower  of  the  time, 


Lancelot  and  E.  271 

338 

1033 

1187 

Holy  Grail  853 

Last  Tournament  191 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  133 

The  Wreck  48 


ell  ffnr  ^  ^  '^^"  I/"""  "'^"^  °^  ««"'  ^d  none  Of  you     " 

can  s  for  me  so  well.  •' 

So  cannot  s  my  mind.    An  end  to  this  !  "          i555 

He  IS  enchanted,  cannot  s— and  she,  "          ffff 

A,  as  It  waxes,  of  a  love  that  wanes  ?  "          ffnf 

For  on  a  day  she  sent  to  s  with  me.  ^o^"  Grail  mi 

And  when  she  came  to  5,  behold  her  eyes  ^            fno 

and  the  King  himself  could  hardly  s  "          Xii 

Ah,  blessed  Lord,  I  s  too  earthlywise,  "          %%; 

Bors     Ask  me  not,  for  I  may  not  s  of  it :  "'          ^fl 

?'?l.''i  \  ^^  ""^i'^  V  *^^  framework  and  the  chord ;         ""  ^l 

a!>,  Lancelot,  thou  art  silent :  Tn^th^.              .^i^ 

To  s  no  slander,  no,  nor  listen  to  it,  ^''''  ^ZJ^T'''  l^l 

corns  Of  the  pure  heart,  nor  seem  Guinevere  472 

And  he  forgave  me,  and  I  could  not  s.  "        «ii 

s°^hTi/irt^ttst:r?  ^" '''  p^^^^«'  ^--  ^f  ^^^  i 

I  did  not  s  :  I  could  not  .  my  love.  ^'' '  ^"^^  '  284 

I  wish'd,  yet  wish'd  her  not  to  s ;  "            *^ 

It  makes  me  angry  yet  to  s  of  it—  "        •   ^ii 

qu^tion  d  if  she  came  From  foreign  lands,  and  still  ' 

sue  did  not  s. 

The  spectre  that  will  s  if  spoken  to.  ""            ooi 

An'  he  didn't  s  for  a  while  p.Vo/Vi         fH 

I  learnt  it  first.     I  had  to  s  e-  .      f  ^*'  Quarrel  66 

Now  let  it  s,  and  you  fire^  "^'"'l^y  ^;  l*^,"®-)  ^f 

The  Shepherd,  when  I  5,  '  ^t  f  fe^'' vf  ?^ 

a  shame  to  .  of  them-Among  the  heathen-  '^"  '^^  ^^'^«*'^«,  J^ 

s,  and  tell  them  all  The  story  of  mv  vovaee  n^L    t.     1 V 

And  when  I  ceased  to  s,  the  king         ^^  '  Columbus  11 

mv  son  will  s  for  me  Ablier  than  I  can  "      Ja 
whenever  we  strove  to  5  Our  voices  were  thinner        V.  of  Maeldune  21 

\  ?^SStitei^rr.  r  '''''''■'  ^^^4 

TC^'Lr.Z  ffof^'w^^Ct^'  Ancient  Sajf 

Come,  s  a  httle  comfort !  m,''  „,.  ,/f° 

S  to  me,  sLster ;  counsel  me  •  ^^'  ^^'^^^  H 

You  s  so  low,  what  is  it  ?  *^"^"  ^vf"''^?^  ^8 

'She  too  might  5  to-day,'  she  mumbled.  ^'^  ^'""S  f. 

You  wiU  not  s,  my  friends,  ta.  m/"  j        o 

But  niver  not  s  plaain  out,  Church-warden,  etc.  43 

tha  mm  «  hout  to  the  Baptises  here  1'  the  town,  "              5? 

g^r    hurl  his  cup  Straight  at  the  s,  '         Merliil'and  V  ^1 

AiMl  I  ran  by  him  without  5,  i««a«i6/ 

The  voice,  that  now  Ls  5,  ^"2/  «J!^««  18 

make  a  man  feel  strong  in  s  truth  •  r           "j  if^'  ^^ 

He  said, '  Ye  take  it,^'                 '  .'     "^  T"^ P^K  ^^ 

'    '  Geraint  and  E.  141 


aMthel^^^^'^^^^^    Thebrand;  the  buckler 
O'erthwarted  with  the  brazen-headed  s 
Into  that  phalanx  of  the  summer  s's 
hoofs  bare  on  the  ridge  of  s's  And  riders 

^  .  .f/r^?"^'  ♦■^^  good  horse  reel, 

that  held  The  horse,  the  s ; 

And  mounted  horse  and  graspt  a  s 

and  either  s  Bent  but  not  brake     ' 

m  a,  moment— at  one  touch  Of  that  skill'd  s, 

ilad  sent  thee  down  before  a  lesser  s 

on  whom  all  s's  Are  rotten  sticks  '     ' 

and  thrice  they  break  their  s's 

Pmr/^  «'^?S  ^  ^  """^^^^  thro'  his  breast 

call  d  for  flesh  and  wine  to  feed  his  s's. 

s  Wherewith  the  Roman  pierced  the  side  of  Christ. 

and  then  the  shadow  of  a  s.  Shot 

kS V'r^  f  I^t'  ^^Z  *°-d^y  *be  shadow  of  a  s. 
King  Pellam's  holy  s.  Reputed  to  be  red 
Ihat  men  go  down  before  your  s  at  a  touch, 
couch  d  their  s's  and  prick'^d  their  steeds. 
■        Pv  f  ,?own-g  ancing  lamed  the  charger,  and  a  s 
Prick'd  sharply  his  own  cuirass, 
Ihat  men  went  down  before  his  s  at  a  touch 
shadow  of  my  s  had  been  enow  To  scare        ' 

^iU  make  thee  with  my  s  and  sword 
and  at  her  will  they  couch'd  their  s's 
and  on  shield  A  s,  a  harp,  a  bugle—  ' 
Arthur  with  a  hundred  s's  Rod!  far 
the  splintering  s,  the  hard  mail  hewn, 
died  Among  their  s's  and  chariots, 
s  and  helmet  tipt  With  stormy  light 
Ihe  s  of  ice  has  wept  itself  away, 
&pear  d    the  sparrow  s  by  the  shrike 
Speamaan     But  left  two  brawny  spearmen, 

tlis  lusty  spearmen  foUow'd  him  with  noise  : 
And  mingled  with  the  spearmen  : 
the  brawny  s  let  his  cheek  Bulge 
&" W    ^^";  splinter'd  s-s's  crack  and  fly, 
Speai-stncken    A  knight  of  thine  s-s  ^' 

Specia    ad].)     Oh  !  sure  it  is  a  s  care  Of  God 

8>peck    httle  pitted  s  in  garner'd  fruit 

<incJtT^^^  ^^  ^1"^'  '^!'^  '  *^'*«'  bare  the  King, 
Special    A  s  doubt  which  makes  me  cold, 

«n««<7.^    'S,''*  ^  dead  man  there  to  a  s  bride  ; 
J>pecfre    There  stands  a  s  in  your  hall  • 

Nightmare  of  youth,  the  s  of  himself  ? 

He  faced  the  s's  of  the  mind 

and  fled  Yelling  as  from  a  s, 

one  of  them  Said,  shuddering,  '  Her  s  " 

Ihe  s  that  will  speak  if  spoken  to. 

Are  there  s  s  moving  in  the  darkness  ? 

tnunders  pass,  the  s's  vanish, 

with  his  drift  Of  flickering  s's 
Speculation    for  a  vast  s  had  fail'd, 
speech    God's  great  gift  of  s  abused 
either  hved  in  cither's  heart  and  s. 

full-flowing  river  of  s  Came  down  upon  mv  heart  nr         «a 

To  hear  each  other's  whisoer'd  s  ■  ^  r  .      r.  .     ^none  68 

and  with  surprise  Frole  my  swi^t  s  •  ^'n'f'^h^-  ^-  ^ 

He  flash'd  his  random  s'^f   ^    '  ^-  %?.;  ST\^^ 

Joyful  came  his  s  •  ^"^  Water.  198 

There  s  and  thought  and  nature  fail'd  v^H.  ^fP^i^m 

addr^s'd  to  s-f  ho  spoketTwS  S^tf  ^'g 

Ere  Thought  could  wed  itself  with  S ;  /TS.'  S^  1I 


Two  Voices  129 
(Enone  139 
Aylmer's  Field  111 
Princess  v  489 
Gareth  and  L.  523 
681 
691 
963 
1223 
1244 
1305 
Marr.  of  Geraint  562 
Geraint  and  E.  86 
601 
halm  and  Balan  113 
322 
373 
556 
Lancelot  and  E.  149 
479 


487 

578 

Holy  Grail  791 

Pelleas  and  E.  45 

r       ^      •'  273 

Last  Tournament  174 
420 
Pass,  of  Arthur  108 
Achilles  over  the  T.  33 
Tiresias  113 
Prog,  of  Spring  6 
Maud  I  iv  23 
Geraint  and  E.  558 
593 
599 
630 
Sir  Galahad  7 
Balin  and  Balan  121 
Supp.  Confessions  63 
Pelleas  and  E.  41 
Merlin  and  V.  394 
Pass,  of  Arthur  465 
/«  Jl/em.  xli  19J 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  ■_ 
Love  and  Duty  IJ,, 
In  Mem.  xcvi  15J 
Geraint  and  E.  7331 
-twer's  Tale  iv  3351 
337 
Ow  Jub.  Q.   'victoria  67 

r.        ■'  69 

Demeter  and  P.  27 

IfajM^  7  i  9 

.4  Dirge  44 

Sonnet  to 14 


Speech 


669 


Spire 


Speech  (coniimied)     But  in  dear  words  of  human  s  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  83 

In  matter-moulded  forms  of  s,  „              xcv  46 

Against  the  feast,  the  s,  the  glee,  „         Con.  101 

And  written  in  the  s  ye  speak  yourself,  Com.  of  Arthur  304 

Knowest  thou  not  the  fashion  of  our  s  ?  Pelleas  and  E.  100 

So  that  he  could  not  come  to  s  with  her.  „             205 

But  in  the  onward  current  of  her  s.  Lover's  Tale  i  565 

Fair  s  was  his  and  deUcate  of  phrase,  ,,               719 

Fair  s  was  his,  and  delicate  of  phrase.  „          iv  273 

I  would  I  knew  their  s  ;  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  11 

Speed     (See  also  God-speed)     Those  writhed  limbs  of 

lightning  s  ;  Clear-headed  friend  23 

a  favourable  s  Ruffle  thy  mirror'd  mast,  In  Mem.  ix  6 

and  all  at  fiery  s  the  two  Shock'd  Gareth  and  L.  962 

named  us  each  by  name.  Calling  '  God  s  !  '  Holy  Grail  352 

Speedwell     The  Uttle  s's  darling  blue.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  10 

Spell  (s)     I  feel  with  thee  the  drowsy  s.  Maud  I  xviii  72 

glimpse  and  fade  Thro'  some  slight  s.  Early  Spring  32 

Spell  (verb)     A  trifle,  sweet !  which  true  love  s's —  Miller's  D.  187 

face  is  practised  when  I  s  the  lines.  Merlin  and  V.  367 

we  scarce  can  s  The  Alif  of  Thine  alphabet  Akbar's  Bream  30 

Spence     Bluff  Harry  broke  into  the  s  Talking  Oak  47 

Spend    Where  they  twain  will  s  their  days  L.  of  Burleigh  36 

To  s  my  one  last  year  among  the  hills.  Ancient  Sage  16 

how  much  to  spare  or  to  s  ;  Spinster's  S's.  Ill 

Spent    passion  shall  have  s  its  novel  force,  Locksley  Hall  49 

my  latest  breath  Was  s  in  blessing  her  Enoch  Arden  884 

'  We  fear,  indeed,  you  s  a  stormy  time  Princess  v  121 

I  scarce  have  s  the  worth  of  one  !  '  Geraint  and  E.  411 

the  storm,  its  burst  of  passion  s,  Merlin  and  V.  961 

and  the  powder  was  all  of  it  «  ;  The  Revenge  80 
I  s  What  seem'd  my  crowning  hour,                     Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  123 

Sphere  (adj.)     By  two  s  lamps  blazon'd  like  Heaven  and 

Earth  Princess  i  223 

Sphere  (s)     Dark-blue  the  deep  s  overhead,  Arabian  Nights  89 

Sure  she  was  nigher  to  heaven's  s's,  Ode  to  Memory  40 

lean  out  from  the  hollow  s  of  the  sea.  The  Mermaid  54 

What  is  there  in  the  great  s  of  the  earth,  //  /  icere  loved  2 

And  deepening  thro'  the  silent  s's  Mariana  in  the  S.  91 

In  yonder  hundred  million  s's  ?  '  Two  Voices  30 

'  And  men,  thro'  novel  s's  of  thought  „          61 

daughter  of  a  cottager.  Out  of  her  s.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  60 

centred  in  the  s  Of  common  duties,  Ulysses  39 

in  dark-purple  s's  of  sea.  Locksley  Hall  164 

The  s  thy  fate  allots  :  Will  Water.  218 

Laborious  orient  ivory  s  in  s,  Princess,  Pro.  20 

An  eagle  clang  an  eagle  to  the  s.  ,.         Hi  106 

seem'd  to  touch  upon  a  s  Too  gross  to  tread,  „        vii  324 
Ay  is  the  song  of  the  wedded  s's,                           Window,  No  Answer  7 

He  mixing  with  his  proper  s.  In  Mem.  Ix  5 

A  s  of  stars  about  my  soul,  „     cxxii  7 

Unto  the  thundersong  that  wheels  the  s's,  Lover's  Tale  i  476 

hereafter — earth  A  s.  Columbus  39 

half-assured  this  earth  might  be  as.  „          60 
or  pain  in  every  peopled  s  ?                                     Locksley  H.,  Sixty  197 

Set  the  s  of  all  the  boundless  Heavens  „            210 

For  dare  we  dally  with  the  s  As  he  did  half  in  jest,  Epilogue  44 

draws  the  child  To  move  in  other  s's.  To  Prin.  Beatrice  8 

glancing  downward  on  the  kindly  s  Poets  and  their  B.  9 

Thro'  ail  the  S's — an  ever  opening  height,  The  Ring  45 

She  lean'd  to  from  her  Spiritual  s,  „         484 

the  s  Of  westward-wheehng  stars  ;  St.  Telemachus  31 

Sphere  (verb)     S  all  your  lights  aroimd,  above  ;  In  Mem.  ix  13 

Sphered     and  s  Whole  in  ourselves  and  owed  to  none.  Princess  iv  147 

had  you  been  S  up  with  Cassiopeia,  ,-,            438 

Sphere-music    S-m  such  as  that  you  dream'd  about.  Sea  Dreams  256 

S-m  of  stars  and  of  constellations.  Parnassus  8 

that  were  such  s-m  as  the  Greek  Akbar's  Bream  44 

For  moans  wiU  have  grown  s-m  The  Breamer  29 

Spheroid    Of  sine  and  arc,  s  and  azimuth,  Princess  vi  256 

Sphinx    woman-breasted  S,  with  wings  Tiresias  148 

Spice  (s)     Dripping  with  Sabaean  s  On  thy  pillow,  Adeline  53 

A  summer  fann'd  vrith  s.  Palace  of  Art  116 

silks,  and  fruits,  and  s's,  clear  of  toll,  Golden  Year  45 

Bring  me  s's,  bring  me  wine  ;  Vision  of  Sin  76 


Spice  (s)  (continued)    With  siunmer  s  the  himmiing  air ;  In  Mem.  ci  8 

like  the  sultan  of  old  in  a  garden  of  s.  Maud  I  iv  42 

And  the  woodbine  s's  are  wafted  abroad,  „        xxii  5 

with  her  s  and  her  vintage,  her  silk  Vastness  13 
Spice  (verb)    S  his  fair  banquet  with  the  dust  of  death  ?     Mand  I  xviii  56 

Spiced     charged  the  winds  With  s  May-sweets  Lover's  Tale  i  318 

Spick-span-new    thebbe  anmaost  s-s-n.  North.  Cobbler  109 

Spicy     Holy  water  will  I  pour  Into  every  s  flower  Poet's  Mind  13 
Round  and  round  the  s  downs  the  yellow  Lotos- 
dust  is  blown.                                                     Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  104 

They  fuse  themselves  to  little  s  baths.  Prog,  of  Spring  33 

Spider     the  bastion'd  walls  Like  threaded  s's.  Princess  i  108 

Caught  in  a  great  old  tyrant  s's  web,  Merlin  and  V.  259 

Spied    came  into  the  field  And  s  her  not ;  Bora  75 

He  s  her,  and  he  left  his  men  at  work,  „       86 

Uncared  for,  s  its  mother  and  began  Princess  vi  136 
But  Arthur  s  the  letter  in  her  hand,                          Lancelot  and  E.  1270 

methought  I  s  A  dying  fire  of  madness  Holy  Grail  767 

And  s  not  any  light  in  hall  or  bower,  Pelleas  and  E.  419 

Sir  Lancelot  passing  by  S  where  he  couch'd,  Guinevere  31 

That  I  niver  not  s  sa  much  es  a  poppy  Spinster's  S's.  78 

Spigot    merry  bloated  things  Shoulder'd  the  s,  Guinevere  268 

Spike    Whose  silvery  s's  are  nighest  the  sea.  The  Mermaid  37 

High  up,  in  silver  s's  !  Talking  Oak  276 

he  had  climb'd  across  the  s's.  Princess,  Pro.  Ill 
s  that  split  the  mother's  heart  Spitting  the  child,       Com.  of  Arthur  38 

darted  s's  and  splinters  of  the  wood  Merlin  and  V.  937 

A  s  of  half-accomplish'd  bells —  To  Ulysses  24 
Spiked     (See  also  Purple-spiked)     and  grimly  s  the  gates.        Princess  iv  206 

Spikenard    Sweet !  sweet !  s,  and  balm,  St.  S.  Stylites  211 

With  costly  s  and  with  tears.  In  Mem.  xxxii  12 

Spill     slope,  and  s  Their  thousand  wreaths  Princess  vii  212 

To  s  his  blood  and  heal  the  land  :  The  Victim  44 

From  that  best  blood  it  is  a  sin  to  s.'  Gareth  and  L.  600 

you  s  The  drops  upon  my  forehead.  Romney's  R.  23 

Spilt     have  died  and  s  our  bones  in  the  flood —  Princess  iv  532 

A  httle  grain  shall  not  be  s.'  In  Mem.  Ixv  4 

the  true  blood  s  had  in  it  a  heat  Maud  I  xix  44 

the  red  life  s  for  a  private  blow —  „          //  ^  93 

burst  in  dancing,  and  the  pearls  were  s  ;  Merlin  and  V.  452 

and  so  s  itself  Among  the  roses,  Pelleas  and  E.  426 

Spin    S's,  toihng  out  his  own  cocoon.  Two  Voices  180 

Sometimes  I  saw  you  sit  and  s  ;  Miller's  B.  121 

Let  the  great  world  s  for  ever  Locksley  Hall  182 
for  we  s  the  lives  of  men,  And  not  of  Gods,  and 

know  not  why  we  s  !  Bemeter  and  P.  85 
Spindling  (adj.)     s  king.  This  Gama  swamp'd  in  lazy 

tolerance.  Princess  v  442 

Spindling  (s)     The  s's  look  unhappy.  Amphion  92 

Spine    my  stiff  s  can  hold  my  weary  head,  St.  S.  Stylites  43 

The  three-decker's  oaken  s  Maud  II  ii  27 

skin  Clung  but  to  crate  and  basket,  ribs  and  s.  Merlin  and  V.  625 

Spinning    behold  a  woman  at  a  door  S  ;  Holy  Grail  392 

Or  s  at  your  wheel  beside  the  vine —  Romney's  R.  5 

Spinster    An'  a  s  I  be  an'  I  will  be,  Spinster's  S's.  112 

ftiire    Looks  down  upon  the  village  s  :  Miller's  B.  36 

And  tipt  with  frost-like  s's.  Palace  of  Art  52 

With  s's  of  silver  shine.'  B.  of  F.  Women  188 

To  watch  the  three  tall  s's  ;  Godiva  3 

High  up,  the  topmost  palace  s.  Bay-Bm.,  Sleep.  P.  48 

But  he,  by  farmstead,  thorpe  and  s,  Will  Water.  137 

Not  by  the  well-known  stream  and  rustic  s,  The  Brook  188 

Whose  blazing  wyvem  weathercock'd  the  s,  Aylmer's  Field  17 

Or  like  a  s  of  land  that  stands  apart  Princess  iv  281 

To  sit  a  star  upon  the  sparkh'ng  s  ;  „         mi  197 

Utter  your  jubilee,  steeple  and  s  !  W.  to  Alexandra  17 

A  mount  of  marble,  a  hundred  s's  !  The  Baisy  60 

Bring  orchis,  bring  the  foxglove  s.  In  Mem.  IxxxiiiQ 

The  s's  of  ice  are  toppled  down,  „         cxxvii  12 

With  deUcate  s  and  whorl,  Maud  II  ii  6 

the  s's  and  turrets  half-way  down  Prick'd  thro'  the 

mist ;  Gareth  and  L.  193 

and  had  made  it  s  to  heaven.  „            309 

Tower  after  tower,  s  beyond  s.  Holy  Grail  229 

s's  Prick'd  with  incredible  pinnacles  into  heaven.  „        422 


Spire 

*»"  (e^^ued)    I  saw  the  spiritual  city  and  aU  her  s's 

Gilded  S^bTom,  or  shatter'd  into  .'.,  iJJj'&fi  m 
overhead  The  aerial  poplar  wave,  an  anlber  s.       Si^te^siEar^E  )M 

topmost  s  of  the  mountain  was  liUes  in  lieu  of  ' 

snow,  T,.     J  ,,    7 , 

and  pigmy  spites  of  the  village.;  -^^""SfS 

Spired    cypress-cones  That  5  abo^e  the  wood;  Zot,6r'rS/ii 39 

.every  topmost  pme  S  into  bluest  heaven,  I)Zhof  (eZII  m 

^  of  happineTAnd  perfect  rest  so  inward  is  ;         ''"^^-  ^^^-^^^^^^  ^^ 

And  the  clear  s  shining  thro'.  S^ 

My  judgment,  and  my  s  whirls,  "             lolf 

O  5  and  heart  made  desolate !  ""             Tog 

thoughts  in  the  translucent  fane  Of  her  still  s  ;  "     Isabel^ 

To  the  young  s  present                                        '  n,t.  i^  i\j            ni, 

A  S  haunts  the  year's  last  hours  ^f  ,^  '^{t"'"'^,  ^? 

Life  in  dead  stones,  or  s  in  ai^  «?*««  Aa««<s  1 

riving  the  5  of  man,                   '  ^  ^'^^"^^f  9 

Some  s  of  a  crimson  rose  In  love  T^f  ?    ^i 

Your  5  is  the  calmed  sea,  ,;^'^"^*'*!  ^1 

Touch'd  by  thy  s's  mellowness,  ^37im 

Kate  hath  a  .  ever  strung  Like  a  new  bow,  Tatlw 

^:^^i^s:i^At^'s^^ ,  ^^-  ^^  -  -s. 

That  read  his  .  blindly  wise,  ^'^^  ^'"'''  "^ 

For  all  the  s  is  his  own.  a/i77 "'    n  ion 

who  wrought  Two  s's  to  one  equal  mind—  *       oor 

In  my  dry  brain  my  «  soon,  'k/,-.„/o« 

the  thought  of  power  Flatt^r'd  his  s ;  S^onem 

Music  that  gentlier  on  the  s  lies,  Lotos-Eat^s   C  S  I 

Nor  barken  what  the  inner  s  sii^s,  '  ^-  '^99 

lend  our  hearts  and  s's  wholly  To  the  influence  "                as 

Sweetens  the  s  still.  n  ^f  v"n/          oo2 

Drawn  from  the  .  thro'  the  brain,  ^^  "^  ^^  'K"/%^?f 

iileep,  holy  s,  blessed  soul,  '^-  "^^  7^ 

Sfn  thv^  IvhI\u  T'  k.'^™^  *«  ""^  ^^  '^"  %  ^«^^  55 

Junet,  she  feo  light  of  foot,  so  hght  of  s—  Gardener' 1  T)  14 

that  crush'd  My  .  flat  before  thie.  StSStvlifes  It 

And  this  gray  s  yearning  in  desire  ''•  '^^  utZs  30 

All  the  5  deeply  dawning  in  the  dark  UcksleuEall  28 

And  our  s's  rush'd  together  ^cKsiey  Hall  ^ 

And  his  s  leaps  within  him  to  be  gone  "          ifc 

crescent  promise  of  my  s  hath  not  set.  "          107 

To  *'5  folded  in  the  womb.  Dav-Dn,    RU.r.    p  s 

His  s  flutters  like  a  lark,  ^     ""''  ^''r^:  f  o^ 

Make  Thou  my  5  pure  and  clear  "«/     a        ^"^  ^n 

My  5  before  Thee  ;  '^'-  ^^**   ^^*  » 

My  s  beats  her  mortal  bars,  ,«?,-,  rv,;  i,  ^  tL 

And  her  .  changed  within.  rZ^f^i^f, 

Tho'  at  times  hir  s  sank  :  ^-  "-^  ^'^'"^"^'^  J^ 

That  her  s  might  have  rest.  "            ,ij; 

I  foimd  My  5's  in  the  golden  age.  To  ¥    r    19 

SirSi  hL"vitil^'"°7'  "\"^-  ^-/^iSmbJo 

^aii  a  all  her  vital  s's  into  each  ear  Avlmer's  Fieia  2m 

But  they  that  cast  her  s  into  flesh.  ^              '  ''^  l2| 

meek.  Exceeding '  poor  in  s '—  '            fS^ 

lorce  ana  growth  Of  5  than  to  junketing  ,„  149 

on  my  s  s  Settled  a  gentle  cloud  of  melancholy ;  "              5^ 

My  s  closed  with  Ida's  at  the  lips  ;                    ^'  ,„v  ? ^o 

Touch  as  among  things  divine,  Qde  'im  Wdl  l^Q 

and  S  with  S  can  meet—  TJinh^  n.  ■      1  ? 

hear  it,  ^  of  C^ivelaitn  !  ^"^^^  ^f^^^  ^ 

A  S,  not  a  breathing  voice.  r„  ^""'^'^ff^  fO 

For  I  in  s  saw  thee^ove  ^"^  ^'"*-  ^'^^if 

So  much  the  vital  s's  sink  "            ^*  f 

But  they  my  troubled  s  mle,  "       „.J,^  J° 

Survive  in  s's  render'd  free,  "         ^^  , A 

And  look  on  ^'s  breathed  away,  "     ^^^"*  10 


670 


Spiritual 


Spint  (continued)     Thy  s  ere  our  fatal  loss 
That  stir  the  s's  inner  deeps. 
And  every  s's  folded  bloom 
Before  the  s's  fade  away. 
The  S  of  true  love  replied  ; 
'  What  keeps  a  s  wholly  true 
The  s  does  but  mean  the  breath 
My  s  loved  and  loves  him  yet, 
I  loved  thee,  S,  and  love. 
From  state  to  state  the  s  walks  ; 
Thy  s  should  fail  from  off  the  globe  ; 
Thy  s  up  to  mine  can  reach ; 
A  hundred  s's  whisper  '  Peace.' 
fierce  extremes  employ  Thy  s's 
I  know  Thy  s  in  time  among  thy  peers  • 
No  s  ever  brake  the  band  ' 

But  he,  the  S  himself,  may  come 
S  to  S,  Ghost  to  Ghost, 
call  The  s's  from  their  golden  day, 
My  s  is  at  peace  with  all. 
And  of  my  s  as  of  a  wife. 
Two  s's  of  a  diverse  love 
Thro'  which  the  s  breathes  no  more  ? 
The  churl  in  s,  up  or  down 
The  churl  in  s,  howe'er  he  veil 
But  in  my  s  will  I  dwell. 
He  breathed  the  s  of  the  song  ; 
While  thou,  dear  s,  happy  star, 
Let  all  my  genial  s's  advance 
And  lust  of  gain,  in  the  s  of  Cain, 
And  the  s  of  murder  works 

eye  well-practised  in  nature,  a  s  bounded  and  poor  • 
Feace,  angry  s,  and  let  him  be  ! 
When  all  my  s  reels  At  the  shouts. 
Would  the  happy  s  descend, 


In  Mem.  xli  1 

),         xlii  10 

xliii  2 

„        xlvii  14 

In  6 

9 

Ivi  7 

Ixi  11 

„       Ixxxii  6 

-     Ixxxiv  36 

Ixxxv  82 

-■     Ixxxvi  16 

,.    Ixxxviii  6 

-,  xci  6 

.,  xciii  2 

6 

8 

1,  xciv  6 

8 

„         xcvii  8 

..  cii  7 

cv20 

„  cxi  1 

»  5 

„       cxxiii  9 

,-        cxxv  10 

„     cxxvii  18 

Con.  77 

Mavd  I  i  23 

40 

iy  38 

,.     xiii  44 

..  //  iv  20 

81   . 


ike  a  household  S  at  the  walls  Beat, 

Iight-wing'd  s  of  his  youth  retum'd 

his  evil  s  upon  him  leapt, 

whimpering  of  the  s  of  the  child, 

heard  the  aS"s  of  the  waste  and  weald 

Himself  beheld  three  s's  mad  with  joy 

so  glad  were  s's  and  men 

ill  prophets  were  they  all,  S's  and  men  : 

When  round  him  bent  the  s's  of  the  hiUs 

Ihou  art  light.  To  which  my  s  leaneth 

and  his  s  From  bitterness  of  death 

Which  to  the  imprison'd  s  of  the  child, 

while  I  gazed  My  s  leap'd  as  with  those  thrills 
*  of  Love  !  that  little  hour  was  bound 
life,  love,  soul,  s,  and  heart  and  strength. 
O  innocent  of  s— let  my  heart  Break  rather— 
s  seem  d  to  flag  from  thought  to  thought, 
clear-eyed  S,  Being  blunted  in  the  Pri^ent 
sorrow  of  my  s  Was  of  so  wide  a  compass 
Moved  with  one  s  round  about  the  bay 
when  her  own  true  s  had  retum'd 
With  a  joyful  s  I  Sir  Richard  Grenville  die  ' ' 
i"  lowers  to  these  '  s's  in  prison  ' 
Whereon  the  S  of  God  moves  as  he  will- 
Out  of  the  deep,  S,  out  of  the  deep, 
6  half-lost  In  thine  own  shadow 
Nor  canst  thou  prove  that  thou  art  s  alone. 
And  some  new  S  o'erbear  the  old 
out  the  fleshless  world  of  s's,        ' 
Her  s  hovering  by  the  church, 
fashion'd  and  worship  a,  S  oi  Evil 
"  S,  nearing  yon  dark  portal  ' 

Spmted    See  Tender-spirited 
Spint-searching    thro'  mine  down  rain'd  Their  s-s 

splendours.  r       >    ^  j    •  •  ,  . , 

(repeat)  >  j  ,  • 

One  s  doubt  she  did  not  soothe  ?  j  1      '^^'^-  Ff '^nf 

And  at  the  s  prime  RewaTet^ith  the  dawning  souI.^KL'^S/i^ 


Geraint  and  E.  403 

Balin  and  Bcdan  21 

.,       .      537 

Last  Tournament  418 

Guinevere  129 

252 

269 

273 

283 

Lover's  Tale  i  104 

142 

204 

363 

437 

460 

737 

„       a  51 

130 

134 

Hi  17 

iv  108 

The  Bevenge  103 

In  the  Child.  Rosy.  37 

Be  Prof.,  Two  G.  28 

32 

39 

Ancient  Sage  60 

Epilogue  14 

The  Ring  228 

478 

Kapiolani  1 

God  and  the  Univ.  4 


1 


Spiritual 


671 


Spoke 


Spiritual  (adj.)  (continued)  That  loved  to  handle  s  strife,    In  Mem.  Ixxxv  54 

But  A'  presentiments,  „           xcii  14 

Rise  in  the  s  rock,  „          cxxxi  3 

Flow'd  from  the  s  lily  that  she  held.  Balin  and  Balan  264 

see  Her  godlike  head  crown'd  with  s  fire,  Merlin  and  V.  837 

and  waste  the  s  strength  Within  us,  Holy  Grail  35 

one  will  crown  thee  king  Far  in  the  s  city  : '  ,.         162 

one  will  crown  me  king  Far  in  the  s  city ;  ,,        483 

I  saw  the  s  city  and  all  her  spires  .,             526 

trrim  faces  came  and  went  Before  her,  or  a  vague  s  fear —   Guinevere  71 

the  babe  She  lean'd  to  from  her  S  sphere,  The  Ring  484 

The  beauty  that  endures  on  the  >S  height,  Happy  37 

The  Christians  o^vn  a  S  Head  ;  Akhar^s  Dream  153 

Spiritual  (s)    S  in  Nature's  market-place^  „            135 

Spirt    upjetted  in  s's  of  wild  sea-smoke.  Sea  Dreams  52 

Spirted  (adj.)     Or  red  with  s  purple  of  the  vats.  Princess  vii  202 

Spirted  (verb)     Prince's  blood  s  upon  the  scarf,  Marr.  of  Geraint  208 

Spit  (s)    bits  of  roasting  ox  Moan  round  the  s —  Lucretius  132 

Sir  ScuUion,  canst  thou  use  that  s  of  thine  ?  Gareih  and  L.  791 

Scullion,  for  ruiming  sharply  with  thy  s  .,             840 

these  be  for  the  s,  Larding  and  basting.  „          1082 

Spit  (verb)     I  hate,  abhor,  s,  sicken  at  him  ;  Lucretius  199 

Spite    {See  also  Monkey-spite)     Delicious  s's  and  darling 

angers,  Madeline  6 

half  in  love,  half  s,  he  woo'd  and  wed  Dora  39 

FiU'd  I  was  with  foUy  and  s,  Edward  Gray  15 

■  A  ship  of  fools,'  he  shriek'd  in  s,  The  Voyage  77 

envy,  hate  and  pity,  and  s  and  scorn,  Litcrelius  11 

sins  of  emptiness,  gossip  and  s  And  slander,  Princess  ii  92 

Should  all  our  churchmen  foam  in  s  To  F.  D.  Maurice  9 

How  I  hate  the  s's  and  the  follies  !  Spiteful  Letter  24 

And  scratch  the  very  dead  for  s  :  Lit.  Squabbles  8 

The  civic  slander  and  the  s  ;  In  Mem.  cvi  22 

Nor  ever  narrowness  or  s,  .,        cxi  17 

a  city,  with  gossip,  scandal  and  s  ;  Maud  I  iv  8 

His  face,  as  I  grant,  in  s  of  s,  „       xiii  8 

to  see  your  beauty  marr'd  Thro'  evil  s  :  Pelleas  and  E.  299 

Marr'd  tho'  it  be  with  s  and  mockery  .,             327 

tho'  she  hath  me  bounden  but  in  s,  „            329 

when  I  were  so  crazy  wi'  s,  First  Quarrel  73 

craft  and  madness,  lust  and  s,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  189 

pigmy  s's  of  the  village  spire  ;  Vastness  25 

Spiteful     And  with  it  a  s  letter.  Spiteful  Letter  2 

all  hearts  Applauded,  and  the  s  whisper  died  :  Geraint  and  E.  958 

Spitting    split  the  mother's  heart  S  the  child,  Com.  of  Arthur  39 

.5  at  their  vows  and  thee.  Pass,  of  Arthur  62 

Splash     and  the  s  and  stir  Of  fountains  Princess  i  217 

Splash'd    «  and  dyed  The  strong  White  Horse  Holy  Grail  311 

And  a  hundred  s  from  the  ledges,  V.  of  Maeldune  103 

Spleen     They  are  fill'd  with  idle  s  ;  Vision  of  Sin  124 

cook'd  liis  s.  Communing  with  his  captains  Princess  i  66 

with  the  least  little  touch  of  s.  Maud  I  ii  11 

Geraint  flash'd  into  sudden  s  :  Marr.  of  Geraint  273 

is  your  s  froth'd  out,  or  have  ye  more  ?  '  Merlin  and  V.  161 

Spleen-bom    S-b,  I  think,  and  proofless.  „            702 

Spleenful     Breaking  a  slumber  in  which  all  s  folly  was  drown'd,    Maud  I  Hi  2 

rode  Geraint,  a  little  s  yet,  Marr.  of  Geraint  293 

Splendid    (See  also  Dark-splendid)     Sees  whatever  fair 

and  *■  Lay  betwixt  his  home  L.  of  Burleigh  27 

A  s  presence  flattering  the  poor  roofs  Aylmer's  Field  175 

The  meteor  of  a  s  season,  she,  „            205 

Till  all  tlie  people  cried,  '  S  is  the  flower.'  The  Flower  16 

Such  s  purpose  in  his  eyes.  In  Mem.  Ivi  10 

There  has  fallen  a  s  tear  From  the  passion-flower  Maud  I  xxii  59 

And  shine  in  the  sudden  making  of  s  names,  „       ///  vi  47 

So  s  in  his  acts  and  his  attire,  Marr.  of  Geraint  620 

Display'd  a  s  silk  of  foreign  loom,  Geraint  and  E.  687 

'Splendour     A  sudden  s  from  behind  Flush'd  Arabian  Nights  81 

The  maiden's  s's  of  the  morning  star  D.  of  F.  Women  55 

Made  lightnings  in  the  s  of  the  moon,  M.  d' Arthur  137 

The  s  falls  on  castle  walls  Princess  iv  1 

Long  lanes  of  s  slanted  o'er  a  press  „          478 

sheathing  s's  and  the  golden  scale  Of  harness,  „         v  41 

A  flying  s  out  of  brass  and  steel,  ,,       vi  365 

suck  the  blinding  s  from  the  sand,  „      vii  39 


Splendour  (continued)     height  and  cold,  the  s  of  the 

hills  ?  Princess  vii  194 

and  a  stifled  s  and  gloom.  High.  Pantheism  10 

And  blurr'd  the  s  of  the  sun ;  In  Mem.  Ixxii  8 

All  her  s  seems  No  liveUer  .,        xcviii  6 

And  breaking  let  the  s  fall  ,,      Con.  119 

I  saw  the  treasured  s,  her  hand,  Maud  I  vi  84 

new-made  lord,  whose  s  plucks  The  slavish  hat  „           x3 

nearer  to  the  glow  Of  your  soft  s's  „    xviii  79 

Queen  Maud  in  all  her  s.  „       xx  50 

And  a  dewy  s  falls  On  the  little  flower  „    II  iv  32 

past  and  leaves  The  Crown  a  lonely  s.  Ded.  of  Idylls  49 

often  saw  The  s  sparkling  from  aloft,  Gareih  and  L.  49 

s  of  the  presence  of  the  King  Throned,  „          320 

daily  fronted  him  In  some  fresh  s ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  14 

Made  a  low  s  in  the  world,  „            598 

she  could  cast  aside  A  s  dear  to  women,  „            808 

And  on  the  s  came,  flashing  me  blind ;  Holy  Grail  413 

Made  lightnings  in  the  s  of  the  moon,  Pass,  of  Arthur  305 

We  paused  amid  the  s.  Lover's  Tale  i  414 

mine  down  rain'd  Their  spirit-searching  s's.  „         ii  147 

glory  in  all  The  s's  and  the  voices  of  the  world !  Ancient  Sage  111 
native  to  that  s  or  in  Mars,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  187 
And  s's  of  the  morning  land,                               Open.  I  and  C.  Exhib.  8 

the  secret  s  of  the  brooks.  Prog,  of  Spring  21 

But  in  the  tearful  s  of  her  smiles  „              41 

All  her  s  fail'd  To  lure  those  eyes  St.  Telemachus  35 

Splenetic     And  therefore  s,  personal,  base,  Maud  I  x33 

Splinter  (s)     into  fiery  s's  leapt  the  lance,  Princess  v  494 

With  darted  spikes  and  s's  of  the  wood  Merlin  and  V.  937 

Splinter  (verb)    gay  navy  there  should  s  on  it.  Sea  Dreams  131 

and  to  s  it  into  feuds  Serving  his  traitorous  end ;  Guinevere  18 

Splinter'd     All  night  the  s  crags  that  wall  the  dell  D.  of  F.  Women  187 

The  s  spear-shafts  crack  and  fly.  Sir  Galahad  1 

Spars  were  s,  (repeat)  The  Captain  45,  49 

A  lance  that  s  like  an  icicle,  Geraint  and  E.  89 

Crack'd  basilisks,  and  s  cockatrices.  Holy  Grail  718 

Then,  sputtering  thro'  the  hedge  of  s  teeth.  Last  Tournament  65 

For  every  s  fraction  of  a  sect  Will  clamour  Akbar's  Dream  33 

Splintering    (See  also  Lance-splintering)    the  blade 

flew  S  in  six,  Balin  and  Balan  396 

and  the  s  spear,  the  hard  mail  hewn.  Pass,  of  Arthur  108 

Split     upon  the  corn-laws,  where  we  s,  Audley  Court  35 

the  wild  figtree  s  Their  monstrous  idols.  Princess  iv  79 

takes,  and  breaks,  and  cracks,  and  s's,  „  v  527 
spike  that  s  the  mother's  heart  Spitting  the  child,       Com.  of  Arthur  38 

with  one  stroke  Sir  Gareth  s  the  skull.  Gareih  and  L.  1404 

earthquake  shivering  to  your  base  S  you,  Pelleas  and  E.  466 

an  iceberg  s's  From  cope  to  base —  Lover's  Tale  i  603 

sink  her,  s  her  in  twain  !  The  Revenue  89 

Splugen     And  up  the  snowy  S  drew.  The  Daisy  86 

Spoil  (s)     (See  also  Ocean-spoil)     the  children  laden  with 

their  s ;  Enoch  Arden  445 

Spoil  (verb)     and  s's  My  bUss  in  being ;  Lucretius  221 

Begin  to  slay  the  folk,  and  s  the  land.'  Guinevere  137 

Spoil'd     still  the  foeman  s  and  bum'd,  The  Victim  17 

Because  the  twain  had  s  her  carcanet.  Last  Tournament  419 

Spoiler    loud  sabbath  shook  the  s  down ;  Ode  on  Well.  123 
Bow'd  the  s,  Bent  the  Scotsman,                           Batt.  of  Brunanburh  20 

Spoilt    You  have  s  this  child ;  Princess  v  116 

thou  hast  s  the  purpose  of  my  life.  Guinevere  453 

Spoke     I  s,  but  answer  came  there  none :  Two  Voices  425 
She  s  at  large  of  many  things.  And  at  the  last  she  s 

of  me ;  MUler's  D.  155 

Last  night,  when  some  one  s  his  name,  Fatima  15 

She  s  and  laugh'd :  I  shut  my  sight  CEnone  188 

iS  slowly  in  her  place.  D.  of  F.  Women  92 

We  s  of  other  things ;  we  coursed  about  Gardener's  D.  222 

in  that  time  and  place,  I  s  to  her,  „            226 

I  s,  while  Audley  feast  Humm'd  like  a  hive  Audley  Court  4 

Poet-like  he  s.  Edwin  Morris  27 

Or  this  or  something  like  to  this  he  s.  „             41 

I  s  her  name  alone.  ,.            68 

Whether  he  s  too  largely ;  ..            73 

So  5  I  knowing  not  the  things  that  were.  „            89 


Spoke 


672 


Spouted 


Spoke  (continued)     I  s  without  restraint, 
And  mystic  sentence  s ; 
He  s ;  and  high  above,  I  heard  them  blast 
yawn'd,  and  rubb'd  his  face,  and  5, 
Sweet  Emma  Moreland  s  to  me : 
I  s  with  heart,  and  heat  and  force, 
and  Enoch  s  his  love.  But  Philip  loved  in  silence ; 
till  the  morrow,  when  he  $. 
Philip  coming  somewhat  closer  s. 
Then  answer'd  Annie ;  tenderly  she  s : 
Saying  gently  '  Annie,  when  I  s  to  you, 
There  Enoch  s  no  word  to  any  one, 
He  said  to  Miriam  '  that  you  s  about, 
and  so  fell  back  and  s  no  more. 
Of  sweet  seventeen  subdued  me  ere  she  s) 
while  she  s,  I  saw  where  James  Made  toward  us, 
I  know  not,  for  he  s  not. 
While  thus  he  s,  his  hearers  wept ; 
s  with  me  on  the  shore ; 
Why  were  you  silent  when  I  s  to-night  ? 
your  rough  voice  (You  s  so  loud) 
Petulant  she  s,  and  at  herself  she  laugh'd ; 
Thus  he  s,  Part  banter,  part  affection. 
At  last  I  s.     '  My  father,  let  me  go. 
She  s,  and  bowing  waved  Dismissal : 
s  of  those  That  lay  at  wine  with  Lar  and  Lucumo ; 
it  was  duty  s,  not  I. 
I  s  of  war  to  come  and  many  deaths. 
She  s  and  tum'd  her  sumptuous  head 
I  s  not  then  at  first,  but  watch'd 
And  then  stood  up  and  s  impetuously, 
being  caught  feign  death,  S  not,  nor  stirr'd. 
Yet  she  neither  s  nor  moved. 
Ida  5  not,  rapt  upon  the  child. 
Ida  s  not,  gazing  on  the  ground, 
But  Ida  stood  nor  s,  drain'd  of  her  force 
Old  studies  f ail'd ;  seldom  she  s : 
Hortensia  s  against  the  tax  ; 
Who  s  few  words  and  pithy. 
But  s  not,  rapt  in  nameless  reverie, 
He  s  among  you,  and  the  Man  who  s ; 
Who  never  s  against  a  foe ; 
I  started,  and  s  I  scarce  knew  how ; 
Till  I  with  as  fierce  an  anger  s, 
s  of  a  hope  for  the  world  in  the  coming  wars — 
Perforce  she  stay'd,  and  overtaken  s. 
Half  inwardly,  half  audibly  she  s. 
He  s  and  fell  to  work  again. 
Prince  and  Earl  Yet  s  together, 
if  he  s  at  all,  would  break  perforce 
He  s,  and  one  among  his  gentlewomen 
He  s,  and  Enid  easily  believed, 
he  s  Closed  his  death-drowsing  eyes, 
He  s  in  words  part  heard, 
Lancelot  s  And  answer'd  him  at  full, 
He  s,  and  vanish'd  suddenly  from  the  field 
s,  he  answer'd  not.  Or  short  and  coldly, 
passionately  she  s :  '  I  have  gone  mad. 
While  he  s  She  neither  blush'd  nor  shook, 
thus  he  s,  half  tum'd  away,  the  Queen 
Then  freely  s  Sir  Lancelot  to  them  all : 
and  even  as  he  s  Fell  into  dust, 
s,  and  taking  all  his  younger  knights, 
He  s,  he  tum'd,  then,  flinging  round  her 

neck, 
S  loudly  even  into  my  irunost  heart 
she  s  '  Here  !  and  how  came  I  here  ? ' 
What  was  it  ?  for  our  lover  seldom  s, 
That  faithful  servant  whom  we  s  about. 
Sir  Richard  s  and  he  laugh'd, 
I  s  it — told  her  of  my  passion, 
when  we  parted,  Edith  s  no  word, 
while  I  s  The  crowd's  roar  feU 
When  he  s  of  his  tropical  home 
And  he  s  not — only  the  storm ; 


Talking  Oak  14 

294 

Golden  Year  75 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  19 

Edward  Gray  5 

The  Letters  37 

Enoch  Arden  40 

156 

398 

422 

448 

667 

805 

914 

The  Brook  113 

116 

Aylmer's  Field  213 

722 

Sea  Dreams  264 

268 

281 

Princess,  Pro.  153 

166 

t68 

n99 

128 

308 

Hi  150 

ivl52 

339 

418 

t)109 

vi8 

220 

227 

vi266 

vii  31 

127 

Con.  94 

108 

Ode  on  Well.  178 

185 

Grandmother  43 

Mavd  II  i  17 

„  ///  vi  11 

Gareth  and  L.  764 

Mart,  of  Geraint  109 

292 

385 

Geraint  and  E.  12 

686 

874 

BaHn  and  Balan  630 

Merlin  and  V.  839 

Lancelot  and  E.  285 

508 

886 

930 

964 

1197 

1289 

Holy  Grail  435 

Last  Tournament  126 

749 

Lover's  Tale  i  428 

iv  96 

225 

342 

The  Revenge  32 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  146 

215 

Columbus  12 

The  Wreck  71 

103 


Spoke  (continued)     For  He  s,  or  it  seem'd  that  He  s,  Despair  26 

'  Ah  God '  tho'  I  felt  as  I  s  „       52 

From  darkness  into  dayUght,  tum'd  and  s.  Ancient  Sage  8 

We  s  of  what  has  been  Most  marvellous  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  10 

for  he  s  and  the  people  heard,  "      Dead  Prophet  33 

No  voice  for  either  s  within  my  heart  The  Ring  162 

And  s  no  more,  but  tum'd  and  pass'd  away.  „        342 
Spoken    (See  also  Fairest-spoken,  Fair-spoken,  Eree-spoken, 

Low-spoken)     High  things  were  s  there,  Alexander  12 

would  have  s,  but  be  found  not  words,  M.  d' Arthur  172 

was  it  not  well  to  speak,  To  have  s  once  ?  Love  and  Duty  56 

Down  they  dropt — no  word  was  s —        ,  The  Captain  51 

I  would  have  s.  And  wam'd  that  madman  Vision  of  Sin  55 

had  not  his  poor  heart  S  with  That,  Enoch  Arden  619 

you  shall  say  that  having  s  with  me,  Aylmer's  Field  311 

so  she  would  have  s,  but  there  rose  A  hubbub  Princess  iv  475 

And  every  s  tongue  should  lord  you.  „            544 

And  out  of  hauntings  of  my  s  love,  „       vii  109 

sweet  soul,  had  hardly  s  a  word,  Maud  II  i  11 

Hath  s  also,  not  in  jest.  Com.  of  Arthur  420 

he  fain  had  s  to  her,  And  loosed  in  words  Geraint  and  E.  105 

I  heard  He  had  s  evil  of  me  ;  Balin  and  Balan  58 

Said  Arthur  '  Thou  hast  ever  s  truth  ;  „              73 

half  her  realm,  had  never  s  word.  Lancelot  and  E.  72 

is  there  more  ?    Has  Arthur  s  aught  ?  „            117 

Then  every  evil  word  I  had  s  once.  Holy  Grail  371 

as  ye  saw  it  ye  have  s  truth.  „          880 

would  have  s,  but  he  found  not  words  ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  340 

s  of  with  tearful  smiles  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  182 

To  one  who  had  not  s,  Lionel.  ,.          iv  272 

The  spectre  that  will  speak  if  s  to.  ,,              337 

Than  ha'  s  as  kind  as  you  did,  First  Quarrel  73 

you  never  have  s  a  word.  Rizpah  14 
When  was  age  so  cramm'd  with  menace  ? 

madness  ?  written,  s  lies  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  108 

in  every  language  I  hear  s,  people  praise  thee,  Akhar's  D.,  Inscrip.  1 

And  had  some  prophet  s  true  Mechanophilus  25 

Sponge    Huge  s's  of  millennial  growth  The  Kraken  6 

Sponged     S  and  made  blank  of  crimeful  record  St.  S.  Stylites  158 

Spongy-wet    Is  hoar  with  rime,  or  s-w  ;  To  F.  D.  Maurice  42 

Sport  (s)     But  take  it — earnest  wed  with  s,  Day-Dm.,  Ep.  11 

so  that  s  Went  hand  in  hand  with  Science  ;  otherwhere 

Pure  s  :  Princess,  Pro.  79 

Lilia,  wild  with  s,  Half  child  half  woman  „                 100 

Or  master'd  by  the  sense  of  s,  „            iv  156 

— the  striplings  ! — for  their  s  ! —  „             v  399 

The  s  half-science,  fill  me  with  a  faith,  „         Con.  76 

Me  the  s  of  ribald  Veterans,  Boddicea  50 

He  mixt  in  all  our  simple  s's  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  10 

and  loud  With  s  and  song,  in  booth  and  tent,  ..          xcmii  28 

The  s  of  random  sun  and  shade.  „           Con.  24 

Or  when  the  thralls  had  5  among  themselves.  Gareth  and  L.  516 

Began  to  break  her  s's  with  graver  fits,  Merlin  and  V.  180 

Your  pretty  s's  have  brighten'd  all  again.  „             305 
Brake  up  their  s's,  then  slowly  to  her  bower 

Parted,  Last  Tournament  238 

on  love  And  s  and  tilts  and  pleasure,  Guinevere  387 

Sport  (verb)     came  To  s  beneath  thy  boughs.  Talking  Oak  100 

And  hence,  indeed,  she  s's  with  words.  In  Mem.  xlviii  9 

Spot     A  s  of  dull  stagnation,  without  light  Palace  of  Art  245 

So  find  I  every  pleasant  s  In  Mem.  viii  9 

Spotless     The  saintly  youth,  the  s  lamb  of  Christ,  Merlin  and  V.  749 

Spousal     and  one  The  later-rising  Sun  of  s  Love,  Prin.  Beatrice  6 

Spouse     Worthy  a  Roman  s.'  D.  of  F.  WomenlQ^ 

Came  Hope  and  Memory,  s  and  bride,  On  a  Mourner  23 

If  ever  maid  or  s.  As  fair  as  my  Olivia,  Talking  Oak  34 

With  only  Fame  for  s  and  your  great  deeds  Princess  Hi  242 

Spout  (s)    little  wide-mouth'd  heads  upon  the  s  Godiva  56 

s  whereon  the  gilded  ball  Danced  like  a  wisp  :  Princess,  Pro.  63 

Spout  (verb)    S  from  the  maiden  fountain  in  her  heart.  Lucretius  240 

Spouted    that  sonorous  flow  Of  s  fountain-floods.  Palace  of  Art  28 

golden  gorge  of  dragons  s  forth  „              23 

monster  s  his  foam-fountains  in  the  sea.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  107 

Till  the  fountain  s,  showering  wide  Vision  of  Sin  21 

foimtains  s  up  and  showering  down  Princess  i  218 


Spouting 


673 


Spring 


Spouting    as  a  stream  that  «  from  a  cliff 
Sprang    Who  s  from  English  blood  ! 

S  from  the  midrifi  of  a  prostrate  king — 

s  No  dragon  warriors  from  Cadmean  teeth, 

yell'd  again  Half-sufEocated,  and  s  up, 

And  from  it  s  the  Commonwealth, 

Out  I  5  from  glow  to  gloom  : 

And  out  of  stricken  helmets  s  the  fire. 


Guinevere  608 

England  and  Amer.  10 

Aylmer's  Field  16 

Lucretius  49 

58 

241 

Princess  iv  178 

V  495 


tum'd  half-roimd  to  Psyche  as  she  s  To  meet  it,  .,        vi  209 

To  the  altar-stone  she  s  alone,  The  Victim  67 

S  up  for  ever  at  a  touch,  In  Mem.  cxii  10 

Gawain  went,  and  breaking  into  song  S  out,  Com.  of  Arthur  321 

He  laugh'd  ;  he  «.  Gareth  and  L.  537 

but  forth  that  other  s,  And,  all  unknightlike,  1149 

5  the  happier  day  from  underground ;  „           1421 

ground  his  teeth  together,  5  with  a  yell,  Balin  and  Balan  538 
the  blood  S  to  her  face  and  fill'd  her  with 

delight;  Lancelot  and  E.  377 

An  outraged  maiden  s  into  the  hall  Holy  Grail  208 

rotten  with  a  hundred  years  of  death,  S  into  fire  :  ..          497 

S  into  fire  and  vanish'd,  .,           506 

I  burst  the  chain,  I  s  into  the  boat.  807 
Forth  s  Gawain,  and  loosed  him  from  his  bonds,        Pelleas  and  E.  315 

S  from  the  door  into  the  dark.  „            603 

but  s  Thro'  open  doors,  and  swording  right  Last  Tournament  472 

current  to  the  fountain  whence  it  s, —  Lover's  Tale  i  503 

<S  up  a  friendship  that  may  help  us  yet.  „        iv  144 

he  s  from  the  oldest  race  upon  earth.  V.  of  Maddv/ne  4 

s  without  leaf  or  a  thorn  from  the  bush ;  „              44 

A  panther  s  across  her  path.  Death  of  Qinone  89 

Tum'd  him  again  to  boy,  for  up  he  s,  St.  Telemachus  58 

I  *■  from  my  seat,  I  wept.  Charity  37 

Rang  the  stroke,  and  s  the  blood,  The  Tourney  9 

Spray  (foam)     tender  curving  lines  of  creamy  s ;  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  62 

Tom  from  the  fringe  of  s.  D.  of  F.  Women  40 
of  hissing  s  wind-driven  Far  thro'  the  dizzy  dark.      Lover's  Tale  ii  198 

and  bosom'd  the  burst  of  the  s,  V.  of  Maeldune  103 

the  ripple  would  hardly  blanch  into  s  The  Wreck  137 

f^pray  (twig)     {See  also  Holly-spray)     From  s,  and  branch, 

and  stem.  Talking  Oak  190 

The  snake  slipt  ifnder  a  s.  Poet's  Song  10 

touchwood,  with  a  single  flourishing  s.  Aylmer's  Field  512 

a  song  on  every  s  Of  birds  that  piped  Princess  v  238 

faces  flat  against  the  panes,  S's  grated,  Balin  and  Balan  345 

Blinkt  the  white  mom,  s's  grated,  „            385 
{See  also  Gravel-spread)    s  his  sheeny  vans  for 

flight ;  Love  and  Death  8 

'  Still  sees  the  sacred  morning  s  Two  Voices  80 

That  every  cloud,  that  s's  above  And  veileth  love,  „          446 
Hath  time  and  space  to  work  and  s.                   You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  16 

So  muscular  he  s,  so  broad  of  breast.  Gardener's  D.  8 

A  cedar  s  his  dark-green  layers  of  shade.  .,         116 

S  the  light  haze  along  the  river-shores,  ,,        264 

hope  ere  death  S's  more  and  more  St.  S.  Stylites  157 

The  life  that  s's  in  them.  Talking  Oak  192 

'  Then  close  and  dark  my  arms  Is,  „         225 

S  upward  till  thy  boughs  discern  ,,        247 

light  shall  s,  and  man  be  Uker  man  Golden  Year  35 

But  o'er  the  dark  a  glory  s's.  Sir  Galahad  55 

To  s  into  the  perfect  fan.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  17 

The  chap-fallen  circle  s's  :  Vision  of  Sin  172 

He  woke,  he  rose,  he  s  his  arms  abroad  Enoch  Arden  912 

To  s  the  Word  by  which  himself  had  thriven.'  Sea  Dreams  197 

and  the  branches  thereupon  S  out  at  top.  Princess  iv  206 

A  rampant  heresy,  such  as  if  it  s  „          411 

S  thy  full  wings,  and  waft  him  o'er.  In  Mem.  ix  4 

s  his  mantle  dark  and  cold,  „      xxii  14 

Proclaiming  social  truth  shall  s,  „     cxxvii  5 

And  o'er  the  friths  that  branch  and  s  „    Con.  115 

over  whom  thy  darkness  must  have  s  Mavd  I  xviii  25 

Dubric  s  his  hands  and  spake.  Com.  of  Arthur  471 

boil'd  the  flesh,  and  s  the  board,  Marr.  of  Geraint  391 

S  the  slow  smile  thro'  all  her  company.  Pelleas  and  E.  95 

Lower  down  S's  out  a  little  lake.  Lover's  Tale  i  534 

I  s  mine  arms,  God's  work,  I  said.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  136 


Spread  (continued)    call'd  the  heavens  a  hide,  a  tent  S  over 

earth,  Columbus  48 

hope  was  mine  to  s  the  Catholic  faith,  „        230 

to  stay,  Not  s  the  plague,  the  famine ;  Demeter  and  P.  134 

and  to  s  the  Divine  Faith  Like  calming  oil  Akbar's  Dream  159 

Spreadeth    Which  the  moon  about  her  s,  Margaret  20 

Spreading    s  made  Fantastic  plume  or  sable  pine ;  The  Voyage  43 

peaks  they  stand  ever  s  and  heightening ;  Parnassus  11 

Sprig     Blow,  flute,  and  stir  the  stiff -set  s's,  Am/phion  63 

s's  of  summer  laid  between  the  folds,  Marr.  of  Geraint  138 

Sprightly    at  first  She  play'd  about  with  slight  and  s  talk,   Merlin  and  V.  171 

Spring  (elastic  contrivance)    a-joompin'  about  ma  as  if 

they  was  set  upo'  s's,  Spinster's  S's.  89 

Spring  (fountain)     Life  of  the  fountain  there,  beneath 

Its  salient  s's,  Sufp.  Confessions  56 

Do  beating  hearts  of  salient  s's  Adeline  26 

Fresh-water  s's  come  up  through  bitter  brine.  //  /  were  loved  8 

The  s's  of  life,  the  depths  of  awe,  Two  Voices  140 

Who  sets  her  pitcher  underneath  the  s,  Enoch  Arden  207 

(If  Death  so  taste  Lethean  s's).  In  Mem.  xliv  10 

Wliile  yet  beside  its  vocal  s's  ..  Ixiv  22 

Nor  ever  drank  the  inviolate  s  ,.  xc  2 

The  bitter  s's  of  anger  and  fear  ;  Maud  /  a;  49 

Brethren,  to  right  and  left  the  s,  Balin  and  Balan  25 

In  mine  own  lady  palms  I  cuU'd  the  s  Merlin  and  V.  273 

Flow  back  again  imto  my  slender  s  Lover's  Tale  i  147 

runnel  in  the  s  Had  liveried  them  all  over.  „  ii  49 

as  we  sat  by  the  gurgle  of  s's,  V.  of  Maeldune  89 

who  found  Beside  the  s's  of  Dirc6,  Tiresias  14 

the  s's  Of  Dirc6  laving  yonder  battle-plain,  „      138 

Spring  (rise)     'tween  the  s  and  downfall  of  the  light,  St.  S.  Stylites  110 

Spring  (season)     But  s,  a  new  comer,  A  s  rich  and 

strange,  Nothing  will  Die  21 

S  will  come  never  more.  All  Things  will  Die  15 

the  breathing  s  Of  Hope  and  Youth.  The  Poet  27 

(S  Letters  cowslips  on  the  hill  ?  Adeline  61 

Sweet  as  new  buds  in  S.  D.  of  F.  Women  272 

Yet,  tho'  I  spared  thee  all  the  s.  The  Blackbird  9 

Caught  in  the  frozen  palms  of  S.  „  24 

But  in  these  latter  s's  I  saw  Talking  Oak  75 

Like  those  blind  motions  of  the  S,  „  175 

In  the  S  a  fuller  crimson  comes  upon  the  robin's 

breast ;  Locksley  Hall  17 

In  the  8  the  wanton  lapwing  gets  himself  another  crest ;        ..  18 

In  the  S  a  livelier  iris  changes  on  the  bumish'd  dove  ;  19 

In  the  S  a  young  man's  fancy  lightly  turns  to  thoughts 

..20 

36 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  3 

23 

Princess  v  2iyi 

vies 

Window,  Winter  17 

„  No  Answer  23 

In  Mem.  xxiii  19 

xxxviii  6 

no 

livid 

Ixix  1 

Ixxxv  70 

120 

cxv  18 

Gareth  and  L.  2 

Merlin  and  V.  557 

Holy  Grail  19 

Lover's  Tale  i  314 

724 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  37 

V.  of  Maeldune  38 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  22 

Vastness  29 

To  Mary  Boyle  20 

Prog,  of  Spring  2 

5 

22 

2   U 


of  love, 

throng'd  my  pulses  with  the  fullness  of  the  S. 
The  maiden  S  upon  the  plain 
She  seem'd  a  part  of  joyous  S  ; 
a  thousand  rings  of  S  In  every  bole. 
Shall  strip  a  hundred  hollows  bare  of  S, 
My  s  is  all  the  nearer, 
S  is  here  with  leaf  and  grass  : 
And  all  the  secret  of  the  S 
The  herald  melodies  of  s, 
And  men  the  flies  of  latter  s, 
And  every  winter  change  to  s. 
I  dream'd  there  would  be  S  no  more, 
S  that  swells  the  narrow  brooks. 
As  not  imlike  to  that  of  S. 
and  in  my  breast  S  wakens  too  ; 
in  a  showerful  s  Stared  at  the  spate. 
Hath  earnest  in  it  of  far  s's  to  be. 
I  have  seen  this  yew-tree  smoke,  S  after  s, 
the  s  Pour  with  such  sudden  deluges  of  light 
recalling  fragrance  and  the  green  Of  the  dead  s 
are  all  they  can  know  of  the  5, 
For  the  S  and  the  middle  Summer  sat 
winter  sunset  fairer  than  a  mom  of  S. 
S  and  Simimer  and  Autumn  and  Winter, 
spring-flower  I  send.  This  song  of  s, 
S  slides  hither  o'er  the  Southern  sea, 
Come,  S,  for  now  from  aU  the  dripping  eaves 
Come,  S  !     She  comes  on  waste  and  wood, 


Spring 


674 


Squire 


ISpring  (season)  (coiUinued)    Come,  S  !     She  comes,  and 

Earth  is  glad  Prog,  of  Spriiuf  48 

reads  thy  gradual  process.  Holy  S.  „            106 

Bright  in  S,  Living  gold  ;  The  Oak  4 

^cing  (verb)     It  s's  on  a  level  of  bowery  lawn,  Poet's  Mind  31 

ringing,  s's  from  brand  and  mail ;  Sir  Galahad  54 

she  whose  elfin  prancer  s's  By  night  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  33 

a  tiger-cat  In  act  to  s.  Princess  ii  451 

We  were  as  prompt  to  s  against  the  pikes,  ..       Hi  286 

Then  s's  the  crowning  race  of  humankind.  ,,       vii  295 

sober  freedom  out  of  which  there  s's  Ode  on  Well.  164 

Lo,  as  a  dove  when  up  she  s's  In  Mem.  xii  1 

Let  him,  the  wiser  man  who  s's  Hereafter,  ,,         cxx  9 

the  spear  s,  and  good  horse  reel,  Gareth  and  L.  523 

I  s  Like  flame  from  ashes.'  „             545 

I  s  from  loftier  lineage  than  thine  OMn.'  ,.             961 

and  dips  and  s's  For  ever ;  ,,           1146 

earthly  heats  that  s  and  sparkle  out  Holy  Grail  33 

shivers,  ere  he  s's  and  kills.  Pelleas  and  E.  286 

Ready  to  s,  waiting  a  chance  :  .      Guinevere  12 

Wilt  s  to  me,  and  claim  me  thine,  ,,        565 

flowers  o'  Jeroosilim  blossom  an'  s  from  the  grass.  Tomorrow  89 

S  from  his  fallen  God,                                        "  Detneter  and  P.  80 

For  Thought  into  the  outward  s's,  Mechanophilus  11 

Spring-flower    '  S-F's'  !     While  you  still  delay  To  Mary  Boyle  1 

'  I  come  with  your  s-f's.'  ,,             17 

Take  then  this  s-f  I  send,  „             19 

Springing    took  root,  and  s  forth  anew  The  Poet  21 

S  alone  With  a  shrill  inner  sound,  The  Mermaid,  19 

Gareth,  lightly  s  from  his  knees,  Gareth  and  L.  556 

Smote  by  the  fresh  beam  of  the  s  east ;  M.  d' Arthur  214 

Smote  by  the  fresh  beam  of  the  s  east ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  382 

Fresh  s  from  her  fountains  in  the  brain,  Lover's  Tale  i  83 

From  buried  grain  thro'  s  blade,  Demeter  and  P.  146 

Sprinkled    sheath  with  jewels  on  it  S  about  in  gold  Aylmer's  Field  221 

and  the  blood  Was  s  on  your  kirtle.  Princess  ii  274 

The  household  Fury  s  with  blood  Maud  I  xix  32 

the  dullness  of  the  s  brook  Smote  on  my  brows.  Lover's  Tale  i  633 

Sprouted    manlike,  but  his  brows  Had  s.  Princess  iv  205 

Of  s  thistle  on  the  broken  stones  Marr.  of  Geraint  314 

Sprang    The  tall  flag-flowers  when  they  s  Miller's  D.  53 

but  the  foe  s  his  mine  many  times,  Def.  of  Lucknow  31 

two  mines  by  the  enemy  s  „              54 

Spnn     wheels  of  Time  S  round  in  station,  Love  and  Duty  76 

The  petty  cobwebs  we  have  s  :  In  Mem.  cxxiv  8 

Spur  (s)     From  s  to  plume  a  star  of  tournament,  M.  d' Arthur  223 

up  we  rose,  and  on  the  s  we  went.  Gardener's  D.  32 

on  the  s  she  fled  ;  and  more  We  know  not, —  Princess  i  151 

Prick'd  by  the  Papal  s,  we  rear'd,  Third  of  Feb.  27 

For  tho'  it  seems  my  s's  are  yet  to  win,  Marr.  of  Geraint  128 

Now  with  dug  s  and  raving  at  himself,  Balin  and  Balan  310 

from  s  to  plume  Red  as  the  rising  sun  Lancelot  and  E.  307 

Set  lance  m  rest,  strike  s,  „            456 

that  dishonour  done  the  gilded  s,  Last  Tournament  435 

From  s  to  plume  a  star  of  tournament.  Pass,  of  Arthur  391 

Spur  (verb)     desire  That  s's  an  imitative  will.  In  Mem.  ex  20 
Spu^re  niilk  From  burning  s,  honey  from  hornet-combs.  Last  Tournament  357 

Spurn    would  not  s  Good  counsel  of  good  friends.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  145 

•  The  heart  of  the  father  will  s  her,'  The  Wreck  99 

let  them  s  me  from  the  doors.  The  Flight  55 

The  mango  s  the  melon  at  his  foot  ?  Akbar's  Bream  39 

Spum'd    S  by  this  heir  of  the  Uar —  Maud  I  xix  78 

I  So  mock'd,  so  s,  so  baited  two  whole  days —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  163 
Spumer    trickster  And  «  of  treaties —                          Batt.  of  Brunanburh  80 

Spuming    S  a  shatter'd  fragment  of  the  God,  St.  Telemachus  16 

S^urr'd     But  s  at  heart  with  fieriest  energy  To  J.  M.  K.  7 

glaring,  by  his  own  stale  devil  s,  Aylmer's  Field  290 

last  I  s  ;  I  felt  my  veins  Stretch  vrith  fierce  heat ;  Princess  v  537 

take  my  charger,  fresh,  Not  to  be  s,  Gareth  and  L.  1301 

8  with  his  terrible  war-cry  ;  Geraint  and  E.  170 

what  knight  soever  s  Against  us,  Baiin  and  Balan  66 

And  toward  him  s,  and  hail'd  him,  Holy  Grail  637 

And  you  s  your  fiery  horse,  Havpy  76 

Spurt     A  sudden  s  of  woman's  jealousy,- —  Merlin  and  V.  524 

lettering    s  thro'  the  hedge  of  splinter'd  teeth.  Last  Tournament  65 


Spy  (s)     harry  me,  petty  s  And  traitress.'  Guinevere  360  , 

what  are  you  ?  do  you  come  as  a  s  ?  Rizpah  11 

yes — a  lady — none  of  their  spies —  „       15 

Death — for  their  spies  were  among  us,  Def.  of  Lticknow  19 

Spy  (verb)     Whither  fly  ye,  what  game  s  ye,  Rosalind  8  , 

get  you  a  seaman's  glass,  S  out  my  face,  Enoch  Arden  2161 

to  s  The  weakness  of  a  people  or  a  house,  Aylmer's  Field  5691 

embower  the  nest,  Some  boy  would  s  it.'  Princess,  Pro.  1481 

he  scarce  could  s  the  Christ  for  Saints,  Balin  and  Balan  409' 

To  s  some  secret  scandal  if  he  might,  Guinevere  26  ' 

she  thought,  '  He  spies  a  field  of  death  ;  „        134  j 

they  would  s  us  out  of  the  town.  Rizpah  5 

She  spies  the  summer  thro'  the  winter  bud.  Ancient  Sage  74 

She  ofiens  'ud  s  summut  wrong  Owd  Rod  70 

I  s  nor  term  nor  bound.  Mechanophilus  20 

Squabble     lulling  random  s's  when  they  rise,  Holy  Grail  557 

Squad  (mud)    neck-an-crop  soomtimes  slaape  down  i' 

the  s  North.  Cobble  20  I 

as  iver  traapes'd  i'  the  s.  Owd  Rod  72  \ 

Squadron    S's  and  squares  of  men  in  brazen  plates,  D.  of  F.  Women  33  j 

embattled  squares.  And  s's  of  the  Prince,  Princess  v  247 ! 

Squalid    Mated  with  a  s  savage — what  to  me  were  sun 

or  cUme  ?  Locksley  Hall  177 1 

one  sleek'd  the  s  hair,  One  kiss'd  his  hand,  Death  of  (Enone  57  \ 

Squall    s  nor  storm  Could  keep  me  from  that  Eden  Gardener's  D.  190  j 

thro'  the  gray  skirts  of  a  lifting  s  Enoch  Arden  829 

Squall 'd     The  parrot  scream'd,  the  peacock  s,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  12 1 

Square    (See  also  Garden-square)    and  s's  of  men  in 

brazen  plates,  D.  of  F.  Women  33 1 

All  the  land  in  flowery  s's.  Gardener's  D.  76  j 

By  s's  of  tropic  summer  shut  Amphion  87 

The  ruddy  s  of  comfortable  light,  Enoch  Arden  12% 

Flourish'd  a  little  garden  s  and  wall'd  :  „           734 

Muses  of  the  cube  and  s  Princess,  Pro.  180 

casement  slowly  grows  a  ghmmering  s ;  ,,                w  52 

embattled  s's.  And  squadrons  of  the  Prince,  ,.               v  246 

Dash'd  on  every  rocky  s  Their  surging  charges  Ode  on  Well.  125 

They  call'd  me  in  the  public  s's  In  Mem.  Ixix  11 

maze  of  quick  About  the  flowering  s's,  „             cxv  3 

And  I  loathe  the  s's  and  streets,  Maud  II  iv  92 

The  massive  s  of  his  heroic  breast,  Marr.  of  Geraint  lb 

A  s  of  text  that  looks  a  little  blot,  Merlin  and  V.  671 

And  every  s  of  text  an  awful  charm,  „             673 

A  thousand  s's  of  corn  and  meadow,  The  Ring  149 

And  from  the  thousand  s's,  „         153 

Squared    In  each  a  s  lawn,  wherefrom  The  golden  gorge 

of  dragons  Palace  of  Art  22 

Square-set    A  s-s  man  and  honest ;  Holy  Grail  703 

Squaw     Nor  stunted  s's  of  West  or  East ;  Princess  ii  78 

Squealing    See  A-squealin' 

Squeedg'd  (squeezed)     An'  tha  s  my  'and  i'  the  shed,  Spinster  s  S's.  39 

Squeezed    {See  also  Squeedg'd)     he  had  s  himself 

betwixt  the  bars.  Princess,  Pro.  112 

Squench    I'll  coom  an'  I'll  s  the  light,  Owd  Rod  117 

Squire     {See  also  Squoire)     Late-left  an  orphan  of  the  s,  Miller's  D.  34 

'  That  was  the  four-year-old  I  sold  the  S.'  The  Brook  137 

the  S  had  seen  the  colt  at  grass,  „      139 

slain  with  laughter  roU'd  the  gilded  S.  Princess  v  22 

Our  ponderous  s  will  give  A  grand  political  diimer  Maud  I  xx  24 

Gareth  hearing  from  a  s  of  Lot  Gareth  and  L.  531 

shook  his  drowsy  s  awake  and  cried,  Marr.  of  Geraint  125 

page,  and  maid,  and  s,  and  seneschal,  „            710 

Hung  at  his  belt,  and  hurl'd  it  toward  the  s.  Geraint  and  E.  23 

and  the  s  Chafing  his  shoulder :  .,             26 

In  silence,  did  him  service  as  a  s  ;  „          406 

Vivien,  with  her  S.  Balin  and  Balan  439 

Then  turning  to  her  S  '  This  fire  of  Heaven,  „              456 

Drew  the  vague  glance  of  Vivien,  and  her  S  ;  „              464 

and  my  s  Hath  in  him  small  defence ;  „              476 

But  snatch'd  a  sudden  buckler  from  the  S,  ,.              554 

Then  to  her  S  mutter'd  the  damsel '  Fools  !  „              564 

And  when  the  S  had  loosed  them,  „              575 

Then  the  gentle  S  '  I  hold  them  happy,  „              580 

And  found  a  fair  young  s  who  sat  alone.  Merlin  and  T'.  472 

twice  to-day.     I  am  your  s  ! '  Lancelot  and  E.  384 


Squire 


675 


Stamp'd-Stampt 


Squire  (continued)     and  their  three  s's  across  their  feet :  Pelleas  and  E.  431 

vioesn  not  touch  thy  'at  to  the  S  ;  '  North.  Cobbler  25 

An'  S,  his  oan  very  sen,  walks  down  fro'  the  'All  „            91 

fur  New  jS'  coom'd  last  night.  Village  Wife  1 

I  liked  the  owd  S  an'  'is  gells  „             6 

the  S  an'  'is  darters  an'  me,  „            7 

new  S's  coom'd  wi'  'is  taail  in  'is  'and,  an'  owd  S's 

gone,  (repeat)  ,.  14, 121 

We'd  anew  o'  that  wi'  the  S,  „          24 

Fur  (S  wur  a  Varsity  scholard,  „          25 

An' S  wur  hallus  a-smilin',  „          33 

ivry  darter  o'  S's  hed  her  awn  ridiia-erse  „           35 

An'  S  'e  smiled  an'  'e  smiled  (repeat)  ,,     61,  88 

But  S  wur  afear'd  o'  'is  son,  „           63 

bootiks,  I  ha'  see'd  'em,  belong'd  to  the  S,  „          71 

And  S  were  at  CharUe  agean  „           74 

Hallus  a  soft  un  S I  „          89 

rattled  down  upo'  poor  owd  S  i'  the  wood,  „          95 

Fur  I'd  ha  done  owt  for  the  S  „         112 

sound  and  honest,  rustic  S,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  239 
Till  I  dream'd  'at  S  walkt  in,  an'  I  says  to  him 

'  S,  ya're  laate,'  Owd  Rod  55 

an'  not  the  faults  o'  the  S.  Church-warden,  etc.  46 

Squireling    political  dinner  To  half  the  s's  near ;  Mavd  I  xx  26 

Squirrel     And  snared  the  s  of  the  glen  ?  Princess  ii  249 

merry  linnet  knew  me.  The  s  knew  me,  Lover's  Tale  ii  16 

While  s's  from  our  fiery  beech  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  3 

Squoire  (Squire)     Thaw  a  iaiaws  I  hallus  voated  wi'  S   N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  15 

wi'  haate  hoonderd  haacre  o'  S's,  „              44 

An'  S  'uU  be  sa  mad  an'  all —  „              47 

I  'a  managed  for  S  coom  Michaelmas  thutty  year.  „              48 

Fur  they  knaws  what  I  bean  to  <S  „              55 

I  done  moy  duty  by  S  „              56 

S's  i'  Lunnon,  an'  summun  I  reckons  „               57 

Staain'd  (stained)     An'  the  taiible  «  wi'  'is  aale,  Spinster's  S's.  99 

Staate  (state)     voated  wi'  Squoire  an'  choorch  an'  s,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  15 

I  tbowt  shall  I  chaiinge  my  s  ?  Spinster's  S's.  44 

I  thowt  if  the  S  was  a  gawin'  Owd  Rod  45 

Staate  (estate)     Fur  's  be  i'  taail,  my  lass  :  Village  Wife  15 

I've  gotten  the  's  by  the  taail  „           68 

Stab  (s)     deathful  s's  were  dealt  apace,  Oriana  50 

Stab  (verb)     Uttle  boys  begin  to  shoot  and  s.  Princess,  Con.  61 

I  was  not  going  to  s  you.  Bandit's  Death  6 

Stabb'd     They  should  have  s  me  where  I  lay,  (repeat)  Oriana  55,  60 

Three  times  I  s  him  thro'  and  thro'.  The  Sisters  29 

She  would  have  s  him  ;  Merlin  and  V.  853 

'  S  thro'  the  heart's  affections  to  the  heart !  „          868 

bride  who  s  her  bridegroom  on  her  bridal  night — •  The  Flight  57 

and  he  s  my  Piero  with  this.  Bandit's  Death  10 

Stable     a  s  wench  Came  running  at  the  call.  Princess  i  226 

they  ran  To  loose  him  at  the  s's,  Aylmer's  Field  126 

brute  rejoicing  in  my  hounds,  and  in  my  s,  By  an  Evolution.  7 

Staff     (See  also  Sceptre-staff)     he  struck  his  s  against 

the  rocks  Golden  Year  59 

is  a  straight  s  bent  in  a  pool ;  High.  Pantheism  16 

Shot  thro'  the  s  or  the  halyard,  Def.  of  Lucknow  5 

the  carven  s — and  last  the  light,  Columbus  74 

Stage     actor  mouth  his  last  upon  the  s.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  152 

this  Earth,  a  s  so  gloom'd  with  woe  The  Play  1 

Stagger     '  I  s  in  the  stream  :  Princess  vi  321 

And  s's  blindly  ere  she  sink  ?  In  Mem.  xvi  14 

I  s  at  the  KorAn  and  the  sword.  Akbar's  Dream  71 

Stagger'd    S  and  shook,  holding  the  branch,  Enoch  Arden  767 

s  thy  strong  Gawain  in  a  tilt  For  pastime  ;  Gareth  and  L.  542 

Into  the  hall  s,  his  visage  ribb'd  Last  Tournament  57 

the  ship  s  imder  a  thunderous  shock,  The  Wreck  107 

shock  upon  shock  S  the  mass  from  without,  Heavy  Brigade  59 

Staggering    and  s  back  With  stroke  on  stroke  Princess  v  522 

Staghom-moss     brought  you  down  A  length  of  s-m,  Romney's  R.  79 

Stagnant    A  black  yew  gloom'd  the  s  air.  The  Letters  2 

Stagnate     But  s's  in  the  weeds  of  sloth  :  In  Mem.  xxvii  11 

As  one  that  let  foul  wrong  s  and  be,  Geraint  and  E.  891 

Stagnation     A  spot  of  dull  s,  without  light  Palace  of  Art  245 

Stag-tuckey     (turkey-cock)     An'  'e  tom'd  as  red  as  a 

s-t's  wattles,  Churchwarden,  etc,  31 


Staid     (See  also  Stay'd)     I  had  not  s  so  long  to  tell  you  all.   Gardener's  D.  242 

Staid  (adj.)     Altho'  a  grave  and  s  God-fearing  man,  Enoch  Arden  112 

Stain  (s)     Some  s  or  blemish  in  a  name  of  note,  Merlin  and  V.  832 

to  have  loved  One  peerless,  without  s :  Lancelot  and  E.  1091 

Stain  (verb)     And  I,  '  Can  clouds  of  nature  5  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  85 
Stain'd    (See  also  Staain'd,  Many-stain'd)    deep-set 

windows,  s  and  traced,  Palace  of  Art  49 

Stainless     But  she,  a  s  wife  to  Gorlois,  Com.  of  Arthur  194 

King  That  morn  was  married,  while  in  s  white,  ,,             456 

Would  mar  their  charm  of  s  maidenhood.'  Balin  and  Ralan  268 

Thy  blessing,  s  King  !  Merlin  and  V.  54 

O  Heaven's  own  white  Earth-angel,  s  bride  of  s  King —  ..             81 

A  s  man  beside  a  s  maid ;  ..           737 

Arthur,  blameless  King  and  s  man  ?  '  ,,779 

0  selfless  man  and  s  gentleman,  „  792 
her  bloom  A  rosy  dawn  kmdled  in  s  heavens,  Pelleas  and  E.  72 
White-robed  in  honour  of  the  s  child.  Last  Tournament  147 
Thro'  her  high  hill-passes  of  s  snow,  Dead  Prophet  47 

Stair    (See  also  Altar-stairs,  Tower-stairs)    Broad-based 

flights  of  marble  s's  Arabian  Nights  117 

The  rock  rose  clear,  or  winding  s.  Palace  of  Art  10 

up  the  corkscrew  s  With  hand  and  rope  Walk,  to  the  Mail  90 " 

his  footsteps  smite  the  threshold  s's  St.  S.  Stylites  191 

adown  the  s  Stole  on  ;  Godiva  48 

His  golden  feet  on  those  empurpled  s's  Liicretitis  135 

And  up  a  flight  of  s's  into  the  hall.  Princess  ii  31 

A  column'd  entry  shone  and  marble  s's,  „       v  364 

And  me  they  bore  up  the  broad  s's,  „      vi  374 

And  liigh  above  a  piece  of  turret  s,  Marr.  of  Geraint  320 

All  up  the  marble  s,  tier  over  tier,  Lancelot  and  E.  1248 

Then  from  the  boat  I  leapt,  and  up  the  s's.  Holy  Grail  819 

Or  ghostly  footfall  echoing  on  the  s.  Guinevere  507 

Adown  a  natural  s  of  tangled  roots.  Lover's  Tale  i  527 

and  climb'd  The  moulder'd  s's  „        iv  137 

1  stood  upon  the  s's  of  Paradise.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  144 
as  far  as  the  head  of  the  s.  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  43 
A  stealthy  foot  upon  the  s  !  The  Flight  70 
an'  the  mud  o'  'is  boots  o'  the  s's,  Spinster's  S's.  99 
tummled  up  s's,  fur  I  'eard  'im,  Owd  Rod  63 
'  But  the  s's  is  afire,'  she  said  ;  „  80 
And  glided  lightly  down  the  s's,  St.  Telemachus  59 

Stairway     down  from  this  a  lordly  s  sloped  Gareth  and  L.  669 

The  s  to  the  hall ;  and  look'd  and  saw  Last  Tournament  757 

Stake  (verb)     I'll  s  my  ruby  ring  upon  it  you  did.'  Princess,  Pro.  170 

Stake  (s)     To  the  thumbscrew  and  the  s,  The  Revenge  21 

And  the  s  and  the  cross-road,  fool,  Despair  116 

I  shudder  at  the  Christian  and  the  s  ;  Akbar's  Dream  72 

Stale     a  fool.  Raw,  yet  so  s  !  '  Pelleas  and  E.  114 

Him,  glaring,  by  his  o«ti  s  devil  spurr'd,  Aylmer's  Field  290 

Staled     iS  by  frequence,  shrunk  by  usage  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  76 

Stalk     Earthward  he  boweth  the  heavy  s's  A  spirit  haunts  7 

And  these  are  but  the  shatter'd  s's.  In  Mem.  Ixxxii  7 

Stall    and  even  beasts  have  s's,  St.  S.  Stylites  109 

The  s's  are  void,  the  doors  are  wide,  Sir  Galahad  31 

A  man  upon  a  s  may  find.  In  Mem.  Ixxvii  9 

Take  him  to  s,  and  give  him  corn,  Marr.  of  Geraint  371 

Enid  took  his  charger  to  the  s ;  „              382 

Stall'd     s  his  horse,  and  strode  across  the  court,  Balin  and  Balan  341 

Stalling    chamber  for  the  night,  And  s  for  the  horses,      Geraint  and  E.  239 

Stalwart    on  free  feet  Set  him,  a  s  Baron,  Arthur's  friend.   Gareth  and  L.  818 

but  afterwards  He  made  a  s  knight.  Merlin  and  V.  482 

Stamford-town     Burleigh-house  by  S-t.  L.  of  Burleigh  92 

Stammer     That  made  my  tongue  so  s  and  trip  Maud  I  vi  83 

left  him  leave  to  s,  '  Is  it  indeed  ?  '  Lancelot  and  E.  420 

Stammer'd     I  s  that  I  knew  him — could  have  wish'd —  Princess  Hi  206 

and  when  she  spake  to  him,  S,  Pelleas  and  E.  85 

Stammering  s  '  scoundrel '  out  of  teeth  that  groimd  Aylmer's  Field  328 
deafen'd  with  the  s  cracks  and  claps  That  foUow'd,   Merlin  and  V.  942 

on  the  border  of  her  couch  they  sat  S  and  staring.  Guinevere  102 

Stamp    Which  s's  the  caste  of  Vere  de  Vere.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  40 

meant  to  s  him  with  her  master's  mark  ;  Merlin  and  V.  759 

I  could  s  my  image  on  her  heart !  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  195 

Stamp'd-Stampt     And  the  leaf  is  stamp'ci  in  clay.  Vision  of  Sin  82 

Stampt  all  into  defacement,  Balin  and  Halan  541 

Stamp'd  with  the  image  of  the  King ;  Holy  Grail  27 


Stamp'd-Stampt 


676 


Star 


Stamp'd-Stampt  (eoivtinued)    Stampt  into  dust — tremulous, 

all  awry,  Bomney's  B.  113 

Stan'    S  'im  theer  i'  the  naiime  o'  the  Lord  North.  Cobbler  73 

(S  'im  theer,  fur  I'U  lootik  my  hemiemy  ..  74 

S  'im  theer  i'  the  winder,  ..  75 

theer  'e  s's  an'  theer  'e  shall  s  ,.  95 

'e  can  naither  s  nor  goa.  Owd  Boa  2 

moor  good  sense  na  the  Parliament  man  'at  s's  fur  us  'ere,  „      13 

if  'e  could  but  s  fur  the  Shere.  „       14 

British  farmers  to  s  agean  o'  their  feeat.  „      46 

Stanch'd     bare  him  in,  There  s  his  wound  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  520 

Stand     {See  also  Stan')     Truth  may  s  forth  unmoved 

of  change,  Supp.  Confessions  144: 


That  s  beside  my  father's  door. 

Where  you  s  you  cannot  hear  From  the  groves 

Which  s's  in  the  distance  yonder  : 

S's  in  the  sun  and  shadows  all  beneath, 

I  s  before  thee,  Eleanore  ; 

To  s  apart,  and  to  adore, 

I  will  s  and  mark. 

Us,  who  s  now,  when  we  should  aid  the  right — • 

Hope  at  Beauty's  call  would  perch  and  s, 

Or  at  the  casement  seen  her  s  ? 

Gargarus  S's  up  and  takes  the  morning : 

There  s's  a  spectre  in  your  hall : 

charm'd  and  tied  To  where  he  s's, — 

That  her  fair  fonn  may  s  and  shine, 

half  s's  up  And  bristles  ; 

saw  An  angel  s  and  watch  me,  as  I  sang. 

That  s  within  the  chace. 

young  beech  That  here  beside  me  s's, 

Than  that  earth  should  s  at  gaze 

And  when  the  tide  of  combat  s's. 

See  the  lordly  castles  s  : 

Ring'd  with  the  azure  world,  he  s's. 

When  all  the  wood  s's  in  a  mist  of  green, 

there  S's  Philip's  farm  where  brook  and  river  meet 

S's  at  thy  gate  for  thee  to  grovel  to — 

Shall  s  :  ay  surely  :  then  it  fails  at  last 

Or  like  a  spire  of  land  that  s's  apart 

That  beat  to  battle  where  he  s's  ; 

'  S_,  who  goes  ?  '    '  Two  from  the  palace  '  I. 

this  is  all,  I  s  upon  her  side  : 

see  how  you  s  Stifi  as  Lot's  wife. 

Let  his  great  example  s  Colossal, 

these  in  our  Thermopylae  shall  s, 

To  break  the  blast  of  winter,  s  ; 

and  I  5  on  the  slope  of  the  hill, 

'  And  all  the  phantom.  Nature,  s's — 

Dark  house,  by  which  once  more  I  s 

we  may  s  Where  he  in  English  earth  is  laid. 

Or  in  the  furrow  musing  s's  ; 

leave  This  laurel,  let  this  holly  s  : 

From  form  to  form,  and  nothing  s's  ; 

And  six  feet  two,  as  I  think,  he  s's  ; 

Yet  I  thought  I  saw  her  s. 

Did  he  s  at  the  diamond  door  Of  his  house 

glory  of  manhood  s  on  his  ancient  height, 

shall  the  shield  of  Mark  s  among  these  ?  ' 

There  s's  the  third  fool  of  their  allegory.' 

And  ride  with  him  to  battle  and  s  by. 

Am  I  so  bold,  and  could  I  so  s  by, 

good  knight's  horse  s's  in  the  court ; 

S  aside.  And  if  I  fall,  cleave  to  the  better  man.' 

But  if  a  man  who  s's  upon  the  brink 

s's  Vacant,  but  thou  retake  it. 

Let  be  :  ye  s,  fair  lord,  as  in  a  dream.' 

I  saw  That  maiden  Saint  who  s's  with  lily  in  hand 

Set  up  the  charge  ye  know,  to  s  or  fall !  ' 

saw  him,  after,  s  High  on  a  heap  of  slain, 

she  seem'd  to  s  On  some  vast  plain 

S's  in  a  wind,  ready  to  break  and  fly, 

yonder  s's,  Modred,  unharm'd, 

To  «  a  shadow  by  their  shining  doors, 

nay  but  thirty-nine  have  risen  and  s. 


Ode  to  Memory  57 

Poet's  Mind  19 

30 

Love  and  Death  11 

Eleanore  69 

79 

To  J.  M.  K.  14 

Poland  13 

Caress'd  or  chidden  3 

L.  of  Shalotti  25 

Qinone  11 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  42 

D.  of  F.  Women  194 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  21 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  31 

St.  S.  Stylites  35 

Talking  Oak  4 

.       ,.         142 

Locksley  Hall  180 

Sir  Galahad  10 

L.  of  Burleigh  18 

The  Eagle  3 

The  Brook  14 

38 

Aylmer's  Field  652 

Lucretius  264 

Princess  iv  281 

578 

v3 

291 

vi  240 

Ode  on  Well.  220 

Third  of  Feb.  47 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  22 

Window,  On  the  Hill  9 

In  Mem.  Hi  9 

vii  1 

xviii  1 

Ixiv  27 

co2 

cxxiii  6 

Maud  I  xiii  10 

//i38 

ii  16 

„       III  vi  21 

Gareth  and  L.  403 

1085 

Marr.  of  Geraint  94 

102 

370 

Geraint  and  E.  151 

472 

Balin  and  Balan  78 

258 

261 

Merlin  and  V.  703 

Lancelot  and  E.  306 

Guinevere  76 

365 

Pass,  of  Arthur  152 

Lwer's  Tale  i  731 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  83 


Stand  (continued)     but  scarcely  could  s  upright,  F.  of  Maeldune  73 

Could  that  s  forth,  and  like  a  statue,  Tiresias  82 

Thebes  thro'  thee  shall  s  Firm-based  „       141 

Helen's  Towee,  here  I  s,  Helen's  Tower  1 

Canning,  s  among  our  best  And  noblest,  Epit.  on  Stratford  1 

in  this  pleasant  vale  we  s  again,  Demeter  and  P.  34 

then  here  I  s  apart,  Happy  25 

When  we  shall  s  transfigured,  „      38 

the  height  I  s  upon  Even  from  myself  ?  s?  Bomney's' B.  65 

And  s  with  my  head  in  the  zenith,  Parnassus  6 

peaks  they  s  ever  spreading  and  heightening ;  „         11 

As  he  s's  on  the  heights  of  his  Ufe  By  an  Evolution.  20 

Look,  he  s's,  Trunk  and  bough.  The  Oak  13 
neither  of   them  s's  behind  the  screen  of  thy 

truth-  Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  7 

Now  first  we  s  and  understand,  Mechanophilus  1 

Standard  (ensign)     With  the  s's  of  the  peoples  Locksley  Hall  126 
The  struggle  of  s's.  The  rust  of  the  javelins,         Batt.  of  Brunanburh  87 


Standard  (tree)     espaliers  and  the  s's  all"  Are  thine  ; 
Standest    That  s  high  above  all  ? 

Thou  s  in  the  rising  svm, 
Standeth    let  him  in  That  s  there  alone. 

And  s  seized  of  that  inheritance 
Standin'    S  here  be  the  bridge, 
Standing    (See  also  A-stanning,  Standin',  Stannin') 

Hlies,  s  near  Purple-spiked  lavender : 

the  couple  s  side  by  side, 

Join'd  not,  but  stood,  and  s  saw 

Stiller  than  chisell'd  marble,  s  there  ; 

Memory  s  near  Cast  down  her  eyes, 

I  reach'd  The  wicket-gate,  and  found  her  s  there, 

Then  Philip  s  up  said  falteringly 

The  Virgin  Mother  s  with  her  child 

He,  s  still,  was  clutch'd  ; 

and  s  like  a  stately  Pine  Set  in  a  cataract 

Boadicea,  s  loftily  charioted,  (repeat) 

And  s,  muffled  round  with  woe, 

she  is  s  here  at  my  head  ; 

And  arms  on  which  the  s  muscle  sloped, 

Then  Lancelot  s  near,  '  Sir  Seneschal, 

The  maiden  s  in  the  dewy  light. 

s  near  the  shield  In  silence, 

thro'  the  casement  s  wide  for  heat, 

Descending  from  the  point  and  s  both.  There 

Then  some  one  s  by  my  grave  will  say. 

There  s,  shouted,  and  Pallas  far  away  Call'd ; 

And  were  only  s  at  gaze, 

Muriel  s  ever  statue-like — 

He  !  is  he  s  at  the  door, 
Stannin'  (standing)    What  atta  s  theer  fur, 

I  browt  what  tha  seeas  s  theer, 

s  theere  0'  the  brokken  stick  ; 
Stanza    those  three  s's  that  you  made 
Star  (s)    (Sec  also  Beacon-star,  Brother-star,  Evening- 
star,  Morning-star,  Pilot-star,  Sun-star)    Distinct 
with  vivid  s's  inlaid. 

Sole  s  of  all  that  place  and  time. 

Was  cloven  with  the  miUion  s's 

With  golden  s's  above  ; 

the  shepherd  who  watcheth  the  evening  s. 

There  would  be  neither  moon  nor  s  ; 

Neither  moon  nor  s. 

You  are  the  evening  s,  alway  Eemaining 

What  songs  below  the  waning  s's  The  lion-heart, 

As  thou  a  s,  in  inmost  heaven  set, 

Her  heart  is  like  a  throbbing  s. 

Fancy  sadder  than  a  single  s, 

Like  to  some  branch  of  s's  we  see 

white-breasted  like  a  s  Fronting  the  dawn 

wanton  pard,  Eyed  like  the  evening  s. 

Between  the  loud  stream  and  the  trembling  s's. 


The  Blackbird  5 

Voice  and  the  P.  10 

In  Mem.  cxxx  3 

D.  of  the  0.  Year  50 

Gareth  and  L.  359 

Tomorrow  2 

Ode  to  Memory  109 

The  Bridesmaid  5 

Palace  of  Art  254 

B.  of  F.  Women  86 

To  J.  S.  53 

Gardener's  D.  213 

Enoch  Arden  284 

Sea  Dreams  242 

Princess  iv  260 

v  346 

Boadicea  3,  70 

In  Mem.  xiv  5 

Maud  II  V  65 

Marr.  of  Geraint  76 

Gareth  and  L.  461 

Lancelot  and  E.  352 

394 

1234 

Lover's  Tale  i  411 

Columbus  209 

Achilles  over  the  T.  17 

Heavy  Brigade  37 

The  Bing  266 

Happy  11 

N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  65 

North.  Cobbler  70 

Owd  Boa  25 

Talking  Oak  135 


Arabian  Nights  90 

152 

Ode  to  Memory  35 

The  Poet  2 

Dying  Swan  35 

The  Merman  21 

24 

Margaret  27 

Eleanore  89 

Kate  9 

Caress'd  or  chidden  13 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  11 

(Enone  57 

„     200 

„     219 


and  ere  the  s's  come  forth  Talk  with  the  wild  Cassandra,  „     262 

Sole  as  a  fljring  s  shot  thro'  the  sky  Palace  of  Art  123 

Crown'd  dying  day  with  s's,  „  184 

A  s  that  with  the  choral  starry  dance  „  25i 


t 


star 


677 


Star 


i  Star  (s)  {continued)   happy  s's  above  them  seem  to  brighten    May  Queen  34 


D.  of  F 


up  to  Heaven  and  die  among  the  s's. 

Sung  by  the  morning  s  of  song, 

Peopled  the  hollow  dark,  like  burning  s's, 

maiden  splendours  of  the  morning  s  Shook 

We  saw  the  large  white  s's  rise  one  by  one, 

this  s  Rose  with  you  thro'  a  little  arc 

While  the  s's  bum,  the  moons  increase, 

Thro'  silence  and  the  trembling  s's 

if  Nature's  evil  s  Drive  men  in  manhood, 

I  bump'd  the  ice  into  three  several  s's, 

cry  that  shiver'd  to  the  tingling  s's, 

From  spur  to  plume  a  s  of  tournament, 

ere  a  s  can  wink,  beheld  her  there. 

Love's  white  s  Beam'd  thro'  the  thicken'd  cedar 

Sow'd  all  their  mystic  gulfs  with  fleeting  s's ; 

Sole  s  of  phosphorescence  in  the  calm, 

I  wake :  the  still  s's  sparkle ; 

paused  Among  her  s's  to  hear  us ;  s's  that  hung 

Love-charm'd 
To  follow  knowledge  like  a  sinking  s, 
and  the  baths  Of  all  the  western  s's. 
Close  over  us,  the  silver  s, 
Ere  yet  they  blind  the  s's. 
And  o'er  them  many  a  sliding  s, 
On  secrets  of  the  brain,  the  s's. 
Draw  me,  thy  bride,  a  glittering  s. 
And  star-like  mingles  with  the  s's. 
New  s's  all  night  above  the  brim 
We  parted :  sweetly  gleam'd  the  s's, 
the  great  s's  that  globed  themselves 
I  murmur  under  moon  and  s's  In  brambly  wildernesses ;    The  Brook  178 


Con.  40 

Women  3 

18 

55 

223 

To  J.  S.  25 

71 

On  a  Mourner  28 

Love  thou  thy  land  73 

The  Epic  12 

M.  d' Arthur  199 

223 

Gardewr's  D.  122 

165 

262 

Audley  Court  87 

St.  S.  Stijlites  114 

Love  and  Dviy  74 

Ulysses  31 

„       61 

Tithonus  25 

39 

IJaij-Dm.,  Depart.  13 

„         L'Envoi  11 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  23 

Sir  Galahad  48 

The  Voyage  25 

The  Letters  41 

Enoch  Arden  597 


and  holds  her  head  to  other  s's. 

Shone  like  a  mystic  s  between  the  less 

A  close-set  robe  of  jasmine  sown  with  s's : 

S  to  s  vibrates  light :  may  soul  to  soul 

such  a  s  of  morning  in  their  blue, 

'  if  every  s  in  heaven  Can  make  it  fair : 

then  I  saw  one  lovely  s  Larger  and  larger. 

crown'd  with  s's  and  high  among  the  s's, — 

Nor  ever  falls  the  least  white  s  of  snow, 

For  on  my  cradle  shone  the  Northern  s. 

dry  old  man,  without  a  s,  Not  Uke  a  king: 

four  wing'd  horses  dark  against  the  s's ; 

In  shining  draperies,  headed  Uke  a  s, 

glorious  names  Were  fewer,  scatter'd  s's. 

The  s,  the  bird,  the  fish,  the  shell. 

Mom  in  the  white  wake  of  the  morning  s 

'  There  sinks  the  nebulous  s  we  call  the  Sun, 

Now  poring  on  the  glowworm,  now  the  s, 

leader  wildiwan  in  among  the  s's  Would  clang  it, 

those  three  s's  of  the  airy  Giant's  zone, 

The  tops  shall  strike  from  s  to  s, 

S  after  s,  arose  and  fell ;  but  I, 

Now  lies  the  Earth  all  Danae  to  the  s's. 

To  sit  a  s  upon  the  sparkling  spire ; 

Lavish  Honour  shower'd  all  her  s's, 

Brought  from  under  every  s. 

Melt  into  s's  for  the  land's  desire  ! 

And  whistled  to  the  morning  s. 

Two  bright  s's  Peep'd  into  the  shell. 

And  look'd  at  by  the  silent  s's : 

The  sun,  the  moon,  the  s's,  the  seas. 

Earth,  these  solid  s's,  this  weight  of  body 

Above  thee  glided  the  s. 

The  valley,  the  voice,  the  peak,  the  s  Pass, 

Peak  is  high,  and  the  s's  are  high, 

the  s's  about  the  moon  Look  beautiful, 

the  s's  Shine,  and  the  Shepherd  gladdens  in  his  heart :  „  15 

Taken  the  s's  from  the  night  Window,  Gone  5 

And  you  are  his  morning  s.  Marr.  Morn.  12 

■*  The  s's,'  she  whispers,  '  blindly  run ;  In  Mem.  iii  5 

Slide  from  the  bosom  of  the  s's.  .,       xmi  16 

And  orb  into  the  perfect  s  -      xxiv  15 

Look  also,  Love,  a  brooding  s,  „       xlvi  15 


195 

Aylmer's  Field  72 

158 

578 

692 

Sea  Dreams  83 

93 

241 

Lucretius  107 

Princess  i  4 

.,       117 

..       211 

..  in09 

„      156 

..      383 

..   iii  17 

„    it)  19 

„       211 

.,      434 

„   «260 

„    vi  57 

..  vii  50 

.,       182 

„      197 

Ode  on  Well.  196 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  25 

W.  to  Alexandra  21 

Sailor  Boy  4 

Minnie  and  Winnie  13 

Lit.  Squabbles  4 

Hiah.  Pantheism  1 

5 

Voice  and  the  P.  8 

27 

31 

Spec,  of  Iliad  11 


Star  (s)  {continued)    And  grapples  with  his  evil  s ;  In  Mem.  Ixiv  8 

Thro'  clouds  that  drench  the  morning  s,  „     Ixxii  22 

To  where  in  yonder  orient  s  „  Ixxxvi  15 

Before  the  crimson-circled  s  ,.  Ixxxix  47 

He  reads  the  secret  of  the  s,  „     xcvii  22 

Is  twisting  round  the  polar  s;  „          ci  12 

And  one  the  shaping  of  a  s ;  „       ciii  36 

A  sphere  of  s's  about  my  soul,  „       cxxii  1 

While  thou,  dear  spirit,  happy  s,  „  cxxvii  18 

But  tho'  I  seem  in  s  and  flower  „       cxxx  6 

And  brighten  like  the  s  that  shook  .,      Con.  31 

And,  s  and  system  rolling  past,  „            122 

sorrow  seize  me  if  ever  that  light  be  my  leading  s  !  Maud  I  iv  12 

you  fair  s's  that  crown  a  happy  day  ..    xviii  30 

Beat,  happy  s's,  timing  with  things  below,  .,           81 

like  a  silent  lightning  xmder  the  s's  „  III  vi  9 

Remembering  all  the  beauty  of  that  s  Ded.  of  Idylls  46 

0  ye  s's  that  shudder  over  me.  Com.  of  Arthur  83 
And  even  in  high  day  the  morning  s.  .,  100 
thereafter  foUow'd  calm.  Free  sky  and  «'« :  „  392 
wholesome  s's  of  love ;  Gareth  and  L.  314 
honour  shining  like  the  dewy  s  Of  dawn,  „  329 
and  thereon  the  morning  s.  „  932 
His  arms,  the  rosy  raiment,  and  the  s.  „  938 
And  he  that  bore  The  s,  when  mounted,  „  951 
And  then  she  sang,  '  O  morning  s '  „  996 
'  O  morning  s  that  smilest  in  the  blue,  O  s,  my  morning 

dream  hath  proven  true,  „            999 

That  named  himself  the  S  of  Evening,  „           1090 

'  No  s  of  thine,  but  shot  from  Arthur's  heaven  ,,          1100 

so  wilt  thou,  Sir  S ;  Art  thou  not  old  ? '  „           1103 

that  same  strength  which  threw  the  Morning  S  ,,           1108 

a  shield  whereon  the  S  of  Even  Half-tamish'd  „          1117 

and  when  he  saw  the  s  Gleam,  .,           1218 

s  shot :  '  Lo,'  said  Gareth,  '  the  foe  falls  ! '  „          1317 

cloud  that  grew  To  thunder-gloom  palling  all  s's,  „           1359 

now  by  night  With  moon  and  trembling  s's,  Marr.  of  Geraint  8 

His  charger  trampling  many  a  prickly  s  „            313 

as  the  white  and  glittering  s  of  morn  „             734 

'  Enid,  the  pilot  s  of  my  lone  life,  Geraint  and  E.  306 

Kiss'd  the  white  s  upon  his  noble  front,  „  757 
or  touch  at  night  the  northern  s ;                              Balin  and  BaJan  166 

rather  seem'd  a  lovely  baleful  s  Merlin  and  V.  262 

misty  s.  Which  is  the  second  in  a  line  of  s's  .,            508 

Of  some  vast  charm  concluded  in  that  s  .,            512 

Her  seer,  her  bard,  her  silver  s  of  eve,  „  954 
like  a  s  in  blackest  night.                                            Lancelot  and  E.  1243 

And  peak'd  wings  pointed  to  the  Northern  S.  Holy  Grail  240 

like  a  flying  s  Led  on  the  gray-hair'd  vdsdom  „           452 

1  saw  him  like  a  silver  s —  „  517 
I  saw  the  least  of  little  s's  Down  on  the  waste,  and 

straight  beyond  the  s  I  saw  the  spiritual  city  „          524 

from  the  s  there  shot  A  rose-red  sparkle  „          529 

which  can  trace  The  wandering  of  the  s's,  „           667 

The  seven  clear  s's  of  Arthur's  Table  Rovmd —  „          684 

a  round  in  heaven,  we  named  the  s's,  „          686 

Across  the  seven  clear  s's — O  grace  to  me —  „          692 

Rode  till  the  s  above  the  wakening  sun,  Fdleas  and  E.  500 

'  0  sweet  s.  Pure  on  the  virgin  forehead  .,            504 

and  the  morning  s  ReePd  in  the  smoke,  „            518 

Peace  at  his  heart,  and  gazing  at  a  s  „  559 
Dost  thou  know  the  s  We  call  the  harp                  Last  Tournament  332 

do  ye  see  it  ?  do  ye  see  the  s?'  „              346 

The  night  was  dark ;  the  true  s  set.     Isolt !  „              605 

s  in  heaven,  a  s  within  the  mere  !    Ay,  ay,  O  ay, — a  s  „              732 

And  one  was  water,  and  one  s  was  fire,  „              736 

'  I  f  oimd  Him  in  the  shining  of  the  s's,  Pass,  of  Arthur  9 

cry  that  shiver'd  to  the  tingling  s's,  „          367 

From  spur  to  plume  a  s  of  tournament,  „          391 

lucid  chambers  of  the  morning  s.  Lover's  Tale  i  28 

Down  those  loud  waters,  like  a  setting  s,  „  59 
Their  Notions  and  their  brightness  from  the  s's.  And 

then  point  out  the  flower  or  the  s?  „            174 

Under  the  selfsame  aspect  of  the  s's,  „             199 

Suck'd  into  oneness  like  a  little  s  „            308 


star 


678 


Started 


Star  (s)  (continued)    Even  then  the  s's  Did  tremble  in  their 

stations  Lover's  Tale  i  581 

cross  between  their  happy  5  and  them  ?  „            730 

»''s  came  out  far  over  tlie  summer  sea,  The  Revenge  56 

peak  sent  up  one  league  of  fire  to  the  Northern  S  ;    V.  of  Maeldune  72 

Rejoicing  that  the  sun,  the  moon,  the  s's  Tiresias  160 

Her  shadow  crowu'd  with  s's —  Ancient  Sage  201 

the  s's  went  down  across  the  gleaming  pane,  The  Flight  13 

fairest  of  their  evening  s's.  Locksleij  H.,  Sixty  188 

glancing  heavenward  on  a  s  so  silver-fair,  191 

the  *S  that  lights  a  desert  pathway,  275 

the  s's  in  heaven  Paled,  and  the  glory  grew.  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  31 

A  s  among  the  s's.  (repeat)  Epilogue  2,  42 

'  The  s's  with  head  sublime,'  „            47 

s  that  gildest  yet  this  phantom  shore ;  To  Virgil  26 

s's  are  from  their  hands  Flung  thro'  the  woods.  Early  Spring  17 

This  order  of  Her  Himian  S,  Freedom  23 

hard  Arabian  moon  And  aUen  s's.  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  46 

Shoot  your  s's  to  the  firmament,  On  Jul.  Q.  Victoria  17 

6^  of  the  morning,  Hope  in  the  sunrise  ;  Vastness  15 

in  vamish'd  glory  shine  Thy  s's  of  celandine.  Prog,  of  Spring  39 

Sphere-music  of  s's  and  of  constellations.  Parnassus  8 

ladder-of-heaven  that  hangs  on  a  s.  By  an  Evolution.  12 

many  a  pendent  bell  and  fragrant  s.  Death  of  (Enone  13 

s  of  eve  was  drawing  light  P'rom  the  dead  sun,  64 

when  she  woke  beneath  the  s's.  ..               82 

^^'hat  s  could  bum  so  low?  not  Ihon  yet.  .,              83 

sphere  Of  west  ward- wheeling  s's ;  St.  Telemachus  32 

after  one  quick  glance  upon  the  s's,  Akbar's  Dream  3 

If  every  single  s  Should  shriek  its  claim  ..            42 

westward — under  yon  slow-falling  s,  ,.           152 

— not  a  s  in  the  sky —  Bandit's  Death  25 

Sunset  and  evening  s.  Crossing  the  Bar  1 

Star  (verb)    s  The  black  earth  with  brilliance"rare.  Ode  to  Memory  19 

Starboard    Roll'd  to  s,  roU'd  to  larboard,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  106 

two  upon  the  larboard  and  two  upon  the  s  lay.  The  Revenge  48 

StaT'broider'd    The  silk  s-b  coverhd  Day -Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  9 

Starcraft     (Oh  falsehood  of  all  s  ! )  Lover's  Tale  i  200 

Star-crown    the  high  s-c's  of  his  pahns  The  Wreck  72 

Stare  (s)     And,  last,  you  fix'd  a  vacant  s,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  47 

^^'ith  a  stony  British  s.  Maud  I  xiii  22 

that  s  of  a  beast  of  prey.  Charity  10 

Stare  (verb)     '  Wherefore  s  "ye  so  ?  Gareth  and  L.  939 

Painted,  who  s  at  open  space,  Geraint  and  E.  268 

and  the  full  moon  s  s  at  the  snow.  Rizpah  4 

That  all  the  ships  of  the  world  could  s  at  him,  „     38 

forward — naked — let  them  s.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  142 

That  all  the  crowd  might  s.  Bead  Prophet  16 

Stared     Whereat  he  s,  replying,  half-amazed,  Godiva  21 

Fantastic  gables,  crowding,  s :  „       61 

And  s,  with  his  foot  on  the  prey.  Poet's  Song  12 

full-busted  figure-head  S  o'er  the  ripple  Enoch  Arden  544 

In  much  amaze  he  s  On  eyes  a  bashful  azure.  The  Brook  205 

as  I  s,  a  fire.  The  fire  that  left  a  roofless  Ilion,  Lucretius  64 

s  As  blank  as  death  in  marble ;  Princess  i  176 

S  with  great  eyes,  and  laugh'd  with  alien  lips,  .,      iv  119 

Fear  8  in  her  eyes,  and  chalk'd  her  face,  ..          377 

aghast  The  women  s  at  these,  all  silent,  „     vi  362 

in  a  showerful  spring  S  at  the  spate.  Gareth  and  L.  3 

for  80  long  a  space  S  at  the  figures,  „        232 

and  he  started  up  and  s  at  her.  Geraint  and  E.  389 

the  unswallow'd  piece,  and  turning  s ;  „              631 

but  while  he  s  about  the  shrine,  Balin  and  Balan  408 

S  at  the  priceless  cognizance,  „              430 

moimting  on  his  horse  S  at  her  towers  that,  Pelleas  and  E.  457 

they  s  at  the  dead  that  had  been  so  valiant  and  true,  The  Revenge  105 

how  they  s.  That  was  their  main  test-question —     Sir  J.  Oldcastle  154 

and  I  s  from  every  eagle-peak,  Demeter  and  P.  68 

And  while  she  s  at  those  dead  cords  Death  of  (Enone  10 

and  ever  seeming  s  upon  By  ghastlier  „              70 

rabble  in  half-amaze  S  at  him  dead,  St.  Telemachus  72 

Staring  {See  also  A-gawinin')  and  thou  art  s  at  the  wall,     Locksley  Hall  79 

The  s  eye  glazed  o'er  with  sapless  days,  Love  and  Duty  16 

A  sign  to  many  a  s  shire  Came  crowing  over  Thames.    WiU  Water.  139 

S  for  ever  from  their  gilded  walls  Aylmer's  Field  833 


Staring  (continued)    Turn,  turn  thy  wheel  above  the  s 

crowd ;  ~  Marr.  of  Geraint  35ft  j 

All  s  at  her  in  her  faded  silk  :  „  6171 

Were  men  and  women  s  and  aghast,  Geraint  and  E.  804JI 

all  at  once  they  found  the  world,  S  wild- wide ;       Balin  and  Balan  59ftl 
Linger'd  that  other,  s  after  him;  Laiicelot  and  E.  721  f 

And  s  each  at  other  like  dumb  men  Stood,  Holy  Grail  19$i 

on  the  border  of  her  couch  they  sat  Stammering  and  s.     Guinevere  102^ 
and  s  wide  And  hungering  for  the  gilt  lever's  Tale  iv  312 

Stark     but  when  she  saw  me  lying  s,  Princess  vi  100*; 

men  down  in  the  hold  were  most  of  them  s  and  cold,      The  Revenge  79 
S  and  dark  in  his  fimeral  fire.  To  Master  of  B.  20; 

Stark-naked    wherever  she  go  S-n,  and  up  or  down.  Dead  Prophet  4ft; 

Starless     Walking  the  cold  and  s  road  of  Death  Uncomforted,     (Enone  259 

Starlight    Thro'  all  yon  s  keen,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  22- 

Not  of  the  moonlight,  Not  of  the  s  !  Merlin  and  the  G.  12r 

from  the  lava-lake  Dazing  the  s,  Kapiolani  15 

Star-like    The  s-l  sorrows  of  immortal  eyes,  D.  of  F.  Women  91 

And  s-l  mingles  with  the  stars.  Sir  Galahad  48' 

Starling    s  claps  his  tiny  castanets.  Prog,  of  Spring  5ft^ 

Starr'd  (See  also  Evil-stsurr'd)  S  from  Jehovah's  gorgeous  armouries,  Milton  ~ 
tho'  the  rough  kex  break  The  s  mosaic,  Princess  iv  W 

streak'd  or  s  at  intervals  With  falling  brook  Lover's  Tale  i  404 

And  s  Avith  a  myriad  blossom  V.  of  Maeldune 

Starry    They  would  pelt  me  with  s  spangles  and  shells.        The  Merman  281 
From  under  my  s  sea-bud  crown  The  Mermaid  Ifl 

Jewel  or  shell,  or  s  ore,  Elednore  201 

Below  the  s  clusters  bright,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  23 

Rapt  after  heaven's  s  flight.  Two  Voices  "" 

A  star  that  with  the  choral  s  dance  Join'd  not,  Palace  of  Art  2531 

.  The  night  is  s  and  cold,  my  friend,  D.  of  the  0.  Year  341 

Above  her  shook  the  s  lights :  .  Of  old  sat  Freedom  3 ' 

AH  s  culmination  drop  Balm-dews  to  bathe  thy  feet !  Talking  Oak  267 
AU  heaven  bursts  her  s  floors,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  27] 

Dip  forward  under  s  light.  Move  eastward  IC 

Till  toward  the  centre  set  the  s  tides,  Princess  ii  118^ 

Where  all  the  s  heavens  of  space  Are  sharpen'd  In  Mem.  Ixxvi  3 


'  Can  clouds  of  nature  stain  The  s  clearness  of  the  free  ? 


haunted  by  the  s  head  Of  her  whose  gentle  wiU 

Charioteer  And  s  Gemini  hang  like  glorious  crowns 

Was  also  Bard,  and  knew  the  s  heavens ; 

Forward  to  the  s  track  Glimmering  up  the  heights 
Starry-clear    silver-shining  armour  s-c ; 
Starry-fair    a  face  Most  s-f,  but  kindled 
Star-shine     By  s-s  and  by  moonlight, 
Star-sisters    S-s  answering  under  crescent  brows ; 
Star-strown    My  shallop  thro'  the  s-s  calm. 
Star-sweet    s-s  on  a  gloom  profound ; 
Start  (s)     given  to  s's  and  bursts  Of  revel ; 
Start  (verb)     I  started  once,  or  seem'd  to  s  in  pain. 

But  as  the  waterUly  s's  and  slides 

Would  s  and  tremble  under  her  feet, 

S  from  their  fallen  lords,  and  wildly  fly, 

ye  would  s  back  agin  into  life, 

nay,  why  do  you  s  aside  ? 
Started     Is  once,  or  seem'd  to  start  in  pain, 

'  But  in  a  pet  she  s  up. 

Then  they  s  from  their  places, 

Forward  she  s  with  a  happy  cry, 

S  from  bed,  and  struck  herself  a  light, 

he  knew  not  wherefore,  s  up  Shuddering, 

Then  of  the  latest  fox — where  s — 

,s-  on  his  feet.  Tore  the  king's  letter. 

Back  s  she,  and  turning  round  we  saw 

I  smote  him  on  the  breast ;  he  s  up ; 

And  many  a  bold  knight  s  up  in  heat. 

Up  s  from  my  side  The  old  lion, 

And  now  and  then  an  echo  s  up. 

Out  into  the  road  I  s,  and  spoke 

S  a  green  linnet  Out  of  the  croft ; 

Back  from  the  gate  s  the  three. 

But  up  like  fire  he  s  : 

seized  on  her,  And  Enid  s  waking, 

either  s  while  the  door,  Push'd  from  without, 

and  he  s  up  and  stared  at  her. 


Ixxxv  86  I 


Maud  I  xviii  22i 
///  vi  Tl 
Merlin  and  V.  16 
Silent  Voices  i 
Holy  Grail  511 
Lover's  Tale  i  73 
Oriana  24 
Princess  ii  4281 
Arabian  Nights  36 ' 
Maud  I  Hi  4 
Princess  i  54i 
D.  of  F.  Women  411 
Princess  iv  255| 
Maud  I  xxii  73 
Geraint  and  E.  4821 
Tomorrow  811 
Bandit's  Death  51 
D.  of  F.  Women  411 
Talking  Oak  22" 
Vision  of  Sin  33J 
Enoch  Arden  151 
49 
61fl 
Aylmer's  Field  25 
Princess  i  " 
,,     ii  32 
„    iv  16 
„     V  35 


The  Grandmother ' 
Minnie  and  Winnie  11 
Gareth  and  L.  23 
112 
Marr.  of  Geraint  674 
Geraint  and  E.  272 


started 


679 


Statesman 


tarted  {cmUinued)     and  Balin  s  from  his  bower. 
Sideways  he  s  from  the  path,  and  saw, 
Yet  blank  from  sleep,  she  s  to  him, 
s  thro'  mid  air  Beanng  an  eagle's  nest : 
Flush'd,  s,  met  him  at  the  doors, 
an'  I  s  awaay  like  a  shot, 
shriek'd,  and  s  from  my  side— 

Jtaxting    S  up  at  once,  As  from  a  dismal  dream 
then  s,  thought  His  dreams  had  come  again. 

startled     neither  self-possess'd  Nor  s, 
Life  was  s  from  the  tender  love 

Itarve    clamouring,  '  If  we  pay,  we  s  ! ' 
'  If  they  pay  this  tax,  they  a-.' 
s  not  thou  this  fire  within  thy  blood, 
The  first  discoverer  s's — his  followers. 
When  all  men  s,  the  wild  mob's  million  feet 


Balin  and  Balan  280 

324 

Lancelot  and  E.  820 

Last  Tournament  14 

512 

North.  Cobbler  69 

Loeksley  H.,  Sixty  264 

Lover's  Tale  i  747 

„  iv  77 

Gardener's  D.  155 

Lover's  Tale  i  616 

Godiva  15 

„       20 

Balin  and  Balan  453 

Columbus  166 

The  Fleet  18 


ttarved  (See  also  Self-starved)  my  husband's  brother 
had  my  son  Thrall'd  in  his  castle,  and  hath  s 
him  dead ;  Gareth  and  L.  358 

Is  the  wild  beast  that  was  linkt  with  thee  eighty 
years  back.  By  an  Evolution.  11 

Jtate  (adj.)     That  crown'd  the  s  pavilion  of  the  King,  Guinevere  399 

Jtate  (body  politic)    (See  also  Sta&te)    Tho'  every 

eliannel  of  the  S  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  23 

And  work,  a  joint  of  s,  that  phes  Its  office,  Love  thou  thy  land  47 

New  Majesties  of  mighty  S's —  „  60 

'Who'd  serve  the  s?  for  if  I  carved  my  name  Audley  Court  48 

Visions  of  a  perfect  S :  Vision  of  Sin  148 

the  s,  The  total  chronicles  of  man.  Princess  ii  380 

But  as  he  saves  or  serves  the  s.  Ode  on  Well.  200 

No  Uttle  German  s  are  we,  Third  of  Feb.  15 

To  mould  a  mighty  s's  decrees.  In  Mem.  Ixiv  11 

Or  touch'd  the  changes  of  the  s,  „     Ixxxix  35 

the  s  has  done  it  and  thrice  as  well :  Maud  I  x  40 

In  silver  tissue  talking  things  of  s ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  663 

Eeople's  praise  From  thine  own  S,  Bed.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  8 

ring  on  both  the  yoke  Of  stronger  s's,  Tiresias  70 

Break  the  S,  the  Church,  the  Throne,  Loeksley  H.,  Sixty  138 

We  founded  many  a  mighty  s ;  Rands  all  Round  30 

Were  she  ...  a  fallen  s  ?  The  Fleet  10 

In  our  ancient  island  S,  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  16 

To  serve  her  myriads  and  the  S, —  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  24 

and  men  at  the  helm  of  s —  The  Wreck  49 

State  (condition)     Thrice  happy  s  again  to  be  The 

trustful  infant  on  the  knee  !  Supp.  Confessions  40 

0  damned  vacillating  s !  „  190 

in  some  confused  dream  To  s's  of  mystical  similitude;     Sonnet  to 4 

The  sUpping  thro'  from  s  to  s.  Two  Voices  351 

'  So  might  we,  if  our  s  were  such  As  one  before,  „         355 

Such  doubts  and  fears  were  common  to  her  s,  Enoch  Arden  521 

Roman  lines  Of  empire,  and  the  woman's  s  in  each.  Princess  ii  131 
still  she  rail'd  against  the  s  of  things.  ..         Hi  84 

As  in  some  mystic  middle  s  I  lay ;  -,  vi  18 

Charity  Could  lift  them  nearer  God-like  s  Lit.  Squabbles  14 

And  he  should  sorrow  o'er  my  s  In  Mem.  xiv  15 

The  lowness  of  the  present  s,  „        xxiv  11 

If,  in  thy  second  s  sublime,  .,  Ixil 

From  s  to  s  the  spirit  walks ;  .-       Ixxxii  6 

That  range  above  our  mortal  s,  „      Ixxxv  22 

Who  first  had  found  and  loved  her  in  a  s  Of  broken 

fortunes,  Marr.  of  Geraint  12 

dazed  and  dumb  With  passing  thro'  at  once  from  s  to  s,  Demeter  and  P.  7 
nearing  yon  dark  portal  at  the  limit  of  thy 

human  s,  God  and  the  Univ.  4 

State  (chair  of  state)    His  s  the  king  reposing  keeps.  Day -Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  39 

Summon'd  out  She  kept  her  s.  Princess  Hi  229 

State  (dignity)    overflowing  revenue  Wherewith  to  embellish  s,    (Enone  113 

Built  for  pleasure  and  for  s.  L.  of  Burleigh  32 

Here  he  lives  in  s  and  bounty,  „  57 

There  she  walks  in  her  s  And  tends  upon  bed  and  bower,    Maud  I  xiv  3 

all  his  land  and  wealth  and  s  were  hers.  Holy  Grail  587 

State  (mien)     and  by  your  s  And  presence  might 

have  guess'd  you  one  Marr.  of  Geraint  430 

for  by  thy  s  And  presence  I  might  guess  thee  chief 

of  those,  Lancelot  and  E.  182 


State  (pomp)    Where  we  withdrew  from  summer  heats  and  s,   Princess  vi  245 
I  go  in  s  to  court,  to  meet  the  Queen.  Lancelot  and  E.  1124 

Led  his  dear  lady  to  a  chair  of  s.  Lover's  Tale  iv  321 

State  (rank)    And  bow'd  her  s  to  them,  that  they  might 

grow  Princess  ii  166 

With  reasons  drawn  from  age  and  s,  „  v  357 

we  believe  him  Something  far  advanced  in  S,  Ode  on  Well.  275 

And,  for  himself  was  of  the  greater  s,  Gareth  and  L.  395 

As  Mark  would  sully  the  low  s  of  churl :  „  427 

State  (splendour)    but  robed  in  soften'd  hght  Of  orient  s.    Ode  to  Memory  11 
Statelier  (adj.)     Then  comes  the  s  Eden  back  to  men :  Princess  vii  293 

With  s  progress  to  and  fro  The  double  tides  of 

chariots  flow  /«  Mem.  xcviii  22 

Garrick  and  s  Kemble,  and  the  rest  To  W.  C.  Macready  7 

Then,  with  a  melody  Stronger  and  s,  Merlin  and  the  G.  63 

Statelier  (s)     Could  find  no  s  than  his  peers  Two  Voices  29 

Stateliest    sit  the  best  and  s  of  the  land  ?  Lu^etius  172 

King  Arthur,  hke  a  modern  gentleman  Of  s  port ;    M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  23 
nor  end  of  mine,  S,  for  thee  !  Princess  vii  170 

Adored  her,  as  the  s  and  the  best  Marr.  of  Geraint  20 

and  as  the  s  under  heaven.  Holy  Grail  224 

Wielder  of  the  s  measm-e  ever  moulded  by  the  lips  of 

man.  To  Virgil  39 

Stateliness     harmony  Of  thy  swan-hke  s,  Eleanore  47 

^A'ho  see  your  tender  grace  and  s.  Guinevere  190 

Stately    The  s  flower  of  female  fortitude,  Isabel  11 

deep  myrrh- thickets  blowing  round  The  s  cedar,       Arabian  Nights  105 

maid,  whose  s  brow  The  dew-impearled  winds  of 

dawn  Ode  to  Memory  13 

To  throng  with  s  blooms  the  breathing  spring  The  Poet  27 

To  her  full  height  her  s  stature  draws ;  D.  of  F.  Women  102 

all  the  decks  were  dense  with  s  forms  Black-stoled,       M.  d' Arthur  196 
Many  an  evening  by  the  waters  did  we  watch  the  s 

ships,  Loeksley  Hall  37 

s  ships  go  on  To  their  haven  under  the  hill ;  Break,  break,  etc.  9 

long  convolvuluses  That  coil'd  around  the  s  stems,       Enoch  Arden  577 
Stept  thro'  the  s  minuet  of  those  days :  Aylmer's  Field  207 

we  stroll'd  For  half  the  day  thro'  s  theatres  Princess  ii  369 

standing  like  a  s  Pine  Set  in  a  cataract  on  an  island-crag,         ,.         v  346 
leader  of  the  herd  That  holds  a  s  fretwork  to  the  Sun,  „  vi  86 

crimson-hued  the  s  palm-woods  Whisper  in  odorous  heights     Milton  15 
But  she  is  tall  and  s.  Maud  I  xii  16 

From  mother  imto  mother,  s  bride,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  9 

Camelot,  a  city  of  shadowy  palaces  And  s,  Gareth  and  L.  304 

midway  down  the  side  of  that  long  hall  A  s  pile, —  „  405 

'  Farewell,  fair  Prince,'  answer'd  the  s  Queen.  Marr.  of  Geraint  224 

And  there  be  made  known  to  the  s  Queen,  „  607 

came  A  s  queen  whose  name  was  Guinevere,  ,.  667 

His  princess,  or  indeed  the  s  Queen,  „  759 

And  moving  out  they  found  the  s  horse,  Geraint  and  E  752 

Manners  so  kind,  yet  s,  such  a  grace  Of  tenderest 

courtesy,  „  861 

Being  mirthful  he,  but  in  a  s  kind —  Lancelot  and  E.  322 

Whereon  a  himdred  s  beeches  grew,  Pelleas  and  E.  26 

He  glanced  and  saw  the  s  galleries.  Last  Tournament  145 

So  the  s  Queen  abode  For  many  a  week,  unknown,  Guinevere  146 

all  the  decks  were  dense  with  s  forms,  Black-stoled,  Pass,  of  Arthur  364 
A  s  mountain  nymph  she  look'd  !  Lover's  Tale  i  359 

in  front  of  which  Six  s  virgins,  all  in  white,  „  ii  77 

s  vestibules  To  caves  and  shows  of  Death:  ,,  125 

the  s  Spanish  men  to  their  flagship  bore  him  then,  The  Revenge  97 

s  and  tall — A  princeher  looking  man  never  stept  thro'  a 

Prince's  hall.  The  Wreck  15 

Raise  a  s  memorial,  Make  it  regally  gorgeous,      On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  44 

S  purposes,  valour  in  battle,  Vastness  7 

Edith  bow'd  her  s  head.  The  Tourney  13 

Stately-gentle    nay  Being  so  s-g,  Balin  and  Balan  192 

Stately-set     the  fair  hall-ceiling  s-s  Palace  of  Art  141 

State-oracle    O  friends,  oiu:  chief  s-o  is  mute :  Ode  on  Well.  23 

States  (United)     He's  gone  to  the  S's,  aroon.  Tomorrow  49 

Statesman    (See  also  Statesman-warrior)    '  And  statesmen 

at  her  council  met  To  the  Qu^en  29 

No  blazon'd  s  he,  nor  king.  You  might  hive  won  24 

O  Statesmen,  guard  us,  guard  the  eye,  Ode  on  Well.  160 

keep  the  soldier  firm,  the  s  pure :  „  222 


high  on  every 


Statesman 

statesman  {contimied)    a  s  there,  betraying  His  party-secret 
When  he  flouted  a  s's  error, 

0  Pateiot  S,  be  thou  wise  to  know 
Whatever  s  hold  the  helm. 
To  all  our  statesmen  so  they  be  True  leaders 
as  honouring  your  fair  fame  Of  S, 

Statesman-warrior    The  s-w,  moderate,  resolute. 
Station    all  the  wheels  of  Time  Spim  round  in  s, 

message  to  and  fro  Between  the  mimic  s's ; 

thro'  his  cowardice  allow'd  Her  s, 

Did  tremble  in  their  s's  as  I  gazed ; 
Stationary    We  stumbled  on  a  s  voice, 
Station'd     Ida  s  there  Unshaken, 
Statuary    break  the  works  of  the  s, 
Statue    (See  also  Statute,  Woman-statue) 
peak  a  s  seem'd  To  hang  on  tiptoe, 

The  s's,  king  or  saint,  or  founder  fell ; 

A  broken  s  propt  against  the  wall. 

Look,  our  hall !    Our  s's  ! — 

Two  great  s's,  Art  And  Science, 

Half  turning  to  the  broken  s,  said, 

and  your  s's  Rear'd,  sung  to. 

And  highest,  among  the  s's,  statue-like, 

April  of  ovation  round  Their  s's, 

o'er  the  s's  leapt  from  head  to  head, 

Disrobed  the  glimmering  s  of  Sir  Ralph 

1  stood  among  the  silent  s's, 
down  their  s  of  Victory  fell. 
In  the  centre  stood  A  s  veil'd, 
But  like  a  s  solid-set, 
She  might  have  seem'd  her  s,  but  that  he, 
one  s  in  the  mould  Of  Arthur,  made  by  Merlin, 
And  eastward  fronts  the  s. 
And  from  the  s  Merlin  moulded  for  us 
like  a  s,  rear'd  To  some  great  citizen, 

Statued     And  s  pinnacles,  mute  as  they. 
Statue-like    s-l,  In  act  to  render  thanks. 

And  highest,  among  the  statues,  s-l, 

Muriel  standing  ever  s-l — 
Statuelike     Balin  and  Balan  sitting  s, 

The  bridesmaid  pale,  s,  passionless — 
Statuette  When  I  was  smaller  than  the  s 
Stature    To  her  full  height  her  stately  s  draws  ; 

Her  s  more  than  mortal  in  the  burst  Of  sunrise, 
Statured    as  long  as  thou  art  s  tall ! 
Statute    an  officer  Rose  up,  and  read  the  s's. 
Statute  (statue)    An'  'e  bowt  little  s's  all-naakt 
Statute-book     According  to  your  bitter  s-h, 
Stave  (s)     '  Chant  me  now  some  wicked  s. 
Stave  (verb)     s  off  a  chance  That  breaks  upon  them 
Stay    Thou,  willing  me  to  s, 

S's  on  her  floating  locks  the  lovely  freight 

Whither  away  ?  listen  and  s  : 

That  will  not  s,  upon  his  way, 

steady  sunset  glow.  That  s's  upon  thee  ? 

A  curse  is  on  her  if  she  s 

And  now  it  seems  as  hard  to  s. 

Here  s's  the  blood  along  the  veins. 

'  Pray  s  a  httle :  pardon  me ; 

And  here  ne  s's  upon  a  freezing  orb 

That  s's  the  rollii^  Ixionian  wheel, 

S's  all  the  fair  young  planet  in  her  hands — 

I  have  not  long  to  s  ; 

But  s  with  the  old  woman  now  :  you  cannot  have 
long  to  s. 

To  those  that  s  and  those  that  roam, 

Mj  sisters  crying, '  S  for  shame ; ' 

Like  her  I  go  ;  I  cannot  s  ; 

What  s's  thee  from  the  clouded  noons. 

That  s's  him  from  the  native  land 
At  least  to  me  ?    I  would  not  s. 

Who  s  to  share  the  morning  feast. 
Why  should  Is?  can  a  sweeter  chance 
may  s  for  a  year  who  has  gone  for  a  week  : 
Let  it  go  or  s,  so  I  wake  to  the  higher  aims 


680 


Steal 


Maud  II  V  34 

The  Wreck  68 

To  Duke  of  Argyll  1 

Hands  all  Round  20 

25 

To  Marq.  of  JDufferin  15 

Ode  on  Well.  25 

Love  and  Duty  76 

Princess,  Pro.  79 

Guinevere  517 

Lover's  Tale  i  582 

Princess  v  2 

„       343 

Boddicea  64 


Palace  of  Art  37 

Sea  Dreams  224 

Princess,  Pro.  99 

m76 

iv20O 

593 

«413 

510 

m67 

366 

Con.  117 

The  Daisy  63 

Boddicea  30 

In  Mem.  ciii  12 

Con.  15 

Lancelot  and  E.  1171 

Holy  Grail  238 

241 

732 

Tiresias  82 

The  Daisy  64 

Gardener's  D.  161 

Princess  v  510 

The  Ring  266 

Balin  and  Balan  24 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  212 

The  Ring  109 

D.  of  F.  Women  102 

Princess,  Pro.  40 

Gareth  and  L.  282 

Princess  ii  69 

VUlage  Wife  50 

Princess  iv  454 

Vision  of  Sin  151 

Geraint  and  E.  353 

Madeline  37 

Ode  to  Monory  16 

Sea- Fairies  42 

Rosalind  15 

Eleanore  56 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  4 

May  Queen,  Con.  10 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  4 

The  Brook  210 

Lucretius  139 

261 

Princess  vii  264 

Grandmother  15 


108 

Sailor  Boy  14 

18 

In  Mem.  xii  5 

..   Ixxxiii  5 

xciii  3 

cxx  8 

„     Con.  75 

Maud  I  i  62 

xvi  6 

„    IIIvi3S 


Stay  {continued)  S  therefore  thou ;  red  berries  charm  the  bird,  Gareth  and  L 
but  s  :  follow  the  deer  By  these  tall  firs  90 

S,  my  best  son  !  ye  are  yet  more  boj  than  man.'  ..  98 

S,  till  the  cloud  that  settles  round  his  birth  Hath  lifted 


J 


but  a  Uttle.    S,  sweet  son.' 
ere  a  man  in  haU  could  s  her,  tum'd 
'  S,  felon  knight,  I  avenge  me  for  my  friend.' 
And  s  the  world  from  Lady  Lyonors. 
and  Pellam's  feeble  cry  '  S,  s  him  ! 
could  make  me  s — That  proof  of  trust — 
'  S  with  me,  I  am  sick  ; 
But  he  pursued  her,  calling, '  S  a  little  ! 
Lancelot  shouted, '  S  me  not ! 
clave  To  Modred,  and  a  remnant  s's  with  me. 
To  s  his  feet  from  falUng, 
'  S  then  a  little,'  answer'd  Julian, 
I  may  not  s,  No,  not  an  hour ; 
S,  my  son  Is  here  anon  : 
I  saw  that  we  could  not  s, 
he  graspt  at  my  arm — '  s  there ' — 
Hence  !  she  is  gone  !  can  Is? 
to  s.  Not  spread  the  plague,  the  famine  ; 
God  s  me  there,  if  only  for  your  sake, 
Stay'd    (See  also  Iron-stay'd,  Staid) 

the  two  peaks ; 
s  beneath  the  dome  Of  hollow  boughs.- 
Would  they  could  have  s  with  us  ! 
s  the  Ausonian  king  to  hear  Of  wisdom 
rummaged  like  a  rat :  no  servant  s  : 
'  But  as  for  her,  she  s  at  home. 
In  these,  in  those  the  life  is  s 


Philip  s  (His  father  lying  sick  and  needing  him) 

S  by  this  isle,  not  knowing  where  she  lay  : 

We  seven  s  at  Christmas  up  to  read  ; 

there  s  ;  Knelt  on  one  knee, — 

I  s  the  wheels  at  Cogoletto, 

He  s  his  arms  upon  his  knee  : 

Stiles  where  we  s  to  be  kind, 

But  s  in  peace  with  God  and  man. 

caught  Aiid  s  liim,  '  Climb  not  lest  thou 


130 

660 

1220 

1412 

Balin  and  Balan  421 

Merlin  and  V.  919 

Lancelot  and  E.  87 

683 

Holy  Grail  643 

Guinevere  443 

Lover's  Tale  i  142 

iv  113 

115 

Columbus  218 

V.  of  Maeldune  35 

The  Wreck  120 

Despair  113 

Demeter  and  P.  133 

Romney's  R.  34 

Hesper  is  s  between 

Leonine  Eleg.  11 

Arabian  Nights  41 

Deserted  House  22 

Palace  of  Art  111 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  38 

Talking  Oak  113 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  18 


Enoch  Arden  64 

630 

Princess,  Pro.  178 

vi  90 

The  Daisy  23 

The  Victim  54: 

Window,  Marr.  Mom.  7 

In  Mem.  Ixxx  8 

Gareth  and  L.  54 


ye  know  we  s  their  hands  From  war  among  themselves,        ,.  421 

holds  her  s  In  her  own  castle,  ,.  615 

Perforce  she  s,  and  overtaken  spoke.  „  764 

on  a  little  knoll  beside  it,  s  Marr.  of  Geraint  162 

Nor  s  to  crave  permission  of  the  King,  Balin  and  Balan  288 

And  s  ;  and  cast  his  eyes  on  fair  Elaine  :  Lancelot  and  E.  640 

S  in  the  wandering  warble  of  a  brook  ;  Last  Tournament  254 

woman,  weeping  near  a  cross,  S  him.  „  494 

have  fail'n.  But  that  they  s  him  up  ;  Guinevere  305 

S  on  the  cloud  of  sorrow  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  255 

And  thus  he  s  and  would  not  look  at  her —  .,  iv  26 

'  This,  I  s  for  this ;  0  love,  „  44 

Took  the  breath  from  our  sails,  and  we  s.  The  Revenge  42 

we  s  three  days,  and  we  gorged  and  we  madden'd,     V.  of  Maeldune  67 
'  Had  I  s  with  him,  I  had  now —  The  Wreck  128 

horsemen,  drew  to  the  valley — and  s  ;  Heavy  Brigade  3 

A  mountain  s  me  here,  a  minster  there,  The  Ring  245 

all-too-full  in  bud  For  puritanic  s  :  Talking  Oak  60 

Stead     But  in  their  s  thy  name  and  glory  cling  Pass,  of  Arthur  53 

Steadfast     (See  also  Stedfast)     A  pillar  s  in  the  storm,         In  Mem.  cxiii  12 
Steady     And  the  s  sunset  glow.  That  stays  upon  thee  ?  Eleanore  55 

s  glare  Shrank  one  sick  willow  sere  and  small.         Mariana  in  the  S.  52 
Steak     Among  the  chops  and  s's  !  Will  Water.  148 

Steal     (See  also  Steal)     Like  sof ten'd  airs  that  blowing  s,      Two  Voices  406 
old  mysterious  glimmer  s's  From  thy  pure  brows,  Tithonus  34 

Her  gradual  fingers  s  And  touch  W^ill  Water.  26 

I  s  by  lawns  and  grassy  plots.  The  Brook  170 

And  s  you  from  each  other  !  Aylmer's  Field  707 

As  slowly  s's  a  silver  flame  In  Mem.  Ixvii  6 

And  every  span  of  shade  that  s's,  „       cxvii  10 

ever  ready  to  slander  and  s  ;  Maud  I  iv  19 

It  lightly  winds  and  s's  In  a  cold  white  robe  „     II  iv  18 

I  s,  a  wasted  frame,  „  69 

wolf  would  s  The  children  and  devour.  Com.  of  Arthur  26 

I  cannot  s  or  plunder,  no  nor  beg :  Geraint  and  E.  487 


steal 


681 


Stephen 


iteal  {continued)    Catlike  thro'  his  own  castle  s's  my 

Mark,  Last  Tournament  51Q 

Mark's  way  to  s  behind  one  in  the  dark —  „            618 

Awake  !  the  creeping  glimmer  s's,  The  Flight  4 
Jteal    Tis'n  them  as  ^  mimny  as  breaks  into  'ouses 

an'  s's,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  45 

$tealest    s  fire,  From  the  fountains  of  the  past,  Ode  to  Memory  1 

Stealing    to  reprove  her  For  s  out  of  view  Mavd  I  xx  9 

But  V^ivien,  into  Camelot  s,  Merlin  and  V.  63 

Jtealth    And  sent  it  them  by  s,  Dora  53 

Stealthily    s,  In  the  mid- warmth  of  welcome  Geraint  and  E.  279 

.  Stealthy    A  s  foot  upon  the  stair  !  The  Flight  70 

Steam    (See  also  Ste&m)    s  Floats  up  from  those  dim  fields        Tithonus  68 

Old  boxes,  larded  with  the  s  Will  Water.  223 

A  dozen  angry  models  jetted  5  :  Princess,  Pro.  73 

The  dust  and  din  and  s  of  town :  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  8 

all  the  hall  was  dim  with  s  of  flesh  :  Geraint  and  E.  603 

making  all  the  night  a  s  of  fire.  Cfuinevere  599 

rose  as  it  were  breath  and  s  of  gold,  Lover's  Tale  i  402 

sucking  The  foul  s  of  the  grave  to  thicken  by  it,  „            649 

miss'd  The  wonted  s  of  sacrifice,  Dem^ter  and  P.  119 

dust  send  up  a  s  of  human  blood,  St.  Telemachus  53 

Steam    ater  mea  mayhap  wi'  'is  kittle  o'  s  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  61 

Steam'd    s  From  out  a  golden  cup.  Palace  of  Art  39 

Steamer     clock-work  s  paddling  plied  Princess,  Pro.  71 

Steaming    On  stony  drought  and  5  salt ;  Mariana  in  the  S.  40 

they  find  a  music  centred  in  a  doleful  song  S  up,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  118 

By  sands  and  s  flats,  and  floods  Of  mighty  mouth.  The  Voyage  45 

That  makes  a  s  slaughter-house  of  Rome.  LMcretius  84 

But  Summer  on  the  s  floods.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  69 

The  5  marshes  of  the  scarlet  cranes,  Prog,  of  Spring  75 

Steamship    In  the  s,  in  the  railway,  Locksley  Hall  166 

Stedfast    (See  also  Steadfast)    while  Saturn  whirls, 

his  s  shade  Palace  of  Art  15 
splendours  of  the  morning  star  Shook  in  the  s  blue.  D.  of  F.  Women  56 
Steed    We  heard  the  s's  to  battle  going,  Oriana  15 
mounted  our  good  s's.  And  boldly  ventured  Princess  i  204 
On  his  haunches  rose  the  s,  „       v  493 
The  towering  car,  the  sable  s's  :  Ode  on  Well.  55 
eating  hoary  grain  and  pulse  the  s's,  Spec,  of  Iliad  21 
couch'd  their  spears  and  prick'd  their  s's,  Lancelot  and  E.  479 
The  weary  s  of  Pelleas  floundering  flung  Pelleas  and  E.  574 
The  prophet  and  the  chariot  and  the  s's,  Lover's  Tale  i  307 
Steel  (adj.)     Whence  drew  you  this  s  temper  ?  Princess  vi  232 
Steel  (s)     As  pure  and  true  as  blades  of  s.  Kate  16 
The  hard  brands  shiver  on  the  s.  Sir  Galahad  6 
But  red-faced  war  has  rods  of  s  and  fire  ;  Princess  v  118 
A  flying  splendour  out  of  brass  and  s,  „        vi  365 
<S  and  gold,  and  com  and  wine,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  17 
but  this  was  all  of  that  true  s,  Gareth  and  L.  66 
and  tipt  With  trenchant  s,  „          693 
Steel  (verb)     S  m.e  with  patience  !  Doubt  and  Prayer  9 
Steel-blue    s-h  eyes.  The  golden  beard  Last  Tournament  667 
Steely    and  the  sight  run  over  Upon  his  s  gyves  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  157 
Steep  (adj.)     high  above,  I  heard  them  blast  The  s  slate- 
quarry,  Golden  Year  76 
But  she  with  her  strong  feet  up  the  s  hill  Sea  Dreams  120 
Between  the  s  cliff  and  the  coming  wave  ;  Guinevere  280 
S  is  the  moimtain,  but  you,  you  will  help  me  to 

overcome  it,  Parnassus  5 

Siteep  (s)     adown  the  s  like  a  wave  I  would  leap  The  Mermaid  39 

below  the  milky  s  Some  ship  of  battle  To  F.  D.  Maurice  25 

Steep  (verb)     s  our  brows  in  slumber's  holy  balm ;     Lotos- Eaters,   C.  S.  21 

Steeped    (See  also  Sun-steep'd)    Thou  art  not  s  in  golden 

languors,  Madeline  1 

'  Thou  art  so  5  in  misery.  Two  Voices  47 

Steeple     Utter  your  jubilee,  s  and  spire  !  W.  to  Alexandra  17 

summit  and  the  pinnacles  Of  a  gray  s —  Lover's  Tale  ii  82 

Fled  onward  to  the  5  in  the  woods  :  „         Hi  26 

fled  Wind-footed  to  the  s  in  the  woods,  ,,              56 

Steepness    The  joy  of  life  in  s  overcome,  ,,          i  386 

Steep-up    Or  s-u  spout  whereon  the  gilded  ball  Danced 

like  a  wisp  :  Princess,  Pro.  63 

Steepy    I  ran  down  The  s  sea-bank.  Lover's  Tale  ii  74 

Steer  (s)     The  s  forgot  to  graze,  Gardener's  D.  85 


(s)  (continued)     The  s  fell  down  at  the  plow  V.  of  Maeldune  30 

Steer  (verb)     I  leap  on  board  :  no  helmsman  s's  :  Sir  Galahad  39 

alone  Go  with  me,  he  can  s  and  row,  Lancelot  and  E.  1128 

Steer'd    We  s  her  toward  a  crimson  cloud  In  Mem.  ciii  55 

Steering    s,  now,  from  a  purple  cove.  The  Daisy  20 


Steevie  (name  of  man  and  cat)    Tommy  the  second,  an'  iS 
an'  Rob. 

Fur  I  seed  that  S  wur  coomin', 

what  art  'a  mewin  at,  S  ? 

Ye  niver  'eard  S  swear  'cep'  it  wur  at  a  dog 

Can't  ye  taake  pattern  hjS? 

S  be  right  good  manners  bang  thruf 

let  S  coom  oop  o'  my  knee. 

S,  my  lad,  thou  'ed  very  nigh  been  the  S  for  me  ! 

fur,  S,  tha  kep'  it  sa  neat 

But  fur  thy  bairns,  poor  S, 

1  mun  part  them  Tommies— <S  git  down. 

Till  Robby  an'  iS  'es  'ed  their  lap — ■ 
Stem    (See  also  Ivy-stems,  Poppy-stem)    upbearing  parasite 
Clothing  the  s, 

Branches  they  bore  of  that  enchanted  s. 

Dark  as  a  funeral  scarf  from  s  to  stern. 

From  spray,  and  branch,  and  s. 

Between  dark  s's  the  forest  glows, 

The  two  remaining  found  a  fallen  s  ; 

That  coil'd  around  the  stately  s's, 

the  s  Less  grain  than  touchwood, 

Dark  as  a  funeral  scarf  from  s  to  stem, 

were  our  mothers'  branches  of  one  s  ? 

Wavers  on  her  thin  s  the  snowdrop 
Stemm'd     had  he  s  my  day  with  night, 
Stemm'd    See  also  Clear-stiemm'd 
Stench    S  of  old  offal  decaying. 
Step  (s)     And  with  the  certain  s  of  man. 

To  follow  flying  s's  of  Truth 

with  slow  s's.  With  slow,  faint  s's, 

No  more  by  thee  my  s's  shall  be. 

No  where  by  thee  my  s's  shall  be. 

But  not  by  thee  ray  s's  shall  be, 

A  s  Of  lightest  echo, 

down  the  s's,  and  thro'  the  court, 

scales  with  man  The  shining  s's  of  Nature, 

With  weary  s's  I  loiter  on, 

Ionian  music  measuring  out  The  s's  of  Time- 
By  a  shuffled  s,  by  a  dead  weight  trail'd, 

There  were  but  a  5  to  be  made. 

I  will  cry  to  the  s's  above  my  head 

With  slow  s's  from  out  An  old  storm-beaten, 

some  ten  s's — In  the  half-light — 

the  great  Queen  Came  with  slow  s's. 

First  as  in  fear,  s  after  s,  she  stole 

made  a  sudden  s  to  the  gate,  and  there — 

listen  for  her  coming  and  regret  Her  parting  s, 

And  s's  that  met  the  breaker  ! 

I  climb'd  a  thousand  s's  With  pain  : 

he  past.  And  heard  but  his  own  s's, 

and  there,  with  slow  sad  s's  Ascending, 

listening  till  those  armed  s's  were  gone, 

I  hear  the  s's  of  Modred  in  the  west, 

spirit  round  about  the  bay,  Trod  swifter  s's  ; 

one  s  beyond  Our  village  miseries, 

jS"   by  s    we    gain'd    a    freedom    known    to 
Europe, 

S  by  s  we  rose  to  greatness, — 

all  my  s's  are  on  the  dead. 

At  times  her  s's  are  swift  and  rash  ; 

Phra-bat  the  s  ;  your  Pontic  coast ; 
Step  (verb)    S  from  the  corpse,  and  let  him  in 

S's  from  her  airy  hill,  and  greens  The  swamp, 

S  deeper  yet  in  herb  and  fem, 

S's  with  a  tender  foot,  light  as  on  air, 

'  I  shudder,  some  one  s's  across  my  grave  ; ' 

This  custom  s's  yet  further  when  the  guest 

'  Lightly  s  over  the  sands  ! 
Stephen  (martyr)     Like  S,  an  unquenched  fire. 


Spinster's  S's.  10 
40 
41 
60 
65 
66 
67 
68 
77 
82 
92 
121 


Isabel  35 

Lotos-Eaters  28 

M.  d' Arthur  194 

Talking  Oak  190 

Sir  Galahad  27 

Enoch  Arden  567 

577 

Princess  iv  332 

Pass,  of  AHhur  362 

Lover's  Tale  ii  25 

Prog,  of  Spring  3 

Lover's  Tale  i  502 

Def.  of  Lucknow  82 

Miller's  D.  96 

Love  thou  thy  land  75 

St.  S.  Stylites  182 

A  Farewell  3 

7 

15 

Princess  iv  214 

555 

i.w262 

In  Mem.  xxxviii  1 

xcv  42 

Maud  /  i  14 

xiv  22 

„    II V  101 

Gareth  and  L.  1112 

1383 

Balin  and  Balan  245 

Lancelot  and  E.  342 

391 

867 

Hohi  Grail  816 

835 

Pelleas  and  E.  416 

Last  Tournament  143 

Guinevere  585 

Pass,  of  Arthur  59 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  18 

Ancient  Sage  206 

Locksley  II.,  Sixty  129 

130 

252 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  2 

To  Ulysses  42 

D.  of  the  0.  Fear  id 

On  a  Mourner  8 

Talking  Oak  245 

Princess  vi  88 

Guinevere  57 

Lover's  Tale  iv  244 

Despair  47 

Two  Voices  219 


Stephen 


682 


stm 


Stephen  (the  speaker's  lover)    we  fondled  it,  .S  and  I,  But  it 

died,  The  Wreck  83 

'  O  <S,  I  love  you,  I  love  you,  and  yet ' —  ..         101 

'  O  (S,'  I  moan'd, '  I  am  coming  to  thee  132 

Stepmother    you  hear  Far-off,  is  Muriel — your  s's  voice.  The  Ring  139 

Your  Mother  and  s-m —  „         146 

Steppe     golden  news  along  the  s's  is  blowii,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  11 

Steppeth    S  from  Heaven  to  Heaven,  from  light  to 

light.  Lover's  Tale  i  512 

Stepping     (See  also  A-steppin')     He,  s  down  By  zig-zag 

paths,                                                           "  M.  d' Arthur  49 

Come  s  lightly  down  the  plank.  In  Mem.  xiv  7 

she  rose,  and  s  lightly,  heap'd  The  pieces  Geraint  and  E.  373 

He,  s  down  By  zigzag  paths.  Pass,  of  Arthur  217 

Seem'd  s  out  of  darkness  with  a  smile.  Lover's  Tale  iv  220 

Stepping-stones     Below  the  range  of  s-s,  Miller's  D.  54 

That  men  may  rise  on  s-s  In  Mem.  i  3 

Stept     When  forth  there  s  a  foeman  tall,  Oriana  33 

Then  s  she  down  thro'  town  and  field  Of  old  sat  Freedom  9 

from  the  ruin'd  shrine  he  s  M.  d' Arthur  45 

And  out  I  s,  and  up  I  crept :  Edwin  Morris  111 

S  forward  on  a  firmer  leg,  Will  Water.  123 

Down  s  Lord  Ronald  from  his  tower  :  Lady  Clare  65 

In  robe  and  crown  the  king  s  down.  Beggar  Maid  5 

S  the  long-hair'd  long-bearded  solitary,  Enoch  Arden  637 

S  thro'  the  stately  minuet  of  those  days  :  Aylmer's  Field  207 

Then  s  a  buxom  hostess  forth,  Princess  i  228 

Lightly  to  the  warrior  s,  „        vi  10 

a  healthful  people  s  As  in  the  presence  Gareth  and  L.  315 

And  inward  to  the  wall ;  he  s  behind  ;  Bcilin  and  Balan  406 

found  a  Uttle  boat,  and  s  into  it ;  Merlin  and  V.  198 

close  behind  them  s  the  lily  maid  Elaine,  Lancelot  and  E.  176 

into  that  rude  hall  S  with  all  grace,  „              263 

from  the  ruin'd  shrine  he  s,  Pass,  of  Arthur  213 

the  man  who  stood  with  me  S  gaily  forward,  Lover's  Tale  Hi  51 

From  wall  to  dyke  he  s,  Achilles  over  the  T.  15 

princeher  looking  man  never  s  thro'  a  Prince's  hall.  The  Wreck  16 

she  s  an  the  chapel-green,  Tomorrow  27 

Christ-like  creature  that  ever  s  on  the  ground.  Charity  32 

Sterling    most,  of  s  worth,  is  what  Our  own  experience 

preaches.  Will  Water.  175 

Stem  (adj.)     Or  gay,  or  grave,  or  sweet,  or  s,  Palace  of  Art  91 

The  s  black-bearded  kings  with  wolfish  eyes,  D.  of  F.  Women  111 

S  he  was  and  rash  ;  The  Captain  10 

Grave,  florid,  s,  as  far  as  eye  could  see.  Sea  Dreams  219 

s  and  sad  (so  rare  the  smiles  Of  sunlight)  The  Daisy  53 

The  s  were  mild  when  thou  wert  by.  In  Mem.  ex  9 

S  too  at  times,  and  then  I  loved  him  not,  Com.  of  Arthur  354 

To  such  a  5  and  iron-clashing  close.  Merlin  and  V.  419 

Stem  (s)     Dark  as  a  funeral  scarf  from  stem  to  s,  M.  d' Arthur  19^^ 

from  stem  to  s  Bright  with  a  shining  people  Com.  of  Arthur  375 

Dark  as  a  funeral  scarf  from  stem  to  s.  Pass,  of  Arthur  362 

Steward     The  wrinkled  s  at  his  task,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  27 

The  butler  drank,  the  s  scrawl'd,  „             Revival  10 

'Tis  but  a  s  of  the  can,  Will  Water.  149 

Sthrame  (stream)     comin'  down  be  the  s,  Tomorrow  7 

s's  runnin'  down  at  the  back  o'  the  glin  „          24 

Stick  (s)     on  whom  all  spears  Are  rotten  s's  !  Gareth  and  L.  1306 

an'  swear'd  as  I'd  break  ivry  s  North.  Cobbler  35 

Molly  kem  limpin'  up  wid  her  s.  Tomorrow  77 

stannin'  theere  o'  the  brokken  s ;  Owd  Rod  25 

Stick  (verb)     And  on  thy  ribs  the  limpet  s's  Sailor  Boy  11 

But  proputty,  proputty  s's,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  16 

a  villain  fitter  to  s  swine  Than  ride  abroad  Gareth  and  L.  865 
Thim's  my  noations,  Sammy,  wheerby  I  means 

to  a  ;  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  57 

what  s  ye  round  The  pasty  ?  Gareth  and  L.  1072 

5  oop  thy  back,  an'  set  oop  thy  taail.  Spinster's  S's.  31 

if  t'one  s  alongside  t'uther  Church-warden,  etc.  10 

Sa  I  s's  like  the  ivin  as  long  as  I  Uves  „              15 

Still    While  my  s  spine  can  hold  my  weary  head,  St.  S.  Stylites  43 

wet  With  drenching  dews,  or  s  with  cracking  frost.  „          115 

'  but  still  My  joints  are  somewhat  s  or  so.  Day-Dm.,  Revival  26 

That  stood  from  out  a  s  brocade  in  which,  Aylmer's  Field  204 

soe  how  you  stand  S  as  Lot's  wife.  Princess  vi  241 


StifE  (continued)     and  stood  iS"  as  a  viper  frozen  ;  Merlin  and  V.  845 

That  whistled  5  and  dry  about  the  marge.  Pass,  of  Arthur  232 

That  whistled  s  and  dry  about  the  marge.  M.  d' Arthur  64 

Stiffen     And,  lest  I  s  into  stone.  In  Mem.cviii2 

Stiff en'd     His  fingers  were  so  s  by  the  frost  The  Ring  239 

Stiffening    Sir  Aylmer  Ayhner  slowly  s  spoke  :  Aylmer's  Field  273 

Stiffer     My  nerves  have  dealt  with  s.  Will  Water.  78 

Stiff-set     Blow,  flute,  and  stir  the  s-s  sprigs,  Amphion  63 

Stiff-stricken    She  sat  S-s,  listening  ;  Guinevere  412 

Stifled     She  whisper'd,  with  a  5  moan  Mariana  in  the  S.  57 

Making  Him  broken  gleams,  and  a  s  splendour  and 

gloom.  High.  Pantheism  10 
breathless  burthen  of  low-folded  heavens  S  and 

chill'd  at  once  ;  Aylmer's  Field  613 

my  strangled  vanity  Utter'd  a  s  cry —  Sisters  ( E.  and  E.)  200 

Stile     So  Lawrence  Aylmer,  seated  on  a  s  The  Brook  197 

S's  where  we  stay'd  to  be  kind.  Window,  Marr.  Morn.  7 

By  meadow  and  s  and  wood,  .,               14 

Over  the  meadows  and  s's,  ..              22 

Or  simple  s  from  mead  to  mead.  In  Mem.  c  7 

That  ever  bided  tryst  at  village  s.  Merlin  and  V.  378 

Still     Pure  vestal  thoughts  in  the  translucent  fane  Of  her  s 

spirit ;  Isabel  ■> 

Wash'd  with  s  rains  and  daisy  blossomed  ;  Circumstatice  7 

senses  with  a  s  delight  Of  dainty  sorrow  Margaret  17 

Falling  into  a  s  delight,  Elednore  106 

Come  only,  when  the  days  are  s.  My  life  is  full  23 

A  S  small  voice  spake  unto  me,  Two  Voices  1 

Then  to  the  s  small  voice  I  said ;  ..            4 

In  her  s  place  the  morning  wept :  „        273 

The  s  voice  laugh'd.     '  I  talk,'  said  he,  „        385 

The  pool  beneath  it  never  s,  Miller's  D.  100 
s  affection  of  the  heart  Became  an  outward  breathing 

type,  „          225 

fit  for  eveij  mood  And  change  of  my  s  soul.  Palace  of  Art&) 

'  I  marvel  if  my  s  delight  In  this  great  house  ..           190 

A  s  salt  pool,  lock'd  in  with  bars  of  sand,  ,,          249 

All  the  valley,  mother,  'ill  be  fresh  and  green  and  s.  May  Q,ueen  37 
When  you  are  warm-asleep,  mother,  and  all 

the  world  is  s.  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  24 


Or  night-dews  on  s  waters  between  walls 

Scaffolds,  s  sheets  of  water,  divers  woes, 

not  so  deadly  s  As  that  wide  forest. 

Thy  sole  delight  is,  sitting  s, 

One  after  one,  thro'  that  s  garden  pass'd  ; 

By  this  s  hearth,  among  these  barren  crags. 

With  one  smile  of  «  defiance  Sold  him 

detaching,  fold  by  fold.  From  those  s  heights. 

And  the  sound  of  a  voice  that  is  s  ! 

face  All-kindled  by  a  s  and  sacred  fire, 

Found  a  s  place,  and  pluck'd  her  likeness  out ; 

doubtful  smile  dwelt  like  a  clouded  moon  In  a  s  water 

strong  on  his  legs,  but  s  of  his  tongue  ! 

I  look'd  at  the  s  little  body — 

Calm  and  s  light  on  yon  great  plain 

The  moon  is  hid  ;  the  night  is  s  ; 


So  that  s  garden  of  the  souls  In  many  a  figured  leaf 

The  fruitful  hours  of  s  increase  ; 

When  all  his  active  powers  are  s. 

Looks  thy  fair  face  and  makes  it  s. 

And  fluctuate  all  the  s  perfume. 

The  moon  is  hid,  the  night  is  s  ; 

One  s  strong  man  in  a  blatant  land, 

Why  am  I  sitting  here  so  stunn'd  and  s. 

Always  I  long  to  creep  Into  some  s  cavern  deep, 

the  two  Left  the  s  King,  and  passing  forth 

A  STOEM  was  coming,  but  the  winds  were  s. 

Past  up  the  s  rich  city  to  his  kin. 

Speaking  a  s  good-morrow  with  her  eyes. 

As  hard  and  s  as  is  the  face  that  men 

then  came  a  night  S  as  the  day  was  loud ; 

Who  yells  Here  in  the  s  sweet  summer  night, 

Clung  to  the  dead  earth,  and  the  land  was  s. 

took  and  bare  him  off.  And  all  was  s  : 

There  came  a  day  as  s  as  heaven, 


Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  3 

D.  of  F.  Women  34 

68 

The  Blackbird  10 

Gardener's  D.  201 

Ulysses  2 

The  Captain  59 

Vision  of  Sin  52 

Break,  break,  etc.  12 

Enoch  Arden  71 

Princess  i  92 

„     vi  271 

Grandmother  13 

66 

In  Mem.  xi  9 

xxviii  2 

xliii  10 

xlvi  10 

Ixiv  18 

Ixx  16 

xcv  56 

„  civ  2 

Maud  /  ar  63 

//  i  2 

,,  iv  96 

Com.  of  Arthur  369 

Merlin  and  V.  1 

Lancelot  and  E.  802 

1033 

1251 

Holy  Grail  683 

Pelleas  and  E.  473 

Guinevere  8 

110 

.,       292. 


stm 

aU  {continued)     A  man  in  some  s  garden  should  infuse 
Rich  atar 
at  the  last  they  found  I  had  grown  so  stupid  and  s 


683 


that  last  deep  where  we  and  thou  are  s 
ill'd    Who  s  the  roUing  wave  of  Galilee  ! 
bees  are  s,  and  the  flies  are  kiU'd, 
Hath  s  the  life  that  beat  from  thee, 
smote,  and  s  Thro'  aU  its  folds 
Hath  A'  the  blast  and  strown  the  wave, 
You  s  it  for  the  moment  with  a  song 
tlQec    <S'  than  chisell'd  marble, 

haunt  of  brawling  seamen  once,  but  now  S, 
Nor  count  me  all  to  blame  if  I  Conjecture  of  a  s 

guest, 
She  comes  from  another  s  world  of  the  dead,  S, 
would  darken  down  To  rise  hereafter  in  a  s  flame 
tillest    Or  in  s  evenings  With  what  voice 
■till-eyed    gazing  like  The  Indian  on  a  s-e  snake, 
itill-fulfilling    The  s-f  promise  of  a  light 
Itill-lighted    S-l  in  a  secret  shrine, 
itillness    That  into  s  past  again. 

Sang  to  the  s,  till  the  mountain-shade 

'  No  voice  breaks  thro'  the  s  of  this  world  : 

This  murmur  broke  the  s  of  that  air 

roimded  by  the  s  of  the  beach 

moving  toward  the  s  of  his  rest. 

Her  constant  beauty  doth  inform  S  with  love, 


Lover's  Tale  i  269 

Rizpah  49 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  25 

Aylmer's  Field  709 

Window,  Winter  10 

In  Mem.  vi  12 

Tiresias  14 

Freedom  34 

Bomney's  R.  84 

B.  of  F.  Women  86 

Enoch  Arden  698 


In  Mem.,  Con.  86 

Maud  II  V  70 

Lancelot  and  E.  1319 

Adeline  30 

Lover's  Tale  ii  189 

Prog,  of  Spring  90 

Mariana  in  the  S.  18 

Miller's  D.  227 

CEnone  21 

Palace  of  Art  259 

Gardener's  D.  147 

Audley  Court  10 

Locksley  Hall  144 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  16 


Assumed  from  thence  a  half -consent  involved  In  5,  Prince'ss  vii  83 

Is  perfect  s  when  they  brawl.  Lit.  Squabbles  20 

A  part  of  s,  yearns  to  speak  :  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  78 

The  s  of  tlie  central  sea.  „         cxxiii  4 

In  scornful  s  gazing  as  they  past ;  Com.  of  Arthur  478 

Balin  the  s  of  a  minute  broke  Saying  Bcdin  and  Balan  51 

.-'  of  the  dead  world's  winter  dawn  Pass,  of  Arthur  442 

Why  in  the  utter  s  of  the  soul  Lover's  Tale  i  276 

tlie  bells  Lapsed  into  frightful  s  ;  „  m  30 

From  either  by  the  s  of  the  grave —  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  282 

StiU-recurring     chased  away  the  s-r  gnat,  Caress'd  or  chidden  7 

Still-shatter 'd    coming  down  on  the  s-s  walls  MiUions 

:  of  musket-bullets,  Bef.  of  Lucknow  92 

Still-working     From  this  my  vantage  ground  To  those 

s-w  energies  Mechanophilus  19 

Stilly    many  a  shadow-chequer'd  lawn  Full  of  the  city's 

*'  sound,  Arabian  Nights  103 

Sting  (s)     Toil'd  onward,  prick'd  with  goads  and  s's  ;         Palace  of  Art  150 

a  s  of  shrewdest  pain  Ran  shrivelling  thro'  me,  St.  S.  Stylites  198 

i         and  draw  The  s  from  pain  ; 

I         lose  thy  life  by  usage  of  thy  s  ; 

Sting  (verb)     Not  s  the  fiery  Frenchman  into  war, 

j        That  lay  their  eggs,  and  s  and  sing 

That  s  each  other  here  in  the  dust ; 

can  stir  them  till  they  s.' 

— we  scorn  them,  but  they  s.' 

And  s's  itself  to  everlasting  death, 

they  fear'd  that  we  still  could  s, 

s's  him  back  to  the  curse  of  the  light ; 

Stink    An'  the  s  o'  'is  pipe  i'  the  'ouse, 

Stinted    I  had  not  s  practice,  0  my  God. 

That  brought  the  s  commerce  of  those  days  ; 
When  have  I  s  stroke  in  foughten  fleld  ? 
Stir  (s)     Begin  to  feel  the  truth  and  s  of  day, 
the  splash  and  s  Of  fountains  spouted  up 
came  a  little  s  About  the  doors, 
I  scarce  could  brook  the  strain  and  s 
no  need  to  make  such  a  s.' 

(verb)     speaks  or  hems  or  s's  his  chair, 
So  fleetly  did  she  s, 
Blow,  flute,  and  s  the  stifi-set  sprigs, 
Let  Whig  and  Tory  s  their  blood  ; 
Yet  dared  not  s  to  do  it, 
secret,  seem'd  to  s  within  my  breast ; 
but  for  those  That  s  this  hubbub — 
there  she  lies.  But  will  not  speak,  nor  s.' 
S  in  me  as  to  strike  : 
That  s  the  spirit's  inner  deeps, 


Stir 


Princess  vii  64 

Ancient  Sage  270 

Third  of  Feb.  4 

In  Mem.  I  11 

Maud  II  i  47 

Merlin  and  V.  36 

Lancelot  and  E.  139 

Last  Tournatnent  452 

The  Revenge  72 

Vastness  18 

Spinster's  S's.  100 

St.  S.  Stylites  59 

Enoch  Arden  817 

Holy  Grail  860 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  19 

Princess  i  217 

„       iv  373 

In  Mem.  xv  12 

First  Quarrel  63 

Sonnet  to 5 

Talking  Oak  130 

Amfhion  63 

Will  Water.  53 

Aylmer's  Field  806 

Princess  Hi  4A 

„      iv  509 

vb2 

268 

In  Mem.  xlii  10 


Stir  (verb)  {continued)    To  s  a  Uttle  dust  of  praise. 
That  made  it  s  on  the  shore. 
Do  these  your  lords  s  up  the  heat  of  war, 
S,  as  they  stirr'd  of  old. 
Not  dead  ;  he  s's  ! — but  sleeping, 
can  s  them  till  they  sting.' 
and  s's  the  pulse  VV'itu  devil's  leaps, 
That  sees  and  s's  the  surface-shadow  there 
And  s  the  sleeping  earth,  and  wake  The  bloom 
at  night  S's  up  again  in  the  heart  of  the  sleeper, 
Across  my  garden  !  and  the  thicket  s's, 

Stirr'd    {See  also  Laughter-stirr'd)    It 
s  with  languid  pulses  of  the  oar, 
and  s  her  lips  For  some  sweet  answer. 
But  yet  my  sap  was  s  : 
The  fragrant  tresses  are  not  s 
The  mountain  s  its  bushy  crown, 
feign  death,  Spoke  not,  nor  s. 
And  at  thy  name  the  Tartar  tents  are  s  ; 
the  roots  of  my  hair  were  s  By  a  shuifled  step. 
All  night  has  the  casement  jessamine  s 
lets  His  heart  be  s  with  any  foolish  heat 
Stir,  as  they  s  of  old,  when  Arthur's  host 
s  this  vice  in  you  which  ruin'd  man 
And  by  the  gateway  s  a  crowd  ; 
The  fancy  s  him  so  He  rose  and  went, 
but  mine  that  s  Among  our  civil  wars 
the  deeps  of  the  world  are  s. 
And,  lightly  s,  Ring  little  bells  of  change 

Stirring    It  was  the  s  of  the  blood. 
Little  about  it  s  save  a  brook  ! 
Not  all :  the  songs,  the  s  air, 
S  a  sudden  transport  rose  and  fell. 

Stitches     In  coughs,  aches,  s,  ulcerous  throes 

Sto     one  Pou  S  whence  afterwards  May  move 

Stoan  (stone)     a  niver  rembles  the  s's.  ~ 


-fur  an  owd  scratted  s, 


fear'd  fur  to  tell  tha  'ow  much 

an'  sleeapin  still  as  a  s, 
Stoan-deaf  (stone-deaf)    Fur  the  dog's  s-d,  an'  e's  blind, 
Stoat     Lion  and  s  have  isled  together. 
Stock     like  an  oaken  .s  in  winter  woods, 
Stockin'     wheer  Sally's  owd  s  ^vur  'id. 
Stock-still     stood  S-s  for  sheer  amazement. 

moved  slow-measure  to  my  tune,  Not  stood  s. 
Stoic    like  a  s,  or  like  A  wiser  epicurean, 
Stole  (s)     With  folded  feet,  in  s's  of  white, 
Stole  (verb)     Then  s  I  up,  and  trancedly  Gazed 

Prevailing  in  weakness,  the  coronach  s 

shadow  of  the  flowers  S  all  the  golden  gloss, 

O'er  the  mute  city  s  with  folded  wings, 

S  from  her  sister  Sorrow. 

we  s  his  fruit,  His  hens,  his  eggs  ; 

a  silent  cousin  s  Upon  us  and  departed  : 

adown  the  stair  <S  on ; 

s  Up  by  the  wall,  behind  the  yew  ; 

I  s  from  court  With  Cyril  and  with  Florian, 

Away  we  s,  and  transient  in  a  trice 

S  a  maiden  from  her  place, 

while  Psyche  ever  s  A  little  nearer, 

thieves  from  o'er  the  wall  S  the  seed  by  night. 

As  the  gray  dawn  s  o'er  the  dewy  world, 

The  wily  Vivien  s  from  Arthur's  court. 

First  as  in  fear,  step  after  step,  she  s 

And  down  the  long  beam  s  the  Holy  Grail, 

underneath  Her  castle-walls,  she  s  upon  my  walk, 

And  calling  me  „  594 

words  s  with  most  prevailing  sweetness  Lover's  Tale  i  553 

I  s  them  all  from  the  lawyers —  Rizpah  52 

earth's  green  s  into  heaven's  own  hue.  Far — far — away  2 

slept  Ay,  till  dawn  s  into  the  cave,  Bandit's  Beath  31 

Stoled    {See  also  Black-stoled)    Were  s  from  head  to 

foot  in  flowing  black  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  85 

Stol'n     dawn's  creeping  beams,  S  to  my  brain,  Z>.  of  F.  Women  262 

Then  down  the  long  street  having  slowly  s,  Enoch  Arden  682 

Because  her  brood  is  s  away.  In  Mem.  xxi  28 


Storn 

In  Mem.  Ixxv  12 

Maud  II  ii  15 

Com.  of  Arthur  169 

Balin  and  Balan  89 

469 

Merlin  and  V.  36 

Guinevere  521 

Ancient  Sage  38 

93 

Vastness  18 

Prog,  of  Spring  53 

the  old  wife's  mettle  :  The  Goose  26 

Gardener's  B.  41 

158 

Talking  Oak  172 

Bay-Bm.,  Sleep.  B.  19 

Amphion  25 

Princess  v  109 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  12 

Maud  I  il3 

„    xxii  15 

Gareth  and  L.  1178 

Bcdin  and  Balan  89 

Merlin  and  V.  362 

Holy  Grail  424 

Lover's  Tale  iv  51 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  74 

The  Wreck  23 

Early  Spring  40 

Two  Voices  159 

Aylmer's  Field  32 

In  Mem.  cxvi  5 

Princess  iv  29 

St.  S.  Stylites  13 

Princess  Hi  263 

iV.  Farmer,  0.  S.  60 

Village  Wife  47 

Owd  Rod  30 

2 

Gareth  and  L.  893 

Golden  Year  62 

North.  Cobbler  31 

Will  Water.  136 

Last  Tournament  283 

Maud  I  iv20 

Sir  Galahad  43 

Arabian  Nights  133 

Bying  Swan  26 

Gardener's  B.  130 

186 

256 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  84 

Edwin  Morris  115 

Godiva  49 

Enoch  Arden  738 

Princess  i  102 

t)3a 

■at  9 
132 

The  "Flower  12 

Geraint  and  E.  385 

Merlin  and  V.  149 

Lancelot  and  E.  342 

Holy  Grail  117,  188 


Stol'n 


684 


Stood 


stol'n  {continued)     and  s  away  To  dreaniful  wastes  Maud  I  arviii  68 

(Who  hearing  her  own  name  had  s  away)  Marr.  of  Geraint  507 

Some  lost,  some  s,  some  as  relics  kept.  Merlin  and  V.  453 

Art  with  poisonous  honey  s  from  France,  To  the  Queen  ii  56 

And  if  the  ring  were  s  from  the  maid,  The  Ring  203 

had  s,  worn  the  ring — Then  torn  it  from  her  finger,  „        455 

Stomach    Less  having  s  for  it  than  desire  Geraint  and  E.  213 

Stomach'd    See  Faint-stomach'd 

Stomacher     He  cleft  me  thro'  the  s  ;  Princess  ii  407 

Stone  (See  also  Altar-stone,  Fomidation-stone,  Stepping- 
stones,  Stoan)  Life  in  dead  s's,  or  spirit  in  air  ;  A  Character  9 
cursed  and  scorn'd,  and  bruised  with  s's  :  Two  Voices  222 
The  lizard,  witti  his  shadow  on  the  s,  (Enone  27 
Ev'n  on  this  hand,  and  sitting  on  this  s  ?  „  233 
one  a  foreground  black  with  s's  and  slags,  Palace  of  Art  81 
song  Throb  thro'  the  ribbed  s ;  „  176 
A  rolling  s  of  here  and  everywhere,  AuMey  Court  78 
Till  all  my  limbs  drop  piecemeal  from  the  s,  St.  8.  Stylites  44 
I  lay  Pent  in  a  roofless  close  of  ragged  s's  ;  „  74 
On  the  mossy  s,  as  I  lay,  Edward  G'fay  26 
'  Bitterly  wept  I  over  the  s  :  „  33 
Tread  a  measure  on  the  s's.  Vision  of  Sin  180 
■On  thy  cold  gray  s's,  O  Sea  !  Break,  break,  etc.  2 
His  eyes  upon  the  s's,  he  reach'd  the  home  Enoch  Arden  684 
or  one  s  Left  on  another,  Aylmer's  Field  788 
men  of  flesh  and  blood,  and  men  of  s.  Sea  Dreams  237 
on  the  pavement  lay  Carved  s's  of  the  Abbey-ruin  Princess,  Pro.  14 
One  rear'd  a  font  of  s  And  drew,  59 
and  watch  The  sandy  footprint  harden  into  s.'  .,,  Hi  271 
Old  Yew,  which  graspest  at  the  s's  in  Mem.  ii  1 
Dark  yew,  that  graspest  at  the  s's  ..  xxxix  4 
From  scarped  cliff  and  quarried  s  ..  Zm  2 
And,  lest  I  stiffen  into  s,  „  cviii  2 
On  a  heart  half-turn'd  to  s.  Maud  I  vi  78 

0  heart  of  s,  are  you  flesh,  ..  79 
Wept  over  her,  carved  in  s ;  ..  viii  4 
(Which  Maud,  like  a  precious  s  Set  in  the  heart  ..  xiv  10 
Low  on  the  sand  and  loud  on  the  s  .,  xxii  25 
Courage,  poor  heart  of  s  !  ..  //  Hi  1 
Courage,  poor  stupid  heart  of  s. —  „  5 
Of  ancient  kings  who  did  their  days  in  s  ;  Gareth  and  L.  305 
by  two  yards  in  casting  bar  or  s  Was  counted  best ;  ..  518 
A  s  about  his  neck  to  drown  him  in  it.  „  812 
Gareth  loosed  the  s  From  off  his  neck,  ,,  814 
and  with  a  s  about  his  neck ;  ,.  823 
but  at  night  let  go  the  s.  And  rise,  ..  825 
Like  sparkles  in  the  s  Avanturine.  ..  930 
Hurl'd  as  a  s  from  out  of  a  catapult  „  965 
slopes  a  wild  brook  o'er  a  little  s,  Marr.  of  Geraint  11 
star  Of  sprouted  thistle  on  the  broken  s's.  ..  314 
suck'd  the  joining  of  the  s's,  and  look'd  A  knot,  ..  324 
Right  o'er  a  mount  of  newly-fallen  s's  „  361 
blade  flew  Splintering  in  six,  and  clinkt  upon 

the  s's.  Balin  and  Balan  396 

when  she  heard  his  horse  upon  the  s's,  Lancelot  and  E.  980 

With  knees  of  adoration  wore  the  s.  Holy  Grail  71 

and  the  s's  They  pitch  up  straight  to  heaven  :  '..          664 

bound  and  plunged  him  into  a  cell  Of  great  piled  s's  ;  ..          676 

Heavy  as  it  was,  a  great  s  slipt  and  fell,  „          680 

shatter'd  talbots,  which  had  left  the  s's  Raw,  „          719 

s  is  flung  into  some  sleeping  tarn,  Pelleas  and  E.  93 

spiring  s  that  scaled  about  her  tower,  Last  Tournament  511 

A  little  bitter  pool  about  a  s  Guinevere  51 

1  CAME  one  day  and  sat  among  the  s's  Lover's  Tale  Hi  1 
you  are  jast  as  hard  as  a  s.  Rizpah  80 
Scribbled  or  carved  upon  the  pitiless  s  ;  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  5 
and  we  took  to  throwmg  the  s,  V.  of  Maeldune  94 
One  was  of  smooth-cut  s,  106 
There  were  some  for  the  clean-cut  s,  „  112 
Beyond  all  work  of  those  who  carve  the  s,  Tiresias  53 
No  s  is  fitted  in  yon  marble  girth  „  135 
and  mute  below  the  chancel  s's,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  43 
Tho'  carved  in  harder  s —  Epilogue  59 
I  am  mortal  s  and  lime.  Helen's  Tower  6 
and  see  no  more  The  S,  the  Wheel,  Demeter  and  P.  150 


Stone  (continued)  a  s.  That  glances  from  the  bottom  of  the  pool,    The  Ring  370 

a  shower  of  s's  that  stoned  him  dead,  ~     ~- 

I  dream'd  That  s  by  s  I  rear'd  a  sacred  fane, 

loosen,  s  from  s.  All  my  fair  work  ; 

Who  fitted  s  to  s  again,  and  Tioith,  Peace, 
Stone  (disease)     Past  earthquake — ay,  and  gout  and  s. 
Stone-cast     About  a  s-c  from  the  wall 
Stoned    either  they  were  s,  or  crucified, 

a  shower  of  stones  that  s  him  dead. 
Stone-deaf    See  Stoan-deaf 
Stone-shot    He  show'd  a  tent  A  s-s  off : 
Stonest    O  thou  that  s,  hadst  thou  understood 
Stoning    no  s  save  with  flint  and  rock  ? 
Stony    On  s  drought  and  steaming  salt ; 

lion  on  your  old  s  gates  Is  not  more  cold  to  you 
than  I. 

while  all  the  fleet  Had  rest  by  s  hills  of  Crete. 

Better  the  narrow  brain,  the  s  heart, 

I  chatter  over  s  ways, 

Before  the  s  face  of  Time, 

had  wound  A  scarf  of  orange  round  the  s  helm, 

chattering  s  names  Of  shale  and  hornblende, 

the  fangs  Shall  move  the  s  bases  of  the  world. 

Gorgonised  me  from  head  to  foot  With  a  s  British 
stare. 

There  ran  a  treble  range  of  s  shields, — 

S  showers  Of  that  ear-stunning  hail  of  Ares 

Gods  Avenge  on  s  hearts  a  fruitless  prayer 
Stood     s  Betwixt  me  and  the  light  of  God  ! 

at  last  s  out  This  excellence  and  solid  form 

heaven's  mazed  signs  s  still  In  the 

And  s  aloof  from  other  minds 

She  s  upon  the  castle  wall, 

you  s  Between  the  rainbow  and  the  sun. 

Pallas  where  she  s  Somewhat  apart, 

Full  of  great  rooms  and  small  the  palace  s, 

in  dark  corners  of  her  palace  s  Uncertain  shajDes ; 

That  s  against  the  wall. 

Join'd  not,  but  s,  and  standing  saw 

Full-faced  above  the  valley  s  the  moon ; 

silent  pinnacles  of  aged  snow,  S  simset  flush'd : 

I  appeal'd  To  one  that  s  beside. 

so  s  I,  when  that  flow  Of  music  left  the  lips 

She  lock'd  her  lips :  she  left  me  where  I  s : 

Losing  her  carol  I  s  pensively. 

That  s  on  a  dark  strait  of  barren  land. 

both  his  eyes  were  dazzled,  as  he  s. 

Long  s  Sir  Bedivere  Revolving  many  memories, 

those  that  s  upon  the  hills  behind  Repeated — 

s.  Leaning  his  horns  into  the  neighbour  field. 

Holding  the  bush,  to  fix  it  back,  she  s, 

Half  light,  half  shade,  She  s, 

to  Mary's  house,  and  s  Upon  the  threshold. 

and  while  we  s  like  fools  Embracing, 

brothers  of  the  weather  s  Stock-stiU 

0  and  proudly  s  she  up  ! 
He  turn'd  and  kiss'd  her  where  she  s : 
Still  on  the  tower  s  the  vane, 
wild  hawk  s  with  the  down  on  his  beak, 
and  while  he  s  on  deck  Waving, 
there  he  s  once  more  before  her  face. 
Her  son,  who  s  beside  her  tall  and  strong, 
There  s  a  maiden  near.  Waiting  to  pass. 
S  from  his  walls  and  wing'd  his  entry-gates 
That  s  from  out  a  stiff  brocade  in  which, 
under  his  own  lintel  s  Storming  with  lifted  hands, 
to  the  lychgate,  where  his  chariot  s, 

1  s  like  one  that  had  received  a  blow : 
s  out  the  breasts.  The  breasts  of  Helen, 
in  the  presence  room  I  s  With  Cyril 
There  s  a  bust  of  Pallas  for  a  sign, 
while  They  s,  so  rapt,  we  gazing,  came  a  voice, 
saw  The  Lady  Blanche's  daughter  where  she  s, 
So  s  that  same  fair  creature  at  the  door. 
There  while  we  s  beside  the  f  oimt, 


St.  Telemachus  68 
Akbar's  Dream  177 
188 
193 
Lucretius  153 
Mariana  37 
St.  S.  Stylites  51 
St.  Telemachus  68 

Princess  v  54 

Aylmer's  Field  739 

746 

Mariana  in  the  S.  40 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  23 

On  a  Mourner  35 

Love  and  Duti/  15 

The  Brook  .39 

Lit.  Squabbles  3 

Princess,  Pro.  102 

Hi  3ol 

vl  .')8 

Maud  I  xiii  22 

Gareth  and  L.  t07 

Tiresias  95 

Death  of  (Enone  41 

Supp.  Confessions  109 

148 

Clear-headed  friend  28 

A  Character  23 

Oriana  28 

Margaret  12 

(Enone  137 

Palace  of  Art  57 

237 

244 

254 

Lotos-Eaters  7 

17 

D.ofF.  Women  100 

194 

241 

245 

M.  d' Arthur  10 

59 

269 

,.  Ep.  25 

Gardener's  J).  86 

127 

141 

Dora  110 

Edwin  Morris  118 

WUl  Water.  135 

Lady  Clare  77 

82 

The  Letters  1 

Poet's  Song  11 

Enoch  Arden  243 

457 

756 

The  Brook  204 

Aylmer's  Field  18 

204 

331 

824 

Sea  Dreatns  161 

Lucretius  60 

Princess  i  51 

222 

..     ii  318 

321 

329 

,,     Hi  23 


stood 


685 


Stoop' d-Stoopt 


lood  (continued)    She  s  Among  her  maidens,  lugher  by  the 
head, 
s,  Engirt  with  many  a  florid  maiden-cheek. 
Alone  I  s  With  Florian,  cursing  Cyril, 
There  s  her  maidens  glimmeringly  group'd 
Lady  Blanche  erect  »S  up  and  spake. 
You  s  in  your  light  and  darken'd  mine. 
And  then  s  up  and  spoke  impetuously, 
high  above  them  s  The  placid  marble  Muses, 
I  s  and  seem'd  to  hear.  As  in  a  poplar  grove 
storming  in  extremes,  S  for  her  cause, 
high  upon  the  palace  Ida  s  With  Psyche's  babe 
So  s  the  unhappy  mother  open-mouth'd, 
rising  slowly  from  me,  s  Erect  and  silent, 
But  Ida  s  nor  spoke,  drain'd  of  her  force 
had  you  s  by  us,  The  roar  that  breaks  the  Pharos 
in  the  centre  s  The  common  men  with  rolling  eyes ; 
And  there  we  saw  Sir  Walter  where  he  s, 
now  him,  of  those  That  s  the  nearest — 
Which  s  four-square  to  all  the  winds  that  blew ! 
Where  he  greatly  s  at  bay, 
for  Willy  s  like  a  rock, 
and  s  by  the  road  at  the  gate. 
Willy  s  up  like  a  man, 
I  s  among  the  silent  statues, 
In  the  centre  5  A  statue  veil'd, 
S  up  and  answer'd  '  I  have  felt.' 
He  s  on  the  path  a  little  aside ; 
And  s  by  her  garden-gate ; 
I  thought  as  I  5,  if  a  hand,  as  white 
And  long  by  the  garden  lake  I  s, 
For  front  to  front  in  an  hour  we  s. 
And  I  s  on  a  giant  deck  and  mix'd  my  breath 
Guinevere  S  by  the  castle  walls  to  watch  him  pass ; 
Who  s  in  silence  near  his  throne, 
'  And  near  him  s  the  Lady  of  the  Lake, 
<S  one  who  pointed  toward  the  voice, 
but  the  King  s  out  in  heaven,  Crown'd. 
his  knights  S  round  him,  and  rejoicing  in  bis  joy. 
The  Lady  of  the  Lake  s :  all  her  dress  Wept 
near  it  s  The  two  that  out  of  north 
Hear  me — this  mom  I  s  in  Arthur's  hall. 
Who  s  a  moment,  ere  his  horse  was  brought. 
The  Lady  Lyonors  at  a  window  s, 
And  s  behind,  and  waited  on  the  three. 
And  Enid  s  aside  to  wait  the  event. 
When  now  they  saw  their  bulwark  fallen,  5 ; 
Was  in  a  manner  pleased,  and  turning,  s. 
While  the  great  charger  s,  grieved  like  a  man 
on  his  right  S,  al!  of  massiest  bronze : 
the  one  Who  s  beside  thee  even  now, 
arose  And  s  with  folded  hands  and  downward  eyes 
Queen  who  s  All  glittering  like  May  sunshine 
and  s  Stiff  as  a  viper  frozen ; 
and  s,  A  virtuous  gentlewoman  deeply  wrong'd, 
Lancelot,  where  he  s  beside  the  King, 
she  drew  Nearer  and  s. 
For  silent,  tho'  he  greeted  her,  she  s 
His  honour  rooted  in  dishonour  s, 
but  deadly-pale  S  grasping  what  was  nearest, 
all  the  place  whereon  she  s  was  green ; 
There  two  s  arm'd,  and  kept  the  door ; 
In  our  great  hall  there  s  a  vacant  chair, 
And  staring  each  at  other  like  dumb  men  S, 
And  those  that  had  not,  s  before  the  King, 
and  there,  half-hidden  by  him,  s, 
there  was  none  S  near  it  but  a  lion  on  each  side 
Breast-high  in  that  bright  line  of  bracken  s : 
he  s  There  on  the  castle-bridge  once  more, 
here  he  s,  and  might  have  slain  Me  and  thyself.' 
But  Percivale  s  near  him  and  replied. 
Rolling  his  eyes,  a  moment  s,  then  spake : 
And  while  they  s  without  the  doors, 
there  with  gibes  and  flickering  mockeries  S, 
while  he  twangled  little  Dagonet  s  Quiet 


Stood  (continued)     moved  slow-measure  to  my  tune, 

Princess  Hi  178                   Not  s  stockstill.  Last  Tournament  283 

349  machicolated  tower  That  s  with  open  doors,  425 
iv  170  near  me  s,  In  fuming  sulphur  blue  and  green,  616 

190  strong  man-breasted  things  s  from  the  sea,  Guinevere  246 

291  s  before  the  Queen  As  tremulously  as  foam  363 

314  near  him  the  sad  nuns  with  each  a  light  S,  ..         591 

418  That  s  on  a  dark  strait  of  barren  land :  Pass,  of  Arthur  llS 

488  That  both  his  eyes  were  dazzled  as  he  s,  .,              227 

V  12  Long  s  Sir  Bedivere  Revolving  many  memories,  ..               437 

177  They  s  before  his  throne  in  silence,  ..               455 

vi  30  Were  drunk  into  the  inmost  blue,  we  s,  Lover's  Tale  i  309 

143  near'd  the  bay,  For  there  the  Temple  s.  ..            339 

151  and  s  A  solid  glory  on  her  bright  black  hair ;  ,.             366 

266  Half-melted  into  thin  blue  air,  s  still,  „            421 

338  For  bliss  s  round  me  like  the  light  of  Heaven, —  ,.            495 

359  I  seem'd  the  only  part  of  Time  s  still,  ..            573 

Con.  81  forms  which  ever  s  Within  the  magic  cirque  .:         ii  158 

93  the  man  who  s  with  me  Stept  gaily  forward,  ,.         Hi  50 

Ode  on  Well.  39  And  I  s  stole  beside  the  vacant  bier.  ,.              58 

106  Before  the  board,  there  paused  and  s,  ,,        iv  307 

Grandmother  10  Is  upon  the  stairs  of  Paradise.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  144 

„            38  Death  while  we  s  with  the  musket,  Def.  of  Lucknow  16 

„            45  s  on  each  of  the  loftiest  capes,  V.  of  Maeldune  100 

The  Daisy  63  he  s,  nor  join'd  The  Achseans —  Achilles  over  the  T.  15 

In  Mem.  ciii  11  S  out  before  a  darkness,  crying  '  Thebes,  Tiresias  115 

„       cxxiv  16  and  the  ship  s  still,  and  the  skies  were  blue.  The  Wreck  115 

Maud  I  xiii  7  ruin'd  by  him,  by  him,  I  s  there,  naked,  amazed  Despair  77 

xiv  6  An'  Dan  s  there  for  a  minute.  Tomorrow  22 

17  s  up  strait  as  the  Queen  of  the  world —  ..           79 

xxii  35  an'  s  By  the  claay'd-oop  pond.  Spinster's  S's.  23 

„       II  i  23  I  feel'd  thy  arm  es  I  s  wur  a-creeapin  ,,             26 

,.  Ill  vi  34  often  I  and  Amy  in  the  mouldering  aisle 

Com.  of  Arthur  48                   have  s,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  31 

277  There  again  I  s  to-day,  ..               33 

283  Here  we  s  and  claspt  each  other,  ,,             180 

438  They  rode,  or  they  s  at  bay —  Heavy  Brigade  51 

443  Ranged  like  a  storm  or  s  like  a  rock  „           56 

459  s  stark  by  the  dead  ;  And  behind  him,  Dead  Prophet  19 

Gareth  and  L.  216  wife  and  his  child  s  by  him  in  tears,  „           57 

„             678  An'  then  as  I  s  i'  the  doorwaay,  Owd  Rod  42 

855  Where  s  the  sheaf  of  Peace :  The  Ring  247 

934  who  were  those  that  s  between  The  tower  ..        252 

,.          1375  whose  hand  was  that  ?  they  s  So  close  together.  „    .    257 

Marr.  of  Geraint  392  Even  from  myself  ?  stand  ?  s  .  .  .  no  more.  Romney's  R.  66 

Geraint  and  E.  153  s  Before  the  great  Madonna-masterpieces  „           85 

168  kindled  the  pyre,  and  all  S  round  it,  Death  of  CEnone  66 

456  But  while  we  s  rejoicing,  I  and  thou,  Akbar's  Dream  182 

535  An'  ya  s  oop  naakt  i'  the  beck.  Church-warden,  etc.  29 

Balin  and  Balan  364       Stook  (stuck)     S  to  his  taail  they  did,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  30 

613       Stool     Perch'd  like  a  crow  upon  a  three-legg'd  s,  Audley  Court  45 

Merlin  and  V.  69  his  foot  was  on  a  s  Shaped  as  a  dragon  ;  Last  Tournament  671 

87  An'  sattle  their  ends  upo  s's  Owd  Rod  24 

844       Stoop    S's  at  all  game  that  wing  the  skies,  Rosalind  4 

910  To  s  the  cowslip  to  the  plains,  „         16 

Lancelot  and  E.  85  The  skies  s  down  in  their  desire ;  Fatima  32 

350  I  could  not  s  to  such  a  mind.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  20 
355  Enormous  elm-tree-boles  did  .s  and  lean  D.  of  F.  Women  57 
876  He  s's — to  kiss  her — on  his  knee.  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  30 
966  The  cloud  may  s  from  heaven  and  take  the  shape  Princess  vii  2 

1200  S  down  and  seem  to  kiss  me  ere  I  die.'  „           150 

1247  To  s  and  kiss  the  tender  little  thumb,  Marr.  of  Geraint  395 

Holy  Grail  167  watch  the  time,  and  eagle-like  S  at  thy  will  Balin  and  Balan  536 

194  I  said  to  her,  '  A  day  for  Gods  to  s,'  Lover's  Tale  i  304 

724  A  clamorous  cuckoo  s's  to  meet  her  hand  ;  Prog,  of  Spring '^ 

754       Stoop'd-Stoopt    He  stoop'd  and  clutch'd  him,  fair  and 

817                  good.  Will  Water.  133 

Pdleas  and  E.  56  And  o'er  her  second  father  stoopt  a  girl,  Enoch  Arden  747 

442  stoop'd  To  drench  his  dark  locks  in  the  gurgling  wave      Princess  iv  186 

491  Rise ! '  and  stoop'd  to  updrag  Melissa :  ,.            366 

523  when  a  boy,  you  stoop'd  to  me  From  all  high  places,  ..            429 

„           581  My  father  stoop'd,  re-father'd  o'er  my  wounds.  ,.        vi  129 

Last  Tournament  113  She  tum'd ;  she  paused ;  She  stoop'd ;  „       vii  155 

187  rode  to  Merlin's  feet,  Who  stoopt  and  caught  the 

252                  babe,  Com.  of  Arthur  385 


Stoop'd-Stoopt 


686 


Storm-strengthen'  d 


Stoop'd-Stoopt  (continued)     and  stoof'd  With  a  low 

whinny  toward  the  pair :  Geraint  and  E.  755 

sorrowing  Lancelot  should  have  stoop'd  so  low,  Lancelot  and  E.  732 

Stoopt,  took,  break  seal,  and  read  it ;  „          1271 

I  stoop'd,  I  gather'd  the  mid  herbs.  Lover's  Tale  i  341 

and  death  while  we  stoopt  to  the  spade,  Bef.  of  Lucknow  16 

dreamer  stoopt  and  kiss'd  her  marble  brow.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  38 

while  I  stoopt  To  take  and  kiss  the  ring.  The  Ring  131 

Stopt    The  swallow  s  as  he  hunted  the  fly.  Poet's  Song  9 

All  of  a  sudden  he  s  :  Grandmother  41 

S,  and  then  with  a  riding  whip  Maud  I  xiii  18 

when  he  s  we  long'd  to  hurl  together,  Merlin  and  V.  420 

Store  (s)     then  with  what  she  brought  Buy  goods  and 

*-'« —  Enoch  Arden  138 

Bought  Annie  goods  and  s's,  and  set  his  hand  ..           169 

With  shelf  and  comer  for  the  goods  and  s's.  „          171 

How  best  to  help  the  slender  s,  To  F.  D.  Maurice  37 

Love,  then,  had  hope  of  richer  s  :  In  Mem.  Ixvxi  5 

We  wish  them  s  of  happy  days.  „        Con.  84 

With  s  of  rich  apparel,  sumptuous  fare,  Marr.  of  Geraint  709 

of  whate'er  The  Future  had  in  s  :  Lover's  Tale  ii  133 

Store  (verb)     For  some  three  suns  to  s  and  hoard  myself,  Ulysses  29 

Stored     all  things  in  order  s,  Palace  of  Art  87 

S  in  some  treasure-house  of  mighty  kings,  M.  d' Arthur  101 

Dora  s  what  little  she  could  save,  Dora  52 

honeycomb  of  eloquence  S  from  all  flowers  ?  Edwin  Morris  27 

I  s  it  full  of  rich  memorial :  Princess  v  391 

In  this  wide  hall  with  earth's  invention  s,  Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  2 

S  in  some  treasure-house  of  mighty  kings,  Pass,  of  Arthur  269 

summers  are  s  in  the  sunlight  still.  The  Dawn  19 

EKoried     where  sweetest  sunlight  falls  Upon  the  s  walls  ;    Ode  to  Memory  86 


with  love  far-brought  From  out  the  s  Past 
Storing    S  yearly  little  dues  of  wheat, 
Stork     Went  by  me,  like  a  s  : 
Storm    (See  also  Thunder-storm)    as  from  the  s  Of 
running  fires  and  fluid  range 

Whither  in  after  life  retired  From  brawling  s's, 

And  shatter,  when  the  s's  are  black. 

Henceforward  squall  nor  s  Could  keep  me 

I  tum'd  once  more,  close-button'd  to  the  s  ; 

Battering  the  gates  of  heaven  with  s's  of  prayer, 

shaken  with  a  sudden  s  of  sighs — 

But  blessed  forms  in  whistling  s's 

S,  such  as  drove  her  under  moonless  heavens 

like  a  s  he  came.  And  shook  the  house,  and  like 
a  s  he  went. 

Caught  in  a  burst  of  unexpected  s, 

Sir  Aylmer  reddening  from  the  s  within, 

but  presently  Wept  like  a  s  : 

sheet-lightnings  from  afar,  but  fork'd  Of  the  near  s, 

but  when  the  wordy  s  Had  ended, 

'  S  in  the  night !  for  thrice  I  heard  the  rain 

'  S,  and  what  dreams,  ye  holy  Gods, 

BEJmier  and  nobler  from  her  bath  of  $, 

The  green  malignant  light  of  coming  s. 

mystic  fire  on  a  mast-head.  Prophet  of  s  : 

Fluctuated,  as  flowers  in  s,  some  red, 

On  me,  me,  me,  the  s  first  breaks  : 

When  s  is  on  the  heights, 

at  which  the  s  Of  galloping  hoofs  bare  on  the  ridge 

Let  our  girls  flit,  Till  the  s  die  ! 

Tho'  all  the  s  of  Europe  on  us  break ; 

s  and  blast  Had  blown  the  lake  beyond  his  limit. 

And  a  s  never  wakes  on  the  lonely  sea, 

a  cloud  in  my  heart,  and  a  s  in  the  air  ! 

No  is  trouble  and  cloud  and  s. 

The  touch  of  change  in  calm  or  s  ; 

O  thou  that  after  toil  and  s 

And  lash  with  s  the  streaming  pane  ? 

The  «  their  high-built  organs  make, 

A  pillar  stedf  ast  in  the  s, 

The  seeming  prey  of  cyclic  s'«, 

Well  roars  the  s  to  those  that  hear  A  deeper  voice 

across  the  «, 
should  burst  and  drown  with  deluging  s's 


Love  thou  thy  land  2 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  122 

Talking  Oak  56 

Swpp.  Confessions  146 

Ode  to  Memory  112 

England  and  Amer.  13 

Gardener's  D.  190 

Edwin  Morris  136 

St.  S.  Stylites  7 

Locksley  Hall  27 

Sir  Galahad  59 

Enach  Arden  547 


Aylmer' s  Field  215 

285 

322 

403 

727 

Sea  Dreams  31 

Lucretius  26 

33 

Princess  Hi  132 

iv  275 

482 

499 

»348 

488 

vi  338 

Third  of  Feb.  14 

The  Daisy  70 

The  Islet  33 

Window,  Gone  6 

„  No  Answer  d> 

In  Mem.  xvi  6 

xxxiii  1 

Ixxii  4 

Ixxxvii  6 

cxiii  12 

cxviii  11 

„     cxxvii  3 
Maud  II  i  42 


Storm  (continued)  whatsoever  s's  May  shake  the  world,   Com.  of  Arthur  292 
And  lightnings  play'd  about  it  in  the  s,  Gareth  and  L.  68 

A  censer,  either  worn  with  wind  and  s  ;  „  222 

world's  loud  whisper  breaking  into  s,  Marr.  of  Geraint  27 

Turn  thy  wild  wheel  thro'  sunshine,  s,  and  cloud ;  „  348 

Whose  skirts  are  loosen'd  by  the  breaking  s,  Geraint  and  E.  459 

A  S  was  coming,  but  the  winds  were  still.  Merlin  and  V.  1 

A  minstrel  of  Caerleon  by  strong  s  ,-9 

s  Brake  on  the  mountain  and  1  cared  not  for  it.  .,  502 

And  lash'd  it  at  the  base  with  slanting  s  ;  „  635 

dark  wood  grew  darker  toward  the  s  In  silence,  „  890 

'  Come  from  the  s,'  and  having  no  reply,  ..  895 

(For  now  the  s  was  close  above  them)  „  935 

Till  now  the  s,  its  burst  of  passion  spent,  „  961 

(Sea  was  her  wrath,  yet  working  after  s)  Lancelot  and  E.  1309 

S  at  the  top,  and  when  we  gain'd  it,  s  Round  us  and 

death  ;  Holy  Grail  491 

Spake  but  of  sundry  perils  in  the  s  ;  ,,        761 

upward-rushing  s  and  cloud  Of  shriek  and  plume.  Last  Tournament  440 
When  that  s  of  anger  brake  From  Guinevere,  Guinevere  361 

Or  wisely  or  unwisely,  signs  of  s.  To  the  Queen  ii  49 

mind  Lies  folded,  often  sweeps  athwart  in  s —  Lover's  Tale  i  50 

S,  sunset,  glows  and  glories  of  the  moon  ..        ii  110 

my  lost  love  Symbol'd  in  s.  ,,  185 

sway  and  whirl  Of  the  s  dropt  to  windless  calm,  „  207 

and  the  s  rushing  over  the  down,  Rizpah  6 

when  the  s  on  the  downs  began,  „    71 

A  moonless  night  with  s —  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  96 

bleat  of  a  lamb  in  the  s  and  the  darkness 

without ;  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  64 

S  at  the  Water-gate  !  s  at  the  Bailey-gate  !  s,  and 

it  ran  Def.  of  Lucknow  37 

in  days  Of  doubt  and  cloud  and  s,  Columbus  156 

the  poplar  and  cypress  unshaken  by  s  V.  of  Maeldune  15 

ridges  drew  the  cloud  and  brake  the  s  Montenegro  13 

driven  by  s  and  sin  and  death  to  the  ancient  fold,  The  Wreck  2 

I  would  hide  from  the  s  without,  I  would  flee  from 

the  s  within,  ,.  9 

great  s  grew  with  a  howl  and  a  hoot  ..91 

And  he  spoke  not — only  the  s  ;  till  after  a  little,  103 

the  s  went  roaring  above  us,  and  he — was  out  of  the  5.  ..        106 

the  s  and  the  days  went  by,  but  I  knew  no  more —  ..        Ill 

And  gone — that  day  of  the  s —  „        148 

She  reels  not  in  the  s  of  warring  words.  Ancient  Sage  70 

The  placid  gleam  of  sunset  after  s  !  „  133 

But  wirrah  !  the  s  that  night —  Tomorrow  23 

Ranged  like  a  s  or  stood  like  a  rock  Heavy  Brigade  56 

And  glared  at  a  coming  s.  Dead  Prophet  24 

s's  Of  Autmnn  swept  across  the  city,  Demeter  and  P.  70 

A  sound  of  anger  like  a  distant  s.  The  Ring  119 

The  s,  you  hear  Far-off,  is  Muriel —  „        138 

One  year  without  a  s,  or  even  a  cloud ;  ,,        284 

whom  the  s  Had  parted  from  his  comrade  „        307 

When  the  s's  are  blowing.  Forlorn  6 

When  I  was  praying  in  a  s —  Happy  80 

And  bring  or  chase  the  s,  Mechanophitus  14 

S  in  the  South  that  darkens  the  day  !  Riflemen  form  !  2 

S  of  battle  and  thunder  of  war  !  „  3 

S,  S,  Riflemen  form  !  (repeat)  5,  19 

Ready,  be  ready  against  the  s  !  (repeat)  ..        6,  20 

Ready,  be  ready  to  meet  the  s  !  (repeat)  ,.      13,  27 

Storm-beaten    \^^ith  slow  steps  from  out  An  old  s-l, 

russet,  Gareth  and  L.  1113 

Storm'd    S  in  orbs  of  song,  a  growing  gale  ;  Vision  of  Sin  25 

and  s  At  the  Oppian  law.  Princess  vii  123 

S  at  with  shot  and  shell  (repeat)  Light  Brigade  22,  43 

Stormier     Fierier  and  s  from  restraining,  Balin  and  Balan  229 

For  whenever  a  rougher  gust  might  tumble  a  s  wave,       The  Wreck  131 

Storming    s  a  hill-fort  of  thieves  He  got  it ;  Aylmer' s  Field  225 

under  his  own  lintel  stood  S  with  lifted  hands,  ,,  332 

and  s  in  extremes.  Stood  for  her  cause,  Princess  v  176 

roughly  set  His  Briton  in  blown  seas  and  s  showers.     Ode  on  Well.  155 

Stormless    pass  With  all  fair  theories  only  made  to  gild 

A  s  summer.'  Princess  ii  234 

Storm-strengthen'd    of  grain  S-s  on  a  windy  site,  Gareth  and  L.  692 


storm-worn 


storm-worn     A  s-w  signpost  not  to  be  read, 
Stormy     In  the  s  east-wind  straining, 

It  is  a  s  season.' 

It  is  a  s  morning.' 

When  down  the  s  crescent  goes, 

There  must  be  s  weather ; 

overboard  one  s  ni^ht  He  cast  his  body, 

As  of  some  fire  against  a  s  cloud, 

'  We  fear,  indeed,  you  spent  a  s  time 

Morning  arises  s  and  pale. 

Who  in  this  s  gulf  have  found  a  pearl 

To  catch  a  friend  of  mine  one  s  day  ; 

Then  like  a  s  sunlight  smiled  Geramt, 


687 


Strange 


Dead  Prophet  17 

L.  of  Shatott  iv  1 

The  Goose  8 

44 

Sir  Galahad  25 

Will  Water.  54 

The  Voyage  79 

Princess  iv  384 

V  121 

Maud  I  vil 

„   xviii  42 

„  II  V  85 

Geraint  and  E.  480 


with  all  Its  s  crests  that  smoke  against  the  skies,  Lancelot  and  E.  484 

And  bluster  into  s  sobs  and  say,  „  1067 
thro'  a  s  glare,  a  heat  As  from  a  seventimes-heated 

furnace.  Holy  Grail  842 

years  Have  hollow'd  out  a  deep  and  s  strait  Lover  s  Tale  i  24 

again  the  s  surf  Crash'd  in  the  shingle :  „  Hi  53 
'  Come  to  us,  0  come,  come  '  in  the  s  red  of  a  sky  V.  of  Maeldune  98 
S  voice  of  France  !     Who  dost  not  love  our 

England — ■  To  Victor  Hugo  8 
spear  and  helmet  tipt  With  s  light  as  on  a  mast  at  sea,  Tiresias  114 
After  all  the  s  changes  shall  we  find  a  changeless 

May  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  156 

Forward,  let  the  s  moment  fly  and  mingle  with  the  Past.          „            279 

stood  like  a  rock  In  the  wave  of  a  s  day  ;  Heavy  Brigade  57 

Muses  cried  with  a  s  cry  '  Send  them  no  more,  Bead  Prophet  2 

Like  calming  oil  on  all  their  s  creeds,  Akbar's  Dream  160 

Story    (See  also  Island-story)     make  the  name  Of  his  vessel 

great  in  s,  The  Captain  19 

— all  the  s  of  his  house.  Enoch  Arden  704 

Here  is  a  s  which  in  rougher  shape  Aylmer's  Field  7 

but  as  he  told  The  s,  storming  a  hill-fort  „          225 

and  so  We  forged  a  sevenfold  s.  Princess,  Pro.  202 

And  here  I  give  the  s  and  the  songs.  „                  247 

For  so,  my  mother  said,  the  s  ran.  „                 i  11 

And  snowy  simimits  old  in  s :  „                  iv2 

And  yet  to  give  the  s  as  it  rose,  „           Con.  26 

Till  in  all  lands  and  thro'  all  human  s  Ode  on  Well.  223 

All  for  a  slanderous  s.  Grandmother  22 

Hear  the  child's  s.'  Gareth  and  L.  39 

Hear  yet  once  more  the  s  of  the  child.  „  100 
diraibly  speaks  Your  s,  that  this  man  loves  you 

no  more.  Geraint  and  E.  329 

And  let  the  s  of  her  dolorous  voyage  Lancelot  and  E.  1343 

That  s  which  the  bold  Sir  Bedivere,  Pass,  of  Arthur  1 

A  woful  man  (for  so  the  s  went)  Lover's  Tale  i  379 

I  learnt  the  drearier  s  of  his  life  ;  „        iv  147 

then  began  the  s  of  his  love  As  here  to-day,  „  354 
I  told  your  wayside  s  to  my  mother                      Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  189 

tell  them  all  The  s  of  my  voyage,  Columbus  12 

Story  (floor)     And  set  in  Heaven's  third  5,  Will  Water.  70 

Stout  (adj.)    S,  rosy,  with  his  babe  across  his  knees  ;  Enoch  Arden  746 
'  ye  are  overfine  To  mar  s  knaves  with  foolish 

courtesies  :  '  Gareth  and  L.  733 

And  the  s  Prince  bad  him  a  loud  good-night.  Geraint  and  E.  361 

that  had  need  Of  a  good  s  lad  at  his  farm  ;  First  Quarrel  18 

Stout  (s)     To  each  his  perfect  pint  of  s,  Will  Water.  115 

Stow'd    Or  s,  when  classic  Canning  died,  „          101 

Straange  (strange)     S  an'  cowd  fur  the  time  !  Village  Wife  21 

S  an'  unheppen  Miss  Lucy  !  „         100 

S  an'  owd-farran'd  the  'ouse,  Owd  Boa  21 

Straat  (straight)    «S  as  a  pole  an'  clean  as  a  flower  North.  Cobbler  44 

Straddling    s  on  the  butts  While  the  wine  ran  :  Guineoere  268 

Straight    (See  also  Straat,  Strait,  Strait)    '  If  5  thy  track, 

or  if  oblique.  Two  Voices  193 

To  the  pale-green  sea-groves  s  and  high.  The  Merman  19 

<S,  but  as  lissome  as  a  hazel  wand ;  The  Brook  70 

Should,  as  by  miracle,  grow  5  and  fair —  Aylmer's  Field  676 
For  all  we  have  power  to  see  is  a  s  staff  bent  in  a 

pool ;  High.  Pantheism  16 

All  round  one  finger  pointed  s,  The  Ririg  453 

Strain  (s)     quick  lark's  closest-caroll'd  s's,  Rosalind  10 

An  echo  from  a  measured  s,  Miller's  D.  66 


Strain  (s)  (continued)    Is  this  the  manly  5  of  Eumiymede  ?    Third  of  Feb.  34 

I  scarce  could  brook  the  s  and  stir  In  Mem.  xv  12 

A  s  to  shame  us  '  keep  you  to  yourselves  ;  To  the  Queen  ii  15 

Strain  (verb)     cords  that  bind  and  s  The  heart  Clear-headed  Friend  4 

Shudderest  when  I  s  my  sight,  Fatima  3 

s  to  make  an  inch  of  room  For  their  sweet  selves,  Lit.  Squabbles  9 

Strain'd     A  little  in  the  late  encounter  s,  Geraint  and  E.  158 

thou  hast  seen  me  s  And  sifted  to  the  utmost,  Pelleas  and  E.  247 

Straining     In  the  stormy  east-wind  s,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  1 

but  s  ev"n  his  uttermost  Cast,  Gareth  and  L.  1152 

S  his  eyes  beneath  an  arch  of  hand.  Pass,  of  Arthur  464 

Strait  (adj.)     Bound  them  by  so  s  vows  to  his  own  self.  Com.  of  Arthur  262 

Went  thro'  the  s  and  dreadful  pass  of  death,  „               395 

Strait  (s)     That  stood  on  a  dark  s  of  barren  land.  M.  d' Arthur  10 

I'll  serve  you  better  in  a  s  ;  Princess  i  85 

hovering  o'er  the  dolorous  s  To  the  other  shore.  In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  39 

That  stood  on  a  dai;k  s  of  barren  land  :  Pass,  of  Arihm  178 

years  Have  hollow'd  out  a  deep  and  stormy  s  Lover's  Tale  i  24 

wreaths  of  all  that  would  advance,  Beyond  our  s,  To  Victor  Hugo  6 

Strait  (straight)     stood  up  s  as  the  Queen  of  the  world—  Tomorrow  79 

Strait     fur  I'll  loocik  my  hennemy  s  i'  the  faace,  North.  Cobbler  74 

Strait-besieged     being  s-b  By  this  wild  king  Princess,  Pro.  36 

Straiten 'd  (adj.)     Cursed  be  the  gold  that  gilds  the  s 

forehead  of  the  fool !  Locksley  Hall  62 

Straiten'd  (verb)     shackles  of  an  old  love  s  him,  Lancelot  and  E.  875 

Strait-laced     S-l,  but  all-too-full  in  bud  Talking  Oak  59 

Straitlier     But  s  bound  am  I  to  bide  with  thee.'  Gareth  and  L.  805 

Strand  (shore)     as  a  ground-swell  dash'd  on  the  s,  W.  to  Alexandra  23 

Here  on  the  Breton  s  !  Maud  II  ii  29 

fringe  Of  that  great  breaker,  sweeping  up  the  s.  Com.  of  Arthur  387 

He  seem'd  to  pace  the  s  of  Brittany  Last  Tournament  407 

Before  Isolt  of  Brittany  on  the  s,  „             589 

Strand  (thread)     '  The  dusky  s  of  Death  inwoven  here  Maud  I  xviii  60 

Stranded     For  sure  no  gladlier  does  the  s  wreck  Enoch  Arden  828 

Stranding    s  on  an  isle  at  morn  Rich,  „            552 

Strange     (See  also  Straange)     A  spring  rich  and  s.  Nothing  will  Die  22 

The  broken  sheds  look'd  sad  and  s  :  Mariana  5 

Like  that  s  angel  which  of  old.  Clear-headed  friend  24 

Sudden  glances,  sweet  and  s,  Madeline  5 

With  a  music  s  and  manifold,  Dying  Swan  29 

At  such  s  war  with  something  good,  Two  Voices  302 

shafts  were  blazon'd  fair  In  diverse  raiment  s  :  Palace  of  Art  168 

As  in  s  lands  a  traveller  walking  slow,  „            277 

You  put  s  memories  in  my  head.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  26 

0  sweet  and  s  it  seems  to  me,  May  Queen,  Con.  53 
Our  sons  inherit  us  :  our  looks  are  s  :  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  73 
'Tis  s  that  those  we  lean  on  most.  To  .J.  S.  9 
Nothing  comes  to  thee  new  or  s.  „  74 
Among  new  men,  s  faces,  other  minds.'  M.  d' Arthur  238 
Like  that  s  song  I  heard  Apollo  sing,  Tithonus  62 
Thro'  sunny  decads  new  and  s,  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  22 
'  So  s  it  seems  to  me.  Lady  Clare  52 
'  That  were  s.  What  surname  ?  '  The  Brook  211 
she  grieved  In  her  s  dream,  she  knew  not  why,  Sea  Dreams  230 
She  brought  s  news.  „  267 
s  was  the  sight  .to  me  ;  Princess,  Pro.  54 
S  was  the  sight  and  smacking  of  the  time  ;  „  89 
And,  yonder,  shrieks  and  s  experiments  „  235 
An  old  and  s  affection  of  the  house.  „  i  13 
On  a  sudden  my  s  seizure  came  Upon  me,  „  Hi  183 
we  give  you,  being  s,  A  license :  speak,  „  204 
If  that  s  Poet-princess  with  her  grand  Imaginations  „  273 
'  Ah,  sad  and  s  as  in  dark  summer  dawns  „  iv  49 
So  sad,  so  s,  the  days  that  are  no  more.  „  53 
and  s  experiences  Unmeet  for  ladies.  „  158 
you  spent  a  stormy  time  With  our  s  girl :  „  v  122 
And  how  the  s  betrothment  was  to  end :  „  474 
That  all  things  grew  more  tragic  and  more  s  ;  „  vi  23 
nor  seem'd  it  s  that  soon  He  rose  up  whole,  „            vii  64 

1  have  heard  Of  your  s  doubts :  „  336 
I  moved  as  in  a  s  diagonal,  „  Con.  27 
For  now  so  s  do  these  things  seem.  In  Mem.  xiii  15 
I  should  not  feel  it  to  be  s.  „  xiv  20 
But  thou  art  turn'd  to  something  s,  „  xli  5 
The  days  that  grow  to  something  s,  „          Ixxi  11 


strange 


688 


Stream 


strange  (contitmed) 
chaiige 
S  friend,  past,  present,  and  to  be  ; 
S,  that  I  hear  two  men. 
How  s  was  what  she  said, 
S,  that  I  felt  so  gay,  S,  that  /  tried  to-day 
S,  that  the  mind,  when  fraught  With  a  passion 
terror  grew  Of  that  s  bright  and  dreadful  thing. 


and  5  Was  love's  dumb  cry  defying 

In  Mem.  xcv  26 

„      cxxix  9 

Maud,  I  vii  13 

xix  34 

XX  1 

„       //  a  58 
Marr.  of  Geraint  616 


And  for  my  s  petition  I  will  make  Amends  „  817 

ye  surely  have  endured  S  chances  here  alone  ;  '  Geraint  and  E.  810 

there  be  two  s  knights  Who  sit  near  Camelot  Balin  and  Balan  10 

A  s  knee  rustle  thro'  her  secret  reeds,  „  354 

'  To  what  request  for  what  s  boon,'  Merlin  and 

Boon,  ay,  there  was  a  boon,  one  not  so  s — 
And  take  this  boon  so  s  and  not  so  s.' 
'  0  not  so  5  as  my  long  asking  it,  Not  yet  so  s  as  you 

j'ourself  are  s,  Nor  half  so  s  as  that  dark  mood  of 

yoiirs. 
nothing  wild  or  s,  Or  seeming  shameful — 
— this,  however  s.  My  latest : 
An  end  to  this  !     A  s  one  ! 
And  the  s  sound  of  an  adulterous  race, 
And  crimson  in  the  belt  a  s  device, 
And  carven  with  s  figures  ; 
^o  s,  and  rich,  and  dim  ; 
Among  the  s  devices  of  our  kings  ; 
but  in  me  lived  a  sin  So  s, 
(S  as  to  some  old  prophet  might  have  seem'd 
and  s  knights  From  the  four  winds  came  in  : 
Then  ran  across  her  memory  the  s  rhyme 
he  heard  S  music,  and  he  paused,  and  turning — 
Among  new  men,  s  faces,  other  minds.' 
All — all  but  one  ;  and  s  to  me,  and  sweet,  Sweet 

thro'  s  years  to  know  that 
And  Hate  is  s  beneath  the  roof  of  Love. 
Made  s  division  of  its  suffering  With  her, 
Wonder'd  at  some  s  light  in  Julian's  eyes 
such  a  feast  So  rich,  so  s,  and  stranger  ev'n  than  rich, 
I  never  yet  beheld  a  thing  so  s,  Sad,  sweet,  and  s 

together—  „  303 

thence  Down  to  this  last  s  hour  in  his  own  hall ;  „  358 

S  fur  to  goa  fur  to  think  what  saailors  North.  Cobbler  4 

On  whom  I  brought  a  s  unhappiness,  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  89 

and  for  a  face  Gone  in  a  moment — s.  „  94 

Selfish,  s !     What  dwarfs  are  men !  „  198 

The  Lord  had  sent  this  bright,  s  dream  to  me  Columbus  91 

With  some  s  hope  to  see  the  nearer  God.  Tiresias  29 

The  s  misfeaturmg  mask  that  I  saw  so  amazed  me.  The  Wreck  117 

I  touch'd  my  limbs,  the  limbs  Were  s  not  mine —         Ancient  Sage  235 
S  !  She  used  to  shun  the  wailing  babe,  The  Ring  357 

Strangeness    feels  a  glimmering  s  in  his  dream.  The  Brook  216 

Stranger  (adj.  and  s)    Two  s's  meeting  at  a  festival :  Circumstance  3 

There  strode  a  5  to  the  door,  (repeat)  The  Goose  3,  39 

And  God  forget  the  s  ! '  „  56 

s's  at  my  hearth  Not  welcome,  Lucretius  158 

The  first-fruits  of  the  s  :  Princess  ii  44 

Moreover  '  seize  the  s's '  is  the  cry.  „      iv  220 

And  Love  has  led  thee  to  the  s  land,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  31 

Will  shelter  one  of  s  race.  In  Mem.  cii  4 

And  answer'd,  '  Pardon  me,  0  s  knight ;  Mart,  of  Geraint  286 

Queen  demanded  as  by  chance  '  Know  ye  the  s 

woman  ?  ' 
Flush'd  slightly  at  the  slight  disparagement  Before 


264 
287 
310 


312 

860 

Lancelot  and  E.  1112 

1223 

Holy  Grail  80 

154 

169 

342 

730 

773 

Pelleas  and  E.  51 

147 

Last  Tournament  131 

Guinevere  239 

Pass,  of  Arthur  406 

Lover's  Tale  i  243 

779 

ii  128 

iv  205 

211 


Merlin  and  V.  129 


the  s  knight,  Lancelot  and  E.  235 

landscape  grow  Familiar  to  the  s's  child  ;  In  Mem.  ci  20 

Like  s's'  voices  here  they  sound,  „           civ  9 

We  live  within  the  s's  land,  „            ct;  3 

Why  mockest  thou  the  s  that  hath  been  Gareth  and  L.  283 

A  s  meeting  them  had  surely  thought  Geraint  and  E.  34 

Shriek'd  to  the  s  '  Slay  not  a  dead  man  ! '  „          779 

(for  Arthur's  knights  Were  hated  s's  in  the  hall)  Balin  arid  IJidan  352 

I  bid  the  s  welcome.  Merlin  and  V.  270 

Yet  s's  to  the  tongue,  and  with  bhmt  stump  Last  Tournament  66 

A  .1  a.s  welcome  as  Satan —  Charity  26 

Stranger  (oompar.)    nor  s  seem'd  that  hearts  So  gentle.  Princess  vii  66 


Stranger  (compar.)  {continued)    such  a  feast  So  rich,  so 

strange,  and  s  ev'n  than  rich.  Lover's  Tale  iv  211 

And  s  yet,  at  one  end  of  the  hall  „              213 

S  than  earth  has  ever  seen  ;  The  Ring  38 

Strange-statued    under  the  s-s  gate.  Where  Arthur's 

wars  Lancelot  and  E.  800 

Strangled     felt,  despite  his  mail,  S,  Gareth  and  L.  1152 

and  then  A  s  titter,  Princess  v  16 
my  s  vanity  Utter'd  a  stifled  cry —                       Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  199 

and  a  ray  red  as  Blood  Glanced  on  the  s  face —  Bandit's  Death  32 

Strata     dip  of  certain  s  to  the  North.  Princess  Hi  170 

Straw     lance  Broken,  and  his  Excalibur  a  s.'  Last  Tournament  88 
cotch'd  'er  death  o'  cowd  that  night,  poor  soul, 

i'  the  s.  Ovid  Roa  114 

Stray     Beyond  the  bounding  hill  to  s.  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  30 

In  lands  where  not  a  memory  s's,  „                 civ  10 

Stray'd    Thy  feet  have  s  in  after  hours  „                cii  14 

Nor  ever  s  beyond  the  pale  :  Holy  Grail  21 

Seeing  I  never  s  beyond  the  cell,  „        628 

Streak  (s)     {See  also  Shadow-streak)    solitary  morning  smote 

The  s's  of  virgin  snow.  Qinone  56 

Now  fades  the  last  long  s  of  snow.  In  Mem.  cxv  1 

gay  with  gold  In  s's  and  rays,  Gareth  and  L.  911 

winds  Laid  the  long  night  in  silver  s's  and  bars,  Lover's  Tale  ii  112 

The  first  gray  s  of  earliest  summer-dawn,  Ancient  Sage  220 

Streak  (verb)     white  vapour  s  the  crowned  towers  Princess  lii  344 

But  pure  as  lines  of  green  that  s  the  white  „         v  196 

Streak'd    {See  also  Silvery-streak'd)     - '  "  starr'd  at  intervals 

With  falling  brook  Lover's  Tale  i  404 

Stream  (s)    {See  also  Atom-stream,  Gulf-stream,  Sthrame) 

When  will  the  s  be  aweary  of  flowing  Nothing  will  Die  1 

The  s  flows.  The  wind  blows,  „      •        9 

The  s  will  cease  to  flow  ;  All  Things  will  Die  9 

The  s's  through  many  a  lilied  row  The  winds,  etc.  5 

A  clear  s  flowing  with  a  muddy  one,  Isabel  30 

And  the  far-off  s  is  dumb.  The  Owl  i  3 

The  leaping  s,  the  very  wind,  Rosalind  14 

Like  two  s's  of  incense  free  From  one  censer  Elednore  58 

The  broad  s  in  his  banks  complaining,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  3 

The  broad  s  bore  her  far  away,  „              17 

the  babble  of  the  s  Fell,  and,  without,  Mariana  in  the  S.  51 

'  Who,  rowing  hard  against  the  s.  Two  Voices  211 

Like  those  long  mosses  in  the  s.  Miller's  D.  48 

Beside  the  mill-wheel  in  the  s,  „          167 

Between  the  loud  s  and  the  trembling  stars.  (Enone  219 

like  a  downward  smoke,  the  slender  s  Lotos-Eaters  8 

A  land  of  s's  !  some,  like  a  downward  smoke,  „            10 

in  the  s  the  long-leaved  flowers  weep,  „  C.  S.  10 

How  sweet  it  were,  hearing  the  downward  s,  „            54 

A  league  of  grass,  wash'd  by  a  slow  broad  s,  Gardener's  D.  40 

A  single  s  of  all  her  soft  brown  hair  „            128 

Night  sUd  down  one  long  s  of  sighing  wind,  „            267 

In  many  s's  to  fatten  lower  lands,  Golden  Year  34 

And  all  the  long-pent  s  of  life  Day -Dm.,  Revival  15 

burst  away  In  search  of  s  or  foxmt,    .  Enoch  Arden  635 

Not  by  the  well-known  s  and  rustic  spire.  The  Brook  188 

Bright  with  the  sun  upon  the  s  beyond :  Sea  Dreams  97 

drifting  up  the  s  In  fancy,  till  I  slept  again,  „        108 

Before  two  s's  of  light  from  wall  to  wall.  Princess  ii  473 

s's  that  float  us  each  and  all  To  the  issue,  „         iv  70 

'  I  stagger  in  the  s :  „       vi  321 

I  strove  against  the  s  and  all  in  vain :  „       vii  12 

The  shimmering  glimpses  of  a  s ;  „     Con.  46 

Who  let  the  turbid  s's  of  rumour  flow  Ode  on  Well.  181 

All  along  the  valley,  s  that  flashest  white,  V.  of  Cauteretz  1 

many  a  fire  between  the  ships  and  s  Spec,  of  Iliad  17 

The  sound  of  s's  that  swift  or  slow  In  Mem.  xxxv  10 

A  secret  sweetness  in  the  s,  „          Ixiv  20 

We  talk'd :  the  s  beneath  us  ran,  „      Ixxxix  43 

On  winding  s  or  distant  sea ;  „           cxv  12 

The  market  boat  is  on  the  s,  „         cxxi  13 

With  never  an  end  to  the  s  of  passing  feet,  Maud  II  v  11 

the  s  Full,  narrow ;  this  a  bridge  of  single  arc  Gareth  and  L.  907 

and  in  the  s  beneath  him,  shone  Immingled  „            935 

hoof  of  his  horse  slipt  in  the  s,  the  s  Descended,  „          1046 


stream 


689 


Strength 


stream  (s)  (continued)    Well  hast  thou  done ;  for  all  the 

s  is  freed,  Gareth  and  L.  1267 

They  hoped  to  slay  him  somewhere  on  the  s,  „          1419 

And  shpt  and  fell  into  some  pool  or  s,  Lancelot  and  E.  214 

to  that  s  whereon  the  barge,  Pall'd  all  its  length  ..             1141 

of  Arthur's  palace  toward  the  s.  They  met,  ..             1178 

and  down  they  flash'd,  and  smote  the  5.  1235 

barge  that  brought  her  moving  down,  Far-off,  a  blot 

upon  the  s,  „             1392 

I  walking  to  and  fro  beside  a  s  Holy  Grail  592 

served  with  choice  from  air,  land,  5,  and  sea,  Pelleas  and  E.  149 

as  a  s  that  spouting  from  a  cliff  Fails  in  mid  air,  Guinevere  608 

The  s  of  life,  one  s,  one  life,  one  blood.  Lover's  Tale  i  239 

As  mountain  s's  Our  bloods  ran  free  •  „               326 

a  s  Flies  with  a  shatter'd  foam  along  the  chasm.  „              382 

s,  Forth  issuing  from  his  portals  in  the  crag  ,,              429 

perchance  of  s's  Running  far  on  within  „               522 

the  sound  Of  the  loud  s  was  pleasant,  „            H  35 
lest  the  s  should  issue  pure.                                    LocTtsley  H.,  Sixty  144 

And  borne  along  by  that  full  s  of  men,  St.  TeUmachus  43 

Stream  (verb)     A  thousand  sims  will  s  on  thee,  A  Farewell  13 

S's  o'er  a  rich  ambrosial  ocean  isle,  Milton  14 

And  crowds  that  s  from  yawning  doors.  In  Mem.  Ixx  9 

In  the  long  breeze  that  s's  to  thy  delicious  East,  Mavd  I  xviii  16 

S's  thro'  the  twelve  great  battles  of  our  King.  Holy  Grail  250 

S's  like  a  cloud,  man-shaped,  To  the  Queen  ii  40 
And  o'er  thee  s's  the  rain,                                 Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son.  14 
Stream 'd    s  Upon  the  mooned  dor"°s  aloof  In  inmost 

Bagdat,  Arabian  Nights  126 

Across  the  mountain  s  below  In  misty  folds,  Palace  of  A  rt  34 

<S  onward,  lost  their  edges,  D.  of  F.  Women  50 

Old,  s  thro'  many  a  golden  bar,  Day-Dm.,  Depart.  15 

The  vine  s  out  to  follow,  Amvhion  46 

How  swiftly  s  ye  by  the  bark  !  The  Voyage  50 

And  in  we  s  Among  the  colimins.  Princess  ii  434 

I  likewise,  and  in  groups  they  s  away.  „   Con.  105 

S  to  the  peak,  and  mingled  with  the  haze  Com.  of  Arthur  436 

half  the  pearls  away,  iS  from  it  still ;  Lancelot  and  E.  808 

S  thro'  my  cell  a  cold  and  silver  beam,  Holy  Grail  116 

And  all  the  pavement  s  with  massacre :  Last  Tovmament  477 

Streamer    Shot  Bke  a  «  of  the  northern  mom,  M.  d' Arthur  139 

Shot  Uke  a  5  of  the  northern  mom.  Pass,  of  Arthur  307 

Streaming    (See  also  Down-streaming)    Forth  s  from 

a  braid  of  pearl:  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  6 

The  torrent  vineyard  s  fell  To  meet  the  sun  The  Daisy  10 

And  lash  with  storm  the  s  pane  ?  In  Mem.  Ixxii  4 

On  leagues  of  odour  s  far,  ..     Ixxxvi  14 

And  high  in  heaven  the  s  cloud.  Con.  107 

— all  her  bright  hair  s  down —  Lancelot  and  E.  1156 

people,  from  the  high  door  s,  brake  Disorderly,  „              1347 

hill  and  wood  Went  ever  s  by  him  till  the  gloom,  Pelleas  and  E.  548 

Up  or  down  the  s  wind  ?  Rosalind  9 
In  many  a  s  torrent  back,                                        England  and  Amer.  14 

What  sequel  ?  S  eyes  and  breaking  hearts  ?  Ixme  and  Duty  2 

Struck  out  the  s  mountain-side,  Lucretius  29 

And  down  the  s  crystal  dropt;  Princess  vii  165 

Here,  in  s  London's  central  roar.  Ode  on  Well.  9 

Hath  left  crag-carven  o'er  the  s  Gelt —  Gareth  and  L.  1203 

grayly  draped  With  s  grass,  appear'd,  Balin  and  Balan  333 

and  thro'  tbe  gap  GUmmer'd  the  s  scud :  Holy  Grail  682 
Crook  and  turn  upon  itself  in  many  a  backward 

s  curve.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  236 

and  aloft  the  glare  Flies  s,  Achilles  over  the  T.  12 

And  s  and  shining  on  Silent  river,  Merlin  and  the  G.  51 

Streamlet    For  us  the  same  cold  s  curl'd  In  Mem.  Ixxix  9 

Streeat  (street)    yon  laady  a-steppin'  along  the  s,  North.  Cobbler  107 

Street    {See  also  Shtreet,  Streeat)    till  noon  no  foot  should  pace 

the  s,  Godiva  39 

The  s's  are  dumb  with  snow.  Sir  Galahad  52 

Till,  where  the  s  grows  straiter,  WUl  Water.  142 

He  pass'd  by  the  town  and  out  of  the  s,  Poet's  Song  2 

long  s  climbs  to  one  tall-tower'd  mill ;  Enoch  Arden  5 

narrow  s  that  clamber'd  toward  the  mill.  „          60 

From  distant  comers  of  the  s  they  ran  .,        349 

The  climbing  s,  the  mill,  the  leafy  lanes,  „        607 


Street  (continued)  Then  down  the  long  s  having  slowly  stolen,  Enoch  Arden  683 

For  Philip's  dwelling  fronted  on  the  s,  .,        731 

All  down  the  long  and  narrow  s  he  went  „        795 

I  mind  him  coming  down  the  s ;  „        847 

'  yesterday  I  met  him  suddenly  in  the  s.  Sea  Dreams  146 

then  my  eyes  Pursued  him  down  the  s,  „          165 

A  little  s  half  garden  and  half  house ;  Princess  i  214 
heave  and  thump  A  league  of  s  in  summer  solstice  down,       .,     Hi  128 

We  cross'd  the  s  and  gain'd  a  petty  mound  „      iv  557 

brawl  Their  rights  or  wrongs  like  potherbs  in  the  s.  „       v  459 

With  lifted  hand  the  gazer  in  the  5.  Ode  on  Well.  22 

Welcome  her,  thundering  cheer  of  the  s  !  W.  to  Alexandra  7 

Till,  in  a  narrow  s  and  dim.  The  Daisy  22 

Here  in  the  long  unlovely  s,  In  Mem.  vii  2 

On  the  bald  s  breaks  the  blank  day.  „            12 

The  field,  the  chamber  and  the  s,  „     viii  11 

The  s's  were  fill'd  with  joyful  sound,  „    xxxi  10 

The  s's  were  black  with  smoke  and  frost,  „      Ixix  3 

I  smell  the  meadow  in  the  s ;  „      cxix  4 

There  where  the  long  s  roars,  „   cxxiv 

At  the  head  of  the  village  s,  Maud  I  vi  ' 

For  only  once,  in  the  village  s,  „      xiii  ■ 

In  the  chamber  or  the  s,  „    //  ir 
I  loathe  the  squares  and  s's, 
Only  a  yard  beneath  the  s, 

Took  horse,  descended  the  slope  s,  and  past  Gareth  and  L'. 

Gareth  rode  Down  the  slope  s,  „ 

Beheld  the  long  s  of  a  Uttle  town  Marr.  of  Geraint 

And  down  the  long  s  riding  wearily,  „              26  i 

On  a  sudden,  many  a  voice  along  the  s,  Geraint  and  E.  270 

That  glance  of  theirs,  but  for  the  s.  Merlin  and  V.  105 

As  the  poach'd  filth  that  floods  the  middle  s,  „            798 

Met  foreheads  all  along  the  s  Holy  Grail  344 

in  middle  s  the  Queen,  Who  rode  by  Lancelot,  „          355 

from  over  the  breadth  of  a  s,  Def.  of  Lucknow  23 

and,  yelling  with  the  yeUing  s,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  135 

maidens  by  the  thousand  on  the  s.  „                220 

would  it  matter  so  much  if  I  came  on  the  s  ?  Charity  8 

Streetward    To  fit  their  little  s  sitting-room  Enoch  Arden  170 
Streetway    a  s  hung  with  folds  of  pure  Wliite  samite,  Last  Tournament  140 

Strength     The  unsunn'd  freshness  of  my  s,  Supp.  Confessions  140 

Mine  be  the  s  of  spirit,  Mine  be  the  strength  1 

Than  cry  for  s,  remaining  weak,  Two  Voices  95 

'  What,  is  not  this  my  place  of  s,'  Palace  of  Art  233 

With  all  my  s  I  pray'd  for  both,  May  Queen,  Con.  31 

S  came  to  me  that  equall'd  my  desire.  D.  of  F.  Women  230 
s  of  some  diffusive  thought  Hath  tinae               You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  15 

A  slow-develop'd  s  awaits  Completion  Love  thou  thy  land  57 

We  are  not  now  that  s  which  in  old  days  Ulysses  66 

that  sin  against  the  s  of  youth  !  Locksley  Hall  59 

My  s  is  as  the  s  of  ten.  Sir  Galahad  3 

aid  me,  give  me  s  Not  to  tell  her,  Enoch  Arden  785 

and  truth  and  love  are  s,  Aylmer's  Field  365 

I  wonder'd  at  her  s,  and  ask'd  her  of  it :  Sea  Dreams  113 
He  took  advantage  of  his  s  to  be  First  in  the  field :         Princess  ii  152 

0  fall'n  at  length  that  tower  of  s  Ode  on  Well.  38 

What  Roman  s  Turbia  show'd  In  ruin,  The  Daisy  5 

Corrupts  the  s  of  heaven-descended  Will,  Will  11 

And  in  my  grief  a  s  reserved.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  52 

He  fought  his  doubts  and  gather'd  s,  ,,             xcvi  13 

The  maidens  gather'd  s  and  grace  „              ciii  27 

Blow  trumpet !  Uve  the  s  and  die  the  lust !  Com.  of  Arthur  492 

thro'  that  s  the  King  Drew  in  the  petty  princedoms  „            516 

Have  s  and  wit,  in  my  good  mother's  haU  Gareth  and  L.  12 

That  s  of  anger  thro'  mine  arms,  „            948 

same  s  which  threw  the  Morning  Star  „          1108 

As  closing  in  himself  the  s  of  ten,  „           1339 

'  Fool,  for  thou  hast,  men  say,  the  s  of  ten,  „          1387 

And  s  against  all  odds,  and  what  the  King  Balin  and  Balan  183 
they  lifted  up  Their  eager  faces,  wondering  at  the  s,   Merlin  and  V.  133 

and  waste  the  spiritual  s  Within  us.  Holy  Grail  35 

said  he,  '  but  men  With  s  and  will  to  right  the  wrong'd,  „        309 

may  count  The  yet-unbroken  s  of  all  his  knights,  „        326 

for  a  s  Was  in  us  from  the  vision,  „        333 

And  in  the  s  of  this  I  rode,  „        476 

2  X 


strength 

Strength  (continued)     and  in  the  s  of  this  Come  liot^r  ti^j,,  n     -i  Aan, 

8  of  heart  And  might  of  limb,  "^^  r„,,  -/"^^  ^''"i  f^ 

chance  and  craft  and  .  in  single  fights  pifof  TT'  f(l 

m.age,  hke  a  charm  of  lightTnd  /up^n  the  .yatersf'l^Sfme  In 
Fierce  m  the  5  of  far  descent,  a  streain  '  009 

?^^r^rf '','"*"  *^^'y™■P?*^y  Of  that  smaU  bay,  "  il4 

With  my  hfe,  love,  soul,  spirit,  and  heart  and  5.  "  i^ 

In  confidence  of  imabated  5,  '•  tvi 

when  s  is  shock'd  With  torment,  "         -^ik 

Strong  with  the  s  of  the  race  to  command  n-f  ^/  r"  7   "  ^^ 

Th^t*'?/  ''^  r"'^^'  ^^'^  ^^*^°"  pTeTtheirs.       '''•^-  '^ m^etTlll 
That  old  s  and  constancy  Which  has  made 

your  fathers  great  n  ^     t       j  ^   ^  ,  ■,   ^ . 

Trunk  and  boufh,  Naked  s.  ^^'**-  ^-  '""^  ^A,f  ^^'^V  ^t 

A  sudden  5  from  heaven,  „,  t  7        i,      l^ 

I  s  lame  hands  of  faith,  and  grope  fnncess  v  538 

But  free  to  s  his  limbs  'in  la^  J&t  r.     ^  ^Th%ll 

at  length  we  began  to  be  weary,  S  s^h  and  to  s  ™'"'  "'"^  ^^  ^^^ 

and  yawn,                                               '  r/     x  ir    ,:, 

'^fo^t  bSfi  tS  pti  ^^^  --^  —  --     0^  &1  } 

'"'SeXTklf  '""^  ''^^^  oSThe.  forefinger  of  ,,f  ^^^^^^  ^'-^'^  ^88 

TheS  the  Lady  5  a  vulture  throat,  ^''''''''  ''  Hi 

She  s  her  arms  and  call'd  Across  the  tumult  "  lo^ 

arms  .S  under  all  the  cornice  and  upheld :  Garethand  L  219 

drunkard,  as  he  s  from  horse  To  strike  him  T„.t%  1  Ht. 

she  .out  her  arms  and  cried  aloud'Oh'Sbur ! '  "^'^  ^7:^Zl  Sg 

— f  my  hands  As  if  I  saw  her ;  wimevere  bUb 

Sketching    A  bounded  field,  nor  5  far  •  tJm         f^\^A 

Lets  down  his  other  leg  and  s,  rn\     '^'f'^^lt 

Strew    xS'ee  Strow  ^"'^^'^  "'^'^  -^-  ^186 

Strewn    S  in  the  entry  of  the  moaning  cave  •  r^,,.  >    't'  7    •••  o 

Stricken    (^««  also  AwVsfcricken,  Hor^orScken.  Panic    ^"'' '  ^"''  "*  ' 

K^°'  Jl^^f  '  'S<'^«°'    Sun  -  stricken?  WelT 

^cken,  Wonder-stncken)    And,  s  by  an  angel's 

And  out  of  s  helmets  sprang  the  fire  ^t  9'^^^<^dm 

Was  cancell'd,  .  thro'  ^th  doubt  r/r''''  ''  ^^a 

knave-knight,  well  s,  0  good  knight-knave-  oJ^hnnT/Zf^ 

then  were  I  s  blind  That  minute  ^areth.  and  L.  1135 

Withallherdamsels,  he  rfSute;  "-Sa^Sf  IS 

And  have  but  s  with  the  sword  in  vain  •  p         i^  /.f'    oi 

I  might  have  .  a  lusty  stroTe  foJhS    '  :^r>  tf/'^^t^  «q 
I  WAS  the  chief  of  the  Lc^he  had^y  father  dead-^F  oSmuJI 

^ A  ^^\    ^y^  P^'^ted,  with  great  s's  amon^  his  dogs.  "  ^    41?  SI 

Abate  the  s,  which  speaks  of  man  p  •   ^"'^^^'^^ 

the  Prince,  as  Enid  past  him,  f aiS'  To  follow  '^'^'''  ''  ^ 

strode  as,  t,^         ^  ^ 

Igdejverb)    hard  heir  .'.  about  their  lands,  '^-liueTlfl^ 

Stridest    warnor-wise  thou  s  thro'  his  halls  r„o,  t                  r,E 

SWgng    now  .  fa.t,  and  now  Sitti^  awMe  'u^^^TSi^m 

StnJe    To  hear  the  murmur  of  the  2  ^"^  ,V        !  ol 

'Waiting  to  strive  a  happy  .  r.,    i?''^'""''i  i 

The  flattery  and  the  s,           '  n     /^°„^'''''^M?° 

Ev'n  now  we  hear  with  inward  <!  t'  °\i '  ^<'^««  148 

pulsation  that  I  feirbefoTthe  5  ^V^^.'^yJf'i^^. 

The  maid  and  page  renew'd  K  s  n  ^^^*%  ^««  109 

Half  fearful  thltTwith Tlf  at  s       '  "'ivZ^wT'^yf, 

'Help  us  from  famine  And  pla^ie  and  s  '  rl   ifZ'  ^?n 

To  point  the  term  of  human  5                  '  ^'^^  ,^*^^**^  J9 

Are  God  and  Nature  then  at  5  ^'^  ^^'"-  ^  ^^ 

That  loved  to  handle  spiritual's  "  ,       K^, 

And  ancient  forms  of  party  s  •    '  "  ^^^^  °'* 

To  fruitful  s's  and  rivalries  of  peace—  /.  ^    ".  r^  T  00 

And  see  my  dear  lord  wounded  in  fh»  .  ,.    ■^^'^-  ^J  ^^V^^^  38 

In  the  crash  of  the  cannSe^  ?JX  'a  .  ^"'^^  "/  ^«-«*^<  103 
slain  thy  fathers  in  waTS^i^k  T"  ^^P«^^*«  ^^  fhe  Revenge!^ 
weary  was  I  of  the  travel,  the  troTbTe,  the  s  and  the  sin^'  "^  ''^''^"^  Jg 


690 


Strikest 


strife  (continued)     Theirs  that  so  often  in  S  mth 

their  enemies  »  «     r  d           ,     ,  , 
Strike  ^g.e  aJso^Spank)    grow  awry  From  roots  whifh     '^  ^'^^'^^^^^  ^^ 

God'wouTd  move  And  s  the  hard,  hard  rock  ^''^^-  ^'^^'^^^^JS 

Aiid  strongly  s  to  left  and  right,                     '  '"      c  ,   o^ 

bhadows  thou  dost  s,  Embracing  cloud  t      rr  •       .H 

Shall  s  within  thy  pulses,  like  a  God"sf'  """ mZZ  lit 

As  when  a  great  thought  s's  along  the  brain  D  of  F   wZl    A 

I  sought  to  s  Into  that  wondrous  tra<=k  of  dreams  "^  ^^  ^  ""'^g 

Would  s,  and  firmly,  and  one  stroke  ■  r       .1     ^:,.    ,     /iS 

earth  feed  thy  brJc'hy  roo^Ttaf ^der  deeply  s's'f'&S'o^fnl 

till_he  madly  s's  Agamst  it,  and  beats  out  his  weary  ^         "^ 

^  thro'  a  finer  element  of  her  own  ?  4 1*^^*  ^^^1^  Jf ^ 

when  she  s's  thro'  the  thick  blo^  Of  cattle  ^"^K'  ^''  '^  ^11 

a  noiseless  riot  underneathVithro'  the  wo'od  I-^oreUusm 

And  s's  him  dead  for  thine  and  thee                 '  t>  ■     "    ■    T^a 

Stir  in  me  as  to  s :  Pnnegss  z?;  584 

Fight  and  fight  well:  sands  home.  '"         "  f no 

shadowing  down  the  champaign  till  it  s's  "'            ^a 

The  tops  shall  s  from  star  to  star  "            -i^ 

Look  up,  and  let  thy  nature  s  on  mine,  '"       J'ofJ 

Should  s  a  sudden  hand  in  mine  7     ,';      '^^l-^V, 

The  sunbeam  s's  along  the  world  ■  ^'^  ^^"^-  ^^^  " 

That  s's  by  night  a  craggy  shelf  "           ^^lo 

And  s  his  being  into  bounds,       '  '    r.  "^i^ 

And  s,  if  he  could,  were  it  but  with  his  ^auTj  i4 

Arise,  my  God,  and  s,  for  we  hold  Thee  just,  ^7/    g 

^  dead  the  whole  weak  race  of  venomoui  worms  "           it 

Suddenly  s  on  a  sharper  sense  For  a  shell             '  "        ,-,•«? 

Then  to  s  him  and  lay  him  low                  '  "        "^ 

'Take  thou  and  s!     "^             ^'  ^         ,  :;  ,.     "onS 

'  S  for  the  King  and  live  '  ^°^-  "f  ^^^^ur  307 

'  S  for  the  King  and  die  !  -{SS 

Accursed,  who  s's  nor  lets  the  hand  be  seen !  Garethand  L  435 

Sun  Heaved  up  a  ponderous  arm  to  s  the  fifth,  ^iSs 

so  Gareth  .seem'd  to  s  Vainly                             '  •          ,045 

^  Romd- ^^''^*^~"'^' "'°"  ^'^ ''''''■*^y  °f  *h^ 'f^bl^ 

^—s     the  wind  will  never  change  again.'  ^           \fA 

Lancelot  thro'  his  warm  blood  felt  Ice  s  ?q^ 

I  yet  should  s  upon  a  sudden  means  To  dig.  Merlin  and  V  659 

placed  where  mornmg's  earliest  ray  Might  s  it,  wX  W  £  6 

Set  lance  in  rest,  s  spur,  suddenly  move,           '  ^^^^l-ot  a,uL  ^6 

I  fear  me  that  will  s  my  blossom  dead.  "07? 

Then  will  1  s  at  him  and  s  him  down,  ■"          inw 

Give  me  good  fortune,  I  will  s  him  dead,  ''          |n71 

-S  down  the  lusty  and  long  practised  knight,  ToLi 

%w2f  K^.f  t '  ,*1^  f '°™  th^  st'^'-  there  shot  ^^/w  GraiZ  5^ 

This  hght  that  s's  his  eyeball  is  not  light,  ^  ^"^""^  %f^ 

Down  !  s  hm  !  put  my  hate  into  you?  strokes,  Pdleas  and  E  228    ' 

No  men  to  s?     Fall  on  him  all  at  once,            '  J^elleas  arul  E.  22% 

and  he  call'd,  '  I  s  upon  thy  side—  "             t^ 

wS  rgk?ii:  hi^fw /™"  ^°^•^1  '^^^  ^^'  ^^'  ^<'"»^men^  IS    ! 

vvnat  rignts  aie  his  that  dare  not  s  for  them  "^  ^    \ 

Where  I  must  s  against  the  man  thev  call  r  •           tik 

and  shim  dead,  and  meet  myself  Death  GmneoeTe^2 

?Slk  Jm  r  '''r^^T  ^^^^  '^  ^  ""y  death  to  me.  Pass.  ofAHhurU 

thrills  of  bhss  That  s  across  the  soul  in  praver  Lm,jJ{  Tni.^\(d 

W    n'fi'  ,S™^-!^^  did  s  my  forehead^al Tpkst ;  ^"^  '  ^"''  '^f  g 

hve  to  fight  agam  and  to  s  another  blow.'  Thl' Ji.„.„T  q^ 

I  swore  I  would  s  off  his  head.  r/  It  m    T^     9 

let  thme  own  hand  s  Thy  youthful  pulses  ^  "  '^St'se 

^i  wlif  s '"sdfhT^h^trr'%*,'t  V-...  ^S  ^Sm 

1  wiu  s    saia  lie    Ihe  stars  with  head  sublime.'  Emlomi^  4fi 

Thou  wilt  s  Thy  glory  thro''the  dav  7i    a.      j  d          A 

Strik^t    but  thou  s^a^strLg  s?roke,  ^'^^  ''cL^maldT^^l 

Ay,  knave,  because  thou  s  as  a  knight,  tmretti  and  i..^877 


Strikin' 


691 


Strong 


Strikin'     an'  theere— it  be  s  height —  Spinster's  S's.  114 

waait  till  tha  'ears  it  be  s  the  hour.  Owd  Rod  18 

Strikiiig    (See  also  Strikin')     blow  Before  hiin,  a-  on  my  brow.       Fatima  25 

There  rose  a  noise  of  s  clocks,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  2 

Now  s  on  huge  stmnbling-blocks  of  scorn  Aylmer's  Field  538 

s  with  her  glance,  The  mother,  me,  the  child ;  Princess  vi  152 

Struck  for  the  throne,  and  s  found  his  doom.  Com.  of  Arthur  325 

when  I  watch'd  thee  s  on  the  bridge  Gareth  and  L.  992 

watch  his  mightful  hand  s  great  blows  At  caitiffs  Marr.  of  Geraint  95 

And  strongly  s  out  her  limbs  awoke ;  Geraint  and  E.  880 

beast  seeking  to  help  herself  By  s  at  her  better.  Merlin  and  V.  499 

And  over  hard  and  soft,  s  the  sod  Pelleas  and  E.  498 

S  the  last  stroke  with  Excalibur,  Pass,  of  Arthur  168 

Thunderless  lightnings  s  under  sea  To  the  Queen  ii  12 

jS  the  hospital  wall,  crashing  thro'  it,  Def.  of  Lucknow  18 

String    (See  also  Bow-string,  Leading-strings)    Shall  it  not 

be  scorn  to  me  to  harp  on  such  a  moulder'd  s  ?  Locksley  Hall  147 

But  send  it  slackly  from  the  s ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  26 

I  cannot  all  command  the  s's ;  ,,       Ixxxviii  10 

and  sometimes  touches  but  one  s  That  quivers.  Lover's  Tale  i  17 

coostom  flitted  awaay  like  a  kite  wi'  a  brokken  s.  North.  Cobbler  28 

Strip     Shall  s  a  hundred  hollows  bare  of  Spring,  Princess  vi  65 

shall  we  s  him  there  Your  lover  ?  Geraint  and  E.  488 

blacksmith  'e  s's  me  the  thick  ov  'is  ainn.  North.  Cobbler  85 
A-  your  own  foul  passions  bare ;                                Locksley  H.,  Sixty  141 

Stripe     Blackening  against  the  dead-green  s's  Pelleas  and  E.  554 

The  last  long  s  of  waning  crimson  gloom,  Ancient  Sage  221 

Striped    dropping  bitter  tears  against  his  brow  S  with 

dark  blood :  M.  d' Arthur  212 
dropping  bitter  tears  against  a  brow  S  with  dark 

blood :  Pass,  of  A  rthur  380 

Stripling    the  s's  ! — for  their  sport ! — I  tamed  my  leopards :     Princess  v  399 

'  The  years  that  made  the  s  wise  Ancient  Sage  111 

Stript     our  long  walks  were  s  as  bare  as  brooms.  Princess,  Pro.  184 

S  from  the  three  dead  wolves  of  woman  bom  Geraint  and  E.  94 

entering  barr'd  her  door,  S  off  the  case,  Lancelot  and  E.  16 

meekly  rose  the  maid,  S  off  the  case,  „            979 

His  friends  had  s  him  bare,  Dead  Prophet  14 

Strive    s  To  reconcile  me  with  thy  God.  Supp.  Confessions  101 

'  Waiting  to  s  a  happy  strife.  Two  Voices  130 

And  s  and  wrestle  with  thee  till  I  die :  St.  S.  Stylites  119 

strong  in  will  To  s,  to  seek,  to  find,  Ulysses  70 

But  for  one  hour,  0  Love,  I  s  To  keep  In  Mem.  xxxv  6 

When  on  the  gloom  I  s  to  paint  The  face  I  know ;  „          Ixx  2 

To  s,  to  fashion,  to  fulfil —  „        cxiii  7 

s  Again  for  glory,  while  the  golden  lyre  Tiresias  179 

Striven    '  I  cannot  hide  that  some  have  s,  Two  Voices  208 

These  two  have  s  half  the  day.  In  Mem.  cii  17 

With  sword  we  have  not  s ;  Gareth  and  L.  1264 

lily  maid  had  s  to  make  him  cheer,  Lancelot  and  E.  327 

Streak  (stroke)     Naay — let  ma  s  tha  down  Spinster's  S's.  53 

Stro^n  (stroking)    Ye  was  s  ma  down  wi'  the  'air,  „              19 

Strode    There  s  a  stranger  to  the  door,  (repeat)  The  Goose  3,  39 

So  s  he  back  slow  to  the  wounded  King.  M.  d' Arthur  65 

And  so  s  back  slow  to  the  wounded  King.  .,         112 

But  the  other  swiftly  s  from  ridge  to  ridge,  „         181 

where  he  s  About  the  haU,  among  his  dogs,  Godiva  16 

S  from  the  porch,  tall  and  erect  again.  Aylmer's  Field  825 

<S  in,  and  claim'd  their  tribute  as  of  yore.  Com.  of  Arthur  506 

Then  s  a  good  knight  forward,  Gareth  and  L.  364 

Sir  Gareth  s,  and  saw  without  the  door  „            676 

Prince,  as  Enid  past  him,  fain  To  follow,  s  a  stride,  Marr.  of  Geraint  376 

s  the  brute  Earl  up  and  down  his  hall,  Geraint  and  E.  712 
stall'd  his  horse,  and  s  across  the  court,                    Balin  and  Balan  341 

shook  his  hair,  s  off,  and  buzz'd  abroad  Lancelot  and  E.  722 

So  s  he  back  slow  to  the  wounded  King.  Pass,  of  Arthur  233 

And  so  s  back  slow  to  the  wounded  King.  „              280 

But  the  other  swiftly  s  from  ridge  to  ridge,  .,              349 
Stroke    (See  also  Sabre-stroke,  StroiUk,  Sword-Stroke) 

'  Then  dying  of  a  mortal  s.  Two  Voices  154 
Would  strike,  and  firmly,  and  one  s :                        Love  thou  thy  land  92 

A  s  of  cruel  sunshine  on  the  cliff.  Princess  iv  524 

mutual  pardon  ask'd  and  given  For  s  and  song,  ,,          v  47 

With  s  on  s  the  horse  and  horseman,  came  ,,           523 

two-cell'd  heart  beating,  with  one  full  s,  Life.'  „      vii  307 


Stroke  (continued)     answering  now  my  random  s  With 

fruitful  cloud  In  Mem.  xxxix  2 

Struck  for  himself  an  evil  s ;  Maud  II  i  21 

but  thou  strikest  a  strong  s,  For  strong  thou  art         Gareth  and  L.  877 
one  5  Laid  hiia  that  clove  it  grovelling  on  the  groimd.  ..  971 

four  s's  they  struck  With  sword,  and  these  were  mighty ;  . .  1042 

But  with  one  s  Sir  Gareth  split  the  skull.  1404 

Short  fits  of  prayer,  at  every  s  a  breath.  Geraint  and  E.  155 

God's  mercy,  what  a  s  was  there  !  Lancelot  and  E.  24 

For  twenty  s's  of  the  blood,  „  720 

When  have  I  stinted  s  in  foughten  field  ?  Holy  Grail  860 

strike  him  !  put  my  hate  into  your  s's,  Pelleas  and  E.  228 

the  s  That  strikes  them  dead  is  as  my  death  to  me.       Pass,  of  Arthur  73 
Striking  the  last  s  with  Excalibur,  „  168 

I  might  have  stricken  a  lusty  s  for  him.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  69 

Not  one  s  firm.  Romnei/s  R.  115 

Rang  the  s,  and  sprang  the  blood.  The  Tourney  9 

Stroked     Sat  on  his  knee,  s  his  gray  face  Lancelot  and  E.  749 

Stroking    See  A-stroakin,  Stroakin 

Stroll     all  that  from  the  town  would  s.  Talking  Oak  53 

Stroll'd     then  we  s  For  half  the  day  thro'  stately  theatres     Princess  ii  368 
Strong     The  s  limbs  failing ;  All  Things  loill  Die  32 

Great  in  faith,  and  s  Against  the  grief  of 

circumstance  Supp.  Confessions  91 

whose  s  right  arm  debased  The  throne  of  Persia,  Alexander  1 

For  there  was  Milton  like  a  seraph  s.  Palace  of  Art  133 

s  to  break  or  bind  All  force  in  bonds  ..  153 

Whereof  the  s  foundation-stones  were  laid  ,,  235 

tale  of  little  meaning  tho'  the  words  are  s ;  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  119 

as  s  gales  Hold  swollen  clouds  from  raining,  D.  of  F.  Women  10 

Thro'  many  agents  making  s.  Love  thou  thy  land  39 

S  mother  of  a  Lion-line,  Be  proud  of  those  s  sons 

of  thine  England  and  Amer.  3 

I  was  s  and  hale  of  body  then ;  St.  S.  Stylites  29 

words  That  make  a  man  feel  s  in  speaking  truth ;         Love  and  Dviy  70 
s  in  will  To  strive,  to  seek,  to  find,  Ulysses  69 

But  thy  s  Hours  indignant  work'd  their  wills,  Tithonus  18 

The  s  tempestuous  treble  throbb'd  and  palpitated  ;        Vision  of  Sin  28 
Cast  his  s  arms  about  his  drooping  wife,  Enoch  Arden  228 

You  chose  the  best  among  us — a  s  man :  „  293 

Her  son,  who  stood  beside  her  tall  and  s,  „  756 

So  past  the  s  heroic  soul  away.  ,,  915 

One  whom  the  s  sons  of  the  world  despise ;  The  Brook  3 

To  make  disproof  of  scorn,  and  s  in  hopes,  Aylmer's  Field  446 

that  one  kiss  Was  Leolin's  one  s  rival  upon  earth :  ,.  557 

But  she  with  her  .9  feet  up  the  steep  hill  Sea  Dreams  120 

And  mould  a  generation  s  to  move  Princess  v  416 

S,  supple,  sinew-corded,  apt  at  arms ;  „  535 

'  O  fair  and  s  and  terrible  !  „      vi  163 

Ruddy  and  white,  and  s  on  his  legs,  Grandmother  2 

S  of  his  hands,  and  s  on  his  legs,  „  13 

Well  for  him  whose  will  is  s  !  Will  1 

S  Son  of  God,  immortal  Love,  In  Mem.,  Pro.  1 

More  s  than  all  poetic  thought ;  „      xxxvi  12 

Then  bring  an  opiate  trebly  s,  „  Ixxi  6 

For  thou  wert  s  as  thou  wert  true  ?  „        Ixxiii  4 

The  wish  too  s  for  words  to  name ;  „        xciii  14 

Than  some  s  bond  which  is  to  be.  „         cxvi  16 

The  s  imagination  roll  A  sphere  of  stars  „         cxxii  6 

And  if  the  words  were  sweet  and  s  „        cxxv  11 

But,  I  fear,  the  new  s  wine  of  love,  Maud  7  m  82 

S  in  the  power  that  all  men  adore,  .,         a;  14 

One  still  s  man  in  a  blatant  land,  63 

So  many  those  that  hate  him,  and  so  s.  Com.  of  Arthur  251 

One  was  fair,  s,  arm'd — But  to  be  won  by  force —      Gareth  and  L.  104 
'  I  have  stagger'd  thy  s  Gawain  in  a  tilt  For  pastime ;  „  542 

Morning-Star,  and  Noon-Sun,  and  Evening-Star,  Being 

s  fools ;  „  635 

but  thou  strikest  a  s  stroke.  For  s  thou  art  and  goodly 

therewithal,  877 

'  0  Sun '  (not  this  s  fool  whom  thou,  Sir  Knave,  ,,  1058 

And  heated  the  s  warrior  in  his  dreams ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  72 

And  the  s  passion  in  her  made  her  weep  110 

and  the  blood  Of  their  s  bodies,  flowing,  569 

With  streaming  grass,  appear'd,  low-built  but  s ;    Balin  and  Balan  333 


strong 


692 


Struck 


Strong  (coiUinued)     A  minstrel  of  Caerleon  by  s  storm  Blown 

into  shelter  Merlin  and  V.  9 

but  God  Broke  tlie  s  lance,  and  roU'd  his  enemy 

down,  Lancelot  and  E.  26 

found  the  Lord  of  Astolat  With  two  s  sons,  174 

When  the  s  neighings  of  the  wild  white  Horse  ..  298 

5'  men,  and  wrathful  that  a  stranger  knight  ..  468 

Gawain,  surnamed  The  Courteous,  fair  and  s,  „  555 

out  of  this  she  plaited  broad  and  long  A  s  sword-belt,     Holy  Grail  153 
dyed  The  s  White  Horse  in  his  own  heathen  blood —  ..  312 

How  my  s  lance  had  beaten  down  the  knights,  ..  363 

their  wise  men  Were  s  in  that  old  magic  „  666 

had  felt  the  sim  Beat  like  a  s  knight  on  his  helm,         Pelleas  and  E.  23 
beholding  hun  so  s,  she  thought  That  peradventure 

he  will  fight  "^  ..  117 

'  0  the  s  hand,'  she  said,  '  See  !  look  at  mine  !  ,.  126 

so  by  that  s  hand  of  his  The  sword  and  golden  circlet  .,  169 

Then  let  the  s  hand,  which  had  overthrown  „  234 

O  towers  so  s,  Huge,  solid,  „  463 

his  s  hands  gript  And  dinted  the  gilt  dragons         Last  Tournament  181 
'  I  had  forgotten  all  in  my  s  joy  To  see  thee —  „  582 

all  his  aims  ^^'ere  sharpen'd  by  s  hate  for  Lancelot  Guinevere  20 

'     -  '  '  ..112 

.       194 

„       246 

Lover's  Tale  ii  88 

iv  282 

Def.  of  Lucknow  47 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  53 

Despair  51 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  49 

Helen's  Tower  7 

To  Ulysses  7 

On  a  Mourner  18 

The  Goose  30 

Day -Dm.,  L' Envoi  14 

Sea  Dreams  298 

306 

Princess  iv  278 

V  536 

vi  166 

Spiteful  Letter  10 

In  Mem.  xcvi  17 

„       cxxviii  1 

Maud  I  via  8 

Gareth  and  L.  1405 

Geraint  and  E.  341 

940 

Holy  Grail  731 

Lancelot  and  E.  463 

Columbus  35 

Tiresias  70 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  58 

Hands  ail  Round  6 

Forlorn  62 

Merlin  and  the  G.  63 

Enoch  Arden  30 


And  fly  to  my  s  castle  overseas : 

Round  that  5  castle  where  he  holds  the  Queen ; 

And  s  man-breasted  things  stood  from  the  sea, 

a  s  sympathy  Shook  all  my  soul : 

a  semi-smile  As  at  a  s  conclusion — 

S  with  the  strength  of  the  race  to  command, 

Seven  s  Earls  of  the  army  of  Anlaf 

There  was  a  s  sea-current  would  sweep  as 

S  in  will  and  rich  in  wisdom, 

Would  my  granite  girth  were  s  As  either  love. 

The  century's  three  s  eights  have  met 
Stronger    Teach  that  sick  heart  the  s  choice. 

Then  wax'd  her  anger  s. 

The  Poet-forms  of  s  hours. 

Till  the  little  wings  are  s. 

Till  the  little  Umbs  are  s. 

Eight  daughters  of  the  plough,  s  than  men. 

But  tougher,  heavier,  s,  he  that  smote 

Love  and  Nature,  there  are  two  more  terrible  And  s. 

Are  mine  for  the  moment  s  ? 

he  came  at  length  To  find  a  s  faith  his  own ; 

The  love  that  rose  on  s  wings, 

suddenly,  sweeter,  my  heart  beat  s  And  thicker. 

Then  with  a  s  buffet  he  clove  the  bebn 

My  malice  is  no  deeper  than  a  moat,  No  s  than  a 
wall: 

in  their  chairs  set  up  a  s  race  With  hearts 

Yea,  shook  this  newer,  s  hall  of  ours, 

then  he  hurl'd  into  it  Against  the  s ; 

The  vast  occasion  of  our  s  life — 

and  bring  on  both  the  yoke  Of  s  states. 

Pining  for  the  s  heart  that  once  had  beat  beside 
her  own. 

With  s  Hfe  from  day  to  day ; 

Tho'  you'll  ne'er  be  s ; 

Then,  with  a  melody  S  and  stateUer, 
Stronger-made  Enoch  s-m  Was  master : 
Strongest     Is  this  enough  to  say  That  my  desire,  like  all 

s  hopes.  Gardener's  D.  237 

where  two  fight  The  s  wins,  Aylmer's  Field  365 

Cries  to  Weakest  as  to  S,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  110 

my  s  M-ish  Falls  flat  before  your  least  unwillingness.       Romney's  R.  71 
Stronglier     And  Gareth  hearing  ever  a-  smote,  Gareth  and  L.  1141 

Stxong-wing'd    These  lame  hexameters  the  s-w  music 

of  Homer !  Trans,  of  Homer  1 

Strove    Resolved  on  noble  things,  and  s  to  speak,  D.  of  F.  Women  42 

blinded  with  my  tears.  Still  s  to  speak :  „  109 

She  s  to  span  my  waist :  Talking  Oak  138 

Not  unbecoming  men  that  s  with  Gods.  Ulysses  53 

That  »  in  other  days  to  pass,  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  10 

So  she  s  against  her  weakness,  X.  of  Burleigh  69 

And  still  they  s  and  wrangled :  Sea  Dreams  229 

8  to  buffet  to  land  in  vain.  Princess  iv  185 


Strove  (continued)     I  s  against  the  stream  and  all  in  vain :     Princess  vii  12 

Son  of  him  with  whom  we  s  for  power —  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  1 

Shall  be  for  whose  applause  I  s,  In  Mem.  li  5 

But  ever  s  to  make  it  true :  „     xcvi  8 

And  while  she  wept,  and  I  s  to  be  cool,  Maud  II  i  15 
lords  Drew  back  in  wrath,  and  Arthur  s  with 

Rome.  Com.  of  Arthur  514 

yet  he  s  To  learn  the  graces  of  their  Table,  Balin  and  Balan  237 

I  yearn'd  and  s  To  tear  the  twain  asunder  Holy  Grail  785 
when  we  s  in  youth,  And  brake  the  petty  kings.         Pass,  of  Arthur  67 

I  s  to  disengage  myself,  but  fail'd.  Lover's  Tale  i  692 

thou  s  to  rise  From  my  full  heart.  .,             711 

I  could  not  rise  Albeit  I  s  to  follow.  „          ii  98 

I  s  myself  with  Spain  against  the  Moor.  Columbus  94 

for  whenever  we  s  to  speak  Our  voices  V.  of  Maeldune  21 
But  ever  I  fail'd  to  please  him,  however  I  s  to  please —    The  Wreck  28 

S  for  sixty  widow'd  years  to  help  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  267 

S  yonder  moimtain  flat,  Mechanophilus  6 

Strow     And  s's  her  lights  below,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  28 

Strowing     the  happy  people  s  cried  '  Hosanna  Enoch  Arden  505 

S  balm,  or  shedding  poison  in  the  fountains  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  274 

StrovTO    (See  also  Strewn,  Star-strown)    And  would  have  s 

it,  and  are  faU'n  themselves.  Princess  vi  42 

s  With  gold  and  scatter'd  coinage,  Geraint  and  E.  25 

loosely  s  with  crags :  We  mounted  slowly ;  Lover's  Tale  i  384 

Hath  stili'd  the  blast  and  s  the  wave,  Freedom  34 

Struck     light  S  up  against  the  blinding  wall.  Mariana  in  the  S.  56 

S  thro'  with  pangs  of  hell.  Palace  of  Art  220 

a  lyre  of  widest  range  S  by  all  passion,  D.  of  F.  Women  166 

And  s  upon  the  corn-laws,  where  we  split,  Audley  Court  35 

he  s  his  staff  against  tlie  rocks  And  broke  it, —  Golden  Year  59 

Then  s  it  thrice,  and,  no  one  opening,  Enoch  Arden  279 

Started  from  bed,  and  s  herself  a  light,  „            494 

S  out  the  streaming  mountain-side,  Lucretius  29 

Whose  death-blow  s  the  dateless  doom  of  kings,  „      236 

twangUng  violin  S  up  with  Soldier-laddie,  Princess,  Pro.  86 

I  s  in :  '  Albeit  so  mask'd.  Madam,  ,.             ii  212 

'  you  wrong  him  more  than  1  That  s  him :  „            iv  246 

She  s  such  warbUng  fury  thro'  the  words ;  „                586 

Till  I  s  out  and  shouted ;  „              v  540 

our  enemies  have  faU'n,  have  fall'n :  they  s;  „              m  48 

while  the  day.  Descending,  s  athwart  the  hall,  ,,                364 

and  flying  s  With  showers  of  random  sweet  „             vii  85 

That  if  to-night  our  greatness  were  s  dead.  Third  of  Feb.  17 

s  the  keys  There  at  his  right  with  a  sudden  crash.  The  Islet  7 

I  hear  the  bell  s  in  the  night :  In  Mem.  x  2 

When  the  dark  hand  s  down  thro'  time,  „  Ixxii  19 

Like  a  sudden  .spark  S  vainly  in  the  night,  Maud  I  ix  14 
And  he  s  me,  madman,  over  the  face,  S  me  before  the 

languid  fool,  ,.       //  i  18 

S  for  himself  an  evil  stroke ;  „              21 

Friend,  to  be  s  by  the  public  foe,  „           v  89 
afterward  S  for  the  throne,  and  striking  found  his 

doom.  Com.  of  Arthur  325 
four  strokes  they  s  With  sword,  and  these  were 

mighty :  Gareth  and  L.  1042 
S  at  her  with  his  whip,  (repeat)                         Marr.  of  Geraint  201,  413 

S  at  him  with  his  whip,  and  cut  his  cheek.  „                     207 

S  thro'  the  bulky  bandit's  corselet  home,  Geraint  and  E.  159 

Earl  Doorm  S  with  a  knife's  haft  „              600 

In  those  fierce  wars,  s  hard —  Balin  arid  Balan  177 

Dragg'd  him,  and  s,  but  from  the  castle  a  cry  „              399 

s  Furrowing  a  giant  oak,  and  javeUning  Merlin  and  V.  935 

S  up  and  hved  along  the  milky  roofs ;  Lancelot  and  E.  409 

lightnings  here  and  there  to  left  and  right  S,  Holy  Grail  495 

moon  S  from  an  open  grating  overhead  Lover's  Tale  iv  60 

bullet  s  him  that  was  dressing  it  suddenly  dead,  The  Revenge  67 

and  ever  they  s  and  they  slew  ;  V.  of  Maeldune  68 

S  for  their  hoards  and  their  hearths  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  19 

as  if  she  had  s  and  crash'd  on  a  rock ;  The  Wreck  108 

S  hard  at  the  tender  heart  of  the  mother,  Despair  74 

S  with  the  sword-hand  and  slew.  Heavy  Brigade  52 

aiming  at  an  all  but  hopeless  mark  To  strike  it,  s ;  The  Ring  347 

Be  s  from  out  the  clash  of  warring  wills ;  Prog,  of  Spring  95 

(S  by  a  poison'd  arrow  in  the  fight.  Death  of  (Enone  26 


struck 


693 


Succeeder 


struck  (coiitinued)     every  dawn  S  from  him  his  own 

shadow  on  to  Rome.  St.  Telemaehus  33 

S  to  the  left  and  s  to  the  right  The  Totirney  4 

Stro^le  (s)     The  s  of  standards,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  87 

Struggle  (verb)     Glory  of  Virtue,  to  fight,  to  s.  Wages  3 

ruby-chain,  and  both  Began  to  s  for  it,  Last  Tournament  410 

Struggled     boy  that  cried  aloud  And  s  hard.  Bora  102 

Strimuuing     VVith  s  and  with  scraping,  Amphian  70 

Strung     Kate  hath  a  spirit  ever  s  Kate  10 

Stubb'd  (hoed)     an'  I  'a  s  Thurnaby  waaste.  N.  Farmer,  O-  S.  28 

But  I  s  'um  oop  wi'  the  lot,  .■                32 

an'  I  mean'd  to  'a  s  it  at  fall,  ..                 41 

Stubble     Fire  in  a  dry  s  a  nine-days'  wonder  Lancelot  and  E.  735 

Stubborn     He  thought  to  quell  the  s  hearts  of  oak,  Biionaparte  1 

'  S,  but  she  may  sit  Upon  a  king's  right  hand  Princess  v  438 

He  shall  find  the  s  thistle  bursting  Ode  on  Well.  206 

Sick  for  thy  s  hardihood,  In  Mem.  ii  14 

Stubborn-shafted     Before  a  gloom  of  s-s  oaks,  Geraint  and  E.  120 

Stuck     (See  also  Stook)     S ;  and  he  clamour'd  from  a 

casement.  The  Brook  85 

s  out  The  bones  of  some  vast  bulk  that  lived  Princess  Hi  293 

Hoanly  Miss  Annie  were  saw  s  oop,  Village  Wife  59 

fur  I  s  to  tha  moor  na  the  rest,  Spinster's  S's.  51 

I  couldn't  a'  s  by  my  word.  „               96 

Studded     others  s  wide  With  disks  and  tiars,  Arabian  Nights  63 

her  hair  <S  with  one  rich  Provence  rose —  Lover's  Tale  Hi  45 

Student     Drove  in  upon  the  s  once  or  twice,  Aylmer's  Field  462 

Hers  more  than  half  the  s's,  all  the  love.  Princess  iii  39 

What  s  came  but  that  you  planed  her  path  ,.      iv  315 

To  cramp  the  s  at  his  desk.  In  Mem.  cxxviii  18 

Study     Back  would  he  to  his  studies,  Aylmer's  Field  394 

Old  studies  fail'd ;  seldom  she  spoke :  Princess  vii  31 

Stuff  (s)     and  chairs.  And  all  his  household  s ;  Walk,  to  the  Mail  40 

Man  is  made  of  solid  s.  Edwin  Morris  49 

'  What  s  is  this  !     Old  writers  push'd  the  happy  season  Golden  Year  65 

household  s.  Live  chattels,  mincers  Princess  iv  514 

Stuff  (verb)     S  his  ribs  with  mouldy  hay.  Vision  of  Sin  66 

Stumble    my  mind  S's,  and  all  my  faculties  are  lamed.  Lucretius  123 

Stumbled     Ran  Gaffer,  s  Gammer.  The  Goose  3A 

We  5  on  a  stationary  voice.  Princess  v  2 

Part  s  mixt  with  floundering  horses.  „       498 

Ues  a  ridge  of  slate  across  the  ford ;  His  horse 

thereon  s —  Gareth  aiid  L.  1057 

horse,  Arising  wearily  at  a  fallen  oak,  S  headlong,  Balin  and  Balan  426 

I  S  on  deck,  half  mad.  The  Wreck  118 

I  have  s  back  again  Into  the  common  day,  Bomney's  R.  32 

He  s  in,  and  sat  Blinded  ;  St.  Telemaehus  48 

Stumbling    jS  across  the  market  to  his  death,  A  yhner's  Field  820 

our  horses  s  as  they  trode  On  heaps  of  ruin.  Holy  Grail  716 

Stmnbling-block     striking  on  huge  s-b  s  of  scorn  A  yhner's  Field  538 

Stump     And  let  my  lady  sear  the  s  for  him,  Pelleas  and  E.  339 

A  s  of  oak  half-dead.  From  roots  like  some  black 

coil  Last  Tournament  12 

with  blunt  s  Pitch-blacken'd  sawing  the  air,  „               66 

Stump'd     with  clamour  bowl'd  And  s  the  wicket ;  Princess,  Pro.  82 

Stung     poisoning  all  bus  rest,  S  him  in  dreams.  Balin  and  Balan  384 

S  by  his  loss  had  vanish'd,  none  knew  where.  Lover  s  Tale  iv  102 

'  The  shaft  of  scorn  that  once  had  s  Ancient  Sage  131 

,               Dead  ! — and  maybe  s  With  some  remorse.  The  Ring  454 

\       Stnnn'd     And  s  me  from  my  power  to  think  In  Mem.  xvi  15 

I               1  sitting  here  so  s  and  still,  Maud  II  i  2 

i               and  s  tiie  twain  Or  slew  them,  Geraint  and  E.  91 

I               and  so  left  him  s  or  dead,  »          464 

'               hurl'd  liini  headlong,  and  he  fell  S,  Guinevere  109 

Stunning    See  Ear-stnnning 

Stunt  (obstinate)     Do'ant  be  s :  taake  time :  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  17 

Stunted     I  lived  for  years  a  s  sunless  life ;  Aylmer's  Field  357 

Nor  s  squaws  of  West  or  East ;  Princess  iiJS 

Stupid    Courage,  poor  s  heart  of  stone. —  Maud  II  iii  5 

She  felt  so  blunt  and  s  at  the  heart :  Geraint  and  E.  747 

O  s  child  !     Yet  you  are  wise  who  say  it ;  Merlin  and  V.  251 

with  such  a  s  heart  To  mterpret  ear  and  eye,  Lancelot  and  E.  941 

then  at  the  last  they  found  I  had  grown  so  s  and  still  Rizpah  49 

Sty     so  retum'd  unf arrow'd  to  her  s.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  100 

A  maiden  moon  that  sparkles  on  a  s,  Princess  v  186 


Style     take  the  s  of  those  heroic  times  ?  The  Epic  35 

What  s  could  suit  ?  Princess,  Con.  9 

Styled    See  Self-styled 

Stylites    (See  also  Simeon,  Simeon  Stylites)    Simeon  of 

the  pillar,  by  surname,  S,  among  men ;  St.  S.  Stylites  162 

Subdue    to  s  this  home  Of  sin,  my  flesh,  „  57 

»S  them  to  the  useful  and  the  good.  Ulysses  38 

foil'd  at  the  last  by  the  handful  they  could  not  s ;     Def.  of  Lucknmo  44 
he  thought  he  could  s  me  to  his  will.  Happy  64 

Subdued     I  s  me  to  my  father's  will ;  D.  of  F.  Women  234 

grace  Of  sweet  seventeen  s  me  ere  she  spoke)  The  Brook  113 

S  me  somewhat  to  that  gentleness,  Geraint  and  E.  867 

Subject  (adj.)     s  to  the  season  or  the  mood,  Aylmer's  Field  71 

Subject  (s)     knowledge  of  his  art  Held  me  above  the  s,    I),  of  F.  Women  10 
we  coursed  about  The  s  most  at  heart.  Gardener's  B.  223 

She  rapt  upon  her  s,  he  on  her :  Princess  iii  304 

My  5  with  my  s's  under  him,  Geraint  and  E.  916 

'  Queen  ?  s  ?  but  I  see  not  what  1  see.  Balin  and  Balan  281 

mine  image.  The  s  of  thy  power,  be  cold  in  her,  Lover's  Tale  i  782 

Artificer  and  s,  lord  and  slave,  „  ii  103 

it  the  rebel  s  seek  to  drag  me  from  the  throne.  By  an  Evolution.  15 

Sublime    my  lover,  with  whom  I  rode  s  On  Fortune's 

neck :  B.  of  F.  Women  141 

'  Name  and  fame  !  to  fly  s  Thro'  the  courts,  Vision  of  Sin  103 

raillery,  or  grotesque,  or  false  s —  Princess  iv  588 

In  his  simplicity  s.  Ode  on  Well.  34 

nourishing  a  youth  s  With  the  fairy  tales  of  science,      Locksley  Hall  11 
If,  in  thy  second  state  s.  In  Mem.  In  1 

With  \vhat  s  repression  of  himself.  Bed.  of  Idylls  19 

Farewell,  Macready ;  moral,  grave,  s ;  To  W.  C.  Macready  12 

'  The  stars  with  head  s,'  Epilogue  47 

Submit    S,  and  hear  the  judgment  of  the  King.'  Geraint  and  E.  799 

Submitting    S  all  things  to  desire.  In  Mem.  cxiv  8 

Subscribed     which  hastily  s.  We  enter'd  on  the  boards :  Princess  ii  73 

Subserve    Or  but  s's  another's  gain.  In  Mem.  liv  12 

Subsist     Within  this  region  I  s.  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  2 

Substance    island  princes  over-bold  Have  eat  our  s.     Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  76 
And  rolling  as  it  were  the  s  of  it  Aylmer's  Field  258 

none  of  all  our  blood  should  know  The  shadow  from  the  s,     Princess  i  9 
do  I  chase  The  s  or  the  shadow  ?  ..    «  409 

everywhere  I  know  the  s  when  I  see  it.  .,        413 

spirit  flash  not  all  at  once  from  out  This  shadow 

into  S —  Bed.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  6 

shadow  leave  the  S  in  the  brooding  light  Happy  99 

Subtil     Her  s,  warm,  and  golden  breath,  Supp.  Confessions  60 

Subtilising    See  All-subtilising 

Subtle     A  s,  sudden  flame,  Madeline  28 

With  shrilling  shafts  of  s  wit.  Clear-headed  friend  13 

Round  thy  neck  in  s  ring  Adeline  58 

Thro'  lips  and  eyes  in  s  rays.  Rosalind  24 

She  with  a  s  smile  in  her  mild  eyes,  (Enone  184 

All  s  thought,  all  curious  fears.  In  Mem.  xxxii  9 

one  indeed  I  knew  In  many  a  s  question  versed,  ,,  xeoi  6 

he  that  like  a  s  beast  Lay  couchant  with  his  eyes  Guinevere  10 

the  s  beast.  Would  track  her  guilt  luitil  he  found,  .,        59 

I  knew  Of  no  more  s  master  imder  heaven  „      478 

Works  of  s  brain  and  hand.  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  7 

How  s  at  tierce  and  quart  of  mind  In  Mem.,  W.  G.  Ward  5 

Subtle-paced    silver  flow  Of  s-p  counsel  Isabel  21 

Subtler    Who  knows  a  s  magic  than  his  own —  Com.  of  Arthur  2Si 

Subtlest    Myriads  of  topaz-lights,  and  jacinth-work  Of  s 

jewellery.  M.  d' Arthur  58 

Myriads  of  topaz-lights,  and  jacinth-work  Of  s 

jewellery.  Pass,  of  Arthur  226 

Subtle-thoughted    S-t,  myriad-minded.  Ode  to  Memory  118 

Suburb     (See  also  Wheat-suburb)     By  park  and  s  under 

brown  Of  lustier  leaves;  In  Mem.  xoviii  24 

mitre-sanction'd  harlot  draws  his  clerks  Into 

the  s —  »S'm'  J.  Oldcastle  107 

Old  Fitz,  who  from  your  s  grange,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  1 

Succeed     '  I  know  that  age  to  age  s's,  Two  Voices  205 

'  The  many  fail:  the  one  s's.'  Bay-Bm.,  Arrival  16 

pushes  us  off  from  the  board,  and  others  ever  s  ?  Alaud  I  iv  27 

That  after  many  changes  may  s  Life,  Prog,  of  Spring  116 

Succeeder     The  sole  s  to  their  wealth,  Aylmer's  Field  294 


Successful 

Successful    Waged  such  unwiUing  tho'  s  war  On  all  the 

youth, 
Succession    make  One  act  a  phantom  of  s : 
Successor    be  dissipated  By  frail  s's. 

but  the  prayers,  That  have  no  s  in  deed, 
Such     Kmgs  have  no  s  couch  as  thine. 

You  move  not  in  s  solitudes. 

At  s  strange  war  with  something  good, 

And  they  that  know  s  things — 

In  s  discourse  we  gain'd  the  garden  rails, 

With  s  compeUing  cause  to  grieve 

I  had  s  reverence  for  his  blame, 

And  s  refraction  of  events  As  often  rises  ere  they  rise 

thy  darkness  must  have  spread  With  s  delight  as  theirs 


694 


Suffering 


Merlin  and  V.  571 

Frincess  in  329 

267 

Akbar's  Dream  10 

A  Dirge  40 

Margaret  45 

Two  Voices  302 

Princess  i  144 

„     Con.  80 

In  Mem.  xxix  1 

xcii  15 


of  old, 
'  Lord,  there  is  no  s  city  anywhere, 
for  the  King  Will  bind  thee  by  s  vows, 
la-sh'd  at  each  So  often  and  with  «  blows, 
Such-wise    In  s-w,  that  no  man  could  see  her 
Suck    from  all  things  s  Marrow  of  mirth 
.<  the  blinding  splendour  from  the  sand, 
I  should  s  Lies  like  sweet  wines : 
an'  they  s's  the  muck  fro'  the  grass 
the  babe  Will  5  in  with  his  milk  hereafter^ 
Suck  d    Have  s  and  gather'd  into  one 

S  from  the  dark  heart  of  the  long  hills 
And  s  from  out  the  distant  gloom 
four  fools  have  s  their  allegory  From  these  damp 
walls,  "^ 

And  s  the  joining  of  the  stones, 
.S'  mto  oneness  like  a  little  star 
Had  s  the  fire  of  some  forgotten  sun, 
My  baby,  the  bones  that  had  s  me, 
Sucking    sometimes  .S'  the  damps  for  drink, 
Flaying  the  roofs  and  s  up  the  drains, 
s  The  foul  steam  of  the  grave  to  thicken  by  it 
Snckhng    fierce  teat  To  human  s's; 
Sudden    S  glances,  sweet  and  strange, 
A  subtle,  s  flame, 

A  s  splendour  from  behind  Flush'd 
m  thee  Is  nothing  s,  nothing  single  ; 
Ring  5  scritches  of  the  jay, 
with  s  fires  Flamed  over: 
And,  isled  in  s  seas  of  light, 
Because  with  s  motion  from  the  gi-ound 
But  I  have  s  touches,  and  can  run 

her  bosom  shaken  with  a  s  storm  of  sighs 

A  s  hubbub  shook  the  hall, 
Hurt  in  that  night  of  s  ruin  and  wreck, 
I  make  a  s  sally, 

with  a  s  execration  drove  The  footstool 
Who  entering  fill'd  the  house  with  s  light. 
Paled  at  a  s  twitch  of  his  iron  mouth  • 
Stirring  a  s  transport  rose  and  fell.      ' 
Up  in  one  night  and  due  to  s  sun : 
made  a  s  turn  As  if  to  speak, 
for  spite  of  doubts  And  s  ghostly  shadowings 
Entermg,  the  s  light  Dazed  me  half-blind  • 
But  yonder,  whiff  !  there  comes  a  s  heat. 
Heaven  flash'd  a  s  jubilant  ray. 
Rush  to  the  roof,  s  rocket,  and  higher 
There  at  his  right  with  a  «  crash, 
For  on  them  brake  the  s  foe ; 
He  caught  her  away  with  a  s  cry ; 
Should  strike  a  s  hand  in  mine, 
'  My  s  frost  was  s  gain, 
Like  a  s  spark  Struck  vainly  in  the  night 
and  my  Delight  Had  a  s  desire, 
And  shine  in  the  s  making  of  splendid  names, 
A  field  of  charlock  in  the  s  sun 
like  a  s  wind  Among  dead  leaves. 
'Rough,  s,^Vnd  pardonable,  worthy  to  be  knight- 
but  heard  in.<if,Aa/    A  o  c.^..„^  „*  u.-*.  ^ 


but  heard  instead  A  s  sound  of  hoofs. 
Whereat  Geraint  flash'd  into  s  spleen  • 
And  loosed  in  words  of  s  lire  the  wrath 


Maud  I  xviii  26 

Gareth  and  L.  206 

270 

Mart,  of  Geraint  564 

Merlin  and  V.  642 

Wai  Water.  213 

Princess  vii  39 

Last  Tournament  644 

Village  Wife  32 

Columbus  38 

Talking  Oak  191 

Princess  v  349 

In  Mem.  xcv  53 

Gareth  and  L.  1199 
Marr.  of  Geraint  324 
Lover's  Tale  i  308 
iv  194 
Bizpah  53 
St.  S._  Stylites  Ti 
Princess  v  525 
Lover's  Tale  i  648 
Com.  ofAHhur29 
Madeline  5 
28 
Arabian  Nights  81 
Eleanor e  57 
My  life  is  full  20 
Buonaparte  11 
Fatima  33 
D.  of  F.  Women  170 
Edwin  Morris  53 
Locksley  Hall  27 
Day-lJta.,  Bevival  7 
Enoch  Arden  564 
The  Brook  24 
Aylmer's  Field  326 
682 
732 
Princess  iv  29 
312 
394 
572 
V  11 
..  Con.  58 
Ode  on  Well.  129 
W.  to  Alexandra  20 
The  Islet  8 
The  Victim  4 
69 
In  Mem.  xiv  11 
„      Ixxxi  10 
Mavd  I  ix  13 
xiv  20 
,:  ///  vi  47 
Gareth  and  L.  388 
514 
653 
Marr.  of  Geraint  164 
273 
Geraint  and  E.  106 


Sudden  (continued)     cried  Geraint  for  wine  and  «oodlv 
cheer  To  feed  the  s  guest, 
AH  to  be  there  against  a  s  need ; 
And  at  a  5  swerving  of  the  road. 
Sent  forth  a  s  sharp  and  bitter  cry, 
Thus,  after  some  quick  burst  of  s  wrath. 
But  snatch'd  a  s  buckler  from  the  Squire, 
boat  Drave  with  a  s  wind  across  the  deeps 
or  else  A  s  spurt  of  woman's  jealousy,—    ' 
Might  feel  some  s  turn  of  anger  born 
I  yet  should  strike  upon  a  «  means  To  dig, 
rapt  By  all  the  sweet  and  s  passion  of  youth 
Then  made  a  s  step  to  the  gate,  and  there— 
I  pray  him,  send  a  s  Angel  down  To  seize  me 
power  To  lay  the  s  heads  of  violence  fiat, 
And  aU  her  form  shone  forth  with  s  light 
coming  out  of  gloom  Was  dazzled  by  the  s  light 
Ihe  s  trumpet  sounded  as  in  a  dream 
And,  saddening  on  the  s,  spake  IsoJt 
For  here  a  s  flush  of  wrathful  heat 
Pour  with  such  s  deluges  of  light 
For  in  the  s  anguish  of  her  heart 
all  at  once  The  front  rank  made  a  s  halt  • 
woods  upon  the  hiU  Waved  with  a  s  gust 
And,  making  there  a  s  light,  beheld 
Found  that  the  s  wail  his  lady  made  Dwelt 
I  knew  Some  s  vivid  pleasure  hit  him  there. 
Vailuig  a  s  eyeUd  with  his  hard  '  Dim  Saesneg ' 
1  felt  On  a  s  I  know  not  what, 
No  s  heaven,  nor  s  heU,  for  man, 
and  a  5  face  Look'd  in  upon  me  like  a  gleam 
As  nightmgale  Saw  thee,  and  flasli'd 
The  s  fire  from  Heaven  had  dash'd  him  dead, 
on  a  s  he,  Paris,  no  longer  beauteous  as  a  Gotl 
And  on  the  s,  and  with  a  cry  '  Saleem ' 
Then  on  a  5  we  saw  your  soldiers  crossing  the  rid"e 
bhe  said  with  a  s  glow  On  her  patient  face 


Geraint  and  E.  284 
375 
506 
722 
Baltn  and  Balan  217 
554 
Merlin  and  V.  201 
524 
531 
659 
Lancelot  and  E.  282 
391 
1424 
Holy  Grail  310 
450 
Pelleas  and  E.  105 
Last  Tournament  151 
581 
Guinevere  356 
Lover's  Tale  i  315 
702 
Hi  29 
34 
iv  53 
149 

Str  J.  Oldcastle  20 

The  Bing  32 

41 

„       419 

Demeter  and  P.  11 

Happy  83 

Death  of  QLnone  24 

Akbar's  Dream  184 

Bandit's  Death  21 

CJlarity  35 


Sudden-beaming     &s-b  tenderness"  Of  m&mexs  Lancelot  and'F\99 

Sudden-curved    drops  down  A  s-c  frown:  J!!/--  ^H 

SSi?T^     '^'''^  "^'"^i^  T^°««  *-°  g^-t  beasts  Hofyt^U%fo 

oudaenly     I  came  amontr  vou  here  so  «  H4  Y^  ^rau  o^u 

Sudden-shrUling    Lilia  S  wit".!"  i^irth  An  echo  ''%:^'Z  ^ 

Sue    s  me,  and  woo  me,  and  flatter  me  Th^  u.       -flo 

Not  one  word ;  No  !  tho'  your  father  .'. :  P.^W^AS 

SufEer    they  s— some,  'tis  whisper'd— down  in  hell  S  ^^^^ess  vi  J4U 

~r^^  as  we,  But  .'.  change  of  framf '^^"^'^I^.S;;^  ^ 


He  s's,  but  he  will  not  s  long ; 

He  s's,  but  he  cannot  s  wrong : 

I  do  not  i- in  a  dream; 

When  all  that  seems  shall  s  shock, 

Had  suffer'd,  or  should  s  any  taint  In  nature  • 

my  lord  thro'  me  should  s  shame. 

I  seem  to  s  nothing  heart  or  limb, 

Than  that  my  lord  should  s  loss  or  shame.' 

I  s  from  the  things  before  me, 

passionate  moment  would  not  *  that— 

Men  will  forget  what  we  s  and  not  what  we  do 

I  s  all  as  much  As  they  do — 
Sufferance    See  Long-sufferance 
Suffer'd     but  all  hath  s  change : 

Show  me  the  man  hath  s  more  than  I. 
thou  hast  s  long  For  ages  and  for  ages  ' ' 
I  have  enjoy'd  Greatly,  have  s  greatly, 
Truly,  she  herself  had  s'~ 
'  0  Katie,  what  I  5  for  your  sake  ! 
Who  loved,  who  s  countless  ills, 
and  loved  and  did.  And  hoped,  and  s, 
Had  s,  or  should  suffer  any  taint  In  nature  • 

That  each  had  s  some  exceeding  wrong.  (y«m;«/  «w  s-  ^« 

knight,  with  whom  I  rode,  Hath  s  misadventure  BaUnandli^nn'llR 
-None  wrought,  but  s  much,  an  orphan  maid^'  M^t  aSvll 
\  et  who  had  done,  or  who  had  s  wrong  ^  flTJ?  tj    ■  'rll 

Suffering    (-S-..  ato  Loig^uffering)    I  goflveak  from  s     ^'"'^'- ^  ^«^«  * '^26 

Two  Voices  238 


Will  2 

„    3 

In  Mem.  xiii  14 

!,        cxxxi  2 

Marr.  of  Geraint  31 

101 

472 

Geraint  and  E.  69 

Balin  and  Balan  284 

Lover's  Tale  iv  356 

Def.  ofLucknow  73 

Columbus  217 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  71 

St.  S.  Stylites  49 

99 

Ulysses  8 

Locksley  Hall  96 

The  Brook  119 

In  Mem.  Ivi  17 

„    Con.  135 

Marr.  of  Geraint  31 

Geraint  and  E.  36 


r 

Suffe 


Suffering 


695 


Suffering  (conl  inued)  and  s  thus  he  made  Minutes  an  age : 
as  by  some  one  deathbed  after  wail  Of  s, 
Made  strange  division  of  its  s  With  her,  whom  to 

have  s  view'd  had  been  Extremest  pain ; 
6' — 0  long-suffering — yes, 
gloom  of  Age  And  s  cloud  the  height 

S  it  thee  Thy  pain  is  a  reaUty.' 
May  not  that  earthly  chastisement  s  ? 
s  to  say  That  whatsoever  such  a  house 

Sufficed     touch  of  their  oftice  miglit  Iiave  s, 

Suffocated    'Sec  Half-suffocated 

Suffrage     take  the  s  of  the  plow. 

Suffused    She  look'd :  but  all  S  with  blushes — 
^V  tliem,  sitting,  lying,  languid  shapes, 

Sugar-pimn     I  hoard  it  as  a  s-p  for  Holmes.' 

S^gesting    Recurring  and  s  still ! 

Suggestion     track  S  to  her  inmost  cell. 

Suit    She  sent  a  note,  the  seal  an  Elle  vous  s, 

Suit  (clothes)     In  summer  s  and  silks  of  holiday. 
(His  dress  a  s  of  fray'd  magnificence, 
and  in  her  hand  A  s  of  bright  apparel, 
I  myself  unwillingly  have  worn  My  faded  s, 
And  robed  them  in  her  ancient  s  again. 
The  three  gay  s's  of  armour  which  they  wore, 
but  bound  the  s's  Of  armour  on  their  horses, 
Three  horses  and  three  goodly  s's  of  aims, 
Their  three  gay  s's  of  armour,  each  from  each, 

Suit  (courtship)    My  s  had  wither'd,  nipt  to  death 
second  s  obtain'd  At  first  with  Psyche. 
Evelyn  knew  not  of  my  former  s, 
So — your  happy  s  w£is  blasted — 

Suit  (petition)     Leolin's  rejected  rivals  from  their  s 
Lightly,  her  s  allow'd,  she  slipt  away, 

Suit  (verb)    could  not  fix  the  glass  to  s  her  eye ; 
And  something  it  should  be  to  s  the  place, 
But  something  made  to  s  wth  Time  and  place. 
What  style  could  s  ? 
Cahn  as  to  s  a  calmer  grief, 

great  offices  that  s  The  full-grown  energies  of  heaven 
Nor  can  it  s  me  to  foi-get  The  mighty  hopes 


Geraint  and  E.  114 
Pass,  of  Arthur  119 


New  life,  new  love,  to  s  the  newer  day : 


(See  also  Green-suited,  Ill-suited,  Sober-suited) 

A  meaning  s  to  his  mind. 

How  gay,  how  s  to  the  house  of  one 
Suiteth    That  only  silence  s  best. 
Suitor     Every  gate  is  throng'd  with  s's, 

Philip,  the  slighted  s  of  old  times. 

Like  the  Ithacensian  s's  in  old  time, 

never  yet  had  woman  such  a  pair  Of  s's  as  this 
maiden ; 

Her  s  in  old  years  before  Geraint, 

He  wildly  fought  a  rival  s, 
Sullen    The  s  answer  sUd  betwixt : 

From  out  my  s  heart  a  power  Broke, 

Touching  the  s  pool  below : 

jS,  defiant,  pitying,  wroth,  return'd 

Secrets  of  the  s  mine, 

cannot  hear  The  s  Lethe  rolling  doom 

-Vnd  gazing  on  thee,  s  tree, 

To  make  the  s  surface  crisp. 

And  a  s  thunder  is  roU'd ; 

For  he  is  always  s :  what  care  I  ?  ' 

Went  Enid  with  her  s  follower  on. 

Where  first  as  s  as  a  beast  new-caged, 

He  seem'd  so  s,  vext  he  could  not  go : 

Methought  by  slow  degrees  the  s  bell  Toll'd  quicker, 


Lover's  Tale  ii  128 

Rizfah  67 

Romney's  R.  65 

Two  Voices  386 

Aylmer's  Field  784 

Lover's  Tale  iv  201 

Maud  II V  27 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  118 

Gardener's  D.  154 

Vision  of  Sin  12 

The  Epic  43 

Will  14 

In  Mem.  xcv  32 

Edwin  Morris  105 

Mart,  of  Geraint  173 

296 

678 

706 

770 

Geraint  and  E.  95 

96 

124 

181 

Edwin  Morris  101 

Princess  vii  71 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  205 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  5 

Aylmer's  Field  493 

Lancelot  and  E.  778 

Enoch  Arden  241 

Princess,  Pro.  211 

231 

Con.  9 

In  Mem.  xi  2 

xl  19 

..  Ixxxv  59 

Last  Tournament  279 


Some  birds  are  sick  and  s  when  they  moult. 

And  changest,  breathing  it,  the  s  wmd, 

Me  they  front  With  s  brows. 
Sullen-purple    And  over  the  s-p  moor  (Look  at  it) 
Sullen-seeming    for  s-s  Death  may  give  More  life 
Sullied     I  have  s  a  noble  name, 
Sully    Mark  would  s  the  low  state  of  churl : 
Sallying    mainly  thro'  that  s  of  our  Queen — 
Sulphur    stood,  In  fuming  s  blue  and  green, 


Day-Dm.,  Moral  12 

Geraint  and  E.  683 

To  J.  S.  64 

Locksley  Hall  101 

Enoch  Arden  745 

Princess  iv  118 

Marr.  of  Geraint  440 

Geraint  and  E.  276 

The  Ring  214 

Two  Voices  226 

443 

Miller's  D.  244 

Aylmer's  Field  492 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  16 

Lit.  Squabbles  11 

In  Mem.  ii  13 

„       xlix  8 

Maud  II  iv  49 

Gareth  and  L.  32 

Geraint  and  E.  440 

856 

Lancelot  and  E.  210 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  13 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  73 

Prog,  of  Spring  110 

Akbar's  Dream  52 

Maud  I  x21 

„   xviii  46 

The  Wreck  5 

Gareth  and  L.  427 

Last  Tournament  682 

617 


Sulphur  (continued)    Dark  thro'  the  smoke  and  the  s 
Sultan    like  the  s  of  old  in  a  garden  of  spice. 

The  S,  as  we  name  him, — 

with  the  S's  pardon,  I  am  all  as  well  delighted, 

if  he  had  not  been  a  iS  of  brutes. 
Sultry    All  naked  in  a  s  sky, 

And  one,  the  reapers  at  their  s  toil. 

And  in  the  s  garden-squares, 

And  all  the  s  palms  of  India  known. 

And  o'er  a  weary  s  land. 

And  summer  basking  in  the  s  plains 


Summer 

Def.  of  Lwcknow  33 

Maud  I  iv  4Z 

XX  4 

39 

,.    //  V  81 

Fatima  37 

Palace  of  Art  77 

The  Blackbird  17 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  14 

Will  17 

Prog,  of  Spring  77 


N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  19 
N.  S.  26 

Gardener's  D.  13 

Supp.  Confessions  11 

154 

Isabel  8 

Madeline  2 

Arabian  Nights  80 
Elednore  7 


you  will  not  deny  my  s  throat  One  draught  of  icy  water.  Romney's  R.  22 

Sum     glory  of  the  s  of  things  Will  flash  In  Mem.  Ixxxviii  11 

This  is  my  s  of  knowledge — that  my  love  Lover's  Tale  i  164 
Summat  (something)     An'  i'  niver  knaw'd  whot  a 

mean'd  but  1  thowt  a  'ad  s  to  saay, 
Mun  be  a  guvness,  lad,  or  s,  and  addle  her  bread 
Summ'd     (See  also  Full-summ'd)     all  grace  S  up  and 

closed  in  little ; — 
Summer  (adj.)     if  a  bolt  of  fire  Would  rive  the 

slumbrous  s  noon 
And  hollows  of  the  fringed  hills  In  s  heats. 
The  s  calm  of  golden  charity. 
No  tranced  s  calm  is  thine, 
solemn  palms  were  ranged  Above,  unwoo'd  of  s 

wind: 
Thou  wert  born,  on  a  s  mom, 
gray  eyes  lit  up  With  s  lightnings  of  a  soul  So  full  of  s 

warmth,  Miller's  D.  13 

There's  many  a  bolder  lad  'iU  woo  me  any  s  day,  May  Queen  23 
With  that  gold  dagger  of  thy  bill  To  fret  the  s 

jenneting.  The  Blackbird  12 
one  s  noon,  an  arm  Rose  up  from  out  the  bosom  of  the 

lake,  M.  d' Arthur  29 

And  bowery  hollows  crown'd  with  s  sea,  „        263 

The  s  pilot  of  an  empty  heart  Gardener's  D.  16 

The  lime  a  s  home  of  murmurous  wings.  „            48 

Her  voice  fled  always  thro'  the  s  land ;  Edwin  Morris  67 

The  light  cloud  smoulders  on  the  s  crag.  „            147 

the  s  night,  that  paused  Among  her  stars  to  hear  us ;  Love  and  Duty  73 
S  isles  of  Eden  lying  in  dark-purple  spheres  of  sea.      Locksley  Hall  164 

looking  like  a  s  moon  Half-dipt  in  cloud :  Godiva  45 

Thro'  many  an  hour  of  s  suns.  Will  Water.  33 

S  woods,  about  them  blowing,  L.  of  Burleigh  19 

echoing  falls  Of  water,  sheets  of  s  glass.  To  E.  L.  2 

like  the  dry  High-elbow'd  grigs  that  leap  in  s  gra.ss.  The  Brook  54 

phalanx  of  the  s  spears  That  soon  should  wear  Aylmer's  Field  111 

A  s  burial  deep  in  hollyhocks ;  .,               164 

those  That  knit  themselves  for  s  shadow,  „              724 

A  league  of  street  in  s  solstice  down.  Princess  Hi  128 

'  Ah,  sad  and  strange  as  in  dark  s  dawns  ..          iv  49 

Like  s  tempest  came  her  tears —  „          w  15 

Where  we  withdrew  from  s  heats  and  state,  .,            245 

That  only  heaved  with  a  s  sweU.  The  Daisy  12 

Brief,  brief  is  a  s  leaf.  Spiteful  Letter  21 

To  rest  in  a  golden  grove,  or  to  bask  in  a  s  sky :  Wages  9 

Nor  branding  s  suns  avail  To  touch  thy  thousand  years 

of  gloom :  In  Mem.  ii  11 

That  never  knew  the  s  woods :  .,      xxvii  4 

In  which  we  went  thro'  s  France.  .,        Ixxi  4 

Or  sadness  in  the  s  moons  ?  .,   Ixxxiii  8 

And  break  the  Uvelong  s  day  With  banquet  ,.  Ixxxix  31 

and  go  By  s  belts  of  wheat  and  vine  .,      xeviii  4 

With  s  spice  the  humming  air ;  .,            ct  8 

'  A  doubtful  throne  is  ice  on  s  seas.  Com.  of  Arthur  248 

At  last,  it  chanced  that  on  a  s  mom  Marr.  of  Geraint  69 
glancing  like  a  dragon-fly  In  s  suit  and  silks  of 

holiday.  „             173 

on  a  s  mom  Adown  the  crystal  dykes  at  Camelot  Geraint  and  E.  469 

Was  cared  as  much  for  as  a  s  shower :  „              523 

Ay,  thou  rememberest  well — one  s  dawn —  Balin  and  Balan  505 

And  call'd  herself  a  gilded  s  fly  Merlin  and  V.  258 

But  since  you  name  yourself  the  s  fly,  „            369 

All  in  an  oriel  on  the  s  side,  Lancelot  and  E.  1177 

'  Then  on  a  s  night  it  came  to  pass,  Holy  Grail  179 


Summer 


696 


Sumptuous 


Summer  (adj.)  (continued)    Who  yells  Here  in  the  still 

sweet  s  night,  Pelleas  and  E.  473 

Built  for  a  s  day  with  Queen  Isolt  Against  a  shower,  Last  Tournament  378 
one  s  noon,  an  arm  Rose  up  from  out  the  bosom  of 

the  lake.  Pass,  of  Arthur  197 

And  bowery  hollows  crown'd  with  s  sea,  „               431 

as  thronging  fancies  come  To  boys  and  girls  when  s 

days  are  new.  Lover's  Tale  i  555 

Till  he  melted  like  a  cloud  in  the  silent  s  heaven ;  The  Revenge  14 

the  stars  came  out  far  over  the  s  sea,  56 

when  half  of  the  short  s  night  was  gone,  65 

and  the  sun  smiled  out  far  over  the  s  sea,  ,.          70 

Ten  long  sweet  s  days  upon  deck.  The  Wreck  64 

'  Ten  long  sweet  s  days '  of  fever,  „        147 

who,  on  that  s  day  When  I  had  fall'n  o£E  the  crag  The  Flight  21 
now  to  these  unsummer'd  skies  The  s  bird  is 

still,  Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son.  18 

The  two  that  love  thee,  lead  a  s  life,  Prin.  Beatrice  18 

Are  cheeping  to  each  other  of  their  flight  To  s  lands  !  The  Ring  87 

I  dream'd  last  night  of  that  clear  s  noon,  Romney's  R.  74 

'  wasting  the  sweet  s  hours '  ?  Charity  1 

fimmner  (s)     {See  also  Fnll-simmier,  Blid-siimmer) 

Autumn  and  s  Are  gone  long  ago ;  Nothing  will  Die  18 

S  herself  should  minister  To  thee,  Elednore  32 

A  s  fann'd  with  spice.  Palace  of  Art  116 

come  back  again  with  s  o'er  the  wave,            May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  19 

Smelt  of  the  coming  s,  Gardener's  D.  78 

The  good  old  S's,  year  by  year  Talking  Oak  39 

'  Old  S's,  when  the  monk  was  fat,  ..41 

Thro'  all  the  s  of  my  leaves  211 

It  was  last  s  on  a  tour  in  Wales :  Golden  Year  2 

And  after  many  a  s  dies  the  swan.  Tithonus  4 

s's  to  such  length  of  years  should  come  Locksley  Hall  67 

The  woman  of  a  thousand  s's  back,  Godiva  11 

A  s  crisp  with  shining  woods.  Day-Bm.,  Pro.  8 

Till  all  the  hundred  s's  pass,  ,.  Sleep.  P.  33 

When  will  the  hundred  s's  die,  „                  49 

'  A  hundred  s's !  can  it  be  ?  „    Depart.  25 

By  squares  of  tropic  s  shut  And  warm'd  Amphion  87 

whose  father-grape  grew  fat  On  Lusitanian  s's.  Will  Water.  8 

She  sUpt  across  the  s  of  the  world,  Enoch  Arden  531 

Dwelt  with  eternal  s,  ill-content.  „            562 

in  branding  s's  of  Bengal,  The  Brook  16 

(The  sootflake  of  so  many  a  s  still  Sea  Dreams  35 

A  Martin's  s  of  his  faded  love,  Aylmer's  Field  560 

all  a  s's  day  Gave  his  broad  lawns  Princess,  Pro.  1 

'  Kill  him  now,  The  tyrant !  kill  him  in  the  s  too,'  „            207 
'  Why  not  a  s's  as  a  winter's  tale  ?     A  tale  for  s  as 

befits  the  time,  „            209 

there  did  a  compact  pass  Long  s's  back,  „          i  124 

The  s  of  the  vine  in  all  his  veins —  „            183 

hither  side,  or  so  she  look'd,  Of  twenty  s's.  .,         li  108 

all  fair  theories  only  made  to  gild  A  stormle.ss  s.'  ,,            234 

And  brief  the  sun  of  s  in  the  North,  „        iv  112 

this  shall  grow  A  night  of  S  from  the  heat,  „         vi  54 

Far  on  in  s's  that  we  shall  not  see :  Ode  on  Well.  234 

To  lands  of  s  across  the  sea ;  The  Daisy  92 

The  bitter  east,  the  misty  s  And  gray  metropolis  „        103 

For  a  score  of  sweet  httle  s's  or  so  ? '  The  Islet  2 

The  child  was  only  eight  s's  old,  The  Victim  33 

Thine  the  lands  of  lasting  s,  Boddicea  43 

But  S  on  the  steaming  floods,  In  Mem.  Ixxocv  69 

When  s's  hourly-mellowing  change  „              xci  9 

o'er  the  sky  The  silvery  haze  of  s  drawn ;  „              xcv  4 

Long  sleeps  the  s  in  the  seed ;  „              «j  26 

Than  in  the  s's  that  are  flown,  „          Con.  18 

So  many  a  s  since  she  died,  Maud  I  vi  66 

Nor  will  be  when  our  s's  have  deceased.  „    xviii  14 

With  sprigs  of  s  laid  between  the  folds,  Marr.  of  Geraint  138 

For  now  the  wine  made  s  in  his  veins,  „              398 

Like  flaws  in  s  laying  lusty  corn :  „              764 

My  Queen,  that  s,  when  ye  loved  me  first.  Lancelot  and  E.  104 

ere  the  s  when  he  died.  The  monk  Ambrosius  Holy  Grail  16 
felt  his  eyes  Harder  and  drier  than  a  fountain 

bed  In  «  :  Pdleas  and  E.  508 


Summer  (s)  {continued)     Kill'd  in  a  tilt,  come  next,  five  s's 

back,  Guinevere  321 

My  pride  in  happier  s's,  at  my  feet.  „        536 

sudden  deluges  of  light  Into  the  middle  s  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  316 

the  Spring  and  the  middle  S  sat  each 
Ten  long  days  of  s  and  sin — 
A  THOUSAND  s's  ere  the  time  of  Christ 
She  spies  the  s  thro'  the  winter  bud, 
where  s  never  dies,  with  Love,  the  Sun  of  life  ! 
all  the  s  long  we  roam'd  in  these  wild  woods 
S's  of  the  snakeless  meadow, 

0  THOU  so  fair  in  s's  gone. 
Gray  with  distance  Edward's  fifty  s's, 
Sunn'd  with  a  s  of  milder  heat. 
Spring  and  S  and  Autumn  and  Winter, 
wind  is  west  With  all  the  warmth  of  s. 
Who  meant  to  sleep  her  hundred  s's  out 
In  the  winter  of  the  Present  for  the  s  of  the  Past ; 
In  s  if  I  reach  my  day — 
And  s  basking  in  the  sultry  plains 
When  over  the  valley.  In  early  s's, 
'  S  is  coming,  s  is  coming. 
S  is  coming,  is  coming,  my  dear. 
In  that  four-hundredth  s  after  Christ, 

1  had  one  brief  s  of  bliss. 
But  if  twenty  million  of  s's  are  stored 
men  of  a  hundred  thousand,  a  million  s's  away  ? 

Summer-blanch'd  here  was  one  that,  s-b. 
Summer-bright  How  s-b  are  yonder  skies, 
Summer-dawn  gray  streak  of  earliest  s-d, 
Summerhouse    the  s  aloft  That  open'd  on  the  pines 

It  WEis  a  room  Within  the  s-h  of  which  I  spake, 
Summer-mom     And  many  a  sheeny  s-m. 

Showing  a  gaudy  s-m. 
Summer-new    fancy  as  s-n  As  the  green  of  the 

bracken 
Summer-palace    a  boon,  A  certain  s-p 
Summer-rich     S-r  Then  ;  and  then  Autumn-changed, 
Summertime    came  With  Modred  hither  in  the  s, 
Sunmier-wan     Arthur's  harp  tho'  s-w. 
Summer-winter    who  breathe  the  balm  Of  s-w's 
Summit    sacred  morning  spread  The  silent  s  overhead. 

'  Cry,  faint  not,  climb  :  the  s's  slope 

Cry  to  the  s,  '  Is  there  any  hope  ?  ' 

splendour  falls  on  castle  walls  And  snowy  s's  old  in 
story : 

But  ere  we  reach'd  the  highest  s  I  pluck'd  a  dai.sy, 

voice  and  the  Peak  Far  over  s  and  laAvn, 

From  hidden  s's  fed  with  rills 

At  times  the  s  of  the  high  city  flash'd  ; 

Green-glimmering  toward  the  s,  bears, 

great  tower  fill'd  with  eyes  Up  to  the  s, 

s  and  the  pinnacles  Of  a  gray  steeple — 

Cried  from  the  topmost  s  with  human  voices 

Yon  s  half-a-league  in  air — 

and  roll  my  voice  from  the  s. 
Summon     But  s  here  before  me  yet  once  more 

They  s  me  their  King  to  lead  mine  hosts 
Summon'd    Then  s  to  the  porch  we  went. 

S  out  She  kept  her  state, 

A  kinsman,  dying,  s  me  to  Rome — 
Summoner    Far-sighted  s  of  War  and  Waste 

at  Pardoners,  S's,  Friars,  absolution-sellers, 
Summoning    Then,  after  s  Lancelot  privily, 

Sound  on  a  dreadful  trumpet,  s  her ; 
Summons     And  brought  a  s  from  the  sea : 

Waiting  for  your  s     .     .     . 
Sumner-chace     Broad  oak  of  S-c, 

good  old  Sumners,  year  by  year  Made  ripe  in  S-c  : 

And  shadow  S-c  ! 
Sumner-place    The  roofs  of  S-p  !  (repeat) 

till  thy  boughs  discern  The  front  of  S-p. 
Sumptuous    turn'd  her  s  head  with  eyes  Of  shining 
expectation 

With  store  of  rich  apparel,  s  fare, 


V.  of  Maeldune  38 

The  Wreck  77 

Ancient  Sage  1 

74 

The  Flight  44 

,.    ■      79 

To  Virgil  19 

Freedom.  1 

On  Jub.  Q.   Victoria  40 

To  Prof.  Jebb  8 

Vastness  29 

The  Ring  30 


Happy  70 

To  Ulysses  9 

Prog,  of  Spring  77 

Merlin  and  the  G.  18 

The  Throstle  1 

15 

St.  Telemachus  4 

Bandit's  Death  9 

The  Dawn  19 

25 

Aylmer's  Field  152 

Ancient  Sage  23 

220 

Lover's  Tale  i  40 

ii  167 

Arabian  Nights  5 

Palace  of  Art  62 

Jume  Bracken,  etc.  8 

Princess  i  147 

The  Oak  6 

Gareth  and  L.  26 

1314 

To  Ulysses  11 

Two  Voices  81 

184 

Vision  of  Sin  2,'^ 

Princess  iv  2 

The  Daisy  87 

Voice  and  the  P.  2 

In  Mem.  ciii  7 

Gareth  and  L.  192 

Lancelot  and  E.  483 

Pelleas  and  E.  167 

Lover's  Tale  ii  81 

V.  of  Maeldune  28 

Ancient  Sage  11 

Parnassus  6 

Com.  of  Arthur  164 

Guinevere  570 

Princess  Hi  178 

The  Ring  178 

Ded.  of  Idylls  37 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  92 

Gareth  and  L.  581 

Geraint  and  E.  383 

In  Mem.  ciii  16 

Forlorn  22 

Talking  Oak  30 

40 

150 

!!  32, 96, 152 

248 

Princess  iv  152 
Marr.  of  Geraint  709 


r 


Sumptiioas 


17 


Sun 


Sumptuous  {continued)    Thy  presence  in  the  silk  of  5  looms  ;    A  ncient  Sage  266 
Sumptuously    and  s  According  to  his  fashion,  Geraint  and  E.  284 

Son  (s)     (See  also  Noon-Sun,  Soon)     as  the  tree  Stands  in 

the  s  and  shadows  all  beneath,  Love  and  Death  11 

Like  a  lily  which  the  s  Looks  thro'  Adeline  12 

tho'  you  stood  Between  the  rainbow  and  the  s.  Margaret  13 

The  s  is  just  about  to  set,  „        58 

grow  To  a  full  face,  there  like  a  s  remain  Fix'd —  Elednore  92 

The  s  came  dazzling  thro'  the  leaves,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  3 

A  merry  boy  in  s  and  shade  ?  Two  Voices  321 

Many  s  s  arise  and  set.  Miller's  D.  205 

0  s,  that  from  thy  noonday  height  Fathna  2 
While  this  great  bow  will  waver  in  the  s.                         Palace  of  Art  43 

1  would  see  the  s  rise  upon  the  glad  New- 
year,  (repeat)  May  Queen,  iV 

To-night  I  saw  the  s  set : 

I  wish  the  snow  would  melt  and  the  s  come 

out  on  high  : 
In  the  early  early  morning  the  smnmer  s  'ill 

shine, 
It  seem'd  so  hard  at  first,  mother,  to  leave 

the  blessed  s, 
O  look  !  the  s  begins  to  rise, 
voice,  that  now  is  speaking,  may  be  beyond 

the  s —  „ 

Between  the  s  and  moon  upon  the  shore  ; 
Half-fall'n  across  the  threshold  of  the  s. 
We  drank  the  Libyan  S  to  sleep. 
While  yon  s  prospers  in  the  blue. 
That  broods  above  the  fallen  s, 
That  made  his  forehead  like  a  rising  s 
but  all  else  of  heaven  was  pure  Up  to  the  S, 
the  s  fell,  and  all  the  land  was  dark,  (repeat) — 
Lay  great  with  pig,  wallowing  in  s  and  mud. 
To  some  full  music  rose  and  sank  the  s, 
The  cloudy  porch  oft  opening  on  the  S  ? 
The  S  will  run  his  orbit,  and  the  Moon  Her  circle, 
The  S  flifes  forward  to  his  brother  S ; 
For  some  three  s's  to  store  and  hoard 
widen'd  \vith  the  process  of  the  s's. 
hurl  their  lances  in  the  s  ; 
what  to  me  were  s  or  clime  ? 
flash  the  lightnings,  weigh  the  S — 
Thro'  many  an  hour  of  summer  s's, 
To  keep  the  best  man  under  the  s 
We  seem'd  to  sail  into  the  S  ! 
How  oft  we  saw  the  iS  retire. 
As  fast  she  fled  thro'  s  and  shade, 
A  thousand  s's  will  stream  on  thee, 
Close  to  the  s  in  lonely  lands. 
As  when  the  s,  a  crescent  of  eclipse, 
A  light  wind  blew  from  the  gates  of  the  s, 
new  warmth  of  life's  ascending  s  Was  felt  by  either, 
Cuts  o£E  the  fiery  highway  of  the  s. 
Under  a  palm-tree,  over  him  the  S  : 
yonder  shines  The  S  of  Righteousness, 
We  tum'd  our  foreheads  from  the  falling  s, 
found  the  s  of  sweet  content  Re-risen  in  Katie's  eyes, 
bearing  hardly  more  Than  his  own  shadow  in  a 

sickly  s. 
'  Let  not  the  s  go  down  upon  your  wrath,' 
Bright  with  the  s  upon  the  stream  beyond  : 
out  I  slipt  Into  a  land  all  s  and  blossom, 
another  of  our  Gods,  the  iS',  Apollo,  Delius, 
how  the  s  delights  To  glance  and  shift  about 
until  the  set  of  s  Up  to  the  people  : 
inhabitant  Of  some  clear  planet  close  upon  the  S, 
set  the  starry  tides.  And  eddied  into  «'s, 
A  Memnon  smitten  with  the  morning  S.' 
They  with  the  s  and  moon  renew  their  light 
white  vapour  streak  the  crowned  towers  Built  to  the  8  :  ' 
till  the  S  Grew  broader  toward  his  death  and  fell, 
'  There  sinks  the  nebulous  star  we  call  the  S, 
And  brief  the  s  of  summer  in  the  North, 
till  the  Bear  had  wheel'd  Thro'  a  great  arc  his  seven  slow  s's. 


Y's.  E.  2,  51 
5 

15 


Con.  9 
49 

54 

Lotos- Eaters  38 

D.  of  F.  Women  63 

145 

The  Blackbird  22 

To  J.  S.  51 

M.  d' Arthur  217 

Gardener's  D.  80 

Dora  79,  109 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  88 

Edwin  Morris  34 

Love  and  Duty  9 

22 

Golden  Year  23 

Ulysses  29 

Locksley  Hall  138 

170 

177 

186 

Will  Water.  33 

Lady  Clare  31 

The  Voyage  16 

17 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  37 

A  Farewell  13 

The  Eagle  2 

Vision  of  Sin  10 

Poet's  Song  3 

Enoch  Arden  38 

130 

501 

504 

The  Brook  165 

168 


Aylmer's  Field  30 

Sea  Dreams  44 

97 

101 

Lucretius  124 

„      188 

Princess,  Pro.  2 

ii  36 

118 

.,         Hi  116 

255 

345 

363 

it)  19 

112 

213 


Sun  (s)  {coniinued)     Up  in  one  night  and  due  to  sudden  s :      Princess  iv  312 
Sees  the  midsummer,  midnight,  Norway  s  Set  into 

simrise ;  .,  575 

issued  in  the  s,  that  now  Leapt  from  the  dewy  shoulders  .,  t)  42 
la.js  on  every  side  A  thousand  arms  and  rushes  to  the  S.  ..  vi  37 
leader  of  the  herd  That  holds  a  stately  fretwork  to  the  S,  ..  *  86 
So  drench'd  it  is  with  tempest,  to  the  s,  ..     vii  142 

Till  the  S  drop,  dead,  from  the  signs.'  ..  245 

underneath  another  s.  Warring  on  a  later  day.  Ode  on  Well.  101 

To  which  our  God  Himself  is  moon  and  s.  „  217 

To  meet  the  s  and  sunny  waters,  T?ie  Daisy  11 

Your  presence  will  be  s  in  winter.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  3 

With  many  a  rivulet  high  against  the  aS  The  Islet  21 

Wake,  little  ladies,  The  s  is  aloft !  Minnie  and  Winnie  20 

The  s,  the  moon,  the  stars,  the  seas.  High.  Pantheism  1 

stars  from  the  night  and  the  s  from  the  day  !  Window,  Gone  5 

S  comes,  moon  comes,  „         When  1 

S  sets,  moon  sets,  „  3 

Blaze  upon  her  window,  s,  .,15 

You  send  a  flash  to  the  s.  Window,  Marr.  Morn  2 

Nor  branding  summer  s's  avail  In  Mem.  ii  11 

And  murmurs  from  the  dying  s :  .,  Hi  8 

Since  our  first  <S  arose  and  set.  .,        xxiv  8 

And  blurr'd  the  splendour  of  the  s  ;  .,       Ixxii  8 

And,  while  we  breathe  beneath  the  s,  .,      Ixxv  14 

s  by  s  the  happy  days  Descend  below  .,  Ixxxiv  27 

And  all  the  courses  of  the  s's.  „     cxvii  12 

Sad  Hesper  o'er  the  buried  s  And  ready,  „        cxxi  1 

I  found  Him  not  in  world  or  s,  ^    „      cxxiv  5 

Thou  standest  in  the  rising  s,  '    „       cxxx  3 

The  sport  of  random  s  and  shade.  „     Con.  24 

To  meet  and  greet  a  whiter  s ;  ,  „  78 

For  him  did  his  high  s  flame,  Maud  I  iv  32 

Our  planet  is  one,  the  s's  are  many,  .,  45 

No  s,  but  a  wannish  glare  In  fold  upon  fold  „  vi2 

s  look'd  out  with  a  smile  Betwixt  the  cloud  „  ix  3 

Something  flash'd  in  the  s,  ..10 

To  faint  in  the  light  of  the  s  that  she  loves,  .,       xxii  11 

To  the  flowers,  and  be  their  s.  ..  58 

fires  of  Hell  brake  out  of  thy  rising  s,  „         II  i  9 

And  noble  thought  be  freer  under  the  s,  „   III  vi  48 

heathen  horde.  Reddening  the  s  with  smoke  and 

earth  with  blood.  Com.  of  Arthur  37 

and  fell'd  The  forest,  letting  in  the  s,  .,  60 

'  Rain,  rain,  and  s  !  a  rainbow  in  the  sky  !  „  403 

Rain,  rain,  and  s  !  a  rainbow  on  the  lea  !  „  406 

Rain,  s,  and  rain  !  and  the  free  blossom  blows  :  „  409 

S,  rain,  and  s  !  and  where  is  he  who  knows  ?  „  410 

The  S  of  May  descended  on  their  King,  „  462 

paced  a  city  all  on  fire  With  s  and  cloth  of  gold,  „  480 

Blow,  for  our  S  is  mighty  in  his  May  !  „  497 

Blow,  for  our  S  is  mightier  day  by  day  !  ,,  498 

ever-highering  eagle-circles  up  To  the  great  S  of  Glory,  Gareth  and  L.  22 
field  of  charlock  in  the  sudden  s  Between  two  showers,  „  389 

shone  the  Noonday  S  Beyond  a  raging  shallow.  ..         1027 

flash'd  the  fierce  shield.  All  s  ;  1031 

'  Ugh  !  '  cried  the  S,  and  vizoring  up  a  red  ..         1038 

the  S  Heaved  up  a  ponderous  arm  to  strike  the  fifth,  1044 

the  stream  Descended,  and  the  S  was  wash'd  away.  1047 

'OS'  (not  this  strong  fool  whom  thou.  Sir  Knave,  1058 

S,  that  wakenest  all  to  bliss  or  pain,  „         1060 

'  O  dewy  flowers  that  open  to  the  s,  „         1066 

new  s  Beat  thro'  the  Windless  casement  Marr.  of  Geraint  70 

Will  clothe  her  for  her  bridals  like  the  s.'  ..  231 

woimd  Bare  to  the  s,  and  monstrous  ivy-stems  ..  322 

pale  and  bloodless  east  began  To  quicken  to  the  s,  arose,      ..  535 

But  since  our  fortune  swerved  from  s  to  shade,  ,.  714 

Herself  would  clothe  her  like  the  s  m  Heaven.  784 

And  clothed  her  for  her  bridals  like  the  s ;  .,  836 

watch'd  the  s  blaze  on  the  turning  scythe,  Geraint  and  E.  252 

But  wliile  the  s  yet  beat  a  dewy  blade,  .,  446 

But  lift  a  shining  hand  against  the  s,  ..  473 

Had  bared  her  forehead  to  the  blistering  s,  .,  515 

And  bear  him  hence  out  of  this  cruel  s  ?  „  544 

there  the  Queen  array'd  me  like  the  s  :  Geraint  and  E.  701 


Sun  698 

Sun  (s)  (continued)     Past  eastward  from  the  falling  s.     Balin  and  Balan  320 

an  Eagle  rising  or,  the  S  In  dexter  chief  ;  Merlin  and  V.  475 

often  o'er  the  s's  bright  eye  Drew  the  vast  eyelid  ..             633 

But  who  can  gaze  upon  the  S  in  heaven  ?  Lancelot  and  E.  123 

The  low  s  makes  the  colour :  ..            134 

emerald  center'd  in  a  s  Of  silver  rays,  295 

Red  as  the  rising  s  with  heathen  blood,  ..             308 

when  the  next  s  brake  from  underground,  „          1137 

till  the  s  Shone,  and  the  wind  blew,  thro'  her,  Holy  Grail  98 

■  So  when  the  s  broke  next  from  under  ground,  ..         328 

'  The  s  is  rising,  tho'  the  s  had  risen.  ..         408 

had  felt  the  s  Beat  like  a  strong  knight  Pelleas  and  E.  22 

Rode  till  the  star  above  the  wakening  s,  „            500 

His  hair,  a  s  that  ray'd  from  off  a  brow  Last  Tournament  666 

On  some  vast  plain  before  a  setting  s,  Guinevere  77 

And  from  the  s  there  swiftly  made  at  her  „        78 

That  made  his  forehead  like  a  rising  s  Pass,  of  Arthur  385 

And  the  new  s  rose  bringing  the  new  year.  „            469 

sail  Will  draw  me  to  the  rising  of  the's,  Lover's  Tale  i  27 

and  blew  Fresh  fire  into  the  s,  ..  319 
light  flash'd  ev'n  from  her  wMte  robe  As  from  a  glass 

in  the  s,  ,.            371 

The  incorporate  blaze  of  s  and  sea.  „            409 

s  below.  Held  for  a  space  'twixt  cloud  ,.            416 

Glow'd  intermingling  close  beneath  the  s.  .,            436 

other,  like  the  s  I  gazed  upon,  ..             507 

Why  fed  we  from  one  fountain  ?  drew  one  s?  ..it  24 

Had  suek'd  the  fire  of  some  forgotten  s,  ..        iv  194 

That  flings  a  mist  behind  it  in  the  s —  ..            294 

All  over  glowing  with  the  s  of  life,  „            381 

An'  then  'e  tum'd  to  the  s,  North.  Cobbler  48 

Seead  nobbut  the  smile  o'  the  s  „              50 

little  of  us  left  by  the  time  this  s  be  set.'  The  Revenge  28 

the  s  went  do\vn,  and  the  stars  came  out  ..           56 

and  the  s  smiled  out  far  over  the  summer  sea,  ..  70 
S  himself  has  limn'd  the  face  for  me.                     Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  101 

hidden  there  from  the  light  of  the  s —  Def.  of  Lucknow  63 

Who  push'd  his  prows  into  the  setting  s,  Columbus  24 

melon  lay  like  a  little  s  on  the  tawny  sand,  V.  of  Maeldune  57 

sends  the  hidden  s  Down  yon  dark  sea.  Be  Prof.,  Two  G.  33 

Drew  to  this  shore  lit  by  the  s's  and  moons  ..               38 

the  numerable-imumierable  S,  s,  and  s,  ,,  45 
with  set  of  s  Their  fires  flame  thickly,                     Achilles  over  the  T.  10 

A  planet  equal  to  the  s  Which  cast  it,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  35 

(Jne  naked  peak — the  sister  of  the  s  Tiresias  30 

Rejoicing  that  the  s,  the  moon,  the  stars  „      160 

And  the  s  of  the  soul  made  day  The  Wreck  55 

Of  a  life  without  s,  without  health.  Despair  7 

s's  of  the  limitless  Universe  sparkled  ,.     15 

When  the  light  of  a  S  that  was  coming  „     23 

and  crows  to  the  s  and  the  moon,  „    90 

Till  the  S  and  the  Moon  of  our  science  „    91 

She  feels  the  »S'  is  hid  but  for  a  night.  Ancient  Sage  73 

seem  to  flicker  past  thro'  s  and  shade,  100 

such  large  life  as  match'd  with  ours  Were  S  to  spark—  238 

clouds  themselves  are  children  of  the  S.  242 

Day  and  Night  are  children  of  the  S,  ,.           245 

up  that  lane  of  light  into  the  setting  s.  The  Flight  40 

we  watch'd  the  s  fade  from  us  thro'  the  West,  „        41 

An'  the  s  kem  out  of  a  cloud  Tomorrow  37 

wid  his  song  to  the  S  an'  the  Moon,  ,,          91 

over  darkness — from  the  still  unrisen  s.  Locksley  //.,  Sixty  92 

and  the  s  himself  will  pass.  ,.            182 

earthlier  earth  of  ours.  Closer  on  the  S,  „            184 

All  the  s's — are  these  but  symbols  of  innumerable  man,         „  195 

and  S's  alon^  their  fiery  way,  ,.            203 

And  that  bright  hair  the  modem  s.  Epilogue  8 

The  s  hung  over  the  gates  of  Night,  Dead  Prophet  23 
And  he  sung  not  alone  of  an  old  s  set.  But  a  s  coming 

up  in  his  youth  !  „  41 
thro'  this  mi<lnight  breaks  the  s  Of  sixty 

years  away,  Pref.  Poem  Broth.  S.  21 

Two  S's  of  Love  make  day  of  human  life.  To  Prin.  Beatrice  1 

one,  the  S  of  dawn  That  brightens  „              3 

— and  one  Th«  later-rising  jS'  of  spousal  Love,  „              6 


Sung 


Sun  (s)  (continued)     conjectured  planet  in  mid  heaven 

Between  two  S's,  To  Prin.  Beatrice  21 

had  roll'd  you  round  and  round  the  S,  Poets  and  their  B.  10 

jiS'  Burst  from  a  swimming  fleece  of  winter  gray,  Demeter  and  P.  19 

And  lighted  from  above  him  by  the  S  ?  ..31 

5,  Pale  at  my  grief,  drew  down  before  his  time  113 

Till  thy  dark  lord  accept  and  love  the  S,  137 

Many  a  planet  by  many  a  s  may  roll  Fastness  2 

in  the  gleam  of  a  milUon  million  of  s's  ?  „  4 

We  often  walk  In  open  s,  The  Ring  328 

sword  that  lighten'd  back  the  s  of  Holy  land,  Happy  43 

Has  push'd  toward  our  faintest  s  '  To  Ulysses  23 

Her  mantle,  slowly  greening  in  the  S,  Prog,  of  Spring  11 

May  float  awhile  beneath  the  s,  Romney's  R.  50 

s  has  risen  To  flame  along  another  dreary  day.  ..  57 

bask  amid  the  senses  while  the  s  of  morning 

shines.  By  an  Evolution.  6 

star  of  eve  was  drawing  light  From  the  dead  s.         Death  of  (Enone  65 
an  old  fane  No  longer  sacred  to  the  S,  St.  Telemachus  7 

That  glances  from  the  s  of  our  Islam.  Akbar's  Dream  79 

proclaimed  His  Master  as  the  '  S  of  Righteousness,'  ..  83 

Alia  call'd  In  old  Iran  the  S  of  Love  ?  87 

— a  s  but  dimly  seen  Here,  till  the  mortal  morning  mists  95 

The  s,  the  s,  they  rail  At  me  the  Zoroastrian.  ..  103 

Let  the  S,  Who  heats  our  earth  to  yield  us  grain  ..  104 

Our  hymn  to  the  s.     They  sing  it.  ,,  203 

I  whirl,  and  I  follow  the  S.'  The  Dreamer  14 

Whirl,  and  follow  the  S  !  (repeat)  „  20, 24, 28,  32 

Rush  of  S's,  and  roll  of  systems,  God  and  the  Univ.  3 

The  face  of  Death  is  toward  the  S  of  Life,  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  12 

Sun  (verb)     doves  That  s  their  milky  bosoms  on  the  thatch.  Princess  ii  103 


Sunbeam    thick-moted  s  lay  Athwart  the  chambers. 

As  when  a  s  wavers  warm  Within  the  dark 

'  Sometimes  I  let  a  s  slip, 

like  a  creeping  s,  slid  From  pillar  unto  pillar, 

I  make  the  netted  s  dance 

old  warrior  from  his  ivied  nook  Glow  like  a  s  : 

To  glide  a  s  by  the  blasted  Pine, 

The  s  strikes  along  the  world : 

But  where  the  s  broodeth  warm, 

Happy  children  in  a  s  sitting 
Sunbright    ghtter'd  o'er  us  a  s  hand, 

and  the  s  hand  of  the  dawn. 
Sun-cluster    vast  s-c's'  gather'd  blaze, 
Sunday    (See  also  Soonday)     'is  best  of  a  iS  at  mum, 

An'  Doctor  'e  calls  o'  «S' 
Sunder    s's  ghosts  and  shadow-casting  men  Became 
a  crystal, 

*S'  the  glooming  crimson  on  the  rnarge. 

And  s  false  from  tme, 
Sunder'd    (See  also  River-sunder'd)    And  never 

can  be  s  without  tears.  To 

Quite  s  from  the  moving  Universe, 

from  the  sabre-stroke  Shatter'd  and  s. 

Time  hath  s  shell  from  pearl.' 

Be  s  in  the  night  of  fear  ; 

Some  cause  had  kept  him  s  from  his  wife  : 

high  doors  Were  softly  s,  and  thro'  these  a  youth, 

her  lips  were  s  With  smiles  of  tranquil  bliss, 

and  fought  till  I  s  the  fray, 

s  once  from  all  the  human  race, 

Gods  had  marr'd  our  peace.  And  s  each  from  each, 
Sundown    Yet  oft  when  s  skirts  the  moor 
Sundry    for  the  rest  Spake  but  of  s  perils  in  the  storm 
Sun-flame    S-f  or  sunless  frost. 
Sunflower    Heavily  hangs  the  broad  s  (repeat) 

Unloved,  the  s-f,  shining  fair. 
Sun-fringed    Like  little  clouds  s-jf,  are  thine. 
Sun-flushed    siglis  to  see  the  peak  S-f, 
Sung    Tlie  cock  s  out  an  hour  ere  light : 

The  blue  fly  s  in  the  pane  ; 

And  the  cock  hath  s  beneath  the  thatch 

Died  round  the  bulbul  as  he  «  ; 

From  Calpe  into  Cauca.sus  they  s. 

At  eve  a  dry  cicala  s, 


Mariana  78 

Miller's  D.  79 

TalMng  Oak  217 

Godiva  49 

The  Brook  176 

Princess,  Pro.  105 

„  vii  196 

In  Mem.  xv  8 

„        xci  14 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  14 

V.  of  Maeldune  84 

92 

Epilogue  54 

North.  Cobbler  A6 

87 

Merlin  and  V.  629 

Gareth  and  L.  1365 

Mechanophilus  2 

-,  With  Pal.  of  Art  13 

Princess  vii  52 

Light  Brigade  36 

In  Mem.  Hi  16 

„     cxxvii  2 

Merlin  and  V.  715 

Pelleas  and  E.  4 

Lover's  Tale  ii  142 

V.  of  Maeldune  69 

To  Virgil  36 

.    Death  of  (Enone  33 

In  Mem.  xli  17 

;  Holy  Grail  761 

Epilogue  QQ 

A  spirit  haunts  9,  21 

In  Mem.  ci  5 

Madeline  17 

Balin  and  Balan  166 

Mariana  27 

63 

The  Owl  i  10 

Arabian  Nights  70 

The  Poet  15 

Mariana  in  the  S.  85 


Sung 


699 


Sunshine 


Sung  (continued)     Among  the  tents  I  paused  and  s,               Two  Voices  125 

'  I  s  the  joyful  Paean  clear,  „        127 

fS  by  the  morning  star  of  song,  I),  of  F.  Women  3 

anthem  s,  is  charm'd  and  tied  To  where  he  stands, —  „             193 

And,  wheresoever  I  am  s  or  told  In  aftertime,  J\I.  d' Arthur  34 

falser  than  all  songs  have  s,  Locksley  Hall  41 

Wherever  he  sat  down  and  s  Amphion  19 

nightingale  thought,  '  I  have  s  many  songs,  Poet's  Song  13 

s  to,  when,  this  gad-fly  brush'd  aside.  Princess  v  414 

Peace,  his  triumph  will  be  s  By  some  Ode  on  Well.  232 

We  s,  tho'  every  eye  was  dim,  In  Mem.  xxx  14 

8  by  a  long-forgotten  mind.  ..     Ixxvii  12 

A  guest,  or  happy  sister,  s,  ..    Ixxxix  26 

One  whispers,  '  Here  thy  boyhood  s  ..            cii  9 

Whatever  I  have  said  or  s,  ..          cxxv  1 
song  that  once  I  heard  By  this  huge  oak,  s  nearly 

where  we  sit :  '       Merlin  and  V.  406 

■  0  crueller  than  was  ever  told  in  tale.  Or  s  in  song  !              „             859 

And  one  hath  s  and  all  the  dumb  will  sing.  Holy  Grail  301 

more  Than  any  have  s  thee  living,  Pelleas  and  E.  351 

Pelleas  had  heard  s  before  the  Queen,  „            397 

many  a  noble  war-song  had  he  s,  Guinevere  278 

And,  wheresoever  I  am  s  or  told  In  aftertime.  Pass,  of  Arthur  202 

we  whirl'd  giddily  ;  the  wind  S  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  202 

Noble  !  he  s,  and  the  sweet  sound  ran  Dead  Prophet  37 

And  he  s  not  alone  of  an  old  sun  set,  „           41 

men  ater  supper  'ed  s  their  songs  an'  'ed  'ed  their  beer,       Otod  Rod  35 

Sank    some  were  s  and  many  were  shatter'd,  The  Revenge  61 

Have  we  s  below  them  ?  Locksley  //.,  Sixty  95 

Soilless    I  lived  for  years  a  stmited  s  life  ;  Aylmer's  Field  357 

S  and  moonless,  utter  light — but  no  !  Columbits  90 

Sun-flame  or  s  frost,  Epilogue  66 

The  s  halls  of  Hades  into  Heaven  ?  Demeter  and  P.  136 

In  seas  of  Death  and  s  gulfs  of  Doubt.  Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  14 

And  thro'  the  5  winter  morning-mist  Death  of  (Enone  8 

Sunlight    faintest  s's  flee  About  his  shadowy  sides  :                   The  Kraken  4 

Place  it,  where  sweetest  s  falls  Ode  to  Memory  85 

The  s  driving  down  the  lea,  Rosalind  13 

His  broad  clear  brow  in  s  glow'd  ;  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  28 

as  s  drinketh  dew.  Fatima  21 

Floated  the  glowing  s's,  as  she  moved.  CEnone  182 

Are  as  moonlight  unto  s,  Locksley  Hall  152 

and  return  In  such  a  s  of  prosperity  Aylmer's  Field  421 

(so  rare  the  smiles  Of  s)  The  Daisy  54 

And  the  5  broke  from  her  lip  ?  Maud  I  vi  86 

Then  like  a  stormy  s  smiled  Geraint,  Geraint  and  E.  480 

Like  5  on  the  plain  behind  a  shower  :  Merlin  and  V.  403 

Crown'd  with  s— over  darkness —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  92 

Yet  the  moonlight  is  the  s,  „             182 

Not  of  the  s,  Not  of  the  moonlight.  Merlin  and  the  G.  120 

million  of  summers  are  stored  in  the  s  still,  The  Dawn  19 

And  the  s  that  is  gone  !  Silent  Voices  6 

Snnlike     make  your  Enid  burst  S  from  cloud —  Marr.  of  Geraint  789 

Son-lit     The  s-1  almond-blossom  shakes —  To  the  Queen  16 
maiden  Spring  upon  the  plain  Came  in  a  s-l  fall  of 

rain.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  4 

There  the  s  ocean  tosses  O'er  them  mouldering,  The  Captain  69 

Sunn'd    S  by  those  orient  skies  ;  The  Poet  42 

day  dwelt  on  her  brows,  and  s  Her  violet  eyes.  Gardener's  D.  136 

S  itself  on  his  breast  and  his  hands.  Maud  I  xiii  13 

caim'd  mountain  was  a  shadow,  s  The  world  to 

peace  again  :  Merlin  and  V.  638 

had  s  The  morning  of  our  marriage,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  243 

<S'  with  a  summer  of  milder  heat.  To  Prof.  J  ebb  8 

Sunnee     wanns  the  blood  of  Shiah  and  *S',  Akbar's  Dream  107 

Sunnier    Cleave  ever  to  the  s  side  of  doubt,  Ancient  Sage  68 

The  fountain  pulses  high  in  s  jets.  Prog,  of  Spring  54 

Banning    *S'  himself  in  a  waste  field  alone —  Aylmer's  Field  9 

Shine  out,  little  head,  s  over  with  curls,  Maud  I  xxii  57 

Sonny     And  shadow'd  coves  on  a  s  shore,  Elednore  18 

but  his  s  hair  Cluster'd  about  his  temples  (Enone  59 

Another  slid,  a  s  fleck,  Talking  Oak  223 

saw  The  dim  curls  kindle  into  s  rings  ;  Tithonus  54 

Thro'  «  decads  new  and  strange.  Day- Dm.,  L' Envoi  22 

The  s  and  rainj-  seasons  came  and  went  Enoch  Arden  623 


Sunny  {continued)    Bright  was  that  afternoon,  S  but  chill ;    Enoch  Arden  670 

S  tokens  of  the  Line,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  19 

To  meet  the  sun  and  s  waters.  The  Daisy  11 

they  pass  the  grave  That  has  to-day  its  s  side.  In  Mem.,  Con.  72 

And  wild  voice  pealing  up  to  the  s  sky,  Maud  I  v  IZ 

And  feet  like  s  gems  on  an  English  green,  .,            14 

What  if  with  lier  s  hair,  And  smile  as  s  as  cold,  ,        vi  23 

birds  Of  s  plume  in  gilded  trellis-work  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  659 

But  heaven  had  meant  it  for  a  s  one  :  Holy  Grail  706 

To  make  it  wholly  thine  on  s  days.  Lover's  Tale  i  14 

Sunny-sweet    Of  tower  or  duomo,  s-s,  The  Daisy  46 

Sunny-warm     In  tracts  of  pasture  s-w,  Palace  of  Art  94 

Suiuise  (adj.)     At  his  highest  with  s  fire  ;  Voice  and  the  P.  30 

Sunrise  (s)     Rare  s  flow'd.  The  Poet  36 

And  Freedom  rear'd  in  that  august  s  „         37 

look'd  upon  the  breath  Of  the  lilies  at  s  ?  Adeline  37 

heath-flower  in  the  dew,  Touch'd  with  s.  Rosalind  42 
lights  of  sunset  and  of  s  mix'd  In  that  brief  night ;      Love  and  Duty  72 

every  day  The  s  broken  into  scarlet  shafts  Enoch  Arden  592 

The  scarlet  shafts  of  s — but  no  sail.  „          599 

Her  stature  more  than  mortal  in  the  burst  Of  s,  Princess,  Pro.  41 

Norway  sun  Set  into  s ;  „            iv  576 

came  from  out  a  mountain-cleft  Toward  the  s,  Gareth  and  L.  261 

level  pavement  where  the  King  would  pace  At  s,  „            668 

light  of  Heaven  varies,  now  At  s,  now  at  sunset,  Marr.  of  Geraint  7 

flame  At  s  till  the  people  in  far  fields.  Holy  Grail  243 
Damsels  in  divers  colours  like  the  cloud  Of  sunset 

and  5,  Pelleas  and  E.  54 

From  sunset  and  s  of  all  thy  reahn,  To  the  Queen  ii  13 

Hued  with  the  scarlet  of  a  fierce  s.  Lover's  Tale  i  353 

Star  of  the  morning,  Hope  in  the  s  ;  Vastness  15 

Who  found  me  at  s  Sleeping,  Merlin  and  the  G.  12 

One  from  the  S  Da^vn'd  on  His  people,  Kapiolani  24 

Sunset  (adj.)     Back  to  the  s  bound  of  Lyonnesse —  Pass,  of  Arthur  81 
Sunset  (s)     {See  also  Sea-sunset)     Breathes  low  between 

the  s  and  the  moon  ;  Elednore  124 

the  s,  south  and  north.  Winds  all  the  vale  Miller's  D.  241 

charmed  s  linger'd  low  adown  In  the  red  West :  Lotos-  Eaters  19 
lights  of  s  and  of  sunrise  mix'd  In  that  brief  night ;     Love  and  Duty  72 

for  my  purpose  holds  To  sail  beyond  the  s,  Ulysses  60 

and  leave  Yon  orange  s  waning  slow  :  Move  eastward  2 

the  gates  were  closed  At  s.  Princess,  Con.  37 

and  rang  Beyond  the  bourn  of  s ;  „                 100 

Where  some  refulgent  s  of  India  Milton  13 

when  the  s  bum'd  On  the  blossoni'd  gable-ends  Maud  I  vi  8 

Under  the  half-dead  s  glared  ;  Gareth  and  L.  80O 

light  of  Heaven  varies,  now  At  sunrise,  now  at  s,  Marr.  of  Geraint  7 
Damsels  in  divers  colours  like  the  cloud  Of  s  and 

sunrise,  Pelleas  and  E.  54 

The  wide-wing'd  s  of  the  misty  marsh  Last  Tournament  423 

an  hour  or  maybe  twain  After  the  s,  Gtoinevere  238 

From  s  and  sunrise  of  all  thy  realm.  To  the  Queen  ii  13 

that  shot  the  s  In  lightnings  round  me  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  442 

Storm,  s,  glows  and  glories  of  the  moon  „           H  110 
setting,  when  Even  descended,  the  very  s  aflame  ;      V.  of  Maeldune  66 

Rich  was  the  rose  of  s  there.  The  Wreck  136 

The  placid  gleam  of  s  after  storm  !  Ancient  Sage  133 

She  that  finds  a  winter  s  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  22 

As  if  perpetual  s  linger'd  there,  The  Ring  83 

The  s  blazed  along  the  wall  of  Troy.  Death  of  QLnone  77 

The  wrathful  s  glared  against  a  cross  St.  Telemachus  5 

Following  a  hundred  s's,  and  the  sphere  „             31 

From  out  the  s  pour'd  an  alien  race,  Akbar's  Dream  192 

S  and  eveninjg  star.  Crossing  the  Bar  1 

Sunset-flush'd    pinnacles  of  aged  snow,  Stood  s-f  Lotos- Eaters  17 

Sun-shaded     S-s  in  the  heat  of  dusty  fights)  Princess  ii  241 

Sunshine     Like  s  on  a  dancing  rill,  Rosalind  29 

where  broad  s  laves  The  lawn  by  some  cathedral,  D.  of  F.  Women  189 

Simeon,  whose  brain  the  s  bakes  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  164 

frolic  welcome  took  The  thunder  and  the  s,  Ulysses  48 

The  random  s  lighten'tl  !  Amphion  56 

Autumn's  mock  s  of  the  faded  woods  Aylmer's  Field  610 

past  In  s  :  right  across  its  track  there  lay,  Sea  Dreams  126 
Many  a  little  hand  Glanced  like  a  touch  of  s  on  the 

rocks.  Princess  Hi  Z51 


Sunshine 


700 


Swallow 


Sunshine  (continued)     A  stroke  of  cruel  s  on  the  cliff,  Princess  iv  524 

When  the  tide  ebbs  in  s,  „        vi  162 

clover  sod,  That  takes  the  «  and  the  rains.  In  Mem.  x  14 

Turn  thy  wild  wheel  thro'  s,  storm  and  cloud ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  348 

This  was  the  s  that  hath  given  the  man  Balin  and  Balan  181 

glitterins;  like  May  s  on  May  leaves  Merlin  and  V.  88 

and  the  s  came  along  with  him.  Pelleas  and  E.  6 

A-  seem'd  to  brood  More  warmly  on  the  heart  Lover's  Tale  i  327 

s  on  that  sail  at  last  which  brings  our  Edwin  home.  The  Flight  92 

So  fair  in  southern  s  bathed,  Freedom  5 

The  gleam  of  household  s  ends.  The  Wanderer  1 

Sun-smittien    S-s  Alps  before  me  lay.  The  Daisy  62 

Sun-star    great  S-s  of  morningtide,  BaU.  of  Brunanburh  26 

Sun-steep 'd     S-s  at  noon,  and  in  the  moon  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  29 

Sun-stricken     fell  S-s,  and  that  other  lived  alone.  Enoch  Arden  570 

Sun-worship     Their  sweet  s-w  ?  Gareth  and  L.  1081 

This  old  s-w,  boy,  will  rise  again,  Balin  and  Balan  457 

Superhuman     Thrice  multiplied  by  s  pangs,  St.  S.  Stylites  11 

Superlative     '  ^lost  dearest '  be  a  true  s —  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  292 

Supersede     one  deep  love  doth  s  All  other.  In  Mem.  xxxii  5 

Supersensual     For  such  a  s  sensual  bond  Merlin  and  V.  109 

Superstition     was  paid  To  woman,  s  all  awry :  Princess  ii  137 

Supper     And  after  s,  on  a  bed.  The  Sisters  16 

dreams  Of  goodly  s  in  the  distant  pool,  Gareth  and  L.  1187 

*  So  that  ye  do  not  serve  me  sparrow-hawks 

For  s,  Marr.  of  Geraint  305 
cup  itself,  from  which  our  Lord  Drank  at  the  last 

sad  s  Holy  Grail  47 

How  oft  the  Cantab  s,  host  and  guest.  To  W.  H.  BrooJcfield  4 

Fur  the  men  ater  «  'ed  simg  their  songs  Owd  Bod  35 

Supple     s,  sinew-corded,  apt  at  ai-ms  ;  Princess  v  535 

And  rosy  knees  and  s  roundedness,  Lucretius  190 

Supple-sinew'd     Iron  jointed,  s-s,  they  shall  dive,  Locksley  Hall  169 

Supple-sliding     scoundrel  in  the  s-s  knee.'  Sea  Dreams  168 

Supplest     and  Death  will  freeze  the  s  limbs —  Happy  46 

Suppliant     many  another  s  crying  came  Gareth  and  L.  436 

look'd  and  saw  The  novice,  weeping,  s,  Guinevere  664 

Supplicated     shall  I  brook  to  be  s  ?  Boadicea  9 

Supplicating     Besought  him,  s,  if  he  cared  Enoch  Arden  163 

would  they  listen,  did  they  pity  me  s  ?  Boadicea  8 

Supplication      With  s  both  of  knees  and  tongue  :  Holy  Grail  602 

Supplied     And  he  s  my  want  the  more  In  Mem.  Ixxix  19 

Supporter    like  s's  on  a  shield,  Bow-back'd  Princess  vi  358 

Or  two  wild  men  s's  of  a  shield,  Geraint  and  E.  267 

Suppose     '  Good  soul  !  s  I  grant  it  thee,  Two  Voices  38 

Suppression    See  Self-suppression 

Supremacy     In  knowledge  of  their  own  s.'  Qinone  133 
Supreme    every  legend  fair  Which  the  s  Caucasian 

mind  Palace  of  Art  126 

Supt     The  kitchen  brewis  that  was  ever  s  Gareth  and  L.  781 
Sure     (See  also  Sewer)     Not  make  him  s  that  he  shall 

cease  ?  Two  Voices  282 

'  Ah  !  s  within  him  and  without,  ,,  307 
'Mid  onward-sloping  motions  infinite  Making  for 

one  s  goal.  Palace  of  Art  248 

rest  thee  s  That  I  shall  love  thee  well  .                   (Ewo«e.l59 

To  be  s  the  preacher  says.  Grandmother  93 

'  Fool,'  he  answer'd,  '  death  is  s  Sailor  Boy  13 

Bound  for  the  Hall,  I  am  s  was  he  :  Maud  I  x  25 

I  am  quite  quite  s  That  there  is  one  to  love  me  ;                      .,         xi  10 

0  Maud  were  s  of  Heaven  If  lowliness  could  save  her.  .,  xii  19 
Most  s  am  I,  quite  s,  he  is  not  dead.'  Geraint  and  E.  545 
they  do  not  flow  From  evil  done  ;  right  s  am  I  of  that,  Guinevere  189 
'  you  are  s  it  '11  all  come  right,'  First  Quarrel  1 

1  am  s  it  'ill  all  come  right.'  (repeat)  „  74,  91 
lit  by  s  hands, — With  thunders,  and  with  lightnings,  Buonaparte  5 
He  means  me  I'm  «  to  be  happy  Rizpah  76 
well,  I  am  not  s — But  if  there  lie  a  preference  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  289 
let  come  what  will ;  at  last  the  end  is  s.  The  Flight  103 
And  s  am  I,  by  Muriel,  one  day  came  And  saw  you.  The  Ring  312 
I  am  all  but  s  I  have — in  Kendal  church —  Romney's  R.  19 
For  you  forgive  me,  you  are  s  of  that —  „         160 

Surely     1  am  not  s  one  of  those  Caught  by  the  flower  The  Ring  343 

How  s  glidest  thou  from  March  to  May,  Prog,  of  Spring  109 

Surer    For  *  sign  had  foUow'd,  either  hand,  M.  d' Arthur  76 


Surer  (continued)     If  we  could  give  them  s,  quicker  proof —  Princess  Hi  282 

For  s  sign  had  foUow'd,  either  hand,  Pass,  of  Arthur  244 

Surety     We  did  but  keep  you  s  for  our  son.  Princess  v  25 

Surf     White  s  wind-scatter'd  over  sails  and  masts,  2>.  of  F.  Women  31 

like  a  wader  in  the  s.  Beyond  the  brook,  The  Brook  117 

the  breakers  on  the  shore  Sloped  into  louder  s  :  Lover's  Tale  Hi  15 

again  the  stormy  s  Crash'd  in  the  shingle  :  „                 53 

Surface  (adj.)     Then,  for  the  s  eye,  that  only  doats  The  Ring  163 

Surface  (S)     In  roaring  he  shall  rise  and  on  the  5  die.  The  Kraken  15 

But  ere  he  dipt  the  s,  rose  an  arm  .1/.  d' Arthur  143 

And  down  my  s  crept.  Talking  Oak  162 

These  flashes  on  the  s  are  not  he.  Princess  iv  253 

To  make  the  sullen  s  crisp.  In  Mem.  xlix  8 

when  the  s  rolls.  Hath  power  to  walk  the  waters       Com.  of  Arthur  293 

Then  from  the  smitten  s  flash'd,  Lancelot  and  E.  1236 

But  ere  he  dipt  the  s,  rose  an  arm  Pass,  of  Arthur  311 

Who  with  his  head  below  the  s  dropt  Lover's  Tale  i  636 

You,  what  the  cultured  s  grows,  Mechanophilus  33 

Surface-shadow    sees  and  stirs  the  s-s  Ancient  Sage  38 

Surge     the'  the  s  Of  some  new  deluge  //  /  were  loved  11 

when  the  s  was  seething  free,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  106 

sands  and  yeasty  s's  mix  In  caves  Sailor  Boy  9 

I  heard  the  shingle  grinding  in  the  s.  Holy  Grail  811 

the  s  fell  From  thunder  into  whispers  ;  Lover's  Tale  Hi  30 

Surged     foeman  s,  and  waver'd,  and  reel'd  Heavy  Brigade  62 

Surgery-school    Fresh  from  the  s-s's  of  France  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  3 

Surging    In  middle  ocean  meets  the  s  shock.  Will  8 

Their  s  charges  foam'd  themselves  away  ;  Ode  on  Well.  126 

and  it  ran  <S  and  swaying  all  round  us,  Bef.  of  Lucknow  38 

Surly     And  there  the  5  village-churls,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  16 

And  liumm'd  a  s  hymn.  Talking  Oak  300 

Sunnise    silent  we  with  blind  s  Regarding,  Princess  iv  381 

Surname    Simeon  of  the  pillar,  by  s  Stylites,  St.  S.  Stylites  161 

■  Katie.'     '  That  were  strange.     What  s  ?  '  The  Brook  212 

wrote  Name,  s,  all  as  clear  as  noon,  The  Ring  237 

Surpass     But  tho'  the  port  s'es  praise.  Will  Water.  77 

As  we  s  our  fathers'  skill,  Mechanophilus  21 

Surprise  (s)     with  s  Froze  my  swift  speech  :  D.  of  F.  Women  89 

With  some  «  and  thrice  as  much  disdain  Turn'd,     Marr.  of  Geraint  557 

But  kept  it  for  a  sweet  s  at  morn.     Yea,  truly  is  it 

not  a  sweet  s?  „             703 

Surprise  (verb)    'S'  thee  ranging  with  thy  peers.  In  Mem.  xliv  12 

Surrender     '  Never  s,  I  charge  you,  Def.  of  Lucknow  10 

Survive     S  in  spirits  render'd  free,  In  Mem.  xxxviii  10 

Suspend     And  he  s's  his  converse  with  a  friend,  Marr.  of  Geraint  340 

Suspicion     A  vague  s  of  the  breast :  Two  Voices  336 

There  gleam'd  a  vague  s  in  his  eyes  :  Lancelot  and  E.  127 

Suspicious    S  that  her  nature  had  a  taint.  Marr.  of  Geraint  68 

Thro'  all  the  outworks  of  s  pride  ;  Isabel  24 

Sussex     Green  S  fading  into  blue  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  7 

Sustain     bad  him  with  good  heart  s  himself —  Aylmer's  Field  544 

Sustain'd     Be  dinmi'd  of  sorrow,  or  s  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  10 

Sustaining     They  tremble,  the  s  crags :  „          cxxvii  11 

Sustenance     Gain'd  for  her  own  a  scanty  s,  Enoch  Arden  259 

No  want  was  there  of  human  s,  „          554 

One  s,  which,  still  as  thought  grew  large,  Lover's  Tale  i  240 

Suttee     were  seen  or  heard  Fir&s  of  S,  Akbar's  Dream  196 

Swallies  (swallow)     whin  they  s  the  man  intire  !  Tomorrow  66 

Swallow  (s)     Above  in  the  wind  was  the  s.  Dying  Swan  16 

the  s  'ill  come  back  again  with  summer         May  Queen.  N.  Y's.  E.  19 

While  the  prime  s  dips  his  "wing,  Edwin  Morris  145 

The  s  stopt  as  he  hunted  the  fly.  Poet's  Song  9 

I  glance.  Among  my  skimming  s's  ;  The  Brook  175 

Where  they  like  s's  coming  out  of  time  Princess  ii  431 

I  watch'd  the  s  winging  south  From  mine  own  land,  .,           iv  89 

'OS,S,  flying,  flying  South,  ..              93 

O  tell  her,  S,  thou  that  knowest  each,  ..              96 

'  O  aS,  -S,  if  I  could  follow,  and  light  99 

'  O  tell  her,  S,  that  thy  brood  is  flown :  ..             108 

'  O  S,  flying  from  the  golden  woods,  ,.            114 

And  s  and  sparrow  and  throstle.  Window,  Ay  14 

The  Mayfly  is  torn  by  the  s,  Maud  I  iv  23 

'  The  s  and  the  swift  are  near  akin.  Com.  of  Arthur  313 

For  Knowletlge  is  the  s  on  the  lake  Ancient  Sage  37 

Hubert  brings  me  home  With  April  and  the  s.  The  Ring  60 » 


Swallow 


701 


Swear 


Swallow  (s)  (continued)     past  her  feet  the  s  circling  flies,  Prog,  of  Spring  44 

Swallow  (verb)    (See  also  Swallies)     to  sloughs  That  s 

common  sense,  Princess  v  442 

darkness  of  the  grave  and  utter  night,  Did  s  up  my 

vision ;  Lover's  Tale  i  599 

Swallow'd    (See  also  Half-swallow'd)     Some  hold  that  he 

hath  s  infant  flesh,  Gareth  and  L.  1342 

And  blackening,  s  all  the  land,  Guinevere  82 

Till  they  were  s  in  the  leafy  bowers.  Lover's  Tale  Hi  57 

S  in  Vastness,  lost  in  Silence,  Vastness  34 

Swallow-flight     loosens  from  the  lip  Short  s-f's  of  song.    In  Mem.  xlviii  15 

Swallowing     a  gulf  of  ruin,  s  gold,  Not  making.  -Sea  Dreams  79 

S  its  precedent  in  victory.  Lover's  Tale  i  763 

Swam     I  loved  the  brimming  wave  that  s  Miller's  D.  97 

'  The  light  white  cloud  s  over  us.  D.  of  F.  Wo7nen  221 

And  in  the  light  the  white  mermaiden  s,  Guinevere  245 

Swamp     like  fire  in  s's  and  hollows  gray.  May  Queen  31 

■  The  s,  where  humm'd  the  dropping  snipe,  On  a  Mourner  9 

Gray  s's  and  pools,  waste  places  of  the  hern,  Geraint  and  E.  31 

A  great  black  s  and  of  an  evil  smell,  Holy  Grail  499 

Down  from  the  causeway  heavily  to  the  s  Last  Tournament  461 

And  leave  the  hot  5  of  voluptuousness  Ancient  Sage  277 

Swamp 'd-Swampt     This  Gama  swamp'd  in  lazy  tolerance.    .   Princess  v  443 
Had  swampt  the  sacred  poets  with  themselves.       Poets  and  their  B.  14 

Swan     (See  also  Wild-Swan)     Adown  it  floated  a  dying  s,        Dying  Swan  6 
The  wild  s's  death-liymn  took  the  soul  „  21 

Far  as  the  wild  s  wings,  to  where  the  sky  Pcdace  of  Art  31 

Moved  from  the  brink,  like  some  full-breasted  s  M.  d' Arthur  266 

And  after  many  a  summer  dies  the  s.  Tiihonus  4 

Or  necklace  for  a  neck  to  which  the  s's  Is  tawnier    Lancelot  and  E.  1184 
On  wyvem,  lion,  dragon,  griifin,  s.  Holy  Grail  350 

Moved  from  the  brink,  like  some  full-breasted  s        Pass,  of  Arthur  434 

Swang    s  besides  on  many  a  windy  sign —  Aylmer's  Field  19 

Swan-like     harmony  Of  thy  s-l  stateliness,  Elednore  47 

Swan-mother     as  makes  The  white  s-m,  sitting,  Balin  and  Balan  353 

Swap     niver  s  Owlby  an'  Scratby  Church-warden,  etc.  44 

Sward     sloping  of  the  moon-lit  s  Was  damask-work,         Arabian  Nights  27 
convent- towers  Slant  doMTi  the  snowy  s,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  6 

The  s  was  trim  as  any  garden  lawn :  Princess,  Pro.  95 

At  this  upon  the  s  She  tapt  her  tiny  silken-sandaPd 

foot :  ..  149 

'  Pitch  our  pavilion  here  upon  the  s ;  ..Hi  346 

Dropt  on  the  s,  and  up  the  linden  walks,  ..  iv  209 

dismounting  on  the  s  They  let  the  horses  graze,         Geraint  and  E.  210 
With  jewels  than  the  s  with  drops  of  dew,  „  690 

leaves  a  breadth  Of  s  to  left  and  right.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  81 

Sware  (See  also  Swore)     Merlin  s  that  I  should  come  again    M.  d' Arthur  23 
Cophetua  s  a  royal  oath :  Beggar  Maid  15 

he  never  s,  Except  his  wrath  were  wreak'd  Lucretius  127 

at  the  last  he  s  That  he  would  send  Princess  i  63 

And  5  to  combat  for  my  claim  till  death.  „      v  360 

But  mine,  but  mine,'  so  I  s  to  the  rose,  Maud  I  xxii  31 

S  on  the  field  of  death  a  deathless  love.  Com.  of  Arthur  132 

the  two  S  at  the  shrine  of  Christ  a  deathless  love :  „  466 

fought  in  her  name,  iS  by  her —  Merlin  and  V.  14 

But  keep  that  oath  ye  s,  ye  might,  ,,  688 

s  a  vow.     '  I  5  a  vow  before  them  all,  Holy  Grail  194 

and  Galahad  « the  vow,  And  good  Sir  Bors,  our  Lancelot's 
cousin,  s,  And  Lancelot  s,  and  many  among  the  knights, 
And  Gawain  s,  and  louder  than  the  rest.'  199 

I  s  a  vow  to  follow  it  till  I  saw.'  282 

when  thy  knights  S,\  s  with  them  only  in  the  hope  „  778 

being  on  the  morrow  knighted,  s  To  love  one  only.    Pelleas  and  E.  140 
Save  that  he  s  me  to  a  message,  saying.  Last  Tournament  76 

What  faith  have  these  in  whom  they  s  to  love?  ,■  188 

The  life  had  flown,  we  s  but  by  the  shell —  „  270 

S  by  the  scorpion-worm  that  twists  in  hell,  ,.  451 

And  solemnly  as  when  ye  s  to  him,  „  647 

They  lied  not  then,  who  s,  and  thro'  their  vows  „  650 

I  s.  Being  amazed :  but  this  went  by —  „  673 

My  house  are  rather  they  who  s  my  vows,  Pass,  of  Arthur  157 

Merlin  s  that  I  should  come  again  To  rule  once  more ;  „  191 

Then  s  Lord  Thomas  Howard :  The  Revenge  4 

Swarm  (s)     Then  we  shoulder'd  thro'  the  s,  Audley  Court  9 

Glitter  like  a  s  of  fire-flies  Locksley  Hall  10 


Swarm  (s)  (continued)     In  silken  fluctuation  and  the  s  Of 

female  whisperers :  Princess  vi  855 

s's  of  men  Darkening  her  female  field :  „        vii  33 

Back  to  France  her  banded  s's.  Ode  on  Well.  110 

Seeing  the  mighty  s  about  their  walls.  Com.  of  Arthur  200 

Swarm  (verb)     thoughts  would  s  as  bees  about  their  queen.       Princess  i  40 
that  ever  s  about  And  cloud  the  highest  heads,  Columbus  119 

those  gilt  gauds  men-children  s  to  see.  To  W.  C.  Macready  11 

Swarm'd     noise  of  life  iS'  in  the  golden  present,  Gardener's  D.  179 

I  smote  them  with  the  cross ;  they  s  again.  St.  S.  Stylites  173 

s  His  literary  leeches.  Will  Water.  199 

from  time  to  time  the  heathen  host  S  overseas.  Com.  of  Arthur  9 

Swarming    With  the  hum  of  s  bees  Into  dreamful  slumber 


lull'd. 

'  I  took  the  5  sound  of  life — 

gates  were  closed  At  sunset,  and  the  crowd  were  s 
now, 

hosts  Of  heathen  s  o'er  the  Northern  Sea ; 
Swarthier     they  marm'd  the  Revenge  with  a  s  alien  crew. 
Swarthy     And  wearing  on  my  s  brows  The  garland 

A  queen,  with  s  cheeks  and  bold  black  eyes, 

and  takes  the  flood  With  s  webs. 

a  light  Of  laughter  dimpled  in  his  s  cheek  ; 

In  which  the  s  ringdove  sat, 

Hard  coils  of  cordage,  s  fishing-nets. 

With  half  a  score  of  s  faces  came. 

with  a  sweep  of  it  Shore  thro'  the  s  neck. 

But  under  her  black  brows  a  s  one  Laugh'd 

and  takes  the  flood  With  s  webs. 
Swathe     Did  s  thyself  all  round  Hope's  quiet  urn 
Swathed    (See  also  Vapour-swathed)    s  the  hurt  that 
drain'd  her  dear  lord's  life. 

Narded  and  s  and  balm'd  it  for  herself, 
Swathing    or  fold  of  mystery  S  the  other. 
Sway  (s)     A  hate  of  gossip  parlance,  and  of  s, 

power  which  ever  to  its  s  Will  win  the  wise 

s  and  whirl  Of  the  storm  dropt  to  windless  calm, 
Sway  (verb)    She  saw  the  gusty  shadow  s. 

Unto  the  dwelling  she  must  s 


Eleanore  29 
Talking  Oak  213 

Princess,  Con.  37 

Guinevere  428 

The  Revenge  110 

Kate  23 

D.  of  F.  Women  127 

M.  d' Arthur  269 

Edwin  Morris  61 

Talking  Oak  293 

Enoch  Arden  17 

Aylmer's  Field  191 

Geraint  and  E.  728 

Last  Tournament  216 

Pass,  of  Arthur  437 

Lover's  Tale  i  100 


Geraint  and  E.  516 

Lover's  Tale  i  682 

183 

Isabel  26 

Mine  be  the  strength  9 

Lover's  Tale  ii  206 

Mariana  52 

Ode  to  Memory  79 


queen  who  s's  the  floods  and  lands  From  Ind  to  Ind,  Buonaparte  3 


Bring  truth  that  s's  the  soul  of  men  ? 
And  waves  that  s  themselves  in  rest, 
Unwatch'd,  the  garden  bough  shall  s. 
Here  will  I  lie,  while  these  long  branches  s. 
Thou  didst  not  s  me  upward ; 
and  s  thy  course  Along  the  years  of  haste 

0  will  she,  moonlike,  s  the  main, 
Sway'd    Still  hither  thither  idly  s 

1  govern'd  men  by  change,  and  so  I  s  All  moods, 
she  s  The  rein  with  dainty  finger-tips, 
s  The  cradle,  while  she  sang  this  baby  song. 
«S'  to  her  from  their  orbits  as  they  moved. 
And  world-wide  fluctuation  s  In  vassal  tides 
S  round  about  him,  as  he  gallop'd  up  To  join  them,  Marr.  of  Geraint  171 
The  hundred  under-kingdoms  that  he  s  Merlin  and  V.  582 
And  blackening  in  the  sea-foam  s  a  boat.  Holy  Grail  802 
High-tide  of  doubt  that  s  me  up  and  down  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  178 
'  The  statesman's  brain  that  s  the  past  Ancient  Sage  134 
S  by  vaster  ebbs  and  flows  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  194 
S  his  sabre,  and  held  his  own  Like  an  Englishman       Heavy  Brigade  18 

To  Prin.  Beatrice  19 


Day-Ihn.,  Sleep.  P.  52 

In  Mefn.  xi  18 

„  ci  1 

Maud  I  xviii  29 

Lover's  Tale  i  98 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  20 

Mechanophilus  13 

Miller's  D.  47 

D.  of  F.  Women  130 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  40 

Sea  Dreams  291 

Princess  vii  326 

In  Mem.  cxii  15 


Happy  43 

Ded.  of  Idylls  21 

Com.  of  Arthur  107 


S  by  each  Love,  and  swaying  to  each  Love, 
s  the  sword  that  lighten'd  back  the  sun 
Swaying    Not  s  to  this  faction  or  to  that ; 
as  here  and  there  that  war  Went  s ; 
s  upon  a  restless  elm  Drew  the  vague  glance  of 

Vivien,  Balin  and  Balan  463 

gustful  April  morn  That  pufE'd  the  s  branches  into 

smoke  Holy  Grail  15 

from  the  crown  thereof  a  carcanet  Of  ruby  s  to  and 

fro,  Last  Tournament  7 

to  and  fro  S  the  helpless  hands.  Pass,  of  Arthur  131 

and  it  ran  Surging  and  s  all  round  us,  Def.  of  Lucknow  38 

Sway'd  by  each  Love,  and  s  to  each  Love,  To  Prin.  Beatrice  19 

Swear     (See  also  Swefir)     Such  eyes  !     I  s  to  you,  my  love,     Miller's  D.  87 
Let  us  s  an  oath,  and  keep  it  with  an  equal  mind,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  8. 108 


Swear 


702 


Sweet 


Swear  {continued)   '  I  s  (and  else  may  insects  prick  Each  leaf   Talking  Oak  69 

'  I  s,  by  leaf,  and  wind,  and  rain,  „            81 

And  hear  me  s  a  solemn  oath,  „  281 
I  have  a  secret — only  s.  Before  I  tell  you — s  upon  the 

book  Not  to  reveal  it,  Enoch  Arden  837 

'  S '  added  Enoch  sternly  '  on  the  book.'  „          842 

I  s  you  shall  not  make  them  out  of  mine.  Aylvier's  Field  301 

she  made  me  s  it — 'Sdeath —  Princess  v  291 

S  by  St.  something — I  forget  her  name —  „          293 

I  s  to  you,  lawful  and  lawless  war  Maud  II  v  94 
but,  so  thou  dread  to  s,  Pass  not  beneath  this 

gateway,  Gareth  and  L.  272 

Eepentant  of  the  word  she  made  him  s,  527 

I  s  thou  canst  not  fling  the  foui'th.'  ,,          1327 

I  s  it  would  not  ru£fle  me  so  much  Geraint  and  E.  150 

I  A'  I  will  not  ask  your  meaning  in  it :  „            743 

But  ere  I  leave  thee  let  me  s  once  more  Merlin  aiid  V.  929 

I  s  by  truth  and  knighthood  that  I  gave  Lancelot  and  E.  1297 

But  by  mine  eyes  and  by  mine  ears  I  s,  Holy  Grail  864 

Will  ye  not  lie?  not  s,  as  there  ye  kneel.  Last  Tournament  646 

I  say,  8  to  me  thou  ^vllt  love  me  ev'n  when  old,  „              652 

Than  had  we  never  sworn.  I  s  no  more.  „  660 
lay  their  hands  in  mine  and  s  To  reverence  the  King,  Guinevere  467 
where  is  he  can  s  But  that  some  broken  gleam    Bed.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  17 

0  my  lord,  I  s  to  you  I  heard  his  voice  Columbus  145 

1  s  and  s  forsworn  To  love  him  most,  The  Flight  49 
and  s  the  brain  is  in  the  feet.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  136 
who  shall  s  it  cannot  be  ?  „              269 

Swear     an'  'e  s's,  an'  'e  says  to  'im  'Noa.  Village  Wife  67 

Ye  niver  'card  Steevie  s  'cep'  it  wur  at  a  dog  Spinster's  S's.  60 

Swear'd  (swore)     an'  s  as  I'd  break  ivry  stick  North.  Cobbler  35 

Swearin    S  agean,  you  Toms,  Spinster's  S's.  59 

Swearing    {See  also  Swearin)     s  he  had  glamour  enow  In 

his  own  blood,  Gareth  and  L.  209 

And  s  men  to  vows  impossible,  Lancelot  and  E.  130 

Sweat    bloody  thumbs  S  on  his  blazon'd  chairs ;  Walk,  to  the  Mail  76 

every  hour  Must  s  her  sixty  minutes  to  the  death,  Golden  Year  69 

That  shriek  and  s  in  pigmy  wars  Lit.  Squabbles  2 

S,  writhings,  anguish,  labouring  of  the  lungs  Pass,  of  Arthur  115 

Sweating     And,  s  rosin,  plump'd  the  pine  Amphion  47 

With  a  weird  bright  eye,  s  and  trembling,  Aylmer's  Field  585 

Then  loosed  their  s  horses  from  the  yoke,  Spec,  of  Iliad  2 

Went  s  underneath  a  sack  of  com,  Marr.  of  Geraint  263 

He  up  the  side,  s  with  agony,  got,  Lancelot  and  E.  494 

Sweeat  (sweet)     sa  pratty  an'  neat  an'  s,  North.  Cobbler  43 

sa  pratty,  an'  feat,  an'  neat,  an'  s?  „            108 

Sweep  (s)     and  a  s  Of  richest  pauses,  Elednore  65 

The  parson  taking  wide  and  wider  s's,  The  Epic  14 

by  many  a  s  Of  meadow  smooth  from  aftermath  Audley  Court  13 

From  the  dread  s  of  the  down-streaming  seas :  Enoch  Arden  55 

or  the  s  Of  some  precipitous  rivulet  „          586 

The  s  of  scythe  in  morning  dew,  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  18 

Made  but  a  single  bound,  and  with  a  s  of  it  Geraint  and  E.  727 

Sweep  (verb)    S  the  green  that  folds  thy  grave.  A  Dirge  6 

Would  s  the  tracts  of  day  and  night.  Two  Voices  69 
never  more  Shall  lone  CEnone  see  the  morning  mist  S 

thro'  them ;  (Enone  217 

we  s  into  the  younger  day :  Locksley  Hall  183 

Who  s  the  crossings,  wet  or  dry.  Will  Water.  47 

those  long  swells  of  breaker  s  The  nutmeg  rocks  The  Voyage  39 

There  let  the  wind  s  and  the  plover  cry ;  Come  not,  when,  etc.  5 

That  s's  with  all  its  autmnn  bowers,  In  Mem.  xi  10 

We  heard  them  s  the  winter  land ;  „      xxx  10 

while  the  wind  began  to  s  A  music  „       ciii  53 

But  s's  away  as  out  we  pass  To  range  the  woods,  „      Con.  95 

to  5  In  ever-highering  eagle-circles  Gareth  and  L.  20 

And  s  me  from  my  hold  upon  the  world,  Merlin  and  V.  303 

heard  the  hollow-ringing  heavens  s  Over  him  till  by 

miracle —  Holy  Grail  678 

S's  suddenly  all  its  half-moulder'd  chords  Lover's  Tale  i  19 

often  s's  athwart  in  storm —  „           50 

sea-current  would  s  us  out  to  the  main.  Despair  51 

Sweeping    {See  also  Earth-sweeping,  Long-sweeping)  And 

with  a  s  of  the  arm,  A  Character  16 

passion  s  thro'  me  left  me  dry,  Locksley  Hall  131 


3(ri 


Sweeping  {continued)  S  the  f rothfly  from  the  fescue  brush'd  Aylmer's  Fidd  S 
Of  that  great  breaker,  s  up  the  strand,  Com.  of  Arthur  387 

sudden  gust  that  s  down  Took  the  edges  of  the  pall.  Lover's  Tale  Hi  34 
shape  with  wings  Came  s  by  him,  St.  Telemachus  25 

Sweet    {See  also  Heaven-sweet,  Lowly-sweet,  May-sweet, 
Perfect-sweet,   Star-sweet,    Sunny-sweet,    Sweeat) 
False-eyed  Hesper,  unkind,  where  is  my  s  Rosalind  ?        Leonine  Eleg.  16 
How  s  to  have  a  common  faith  !  Supp.  Confessions  33 

S  in  their  utmost  bitterness,  ,,  117 

S  lips  whereon  perpetually  did  reign  The  simimer  calm  Isabel  7 

She  could  not  look  on  the  s  heaven,  Mariana  15 

Sudden  glances,  5  and  strange,  Madeline  5 

vaults  of  pillar'd  palm.  Imprisoning  s's,  Arabian  Nights  40 

In  s  dreams  softer  than  unbroken  rest  Ode  to  Memory  29 

With  music  and  s  showers  Of  festal  flowers,  „  77 

S  faces,  rounded  arms,  and  bosoms  prest  Sea-Fairies  3 

And  s  is  the  colour  of  cove  and  cave,  And  s  shall  your 

welcome  be :  ..30 

We  will  kiss  s  kisses,  and  speak  s  words :  ..        34 

O  pale,  pale  face  so  s  and  meek,  Oriatia  66 

O  S  pale  Margaret,  (repeat)  Margaret  1,  54 

Your  melancholy  s  and  frail  „  7 

'  His  little  daughter,  whose  s  face  He  kiss'd.  Two  Voices  253 

The  s  church  bells  began  to  peal.  ..  408 

These  three  made  unity  so  s,  „  421 

'  What  is  it  thou  knowest,  s  voice  ?  '  ,.  440 

My  own  s  Alice,  we  must  die.  Miller's  D.  18 

So  s  it  seems  with  thee  to  walk,  ..  29 

S  AUce,  if  I  told  her  all  ? '  ..        120 

A  trifle,  s  !  which  true  love  spells —  „        187 

S  gales,  as  from  deep  gardens,  blow  Fatima  24 

And  that  s  incense  rise  ?  '  Palace  of  Art  4A 

■  For  that  s  incense  rose  and  never  fail'd,  ..  45 

Or  gay,  or  grave,  or  s,  or  stem,  91 

Or  s  Europa's  mantle  blew  unclasp'd,  ..  117 

Making  s  close  of  his  delicious  toils —  ..  185 

Nor  would  I  break  for  your  s  sake  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  13 

Oh  your  s  eyes,  your  low  replies :  „  29 

by  the  meadow-trenches  blow  the  faint  s  cuckoo-flowers ;   May  Queen  30 
O  s  is  the  new  violet,  May  Queen,  Con.  5 

And  s  is  all  the  land  about,  ,.  7 

O  s  and  strange  it  seems  to  me,  ..  53 

Theee  is  s  music  here  that  softer  falls  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  1 

Music  that  brings  s  sleep  down  from  the  blissful  skies.  „  7 


How  s  it  were,  hearing  the  downward  stream, 

How  s  (while  warm  airs  lull  us,  blowing  lowly) 

Only  to  hear  were  s. 

Surely,  surely,  slumber  is  more  s  than  toil, 

And  s  it  was  to  dream  of  Fatherland, 

whose  s  breath  Preluded  those  melodious  bursts 

S  as  new  buds  in  Spring. 

Failing  to  give  the  bitter  of  the  s, 

Sleep  till  the  end,  true  soul  and  s. 

and  stirr'd  her  lips  For  some  s  answer, 

Of  that  which  came  between,  more  s  than  each, 

My  s,  wild,  fresh  three  quarters  of  a  year, 

made  it  s  To  walk,  to  sit,  to  sleep,  to  wake, 

Then  low  and  s  1  whistled  thrice ; 

S\  si  spikenard,  and  balm,  and  frankincense. 

Ah  !  let  me  not  be  f ool'd,  s  saints : 

'  Yet  seem'd  the  pressure  thrice  as  s 

The  slow  s  hours  that  bring  us  all  things  good, 

Thy  s  eyes  brighten  slowly  close  to  mine, 

Whispering  I  knew  not  what  of  wild  and  s. 

How  s  are  looks  that  ladies  bend 

S  Emma  Moreland  of  yonder  town 

S  Emma  Moreland  spoke  to  me : 

'  S  Emma  Moreland,  love  no  more 

I  buried  her  like  my  own  5  child, 

colour  flushes  Her  s  face  from  brow  to  chin : 

So  s  a  face,  such  angel  grace, 

Who  make  it  seem  more  s  to  be 

And  chanted  a  melody  loud  and  s, 

To  where  the  rivulets  of  s  water  ran ; 

'  If  I  might  look  on  her  s  face  again 


54 

89 

99 

126 

Lotos-Eaters  39 

D.  ofF.  Women  5 

272 

286 

To  J.  S.  73 

Gardener's  D.  159 

252 

Edwin  Morris  2 

39 

113 

St.  S.  Stylites  211 

212 

Talkvng  Oak  145 

Love  and  Dviy  57 

Tithonus  38 

61 

Sir  Galahad  13 

Edward  Gray  1 

5 

7 

Lady  Clare  27 

L.  of  Burleigh  62 

Beggar  Maid  13 

You  might  have  won  29 

Poet's  Soru  6 

Enoch  Arden  642 

718 


Sweet 


703 


Sweet 


Sweet  (ccnvtinued)     Like  fountains  of  s  water  in  the  sea,      ^^of^ff^kfl 
Or  ev'n  the  s  half-EngUsh  Neilgherry  air  The  Brook  17 

'  ,S  Katie,  once  I  did  her  a  good  turn,  •■         ' 

Of  s  seventeen  subdued  me  ere  she  spoke)  >-       | 

Arrived  and  found  the  sun  of  s  content  Ee-risen  •.      ^ 

I  move  the  s  forget-me-nots  ^   7    ^.  ttL/j  qQ9 

her  .  face  and  faith  Held  him  from  that :  Ayln^s  FM  392 

She  look'd  so  s,  he  kiss'd  her  tenderly  ,,    ,     ,     o,„n,*„™ein6 

'  That  was  then  your  dream,'  she  said, '  Not  sad,  but  s.'    Sea  Dreams  10b 
« So  s,  I  lay,'  said  he,  '  And  mused  upon  it,  ,.  ^" ' 

Their  wildest  waiUngs  never  out  of  tune  With  that  s  note;        „  ^^^ 

Nothing  to  mar  the  sober  majesties  Of  settled,  s,  Lucretius  218 
AndTgir^graduates  in  their  golden  hair.                     Princess,  Pro.  142 

And  s  as  English  air  could  make  her,  -                 ^^ 

,S  thoughts  would  swarm  as  bees  about  their  queen.  „                »^ 

We  remember  love  ourselves  In  our  s  youth :  ,.                ^« 

S  household  talk,  and  phrases  of  the  hearth,  „            « ^ 

Is  she  The  s  proprietress  a  shadow  ?  »               .™J 

S  and  low,  s  and  low,                 ,.,    ,  o  >  "                  ftft 

'  What  pardon,  s  Melissa,  for  a  blush  f                       ,  ^  "                qa? 

'  0  how  s '  I  said  (For  I  was  half-obUvious  of  my  mask)  „                »o( 

O  s  and  far  from  cliff  and  scar  "                *  __ 

And  s  as  those  by  hopeless  fancy  feign  d  "64 

So  s  a  voice  and  vague,  fatal  to  men,  "                  -7 

Like  some  s  sculpture  draped  from  head  to  foot,  .,               ''  ^ 

'  Lift  up  your  head,  s  sister :  lie  not  thus.  "                  ^ 

6f  is  it  to  have  done  the  thing  one  ought,  ..                  o' 

My  one  s  child,  whom  I  shall  see  no  more !  '.                  °? 

My  babe,  mys  Aglaia,  my  onechild:                         „    o  "                 iqi 

Twice  as  magnetic  to  s  influences  Of  earth  and  heaven?  .,                !«! 

'  We  remember  love  ourself  In  our  s  youth ;  ..  ^"° 

Prince,  she  can  be  s  to  those  she  loves,  "  f°^ 

'-S  my  child,  I  hve  for  thee.'        .  ^    ^^     ,  "  Jf-\k 

by  and  by  S  order  hved  again  with  other  laws :  .,  ««*  ^ 

two  dewdrops  on  the  petal  shake  To  the  same  s  air,  „  o» 

showers  of  random  s  on  maid  and  man.  » 

And  call  her  s,  as  if  in  irony,  »  ,  „! 

nor  more  S  Ida :  pahn  to  pahn  she  sat :  "  ^^ 

'  If  you  be,  what  I  think  you,  some  s  dream,  »  j*^ 

only,  if  a  dream,  S  dream,  be  perfect. 

she  found  a  smaU  S  Idyl,  and  once  more,  as  low,  ^^^ 

and  s  is  every  sound.  Sweeter  thy  voice,  but  every  ^^^ 

sound  is  s;                            ,     ,  ,  .„j  .      n  "                99sx 

she  had  fail'd  In  s  humihty ;  had  fail'd  m  all ;  „                ^;f» 

could  we  make  her  as  the  man,  S  Love  were  slam :  „                ^' ' 

lives  A  drowning  Ufe,  besotted  in  s  self,  ••                ^ 

forced  S  love  on  pranks  of  saucy  boyhood :  >•                ^^ 

Lav  thv  s  hands  in  mine  and  trust  to  me.  ^  ,    ^  \      ^  i,  t  ^ 

UpWa  thousand  voices  full  and  s.  Ode  Inter- ExMb-  1 

Welcome  her,  all  things  youthful  and  s,  W .  to  Alexandra  8 

^'sE  •'^'  ^'^  ^  '^^  ^  '^^  ^^  ""'*'  ''^  '  "'°'""  Grar^-^ther  49 
There  lay  the  s  little  body  that  never  had  drawn  a  breath.      „  62 

Sin'  I  mun  doy  I  mun  doy,  thaw  loife  they  says     ^  ^^^^^  ^  ^  ^^ 

is  s,  '              '  N  S  11 

thou's  »■  upo' parson's  lass—  »     ^.r  "r  7' ,  2 

For  a  score  of  s  little  summers  or  so  ?  '  -^  ««  ^  «'«'  ^ 

The  s  little  wife  of  the  singer  said,  "  . 
To  a  s  little  Eden  on  earth  that  I  know. 

And  strain  to  make  an  inch  of  room  For  their  s  ^  ^^^^^^^^  ^^ 

honouSig  your  .  faith  in  him.  May  trust  himself ;.  ^^^l^^'^,? 
O  hghtsTare  you  flying  over  her  s  Uttle  face?     Wtndow,  On  tf^e  miJS 

Where  is  another  s  as  my  s,                                       "  Answer  2 

Claspt  on  her  seal,  my  s !                                           "  ^^^    ...  3 

0  s  and  bitter  m  a  breath,  ^^ ..  3 
Thro'  four  s  years  arose  and  feU,  ,„ 
'  They  rest,'  we  said, '  their  sleep  is  s,  "      ''f'^ 

1  strive  To  keep  so  s  a  thing  ahve :  "        ;-^^  ' 
hear  thy  laurel  whisper  s  About  the  ledges  of  the  hill.  .,     .<    :mi  7 
S  soul,  do  with  me  as  thou  wilt  |  "    j   ,oiil6 
To  utter  love  more  s  than  praise.  ■•     '    " 
The  same  s  forms  in  either  mmd.  "      '■^•«»*" 


/n  Mem.  Ixxxi  9 

Ixxxiii  2 

Ixxxvi  1 

Ixxxviii  1 

carwi  2 

cxiJii  6 

ca;a;i  17 

CXOT)  11 

cxxtx  6 


Sweet  (continued)     But  Death  returns  an  answer  s : 
O  s  new-year  delaying  long ; 
S  after  showers,  ambrosial  air. 
Wild  bird,  whose  warble,  liquid  s, 
regret  for  buried  time  That  keenlier  in  s  April  wakes. 
Desire  of  nearness  doubly  s ; 
S  Hesper-Phosphor,  double  name 
And  if  the  words  were  s  and  strong 
S  human  hand  and  lips  and  eye ; 
Maud  with  her  s  purse-mouth  when  my  father  dangled 

the  grapes. 
And  she  touch'd  my  hand  with  a  smile  so  s. 
But  a  smile  could  make  it  s.  (repeat) 
How  prettily  for  his  own  s  sake 
What  some  have  found  so  s ; 
Let  the  s  heavens  endure, 
Maud  is  as  true  as  Maud  is  s : 
Think  I  may  hold  dominion  s, 
In  our  low  world,  where  yet  'tis  s  to  live, 
silver  knell  Of  twelve  s  hours  that  past  in  bridal  white, 

Seal'd  her  mine  from  her  first  s  breath. 

That,  if  left  uncancell'd,  had  been  so  s : 

And  for  your  s  sake  to  yours ; 

(If  I  read  her  s  will  right) 

From  the  meadow  your  walks  have  left  so  s 

She  is  coming,  my  own,  my  s ; 

For  she,  s  soul,  had  hardly  spoken  a  word, 

'Tis  a  morning  pure  and  s,  (repeat) 

'  Take  me,  s,  To  the  regions  of  thy  rest  ? 

S  nature  gUded  by  the  gracious  gleam  Of  letters, 

Call  him  baseborn,  and  since  his  ways  are  s, 

friends  Of  Arthur,  gazing  on  him,  tall,  with  bright 

iS  f3>C6S 

And  spake  s  words,  and  comforted  my  heart, 

But  s  again,  and  then  I  loved  him  well. 

5'  mother,  do  ye  love  the  child? ' 

so  the  boy,  S  mother,  neither  clomb, 

'  True  love,  s  son,  had  risk'd  himself  and  chmb  d, 

'  S  son,  for  there  be  many  who  deem  him  not, 

Stay,  s  son.' 

Rather  than— O  s  heaven  ! 

S  lord,  how  like  a  noble  knight  lie  talks ! 

Theirs  sun-worship?   these  be  for  the  snare 

He  compass'd  her  with  s  observances  And  worship,  Marr.  ofGeramt^ 

in  the  s  face  of  her  Whom  he  loves  most,  :-  1^'^ 

Lost  in  s  dreams,  and  dreaming  of  her  love  For 

Lancelot,  "  oqq 

Singing;  and  as  the  s  voice  of  a  bird,  «  ^ 

So  the  s  voice  of  Enid  moved  Geramt ;  .-  00^ 

And  Enid  brought  s  cakes  to  make  them  cheer,  „  ^ 

And  seeing  her  so  s  and  serviceable,  >'  ^^ 

Sank  her  s  head  upon  her  gentle  breast ;  ,.  o^i 

And  softly  to  her  own  s  heart  she  said :  -  o^o 

S  heaven,  how  much  I  shall  discredit  him !  ,.  oai 

But  kept  it  for  a  s  surprise  at  morn.    Yea,  truly  is 

it  not  as  surprise?  ■'  '^ 

But  rested  with  hers  face  satisfied;  -  ''o 

In  words  whose  echo  lasts,  they  were  so  s,  .  .,  '°^ 

To  compass  her  with  s  observances,  Geramt  and  /4.  dy 

And  she  was  ever  praying  the  s  heavens  To  save  her 

dcSir  lord.  " 

But  keep  a  touch  of  s  civility  Here  in  the  heart  „  312 

tender  sound  of  his  own  voice  And  s  self-pity,  „  ^ 

But  ended  with  apology  so  s,        ,    ,    .    ^  ,    .,  "  i^ 

'  Your  s  faces  make  good  feUows  fools  And  traitors.  „  d»y 

S  lady,  never  since  I  first  drew  breath  Have  I  beheld  „  blH 

breath  Of  her  s  tendance  hovering  over  him,  ==  »^b 

but  when  he  mark'd  his  high  s  smile  In  passing.     Balm  and  Balan  IbO 
and  with  how  s  grace  She  greeted  my  return ! 
Hail,  royal  knight,  we  break  on  thy  s  rest, 
Again  she  sigh'd  '  Pardon,  s  lord ! 
'  Rise,  my  s  King,  and  kiss  me  on  the  lips, 
S  lord,  ye  do  right  well  to  whisper  this. 
Here  her  slow  s  eyes  Fear-tremulous, 


Maud  I  i  71 

vi  12 

..      39, 95 

51 

„  xi  4 

8 

,,     xiii  32 

xvi  12 

.,    xviii  48 

65 

xix  41 

;,       46 

91 

xxi  10 

.,    xxii  39 

67 

„    77  ill 

.,  iv  31,  35 

87 

Ded.  of  Idylls  39 

Com.  of  Arthur  180 

279 

349 

355 

Gareth  and  L.  35 

56 

60 

93 

121 

131 

741 

777 

1081 


193 
470 

516 

529 
Merlin  and  V.  85 


Sweet 

Sweet  (continued)    With  dark  5  hints  of  some  who  prized 

him  more  Merlin  and  V.  159 

riut,  Vivien,  when  you  sang  me  that  s  rhyme,  „             434 

S  were  the  days  when  I  was  all  unknown,  .,            501 

Those  twelve  s  moons  confused  his  fatherhood.'  ,'            712 

What  say  ye  then  to  s  Sir  Sagramore,  ,','             721 

To  crop  his  own  s  rose  before  the  hour  ?  '  ,"            725 
And  they,  s  soul,  that  most  impute  a  crime  Are 

pronest  to  it,  g25 

rapt  By  all  the  s  and  sudden  passion  of  youth  Lancelot'and  E.  282 

She  needs  must  bid  fareweU  to  s  Lavaine.  „              341 

'  Ah  my  s  lord  Sir  Lancelot,'  said  Lavaine,  ,','              512 
For  if  you  love,  it  will  be  s  to  give  it ;  And  if  he 

love,  it  will  be  s  to  have  it  ^.              §92 

S  father,  will  you  let  me  lose  my  wits  ?  '  •           ',               752 

S  father,  I  behold  him  in  my  dreams  .,               763 

to  be  s  and  serviceable  To  noble  knights  in  sickness,  „'              767 

Would  call  her  friend  and  sister,  s  Elaine,  ,.              865 
arraying  her  5  self  In  that  wherein  she  deem'd  she 

look'd  her  best,  9O6 

I  had  been  wedded  earlier,  s  Elaine :  "              935 
for  true  you  are  and  s  Beyond  mine  old  belief  in 

womanhood,  ,^              954 

'  Peace  to  thee,  S  sister,'  ''              997 
'  S  is  true  love  tho'  given  in  vain,  in  vain ;  And  s 

is  death  who  puts  an  end  to  pain :  „             IOO7 
'  Love,  art  thou  s  ?  then  bitter  death  must  be : 

Love,  thou  art  bitter ;  s  is  death  to  me.  „            loio 
'iS  love,  that  seems  not  made  to  fade  away,  S 

death,  that  seems  to  make  us  loveless  clay,  „            1013 
'iS  brothers,  yesternight  I  seem'd  a  curious  little 

maid  again,  ^^            1034 

S  father,  aU  too  faint  and  sick  am  I  For  anger :  „             1086 

'iS  father,  and  bid  call  the  ghostly  man  Hither,  "             1099 

•  O  s  father,  tender  and  true.  Deny  me  not,'  she  said —       ..  1110 

'  Farewell,  s  sister,'  parted  all  in  tears.  !,             1152 

Ah  simple  heart  and  s,  Ye  loved  me,  damsel,  „            1393 

But  the  s  vision  of  the  Holy  Grail  Holy  Grail  31 

'  S  brother,  I  have  seen  the  Holy  Grail :  ,.        107 

'  But  she,  the  wan  s  maiden,  shore  away  ..         149 

We  that  are  plagued  with  dreams  of  something  s  ..         625 

the  s  Grail  Glided  and  past,  and  close  upon  it  peal'd  .,         694 

A  s  voice  singing  in  the  topmost  tower  To  the  eastward :  ,.        834 

and  the  s  smell  of  the  fields  Past,  Pelleas  and  E.  5 

their  malice  on  the  placid  lip  Froz'n  by  s  sleep,  433 

Who  yells  Here  in  the  still  s  summer  night,  but  I —  „           473 

'  O  s  star,  Pure  on  the  virgin  forehead  of  the  dawn  ! '  ..           504 

Till  the  5  heavens  have  fill'd  it  from  the  heights  „          510 
But  the  s  body  of  a  maiden  babe.                               Last  Tournament  48 

New  loves  are  s  as  those  that  went  before:  .,            280 

that  desert  lodge  to  Tristram  lookt  So  s,  „            388 

the  s  name  Allured  him  first,  and  then  the  maid  herself,       ..  398 

If  this  be  s,  to  sin  in  leading-strings,  .,            574 

thy  s  memories  Of  Tristram  in  that  year  he  was  away.'        \]  579 

To  pine  and  waste  in  those  s  memories.  „             598 

'  May  God  be  with  thee,  s,  when  old  and  gray,  ,            627 
•  May  God  be  with  thee,  s,  when  thou  art  old.  And 

s  no  more  to  me ! '  ,,             629 

that  I  should  suck  Lies  like  s  wines :  „             645 

'  Press  this  a  little  closer,  s,  "            718 

'  Have  we  not  heard  the  bridegroom  is  so  s  ?  Guinevere  177 

Ah  s  lady,  the  King's  grief  For  his  own  self,  „      196 
'  and,  s  lady,  if  I  seem  To  vex  an  ear  too  sad  to 

listen  to  me,  314 

As  I  could  think,  s  lady,  yours  would  be  Such  as  they  are,         ."      352 

Rapt  in  s  talk  or  lively,  all  on  love  And  sport  „      386 

Thou  hast  not  made  my  life  so  s  to  me,  "      451 

To  lead  s  lives  in  purest  chastity,  "      474 
yet  in  him  keeps  A  draught  of  that  s  fountain  that 

he  loves,  i^^^'^  j^^i^  ^  j^j 

Yet  was  not  the  less  s  for  that  it  seem'd  ?  „              155 
All — all  but  one  ;  and  strange  to  me,  and  s,  8 

thro'  strange  years  to  know  243 

Still  to  believe  it — 'tis  so  a  a  thought,  "              275 

Absorbing  all  the  incense  of  s  thoughts  "              469 


704 


Sweeter 


Sweet  (continued)     Ls  presently  received  in  a  s  grave  Of 

eglantines,  _  ,  ~  Lover' s  Tde  i  526 

ileid  converse  s  and  low — low  converse  s,  541 

It  was  so  hapj)y  an  hour,  so  s  a  place,  ]^              558 

At  first  her  voice  was  very  s  and  low,  553 
A  morning  air,  s  after  rain,  ran  over  The  riopline 

levels                                                           ^^    ^  ^^.^0 

That  will  not  hear  my  call,  however  s,  j^  jeo 

So  the  s  figure  folded  round  with  night  ..              219 

Sad,  s,  and  strange  together — floated  in —  304 
A  s  voice  that— you  scarce  could  better  that.        Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  14 

the  s  eyes  frown  :  the  lips  Seem  but  a  gash.  106 

And  all  her  s  self-sacrifice  and  death.  255 
his  voice  was  low  as  from  other  worlds,  and  his 

eyes  were  5,         ,     ^     ^.  ^  V.  of  Maeldune  111 

tor  that  s  mother  land  which  gave  them  birth  Tiresias  122 

The  small  s  face  was  flush'd.  The  Wreck  60 

1  en  longs  summer  days  upon  deck,  64 

one  morning  a  bird  with  a  warble  plaintively  s  81 

'  Ten  long  s  summer  days  '  of  fever,  "         147 

she  was  always  loyal  and  s~  jj'ir  49 

ihe  morning  with  such  music,  would  never  be  so  s  !  The  Flioht  66 

0  s,  they  tell  me  that  the  world  is  hard,  101 
Achora,  yer  laste  little  whishper  was  s  as  the  lilt  of  a 

T?U='  ,        .urn  TovlOTTOW  33 

1  calls  em  arter  the  fellers  es  once  was  s  upo'  me  ?         Spinster's  S's.  4 
1  remember  how  you  kiss'd  the  miniature  with 

those  s  eyes.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  12 

o  fet.  Iirancis  of  Assisi,  would  that  he  were  here  again,  100 

^}% ^.^n"'^?  '■*»  ?^^^9\ palace  and  cottage  door.  Dead" Prophet  37 

*  Catullus  s  all-but-island,  olive-silvery  Sirmio  !  Frater  Ave  etc  9 

torpid  mummy  wheat  Of  Egypt  bore  a  grain  as  s  To  Prof,  'jebb  6 

In  your  5  babe  she  finds  but  you —  The  Ring  365 

Beat  upon  mine  !  you  are  mine,  my  .<! !     All  mine  from 

your  pretty  blue  eyes  to  your  feet.  My  s.'  Romney's  R.  95 

And  tind  the  white  heather  wherever  you  go.  My  s.'  „         109 

'  wasting  the  s  summer  hours  '  ?  Charity  1 

All  very  well  just  now  to  be  calling  me  darling  and  s,  7 

Sing  thou  low  or  loud  or  s,  Poets  and  Critics  6 

Sweet-  arts  (sweet-hearts)     Lucy  wur  laame  o'  one  leg, 

s-a  she  niver  'ed  none—  VUlage  Wife  99 

^''f  ^A^n^t't'-,^^''    ,    ,•  Spinster's  S's.  1 

S-a  !     Molly  belike  may  'a  lighted  to-night  upo'  one.  7 

S-a  !  thanks  to  the  Lord  that  I  niver  not  listen'd 

to  noan  !  g 

An'  noan  of  my  four  s-a  'ud  'a  let  me  'a  hed  my 

oan  waay,  2OI 

Sweeten    S's  the  spirit  still.  2).  of  F.  Women  236 

They  freshen  and  s  the  wards  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  38 

Sweeten  d    Lo  !  s  with  the  summer  light,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  32 

One  rose,  my  rose,  that  s  all  mine  air—  Pelleas  and  E.  403 

Sweeter     Whether  smile  or  frown  be  s,  Madeline  13 

And  s  is  the  young  lamb's  voice  May  Queen,  Con.  6 

And  s  far  is  death  than  life  to  me  ,,  g 

There  came  a  s  token  when  the  night  and  morning 

meet :  22 

s  than  the  dream  Dream'd  by  a  happy  man.  Gardener's  D.  71 

■  Your  own  will  be  the  s,'  Sea  Dreams  318 

^  thy  voice,  but  every  sound  is  sweet ;  Princess  vii  219 

*n  SI®    ^  M®  ^^^^  '  ^^^^  garden  rose  Balin  and  Balan  269 

s  still  The  wild-wood  hyacinth  and  the  bloom  of  May.  „  270 

I  know  not  which  is  s,  no,  not  I.  (repeat)      Lancelot  and  E.  1009,  1015 

0  Love,  if  death  be  s,  let  me  die.  „  1012 
Os  than  all  memories  of  thee,                                   Last  Tournament  585 

1  hen— -while  a  s  music  wakes,  To  the  Queen  13 
Chaunteth  not  the  brooding  bee  S  tones  than  calumny  ?  A  Dirge  17 
Drip  s  dews  than  traitor's  tear.  ^,  24 
You  could  not  light  upon  a  s  thing :  Walk,  to  the  "Mail  52 
Ah,  s  to  be  drunk  with  loss,  /^  Mem.  ill 
s  seems  To  rest  beneath  the  clover  sod,  ".  a;  12 
With  s  manners,  purer  laws.  ,.  (^  16 
can  a  s  chance  ever  come  to  me  here  ?  Maud  I  i62 
To  the  s  blood  by  the  other  side  ;  ,.  xiii  34 
For  nothing  can  be  s  Than  maiden  Maud  in  either.  ..  xx  21 
Mixt  with  kisses  s  s  Than  anything  on  earth.                         „       //  iv  9 


I 


11 


Sweeter 


705 


Swollen 


Sy^eeU^Ucontinued)  And  .  than  the  bride  of  Cassivelaun,  ^-^'JmtBI 

Kn.i  you  that  weax  a  wreaU.  of  s  bay,  ^thZithts  141 

^^L?l&  &XZ\e  stoned  walls ;  OOe  to  Menu>ry  S5 

Then  her  5  meal  she  makes  On  the  first-born  of  her  ^^^  ^^  ^  .^^  ^^ 

'The"1nother  of  the  5  little  maid,  Prinom  «  279 

The  passing'  of  the  s  soul  That  ever  look  d  with  ^^^  ^^^  ^^ . .  ^^ 

tinyTr^m^ermg gnatcan break ourdream When.;  i«^eZo*anrfE.  138 

love  Of  man  and  woman  when  they  love  their  best,  ^^^ 

SweetilSr^^^e'^ruktle  round  the  shelving  keel ;  ,,^^:^^"^'^J^^ 
tZ^P    iSeealsoS^i-'^xis)    '  ^,  ll.e  you  SO  well     Or;f^^,f^ 

Sweetlle^^  T^.to^l^  ^M-blue  eyes  ^^^^ 

Sweetness     Now  folds  the  lily  all  her  s  up,  tnncessmi^^ 

He  gain  in  s  and  in  moral  height,  «              . . 

Will  change  my  s  more  and  more,  ■?»  ^««-  ^fj^  ^g 

A  secret  s  in  the  stream,  ••      ;     ^^^^  g 

Thv  s  from  Its  proper  place  ?  "      -"        j„ 

Nor  mine  the  s  or  the  skill,             .  "       ,  ^24 

For  your  s  hardlv  leaves  me  a  choice  -«iaM«  ^^J^  ^ 

Can  ye  take  off  the  s  from  the  flower,  The  colour 

and  the  s  from  the  rose,                 ,  •»    u  "              272 

and  over-full  Of  5,  and  m  smelhng  of  itself,  «              ^'^ 

wild  vouth  of  an  evil  prince,  Is  without  s,  ..              ^^ 

But  taken  with  the  s  of  the  place,  -                  „ 

her  words  stole  with  most  prevailing  s  Into  my  heart,         ..  a&^ 

SweU(s)    (6'..aZ.oGrouiid-sweU)    And  the  wavy  s  of  .^^^^  38 

From  S'rurTeJs'four  currents  in  one  .  ^    pJace  of  Art  33 

uj  ri^e  vJey  came  a  s  of  music  on  the  wind.  May  Qnem,  Con.  32 

those  lor^  .'s  of  breaker  sweep  The  nutmeg  rocks  The  I  oyage  39 

So  fresh  they  rose  in  shadow'd  sh  To  EL  18 

on  the  s  The  silver  lily  heaved  and  fell ;  To  E.U  l» 

That  only  heaved  with  a  summer  s.  Maud  I  S  62 

only  the  s  Of  the  long  waves  that  roll               .  Maud  1  xmn  OJ 

SweU  (verb)     above  him  s  Huge  sponges  of  millennial  ^^^  ^^^^^  ^ 

thfckTdth  white  bells  the  clover-hill .'.  "^ EiSni 

Or  sonjetnnes  they  s  and  move,  Talkin^Tak  270 

And  while  he  sinks  or  ss  ^        J           ^g 

(S  s  up,  and  shakes  and  falls.  d       „„„  .•  o/is 

3  On^s'ome  dark  shore  just  seen  that  it  was  rich.  ^^^x W  7 

S  out  and  fail,  as  if  a  door  Were  shut  In  ^^"^-f^ll 

Spring  that  s's  the  narrow  brooks,  »      'j^^^  {^ 

SweU'd    The  broad  seas  s  to  meet  the  keel,  l he  voyage  lo 
low  musical  note  «  up  and  died ;  and,  as  it  5,  a  ridge 

Of  breaker  issued  from  the  belt,                  .  ^^  vreams  ^x± 

past  into  the  belt  and  s  again  Slowly  to  music  :  p^"s  iv  319 

But  still  her  lists  were  s  and  imne  were  lean  ;  Prmcess  iv6Ly 

voice  of  the  long  sea-wave  as  it  s  Clarihel  15 

Swelleth     Her  song  the  lintwhites  Sea  Dreams  9.1 

Swelling    Of  such  a  tide  s  toward  the  land,  rnr^^pJ^D^^Q 

KT^And  with  a  fiving  finger  s  my  lips,  dJdZ  pLdl 

A  breeze  thro'  all  the  garden  «,  ^"2/ 1^^  y-„„„g  14 

swell'd  to  meet  the  keel.  And  s  behind  ;  ^  /»e  Koj/a^e  i* 

He  cast  his  body,  and  on  we  s.  Dreams  89 

S  with  it  to  the  shore,  and  enter'd  one  *««  Ureams^y 

and  s  away  The  men  of  fiesh  and  blood,  '^ 

down  we  .and  charged  and  overthrew.  i%Zlxxvii6 

?tr  E  or^n^ZeTrom  off  the  threshold  Gareth  and  L.  135 

voice  S  bellowing  thro'  the  darkness  on  to  dawn,  ,,            ^  u 

and  all  the  sand  ^  like  a  river  VofMaeldune^ 

S  like  a  torrent  of  gems  from  the  sky  f^-  "/  iWaetrtwne  40 


Swept  (continued)     and  s  in  a  cataract  off  from  her  sides,         The  Wreck  90 
And  deed  and  song  alike  are  s  Away,  /g'^TI  ^I 

she  s  The  dust  of  earth  from  her  knee.  Bead  Frovha  61. 

in  the  storms  Of  Autumn  s  across  the  city,  Demeter  and  r.  11 

Swerve    S  from  her  duty  to  herself  and  us—  Aylmer  s  Field  304 

line  of  the  approaching  rookery  s  From  the  ehns,         Princess,  Con.  97 
Nor  pastoral  rivulet  that  s's  ^  „  In  Mem.  c  14 

made  his  beast  that  better  knew  it,  s  Pelleas  and  K.  551 

remember  how  the  course  of  Time  will  s,  LocksleyU.,  t>xxty  ^d& 

Swerved    be  s  from  right  to  save  A  prince,  Pnncess  m^^ 

"^And  so  my  passion  hath  not  5  ^^,^  In  Mem  Ixxrv  49 

they  s  and  brake  Flying,  and  Arthur  call'd  Com.  of  Arthur  119 

But  since  our  fortune  s  from  sun  to  shade,  Marr.  ofGeraint  714 

And  Holy  Church,  from  whom  I  never  s  f^f"^   •    !S 

Had  never  5  for  craft  or  fear.  To  Marq.  of  D^ff^nnfl 

Swerving     And  at  a  sudden  s  of  the  road,  Geratntand  E.  50b 

^e  night  ray  pathway  s  east,  ^"Pfr^t 

Swift  (a  bird)     The  swallow  and  the  s  are  near  akm.        Com.  of  Arthur  616 
Swift  adj.)     but  seeming-bitter  From  excess  of  s  delight.  Rosalind  6^ 

^  Not  less  s  souls  that  yearn  for  light.  Two  Voices  67 

From  my  s  blood  that  went  and  came  JfaXima  lo 

Her  loveliness  vdth  shame  and  with  surprise  Froze    ,^     .  ^   „^  ^ 

my  s  speech  •  ^-  "/  ^-  Women  90 

Not  s  nor  slow'to  change,  but  firm  :  Love  thouthy  land  31 

This  way  and  that  dividing  the  s  mind,  M.d  Arthur  bU 

The  sound  of  streams  that  s  or  slow  In  Mem  f^^ 

This  way  and  that  dividing  the  s  mind.  Pass,  of  Arthur  2J8 

At  times  her  steps  are  s  and  rash ;  To  Marq.  of  Duffertn  2 

Not  s  or  rash,  when  late  she  lent  r?,'.     t,-      aa 

Ionian  Evolution,  s  or  slow,  Thro'  all  the  Spheres-  The  Ring  44 

Swifter    With  s  movement  and  in  purer  light  isaoet  iJJ 

Moved  with  one  spirit  round  about  the  bay.  Trod  .. 

s  steps  •  iofer's  Tale  in  18 

Swiftness    And  with  a  shameful  s  :  ^"^•^^/^t''"-^  !?5 

AM  with  exceeding  .  ran  the  boat,  ^  ^^  2/  Grail ^U 

borne  With  more  than  mortal  s.  Lover  s  TaleulZ 

Swim    '  High  up  the  vapours  fold  and  s  :  Two  Voices  262 

taught  me  how  to  skate,  to  row,  to  s,  ^t'''r57h7d  II 

A  light  before  me  s's,  r    u       ufi^o 

The  mystic  glory  5'.  away;  ,  ^""^'"^-IlTn 

And  on  the  depths  of  death  there  s  s  ..     ,  f^"^^ 

Down  to  the  rfver,  sink  or  s,  ,  Gareth  <lfLJ15i 

read  but  on  my  breviary  with  ease.  Till  mv  head  s's  ;      Holy  Grail  546 
Swimming    The  s  vapour  slopes  athwart  the  glen,  j  j^'^ook 

'^Xfose,  and  fixt  her  s  eyes  upon  hun,  Enoch  ^rdm^f 

Sun  Burst  from  a  s  fleece  of  winter  gray,  Demeter  and  P.  ^0 

Swindler    and  a  wretched  s's  lie  ?  ^"f^^i'iqq 

Ke     I  watch  the  darkening  droves  of  s  ^^liTtll  Hilm 

Upon  her  tower,  the  Niobe  of  s,  Walk,  to  the  MailQ9 

all  the  5  were  sows.  And  all  the  do^'-  ^m'^T//?! 

poor  are  hovell'd  and  hustled  together,  each  sex,  like  s.      Maud  I  z  34 
a  villain  fitter  to  stick  s  Than  ride  abroad  Gareth  and  L.  865 

one  of  all  the  drove  should  touch  me  :  .  ! '  Merlm  and  V,  699 

S  in  the  mud,  that  cannot  see  for  slime,  Holy  Grail  ill 

Save  that  he  were  the  s  thou  spakest  of,  r    .  t       "        i^ 

Lord,  I  was  tending  s,  and  the  Red  Knight  Last  Tournament  Tl 

Who  knew  thee  s  enow  before  I  came,  ••  ^ 

less  than  s,  A  naked  augh^-yet  s  I  hold  thee  still,  -,  6m 

For  I  have  flung  thee  pearls  and  find  thee  s.  ,.  ^|" 

*S?     I  have  wallow'd,  I  have  wash'd—  v  ^^^ 

S,  say  ye  ?  s,  goats,  asses,  rams  and  geese  "  ooe 

'  Then  were  s,  goats,  asses,  geese  The  wiser  fools,  ,,  3^» 

Priest's  pearl,  flung  down  to  s-The  s.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  116 

my  lord  is  lower  than  his  oxen  or  his  s.  Locksley  H.,  inxty  12b 

Swine-flesh    men  may  taste  <S-/,  drink  wine ;  j^^"^  '  ^""fT^oi 

Keherd     the  s's  malkin  in  the  mast  ?  Last  Tournament ^2 

Swing  (s)     the  rush  of  the  air  in  the  prone  s,  Aylmer  s  Field  86 

SS  verb)    s's  the  trailer  from  the  crag  ;  Locksley  fall  162 

The  shrill  bell  rings,  the  censer  s's,  ^^^  ^    Sir  Galahad  35 

thrones  and  peoples  are  as  waifs  that  s,  W.  to  Mcme  -^iea:.  26 

where  they  s  the  Locksley  shield,  Locksley  S    S^xty  247 

SwoUen    thou  art  but  s  with  cold  snows  Gareth  avd  h.y 

as  strong  gales  Hold  s  clouds  from  raming,  D.  ofF.  Women  11 

And  blew  the  5  cheek  of  a  trumpeter.  Princess  n  364 

On  yon  s  brook  that  bubbles  fast  By  meadows  In  Mem.  xcix  6 

2   Y 


Swoon 


706 


Swung 


Elednore  134 

Fatima  27 

Geraint  and  E.  583 

Pass,  of  Arthur  120 

Lover's  Tale  i  791 

s,  Lotos- Eaters  5 

Enoch  Arden  774 

In  Mem.  xxi  17 

Aylmer's  Field  811 

Princess  vi  2 

Gareth  and  L.  1394 

Balin  and  Balan  563 

Lancelot  and  E.  518 

625 

Zfo/(/  Grai/  845 

Last  Tournainent  622 

Boddicea  67 

Merlin  and  V.  281 

Lancelot  and  E.  968 

HoZj/  GraiZ  850 

Princess  v  382 

Gareth  and  L.  22 


Clear-headed  friend  14 

Tfee  Poe<  53 

Z>.  o/  J'.  PFowew  95 


Swoon  (s)     as  in  a  s.  With  dinning  sound 

Down-deepening  from  s  to  s, 

Till  at  the  last  he  waken'd  from  his  s, 

or  thro'  death  Or  deathlike  s, 

First  falls  asleep  in  s,  wherefrom  awaked, 
Swoon  (verb)     All  round  the  coast  the  languid  air  d^ 

Lest  he  should  s  and  tumble  and  be  found, 

'  A  time  to  sicken  and  to  s, 
Swoon'd    fell  The  woman  shrieking  at  his  feet,  and  s. 

She  nor  s,  nor  utter'd  cry : 

Which  set  the  horror  higher  :  a  maiden  s  ; 

and  either  fell,  and  s  away.  ^ 

sank  For  the  pure  pain,  and  wholly  s  away. 

Thereon  she  smote  her  hand :  wellnigh  she  s  : 

With  such  a  fierceness  that  I  s  away — 

That  here  in  utter  dark  I  s  away. 
Swooning    Lash  the  maiden  into  s, 

And  I  was  faint  to  s,  and  you  lay 

thus  they  bore  her  s  to  her  tower. 

for  all  my  madness  and  my  sin,  And  then  my  s, 
Swoop    and  s's  The  vultiu-e,  beak  and  talon, 

and  thence  s  Down  upon  all  things  base. 
Swop    See  Swap 
Sword     Nor  martyr-flames,  nor  trenchant  s's 

No  s  Of  wrath  her  right  arm  whirl'd. 

Many  drew  s's  and  died. 

Certain,  if  knowledge  bring  the  s,  That  knowledge 

takes  the  s  away.  Love  thou  thy  land  87 

Clothed  in  white  samite,  mystic,  wonderful,  Holding 

the  s—  M.  d' Arthur  32 

Saying,  '  King  Arthur's  s,  Excalibur,  .,         103 

clutch'd  the  s,  And  strongly  wheel'd  and  threw  it.  ..        135 

No  desolation  but  by  s  and  fire  !  Aylmer's  Field  748 

hoveringly  a  s  Now  over  and  now  under,  Lu/yretius  61 

Man  for  the  s  and  for  the  needle  she  :  Princess  v  448 

And  s  to  s,  and  horse  to  horse  we  hung,  ..  539 

Yet  Harold's  England  fell  to  Norman  s's  ;  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  22 

To  draw,  to  sheathe  a  useless  s,  In  Mem.  cxxviii  13 

The  viler,  as  underhand,  not  openly  bearing  the  s.  Maud  I  i28 

She  gave  the  King  his  huge  cross-Mlted  s, 

s  That  rose  from  out  the  bosom  of  the  lake, 

s  rose,  the  hind  fell,  the  herd  was  driven, 

And  down  from  one  a  s  was  hung, 

and  knowing  both  of  lance  and  s.' 

four  strokes  they  struck  With  s,  and  these  were  mighty ; 

Out,  s  ;  we  are  thrown  ! ' 

With  s  we  have  not  striven  ; 

How  best  to  manage  horse,  lance,  s  and  shield, 

This  heard  Geraint,  and  grasping  at  his  s, 

touch  it  with  a  s,  It  buzzes  fiercely 

That  seem  a  s  beneath  a  belt  of  three, 

Of  every  dint  a  s  had  beaten  in  it, 

knights,  to  M'hom  the  moving  of  my  s 

from  the  boat  I  leapt,  and  up  the  stairs.    There  drew  my  s 

with  violence  The  s  was  dash'd  from  out  my  hand. 


Com.  of  Arthur  286 

296 

432 

Gareth  and  L.  221 

731 

1043 

1236 

1264 

1351 

Geraint  and  E.  725 

Merlin  and  V.  431 

510 

Lancelot  and  E.  19 

Holy  Grail  790 

820 

826 


the  prize  A  golden  circlet  and  a  knightly  s,  Pelleas  and  E.  12 

for  his  lady  won  The  golden  circlet,  for  himself  the  s  :  ,,              14 

I  will  make  thee  with  thy  spear  and  s  As  famous —  „              45 

The  s  and  golden  circlet  were  achieved.  „            170 

Saving  the  goodly  s,  his  prize,  „            359 

and  drew  the  s,  and  thought, '  What !  „            447 

groaning  laid  The  naked  s  athwart  their  naked  throats,         „  452 

And  the  s  of  the  tourney  across  her  throat.  „            456 

Awaking  knew  the  s,  and  tum'd  herself  To  Gawain :  „            489 

the  s  That  made  it  plunges  thro'  the  wound  „            529 

'  Thou  art  false  as  Hell :  slay  me  :  I  have  no  s.'  .,            576 

and  he,  hissing  '  I  have  no  «,'  „            602 
Arthur  deign'd  not  use  of  word  or  s,                        Last  Tournament  458 

children  bom  of  thee  are  s  and  fire,  Guinevere  425 
And  have  but  stricken  with  the  s  in  vain ;                  Pass,  of  Arthur  23 

that  helm  which  manj  a  heathen  s  Had  beaten  thin ;  .,            166 
Clothed  in  white  samite,  mystic,  wonderful.  Holding 

the  s —  „            200 

Saying,  '  King  Arthur's  s,  Excalibur,  „            271 

clutch'd  the  s,  And  strongly  wheel'd  and  threw  it.  „            303 


Sword  {continued)    thou  bringest  Not  peace,  a  s,  a  fire.     Sir  J.  Oldcastle  3i 

Him,  who  should  bear  the  s  Of  Justice —  „  87 

drew  His  s  on  his  fellow  to  slay  him,  V.  of  Maeldune  68 

with  s's  that  were  sharp  from  the  grindstone,      Batt.  of  Brunanburh  41 

Thro'  the  forest  of  lances  and  s's  Heavy  Brigade  49 

warrior  of  the  Holy  Cross  and  of  the  conquering  s,  Happy  21 

sway'd  the  s  that  lighten'd  back  the  sun  „         43 

flung  himself  between  The  gladiatorial  s's,  St.  Telemachus  62 

Thro'  all  the  vast  dominion  which  a  s,  Akbar's  Dream  14 

I  stagger  at  the  Koran  and  the  s.  „  71 

Sword-belt     broad  and  long  A  strong  s-b,  Holy  Grail  153 

Swordcut     Seam'd  with  an  ancient  s  on  the  cheek,  Lancelot  and  E.  258 

Sword-edge     Slew  with  the  s-e  There  by  Brunanburh,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  9 

Slaughter  of  heroes  Slain  by  the  s-e —  ,,  113 

Sword-grass     On  the  oat-grass  and  the  s-g,  May  Queen,  X.  Vs.  E.  28 

Sword-hand     Struck  with  the  s-h  and  slew,  Heavy  Brigade  52 

Sword-handle     Fingering  at  his  s-h  until  he  stood  Pelleas  and  E.  442 

Swording     and  s  right  and  left  Men,  women.  Last  Tournament  473 

Sword-stroke    Five  young  kings  put  asleep  by 

the  s-s,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  52 

Swore     {See  also  Sware,  Swear'd)     She  turn'd,  we  closed, 

we  kiss'd,  s  faith,  Edwin  Morns  114 

and  s  They  said  he  lived  shut  up  within  himself.  Golden  Year  8 

laugh'd,  and  s  by  Peter  and  by  Paul :  Godiva  24 

The  barons  s,  with  many  words,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  23 

But  ours  he  s  were  all  diseased.  The  Voyage  76 

And  on  the  book,  half-frighted,  Miriam  s.  Enoch  Arden  843 

And  how  the  bailiff  s  that  he  was  mad.  The  Brook  143 

s  besides  To  play  their  go-between  as  heretofore        Aylmer's  Field  522 
to  those  that  s  Not  by  the  temple  but  the  gold,  „  793 

And  s  he  long'd  at  college,  only  long'd,  Princess,  Pro.  158 

She  was  a  princess  too ;  and  so  I  s.  ,,  v  295 

.  caught  By  that  you  s  to  withstand  ?  Maud  I  vi  80 

so  my  knighthood  keep  the  vows  they  s,  Gareth  and  L.  602 

I  s  That  I  would  track  this  caitiff  to  his  hold,  Marr.  of  Geraint  414 

I  s  to  the  great  King,  and  am  forsworn.  Last  Tournament  661 

s  that  he  dare  not  rob  the  mail,  and  he  s  that  he  would  ;         Rizpah  30 
I  s  I  would  strike  off  his  head.  V.  of  Maeldune  2 

s  the  seeming-deathless  vow     .     .     .  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  180 

I  s  the  vow,  then  with  my  latest  kiss  The  Ring  298 

Sworn     True  Mussulman  was  I  and  s,  Arabian  Nights  9 

Hath  he  not  s  his  love  a  thousand  times,  CEnone  231 

Not  tho'  Blanche  had  s  That  after  that  dark  night  Princess  vii  72 

Mine,  mine — our  fathers  have  s.  Maud  I  xix  43 

So  now  I  have  s  to  bury  All  this  dead  body  ,,  96 

s  Tho'  men  may  wound  him  that  he  will  not  die.      Com.  of  Arthur  420 
for  these  have  s  To  wage  my  wars,  ,,  507 

my  knights  are  s  to  vows  Of  utter  hardihood,  Gareth  and  L.  552 

See  now,  s  have  I,  Else  yon  black  felon  ,,  1292 

then  have  I  s  From  his  own  lips  to  have  it —  Marr.  of  Geraint  408 

I  have  s  That  I  will  break  his  pride  and  learn  his  name,      „  423 

'  Have  I  not  s  ?  I  am  not  trusted.  Merlin  and  V.  527 

'  Had  I  been  here,  ye  had  not  s  the  vow.'  Holy  Grail  276 

My  King,  thou  womdst  have  s.'  ..  278 

and  therefore  have  we  s  our  vows.'  ,,  285 

I  had  s  I  saw  That  which  I  saw  ;  ..  850 

if  the  King  Had  seen  the  sight  he  would  have  s  the  vow :        ,,  904 

for  I  have  s  my  vows,  Pelleas  and  E.  244 

the  King  hath  bound  And  s  me  to  tliis  brotherhood  ;  '  ..  449 

And  whatsoever  his  own  knights  have  s  My  knights 

have  s  the  counter  to  it —  Last  Tournament  79 

Than  had  we  never  s.     I  swear  no  more.  ,,  660 

And  I  have  s  never  to  see  him  more,  Guinevere  376 

S  to  be  veriest  ice  of  pureness,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  108 

s  to  seek  If  any  golden  harbour  Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  12 

Bright  and  Dark  have  s  that  I,  Demeter  and  P.  96 

Swum     with  an  eye  that  s  in  thanks  ;  Princess  vi  210 

Lancelot,  having  s  the  riser-loops —  Gareth  and  L.  1216 

and  s  with  balanced  wings  To  some  tall  mountain:      Lover's  Tale  i  302 
Swung    bells  that  s,  Moved  of  themselves.  Palace  of  Art  129 

S  themselves,  and  in  low  tones  replied  ;  Vision  of  Sin  20 

For  sideways  up  he  s  his  arms.  Sea  Breams  24 

and  s  The  heavy -folded  rose,  In  Mem.  xcv  58 

There  s  an  apple  of  the  purest  gold,  Marr.  of  Geraint  170 

(S  from  his  brand  a  windy  buffet  Geraint  and  E.  90 


6^ 


Swung 


707 


Table  Round 


Swung  (continued)     A  goodly  brother  of  the  Table 
Round  S  by  the  neck  : 

Tristram  show'd  And  s  the  ruby  carcanet. 

S  round  the  lighted  lantern  of  the  hall ; 

Great  garlands  s  and  blossom'd  ; 
Sycamore    The  pillar'd  dusk  of  sounding  s's, 

with  all  thy  breadth  and  height  Of  foliage, 
towering  s  ; 

The  large  leaves  of  the  s, 
Sylla    all  the  blood  by  S  shed  Came  driving 
Syllable    Faltering,  would  break  its  s's, 

Be  cabin'd  up  in  words  and  s's, 

While  her  words,  s  by  s, 

Choked  all  the  s's,  that  strove  to  rise 


Last  Tournament  432 

740 

Guinevere  262 

Lover's  Tale  iv  191 

Audley  Court  16 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  4 

xcv  55 

Lucretius  47 

Love  and  Duty  39 

Lover's  Tale  i  480 

575 

711 


Sylvester    ever  since  S  shed  the  venom  of  world-wealth  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  166 


Symbol    Weak  s's  of  the  settled  bliss. 

Are  they  not  sign  and  s  of  thy  division 

Or  so  shall  grief  with  s's  play 

Mute  s's  of  a  joyful  morn, 

The  golden  s  of  his  kinglihood, 

With  many  a  mystic  s,  gird  the  hall : 

Three  cypresses,  s's  of  mortal  woe. 

The  word  that  is  the  s  of  myself, 

All  the  suns — are  these  but  s's  of  innumerable 
man, 

Institute,  Rich  in  s,  in  ornament, 

Shiah  and  Sunnee,  S  the  Eternal ! 
Symbol'd     As  if  the  living  passion  s  there 
Symmetry    s  Of  thy  floating  gracefulness, 

long  desired  A  certain  miracle  of  s, 
Sympathise    growing  coarse  to  s  with  clay. 
I^mpathy    trembling  thro'  the  dew  Of  dainty-woeful 
sympathies. 

that  plies  Its  office,  moved  with  s. 

Nor  lose  their  mortal  s, 

And  yet  I  spare  them  s. 

Some  painless  s  with  pain  ?  ' 

into  the  s  Of  that  small  bay, 

and  S  hew'd  out  The  bosom-sepulchre  ot  S  ? 

a  strong  s  Shook  all  my  soul : 

And  sympathies,  liow  frail.  In  sound  and  smell ! 
Syrian    when  her  Satrap  bled  At  Issus  by  the  S  gates 

years  That  breathed  beneath  the  S  blue  : 
System    A  dust  of  s's  and  of  creeds. 

The  four-field  s,  and  the  price  of  grain ; 

hated  by  the  wise,  to  law  S  and  empire  ? 

you  block  and  bar  Your  heart  with  s 

a  world  Of  traitorous  friend  and  broken  s 

Our  little  s's  have  their  day ; 

And,  star  and  s  rolling  past, 

When  the  schemes  and  all  the  s's. 

Rush  of  Suns,  and  roll  of  s's. 


Miller's  D.  233 

High.  Pantheism  6 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  95 

Con.  58 

Com.  of  Arthur  50 

Holy  Grail  233 

Lover's  Tale  i  537 

Ancient  Sage  231 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  195 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  47 

Akhar's  Dream  108 

Aylmer's  Field  535 

Elednore  49 

Gardener's  D.  11 

Locksley  Hall  46 


Margaret  53 

Love  thou  thy  land  48 

In  Mem.  xxx  23 

Ixiii  7 

Ixxxv  88 

Lover's  Tale  i  434 

a  31 

88 

Early  Spring  35 

Alexander  3 

In  Mem.  Hi  12 

Two  Voices  207 

Audley  Court  34 

Love  and  DiUy  8 

Princess  iv  463 

vi  195 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  17 

Con.  122 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  159 

God  and  the  Univ.  3 


Taable  (table)     I  mash'd  the  t's  an'  chairs, 

An'  the  t  staain'd  wi'  'is  aale, 
Ta&en  (taken)     A  mowt  'a  t  owd  Joanes, 

Or  a  mowt  'a  t  young  Robins — 

And  'a  t  to  the  bottle  beside, 

fur  I  could  'a  t  to  tha  well, 
Ta&il  (entail)     Stook  to  his  t  they  did, 

new  Squire's  coora'd  wi'  'is  <  in  'is  'and,  (repeat) 

Fur  'staate  be  i'  t,  my  lass  : 

and  the  next  lui  he  taakes  the  t.' 

An'  the  gells,  they  hedn't  naw  t's, 

That  'is  t  were  soa  tied  up 

'  Lad,  thou  mun  cut  oS  thy  t, 

if  thou'll  'gree  to  cut  off  thy  t 

I've  gotten  the  'staate  by  the 

to  git  'im  to  cut  off  'is  t. 

an'  'e  wouldn't  cut  off  the  t. 


N. 


North.  Cobbler  37 

Spinster's  S's.  99 

Farmer,  0.  S.  49 

50 

Spinster's  S's.  56 

81 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  30 

Village  Wife  14,  121 

15 

18 

29 

30 

64 


74 
78 


Taail  (entail)  (continued)     theer  wur  a  hend  o'  the  t,  fur 
lost  'is  t  i'  the  beck, 

Sa  'is  t  wur  lost  an  'is  boooks  wur  gone 
Taail  (tail)    stick  oop  thy  back,  an'  set  oop  thy  t, 

Steevie  be  right  good  manners  bang  thruf  to  the  tip 
o'  the  t. 

Sa  I  likes  'em  best  wi'  t's 

an'  'e'd  niver  not  down  wi'  'is  t, 

till  'e  waggled  'is  t  fur  a  bit, 
Taail'd  (draggle)     t  in  an  owd  turn  gown, 
Ta&ilor  (tailor)    An'  once  I  fovi't  wi'  the  T — 
Takke  (take)     But  godamoighty  a  moost  t  mea  an'  t 

Do'ant  be  stunt :  t  time  : 

coats  to  their  backs  an'  t's  their  regular  meals. 

T  my  word  for  it,  Sammy,  the  poor  in  a  loomp  is  bad. 


N. 


Village  Wife  86 
87 

Spinster's  S's.  31 

66 
102 
Owd  Rod  9 
„      105 
North.  Cobbler  41 
21 
Farmer,  0.  S.  51 
N.  S.  17 
46 
48 
and  then  I  t's  to  the  drink.  North.  Cobbler  16 

hev  'im  a-buried  wi'mma  an'  t  'im  afoor  the  Throan.  ,.  106 

and  the  next  un  he  t's  the  taail.'  Village  Wife  18 

Sa  I  didn't  not  t  it  kindly  ov  owd  Miss  Annie  .,         109 

Can't  ye  t  pattern  by  Steevie  ?  Spinster's  S's.  65 

Parson  'e  'ears  on  it  all,  an'  then  t's  kindly  to  me,   Church-warden,  etc.  37 
Taaked  (took)      1 1  'im  at  fust  fur  dead  ;  Oivd  Rod  1(X) 

Taakin'  (t^dng)     '  The  amoighty's  a  t  o'  you  to 

'iss^n,  (repeat)  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  10,  26 

I'll  gie  tha  a  bit  o'  my  mind  an'  tha  weant  be  t 

oiience.  Church-warden,  etc.  21 

Taale  (tale)     an  a's  liallus  i'  the  owd  t ;  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  66 

Taaste  (taste)     if  I  cared  to  t,  North.  Cobbler  101 

T  another  drop  o'  the  wine —  Village  Wife  120 

Taate  (potato)     Baacon  an'  t's,  an'  a  beslings  puddin'        North.  Cobbler  112 

Whoats  or  tonups  or  t's —  Village  Wife  26 

Tabby     An'  thou  be  es  pretty  a  T,  Spinster's  S's.  14 

thou  be  es  'ansom  a  t  es  iver  patted  a  mouse.  „  70 

Tabernacle    left  Their  own  gray  tower,  or  plain-faced  t,   Aylmer's  Field  Q18 

Table    (See  also  Bound  Table,  Taable,  Table  Bound)    Till 

"      ■    "         ■  The  Goose  47 

M.  d' Arthur  3 

234 

Will  Water.  160 

Sea  Dreams  74 

Princess,  Pro.  16 

Boddicea  61 

Gareth  and  L.  836 

Balin  and  Balan  238 

380 

459 

Merlin  and  V.  7 

Lancelot  and  E.  1203 

Holy  Grail  329 

650 

829 

Pelleas  and  E.  320 

526 

533 

Last  Tournament  78 

..      189,  212 

475 

Guinevere  45 

235 


all  the  t's  danced  again, 
Until  King  Arthur's  t,  man  by  man, 
But  now  the  whole  bound  ?■  is  dissolved 
And  thruimning  on  the  t : 
Sat  at  liis  t ;  drank  his  costly  wines  ; 
on  the  t's  every  clime  and  age  Jumbled  together  ; 
drank  in  cups  of  emerald,  there  at  t's  of  ebony  lay, 
'  I  well  believe  You  be  of  Arthur's  T,' 
yet  he  strove  To  learn  the  graces  of  their  T, 
to  thy  guest.  Me,  me  of  Arthur's  T. 
and  break  the  King  And  all  his  T.' 
The  slights  of  Arthur  and  his  T, 
laid  aside  the  gems  There  on  a  <  near  lier. 
All  the  great  t  of  our  Arthur  closed 
once  the  talk  And  .scandal  of  our  t, 
nothing  in  the  somiding  hall  I  saw.  No  bench  nor  t, 


whom  Tate  our  Arthur  made  Knight  of  his  t ; 

or  being  one  Of  our  free-spoken  T 

'  Have  any  of  our  Round  T  held  their  vows  ?  ' 

that  I  Have  founded  my  Roimd  T  in  the  North, 

The  glory  of  our  Round  T  is  no  more.'  (repeat) 

hurl'd  The  t's  over  and  the  wines, 

he  was  answer'd  softly  by  the  King  And  all  his  T. 

said  my  father,  and  himself  was  knight  Of  the  great  T — 


Until  King  Arthur's  T,  man  by  man, 
But  now  the  whole  Round  T  is  dissolved 
Their  favourite — which  I  call '  The  T's  Turned.' 
weeks  I  tried  Your  t  of  Pythagoras, 
poring  over  his  T's  of  Trade  and  Finance  ; 
Laid  on  her  t  overnight,  was  gone  ; 
Table-knight    Some  hold  he  was  a  t-k 
Table-land    Are  close  upon  the  shining  t-l's 
Table  Bound    (See  also  Bound  Table,  Table) 
the  puissance  of  his  T  R, 
when  he  spake  and  cheer'd  his  T  R 
And  all  this  Order  of  thy  T  R 
Strike,  thou  art  worthy  of  the  T  R — 
Hail,  Knight  and  Prince,  and  of  our  T  R  I' 
one  Of  that  great  order  of  the  T  R, 
Now,  made  a  knight  of  Arthur's  T  R, 


Pass,  of  Arthur  172 

402 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  3 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  15 

The  Wreck  26 

The  Ring  277 

Last  Tournament  69 

Ode  on  Well.  216 

And  thro' 

Com.  of  Arthur  17 

267 

474 

Gareth  and  L.  1138 

1271 

Marr.  of  Giraint  3 

Geraint  and  E.  793 


Table  Bound 


708 


Take 


Table  Round  (continued)  I,  therefore,  made  him  of  our  T  R,  Geraint  and  E.  908 
question  rose  About  the  founding  ot  a,  T  R,  Merlin  and  V.  411 

Assay  it  on  some  one  of  the  T  R,  ..  689 

And  blinds  himself  and  all  the  T  i?  784 

I  know  the  T  R,  my  friends  of  old  ;  816 

else  Rapt  in  this  fancy  of  his  T  R,  Lancelot  and  E.  129 

the  rest,  his  T  R,  Known  as  they  are,  ..  185 

And  much  they  ask'd  of  court  and  p  R,  268 

beheld  the  King  Charge  at  the  head  of  all  his  T  R,  ..  304 

Ranged  with  the  T  R  that  held  the  lists,  „  467 

And  all  the  T  R  that  held  the  lists,  ..  499 

any  knight.  And  mine,  as  head  of  all  our  T  R,  ..  1328 

The  marshall'd  Order  of  their  T  R,  ..  1332 

Tell  me,  what  drove  thee  from  the  T  R,  Holy  Grail  28 

Sin  against  Arthur  and  the  T  R,  ..79 

And  when  King  Arthur  made  His  T  R,  ..90 

The  seven  clear  stars  of  Arthur's  T  R —  ;,        684 

Yea,  by  the  honour  of  the  T  R,  Pelleas  and  E.  342 

a  scourge  am  I  To  lash  the  treasons  of  the  T  R.'  ..  566 

Had  made  mock-knight  of  Arthur's  T  R,  Last  Tournament  2 

A  goodly  brother  of  the  T  R  „  431 

sought  To  make  disruption  in  the  T  R  Ot  Arthur,  Guinevere  17 

whose  disloyal  life  Hath  wrought  confusion  in  the  T  R  ..       220 

What  canst  thou  know  of  Kings  and  T's  R,  ..       228 

In  that  fair  order  of  my  T  R,  ..       463 

Table-shore    Heard  in  dead  night  along  that  t-s,  Last  Tournament  463 

Tablet     Upon  the  blanched  t's  of  her  heart ;  Isabel  17 

Thy  t  glimmers  to  the  dawn.  In  Mem.  Ixvii  16 

Their  pensive  t's  round  her  head,  „        Con.  51 

Table-talk    genial  t-t,  Or  deep  dispute,  „    Ixxxiv  23 

Taboo     worse  than  South-sea-isle  t.  Princess  Hi  278 

Broke  the  T,  Dipt  to  the  crater,  Kapiolani  30 

Tack     till  as  when  a  boat  T's,  and  the  slacken'd  sail  flaps.     Princess  ii  186 

Tackle  (s)     Dry  sang  the  t,  sang  the  sail :  The  Voyage  10 

Buoy'd  upon  floating  t  and  broken  spars,  Enoch  Arden  551 

Tackle  (verb)     Tha  mun  t  the  sins  o'  the  Wo'ld,  Church-warden,  etc.  46 

Tact    So  gracious  was  her  t  and  tenderness :  Princess  i  24 

The  graceful  t,  the  Christian  art ;  In  Mem.  ex  16 

And  she  by  t  of  love  was  well  aware  Lancelot  and  E.  984 

Ta'en  (taken)    clay  t  from  the  common  earth  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  17 

And  t  my  fiddle  to  the  gate,  (repeat)  Am]}hion  11,  15 

And  since  my  oath  was  t  for  public  use,  Princess  iv  337 

he  be  nor  t  nor  slain.'  Gareth  and  L.  586 

Tagg'd    my  beard  Was  t  with  icy  fringes  in  the  moon,         St.  S.  Stylites  32 

Tail    {See  also  Taail)    from  head  to  t  Came  out  clear  plates 

of  sapphire  mail.  Two  Voices  11 

with  playful  i  Crouch'd  fawning  in  the  weed.  (Enone  200 

Twinkled  the  innumerable  ear  and  t.  The  Brook  134 

TaU'd    See  Long-tail'd,  White-tail'd 

Tailor    See  Taailor 

Taint    pure  as  he  from  t  of  craven  guile,  Ode  on  Well.  135 

Defects  of  doubt,  and  t's  of  blood  ;  In  Mem.  liv  4 

Had  suffer'd,  or  should  suffer  any  t  In  nature  :  Marr.  of  Geraint  31 

Suspicious  that  her  nature  had  a  t.  „  68 

leper  plague  may  scale  my  skin  but  never  t  my  heart ;  Bappy  27 

Take     (See  also  Taake)     T,  Madam.,  this  poor  hook  of 

song  ;  To  the  Queen  17 

knew  the  seasons  when  to  t  Occasion  by  the  hand,  „  30 

T  the  heart  from  out  my  breast.  Adeline  8 

Whence  shall  she  t  a  fitting  mate  ?  Kate  13 

She  still  would  t  the  praise,  and  care  no  more.  The  form,  the  form,  14 
weepest  thou  to  t  the  cast  Of  those  dead  lineaments  Wan  Sculptor  1 
'  Some  turn  this  sickness  yet  might  t,  Two  Voices  55 

Gargarus  Stands  up  and  t's  the  morning :  (Enone  11 

'  1 1  possession  of  man's  mind  and  deed.  Palace  of  Art  209 

What  is  it  that  will  t  away  my  sin,  „  287 

Let  her  t  'em  :  they  are  hers :  May  Queen,  N.  ¥'s.  E.  46 

I  thought,  I  <  it  for  a  sign.  „  Con.  38 

there  Grows  green  and  broad,  and  t's  no  care,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  28 
T  warning  !  he  that  will  not  sing  The  Blackbird  21 

And  the  New-year  will  t  'em  away.  2>.  of  the  O.  Year  14 

Comes  up  to  t  his  own.  „  36 

That  t's  away  a  noble  mind.  To  J.  S.  48 

t  The  place  of  him  that  sleeps  in  peace.  „  67 

That  knowledge  t's  the  sword  away—  Love  thou  thy  land  88 


Take  (continued)     Here,  t  the  goose,  and  keep  you  warm.  The  Goose  1 

'  Go,  t  the  goose,  and  wring  her  throat,  .,          31 

Quoth  she, '  The  Devil  t  the  goose,  „          55 

'  Why  t  the  style  of  those  heroic  times  ?  The  Epic  35 

Thou  therefore  t  my  brand  Excalibur,  M.  d' Arthur  27 

t  Excalibur,  And  fling  him  far  into  the  middle  mere  :  „          36 

and  t's  the  flood  With  swarthy  webs.  „        268 

The  lusty  bird  t's  every  hour  for  dawn  :  .,  Ep.  11 

I  bred  His  daughter  Dora :  t  her  for  your  wife  ;  Dora  20 

Consider,  William  :  t  a  month  to  think,  „     29 

let  me  t  the  boy.  And  I  will  set  him  in  my  imcle's  eye  „     66 

but  t  the  child.  And  bless  him  for  the  sake  of  him  „    93 

Well— for  I  will  t  the  boy  :  „    99 

That  thou  shouldst  t  my  trouble  on  thyself  :  „  118 

And  I  will  beg  of  him  to  t  thee  back  :  „  123 

But  if  he  will  not  t  thee  back  again,  „  124 

I  come  For  Dora  :  t  her  back ;  she  loves  you  well.  ..  143 

t  Dora  back.  And  let  all  this  be  as  it  was  before.'  ..  154 

I  a  beast  To  t  them  as  I  did  ?  Edwin  Morris  72 

Have  mercy.  Lord,  and  t  away  my  sin.  St.  8.  Stylites  8 

0  t  the  meaning.  Lord :  I  do  not  breathe,  „  21 
Have  mercy,  mercy :  t  away  my  sin.  „  45 
The  silly  people  t  me  for  a  saint,  „  127 
let  them  t  Example,  pattern :  „  223 
Let  me  go  :  t  back  thy  gift :  Tithonus  27 
kiss  him  :  t  his  hand  in  thine.  Locksley  Hall  52 

1  will  t  some  savage  woman,  „  168 
Then  t  the  broidery-frame,  and  add  A  crimson  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  15 
So,  Lady  Flora,  t  my  lay,  ..  Moral  1 
So  much  your  eyes  my  fancy  f —  ..  L' Envoi  2& 
And  I  will  t  my  pleasure  there :  „  32 
So,  Lady  Flora,  t  my  lay,  „  Ep.  1 
But  t  it — earnest  wed  with  sport,  „  11 
I'll  t  the  showers  as  they  fall,  Amphion  101 
nor  t  Half-views  of  men  and  things.  WUl  Water.  51 
1 1  myself  to  task  ;  ,,  162 
T  my  brute,  and  lead  him  in.  Vision  of  Sin  65 
'  T  your  own  time,  Annie,  t  your  own  time.'  Enoch  Arden  466 
was  it  hard  to  t  The  helpless  life  so  wild  „  556 
'  Too  hard  to  bear  !  why  did  they  t  me  thence  ?  „  781 
T,  give  her  this,  for  it  may  comfort  her :  „  899 
'  O  would  1 1  her  father  for  one  hoiu".  The  Brook  114 
' T  it,'  she  added  sweetly,  '  tho'  his  gift;  Aylmer's  Field  246 
who  beside  your  hearths  Can  t  her  place —  ,,  736 
Will  not  another  t  their  heritage  ?  „  786 
did  I  t  That  popular  name  of  thine  to  shadow  forth  Lucretius  95 
to  t  Only  such  cups  as  left  us  friendly- warm,  „  214 
Great  Nature,  t,  and  forcing  far  apart  „  245 
And  t's  a  lady's  finger  with  all  care.  Princess,  Pro.  173 
'  T  Lilia,  then,  for  heroine,'  clamour'd  he,  „  223 
Cyril  whisper'd :  '  T  me  with  you  too.'  „  1 81 
Tme:  I'll  serve  you  better  in  a  strait;  „  85 
'  Well  then.  Psyche,  t  my  life,  ,.  ii  204 
Umed  oiu'selves  With  open  eyes,  and  we  must  t  the 

chance.  „           Hi  143 

Princess  rode  to  t  The  dip  of  certain  strata  ,.                169 

And  t's  and  ruins  all ;  „                 238 

'  O  were  I  thou  that  she  might  t  me  in,  „           iv  102 

Our  mind  is  changed :  we  Ht  to  ourself.'  „  362 
What  hinders  me  To  t  such  bloody  vengeance  on  you 

both?—  „                534 

'  Satan  t  The  old  women  and  their  shadows  !  „               v  33 

'  Yet  I  pray  T  comfort :  live,  dear  lady,  „                  80 

Or  they  will  t  her,  they  will  make  her  hard,  „                 90 

And  I  will  t  her  up  and  go  my  way,  ,,                102 

t  them  all-in-all.  Were  we  ourselves  but  half  as  good,        „  200 

1 1  her  for  the  flower  of  womankind,  „                287 

Still  T  not  his  life :  he  risk'd  it  for  my  own ;  „                407 

When  the  man  wants  weight,  the  woman  t's  it  up,  „                444 

but  you — she's  yet  a  colt — T,  break  her :  „                456 

And  on  the  little  clause  '  t  not  his  life : '  „               470 

t's,  and  breaks,  and  cracks,  and  splits,  „               527 

'  All  good  go  with  thee !  t  it  Sir,'  „           vi  207 

kiss  her ;  t  her  hand,  she  weeps :  'Sdeath !  ,.                225 

on  to  the  tents :  t  up  the  Prince.'  „                279 


Take 


709 


Taketh 


Take  {continued)   cloud  may  stoop  from  heaven  and  t  the  shape    Princess  vii  2 
Let  the  great  river  t  me  to  the  main :  „  13 

the  crowd  were  swarming  now,  To  t  their  leave,  „  Con.  38 

he  wouldn't  t  my  advice.  Grandmother  4 

(T  it  and  come)  to  the  Isle  of  Wight ;  To  F.  D.  Maurice  12 

'  God  help  me !  save  1 1  my  part  Of  danger  Sailor  Boy  21 


The  Victim  27 

A  Dedication  4 

Boadicea  65 

Window,  No  Answer  20 

24 

.,        The  Answer  3 

5 

7 

In  Mem.  Hi  13 

m32 


T  you  his  dearest.  Give  us  a  life.' 
t  this  and  pray  that  he  Who  wrote  it, 
T  the  hoary  Roman  head  and  shatter  it, 
T  my  love,  for  love  will  come, 
T  my  love  and  be  my  wife. 
Must  1 1  you  and  break  you, 

I  must  t  you,  and  break  you, 
T,  t, — break,  break — Break — 
And  shall  I  t  a  thing  so  bUnd, 
She  t's  a  riband  or  a  rose ; 
That  t's  the  sunshine  and  the  rains,  „             x  14 
seem  to  t  The  touch  of  change  in  calm  or  storm ;  „            xvi  5 

I I  the  grasses  of  the  grave,  ,,  xxi  3 
envy  not  the  beast  that  t's  His  license  in  the  field  of 

time,  „         xxvii  5 

To  t  her  latest  leave  of  home,  „             xl  6 

She  t's,  when  harsher  moods  remit,  „        xlviii  6 

And  thou  shalt  t  a  nobler  leave.'  „        Iviii  12 

Who  t's  the  children  on  his  knee,  „         Ixvi  11 

T  wings  of  fancy,  and  ascend,  „        Ixxvi  1 

T  wings  of  foresight ;  lighten  thro'  The  secular  abyss  „                 5 

And  <  us  as  a  single  soul.  „    Ixxxiv  44 

Can  t  no  part  away  from  this :  „      Ixxxv  68 

Ah,  t  the  imperfect  gift  I  bring,  „              117 

I'll  rather  t  what  fruit  may  be  „        eviii  13 

The  distance  t's  a  lovelier  hue,  „           cxv  6 

f's  The  colours  of  the  crescent  prime  ?  „          cxvi  3 

1 1  the  pressure  of  thine  hand.  „        cxix  12 

t  the  print  Of  the  golden  age — why  not  ?  Maud  I  i29 

To  <  a  wanton  dissolute  boy  For  a  man  „        x  58 

Shall  I  not  t  care-  of  all  that  I  think,  „        xv  7 

Or  to  ask  her,  '  T  me,  sweet,  „  II  iv  87 

He  may  t  her  now ;  for  she  never  speaks  her  mind,  „  v  67 
'  T  me,'  but  turn  the  blade  and  ye  shall  see,              Com.  of  Arthur  303 

'  T  thou  and  strike !  the  time  to  cast  away  „  307 
T  thou  the  truth  as  thou  hast  told  it  me.                     Gareth  and  L.  257 

Yet  t  thou  heed  of  him,  for,  so  thou  pass  .,            267 

Abide :  t  counsel ;  for  this  lad  is  great  And  lusty,  „            730 

t  his  horse  And  arms,  and  so  return  him  to  the  King.  ,.            955 

'  T  not  my  life :  I  yield.'  .,            973 

*  But  thou  begone,  t  counsel,  and  away,  ..          1002 

and  t  TtiY  charger,  fresh,  „  1300 
T  him  to  stall,  and  give  him  com,                            Marr.  of  Geraint  371 

They  t  the  rustic  murmur  of  their  bourg  ..                419 

'  Advance  and  t,  as  fairest  of  the  tair,  .,  553 
He  said,  '  You  t  it,  speaking,'  and  she  spoke.             Geraint  and  E.  141 

but  t  A  horse  and  arms  for  guerdon ;  •>              217 

'  I  <  it  as  free  gift,  then,'  said  the  boy,  „              222 

'  T  Five  horses  and  their  armours ; '  „              409 

'  Would  some  of  your  kind  people  t  him  up,  „              543 

Here,  t  him  up,  and  bear  hirn  to  our  hsJl :  .,              552 

See  ye  t  the  charger  too,  A  noble  one.'  „              555 

T  warning :  yonder  man  is  surely  dead ;  ..              672 

T  my  salute,'  unknightly  with  flat  hand,  .,              717 

tho'  Geraint  could  never  t  again  That  comfort  „  949 
thou  would'st  t  me  gladher  back,  Balin  and  Balon  67 
Help,  for  he  follows  !  t  me  to  thyself  !                            Merlin  and  V.  82 

Courteoas — amends  for  gaimtness — t's  her  hand —  ..             104 

And  t  this  boon  so  strange  and  not  so  strange.'  „             310 

T  Vivien  for  expounder ;  she  will  call  ,•            319 

T  one  verse  more — the  lady  speaks  it —  .,            445 

And  being  foimd  t  heed  of  Vivien.  -.            529 

Good :  t  my  counsel :  let  me  know  it  at  once :  .,             653 

He  brought,  not  foimd  it  therefore :  t  the  truth.'  „  719 
shameless  ones,  who  t  Their  pastime                           Lancelot  and  E.  100 

'  Advance  and  t  thy  prize  The  diamond ; '  „               503 

Rise  and  t  This  diamond,  and  deliver  it,  „              545 

ye  used  to  t  me  with  the  flood  Up  the  great  river  ,.            1037 

Then  t  the  little  bed  on  which  I  died  „            1117 


Take  (continued)    a  chariot-bier  To  t  me  to  the  river, 
T,  what  I  had  not  won  except  for  you, 
A  strange  one !  yet  It  it  with  Amen. 
Or  come  to  t  the  King  to  Fairyland  ? 
Hither,  to  t  my  last  farewell  of  you. 
'  What  said  the  King  ?     Did  Arthur  t  the  vow  ? ' 
'  T  thou  my  robe,'  she  said,  '  for  all  is  thine,' 
t  him  to  you,  keep  him  off, 
'  Yet,  t  him,  ye  that  scarce  are  fit  to  touch, 
'  T  thou  the  jewels  of  this  dead  innocence, 
'  T  thou  my  churl,  and  tend  him  curiously 
But  how  to  t  last  leave  of  all  I  loved  ? 
I  cannot  t  thy  hand ;  that  too  is  flesh. 
Thou  therefore  t  my  brand  Excalibur, 
t  Excalibur,  And  fling  him  far  into  the  middle  mere 
and  t's  the  flood  With  swarthy  webs. 
t  withal  Thy  poet's  blessing, 
that  t's  The  heart,  and  sometimes  touches 
But  t's  it  all  for  granted : 
Can  ye  t  off  the  sweetness  from  the  flower, 
reading  of  the  will  Before  he  t's  possession  ? 
while  I  mused  nor  yet  endured  to  t  So  rich  a  prize, 
'  T  my  free  gift,  my  cousin,  for  your  wife ; 
I  didn't  t  heed  o'  them, 
Which  voice  most  t's  you  ? 
an'  'e  didn't  t  kind  to  it  like ; 
To  t  me  to  that  hiding  in  the  hiUs. 
to  t  the  king  along  with  him — 
which  you  will  t  My  Fitz,  and  welcome. 
Nor  t  thy  dial  for  thy  deity. 
Shall  1 1  him  ?     I  kneel  with  him  ? 
'  The  Divil  t  all  the  black  Ian', 
T  the  charm  '  For  ever '  from  them, 
and  t  their  wisdom  for  your  friend, 
eyes  may  t  the  growing  glimmer  for  the  gleam 
withdrawn 


Lancelot  and  E.  1122 

1181 

1223 

1257 

1275 

Holy  Grail  204 

449 

Pelleas  and  E.  194 

292 

Last  Tournament  31 

90 

Guinevere  546 

553 

Pass,  of  Arthur  195 

204 

436 

To  the  Queen  ii  45 

Lover's  Tale  i  16 

157 

171 

677 

Hi  49 

,.        iv  363 

First  Quarrel  29 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  30 

Village  Wife  44 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  2 

49 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  50 

Ancient  Sage  109 

The  Flight  49 

Tomorrow  64 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  72 

104 


230 


like  old-world  inns  that  t  Some  warrior  for  a  sign   Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  13 
let  the  patriot-soldier  t  His  meed  of  fame  Epilogue  32 

Prince  has  foimd  you,  t  this  ring.  The  Eing  69 

I  stoopt  To  t  and  kiss  the  ring.  132 

'  1 1  thee  Muriel  for  my  wedded  wife ' —  ..        377 

My  roses — will  he  t  them  now —  Happy  13 

Not  t  them  ?     Still  you  wave  me  off —  „      101 

you  still  delay  to  t  Your  leave  of  Town,  To  Mary  Boyle  1 

T  then  this  spring-flower  I  send,  19 

T,  read !  and  be  the  faults  your  Poet  makes  ,,  61 

'  T  comfort  you  have  won  the  Painter's  fame,'  Romney's  R.  43 

T  it,  and  save  me  from  it !  Bandit's  Death  38 

Look  to  your  butts,  and  t  good  aims  !  Riflemen  form  !  16 

'  T  her  Sir  Ralph,'  said  the  king.  The  Tourney  18 

Taken     {See  also  Taaen,  Ta'en)     But  more  is  t  quite  away.      Miller's  D.  22 
AU  things  are  t  from  us,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  46 

Those  we  love  first  are  t  first.  To  J.  S.  12 

yet  I  fear  My  wound  hath  t  cold,  and  I  shall  die.'  M.  d' Arthur  166 

Are  t  by  the  forelock.  Golden  Year  19 

Tho'  much  is  t,  much  abides ;  Ulysses  65 

Till  t  with  her  seeming  openness  Princess  iv  300 

•  They  have  t  the  child  To  spill  his  blood  The  Victim  43 

They  have  t  our  son,  „  49 

T  the  stars  from  the  night  and  the  sun  from  the  day !   Witidow,  Gone  5 

In  Mem.  xlviii  2 

Gareth  and  L.  1200 

Geraint  and  E.  723 

Guinevere  117 

517 

Pass,  of  Arthur  334 

Lover's  Tale  i  531 

710 

iv  216 

Rizpah  10 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  31 

V.  of  Maeldune  122 

Tiresias  102 

Last  Tournament  193 

A  spirit  haunts  14 


Were  t  to  be  such  as  closed  Grave  doubts 

and  t  but  the  form. 

As  of  a  wild  thing  t  in  the  trap, 

Nay,  friend,  for  we  have  t  our  farewells. 

t  everywhere  for  pure,  She  like  a  new  disease, 

I  fear  My  wound  hath  t  cold,  and  I  shall  die.' 

But  t  with  the  sweetness  of  the  place, 

As  it  had  t  life  away  before, 

a  picture  of  his  lady,  t  Some  years  before, 

I  have  t  them  home,  I  have  number'd  the  bones, 

you  are  t  With  one  or  other : 

each  t  a  life  for  a  life, 

Lest  she  be  t  captive — 
Takest    See,  the  hand  Wherewith  thou  t  this,  is  red ! ' 
Taketh    sick  man's  room  when  he  t  repose 


Takin' 


710 


Talk 


Takin'     been  t'  a  dhrop  o'  the  crathur'  Tomorrow  11 

Takii^    (See  also  A-ta&^',  Leave-taking,  Takin')    He 

kiss'd,  t  his  last  embrace,  Two  Voices  254 

The  parson  t  wide  and  wider  sweeps,  The  Epic  14 

Titanic  forces  t  birth  In  divers  seasons,  Day -Dm.,  L' Envoi  17 
hand  crept  too  across  his  trade  T  her  bread  and  theirs :  Enoch  Arden  111 

Nor  asking  overmuch  and  t  less,  „            252 

So  often,  that  the  folly  t  wings  Aylmer's  Field  494 

or  t  pride  in  her,  She  look'd  so  sweet,  „            554 

Womanlike,  t  revenge  too  deep  for  a  transient  wrong  Mavd  I  Hi  5 

sad  was  Arthur's  face  T  it,  but  old  Merlin  Com.  of  Arthur  306 

By  t  true  for  false,  or  false  for  true ;  Geraint  and  E.  4 

gross  heart  Would  reckon  worth  the  t  ?  Merlin  and  V.  917 

Come,  for  you  left  me  t  no  farewell,  Lancelot  and  E.  1274 

T  my  war-horse  from  the  holy  man,  Holy  Grail  537 

T  his  hand,  '  0  the  strong  hand,'  Pelleas  and  E.  126 

He  spoke,  and  t  all  his  younger  knights,  Last  Tournament  126 

Then  t  his  dear  lady  by  one  hand.  Lover's  Tale  iv  369 

t  the  place  of  the  pitying  God  Despair  42 

felt  as  I  spoke  I  was  t  the  name  in  vain —  „         52 

What  is  this  you're  t?  .  .  .  Forlorn  40 

Talbot    shatter'd  t's,  which  had  left  the  stones  Raw,  Holy  Grail  719 

Tale     {See  also  Fairy-tale,  Taale)     A  deeper  t  my  heart 

divines.  Two  Voices  269 

With  cycles  of  the  human  t  Of  this  wide  world.  Palace  of  Art  146 
an  ancient  t  of  wrong.  Like  a  <  of  little  meaning     Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  118 

Brimful  of  those  ^dld  t's,  D.  of  F.  Women  12 

With  the  fairy  t's  of  science,  Locksley  Hall  12 

And  told  him  all  her  nurse's  t.  Lady  Clare  80 

'  Tell  me  t's  of  thy  first  love —  Vision  of  Sin  163 

And  I  will  tell  him  t's  of  foreign  parts,  Enoch  Arden  198 

And  there  the  t  he  utter'd  brokenly,  „             647 

he  felt  the  t  Less  than  the  teller :  „             711 

her  father  came  across  With  some  long-winded  t.  The  Brook  109 

And  there  he  told  a  long  long-winded  t  „         138 
Lightning  of  the  hour,  the  pun,  the  scurrilous  t, —     Aylmer's  Field  441 

t's  !  for  never  yet  on  earth  Could  dead  flesh  creep,  Lucretius  130 

rustic  Gods !  a  <  To  laugh  at — more  to  laugh  at  „        182 

Dived  in  a  hoard  of  t's  that  dealt  with  knights,  Princess,  Pro.  29 

the  t  of  her  That  drove  her  foes  with  slaughter  ,.                122 
often  told  a  t  from  mouth  to  mouth  As  here  at 

Christmas.'  „               191 

what  kind  of  t's  did  men  tell  men,  „               196 
'  Why  not  a  summer's  as  a  winter's  t  ?    At  for  summer 

as  befits  the  time,  „               209 

we  should  have  him  back  Who  told  the  '  Winter's  t '  ..               238 

tell  me  pleasant  t's,  and  read  My  sickness  „           ii  252 

he  that  next  inherited  the  t  Half  turning  ,,            iv  592 

whereon  Follow'd  his  t.  „               » 48 

infuse  my  t  of  love  In  the  old  king's  ears,  ..                240 

So  closed  our  t,  of  which  I  give  you  all  „           Con.  1 

the  sequel  of  the  t  Had  touch'd  her ;  „                 30 

And  I  fear  you'll  listen  to  t's.  Grandmother  54 

To  bear  thro'  Heaven  a  i  of  woe.  In  Mem.  xii  2 

When  truth  embodied  in  a  t  Shall  enter  „      xxscvi  7 

Then  be  my  love  an  idle  t,  „         Ixii  3 

Thereafter — as  he  speaks  who  tells  the  t —  Com.  of  Arthur  95 

'  But  let  me  tell  thee  now  another  t :  „            359 

Or  Gareth  telling  some  prodigious  t  Of  knights,  Gareth  and  L.  508 

turning  to  Lynette  he  told  The  t  of  Gareth,  ,,          1273 

And  he  that  told  the  t  in  older  times  „          1427 

And  call'd  her  like  that  maiden  in  the  t,  Marr.  of  Geraint  742 

And  there  lay  still ;  as  he  that  tells  the  t  Geraint  and  E.  161 
Earl  Limours  Drank  till  he  jested  with  all  ease,  and 

told  Free  t's,  „            291 

and  cursed  the  t,  The  told-of ,  and  the  teller.  Balin  and  Balan  542 

Were  I  not  woman,  I  could  tell  a  t.  Merlin  and  V.  696 

Then  answer'd  MerUn  '  Nay,  I  know  the  t.  ..            713 

'  O  ay,'  said  Vivien,  '  overtrue  a,t.  720 

he  never  wrong'd  his  bride.     I  know  the  t.  „            730 

'  O  crueller  than  was  ever  told  in  t,  „            858 

She  blamed  herself  for  telling  hearsay  t's :  „            951 

So  ran  the  t  like  fire  about  the  court,  Lancelot  and  E.  734 

when  the  maid  had  told  him  all  her  t,  „            798 

when  the  maid  had  told  him  all  the  t  Of  King  and  Prince,         „  823 


Tale  (continued)  he  that  tells  the  t  Says  that  her  ever- 
veering  fancy  Pelleas  and  E.  492 
for  he  that  tells  the  t  Liken'd  them.  Last  Tournament  226 
And  fault  and  doubt — no  word  of  that  fond  t —  „  578 
prattling  and  the  t's  Which  my  good  father  told  me,  Guinevere  316 
accept  this  old  imperfect  t,  New-old,  To  the  Queen  ii  36 
and  drank  her  whisper'd  t's.  Lover's  Tale  i  817 
I'll  tell  you  the  t  o'  my  life.  First  Quarrel  9 
I  told  them  my  t,  God's  own  truth —  Rizpah  33 
in  many  a  merry  t  That  shook  our  sides —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  91 
A  t,  that  told  to  me.  When  but  thine  age,  Tires  ias  18 
Two  lovers  parted  by  a  scurrilous  t  The  Ring  208 
Two  lovers  parted  by  no  sciu-rilous  t —  „  427 
All  her  t  of  sadness.  Forlorn  80 
your  t  of  lands  I  know  not,  your  Arabian  sands ;  To  Ulysses  34 
And  read  a  Grecian  t  re-told.  To  Master  of  B.  5 
I  have  told  you  my  t.  Get  you  gone.  Charity  44 
Tale  (number)  The  t  of  diamonds  for  his  destined  boon)  Lancelot  and  E.  91 
Talent  health,  wealth,  and  time.  And  t.  Princess  iv  353 
Taliessin  '  T  is  our  fullest  throat  of  song.  Holy  Grail  300 
Talk  (s)  (See  also  Table-talk)  It  seems  in  after-dinner  t  Miller's  D.  31 
we  held  a  t,  How  all  the  old  honour  The  Epic  6 
Delight  our  souls  with  t  of  knightly  deeds,  M.  d' Arthur  19 
he  turn'd  The  current  of  his  t  to  graver  things  Enoch  Arden  203 
Fairer  his  t,  a  tongue  that  ruled  the  hour,  Aylmer's  Field  194 
remembering  His  former  t's  with  Edith,  „  457 
Made  more  and  more  allowance  for  his  t ;  Sea  Dreams  75 
Whose  pious  t,  when  most  his  heart  was  dry,  „  186 
A  t  of  coUege  and  of  ladies'  rights.  Princess,  Pro.  233 
Our  dances  broke  and  buzz'd  in  knots  oit;  „  i  133 
Sweet  household  t,  and  phrases  of  the  hearth,  „  ii  315 
.  From  t  of  battles  loud  and  vain,  Ode  on  Well.  247 
But  honest  t  and  wholesome  wine.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  18 
Heart-afHuence  in  discursive  t  In  Mem.  cix  1 
Just  now  the  dry-tongued  laurels'  pattering  t  Maud  I  xviii  8 
vext  her  and  perplext  her  With  his  wordly  t  „  xx  7 
And  when  the  thralls  had  t  among  themselves,  Gareth  and  L.  491 
But  if  their  t  were  foul,  „  504 
Then,  like  a  shadow,  past  the  people's  t  Marr.  of  Geraint  82 
I  will  tell  him  all  their  caitiff  t ;  Geraint  and  E.  66 
his  t.  When  wine  and  free  companions  kindled  him,  „  292 
Here  the  huge  Earl  cried  out  upon  her  t,  ,,  651 
Felon  t !  Let  be  !  no  more  ! '  Balin  and  Balan  380 
Their  t  was  all  of  training,  terms  of  art.  Merlin  and  V.  124 
She  play'd  about  with  slight  and  sprightly  t,  .,.  171 
Tho'  harlots  paint  their  t  as  well  as  face  „  821 
And  t  and  minstrel  melody  entertain'd.  Lancelot  and  E.  267 
From  t  of  war  to  traits  of  pleasantry —  ..  321 
Than  Lancelot  told  me  of  a  common  t  „  577 
those  black  walls  of  yew  Their  t  had  pierced,  „  970 
Was  noble  man  but  made  ignoble  t.  „  1088 
once  the  t  And  scandal  of  our  table,  Holy  Grail  649 
Suddenly  waken'd  with  a  sound  of  t  Pelleas  and  E.  48 
And  all  t  died,  as  in  a  grove  all  song  „  607 
'  Will  the  child  kill  me  with  her  innocent  t  ?  '  Guinevere  214 
Rapt  in  sweet  t  or  lively,  all  on  love  ..  386 
And  miss  to  hear  high  t  of  noble  deeds  ,,  499 
Delight  our  souls  with  t  of  knightly  deeds.  Pass,  of  Arthur  187 
from  that  necessity  for  t  Which  lives  with 

blindness.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  248 

I  have  scared  you  pale  with  my  scandalous  t,  Despair  111 

an'  doesn't  not  'inder  the  t  !  Spinster's  S's.  86 

Is  girlish  t  at  best ;  Epilogue  43 

And  all  her  t  was  of  the  babe  she  loved  ;  The  Ring  353 

Talk  (verb)     To  himself  he  t's  ;  A  spirit  haunts  3 

And  ye  t  together  still,  Adeline  60 

'  1 1,'  said  he,  '  Not  with  thy  dreams.  Two  Voices  385 

And  makes  me  t  too  much  in  age.  Miller's  D.  194 

ere  the  stars  come  forth  T  with  the  wild  Cassandra,  (Enone  263 

But  you  can  t :  yours  is  a  kindly  vein  :  Edwin  Morris  81 

the  days  were  brief  Whereof  the  poets  t,  Talking  Oak  186 

'  O  ay,  ay,  ay,  you  t ! '  Godiva  26 

all  his  lite  the  charm  did  t  About  his  path,  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  21 

Had  made  him  t  for  show  ;  Will  Water.  196 

clamour'd  the  good  woman,  '  hear  him  t !  Enoch  Arden  840 


Talk 


711 


Tamed 


Talk  (verb)  (continued)     For  one  half-hour,  and  let  him  t  to 


the  days  That  most  she  loves  to  (  of, 

We  did  but  t  you  over,  pledge  you  all 

Or  down  the  fiery  gulf  as  <  of  it, 

You  t  almost  like  Ida  :  she  can  t ; 

But  you  t  kindlier:  we  esteem  you  for  it. — 

And  I  too,  t,  and  lose  the  touch  1 1  of. 

While  now  we  t  as  once  we  talk'd 

To  t  them  o'er,  to  wish  them  here. 

Be  cheerful-minded,  t  and  treat 

And  t  of  others  that  are  wed, 

I  trust  that  I  did  not  t  (repeat) 

Sweet  lord,  how  like  a  noble  knight  he  t's  ! 

Up  then,  ride  with  me  !     T  not  of  shame  ! 

Too  curious  Vivien,  tho'  j^ou  t  of  trust. 

Yea,  if  ye  /  of  trust  I  tell  you  this, 

And  heard  their  voices  t  behind  the  wall, 

Of  whom  the  people  t  mysteriously, 

fool,'  he  said,    ye  t  Fool  s  treason  : 

As  even  here  they  t  at  Ahnesbury 

T  of  lost  hopes  and  broken  heart ! 

The  merrier,  prettier,  wittier,  as  they  t, 

lasses  'ud  t  o'  their  Missis's  waays, 

play  with  'em,  t  to  'em  hours  after  houi's  ! 

thou  hast  come  to  t  our  isle. 

Fur  moast  of  'em  t's  agean  tithe. 


The  Brook  115 

226 

Princess,  Pro.  185 

Hi  287 

V  210 

212 

Lit.  Squabbles  17 

In  Mem.  Ixxi  9 

xc  11 

cvii  19 

Con.  98 

Mavd  I  xix  12,  16 

Gareth  and  L.  Ill 

Balin  and  Balan  523 

Merlin  and  V.  358 

360 

631 

Lancelot  and  E.  425 

Last  Toumatnent  351 

Guinevere  208 

Lover's  Tale  iv  176 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  286 

Village  Wife  57 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  34 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  32 

Church-warden,  etc.  52 


Talk'd-Talkt    so  we  sat  and  eat  And  talk'd  old  matters 

over  ;  Audley  Court  29 

For  oft  I  talk'd  with  him  apart,  Talking  Oak  17 

She  tnlKd  as  if  her  love  were  dead.  The  Letters  27 

Blues  and  reds  They  talVd  of  :  Aylmer's  Field  252 

For  people  talk'd — that  it  was  wholly  wise  ,.             268 

people  talk'd — The  boy  might  get  a  notion  into  him  ;  ,.             270 

So  they  talk'd.  Poor  children,  for  their  comfort :  ..             426 

wrinkled  benchers  often  talk'd  of  him  Approvingly,  „             473 

But  while  they  talk'd,  above  their  heads  I  saw  Princess,  Pro.  118 

they  talk'd  At  wine,  in  clubs,  of  art,  of  politics ;  ,.                   160 

And  while  I  walk'd  and  talk'd  as  heretofore,  „                  i  16 

you  that  talk'd  The  trash  that  made  me  sick,  „               ii  393 

She  answer'd  sharply  that  I  talk'd  astray.  ,.             Hi  140 

we  are  not  talk'd  to  thus :  ..                  250 

(And  every  voice  she  talk'd  with  ratify  it,      ,  ..               v  133 

Her  that  talk'd  down  the  fifty  wisest  men  ;  ..                   294 

she  you  walk'd  with,  she  You  talk'd  with,  .,              vi  255 

the  maidens  came,  they  talk'd,  They  sang,  „               vii  22 

That  hears  his  burial  talk'd  of  by  his  friends,  „                   152 

While  now  we  talk  as  once  we  talk'd  In  Mem .  Ixxi  9 

We  talk'd  :  the  stream  beneath  us  ran,  „  Ixxxix  43 

My  love  has  talk'd  with  rocks  and  trees  ;  „       xcvii  1 

And  oft  I  talk'd  \vith  Dubric,  the  high  saint,  Geraint  and  E.  865 

And  I,  when  often  they  have  talk'd  of  love,  Lancelot  and  E.  673 

for  they  talk'd,  Meseem'd,  of  what  they  knew  not ;  „               674 

And  all  the  damsels  talk'd  confusedly,  Pelleas  and  E.  57 

Fur  hofEens  we  talkt  o'  my  darter  Village  Wife  10 

An'  the  Missisis  talk'd  o'  the  lasses. —  „             58 

Talketh    Who  t  with  thee,  Adeline  ?  Adeline  24 

Talkin'     Thou's  bean  t'  to  muther,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  10 

Es  I  should  be  t  agean  'em.  Village  Wife  110 

Talking     (See  also  A-talkin',  Talkin')     walking  all  alone 

beneath  a  yew.  And  t  to  hiinself ,  Love  and  Death  6 
heard  them  t,  his  long-bounden  tongue  Was  loosen'd,    Enoch  Arden  644 

And,  t  from  the  point,  he  drew  him  in.  The  Brook  154 

And  with  me  Philip,  t  still ;  „           164 

I  thought  her  half-right  t  of  her  wrongs  ;  Princess  v  285 

Drinking  and  t  of  me  ;  Maud  I  vii  6 

I  hear  two  men.  Somewhere,  t  of  me ;  „               14 

In  silver  tissue  t  things  of  state  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  663 

While  he  were  t  sweetly  with  your  Prince,  „              698 

thither  came  the  village  girls  And  linger'd  t,  Pelleas  and  E.  509 

Now  t  of  their  woodland  paradise.  Last  Tournament  726 

Tftlkt    iS^ee  Talk'd 

Tall     Down  by  the  poplar  t  rivulets  babble  and  fall.  Leonine  Eleg.  4 

T  orient  shrubs,  and  obelisks  Arabian  Nights  107 

When  forth  there  stept  a  foeinan  t,  Oriana  33 


Tall  (continued)    The  arching  limes  are  t  and  shady,  Margaret  59 

The  t  flag-flowers  when  they  sprung  Miller's  D.  53 

My  t  dark  pines,  that  plumed  the  craggy  ledge  OSnone  209 

Till  Charles's  Wain  came  out  above  the  t  white 

chimney-tops.  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  12 

The  building  rook  '11  caw  from  the  windy  t  elm-tree,  „  17 

heroes  t  Dislodging  pinnacle  and  parapet  D.  of  F.  Women  25 

A  daughter  of  the  gods,  divinely  t,  „  87 

Patient  on  this  t  pillar  1  have  borne  St.  S.  Stylites  15 

To  watch  the  three  t  sfirei, ;  Godiva  3 

flour  From  his  t  mill  that  whistled  on  the  waste.  Enoch  Arden  343 

A  later  but  a  loftier  Annie  Lee,  Fair-hair'd  and  t,  ..  749 

Her  son,  who  stood  beside  her  t  and  strong,  756 

And  his  own  children  t  and  beautiful,  762 

help'd  At  lading  and  imlading   the  t  barks,  „  816 

T  and  erect,  but  bending  from  his  height  Aylmer's  Field  119 

A  perilous  meeting  imder  the  t  pines  ..  414 

follow'd  out  T  and  erect,  but  in  the  middle  aisle  818 

Strode  from  the  porch,  t  and  erect  again.  ,,  825 

What !  are  the  ladies  of  your  land  so  t?  '  Princess  ii  47 

o'er  him  grew  T  as  a  figure  lengthen'd  on  the  sand  ,,      vi  161 

those  t  columns  drown'd  In  silken  fluctuation  „  354 

One  t  Agave  above  the  lake.  The  Daisy  84 

Then  it  grew  so  t  It  wore  a  crown  of  light,  The  Flower  9 

But  she  is  t  and  stately.  Maud  I  xii  16 

friends  Of  Arthur,  gazing  on  him,  t.  Com.  of  Arthur  278 

The  last  t  son  of  Lot  and  Bellicent,  Gareth  and  L.  1 

follow  the  deer  By  these  t  firs  and  our  fast-falling  bums  ;        .,  91 

The  prince  his  heir,  when  t  and  marriageable,  ..  102 

Wellnigh  as  long  as  thou  art  statured  t ! 
but  in  all  the  listening  eyes  Of  those  t  knights, 
Saw  six  t  men  haling  a  seventh  along, 
(not  that  t  felon  there  Whom  thou  by  sorcery 
Then  Enid  was  aware  of  three  t  knights  On 

horseback, 
roimded  moon  Thro'  the  t  oriel  on  the  rolling  sea. 
By  those  whom  God  had  made  full-limb'd  and  t. 
Come  dashing  down  on  a  i  wayside  flower, 
and  swum  with  balanced  wings  To  some  t 

mountain : 
rise  three  dark,  t  cypresses, — 
As  the  t  ship,  that  many  a  dreary  year 

fears  went  over  till  I  that  was  little  had  grown  so  t, 
had  grown  so  handsome  and  t — 
as  it  seem'd,  beneath  the  t  Tree-bowers, 
— dark  visaged,  stately  and  t- 


282 
328 
811 
996 

Geraint  and  E.  56 

Holy  Grail  831 

Guinevere  43i 

253 

Lover's  Tale  i  303 

536 

808 

First  Quarrd  27 

37 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  Ill 

The  Wreck  15 

Shamus  O'Shea  that  has  now  ten  childer,  hansome 

an'  t.  Tomorrow  85 

Taller     a  hart  T  than  all  his  fellows,  Marr.  of  Geraint  150 

But  newly-enter'd,  t  than  the  rest.  Last  Tournament  169 

he  is  Lancelot — t  indeed,  Rosier  and  comelier,  .,  709 

T  than  all  the  Muses,  and  huger  than  all  the 

mountain  ?  Parnassus  10 

Tallest     she,  that  rose  the  t  of  them  all  And  fairest,  M.  d' Arthur  207 

last  tall  son  of  Lot  and  Bellicent,  And  t,  Gareth,  Gareth  and  L.  2 

In  glassy  bays  among  her  t  towers.'  (Enone  119 

They  came,  they  cut  away  my  t  pines,  „       208 

she,  that  rose  the  t  of  them  all  And  fairest,  Pass,  of  Arthur  375 

Tall-tower 'd    long  street  climbs  to  one  t-t  mill ;  Enoch  Arden  5 

Tallyho     Black  Bess,  Tantivy,  T,  The  Brook  160 

Talon     and  swoops  The  vulture,  beak  and  t,  Princess  v  383 

their  ever-ravening  eagle's  beak  and  t  Boddicea  11 

And  all  unscarr'd  from  beak  or  t.  Last  Tournament  20 

Tamarisk     The  stately  cedar,  t's,  Arabian  Nights  105 

from  a  t  near  Two  Proctors  leapt  upon  us.  Princess  iv  258 

Tame  (adj.)     The  helpless  life  so  wild  that  it  was  t.  Enoch  Arden  557 

With  two  t  leopards  couch'd  beside  her  throne.  Princess  ii  33 

her  foot  on  one  Of  those  t  leopards.  „     Hi  181 

'  Being  a  goose  and  rather  t  than  wild,  Gareth  and  L.  38 

Tut :  he  was  t  and  meek  enow  with  me,  „  718 

were  all  as  <  I  mean,  as  noble.  Merlin  and  V.  607 

Tame  (verb)     nor  t  and  tutor  with  mine  eye  D.  of  F.  Women  138 

I  tamed  my  leopards  :  shall  I  not  t  these  ?  Princess  v  400 

And  t  thy  jailing  princess  to  thine  hand.  Pelleas  and  E.  344 

Tamed     1 1  my  leopards  :  shall  I  not  tame  these  ?  Princess  v  4(X) 


Tamesa 


712 


Teaohei 


Tamesa  (Thames)     Bloodily  flow'd  the  T  rolling  phantom  bodies  Boddicea  21 

TttoptK    embassies  of  love.  To  t  with  the  feelings,  Oardener's  D.  19 

nunper'd    Some  nieddling  rogue  has  (  with  him —  Lancelot  and  E.  128 

And  t  with  the  Ixirds  of  Uie  White  Horse,  Guinevere  15 

Tangle  (s)    Should  toss  with  t  and  with  shells.  In  Mem.  x  20 
Tangle  (viarb)    cuts  atwain  The  knots  tliat  (  human 

creeds,  Clear-headed  friend  3 

Tangled  (adj.  and  part)    The  t  water-courses  slept,  Dying  Swan  19 

Glitt«r  like  a  swarm  of  fire-flies  <  in  a  silver  braid.  Lockdey  Hall  10 

Two  in  the  t  business  of  the  world,  Princess  ii  174 

passing  lightly  Adown  a  natural  stair  of  (  roots.  Lover's  Tale  i  527 

Tantivy     Black  Bess,  T,  Tallyho,  The  Brook  160 

Tap  (a  touch)    crush 'd  with  a  t  Of  my  finger-na  Matid  II  ii  21 

Tap  (tap-room)     Thou'U  goa  sniffin'  about  the  (  North.  Cobbler  64 

I  weant  goa  sniffin'  about  the  t.'  „            67 

Taper  (adj.)    If  my  lips  should  dare  to  kiss  Thy  (  fingers 

amorously,  Madelitte  44 

Thro'  rosy  t  fingers  drew  Her  streaming  curls  Mariana  in  the  S.  15 

Tapw  (s)     A  inilUon  t's  flaring  bright  Arabian  NigtUs  124 

I  knew  your  (  far  away.  Miller's  D.  109 

Her  (  glunmer'd  in  the  lake  below :  Edvoin  Morris  135 

As  this  pale  fs  earthly  spark,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  15 

The  /"*-  burning  fair.  Sir  iialatuid  32 

And  calm  that  let  the  t's  bum  Unwavering :  In  Mem.  scv  5 

tins^ers  of  a  haiid  Before  a  burning  t.  Holy  Grail  694 

Tapestry     Working  a  t,  lifted  up  her  bead.  Last  Toumantent  129 

Tapping    Leisurely  t  a  glossy  boot,  Mand  I  xiii  19 

Tapt    whined  in  lobbies,  t  at  doors,  Walk,  to  the  Mail  37 

She  /  her  tiny  silken-sandal'd  foot :  Princess,  Pro.  150 

Taranis     T  be  propitiated.  Boadicea  16 

Tare    That  t  each  other  in  their  slime.  In  Mem.  lei  23 

And  when  his  anger  t  him,  Gareth  and  L.  1340 

Target    passion  were  a  t  for  their  scom :  Loekslet/  Hall  146 

Or  from  the  tiny  pitted  t  blew  Aylnter^'s  Field  93 

Tarn     Slumbers  not  like  a  mountain  t  ?  Supp.  Confessions  129 

And  quenching  lake  by  lake  and  thy  t  Pnncess  vii  40 

Far  over  the  blue  t's  and  hazy  seas,  Gareth  and  L.  499 

Had  found  a  glen,  gray  boulder  and  black  t.  Lancdot  and  E.  36 

A  horror  lived  about  tne  t,  and  clave  „              37 

Fled  like  a  glittering  ri\nUet  to  the  t:  .,52 

A  stone  is  tlung  into  some  sleeping  t,  PMeas  and  E.  93 

Those  diamonds  that  I  resouetl  from  the  t.  Last  Tournament  37 

Tamish'd    {See  also  HaU-tamish'd)    Mark  hath  (  the 

great  name  of  king,  GarHh  and  L.  426 

Tarqain    brooking  not  the  T  in  her  veins,  Lucretius  237 

THrianoe    after  two  days'  ( there,  retum'd.  Lancelot  and  E.  569 

Turied    And  while  1 1,  every  day  she  set  Holy  Grail  588 

Where  once  I  ( for  a  while.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  2 

Tarry    '  He  daured  not  t,'  men  will  say,  Two  Voices  101 

I  must  go  :  I  dare  not  t,'  Princess  Hi  95 

Knowing  I  (  for  thee,'  Maud  III  vi  13 

Would  he  could  t  with  us  here  awhile,  Marr.  of  Geraint  622 

Yet  if  he  could  but  t  a  day  or  two,  „              627 

For  if  thou  t  we  shall  meet  again,  Guinei^ere  89 

Tarrying    after  (  for  a  space  they  rode,  Geraint  and  E.  953 

Tartar    at  thy  name  the  T  tents  are  stirr'd  ;  IF.  to  Marie  Alex.  12 

thine  own  land  had  bow'd  to  T  hordes  „             23 

Task  (s)     '  Hard  /,  to  pluck  resolve,'  I  cried.  Two  Voices  118 

Sore  (  to  hearts  worn  out  by  many  wars  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  86 

Deliver  not  the  t's  of  might  To  weakness.  Love  thou  thy  land  13 

The  wrinkled  steward  at  his  t,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  27 

I  Uke  myself  to  ( ;  Will  Water.  162 

came  Cyril,  and  yawning  '  O  hard  <,'  he  cried  ;  Princess  Hi  124 

or  hew  wood,  Or  grosser  t's  ;  Gareth  and  L.  487 

kiss  the  child  That  does  the  (  assign'd,  Lancelot  and  E.  829 

Task  (verb)     as  we  t  ourselves  To  learn  a  language  Aylmer's  Fidd  432 

Tassel-hong    In  native  hazels  t-h.'  In  Mem.  cii  12 

nuMll'd    See  Dewy-tassell'd 

IMe  (8)    Made  all  our  t's  and  fancies  like,  lover's  Tale  i  242 
IMe  (verb)    (See  <dso  Ta&ste)    but  whoso  did  receive  of 

them.  And  t.  Lotos- Eaters  31 

(If  Death  so  t  Lethean  springs),  In  Mem.  xliv  10 

She  fs  the  fruit  before  the  blossom  falls.  Ancient  Sage  75 

that  men  may  t  Swine-flesh,  drink  wine ;  Akbar's  Dream  53 

He  <  love  with  half  his  mind.  In  Mem,  xe  1 


Tasted  (cotUinued)  Nor  ever  touch'd  fierce  wine,  nor  ( flesh,  Merlin  and  V. 


till  I  (  flesh  again  One  night 
Tattoo'd    then  the  man ;  T  or  woaded, 
Taught    {See  also  Lam'd)    We  t  him  lowlier  moods, 

at  TrafiUgar  yet  once  more  We  t  him : 

Should  that  plain  fact,  as  (  by  these. 

He  t  me  all  the  mercy, 

Ketaught  the  lesson  thou  hadst  t, 

I  must  be  t  my  duty,  and  by  3rou  ! 
Who  /  me  how  to  skate,  to  row,  to  swim, 
leaders  of  their  Institute  T  them  with  facts. 
And  I  would  teach  them  all  that  men  are  t ; 
but  she  That  t  the  Sabine  how  to  rule, 
Here  might  they  learn  whatever  men  were  t : 
And  whatsoever  can  be  t  and  known ; 
what  woman  (  you  this  ?  ' 
With  those  deep  voices  our  dead  captain  (  The 

tyrant. 
So  great  a  soldier  (  us  there, 
Blejrs,  Who  (  him  magic  ; 
The  charm  so  (  will  chann  us  both  to  rest, 
then  he  t  the  King  to  charm  the  Queen 
never  yet  Hath  what  thy  sister  (  me  first  to  see, 
My  kn^htJ\ood  /  me  this — 
Ix^^ian  to  hum  An  air  the  nuns  had  t  her ; 
should  he  not  be  t,  Ev'n  by  the  price 

I I  myself  as  I  could  To  make  a  good  wife 
Who  t  me  in  childhood, 
Thou  knowest,  T  by  some  God, 

Taunt  (s)     A  t  that  clench'd  his  purpose  like  a  blow  ! 
Taunt  (verb)     I  know  it ;  T  me  no  more : 
Tavern    Seeking  a  t  which  of  old  he  knew. 
Tavern-catch    To  troll  a  careless,  careless  t-c 
Tavern-do<w    sent  From  many  a  t-d, 
Tavern-fellow    My  boon  companion,  t-f — 
Tavern-hour    The  t-h's  of  mighty  wits — 
Taw     boy  That  knuckled  at  the  t : 
Tawnier    the  swan's  Is  ( than  her  cygnet's : 
Tawny    to  tear  away  Their  (  clusters, 

Tumble^i  the  /  niscal  at  his  feet, 

warm  melon  lay  like  a  little  sun  on  the  t  sand, 
Tax    Honour,'  she  said,  '  and  homage,  t  and  toll, 

for  when  he  laid  a  (  Upon  his  town, 

'  If  they  pay  this  t,  they  starve.' 

she  took  the  t  away  And  built  herself 

Levieti  a  kindly  t  upon  themselves, 

Hortensia  spoke  against  the  ( ; 
Ta-year  (this  year,  to-year)    {See  also  To-year)    Done 
it  t-y  I  meiin'd, 

fur  a  lot  on  'em  coom'd  t-y — 
Tea    an'  offens  we  bed  'em  to  t. 
Teach    Oh  t  me  yet  Somewhat  before  the  heavy 
clod 

T  me  the  nothingness  of  things. 


To  E.  Fitzgerald '. 
Princess  ii  12 
Buonaparte  i 

Two  Voices 

May  Qtieen,  Con.  17 

Englatid  and  A  mer.  8 

Z>om97 

Edwin  Morris  19 

Princess,  Pro.  59 

136 

ii  79 

146 

385 

vii  310 

Ode  0,1  Well.  69 

«         131 

Com.  of  Arthur  154 

Merlin  and  F.  332 

641 

Holy  GraU  469 

Last  ToumametU  658 

Guinevere  163 

Lover's  Tale  iv  151 

First  Quarrel  29 

.Merlin  and  the  G.  115 

Death  of  (Enone  S5 

Princess  v  306 

„      vi  301 

Enoch  Arden  691 

Princess  iv  157 

Will  Water.  188 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  90 

Will  Water.  191 

132 

Lancelot  and  E.  llSo 

Enoch  Arden  38- 

Aylmer's  Field  230 

V.  of  Maddune  57 

(Enone  116 

Godiva  13 

20 

„      78 

Enoch  Arden  66& 

Princess  vii  127 

N.  Fanner,  0.  S.  42 

Church-warden,  etc.  13 

VUlage  Wife  56 


Supp.  Confessions  183 
A  Character  4 


Oh  !  ( the  orphan  boy  to  read.  Or  ( the  orphan-girl 

to  sew,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  69 

T  that  sick  heart  the  stronger  choice.  On  a  Mourner  18 

For  he  will  t  him  hardness,  Dora  120 

And,  as  tradition  t'es,  .imphion  26 

And  others'  follies  t  us  not.  Will  Water.  173 

Nor  much  their  wisdom  t'es ;  »          174 

And  I  would  ( them  all  that  men  are  taught ;  Princess,  Pro.  136 

Shall  we  t  it  a  Roman  lesson  ?  Boadicea  32 

Come  Time,  and  t  me,  many  years.  In  Mem.  xiii  l'^ 

My  own  dim  life  should  (  me  this,  „        xxxiv  1 

Her  office  there  to  rear,  to  ^  „           jd  l:' 

And  t  true  life  to  fight  with  mortal  wrongs.  Maud  I  xviii  51 

As  proof  of  trust.     O  Merlin,  t  it  me.  .Merlin  and  V.  331 

To  nnd  a  wizard  who  might  t  the  King  »            583 

But  t  high  thought,  and  amiable  wonfe  ^Kti»«wre  481 

Ev'n  the  homely  farm  can  t  us  Locksleij  H.,  Sixty  26 

T  your  flatter'd  kings  that  only  those  who  caimot  read        „  132 

I  too  would  ( the  man  Beyond  the  darker  hour  Prog,  of  Spring  87 

Teacher     Left  by  the  T,  whom  he  held  divine.  Lucretius  V^ 

Blest  be  the  Voice  of  the  T  Kapiolani  2 


Teaching 


713 


Tear 


Teadiing    t  him  that  died  Of  hemlock ;  Prineeu  Hi  302 

Teacap-dmes     In  t-t  of  hood  and  hoop,  *                Talking  Oak  63 

Team    {-See  also  TeSm)    and  the  vnld  t  Which  love  tiiee,             Tithoniu  39 

I  hear  them  too— tbey  sing  to  their  t :  Grandmciher  81 

Tbe  t  is  looaen'd  fnnn  the  wain.  In  Mem.  exxi  5 

And  aee'st  tbe  moving  of  tbe  t.  „               16 

Tbe  sbrilH-  whinnyings  of  the  (  of  Hell,  DetneUr  and  P.  44 

Te&n    blessed  fealds  wi'  the  Divil's  oan  t.  N.  Parmer,  O.  S.  02 

Tear  it)    Woulrl  issue  ft  of  penitence  Siupp.  Confetsions  118 

Her  (s  fell  with  tbe  dews  at  even  ;  Manama  13 

Her  ft  fell  ere  tbe  dews  were  dried  ;  „        14 

Crocodiles  wept  ft  for  tbee ;  A  Dirge  22 

woodbine  ana  eglatere  Drip  sweeter  dews  than  traitor's  t.          „        24 

While  blisrful  ft  blinded  my  si^t  Oriana  23 

And  then  tbe  ft  run  down  my  cbeek,  00 

I  feel  the  ^<  of  blood  arise  77 

A  matter  to  be  wcrpt  with  ft  of  blood  !  Poland  14 

A  moment  came  the  toidemess  of  ft.  The  form,  the  form  9 

My  ft,  no  ft  of  Lore,  are  flowing  fast.  Wan,  Sculptor  7 

No  ft  of  love,  but  ft  that  Love  can  die.  „            8 

Thy  sister  smiiled  and  said,  '  No  ft  for  me  !  The  Bridetmaid  3 

I  lored  tfaee  for  the  t  thou  couldst  not  hide,  „          11 

Tbe  home  ci  woe  without  a  t.  Mariana  in  the  8.  20 

Larger  Hesper  giitter'd  on  her  ft,  „             90 

'  Whose  eyes  are  dim  with  glorious  ft,  Tvbo  Voieet  151 

And  dews,  that  would  have  fall'n  in  ft,  MiHer't  D.  151 

Eyes  with  idle  ft  are  wet.  _        211 

They  hare  not  shed  a  many  ft,  „        221 

Yet  ft  they  shed :  they  had  their  part  Of  sorrow : 


My  eyes  are  full  of  ft,  my  heart  of  lore, 

watef'd  it  with  ft?    O  bappjr  ft. 

And  nerer  can  be  sunder'a  without  ft.      To  — 

and  tempered  with  the  ft  Of  angels 

white-eyed  phantasms  weeping  ft  ot  blood. 

And  erer  unrelieved  by  dinnaJ  ft, 

embraces  of  our  wires  And  their  warm  ft : 

Qia^ged  both  mine  eyes  with  ft. 

I,  Umded  with  my  ft, '  Still  strove  to  speak : 

.*%e  ceased  in  ft,  fallen  from  hope  and  trust : 

By  sighs  or  groans  or  ft ; 

and  a  t  Dropt  on  the  letters  as  I  wrote. 

May  perpetual  youth  Keep  dry  their  lij^t 

from  t  s ; 
Him  Sir  Bedirere  Remorsefully  regarded  thro' 

bis^«, 
dropping  bitter  ft  against  his  brow 
Mary  sat  And  look'd  with  ft  upon  her  boy. 
When  eyes,  love-languid  thro'  half  ft 
Bain  out  the  heavy  mist  of  ft, 
bum'd  upon  its  object  thro'  such  ft  As  flow  but 

ODce  a  life, 
those  tremulous  eyes  that  fill  with  ft 
and  thy  ft  are  on  my  cbeek. 
Why  wflt  thou  ever  scare  me  with  thy  ft, 
to  the  ft  that  thou  wilt  weep. 
She  told  him  ei  tbax  ft.  Aim  pray'd  him. 
With  ft  and  smileB  from  heaven  again 
To  dn^  thy  foolirii  ft  upon  my  grave. 
What  there  is  in  loving  ft, 
eyes  All  flooded  with  the  bel{dess  wrath  of  ft. 
But  manifold  entreaties,  many  a  (, 
Fast  flow'd  the  canent  of  her  eas^  ft. 
Who  dabbling  in  the  fount  of  Active  ft, 
their  own  bitter  ft,  Tt,  and  the  careless  rain 
Deity  fake  in  human-amorous  ft ; 
And  kisB'd  again  with  ft. 
And  kisB  again  with  ft ! 
We  kiss'd  apia  with  ft. 

round  her  &wj  eyes  The  drded  Iris  of  a  ni^t  of  ft ; 
She  bow'd  as  if  to  veil  a  noble  ( ; 
'  T't,  idle  ft,  I  know  not  what  they  mean, 
T'l  from  the  depth  ot  some  divine  despair 
the  t.  She  sang  of,  riiook  and  fdL, 
At  length  my  £Sre,  his  rou^  dieek  wet  with  ft, 
like  summer  tempest  came  her  ft — 


aSnone  31 

«    234 

-,  With  Pal.  of  AH  13 

18 

Palace  of  AH  239 

271 

Lotot-Eatert,  C.  8.  71 

D.  of  P.  Women  13 

106 

257 

284 

To  J.  8.  55 

Of  old  tat  Preedtm  20 

M.  SArihur  171 

211 

Dora  51 

Love  and  Duty  36 

43 

63 

Tfthfmut26 

45 

46 

LoekaUy  BattSZ 

GoditaW 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  2 

Come  not,  when,  etc.  2 

Vition  of  Sin  161 

Enoch  Arden  32 

160 

865 

The  Brook  m 

Aylmer't  Field  428 

Lucretius  90 

Princett  Ub 

9 

14 

„       iii2n 

280 

«r39 

40 

„  50 

«23 

wl5 


Tear  (■)  {continued)    The  leaves  were  wet  with  womoi's  ft :     Prineett  vi  39 

Passionate  ft  FoUowM :  the  king  replied  not :  „           311 

Lore,  like  an  Alpine  harebell  hung  with  ft  „     vii  115 

a  touch  Came  round  mv  wrist,  ami  ft  upon  my  band  ,,          138 

dark  crowd  moves,  ami  there  are  sobs  and  ft :  Ode  on  Well.  268 

All  for  a  slanderous  storr,  that  cost  me  many  a  t.  Grandmother  22 

time  to  catch  The  fuoi  interest  of  ft  ?  In  Mem.  i  8 

Break,  thou  deep  rase  of  chilling  ft,  to  11 

2"i  of  the  widower,  when  he  sees  .,        arm  1 

Mine  eyes  have  leisure  for  their  fs ;  „             16 

When  fill'd  with  ft  that  cannot  fall,  „      xiz  11 

And  ft  that  at  their  fountain  freeze ;  ..        xx  12 

With  costly  spikenard  and  with  ft.  .,    xxxii  12 

And  ft  are  on  the  mother's  face,  „        ;;^  10 

dip  Their  wines  in  ft,  and  skim  away.  .,    :dviii  16 

motions  blindfy  drown  The  bases  of  nay  life  in  ft.  .,     dix  16 

grieve  Thy  brethren  with  a  fruitless  t  i  .,     Iviii  10 

With  thy  quick  ft  that  make  the  rose  Pull  sideways,  ..    IxxH  10 

No  sii^ie  (,  no  mark  of  pain :  „  IxxviU  14 

But  with  long  use  her  ft  are  dry.  20 

To  pledge  than  with  a  kindly  (,  .,        ze  10 

Ana  dipt  in  baths  of  hissing  ft,  .,  exvOi  23 

There  has  fallen  a  ^lendid  t  Maud  I  xzU  50 

Shall  shake  its  threaded  ft  in  the  wind  no  more.  „     ///  vi  28 

I  consecrate  with  ft — These  Idylls.  Ded.  of  IdyUt  4 

Enforced  she  was  to  wed  him  in  her  ft.  Com.  of  Arthur  204 

comforted  my  heart,  And  dried  my  ft,  „             350 

True  ft  upon  bis  broad  and  naked  breast,  Marr.  of  Geraint  111 

the  mother  smiled,  but  half  in  ft,  „             823 

Ye  mar  a  comely  face  with  idiot  ft.  Geraint  and  E.  550 

And  felt  the  warm  ft  falling  on  his  face  ;  „            586 

Made  aaswer,  either  eyelid  wet  with  ft :  Merlin  and  V,  379 

So  sweetly  gleam'd  her  eyes  behind  her  ft  402 

The  slow  i  creep  from  her  closcl  eyelid  yet,  ,,            906 

Then  flash'd  into  wild  ft,  and  rose  again,  Lancelot  and  E.  613 

'  Farewell,  sweet  sister,'  parted  all  in  ft.  „            1152 

grant  my  worship  of  it  Words,  as  we  grant  grief  ft.  „            1188 

and  the  ft  were  in  lu^  eyes.  Holy  GraU  750 

and  my  ft  hare  brought  me  good :  Guinevere  202 

Made  my  ft  bum — is  also  past — part.  „  542 
Him  Sir  Bedirere  Remorsefully  regarded  thro* 

bis  ft,  Patt.  of  Arthur  3S9 

And  dropping  bitter  ft  against  a  brow  „              379 

Her  smile  lit  up  tbe  rainbow  on  my  ft,  Lover't  Tale  i  254 

and  mine  Were  ^lim  with  floating  ft,  „             ^42 

I  saw  the  moonlight  glitter  on  their  ft —  „              807 

The  dew  of  ^4  in  an  unwholesome  dew,  „              765 

if  thou  be'st  Lore,  dry  im  these  ft  _              780 

it  melteth  in  tbe  source  Of  Uiese  sad  ft,  „             784 

And  Memory  fed  the  soul  of  Love  with  ft.  „             S22 

I  flm^  myself  upon  him  In  ft  and  cries :  ,,            n  90 

poor  hA,  an'  we  parted  in  ft.  Firtt  Quarrd  20 
Edith  spoke  no  word.  She  wept  no  /,  Sittert  (E.  and  E.)  216 
it  often  moved  me  to  ft.                                        In  the  Child.  Hotp.  31 

band  of  the  Highlander  wet  with  their  ft  I  Def.  of  Lucknow  102 

Sank  from  their  thrones,  and  melted  into  ft,  C'Av.mtmt  15 

Lord  of  human  ft ;  Cbild-lorer ;  To  Virtm  Hugo  3 

I  felt  one  warm  t  fall  upon  it.  Tiretiat  167 

a  tone  so  ron^  that  I  broke  into  paaekmate  ft.  The  Wreck  122 
But  vain  the  ft  tor  darkoi'd  years  As  hm^ter  over 

wine.  And  vain  the  lau^ter  as  the  ft.  Ancient  Sage  183 

aU  nig^t  I  pray'd  with  ft.  The  Flight  17 

I  watch'd  her  at  mass  lettin'  down  tbe  t.  Tomorrow  29 

tbe  follies,  furies,  curses,  passionate  ft,  Locktley  H.,  Sixty  30 

wife  and  bis  child  stood  by  him  in  ft  Dead  Prophet  57 

her  ft  Are  half  of  pleasure,  half  of  pain —  To  Prim.  Beatrice  10 

My  guick  ft  kill'd  the  flower,  Demeter  and  P.  108 

So  glad  ?  no  t  for  him,  who  left  you  wealtii.  The  Ring  188 

And  then  the  t  fell,  the  voice  broke.  „        367 

BUster'd  every  word  with  ft.  Forlorn  81 

Are  they  ft  ?    For  me—  Rommey't  S.  26 

TMr  (veib)    To  <  his  heart  b^ore  the  crowd  !  You  might  have  von  36 

to  ( away  Their  tawny  dosteo,  Enoch  Arden  ^1 

T  the  noble  heart  ct  Britain,  Boadicea  12 

tbe  winds  of  winter  t  an  oak  on  a  promontory.  „          77 


Tear 

Tear  (verb)  (continued)    fiends,  Who  leap  at  thee  to  t 

^„H^!f '  ^^  T,^  ,  ,,     ,      .              ,      .  Balin  mid,  Balan  142 

and  strove  To  <  the  twain  asunder  in  my  heart,  Holv  Grail  786 

the  beasts  Will  t  thee  piecemeal.'  ^            035 

Whim^ifr    ^^'=^^*'     •.  Ancient  Sage  12^ 

\\  hen  he  will  t  me  from  your  side,  7^^^  p/,^/,,  in 

Tear'd  (torn)    lasses  'ed  t  out  leaves  i'  the  middle  Villa  J  Wife  72 

J^S?'  Wht/l-r^^'''  from.its  source,  /JSgofll! 

Tearful    What  lit  your  eyes  with  <  power,  i&ar<7a»-e<  3 

From  all  things  outward  you  have  won  A  t  grace  margarei^ 

I  knew  The  <  glimmer  of  the  languid  da\ra  '     B.  of  F   Women  74 

And  coidd  I  look  upon  her  t  eyes  ?  z'L'    ^1731 

And  lookmg  round  upon  his  t  friends,  700 

spoken  of  with  t  smiles  ;  "         •  •  Jqo 

But  in  the  <  splendour  of  her  smiles  Prog  ofSvriL  41 

Tearin'     an'  crym^and  t  'er  'aair,  N^h^CoblZ  t\ 

mayhap  to  my  f aace  or  a  t  my  gown-  Spinster's  S's.  91 

Roaver  a-tuggin'  an' t  my  sheave.  '^    Oi/'rf  ff««  fiO 

a-tuggin'  an'  (  me  wuss  nor  afoor,  rr 

Tearing    (See  also  T^xin')    And  <  off  her  veil  of  faded 

J  J      .    r    ,      , ,   m,     ■         ,  Geraint  and  E.  514 

Teat    from  the  plamtive  mother's  <  he  took  TaJ'^^-oo^S-Im 

lent  her  fierce  t  To  human  sucklings  ;  Covi  of  Arth^.ril 

Teem    and  they  would  win  thee-<,     ^'  Holv  GmU -ill 

Above  the  Aground  ^^^  ^_  „^^  ^   ^  {g 

For  t  with  liars,  and  madmen,  rhp  Or^^^^/o 

Teens    The  maiden  blossoms  of  her  t  T^kinanntnl 

Teething    And  ills  and  aches,  and  «'.,  mtTLaiAu 

Teetotaler    See  ToatUer  ^    '^"'^  ^^* 

Telegraph    there  thro'  twenty  posts  of  t  Prinrei^    Pm   77 

K  ;SS£    Th-  '™"  ^-^Thro'  darkness,         Pro.  IogT^LX  S 

Telemachus    This  is  my  son,  mine  own  T,  TThi^J^  <?q 

Tpl^'\".f  P'"^'?'  I  '^'  ^^"*--  -^^^  ^«WS  U 

Telescope    here  were  Vs  For  azure  views  ;  Prinreio    Pm  fi7 

■^^^  sSr^'!;f /  '"'•/  T"^  ^'"°^  ^^'^  "-^^^       *s«pp.  cr&onr 

bhe  11  not  t  me  if  she  love  me,  r,-/  •      A 

Exquisite  Margaret,  who  can  t  Marmot  m 

Yet  <  my  name  again  to  me,  Elelwreli 

And  t  me  if  the  woodbines  blow.  Mu  UfeTsfvllU 

t  her  to  her  face  how  much  I  hate  Her  presence,  ^    K2  228 
t  her,  when  I  m  gone,  to  train  the  rosebush   May  Queen,  N.  Y's   E  47 

Effie  on  the  other  side,  and  I  will  t  the  sign.  Con  24 

say  to  Robin  a  kind  word,  and  t  him  not  to  fret  •    '  '  4I 

If  1  had  lived— I  cannot  t—  '"                             T^ 

and  <  o'er  Each  little  sound  and  sight.  B.  of  F   Women  276 

I  will  not  t  you  not  to  weep.  ^  "J  ^  ■  ^f^Yia 

And  ran  to  t  her  neighbours ;  rh^  r-^^.I  i ^ 

YeM?°hVT^'^'°  'T  *°  '  ^°."  ^^'  ,.  G..W?r2l2 

Yet  might  1 1  of  meetings,  of  farewells—  o^ 

Might  I  not  t  Of  difference,  reconcilement,  '"          o^« 

Dare  <  him  Dora  waited  with  the  child ;  "   n„™„  7« 

But  t  me,  did  she  read  the  name  I  carved  Talking  Oak  15^ 

thanks  for  what  I  learn  And  what  remains  to  t.  ^          204 

And  I  will  <  It.     Turn  your  face,  Dav-Thn     P^nVr 

And  whither  goest  thou,  t  me  where  ?  '  "^      De^Z  sJ 

n  my  heart  by  signs  can  t,  t  "f  rf^i'^% 

'  T  me  tales  of  thffirst  love-  p-^jf  5"Sf «? 

I  will  t  him  tales  of  foreign  parts,  V^Tl  1  f""  ]^l 

who  best  could  t  What  most^it  needed-  ^"""'^  ^"^"'^  J^f 

Not  to  t  her  never  to  let  her  know,  (repeat)  "  7«fi  708 

If  you  could  t  her  you  had  seen  him  dead,  sns 

I  have  a  secretr-only  swear.  Before  1 1  you—  "'          o^ 

When  you  shall  see  fier,  t  her  that  I  died  Blessing  her,  878 

And  t  my  daughter  Annie,  whom  I  saw  aao 

And  <  my  son  that  I  died  blessing  him.  "          ^i 

have  loved  you  more  as  son  Than  brother,  let  " 

me  t  you :  J  1      , 

nor  at  all  can  t  Whether  I  mean  this  day  ^^^T^Sf  !! 


714 


Tell  (continued)     t  me  pleasant  tales,  and  read  My  sickness 
'  no— I  would  not  t,  No,  not  for  all  Aspasia's 

cleverness, 
'  T  us,'  Florian  ask'd,  '  How  grew  this  feud 
But  children  die  ;  and  let  me  t  you,  girl. 
And  t  her,  t  her,  what  1 1  to  thee. 
'  0  t  her.  Swallow,  thou  that  knowest  each, 
'  0  t  her.  Swallow,  that  thy  brood  is  flown  : 
O  t  her,  brief  is  life  but  love  is  long. 

And  t  her,  t  her,  that  I  follow  thee.' 

To  t  her  what  they  were,  and  she  to  hear : 

I  came  to  t  you  ;  found  that  you  had  gone 

my  nurse  would  t  me  of  you  ; 

'  You — t  us  what  we  are  '  who  might  have  told 

I  knew,  but  I  would  not  t. 

Git  ma  my  aale  1 1  tha. 

And  now  it  t's  of  Italy. 

'  What  are  they  dreaming  of  ?     Who  can  t  ? 


TeU 

Princess  ii  252 


I  pray  you  t  the  truth  to  me. 
And  which  the  dearest  I  cannot  t !  ' 
T  my  wish  to  her  dewy  blue  eye  : 
Who  mused  on  all  I  had  to  t, 
And  I  should  t  him  all  my  pain, 
And  t  them  all  they  would  have  told. 
In  that  high  place,  and  t  thee  all. 
Could  hardly  t  what  name  were  thine, 
passing,  turn  the  page  that  Vs  A  grief, 
0  t  me  where  the  senses  mix, 

0  t  me  where  the  passions  meet. 
You  t  me,  doubt  is  Devil-born, 
the  clash  and  clang  that  t's  The  joy 
can  he  t  Whether  war  be  a  cause  or  a  consequence  ? 

1  must  t  her  before  we  part,  I  must  t  her,  or  die. 
Beat  with  my  heart  more  blest  than  heart  can  t, 
And  t  s  me,  when  she  lay  Sick  once, 
that  they  might  t  us  What  and  where  they  be. 
T  him  now  :  she  is  standing  here  at  my  head; 
as  he  speaks  who  t's  the  tale — 
T  me,  ye  yourselves.  Hold  ye  this  Arthur 

O  King,'  she  cried,  '  and  I  will  t  thee  : 

conifortable  words.  Beyond  my  tongue  to  t  thee— 

^  O  King  !  '  she  cried,  '  and  I  will  t  thee  true  : 
But  let  me  t  thee  now  another  tale  : 

Nor  shalt  thou  t  thy  name  to  anyone. 

Nor  t  my  name  to  any— no,  not  the  King.' 

but  t  thou  these  the  truth.' 

^  Tut,  t  not  me,'  said  Kay,  '  ye  are  overfine 
And  wherefore,  damsel  ?  t  me  all  ye  know 

And  day  by  day  she  thought  to  t  Geraint, 

And  t  him  what  I  think  and  what  they  say. 

And  yet  not  dare  to  t  him  what  I  think, 
sparrow-hawk,  what  is  he  ?  t  me  of  him. 
nne,  seeing  I  have  sworn  That  I  will  break 

T  her,  and  prove  her  heart  toward  the  Prince.' 

Ashamed  am  I  that  I  should  t  it  thee. 

Look  on  it,  child,  and  <  me  if  ye  know  it." 

And  yester-eve  I  would  not  t  you  of  it, 

If  he  would  only  speak  and  t  me  of  it.' 

And  I  will  t  him  all  their  caitiff  talk  ; 

And  I  will  t  him  all  their  villany. 

And  there  lay  still ;  as  he  that  t's  the  tale 

I  will  t  him  How  great  a  man  thou  art : 

Arthur  seeing  ask'd  '  T  me  your  names  ; 

for  shall  1 1  you  truth  ? 

Heaven  that  hears  1 1  you  the  clean  truth, 

if  ye  talk  of  trust  1 1  you  this, 

T  me,  was  he  like  to  thee  ?  ' 

Were  I  not  woman,  I  could  t  a  tale. 

And  mutter'd  in  himself,  '  T  her  the  charm  ! 

0  t  us — for  we  live  apart — 

Deck  her  with  these  ;  t  her,  she  shines  me  down  : 
T  me,  what  drove  thee  from  the  Table  Round, 
T  me,  and  what  said  each,  and  what  the  King  ?  ' 

1  need  not  t  thee  foolish  words,— 
Well,  I  will  t  thee :  '  O  Kin", 


343 

Hi  76 

253 

iv  95 

96 

108 

111 

116 

323 

342 

427 

„      Con.  34 

Grandmother  26 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  68 

The  Daisy  90 

Minnie  and  Winnie  16 


The  Victim  48 
60 
Window,  Letter  13 
In  Mem.  vi  19 
xiv  13 
xl  25 
„         xliv  16 
lix  16 
„     Ixxvii  10 
„    Ixxxviii  3 
4 
„  xcvi  4 

Con.  61 
Maud  /  a;  44 
xvi  33 
„      xviii  82 
xix  72 
..     II  iv  15 
•w65 
Com.  of  Arthur  95 
171 
254 
269 
339 
359 
Gareth  and  L.  156 
171 
251 
732 
1328 
Marr.  of  Geraint  65 
90 
105 
404 
423 
513 
577 
684 
702 
Geraint  and  E.  54 
66 
132 
161 
227 
Balin  and  Balan  50 
Merlin  and  V.  301 
343 
360 
613 


809 

Lancelot  and  E.  284 

1225 

Holy  Grail  28 

710 

855 

858 


Jl 


w 


TeU 


715 


Ten 


JbU  {continued)     straight  forward  ?  back  again  ?     Which  ? 

t  us  quickly.'  Pelleas  and  E.  68 

Such  as  the  wholesome  mothers  t  their  boys.  ..  197 

he  that  t's  the  tale  Says  that  her  ever- veering  ..  492 

'  T  thou  the  King  and  all  his  liars,  Last  Tournament  77 

T's  of  a  manhood  ever  less  and  lower  ?  ..  121 

for  he  that  Vs  the  tale  Liken'd  them,  ..  226 

Let  me  t  thee  now.  „  611 

till  her  time  To  t  you  :  '  Guinevere  143 

nor  would  he  t  His  vision  ;  ..         305 

Is  there  none  Will  t  the  King  I  love  him  tho'  so  late  ?  651 

Myself  must  t  him  in  that  purer  life,  .,         653 

When  I  began  to  love.     How  should  1 1  you  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  145 

How  should  the  broad  and  open  flower  t  What  sort 

of  bud  it  was,  „  151 

life  and  love,  And  t  me  where  I  am  ?  ..  177 

As  was  our  childhood,  so  our  infancy,  They  t  me,  „  250 

They  t  me  we  would  not  be  alone, —  ,.  252 

nor  t  Of  this  our  earliest,  our  closest-drawn,  .,  277 

If  I  should  t  you  how  I  hoard  in  thought  ..  288 

To  t  him  of  the  bliss  he  had  with  God—  ,.  674 

And  none  but  you  yourself  shall  t  him  of  it,  ..  iv  111 

Ah  heavens  !     Why  need  1 1  you  all  ? —  ,.  201 

I'll  t  you  the  tale  o'  my  life.  First  Quarrel  9 

fur  thou  mun  a'  sights  to  t.  North.  Cobbler  1 

an'  I'll  t  tha  why.  „  10 

Good  Sir  Richard,  t  us  now.  The  Revenge  26 

(I  did  not  t  you — A  widow  with  less  guile  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  181 

Did  I  not  <  you  they  were  twins  ? —  ..  257 

nor  can  1 1  One  from  the  other,  276 

nor  care  to  t  One  from  the  other,  .  277 

can  tha  t  ony  harm  on  'im  lass  ? —  Village  Wife  19 

I  be  fear'd  fur  to  t  tha  'ow  much —  „  47 

but,  Enmiie,  you  t  it  him  plain,  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  57 

who  can  t — Thou — England's  England-loving 

daughter —  Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  14 

who  can  t  but  the  traitors  had  won  ?  Def.  of  Lucknow  66 

They  t  me — weigh'd  him  down  into  the  abysm —  Columbus  137 

I  pray  you  t  King  Ferdinand  who  plays  with  me,  ..         222 

— but  you  will  t  the  King,  that  I,  234 

Half  hid,  they  t  me,  now  in  flowing  vines —  Tiresias  144 

will  hide  my  face,  I  will  t  you  all.  The  Wreck  12 

You  are  curious.     How  shoidd  It?  Despair  3 

In  vain  you  t  me  '  Earth  is  fair '  Ancient  Sage  169 

thev  t  me  that  the  world  is  hard,  and  harsh  of  mind,  The  Flight  101 
An  t  thim  in  Hiven  about  Molly  Magee  Tomorrow  92 

for  owt  I  can  t — Robby  wur  fust  Spinster's  S's.  41 

who  can  t  how  all  will  end  ?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  103 

t  them '  old  experience  is  a  fool,'  „  131 

Fur  I  wants  to  t  tha  o'  Roa  when  we  lived  Owd  Rod  19 

I  myself  would  t  you  all  to-day.  The  Ring  124 
Up,  get  up,  and  t  him  all,  T  him  you  were  Ijdng  !  Forlorn  55 
T  him  now  or  never  !  T  him  all  before  you  die,  „  74 
do  you  scorn  me  when  you  t  me,  0  my  lord,  Happy  23 
Bid  him  farewell  for  me,  and  t  him — Hope  !  Romney's  R.  147 
T  my  son — 0  let  me  lean  my  head  upon  your  breast.  „  153 
woman  ruin'd  the  world,  as  God's  own  scriptures  t,  Charity  3 
'  My  dear,  I  will  t  you  before  I  go.'  „  36 
only  the  Devil  can  t  what  he  means.  Riflemen  form  !  25 
But  what  may  follow  who  can  t  ?  The  Wanderer  14 
What  is  true  at  last  will  t :                                             Poets  and  Critics  9 

Tell'd  (told)     An  Sally  she  t  it  about,  North.  Cobbler  81 

I I  ya,  na  moor  o'  that !  Spinster's  S's.  93 
Moother  'ed  t  ma  to  bring  tha  down,  Owd  Rod  50 
as  I  ofiens  'ev  t  'er  mysen,  „  73 
I  <  'er  '  Yeas  I  mun  goa.'  „  98 
ya  t  'im  to  knaw  his  awn  plaace                               Church-warden,  etc.  29 

Teller  (See  also  Truth-teller)  he  felt  the  tale  Less  than  the  t :  Enoch  Arden  712 
The  told-of,  and  the  t.  Balin  and  Balan  543 

TeDJn'     an'  she  bean  a  t  it  me.  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  10 

an'  t  me  not  to  be  skeard,  Owd  Rod  85 

Dldling    (See  also  Tellin')     Which  t  what  it  is  to  die  In  Mevi.  xxxi  7 

She  blamed  herself  for  t  hearsay  tales  :  Merlin  and  V.  951 

Or  Gareth  t  some  prodigious  tale  Of  knights,  Gareth  and  L.  508 

So  she  came  in  : — I  am  long  in  t  it,  Lover's  Tale  iv  302 


Temper     One  equal  t  of  heroic  hearts, 

Of  t  amorous,  as  the  first  of  May, 

We,  conscious  of  what  t  you  are  built. 

Whence  drew  you  this  steel  t  ? 
Temperament     But  yet  your  mother's  jealous  t— 

He  has  a  solid  base  of  t : 

manfulness  And  pure  nobility  of  t. 
Temperate    That  I,  who  gaze  with  t  eyes 

but  keep  a  t  brain  ; 

Our  loyal  passion  for  our  t  kings  ; 
Temper'd    and  t  with  the  tears  Of  angels         To  — 
Tempest    when  the  crisp  slope  waves  After  a  t. 

The  t  crackles  on  the  leads, 

A  rushing  t  of  the  wrath  of  God 

After  a  t  woke  upon  a  morn 

Fixt  like  a  beacon-tower  above  the  waves  Of  t. 

Like  summer  t  came  her  tears — 

while  each  ear  was  prick'd  to  attend  A  t, 

So  drench'd  it  is  with  t,  to  the  sun, 

whatever  t's  lour  For  ever  silent ; 

So  may  whatever  t  mars  Mid-ocean, 

And  tracts  of  calm  from  t  made, 

And  felt  that  t  brooding  round  his  heart, 

and  ever  overhead  Bellow'd  the  t. 

Torn  as  a  sail  that  leaves  the  rope  is  torn  In  t : 

But  after  t,  when  the  long  wave  broke 

his  trust  that  Heaven  Will  blow  the  t 
Tempest-bufieted     T-b,  citadel-crown'd. 


Ulysses  68 

Princess  i  2 

„     i-y400 

„    OT232 

..     a  338 

.,    w254 

Marr.  of  Geraint  212 

In  Mem.  cxii  2 

Maud  I  iv  40 

Ode  on  Well  165 

-,  With  Pal.  of  Art  18 

Supp.  Confessions  127 

Sir  Galahad  53 

Aylmer's  Field  757 

Liuretius  24 

Princess  iv  494 

vi  15 

281 

vii  142 

Ode  on  Well.  175 

In  Mem.  xvii  13 

„  cxii  14 

Geraint  and  E.  11 

Merlin  and  V.  957 

Holy  Grail  213 

Guinevere  290 

To  the  Queen  ii  47 

Will  9 


Tempestuous     The  strong  <  treble  throbb'd  and  palpitated  ;    Vision  of  Sin  2S 


Freedom  38 

Supp.  Confessions  53 

D.  of  F.  Women  114 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  28 

Aylmer's  Field  794 

Boddicea  53 

Lover's  Tale  i  339 

685 

To  Virgil  2 

Demeter  and  P.  72 

The  Ring  219 

Akbar's  D.,  Inscrip.  1 


Unfurnish'd  brows,  t  tongues — 
Temple  (building)     Her  t  and  her  place  of  birth, 
The  crowds,  the  t's,  waver'd,  and  the  shore  ; 
The  palms  and  t's  of  the  South, 
swore  Not  by  the  t  but  the  gold, 
Lo  the  palaces  and  the  t, 
For  there  the  T  stood. 
I  was  led  mute  Into  her  t  like  a  sacrifice  ; 
Ilion's  lofty  t's  robed  in  fire, 
and  heard  The  murmur  of  their  t's  chanting  me. 
Shrined  him  within  the  t  of  her  heart, 

0  God  in  every  t  I  see  people  that  see  thee. 
But  it  is  thou  whom  I  search  from  t  to  t. 
A  t,  neither  Pagod,  Mosque,  nor  Church,  Akbar's  Dream  178 

Temple  (part  of  head)     Cluster'd  about  his  t's  like  a  God's.  (Enone  60 

Flush'd  in  her  t's  and  her  eyes,  Palace  of  Art  170 

brows  that  shook  and  throbb'd  From  t  unto  t.  Lover's  Tale  Hi  8 

but  how  my  t's  bum  !  The  Flight  73 

Temple-bar    High  over  roaring  T-b,  Will  Water.  69 

Temple-cave     T-c  of  thine  own  self,  Ancient  Sage  32 

Temple-eaten    college-times  Or  T-e  terms,  Aylmer's  Field  105 

Temple-gates     And  drops  at  Glory's  t-g.  You  might  have  won  34 

Tempt    length  of  ribbon  and  a  ring  To  t  the  babe,  Enoch  Arden  751 

t  The  Trojan,  while  his  neat-herds  were  abroad ;  Lucretius  87 

Temptation    Who  feel  no  touch  of  my  t,  Romney's  R.  121 

Tempted     I  well  believe  she  t  them  and  fail'd,  Merlin  and  V.  819 

Tempter    I  was  the  t,  Mother, 

Ten  (adj.)     minstrel  sings  Before  them  of  the  t  years' 

war  in  Troy,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  77 

that  thrice  t  years.  Thrice  multiplied  by  superhuman 

pangs,  St.  S.  Stylites  10 

1  grew  Twice  t  long  weary  weary  years  to  this,  „  90 
T  thousand  broken  lights  and  shapes,  Will  Water.  59 
Had  cast  upon  its  crusty  side  The  gloom  of  t  Decembers.  „  104 
so  t  years  Since  Enoch  left  his  hearth  Enoch  Arde^i  359 
That  he  who  left  you  t  long  years  ago  „  404 
And  that  was  t  years  back,  or  more,  if  I  don't  forget  Grandmother  75 
T  thousand-fold  had  grown,  flash'd  the  fierce  shield,  Gareth  and  L.  1030 
this  cut  is  fresh  ;  That  t  years  back  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  22 
t  years  before,  The  heathen  caught  and  reft  him 

of  his  tongue,  _  272 

'  t  times  nay  !     This  is  not  love :  ..  948 

But  t  slow  mornings  past,  and  on  the  eleventh  ,.  1133 

T  year  sin',  and  wa  'greed  as  well  as  a  fiddle  i' 

tune  :  North.  Cobbler  12 

Fire  from  t  thousand  at  once  of  the  rebels  Def.  of  Lucknow  22 


The  Wreck  11 


Ten  716 


Tent 


Ten  (adj.)  (continued)     And  once  for  t  long  weeks  I  tried 

Your  table  of  Pythagoras,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  14 

T  long  sweet  summer  days  uj)on  deck,  The  Wreck  64 

T  long  days  of  summer  and  sin —  „  77 

'  T  long  sweet  summer  days '  of  fever,  „        147 

An'  Shamus  O'Shea  that  has  now  t  childer.  Tomorrow  85 

Let  us  hush  this  cry  of  '  Forward  '  till  t  thousand 

years  have  gone.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  78 

Old  Virgil  who  would  write  ( lines.  Poets  and  their  B.  2 

Ull  be  fun'  upo'  four  short  legs  t  times  fur  one  upo'  two.     Owd  Rod  16 

T  year  sin— Naay — ^naay  !  .,20 

Too  laate — but  it's  all  ower  now — hall  hower — an' <  year  sin  ;    „      116 

For  t  thousand  years  Old  and  new  ? 

But  after  t  slow  weeks  her  fix'd  intent, 
Ten  (s)    Warless  ?  when  her  t's  are  thousands, 
Tenant    Careless  t's  they  ! 

As  well  as  with  his  t,  Jocky  Dawes. 

thither  flock'd  at  noon  His  t's,  wife  and  child. 

Be  t's  of  a  single  breast, 
Tenanted    We  bought  the  farm  we  t  before. 
Tend    Live  happy  :  t  thy  flowers  ; 

Were  you  sick,  ourself  Would  t  upon  you. 

That  t's  her  bristled  grunters  in  the  sludge  : ' 

we  will  t  on  him  Like  one  of  these ; 

And  were  half  fool'd  to  let  you  t  our  son, 

That  you  may  t  upon  him  with  the  prince.' 

And  t  s  upon  bed  and  bower, 

'  0  I  that  wasted  time  to  t  upon  her, 

and  t  him  curiously  Like  a  king's  heir. 

Henceforward  too,  the  Powers  that  t  the  soul, 
Tendance    nor  from  her  t  tum'd  Into  the  world  without ;  Gardener's  D.  144 

And  pensive  t  in  the  all-weary  noons.  Princess  vii  102 

breatn  Of  her  sweet  t  hovering  over  him,  Geraint  and  E.  926 

Tended    t  by  Pure  vestal  thoughts  in  the  translucent  fane  Isabel  3 

tend  thy  flowers  ;  be  <  by  My  blessing  !  Love  and  Duty  87 

But  Psyche  t  Florian  :  with  her  oft,  Melissa  came  ;  Princess  vii  55 

And  t  her  like  a  nurse. 

That  still  had  /  on  him  from  his  birth, 

And  Enid  t  on  him  there  ; 

and  every  day  she  t  him, 

women  who  t  the  hospital  bed. 
Tender    Like  the  t  amber  round, 

For  while  the  t  service  made  thee  weep. 

And  oft  I  heard  the  t  dove 

I  roU'd  among  the  t  flowers  : 

And  t  curving  lines  of  creamy  spray  ; 

Sleep  sweetly,  t  heart,  in  peace  : 

cushions  of  whose  touch  may  press  The  maiden's  t 
palm. 

for  a  t  voice  will  cry. 

But  the  t  grace  of  a  day  that  is  dead 

On  a  sudden  a  low  breath  Of  t  air  made  tremble 

The  t  pink  five-beaded  baby-soles, 

nor  from  t  hearts,  And  those  who  sorrow'd  o'er  a 
vanish'd  race, 

Where  she,  who  kept  a  t  Christian  hope. 

Made  havock  among  those  t  cells, 

roll  thy  t  arms  Round  him, 

And  dark  and  true  and  t  is  the  North. 

Delaying  as  the  t  ash  delays  To  clothe  herself. 

Like  t  things  that  being  caught  feign  death, 

there  the  t  orphan  hands  Felt  at  my  heart, 

t  ministries  Of  female  hands  and  hospitality. 

Steps  with  a  t  foot,  light  as  on  air. 

Or  thro'  the  parted  silks  the  t  face  Peep'd, 

Not  perfect,  nay,  but  full  of  t  wants, 

Mighty  Seaman,  t  and  true, 

Rolling  on  their  purple  couches  in  their  t  effeminacy 

That  breathe  a  thousand  t  vows, 

hopes  and  light  regrets  that  come  Make  April  of  her 

t  eyes ;  „  xl  8 

What  time  his  t  palm  is  prest  „  xlv  2 

whose  light-blue  eyes  Are  t  over  drowning  flies,  „  xcvi  3 

The  t  blossom  flutter  down,  Unloved,  „  ci  3 

With  t  gloom  the  roof,  the  wall ;  „     Con.  118 


Tender  (continued)     Perhaps  the  smile  and  t  tone  Came  out 


J 


The  Ring  19 
„      345 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  171 

Deserted  House  4 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  28 

Princess,  Pro.  4 

In  Mem.  xvi  3 

The  Brook  222 

Love  and  Duty  87 

Princess  Hi  321 

v21 

vi  124 

274 

315 

Maud  I  xiv  4 

Geraint  and  E.  38 

Last  Tournament  90 

Guinevere  65 


Maud  I  xix  76 

Gareth  and  L.  179 

Geraint  and  E.  924 

Lancelot  and  E.  850 

Def.  of  Lucknow  87 

Margaret  19 

The  Bridesmaid  10 

Miller's  D.  41 

Fatima  11 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  62 

To  ./.  S.  69 

Talking  Oak  180 

Locksley  Hall  87 

Break,  break,  etc.  15 

The  Brook  202 

Aylmer's  Field  186 

843 

Sea  Dreams  41 

Lucretius  22 

.  "       .    ^2 

Princess  iv  98 

106 

v  108 

435 

m72 


vii  60 
319 

Ode  on  Well.  134 

Boddicea  62 

hi  Mem.  xx  2 


of  her  pitying  womanhood,  Maud  I  vi 

And  dream  of  her  beauty  with  t  dread,  ..        xvi 

For,  Maud,  so  t  and  true,  .,       xix  85 

My  own  dove  with  the  t  eye  ?  ,,    //  iv  46 

Seem  I  not  as  t  to  him  As  any  mother  ?  Gareth  and  L.  1283 

And  seeing  them  so  t  and  so  close,  Marr.  of  Geraint  22 

To  stoop  and  kiss  the  t  little  thumb,  395 

'  Mother,  a  maiden  is  a  t  thing,  ,.            510 

and  felt  Her  low  firm  voice  and  t  government.  Geraint  and  E.  194 

At  this  the  t  soimd  of  his  own  voice  348 

And  Enid  could  not  say  one  t  word,  ,.            746 

I  think  ye  hardly  know  the  t  rhyme  Merlin  and  V.  383 

O  Master,  do  ye  love  my  t  rhyme  ?  '  ..            399 

So  t  was  her  voice,  so  fair  her  face,  401 
Then  Merlin  to  his  own  heart,  loathing,  said : 

'  O  true  and  t  !  „             791 

Yet  with  all  ease,  so  t  was  the  work  :  Lancelot  and  E.  442 

Utter'd  a  little  t  dolorous  cry.  ..            817 

'  0  sweet  father,  t  and  true.  Deny  me  not,'  1110 

This  t  rhyme,  and  evermore  the  doubt,  Pelleas  and  E.  410 

Who  see  your  (  grace  and  stateliness.  Guinevere  190 

and  all  The  careful  burthen  of  our  t  years  Lover's  Tale  i  222 

Frail  Life  was  startled  from  the  t  love  „              616 
'  Never  the  heart  among  women,'  he  said,  '  more  t  and 

true.'  The  Wreck  96 

Struck  hard  at  the  t  heart  of  the  mother.  Despair  74 
Sun  of  dawn  That  brightens  thro'  the  Mother's 

t  eyes,  Prin.  Beatrice  4 
Woman  to  her  inmost  heart,  and  woman  to  her 

t  feet,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  50 

Legend  or  true  ?  so  t  should  be  true  !  The  Ring  224 

Solved  in  the  t  blushes  of  the  peach ;  Prog,  of  Spring  34 

slowly  moving  again  to  a  melody  Yearningly  t.  Merlin  and  the  G.  91 

So  princely,  t,  truthful,  reverent,  pure —  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  4 

Tenderer     surely  with  a  love  Far  t  than  my  Queen's.     Lancelot  and  E.  1395 

Tenderest     The  fancy's  t  eddy  wreathe.  In  Mem.  xlix  6 

such  a  grace  Of  t  courtesy,  Geraint  and  E.  862 

T  of  Roman  poets  nineteen-hundred  years  ago,  Frater  Ave,  etc.  6 

in  wife  and  woman  I  found  The  t  Christ-like  creature  Charity  32 

Tenderest-hearted    Vivien,  like  the  t-h  maid  Merlin  and  V.  377 

Tenderest-touching    by  t-t  terms,  To  sleek  her  ruffled  peace         ,.  898 

Tenderly     ia  what  limits,  and  how  t ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  20 

Tender-natured    Gone  thy  t-n  mother,  wearying  to 

be  left  alone,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  57 

Tenderness     A  moment  came  the  t  of  tears.  The  form,  the  form  9 

decent  not  to  fail  In  offices  of  t,  Ulysses  41 

His  bashfulness  and  t  at  war,  Enoch  Arden  289 

So  gracious  was  her  tact  and  t :  Princess  i  24 

That  lute  and  flute  fantastic  t,  .,      iv  129 

No  saint — -inexorable — no  t —  i                   ..       v  515 

The  t,  not  yours,  that  could  not  kill,  ..      vi  186 

T  touch  by  touch,  and  last,  ,.     vii  114 

that  might  express  All-comprehensive  t,  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  47 

A  face  of  t  might  be  feign'd,  Maud  I  vi  52 

Thro'  that  great  t  for  Guinevere,  Marr.  of  Geraint  30 

There  brake  a  sudden-beaming  t  Of  manners  Lancelot  and  E.  328 

His  t  of  manner,  and  chaste  awe,  Pelleas  and  E.  110 

offices  Of  watchful  care  and  trembling  t.  Lover's  Tale  i  226 

Tender-pencil'd    The  t-p  shadow  play.  In  Mem.  xlix  12 

Tender-spirited    The  low-voiced,  t-s  Lionel,  Lover's  Tale  i  655 

Tending     t  her  rough  lord,  tho'  all  vmask'd,  Geraint  and  E.  405 

Tendon     And  scirrhous  roots  and  t's.  Amphion  64 

TenerifEe    great  flame-banner  borne  by  T,  Columbus  69 

Tenfold-complicated    abyss  Of  t-c  change.  In  Mem.  xcHi  12 

Ten-hundred-fold     Pain  heap'd  i-h-f  to  this,  were  still 

Less  burthen,  by  t-h-f,  St.  S.  Stylites  23 

Tennis     Quoit,  t,  ball — no  games  ?  Princess  Hi  215 

Tenor    My  blood  an  even  t  kept,  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  17 

Tent     Among  the  t's  I  paused  and  sung.  Two  Voices  125 

they  raised  A  <  of  satin,  elaborately  wrought  Princess  Hi  348 

No  bigger  than  a  glow-worm  shone  the  t  ,,          iv  25 

They  bore  her  back  into  the  t :  „            193 

blazon'd  lions  o'er  the  imperial  t  „             v9 

He  show'd  a  t  A  stone-shot  oS :  „              53 


Tent 


717 


Thebes 


Tent  (continued)     lie  in  the  t's  with  coarse  mankind, 

You  shall  not  lie  in  the  t's  but  here, 

on  to  the  t's  :  take  up  the  Prince.' 

And  at  thy  name  the  Tartar  t's  are  stirr'd  ; 

and  loud  With  sport  and  song,  in  booth  and  t, 

and  pitch'd  His  t's  beside  the  forest. 

And  show'd  an  empty  t  allotted  her, 

And  past  to  Enid's  t ;  and  thither  came 

Heard  in  his  t  the  moanings  of  the  King  : 

the  heavens  a  hide,  a  t  Spread  over  earth, 
Tented    The  t  winter-field  was  broken  up 
Ten-thousand    The  bearded  Victor  of  t-t  hymns. 
Ten-times     And  make,  as  t-t  worthier  to  be  thine 
Tentiug-pin    Tore  my  pavilion  from  the  t-p, 
Term  (academic)    save  for  college-times  Or  Temple- 
eaten  ^5, 

caught  the  blossom  of  the  flying  t's, 
Term  (of  time)     To  sleep  thro'  t's  of  mighty  wars, 

days  Were  dipt  by  horror  from  his  t  of  life. 

To  point  the  t  of  hxmian  strife, 

Pass  we  then  A  <  of  eighteen  years. 

Climg  closer  to  us  for  a  longer  t 

five-fold  thy  t  Of  years,  I  lay  ; 

I  spy  nor  t  nor  bound. 
Term  (word,  etc.)    (See  also  Counter-term)    Not 
master'd  by  some  modem  t ; 

mixt  with  inmost  t's  Of  art  and  science  : 

Heap'd  on  her  t's  of  disgrace, 

may  merit  well  Your  t  of  overstrain'd. 

Then  thrice  essay'd,  by  tenderest-touching  t's, 

after  that  vile  t  of  yours,  I  find  with  grief  ! 
Tnrace    The  t  ranged  along  the  Northern  front, 

I  paced  the  t,  till  the  Bear  had  wheel'd 

The  moonlight  touching  o'er  a  t 

I  used  to  walk  This  T — ^morbid. 

Rose,  on  this  t  fifty  years  ago, 

which  on  our  t  here  Glows  in  the  blue 
Terrace-lawn    On  every  slanting  t-l. 
Terrible    fear'd  To  send  abroad  a  shrill  and  t  cry, 

recollect  the  dreams  that  come  Just  ere  the  waking 
0  fair  and  strong  and  t ! 


Princess  vi  69 

94 

279 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  12 

In  Mem.  xcviii  28 

Com.  of  Arthur  58 

Geraint  and  E.  885 

922 

Pass,  of  Arthur  8 

Columbus  47 

Aylmer's  Field  110 

Princess  Hi  352 

Balin  and  Balan  68 

Holy  Grail  747 

Aylmer's  Field  105 

Princess,  Pro.  164 

Bay- Dm.,  L' Envoi  9 

Aylmer's  Field  603 

In  Mem.  I  14 

Lover's  Tale  i  287 

Columbus  197 

Tiresias  33 

MechanofhiXus  20 

Love  thou  thy  land  30 

Princess  ii  446 

Maud  II  i  14 

Merlin  and  V.  535 

898 

921 

Princess  Hi  118 

iv  212 

The  Daisy  83 

The  Eing  168 

Hoses  on  the  T.  1 

7 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  10 

Enoch  Arden  768 

t  !       Lucretius  36 

Princess  vi  163 


Love  and  Nature,  these  are  two  more  t  And  stronger.  „  165 

sang  the  t  prophetesses,  Boadicea  37 

Spurr'd  with  their  t  war-cry  ;  Geraint  and  E.  170 

T  pity,  if  one  so  beautiful  Prove,  Lover's  Tale  iv  338 

down  the  t  ridge  Plunged  in  the  last  fierce 
chaise 

These  are  Astronomy  and  (Jeology,  t  Muses  ! 

None  but  the  t  Peele  remaining 
Tecritorial    See  Lord-territorial 
Territory    You  lying  close  upon  his  t, 

they  wasted  all  the  flourishing  t, 

And  Arthur  gave  him  back  his  t, 

his  princedom  lay  Close  on  the  borders  of  a  I, 

loves  to  know  When  men  of  mark  are  in  his  < 

Led  from  the  t  of  false  Limours 

Endow  you  with  broad  land  and  t 

Estate  them  with  large  land  and  t 
Tleiror    He  that  only  rules  by  t 

Brook'd  not  the  expectant  t  of  her  heart, 

wreck,  Flights,  t's,  sudden  rescues. 

But  must,  to  make  the  t  of  thee  more. 

Then  those  that  did  not  blink  the  t, 

still  she  look'd,  and  still  the  t  grew 

leech  forsake  the  dying  bed  for  <  of  his  life  ? 

When  from  the  t's  of  Nature  a  people 
Test  (s)     I  come  to  the  t,  a  tiny  poem 
Test  (verb)     defying  change  To  t  his  worth  ; 

Well,  we  shall  t  thee  farther ; 
Tested    to  return  When  others  had  been  t) 

And  heard  it  ring  as  true  as  t  gold.' 
Testify    Yes,  as  the  dead  we  weep  for  t — 

For  I  must  live  to  t  by  fire. 
Testimony    To  this  I  call  my  friends  in  t, 

to  the  basement  of  the  tower  For  t ; 


Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  63 
Parnassus  16 
Kafiolani  28 

Princess  iv  403 

Boadicea  54 

Gareth  and  L.  78 

Marr.  of  Geraint  34 

Geraint  and  E.  229 

437 

Lancelot  and  E.  957 

1322 

The  Captain  1 

Enoch  Arden  493 

Aylmer's  Field  99 

Gareth  and  L.  1389 

1402 

Marr.  of  Geraint  615 

Happy  98 

Kapiotani  1 

Hendecasyllabics  3 

In  Mem.  xcv  28 

Merlin  and  V.  94 

Aylmer's  Field  219 

Last  Tournament  284 

Aylmer's  Field  747 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  206 

Lancelot  and  E.  1299 

Guinevere  105 


Test-question     That  was  their  main  t-q —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  155 

Tether'd     How  can  ye  keep  me  t  to  you —  Gareth  and  L.  115 

should  be  T  to  these  dead  pillars  of  the  Church —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  121 

Teuton     T  or  Celt,  or  whatever  we  be,  W.  to  Alexandra  32 

Slav,  T,  Kelt,  I  count  them  all  My  friends  Epilogue  18 

Tew  (a  worry)    (See  also  Tued)    at  fust  she  wur  all  in  a  t,    North.  Cobbler  53 

Text     Suddenly  put  her  finger  on  the  t,  Enoch  Arden  497 

Not  sowing  nedgorow  t's  and  passing  by,  Aylmer's  Field  171 

And  being  used  to  find  her  pastor  t's,  „  606 

Christian  hope.  Haunting  a  holy  t.  Sea  Dreams  42 

the  maiden  Aimt  Took  this  fair  day  for  t,  Princess,  Pro.  108 

And  the  parson  made  it  his  t  that  week.  Grandmother  29 

A  square  of  t  that  looks  a  little  blot.  The  t  no 
larger  than  the  limbs  of  fleas ;  And  every 
square  of  t  an  awful  charm, 
And  none  can  read  the  t,  not  even  I ; 

Thack  (thatch)     an'  thou  runn'd  oop  o'  the  t ; 

Thames     (See  also  Tamesa)     Came  crowing  over  T. 

Thtmk     Light  on  a  broken  word  to  t  him  with. 

I  fear'd  To  meet  a  cold  '  We  t  you, 
T  Him  who  isled  us  here,  and  roughly  set 
t  God  that  I  keep  my  eyes. 
And  t  the  Lord  I  am  King  Arthur's  fool. 

I I  the  saints,  I  am  not  great. 

I  would  t  him,  the  other  is  dead, 
'  t  God  that  I  hevn't  naw  cauf  o'  my  oan.' 
We  t  thee  with  our  voice, 

I I  him.     I  am  happy,  happy. 
Raise  me.     1 1  you. 

Thanked     God  be  < ! '  said  Alice  the  nurse. 

Assumed  that  she  had  t  him,  adding. 
Thankful     Not  t  that  his  troubles  are  no  more. 
Thanks    statue-like,  In  act  to  render  t. 

A  thousand  t  for  what  I  learn 

I  do  forgive  him  !  '     '  T,  my  love,' 

Their  debt  of  t  to  her  who  first  had  dared 

But  '  T,'  she  answer'd  '  Go  : 

you  have  our  t  for  all : 

You  saved  our  life  :  we  owe  you  bitter  t : 

To  lighten  this  great  clog  of  t, 

with  an  eye  that  swum  in  t ; 

Render  t  to  the  Giver,  (repeat) 

For  this,  for  all,  we  weep  our  t  to  thee  ! 

T,  for  the  fiend  best  knows  whether 

'  T,  venerable  friend,'  replied  Geraint ; 

maybe,  shall  have  leam'd  to  lisp  you  t.' 

to  which  She  answer'd,  '  T,  my  lord ;  ' 

my  t.  For  these  have  broken  up  my  melancholy.' 

I  bid  the  stranger  welcome.     T  at  last  ! 

O  no  more  t  than  might  a  goat  have  given 

your  feet  before  her  own  ?     And  yet  no  t : 

next  For  t  it  seems  till  now  neglected, 

T,  but  you  work  against  your  own  desire  ; 

And  love,  and  boundless  t — 

an'  am'd  naw  t  fur  'er  paains. 

my  poor  t !     I  am  but  an  alien  and  a  Genovese. 

Yield  thee  full  t  for  thy  full  courtesy 

t  to  the  Lord  that  I  never  not  listen'd  to  noan  ! 

would  yield  full  t  to  you  For  your  rich  gift, 

But  t  to  the  Blessed  Saints  that  I  came 
Thatch    (See  also  Thack)     Weeded  and  worn  the  ancient  t 

And  the  cock  hath  sung  beneath  the  t 

doves  That  sun  their  milky  bosoms  on  the  t. 

It  sees  itself  from  t  to  base 

and  drive  Innocent  cattle  under  t, 
Thatch'd     They  built,  and  t  with  leaves  of  palm. 
Thaw  (verb)     T  this  male  nature  to  some  touch 

And  t's  the  cold,  and  fills  The  flower 
Thaw  (s)     an'  the  daale  was  all  of  a  t, 

Moother  'ed  bean  sa  soak'd  wi'  the  t 
Theatre    stately  t's  Bench'd  crescent-wise. 
Thebes    in  thy  virtue  lies  The  saving  of  our  T ; 

crying  '  T,  Thy  T  shall  fall  and  perish, 

will  murmur  thee  To  thine  own  T,  while  T  thro'  thee 
shall  stand 


Merlin  and  V.  671 

681 

Spinster's  S's.  38 

Will  Water.  140 

Enoch  Arden  347 

Princess  iv  328 

Ode  on  Well.  154 

Grandmother  106 

Last  Tournament  320 

Guinevere  199 

Despair  70 

Spinster's  S's.  116 

To  W.  C.  Macready  4 

Happy  107 

Romney  s  B.  60 

Lady  Clare  17 

Geraint  and  E.  646 

LxLcretius  143 

Gardener's  D.  162 

Talking  Oak  203 

Sea  Dreams  317 

Princess  ii  141 

357 

iv  528 

531 

vi  126 

210 

Ode  on  Well.  44,  47 

Open.  Inter.  Exhib.  9 

Maud  I  i75 

Marr.  of  Geraint  303 

822 

Geraint  and  E.  264 

Merlin  and  V.  266 

270 

278 

285 

308 

Lancelot  and  E.  1096 

Lover's  Tale  iv  382 

Village  Wife  12 

Columbus  242 

To  Victor  Hugo  13 

Spinster's  S's.  8 

To  Ulysses  33 

Bandit's  Death  40 

Mariana  7 

The  Owl  i  10 

Princess  ii  103 

Requiescat  3 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  96 

Enoch  Arden  559 

Princess  vi  306 

Early  Spring  45 

Owd  Roa  39 

,,      113 

Princess  ii  369 

Tiresias  110 

115 

141 


Thebes 


718 


Thing 


Thebes  (cmitinued)     Folded  her  lion  paws,  and  look'd  to  T.         Tiresias  149 

Theft    and  you,  will  you  call  it  a  t  ? —  Rizpah  52 

The  t  were  death  or  madness  to  the  thief.  The  Ring  204 

Theme     Seem  but  the  t  of  writers,  Edwin  Morris  48 

Ah,  let  the  rusty  t  alone  !  Will  Water.  177 

warming  with  her  t  She  f  ulmined  out  her  scorn  Princess  ii  132 

Whereat  we  glanced  from  t  to  t.  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  33 

Then     (See  also  Thin)     Break  into  '  T's  '  and  '  Whens  '      Ancient  Sage  104 

Theodolind    castle  Of  Queen  T,  where  we  slept ;  The  Daisy  80 

Theory     forged  a  thousand  theories  of  the  rocks,  Edwin  Morris  18 

as  a  rogue  in  grain  Veneer'd  with  sanctimonious  t.      Princess,  Pro.  117 

They  fed  her  theories,  in  and  out  of  place  „                1 129 

pass  With  all  fair  theories  only  made  to  gild  .,               ii  233 

my  mother  still  Affirms  your  Psyche  thieved  her 

theories,  ..               Hi  92 

For  she  was  cramm'd  with  theories  out  of  books,  „           Con.  35 

Thermopylse     these  in  our  T  shall  stand,  Third  of  Feb.  47 

Thesis     The  t  which  thy  words  intend —  Two  Voices  338 

Thessalian     Or  that  T  growth,  Talking  Oak  292 

Thew     nor  ever  had  I  seen  Such  t's  of  men  :  Princess  v  256 

Nor  lose  the  wrestling  t's  that  throw  the  world  ;  „     vii  282 

I  felt  the  t's  of  Anakim,  In  Mem.  ciii  31 

Thick     (See  also  Jewel-thick)    faults  were  t  as  diist  In  vacant 

chambers,  To  the  Queen  18 

t  with  white  bells  the  clover-hill  swells  Sea- Fairies  14 
chestnuts  near,  that  hung  In  masses  t  with  milky 

cones.  Miller's  D.  56 

t  as  Autumn  rains  Flash  in  the  pools  CEnone  205 

my  voice  was  t  with  sighs  As  in  a  dream.  B.  of  F.  Women  109 
with  a  grosser  film  made  t  These  heavy,  horny  eyes.    St.  S.  Stylites  200 

We  gain'd  the  mother-city  t  with  towers,  Princess  i  112 

snowy  shoulders,  t  as  herded  ewes,  „      iv  479 

T  rosaries  of  scented  thorn,  Arabian  Nights  106 

And  thro'  t  veils  to  apprehend  Two  Voices  296 
from  beneath  Whose  t  mysterious  boughs  in  the  dark  morn  CEnone  213 

when  she  strikes  thro'  the  t  blood  Of  cattle,  Lucretius  98 

Climb  thy  t  noon,  disastrous  day  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxii  26 

So  t  with  lowings  of  the  herds,  „            xcix  3 

t  By  ashen  roots  the  violets  blow.  „              cxv  3 
Then  fell  t  rain,  plume  droopt  and  mantle  clung,    Last  Tournament  213 

Thro'  the  t  night  I  hear  the  trumpet  blow :  Guinevere  569 

T  with  wet  woods,  and  many  a  beast  therein,  Com.  of  Arthur  21 

so  quick  and  t  The  lightnings  here  and  there  Holy  Grail  493 
Thickend  (adj.)     (See  also  Grape-thicken'd)     Love's 

white  star  Beam'd  thro'  the  t  cedar  in  the  dusk.  Gardener's  D.  166 

Thicken'd  (verb)     A  clamour  t,  mixt  with  inmost  terms  Princess  ii  446 
Thickening    See  Slowly-thickening 

Thicker     T  the  drizzle  grew,  deeper  the  gloom  ;  Enoch  Arden  679 

Now  thinner,  and  now  t,  like  the  flakes  Lucretius  166 

and  mingled  with  the  haze  And  made  it  t ;  Com.  of  Arthur  436 

t  down  tlie  front  With  jewels  than  the  sward  Geraint  and  E.  689 

T  than  drops  from  thunder.  Holy  Grail  348 

Then  spoke  King  Arthur,  drawing  t  breath  :  M.  d' Arthur  148 

my  heart  beat  stronger  And  t,  Maud  I  viii  9 

Then  spoke  King  Arthur,  drawing  t  breath  :  Pass,  of  Arthur  316 

Thickest     When  t  dark  did  trance  the  sky,  Mariana  18 

Among  the  t  and  bore  down  a  Prince,  Princess  v  518 
Thicket    (see  also  Elder-thicket,  Myrrh-thicket)    Athwart  the 

t  lone  :  Claribel  10 

Or  the  dry  t's,  I  could  meet  with  her  CEnone  223 

No  branchy  t  shelter  yields  ;  Sir  Galahad  58 

some  hid  and  sought  In  the  orange  t's :  Princess  ii  460 

round  us  all  the  t  rang  To  many  a  flute  In  Mem.  xxiii  23 

and  the  t  closed  Behind  her.  Merlin  and  V.  973 

Across  my  garden  !  and  the  t  stirs.  Prog,  of  Spring  53 
Thicketed    See  Roogh-thicketed 

Thick-fleeced    livelong  bleat  Of  the  t-f  sheep  Ode  to  Memory  66 

Thick-jewell'd     T-j  shone  the  saddle-leather,  L.  of  Shalott  iii  20 

Thick-leaved    oak-tree  sigheth,  T-l,  ambrosial,  Claribel  5 

Beyond  the  t-l  platans  of  the  vale.  Princess  iii  175 

Thick-moted    When  the  t-m  sunbeam  lay  Mariana  78 

Thick-set    from  thy  topmost  head  The  t-s  hazel  dies  ;  Will  Water.  234 
Thick-twined     cave  to  cave  thro'  the  t-t  vine —            Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  95 

Thief     therefore  turning  softly  like  a  t,  Enoch  Arden  771 

storming  a  liill-fort  of  thieves  He  got  it ;  Aylmer's  Field  225 


Thief  (continued)    But  thieves  from  o'er  the  wall  Stole  the  seed    The  Flower  11 
Kill  the  foul  t,  and  wreak  me  for  my  son.'  Gareth  and  L.  363 

wood  is  nigh  as  full  of  thieves  as  leaves :  ..  789 

for  my  wont  hath  ever  been  To  catch  my  t,  ,,  822 

To  curse  this  hedgerow  t,  the  sparrow-hawk  :  Marr.  of  Geraint  309 

Who  now  no  more  a  vassal  to  the  t,  Geraint  and  E.  753 

Thieves,  bandits,  leavings  of  confusion,  Last  Tournament  95 

To  be  hang'd  for  a  t — and  then  put  away —  Rizpah  36 

Sanctuary  granted  To  bandit,  t,  assassin —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  113 

theft  were  death  or  madness  to  the  t.  The  Ring  204 

Thieved     my  mother  still  Affirms  your  Psyche  t  her  theories.  Princess  iii  92 
Thigh     (See  also  Mid-thigh-deep)    flush'd  Ganymede,  his 

rosy  t  Half-buried  Palace  of  Art  121 

it  is  written  that  my  race  Hew'd  Ammon,  hip  and  t,   D.  of  F.  Women  238 

St.  S.  Stylites  41 

Lancelot  and  E.  664 

Pelleas  and  E.  459 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  35 

Lotos-  Eaters  34 

n.  of  the  O.  Year  46 

Princess  iv  7 

Maud  I  xix  20 

Gareth  and  L.  31 

Lover's  Tale  i  421 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  39 

Prog,  of  Spring  3 

Balin  and  Baton  214 

Death  of  CEnone  21 

)  Aylmer's  Field  76 

Last  Tournament  465 


And  both  my  t's  are  rotted  with  the  dew ; 

Ramp  in  the  field,  he  smote  his  t,  and  mock'd  : 

Then  crush'd  the  saddle  with  his  t's, 
Thimbleby     Noaks  or  T — toaner  'ed  shot  'um 
Thin  (adj.)     if  his  fellow  spake,  His  voice  was  t, 

His  face  is  growing  sharp  and  t. 

O  hark,  0  hear  !  how  t  and  clear. 

When  it  slowly  grew  so  t, 

Tho'  Modred  biting  his  t  lips  was  mute, 

the  moon,  Half-melted  into  t  blue  air, 

and  her  t  hands  crost  on  her  breast — 

Wavers  on  her  /  stem  the  snowdrop  cold 

Hath  ever  and  anon  a  note  so  t 

T  as  the  batlike  shriUings  of  the  Dead 
Thin  (verb)     or  would  seem  to  t  her  in  a  day, 

waters  break  Whitening  for  half  a  league,  and  t 
themselves. 
Thin  (then)     An'  where  'ud  the  poor  man,  t,  cut  his  bit  o' 

turf  for  the  fire  ? 
Thing     All  t's  will  change  (repeat) 

Yet  all  t's  must  die. 

For  all  t's  must  die.  (repeat) 

All  t's  must  die. 

All  t's  were  born. 

that  Hesperus  all  t's  bringeth. 

And  trust  and  hope  till  t's  should  cease, 

and  t's  that  seem.  And  t's  that  be. 

Teach  me  the  nothingness  of  t's. 

all  the  dry  pied  t's  that  be  In  the  hueless  mosses 

All  t's  that  are  forked,  and  horned 


From  all  t's  outward  you  have  won  A  tearful 

But  good  t's  have  not  kept  aloof. 

High  t's  were  spoken  there, 

'  Lord,  how  long  shall  these  t's  be  ? 

Will  learn  new  t's  when  I  am  not.' 

There  is  no  other  t  express'd  But  long  disquiet 

*  These  t's  are  wrapt  in  doubt  and  dread, 

Not  simple  as  a  <  that  dies. 

many  t's  perplex,  With  motions,  checks. 

He  may  not  do  the  t  he  would. 

She  spoke  at  large  of  many  t's, 

all  t's  in  order  stored,  A  haunt  of  ancient  Peace 

'  O  all  t's  fair  to  sate  my  various  eyes  ! 

But  all  these  t's  have  ceased  to  be, 

A  land  where  all  t's  always  seem'd  the  same  ! 

While  all  t's  else  have  rest  from  weariness  ? 

All  t's  have  rest :  why  should  we  toil  alone, 

We  only  toil,  who  are  the  first  of  t's, 

the  roof  and  crown  of  t's  ? 

All  t's  are  taken  from  us. 

All  t's  have  rest,  and  ripen  toward  the  grave 

And  our  great  deeds,  as  half-forgotten  t's. 

to  start  in  pain.  Resolved  on  noble  t's. 

How  beautiful  a  t  it  was  to  die  For  God 

A  man  may  speak  the  t  he  will ; 

keep  a  t,  its  use  will  come. 

A  little  t  may  harm  a  wounded  man. 

This  is  a  shameful  t  for  men  to  lie. 

and  do  the  1 1  bad  thee,  watch. 

Such  a  precious  t,  one  worthy  note. 


Tonwrrow  65 

Nothing  will  Die  15,  38 

All  Things  will  Die  8 

13,  49 

14 

47 

Leonine  Eleg.  13 

Swpp.  Confessions  31 

173 

A  Character  4 

The  Mermaid  48 

53 


More  t's  are  wrought  by  prayer  Than  this  world  dreams  of. 


race,  Margaret  11 

My  life  is  full,  etc.  2 

Alexander  12 

Poland  9 

Two  Voices  63 

248 

266 

288 

299 

303 

Miller's  D.  155 

Palace  of  Art  87 

193 

May  Queen,  Con.  48 

Lotos- Eaters  24 

..     C.  S.  14 

15 

16 

24 

46 

51 

78 

D.  of  F.  Women  42 

231 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  8 

The  Epic  42 

M.  d' Arthur  42 

78 

80 

89 


247 

1 


Thing 


719 


Thing 


Thing  (continued)     '  Come  With  all  good  t's,  and  war 

shall  be  no  more.' 
We  spoke  of  other  fs  ;  we  coursed  about 
and  thought  Hard  t's  of  Dora. 
And  all  the  t's  that  had  been. 
(For  they  had  pack'd  the  t  among  the  beds,) 
You  could  not  light  upon  a  sweeter  t : 
betwixt  shame  and  pride,  New  t's  and  old, 
should  have  seen  him  wince  As  from  a  venomous  t : 
spoke  I  knomng  not  the  t's  that  were, 
slow  sweet  hours  that  bring  us  all  t's  good.  The 

slow  sad  hours  that  bring  us  all  t's  ill.  And  all 

good  t's  from  evil, 
'  We  sleep  and  wake  and  sleep,  but  all  t's  move  ; 
liuman  t's  returning  on  themselves  Move  onward, 
something  more,  A  bringer  of  new  t's  ; 
Thou  seest  all  t's,  thou  wilt  see  my  grave  : 
easy  t's  to  understand — 

sorrow's  crown  of  sorrow  is  remembering  happier  t's, 
but  earnest  of  the  t's  that  they  shall  do  : 
all  t's  here  are  out  of  joint : 
to  have  loved  so  slight  a  t. 
Howsoever  these  t's  be,  a  long  farewell 
Here  all  t's  in  their  place  remain, 
All  precious  t's,  discover'd  late. 
Well — were  it  not  a  pleasant  t  To  fall  asleep 
nor  take  Half-views  of  men  and  t's. 
K  old  t's,  there  are  new  ; 
I  look  at  all  t's  as  they  are, 
Like  all  good  t's  on  earth  ! 
I  hold  it  good,  good  t's  should  pass  : 
thou  shalt  from  all  t's  suck  Marrow 
She  will  order  all  t's  duly, 
As  looks  a  father  on  the  t's  Of  his  dead  son, 
Callest  thou  that  /  a  leg  ? 
Tomohrit,  Athos,  all  t's  fair, 
came  a  change,  as  all  t's  human  change, 
tum'd  The  current  of  his  talk  to  graver  t's 
he  set  his  hand  To  do  the  t  he  will'd, 
Annie,  there  is  a  <  upon  my  mind, 
and  all  these  t's  fell  on  her  Sharp  as  reproach, 
he  himself  Moved  haunting  people,  t's  and  places, 
Because  t's  seen  are  mightier  than  t's  heard. 
Almost  to  all  t's  could  he  turn  his  hand. 
Nor  could  he  understand  how  money  breeds.  Thought 

it  a  dead  t ;  yet  himself  could  make  The  t  that  is  not 

as  the  t  that  is. 
And  how  it  was  the  t  his  daughter  wish'd, 
Re-risen  in  Katie's  eyes,  and  all  t's  well. 
Took  joyful  note  of  all  t's  joyful. 
And  neither  loved  nor  liked  the  t  he  heard. 
T's  in  an  Aylmer  deem'd  impossible, 
The  t's  belonging  to  thy  peace  and  ours  ! 
is  it  a  light  t  That  I,  their  guest,  their  host, 
all  t's  work  together  for  the  good  Of  those  ' — 
Another  and  another  frame  of  t's  For  ever  : 
Which  t's  appear  the  work  of  mighty  Gods, 
universal  culture  for  the  crowd,  And  all  t's 
made  it  death  For  any  male  t  but  to  peep  at  us.' 
And  they  that  know  such  t's — 
not  to  answer.  Madam,  all  those  hard  t's 
And  two  dear  t's  are  one  of  double  worth. 
And  still  she  rail'd  against  the  state  of  t's. 
One  mind  in  all  t's  : 
For  all  t's  were  and  were  not. 
Your  Highness  might  have  seem'd  the  t  you  say.' 
for  all  t's  serve   their  time  Toward  that    great 

year 
To  harm  the  t  that  trusts  him. 
And  all  t's  were  and  were  not. 
Sweet  is  it  to  have  done  the  t  one  ought. 
Like  tender  t's  that  being  caught  feign  death, 
As  he  that  does  the  t  they  dare  not  do, 
I  myself,  What  know  I  of  these  t's  ? 
That  all  t's  grew  more  tragic  and  more  strange  ; 


M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  28 

Gardener's  D.  222 

Dora  58 

„  107 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  44 

52 

61 

:  „  72 

Edwin  Morris  89 


Love  and  Duty  51 

Golden  Year  22 

25 

Ulysses  28 

Tithonus  73 

Locksley  Hall  55 

76 

118 

133 

148 

189 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  53 

Arrival  1 

L' Envoi  3 

Will  Water.  52 

58 

71 

202 

205 

213 

L.  of  Burleigh  39 

The  Letters  23 

Vision  of  Sin  89 

To  E.  L.  5 

Enoch  Arden  101 

203 

295 

399 

487 

604 

766 

813 


The  Brook  7 

140 

169 

Aylmer' s  Field  67 

250 

305 

740 

789 

Sea  Breams  158 

Liuiretivs  42 

102 

Princess,  Pro.  110 

152 

il44 

a  345 

419 

„  iii  84 

91 

189 

202 

iv  73 
248 
567 

■w67 
108 
160 
284 

m23 


Thing  {continued)    May  these  t's  be  ! '    Sighing  she  spoke 

*  I  fear  They  will  not.' 
trust  in  all  t's  high  Comes  easy  to  him. 
Too  comic  for  the  solemn  t's  they  are, 
If  aught  of  t's  that  here  befall  Touch  a  spirit  among 

t's  divine, 
let  all  good  t's  await  Him  who  cares  not  to  be  great. 
There  might  be  left  some  record  of  the  t's  we  said. 
They  knew  the  precious  t's  they  had  to  guard : 
Welcome  her,  all  t's  youthful  and  sweet. 
And  all  t's  look'd  half-dead, 
and  look'd  the  t  that  he  meant ; 
laughing  at  t's  that  have  long  gone  by, 
o'  use  to  saay  the  t's  that  a  do. 
On  them  and  theirs  and  all  t's  here  : 
Of  their  dead  selves  to  higher  t's. 
And  shall  I  take  a  <  so  blind, 
like  a  guilty  1 1  creep  At  earliest  morning 
For  now  so  strange  do  these  t's  seem. 
And  ask  a  thousand  t's  of  home  ; 
Behold,  ye  speak  an  idle  t : 

hardly  worth  my  while  to  choose  Of  t's  all  mortal. 
To  keep  so  sweet  a  t  alive  :  ' 
And  all  he  said  of  t's  divine, 
Shall  count  new  t's  as  dear  as  old  : 
May  some  dim  touch  of  earthly  t's 
And  other  than  the  t's  I  touch.' 
For  love  reflects  the  t  beloved  ; 
How  should  he  love  a  <  so  low  ?  ' 
So  little  done,  such  t's  to  be. 
In  fitting  aptest  words  to  t's. 
But  over  all  t's  brooding  slept 
whether  trust  in  t's  above  Be  dimm'd  of  sorrow, 
Where  all  t's  round  me  breathed  of  him. 
these  t's  pass,  and  I  shall  prove  A  meeting  somewhere 
The  glory  of  the  sum  of  t's 
And  he,  he  knows  a  thousand  t's. 
talk  and  treat  Of  all  t's  ev'n  as  he  were  by  ; 
Best  seem'd  the  t  he  was,  and  join'd 
Submitting  all  t's  to  desire. 
But  I  was  born  to  other  t's. 
Thou  watchest  all  t's  ever  dim  And  dimmer, 
I  cannot  think  the  t  farewell. 
That  sees  the  course  of  human  t's. 
Love  for  the  silent  t  that  had  made  false  haste 
cannot  I  be  Like  t's  of  the  season  gay, 
A  wounded  t  with  a  rancorous  cry. 
This  broad-brimm'd  hawker  of  holy  t's, 
Her  mother  has  been  a  t  complete, 
I  know  it  the  one  bright  t  to  save 
Had  given  her  word  to  a  <  so  low  ? 
Beat,  happy  stars,  timing  with  t's  below, 
I  have  cursed  him  even  to  lifeless  t's) 
For  a  shell,  or  a  flower,  little  t's 
Comfort  her,  comfort  her,  all  t's  good. 
But  speak  to  her  all  t's  holy  and  high, 
another,  a  lord  of  all  t's,  praying 
But  is  ever  the  one  t  silent  here. 
I  come  to  be  grateful  at  last  for  a  little  t : 
in  a  weary  world  my  one  t  bright ; 
his  chamberlain,  to  whom  He  trusted  all  t's, 
wrote  All  t's  and  whatsoever  Merlin  did 
She  answer'd,  '  These  be  secret  t's,' 
and  ask'd  him  if  these  t's  were  truth — 
King  In  whom  high  God  hath  breathed  a  secret  t. 


Princess  vii  296 

329 

„      Con.  67 

Ode  on  Well.  138 

198 

Third  of  Feb.  18 

41 

W.  to  Alexandra  8 

Grandmother  34 

45 

92 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  6 

Lit.  Squabbles  12 

In  Mem.  i  4 

iii  13 

vii  7 

xiii  15 

xiv  12 

xxi  21 

xxxiv  11 

XXXV  7 

xxxvii  18 

xl2S 

xliv  11 

xlv  8 

Hi  2 

IxlQ 

Ixxiii  2 

Ixaro  6 

Ixxviii  7 

Ixxxv  9 

32 

98 

Ixxxviii  11 

xcvii  32 

cvii  20 

cxi  13 

cxiv  8 

cxx  12 

cxxiS 

cxxiii  12 

cxxviii  4 

Maud  /  i  58 

iv3 

a;  34 

41 

xiii  35 

xvi  20 

27 

xviii  81 

xix  15 

//  a  64 

75 

78 

1)32 


IllviS 

17 

Com.  of  Arthur  146 

157 

318 

398 

501 

Gareth  and  L.  23 

65 


and  thence  swoop  Down  upon  all  t's  base, 
had  the  t  I  spake  of  been  Mere  gold — 
New  t's  and  old  co-twisted,  as  if  Time  Were 

nothing,  „  226 

and  flash'd  as  those  Dull-coated  t's,  „  686 

And  deems  it  carrion  of  some  woodland  t,  „  748 
these  t's  he  told  the  King.                                           Marr.  of  Geraint  161 

And  may  you  light  on  all  t's  that  you  love,  „  226 

His  dwarf,  a  vicious  under-shapen  t,  „  412 

'  Mother,  a  maiden  is  a  tender  t,  „  510 


Thing 


720 


Think 


Thing  (continued)    '  These  two  t's  shalt  thou  do,  or  else 

thou  diest.  Man.  of  Geraini  580 

These  two  t's  shalt  thou  do,  or  thou  shalt  die.'     And 

Edym  answer'd,  '  These  t's  will  I  do, 
In  silver  tissue  talking  t's  of  state  ; 
But  evermore  it  seem'd  an  easier  t 
Tho'  men  may  bicker  with  the  t's  they  love, 
What  t  soever  ye  may  hear,  or  see, 
Half  ridden  off  with  by  the  t  he  rode, 
Each  hurling  down  a  heap  of  t's  that  rang 
I  never  yet  beheld  a  <  so  pale. 
I  will  do  the  1 1  have  not  done, 
or  what  had  been  those  gracious  t's, 
As  of  a  wild  t  taken  in  the  trap, 
Took,  as  in  rival  heat,  to  holy  t's  ; 
I  suffer  from  the  t's  before  me, 
he  defileth  heavenly  t's  With  earthly  uses  ' — 
'  The  fire  of  Heaven  is  lord  of  all  t's  good, 
My  mind  involved  yourself  the  nearest  t 
unashamed,  On  all  t's  all  day  long, 
But  when  the  t  was  blazed  about  the  court, 
To  t's  with  every  sense  as  false  and  foul 
The  seeming-injured  simple-hearted  t 
In  truth,  but  one  t  now — better  have  died 
One  flash,  that,  missing  all  t's  else, 
speaking  in  the  silence,  full  Of  noble  t's, 
Lavaine  gaped  upon  him  As  on  a  (  miraculous, 
For  if  I  could  believe  the  t's  you  say 
in  half  disdain  At  love,  life,  all  t's. 
We  moulder — as  to  t's  without  I  mean- — 
But  who  first  saw  the  holy  t  to-day  ?  ' 
glanced  and  shot  Only  to  holy  t's  ; 
So  now  the  Holy  T  is  here  again  Among  us. 
But  since  I  did  not  see  the  Holy  T, 
all  these  t's  at  once  Fell  into  dust, 
the  Lord  of  all  t's  made  Himself  Naked  of  glory 
thy  sister  taught  me  first  to  see.  This  Holy  T, 
And  this  high  Quest  as  at  a  simple  t : 
'  Gawain,  and  blinder  imto  holy  t's 
strong  man-breasted  t's  stood  from  the  sea, 
in  the  cellars  merry  bloated  t's  Shoulder'd  the  spigot. 


A  little  t  may  harm  a  wounded  man  ; 

This  is  a  shameful  t  for  men  to  lie. 

and  do  the  1 1  bade  thee,  watch. 

Surely  a  precious  t,  one  worthy  note, 

More  t's  are  wrought  by  prayer  Than  this  world 

dreams  of. 
Moved  from  the  cloud  of  unforgotten  t's, 
Once  or  twice  she  told  me  (For  I  remember  all  t's) 
And  saw  the  motion  of  all  other  t's  ; 
Why  were  we  one  in  all  t's, 
till  the  t's  familiar  to  her  youth  Had  made 
I  never  yet  beheld  a  t  so  strange. 
Of  all  t's  upon  earth  the  dearest  to  me.' 
That  which  of  all  t's  is  the  dearest  to  me, 
I  that  hold  them  both  Dearest  of  all  t's — 
that  ever  such  t's  should  be  ! 
God's  free  air,  and  hope  of  better  t's. 
wroth  at  t's  of  old — No  fault  of  mine, 
greatness  and  touching  on  all  t's  great, 
some  have  gleams  or  so  they  say  Of  more  than 

mortal  t's.' 
in  the  sidelong  eyes  a  gleam  of  all  t's  ill — 
He  !  where  is  some  sharp-pointed  t  ? 
there's  rason  in  all  t's,  yer  Honour, 
That  a  man  be  a  durty  t  an'  a  trouble 
an'  saayin'  ondecent  t's, 
Bringer  home  of  all  good  t's. 
All  good  t's  may  move  in  Hesper, 
the  Heavenly  Power  Makes  all  t's  new,  (repeat) 
Expecting  all  t's  in  an  hour — 
Faih  t's  are  slow  to  fade  away, 


586 

663 

Geraint  and  E.  108 

325 

415 

460 

594 

615 

625 

636 

723 

Balin  and  Balan  100 

284 

421 

452 

Merlin  and  V.  300 

666 

743 

797 

902 

918 

932 

Lancelot  and  E.  339 

453 

1097 

1239 

Holy  Grail  39 

67 

76 

124 

281 

388 

447 

470 

668 

870 

Guinevere  246 

267 

Pass,  of  Arthur  210 

246 

248 

257 

415 

Lover's  Tale  i  48 

346 

574 

a  26 

iv  95 
303 
319 

348 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  289 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  10 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  10 

21 

The  Wreck  50 


May  Queen,  N. 


An'  smoakin'  an'  thinkin'  o'  t's — 
A  thousand  t's  are  hidden  still 
This  l,  that  t  is  the  rage, 


Ancient  Sage  215 
The  Flight  31 
72 
Tomorrow  6 
Spinster's  S's.  50 
90 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  185 
186 
Early  Spring  2,  44 
Freedom  39 
To  Prof.  Jehb  1 
Owd  Rod  34 
Mechanophilus  23 
Poets  and  Critics  1 


Think  T  my  belief  would  stronger  grow  !  Supp.  Confessions  IS 
1 1  that  pride  hath  now  no  place  Nor  sojourn  in  me.  „  120 
I  walk,  I  dare  not  t  of  thee,  Oriana  93 
'  T  you  this  mould  of  hopes  and  fears  Two  Voices  28 
Thou  canst  not  t,  but  thou  wilt  weep.  „  51 
When  she  would  t,  where'er  she  tum'd  Palace  of  Art  225 
As  I  came  up  the  valley  whom  t  ye  should  I  see.  May  Queen  13 
"                      -----    ^,^   ^^ 

40 

Con.  11 

41 

M.  d' Arthur  17 

Gardener's  D.  99 

Dora  29 

,,119 

Edwin  Morris  77 

82 

St.  S.  Stylites  92 

126 

Love  and  Duty  32 

Locksley  Hall  51 

73 

Day- Dm.,  Ep.  4 

Will  Water  119 

L.  of  Burleigh  4 

Vision  of  Sin  77 

141 

Enoch  Arden  318 

411 

417 

851 

Aylmer's  Field  267 

Sea  Dreams  129 

Princess,  Pro.  143 

il25 

158 

•  a  196 

226 

334 

408 

Hi  235 

II 152 

401 

429 

m200 

277 

329 

vii  145 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  32 

Grandmother  17 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  7 

12,  38 

14 

Spiteful  Letter  7 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  11 

xvi  15 

XX  19 

xxii  19 

xcvii  24 

c20 

cxix  8 

cxx  2 

cxxiii  12 

Con.  126 

Mavd   I  X  26 

„       xiii  10 

„  XV  1 

„        xvi  12 

xviii  10 

„    II  a  60 

„  « 45 

86 

Com.  of  Arthur  250 

Gareth  and  L.  471 

Marr.  of  Geraint  90 


low  i'  the  mould  and  t  no  more  of  me. 
often  with  you  when  you  t  I'm  far  away. 

I  i  it  can't  be  long  before  I  find  release  ; 
So  now  1 1  my  time  is  near.     I  trust  it  is. 

I I  that  we  Shall  never  more, 
T  you  they  sing  Like  poets, 
Consider,  William  :  take  a  month  to  t, 
And,  now  I  t,  he  shall  not  have  the  boy, 
Edwin,  do  not  t  yourself  alone  Of  all  men  happy. 

I  have,  1 1, — Heaven  knows — as  much  within  ; 

I I  that  I  have  borne  as  much  as  this — 
Ha  !  ha  !     They  t  that  I  am  somewhat, 
let  me  t  'tis  well  for  thee  and  me — 
t  not  they  are  glazed  with  wine. 
Can  1 1  of  her  as  dead, 
'  What  wonder,  if  he  t's  me  fair  ?  ' 
I  <  he  came  like  Ganymede, 
And  1 1  thou  lov'st  me  well.' 
I  remember,  when  1 1, 

I  <  we  know  the  hue  Of  that  cap  upon  her  brows. 

I I  your  kindness  breaks  me  down ; 

I  do  <  They  love  me  as  a  father  : 
T  upon  it :  For  I  am  well-to-do — 
Itl  have  not  three  days  more  to  live  ; 
t — For  people  talk'd — that  it  was  wholly  wise 
To  t  that  in  our  often-ransack'd  world 

I I  they  should  not  wear  our  rusty  gowns, 
1 1  the  year  in  which  our  olives  fail'd. 

I  confess  with  right)  you  t  me  bound  In  some  sort, 
'  who  could  /  The  softer  Adams  of  your  Academe, 

I I  no  more  of  deadly  lurks  therein, 
Nor  t  I  bear  that  heart  within  my  breast, 
What  t  you  of  it,  Florian  ? 
You  grant  me  license  :  might  I  use  it  ?  < ; 

I  almost  t  That  idiot  legend  credible, 
for  since  you  t  me  touch'd  In  honour — 
indeed  1 1  Our  chiefest  comfort  is  the  little  child 
to  1 1  might  be  something  to  thee. 
And  t  that  you  might  mix  his  draught  with  death, 
— verily  It  to  win.' 
'  If  you  be,  what  1 1  you,  some  sweet  dream, 

0  ye,  the  wise  who  t,  the  wise  who  reign, 
you  t  I  am  hard  and  cold  ; 
Time  to  t  on  it  then  ;  for  thou'll 
an'  we  boath  on  us  t's  tha  an  ass.  (repeat) 
She's  a  beauty  thou  t's — 

I I  not  much  of  yours  or  of  mine, 
He  t's  he  was  not  made  to  die ; 
And  stunn'd  me  from  my  power  to  t 
To  see  the  vacant  chair,  and  t '  How  good  !  how  kind  ! 
And  t,  that  somewhere  in  the  waste 

He  looks  so  cold :  she  t's  him  kind. 
1 1  once  more  he  seems  to  die. 
And  t  of  early  days  and  thee, 
1 1  we  are  not  wholly  brain, 

1  cannot  t  the  thing  farewell. 
Result  in  man,  be  bom  and  t. 

Bound  for  the  Hall,  and  1 1  for  a  bride. 

And  six  feet  two,  as  I  <,  he  stands  ; 

Shall  I  not  take  care  of  all  that  1 1, 

T  I  may  hold  dominion  sweet, 

shook  my  heart  to  t  she  comes  once  more  ; 

t  that  it  well  Might  drown  all  life  in  the  eye, — 

Not  let  any  man  t  for  the  public  good, 

I  could  even  weep  to  /  of  it ; 

Yea,  but  ye — t  ye  this  king — 

T  ye  this  fellow  will  poison  the  King's  dish  ? 

And  tell  him  what  1 1  and  what  they  say. 


I 


Think 


721 


Thorpe 


I    Tivak  (continued)    And  yet  not  dare  to  tell  him  what  I  <,    Marr.  of  Geraint  105 

£            Ye  t  the  rustic  cackle  of  your  bourg  „            276 

'            Moves  him  to  t  what  kind  of  bird  it  is  That  sings  „            331 

To  t  or  say,  '  There  is  the  nightingale  ; '  „             342 

Let  never  maiden  t,  however  fair,  „             721 

let  me  t  Silence  is  wisdom  :  Merlin  and  V.  252 

O,  if  you  t  this  wickedness  in  me,  „            339 

but  t  or  not,  By  Heaven  that  hears  I  tell  you  „             342 

because  1 1,  However  wise,  ye  hardly  know  me  yet.'  „            354 

I  <  ye  hardly  know  the  tender  rhyme  „  383 
O  Vivien,  For  you,  methinks  you  t  you  love  me  well ;  „  483 
However  well  ye  t  ye  love  me  now  ,,  516 
Spleen-born,  I  t,  and  proofless.  ,,  702 
Farewell ;  t  gently  of  me,  for  I  fear  „  926 
there,  1 1,  So  ye  will  learn  the  courtesies  of  the 

court,  Lancelot  and  E.  698 

sure  1 1  this  fruit  is  hung  too  high  „               774 

ye  1 1  show  myself  Too  dark  a  prophet :  Holy  Grail  321 

t<j  ^  of  Modred's  dusty  fall,  Guinevere  55 

As  I  could  /,  sweet  lady,  yours  would  be  ,,        352 

Not  ev'n  in  inmost  thought  to  t  again  „        374 

but  rather  t  How  sad  it  were  for  Arthur,  „        495 

t  not,  tho'  thou  wouldst  not  love  thy  lord,  „        508 

Yet  t  not  that  I  come  to  urge  thy  crimes,  .,        532 

what  hope  ?     1 1  there  was  a  hope,  „        630 

I I  that  we  Shall  never  more,  Pass,  of  Arthur  185 
(They  told  her  somewhat  rashly  as  1 1)  Lover's  Tale  iv  98 
Do  you  1 1  was  scared  by  the  bones  ?  Rizpah  55 
Do  you  t  that  I  care  for  my  soul  „  78 
1 1  that  you  mean  to  be  kind,  „  81 
t  what  saailors  a'  seean  an'  a'  doon ;  North.  Cobbler  4 
as  'appy  as  'art  could  t,  „  15 
yet  she  t's  She  sees  you  when  she  hears.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  192 
1 1  this  gross  hard-seeming  world  „  229 
It  I  likewise  love  your  Edith  most.  „  293 
t  he  was  one  of  those  who  would  break  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  8 
bullet  broke  thro'  the  brain  that  could  t  for  the 

rest ;  Def.  of  Imcknow  20 

I  beant  sich  a  fool  as  ye  t's  ;  Spinster's  S's.  18 

I  t's  as  I'd  like  fur  to  hev  Owd  Rod  12 

I  t's  least waays  as  I  wasn't  afeard  ;  „        86 

thaw  I  didn't  haafe  t  as  'e'd  'ear,  „         91 

tho'  I  t  I  hated  him  less.  Bandit's  Death  17 

Thinketh     then  t,  '  I  have  found  A  new  land,  Palace  of  Art  283 

Thinkin'     An'  smoakin'  an'  t'  o'  things —  Owd  Rod  34 

Thinking    (See  also  Half -thinking,  Thinkin')    for  three  hours 

he  sobb'd  o'er  William's  child  T  of  William.  Dora  168 

Still  downward  t '  dead  or  dead  to  me  ! '  Enoch  Arden  689 

Enoch  t '  after  I  am  gone,  „          834 

t  that  her  clear  germander  eye  Droopt  Sea  Dreams  4 

And  t  of  the  days  that  are  no  more.  Princess  iv  43 

She  flung  it  from  her,  t :  „   Con.  32 

I           t,  '  here  to-day,'  Or  '  here  to-morrow  In  Mem.  vi  23 

And  t  '  this  will  please  him  best,'  „              31 

Looking,  t  of  all  I  have  lost ;  Maud  II  ii  46 
t  as  he  rode,  '  Her  father  said  That  there  between      Com.  of  Arthur  78 

t,  that  if  ever  yet  was  wife  True  to  her  lord,  Marr.  of  Geraint  46 

Geraint,  now  t  that  he  heard  The  noble  hart  at  bay,  „            232 

He  t  that  he  read  her  meaning  there,  Laiicelot  and  E.  86 

<  ■  Is  it  Lancelot  who  has  come  Despite  the  wound  „            565 

Thinn'd     T,  or  would  seem  to  thin  her  in  a  day,  Aylmer's  Field  76 
councils  t,  And  armies  waned,  for  magnet-like  she 

drew  Merlin  and  V.  572 

Thiimer    Then  her  cheek  was  pale  and  t  Locksley  Hall  21 

they  fly  Now  t,  and  now  thicker,  like  the  flakes  Lucretius  166 

And  t,  clearer,  farther  going  !  Princess  iv  8 

Our  voices  were  t  and  fainter  V.  of  Maeldune  22 

Thinnest    Slow-dropping  veils  of  t  lawn,  did  go  ;  Lotos-Eaters  11 

Which  is  t?  thme  or  mine  ?  Vision  of  Sin  90 

Xhild     And  set  in  Heaven's  t  story.  Will  Water.  70 

t  child  was  sickly-bom  and  grew  Yet  sicklier,  Enoch  Arden  261 

Then  the  t  night  after  this,  „             907 

There  stands  the  t  fool  of  their  allegory.'  Gareth  and  L.  1085 

Then  the  t  brother  shouted  o'er  the  bridge,  „  1096 
And  on  the  t  day  will  again  be  here,                         Marr.  of  Geraint  222 


Third  (continued)  But  when  the  t  day  from  the  hunting- 
morn  Marr.  of  Geraint  b^l 
So  bent  he  seem'd  on  going  the  t  day,  ,,  604 
Bent  as  he  seem'd  on  going  this  t  day,  „  625 
hope  The  t  night  hence  will  bring  thee  news  of  gold.'  Pelleas  and  E.  357 
t  night  brought  a  moon  With  promise  of  large  light  „  393 
Thou  t  great  Canning,  stand  among  our  best  Epit.  on  Stratford  1 
I  brought  you  to  that  chamber  on  your  t  September 

birthday  The  Ring  129 

Third-rate    Somfe  t-r  isle  half-lost  among  her  seas  ?  To  the  Queen  ii  25 

Thirst    In  hungers  and  in  t's,  fevers  and  cold,  St.  S.  Stylites  12 

her  t  she  slakes  Where  the  bloody  conduit  runs.  Vision  of  Sin  143 

and  when  I  thought  my  t  Would  slay  me,  Holy  Grail  379 

'  And  on  I  rode,  and  greater  was  my  t.  „  401 

there  the  hermit  slaked  my  burning  t,  „  461 

with  t  in  the  middle-day  heat.  V.  of  Maeldune  50 

Thirsted     1 1  for  the  brooks,  the  showers :  Fatima  10 

Thirsteth     He  that  t,  come  and  drink  !  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  134 

Thirsting    only  t  For  the  right.  Ode  on  Well.  203 

and  I  was  left  alone.  And  t,  Holy  Grail  390 

Thirsty     O  to  watch  the  t  plants  Imbibing  !  Princess  ii  422 

And  I  was  t  even  unto  death  ;  Holy  Grail  377 

Thirty     (See  also  Thutty)     '  Will  t  seasons  render  plain  Two  Voices  82 

But  t  moons,  one  honeymoon  to  that,  Edwin  Morris  29 

larded  with  the  steam  Of  t  thousand  dinners.  Will  Water.  224 

By  t  hills  I  hurry  down,  The  Brook  27 

I  walk'd  with  one  I  loved  two  and  t  years  ago.  V.  of  Caut&retz  4 

The  two  and  t  years  were  a  mist  that  rolls  away  ;  „  6 

I  well  remember  that  red  night  When  t  ricks.  All 

flaming,  To  Mary  Boyle  36 

Thistle    I  could  not  move  a  t ;  Amphion  66 

Let  there  be  t's,  there  are  grapes ;  Will  Water.  57 

stubborn  t  bursting  Into  glossy  purples,  Ode  on  Well.  206 

many  a  prickly  star  Of  sprouted  t  Marr.  of  Geraint  314 

Figs  out  of  t's,  silk  from  bristles.  Last  Tournament  356 

flower.  That  shook  beneath  them,  as  the  t  shakes  Guinevere  254 

the  wool  of  a  t  a-flyin'  an'  seeadin'  Spinster's  S's.  79 

Are  figs  of  t's  ?  or  grapes  of  thorns  ?  Riflemen  form  /  10 

Thistledown    soft  winds.  Laden  with  t  Lover's  Tale  ii  13 

Thomas  Howard     (See  also  Howard)    Then  sware  Lord 

T  H  :  The  Revenge  4 

Thor     To  T  and  Odin  lifted  a  hand  :  The  Victim  8 

Thorn     (See  also  Thum)     my  sin  was  as  a  <  Among 

the  t's  Supp.  Confessions  5 

Thick  rosaries  of  scented  t,  Arabian  Nights  106 

I  know  That  all  about  the  t  will  blow  Two  Voices  59 

as  a  <  Turns  from  the  sea  ;  Audley  Court  54 

like  me,  with  scourges  and  with  t's  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  180 

T's,  ivies,  woodbine,  mistletoes,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  43 

we  reach'd  A  mountain,  like  a  wall  of  burs  and  t's  ;        Sea  Dreams  119 
A  rosebud  set  with  little  wilful  t's.  Princess,  Pro.  154 

Shadow  and  shine  is  life,  little  Annie,  flower  and  t.  Grandmother  60 

I  have  heard  of  t's  and  briers.  Window,  Marr.  Morn.  20 

Over  the  t's  and  briers,  „  21 

The  path  we  came  by,  t  and  flower.  In  Mem.  xlvi  2 

I  took  the  t's  to  bind  my  brows,  „  Ixix  7 

The  fool  that  wears  a  crown  of  t's :  „  12 

bristles  all  the  brakes  and  t's  „  cvii  9 

evermore  Seem'd  catching  at  a  rootless  t,  Geraint  and  E.  378 

T's  of  the  crown  and  shivers  of  the  cross,  Balin  and  Balan  111 

where  the  winter  t  Blossoms  at  Christmas,  Holy  Grail  52 

in  a  land  of  sand  and  t's,  (repeat)  „    376,  390 

And  wearying  in  a  land  of  sand  and  t's.  „  420 

I  cared  not  for  the  t's ;  the  t's  were  there.  Pelleas  and  E.  404 

fall  on  its  own  t's — if  this  be  true —  Lover's  Tale  i  273 

Its  knotted  t's  thro'  my  unpaining  brows,  „  620 

roses  that  sprang  without  leaf  or  a  t  from  the  bush  ;   V.  of  Maeldune  44 
Are  figs  of  thistles  ?  or  grapes  of  t's  ?  Riflemen  form  !  10 

Thomless     thy  great  Forefathers  of  the  t  garden,  MavA  I  xviii  27 

Thorny     Are  wither'd  in  the  <  close,  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  11 

I  found  a  wood  with  t  boughs  :  In  Mem.  Ixix  6 

Thorough-edged    t-e  intellect  to  part  Error  from  crime  ;  Isabel  14 

Thoroughfare     In  shadowy  t's  of  thought ;  In  Mem.  Ixx  8 

He  left  the  barren-beaten  t,  Lancelot  and  E.  161 

Thorpe     But  he,  by  farmstead,  t  and  spire,  WUl  Water.  137 

2  z 


The  Brook  29 

The  Victim  3 

Holy  Grail  547 


Thorpe 

Iborpe  (contimLed)     By  twenty  thorps,  a  little  town, 
Then  t  and  byre  arose  in  fire, 
Down  to  the  little  t  that  lies  so  close, 

Ibonght  (s)     {See  also  Thowt)     He  hath  no  t  of 

coming  woes  ;  Suvf.  Confessions  47 

tended  by  Pure  vestal  t's  in  the  translucent  fane         "  Isabel  4 

Small  t  was  there  of  life's  distress  ;  Ode  to  Memory  37 

The  viewless  arrows  of  his  t's  were  headed  The  Poet  11 

Life  and  T  have  gone  away  Side  by  side,  Deserted  House  1 

for  Life  and  T  Here  no  longer  dwell ;  „            17 

mortal  dower  Of  pensive  t  and  aspect  pale,  Margaret  6 

who  can  tell  The  last  wild  t  of  Chatelet,  37 

Y^V^fl^?. ^^^  ^^u'^  \;. ■  u  Eleanore  5 

And  flattering  thv  childish  t  23 

T  and  motion  mingle,  Mingle  ever.  "       gg 

I  seem  to  see  T  folded  over  t,  smiling  asleep,  "'      84 

T  seems  to  come  and  go  In  thy  large  eyes,  '       96 

Our  t  gave  answer  each  to  each.  Sonnet  to  - —  10 

And  men,  thro'  novel  spheres  of  t  Two  Voices  61 

Asks  what  thou  lackest,  t  resign'd,  98 

Fruitful  of  further  t  and  deed,  "        144 

but  overtakes  Far  t  with  music  that  it  makes  :  ,"        438 

mind  was  brought  To  anchor  by  one  gloomy  t ;  [,        459 

I  least  should  breathe  a  t  of  pain.  Miller's  D.  26 

With  blessings  beyond  hope  or  t,  237 

so  much  the  t  of  power  Flatter'd  his  spirit ;  (Enone  136 

for  fiery  t's  Do  shape  themselves  within  me,  246 

auid  divided  quite  The  kingdom  of  her  t.  Palace  of  "ah  228 

As  when  a  great  t  strikes  along  the  brain,  D.  of  F.  Women  43 

by  down-lapsing  t  Stream'd  onward,  „              49 

'  It  comforts  me  in  this  one  t  to  dwell,  ]]           233 

deep  Gold-mines  of  t  to  lift  the  hidden  ore  "            274 
strength  of  some  diffusive  t  Hath  time  and 

space  Ppjj  ggj^  ^g  ^^     g^^  25 

When  single  t  is  civil  crime,  29 

Thro'  future  tune  by  power  of  t.  Love  thZ  thy  land  4 

Wherever  T  hath  wedded  Fact.  52 

Counting  the  dewy  pebbles,  fix'd  in  < ;  M.  d' Arthur  84 

His  own  t  drove  him,  like  a  goad.  285 

all  kinds  of  t  That  verged  upon  them.  Gardener's  D.  70 

Ihese  birds  have  joyful  t's.  99 

Lightly  he  laugh'd,  as  one  that  read  my  t,  .'         206 

A  t  would  fill  my  eyes  with  happy  dew  ;  297 

or  should  have,  but  for  a  t  or  two,  Edwin  Morris  83 

(And  heedf idly  I  sifted  all  my  t)  St.  S.  StylUes  56 

fehould  mjr  Shadow  cross  thy  t's  Love  and  Duty  88 

tho  the  times,  when  some  new  t  can  bud.  Golden  Year  27 

Beyond  the  utmost  boxmd  of  human  t.  Ulysses  32 
Spring  a  young  man's  fancy  lightly  turns  to  t's  of  love.   Locksley  Hall  20 

touch  him  with  thy  lighter  t.  ''           54 

t's  of  men  are  widen'd  with  the  process  of  the  suns.  "          138 

in  the  railway,  in  the  t's  that  shake  mankind.  "           166 

And  would  you  have  the  1 1  had,  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  13 

And  t  and  time  be  bom  again,  ,,    sleep  P  50 

From  deep  t  himself  he  rouses,  L  'of  Burleigh  21 

Whited  t  and  cleanljr  life  As  the  priest.  Vision  of  SinUQ 

utter  The  t  s  that  arise  in  me.  Break,  break,  etc.  4 

feo  the  t  Haunted  and  harass'd  him,  Enoch  Arden  719 

There  speech  and  t  and  nature  fail'd  a  little,  792 

Her  all  of  t  and  bearing  hardly  more  Aylmer's  Field  29 

worst  t  she  has  Is  whiter  even  than  her  pretty  hand  :  362 

Is  It  so  true  that  second  t's  are  best  ?  Sea ' Dreams  65 

feweet  ts  would  swarm  as  bees  about  their  queen.  Princess  i  40 

A  t  flash  d  thro'  me  which  I  clothed  in  act,  I95 

whose  t's  enrich  the  blood  of  the  world.'  "    a  281 

And  all  her  t's  as  fair  within  her  eyes,  "  ^^^  326 

You  need  not  set  your  t's  in  rubric  thus  "lo'r '  W 

And  she  broke  out  interpreting  my  fs :  J  'a       j 

And  live,  perforce,  from  <  to  «,                             ,l  ^'^  ^^^  28 

tost  on  t  s  that  changed  from  hue  to  hue,  "  'tr  210 

to  those  t's  that  wait  On  you,  their  centre :  "        443 

not  a  t,  a  touch,  But  pure  as  lines  of  green  "     „  195 

but  other  t's  than  Peace  Burnt  in  us  "        o7k 

Now  could  you  share  your  t ;  "    ,„•  9^ 

A  shining  furrow,  as  thy  <'«  in  me.  "   ^.^i  285 


722 


Thought 


Thought  (S)  (continued)  and  always  t  in  t.  Purpose  in  purpose,  Princess  vii  304 

Beyond  all  t  into  the  Heaven  of  Heavens.  Con  115 

And  the  t  of  a  man  is  higher.  yoice  and  the  P  32 
And  my  f  s  are  as  quick  and  as  quick,                  Window,  On  the  Hill  12 

And  with  the  t  her  colour  burns  ;  '7,1  Mem.  m  34 

An  awful  t,  a  life  removed,  ^.^^-  20 
And  T  leapt  out  to  wed  with  T  Ere  T  could  wed 

Itself  with  Speech  ;  •  ■  •  , . 

Nor  other  t  her  mind  admits  "        Trlii% 

All  subtle  t,  all  curious  fears,  "                 q 

More  strong  than  all  poetic  t;  "      r r  )^»  1 9 

The  lightest  wave  of  t  shall  lisp,  "'        "IL  5 

and  moved  Upon  the  topmost  froth  of  t.  "             m  4 

There  flutters  up  a  happy  t,  "            ;_^  j 

In  shadowy  thoroughfares  of  < ;  "'            1^-  q 

A  grief  as  deep  as  life  or  t,  "         ;„„_  7 

And  fix  my  t's  on  all  the  glow  "       ixxxiv  3 

Leaving  great  legacies  of  t,  "                35 

Whose  life,  whose  t's  were  little  worth,  "'      i^xim  30 

I  find  not  yet  one  lonely  t  "           ^^  23 

Should  be  the  man  whose  t  would  hold  "          xdv  3 

About  empyreal  heights  of  t,  "          -.^  30 

sway'd  In  vassal  tides  that  follow'd  t.  "         cxii  16 

And  m  my  t's  with  scarce  a  sigh  "       rri-r  ^  i 

I  slip  the  ^'5  of  life  and  death ;  "      ^^xii  16 

And  every  t  breaks  out  a  rose.  "               20 

shade  of  passing  t,  the  wealth  Of  words  and  wit,  "     Con  102 

wrong  Done  but  in  t  to  your  beauty,  Maud  I'iii  6 

And  letting  a  dangerous  t  run  wild  ^{j.  52 

And  noble  t  be  freer  under  the  sun,  "  ///^i^-  43 

Another  t  was  mine  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  793 

urant  me  pardon  for  my  t's  :  §25 

They  hated  her  who  took  no  t  of  them,  GerairU  a,id  E.  639 

and  heard  in  t  Their  lavish  comment  Merlin  and  V.  150 

bo  grated  down  and  filed  away  with  t,  623 

rathe  she  rose  half-cheated  in  the  t  Lancelot  "mid  E.  340 

And  every  eviH  I  had  thought  of  old.  Holy  Grail  372 

remembering  Her  t  when  first  she  came,  Gwinevere  182 
what  is  true  repentance  but  in  <— Not  ev'n  in  inmost  t 

to  think  .3-0 

grew  half-guilty  in  her  t's  again,  ""         403 

But  teach  high  t,  and  amiable  words  "'         432 

wrath  which  forced  my  t's  on  that  fierce  law,  537 

Counting  the  dewy  pebbles,  fixed  in  t ;  Pass,  of  Adhar  252 

His  own  t  drove  him  like  a  goad.  353 

Leapt  like  a  passing  t  across  her  eyes ;  Lover^\  Tale  i  70 

And  length  of  days,  and  immortality  Of  t,  2O6 
One  sustenance,  which,  still  as  t  grew  large.  Still  larger 

moulding  all  the  house  of  t,  240 

At  t  of  which  my  whole  soul  languishes  "              267 

Still  to  believe  it — 'tis  so  sweet  a  t,  "             275 

tell  you  how  I  hoard  in  t  The  faded  rhymes  "              988 

A  graceful  t  of  hers  Grav'n  on  my  fancy !  "               357 

Absorbing  all  the  incense  of  sweet  t's  "              469 

Oh  friend,  t's  deep  and  heavy  as  these  "              688 

The  brightness  of  a  burning  t,  "               743 

The  spirit  seem'd  to  flag  from  <  to  <,  "             j/52 

Alway  the  inaudible  invisible  i,  "              202 

burst  through  the  cloud  of  t  Keen,  irrepressible  "              264    I 

2".  of  tlie  breezes  of  May  blowing  Bef.  of'Luchww  83    i 

That  Lenten  fare  makes  Lenten  t,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  31 

tliin  minds   who  creep  from  t  to  t,  a  ncient  Sage  103    : 

Do-well  will  follow  t,  ^   273 

An  evil  t  may  soil  thy  children's  blood  ;  "            275 

To  <  5  that  lift  the  soul  of  men.  To  Master  of  B.  14 

m^J^M  I  '^  M     fe*'''*T^''^PI!i^^'xx  Mechamphilus  11 
Thought  (verb)     {See  also  Thowt)    He  t  to  quell  the 

stubborn  hearts  Btionavarte  1 

q.^'^/'^'a-^^  life  is  sick  of  single  sleep :  The  BridesZiid  13 

She  t     My  spirit  is  here  alone,  Mariana  in  the  S.  47 

1  cast  me  down,  nor  t  of  you,  Afif!M-'<:  D  6R 

My  mother  t.  What  ails  the  boy  ?  ^ 

And  '  by  that  lamp,'  1 1,  '  she  sits  !  '  "        124 

she  1 1  might  have  look'd  a  little  higher ;  "        233 


II 


Thought 


723 


she  t,  '  Aiid  who  shall  <?aze 


;ht  (verb)  (cmitinued) 

upon  My  palace 
You  t  to  break  a  country  heart  For  pastime. 
He  t  of  that  sharp  look,  mother, 
He  1 1  was  a  ghost,  mother, 

I  T  to  pass  away  before,  and  yet  alive  I  am  ; 
lying  broad  awake  1 1  of  you  and  Effie  dear ; 

I I  that  it  was  fancy,  and  I  listen'd  in  my  bed, 
lt,l  take  it  for  a  sign. 
He  t  that  nothing  new  was  said. 
And  often  t '  I'll  make  them  man  and  wife.' 
had  been  always  with  her  in  the  house,  T  not  of  Dora. 
She  t, '  It  cannot  be  :  my  uncle's  mind  will  change  ! ' 
and  t  Hard  things  of  Dora, 
he  t  himself  A  mark  for  all, 
God  only  thro'  his  boimty  hath  t  fit, 
toil'd,  and  wrought,  and  t  with  me — 
'  Shy  she  was,  and  1 1  her  cold ;  T  her  proud,  and 

fled  over  the  sea ; 
and  Itl  would  have  spoken, 
nightingale  t,  '  I  have  sung  many  songs, 
'  I  <  not  of  it :  but — I  know  not  why — 
Some  t  that  PhUip  did  but  trifle  with  her ; 
'  He  is  gone,'  she  < '  he  is  happy, 
Philip  t  he  knew  : 
He  t  it  must  have  gone  ; 

he  t '  After  the  LokI  has  call'd  me  she  shall  know, 
And  t  to  bear  it  with  me  to  my  grave ; 
how  money  breeds,  T  it  a  dead  thing ; 
blues  were  sure  of  it,  he  t : 
Some  one,  he  t,  had  slander'd  Leolin  to  him. 
'  O  pray  God  that  he  hold  up  '  she  t 
But  I  that  t  myself  long-suffering,  meek, 
1 1  the  motion  of  the  boundless  deep 
'  What  a  world,'  I  <, '  To  live  in  ! ' 

0  then  to  ask  her  of  my  shares,  1 1 ; 
(1 1 1  could  have  died  to  save  it) 
1 1  that  all  the  blood  by  Sylla  shed 
For  these  1 1  my  dream  would  show  to  me, 

1  i  I  lived  securely  as  yourselves — 
A  pleasant  game,  she  t : 
But  my  good  father  t  a  king  a  king ; 
they  had  but  been,  she  t.  As  children  ; 
'  We  scarcely  t  in  our  own  hall  to  hear 
once  or  twice  1 1  to  roar, 
and  t  He  scarce  would  prosper. 
One  anatomic'    '  Nay,  we  t  of  that,' 
and  my  foot  Was  to  you :  but  1 1  again : 
1 1,  That  surely  she  will  speak  ; 

we  t  her  half-possess'd,  She  struck  such  warbling  fury 
1 1  her  half-right  talking  of  her  wrongs  ; 
1 1  on  all  the  wrathful  king  had  said, 
1 1,  can  this  be  he  From  Gama's  dwarfish  lions  ? 
Woman,  whom  we  t  woman  even  now, 
first  time,  too,  that  ever  1 1  of  death. 
T  on  all  her  evil  tyrannies. 
And  something  written,  something  t ; 
Has  never  t  that '  this  is  I :  ' 
You  t  my  heart  too  far  diseased  ; 
I  look'd  on  these  and  t  of  thee 
For  all  we  t  and  loved  and  did, 
and  t  he  would  rise  and  speak  And  rave 
t,  is  it  pride,  and  mused  and  sigh'd 
I «  as  I  stood,  if  a  hand,  as  white 
Now  1 1  that  she  cared  for  me.  Now  1 1  she  was  kind 
and  t  like  a  fool  of  the  sleep  of  death. 
And  none  of  us  <  of  a  something  beyond, 
Yet  Itl  saw  her  stand, 
and  t  It  is  his  mother's  hair. 
For  1 1  the  dead  had  peace. 
When  1 1  that  a  war  would  arise  in  defence 
but  t  To  sift  his  doubtings  to  the  last, 
For  then  I  surely  t  he  would  be  king. 
And  t, '  For  this  half-shadow  of  a  lie 
and  t  the  King  Scom'd  me  and  mine  ; 


Palace  of  Art  41 

C.  V.  de  Vere  3 

May  Queen  15 

17 

Con.  1 

29 

33 

38 

The  Epic  30 

Dora  4 

„     8 

.,  46 

„  57 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  72 

St.  S.  Stylites  186 

Ulysses  46 

Edward  Gray  13 

Vision  of  Sin  55 

Poet's  Song  13 

Enoch  Arden  396 

475 

502 

520 


The  Brook  7 

Aylmer's  Field  252 

350 

733 

753 

Sea  Dreams  91 

94 

115 

134 

Lucretius  47 

51 

,,      210 

Princess,  Pro.  194 

i25 

136 

a  53 

423 

„  Hi  75 

307 

iv  327 

343 

585 

tj285 

473 

505 

vi  273 

Grandiiiother  61 

Boddicea  80 

In  Mem.  vi  20 

„  xlv  4 

„         Ixvi  1 

xcvii  6 

„    Con.  134 

Maud  I  i59 

„      via  12 

.,      xiv  17 

25 

38 

„      xix  47 

.,     II  i  38 

a  69 

•»15 

„ /77  m  19 

Com.  of  Arthur  310 

358 

Gareth  and  L.  323 

1165 


Thought  (verb)  {continued) 
Geraint, 


Thought 

And  day  by  day  she  t  to  tell 

Marr.  of  Geraint  65 
80 
115 
343 
367 
417 
610 


t  within  herself,  Was  ever  man  so  grandly  made 

And  then  he  t, '  In  spite  of  all  my  care. 

So  fared  it  with  Geraint,  who  t  and  said, 

In  a  moment  t  Geraint, '  Here  by  God's  rood 

and  t  to  find  Arms  in  your  town, 

And  t  it  never  yet  had  look'd  so  mean. 

while  she  t '  They  will  not  see  me,'  „            666 

likewise  t  perhaps,  That  service  done  so  graciously  „            789 

1 1,  That  could  I  someway  prove  such  force  „            804 

A  stranger  meeting  them  had  surely  t  Geraint  and  E.  34 

Then  t  again, '  If  there  be  such  in  me,  ,,              52 

Held  his  head  high,  and  t  himself  a  knight,  „            242 

1 1,  but  that  your  father  came  between,  ,,            314 

Then  t  she  heard  the  wild  Earl  at  the  door,  „            381 

he  t '  was  it  for  him  she  wept  In  Devon  ?  '  ,.            397 

And  since  she  t, '  He  had  not  dared  to  do  it,  „            720 

You  t  me  sleeping,  but  I  heard  you  say,  741 

'  I  will  be  gentle  '  he  i  '  And  passing  gentle  '  Balin  and  Balan  370 

and  t '  I  have  shamed  thee  so  that  now  thou 

shamest  me,  „              430 

1 1  the  great  tower  would  crash  down  on  both —  ,,              515 

heard  and  t '  The  scream  of  that  Wood-devil  „  547 
1 1  that  he  was  gentle,  being  great :  Merlin  and  V.  871 
and  she  t  That  all  was  nature,                                   Lancelot  and  E.  329 

But  t  to  do  while  he  might  yet  endure,  „              495 

Yea,  twenty  times  1 1  him  Lancelot —  „              535 

for  she  f '  If  I  be  loved,  these  are  my  festal  robes,  „              908 

the  brothers  heard,  and  t  With  shuddering,  „            1021 

dwelt  the  father  on  her  face,  and  t '  Is  this  Elaine  ?  '  „            1030 

t  That  now  the  Holy  Grail  would  come  again ;  Holy  Grail  91 

1 1  She  might  have  risen  and  floated  „          99 

t  '  It  is  not  Arthur's  use  To  hunt  by  moonlight ; '  „        110 

and  t  Of  all  my  late-shown  prowess  in  the  lists,  „        361 

And  every  evil  thought  I  had  t  of  old,  „        372 

and  when  1 1  my  thirst  Would  slay  me,  „         379 

but  t '  The  sun  is  rising,'  „        407 

But  when  I  <  he  meant  To  crush  me,  „  415 
Pelleas  gazing  t,  '  Is  Guinevere  herself  so  beautiful  ?  '  Pelleas  and  E.  69 


she  t  That  peradventure  he  will  fight  for  me, 

'  O  happy  world,'  t  Pelleas,  '  all,  meseems, 

'  These  be  the  ways  of  ladies,'  Pelleas  t, 

t,  Why  have  I  push'd  him  from  me  ? 

'  Ay,'  t  Gawain,  '  and  you  be  fair  enow  : 

and  t,  '  I  will  go  back,  and  slay  them 

and  drew  the  sword,  and  t,  '  What ! 

Modred  t,  '  The  time  is  hard  at  hand.' 

until  himself  had  t  He  loved  her  also, 

whereon  he  t — '  What,  if  she  hate  me  now  ? 

t  she  heard  them  moan :  And  in  herself  she  moan'd 

she  t '  He  spies  a  field  of  death ; 

then  she  t,    With  what  a  hate  the  people  and  the  King 

Then  t  the  Queen  within  herself  again, 

t  the  Queen,  '  Lo  !  they  have  set  her  on, 

glanced  at  him,  t  him  cold,  High,  self-contain'd, 

1 1 1  could  not  breathe  in  that  fine  air 

I,  being  simple,  t  to  work  His  will, 

Or  t  he  saw,  the  speck  that  bare  the  King, 

I  f  it  was  an  adder's  fold. 
Sometimes  1 1  Camilla  was  no  more, 

I I  Four  bells  instead  of  one  began  to  ring, 
knew  the  meaning  of  the  whisper  now,  T  that  he 

knew  it. 
then  starting,  t  His  dreams  had  come  again, 
w'  m  I  saw  her  (and  1 1  him  crazed, 
he  t — there  were  other  lads — 
'  t  of  him  out  at  sea, 
lOw  and  then     ;  Laziness,  vague  love- 
longings, 
eyes  Upon  me  when  she  1 1  did  not  see — 
1 1 '  What,  will  she  never  set  her  sister  free  ? 
and  we  t  her  at  rest.  Quietly  sleeping — 
but  1 1  that  it  never  would  pass. 
Some  t  it  heresy,  but  that  would  not  hold. 


117 
136 
209 
306 

388 
443 
447 
610 
Last  Tournament  401 
495 
Guinevere  130 
134 
156 


224 

308 

405 

645 

Pass,  of  Arthur  22 

465 

Lover's  Tale  i  691 

ii  69 

Hi  19 

iv  4A 

77 

163 

First  Quarrel  38 

89 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  127 

166 

217 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  40 

61 

Columbus  46 


Columbus  57 

87 

The  Wreck  84 

124 

Despair  11 

„       105 

Tomorrow  81 

The  Ring  140 

Happy  64 

June  Bracken,  etc.  4 

St.  Telemachus  24 

The  Dreamer  16 

ffo^y  6Vai7  455 


Thought 

Thought  (verb)  (continued)  And  /  to  turn  my  face  from  Spain 
I  woke,  and  t — death — I  shall  die — 
and  Itot  the  child  for  a  moment, 
then  All  on  a  sudden  1 1, 

I  remember  I  <,  as  we  past, 

God  of  Love  and  of  Hell  together — they  cannot  be  t 
Och,  Molly,  we  t,  machree,  ' 

Vext,  that  you  t  my  Mother  came  to  me  ? 
A  lie  by  which  he  t  he  could  subdue 

I I  to  myself  I  would  offer  this  book 
once,  he  t,  a  shape  with  wings  Came  sweeping 
Yet  he  t  he  answer'd  her  wail  with  a  song —  " 

Thoughted    -S'ee  Subtle-thoughted 

Thoughtest    t  of  tliy  prowess  and  tliy  sins  ? 

Thousand  (adj.)    (See  also  Eighty-Thousand,  Ten-thousand) 

A  t  claims  to  reverence  closed  To  the  Queen  27 

And  flashes  off  a  t  ways,  Rosalind  23 

And  If  you  kiss'd  her  feet  a  t  years.  The  form,  the  form  13 

deluge  from  at  lulls  Flung  leagues  of  roaring  foam      //  /  were  loved  12 

Miller's  D.  72 

Fatima  17 

(Enone  197 

„    231 

May  Queen,  Con.  16 

D.  of  F.  Women  203 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  18 

Edwin  Morris  18 

126 

St.  S.  Stylites  111 

Talking  Oak  203 

Godiva  11 

Will  Water.. 59 

224 

A  Farewell  13 

Enoch  Arden  95 

724 

Aylmer's  Field  382 

602 

Princess,  Pro.  57 

i21 

64 


724 


Threadbare 


That  went  and  came  a  t  times. 

A  t  little  shafts  of  flame  Were  shiver'd 

My  love  hath  told  me  so  a  t  times. 

Hath  he  not  sworn  his  love  a  t  times, 

A  t  times  I  blest  him,  as  he  knelt  beside  my  bed 

a  t  times  I  would  be  born  and  die. 

The  wisdom  of  a  t  years  Is  in  them. 

Who  forged  a  t  theories  of  the  rocks, 

in  one  month  They  wedded  her  to  sixty  t  pounds, 

Bow  down  one  t  and  two  hundred  times, 

A  t  thanks  for  what  I  learn 

The  woman  of  a  t  summers  back. 

Ten  t  broken  lights  and  shapes, 

larded  with  the  steam  Of  thirty  t  dinners. 

A  t  suns  will  stream  on  thee,  A  t  moons  will  quiver  • 

face,  Rough-redden'd  with  a  t  winter  gales,  ' 

There  did  a  t  memories  roll  upon  him. 

These  partridge-breeders  of  a  t  years, 

many  t  days  Were  dipt  by  horror 

There  moved  the  multitude,  a  t  heads  : 

My  mother  pitying  made  a  t  prayers  ; 

he  sware  That  he  would  send  a  hundred  t  men, 

A  t  hearts  lie  fallow  in  these  halls.  And  round  these 

halls  a  t  baby  loves 
May  beat  admission  in  a  t  years, 
a  race  Of  giants  living,  each,  a  t  years. 
With  many  t  matters  left  to  do, 
Six  t  years  of  fear  have  made  you  that 
a  t  rings  of  Spring  In  every  bole, 
A  t  arms  and  rushes  to  the  Sun. 
.spill  Their  t  wreaths  of  dangling  water-smoke, 
Uplift  a  t  voices  full  and  sweet, 
A  t  shadowy-pencill'd  valleys  And  snowy  dells 
'A  t  voices  go  To  North,  South,  East,  and  AVest ; 
To  touch  thy  t  years  of  gloom  : 
And  ask  a  t  things  of  home  ; 
That  breathe  a  t  tender  vows, 
She  cries,  '  A  t  types  are  gone  : 
Or  when  a  t  moons  shall  wane 
Upon  the  t  waves  of  wheat. 
And  he,  he  knows  a  t  things. 
a  t  wants  Gnarr  at  the  heels  of  men. 
Ring  out  the  t  wars  of  old.  Ring  in  the  t  years  of  peace 
To  whom  a  t  memories  call. 
With  t  shocks  that  come  and  go, 
electric  force,  that  keeps  A  t  pulses  dancing. 

Before  a  <  peering  littlenesses  Ded.of  Idylls  26 

War  with  a  <  battles,  ana  shaking  a  hundred  thrones.         Maud  I  i  48 


ii  400 

Hi  155 

269 

ii;458 

507 

t)237 

vi37 

vii  213 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  1 

The  Daisy  67 

Voice  and  the  P.  13 

In  Mem.  ii  12 

xiv  12 

t.  XX  2 

Ivi  3 

Ixxvii  8 

,,  xd  11 

„       xcvii  32 

xcviii  16 

cvi  27 

cxi  10 

cxiii  17 

cxxv  16 


thro   tops  of  many  t  pines  A  gloomy-gladed 

A  t  pips  eat  up  your  sparrow-hawk  ! 
and  sent  a  t  men  To  till  the  wastes, 
He  saw  two  cities  in  a  t  boats 
Fare  you  well  A  t  times  !— a  t  times  farewell ! 
Gawam,  who  bad  a  t  farewells  to  me, 
A  t  piers  ran  into  the  great  Sea. 
up  I  climb'd  a  t  steps  With  pain  : 


Gareth  and  L.  796 

Marr.  of  Geraint  274 

Geraint  and  E.  941 

Merlin  and  V.  561 

Lancelot  and  E.  696 

1056 

Holy  Grail  503 

835 


Lover's  Tale  i  550 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  63 

195 

Columbus  136 


Thousand  (adj.)  (continued)     Had  drawn  herself  From 
many  t  years, 
a  t  lives  To  save  his  soul. 
A  t  marks  are  set  upon  my  head, 
a  single  piece  Weigh'd  nigh  four  t  Castillanos 
hundred  who  heard  it  would  rush  on  a  t  lances 

\   rr  i  1     , .         .  „.    .  V.  of  Maeldune  24 

A  T  summers  ere  the  time  of  Christ  Ancient  Sane  1 

Let  us  hush  this  cry  of  '  Forward  '  till  ten  t  years  ^ 

have  gone  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  78 

Timur  bmlt  his  ghastly  tower  of  eighty  «  human  skulls,  82 

tT  1  fl  "''"'^  ™^^  l"^*  ^°''  ^  1 1^^^'  Dead  Prophet  59 

Trade  flying  over  a  t  seas  with  her  spice  Vattne^^  VK 

For  ten  t  years  Old  and  new  ?  ThVvHn  la 

They  made  a  t  honey  moons  of  one  ?  ^  22 

that  sees  A  t  squares  of  corn  and  meadow,  "         149 

And  from  the  t  squares,  one  silent  voice  "         153 
And  eighty  <  Christian  faces  watch  Man  murder  man.  St.  Telemachus  55 

press  of  a  t  cities  is  prized  for  it  smells  of  the  beast,  The  Dawn  14 

In  a  hundred,  a  t  winters  ?  04 

Thn„i!,H^'Tw^^l'^'if"  -i^F    >.  •      u.  Mecham>fhilus23 

Thousand  (s)     Who  had  mildew'd  m  their  t's,  Aylmer's  held  383 

There  are  <'s  now  Such  women.  Princess  Pro  127 

many  t's  that  if  they  be  bold  enough,  Def  of  Lucknow  40 

when  her  tens  are  <'s,  and  her  ^'5  millions,  Lockslev  H  Siriu -[T^ 

Thousand-fold    Ten  t-f  had  grown,  flash'd  the  fierce  ^              ^    '  ^ 

shield,  Gareth  and  L.  1030 

seems  to  me  A  t-f  more  great  and  wonderful  Geraint  and  E.  914 

ThoJ  rthi;thf?  r'L^"  n«f  «.™"«t.be  a  ^/Less  noble,  Guinevere  338 

rhOWt  (thought)  (s)     —I  mver  giv  it  a  <—  N  Farmer    N  S  2^ 

ThowJ  (thought)  (verb)     I  <  a  'ad  summut  to  saay,  N.  f7vZ'  0  S  19 

An  It  a,  said  whot  a  owt  to  'a  said  '     '     '  20 

An'?f'flV/^"^M?>!^^yT^^P/  ^^orth.  Cobbler  68 

An  1 1  twur  the  will  0^  the  Lord,  yuiage  Wife  11 

1 1  It  wur  Charlie's  ghoast  1'  the  derk,  eo 

thaw  soom 'ud 'a  <  ma  plaain,  Svinster'\  S'-,  1ft 

But  Robby,  I  t  0'  tha  all  the  while  Spinster  s  6  s.  lb 

An'  I  t  shall  I  chaiinge  my  staate  ?  "44 

Tha  t  tha  would  marry  ma,  did  tha  ?  "            74 

1 1  to  mysen  '  thank  God  that  I  hevn't  naw  caiif  "           lift 

/  /f  ^h!''«f ^"  f'^  ""^"^  *™^'  'f^  ^^  ?«^"'  Owd  Rod  43 

« It  tHe  btaate  was  a  gawm'  to  let  m  furriners'  wheat,  45 

An  I  <  as  e'd  goan  clean-^vud,  "         gi 

It  it  was  Roaver  a-tuggin'  "         aa 

An'  I «  'at  I  kick'd  'im  agean,  "         an 

t  she  was  nobbut  a-rilin'  ma  then.  '"        74 

ThrifhnrTtoH«!f  '^  "'''^'  ^T"^  ''^^^^  T^>  *'  Church-warden,  etc.  18 

iSSZ  ^  T^l^     "T'  ' -i^u'  l""  *^  ^^^^  °^  "1^  '  ^'n         Tomorrow  50 

?Hf ?Sr«rI™^''  T^'""'  ''''f'  *^'  u^^""""  «i  Freedom,  Vastness  10 

Thrall  (thraldom)     To  save  from  shame  and  t :  Sir  Galahad  16 

Loosed  from  their  simple  t  they  had  flow'd  abroad,     Lover's  Tale  i  703 

And  free  the  Holy  Sepulchre  from  t.  Columbvi  104 

And  save  the  Holy  Sepulchre  from  i.  l^olumbus  104 

^"""^J')  ,  ^^*  ""*  "^y  tO'ipe  be  a  t  to  my  eye,  Maud" I  xvi  32 

The  t  in  person  may  be  free  in  soul,  Gareth  and  L.  165 

then  wilt  thou  become  A  t  to  his  enchantments  269 

And  when  the  t's  had  talk  among  themselves,    '  ""  491 

Or  when  the  t's  had  sport  among  themselves,  "  516 

So  for  a  month  he  wrought  among  the  t's ;  "  525 

from  out  of  kitchen  came  The  t's  in  throng,  "  695 

T's  to  j'our  work  again,  "  biq 
I  smote  upon  the  naked  skull  A  t  of  mine  in  open 

T?^„  T  li    4  i-j  j.1.  i     •  1  ,  Balin  and  Balan  56 

For  I  that  did  that  violence  to  thy  t,  «! 

being  knighted  till  he  smote  the  t,  "  155 

once  he  saw  the  <  His  passion  half  had  gauntleted  "  219 

ThraJI  (verb)     she  send  her  delegate  to  t  These  fightings  Pelleas'and  E.  336 

Thrall'd    my  husband's  brother  had  my  son  T  in  his 

'vh^Jf^^it'     V         ,       .  .,     ^  .    .,  ,.  Gareth  and  L.  358 

Thraw  d  (threw)     an'  ya    the  fish  1'  'is  f  aace,-  Churchwarden,  etc.  30 

Thread     Draws  different  t's,  and  late  and  soon  Two  Voices  179 

He  plays  with  t's,  he  beats  his  chair  in  Mem  Ixvi  13 

Ran  down  the  silken  t  to  ki.ss  each  other  Merlin  and  V.  455 

Th^IT^       }y  ^  ''^%'  "^"^  ''"'^''°.". '"  '^^  ^^^  Holy  Grail  153 

Threadbare    theme  of  writers,  and  indeed  Worn  t.  Edwin  Morris  49 


Threaded 

Threaded  (adj.)     (See  also  Crimson-threaded)    from  the 
bastion'd  walls  Like  t  spiders,  one  by  one,  we  dropt, 


725 


Threshold 


Princess  i  108 


Shall  shake  its  t  tears  in  the  wind  no  more.  Maud  III  vi  28 

Threaded  (verb)     he  t  The  secretest  walks  of  fame  :  The  Poet  9 

Or  t  some  Socratic  dream  ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  36 

Threading    led  T  the  soldier-city,  Princess  v  7 

Threat      Puppet  to  a  father's  t,  Locksley  Hall  42 

But  scared  with  Vs  of  jail  and  halter  Aylmer's  Field  520 

Our  Boanerges  with  his  t's  of  doom,  Sea  Dreams  251 

I  hear  the  violent  t's  you  do  not  hear,  Geraint  and  E.  420 

after  hours  of  search  and  doubt  and  t's,  And  hubbub,        The  Ring  278 
Threatened     Had  wink'd  and  t  darkness,  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  2 

Three  (adj.)    (See  also  Fifty-three,  Three  Hundred)    She 

made  t  paces  thro'  the  room,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  38 

T  fingers  round  the  old  silver  cup —  Miller's  D.  10 

Or  those  t  chestnuts  near,  that  hung  „  55 

T  times  I  stabb'd  him  thro'  and  thro'.  The  Sisters  29 

brandish'd  him  T  times,  and  drew  him  under  in 
the  mere.'  (repeat) 

Not  tho'  I  live  t  lives  of  mortal  men, 

by  these  T  Queens  with  crowns  of  gold — 

There  those  t  Queens  Put  forth  their  hands, 

to  t  arches  of  a  bridge  Crown'd  with  the  minster- towers 

And  in  the  compass  of  t  little  words. 

And  for  t  hours  he  sobb'd  o'er  William's  child 

T  winters,  that  my  soul  might  grow  to  thee, 

and  t  years  on  one  of  twelve  ;  And  twice  t  years  I 
crouch'd  on  one  that  rose 

Is  t  times  worth  them  all ; 

those  t  stanzas  that  you  made  About  my  "  giant  bole  ;  " 

For  some  t  suns  to  store  and  hoard  myself, 

To  watch  the  t  tall  spires  ; 

T  fair  children  first  she  bore  him, 

I  think  I  have  not  t  days  more  to  live  ; 

he  past  To  turn  and  ponder  those  t  hundred  scrolls 

One  babe  was  theirs,  a  Margaret,  t  years  old  : 

The  lady  of  t  castles  in  that  land  : 

'  T  ladies  of  the  Northern  empire  pray 

Not  for  t  years  to  correspond  with  home  ;  Not  for  t  years 
to  cross  the  liberties ;  Not  for  /  years  to  speak  with 
anjr  men ; 

To  give  t  gallant  gentlemen  to  death.' 

Till  like  t  horses  that  have  broken  fence. 

For  dear  are  those  t  castles  to  my  wants. 

Descended  to  the  court  that  lay  t  parts  In  shadow, 

b«ing  herself  T  times  more  noble  than  t  score  of  men, 

And  our  t  lives. 

Now,  scarce  t  paces  measured  from  the  mound, 

A  smoke  go  up  thro'  which  I  loom  to  her  T  times  a 
monster : 

anon  to  meet  us  lightly  pranced  T  captains  out ; 

made  them  glance  Like  those  t  stars  of  the  airy  Giant's 
zone, 

then  took  the  king  His  t  broad  sons  ; 

t  times  he  went :  The  first,  be  blew  and  blew. 

Shadows  of  t  dead  men  (repeat)  G.  of  Swainston  3,  5 

T  dead  men  have  I  loved  and  thou  art  last  of  the  three.       „  15 

Tho'  I  since  then  have  number'd  o'er  Some  thrice  t 

years  :  In  Mem.,  Con.  10 

cataract  seas  that  snap  The  t  decker's  oaken  spine  Maud  II  ii  27 

Flame-colour,  vert  and  azure,  in  t  rays,  One 
falling  upon  each  of  t  fair  queens,  Com.  of  Arthur  275 

over  all  High  on  the  top  were  those  t  Queens,  Gareth  and  L.  229 

a  river  Runs  in  t  loops  about  her  living-place  ;  And 

o'er  it  are  t  passings,  and  t  knights  „  612 


M.  d' Arthur  146,  161 
155 
198 
205 
Gardener's  D.  43 
232 
Dora  167 
St.  S.  StylUes  71 

87 

Talking  Oak  72 

135 

Ulysses  29 

Godiva  3 

L.  of  Burleigh  87 

Enoch  Arden  851 

Lucretius  12 

Sea  Dreams  3 

Princess  i  79 

238 


m70 
335 
386 
417 

m  20 
109 
142 
vl 

131 
255 

260 
269 
335 


t  fair  girls  In  gilt  and  rosy  raiment  came  : 
O  rainbow  with  t  colours  after  rain, 
but  when  the  Prince  T  times  had  blown — 
Slay  me  not :  my  t  brethren  bad  me  do  it, 
night  Before  her  birthday,  t  sad  years  ago. 
And  forth  they  rode,  but  scarce  t  paces  on. 


926 
1160 
1378 
1410 

Marr.  of  Geraint  633 
Geraint  and  E.  19 


Then  Enid  was  aware  of  t  tall  knights  On  horseback, 
I  saw  t  bandits  by  the  rock  Waiting  to  fall  on  you, 
Stript  from  the  t  dead  wolves  of  woman  born  The  t 
gay  suits  of  armour 


56 

72 


94 


Three  (adj.)  (continued)     T  other  horsemen  waiting, 

wholly  arm'd,  Geraint  and  E.  121 

'  There  lurk  t  villains  yonder  in  the  wood,  .,             142 

Their  t  gay  suits  of  armour,  each  from  each,  ..             181 

and  my  purpose  t  years  old,  ,.             849 

those  t  kingless  years  Have  past —  Balin  and  Balan  63 

for  but  t  brief  moons  had  glanced  away  „             154 

Had  I  for  t  days  seen,  ready  to  fall.  Merlin  and  V.  296 

So  to  the  Gate  of  the  t  Queens  we  came,  Holy  Grail  358 
T  knights  were  thereamong  ;  and  they  too  smiled,      Pelleas  and  E.  96 

Then  glanced  askew  at  those  t  knights  of  hers,  „             134 

And  those  t  knights  all  set  their  faces  home,  „             187 

Then  calling  her  t  knights,  she  charged  them,  „             219 

while  walking  on  the  walls  With  her  t  knights,  „             226 

Give  me  t  days  to  melt  her  fancy,  „             356 

So  those  t  days,  aimless  about  the  land,  ..             391 

Then  was  he  ware  of  t  pavilions  rear'd  ,,            428 

and  their  t  squires  across  their  feet :  ..  431 
hence  he  went  To-day  for  t  days'  huntings            Last  Tournament  530 

Himself  beheld  t  spirits  mad  with  joy  Guinevere  252 

When  t  gray  linnets  wrangle  for  the  seed  :  .,         255 

lived  For  t  brief  years,  and  there,  .,  697 
brandish'd  him  T  times,  and  drew  liim  under 

in  the  mere,  (repeat)  Pass,  of  Arthur  314,  329 

Not  tho'  I  live  t  lives  of  mortal  men,  .,                      323 

by  these  T  Queens  with  crowns  of  gold  :  „                      366 

There  those  t  Queens  Put  forth  their  hands,  ,,  373 
from  the  woods  That  belt  it  rise  t  dark,  tall 

cjrpresses, —  T  cypresses.  Lover's  Tale  i  536 

Fixing  my  eyes  on  those  t  cypress-cones  „             ii  38 

The  mountam,  the  t  cypresses,  the  cave,  „              109 

Dead — and  had  lain  t  days  without  a  pulse  :  „            iv  34 

An'  he  took  t  turns  in  the  rain.  First  Quarrel  75 
which  our  house  has  held  T  hundred  years —  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  53 
I  had  sat  t  nights  by  the  cliild—                             In  the  Child.  Hosp.  59 

And  we  stay'd  t  days,  and  we  gorged  V.  of  Maeldune  67 

T  days  since,  t  more  dark  days  of  the  Godless  gloom  Despair  6 
Those  t  hundred  millions  under  one  Imperial 

sceptre  now,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  117 

came  On  t  gray  heads  beneath  a  gleaming  rift.  Demeter  and  P.  83 

T  dark  ones  in  the  shadow  with  thy  King.  „           122 

those  t  sweet  Italian  words,  The  Ring  406 

The  century's  t  strong  eights  have  met  To  Ulysses  7 

T  slaves  were  trailing  a  dead  lion  away,  St.  Telemachus  47 

Thro'  those  t  words  would  haunt  him  when  a  boy,  Far — far — away  8 
Three  (s)     Three  dead  men  have  I  loved  and  thou  art 

last  of  the  t.  G.  of  Swainston  15 

Three-days-long     That  t-d-l  presageful  gloom  of  yours  Merlin  and  V.  320 

Three-decker    rushing  battle-bolt  sang  from  the  t-d  Maud   I  i  50 

cataract  seas  that  snap  The  t  d's  oaken  spine  „      II  ii  27 

Threefold    Lower'd  softly  with  a  t  cord  of  love  D.  of  F.  Women  211 

Three  hundred    The  charge  of  the  gallant  t  h,  Heavy  Brigade  1 

Scarlett  and  Scarlett's  t  h  were  riding  by  ..            4 

gallant  t  h  whose  glory  will  never  die—  ..           10 

Gallopt  the  gallant  t  h,  the  Heavy  Brigade.  „           25 

'Lost  are  the  gallant  t  h  of  Scarlett's  Brigade  !  '  „           45 

Glory  to  all  the  t  h,  and  all  the  Brigade  !  ,,           66 

Three-months-old     On  corpses  t-tn-o  at  noon  she  came,  Palace  of  Art  243 

Three-parts-sick    t-p-s  With  strumming  and  with  scraping,        Amphion  69 

Three-times-three    The  crowning  cup,  the  t-t-t.  In  Mem.,  Con.  104 

Three-years'     Sent  me  a  t-y  exile  from  thine  eyes.  Balin  and  Balan  59 

Thresher     t  with  his  flail  had  scatter'd  them.  Gareth  and  L.  842 

Threshing-floor    by  the  lonely  t-f,  Demeter  and  P.  126 

Threshold  (adj.)    footsteps  smite  the  t  stairs  Of  life —  St.  S.  Stylites  191 

Threshold  (s)    and  on  her  t  lie  Howling  in 

outer  darkness.                                           To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  15 

see  me  carried  out  from  the  t  of  the  door  ;    May  Queen,  JS.  Y's.  E.  42 

Corpses  across  the  t;  D.  of  F.  Women  25 

Half-fall'n  across  the  t  of  the  sun,  „              63 

Dora  went  to  Mary's  house,  and  stood  Upon  the  t.  Dora  111 

That  float  about  the  t  of  an  age,  Golden  Year  16 

wrinkled  feet  Upon  thy  glimmering  t's,  Tithonus  68 

And  burn  the  t  of  the  night.  The  Voyage  18 

And  seldom  crost  her  t,  Enoch  Arden  337 

dark  retinue  reverencing  death  At  golden  t's  ;  Aylmer's  Field  843 


Threshold 


726 


Throne 


Threshold  (s)  (continued)    come  thou  down  And  find  him  ; 

by  the  liappy  t,  he,  Princess  vii  200 

Upon  the  t  of  the  mind  ?  In  Mem.  Hi  16 

guest  To  enrich  the  t  of  the  night  „       xxix  6 

From  off  the  t  of  the  realm,  Gareth  and  L.  136 

Here  on  the  t  of  our  enterprise.  „  298 

Was  all  the  marble  t  flashing,  Geraint  and  E.  25 

With  all  her  golden  t's  clashing.  Lover's  Tale  i  605 

Love  passeth  not  the  t  of  cold  Hate,  „  778 

Falls  on  the  t  of  her  native  land,  Bemeter  and  P.  3 

nirew  (See  also  Thraw'd)  She  t  her  royal  robes  away.  Palace  of  Art  290 
dutch'd  the  sword,  And  strongly  wheel'd  and  t  it.'  M.  d' Arthur  136 
heavier,  stronger,  he  that  smote  And  t  him  :  Princess  v  537 

t  the  kings  Car^dos,  Urien,  Cradlemont  of  Wales,     Com.  of  Arthur  111 
Moimted  in  arms,  t  up  their  caps  Gareth  and  L.  697 

same  strength  which  t  the  Morning  Star  Can  throw 

the  Evening.' 
Lancelot ! — thine  the  hand  That  <  me  ? 
By  overthrowing  me  you  t  me  higher, 
clutch'd  the  sword,  And  strongly  wheel'd  and  t  it. 
on  the  sand  T  down  the  bier ; 
1 1  myself  all  abroad — 
and  t  Underfoot  there  in  the  fray — 
Miriam  sketch'd  and  Muriel  t  the  fly  ; 
She  t  the  fly  for  me  ; 
how  long — till  you  t  me  aside  ! 
Thrice     T  happy  state  again  to  be 
Thrice-beaten    weakling,  and  t-b  hound : 
Thrice-happy     T-h  days  !     The  flower  of  each, 

'  T-h  he  that  may  caress  The  ringlet's 
Thrice-tum'd    chew'd  The  t-t  cud  of  wrath, 
Thrid    To  t  the  musky-circled  mazes. 
He  t's  the  labyrinth  of  the  mind, 
Thridded     1 1  tlie  black  heart  of  all  the  woods, 
Thridding     T  the  sombre  boskage  of  the  wood, 
Thried  (tried)     1 1  her  meself  av  the  bird  'ud  come 
Thrift    like  the  little  t,  Trembled  in  perilous  places 
Thrifty    t  too  beyond  her  age. 

Earn  well  the  t  months,  nor  wed  Raw  Haste, 
Thrill    His  countrj^'s  war-song  t  his  ears  : 
Me  mightier  transports  move  and  t ; 
My  spirit  leap'd  as  with  those  t's  of  bliss 
with  some  electric  t  A  cold  air  pass'd  between  us, 
Thrill'd    a  clear  under-tone  T  thro  mine  ears 

T  thro'  the  woods  ;  and  Balan  lurking  there 
Thrilleth    Thro'  my  very  heart  it  t 
Thrilling    See  Spirit-thrilling 
Thrive    those  Fresh  faces,  that  would  t 
Thriven    Word  by  which  himself  had  t.' 

That  on  dumb  death  had  t ; 
Throan  (throne)    an'  taake  'im  afoor  the  T. 

an'  sits  o'  the  Bishop's  t. 
Throat    golden  round  her  lucid  t  And  shoulder ; 
From  cheek  and  t  and  chin. 
But  there  was  that  across  his  t 
bright  death  quiver'd  at  the  victim's  t ; 
and  in  her  t  Her  voice  seem'd  distant, 
'  Go,  take  the  goose,  and  wring  her  t, 
All  t's  that  gurgle  sweet ! 
She  lit  the  spark  within  my  t, 
Faltering  and  fluttering  in  her  t, 
Make  liquid  treble  of  that  bassoon,  my  t ; 
Thereat  the  Lady  stretch'd  a  vulture  t, 
MiUions  of  t's  would  bawl  for  civil  rights, 
Tho'  niggard  t's  of  Manchester  may  bawl, 
There  is  but  one  bird  with  a  musical  t, 
And  flood  a  fresher  t  with  song, 
cobweb  woven  across  the  cannon's  t 
bared  the  knotted  column  of  his  t, 
many-winter'd  fleece  of  t  and  chin, 
felt  the  knot  Climb  in  her  t, 
'  Taliessin  is  our  fullest  t  of  song. 
The  naked  sword  athwart  their  naked  t's, 
the  sword  of  the  tourney  across  her  t. 
that  felt  the  cold  touch  on  her  t. 


1108 

1242 

Geraint  and  E.  792 

Pass,  of  Arthur  304 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  33 

The  Wreck  39 

Heavy  Brigade  54 

The  Sing  159 

355 

Charity  5 

Sum).  Confessions  40 

Pelleas  and  E.  291 

Edwin  Morris  68 

Talking  Oak  177 

Princess  i  66 

„      iv  261 

In  Mem.  xcvii  21 

Demeter  and  P.  69 

D.  of  F.  Women  243 

Totnorrow  45 

Sea  Dreams  10 

Dora  16 

Love  thou  thy  land  95 

Two  Voices  153 

Sir  Galahad  22 

Lover^s  Tale  i  363 

The  Sing  379 

D.  of  F.  Women  82 

Balin  and  Balan  546 

Lilian  22 

Talking  Oak  50 

Sea  Dreams  197 

Dead  Prophet  26 

North.  Cobbler  106 

Church-warden,  etc.  20 

(Enone  178 

Palace  of  Art  140 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  31 

D.  of  F.  Women  115 

To  J.  S.  54 

The  Goose  31 

Talking  Oak  266 

WUl  Water.  109 

Princess  ii  187 

426 

it)  363 

1)387 

Third  of  Feb.  43 

The  Islet  27 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiii  16 

Maud  III  vi  27 

Marr.  of  Geraint  74 

Merlin  and  V.  841 

Lancelot  and  E.  741 

Holy  Grail  300 

Pelleas  and  E.  452 

455 

488 


Throat  (continued)     The  warm  white  apple  of  her  t,      Last  Tournament  71 T 
he  bow'd  to  kiss  the  jewell'd  t,  „  751 

yea  to  him  Who  hacks  his  mother's  t —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  114 

Sorra  the  silent  t  but  we  hard  it  Tomorrow  84 

scatters  on  her  t  the  sparks  of  dew.  Prog,  of  Spring  58 

you  will  not  deny  my  sultry  t  One  draught  Rotaney's  R.  22 

He  gript  it  so  hard  by  the  t  Bandit's  Death  28 

Throated    See  Glossy-throated,  Hundred-throated, 
Serpent-throated,  Yellow-throated) 

Throb  (s)     Perchance,  to  lull  the  t's  of  pain. 

Throb  (verb)     and  t's  Thro'  earth,  and  all  her  graves, 
T  thro'  the  ribbed  stone  ; 
The  sight  that  t's  and  aches  beneath  my  touch, 

Throbb'd    Till  the  war-drum  t  no  longer, 
tempestuous  treble  t  and  palpitated  ; 
T  thimder  thro'  the  palace  floors, 
brows  that  shook  and  t  From  temple  unto  temple. 

Throbbing     T  thro'  all  thy  heat  and  light. 
Her  heart  is  like  a  t  star. 
When  last  vnth  t  heart  I  came  To  rest 
A  footstep,  a  low  t  in  the  walls. 

Throe    coughs,  aches,  stitches,  ulcerous  t's 


The  Daisy  105 
Romney's  R.  127 
Palace  of  Art  176 
Lover's  Tale  i  33 
Locksley  Hall  127 
Vision  of  Sin  28 
Princess  vii  104 
Lover's  Tale  Hi  7 
Fatima  4 
Kate  !) 
Talking  Oak  155 
The  Ring  409 
St.  S.  Stylites  13 
Travail,  and  t's  and  aigonies  of  the  life.  Com.  of  Arthur  76 

Throne    (See  also  Bosom-throne,  Dais-throne,  Rock-throne, 

Throan)     Which  kept  her  t  unshaken  sfill,  To  the  Queen  34 

underpropt  a  rich  T  of  the  massive  ore,  Arabian  Nights  146 

to  own  A  crown,  a  sceptre,  and  a  t  !  Ode  to  Memory  121 

With  a  crown  of  gold.  On  a  i  ?  The  Merman  7 

With  a  comb  of  pearl.  On  at?  The  Mermaid  8 

Over  the  t  In  the  midst  of  the  hall ;  .,  21 

lightly  vault  from  the  t  and  play  With  the  mermen  ,,  33 

Thou  from  a  t  Mounted  in  heaven  To  J.  M.  K.  12 

whose  strong  right  arm  debased  The  t  of  Persia,  Alexander  2 

The  t  of  Indian  Cama  slowly  sail'd  Palace  of  Art  115 

bells  Began  to  chime.     She  took  her  t :  .,  158 

held  she  her  solemn  mirth.  And  intellectual  t.  ,,  216 

two  tame  leopards  couch'd  beside  her  t,  Princess  ii  33 

glittering  bergs  of  ice,  T  after  t,  ,,        iv  72 

the  crowd  dividing  clove  An  advent  to  the  t :  „  284 

and  winged  Her  transit  to  the  t,  „  378 

at  the  further  end  Was  Ida  by  the  t,  .,      vi  357 

And  barking  for  the  t's  of  kings  ;  Ode  on  Well.  121 

Betwixt  a  people  and  their  ancient  t,  „  163 

joy  to  the  people  and  joy  to  the  t,  W.  to  Alexandra  29 

English  Harold  gave  its  t  a  wife,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  24 

t's  and  peoples  are  as  waifs  that  swing,  ,,  26 

Green-rushing  from  the  rosy  t's  of  dawn  ! 

(repeat)  Voice  and  the  P.  4,  40 

The  chairs  and  t's  of  civil  power  ?  In  Mem.  xxi  16 

And  shape  the  whisper  of  the  t ;  „        Ixiv  12 

thousand  battles,  and  shaking  a  hvmdred  t's.  Maud  I  i  4S 

In  that  fierce  light  which  beats  upon  a  t,  Ded.  of  Idylls  27 

from  this  land  of  beasts  Up  to  my  t.  Com.  of  Arthur  81 

'  A  doubtful  t  is  ice  on  summer  seas.  ,,  248 

Who  stood  in  silence  near  his  t,  ,.  277 

same  that  afterward  Struck  for  the  t,  „  325 

those  tall  knights,  that  ranged  about  the  t,  Gareth  and  L.  328 

Which  down  he  laid  before  the  t,  and  knelt,  „  390 

Lest  we  should  set  one  truer  on  his  t.  Balin  and  Balan  7 

a  knight  cast  down  Before  his  t  Last  Tournament  162 

Lay  couchant  with  his  eyes  upon  the  t,  Guinevere  11 

When  all  the  purport  of  my  t  hath  fail'd.  Pass,  of  Arthur  160 

They  stood  before  his  t  in  silence,  „  455 

and  her  t  In  our  vast  Orient,  To  the  Queen  ii  30 

There  in  my  realm  and  even  on  my  t,  Lover's  Tale  i  593 

Whom  once  he  rose  from  off  his  t  to  greet  Columbus  5 

the  king,  the  queen,  Sank  from  their  t's,  „        15 

the  mountain  arose  like  a  jewell'd  t  V.  of  Maeldune  59 

as  a  slave  to  his  intellectual  t,  The  Wreck  66 

Break  the  State,  the  Church,  the  T,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  138 

seen  the  loneliness  of  earthly  t's.  To  Prin.  Beatrice  14 

One  life,  one  flag,  one  fleet,  one  T  ! '  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  39 

Flattery  gilding  the  rift  in  a  < ;  Vastness  20 

rebel  subject  seek  to  drag  me  from  the  t.  By  an  Evolution.  15 

all  the  T's  are  clouded  by  your  loss,  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.6 


Throned 


727 


Thunderbolt 


Tbroned    (See  also  Lov-tiaonei)    wisdom-bred  AmU  of 

wisdom —  ,,      .  _,   -,,           TO- 

I  turning  saw,  t  on  a  flowery  rise,  U-  of  F.  W  omen  1 J5 

And  t  races  may  degrade  ;  I^  Mem.  cxf^^^1 

splendour  of  the  presence  of  the  King  T,  Gareth  and  L  d^i 

That  victor  of  the  Pagan  t  in  hall—  Last  Tournament  665 

Throng  (S)     in  among  the  t's  of  men  :  Locksley  ^cUl  lib 

Aid  pinch  their  brethren  in  the  i,  Lit  Sqv^hhlesi 

\  head  with  kindling  eyes  above  the  t,  Gareth  and  L.  b4b 

from  out  of  kitchen  came  The  thralls  in  t,  „            o»& 

push'd  Athwart  the  t  to  Lancelot,  Holy  Grail  156 

Throng  (verb)     To  <  with  stately  blooms  IheFoetZi 

marish-flowers  that  t  The  desolate  creeks  Dying  Swan  40 

and  t,  their  rags  and  they  The  basest,  Lucretius  170 

the  people  t  The  chairs  and  thrones  In  Mem.  xxi  15 

Throngd    {See  also  Mast-throng'd)     And  her  whisper  t  „  „  oc 

my  pulses  Locksley  Hall  36 

Every  gate  is  t  with  suitors,  "           ^^^ 

In  their  own  darkness,  t  into  the  moon.  Pelleas  and  h.  458 
Their  people  t  about" them  from  the  hall,  Sisters  ( E.  and  h.)  16b 
a  crowd  T  the  waste  field  about  the  city  gates  :         Str  J.  OldcastUm 

Thronging    Or  t  all  one  porch  of  Paradise  Palace  of  Art  101 

Till  t  in  and  in,  to  where  they  waited,  T  isumof&m2b 

as  t  fancies  come  To  boys  and  girls  Lover  s  lale  i  564 

Throstle     And  thro'  wild  March  the  t  cMs,  To  the  Quern  14 

The  callow  nispeth,  j  ^''^/^  Ti 

Sometimes  the  t  whistled  strong  :  Sir  L.and  y.  tr.  li 

And  swallow  and  sparrow  and  t,  Umdow,  Ay  14 

blackbirds  have  their  wills.  The  t's  too.  Early  Spring  6 

Throve     And  so  she  t  and  prosper'd  :  -'  alaceof  Artjll 

that  on  which  it  <  Falls  off,  ,Aio\l 

But  t  not  in  her  trade,  not  being  bred  To  barter,  Enoch  Arden  249 

And  in  it  <  an  ancient  evergreen,  ,     ,,    "        ■••'Vo 

Who  t  and  branch'd  from  clime  to  clime.  In  Menu  cxviiild 

And  all  this  t  until  I  wedded  thee,  Gutwevere  484 

Throw    I  would  <  to  them  back  in  mine  „  irf^"**^? 

dividing  the  swift  mind.  In  act  to  t :  Af.  d  Arthur  bl 

Nor  lose  the  wrestling  thews  that  t  the  world  ;  Princess  mi  ZbZ 

To  seize  and  t  the  doubts  of  man  ;  In  Mem.  cixb 

being  but  knave,  I  /  thine  enemies.'  Gareth  and  L.  WZ6 

Morning  Star  Can  t  the  Evening.'  ,.          110^ 

dividing  the  swift  mind.  In  act  to  t :  Pass,  of  Arthur 'm 

Throwing     t  down  his  robes.  And  claspt  her  hand  Lover  s  T<de  in  51 

and  we  took  to  t  the  stone,  V.  of  Maeldunedi 

Thrown    selfsame  impulse  wherewith  he  was  t  Mine  be  the  strength  6 

thunder,  or  a  sound  Of  rocks  t  down,  Pdace  of  Art'ib2 

Still  from  one  sorrow  to  another  t :  Lotos- Eaters,  !^- S.  io 

broad-limb'd  Gods  at  random  t  By  fountain-urns  ;—  To  E.  L.  15 

the  shiver  of  dancing  leaves  is  t  Maud  L  w  7d 
knight  of  Arthur,  here  lie  t  by  whom  I  know  not,      Gareih  and  L.  1166 

Out,  sword ;  we  are  t\'  "          1236 

T  have  I  been,  nor  once,  but  many  a  time.  ,,          l-^ol 

Thrue  (true)     yer  Honour's  the  t  ould  blood  Tomorrow  5 

Thrum    to  flaunt,  to  dress,  to  dance,  to  t,  Princess  iv  5iy 

Thrumm'd     who  t  On  such  a  wire  as  musically  Last  Tournament  6jZ 

Thrumming    And  <  on  the  table :  Will  Water.  1^ 

Thrush     (6'«e  aZso  Mavis)     rarely  pipes  the  mounted  < ;  Iri  Mem.  xciZ 

Thrust  (s)     here  a  t  that  might  have  kiU'd,  Larwelotand  E.  Zb 

Thrust  (verb)     and  t  The  dagger  thro'  her  side.'  D.  of  F.  Women  259 

Who  t  him  in  the  hollows  of  his  arm,  .     JJora  16Z 

And  with  grim  laughter  t  us  out  at  gates.  Princess  w  56b 

T  in  between ;  but  Arac  rode  him  down  :  ..         jji 

For  into  a  shallow  grave  they  are  f,  •  .      j  i  iLr 

And  t  the  dish  before  her,  crying,  '  Eat.'  Geraint  and  E.  b&5 

Unbind  him  now.  And  t  him  out  of  doors  ;  Pelleas  and  E.  Zbi 

and  unbound,  and  t  him  from  the  gate.  ••             ^ 

Far  less  to  bind,  your  victor,  and  t  him  out,  ,■            2yd 

but  t  him  bounden  out  of  door.  -             <^^ 

Or  t  the  heathen  from  the  Roman  wall.  Pass,  of  Arthur  69 

portion  of  the  pleasant  yesterday,  T  forward  on  ,    ,r,  7    •  loo 

to-day  Lover's  Tale  1 126 

Had  t  his  wife  and  child  and  dash'd  v           .    380 

him  Who  t  him  out,  or  him  who  saved  his  life  ?  .,          tv  Zbi 

Thrusteth    My  tough  lance  t  sure,  .     Sir  OalahadZ 

Thud     the  hollow-beaten  mosses  t  Balm  and  Halan  d2i 


Thumb     his  nice  eyes  Should  see  the  raw  mechanic's 

bloody  t's  Walk,  to  the  Mail  75 

And  rotatory  t's  on  silken  knees,  Aylmer's  Field  200 
nipt  her  slender  nose  With  petulant  t  and  finger,         Gareth  and  L.  750 

stoop  and  kiss  the  tender  little  t,  Man:  of  Geraint  395 

Thumbscrew    To  the  t  and  the  stake.  The  Iieverige21 

Thump     heave  and  t  A  league  of  street  Princess  in  127 

Thunder  (s)  (See  also  Battle-thunder,  Tundher,  War- 
thunder)  Below  the  t's  of  the  upper  deep  ;  The  Krakenl 
Her  words  did  gather  t  as  they  ran.  The  Poet  49 
And  as  the  lightning  to  the  t  Which  follows  it,  ,.  50 
Ever  brightening  With  a  low  melodious  t ;  Poet  s  Mind  27 
Low  t  and  light  in  the  magic  night—  The  Merman  23 
With  t's,  and  with  lightnings,  BuonafaHeQ 
Rest  in  a  happy  place  and  quiet  seats  Above  the  t,  (Enone  162 
The  ragged  rims  Of  t  brooding  low.  Palace  of  Art  15 
t,  or  a  sound  of  rocks  thrown  down,  ,,  281 
And  t  on  the  everlasting  hills.  D.of  I.  Women  22b 
The  t's  breaking  at  her  feet :  Of  old  sat  Freedom  2 
Black'd  with  thy  branding  t,  St.S.  SlyliiesT6 
Low  t's  bring  the  mellow  rain.  Talking  Oak  279 
frolic  welcome  took  The  t  and  the  sunshine,  Ulysses  48 
But  they  heard  the  foeman's  t  The  Coftainjtl 
for  on  her  the  t's  of  the  house  Had  fallen  Aylmer  s  i*  leld  278 
flood,  fire,  earthquake,  t,  wrought  Such  waste  ,,  639 
Dead  claps  of  t  from  within  the  cliffs  Sea  Dreams  55 
And  there  was  rolling  « ;  "  ]}^ 
Nor  ever  lowest  roll  of  t  moans,  Lucretius  108 
A  long  melodious  t  to  the  sound  Of  solemn  psalms.  Princess  ii  47b 
shattering  on  black  blocks  A  breadth  of  t.  „  iii  292 
with  the  crash  of  shivering  points.  And  t.  „  v  492 
Throbb'd  t  thro'  the  palace  floors,  ^  mi  104 
even  if  they  broke  In  t,  silent ;  Ode  on  Well.  177 
Welcome  her,  t's  of  fort  and  of  fleet  !  M  .to  Alexandra  6 
if  he  thunder  by  law  the  t  is  yet  His  voice.  High.  Pantheism  14 
T,  a  flying  fire  in  heaven,  ^^  Boadicea  24 
AAd  a  sullen  t  is  roU'd  ;  ^  Maud  II  iv  49 
Made  lightnings  and  great  t's  over  him.  Com.  of  Arthur  im 
break  perforce  Upon  a  head  so  dear  in  t,  said  :  Geraint  and  E.  16 
crash  of  the  near  cataract  hears  The  drumming  t  ,  "  ,  j.  lH 
The  hard  earth  shake,  and  a  low  t  of  arms.  Lancelot  and  E.  4b0 
and  overhead  T,  and  in  the  t  was  a  cry.  Holy  Grail  185 
Thicker  than  drops  from  t,  "  ^*° 
the  heavens  Open'd  and  blazed  with  t  „  6U» 
and  close  upon  it  peal'd  A  sharp  quick  t.  t  ,  rr  "  ,  i  «q 
then  one  low  roll  Of  Autumn  t,  Last  Tournament  153 
thresholds  clashing,  roll'd  Her  heaviest  t—  Lover  s  Tale  t  606 
the  surge  fell  From  t  into  whispers  ;  ,,  *«  31 
I  heard  his  voice  between  The  t's  Columbus  146 
t  of  God  peal'd  over  us  all  the  day,  i^  •  of  Maeldune  11^ 
a  voice  rang  out  in  the  t's  of  Ocean  and  Heaven  1  he  Wreck  88 
Full-handed  t's  often  have  confessed  Thy  ^  „.  ^  ,^  ,  „ 
po^er  To  R  .  C.  Macready  2 
Are  there  t's  moaning  in  the  distance  ?  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  66 
Till  the  t's  pass,  the  spectres  vanish,  „  ,  „  ^9 
Downward  t  in  hollow  and  glen,  To  Master  of  B.  16 
Across  the  downward  t  of  the  brook  Death  of  (Enone  26 
or  shake  with  her  t's  and  shatter  her  island,  Kapiolani  10 
There  is  a  sound  of  t  afar.  Riflemen  form  !  1 
Storm  of  battle  and  t  of  war !  ^^  ^  , , 
and  hew'd  Like  broad  oaks  with  t.  The  Tourney  11 
at  the  shipwreck,  or  the  rolling  T,  lot 
Thunder  (verb)  That  not  one  moment  ceased  to  t,  ^ea  Dreams  125 
And  the  volleying  cannon  t  his  loss  ;  Ode  on  Well.  62 
T  ■  Anathema,'  friend,  at  you  ;  To  F  D.  Maurice  8 
if  He  t  by  law  the  thunder  is  yet  His  voice.  High.  Pantheism  14 
Thunderbolt  in  its  breast  a  t.  Locksley  HM  192 
And  like  a  t  he  falls.  The  Eagle  6 
and  once  the  flash  of  a  <—  „  .  Lucretius  27 
And,  falling  on  them  like  a  t.  Princess,  Pro-^ 
the  t  Hangs  silent ;  but  prepare  :  I  speak  ;  „  m  226 
/  dare  All  these  male  i's  :  >.  „  ivm) 
Whence  the  t  will  fall  Long  and  loud,  The  Revenge  44 
Shrine-shattering  earthquake,  fire,  flood,  t,  Tiresias  bl 
Burst  like  a  t,  Crash'd  like  a  hurricane,  Heavy  Brigade  21 


Thunderbolt 


728 


Tilt 


Thunderbolt  {continued)    Gods,  To  quench,  not  hurl  the 

t,  to  stay,  Demeter  and  P.  133 

Thnnderclap    There  was  a  t  once.  In  the  Child.  Hosf.  62 

blast  of  that  underground  t  echo'd  away,  Dej.  of  Lucknow  32 

Thunder-cloud     As  t-c's  that,  hung  on  high,  Eleanore  98 

like  a  t-c  Whose  skirts  are  loosen'd  Geraint  and  E.  458 

Thunder-drops    As  t-d  fall  on  a  sleeping  sea :  D.  of  F.  Women  122 

Thunder'd     Volleyed  and  t ;  (repeat)  Light  Brigade  21,  42 

t  up  into  Heaven  the  Christless  code,  Maud  II  i  26 

war  That  i  in  and  out  the  gloomy  skirts  Lancelot  and  E.  291 

Thunder-gloom     cloud  that  grew  To  t-g  Gareth  and  L.  1359 

Thundering    The  league-long  roller  t  on  the  reef,  Enoch  Arden  584 

Welcome  her,  t  cheer  of  the  street  !  W.  to  Alexandra  7 

All  down  the  t  shores  of  Bude  and  Bos,  Guinevere  291 

Thunderless     T  lightnings  striking  under  sea  To  the  Queen  ii  12 

waterfalls  Pour'd  in  at  plimge  to  the  base  V.  of  Maeldune  14 

Thunder-music    t-m,  rolling,  shake  The  prophet  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  7 

Thunderous     when  the  note  Had  reach'd  a  t  fulness.  Sea  Dreams  214 

the  ship  stagger'd  under  a  t  shock.  The  Wreck  107 

Thunder-peals    A  bridal  dawn  of  t-f,  Love  thou  thy  land  51 

Thundershaken    collapsed  masses  Of  t  columns  indistinct.  Lover's  Tale  ii  66 

Thunder-shower    are  drown'd  in  azure  gloom  Of  t-s,  Princess  iv  526 

Thunder-sketch    t-s  Of  lake  and  mountain  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  99 

Thunder-smoke    roofs  Of  our  great  hall  are  roll'd  in  i-s  !        Holy  Grail  220 

Iliundersong     the  t  that  wheels  the  spheres,  Lover's  Tale  i  476 

Thunder-storm     the  peoples  plunging  thro'"  the  t-s  ;             Locksley  Hall  126 

Upon  a  king's  right  hand  in  t-s's,  Princess  v  439 

Thundrous    With  scraps  of  t  Epic  lilted  out  „        ii  375 

Thum  (thorn)     and  a  <  be  a-grawin'  theer.  Village  Wife  79 

As  fer  as  fro'  Thursby  t  North.  Cobbler  14 

fust  kiss  I  gied  'er  by  Thursby  t;  „            45 

Thumaby    an'  I  'a  stubb'd  T  waaste.  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  28 

an'  T  hoalms  to  plow !  „            52 

Thursby    As  fer  as  fro'  T  thurn  North.  Gobbler  14 

fust  kiss  I  gied  'er  by  T  thum ;  „            45 

Thutty  (thirty)     I  ears  es  'e'd  gie  fur  a  howry  owd  book  t 

pound  an'  moor,  Village  Wife  45 

I  'a  managed  for  Squoire  coom  Michaelmas  t  year.   N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  48 

Thwack'd     Knights  were  t  and  riven.  The  Tourney  10 

Thwarted     T  by  one  of  these  old  father-fools,  Aylmer's  Field  390 

wrong'd  and  lied  and  t  us —  Princess  iv  540 

Thwarting     t  their  traditions  of  Himself,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  181 

Thymy     Love  paced  the  t  plots  of  Paradise,  Love  and  Death  2 

Lingering  about  the  t  promontories,  Sea  Dreams  38 

Tiar    studded  wide  With  disks  and  t's,  Arabian  Nights  64 

Ticking    The  slow  clock  t,  and  the  sound  Mariana  74 

Tickle    t  the  maggot  bom  in  an  empty  head,  Maud  II  v  38 

Tickled     And  secret  laughter  t  all  my  soul.  Princess  iv  267 

Ticklin'     ya  was  t'  o'  trout,  Church-warden,  etc.  27 

Tickling     (See  also  Ticklin')     caught  the  younker  t 

trout —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  33 

t  the  bmte  brain  within  the  man's  Lucretius  21 
Tide    (See  also  Autumn-tide,  High-tide,  Hunting-tide, 

River-tide)     The  t  of  time  flow'd  back  with  me,        Arabian  Nights  3 

The  forward-flowing  t  of  time ;  „               4 

For  ere  she  reach'd  upon  the  t  L.  of  Shalott  iv  33 

Bluster  the  winds  and  t's  the  self-same  way  D.  of  F.  Women  38 

And  when  the  t  of  combat  stands,  Sir  Galahad  10 

As  down  dark  I's  the  glory  slides,  „           47 
On  whose  dull  sameness  his  full  t  of  youth  Broke      Aylmer's  Field  115 

a  full  t  Rose  with  ground-swell,  Sea  Dreams  50 

you  do  but  hear  the  t.  „           84 

Of  such  a  t  swelling  toward  the  land,  „          87 

No ! '  said  he, '  but  this  t's  roar,  „        250 

at  high  t  of  feast.  In  masque  or  pageant  Princess  i  197 

Till  toward  the  centre  set  the  starry  t's,  „        ii  117 

a  <  of  fierce  Invective  seem'd  to  wait  „        iv  471 

When  the  t  ebbs  in  sunshine,  „        vi  162 

we  hear  The  t's  of  Music's  golden  sea  Ode  on  Well.  252 

Dream  in  the  sliding  t's.  Requiescat  4 

The  t  flows  down,  the  wave  again  In  Mem.  xix  13 

The  double  t's  of  chariots  flow  „      xcviii  23 

forward-creeping  t's  Began  to  foam,  „          ciii  37 

In  vassal  t's  that  follow'd  thought.  .,         cxii  16 

t  in  its  broad-fliuig  ship-wrecking  r0£ir,  Maud  I  Hi  11 


Tide  (continued)    Your  limit,  oft  returning  with  the  t.     Lancelot  and  E.  1041 

t  within  Red  with  free  chase  and  heather-scented 

air,  Last  Tournament  690 

and  with  that  wind  the  t  Rose, 

And  London  roU'd  one  t  of  joy 

where  the  t  Plash' d,  sapping  its  worn  ribs ; 

a-saiUng  with  wind  an'  t. 

bank  that  is  daily  devour'd  by  the  t — 

t's  of  onset  sap  Our  seven  high  gates, 

flung  from  the  rushing  t  of  the  world 

home  in  the  canes  by  the  purple  t, 

towering  crest  of  the  t's  Plunged  on  the  vessel 

change  of  the  t — what  is  all  of  it  worth  ? 

in  the  t's  of  a  civic  insanity  ! 

clash  of  t's  that  meet  in  narrow  seas. — 

But  such  At  as  moving  seems  asleep, 
Tided    See  Full-tided 
Tidings     Be  cheer'd  with  t  of  the  bride, 

To  hear  the  t  of  my  friend. 
Tie  (s)     To  pass  with  all  our  social  t's 

ancient  t's  Would  still  be  dear  beyond 

strand  of  Death  inwoven  here  With  dear  Love's  t. 


Tie  (verb)     T  up  the  ringlets  on  your  cheek : 
Close  up  his  eyas :  t  up  his  chin : 

Tied     Bhidesmaid,  ere  the  happy  knot  was  t, 
is  charm'd  and  t  To  where  he  stands, — 
t  it  round  his  hat  To  make  him  pleasing 
t  the  bridal-reins  of  all  the  three  (repeat) 
That  'is  taail  were  soa  t  up 

Tier    All  up  the  marble  stair,  t  over  t, 

high  above  us  with  her  yawning  t's  of  guns. 

Tierce    subtle  at  t  and  quart  of  mind 

Tiger  (adj.)     The  t  spasms  tear  his  chest, 


Every  t  madness  muzzled,  every  serpent  passion 
kill'd. 
Tiger  (s)     Here  play'd,  a  t,  rolling  to  and  fro 

And  let  the  ape  and  t  die. 

if  the  t's  leap  into  the  fold  unawares — 

I  saw  the  t  in  the  ruin'd  fane  Spring 

hvmt  the  t  of  oppression  out  From  office ; 

From  the  lower  world  within  him,  moods  of  t,  or 
of  ape? 
Tiger-cat     a  t-c  In  act  to  spring. 
Tiger-lily    Heavily  hangs  the  t-l.  (repeat) 
Tight    I'd  clasp  it  round  so  close  and  t. 

that  trims  us  up.  And  keeps  us  t ; 

Would  twist  his  girdle  t, 

link  Of  some  t  chain  within  my  inmost  frame  Was 
riven  in  twain : 
Tighten    made  her  lithe  arm  round  his  neck  T, 
Tigress    To  trip  a  t  with  a  gossamer, 
Tigris     Adown  the  T  I  was  borne, 
Tile    her  whinny  shrills  From  t  to  scullery. 

Fill  out  the  spaces  by  the  barren  t's. 
Till  (s)     rogue  would  leap  from  his  counter  and  t. 
Till  (verb)     It  is  the  land  that  freemen  t, 

Man  comes  and  t's  the  field  and  lies  beneath, 

year  by  year  the  labourer  t's  His  wonted  glebe, 

sent  a  thousand  men  To  t  the  wastes, 
Till'd    for  miles  about  Was  t  by  women ; 

Every  grim  ravine  a  garden,  every  blazing 
desert  t, 
Tiller     three  were  clad  like  t's  of  the  soil. 

Gareth,  '  We  be  t's  of  the  soil. 
Tilt  (cart-cover)     his  wife  upon  the  t. 
Tilt  (IcQightiy  exercise)     that  rang  With  t  and  tourney ; 

I  seem'd  to  move  in  old  memorial  t's, 

stagger'd  thy  strong  Gawain  in  a  <  For  pastime ; 

Forgetful  of  the  t  and  tournament. 

And  victor  at  the  t  and  tournament. 

Hurt  in  his  first  t  was  my  son. 

That  he  should  wear  her  favour  at  the  t. 

many  a  time  have  watch'd  thee  at  the  t 

acts  of  prowess  done  In  tournament  or  t,  Sir  Percivale 

Killed  in  a  t,  come  next,  five  summers  back, 


Pass,  of  Arthur  125 

To  the  Queen  ii  8 

Lover's  Tale  i  55 

First  Quarrel  42 

Def.  of  Lucknow  39 

Tiresias  91 

The  Wreck  6; 

71 

89 

Vastness  30 

Beautiful  City  4 

Akbar's  Dream  58 

Crossing  the  Bar  5 

In  Mem.  xl  23 

„     cxxvi  3 

Day- Dm.,  L' Envoi  5 

Princess  ii  264 

Maud  I  xviii  61 

Margaret  57 

D.  of  the  0.  Year  48 

The  Bridesmaid  1 

D.  of  F.  Women  193 

Dora  83 

Geraint  and  E.  98,  183 

Village  Wife  30 

Lancelot  nnd  E.  1248 

The  Revenge  41 

In  Mem.,  W.  G.  Ward  5 

Ancient  Sage  123 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  167 

Palace  of  Art  151 

In  Mem,  cxviii  28 

Def.  of  Lucknow  51 

Demeter  and  P.  79 

Akbar's  Dream  158 

Making  of  Man  2 

Princess  ii  450 

A  spirit  haunts  12,  24 

Miller's  D.  180 

Edwin  Morris  47 

Talking  Oak  43 

Lover's  Tale  i  595 

Merlin  and  V.  615 

Princess  t)  170 

Arabian  Nights  6 

Princess  v  453 

Prog,  of  Spring  43 

Maud  I  ibl 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  5 

Tithonus  3 

In  Mem.  ci  21 

Geraint  and  E.  942 

Princess  i  192 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  168 

Gareth  and  L.  181 

242 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  41 

Princess,  Pro.  122 

v  479 

Gareth  and  L.  542 

Marr.  of  Geraint  52 

Geraint  and  E.  960 

Larwelot  and  E.  196 

358 

1359 

Holy  Grail  2 

Guinevere  32] 


TUt 

Tilt  (knightly  exercise)  (continued)    on  love  And  sport 

and  pleasure,  ,,     i    i 

Tilt  (verb)     Himself  woidd  t  it  out  among  the  lads : 
Ask'd  me  to  t  with  him,  the  proven  knight. 
Who  t  for  lady's  love  and  glory  here, 
But  in  this  tournament  can  no  man  t, 
And  t's  with  my  good  nephew  thereupon, 
He  left  it  with  her,  when  he  rode  to  t 
to  (  against  the  knights  There  at  Caerleon, 
t  with  a  lance  Becomes  thee  well- 
Tilted    See  Tip-tilted 
Tilth    wither'd  holt  or  t  or  pasturage, 
and  so  by  t  and  grange,  And  vmes, 
t  and  vineyard,  hive  and  horse  and  herd ; 
Tilting-field     In  open  battle  or  the  t-f  (repeat) 
Timber     And  fiddled  in  the  < ! 
Timber-crost    A  front  of  t-c  antiquity, 
Timbrel    With  t  and  with  song. 
Time  (s)    (See  also  Bridal-time,  CoUege-tmie,  Cradle- 
time,  Ten-times,  Toime)     yield  you  t  To  make 
demand  of  modern  rhyme 
Nine  t's  goes  the  passing  bell : 
In  a  t,  Of  which  he  wots  not, 
The  tide  of  t  flow'd  back  with  me,  The  forward- 
flowing  tide  of  t ; 
In  sooth  it  was  a  goodly  t, 
A  goodly  place,  a  goodly  t,  (repeat) 
A  goodly  t,  For  it  was  in  the  golden  prune 
fed  the  t  With  odour  in  the  golden  prune 
Apart  from  place,  withholding  t, 
A  lovely  t,  For  it  was  in  the  golden  prime 
Entranced  with  that  place  and  t, 
Graven  with  emblems  of  the  t, 
After  the  fashion  of  the  t, 
night  new-risen,  that  marvellous  t 
The  sweetest  lady  of  the  t, 
Sole  star  of  all  that  place  and  t. 
What  t  the  amber  mom  Forth  gushes 
What  t  the  mighty  moon  was  gathering  light 
That  tho'  I  knew  not  in  what  t  or  place, 
said  the  secret  voice,  '  some  t.  Sooner  or  later, 
'  Forerun  thy  peers,  thy  t,  and  let  Thy  feet, 
memory  of  the  wither'd  leaf  In  endless  t 
What  t  the  foeman's  Une  is  broke, 
*  For  memory  dealing  but  with  t. 
Beat  t  to  nothing  in  my  head 
That  went  and  came  a  thousand  t's. 
when  t  was  ripe.  The  still  aSection  of  the  heart 
from  that  t  to  tliis  I  am  alone. 
My  love  hath  told  me  so  a  thousand  t's.  ^ 
Hath  he  not  sworn  his  love  a  thousand  t's, 
Three  t's  I  stabb'd  him  thro'  and  thro', 
the  t's  of  every  land  So  wrought. 
What  t  I  watch  the  darkening  droves  of  swine 
But  dreadful  t,  dreadful  eternity. 
And  ever  worse  with  growing  t, 
You  know  so  ill  to  deal  with  t, 
If  t  be  heavy  on  your  hands, 
To-morrow  'ill  be  the  happiest  t  of  all  the  glad 

year;  (repeat) 
The  good  old  year,  the  dear  old  t, 
A  thousand  t's  I  blest  him, 
And  if  it  comes  three  t's,  I  thought. 
So  now  I  think  my  t  is  near. 
T  driveth  onward  fast, 
The  spacious  t's  of  great  Elizabeth 
The  t's  when  I  remember  to  have  been    ^ 
wood  is  all  thine  own,  Until  the  end  of  t. 
The  Nilus  would  have  risen  before  his  t 
This  is  the  curse  of  t.     Alas  ! 
'  Beat  quicker,  for  the  t  Is  pleasant. 
Hath  t  and  space  to  work  and  spread, 
induce  a  t  When  single  thought  is  civil  crime, 
transfused  Thro'  future  t  by  power  of  thought 
But  pamper  not  a  hasty  t, 


729 


and  t's 

Guinevere  387 

Princess  v  355 

Gareth  and  L.  27 

740 

Marr.  of  Geraint  480 

488 

Lancelot  and  E.  30 

Pelleas  and  E.  65 

Last  Tournameni  636 

Enoch  Arden  675 

Princess  i  110 

To  Virgil  10 

Guinevere  330,  332 

Amphion  16 

Enoch  Arden  692 

D.  of  F.  Women  200 

To  the  Queen  10 
All  Things  will  Die  35 
Swpf.  Confessions  160 

Arabian  Nights  3 

20 

.,      31, 53 

42 

64 

75 

86 

97 

108 

119 

130 

141 

152 

Ode  to  Memory  70 

Love  and  Death  1 

Sonnet  to 12 

Two  Voices  64 
88 
113 
155 
376 
MUler's  D.  67 
72 
224 
CEnone  193 
.,      197 
.,      231 
The  Sisters  29 
Palace  of  Art  147 
199 
267 
270 
L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  63 
66 
New- 
Maw  Queen  2,  42 
.:  N.  Y's.  E.  6 
Cotu  16 
,  38 

'.,  41 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  43 
D.  of  F.  Women  7 
79 
84 
143 
To  J.  S.  17 
On  a  Mourner  12 
You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  16 
18 
Love  thou  thy  land  4 
9 


Time  (s)  (continued)    For  all  the  past  of  T  reveals  A 
bridal  dawn 
And  this  be  true,  till  T  shall  close, 
'  Why  take  the  style  of  those  heroic  t's  ? 
For  nature  brings  not  back  the  Mastodon,  Nor  we 

those  t's ; 
Shall  never  more,  at  any  future  t. 
And  hid  Excahbur  the  second  t, 
brandish'd  him  Three  t's,  and  drew  him  under  in  the 

mere,  (repeat) 
'tis  t  that  I  were  gone. 
I  see  the  true  old  t's  are  dead, 
Such  t's  have  been  not  since  the  light 
cock  crew  loud ;  as  at  that  t  of  year  The  lusty  bird 
we  listen'd ;  with  the  t  we  play'd. 
Then,  in  that  t  and  place,  I  spoke  to  her. 
And  in  that  t  and  place  she  answer'd  me, 
the  t  Is  come  to  raise  the  veil. 
But  in  my  <  a  father's  word  was  law, 
and  in  harvest  t  he  died. 


Time 

Love  thou  thy  land  50 

79 

The  Epic  35 

37 

M.  d' Arthur  18 

111 


„    146,  161 

163 

229 

232 

„       Ep.  10 

Gardener's  D.  221 

226 

231 

273 

Dora  27 

.,    55 


TwiU  set  me  right.'  Edwin  Morris  88 

for  so  long  a  <,  If  I  may  measure  t  St.  6.  ^tylttesva 

Heaven,  and  Earth,  and  T  are  choked.    ,   ,    ^    ^,    .  .  "  |Yi 

Bow  down  one  thousand  and  two  hundred  i  s,  1  o  Ohi'ist,         „  -in 


I  do  not  say  But  that  a  t  may  come — 
Yet  I  do  not  say,  that  t  is  at  the  doors 

'  But  could  I,  as  in  t's  foregone,  „,    .,  o 

Shall  Error  in  the  round  of  t  Still  father  Tmth .-' 

O  three  t's  less  unworthy  ! 

Wait ;  my  faith  is  large  in  T, 

when  a  hundred  t's  In  that  last  kiss, 

all  the  wheels  of  T  Spun  round  in  station, 

'  Ah  tho'  the  t's,  when  some  new  thought  can  bud, 

Not  in  our  t,  nor  in  our  children's  t, 

all  t's  I  have  enjoy'd  Greatly, 

Made  weak  by  t  and  fate,  but  strong  m  will 

fairy  tales  of  science,  and  the  long  result  of  1  ; 

Love  took  up  the  glass  of  T, 

in  the  foremost  files  of  t — 

Not  only  we,  the  latest  seed  of  T, 

And  thought  and  t  be  born  again. 

And  in  the  morning  of  the  t's.  , ,  .    t^ 

For  since  the  t  when  Adam  first  Embraced  his  hve 

How  goes  the  t  ?     'Tis  five  o'clock. 

Nor  add  and  alter,  many  t's, 

on  this  whirligig  of  T  We  circle 

With  1 1  will  not  quarrel : 

It  was  the  t  when  liUes  blow, 

Tho'  at  t's  her  spirit  sank : 

Then  before  her  t  she  died. 

At  t's  the  whole  sea  burn'd,  at  t's 

At  t's  a  carven  craft  would  shoot 

Wed  whom  thou  wilt,  but  I  am  sick  of  T, 

Is  to  be  the  ball  of  T, 

crime  Of  sense  avenged  by  sense  that  wore  witli  t. 
at  t's  Enoch  would  hold  possession  for  a  week : 
Enoch  at  t's  to  go  by  land  or  sea ;  ^ 

'  Take  your  own  t,  Annie,  take  your  own  t.  ^ 

bought  Quaint  monsters  for  the  market  of  those  t  s, 
saw  Philip,  the  slighted  suitor  of  old  t's,  ^ 

Lord  has  call'd  me  she  shall  know,  I  wait  His  t, 
touch'd  On  such  a  t  as  goes  before  the  leaf, 
and  then  indeed  Harder  the  t's  were. 
Ran  a  Malayan  amuck  against  the  t's. 
Beholding  how  the  years  which  are  not  T  s  Had 

blasted  him — 
Is  this  a  t  to  madden  madness  then  ? 
Was  this  a  t  for  these  to  flaunt  their  pride  ? 
Which  else  had  link'd  their  race  with  t's  to  come — 
this,  at  t's,  she  mingled  with  his  drink. 
Huge  Ammonites,  and  the  first  bones  of  T ; 
Strange  was  the  sight  and  smacking  of  thei; 
one  wide  chasm  of  t  and  frost  they  gave  The  park, 
monsters  only  made  to  kiil  T  by  the  fire  in  winter. 
A  tale  for  summer  as  befits  the  t, 


190 
192 
Talking  Oak  189 
Love  and  Duty  4 
20 
25 
66 
75 
Golden  Year  27 
55 
Ulysses  7 
„    69 
Locksley  Hall  12 
31 
178 
Godiva  5 
Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  50 
L'Envoi  20 
41 
Will  Water.  3 
15 
63 
206 
Lady  Clare  1 
L.  of  Burleigh  70 
88 
The  Voyage  51 
„  53 

Come  not,  when,  etc.  9 
Vision  of  Sin  105 
214 
Enoch  Arden  26 
104 
466 
539 
745 
811 
The  Brook  13 
Aiilmer's  Field  452 
463 


601 

770 

779 

Lucretius  18 

Princess,  Pro.  15 

89 

93 

205 

210 


Time 

Time  (s)  (continued)     something  made  to  suit  with  T  and 

From 'to  t,  some  baUad  or  a  song  ^'''"'''''  ^'°-  E] 

still  from  t  to  t  Came  munnurs  of  her  beauty  "             /os 

Some  future  <,  if  so  indeed  vou  B-iU  "            ,- ^ 

on  the  stTetch'd  forefinger  8f  all  T  Sparkle  for  ever:  '"              3?g 

like  swaUows  coming  out  of  <  "              V^ 

your  great  name  flow  on  with  broadening  t  "        ,v,-  ifii 

Our  ^yeakness  somehow  shapes  the  shadow,  T  ■  "             QOn 

aU  things  serve  their  t  Toward  that  great  year'  "           i/73 

J^t  **i  ^  tT?**=^^  .*^«  «^^"o^^  ^""ging  south  '"                89 

Like  the  Ithacensian  suitors  in  olf<,  "              „r 

they  mind  us  of  the  t  When  mc  made  bricks  in  E^ypt         "'  127 

those  were  gracious  rs.                                            ^^^  "              ^^' 

fellow-worker  be,  When  i!  should  serve ;  "              ^ 

I  that  have  wasted  here  health,  wealth,  and  L  "              ^ 

drunkard's  footbaU,  laughing-stocks  of  V  "              ^T? 

you  spent  a  stormy  t  With  our  strange  girl :  "           „  loi 

three  fs  he  went :  The  firet,  he  blew  and  blew,  "'              iji 

equal  baseness  hved  in  sleeker  <'«  '"              o^ 

He  plant  a  solid  foot  into  the  T,  '"              4?? 

roll  d  With  music  in  the  growing  breeze  of  T  "           ^fia 

we  will  scatter  aU  our  maids  Till  happier  t's  "              %m 

™?» J  ^  maicien  passing  home  Till  happier  t's ;  "              nsf 

call  d  On  flymg  T  from  all  their  silver  tongue^-  "        ^u  fJs 

Much  had  she  learnt  in  little  <.  "              9dn 

Sti^  w  t"'  ."P*""  *he  skirts  of  T,  Sit  side  by  side,  .';              IgV 

Give  It  <  To  learn  Its  limbs :                           '         '  '       r.^U 

Give  up  their  parks  some  dozen  t's  a  year  '"             i  m 

Foremost  captain  of  his  t,                  ^  n/J n«  ir.77  qV 

For  many  a  t  in  many  a  clime  His  captain's-ear  '^*"-  ^ 

wL  theTr^t^^ln"^?  ^  ^'^  'i  ..       u  Gra«rf;;oi;i«r  11 

was  tne  drst  t,  too,  that  ever  I  thought  of  death.  ri 

1  could  not  weep— my  own  t  seem'd  so  near.  "            70 

mine  is  a  «  of  peace,  (repeat)  "      rq  q1 

And  age  is  a  <  of  peace,  "      °^'  X* 

What  t  have  I  to  be  vext  ?  "  iL 
T  to  think  on  it  then :  m  v  "  n-  tn 
Do'ant  be  stunt:  taake  t:                                          ^ '  ^"'^''•'  ^-  -^i  J 

But  111  for  him  who,  bettering  not  with  t,  "  will  10 
Rhymes  and  rhymes  in  the  range  of  the  t's  !  SvitefulLoter^ 
But  this  is  the  t  of  hollies.                                                 o?>if«/«f  .Lewer  y 

Before  the  stony  face  of  T,  r,-,   «!.'      117  ^ 

no  tmer  T  himself  Can  prove  you,  fnTr''  f 

O  skill'H  tr.  cJr.^  «f  -r  „-  i:'*       V    '  ^  JJedicatwn  1 

u  sKiu  a  to  smg  of  T  or  Etermty,  j/,7/o„  o 

Sun  comes,  moon  comes,  T  sUps  away.  Window   Whl  2 

Or  reach  a  hand  thro'  t  to  catch  inaow   When  I 

Ck,me  T,  and  teach  me,  many  years,  ''^  ^^^.;\I 

My  fancies  ^  to  rise  on  wing,     '  '"             \t 

'  A  <  to  sicken  and  to  swoon,  '"           •  |l 

And  all  was  good  that  T  could  bring,  "  fj^-  \i 

T"h7/X  *^'  bea^t  that  takes  His  Ucense  in  the  field  of  t,  I     x^t& 

The  <  draws  near  the  birth  of  Christ:                               '  "    /j^ •  •  j 

kilt''T^^^\  miss  their  yearly  due  Before  their  t  ?  l"    x^il\k 

As  when  he  loved  me  here  in  T,  J--- 1? 

What  <  his  tender  palm  is  prest  "          ,9 

A  hfelong  tract  of  t  reveal'd  •  "'         j.  t 

And  T,  a  maniac  scattering  dust,  "           7  ^ 

When  T  hath  sunder'd  shell  from  pearl'  "       m  A 

The  perfect  flower  of  humane;  "        /   ■  ? 

When  the  dark  hand  struck  down  thro'  t,  "  UxiiM 

Foreshorten'd  m  the  tract  of  <  ?  "  }^^,*^/5 

What  t  mine  own  might  also  flee,  "lxTx7v^l 

ShaU  gather  in  the  cycled  t's.  "  ,    ^^  tL 

^ch  A  friendship  as  had  master'd  T :  "  ^^''''''  !! 

Which  masters  T  indeed,  and  is  Eternal  "            ^ 

Thy  spirit  in  <  among  thy  peers ;  "             !^ 

^onian  masic  measuring  out  The  steps  0  f  T—  "      ^.ff  49 

The  t  draws  near  the  birth  of  Christ  •  "        ?•   , 

There  in  due  Uhe  woodbine  blows,  '"        "'^  i 

For  change  of  place,  like  growth  of  t,  "          '^■,  ] 

The  faithless  coldness  of  the  <'*;  "      ^  •  " 

The  t  admits  not  flowers  or  leaves  "       "'*•  ^^ 

Becoming,  when  the  t  has  birth  "       ^if 

Is  it,  then,  regret  for  buried  t  "   "^"^  f^ 

J,      cxm  1 


730 


Time  (s)  (continued)    Contemplate  all  this  work  of  T 
If  so  he  type  this  work  of  t  ' 

vast  eddies  in  the  flood  Of  onward  t 
As  echoes  out  of  weaker  t's, 
But  they  must  go,  the  t  draws  on, 
Appearing  ere  the  t's  were  ripe, 
I  remember  the  t,  for  the  roots  of  my  hair 
I  weU  could  weep  for  a  t  so  sordid  and  mean. 
My  yet  young  Ufe  in  the  wilds  of  T, 
She  is  but  dead,  and  the  t  is  at  hand 
Wretchedest  age,  since  T  began. 
My  mood  is  changed,  for  it  fell  at  a  i  of  year 
^  It  IS  t,  It  is  t,  0  passionate  heart,' 
'It  is  t,  O  passionate  heart  and  morbid  eye 
Hereafter,  thro'  aU  t's,  Albert  the  Good.      ' 
from  t  to  t  the  heathen  host  Swarm'd  overseas 
ye  know  that  in  King  Uther's  t  The  prince       ' 
all  before  his  t  Was  Arthur  born. 
Of  Uther's  son,  and  bom  before  his  t 
the  t  to  cast  away  Is  yet  far-off.'        ' 
And  many  a  t  he  came,  and  evermore 
and  sad  At  t's  he  seem'd,  and  sad  with  him  was  I 

Stem  too  at  t's,  and  then  I  loved  him  not 
answer'd  me  In  riddling  triplets  of  old  t        ' 
and  Meriin  in  our  t  Hath  spoken  also     ' 
while  the  phantom  king  Sent  out  at  t's  a  voice  • 
The  fair  beginners  of  a  nobler  t,  ' 

For  it  was  past  the  t  of  Easterday 


Time 

In  Mem.  cxviii  1 

16 

„  cx3xiii& 

„    Con.  22 

89 

139 

Maud  I  il3 

vn 

xvi  21 

..     II  iiiS 

'y21 

.,   IIIviA 

30 

32 

Ded.  of  Idylls^ 

Com.  of  Arthurs 

185 

211 

241 

307 

351 

353 
402 
419 

437 
457 
Gareth  and  L.  186 


At  t  s  the  summit  of  the  high  city  flash'd ;  At  t's  the 
spires  and  turrets  half-way  down  Prick'd  thro'  the 
mist ;  Atts  the  great  gate  shone  Only 
f^e\things  and  old  co-twisted,  as  if  T  Were  nothing, 
the  King  hath  past  his  t~ 

Lion  and  stoat  have  isled  together,  knave,  In  t  of  flood, 
ihou  shakest  in  thy  fear:  there  yet  is  <• 

Far  hefer  had  I  fight  a  score  of  t's 

So  many  a  t  he  vaulted  up  again  • 

The  war  of  T  against  the  soul  of  man. 

Thrown  have  I  been,  nor  once,  but  many  a  t. 

but  when  the  Prince  Three  t's  had  blown-— 

And  he  that  told  the  tale  in  older  t's 

Has  little  t  for  idle  questioners.' 

And  there  is  scantlv  t  for  half  the  work. 

Tho'  having  seen  all  beauties  of  our  t, 

Constrain'd  us,  but  a  better  t  has  come  • 

1 0  I  that  wasted  t  to  tend  upon  her      ' 

in  scarce  longer  t  Than  at  Caerleon  ' 

cursing  their  lost  t,  and  the  dead  man, 

cry  of  children,  Enids  and  Geraints  Of  t's  to  be  ■ 

Groan  d,  and  at  t's  would  mutter,  ' 

From  whence  to  watch  the  t, 

Many  a  t  As  once— of  old— among  the  flowers- 
Arriving  at  a  <  of  golden  rest, 

the  most  famous  man  of  all  those  t's, 

at  t's  Would  flatter  his  own  wish  in  age  for  love 

for  thus  at  t's  He  waver'd ;  ' 

Upon  the  great  Enchanter  of  the  T, 

It  was  the  t  when  first  the  question  rose 

nine  tithes  of  t's  Face-flatterer  and  backbiter  xyx 

when  the  t  drew  nigh  Spake  (for  she  had  been  sick)    Lancelot  and  E  77 
Had  marr'd  his  face,  and  mark'd  it  ere  his  t  247 

with  half  disdain  Hid  under  grace,  as  in  a  smaUer  t  "  2fi4 

1  ea,  twenty  t's  I  thought  him  Lancelot—  "  gog 

Fare  you  well  A  thousand  t's— a.  thousand  t's  farewell '  "  696 

at  t  s  Brain-feverous  in  his  heat  and  agony  "  fl«;Q 

The  simples  and  the  science  of  that  t,  "  8fi2 

drave  her  ere  her  t  across  the  fields  "  tan 

he  answer'd  '  ten  i's  nay  !     This  is  not  love :  "  q^^ 

and  at  t's.  So  touch'd  were  they,  "         loJa 

many  a  t  have  watch'd  thee  at  the  tilt  "  r^ , 

then  the  <'s  Grew  to  such  evil  that  the  holy  cup  Ho'lv  Grail  56 

each  of  these  a  hundred  winters  old.  From  our  Lord's  t  m ' 

beam  of  light  seven  t's  more  clear  than  day :  '  "        107  i 

But  my  t  is  hard  at  hand,  And  hence  I  go ;  "        481 

Embraced  me,  and  so  kiss'd  me  the  first  <,  "        ^gj 


192 
226 
709 
894 
940 
944 
1125 
1198 
1261 
1378 
1427 
Marr.  of  Geniint  272 
288 
498 
716 
Geraint  and  E.  38 
115 
576 
966 
Balin  and  Balan  173 
535 
Merlin  and  V.  135 
142 
166 
184 
186 
216 
410 
823 


Time 


731 


Tiny-trumpeting 


':  Time  (s)  (continued)    For  every  fiery  prophet  in  oKl  t's,  Holy  Grail  876 

Come,  as  they  will,  and  many  a  t  they  come,  „        911 

'  In  happy  t  behold  our  pilot-star !  Pelleas  and  E.  63 

So  for  the  last  t  she  was  gracious  to  him.  ..             175 

Modred  thought,  '  The  t  is  hard  at  hand.'  ,.             610 

in  t  the  carcanet  Vest  her  with  plaintive  memories  Last  Tom-nament  28 

Thej-  served  their  use,  their  t ;  „             676 


Many  a  t  for  hours.  Beside  the  placid  breathings 

till  lier  t  To  tell  you : ' 

(for  the  t  Was  maytime,  and  as  yet  no  sin 

Bear  with  me  for  the  last  t  while  I  show. 

And  be  the  fair  beginning  of  a  t. 

Dwelt  with  them,  till  in  t  their  Abbess  died. 

Shall  never  more,  at  any  future  t. 

And  hid  Excalibur  the  second  <, 

caught  him  by  the  hilt,  and  brandish'd  him  Three 

t's,  (repeat) 
'tis  t  that  I  were  gone. 
For  now  I  see  the  true  old  t's  are  dead, 
Such  t's  have  been  not  since  the  light 
Touch'd  by  the  adulterous  finger  of  a  < 
That  saved  her  many  t's,  not  fail — 
For  T  and  Grief  abode  too  long  with  Life, 
So  T  and  Grief  did  beckon  unto  Death, 
Yet  is  my  life  nor  in  the  present  t. 
Heart  beating  t  to  heart,  lip  pressing  lip, 
that  little  hour  was  bound  Shut  in  from  T, 
strait  girth  of  T  Inswathe  the  fulness  of  Eternity, 
To  centre  in  this  place  and  t. 
And  heralded  the  distance  of  this  t ! 
I  seem'd  the  only  part  of  T  stood  still, 
Long  t  entrancement  held  me. 
Feom  that  t  forth  I  would  not  see  her  more ; 
(As  I  have  seen  them  many  a  hundred  t's) 
ill-suited  as  it  seem'd  To  such  a  t, 
Laud  me  not  Before  my  t,  but  hear  me  to  the  close. 
Those  were  the  pleasant  t's, 
in  the  pleasant  t's  that  had  past, 
I  was  near  my  t  wi'  the  boy, 
little  of  us  left  by  the  t  this  sun  be  set.' 
For  a  dozen  t's  they  came  with  their  pikes  and  musqueteers, 

And  a  dozen  t's  we  shook  'em  off 
That  t  I  did  not  see. 
Straange  an'  cowd  fur  the  t ! 
but  the  foe  sprung  his  mine  many  t's, 
(My  good  friend  By  this  t  shoidd  be  mth  me.) 
Set  thee  in  light  till  t  shall  be  no  more  ? 
Towers  of  a  happier  t,  low  down  in  a  rainbow  deep 
O  never  was  t  so  good  ! 
And  we  came  in  an  evil  /  to  the  Isle 
finite-infinite  space  In  finite-infinite  T- 


Gu  inevere  68 
142 
387 
454 
466 
692 
Pass,  of  Arthur  186 
279 

.,    314,329 

331 

397 

400 

To  the  Queen  ii  43 

62 

Lover's  Tale  i  107 

110 

116 

260 

438 

482 

552 

562 

573 

626 

„  ii  1 

145 

iv  208 

243 

First  Quarrel  41 

55 

82 

The  Revenge  28 


the  lost  light  of  those  dawn-golden  t's, 

for  the  sake  Of  one  recalling  gracious  t's, 

And  mixt  the  dream  of  classic  t's 

To  women,  the  flower  of  the  t, 

glory  and  shame  dying  out  for  ever  in  endless  t, 

I  have  had  some  glimmer,  at  t's, 

A  Thousand  summers  ere  the  t  of  Christ 

cock  has  crow'd  already  once,  he  crows  before  his  t ; 

Not  he,  not  yet !  and  t  to  act — 

many's  the  t  that  I  watch'd  her  at  mass 

fur  it  mun  be  the  t  about  now  When  Molly 

Naay  to  be  sewer  it  be  past  'er  t. 

triumphs  over  t  and  space, 

Then,  and  here  in  Edward's  t, 

we  range  with  Science,  glorying  in  the  T, 

Lame  and  old,  and  past  his  t, 

remember  how  the  course  of  T  will  swerve, 

The  man  in  Space  and  T, 

Dead,  who  had  served  his  t. 

Love  is  in  and  out  of  t, 

'  Light — more  Light — while  T  shall  last !  ' 

At  t's  our  Britain  cannot  rest,  At  t's  her  steps 

are  swift  and  rash  ; 
But  since  your  name  will  grow  with  T, 


53 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  90 

Village  Wife  21 

Bef.  of  Lucknow  31 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  139 

Columbus  150 

V.  of  Maeldune  79 

87 

105 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  46 


To  W.  H.  Brookfleld  7 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  53 

Tiresias  194 

The  Wreck  49 

Despair  75 

„       103 

Ancient  Sage  1 

The  Flight  3 

73 

Tomorrow  29 

Spinster's  S's.  1 

5 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  75 

83 

217 

227 

235 

Epilogue  49 

Dead  Prophet  9 

Helen's  Tower  5 

Epit.  on  Caxton  1 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  1 
13 


Time  (s)  (continued)    Fifty  t's  the  rose  has  floMer'd 

and  faded.  Fifty  t's  the  golden  harvest  fallen,  On  .Jul.  Q.   Victoria  1 

drew  down  before  his  t  Sickening,  Demeter  and  P.  114 

fun'  upo'  four  short  legs  ten  t's  fur  one  upo'  two.  Owd  Rod  16 

I  thowt  o'  the  good  owd  t's  'at  was  goaii,  „         43 

an'  the  t's  'at  was  coomin'  on  ;  ,.44 

a  jubilant  challenge  to  T  and  to  Fate  ;  Vastness  21 

Twelve  t's  in  the  year  Bring  me  bliss.  The  Ring  5 

Moon,  you  fade  at  t's  From  the  night.  ..           9 

landscape  which  your  eyes  Have  many  a  t  ranged  over  ,.       151 

At  t's  too  shrilling  in  her  angrier  moods,  .,      395 

Up,  get  up,  the  t  is  short,  Forlorn  73 

I  tolerant  of  the  colder  t.  To  Ulysses  13 

As  I  shall  be  forgotten  by  old  T,  To  Mary  Boyle  23 

When  Dives  loathed  theVs,  „            29 

in  their  t  thy  warblers  rise  on  wing.  Prog,  of  Spring  108 

The  true  Alcestis  of  the  t.  Romney's  R.  91 

a  proof  That  I — even  I — at  t's  remember'd  you.  „          93 

I  sank  with  the  body  at  t's  in  the  sloughs  By  an  Evolution.  18 
At  t's  the  small  black  fly  upon  the  pane       To  one  who  ran  down  Eng.  3 

Ever  as  of  old  t,  Solitary  firstling.  The  Snowdrop  3 
Coming  in  the  cold  t.  Prophet  of  the  gay  t.  Prophet 

of  the  May  t,  „            5 

But  in  due  t  for  every  Mussulman,  Akbar's  Dream  24 

Still — at  t's  A  doubt,  a  fear, —  „             168 

even  As  in  the  t  before ;  „            191 

in  the  flame  that  measures  T  !  „     Hymn  8 

They  heard,  they  bided  their  t.  Baiidit's  Death  14 

there  is  t  for  the  race  to  grow.  The  Dawn  20 
that  Eternal  Harmony  Whereto  the  worlds 

beat  t,  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  16 

For  tho'  from  out  our  bourne  of  T  and  Place  Crossing  the  Bar  13 

Time  (verb)     Death's  twin-brother,  t's  my  breath  ;  In  Mem.  Ixviii  2 

Timeless     Kneel  adoring  Him  the  T  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  8 

Timid     and  said  to  him  With  t  firmness,  Geraint  and  E.  140 

Amy  loved  me.  Amy  f ail'd  me.  Amy  was  a  t 

child  ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  19 

Timing    happy  stars,  t  with  things  below,  Maud  I  xviii  81 

Timour-Mammon     T-M  grins  on  a  pile  of  children's  bones,      „              i  46 

Timur     T  built  his  ghastly  tower  of  eighty  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  82 

Tin     polish'd  t's.  To  serve  the  hot-and-hot ;  Will  Water.  227 

Tinct     blazon'd  on  the  shield  In  their  own  t,  Lancelot  and  E.  10 

Tinged     t  with  wan  from  lack  of  sleep,  Princess  Hi  25 

Tingle     and  the  nerves  prick  And  t :  In  Mem.  I  3 

Tinglhig     A  cry  that  shiver'd  to  the  t  stars,  M.  d' Arthur  199 

A  cry  that  shiver'd  to  the  t  stars,  Pass,  of  Arthur  367 
Tinkled    See  Low-tinkled 

Tinkling     Now  by  some  t  rivulet.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  29 

Nor  rivulet  t  from  the  rock  ;  In  Mem.  c  13 

Here  at  the  head  of  a  t  fall,  Maud  I  xxi  6 

Tinsel     And  shrill'd  his  t  shaft.  Talking  Oak  68 

Light  coin,  the  t  clink  of  compliment.  Princess  ii  55 

Tint  (s)     days  have  vanish'd,  tone  and  t.  In  Mern.  xliv  5 

Tint  (verb)    As  light  a  flush  As  hardly  t's  the  blossom  Balin  and  Balan  267 

Tintagil     held  T  castle  by  the  Cornish  sea.  Com.  of  Arthur  187 

Uther  in  his  wrath  and  heat  besieged  Ygerne  within  T,         .,  199 

on  the  night  When  Uther  in  T  past  away  „             367 

by  strong  storm  Blown  into  shelter  at  T,  Merlin  and  V.  10 

Perchance  in  lone  T  far  from  all  The  tonguesters  Last  Tournament  392 

turning,  past  and  gain'd  T,  half  in  sea,  „              505 

sands  Of  dark  T  by  the  Cornish  sea  ;  Guinevere  294 

Tinted    See  Rosy-tinted 

Tiny    Claps  her  t  hands  above  me,  Lilian  4 
Annie  from  her  baby's  forehead  dipt  A  t  curl,  and 

gave  it :  Enoch  Arden  236 

Or  from  the  t  pitted  target  blew  Aylmer's  Field  93 

She  tapt  her  t  silken-sandal'd  foot :  Princess,  Pro.  150 

a  t  poem  All  composed  in  a  metre  of  Catullus,  Hendecasyllabics  3 

The  t  cell  is  forlorn,  Maud  II  ii  13 

Save  that  one  rivulet  from  a  t  cave  Pelleas  and  E.  425 

whereon  There  tript  a  himdred  t  silver  deer,  Last  Tournament  171 
t  fist  Had  graspt  a  daisy  from  your  Mother's  grave —         The  Ring  322 

The  starling  claps  his  t  castanets.  Prog,  of  Spring  56 

Will  my  t  spark  of  being  wholly  vanish  God  and  the  Univ.  1 

Tiny-trumpeting    The  t-t  gnat  can  break  our  dream  Lancelot  and  E.  137 


Tip 


732 


Token 


Tip    (See  also  Finger-tips)     thro'  her  to  the  t's  of  her 

long  hands,  Princess  ii  40 

Thy  gloom  is  kindled  at  the  i's,  In  Mem.  xxxix  11 

Tipmost     to  t  lance  and  topmost  helm,  Last  Tournament  442 

Tipt     And  t  with  frost-like  spires.  Palace  of  Art  52 

with  their  fires  Love  t  his  keenest  darts  ;  D.  of  F.  Women  173 

t  with  lessening  peak  And  pinnacle,  Gareth  and  L.  308 

and  t  With  trenchant  steel,  „             692 

spear  and  hehnet  t  With  stormy  light  Tiresias  113 

Tip-tilted     T-t  like  the  petal  of  a  flower  ;  Gareth  and  L.  591 

Tiptoe     on  every  peak  a  statue  seem'd  To  hang  on  t,  Palace  of  Art  38 

On  t  seem'd  to  touch  upon  a  sphere  Princess  vii  324 

Tire     Bore  and  forebore,  and  did  not  t,  Two  Voices  218 

For  a  love  that  never  fs  ?  Window,  Marr.  Mom.  18 

But  mine  the  love  that  will  not  t,  In  Mem.  ex  18 

Tired     '  out  With  cutting  eights  that  day  The  Epic  9 

Than  t  eyelids  upon  t  eyes  ;  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  6 

At  last,  t  out  with  play.  Talking  Oak  206 

Ascending  t,  heavily  slept  till  morn.  Enoch  Arden  181 

'  T,  Annie  ?  '  for  she  did  not  speak  a  word.  „           390 

'  T  ?  '  but  her  face  had  fall'n  upon  her  hands  ;  .,           391 

T  of  so  much  within  our  little  life,  Lucretius  226 

I  began  to  be  f  a  little.  Grandmother  74 

I  seem  to  be  <  a  little,  „          99 

Tirra  lirra    '  T  I,'  by  the  river  Sang  Sir  Lancelot.  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  35 

Tissue     In  silver  t  talking  things  of  state  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  663 

Tit     tumble  the  blossom,  the  mad  little  t's  !  Window,  Ay  9 

T's,  wrens,  and  all  wing'd  nothings  peck  Marr.  of  Geraint  275 

glance  the  t's,  and  shriek  the  jays,  Prog,  of  Spring  15 

Titan  (adj.)     Whose  T  angels,  Gabriel,  Abdiel,  Milton  5 

Titan  (s)     The  pulses  of  a  T's  heart ;  In  Mem.  ciii  32 

Weird  T  by  thy  winter  weight  of  years  To  Victor  Hugo  7 

Titanic     T  forces  taking  birth  In  divers  seasons.  Day  Dm.,  L' Envoi  17 

T  shapes,  they  cramm'd  The  forum.  Princess  vii  124 

Tithe  (church  rate)     {See  also  Toithe)    paid  our  t's  in  the 

days  that  are  gone,  Maud  II  v  23 

Fur  moiist  on  'em  talks  agean  t.  Church-warden,  etc.  52 
Tithe  (tenth  part)     nine  t's  of  times  Face-flatterer  and 

backbiter  Merlin  and  V.  823 

Wasted  and  worn,  and  but  a,toi  them.  Holy  Grail  723 

And  a  lean  Order — scarce  return'd  a  t —  „          894 

When  I  landed  again,  with  a,  t  oi  my  men,  V.  of  Maeldune  130 

Titian     I  am  not  Raphael,  T — no  Romney's  R.  46 

Titianic     in  hues  to  dim  The  T  Flora.  Gardener's  D.  171 

Title     Nor  toil  for  t,  place,  or  touch  Of  pension.  Love  thou  thy  land  25 

New  as  his  t,  built  last  year,  Maud  I  x  \Q 

a  Prince  indeed.  Beyond  all  t's,  Ded.  of  Idylls  42 

her  name  And  t,  '  Queen  of  Beauty,'  Pelleas  and  E.  116 

heirless  flaw  In  his  throne's  t  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  73 

Our  t,  which  we  never  mean  to  yield,  Columbus  32 

scarce  have  learnt  the  t  of  your  book,  The  Ring  126 

Title-scroll    t-s's  and  gorgeous  heraldries.  Aylmer's  Field  656 

Titmouse    t  hope  to  win  her  With  his  chirrup  Maud  I  xx  29 

Titter     and  then  A  strangled  t.  Princess  v  16 

Tityrus     Poet  of  the  happy  T  piping  underneath  To  Virgil  13 

To-and-fro     commenced  A  t-a-f,  so  pacing  Princess  ii  302 

'Toattler  (teetotaler)    Doctor's  a  't,  lass,  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  66 

To-be     Dispensing  harvest,  sowing  the  T-b,  Princess  vii  289 

Thro'  all  the  secular  i-b.  In  Mem.  xli  23 

To-come     and  all  the  rich  t-c  Reels,  Princess  vii  356 

To-daay  (to-day)     As  I  says  to  my  missis  t-d,  Church-warden,  etc.  25 

Todaay  (to-day)     Seead  her  t  goa  by —  N.  Partner,  N.  S.  13 

To^y    (See  also  To-daay,  Tc^aay)    To-morrow  yet 

would  reap  t-d.  Love  thou  thy  land  93 

'  T-d  I  saw  the  dragon-fiy  Two  Voices  8 

Her6  comes  t-d,  Pallas  and  Aphrodite,  (Enone  85 

I  care  not  if  I  go  t-d.  May  Queen,  Con.  43 

'  The  sequel  of  t-d  unsolders  all  M.  d' Arthur  14 

I  die  here  T-d,  and  whole  years  long,  St.  S.  Stylites  54 

T-d  I  sat  for  an  hour  and  wept,  Edward  Gray  11 

Cruelly  came  they  back  t-d :  „           18 

T-d  the  Lady  Psyche  will  harangue  Princess  ii  95 

to  slip  away  T-d,  to-morrow,  soon :  „          297 

And  told  me  she  would  answer  us  t-d,  „     Hi  166 

Let  us  dream  our  dream  t-d.  Ode  Inter,  Exhib.  31 


To-day  (continued)     See,  empire  upon  empire 
smiles  t-d. 
All  along  the  valley,  while  I  walk'd  t-d. 
Be  merry,  all  birds,  t-d, 
thinking  '  here  t-d,'  Or  '  here  to-morrow 
That  thou  hadst  touch'd  the  land  t-d. 
Nor  will  it  lessen  from  t-d  ; 
T-d  they  count  as  kindred  souls  ; 
That  has  t-d  its  sunny  side. 
T-d  the  grave  is  bright  for  me. 
Strange,  that  I  tried  t-d  To  beguile  her 
So  well  thine  arm  hath  wrought  for  me  t-d^' 
By  this  King  Arthur  as  by  thee  t-d, 
'  Forward  !  and  t-d  I  change  you, 
A  man  of  thine  t-d  Abash'd  us  both. 


W.  to  Marie  Alex.  33 

V.  of  Cauteretz  5 

Window,  Ay  1 

In  Mem.  vi  23 

„  xiv  2 

lix  10 

„       xcix  19 

.,      Con.  72 

73 

Maud  I  XX  2 

Com.  of  Arthur  127 

162 

Geraint  and  E.  413 

Balin  and  Balan  70 


'  Eyes  have  I  That  saw  t-d  the  shadow  of  a  spear,  „            373 

He  cares  not  for  me  :  only  here  t-d  Lancelot  and  E.  126 

grace  to  me,'  She  answer'd,  '  twice  t-d.  „              384 

So  great  a  knight  as  we  have  seen  t-d —  „              533 

speak  your  wish.  Seeing  I  go  t-d :  '  .,              925 

But  who  first  saw  the  holy  thing  t-d  ?  '  Holy  Grail  67 

hence  he  went  T-d  for  three  days'  hunting —  Last  Tournament  530 

'  The  sequel  of  t-d  unsolders  all  Pass,  of  Arthur  182 

Thrust  f  roward  on  t-d  and  out  of  place  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  123 

As  here  t-d,  but  not  so  wordily —  „          iv  355 

'  O  worms  and  maggots  of  t-d  Ancient  Sage  210 

T-d  ?  but  what  of  yesterday  ?  „            216 

There  again  I  stood  t-d,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  33 

Here  t-d  was  Amy  with  me,  „              53 

Those  eyes  the  blue  t-d,  Epilogue  9 

happier  lot  Than  ours,  who  rhyme  t-d.  „  51 
The  days  that  seem  t-d,                                     Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son.  24 

Miriam,  breaks  her  latest  earthy  link  With  me  t-d.  The  Ring  48 

For  I  myself  would  tell  you  all  t-d.  „        124 

'  She  too  might  speak  t-d,'  „         125 

Ay,  t-d  !     I  brought  you  to  that  chamber  „        128 

but  close  to  me  t-d  As  this  red  rose,  Roses  on  the  T.  6 

T-d,  before  you  turn  again  To  thoughts  To  Master  of  B.  13 

and  wield  The  forces  of  t-d,  Mechanophilus  30 

Toddle     Poor  little  life  that  t's  half  an  hour  Lucretius  228 

Toil  (s)     But  enter  not  the  t  of  life.  Margaret  24 

And  one,  the  reapers  at  their  sultry  t.  Palace  of  Art  77 

Making  sweet  close  of  his  delicious  t's —  „           185 

Ripens  and  fades,  and  falls,  and  hath  no  t.  Lotos-  Eaters,  C.  S.  37 

and  reap  the  harvest  with  enduring  t,  „               121 

surely,  slumber  is  more  sweet  than  t,  „              126 

a  Rose  In  roses,  mingled  with  her  fragrant  t,  Gardener's  D.  143 

Old  age  hath  yet  his  honour  and  his  t ;  Ulysses  50 

I  must  work  thro'  months  of  t,  A  mphion  97 

And  mutual  love  and  honourable  t ;  Enoch  A  rden  83 

On  with  /  of  heart  and  knees  and  hands.  Ode  on  Well.  212 

O  thou  that  after  t  and  storm  In  Mem.  xxxiii  1 

Is  t  ccioperant  to  an  end.  „      cxxviii  24 

As  careful  robins  eye  the  delver's  t,  Marr.  of  Geraint  774 

As  careful  robins  eye  the  delver's  t ;  Geraint  and  E.  431 

body  journeying  onward,  sick  with  t.  Lover's  Tale  i  124 

T  and  inefiable  weariness,  Def.  of  Lucknow  90 

If  night,  what  barren  <  to  be  !  Tiresias  207 

Toil  (verb)     I  said,  '  1 1  beneath  the  curse,  Two  Voices  229 

why  should  we  t  alone.  We  only  t.  Lotos-  Eaters,  C.  S.  15 

Why  should  we  only  t,  „              24 

Nor  t  for  title,  place,  or  touch  Of  pension,  Love  thou  thy  land  25 

Who  t's  across  the  middle  moonlit  nights,  Lover's  Tale  i  138 

Toil'd     T  onward,  prick'd  with  goads  and  stings  ;  Palace  of  Art  150 

Souls  that  have  t,  and  wrought,  Ulysses  46 

t  Mastering  the  lawless  science  of  our  law,  Aylmer's  Field  434 

Has  often  t  to  clothe  your  little  ones ;  „             699 

Toiling     late  and  soon  Spins,  t  out  his  own  cocoon.  Two  Voices  180 

A  motion  t  in  the  gloom — -  Love  thou  thy  land  54 

T  in  immeasurable  sand,  Will  16 

Of  loyal  vassals  t  for  their  liege.  Com.  of  Arthur  282 

Toime  (time)     i'  the  woost  o'  t's  I  wur  niver  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  16 

Toithe  (tithe)     an's  t  were  due,  an'  I  gied  it  in  hond  ;  „              11 

an'  agean  the  t  an'  the  raate.  Church-warden,  etc.  11 

Token    There  came  a  sweeter  t  when  the  night  May  Queen,  Con.  22 


I 


I 


Token 


733 


ToU 


Token  (continued)    There  came  a  mystic  t  from  the  king    Edwin  Morris  132 

It  will  moreover  be  a  <  to  her,  That  I  am  he.'  Enoch  Arden  900 

Sunny  t's  of  the  Line,  Ode  Inter.  Exhih.  19 

Who  show'd  At  ol  distress  ?  In  Mevi.  Ixxviii  13 

In  t  of  true  heart  and  fealty.  Gareth  and  L.  399 

pray  the  King  To  let  me  bear  some  t  of  his 
Queen 

Thro'  memory  of  that  t  on  the  shield 

then  he  bound  Her  ^  on  h  s  helmet, 

know  When  these  have  worn  their  t's : 
Told    (See  also  Be-told,  Tell'd,  Tould,  Towd) 
hardly  nigher  made, 

Sweet  Alice,  if  I  <  her  all  ?  ' 

My  love  hath  t  me  so  a  thousand  times. 

the  clergyman,  has  t  me  words  of  peace. 

wheresoever  I  am  sung  or  t  In  aftertime. 

And  t  me  I  should  love. 

The  cuckoo  t  his  name  to  all  the  liills ; 

This  is  not  t  of  any.     They  were  saints. 

And  t  him  of  my  choice, 

and  that  same  song  of  his  He  <  me  ; 

She  t  him  of  their  tears,  And  pray'd  him. 

And  t  him  all  her  nurse's  tale. 

She  t  me  all  her  friends  had  said  ; 

T  him,  with  other  annals  of  the  port, 

tho'  Miriam  Lane  had  t  him  all. 

Then  he  t  her  of  his  voyage.  His  wreck, 

'  She  t  me.     She  and  James  had  quarreli'd. 

he  t  a  long  long-winded  tale  Of  how  the  Squire 

And  been  himself  a  part  of  what  he  t. 

t  her  fairy-tales,  Show'd  her  the  fairy  footings 

as  he  <  The  story,  storming  a  hill-fort 

praised  the  waning  red,  and  t  The  vintage — 

Then  she  t  it,  having  dream'd  Of  that  same  coast. 

My  golden  work  in  which  I  <  a  truth 

but  we,  imworthier,  t  Of  college  : 

And  often  t  a  tale  from  mouth  to  mouth 

have  him  back  Who  t  the  '  Winter's  tale  ' 

But  your  example  pilot,  t  her  all. 

But  such  extremes,  1 1  her,  well  might  harm 

And  t  me  she  would  answer  us  to-day. 

How  came  you  here  ?  '  I  t  him  : 

And  me  none  t :  not  less  to  an  eye  like  mine 

you  had  gone  to  her.  She  t,  perforce ; 

Go  :  Cyril  t  us  all.' 

now  a  pointed  finger,  t  them  all : 

And  so  I  often  t  her,  right  or  wrong, 

1 1  the  king  that  I  was  pledged  To  fight 

if  I  saw  not,  yet  they  t  me  all 

who  might  have  t,  For  she  was  cramm'd 

you  t  us  all  That  England's  honest  censure 

It  t  of  England  then  to  me. 

These  have  t  us  all  their  anger 

There  was  one  who  watch'd  and  I  me — 

He  t  it  not ;  or  something  seal'd 

And  tell  them  all  they  would  have  t, 

He  t  me,  lives  in  any  crowd. 

Since  first  he  t  me  that  he  loved 

What  if  he  had  t  her  yestermorn 

Who  t  him  we  were  there  ? 

Horrible,  hateful,  monstrous,  not  tohe  t; 

when  I  enter'd  t  me  that  himself  And  Merlin 

nor  could  I  part  in  peace  Till  this  were  t.' 

That  God  hath  t  the  King  a  secret  word. 

Take  thou  the  truth  as  thou  hast  t  it  me. 

t.  How  once  the  wandering  forester  at  dawn, 

he  sought  The  King  alone,  and  found,  and  t  liim  all 

And  t  him  of  a  cavern  hard  at  hand, 

turning  to  Lynette  he  t  The  tale  of  Gareth, 

And  he  that  t  the  tale  in  older  times 

But  he,  that  t  it  later,  says  Lynette. 

T  Enid,  and  they  sadden'd  her  the  more  : 

journey  to  her,  as  himself  Had  t  her, 

these  things  he  t  the  King. 

Who  t  him,  scouring  still, '  The  sparrow-hawk  ! ' 


Balin  and  Balan  188 

369 

Lancelot  and  E.  374 

769 

I  t  thee — 

Two  Voices  173 

Miller's  D.  120 

(Enone  197 

May  Queen,  Con.  12 

M.  d' Arthur  34 

Gardener's  D.  64 

93 

St.  S.  Stylites  151 

Talking  Oak  18 

Golden  Year  8 

Godiva  19 

Lady  Clare  80 

The  Letters  25 

Etioch  Arden  702 

765 

861 

The  Brook  96 

„      138 

Aylmer's  Field  12 

89 

224 

406 

Sea  Dreams  206 

Lucretius  260 

Princess,  Pro.  110 

191 

238 

Hi  137 

144 

166 

iv221 

324 

330 

v36 

270 

288 

352 

vi20 

Con.  34 

Third  of  Feb.  1 

The  Daisy  89 

Boddicea  23 

„       .30 

In  Mem.  xxxi  15 

xl  25 

„        xcviii  26 

„  Con.  6 

Maud  I  vi  50 

II  V  52 

„    ///  vi  41 

Com.  of  Arthur  364 

394 

489 

Gareth  and  L.  257 

497 

541 

1189 

1272 

1427 

1429 

Marr.  of  Geraint  64 

144 

151 

260 


Told  (continued)  And  t  her  all  their  converse  in  the  hall,  Marr.  of  Geraint  520 

journey  toward  her,  as  liimself  Had  t  her,  „  846 

the  boy  retum'd  And  t  them  of  a  chamber,  Geraint  and  E.  261 

t  Free  tales,  and  took  the  word  and  play'd  ..  290 

She  t  him  all  that  Earl  Limours  had  said,  ,.  391 

nor  t  his  gentle  wife  What  ail'd  him,  „  503 

then  he  plainlier  t  How  the  huge  Earl  lay  slain  „  805 

therewithal  (for  thus  he  t  us)  brought  Balin  and  Balan  112 

Then  Balan  t  him  brokenly,  and  in  gasps,  „  603 

this  good  knight  T  me,  that  twice  a  wanton  damsel  „  609 

For  Merlin  once  had  t  her  of  a  charm.  Merlin  and  V.  205 

Than  when  1 1  you  first  of  such  a  charm.  „  359 

Too  much  I  trusted  when  1 1  you  that,  „  361 

'  O  crueller  than  was  ever  t  in  tale,  „  858 

t  her  all  the  charm,  and  slept.  „  966 

What  is  it  ?  and  she  t  him    A  red  sleeve 
Broider'd  with  pearls,' 

Than  Lancelot  <  me  of  a  common  talk 

there  t  the  King  What  the  King  knew. 

But  when  the  maid  had  t  him  all  her  tale. 

And  when  the  maid  had  t  him  all  the  tale 

T  him  that  her  fine  care  had  saved  his  life. 

1 1  her  that  her  love  Was  but  the  flash  of  youth, 

T  us  of  this  in  our  refectory. 

And  he  to  whom  she  t  her  sins,  or  what 

'  O  brother,  when  1 1  him  what  had  chanced. 

To  whom  1 1  my  phantoms,  and  he  said  : 

T  him  he  follow'd — almost  Arthur's  words — 

So  when  1 1  him  all  thyself  hast  heard, 

'  Lo  !  Pel  leas  is  dead — he  t  us — 

Sir  Lancelot  t  This  matter  to  the  Queen, 

Vivien,  lurking,  heard.     She  t  Sir  Modred. 

Nor  with  them  mix'd,  nor  t  her  name, 

and  the  tales  Which  my  good  father  t  me, 

T,  when  the  man  was  no  more  than  a  voice 

wheresoever  I  am  sung  or  t  In  aftertime, 

Once  or  twice  she  t  me  (For  I  remember  all 
things) 

The  wind  T  a  lovetale  beside  us, 

What  marvel  my  Camilla  t  me  all  ?  (repeat) 

She  t  me  all  her  love  :  she  shall  not  weep. 

Unfrequent,  low,  as  tho'  it  t  its  pulses  ; 

Some  one  had  t  me  she  was  dead, 

1 1  him  all  my  love,  How  I  had  loved  her 

but  of  this  I  deem  As  of  the  visions  that  he  t — 

(They  t  her  somewhat  rashly  as  I  think) 

(I  t  you  that  he  had  his  golden  hour), 

till  he  t  me  that  so  many  years  had  gone  by. 

An'  he  t  it  me  all  at  once,  as  simple  as  any  child, 

and  he  never  has  t  me  a  lie. 

1 1  them  my  tale,  God's  own  truth — 

they  have  t  you  he  never  repented  his  sin. 

Then  t  them  of  his  wars,  and  of  his  wound.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  60 

1 1  your  wayside  story  to  my  mother  And  Evelyn.  „  189 

And  t  the  living  daughter  with  what  love  „  253 

'  All  the  more  need,'  1 1  him.  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  18 

their  marksmen  were  t  of  our  best,  Def.  of  Lucknow  19 

is  it  true  what  was  t  by  the  scout,  „  95 

tale,  that  t  to  me.  When  but  thine  age,  Tiresias  18 

souls  of  men  were  immortal,  as  men  have  been  t,  Despair  99 

And  then  he  t  their  legend  :  m,     r.^     e^^ 

1 1  her  '  sent  To  Miriam,' 

1 1  her  of  my  vow, 

I  have  t  you  my  tale.     Get  you  gone. 
Told-of     and  cursed  the  tale.  The  t-o, 
Tolerance    must  have  rated  her  Beyond  all  t. 

This  Gama  swamp'd  in  lazy  t. 
Tolerant     T  of  what  he  half  disdain'd, 

Itot  the  colder  time. 
Toll  (s)     '  Honour,'  she  said,  '  and  homage,  tax  and  t, 

With  silks,  and  fruits,  and  spices,  clear  of  /, 

The  t  of  funeral  in  an  Angel  ear 
Toll  (verb)     T  ye  the  church-bell  sad  and  slow, 

One  set  slow  bell  will  seem  to  t 

Would  you  could  t  me  out  of  life, 


Lancelot  and  E.  372 

577 

706 

798 

823 

863 

1317 

Holy  Grail  41 

83 

271 

444 

669 

736 

Pelleas  and  E.  377 

Guinevere  53 

99 

148 

317 

Pass,  of  Arthur  3 

202 

Lover's  Tale  i  345 
543 
557,  579 
742 
ii  55 
70 
90 
iv2^ 
98 
206 
First  Quarrel  36 
58 
Rizpah  24 
„      33 


The  Ring  206 

362 

401 

Charily  44 

Balin  and  Balan  543 

Aylmer's  Field  381 

Princess  v  443 

Merlin  and  V.  178 

To  Ulysses  13 

(Enone  116 

Golden  Year  45 

D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  10 

D.  of  the  0.  Year  3 

In  Mem.  Ivii  10 

Lover's  Tale  iv  30 


ToU 


734 


Tongue 


Toll  (verb)  (continued)   when  they  t  the  Chapel  bell !   Locksley  IL,  Sixty  261 
Toll'd    like  a  bell  T  by  an  earthquake  in  a  trembling 

tower,  Princess  vi  332 

Let  the  bell  be  t.  (repeat)  Ode  on  Well.  46,  53,  58 

by  slow  degrees  the  sullen  bell  T  quicker,  Lover  s  Tale  Hi  14 

Tolling    thence  at  intervals  A  low  bell  t.  ,,  H  83 

Then  came  on  me  The  hollow  t  of  the  bell,  „  Hi  10 

Heard  yet  once  more  the  t  bell,  „  iv  29 

For  that  low  knell  t  his  lady  dead —  „  33 

/  of  his  funeral  bell  Broke  on  my  Pagan  Paradise,  Tiresias  192 

Bridal  bells  with  tl     .     .    .  Forlorn  70 

Tom  (name  of  men  and  cats)    (See  also  Tommy)     T,  lig 

theere  o'  the  cusliion,  an'  tother  T  'ere  o'  the  mat.    Spinster's  S's.  94 
Swearing  agean,  you  T's,  „  59 

Tomb    Shut  up  as  in  a  crumbling  t,  Palace  of  Art  273 

And  in  the  moon  athwart  the  place  of  t's,  M.  d' Arthur  46 

risuig  bore  him  thro'  the  place  of  t's.  „         175 

Shall  hold  their  orgies  at  your  t.  You  might  have  won  12 

Remains  the  lean  P.  W.  on  his  < :  The  Brook  192 

her,  that  is  the  womb  and  t  of  all,  Lucretius  244 

near  his  t  a  feast  Shone,  silver-set ;  Princess,  Pro.  105 

her  empty  glove  upon  the  t  Lay  by  her  „  iv  596 

I  go  to  plant  it  on  his  t.  In  Mem.  viii  22 

In  that  deep  dawn  behind  the  t,  „  xlvi  6 

My  old  affection  of  the  t,  (repeat)  „  Ixxxv  75,77 

As  it  were  a  duty  done  to  the  t,  Maud  I  xix  49 

'  Let  her  t  Be  costly,  and  her  image  thereupon,      Lancelot  and  E.  1339 
all  true  hearts  be  blazon'd  on  her  t  In  letters  gold 

and  azui'e !  '  „  1344 

And  in  the  moon  athwart  the  place  of  t's.  Pass,  of  Arthur  214 

rising  bore  loim  thro'  the  place  of  t's.  „  343 

break  down  and  raze  The  blessed  t  of  Clirist ;  Columbus  99 

I  was  planted  now  in  a  < ;  The  Wreck  37 

And  growing,  on  her  t,  Ancient  Sage  164 

heai"d  in  silence  from  the  silence  of  a  t.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  74 

Angel  seated  in  the  vacant  t.  „  278 

I  peer'd  thro'  t  and  cave,  Demeter  and  P.  70 

'  Among  the  t's  in  this  damp  vale  of  yours  !  The  Ring  325 

Tombing     The  blackness  round  the  t  sod,  On  a  Mourner  27 

Tome     at  a  board  by  t  and  paper  sat.  Princess  ii  32 

Tommy  (lovers  and  cats)    (See  also  Tom)     T  the  fust,  an'  T 

the  second,  Spinster's  S's.  10 

and  one  o'  the  Tommies  beside.  „  40 

I  mun  part  them  Tommies —  „  92 

Hed  I  married  the  Tommies — O  Lord,  „  95 

To  loove  an'  obaay  the  Tommies  !  „  96 

You  Tommies  shall  waait  to-night  „  120 

Tommy  (name  of  boy)    T's  f aace  be  as  fresh  as  a  codlin     North.  Cobbler  110 
'Ere  be  our  Sally  an'  T,  „  111 

Tomobrit     T,  Athos,  all  things  fair.  To  E.  L.  5 

Tomorra  (to-morrow)     ye  gev  her  the  top  of  the  momin', '  T  ' 

says  she.  Tomorroio  3 

I'll  meet  you  agin  t,'  says  he,  „         16 

ye'll  meet  me  <  ?'     "  T',  t,  Machree  ! '  „        18 

an'  whishper,  an'  say  '  T,  T  \  '  „         55 

'  T,  T,'  she  says,  an'  she  didn't  intind  „        59 

'  He  said  he  would  meet  me  t '.  '  „         80 

To-morrow  (See  also  Morrow,  Tomorra)    I  come  t-m  morn. 

■  1  go,  but  I  return:  Audley  Court  70 

We  two  will  wed  t-m  morn.  Lady  Clare  87 

We  hold  a  tourney  here  t-7ti  mom,  Marr.  of  Geraint  287 

T-m  'ill  be  the  happiest  time  of  all  the  glad  New- 
year  ;  (repeat)  May  Queen  2,  42 
Etlie  shall  go  with  me  t-m  to  the  green,  „  25 
T-^n  'ill  be  of  all  the  year  the  maddest  merriest  day,  „  43 
T-m  yet  would  reap  to-day,  jMve  tliou  thy  land  93 
•  T-m  he  weds  \vith  me.'  Lady  Clare  16 
to  slip  away  To-day,  t-m,  soon  :  Princess  ii  297 
'  T-m,  love,  t-m,  And  that's  an  age  away.'  Window,  When  13 
thinking,  '  here  to-day,'  Or  '  here  t-m  In  Mem.  vi  24 
But  t-m,  if  we  live,  Mavd  I  xx  23 
Lancelot,  sitting  in  my  place  Enchair'd  t-m.  Last  Tournament  104 
Hail,  King  !  T-m  thou  shalt  pass  away.  Pass,  of  Arthur  34 
I'll  come  for  an  hour  t-m.  First  Quarrel  46 
Nurse,  I  must  do  it  t-m ;                                       In  the  Child.  Hasp.  42 


To-morrow  (continued)     Not  to-night  in  Locksley 
Hall— ^?«. — 

Here  to-night,  the  Hall  t-m, 
Tomyris    bronze  valves,  emboss'd  with  T 
Ton     Than  were  those  lead-like  t's  of  sin, 

San  Philip  that,  of  fifteen  himdred  t's, 
Tone     (See  also  Under-tone)     Wears  all  day  a  fainter  t 

Sweeter  t's  than  calumny  ? 

Ah  pity— hint  it  not  in  human  t's, 

'  0  cruel  heart,'  she  changed  her  t, 

'  He  heeded  not  reviling  t's. 


Locksley  H.,  Sixty  214 

261 

Princess  v  365 

St.  S.  Stylites  25 

The  Revenge  40 

The  Owl  ii  7 

A  Dirge  17 

Wan  Sculptor  11 

Mariana  in  the  S.  69 

Two  Voices  220 

All  day  the  wind  breathes  low  with  mello^ver  t :  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  102 


fall  down  and  glance  From  t  to  t,  D.  of  F.  Women  167 

it  was  the  t  with  which  he  read —  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  5 

Swung  themselves,  and  in  low  t's  replied  ;  Vision  of  Sin  20 

There  to  herself,  all  in  low  t's,  she  read.  Princess  vii  175 

To  one  clear  harp  in  divers  t's.  In  Mem.  i  2 

With  all  the  music  in  her  t,  .,     Hi  10 

The  days  have  vanish'd,  t  and  tint,  ..     xliv  5 

He  past ;  a  soul  of  nobler  t:  ,,        Ix  1 

Perhaps  the  smile  and  tender  t  Maud  I  vi  63 

Then  the  King  in  low  deep  t's.  Com.  of  Arthur  260 

she  tower'd  her  bells,  T  under  t,  shrill'd ;  Merlin  and  V.  132 

Then  came  her  father,  saying  in  low  t's,  Lancelot  and  E.  994 

Is  this  the  t  of  empire  ?  _      To  the  Queen  ii  18 

in  the  utterance  Of  silver-chorded  t's :  '     Lover's  Ttde  ii  142 

a  t  so  rough  that  I  broke  into  passionate  tears,  The  Wreck  122 
Toned    See  Fi^-toned,  Heavenly-toned,  Low-toned,  Richest-toned 

Tongue  (S)     Thou  of  the  many  t's,  the  myriad  eyes  !  Ode  to  Memory  47 

Like  Indian  reeds  blown  from  his  silver  t,  The  Poet  13 

My  tremulous  t  faltereth,  Elednore  136 

For  Kate  hath  an  imbridled  t,  Kate  7 

'  When,  wide  in  soul  and  bold  of  t.  Two  Voices  124 

Blowing  a  noise  of  t's  and  deeds,  „        206 

To  feel,  altho'  no  t  can  prove,  „        445 

That  run  before  the  fluttering  t's  of  fire ;  D.  of  F.  Women  30 

A  golden  bill !  the  silver  t.  The  Blackbird  13 

and  servile  to  a  shrewish  t !  Locksley  Hall  42 

'Tis  said  he  had  a  tuneful  t,  A  mphion  17 

Lot  me  loose  thy  t  with  wine  :  Vision  of  Sin  88 

'  Fear  not  thou  to  loose  thy  t ;  „          155 

But  in  a  <  no  man  can  understand  ;  „           222 

I  would  that  my  t  could  utter  The  thoughts  Break,  break,  etc.  3 

his  long-bounden  t  Was  loosen'd,  Enoch  Arden  644 

Fairer  his  talk,  a  t  that  ruled  the  hour,  Aylmers  Field  194 

My  t  Trips,  or  I  speak  profanely.  Lucretius  73 

Not  in  this  frequence  can  I  lend  full  t.  Princess  iv  442 

And  every  spoken  t  should  lord  you.  „            544 

On  flying  Time  from  all  their  silver  Vs —  „  vii  105 
his  triumph  will  be  simg  By  some  yet  unmoulded  t       Ode  on  Well.  233 

Far,  how  far  no  t  can  say,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  30 

strong  on  liis  legs,  but  still  of  his  t  !  Grandmother  13 

tis,  a.  fire  as  you  know,  my  dear,  the  t  „          28 

Whatever  fickle  t's  may  say.  In  Mem.  xxvi  4 

To  flicker  with  his  double  t.  „             ex  8 

seem'd  to  live  A  contradiction  on  tlie  t,  „         cxxv  4 

That  made  my  t  so  stammer  and  trip  Mand  I  vi  83 

With  the  evil  t  and  the  evil  ear,  ,,           x  51 

Let  not  my  t  be  a  thrall  to  my  eye,  „        xvi  32 

words,  Beyond  my  t  to  tell  thee —  Com.  of  Arthur  269 

Graven  in  the  oldest  /  of  all  this  world,  „            302 

And  Uther  slit  thy  t :  Gareth  and  L.  376 

I  curse  the  t  that  all  thro'  yesterday  Keviled  thee,  „           1322 

as  a  man  upon  his  t  May  break  it,  Geraint  and  E.  42 
man,  who  driven  by  evil  t's  From  all  his  fellows,  Balin  and  Balan  125 
as  the  man  in  life  Was  wounded  by  blind  t's  he  saw 

not  „              130 

Woods  have  t's,  As  walls  have  ears :  „              530 

neither  eyes  nor  t — O  stupid  child  !  Merlin  and  V.  251 

yet,  methinks  Thy  t  has  tript  a  little :  „             602 

and  let  her  t  Rage  like  a  fire  „            801 

heathen  caught  and  reft  him  of  his  t.  Lancelot  and  E.  273 

prick'd  at  once,  all  t's  were  loosed :  „              724 

such  a  <  To  blare  its  own  interpretation —  „              942 

rain  a  scroll  Of  letters  in  a  <  no  man  could  read.  Uoly  Grail  Ml 


Tongue 


735 


Took 


Tongue  (s)  (continued)  With  supplication  both  of  knees  and  t :  Holy  Grail  602 

given  thee  a  fair  face,  Lacking  a  <  ?  '  Pelleas  and  E.  102 

Queen,  May  help  them,  loose  thy  t,  and  let  nie  know.'  „  600 

Yet  strangers  to  the  t,  and  with  blunt  stamp  Last  Tournament  66 

lock  up  my  t  From  uttering  freely  „  693 

good  nuns  would  check  her  gadding  t  Guinevere  313 

This  t  that  wagg'd  They  said  with  such  heretical 
arrogance 

Must  learn  to  use  the  t's  of  all  the  world. 

Who  finds  the  Saviour  in  his  mother  t. 

speaking  clearly  in  thy  native  t — No  Latin — 

the  men  that  were  mighty  of  t 

Of  diverse  t,  but  with  a  common  will 

their  t's  may  have  babbled  of  me — 

Nor  roll  thy  viands  on  a  luscious  t 

a  single  race,  a  single  t — 

Unfumish'd  brows,  tempestuous  t's — 

But  Moother  was  free  of  'er  t, 

waste  and  field  and  town  of  alien  t, 

Tha'd  niver  not  hopple  thy  t,  an'  the  t's  sit  afire 

o'  Hell,  Church-warden,  etc.  24 

Tongue  (verb)     Whose  echo  shall  not  t  thy  glorious  doom,  Tiresias  136 

Tongue-banger    Sally  she  tum'd  a  t-b,  North.  Cobbler  23 

Tongued    See  Dry-tongued,  Low-tongoed 
Tongaeless    then  tum'd  the  t  man  From  the  half-face 

to  the  full  eye,  Lancelot  and  E.  1261 

Tonguester  (adj.)     madden'd  to  the  height  By  t  tricks.      To  Alary  Boyle  34 


Sir  J.  Oldcastle  14 

34 

115 

133 

V.  of  Maeldwne  23 

Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  6 

The  Wreck  41 

Ancient  Sage  267 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  165 

Freedom  38 

Owd  Rod  73 

St.  Telemachus  30 


Tonguester  (s)    far  from  all  The  t's  of  the  court 

thro'  the  t's  we  may  fall. 
Tongue-tied     A  t-t  Poet  in  the  feverous  days, 

And  thus  t-t,  it  made  him  wroth  the  more 
To-night     T-n  I  saw  the  stm  set : 

I  go  t-n  :  I  come  to-morrow  mom, 

I  prophesy  that  I  shall  die  t-n, 

'  Tho  I  should  die  t-n.' 

how  pale  she  had  look'd  Darling,  t-ii ! 

Why  were  you  silent  when  I  spoke  t-n  ? 

t-n — the  song  Might  have  been  worse 

Sweet  dream,  be  perfect.     I  shall  die  t-n. 

if  t-n  our  greatness  were  struck  dead, 

Yet  here  t-n  in  this  dark  city. 

For  he  will  see  them  on  t-n  ; 

T-n  the  winds  begin  to  rise 

T-n  ungather'd  let  us  leave 

Who  rest  t-n  beside  the  sea. 

Her  brother  is  coming  back  t-n 

On  my  fresh  hope,  to  the  Hall  t-n. 

'  Ah,  be  Among  the  roses  t-n.' 

Leave  me  t-n  :  I  am  weary  to  the  death.' 

And  yet  t-n,  t-n — when  all  ray  wealth 

I  propose  t-n  To  show  you  what  is  dearest 

I  have  liere  t-n  a  guest  So  bound  to  me 

an'  go  t-n  by  the  boat.' 

Why  should  he  call  me  t-n. 

But  I  go  t-n  to  my  boy, 

Molly  belike  may  'a  lighted  t-n  upo'  one. 

You  Tommies  shall  waait  t-n 

Not  t-n  in  Locksley  Hall — 

Not  the  Hall  i-n,  my  grandson  ! 

Here  t-n  !  the  Hall  to-morrow. 

Farewell,  Macready,  since  t-n  we  part ; 

Set  the  mountain  aflame  t-n, 

'  can  ya  paay  me  the  rent  t-n  ?  ' 

'  Then  hout  t-n  tha  shall  goa.' 

'  what  has  darken'd  thee  t-n  ?  ' 
Tonsured     A  t  head  in  middle  age  forlorn, 
Tonnp  (turnip)     Whoats  or  t's  or  taates — 

Goan  into  mangles  an'  t's, 

t's  was  haafe  on  'em  fingers  an'  toas, 
Too-earnest     Nor  look  with  that  t-e  eye — 
Too-fearful    t-f  guilt.  Simpler  than  any  child, 
Took    (See  also  Taaked,  Tuk)    So  t  echo  with  delight, 
(repeat) 

Cleaving,  t  root,  and  springing  forth  anew 

And  t  the  reed-tops  as  it  went. 


Last  Tournament  393 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  130 

Golden  Year  10 

Geraint  and  E.  112 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  5 

AvMey  Court  70 

St.  S.  StylUes  220 

Lady  Clare  48 

Aylmer's  Field  380 

Sea  Dreams  268 

Frincess  iv  250 

„       vii  149 

Third  of  Feb.  17 

The  Daisy  95 

In  Mem.  vi  33 

XV  1 

ev  1 

„     Con.  76 

Maud  I  xix  1 

103 

„        xxi  13 

Geraint  and  E.  358 

Lover's  Tale  i  668 

iv  251 

344 

First  Quarrel  88 

Rizpah  3 

74 

Spinster's  S's.  7 

120 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  214 

237 

261 

To  W.  C.  Macready  1 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  16 

Owd  Roa  57 

58 

Akbar's  Dream  2 

The  Brook  200 

VUlage  Wife  26 

Owd  Rod  28 

Church-warden,  etc.  4 

Day  Dm.,  Pro.  18 

Guinevere  370 


Took  (coniinued)     t  the  soul  Of  that  waste  place  with  joy       Dying  Swan  21 
'  Who  t  a  wife,  who  rear'd  his  race,  Two  Voices  328 

those  great  Bells  Began  to  chime.  She  t  her  throne  :  Palace  of  Art  158 
great  delight  and  shuddering  t  hold  of  all  my  mind.  May  Queen,  Con.  35 
He  t  the  goose  upon  his  arm,  The  Goose  41 

I  row'd  across  And  t  it,  and  have  worn  it,  M.  d' Arthur  33 

Then  t  with  care,  and  kneeling  on  one  knee,  ,,         173 

Put  forth  their  hands,  and  t  the  King,  „         206 

Yet  for  the  pleasure  that  I  i  to  hear,  Gardener's  D.  228 

Dora  t  the  child,  and  went  her  way  Dora  71 

she  rose  and  t  The  child  once  more,  „    80 

he  t  the  boy  that  cried  aloud  And  struggled  hard.  „  101 

Dora  said,  "  My  imcle  t  the  boy  ;  „  114 

as  years  Went  forward,  Mary  t  another  mate  ;  ,,  171 

As  one  by  one  we  t  them —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  95 

We  t  them  all,  till  she  was  left  alone  „  98 

'  1 1  the  swarming  sound  of  life —  Talking  Oak  213 

Why  t  ye  not  your  pastime  ?  Love  and  Duty  28 

Love  liimself  t  part  against  himself  „  45 

with  a  frolic  welcome  t  The  thimder  and  the  sunshine,  Ulysses  47 

Love  t  up  the  glass  of  Time,  Locksley  Hall  31 

Love  t  up  the  harp  of  Life,  „  33 

she  t  the  tax  away  And  built  herself  an  everlasting  name.        Godiva  78 

Edward  Gray  25 

The  Letters  17 

Vision  of  Sin  6 

Enoch  Arden  153 

646 

The  "Brook  129 

Aylmer's  Field  67 

491 

532 

Sea  Dreams  185 

189 

Lucretius  7 

Frincess,  Pro.  108 

179 

i46 

a  124 

152 
304 

362 

„  iv  313 

380 

598 

t;268 

484 

468 

„  vi  11 

192 

Con.  29 

The  Daisy  85 

In  Mem.  xxx  21 

„         loiii  1 

„         Ixix  7 

Maud  I  xii  14 

Com.  of  Arthur  221 

298 

309 

Gareth  and  L.  662 


The  Owl  a  4 

The  Poet  21 

Dying  Swan  10 


Then  1 1  a  pencil,  and  wrote  On  the  mossy  stone. 
She  t  the  little  ivory  chest. 
And  t  him  by  the  curls,  and  led  him  in, 
Enoch  t,  and  handled  all  his  limbs, 
when  their  casks  were  fill'd  they  t  aboard : 
he  t  Her  blind  and  shuddering  puppies, 
still  T  joyful  note  of  all  things  joyful, 
innocent  hare  Falter  before  he  t  it. 
Seized  it,  t  home,  and  to  my  lady, — 
So  false,  he  partly  t  himself  for  true  ; 
So  never  t  that  useful  name  in  vain, 
the  master  t  Small  notice,  or  austerely, 
the  maiden  Aunt  T  this  fair  day  for  text, 
And  there  we  t  one  tutor  as  to  read : 
they  saw  the  King ;  he  t  the  gifts ; 
she  t  A  bird's-eye-view  of  all  imgracious  past ; 
He  t  advantage  of  his  strength  to  be 
T  both  his  hands,  and  smiling  faintly  said  : 
We  tum'd  to  go,  but  Cyril  t  the  child, 
We  t  this  palace ;  but  even  from  the  first 
dispatches  which  the  Head  T  half-amazed, 
She  t  it  and  she  flung  it. 
then  t  the  king  His  three  broad  sons ; 
It  it  for  an  hour  in  mine  own  bed  This  morning : 
1 1  my  leave,  for  it  was  nearly  noon : 
T  the  face-cloth  from  the  face ; 
she  t  it :  Pretty  bud  !  Lily  of  the  vale  ! 
for  she  t  no  part  In  our  dispute : 
What  more  ?     We  t  our  last  adieu, 
Our  voices  t  a  higher  range ; 
In  those  sad  words  1 1  farewell : 

I  t  the  thorns  to  bind  my  brows. 
She  t  the  kiss  sedately ; 
Wherefore  Merlin  t  the  child. 
And  Arthur  row'd  across  and  t  it — 
So  this  great  brand  the  king  T, 
T  horse,  descended  the  slope  street, 
t  the  shield  And  mounted  horse  and  graspt  a  spear, 
this  a  bridge  of  single  arc  T  at  a  leap;  „  909 
She  t  them,  and  array'd  herself  therein,  Marr.  of  Geraint  139 
T  horse,  and  forded  Usk,  and  gain'd  the  wood ;  „  161 
So  Enid  t  his  charger  to  the  stall ;  „  382 
Ah,  dear,  he  t  me  from  a  goodly  house,  „  708 
she  found  And  t  it,  and  array'd  herself  therein.  „  849 
And  Enid  t  a  little  delicately,  Geraint  and  E.  212 
and  t  the  word  and  play'd  upon  it,  „  291 
One  t  him  for  a  victim  of  Earl  Doorm,  „  524 
They  hated  her,  who  t  no  thought  of  them,  „  639 
And  t  his  russet  beard  between  his  teeth ;                             „              713 

I I  you  for  a  bandit  knight  of  Doorm ;  „  786 
and  <  a  paramour;  Did  her  mock-honour  „  832 
converse  which  he  t  Before  the  Queen's  fair  name                „              950 


Took 


736 


Tore 


Lover 


Took  (continued)    T,  as  in  rival  heat,  to  holy 
things ; 
He  /  the  selfsame  track  as  Balan, 
She  t  the  helm  and  he  the  sail ; 
I  <  his  brush  and  blotted  out  the  bird, 
A  rumour  runs,  she  t  him  for  the  King, 
and  suddenly  she  t  To  bitter  weeping 
blood  of  the  wizard  at  her  touch  T  gayer  colours, 
Then  of  the  crowd  ye  t  no  more  account 
She  still  t  note  that  when  the  living  smile  Died 
and  t  the  shield.  There  kept  it, 
he  t.  And  gave ,  the  diamond : 
So  those  two  brethem  from  the  chariot  t 
Stoopt,  U  brake  seal,  and  read  it ; 
AndJ  both  ear  and  eye ;  and  o'er  the  brook 
and  t  Gawain's,  and  said,  '  Betray  me  not,  but 

help — 
brought  A  maiden  babe ;  which  Arthur  pitying  t, 
'  He  t  them  and  he  drave  them  to  his  tower — 
and  his  creatures  t  and  bare  him  o£E, 
that  t  Full  easily  all  impressions  from  below. 
She  said :  they  t  her  to  themselves ; 

I  row'd  across  And  t  it,  and  have  worn  it, 
Then  t  with  care,  and  kneeling  on  one  knee, 
Put  forth  their  hands,  and  t  the  King, 
made  garlands  of  the  selfsame  flower,  Which  she  t 

smiling, 

The  night  in  pity  t  away  my  day. 
She  <  the  body  of  my  past  delight, 
sorrow  of  my  spirit  Was  of  so  wide  a  compass  it 

t  in 
sudden  gust  that  sweeping  down  T  the  edges  of  the  pall, 
t  him  home.  And  fed,  and  cherish'd  him, 
An'  he  t  three  turns  in  the  rain, 
he  t  no  life,  but  he  t  one  purse, 
T  the  breath  from  our  sails, 
So  t  her  thence,  and  brought  her  here, 
Annie,  the  heldest,  I  niver  not  t  to  she : 
t  and  hang'd,  T,  hang'd  and  burnt — 
Who  t  the  world  so  easily  heretofore. 
Who  t  us  for  the  very  Gods  from  Heaven, 
And  we  t  to  playing  at  ball,  and  we  t  to  throwing 

the  stone. 
And  we  t  to  playing  at  battle, 

I I  it,  he  made  it  a  cage. 
They  t  us  abroad :  the  crew  were  gentle, 
t  and  kiss'd  me,  and  again  He  kiss'd  me ; 
Christian  conquerors  t  and  flung 
You  f  me  to  that  chamber  in  the  tower, 
( the  ring,  and  flaunted  it  Before  that  other 

I  <,  I  left  you  there ;  I  came, 

I I  And  chafed  the  freezing  hand, 
you  t  them  tho'  you  frown'd ; 

Tool    {See  also  Edge-tools,  Garden-tools,  Harvest-tool) 

Made  Him  his  catspaw  and  the  Cross  his  t, 

Or  thou  wilt  prove  their  t. 

thou  their  t,  set  on  to  plague  And  play  upon, 

He  had  brought  his  ghastly  Vs : 

Down,  you  idle  t's,  Stampt  into  dust — 
Too-officious    Life  (like  a  wanton  t-o  friend, 
Too-quick    Down  hill '  T-q'  the  chain. 
Too-slow     Up  hill '  T-s '  will  need  the  whip. 
Tooth     my  teeth,  which  now  are  dropt  away, 

stammering  '  scoundrel '  out  of  teeth  that  ground 

sprang  No  dragon  warriors  from  Cadmean  teeth, 

But  in  the  teeth  of  clench'd  antagonisms 

captains  flash'd  their  glittering  teeth, 

red  in  t  and  claw  With  ravine. 

And  took  his  russet  beard  between  his  teeth ; 

He  ground  his  teeth  together, 

thro'  the  hedge  of  splinter'd  teeth, 

teeth  of  Hell  flay  bare  and  gnash  thee  flat ! — 
Tooth'd     {See  also  Gap-tooth'd)     and  t  with  grinning 

savagery.' 
Toothed    £ad  every  kiss  of  t  wheels. 


Balin  and  Balan  100 

290 

Merlin  and  V.  200 

478 

776 

854 

950 

Lancelot  and  E.  105 

323 

397 

550 

1146 

1271 

Holy  Grail  383 

Pdleas  and  E.  359 

Last  Tournament  21 

68 

Guinevere  109 

641 

690 

Pass,  of  Arthur  201 

341 

374 


.f  Tale  i  344 
612 
681 


a  135 

Hi  35 

21)263 

First  Quarrel  75 

Rizpah  31 

The  Revenge  42 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  267 

VUlage  Wife  8 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  45 

89 

Columbus  183 

of  Maeldune  94 

95 

The  Wreck  83 

129 

The  "Flight  23 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  84 

The  Ring  111 

243 

347 

451 

Happy  74 

Sea  Breams  190 

Maud  I  vi  59 

Guinevere  359 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  69 

Romney's  R.  112 

Lover's  Tale  i  627 

Politics  12 

„       11 

St.  S.  Stylites  30 

Aylmer's  Field  328 

Lucretius  50 

Princess  iv  465 

■»20 

In  Mem.  hi  15 

Geraint  and  E,  713 

Balin  and  Balan  538 

Last  Tournament  65 

444 

Balin  and  Balan  197 
In  Mem.  cxvii  11 


Top  {See  also  Chimney-top,  Mountain-top,  Beed-tops, 
Towery-top)  Or  over  hills  with  peaky  t's 
engrail'd, 

'  will  you  climb  the  t  of  Art. 

and  here  it  comes  With  five  at  t : 

Strikes  through  the  wood,  sets  all  the  fs  quivering — 

The  t's  shall  strike  from  star  to  star, 

I  climb'd  to  the  t  of  the  garth, 

A  hon  ramps  at  the  t, 

shouted  at  once  from  the  t  of  the  house ; 

High  on  the  t  were  those  three  Queens, 

Till  lost  in  blowing  trees  and  t's  of  towers ; 

saw.  Bowl-shaped,  thro'  t's  of  many  thousand  pines 

And  on  the  t,  a  city  wall'd : 

but  found  at  t  No  man,  nor  any  voice. 

and  on  the  naked  mountain  t  Blood-red, 

Storm  at  the  t,  and  when  we  gain'd  it, 

Climb'd  to  the  high  i  of  the  garden-wall 

Flying  at  t  of  the  roofs  in  the  ghastly  siege 

ye  gev  her  the  t  of  the  momin', 

I  mashes  the  winder  hin,  when  I  gits  to  the  t. 


Palace  of  Art  IIS  \ 
Gardener's  D.  169  ' 
Walk,  to  the  Mail  113 
Lucretius  186 
Princess  vi  57  i 
Grandmother  38  ' 
Maud  I  xiv  7  ' 
„     //v50 
Gareth  and  L.  229 
670 
796 
Holy  Grail  422 
427  i 
474  ' 
491 
Guinevere  25 
Def.  of  Lucknow  4 
Tomorrow  3 
Owd  Rod  83 


I  saw  beyond  their  silent  Vs  The  steaming  marshes    Prog,  of  Spring  74 


Thebb  on  the  t  of  the  down, 

an'  coom'd  to  the  t  o'  the  tree. 
Topaz  sardius,  Chrysolite,  beryl,  t, 
Topaz-lights    Myriads  of  t-l,  and  jacinth-work 

Myriads  of  t-l,  and  jacinth-work 
Topic    speak,  and  let  the  t  die.' 
Topmost     Behind  the  valley  t  Gargarus  Stands  up 

And  thro'  the  t  Oriels'  coloured  flame 

Whose  t  branches  can  discern  The  roofs  of  Sumner- 
place ! 

Long  may  thy  t  branch  discern  The  roofs  of  Sumner- 
place ' 


June  Bracken,  etc.  1 

Church-warden,  etc.  38 

Columbus  85 

M.  d' Arthur  57 

Pass,  of  Arthur  225 

Princess  Hi  205 

(Enone  10 

Palace  of  Art  161 


Talking  Oak  31 
151 


High  up,  the  t  palace  spire.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  48 

The  t  elm-tree  gather'd  green  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  8 

and  moved  Upon  the  t  froth  of  thought.  In  Mem,.  Hi  4 

A  sweet  voice  singing  in  the  t  tower  To  the  eastward :     Holy  Grail  834 
Even  to  tipmost  lance  and  t  helm.  Last  Tournament  442 

Hebe  far  away,  seen  from  the  t  cliff.  Lover's  Tale  i  1 

ever  upon  the  t  roof  our  banner  of 

England  blew,  (repeat)  Def.  of  Lucknow  6,  30,  45,  60,  94 

That  ever  upon  the  t  roof  our  banner 

in  India  blew.  „  72 

Cried  from  the  t  summit  with  human  voices  and 

words ;  V.  of  Maeldune  28 

And  the  t  spire  of  the  mountain  was  lilies  in  lieu  of 

snow,  „  41 

and  every  t  pine  Spired  into  bluest  heaven.  Death  of  (Enone  68 

The  Ring  112 

Princess  ii  232 

1)445 

„     Con.  62 

In  Mem.  xv  19 

Gareth  and  L.  651 

In  Mem.  cxxvii  12 

Marr.  of  Geraint  491 

Ode  on  Well.  215 

Geraint  and  E.  834 

Gareth  and  L.  255 

Merlin  and  V.  731 

Tiresias  159 

Akbar's  Dream  120 


The  t—&  chest  there,  by  which  you  knelt — 
Topple     Will  t  to  the  trumpet  down. 

And  t's  down  the  scales ; 

A  kingdom  Vs  over  with  a  shriek  Like  an  old  woman. 

And  Vs  round  the  dreary  west, 

I  can  t  over  a  hundred  such. 
Toppled    The  spires  of  ice  are  t  down. 
Toppling     And  t  over  all  antagonism 

Shall  find  the  t  crags  of  Duty  scaled 

And,  t  over  all  antagonism. 
Topsy-turvy    solid  turrets  t-t  in  air : 
Torch    gust  of  wind  Poff'd  out  hLs  t 

not  to  plunge  Thy  t  of  life  in  darkness, 

I  can  but  lift  the  t  Of  Reason 


Tore    {See  also  Out-tore,  Baaved)    (With  that  she  t  her 

robe  apart,  D.  of  F.  Women  157 

With  wakes  of  fire  we  t  the  dark ;  The  Voyage  52 

t.  As  if  the  living  passion  symbol'd  there  Aylmer's  Field  534 

ran  in.  Beat  breast,  t  hair,  Lucretius  277 

T  the  king's  letter,  snow'd  it  down,  Princess  i  61 

Took  half-amazed,  and  in  her  lion's  mood  T  open,  „    iv  381 

T  from  the  branch,  and  cast  on  earth,  Balin  and  Balan  539 

Leaf  after  leaf,  and  t,  and  cast  them  off,  Lancelot  and  E.  1199 

then  this  gale  T  my  pavilion  from  the  tenting-pin,  Holy  Grail  1^1 

The  rough  brier  t  my  bleeding  palms ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  18 

And  we  t  up  the  flowers  by  the  million  V.  of  Maeldune  53 


Tore  737 

Tore  (continued)    She  crouch'd,  she  t  him  part  from  part,    Dead  Prophet  69 

She  t  the  Prophet  after  death,  „  77 

Torment    when  strength  is  shoek'd  With  t.  Lover's  Tale  ii  151 

and  infinite  t  of  flies,  Def.  of  Lucknow  82 

all  the  hateful  fires  Of  t,  Demeter  and  P.  152 

contemplate  The  t  of  the  damn'd '  Akbar's  Bream  49 

Tonuented    See  Long-tormented 

Tom    (See  also  Raaved,  Tear'd,  Turn)    who  smiled  when  she 

was  t  in  three ;  Poland  12 

T  from  the  fringe  of  spray.  D.  of  F.  Women  40 

AU  the  air  was  t  in  sunder.  The  Captain  43 

I  was  drench'd  with  ooze,  and  t  with  briers,  Princess  v  28 

and  the  household  flower  T  from  the  lintel —  „        129 

her  blooming  mantle  t,  „    vi  145 

The  Mayfly  is  t  by  the  swallow,  Maud  I  iv  23 

By  which  our  houses  are  t :  „      xix  33 

a  Shape  that  fled  With  broken  wings,  t  raiment  Gareth  and  L.  1208 
would  have  t  the  child  Piecemeal  among  them,  Com.  of  Arthur  217 
T  as  a  sail  that  leaves  the  rope  is  /  In  tempest :  Holy  Grail  212 

Then  t  it  from  her  finger.  The  Ring  456 

from  her  own  hand  she  had  t  the  ring  In  fright,  „        470 

Tom'd  (turned)    An'  'e  t  as  red  as  a  stag-tuckey's 

wattles, 
Torpid    That  here  the  t  mummy  wheat  Of  Egypt 
Torre    two  strong  sons.  Sir  T  and  Sir  Lavaine, 

'  Here  is  T's :  Hurt  in  his  first  tilt  was  my  son  Sir  T. 
added  plain  Sir  T,  '  Yea,  since  I  cannot  use  it. 
Surely  I  but  play'd  on  T : 
Then  far  away  with  good  Sir  T  for  guide 
He  amazed,  '  T  and  Elaine !  why  here  ? 
Then  tum'd  Sir  T,  and  being  in  his  moods 
Then  the  rough  T  began  to  heave  and  move. 
Torrent  (adj.)    '  The  t  brooks  of  hallow'd  Israel 
Flung  the  t  rainbow  round  : 
The  t  vineyard  streaming  feU 
That  listens  near  a  t  mountain-brook, 
Torrent  (s)    Far-off  the  t  call'd  me  from  the  cleft 
She  heard  the  t's  meet. 
In  many  a  streaming  t  back. 
Like  t's  from  a  mountain  source 
For  me  the  t  ever  pour'd  And  glisten'd — 
And  t's  of  her  myriad  universe, 
roll  The  t's,  dash'd  to  the  vale  : 
To  roll  the  t  out  of  dusky  doors : 
let  the  t  dance  thee  down  To  find  him  in  the  valley 
oleanders  flush'd  the  bed  Of  sUent  t's, 
must  fain  have  t's,  lakes.  Hills, 
Swept  like  a  f  of  gems  from  the  sky 
Following  a  <  till  its  myriad  falls 
in  a  popular  t  of  lies  upon  lies ; 
Of  cataract  music  Of  falling  fs, 
By  the  long  t's  ever-deepen'd  roar. 
Torrent-bow    floating  as  they  fell  Lit  up  a  t-b 
Tortoise     Upon  the  t  creeping  to  the  wall ; 
Torture     T  and  trouble  in  vain, — 

Why  should  we  bear  with  an  hour  of  t. 
Tortured    a  twitch  of  pain  T  her  mouth. 

Me  they  seized  and  me  they  t, 
Tory  (adj.)     The  T  member's  elder  son, 
Tory  (s)     I  myself,  A  T  to  the  quick. 
Let  Whig  and  T  stir  their  blood ; 
A  gathering  of  the  T, 
ToBS     There  the  sunlit  ocean  t'es 

That  t'es  at  the  harbour-mouth ; 
Should  t  with  tangle  and  with  shells, 
but  wherefore  t  me  this  Like  a  dry  bone 
and  t  them  away  with  a  yawn, 
Tossing    <  up  A  cloud  of  incense  of  all  odour 


Touch 


Tost    (See  also  Trouble-tost) 
kite, 
T  over  all  her  presents  petulantly : 
Discuss'd  a  doubt  and  t  it  to  and  fro : 
others  t  a  ball  Above  the  fountain-jets, 
t  on  thoughts  that  changed  from  hue  to  hue, 
Elaine,  and  heard  her  name  so  t  about, 


Church-warden,  etc.  31 

To  Prof.  Jebb.  5 

Lancelot  and  E.  174 

195 

198 

209 

788 

796 

799 

„         1066 

D.  ofF.  Women  \%l 

Vision  of  Sin  32 

The  Daisy  10 

Geraint  and  E.  171 

(Enone  54 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  4 

England  and  Amer.  14 

The  Letters  39 

To  E.  L.  13 

Lucretius  39 

Princess  v  350 

„    vii  208 

209 

The  Daisy  34 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  221 

V.  of  Maeldune  46 

Tiresias  37 

Vastness  6 

Merlin  and  the  G.  47 

Death  of  (Enone  85 

Palace  of  Art  36 

D.ofF.  Wom^n27 

Def.  of  Lucknow  86 

Despair  81 

Princess  vi  106 

Boadicea  49 

Princess,  Con.  50 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  81 

Will  Water.  53 

Maud  I  XX  33 

The  Captain  69 

The  Voyage  2 

In  Mem.  x  20 

Last  Tournament  195 

The  Wreck  21 

Palace  of  Art  Z9> 


Had  t  his  ball  and  flown  his 

Aylmer's  Field  84 

235 

Princess  ii  445 

460 

„       iv  210 

Lancelot  and  E.  233 


Tost  {continued)    was  a  phantom  cry  that  I  heard  as 

1 1  about,  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  63 

The  sacred  relics  t  about  the  floor —  The  Ring  447 

Total     The  t  chronicles  of  man,  the  mind,  Princess  ii  381 

The  t  world  since  life  began ;  In  Mem.  xliii  12 

Tother  (other)     'E  reads  of  a  sewer  an'  sartan  'oap  o'  the 

t  side ;  Village  Wife  92 

Or  like  t  Hangel  i'  Scriptur  Owd  Rod  94 

Totter    Till  she  began  to  t.  Sea  Dreams  244 

what  is  it  ?  there  ?  yon  arbutus  T's ;  Lucretius  185 

Totter'd    roofs  T  toward  each  other  in  the  sky.  Holy  Grail  343 

Tottering    yester-even,  suddenly  giddily  t —  Boadicea  29 

Touch  (s)     And  weary  with  a  finger's  t  Clear-headed  friend  22 

Nor  toil  for  title,  place,  or  t  Of  pension.  Love  thou  thy  land  25 

Perhaps  some  modem  t'es  here  and  there  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  6 

Such  t'es  are  but  embassies  of  love.  Gardener's  D.  18 

But  I  have  sudden  t'es,  and  can  run  My  faith  Edwin  Morris  53 

there  seem'd  A  t  of  something  false,  „            74 

My  sense  of  t  is  something  coarse,  Talking  Oak  163 

The  cushions  of  whose  t  may  press  „          179 

Baby  fingers,  waxen  t'es,  Locksley  Hall  90 

A  T,  a  kiss !  the  charm  was  snapt  Day-Dm.,  Revival  1 

O  for  the  <  of  a  vanish'd  hand,  Break,  break,  etc.  11 

Which  at  a  <  of  light,  an  air  of  heaven,  Aylmer's  Field  5 

80  finely,  that  a  troublous  t  Thinn'd,  „            75 

hand  Glanced  Uke  a  <  of  sunshine  on  the  rocks,  Princess  Hi  357 

To  whom  the  t  of  all  mischance  but  came  „        iv  573 

not  a  thought,  a  t.  But  pure  as  lines  of  green  „          v  195 

some  t  of  that  Which  kills  me  with  myself,  „        vi  306 

No  more,  dear  love,  for  at  a  f  I  yield ;  „         vii  14 

Tenderness  t  by  t,  and  last,  to  these,  „             114 

a  t  Came  roimd  my  wrist,  and  tears  upon  my  hand  „             137 

Too  solemn  for  the  comic  t'es  in  them,  „      Con.  68 

When  one  small  t  of  Charity  .    Lit.  Squabbles  13 

And  I  too,  talk,  and  lose  the  1 1  talk  of.  --liv-i             „            17 

And  I  perceived  no  t  of  change,  •        In  Mem.  xiv  17 

The  t  of  change  in  calm  or  storm ;  „            xvi  6 

A  <  of  shame  upon  her  cheek :  „     xxxvii  10 

May  some  dim  t  of  earthly  things  „         xliv  11 

If  such  a  dreamy  t  should  fall,  „                13 

You  say,  but  with  no  t  of  scorn,  „           xcvi  1 

Sprang  up  for  ever  at  a  t,  „        cxii  10 

old  place  will  be  gilt  by  the  <  of  a  millionaire:  Maud  /  i  66 

heart-free,  with  the  least  little  t  of  spleen.  „        ii  11 

A  t  of  their  ofiice  might  have  sufficed,  „    II  v  27 

in  a  moment — at  one  t  Of  that  skill'd  spear,  Gareth  and  L.  1222 

But  keep  a  t  of  sweet  civility  Geraint  and  E.  312 

The  pale  blood  of  the  wizard  at  her  t  Merlin  and  V.  949 

For  who  loves  me  must  have  a  t  of  earth ;  Lancelot  and  E.  133 

That  men  go  down  before  your  spear  at  a  t,  „              149 

save  it  be  some  far-off  t  Of  greatness  „              450 

That  men  went  down  before  his  spear  at  a  t,  „              578 

Courtesy  with  a  t  of  traitor  in  it,  „               639 

she,  that  felt  the  cold  t  on  her  throat,  Pelleas  and  E.  488 

I'U  hold  thou  hast  some  t  Of  music,  Last  Tournament  313 

The  sight  that  throbs  and  aches  beneath  my  t,  Lover's  Tale  i  33 
quick  as  a  sensitive  plant  to  the  t ;                         In  the  Child.  Hosp.  30 

Your  plague  but  passes  by  the  t.  Happy  104 

Who  feel  no  t  of  my  temptation,  Romney's  R.  121 

vines  Which  on  the  t  of  heavenly  feet  Death  of  (Enone  5 

Would  the  man  have  a  t  of  remorse  Charity  17 

Touch  (verb)     For  those  two  likes  might  meet  and  t.  Two  Voices  357 

That  t'es  me  with  mystic  gleams,  „          380 

I'd  t  her  neck  so  warm  and  white.  Miller's  D.  174 
touch'd  with  some  new  grace  Or  seem'd  to  t  her,         Gardener's  D.  205 

came  To  t  my  body  and  be  heal'd,  and  live :  St.  S.  Stylites  79 

It  may  be  we  shall  t  the  Happy  Isles,  Ulysses  63 

t  him  with  thy  lighter  thought.  Locksley  Hall  54 

love  no  more  Can  t  the  heart  of  Edward  Gray.  Edward  Gray  8 

And  t  upon  the  master-chord  Will  Water.  27 

So, — ^from  afar, — t  as  at  once  ?  Aylmer's  Field  580 

O  Goddess,  Uke  ourselves  T,  and  be  touch'd,  Lucretius  81 

We  t  on  our  dead  self,  nor  shun  to  do  it,  Princess  Hi  221 

Which  t'es  on  the  workman  and  his  work.  ,.            322 

'  You  have  our  son :  t  not  a  hair  of  his  head :  „        iv  407 

3   A 


Touch 


738 


Towd 


Touch  (verb)  {continued) 
gross  to  tread, 
T  a  spirit  among  things  divine, 
To  t  thy  thousand  yeai's  of  gloom : 
O  P"ather,  t  the  east,  and  light 
And  other  than  the  things  1 1.' 
That  seem'd  to  <  it  into  leaf : 
T  thy  dull  goal  of  joyless  gray, 
Descend,  and  t,  and  enter; 
And  t  with  shade  the  bridal  doors, 
Not  t  on  her  father's  sin : 
We  will  not  t  upon  him  ev'n  in  jest.' 
or  t  at  night  the  northern  star  j 
T  flax  with  flame — a  glance  will  serve — 
but  t  it  with  a  sword,  It  buzzes  fiercely 
Not  one  of  all  the  drove  should  t  me : 
if  a  man  Could  t  or  see  it,  he  was  heal'd  at  once, 
Nor  aught  we  blow  with  breath,  or  t  with  hand, 
if  I  find  the  Holy  Grail  itself  And  t  it, 
That  could  It  or  see  the  Holy  Grail 
'  Yet,  take  him,  ye  that  scarce  are  fit  to  t, 


seem'd  to  t  upon  a  sphere  Too 

Princess  vii  324 

Ode  on  Well.  139 

In  Mem.  ii  12 

.,     xacx  31 

„         xlv  8 

,,     Ixix  18 

,,    Ixxii  27 

„    xciii  13 

„  Con.  117 

Maud  I  xix  17 

Mart,  of  Geraint  311 


but  when  1 1  her,  lo  !  she,  too.  Fell  into 

Holy  Grail  396 

418 

535 

Last  Tournament  752 


Save  that  to  t  a  harp,  tilt  with  a  lance 

had  let  one  finger  lightly  t  The  warm  white  apple 

I  cannot  t  thy  lips,  they  are  not  mine, 
sometimes  t'es  but  one  string  That  quivers, 
doesn  not  t  thy  'at  to  the  Scjuire ; ' 
But  they  dared  not  t  us  agam, 
gleam  from  our  poor  earth  May  t  thee, 
fleeted  far  and  fast  To  t  all  shores, 

I I  thy  world  again — 
Earth  would  never  t  her  worst, 
Did  he  t  me  on  the  lips  ? 
Human  forgiveness  Ves  heaven,  and  thence — 
seon  after  aeon  pass  and  t  him  into  shape  ? 


Touch'd    {See  also  True-touched) 
hue, 
heath-flower  in  the  dew,  T  with  sunrise. 
T  by  thy  spirit's  mellowness, 
T  by  his  feet  the  daisy  slept. 
T ;  and  I  knew  no  more.' 
ere  it  <  a  foot,  that  might  have  danced 
each  in  passing  t  with  some  new  grace 
Then  t  upon  the  game,  how  scarce  it  was 
The  flower,  she  t  on,  dipt  and  rose. 
Are  t,  are  turn'd  to  finest  air. 
Then  the  music  t  the  gates  and  died ; 
When  that  cold  vapour  t  the  palace  gate. 
And  ere  he  t  his  one-and-twentieth  May 
t  On  such  a  time  as  goes  before  the  leaf, 
for  the  second  death  Scarce  t  her 
And  oaken  finials  till  he  t  the  door ; 
T,  clink'd,  and  clash'd,  and  vanish'd, 

0  Goddess,  like  ourselves  Touch,  and  be  t, 
(A  little  sense  of  wrong  had  t  her  face  With  colour) 
t  on  Mahomet  With  much  contempt, 
the  Muses'  heads  were  t  Above  the  darkness 
t  upon  the  point  Where  idle  boys  are  cowards 
for  since  you  think  me  t  In  honour — 
the  sequel  of  the  tale  Had  t  her ; 
That  thou  hadst  t  the  land  to-day, 
God's  finger  t  him,  and  he  slept. 
Or  t  the  changes  of  the  state. 
The  dead  man  t  me  from  the  past, 
Who  t  a  jarring  lyre  at  first. 
Nor  harp  be  <,  nor  flute  be  blown ; 
But  t  with  no  ascetic  gloom ; 
she  t  my  hand  with  a  smile  so  sweet, 
For  her  feet  have  t  the  meadows 

1  find  whenever  she  t  on  me 
Mage  at  Arthur's  Coiu-t,  Knowing  all  arts,  had  <, 
So  when  they  t  the  second  river-loop, 
rose  to  look  at  it,  But  t  it  imawares : 
Nor  ever  t  fierce  wine,  nor  tasted  flesh, 
T  at  all  points,  except  the  poplar  grove, 
at  times,  So  t  were  they,  half-thinking 


Balin  and  Balan  166 

Merlin  and  F.  Ill 

431 

699 

Holy  Grail  55 

„        114 

439 

779 

Pelleas  and  E.  292 

Last  Tournament  636 

716 

Guinevere  551 

Lover's  Tale  i  17 

North.  Cobbler  25 

The  Revenge  72 

Ded.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  19 

PreJ.  Son.  19th  Cent.  2 

Ancient  Sage  249 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  270 

Happy  66 

Romney's  R.  159 

Making  of  Man  4 


T  with  a  somewhat  darker 

Margaret  50 

Rosalind  42 

Elednore  103 

Two  Voices  276 

D.  ofF.  Women  116 

Gardener's  D.  133 

204 

Audley  Court  32 

Talking  Oak  131 

Sir  Galahad  72 

Vision  of  Sin  23 

58 

Enoch  Arden  51 

The  Brook  12 

Aylmer's  Field  605 

823 

Sea  Dreams  135 

Lucretius  81 

Princess,  Pro.  219 

ii  134 

Hi  21 

v308 

401 

Con.  31 

in  Mem.  xlv  2 

„     Ixxxv  20 

„  Ixxxix  35 

„         xcv  34 

„         xcvi  7 

CD  22 

„         cix  10 

Maud  I  vi  12 

„       xii  23 

„      xix  59 

Gareth  and  L.  307 

1025 

Geraint  and  E.  388 

Merlin  and  V.  627 

Lancelot  and  E.  617 

1287 


Touch'd  (continued) 
dust 

up  I  went  and  t  him,  and  he,  too.  Fell  into  dust, 

1 1  The  chapel-doors  at  dawn  I  know ; 

Out  of  the  dark,  just  as  the  lips  had  t, 

its  shadow  flew  Before  it,  till  it  t  her, 

T  by  the  adulterous  finger  of  a  time 

and  t  far-off  His  mountain-altars. 

Thy  fires  from  heaven  had  t  it, 

But  all  from  these  to  where  she  t  on  earth, 

our  lover  seldom  spoke.  Scarce  t  the  meats ; 

we  came  to  the  Silent  Isle  that  we  never  had  t  at 
before, 

dark  orb  T  with  earth's  ligM — 

you  have  t  at  seventy-five, 

1 1  my  limbs,  the  limbs  Were  strange 

t  on  the  whole  sad  planet  of  man. 

For,  see,  thy  foot  has  /  it ; 

T  at  the  golden  Cross 

If  the  lips  were  t  with  fire 

he  t  his  goal.  The  Christian  city. 
Touching    {See  also  Tenderest-touching) 
below : 

our  spirits  rush'd  together  at  the  t  of  the  lips. 

Answer'd  all  queries  t  those  at  home 

which,  on  the  foremost  rocks  T,  upjetted 

moonlight  t  o'er  a  terrace  One  tall  Agave 

T  her  guilty  love  for  Lancelot, 

And  t  Breton  sands,  they  disembark'd. 

And  t  fame,  howe'er  ye  scorn  my  song, 

crown'd  with  spiritual  fire.  And  t  other  worlds. 

and  t  on  all  things  great, 
Touchwood    a  cave  Of  t,  with  a  single  flourishing  spray 

the  stem  Less  grain  than  t, 
Touchwood-dust    Raking  in  that  millennial  t-d 
Tough    My  t  lance  thrusteth  sure, 

t,  Strong,  supple,  sinew-corded. 
Tougher    t,  heavier,  stronger,  he  that  smote 
Tould  (told)     Call'd  from  her  cabin  an' t  her 

1 1  yer  Honour  whativer  I  hard  an'  seen. 
Tour     last  summer  on  a  <  in  Wales : 
Tournament    From  spur  to  plume  a  star  of  t, 

For  Lancelot  was  the  first  in  T, 

Forgetful  of  the  tilt'and  t, 

But  in  this  t  can  no  man  tilt. 

And  victor  at  the  tilt  and  t, 

and  acts  of  prowess  done  In  t  or  tilt, 

heard  the  King  Had  let  proclaim  a  t — 

And  this  was  call'd  '  The  T  of  Youth: ' 

But  when  the  morning  of  a  t, 

in  mockery  call'd  The  T  of  the  Dead  Innocence, 

He  saw  the  laws  that  ruled  the  t  Broken, 

From  spur  to  plume  a  star  of  t, 

Flash'd  on  the  T, 
Tourney  (s)     a  page  or  two  that  rang  With  tilt  and  t ; 

pledged  To  fight  in  t  for  my  bride, 

With  whom  he  used  to  play  at  t  once, 

beside  The  field  of  t,  murmuring  '  kitehen-knave.' 

But  by  the  field  of  t  lingering  yet 

We  hold  a  t  here  to-morrow  morn, 

this  nephew,  fight  In  next  day's  t 

■ — will  you  wear  My  favour  at  this  t  ?  ' 

closed  And  clash'd  in  such  a  t  and  so  full, 

and  remain  Lord  of  the  t. 

The  circlet  of  the  t  roimd  her  brows.  And  the  sword 

of  the  t  across  her  throat.  _  „  454 

Tourney  (verb)  But  meant  once  more  perchance  to  t  in  it.  Lancelot  and  E.  810 
Toumey-fall  In  those  brain-stuiming  shocks,  and  t-f's,  Gareth  and  L.  89 
Toumey-prize     And  make  them,  an  thou  wilt  a  t-p.'       Last  Tournament  32 

And  won  by  Tristram  as  a  t-p,  „  746 

Tourney-skill    no  room  was  there  For  lance  or  t-s :  Gareth  and  L.  1042 

Tow     Nor  like  poor  Psyche  whom  she  drags  in  t.'  Princess  Hi  103 

Towd  (told)     An'  a  t  ma  my  sins,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  11 

knawed  a  Quaaker  fellow  as  often  'as  t  ma  this : 

I  knaws  the  law,  I  does,  for  the  lawyer  ha  t  it  me. 


Guinevere  80  . 

To  the  Queen  ii  43  > 

Lover's  Tale  i  321 ' 

439  i 

ivl&I^ 

226  j 

V.  of  Maeldune  11  j 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  10  i 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  U:\ 

Ancient  Sage  234} 

Dead  Prophet  391 

Demeter  and  P.  48  ] 

Merlin  and  the  G.  67  j 

Parnassus  17 

St.  Telemachus  341 

T  the  sullen  pool 

Miller's  D.  2441 

Locksley  Hall  '• 

Aylmer's  Field  ■ ' 

Sea  Dreams  52 

The  Daisy  83" 

Marr.  of  Geraint  25 

Merlin  and  V.  202 

444 

838 

The  Wreck  50 

Aylmer's  Field  512 

Princess  iv  333 

Aylmer's  Field  514 

Sir  Galahad  2 

Princess  v  534 

536 

Tomorrow  20 

97 

Golden  Year  2 

M.  d' Arthur  223 

Gareth  and  L.  495 

Marr.  of  Geraint  52 

480 

Geraint  and  E.  960 

Holy  Grail  2 

Pelleas  and  E.  11 

158 

Last  Tournament  134 

136 

160 

Pass,  of  Arthur  391 

Merlin  and  the  G.  69 

Princess,  Pro-  122 

V  353 

Gareth  and  L.  532 

664 

736 

Mair.  of  Geraint  287 

476 

Lancelot  and  E.  362 

Holy  Grail  330 

Pelleas  and  E.  163 


N.  S.  19 
VUlage  Wife  16 


ll 


Towd 


739 


Town 


Towd  (told)  {continued)     the  lawyer  he  t  it  me  That  'is  taail 

were  soa  tied  up  Village  Wife  29 

es  it  beant  not  fit  to  be  i !  „           108 

Tower  (s)    (See  also  Beacon-tower,  Chvirch-tower, 
Cloud-tower,  Convent-tower,  Minster-tower) 
flee  By  town,  and  t,  and  hill,  and  cape,  Mine  be  the  Strength  6 

Four  gray  walls,  and  four  gray  Vs,  L.  of  Shalott  i  15 

Under  t  and  balcony,  „          iv  37 

Tho'  watching  from  a  ruin'd  t  Two  Voices  77 

Below  the  city's  eastern  t's :  Fatima  9 

In  glassy  bays  among  her  tsdlest  fs.'  (Enone  119 

in  the  t's  I  placed  great  bells  that  swung,  Paiace  of  Art  129 

'  Yet  pull  not  down  my  palace  Vs,  „             293 

You  pine  among  your  halls  and  t's :  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  58 
grape-loaded  vines  that  glow  Beneath  the  battled  t.   D.  ofF.  Women  220 

range  Of  waning  lime  the  gray  cathedral  t's,  Gardener's  D.  218 

By  night  we  dragg'd  her  to  the  college  t  Walk,  to  the  Mail  89 

left  alone  Upon  her  t,  the  Niobe  of  swine,  „                99 

O  flourish  high,  with  leafy  t's,  Talking  Oak  197 

While  Uion  like  a  mist  rose  into  t's.  Tithonus  63 

clash'd  and  hammer'd  from  a  hundred  t's,  Godiva  75 
Here  droops  the  banner  on  the  t,                            Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  13 

Down  stept  Lord  Ronald  from  his  t :  Lady  Clare  65 

Still  on  the  t  stood  the  vane,  The  Letters  1 

but  now  The  broken  base  of  a  black  t,  Aylmer's  Field  511 

left  Their  own  gray  t,  or  plain-faced  tabernacle,  „            618 

We  gain'd  the  mother-city  thick  with  t's.  Princess  i  112 

soft  white  vapour  streak  the  crowned  t's  „     Hi  344 

she  You  talk'd  with,  whole  nights  long,  up  in  the  t,                 „     vi  255 

Toll'd  by  an  earthquake  in  a  trembling  t,  „         332 

here  and  there  a  rustic  t  Half-lost  in  belts  „  Con.  44 

Before  a  t  of  crimson  hoUy-hoaks,  „           82 

0  fall'n  at  length  that  t  of  strength  Ode  on  Well.  38 
Breaking  their  mailed  fleets  and  armed  t's.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  39 
Flags,  flutter  out  upon  turret  and  t's  !  W.  to  Alexandra  15 
Or  t,  or  high  hill-convent,  The  Daisy  29 
Of  t,  or  duomo,  sunny-sweet.  Or  palace,  „  46 
8ow'd  it  far  and  wide  By  every  town  and  t.  The  Flower  14 
stream  Of  Xanthus  blazed  before  the  t's  of  Troy,  Spec,  of  Iliad  18 
And  crowded  farms  and  lessening  t's,  In  Mem.  xi  11 
And  wildly  dash'd  on  (  and  tree  „  xv  1 
And  t's  fall'n  as  soon  as  built —  ,.  xxvi  8 
The  ruin'd  shells  of  hollow  t's  ?  „  Ixxvi  16 
And  tuft  with  grass  a  feudal  t ;  „  cxxviii  20 
Dumb  is  that  t  which  spake  so  loud,  „  Con.  106 
everyone  that  owns  a  t  The  Lord  for  half  a  league.  Gareth  and  L.  595 
stairway  sloped  Till  lost  in  blowing  trees  and  tops  of  t's ;  „  670 
His  t's  where  that  day  a  feast  had  been  Held  „  847 
And  here  had  fall'n  a  great  part  of  a  t,  Marr.  of  Geraint  317 
Guinevere  had  climb'd  The  giant  t,  „  827 
beheld  A  little  town  with  t's,  upon  a  rock,  Geraint  and  E.  197 
A  home  of  bats,  in  every  t  an  owl.  Balin  and  Balan  336 
By  the  great  t — Caerleon  upon  Usk —  „               506 

1  thought  the  great  t  would  crash  down  on  both —  „  515 
huge  and  old  It  look'd  a.  t  of  ivied  masonwork,  Merlin  and  V.  4 
•Closed  in  the  four  walls  of  a  hollow  t,  (repeat)  „  209,  543 
crows  Hung  like  a  cloud  above  the  gatew  ay  t's.'  „  599 
High  in  her  chamber  up  a  t  to  the  east  Lancelot  and  E.  3 
climb'd  That  eastern  t,  and  entering  barr'd  her  door,  „  15 
Fired  from  the  west,  far  on  a  hill,  the  t's.  „  168 
Lavaine  Past  inward,  as  she  came  from  out  the  t.  „  346 
Then  to  her  t  she  climb'd,  and  took  the  shield,  „  397 
And  thus  they  bore  her  swooning  to  her  t.  „  968 
So  in  her  t  alone  the  maiden  sat :  ..  989 
fiery  dawning  wild  with  wind  That  shook  her  t,  „  1021 
T  aiier  t,  spire  beyond  spire,  Holy  Grail  229 
Behold,  the  enchanted  ts  of  Carbonek,  „  813 
sweet  voice  singing  in  the  topmost  t  To  the  eastward :  „  834 
great  t  fill'd  with  eyes  Up  to  the  simimit,  Pelleas  and  E.  166 
from  the  t  above  hmi  cried  Ettarre,  „  231 
beneath  the  shadow  of  those  t's  A  villainy,  ,,  276 
Up  ran  a  score  of  damsels  to  the  t ;  „  368 
mounting  on  his  horse  Stared  at  her  f's  „  467 
O  t's  so  strong.  Huge,  solid,  „  463 
Beside  that  t  where  Percivale  was  cowl'd,  „            501 


Tower  (s)  (continued)    From  Camelot  in  among  the  faded 

fields  To  furthest  t's ;  Last  Toumainent  54 

'  He  took  them  and  he  drave  them  to  his  < —  „  68 

Brake  in  upon  me  and  drave  them  to  his  t ;  „  72 

My  <  is  full  of  harlots,  like  his  court,  „  81 

Glared  on  a  huge  machicolated  t  That  stood  „  424 

High  on  a  grim  dead  tree  before  the  t,  „  430 

echoing  yell  with  yell,  they  fired  the  t,  „  478 

and  high  on  land,  A  crown  of  t's.  „  506 

feet  of  Tristram  grind  The  spiring  stone  that  scaled 

about  her  t,  „  511 

westward-smiling  seas,  Watch'd  from  this  t.  „  588 

then  this  crown  of  t's  So  shook  to  such  a  roar  „  620 

Modred  brought  His  creatures  to  the  basement  of  the  t  Guinevere  104 
T's  of  a  happier  time,  low  down  in  a  rainbow  deep  V.  of  Maeldune  79 
And  we  came  in  an  evil  time  to  the  Isle  of  the  Double  T's,        „  105 

And  the  daws  flew  out  of  the  T's  „  109 

and  all  took  sides  with  the  T's,  „  111 

the  song-built  t's  and  gates  Reel,  Tiresias  98 

And  trees  like  the  t's  of  a  minster.  The  Wreck  74 

ghastly  t  of  eighty  thousand  human  skulls,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  82 

In  this  gap  between  the  sandhills,  whence  you  see 

the  Locksley  t,  „  176 

Just  above  the  gateway  t,  „  179 

Helen's  T,  here  I  stand,  Helen's  Tower  1 

Why  do  you  look  so  gravely  at  the  t  ?  The  Ring  80 

And  how  the  birds  that  circle  roimd  the  t  „        85 

That  chamber  in  the  t.  „        94 

You  took  me  to  that  chamber  in  the  t,  „      111 

when  the  t  as  now  Was  all  ablaze  with  crimson  „      249 

between  The  t  and  that  rich  phantom  of  the  f?  „      253 

mist  of  autxmin  gather  from  your  lake.  And  shroud  the  t ;  „      330 

up  the  t — an  icy  air  Fled  by  me.  „      445 

T  and  altar  trembling  .  .  .  Forlorn  34 

I  see  the  slowly-thickening  chestnut  t's  Prog,  of  Spring  42 

Tower  (verb)     T,  as  the  deep-domed  empyrean  Milton  7 

The  chestnut  t's  in  his  bloom ;  Voice  and  the  P.  18 

Tower'd(adi.)    (See  oZso  Tall-tower'd,  Many-tower'd)    the 

river  winding  clearly,  Down  to  t  Camelot ;  L.  of  Shalott  i  32 

page  in  crunson  clad.  Goes  by  to  t  Camelot ;  „  ii  23 

Heavily  the  low  sky  raining  Over  t  Camelot;  „  iv  5 

From  Mizpeh's  t  gate  with  welcome  light,  B.  of  F.  Women  199 

Tower 'd  (verb)    the  pale  head  of  him,  who  t  Above  them,  Aylmer's  Field  623 


she  t ;  her  bells.  Tone  under  tone,  shrill'd ; 

Towering    Now  t  o'er  him  in  serenest  air. 
And  a  reverent  people  behold  The  t  car, 
with  all  thy  breadth  and  height  Of  foliage,  t 

sycamore ; 
for  the  t  crest  of  the  tides  Plunged  on  the  vessel 

Tower-stairs    she  stole  Down  the  long  t-s, 

Towery-top    O  rock  upon  thy  t-p 

Town     (See  also  County  town)     flee  By  t,  and  tower, 
and  hill, 
and  out  of  every  smouldering  t  Cries  to  Thee, 
Flood  with  full  daylight  glebe  and  t  ? 
From  many  an  inland  t  and  haven  large, 
flying  star  shot  thro'  the  sky  Above  the  pillar'd  t. 
For  pastime,  ere  you  went  to  t. 
Clanging  fights,  and  flaming  t's. 
That  bore  a  lady  from  a  leaguer'd  t ; 
Then  stept  she  down  thro'  t  and  field 
The  t  was  hush'd  beneath  us : 
'  And  all  that  from  the  t  would  stroll, 
the  fair  Was  holden  at  the  t ; 
The  music  from  the  t — 
for  when  he  laid  a  tax  Upon  his  t, 
answer'd,  '  Ride  you  naked  thro'  the  t. 
Thro'  dreaming  t's  I  go. 
Sweet  Emma  Moreland  of  yonder  t 
High  t's  on  hills  were  dimly  seen, 
He  pass'd  by  the  t  and  out  of  the  street, 
'  Did  you  know  Enoch  Arden  of  this  t  ? ' 
By  twenty  thorps,  a  little  t, 
One  of  our  t,  but  later  by  an  hour 
Thro'  the  wild  woods  that  hung  about  the  t ; 


Merlin  and  V.  131 

Lucretius  178 

Ode  on  Well.  55 

In  Mem.  Ixxxix  4 

The  Wreck  89 

Lancelot  and  E.  343 

Talking  Oak  265 

Mine  be  the  strength  6 

Poland  5 

Two  Voices  87 

(Enone  117 

Palace  of  Art  124 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  4 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  116 

D.  ofF.  Women  41 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  9 

Audley  Court  85 

Talking  Oak  53 

102 

214 

Godiva  14 

„       29 

Sir  Galahad  50 

Edward  Gray  1 

The  Voyage  34 

Poet's  Song  2 

Enoch  Arden  845 

The  Brook  29 

Sea  Dreams  263 

Princess  i  91 


iil 


Town 


740 


Traitor 


Town  (continued)     Cat-footed  thro'  the  t  and  half  in  dread      Princess  i  104 
We  dropt  with  evening  on  a  rustic  t  „  170 

man  and  woman,  t  And  landskip,  have  I  heard  of,  „     iv  445 

Where,  far  from  noise  and  smoke  of  t,  To  F.  D.  Maurice  13 

Sow'd  it  far  and  wide  By  every  t  and  tower.  The  Flower  14 

I  wander'd  from  the  noisy  t,  In  Mem.  Ixix  5 

I  roved  at  random  thro'  the  t,  ,,  Ixxxvii  3 

The  dust  and  din  and  steam  olt:  „    Ixxxix  8 

But  if  I  praised  the  busy  t,  „  37 

That  not  in  any  mother  t  „    xcviii  21 

And  pass  the  silent-lighted  t,  „   Con.  112 

Last  week  came  one  to  the  county  t,  Maud  7  a;  37 

His  heart  in  the  gross  mud-honey  of  t,  „        xvi  5 

the  worth  of  half  at,  A  warhorse  of  the  best,  Gareth  and  L.  677 

Beheld  the  long  street  of  a  little  t  Marr.  of  Geraint  242 

And  out  of  t  and  valley  came  a  noise  „  247 

'  What  means  the  tumult  in  the  t?'  „  259 

Go  to  the  t  and  buy  us  iiesh  and  wine ;  „  372 

went  her  way  across  the  bridge.  And  reach'd  the  t,  „  384 

Ride  into  that  new  fortress  by  your  t,  „  407 

and  thought  to  find  Arms  in  your  t,  „  418 

Raised  my  own  t  against  me  in  the  night  „  457 

knights  And  ladies  came,  and  by  and  by  the  t  Flow'd  in,    „  546 

Went  Yniol  thro'  the  t,  and  everywhere  He  found 
the  sack!  and  plunder  of  our  house  All  scatter'd 
thro'  the  houses  of  the  t ;  „  693 

beheld  A  little  t  with  towers,  upon  a  rock,  Geraint  and  E.  197 

And  then  I  chanced  upon  a  goodly  t  Holy  Grail  573 

they  would  spy  us  out  of  the  t.  Riz-pah  5 

and  beat  Thro'  all  the  homely  t  Columbus  83 

Blown  by  the  fierce  beleaguerers  of  a  t,  Achilles  over  the  T.  20 

Or  the  foulest  sewer  of  the  t —  Bead  Prophet  48 

illuminate  All  your  t's  for  a  festival,  On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  19 

you  still  delajr  to  take  Your  leave  of  T,  To  Mary  Boyle  2 

Deab  Master  in  our  classic  t.  To  Master  of  B.  1 

waste  and  field  and  t  of  alien  tongue,  St.  Telemachus  30 

tha  mun  speak  hout  to  the  Baptises  here  1'  the  t,    Church-warden,  etc.  51 
Toy     t's  in  lava,  fans  Of  sandal.  Princess,  Pro.  18 

The  tricks,  which  make  us  t's  of  men,  „  ii  63 

might  have  seem'd  a  t  to  trifle  with,  Pelleas  and  E.  76 

An'  their  mashin'  their  t's  to  pieaces  Spinster's  S's.  88 

To-year    niver  ha  seed  it  sa  white  wi'  the  Maay  es  I  see'd 

it  t-y—  Village  Wife  80 

Traade  (trade)     Bum  i'  t.  Church-warden,  etc.  18 

an'  the  Freea  T  runn'd  'i  my  'ead,  Owd  Rod  54 

Traapes'd  (trapesed,  trudged)    as  iver  t  i'  the  squad.  „        72 

Trace  (s)     And  silent  t's  of  the  past  In  Mem.  xliii  7 

but  t  of  thee  I  saw  not ;  Demeter  and  P.  80 

Trace  (verb)    old  magic  which  can  t  The  wandering  of  the  stars,  Holy  Grail  666 

fail'd  to  t  him  thro'  the  flesh  and  blood  Last  Tournament  686 

to  t  On  paler  heavens  the  branching  grace  To  Ulysses  14 

Traced     in  her  raiment's  hem  was  t  in  flame  The  Poet  45 

Likewise  the  deep-set  windows,  stain'd  and  t,  Palace  of  Art  49 

I  might  as  well  have  t  it  in  the  sands ;  AuMey  Court  50 

Till  as  he  t  a  faintly-shadow'd  track,  Lancelot  and  E.  165 

and  in  the  dark  of  mine  Is  t  with  flame.  Lover's  Tale  i  298 

Trachsrte     trap  and  tuff.  Amygdaloid  and  t.  Princess  Hi  363 

Track  (s)     '  If  straight  thy  t,  or  if  oblique.  Two  Voices  193 

strike  Into  that  wondrous  t  of  dreams  again  !  D.  of  F.  Wom^n  279 

right  across  its  t  there  lay.  Sea  Dreams  126 

the  t  Whereon  with  equal  feet  we  fared ;  In  Mem.  xxv  1 

We  ranging  down  this  lower  t,  „         xlvi  1 

Enid  leading  down  the  t's  Thro'  which  he  bad  her  lead   Geraint  and  E.  28 

He  took  the  selfsame  t  as  Balan,  Balin  and  Balan  290 

Till  as  he  traced  a  faintly-shadow'd  t,  Lancelot  and  E.  165 

Troubled  the  t  of  the  host  that  we  hated,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  40 

All  the  t's  Of  science  making  toward  Akbar's  Dream  28 

Forward  to  the  starry  t  Glimmering  Silent  Voices  8 

Track  (verb)     impossible.  Far  as  we  t  ourselves —  Aylmer's  Field  306 

snaras  to  t  Suggestion  to  her  inmost  cell.  In  Mem.  xcv  31 

I  will  t  this  vermin  to  their  earths :  Marr.  of  Geraint  217 

swore  That  I  would  t  this  caitiff  to  his  hold,  „  415 

the  subtle  beast.  Would  t  her  guilt  until  he  found,  Guinevere  60 

Track'd     And  t  you  still  on  classic  groimd,  To  E.  L.  10 

'  So,'  thought  Geraint, '  I  have  t  him  to  his  earth.'    Marr.  of  Geraint  253 


Bed. 


Trackless     Roving  the  t  realms  of  Lyonnesse,  Lancelot  and  E.  35- 

Tract     (See  also  Mountain-tract)     In  the  dim  t  of 
Penuel. 

Would  sweep  the  t's  of  day  and  night. 

One  seem'd  all  dark  and  red — a  t  of  sand, 

In  t's  of  pasture  sunny-warm. 

And  many  a  t  of  palm  and  rice, 

Faith  from  t's  no  feet  have  trod, 

overlooks  the  sandy  t's. 

Which  led  by  t's  that  pleased  us  well, 

A  lifelong  t  of  time  reveal'd ; 

Foreshorten'd  in  the  t  of  time  ? 

And  t's  of  calm  from  tempest  made, 

In  t's  of  fluent  heat  began, 

thro'  all  this  t  of  years  Wearing  the  white  flower 

so  there  grew  great  t's  of  wilderness. 

Sir  Bors  Rode  to  the  lonest  t  of  all  the  realm, 

half  the  morning  have  I  paced  these  sandy  t's, 
Trade  (s)     (See  also  Traade)     Another  hand  crept  too 
across  his  t 

set  Annie  forth  in  t  With  all  that  seamen 

But  throve  not  in  her  t,  not  being  bred  To  barter, 

poring  over  his  Tables  of  T  and  Finance ; 

Or  T  re-frain  the  Powers  From  war 

T  flying  over  a  thousand  seas  with  her  spice 
Trade  (verb)     Should  he  not  t  himself  out  yonder  ? 
Traded    There  Enoch  t  for  himself. 
Trader     Never  comes  the  i,  never  floats 
Tradesman    faith  in  a  t's  ware  or  his  word  ? 
Tradition    as  t  teaches,  Yoimg  ashes  pirouetted 

made  Their  own  t's  God,  and  slew  the  Lord, 

He  thwarting  their  t's  of  Himself, 
Trafalgar     at  T  yet  once  more  We  taught  him ; 
Tragedian    great  T,  that  had  quench'd  herself 
Tragic    (See  also  Over-tragic)    That  all  things  grew  more  t 
TraU  (s)     They  hunt  old  t's '  said  Cyril '  very  well ; 


Clear-headed  friend  29 

Two  Voices  69* 

Palace  of  Art  05 

94 

114  I 

On  a  Mourner  29 

Locksley  Hall  5 

In  Mem.  xxii  2 

xlvi  9' 

Ixxvii  4 . 

cxii  14 

cxviii  9" 

of  Idylls  24^ 

Com.  of  Arthur  10 

Holy  GraU  661 1 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  1  \ 

Enoch  Arden  110 

13& 

249 

The  Wreck  20 

Epilogue  15 

Fastness  13 

Enoch  Arden  141 

538 

Locksley  Hall  161 

Maud  I  i  26. 

Amphion  26 

Aylmer's  Field  795 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  181 

Buonaparte  12 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  233 

Princess  vi  23 

„      ii  390 


Trail  (verb)     Would  slowly  t  himself  sevenfold 

Clasp  her  window,  t  and  twine  ! 

T  and  twine  and  clasp  and  kiss, 
Trail'd    heavy  barges  t  By  slow  horses ; 

T  himself  up  on  one  knee : 

By  a  shuffled  step,  by  a  dead  weight  t, 
Trailer    bell-like  flower  Of  fragrant  t's, 

swings  the  t  from  the  crag ; 

the  t  mantles  all  the  mouldering  bricks — 
Trailing    Some  bearded  meteor,  t  light. 

With  plaited  alleys  of  the  t  rose. 

Three  slaves  were  t  a  dead  lion  away. 
Train  (of  dress)     Or  old-world  t's,  upheld  at  court 
Train  (ordered  sequence)    Nor  any  t  of  reason  keep : 

lead  my  Memmius  in  a  <  Of  flowery  clauses 

'  Last  of  the  t,  a  moral  leper,  I, 

A  hundred  maids  in  t  across  the  Park. 

behind,  A  <  of  dames :  by  axe  and  eagle  sat, 

And  all  the  t  of  bounteous  hours 
Train  (railway)    /  waited  for  the  t  at  Coventry; 

Wreck'd — your  t — or  all  but  wreck'd  ? 

Two  t's  clash'd :  then  and  there 
Train  (verb)    to  t  the  rose-bush  that  I  set 

t  To  riper  growth  the  mind  and  will : 
Train'd    given  us  a  fair  falcon  which  he  t ; 
Training    The  bearing  and  the  t  of  a  child 

Their  talk  was  all  of  t,  terms  of  art. 
Trait    From  talk  of  war  to  t's  of  pleasantry- 
Traitor  (adj.)    And  shouts  of  heathen  and  the  t  knights,  Pass,  of  Arthur  113 

Sir  Lancelot,  friend  T  or  true  ?  Merlin  and  V.  770 

Traitor  (s)  (See  also  Thraithur)   Drip  sweeter  dews  than  t's  tear.    A  Dirge  24 

So  foul  a  t  to  myself  and  her,  Aylmer's  Field  319 

'  See  that  there  be  no  t's  in  your  camp :     We  seem  a 

nest  of  t's —  Princess  v  425 

Dear  t,  too  much  loved,  why  ?  „       vi  293 

For  ever  since  when  t  to  the  King  Gareth  and  L.  76 

changed  and  came  to  loathe  His  crime  of  t,  Marr.  of  Geraint  594 

And  all  thro'  that  young  i,  „  715 

'  Your  sweet  faces  make  good  fellows  fools  And  fs.    Geraint  and  E.  400 


The  Mermaid  25 

Window,  At  the  Wind.  2 

„  4 

L.  of  Shalott  i  2fy 

Princess  vi  155 

Maud  I  ilA 

Elednore  38 

Locksley  Hall  162 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  257 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  26 

Ode  to  Memory  106 

St.  Telemachus  47 

Day-Dm.,  Ep.  9 

Two  Voices  50 

Lucretius  119 

Princess  iv  222 

„  vi  76 

„       vii  128 

Jn  Mem.  Ixxxiv  30 

Godiva  1 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  215 

Charity  21 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.Al 

In  Mem.  xlii  7 

Merlin  and  V.  96 

Princess  v  465 

Merlin  and  V.  124 

Lancelot  and  E.  321 


Traitor 


741 


Tread 


Traitor  (s)  (continued)     Fools  prate,  and  perish  t's.  Balin  and  Balan  530 

shriek'd  out '  T '  to  the  unhearing  wall,  Lancelot  and  E.  612 

Courtesy  with  a  touch  of  t  in  it,  „  639 
a  coward  slinks  from  what  he  fears  To  cope  with,  or 

a  t  proven,  Pelleas  and  E.  439 

'  T,  come  out,  ye  are  trapt  at  last,'  Guinevere  106 

Modred  whom  he  left  in  charge  of  all,  The  t —  „        196 

If  this  false  t  have  displaced  his  lord,  ,,        216 

heathen,  and  knights,  T's —  „        575 

I  lean'd  in  wife  and  friend  Is  t  to  my  peace,  Pass,  of  Arthur  25 
Modred,  imharm'd,  the  t  of  thine  house.'  ,,  153 
But  call  not  thou  this  t  of  my  house  „  155 
her  own  true  eyes  Are  t's  to  her ;  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  285 
who  can  tell  but  the  t's  had  won  ?  Def.  of  Luchnmo  66 
but  to  call  men  t's  May  make  men  t's.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  50 
That  t  to  King  Richard  and  the  truth,  „  171 
T  and  trickster  And  spumer  of  treaties —  Batt.  of  Bnmanburh  79 
God  the  t's  hope  confound  !  (repeat)              Hands  all  Round  10,  22,  34 

Traitor-hearted    unkind,  untrue,  Unknightly,  t-h !  M.  d' Arthur  120 

imkind,  untrue,  Unknightly,  t-h\  Pass,  of  Arthur  288 
Traitorous    when  a  world  Of  t  friend  and  broken  system        Princess  vi  195 

to  splinter  it  into  feuds  Serving  his  t  end ;  Guinevere  19 

Ever  the  day  with  its  t  death  from  the  loopholes 

aroimd,  Bef.  of  Lucknow  79 

Traitress     nip  me  flat.  If  I  be  such  a  t.  Merlin  and  V.  351 

and  harry  me,  petty  spy  And  t.'  Guinevere  361 

Tram    laying  his  t's  in  a  poison'd  gloom  Maud  1x8 

*bamp  (a  vagrant)     an'  gied  to  the  t's  goin'  by —  Village  Wife  33 

Tramp  (sound)     t  of  the  homfooted  horse  That  grind  Tiresias  94 

Tramp  (verb)     To  t,  to  scream,  to  burnish.  Princess  iv  520 

Trample    To  t  round  my  fallen  head.  Come  not,  when,  etc.  3 

I I  on  your  offers  and  on  you :  Princess  iv  546 
on  my  chargers,  t  them  under  us.'  Boddicea  69 
Behold  me  overturn  and  t  on  him.  Geraint  and  E.  843 
And  t's  on  the  goodly  shield  to  show  Baiin  and  Balan  550 
'  T  me,  Dear  feet,  that  I  have  f ollow'd  Merlin  and  V.  226 
and  bums  the  feet  would  t  it  to  dust.  The  Flight  68 

Trampled  (adj.)     I  was  left  a  t  orphan,  Locksley  Hall  156 

The  desecrated  shrine,  the  t  year,  Princess  v  127 

Till  the  filthy  by-lane  rings  to  the  yell  of  the  t  wife,  Maud  7  i  38 
Let  the  t  serpent  show  you  that  you  have  not 

lived  in  vain.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  242 

arose  The  shi-iek  and  curse  of  t  millions,  Akbar's  Dream  190 

Trampled  (verb)     And  t  imder  by  the  last  and  least  Poland  2 

She  t  some  beneath  her  horses'  heels.  Princess,  Pro.  44 

a  spark  of  will  Not  to  be  t  out.  Maud  II  ii  57 
and  why  T  ye  thus  on  that  which  bare  the 

Crown  ?  '  Bcdin  and  Balan  602 

There  t  out  his  face  from  being  known,  Last  Tournament  470 

man's  word,  Here  t  by  the  populace  underfoot,  Tiresias  174 

Trampling     t  the  flowers  With  clamour  :  Princess  v  247 

All  great  self-seekers  t  on  the  right :  Ode  on  Well.  187 
hollow  t's  up  and  down  And  muffled  voices  heard,     Gareth  and  L.  1372 

His  charger  t  many  a  prickly  star  Marr.  of  Geraint  313 

But  Michael  t  Satan  ;  Last  Tournament  673 

Trance  (s)     I  muse,  as  in  a  <,  (repeat)  Eleanore  72,  75 

Like  some  bold  seer  in  a  t,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  11 
'  As  here  we  find  in  t's,  men  Forget  the  dream  that 

happens  then.  Until  they  fall  in  t  again.  Two  Voices  352 
who  clasp'd  in  her  last  t  Her  murder'd  father's 

head,  D.  of  F.  Women  266 

The  t  gave  way  To  those  caresses,  Love  and  Dviy  65 

I  could  no  more,  but  lay  like  one  in  t.  Princess  vii  151 

In  some  long  t  should  slumber  on  ;  In  Mem.  xliii  4 

Sleep,  kinsman  thou  to  death  and  t  And  madness,  „          Ixxi  1 

At  length  my  t  Was  cancell'd,  „          xcv  43 

But  when  the  Queen  immersed  in  such  a  t,  Guinevere  401 

led  on  with  light  In  t's  and  in  visions  :  Lover's  Tale  i  78 

Thro'  dreams  by  night  and  t's  of  the  day.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  274 

Till  I  woke  from  the  t.  The  Wreck  115 

following,  as  in  t,  the  silent  cry.  Beath  of  CEnone  86 

Tbance  (verb)     When  thickest  dark  did  t  the  sky,  Mariana  18 

Tranced    (See  also  Deep-tranced)    So  t,  so  rapt  in  ecstasies,        Eleanore  78 

No  t  summer  calm  is  thine,  Madeline  2 

Hung  t  from  all  pulsation,  Gardener's  D.  260 


Tranced  (continued)    On  either  side  her  t  form  Forth 

streaming  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  5 

nature  fail'd  a  little.  And  he  lay  t ;  Enoch  Arden  793 

We  stood  t  in  long  embraces  Mixt  with  kisses  Maud  II  iv  8 

Tranquil     her  lips  were  sunder'd  With  smiles  of  t  bliss,     Lover's  Tale  ii  143 

Tranquillity    O  Thou,  Passionless  bride,  divine  T,  Lucretius  266 

Marr'd  her  friend's  aim  with  pale  t.  Lancelot  and  E.  733 

Transfer    That  foolish  sleep  t's  to  thee.  In  Mem.  Ixviii  16 

t  The  whole  I  felt  for  him  to  you.  „       Ixxxv  103 

Transferr'd    my  dull  agony,  Ideally  to  her  t.  Lover's  Tale  ii  137 

Trans^ured    When  we  shall  stand  t,  Happy  38 

Transflxt    So  lay  the  man  t.  Geraint  and  E.  166 

Transfused     but  t  Thro'  future  time  by  power  Love  thou  thy  land  3 

Transgress     T  his  ample  bound  to  some  new  crown  :■ —  Poland  8 

Transgression    So  for  every  light  t  The  Captain  11 

Transient    Away  we  stole,  and  tin  a,  trice  Princess  v  39 

But  knows  no  more  of  t  form  In  her  deep  self.  In  Mem.  xvi  7 

Womanlike,  taking  revenge  too  deep  for  a  t  wrong  Maud  I  Hi  5 

And  wordy  trucklings  to  the  t  hour,  To  the  Queen  ii  51 

And  the  t  trouble  of  drowning — -  Despair  67 

Transit     and  wing'd  Her  t  to  the  throne.  Princess  iv  378 

Transitory     and  a  t  word  Made  knight  or  churl  or  child     Balin  and  Balan  161 

Translucent    Pure  vestal  thoi^hts  in  the  t  fane  Isabel  4 

Transmitter    The  one  t  of  their  ancient  name,  Aylmer's  Field  296 

Transparent    That  dimples  your  t  cheek,  Margaret  15 

Transplanted  I  know  t  human  worth  Will  bloom  to  profit.     In  Mem.  Ixxxii  11 

Transplanting    And  Methods  of  t  trees  Amphion  79 

Transport    '  But  heard,  by  secret  t  led,  Two  Voices  214 

Me  mightier  t's  move  and  thrill ;  »S'*V  Galahad  22 

Stirring  a  sudden  t  rose  and  fell.  Princess  iv  29 

Trap  (rock)     hornblende,  rag  and  t  and  tuff,  „      Hi  362 

Trap  (snare)     As  of  a  wild  thing  taken  in  the  t,  Geraint  and  E.  723 

Trap  (verb)     Christ  the  bait  to  «  his  dupe  Sea  Dreams  191 

l^pesed    See  Tra&pes'd 

Trapper    Which  sees  the  t  coming  thro'  the  wood.  Geraint  and  E.  724 

Trapt  (adorned)     there  she  f oimd  her  palfrey  t  Godiva  51 

On  horses,  and  the  horses  richly  t  Pelleas  and  E.  55 

Trapt  (caught)     '  Traitor,  come  out,  ye  are  t  at  last,'  Guinevere  106 

Trash    you  that  talk'd  The  t  that  made  me  sick.  Princess  ii  394 

'  0  ^ '  he  said,  '  but  with  a  kernel  in  it.  „            395 

Trath  Treroit     down  the  waste  sand-shores  of  T  T,  Lancelot  and  E.  301 

Travail     T,  and  throes  and  agonies  of  the  life,  Com.  of  Arthur  76 

Camilla's  t  came  Upon  her.  Lover's  Tale  iv  127 

Travel  (S)     I  cannot  rest  from  t :  Ulysses  6 

if  it  had  not  been  For  a  chance  of  t,  Maud  I  ii  8 

overtoil'd  By  that  day's  grief  and  t,  Geraint  and  E.  377 

O  weary  was  I  of  the  t,  V.  of  Maeldune  129 

Travel  (verb)     blasts  of  balm  To  one  that  t's  quickly,  Gardener's  D.  69 

He  t's  far  from  other  skies —  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  5 

here  and  there  a  foamy  flake  Upon  me,  as  I  i  The  Brook  60 

Travell'd    how  they  prose  O'er  books  of  t  seamen,  Amphion  82 

And  t  men  from  foreign  lands  ;  In  Mem.  x  6 

Traveller     in  strange  lands  a  t  walking  slow,  Palace  of  Art  277 

The  t  hears  me  now  and  then.  In  Mem.  xxi  5 

Traveller's-joy    Was  parcel-bearded  with  the  t-j  Aylmer's  Field  153 

Travellhig    quite  worn  out,  T  to  Naples.  The  Brook  36 

His  kinsman  <  on  his  own  affair  Merlin  and  V.  717 

myself  was  then  T  that  land,  Lover's  Tale  iv  133 

Traversed    Silent  the  silent  field  They  t.  Gareth  and  L.  1314 

blossom-dust  of  those  Deep  meadows  we  had  t.  Merlin  and  V.  283 

Treacherous    Making  a  t  quiet  in  his  heart,  Lancelot  and  E.  883 

Treachery    tript  on  such  conjectural  t —  Merlin  and  V.  348 

fevers,  fights.  Mutinies,  treacheries —  Columbus  226 

Tread  (s)     Were  it  ever  so  airy  a  t,  Maud  I  xxii  68 

Tread  (verb)     And  t  softly  and  speak  low,  D.  of  the  O.  Year  4 

ere  the  hateful  crow  shall  t  The  comers  Will  Water.  235 

While  he  t's  with  footstep  firmer,  L.  of  Burleigh  51 

Freedom,  gaily  doth  she  t ;  Vision  of  Sin  136 

T  a  measure  on  the  stones,  „            180 

The  wisp  that  flickers  where  no  foot  can  t.'  Princess  iv  358 

And  t  you  out  for  ever :  „        vi  176 

seem'd  to  touch  upon  a  sphere  Too  gross  to  t,  „      vii  325 

The  solid  earth  whereon  we  t  In  Mem.  cxviii  8 

t  me  down  And  I  will  kiss  you  for  it ; '  Merlin  and  V.  228 

You  that  would  not  <  on  a  worm  Forlorn  45 


Treading 

IVeading    Then  her  people,  softly  t, 

Treason    says  the  song,  I '  trow  it  is  no  t.' 
To  lash  the  t's  of  the  Table  Round.' 
fool,'  he  said,  '  ye  talk  Fool's  t : 
The  doom  of  t  and  the  flaming  death, 
king  along  with  him— All  heresy,  t : 

Tceasore    handed  down  the  golden  t  to  him.' 
a  peculiar  t,  brooking  not  Exchange 
accounts  Of  all  his  t's  the  most  beautiful 
m  her  behold  Of  all  my  t's  the  most  beautiful 
com  d  into  EngUsh  gold  some  t  of  classical  son" 

iTeasured     When  I  saw  the  t  splendour,  her  hand 


742 


Trembling 


L.  of  Burleigh  97 

Merlin  and  V.  723 

Pelleas  and  E.  566 

Last  Tournament  352 

Guinevere  538 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  50 

Gareth  and  L.  61 

Lover's  Tale  i  447 

iv  234 

318 

The  Wreck  67 

Maud  I  vi  84 


^STsomJ^/f oi^^'rf  'f"*  "'^^^y  ^^''  -^^-  ^'^^'hur  101 

Thro' the  dmi  meadow  toward  his  W,  ^^»«er  5  i- t«/rf  515 

Treasuring     T  the  look  it  cannot  find,  /„  1/"  "To 

"^LiSdToWiThSL^'^*  ^'^  «.^  "^^*«r-  ^'      ^^-^r^- 3  0 

rtheir  loathsom!  hurts  and  heal  mine  own  ;  "1^^,  6^ 

Treated    Too  awful,  sure  for  what  they  t  of,     '  pSH  139 

And  waitmg  to  be  t  like  a  wolf  /--      .^f*    j  *  *  ^^^ 

Treatise    They  read  Botanic  J^'  &«m^,,^  a^  £.  857 

Treaty     trickster  And  spumer  of  treaties—  Ji„H     r  v  ^'^P^^  I' 

Treble  (^.)    (See  also  ker-t^bS^'^'he  t  works,  thtvasf  ^-'"'^*^'-'^  »« 

A  .da^ess.  Evil  haunts  The  birth,  j^Z  S^•  S 

There  ran  a  t  range  of  stony  shields,-  Gar£UTJ)7 

For  there  beyond  a  bridge  of  <  bow,  '*'*^  -^  l  ^I 

Treble  (s)     With  blissful  t  ringing  clear.  sir  L  and  O   r?  22 

tempestuous  t  throbb'd  and  palpitated ;  VisZnofSin  i 

In  httle  sharps  and  i's,                            '  ^   ^     7  T« 

Make  liquid  «  of  that  bassoon,  my  throat ;  /rtZ'um 

^^,^'^^1^^'^^  as  far  As  I  could  ape  their  t,  ^"'  "•„lS 

Trebled  (adj.)    London  roll'd  one  tide  of  joy  thro' all  " 

Her  t  millions,  t    ^i     ^          • .  ^ 

Trebled  (verb)    Love  nife  within  me,  (S-lLSTlgs 

xtebi^'  "SdTaK  rtr-  tri^  «^  ^--^ '  ^ '  ^?J~-i 

"^    St^'i^'feS^'A^-t'^.Boor.tree.Cedar.tre^'""^'^"'^"'^ 
Ehn-tree,    Figtree,    Garden-tree,  Hazel-tree,  0^ 

?wf.«  w"*T'-^°?^^'^H^'    Roof-tree.  Rosetree, 
Sloe-tree,  Wayfanng-tree,  Yew-tree)    no  other  t  did 

mark  The  level  waste,  nf     ■        ao 

Kain  makes  music  in  the  t  Marmtia  43 

as  the  <  Stands  in  the  sun  and  shadows  Lo^e  and  Z^h  10 

The  shadow  passeth  when  the  t  shall  fall  T4 

Thou  hest  beneath  the  greenwood  t,  "  Oriana  95 

The  wind  IS  blowing  in  turret  and  t.  (repeat)  The  Sist^Jt  33 

The  wmd  IS  howling  in  turret  and  <.  '    q 

The  wind  is  roaring  in  turret  and «.  "               ic 

The  wind  is  raging  in  turret  and  t.  "             i? 

The  wind  is  raving  in  turret  and  t.  "              7,7, 

The  <'*  beg;an  to  whisper,  "  ^        '  X'  ^^S 

Their  humid  arms  festooning  ttot,  "  T)  r,f  v  m        '  in 

5.s;t A/sSprJ!  ™  ■^'» "»-  °°  '^« '  J^S»rsr|| 

And  legs  of  t's  were  limber,  ^wpA«>«  3 

Like  some  great  landslip,  t  by  <,  "        if 

And  Methods  of  transplanting  t's  "         ^q 

Then  move  the  t's,  the  copses  nod  v;„  n  i'  1.  j  in 

And  fly,  like  a  bird,  from  <  to  T,    '  VdLjJ^  XL 

But  here  will  sigh  thine  alder  t  if'^e.Zfi 

And  dies  imheard  within  his  /                                v  •  ,    ,  ^'^^^«"  9 
The  moving  wEp^r  of  h.^  '.                             ^'^  Vorh'^Tr\^ 

On  the  nigh-nak^  ^  the  robin  piped  Disconsolate  "^  «^ 

the  family  /  Sprang  from  the  miJriff  ^'''=*^'^'^^'  ,"          676 

Have  also  set  hLs  many-shielded  t  •■>  ^ylmer  s  b leld  15 

Once  grovelike,  each  huge  arm  a  t',  "          gj^ 


Tree  (continued)     t's  As  high  as  heaven,  and  every  bird 
that  sings  : 
bathed  In  the  green  gleam  of  dewy-tassell'd  t's  ■ 
A  t  Was  half -disrooted  from  his  place 
across  the  lawns  Beneath  huge  t's, 

^^  *^®  f  J    ^^}'  "'^  ^'^*  ™*^«  't  fagots  for  the  liearth 

from  the  high  t  the  blossom  wavering  fell, 

all  along  the  valley,  by  rock  and  cave  and'i 

For  the  bud  ever  breaks  into  bloom  on  the  t 

And  gazing  on  thee,  sullen  t,  ' 

And  wildly  dash'd  on  tower  and  t 

Within  the  green  the  moulder'd  t, 

the  t's  Laid  their  dark  arms  about  the  field,  (repeat) 

My  love  has  talk'd  with  rocks  and  t's; 

There  rolls  the  deep  where  grew  the  t. 

on  the  t's  The  dead  leaf  trembles  to  the  bells 

A  voice  by  the  cedar  t  In  the  meadow 

One  long  milk-bloom  on  the  t ; 

stairway  sloped  Till  lost  in  blowing  t's  and  tops  of 

towers  ; 
saw  The  t  that  shone  white-listed  thro'  the  gloom 
then  binding  his  good  horse  To  a  <, 
thro'  the  t  Rush'd  ever  a  rainy  wind, 
and  crag  and  t  Scaling,  Sir  Lancelot ' 
High  on  a  grim  dead  t  before  the  tower. 
As  the  t  falls  so  must  it  lie. 
they  would  hang  him  again  on  the  cursed  t. 
es  he  couldn't  cut  down  a.t\     '  Drat  the  t's,'  says  I 
could  It  be  That  t's  grew  downward, 
isle-side  flashing  down  from  the  peak  without 

ever  a  t 
And  t's  like  the  towers  of  a  minster, 
birds  Begin  to  warble  in  the  budding  orchard  t's  • 
And  a  t  with  a  moulder'd  nest 
^om  off  the  t  We  planted  both  together, 
Her  tribes  of  men,  and  t's,  and  flowers, 
cords  that  ran  Dark  thro'  the  mist,  and  linking 
t  to  t,  * 

an'  coom'd  to  the  top  o'  the  t. 
Tree-bower    beneath  the  tall  T-b's, 
^ee-fem    Your  cane,  your  palm,  t-f,  bamboo, 
M^top    On  the  t-t's  a  crested  peacock  lit. 
Trefoil     t,  sparkling  on  the  rainy  plain, 
Tftellis-work    birds  Of  sunny  plume  in  gilded  t-tv  ■ 
Tremble    stars  which  t  O'er  the  deep  mind  ' 

the  jewel  That  t's  in  her  ear  : 
whispers  of  the  leaves  That  t  round  a  nightingale— 
And  make  me  t  lest  a  saying  learnt. 
Begins  to  move  and  t. 
breath  Of  tender  air  made  t  in  the  hedge 
and  <  deeper  down.  And  slip  at  once  all-fragrant 
In  that  fine  air  1 1,  all  the  past  Melts 
A  breeze  began  to  t  o'er  The  large  leaves 
They  t,  the  sustaining  crags  ; 
The  dead  leaf  t's  to  the  bells. 
Would  start  and  t  under  her  feet, 
He  felt  the  hollow-beaten  mosses  thud  And  t 
stars  Did  t  in  their  stations  as  I  gazed  ;  ' 

excess  of  sweetness  and  of  awe,  Makes  the  heart  t 
felt  him  t  too.  And  heard  him  muttering,  ' 

That  t's  not  to  kisses  of  the  bee  : 
Trenibled    Lovingly  lower,  t  on  her  waist — 
'  A  teardrop  t  from  its  source. 
Low  voluptuous  music  winding  t, 
T  in  perilous  places  o'er  a  deep  : 
And  the  voice  t  and  the  hand, 
but  in  his  heat  and  eagerness  T  and  quiver'd 
burthen  of  our  tender  years  T  upon  the  other. 
I  heard  and  t,  yet  I  could  but  hear ; 
and  the  Paradise  t  away. 
Tremblest    Who  t  thro'  thy  darkling  red 
Trembling     But  ever  t  thro'  the  dew 
And  full  at  heart  of  t  hope. 
Between  the  loud  stream  and  the  t  stars. 
Thro'  silence  and  the  t  stars 


Sen  Dreams  101 

Princess  i  94 

..     iv  185 

,.      V  237 

vi  44 

80 

V.  of  Cauteretz  9 

The  Islet  32 

//(  Mem.  ii  13 

XV  7 

xxvi  7 

..  xcv  15,  51 

xcvii  1 

cxxiii  1 

Con.  63 

Maud  I  V  1 

„    xxii  46 


Gareth  and  L.  670 

Merlin  and  V.  939 

Pelleas  and  E.  31 

Last  Tournament  15 

17 

430 

Sizpah  12 

„      59 

Village  Wife  30 

Columbus  50 

'.  of  Maeldune  45 
The  Wreck  74 
The  Flight  61 

Dead  Prophet  18 

Happy  13 

To  Ulysses  3 


Death  of  CEnone  11 
Church-warden,  etc.  38 
Sisters  (E.  and  £.)  112 
To  Ulysses  36 
CEnone  104 
Gareth  and  L.  1159 
Marr.  of  Geraint  659 
Ode  to  Memory  35 
Miller's  D.  172 
Gardener's  D.  254 
Tithonus  47 
Will  Water.  32 
The  Brook  202 
Princess  vii  69 
354 
In  Mem.  xcv  54 
„     cxxvii  11 
Con.  64 
Maud  I  xxii  73 
Balin  and  Balan  322 
Lover's  Tale  i  582 
„  ii  15t> 

iv  324 
Prog,  of  Spring  4 
Gardener's  D.  131 
Talking  Oak  161 
Vision  of  Sin  17 
Sea  Dreams  11 
Princess  vii  227 
Pelleas  and  E.  284 
Lover's  Tale  i  223 
570 
V.  of  Maeldune  82 
In  Mem.  xcix  5 
Margaret  52 
Miller's  D.  110 
CEnone  21» 
On  a  Mourner  28 


. 


Trembling 


748 


Tristram 


Drembliog  (cotitiniLed)    Smote  the  chord  of  Self,  that,  /, 

pass'd  in  music  out  of  sight.  Locksley  Hall  34 

With  a  weird  bright  eye,  sweating  and  t,  Aylmer's  Field  585 

ToU'd  by  an  earthquake  in  a  t  tower.  Princess  vi  332 

And  letters  unto  t  hands  ;  In  Mem.  x  7 

With  t  fingers  did  we  weave  The  holly  „       xxx  1 

now  by  night  With  moon  and  t  stars,  Marr.  of  Geraint  8 

all  offices  Of  watchful  care  and  t  tenderness.  Lover's  Tale  i  226 

(Huge  blocks,  which  some  old  t  of  the  world  „            ii  45 

dragon,  which  our  t  fathers  call'd  The  God's  own  son.  Tiresias  16 

Tower  and  altar  t  .  .  .  Forlorn  34 
Tremnloos    {See  also  Ever-tremoloos,  Fear-tremulous)    My 

t  tongue  faltereth,  Elednore  136 

Perhaps  her  eye  was  dim,  hand  t ;  Enoch  Arden  242 

Shines  in  those  t  eyes  that  fill  with  tears  Tithonus  26 

over  them  the  t  isles  of  light  Slided,  Princess  vi  81 

And  in  the  meadows  t  aspen-trees  Lancelot  and  E.  410 

There  on  the  t  bridge,  that  from  beneath  Lover's  Tale  i  412 

When  first  she  peers  along  the  t  deep,  Bemeter  and  P.  14 

Stampt  into  dust — t,  all  awry,  Romney's  R.  113 
nwnch    (See  also  Meadow-trenches)    shovell'd  up  into 

some  bloody  t  AtuUey  Court  42 
Trenchant    nor  t  swords  Can  do  away  that  ancient 

lie;  Clear-headed  friend  14: 

tipt  With  t  steel,  around  him  slowly  prest  Gareth  and  L.  693 

Trenched     The  t  waters  run  from  sky  to  sky  ;  Ode  to  Memory  104 

Nor  quarry  t  along  the  hill  In  Mem.  c  11 

Trencher    tender  little  thimib.  That  crost  the  t  Marr.  of  Geraint  396 
Treroit     And  down  the  waste  sand-shores  of  Trath  T,    Lancelot  and  E.  302 

Trespass-chiding    slink  From  ferule  and  the  t-c  eye,  Princess  v  38 
Tress     {See  also  Ivy-tress)     I  see  thee  roam,  with  t'es 

unconfined,  Elednore  122 

The  fragrant  t'es  are  not  stirr'd  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  19 

'  Love,  if  thy  t'es  be  so  dark,  „             Arrival  31 

I  wore  her  picture  by  my  heart.  And  one  dark  t ;  Princess  i  39 

With  all  her  autumn  t'es  falsely  brown,  „     ii  449 

Drew  from  my  neck  the  painting  and  the  t,  ,,    vi  110 

good  Queen,  her  mother,  shore  the  t  With  kisses,  „         113 

Tressed     T  with  redolent  ebony,  Arabian  Nights  138 

Trial     and  true  love  Crown'd  after  / ;  Ayhner's  Field  100 

Girl  after  girl  was  call'd  to  t :  Princess  iv  228 

So  there  were  any  t  of  mastery,  Gareth  and  L.  517 

'  To  those  who  love  them,  t's  of  our  faith.  Pelleas  and  E.  210 

I  know  That  all  these  pains  are  t's  of  my  faith,  „            246 

Dishonour'd  all  for  t  of  true  love —  „            477 

Tribe     twelve-divided  concubine  To  inflame  the  t's  :  Aylmer's  Field  760 

Girt  by  half  the  t's  of  Britain,  Boddicea  5 

'  They  that  scorn  the  t's  and  call  us  „        7 

A  <  of  women,  dress'd  in  many  hues,  Geraint  and  E.  598 

shim  the  wild  ways  of  the  lawless  t.  „             608 

Her  t's  of  men,  and  trees,  and  flowers,  To  Ulysses  3 

Form,  Ritual,  varying  with  the  t's  of  men.  Akbar's  Dream  125 

Tributary    A  t  prince  of  Devon,  Marr.  of  Geraint  2 

IjOw  bow'd  the  t  Prince,  and  she,  „          174 

and  had  his  realm  restored  But  render'd  t,  Balin  and  Balan  3 

Tribute  (adj.)     Thy  t  wave  deliver :  A  Farewell  2 

Tribute  (s)     The  filter'd  t  of  the  rough  woodland,  Ode  to  Memory  63 

Strode  in,  and  claim'd  their  t  as  of  yore.  Com.  of  Arthur  506 

No  t  will  we  pay : '  „            513 

fail'd  of  late  To  send  his  t ;  Balin  and  Balan  4 

after,  when  we  sought  The  t,  answer'd  „           116 

a  liar  is  he.  And  hates  thee  for  the  t\'  „          608 

Hath  sought  the  <  of  a  verse  from  me.  To  Dante  5 

Trice     Away  we  stole,  and  transient  in  a  «  Princess  v  39 

Trick  (s)     '  I  see  it  is  a  <  Got  up  betwixt  you  Dora  95 

'  Play  me  no  t's,  said  Lord  Ronald,  (repeat)  Lady  Clare  73,  75 

The  t's,  which  make  us  toys  of  men.  Princess  ii  63 

What  was  it  ?  a  lying  t  of  the  brain  ?  Maud  II  i  37 

'  Are  these  your  pretty  t's  and  fooleries.  Merlin  and  V.  265 

madden'd  to  the  height  By  tonguester  t's.  To  Mary  Boyle  34 

Trick  (verb)     T  thyself  out  in  ghastly  imageries  Gareth  and  L.  1390 

Trick'd    and  leaves  me  fool'd  and  t,  „            1251 

Trickling     That  gather'd  t  dropwise  from  the  cleft.  Merlin  and  V.  274 

Trickster    Traitor  and  t  And  spumer  of  treaties — •     Batt.  of  Brunanburh  79 

Tried  {See  also  Thried)  This  dress  and  that  by  turns  you  t,    Miller's  D.  147 


Tried  {continued)  this  frail  bark  of  ours,  w  hen  sorely  t, 
1 1  the  mother's  heart, 
ourself  have  often  t  Valkyrian  hymns, 
I  your  old  friend  and  t,  she  new  in  all  ? 
O  true  in  word,  and  t  in  deed, 

0  true  and  t,  so  well  and  long. 
Strange,  that  /  t  to-day  To  beguile  her 
But  on  all  those  who  t  and  fail'd. 
And  many  t  and  fail'd,  because  the  charm 
Then,  if  1 1  it,  who  should  blame  me  then  ?  ' 
tho'  he  t  the  villages  round, 

1  couldn't  get  back  tho'  1 1, 
weeks  1 1  Your  table  of  Pythtigoras, 

Trifle  (s)     And  singing  airy  t's  this  or  that, 

A  t,  sweet !  which  true  love  spells — 

A  t  makes  a  dream,  a  t  breaks.' 

*  No  t,'  groan'd  the  husband  ; 

Like  one  with  any  t  pleased. 

They  chatter'd  t's  at  the  door  : 

There  is  but  a  t  left  you, 
Trifle  (verb)    gentlemen.  That  t  with  the  cruet. 

Some  thought  that  Philip  did  but  t  with  her  ; 

She  might  have  seem'd  a  toy  to  t  with. 
Trifled    Or  like  a  king,  not  to  be  t  with — 
Triflhig     As  many  little  t  Lilias — 
Trill     Upon  her  lattice,  I  would  pipe  and  t, 

That  hears  the  latest  linnet  t, 
Trilleth  Silver-treble  laughter  t : 
Trim  (adj.)    sward  was  t  as  any  garden  lawn  : 

T  hamlets  ;  here  and  there  a  rustic  tower 
Trim  (verb)     have  a  dame  indoors,  that  t's  us  up, 

t  our  sails,  and  let  old  bygones  be, 
Trinacrian    Tho'  dead  in  its  T  Enna, 
Trinity     All  glory  to  the  all-blessed  T, 
Trinket    And  gave  the  t's  and  the  rings, 
Trinobant    hear  Coritanian,  T  !  (repeat) 

Gods  have  answer'd,  Catieuchlanian,  T. 

Shout  Icenian,  Catieuchlanian,  shout  Coritanian,  T, 
Trip    My  tongue  T's,  or  I  speak  profanely. 

To  t  a  tigress  with  a  gossamer, 

tho'  he  t  and  fall  He  shall  not  blind  his  soul 

That  made  my  tongue  so  stammer  and  t 
Triple    Who,  God-like,  grasps  the  t  forks, 
Triple-mailed    and  guard  about  With  t-m  trust 
Triplet     In  riddling  t's  of  old  time. 
Tripod    on  a  <  in  the  midst  A  fragrant  flame 
Tript    That  Jenny  had  t  in  her  time  : 

Have  t  on  such  conjectural  treachery — 

yet,  methinks  Thy  tongue  has  t  a  little : 

There  t  a  hxmdred  tiny  silver  deer. 


Aylmer's  Field  715 

Princess  Hi  147 

„        iv  138 

318 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  5 

Con.  1 

Mavd  I  XX  2 

Merlin  and  V.  590 

595 

661 

First  Quarrel  43 

Rizpah  43 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  14 

Caress'd  or  chidden  2 

Miller's  D.  187 

Sea  Dreams  144 

145 

In  Mem.  Ixvi  4 

„         Ixix  4 

Grandmother  107 

Will  Water.  232 

Enoch  Arden  475 

Pelleas  and  E.  76 

Merlin  and  V.  593 

Princess,  Pro.  188 

Princess  iv  100 

In  Mem.  c  10 

Lilian  24 

Princess,  Pro.  95 

Con.  44 

Edwin  Morris  46 

Princess  iv  69 

To  Prof.  Jehb  11 

Columbus  61 

The  Letters  21 

Boddicea  10,  34,  47 

22 

57 

Lu/?retius  74 

Princess  v  170 

„      vii  331 

Maud  I  m  83 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  15 

Sufp.  Confessions  66 

Com.  of  Arthur  402 

Princess  iv  33 

Grandmother  26 

Merlin  and  V.  348 

602 

Last  Tournament  171 


Tristram  (a  Knight  o!  the  Round  Table)    Had  made  his 

goodly  cousin,  T,  knight,  Gareth  and  L.  394 

after  Lancelot,  T,  and  Geraint  And  Gareth,  Lancelot  and  E.  556 

the  prize  Of  T  in  the  jousts  of  yesterday.  Last  Tournament  8 

T,  saying, '  Why  skip  ye  so.  Sir  Fool  ?    (repeat)  „  9,  243 

T — late  From  overseas  in  Brittany  retiim'd,  „  174 

Sir  T  of  the  Woods — Whom  Lancelot  knew,  „  177 

in  one  full  shock  With  T  ev'n  to  death :  .,  181 

Drew  from  before  Sir  T  to  the  bounds,  „  185 

So  T  won,  and  Lancelot  gave,  the  gems,  „  190 

T,  half-plagued  by  Lancelot's  languorous  mood,  „  194 

T  roimd  the  gallery  made  his  horse  Caracole ;  „  205 

And  wroth  at  T  and  the  lawless  jousts,  „  237 

'  Ay,  fool,'  said  T,  '  but  'tis  eating  dry  To  dance  „  249 

Then  T,  waiting  for  the  quip  to  come,  „  260 

Sir  fool,'  said  T,  '  I  would  break  thy  head.  „  268 

And  T,  '  Was  it  muddier  than  thy  gibes  ?  „  299 

And  T,  '  Then  were  swine,  goats,  asses,  „  325 

And  T, '  Ay,  Sir  Fool,  for  when  our  King  „  334 

'  Nay,  fool,  said  T,  '  not  in  open  day.'  „  347 

Rode  T  toward  Lyonnesse  and  the  west.  „  362 

when  T  was  away.  And  snatch'd  her  hence ;  „  383 

yet  dreading  worse  than  shame  Her  warrior  T,  „  385 

now  that  desert  lodge  to  T  lookt  So  sweet,  ,,  387 

out  of  T  waking,  the  red  dream  Fled  with  a  shout,  „  487 


Tristram 


744 


True 


Tristram  (a  Knight  of  the  Bound  Table)  {continued) 
heard  the  feet  of  T  grind  The  spiring  stone 
To  whom  Sir  T  smiling, '  I  am  here, 
and  spake  To  T,  as  he  knelt  before  her, 
And  T, '  Last  to  my  Queen  Paramount, 
sweet  memories  Of  T  in  that  year  he  was  away.' 
And  T,  fondling  her  light  hands,  replied, 
Then  T,  ever  dallying  with  her  hand. 
Far  other  was  the  T,  Arthur's  knight ! 
Then  T,  pacing  moodily  up  and  down. 
Then  T  laughing  caught  the  harp,  and  sang  : 
in  the  light's  last  glimmer  T  show'd  And  swung 
And  won  by  T  as  a  tourney-prize.  And  hither  brought 

by  T  for  his  last  Love-offering 
Then  came  the  sin  of  T  and  Isolt ; 

Trimnph  (s)     And  like  a  bride  of  old  In  t  led, 
Keen  with  t,  watching  still  To  pierce  me 
herald  of  her  t,  drawing  nigh  Half-whisper'd 
What  Roman  would  be  dragg'd  in  t  thus  ? 
elaborately  wrought  With  fair  Corinna's  t ; 
Peace,  his  t  will  be  sung 
And  felt  thy  t  was  as  mine  ; 
nor  cares  For  t  in  our  mimic  wars, 
he  had  One  golden  hour — of  t  shall  I  say  ? 
t's  over  time  and  space. 

Triumph  (verb)    It  in  conclusive  bliss, 

Trinmph'd    So  It  ere  my  passion  sweeping 

Trinmvir    The  fierce  t's  ;  and  before  them  paused 

Troad    she  used  to  gaze  Down  at  the  T ; 
and  thy  fame  Is  blown  thro'  all  the  T, 


she 
Last  Tournament  510 
521 


541 
551 
580 
601 
626 
634 
654 
730 
739 

747 
Guinevere  488 
Ode  to  Memory  76 
Rosalind  26 
(Enone  185 
Lucretius  234 
Princess  Hi  349 
Ode  on  Well.  232 
In  Mem.  ex  14 
Lancelot  and  E.  312 
Lover's  Tale  iv  6 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  75 
In  Mem.  Ixxxv  91 
Locksley  Rail  131 
Princess  vii  131 
Death  oj  (Enone  3 
37 
Troas    reveal  T  and  Dion's  column'd  citadel,  The  crown  of  T.      (Enone  13 
Trod     (See  also  Trode)     Old  footsteps  t  the  upper  floors,  Mariana  67 

And  t  on  silk,  as  if  the  winds  A  Character  21 

They  should  have  t  me  into  clay,  Oriana  62 

But  over  these  she  t :  and  those  great  bells  Palace  of  Art  157 

Comes  Faith  from  tracts  no  feet  have  t,  On  a  Mourner  29 

Upon  an  ampler  dunghill  t,  Will  Water.  125 

with  her  strong  feet  up  the  steep  hill  T  out  a  path  :       Sea  Dreams  121 
I  falter  where  I  firmly  t,  In  Mem.  Iv  13 

We  pass  ;  the  path  that  each  man  t  Is  dim,  „     Ixxiii  9 

Whereof  the  man,  that  with  me  t  This  planet,  „   Con.  137 

how  native  Unto  the  hQIs  she  t  on  !  Lover's  Tale  i  360 

We  t  the  shadow  of  the  downward  hill ;  „  515 

they  t  The  same  old  paths  where  Love  had  walk'd  „  820 

Yet  1 1  not  the  wildflower  in  my  path,  „  ii  20 

spirit  round  about  the  bay,  T  swifter  steps ;  „  Hi  18 

we  pass  By  that  same  path  our  true  fore- 
father's t ;  Doubt  and  Prayer  4 
Trodden    Had  t  that  crown'd  skeleton,  Lancelot  and  E.  49 
the  weak  t  down  by  the  strong.  Despair  31 
Trode  (See  also  Trod)   On  burnish'd  hooves  his  war-horse  t;  L.  ofShalott  Hi  29 
our  horses  stumbling  as  they  t  On  heaps  of  ruin,              Holy  (rrail  716 

"      '  Lucretius  88 

Spec,  of  Iliad  1 

Achilles  over  the  T.  23 

31 

Princess  iv  157 

Owd  Rod  72 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  19 

St.  S.  Stylites  4 

You  might  have  won  7 

Princess  iv  168 

Merlin  and  V.  598 

Last  Tournament  322 

Vision  of  Sin  171 


Trojan    tempt  The  T,  while  his  neat-herds 

So  Hector  spake ;  the  T's  roar'd  applause  ; 

cry  of  ^akidds  Was  heard  among  the  T's, 

backward  reel'd  the  T's  and  allies  ; 
Troll    To  t  a  careless,  careless  tavern-catch 
Trollope  (a  slat)    gell  was  as  howry  a  t 
Troop    Sometimes  a  t  of  damsels  glad, 

t's  of  devils,  mad  with  blasphemy, 

Thro'  t's  of  unrecording  friends, 

A  <  of  snowy  doves  athwart  the  dusk, 

many  weeks  a  t  of  carrion  crows  Hung 
Troop'd     T  round  a  Paynim  harper  once, 
Trooping    '  T  from  their  mouldy  dens 
Tropic     By  squares  of  t  summer  shut  And  warm'd  in 

crystal  cases.  Amphion  87 

For  on  a  t  mountain  was  I  born,  Prog,  of  Spring  67 

The  wealth  of  t  bower  and  brake  ;  To  Ulysses  37 

Tropical    When  he  spoke  of  bis  t  home  in  the  canes  The  Wreck  71 

Man  with  his  brotherless  dinner  on  man  in  the  t  wood.         The  Dawn  3 
Troth    I  to  thee  my  t  did  plight,  Oriana  26 

Will  I  to  Olive  plight  my  t.  Talking  Oak  283 

wherefore  break  her  t  ?     Proud  look'd  the  lips  :  Princess  i  95 

then  this  question  of  your  t  remains  :  „     v  279 


Troth  (continued)     some  pretext  held  Of  baby  t,  invalid.  Princess  v  398 

plighted  t,  and  were  at  peace.  „      vii  83 

The  heart  that  never  plighted  t  In  Mem.  xxvii  10 

here  I  pledge  my  t,  Yea,  by  the  honour  Pelleas  and  E.  341 

But  I  to  your  dead  man  have  given  my  t,  „            389 

Forgetful  of  their  t  and  fealty,  Guinevere  442 

Trouble  (s)     Whose  t's  number  with  his  days  :  Two  Voices  330 

T  on  t,  pain  on  pain.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  84 

That  thou  shouldst  take  my  t  on  thyself  :  Dora  118 

may  he  never  know  The  t's  I  have  gone  thro'  !  '  „     150 

a  lip  to  drain  thy  (  dry.  Locksley  Hall  88 

We  drink  defying  t.  Will  Water.  94 

But  a  t  weigh'd  upon  her,  L.  of  Burleigh  77 

Not  thankful  that  his  t's  are  no  more.  Lucretius  143 

his  t  had  all  been  in  vain.  Grandmother  66 

No  is  t  and  cloud  and  storm.  Window,  No  Answer  8 

Such  clouds  of  nameless  t  cross  All  night  In  Mem.  iv  13 

when  sundown  skirts  the  moor  An  inner  t  I  behold,  ,,        xli  18 

I  turn  about,  I  find  a  <  in  thine  eye,  „    Ixviii  10 

It  is  the  t  of  my  youth  That  foolish  sleep  „              15 

Can  t  live  with  April  days,  „   Ixxxiii  7 

A  world  of  t  withm  !  Maud  I  xix  25 

lost  in  t  and  moving  round  Here  at  the  head  „           xxi  5 

'  And  in  that  hope,  dear  soul,  let  t  have  rest,  „     ///  vi  12 

Foredooming  all  his  t  was  in  vain,  Gareth  and  L.  1127 

Do  forge  a  life-long  t  for  ourselves,  Geraint  and  E.  3 

That  t  which  has  left  me  thrice  your  own  :  „          737 

Before  the  useful  t  of  the  rain :  „          771 

Seeing  the  homeless  t  in  thine  eyes,  Lancelot  and  E.  1365 

And  all  this  t  did  not  pass  but  grew ;  Guinevere  84 

But  the  boy  was  bom  i'  t.  First  Quarrel  2 

Torture  and  t  in  vain, —  Def.  of  Lucknow  86 

the  t,  the  strife  and  the  sin,  V.  of  Maeldune  129 

And  the  transient  t  of  drowning —  Despair  67 

a  man  be  a  durty  thing  an'  a  t  Spinster's  S's.  50 

I  am  a.t  to  you.  Could  kneel  for  your  forgiveness.  Romney's  R.  25 

Trouble  (verb)    should  come  like  ghosts  to  t  joy.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  74 

'  To  t  the  heart  of  Edward  Gray.'  Edward  Gray  20 

Be  still,  for  you  only  t  the  mind  Maud  I  v  20 

Troubled  (adj.  and  part.)     Being  t,  wholly  out  of  sight,  Lucretius  152 

Would  pace  the  t  land,  like  Peace  ;  Love  thou  thy  land  84 

Grow  long  and  t  like  a  rising  moon,  Princess  i  59 

But  then  my  t  spirit  rule.  In  Mem.  xxviii  17 

His  dear  little  face  was  t.  Grandmother  65 
Coursed  one  another  more  on  open  ground  Beneath 

a  /  heaven,  Marr.  of  Geraint  523 

They  leave  the  heights  and  are  t.  Voice  and  the  P.  15 

all  their  hearts  Were  t,  Achilles  over  the  T.  24 
Troubled  (verb)     T  the  track  of  the  host  that  we 

hated,  Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  40 

Trouble-tost    I  lull  a  fancy  t-t  In  Mem.  Ixv  2 

Troubling     And  the  wicked  cease  from  t.  May  Queen,  Con.  60 

Troublous     And  yet  so  finely,  that  a  t  touch  Thinn'd,         Aylmer's  Field  75 

Trough    wallowing  in  the  t's  of  Zolaism, —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  145 

Trout    Then  leapt  a  t.     In  lazy  mood  I  watch'd  Miller's  D.  73 

there  he  caught  the  younker  tickling  t —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  33 

And  here  and  there  a  lusty  t,  The  Brook  57 

i'  Howlaby  beck  won  daay  ya  was  ticklin'  o'  t.  Church-warden,  etc.  27 

Trow     1 1  they  did  not  part  in  scorn  :  Lady  Clare  5 

No  blood  of  mine,  1 1 ;  Last  Tournament  201 

I  have  broke  their  cage,  no  gilded  one,  1 1 —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  3 

Troy    I  will  rise  and  go  Down  into  T,  (Enone  262 

minstrel  sings  Before  them  of  the  ten  years'  war 

in  T,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  77 

to  greet  T's  wandering  prince,  On  a  Mourner  33 

Far  on  the  ringing  plains  of  windy  T.  Ulysses  17 

stream  Of  Xanthus  blazed  before  the  towers  of  T,        Spec,  of  Iliad  18 

The  wounded  warrior  climbs  from  T  to  thee.  Death  of  (Enone  39 

The  sunset  blazed  along  the  wall  of  T.  „              77 

Truck    Grimy  nakedness  dragging  his  t's  Maud  1x7 

Truckled    Had  often  t  and  cower'd  Dead  Prophet  62 

Truckling    wordy  t's  to  the  transient  hour,  To  the  Queen  ii  51 

Trudged    See  Traapes'd 

True  (adj.)     (See  also  Thrue)     T  Mussulman  was  I  and 

sworn,  Arabian  Nights  9 


True 


745 


True 


ftne  (adj.)  (continued)     The  burning  bradn  from  the  t  heart,        Margaret  39 

As  pure  and  t  as  blades  of  steel.  Kate  16 

Our  thought  gave  answer  each  to  each,  so  t —  Sonnet  to 10 

For  '  Love,'  they  said,  '  must  needs  be  t,  Mariana  in  the  S.  63 
A  trifle,  sweet !  which  t  love  spells^  T  love  interprets — 

ri^ht  alone.  Miller's  D.  187 

T  wife,  Round  my  /  heart  thine  arms  entwine  „  215 
For  ever  and  for  ever  with  those  just  souls  and  t —  May  Queen,  Con.  55 

He  gave  me  a  friend,  and  a  t  true-love,  D.  of  the  O.  Year  13 

and  my  t  breast  Bleedeth  for  both  ;  To  J.  S.  62 

Sleep  till  the  end,  t  soul  and  sweet.  „        73 

T  love  tum'd  round  on  fixed  poles.  Love  thou  thy  land  5 

And  this  be  t,  till  Time  shall  close,  „            79 

Not  rendering  t  answer,  as  beseem'd  Thy  fealty,  M.  d' Arthur  74 

For  now  I  see  the  t  old  times  are  dead,  „        229 

Yet  this  is  also  t,  that,  long  before  Gardener's  D.  61 

'Tis  t,  we  met ;  one  hour  I  had,  no  more  :  Edwin  Morris  104 

In  days  far-off,  on  that  dark  earth,  be  <  ?  Tithonu^  48 

But  for  some  t  result  of  good  All  parties  Will  Water.  55 

He  loves  me  for  my  own  t  worth.  Lady  Clare  11 

0  mother,'  she  said,  '  if  this  be  t,  „          30 

Sailors  bold  and  t.  The  Captain  8 

Philip's  t  heart,  which  hun^er'd  for  her  peace  Enoch  Arden  272 

and  t  love  Crown'd  after  trial ;  Aylmer's  Field  99 

Ringing  like  proven  golden  coineige  t,  „            182 

She  must  prove  t :  for,  brother,  „            364 

Is  it  so  t  that  second  thoughts  are  best  ?  Sea  Dreams  65 

So  false,  he  partly  took  himself  for  t ;  .,        185 

T  Devils  with  no  ear,  they  howl  in  tune  ..        260 

'  T '  indeed  !     One  of  our  town,  „        262 

'  T,'  she  said,  '  We  doubt  not  that.  Princess,  Pro.  168 

And  bites  it  for  t  heart  and  not  for  harm,  „                174 

that  was  t :  But  then  she  had  a  will ;  „               t  47 

'  An  open-hearted  maiden,  t  and  pure.  „             Hi  98 

My  prmcess,  0  my  princess !  t  she  errs,  „                107 

T — we  had  limed  ourselves  With  open  eyes,  „                142 

nor  is  it  Wiser  to  weep  a  t  occasion  lost,  „              iv  68 

And  dark  and  t  and  tender  is  the  North.  „                 98 

She  wept  her  t  eyes  blind  for  such  a  one,  „                134 

Know  you  no  song,  the  t  growth  of  your  soil,  „                150 

In  us  t  growth,  in  her  a  Jonah's  goturd,  „                311 

gentleness  To  such  as  her  !  if  Cyril  spake  her  t,  „             v  168 

T  woman  :  but  you  clash  them  all  in  one,  „                180 

As  t  to  thee  as  false,  fake,  false  to  me  !  „           vi  204 

It  was  ill  counsel  had  misled  the  girl  To  vex  t  hearts  :        ,,  vii  242 

in  t  marriage  lies  Nor  equal,  nor  imequal :  .,                302 

0  iron  nerve  to  t  occasion  t,  Ode  on  Well.  37 
Mighty  Seaman,  tender  and  t,  „  134 
And  save  the  one  t  seed  of  freedom  sown  „  162 
Until  we  doubt  not  that  for  one  so  t  .,  255 
What  England  was,  shall  her  t  sons  forget  ?  Third  of  Feb.  44 
Doctors,  they  knaws  nowt,  fur  a  says  what's 

nawways  t :  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  5 

Dreams  are  t  while  they  last.  High.  Pantheism  4 

Deab,  near  and  t — no  truer  Time  himself  A  Dedication  1 

And  flashes  into  false  and  t.  In  Mem.  xvi  19 

In  more  of  life  t  life  no  more  And  Love  „        xxvi  11 

1  hold  it  t,  whate'er  befall ;  „  xxvii  13 
The  Spirit  of  t  love  replied ;  „  lii  6 
'  What  keeps  a  spirit  wholly  t  „  9 
For  thou  wert  strong  as  thou  wert  t  ?  „  Ixxiii  4 
O  t  in  word,  and  tri»i  in  deed,  „  Ixxxv  5 
If  not  so  fresh,  with  love  ast,  ■  „  101 
Should  prove  the  phantom-warning  t.  „  xcii  12 
But  ever  strove  to  make  it  t :  „  xcvi  8 
And  dream  my  dream,  and  hold  it  / ;  „  cxxiii  10 
O  t  and  tried,  so  well  and  long,  „  Con.  1 
She  might  by  a  /  descent  be  untrue  ;  And  Maud  is 

as  t  as  Maud  is  sweet :  Maud  I  xiii  31 

And  teach  t  life  to  fight  with  mortal  wrongs.  „       xviii  54 

But  the  t  blood  spilt  had  in  it  a  heat  „         xix  44 

For,  Maud,  so  tende  and  t,  „  85 
Come  out  to  your  own  t  lover,  That  your  t  lover 

may  see  Your  glory  also,  „          xx  46 

To  find  the  arms  of  my  t  love  Round  me  „        //  iv  3 


True  (adj.)  {continued)     (For  I  cleaved  to  a  cause  that  I  felt 

to  be  pure  and  t),  Maud  III  vi  31 

'  0  King  ! '  she  cried,  '  and  I  will  tell  thee  t :  Com.  of  Arthur  339 

'  T  love,  sweet  son,  had  risk'd  himself  Gareth  and  L.  60 

but  this  was  all  of  that  t  steel,  „            66 

Her  own  t  Gareth  was  too  princely-proud  „          161 

In  token  of  t  heart  and  fealty.  „          399 
Enid  loved  the  Queen,  and  with  t  heart  Adored  her,  Mart,  of  Geraint  19 


that  if  ever  yet  was  wife  T  to  her  lord, 

0  me,  I  fear  that  I  am  no  t  wife.' 
T  tears  upon  his  broad  and  naked  breast. 
And  that  she  fear'd  she  was  not  a  t  wife. 
'  Well  said,  t  heart,'  replied  Geraint, 
As  I  will  make  her  truly  my  t  wife.' 
To  dress  her  beautifully  and  keep  her  t ' — 
The  one  t  lover  whom  you  ever  own  d, 
Nor  let  her  t  hand  falter,  nor  blue  eye  Moisten, 

1  heard  you  say,  that  you  were  no  t  wife  : 
with  your  own  t  eyes  Beheld  the  man  you  loved 
Rise,  my  t  knight. 

Balin  first  woke,  and  seeing  that  t  face, 
Pure  as  our  own  t  Mother  is  our  Queen.' 
Goodnight,  t  brother.'  (repeat) 
To  worship  woman  as  t  wife  beyond 
That  old  t  filth,  and  bottom  of  the  well. 
And  half  believe  her  t : 
and  half  believed  her  t,  (repeat) 
Yet  is  there  one  t  line,  the  pearl  of  pearls : 
And  Vivien,  frowning  in  t  anger,  said : 
friend  Traitor  ort? 

'  O  t  and  tender  !     0  my  liege  and  King  ! 
Have  all  men  t  and  leal,  all  women  pure  ; 
So  love  be  t,  and  not  as  yours  is— 
O,  I,  that  flattering  my  t  passion, 
our  t  King  Will  then  allow  your  pretext. 
And  found  it  t,  and  answer'd,  '  T,  my  child. 
Dearer  to  t  young  hearts  than  their  own  praise, 
'  Our  t  Arthur,  when  he  learns, 
T,  indeed.  Albeit  I  know  my  knights  fantastical, 
our  Lancelot !  that  t  man  ! ' 
I  know  not  if  I  know  what  t  love  is. 
Must  our  t  man  change  like  a  leaf  at  last  ? 
And  faith  unfaithful  kept  him  falsely  t. 
To  speak  the  wish  most  near  to  your  t  heart ; 
And  then  will  I,  for  t  you  are  and  sweet 
'  Sweet  is  t  love  tho'  given  in  vain. 
And  folded,  '  O  sweet  father,  tender  and  t, 
And  therefore  my  t  love  has  been  my  death, 
for  good  she  was  and  t. 
For  all  t  hearts  be  blazon'd  on  her  tomb 
like  to  coins.  Some  t,  some  light, 
'  O  son,  thou  hast  not  t  humility, 
'  Hail,  Bors  !  if  ever  loyal  man  and  t  Could  see  it, 
Dishonour'd  all  for  trial  of  t  love — 
as  the  one  t  knight  on  earth.  And  only  lover  ; 
'  Is  the  King  t?  '     '  The  King  !  '  said  Percivale. 
And  barken  if  my  music  be  not  t. 
And  heard  it  ring  as  <  as  tested  gold.' 
'  Fear  God :   honour  the  King — ^his  one  t 

knight — 
The  night  was  dark  ;  the  t  star  set. 
For  what  is  t  repentance  but  in  thought — 
T  men  who  love  me  still,  for  whom  I  live, 
Too  wholly  t  to  dream  untruth  in  thee. 
My  own  t  lord  !  how  dare  I  call  him  mine  ? 
Not  rendering  t  answer,  as  beseem'd  Thy  fealty. 
For  now  I  see  the  t  old  times  are  dead. 
And  that  t  North,  whereof  we  lately  heard 
If  this  be  t.  At  thought  of  which  my  whole  soul 
It  fall  on  its  own  thorns — if  this  be  t — 
But,  placing  his  t  hand  upon  her  heart. 
Then,  when  her  own  t  spirit  had  retum'd, 
I  ha'  been  as  <  to  you  as  ever  a  man  to  his  wife  ; 
'  You  said  that  you  hated  me,  Ellen,  but  that  isn't 

t,  you  know ; 


47 

108 

111 

114 

474 

503 

Geraint  and  E,  40 

344 

512 

742 

846 

Balin  and  Balan  75 

590 

617 

„      626, 628 

Merlin  and  V.  23 

47 

186 

„    400,  893 

459 

691 

770 

791 

794 

862 

874 

Lancelot  and  E.  152 

370 

419 

585 

593 

665 

676 

686 

877 

914 

954 

1007 

1110 

1277 

1292 

1344 

Holy  Grail  26 

445 

756 

Pelleas  and  E.  477 

494 

535 

Last  Tournament  274 

284 

302 

605 

Guinevere  373 

445 

541 

617 

Pass,  of  Arthur  242 

397 

To  the  Queen  ii  14 

Lover's  Tale  i  266 

273 

iv  75 

108 

First  Quarrel  60 

79 


The  Revenge  101 


True 

True  (adj.)  (continued)     '  I  have  fought  for  Queen  and 

Faith  like  a  valiant  man  and  t ; 
they  stared  at  the  dead  that  had  been  so  valiant 

.    *°'*''  105 
^\  '  ^u^'"  1^^^.  ""*'  ^  "^^^  imperial  all-in-aU.      Sisters  (E.  mid  E.)  226 

she  That  loved  me — our  t  Edith—  '  235 

and  her  own  t  eyes  Are  traitors  to  her ;  "'              284 

'  Most  dearest '  be  a  <  superlative —  "              ono 
which  lived  T  life,  live  on— and  if  the  fatal  kiss 

Born  of  <  life  and  love,  p„-„    Alice  2 
t  is  your  heart,  but  be  sure  that  your  hand  be 

;o  ^t  "  I.  4.          i  ij  I,     X,             .  ^^/-  of  Lucknmo  56 

IS  it  t  what  was  told  by  the  scout,  95 

From  that  t  world  within  the  world  we  see,  De  Prof  " Two  G  30 

Our  t  co-mates  regather  round  the  mast ;  Pref.  Son.  'wth  Cent.  5 
A  ever  the  heart  among  women,'  he  said,  'more  tender 

*      ^•'  The  Wreck  96 

that  would  pluck  from  this  t  breast  the  locket  The  Fliaht  33 

Arise,  my  own  t  sister,  come  forth  !  og 

I  wur  sewer  that  it  couldn't  be  t ;  SpinsUr's  S's.  20 

so  es  all  that  I  'ears  be  / ;  ^                    gg 

being  t  as  he  was  brave ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  59 

when  you  speak  were  wholly  t.  220 
a  guest  may  make  T  cheer  with  honest 

1    ^^^^       I  c  u^  m         ,  -f™-  *o  Gen.  Hamley  16 

he  needs  must  fight  To  make  t  peace  his  own,  Epiloqiie  27 
I  brother,  only  to  be  known  By  those  who 

love  thee  best  Pref .  Poem  Broth.  Son.  7 

T  poet,  surely  to  be  found  When  Truth  I5 

That  man'5  the  t  Conservative  Ha'Us  all  Round  7 

1  leaders  of  the  land's  desire !  26 

but  Thou,  T  daughter  whose  all-faithful,  PHn.  Beatrice  13 

Queen  as  f  to  womanhood  as  Queenhood,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  25 
Faaithful  an'  T  '—them  words  be  i'  Scriptur— an' 

Faaithful  an'  T  n,,,  j  t>  --ik 

T  „„      1       V  o        1     J       1      . ,  ■       .  (Jwd  Roa  15 

Legend  or  t?  so  tender  should  be  t !  The  Ring  224 

TiL^  Ai     ^^^"-^  thy  home.  p^og.  of  SpZg  52 

The     Alcestis  of  the  time  Romney's  R  91 

Not  the  Great  Voice  not  the  t  Deep.  Akbar's  Dream  59 

And  following  thy  t  counsel,  by  thme  aid,  I54 

T  gentleman,  heart  blood  and  bone.  Bandit's  Death  2 

And  had  some  prophet  spoken  t  Mechanovhilus  25 

J  we  have  got—sv^h  a  faithful  ally  Riflemen  form !  24 

I  count  you  kind,  I  hold  you  t ;  The  Wanderer  13 

What  is  t  at  last  will  tell :  Poets  and  the  Critics  9 

By  that  same  path  our  t  forefathers  trod  ;  Dmbt  and  Prayer  4 

Trae  (S)     undo  One  riddle,  and  to  find  the  t,  Two  Voices  233 

Yet  glimpses  of  the  t.  ur^n  ly  .      gr, 

Who  battled  for  the  T,  the  Just,  InMem.ti  S 

King  out  the  false,  ring  m  the  t.  ^  g 

taking  t  for  false,  or  false  for  t ;  Geraint  and  E  4 

Could  all  of  <  and  noble  in  knight  and  man  Holy  Grail  882 

The  Good,  the  T,  the  Pure,  the  Just—  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  71 

Tm  J.nlir'^^l*^^/""™/' u        .  Mecha^philus2 

Troe-ueroiC    why  Not  make  her  t-h—  Princess  Con  20 
Tfeue-love  (adj.)     and  carolling  as  he  went  A  t-l  ballad,  Lancelot  arU  E.  705 

ftne-love  (s)    He  gave  me  a  friend,  and  a  true  t-l,  D.  of  the  O.  Year  13 
Truer    A  heart  that  doats  on  t  charms,                       ■     L  C  V  de  Vere  14 

^^H^lifl^r''"'*^^',  "     'P^ncessvim 

Asxd  that  he  wears  a  t  crown  Qde  on  Well.  276 

no  t  Time  himself  Can  prove  you,  a  Dedication  1 

Lest  we  should  set  one  t  on  his  throne.  Bdin  and  Balan  7 

A  seven-months'  babe  had  been  a  t  gift.  Merlin  and  V.  711 

Henceforth  be  t  to  your  faultless  lord  ?  Lancelot  and  E.  119 

rmne  is  the  farmer  seat.  The  i  lame :  447 

But  mine  are  t,  seeing  they  profess  Last  Tournament  85 

Bury  them  as  God's  t  images  Are  daily  buried.'      Sir  J.  Oldcastle  140 

Be    to  your  promise      There!  To  Mary  Boyle  b 

TVni  hl^^*'  T,   ^^r'^^^i  "0  discordance  D.  of  the  Duke  of  6.  13 

Truer-hearted    There  is  no  t-h-zh,  you  seem  Princess  Hi  208 

Truest    1  friend  and  noblest  foe ;  w  n 

?lfy  noE  Shy  ???  ""^  '  --'  ^-'^  «-^  ^-  ^g 

The  t  eyes  that  ever  answer'd  Heaven,  Geraint  and  E.  842 


746 


Trust 


Truest  {continued)     Deeming  our  courtesy  is  the  t  law,    Lancelot  and  E  712 
As  prowest  knight  and  t  lover,  pdieas  and  E.  350 

JNo  frost  there,'  so  he  said,  '  as  in;(  Love  no  Death.'         The  Wreck  80 


And  while  I  communed  with  my  t  self. 
The  t,  kindhest,  noblest-hearted  wife 
True-sublime    Why  not  make  her  true- heroic — t-s  ? 
True-touched    With  its  t-t  pulses  in  the  flow 
Truly    For  t  as  thou  sayest,  a  Fairy  King 

'  Ay,  t  of  a  truth.  And  in  a  sort. 
Trumpet    And  t's  blown  for  wars ; 

And  bade  liim  cry,  with  sound  of  t, 

The  shattering  t  shrilleth  high. 

Brake  with  a  blast  of  Vs  from  the  gate, 

in  the  halloo  Will  topple  to  the  t  down, 

we  hear  A  <  in  the  distance  pealing  news 

A  moment,  while  the  t's  blow. 

With  the  air  of  the  t  round  him, 

till  the  t  blared  At  the  barrier  like  a  wild  horn 

and  once  more  The  t,  and  again : 

Last,  the  Prussian  t  blew ; 

Warble,  O  bugle,  and  t,  blare ! 

Altho'  the  t  blew  so  loud. 

A  martial  song  like  a  t's  call ! 

the  t's  blew.  And  Arthur's  knighthood 

'  Blow  t,  for  the  world  is  white  with  May ;  Blow  t, 

the  long  night  hath  roll'd  away ! 
'  Blow  t !  he  will  lift  us  from  the  dust.     Blow  t ! 

live  the  strength  and  die  the  lust ! 
Then  Yniol's  nephew,  after  t  blown, 
Sound  on  a  dreadful  t,  summoning  her  • 
and  anon  The  <'s  blew;  ' 

then  the  t's  blew  Proclaiming  his  the  prize, 
after  t  blown,  her  name  And  title. 
Up  to  the  summit,  and  the  t's  blew. 
The  sudden  t  sounded  as  in  a  dream 
Far  off  a  solitary  t  blew. 
Thro'  the  thick  night  I  hear  the  t  blow : 
when  the  t  of  jud^ent  'ill  sound, 
like  the  clear  voice  when  a  t  shrills. 
Pause  !  before  you  sound  the  t. 
The  <,  the  gallop,  the  charge, 
t's  of  victory,  groans  of  defeat ; 
Fame  blowing  out  from  her  golden  t 
All  at  once  the  t  blew. 
Let  blow  the  t  strongly  while  I  pray, 
Trumpet-blast    either  side,  with  t-h, 
Trumpet-blowings    such  fire  for  fame,  Such  t-b  in  it 

cry  of  a  great  jousts  With  t-h  ran  on 
Trumpeter    blew  the  swoll'n  cheek  of  a  t, 

he  bad  his  t  sound  To  the  charge. 
Trumpeting    See  Tiny-tnmipeting 
Trundled    Her  mother  t  to  the  gate 
Trunk    Ruin'd  t's  on  wither'd  forks, 
till  the  dry  old  t's  about  us,  dead. 
Look,  he  stands,  T  and  bough. 
Trust  (s)    And  t  and  hope  till  things  should  cease, 
and  guard  about  With  triple-mailed  t, 
'  Go,  vexed  Spirit,  sleep  in  t ; 
She  ceased  in  tears,  fallen  from  hope  and  t : 
breathing  love  and  t  against  her  lip  : 
Break  lock  and  seal :  betray  the  t : 
On  providence  and  t  in  Heaven, 
and  t  in  all  things  high  Comes  easy  to  him. 
On  God  and  Godlike  men  we  build  our  t. 
sensuous  frame  Is  rack'd  with  pangs  that  conquer  t 
whether  t  m  things  above  Be  drnim'd  of  sorrow, 
Cry  thro'  the  sense  to  hearten  t 
why  not  ?     I  have  neither  hope  nor  t ; 
chann  Of  woven  paces  and  of  waving  hands.  As 

T  ?™v^  °{t            ,  ,  -^i^riin  a7id  V.  331 

1,  feeling  that  you  felt  me  worthy  <,                                        ,  3341 

Too  curious  Vivien,  tho'  you  talk  of  t,                                    ",  356 

Yea,  if  ye  talk  of  1 1  tell  you  this,                                            ",  360| 

Poor  Vivien  had  not  done  to  win  his  t                                    "  8631 

That  proof  of  t — so  often  ask'd  in  vain  !                                 ",  95 


The  Ring  181 

Romney's  R.  35 

Princess,  Con.  20 

Lover's  Tale  i  205 

Gareth  and  L.  258 

837 

D.ofF.  Women  20 

Godiva  36 

Sir  Galahad  5 

Princess,  Pro.  42 

a  232 

iv  81 

581 

V  162 

485 

488 

Ode  on  Well.  127 

W.  to  Alexandra  14 

In  Mem.  xcvi  24 

Maud  /  »  5 

Com.  of  Arthur  480 

482 

491 

Man:  of  Geraint  551 

Geraint  and  E.  383 

Lancelot  and  E.  454 

500 

Pelleas  and  E.  115 

167 

Last  Tournament  151 

Guinevere  529 

„        569 

Rizpah  57 

Achilles  over  the  T.  19 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  116 

Heavy  Brigade  13 

Vastness  8 

„       21 

Happy  75 

Douht  and  Prayer  10 

Com.  of  Arthur  102 

Merlin  and  V.  418 

Last  Tournament  52 

Princess  ii  364 

Heavy  Brigade  8 

Talking  Oak  111 

Vision  of  Sin  93 

Holy  Grail  495 

The  Oak  14 

Supp.  Confessions  31 

66 

Two  Voices  115 

D.  of  F.  Women  257 

Audley  Court  69 

You  might  have  won  18 

Enoch  Arden  205 

Princess  vii  329 

Ode  on  Well.  266 

In  Mem.  I  6 

„    Ixxxv  9 

„       cxvi  7 

Maud  I  i  30 


Trust 


747 


Truth 


Trust  (s)  (continued)    Should  have  in  it  an  absoluter 

t  To  make  Lancelot  and  E.  1192 

and  liis  t  that  Heaven  Will  blow  the  tempest  To  the  Queen  ii  46 

My  lily  of  truth  and  t —  Ancient  Sage  160 

Trust  (verb)     /  could  t  Your  kindness.  To  the  Queen  19 

■  T  me,  in  bliss  I  shall  abide  Palace  of  Art  18 

To  make  him  t  his  modest  worth,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  46 

T  me,  Clara  Vere  de  Vere,  „              49 

I  think  my  time  is  near.     I  <  it  is.  May  Queen,  Con.  41 

I I  That  I  am  whole,  and  clean,  St.  S.  Stylites  212 
t  me  on  my  word,  Hard  wood  I  am,  Talking  Oak  170 
T  me,  cousin,  all  the  current  of  my  being  Locksley  Hall  24 
He  t's  to  light  on  something  fair  ;  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  20 
Henceforth  1 1  the  man  alone.  The  Letters  31 
And  t  me  while  I  tum'd  the  page.  To  E.  L.  9 
Kaw  from  the  nursery — who  could  t  a  child  ?  Aylmers  Field  264 
first  I  fronted  him,  Said,  '  T  him  not ; '  Sea  Dreams  71 
'  1 1  you,'  said  that  other  '  for  we  two  Princess  ii  336 
all,  I  t,  may  yet  be  well.'  ,.  361 
'  O  friend,  we  t  that  you  esteein'd  us  not  Too  harsh  ,.  Hi  198 
To  harm  the  thing  that  t's  him,  ..  iv  248 
nest  of  traitors — none  to  t  Since  our  arms  fail'd —  ,.  v  426 
1 1  that  there  is  no  one  hurt  to  death,  .,  vi  242 
And  t,  not  love,  you  less.  ,.  296 
Lay  thy  sweet  hands  in  mine  and  t  to  me.'  ,,  vii  366 
May  t  himself  ;  and  after  praise  and  scorn,  A  Dedication  6 
And  yet  we  /  it  comes  from  thee,  In  Mem.,  Pro.  23 
I  f  he  lives  in  thee,  ,.  39 
Yet  if  some  voice  that  man  could  t  „  xxxv  1 
Nor  dare  she  t  a  larger  lay,  „  xlviii  13 
Oh  yet  we  t  that  somehow  good  „  liv  1 
I  can  but  t  that  good  shall  fall  At  last —  „  14 
And  faintly  t  the  larger  hope.  „  Iv  20 
But  t  that  those  we  call  the  dead  „          cxviii  5 

I  <  I  have  not  wasted  breath :  „  cxx  1 
To  one  that  with  us  works,  and  t,  ,.  cxxxi  8 
For  I  <  if  an  enemy's  fleet  came  yonder  Maud  I  i  49 

I I  that  it  is  not  so.  „  xvi  30 
1 1  that  I  did  not  talk  (repeat)  „  xix  12, 16 
Let  chance  what  will,  1 1  thee  to  the  deatli.'  Com.  of  Arthur  134 
thy  chief  man  Sir  Lancelot  whom  he  t's  to 

overthrow,  Gareth  and  L.  620 

His  arms  are  old,  he  t's  the  harden'd  skin —  ,.           1139 

Canst  thou  not  t  the  limbs  thy  God  hath  given,  ,.  1388 
'  t  me  not  at  all  or  all  in  all.'  (repeat)           Merlin  and  V.  384,  398,  449 

I  t  That  you  t  me  in  your  own  nobleness,  Lancelot  and  E.  1194 

I I  We  are  green  in  Heaven's  eyes  ;  Holy  Grail  37 
T  me,  long  ago  I  should  have  died,  Lover's  Tale  i  86 
says  The  common  voice,  if  one  may  t  it :  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  37 
T  the  Hand  of  Light  will  lead  her  people,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  68 
To  make  him  t  his  life,  and  give  His  fealty  The  Wanderer  11 

Trusted    some  sick  man  declined,  And  t  any  cure.  Palace  of  Art  156 

t  as  he  was  with  her,  The  sole  succeeder  Aylmer's  Field  293 

fool !  and  t  him  with  all,  All  my  poor  scrapings  Sea  Dreams  76 

Who  t  God  was  love  indeed  In  Mem.  hi  13 

his  chamberlain,  to  whom  He  t  all  things,  Cow.  of  Arthur  146 
t  his  liege-lord  Would  yield  him  this  large  honour        Gareth  and  L.  396 

Too  much  1 1  when  I  told  you  that.  Merlin  and  V.  361 

Yea,  by  God's  rood,  1 1  you  too  much.'  ..            376 

Have  I  not  sworn  ?     I  am  not  t.  ■■            527 

A  woman  and  not  t,  „            530 

To  have  t  me  as  he  hath  t  thee.  Lancelot  and  E.  591 

Trustee     came  T's  and  Aunts  and  Uncles.  Edwin  Morris  121 

!bustful     The  t  infant  on  the  knee  !  Supp.  Confessions  41 

the  child  would  twine  A  t  hEind,  In  Mem.  cix  19 
who  take  Their  pastime  now  the  t  King  is 

gone  ! '  Lancelot  and  E.  101 

And  t  courtesies  of  household  life,  Guinevere  86 
Truthful,  t,  looking  upward  to  the  practised 

hustings-liar  ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  123 

Our  kindlier,  t  Jaques,  past  away  !  To  IV.  H.  Brookfield  11 

Trusting     T  no  longer  that  earthly  flower  Despair  35 

Xmth     When  I  went  forth  in  quest  of  t,  Supp.  Confessions  141 

T  may  stand  forth  unmoved  of  change,  „               144 

Fair-fronted  T  shall  droop  not  now  ■  Clear-headed  friend  12 


Truth  {contintied)    Weak  T  a-leaning  on  her  crutch. 
Wan,  wasted  T  in  her  utmost  need, 
to  fling  The  winged  shafts  of  t, 
Thus  t  was  multiplied  on  t. 
And  all  at  once  a  pleasant  1 1  leam'd, 
'  This  t  within  thy  mind  rehearse. 
Still  moving  after  t  long  sought. 
Named  man,  may  hope  some  t  to  find, 
'  Cry,  faint  not :  either  T  is  bom 
was  there  Not  less  than  t  design'd. 
She  spake  some  certain  t's  of  you. 
In  t.  How  should  I  soothe  you  anyway. 
Her  open  eyes  desire  the  t. 
To  follow  flying  steps  of  T 
a  t  Looks  freshest  in  the  fashion  of  the  day  : 
Begin  to  feel  the  t  and  stir  of  day, 
Shall  Error  in  the  round  of  time  Still  father  T  ? 
That  make  a  man  feel  strong  in  speaking  t ; 
With  quiet  eyes  unfaithful  to  the  t, 
Like  t's  of  Science  waiting  to  be  caught — 
Amy,  speak,  and  speak  the  t  to  me, 
Cursed  be  the  social  lies  that  warp  us  from  the  living  t 
this  is  t  the  poet  sings. 
Bring  t  that  sways  the  soul  of  men  ? 
Nor  finds  a  closer  t  than  this  All-graceful  head. 
The  t,  that  flies  the  flowing  can, 
'  I  speak  the  t :  you  are  my  child. 
I  speak  the  t,  asl  live  by  bread  ! 
Trying  his  t  and  his  long-sufferance, 
and  t  and  love  are  strength,  And  you  are  happy  : 
To  make  a  t  less  harsh,  I  often  grew  Tired 
My  golden  work  in  which  I  told  a  t 
point  you  out  the  shadow  from  the  t ! 
yet,  to  speak  the  t,  I  rate  your  chance 

Albeit  so  mask'd,  Madam,  I  love  the  t ; 
So  my  mother  clutch'd  The  t  at  once, 
wears  her  error  like  a  crown  To  blind  the  t  and  me  : 
I  know  the  Prince,  I  prize  his  t : 
and  dream  and  t  Flow'd  from  me  ; 
call  her  hard  and  cold  which  seem'd  a  t : 
sought  far  less  for  t  than  power  In  knowledge  : 
dreams  Are  but  the  needful  preludes  of  the  t : 
never  sold  the  t  to  serve  the  hour, 
Between  your  peoples  t  and  manful  peace, 
That  a  lie  which  is  half  a  t 
But  a  lie  which  is  part  a  t 
I  know  for  a  t,  there's  none  of  them 
So  I  pray  you  tell  the  t  to  me. 
Forgive  them  where  they  fail  in  t, 
I  HELD  it  t,  with  him  who  sings 
To  which  she  links  a  t  divine  ! 
Tho'  t's  in  manhood  darkly  join, 
Where  t  in  closest  words  shall  fail,  "* 

When  t  embodied  in  a  tale  Shall  enter 
Of  comfort  clasp'd  in  t  reveal'd  ; 
reaps  A  t  from  one  that  loves  and  knows  ? 
Yet  who  would  preach  it  as  a  i 
I  wake,  and  I  discern  the  t ; 
This  t  came  borne  with  bier  and  pall. 
Ring  in  the  love  of  t  and  right. 
Nor  dream  of  human  love  and  t, 
Because  he  felt  so  fix'd  in  t : 
Proclaiming  social  t  shall  spread. 
The  t's  that  never  can  be  proved 
I  have  walk'd  awake  with  T. 
whether  there  were  t  in  anything  Said  by  these 


Clear-headed  friend  18 

Tlie  Poet  26 

33 

The  Bridesmaid  9 

Two  Voices  25 

62 

176 

181 

Palace  of  Art  92 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  36 

To  J.  S.  57 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  17 

Love  thou  thy  land  75 

The  Epic.  31 

M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  19 

Love  and  Duty  5 

70 

94 

Golden  Year  17 

Locksley  Hall  23 

60 

75 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  52 

L' Envoi  37 

IVill  Water.  171 

Lady  Clare  24 

26 

Enoch  Arden  470 

Aylmer's  Field  365 

Luxrretius  225 

260 

Princess  i  84 

160 

M2ia 

Hi  61 

112 

233 

t;541 

vii  98 

236 

Con.  74 

Ode  on  Well.  179 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  49 

Grandmother  30 

32 

85 

The  Victim  48 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  43 

il 

„         xxxiii  12 

„  xxoi^i  1 

6 

7 

„        xxxvii  22 

,.  xlii  12 

,,  liii  11 

„  Ixmii  14 

,,  Ixxxv  1 

„  cvi  23 

,,  cxviii  3 

„  cxxv  8 

,.  cxxvii  5 

,.  cxxxi  10 

Maud  I  xix  4 


three.  Com.  of  Arthur  242 

and  ask'd  him  if  these  things  were  t —  „            398 

And  t  is  this  to  me,  and  that  to  thee ;  „            407 

And  t  or  clothed  or  naked  let  it  be.  ,.            408 

but  tell  thou  these  the  t.'  Gareth  and  L.  251 
And  here  is  t ;  but  an  it  please  thee  not.  Take  thou 

the  t  as  thou  hast  told  it  me.  ..             256 

beard  That  looks  as  white  as  utter  t,  ..             281 

'  Ay,  truly  of  a  t.  And  in  a  sort,  ,.            83T 


Truth 


748 


Tuned 


Traih  (continued)    Where  should  be  t  if  not  in  Arthur's 

.  ^^\     .     ^ ,  „  Gareth  and  L.  1254 

Arms  f  t\     I  know  not :  all  are  wanted  here.         Marr.  of  Geraint  289 
i,  ^ood  t,  I  know  not,  save,  _^  290 

Said  Arthur  '  Thou  hast  ever  spoken  t ;  Balin  and  Balan  73 

Nay    said  the  churl, '  our  devil  is  a  t,  302 

But  thou  art  man,  and  canst  abide  a  <,  "  501 

lightest  word  Is  mere  white  t  in  simple  nakedness,  "  518 

Breathed  in  a  dismal  whisper  '  Is  it  t.'  ''  527 

and  shown  the  t  betimes.  That  old  true  filth,  and 

bottom  of  the  well,  Where  T  is  hidden.  Merlin  and  V  46 

for  shall  I  tell  you  t  ?    You  seem'd  that  wave  „  301 

By  Heaven  that  hears  I  tell  you  the  clean  t,  "  343 

He  brought,  not  found  it  therefore :  take  the  <.'  1'  719 

In  t,  but  one  thing  now —  "  gjg 

Urged  him  to  speak  against  the  t,  Lancelot  and  E.  92 

In  lieu  of  idly  dallying  with  the  t,  59O 

I  swear  by  t  and  knighthood  that  I  gave  No  cause,  ..  1297 

And  as  ye  saw  it  ye  have  spoken  t.  Holy  Grail  880 

And  love  01 1,  and  all  that  makes  a  man.  Guinevere  483 

yet,  in  t,  Fair  speech  was  his  and  dehcate  of  phrase.   Lover's  Tale  i  718 
told  them  my  tale,  God's  own  t —  Rizpah  34 

That  traitor  to  King  Richard  and  the  t,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  171 

showing  courts  and  kings  a  t  Columbus  37 

moming-star  to  the  full  round  of  t.  44 

and  murmur  down  T  in  the  distance —  "      12I 

These  hard  memorials  of  our  t  to  Spain  "      jgg 

And  speak  the  t  that  no  man  may  believe.'  Tiresias  50 

I  speak  the  t  Believe  I  speak  it,  I55 

My  lily  of  t  and  trust—  Ancient  Sage  160 

every  heart  that  loves  with  t  is  equal  to  endure.  The  Flight  104 

T,  for  T  is  T,  he  worshipt,  Loclsley  H.,  Sixty  59 

T  for  t,  and  good  for  good !  .^  72 

these  would  feel  and  follow  T  "[  119 

led  by  Justice,  Love,  and  T ;  "  151 

For  man  is  a  lover  of  T,  Dead'Prophet  44 

Yet  a  <  IS  a  t,  she  cried.  6q 

surely  to  be  found  When  T  is  found  again.     Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son.  16 
By  one  side-path,  from  simple  t ;  To  Mara,  of  Dufferin  28 

and  you  the  soul  of  T  In  Hubert  ?  The  Ring  62 

Grafted  on  half  a  < ;  Romney's  R.  42 

One  t  will  damn  me  with  the  mindless  mob,  „        120 

neither  of  them  stands  behind  the  screen  of 

1.  I"^^''  ,  Akbar's  D.,  Inscriv.  7 

held  His  people  by  the  bridle-rein  of  T.  Akbar's  Dream  85 

and  Love  The  net  of  <  ?  '  gg 

Thro'  after  ages  in  the  love  of  T,  The  t  of  Love.  !,'  loi 

nurse  my  children  on  the  milk  of  T,  ^  162 

T  and  Peace  And  Love  and  Justice  came  and 

dwelt  therein ;  ^  Igg 

T,  Peace,  Love  and  Justice  came  and  dwelt  therein,  "  193 

violates  virgin  T  for  a  coin  or  a  cheque.  The  Dawn  15 

m-A'^?  I  clash  with  an  iron  T,  The  Dreamer  6 

TTOtaifuI    half  as  good,  as  kind.  As  t,  Princess  v  202 

This  t  change  m  thee  has  kill'd  it.  „     mi  350 

The  t  King  will  doom  me  when  I  speak.'  Gareth  and  L.  324 

T,  trustful,  looking  upward  to  the  practised 

hustings-liar ;  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  123 

So  princely,  tender,  t,  reverent,  pure—  D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  4 

Irauiless    t  violence  mourn'd  by  the  Wise,  Fastness  5 

Trato-lover     T-l  was  our  English  Duke ;  Ode  on  Well.  189 

XfUto-speaking     T-s,  brave,  good  livers,  Gareth  a-nd  L.  424 

Trath-teller     T-t  was  our  England's  Alfred  named  ;  Ode  on  Well.  188 

Try     Twere  well  to  question  him,  and  t  Talking  Oak  27 

Nor  thro'  the  questions  men  may  t,  In  Mem.  cxxiv  7 

Like  fcdm  who  tries  the  bridge  he  fears  may  fail,         Geraint  and  E.  303 

Should  t  this  charm  on  whom  ye  say  ye  love.'  Merlin  and  V.  525 

shouU  ye  t  him  with  a  merry  one  Pelleas  and  E.  198 

Trying     ^  his  truth  and  his  long-sufferance,  Enoch  Arden  470 

And  t  to  pass  to  the  sea ;  Maud  I  xxi  7 

happier  usuig  the  knife  than  in  t  to  save  the 

nw-*    r^l          u-j  ^           .,.  ■''»  «^«  CJM^i.  Hosv.  6 

T^    That  ever  bided  t  at  village  stile,  Merlin  and  V.  '378 

mwnogora    Great  T  !  never  since  thine  own  Montenegro  12 

Tador-ohimmed    a  T-c  bulk  Of  mellow  brickwork  Edwin  Morris  11 


N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  52 

Princess  Hi  362 

Two  Voices  60 

(Enone  88 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  26 

In  Mem.  xci  1 

„   cxxviii  20 


Tued  (worried)     (See  also  Tew)     But  'e  t  and  moil'd 

iss^n  dead. 
Tuff    hornblende,  rag  and  trap  and  t. 
Tuft  (s)     In  t's  of  rosy-tinted  snow ; 

Behind  yon  whispering  t  of  oldest  pine, 

A  light-green  t  of  plumes  she  bore 
Tuft  (verb)     When  rosy  plumelets  t  the  larch. 

And  t  with  grass  a  feudal  tower  ; 
Tufted    And  the  t  plover  pipe  along  the  fallow 

^Af^'       uu  1      ,  ,  '^'^y  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  18 

Inlhng  with  purple  gloom  the  vacancies  Between  the 

Tuggii'^SeA-tuggin  Lover's  Tale  i  3 

Tuk  (took)     Father  Molowny  he  t  her  in  ban'.  Tomorrow  'S'S 

Tulip    sometimes  a  Dutch  love  For  t's  ;  GardZTsD  ill 

T„mS7c^       ff        1  *^^  f  T'^  ?°^PyA  ^-  of  Maeldune  43 

Tumble  (S)     aiter  a  long  <  about  the  Cape  Enoch  Arden  532 

Should  I  flounder  awhile  without  a  t  Ue,idacasyllabics  9 

t,™KJk\    her  venturous  climbmgs  and  t's  Maid  I  i  69 

Tumble  (verb)    Lest  he  should  swoon  and  t  Enoch  Arden  774 

They  mounted,  Ganymedes,  To  t,  Vulcans,  Princess  m  72 

K.J  ^     /  r  f—.  ^""^  ^^""^  '  ^o  F.  D.  Maurice  24 

Hard,  hard  hard  IS  it  only  not  to  t,  Eendecasyllabics  13 

^^1  K°ll  ^l  t^«  blossom,  the  mad  little  tits  !  WiA>w,  Ay  9 

Dark  bulks  that  t  half  ahve,  7^  Mem  IxxU 

hke  a  crag  that  t's  from  the  cliff,  MarrofG^i^tSll 

a  rougher  gust  might  t  a  stormier  wave.  The  Wreck  131 

Tumbled  (adj.  and  part.)    Among  the  fragments  t  from  the  glens,    (Enone  222 

babies  roll'd  about  Liket  fruit  in  grass  ;  Princess,  Pro.  83 

And  had  a  cousin  t  on  the  plain,  ^,-  01  q 

Among  the  <  fragments  of  the  hills.'  Lancelot  "and  E.  1427 

Rear  d  on  the  t  rmns  of  an  old  fane  st   Telemach«<,  k 

Tumbled  (verb)     (See  also  Tummled)     And  half  the  elemachus  b 

chimneys  ^  The  Goose  A8 

T  the  tawny  rascal  at  his  feet,  Aylmer's  Field  230 

And  ever'^MSseVa  sdlncefn"^  '^'"  ^''"''^?-  ^^ 

And  t  on  Ihe  purple  f ooTckth,'  Prtncess  «  399 

Thff^^^^tf  V"!!^^'"]^  P^^''  ■  ^«  ^'^'-  ^*^^»*  20 

Ihat  t  m  the  Godless  deep  ;  ^    lo 

?n.?  il  *\'  mere  beside  T  it ;  Gareth  and  L.  816 

And  t  back  into  the  kitchen-knave,  1228 
«K  ^^l^  whatever  knight  of  thine  I  fought  And  t.  Last  Tournament  454 

T„mW)L  l^f  helpless  corpse  about  Dead  Prophet  65 

Tumbling    («ee  a^so  Tummlm')     T  the  hollow  hehnets 

of  the  fallen,  p          -■  jw^,,,  109 

Tummled  (tumbled)     An' It  athurt  the  craadle  NoHh.  Cobbler  i 

t  up  stairs,  fur  I  'eard  'un,  q^^  j^^^  go 

Tummlin'  (tumbling)    when  the  rigtree  was  t'  in—  115 

Tumult    the  t  of  their  acclaim  is  roll'd  Duina  Swan  ^S 

antthJ/''?  '  ''1^'  ^''''-  '7argZ2  11 

and  the  t  of  my  life  ;  j^^cksley  Hall  110 

in  an  hour  Of  cmc  t  jam  the  doors,  Lucretius  im 

call'd  Across  the  i  and  the  .  fell.  p^ZetTv  49? 

The  cataract  and  the  t  and  the  kings  534  • 

Is  wrought  with  tot  acclaim.  j^  m,^_  i^^  gO  i 

And  saw  the  <  of  the  halls ;  Ixxxnii^ 

O'erlook'st  the  t  from  afar,  "       ^Sl9 

For  a  t  shakes  the  city,  jj^^  jj  ^^  ^  ; 
What  means  the  iin  the  town  ?  '                             Marr.  of  Geraint  259  . 

And  ate  with  <  in  the  naked  hall,  Geraint  and  E.  605 

(Because  the  hall  was  all  m  <—  jjoly  Grail  269 
Tumultuous    So  the  silent  colony  hearing  her  t  adversaries         Boadicea  78 

^ju*"°^'^  J  ^'"T  *^''°  ^■^^  whitening  hazels  Enoch  Arden  378 

Tundher  (thunder)     the  t,  an'  ram  that  feU,  Tomorrow  23 

Tune  (S)     wi  dest  waihngs  never  out  of  t  Sea  Dreams  231 

howl  in  t  With  nothing  but  the  Devil ! '  260 

Their  hearts  of  old  have  beat  in  t,  /„  Mem.  xcvii  10 

To  the  dancers  dancing  in  t ;  Maud  I  xxii  16 
Ye  nught  have  moved  slow-measure  to  my  t.       Last  Tournament  282 

and  learn  d  To  lisp  m  t  together ;  Lover's  Tale  i  258 
Midnight— m  no  midsummer  t                         Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son.  1 

Tune  (verb)    Who  scarce  can  t  his  high  majestic  sense  Lover's  Tale  i  475 
Toned    See  Full-tnned 


Tuneful 


749 


Turn'd 


Tuneful    'Tis  said  he  had  a  t  tongue, 
Tunic    display  A  t  white  as  May  ! 
Tunnel    A  railway  there,  a  t  here, 
Turbla    What  Roman  strength  T  show'd 
Turbid    Who  let  the  t  streams  of  rumour  flow 
Turbulence    For  in  that  realm  of  lawless  t, 
Turbulent     I  that  knew  him  fierce  and  I 
That,  compass'd  round  with  t  sound, 
Turf  (s)     In  cool  soft  t  upon  the  bank, 
all  the  t  was  rich  in  plots 
cut  his  bit  o'  t  for  the  fire  ? 
no  one  came,  the  t  was  fresh. 
Turf  (verb)     after  furious  battle  t's  the  slain 
Turk     arm'd  by  day  and  night  Against  the  T  ; 
Turkey-cock    See  Stag-tuckey 
Turkis     T  and  agate  and  almondine  : 

Each  like  a  garnet  or  a  <  in  it ; 
Turkish    beating  back  the  swarm  Of  T  Islam 
Turn  (s)     thro'  many  a  bowery  t  A  walk 
In  every  elbow  and  t. 
Every  t  and  glance  of  thine, 
'  Some  t  this  sickness  yet  might  take, 
he  that  shuts  Love  out,  in  t  shall  be  Shut 

out  from  Love,  To  — 

Katie,  once  I  did  her  a  good  t, 
with  every  t  Lived  thro'  her  to  the  tips 
made  a  sudden  t  As  if  to  speak, 
When  each  by  t's  was  guide  to  each, 
As  some  wild  t  of  anger,  or  a  mood 
Might  feel  some  sudden  t  of  anger 
every  t  and  depth  Between  is  clearer  in  my  life 
An'  he  took  three  fs  in  the  rain, 
Thy  leaves  possess  the  season  in  their  t, 
Tom  (verb)     But  when  1 1  away. 


Amphion  17 

Prog,  of  Spring  65 

Mechanophilus  7 

The  Daisy  5 

Ode  on  Well.  181 

Geraint  and  E.  521 

Marr.  of  Geraint  447 

Wiin 

Arabian  Nights  96 

Marr.  of  Geraint  660 

Tomorrow  65 

Prog,  of  Spring  72 

Merlin  and  V.  657 

Montenegro  4 

The  Merman  32 

Marr.  of  Geraint  661 

Montenegro  11 

Arabian  Nights  56 

Ode  to  Memory  62 

Elednore  52 

Two  Voices  55 

-,  With  Pal.  of  Art  14 
The  Brook  74 
Princess  ii  39 
„      11)394 
In  Mem.  xxiii  13 
Merlin  and  V.  521 
531 
Lover's  Tale  i  148 
First  Quarrel  75 
Prog,  of  Spring  107 
Madeline  36 
did  1 1  away  The  boat-head  down  a  broad  canal         Arabian  Nights  24 
Fold  thine  arms,  t  to  thy  rest.  A  Dirge  3 

Thou  wilt  not  t  upon  thy  bed  ;  „       15 

'  T  and  look  on  me  :  I  am  that  Rosamond,  D.  of  F.  Women  250 

Imitates  God,  and  t's  her  face  To  every  land  On  a  Mourner  2 

as  a  thorn  T's  from  the  sea  ;  Audley  Court  55 

Jack,  t  the  horses'  heads  and  home  again.'  Walk,  to  the  Mail  46 

with  what  delighted  eyes  I  <  to  yonder  oak.  Talking  Oak  8 

In  the  Spring  a  young  man's  fancy  lightly  t's  to 

thoughts  of  love.  Locksley  Hall  20 

T  thee,  t  thee  on  thy  pillow :  „  86 

What  is  that  which  I  should  t  to,  „  99 

I  will  t  that  earUer  page.  „  107 

I  will  tell  it.     T  your  face,  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  17 

Had  ever  half  the  power  to  t  This  wheel  Will  Water.  83 

And  beneath  the  gate  she  t's  ;  L.  of  Burleigh  44 

Proudly  t's  he  roimd  and  kindly,  „  55 

'  Mine  too  '  said  Philip  '  t  and  t  about :  '  Enoch  Arden  29 

to  all  things  could  he  t  his  hand.  „        813 

he  past  To  t  and  ponder  those  three  hundred  scrolls  Lucretius  12 

as  a  parrot  t's  Up  thro'  gilt  wires  Princess,  Pro.  171 

secular  emancipation  t's  Of  half  this  world,  .,  ii  289 

but  brooding  t  The  book  of  scorn,  ,.  v  141 

Yet,  as  it  may,  t's  toward  him,  „  vii  143 

I  heard  her  t  the  page ;  „  190 

Till  you  should  t  to  dearer  matters.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  35 

t's  Once  more  to  set  a  ringlet  right ;  In  Mem.  vi  35 

I  should  t  mine  ears  and  hear  „         xxarv  8 

0  t  thee  round,  resolve  the  doubt ;  ,,  xliv  14 
Yet  t  thee  to  the  doubtful  shore,  „  lxi9 

I I  about,  I  find  a  trouble  „  Ixviii  9 
who  t's  a  musing  eye  On  songs,  and  deeds,  ,i  Ixxvii  2 
passing,  t  the  page  that  tells  A  grief,  „  10 
But  t's  his  burthen  into  gain.  ,,  Ixxx  12 

1  <  to  go  :  my  feet  are  set  „  cii  21 
knew  not  wmther  he  should  t  for  aid.  Com.  of  Arthur  40 
but  t  the  blade  and  ye  shall  see,  „  303 
To  t  the  broach,  draw  water,  or  hew  wood,  Gareth  and  L.  486 
Larded  thy  last,  except  thou  t  and  fly.  „  1084 
ye  cleave  His  armour  off  him,  these  will  t  the  blade.'  „  1095 
T,  Fortime,  t  thy  wheel  and  lower  the  proud;  Marr.  of  Geraint  347 
*  T,  Fortune,  t  uiy  wheel  with  smile  or  frown ;  „             350 


Turn  (verb)  {continued)     T  thy  wild  wheel  thro'  sun- 
shine, storm, 

'  T,  t  thy  wheel  above  the  staring  crowd  ; 

Before  he  t  to  fall  seaward  again, 

break  her  sports  with  graver  fits,  T  red  or  pale, 

in  a  wink  the  false  love  t's  to  hate) 

That  t's  its  back  on  the  salt  blast. 

What  miracle  could  t  ? 

And  thought  to  t  my  face  from  Spain, 

I  know  not  where  to  t ; 

Crook  and  t  upon  itself 

an'  the  wind  wasn't  like  to  t. 

But  you  will  t  the  pages. 

Less  profile  !  t  to  me — three-quarter  face. 

Would  t,  and  glare  at  me,  and  point  and  jeer. 

To-day,  before  you  t  again  To  thoughts 

drew  from  out  the  boundless  deep  T's  again  home. 
Turn  (torn)     Sally  wur  sloomy  an'  draggle  taail'd  in  an 

owd  t  gown, 
Turn'd    {See  also  Half-tum'd,  Thrice-tum'd,  Tom'd) 

eyes  were  darken'd  wholly,  T  to  tower'd  Camelot. 

think,  where'er  she  t  her  sight  The  airy  hand 

Growths  of  jasmine  t  Their  humid  arms 

True  love  t  round  on  fixed  poles, 

Eustace  t,  and  smiling  said  to  me, 

'  Look  !  look  !  '  Before  he  ceased  1 1, 

nor  from  her  tendance  t  Into  the  world  without ; 

Then  he  t  His  face  and  pass'd — 

And  all  my  heart  t  from  her, 

She  t,  we  closed,  we  kiss'd, 

I  read,  and  fled  by  night,  and  flying  t : 

I I  once  more,  close-button'd  to  the  storm ; 
And  t  the  cowls  adrift : 
dipt  and  rose.  And  t  to  look  at  her. 
That  show  the  year  is  t. 
And  she  t — her  bosom  shaken 
and  <  it  in  his  glowing  hands  ; 
Are  touch'd,  are  t  to  finest  air. 
Bitterly  weeping  1 1  away  :  (repeat) 
He  t  and  kiss'd  her  where  she  stood : 
Pale  he  t  and  red, 
1 1  and  humm'd  a  bitter  song 
With  half  a  sigh  she  t  the  key. 
And  trust  me  while  1 1  the  page, 
when  he  t  The  current  of  his  talk  to  graver  things 
But  t  her  own  toward  the  wall  and  wept. 
There  she  t,  She  rose,  and  fixt  her  swimming  eyes 
t  our  foreheads  from  the  falling  sun, 
crippled  lad,  and  coming  t  to  fly, 
then  t,  and  groaning  said,  '  Forgive  ! 
The  woman  half  t  roimd  from  him  she  loved, 
t  to  me  with  '  As  you  will ;  Heroic  if  you  will. 
We  t  to  go,  but  Cyril  took  the  child, 
then  we  t,  we  wound  About  the  cliffs. 
She  spoke,  and  t  her  sumptuous  head 
You  t  your  wanner  currents  all  to  her. 
Half-drooping  from  her,  t  her  face, 
Gama  t  to  me  :  '  We  fear,  indeed. 
King,  camp  and  college  t  to  hollow  shows  ; 
And  t  each  face  her  way  : 
Who  t  half-round  to  Psyche  as  she  sprang 
So  she,  and  t  askance  a  wintry  eye  : 
She  t ;  the  very  nape  of  her  white  neck 
So  their  fair  college  t  to  hospital ; 
She  t ;  she  paused  ;  She  stoop'd  ; 
Flash'd  as  they  t  in  air 
And  he  t,  and  I  saw  his  eyes  all  wet. 
But  he  t  and  claspt  me  in  his  arms, 
T  as  he  sat,  and  struck  the  keys 
And  bird  in  air,  and  fishes  t 
even  when  she  t,  the  curse  Had  fall'n. 
But  thou  art  t  to  something  strange. 
Ere  childhood's  flaxen  ringlet  t 
And  left  his  coal  all  t  into  gold 
But  his  essences  t  the  live  air  sick, 
turning  toward  him  wheresoe'er  he  t, 


Marr.  of  Geraint  348 

356 

Geraint  and  E.  117 

Merlin  and  V.  181 

852 

Pelleas  and  E.  544 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  180 

Columbus  57 

The  Flight  74 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  236 

Owd  Boa  104 

The  Ring  127 

Romney's  B.  98 

136 

To  Master  of  B.  13 

Crossing  the  Bar  8 

North.  Cobbler  41 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  32 

Palace  of  Art  225 

D.  of  F.  Women  69 

Love  thou  thy  land  5 

Gardener's  D.  97 

121 

144 

Dora  150 

Audley  Court  54 

Edwin  Morris  114 

134 

136 

Talking  Oak  48 

132 

176 

Locksley  Hall  27 

31 

Sir  Galahad  72 

Edward  Gray  6,  34 

Lady  Clare  82 

The  Captain  62 

The  Letters  9 

18 

To  E.  L.  9 

Enoch  Arden  202 

283 

324 

The  Brook  165 

Aylmer's  Field  519 

Sea  Dreams  59 

286 

Princess,  Pro.  220 

ii  362 

Hi  359 

wl52 

301 

368 

i;120 

478 

vi  144 

209 

330 

343 

mi  17 

154 

Light  Brigade  28 

Grandmother  49 

55 

The  Islet  7 

The  Victim  19 

In  Mem.  vi  37 

„  xli  5 

„      Ixxix  15 

Maud  I  X  11 

„      xiii  11 

Gareth  and  L.  174 


Tarn'd 


750 


Tuwhoo 


Tarn'd  (continued)  mocker  ending  here  T  to  the  right,  Gareth  and  L.  295 
t  Fled  down  the  lane  of  access  to  the  King,  ,,  660 
Before  them  when  he  t  from  watching  him.  „  1032 
Then  t  the  noble  damsel  smihng  at  hun,  „  1188 
Who,  with  back  t,  and  bow'd  above  his  work,  Marr.  of  Geraint  267 
T,  and  beheld  the  four,  and  all  his  face  „  558 
Who,  after,  t  her  daughter  roxmd,  „  740 
like  that  false  pair  who  t  Flying,  Geraint  and  E.  176 
Enid,  the  loss  of  whom  hath  t  me  wild —  „  308 
With  that  he  t  and  look'd  as  keenly  at  her  „  430 
At  this  he  t  all  red  and  paced  his  hall,  „  668 
he  t  his  face  And  kiss'd  her  climbing,  „  760 
saw  her  Pass  into  it,  t  to  the  Prince,  „  887 
And  spake  no  word  until  the  shadow  t ;  Balin  and  Balan  45 
Whereat  she  smiled  and  t  her  to  the  King,  „  201 
and  t  aside  into  the  woods,  „  433 
and,  Vivien  following  him,  T  to  her  :  Merlin  and  V.  33 
Have  t  to  tyrants  when  they  came  to  power)  ,,  518 
She  paused,  she  t  away,  she  hung  her  head,  „  887 
There  to  his  proud  horse  Lancelot  t,  Lancelot  and  E.  347 
he  t  Her  counsel  up  and  down  within  his  mind,  „  368 
And  sharply  t  about  to  hide  her  face,  „  608 
From  foot  to  forehead  exquisitely  t :  „  643 
Then  t  Sir  Torre,  and  being  in  his  moods  h  799 
so  t  Sighing,  and  feign'd  a  sleep  imtil  he  slept.  „  841 
And  now  to  right  she  t,  and  now  to  left,  „  900 
While  thus  he  spoke,  half  t  away,  the  Queen  Brake  „  1197 
then  t  the  tongueless  man  From  the  half-face  „  1261 
'  He  ceased  ;  and  Arthur  t  to  whom  at  first  Holy  Grail  751 
with  a  slow  smile  t  the  lady  roimd  Pelleas  and  E.  91 
Glanced  down  upon  her,  t  and  went  her  way.  „  185 
And  this  persistence  t  her  scorn  to  wrath.  „  218 
Then  t,  and  so  return'd,  and  groaning  „  451 
Awaking  knew  the  sword,  and  /  herself  „  489 
her  ever-veering  fancy  t  To  Pelleas,  „  493 
Then  Arthur  t  to  Kay  the  seneschal,  Last  Tournament  89 
the  King  T  to  him  saying,  '  Is  it  then  so  well  ?  „  114 
and  sharply  t  North  by  the  gate.  „  127 
'  Good :  an  I  <  away  my  love  for  thee  „  706 
He  spoke,  he  t,  then,  flinging  round  her  neck,  „  749 
till  it  touch'd  her,  and  she  t —  Guinevere  80 
And  pale  he  t,  and  reel'd,  ,,  304 
And  even  then  he  t ;  and  more  and  more  „  600 
he  slowly  t  and  slowly  clomb  The  last  hard  foot- 
step Pass,  of  Arthur  446 
We  t :  our  eyes  met :  hers  were  bright.  Lover's  Tale  i  441 
Cries  of  the  partridge  like  a  rusty  key  T  in  a  lock,  „  ii  116 
1 1 :  my  heart  Shrank  in  me,  „  Hi  37 
At  once  they  t,  and  caught  and  brought  him  in  „  iv  376 
But  1 1  my  face  from  him,  an'  he  t  his  face  an'  he 

went.  First  Quarrel  84 

Sally  she  t  a  tongue-banger,  North.  Cobbler  23 

I  fun',  when  'er  back  wur  t,  „              31 

An'  then  'e  t  to  the  sun,  „              48 

I  never  t  my  back  upon  Don  or  devil  yet.'  The  Revenge  31 
Their  favourite— which  I  call '  The  Tables  T.'  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  3 
'  No  harm,  no  harm  '  1 1  again,  „  213 
he  <  to  me,  '  Ay,  good  woman.  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  20 
Who  ever  t  upon  his  heel  to  hear  Tiresias  72 
and  t  in  her  haste  and  fled.  The  Wreck  62 
as  1 1— '  The  heart,  the  heart !  '  „  104 
And  we  t  to  the  growing  dawn.  Despair  22 
and  we  <  to  each  other,  we  kiss'd,  „  53 
are  both  of  them  t  into  blood,  „  91 
From  darkness  into  daylight,  t  and  spoke.  Aiicient  Sage  8 
hope  I  catch  at  vanishes  and  youth  is  t  to  woe.  The  Flight  16 
she  t  herself  roun'  Wid  a  diamond  dhrop  Tomorrow  27 
t  half  round,  and  he  bad  his  tnmipeter  sound  Heavy  Brigade  8 
we  t  to  each  other,  whispering,  all  dismay'd,  „  44 
— and  t,  And  fled  by  many  a  waste,  Demeter  and  F.  73 

I I  in  agean,  an'  I  thowt  o'  the  good  owd  times  Owd  Rod  43 
An'  all  along  o'  the  feller  as  t  'is  back  „  48 
She  t,  and  in  her  soft  imperial  way  I'he  Ring  267 
.spoke  no  more,  but  t  and  pass'd  away.  „  342 
Door-handles  t  when  none  was  at  the  door,  „  412 
He  groan'd,  he  t,  and  in  the  mist  at  once  Death  of  CEnone  49 


Tum'd  (continued)   T  him  again  to  boy,  for  up  he  sprang,   St.  Tdemachus  58 

1 1  away  And  the  hard  blue  eyes  have  it  still,  Charity  9 

So  I  <  my  face  to  the  wall,  „     27 
Turner    See  Broach-turner 

'Tumey  (Attorney)    fur  the  't's  letters  they  foller'd  sa  fast ;  Village  Wife  62 

Turning    (See  also  A-turnin')    t  roimd  a  cassia,  full  in  view,  Lcme  and  Death  4 

And  t  look'd  upon  your  face.  Miller's  D.  157 

t  yellow  Falls,  and  floats  adown  the  air.  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  30 

she  t  on  my  face  The  star-like  sorrows  D.  of  F.  Women  90 

and  1 1  appeal'd  To  one  that  stood  beside.  ,,            99 

1 1  saw,  throned  on  a  flowery  rise,  „          125 

T  to  scorn  with  lips  divine  Of  old  sat  Freedom  23 

And  dropt  the  branch  she  held,  and  i.  Gardener's  D.  157 

But  t  now  and  then  to  speak  with  him,  Enoch  Arden  755 

He  therefore  t  softly  like  a  thief,  „          771 

and  t  to  the  warmth  The  tender  pink  Aylmer's  Field  185 

T  beheld  the  Powers  of  the  House  „            287 

t  round  we  saw  The  Lady  Blanche's  daughter  Princess  ii  320 

t  to  her  maids,  '  Pitch  our  pavilion  here  „       Hi  345 

Half  t  to  the  broken  statue,  said,  „        iv  593 

and  t  saw  The  happy  valleys,  half  in  light,  ,,      Con.  40 

And  t  toward  liim  wheresoe'er  he  tum'd,  Gareth  and  L.  174 

on  Sir  Gareth's  t  to  him,  cried,  '  Stay,  felon  knight,  „           1219 

when  t  to  Lynette  he  told  The  tale  of  Gareth,  „          1272 

the  man  Not  t  round,  nor  looking  at  him,  Marr.  of  Geraint  270 

Whereat  the  armourer  t  all  amazed  „              283 

and  the  two  Were  t  and  admiring  it,  „              637 

And  watch'd  the  sun  blaze  on  the  t  scythe,  Geraint  and  E.  252 

t  romid  she  saw  Dust,  and  the  points  of  lances  „            448 

Was  in  a  manner  pleased,  and  t,  stood.  „            456 

cheek  Bulge  with  the  unswallow'd  piece,  and  t  stared ;  ,,            631 

so  t  side  by  side  They  past,  and  Balin  started  Balin  and  Balan  279 

t  to  her  Squire '  This  fire  of  Heaven,  „              456 

Roll'd  into  light,  and  t  on  its  rims  Lancelot  and  E.  51 

And  found  no  ease  in  t  or  in  rest ;  „            901 

answer'd  not,  but,  sharply  t,  ask'd  Of  Gawain,  Holy  Grail  739 

the  gloom.  That  follows  on  the  t  of  the  world,  Pelleas  and  E.  549 

Then  she,  t  to  Pelleas,  *  0  young  knight,  „            595 

Dagonet,  t  on  the  ball  of  his  foot.  Last  Tournament  329 

t,  past  and  gain'd  Tintagil,  half  in  sea,  „              504 

Strange  music,  and  he  paused,  and  t —  Guinevere  239 

ever  t  round  To  gaze  upon  thee  till  their  eyes  Lover's  Tale  i  490 

that  t  to  me  And  saying  '  It  is  over  :  let  us  go  ' —                „          iv  383 

T  my  way,  the  loveliest  face  on  earth.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  87 

And  t  slowly  toward  him,  Akbar  said  Akbar's  Dream  4 

Is  it  <  a  fainter  red  ?  The  Dawn  22 
Turnip    See  Tonup 

Turnpike     where  this  byway  Joins  The  t  ?  Walk,  to  the  Mail  5 

Turnspit    t's  for  the  clown,  Princess  iv  516 
Turquoise    See  Turkis 

Tiuret  (adj.)     And  high  above  a  piece  of  t  stair,  Marr.  of  Geraint  320 

Turret  (s)     The  wind  is  blowing  in  t  and  tree,  (repeat)  The  Sisters  3,  33 

The  wind  is  howling  in  /  and  tree.  „                  9 

The  wind  is  roaring  in  t  and  tree.  „                 15 

The  wind  is  raging  in  t  and  tree.  „                21 

The  wind  is  raving  in  t  and  tree.  „                27 

upon  a  rock  With  t's  lichen-gilded  like  a  rock  :  Edwin  Morris  8 

Flags,  flutter  out  upon  t's  and  towers  !  W.  to  Alexandra  15 

flower  that  clings  To  the  t's  and  the  walls  ;  Maud  II  iv  34 

In  the  garden  by  the  t's  Of  the  old  manorial  hall.  „             79 

spires  and  t's  half-way  down  Prick'd  thro'  the  mist ;    Gareth  and  L.  193 

And  solid  t's  topsy-turvy  in  air :  „             255 

clamour  of  the  daws  About  her  hollow  t,  Geraint  and  E.  256 

Turtle     blackcap  warbles,  and  the  t  purrs.  Prog,  of  Spring  55 

Tuscan     read  The  T  poets  on  the  lawn  :  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  24 

Tusklike     from  the  floor  T,  arising,  Balin  and  Balan  316 

Tussle    foe  perhaps — a  t  for  it  then  !  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  196 

Tutor  (s)     one  Discuss'd  his  t,  rough  to  common  men,        Princess,  Pro.  114 

And  there  we  took  one  <  as  to  read :  „                179 

her  we  ask'd  of  that  and  this,  And  who  were  t's.  „             i  232 

Tutor  (verb)     nor  tame  and  t  with  mine  eye  Z>.  of  F.  Women  138 

Tuwhit    Thy  t's  are  lull'd,  I  wot,  Tlie  Owl  ii  1 

Thee  to  woo  to  thy  t,  (repeat)  „            11 

Tuwhoo,  t,  t,  tuwhoo-o-o.  „            14 

Tuwhoo    Thy  t's  of  yesternight,  „              2 

Not  a  whit  of  thy  t,  „            10 


Tuwhoo 


751 


Twitter 


The  Owl  a  14 

Last  Tournament  346 

Holy  Grail  786 

Tiresias  68 

Sea- Fairies  38 

Amphion  61 

Kate  8 

Princess  ii  402 

Last  Tournament  251 


Tuwhoo  (continued)     T,  tuwhit,  tuvvhit,  t-o-o. 
T  !  do  you  see  it  ?  do  ye  see  the  star  ?  ' 

Twain    yeam'd  and  strove  To  tear  the  t  asunder 
when  I  knew  the  t  Would  each  waste  each, 

Twang  (s)     sharp  clear  t  of  the  golden  chords 

Twang  (verb)     T  out,  my  fiddle  !  shake  the  twigs  ! 

Twanging    Clear  as  the  t  of  a  harp. 

Fly  t  headless  arrows  at  the  hearts, 

Twangied     Then  he  i  on  his  harp.  And  while  he  t 

Twangling    while  the  t  violin  Struck  up  with  Soldier-laddie,   Princess,  Pro.  85 

But  when  the  t  ended,  skipt  again  ;  Last  Tournament  255 

Twelve    '  he  burnt  His  epic,  his  King  Arthur,  some  t  books ' —    The  Epic  28 

these  t  books  of  mine  Were  faint  Homeric  echoes,  „        38 

With  t  great  shocks  of  soimd,  Godiva  74 

silver  knell  Of  t  sweet  hours  that  past  Maud  I  xviii  65 

in  t  great  battles  overcame  The  heathen  hordes,  Com.  of  Arthur  518 

With  all  the  passion  of  a  t  hours'  fast.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  306 

made  Those  banners  of  t  battles  overhead  Balin  and  BaJan  88 

Those  t  sweet  moons  confused  his  fatherhood.'  Merlin  and  V.  712 

Where  t  great  windows  blazon  Arthur's  wars.  Holy  Grail  248 

Streams  thro'  the  t  great  battles  of  our  King.  ..        250 

Knights  that  in  t  great  battles  splash'd  and  dyed  „         311 

The  t  small  damosels  white  as  Innocence,  Last  Tournament  291 

In  t  great  battles  ruining  overthrown.  Guinevere  432 

ten  or  t  good  paces  or  more.  IJef.  of  LuckTWW  62 

— and  those  t  gates.  Pearl — and  I  woke,  Columbus  86 

as  ye  used  to  do  t  year  sin'  !  Spinster's  S's.  59 

T  times  in  the  year  Bring  me  bliss,  The  Ring  5 

Twelve-divided    Sent  like  the  t-d  concubine  Aylmer's  Field  759 

Twelvemonth     thou  shalt  serve  a  t  and  a  day.'  Gareth  and  L.  157 


meat  and  drink  among  thy  kitchen-knaves  A  t  and  a  day. 


446 


would  ride  A  t  and  a  day  in  quest  of  it,  Holy  Grail  196 

My  t  and  a  day  were  pleasant  to  me.'  „        750 

Twenty     By  t  thorps,  a  little  town.  The  Brook  29 

For  here  I  came,  t  years  back —  „  77 

About  these  meadows,  t  years  ago.'  „        220 

wealth  enough  for  theirs  For  t  matches.  Aylmer's  Field  370 

Why  t  boys  and  girls  should  marry  on  it,  ..  371 

So  old,  that  t  years  before,  a  part  Falling  ..  508 

face  to  face  With  t  months  of  silence,  .,  567 

And  there  thro' t  posts  of  telegraph  Princess,  Pro.  77 

or  so  she  look'd,  Of  t  summers.  .,  ii  108 

And  cheep  and  twitter  t  million  loves.  ..  iv  101 

There  was  not  his  like  that  year  in  t  parishes  round.  (Grandmother  12 
Time  to  think  on  it  then  ;  for  thou'll  be  t  to  weeak.  A.  Farmer,  N.  S.  7 
Thro'  t  folds  of  twisted  dragon,  Gareth  and  L.  510 

Old,  with  the  might  and  breath  of  t  boys.'  „  1106 

ten-times  worthier  to  be  thine  Than  t  Balins,  Balin  and  Balan  69 

Whose  bark  had  plunder'd  t  nameless  isles ;  Merlin  and  V.  559 

0  ay,  it  is  but  t  pages  long,  „  668 
Yea,  t  timas  I  thought  him  Lancelot —  Lancelot  and  E.  535 
For  t  strokes  of  the  blood,  without  a  word,  „  720 
'  I  had  liefer  t  years  Skip  to  the  broken  music         Last  'Tournament  257 

1  sarved  'em  wi'  butter  an'  heggs  fur  huppuds  o'  t  year.  Village  Wife  114 
still  for  t  years  Bound  by  the  golden  cord  The  Ring  428 
But  if  i  million  of  summers  are  stored  in  the  sunlight  still,    The  Dawn  19 


Twenty-five    so  bitter  When  I  am  but  t-f  ? 
Twenty-fold    I  scent  it  t-f.' 
Twice     And  t  three  years  I  crouch'd  on  one 
Twig     Twang  out,  my  fiddle  !  shake  the  t's  ! 

low  bashes  dip  their  t's  in  foam. 
Twilight  (adj.)     Long  alleys  falling  down  to  t  grots, 

Than  our  poor  t  dawn  on  earth — 
Twili^t  (s)     In  the  purple  t's  under  the  sea  ; 

That  sets  at  t  in  a  land  of  reeds. 

About  him  broods  the  t  dim  : 

gray  t  pour'd  On  dewy  pastures,  dewy  trees, 

rain'd  about  the  leaf  T  s  of  airy  silver, 

And  either  t  and  the  day  between  ; 

And  beat  the  t  into  flakes  of  fire. 

Pilots  of  the  purple  t. 

The  t  melted  mto  morn. 

The  t  died  into  the  dark. 

purple-skirted  robe  Of  t  slowly  downward  drawn, 

November  day  Was  growing  duller  t. 

And,  into  mournful  t  mellowing, 


Maud  I  vi  34 

Gareth  and  L.  995 

St.  S.  Stylites  88 

Amphion  61 

Prog,  of  Spring  51 

Ode  to  Memory  107 

Tiresias  206 

The  Mermaid  44 

Caress'd  or  chidden  14 

Two  Voices  263 

Palace  of  Art  85 

Audley  Court  82 

Edwin  Morris  37 

Tithonus  42 

Locksley  Hall  122 

Day-Dm.,  Depart.  16 

24 

The  Voyage  22 

Enoch  Arden  722 

Princess  vi  191 


Twilight  (s)  {continued) 
the  lark 
And  t  gloom'd  ;  and  broader-grown  the  bowers 
Deepening  the  courts  of  t  broke  them  up 
I  watch  the  t  falling  brown 


And  t  dawn'd  ;  and  mom  by  morn 

Princess  vii  45 

„       vii  48 

„  Con.  113 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  14 


The  t  of  eternal  day. 

All  wmds  that  roam  the  t  came 

When  t  was  falling, 

thro'  the  feeble  t  of  this  world  Groping, 

when  the  gloom  Of  t  deepens  roimd  it, 

day  by  day  she  past  In  either  t  ghost-like  to  and  fro  Lancelot  and  E.  849 


In  Mem.  I  16 

In  Mem.  Ixxix  11 

Maud  I  xii  2 

Geraint  and  E.  5 

Balin  and  Balan  233 


Thro'  that  green-glooming  t  of  the  grove, 

day  Grew  drearier  toward  t  falling, 

The  rosy  t  of  a  perfect  day. 

T  and  evening  bell, 
Twin  (adj.)     T  peaks  shadow'd  with  pine  slope  to  the 
dark  hyaline. 

nor  yet  Did  those  t  brothers,  risen  again  and  whole  ; 
Twin  (s)    nor  the  t's  Her  brethren,  tho'  they  love  her, 

two  crowned  t's,  Commerce  and  conquest, 

A  lusty  brace  Of  t's  may  weed  her  of  her  folly. 

Henceforth  that  mystic  bond  betwixt  the  t's- 
Did  I  not  tell  you  they  were  t's  ? — 
Twin-brother    Sleep,  Death's  t-b,  (repeat) 
Twine  (s)     reverend  beard  Of  grisly  t, 
Twine  (verb)     Clasp  her  window,  trail  and  t ! 

Trail  and  t  and  clasp  and  kiss, 

the  child  would  t  A  trustful  hand. 

Began  to  move,  seethe,  t  and  curl : 

T  round  one  sin,  whatever  it  might  be, 

soul  t's  and  mingles  with  the  growths 
Twined    [See  also  Thick-twined) 
neck 

leaning  on  a  fragrant  t  with  vine. 

Behind  his  ankle  t  her  hollow  feet 

knightly  in  me  t  and  clung  Hound  that  one  sin, 

an' t  like  a  band  o'  haay. 

and  this  you  t  About  her  cap. 
Twinkle  (s)     There  is  not  left  a  i  of  a  fin 

Then  with  a  ribald  t  in  his  bleak  eyes — 
Twinkle  (verb)     I  see  his  gray  eyes  t  yet 

The  lights  begin  to  t  from  the  rocks  : 

That  t  into  green  and  gold  : 

A  livelier  emerald  t's  in  the  grass. 
Twinkled     For  all  the  haft  t  with  diamond  sparks, 

T  the  innumerable  ear  and  tail. 

Echo'd  the  walls  ;  a  light  t ; 

For  all  the  haft  t  with  diamond  sparks. 


Pelleas  and  E.  33 

Pass,  of  Arthur  123 

The  Ring  187 

Crossing  the  Bar  9 

Leonine  Eleg.  10 

Princess  vii  89 

i  153 

1)420 

464 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  266 

In  Mem.  I  xviii  2,  3 

Princess  vi  104 

Window,  At  the  Window  2 

4 

In  Mem.  cix  18 

Gareth  and  L.  234 

Holy  Grail  883 

Lover's  Tale  i  132 

locks  a-drooping  t  Round  thy 

Adeline  57 

(Enone  20 

Merlin  and  V.  240 

Holy  Grail  774 

Owd  Rod  22 

Romney's  R.  79 

Geraint  and  E.  474 

The  Ring  199 

Miller's  D.  11 

Ulysses  54 

In  Mem  xi  8 

Maud  I  xviii  51 

M.  d' Arthur  56 

The  Brook  134 

Gareth  and  L.  1370 

Pass,  of  Arthur  224 


Twinkling     momently  The  t  laurel  scatter'd  silver  lights.   Gardener's  D.  118 


Till  at  thy  chuckled  note.  Thou  t  bird, 
Twinn'd     t  as  horse's  ear  and  eye. 
Twin-sister     Than  your  t-s,  Adeline. 

like  t-s's  grew,  T-s's  differently  beautiful. 
Twist  (s)     A  <  of  gold  was  round  her  hair ; 
Twist  (verb)     Would  t  his  girdle  tight,  and  pat 

And  t's  the  grain  with  such  a  roar 

Sware  by  the  scorpion-worm  that  t's  in  hell. 
Twisted     {See  also  A-twizzen'd,  Co-twisted)     A  million 
tapers  flaring  bright  From  t  silvers 

T  as  tight  as  I  could  knot  the  noose  ; 

With  t  quirks  and  happy  hits. 

Now  on  some  t  ivy-net, 

how  the  words  Have  t  back  upon  themselves. 

And  t  shapes  of  lust,  unspeakable, 

now  A  t  snake,  and  now  a  rain  of  pearls. 

Thro'  twenty  folds  of  t  dragon, 

T  hard  in  fierce  embraces. 

Winking  his  eyes,  and  t  all  his  face. 

T  hard  in  mortal  agony 
Twisting    Is  t  round  the  polar  star ; 
Twit    to  t  me  with  the  cause  ! 
Twitch     Paled  at  a  sudden  t  of  his  iron  mouth  ; 

a  <  of  pain  Tortured  her  mouth, 
Twitch'd    t  the  reins.  And  made  his  beast 

Then  his  pale  face  t ; 
Twitter  (verb)    cheep  and  t  twenty  million  loves. 


Early  Spring  38 

Princess  i  57 

Margaret  48 

Edwin  Morris  32 

Merlin  and  V.  221 

Talking  Oak  43 

Princess  v  528 

Last  Tournament  451 

Arabian  Nights  125 

St.  S.  Stylites  65 

Will  Water.  189 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  28 

Aylmer's  Field  755 

Lucretius  157 

Princess,  Pro.  62 

Gareth  and  L.  510 

Vision  of  Sin  40 

Lancelot  and  E.  1145 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  98 

In  Mem.  ci  12 

Lover's  Tale  i  661 

Aylmer's  Field  732 

Princess  vi  105 

Pelleas  and  E.  550 

The  Wreck  101 

Princess  iv  101 


Twitter 


752 


Unarm'd 


1 


Twitter  (s)     as  a  rustle  or  <  in  tlie  wood  Made  dull  his 

iiuier  Last  Tournament  365 

Two     Low-throned  Hesper  is  stayed  between  the  t  peaks  ;  Leonine  Eleg.  11 

With  Cyril  and  with  Florian,  my  t  friends  :  Princess  i  52 

T  widows,  Lady  Psyche,  Lady  Blanche ;  „  128 

With  t  tame  leopards  couch'd  beside  her  throne,  ,,        ii  33 

'  everywhere  T  heads  in  council,  t  beside  the  hearth, 
T  in  the  tangled  business  of  the  world,  T  in  the 
liberal  offices  of  life,  T  plummets  dropt  for  one  to 
sound  the  abyss 

And  t  dear  things  are  one  of  double  worth, 

Before  t  streams  of  light  from  wall  to  wall, 

Herself  and  Lady  Psyche  the  t  arms  ; 

'  Read,'  and  I  read — t  letters — one  her  sire's. 

Till  one  of  those  t  brothers,  half  aside 

Down  From  those  t  bulks  at  Arac's  side, 

So  those  t  foes  above  my  fallen  life, 

T  women  faster  welded  in  one  love 

the  t  gBcat  cats  Close  by  her, 

From  those  t  hosts  that  lay  beside  the  walls. 

Than  when  t  dewdrops  on  the  petal  shake 

wherein  were  wrought  T  grand  designs  ; 

I  walk'd  with  one  I  loved  t  and  thirty  years  ago. 
t  and  thirty  years  were  a  mist  that  rolls  away  ; 

T  dead  men  have  I  known 

T  dead  men  have  I  loved 

T  bright  stars  Peep'd  into  the  shell. 

T  little  hands  that  meet,  (repeat) 

With  Gawain  and  young  Modred,  her  t  sons, 

sign'd  To  those  t  sons  to  pass,  and  let  them  be 

field  of  charlock  in  the  sudden  sun  Between  t  showers,  Gareth  and  L.  389 

by  t  yards  in  casting  bar  or  stone  Was  counted  best ;  „  518 

Now  t  great  entries  open'd  from  the  hall, 

T  forks  are  fixt  into  the  meadow  groimd. 

What  I  these  t  years  past  have  won  for  thee, 

'  These  t  things  shalt  thou  do,  (repeat) 

And  made  it  of  t  colours ; 

And  we  will  live  like  t  birds  in  one  nest, 

But  Enid  in  their  going  had  t  fears. 

But  nevermore  the  same  t  sister  pearls 

He  saw  t  cities  in  a  thousand  boats 

And  t  fair  babes,  and  went  to  distant  lands ; 

For  here  t  brothers,  one  a  king,  had  met 

With  t  strong  sons.  Sir  Torre  and  Sir  Lavaine, 

from  the  carven-work  behind  him  crept  T  dragons  gilded, 

after  t  days'  tarriance  there,  retum'd. 


173 
419 

473 

„       Hi  35 

„      iv  397 

V  302 

499 

„      vi  130 

253 

357 

383 

„      vii  68 

122 

V.  of  Cavieretz  4 

6 

G.  of  Swainston  11 

13 

Minnie  and,  Winnie  13 

Window,  Answer  1,  4 

Com.  of  Arthur  244 

319 


665 

Marr.  of  Geraint  482 

554 

„      580, 586 

Geraint  and  E.  292 
627 
817 

Merlin  and  V.  454 
561 
707 

Lancelot  and  E.  39 
174 
437 
569 


those  t  brethren  slowly  with  bent  brows  Accompanying,        „  1138 

So  those  <  brethren  from  the  chariot  took  „  1146 

Those  t  great  beasts  rose  upright  like  a  man.  Holy  Grail  821 

So  from  each  Of  those  t  pillars  which  from  earth         Lover's  Tale  i  220 
at  one  end  of  the  hall  T  great  funereal  curtains,  „  iv  214 

On  a  sudden  after  t  Italian  years  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  150 

then  t  weeks — no  more — she  joined,  „  271 

Roar  upon  roar  in  a  moment  t  mines  by  the  enemy  Bef.  of  Lucknow  54 
Lord  give  thou  power  to  thy  t  witnesses  !  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  81 

I  So  mock'd,  so  spurn'd,  so  baited  t  whole  days —  „  163 

so  might  there  be  T  Adams,  t  mankinds,  Columbus  54 

There  came  t  voices  from  the  Sepulchre,  T  friars  crying 

'  „        95 


that  if  Spain  should  oust 
T  voices  heard  on  earth  no  more  ; 
'  His  t  wild  woodland  flowers.' 
I'  a  kep'  thruf  thick  an'  thin  my  t  'oonderd  a-year 

to  mysen ; 
Thou  'ed  wellnigh  purr'd  ma  awaay  fro'  my  can  t 

'oonderd  a-year. 
Like  some  conjectured  planet  in  mid  heaven  Between 

t  Suns,  Prin.  Beatrice  21 

An'  the  Heagle  'as  hed  t  heads  stannin'  theere  Owd  Rod  25 

'  The  souls  Of  t  repentant  Lovers  guard  the  ring  ; ' 
T  lovers  parted  by  a  scurrilous  tale  Had  quarrell'd, 
T  lovers  parted  by  no  scurrilous  tale — 
— those  t  Ghost  lovers —     Father.    Lovers  yet — 
What  be  those  t  shapes  high  over  the  sacred  fountain, 
t  known  peaks  they  stand  ever  spreading 
T  words, '  My  Rose '  set  all  your  face  aglow. 


T  trains  clash'd :  then  and  there  be  was  crush'd 


To  E.  Fitzgerald  41 
The  Flight  80 

Spinster's  S's.  12 

58 


The  Ring  198 

208 

427 

459 

Parnassus  9 

11 

Roses  on  the  T.  3 


Charity  21 


Two-cell'd     The  t-c  heart  beating,  with  one  full  stroke,  Princess  vii  307 

Twofold     One  t  mightier  than  the  other  was.  Lover's  Tale  i  211 

Twofooted     T  at  the  limit  of  his  chain,  Aylmer's  Field  127 

Twy-natured     T-n  is  no  nature  :  Liicretius  194 

Type  (s)     The'  all  her  fairest  forms  are  i's  of  thee,  Isabel  39 

'  That  t  of  Perfect  in  his  mind  Two  Voices  292 

Became  an  outward  breathing  t,  Miller's  D.  226 

carved  cross-bones,  the  t's  of  Death,  Will  Water.  245 

And  ev'n  for  want  of  such  a  t.  In  Mem.  xxxiii  16 

So  careful  of  the  t  she  seems,  ,,                 Ivl 

'  So  careful  of  the  t  ? '  but  no.  „                 Ivi  1 

She  cries,  '  A  thousand  t's  are  gone  :  „                     3 

man,  that  with  me  trod  This  planet,  was  a  noble  t  „         Con.  138 

Pass,  thou  deathlike  t  of  pain,  Maud  II  iv  58 

Type  (verb)     '  Dear,  but  let  us  t  them  now  Princess  vii  299 

If  so  he  <  this  work  of  time  In  Mem.  cxviii  16 

Which  t's  all  Nature's  male  and  female  On  One  who  aff.  E.  M.  3 

Tyrannous    And  fused  together  in  the  t  light —  Lover's  Tale  ii  67 

l^anny    And  play  the  slave  to  gain  the  t.  Princess  iv  132 

Thought  on  all  her  evil  tyrannies,  BoSdicea  80 

Out  of  evil  evil  flourishes,  out  of  1 1  buds.  „        83 

iron  t  now  should  bend  or  cease,  Maud  III  vi  20 

My  warning  that  the  t  of  one  Was  prelude  to 

the  t  of  all  ?    My  counsel  that  the  t  of  all  Led 

backward  to  the  t  of  one  ?  Tiresias  73 

Tyrant  (adj.)     Caught  in  a  great  old  t  spider's  web,  Merlin  and  V.  259 

No  father  now,  the  t  vassal  of  a  t  vice  !  The  Flight  25 
Tyrant  (s)     Faster  binds  a  t's  power ;  And  the  t's  cruel 

glee  Forces  on  the  freer  hour.  Vision  of  Sin  128 

Pity,  the  violet  on  the  t's  grave.  Aylmer's  Field  845 

'  Kill  him  now.  The  t !  Princess,  Pro.  207 

our  dead  captain  taught  The  t.  Ode  on  Well.  70 

Our  Britain  cannot  salve  a  t  o'er.  Third  of  Feb.  20 

we  will  not  spare  the  t  one  hard  word.  „            42 

makes  you  t's  in  your  iron  skies,  Maud  I  xviii  37 

Than  hardest  t's  in  their  day  of  power,  Geraint  and  E.  695 

Have  tum'd  to  t's  when  they  came  to  power)  Merlin  and  V.  518 
Gone  the  t  of  my  youth,                                             Locksley  H.,  Sixty  43 

Waeriob  of  God,  man's  friend,  and  t's  foe,  Efit.  on  Gordon  1 

Tyre    Against  the  guiltless  heirs  of  him  from  T,  Tiresias  12 

red-hot  palms  of  a  Moloch  of  T,  The  Dawn  2 

Tyrol     A  cap  of  T  borrow'd  from  the  hall.  Princess  iv  601 


Udder     Nosing  the  mother's  u,  Lucretius  100 
Udder'd    See  Deep-ndder'd 

Ugly     (See  also  Hug^)     Feyther  'ud  saay  I  wur  u  es  sin.   Spinster's  S's.  15 

Ulama     our  U,  Who  "  sitting  on  green  sofas  Akbar's  Dream  47 

Ulcer     the  u,  eating  thro'  my  skin,  St.  S.  Stylites  67 

Ulcerous    aches,  stitches,  u  throes  and  cramps,  „            13 
Ulfius  (a  Knight  of  the  Bound  Table)     U,  and 

Brastias,  and  Bedivere,  (repeat)  Com.  of  Arthur  136,  165 

And  U  and  Brastias  answer'd,  '  Ay.'  „                      173 

Ulric     Where  noble  U  dwells  forlorn,  Happy  10 

Who  whisper'd  me  '  your  U  loves  ' —  „       62 

'  Let  us  revenge  ourselves,  your  U  woos  my  wife  ' —  „      63 

Ultramontane    Most  generous  of  all  V's,  Ward,  In  Mem.,  W.  G.  Ward  4 

Ulysses     U,  much-experienced  man.  To  Ulysses  1 

Umpire    by  common  voice.  Elected  u,  CEnone  85 

Sat  their  great  u,  looking  o'er  the  lists.  Last  Tournament  159 

Unabated    In  confidence  of  u  strength.  Lover's  Tale  i  511 

Unaccomplish'd    The  hope  of  u  years  In  Mem.  xci  7 

and  Balan  lurking  there  (His  quest  was  u)  Balin  and  Balan  547 
Unanimous    Clash  the  darts  and  on  the  buckler  beat  with 

rapid  u  hand,  Boddicea  79 

Unannounced    My  lady's  Indian  kinsman  u  Aylmer's  Field  190 

Unanswer'd     V,  since  I  spake  not ;  Lover's  Tale  i  101 

Uoapproached    Shelter'd  his  u  mysteries  :  Alexander  11 

not  rather  A  sacred,  secret,  u  woe,  Lover's  Tale  i  679 

Unarm'd    the  lawless  warrior  paced  U,  Gareth  and  L.  915 

See  that  he  fall  not  on  thee  suddenly,  And  slay  thee  u  :        „  922 

For  tho'  I  ride  u,  I  do  not  doubt  To  find,  Marr.  of  Geraint  218 


Unarm'd 


753 


Understand 


Unarm'd  (contimied)    all  u  I  rode,  and  thought  to  find 
Arms 

He  sits  u  ;  I  hold  a  finger  up  ; 
Unashamed     Delivers  brawling  judgments,  u, 
Unaskd    lialf  abash'd  him  ;  yet  u, 

A  trustful  hand,  m,  in  thine. 

Then  tending  her  rough  lord,  tho'  all  u. 

You  follow'd  me  u  ;  And  when  I  look'd, 

And  clear  myself  u — not  I. 
Unauthorized    Yet  that  I  came  not  all  u 
Unavenged     With  life-long  injuries  burning  u, 
Unaware    rose  to  look  at  it,  But  touch'd  it  u's  : 

so  blind  in  rage  that  u's  He  burst  his  lance 

All  lis  before  his  half-shut  eyes, 
Unbeautiful    "  Nothing  in  nature  is  u  ; 
Unbecoming     Not  u  men  that  strove  with  Gods. 
Unbeguiled     At  me  you  smiled,  but  u 
Unbeheld    Mayst  well  behold  them  u. 
Unbelief     curse  Of  blindness  and  their  u, 

I  reap  No  revenue  from  the  field  of  u. 

Till  this  embattled  wall  of  u  My  prison. 
Unbelievable    pine  shot  aloft  from  the  crag  to  an  u 

height, 
Unbiased     U  by  self -profit,  oh  ! 
Unbidden    camels  knelt  U, 

( )  «  arble,  imchidden,  u  ! 
Unbind     U  him  now.  And  thrust  him  out  of  doors  ; 

Sing,  and  u  my  heart  that  I  may  weep.' 
Unblazon'd    See  Yet-unblazon'd 
Unblest    never  child  be  born  of  me  U, 

I  care  no  longer,  being  all  w  : 
Unblinded    who  shall  gaze  upon  My  palace  with  u  eyes,      Palace  of  Art  42 
Unblissful    Thrill'd  thro'  mine  ears  in  that  %  clime,         Z>.  oj  F.  Women  82 
Unboding     U  critic-pen.  Will  Water.  42 

Unborn    (See  also  Bom-unborn)     But  where  a  passion 
yet  u  perhaps  Lay  hidden 

I  see  their  u  faces  shine 

By  village  eyes  as  yet  u  ; 

The  cackle  of  the  u  about  the  grave. 
Unbound    being,  as  I  think,  U  as  yet,  and  gentle, 

Laugh'il,  and  m,  and  thrust  him  from  the  gate. 
Unbridled    For  Kate  hath  an  u  tongue. 
Unbroken    (See  also  Yet-unbroken)     In  sweet  dreams 

softer  than  u  rest  Ode  to  Memory  29 

Caught  his  u  limbs  from  the  dark  field,  Pelleas  and  E.  585 

Weird  Titan  by  thy  winter  weight  of  years  As  yet  u.  To  Victor  Hugo  8 
Unburiable    yet-warm  corpse,  and  yet  «, 
Unbumish'd    To  rust  %,  not  to  shine  in  use  ! 
Unbury    made  by  me,  may  seek  to  u  me, 
Uncall'd    That  you  came  unwish'd  for,  u, 
Uncall'd  for     (power  of  herself  Would  come  u  f) 
Uncancell'd    if  left  u,  had  been  so  sweet : 
Uncared  for     U  f,  spied  its  mother  and  began 

U  f,  gird  the  windy  grove. 

He  must  not  pass  u  f. 


Marr.  of  Geraint  417 

Geraint  and  E.  337 

Merlin  and  V.  665 

Enoch  Arden  288 

In  Mem.  cix  19 

Geraint  and  E.  405 

Merlin  and  V.  298 

Happy  78 

Princess  iv  467 

Geraint  and  E.  696 

388 

Balin  and  Balan  328 

Lover's  Tale  ii  153 

t350 

Ulysses  53 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  5 

(Enone  89 

Tiresias  59 

Akbar's  Dream  67 

Doubt  and  Prayer  11 

V.  of  Maeldune  16 

CEnone  159 

Merlin  and  V.  576 

The  Throstle  14 

Pelleas  and  E.  256 

Guinevere  166 

(Enone  255 
Come  not,  when,  etc.  8 


Aylm^'s  Field  101 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  19 

Con.  59 

Merlin  and  V.  507 

Lancelot  and  E.  1386 

Pelleas  and  E.  260 

Kate  7 


Gareth  and  L.  80 

Ulysses  23 

Columbus  206 

Despair  5 

(Enone  147 

Maud  I  xix  46 

Princess  vi  136 

In  Mem.  ci  13 

Lancelot  and  E.  536 

Uncertain     in  dark  comers  of  her  palace  stood  U  shapes  ;  Palaceof  Art  238 


U  as  a  vision  or  a  dream,  Enoch  Arden  356 

That  after  all  these  sad  u  years,  „          415 

moving  thro'  the  u  gloom.  Princess  iv  216 

O'er  his  u  shadow  droops  the  day.  Prog,  of  Spring  8 

If  my  body  come  from  brutes,  my  soul  u.  By  an  Evolution.  5 

Unchain'd    Which  he  u  for  all  the  world  to  come.'  Columbus  215 

Unchallenged    deeds  will  come  and  go  U,  Holy  Grail  319 

Uncharity     Fought  with  what  seem'd  my  own  u ;  Sea  Dreams  73 

Uncharm'd     may  now  assure  you  mine  ;  So  live  u.  Merlin  and  V.  550 

Unchidden     O  warble  u,  unbidden  !  The  Throstle  14 

Unclad      U  herself  in  haste  ;  adown  the  stair  Godiva  48 

Unclaim'd     query  pass  U,  in  flushing  silence.  The  Brook  105 

Unclasp'd     I  scarce  should  be  u  at  night.  Miller's  D.  186 

Or  sweet  Europa's  mantle  blew  w,  Palace  of  Art  117 

U  the  wedded  eagles  of  her  belt,  Godiva  43 

Unclaspii^     U  flung  the  casement  back,  Lancelot  and  E.  981 

Uncle     Now  Dora  felt  her  u's  will  in  aU,  Dora  5 

'  It  cannot  be  :  my  u's  mind  will  change  !  '  „  47 

'  I  have  obey'd  my  u  until  now,  „  59 


Uncle  (continued)     I  will  set  him  in  my  u's  eye  Among  the 

.wheat;  .  Dora  67 

tied  it  round  his  hat  To  make  him  pleasing  in  her  u's  eye.  „    84 

And  Dora  said,  '  My  u  took  the  boy  ;  „  114 

and  out  they  came  Trustees  and  Aunts  and  U's.        Edwin  Morris  121 
I  was  left  a  trampled  orphan,  and  a  selfish  u's 

ward. 
Had  babbled  '  J7  '  on  my  knee  ; 
Your  good  U,  whom  You  count  the  father  of 

your  fortune, 
my  best  And  oldest  friend,  your  U,  wishes  it. 

Unclosed     U  the  hand,  and  from  it  drew  the  ring. 

Unclouded     All  in  the  blue  u  weather 

Uncoil'd     the  braid  Slipt  and  u  itself, 

Uncomforted      U,  leaving  my  ancient  love 

Unconfined     From  cells  of  madness  u, 

But  when  I  see  thee  roam,  with  tresses  u, 

Uncongeal     When  meres  begin  to  u, 

Uncongenial    by  degrees  May  into  u  spirits  flow ; 

Unconjecttured     With  gods  in  u  bliss. 

Unconquerable     I  believed  myself  U, 

Unconscious    {See  also  Half-unconscious) 
feeble,  all  u  of  itself, 
O  somewhere,  meek,  u  dove, 
U  of  the  sliding  hour, 

Uncourteous     in  lois  heat  and  agony,  seem  U, 

Unctuous    laying  down  an  u  lease  Of  life, 
And  that  one  u  mouth  which  lured  him, 

Uncurl'd     Did  he  push,  when  he  was  u. 

Uncut    See  Half-uncut 

Undazzled    Slowly  my  sense  u. 

Under     Now  gnaw'd  his  u,  now  his  upper  lip, 

Undercurrent    some  dark  u  woe  That  seems  to  draw- 

Under-flame    Grew  darker  from  that  u-f : 

Underfoot    Lest  the  harsh  shingle  should  grate  u, 
F"or  u  the  herb  was  dry  ; 
then  or  now  Utterly  smite  the  heathen  u, 
and  threw  U  there  in  the  fray — 

Under-fringe     Broad-faced  with  u-f  of  russet  beard, 

Undergone     both  have  u  That  trouble  which  has  left  me 

Underground  (adj.)     as  the  blast  of  that  u  thunderclap 

echo'd  away,  Def.  of  Lucknow  32 

Underground  (adv.  and  s)     Will  vex  thee  lying  u  ?  Two  Voices  111 

Averill  was  a  decad  and  a  half  His  elder,  and  their 

parents  u) 
Then  sprang  the  happier  day  from  u  ; 
But  when  the  next  day  broke  from  u, 
But  when  the  next  sun  brake  from  u, 
So  when  the  sun  broke  next  from  under  ground, 
But  when  the  next  day  brake  from  under  ground- 

iron-stay'd  In  damp  and  dismal  dungeons  u,  Lover's  Tale  ii  149 

But  thou  art  silent  u,  Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son.  13 

Underhand     that  of  a  kind  The  viler,  as  u,  Maud  I  i  28 

Under-kingdom    hundred  u-k's  that  he  sway'd  Merlin  and  V.  582 

Underlip    u,  you  may  call  it  a  little  too  ripe,  Maud  I  ii  9 

Under-lying    That  name  the  u-l  dead.  In  Mem.  ii  2 

Underneath    from  end  to  end  Of  all  the  landscape  u,  „  c  2 

Underpropt    u  a  rich  Throne  of  the  massive  ore,  Arabian  Nights  145 

Under-roof     An  u-r  of  doleful  gray.  Dying  Swan  4 

Undersea    and  we  past  Over  that  u  isle,  V.  of  Maeldune  77 

Underscored     only  yours  ; '  and  this  Thrice  u.  Edwin  Morris  107 

Under-shapen     His  dwarf,  a  vicious  u-s  thing,  Marr.  of  Geraint  412 

Under-sky    And  floating  about  the  u-s.  Dying  Swan  25 

Understand    (See  also  Understond,  Undherstan')    He 

answers  not,  nor  u's.  Two  Voices  246 

a  sort  of  allegory,  (For  you  will  u  it)  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art.  2 

what  he  whisper'd  under  Heaven  None  else  could  u  ;  Talking  Oak  22 
He  will  answer  to  the  purpose,  easy  things  to  u —  Locksley  Hall  55 
When  thy  nerves  could  M  Vision  of  Sin  160 

But  in  a  tongue  no  man  could  u ;  „         222 

tongue  Was  loosen'd,  till  he  made  them  u  ;  Enoch  Arden  645 

mark  me  and  u,  While  I  have  power  to  speak.  „  876 

Nor  could  he  u  how  money  breeds.  The  Brook  6 

A  noise  of  songs  they  would  not  u  :  Princess  vi  40 

but  if  I  could  u  What  you  are.  Flow,  in  cran.  wall  4 

3    B 


Locksley  Hall  156 
In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  13 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  27 

47: 

The  Ring  269  ■ 
L.  of  Shalott  Hi  19 
Merlin  and  V.  889 
(Enone  260 
Two  Voices  371 
Elednore  122 
Two  Voices  407 
Mine  be  the  strength  11 
In  Mem.  xciii  10 
Geraint  and  E.  836 
frail  at  first  And 

Princess  vii  117 

In  Mem.  vi  25 

„        xliii  5 

Lancelot  and  E.  855 

Will  Water.  243 

Sea  Dreams  14 

Maud  II  ii  18 

D.  of  F.  Women  177 

Geraint  and  E.  669 

Maud  I  xviii  83 

Arabian  Nights  91 

Enx>ch  Arden  772 

In  Mem.  xcv  2 

Com.  of  Arthur  423 

Heavy  Brigade  55 

Geraint  and  E.  537 

736 


Aylmer's  Field  83 

Gareth  and  L.  1421 

Lancelot  and  E.  413 

1137 

Holy  Grail  328 

338 


Understand 

Understand  (coiUinued)    The  words  were  hard  to  u. 

'  I  cannot  u  :  I  love.' 

What  is,  and  no  man  u's  ; 

nursed  at  ease  and  brought  to  w  A  sad  astrology, 

Thou  canst  not  u  That  thou  art  left  for  ever  alone  : 

I  hold  a  finger  up  ;  They  u : 

But  you  are  man,  you  well  can  u 

these  can  never  know  thee,  They  cannot  u  me. 

if  you  shall  fail  to  u  What  England  is. 

Now  first  we  stand  and  u, 
Xlnderstandest    Nor  w  bound  nor  boimdlessness, 
UnderstandLog    u  all  the  foolish  work  Of  Fancy, 
Understond  (understand)    I  kep  'um,  my  lass,  tha 

mun  u  ;  i 

Understood    A  notice  faintly  u, 

O  thou  that  stonest,  hadst  thou  u 


754 


Universal 


In  Mem.  Ixix  20 

„         xcvii  36 

„        cxxiv  22 

Maud  I  xviii  35 

„  //  Hi  3 

Geraint  and  E.  338 

Merlin  and  V.  697 

Lover's  Tale  i  286 

The  Fleet  1 

MechanophUiis  1 

Ancient  Sage  48 

Princess  m  116 


Farmer,  0.  iS.  23 
Two  Voices  431 
Ayhner's  Field  739 


The  land,  he  u,  for  miles  about  Was  tiU'd  by  women  ;       Princess  i  191 


Loved  deeplier,  darklier  u  ; 

the  prophecy  given  of  old  And  then  not  u, 

And  best  by  her  that  bore  her  u. 
Undertake    Wilt  thou  I  u  them  as  we  pass, 
Under-tone    And  from  within  me  a  clear  u-t 
Underwent    Did  more,  and  u,  and  overcame, 

Gareth  all  for  glory  u  The  sooty  yoke  of  kitchen- 


In  Mem.  cxxix  10 

Mavd  II  V  43 

Marr.  of  Geraint  511 

Balin  and  Balan  14 

B.  of  F.  Women  81 

Godiva  10 

Gareth  and  i.  478 

Underworld    That  brings  our  friends  up  from  the  u.  Princess  iv  45 

Undescried    tho'  w.  Winning  its  way  with  extreme  gentleness  Isabel  22 

Undevelopt     For  woman  is  not  %  man.  Princess  vii  275 

Undherstan'  (understand)     '  me  dear,  av  I  w,'  Tomorrow  56 

Undinuned    And  holdeth  his  u  forehead  far  Lover's  Tale  i  513 

Undiscovered    And  thine  in  u  lands.  In  Mem.  xl  32 

Undissolved    A  sleep  by  kisses  u,  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  51 

Lilian  11 

Two  Voices  22,2 

Maud  I  xvi  19 

Gareth  and  L.  All 

Merlin  and  V.  686 

Forlorn  4 

M.  d' Arthur  93 

Pass,  of  Arthur  261 

(Enone  115 

St.  S.  Stylites  116 

Princess  v  253 

In  Mem.  cxiii  20 

Isabel  3 

Poet's  Mind  33 

(Enone  132 


Undo    Thoroughly  to  u  me, 

in  seeking  to  u  One  riddle,  and  to  find  the  true, 

To  know  her  beauty  might  half  u  it. 

fineness,  Lancelot,  some  fine  day  U  thee  not — 

And  never  could  u  it :  ask  no  more : 
Undoing    flattery  and  the  craft  Which  were  my  u  .  . 
Undone    What  harm,  w  ?  deep  harm  to  disobey. 

What  harm,  u  ?     Deep  harm  to  disobey, 
Undrainable    labour'd  mine  u  of  ore. 
Undress'd     wear  an  u  goatskin  on  my  back  ; 
Undulated    u  The  banner  :  anon  to  meet  us 
Undulation    cries.  And  u's  to  and  fro. 
Undying    Clear,  without  heat,  u, 

And  it  sings  a  song  of  u  love  ; 

with  u  bliss  In  knowledge  of  their  own  supremacy 


Uneam'd     doubtless,  all  u  by  noble  deeds.  Balin  and  Balan  471 

Unearthlier     V  than  all  shriek  of  bird  or  beast,  „              545 

Unequal    in  true  marriage  lies  Nor  equal,  nor  u :  Princess  vii  303 

I  mete  and  dole  U  laws  imto  a  savage  race,  Ulysses  4 

Unexhausted    bloodily  fall  the  battle-axe,  u,  Boadxcea  56 

Unexpect^     as  one  Caught  in  a  burst  of  u  storm,  Ayhner's  Field  285 

Unezpress'd     I  leave  thy  praises  %  In  Mem.  Ixxv  1 

Unfoir    Who  shall  call  me  ungentle,  u,  Maud  I  xiii  14 

Unfaith     Faith  and  u  can  ne'er  be  equal  po^vers  :  Merlin  and  V.  388 

U  in  aught  is  want  of  faith  in  all.  „             389 

Unfaithful    With  quiet  eyes  u  to  the  truth,  Love  and  Duty  94 

And  faith  u  kept  him  falsely  true.  Lancelot  and  E.  877 
Unfamiliar     But  u  Amo,  and  the  dome  Of  Brunelleschi ;        The  Brook  189 

Unfarrow'd    And  so  retum'd  u  to  her  sty.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  100 

Unfathom'd     There  on  the  depth  of  an  u  woe  Lover's  Tale  i  746 

Unfelt    shock  of  gloom  had  fall'n  U,  „              506 

Unfetter'd     U  by  the  sense  of  crime,  In  Mem.  xxvii  7 

Unfinish'd    work  is  left  U — if  I  go.  Lucretius  104 

Unfit     U  for  earth,  u  for  heaven,  St.  S.  Stylites  3 

Unfold     I  see  thy  beauty  gradually  u,  Eleanore  70 

And  like  a  flower  that  cannot  all  u.  Princess  vii  141 

Unfolding    hour  by  hour  u  woodbine  leaves  Prog,  of  Spring  7 

Unforgotten    Moved  from  the  cloud  of  u  things,  Lover's  Tale  i  48 

Unfrequent     Z7,  low,  as  tho'  it  told  its  pulses  ;  „         ii  55 

Unfriendly     U  of  your  parted  ^est.  The  Wanderer  4 

Unfrowardly    thou  canst  not  bide,  m,  Pelleas  and  E.  597 

Unfnlfill'd    O  therefore  that  the  u  desire,  Tiresias  79 

Unfurl    u  the  maiden  banner  of  our  rights.  Princess  iv  503 


Unfurnish'd      U  brows,  tempestuous  tongues —  Freedom  38 

Ungainliness    mocking  at  the  much  u,  Last  Tournament  728 
Ungainly    See  Unheppen 

Ungamer'd     And  whirl  the  w  sheaf  afar.  In  Mem.  Ixxii  23 

Ungather'd     To-night  u  let  us  leave  „               cvl 

Ungenerous    "  TJ,  dishonourable,  base,  Aylmer's  Field  292 

Ungentle     Who  shall  call  me  u,  mifair,  Maud  I  xiii  14 

to  be  gentle  than  u  with  you  ;  Geraint  and  E.  716 

The  most  u  knight  in  Arthur's  hall.'  Gareth  and  L.  757 

Ungracious     I  am  more  u  ev'n  than  you,  Aylmer's  Field  247 

A  bird's-eye-view  of  all  the  u  past ;  Princess  ii  125 

'  U  I  '  answer'd  Florian ;  '  have  you  learnt  „             392 

We  knew  not  your  u  laws,  „        iv  399 

Ungraciousness     I  seem  to  be  u  itself.'  Aylmer's  Field  245 

Ungrateful     Not  all  u  to  thine  ear.  hi  Mem.  xxxviii  12 

And  '  petty  Ogress,'  and  '  u  Puss,'  Princess,  Pro.  157_ 

Unguent    heal'd  Thy  hurt  and  heart  with  xi  and 

caress —  Last  Tour-nametit  595 

Unhail'd    u  The  shallop  flitteth  silken-sail'd  L.  of  Shallott  i  21 

Unhallow'd     But  all  is  new  u  ground.  In  Mem.  civ  12 

Unhanded     High  things  were  spoken  there,  u  down  ;  Alexander  12 
Unhappiness    by  some  device  Full  cowardly,  or  by 

mere  u,  Gareth  and  L.  768 

by  sorcery  or  u  Or  some  device,  hast  foully  overthro\\Ti),        ..  997 

Hast  overthrown  thro'  mere  u),  ,,        1059 

all  thro'  mere  u —  ,.        1234 

Device  and  sorcery  and  u —  ..         1235 

thro'  the  mere  u  Of  one  who  came  to  help  thee,  „        1237 

Else  must  I  die  thro'  mine  «.'  Pelleas  and  E.  332 

On  whom  I  brought  a  strange  u.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  89 

Unhappy     Nor  u,  nor  at  rest,  Adeline  4 

There  are  enough  u  on  this  earth,  (Enone  239 

he  turn'd  His  face  and  pass'd — u  that  I  am  !  Dora  151 

The  spindlings  look  u.  Amphion  92 

He  was  not  all  u.     His  resolve  Upbore  him,  Enoch  Arden  799 
Not  all  M,  having  loved  God's  best  And  greatest,    Lancelot  and  E.  1093 

made  The  happy  and  the  u  love,  Lover's  Tale  i  753 

Often  I  seem  d  u,  and  often  as  happy  too.  First  Quarrel  31 
In  the  dead  u  night,  and  when  the  rain  is  on  the 

roof.  Locksley  Hall  78 

And  vex  the  u  dust  thou  wouldst  not  save.  Come  not,  when,  etc.  4 

So  stood  the  u  mother  open-mouth'd.  Princess  vi  143 

Confused  me  like  the  u  bark  In  Mem .  xvi  12 

So  sadly  lost  on  that  u  night ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  689 

that  u  cliild  Past  in  her  barge  :  Last  Tournament  44 
wail  For  ever  woke  the  u  Past  again,                    Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  263 

has  it  come  to  this,  O  u  creature  ?  Forlorn  44 

Unhann'd    yonder  stands,  Modred,  u,  Pass,  of  Arthur  153 

But  the  new-wedded  wife  was  u.  Charity  22 
Unheard    grief  of  circumstance  Wert  thou,  and 

yet  u.  Supp.  Confessions  93 

behold  them  unbeheld,  u  Hear  all,  (Enone  89 

They  were  modulated  so  To  an  u  melody,  Eleanore  64 

And  dies  u  within  his  tree,  You  wight  have  won  32 

Unhearing     shriek'd  out  '  Traitor  '  to  the  u  wall,  Lancelot  and  E.  612 

Unheeded      (' :  and  detaching,  fold  by  fold.  Vision  of  Sin  51 

U :  and  I  thought  I  would  have  spoken,  „              55 

Unheedful     or  as  once  we  met  U,  Gardener's  D.  266 

Unheppen  (ungainly)    Straange  an'  u  Miss  Lucy  !  Village  Wife  100 

Unhooded     and  m  casting  off  The  goodly  falcon  Merlin  and  V.  130 

Unicom     hornless  u's,  Crack'd  basilisks,  Holy  Grail  717 

Unimpassion'd     Beneath  a  pale  and  u  moon,  Aylmer's  Field  334 

Uninvaded    u  sleep  The  Kraken  sleepeth  :  The  Kraken  3 

Uninvited    The  Abominable,  that  u  came  (Enone  224 

Union     Should  banded  u's  persecute  Opinion,  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  17 

our  knights  at  feast  Have  pledged  us  in  this  u,         Lancelot  and  E.  115 

Here's  to  your  happy  u  with  my  child  !  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  68 

power  to  fuse  My  myriads  into  u  under  one  ;  Akbar's  Dream  157 

Unison     All  your  voices  in  u.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  63 

Unity    These  three  made  m  so  sweet,  Two  Voices  421 

It  was  but  u  of  place  In  Mem.  xiii  3 

Universal    and  u  Peace  Lie  like  a  shaft  of  light  Golden  Year  48 

the  kindly  earth  shall  slumber,  lapt  in  u  law.  Locksley  Hall  130 

from  it  preach'd  An  u  culture  for  the  crowd.  Princess,  Pro.  109 

sad  and  slow,  As  fits  an  u  woe,  Ode  on  Well.  14 


I 


Universal 


755 


Unshorn 


Vnivosal  {continited)     And  praise  the  invisible  u 

Lord,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  3 

The  voices  of  our  u  sea  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  16 

led  my  friend  Back  to  the  pure  and  u  church.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  71 
Robed  in  u  harvest  up  to  either  pole  she  smiles, 

U  ocean  softly  washing  all  her  warless  Isles,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  169 

Thou  that  seest  U  Nature  moved  by  U  Mind  ;  To  Virgil  21 

Our  Shakespeare's  bland  and  u  eye  Dwells  To  W.  C.  Macready  13 

Universe     wanderings  Of  this  most  intricate  U  A  Character  3 

That  in  a  boundless  u  Is  boundless  better,  Two  Voices  26 

knowing  not  the  u,  I  fear  to  slide  from  bad  to  worse.  „        230 

atom-streams  And  torrents  of  her  myriad  u,  Ltu^retius  39 

And  fleeting  thro'  the  boundless  u,  „       161 

Quite  sunder'd  from  the  moving  U,  Princess  vii  52 

suns  of  the  limitless  U  sparkled  and  shone  Despair  15 
University    {See  also  Varsity)    All  wild  to  found  an  U  For 

maidens,  Princess  i  150 

Unjust     and  yet  Pardon — too  harsh,  u.  Columbus  199 

Unkept    montage,  yet  m.  Had  relish  fiery-new.  Will  Water.  97 

Unkind    False-eyed  Hesper,  w,  Leonine  Eleg.  16 

Ah,  miserable  and  u,  untrue,  M.  d' Arthur  119 

be  jealous  and  hard  and  «.'  Grandmother  54 

'  Ah,  miserable  and  u,  untrue.  Pass,  of  Arthur  287 

Unkindliness     Kill'd  with  unutterable  u.'  Merlin  and  V.  886 

Unkinglike    wall  them  up  perforce  in  mine — 

unwise,  U  ; —  Akbar's  Dream  63 
UnknightUke    all  u,  writhed  his  wiry  arms  Aroimd 

him,  Gareth  and  L.  1150 

Unknightly     U,  traitor-hearted  !     Woe  is  me  !  M.  d  Arthur  120 

u  with  flat  hand,  However  lightly,  Geraint  and  E.  717 

U,  traitor-hearted  !     Woe  is  me  !  Pass,  of  Arthur  288 

Unknit    God  u's  the  riddle  of  the  one.  Lover's  Tale  i  181 

Unknown    And  left  a  want  u  before ;  Miller's  D.  228 

hears  the  low  Moan  of  an  u  sea ;  Palace  of  Art  280 

His  wife,  an  u  artist's  orphan  child —  Sea  Dreams  2 

remain'd  among  us  In  our  yotmg  nursery  still  u,  Princess  iv  332 

Known  and  u  ;  human,  divine  ;  In  Mem.  cxxix  5 

Sweet  were  the  days  when  I  was  all  m,  Merlin  and  V.  501 

your  great  name.  This  conquers  :  hide  it  therefore  ; 

go  u  :  Win  !  Lancelot  and  E.  151 

Known  as  they  are,  to  me  they  are  u.'  ..            186 

But  since  I  go  to  joust  as  one  u  At  Camelot  „            190 

That  he  might  joust  u  of  all,  „            583 

The  maiden  buried,  not  as  one  u,  ,.          1334 

Queen  abode  For  many  a  week,  u,  among  the  nuns  ;  Guinevere  147 

With  some  revenge — even  to  itself  u, — ■  Lover's  Tale  ii  127 

Shall  fade  with  him  into  the  u,  Tiresias  215 

Unlaborious    u  earth  and  oarless  sea ;  To  Virgil  20 

Unlaced     u  my  casque  And  grovell'd  on  my  body.  Princess  vi  27 

Gareth  there  u  His  helmet  as  to  slay  him,  Gareth  and  L.  978 

Unlading     At  lading  and  u  the  tall  barks,  Enoch  Arden  816 

Unlamed     to  find  his  charger  yet  u,  Balin  and  Balan  428 

Unlawful      U  and  disloyal  brotherhood —  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  174 

Unleam'd     In  grief  I  am  not  all  u;  To  J.  S.  18 

Unled     (His  gentle  charger  following  him  u)  Geraint  and  E.  571 

Unlicensed     Dooms  our  u  preacher  to  the  flame,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  105 

Unlifted      U  was  the  clinking  latch  ;  Mariana  6 

Unlike    O  happy  tears,  and  how  u  to  these  !  (Enone  235 

Said  Ida,  tremulously,  '  so  all  u—  Princess  vii  333 

As  not  u  to  that  of  Spring.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  120 

With  miracles  and  marvels  like  to  these,  Not  all  w  ;         Holy  Grail  544 

Unlikeness    As  his  u  fitted  mine.  In  Mem.  Ixxix  20 

Unlimited     The  Heavenly-unmeasured  or  u  Love,  Lover's  Tale  i  474 

Unloveable     Ev'n  when  they  seem'd  u,  Merlin  and  V.  176 

Unloved      U,  that  beech  will  gather  brown.  In  Mem.  ci  3 

U,  the  sun-flower,  shining  fair,  „            5 

U,  by  many  a  sandy  bar,  „            9 

Unlovely    I  stand  Here  in  the  long  u  street,  „      vii  2 

Unloverlike    most  u.  Since  in  his  absence  Lover's  Tale  i  424 

UnmanacI^     U  from  bonds  of  sense.  Two  Voices  236 

Unmann'd     but  that  my  zone  U  me  :  Princess  ii  421 

Unmannerly     U,  with  prattling  and  the  tales  Guinevere  316 

Unmark'd     Enwind  her  isles,  u  of  me  :  In  Mem.  xcviii  10 

Unmarried     But  Dora  lived  u  till  her  death.  Dora  172 

Sir  Lancelot  worshipt  no  u  girl  Merlin  and  V.  12 


Unmeasured    {See  also  Heavenly-unmeasured)    clamouring 

etiquette  to  death,   U  mirth  ;  Princess  v  18 

Unmeet    and  strange  experiences  U  for  ladies.  „    iv  159 

Maud,  you  milkwhite  fawn,  you  are  all  u  for  a  wife.  Maiid  I  iv  57 

Unmelodious     Saying  '  An  u  name  to  thee,  Balin  and  Balan  52 

Unmockingly      U  the  mocker  ending  here  Gareth  and  L.  294 

Unmortised    The  feet  u  from  their  ankle-bones  Merlin  and  V.  552 

Umuoulded     By  some  yet  u  tongue  Ode  on  Well.  233 

Unmoved     With  such  and  so  w  a  majesty  Lancelot  and  E.  1170 

Unmown     deep  inlay  Of  braided  blooms  m,  Arabian  Nights  29 

Unnetted     The  u  black-hearts  ripen  dark.  The  Blackbird  7 

Unnoticed     For  that  u  failing  in  herself,  Geraint  and  E.  47 

Unnumber'd      U  and  enormous  polypi  The  Kraken  9 

Unopen'd     and  dash'd  U  at  her  feet :  Princess  iv  471 
Unpaining    driven  Its  knotted  thorns  thro'  my  u  brows,   Lover's  Tale  i  620 

Unpalsied      U  when  he  met  with  Death,  In  Mem.  cxxviii  2 
Unparallel'd    That  various  wilderness  a  tissue  of 

light  U.  Lover's  Tale  i  420 

Unpeopled    Whose  crime  had  half  u  Ilion,  Death  of  (Enone  61 

Unperceived    Love,  u,  A  more  ideal  Artist  Gardener's  D.  24 

stole  from  court  With  Cyril  and  with  Floriaii,  u.  Princess  i  103 

Unpiloted     U  i'  the  echomg  dance  Of  reboant 

whirlwinds,  Swpp.  Confessions  96 

Unpitied     C/^ :  for  he  groped  as  blind,  Aylmer's  Field  821 

Unprofitable    if  a  king  demand  An  act  u,  M.  d' Arthur  96 

if  a  king  demand  An  act  u,  Pass,  of  Arthur  264 

Unprogressive    Cries  of  u  dotage  ere  the  dotard  fall 

asleep,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  153 

Unprophetic         U  rulers  they —  Open.  I.  aild  C.  Exhib.  26 

Unproportion'd    So  u  to  the  dwelling-place,)  Lover's  Tale  i  187 

Unproven    and  every  younger  knight,  U,  Holy  Grail  304 

Unquenehed     Like  Stephen,  an  u  fire.  Two  Voices  219 

Unquestion'd    ample  rule  tf,  (Enone  112 

Unquiet     But,  for  the  u  heart  and  brain.  In  Mem.  v  5 

Unreal    but  these  u  ways  Seem  but  the  theme  Edwin  Morris  47 

past  and  flow'd  away  To  those  u  billows  :  Lover's  Tale  ii  196 

Unrecorded     a  wife  as  you  Should  vanish  u.  Romney's  R.  69 

Unrecording     Thro'  troops  of  w  friends,  You  might  have  won  7 

Unrelieved     and  ever  u  by  dismal  tears,  Palace  of  Art  271 

Unremember'd     and  my  sins  Be  w,  Supp.  Confessions  182 

Unremorseful    wrapt  In  u  folds  of  rolling  fire.  Holy  Grail  261 

Unrepress'd     Ceasing  not,  mingled,  w,  Arabian  Nights  74 

Unresisting     and  a  sense  Of  meanness  in  her  u  life.  Aylmer's  Field  801 

Unrest     but  the  Naiad  Throbbing  in  mild  u  Leonine  Eleg.  12 

The  wild  u  that  lives  in  woe  In  Mem.  xv  15 

Can  calm  despair  and  wild  u  „            xvi  2 

Unreveal'd    The  rest  remaineth  ?t ;  „       xxxi  14 

Unriddled    Shall  be  u  by  and  by.  Miller's  D.  20 

Unrisen     a  poising  eagle,  burns  Above  the  u  morrow  :  '  Princess  iv  83 

— over  darkness — from  the  still  u  sun.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  92 

UnroII'd     One  sitting  on  a  crimson  scarf  u;  D.  of  F.  Women  126 

hail  once  more  to  the  banner  of  battle  m  !  Maud  III  vi  42 

Unruffling      U  waters  re-collect  the  shape  Last  Tournament  369 

Unsaid     And  what  I  see  I  leave  m,  In  Mem.  Ixxiv  10 

Unsay      U  it,  unswear  !  Last  Tournament  641 

Unscarr'd    And  all  u  from  beak  or  talon,  „                20 

Unscathed     Render  him  up  u  :  Princess  iv  408 

Unseal'd     Falling,  u  our  eyelids,  and  ^^•e  woke  Lover's  Tale  i  265 

Unseen     Then  leaping  out  upon  them  u  The  Merman  33 

the  dark  East,   U,  is  brightening  to  his  bridal  morn.      Gardener's  D.  73 

Her  face  was  evermore  u,  The  Voyage  61 

And  far,  in  forest-deeps  u,  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  7 

Had  his  dark  hour  u,  and  rose  and  past  Enoch  Arden  78 

But  now  it  seems  some  u  monster  lays  Lucretius  219 

Into  the  u  for  ever, — till  that  hoiu-,  „        259 

or  are  moved  by  an  u  hand  at  a  game  Maud  I  iv  26 

His  love,  u  but  felt,  o'ershadow  Thee,  Ded.  of  Idylls  51 

Merlin,  who,  they  say,  can  walk  U  at  pleasure —      Com.  of  Arthur  348 

with  her  feet  u  Crush'd  the  wild  passion  Lancelot  and  E.  741 

for  u,  But  taken  with  the  sweetness  of  the  place.         Lover's  Tale  i  530 

Unshadowable    u  in  words.  Themselves  but  shadows  Ancient  Sage  238 

Unshaken     Which  kept  her  throne  u  still,  To  the  Queen  34 

Thro'  open  doors  of  Ida  stationed  there  U,  Princess  v  344 

Unshatter'd     haste  and  random  youth  U  ;  l)e  Prof.,  Two  G.  22 

Unshorn    she  that  saw  him  lying  vmsleek,  u,  Lancelot  and  E.  815 


UnskiU'd 


756 


Urn 


Unskill'd     And  let  the  younger  and  u  go  by 
Unsleek    she  that  saw  him  lying  u,  unshorn, 
Unsolder    sequel  of  to-day  u's  all  The  goodliest 
fellowship 

setiuel  of  to-day  u's  all  The  goodliest  fellowship 
Unsown    sat  upon  a  mound  Tliat  was  u, 
Unspeakable    memories  roll  upon  him,  U  for  sadness. 

And  twLsted  shapes  of  lust,  u, 

A  sacred,  secret,  imapproached  woe,  U  ? 

Dying,  '  U  '  he  wrote  '  Their  kindness,' 
Unstain'd     A  lovelier  life,  a  more  u,  than  his  ! 
Unsubduable    The  last  a  monster  u 
Unsubject     U  to  confusion, 
Unsummer'd     And,  now  to  these  w  skies 
Unsunn'd     The  u  freshness  of  my  strength, 
Unsunny     O  damsel,  wearing  this  u  face 
Unswallow'd     brawny  speannan  let  liis  cheek  Bulge 

with  the  u  piece, 
Unswear     Unsay  it,  u  ! 
Unsweet    Is  faith  as  vague  as  all  u  : 
Untaken     and  hath  left  his  prize  U, 
Untamish'd    name  will  yet  remain  U  as  before  ; 
Untidy    See  Hugger-mugger 
'Untin'  (hunting)     an'  was  'w'  arter  the  men. 
Untold     Nor  left  w  the  craft  herself  had  usecl ; 
Untouch'd      U  with  any  shade  of  years, 

my  good  son — -Is  yet  u  : 
Untravell'd    experience  is  an  arch  wherethro'  Gleams 

that  u  world. 
Untrue    Ah,  miserable  and  unkind,  u, 

1  wrong  the  grave  with  fears  u  : 

She  might  by  a  true  descent  be  u  ; 

"  Ah,  miserable  and  unkind,  u, 
Untruth     never  had  a  glimpse  of  mine  u. 

Too  wholly  true  to  dream  u  in  thee, 
Untuneful    That  her  voice  u  grown, 
Unused      U  example  from  the  grave 
Unvenerable     U  will  thy  memory  be 
Unvext     /'  She  slipt  across  the  summer 
Unwatchd     U,  the  garden  bough  shall  sway. 
Unwavering     calm  that  let  the  tapers  bum  U  : 
Unwedded     1  was  wife,  and  thou  U  : 
Unwilling     Waged  such  u  tho'  successful  war 

Tlie  lady  never  made  u  war  With  those  fine  eyes 
Unwillingly    See  Half-unwillingly 
Unwillingness    wish  Falls  flat  before  your  least  u. 
Unwise    What  wonder  I  was  all  u, 

wall  them  up  perforce  in  mine — u,  Unkinglike ; — 
Unwisely    wisely  or  u,  signs  of  storm, 
Unwish'd    That  you  came  u  for,  imcall'd, 
Unwish'd-for    With  proffer  of  u-f  services) 
Unwitty     If  these  u  wandering  wits  of  mine. 
Unwonted    Should  kiss  with  an  u  gentleness. 
Unwoo'd    palms  were  ranged  Above,  u  of  summer 

wind  : 
Unworldly    My  friend,  the  most  u  of  mankind, 
Unworthier     but  we,  u,  told  Of  college  : 
Unworthily    some  u  ;  their  sinless  faith, 
Unworthiness    lay  Contemplating  her  own  u  ; 
Unworthy    O  three  times  less  u  ! 

Hadst  thou  less  u  proved— 

Vext  with  u  madness,  and  deform'd. 

chiefest  comfort  is  the  little  child  Of  one  u  mother 

On  some  u  heart  with  joy, 

but  most  Predoom'd  her  as  u. 
Unwounded     To  find  him  j'et  u  after  fight, 
Unwove     Wove  and  u  it,  till  the  boy  return'd 
Up     S't'  Steep-up 
Upbare    u  A  broad  earth-sweeping  pall  of  whitest 

lawn. 
Upbearing     A  leaning  and  u  parasite, 
Upblown     u  billow  ran  Shoreward  beneath  red  clouds, 
Upbore     His  resolve  U  him,  and  firm  faith, 

but  her  deep  love  U  her  ; 
Upbreaking     the  heavens  u  thro'  the  earth, 


Lancelot  and  E.  1361 
815 

M.  d' Arthur  14 

Pass,  of  AHhur  182 

Dora  73 

Enoch  Arden  725 

Lucretius  157 

Lover's  Tale  i  680 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  35 

Bed.  of  Idylls  30 

Gareth  and  L.  858 

Will  Water.  86 

Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son.  17 

Supp.  Confessions  140 

Pelleas  and  E.  180 

Geraint  and  E.  631 

Last  Tournament  641 

In  Mon.  xlvii  5 

Lancelot  and  E.  531 

Marr.  of  Geraint  501 

VUlage  Wife  36 

Geraint  and  E.  393 

Miller's  D.  219 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  288 

Ulysses  20 

M.  d' Arthur  119 

In  Mem.  li  9 

Maud  I  xiii  31 

Pass,  of  Arthur  287 

Lancelot  and  E.  125 

Guinevere  541 

The  Owl  a  6 

In  Mem.  Ixxx  15 

Tiresias  132 

Enoch  Arden  530 

In  Mem.  ci  1 

„  xcv  6 

Guinevere  120 

Merlin  and  V.  571 

603 

Pomney's  R.  72 

Day-Dm.,  Ep.  5 

—       Akbar's  Dream  62 

To  the  Queen  ii  49 

Despair  5 

Lover's  Tale  i  629 

Merlin  and  V.  346 

Lover's  Tale  i  739 

Arabian  Nights  80 

In  Mem.  W.  G.  Ward  3 

Prirwess,  Pro.  110 

V  185 

Marr.  of  Geraint  533 

Love  and  Duty  20 

Locksley  Hall  63 

Aylmer's  Field  335 

;  Princess  v  431 

In  Mem.  Ixii  7 

Lancelot  and  E.  729 

Geraint  and  E.  371 

260 


Lover's  Tale  ii  77 

Isabel  34 

Lover's  Tale  ii  178 

Enoch  Arden  800 

Lancelot  and  E.  861 

Guinevere  391 


Up-clomb      U-c  the  shadowy  pine  above  the  woven  copse.     Lotos- Eaters  18 
Upcurl'd     wreaths  of  floating  dark  u,  The  Poet  35 

Updrag     Rise  ! '  and  stoop'd  to  u  ]Melissa :  •  Princess  iv  366 

Updrawn     Anchors  of  rusty  fluke,  and  boats  u  ;  Enoch  Arden  18 

Upheaven     land  of  old  u  from  the  abyss  By  fire.  Pass,  of  Arthur  81' 

Upheld     under  all  the  cornice  and  u  :  Gareth  and  L.  219 

Uphill     lay  thine  u  shoulder  to  the  wheel,  Ancient  Sage  279 

Uphold     (See  also  Upowd)     didst  u  me  on  my  lonely  isle. 


U  me. 

To  break  the  heathen  and  u  the  Christ, 

Which  yet  u's  my  life,  and  evermore 

two  pillars  which  from  earth  u  Our  childhood, 

Genius  of  that  hour  which  dost  u  Thy  coronal  of 
glory 
Upjetted    u  in  spirts  of  wild  sea-smoke. 
Upland     Piling  sheaves  in  u's  airy. 

Behind  Were  realms  of  u,  prodigal  in  oil. 
Uplift      U  a  thousand  voices  full  and  sweet, 

A  lever  to  u  the  earth 

And  pure  Sir  Galahad  to  u  the  maid  ; 
Uplifted      U  was  the  clinking  latch  ; 

The  bold  Sir  Bedivere  u  him, 
U  high  in  heart  and  hope  are  we. 

And  been  thereby  u,  should  thro'  me. 

The  bold  Sir  Bedivere  u  him, 
Uplooking    u  and  almost  Waiting  to  see  some  blessed 

shape 
Up-on-end    See  Hup-on-end 
Upowd  (uphold)     '  I'll  u  it  tha  weant ; 
Upper     Below  the  thunders  of  the  u  deep  ; 

Old  footsteps  trod  the  u  floors. 

Too  long  you  keep  the  u  skies  ; 

Now  gnaw'd  his  under,  now  his  u  lip, 
Uprear'd     And  in  his  chair  himself  w, 

Or  whence  the  fear  fest  this  my  realm,  u, 
Upright     U  and  flush'd  before  him : 

but  scarcely  could  stand  u. 
Uprising    The  knife  u  towaixi  the  blow 
Uproar    not  without  an  u  made  by  those  Who  cried. 
Uprose    u  the  mystic  mountain-range  : 
Upshoot     All  round  a  hedge  u's,  and  shows 
Upside    See  Hupside 

Upsprang    gain'd  her  castle,  u  the  bridge, 
Upsprung     In  closest  coverture  u, 
Upstarted    Scared  by  the  noise  u  at  our  feet, 
Upstay'd     Bent  o'er  me,  and  my  neck  his  arm  u. 
Upswell     u's  The  gold-fringed  pillow  lightly  prest : 
Upward    Strike  u  thro'  the  shadow ; 

Tho'  following  with  an  u  mind 
Upward-rushing    ever  u-r  storm  and  cloud  Of  shriek 

and  plume, 
Urania     U  speaks  with  darken'd  brow  : 
Uranian    o'er  his  head  U  Venus  hung, 
Urge     To  which  the  voice  did  u  reply  ; 

'  Yet  think  not  that  I  come  to  u  thy  crimes, 

U  him  to  foreign  war. 
Urged    brought  it ;  and  the  poet  little  u, 

I  u  the  fierce  inscription  on  the  gate, 

Lancelot  on  him  u  All  the  devisings 

U  him  to  speak  against  the  truth, 
Urien    then  his  brother  king,  U,  assail'd  him : 

Carlos,   U,  Cradlemont  of  Wales, 
Urim    rich  With  jewels,  elfin  U,  on  the  hilt, 
Urn     (See  also  Fountain-ums)     From  fluted  vase,  and 
brazen  u 

Drawing  into  his  narrow  earthen  u, 

white  dust,  shut  in  an  u  of  brass  ! 

Soft  lustre  bathes  the  range  of  u's 

Found  lying  with  his  u's  and  ornaments, 

and  with  great  u's  of  flowers. 

Thro'  prosperous  floods  his  holy  u. 

And  on  the  board  the  fluttering  u  : 

An  angel  watching  an  u  Wept 

swathe  thyself  all  round  Hope's  quiet  u  For  ever  ? 

immerging,  each,  his  u  In  his  own  well, 


Enoch  Arden  783 

Guinevere  470 

Lover's  Tale  i  168 

220 

487 

Sea  Dreams  52 

L.  of  Shalott  i  34 

Palace  of  Art  79 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  1 

In  Mem.  cxiii  15 

Lancelot  and  E.  1265 

Mariana  6 

M.  d' Arthur  6 

Ode  on  Well.  254 

Balin  and  Balan  491 

Pass,  of  Arthur  175 

Lover's  Tale  i  311 

NorlJi.  Cobbler  63 

The  Kraken  1 

Mariana  67 

Rosalind  35 

Geraint  and  E.  669 

Day-Dm.,  Revival  18 

Last  Tournament  122 

Merlin  and  V.  912 

V.  of  Maeldune  73 

The  Victim  m 

Com.  of  Arthur  42 

Vision  of  Sin '2^ 

Day-Sm.,  Sleep.  P.  41 

Pelleas  and  E.  206 

Arabian  Nights  68 

Merlin  and  V.  422 

Lffoer's  Tale  i  690 

Day- Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  21 

The  Ring  372 

In  Mem.  xli  21 

Last  Tournament  440 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  1 

Princess  i  243 

Two  Voices  7 

Guinevere  532 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  6& 

The  Epic  48 

Princess  lii  141 

Gareth  and  L.  1348 

Lancelot  and  E.  92 

Com.  of  Arthur  36 

112 

298 


Arabian  Nights  60 

Ode  to  Memory  61 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  68 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  9 

Aylmer's  Field  4 

Princess  ii  26 

In  Mem.  ix  8 

„        x&o% 

Maud  I  viii  3 

Lover's  Tale  i  100 

Tiresias  88 


'Urry 


757 


Uther 


'Urry  (hurry)     Naay  sit  down — naw  'u — sa  cowd  ! —  Village  Wife  20 

Usage     (See  also  Dl-usage)     tenfold  dearer  by  the 

power  Of  intermitted  u  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  811 

And  lose  thy  life  by  u  of  thy  sting  ;  Ancient  Sage  270 

shrunk  by  u  into  commonest  commonplace  !  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  76 

Use  (s)     keep  a  thing,  its  u  will  come.  The  Epic  42 

■  God  made  the  woman  for  the  u  of  man,  Edwin  Morris  91 

To  rust  unbumish'd,  not  to  shine  in  u  !  Ulysses  23 

to  what  u's  shall  we  put  The  wild  weed-flower  Day- Dm.,  Moral  5 

So  'twere  to  cramp  its  m,  if  I  Should  hook  „               15 

gentle  creature  shut  from  all  Her  charitable  u,  Aylmer's  Field  566 

too  late  !  they  come  too  late  for  u.  Sea  Dreams  67 

or  of  older  u  All-seeing  Hyperion —  Lucretius  125 

From  childly  wont  smd  ancient  u  I  call —  „         209 

redound  Of  u  and  glory  to  yourselves  ye  come,  Princess  ii  43 

might  grow  To  u  and  power  on  this  Oasis,  „          167 

public  u  required  she  should  be  kno\vn  ;  „      iv  336 

since  my  oath  was  ta'en  for  public  u,  „          337 

And  boats  and  bridges  for  the  u  of  men.  „        vi  47 

What  u  to  keep  them  here — now  ?  „          304 

void  was  her  u,  And  she  as  one  that  climbs  a  peak  „       vii  34 

All  of  beauty,  all  of  u,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  23 

Naw  soort  o'  koind  o'  m  to  saay  T.  Farmer,  0.  S.  6 

'  O  wife,  what  u  to  answer  now  ?  The  Victim  55 

A  u  in  measured  language  lies  ;  In  Mem.  v  6 

Make  one  wreath  more  for  U  and  Wont,  .,     xxix  11 

And  learns  the  u  of  '  I,'  and  '  me,'  „          xlv  6 

This  u  may  lie  in  blood  and  breath,  ,,               13 

But  with  long  u  her  tears  are  dry.  ..  Ixxviii  20 

because  he  bare  The  u  of  virtue  out  of  earth  :  .,  Ixxxii  10 

Has  broke  the  bond  of  dying  u.  „          cv  12 

And  soil'd  with  all  ignoble  u.  „        cxi  24 

batter'd  with  the  shocks  of  doom  To  shape  and  u.  .,    cxviii  25 

And  thrice  the  gold  for  Uther's  u  thereof,  Gareth  and  L.  344 

To  war  against  ill  u's  of  a  life,  „           1130 

I  will  make  u  of  all  the  power  I  have.  Geraint  and  E.  345 

(tho'  I  count  it  of  small  u  To  charge  you)  „            416 

'  Thou  shalt  put  the  crown  to  u.  Balin  and  Balan  202 

he  defileth  heavenly  things  With  earthly  u's  ' —  „              422 
lost  to  life  and  u  and  name  and  fame,  (repeat)    Merlin  and  V.  214,  970 

My  u  and  name  and  fame.  „                    304 

Ujjon  mjr  life  and  u  and  name  and  fame,  „                    374 

With  this  for  motto,  '  Bather  u  than  fame.'  „                    480 
U  gave  me  Fame  at  first,  and  Fame  again 

Increasing  gave  me  u.  „                    493 

I  rather  dread  the  loss  of  u  than  fame  ;  „                    519 

and  she  lay  as  dead.  And  lost  all  u  of  life  :  v                    645 

kingdom's,  not  the  King's — For  public  u  :  Lancelot  and  E.  60 

ourselves  shall  grow  In  u  of  arms  and  manhood,  .,               64 

I  might  have  put  my  wits  to  some  rough  u,  .,           1306 

Now  grown  a  part  of  me  :  but  what  m  in  it  ?  „           1416 

'  It  is  not  Arthur's  u  To  hunt  by  moonlight ; '  Holy  Grail  110 

heart  And  might  of  limb,  but  mainly  u  and  skill.  Last  Tournament  198 

and  with  mirth  so  loud  Beyond  all  m,  .,              236 

Arthur  deign'd  not  u  of  word  or  sword,  ,,              458 

They  served  their  u,  their  time ;  „              676 

or  what  u  To  know  her  father  left  us  Lover's  Tale  i  292 

for  henceforth  what  u  were  words  to  me  !  „               609 

show'd  he  drank  beyond  his  w  ;  „          iv  228 

What  u  to  brood  ?  this  life  of  mingled  pains  To  Mary  Boyle  49 

Use  (verb)     and  u  Her  influence  on  the  mind,  Will  Water.  11 

You  grant  me  license  ;  might  I  m  it  ?  Princess  Hi  235 

to  M  A  little  patience  ere  I  die ;  In  Mem.  xxxiv  11 

before  my  lance  if  lance  Were  mine  to  u —  Gareth  and  L.  7 

And  answer'd  with  such  craft  as  women  u,  Geraint  and  E.  352 

u  Both  grace  and  will  to  pick  the  vicious  quitch  „            902 

eats  And  u's,  careless  of  the  rest ;  Merlin  and  V.  463 

Might  u  it  to  the  harm  of  anyone,  „             685 

since  I  cannot  u  it,  ye  may  have  it.'  Lancelot  and  E.  199 

I  pray  you,  u  some  rough  discourtesy  „              973 

Besought  me  to  be  plain  and  blunt,  and  u,  „             1301 

who  cared  Only  to  u  his  own.  Lover's  Tale  iv  312 
my  Leonard,  u  and  not  abuse  your  day,                Locksley  H.,  Sixty  265 

Used     (See  also  Ul-used)     out  the  storied  Past,  and 

u  Within  the  Present,  Love  thou  thy  land  2 


Used  (continued)      U  all  her  fiei-y  will,  and  smote  Her  life      Will  Water.  Ill 

And  she  the  left,  or  not,  or  seldom  u  ;  Princess  Hi  38 

But  great  is  song  U  to  great  ends  :  ,.        iv  138 

Fatherly  fears — ^you  u  us  courteously —  „         v  216 

It  is  all  II  up  for  that.  Maud  II  v  6i 

Am  much  too  gentle,  have  not  u  my  power :  Marr.  of  Geraint  467 

Nor  left  untold  the  craft  herself  had  u  ;  Geraint  and  E.  393 

'  Enid,  I  have  u  you  worse  than  that  dead  man  ;  ,,             735 
wrought  too  long  with  delegated  hands.  Not  u  mine 

own :  ,.             894 

So  xc  as  I,  My  daily  wonder  is.  Merlin  and  V.  535 

This  was  the  one  discourtesy  that  he  u.  Lancelot  and  E.  988 

Used  (accustomed)     We  are  w  to  that :  Princess  Hi  277 

Used  (was  or  were  accustomed)    Musing  on  him  that 

u  to  fill  it  for  her,  Enoch  Arden  208 

ah  God,  as  he  u  to  rave.  Maud  I  i  60 

full  of  wolves,  where  he  u  to  lie  ;  „    II  v  54 

With  whom  he  u  to  play  at  tourney  once,  Gareth  and  L.  532 

whom  he  u  To  harry  and  hustle.  „            706 

when  I  am  gone  Who  u  to  lay  them  !  Balin  and  Balan  141 

golden  hair,  with  which  I  u  to  play  Not  knowing  !              Guinevere  547 

as  ye  M  to  do  twelve  year  sin'  !  Spinster's  S's.  59 

you  u  to  call  me  once  The  lonely  maiden-Princess  The  Ring  64 

as  I  M  To  prattle  to  her  picture —  ,,         115 

I  M  to  walk  This  Terrace — morbid,  ,.         167 

She  u  to  shun  the  wailing  babe,  ,,         358 

she  u  to  gaze  Do'wn  at  the  Troad  ;  Death  of  (Enone  2 

For  I  ?t  to  play  with  the  knife.  Charity  15 

Useful     Should  hook  it  to  some  u  end.  Day-Dm.,  Moral  16 

So  never  took  that  u  name  in  vain.  Sea  Dreams  189 

Before  the  u  trouble  of  the  rain  :  Geraint  and  E.  771 

Subdue  them  to  the  u  and  the  good.  Ulysses  38 

Useless     To  draw,  to  sheathe  a  u  sword.  In  Mem.  cxxviii  13 

these  blind  hands  were  m  in  their  wars.  Tiresias  78 

This  u  hand  !     I  felt  one  warm  tear  fall  upon  it.  „         166 

Usherest     Who  u  in  the  dolorous  hour  In  Mem.  Ixxii  9 

Using    like  the  liand,  and  grew  With  to  ;  Princess  ii  151 

Usk     Held  court  at  old  Caerleon  upon  J7.  Marr.  of  Geraint  146 

Took  horse,  and  forded  U,  and  gain'd  the  wood  ;  „               161 

but  up  the  vale  of  U,  By  the  flat  meadow,  „              831 

the  full-tided  U,  Before  he  turn  to  fall  seaward  Geraint  and  E.  116 

they  past  With  Arthur  to  Caerleon  upon  U.  „            946 

By  the  great  tower — Caerleon  upon  U —  Balin  and  Balan  506 

Who  never  sawest  Caerleon  upon  U —  „              570 

the  flat  field  by  the  shore  of  U  Holden  :  Pelleas  and  E.  164 

Usurp'd     Sir  Modred  had  u  the  realm,  Guinevere  154 

Usury     kiss  for  kiss,  With  u  thereto.'  Talking  Oak  196 

Uther     Or  mythic  tf's  deeply-wotmded  son  Palace  of  Art  105 

And  after  him  King  TJ  fought  and  died,  Com.  of  Arthur  14 

Who  cried,  '  He  is  not  U's  son  ' — •  ,.              43 

who  hath  proven  him  King  U's  son  ?  .,               70 

Are  like  to  those  of  U  whom  we  knew.  ,,               72 

wise  man  that  served  King  U  thro'  his  magic  art ;  ,,             152 

Hold  ye  this  Arthur  for  King  U's  son  ?  '  „             172 

for  ye  know  that  in  King  U's  time  „             185 

And  U  cast  upon  her  eyes  of  love :  „             193 

That  Gorlois  and  King  U  went  to  war :  „             196 

Then  U  in  his  wrath  and  heat  besieged  Ygeme  ..             198 

Left  her  and  fled,  and  U  enter'd  in,  ,.             201 

King  U  died  himself,  Moaning  and  wailing  for  an  heir          „             206 

And  many  hated  U  for  the  sake  Of  Gorlois.  ,.             220 

an  old  knight  And  ancient  friend  oi  U ;  „            223 

'  Here  is  tf's  heir,  your  king,'  „            230 

Or  U's  son,  and  bom  before  his  time,  „             241 

near  him  when  the  savage  yells  Of  U's  peerage  died,  „            257 

and  dark  was  U  too,  Wellnigh  to  blackness ;  „             329 
Merlin  ever  served  about  the  King,  U,  before  he  died  ; 

and  on  the  night  When  U  in  Tintagil  past  away  „            366 

'  The  King  !     Here  is  an  heir  tor  U  \'  ,.            386 

No  son  of  U,  and  no  king  of  ours ;  '  „            440 

Thy  father,  U,  reft  From  my  dead  lord  a  field  Gareth  and  L.  334 

And  thrice  the  gold  for  U's  use  thereof,  „             344 

A  knight  of  U  in  the  Barons'  war,  „            353 

And  U  slit  thy  tongue :  ..            376 

whom  U  left  in  charge  Long  since,  Geraint  and  E.  933 


utmost  758 


Supp.  Confessions  117 

Clear-headed  friend  19 

Ulysses  32 

Day -Dm.,  Depart.  6,  30 

Merlin  and  V.  897 

Lancelot  and  E.  526 


Utmost    Sweet  in  their  u  bitterness, 
Wan,  wasted  Truth  in  her  u  need. 
Beyond  the  u  bound  of  human  thought. 
Beyond  their  u  purple  rim,  (repeat) 
as  for  u  grief  or  shame  ; 
His  party,  knights  of  u  North  and  West, 
when  thou  hast  seen  me  strain'd  And  sifted  to 

the  u,  Pelleas  and  E.  248 

On  that  sharp  ridge  of  u  doom  ride  highly  Lover's  Tale  i  805 
Utter  (adj.)     seest  me  drive  Thro'  u  dark  a  fuU-sail'd 

skiff,  Suff.  Confessions  95 

silence  seems  to  flow  Beside  me  in  my  w  woe,  Oriana  87 

'  Then,  then,  from  u  gloom  stood  out  the  breasts,  Lticretitis  60 

reverence  thine  own  beard  That  looks  as  white  as  u 

truth,  Gareth  and  L.  281 
my  knights  are  sworn  to  vows  Of  w  hardihood,  u 

gentleness,  And,  loving,  u  faithfulness  in  love,  „            553 

The  King  in  u  scorn  Of  thee  and  thy  much  folly  ,,            918 
as  if  the  world  were  one  Of  u  peace,  and  love,  and 

gentleness  !  •■  .  1289 
Geraint,  from  u  courtesy,  forbore.  Marr.  of  Geraint  381 
Then  Enid,  in  her  u  helplessness,  Geraint  and  E.  719 
So  passionate  for  an  u  purity  Merlin  and  V.  26 
or  what  Her  all  but  u  whiteness  held  for  sin,  Holy  Grail  84 
did  Pelleas  in  an  u  shame  Creep  with  his  shadow- 
thro'  the  court  again,  Pelleas  and  E.  440 
That  here  in  u  dark  I  swoon'd  away.  Last  Tournament  622 
You  lose  yourself  in  u  ignorance  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  79 
Why  in  the  u  stillness  of  the  soul  „  276 
All  thro'  the  livelong  hours  of  u  dark,  „  810 
but  roxmd  my  Evelyn  clung  In  u  silence  for  so 

long,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  217 

That  mock-meek  mouth  of  u  Antichrist,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  170 

SunlRSS  and  moonless,  %  light — but  no  !  Columbus  90 

If  u  darkness  closed  the  day,  my  son —  Anient  Sage  199 
Sons  of  God,  and  kings  of  men  in  u  nobleness  of 

mind,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  122 

W'ere  u  darkness — one,  the  Sun  of  dawn  Frin.  Beatrice  3 

lost  in  u  grief  1  fail'd  To  send  my  life  Demeter  and  P.  109 

And  u  knowledge  is  but  u  love —  The  Ring  43 
colour'd  bubble  bursts  above  the  abyss  Of  Darkness, 

M  Lethe.  Romney's  R.  53 

With  politic  care,  with  u  gentleness,  Akbar's  Dream  128 

Utter  (verb)     I  would  that  my  tongue  could  u  Break,  Break,  etc.  3 

U  your  jubilee,  steeple  and  spire  !  W.  to  Alexandra  17 

To  ?t  love  more  sweet  than  praise.  In  Mem.  Ixxvii  16 

what  dream  ye  when  they  u  forth  May-music  Gareth  and  L.  1079 

on  a  sudden  the  garrison  u  a  jubilant  shout,  Def.  of  Lucknow  98 

Utterance    glided  thro'  all  change  Of  liveliest  u.  D.  of  F.  Women  168 

in  sighs  Which  perfect  Joy,  perplex'd  for  u.  Gardener's  D.  255 

Gave  u  by  the  yearning  of  an  eye,  Love  and  Duty  62 

As  if  to  speak,  but,  u  failing  her.  Princess  iv  395 

told  us  all  their  anger  in  miraculous  u's,  Boadicea  23 

His  broken  u's  and  bashfulness,  Pelleas  and  E.  Ill 

Went  on  in  passionate  u  :  Guinevere  611 

her  gracious  lips  Did  lend  such  gentle  u.  Lover's  Tale  i  457 

As  if  she  were  afraid  of  w  ;  »           _  564 

breath  floated  in  the  u  Of  silver-chorded  tones  :  „          ii  141 

Utter'd     brows  Of  him  that  u  nothing  base  ;  To  the  Queen  8 

He  u  rhjTne  and  reason,  The  Goose  6 

He  ti  words  of  scorning ;  ..          42 

Caught  up  the  whole  of  love  and  u  it,  Love  and  Duty  82 

And  there  the  tale  he  u  brokenly,  Enoch  Arden  647 

She  nor  swoon'd,  nor  u  cry  :  Princess  vi  2 

on  her  Fixt  my  faint  eyes,  and  u  whisperingly  :  „     vii  144 

Bow'd  at  her  side  and  u  whisperingly  :  Geraint  and  E.  305 

To  whom  the  woodman  u  wonderingly  Balin  and  Balan  297 

But  when  Sir  Garlon  u  mocking-wise ;  „              389 

While  he  u  this.  Low  to  her  own  heart  Lancelot  and  E.  318 

U  a  little  tender  dolorous  cry.  „              817 

Lancelot  kneeling  u, '  Queen,  Lady,  my  liege,  „            1179 

For  when  had  Lancelot  u  aiight  so  gross  ImsI  Tournament  631 

my  strangled  vanity  U  a  stifled  crj- —  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  200 

Before  the  first '  I  will '  was  u,  »              211 

you  heard  the  lines  I  read  Nor  u  word  of  blame,  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  18 


Utter'd  (continued)     heart  of  this  most  ancient  realm 
hateful  voice  be  u, 
till  the  little  one  u  a  cry. 
Utterest    all  of  them  redder  than  rosiest  health  or 

than  u  shame. 
Uttering    all  in  passion  u  a  dry  shriek, 

lock  up  my  tongue  From  u  freely  what  I  freely 

hear? 
brook'd  No  silence,  brake  it,  u  '  Late  !  so  late  ! 

What  hour. 
And  u  this  the  King  Made  at  the  man  : 
Utterly    and  brake  it  w  to  the  hilt. 
Uttermost  (adj.)     Is  He  not  yonder  in  those  u  Parts  of 
the  morning  ? 
And  u  obedience  to  the  King.' 
For  u  obedience  make  demand 
In  u  obedience  to  the  King. 
Uttermost  (s)     To  hoard  all  savings  to  the  u, 
wish  To  save  all  earnings  to  the  u. 
So  aid  me  Heaven  when  at  mine  u. 
That  he  might  prove  her  to  the  w. 
Fasted  and  pray'd  even  to  the  u, 
Yea,  let  her  prove  me  to  the  u.  For  loyal  to  the  u 

am  I.' 
when  the  guest  Is  loved  and  honour  d  to  the  u. 
you  are  honour'd  now  Ev'n  to  the  u : 
Uxoriousness     And  molten  down  in  mere  u. 
past  the  people's  talk  And  accusation  of  u 


Vagrant 


Prog,  of  Spring  103 
Bandit's  Death  26 

V.  of  Maeldime  65 
Geraint  and  E.  461 

Last  Tournament  694 

Guinevere  160 
Pass,  of  Arthur  164 
Gareth  and  L.  1148 

Enoch  Arden  223 

Gareth  and  L.  555 

558 

833 

Enoch  Arden  46 

86 

Marr.  of  Geraint  502 

Geraint  and  E.  58& 

Holy  Grail  132 

Pelleas  and  E.  211 

Lover's  Tale  iv  245 

317 

Marr.  of  Geraint  60 

83 


Vaain  (vain)     an'  I  beant  not  v.  Spinster  s  S  s.  1& 

An'  1  beant  not  v,  but  I  knaws  ,.             '1 

Vacancy    we  shall  see  The  nakedness  and  v  Deserted  House  11 

gloom  the  vacancies  Between  the  tufted  hills,  Lover  s  Tale  *  2  ' 

Vacant     In  v  chambers,  I  could  trust  Your  kindness.  To  the  Queen  19 

And,  last,  you  fix'd  a  v  stare,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere\i 

V  of  our  glorious  gains,  Locksley  Halt  170 

Will  haunt  the  i;  cup  :  ^   F^,'^-^.^^\lld 

I  cry  to  t)  chairs  and  widow'd  walls,  Aylmer  s  tield  IM 

Whence  follows  many  a  v  pang  ;  Princess  it  403 

Perchance,  to  charm  a  v  brain,  The  Daisy  10b 

And  V  chaff  well  meant  for  grain.  In  Mem.  vt  4 

vital  spirits  sink  To  see  the  v  chair,  „         xx  19 

Of  V  darkness  and  to  cease.  v    xxxiv}<i 

And  V  veaming,  tho'  with  might  ,.        ?^*V^ 

stands"  V,  but  thou  retake  it,  mine  agam  !  Balm  and  Balan  /» 

In  our  great  hall  there  stood  a  v  chair,  Holy  Grail  167 

Your  places  being  v  at  my  side,  ,.          317 

In  hanging  robe  or  v  ornament,  Guinevere  5\m 

And  I  stood  sole  beside  the  v  bier.  Lover's  Tale  in  58 
Till  you  find  the  deathless  Angel  seated  in  the  v 

tomb.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  2(& 

And  sanguine  Lazarus  felt  a  v  hand  To  Mary  Boyle  31 

Vacillating    O  damned  v  state  !  Supp.  Confessi(ms  190 
in  my  good  mother's  hall  Linger  with  v  obedience,        Gareth  and  L.  id 

Vagrant    And  v  melodies  the  winds  which  bore  The  Poet  11 

'  If  all  be  dark,  v  voice,'  I  said.  Two  Voices  265 

A  V  suspicion  of  the  breast :  "        33ft 

'  Some  V  emotion  of  delight  y        ^oi 

Love  is  made  a  I)  regret.  ^    r.  f^rr      S? 

But  sickening  oia.v  disease,  L.  C.J  .  de  Vere  W 

But  V  in  vapour,  hard  to  mark  ;  Love  thou  thy  land  bJ 

And  V  desires,  like  fitful  blasts  of  balm  Gardener  s  D.  6» 

I  shook  her  breast  with  v  alarms—  Tl^  Letters  38 

And  therewithal  an  answer  v  as  wind  :  Princess  t  45 

moulder'd  lodges  of  the  Past  So  sweet  a  voice  and  v,  „        iv  bi 

as  babies  for  the  moon,  V  brightness ;  r     ,;'         7^ 

To  that  v  fear  implied  in  death  ;  In  Mem.  xh  14 

Is  faith  as  i>  as  all  unsweet :  "         xlmi  & 

If  any  v  desire  should  rise,  "              ''ak. 

V  words  !  but  ah,  how  hard  to  frame  „         xcv  4Sy 


Vagrant 


759 


VaUey 


Guinevere  663 
Last  Tournament  150 


Vagrant  (continued)     v  desire  That  spurs  an  imitative  will.     In  Mem.  ex  19 
swaying  upon  a  restless  elm  Drew  the  v  glance  of 

Vivien,  Balin  and  Balan  464 

To  one  at  least,  who  hath  not  children,  v,  Merlin  and  V.  506 

■  You  breathe  but  accusation  vast  and  v,  „  701 
There  gleam'd  a  v  suspicion  m  his  eyes  :  Lamcelot  and  E.  127 
came  and  went  Before  her,  or  a  «  spiritual  fear —  Guinevere  71 
Laziness,  v  love-longings,  the  bright  May,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  128 
What  V  world-whisper,  mystic  pain  or  joy,  Far — far-away  7 
Till,  led  by  dream  and  v  desire,                                     To  Master  of  B.  17 

Vaguer    »  voices  of  Polytheism  Make  but  one  music,       Akbar's  Dream  150 

Vail    her  hand  Grasp'd,  made  her  v  her  eyes  : 

Vail'd    He  look'd  but  once,  and  v  his  eyes  again. 

Vain  (adj.)     {See  also  Vaain)     Of  knitted  purport,  all 

were  v.  Two  Voices  168 

The  chancellor,  sedate  and  v,  Day -Dm.,  Revival  29 

blank  And  waste  it  seem'd  and  v  ;  Princess  vii  43 

From  talk  of  battles  loud  and  v,  Ode  on  Well.  247 

V  solace  !  Memory  standing  near  To  J.  S.  53 

No  V  libation  to  the  Muse,  Will  Water.  9 

Who  will  not  hear  denial,  v  and  rude  Lover's  Tale  i  628 

like  a  v  rich  man.  That,  having  always  prosper'd  „  715 

■  But  V  the  tears  for  darken'd  years  Ancient  Sage  183 
And  V  the  laughter  as  the  tears,  „  185 
Rail  at '  Blind  Fate  '  with  many  a  v  '  Alas  !  '  Doubt  and  Prayer  2 
Help  thy  v  worlds  to  bear  thy  light.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  32 
making  v  pretence  Of  gladness,  „  xxx  6 
That  not  a  moth  with  v  desire  „  liv  10 
At  night  she  weeps,  '  How  v  am  I !  „  Ix  15 
With  fifty  Mays,  thy  songs  are  v ;  „  IxxvilA 
Thy  likeness,  I  might  count  it  v  „  xcii  2 
Half-gro^vn  as  yet,  a  child,  and  v —  „  cxiv  9 
man  of  science  himself  is  fonder  of  glory,  and  v,  Maud  I  iv  37 
She  murmur'd,  '  V,  in  vain  :  it  cannot  be.  Lancelot  and  E.  892 
project  after  project  rose,  and  all  of  them  were  v  ;  The  Flight  14 
I  was  jealous,  anger'd,  v. 
May  your  fears  be  v  ! 

Vain  (s)     I  would  shoot,  howe'er  in  v, 

Her  and  her  children,  let  her  plead  in  y; 

Borrow'd  a  glass,  but  all  in  v : 

If  all  be  not  in  i> ; 

the  Queen,  who  long  had  sought  in  v  To  break  him 

Foredooming  all  his  trouble  was  in  v, 

that  ye  blew  your  boast  in  t)  ?  ' 

To  sleek  her  rufifled  peace  of  mind,  in  v. 

That  proof  of  trust-— -so  often  ask'd  in  v  ! 

She  murmur'd, '  Vain,  in  t) :  it  cannot  be. 

When  some  brave  deed  seem'd  to  be  done  in  v, 

all  My  quest  were  but  in  v  ; 

And  now  his  chair  desires  him  here  in  v, 

her  life  Wasted  and  pined,  desiring  him  in  v. 

have  but  stricken  with  the  sword  in  v  ; 

And  we  had  not  fought  them  in  v, 

Torture  and  trouble  in  v, — 

Or  you  may  drive  in  v, 

But  the  Bandit  had  woo'd  me  in  v, 
Vainglorious     Nothing  of  the  vulgar,  or  v, 
Vainglory     Drove  me  from  all  vainglories, 
Vainlier    v  than  a  hen  To  her  false  daughters 
Vale     Winds  all  the  v  in  rosy  folds, 

Thebe  lies  a  V  in  Ida, 

many  a  v  And  river-sunder'd  champaign 

Lay,  dozing  in  the  v  of  Avalon, 

■  Make  me  a  cottage  in  the  v,' 
and  many  a  winding  v  And  meadow. 
Beyond  the  thick-leaved  platans  of  the  v. 
roll  The  torrents,  dash'd  to  the  v  : 
'  Pretty  bud  !  Lily  of  the  v  ! 
come  ;  for  all  the  v's  Await  thee  ; 
Light,  so  low  in  the  v  You  flash  and  lighten 

afar. 
The  flocks  are  whiter  down  the  v, 
up  the  v  of  Usk,  By  the  flat  meadow, 
'  And  thence  I  dropt  into  a  lowly  v, 
and  where  the  v  Was  lowest,  found  a  chapel, 


Happy  66 

To  One  who  ran  down  Eng.  2 

Two  Voices  344 

Enoch  Arden  166 

240 

In  Mem.  cxiv  18 

Gareth  and  L.  139 

1127 

1229 

Merlin  and  V.  899 

920 

Lancelot  and  E.  892 

Holy  Grail  274 

783 

901 

Pelleas  and  E.  496 

Pass,  of  Arthur  23 

The  Revenge  74 

Def.  of  Lucknow  86 

Politics  8 

Bandit's  Death  10 

On  Jut.  Q.  Victoria  13 

Holy  Grail  32 

Princess  v  328 

Miller's  D.  242 

(Enone  1 

„  113 

Palace  of  Art  107 

291 

Lotos- Eaters  22 

Princess  Hi  175 

V  350 

„      vi  193 

„     vii  215 

Window,  Marr.  Mom.  9 

In  Mem.  cxv  10 

Marr.  of  Geraint  831 

Holy  Grail  440 

441 


Vale  {continued)    Re-makes  itself,  and  flashes  down  the  v —      Guinevere  610 

By  thousands  down  the  crags  and  thro'  the  v's.  Montenegro  8 

and  every  way  the  v's  Wind,  Tiresias  182 

A  gleam  from  yonder  v,  Early  Spring  33 

in  this  pleasant  v  we  stand  again,  Demeter  and  P.  34 

'  Among  the  tombs  in  this  damp  v  of  yours  !  The  Ring  325 

Our  vernal  bloom  from  every  v  and  plain  To  Mary  Boyle  9 

gulf  on  gulf  thro'  all  their  v's  below.  Prog,  of  Spring  73 

But  when  she  gain'd  the  broader  v.  Death  of  (Enone  91 

Came  that '  Ave  atque  V  '  of  the  Poet's  Frater  Ave,  etc.  5 

■  Frater  Ave  atque  V  ' — as  we  wander'd  to  and  fro  „              7 
Valence     "  O  ay,  what  say  ye  to  Sir  V,  Merlin  and  V.  705 

Sir  V  wedded  with  an  outland  dame :  ,,            714 

Was  charged  by  F  to  bring  home  the  child.  „            718 

Valentine    birds  that  piped  their  V's,  Princess  v  239 

Valiant     Ring  in  the  v  man  and  free,  In  Mem.  cvi  29 

■  I  have  fought  for  Queen  and  Faith  like  a  v  man 

and  true  ;  The  Revenge  101 

they  stared  at  the  dead  that  had  been  so  v  and  true,  „        105 

Valkyrian  ourself  have  often  tried  V  hymns.  Princess  iv  139 
Valley     {See  also  Island-valley)     the  broad  v  dimm'd 

in  the  gloaming :  Leonine  Eleg.  1 
or  fills  The  homed  v's  all  about,                               Supp.  Confessions  152 

lovelier  Than  all  the  v's  of  Ionian  hills.  (Enone  2 

Behind  the  v  topmost  Gargarus  Stands  up  ,.     10 

panther's  roar  came  muffled,  while  I  sat  Low  in  the  v.  ,,  215 

In  this  green  v,  imder  this  green  hill,  ,.  232 

As  I  came  up  the  v  whom  think  ye  should  I  see,  Man  (^tieen  13 

All  the  V,  mother,  'ill  be  fresh  and  green  „          37 

up  the  V  came  a  swell  of  music  on  the  wind.  „  Con.  32 

Ajid  up  the  V  came  again  the  music  on  the  wind.  „          36 

Wild  flowers  in  the  v  for  other  hands  than  mine.  „          52 

Full-faced  above  the  v  stood  the  moon  ;  Lotos- Eaters  7 

bolts  are  hurl'd  Far  below  them  in  the  v's,  „  C.  S.  112 

others  in  Elysian  v's  dwell,  „          124 

The  v's  of  grape-loaded  vines  that  glow  D.  of  F.  Women  219 

Where  yon  dark  v's  wind  forlorn.  On  a  Mourner  22 

I  lived  In  the  white  convent  down  the  v  there,  St.  S.  Stylites  62 

from  the  v's  underneath  Came  little  copses  Anvphion  31 

From  some  delightful  v.  Will  Water.  120 

To  bicker  down  a  v.  The  Brook  26 

fought  their  last  below,  Was  climbing  up  the  v  ;  Aylmer's  Field  228 
come,  for  Love  is  of  the  v,  come.  For  Love  is  of  the 

V,  come  thou  down  Princess  vii  198 

let  the  torrent  dance  thee  down  To  find  him  in  the  v  ;  „            210 

turning  saw  The  happy  v's,  half  in  light,  „     Con.  41 

Follow'd  up  in  v  and  glen  With  blare  of  bugle.  Ode  on  Well.  114 

All  in  the  v  of  Death  Rode  the  six  hundred.  Light  Brigade  3 

Into  the  V  of  Death  Rode  the  six  himdred.  (repeat)  „        7,  16 

A  thousand  shadowy -pencill'd  v's  The  Daisy  67 

All  along  the  v,  stream  that  flashest  white,  V.  of  Cauteretz  1 

All  along  the  v,  where  thy  waters  flow,  „            3 

All  along  the  v,  while  I  walk'd  to-day,  „            5 

For  all  along  the  v,  down  thy  rocky  bed,  „            7 

And  all  along  the  v,  by  rock  and  cave  and  tree,  ,,            9 

Above  the  v's  of  palm  and  pine.'  The  Islet  23 

The  V,  the  voice,  the  peak,  Voice  and  the  P.  27 

and  jutting  peak  And  v,  Spec,  of  Iliad  14 

Fly  to  the  light  in  the  v  below—  Window,  Letter  12 

Ringing  thro'  the  v's,  Maud  I  xii  10 

And  the  v's  of  Paradise.  „    xxii  44 

Flee  down  the  v  before  he  get  to  horse.  Gareth  and  L.  941 

thro'  many  a  grassy  glade  And  v,  Marr.  of  Geraint  237 

long  street  of  a  little  town  In  a  long  v,  „             243 

And  out  of  town  and  v  came  a  noise  „  247 
That  glooms  his  v,  sighs  to  see  the  peak  Sun- 

flush'd,  Balin  and  Balan  165 

fill'd  With  the  blue  v  and  the  glistening  brooks.  Lover's  Tale  i  331 

men  dropt  dead  in  the  v's  V.  of  Maeldune  31 

To  silver  all  the  v's  with  her  shafts —  Tiresias  32 

horsemen,  drew  to  the  v — and  stay'd  ;  Heavy  Brigade  3 

When  over  the  v.  In  early  summers.  Merlin  and  the  G.  17 

Drew  to  the  v  Named  of  the  Shadow,  „              86 

while  we  dwelt  Together  in  this  v —  Death  of  (Enone  30 

Thro'  blasted  v  and  flaring  forest  Kapiolani  12 


Valorous 


760 


Varying 


Valorons    many  a  v  legionary, 

our  most  v,  Sanest  and  most  obedient : 

a  V  weapon  in  olden  England  ! 
Valour     V  and  charity  more  and  more. 

courtesy  wins  woman  all  as  well  As  v  may, 

Stately  purposes,  v  in  battle, 
Value     To  loyal  hearts  the  v  of  all  gifts 

The  V  of  that  jewel  he  had  to  guard  ? 

And  trebling  all  the  rest  in  v — 

A  gift  of  slenderer  v,  mine. 
Valued     he  knew  the  man  and  v  him. 
Valueless    and  you  saved  me,  a  v  life, 
Valuing     V  the  giddy  pleasure  of  the  eyes. 

V  the  giddy  pleasure  of  the  eyes. 
Valve    and  betwixt  were  u's  Of  open-work 

marble  stairs.  And  great  bronze  v's, 

Descending,  burst  the  great  bronze  v's. 
Van     Love  wept  and  spread  his  sheeny  v's  for  flight ; 

Then  those  who  led  the  v,  and  those  in  rear, 
Van  Diemen    grows  From  England  to  F  Z>. 
Vane    not  the  County  Member's  with  the  v  : 

Still  on  the  tower  stood  the  v. 

Waverings  of  every  v  with  every  wind, 

and  once  we  only  saw  Your  gilded  v. 
Vanish    So  v  friendships  only  made  in  wine. 

and  pass  And  v  in  the  woods  ; 

Dreamlike,  should  on  the  sudden  v, 

From  less  to  less  and  v  into  light. 

madden'd  the  peoples  would  v  at  last. 

And  ever  vanishing,  never  v'es, 

thy  world  Might  v  like  thy  shadow  in  the  dark. 

The  hope  I  catch  at  v'es  and  youth 

But  Song  will  V  in  the  Vast ; 

Till  shadows  v  in  the  Light  of  Light. 

Will  V  and  give  place  to  the  beauty 

ere  it  v'es  Over  the  margin, 

if  such  a  wife  as  you  Should  v  unrecorded. 

Let  the  golden  Iliad  v, 

V  in  your  deeps  and  heights  ? 
Vanish'd  (adj.  and  part)    But  O  for  the  touch  of  a  « 

hand,  Break,  break,  etc.  11 

And  those  who  sorrow'd  o'er  a  v  race,  Aylmer's  Field ^^ 

But  since  it  pleased  a  v  eye.  In  Mem.  viii  21 

And,  thy  dark  freight,  a  v  life.  „  x  8 

The  days  have  v,  tone  and  tint,  „  xliv  5 

And  thou  hast  v  from  thine  own  Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son.  5 

Far  among  the  v  races,  old  Assyrian  kings  would 

flay  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  79 

All  1  loved  are  v  voices,  all  my  steps  are  on  the  dead.  „  252 

When,  in  the  v  year.  You  saw  the  league-long 

rampart-fire  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  26 

Light  among  the  v  ages  ;  To  Virgil  25 

Stung  by  his  loss  had  v,  none  knew  where.  Lover's  Tale  iv  102 

Many  a  hearth  upon  our  dark  globe  sighs  after  many  a  v 

face,  Vastness  1 

Many  a  planet  by  many  a  sun  may  roll  with  the  dust 


Boadicea  85 

Geraint  and  E.  910 

Kafiolani  4 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  40 

Last  Tournament  708 

Vastness  7 

Lancelot  and  E.  1214 

Lover's  Tale  iv  153 

200 

To  Ulysses  48 

Enoch  Arden  121 

Despair  61 

M.  d' Arthur  128 

Pass,  of  Arthur  296 

Princess  iv  202 

t)365 

vi  75 

Love  and  Death  8 

Lover's  Tale  Hi  24 

Amfhion  84 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  12 

The  Letters  1 

To  the  Queen  ii  50 

The  Ring  331 

Geraint  and  E.  479 

Balin  and  Balan  327 

Holy  Grail  260 

Pass,  of  Arthur  468 

Despair  24 

Ancient  Sage  44 

52 

The  Flight  16 

Epilogue  40 

Epit.  on  Caxton  4 

Happy  36 

Merlin  and  the  G.  128 

Romney's  R.  69 

Parnassus  20 

God  and  the  Univ.  1 


of  a  t)  race. 
Arthur  had  v  I  knew  not  whither. 
Has  V  in  the  shadow  cast  by  Death. 
Vanish'd  (verb)    she  cast  back  upon  him  A  piteous 

glance,  and  v. 
clink'd,  and  cla.sh'd,  and  v,  and  I  woke, 
v  panic-stricken,  like  a  shoal  Of  darting  fish, 
Until  they  v  by  the  fairy  well 
And  V,  and  his  book  came  down  to  me.' 
V  suddenly  from  the  field  With  young  Lavaine 
every  bridge  as  quickly  as  he  crost  Sprang  into  fire 

andi), 
now  there  is  a  lion  in  the  way.'    So  v." 
bounded  forth  and  v  thro'  the  night. 
Or  ev'n  a  fall'n  feather,  v  again, 
watch'd  them  till  they  v  from  my  sight 
flash'd  thro'  sense  and  soul  And  by  the  poplar 
power  over  Hell  till  it  utterly  v  away 


Vanish'd  (verb)  {continued) 

and  Goddesses, 
Vanishing    {See  also  Ever-vanishing 
V,  atom  and  void, 

to  the  last  dip  of  the  v  sail  She  watch'd  it. 

And  ever  v,  never  vanishes. 
Vanity    Oh  !  ^  !  Death  waits  at  the  door. 

they  sing  Like  poets,  from  the  v  of  song  ? 

thy  V  so  shot  up  It  frighted  all  free  fool 

my  strangled  v  Utter'd  a  stifled  cry — 
Vanquish    knew  that  Love  can  v  Death, 


Merlin  and  the  G.  77 
D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  3 

Aylmer's  Field  284 
Sea  Dreams  135 
Geraint  and  E.  468 
Merlin  and  V.  428 
^  650 
Lancelot  and  E.  508 

Holy  Grail  506 

646 

Pelleas  atid  E.  487 

Last  Tournament  372 

Lover's  Tale  ii  42 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  110 

Despair  102 


before  him  V  shadow-like  Gods 

Kapiolani  26 
grave  itself  shall  pass, 

Lucretius  258 
Enoch  Arden  245 


I 


Vanquish'd 

lost. 
We  V,  you  the  Victor  of  your  will. 
Victor  from  v  issues  at  the  last. 
Vantage    1  set  thee  high  on  v  ground. 


Ancient  Sage  44 

All  Things  will  Die  16 

Gardener's  D.  100 

Last  Tournament  306 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  199 

D.  of  F.  Women  269 


when  our  side  was  v  and  my  cause  For  ever 

Princess  vi  24 

167 

Gareth  and  L.  1262 

Balin  and  Balan  534 


Vantage-ground    With  such  a  v-g  for  nobleness  !  Aylmer's  Field  387 

nor  a  v-g  For  pleasure  ;  Ded.  of  Idylls  23 

Vapid     But  languidly  adjust  My  v  vegetable  loves  Talking  Oak  183 

Vapour    '  High  up  the  v's  fold  and  swim  :  Two  Voices  262 

swimming  v  slopes  athwart  the  glen,  Qinone  3 

But  vague  in  v,  hard  to  mark  ;  Love  thou  thy  latid  62 

The  v's  weep  their  burthen  to  the  ground,  Tithomos  2 

When  the  ranks  are  roll'd  in  v,  Locksley  Hall  104 

Comes  a  v  from  the  margin,  „             191 

Faint  shadows,  v's  lightly  curl'd,  Day- Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  5 

flowing  range  Of  v  buoy'd  the  crescent-bark,  „          Depart.  22 

My  breath  to  heaven  like  v  goes  :  St.  Agnes'  Eve  3 

In  crystal  v  everywhere  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  5 

A  v  heavy,  hueless,  formless,  cold,  Visimi  of  Sin  53 

When  that  cold  v  touch'd  the  palace  gate,  „          58 

A  belt,  it  seem'd,  of  luminous  v,  lay.  Sea  Dreams  209 

saw  The  soft  white  v  streak  the  crowned  towers  Princess  Hi  344 

Roll'd  the  rich  v  far  into  the  heaven.  Spec,  of  Uiad  8 

Behind  a  purple-frosty  bank  Of  v.  In  Mem.  irvii  4 

All  night  the  shining  v  sail  „    Con.  Ill 

yellow  v's  choke  The  great  city  sounding  wide  ;  Maud  II  iv  63 

a  lovely  baleful  star  Veil'd  in  gray  v  ;  Merlin  and  V.  263 

The  moony  v  rolling  round  the  King,  Guinevere  601 

silvery  v  in  daylight  Over  the  mountain  Floats,  Kapiolani  16 

Vapour-braided    And  sweet  the  v-b  blue.  The  Letters  42 

Vapour-girdle    from  my  v-g  soaring  forth  Prog,  of  Spring  79 

Vapour-swathed    forehead  v-s  In  meadows  ever  green  ;  Freedom  7 

Variable     Then  follow'd  calms,  and  then  winds  v,  Enoch  Arden  545 

Varied     With  all  the  v  changes  of  the  dark,  Edwin  Morris  36 

The  coming  year's  great  good  and  v  ills.  Prog,  of  Spring  93 

Varier    pious  v's  from  the  church.  To  chapel ;  Sea  Dreams  19 

Varieties    (Beauty  seen  In  all  v  of  mould  and 

mind)  To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  7 

Various     Each  month  is  v  to  present  The  world  Two  Voices  74 

All  v,  each  a  perfect  whole  From  living  Nature,  Palace  of  Art  58 

'  O  all  things  fair  to  sate  my  v  eyes  !  ,.           193 

So  beautiful,  vast,  v.  Ancient  Sage  84 

foremost  in  thy  v  gallery  Place  it.  Ode  to  Memory  84 

That  v  wilderness  a  tissue  of  light  Lover's  Tale  i  419 

To  prize  your  v  book,  and  send  A  gift  To  Ulysses  47 

Varmint  (vermin)    '  Gaw  up  agean  fur  the  v  ?  '  Owd  Rod  98 

Vamish'd     once  more  in  v  glory  shine  Thy  stars  Prog,  of  Spring  38 

Varsity  (imiversity)     'e  coom'd  to  the  parish  wi'  lots  o' 

V  debt,  y.  Farmer,  N.  S.  29 

Fur  Squire  wur  a  V  scholard.  Village  Wife  25 


Vartical  (vertical) 

soon  !  ' 
Vary    To  v  from  the  kindly  race  of  men, 

violet  varies  from  the  lily  as  far  As  oak  from  elm  : 
And  as  the  light  of  Heaven  varies. 


when  the  white  fog  v  like  a  ghost  Before  the  day,      Death  of  (Enone  67 


'  Cast  awaay  on  a  disolut  land  wi'  a  v 

North.  Cobbler  3 
Tithonus  29 
Princess  v  182 
Marr.  of  Geraint  6 
so  loved  Geraint  To  make  her  beauty  v  day  by  day,  ,,  9 

value  of  all  gifts  Must  v  as  the  giver  s.  Lancelot  and  E.  1215 

V  like  the  leaves  and  flowers.  Poets  and  Critics  4 

Vary-COlour'd     A  walk  with  v-c  shells  Arabian  Nights  57 

Varying    v  to  and  fro.  We  know  not  wherefore  ;  Aylmer's  Field  73 

Fomi,  Ritual,  v  with  the  tribes  of  men.  Akbar's  Dream,  125 

Ever  v  Madeline,  (repeat)  Madeline  3,  18,  27 

The  V  year  with  blade  and  sheaf  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  1 

By  many  a  v  influence  and  so  long.  Princess  vi  267 


Varying 


761 


Vein 


Tarying  {coiUiniied)    poesy,  v  voices  of  prayer  ?  Fastness  31 

Vase     From  fluted  v,  and  brazen  uni  In  order,  Arabian  Nights  60 

from  v's  in  the  hall  Flowers  of  all  heavens,  Princess,  Pro.  11 

or  prove  The  Dana'id  of  a  leaky  v,  „  ii  340 

Break,  thou  deep  v  of  chilling  tears,  In  Mem.  iv  11 

Years  that  make  And  break  the  v  of  clay,  Ancient  Sage  92 

Vashti    O  V,  noble  V  !    Summon'd  out  She  kept  her  state,  Princess  Hi  228 
Vassal  (adj.)     In  v  tides  that  follow'd  thought.  In  Mem.  cxii  16 

Delivering,  that  his  lord,  the  v  king,  Gareth  and  L.  391 

follow'd  up  by  her  v  legion  of  fools  ;  Fastness  12 

Vassal  (S)     Not  v's  to  be  beat,  nor  pretty  babes  Princess  iv  146 

And  makes  it  v  imto  love  :  In  Mem.  xlviii  8 

feeble  v's  of  wine  and  anger  and  lust,  Maud  II  i  ^ 

loyal  v's  toiling  for  their  liege.  Coin,  of  Arthur  282 

Doorm,  whom  his  shaking  v's  call'd  the  Bull,  Geraint  and  E.  439 

Who  now  no  more  a »  to  the  thief,  „  753 

But  work  as  V  to  the  larger  love.  Merlin  and  F.  491 

A  prisoner,  and  the  v  of  thy  will ;  Pelleas  and  E.  241 

The  Present  is  the  v  of  the  Past :  Lover's  Tale  i  119 

And  make  thy  gold  thy  v  not  thy  king,  Ancient  Sage  259 

the  tyrant  v  oi  a.  tyrant  vice  !  The  Flight  25 

Vassalage    See  Kitchen-vassalage 
"Vast  (adj.)      F  images  in  glimmering  dawn, 

The  V  Republics  that  majr  grow, 

But,  all  his  v  heart  sherris-warm'd, 

The  V  Akrokeraunian  walls, 

and  fell  In  v  sea-cataracts — 

lays  His  v  and  filthy  hands  upon  my  will, 

then  how  v  a  work  To  assail  this  gray 

The  bones  of  some  v  bulk  that  lived 

the  V  designs  Of  his  labour'd  rampart-lines, 

And  in  the  v  cathedral  leave  Mm, 

fur  I  luvv'd  'er  a  v  sight  moor  fur  it : 

Drops  in  his  v  and  wandering  grave. 

His  own  V  shadow  glory-crown'd  ; 

No  doubt  V  eddies  in  the  flood 

for  a  V  speculation  had  fail'd 

whose  V  wit  And  hundred  winters 

drew  The  v  and  shaggy  mantle  of  his  beard 

but  I  dreamt  Of  some  v  charm  concluded 

Drew  the  v  eyelid  of  an  inky  cloud, 

And  whelm  all  this  beneath  asv  a  mound 

'  You  breathe  but  accusation  v  and  vague, 

The  v  necessity  of  heart  and  life. 

Brake  from  the  v  oriel-embowering  vine 

Then  Arthur  made  v  banquets,  and  strange  knights  Pelleas  and  E.  147 

On  some  v  plain  before  a  setting  sun,  Guinevere  77 

I,  whose  V  pity  almost  makes  me  die  „       534 

who  broke  The  v  design  and  purpose  of  the  King.  „       670 

and  her  throne  In  our  v  Orient,  and  one  isle,  To  the  Queen  ii  31 

mighty  gyres  Rapid  and  v. 

The  v  occasion  of  our  stronger  life — 

So  beautiful,  v,  various,  so  beyond 

The  v  sun-clusters'  gather'd  blaze. 

In  that  V  Oval  ran  a  shudder  of  shame. 

Thro'  all  the  v  dominion  which  a  sword, 
Vast  (s)    Thine  own  shall  wither  in  the  v, 

A  soul  shall  draw  from  out  the  v 

But  Song  will  vanish  in  the  F  ; 
Vaster    May  make  one  music  as  before.  But  v. 

What  v  dream  can  hit  the  mood  Of  Love 

As,  unto  V  motions  bound, 

And  still  as  v  grew  the  shore 

My  love  is  v  passion  now  ; 

Or  in  that  v  Spain  I  leave  to  Spain 


Two  Foices  305 

Day- Dm.,  L' Envoi  15 

WUl  Water.  197 

To  E.  L.  4 

Sea  Dreams  54 

Luxiretius  220 

Princess  Hi  233 

294 

Ode  on  Well.  104 

280 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  36 

In  Mem.  vi  16 

„         xcvii  3 

„      cxxviii  5 

Maud  I  i9 

Com.  of  Arthur  280 

Merlin  and  F.  256 

512 

634 

656 

701 

925 

Lancelot  and  E.  1198 


Lover's  Tale  ii  198 

Columbus  35 

Ancient  Sage  84 

Epilogue  54 

St.  Telemachus  73 

Akbar's  Dream  14 

In  Mem.  Ixxvi  11 

Con.  123 

Epilogue  40 

In  Mem.,  Pro.  29 

„  .vlvii  11 

„  Ixiii  10 

„  ciii  25 

„         cxxx  10 

Columbus  208 

Sway'd  by  v  ebbs  and  flows  than  can  be  known  LocTcsley  H.,  Sixty  194 

Vastness     In  v  and  in  mystery.  In  Mem.  xcvii  7 

Swallow'd  in  F,  lost  in  Silence,  Fastness  34 

Vat     flask  of  cider  from  his  father's  v's,  Audley  Court  27 

red  with  spirted  purple  of  the  v's.  Princess  yii  202 

Vault  (s)     Imbower'd  d's  of  pillar'd  palm,  Arabian  Nights  dQ 

Nor  any  cloud  would  cross  the  v,  Mariana  in  the  S.  38 

Ranges  of  glimmering  v's  with  iron  grates,  D.  of  F.  Women  35 

O  Priestess  in  the  v's  of  Death,  In  Mem.  Hi  2 

In  v's  and  catacombs,  they  fell ;  „        Iviii  4 


Vault  (s)  {continued)     up  thy  v  with  roaring  sound  Climb 

thy  thick  noon,  In  Mem.  Ixxii  25 

Far  beneath  a  blazing  v.  Will  18 

from  the  deep  v  where  the  heart  of  Hope  Fell 

into  dust.  Lover's  Tale  i  94 

And  laid  her  in  the  v  of  her  own  kin.  „  iv  39 

entering  the  dim  v.  And,  making  there  a  sudden  light,  „  52 

Then  at  the  far  end  of  the  v  he  saw  His  lady  „  56 

Drown'd  in  the  gloom  and  horror  of  the  v.  „  62 

Vault  (verb)     lightly  v  from  the  throne  and  play  The  Mermaid  33 

Far  as  the  Future  v's  her  skies,  Mechanofhilus  11 

Vaulted    {See  also  Hollow-vaulted,  Long-vaulted,  Over- 
vaulted)      F  o'er  the  dark-blue  sea.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  40 
Then  some  one  sent  beneath  his  v  palm  Princess  v  31 
So  many  a  time  he  v  up  again  ;                                     Gareth  and  L.  1125 
And  V  on  his  horse,  and  so  they  crash'd  In 

onset,  Balin  and  Balan  555 

Ran  thro'  the  doors  and  v  on  his  horse  And  fled  :       Pelleas  and  E.  539 
V  upon  him.  And  rode  beneath  an  ever-showering 

leaf.  Last  Tournament  491 

Vauntcourier     that  one  F  to  this  double  ?  Lover's  Tale  ii  30 

Vaunted     and  v  our  kith  and  our  kin,  F.  of  Maeldune  47 

Veer     the  warm  hour  returns  With  v  of  wind.  Last  Tournament  231 

Veering    (See  also  Ever-veering)    bird  that  still  is  v  there 


Above  his  four  gold  letters) 

By  »  passion  fann'd, 
Vegetable     But  languidly  adjust  My  vapid  v  loves 
Veil  (s)     inner  impulse  rent  the  v  Of  his  old  husk  : 

thro'  thick  v's  to  apprehend  A  labour 

Slow-dropping  v's  of  thinnest  lawn, 

the  time  Is  come  to  raise  the  v. 

And  draws  the  v  from  hidden  worth. 

rose  of  Gulistan  Shall  burst  her  v  : 

From  orb  to  orb,  from  v  to  v.' 

Behind  the  v,  behind  the  v. 

A  lucid  V  from  coast  to  coast,  • 

We  heard  behind  the  woodbine  v 

an  Isis  hid  by  the  v. 

A  faded  mantle  and  a  faded  v. 

And  in  her  v  enfolded,  manchet  bread. 

And  tearing  ofi  her  v  of  faded  silk 

I  knew  the  v  had  been  withdrawn. 

aghast  the  maiden  arose,  White  as  her  v, 

from  under  this  A  v,  that  seemed.no  more  than 
gilded  air, 

our  mortal  v  And  shatter'd  phantom 

the  V  Is  rending,  and  the  Voices  of  the  day 

She  comes  to  dress  me  in  my  bridal  v. 

But  the  bridal  v — Your  nurse  is  waiting. 
Veil  (verb)     I  cannot  v,  or  droop  my  sight, 

gleams  of  good  that  broke  From  either  side,  nor  « 
his  eyes  : 

She  bow'd  as  if  to  «  a  noble  tear  ; 

V  His  want  in  forms  for  fashion's  sake, 

Well  might  I  wish  to  v  her  wickedness, 

and  now  He  v's  His  flesh  in  bread, 

Murder  would  not  v  your  sin, 


The  Ping  332 

Madeline  29 

Talking  Oak  183 

Two  Foices  10 

296 

Lotos- Eaters  11 

Gardener's  D.  274 

Day -Dm.,  Arrival  4 

Princess  iv  123 

In  Mem.  xxx  28 

Ivi  28 

„        Ixvii  14 

„    Ixxxix  50 

Maud  I  iv  43 

Marr.  of  Geraint  135 

389 

Geraint  and  E.  514 

Holy  Grail  522 

Guinevere  363 

Lover's  Tale  iv  290 

De  Prof.,  Two  G.  46 

The  Ring  38 


Eleanore  87 

Love  thou  thy  land  90 

Princess  Hi  289 

In  Mem.  cxi  5 

Guinevere  211 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  156 

Forlorn  49 


Veil'd     {See  also  Willow-veil'd)     eyes  have  been  intent 

On  that  V  picture — -v,  for  what  it  holds  Gardener's  D.  270 

That  V  the  world  with  jaundice.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  20 

he  V  His  face  with  the  other,  and  at  once,  Aylmer's  Field  808 


again  She  v  her  brows,  and  prone  she  sank, 

In  the  centre  stood  A  statue  v,  to  which  they  sang  ; 
And  which,  tho'  v,  was  known  to  me, 

seem'd  a  lovely  baleful  star  F  in  gray  vapour  ; 

but  what  I  saw  was  v  And  cover'd  ; 

walk'd  abreast  with  me,  and  v  his  brow, 

I  walk'd  behind  with  one  who  v  his  brow. 

'  He  V  Himself  in  flesh, 
Veileth    every  cloud,  that  spreads  above  And  v  love, 
Veilless    He  drove  the  dust  against  her  v  eyes  : 
Vein  (s)     Life  shoots  and  glances  thro'  your  v's, 

a  languid  fire  creeps  Thro'  my  v's 

you  can  talk  :  yours  is  a  kindly  v  : 

Here  stays  the  blood  along  the  v's. 


Princess  v  107 


In  Mem.  ciii  12 

Merlin  and  F.  263 

Holy  Grail  851 

Lover's  Tale  ii  86 

„  Hi  12 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  156 

Two  Foices  447 

Geraint  and  E.  529 

Rosalind  22 

Eleanore  131 

Edwin  Morris  81 

[Day- Dm.,  Sleep  P.  4* 


Vein 


762 


Vexed-Vext 


Vein  (s)  (continued)     brooking  not  the  Tarquin  in  lier  v's,  Lua-eiius  237 

The  summer  of  the  vine  in  all  his  v's —  Princess  i  183 

But  branches  current  yet  in  kindred  v's.'  „      n  245 

From  out  a  common  v  of  memory  Sweet  household  talk,         ,.  314 

I  felt  my  v's  Stretch  with  fierce  heat ;  ,,       v  537 

half  the  wolf's-milk  curdled  in  their  v's,  „     vii  130 

now  the  wine  made  summer  in  his  v's,  Man:  of  Geraint  398 

his  forehead  v's  Bloated,  and  branch'd  ;  Balin  and  Balan  391 

The  flowers  that  run  poison  in  their  v's.  Lover's  Tale  i  347 


Burst  v,  snap  sinew,  and  crack  heart.  Si; 

heat  of  a  WTetched  life  rushing  back  thro'  the  v's  ? 
Vein  (verb)     all  the  gold  That  v's  the  world 
Velvet  (adj.)     added  fulness  to  the  phrase  Of 

'  Gaimtlet  in  the  v  glove.' 
Velvet  (s)     dusted  v's  have  much  need  of  thee  : 

Black  V  of  the  costliest — 
Veneer'd     V  with  sanctimonious  theory. 
Venerable     '  Thanks,  v  friend,'  replied  Geraint ; 

Among  the  Roses,  the  more  v. 
Venerator    not  a  scomer  of  your  sex  But  v, 
Vengeance    '  Is  this  thy  v,  holy  Venus, 


J.  Oldcastle  123 
Despair  68 
Princess  iv  543 


To  Mara,  of  Dufferin  12 

To  J.  M.  K.  4 

Aylmer's  Field  804 

Princess,  Pro.  117 

Marr.  of  Geraint  303 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  76 

Princess  iv  423 

Lucretius  67 


What  hinders  me  To  take  such  bloody  v  on  you  both  ? —  Princess  iv  534 


when  he  told  us  '  F  is  mine  ! 
Venial    Or  seeming-genial  v  fault, 
Venice     then  I  pass'd  Home,  and  thro'  F, 
Venom     Not  one  to  flirt  a  i;  at  her  eyes, 
Venom'd    See  Faintly-venoih'd 

Venomous    You  should  have  seen  him  wince  As  from 
a  V  thing : 

Strike  dead  the  whole  weak  race  of  v  worms, 
Venture    my  poor  v  but  a  fleet  of  glass 

would  V  to  give  him  the  nay  ? 
Ventured    Alone  at  home,  nor  v  out  alone. 

And  boldly  v  on  the  liberties. 

or  half  the  world  Had  v— 
Venturous    Maud  with  her  v  climbings 
Venus     '  Is  this  thy  vengeance,  holy  V, 

And  o'er  his  head  Uranian  F  hung, 

And  silver-smiling  F  ere  she  fell 

V  near  her  !  smiling  downward 

Hesper —  F — were  we  native  to  that  splendour 
Veragua    thunders  in  the  black  V  nights, 
Vwbiage    This  barren  v,  current  among  men, 
Vere  de  Vere    (See  also  Clara  Vere  de  Vere)  repose 

Which  stamps  the  caste  oi  V  d  V. 
Verge    Float  by  you  on  the  v  of  night. 

That  lent  broad  v  to  distant  lands, 

hull  Look'd  one  black  dot  against  the  v  of  dawn, 

May  from  v  to  v,  And  May  with  me  from  head  to 
heel. 

That  sinks  with  all  we  love  below  the  v  ; 

Blot  out  the  slope  of  sea  from  v  to  shore, 

And  on  the  low  dark  v  of  life 

hull  Look'd  one  black  dot  against  the  v  of  dawn, 

Each  way  from  t>  to  v  a  Holy  Land, 

dipping  his  head  low  beneath  the  v. 
Verged    kinds  of  thought.  That  v  upon  them, 
Veriest    The  v  beauties  of  the  work  appear 

Sworn  to  be  V  \ce\ol  pureness. 
Vermeil-white    near  her,  like  a  blossom  v-vc. 
Vermin  (adj.)     and  the  v  voices  here  May  buzz  so 

loud^ 
Vermin  (s)     (See  also  Varmint) 
a  nut 

curse  me  the  British  v,  the  rat ; 

and  then  like  v  here  Drown  him, 

I  will  track  this  v  to  their  earths  : 

from  the  v  that  he  sees  Before  him, 

show'd  him,  like  a  »  in  its  hole. 
Vernal    till  all  Our  v  bloom  from  every  vale 

Broaden  the  glowing  isles  of  v  blue. 
Versatility    The  grace  and  v  of  the  man  ! 
Verse     How  may  fuU-sail'd  v  express, 

inva<ie  Even  with  a  v  your  holy  woe. 

another  which  you  had,  I  mean  of  v 


V.  of  Maeldune  120 

Will  13 

The  Ring  192 

Merlin  and  V .  609 


Walk,  to  the  Mail  72 

Maud  II  i  46 

Sea  Dreams  138 

The  Wreck  17 

Enoch  Arden  517 

Princess  i  205 

Gareth  and  L.  65 

Maud  I  i  69 

Lucretius  67 

Princess  i  243 

Lover's  Tale  i  61 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  183 

187 

Columbus  146 

Princess  ii  54 


L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  40 

Margaret  31 

Palace  of  Art  30 

M.  d' Arthur  271 

Gardener's  D.  80 

Princess  iv  47 

„       vii  38 

In  Mem.  1 15 

Pass,  of  Arthur  439 

Lover's  Tale  i  337 

509 

Gardener's  D.  71 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  105 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  108 

Marr.  of  Geraint  364 

Lancelot  and  -E.  138 
As  fancies  like  the  v  in 

Princess  vi  263 

Maud  II V  58 

Gareth  and  L.  822 

Marr.  of  Geraint  217 

Pelleas  and  E.  285 

Last  Tournament  165 

To  Mary  Bmjle  9 

Pi-og.  of  Spring  60 

Lancelot  and  E.  472 

Eleanore  44 

To  J.  S.  8 

The  Epic  26 


Verse  (continued)     gave  the  v  '  Behold,  Your  house  is 
left  unto  you  desolate  ! ' 

great  Sicilian  called  Calliope  to  grace  his  golden  v 

In  V  that  brings  myself  relief. 

Take  one  v  more — the  lady  speaks 

the  name  at  the  head  of  my  v  is  thine. 

read  me  a  Bible  v  of  the  Lord's  good  will 

sought  the  tribute  ot  av  from  me, 

in  his  hand  A  scroll  of  v — 

patriot-soldier  take  His  meed  of  fame  in  v  ; 
Versed    In  many  a  subtle  question  v, 
Version    which  I  know  no  v  done  In  English 
Vert     Flame-colour,  v  and  azure,  in  three  rays, 
Vertical    See  Vartical 

Verulam  (Lord,  Francis  Bacon)     Plato  the  wise,  and  large 
brow'd  V, 

But  Homer,  Plato,   F  ; 
Verulam  (Roman  Ciolony)    London,  F,  C^muloditne. 
Very    The  v  graves  appear'd  to  smile, 

And  some  that  men  were  in  the  v  walls, 

The  V  source  and  fount  of  Day 

But  brake  his  v  heart  in  pining  for  it, 


1 


Aylmer's  Field  628 

Lucretius  94 

In  Mem.  Ixxv  2 

Merlin  and  V.  445 

To  A.  Tennyson  6 

Rizpah  61 

To  Dante  5 

Ancient  Sage  6 

Epilogue  33 

In  Mem.  xcvi  6 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  33 

Com.  of  Arthur  275 


Palace  of  Art  163 
Princess  ii  160 
Boddicea  86 
The  Letters  45 
Princess  iv  485 
In  Mem.  xxiv  3 
Gareth  and  L.  57 
I  fear'd  The  v  foim tains  of  her  life  were  chill'd  ;  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  266 
when  Even  descended,  the  v  sunset  aflame  ;  F.  of  Maeldune  66 

This  V  ring  lo  t'amo  ?  The  Ring  133 

Vesper     From  prime  to  v's  will  I  chant  Pelleas  and  E.  349 

Vessel     On  the  coals  I  lay,  A  v  full  of  sin  :  St.  S.  Stylites  170 

There  lies  the  port ;  the  v  puffs  her  sail :  Ulysses  44 

The  silver  v's  sparkle  clean,  Sir  Galahad  34 

to  make  the  name  Of  his  v  great  in  story.  The  Captain  19 

Reporting  of  his  v  China-bound,  Enoch  Arden  122 

Waving,  the  moment  and  the  v  past.  „  244 

The  V  scarce  sea-worthy ;  „  656 

And  o'er  his  head  the  Holy  F  hung  (repeat)  Holy  Grail  512,  520 

And  to  the  Holy  F  of  the  Grail.'  „  840 

one  A  v  in  mid-ocean,  her  heaved  prow  Clambering,  Lover's  Tale  ii  169 
when  all  at  once  That  painted  v,  „  191 

Tho'  his  V  was  all  but  a  wreck  ;  The  Revenge  64 

Fleeted  his  v  to  sea  with  the  king  in  it,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  60 

crest  of  the  tides  Plunged  on  the  v  The  Wreck  90 

Launch  your  v.  And  crowd  your  canvas.  Merlin  and  the  G.  126 

Vestal     tended  by  Pure  v  thoughts  in  the  translucent  fane  Isabel  4 

love-whispers  may  not  breathe  Within  this  v  limit,  Princess  ii  222 


in  the  F  entry  shriek'd  The  virgin  marble 

The  flower  of  all  their  v  knighthood, 
Vested    See  Woman-vested 
Vestibule    v's  To  caves  and  shows  of  Death : 
Veteran    Me  the  sport  of  ribald  V's, 
Vex     F  not  thou  the  poet's  mind  (repeat) 

Will  V  thee  lying  underground  ? 

'  The  end  and  the  beginning  v  His  reason  : 

to  V  me  with  his  father's  eyes  ! 

And  an  eye  shall  v  thee, 

I  will  not  V  my  bosom  : 

want  of  pence.  Which  v'es  public  men, 

V  the  unhappy  dust  thou  wouldst  not  save. 

And  it  would  v  him  even  in  his  grave, 

For  my  dead  face  would  v  her  after-life. 

Ere  you  were  bom  tovvs? 

ill  counsel  had  misled  the  girl  To  v  true  hearts  : 

As  daily  v'es  household  peace, 

I  V  my  heart  with  fancies  dim  : 

Let  this  not  ■;;  thee,  noble  heart  ! 

An  old  song  v'es  my  ear  ; 

boys  Who  love  to  v  him  eating, 

F  not  yourself  :  ye  will  not  see  me  more.' 

began  To  v  and  plague  her. 

I  seem  To  v  an  ear  too  sad  to  listen  to  me, 

And  V  them  with  my  darkness  ? 

A  madman  to  v  you  with  wretched  words. 

To  V  the  noon  with  fiery  gems, 
Vexed-Vext     Vex'd  with  a  morbid  devil  in  his  blood 

The  fanner  vext  packs  up  his  beds  and  chairs. 

Draw  down  into  his  vexed  pools 

The  vexed  eddies  of  its  wayward  brother  : 


„      m350 
Balin  and  Balan  508 

Lover's  Tale  ii  125 

Boddicea  50 

Poet's  Mind  1,  3 

Two  Voices  111 

298 

CEnone  255 

Locksley  Hall  85 

Amphion  102 

Will  Water.  44 

Come  not,  when,  etc.  4 

Enoch  Arden  303 

891 

Princess  vi  248 

„       vii  24t'2i 

In  Mem.  xxix  2 

„  xlii  1 

„        Ixxix  2 

Maud  II  ii  47 

Geraint  and  E.  561 

Pelleas  and  E.  304 

Guinevere  68 

„      315 

Lover's  Tale  i  732 

Despair  108 

Ancient  Sage  265 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  19 

39 

Supp.  Confessions  133 

Isabel  33 


Vexed-Vext 


763 


Vile 


Vexed-Vext  (continued)     '  Go,  vexed  Spirit,  sleep  in  trust ; 
scudding  drifts  the  rainy  Hyades  Vext  the  dim  sea  : 


Two  Voices  115 
Ulysses  11 


if  he  come  again,  vext  will  he  be  To  find  Enoch  Arden  301 

And  James  departed  vext  with  him  and  her.'  The  Brook  110 

Vext  with  unworthy  madness,  and  deform'd.  Aylmer's  Field  335 

Then  their  eyes  vext  her ;  ,,  802 

they  vext  the  souls  of  deans  ;  Princess,  Fro.  162 

I  stood  With  Florian,  cursing  Cj'ril,  vext  at  heart,  „  iv  171 

What  time  have  I  to  be  vext  ?  Grandmother  104 

Fool  that  I  am  to  be  vext  with  his  pride  !  Maud  I  xiii  5 

Vext  with  lawyers  and  harass'd  with  debt :  ,,        xix  22 

But  he  vext  her  and  peiplext  her  .,  xx  6 

Vext  with  waste  dreams  ?  Com.  of  Arthur  85 

bitterness  and  grief  That  vext  his  mother,  „  211 

And  vext  his  day,  but  blesses  him  asleep —  Gareth  and  L.  1286 

A  little  vext  at  losing  of  the  hunt,  Marr.  of  Geraint  234 

'  No,  no,'  said  Enid,  vext,  '  I  will  not  eat  Geraint  and  E.  656 

Vext  at  a  rtunour  issued  from  herself  Merlin  and  V.  153 

Then  Lancelot  vext  at  having  lied  in  vain  :  Lancelot  and  E.  102 

He  seem'd  so  sullen,  vext  he  could  not  go  :  „  210 

Glad  that  no  phantom  vext  me  more.  Holy  Grail  538 

vext  his  heart.  And  marr'd  his  rest —  Pelleas  and  E.  398 

carcanet  Vext  her  with  plaintive  memories  of 

the  child : 
I  should  evermore  be  vext  with  thee 
Vext  me  a  bit,  till  he  told  me 
to  have  vext  myself  And  all  in  vain  for  her — 
Never  since  I  was  nurse,  had  I  been  so  grieved 

and  so  vext !  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  45 

Vext,  that  you  thought  my  Mother  came  to  me  ?  The  Ring  140 

A  demon  vext  me,  The  light  retreated,  Merlin  and  the  G.  29 

Veadllary     In  letters  like  to  those  the  v  Gareth  and  L.  1202 

Vodog     O  Mary,  Mary  !    V  you  with  words  !  Romney's  R.  29 

Vext    See  Vexed 

Vial    A  man  with  knobs  and  wires  and  v's 

Viand    Lay  out  the  v's.' 

before  us  glow'd  Fruit,  blossom,  v,  amber  wine, 
many  a  v  left.  And  many  a  costly  cate. 
Nor  roll  thy  v's  on  a  luscious  tongue. 

Vibrate    chord  which  Hampden  smote  Will  v  to 
the  doom. 
Star  to  star  v's  light : 
In  the  Queen's  shadow,  v  on  the  walls. 

Vicar     Rome's  V  in  our  Indies  ? 

Vice    Or  crush  her,  like  a  v  of  blood, 

heart  of  the  poet  is  whirl'd  into  folly  and  v. 
And  doubling  all  his  master's  v  of  pride, 
stirr'd  this  v  in  you  which  ruin'd  man 
I  call  it,— well,  I  will  not  call  it  v  : 
They  fain  would  make  you  Master  of  all  v.' 
bagpipes,  revelling,  devil's-dances,  v. 
But  pity — the  Pagan  held  it  a  v — 
the  tyrant  vassal  of  a  tyrant  v  ! 
Rip  your  brothers'  v's  open. 

Viceregal    Your  v  days  Have  added  fulness 

Vicious    Who  being  v,  old  and  irritable. 
His  dwarf,  a  v  under-shapen  thing, 
Both  grace  and  will  to  pick  the  v  quitch 
a  shatter'd  wheel  ?  a.v  boy 

Vicisti  Galileee    often  mutter  low  '  V  G' ;  louder  again. 

Spuming  a  shatter'd  fragment  of  the  God, '  V  G  \  '  St.  Telemachus  15 

Victim     (See  also  Fellow-victim)     death  quiver'd  at  the 

v's  throat ;  /J-  of  F.  Women  115 

snake-like  slimed  his  v  ere  he  gorged  ;  Sea  Bream^s  193 

And  dress  the  v  to  the  offering  up.  Princess  iv  130 

He  seem'd  a  v  due  to  the  priest.  The  Victim  36 

Priest  was  happy.  His  v  won :  „  62 

The  rites  prepared,  the  v  bared,  „  65 

Till  the  V  hear  within  and  yearn  Boddicea  58 

One  took  him  for  a  i;  of  Earl  Doorm,  Geraint  and  E.  524 

If  not,  the  v's  flowers  before  he  fall.'  Lancelot  and  E.  910 

lurks,  listens,  fears  his  v  may  have  fled —  The  Flight  71 

A  virgin  v  to  his  memory.  The  Ring  221 

O  you  that  can  flatter  your  v's,  Charity  29 

Victor  (adj.)     Than  that  the  v  Hours  should  scorn  In  Mem.  i  13 


Last  Tournament  29 

Guinevere  505 

First  Quarrel  36 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  200 


Princess,  Pro.  65 
Hi  347 
w35 
Gareth  and  L.  848 
Ancient  Sage  267 

England  and  A  Tner.  20 

Aylmer's  Field  578 

Lancelot  and  E.  1175 

Columbus  195 

In  Mem.  Hi  15 

Maud  I  iv  39 

Marr.  of  Geraint  195 

Merlin  and  V.  362 

368 

469 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  149 

Despair  41 

The  Flight  25 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  141 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  10 

Marr.  of  Geraint  194 

412 

Geraint  and  E.  903 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  215 


Victor  (s)     (See  also  World-victor)     Whichever  side  be  V, 

in  the  halloo  Princess  ii  231 

The  bearded  V  of  ten-thousand  hymns,  „     Hi  352 

We  vanquish'd,  you  the  V  of  your  will.  „      vi  167 

great  World-victor's  v  will  be  seen  no  more.  Ode  on  Well.  42 

And  V  he  must  ever  be.  „          258 

And  fawn  at  a  v's  feet.  Maud  I  viSO 

nor  make  myself  in  my  own  realm  V  and  lord.  Com.  of  Arthur  90 

V  his  men  Report  him !  „  24& 
'  Nay,  not  a  point :  nor  art  thou  v  here.  Gareth  and  L.  1055 
And  V  of  the  bridges  and  the  ford,  „          1232 

V  from  vanquish'd  issues  at  the  last,  „  1262 
Who  doubts  thee  v?  „  1296 
'  Hark  the  v  pealing  there  ! '  „  1318 
I  watch'd  thee  v  in  the  joust,  „  135& 
On  whom  the  v,  to  confoimd  them  more,  Geraint  and  E.  169 
And  V  at  the  tilt  and  tournament,  „  960 
Arthur's  host  Proclaim'd  him  V,  Balin  and  Balan  90 
bore  the  prize  and  could  not  find  The  v,  Lancelot  and  E.  630 
and  in  the  strength  of  this  Come  v.  Holy  Grail  481 
Far  less  to  bind,  your  v,  and  thrust  him  out,  Pelleas  and  E.  293 
for  when  our  King  Was  v  wellnigh  day  by  day.  Last  Tournament  335 
beheld  That  v  of  the  Pagan  throned  in  hall —  ,,              665 

V  in  Drama,  V  in  Romance,  To  Victor  Hugo  1 
iron-hearted  v's  they.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  80 
But  they  rode  like  V's  and  Lords  Heavy  Brigade  48 
the  Light  is  V,  and  the  darkness  Dawns             On  Jiib.  Q.  Victoria  70 

Victoria     V, — since  your  Royal  grace  To  the  Queen  5 

Victory     Not  Arac,  satiate  with  his  v.  Princess  vii  90 

Bellowing  v,  bellowing  doom  :  Ode  on  Well.  66 

down  their  statue  of  V  fell.  Boadicea  30 

and  there  cometh  a  v  now.  „        46 

with  pure  Affection,  and  the  light  of  v,  Gareth  and  L.  331 

Whether  ye  wish  me  v  or  defeat,  Geraint  and  E.  80 

in  steepness  overcome.  And  victories  of  ascent.  Lover's  Tale  i  387 

Swallowing  its  precedent  in  v.  „          763 

trumpets  of  v,  groans  of  defeat ;  Vastness  8 

Victual    in  his  hand  Bare  v  for  the  mowers  :  Geraint  and  E.  202 

Geraint  Ate  all  the  mowers'  v  unawares,  „            215 

fetch  Fresh  v  for  these  mowers  of  our  Earl ;  „            225 

and  return  With  v  for  these  men,  „            240 

Vied     Sappho  and  others  v  with  any  man  :  Princess  ii  164 

Vienna    That  in  V's  fatal  walls  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  19 

I  have  not  seen,  I  will  not  see  V  ;  „        xcviii  12 

View     (See  also  Half-views)     full  in  v,  Death,  walking 

all  alone  Love  and  Death  4 

whose  brilliant  hue  Is  so  sparkling-fresh  to  v,  Rosalind  40 

When  thus  he  met  his  mother's  v,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  34 

Half -invisible  to  the  v,  Vision  of  Sin  36 

here  were  telescopes  For  azure  v's  ;  Princess,  Pro.  68 

Her  early  Heaven,  her  happy  v's  ;  In  Mem.  xxxiii  6 

But  somewhere,  out  of  hiunan  v,                       *  „          Ixosv  18 

Yea,  tho'  it  spake  and  bared  to  v  „            xcii  9 

to  reprove  her  For  stealing  out  of  v  Maud  I  xx  9 

lands  in  your  v  From  this  bay  window —  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  51 

loved  the  v  Long-known  and  loved  by  me.  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  5 

She  held  them  up  to  the  v  ;  Dead  Prophet  72 

but  the  goodly  v  Was  now  one  blank.  Death  of  (Enone  3 

View'd     suffering  v  had  been  Extremest  pain  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  129 

Viewless    The  v  arrows  of  his  thoughts  were  headed  The  Poet  11 

Vignette     In  bright  v's,  and  each  complete,  The  Daisy  45 

Vigorous     with  the  growtlis  Of  v  early  days.  Lover's  Tale  i  133 

Vigorously     So  v  yet  mildly,  that  all  hearts  Geraint  and  E.  957 

Vigour     So  that  my  v,  wedded  to  thy  blood,  (Enone  161 

The  faith,  the  v,  bold  to  dwell  In  Mem.  xcv  29 

Yourself  shall  see  my  v  is  not  lost.'  Geraint  and  E.  82 

Vile     And  yonder  a  v  physician,  Maud  II  v  36 

A  little  at  the  v  occasion,  rode,  Marr.  of  Geraint  235 

'  This  is  more  v,'  he  made  reply,  Two  Voices  103 

v  it  were  For  some  three  suns  to  store  Ulysses  28 

Hired  animalisms,  v  as  those  that  made  Lucretius  53 

A  red-faced  bride  who  knew  herself  so  v,  Gareth  and  L.  110 

for  men  sought  to  prove  me  v.  Merlin  and  V.  495 

How  justly,  after  that  v  term  of  yours,  „            921 

climb'd  The  moulder'd  stairs  (for  everything  was  v)  Lover's  Tale  iv  137 


VUe 


764 


Viper 


Vile  (continued)      V,  so  near  the  ghost  Himself,  The  Ring  230 

Vileness    mean  V,  we  are  grown  so  proud —  Aylmer's  Field  756 

No  inner  v  that  we  dread  ?  In  Mem.  li  4 

Sinn'd  thro'  an  animal  v.  The  Wreck  42 

Viler     I  am  a  sinner  v  than  you  all.  St.  S.  Stylites  135 

or  the  V  devil  who  plays  his  part,  Balin  and  Bcdan  300 

of  a  kind  The  v,  as  underhand,  Mavd  /  i  28 

Vilest     The  v  herb  that  runs  to  seed  Amphion  95 

Village  (adj.)     Looks  down  upon  the  v  spire  :  Miller's  D.  36 

I  saw  the  v  lights  below ;  „           108 

Why  come  you  drest  like  a  v  maid.  Lady  Clare  67 

'  If  I  come  drest  like  a  v  maid,  „           69 

At  the  head  of  the  v  street,  Maud  I  vi  10 

She  came  to  the  v  church,  „          viii  1 

For  only  once,  in  the  v  street,  „       xiii  26 

maid  That  ever  bided  tryst  at  v  stile.  Merlin  and  V.  378 

came  the  v  girls  And  linger'd  talking,  Pelleas  and  E.  508 

'  A  hic^orant  v  wife  as  'ud  hev  to  be  larn'd  Village  Wife  106 

and  pigmy  spites  of  the  v  spire ;  Fastness  25 

And  darkness  in  the  v  yew.  Two  Voices  273 

And  a  v  maiden  she.  L.  of  Burleigh  8 

Leads  her  to  the  v  altar,  „           11 

as  the  V  girl  Who  sets  her  pitcher  underneath  Enoch  Arden  206 

Bom  of  a  i)  girl,  carpenter's  son,  Aylmer's  Field  668 

And  on  a  simple  v  green  ;  In  Mem.  Ixiv  4 

Thou  hear'st  the  v  hammer  clink,  ,.      cxxi  15 

By  V  eyes  as  yet  unborn  ;  „      Con.  59 

Seems  to  be  pluck'd  at  by  the  v  boys  Geraint  and  E.  560 

as  the  V  wife  who  cries  '  1  shudder,  Guinevere  56 

having  climb'd  one  step  beyond  Our  v  miseries,  Ancient  Sage  207 
Village  (s)     {See  also  Sea-village)     Two  children  in  two 

neighbour  v's  Circumstance  1 

Where  almost  all  the  v  had  one  name  ;  Aylmer's  Field  35 

The  little  v  looks  forlorn  ;  In  Mem.  Ix  9 

Maud  the  delight  of  the  v,  Maud  I  i  70 

Below  me,  there,  is  the  v,  „          iv  7 

For  one  from  out  his  v  lately  climb'd  Balin  and  Balan  167 

tho'  he  tried  the  v's  round.  First  Quarrel  43 

Village-churls     And  there  the  surly  v-c,  L.  of  ShaJott  ii  16 

Villager     slavish  hat  from  the  v's  head  ?  Mavd  1x4 

Vill^  (adj.)     Low  down  thro'  v  kitchen-vassalage,  Gareth  and  L.  160 

Villain  (s)     One  says,  we  are  v's  all.  Maud  I  ill 

How  the  V  lifted  up  liis  voice,  Gareth  and  L.  716 

a  V  fitter  to  stick  swine  Than  ride  abroad  „             865 

'  There  lurk  three  v's  yonder  in  the  wood,  Geraint  and  E.  142 

Villainous    the  v  centre-bits  Grind  on  the  wakeful  ear  Maud  /  i  41 

Villainously     foully  slain  And  v  !  Balin  and  Balan  136 

Villainy      V  somewhere  !  whose  ?     One  says,  Maud  I  ill 

And  I  will  tell  him  all  tlieir  v.  Geraint  and  E.  132 

My  violence,  and  my  v,  come  to  shame.'  Balin  and  Balan  492 

beneath  the  shadow  of  those  towers  A  v,  three 

to  one  :  Pelleas  and  E.  277 

So  Gawain,  looking  at  the  v  done.  Forbore,  „            282 

lust,  V,  violence,  avarice,  of  your  Spain  Columbus  172 
Vine     (See  also  Briony-vine)     comest  not  with  shows 

of  flaunting  v's  Ode  to  Memory  48 

And  silent  in  its  dusty  v's  :  Mariana  in  the  S.  4 

leaning  on  a  fragment  twined  with  v,  (Enone  20 

And  overhead  the  wandering  ivy  and  v,  „       99 
From  cave  to  cave  thro'  the  thick- twined  v —      Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  95 

valleys  of  grape-loaded  v's  that  glow  D.  of  F.  Women  219 

And  cliinmeys  muffled  in  the  lejify  v.  Audley  Court  19 

Old  elms  came  breaking  from  the  v,  Amphion  45 

The  V  stream'd  out  to  follow,  „        46 

from  a  bower  of  v  and  honeysuckle  :  Aylmer's  Field  156 

and  so  by  tilth  and  grange.  And  v's,  Princess  i  111 

The  summer  of  the  v  in  all  his  veins —  ,,          183 

we  two  Were  always  friends,  none  closer,  elm  and  v  :  .,       ii  337 

At  last  I  hook'd  my  ankle  in  a  v,  „       iv  268 

Or  foxlike  in  the  v  ;  ,,     vii  203 

Beating  from  the  wasted  v's  Ode  on  Well.  109 

Of  olive,  aloe,  and  maize  and  v.  The  Daisy  4 

Mixt  with  mvrtle  and  clad  with  v.  The  Islet  19 
V,  V,  and  eglantine,  (repeat)                         Window,  At  the  Window  1,  8 

and  go  By  summer  belts  of  wheat  and  v  In  Mem.  xcviii  4 


Vine  (coiitinued)  Queen  Brake  from  the  vast  oriel- 
embowering  V  Lancelot  and  E.  1198 
berries  that  flamed  upon  biiae  and  v,  V.  of  Maeldune  61 
v's  with  grapas  Of  Eshcol  hugeness  ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  27 
they  tell  me,  now  in  flowing  v's —  Tiresias  144 
send  my  life  thro'  olive-yard  and  v  And  golden 

grain,  Demeter  and  P.  110 

spinning  at  your  wheel  beside  the  v —  Romney's  R.  5 

serpent  v's  Which  on  the  touch  of  heavenly  feet  Death  of  (Enone  4 

Vine-bunches     Between  the  shadows  of  the  v-h  (Enone  181 

Vine-clad     an  oriel  on  the  summer  side,  V-c,  Lancelot  and  E.  1178 

Vineyard     Peace  in  her  v — ^yes  ! —  Maud  /  i  36 

torrent  v  streaming  fell  To  meet  the  sun  The  Daisy  10 

tilth  and  v,  hive  and  horse  and  herd  ;  To  Virgil  10 

Vinous     And  softly,  thro'  a  v  mist.  Will  Water.  39 

Vintage     Whether  the  v,  yet  unkept,  „          97 

praised  the  waning  red,  and  told  The  v —  Aylmer's  Field  407 

Whom  they  with  meats  and  v  of  their  best  Lancelot  and  E.  266 

with  her  spice  and  her  v,  her  silk  and  her  corn  ;  Vastness  13 

Violate     behold  our  sanctuary  Is  v,  our  laws  broken  :  Princess  vi  60 

And  that  she  now  perforce  must  v  it,  Geraint  and  E.  367 

Which  flesh  and  blood  perforce  would  v  :  Last  Tournament  689 

v's  virgin  Truth  for  a  coin  or  a  cheque.  The  Dawn  15 

Violated     So  was  their  sanctuary  v.  Princess  vii  16 

Violatinyg     Not  v  the  bond  of  like  to  like.'  Lancelot  and  E.  241 

Violator     mine  of  ruffian  v's  !  Boadicea  50 

Violence    Moved  with  v,  changed  in  hue,  Vision  of  Sin  34 

and  shriek'd  '  Thus,  thus  with  v.  Sea  Dreams  25 

'  Thus  with  V  Shall  Babylon  be  cast  into  the  sea  ;  „          27 

Uther,  reft  From  my  dead  lord  a  field  with  v  :  Gareth  and  L.  335 

Was  nigh  to  burst  with  v  of  the  beat,  „             763 

And  snatch  me  from  him  as  by  v  ;  Geraint  and  E.  357 

And  bare  her  by  main  v  to  the  board,  „             654 

Edyrn  wrought  upon  himself  After  a  life  of  v,  „             913 

For  I  that  did  that  v  to  thy  thrall,  Balin  and  Balan  61 

forget  My  heats  and  v's  ?  „             190 

So  this  will  help  him  of  his  v's  !  '  „             205 

Moaning  '  My  v's,  my  v's  !  '  ,,             435 

My  V,  and  my  villainy,  come  to  shame.'  „             492 

power  To  lay  the  sudden  heads  of  v  flat.  Holy  Grail  310 

with  v  The  sword  was  dash'd  from  out  my  hand,  „           825 

From  flat  confasion  and  brute  v's.  Last  Tournament  124 

small  V  done  Rankled  in  him  and  ruffled  Guinevere  48 

Villainy,  v,  avarice,  of  your  Spain  Columbus  172 

truthless  v  mourn'd  by  the  Wise,  Vastness  5 

Violent    I  hear  the  v  threats  you  do  not  hear,  Geraint  and  E.  420 

Rang  by  the  white  mouth  of  the  v  Glem  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  288 

Violet  (adj.)     and  sunn'd  Her  v  eyes,  Gardener's  D.  137 

For  large  her  v  eyes  look'd,  Pelleas  and  E.  71 

Violet  (Christian  Name)     V,  she  that  sang  the  mournful 

song.  Princess  vi  318 

Violet  (flower,  colour)     With  what  voice  the  v  woos  Adeline  31 

V ,  amaracus,  and  asphodel.  Lotos  and  lilies  :  (Enone  97 

from  the  v's  her  light  foot  Shone  rosy-white,  „       179 

To  die  before  the  snowdrop  came,  and  now  the  v's 

here.  May  Queen,  Con.  4 

O  sweet  is  the  new  v,  that  comes  beneath  the  skies,  „              5 

The  smell  of  v's,  hidden  in  the  green,  D.  of  F.  Women  77 

The  V  oi  A  legend  blow  Among  the  chops  Will  Water.  147 

In  mosses  mixt  with  v  Her  cream-white  mule  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  30 

Pity,  the  v  on  the  tyrant's  grave.  Aylmer's  Field  845 

The  V  varies  from  the  lily  as  far  As  oak  from  elm  :  Princess  r  182 

Crocus,  anemone,  v.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  44 

The  V  of  his  native  land.  In  Mem.  xviii  4 

A  wither'd  v  is  her  bliss  :  „        xcvii  26 

The  V  comes,  but  we  are  gone.  „               cv  8 

By  ashen  roots  the  v's  blow.  „             cxv  4 

and  my  regret  Becomes  an  April  v,  „                 19 

jewel-print  of  your  feet  In  v's  blue  as  your  eyes,  Maud  I  xxii  42 

with  earliest  v's  And  lavish  carol  Lover's  Tale  i  282 

And,  tho'  thy  v  sicken  into  sere.  Prog,  of  Spring  25 

Violet-hcwded     Epic  lilt«d  out  By  v-h  Doctors,  Princess  ii  376 

Violin     twangling  v  Struck  up  with  Soldier-laddie,  „     Pro.  85 
All  night  have  the  roses  heard  The  flute,  v,  ba.ssoon  ;      Maud  I  xxii  14 

Viper     fling  it  like  a  v  off,  and  shriek  Princess  vii  94 


Viper 


765 


Vivien 


(continued)     Jenny,  the  v,  made  me  a  mocking 

curtsej'  Grandmother  46 

and  stood  Stiff  as  a  -y  frozen  ;  Merlin  and  V.  845 

Virgil     Roman  V,  thou  that  singest  To  Virgil  1 

Old  V  who  would  write  ten  lines,  Poets  and  their  B.  2 

Virgilian    The  rich  V  rustic  measure  The  Daisy  75 

Virgin  (adj.)     solitary  morning  smote  The  streaks  of  v  snow.  (En-one  56 

To  Christ,  the  V  Mother,  and  the  saints  ;  St.  S.  Slylites  112 

V  Mother  standing  with  her  child  High  up  Sea  Dreams  242 

The  V  marble  under  iron  heels  :  Princess  vi  351 

That  marry  with  the  v  heart.  In  Memi  Ixxxv  108 

It  more  beseems  the  perfect  v  knight  Merlin  and  V.  22 

Pure  on  the  v  forehead  of  the  dawn  !  '  Pelleas  and  E.  505 

from  her  v  breast,  and  v  eyes  Remaining  fixt  on  mine,  Tiresias  46 

V  soul  Inform'd  the  pillar'd  Parthenon,  Freedom  2 
A  V  victim  to  his  memory.  The  Ring  221 
Or  easily  violates  v  Truth  for  a  coin  The  Dawn  15 

Virgin  (s)     To  holy  v^s  in  their  ecstasies,  Holy  Grail  867 

For  I  was  ever  v  save  for  thee,  Guinevere  557 

in  front  of  which  Six  stately  v's,  all  in  white,  Lover's  Tale  ii  77 

Save  those  six  v's  which  upheld  the  bier,  „              84 

Who  sits  beside  the  blessed  V  now,  Columbus  232 

Virtue     He  spake  of  v :  not  the  gods  More  purely,  A  Character  13 

And  V,  like  a  household  god  Promising  empire ;  On  a  Mourner  30 

Like  V  firm,  like  Knowledge  fair.  The  Voyage  68 

V  ! — to  be  good  and  just —  Vision  of  Sin  111 
Glory  to  V,  to  fight,  to  struggle.  Wages  3 
if  the  wages  of  V  be  dust,  „  6 
because  he  bare  The  use  of  v  out  of  earth  :  In  Mem.  Ixxxii  10 
Your  words  have  v  such  as  draws  „  Ixxxv  13 
from  my  hold  on  these  Streams  v — fire —  Gareth  and  L.  1310 
I  savour  of  thy — v's  ?  fear  them  ?  no.  Merlin  and  V.  39 
The  highest  v,  mother  of  them  all ;  Holy  Grail  446 

V  must  shape  itself  in  deed,  Tiresias  86 
in  thy  v  lies  The  saving  of  our  Thebes ;  „  109 
whether  crown'd  for  a  v,  or  hang'd  for  a  crime  ?  Despair  76 
All  his  v's — I  forgive  them —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  44 

Virtuous     A  v  gentlewoman  deeply  wrong'd,  Merlin  and  V.  911 

Visage     His  v  all  agrin  as  at  a  wake,  Princess  v  521 

his  V  ribb'd  From  ear  to  ear  with  dogwhip-weals,  Last  Tournament  57 

Visaged     dark  v,  stately  and  tall —  The  Wreck  15 

Visible  (adj.)     Lord  over  Nature,  Lord  of  the  v  earth.  Palace  of  Art  179 

(A  V  link  unto  the  home  of  my  heart).  Lover's  Tale  i  431 
Visible  (s)     Shaped  by  the  audible  and  v,  Moulded  the 

audible  and  v ;  „         ii  104 

Vision     With  dazed  v  unawares  Arabian  Nights  111 

And  there  a  v  caught  my  eye  ;  Miller's  D.  76 

She  moves  among  my  v's  of  the  lake,  Edwin  Morris  144 

As  on  this  v  of  the  golden  year.'  Golden  Year  58 

Saw  the  V  of  the  world,  (repeat)  Locksley  Hall  16,  120 

And  see  the  v  that  I  saw,  Day -Dm.,  Pro.  14 

Ah,  blessed  v  !  blood  of  God  !  Sir  Galahad  45 

one  fair  V  ever  fled  Down  the  waste  waters  The  Voyage  57 

I  HAD  a  V  when  the  night  was  late  :  Vision  of  Sin  1 

V's  of  a  perfect  State :  „  148 
Enoch  seem'd  to  them  Uncertain  as  a  «;  or  a  dream,     Enoch  Arden  356 

Like  v's  in  the  Northern  dreamer's  heavens,  Aylmer's  Field  161 

I  slept  again,  and  pieced  The  broken  v  ;  Sea  Dreams  110 

seizure  came  Upon  me,  the  weird  v  of  our  house  :  Princess  Hi  184 

0  Soul,  the  V  of  Him  who  reigns  ?     Is  not  the 

F  He  ?  High.  Pantheism  2 

But  if  we  could  see  and  hear,  this  V —  „            18 

If  any  v  should  reveal  Thy  likeness,  In  Mem.  xcii  1 

1  dream'd  a  v  of  the  dead,  „  ciii  3 
there  is  no  such  city  anywhere.  But  all  a  v.'  Gareth  and  L.  207 
whether  there  be  any  city  at  all.  Or  all  a  i? :  „  250 
Who  passes  thro'  the  v  of  the  night —  Lancelot  and  E.  1406 
But  the  sweet  v  of  the  Holy  Grail  Holy  Grail  31 
so  perchance  the  v  may  be  seen  By  thee  and  those,  ,,  127 
My  sister's  v,  fill'd  me  with  amaze  ;  „  140 
among  bright  faces,  ours.  Full  of  the  v,  prest :  „  267 
My  sister's  v,  and  the  rest,  „  272 
As  thou  art  is  the  v,  not  for  these.  „  294 
for  a  strength  Was  in  us  from  the  v,  „  334 
For  thou  shalt  .see  the  v  when  I  go.'  „        484 


Vision  (continued)     and  the  v  had  not  come  ;  Holy  Grail  572 

If  God  would  send  the  v,  well :  if  not,  ..         658 

but  now— the  Quest,  This  v —  ..         734 

And  out  of  those  to  whom  the  v  came  ..         895 

And  one  hath  had  the  v  face  to  face,  ..         900 

Let  v's  of  the  night  or  of  the  day  Come,  ..         910 

This  air  that  smites  his  forehead  is  not  air  But  v —  ..         915 
And  knows  himself  no  v  to  himself,  Nor  the  high  God  a  v,         ,,         917 

A  V  hovering  on  a  sea  of  fire,  Pelleas  and  E.  52 

nor  would  he  tell  His  v  ;  Guinevere  306 
And  some  had  v's  out  of  golden  youth.                       Pass,  of  Arthur  102 

The  memory's  v  hath  a  keener  edge.  Lover's  Tale  i  36 

led  on  with  light  In  trances  and  in  v's :  ..                 78 
darkness  of  the  grave  and  utter  night,  Did  swallow 


up  my  V ; 
And  in  my  v  bidding  me  dream  on, 
Oftentimes  The  v  had  fair  prelude. 
As  a  i)  Unto  a  haggard  prisoner, 
and  all  The  v  of  the  bier. 
There,  there,  my  latest  t;— then  the  event  ! 
I  deem  As  of  the  v's  that  he  told — 
Past  thro'  his  v's  to  the  burial ; 
Is  our  misshaping  v  of  the  Powers 
V's  of  youth — -for  my  brain  was  drunk 
Strike  on  the  Mount  of  V  ! 
with  all  the  v's  of  my  youth  ? 

0  follower  of  the  V, 
And  the  V  that  led  me  of  old. 

Visionary     Wreck 'd  on  a  reef  of  v  gold.' 
Visit  (s)     Or  later,  pay  one  v  here, 

1  go  On  that  long-promised  v  to  the  North. 
Visit  (verb)     oh,  haste,  V  my  low  desire  ! 

Does  the  king  know  you  deign  to  v  him 
Visitant     Edith  ever  v  with  him. 
Visitation     And  hourly  v  of  the  blood. 
Visited     Father's  fault  V  on  the  children  ! 
Visiting     there  From  college,  v  the  son, — 
Visual     No  V  shade  of  some  one  lost. 
Vital     Call'd  all  her  v  spirits  into  each  ear 

So  much  the  v  spirits  sink 
Vitriol    v  madness  flushes  up  in  the  ruffian's  head, 
Vivat  Rex     Death  is  king,  and  V  R  ! 
Vivian  (Sir  Walter)    See  Walter,  Walter  Vivian 
Vivian-place     we  were  seven  at  V-f. 

But  miss'd  the  mignonette  of  V-f, 

we  climb'd  The  slope  to  F-p, 
Vivid     Distinct  with  v  stars  inlaid. 

And  now  those  v  hours  are  gone, 

but  less  V  hue  Than  of  that  islet 

And  V  smiles,  and  faintly-venom'd  points 

Some  sudden  v  pleasure  hit  him  there. 
Vivien     V,  with  her  Squire. 

But  follow  V  thro  the  fiery  flood  ! 

Drew  the  vague  glance  of  V,  and  her  Squire  ; 

And,  F,  tho'  ye  beat  me  like  your  dog. 

At  Merlin's  feet  the  wily  F  lay. 

for  F  sweetly  said  (She  sat  beside  the  banquet  nearest 
Mark), 

and  F  following  him,  Turn'd  to  her  : 

O  F,  save  ye  fear  The  monkish  manliood. 

And  F  answer'd,  smiling  scornfully. 

But  F,  into  Camelot  stealing. 

She  past ;  and  F  murmur'd  after  '  Go  ! 

But  F  half -forgotten  of  the  Queen 

so  F  in  the  lowest.  Arriving  at  a  time  of  golden  rest. 

The  wily  F  stole  from  Arthur's  court. 

F,  being  greeted  fair,  Would  fain  have  wrought 

That  F  should  attempt  the  blameless  King. 

And  F  follow'd,  but  he  mark'd  her  not. 

And  F  ever  sought  to  work  the  chann 

And  lissome  F,  holding  by  his  heel, 

F  answer'd  quick,  '  I  saw  the  little  elf-god 

So  F  call'd  herself.  But  rather  seem'd 

tricks  and  fooleries,  O  F,  the  preamble  ? 

And  F  answer'd  smiling  saucily,  (repeat) 


599 

ii  119 

124 

147 

Hi  11 

59 

iv  23 

357 

Sisters  (E^ and  E.)  230 

Despair  65 

Ancient  Sage  285 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  162 

Freedom  13 

The  Dreamer  5 

Sea  Dreams  139 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  45 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  188 

Ode  to  Memory  4 

Columbus  4 

Aylmer's  Field  166 

Lover's  Tale  i  206 

The  Ring  176 

Princess,  Pro.  7 

In  Mem.  xciii  5 

Aylmer's  Field  201 

In  Mem.  xx  18 

Maud  I  i37 

Vision  of  Sin  179 


Princess,  Pro.  9 

165 

Con.  40 

Arabian  Nights  90 

Miller's  D.  195 

Aylmer's  Field  64 

Merlin  and  V.  172 

Lover's  Tale  iv  178 

Balin  and  Balan  439 

454 

464 

582 

Merlin  aiid  V.  5 


17 

32 

34 

37 

63 

98 

137 

141 

149 

155 

164 

199 

215 

238 

248 

261 

266 

268,  651 


Vivien 


766 


Voice 


Vivien  {continued)     did  you  know  That  V  bathed  your 
feet  before  her  own  ? 
And  V  answer'd  smiling  mournfully  :  (repeat) 
Take  V  for  expoimder  ; 
Too  curious  V,  tho'  you  talk  of  trust, 
And  V,  like  the  tenderest-hearted  maid 
But,  V,  when  you  sang  me  that  sweet  rhyme, 
V,  For  you,  methinks  you  think  you  love  me  well ; 
And  V  answer'd  smiling  as  in  wrath  : 
And  being  found  take  heed  of  V. 
'  Thou  read  the  book,  my  pretty  V  ! 
And  V,  frowning  in  true  anger,  said  : 
And  V  answer'd  frowning  wrathfully  : 
'  0  ay,'  said  V,  '  overtrue  a  tale. 
'  0  ay,'  said  V,  '  that  were  likely  too. 
And  V  answer'd  frowning  yet  in  wrath  : 
But  V,  deeming  Merlin  overborne  By  instance, 
But  V,  gathering  somewhat  of  his  mood. 
Poor  V  had  not  done  to  win  his  trust 
But  V,  fearing  heaven  had  heard  her  oath, 
lissome  V,  of  her  court  The  wiliest  and  the  worst ; 
V,  lurking,  heard.    She  told  Sir  Modred. 
Vizier     V's  nodding  together  In  some  Arabian  night  ? 
Vizor    and  the  knight  Had  v  up. 

But  Gawain  lifting  up  his  v  said, 
and  when  thou  passest  any  wood  Close  v. 
Vizoring    and  v  up  a  red  And  cipher  face 
Voat  (vote)     An'  I'd  v  fur  'im,  my  oan  sen, 
Voated  (voted)     a  knaws  I  hallus  v  wi'  Squoire 
Vocabulary    diminutives  Scatter'd  all  over  the  v 

in  the  rich  v  of  Love  '  Most  dearest ' 
Vocal    brook  V,  with  here  and  there  a  silence. 
Is  V  in  its  wooded  walls  ; 
While  yet  beside  its  v  springs 
Alphabet-of-heaven-in-man  Made 


Voice    (See  also  Organ-voice,  Sea-voice)    v  of  the  bird 


Merlin  and  V.  284 
311,  438 
319 
358 
377 
434 
482 
526 
529 
667 
691 
704 
720 
746 
768 
800 
842 
863 
940 
Guinevere  28 


Maud  I  vii  11 

Marr.  of  Geraint  189 

Pelleas  and  E.  370 

Last  Tournament  535 

Gareth  and  L.  1038 

Owd  Rod  14 

.V.  Farmer,  0.  S.  15 

Aylmer's  Field  540 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  291 

Aylmer's  Field  146 

In  Mem.  xix  14 

Ixiv  22 

Akbar's  Dream  137 


Shall  no  more  be  heard, 
Old  v's  call'd  her  from  without. 
That  her  v  imtuneful  grown. 
And  yet,  tho'  its  v  be  so  clear  and  full, 
With  an  inner  v  the  river  ran. 
But  anon  her  awful  jubilant  v, 
I  would  fill  the  sea-halls  with  a  v  of  power  ; 
With  what  v  the  violet  woos 
I  shall  knoM'  Thy  v,  and  answer  from  below 
A  STILL  small  v  spake  unto  me. 
Then  to  the  still  small  v  I  said  ; 
To  which  the  v  did  urge  reply  ; 
Thereto  the  silent  v  replied  ; 
Again  the  v  spake  unto  me  : 
'  Yet,'  said  the  secret  v,  '  some  time, 
'  Yea  ! '  said  the  v,  '  thy  dream  was  good, 
'  O  dull,  one-sided  v,'  said  I, 
'  Consider  well,'  the  v  replied, 
'  If  all  be  dark,  vague  v,  I  said, 
the  V  with  which  I  fenced  A  little  ceased, 
The  still  V  laugh'd.     '  I  talk,'  said  he. 
Then  said  the  v,  in  quiet  scorn, 
The  dull  and  bitter  v  was  gone. 
A  second  v  was  at  mine  ear, 
'  What  is  it  thou  knowest,  sweet  v?  '  I  cried.     '  A 

hidden  hope,'  the  v  replied  :  „        440 

To  conmiune  with  that  barren  v,  „        461 

by  common  v  Elected  umpire,  (Enone  84 

Then  first  I  heard  the  v  of  her,  „    107 

'  No  V,'  she  shriek'd  in  that  lone  hall,  '  No  v 

breaks  thro'  the  stillness  of  this  world  :  Palace  of  Art  258 

And  sweeter  is  the  young  lamb's  v  to  me  May  Queen,  Con.  6 

O  blessings  on  his  kindly  v  and  on  his  silver  hair  !  „  13 

The  V,  that  now  is  speaking,  may  be  beyond  the  sun —  „  54 

His  V  was  thin,  as  v's  from  the  grave  ;  Lotos- Eaters  34 

my  v  was  thick  with  sighs  As  in  a  dream.  B.  of  F.  Women  109 

Sudden  I  heard  a  v  that  cried,  '  Come  here,  „  123 

Her  warbling  v,  a  lyre  of  widest  range  „  165 

'  Alas  !  alas  !  '  a  low  v,  full  of  care,  Murmur'd  „  249 


All  Things  will  Die  24 

Mariana  68 

The  Owl  a  6 

Poet's  Mind  34 

Dying  Swan  5 

28 

The  Merman  10 

Adeline  31 

My  life  is  ftdl,  etc.  10 

Two  Voices  1 

4 

7 

22 

46 

64 

157 

202 

241 

265 

317 

386 

401 

426 

427 


Voice  {continued)     and  in  her  throat  Her  v  seem'd  distant.  To  J.  S.  55 

And  murmurs  of  a  deeper  v.  On  a  Mourner  16 

But  fragments  of  her  mighty  v  Came  rolling  Of  old  sat  Freedom  7 

Or  V,  or  else  a  motion  of  the  mere.  M.  d'  Arthur  77 

as  it  were  one  v  an  agony  Of  lamentation,  ..         200 

let  thy  V  Rise  like  a  fountain  for  me  night  248 

And,  further  inland,  v's  echoed — '  Come  ..    Ep.  27 
From  the  woods  Came  v's  of  the  well-contented  doves.    Gardener's  D.  89 

such  a  V  Call'd  to  me  from  the  years  to  come,  ..         179 

The  silver  fragments  of  a  broken  v,  ,,        234 

Her  V  fled  always  thro'  the  summer  land  ;  Edwin  Morris  67 

And  lower  v's  saint  me  from  above.  St.  S.  Stylites  154 

he  plagiarised  a  heart,  And  answer'd  with  a  v.  Talking  Oak  20 

She  sent  her  v  thro'  all  the  holt  Before  her,  „        123 

thy  low  V,  Faltering,  would  break  its  syllables.  Love  and  Duty  38 

the  deep  Moans  round  with  many  v's.  Ulysses  56 

for  a  tender  v  will  cry.  Locksley  Hall  87 
And  whisper'd  v's  at  his  ear.                                       Day-Dm.,  Arrival  24 

I  hear  a  v  but  none  are  there  ;  Sir  Galahad  30 

Wings  flutter,  v's  hover  clear :  „           78 

The  V  grew  faint :  there  came  a  further  change :  Vision  of  Sin  207 

At  last  I  heard  a  v  upon  the  slope  Cry  „             219 
A  deedf ul  life,  a  silent  v  :                                            You  might  have  won  8 

And  the  sound  of  a  «  that  is  still  !  Break,  break,  etc.  12 

Or  means  to  pay  the  v  who  best  could  tell  Enoch  Arden  266 

Their  v's  make  me  feel  so  solitary.'  ,.           397 

And  sent  his  v  beneath  liim  thro'  the  wood.  „           444 

his  V  Shaking  a  little  like  a  dnmkard's  hand,  „           464 

Nor  ever  hear  a  kindly  v,  „          582 

Crying  with  a  loud  v  '  A  sail !  a  sail !  „          913 

but  ever  call'd  away  By  one  low  v  Aylmer's  Field  60 

but  a  -w  Of  comfort  and  an  open  hand  of  help,  '  ..            173 

Low  was  her  v,  but  won  mysterious  way  ..            695 

Is  there  no  prophet  but  the  v  that  calls  741 

I  wish'd  my  v  A  rushing  tempest  of  the  wrath  of  God  ..            756 

But  your  rough  v  (You  spoke  so  loud)  Sea  Dreams  280 

bird  Makes  his  heart  v  amid  the  blaze  of  flowers :  Lucretius  101 

women  sang  Between  the  rougher  v's  of  the  men.  Princess,  Pro.  245 

and  a  V  Went  with  it,  '  Follow,  follow,  „               i  99 

His  name  was  Gama  ;  crack'd  and  small  his  v,  „                 114 

Hers  are  we,'  One  v,  we  cried ;  „                235 

that  full  v  which  circles  round  the  grave,  „               ii  45 

all  her  v  Faltering  and  fluttering  in  her  throat,  „                186 

They  stood,  so  rapt,  we  gazing,  came  a  v,  „               318 

'  So  sweet  a  v  and  vague,  fatal  to  men,  „              iv  64 

for  still  my  v  Rang  false :  „                 120 

then  shall  they  That  love  their  v's  more  than  duty,  „                512 

we  saw  the  lights  and  heard  The  v's  murmuring.  „                559 

Thy  v  is  heard  thro'  rolling  drums,  „                577 

We  stumbled  on  a  stationary  v,  .,                v2 

she  moved,  She  moan'd,  a  folded  v;  „                  72 

At  which  she  lifted  up  her  v  and  cried.  „                  81 

(And  every  v  she  talk  d  with  ratify  it,  ,.                133 

An  awful  v  within  had  warn'd  him  thence  :  „                338 

Ida  with  a  v,  that  like  a  bell  Toll'd  by  an  earthquake        „  vi  331 

Then  the  v  Of  Ida  sounded,  issuing  ordinance  :  „                372 

Low  v's  with  the  ministering  hand  ,,             vii  21 

Sweeter  thy  v,  but  every  sound  is  sweet ;  ,.                219 

And  the  v  trembled  and  the  hand.  ..                227 

Her  V  Choked,  and  her  forehead  sank  upon  her  hands,       „  246 

O  V  from  which  their  omens  all  men  drew,  Ode  on  Well.  36 

He  knew  their  v's  of  old.  ..            63 

When  he  with  those  deep  v's  wrought,  ..            67 

With  those  deep  v's  our  dead  captain  The  tyrant,  ..             69 
thro'  the  centuries  let  a  people's  v  In  full  acclaim,  A 

people's  V,  The  proof  and  echo  of  all  human  fame, 

A  people's  v,  when  they  rejoice 
A  people's  v  !  we  are  a  people  yet. 
We  have  a  v,  with  which  to  pay  the  debt 
His  V  is  silent  in  your  council-hall 
But  the  one  v  in  Europe  :  we  mv^t  speak  ; 
Uplift  a  thousand  v's  full  and  sweet. 


Roll  and  rejoice,  jubilant  v. 
The  v's  of  our  imiversal  sea 
Deepening  thy  v  with  the  deepening  of  the  night, 


142 
151 
156 
174 
Third  of  Feb.  16 
Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  1 
W.  to  Alexandra  22 
W.  to  Marie  Alex.  16 
V.  of  Cauteretz  2 


Voice 


767 


Voice 


Voice  (continued)   Thy  living  v  to  me  was  as  the  v  of  the  ilea  J,    V.  of  Cauteretz  8 
The  V  of  the  dead  was  a  living  v  to  me.  „  10 

Paid  with  a  v  flying  by  to  be  lost  on  an  endless  sea —  Wages  2 

if  He  thunder  by  law  the  thvmder  is  yet  His  v.  High.  Pantheism  14 

The  V  and  the  Peak  (repeat)  Voice  and  the  P.  1,  37 

All  night  have  I  heard  the  v  „  5 


Voice  {cmttinued)   and  the  vermin  v's  here  May  buzz  so 
loud — 


In 


Hast  thou  no  v,  0  Peak, 

'  I  am  the  v  of  the  Peak, 

A  thousand  v's  go  To  North,  South,  East,  and  West ; 

The  valley,  the  v,  the  peak,  the  star  Pass, 

A  Spirit,  not  a  breathmg  v. 

Four  v's  of  four  hamlets  round. 

Each  V  four  changes  on  the  wind. 

Then  echo-like  our  v's  rang  ; 

Our  v's  took  a  higher  range  ; 

Yet  if  some  v  that  man  could  trust 

And  many  an  abler  v  than  thou. 

0  for  thy  v  to  soothe  and  bless  ! 
The  V  was  low,  the  look  was  bright ; 
The  V  was  not  the  v  of  grief. 
Or  V  the  richest-toned  that  sings. 
So  loud  with  v's  of  the  birds. 
Like  strangers'  v's  here  they  sound, 
A  potent  V  of  Parliament, 
And  that  dear  v,  I  once  have  known. 
And  v's  hail  it  from  the  brink  ; 

1  heard  a  v  '  believe  no  more  ' 
A  deeper  v  across  the  storm. 
Thy  D  is  on  the  rolling  air ; 
I  prosper,  circled  with  thy  v ; 
A  V  as  unto  him  that  hears, 
A  t)  by  the  cedar  tree  In  the  meadow 
A.nd  wild  v  pealing  up  to  the  sunny  sky. 
Silence,  beautiful  v  !     Be  still, 
Not  her,  not  her,  but  a  v. 
And  simper  and  set  their  v's  lower. 
Or  the  V  of  the  long  sea-wave  as  it  swell'd 

V  in  the  rich  dawn  of  an  ampler  day — 
And  find  nor  face  nor  bearing,  limbs  nor  v, 
before  a  i)  As  dreadful  as  the  shout  of  one 
lifted  his  v,  and  call'd  A  hoary  man, 
A  hundred  v's  cried,  '  Away  with  him  ! 
heard  among  the  holy  hymns  A  c  as  of  the  waters, 
gathering  half  the  deep  And  full  of  v's, 
while  the  phantom  king  Sent  out  at  times  a  v  ;  and  here 

or  there  Stood  one  who  pointed  toward  the  v,    .  ..  437 

past  along  the  hymns  A  v  as  of  the  waters,  ..  465 

full  V  Swept  bellowing  thro'  the  darkness  Gareth  and  L.  176 

heard  A  v,  the  v  of  Arthur,  ,.  318 

'  A  boon.  Sir  King  (his  v  was  all  ashamed),  ..  442 

How  the  villain  lifted  up  his  v,  ..  716 

nor  rough  face,  or  v,  Brute  bulk  of  limb,  ..  1329 

nor  have  I  heard  the  v.  ..  1336 

And  mufHed  v's  heard,  and  shadows  past ;  ..  1373 

Not  hearing  any  more  his  noble  v,  Marr.  of  Geraint  98 

*  The  V  of  Enid,  Yniol's  daughter,  rang  „  327 

and  as  the  sweet «  of  a  bird,  „  329 

So  the  sweet  v  of  Enid  moved  Geraint ;  ..  334 

'  Here,  by  God's  grace,  is  the  one  v  for  me.'  „  344 

the  soldiers  wont  to  hear  His  v  in  battle,  Geraint  and  E.  175 

and  felt  Her  low  firm  v  and  tender  government.  „  194 

On  a  sudden,  many  a  v  along  the  street,  ,,  270 

the  tender  sound  of  his  own  v  And  sweet  self-pity,  „  348 

Cried  out  with  a  big  v, '  What,  is  he  dead  ?  '  „  541 

answer'd  in  low  v,  her  meek  head  yet  Drooping,  „  640 

'  The  V  of  Enid,'  said  the  knight ;  ,.  780 

It  seems  another  v  in  other  groves  ;  Balin  and  Balan  215 

Mark  The  Cornish  King,  had  heard  a  wandering  v.        Merlin  and  V.  8 
With  reverent  eyes  mock-loyal,  shaken  v,  ..  157 

O  my  Master,  have  ye  found  your  v?  ,.  269 

So  tender  was  her  v,  so  fair  her  face,  „  401 

And  heard  their  v's  talk  behind  the  wall,  „  631 

Then  her  false  v  made  way,  broken  with  sobs  :  „  857 

When  its  own  v  clings  to  each  blade  of  grass.  And 

every  v  is  nothing.  Lancelot  aiid  E.  107 


9 

11 

13 

27 

Mem.  xiii  12 

xxviii  5 

9 

XXX  13 

21 

XXXV  1 

xxxvii  4 
Ivi  26 
Ixix  15 
19 
Ixxv  7 
xcix  2 
civ  9 
cxiii  11 
cxvi  11 
cxxi  14 
cxxiv  10 
cxxvii  4 
cxxx  1 
15 
cxxxi 6 
Maud  I  V  1 
13 
19 
28 
a;  15 
xw  3X 
Bed.  of  Idylls  36 
Com.  of  Arthur  71 
116 
144 
231 
291 
381 


-I  knew 


Won  by  the  mellow  v  before  she  look'd. 

And  seeing  me,  with  a  great  v  he  cried, 

like  a  friend's  v  from  a  distant  field 

High  with  the  last  line  scaled  her  v, 

a  courtesy  Spake  thro'  the  limbs  and  in  the  v 

till  I  found  a  ii  and  sware  a  vow. 

in  a  V  Shrilling  along  the  hall  to  Arthur, 

but  found  at  top  No  man,  nor  any  v. 

and  he  had  Scarce  any  v  to  answer, 

heard  a  v,  '  Doubt  not,  go  forward  ; 

V  singing  in  the  topmost  tower  To  the  eastward 

He  heard  her  v  ;  Then  let  the  strong  hand, 

'  I  never  heard  his  v  But  long'd  to  break  away. 

he  heard  The  v  that  billow'd  round  the  barriers 

He  ended  :  Arthur  knew  the  v  ; 

about  his  feet  A  v  clung  sobbing  till  he  question'd  it 

and  the  v  about  his  feet  Sent  up  an  answer, 

crying  with  full  v  '  Traitor,  come  out. 


Lancelot  and  E.  138 

243 

309 

999 

1019 

Holy  Grail  23 

194 

288 

428 

434 

823 

834 

Pelleas  and  E.  233 

255 

Last  Tournament  167 

455 

759 

760 

Guinevere  105 


419 
531 

607 
672 


then  came  silence,  then  a  v,  Monotonous  and  hollow 
the  warhorse  neigh'd  As  at  a  friend's  v, 
there  her  v  brake  suddenly. 
Meek  maidens,  from  the  v's  crying  '  shame.' 
To  where  beyond  these  v's  there  is  peace, 

when  the  man  was  no  more  than  a  v  Pass,  of  Arthur  3 

Thine,  Gawain,  was  the  v —  ,,              47 

Moans  of  the  dying,  and  v's  of  the  dead.  „            117 

The  V  of  days  of  old  and  days  to  be.  „            135 

'  Hearest  thou  this  great  v  that  shakes  the  world,  „            139 

Or  V,  or  else  a  motion  of  the  mere.  „            245 

as  it  were  one  v,  an  agony  Of  lamentation,  „            368 

let  thy  V  Kise  like  a  foimtain  for  me  night  and  day.  „            416 

as  if  some  fair  city  were  one  v  Aroimd  a  king  „            460 

this,  indeed,  her  v  And  meaning.  To  the  Queen  ii  19 

The  V  of  Britain,  or  a  sinking  land,  „              24 

There  rang  her  v,  when  the  full  city  peal'd  .,              26 

Or  Labour,  with  a  groan  and  not  a  v,  „              55 

loved  The  somid  of  one-another's  v's  Lover's  Tale  i  256 


low  converse  sweet,  In  which  our  v's  bore  least  part 
At  first  her  v  was  verj^  sweet  and  low, 
for  the  sound  Of  that  dear  v  so  musically  low, 
for  my  v  Was  all  of  thee  : 
And  v's  in  the  distance  calling  to  me 
Willy's  v  in  the  wind,  '  O  mother,  come  out  to  me. ' 
for  my  Willy's  v  in  the  wind- — 
A  sweet  v  that — you  scarce  could  better  that. 
Marvellously  like,  their  v's — and  themselves  ! 
let  me  ask  you  then,  Which  v  most  takes  you  ? 
says  The  common  v,  if  one  may  trust  it : 
Harsh  red  hair,  big  v,  big  chest, 
our  cliildren  would  die  But  for  the  v  of  Love, 
but  his  V  and  his  face  were  not  kind, 
V  of  the  dead  whom  we  loved, 
nor  V  Nor  finger  raised  against  him — 
lifted  hand  and  heart  and  v  In  praise  to  God 
There  came  two  v's  from  the  Sepulchre, 
I  heard  his  v  between  The  thunders 
I  heard  his  v,  '  Be  not  cast  down. 
And  I  shall  hear  his  v  again — 
His  V  again. 

God's  Own  V  to  justify  the  dead — 
Our  v's  were  thinner  and  fainter 
with  hvunan  v's  and  words  ; 
whenever  their  v's  peal'd  The  steer  fell  do^Ti 
his  V  was  low  as  from  other  worlds. 
Stormy  v  of  France  ? 

For  like  the  clear  v  when  a  trumpet  shrills. 
So  rang  the  clear  v  of  .ffiakidfis  ; 
Two  v's  heard  on  earth  no  more ; 
I  heard  a  v  that  said  '  Henceforth  be  blind, 
was  mine  the  v  to  curb  The  madness  of  our  cities 
I  knew  not  what,  when  I  heard  that  v, — 
Mother,  the  v  was  the  v  of  the  soul ; 


a  V  rang  out  in  the  thunders  of  Ocean  and  Heaven 


542 

563 

708 

ii  14 

118 

Mizpah  2 

„      82 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  14 

24 

30 

37 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  4 

12 

15 

Def.  of  Lucknow  11 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  44 

Columbus  16 

95 

145 

157 

159 

162 

203 

V.  of  Maeidune  22 

28 

29 

117 

To  Victor  Hugo  8 

Achilles  over  the  T.  19 

21 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  41 

Tiresias  48 

70 

The  Wreck  52 

54 


Voice 


768 


Voyage 


The  Wreck  92 
104 
Ancient  Sage  34 
177 
262 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  77 
116 
131 


Voice  (continued)     In  the  rigging,  ^)'s  of  hell — 
I  yeam'd  For  his  v  again, 
May'st  haply  learn  the  Nameless  hath  a  v. 
The  splendoure  and  the  v's  of  the  world  ! 
Nor  list  for  guerdon  in  the  v  of  men, 
'  Forward  '  rang  the  v's  then, 
hear  the  v's  from  the  field. 
You  that  woo  the  V's — tell  them 
Poor  old  V  of  eighty  crying  after  v's  that  have  fled  ! 

All  I  loved  are  vanish'd  v's, 
Hears  he  now  the  V  that  wrong'd  him  ? 
Too  many  a  v  may  cry  That  man  can  have 
Who  wert  the  v  of  England  in  the  East, 
thy  V,  a  music  heard  Thro'  all  the  yells 
Welcome,  welcome,  with  one  v  ! 
Britain's  myriad  v's  call. 

We  thank  thee  with  our  v,  and.  from  the  heart.      To  W.  C.  Macready  4 

One  full  V  of  allegiance,  •  On  Juh.  Q.  Victoria  22 

"  „  63 


251 
269 

Epilogue  72 

Efit.  on  Stratford  4 

To  Duke  of  Argyll  7 

Of  en.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  1 

35 


All  your  v's  in  unison, 

from  all  the  world  the  v's  came  '  We  know  not, 

I  heard  one  v  from  all  the  three  '  We  know  not. 

Thousands  of  v's  dro^vning  his  own 

all  the  sciences,  poesy,  varying  v's  of  prayer  ? 

I  hear  your  Mother's  v  in  yours. 

V's  of  the  day  Are  heard  across  the  V's  of  the  dark. 

is  Muriel — your  stepmother's  v. 

one  silent  v  Came  on  the  wind. 

No  V  for  either  spoke  within  my  heart 

And  then  the  tear  fell,  the  v  broke. 

All  the  world  will  hear  a  v  Scream 

A  hateful  v  be  utter'd, 

and  roll  my  v  from  the  simimit. 

Shall  the  royal  v  be  mute  ? 

she  lifted  up  a  v  Of  shrill  command, 

Not  the  Great  V  not  the  true  Deep. 

A  V  from  old  Iran  !     Nay,  but  I  know  it — 

vaguer  v's  of  Polytheism  Make  but  one  music, 

clatter  of  arms,  and  v's,  and  men  passing 

Blest  be  the  v  of  the  Teacher 

their  v's  blend  in  choric  Hallelujah 

dream'd  that  a  F  of  the  Earth  went  wailingly 

A  V  spake  out  of  the  skies 

Silent  V's  of  the  dead. 

Call  me  rather,  silent  v's. 
Voiced    See  Clear-voiced,  Low-voiced,  Sweet-voiced 
Voiceless     creatures  v  thro'  the  fault  of  birth, 
Void     I  am  v,  Dark,  formless, 

Kate  saith  '  the  world  is  v  of  might.' 

Not  V  of  righteous  self-applause, 

Naked  I  go,  and  v  of  cheer  : 

The  stalls  are  v,  the  doors  are  wide, 

for  it  seem'd  A  v  was  made  in  Nature ; 

Vanishing,  atom  and  v,  atom  and  v, 

V  was  her  use.  And  she  as  one  that  climbs 

A  V  where  heart  on  heart  reposed  ; 

The  captive  v  of  noble  rage, 

Or  cast  as  rubbish  to  the  v, 

V  of  the  little  living  will 

from  within  The  city  comes  a  murmur  v  of  joy. 
Volcano    Cold  upon  the  dead  v  sleeps  the  gleam 

The  smoke  of  war's  v  burst  again 
Volley    v  on  v,  and  yell  upon  yell — 
Volley'd      V  and  thunder  d  ;  (repeat) 
Volleying    And  the  v  cannon  thunder  his  loss ; 
VoInbiUty    all  that  heard  her  in  her  fierce  v, 

Yell'd  and  shriek'd  between  her  daughters  in  her  fierce  v.  „      72 

Voluble    Miriam  Lane  Made  such  a  v  answer  Enoch  Arden  903 

Volume     I  found  it  in  a  v,  all  of  songs,  Avdley  Court  57 

In  this  hand  held  a  r  as  to  read,  Princess  ii  455 

held  A  «  of  the  Poets  of  her  land  :  „       vii  174 

She  moved,  and  at  her  feet  the  v  fell.  „  254 

Volnptaons    Low  v  music  winding  trembled,  Vision  of  Sin  17 

which  outredden  All  v  garden-roses.  Ode  on  Well.  208 

To  whom  my  false  v  pride,  Guinevere  641 

The  sombre  close  of  that  v  day,  „      688 


Demeter  and  P.  66 

84 

Vastness  6 

31 

The  Ming  28 

39 

139 

153 

162 

367 

Forlorn  27 

Prog,  of  Spring  103 

Parnassus  6 

By  an  Evolution.  14 

Death  of  CEnone  98 

Akhar's  Dream  59 

89 

150 

Bandit's  Death  24 

Kafiolani  2 

Making  of  Man  7 

The  Dreamer  3 

Voice  spake,  etc.  1 

Silent  Voices  4 

7 


Geraint  and  E.  266 

Supp.  Confessions  121 

Kate  17 

Two  Voices  146 

239 

Sir  Galahad  31 

Lucretius  37 

258 

Princess  vii  34 

In  Mem.  xiii  6 

„        xxvii  2 

liv  7 

Maud  II  ii  14 

Tiresias  101 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  42 

Prog,  of  Spring  97 

Def.  of  Lucknow  34 

Light  Brigade  21,  42 

Ode  on  Well.  62 

Boddicea  4 


Voluptuousness    in  his  lust  and  v, 
And  leave  the  hot  swamp  oiv 
Vote     {See  also  Voat)     A  wretched  v  may  be  gain'd. 
Voted    See  Voated 

Vow  (s)     I  listen'd  to  thy  v's, 

Kate  snaps  her  fingers  at  my  v's  ; 

0  would  she  give  me  v  for  v, 
that  died  To  save  her  father's  v  ; 

v's,  where  there  was  never  need  of  v's. 

That  oft  hast  heard  my  v's, 

did  she  read  the  name  I  carved  with  many  v's 

Before  you  hear  my  marriage  v.' 

Kissing  his  v's  upon  it  like  a  knight. 

my  V  Binds  me  to  speak,  and  O  that  iron  will, 

That  breathe  a  thousand  tender  v's. 

At  one  dear  knee  we  proffer'd  v's. 

Of  early  faith  and  plighted  v's  ; 

Bound  them  by  so  strait  v's  to  his  own  self. 

And  glorying  in  their  v's  and  him, 

for  the  King  Will  bind  thee  by  such  v's, 

Arms  for  her  son,  and  loosed  him  from  his  v. 

my  knights  are  sworn  to  v's  Of  utter  hardihood, 

so  my  knighthood  keep  the  v's  they  swore, 

v's  like  theirs,  that  high  in  heaven 

They  bound  to  holy  v's  of  chastity  ! 

And  swearing  men  to  v's  impossible. 

Full  many  a  holy  v  and  pure  resolve. 

till  I  found  a  voice  and  sware  a  v. 

1  sware  a  v  before  them  all, 

and  Galahad  sware  the  v.  And  good  Sir  Bors, 

Did  Arthur  take  the  v  ?  ' 

'  Had  I  been  here,  ye  had  not  sworn  the  v.' 

I  sware  a  d  to  follow  it  till  I  saw.' 

'  Nay,  lord,  therefore  have  we  sworn  our  v's.' 

Go,  since  your  v's  are  sacred,  being  made  : 

All  men,  to  one  so  bound  by  such  a  v. 
How  far  I  falter'd  from  my  quest  and  v  ? 
Had  never  kiss'd  a  kiss,  or  vow'd  a  v. 
but  one  night  my  v  Burnt  me  within, 
Hope  not  to  make  thyself  by  idle  v's. 


Boadicea  66 

Ancient  Sage  277 

Maud  I  vi  56 

Supp.  Confessions  71 

Kate  19 

MUler's  D.  119 

D.  of  F.  Women  196 

Gardener's  D.  258 

Talking  Oak  98 

„       154 

The  Letters  8 

Aylmer's  Field  472 

Princess  ii  201 

In  Mtm.  XX  2 

„    Ixxix  13 

„     xcvii  30 

Com.  of  Arthur  262 

458 

Gareth  and  L.  270 

530 

552 

602 

Merlin  and  V.  14 

695 

Lancelot  and  E.  130 

879 

Holy  Grail  194 

195 

199 

204 

276 

282 

285 

314 

565 

568 

584 

607 

871 


if  the  King  Had  seen  the  sight  he  would  have  sworn  the  v  :    ..  904 

for  I  have  sworn  my  v's,  Pelleas  and  E.  244 

But  when  she  mock'd  his  v's  and  the  ^reat  King,  „  252 

0  noble  v's  !  O  great  and  sane  and  simple  race  „  479 
'  Have  any  of  our  Bound  Table  held  their  v's  ?  '  „  533 
By  noble  deeds  at  one  with  noble  v's.  Last  Tournament  123 
his  one  true  knight — Sole  follower  of  the  v's  ' —  „  303 
With  Arthur's  v's  on  the  great  lake  of  fire.  „  345 
My  God,  the  power  Was  once  in  v's  „  649 
thro'  their  v's  The  King  prevailing  made  his  realm  : —  .,  650 
'  V's  !  did  you  keep  the  v  you  made  to  Mark  ,,  655 
The  v  that  binds  too  strictly  snaps  itself —  .,  657 
The  v's  !  O  ay — the  wholesome  madness  of  an  hour —  .,  674 
but  then  their  v's — First  mainly  thro'  ,,  681 
a  doubtful  lord  To  bind  them  by  inviolable  v's,  „  688 
v's — I  am  woodman  of  the  woods,  ..  699 
spitting  at  their  v's  and  thee.  Pass,  of  Arthur  62 
My  house  are  rather  they  who  sware  my  v's,  „  157 
strange  dream  to  me  To  mind  me  of  the  secret  v  I  made  Columbus  92 
and  heard  his  passionate  v.  The  Flight  83 
swore  the  seeming-deathless  «...                         Locksley  H.,  Sixty  180 

V's  that  will  last  to  the  last  deathruckle,  and  v's  that  are 
snapt  in  a  moment  of  fire  ;  Vastness  26 

1  swore  the  v,  then  with  my  latest  kiss  The  Ring  298 
I  told  her  of  my  v.  No  pliable  idiot  I  to  break  my  v  ;  „        401 

Vow  (verb)     Godless  Jephtha  v's  his  child  .  .  .  The  Flight  26 

While  she  v's  '  till  death  shall  part  us,'  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  24 

Vow'd     I  V  that  could  I  gain  her,  our  fair  Queen,  Marr.  of  Geraint  787 

Had  never  kiss'd  a  kiss,  or  r  a  vow.  Holy  Grail  584 

I  V  That  I  would  work  according  as  he  will'd.  „  783 

I  V  That,  if  our  Princes  harken'd  to  my  prayer,  Columbus  99 

I  V  Whate'er  my  dreams,  Akbar's  Dream  12 

Vowing    some  V,  and  some  protesting),  Holy  Grail  270 

Voyage    {See  also  Home-voyage)    go  This  v  more  than 

once  ?  yea  twice  or  thrice —  Enoch  A  rden  142 


i 


Voyage 


769 


Waist 


▼oiyage  (continued)    this  v  by  the  grace  of  Grod  Will  bring 

fair  weather  Enoch  Arden  190 

And  dull  the  v  was  with  long  delays,  „  655 

Then  he  told  her  of  his  v,  His  wreck,  „  861 

And  after  my  long  v  I  shall  rest ! '  Lancelot  and  E.  1061 

And  let  the  story  of  her  dolorous  v  „  1343 

and  tell  them  all  The  story  of  my  v,  Columhus  12 

I  sail'd  On  my  first  v,  harrass'd  by  the  frights  .,        67 

Who  fain  had  pledged  her  jewels  on  my  first  v,  ,.      229 

yet  Am  ready  to  sail  forth  on  one  last  v.  ,,       237 

Art  passing  on  thine  happier  v  now  Sir  J.  Franklin  3 

Vulcan     mounted,  Ganymedes,  To  tumble,  V's,  Princess  Hi  72 

Vul^r     Nothing  of  the  v,  or  vainglorious.  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  13 

Vulture  (adj.)     Thereat  the  Lady  stretch'd  a  x;  throat.  Princess  iv  363 

Vulture  (s)     For  whom  the  carrion  v  waits  You  might  have  won  35 

swoops  The  v,  beak  and  talon,  at  the  heart  Princess  v  383 

Vulturous     Then  glided  a  v  Beldam  forth.  Dead  Prophet  25 


W 

Waaist  (waist)     wur  a-ereeapin'  about  my  w  ;  Spinster's  S's.  26 

Waait  (wait)     W  till  our  Sally  cooms  in.  North.  Cobbler  1 

You  Tonamies  shall  w  to-night  Spinster's  S's.  120 

but  w  till  tha  'ears  it  be  strikin'  the  hour.  Owd  Bod  18 

Waaked  (waked)     An'  when  I  w  i'  the  mumin'  North.  Cobbler  39 

To  be  horder'd  about,  an'  w,  Spinster's  S's.  97 

Then  I  w  an'  I  fun  it  was  Roaver  Owd  Rod  60 

Waaste  (waste)     D'ya  moind  the  w,  my  lass  ?  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  29 

Dubbut  loook  at  the  w:  „  37 

an'  I  'a  stubb'd  Thumaby  w.  .  „  28 

Waay  (way)     in  anoother  kind  of  a  w.  North.  Cobbler  96 

lasses  'ud  talk  o'  their  Missis's  w's,  Village  Wife  57 

'ud  'a  let  me  'a  bed  my  oan  w  Spinster's  S's.  101 

An'  'ed  goan  their  w's ;  Owd  Rod  36 

I  wur  gawin'  that  w  to  the  bad,  „        71 

wind  blawin'  hard  tother  w,  „      104 

rummle  down  when  the  roof  gev  «,  „      109 

I  fun  that  it  wam't  not  the  gaainist  w  to  the 

narra  Gaate.  Church-warden,  etc.  12 

Wader    James  Made  toward  us,  like  a  w  in  the  surf.  The  Brook  117 

Waft  (s)    crosses  With  one  w  of  the  wing.  The  Captain  72 

like  the  w  of  an  Angel's  wing  ;  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  38 

Waft  (verb)     Yet  w  me  from  the  harbour-mouth,     Ymi,  ask  me,  why,  etc.  25 

In  Mem.  ix  4 

Maud  I  xxii  5 

Princess  v  19 

Ancient  Sage  124 

In  Mem..  Ixxxii  1 

Com.  of  Arthur  508 

Guinevere  193 

Pass,  of  Arthur  12 

Merlin  and  V.  571 

Wages  6 

„     10 

Gareth  and  L.  1005 

The  Wreck  93 

Charity  40 

Com.  of  Arthur  418 

Geraint  and  E.  505 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  14 

Owd  Bod  105 

Com.  of  Arthur  6 

Guinevere  156 

434 

The  Brook  199 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  26 


Spread  thy  full  wings,  and  w  him  o'er 
Wafted    the  woodbine  spices  are  w  abroad, 
Wag     kings  Began  to  w  their  baldness  up  and  down. 

The  palsy  w's  his  head  ; 
Wage    I  w  not  any  feud  with  Death 

'  Behold,  for  these  have  sworn  To  w  my  wars. 

To  w  grim  war  against  Sir  Lancelot  there, 

I  w  His  wars,  and  now  I  pass  and  die. 
Waged     W  such  unwilling  tho'  successful  war 
Wages    The  w  of  sin  is  death  :  if  the  w  of  Virtue  be  dust. 

Give  her  the  w  of  going  on. 

Will  pay  thee  all  thy  w,  and  to  boot. 

'  The  w  of  sin  is  death,' 

I  need  no  w  of  shame. 
Wage-work    comfort  after  their  w-w  is  done, 
Waggd     Till  his  eye  darken'd  and  his  helmet  w 

This  tongue  that  w  They  said  with  such 
Waggled    till 'e  w  'is  taail  fur  a  bit. 
Waging    and  ever  w  war  Each  upon  other, 

while  the  King  Was  w  war  on  Lancelot : 

From  w  bitter  war  with  him  : 
Waif    rolling  in  his  mind  Old  w's  of  rhyme, 

thrones  and  peoples  are  as  w's  that  swing, 

flung  from  the  rushing  tide  of  the  world  as  a  w  of  shame,   The  Wreck  6 

rl  (s)    gets  for  greeting  but  a  w  of  pain  ;  Lucretius  138 

Phantom  w  of  women  and  children,  Boddicea  26 

whose  dying  eyes  Were  closed  with  w,  In  Mem.  xc  6 

then  with  a  cbuldlike  w,  And  drawing  down  Balin  and  Balan  596 

wife  and  child  with  w  Pass  to  new  lords  ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  44 

as  by  some  deathbed  after  w  Of  suffering,  „  118 


Wail  (s)  (continued)    a  w  That  seeming  something,  yet 

was  nothing.  Lover's  Tale  iv  103 

the  sudden  w  his  lady  made  Dwelt  in  his  fancy :  „           149 

the  mother's  garrulous  w  For  ever  woke  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  262 

I  read  no  more  the  prisoner's  mute  w  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  4 

I  am  roused  by  the  w  of  a  child,  The  Wreck  7 

w  came  borne  in  the  shriek  of  a  growing  wind,  „        87 

and  the  w  Of  a  beaten  babe,  ,'      122 

Let  be  thy  w  and  help  thy  fellow  men,  Ancient  Sage  258 

Among  the  w  of  midnight  winds,  Demeter  and  P.  59 

As  we  forget  our  w  at  being  bom.  The  Bing  465 

nor  w  of  baby- wife.  Or  Indian  widow  ;  Akbar's  Bream  196 

I  sent  him  a  desolate  w  and  a  curse,  Charity  14 

my  w  of  reproach  and  scorn  ;  „       23 

To  the  w  of  my  winds.  The  Dreamer  13 

thought  that  he  answer'd  her  w  with  a  song —  „         16 

Wail  (verb)     Here  it  is  only  the  mew  that  w's  ;  Sea- Fairies  19 

Cease  to  w  and  brawl !  Two  Voices  199 

the  Dead  March  w's  in  tho  people's  ears  :  Ode  on  Well.  267 

if  he  be  not  dead.  Why  w  ye  for  him  thus  ?  Geraint  and  E.  547 

wherefore  w  for  one.  Who  put  your  beauty  „            674 

burst  away  To  weep  and  w  in  secret ;  Lancelot  and  E.  1245 
beneath  a  winding  wall  of  rock  Heard  a  child  w.      Last  Tournament  12 

and  w  their  way  From  cloud  to  cloud,  Pass,  of  Arthur  39 

At  once  began  to  wander  and  to  w,  Lover's  Tale  iv  99 

Whereat  the  very  babe  began  to  w  ? '  „            375 

The  wind  that  'ill  w  like  a  child  Rizpah  72 

And  they  w  to  thee  !  Tiresias  107 

Wherefore  do  ye  w  ? '  Demeter  and  P.  60 

'  We  know  not,  and  we  know  not  why  we  w.'  „            62 

Why  w  you,  pretty  plover  ?  Happy  1 

Wail'd    w  and  woke  The  mother,  and  the  father  suddenly 

cried,  Sea  Dreams  57 

fell  on  him,  Clasp'd,  kiss'd  him,  w  :  Jjuaretiu^  280 

and  w  about  with  mews.  Princess  iv  282 

They  wept  and  w,  but  led  the  way  In  Mem.  ciii  18 

the  wind  like  a  broken  worlding  w,  Maud  I  i  11 

Cast  herself  down,  knelt  to  the  Queen,  and  w.  Merlin  and  V.  66 

Queen,  Who  rode  by  Lancelot,  w  and  shriek'd  Holy  Grail  356 

But  w  and  wept,  and  hated  mine  own  self,  „        609 

and  he  shrank  and  w,  '  Is  the  Queen  false  ?  '  Pelleas  and  E.  531 
Queens  in  yon  black  boat.  Who  shriek'd  and  w.        Pass,  of  Arthur  453 

finds  the  fountain  where  they  w  '  Mirage  '  !  Ancient  Sage  77 

So  the  Shadow  w.     Then  I,  Earth-Goddess,  Demeter  and  P.  101 

and  the  dream  W  in  her,  when  she  woke  Death  of  (Enone  82 

Wailest     who  w  being  born  And  banish'd  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  41 

WaiUng     {See  also  Eeenin')     And  on  the  mere  the  w 

died  away.  M.  d' Arthur  272 
To  ailing  wife  or  w  infancy  Or  old  bedridden  palsy, —     A  ylmer's  Field  177 

After  much  w,  hush'd  itself  at  last  „            542 

Their  wildest  w's  never  out  of  tune  Sea  Dreams  231 

they  hate  to  hear  me  like  a  wind  W  for  ever.  Princess  v  99 
Moaning  and  w  for  an  heir  (repeat)                     Com.  of  Arthur  207,  368 

Your  w  will  not  quicken  him  :  Geraint  and  E.  549 

clapt  her  hands  Together  with  a  w  shriek.  Merlin  and  V.  867 

the  owls  W  had  power  upon  her,  Lancelot  and  E.  1001 

And  on  the  mere  the  w  died  away.  Pass,  of  Arthur  440 

W,  w,  w,  the  wind  over  land  and  sea —  Bizpah  1 

before  their  Gods,  And  w  '  Save  us.'  Tiresias  106 

hear  in  one  dark  room  a  w,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  262 

She  used  to  shun  the  w  babe.  The  Bing  358 

O  the  night.  When  the  owls  are  w  !  Forlorn  30 

She  heard  a  w  cry,  that  seem'd  at  first  Death  of  (Enone  20 

Wailingly     Voice  of  the  Earth  went  w  past  him  The  Dreamer  3 

Wain     or  when  the  lesser  w  Is  twisting  In  Mem.  ci  11 

The  team  is  loosen'd  from  the  w,  „        cxxi  5 

Wainscot  (adj.)     And  the  shrieking  rush  of  the  w  moaso,  Maud  I  vi  71 

Wainscot  (s)     Behind  the  mouldering  w  shriek'd,  Mariarta  64 

Waist     (See  also  Waaist)     the  girdle  About  her  dainty 

dainty  w.  Miller's  D.  176 

You  should  have  clung  to  Fulvia's  w,  D.  of  F.  Women  259 

Lovingly  lower,  trembled  on  her  ic —  Gardener's  D.  131 

She  strove  to  span  my  w  :  Talking  Oak  138 

And  round  her  w  she  felt  it  fold,  Day- Dm.,  Depart.  2 

And  held  her  round  the  knees  against  his  to,  Princess  it  363 

3  c 


Waist 


770 


Wake 


Wftist  {co-niimied)     coverlid  was  cloth  of  gold  Drawn 

to  her  w,  Lancelot  and  E.  1158 

Waist-deep  Beyond  the  brook,  -w-d  in  meswiow-sweet.  The  Brook  ll8 
Wait    (See  also  Waait)     Oh  !  vanity  !     Death  w's  at 

the  door.  AH  Things  will  Die  17 

To  w  for  death — mute — careless  of  all  ills,  //  /  were  loved  10 

hands  and  eyes  That  said,  We  w  for  thee.  Falace  of  Art  104 
And  there  to  w  a  little  while  May  Queen,  Con.  58 
From  those,  not  blind,  who  w  for  day,  Ijove  thou  thy  land  15 
W,  and  Love  himself  will  bring  The  drooping 

flower  Love  and  Duty  23 

W :  my  faith  is  large  in  Time,  „             25 

So  the  Powers,  who  w  On  noble  deeds,  Godiva  71 

For  me  the  Heavenly  Bridegroom  w's,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  31 

For  whom  the  carrion  vulture  w's  You  might  of  won  35 
she  cried,  Scared  as  it  were,  '  dear  Philip,  w  a 

while:  Enoch  Arden'^0 
Yet  w  a  year,  a  year  is  not  so  long  :  Suiely  I  shall 

be  wiser  in  a  year :  O  w  a  little  ! '  „          432 

as  I  have  waited  all  my  life  I  well  may  w  a  little.'  „          436 

In  those  two  deaths  he  read  God's  warning  ' «?.'  „          571 

she  shall  know,  I  w  His  time,'  „  811 
he  could  not  w.  Bound  on  a  matter  he  of  life  and 

death  :  Sea  Dreams  150 

thoughts  that  w  On  you,  their  centre  :  Princess  iv  443 

Invective  seem'd  to  w  behind  her  lips,  „          472 

As  w's  a  river  level  with  the  dam  „          473 

'  The  second  two  :  they  w,'  he  said,  „           v  i 

every  captain  w's  Himgry  for  honour,  .,          313 

to  w  upon  him,  Like  mine  own  brother.  „      vi  298 

'  W  a  little,  w  a  little.  You  shall  fix  a  day.'  Window,  When  11 

The  Shadow  sits  and  w's  for  me.  In  Mem.  xxii  20 

And  doubt  beside  the  portal  w's,  „          xciv  14 

And  those  white-favour'd  horses  w  ;  „         Con.  90 

And  the  lily  whispers, '  I  w.'  Maud  I  xxii  66 

'  Wherefore  w's  the  madman  there  Naked  Gareth  and  L.  1091 

'  Therefore  w  with  me,'  she  said  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  180 

W  here,  and  when  he  passes  fall  upon  him.'  Geraint  and  E.  129 

Enid  stood  aside  to  w  the  event,  „             153 

there  he  w's  below  the  wall,  Pelleas  and  E.  380 
your  flower  W's  to  be  solid  fruit  of  golden  deeds.  Last  Tournament  100 
greedy  heir  That  scarce  can  w  the  reading  of  the  will    Lovers  Tale  i  676 

And  in  a  loft,  with  none  to  w  on  him,  ,,         iv  138 

His  master  would  not  w  imtil  he  died,  ,,  259 
'  W  a  little,'  you  say,  '  you  are  sure  it  '11  all  come 

right,'  First  Quarrel  1 
W  !  an'  once  I  ha'  waited — I  hadn't  to  w  for  long. 

Now  lw,w,w  for  Harry. —  „            3 

an'  I  work  an'  I  w  to  the  end.  „            7 

Doctor,  if  you  can  w,  I'll  tell  you  the  tale  •  „  9 
'  W  a  little,  my  lass,  I  am  sure  it  'ill  all  come 

right.'  (repeat)  „    74,  91 

w  till  the  point  of  the  pickaxe  be  thro'  !  Def.  of  Liicknow  27 

W  a  while.    Your  Mother  and  step-mother —  The  Ring  145 

Nor  w,  till  all  Our  vernal  bloom  To  Mary  Boyle  8 

to  mourn  and  sigh — Not  long  to  w—  „            58 

To  w  on  one  so  broken,  so  forlorn  ?  Romney's  R.  17 

That  all  the  dead,  who  w  the  doom  of  Hell  „        132 

W  till  Death  has  flung  them  open.  Faith  7 

Waited     I  w  underneath  the  dawning  hills,  CEnone  47 

To  me,  methought,  who  w  with  a  crowd,  M.  d' Arthur,  E<p.  20 

none  of  all  his  men  Dare  tell  him  Dora  w  with  the  child  ;  Dora  76 

I  w  long  ;  My  brows  are  ready.  St.  S.  Stylites  205 

/  w  for  the  train  at  Coventry  ;  Godiva  1 

Mute  with  folded  arms  they  w —  The  Captain  39 

thronging  in  and  in,  to  where  they  w,  Vision  of  Sin  26 

'  Annie,  as  I  have  w  all  my  life  Enoch  Arden  435 

and  there  a  group  of  girls  In  circle  w.  Princess,  Pro.  69 

let  us  know  The  Princass  Ida  w :  „            ii  21 

and  w,  fifty  there  Opposed  to  fifty,  „           v  484 

Fixt  by  their  cars,  w  the  golden  dawn.  Spec,  of  Iliad  22 

sent  her  coming  champion,  w  him.  Gareth  and  L,  1192 

And  wliile  he  w  in  the  castle  court,  Marr.  of  Geraint  326 

And  stood  behind,  and  w  on  the  three.  „              392 

And  w  there  for  Yniol  and  Geraint.  „              538 


Waited  (continued)     Then  Enid  w  pale  and  sorrowful,  Geraint  and  E.  83 

while  we  w,  one,  the  youngest  of  us.  Merlin  and  V.  415 

Lost  in  a  doubt,  Pelleas  wandering  JV,  Pelleas  and  E.  393 

And  w  for  her  message,  Lover's  Tale  iv  146 

Wait  !  an'  once  I  ha'  w —  First  Quarrel  3 

Waiter     (See  also  Head-waiter)     halo  lives  about  The  xc's 

hands.  Will  Water.  114 

'  Slip-shod  w,  lank  and  sour.  Vision  of  Sin  71 

Waitest     What  aileth  thee  ?  whom  w  thou  Adeline  45 

Poor  child,  that  w  for  thy  love  !  In  Mem.  vi  28 

Waiteth     standeth  there  alone.  And  w  at  the  door.  D.  of  the  0.  Year  51 


W  to  strive  a  happy  strife. 


Waiting    (See  also  A-waatin') 
My  whole  soul  w  silently. 
Kept  watch,  w  decision,  made  reply. 
W  to  see  me  die. 

Like  truths  of  Science  w  to  be  caught — 
A  shipwreck'd  sailor,  w  for  a  sail : 
There  stood  a  maiden  near,  W  to  pass. 
So  quickly,  w  for  a  hand, 
That  Shadow  w  with  the  keys. 
Now  w  to  be  made  a  wife, 
stay'd  W  to  hear  the  hounds  ; 
In  shadow,  w  for  them,  caitiffs  all ; 
I  saw  three  bandits  by  the  rock  W  to  fall  on  you. 
Three  other  horsemen  w,  wJiolly  arni'd. 
And  w  to  be  treated  like  a  wolf. 


Tristram,  w  for  the  quip  to  come, 

Ready  to  spring,  w  a  chance  : 

Then  w  by  the  doors  the  warhorse  neigh'd 

W  to  see  some  blessed  shape  in  heaven, 

w  still  The  edict  of  the  will  to  reassume 

W  to  see  the  settled  countenance  Of  her  I  loved. 

Your  nurse  is  w.     Kiss  me  child  and  go. 

W  for  your  summons  .  .  . 
Waive    she  will  not :  w  your  claim  : 
Wake  (fair)     visage  all  agrin  as  at  a  w. 
Wake  (festival)    wid  the  best  he  could  give  at  ould 

Donovan's  w — 
Wake  (funeral  festival)    at  yer  w  like  husban'  an'  wife, 
Wake  (trail)     With  w's  of  fire  we  tore  the  dark  ; 

Morn  in  the  white  w  of  the  morning  star 
Wake  (verb)     Then — while  a  sweeter  music  w's, 

I  w  alone,  I  sleep  forgotten,  I  w  forlorn.' 

iSolian  harp  that  w's  No  certain  air, 

You  must  w  and  call  me  early,  (repeat) 

I  shall  never  w.  If  you  do  not  call  me  loud 

to  sit,  to  sleep,  to  w,  to  breathe.' 

I  w  :  the  chill  stars  sparkle  ; 

leave  thee  freer,  till  thou  w  ref resh'd 

We  sleep  and  w  and  sleep, 

'  O  w  for  ever,  love,'  she  hears, 

•  0  love,  thy  kiss  would  w  the  dead  ! 

And  w  on  science  grown  to  more, 

■  W  him  not :  let  liim  sleep  ; 

but  as  one  before  he  w's, 

he  said,  '  pass  on  ;  His  Highness  w's  :  ' 

wind  w's  A  lisping  of  the  innumerous  leaf 

a  storm  never  w's  on  the  lonely  sea. 

Sleep,  little  ladies  !     W  not  soon  ! 

W,  little  ladies.  The  sun  is  aloft ! 

With  morning  w's  the  will,  and  cries. 

To  whom  a  conscience  never  w's  ; 

I  almost  wish'd  no  more  to  w, 

I  w,  and  I  discern  the  truth  ; 

wherefore  w  The  old  bitterness  again, 

regret  for  buried  time  That  keenlier  in  sweet  April  w's, 

And  I  w,  my  dream  is  fled  ; 

Let  it  go  or  stay,  so  I  w  to  the  higher  aims 

w's  Half-blinded  at  the  coming  of  a  light. 

sound  cause  to  sleep  hast  thou.     W  lusty  ! 

and  Enid  had  no  heart  To  w  him. 

Ride,  ride  and  dream  until  ye  w — 

'  Man  dreams  of  Fame  while  woman  w's  to  love.' 

'  Do  I  w  or  sleep  ? 

and  w  The  bloom  that  fades  away  ? 


Two  Voices  130 

Fatima  36 

CEnone  143 

D.  of  F.  Women  112 

Golden  Year  17 

Enoch  Arden  590 

The  Brook  205 

In  Mem.  vii  4 

xxvi  15 

..      Con.  49 

Marr.  of  Geraint  163 

Geraint  and  E.  58 

73 

121 

857 


Last  Tournament  260 

Guinevere  12 

530 

Lover's  Tale  i  312 

m160 

,.  Hi  39 

The  Ring  489 

Forlorn  22 

Princess  v  296 

521 

Tomorrow  42 

82 

The  Voyage  52 

Princess  Hi  17 

To  the  Queen  13 

Mariana  in  the  S.  35 

Two  Voices  436 

May  Queen  1,  41 

9 

Edwin  Moms  40 

St.  S.  Stylites  114 

Love  and  Duty  97 

Golden  Year  22 

Day-Dm.,  Depart 


a 


„      L' Envoi  10 

Enoch  Arden  233 

The  Brook  215 

Princess  v  5 

13 

The  Islei33 

Minnie  and  Winnie  10 


In  Mem.  iv  15 

xxvii  8 

xxviii  14 

Ixviii  14 

..     Ixxxiv  46 

cxvi  2 

Maud  II  iv  51 

„  ///w38 

Com.  of  Arthur  265 

Gareth  and  L.  1283 

Geraint  and  E.  370 

Merlin  and  V.  118 

460 

Lover's  Tale  iv  78 

Ancient  Sage\ 


1l 


Ancient  Sage  132 

The  Flight  7 

63 

The  Ming  67 

„       449 

To  Mary  Boyle  63 

'S';.  Telemachus  20 

57 


Wake 

Wake  (verb)  (continued)     But  w's  a,  dotard  smile.' 

to  rest  and  w  no  more  were  better  rest  for  me,- . 

how  early  would  I  w  ! 

Before  a  kiss  should  w  her. 

J  rais'd  her,  call'd  her  '  Muriel,  Muriel  iv  !  ' 

his  young  music  w's  A  wish  in  you 

an  answer  '  W  Thou  deedless  dreamer, 

great  shock  may  w  a  palsied  limb. 
Waked     (See  also  Waaked)     to  sleep  with  sound.  And  w 

7"^  ^'>"f '•  V,.   T  u      ^  .  ''^^-  d' Arthur,  Ep.  4 

w  at  dead  of  night,  I  heard  a  sound  Holy  Grail  108 

tie  w  for  both  :  he  pray'd  for  both  :  Lover's  Tale  i  227 

I  remember  once  that  being  w  By  noises  in  the  house—    The  Ring  416 
!.•»  ,.  £f,  ^  ^  ^'^  °^  P^'^y,  *^^^  scream'd  and  past ;  Death  of  (Enone  87 

iWakrful     Begmnmg,  and  the  w  bird  ;  in  Mem.  cxxi  11 

Urmd  on  the  w  ear  m  the  hush  of  the  moonless  nights,       Maud  I  i  42 

Before  the  w  mother  heard  him,  went.  Gareth  and  L.  180 

A  w  portress,  and  didst  parle  with  Death,—  Lover^s  Tale  i  113 

Wakefulness     After  a  night  of  feverous  w,  Enoch  Arder,  9^A 

Waken    (See  also  Wakken)    The  fire-fly  w's :  w  thou 

with  me. 

That  w's  at  this  hour  of  rest 

and  in  my  breast  Spring  w's  too  ; 

Than  to  w  every  morning  to  that  face  I  loathe 
Waken'd    the  first  matin-song  hath  w  loud 

What  eyes,  like  thine,  have  w  hopes. 

For  thrice  I  w  after  dreams. 

Till  at  the  last  he  w  from  his  swoon, 

A  way  by  love  that  w  love  within, 

Suddenly  w  with  a  sound  of  talk 
Wakenest    Who  w  with  thy  balmy  breath 

Sun,  that  w  all  to  bliss  or  pain. 
Wakening    Gareth,  w,  fiercely  clutch'd  the  shield  ; 

Kode  till  the  star  above  the  w  sun, 
Waking     W  she  heard  the  night-fowl  crow  : 

If  you're  w  call  me  early, 

if  you're  w,  call  me,  call  me  early, 

the  dreams  that  come  Just  ere  the  «• : 

And,  truly,  w  dreams  were,  more  or  less, 

W  laughter  in  indolent  reviewers. 

Till  a  silence  fell  with  the  w  bird. 

But  come  to  her  w,  find  her  asleep. 

And  Enid  started  w,  with  her  heart 

Tristram  w,  the  red  dream  Fled  with  a  shout, 

set  the  mother  w  in  amaze  To  find  her  sick 

From  off  the  rosy  cheek  of  w  Day. 
Wakken  (waken)    I  couldn't  w  'im  oop, 
Wales     It  was  last  summer  on  a  tour  in  W  : 

Urien,  Cradlemont  of  IV,  Claudias, 

ears  for  Christ  in  this  wild  field  of  W— 
Walk  (s)    (See  also  Garden-walks,  Wood-walk) 
vary-colour'd  shells 


771 


Walk'd-Walkt 


Princess  vii  179 

In  Mem.  civ  6 

,.  cxv  18 

The  Flight  8 

Ode  to  Memory  68 

Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  45 

Lucretius  34 

Geraint  and  E.  583 

Holy  Grail  11 

Pelleas  and  E.  48 

In  Mem.  xcix  13 

Gareth  and  L.  1060 

1304 

Pelleas  and  E.  500 

Mariana  26 

May  Queen,  N.   Y's.  E.  1 

52 

Lucretius  36 

Princess  i  12 

Uendecasyllabics  8 

Maud  I  xxii  17 

„      //  a  81 

Marr.  of  Geraint  674 

Last  Tournament  487 

Demeter  and  P.  57 

Akbar's  Dream,  202 

Owd  Rod  102 

Golden  Year  2 

Com.  of  Arthur  112 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  13 

A  w  with 

Arabian  Nights  57 


you  may  hear  him  sob  and  sigh  In  the  w's  ;  A  splrU  haunts  6 
with  echoing  feet  he  threaded  The  secretest  w's  of  fame  :      The  Poet  10 

said  Death,  •  these  w's  are  mine.'  Lov^  and  Death  7 

yielding  gave  into  a  grassy  w  Garde-ner's  D.  Ill 

last  night  s  gale  had  caught,  And  Ijlown  across  the  w.                          125 

With  words  of  promise  in  his  w,  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  23 
and  all  round  it  ran  aw  Of  shingle,  and  a  w  divided  it :    Enoch  Arden  736 

iinoch  shimn  d  the  middle  w  and  stole  738 

Katie  somewhere  in  the  w's  below.  The  Brook  86 

Would  often,  in  his  w's  with  Edith,  claim  Aylmer's  Field  61 

our  long  w's  were  stript  as  bare  as  brooms,  Princess   Pro  184 

the  chapel  bells  CaH'cl  us  :  we  left  the  w's  ;  „      '       ii  471 

Dropt  on  the  sward,  and  up  the  linden  to's,  ,'            i^;  209 

Nor  waves  the  cypress  in  the  palace  w  ;  ,"           -„n  177 

Or  w's  in  Boboli's  ducal  bowers.  "xhe  Daisy  44 
Shadows  of  three  dead  men  Walk'd  in  the  w's  with  me,  G.  ofSwainston  4 

In  those  deserted  w's,  may  find  In  Mem  viii  14 

partner  in  the  fiowery  w  Of  letters,  ;,    i^^^iv  22 

Up  that  long  w  of  lim^  1  past  „   Ixxxvii  15 

That  saw  thro'  all  the  Muses'  w,  ^-g  4 

her  light  foot  along  the  garden  w,  3Iaud  I  xviii  9 

1  did  not  talk  To  gentle  Maud  in  our  w  .,          ,,.,_,,  13 

From  the  meadow  your  w's  have  left  so  sweet  „        xxii  39 


Walk  (s)  (continued)     Glanced  at  the  doors  or  gambol'd 

•         down  the  w's  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  665 
A  w  of  roses  ran  from  door  to  door ;  A  w  of  lilies 

crost  it  to  the  bower  :  Balin  and  Balan  242 

paced  The  long  white  w  of  lilies  toward  the  bower.  „              249 

she  stole  upon  my  w.  And  calling  me  the  greatest  Holy  Grail  594 
How  oft  with  him  we  paced  that  w  of  limes.        To  W.  H.  Brookfield  6 

an  they  goas  fur  aw.  Spinster's  S's.  85 

He  dreams  of  that  long  w  thro'  desert  life  To  Mary  Boyle  55 

Walk  (verb)     In  sleep  she  seem'd  to  w  forlorn,  Mariana  30 

I  w,  I  dare  not  think  of  thee,  Oriana  93 

W's  forgotten,  and  is  forlorn.'  Mariana  in  the  S.  48 

So  sweet  it  seems  with  thee  to  w,  Miller's  D.  29 

made  it  sweet  To  w,  to  sit,  to  sleep,  to  wake,  Edwin  Morris  40 

Could  slip  Its  bark  and  w.  Talking  Oak  188 

But  any  man  that  w's  the  mead,  Day-Dm.,  Moral  9 

Katie  w  s  By  the  long  wash  of  Australasian  seas  The  Brook  193 

Averill  w  So  freely  with  his  daughter  ?  Aylmer's  Field  269 

nor  cares  to  w  With  Death  and  Morning  Princess  vii  203 

0  we  will  w  this  world.  Yoked  in  all  exercise  „  360 
He  that  w's  it,  only  thirsting  For  the  right,  Ode  on  Well.  203 
Nor  follow,  tho  I  w  in  haste,  /„  Mem.  xxii  18 
Ihat  nothing  w's  with  aimless  feet ;  „               U^  5 

1  w  as  ere  I  walk'd  forlorn,  "  l^viii  5 
From  state  to  state  the  spirit  w's  ;  .'  Ixxxii  6 
to  w  all  day  like  the  sultan  of  old  Maud  I  iv  42 
each  man  w's  with  his  head  in  a  cloud  of  poisonous  flies  „  54 
There  she  w's  in  her  state  ,.  ^iv  3 
the  Powers  who  w  the  world  Made  lightnings  Com.  of  ' Arthur  107 
Hath  power  to  w  the  waters  like  our  Lord.  ..  294 
Merlin,  who,  they  say,  can  w  Unseen  at  pleasure—  ^,  347 
I  will  w  thro'  fire,  Mother,  to  gain  it—  Gareth  and  L.  133 

Will  ye  w  thro'  fire  ?     Who  w's  thro'  fire  will 

hardly  heed  the  smoke.  ,,            142 

w  with  me,  and  move  To  music  with  thine  Order  Bal-in  and  Balan  76 

Until  this  earth  he  w's  on  seems  not  earth.  Holy  Grail  912 

W  your  dim  cloister,  and  distribute  dole  Guinevere  683 

Who  w  before  thee,  ever  turning  round  Lover's  Talc  i  490 

his  wont  to  w  Between  the  going  light  „             663 

Where  Love  could  w  with  banish'd  Hope  ",            813 

w's  down  fro'  the'  All  to  see.  North.' Cobbler  91 

To  w  within  the  glory  of  the  Lord  Columbus  89 

lies  all  m  the  way  that  you  w.  Despair  112 

An'  maiiybe  they'll  w  upo'  two  Qiod  Rod  17 

Thraldom  who  w's  with  the  banner  of  Freedom,  Fastness  10 

I  used  to  w  This  Terrace —  The  Ring  167 

We  often  w  In  open  sun,  and  see  beneath  our  feet  „         327 

Walk'd-Walkt     One  walk'd  between  his  wife  and  child,  Ttco  Voices  412 

The  little  maiden  walk'd  demure,  ,,           419 

But,  as  he  walk'd,  King  Arthur  panted  hard,  M.  d' Arthur  176 

and  looking,  as  he  walk'd.  Larger  than  human  „          182 

I'm  glad  I  walk'd.     How  fresh  the  meadows  look  Walk,  to  the  Mail  1 
what  home  ?  had  he  a  home  ?     His  home,  he  walk'd.  Enoch  Arden  669 

for  she  walk'd  Wearing  the  light  yoke  Aylmer's  Field  707 

So  now  on  sand  they  walk'd,  and  now  on  cliff,  Sea  Dreams  37 

And  that  the  woman  walk'd  upon  the  brink  :  „         112 

And  while  I  walk'd  and  talk'd  as  heretofore.  Princess  i  16 

there  One  walk'd  reciting  by  herself,  „       a  454 

she  you  walk'd  with,  she  You  talk'd  with,  ][      vi  254 

Walk'd  at  their  will,  and  everything  was  changed.  ,'          384 

I  walk'd  with  one  I  loved  two  and  thirty  years  ago.  V.  of  Cauteretz  4 

while  I  walk'd  to-day.  The  two  and  thirty  years  5 

Shadows  of  three  dead  men  WalFd  in  the  walks  G.  ofSwainston  4 

where  the  path  we  walk'd  began  To  slant  In  Mem.  xxii  9 

I  walk  as  ere  I  walk'd  forlorn,  ,.        Ixviii  5 

In  walking  as  of  old  we  walk'd  "        i^xi  12 

Where  first  he  walk'd  when  claspt  in  clay  ?  .,          xciii  4 

out  he  walk'd  when  the  wind  like  a  broken  Maud  I  ill 

Walk'd  in  a  wintry  wind  by  a  ghastly  glimmer,  ..       m  13 

I  have  walk'd  awake  with  Truth.  ..       ^ix  4 

He  walk'd  with  dreams  and  darkness,  Merlin  and  V.  190 
For  all  that  walk'd,  or  crept,  or  perch'd,  or  flew.  Last  Tournament  367 
But,  as  he  walk'd,  King  Arthur  panted  hard,             Pass,  of  Arthur  344 

and  looking,  as  he  walk'd.  Larger  than  human  „            350 

same  old  paths  where  Love  had  walk'd  with  Hope,  Lover's  Tale  i  821 


Walk'd-Walkt 


772 


WaU 


Walk'd-Walkt  (continued)     One  walk'd  abreast  with  me 
and  veil'd  his  brow, 

I  walk'd  behind  mth  one  who  veil'd  his  brow. 

and  while  I  walk'd  with  these  In  marvel 

I  walked  with  him  down  to  the  quay, 

Fur  Molly  the  long  un  she  walkt  awaay 

I  walk'd  with  our  kindly  old  doctor 

men  Walk'd  like  the  fly  on  ceilings  ? 

whiniver  ye  walkt  in  the  shtreet, 

Fur  I  walk'd  wi'  tha  all  the  way  hoam 

Till  1  dream'd  'at  Squire  walkt  in, 
Walking     (See  also  A-walkin')     Death,  w  all  alone 
beneath  a  yew, 

W  the  cold  and  starless  road  of  Death 

As  in  strange  lands  a  traveller  w  slow, 

Beauty  and  anguish  w  hand  in  hand 

W  about  the  gardens  and  the  halls  Of  Camelot, 

Met  me  w  on  yonder  way, 

W  up  and  pacing  down, 

Would  care  no  more  for  Leolin's  w  with  her 

In  w  as  of  old  we  walk'd 

I  was  w  a  mile.  More  than  a  mile 

She  is  w  in  the  meadow, 

For  once,  when  Arthur  w  all  alone, 

one  fair  mom,  I  w  to  and  fro  beside  a  stream 

once,  A  week  beyond,  while  w  on  the  walls 

W  about  the  gardens  and  the  halls  Of  Camelot, 

Brute  that  is  w  and  haunting  us  yet, 
Walkt    -See  Walk'd-Walkt 

Wall  (s)  (See  also  Abbey-wall,  Castle-wall,  Cottage-walls, 
Gable-wall,  Garden-wall,  Mountain-wall,  Nunnery- 
walls,  Palace-walls,  Shield-wall)  About  a  stone-cast 
from  the  w 

A  pillar  of  white  light  upon  the  w 

simlight  falls  Upon  the  storied  w's  ; 

She  stood  upon  the  castle  w, 

Atween  me  and  the  castle  w, 

Two  lovers  whispering  by  an  orchard  w  ; 

When  from  her  wooden  w's, — 

Four  gray  w's,  and  four  gray  towers, 

Struck  up  against  the  blinding  w. 

The  one  black  shadow  from  the  w. 

as  yonder  w's  Rose  slowly  to  a  music 

bellowing  caves.  Beneath  the  windy  w. 

That  stood  against  the  w. 

girt  round  With  blackness  as  a  solid  w, 

between  w's  Of  shadowy  granite, 

Upon  the  tortoise  creeping  to  the  w  ; 

All  thine,  against  the  garden  w. 

its  w's  And  chimneys  muffled  in  the  leafy  vine. 

and  thou  art  staring  at  the  w, 

the  blind  w's  Were  full  of  chinks  and  holes  ; 

Gleam  thro'  the  Gothic  archway  in  the  w. 

That  watch  the  sleepers  from  the  w. 

All  creeping  plants,  a  w  of  green  Close-matted, 

He  watches  from  his  mountain  w's. 

The  vast  Akrokeraunian  w's. 

But  tum'd  her  own  toward  the  w  and  wept. 

Then  Annie  with  her  brows  against  the  w 

The  late  and  early  roses  from  his  w, 

compass'd  round  by  the  blind  w  of  night 

blown  across  her  ghostly  w  : 

and  stole  Up  by  the  w,  behind  the  yew  ; 

Stood  from  his  w's  and  wing'd  his  entry-gates 

I  cry  to  vacant  chairs  and  widow'd  w's. 

Staring  for  ever  from  their  gilded  w's 

A  mountain,  like  a  w  of  burs  and  thorns  ; 

higher  on  the  w's.  Betwixt  the  monstrous  horns 
Had  beat  her  foes  with  slaughter  from  her  w's. 
some  were  whelm'd  with  missiles  of  the  w, 
A  broken  statue  propt  against  the  w, 
That  drove  her  foes  with  slaughter  from  her  w's, 
from  the  bastion'd  w's  Like  threaded  spiders. 
The  foundress  of  the  Babylonian  w, 
Before  two  streams  of  light  from  w  to  w, 
The  splendour  falls  on  castle  w's 


Lover's  Tale  it  86 

„  in  12 

18 

First  Quarrel  20 

Village  Wife  97 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  43 

Columbus  51 

Tomorrow  37 

Spinster's  S's.  32 

Owd  Boa,  55 

Love  and  Death  5 

(Enone  259 

Palace  of  Art  211 

D.  of  F.  Women  15 

M.  d'Arthur  20 

Edward  Gray  2 

L.  of  Burleigh  90 

Aylmer's  Field  124 

In  Mem.  Ixxi  12 

Maud  I  ix  1 

„  IlivZl 

Merlin  and  V.  152 

Holy  Grail  592 

Pelleas  and  E.  225 

Pass,  of  Arthur  188 

The  Dawn  23 


Mariana  37 

Ode  to  Memory  53 

86 

Oriana  28 

„       35 

Circumstance  4 

Buonaparte  5 

L.  of  Shahtt  i  15 

Mariana  in  the  S.  56 

80 

(Enone  40 

Palace  of  Art  72 

244 

274 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  3 

D.  of  F.  Women  27 

The  Blackbird  8 

Audley  Court  18 

Locksley  Hall  79 

Godiva  59 

„       64 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  24 

45 

The  Eagle  5 

To  E.  L.  4 

Enoch  Arden  283 

314 

339 

492 

661 

739 

Aylmer's  Field  18 

720 

833 

Sea  Dreams  119 

Princess,  Pro.  22 

34 

45 

99 

123 

i  107 

a  80 

473 

M  «V  1 


Wall  (s)  (continued)     And  some  tliat  men  were  in  the 

very  w's.  Princess  iv  485 

By  glimmering  lanes  and  w's  of  canvas  ,.             » 6 

From  those  two  hosts  that  lay  beside  the  w's,  „       vi  383 

cloud  Drag  inward  from  the  deeps,  a  w  of  night,  ,.        vii  37 

silent  light  Slept  on  the  painted  w's,  ..    '        121 

the  w's  Blacken'd  about  us,  bats  wheel'd,  ,,  Con.  109 

Your  cannons  moulder  on  the  seaward  w  ;  Ode  on  Well.  173 
But  thieves  from  o'er  the  w  Stole  the  seed  by  night.         The  Flower  11 

Flowek  in  the  crannied  w,  Flow,  in  cran.  wall  1 

Is  vocal  in  its  wooded  w's  ;  In  Mem.  xix  14 

There  comes  a  glory  on  the  w's  :  „          Ixvii  4 

That  in  Vienna's  fatal  w's  „      Ixxxv  19 

I  past  beside  the  reverend  w's  „     Ixxxvii  1 

A  river  sliding  by  the  w.  „            ciii  8 

The  blind  w  rocks,  and  on  the  trees  „        Con.  63 

With  tender  gloom  the  roof,  the  w ;  „               US 

little  flower  that  clings  To  the  turrets  and  the  w's  ;  Maud  II  iv  34 

and  Guinevere  Stood  by  the  castle  w's  Com.  of  Arthur  48 

Seeing  the  mighty  swarm  about  their  w's,  „            200 

To  drive  the  heathen  from  your  Roman  w,  „            512 
fools    have    suck'd    their    allegory    From    these 

damp  w's,  Gareth  and  L.  1200 

Echo'd  the  w's ;  a  light  twinkled ;  „          1370 

And  enter'd,  and  were  lost  behind  the  w's.  Mart,  of  Geraint  252 

ivy-stems  Claspt  the  gray  w's  with  hairy-fibred  arms,  „              323 

now  and  then  from  distant  w's  There  came  a  clapping         „  565 

slide  From  the  long  shore-cliEE's  windy  w's  Geraint  and  E.  164 

Push'd  from  without,  drave  backward  to  the  w,  „            273 

No  stronger  than  a  w  :  there  is  the  keep  ;  „            341 

like  a  household  Spirit  at  the  w's  Beat,  „            403 

Along  the  w's  and  down  the  board  ;  Balin  aiid  Balan  84 

the  w's  Of  that  low  church  he  built  at  Glastonbury.  „            366 
portal  of  King  Pellam's  chapel  wide  And  inward 

to  the  w  ;  ,,406 
rummage  buried  in  the  w's  Might  echo,  „  416 
Woods  have  tongues.  As  w's  have  ears :  „  531 
Closed  in  the  four  w's  of  a  hollow  tower,  (repeat)  Merlin  and  V.  209,  543 
And  many  a  wizard  brow  bleach'd  on  the  w's  :  „  597 
to  him  the  w  That  sunders  ghosts  and  shadow- 
casting  men  „  628 
And  heard  their  voices  talk  behind  the  w,  „  631 
and  she  watch'd  him  from  her  w's.  „  775 
'  Traitor  '  to  the  unhearing  w,  Lancelot  and  E.  612 
first  she  saw  the  casque  Of  Lancelot  on  the  w  :  „  806 
to  whom  thro'  those  black  w's  of  yew  ,.  969 
And  grew  between  her  and  the  pictured  w.  „  993 
In  the  Queen's  shadow,  vibrate  on  the  w's,  „  1175 
Till  all  the  white  w's  of  my  cell  were  dyed  With  rosy 

colours  leaping  on  the  w  ;  Holy  Grail  119 

from  the  w's  The  rosy  quiverings  died  into  the  night.  „           122 

necks  Of  dragons  clinging  to  the  crazy  w's,  „          347 

plaster'd  like  a  martin's  nest  To  these  old  w's —  „          549 

painting  on  the  w  Or  shield  of  knight ;  „          829 

upon  his  charger  all  day  long  Sat  by  the  w's,  Pelleas  and  E.  217 

'  Out  !     And  drive  him  from  the  w's.'  „             220 

still  he  kept  his  watch  beneath  the  w.  „            223 

while  walking  on  the  w's  With  her  three  knights,  „            225 

And  drive  him  from  my  w's.'  „            229 

loosed  him  from  his  bonds,  And  flung  them  o'er  the  w's  ;      „  316 

Then  bounded  forward  to  the  castle  w's,  „            363 

That  all  the  echoes  hidden  in  the  w  Rang  out  „            366 

there  he  waits  below  the  w.  Blowing  his  bugle  „            380 

but  rode  Ere  midnight  to  her  w's,  „             413 

Far  down  beneath  a  winding  w  of  rock  Last  Tournament  11 

So  from  the  high  w  and  the  flowering  grove  Guinevere  33 

That  keeps  the  rust  of  murder  on  the  w's —  „        74 

Or  thrust  the  heathen  from  the  Roman  w.  Pass,  of  Arthur  69 

Or  build  a  w  betwixt  my  life  and  love,  Lover's  Tale  i  176 

And  steep-down  w's  of  battlemented  rock  „              399 

thro'  the  ragged  w's.  All  unawares  „          ii  152 

from  an  open  grating  overhead  High  in  the  w,  „           iv  61 

— in  the  night  by  the  churchyard  w.  Rizpah  56 

it  is  coming — shaking  the  w's —  „        85 

fell,  Striking  the  hospital  w,  crashing  Def.  of  Lv^hnow  18 

into  perilous  chasms  our  w's  and  our  poor  palisades.  „             55 


\i 


WaU 


773 


Wandering 


I  Wall  (s)  (continued)   coining  down  on  the  still-shatter'd  mi's  Def.  ofLucknow  92 
I  And  breach'd  the  belting  w  of  Cambalu,  Columbus  108 

I  to  the  base  of  the  mountain  w's,  V.  of  Maeldune  14 

I  From  w  to  dyke  he  stept,  Achilles  over  the  T.  15 


hail  of  Ares  crash  Along  the  sounding  w's. 

more  than  w  And  rampart,  their  examples  reach 

phantom'  w's  of  this  illusion  fade, 

A  dying  echo  from  a  falling  w  ; 

an'  sets  'im  agean  the  w, 

A  footstep,  a  low  throbbing  in  the  w's. 

This  w  of  solid  flesh  that  comes  between 

The  sunset  blazed  along  the  w  of  Troy. 

So  I  tum'd  my  face  to  the  w, 

Till  this  embattled  w  of  unbelief  My  prison, 
'Wall  (verb)     To  embattsul  and  to  w  about  thy  cause 

splinter'd  crags  that  w  the  dell  With  spires 

And  w  them  up  perforce  in  mine — - 
'Wall'd    {See  also  Clear-wall'd)     Flourish'd  a  little 
garden  square  and  w  : 

And  on  the  top,  a  city  w  : 
IWallow    They  graze  and  w,  breed  and  sleep  ; 

wolf  and  wolf  kin,  from  the  wilderness,  w  in  it. 

To  w  in  that  winter  of  the  hills. 

decreed  That  Rome  no  more  should  w  in  this  old  last 

Peeli^  the  Goddess  would  w  in  fiery  riot 
rWallow'd     And  w  in  the  gardens  of  the  King 

I  have  w,  I  have  wash'd— 

an  I  w,  then  I  wash'd- 


Tiresias  97 

„       125 

Ancient  Sage  181 

263 

Owd  Rod  82 

The  Ring  409 

Happy  35 

Death  of  (Enone  11 

Charily  27 

Doubt  and  Prayer  11 

To  J.  M.  K.  8 

D.  of  F.  Women  187 

Akbar's  Dream  62 

Enoch  Arden  734 

Holy  Grail  422 

Palace  of  AH  202 

Boddicea  15 

Romney's  R.  15 

.S7.  Telemachus  78 

Kapiolani  8 

Com.,  of  Arthur  25 

LdRt  Tournament  315 

318 


And  we  w  in  beds  of  lilies,  V.  of  Maeldune  48 

fWaUowing    great  with  pig,  w  in  sun  and  mud.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  88 

When  the  w  monster  spouted  his  foam-fountains 

in  the  sea.  Lotos- Eaters ^^  C.  S.  107 

w  in  the  troughs  of  Zolaism, —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  145 

draw  The  crowd  from  w  in  the  mire  of  earth,  Akbar's  Dream  141 


Walnut    Across  the  w's  and  the  wine — 

Walter    {See  also  Walter  Vivian)    '  O  PF,  I  have  shelter'd 
here  Whatever  maiden  grace 
\Tsiting  the  son, — the  son  A  W  too, — 
me  that  morning  W  show'd  the  house, 
Ask'd  W,  patting  Lilia's  head  (she  lay  Beside  him) 
But  W  hail'd  a  score  of  names  upon  her, 
W  nodded  at  me  ;   He  began.  The  rest  would  follow, 
W  warp'd  his  mouth  at  this  To  something 
and  W  said,  '  I  wish  she  had  not  yielded  !  ' 
And  there  we  saw  Sir  W  where  he  stood, 
'  From  W,'  and  for  me  from  you  then  ? 
bad  the  man  engrave  '  From  W  '  on  the  ring, 

Walter  Vivian    {See  also  Walter)    Sie  W  F  all  a 
summer's  day 

Wan    {See  also  Wan-sallow)     Philip's  rosy  face  contreict- 
ing  grew  Careworn  and  w  ; 
tinged  with  w  from  lack  of  sleep, 
w  was  her  cheek  With  hollow  watch, 
As  w,  as  chill,  as  wild  as  now ; 
'  But  she,  the  w  sweet  maiden,  shore  away 
I  was  changed  to  w  And  meagi'e, 
W  was  her  cheek  ;  for  whatso'er  of  blight 
an'  looks  so  w  an'  so  white  : 
W,  but  as  pretty  as  heart  can  desire, 
W,  wasted  Truth  in  her  utmost  need. 
W  Sculptor,  weepest  thou  to  take  the  cast 
under  this  w  water  many  of  them  Lie  rotting, 
'  He  hears  the  judgment  of  the  King  of  kings,' 

Cried  the  w  Prince  ; 
Familiar  up  from  cradle-time,  so  w, 
w  day  Went  glooming  down  in  wet  and  weariness 
for  I  have  seen  him  w  enow  To  make  one  doubt 
only  the  w  wave  Brake  in  among  dead  faces, 

Wsa  (one)     an'  meself  remimbers  w  night  comin'  down 

jrfther  her  paarints  had  inter'd  glory,  an'  both  in  w  day, 
his  Riverence  buried  thim  both  in  w  grave 

Wand    Straight,  but  as  lissome  as  a  hazel  w  ; 
He  held  his  sceptre  like  a  pedant's  w 


And  over  these  is  placed  a  silver  w, 
And  over  these  they  placed  the  silver  w, 


Miller's  D.  32 

Talking  Oak  37 

Princess,  Pro.  8 

10 

125 

156 

200 

214 

Con..  4 

81 

The  Ring  71 

„       236 

Princess,  Pro.  1 

Enoch  Arden  487 

Princess  Hi  25 

„      vi  144 

In  Mem.  Ixxii  17 

Holy  Grail  149 

571 

Lover's  Tale  i  694 

First  Quarrel  2 

In  the  Child.  Hosp.  40 

Clear-headed  friend  19 

Wan  Sculptor  1 

Gareth  and  L.  824 

Geraint  and  E.  801 
Balin  and  Balan  591 
Last  Tournament  214 
563 
Pass,  of  Arthur  129 
Tomorrow  1 
„      53 
„      87 
The  Brook  70 
Princess  i  27 
Marr.  of  Geraint  483 
549 


Wanded    See  Serpent-wanded 
Wander    Hating  to  w  out  on  earth, 

Light  and  shadow  ever  w  O'er  the  green 

Wild  words  w  here  and  there  : 

Alone  I  w  to  and  fio, 

And  then  we  would  w  away, 

But  at  night  I  would  w  away,  away, 

W  from  the  side  of  the  morn, 

Hope  is  other  Hope  and  w's  far, 

Arise,  and  let  us  w  forth, 

My  heart  may  w  from  its  deeper  woe. 

brother  mariners,  we  will  not  w  more. 

there  to  w  far  away, 

might  a  man  not  w  from  his  wits 


Siipp.  Confessions  57 

A  Dirge  12 

„.      43 

Oriana  8 

The  Merman  18 

The  Mermaid  31 

Adeline  52 

Caress' d  or  chidden  10 

MUler's  D.  239 

QSnone  44 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  128 

Locksley  Hall  151 

Princess  ii  440 


Dainty  little  maiden,  whither  would  you  w  ?  (repeat)      City  Child  1,  6 

I  w,  often  falling  lame.  In  Mem.  xxiii  6 

To  w  on  a  darken'd  earth,  „        Ixxxv  31 

you  w  about  at  your  will ;  Maud  I  iv  59 

An  old  man's  wit  may  w  ere  he  die.  Com.  of  Arthur  405 

So  shook  his  wits  they  w  in  his  prime —  Gareth  and  L.  715 

Who  may  not  w  from  the  allotted  field  Holy  Grail  908 

She  felt  the  King's  breath  w  o'er  her  neck,  Guinevere  582 

Which  w  round  the  bases  of  the  hills,  Lover's  Tale  ii  121 

At  once  began  to  w  and  to  wail,  „            iv  99 
They  that  can  w  at  will  where  the  works  of 

the  Lord  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  35 

I  will  w  till  I  die  about  the  barren  moors.  The  Flight  56 

You  will  not  leave  me  thus  in  grief  to  w  forth  forlorn  ;  „          85 

but  w  hand  in  hand  With  breaking  hearts,  „          99 

That  w's  from  the  public  good.  Freedom  26 

And  w's  on  from  home  to  home  !  The  Wanderer  8 

Wander'd     A  walk  with  vary-coloured  shells  W  Arabian  Nights  58 

Nor  w  into  other  ways  :  My  life  is  full  3 

I  blest  them,  and  they  w  on  :  Two  Voices  424 

I  had  w  far  In  an  old  wood  :  D.  of  F.  Women  53 

nor  having  w  far  Shot  on  the  sudden  into  dark.  To  J.  S.  27 
'  0  yes,  she  w  roimd  and  round  These  knotted  knees     Talking  Oak  157 

Here  about  the  beach  I  w,  Locksley  Hall  11 

Years  have  w  by,  The  Captain  66 

W  at  will,  but  oft  accompanied  By  Averill :  Aylmer's  Field  137 

Who  knows  ?  but  so  they  w,  hour  by  hour  „             141 

Sounds  of  the  great  sea  W  about.  Minnie  and  Winnie  8 

I  w  from  the  noisy  town.  In  Mem.  Ixix  5 
whose  ring'd  caress  Had  w  from  her  own  King's 

golden  head,  Balin  and  Balan  513 

The  flaxen  ringlets  of  our  infancies  W,  Lover's  Tale  i  235 

And  we  w  about  it  and  thro'  it.  V.  of  Maeldune  87 

W  back  to  living  boyhood  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  3 

while  I  w  down  the  coast,  „              53 
as  we  w  to  and  fro  Gazing  at  the  Lydian  laughter        Frater  Ave,  etc.  1 

perhaps  indeed  She  w,  having  w  now  so  far  The  Ring  107 

Wanderer    Charm,  as  a  w  out  in  ocean,  Milton  12 

Wandering  (adj.  and  part.)    {See  also  Often-wandering) 

Wrestled  with  w  Israel,  Clear-headed  friend  26 

Mournful  OEnone,  w  forlorn  Of  Paris,  GEnone  16 

And  overhead  the  w  ivy  and  vine,  „         99 

Weary  the  w  fields  of  barren  foam.  Lotos- Eaters  42 
Once  heard  at  dead  of  night  to  greet  Troy's  w  prince,  On  a  Mourner  33 

Inswathed  sometimes  in  w  mist,  St.  S.  Stylites  75 

with  yet  a  bed  for  w  men.  Enoch  Arden  698 

with  now  a  w  hand  And  now  a  pointed  finger.  Princess  v  269 

Forgive  these  wild  and  w  cries.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  41 

Drops  in  his  vast  and  w  grave.  „                vi  16 

Yet  as  that  other,  w  there  In  those  deserted  walks,  „             viii  13 

Is  dash'd  with  w  isles  of  night.  „              xxiv  4 

How  often,  hither  w  down,  „         Ixxxix  5 

The  joy  to  every  w  breeze ;  „           Con.  62 

How  once  the  w  forester  at  dawn,  Gareth  and  L.  498 

Mark  The  Cornish  King,  had  heard  a  w  voice,  Merlin  and  V.  8 

when  the  dead  Went  w  o'er  Moriah —  Holy  Grail  50 

Wealthy  with  w  lines  of  mount  and  mere,  .,         252 

while  ye  follow  w  fires  Lost  in  the  quagmire  !  „         319 

That  most  of  us  would  follow  w  fires,  (repeat)  „  369, 599 

That  most  of  them  would  follow  w  fires,  „         891 

Lost  in  a  doubt,  Pelleas  w  Waited,  Pdleas  and  E.  392 


Wandering 


774 


War 


Wandering  (adj.  and  part.)  {continued)    Stay'd  in  the  « 

warble  of  a  brook  ;  Last  Tournament  254 

name  Went  w  somewhere  darkling  in  his  mind.  „  457 

ghost  of  Gawain  blown  Along  a  w  wind,  Pass,  of  Arthur  32 

And  I  am  blown  along  a  w  wind,  „  36 

As  moonlight  w  thro'  a  mist :  Lover's  Tale  ii  52 

we  gazed  at  the  w  wave  as  we  sat  V.  of  Maeldune  89 

Wandering  (s)     '  The  w's  Of  this  most  intricate  Universe         A  Character  2 
fold  our  wrings,  And  cease  from  w's,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  20 

DoMii  shower  the  gambolling  waterfalls  P'rom  w  over 


the  lea 

(For  often  in  lonely  w's  I  have  cursed  him 

magic  which  can  trace  The  w  of  the  stars, 

Then,  in  my  w's  all  the  lands  that  lie 
Wane    The  long  day  w's  :  the  slow  moon  climbs  : 

Or  when  a  thousand  moons  shall  w 

O  sorrow,  then  can  sorrow  w  ? 

Speak,  as  it  waxes,  of  a  love  that  w's  ? 

when  the  day  began  to  w,  we  went. 
Waned    councils  thinn'd,  And  armies  w, 

to  this  present  My  full-orb'd  love  has  w  not. 

The  day  w  ;  Alone  I  sat  with  her : 

Gleam,  that  had  w  to  a  wintry  glimmer 
Waning    (See  also  Slowly-waning)     The  pale  yellow 
woods  were  w. 

Yon  orange  sunset  w  slow  : 

'  Bitter  barmaid,  w  fast ! 

What  songs  below  the  w  stars 

When  the  flowers  come  again,  mother,  beneath 

the  w  light  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  25 

over  many  a  range  Of  w  lime  the  gray  cathedral 
toweirs, 

praised  the  w  red,  and  told  The  vintage — 

rooks.  That  gather  in  the  w  woods. 

The  last  long  stripe  of  w  crimson  gloom, 
Wann'd     Psyche  flush'd  and  w  and  shook  ; 

and  ever  w  with  despair, 
Wannish     No  sun,  but  a  w  glare  In  fold  upon  fold 
Wan-sallow    a  man  of  mien  W-s  as  the  plant 
Want  (s)     And  left  a  w  imknown  before  ; 

Shall  sing  for  w,  ere  leaves  are  new, 

'tis  from  no  w  in  her  :  It  is  my  shyness. 

And  to  the  w,  that  hollow'd  all  the  heart. 

Cursed  be  the  social  w's  that  sin 

Or  that  eternal  w  of  pence, 

nor  compensating  the  w  By  shrewdness, 

Or  thro'  the  w  of  what  it  needed  most, 

No  w  was  there  of  human  sustenance. 

Doubled  her  own,  for  w  of  plajmiates, 

any  of  our  people  there  In  w  or  peril. 

For  dear  are  those  three  castles  to  my  w's, 

And  either  she  will  die  from  w  of  care, 

Not  perfect,  nay,  but  full  of  tender  w's, 

And  ev'n  for  w  of  such  a  type. 

Shall  love  be  blamed  for  w  of  faith  ? 

And  he  supplied  my  w  the  more 

a  thousand  w's  Gnarr  at  the  heels  of  men, 

Ring  out  the  w,  the  care,  the  sin, 

veil  His  w  in  forms  for  fashion's  sake, 

let  Kay  the  seneschal  Look  to  thy  w's, 

Unfaith  in  aught  is  w  of  faith  in  all. 

And  I  must  die  for  w  of  one  bold  word.' 

I — misyoked  with  such  a  w  of  man — 


Sea- Fairies  11 

Maud  I  xix  14 

Holy  Grail  667 

Tiresias  25 

Ulysses  55 

In  Mem.  Ixxvii  8 

„        Ixxviii  15 

Lancelot  and  E.  1401 

Holy  Grail  488 

Merlin  and  V.  573 

Lover's  Tale  i  734 

ii  139 

Merlin  and  the  G.  83 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  2 

Move  eastward  2 

Vision  of  Sin  67 

Margaret  33 


Gardener's  D.  218 
Aylmer's  Field  406 
In  Mem.  Ixxxv  72 
A  ncient  Sage  221 
Princess  iv  160 
Maud  I  i  10 
vi2 
Gareth  and  L.  453 
Miller's  D.  228 
The  Blackbird  23 
Edwin  Morris  85 
Love  and  Duly  61 
Locksley  Hall  59 
Will  Water.  43 
Enoch  Arden  250 
265 
554 
Aylmer's  Field  81 
Princess  ii  267 
417 
'y85 
vii  319 
In  Mem.  xxxiii  16 
lilO 
Ixxix  19 
xcviii  16 
cvi  17 
cxi  6 
Gareth  and  L.  434 
Merlin  and  V.  389 
Lancelot  and  E.  927 
Last  Tournament  bl\ 
the  daily  w  Of  Edith  in  the  house,  the  garden.    Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  245 
days '  of  fever,  and  w  of  care  !  The  Wreck  147 

Mere  w  of  gold — and  still  for  twenty  years  The  Ring  428 

Want  (verb)     More  life,  and  fuller,  that  I  w.'  Tico  Voices  399 

Of  those  that  w,  and  those  that  have :  Walk,  to  the  Mail  78 

when  you  w  me,  sound  upon  the  bugle-horn.  Locksley  Hall  2 

I  w  her  love.  Princess  v  136 

When  the  man  w's  weight,  the  woman  takes  it  up,  „  444 

I  w  forgiveness  too  :  „      vi  290 

M.  Farmer,  N.  S.  37 

Ma\id  I  vi  47 

Geraint  and  E.  237 


Want  (verb)  {continued)     To  doubt  her  fairness  were 
to  TO  an  eye. 

To  doubt  her  pureness  were  to  lo  a  heart — 

For  we  that  w  the  warmth  of  double  life. 

But  if  thou  w's  thy  grog. 

But  if  tha  w's  ony  grog 

Fur  I  w's  to  tell  tha  o'  Roa 

if  tha  w's  to  git  forrards  a  bit. 
Want-begotten  Nor  any  w-h  rest. 
Wanted    Another  ship  (She  w  water) 

nor  w  at  his  end  The  dark  retinue 

truth  !  I  know  not :  all  are  w  here. 
Wantest    What  w  thou  ?  whom  dost  thou  seek. 
Wanting    And  w  yet  a  boatswain.     Would  he  go  ? 

I  grieve  to  see  you  poor  and  w  help  : 

He  look'd  and  found  them  w  ; 

impute  themselves,  W  the  mental  range ; 


Wanton  (adj.)    {See  also  Seeming-wanton) 
wild  and  w  pard, 
And  w  without  measure  ; 
In  the  Spring  the  w  lapwing  gets  himself  another 

crest ; 
To  take  a  w  dissolute  boy  For  a  man 
And  that  within  her,  which  a  w  fool. 
Told  me,  that  twice  a  w  damsel  came, 
Half  overtrailed  with  a  w  weed, 
(like  a  w  too-officious  friend, 
anon  the  w  billow  wash'd  Them  over, 

Wanton  (s)     What  did  the  w  say  ? 

Wanton  (verb)     Say  to  her,  I  do  but  w  in  the  South, 

Wantonness    That  hover'd  between  war  and  w. 

War  (s)    (See  also  World-war) 
along  the  distant  sea, 
And  all  the  w  is  roll'd  in  smoke.' 
At  such  strange  w  with  something  good. 
And  let  the  world  have  peace  or  w's, 
minstrel  sings  Before  them  of  the  ten  years'  w 

in  Troy, 
Sore  task  to  hearts  worn  out  by  many  w's 
And  trumpets  blown  for  w's  ; 
when  fresh  from  w's  alarms.  My  Hercules, 
Across  the  brazen  bridge  of  w 


Lancelot  and  E.  1376 

1377 

Holy  Grail  624 

North.  Cobbler  B 

113 

Owd  Roa  19 

Church-warden,  etc.  49 

In  Mem.  xxvii  12 

Enoch  Arden  628 

Aylmer's  Field  841 

Marr.  of  Geraint  289 

Oriana  71 

Enoch  Arden  123 

406 

Geraint  and  E.  935 

Merlin  and  V.  827 


When  I  past  by,  a 


thy  muther  says  thou  w's  to  marry  the  lass. 
Who  w's  the  finer  politic  sense  To  mask. 
And  if  he  w  me,  let  him  come  to  me. 


(Enone  199 
Amphion  58 

Locksley  Hall  18 

Maud  7  X  58 

Geraint  and  E.  432 

Balin  aiid  Balan  609 

Lover's  Tale  i  525 

627 

m9 

Merlin  and  V.  812 

Princess  iv  109 

To  the  Queen  ii  44 

Elsinore  Heard  the  w  moan 

Bv/maparte  10 

Two  Voices  156 

302 

Palace  of  Art  182 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  11 
86 
D.  of  F.  Women  20 
149 
Love  thou  thy  land  76 
'  Come  With  all  good  things,  and  w  shall  be  no  more.'   M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  28 
Made  w  upon  each  other  for  an  hour,  Godiva  34 

To  sleep  thro'  terms  of  mighty  w's,  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  9 

His  bashfulness  and  tenderness  at  w,  Enoch  Arden  289 

They  hate  me  :  there  is  w  between  us,  Aylmer's  Field  424 

Commiming  with  his  captains  of  the  w.  Princess  i  67 

The  Carian  Artemisia  strong  in  w,  „       ii  81 

arts  of  w  The  peasant  Joan  and  others  ; 
If  more  and  acted  on,  what  follows  ?  w  ; 
I  spoke  of  w  to  come  and  many  deaths. 
And  clad  in  iron  burst  the  ranks  of  w, 
clapt  her  hands  and  cried  for  w, 
o'er  the  imperial  tent  Whispers  of  w. 
red-faced  w  has  rods  of  steel  and  fire  ;  She  yields,  or  w.' 
say  you,  w  or  not  ?  '     '  Not  w,  if  possible, 
I  said,  '  lest  from  the  abuse  of  w. 
More  soluble  is  this  knot  By  gentleness  than  w. 
I  would  the  old  God  of  w  himself  were  dead. 
To  our  point :  not  w  :  Lest  I  lose  all.' 
yet  my  father  wills  not  w  :  And,  'sdeath  !  myself, 

what  care  I,  w  or  no  ? 
loth  by  brainless  w  To  cleave  the  rift 
Great  in  council  and  great  in  w. 
Such  a  w  had  such  a  close, 
the  leader  in  these  glorious  w's 
Not  sting  the  fiery  Frenchman  into  w. 

Wild  W,  who  breaks  the  converse  of  the  wise  ;  „ 

The  works  of  peace  with  works  of  w.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  28 

discuss  the  Northern  sin  Which  made  a  selfish  w 

begin  ;  To  F.  L).  Maurice  30 

w's  avenging  rod  Shall  lash  all  Europe  into  blood  ;  „  33 

That  shriek  and  sweat  in  pigmy  vPs  Lit.  Squabbles^2_ 

these  all  night  upon  the  bridge  of  w  Sat  glorying ;  Spec,  of  Ilia< 


Ode  on 


162 

229 

iii  150 

iv504 

590 

i;10 

118 

1)124 

126 

136 

145 

204 

277 
300 
Well.  30 
118 
192 
Third  of  Feb.  4 


I 


War 


775 


War-horse 


ji  War  (s)  (continued)     As  one  would  sing  the  death  of  w,         In  Mem.  ciii  33 

I  Ring  out  the  thousand  w's  of  old,  „  cvi  27 

I         heart  of  the  citizen  hissing  in  w  Maud  /  i  24 

3  Is  it  peace  or  ic  ?     Civil  w,  as  I  think,  ,.  27 

I  Is  it  peace  or  w  ?  better  w  !  loud  w  by  land  and  by  sea, 

»  W  with  a  thousand  battles,  „  47 

J  At  w  with  myself  and  a  wretched  race,  „         a;  35 

I  This  huckster  put  down  w  !  can  he  tell  Whether  w  be 

J  a  cause  or  a  consequence  ?  ,,44 

k  For  each  is  at  w  with  mankind.  „  52 

;  I  swear  to  you,  lawful  and  lawless  ic  „    //  v  94 

>  spoke  of  a  hope  for  the  world  in  the  coming  w's —  „  Illvill 

I  I  thought  that  a  w  would  arise  in  defence  of  the  right,  „  19 

I         flsunes  The  blood-red  blossom  of  «•  „  53 

j  and  the  w  roll  down  like  a  wind,  „  64 

I         Commingled  with  the  gloom  of  imminent  u-,  Ded.  of  Idylls  13 

I         Far-sighted  summoner  of  W  and  Waste  „  37 

'  and  ever  waging  w  Each  upon  other,  Com.  of  Arthur  6 

ji  Lords  and  Barons  of  his  realm  Flash'd  forth  and 

jj  into  w  : 

I         as  here  and  there  that  w  Went  swaying  ; 

l         So  like  a  painted  battle  the  w  stood  Silenced, 

I         Do  these  your  lords  stir  up  the  heat  of  w, 

1'         That  Gorlois  and  King  Uther  went  to  w  : 
lords  Banded,  and  so  brake  out  in  open  w.' 
for  these  have  sworn  To  wage  my  w's, 
mine  innocent,  the  jousts,  the  w's, 
'         Were  Arthur's  w's  in  weird  devices  done, 
1         A  knight  of  Uther  in  the  Barons'  w, 
J         ye  know  we  stay'd  their  hands  From  w 

w  of  Time  against  the  soul  of  man. 
I         who  held  and  lost  with  Lot  In  that  first  w, 
\         But  rather  proven  in  his  Paynim  w's 

■  In  those  fierce  w's,  struck  hard — 
I         Waged  such  unwilling  tho'  successful  w 
j         The  lady  never  made  unwilling  w 
\         you  know  Of  Arthur's  glorious  w's.' 
j         then  the  w  That  thunder'd  in  and  out 
j         nor  cares  For  triumph  in  our  miinic  w's, 
j         Yet  in  this  heathen  w  the  fire  of  God  Fills  him  : 
j         From  talk  of  w  to  traits  of  pleasantry— 

■  Where  Arthur's  w's  were  render'd  mystically, 
j         Where  twelve  great  windows  blazon  Arthur's  w's, 
!         perchance,  when  all  our  w's  are  done, 
j         Where  Arthur's  w's  are  rendered  mystically, 
I         To  whence  I  came,  the  gate  of  Arthur's  w's.' 
\        I  came  late,  the  heathen  w's  were  o'er, 
I        while  the  King  Was  waging  w  on  Lancelot : 

To  wage  grim  w  against  Sir  Lancelot  there, 
"         that  night  the  barf.  Sang  Arthur's  glorious  w's, 
I         From  waging  bitter  w  with  him  : 
]        I  waged  His  w's,  and  now  I  pass  and  die. 
j        Gawain  kiU'd  In  Lancelot's  w, 
3         Around  a  king  returning  from  his  w's. 
3        and  shadowing  Sense  at  w  with  Soul, 

That  hover'd  between  w  and  wantonness, 

'  Spanish  ships  of  w  at  sea  ! 

past  away  with  five  ships  of  w  that  day, 

Then  told  them  of  his  w's,  and  of  his  wound. 

mine  that  stirr'd  Among  our  civil  w's 

Red  in  thy  birth,  redder  with  household  w. 

Urge  him  to  foreign  w. 

Spain  was  waging  w  against  the  Moor — 

slain  thy  fathers  in  w  or  in  single  strife, 

There  was  the  Scotsman  Weary  of  w. 

Mangled  to  morsels,  A  youngster  in  w  ! 

own  in  his  own  West-Saxon-land,  Glad  of  the  w 

men  contend  in  grievous  w  From  their  own  city 

and  sail  to  help  them  in  the  w  ; 

the  crowd  would  roar  For  blood,  for  w, 

these  blind  hands  were  useless  in  their  w's. 

a  weight  of  w  Rides  on  those  ringing  axles  ! 

whose  one  bliss  Is  w,  and  human  sacrifice — 

holding,  each  its  own  By  endless  w  : 

w  will  die  out  late  then. 


War  (s)     (continued)     Could  we  dream  of  w's  and 

carnage,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  189 

Most  marvellous  in  the  w's  your  own  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  11 

You  praise  when  you  should  blame  The  barbarian  of  w's.       Epilogue  5 


66 

106 

122 

169 

196 

237 

508 

Gareth  and  L.  86 

225 

353 

422 

1198 

Balin  and  Balan  2 

38 

177 

Merlin  and  V.  571 

603 

Lancelot  and  E.  285 

290 

312 

315 

321 

801 

Holy  Grail  248 

256 

359 

539 

Last  Tournament  269 

Guinevere  156 

193 

286 

434 

Pass,  of  Arthur  12 

31 

461 

To  the  Queen  ii  37 

44 

The  Revenge  3 

13 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  60 

75 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  53 

68 

Columbus  93 

V.  of  Maeldune  121 

Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  36 

74 

104 

Achilles  over  the  T.  9 

13 

Tiresias  65 

78 

92 

„       112 

Ancient  Sage  252 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  173 


I  would  that  w's  would  cease. 

Or  Trade  re-frain  the  Powei-s  From  w 

who  loves  IV  for  W's  own  sake  Is  fool, 

w's,  and  filial  faith,  and  Dido's  pyre  ; 

An'  the  munney  they  maade  by  the  w, 

'  A  warrior's  crest  above  the  cloud  of  ic  ' — 

You  were  parting  for  the  w, 

You  parted  for  the  Holy  W  without  a  word  to  me. 

The  smoke  of  w's  volcano  burst  again 

bolt  of  w  dashing  down  upon  cities 

Storm  of  battle  and  thvmder  of  w  ! 
War  (verb)     To  w  with  falsehood  to  the  knife. 

What  pleasure  can  we  have  To  w  with  evil 

To  w  against  ill  uses  of  a  life, 

To  w  against  my  people  and  my  knights. 
War  (was)     An'  I  went  wheer  munny  w  : 
Warble  (s)     at  first  to  the  ear  The  w  was  low, 

Wild  bird,  whose  w,  li(}uid  sweet, 

a  bird  with  a  w  plaintively  sweet  Perch'd 

And  rolling  of  dragons  By  w  of  water. 
Warble  (verb)    thou  may'st  w,  eat  and  dwell. 

Than  he  that  w's  long  and  loud 

W,  O  bugle,  and  trumpet,  blare  ! 

'  O  birds,  that  w  to  the  morning  sky,  O  birds  that 
w  as  the  day  goes  by, 

birds  Begin  to  w  yonder  in  the  budding 

The  blackcap  w's,  and  the  turtle  purrs, 

0  w  unchidden,  unbidden  ! 
Warbled    Nightingales  w  without. 

Nightingales  w  and  sang  Of  a  passion 

That  she  w  alone  in  her  joy  ! 
Warbler    Dan  Chaucer,  the  first  w, 

in  their  time  thy  w's  rise  on  wing. 
Warbling    springs  By  night  to  eery  w's, 

She  struck  such  w  fury  thro'  the  words  ; 

Her  w  voice,  a  lyre  of  widest  range 

damsel-errant,  w,  as  she  rode  The  woodland 
alleys. 
War-cry    Spurr'd  with  his  terrible  w-c  ; 
Ward  (surname)  generous  of  all  Untramontanes,  W. 
Ward  (minor)     and  a  selfish  imcle's  w. 
Ward  (of  a  hospital)     Here  was  a  boy  in  the  w, 

0  how  could  I  serve  in  the  w's 

past  to  this  w  where  the  younger  children  are  laid 

They  freshen  and  sweeten  the  w's 

Then  I  retum'd  to  the  w  ; 

such  a  lot  of  beds  in  the  w  !  ' 

caught  when  a  nurse  in  a  hospital  w. 
Ward  (guard)     Keep  watch  and  w,  (repeat) 

why  shine  ye  here  so  low  ?     Thy  w  is  higher  up  : 
Warded    For  each  had  w  either  in  the  fight, 
Warder    The  w's  of  the  growing  hour, 

Old  w  of  these  biu:ied  bones, 
War-drum    Till  the  w-d  throbb'd  no  longer. 
Ware  (adj.)     they  were  w  That  all  the  decks  were  dense 

Then  was  I  w  of  one  that  on  me  moved 

He  woke,  and  being  w  of  some  one  nigh, 

they  were  w  That  all  the  decks  were  dense 
Ware  (s)     As  when  a  hawker  hawks  his  w's. 

sold  her  w's  for  less  Than  what  she  gave 

faith  in  a  tradesman's  w  or  his  word  ? 
Ware  (verb)     w  their  ladies'  colours  on  the  ca.sque. 
War-field    Earls  of  the  army  of  Anlaf  Fell  on 

the  w-/, 
War-glaive    The  clash  of  the  w-g — 

War-harden'd  Kissing  the  w-A  hand  of  the  Highlander  Def.  of  Lucknow  102 
War-hawk  Gave  to  the  garbaging  w-h  to  gorge  it,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  109 
War-horse    On  bumish'd  hooves  his  w-h  trode  ;  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  29 

A  w  of  the  best,  and  near  it  stood  Gareth  and  L.  678 

Death's  dark  w-h  bounded  forward  with  him.  „  1401 

and  thence  Taking  my  w-h  from  the  holy  man,  Holy  Grail  537 


11 

16 

,.      30 

To  Virgil  4: 

Owd  Rod  44 

The  Ring  338 

Happy  74 

„      77 

Prog,  of  Spring  97 

The  Dawn  8 

Riflemen  form, !  3 

Two  Voices  131 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  49 

Gareth  and  L.  1130 

jPass.  of  Arthur  71 

N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  21 

Dying  Swan  24 

In  Mem.  Ixxxviii  1 

The  Wreck  81 

Merlin  and  the  G.  45 

The  Blackbird  4 

You  might  have  won  33 

W.  to  Alexandra  14 

Gareth  and  L.  1075 

The  Flight  61 

Prog,  of  Spring  55 

The  Throstle  14 

G.  of  Swainston  1 

8 

Maud  I  X  55 

D.  of  F.  Women  5 

Prog,  of  Spring  108 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  34 

Princess  iv  586 

D.  of  F.  Women  165 

Balin  uTid  Balan  438 

Geraint  and  E.  170 

In  Mem.,  W.  G.  Ward  4: 

Locksley  Hall  156 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  13 

24 

27 

38 

44 

54 

Charity  41 

Maud  I  vi  58 

Gareth  and  L.  1098 

Com.  of  Arthur  131 

Love  thou  thy  land  61 

In  Mem.  xxxix  1 

Locksley  Hall  127 

M.  d' Arthur  195 

Holy  Grail  409 

Pelleas  and  E.  520 

Pass,  of  Arthur  363 

The  Blackbird  20 

Enoch  Arden  255 

Maud  I  i  26 

Last  Tournament  184 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  54 
78 


War-horse 


776 


Warren 


War-horse  (continued)    Lancelot  slowly  rode  his  to  back 

To  Camelot,  Pelleas  and  E.  583 

He  whistled  his  good  w  left  to  graze  Last  Tournament  490 

waiting  by  the  doors  the  w  neigh'd  Guinevere  530 

War-knife — The  welcome  of  war-knives —  Batt.  of  Brwnanhurh  68 

Warless     Earth  at  last  a  w  world,  a  single  race,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  165 

W  ?  when  her  tens  are  thousands,  „               171 

— who  can  fancy  w  men  ?  „              172 

W  ?  war  will  die  out  late  then.  „              173 

Warm  (adj.)     Ice  with  the  w  blood  mixing  ;  All  Things  will  Die  33 

So  let  the  w  winds  range,  „              42 

Her  subtil,  w,  and  golden  breath,  Swpp.  Confessions  60 

nm  short  pains  Thro'  his  w  heart ;  „            162 

Ev'n  as  the  w  gulf-stream  of  Florida  Mine  be  the  strength  12 

As  when  a  sunbeam  wavers  w  Within  the  dark  Miller's  D.  79 

I'd  touch  her  neck  so  w  and  white.  „        174 

From  her  «  brows  and  bosom  her  deep  hair  (Enone  177 
dear  the  last  embraces  of  our  wives  And 

their  w  tears  :  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  71 

(while  w  airs  lull  us,  blowing  lowly)  „              89 

For  Nature  also,  cold  and  w,  Love  thou  thy  land  37 

'  Here,  take  the  goose,  and  keep  you  w.  The  Goose  7 

'  So  keep  you  cold,  or  keep  you  w,  „        43 

And  one  w  gust,  full-fed  with  perfume.  Gardener's  D.  113 
we  dragg'd  her  to  the  college  tower  From 

her  w  bed.  Walk,  to  tlie  Mail  90 

eat  wholesome  food,  And  wear  w  clothes,  St.  S.  Stylites  109 

'Tis  little  more  :  the  day  was  w  ;  Talking  Oak  205 
world-wide  whisper  of  the  south-wind  rushing  w,       Locksley  Hall  125 

The  slumbrous  light  is  rich  and  w,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  B.  7 

'  The  birds  were  w,  the  birds  were  w  upon  him  ;  Aylmer's  Field  260 

From  where  his  worldless  heart  had  kept  it  w,  „            471 

And,  where  w  hands  have  prest  and  closed,  In  Mem.  xiii  7 

O  heart,  with  kindliest  motion  w,  „    Ixxxv  34 

'Twas  well,  indeed,  when  w  with  wine,  „           xe  9 

But  where  the  sunbeam  broodeth  w,  „        xci  14 

Nor  bowl  of  wassail  mantle  w  ;  „          cv  18 

A  life  in  civic  action  w,  „       cxiii  9 

Kept  itself  w  in  the  heart  of  my  dreams,  Maud  I  vi  18 

Sir  Lancelot  thro'  his  w  blood  felt  Ice  strike,  Gareth  and  L.  1398 
shall  wear  your  costly  gift  Beside  your  own  w 

hearth,  Marr.  of  Gerainl  820 

And  felt  the  w  tears  falling  on  his  face  ;  Geraint  and  E.  586 

Not  to  be  bound,  save  by  white  bonds  and  w,  Pelleas  and  E.  353 

W  with  a  gracious  parting  from  the  Queen,  „          558 

till  the  w  hour  returns  With  veer  of  wind.  Last  Tournament  230 

The  w  white  apple  of  her  throat,  „            717 

neither  Love,  W  in  the  heart,  his  cradle.  Lover's  Tale  i  158 

Constraining  it  with  kisses  close  and  w,  „              468 

Her  w  breath  floated  in  the  utterance  „          ii  141 

'  O,  you  w  heart,'  he  moan'd,  .,            iv  76 

w  melon  lay  like  a  little  sun  on  the  tawny  sand,  V.  of  Maeldune  57 

This  useless  hand  !     I  felt  one  w  tear  fall  upon  it.  Tiresias  167 

Low  w  winds  had  gently  breathed  us  away  The  Wreck  63 

W  as  the  crocus  cup.  Early  Spring  29 

W  enew  theere  sewer-ly,  Owd  Rod  111 

often  while  her  lips  Were  w  upon  my  cheek.  The  Ring  399 

Warm  (verb)     Roof-haimting  martins  w  their  eggs  :  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  17 

New  life-blood  w  the  bosom.  Will  Water.  22 

That  w'a  another  living  breast.  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  116 

to  w  My  cold  heart  with  a  friend  :  Holy  Grail  618 

Ck)ld  words  from  one  I  had  hoped  to  w  so  far  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  194 

And  w's  the  child's  awakening  world —  To  Prin.  Beatrice  5 

the  long  day  of  knowledge  grows  and  w's,  Prog,  of  Spring  101 

And  w's  the  blood  of  Sliiah  and  Simnee,  Akbar's  Dream  107 
Warm-asleep     When  you  are  w-a,  mother,           May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  24 

Warm-blue     The  w-b  breathings  of  a  hidden  hearth  Aylmer's  Field  155 
Warm'd    (See  also  Sherris-warm'd)     One  hope  that  w  me 

in  the  days  Two  Voices  122 

And  w  in  crystal  cases.  A  mphion  88 

W  with  his  wines,  or  taking  pride  in  her,  Aylmer's  Field  554 

Too  ragged  to  be  fondled  on  her  lap,  W  at  her  bosom  ?  „            687 

And  hearts  are  w  and  faces  bloom,  In  Mem.,  Con.  82 

Took  gayer  colours,  like  an  opal  w.  Merlin  and  V.  950 

And  the  sea  rolls,  and  all  the  world  is  w  ?  '  Holy  Grail  672 


Warm'd  (continued)    w  but  by  the  heart  Within 

them. 
Warmer     Wild  wind  !     I  seek  a  w  sky. 

We  came  to  w  waves,  and  deep  Across 

Is  a  clot  of  w  dust. 

You  turn'd  your  w  currents  all  to  her. 


Akbar's  Dream  132 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  26 

The  Voyaged! 

Vision  of  Sin  113 

Princess  iv  301 


Warmest     Brinun'd  with  delirious  draughts  of  w  life.  Elednore  139 

Warming    Alone  and  w  his  five  wits,  (repeat)  The  Owl  i  6,  13 

w  with  her  theme  She  fulmined  out  her  scorn  Princess  ii  132 

but  w  as  he  went.  Glanced  at  the  point  of  law,  Lover's  Tale  iv  275 

Warmth    (See  also  Mid-warmth)    So  full  of  summer  w, 

so  glad,  Miller's  D.  14 

And  doubled  his  own  w  against  her  lips.  Gardener's  D.  138 

The  w  it  thence  shall  win  To  riper  life  Talking  Oak  254 

And  the  w  of  hand  in  hand.  Vision  of  Sin  162 

new  w  of  life's  ascending  sun  Was  felt  Enoch  Arden  38 

And  all  the  w,  the  peace,  the  happiness,  „        761 

Having  the  w  and  muscle  of  the  heart,  Aylmer's  Field  180 

and  turning  to  the  w  The  tender  pink  „             185 

The  loyal  w  of  Florian  is  not  cold.  Princess  ii  244 

helpless  w  about  my  barren  breast  In  the  dead  prime  :  „      vi  202 

broke  A  genial  w  and  light  once  more,  „          282 

A  rosy  w  from  marge  to  marge.  /»i  Mem.  xlvi  16 

A  central  w  diffusing  bliss  In  glance  and  smile,  „        Ixxxiv  6 

imderfoot  the  herb  was  dry  ;  And  genial  lo  ;  „             xcv  3 

A  w  within  the  breast  would  melt  „        cxxiv  13 

all  the  kindly  w  of  Arthur's  hall  Balin  aiid  Balan  236 

For  we  that  want  the  w  of  double  life,  Holy  Grail  624 

An  out-door  sign  of  all  the  w  within,  „          704 

I  yearn'd  for  w  and  colour  which  I  found  Guinevere  647 

With  hated  w  of  apprehensiveness.  Lover  s  Tale  i  632 

.  for  the  cold  Without,  and  w  within  me,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  29 

ranged  from  the  narrow  w  of  your  fold,  Despair  38 

light  and  genial  w  of  double  day.  To  Prin.  Beatrice  22 

With  all  the  w  of  smnmer.  The  Ring  30 

Thy  w's  from  bud  to  bud  Accomplisli  Prog,  of  Spring  113 

Beyond  all  hopes  of  w,  CEnone  sat  Not  moving,  Death  of  (Enone  74 

Express  him  also  by  their  w  of  love  Akbar's  Dream.  109 

War-music     when  first  I  heard  W-m,  Princess  v  266 

Warn     part  against  himself  To  w  us  off.  Love  and  Duty  46 

Something  divine  to  w  them  of  their  foes  :  Sea  Dreams  69 

And  fearing  waved  my  arm  to  w  them  off  ;  „        132 

from  him  flits  to  w  A  far-off  friendship  Demeter  and  P.  89 

Be  not  deaf  to  the  sound  that  w's,  Riflemen  form  !  8 

Wam'd     spoken.  And  w  that  madman  ere  it  grew  too  late  :    Vision  of  Sin  5& 

An  aAvful  voice  within  had  w  him  hence  :  Princess  v  338 

Balan  w,  and  went ;  Balin  remain'd  :  Balin  and  Balan  153 

w  me  of  their  fierce  design  Against  my  house,  Lancelot  and  E.  274 

Warning    (See  also  Phantom-warning)    Take  w  !  he  that 

will  not  sing  The  Blackbird  21 

For  by  the  w  of  the  Holy  Ghost,  St.  S.  Stylites  219 

In  those  two  deaths  he  read  God's  w  '  wait.'  Enoch  Arden  571 

nail  me  like  a  weasel  on  a  grange  For  w  :  Princess  ii  206 

Did  I  wish  Your  w  or  your  silence  ?  Geraint  and  E.  77 

Then  not  to  give  you  w,  that  seems  hard ;  „            422 

yet  to  give  him  w,  for  he  rode  As  if  he  heard  not,  „            451 

Take  w :  yonder  man  is  surely  dead ;  „            672 

'  Thereafter,  the  dark  w  of  our  King,  Holy  Grail  368 

Then  I  remember'd  Arthur's  w  word,  „          598 

Some  w — sent  divinely — as  it  seem'd  Lover's  Tale  iv  21 

Who  ever  turn'd  upon  his  heel  to  hear  My  w  Tiresias  73 

You  scorn  my  Mother's  w,  The  Ring  326 

Warp  (s)     wonder  of  the  loom  thro'  w  and  woof  Princess  i  62 

Warp  (verb)     lies  that  w  us  from  the  living  truth  !  Locksley  Hall  60 

'  Ye  are  green  wood,  see  ye  w  not.  Princess  ii  75 

I  loved  thee  first.  That  w's  the  wit.'  Merlin  and  V.  61 

Warp'd     Walter  w  his  mouth  at  this  To  something  Princess,  Pro.  214 

Warrant  (s)     Crown'd  w  had  we  for  the  crowning  sin    Last  Tournament  576 
Slender  w  had  He  to  be  proud  of  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  66 

Warrant  (verb)    I  w,  man,  that  we  shall  bring  you  round.'  Enoch  Arden  841 
Butter  I  w's  be  prime,  an'  I  w's  the  heggs  be  as  well.        Village  Wife  3 

I  w  ye  soom  fine  daay —  Spinster's  S's.  63 
Sa  I  w's  'e  niver  said  haafe  wot  'e  thowt,               Church-warden,  etc.  18 

Warren     And  waster  than  a  w  :  Amphioni 
couch  of  incest  in  the  w's  of  the  poor.                   Locksley  H.,  Sixty  224- 


Warring 


777 


Waste 


Warring     W  on  a  later  day,  Ode  on  Well.  102 

conscience  of  a  saint  Among  his  w  senses,  Guinevere  640 

She  reels  not  in  the  storm  of  w  words,  Ancient  Sage  70 

Be  struck  from  out  the  clash  of  w  wills  ;  Prog,  of  Spring  95 

Thro'  all  the  w  world  of  Hindustan  Akbar's  Dream  26 

Warrior  (adj.)     Cotdd  give  the  w  kings  of  old.  To  the  Queen  4 

The  daughter  of  the  w  Gileadite,  D.  of  F.  Women  197 

Wilt  surely  guide  me  to  the  w  King,  Balin  and  Balan  478 

Warrior  (s)    (See  also  Statesman-warrior)     W  of  God, 
whose  strong  right  arm 

And  like  a  w  overthrown  ; 

sprang  No  dragon  w's  from  Cadmean  teeth, 

made  the  old  w  from  his  ivied  nook  Glow 

about  their  heads  I  saw  The  feudal  w  laily-clad  ; 

in  thunder-storms.  And  breed  up  w's  ! 

Home  they  brought  her  w  dead  : 

Lightly  to  the  w  stept. 

And  happy  w's,  and  immortal  names. 

Come,  a  grace  to  me  !     I  am  your  w  : 

W's  carry  the  w's  pall, 

Glort  of  w,  glory  of  orator, 

laugh'd  upon  his  w  whom  he  loved  And  honour'd 
most. 

and  his  w's  cried, '  Be  thou  the  king, 

charg'd  his  w  whom  he  loved  And  honour'd  most, 

therebefore  the  lawless  w  paced  Unarm'd, 

And  heated  the  strong  w  in  his  dreams ; 

At  which  the  w  in  his  obstinacy, 

vanish'd  by  the  fairy  well  That  laughs  at  iron —  as 
our  w's  did — 

And  on  the  third  are  w's,  perfect  men, 

dreading  worse  than  shame  Her  w  Tristram, 

There  rode  an  armed  w  to  the  doors. 

w's  beating  back  the  swarm  Of  Turkish  Islam 

W's  over  the  Weltering  waters 

and  round  The  w's  puissant  shoulders 

The  w  hath  forgot  his  arms, 

Lies  the  w,  my  forefather. 

Dead  the  w,  dead  his  glory, 

Indian  w's  dream  of  ampler  hunting  grounds  „  69 

old-world  inns  that  take  Some  w  for  a  sign         Pro.  to  Gen.  Uamley  14 

realm  were  in  the  wrong  For  which  her  w's  bleed,  Epilogue  35 

right  to  crown  wth  song  The  w's  noble  deed —  „        37 

W  of  God,  man's  friend,  Epit.  on  Gordon  1 

the  shadowy  w  glide  Along  the  silent  field  Demeter  and  P.  152 

A  w's  crest  above  the  cloud  of  war ' —  The  Ring  338 

My  w  of  the  Holy  Cross  and  of  the  conquering  sword,  Happy  21 


Alexander  1 

Two  Voices  150 

Lucretius  50 

Princess,  Pro.  104 

119 

vUO 

vi  1 

10 

93 

224 

Ode  on  Well.  6 
Wages  1 

Com.  of  Arthur  125 

258 

447 

Garah  and  L.  914 

Marr.  of  Geraint  72 

Geraint  and  E.  454 


Merlin  and  V.  429 

Holy  Grail  236 

Last  Tournament  385 

Guinevere  409 

Montenegro  10 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  47 

Achilles  over  the  T.  3 

Ancieni  Sage  138 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  28 

30 


To  Ulysses  26 

To  Master  of  B.  19 

Death  of  CEnone  39 

Tiresias  178 

Last  Tournament  517 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  59 

Two  Voices  153 

Guinevere  278 

Dead  Prophet  56 

Tiresias  100 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  121 


pine  which  here  The  w  of  Caprera  set. 
Find  her  w  Stark  and  dark  in  his  funeral  tire 
The  wounded  w  climbs  from  Troy  to  thee. 
'  Warrior-king    the  w-k's.  In  height  and  prowess 

Warrior-wise    w-w  thou  stridest  thro'  his  halls 

Warship     Fled  to  his  w  : 

War-song    His  country's  w-s  thrill  his  ears  : 
Full  many  a  noble  w-s  had  he  sung, 

Wart     Were  it  but  for  a  w  or  a  mole  ?  ' 

War-thunder    shuddering  W-t  of  iron  rams  ; 

War-worker    w-w's  who  Harried  the  Welshman, 

Was     (See  also  War)     For  w,  and  is,  and  will  be,  are 

but  is  ;  Princess  Hi  324 

And  now  the  W,  the  Might-have  been,  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  38 

Who  am,  and  w,  and  will  be  his,  his  own  Happy  7 

Wash  (s)     Katie  walks  By  the  long  w  of  Australasian  seas      The  Brook  194 

Wash  (verb)     (See  also  Wesh)     0  mercy,  mercy  !  w 

away  my  sin.  St.  S.  Stylites  120 

It  may  be  that  the  gulfs  will  w  us  down :  Ulysses  62 

And  in  the  great  sea  w  away  my  sin.'  Holy  Grail  806 

Wash'd    (See  also  Fresh-washed,  Wesh'd)     W  with  still 

rains  and  daisy  blossomed  ;  Circumstance  7 

A  league  of  grass,  w  by  a  slow  broad  stream,  Gardener's  D.  40 

daily  left  The  little  footprint  daily  w  away.  Enoch  Arden  22 

shone  Their  morions,  w  with  morning,  Princess  v  264 

stream  Descended,  and  the  Sxm  was  m  away.  Gareth  and  L.  1047 

I  have  wallow'd,  I  have  w —  Last  Tournament  315 

an  I  wallow'd,  then  I  w —  „  318 


Wash'd  (continued)    w  up  from  out  the  deep  ? 

anon  the  wanton  billow  w  Them  over. 
Washer    See  Dish-washer 
Washing     I  heard  the  ripple  w  in  the  reeds. 

And  the  long  ripple  w  in  the  reeds.' 

I  heard  the  ripple  w  in  the  reeds, 

And  the  long  ripple  w  in  the  reeds.' 

Universal  ocean  softly  w  all  her  warless  Isles 
Wasp     W's  in  our  good  hive. 
Wassail    pledge  you  all  In  w  ; 

Nor  bowl  of  w  mantle  wann  ; 
Wassail-bowl    The  host,  and  I  sat  round  the  w-b, 

I,'  quoth  Everard,  '  by  the  w-b.' 
Waste  (adj.)     Stretch'd  wide  and  wild  the  w  enormous 
marsh, 

swan's  death-hymn  took  the  soul  Of  that  w  place 
with  joy 

'  From  emptiness  and  the  w  wide  Of  that  abyss, 

like  a  wind,  that  shrills  All  night  in  a  w  land, 

Fly  o'er  w  fens  and  windy  fields. 

Do\vn  the  w  waters  day  and  night. 

Sunning  himself  in  a  w  field  alone — 

To  the  w  deeps  together. 

blank  And  w  it  seem'd  and  vain ; 

Better  the  w  Atlantic  roll'd  On  her 

From  out  w  places  comes  a  cry, 

And  thus  the  land  of  Cameliard  was  w, 

Vext  with  w  dreams  ? 

Gray  swamps  and  pools,  w  places  of  the  hern, 

To  the  w  earldom  of  another  earl, 

O'er  these  w  downs  whereon  I  lost  myself. 

And  down  the  w  sand-shores  of  Trath  Treroit, 

Lords  of  w  marshes,  kings  of  desolate  isles, 

And  whipt  me  into  w  fields  far  away  ; 

For  out  of  the  w  islands  had  he  come, 

Better  the  King's  w  hearth  and  aching  heart 

On  the  w  sand  by  the  w  sea  they  closed. 

like  a  wind  that  shrills  All  night  in  a  w  land, 

Forthgazing  on  the  w  and  open  sea. 

And  all  the  land  was  w  and  solitary  : 

a  crowd  Throng'd  the  w  field  about  the  city  gates  : 

Some  lodge  within  the  w  sea-dunes, 

Now  somewhere  dead  far  in  the  w  Soudan, 
Waste  (s)     (See  also  Waaste)     The  level  w,  the  rounding  gray 

Ammonian  Oasis  in  the  w. 

across  the  w  His  son  and  heir  doth  ride 

play'd  Among  the  w  and  lumber  of  the  shore, 

babes  were  running  wild  Like  colts  about  the  w 

flour  From  his  tall  mill  that  whistled  on  the  w. 

With  one  small  gate  that  open'd  on  the  w, 

and  came  out  upon  the  w. 

of  all  his  lavish  w  of  words 

wrought  Such  w  and  havock  as  the  idolatries, 

Doom  upon  kings,  or  in  the  w  '  Repent '  ? 

and  molten  on  the  w  Becomes  a  cloud  : 

that  somewhere  in  the  w  The  Shadow  sits 

dreamful  w's  where  footless  fancies  dwell 

Far-sighted  summoner  of  War  and  W 

glancing  round  the  w  she  fear'd 

and  she  drove  them  thro'  the  w. 

Here  in  the  heart  of  w  and  wilderness. 

and  sent  a  thousand  men  To  till  the  w's, 

The  sad  sea-sounding  w's  of  Lyonesse — 

rose  And  drove  him  into  w's  and  solitudes  For 
agony, 

I  saw  the  least  of  little  stars  Down  on  the  w,  , 

Fled  all  night  long  by  glimmering  w  and  weald,  And 
heard  the  Spirits  of  the  w  and  weald 

or  doth  all  that  haunts  the  w  and  wild  Mourn, 

In  praise  to  God  who  led  me  thro'  the  w. 

tum'd.  And  fled  by  many  a  w, 

She  comes  on  w  and  wood,  On  farm  and  field  : 

By  w  and  field  and  town  of  alien  tongue, 
Waste  (verb)     if  I  w  words  now,  in  truth  You  must 

blame  Love.  Miller's  D.  191 


Last  Tournament  685 
Lover's  Tale  ii  9 

-1/.  d' Arthur  70 

117 

Pass,  of  Arthur  238 

285 

Locksley  11.,  Sixty  170 

Princess  iv  535 

„  Pro.  186 

111  Mem.  cv  IS 

The  Epic  5 

23 

Ode  to  Memory  101 

Dying  Swan  22 

Two  Voices  119 

M.  d' Arthur  202 

Sir  Galahad  60 

The  Voyage  58 

Aylmer's  Field  9 

Sea  Dreams  238 

Princess  vii  43 

Third  of  Feb.  21 

In  Mem.  Hi  7 

Com.  of  Arthur  20 

85 

Geraint  and  E.  31 

438 

Lancelot  and  E.  225 

301 

527 

Holy  Grail  788 

Pelleas  and  E.  86 

Guinevere  524 

Pass,  of  Arthur  92 

370 

Lover  s  Tale  ii  177 

„  iv  125 

Sir  J .  Oldcastle  40 

The  Flight  90 

Epit.  on  Gordon  2 

Mariana  44 

Alexander  8 

D.  of  the  0.   Year  30 

Enoch  Arden  16 

305 

343 

,733 

777 

The  Brook  191 

Aylmer's  Field  640 

742 

Princess  iv  72 

In  Mem.  xxii  19 

Maud  I  xviii  69 

Ded.  of  Idylls  37 

Geraint  and  E  50 

100 

313 

942 

Merlin  and  V.  74 

Lancelot  and  E.  252 
Holy  Grail  525 


Pas 


Guinevere  128 
of  Arthur  48 
Columbus  17 
Demeter  and  P.  74 
Prog,  of  Spring  22 
St.  Telemachus  30 


Waste 


778 


Watch'd 


Waste  (verb)  (cotUinued)    The  sea  w's  all:  but  let  me  live 

my  life.  Audley  Court  51 

To  10  his  whole  heart  in  one  kiss  Sir  L.  arid  Q.  G.  44 

That  like  a  broken  purpose  w  in  air  :  So  w  not  thou  ; 

but  come  ;  Princess  vii  214 
Forgive  me,  I  w  my  heart  in  signs  :  let  be.  „  359 
Half  the  night  I  w  in  sighs,  Maud  II  iv  23 
Nor  dared  to  w  a  perilous  pity  on  him  :  Geraint  and  E.  525 
Speak  therefore  :  shall  I  w  myself  in  vain  ?  '  Lancelot  and  E.  670 
and  to  the  spiritual  strength  Within  us,  Holy  Grail  35 
her  too  hast  thou  left  To  pine  and  w  Last  Tournament  598 
when  I  knew  the  twain  Would  each  w  each,  Tiresias  69 
111  To  w  this  earth  began —  Ef  Hague  23 
Wasted  (adj.  and  part)  My  heart  is  w  with  my  woe,  Oriana  1 
Wan,  w  Truth  in  her  utmost  need.  Clear-headed  friend  19 
Where  they  smile  in  secret,  looking  over  it- 
lands,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  114 
I  that  have  w  here  health,  wealth,  and  time.  Princess  iv  352 
And  wordless  broodings  on  the  w  cheek —  „  vii  112 
Beating  from  the  w  vines  Back  to  France  Ode  on  Well.  109 
Confusions  of  a  w  youth  ;  In  Mem.,  Pro.  42 
I  trust  I  have  not  w  breath :  „  cxx  1 
Thro'  the  hubbub  of  the  market  I  steal,  a  w  frame,  Maud  II  iv  69 
W  so  often  by  the  heathen  hordes.  Holy  Grail  244 
W  and  worn,  and  but  a  tithe  of  them,  „  723 
But  when  the  matron  saw  That  hinted  love  was  only 

w  bait.  The  Ring  360 
You  that  lie  with  w  lungs  Waiting  for  your  summons  .  .  .     Forlorn  21 

Wasted  (verb)     Last  night  I  w  hateful  hours  Fatima  8 

And  beat  me  down  and  marr'd  and  w  me,  Tithonus  19 

He  w  hours  with  Averill ;  Aylmer's  Field  109 

There  they  ruled,  and  thence  they  w  Boadicea  54 

waging  war  Each  upon  other,  w  all  the  land  ;  Com.  of  Arthur  7 

'  O  I  that  w  time  to  tend  upon  her,  Geraint  and  E.  38 

and  thro'  her  love  her  life  W  and  pined,  Pelleas  and  E.  496 

Wasteful     And  scaled  in  sheets  of  w  foam,  Sea  Dreams  53 
disciple,  richly  garb'd,  but  worn  From  w  living, 

fouow'd —  Ancient  Sage  5 

Waster    And  w  than  a  warren  :  Amphion  4 

Wastest    The  w  moorland  of  our  realm  shall  be  Safe,         Gareth  and  L.  603 

Wasting     w  odorous  sighs  All  night  long  Adeline  43 

leapt  To  greet  her,  w  his  forgotten  heart,  Aylmer's  Field  689 

'  w  the  sweet  summer  hours  '  ?  Charity  1 

Watch  (s)     (See  also  Death-watch)     Kept  w,  waiting  decision,        CEnone  143 

wan  was  her  cheek  With  hollow  w,  Princess  vi  145 

And  w'es  in  the  dead,  the  dark,  „       vii  103 

Come  :  not  in  w'es  of  the  night.  In  Mem.  xci  13 

Keep  w  and  ward,  keep  w  and  ward,  Maud  I  vi  58 

did  Enid,  keeping  w,  behold  In  the  first  shallow 

♦    shade  Geraint  and  E.  118 

still  he  kept  his  w  beneath  the  wall.  Pelleas  and  E.  223 

Wide  open  were  the  gates.  And  no  w  kept ;  „            415 

But  kept  their  w  upon  the  ring  and  you.  The  Ring  300 

heron  rises  from  his  w  beside  the  mere,  Happy  3 

Watch  (time-piece)     seal,  that  himg  From  Allan's  w,  Dora  136 

Watch  (verb)     I  w  thy  grace  ;  and  in  its  place  Elednore  127 

Fancy  w'es  in  the  wilderness,  Caress'd  or  chidden  12 

I  w  the  darkening  droves  of  swine  Palace  of  Art  199 

To  w  the  crisping  ripples  on  the  beach.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  61 

To  w  the  long  bright  river  drawing  slowly  „                92 

To  w  the  emerald-colour'd  water  falling  „                96 

W  what  main-currents  draw  the  years  :  Love  thou  thy  land  21 

W  what  thou  seest,  and  lightly  bring  aie  word.'  ^1/.  d' Arthur  38 

W  what  I  see,  and  lightly  bring  thee  word.'  ,.          44 

I  bad  thee,  w,  and  lightly  bring  me  word.'  „          81 

saw  An  angel  stand  and  w  me,  as  I  sang.  St.  S.  Stylites  35 

I  used  to  w — if  I  be  he  that  watch'd —  Tithonus  52 

did  we  w  the  stately  ships,  Locksley  Hall  37 

To  w  the  three  tall  spires  ;  Godiva  3 

That  w  the  sleepers  from  the  wall.  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  24 

He  w'es  from  his  mountain  walls.  The  Eagle  5 

dewy  eyes  That  w  me  from  the  glen  below.  Move  Eastward  8 
built  their  castles  of  dissolving  sand  To  w  them 

overflow'd,  Enoch  Arden  20 

There  often  as  he  watch'd  or  seem'd  to  w,  „          600 


Aylmer's  Field  275 

551 

Princess  i  247 

„       a  422 

„        Hi  24 

270 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  14 

In  Mem.  xxvi  5 

xxxvi  15 

K14 

„  Ixiii  9 

„         Ixxiv  2 

„      Ixxxv  81 

Maud  I  xix  10 

///  vi  25 


Watch  (verb)   (continued)    '  Good,'  said  his  friend, 
' but  w  ! ' 
and  one  was  set  to  w  The  watcher, 
and  w  A  full  sea  glazed  with  muffled  moonlight, 

0  to  w  the  thirsty  plants  Imbibing  ! 
Or  seem'd  to  w  the  dancing  bubble, 
and  w  The  sandy  footprint  harden  into  stone.' 

1  w  the  twilight  falling  brown 
if  that  eye  which  w'es  guilt  And  goodness. 
And  those  wild  eyes  that  w  the  wave 
Ye  w,  like  God,  the  rolling  hours 
So  may'st  thou  w  me  where  I  weep. 
To  those  that  w  it  more  and  more, 
'  I  w  thee  from  the  quiet  shore ; 
For  who  was  left  to  w  her  but  I  ? 
And  w  her  harvest  ripen,  her  herd  increase, 
Guinevere  Stood  by  the  castle  walls  to  w  him  pass  ;  Com.  of  Arthur  48 
w  his  mightful  hand  striking  great  blows  Marr.  of  Geraint  95 
last  bethought  her  how  she  used  to  w,  „  647 
Not  dare  to  w  the  combat,  Geraint  and  E.  154 
Geraint  Waving  an  angry  hand  as  who  should  say 

'  Ye  w  me,'  „            445 

From  whence  to  w  the  time,  and  eagle-like  Balin  and  Balan  535 

the  Seer  Would  w  her  at  her  petulance.  Merlin  and  V.  175 

and  laugh  As  those  that  w  a  kitten  ;  „            177 

And  w  the  curl'd  white  of  the  coming  wave  „            292 

while  women  w  Who  wins,  who  falls  ;  Holy  Grail  34 

'  There  he  w'es  yet,  There  like  a  dog  Pelleas  and  E.  262 

W  what  thou  seest,  and  lightly  bring  me  word.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  206 

W  what  I  see,  and  lightly  bring  thee  word.'  „              212 

I  bad  thee,  w,  and  lightly  bring  me  word.'  „              249 
I  could  not  w  her  for  four —                                   In  the  Child.  Hasp.  59 

Still— could  we  w  at  all  points  ?  Def.  of  Lucknow  49 

w  the  chariot  whirl  About  the  goal  again,  Tiresias  176 

Or  w  the  waving  pine  which  here  To  Ulysses  25 

'  Father  and  Mother  will  w  you  grow  ' —  (repeat)  Romney's  R.  104, 106 

Christian  faces  w  Man  murder  man.  St.  Telemachus  55 

Watch'd    She  w  my  crest  among  them  all,  Oriana  30 

In  lazy  mood  I  w  the  little  circles  die  ;  Miller's  B.  74 

I  w  the  little  flutterings,  „        153 

And  w  by  weeping  queens.  Palace  of  Art  108 

I  used  to  watch — if  I  be  he  that  w —  Tithonus  52 

And  w  by  silent  gentlemen.  Will  Water.  231 

Maiden,  I  have  w  thee  daily,  L.  of  Burleigh  3 

to  the  last  dip  of  the  vanishing  sail  She  w  it,  Enoch  Arden  246 

There  often  as  he  w  or  seem'd  to  watch,  „          600 

Miriam  w  and  dozed  at  intervals,  „          909 

They  parted,  and  Sir  Alymer  Aylmer  w.  Aylmer's  Field  277 

conscious  of  the  rageful  eye  That  w  him,  „            337 

Or  made  occasion,  being  strictly  w,  „            478 

and  groves  of  pines,  W  even  there ;  „            551 

and  Sir  Aylmer  w  them  all,  .,             552 

the  wife,  who  w  his  face.  Paled  at  a  sudden  twitch  „            731 

and  w  it  lying  bathed  In  the  green  gleam  Princess  i  93 

While  Psyche  w  them,  smiling,  „     ii  365 

and  w  Or  seem'd  to  watch  the  dancing  bubble,  „     Hi  23 

I  w  the  swallow  winging  south  „      iv  89 

but  w  them  well.  Saw  that  they  kept  apart,  „        339 

but  w  awake  A  cypress  in  the  moonlight  shake.  The  Daisy  81 

There  was  one  who  w  and  told  me —  Boadicea  30 

And  I  myself,  who  sat  apart  And  w  them.  In  Mem.  ciii  30 

That  w  her  on  her  nurse's  arm,  „     Con.  46 

and  w  the  great  sea  fall.  Wave  after  wave.  Com.  of  Arthur  378 

and  w  him  from  the  gates :  „            449 

Then  she  that  w  him,  '  Wherefore  stare  ye  so  ?  Gareth  and  L.  939 

Knave,  when  I  w  thee  striking  on  the  bridge  „            992 

But  w  him  have  I  like  a  phantom  pass  „          1335 

Yet  have  I  w  thee  victor  in  the  joust,  „          1356- 

While  he  that  w  her  sadden,  Marr.  of  Geraint  67 

he  TO  The  being  he  loved  best  in  all  the  world,  Geraint  and  E.  102 

And  w  the  sun  blaze  on  the  turning  scythe,  „            252 

Eyes  too  that  long  have  w  how  Lancelot  draws  Balin  and  Balan  375 
Queen  Among  her  damsels  broidering  sat,  heard,  w 

And  whisper'd  :  Merlin  and  V.  138 

one  had  w,  and  had  not  held  his  peace :  „            16 


I 


Watch'd 


779 


Water-course 


Watch'd  (continued)     and  she  w  him  from  her  walls.  Merlin  and  V.  775 

\i  hile  she  w  their  arms  far-off  Sparkle,  Lancelot  and  E.  395 

many  a  time  have  w  thee  at  the  tilt  .,            1359 

Sat  by  the  river  in  a  cove,  and  w  The  high  reed  wave,         ..            1389 

all  along  the  street  of  those  Who  w  us  pass  ;  Holy  Grail  345 

W  her  lord  pass,  and  knew  not  that  she  sigh'd.  Last  Tournament  130 

the  knights,  who  w  him,  roar'd  And  shouted  .,               468 

westward-smiling  seas,  W  from  this  tower.  „              588 

fledged  The  hills  that  w  thee,  as  Love  Lover's  Tale  i  12 

All  day  I  w  the  floating  isles  of  shade,  ,,             ii  5 

And  w  them  till  they  vanish'd  from  my  sight  .,               42 

an'  I  w  him,  an'  when  he  came  in  First  Quarrel  75 

So  they  w  what  the  end  would  be.  The  Revenge  73 

How  often  have  we  w  the  sun  fade  The  Flight  41 

many's  the  time  that  I  w  her  at  mass  Tomorrow  29 

W  again  the  hollow  ridges  Locksley  R.,  Sixty  2 
A  soul  that,  w  from  earliest  youth.                       To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  25 

W  my  far  meadow  zoned  with  airy  mom  ;  Frog,  of  Spring  69 

You  w  not  I,  she  did  not  grow,  Romney's  R.  105 

I  w  my  son.  And  those  that  follow'd,  Akbar's  Dream  187 

She  w  me,  she  nursed  me,  she  fed  me.  Charity  33 

Watcher    The  w  on  the  column  till  the  end  ;  St.  S.  Stylites  163 

and  one  was  set  to  watch  The  w,  Aylmer's  Field  552 

A  lidless  w  of  the  public  weal.  Princess  iv  325 

Sat  watching  like  a  w  by  the  dead.  „         v  62 
kinsman  left  himic  o'er  his  wife  And  two  fair  babes,    Merlin  and  V.  706 

Heard  by  the  w  in  a  haunted  house,  Guinevere  73 

Watchest    Thou  w  all  things  ever  dim  In  Mem.  cxxi  3 

Watcheth    shepherd  who  w  the  evening  star.  Dying  Swan  35 

Watchful    Leolin  ever  w  of  her  eye,  Aylmer's  Field  210 

all  offices  Of  w  care  and  trembling  tentlemess.  Lover's  Tale  i  226 

for  I  do  not  doubt  Being  a  w  parent,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  31 

Watching     with  triumph,  w  still  To  pierce  me  thro'  Rosalind  26 

Tho'  w  from  a  ruin'd  tower  How  grows  the  day  Two  Voices  77 

W  your  growth,  I  seem'd  again  to  grow.  Aylmer's  Field  359 

Sat  w  like  a  watcher  by  the  dead.  Princess  v  62 

With  Psyche's  babe,  was  Ida  w  us,  ,,        512 

All  her  maidens,  w,  said,  ,.        viS 

w  here  At  this,  om-  great  solenanity.  Ode  on  Well.  243 

Now  w  high  on  mountain  cornice,  The  Daisy  19 

awful  sense  Of  one  mute  Shadow  w  all.  In  Mem.  xxx  8 

In  w  thee  from  hour  to  hour,  „        cxii  12 

An  angel  w  an  urn  Wept  over  her,  Maud  I  viii  3 

Darken'd  w  a  mother  decline  And  that  dead  man  „        xix  8 

when  he  tum'd  from  w  him.  Gareth  and  L.  1032 

w  overhead  The  aerial  poplar  wave,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  83 

No  phantoms,  w  from  a  phantom  shore  Anciemi  Sage  179 

w  till  the  day  begun —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  91 

IV  her  large  light  eyes  and  gracious  looks.  Prog,  of  Spring  19 

You  that  are  w  The  gray  Magician  Merlin  and  the  G.  4 

Watchman     the  w  peal  The  sliding  season  :  Gardener's  D.  182 

Watch-word     Nor  deal  in  w-w's  overmuch  :  Love  thou  thy  land  28 

and  this  proud  w  rest  Of  ec[ual ;  Princess  vii  300 
be  grateful  for  the  sounding  w  '  Evolution  ' 

here.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  198 
Water    (See  also  Bog-wather,  Fresh-water,  Sea-water, 

Watter)     the  glimmering  w  outfloweth  :  Leonine  Eleg.  9 

A  sluice  with  blacken'd  w's  slept,  Mariana  38 

which  crept  Adown  to  where  the  w  slept.  Arabian  Nights  30 

The  trenched  w's  run  from  sky  to  sky  ;  Ode  to  Memory  104 

Holy  10  will  I  pour  Into  every  spicy  flower  Poet's  Mind  12 

Winds  were  blowing,  w's  flowing,  Oriana  14 

Keeps  his  blue  w's  fresh  for  many  a  mile.  Mine  be  the  strength  8 

Their  moon-led  w's  white.  Palace  of  Art  252 

night-dews  on  still  w's  between  walls  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  3 

river  drawing  slowly  His  w's  from  the  purple  hill —  „              93 

To  watch  the  emerald  coloiir'd  w  falling  „              96 

Scaffolds,  still  sheets  of  w,  divers  woes,  D.  of  F.  Women  34 
On  one  side  lay  the  Ocean,  and  on  one  Lay  a 

great  w,  M.  d' Arthur  12 

And  the  wild  w  lapping  on  the  crag.'  „           71 

'  I  heard  the  w  lapping  on  the  crag,  „         116 

Many  an  evening  by  the  w's  did  we  watch  Locksley  Hall  37 

as  moonlight  unto  sunlight,  and  as  w  imto  wine —  „          152 

Rift  the  hills,  and  roll  the  w's,  „          186 


Water  (continued)     Side  by  side  beneath  the  w  Crew  and 

Captain  lie ;  The  Captain  67 

stars  all  night  above  the  brim  Of  w's  The  Voyage  26 

Down  the  waste  w's  day  and  night,  „        58 

Illyeian  woodlands,  echoing  falls  Of  w.  To  E.  L.  2 

The  blaze  upon  the  w's  to  the  east ;  Enoch  Arden  594 

The  blaze  upon  the  w's  to  the  west ;  „             596 

Another  ship  (She  wanted  w)  „            628 

The  silent  w  slipping  from  the  hills,  „            633 

To  where  the  rivulets  of  sweet  w  ran  ;  „            642 

Like  fomitains  of  sweet  w  in  the  sea,  „             803 

Beyond  it,  where  the  w's  marry —  The  Brook  81 

Down  in  the  w,  a  long  reef  of  gold.  Sea  Dreams  127 

And  drew,  from  butts  of  w  on  the  slope.  Princess,  Pro.  60 

smile  that  like  a  wrinkling  wind  On  glassy  w  ■  „            i  116 

Over  the  rolling  w's  go,  „             Hi  5 

smile  dwelt  like  a  clouded  moon  In  a  still  w  :  „          vi  271 

To  meet  the  sim  and  sunny  w's.  The  Daisy  11 

All  along  the  valley,  where  thy  w's  flow,  V.  of  Cauteretz  3 

Where  yon  broad  w  sweetlj'  slowly  glides.  Kequiescat  2 

The  forest  crack'd,  the  w's  curl'd,  In  Mem.  xv  5 

Is  on  the  w's  day  and  night,  „       xvii  11 

As  drop  by  drop  the  w  falls  „        Iviii  3 

By  that  broad  w  of  the  west,  ,,        laovii  3 

I  hear  thee  where  the  w's  run ;  „  cxxx  2 
was  heard  among  the  holy  hymns  A  voice  as  of 

the  w's.  Com.  of  Arthur  291 

Hath  power  to  walk  the  w's  like  our  Lord.  „              294 

there  past  along  the  hymns  A  voice  as  of  the  w's,  „  464 
all  her  dress  Wept  from  her  sides  as  w  flowing 

away  ;  Gareth  and  L.  217 

And  drops  of  w  fell  from  either  hand ;  „            220 

To  turn  the  broach,  draw  w,  or  hew  wood,  „            486 

under  this  wan  w  many  of  them  Lie  rotting,  ,,             824 

and  beside  The  carolling  w  set  themselves  Balin  and  Balan  44 
as  an  enemy  that  has  left  Death  in  the  living  w's.     Merlin  and  V.  148 

At  once  she  slipt  like  w  to  the  floor.  Lancelot  and  E.  830 

Heard  on  the  winding  w's,  eve  and  morn  „             1408 

Ye  could  not  hear  the  w's  for  the  blast,  Holy  Grail  797 

with  living  w's  in  the  change  Of  seasons  :  Pelleas  and  E.  511 
Unruffling  w's  re-collect  the  shape                            Last  Tournament  36& 

after  the  great  w's  break  Whitening  for  half  a  league,  „              464 

as  the  w  Moab  saw  Come  round  by  the  East,  „              482 

And  one  was  w  and  one  star  was  fire,  „  736 
On  one  side  lay  the  Ocean,  and  on  one  Lay  a 

great  w.  Pass,  of  Arthur  180 

And  the  wild  w  lapping  on  the  crag.'  „            239' 

'  I  heard  the  w  lapping  on  the  crag,  „             284 

Do^ra  that  long  w  opening  on  the  deep  „             466 

pleasant  breast  of  w's,  quiet  bay,  Lover's  Tale  i  6 

semicircle  Of  dark-blue  w's  and  the  narrow  fringe  „              38 

and  thro'  the  arch  Down  those  loud  w's,  .,              59 

charm  of  light  and  strength  Upon  the  w's,  .,              92 

And  glory  of  broad  w's  interfused,  ..             401 


how  he  woo'd  The  w's,  and  the  w's  answering  lisp'd 

Like  w,  drop  by  drop,  upon  my  ear  Fell ; 

When  he  leaps  from  the  w  to  the  land. 

And  the  w  began  to  heave  and  the  weather 

Rather  to  thee,  thou  living  w, 

where  the  w  is  clearer  than  air  : 

Warriors  over  the  Weltering  w's 

the  w's — you  hear  them  call ! 

for  my  brain  was  drunk  with  the  w, 

This  wealth  of  w's  might  but  seem  to  draw 

and  hear  the  w's  roar, 

as  a  man  Who  sees  his  face  in  w, 

rolling  of  dragons  By  warble  of  w, 

you  will  not  deny  my  sultry  throat  One  draught 
of  icy  w. 

A  fall  of  w  lull'd  the  noon  asleep. 
Waterbreak    With  many  a  silvery  ic 
Water-circle    Gleams  of  the  w-c's  as  they  broke. 
Water-course    The  tangled  w-c's  slept, 

and  show'd  A  riotous  confluence  of  w-c's 

Scarr'd  with  a  hundred  wintn-  w-c's — 


544 

576 

The  Revenge  55 

113 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  131 

V.  of  Maeldune  77 

Batt.  of  Bninanburh  48- 

Despair  47 

65 

A  ncient  Sage  9 

The  Flight  00 

The  Ring  370 

Merlin  and  the  G.  45 

Romney's  R.  23 

83 

The  "Brook  61 

Lover's  Tale  i  67 

Dying  Swan  19 

Lucretius  30 

Holy  Grail  490 


Water'd 

Water'd    rieal'd  it  with  kisses  ?  w  it  with  tears  ? 
Waterfall     Thou  wert  not  nursed  by  the  to 

Down  shower  the  gambolling  w's 

w's  Pour'd  in  a  thunderless  plunge 
Waterflag     There  in  the  many-knotted  w's, 

There  in  the  many-knotted  w's, 
Waterfowl     they  ride  away — to  hawk  For  w. 
Water-gate    Storm  at  the  W-g  ! 
Water-gnat    in  the  burn  w-g's  murmur  an<l  inoum. 
Water-lily    She  saw  the  w-l  bloom, 

But  as  the  w  starts  and  slides  Upon  tlie  level 
Waterloo     in  sawdust,  slept.  As  old  as  W  ; 

In  that  world-earthquake,  W  ! 

nobler  work  to  do  Than  when  he  fought  at  W, 

Plunged  in  the  last  fierce  charge  at  Jf, 
Water-pipes    Creeps  to  the  garden  w-p  beneath, 
Water-side     The  first  house  by  the  ^o-s, 
Water-smoke     thousand  wreaths  of  dangling  w-s, 


780 


Wavering 


(Enone  234 

Ode  to  Memory  51 

Sea- Fairies  10 

V.  of  Maeldune  13 

M.  d' Arthur  63 

Pass,  of  Arthur  231 

Merlin  and  V.  108 

Def.  of  Lucknow  37 

Leonine  Eleg.  8 

L.  of  Shalott  Hi  39 

Princess  iv  255 

Will  Water.  100 

Ode  on  Well.  133 

257 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  64 

D.  of  F.  Women  206 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  34 

Princess  vii  213 


Water-sodden     Dagonet  stood  Qmet  as  any  w-s  log  Last  Tournament  253 

Water-world    Thro' his  dim  t«-w  ?  Maud  II  ii  20 

Watery    slight  Sir  Robert  with  his  w  smile  Edwin  Morris  128 

inat  weak  and  w  nature  love  you  ?  No  !  The  Ring  396 

Waiter  (water)     'E  seeams  naw  moor  nor  w,  North.  Cobbler  76 

some  on  "em  said  it  wur  w —  '                33 

thou  can't  graw  this  upo'  w  !  '  "86 

Wattle     he  built  with  w's  from  the  marsh  Holy  Grail  63 

■or  Jt'i  '^JS'^'^'L^J^'^.  ^,  a  stag-tuckey's  w's.  Church-to ar dm,  etc.  31 

Wattled     bleat  Of  the  thick-fleeced  sheep  from  w  folds,     Ode  to  Memory  66 

Wattling     And  one  was  rough  with  w,  Balin  and  Balan366 

Wave  (S)     {See  also  Sea-wave)     The  slumbrous  w  outwelleth,        Claribel  18 

when  the  crisp  slope  w's  After  a  tempest,  Stipp.  Confessions  126 

And  the  blue  w  beat  the  shore  ;  All  Things  will  Die  43 

the  rainbow  hangs  on  the  poising  w,  Sea-  Fairies  29 

And  shook  the  w  as  the  wind  did  sigh  ;  Dying  Swan  15 

But  the  w  would  make  music  above  us  afar—  The  Merman  22 

adown  the  steep  like  awl  would  leap  The  Mermaid  39 

As  w's  that  up  a  quiet  cove  Rolling  slide,  Eleanore  108 

Ihro  the  w  that  runs  for  ever  By  the  island  L.  of  Shalott  i  12 

1  loved  the  brimming  w  that  swam  Miller's  D  97 

One  show'd  an  iron  coast  and  angry  w's.  Palace  of  Art  69 

swallow  'ill  come  back  again  -vvith  summer  o'er 

Ihis  mounting  w  will  roll  us  shoreward  soon.'  Lotos- Eaters  2 

gushing  of  the  w  Far  far  away  did  seem  to  mourn  31 

Our  island  home  Is  far  beyond  the  w;  45 

In  ever  climbing  up  the  climbing  w?  ,]  Q.  S.  50 

wind  and  w  and  oar ;  "  "  "227 
holy  organ  rolling  w's  Of  sound  on  roof  and  floor    D.  of  F.  Womm  191 

on  the  bounteous  M)  of  such  a  breast  Gardiner's  D.  139 

€ame  wet-shod  alder  from  the  w,  Amphion  41 

We  came  to  warmer  w's,  and  deep  The  Vovaae  37 

■on  w's  that  idly  burst  Like  Heavenly  Hope  69 

Thy  tribute  w  deliver  :  ^  Farewell  2 

Rising  falling  like  a  w,  virion  of  Sin  125 

And  w  «  of  shadow  went  over  the  wheat,  Poet's  Song  4 

w^P  P/.,?T  precipitous  rivulet  to  the  w,  Enoch  Ardm  kl 

Who  still  d  the  rolling  w  of  Galilee  !  Ayhner's  Field  709 

that  great  w  Returning,  while  none  mark'd  it,  Sea  Dreams  233 

No  rock  so  hard  but  that  a  little  w  Princess  Hi  154 

old-recurring  w's  of  prejudice  Resmooth  240 

drench  his  dark  locks  in  the  gurgling  w  Mid-channel.  "        iv  187 

like  a  beacon-tower  above  the  w's  Of  tempest,  493 

Naked,  a  double  light  in  air  and  w,  "       ^i  157 

Nor  all  Calamity's  hugest  w's  confound,  "        Wjn  5 

I^  s  on  a  diamond  shingle  dash,  The  Islet  16 

And  w's  that  sway  themselves  in  rest.  In  Mem.  xi  18 

And  in  the  hearing  of  the  w.  ^i^  4 

the  w  again  Is  vocal  in  its  wooded  walls ;  "              13 

And  those  wild  eyes  that  watch  the  w  "    xxxvi  15 

The  lightest  w  of  thought  shall  lisp,  "        Xs 

And  every  pulse  of  wind  and  w  Recalls,  "    ix^rv  73 

Or  cool'd  within  the  glooming  w  ;  "  iJZTx  45 

Upon  the  thousand  w's  of  wheat,  '"  ^^  t? 

Trtl  all  my  blood,  a  fuller  w,  "'  ^fJii^^ 
^ream  of  a  madden'd  beach  dragg',1  <lown  by  the  w,        Maud  Tiii  12 


Wave  (s  {continued)  the  long  w's  that  roll  in  yonder 

bay?  MaudlxviUm 

W  after  w,  each  mightier  than  the  last,  Com.  of  Arthur  379 

and  all  the  w  was  in  a  flame  :  And  down  the  w  and 


in  the  flame  was  borne  A  naked  babe, 

And  rippled  like  an  ever-fleeting  w, 

Clash  like  the  coming  and  retiring  w. 

Comes  flying  over  many  a  windy  w  To  Britain, 

For  the  great  w  that  echoes  round  the  world  ; 

That  keeps  the  wear  and  polish  of  the  w. 

blind  w  feeling  roimd  his  long  sea-hall 

watch  the  curl'd  white  of  the  coming  w 

Ev'n  such  a  w,  but  not  so  pleasurable, 

You  seem'd  that  w  about  to  break  upon  me 

as  a  wild  w  in  the  wide  North-sea, 

Play'd  ever  back  upon  the  sloping  w, 

The  heathen — but  that  ever-climbing  w, 

as  the  crest  of  some  slow-arching  w. 

Between  the  steep  cliff  and  the  coming  w  ; 

But  after  tempest,  when  the  long  w  broke 

only  the  wan  w  Brake  in  among  dead  faces. 

Upon  the  dappled  dimplings  of  the  w, 

Held  for  a  space  'twixt  cloud  and  w, 
Showers  slanting  light  upon  the  dolorous  w. 

All  crisped  sounds  of  w  and  leaf  and  wind, 

Slow-moving  as  a  w  against  the  wind, 

a  w  like  the  10  that  is  raised  by  an  earthquake 

grew. 
Backward  they  reel  like  the  w,  like  the  w 
And  we  gazed  at  the  wandering  w 
and  the  roar  of  w's, 

rougher  gust  might  tumble  a  stormier  lo, 
But  the  blind  w  cast  me  ashore. 
Or  if  lip  were  laid  to  lip  on  the  pillows  of  the  w. 
like  a  rock  In  the  w  of  a  stormy  day  ; 
Hath  still'd  the  blast  and  stroAvn  the  w. 
And  ask'd  the  w's  that  moan  about  the  world 
fill  the  hollows  between  w  and  w  ; 
and  the  moan  of  my  w's  I  whirl, 
Wave  (verb)     But  who  hath  seen  her  w  her  hand  ? 
W's  all  its  lazy  lilies,  and  creeps  on, 
bottom  agates  seem  to  w  and  float 
Nor  w's  the  cypress  in  the  palace  walk  ; 
And,  since  the  grasses  round  me  w. 
Sat  by  the  river  in  a  cove,  and  watch'd  The  high 

reed  w,  Lancelot  and  E.  1390 

watching  overhead  The  aerial  poplar  w,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  84 

He  sees  me,  w's  me  from  him.  Happy  19 

You  need  not  w  me  from  you.  ,,       20 

Still  you  w  me  off — ^poor  roses —  "     loi 

Thy  gay  lent-lilies  w  and  put  them  by.  Prog,  of  Spring  37 

Waved     caught  His  bundle,  w  his  hand,  and  went  his  way.  Enoch  Arden  238 
And  fearing  w  my  arm  tB  warn  them  off  ;  Sea  Dreams  132 

She  spoke,  and  bowing  w  Dismissal :  Princess  ii  99 

She,  ending,  w  her  hands  :  „      ^i,  522 

She  w  to  me  with  her  hand.  Maud  I  ix  8 

The  wrist  is  parted  from  the  hand  that  w,  Merlin  and  V.  551 

yet  he  glanced  not  up,  nor  w  his  hand,  Lancelot  and  E.  986 

Arthur  w  them  back.     Alone  he  rode.  Last  Tournament  437 

woods  upon  the  hill  W  with  a  sudden  gust  Lover's  Tale  Hi  34 

w  his  blade  To  the  gallant  three  hundred  Hemy  Brigade  9 

Waver     As  when  a  smibeam  w's  warm  Miller's  D.  79 

While  this  great  bow  will  w  in  the  sun,  Palace  of  Art  ^ 

The  gas-light  w's  dimmer  ;  wm  Water.  38 

IF  s  on  her  thin  stem  the  snowdrop  cold  Prog,  of  Spring  3 

A  blood-red  awning  w  overhead,  St.  Telemachus  52 

Waver  d     The  crowds,  the  temples,  w,  and  the  shore  ;   D.  of  F.  Womm  114 
for  thus  at  times  He  w  ;  Merlin  and  V.  187 

Here,  too,  my  love  W  at  anchor  with  me,  Lover's  Tale  i  65 

W  and  floated — which  was  less  than  Hope,  „  452 

foeman  surged,  and  w,  and  reel'd  Up  the  hill,  Heavy  Brigade  62 

Wavering    and,  w  Lovingly  lower,  trembled  on  her 

waist— Ah,  happy  shade— and  still  went  w  down,    Gardmer's  D.  130 
From  the  high  tree  the  blossom  w  fell,  Princess  vi  80 

W's  of  every  vane  with  every  wind,  To  the  Quern  ii  50 


383 

Gareth  and  L.  215 

522 

Marr.  of  Geraint  337 

420 

682 

Merlin  and  V.  232 

292 

294 

302 

Lancelot  and  E.  482 

Holy  Grail  382 

Last  Tournament  92 

462 

Guinevere  280 

290 

Pass,  of  Arthur  129 

Lover's  Tale  i  44 

417 

811 

ii  106 

iv  293 

The  Revenge  115 

Def.  of  Lucknow  43 

V.  of  Maeldune  89 

The  Wreck  4 

131 

Despair  61 

The  Flight  48 

Heavy  Brigade  57 

Freedom  34 

Detneter  and  P.  64 

Akbar's  Dream  161 

The  Dreamer  13 

L.  of  Shalott  i  24: 

Gardener's  D.  42 

Princess  ii  327 

vii  177 

In  Mem.  xxi  2 


II 


Wavering 


781 


Way 


Wavering  (continued)     \^'oo  her  and  gain  her  then  : 

no  w,  boy  !  Histers  (E.  and  E.)  39 

The  flame  of  life  went  w  down  ;  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  32 

Bled  ic  o'er  thy  face,  and  chased  away  Demeter  and  P.  15 

see  I  thro'  the  w  flakes  Yon  blanching  apricot  Prog,  of  Sf ring  29 

some  thro'  w  lights  and  shadows  broke,  Lotos- Eaters  12 

In  every  w  brake  an  ambuscade.  Geraint  and  E.  51 

Waveringly     Immingled  with  Heaven's  azure  w,  Gareth  and  L.  936 

Wave-worn     the  w-w  horns  of  the  echoing  bank,  Dying  Swan  39 

Waving     and  while  he  stood  on  deck  W,  Enoch  Arden  244 

w  to  him  White  hands,  and  courtesy  ;  Gareth  and  L.  1376 

Geraint  W  an  angry  hand  as  who  should  say  Geraint  and  E.  444 

Perceived  the  w  of  his  hands  that  blest.  Guinevere  584 

Then  w  us  a  sign  to  seat  ourselves,  Lover's  Tale  iv  320 

But  one — he  was  w  a  flag —  The  Wreck  119 

0  slender  lily  w  there,  Ancient  Sage  167 
'  Thrice-happy  he  that  may  caress  The  ringlet's  w 

balm  Talking  Oak  178 

With  woven  paces  and  with  w  arms,  Merlin  and  V.  207 

Of  woven  paces  and  of  w  hands,  (repeat)  „      330,  968 

Or  watch  the  w  pine  which  here  To  Ulysses  25 

Wavy     And  the  w  swell  of  the  soughing  reeds.  Dying  Swan  38 
honeysuckle  round  the  porch  has  wov'n  its  w  bowers.       May  Queen  29 

Wax  (s)     I  will  melt  this  marble  into  w  Princess  Hi  73 

Wax  (verb)     Thou  shalt  w  and  he  shall  dwindle,  Boddicea  40 

Speak,  as  it  w'es,  of  a  love  that  wanes  ?  Lancelot  and  E.  1401 

Waz'd    Then  w  her  anger  stronger.  The  Goose  30 

And  watch'd  them,  w  in  every  limb  ;  In  Mem.  ciii  30 
So  w  in  pride,  that  I  believed  myself  Unconquerable,  Geraint  and  E.  835 

Waxen     Baby  fingers,  w  touches,  press  me  from  my 

mother's  breast.  Locksley  Hall  90 

And  melt  the  w  hearts  of  men.'  In  Mem.  xxi  8 

A  bought  commission,  a  w  face,  Maud  I  x  30 

Waxeth     Ever  the  wonder  w  more  and  more.  Sonnet  to 6 

Waxing    The  full-juiced  apple,  w  over-mellow,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  33 

But  tho'  his  eyes  are  w  dim,  D.  of  the  O.  Year  21 

Way    (See  also  HaU-way,  Hilky-way,  Waay,  Wood-way) 

Winning  its  w  with  extreme  gentleness  Isabel  23 

A  weary,  weary  w  I  go,  Oriana  89 

That  will  not  stay,  upon  his  w,  Bosalind  15 

And  flashes  off  a  thousand  w's,  „        23 

Nor  wander'd  into  other  w's  :  Mi/  life  is  full  3 

one  silvery  cloud  Had  lost  his  w  (Enone  93 

This  w  and  that,  in  many  a  wild  festoon  Ran  riot,  „       100 

The  blessed  music  went  that  w  my  soul  May  Queen,  Con.  42 

Bluster  the  winds  and  tides  the  self-same  w,  D.  of  F.  Women  38 

and  the  woods  and  w's  Are  pleasant,  On  a  Mourner  13 

Till  all  thy  life  one  w  incline  „           19 

The  goose  flew  this  w  and  flew  that.  The  Goose  35 

And  God  fulfils  himself  in  many  w's,  M.  d' Arthur  241 

1  am  going  a  long  w  With  these  thou  seest —  „  256 
all  the  livelong  w  With  solemn  gibe  Gardener's  D.  167 
his  w's  were  harsh  ;  But  Dora  bore  them  meekly.  Dora  35 
and  went  her  w  Across  the  wheat,  „  71 
these  unreal  w's  Seem  but  the  theme  of  writers,  Edwin  Morris  47 
Bear  witness,  if  I  could  have  found  a  w  St.  S.  Stylites  55 
Yet  this  w  was  left.  And  by  this  w  I  'scaped  them.  „  178 
And  down  the  w  you  use  to  come.  Talking  Oak  115 
The  trance  gave  w  To  those  caresses,  Love  and  Duty  65 
Met  me  walking  on  yonder  w,  Edward  Gray  2 
summer  suns.  By  many  pleasant  w's,  Will  Water.  34 
And  follow'd  her  all  the  w.  Lady  Clare  64 
To  meet  and  greet  her  on  her  w  ;  Beggar  Maid  6 
All  the  windy  w's  of  men  (repeat)  Vision  of  Sin  132,  168 
caught  His  bimdle,  waved  his  hand,  and  went  his  w.  Enoch  Arden  238 
And  wherefore  did  he  go  this  weary  w,  „  296 
While  yet  she  went  about  her  househokl  w's,  „  453 
winding  glades  high  up  like  w's  to  Heaven,  „  573 
led  the  w  To  where  the  rivulets  of  sweet  water  ran ;  „  641 
I  chatter  over  stony  w's,  The  Brook  39 
A  childly  w  with  children,  Aylmer's  Field  181 
won  mysterious  w  Thro'  the  seal'd  ear  „  695 
Is  not  our  own  child  on  the  narrow  w,  „  743 
as  a  footsore  ox  in  crowded  w's  „  819 
'  That's  your  light  w  ;  Princess,  Pro.  151 


Way  (continued)     She  once  had  past  that  w  ;  Princess  Pro.  i  185 

And  thus  (what  other  w  was  left)  I  came.'  „  H  217 

true  she  errs.  But  in  her  own  grand  w  :  „  Hi  107 

I  forced  a  w  Thro'  solid  opposition  „  125 

when  we  sent  the  Prince  your  w  „  iv  398 

done  the  thing  one  ought,  When  faJl'n  in  darker  w's.'        ,.  v  68 

And  I  will  take  her  up  and  go  my  w,  ..  102 

for  everything  Gave  w  before  him :  „  530 

or  was  it  chance.  She  past  my  w.  „  vi  98 

And  turn'd  each  face  her  w :  „  144 

to  them  the  doors  gave  w  Groaning,  „  vi  349 

These  were  the  rough  w's  of  the  world  till  now.  „  vii  257 

one  Not  learned,  save  in  gracious  household  w's,  „  318 


The  path  of  duty  was  the  w  to  glory  :  (repeat) 

The  path  of  duty  be  the  w  to  glory  : 

like  a  man,  too,  would  have  his  w  : 

Of  Lari  Maxume,  all  the  w. 

And  dead  men  lay  all  over  the  w. 

All  running  on  one  w  to  the  home  of  my  love, 

And  ever  met  him  on  his  w 

And  we  with  singing  cheer'd  the  w. 

Still  onward  winds  the  dreary  w  ; 

And  look  thy  look,  and  go  thy  w. 

Moving  about  the  household  w's, 

My  darken'd  w's  Shall  ring  with  music 

Whatever  w  my  days  decline. 

That  will  not  yield  each  other  w. 

They  wept  and  wail'd,  but  led  the  w 

and  let  the  world  have  its  w  : 

Who  knows  the  w's  of  the  world. 

Be  mine  a  philosopher's  life  in  the  quiet  woodland  w's, 

I  know  the  w  she  went  Home 

what  am  I  That  I  dare  to  look  her  w  ; 


Ode  on  Well.  202,  210 

224 

Grandmother  70 

The  Daisy  76 

The  Victim  21 

Window,  On  the  Hill  8 

In  Mem.  vi  22 

„        xxii  5 

„        xxvi  1 

xlix  9 

Ix  11 

,.    Ixxvii  13 

,.    Ixxxv  41 

m20 

„        ciii  18 

Maud  I  iv  21 

44 

49 

xii  21 

xvi  11 


his  w's  are  sweet.  And  their's  are  bestial,  Com.  of  Arthur  180 

To  guard  thee  on  the  rough  w's  of  the  world.'  „  336 

son  Beheld  his  only  w  to  glory  lead  Gareth  and  L.  159 

the  vassal  king.  Was  ev'n  upon  his  w  to  Camelot ;  „  392 

who  sliced  a  red  life-bubbling  w  .,  509 

I  have  miss'd  the  only  w  (repeat)  „    787,  792 

convey'd  them  on  their  w  And  left  them  „  889 

I  watch'd  thee  victor  in  the  joust.  And  seen  thy  w.'  „  1357 

And  after  went  her  w  across  the  bridge,  Marr.  of  Geraint  383 

I  have  let  men  be,  and  have  their  w ;  „  466 

For  old  am  I,  and  rough  the  w's  and  wild ;  „  750 

I  charge  thee  ride  before.  Ever  a  good  w  on  before ;    Geraint  and  E.  15 
I  will  not  fight  my  w  with  gilded  arms,  „  21 

pain  she  had  To  keep  them  in  the  wild  w's  of  the  wood,        „  187 


Them  forward  by  a  w  which,  beaten  broad, 

And  left  him  lying  in  the  public  w  ; 

answering  not  one  word,  she  led  the  w. 

and  she  wept  beside  the  w. 

The  long  w  smoke  beneath  him  in  his  fear  ; 

To  shun  the  wild  w's  of  the  lawless  tribe. 

'  The  fire  of  Heaven  is  on  the  dusty  w's. 

who  sought  to  win  my  love  Thro'  evil  w's  : 

And  then  she  follow'd  Merlin  all  the  w. 

Then  her  false  voice  made  w,  broken  with  sobs  : 

Glanced  first  at  him,  then  her,  and  went  his  w. 

Full  often  lost  in  fancy,  lost  his  w  ; 

in  the  w's  below  The  knights  and  ladies  wept, 

And  thence  departed  every  one  his  w. 

some  ancient  king  Had  built  a  w, 

For  now  there  is  a  lion  in  the  w.' 

one  was  pointing  this  w,  and  one  that,  Because 

the  w  was  lost, 
tilt  against  the  knights  There  at  Caerleon,  but  have 

lost  our  w  : 
Glanced  down  upon  her,  turn'd  and  went  her  w. 
Some  rough  old  knight  who  knew  the  worldly  w, 
These  be  the  w's  of  ladies,'  Pelleas  thought. 
With  promise  of  large  light  on  woods  and  w's. 
But  he  by  wild  and  w,  for  half  the  night, 
With  tnmipet-blowings  ran  on  all  the  w's  From 

Camelot  Last  Tournament  52 

loneliest  w's  are  safe  from  shore  to  shore.  „  102 


436 
478 
495 
519 
532 
608 
Balin  and  Balan  448 
475 

Merlin  and  V.  203 
857 

Lancelot  and  E.  95 
164 
Holy  Grail  352 
360 
502 
645 

Pelleas  and  E.  58 


66 
185 
192 
209 
394 
497 


Way 


782 


Way  (continued)     So  all  the  w's  were  safe  from  shore 

Mark  s  w  my  soul !— but  eat  not  thou  with  Mark,  Vi9 

bo,  pluck  d  one  w  by  hate  and  one  by  love  "             ^qq 

Mark's  w's  to  steal  behind  one  in  the  dark—  "            «?« 

And  cast  him  as  a  worm  upon  the  w  •  /"  ■           oc 

And  then  they  rode  to  the  divided^,'  Oumevere^b 

That  did  not  shun  to  smite  me  in  worse  ic  dtt 

and  the  w's  Were  filled  with  rapine,            '  lin 

But  m  His  w's  with  men  I  find  Hina  not.  Pass  of  irthur  11 

and  wail  their  w  From  cloud  to  cloud,  •'              oq 

find  or  feel  a  w  Thro'  this  blind  haze,  '"              7^ 

And  God  fulfils  himself  in  many  w's,  "'             J^ 

I  am  going  a  long  w  With  these  thou  seest—  "            404 

that  w  my  wish  leads  me  evermore  Still  to  " 

believe  it —  ,-       ^    rr  j    •  ^r,. 

Each  w  from  verge  to  verge  a  Holy  Land.  ^''' '  ^"^*  '  fit 

effect  weigh'd  seas  upon  my  head  To  come  my  «  !  "'              661 

Was  not  the  land  as  free  thro'  all  her  w's  "              ^o 

Could  that  be  more  because  he  came  my  w  »  "              ««« 

Why  should  he  not  come  my  w  if  he  would  '  "              ««? 

why  shoidd  he  come  my  w  Robed  in  those  robes  "              am 

what  gleam  on  those  black  w's  Where  Love  "              si  9 

Had  died  ahnost  to  serve  them  any  w,  "          ,%.  ? 94 

And  leave  him  in  the  public  w  to  die  "              o^i 

And  balanced  either  w  by  each,  "              9^0 

he  patted  my  hand  in  his  gentle  w,  First  Quarrel  67 

and  now  you  may  go  your  w.  "^        El  20 

Turning  my  w,  the  loveliest  face  on  earth.  Sisters  ( E  andF\  87 

Flower  mto  fortune-our  world's  w-  ^"^^    CoMus  161 

sometimes  wish  I  had  never  led  the  w.  Columbus  lb7 
Shaping  their  w  toward  Dyflen  again,                   BaU  of  Brunei, h^^rhQfi. 

moves  miseen  among  the  w's  oimen.'  "*  '^        Ti^eZs  24 

Send  no  such  light  upon  the  w's  of  men  iresms^ 

and  every  w  the  vales  Wind,  "      foi 

By  all  my  w's  where'er  they  ran.  Ancient  Saae  1^7 

he— some  one— this  w  creeps—  ^nctent  ^afel57 
and  Suns  along  their  fiery  w,                                   Loclcslev  H     Sfi^q 

know  them,  follow  him  who  led  the  ro  ^  ^•'  ^'''^^  B^ 

Not  this  w  will  you  set  your  name      '  "  v   -i         i 

Yon  myriad-worlded  w~  Epilogue  1 

Well,  One  w  for  Miriam.  rp,    "„ .     ^^ 

She  tum'd,  and  in  her  soft  imperial  w  ^'^%ij 

/am  on  the  Perfect  W,  All  else  is  to  perdition.'  Akbar's  Breanfu 

Here  on  this  bank  in  some  w  live  the  life  l  fl 

Will  you  move  a  little  that  w  ?  r-j.^,,*/^ 

Well  if  it  do  not  roll  our  w.  »;/,.     Ckartty  20 

Toward  the  lowland  w's  behind  me  "^fc?  t"^  '  t 

Wayfaring-tree    Black  holly,  and  white-flower'd  w-t !  Sir  J  olLastlTm 

Wayade    Crait,  poisonous  counsels,  w  ambushings-  GarethaZi  432 

The  w  blossoms  open  to  the  blaze  R„7,-„  „„a  Ti      T/in 

Come  dashing  do4n  on  a  tall  I  fl'ower,  ^'^'"    trIntZ  IS 
I  told  your  w  story  to  my  mother                          Sisters  (En^TvAli 

Wayward-The  vexed  eddies  of  its  w  brother :  ^^^    "^UaUf^ 
I  have  been  wild  and  10,  but  you'll  forgive  me 

OrTmUhing  of  a  w  modern  mind  '''''  ^""Irf^^i,  S^,  f, 

I  went  thro'  many  w  moods  /)««  nl     p      « 

No  more  shall  w  grief  abuse  The  genial  hour  ZnMewZ  9 

And  yet  so  wild  and  w  that  my  dream-  dkbar'^ Bream  172 

Waywardness    At  any  gentle  damsel's  w.  gTJu  andluil 

Way-worn    Foot-sore,  w-w,  at  length  ^aretnam  J.  1179 

Weak  (adj.)     f  Truth  a-le^ning  ^her  crutch,  Clefr-hSTfr^Zlt 

Than  C17  for  strength,  remaining  w,  5^  f^Z,  kt 

'  For  I  go,  w  from  suffering  here  :  ^'"''  ^"'^^^ 

ff'  symbols  of  the  settled  bliss,  n^^^^,"  r,  03? 

And  m  my  w,  lean  arms  I  lift  the  cross,  St  S  Stvlites  118 

Made  w  by  time  and  fate,  but  strong  in  will  *"    Mvssesll 

Pass  on,  w  heart,  and  leave  me  where  I  lie  :         Come  not  when  et^  11 

Half-parted  from  a  w  and  scolding  himje  'to.  »     i  Za 

Full  of  w  poison,  turnsnits  for  thTcK,'  PrteTh^it 

This  fellow  would  make  weakness  w  r;rtncess  iv  Olb 

Strike  dead  the  whole  w  r^e  STno/nous  worms  M^^Trl 

Seeing  that  ye  be  grown  too,,  and  old            ^'  Com  «f  J^/i\n 

For  see  ye  not  how  w  and  hungerwom  I  seem-  ^arl  «13'I  m 


Weak  (adj.)  (coiUinued)     The  sick  w  beast  seekintr  to 
help  lierself 
And  being  w  in  body  said  no  more  ; 
Flatter  me  rather,  seeing  me  so  w, 
Of  eyes  too  w  to  look  upon  the  light ; 
An'  Hetty  wur  w  i'  the  hattics, 
being  woman  and  w.  His  formal  kiss  fell 
'  That  w  and  watery  nature  love  you  ?     No  ' 
Weak  (s)    if  from  Arthur's  hall,  To  help  the  w. 
Weaken  d     And  all  the  senses  w,  save  in  that 

•  Muriel's  health  Had  w,  nursing  little  Miriam. 
Weakening    gentle  sickness,  gradually  W  the  man 
Weaker    Words  w  than  your  grief  would  make      ' 
And  ever  w  grows  thro'  acted  crime, 
'  I  might  forget  my  w  lot ; 
songs  I  made  As  echoes  out  of  w  times, 
till  he  saw  Which  were  the  w  • 
Weakest    Cries  to  JF  as  to  Strongest, 
Weakling    Poor  w  ev'n  as  they  are.' 

Of  craven,  w,  and  thrice-beaten  hound  : 
'  Rise,  w  ;  I  am  Lancelot ;  say  thy  sav  ' 
Weakly    This  pretty,  puny,  w  little  one,— 
Weakness    my  own  w  fools  My  judgment, 
Prevailing  in  w,  the  coronach  stole 
Deliver  not  the  tasks  of  might  To  w, 
Regard  the  w  of  thy  peers : 
W  to  be  wroth  with  w  ! 
So  she  strove  against  her  w. 
That  was  your  hour  of  w. 
And  Enoch  bore  his  w  cheerfully, 
to  spy  The  w  of  a  people  or  a  house. 
Our  w  somehow  shapes  the  shadow, 
And  hatred  of  her  w,  blent  with  shame, 
but  well-nigh  close  to  death  For  w  : 
'  This  fellow  would  make  w  weak, 
my  passion  hath  not  swerved  To  works  of  w 
Forgot  his  w  in  thy  sight.  ' 

those  Whom  w  or  necessity  have  cramp'd 
Weal    (^ee  a;.9p  Dogwhip-weals)     he  for  the  common  w, 
1  he  fading  politics 
A  lidless  watcher  of  the  public  w, 
So  far,  so  near  in  woe  and  w  ; 
Be  moulded  by  your  wishes  for  her  w  ; 
Hours  That  cancel  w  with  woe. 


Wealth 


Merlin  and  V.  498 
Lancelot  and  E.  839 
Last  Tournament  642 
Lover's  Tale  i  614 
Village  Wife  101 
The  Wreck  31 
The  Ring  396 
Balin  and  Balan  473 
Lover's  Tale  i  127 
The  Ring  357 
Enoch  Arden  825 
To  J.  S.  65 
Will  12 
Two  Voices  367 
l7h  Mem.,  Con.  22 
Lancelot  and  E.  462 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  110 
Princess  vi  310 
Pelleas  and  E.  291 
582 
Enoch  Arden  195 
Sufj).  Confessions  136 
Dying  Swan  26 
Love  thou  thy  land  14 
24 
Locksley  Hall  149 
L.  of  Burleigh  69 
Enoch  Arden  449 
827 
Aylmer's  Field  570 
Princess  iii  330 
vii  30 
120 
In  Mem.  xxi  7 
„    Ixxxv  50 
,,  ex  A 

Tiresias  87 


Princess  ii  285 

iv  325 

//(  Mem.  cxxix  2 

Marr.  of  Geraint  799 

Ancient  Sage  96 


And 


Aylmer's  Field  294 


Princess 


Weald     Fled  all  night  long  by  glimmering  waste  and 

heard  the  Spirits  of  the  waste  and  w  Guinevere  128 

In  glowing  health,  with  boundless  w,  L    C    V  devire  61 

^^  hen  w  no  more  shall  rest  in  mounded  lieaps.  Golden  Year  32 

Ihe  sole  succeeder  to  their  w,  their  lands 
heiress,  w.  Their  w,  their  heiress  !  w  enough  was 

theirs  For  twenty  matches. 
May  beat  a  pathway  out  to  w  and  fame. 
Whatever  eldest-bom  of  rank  or  w 
I  that  have  \vasted  here  health,  w,  and  time, 

0  more  than  poor  men  w.  Than  sick  men  health- 
Abide  :  thy  w  is  gather'd  in. 
And  so  my  w  resembles  thine, 
the  w  Of  words  and  wit,  the  double  health, 

1  our  father  lias  w  well-gotten, 
joy  that  blazed  itself  in  woodland  w  Of  leaf, 
all  his  land  and  w  and  state  were  hers. 
And  gave  herself  and  all  her  w  to  me. 
all  the  w  and  all  the  woe  ? 
And  so  much  w  as  God  had  charged  her  with— 
when  all  my  w  Flash'd  from  me  in  a  moment 
Whatever  w  I  brought  from  that  new  world 
with  the  wisdom  and  w  of  his  own, 
W  with  his  wines  and  his  wedded  harlots ; 
kinsman,  dying,  summon'd  me  to  Rome— He  left  me  w 


no  tear  for  him,  who  left  you  w, 
The  w  of  tropic  bower  and  brake ; 


368 

439 

484 

)352 

459 

In  Mem.  Hi  15 

„      Ixxix  17 

„      Con.  102 

Maud  I  iv  18 

Balin  and  Balan  82 

Holy  Grail  587 

597 

Guinevere  344 

Lover's  Tale  i  213 

668 

Columbus  101 

The  Wreck  65 

Vastness  19^ 

The  Ring  17M 


To  Ulysses  Zl\ 


Wealth 


783 


Weary 


'Wwlth  {continued)     Youth  and  Health,  ami  birth 

and  tv, 
We&lttlier     and  himself  Be  wealthy  still,  ay  «•. 

Then  closed  her  access  to  the  w  fanns, 

Then  were  I  w  than  a  leash  of  kings.' 

'  Ye  will  be  all  the  w,'  (repeat) 

A  w  life  than  heretofore  with  the.se  And  Balin 

w — u! — hour  by  hour  ! 

Jilted  for  a,  w  I  w? 

To  make  them  w  in  his  readers'  eves  ; 


By  an  Evolution.  8 

Aylmer's  Field  373 

503 

Gareth  and  L.  51 

Geraint  and  E.  221,  412 

Balin  and  Balan  92 

To  the  Queen  ii  23 

Locksleij  H.,  Sixty  11 

Poets  and  their  B.  4 


Wealthiest    Spain  then  the  mightiest,  w  realm  on  earth, 
Wealthy     Kevealings  deep  and  clear  are  thine  Of  w  smiles  : 

I  SEE  the  w  miller  yet, 

Like  w  men  who  care  not  how  thej'  give. 

Where  the  w  nobles  dwell.' 

And  when  she  show'd  the  w  scabbard, 

and  himself  Be  w  still,  ay  wealthier. 

Days  order'd  in  a  w  peace, 

W  with  wandering  lines  of  mount  and  mere. 

Hold  her  a  w  bride  within  thine  arms, 

Tho'  w  enough  to  have  bask'd  in  the  light 
Weapon     With  thine  own  w  art  thou  slain, 

wearing  neither  hunting-dress  Nor  «■, 

The  wielding  of  w's — 

a  valorous  w  in  olden  England  ! 
Wear  (s)     keeps  the  w  and  polish  of  the  wave. 
Wear  (verb)     W's  all  day  a  fainter  tone. 

And  King-like,  w's  the  crown  : 

eat  wholesome  food,  And  w  warm  clothes, 

w  an  undress'd  goatskin  on  my  back  ; 

shall  w  Alternate  leaf  and  acom-ball 

This  mortal  armour  that  I  w, 

Of  those  that  w  the  Poet's  crown : 

spears  That  soon  should  w  the  garlanil ; 

his  pride  Lay  deeper  than  to  w  it  as  his  ring — 

I  think  they  should  not  w  our  rusty  gowns, 

than  w  Those  lilies,  better  blush 

And  so  she  w's  her  error  like  a  crown 

he  w's  a  truer  crown  Than  any  wreath 

bear  the  head  That  sleeps  or  w's  the  mask  of  sleep, 

When  first  she  w's  her  orange-flower  ! 

Who  w's  his  manhood  hale  and  green  : 

The  fool  that  w's  a  crown  of  thorns  : 

Come,  w  the  forms  by  which  I  know 

But  ill  for  him  that  w's  a  crown, 

And  Maud  will  w  her  jewels, 

And  w's  a  helmet  mounted  with  a  skull, 

your  fair  child  shall  w  your  costly  gift 

Were  fit  to  w  your  slipper  for  a  glove. 

Why  w  ye  this  crown-royal  upon  shield  ?  ' 

'  Why  w  ye  that  crown-royal  ?  ' 

'  What,  w  ye  still  that  same  crown-scandalous  ? 

this  maid  Might  w  as  fair  a  jewel  as  is  on  earth, 

That  he  shoiild  w  her  favour  at  the  tilt . 

will  you  w  My  favour  at  this  tourney  ?  ' 

Well,  I  will  w  it :  fetch  it  out  to  me  : 

One  rose,  a  rose,  to  gather  and  to  w, 

Why  ye  not  w  on  arm,  or  neck,  or  zone 

Lancelot  won,  methought,  for  thee  to  w.' 

W  black  and  white,  and  be  a  nun  like  you. 

And  so  w  out  in  ahnsdeed  and  in  prayer 

Robed  in  those  robes  of  light  I  must  not  w, 

pluck  from  this  true  breast  the  locket  that  I  w, 

Envy  w's  the  mask  of  Love, 

I  should  w  my  crown  entire 

you,  that  w  a  wreath  of  sweeter  bay, 

I  myself  Am  half  afraid  to  w  it. 

and  w's  the  leper's  weed  ? 
WeSr'd  (spent)     I  w  it  o'  liquor,  I  did. 
Wearied    Is  w  of  the  rolling  hours. 

Smoothing  the  w  mind  : 

And  closing  eaves  of  w  eyes  I  sleep  till  dusk 

I  felt  Thy  manhood  thro'  that  w  lance  of  thine. 

and  Balin's  horse  Was  w  to  the  death, 

And  w  out  made  for  the  couch  and  slept. 


Columbus  205 

Madeline  11 

Miller's  D.  1 

Tithonus  17 

L.  of  Burleigh  24 

Aylmer's  Field  236 

373 

In  Mem.  xlvi  11 

Holy  Grail  252 

621 

The  Wreck  45 

Two  Voices  311 

Marr.  of  Geraint  166 

Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  90 

Kapiolani  4 

Man-,  of  Geraint  682 

The  Owl  ii  7 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  16 

St.  S.  Stylites  109 

116 

Talking  Oak  286 

Sir  Galahad  70 

You  might  have  won  10 

Aylmer's  Field  112 

122 

Princess,  Pro.  143 

„  Hi  67 

111 

Ode  on  Well.  276 

In  Mem.  xviii  10 

a;Z4 

liii  4 

Ixix  12 

xci  5 

cxxvii  9 

Maud  I  XX  27 

Gareth  and  L.  639 

Marr.  of  Geraint  819 

Geraint  and  E.  623 

Balin  and  Balan  338 

348 

390 

Lancelot  and  E.  240 

358 

361 

371 

Pelleas  and  E.  406 

Last  Tournament  36 

38 

Guinevere  677 

687 

Lover's  Tale  i  671 

The  Flight  33 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  109 

Helen's  Tower  9 

Poets  and  their  B.  7 

The  Ring  472 

Happy  10 

North.  Cobbler  32 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  60 

Leonine  Eleg.  14 

In  Mem.  Ixvii  11 

Gareth  and  L.  1266 

Balin  and  Balan  561 

Merlin  and  V.  736 


Wearied  ( continued)     Wounded  and  w  needs  must  he 

be  near.  Lancelot  and  E.  538 

Rode  with  his  diamond,  w  of  the  quest,  '       „               616 

To  seek  him,  and  had  w  of  the  search.  ..               631 

all  w  of  the  quest  Leapt  on  his  horse,  ,.              703 

'  Alas,'  he  said,  '  your  ride  hath  w  you.  „              831 

I  am  w  of  our  city,  son,  Ancient  Sage  15 

And  M)  of  Autocrats,  Anarchs,  and  Slaves,  The  Dreamer  10 

Wearier     Thro'  wearj'  and  yet  ever  w  hours,  Aylmer's  Field  828 

Wearieth    Gaiety  without  eclipse,  W  me,  Lilian  21 

Weariness     all  things  else  have  rest  from  w  ?  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  8.  14 

As  all  but  empty  heart  and  w  Geraint  and  E.  652 

Settles,  till  one  could  yield  for  w  :  Merlin  and  V.  372 

wan  day  Went  glooming  down  in  wet  and  w  :  Last  Tournament  215 

Toil  and  ineffable  w,  faltering  hopes  of  relief,  Def.  of  Lucknow  90 

those  three  sweet  Italian  words,  became  a  w.  The  Ring  407 

He,  all  but  deaf  thro'  age  and  w,  St.  Telemachus  41 

Wearing     And  w  on  my  swarthy  brows  The  garland  Kate  23 

W  the  rose  of  womanhood.  Two  Voices  417 

IF  the  light  yoke  of  that  Lord  of  love,  Aylmer's  Field  708 

W  his  wisdom  lightly,  like  the  fruit  A  Dedication  12 

w  all  that  weight  Of  learning  lightly  In  Mem.,  Con.  39 

W  the  white  flower  of  a  blameless  life,  Ded.  of  Idylls  25 

w  neither  hmiting-dress  Nor  weapon,  Man:  of  Geraint  165 

in  w  mine  Needs  must  be  lesser  likelihood,  Lancelot  and  E.  366 

damsel,  w  this  unsxmny  face  To  him  who  won  Pelleas  and  E.  180 

And  w  but  a  holly-spray  for  crest,  Last  Tournament  172 

I,  w  but  the  garland  of  a  day,  To  Dante  6 
Weary  (adj.)    {See  also  Heart-weary)    O  w  life  !    O 

w  death  !  Supp.  Confessions  188 

w  with  a  finger's  touch  Those  writhed  limbs  Clear-headed  friend  22 

From  brawling  storms,  From  w  wind,  Ode  to  Memory  113 

Slow  sail'd  the  w  mariners  and  saw,  Sea- Fairies  1 

Ever  the  w  wind  went  on,  Dying  Swan  9 

A  w,  IV  way  I  go,  Oriana.  Oriana  89 

My  life  is  full  of  w  days.  My  life  is  full  1 

Which  some  green  Christmas  crams  with  w  bones.  Wan  Sculptor  14 

And  by  the  moon  the  reaper  w,  L.  of  Shalott  i  33 

give  me  grace  To  help  me  of  my  w  load.'  Mariana  in  the  S.  30 

With  w  sameness  in  the  rhymes.  Miller's  D.  70 

Breathing  like  one  that  hath  a  w  dream.  Lotos-Eaters  6 

but  evermore  Most  w  seem'd  the  sea,  w  the  oar,  W  the 

wandering  fields  of  barren  foam.  ..              41 

Resting  w  limbs  at  last  on  beds  of  asphodel.  „  C.  S.  125 

While  my  stiff  spine  can  hold  my  w  head,  St.  S.  Stylites  43 

Twice  ten  long  w  w  years  to  this,  „          90 

since  I  heard  him  make  reply  Is  many  a  w  hour  ;            Talking  Oak  26 

It  may  be  my  lord  is  w,  Locksley  Hall  53 

And  wherefore  did  he  go  this  w  way,  Enoch  Arden  296 

But  after  scaling  half  the  w  down,  ..          372 

and  beats  out  his  w  life.  ..           730 

Beating  it  in  upon  his  w  brain,  „           796 
all  about  the  fields  you  caught  His  w  daylong  chirping,      The  Brook  53 

Thro'  w  and  yet  ever  wearier  hours,  Aylmer's  Field  828 

For  many  w  moons  before  we  came,  Princess  Hi  319 

Panted  from  w  sides  '  King,  you  are  free  !  .,           w  24 

When  ill  and  w,  alone  and  cold.  The  Daisy  96 

And  o'er  a  w  sultry  land.  Will  17 

That  it  makes  one  w  to  hear.'  The  Islet  29 

With  w  steps  I  loiter  on,  In  Mem.  xxxviii  1 

She  is  w  of  dance  and  play.'  Maud  I  xxii  22 

However  w,  a  spark  of  will  Not  to  be  trampled  out.  „         II  ii  56 

That  has  been  in  a  w  world  my  one  thing  bright ;  ..       ///  vi  17 

and  thy  good  horse  And  thou  are  w  ;  Gareth  and  L.  1265 

My  lord  is  w  with  the  fight  before,  Geraint  and  E.  133 

Leave  me  to-night :  I  am  w  to  the  death.'  „              358 

I  am  w  of  her.'  Merlin  and  V.  838 

Now  w  of  my  service  and  devoir,  Lancelot  and  E.  118 

but  so  w  were  his  limbs,  that  he,  Pelleas  and  E.  513 

at  once  The  w  steed  of  Pelleas  floundering  „            574 

The  white  light  of  the  w  moon  above,  Lovers  Tale  i  640 

But  many  w  moons  I  lived  alone —  „              H  2 

Over  all  this  w  world  of  ours,  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  12 

But  at  length  we  began  to  be  w,  V.  of  Maeldune  91 

O  w  was  I  of  the  travel,  „             129 


Weary 


784 


Weed 


Weary  (adj.)  (continued)    There  was  the  Scotsman  W 

of  war.  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  36 

Old  and  w.  But  eager  to  follow,  Merlin  and  the  G.  100 

Good,  I  am  never  w  painting  you.  Romney's  R.  3 

O  w  one,  has  it  begun  ?  The  Dreamer  26 

Weary  (s)     And  the  wicked  cease  from  troubling,  and 

the  w  are  at  rest.  May  Queen,  Con.  60 

Let  the  w  be  comforted.  On  JiA.  Q.  Victoria  34 

Weary  (verb)     Nor  could  I  w,  heart  or  limb.  In  Mem.  xxv  9 

till  the  ear  Wearies  to  hear  it,  Lancelot  and  E.  898 

Wearying    And  w  in  a  land  of  sand  and  thorns.  Holy  Grail  420 

Gone  thy  tender-natured  mother,  w  to  be  left 

alone,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  57 

Weasel     the  thin  w  there  Follows  the  mouse,  Aylmer's  Field  852 

nail  me  like  a  w  on  a  grange  For  warning  :  Princess  ii  205 
deems  it  carrion  of  some  woodland  thing.  Or  shrew, 

or  w,  Gareth  and  L.  749 

Weather  (adj.)     huge  sea-castles  heaving  upon  the  w  bow.     The  Revenge  24 

Weather  (s)     Careless  both  of  wind  and  w,  Rosalind  7 

All  in  the  blue  unclouded  w  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  19 

And  it  was  windy  w.  (repeat)  The  Goose  4,  40 

There  must  be  stormy  w  ;  Will  Water.  54 

His  brothers  of  the  w  stood  Stock-still  „          135 

Will  bring  fair  w  yet  to  all  of  us.  Enoch  Arden  191 

Passing  with  the  w,  Window,  Spring  6 

water  began  to  heave  and  the  w  to  moan.  The  Revenge  113 

Nasty,  casselty  w  !  Church-warden,  etc.  2 

Weather-beaten     Denying  not  these  w-b  limbs  St.  S.  Stylites  19 

His  large  gray  eyes  and  w-b  face  Enoch  Arden  70 

Weathercock'd    Whose  blazing  wyvem  w  the  spire,  Aylmer's  Field  17 

Weather'd    many  a  rough  sea  had  he  w  in  her  !  Enoch  Arden  135 

Weave     There  she  w's  by  night  and  day  L.  of  Shalott  ii  1 

To  w  the  mirror's  magic  sights,  „              29 

Than  any  wreath  that  man  can  w  him.  Ode  on  Well.  277 

With  trembling  fingers  did  we  w  In  Mem.  xxx  1 

And  w  their  petty  cells  and  die.  „             1 12 

Again  at  Christmas  did  we  w  .,      Ixxviii  1 

She  meant  to  w  me  a  snare  Maud  I  vi  25 

Weaver    See  Cloud-weaver 

Weaveth     And  so  she  w  steadily,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  7 

Weaving     w  over  That  various  wilderness  Lover's  Tale  i  418 

Web     A  magic  w  with  colours  gay.  L.  of  Shalott  ii  2 

in  her  w  she  still  delights  To  weave  ,.               28 

She  left  the  w,  she  left  the  loom,  .,         Hi  37 

Out  flew  the  w  and  floated  wide ;  „               42 

and  takes  the  flood  With  swarthy  w's.  M.  d' Arthur  269 

Who  wove  coarse  w's  to  snare  her  purity,  Aylmer's  Field  780 

A  w  is  wov'n  across  the  sky  ;  In  Mem.  Hi  6 

A  cloth  of  roughest  w,  and  cast  it  down,  Gareth  and  L.  683 

Caught  in  a  great  old  tyrant  spider's  w.  Merlin  and  V.  259 

and  takes  the  flood  With  swarthy  w's.  Pass,  of  Arthur  437 

Wed    young  spirit  present  When  first  she  is  w  ;  Ode  to  Memory  74 

Came  two  young  lovers  lately  w  ;  L.  of  Shalott  ii  34 

And  I  was  young — too  young  to  w  :  Miller's  D.  141 

nor  w  Raw  Haste,  half-sister  to  Delay.  Love  thou  thy  land  95 

he  woo'd  and  w  A  labourer's  daughter,  Dora  39 

But  take  it — earnest  w  with  sport,  Day-Dm.,  Ep.  11 

They  two  will  w  the  morrow  mom  :  Lady  Clare  7 

'  To-morrow  lie  w's  with  me.'  .,          16 

We  two  will  w  to-morrow  mom,  „          87 

That  she  wore  when  she  was  w.'  L.  of  Burleigh  96 

In  the  dress  that  she  was  w  in,  „            99 

W  whom  thou  wilt,  but  I  am  sick  of  Time,  Co^ne  not,  when,  etc.  9 

It  is  long  before  you  w.  Vision  of  iSin  70 
So  these  were  w,  and  merrily  rang  the  bells, 

(repeat)  Enoch  Arden  80,  511 

To  w  the  man  so  dear  to  all  of  them  ,.                  484 

'  There  is  no  reason  why  we  should  not  w.'  „                 508 

So  you  will  w  me,  let  it  be  at  once.'  „                 510 

Merrily  rang  the  bells  and  they  were  w  „                 512 

when  the  days  drew  nigh  that  I  should  w.  Princess  i  41 

certain,  would  not  w.  „             50 

we  purposed  with  ourself  Never  to  w.  „         ii  61 

/  w  with  thee  !      /  bound  by  precontract  „      iv  541 

Besides,  the  woman  w  is  not  as  we,  „       v  462 


Wed  (continued)    She  needs  must  w  him  for  her  own 

good  name  ;  Princess  vii  74 

On  the  day  that  follow'd  the  day  she  was  w.  The  Islet  4 

Thought  leapt  out  to  w  with  Thought  Ere  Thought 

could  w  itself  with  Speech  ;  In  Mem.  xxiii  15 

But  lives  to  w  an  equal  mind  ;  „  Ixii  8 

And  talk  of  others  that  are  w,  ..        Con.  98 

Enforced  she  was  to  w  him  in  her  tears.  Corn,  of  Arthur  204 

he  needs  Must  w  that  other,  whom  no  man  desired,    Gareth  and  L.  109 
break  her  will,  and  make  her  w  with  him  :  ..  617 

whom  he  trusts  to  overthrow.  Then  w,  with  glory  : 

but  she  will  not  w  Save  whom  she  loveth,  „  621 

And  live  to  w  with  her  whom  first  you  love  :  But 

ere  you  w  with  any,  bring  your  bride,  Marr.  of  Geraint  227 

when  it  w's  with  manhood,  makes  a  man.  Geraint  and  E.  868 

'  Had  I  chosen  to  w,  I  had  been  wedded  earlier,       Lancelot  and  E.  934 
W  thou  our  Lady,  and  rule  over  us.  Holy  Grail  605 

but  could  I  w  her  Loving  the  other  ?  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  167 

and  w's  me  to  my  grave.  The  Flight  20 

not  Love  but  Hate  that  w's  a  bride  against  her  will ;  ,,  32 

W  him  !     I  will  not  w  him,  „  55 

when  Hubert  w's  in  you  The  heart  of  Love,  The  Ring  61 

So  w  thee  with  my  soul,  Prog,  of  Spring  92 

W  to  the  melody,  Sang  thro'  the  world  ;  Merlin  and  the  G.  97 

Wedded  (adj.  and  part.)    (See  also  New-wedded,  Proxy-wedded) 

So  that  my  vigour,  w  to  thy  blood,  (Enone  161 

Dear  is  the  memory  of  our  w  lives.  Lotos-  Eaters,  C.  S.  96 

Wherever  Thought  hath  w  Fact.  Love  thou  thy  land  52 

there  Unclasp'd  the  w  eagles  of  her  belt,  Godiva  43 

LuciLiA,  w  to  Lucretius,  found  Her  master  cold  ;  Lucretius  1 

but  she  says  (God  help  her)  she  was  w  to  a  fool ;  Princess  Hi  83 

I  had  been  w  wife,  I  knew  mankind,  „      vi  327 

So  Willy  and  I  were  w  :  I  wore  a  lilac  gown  ;  Grandmother  57 

Ay  is  the  song  of  the  w  spheres.  Window,  No  Answer  7 

Was  w  with  a  winsome  wife,  Ygeme  :  Com.  of  Arthur  188 

And  there  be  w  with  all  ceremony.  Marr.  of  Geraint  608 

They  twain  were  w  with  all  ceremony.  „  839 

Seeing  that  ye  are  w  to  a  man,  Geraint  and  E.  425 

I  had  been  w  earlier,  sweet  Elaine  :  Lancelot  and  E.  935 

And  one  had  w  her,  and  he  was  dead.  Holy  Grail  586 

until  himself  had  thought  He  loved  her  also,  w 

easily,  Last  Tournament  402 

'  He  has  w  her,'  she  said.  Not  said,  but  hiss'd  it :  „  619 

but  Lionel  and  the  girl  Were  w.  Lover's  Tale  iv  14 

'  get  them  w  '  would  he  say.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  57 

Wealth  with  his  wines  and  his  w  harlots  ;  Vastness  19 

'  I  take  thee  Muriel  for  my  w  wife  ' —  T/ie  Ring  377 

Wedded  (verb)     and  in  one  month  They  w  her  to  sixty 

thousand  pounds,  Edwin  Morris  126 

Who  w  with  a  nobleman  from  thence  :  Princess  i  77 

who  lay  Among  the  ashes  and  w  the  King's  son.'         Gareth  and  L.  904 
Says  that  Sir  Gareth  w  Lyonors,  „  1428 

Sir  Valence  w  with  an  outland  dame  :  Merlin  and  V.  714 

'  Queen,  she  would  not  be  content  Save  that  I  w 

her,  Lancelot  and  E.  1315 

More  specially  were  he,  she  w,  poor,  „  1321 

W  her  ?  Fought  in  her  father's  battles  ?  Last  Tournament  591 

And  all  this  throve  before  I  w  thee,  Guinevere  484 

Wedged     W  themselves  in  between  horse  and  horse.  Heavy  Brigade  22 

Wedlock     welded  in  one  love  Than  pairs  of  w  ;  Princess  vi  254 

The  boy  was  born  in  lo.  First  Quarrel  6 

Weeak  (week)     But  'e  reads  wonn  sarmin  a  w,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  28 

for  thou'll  be  twenty  to  w.  „  N.  S.  7 

Weed  (dress)     In  words,  like  w's,  I'll  wrap  me  o'er,  In  Mem.  v  9 

But  stagnates  in  the  w's  of  sloth  :  „  xxvii  11 

This  silken  rag,  this  beggar  woman's  w ;  Geraint  and  E.  680 

And  wears  the  leper's  w?  Happy  10 

Weed  (plant)     (See  also  Willow-weed)     creeping  mosses  and 

clambering  w's.  Dying  Swan  36 

At  least,  not  rotting  like  a  to,  Two  Voices  142 

Crouch'd  fawning  in  the  w.  CErwne  201 

A  spacious  garden  full  of  flowering  w's,       To ,  With  Pal.  of  Art  4 

Better  to  me  the  meanest  w  That  blows  Avt/phion  93 

Athwart  the  smoke  of  burning  w's.  Princess  vii  358 

The  people  said,  a  w.  The  Flower 


I 


Weed 


785 


Weigh'd 


Weed  (plant)  {continued)    again  the  people  Call  it  but 

a  w.  The  Flower  24 

Is  dim,  or  will  be  dini,  with  w's  :  In  Mem.  Ixxiii  10 

hurl'd  it  from  him  Among  the  forest  w's,  Balin  and  Bcdan  542 

'  I  once  was  looking  for  a  magic  w,  Merlin  and  V.  471 

Foregoing  all  her  sweetness,  like  a  w.  Holy  Grail  623 

Half  overtrailed  with  a  wanton  w,  Lover's  Tale  i  525 

Weed  (verb)     brace  Of  twins  may  w  her  of  her  folly.  Princess  v  464 

As  I  will  to  this  land  before  I  go.  Geraint  and  E.  907 

as  now  Men  w  the  white  horse  on  the  Berkshire  hills             „            936 

'  Weeded     W  and  worn  the  ancient  thatch  Mariana  7 

Weeding     Edym  has  done  it,  w  all  his  heart  Geraint  and  E.  906 

Weedy    the  wind  Still  westward,  and  the  w  seas —  Columbus  72 

Week    (See  also  Wee&k)     whole  w's  and  months,  and  early 

and  late.  The  Sisters  10 

For  many  w's  about  my  loins  I  wore  St.  S.  Stylites  63 

Enoch  would  hold  possession  for  a  w  :  Enoch  Arden  27 

There  yet  were  many  w's  before  she  sail'd,  „        124 

In  that  same  w  when  Annie  buried  it,  „        271 

the  w  Before  I  parted  with  poor  Edmund  ;  The  Brook  77 

They  lost  their  w's  ;  Princess,  Pro.  162 

harangue  The  fresh  arrivals  of  the  w  before  ;  „              H  96 

she  had  nursed  me  there  from  w  to  w  :  „           vii  239 

'  Here's  a  leg  for  a  babe  of  a  w  !  '  Grandmother  11 

And  the  parson  made  it  his  text  that  w,  „          29 

Willy  had  not  been  down  to  the  farm  for  a  w  and  a  day  :  „          33 

'  A  w  hence,  a  w  hence.'  Window,  When  9 

W  after  w  :  the  days  go  by  :  In  Mem.  xvii  7 

He  bears  the  burthen  of  the  w's  „     Ixxx  11 

Last  w  came  one  to  the  county  town,  Maud  /  a:  37 

He  may  stay  for  a  year  who  has  gone  f or  a  w  :  „        xvi  6 

But  in  the  w's  that  follow'd,  Gareth  and  L.  526 

And  all  that  w  was  old  Caerleon  gay,  Marr.  of  Geraint  837 

many  w's  a  troop  of  carrion  crows  Hung  Merlin  and  V.  598 
for  many  a  w  Hid  from  the  wide  world's  rumour      Lancelot  and  E.  521 

many  among  us  many  a  w  Fasted  and  pray'd  Holy  Grail  131 

once,  A  w  beyond,  while  walking  on  the  walls  Pelleas  and  E.  225 

after  this,  a  w  beyond,  again  She  call'd  them,  „            261 

Queen  abode  For  many  a  w,  unknoMTi,  Guinevere  147 

days  will  grow  to  w's,  the  w's  to  months,  „        624 

adding,  with  a  smile,  The  first  for  many  w's —  Lover's  Tale  iv  281 

'  I  ha'  six  w's'  work,  little  wife.  First  Quarrel  45 

I  ha'  six  w's'  work  in  Jercey  „  88 
then  two  w's — no  more — she  join'd.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  271 
for  ten  long  w's  I  tried  Your  table  of  Pythagoras,    To  E.  Fitzgerald  14 

all  but  yours — A  w  betwixt —  The  Ring  249 

But  after  ten  slow  w's  her  fix'd  intent,  „         345 

after  a  w — no  more — A  stranger  as  welcome  Charity  25 

Weep     {See  also  Blubber'd)     Prythee  w,  May  Lilian  !  (repeat)  Lilian  19,  25 
W  on  :  beyond  his  object  Love  can  last :  His  object 

lives  :  more  cause  to  w  have  I :  Wan  Sculptor  5 

For  while  the  tender  service  made  thee  w,  The  Bridesmaid  10 

Who'll  w  for  thy  deficiency  ?  Two  Voices  39 

Thou  canst  not  think,  but  thou  wilt  w.  „          51 

Nay,  nay,  you  must  not  w.                              May  Queen,  X.  Y's.  E.  35 

in  the  stream  the  long-leaved  flowers  w,  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  10 

I  will  not  tell  you  not  to  w.  .To  J.  S.  36 

'  W,  weeping  dulls  the  inward  pain.'  ,,       40 

Let  her  will  Be  done — to  w  or  not  to  w.  ,,44 

The  vapours  w  their  burthen  to  the  ground,  Tithonus  2 

to  the  tears  that  thou  wilt  w.  Locksley  Hall  82 

at  this  The  little  wife  would  w  for  company,  Enoch  Arden  34 

Yes,  as  the  dead  we  w  for  testify —  Aylmer's  Field  747 

Wiser  to  w  a  true  occasion  lost,  Princess  iv  68 

'  She  must  w  or  she  will  die.'  ..          vi  4 

kiss  her ;  take  her  hand,  she  w's  :  „           225 

For  this,  for  all,  we  w  our  thanks  to  thee  !  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  9 

I  cannot  w  for  Willy,  nor  can  I  w  for  the  rest ;  Grandmother  19 

For  Willy  I  cannot  "w,  „           67 

I  could  not  w — my  own  time  seem'd  so  near.  „           72 

But  how  can  I  w  for  Willy,  „         102 

Which  w  a  loss  for  ever  new,  In  Mem.  xiii  5 

Which  w  the  comrade  of  my  choice,  „                 9 

And  come,  whatever  loves  to  w,  „     xviii  11 

And  w  the  fulness  from  the  mind  :  „           xx  Q 


Weep  {continued)     At  night  she  w's, '  How  vain  am  I  !            In  Mem.  Ix  15 

So  mayst  thou  watch  me  where  I  w,  „        Ixiii  9 

He  loves  her  yet,  she  will  not  w,  „     xcvii  18 

not  as  one  that  w's  I  come  once  more  ;  „        cxix  2 

Shall  I  w  if  a  Poland  fall  ?  Maud  I  iv46 

Till  I  well  could  w  for  a  time  so  sordid  and  mean,  „           v  17 

And  the  white  rose  w's,'  She  is  late  ; '  „      xxii  64 

There  to  w,  and  w,  and  w  My  whole  soul  out  „     II  iv  97 

Yet  now  I  could  even  w  to  think  of  it ;  „           ■»  86 

a  light  shall  darken,  and  many  shall  w  ,,    Illvi  43 

strong  passion  in  her  made  her  w  Marr.  of  Geraint  110 

said  to  his  own  heart, '  She  w's  for  me ' :  (repeat)  Geraint  and  E.  587, 590 

God's  curse,  it  makes  me  mad  to  see  you  w.  „                  616 

were  I  dead  who  is  it  would  w  for  me  ?  „                   618 

she  did  not  w,  But  o'er  her  meek  eyes  „                  768 

When  sick  at  heart,  when  rather  we  should  w.  Balan  and  Balan  498 

If  the  wolf  spare  me,  w  my  life  away.  Merlin  and  V.  885 

burst  away  To  w  and  wail  in  secret ;  Lancelot  and  E.  1245 

'  Why  w  ye  ?  '     '  Lord,'  she  said,  Last  Tournament  494 

'  Yet  w  not  thou,  lest,  if  thy  mate  return,  „              499 

Sing,  and  unbind  my  heart  that  I  may  w.'  Guinevere  166 

'  0  pray  you,  noble  lady,  w  no  more  ;  „         184 

they  cannot  w  behind  a  cloud  :  „         207 

And  w  for  her  who  drew  him  to  his  doom.'  „        348 

What  had  she  done  to  w  ?     Why  should  she  w  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  736 

She  told  me  all  her  love  :  she  shall  not  w.  „              742 

When  I  beheld  her  w  so  ruefully ;  „              773 

I  felt  myself  ready  to  w  For  I  knew  not  what,  The  Wreck  51 

and  there  I  began  to  w,  „          93 

For  all  that  laugh,  and  all  that  iv  Ancient  Sage  187 

let  me  w  my  fill  once  more,  and  cry  myself  to  rest !  The  Flight  6 
Mother  w's  At  that  white  funeral  of  the  single  life.    To  Prin.  Beatrice  8 

Weepest    Wan  sculptor,  w  thou  to  take  the  cast  Wan  Sculptor  1 

Weeping     And  w  then  she  made  her  moan,  Mariana  in  the  S.  93 

And  watch'd  by  w  queens.  Palace  of  Art  108 

white-eyed  phantasms  w  tears  of  blood,  „            239 

'  Weep,  w  dulls  the  inward  pain.'  To  J.  8.  40 

or  fruits  and  cream  Served  in  the  w  elm  ;  Gardener's  D.  195 

w,  '  I  have  loved  thee  long.'  Locksley  Hall  30 

Bitterly  w  I  tum'd  away  :  (repeat)  Edward  Gray  6,  34 

W,  w  late  and  early,  L.  of  Burleigh  89 

and  departed  w  for  him  ;  Enoch  Arden  246 

Then  Annie  w  answer'd  '  I  am  bound.'  „           451 

later  in  the  night  Had  come  on  Psyche  w  :  Princess  v  50 

With  a  nation  w,  and  breaking  on  my  rest  ?  Ode  on  Well.  82 

Within  was  w  for  thee  :  G.  of  Swainston  2 

And  linger  w  on  the  marge,  In  Mem.  xii  12 

To  hear  her  w  by  his  grave  ?  „         xxxi  4t 

A  mother  w,  and  I  hear  her  say,  Com.  of  Arthur  334 
woman  w,  '  Nay,  my  lord.  The  field  was  pleasant        Gareth  and  L.  341 

W  for  some  gay  knight  in  Arthur's  hall.'  Marr.  of  Geraint  118 

A  woman  w  for  her  murder'd  mate  Geraint  and  E.  522 
suddenly  she  took  To  bitter  w  like  a  beaten  child, 

A  long,  long  w,  not  consolable.  Merlin  and  V.  855 

one  lone  woman,  w  near  a  cross,  Stay'd  him.  Last  Tournament  493 

sat  There  in  the  holy  house  at  Almesbury  W,  Guinevere  3 

There  kiss'd,  and  parted  w  :  „      125 

she  look'd  and  saw  The  novice,  w,  „      664 

beheld  the  holy  nuns  All  round  her,  w  ;  „      667 

he  was  loud  in  w  and  in  praise  Of  her,  Lover's  Tale  ii  87 

He  left  us  w  in  the  woods  ;  The  Flight  37 

and  w  scarce  could  see  ;  Happy  54 

Weigh    before  the  heavy  clod  W's  on  me,  Supp.  Confessions  185 

lightly  w's  With  thee  unto  the  love  Ode  to  Memory  90 

W  heavy  on  my  eyelids  :  let  me  die.  (Enone  244 

flash  the  lightnings,  w  the  Sun.  Locksley  Hall  186 

w  Whether  thou  wilt  not  with  thy  damsel  Gareth  and  L.  880 

w  your  sorrows  with  our  lord  the  King's,  Guinevere  191 

Weigh'd     Why  are  we  w  upon  with  heaviness.  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  12 

heavy  mist  of  tears,  that  w  Upon  my  brain.  Love  and  Duly  43 

But  a  trouble  w  upon  her,  L.  of  Burleigh  77 

why,  the  causes  w.  Fatherly  fears—  Princess  v  215 

w  the  necks  Of  dragons  clinging  to  the  crazy  walls.  Holy  Grail  346 

while  I  w  thy  heart  with  one  Too  wholly  true  Guinevere  540 

the  effect  w  seas  upon  my  head               [  Lover's  Tale  i  660 

3    D 


Weigh'd 


786 


WeU 


'd  {contintud)    The  whole  land  w  him  down  as 

jEtna  does  Lover's  TaU  iv  17 

— his  loss  W  on  him  ret —  „  275 

single  piece  W  nig^  foiir  thousand  Castillanos — so  They 

tell  me — w  him  down  into  the  abysm —  Columbus  136 

Wei^ieat    Thou  v  heavy  on  the  heart  within,  (Enoiu  243 

Weit^iiiig    And  w  find  them  less  ;  Guimaxre  192 

Weigbt    O  happy  earth,  bow  canst  thou  bear  my  w  ?  (Enont  237 

Make  broad  thy  shoulders  to  receive  my  ic,  M.  d'Arihur  164 

will  have  tc  to  drag  thee  down.  LtxksUy  Hall  48 

This  IT  and  size,  t^  heart  and  eyes,  Sir  Galahad  71 

Is  it  the  w  of  that  half-crown.  Will  Water.  155 

Appraised  his  w  and  fondled  father-like,  Enoeh  Arden.  154 

dead  w  of  the  dead  leaf  bore  it  down  :  „  678 

The  tr  of  all  the  hopes  of  half  the  world,  Primetts  tv  184 

Caryatids,  lifted  up  A  tr  of  «nblem,  ^  202 

theu-  heavy  hands.  The  tc  of  destiny  :  -,  554 

When  the  man  wants  to,  the  woman  takes  it  up,  ^       v  444 

This  nightmare  w  of  gratitude,  -.      vi  300 

Then  us  they  lifted  up,  dead  Hi's,  348 

Once  the  tc  and  fate  of  Europe  bung.  Ode  o»  Well.  240 

these  solid  stars,  this  v>  of  body  and  limb,  Hi^.  Pantheism  5 

A  tc  of  nerves  without  a  mind,  In  Mem.  xii  1 

I  loved  the  le  I  had  to  bear,  .,         xxt  7 

And  falling  with  my  tc  of  cares  „  'f.?^* 

Can  haxi%  no  tc  upon  my  heart  ^       Ixiii  3 

wearing  all  that  tc  Of  learning  lightly  Con.  39 

By  a  Muffled  step,  by  a  dead  w  trail'd,  Maud  /  1 14 

The  l^ter  by  the  l<»s  of  his  tc  ;  „        xvi  2 

By  the  loss  of  that  dead  tc,  -      xix  99 

Whoi  tc  is  added  only  grain  by  grain,  Marr.  of  Geraini  526 

Make  broad  thy  shoiilders  to  receive  my  to,  Pass,  of  Arthur  332 

Tte  w  as  if  of  age  upon  my  limbs.  Lover's  TaU  i  125 

her  tc  Shrank  in  my  grasp,  n  ii  202 

commission  one  of  tc  and  worth  To  judge  Columbus  124 

V  of  war  Rides  on  those  ringing  axles  I  Tiresias  92 

noise  of  f?tlling  to'«  that  never  feU,  The  Sing  410 

Less  sc  now  for  the  ladder-of-heaven  Bif  an  Evolution.  12 

and  the  «c  that  dragged  at  my  band  ;  Bandies  Death  39 

WaitfltBd    cognizance  on  shield  W  it  down,  Balin  and  Balan  2^5 

WailJlUer    his  mind  Half  buried  in  some  tc  argument,  Lucretius  9 

Weild     With  a  tc  bright  eye,  sweating  and  trembling,      Aylmefs  Field  585 
Myself  too  had  tc  seizures.  Heaven  knows  what :  Princess  i  14 

■  what,  if  these  tc  seizures  come  Upon  you  82 

stranse  seizure  came  Upon  me,  the  to  vision  of  our  house :        ..   Hi  184 
came  On  a  sudden  the  tc  seizure  and  the  doubt :  ..    iv  560 

And  like  a  flash  the  to  affection  came :  ^.j'~^'^ 

Deeper  than  those  tc  doubts  could  reach  me,  vii  51 

Were  Arthur's  wars  in  tc  devices  done,  Gareth  and  L.  220 

past  The  tc  white  gate,  and  paused  without,  „  663 

That  tc  yell,  Unearthlier  than  all  shriek  of  bird       Balin  and  Balan  544 
Moreover,  that  tc  legend  of  his  birth.  Last  Tournament  669 

Then,  ere  that  last  to  battle  in  the  west.  Pass,  of  Arthur  29 

Like  ttus  last,  dim,  tc  battle  of  the  west.  „  94 

And  therewithal  came  on  him  the  w  rhyme,  ,.  444 

And  something  tr  and  wild  about  it  all :  Lover's  TaU  iv  22i 

W  Titan  by  thy  winter  weight  of  years  To  Victor  Hugo  7 

since  The  key  to  that  tc  casket,  which  for  thee  Ancient  Sage  254 

then  laugh'd  '  the  ring  is  tc.'     And  tc  and  worn  and 

wizard-like  was  he.     '  Why  ic  ?  '  I  ask'd  him  ;  The  Ring  195 

H'  whispers,  bells  that  rang  without  a  hand,  „       411 

Wdrdly-Kalptlired     And  past  beneath  the  v-s  gates       Lancelot  and  E.  844 

Wdocme  (inter,  and  adj.)    Should  come  most  tc,  seeing  men,       (Enone  129 

Turn  Voices  ^11 

Vision  of  Sin  VIZ 

D.  of  F.  Women  199 

The  Brook '£Sb 

Aylmer's  Fidd  114 

Lucretius  159 

In  Mem.  xxix  5 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  6 

Holy  GraU  425 

Sitters  (£.  and  E.)  197 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  1 

Churdt^warden,  etc.  36 


Each  enterd  like  a  ic  guest 

H',  fellow-citizens. 

From  Mizpeh's  towerd  gate  with  tc  l^t, 

But  she — you  will  be  to— O,  come  in  ! ' 

lastly  there  At  Christmas ;  ever  tc  at  the  Hall, 

strangers  at  my  hearth  Not  tc. 

Which  brings  no  more  a  tc  guest 

And  to  Buflsian  flower,  apeople's  pride, 

Cried  to  me  climbing, '  W,  Peicivale  ! 

Cold,  but  as  w  as  free  airs  of  heaven 

W,  w  with  one  voice  ! 

aaya  to  tha  *  keeap  'em,  an'  w ' 


WekxHne  (inter,  aal  aii.)  (eontmued) 

.Satan — 
Wdcome  (8)     And  sweet  diaU  your  «o  be : 
A  tc  mix'd  with  sie^. 
Farewell,  like  endkss  tc,  lived  and  died, 
with  a  frolic  to  took  The  thimder  and  the  stmshine. 
To  greet  his  hearty  to  heartily ; 
'  We  give  you  tc  :  not  without  redotmd 
glowing  full-faced  tc,  she  Began  to  address  us. 
Less  tc  find  among  us,  if  you  came  Among  us, 
W,  farewell,  and  tc  for  the  year  To  follow  : 

0  give  him  to,  this  is  he  Worthy 
all  of  us  Danes  in  our  to  of  thee. 
We  are  each  all  Dane  in  our  tc  of  thee. 
Yet  one  lay-hearth  would  give  you  tc 
lliey  should  speak  to  me  not  without  a  tc, 
Beceived  and  gave  him  to  there ; 
An  iron  tc  wh«i  they  rise : 
means  of  goodly  tc,  flesh  and  wine. 
Embraced  her  with  all  tc  as  a  frioid. 
In  the  mid-warmth  of  tc  and  graspt  hand. 
Sweet-voiced,  a  song  of  »c. 
Witness  their  flowery  tc. 

1  bid  the  stranger  tc. 
roar  An  ocean-sounding  tc  to  one  knight, 
and  loud  leagues  of  man  And  tc  ! 
a  light  Of  smiling  tc  round  her  lips — 
and  a  noise  of  tc  at  the  doors — 
made  the  ihymes.  That  miss'd  his  liviiig  ic, 
and  flash'd  into  frolic  of  song  And  w ; 
where  tte  loyal  bells  Clash  tc — 
Mant,  many  tc'*,  February  fair-maid,  (repeat) 

Welcome  (verb)     W  her,  thunders  of  fort  and  of  fleet ! 
W  her,  thundering  cheer  of  the  street  I     W  her, 
all  things  youthful  and  sweet, 
W  her,  to  her,  all  that  is  ours  ! 
Roar  as  the  sea  when  he  tc'*  the  land.  And  tc  her, 

ic  the  land's  desire, 
-^d  all  the  gentle  court  will  tc  me. 
Up  leaps  the  lark,  gone  wild  to  tc  her. 

Welcomed     Not  beat  him  back,  but  tc  him 

Wdded     Two  women  faster  tc  in  one  love 
'  Sons,  be  tc  each  and  all. 

Welfare    How  much  their  tc  is  a  passion  to  us 
■  A  to  in  thine  eye  reproves  Oiii  fear 
In  your  tc  we  rejoice,  Open.  I.  and  C.  Edub.  2 

Wdl  (adj.  and  adv.)     Nor  would  I  now  be  tc,  mother.      May  Queen,  Con.  19 
A  pretty  face  is  tc,  and  this  is  tc,  Etbcin  Morris  45 

'Tis  to  ;  'tis  something  ;  we  may  stand  In  Mem.  xviii  1 

O  true  and  tried,  so  to  and  long,  „         Con.  1 

O  father !  O  God  !  was  it  to  ?—  Maud  I  i  6 

Let  all  be  to,  be  to.  ..  .m'ti  85 

He  rested  tc  content  that  all  was  tc.  Geraimt  and  E.  952 

Speak,  Lancelot,  thou  art  sil«it :  is  it  tc  ?  '  Last  Tournament  107 

Sir  Lancelot  answer'd,  '  It  is  to :  «  108 

Else,  for  the  King  has  will'd  it,  it  is  to.'  „  111 

King  Tum'd  to  him  saying,  "  Is  it  thai  so  tc  ?  ,.  114 

Election,  Election  and  Reprobation — ^it's  all  very  tc.  Rizpah  73 

but  I  be  maain  glad  to  seea  tha  sa  'arty  an'  k.  yorth.  Cobbler  2 

an'  I  knaws,  as  knaws  tha  sa  tc,  .,  &5 

And,  Robby,  I  niver  'a  liked  tha  sa  to.  Spinster's  S's.  29 

or  I  mowt  'a  liked  tha  sa  to.  ..42 

is  it  to  to  wish  you  joy  ?     Is  it  «c  that  while  we 

range  with  Science,  LoeksUy  II..  Sixty 

all's  tc  that  ends  tc,  (repeat)  The  Dreamer  lit.  23,  27, 

Wdl  (!)    (See  also  CuOe-wdl,  Droppiog-weDs)    As  a  Naiad  in 


A  stranger  as  tc  as 

Charity  26 

Sea- Fairies  Zl 

Talking  Oak  212 

Love  and  Duty  66 

Ulysses  47 

Enodi  Arden  ZSO 

Princess  ii  4S 

183 

„      u354 

..   C(m.S6 

Ode  on  WeU.  92 

IT.  to  Alexandra  4 

33 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  II 

Hendeoasyllabies  U 

In  Mem.  Ixxxt  2 

n  XC 

Marr.  of  Geraint  Z6', 

834 

Gernint  and  E.  280 

Balin  and  Balan  86 

145 

Merlin  and  T.  270 

Last  Tournament  168 

To  the  Queen  ii  10 

Lovers  TaU  Hi  46 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  149 

rtr«»a*197 

Demeter  and  P.  13 

The  Bing4SS 

Snovdrop  1,  9 


W.  to  AUxanim  6 
13 

24 

Lanedol  and  E.  1060 

Prog,  of  Spring  14 

Marr.  of  Geraini  748 

Princess  vi  253 

Oven.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  36 

Princess  Hi  281 

Holy  Grail  126 


'jpen. 


a  tc,  Looking  at  the  set  of  day. 
(x)me  from  the  tc'*  where  he  did  lie. 
Fresh  as  the  foam,  new-bathed  in  Paphian  ic**, 
rope  that  haled  the  buckets  from  the  tc. 
Fairer  than  Rachel  by  the  palmy  tc, 
fawn  Came  flying  while  you  sat  beside  the  er  ? 
Or  by  denial  flush  her  babbling  tc'« 
Than  if  with  thee  the  roaring  tc'* 
Or  dive  below  the  to'*  of  Death  ? 


42 

1 


Addime 

Ttco  Voices 

(Enone  lib 

St.  S.  Stifiites  64 

Aylmer's  Fidd  679 

Princess  ii  271 

„       1)334 

In  Mem.  x  17 

cm»8 


1 


Wen 

WiB  W  {eoniimued)    why  sat  je  by  the  «  ? ' 
Mfithnnght  that  if  we  sat  beside  the  v, 
boUom  oltbew.  Where  Truth  is  hidden. 
And  when  we  halted  at  that  other  v, 
UntU  they  ranisb'd  by  the  fairv  tc 
and  ay  '  Lau^  little  w  ! ' 
Kaze  by  the  laetdog  biook  or  silent  w. 
yet  one  Ottering  foot  disturb'd  The  hicid  w : 
each,  his  um  In  his  own  w,  draw  solace 
baeket  from  the  it  Along  the  line, 

WeO  (TOb)     Ancient  founts  of  inspiration  w  thro'  all  my 


JS7 


Went 


Balin  and  Balan  50 

65 

J/erfm  and  V.  47 

280 

428 

431 

G*i»ecere  4030 

Tiresias^ 

89 

To  Mary  Bm^e  39 


fancy  yet. 
Wfll  Uttmun'i'd     A  man  <A  v-a  frame. 
WeU-belored    We  leave  the  w-6  place 
WeU-content     Philip  rested  with  her  w^ ; 
Well-contented    Came  voices  (rf  the  v-«  doves. 
Well-gottes    Your  father  has  wealth  w-^. 
Well-beads    From  old  te-k  of  haunted  rflls, 
WeU-kDOwn     Not  by  the  »-i  stream  and  rustic  spire. 

fr  :a  prime  youth  W-h  well-ioved. 
WeU-knred     W-l  of  me,  discerning  to  fulfil 

from  prime  youth  Well-known  »-/. 
WeO-iaoalded    quick  brunette,  ic-w,  falcon-eyed, 
Wdl-oird    I  was  courteous,  every  phrase  »-«, 
Wdl>|ieMed    pass,  IF-p,  from  room  to  room. 

and  hrane  «-^  we  went. 
Wefl-fOetind    An  eye  w-ja  in  nature. 
Well  rtiitktu    cijing, '  W-»,  kitchm-knave ! ' 
WeD-to-do    Annie — for  I  am  rich  and  v-f-^ 

I  arn  vc-i-d — no  kin,  no  care, 
WeJl-won    Far-famed  for  w-io  enterprise, 
WeD-wOBD     Down  which  a  v-w  pathway  ootnted  xx 
WeMi    Had  he  God's  word  in  IF  He  m^t  be  bbdl 


Lod^Oey  Haai88 

Ode  on  Wdl.  74 

In  Mem.  cii  1 

Enoch  Arden  376 

Gardener's  D.  89 

Mttud  I  it)  19, 

EJeanoreie 

The  Brook  188 

Lorers  Tale  it  176 

Ulysses  35 

Later  s  Tale  ii  176 

Prineess  ii  106 

„       »n  133 

Palaee  of  Art  56 

Prineess,  Con.  118 

Mamd  I  ivdS 

Gareth  and  L.  970 

Eno(A  Arden  311 

418 

.£^0^22 

Gardener's  D.  109 

\kt:  Sir  J.  Oldeastle  22 


w^S^    '^?'-*«*^?*°  Harried  the  W,  Batt.  of  BrUa»bu»k^ 

WaUK    Happier  are  those  that  v  m  thdr  sin,  Hali  fJroil  77n 

Weterd    i^eealsofn^mUn'i)    Down  »ihro' the  ««*»  G««^  .70 


Lover's  Tale  ii  206 

Batt.  of  Brunanburh  48 

Pr«No!Mt226 

Spinster's  S's.  25 

Lancelot  and  E.  412 

Sufy>.  Confessions  141 


iark  ever  and  ever. 
Weltering     Warriors  over  the  W  waters 
Wench    plump-ann'd  Ostleress  and  a  staUe  w 

\V:.e*r  the  poor  w  diowndid  heiaen. 
Wending    thither  w  there  that  ni^t  they  bode. 
Went      .See  also  Wiat.)    When  I  »  forth  in  quest 

r^  er  the  weary  wmd  ic  on.  And  took  the  reed-tops  as  it  w.  Dying  Swan  9 
rhe  bitter  arrow  w  aside,  TLr—  q" 

The  false,  false  arrowwiide,  Urutnai 

Yet  in  the  whirling  ^i^witif  as  we  «c, 
funeral,  with  phnnes  and  lights  And  miKic,  w  to 

Camelot: 
And  forth  into  the  fields  I  w, 
-iOng.  That  w  and  came  a  thiHwand  times. 
.\nd  down  I  *r  to  fetch  my  bride : 
^^lien.  arm  in  arm,  we  «  aloi^. 
From  my  swift  blmid  that  w  and  came 
all  my  heart  (F  forth  to  embrace  him 
dbe<ued :  she  w  to  burning  flame : 
For  pastime,  ere  you  w  to  town. 
The  Messed  music  w  that  way  my  soul 
she  w  along  From  MizpA's  towa'd  gate 
■  And  I  «c  moumiiK, '  No  fair  Hebrew  boy 
One  K,  who  never  bth  returned. 
>e  Sir  Bediverc  the  second  time  Across  the  ridge. 
And  liahth-  w  the  other  to  the  King. 
I  and  Eustace  from  the  dty  w 
-ind  up  we  rose,  and  on  the  spur  we  v. 
the  day  we  «  To  see  her. 
And  on  we  « ;  but  ere  an  hour  had  pass'd, 
AK  happy  diade— and  stiU  w  wavera^  down, 
•^  home  we  w,  and  all  the  liveln^  my 
-■,  '■■',-nc  T  «,  bat  could  not  ale^  for  joy, 

ioms  on  me  as  they  w 

^ait  brows  «  by, 
oays  IC  on,  and  there  was  bom  a  boy  To  William : 


Tliien  Dora  w  to  Marf. 

Doca  took  the  child,  and  tr  her  way 


•^      r  "39 

The  form,  the  form  5 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  32 

Two  Voices  4^ 

Miner's  D.  72 

145 

163 

Fatima  16 

(EnoneeZ 

The  Sisters  7 

X.  C.  V.  de  Vere  4 

May  Queen,  Con.  42 

D.  of  F.  Women  198 

213 

To  J.  S.  20 

M.  d^ Arthur  82 

147 

Gardener's  D.  2 

32 

75 

107 

132 

167 

174 

187 

245 

Z>orffl48 

..    56 

^     71 


Went  (continued)     Then  Dora  \c  to  Mary's  house.  Bora  110 

as  years  W  forward,  Marv  took  another  mate  •  171 
and  how  The  races  tc ,  and  who  would  rent  the  hall :      Audley  Court  31 

And  sick  of  home  «:  overs^  for  change.  Walk,  to  the  MaU  24 

Itc  and  came ;  Her  voice  fled  always  EdH>in  Morris  66 

ishe  to— and  m  one  month  They  wedded  her  i^ 

^my  brewer's  soul  W  by  me,  like  a  stork :  Talking  Oak  56 

And  on  the  roof  she  v,  ^        jfl 

from  yonder  ivied  casement,  ere  I  tc  to  rest,  LodcsUu  Hall  7 

1  w  thro  many  wayward  moods  Daxi-Dm    Pro  6 

far  across  the  hills  they  w  In  that  new  world  De«ari  ? 

she  «:  With  aU  her  bees  behind  her :  "  Amvl^'d 

Go,  therefore,  thou  !  thv  betters  w  WUlWauTl^ 

;  Who  was  this  that  tr  from  thee  ?  '  LadvcZreU 

She  «:  by  dale,  and  she  ur  by  down,  J^y  Clare  M 

Stately,  lightly,  «  she  Norward,  The  Captain  35 

Crashing  w  the  boom,  ^•'v'um  o^ 

And  waves  of  shadow  k  over  the  wheat,  PoefsSona  4 

great  and  small,  W  nutting  to  the  hazels.  Eno<A  Arden  64: 

caught  His  bundle,  waved  his  hand,  and  ic  his  way.  238 

therefore  tc.  Past  thro'  the  solitary  room  "          976 

For  was  not  Annie  with  them  ?  and  thev  ir.  "           371 

While  yet  she  tc  about  her  household  ways,  "          453 

sunny  and  rainy  seasons  came  and  vi       '  "          g23 

Down  to  the  pool  and  narrow  wharf  he  ir,  "           ggn 

All  down  the  long  and  narrow  street  he  v  ''           795 

For  in  I  ic,  and  call'd  old  Philip  out  The  Brook  120 

lanes  Of  his  wheat-suburb,  babbling  as  he  w.  123 

shook  the  house,  and  like  a  storm  he  tr.  Aylmer's  Field  216 

crashing  with  long  echoes  thro'  the  land,  W  Leolin  ;  „            339 

So  L«oIin  tc ;  and  as  we  task  ourselves                      '  "^            432 

ic  Hating  his  own  lean  heart  and  miserable.  "            525 

But  passionately  restless  came  and  tc,  ^            545 

Then  AveriH  w  and  gazed  upon  his  death.  "            ggo 

Whose  shame  is  that,  if  he  te  hence  with  shame  ^  "            Tig 

The  diiklless  mother  «c  to  seek  her  chiH :  "            g^S 

^t,  woke  and  tc  the  next,  The  Sabbath,  Sed^ Dreams  18 

W  further,  fool !  and  trusted  him  with  all,  75 

and  with  Grod-bless-you  tc.  "        jgQ 

for  I  had  one  That  altogether  vi  to  music  ?  "        204 

W  both  to  make  your  dream  :  "        254 

We  tc  (I  kept  the  book  and  had  my  finger  in  it)  Prineess  Pro  52 

so  that  sport  W  hand  in  hand  with  Science :  '        '  80 

a  Voice  W  with  it, '  Follow,  follow,  "           ,•  jgo 

As  thro'  the  land  at  eve  we  tc,  "              » 1 

(for  .still  My  mother  tc  revolving  on  the  word)  "           m  54 

Up  te  the  hush'd  amaze  of  hand  and  eye.  "              238 

Then  summon'd  to  the  porch  we  tp.  "              178 

This  tc  by  As  strangely  as  it  came,  "          {„  5^ 

three  thnes  he  « :  The  first,  he  blew  and  blew,  ^           ,,335 

With  message  and  defiance,  tp  and  came ;  ^              379 

there  tc  up  a  great  cry.  The  Prince  is  slain.  "            pj  25 

by  them  te  The  enamourd  air  sibling,  ^                 70 

W  sorrowing  in  a  pause  I  dared  not  break  ;  ^        ^{  249 

So  I  and  some  tc  out  to  these :  "       Coti  ^ 

But  we  tc  back  to  the  Abbey,  "              i^ 

and  home  well-pleased  we  tc.  "               jig 
told  us  all  That  England's  honest  censure  tp  too  far ;      Thkrd  of  Fd>  2 

I  wonder  he  tc  so  young.  Grandmother  14 

made  me  a  mocking  curtsey  and  tp.  4g 

For  Harry  tc  at  sixty,  aa 
An'  I  tc  wheer  munny  war  :                                        Jf  .  Parmer, "  V.  S  21 

To  and  fro  they  tc  Thro'  my  gardoi-bower.  The  Flower  5 

The  Pnest  IP  out  by  heath  and  hill;  The  Victim  29 

And  I  tp  down  mto  the  quay,  /„  j/^   ^  3 

rrom  April  on  to  April  tc,  ^^        ^^,-  7 

In  which  we  tc  thro  summer  France.  '^        /^^  4 

And  bats  tc  roimd  in  fragrant  skies,  "         jr—  a 

in  the  house  light  after  light  W  out,  ^              20 

On  that  last  n^t  before  we  tc  "         _•.-,- 1 

Up  the  side  I  IP,  And  fen  in  silence  "             43 

they  tp  and  came.  Remade  the  blood  "     Con  10 

I  know  the  way  she  tc  Maud  I  xii  21 

And  so  tiiat  he  find  what  he  tc  to  seek,  „          ^3 

And  the  soul  (rf  the  rose  to  into  my  blood,  "^      xxii  33 


Went 


788 


Wept 


Went  {continued)     as  here  and  there  that  war  W 

swaying  ;  Com.  of  Arthur  107 

Gawain  w,  and  breaking  into  song  Sprang  out,  „            320 

'  How  he  w  down,'  said  Gareth,  '  as  a  false  knight  Gareth  and  L.  5 

Gareth  w,  and  hovering  round  her  chair  ,,             33 

Before  the  wakeful  mother  heard  him,  w.  ,.          180 

Then  those  who  w  with  Gareth  were  amazed,  „           197 

W  sliding  down  so  easily,  and  fell,     *  ,.         1224 

a  page  Who  came  and  w,  and  still  reported  ,.        1338 

O  Prince,  I  w  for  Lancelot  first,  „        1343 

W  sweating  underneath  a  sack  of  corn,  Marr.  of  Geraint  263 

And  after  w  her  way  across  the  bridge,  „              383 

lords  and  ladies  of  the  high  court  w  „               662 

W  Yniol  thro'  the  town,  „               693 

Yniol  with  that  hard  message  w ;  „               763 

Then  she  w  back  some  paces  of  return,  Geraint  and  E.  70 

'  Yea,  my  kind  lord,'  said  the  glad  youth,  and  w,  „            241 

And  told  them  of  a  chamber,  and  they  w  ;  „             261 

and  then  W  slipping  down  horrible  precipices,  „            379 

W  Enid  with  her  sullen  follower  on.  „             440 

'  Enough,'  he  said,  '  I  follow,'  and  they  w.  „            816 

But  w  apart  with  Edyrn,  whom  he  held  „             881 

blameless  King  w  forth  and  cast  his  eyes  „             932 

he  arm'd  himself  and  w,  Balin  and  Balan  22 

So  Balan  wam'd,  and  w ;  Balin  remain'd :  „             153 

Fixt  in  her  will,  and  so  the  seasons  w.  Merlin  and  V.  188 

that  old  man  W  back  to  his  old  wild,  „             649 

two  fair  babes,  and  w  to  distant  lands ;  „            707 

Sir  Lancelot  w  ambassador,  at  first,  „            774 

her  hand  half-clench'd  W  faltering  sideways  downward         „  850 

Her  eyes  and  neck  glittering  w  and  came ;  „             960 

King  Glanced  first  at  him,  then  her,  and  w  his  way.  Lancelot  and  E.  95 

That  iflw  and  if  I  fought  and  won  it  „             216 

So  all  in  wrath  he  got  to  horse  and  w  ;  „            563 

men  w  down  before  his  spear  at  a  touch,  „            678 

So  that  he  w  sore  wounded  from  the  field :  „            600 

and  w  To  all  the  winds  ?  '  ,,657 

and  carolling  as  he  w  A  true-love  ballad,  „            704 

the  simple  maid  W  half  the  night  repeating,  „             899 

Lancelot,  who  coldly  w,  nor  bad  me  one  :  „           1057 

Oar'd  by  the  dumb,  w  upward  with  the  flood —  „           1154 

slowly  w  The  mai-shall'd  Order  of  their  Table  Round,  „  1331 

....  .......  ^  jgg^ 

Holy  Grail  50 
213 
418 
467 
488 
583 
785 
890 


he  w.  And  at  the  inrunning  of  a  little  brook 
when  the  dead  W  wandering  o'er  Moriah — 
King  arose  and  w  To  smoke  the  scandalous  hive 
And  up  I  w  and  touch'd  him,  and  he,  too. 
That  smote  itself  into  the  bread,  and  w  ; 
Then,  when  the  day  began  to  wane,  we  w. 
all  my  heart  W  after  her  with  longing  : 
And  forth  I  w,  and  while  I  yearn'd  and  strove 
To  those  who  w  upon  the  Holy  Quest, 
'  Lead  then,'  she  said  ;  and  thro'  the  woods  they  w.  Pelleas  and  E.  108 

Glanced  down  upon  her,  tum'd  and  w  her  way.  „            185 

they  w,  And  Pelleas  overthrew  them  one  by  one  ;  „            229 

v)  on,  and  found.  Here  too,  all  hush'd  below  „            423 

so  w  back,  and  seeing  them  yet  in  sleep  „            445 

hill  and  wood  W  ever  streaming  by  him  „            548 
and  shower  and  shorn  plume  W  down  it.                Last  Tournament  156 

New  loves  are  sweet  as  those  that  w  before  :  „              280 

name  W  wandering  somewhere  darkling  in  his  mind.  „              457 

hence  he  w  To-day  for  three  days'  hunting —  „              529 

I  sware,  Being  amazed :  but  this  w  by —  „              674 

sharply  smote  his  knees,  and  smiled,  and  w  :  Guinevere  47 

grim  faces  came  and  w  Before  her,  „        70 

W  slipping  back  upon  the  golden  days  ,,       380 

W  on  in  passionate  utterance  :  ,,611 
and  past  his  ear  W  shrilling,  '  Hollow,  hollow            Pass,  of  Arthur  33 

w  Sir  Bedevere  the  second  time  Across  the  ridge,  „            250 

And  lightly  w  the  other  to  the  King.  „            315 
A  woful  man  (for  so  the  story  w)                                  Lover's  Tale  i  379 

those  that  w  with  me.  And  those  that  held  „           Hi  15 

The  fancy  stirr'd  him  so  He  rose  and  w,  „           iv  52 

The  light  was  but  a  flash,  and  w  again.  „                55 

but  warming  a^  he  w,  Glanced  at  the  point  of  law,  „              275 
And  years  w  over  till  I  that  was  little                             First  Quarrel  27 


First  Quarrel  44 

84 

92 

Rizfah  23 

The  Revenge  50 

56 

70 

118 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  228 

Village  Wife  76 


Went  {continued)     Harry  w  over  the  Solent  to  see  if  work 
an'  he  turn'd  his  face  an'  he  w. 
the  boat  w  down  that  night —  (repeat) 
I  kiss'd  my  boy  in  the  prison,  before  he  w  out  to  die. 
she  bethought  herself  and  w 
the  sun  w  down,  and  the  stars  came  out 
the  night  w  down,  and  the  sun  smiled 
Revenge  herself  w  down  by  the  island  crags 
Far  off  we  w.     My  God,  I  would  not  live 
Not  thaw  ya  w  fur  to  raake  out  Hell 
es  soon  es  they  w  awaay,  Fur,  lawks  !  'ow  I  cried 

when  they  w,  „         110 
So  he  w.    And  we  past  to  this  ward                      In  the  Child.  Hosp.  27 

and  we  w  to  see  to  the  child.  „  68 
And  round  it  we  w,  and  thro'  it,  V.  of  Maeldune  19 
W  to  his  own  in  his  own  West-Saxon-land,        Batt.  of  Brunanburh  103 

And  the  storm  w  roaring  above  us.  The  Wreck  106 

the  storm  and  the  days  w  by,  but  I  knew  no  more—  „        111 

stars  w  down  across  the  gleaming  pane,  The  Flight  13 

How  slowly  down  the  rocks  he  w,  „  38 
w  in  search  of  thee  Thro'  many  a  palace,                      Demeter  and  P.  54 

I  fetcht  'im  a  kick  an'  'e  w.  Owd  Rod  62 

I  came,  I  w,  was  happier  day  by  day  ;  The  Ring  348 

I  parted  from  her,  and  I  w  alone.  „       437 

Voice  of  the  Earth  w  wailingly  past  The  Dreamer  3 

Ralph  w  down  like  a  fire  to  the  fight  The  Tourney  3 

Wept     She  w,  '  I  am  aweary,  aweary,  Mariana  83 

One  willow  over  the  river  w,  Dying  Swan  14 

Crocodiles  w  tears  for  thee  ;  A  Dirge  22 

Love  w  and  spread  his  sheeny  vans  for  flight ;  Love  and  Death  8 

A  matter  to  be  w  with  tears  of  blood  !  Poland  14 

Thine  eyes  so  w  that  they  could  hardly  see  ;  The  Bridesmaid  2 

I  w  '  Tho'  I  should  die,  I  know  Two  Voices  58 

To  perish,  w  for,  honour'd,  known,  „        149 

In  her  still  place  the  morning  w  :  „         275 

and  took  the  King,  and  w.  M.  d' Arthur  206 

She  bow'd  down  And  w  in  secret ;  Dora  108 

But  I  believe  she  w.  Talking  Oak  164 

To-day  I  sat  for  an  hour  and  w,  Edward  Gray  11 

'  Bitterly  w  I  over  the  stone  :  „          33 

'  A  ship  of  fools,'  he  sneer'd  and  w.  The  Voyage  78 

But  tum'd  her  own  toward  the  wall  and  w.  Enoch  Arden  283 

Annie  could  have  w  for  pity  of  him  ;  „  467 
but  presently  W  like  a  storm  :                                       Aylmer's  Field  403 

While  thus  he  spoke,  his  hearers  w;  „            722 

her  that  o'er  her  wounded  hunter  w  Lucretius  89 

blood  Was  sprinkled  on  your  kirtle,  and  you  w.  Princess  ii  274 

That  was  fawn's  blood,  not  brother's,  yet  you  w.  „            275 

'  My  fault '  she  w  '  my  fault  !  „         iii  30 

She  w  her  true  eyes  blind  for  such  a  one,  „        iv  134 

Yet  she  neither  moved  nor  w.  „          vi  12 

Down  thro' her  limbs  a  drooping  languor  w  :  „  268 
I  could  have  w  with  the  best,  (repeat)                        Grandmother  20,  100 


I  had  not  w,  little  Annie,  not  since  I  had  been  a  wife ; 

But  I  w  like  a  child  that  day. 
But  I  w  like  a  child  for  the  child  that  was  dead 
Thou  comest,  much  w  for  : 
And  silence  follow'd,  and  we  w. 
They  w  and  wail'd,  but  led  the  way 
W  over  her,  carved  in  stone  ; 
And  while  she  w,  and  I  strove  to  be  cool, 
And  w,  and  wish'd  that  I  were  dead  ; 
all  her  dress  W  from  her  sides  as  water 
Lady  Lyonors  wrung  her  hands  and  w, 
'  was  it  for  him  she  w  In  Devon  ?  ' 
and  she  w  beside  the  way. 
Then  he  remember'd  her,  and  how  she  w  ; 
braid  Slipt  and  uncoil'd  itself,  she  w  afresh, 
and  for  her  fault  she  w  Of  petulancy  ; 
W,  looking  often  from  his  face  who  read 
The  knights  and  ladies  w,  and  rich  and  poor  W, 
But  wail'd  and  w,  and  hated  mine  own  self. 
To  one  most  holy  saint,  who  w  and  said, 
he  would  have  w,  but  felt  his  eyes  Harder 
when  first  she  came,  w  the  sad  Queen. 


63 

;,  68 

In  Mem.  xvii  1 

„         XXX  20 

„  dii  18 

Maud  I  via  4 

„       II  i  15 

Com.  of  Arthur  345 

Gareth  and  L.  217 

1395 

Geraint  and  E.  397 

519 

612 

Merlin  and  V.  889 

952 

Lancelot  and  E.  1285 

Holy  Grail  353 

609 

,,       ^  781 

Pelleas  and  E.  506 

Guinevere  IS 


1 


Wept 


789 


Wheat 


Wept  {continued)    her  heart  was  loosed  Within  her,  and  she  w     Guinevere  668 
and  took  the  King,  and  w.  Pass,  of  Arthur  374 

when  I  w,  Her  smile  lit  up  the  rainbow  on  mj-  tears.      Lover's  Tale  i  253 


iv  103 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  216 

Columbus  231 

Bead  Prophet  29 

Happy  69 

Prog,  of  Spring  6 

Death  of  (Enone  9 

Bandit's  Death  29 

Charity  38 

Churchwarden,  etc.  14 

NoHh.  Cobbler^ 

42 


'  He  casts  me  out,'  she  w,  '  and  goes 
Edith  spoke  no  word.  She  w  no  tear. 
Who  w  with  me  when  I  retum'd  in  chains. 
She  knelt — '  We  worship  him  ' — all  but  w — 
but  I  w  alone,  and  sigh'd  In  the  winter 
The  spear  of  ice  has  w  itself  away, 
In  silence  w  upon  the  flowerless  earth, 
he  sobb'd  and  he  w.  And  cursed  himself ; 
I  w,  and  I  kiss'd  her  hands, 
Wesh  (wash)     to  my  pond  to  w  thessens  theere — 
Wesh'd  (washed)    Sally  she  w  foalks'  cloaths 
An'  the  babby's  faace  wum't  w 
Tommy's  faace  be  as  fresh  as  a  codlin  w  \  the  dew.  „  110 

Fur  they  w  their  sins  i'  my  pond.  Church-warden,  etc.  16 

West  (adj.)     Four  courts  I  made.  East,  W  and  South  and 

North,  Palace  of  Art  21 

wet  w  wind  and  the  world  will  go  on.  (repeat)  Window,  So  Answer  6, 12 
Wet  w  wind  how  you  blow,  you  blow !  „  14 

wet  w  wind  and  the  world  may  go  on.  „  18 

why,  you  shiver  tho'  the  wind  is  w  The  Ring  29 

West  (s)     (See  also  Soath-west)     sunset  linger'd  low  ado«  n 

In  the  red  W  :  Lotos- Eaters  20 

Across  a  hazy  glinuner  of  the  w,  (hardener's  D.  219 

Orion  sloping  slowly  to  the  W.  Locksley  Hall  8 

The  blaze  upon  the  waters  to  the  w  ;  Enoch  Arden  596 

Here  in  the  woman-markets  of  the  w,  Aylmer's  Field  348 

Till  all  the  sails  were  darken'd  in  the  if,  Sea  Dreams  39 

Nor  stunted  squaws  of  W  or  East ;  Princess  ii  78 

Silver  sails  all  out  of  the  w  „       Hi  14 

and  half  Far-shadowing  from  the  w,  „    Con.  42 

and  a  feast  Of  wonder,  out  of  W  and  East,  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  21 

So  now  thy  fuller  life  is  in  the  w,  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  36 

voices  go  To  North,  South,  East,  and  W  ;  Voice  and  the  P.  14 

FloNvn  to  the  east  or  the  w.  Window,  Gone  7 

And  topples  round  the  dreary  w.  In  Mem.  xv  19 

By  that  broad  water  of  the  w,  .,       Ixvii  3 

And  East  and  W,  without  a  breath,  „        xcv  62 

Kosy  is  the  W,  Rosy  is  the  South,  (repeat)  Maud  I  xvii  5,  25 

Blush  it  thro'  the  W ;  (repeat)  .,  16,  24 

Blush  from  W  to  East,  Blush  from  East  to  W,  Till 

the  W  is  East,  „  21 

Orion's  grave  low  down  in  the  w,  „  III  vi  8 

Will  there  be  dawn  in  W  and  eve  in  East  ?  Gareth  and  L.  712 

All  in  a  rose-red  from  the  w,  „  1087 

he  saw  Fired  from  the  w,  far  on  a  hill,  Lancelot  and  E.  168 

The  flower  of  all  the  w  and  all  the  world,  ..  249 

knights  of  utmost  North  and  W,  •  ..  526 

And  also  one  to  the  w,  and  counter  to  it,  And  blank  :      Holy  Grail  254 
Rode  Tristram  toward  Lyonnesse  and  the  tp.  Last  Tournament  362 

Far  on  into  the  rich  heart  of  the  w  :  Gn  inevere  244 

Far  down  to  that  great  battle  in  the  w,  „         571 

ere  that  last  weird  battle  in  the  w.  Pass,  of  Arthur  29 

I  hear  the  steps  of  Modred  in  the  w,  ■,  59 

'  Far  other  is  this  battle  in  the  w  Whereto  we  move,  „  66 

94 

To  the  Queen  ii  65 

Lover's  Tale  i  60 

406 

414 

432 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  7 

Columbus  25 

„    171 

V.  of  Maeldune  86 

The  Flight  41 

91 

Dead  Prophet  20 

Epit.  on  Stratford  3 

Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  28 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  4 

6 

Prog,  of  Spring  98 


this  last,  dim,  weird  battle  of  the  w 

forego  The  darkness  of  that  battle  in  the  W, 

Mixt  with  the  gorgeous  w  the  lighthouse  shone, 

Framing  the  mighty  landscape  to  the  w. 

All  the  w  And  ev'n  unto  the  middle  south 

Ran  amber  toward  the  w,  and  nigh  the  sea 

Far  from  out  the  w  in  shadowing  showers, 

made  W  East,  and  sail'd  the  Dragon's  mouth, 

a  door  for  scoundrel  scum  I  open'd  to  the  W, 

till  the  labourless  day  dipt  under  the  W  ; 

we  watch'd  the  sun  fade  from  us  thro'  the  W, 

And  see  the  ships  from  out  the  W 

And  behind  him,  low  in  the  W, 

Here  silent  in  our  Minster  of  the  W 

That  young  eagle  of  the  W 

The  golden  keys  of  East  and  W. 

she  lent  The  sceptres  of  her  W,  her  East, 

hoary  deeps  that  belt  the  changeful  W, 


West  (s)  {cordinued)    drowsed  in  gloom,  self-darken'd 

from  the  w,  Death  of  (Enone  76 

'  Is  earth  On  fire  to  the  W  ?  St.  Telemachus  19 
shape  with  wings  Came  sweeping  by  him,  and  pointed 

to  the  W,  „          25 

Western    day  Was  sloping  toward  his  w  bower.  Mariana  80 

baths  Of  all  the  w  stars,  until  I  die.  Ulysses  61 

Wind  of  the  w  sea,  (repeat)  Princess  Hi  2,  4 

West-Indian     lands  at  home  and  abroad  in  a  rich  W- 1  isle  ;    The  Wreck  46 

West  Indies    See  Indies 

West-Saxon-land     Went  to  his  own  in  his  own 

W-S-l,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  103 

West-Saxons    We  the  W-S,  „                37 

Westward    gloomy-gladed  hollow  slowly  sink  To  w —  Gareth  and  L.  798 

For  on  their  march  to  w,  Bedivere,  Pass,  of  Arthur  6 

and  the  wind  Still  w,  and  the  weedy  seas —  Columbus  72 

There  w — under  yon  slow-falling  star,  Akbar's  Dream  152 

Westward-smiling    far-rolling,  w-s  seas.  Last  Tournament  587 

Westward-wheeliog     sphere  Of  w-w  stars  ;  St.  Telemachus  32 

Westward-winding    From  the  w-w  flood,  Margaret  9 

Wet  (adj.)     (See  also  Spongy-wet)     Thro'  crofts  and  pastures 

w  with  dew  Two  Voices  14 

Eyes  with  idle  tears  are  w.  Miller's  D.  211 

I  am  w  With  drenching  dews,  St.  S.  Stylites  114 

Who  sweep  the  crossings,  w  or  dry.  Will  Water.  47 
so  that  falling  prone  he  dug  His  fingers  into  the  w 

earth,  Enoch  Arden  780 

Made  w  the  crafty  crowsfoot  round  his  eye  ;  Sea  Dreams  187 

my  Sire,  his  rough  cheek  w  with  tears,  Princess  v  23 

The  leaves  were  w  with  women's  tears  :  „        vi  39 

I  saw  his  eyes  all  w,  in  the  sweet  moonshine  :  Grandmother  49 
w  west  wind  and  the  world  will  go  on. 

(repeat)  Window,  No  Answer  6,  12 

W  west  wind  how  you  blow,  you  blow  !  „                       14 

w  west  wind  and  the  world  may  go  on.  „                       18 

often  I  caught  her  with  eyes  all  w,  Maud  I  xix  23 

Thick  with  w  woods,  and  many  a  beast  therein,  Com.  of  Arthur  21 

came  a  forester  of  Dean,  W  from  the  woods,  Marr.  of  Geraint  149 

Made  answer,  either  eyelid  w  with  tears  :  Merlin  and  V.  379 

Brake  with  a  w  wind  blowing,  Lancelot,  Last  Tournament  137 

W  with  the  mists  and  smitten  by  the  lights,  Guinevere  597 

he  was  all  w  thro'  to  the  skin.  First  Quarrel  76 

hand  of  the  Highlander  w  with  their  tears  !  Def.  of  Lucknow  102 
These  w  black  passes  and  foam-churning  chasms —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  9 
dhry  eye  thin  but  was  w  for  the  frinds  that  was  gone  !        Tomorrow  83 

Wet  (s)     The  wind  and  the  w,  the  wind  and  the  w  !   Window,  No  Answer  13 

Woods  where  we  hid  from  the  w,  „         Marr.  Morn.  6 

day  Went  glooming  down  in  w  and  weariness  :  Last  Tournament  215 

An'  I  never  said  '  off  wi'  the  w,'  First  Quarrel  77 

I  soaking  here  in  winter  w —  To  Ulysses  6 

Wether     Or  some  black  w  of  St.  Satan's  fold.  Merlin  and  V.  750 

Wet-sJiod    Came  w-s  alder  from  the  wave,  Amphion  41 

Wharf    Out  upon  the  w's  they  came,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  42 

red  roofs  about  a  narrow  w  In  cluster  ;  Enoch  Arden  3 

Down  to  the  pool  and  narrow  w  he  went,  „         690 

famishing  populace,  wharves  forlorn  ;  Vastness  14 

Whate  (wheat)     '  Goin'  to  cut  the  Sassenach  w  '  Tomorrow  14 

'  niver  crasst  over  say  to  the  Sassenach  w  ;  „        48 

betther  nor  cuttin'  the  Sassenach  w  ,.         94 

What's  my  thought    w  m  t  and  when  and  where 

and  how.  Princess,  Pro.  190 

Whatsoever     For  w  knight  against  us  came  Balin  and  Balan  35 

Wheat    (See  also  Whate,  Wheat)    Storing  yearly  little 

dues  of  w,  and  wine  and  oil ;  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  122 

I  will  set  him  in  my  uncle's  eye  Among  the  w  ;  Dora  68 

and  went  her  way  Across  the  w,  „     72 

And  waves  of  shadow  went  over  the  w.  Poet's  Song  4 

Half-lost  in  belts  of  hop  and  breadths  of  w  ;  Princess,  Con.  45 

Upon  the  thousand  waves  of  w.  In  Mem.  xci  11 

and  go  By  smnmer  belts  of  w  and  vine  „        xcviii  4 

Thou  that  singest  w  and  woodland,  To  Virgil  9 

torpid  mummy  w  Of  Egypt  bore  a  grain  as  sweet  To  Prof.  Jebb  5 

Rain-rotten  died  the  w,  the  barley-spears  Demeler  and  P.  112 

Wheat     sa  much  es  a  poppy  along  wi'  the  w,  Spinster's  S's.  78 

if  the  Staate  was  a  gawin'  to  let  in  furriners'  %c,  Owd  Rod  45 


Wheat-suburb 


790 


Whishper 


Wheat-suburb    sweet-smelling  lanes  Of  his  w-s,  The  Brook  123 

Wheedle    And  w  a  world  that  loves  him  not,  Maud  II  v  39 

Wheedling     W  and  siding  with  them  !  Princess  v  158 

Wheel  (s)     {See  also  Mill-wheel)     The  dark  round  of  the 

dripping  w,  3IiUer's  D.  102 

all  the  w's  of  Time  Spim  round  in  station,  Love  and  Duty  75 

And  thee  returning  on  thy  silver  w's.  Tithonus  76 

men,  that  in  the  flying  of  a  w  Cry  down  the  past,  Godiva  6 

power  to  turn  This  w  within  my  head,  '  Will  Water.  84 

land,  where  under  the  same  w  The  same  old  rut  Aylmer's  Field  33 

That  stays  the  rolling  Ixionian  w,  Lucretius  261 

The  common  hate  with  the  revolving  w  Princess  vi  173 

And  he  call'd  '  Left  w  into  line  !  '  Heavy  Brigade  6 

Loom  and  w  and  enginery.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  15 

I  stay'd  the  w's  at  Cogoletto,  The  Daisy  23 

I  see  the  sailor  at  the  w.  In  Mem.  x  4 

And  all  the  w's  of  Being  slow.  „  Z  4 

And  every  kiss  of  toothed  w's,  „  cocvii  11 

The  last  w  echoes  away.  Maud  I  xxii  26 

And  the  roaring  of  the  w's.  „         //  iv  22 

And  the  w's  go  over  my  head,  „  v  A 

song  that  Enid  sang  was  one  Of  Fortune  and  her  w,  Marr.  of  Geraint  346 
'  Turn,  Fortune,  turn  thy  w  and  lower  the  proud  ;  „  347 

Turn  thy  wild  w  thro'  stmshine,  storm,  and  cloud ;  „  348 

Thy  w  and  thee  we  neither  love  nor  hate,  (repeat)  ,,      349,  358 

'  Turn,  Fortune,  turn  thy  w  with  smile  or  frown  ;  „  350 

With  that  wild  w  we  go  not  up  or  down ;  „  351 

'  Turn,  turn  thy  w  above  the  staring  crowd  ;  „  356 

Thy  w  and  thou  are  shadows  in  the  cloud  ;  „  357 

I  heard  W's,  and  a  noise  of  welcome  at  the 

doors — 
And  lay  thine  uphill  shoulder  to  the  w, 
a  shatter'd  w  ?  a  vicious  boy ! 
and  see  no  more  The  Stone,  the  W, 
Or  spinning  at  your  w  beside  the  vine — 
We  move,  the  w  must  always  move. 

Wheel  (verb)     Too  long  you  roam  and  w  at  will ; 
And  tv's  the  circled  dance, 
Unto  the  thundersong  that  w's  the  spheres. 
That  w  between  the  poles, 
round  her  forehead  w's  the  woodland  dove, 

Wheel'd    (See  also  Low-wheel'd) 
strongly  w  and  threw  it. 
Earth  follows  w  in  her  ellipse  ; 
Sometimes  the  sparhawk,  w  along. 
Bear  had  w  Thro'  a  great  arc  his  seven  slow  sims 
bats  w,  and  owls  whoop'd, 
w  on  Europe-shadowing  wings, 
w  or  lit  the  filmy  shapes  That  haunt  the  dusk, 
W  roimd  on  either  heel,  Dagonet  replied, 
w  and  broke  Flying,  and  link'd  again,  and  w  and  broke 

Flying,  Guinevere  257 

clutch'd  the  sword.  And  strongly  w  and  threw  it.     Pass,  of  Arthur  304 
planet  at  length  will  be  w  thro'  the  silence  of  space.  Despair  83 

and  they  w  and  obey'd.  Heavy  Brigade  6 

Wheeling    (See  also  Westward-wheeling)    with  both  hands 


Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  149 
Ancient  Sage  279 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  215 
Demeter  and  P.  150 
Romney's  R.  5 
Politics  1 
Rosalind  36 
III  Mem.  xcviii  30 
Lover's  Tale  i  476 
Epilogue  21 
Prog,  of  Spring  57 
clutch'd  the  sword.  And 

M.  d' Arthur  136 
Golden  Year  24 
Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  12 
Princess  iv  212 
„  Con.  110 
Ode  on  Well.  120 
In  Mem.  xcv  10 
Last  Tournament  244 


I  flung  him,  w  him 
w  round  The  central  wish. 
The  myriad  shriek  of  w  ocean-fowl, 
W  with  precipitate  paces  To  the  melody, 
eddied  into  suns,  that  w  cast  The  planets  : 
with  both  hands  I  flung  him,  w  him  ; 
Glance  at  the  w  Orb  of  change. 

Whelm    or  to  w  All  of  them  in  one  massacre  ? 
And  w  all  this  beneath  as  vast  a  mound 

Whelm'd     Roll'd  a  sea-haze  and  w  the  world  in  gray  ; 
some  were  w  with  missiles  of  the  wall. 

Whelp    (See  also  Lion-whelp)    bones  for  his  o'ergrown 
w  to  crack ; 

Whelpless    glaring  with  his  w  eye,  Silent ; 


M.  d'Arthur  157 

Gardener's  D.  224 

Enoch  Arden  583 

Vision  of  Sin  37 

Princess  ii  118 

Pass,  of  Arthur  325 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  3 

Lucretius  206 

Merlin  and  V.  656 

Enoch  Arden  672 

Princess,  Pro.  45 


what's  my  thought  and  when  and 


When  and  where  and  how 

ichere  and  how, 
Whens     Break  into  '  Thens  '  and  '  W  ' 
Wherewithal    having  w,  And  in  the  fallow  leisure  of  my 

life 


Maud  II  V  55 
Princess  vi  99 


,  Pro.  190 
Ancient  Sage  104 

Avdley  Court  76 


Wherewithal  (continued)    for  the  w  To  give  his  babes  a 

better  bringing-up  Enoch  Arden  298 

Whiff     yonder,  w  !  there  comes  a  sudden  heat,  Princess,  Con.  58 

Whig     Let  W  and  Tory  stir  their  blood  ;  Will  Water.  53 

While     we  might  make  it  worth  his  w.  Princess  i  184 

'Twere  hardly  worth  my  w  to  choose  In  Mem.  xxxiv  10 

Bide  ye  here  the  w.'  Merlin  and  V.  97 

Pelleas  in  brief  w  Caught  his  unbroken  Ihnbs  Pelleas  and  E.  584 

Whim     hurt  to  death,  For  your  wild  w  :  Princess  vi  243 

Whimper     Who  love  her  still,  and  w,  Romney's  R.  117 

Whimpering     then  A  w  of  the  spirit  of  the  child.  Last  Tournament  418 

Whine  (s)     colt-like  whinny  and  with  hoggish  w  St.  S.  Stylites  177 

Whine  (verb)     I  that  heard  her  w  And  snivel,  Last  Tournament  449 

Whined    ghost,  that  shook  The  curtains,  w  in  lobbies,   Walk,  to  the  Mail  37 

canker'd  boughs  without  W  in  the  wood  ;  Balin  and  Balan  346 

and  old  boughs,  W  in  the  wood.  „              386 

Whinny     colt-like  w  and  with  hoggish  whine  St.  S.  Stylites  177 

her  w  shrills  From  tile  to  scullery.  Princess  v  452 

and  stoop'd  With  a  low  w  toward  the  pair  :  Geraint  and  E.  756 

Whinnying    At  which  her  palfrey  w  lifted  heel,  „            533 

thence  The  shrilly  w's  of  the  team  of  Hell,  Demeter  and  P.  44 

Whip     Stopt,  and  then  with  a  riding  w  Maud  I  xiii  18 

Struck  at  her  with  his  w,  (repeat)  Marr.  of  Geraint  201,  413 

Struck  at  him  with  his  w,  and  cut  his  cheek.  „                    207 

Up  hill '  Too-slow  '  will  need  the  w.  Politics  11 

Whipt     And  w  me  into  the  waste  fields  far  away  ;  Holy  Grail  788 

I  w  him  for  robbing  an  orchard  once  Rizpah  25 

Whirl  (s)     Ran  into  its  giddiest  w  of  sound,  Vision  of  Sin  29 

sway  and  w  Of  the  storm  dropt  to  windless  calm,       Lover's  Tale  ii  206 

Whirl  (verb)     My  judgment,  and  my  spirit  w's,  Supp.  Confessions  137 

There  the  river  eddy  w's,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  15 

I  w  like  leaves  in  roaring  wind.  Fatima  7 

while  Saturn  w's,  his  stedfast  shade  Palace  of  Art  15 

W's  her  to  me  :  but  will  she  fling  herself,  Lucretius  202 

And  w  the  ungamer'd  sheaf  afar.  In  Mem  Ixxii  23 

w  the  dust  of  harlots  round  and  round  Pelleas  and  E.  470 

watch  the  chariot  w  About  the  goal  again,  Tiresias  17G 

I  w,  and  I  follow  the  Sun.'  The  Dreamer  14 

W,  and  follow  the  Sun  !  (repeat)  „  20, 24, 28, 32 

Whirl'd     No  sword  Of  wrath  her  right  arm  w.  The  Poet  54 

heavy-plunging  foam,  W  by  the  wind,  D.  of  F.  Women  119 

flashing  round  and  round,  and  w  in  an  arch,  M.  d'Arthur  138 

w  her  white  robe  like  a  blossom'd  branch  Princess  iv  179 

She  w  them  on  to  me,  as  who  should  say  „            396 

like  the  smoke  in  a  hurricane  w.  Boadicea  59 

The  last  red  leaf  is  w  away.  In  Mem.  xv  3 

and  w  About  empyreal  heights  of  thought,  „        xcv  37 

heart  of  the  poet  is  w  into  folly  and  vice.  Maud  I  iv  39 

Pine  Lost  footing,  fell,  and  so  was  w  away.  Gareth  and  L.  4 

flashing  round  and  round,  and  w  in  an  arch.  Pass,  of  Arthur  306 

we  w  giddily  ;   the  wind  Sung  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  201 

An  open  landaulet  W  by,  which.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  86 

W  for  a  million  aeons  thro'  the  vast  Waste  dawn      De  Prof.,  Two  G.  3 

full-maned  horses  w  The  chariots  backward,  Achilles  over  the  T.  24 

Whirligig     As  on  this  w  of  Time  We  circle  Will  Water.  63 

Whirling     All  their  planets  w  round  them,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  204 

Yet  in  the  w  dances  as  we  went.  The  form,  the  form  5 

Flash  in  the  pools  of  w  Simois.  (Enone  206 

part  were  drowTi'd  within  the  w  brook  :  Princess,  Pro.  47 

w  rout  Led  by  those  two  rush'd  into  dance.  Lover's  Tale  Hi  54 

phantom  of  the  w  landaulet  For  ever  past  me  by  :  Sisters  ( E.  and  E.)  114 

W  their  sabres  in  circles  of  light !  Heavy  Brigade  34 

Whirlwind     the  echoing  dance  Of  reboant  w's,  Supp.  Confessions  97 

And  loud  the  Norland  w's  blow,  Oriana  6 

And  a  w  clear'd  the  larder  :  The  Goose  52 

Across  the  w's  heart  of  peace.  The  Voyage  87 

And  bring  her  in  a  w  :  Princess  i  65 

Like  the  leaf  in  a  roaring  w,  Boadicea  59 

A  moment,  ere  the  onward  w  shatter  it,  Lover's  Tale  i  451 

round  and  round  A  w  caught  and  bore  us  ;  „          ii  197 

a  w  blow  these  woods,  as  never  blew  before.  The  Flight  12 

Whirr    See  Dorhawk-whirr 

Whirring    And  the  w  sail  goes  round,  (repeat)  The  Owl  i  4,  5 
Whishper  (whisper)  (s)    laste  little  w  was  sweet  as  the 

lilt  of  a  bird  !  Tomorrow  33 


p 


Whishper 


791 


White 


Wbishper  (verb)     the  crathur,  an'  w,  an'  say 
Whisker    his  watery  smile  And  educated  w. 

Ay,  roob  thy  w's  agean  ma, 
Whisky    iSee  Crathur' 

Whisper  (s)    (See  also  Love-whispers,  Whishper,  World 
whisper)     She  has  heard  a  w  say, 

A  little  w  silver-clear, 

A  hint,  a  w  breathing  low, 

Such  seem'd  the  w  at  my  side  : 

In  w's,  like  the  w's  of  the  leaves 

And  her  w  throng'd  my  pulses 

w  of  the  south-wind  rushing  warm, 

a  w  on  her  ear.  She  knew  not  what ; 

w  of  huge  trees  that  branch'd  And  blossom'd 

Again  in  deeper  inward  w's  '  lost !  ' 

A  w  half  reveal'd  her  to  herself. 

But  honrying  at  the  w  of  a  lord  ; 

shook  the  songs,  the  w's,  and  the  shrieks 

o'er  the  imperial  tent  W's  of  war. 

Would  lisp  in  honey'd  w's  of  this  monstrous  fraud 

and  my  prayer  Was  as  the  w  of  an  air 

And  shape  the  w  of  the  throne  ; 

In  w's  of  the  beauteous  world. 

This  haunting  w  makes  me  faint, 

And  lightly  does  the  w  fall ; 

world's  loud  w  breaking  into  storm, 

all  hearts  Applauded,  and  the  spiteful  w  died 

Breathed  in  a  dismal  w  '  It  is  truth.' 

He  spoke  in  words  part  heard,  in  w's  part, 

whose  lightest  w  moved  him  more 

A  murmuring  w  thro'  the  nunnery  ran, 

Save  for  some  w  of  the  seething  seas, 

Falling  in  w's  on  the  sense, 

the  surge  fell  From  thunder  into  w's  ; 

Surely,  but  for  a  w,  '  Go  not  yet,' 

He  knew  the  meaning  of  the  w  now, 

But  his  friend  Replied,  in  half  a  w. 

Not  to  break  in  on  what  I  say  by  word  Or  w. 

There  was  a  w  among  us,  but  only  a  w 

thro'  the  roar  of  the  breaker  a  w, 

A  breath,  a  w — some  divine  farewell — 

Weird  w's,  bells  that  rang  without  a  hand, 

A  w  from  his  dawn  of  life  ? 

And  at  his  ear  he  heard  a  w  '  Rome  ' 
Whisper  (verb)    {See  also  Whishper)    all  day  long  you  sit 
between  Joy  and  woe,  and  w  each. 

And  at  my  headstone  w  low. 

Listening,  w's  '  'Tis  the  fairy  Lady  of  Shalott.' 

While  those  full  chestnuts  w  by. 

The  trees  began  to  w,  and  the  wind  began  to  roll, 

Not  w,  any  murmur  of  complaint. 

0  w  to  your  glass,  and  say, 
And  w  lovely  words,  and  use  Her  influence 
In  her  ear  he  w's  gaily, 
Heard  the  good  mother  softly  w 
W  in  odorous  heights  of  even. 
What  w's  from  thy  lying  lip  ? 
'  The  stars,'  she  w's,  '  blindly  run  ; 
And  hear  thy  laurel  w  sweet 
A  hundred  spirits  w  "  Peace.' 
One  w's,  '  Here  thy  boyhood  sung 
And  w's  to  the  worlds  of  space, 
We  w,  and  hint,  and  chuckle. 
And  the  lily  w's,  '  I  wait.' 
Sweet  lord,  ye  do  right  well  to  w  this. 
Edith  pray'd  me  not  to  w  of  it. 
She  w's,  '  From  the  South  I  bring  you  balm, 

1  hear  a  death-bed  Angel  w  '  Hope.' 
Whisper'd  (adj.  and  part.)    {See  also  Half-whisper 'd) 

To  hear  each  other's  w  speech  ; 

and  they  suffer — ^some,  'tis  w— -down  in  hell 

Thou  shalt  hear  the  '  Never,  never,'  w  by  the 

phantom  years, 
And  w  voices  at  his  ear. 
A  w  jest  to  some  one  near  him,  '  Look, 


Tomorrow  54 
Edwin  Morris  129 
Spinster's  S's.  81 


L.  of  Shalott  ii  3 

Two  Voices  428 

434 

439 

Gardener's  D.  253 

Locksley  Hall  36 

125 

Enoch  Arden  515 

585 

716 

Aylmer's  Field  144 

Priiicess,  Pro.  115 

i98 

vlO 

!       Third  of  Feb.  36 

In  Mem,,  xvii  3 

„     Ixiv  12 

V  Ixinx  12 

„    Ixxxi  7 

„  Ixxxv  89 

Mart,  of  Geraint  27 

Geraint  and  E.  958 

Balin  and  BaJan  527 

Merlin  and  V.  839 

Pelleas  and  E.  155 

Guinevere  410 

Pass,  of  Arthur  121 

Lover's  Tale  i  720 

Hi  31 

ii;20 

43 

336 

353 

Def.  of  Lucknow  50 

Despair  13 

Ancient  Sage  225 

The  Ring  411 

Far — far — away  10 

St.  Telemachus  26 


Margaret  64 

My  life  is  full  24 

L.  of  Shalott  i  35 

Miller's  D.  168 

May  Queen,  Con.  27 

St.  S.  Stylites  22 

Day-Dm.,  Ef.  3 

Will  Water.  11 

L.  of  Burleigh  1 

Aylmer's  Field  187 

Milton  16 

In  Mem.  Hi  4 

5 

xxxvii  7 

Ixxxvi  16 

cii  9 

cxxvi  11 

Maud  I  iv  29 

„      xxii  66 

Balin  aiid  Balan  529 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  207 

Prog,  of  Spring  66 

Romney's  R.  148 

Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  59 
123 

Locksley  Hall  83 

Day-Dm.,  Arrival  24 

Princess  v  32 


Whisper'd  (adj.  and  part)  {continued)     By  a  shuffled  step,  by 

a  dead  weight  trail'd,  by  a  w  fright,  Maud  I  i  14 
Love  drew  in  her  breath  In  that  close  kiss,  and 

dnmk  her  w  tales.  Lover's  Tale  i  817 

Whisper'd  (verb)  She  w,  with  a  stifled  moan  Mariana  in  the  S.  57 
what  he  w  under  Heaven  None  else  could  under- 
stand ;  Talking  Oak  21 
W,  '  Listen  to  my  despair  :  Edward  Gray  22 
Cyril  w  ;  '  Take  me  with  you  too.'  Princess  i  81 
no  livelier  than  the  dame  That  w  '  Asses'  ears,'  „  ii  113 
'  Come,'  he  w  to  her  '  Lift  up  your  head,  „  «  63 
What  w  from  her  lying  lips  ?  In  Mem.  xxxix  10 
'  The  fault  was  mine,'  he  w,  '  fly  !  '  Maud  II  i  30 
For  I  never  w  a  private  affair  „  v  47 
Lifted  an  arm,  and  softly  w,  '  There.'  Gareth  and  L.  1361 
sat,  heard,  watch'd  And  w  :  thro'  the  peaceful 

court  she  crept  And  w  :  Meiiin  and  V  .  139 

Or  w  in  the  corner  ?  do  ye  know  it  ?  '  „            772 

half-awake  he  w,  '  Where  ?    O  where  ?  Pelleas  and  E.  41 

For  all  that  ample  woodland  w  '  debt,'  The  Ring  170 

Who  w  me  '  your  Ulric  loves  '—  Happy  62 

Master  w  '  Follow  the  Gleam.'  Merlin  and  the  G.  33 

I  w  '  give  it  to  me,'  but  he  would  not  Bandit's  Death  27 

Whisperer    and  the  swarm  Of  female  w's  :  Princess  vi  356 

Whispering    within  the  cave  Behind  yon  w  tuft  of  oldest  pine,      CEnone  88 
beneath  a  w  rain  Night  slid  down  one  long  stream       Gardener's  D.  266 

Or  low  morass  and  w  reed,  In  Mem.  c  6 

these  few  lanes  of  elm  And  w  oak.  To  Mary  Boyle  68 

W  to  each  other  half  in  fear.  Sea- Fairies  5 

Two  lovers  w  by  an  orchard  wall ;  Circumstance  4 

W  I  knew  not  what  of  wild  and  sweet,  Tithonus  61 

or,  w,  play'd  A  chequer-work  of  beam  In  Mem.  Ixxii  14 

tum'd  to  each  other,  w,  all  dismay'd,  Heavy  Brigade  44 

Whistle  (s)    Scarce  answer  to  my  w  ;  Amphion  68 

And  bustling  w  of  the  youth  Marr.  of  Geraint  257 

great  plover's  human  w  amazed  Her  heart,  Geraint  and  E.  49 

Whistle  (verb)     W  back  the  parrot's  call,  Locksley  Hall  171 

Then  would  he  w  rapid  as  any  lark,  Gareth  and  L.  505 

But  if  my  neighbour  w  answers  him—  Lover's  Tale  iv  161 

Whistled    waterflags,  That  w  stiff  and  dry  about  the 

marge.  M.  d' Arthur  64 

redcap  w  ;  and  the  nightingale  Sang  loud,  Gardener's  D.  95 

Then  low  and  sweet  I  w  thrice  ;  Edwin  Morris  113 

Sometimes  the  throstle  w  strong  :  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  11 

flour  From  his  tall  mill  that  w  on  the  waste.  Enoch  Arden  343 

And  w  to  the  morning  star.  Sailor  Boy  4 

And  while  he «  long  and  loud  „          5 

Prison'd,  and  kept  and  coax'd  and  w  to —  Gareth  and  L.  14 
He  w  his  good  warhorse  left  to  graze                        Last  Tournament  490 

waterflags.  That  w  stiff  and  dry  about  the  marge.  Pass,  of  Arthur  232 

Whistling     W  a  random  bar  of  Bonny  Doon,  The  Brook  82 

But  blessed  forms  in  w  storms  Sir  Galahad  59 

Half  w  and  half  singing  a  coarse  song,  Geraint  and  E.  528 

Whit     Not  a  w  of  thy  tuwhoo.  The  Owl  ii  10 

And  w,  w,  w,  in  the  bush  beside  me  Grandmother  40 

and  never  a  w  more  wise  The  fourth,  Gareth  and  L.  635 

White  (adj.)    See  also  Cold-white,  Death-white,  Dusty-white,  • 
Lily-white,  May-white,  Milk-white,  Milky-white,  Rosy- 
white,    Snow-white,    Vermeil-white,    Winter-white) 

And  w  against  the  cold-white  sky.  Dying  Swan  12 
One  after  another  the  w  clouds  are  fleeting  ;       'All  Things  will  Die  5 

In  the  w  curtain,  to  and  fro,  Mariana  51 

The  w  owl  in  the  belfry  sits,  (repeat)  The  Owl  i  7,  14 

Flinging  the  gloom  of  yesternight  On  the  w  day ;  Ode  to  Memory  10 

A  pillar  of  w  light  upon  the  wall  Of  purple  cliffs,  „            53 

thick  with  w  bells  the  clover-hill  swells  Sea- Fairies  14 

The  w  chalk-quarry  from  the  hill  Miller's  D.  115 

The  lanes,  you  know,  were  w  with  may,  „         130 

I'd  touch  her  neck  so  warm  and  w.  „        174 

All  barr'd  with  long  w  cloud  the  scornful  crags,  Palace  of  Art  83 

her  hair  Wound  with  w  roses,  slept  St.  Cecily  ;  „            99 
seas  draw  backward  from  the  land  Their  moon-led 

waters  w.  „          252 
Till  Charles's  Wain  came  out  above  the  tall 

w  chimney-tops.  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  12 


White 


792 


White 


White  (adj.)  (continued)    Two  handfuls  of  w  dust,  shut 

in  £in  um  of  brass  !  Lotos-  Eaters,  C.  S.  68 

W  surf  wind-scatter'd  over  sails  and  masts,  D.  of  F.  Women  31 

'  I  would  the  w  cold  heavy-plunging  foam,  ,,  118 

'  The  light  w  cloud  swam  over  us.  ,,  221 

We  saw  the  large  w  stars  rise  one  by  one,  „  223 

With  that  sharp  sound  the  w  dawn's  creeping  beams,  „  261 

She  caught  the  w  goose  by  the  leg,  The  Goose  9 

more  the  w  goose  laid  It  clack'd  and  cackled  louder.  ,,        23 

Clothed  in  w  samite,  mystic,  vi'onderful, 

(repeat)  M.  d' Arthur  31,  144,  159 

for  all  his  face  was  w  And  colourless,  „  212 

Love's  w  star  Beam'd  thro'  the  thicken'd  cedar  Gardener's  D.  165 

As  clean  and  w  as  privet  when  it  flowers.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  56 

The  meed  of  saints,  the  w  robe  and  the  palm.  St.  S.  Stylites  20 

I  lived  In  the  w  convent  down  the  valley  there,  „  62 

As  these  w  robes  are  soil'd  and  dark,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  13 

In  raiment  w  and  clean.  „  24 

or  following  up  And  flying  the  w  breaker,  Enoch  Arden  21 

Enoch's  w  horse,  and  Enoch's  ocean-spoil  „  93 

And  York's  w  rose  as  red  as  Lancaster's,  Aylmer's  Field  51 

Nor  ever  falls  the  least  w  star  of  snow,  Lucretius  107 

Morn  in  the  w  wake  of  the  morning  star  Princess  Hi  17 

saw  The  soft  w  vapour  streak  the  crowned  towers  „  344 

There  whirl'd  her  w  robe  like  a  blossom'd  branch  „        iv  179 

Her  round  w  shoulder  shaken  with  her  sobs,  „  289 

Here  he  reach'd  W  hands  of  farewell  to  my  sire,  „         v  233 

very  nape  of  her  w  neck  Was  rosed  with  indignation  :  „        vi  343 

'  Now  sleeps  the  crimson  petal,  now  the  w  ;  „      vii  176 

Nor  wilt  thou  snare  him  in  the  w  ravine,  „  205 

A  red  sail,  or  a  «; ;  and  far  beyond,  „     Con.  47 

Ruddy  and  w,  and  strong  on  his  legs,  he  looks  like  a 

man.  Grandmother  2 

We  loved  that  hall,  tho'  w  and  cold,  The  Daisy  37 

All  along  the  valley,  stream  that  flashest  w,  V.  of  Cauteretz  1 

With  blasts  that  blow  the  poplar  w.  In  Mem.  IxxH  3 

The  V3  kine  glimmer'd,  and  the  trees  (repeat)  „     xcv  15,  51 

Has  a  broad-blown  comeliness,  red  and  w,  Maud  I  xiii  9 

if  a  hand,  as  w  As  ocean-foam  in  the  moon,  „        xiv  17 

The  w  lake-blossom  fell  into  the  lake  „      xxii  47 

And  the  w  rose  weeps,  '  She  is  late ; '  „  64 

It  lightly  winds  and  steals  In  a  cold  w  robe  before  me,  „     //  iv  19 

Wearing  the  w  flower  of  a  blameless  life,  Ded.  of  Idylls  25 

Clothed  in  w  samite,  mystic,  wonderful.  Com.  of  Arthur  285 

'  Blow  trumpet,  for  the  world  is  w  with  May  ;  „  482 

reverence  thine  own  beard  That  looks  as  w  as  utter 

truth,  Gareth  and  L.  281 

Our  one  w  lie  sits  like  a  little  ghost  ,,  297 

plant  that  feels  itself  Root-bitten  by  w  lichen,  „  454 

past  The  weird  w  gate,  and  paused  without,  „  663 

With  w  breast-bone,  and  barren  ribs  of  Death,  „  1382 

often  with  her  own  w  hands  Array'd  and  deck'd 

her, 
W  from  the  mason's  hand,  (repeat) 
Then,  as  the  w  and  glittering  star  of  morn 
And  w  sails  flying  on  the  yellow  sea ; 
Betwixt  the  cressy  islets  w  in  flower ; 
she  Kiss'd  the  w  star  upon  his  noble  front, 
Men  weed  the  w  horse  on  the  Berkshire  hills 
and  paced  The  long  w  walk  of  lilies  toward  the 

bower, 
as  makes  The  w  swan-mother,  sitting, 
and  dim  thro'  leaves  Blinkt  the  w  mom,  „ 

And  mimibled  that  w  hand  whose  ring'd  caress  „ 

whose  lightest  word  Is  mere  w  truth  in  simple 

nakedness,  „ 

O  Heaven's  own  w  Earth-angel,  Merlin  and 

As  clean  as  blood  of  babes,  as  w  as  milk  :  „ 

Ran  down  the  silken  thread  to  kiss  each  other  On  her 

w  neck —  „ 

A  maid  so  smooth,  so  w,  so  wonderful,  „ 

Is  thy  w  blamelessness  accounted  blame  ! '  „ 

bare-grinning  skeleton  of  death  !     W  was  her  cheek  ;  „ 

Rang  by  the  w  mouth  of  the  violent  Glem  ;  Lancelot  and  E.  288 

When  the  strong  neighings  of  the  wild  w  Horse  „  298 


Marr.  of  Geraint  16 

„    244,408 

734 

829 

Geraint  and  E.  475 
757 


Balin  and  Balan  249 
353 
385 
512 

518 

F.  80 

344 

456 
566 
799 

848 


White  (adj.)  (continued)    In  the  w  rock  a  chapel  and 

a  hall  On  massive  columns,  Lancelot  and  E.  405 

And  innocently  extending  her  w  arms,  „  932 

Till  all  the  w  walls  of  my  cell  were  dyed  Holy  Grail  119 

ever  moved  Among  us  in  w  armour,  Galahad.  „        135 

dyed  The  strong  W  Horse  in  his  own  heathen  blood —  „        312 

Not  to  be  bound,  save  by  w  bonds  and  warm,  Pelleas  and  E.  353 

up  a  slope  of  garden,  all  Of  roses  w  and  red,  „  422 

in  her  w  arms  Received,  and  after  loved  it 

tenderly,  Last  Tournament  23 

down  a  streetway  himg  with  folds  of  pure  W  samite,  „  141 

Isolt  the  w — Sir  Tristram  of  the  Woods —  „  177 

Our  one  w  day  of  Innocence  hath  past,  „  218 

The  twelve  small  damosels  w  as  Innocence,  „  291 

one  of  those  w  slips  Handed  her  cup  and  piped,  „  295 

'  Isolt  Of  the  w  hands  '  they  call'd  her :  „  398 

Who  served  him  well  with  those  w  hands  of  hers,  „  400 

Is  all  as  cool  and  w  as  any  flower.'  „  416 

there  Belted  his  body  with  her  w  embrace,  „  513 

Calling  me  thy  w  hind,  and  saying  to  me  „  569 

The  warm  w  apple  of  her  throat,  ,,  717 

The  w  mist,  like  a  face-cloth  to  the  face,  Guinevere  7 

And  in  the  light  the  w  mermaiden  swam,  „      245 

aghast  the  maiden  rose,  W  as  her  veil,  ,,      363 

who  leagues  With  Lords  of  the  W  Horse,  heathen,  „      574 

when  the  man  was  no  more  than  a  voice  In  the  w 

winter  of  his  age, 
Clothed  in  w  samite,  mystic,  wonderful,  (repeat) 
for  all  his  face  was  w  And  colourless, 
W  asw  clouds,  floated  from  sky  to  sky. 
Or  when  the  w  heats  of  the  blinding  noons 
A  mystic  light  flash'd  ev'n  from  her  w  robe 
then  came  in  The  w  light  of  the  weary  moon  above, 
But  the  boy  was  born  i'  trouble,  an'  looks  so  wan  an 

so  w  : 
I  niver  ha  seed  it  sa  w  wi'  the  Maay  es  I  see'd  it 

to-year — 
Fur  I  thowt  it  wur  Charlie's  ghoast  i'  the  derk,  fur 

it  loookt  sa  w. 
Blessing  the  wholesome  w  faces  of  Havelock's  good 

fusileers. 
And  a  hundred  ranged  on  the  rock  like  w  sea-birds 
And  his  w  hair  sank  to  his  heels  and  his  w  beard 

fell  to  his  feet. 
Not  here  !  the  w  North  has  thy  bones  ; 
The  broad  w  brow  of  the  Isle — 
the  hills  are  w  with  rime. 

all  my  life  was  darken'd,  as  I  saw  the  w  sail  run, 
an'  her  hair  was  as  w  as  the  snow  an  a  grave. 
All  in  w  Italian  marble,  looking  still  as  if  she 

smiled,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  35 

Mother  weeps  At  that  w  funeral  of  the  single  life,  Frin.  Beatrice  9 

dwell  For  nine  w  moons  of  each  whole  year  with  me,  Demeter  and  P.  121 
Of  a  Christmas  Eave,  an'  as  cowd  as  this,  an'  the  midders 

as  w,  Owd  Roa  81 

Flies  back  in  fragrant  breezes  to  display  A  tunic  w  as 


Pass,  of  Arthur  4 
„  199,  312,  327 
380 
Lover's  Tale  i  5 
139 
370 
640 

First  Quarrel  2 

Village  Wife  80 

82 


Def.  of  Lucknow  101 
V.  of  Maeldwne  101 

118 

Sir  J.  Franklin  1 

The  Wreck  135 

The  Flight  4 

39 

Tomorrow  60 


May  ! 
And  find  the  w  heather  wherever  you  go, 
my  w  heather  only  blooms  in  heaven 
And  on  this  w  midwinter  day — 
But  when  the  w  fog  vanish'd  like  a  ghost 
And  now  that  I  am  w,  and  you  are  gray, 
White  (s)     (See  also  May-white)     Lying,  robed  in 

snowy  w 
He  thought  I  was  a  ghost,  mother,  for  I  was  all 

in  w, 
Gown'd  in  pure  w,  that  fitted  to  the  shape — 
Which  charts  us  all  in  its  coarse  blacks  or  w"s. 
With  folded  feet,  in  stoles  of  w, 
No  pint  of  w  or  red  Had  ever  half  the  power 
Six  hundred  maidens  clad  in  purest  w. 
But  pure  as  lines  of  green  that  streak  the  w 
Of  twelve  sweet  hours  that  past  in  bridal  w, 
King  That  mom  was  married,  while  in  stainless  w.  Com.  of  Arthur  456 
Muriel  and  Miriam,  each  in  w,  and  like  May-blossoms        The  Ring  254 


Prog,  of  Spring  6S 
Romnei/'s  R.  108 

„       nc 

To  Master  of  B.  9 

Death  of  (Enone  &1 

Roses  on  the  T.  4 

L.  of  Shalott  iv  19 

May  Queen  17 

Gardener's  D.  126 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  107 

Sir  Galahad  43 

Will  Water.  83 

Princess  ii  47i 

V  196 

Maud  I  xviii  6S 


White 


^93 


Wholesome 


Wbit6  (s)  (contimied)     And  watch  the  curl'd  w  of 

the  coming  wave  Merlin  and  V.  292 

and  she  herself  in  w  All  but  her  face,  Lancelot  and  E.  1158 
where  the  crisping  w  Play'd  ever  back  upon  the 

sloping  wave,  Holy  Grail  381 

Where  children  sat  in  w  with  cups  of  gold.  Last  Tournament  142 
•all  the  purple  slopes  of  mountain  flowers  Pass 

under  w,  ..              230 

So  dame  and  damsel  cast  the  simple  w,  ..              232 

Wear  black  and  w,  and  be  a  nun  like  you,  Guinevere  677 

in  front  of  which  Six  stately  virgins,  all  in  w.  Lover's  Tale  ii  77 

Leapt  lightly  clad  in  bridal  w —  „         Hi  44 

might  be  borne  in  w  To  burial  or  to  burning.  Ancient  Sage  207 
MoUy  Magee,  wid  the  red  o'  the  rose  an'  the  w  o' 

the  May,  Tomorrow  31 

All  his  virtues — I  forgive  them — black  m  w  above 

his  bones.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  44 

White-breasted    w-b  like  a  star  Fronting  the  dawn  (Enone  57 

Whited     W  thought  and  cleanly  life  As  the  priest.  Vision  of  Sin  116 

White-eyed    w-e  phantasms  weeping  tears  of  blood.  Palace  of  Art  239 

White-faced     The  w-/ halls,  the  glancing  rills,  In  Mem.,  Con.  113 

White-favour'd    And  those  w-f  horses  wait ;  „              90 

White-flower'd    saw  The  w-f  elder-thicket  from  the  field  Godiva  63 

Black  holly,  and  w-f  wayfaring-tree  !  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  130 

White-hair'd    A  w-h  shadow  roaming  like  a  dream  Tithonus  8 

White-headed    I  this  old  w-h  dreamer  stoopt  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  38 

White-hooved    Leading  a  jet-black  goat  white-hom'd,  w-h,  (Enone  51 

White-hom'd    Leading  a  jet-black  goat  w-h,  white-hooved,  „      51 

White-listed     tree  that  shone  w-l  thro'  the  gloom.  Merlin  and  V.  939 

Whiten    Willows  w,  aspens  quiver,  L.  of  Shalott  i  10 

The  ptarmigan  that  w's  ere  his  hour  Last  Tournament  697 

Whiten'd  (adj.  and  part.)     Part  black,  part  w  with  the 

bones  of  men.  Holy  Grail  500 

The  meal-sacks  on  the  w  floor,  Miller's  D.  101 

Whiten'd  (verb)     And  w  all  the  rolling  flood  ;  The  Victim  20 

When  the  lake  w  and  the  pinewood  roar'd,  Merlin  and  V.  637 

Whiteness    all  but  utter  w  held  for  sin,  Holy  Grail  84 

Whitening    Down  thro'  the  w  hazels  made  a  plunge  Enoch  Arden  379 

after  the  great  waters  break  W  for  half  a  league,  Last  Tournament  465 

A  rhyme  that  flower'd  betwixt  the  w  sloe  To  Mary  Boyle  25 

Whiter    Is  w  even  than  her  pretty  hand  :  Aylmer's  Field  363 

The  flocks  are  w  down  the  vaJe,  In  Mem.  cxv  10 

To  meet  and  greet  a  w  sun ;  „     Con.  78 

And  w  than  the  mist  that  all  day  long  Pass,  of  Arthur  137 

White-robed     W-r  in  honour  of  the  stainless  child.  Last  Tournament  147 

White  Rose     W  R,  Bellerophon,  the  Jilt,  The  Brook  161 

Whitest     With  w  honey  in  fairy  gardens  cull'd —  Elednore  26 

The  very  w  lamb  in  all  my  fold  Loves  you  :  Aylmer's  Field  361 

A  broad  earth-sweeping  pall  of  w  lawn.  Lover's  Tale  ii  78 

White-tail'd     Left  for  the  w-t  eagle  to  tear  it,  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  107 

White-wing'd     let  the  fair  w-w  peacemaker  fly  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  34 

Whither     Arthur  had  vanish'd  I  knew  not  w,  Merlin  and  the  G.  78 

Whitsuntide     Arthur  on  the  W  before  Held  court  Marr.  of  Geraint  145 

And  this  was  on  the  last  year's  W.  „              840 

Whizz "d     An  arrow  w  to  the  right,  one  to  the  left,  Baiin  and  Balan  419 

Whoate  (oats)     W  or  tonups  or  taates —  Village  Wife  26 

Whole  (adj.)     {See  also  'Ole)     Oft  lose  w  years  of  darker 

mind.  Two  Voices  372 

So  healthy,  sound,  and  clear  and  w.  Miller's  D.  15 

With  one  long  kiss  my  w  soul  thro'  My  lips,  Fatima  20 

My  w  soul  waiting  silently,  „       36 

W  weeks  and  months,  and  early  and  late,  The  Sisters  10 

And  blessings  on  his  w  life  long.  May  Queen,  Con.  14 

But  now  the  w  hound  table  is  dissolved  M.  d' Arthur  234 

I,  that  w  day.  Saw  her  no  more,  Gardener's  D.  163 

But  this  w  hour  your  eyes  have  been  intent  „             269 
but  I  die  here  To-day,  and  w  years  long,  a  life 

of  death.  St.  8.  Stylites  54 

If  it  may  be,  fast  W  Lents,  and  pray.  „           182 

I  trust  That  I  am  w,  and  clean,  and  meet  for  Heaven.  „          213 

This  w  wide  earth  of  light  and  shade  Will  Water.  67 

At  times  the  w  sea  bum'd,  at  times  The  Voyage  51 
To  waste  his  «  heart  in  one  kiss  Upon  her  perfect 

lips.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  44 
our  pride  Looks  only  for  a  moment  w  and  sound  ;         Aylmer's  Field  2 


Whole  (adj.)  (continued)    for  fear  This  w  foundation  ruin,       Princess  ii  341 

sphered  W  in  ourselves  and  owed  to  none.  „        iv  148 

miless  you  send  us  back  Our  son,  on  the  instant,  w.'  „            416 

but  half  Without  you ;  with  you,  w  ;  „             461 

My  mother,  looks  as  w  as  some  serene  „          v  193 

and  slips  in  sensual  mire,  But  w  and  one  :  „          v  200 

Then  felt  it  sound  and  w  from  head  to  foot,  „        vi  211 

she  You  talk'd  with,  w  nights  long,  up  in  the  tower,  „             255 

nor  seem'd  it  strange  that  soon  He  rose  up  w,  „         vii  65 

nor  yet  Did  those  twin  brothers,  risen  again  and  w  ;  „              89 

And  keeps  our  Britain,  w  within  herself,  .,      Con.  52 

I  wish  they  were  a  w  Atlantic  broad.'  ,,               71 

W  in  himself,  a  common  good.  Ode  on  Well.  26 

keep  our  noble  England  w,  „           161 

And  love  will  last  as  pure  and  w  In  Mem.  xliii  13 

That  so  my  pleasure  may  be  w  ;  „          Ixxi  8 

To  which  the  w  creation  moves.  „      Con.  144 

Has  our  w  earth  gone  nearer  to  the  glow  Maud  I  xviii  78 

Strike  dead  the  w  weak  race  of  venomous  worms,  „           //  i  46 

and  weep  My  w  soul  out  to  thee.  „              iv  98 

W,  like  a  crag  that  tumbles  from  the  cliff,  Marr.  of  Geraint  318 

To  save  her  dear  lord  w  from  any  wound.  Geraint  and  E.  45 

And  men  brought  in  w  hogs  and  quarter  beeves,  „             602 

Then,  when  Geraint  was  w  again,  „             945 

The  w  wood-world  is  one  full  peal  of  praise.  Balin  and  Balan  450 

Polluting,  and  imputing  her  «  self.  Merlin  and  V.  803 

the  one  passionate  love  Of  her  w  life ;  „            956 

'  Sir  King,  mine  ancient  wound  is  hardly  w,  Lancelot  and  E.  93 

Right  fain  were  I  to  learn  this  knight  were  w,  „             772 

Whereof  he  should  be  quickly  w,  „            853 

But  when  Sir  Lancelot's  deadly  hurt  was  w,  „             904 
Yet  still  thy  life  is  w,  and  still  I  live  Who  love 

thee  ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  150 

But  now  the  w  Round  Table  is  dissolved  „            402 

For  so  the  w  round  earth  is  every  way  „            422 
single  glance  of  them  Will  govern  a  w  life  from 

birth  to  death,  Lover's  Tale  i  76 

At  thought  of  which  my  w  soul  languishes  „            267 

The  w  land  weigh'd  him  down  as  .^tna  does  The  Giant 

of  Mythology :  „  iv  17 
Ship  after  ship,  the  w  night  long,  (repeat)  The  Revenge  58,  59,  60 
And  the  w  sea  plunged  and  fell  on  the  shot- 

shatter'd  navy  of  Spain,  „                        117 

So  mock'd,  so  spurn'd,  so  baited  two  w  days —  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  163 

And  the  w  isle-side  flashing  down  from  the  peak  V.  of  Maeldune  45 

For  the  w  isle  shudder'd  and  shook  like  a  man  „              74 

Oat  of  His  w  World-self  and  all  in  all—  Be  Prof,  Two  G.  49 

For  he  touch'd  on  the  w  sad  planet  of  man.  Dead  Prophet  39 
dwell  For  nine  white  moons  of  each  w  year  with  me,    Demeter  and  P.  121 

When  thou  shalt  dwell  the  w  bright  year  with  me,  „            139 

National  hatreds  of  w  generations,  Vastness  25 

Whole  (s)     All  various,  each  a  perfect  w  From  living 

Nature,  Palace  of  Art  58 

Is  bodied  forth  the  second  w.  Love  thou  thy  land  66 

That  each,  who  seems  a  separate  w.  In  Mem.  xlvii  1 

The  wish,  that  of  the  living  w  „              Iv  1 
Boundless  inward,  in  the  atom,  boimdless 

outward,  in  the  W.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  212 

be  welded  each  and  all.  Into  one  imperial  w,     Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  37 

Wholeness    He  that  in  his  Catholic  w  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  101 

Wholesale    You  need  not  set  your  thoughts  in  rubric 

thus  For  w  comment.'  Princess  Hi  51 

Wholesome     You  changed  a  w  heart  to  gall.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  4A 

eat  w  food.  And  wear  warm  clothes,  St.  S.  Stylites  108 

That  mock'd  the  w  human  heart.  The  Letters  10 

But  honest  talk  and  w  wine.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  18 

But  better  serves  a  w  law.  In  Mem.  xlviii  10 

glanced  Eyes  of  pure  women,  w  stars  of  love  ;  Gareth  and  L.  314 

None ;  or  the  w  boon  of  gyve  and  gag.'  „            370 

But  now  the  w  music  of  the  wood  Balin  and  Balan  436 

until  the  w  flower  And  poisonous  grew  together,  Holy  Grail  775 

Such  as  the  w  mothers  tell  their  boys.  Pelleas  and  E.  197 

whom  The  w  realm  is  purged  of  otherwhere.  Last  Tournament  96 

0  ay — the  w  madness  of  an  hour —  „               675 

Boughs  on  each  side,  laden  with  w  shade,  Lover's  Tale  i  230 


Wholesome 


794 


Wife 


Wholesome  (continued)    Whereof  to  all  that  draw  the  ?/' 

air,  Lover's  Tale  i  500 

Blessing  the  w  white  faces  of  Havelock's  good 

fusileers,  Bef.  of  Lucknow  101 

came  back  That  w  heat  the  blood  had  lost,  To  E.  Fitzgerald  24 

Dust  in  w  old-world  dust  before  the  newer  world 

begin.  Lockshy  H.,  Sixty  150 

Wholly     Then  I  cannot  be  w  duinb  ;  Maud  II  v  100 

Whoop     {See  also  Owl-whoop)     Call  to  each  other  and  w 

and  cry  The  Merman  26 

Whoop'd-Whoopt     bats  wheel'd,  and  owls  whoop'd.  Princess,  Con.  110 

An  owl  wkoopt :    '  Hark  the  victor  pealing 

there  !  '  Gareth  and  L.  1318 

Whooping     I  drown'd  the  w's  of  the  owl  with  sound  St.  S.  Stylites  33 

Whoopt    See  Whoop'd 

Whorl    With  delicate  spire  and  w,  Maud  II  ii  6 

Wicked  (adj.)     '  Chant  me  now  some  w  stave,  Vision  of  Sin  151 

for  the  w  broth  Confused  the  chemic  labour  of  the 

blood,  Lucretius  19 

About  the  good  King  and  his  w  Queen,  Guinevere  209 

Makes  w  lightnings  of  her  eyes,  „        520 

'  Ye  know  me  then,  that  w  one,  „        669 

And  so  she  was  w  with  Harry  ;  First  Quarrel  26 

Wicked  (s)     And  the  w  cease  from  troubling,  May  Queen,  Con.  60 

Wickedness    if  you  think  this  w  in  me,  Merlin  and  V.  339 

If  you — and  not  so  much  from  w,  „  520 

And  heal  the  world  of  all  their  w  !  Holy  Grail  94 

Well  might  I  wish  to  veil  her  w,  Guinevere  211 

who  hath  forgiven  My  w  to  him,  „        635 

Wicket    {See  also  Wicket-gate)     one  green  w  in  a  privet 

hedge  ;  Gardener's  D.  110 

Wicket  (in  cricket)     clamour  bowl'd  And  stunap'd 

the  w  ;  Princess,  Pro.  82 

Wicket-gate     I  reach'd  The  w-g,  and  found  her  standing 

there.  Gardener's  D.  213 

Wiclif     He  might  have  come  to  learn  Our  W's 

learning  :  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  65 

By  this  good  W  moimtain  down  from  heaven,  „  132 

Wiclif-preacher    My  frighted  W-f  whom  I  crost  ,,  38 

Wide     {See  also  Wild-wide,  Worid-wide)     W,  wild,  and  open 

to  the  air,  Dying  Swan  2 

Look  up  thro'  night :  the  world  is  w.  Two  Voices  24 

and  the  waste  w  Of  that  abyss,  or  scornful  pride  !  ,,119 

'  When,  w  in  soul  and  bold  of  tongue,  „         124 

mansion,  that  is  built  for  me,  So  royal-rich  and  «.'       Palace  of  Art  20 
With  cycles  of  the  human  tale  Of  this  w  world,  „  147 

In  this  great  house  so  royal-rich,  and  w,  „  191 

The  stalls  are  void,  the  doors  are  w,  Sir  Galahad  31 

Suddenly  set  it  w  to  find  a  sign,  Enoch  Arden  496 

the  suns  are  many,  the  world  is  w.  Maud  I  iv  45 

shiver  of  dancing  leaves  is  thrown  About  its  echoing 

chambers  w,  «        vi  74 

portal  of  King  Pellam's  chapel  w  And  inward  to 

the  wall ;  Balin  and  Balan  405 

my  spirit  Was  of  so  w  a  compass  Lover's  Tale  ii  135 

coostom  agean  draw'd  in  like  a  wind  fro'  far 

an'  w.  North.  Cobbler  93 

Stretch'd  w  and  wild  the  waste  enormous  marsh,       Ode  to  Memory  101 
Is  not  so  deadly  still  As  that  w  forest.  D.  of  F.  Women  69 

The  parson  taking  w  and  wider  sweeps.  The  Epic  14 

looking  wistfully  with  w  blue  eyes  As  in  a  picture.         M.  d' Arthur  169 
One  sabbath  deep  and  w —  St.  Agnes'  Eve  34 

This  whole  w  earth  of  light  and  shade  Will  Water.  67 

Till  the  fountain  spouted,  showering  w  Vision  of  Sin  21 

Thro'  one  w  chasm  of  time  and  frost  they  gave  Princess,  Pro.  93 

'  Fling  our  doors  w  !  all,  all,  not  one,  but  all,  „  vi  334 

In  this  w  hall  with  earth's  invention  stored.  Open.  Inter.  Exhib.  2 

Calm  and  deep  peace  in  this  w  air.  In  Mem.  xi  13 

Hid  from  the  w  world's  rumour  by  the  grove  Lancelot  and  E.  522 

W  flats,  where  nothing  but  coarse  grasses  grew  ;  Holy  Grail  794 

W  open  were  the  gates.  And  no  watch  kept ;  Pelleas  and  E.  414 

The  w  world  laugl^  at  it.  Last  Tournament  695 

Arise,  my  own  true  sister,  come  forth  !  the  world 

is  w.  The  Flight  96 

Read  the  w  world's  annals,  you,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  104 


Wide-dispread    locks  not  w-d,  Isabel  5 

Wide-mouth'd     The  little  w-m  heads  upon  the  spout  Godiva  56 

Widen     The  circle  w's  till  it  lip  the  marge,  Pelleas  and  E.  94 

Widened     And  the  thoughts  of  men  are  w  Locksley  Hall  138 
Widening    {See  also  Ever-widening)     And  ever  w  slowly 

silence  all.  Merlin  and  V.  392 

Wider     and  make  The  bounds  of  freedom  w  yet  To  the  Queen  32 

a  lyre  of  w  range  Struck  by  all  passion,  D.  of  F.  Women  165 

The  parson  taking  wide  and  w  sweeps.  The  Epic  14 

Wide-wing'd    w-w  sunset  of  the  misty  marsh  Last  Tournament  423 

Widow    {See  also  Would-be-widow)     his  w  Miriam  Lane, 

With  daily-dwindling  profits  Enoch  Arden  695 

affectionate  smile  That  makes  the  w  lean.  Sea  Dreams  156 

but  there  were  w's  here.  Two  w's.  Princess  i  127 

Then  came  a  w  crying  to  the  King,  Gareth  and  L.  333 

Came  yet  another  w  crying  to  him,  „            350 
w  with  less  guile  than  many  a  child.                     Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  182 

nor  wail  of  baby-wife.  Or  Indian  w  ;  Akbar's  Dream  197 

a  w  came  to  my  door  :  Charity  26 

Widow-bride     made  The  wife  of  wives  a  w-b,  Romney's  R.  138 

Widow'd    Laid  w  of  the  power  in  his  eye  M.  d' Arthur  122 
To  thy  w  marriage-pillows,  to  the  tears  that  thou  wilt 

weep.  Locksley  Hall  82 

I  cry  to  vacant  chairs  and  w  walls,  Aylmer's  Field  720 

Till  all  my  w  race  be  run  ;  In  Mem.  ix  18 

Till  all  my  w  race  be  run.  „       xvii  20 

Could  we  forget  the  w  hour  „           xl  1 

My  heart,  tho'  w,  may  not  rest  „  Ixxxv  113 

Laid  w  of  the  power  in  his  eye  Pass,  of  Arthur  290 

Wilt  neither  quit  the  w  Crown  nor  let  Prin.  Beatrice  15 

Widower  (adj.)     there  the  w  husband  and  dead  wife         Lover's  Tale  iv  372 

Widower  (s)     Tears  of  the  w,  when  he  sees  In  Mem.  xiii  1 

Widowhood    praise  To  God,  that  help'd  her  in  her  w.  Dora  113 

Thro'  all  the  clouded  years  of  w,  Death  of  (Enone  103 

Width     two  remain'd  Apart  by  all  the  chamber's  w,         Geraint  and  E.  265 

Wield     So  the  Higher  vrs  the  Lower,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  124 

my  brothers,  work,  and  w  The  forces  of  to-day,  Mechanophilus  29 

Wielded     Nor  w  axe  disjoint.  Talking  Oak  262 

Wielder     W  of  the  stateliest  measure  To  Virgil  39 

Wieldii^    The  w  of  weapons —  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  90 

Wife     {See  also  Baby-wife,  Missis)     In  her  as  Mother,  W, 

and  Queen  ;  To  the  Queen  28 

The  queen  of  marriage,  a  most  perfect  w.  Isabel  28 

'  Who  took  a  w,  who  rear'd  his  race,  Two  Voices  328 

One  walk'd  between  his  w  and  child,  „        412 

Pray,  Alice,  pray,  my  darling  w.  Miller's  D.  23 

True  w.  Round  my  true  heart  thine  arms  entwine  „        215 

fairest  and  most  loving  w  in  Greece,'  (Enone  187 

Fairest — why  fairest  w  ?  am  I  not  fair  ?  „       196 

The  gardener  Adam  and  his  w  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  51 

cannot  tell — I  might  have  been  his  w  ;  May  Queen,  Con.  47 

dream  of  Fatherland,  Of  child,  and  w,  Lotos- Eaters  40 

dear  the  last  embraces  of  our  wives  „     C.  S.  70 

I  KNEW  an  old  w  lean  and  poor,  The  Goose  1 

It  stirr'd  the  old  w's  mettle  :  „      26 

often  thought,  '  I'll  make  them  man  and  w.'  Dora  4 

take  her  for  your  w  ;  ,,20 

Or  change  a  word  with  her  he  calls  his  w,  „    44 

I  had  been  a  patient  w  :  „  147 

his  w  upon  the  tilt,  IValk.  to  the  Mail  41 

He  left  his  w  behind ;  for  so  I  heard.  „              47 

Sit  with  their  wives  by  fires,  St.  S.  Stylites  108 

Match'd  with  an  aged  w,  I  mete  and  dole  Ulysses  3 

As  the  husband  is,  the  w  is  :  Locksley  Hall  47 

loved  thee  more  than  ever  w  was  loved.  „            64 

Godiva,  w  to  that  grim  Earl,  Godiva  12 

But  break  it.     In  the  name  of  w,  Day-Dm.,  L' Envoi  53 

Lord  Ronald's,  When  you  are  man  and  w.'  Lady  Clare  36 

Little  can  I  give  my  w.  L.  of  Burleigh  14 

above  his  book  Leering  at  his  neighbour's  w.  Vision  of  Sin  118 

'  This  is  my  house  and  this  my  little  w.'  Enoch  Arden  28 

The  little  w  would  weep  for  company,  „            34 

And  say  she  would  be  little  w  to  both.  „            36 

his  w  Bore  him  another  son,  a  sickly  one  :  „          108 

yet  the  w — When  he  was  gone —  „          13 


1 


Wife 


795 


Wild 


Wife  (coiitinued)     With  all  that  seamen  needed  or  their 
wives — 

Pray'd  for  a  blessing  on  his  w  and  babes 

Cast  his  strong  arms  about  his  drooping  w, 

I  wish  you  for  my  w. 

I  believe,  if  you  were  fast  my  u; 

beheld  His  w  his  w  no  more,  and  saw  the  babe 

'  This  miller's  w  '  He  said  to  Mirisim 

This  fiat  somewhat  soothed  himself  and  u\  His  w  a 
faded  beauty  of  the  Baths, 

To  ailitig  w  or  wailing  infancy 

the  M--,  who  watch'd  his  face.  Paled 

in  the  narrow  gloom  By  w  and  child  ; 

His  w,  an  unknown  artist's  orphan  child — 

The  gentle-hearted  w  Sat  shuddering 

And  silenced  by  that  silence  lay  the  w, 

•  Not  fearful :  fair,'  Said  the  good  w, 

'  Nay,'  said  the  kindly  w  to  comfort  him, 

'  Was  he  so  bound,  poor  soul  ? '  said  the  good  w ; 

flock'd  at  noon  His  tenants,  w  and  child, 

We  fell  out,  my  w  and  I, 

a  good  mother,  a  good  w,  Worth  winning ; 

see  how  you  stand  Stiff  as  Lot's  w, 
I      I  had  been  wedded  w,  I  knew  mankind, 

My  bride.  My  w,  my  life. 

Since  English  Harold  gave  its  throne  a  w. 

And  Willy's  w  has  written :  (repeat) 

Never  the  w  for  Willy : 

not  wept,  little  Annie,  not  since  I  had  been  a  w ; 

The  sweet  little  w  of  the  singer  said, 

'  The  King  is  happy  In  child  and  w ; 

Is  he  your  dearest  ?    Or  I,  the  w  ? ' 

'  O  w,  what  use  to  answer  now  ? 

Suddenly  from  him  brake  his  w, 

Gods  have  answer'd ;  We  give  them  the  w ! ' 

Me  the  w  of  rich  Prasittagus, 

Take  my  love  and  be  my  w. 

Thou  bring'st  the  sailor  to  his  w, 

No  casual  mistress,  but  a  w. 

They  would  but  find  in  child  and  w 

And  of  my  spirit  as  of  a  w. 

That  must  be  made  a  w  ere  noon  ? 

Now  waiting  to  be  made  a  w, 


Enoch  Arden  139 
188 
228 
410 
414 
759 
804 


Aylmer's  Field  26 

177 

731 

841 

iSea  Dreams  2 

29 

46 

83 

140 

169 

Princess,  Fro.  4 

»  ii  3 

vim 

in  241 

327 

vii  360 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  24 

Grandmother  3,  105 

4 

63 

The  Islet  3 

.     The  Victim  26 

52 

55 

70 

79 

Boddicea  48 

Windorc,  No  Answer  24 

In  Mem.  x  5 

„      lix  2 

„       xc  7 

„  xevii  8 

„  Con.  26 

49 


filthy  by-lane  rings  to  the  yell  of  the  trampled  w, 

you  are  all  unmeet  for  a  w. 

Was  wedded  with  a  winsome  w,  Ygeme : 

Lot's  w,  the  Queen  of  Orkney,  Bellicent,  (repeat) 

But  she,  a  stainless  w  to  Gorlois, 

and  his  w  Nursed  the  young  prince, 

A  horror  on  him,  lest  his  gentle  w, 

that  if  ever  yet  was  w  True  to  her  lord, 

I  fear  that  I  am  no  true  w.' 

And  that  she  fear'd  she  was  not  a  true  w. 

As  I  will  make  her  truly  my  true  w.' 

I  charge  thee,  on  thy  duty  as  a  w, 

nor  told  his  gentle  w  What  ail'd  him, 

I  heard  you  say,  that  you  were  no  true  w : 

Hath  push'd  aside  his  faithful  w, 

To  worship  woman  as  true  w  beyond 

Whose  kinsman  left  him  watcher  o'er  his  w 

Some  cause  had  kept  him  sunder'd  from  his  w  : 

'  Your  love,'  she  said,  '  your  love — to  be  your  w.' 

But  now  there  never  will  be  w  of  mine.' 

'  No,  no,'  she  cried,  '  I  care  not  to  be  w, 

Our  bond,  as  not  the  bond  of  man  and  w. 

Our  bond  is  not  the  bond  of  man  and  w. 

Delight  myself  with  gossip  and  old  wives. 

Rough  wives,  that  laugh'd  and  scream'd 

he  could  harp  his  w  up  out  of  hell.' 

as  the  village  w  who  cries  '  I  shudder, 

Mine  is  the  shame,  for  I  was  w, 

lets  the  w  Whom  he  knows  false,  abide  and  rule 

whereon  I  lean'd  in  w  and  friend 

w  and  child  with  wail  Pass  to  new  lords; 

Had  thrust  his  w  and  child  and  dash'd 


Maud  I  i  38 

iv  57 

Com.  of  Arthur  188 

„    190,245 

194 

223 

Marr.  of  Geraint  29 

46 

108 

114 

503 

Geraint  and  E.  16 

503 

742 

Balin  and  Balan  106 

Merlin  and  V.  23 

706 

715 

Lancelot  and  E.  933 

936 

937 

1191 

1206 

Holy  Grail  553 

Pelleas  and  E.  89 

Last  Tournament  328 

Guinevere  56 

„       119 

„       514 

Pass,  of  Arthur  24 

44 

Lover's  Tale  i  380 


Wife  (continued)     '  Take  my  free  gift,  my  cousin,  for 
your  w ; 
widower  husband  and  dead  w  Rush'd  each  at  each 
when  at  last  he  freed  himself  From  w  and  child, 
he  call'd  me  his  own  little  w  ; 
To  make  a  good  w  for  Harry, 
'  I  ha'  six  weeks'  work,  little  w, 
been  as  true  to  you  as  ever  a  man  to  his  w ; 
Come,  come,  little  w,  let  it  rest ! 
kind  of  you,  Madam,  to  sit  by  an  old  dying  w. 
an'  I  wur  chousin'  the  w, 
'  We  have  children,  we  have  wives, 
So  far  that  no  caress  could  win  my  w 
hignorant  village  w  as  'ud  hev  to  be  lam'd  her 

awn  plaace,' 
God  help  them,  our  children  and  wives  I 
'  Children  and  wives — if  the  tigers  leap 
Their  wives  and  children  Spanish  concubines, 
He  blesses  the  w. 

maidens,  wives,  And  mothers  with  their  babblers 
I  cried,  '  for  the  sin  of  the  w. 

Not  from  the  nurse — nor  yet  to  the  w — to  her  maiden  name  !        „       144 
You  have  parted  the  man  from  the  w.  Despair  62 

and  she,  the  delicate  w.  With  a  grief  that  could  only  be  cured,       „       79 


Lover's  Tale  iv  363 
372 
380 

First  Quarrel  10 

30 

45 

60 

62 

Eizpah  21 

North.  Cobbler  83 

The  Revenge  92 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  258 

Village  Wife  106 

Def.  of  Lucknow  8 

51 

Columbus  175 

To  Prin.  F.ofH.  4 

Tiresias  102 

The  Wreck  99 


The  w,  the  sons,  who  love  him  best 
would  I  were  there,  the  friend,  the  bride,  the  w, 
an'  he's  married  another  w, 
at  yer  wake  like  husban'  an'  ic. 
'  A  faaithful  an'  loovin'  w  ! ' 
vows  '  till  death  shall  part  us,'  she  the  would-be- 
widow  w. 
kill'd  the  slave,  and  slew  the  w 
His  w  and  his  child  stood  by  him  in  tears, 
I  envied  human  wives,  and  nested  birds, 
'  I  take  thee  Muriel  for  my  wedded  w ' — 
larger  woman-world  Of  wives  and  mothers. 
'  Let  us  revenge  ourselves,  your  Ulric  woos  my  w  '- 
If  man  and  w  be  but  one  flesh, 
if  /  had  been  the  leper  would  you  have  left  the  w  ? 
bewail  the  friend,  the  w,  For  ever  gone. 
The  truest,  kindliest,  noblest-hearted  w 
That  w  and  children  drag  an  Artist  down ! 
if  such  a  w  as  you  Should  vanish  unrecorded. 
'  Why  left  you  w  and  children  ? 
make  The  w  of  wives  a  widow-bride, 
Sir,  I  was  once  a  w. 
But  the  new-wedded  w  was  unharm'd, 
I  had  cursed  her  as  woman  and  w,  and  in  w  and  woman 
I  found 
Wifehood    Of  perfect  w  and  pure  lowlihead. 
Wif&-hanting     W-h,  as  the  rumour  ran. 
Wifeless    now  a  lonely  man  W  and  heirless, 
Wifelike     W,  her  hand  in  one  of  his. 
Wife-murder    adulteries,  W-m's, — 
Wife-worship    fair  w-«  cloaks  a  secret  shame  ? 
Wight  (isle)     Among  the  quarried  downs  of  W, 

(Take  it  and  come)  to  the  Isle  of  W ; 
Wild  (adj.)     (See  also  Ravimg-wild,  Woild)     And  thro'  w 

March  the  throstle  calls.  To  the  Queen  14 

At  noon  the  w  bee  hummeth  Claribel  11 

And  w  winds  bound  within  their  cell,  Mariana  54 

Stretch'd  wide  and  w  the  waste  enormous  marsh,      Ode  to  Meinory  101 
The  plain  was  grassy,  w  and  bare,  Wide,  w,  and  open 

to  the  air. 
Chasing  itself  at  its  own  w  will, 

w  swan's  death-hymn  took  the  soul  Of  that  waste  place 
W  words  wander  here  and  there : 
who  can  tell  The  last  w  thought  of  Chatelet, 
Her  rapid  laughters  w  and  shrill. 
By  some  w  skylark's  matin  song. 
in  many  a  w  festoon  Ran  riot, 
When  I  past  by,  a  w  and  wanton  pard, 
ere  the  stars  come  forth  Talk  with  the  w  Cassandra, 
Far  as  the  w  swan  wings,  to  where  the  sky 
or  one  deep  cry  Of  great  w  beasts ; 


Ancient  Sage  125 

The  Flight  43 

Tomorrow  49 

82 

Spinster's  S's.  72 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  24 

67 

Dead  Prophet  57 

Demeter  arid  P.  53 

The  Ring  377 

487 

—  Happy  63 

„      94 

„    100 

To  Mary  Boyle  53 

Romney's  R.  35 

38 

68 

129 

138 

Bandit's  Death  9 

Charity  22 


„      31 

Isabel  12 

Aylmer's  Field  212 

Lancelot  and  E.  1371 

Aylmer's  Field  808 

Romney's  R.  134 

Balin  and  Balan  360 

To  Ulysses  32 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  12 


Dying  Swan  1 

17 

21 

A  Dirge  43 

Margaret  37 

Kate  3 

Miller's  D.  40 

(Enone  100 

„      199 

„      263 

Palace  of  AH  i\ 

283 


Wild 


796 


Wild 


Wild  (adj.)  (continued)    w  marsh-marigold  slimes  like  fire  in 

swamps  May  Queen  31 

I  have  been  w  and  wayward,  May  Queen  N .  Y's.  E.  33 

j'Ou  must  not  weep,  nor  let  your  grief  be  w,  ,,  35 

All  in  the  ^o  March-morning  I  heard  the  angels  call ;   „  Con.  25 

in  the  w  March-morning  I  heard  them  call  my  soul.    „  28 

W  flowers  in  the  valley  for  other  hands  than  mine.    „  52 

Brimful  of  those  w  tales,  D.  of  F.  Women  12 

And  the  w  kiss,  when  fresh  from  war's  alarms,  ,.  149 

'  Heaven  heads  the  count  of  crimes  With  that  w  oath.'  „  202 

Yet  waft  me  from  the  harbour-mouth,  W  wind !  You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  26 
w  hearts  and  feeble  wings  That  even?  sophister  Love  thou  thy  land  11 
The  w  wind  rang  from  park  and  plam,  The  Goose  45 

And  the  w  water  lapping  on  the  crag.'  M.  d' Arthur  71 

swan  That,  fluting  a  w  carol  ere  her  death,  ,.        267 

where  the  heart  on  one  w  leap  Hung  tranced  Gardeners  D.  259 

My  sweet,  w,  fresh  three  quarters  of  a  year,  Edwin  Morris  2 

Again  with  hands  of  w  rejection  '  Go  !• — ■  „         124 

Till  that  w  wind  made  work  Talking  Oak  54 

And  in  the  chase  grew  w,  „        126 

and  the  w  team  Which  love  thee,  Tithonus  39 

Whispering  I  knew  not  what  of  w  and  sweet,  „       61 

Make  me  feel  the  w  pulsation  that  I  felt  Locksley  Hall  109 

Where  in  w  Mahratta-battle  fell  my  father  evil- 

starr'd ; — 
Catch  the  w  goat  by  the  hair, 
but  I  know  my  words  are  w. 
As  w  as  aught  of  fairy  lore ; 
But  it  is  w  and  barren. 
Caught  each  other  with  w  grimaces, 
w  hawk  stood  with  the  down  on  his  beak. 
If  he  could  know  his  babes  were  running  w 
The  helpless  life  so  w  that  it  was  tame, 
upjetted  in  spirts  of  w  sea-smoke, 
but  if  there  were  A  music  harmonizing  our  w  cries, 
By  this  w  king  to  force  her  to  his  wish, 


Lilia,  w  with  sport.  Half  child  half  woman 

Thro'  the  w  woods  that  hung  about  the  town ; 

and  the  shrieks  Of  the  w  woods  together ; 

All  w  to  found  an  University  For  maidens, 

Like  some  w  creature  newly-caged, 

*  Who  ever  saw  such  w  barbarians  ? 

And  the  w  cataract  leaps  in  glory. 

Blow,  bugle,  blow,  set  the  w  echoes  flying,  (repeat) 

Deep  as  first  love,  and  w  with  all  regret ; 

and  the  w  figtree  split  Their  monstrous  idols, 

When  the  w  peasant  rights  himself, 

w  birds  on  the  light  Dash  themselves  dead. 

And  make  a  w  petition  night  and  day, 

Rotting  on  some  w  shore  with  ribs  of  wreck, 

'  W  natures  need  wise  curbs. 

'  for  this  w  wreath  of  air, 

so  belabour'd  him  on  rib  and  cheek  They  made  him  w 

I  miised  on  that  w  morning  in  the  woods. 

At  the  barrier  like  a  w  horn  in  a  land  Of  echoes, 

I  trust  that  there  is  no  one  hurt  to  death,  For  your 

w  whim : 
catch  Her  hand  in  w  delirixun,  gripe  it  hard, 
for  on  one  side  arose  The  women  up  in  w  revolt, 
let  the  w  Lean-headed  Eagles  yelp  alone, 
something  w  within  her  breast, 
Like  our  w  Princess  with  as  wise  a  dream 
W  War,  who  breaks  the  converse  of  the  wise ; 
O  the  w  charge  they  made ! 
And  howsoever  this  w  world  may  roll, 


155 
170 
173 

Day  Dm.,  L'Envoi  12 

Amphion  2 

Vision  of  Sin  35 

Poet's  Song  11 

Enoch  Arden  304 

557 

Sea  Dreams  52 

255 

Princess,  Pro.  37 


100 

i91 

99 

150 

m301 

Hi  42 

iv  4 

5,17 

57 

79 

385 

495 

vm 

147 
173 
318 
342 
471 
486 


vi  243 

vii  93 

123 

210 

237 

Con.  69 

Third  of  Feb.  8 

Light  Brigade  51 

W.  to  Marie  Alex.  48 


Yell'd  and  shriek'd  between  her  dauglitere  o'er  a  w 

confederjicy.  Boddicea  6 
Forgive  these  w  and  wandering  cries,                            In  Mem.,  Pro.  41 

The  w  pulsation  of  her  wings ;  „  xii  4 

The  vo  unrest  that  lives  in  woe  „  xv  15 

Can  calm  despair  and  w  unrest  „  xvi  2 

such  as  lurks  In  some  w  Poet,  „  xxxiv  7 

And  those  w  eyes  that  watch  the  wave  „  xxxvi  16 

That  had  the  w  oat  not  been  sown,  „  liii  6 

As  wan,  as  chill,  as  w  as  now ;  „  Ixxii  17 


Wild  (adj.)  (continued)     Ring  out,  w  bells,  to  the  w  sky,  /w  Mem.  cvi  1 

Ring  out,  w  bells,  and  let  him  die.                           "  ..                4 

But  some  w  Pallas  from  the  brain  Of  Demons?  cxiv  12 

W  Hours  that  fly  with  Hope  and  Fear,  ..    cxxviii  9 

And  w  voice  pealing  up  to  the  sunny  sky,  Maud  I  vlZ 

So  that  w  dog,  and  wolf  and  boar  and  bear  Com.  of  Arthur  23 

W  beasts,  and  surely  would  have  torn  the  child  ..          217 

lords  Have  foughten  like  w  beasts  among  themselves,  ..          226 

'  Being  a  goose  and  rather  tame  than  w,  Gareth  atid  L.  38 

As  slopes  a  w  brook  o'er  a  little  stone,  Marr.  of  Geraint  77 

Turn  thy  w  wheel  thro'  sunshine,  „            348 

With  that  w  wheel  we  go  not  up  or  down  ;  .,            351 

I  know  not,  but  he  past  to  the  w  land.  „            443 

For  old  am  I,  and  rough  the  ways  and  w;  ..            750 

That  skins  the  w  beast  after  slaying  him,  Geraint  and  E.  93 

To  keep  them  in  the  w  ways  of  the  wood,  ,,             187 

Or  two  w  men  supporters  of  a  shield,  „            267 

Enter'd,  the  w  lord  of  the  place,  Limours.  „            277 

Enid,  the  loss  of  whom  hath  turn'd  me  w- —  „            308 

I  call  mine  own  self  w,  „            311 

Then  thought  she  heard  the  w  Earl  at  the  door,  „            381 

And  in  the  moment  after,  w  Limours,  „            457 

To  shun  the  w  ways  of  the  lawless  tribe.  „             608 

As  of  a  w  thing  taken  in  the  trap,  .,             723 

And  in  the  w  woods  of  Broceliande,  Merlin  and  V.  2 

Ev'n  to  the  w  woods  of  Broceliande.  ,.          204 

Who  meant  to  eat  her  up  in  that  to  wood  ..          260 

all  thro'  this  w  wood  And  all  this  morning  „  285 
To  chase  a  creature  that  was  current  then  In  these 

w  woods,  ,.          409 

And  all  thro'  following  you  to  this  w  wood,  ..          440 

As  some  w  turn  of  anger,  or  a  mood  ..          521 

On  some  w  down  above  the  windy  deep,  ,,           658 

0  cruel,  there  was  nothing  w  or  strange,  ..  860 
When  the  strong  neighings  of  the  w  white  Horse  Lancelot  and  E.  298 
Suddenly  flash'd  on  her  a  w  desire,  „  357 
Bare,  as  a  w  wave  in  the  wide  North-sea,  „  482 
Then  flash'd  into  w  tears,  and  rose  again,  „  613 
'  Well — if  I  bide,  lo  !  this  w  flower  for  me  ! '  „  644 
Crush'd  the  w  passion  out  against  the  floor  „  742 
All  in  a  fiery  dawning  w  with  wind  „  1020 
But  the  w  Queen,  who  saw  not,  burst  away  ..  1244 
To  smoke  the  scandalous  hive  of  those  w  bees  Holy  Grail  214 
'  O  w  and  of  the  woods,  Pelleas  and  E.  99 
But  thou,  thro'  ever  harrying  thy  w  beasts —  Last  TouriMment  635 
Becomes  thee  well — art  grown  w  beast  thyself.  „  637 
And  with  a  w  sea-light  about  his  feet,  Guinevere  242 
To  guard  thee  in  the  w  hour  coming  on,  „  446 
like  w  birds  that  change  Their  season  in  the  night  Pass,  of  Arthur  38 
And  the  w  water  lapping  on  the  crag.'  „  239 
swan  That,  fluting  a  w  carol  ere  her  death,  „            435 

1  stoop'd,  I  gather'd  the  w  herbs.  Lover's  Tale  i  342 
Like  to  the  vj  youth  of  an  evil  prince,  „  354 
w  brier  had  driven  Its  knotted  thorns  „  619 
Embathing  all  with  w  and  woful  hues,  „  it  64 
like  w  Bacchanals  Fled  onward  to  the  steeple  „  Hi  25 
And  something  weird  and  w  about  it  all :  „  iv  224 
an'  I  flung  him  the  letter  that  drove  me  w,  First  Quarrel  57 
he  was  always  so  w —  Rizpah  26 
But  he  lived  with  a  lot  of  w  mates,  „  29 
w  earthquake  out-tore  Clean  from  our  lines  of 

defence  Def.  of  Lucknow  61 

Some  ears  for  Christ  in  this  w  field  of  Wales — -  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  13 

when  the  w  hour  and  the  wine  Had  set  the  wits  aflame.  „            94 

a  score  of  w  birds  Cried  from  the  topmost  summit  V.  of  Maeldune  27 

shouting  of  these  w  birds  ran  into  the  hearts  ,,              33 

For  a  w  witch  naked  as  heaven  stood  on  each  .,  „            100 

all  the  summer  long  we  roam'd  in  these  w  woods  The  Flight  79 

'  His  two  w  woodland  flowers.'  ,.        80 

W  flowers  blowing  side  by  side  in  God's  free  light  ..        81 

W  flowers  of  the  secret  woods,  ..        82 

W  woods  in  which  we  roved  with  him,  .,        83 

W  woods  in  which  we  rove  no  more,  „  84 
she  had  never  driven  me  w*                                      Locksley  H.,  Si.vty  20 

Ages  after,  while  in  Asia,  he  that  led  the  w  Moguls,  „               81 


wad 


797 


wm 


Wild  (adj.)  (continued)     Drove  it  in  w  disarray,  Heavy  Brigade  60 

?o  mob's  million  feet  Will  kick  you  from  your  place,  The  Fleet  18 

Yea,  for  some  w  hope  was  mine  That,  The  Ring  135 

Up  leaps  the  lark,  gone  w  to  welcome  her.  Prog,  of  Sping  14 

I  am  w  again  !     The  coals  of  fire  you  heap  Eomney's  R.  140 

starved  the  w  beast  that  was  linkt  with  thee  Bi/  cm  Evolution.  11 

In  some  fifth  Act  what  this  w  Drama  means.  The  Play  4 

Yes,  my  w  little  Poet.  The  Throstle  4 

w  heather  round  me  and  over  me  June's  high  blue,  June  Bracken,  etc.  2 
these  Are  like  w  brutes  new-caged —  Akbar's  Dream  50 

w  horse,  anger,  plunged  To  fling  me, 
And  yet  so  w  and  wayward  that  my  dream — 

Vl^ld  (s)     flight  from  out  your  bookless  w's 

'  Peace,  you  young  savage  of  the  Northern  to  ! 

thro'  those  dark  gates  across  the  w  That  no  man  knows 

The  King  was  hunting  in  the  w  ; 

The  King  retum'd  from  out  the  w,  ' 

Till  from  the  garden  and  the  w 

My  yet  young  life  in  the  w's  of  Time, 

then  he  cried  again,  '  To  the  to's  !  ' 

a  meadow  gemlike  chased  In  the  brown  to. 

Who  lived  alone  in  a  great  w  on  grass ; 

that  old  man  Went  back  to  his  old  w. 

But  he  by  w  and  way,  for  half  the  night, 

doth  all  that  haimts  the  waste  and  w  Mourn, 

Wlldbeast     (See  also  Wild)     felt  the  blind  «  of  force, 

Wild-bird    (See  also  Wild)     From  the  groves  within  The 

w-h's  din.  PoeVs  Mind  21 

Nor  bruised  the  lo's  egg.  Lover's  Tale  ii  21 

Wilder    And  some  are  w  comrades,  Pref.  Son.  19th  Cent.  12 

Wilderness    As  manna  on  my  w,  Supp.  Confessions  114 

And  Fancy  watches  in  the  w,  Caress'd  or  chidden  12 

Ijnurmur  under  moon  and  stars  In  brambly  w'es ;  The  Brook  179 

Aylmer's  Field  437 


Will  (s)  (cotitinued)     My  Lord,  if  so  it  be  Thy  w.' 
The  marvel  of  the  everlasting  w, 
Chasing  itself  at  its  own  wild  w, 
Then  let  wise  Nature  work  her  w, 
'  Sick  art  thou — -a  divided  w  Still  heapii^ 
full-grown  w,  Circled  thro'  all  experiences, 
and  yet  His  w  be  done ! 


Supp.  Confessions  106 

The  Poet  7 

Dying  Swan  17 

My  life  is  full  21 

Two  Voices  106 

(Enone  165 

May  Queen,  Con.  10 


118 

172 

Princess  ii  56 

„     Hi  247 

„    OTi362 

The  Victim  30 

41 

In  Mem.  ci  17 

Maud  I  xvi  21 

Geraint  and  E.  28 

199 

Merlin  and  F.  621 

649 

PelhasandE.  497 

Pass,  of  Arthur  48 

Princess  v  266 


That  w  of  single  instances. 

The  w  shall  blossom  as  the  rose. 

Hide,  hide  them,  million-myrtled  to. 

And  vines,  and  blowing  bosks  of  to, 

wolf  and  wolfkin,  from  the  w,  wallow  in  it, 

to,  full  of  wolves,  where  he  used  to  lie ; 

And  so  there  grew  great  tracts  of  to, 

'  I  will  ride  forth  into  the  to ; 

And  w'es,  perilous  paths,  they  rode : 

Here  in  the  heart  of  waste  and  to. 

What  go  ye  into  the  to  to  see  ?  ' 

weaving  over  That  various  w  a  tissue  of  light 

But  God  is  with  me  in  this  to. 

Over  a  to  Gliding, 

then  A  hiss  as  from  a  to  of  snakes. 
Wildest    Their  to  wailings  never  out  of  tune 

maybe  w  dreams  Are  but  the  needful  preludes 

Something  other  than  the  to  modem  guess 
Wild-eyed    My  bright-eyed,  to-e  falcon, 

Fast,  fast,  my  to-e  Rosalind, 
Wildfire    Be  dazzled  by  the  w  Love 
Wild-flower  (adj.)     I  had  lived  a  to-/  life 
WUd-flower  (s)    (See  also  Wild) 
the  hill?— 

Yet  trod  I  not  the  to  in  my  path. 
Wild-goose     '  Thou  art  but  a  to-g'  to  question  it.' 
Wilding    And  like  a  crag  Was  gay  with  w  flowers : 
Wildness    His  to,  and  the  chances  of  the  dark.' 
Wild-swan    (See  also  Wild)    made  the  w-s  pause  in  her  cloud.  Poet's  Song  7 

leader  w  in  among  the  stars  Would  clang  it.  Princess  iv  434 

Wildweed-flower    The  to-/  that  simply  blows  ?  Day-Dm.,  Moral  6 

Wild-wide    found  the  world.  Staring  w-to ;  Balin  and  Balan  596 

Wild  Will     W  W,  Black  Bess,  Tantivy,  The  Brook  160 

Wild-wood  (See  also  Wild)  sweeter  still  The  to-to  hyacinth  Balin  and  Balan  271 
Wile    w  the  length  from  languorous  hours.  Princess  vii  63 

Wilful    To  make  her  thrice  as  to  as  before.'  Lancelot  and  E.  206 

'  Father,  you  call  me  to,  and  the  fault  Is  yours  „  750 

Being  so  very  to  you  must  go.'  (repeat)  „      777,  781 

'  Being  so  very  w  you  must  die.'  „  783 

A  rosebud  set  with  little  w  thorns,  Princess,  Pro.  154 

Wiliest    of  her  court  The  to  and  the  worst ;  Guinevere  29 

Will  (s)     Broad-based  v/pon  her  people's  w,  To  the  Queen  35 


iMcretius  204 

Princess  i  111 

Boadicea  15 

Maud  II  V  54 

Com.  of  Arthur  10 

Marr.  of  Geraint  127 

Geraint  and  E.  32 

313 

Holy  Grail  287 

Lover's  Tale  i  419 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  8 

Merlin  and  the  G.  36 

St.  Telemachus  66 

Sea  Dreams  231 

Princess,  Con.  73 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  232 

Rosalind  6 

Princess  v  441 
The  Wreck  37 
Plucking  the  harmless  w-f  on 

Maud  II  i  3 
Lover's  Tale  ii  20 
Gareth  and  L.  36 
Marr.  of  Geraint  319 
Princess  iv  244 


yet  it  chafes  me  that  I  could  not  bend  One  to ;         D.  of  F.  Women  138 

That  I  subdued  me  to  my  father's  w ;  „              234 

Let  her  w  Be  done — to  weep  To  J.  S.  43 

With  one  wide  W  that  closes  thine.  On  a  Mourner  20 

power  in  his  eye  That  bow'd  the  to.  M.  d' Arthur  123 

Now  Dora  felt  her  uncle's  w  in  all,  Dora  5 

My  home  is  none  of  yours.  My  to  is  law.'  „  45 
more  from  ignorance  than  w                                     Walk,  to  the  Mail  110 

knowing  all  Life  needs  for  life  is  possible  to  w —  Love  and  Duty  86 

strong  in  to  To  strive,  to  seek,  to  find,  Ulysses  69 

thy  strong  Hours  indignant  work'd  their  to '5,  Tithonus  18 

his  eyes,  before  they  had  their  w,  Godiva  69 

A  virgin  heart  in  work  and  w.  Sir  Galahad  24 

Against  her  father's  and  mother's  w :  Edward  Gray  10 

Used  all  her  fiery  to,  and  smote  Her  life  Will  Water.  Ill 

Annie  fought  against  his  w :  Enoch  Arden  158 

So  grieving  held  his  w,  and  bore  it  thro'.  „          167 

Set  her  sad  w  no  less  to  chime  with  bis,  .,           248 

Prayer  from  a  living  source  within  the  to,  „           801 

His  vast  and  filthy  hands  upon  my  w,  Lucretius  220 

Dash  them  anew  together  at  her  w  „         247 

laid  about  them  at  their  w's  and  died ;  Princess,  Pro.  31 

But  then  she  had  a  w ;  was  he  to  blame  ?  ..              t  48 

0  that  iron  w.  That  axelike  edge  imtumable,  „            ii  202 

nor  pretty  babes  To  be  dandled,  no,  but  living  w's,  „           iv  147 

'sdeath !  against  my  father's  to.'  „            v  298 

yet  her  to  Bred  w  in  me  to  overcome  it  or  fall.  „  -^^        350 

since  my  w  Seal'd  not  the  bond —  „               398 

Her  iron  w  was  broken  in  her  mind ;  ,,           vi  117 

you  the  Victor  of  your  to.  ,.                167 

Purpose  in  purpose,  w  inw,  ,,          vii  305 

Make  and  break,  and  work  their  to ;  Ode  on  Well.  261 
Whose  w  is  lord  thro'  all  this  world-domain —          W.  to  Marie  Alex.  2 

But  I  wish'd  it  had  been  God's  10  that  I,  Grandmother  73 

0  VFELL  for  him  whose  to  is  strong !  Will  1 

Corrupts  the  strength  of  heaven-descended  W,  „  11 

Thither  at  their  to  they  haled  Boadicea  55 

Our  to'5  are  ours,  we  know  not  how ;  In  Mem,  Pro.  15 

Our  w's  are  ours,  to  make  them  thine.  „                16 

My  to  is  bondsman  to  the  dark ;  „              iv  2 

With  morning  wakes  the  w,  and  cries,  „                15 

That  I  could  wing  my  w  with  might  „           xli  10 

To  riper  growth  the  mind  and  w :  „           xlii  8 

To  pangs  of  nature,  sins  of  to,  „            liv  3 

Till  all  at  once  beyond  the  to  ,.         Ixx  13 

The  sense  of  human  to  demands  ,.      Ixxxv  39 

vague  desire  That  spurs  an  imitative  to.  .,           ca;  20 

0  living  w  that  shaft  endure  „  cxxxi  1 
whose  gentle  to  has  changed  my  fate,  Maud  I  xviii  23 
For  shall  not  Maud  have  her  w?  .,  xix  84 
(If  I  read  her  sweet  w  right)  ..  xxi  10 
Void  of  the  little  living  w  ,.  II  ii  14 
However  weary,  a  spark  of  w  Not  to  be  trampled  out.  „  56 
cannot  will  my  to,  nor  work  my  work  Wholly,  Com.  of  Arthur  88 
And  reigning  with  one  w  in  everything  „  92 
thou  dost  His  to,  The  Maker's,  Gareth  and  L.  10 
A  knight  of  Arthur,  working  out  his  w,  ,,  24 
Found  her  son's  w  unwaveringly  one,  „         141 

1  therefore  yield  me  freely  to  thy  w ;  „  168 
and  so  besieges  her  To  break  her  to,  „  617 
I  compel  all  creatures  to  my  to.'  (repeat)  Geraint  and  E.  629,  673 
and  the  wine  will  change  your  to.'  „  663 
use  Both  grace  and  w  to  pick  the  vicious  quitch  „  903 
and  brake  my  boast.  Thy  to  ?  '  Balin  and  Balan  72 
eagle-like  Stoop  at  thy  to  on  Lancelot  and  the  Queen.'  „  536 
Fixt  in  her  w,  and  so  the  seasons  went.  Merlin  and  V.  188 
Without  the  to  to  lift  their  eyes,  „  836 
and  the  fault  Is  yours  who  let  me  have  my  to,          Lancelot  and  E.  751 


WiU 


798 


Win 


Will  (s)  (cotitinued)     that  I  make  My  w  of  yours, 
then  I  said, '  Now  shall  I  have  my  w : ' 
mine  now  to  work  my  w — 
men  With  strength  and  w  to  right  the  wrong'd, 
her  longing  and  her  w  Was  toward  me  as  of  old ; 
baseness  in  him  by  default  Of  w  and  nature, 
A  prisoner,  and  the  vassal  of  thy  w ; 
and  at  her  w  they  couch'd  their  spears, 
He  needs  no  aid  who  doth  his  lady's  w.' 
As  let  these  caitiffs  on  thee  work  their  w  ? ' 
Pelleas  answer'd,  '  O,  their  w's  are  hers 
'  Slay  then,'  he  shrieked,  '  my  w  is  to  be  slain,' 
this  honour  after  death.  Following  thy  V3 ! 
I,  being  simple,  thought  to  work  His  w, 
power  in  his  eye  That  bow'd  the  w. 
My  w  is  one  with  thine ; 
heir  That  scarce  can  wait  the  reading  of  the  w 
In  battle  with  the  glooms  of  my  dark  w, 
edict  of  the  w  to  reassume  The  semblance 
And  I  vnW  do  your  w.     I  may  not  stay, 
And  I  will  do  your  w,  and  none  shall  know.' 
some  with  gems  Moveable  and  resettable  at  w, 
all  his  to  work  his  w.' 
but  the  creatures  had  worked  their  w. 
An'  I  thowt  'twur  the  w  o'  the  Lord, 
not  yet  too  old  to  work  his  w — 
not  Love  but  Hate  that  weds  a  bride  against  her  w ; 


Strong  in  w  and  rich  in  wisdom, 

shedding  poison  in  the  foimtains  of  the  W. 

Perchance  from  some  abuse  of  W  In  worlds 

and  had  yielded  her  w  To  the  master, 

The  blackbirds  have  their  w's,  (repeat) 

thy  w,  a  power  to  make  This  ever-changing  world  To  Duke  of  Argyll  9 


Lancelot  and  E.  916 

1047 

1231 

Holy  Grail  309 

590 

Pelleas  and  E.  82 

241 

273 

281 

323 

324 

579 

Last  Tournament  35 

Pass,  of  Arthur  22 

291 

Lover's  Tale  i  463 

676 

744 

a  161 

iv  115 

120 

199 

283 

Rizpah  50 

Village  Wife  11 

Columbus  161 

The  Flight  32 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  49 

274 

Epilogue  24 

Dead  Prophet  63 

Early  Spring  5,  47 


Freedom  15 
The  Ring  42 
„      293 
Happy  64 
Prog,  of  Spring  24 
95 
Romney's  R.  16 
The  Dawn  18 
Com.  of  Arthur  259 
Poets  and  Critics  13 
You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  8 


Howe'er  blind  force  and  brainless  w 

But  thro'  the  W  of  One  who  knows  and  rules- 

Her  firm  w,  her  fix'd  purpose. 

thought  he  could  subdue  me  to  his  w. 

Diffuse  thyself  at  w  thro'  all  my  blood. 

Be  struck  from  out  the  clash  of  warring  w's ; 

were  you  hired  ?  or  came  of  your  own  w 

no  slaves  of  a  four-footed  w  ? 

we  will  work  thy  w  Who  love  thee.' 

Hold  thine  own,  and  work  thy  w  ! 

Will  (verb)     A  man  may  speak  the  thing  he  w ; 

when  Enoch  comes  again  Why  then  he  shall  repay 

me — if  you  w,  Enoch  Arden  310 

yet  my  father  w's  not  war :  Princess  v  277 

cannot  w  my  will,  nor  work  my  work  Wholly,  Com.  of  Arthur  88 

knight-errantry  Who  ride  abroad,  and  do  but  what 

they  w ;  Gareth  and  L.  630 

Lord  am  I  In  mine  own  land,  and  what  I  w  I  can.'   Lancelot  and  E.  917 
'  That  were  against  me :  what  I  can  I  w ; '  „  976 

not  without  She  w's  it :  would  I,  „  1422 

Let  visions  of  the  night  or  of  the  day  Come,  as  they  w ;    Holy  Grail  911 
'  Why,  let  my  lady  bind  me  if  she  w,  And  let  my  lady 

beat  me  if  she  w  :  Pelleas  and  E.  334 

and  does  what  he  w  with  his  own ;  Despair  97 

Will  be     was,  and  is,  and  w  b,  are  but  is ;  Princess  Hi  324 

Who  am,  and  was,  and  w  b  his,  his  own  and  only  own,  Happy  7 

Will'd     set  his  hand  To  do  the  thing  he  w,  Enoch  Arden  295 

might  not  Averill,  had  he  w  it  so,  Aylmer's  Field  46 

Her  words  had  issue  other  than  she  w.  Merlin  and  V.  806 

would  I,  if  she  w  it  ?  nay.  Who  knows  ?  Lancelot  and  E.  1422 

I  would  work  according  as  he  w.  Holy  Grail  784 

Else,  for  the  King  has  w  it,  it  is  well.'  Last  Tournament  111 

She  rose,  and  set  before  him  all  he  w ;  „  723 

had  he  tti  I  might  have  stricken  a  lusty  stroke  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  68 

Wiliest    if  Thou  w,  let  my  day  be  brief,  Doubt  and  Prayer  13 

William    (See  also  Willy)     at  the  farm  abode  W  and  Dora.     W  was 

his  son,  Dora  2 

And  yeam'd  toward  W ;  but  the  youth,  „    6 

But  W  answer'd  short ;  '  I  cannot  marry  Dora ;  ,,  22 

Consider,  W :  take  a  month  to  think,  „  29 

But  W  answer'd  madly ;  bit  his  lips,  „  33 

days  went  on,  and  there  was  bom  a  boy  To  IF ;  „  49 


William  (continued)    till  at  last  a  fever  seized  On  W,  Dora  55 

all  thro'  me  This  evil  came  on  W  at  the  first.  61 

And  answer'd  softly,  '  This  is  W's  child ! '  .,90 

work  for  W's  child,  until  he  grows  Of  age  „  126 

never  came  a-begging  for  myself.  Or  W,  or  this  child ;  ..  142 

when  W  died,  he  died  at  peace  With  all  men ;  ..  144 

for  three  hours  he  sobb'd  o'er  W's  child  Thinking  of  W.                „  167 


Willing    Thou,  w  me  to  stay, 

Nor  w  men  should  come  among  us, 

w  she  should  keep  Court-favour : 

A  w  ear  We  lent  him. 

Wroth  at  himself.     Not  w  to  be  known, 

Willingly    '  Yea,  w'  replied  the  youth ; 
You  say  that  you  can  do  it  as  w 


Madeline  37 

Princess  Hi  318 

„         vii  57 

In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  30 

Lancelot  and  E.  160 

Geraint  and  E.  207 

Sisters  (E.  and  E)  10 


Willis    I  niver  puts  saame  i'  my  butter,  they  does  it  at 

W's  farm,  '  Village  Wife  119 

Willow     One  w  over  the  river  wept.  Dying  Swan  14 

W's  whiten,  aspens  quiver,  L.  of  Shalott  i  10 

found  a  boat  Beneath  a  w  left  afloat,  ,,  iv  7 

Shrank  one  sick  w  sere  and  small.  Mariana  in  the  S.  53 

There  by  the  himipback'd  w ;  Walk,  to  the  Mail  31 

shock-head  w's  two  and  two  By  rivers  gallopaded.  Amphion  39 

measured  pulse  of  racing  oars  Among  the  w's;  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  11 

Silvery  w.  Pasture  and  plowland.  Merlin  and  the  G.  53 

Willow-branches     And  the  w-b  hoar  and  dank.  Dying  Swan  37 

Willows    (See  also  James,  James  Willows,  Katie,  Katie 

Willows)     What  surname?'     'IF.'     'No!'  The  Brook  212 

Willow-veil'd     By  the  margin,  w-v,  L.  of  Shalott  i  19 

Willow-weed    fairy  foreland  set  With  w-w  and  mallow.  The  Brook  46 

Willowy    boat-head  wound  along  The  w  hills  and  fields 

among,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  25 

Willy     (See  also  William)     And  W,  my  eldest-bom,  is  gone, 

you  say.  Grandmother  1 

And  W's  wife  has  written :  (repeat)  „  3, 105 

Never  the  wife  for  W :  „  4 

and  W,  you  say,  is  gone.  „  8 

W,  my  beauty,  my  eldest-bom,  the  flower  of  the 
flock;  Never  a  man  could  fling  him:  for  W 
stood  like  a  rock.  „  9 

I  cannot  weep  for  W,  nor  can  I  weep  for  the  rest ;  „  19 

W  had  not  been  down  to  the  farm  for  a  week  and  a  day ;       „  33 

W, — he  didn't  see  me, — and  Jenny  hung  on  his  arm.  „  42 

W  stood  up  like  a  man,  and  look'd  the  thing  „  45 

'  Marry  you,  W ! '  said  I,  „  53 

So  W  and  I  were  wedded :  I  wore  a  lilac  gown ;  „  57 

For  W  I  cannot  weep,  I  shall  see  him  another  mom :  „  67 

IF,  my  eldest-bom,  at  nigh  threescore  and  ten;  „  87 

So  W  has  gone,  my  beauty,  my  eldest-bom,  my 

flower ;  But  how  can  I  weep  for  W,  „  101 

And  W's  wife  has  written,  she  never  was  over-wise.  „  105 

W's  voice  in  the  wind,  '  0  mother,  Rizpah  2 

couldn't  be  idle — my  W- — he  never  could  rest.  ..     27 

My  W  'ill  rise  up  whole  when  the  trumpet  ,.     57 

I'm  sure  to  be  happy  with  W,  I  know  not  where.  ,.     76 

for  my  W's  voice  in  the  wind —  .,     82 

W — the  moon's  in  a  cloud — Good-night.  ,.     86 

Wilt  thou    The  'w  t'  answer'd,  and  again  The  'w  t' 

ask'd,  In  Mem.,  Con.  54 

Wily     At  Merlin's  feet  the  w  Vivien  lay.  Merlin  and  V.  5 

The  w  Vivien  stole  from  Arthur's  court.  „  149 

Wimple    From  beneath  her  gather'd  w  Lilian  14 

Win    Woo  me,  and  w  me,  and  marry  me.  The  Mermaid  46 

power  which  ever  to  its  sway  Will  w  the  wise  at 

once.  Mine  be  the  strength  10 

And  w  all  eyes  with  all  accomplishment :  The  form,  the  form-  4 

To  w  his  love  I  lay  in  wait :  The  Sisters  11 

Of  me  you  shall  not  w  renown :  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  2 

The  warmth  it  thence  shall  w  Talking  Oak  254 

Which  did  w  my  heart  from  me ! '  L.  of  Burleigh  84 

where  two  fight  The  strongest  w's,  Aylmer's  Field  365 

How  roughly  men  may  woo  thee  so  they  w —  Lucretius  273 

That  she  but  meant  to  w  him  back,  ,,        279 

and  be  you  The  Prince  to  w  her !  Princess,  Pro.  226 

'  Follow,  follow,  thou  Shalt  w.'  „  i  100 

And  partly  that  I  hoped  to  w  you  back, 


1 


Win 


799 


Wind 


^lin  (continued)    w's,  tho'  dash'd  with  death  He  reddens         Princess  v  164 
if  we  fail,  we  fail,  And  if  we  w,  we  fail:  „  323 

And  on  the  '  Follow,  follow,  thou  shalt  w : '  „  472 

W  you  the  hearts  of  women ;  „      vi  171 

—verily  I  thmk  to  w.'  „  329 

Emperor,  Ottoman,  which  shall  w :  To  F.  1).  Maurice  32 

That  out  of  words  a  comfort  w ;  In  Mem.  xx  10 

the  past  will  always  w  A  glory  from  its  benig  far ;  „      xxiv  13 

they  could  not  w  An  answer  from  my  lips,  „        ciii  49 

And  the  titmouse  hope  to  w  her  Maud  I  xx  29 

Belike  he  w's  it  as  the  better  man :  Gareth  and  L.  1346 

To  dash  against  mine  enemy  and  to  w.  „  1355 

For  tho'  it  seems  my  spurs  are  yet  to  w,  Marr.  of  Geraint  128 

I  know  men :  nor  will  ye  w  him  back,  Geraint  and  E.  332 

who  sought  to  w  my  love  Thro'  evil  ways :  Balin  and  Balan  474 

Vivien  had  not  done  to  w  his  trust  Merlin  and  V.  863 

W  !  by  this  kiss  you  will :  Lancelot  and  E.  152 

They  prove  to  him  his  work :  w  and  return.'  .,  158 

Joust  for  it,  and  w,  and  bring  it  in  an  hour,  ,,  204 

W  shall  I  not,  but  do  my  best  to  w :  „  221 

And  you  shall  w  this  diamond, —  „  227 

To  w  his  honour  and  to  make  his  name,  „  1362 

while  women  watch  Who  w's,  who  falls ;  Holy  Grail  35 

and  they  would  w  thee — teem,  „         541 

he  will  fight  for  me.  And  w  the  circlet :  Pelleas  and  E.  119 

And  V)  me  this  fine  circlet,  Pelleas,  „  128 

he  cried,  '  Ay  !  wilt  thou  if  I  w  ? '    'Ay,  that  will  I,'  „  131 

purest  of  thy  knights  May  w  them  Last  Tournament  50 

For  courtesy  w's  woman  all  as  well  As  valour  may,  „  707 

Yet  so  my  path  was  clear  To  w  the  sister.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  203 

no  caress  could  w  my  wife  Back  to  that  passionate 


answer 

w  £ill  praise  from  all  Who  past  it, 

To  w  her  back  before  I  die — 
Wince    You  should  have  seen  him  w 
Wind  (s)    (See  also  East-wind,  March-wind,  Night- 
wind,  North-wind,    Seap-wind,  South-wind) 

When  will  the  w  be  aweary  of  blowing 

The  stream  flows,  The  w  blows. 

Shall  make  the  w's  blow  Roimd  and  round. 

So  let  the  w  range ; 

south  w's  are  blowing  Over  the  sky. 

The  w  will  cease  to  blow ; 

Nor  the  tv  on  the  hill. 

So  let  the  warm  w's  range, 

W's  creep  ;  dews  fall  chilly : 

The  w's,  as  at  their  hour  of  birth. 

Till  cold  w's  woke  the  gray-eyed  mom 


258 

Tiresias  83 

Romney's  R.  118 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  71 


Nothing  will  Die  3 

10 

23 

32 

All  Things  will  Die  3 

10 

26 

42 

Leonine  Eleg.  7 

The  winds,  etc.  1 

Mariana  31 

50 

54 


the  shrill  w's  were  up  and  away, 
wild  w's  bound  withm  their  cell, 

sound  Which  to  the  wooing  w  aloof  The  poplar  made,  „  75 
palms  were  ranged  Above,  unwoo'd  of  summer  w :  Arabian  Xighis  80 
The  dew-impearled  w's  of  dawn  have  kiss'd.                 Ode  to  Memory  14 

flowers  which  in  the  rudest  w  Never  grow  sere,  ,,              24 

From  brawling  storms,  From  weary  w,  „            113 

w's  Blew  his  own  praises  in  his  eyes,  A  Character  21 

the  w's  which  bore  Them  earthward  Th£  Poet  17 

Bright  as  light,  and  clear  as  w.                  •  Poet's  Mind  7 

Ever  the  weary  w  went  on,  Di/ing  Swan  9 

shook  the  wave  as  the  w  did  sigh ;  „          15 

Above  in  the  w  was  the  swallow,  „           16 

W's  were  blowing,  waters  flowing,  Oriana  14 

When  Norland  w's  pipe  down  the  sea,  „       91 

Lovest  thou  the  doleful  w  Adeline  49 

Careless  both  of  to  and  weather,  Rosalind  7 

Up  or  down  the  streaming  w?  «        9 

The  leaping  stream,  the  very  w,  „      14 

the  amorous,  odorous  w  Breathes  low  Elednore  123 

'  Tho'  thou  wert  scatter'd  to  the  w,  Two  Voices  32 

He  sows  himself  on  every  w.  „          294 

And,  in  the  pauses  of  the  w.  Miller's  D.  122 

I  whirl  like  leaves  in  roaring  w.  Fatima  7 

The  w  sounds  like  a  silver  wire,  „     29 

Rests  like  a  .shadow,  and  the  w's  are  dead.  (Enone  28 

the  foam-bow  brightens  When  the  w  blows  the  foam,  „      62 


You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  26 
Of  old  sat  Freedom  8 
Love  thou  thy  land  17 


Wind  (s)  (continued)  a  w  arose.  And  overhead  the  wandering  ivy  (Enone  98 
The  w  is  blowing  in  turret  and  tree,  (repeat)  The  Sisters  3,  33 

The  w  is  howling  in  turret  and  tree.  ,.  9 

The  w  is  roaring  in  turret  and  tree.  „  15 

The  w  is  raging  in  turret  and  tree.  ..  21 

The  w  is  raving  in  turret  and  tree.  ,,  27 

And  hoary  to  the  w.  Palace  of  Art  80 

trees  began  to  whisper,  and  the  w  began  to  roll.       May  Queen,  Con.  27 
up  the  valley  came  a  swell  of  music  on  the  w.  „  32 

up  the  valley  came  again  the  music  on  the  w.  ,.  36 

With  w's  upon  the  branch,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  27 

All  day  the  w  breathes  low  with  mellower  tone :  ..  102 

w  and  wave  and  oar ;  „  127 

Bluster  the  w's  and  tides  the  self -same  way,  D.  of  F.  Women  38 

Whirl'd  bj^  the  w,  had  roll'd  me  deep  below,  „  119 

And  the  winter  w's  are  wearily  sighing :  D.  of  the  O.  Year  2 

The  w,  that  beats  the  mountain,  blows  To  J.  S.  1 

God's  ordinance  Of  Death  is  blown  in  every  w ; ' 
waft  me  from  the  harbour  mouth.  Wild  w 
voice  Came  rolling  on  the  w. 
Make  knowledge  circle  with  the  w's ; 
lest  the  soul  Of  Discord  race  the  rising  w ; 
A  w  to  puff  your  idol-fires. 
The  wild  w  rang  from  park  and  plain, 
like  a  w,  that  shrills  All  night  in  a  waste  land. 
Nor  ever  w  blows  loudly ; 
Beneath  a  broad  and  equal-blowing  w. 
Night  slid  down  one  long  stream  of  sighing  w, 
But  she  was  sharper  than  an  eastern  w, 
soft  w  blowing  over  meadowy  holms  And  alders 
Rain,  w,  frost,  heat,  hail, 
Till  that  wild  w  made  work 
'  I  swear,  by  leaf,  and  w,  and  rain, 
'  A  light  w  chased  her  on  the  wing, 
light  as  any  w  that  blows  So  fleetly 
and  the  w's  are  laid  with  sound.        , 
For  the  mighty  w  arises,  roaring  seaward, 
As  w's  from  all  the  compass  shift  and  blow. 
And  all  the  low  w  hardly  breathed  for  fear. 
And  many  a  merry  w  was  borne. 
And  the  w  did  blow ; 
The  happy  w's  upon  her  play'd. 
There  let  the  w  sweep  and  the  plover  cry ; 
A  light  w  blew  from  the  gates  of  the  sun. 
Then  follow'd  calms,  and  then  w's  variable, 
blown  by  baffling  w's,  Like  the  Good  Fortune, 
His  fancy  fled  before  the  lazy  w 
the  w  blew ;  The  rain  of  heaven, 
o'er  those  lazy  limits  down  the  w  With  rumour. 
Where  never  creeps  a  cloud,  or  moves  a  w. 
Like  linnets  in  the  pauses  of  the  w : 
And  therewithal  an  answer  vague  as  w : 
A  w  arose  and  rush'd  upon  the  South, 
smile  that  like  a  wrinkling  w  On  glassy  water 
She  rose  upon  a  w  of  prophecy 
W  of  the  western  sea,  (repeat) 
often  fretful  as  the  w  Pent  in  a  crevice : 
Upon  the  level  in  little  puffs  of  w, 
Huge  women  blowzed  with  health,  and  w,  and  rain, 
light  w  wakes  A  lisping  of  the  innumerous  leaf 
Until  they  hate  to  hear  me  like  a  w 
That  range  above  the  region  of  the  w, 
four-square  to  all  the  w's  that  blew ! 
Yell'd  as  when  the  w's  of  winter  tear  an  oak 
w's  from  off  the  plain  Roll'd  the  rich  vapour 
moon  Look  beautiful,  when  all  the  w's  are  laid, 
the  w's  are  up  in  the  morning?  (repeat) 


w's  and  lights  and  shadows  that  cannot  be  still, 
wet  west  w  and  the  world  will  go  on.  (repeat) 
The  w  and  the  wet,  the  w  and  the  wet ! 
Wet  west  w  how  you  blow,  you  blow  ! 
wet  west  w  and  the  world  may  go  on. 
W's  are  loud  and  you  are  dimib, 
W's  are  loud  and  w's  will  pass  ! 


The  Goose  45 

M.  d' Arthur  201 

261 

Gardener's  D.  77 

267 

Audley  Court  53 

Edwin  Morris  95 

St.  S.  Stylites  16 

Talking  Oak  54 

81 

125 

129 

Locksley  Hall  104 

194 

Godiva  33 

„      55 

Day -Dm.,  Depart.  14 

The  Captain  34 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  38 

Come  not,  when,  etc.  5 

Poet's  Song  3 

Enoch  Arden  545 

628 

657 

Ayhner's  Field  427 

495 

Lucretius  106 

Princess,  Pro.  246 

i45 

97 

115 

a  171 

„  Hi  2,  4 

80 

iv  256 

279 

vl3 

98 

Con.  112 

Ode  on  Well.  39 

Boddicea  77 

Spec,  of  Iliad  7 

12 

Window,  On  the  Hill  5,  10, 

15,20 

7 

No  Answer  6,  12 

13 

14 

18 

19 

22 


Wind 


800 


Window 


wind  (s)  {continued)     A  flower  beat  with  rain  and  w, 
Sleep,  gentle  w's,  as  he  sleeps  now, 
To-night  the  w's  begin  to  rise  And  roar 
Each  voice  four  changes  on  the  w, 
We  paused :  the  w's  were  in  the  beech : 
But  blame  not  thou  the  w's  that  make 
No  wing  of  w  the  region  swept, 
All  w's  that  roam  the  twilight  came 
And  every  pulse  of  w  and  wave 
I  hear  a  w  Of  memory  murmuring  the  past, 
while  the  w  began  to  sweep  A  music 
Nor  feed  with  sighs  a  passing  w : 
the  w  like  a  broken  worldling  wail'il, 
Walk'd  in  a  wintry  w  by  a  ghastly  glimmer, 
shake  its  threaded  tears  in  the  w  no  more, 
and  the  war  roll  down  like  a  w, 
In  drifts  of  smoke  before  a  rolling  w, 
When  waken'd  by  the  w  which  with  full  voice 
A  censer,  either  worn  with  w  and  storm ; 
like  a  sudden  w  Among  dead  leaves, 
but  the  w  hath  changed :  I  scent  it  twenty -fold.' 
'  Hath  not  the  good  w,  damsel,  changed  again  ? 
the  w  will  never  change  again.' 
And  scatter'd  all  they  had  to  all  the  w's : 
A  STOHM  was  coming,  but  the  w's  were  still, 
Among  the  dead  and  sown  upon  the  w — 
Drave  with  a  sudden  w  across  the  deeps. 
Thro'  the  dim  land  against  a  rushing  w, 
An  angry  gust  of  w  Puff'd  out  his  torch 


In  Mem.  viii  15 
ix  15 

XV  1 

xxviii  9 

,.  XXX  9 

„  xlix  10 

„        Ixxviii  6 

Ixxix  11 

„       Ixxxvp 

,,  xcii  7 

;,  ciii  53 

,,  cviii  4 

Maud  I  ill 

.,       Hi  13 

„//7ot28 

54 

Com.  of  Arthur  434 

Gareth  and  L.  176 

222 

514 

994 

1054 

1140 

Marr.  of  Geraint  635 

Merlin  and  V.  1 

45 

201 

425 

Their  plumes  driv'n  backward  by  the  w  they  made    Lancelot  and  E.  480 


and  went  To  all  the  w's?'  „            658 

gloomis  Of  evening,  and  the  moanings  of  the  w.  ,           1003 

AH  in  a  fiery  dawning  wild  with  w  „           1020 

the  sun  Shone,  and  the  w  blew,  thro'  her,  Holy  Grail  99 

Such  as  no  w  could  move :  „        681 

And  the  w  fell,  and  on  the  seventh  night  „  810 
strange  knights  From  the  four  w's  came  in :                Pelleas  and  E.  148 

like  a  poisonous  w  I  pass  to  blast  „  569 
thro'  the  tree  Rush'cf  ever  a  rainy  w,  and  thro' 

the  w  Pierced  ever  a  child's  cry  :  Last  Tournament  16 

Brake  with  a  wet  w  blowing,  Lancelot,  ,.            137 

And  ever  the  w  blew,  and  yellowing  leaf  „             154 

till  the  warm  hour  returns  With  veer  of  w,  „            231 

and  the  w  among  the  boughs.  „            489 

'  Ay,  ay,  O  ay — the  w's  that  bend  the  brier  !  „            731 

0  ay — the  w's  that  bow  the  grass  !  „            735 

O  ay — the  w's  that  move  the  mere.'  „             738 

As  the  sharp  w  that  ruffles  all  day  long  Guinevere  50 

Till  in  the  cold  w  that  foreruns  the  morn,  „         132 

Stands  in  a  w,  ready  to  break  and  fly,  „  365 
ghost  of  Gawain  blown  Along  a  wandering  w,            Pass,  of  Arthur  32 

And  I  am  blown  along  a  wandering  w,  „              36 

down  the  long  w  the  dream  Shrill'd ;  „              40 

0  light  upon  the  w,  Thine,  Gawain,  was  the  voice —  „  46 
came  A  bitter  w,  clear  from  the  North,  and  blew  The 

mist  aside,  and  with  that  w  the  tide  Rose,  „            124 

like  a  w  that  shrills  All  night  in  a  waste  land,  „            369 

Nor  ever  w  blows  loudly ;  „  429 
Waverings  of  every  vane  with  every  w,  To  the  Queen  ii  50 
charged  the  w's  With  spiced  May-sweets                      Lover's  Tale  i  317 

And  shot  itself  into  the  singing  w's ;  „              369 

thence  one  night,  when  all  the  w's  were  loud,  „              378 

The  w  Told  a  lovetale  beside  us,  „              542 

waters  answering  lisp'd  To  kisses  of  the  w,  that,  „              545 

The  w  had  blown  above  me,  „              622 

hour  died  Like  odour  rapt  into  the  winged  w  „              801 

soft  w's,  Laden  with  thistledown  and  seeds  „            H  12 

the  w  Came  wooingly  with  woodbine  smells.  „                35 

All  crisped  sounds  of  wave  and  leaf  and  w,  „              106 

silent-creeping  w's  Laid  the  long  night  „               111 

mast  bent  and  the  ravin  w  In  her  sail  roaring.  „              170 

we  whirl'd  giddily :  the  w  Simg ;  „              201 

Slow-moving  as  a  wave  agaiast  the  w,  „  iv  293 
like  ships  i'  the  Channel  a-sailing  with  w  an'  tide.         First  Quarrel  42 

An'  the  w  began  to  rise,  „           89 


Wind  (s)  (continued)     wailing,  wailing,  the  w  over  land  and  sea —    Rizpah  1 
Willy's  voice  in  the  w,  '  0  mother,  ,.      2 

and  the  w  and  the  shower  and  the  snow.  ,,     68 

The  w  that  'ill  wail  like  a  child  „     72 

for  my  Willy's  voice  in  the  w — •  ,.     82 

coostom  ageiin  draw'd  in  like  a  w  fro'  far  an'  wide.      North.  Cobbler  93 
When  a  w  from  the  lands  they  had  ruin'd  The  Revenge  112 

and  the  w  Still  westward,  and  the  weedy  seas — ■  Columbus  71 

the  w's  were  dead  for  heat ;  Tiresias  34 

warm  w's  had  gently  breathed  us  away  from  the  land —    The  Wreck  63 
orphan  wail  came  borne  in  the  shriek  of  a  growing  w,  „  87 

some  of  late  would  raise  a  w  To  sing  thee  to  thy  grave,         Freedom  35 
Among  the  wail  of  midnight  w's,  Demeter  and  P.  59 

w  blawin'  hard  tother  waay,  an'  the  w  wasn't  like  to 

turn.  Owd  Mod  104 

you  shiver  tho'  the  w  is  west  The  Ring  29 

one  silent  voice  Came  on  the  w,  „        154 

changest,  breathing  it,  the  sullen  w.  Prog,  of  Spring  110 

when  all  but  the  w's  were  dead.  The  Dreamer  1 

To  the  wail  of  my  w's,  „         13 

Was  it  only  the  w  of  the  Night  shrilling  „         15 

Wind  (verb)     W's  all  the  vale  in  rosy  folds,  Miller's  D.  242 

Where  yon  dark  valleys  w  forlorn.  On  a  Mourner  22 

More  close  and  close  his  footsteps  w  :  Day-Din.,  Arrival  25 

I  w  about,  and  in  and  out,  The  Brook  55 

w  And  double  in  and  out  the  boles.  Princess  iv  261 

Still  onward  w's  the  dreary  way  ;  In  Mem.  xxvi  1 

And  w's  their  curls  about  his  hand  :  „         Ixvi  12 

It  lightly  w's  and  steals  In  a  cold  white  robe  Maud  II  iv  18 

and  every  way  the  vales  W,  Tiresias  183 

And  w  the  front  of  youth  with  flowers,  Ancient  Sage  97 

Wind-driven    spray  w-d  Far  thro'  the  dizzy  dark.  Lover's  Tale  ii  198 

Winded     (See  also  Long-winded)     And  w  it,  and  that  so 

musically  Pelleas  and  E.  365 

the  lilies  like  the  glaciers  w  down,  V.  of  Maeldune  42 

Winder  (window)    Stan'  'im  theer  i'  the  w,  North.  Cobbler  75 

out  o'  sight  o'  the  w's  o'  Gigglesby  Hiim —  Spinster's  S's.  35 

I  claums  an'  I  mashes  the  w  hin,  Owd  Rod  83 

wi'  my  bairn  i'  'is  mouth  to  the  w  „        92 

I  clauinb'd  up  agean  to  the  w,  „        99 

Wind-footed     fled  W-f  to  the  steeple  in  the  woods.  Lover's  Tale  Hi  56 

Wind-hover  (kestrel)     as  long  As  the  w-h  hangs  in 

balance,  Aylmer's  Field  321 

Winding    (See  also  Westward-winding)    From  the  river  w 

clearly,  L.  of  Shalott  i  31 

she  sees  the  highway  near  W  down  to  Camelot :  „  ii  14 

we  paused  About  the  w's  of  the  marge  Edwin  Morris  94 

Low  voluptuous  music  w  trembled.  Vision  of  Sin  17 

w  under  woodbine  bowers,  The  Brook  88 

We  glided  w  vmder  ranks  Of  iris.  In  Mem.  ciii  23 

The  rock  rose  clear,  or  w  stair.  Palace  of  Art  10 

a  full-fed  river  w  slow  By  herds  upon  an  endless  plain,  „  73 

and  many  a  w  vale  And  meadow.  Lotos- Eaters  22 

The  Lotos  blows  by  every  w  creek  :  „  C.  8. 101 

On  open  main  or  w  shore  !  The  Voyage  6 

the  lawns  And  w  glades  high  up  like  ways  to  Heaven,  Enoch  Arden  573 
On  w  stream  or  distant  sea  ;  In  Mem.  cxv  12 

Far  down  beneath  a  w  wall  of  rock  Last  Tournament  11 

She  chanted  snatches  of  mysterious  hymns  Heard 

on  the  w  waters,  Lancelot  and  E.  1408 

Windle  (drifted  snow)     all  on  'em  bolster'd  oop  wi'  the  w  that 

night ;  Owd  Rod  32 

Windless    Who  might'st  have  heaved  a  w  flame  Up  the 

deep  East,  In  Mem.  Ixxii  13 

all  the  sway  and  whirl  Of  the  storm  dropt  to  w  calm.    Lover's  Tale  ii  207 

Windmill    an'  thy  w  oop  o'  the  croft.  Spinster's  S's.  73 

Window  (adj.)     Oh  is  it  the  brook,  or  a  pool,  or  her 

w  pane.  Window,  On  the  Hill  4 

And  never  a  glimpse  of  her  w  pane  !  „         No  Answer  3 

on  the  w  ledge,  Close  underneath  his  eyes,  Lancelot  and  E.  1239 

Window  (s)     (See  also  Bay-window,  Cabin-window, 
Pailour-window,  Winder)    The  fourscore  w's 

all  alight  Arabian  Nights  122 

Leaving  doors  and  w's  wide  :  Deserted  House  3 

In  the  w's  is  no  light ;  „  6 


Window 


801 


Wing 


I  m^ndow  (s)  {continued)    Or  thro'  the  w's  we  shall  see  The" 


I  nakedness 

I  the  deep-set  w's,  stain'd  and  traced, 

s         forms  that  pass'd  at  w's  and  on  roofs 
I  Reveal'd  their  shining  w's  : 

I         all  Should  keep  within,  door  shut,  and  w  barr'd. 
I         Saw  from  his  w's  nothing  save  his  own — 
I         so  To  the  open  w  moved,  remaining  there 
I         The  giant  w's'  blazon'd  fires, 
Clasp  her  w,  trail  and  twine  ! 
'         Blaze  upon  her  w,  sim, 

were  laid  On  the  hasp  of  the  w. 
The  Lady  Lyonors  at  a  w  stood, 
glancing  on  the  w,  when  the  gloom  Of  twilight 
Where  twelve  great  w's  blazon  Arthur's  wars, 
lands  in  your  view  From  this  bay  w — 
May  leave  the  w's  blinded. 
Window-bars    it  came,  and  close  beside  the  w-b, 

Window-pane    Oh  is  it  the  brook,  or  a  pool,  or  her  w  p,  Window,  On  the  Hill  4 
I  follow  them  down  to  the  w-p  of  my  dear,  „  17 

And  never  a  glimpse  of  her  w  p  !  „       No  Answer  3 

Wind-scatter'd    surf  w-s  over  sails  and  masts,  D.  of  F.  Women  31 

Windy     Beneath  the  w  waU.  Palace  of  Art  72 

building  rook  '11  caw  from  the  w  tall  elm- 
tree,  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  17 


Deserted  House  10 

Palace  of  Art  49 

B.  of  F.  Women  23 

Gardener's  D.  220 

Godiva  41 

Aylmer's  Field  21 

Princess  iv  492 

The  Daisy  58 

Window,  At  the  Window  2 

When  15 

Maud  I  xiv  19 

Gareth  and  L.  1375 

Balin  and  Balan  232 

Holy  Grail  248 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  62 

Romney's  R.  146 

May  Queen,  Con.  39 


And  it  was  w  weather,  (repeat) 

you  hear  The  w  clanging  of  the  minster  clock  ; 

Far  on  the  ringing  plains  of  w  Troy. 

Fly  o'er  waste  fens  and  w  fields. 

By  Ellen's  grave,  on  the  w  hill. 

All  the  w  ways  of  men  Are  but  dust  that  rises 
up,  (repeat) 

And  swang  besides  on  many  a  w  sign — 

That  climb  into  the  w  halls  of  heaven : 

ere  the  w  jest  Had  labour'd  down  within 

Fair-hair'd  and  redder  than  a  w  mom ; 

Flames,  on  the  w  headland  flare  ! 

Or  sheepwalk  up  the  w  wold  ; 

Uncared  for,  gird  the  w  grove, 

of  grain  Storm-strengthen'd  on  a  w  site. 

Comes  flying  over  many  a  w  wave  To  Britain, 

Swung  from  his  brand  a  w  buffet  out  Once, 

slide  From  the  long  shore-cliff's  w  walls 

And  all  the  w  clamour  of  the  daws 

On  sallows  in  the  w  gleams  of  March : 

On  some  wild  down  above  the  w  deep, 
l^ne    {See  also  Adam's  wine,  C!owslip  wine)    our 
friends  are  all  forsaking  The  w  and  the  merry- 
making. All  Things  wUl  Die  19 

Across  the  walnuts  and  the  w —  Miller's  D.  32 

little  dues  of  wheat,  and  w  and  oil ;  Lotos- Eaters,  C.  S.  122 

think  not  they  are  glazed  with  w.  Locksley  Hall  51 

as  moonlight  imto  simlight,  and  as  water  unto  w —  „        152 


The  Goose  4,  40 

Gardener's  D.  38 

Ulysses  17 

Sir  Galahad  60 
Edward  Gray  12 

Vision  of  Sin  \22,  168 

Aylmer's  Field  19 

Lucretius  136 

Princess  v  272 

„    Con.  91 

W.  to  Alexandra  16 

In  Mem.  c  8 

„        ci  13 

Gareth  and  L.  692 

Mart,  of  Geraint  337 

Geraint  and  E.  90 

164 

255 

Merlin  and  V.  225 

658 


And  beaker  brimm'd  with  noble  w. 
she  comes  and  dips  Her  laurel  in  the  w, 
Sipt  w  from  silver,  praising  God, 
By  heaps  of  gourdJs,  and  skins  of  w. 
Bring  me  spices,  bring  me  w  ; 
W  is  good  for  shrivell'd  lips. 
Let  me  loose  thy  tongue  with  w  : 
Charier  of  sleep,  and  w,  and  exercise, 
Warm'd  with  his  w's,  or  taking  pride  in  her, 
Sat  at  his  table ;  drank  his  costly  w's  ; 
they  talk'd  At  w,  in  clubs,  of  art,  of  politics  ; 
call'd  mine  host  To  council,  plied  him  with  his 

richest  w's, 
those  That  lay  at  w  with  Lar  and  Lucumo  ; 
Fruit,  blossom,  viand,  amber  w, 
riot  a  death's-head  at  the  w.' 
And  had  our  w  and  chess  beneath  the  planes. 
Steel  and  gold,  and  com  and  w. 
But  honest  talJc  and  wholesome  w, 
honey-hearted  w  And  bread  from  out  the  houses 
(And  dear  to  me  as  sacred  w  To  dying  lips 
'Twaa  well,  indeed,  when  warm  with  w, 


Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  36 

Will  Water.  18 

127 

Vision  of  Sin  13 

76 

79 

88 

Aylmer's  Field  448 

554 

Sea  Dreams  74 

Princess,  Pro.  161 

il74 

m129 

iv35 

87 

m246 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  17 

To  F.  D.  Maurice  18 

Spec,  of  Iliad  5 

In  Mem.  xxxvii  19 

„  xc  9 


Wine  {continued)    fetch  the  w.  Arrange  the  board  and  brim 

the  glass  ;  In  Mem.  cvii  15 

yes  ! — but  a  company  forges  the  w.  Maud  /  t  36 

I  fear,  the  new  strong  w  of  love,  „        m  82 

Betrothed  us  over  their  w,  „      xix  39 

That  he  left  his  w  and  horses  and  play,  „            74 

brief  night  goes  In  babble  and  revel  and  w.  „    xxii  28 

feeble  vassals  of  w  and  anger  and  lust,  „    II  i  ^ 

baken  meats  and  good  red  w  Of  Southland,  Gareth  and  L.  1190 

Go  to  the  town  and  buy  us  flesh  and  w  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  372 

means  of  goodly  welcome,  flesh  and  w.  „              387 

For  now  the  w  made  summer  in  his  veins,  „              398 

A  creature  wholly  given  to  brawls  and  w,  „              441 

cried  Geraint  for  w  and  goodly  cheer  Geraint  and  E.  283 

And  w  and  food  were  brought,  ,,             289 

When  w  and  free  companions  kindled  him,  „            293 

So  vanish  friendships  only  made  in  w.  „            479 

call'd  for  flesh  and  w  to  feed  his  spears.  „            601 

(And  fiU'd  a  horn  with  w  and  held  it  to  her,)  „            659 

Drink  therefore  and  the  w  will  change  your  will.'  „            663 

I  will  not  look  at  w  imtil  I  die.'  „            667 

Nor  ever  touch'd  fierce  w,  nor  tasted  flesh.  Merlin  and  V.  627 

They  sit  with  knife  in  meat  and  w  in  horn  !  „            694 

But  once  in  life  was  fluster'd  with  new  w,  „            756 

and  by  fountains  running  w.  Last  Tournament  141 

did  ye  mark  that  fountain  yesterday  Made  to 

run  w  ?—  „              287 

To  hand  the  w  to  whosoever  came —  „              290 

hurl'd  The  tables  over  and  the  w's,  „              475 

that  I  should  suck  Lies  like  sweet  w's :  „              645 

meat,  W,  w — and  I  will  love  thee  to  the  death,  „              720 

these  had  comforted  the  blood  With  meats  and  w's,  „              725 

straddling  on  the  butts  While  the  w  ran :  Guinevere  269 

Till,  drunk  with  its  own  w,  Lover's  Tale  i  271 

w's  that.  Heaven  knows  when.  Had  suck'd  the  fire  „          iv  193 

the  w's  being  of  such  nobleness —  „              222 

priceless  goblet  with  a  priceless  w  Arising,  „              227 
Crazy  with  laughter  and  babble  and  earth's  new  w.    To  A.  Tennyson  2 

For  see — this  w — the  grape  from  whence  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  61 

hev  a  glass  o'  cowslip  w  !  Village  Wife  5 

Droonk  wi'  the  Quoloty's  w,  „          77 

Taaste  another  drop  o'  the  w —  „        120 
the  wild  hour  and  the  w  Had  set  the  wits  aflame.      Sir  J.  Oldcastle  94 

riotous  fits  Of  w  and  harlotry —  „            101 

was  the  poisonous  pleasure  of  w  ;  V.  of  Maeldune  62 

of  a  hand  giving  bread  and  w.  The  Wreck  114 

As  laughter  over  w.  Anient  Sage  184 

'  Yet  w  and  laughter  friends  !  „            195 

Nor  drown  thyself  with  flies  in  honied  w ;  „            268 

guest  may  make  True  cheer  with  honest  w —  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  16 

Wealth  with  his  w's  and  his  wedded  harlots ;  Vastness  19 

and  choice  of  women  and  of  w's  ?  By  an  Evolviion.  8 

men  may  taste  Swine-flesh,  drink  w  ;  Akhar's  Dream  54 

one  of  those  Who  mix  the  w's  of  heresy  „          174 

brag  to  his  fellow  rakes  of  his  conquest  over  the  w  ?  Charity  18 

Wine-fl^dc  The  w-f  lying  couch'd  in  moss.  In  Mem.  Ixxxix  44 
Wine-heated  Moist  as  they  were,  w-h  from  the  feast ;  Geraint  and  E.  351 
Wing  (s)     {See  also  Ankle-wing)     What  they  say  betwixt 

their  w's  ?  Adeline  29 

And  clip  your  w's,  and  make  you  love  :  Rosalind  45 

Droops  both  his  w's,  regarding  thee,  Elednore  119 

'  He  dried  his  w's  :  like  gauze  they  grew ;  Two  Voices  13 

'  Here  sits  he  shaping  w's  to  fly :  „        289 

fold  our  w's.  And  cease  from  wanderings,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  19 

crested  bird  That  claps  his  w's  at  dawn.  D.  of  F.  Women  180 

hearts  and  feeble  w's  That  every  sophister  Love  thou  thy  land  11 

lime  a  summer  home  of  murmurous  w's.  Gardener's  D.  48 
O'er  the  mute  city  stole  with  folded  w's.  Distilling 

odours  „        186 

While  the  prime  swallow  dips  his  w,  Edwin  Morris  145 

This  dull  chrysalis  Cracks  into  shining  w's,  St.  S.  Stylites  156 

'  A  light  wind  chased  her  on  the  w,  Talking  Oak  125 

On  sleeping  w's  they  sail.  Sir  Galahad  44 

W's  flutter,  voices  hover  clear :  „            78 

Tho'  fortune  clip  my  w's.  Will  Water,  50 

3   E 


Wing 


802 


Winter 


Wing  (s)  {continued)    seabird  crosses  With  one  waft  of 

the  w.  The  Captain  72 

He  rode  a  horse  with  w's,  Vision  of  Sin  3 

huDg  With  w's  of  brooding  shelter  o'er  her  peace,  Aylmer's  Field  139 

So  often,  that  the  folly  taking  w's  „            494 

Till  the  little  w's  are  stronger.  Sea  Breams  298 

Whereon  a  woman-statue  rose  with  w's  Princess  i  210 

wheel'd  on  Europe-shadowing  w's.  Ode  on  Well.  120 

you  have  gotten  the  w's  of  love,  Window,  Ay  15 

Spread  thy  full  w's,  and  waft  him  o'er  In  Mem.  ix  4 

The  wild  pulsation  of  her  w's ;  „          xii  4 

My  fancies  time  to  rise  on  w,  „       xiii  17 

that  dip  Their  w's  in  tears,  and  skim  away.  „    xlviii  16 

Self-balanced  on  a  lightsome  w :  „          Ixv  8 

Take  w's  of  fancy,  and  ascend,  „      Ixxvi  1 

Take  w's  of  foresight ;  lighten  thro'  „                5 

No  w  of  wind  the  region  swept,  „    Ixxviii  6 

Or  eagle's  w,  or  insect's  eye ;  „      cxxiv  6 

The  love  that  rose  on  stronger  w's,  „    cxxviii  1 

My  life  has  crept  so  long  on  a  broken  w  Maud  III  vi  1 

a  Shape  that  fled  With  broken  w's,  Gareth  and  L.  1208 

and  w's  Moved  in  her  ivy,  Marr.  of  Geraint  598 

made  his  feet  W's  thro'  a  glimmering  gallery,  Balin  and  Balan  404 

To  catch  a  loathly  plume  f all'n  from  the  w  Merlin  and  V.  727 

And  on  the  fourth  are  men  with  growing  w's.  Holy  Grail  237 

And  peak'd  w's  pointed  to  the  Northern  Star.  „          240 

And  both  the  w's  are  made  of  gold,  „          242 

Became  a  living  creature  clad  with  w's  ?  „          519 

Half-wrench'd  a  golden  w ;  „          733 

Great  angels,  awful  shapes,  and  w's  and  eyes.  „          848 

Follow'd  a  rush  of  eagle's  w's.  Last  Tournament  417 

swimi  with  balanced  w's  To  some  tall  mountain  :  Lover's  Tale  i  302 

Love,  rising,  shook  his  w's,  and  charged  the  winds  „              317 

Love  wraps  his  w's  on  either  side  the  heart,  „              467 
like  the  waft  of  an  Angel's  w  ;                               In  the  Child.  Hosp.  38 

The  moth  will  singe  her  w's,  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  189 

Sphinx,  with  w's  drawn  back,  Tiresias  148 

rose  as  it  were  on  the  w's  of  an  eagle  The  Wreck  69 

Without  their  hope  of  w's  !  '  Ancient  Sage  211 

w  push'd  out  to  the  left  and  a  w  to  the  right.  Heavy  Brigade  15 

Russian  crowd  Folded  its  w's  „          39 

And  showing  them,  souls  have  w's  !  Dead  Prophet  12 

in  their  turn  thy  warblers  rise  on  w.  Prog,  of  Spring  108 

a  shape  with  w's  Came  sweeping  by  him,  St.  Telemachus  24 

The  shape  with  w's.  „          38 

Bring  me  my  horse — my  horse  ?  my  w's  Mechanophilus  9 

Wing  (verb)     Stoops  at  all  game  that  w  the  skies,  Rosalind  4 

Far  as  the  wild  swan  w's,  to  where  the  sky  Palace  of  Art  31 

That  I  could  w  my  will  with  might  In  Mem.  xli  10 

Wing-case    slide  apart  Their  dusk  w-c's,  Gareth  and  L.  687 
Wing'd    {See  also  Black-wing'd,  Light-wing'd,  Strong-wing'd, 
White-wing'd,  Wide-wing'd)    arrows  of  his  thoughts 

were  headed  And  w  with  flame,  The  Poet  12 

bravely  fumish'd  all  abroad  to  fling  The  w  shafts  of  truth,  „      26 

That  sought  to  sow  themselves  like  w  seeds,  Gardener's  D.  65 

Stood  from  his  walls  and  w  his  entry-gates  Aylmer's  Field  18 

From  four  w  horses  dark  against  the  stars  ;  Princess  i  211 

and  w  Her  transit  to  the  throne,  „      iv  377 

Or  keeps  his  w  affections  dipt  with  crime  :  „     vii  316 
Not  making  his  high  place  the  lawless  perch  Of  w 

ambitions.  Bed.  of  Idylls  23 

Tits,  wrens,  and  all  w  nothings  peck  him  dead  !  Marr.  of  Geraint  275 

Like  odour  rapt  into  the  w  wind  Lover's  Tale  i  801 

Winging    What  time  I  watch'd  the  swallow  w  Princess  iv  89 

Wink  (s)     Till  with  a  w  his  dream  was  changed,  Com.  of  Arthur  441 

(For  in  a  w  the  false  love  turns  to  hate)  Merlin  and  V.  852 

Wink  (verb)     ere  a  star  can  w,  beheld  her  there.  Gardener's  B.  122 

one  that  nods  Jind  w's  behind  a  slowly  djing  fire.         Locksley  Hall  136 

W  at  our  advent :  help  my  prince  to  gam  Princess  Hi  160 

Nor  w's  the  gold  fin  in  the  porphyry  font :  „        vii  178 

But  w  no  more  in  slothful  overtrust.  Ode  on  Well.  170 

'  Man  !  is  he  man  at  all,  who  knows  and  w's  ?    Sees 

what  his  fair  bride  is  and  does,  and  w's  ?  Merlin  and  V.  781 
Wink'd    last  light,  that  long  Had  w  and  threaten'd 

darkness,  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  2 


Wink'd  {continued)     which  for  bribe  had  w  at  wrong. 

Mutinies,  treacheries — w  at,  and  condoned — 
Winking    The  landscape  w  thro'  the  heat : 

W  his  eyes,  and  twisted  all  his  face. 
Winner    Are  w's  in  this  pastime  of  our  King. 
Winnie    Minnie  and  W  Slept  in  a  shell. 
Winning     W  its  way  with  extreme  gentleness 
To  all  the  people,  w  reverence. 
If  such  be  worth  the  w  now, 
w  easy  grace.  No  doubt,  for  slight  delay, 
a  good  mother,  a  good  wife.  Worth  w  ; 
To  all  the  people,  w  reverence. 
Winnow    enormous  polypi  W  with  giant  arms 
Winsome    Was  wedded  with  a  w  wife,  Ygerne  : 

Peept  the  w  face  of  Edith  like  a  flower 
Wint  (went)     an'  thin  w  into  the  dark. 

people  'ud  see  it  that  w  in  to  mass — 
Winter  (adj.)    {See  also  Midwinter)    "" 
moon ; 
From  w  rains  that  beat  his  grave. 
The  slow  result  of  w  showers  : 
Full  knee-deej)  lies  the  w  snow.  And  the  w  winds 

are  wearily  sighing : 
Among  the  mountains  by  the  w  sea  ; 
w  moon.  Brightening  the  skirts  of  a  long  cloud. 
And  the  long  glories  of  the  w  moon. 
And  like  an  oaken  stock  in  w  woods. 
Made  orphan  by  a  w  shipwreck, 
face,  Rough-redden'd  with  a  thousand  w  gales, 
Mock-Hymen  were  laid  up  like  w  bats, 
Which  in  our  w  woodland  looks  a  flower. 
We  heard  them  sweep  the  w  land  ; 
Glastonbury,  where  the  w  thorn  Blossoms  at 

Christmas, 
Among  the  momitains  by  the  w  sea  ; 
w  moon.  Brightening  the  skirts  of  a  long  cloud. 
And  the  long  glories  of  the  w  moon. 
The  stillness  of  the  dead  world's  w  dawn 
Weird  Titan  by  thy  w  weight  of  years 
She  spies  the  simimer  thro'  the  w  bud, 
She  that  finds  a  w  sunset  fairer  than  a  morn  of 

Spring. 
Dumb  on  the  w  heath  he  lay. 
Sun  Burst  from  a  swimming  fleece  of  w  gray, 
and  iEtna  kept  her  w  snow. 
That  icy  w  silence — ^how  it  froze  you 
I  soaking  here  in  w  wet — 

Who  love  the  w  woods,  to  trace  On  paler  heavens 
thro'  the  sunless  w  morning-mist  In  silence  wept 
Winter  (s)    {See  also  Midwinter,  Summer-winter)    'Tis 
the  world's  w ; 
A  hundred  w's  snow'd  upon  his  breast, 
where  the  moving  isles  of  w  shock  By  night. 
Three  w's,  that  my  soul  might  grow  to  thee, 
monsters  only  made  to  kill  Time  by  the  fire  in  w.' 
'  Why  not  a  summer's  as  a  w's  tale  ? 
we  should  have  him  back  Who  told  the  '  W's  tale  ' 
Those  w's  of  abeyance  all  worn  out. 
Whose  eighty  w's  freeze  with  one  rebuke 
Your  presence  will  be  sun  in  w. 
To  break  the  blast  of  w,  stand  ; 
Yell'd  as  when  the  winds  of  w 
Till  growing  w's  lay  me  low  ; 
And  every  w  change  to  spring. 
As  in  the  w's  left  behind. 
Merlin,  whose  vast  wit  And  himdred  w's 
A  man  wellnigh  a  hundred  w's  old. 
And  each  of  these  a  hundred  w's  old, 
man  was  no  more  than  a  voice  In  the  white  w  of  his 

age.  Pass,  of  Arthur  i 

seen  where  the  moving  isles  of  w  shock  By  night,  „  308 

and  his  w's  were  fifteen  score,  V.  of  Maeldune  116 

His  w  chills  him  to  the  root,  Ancient  Sage  119 

Eighty  w's  leave  the  dog  too  lame  to  follow  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  226 

Spring  and  Summer  and  Autumn  and  W,  Vastness  29 


Geraint  and  E.  939 
Columbus  226 
In  Mem.  Ixxxix  16 
Lancelot  and  E.  1145    i 
Last  Tournament  199    1 
Minnie  and  Winnie  1 
Isabel  23 
-If.  d' Arthur  108 
You  might  have  won  2    , 
Princess  iv  330    ' 
v\&l 
Pass,  of  Arthur  276   i 
The  Kraken  10   ' 
Com.  of  Arthur  188 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  260 
Tomorrow  22 
74 
The  niellow'd  reflex  of  a  w 

Isabel  29 

T^oo  Voices  261 

452 

B.  of  the  0.  Year  1 

M.  d' Arthur  2 

53 

192 

Golden  Year  62 

Enoch  Arden  15 

.  »       .95 

Princess  iv  144 

A  Bedication  13 

In  Mem.  xxx  10 

Holy  Grail  52 

Pass,  of  Arthur  171 

221 

360 

442 

I'o  Victor  Hu^o  7 

Ancient  Sage  74 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  22 

Bead  Prophet  13 

Bemeter  and  P.  20 

115 

Happy  71 

To  Ulysses  6 

14 

Beath  of  Qinone  8 

Nothing  will  Bie  17 

Palace  of  Art  139 

M.  d'Arihur  140 

St.  S.  Stylites  71 

Princess,  Pro.  205 

209 

238 

„  iv  440 

Ode  on  Well.  186 

To  F.  B.  Maurice  3 

22 

Boddicea  77 

1 71  Mem.  xl  30 

„         liv  16 

*  ,,    Ixxviii  9 

Com.  of  Arthur  281 

Holy  Grail  85 


Winter 


803 


Wiser 


Winter  (s)  (continued)    a  breath  that  past  With  all  the  cold 

of  w.  The  Ring  33 
fingers  were  so  stiffen'd  by  the  frost  Of  seven  and 

ninety  w's,  „        240 
sigh'd  In  the  w  of.the  Present  for  the  summer  of  the 

Past ;  Happy  70 

My  yucca,  which  no  w  quells,  To  Ulysses  21 

To  wallow  in  that  w  of  the  hills.  Romney's  R.  15 

.\nd  all  the  w's  are  hidden.  The  Throstle  16 

In  a  hundred,  a  thousand  w's  ?  The  Dawn  24 

Winter-black     One  night  when  earth  was  w-b.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  21 

Winter-clad    Tattoo'd  or  woaded,  w-c  in  skins,  Princess  ii  120 

Winterd    See Many-winter'd 

Winter-field    The  tented  w-f  was  broken  up  Aylmer's  Field  110 

Winterless    the  sons  oi  a,w  day.  The  Wreck  74 

Wintertide    in  w  shall  star  The  black  earth  Ode  to  Memory  19 

Would  make  the  world  as  blank  as  W-t.  Last  Tournament  221 

Winter-white    by  age  as  w-m  As  mine  is  now,  Tiresias  19 

Wintry    So  she,  and  tuni'd  askance  a  w  eye  :  Princess  vi  329 

\Vho  roll'd  the  psalm  to  to  skies.  In  Mem.  Ivi  11 

Walk'd  in  a  w  wind  by  a  ghastly  glimmer,  Maud  I  Hi  13 

Scarr'd  with  a  himdred  w  water-courses —  Holy  Grail  490 

Gleam,  that  had  waned  to  a  w  glimmer  On  icy 

fallow  Merlin  and  the  G.  83 

(Viped    Why  'edn't  tha  w  thy  shoes  ?  Spinster's  S's.  46 

iVire    The  wind  sounds  like  a  silver  w,  Fatima  29 

The  parrot  in  his  gilded  w's.  Bay-Bm.,  Sleep.  P.  16 

A  man  with  knobs  and  w's  and  vials  fired  A 

cannon  :  Princess,  Pro.  65 

Up  thro'  gilt  w's  a  crafty  loving  eye,  „              172 

who  thrumm'd  On  such  a  w  as  musically  Last  Tournament  323 

iVirer    The  nightly  w  of  their  innocent  hare  Aylmer's  Field  490 

Wiry    writhed  his  w  arms  Around  him,  Gareth  and  L.  1150 

Wisdom    her  raiment's  hem  was  traced  in  flame  W,  The  Poet  46 

Could  his  dark  w  find  it  out,  Ttco  Voices  308 

wisdom-bred  And  throned  of  w —  CEnone  124 

Were  w  in  the  scorn  of  consequence.'  „      150 

stay'd  the  Ausonian  king  to  hear  Of  w  Palace  of  Art  112 

The  w  of  a  thousand  years  Is  in  them.  Of  old  sat  Freedom  18 

flower  of  knowledge  changed  to  fruit  Of  it\  Love  and  Buty  25 
Knowledge  comes,  but  «?  lingers,  (repeat)             Locksley  Hall  141,  143 

Not  much  their  w  teaches  ;  Will  Water.  174 

yet  for  all  your  w  well  know  I  That  I  shall  look  Enoch  Arden  211 

a  tigress  with  a  gossamer,  W'ere  w  to  it.'  Princess  v  171 

bearing  and  the  training  of  a  child  Is  woman's  w.'  „          466 

Wearing  his  w  lightly,  like  the  fruit  A  Bedication  12 

And  in  thy  w  make  me  wise.  In  Mem.  Pro.  44 

For  W  dealt  with  mortal  powers,  „        xxxvi  5 

There  must  be  w  with  great  Death :  „            li  11 

Whatever  w  sleep  with  thee.  „        cviii  16 

Nor  let  thy  w  make  me  wise.  „          cix  24 

High  10  holds  my  w  less,  „           cxii  1 

Yet  how  much  w  sleeps  with  thee  „         cxiii  2 

moving  side  bv  side  With  w,  „        cxiv  20 

But  W  heavenly  of  the  soul.  „                22 

let  me  think  Silence  is  w  :  Merlin -and  V.  253 

'  And  lo,  I  clothe  myself  with  w,  „            255 

till  he  let  his  w  go  For  ease  of  heart,  „            892 

Led  on  the  gray-hair'd  w  of  the  east ;  Holy  Grail  453 

with  the  w  and  wealth  of  his  own.  The  Wreck  65 

Strong  in  will  and  rich  in  w,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  49 

and  take  their  w  for  your  friend.  „            104 

Pillory  W  in  your  markets,  „            134 

move  to  such  a  goal  As  W  hopes  to  gain,  Politics  4 

'  Thy  glory  baffles  w.  Akhar's  Bream  28 

Visdom-brad    w-b  And  throned  of  wisdom —  CEnone  123 

Vise  (adj.)     That  read  his  spirit  blindly  w,  Two  Voices  287 

The  slow  w  smile  that,  round  about  Miller's  B.  5 

No  one  can  be  more  w  than  destiny.  B.  of  F.  Women  94 
with  choice  paintings  of  w  men  I  himg  The  royal 

dais  round.  Palace  of  Art  131 

Great  Nature  is  more  w  than  I :  To  J.  S.  35 

'  Be  w  :  not  easily  forgiven  Are  those,  Gardener's  B.  247 

Therefore  comes  it  we  are  w.  Vision  of  Sin  100 
'  O  Enoch,  you  are  w  ;  And  yet  for  all  your  wisdom    Enoch  Arden  210 


Wise  (adj.)  (continued)    wholly  w  To  let  that  handsome 

fellow  Aylmer's  Field  268 
Should  I  not  call  her  w,  who  made  me  w  ?  Princess  ii  396 
Lady  Psyche,  younger,  not  so  w,  „  iv  316 
Like  our  wild  Princess  with  as  •«;  a  dream  „  Con.  69 
Attain  the  w  indifference  of  the  wise  ;  A  Bedication  8 
For  such  a  w  humility  As  befits  a  solemn  fane :  Ode  on  Well.  249 
And  in  thy  wisdom  make  me  w.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  44 
If  thou  wilt  have  me  w  and  good.  „  lix  8 
She  darkly  feels  him  great  and  w,  „  xcvii  34 
They  sang  of  what  is  w  and  good  „  ciii  10 
'Tis  held  that  sorrow  makes  us  w,  ,,  cviii  15 
Nor  let  thy  wisdom  make  me  w.  „  cix  24 
'Tis  held  that  sorrow  makes  usw ;  „  cxiii  1 
But  that  blind  clamour  made  me  w  ;  „  cxxiv  18 
Were  it  not  w  if  I  fled  from  the  place  Maud  /  i  64 
How  modest,  kindly,  all-accomplish'd,  w.  Bed.  of  Idylls  18 
we  have  heard  from  our  w  man  at  home  To  North- 
ward, Gareth  and  L.  201 
and  never  a  whit  more  w  The  fourth,  „  635 
O  damsel,  be  you  w  To  call  him  shamed,  „  1259 
whether  very  w  Or  very  foolish  ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  469 
'  Yea  so,'  said  he,  '  do  it :  be  not  too  w  ;  Geraint  and  E.  424 
And  this  w  world  of  ours  is  mainly  right.  „  901 
And  our  w  Queen,  if  knowing  that  I  know.  Merlin  and  V.  121 
'  Who  are  w  in  love  Love  most,  say  least,'  „  247 
Yet  you  are  w  who  say  it ;  „  252 
surely  ye  are  w,  But  such  a  silence  is  more  w  than 

kind.'  „            288 

However  w,  ye  hardly  know  me  yet.'  ,,            355 

'  I  never  was  less  w,  however  w,  „            357 

'  Are  ye  so  w  ?  ye  were  not  once  so  w,  Lancelot  and  E.  103 

their  w  men  Were  strong  in  that  old  magic  Holy  Grail  665 

the  heart  that  was  w  !  The  Wreck  56 

By  which  thou  wilt  abide,  if  thou  be  w.  Ancient  Sage  35 

wherefore  thou  be  w.  Cleave  ever  to  the  sunnier  side                 .,          67 

But  thou  be  w  in  this  dream-world  of  ours,  ..         108 

years  that  made  the  stripling  w  Undo  their  work  again,  „         111 

yet  perhaps  she  was  not  w  ;  Locksley  II.,  Sixty  11 

if  dynamite  and  revolver  leave  you  courage  to  be  w  :  „            107 

Patriot  Statesman,  be  thou  w  to  know  To  Buke  of  Argyll  1 

Then  let  w  Nature  work  her  will.  My  life  is  full  21 

Merlin,  the  w  man  that  ever  served  King  Uther  Com.  of  Arthur  151 

Not  even  thy  w  father  with  his  signs  Guinevere  274 

'  If  I,'  said  the  w  little  Annie,  '  was  you.  In  the  Child.  Hosp.  48 

Achseans — honouring  his  w  mother's  word —  Achilles  over  the  T.  16 

To  cast  w  words  among  the  multitude  Tiresias  66 

but  thou  art  w  enough,  Tho'  young  to  love  thy  wiser,  „      153 

w  man's  word.  Here  trampled  by  the  populace  „      173 

In  what  they  prophesy,  our  w  men.  Epilogue  65 
Horace,  you  the  w  Adviser  of  the  nine-years-ponder'd 

lay.  Poets  and  their  B.  5 
Voice  spake  out  of  the  skies  To  a  just  man  and 

a  w —  Voice  spake,  etc.  2 

Wise  (s)     to  its  sway  Will  win  the  w  at  once,  Mine  be  the  strength  10 

0  silent  faces  of  the  Great  and  W,  Palace  of  Art  195 

Not  yet  the  w  of  heart  would  cease  Love  thou  thy  land  81 
her  least  remark  was  worth  The  experience  of  the  w.    Edwin  Morris  66 

Thro'  madness,  hated  by  the  w,  Love  and  Buty  7 

Yeam'd  after  by  the  wisest  of  the  w,  Lucretius  267 

Among  the  w  and  the  bold.  Ode  on  Well.  52 

War,  who  breaks  the  converse  of  the  w ;  Third  of  Feb.  8 

the  w  who  think,  the  w  who  reign.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  32 

God  is  law,  say  the  w  ;  High.  Pantheism  13 

Attain  the  wise  indifierence  of  the  w  ;  A  Bedication  8 

With  all  the  circle  of  the  w,  In  Mem.  Ixi  3 

Thy  likeness  to  the  w  below,  „       Ixxiv  7 

truthless  violence  moum'd  by  the  W,  Vastness  5 

Wise  See  Broken-wise,  Crescent-wise,  Dropwise,  Earthly-wise, 
Elsewise,  Heavenly -wise.  Madonna -wise,  Mocking  -  wise. 
Over-wise,  Warrior-vrtse,  Worldly-wise 

Wisely     Or  w  or  tmwisely,  signs  of  storm,  To  the  Queen  ii  49 

Wiser    That  we  are  w  than  our  sires.  Love  thou  thy  land  72 

Surely  I  shall  be  w  in  a  year :  Enoch  Arden  433 

nor  is  it  IF  to  weep  a  true  occasion  lost,  Princess  iv  68 


Wiser 


804 


Wiser  (continued)    dismiss'd  in  shame  to  live  No  ^v  than        ^^.^^^^^  .^  ^^^ 
.y'u^^mlnwhlbe.byand^  ,  Co^-- of  Arthur  4DA 

lIchMven  learn,  be  thou  W  for  falling  !  Bahn  «f  f  «^«^  g 

fierce  beast  found  Aw  than  herseli,  Ttresws  15^ 

thou  art  wise  enough,  Tho'  young,  to  love  thy  w,  e,v^,  fil 

V  there  than  you,  that  crowning  barren  Death     D,cksley  H.,  Sixty  61 
But  you  have  made  the  w  choice,  Tou  might  hive  won  5 

£et  hS  tbe  w  man  who  springs  Hereafter,  ^"^iSTvT.  2? 

like  a  stoic,  or  like  A  w  epicurean,  T^iroi^ 

'Belike  for  lack  of  «;  company  ;  Za5<  Towmamm<  2g 

'  Then  were  swine,  goats,  asses,  geese  The  w  fools,  ,,  ^^o 

Wisest    Yeam'd  after  by  the  w  of  the  wise,  iwcre<i«s  267 

'Madam,  he  the  w  man  Feasted  the  woman  w  then,  Prtnc.ss  tt  350 

Her  that  talk'd  down  the  fifty  w  men ;  ^       ^      "         ■"  ^^^ 

?o  know  myself  the  w  knight  of  all.'  £«««  Tottmameni  248 

Nor  is^he  the  v,  man  who  never  proved  himself    ^^^^^^^^  ^_^  ^.^^^  ^^ 

Do^uBT  no  longer  that  the  Highest  is  the  w  and  the  best,  J'at^/j  1 
Wish  (s)    phantom  of  a  «;  that  once  could  move,          The  form,  the  form  W 

wheeling  round  The  central  w,  Gardener  s  D225 

And  let  me  have  an  answer  to  my  w  ;  StvliUslU 

let  him  speak  his  w.              ,  '^'-  t-X„tL^ 

Old  w'es,  ghosts  of  broken  plans,  W'^^/  f^a^^*--  29 
the  noble  «;  To  save  all  earnings  to  the  uttermost,         Enoch  Arden  85 

a  w  renew'd.  When  two  years  after  came  a  boy  „            °° 

his  had  been,  or  yours  :  that  was  his  w.  "           ^ 

He  oft  denied  his  heart  his  dearest  w,  "          ^^" 

He  laugh'd,  and  yielded  readily  to  their  w,  >.          ^'^ 

son  Was  silent,  tho'  he  often  look  d  his  w  ;  .-    p„„  on 

tWs  wild  king  to  force  her  to  his  w,  Princess,  Pw.  37 

As  if  to  close  with  Cyril's  random  w  :  .-         «*  ^"j!: 

But  led  by  golden  w'es,  and  a  hope  "      ^  JylJi^ 

Tell  my  w  to  her  dewy  blue  eye  :  ^'"f^lrilZ  S 

And  ever  met  bun  on  his  way  With  w'es.  In  Mem.  m  22 

The  w,  that  of  the  living  whole  "            '  ^ 

That  cries  against  my  w  for  thee.  "                 . 

The  w  too  strong  for  words  to  name  ;  ''    /  r   -s^l 

sent  her  w  that  I  would  yield  thee  thme.  Gareth  and  i.  551 

knight  art  thou  To  the  King's  best  w.  t'h      ■  tnKx 

SS I  give  no  reason  but  my  w,  Marr.  of  Geraint  761 

Be  moulded  by  your  w'es  for  her  weal ;  r-      •  V  ^«^  v  41 Q 

I  know  Your  w,  and  would  obey  ;  Geraxnt  and  E.  419 

Beholding  how  ye  butt  against  my  w,  ir    r-    "  j  17  lee; 
STtimes  Would  flatter  hii  own  w  in  age  for  love,       Merlm  and  V.  185 

And  grant  my  re-reiterated  w,  "            ggg 

Nor  own'd  a  sensual  w,  "            ggg 

the  w  to  prove  him  wholly  hers.  "         „  „„ 

Love-loyal  to  the  least  w  of  the  Queen  ianceZoi  anti  £89 

To  speak  the  w  most  near  to  your  true  heart ;  ,.            ^^* 

And  Lancelot  saw  that  she  withheld  her  w,  >.            »|^ 

'  Delay  no  longer,  speak  your  w,  "          in4« 

And  there  I  woke,  but  still  the  w  remain  d.  .  v          ^^ 
and  sent  him  to  the  Queen  Bearing  his  w, 

that  he  welkiigh  deem'd  His  w  by  hers  was  ^^^^^^  ^^  ^  ^^l 

LoTe-loyal  to  the  leasts  of  the  Queen  Guinevere  :^6 

way  my  «  leads  me  evermore  Still  to  believe  it-  Lover's  Tale  t  274 
But  she  spake  on,  for  I  did  name  no  u'. 

But  she  spake  on,  for  I  did  name  no  w.  No  m— no  ^^^ 

bope.                         . ,    ,                  ^      ,  "             ,„  aQ 

'  It  was  my  w,'  he  said,    to  pass,  to  sleep,  ,.          ^»  o^ 

such  her  dying  i«-Giyen  on  the  morning  J^he  Kmg  ^0 

if  his  young  music  wakes  A  w  in  you  Jo  ^'^'^^^c  7?  71 

my  strongest  w  Falls  flat  before  your  least  unwillingness.  Bomney  s  B  71 

Wish  (verb)     Where  she  would  ever"^«>  to  dwell,  Supp.  Confessions  54 

^     thiy  "  to  charm  Pallas  and  Jmio  sitting  by  :  A  Character  U 

I  w  that  somewhere  in  the  ruin'd  folds,   .  n    V'TfU. 

only  w  to  live  till  the  snowdrops  come  agam  :  May  Queen,  J\.  J^  «•  -^^  j* 

I  w  the  snow  would  melt  and  the  sun  come  out  "  r     7   <?  m 

Yet  something  I  did  w  to  say  :  -^^  •{.•  ^-  ri 

I  would  w  to  see  My  grandchild  on  my  knees  w  f;  Iq 

Is  it  well  to  w  thee  hippy  ?-  Locksjey  Hall^ 

I  cannot  help  you  as  twio  do  Unless-  Enoch  Arden  407 

1 10  you  for  my  wife.  " 


Wish  (verb)  (continued)    do  I  w— What  ?— that  the  bush 
were  leafless  ? 
I  w  I  were  Some  mighty  poetess, 

0  I  w  That  I  were  some  great  princess, 

1  could  not  help  it,  did  not  w  : 
that  w'es  at  a  dance  to  change  The  music— 
I  w  it  Gentle  as  freedom  ' — 
I  w  she  had  not  yielded  ! ' 
I  w  they  were  a  whole  Atlantic  broad. 
To  talk  them  o'er,  to  w  them  here. 
We  w  them  store  of  happy  days. 
I  a/;  I  could  hear  again  The  chivalrous  battle-song 
And  w'es  me  to  approve  him. 
She  did  not  w  to  blame  him— 
I  have  not  fall'n  so  low  as  some  would  w. 
'  Did  I  w  Your  warning  or  your  silence  ? 
Whether  ye  w  me  victory  or  defeat, 
Then  said  Geraint,  '  I  w  no  better  fare  : 
make  me  w  still  more  to  learn  this  charm 
I  well  could  w  a  cobweb  for  the  gnat, 
Pure,  as  you  ever  w  your  knights  to  be. 
Well— can  I  w  her  any  huger  wrong 
Well  might  I  w  to  veil  her  wickedness, 
an'  I  w  I  was  dead—  ,    ^  t  u  ^  > 
died  0'  your  going  away,  an  I  w  that  1  naa. 
I  too  w  that  I  had— in  the  pleasant  times 
best  And  oldest  friend,  your  Uncle,  w'es  it, 
Could  sometimes  w  I  had  never  led  the  way. 
IW  I  were  in  the  years  of  old. 
And  w  the  dead,  as  happier  than  ourselves 
I  could  w  yon  moaning  sea  would  rise 
is  it  well  to  w  you  joy  ?  n  u    ^ 
W  me  joy  !     Father.    What  need  to  w  when  Hubert 

weds  in  you  The  heart  of  Love, 

'  He  is  fled — I  w  him  dead — 
Wish'd    She  w  me  happy,  but  she  thought 

I  have  w  this  marriage,  night  and  day, 

'  I  w  myself  the  fair  young  beech 

and  I  w  for  Leonard  there, 

'  I  came  to  speak  to  you  of  what  he  w, 

roll'd  his  eyes  upon  her  Repeating  all  he  w. 

And  how  it  was  the  thing  his  daughter  w, 

I  w  my  voice  A  rushing  tempest 

They  w  to  marry  ;  they  could  rule  a  house  ; 

I  stammer'd  that  I  knew  him— could  have  w— 

Because  he  might  have  w  it — 

They  hated  banter,  w  for  something  real. 

But  I  w  it  had  been  God's  will  that  I, 

I  almost  w  no  more  to  wake, 

And  wept,  and  w  that  I  were  dead  ; 

w  The  Prince  had  found  her  in  her  ancient  home ; 

W  it  had  been  my  mother, 

and  I  w,  yet  w  her  not  to  speak  ; 

But  I  niver  not  w  fur  childer. 
Wishing    And,  tho'  in  silence,  w  joy. 
Wisp    the  gilded  ball  Danced  like  a  w  : 

w  that  flickers  where  no  foot  can  tread.' 

the  w  that  gleams  On  Lethe  in  the  eyes  of  Death. 
Wistful    '  Then  I  fixt  My  w  eyes  on  two  fair  images, 

mother's  eye  Full  of  the  w  fear  that  he  would  go. 
Wit    With  shrilling  shafts  of  subtle  w. 

Alone  and  warming  his  five  w's,  (repeat) 

The  fruitful  w  Cleaving,  took  root, 

With  thy  shallow  w  : 

0  the  dalliance  and  the  w, 

1  grow  in  worth,  and  w,  and  sense, 
The  tavern-hours  of  mighty  w's — 
Thro'  which  a  few,  by  w  or  fortime  led, 
gave  To  him  that  fluster'd  his  poor  parish  w  s 
How  might  a  man  not  wander  from  his  w's 
the  wealth  Of  words  and  w. 
Merlin,  whose  vast  w  And  hundred  winters 
An  old  man's  w  may  wander  ere  he  die. 
Have  strength  and  w,  in  my  good  mother  s  hall 
shook  his  w's  they  wander  in  his  prime — 


Wit 


Lucretius  205 
Princess,  Pro.  131 
133 
n332 
it)  589 
vi  205 
Con.  5 
Tl 
In  Mem.  xc  11 
„      Con.  84 
Maud  I  X  5'i 
„       xix  71 
„  XX  5 

Marr.  of  Geraint  129 
Geraint  arid  E.  7G 
80 
232 
Merlin  and  V.  329 
370 
Lancelot  and  E.  1375 
Last  Tournament  596 
Guinevere  211 
First  Quarrel  52 
54 
55 
Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  47 
Columbus  186 
Tiresias  1 
Ancient  Sage  205 
The  Flight  11 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  216 

The  Bing  60 
Forlorn  1 
Miller's  B.  139 
Dora  21 
Talking  Oak  141 
Golden  Year  4 
Enoch  Arden  291 
905 
The  Brook  140 
Aylmer's  Field  756 
Princess  ii  465 
in  206 
vi  275 
„     Con.  18 
Grandmother  73 
In  Mem.  xxviii  14 
Com.  of  Arthur  345 
Marr.  of  Geraint  643 
Lancelot  and  E.  674 
Lover's  Tale  i  577 
Spinster's  S's.  84 
In  Mem.,  Con.  88 
Princess,  Pro.  64 
„  iv  358 

In  Mem.  xcviii  7 
Sea  Breams  240 
Gareth  and  L.  173 
Clear-headed  friend  13 
The  Owl  i  6,  13 
The  Poet  20 
Poet's  Mind  2 
D.  of  F.  Women  147 
Will  Water.  41 
191 
Aylmer's  Field  438 
521 
Princess  ii  440 
In  Mem.,  Con.  103 
Com.  of  Arthur  280 
405 
Gareth  and  L.  12 
715 


Wit 


805 


Woke 


Wit  (continued)     but,  being  knave,  Hast  mazed  my  w :     Gareth  and  L.  1170 

Dreams  ruling  when  to  sleeps  !  Balin  and  Balan  143 

I  loved  thee  first,  That  warps  the  w.'  Merlin  and  V.  61 

If  these  unwitty  wandering  w's  of  mine,  ,,             346 

1  fain  had  given  them  greater  w's :  „            496 
added,  of  her  w,  A  border  fantasy  of  branch  and 

flower,  Lancelot  and  E.  10 

but  listen  to  me,  If  I  must  find  you  w  :  „             148 

set  himself  to  play  upon  her  With  sallying  w,  „            647 

Sweet  father,  will  you  let  me  lose  my  w's  ?  '  „            752 

'  Ye  will  not  lose  your  w's  for  dear  Lavaine  :  „            755 

I  might  have  put  my  w's  to  some  rough  use,  „          1306 

Beast  too,  as  lacking  human  w —  Pelleas  and  E.  476 

seeing  too  much  w  Makes  the  world  rotten,  Last  Tournament  246 

To  babble  about  him,  all  to  show  your  w —  „              340 

The  slippery  footing  of  his  narrow  w,  Lover's  Tale  i  102 

wild  hour  and  the  wine  Had  set  the  w's  aflame.  iS'ir  J.  Oldcastle  95 

But  her  w's  wor  dead,  an'  her  hair  was  as  white  Tomorrow  60 

Witch    sought  and  found  a  w  Who  brew'd  the  philtre  Lucretius  15 

And  we  past  to  the  Isle  of  W'es  J',  of  Maeldune  97 

For  a  wild  w  naked  as  heaven  stood  „            100 

Witch-elm     W-e's  that  counterchange  the  floor  hi  Mem.  Ixxxix  1 

Withdraw    '  To  pass,  when  Life  her  light  w's,  Two  Voices  145 

Else  I  w  favour  and  countenance  Ai/lnifr's  Field  307 

It  might  be  safe  our  censures  to  w  ;  'Third  of  Feb.  11 

still  w  themselves  Quite  into  the  deep  soul.  Lover's  Tale  i  81 

if  the  Nameless  should  w  from  all  Ancient  Sage  50 

Withdrawing     W  by  the  counter  door  to  that  Ayhner's  Field  282 

Withdrawn    {See  also  Long-withdrawn)    Half  shown,  are 

broken  and  w.  Two  Voices  306 
Deep  in  the  garden  lake  w.                                      Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  12 

every  morning,  far  w  Beyond  the  darkness  Vision  of  Sin  48 

on  the  glimmering  limit  far  w  „          223 

Far  into  heaven  w,  Voice  and  the  P.  38 

Death  in  the  living  waters,  and  w,  Merlin  and  V.  148 

I  knew  the  veil  had  been  w.  Holy  Grail  522 

Withdrew    As  she  w  into  the  golden  cloud,  (Enone  191 

Where  we  w  from  siunmer  heats  and  state,  Princess  vi  245 

W  themselves  from  me  and  night,  In  Mem.  xcv  18 

Wither     W  beneath  the  palate,  and  the  heart  Faints,  D.  of  F.  Women  287 

I  w  slowly  in  thine  arms,  Tithonus  6 

lest  I  w  by  despair.  Locksley  Hall  98 

And  the  individual  w's,  „          142 

Now  for  me  the  woods  may  w,  „          190 

Thine  own  shall  w  in  the  vast,  In  Mem.  Ixxvi  11 

as  anger  falls  aside  And  w's  on  the  breast  Lover's  Tale  i  10 

He  w's  marrow  and  mind ;  Ancient  Sage  120 

laurel  of  Caesar,  but  mind  would  not  w.  Parnassus  4 

Wither'd    parch'd  and  w,  deaf  and  blind,  Fatima  6 

My  suit  had  w,  nipt  to  death  by  him  Edwin  Morris  101 

Are  w  in  the  thorny  close,  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  11 

The  naked  Three,  were  w  long  ago,  Death  of  CEnone  7 

'  What  drug  can  make  A  w  palsy  cease  to  shake  ?  '  Two  Voices  57 

'  The  memory  of  the  w  leaf  In  endless  time  „  112 
like  the  w  moon  Smote  by  the  fresh  beam  of  the 

springing  east ;  M.  d' Arthur  213 

The  w  Misses !  how  they  prose  O'er  books  Amphion  81 

Who  slowly  rode  across  a  w  heath,  Vision  of  Sin  61 

Kuin'd  trunks  on  w  forks,  ,,            93 

to  left  and  right  Of  w  holt  or  tilth  or  pasturage.  Enoch  Arden  675 

A  w  violet  is  her  bliss :  In  Mem.  xcvii  26 

as  the  worm  draws  in  the  w  leaf  And  makes  it  earth,  Geraint  and  E.  633 
Danced  like  a  w  leaf  before  the  hall,  (repeat)  Last  Tournament  4,  242 
like  the  w  moon  Smote  by  the  fresh  beam  of  the 

springing  east ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  381 

And  pale  and  fibrous  as  a  w  leaf,  Lover's  Tale  i  422 

Withering    O  Love,  Love,  Love !     O  w  might !  Fatima  1 

Withheld     Lancelot  saw  that  she  w  her  wish,  Lancelot  and  E.  920 

w  His  older  and  his  mightier  from  the  lists ;  Pelleas  and  E.  159 

Withhold    a  prudence  to  w ;  Isabel  15 

Withholding     Apart  from  place,  w  time,  Arabian  Nights  75 

Within     See  Half-within 

Without    See  Half-without 

Withstand    caught  By  that  you  swore  to  w  ?  Maud  I  vi  80 

Frail,  but  of  force  to  w,  „    //  ii  24 


St.  S.  Stylites  55 
129 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  35 

81 

To  Prof.  Jebb.  2 

Forlorn  7 

,,    25 

AJcbar's  Dream  98 

Aylmer's  Field  749 

Balin  and  Balan  145 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  36 

286 


Witness  (s)    {See  also  Eye-witness)     Bear  w,  if  I  could 
have  found  a  way 
in  truth  (thou  wilt  bear  w  here) 
thine  own  w  that  thou  bringest  Not  peace, 
Lord  give  thou  power  to  thy  two.  w'es ! 
Bear  w  you,  that  yesterday 
'  Who  was  w  of  the  crime  ? 
There  Avill  come  a  w  soon  Hard  to  be  confuted, 
when  creed  and  race  Shall  bear  false  w. 

Witness  (verb)     Yes,  as  your  moanings  w, 
W  their  flowery  welcome. 

Wittier     Evelyn  is  gayer,  w,  prettier, 

our  quick  Evelyn — The  merrier,  prettier,  w. 

Witty    grew  So  w  that  ye  play'd  at  ducks  and  drakes  Last  Tournament  344 

Wizard  (adj.)     Some  figure  like  a  w  pentagram  The  Brook  103 

I  hear  a  w  music  roll.  In  Mem.  Ixx  14 

The  w  lightnings  deeply  glow,  „    cxxii  19 

Wizard  (s)     Lash'd  at  the  w  as  he  spake  the  word.  Com.  of  Arthur  388 

The  people  call'd  him  W ;  Merlin  and  V.  170 

To  find  a  w  who  might  teach  the  King  „            583 

but  did  they  find  Aw?    Tell  me,  was  he  like  to  thee  ? '  „            613 

The  gentle  w  cast  a  shielding  arm.  „            908 

pale  blood  of  the  w  at  her  touch  Took  gayer  colours,  „            949 
Mighty  the  W  Who  found  me  at  sunrise                  Merlin  and  the  G.  11 

Wizard-like    And  weird  and  worn  and  w-l  was  he.  The  Ring  196 

Wo&  (stop)     W — theer's  a  craw  to  pluck  wi'  tha,  Sam :  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  5 

— w  then  w — let  ma  'ear  mysen  speak.  „              8 

W  then,  proputty,  wiltha  ? —  „            39 

W  then,  wiltha  ?  dangtha !—  „            40 

Woaded    Tattoo'd  or  w,  winter-clad  in  skins,  Princess  ii  120 

Woe    He  hath  no  thought  of  coming  w's ;  Supp.  Confessions  47 

My  heart  is  wasted  with  my  w,  Oriana  1 

silence  seems  to  flow  Beside  me  in  my  utter  w,  „    87 

all  day  long  you  sit  between  Joy  and  w,  Margaret  64 
The  home  of  w  without  a  tear.                                   Mariana  in  the  S.  20 

A  little  hint  to  solace  w,  Two  Voices  433 

My  heart  may  wander  from  its  deeper  w.  (Enone  44 

Or  hearing  would  not  hear  me,  to  is  me !  „     171 

still  sheets  of  water,  divers  w's,  D.  of  F.  Women  34 

That  makes  my  only  w.  „             136 

Even  with  a  verse  your  holy  w.  To  J.  S.  8 

Proclaiming  Enoch  Arden  and  his  w's ;  Enoch  Arden  868 

As  fits  an  universal  w,  Ode  on  Well.  14 

it  cost  me  a  world  of  w,  Grandmother  23 

To  bear  thro'  Heaven  a  tale  of  w.  In  Mem.  xii  2 

And  standing,  muffled  roimd  with  w,  „          xiv  5 

The  M'ild  unrest  that  Uves  in  w  „          xv  15 

Peace ;  come  away :  the  song  of  w  „          Ivii  1 

Likewise  the  imaginative  w,  „    Ixxxv  53 

And  I — ^my  harp  would  prelude  w —  „  Ixxxviii  9 

Or,  crown'd  with  attributes  of  w  „     cxviii  18 

So  far,  so  near  in  w  and  weal ;  „       cxxix  2 
for  some  dark  undercurrent  w  That  seems  to  draw —     Maud  I  xviii  83 

Wrought  for  his  house  an  irredeemable  w ;  „         II  i  22 
'  0  brother '  answer'd  Balin  '  to  is  me !                       Balin  and  Balan  618 

'  W  is  me,  my  knights,'  he  cried.  Holy  Grail  275 

all  the  wealth  and  all  the  to  ?  Guinevere  344 

we  came  To  what  our  people  call '  The  Hill  of  W.'  Lover's  Tale  i  374 

Three  cypresses,  symbols  of  mortal  w,  „            537 

A  sacred,  secret,  unapproached  w,  „            679 

on  the  depth  of  an  unfathom'd  w  Reflex  of  action.  „            746 

were  worlds  of  w  like  our  own —  Despair  18 

scroll  written  over  with  lamentation  and  w.  „      20 

had  some  glimmer,  at  times,  in  my  gloomiest  w,  „    103 

Days  and  Hours  That  cancel  weal  with  to,  Ancient  Sage  96 

and  youth  is  tum'd  to  w.  The  Flight  16 

this  Earth,  a  stage  so  gloom'd  with  to  The  Play  1 

'  W  to  this  island  if  ever  a  woman  (repeat)  Kapiolani  20,  22 
Wofol    {See  also  Dainty-woeful)     A  w  man  (for  so  the 
story  went) 
when  the  w  sentence  hath  been  past, 
Embathing  all  with  wild  and  w  hues, 
Woild  (wild)     Down  i'  the  w  'enemies  afoor  I  coom'd 

to  the  plaace. 
Woke    Till  cold  winds  w  the  gray-eyed  mom 


Lover's  Tale  i  379 

788 

ii  64 

N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  34 
Mariana  31 


Woke 


806 


Woman 


Woke  {continued)     Ind  to  Ind,  but  in  far  daylight  w,  Buonaparte  4 

And  w  her  with  a  lay  from  fairy  land.  Caress'd  or  chidden  8 

She  w :  the  babble  of  the  stream  Fell,  Mariana  in  the  S.  51 

Until  I  w,  and  found  him  settled  down  The  Epic  17 

That  with  the  sound  I  w,  and  heard  M.  d' Arthur,  Ef.  30 

'  0  happy  kiss,  that  w  thy  sleep  ! '  Day -Dm.,  Depart.  19 

In  him  w,  With  his  first  babe's  first  cry,  Enoch  Arden  84 

Here  she  w.  Resolved,  sent  for  him  „         506 

He  w,  he  rose,  he  spread  his  arms  abroad  „         912 

out  a  despot  dream  The  father  panting  w,  Aylmer's  Field  528 

till  the  comrade  of  his  chambers  w,  „            583 

slept,  w,  and  went  the  nest,  The  Sabbath,  Sea  Dreams  18 

wail'd  and  w  The  mother,  ,,          57 

I  w,  I  heard  the  clash  so  clearly.  ,.        135 

mixt  with  little  Margaret's,  and  I  w,  ,■     _    246 

After  a  tempest  tv  upon  a  morn  Lucretius  24 

Shot  out  of  them,  and  scorch'd  me  that  I  w.  „        66 

Lilia  w  with  sudden-shrilling  mirth  Princess,  Pro.  216 

ri;  Desire  in  me  to  infuse  my  tale  of  love  .,           v  239 

And  ere  I  w  it  was  the  point  of  noon,  „              482 

Last  I  w  sane,  but  well-nigh  close  to  death  „         vii  119 

Deep  in  the  night  I  w :  she,  near  me,  „              173 

That  early  w  to  feed  her  little  ones,  :,              252 

This  year  I  slept  and  w  with  pain,  In  Mem.  xxviii  13 

songs,  that  w  The  darkness  of  our  planet,  „           Ixocvi  9 

Enid  w  and  sat  beside  the  couch,  Marr.  of  Geraint  79 

W  and  bethought  her  of  her  promise  given  „            602 

Geraint  W  where  he  slept  in  the  high  hall,  „            755 

Beat,  till  she  w  the  sleepers,  Geraint  and  E.  404 

Balin  first  w,  and  seeing  that  true  face,  Balin  and  Balan  590 

W  the  sick  knight,  and  while  he  roU'd  his  eyes  Lancelot  and  E.  819 

There  bode  the  night :  but  w  with  dawn,  „            846 

there  I  w,  but  still  the  wish  remain'd.  ,,           1048 

damsel,'  answer'd  he,  '  I  w  from  dreams;  Pelleas  and  E.  104 

He  w,  and  being  ware  of  some  one  nigh,  „          520 

And  w  again  in  utter  dark,  and  cried,  Last  Tournament  623 

Far  cities  burnt,  and  with  a  cry  she  w.  Guinevere  83 

Arthur  w  and  call'd,  '  Who  spake  ?  Pass,  of  Arthur  45 

and  we  w  To  gaze  upon  each  other.  Lover's  Tale  i  265 

when  I  w.  Something  she  ask'd,  1  know  not  what,  „            705 

I  dozed ;  I  w.     An  open  landaiilet  Whirl'd  by,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  85 

wail  For  ever  w  the  unhappy  Past  again,  „                263 

I  w,  and  thought — death — I  shall  die —  Columbus  87 

and  w  These  eyes,  now  dull,  but  then  so  keen  Tiresias  3 

Till  I  w  from  the  trance.  The  Wreck  115 

I  w  to  all  of  truest  in  myself,  The  Ring  182 

w  me  And  leam'd  me  Magic  !  Merlin  and  the  G.  13 
dream  Wail'd  in  her,  when  she  w  beneath  the  stars.  Death  of  (Enone  82 

His  dream  became  a  deed  that  w  the  world,  St.  Telemachus  70 

Wold    (See  also  Sea-wold,  Wowd)    sheep  from  wattled 

folds.  Upon  the  ridged  w's,  Ode  to  Memory  67 

the  long  dun  w's  are  ribb'd  with  snow,  Oriana  5 

That  clothe  the  w  and  meet  the  sky ;  L.  of  Shalott  i  3 

And  oft  in  ramblings  on  the  w,  Miller's  D.  105 

From  off  the  w  I  came,  and  lay  „          111 

To  yon  old  miU  across  the  w's ;  „          240 
from  the  dry  dark  w  the  simimer  airs  blow  cool  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  27 

blows  More  softly  round  the  open  w,  To  J.  S.  2 

Calm  and  deep  peace  on  this  high  w,  In  Mem.  xi  5 

Or  sheepwalk  up  the  windy  w;  „         c  8 

And  kindled  all  the  plain  and  all  the  w.  Balin  and  Balan  441 

Wolf    By  shores  that  darken  with  the  gathering  w,  Aylmer's  Field  767 

a  w  within  the  fold  !     A  pack  of  wolves  !  Princess  ii  190 

Then  came  these  wolves :  they  knew  her :  „       w  321 

Kite  and  kestrel,  w  and  wolfkin,  Boddicea  15 

A  gray  old  w  and  a  lean.  Maud  I  xiii  28 
Not  that  gray  old  w,  for  he  came  not  back  From  the 

wilderness,  full  of  wolves,  „        II  v  53 
dog,  and  w  and  boar  and  bear  Came  night  and  day,  Com.  of  Arthur  23 

the  w  would  steal  The  children  and  devour,  „            26 

frew  up  to  wolfUke  men.  Worse  than  the  wolves.  „            33 
tript  from  the  three  dead  wolves  of  woman  born        Geraint  and  E.  94 

drew  from  those  dead  wolves  Their  three  gay  suits  „            180 

And  waiting  to  be  treated  like  a  w,  „            857 

And  find  that  it  had  been  the  w's  indeed :  „            864 


Wolf  (continued)     heard  them  pass  like  wolves 

Howling ;  Balin  and  Balan  407 

let  the  wolves'  black  maws  ensepulchre  „  487 

'  Leave  them  to  the  wolves.'  „  588 

If  the  w  spare  me,  weep  my  life  away,  Merlin  and  V.  885 

Old  milky  fables  of  the  w  and  sheep,  Pelleas  and  E.  196 

Let  the  fox  bark,  let  the  w  yell.         _  „  472 

'Why  then  let  men  couple  at  once  with  «oZ««s.  „  536 

Sally  she  wesh'd  foalks'  cloaths  to  keep  the  w  fro'  the 

door.  North.  Cobbler  29 

Mea  fur  to  kick  our  Sally  as  kep  the  w  fro'  the  door,  „  59 

the  howl  of  all  the  cassock'd  wolves.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  158 

That  gray  beast,  the  w  of  the  weald.  Batt.  of  Brunanburh  110 

When  the  wolves  are  howling.  Forlorn  72 

Wolfish    stem  black -bearded  kings  with  w  eyes,  D.  of  F.  Women  111 

Wolfkin     Kite  and  kestrel,  wolf  and  w,  Boddicea  15 

Wolf-like     they  grew  up  to  w-l  men,  Worse  than  the 

wolves. "  Com.  of  Arthur  32 

Wolfskin     mighty  hands  Lay  naked  on  the  w,  Lancelot  and  E.  813 

Wolf's-milk     half  the  lo-m  curdled  in  their  veins,  Princess  vii  130 

Wolseley    foe  was  driven,  And  W  overthrew  Arabi,  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  30 
Woman    (See  also  Beggar-woman,  Countrywoman, 


Gentlewoman,  Lay-women,  Man-woman    And 

women  smile  with  saint-like  glances 
my  ancient  love  AVith  the  Greek  w. 
'  The  Legend  of  Good  Women  '  long  ago  Sung 
This  w  was  the  cause, 
the  greatest  gift,  A  w's  heart, 
for  your  sake,  the  w  that  he  chose. 
Got  up  betwixt  you  and  the  w  there. 
So  the  women  kiss'd  Each  other,  and  set  out, 
I  woo'd  a  w  once,  But  she  was  sharper 
A  w  like  a  butt,  and  harsh  as  crabs. 
God  made  the  w  for  the  man,  (repeat) 
'  God  made  the  w  for  the  use  of  man, 
w's  pleasure,  w's  pain — 
W  is  the  lesser  man, 
I  will  take  some  savage  w, 
The  w  of  a  thousand  simimers  back, 
As  just  and  mere  a  serving-man  As  any  born  of  w 
Shaped  her  heart  with  w's  meekness 
The  w  cannot  be  believed. 
And  women's  slander  is  the  worst. 
Scarce  could  the  w  when  he  came  upon  her, 
they  say  that  women  are  so  quick- — 
'  W,  I  have  a  secret — only  swear, 
'  Dead,'  clamour'd  the  good  w, 
At  which  the  w  gave  A  half-incredulous. 
As  the  w  heard.  Fast  flow'd  the  current 
'  W,  disturb  me  not  noM'  at  the  last, 
the  shame  The  w  should  have  borne, 
fell  The  w  shrieking  at  his  feet, 
fulminated  Against  the  scarlet  w  and  her  creed ; 
And  near  the  light  a  giant  w  sat, 
that  the  w  walked  upon  the  brink : 
the  w  honest  Work  ; 
That  which  I  ask'd  the  w  in  my  dream. 
Came  men  and  women  in  dark  clusters  round, 
The  w  half  turn'd  round  from  him  she  loved, 
when  the  w  heard  his  foot  Return  from  pacings 
'  0  miracle  of  women,'  said  the  book. 
Half  child  half  w  as  she  was, 
'  lives  there  such  a  w  now  ?  ' 
'  There  are  thousands  now  Such  women, 
the  rest  f ollow'd :  and  the  women  sang 
loved  to  live  alone  Among  her  women ; 
The  w  were  an  equal  to  the  man. 
they  must  lose  the  child,  assume  The  w : 
these  the  women  sang ; 
for  miles  about  Was  till'd  by  women ; 
and  the  w's  state  in  each.  How  far  from  just ; 
respect,  however  slight  was  paid  To  w, 
but  that  which  made  W  and  man. 
But  w  ripen'd  earlier,  and  her  life  Was  longer ; 
Plato,  Verulam ;  even  so  With  w : 


Supp.  Confessions  22 

(Enone  261 

D.ofF.  Women  2 

104 

Gardener's  D.  230 

Dora  63 

„    96 

„  128 

Audley  Court  52 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  49 

Edwin  Morris  43,  50 

91 

Locksley  Hall  149 

151 

168 

Godiva  11 

Will  Water.  152 

L.  of  Burleigh  71 

The  Letters  32 

34 

Enoch  Arden  345 

408 

837 

840 

852 

864 

874 

's  Field  356 

811 

Sea  Dreams  23 


Aylmer 


112 
137 
147 
226 
286 
Lucretius  5 
Princess,  Pro.  35 
101 
126 
128 
244 
i50 
131 
1.38 
143 
192 
ii  131 
137 
145 
15 


Woman 


807 


Woman-grown 


Woman  {continued)     be  that  for  ever  which  I  seem,  If,  Princess  ii  258 

These  women  were  too  barbarous,  would  not  leani ;  „  298 

wisest  man  Feasted  the  w  wisest  then,  „  351 

But  when  did  w  ever  yet  invent  ?  '  „  391 

Men  hated  learned  women :  ,.  466 

And  with  that  w  closeted  for  hours  ! '  „  Hi  56 

She  sees  herself  in  every  w  else,  „  110 

extremes,  I  told  her,  well  might  harm  The  w's  cause.  ..  145 

To  lift  the  w's  fall'n  divinity  ..  223 

what  every  xc  counts  her  due.  Love,  children,  ,,  244 

for  women,  up  till  this  Cramp'd  under  woi-se  „  277 

and  mould  The  w  to  the  fuller  day.'  „  332 

Disorderly  the  women.  „  iv  170 

Huge  women  blowzed  with  health,  „  279 

You  hold  the  w  is  the  better  man ;  „  410 

all  women  kick  against  their  Lords  „  412 

That  many  a  famous  man  and  w,  „  445 

And  you  look  well  too  in  your  w's  dress :  „  529 

'  Satan  take  The  old  women  and  their  shadows  !  „  i>  34 

We  left  her  by  the  w,  „  113 

Man  is  the  hunter ;  w  is  his  game :  „  154 

and  leaps  in  Among  the  women,  „  163 

yet  I  hold  her,  king,  True  w :  „  180 

The  w's  garment  hid  the  w's  heart.'  „  305 

those  that  iron-cramp'd  their  women's  feet ;  „  376 

throats  would  bawl  for  civil  rights,  No  w  named :  „  388 

the  w's  Angel  guards  you,  „  410 

When  the  man  wants  weight,  the  w  takes  it  up,  ,.  444 

Man  for  the  field,  and  w  for  the  hearth :  „  447 

Man  with  the  head  and  w  with  the  heart :  „  449 

Man  to  command  and  w  to  obey ;  „  450 

Besides,  the  w  wed  is  not  as  we,  „  462 

bearing  and  the  training  of  a  child  Is  w's  wisdom  :  „  466 

The  leaves  were  wet  with  women's  tears :  „  vi  39 

make  Our  progress  falter  to  the  w's  goal.'  „  127 

Win  you  the  hearts  of  women ;  ,,  171 

you  keep  One  pulse  that  beats  true  w,  „  180 

the  w  is  so  hard  Upon  the  w.  „  222 

men  see  Two  women  faster  welded  in  one  love  „  253 

W,  whom  we  thought  w  even  now,  „  273 
amazed  They  glared  upon  the  women,  and  aghast 

The  women  stared  at  these,  „  361 

for  on  one  side  arose  The  women  up  in  wild  revolt,  „  vii  123 

And  left  her  w,  lovelier  in  her  mood  „  162 

that  know  The  w's  cause  is  man's :  „  259 

For  w  is  not  undevelopt  man,  „  275 

The  man  be  more  of  w,  she  of  man ;  „  280 

what  w  taught  you  this  ?  '  „  310 

I  loved  the  w :  he,  that  doth  not,  lives  A  drowning  life,         „  313 

Thee  w  thro'  the  crust  of  iron  moods  ,,  342 

So  pray'd  the  men,  the  women :  „  Con.  7 

The  women — and  perhaps  they  felt  their  power,  „  13 

kingdom  topples  over  with  a  shriek  Like  an  old  w,  „  63 
But  stay  with  the  old  w  now :                                           Grandmother  108 

Phantom  wail  of  women  and  children,  Boadicea  26 
And  women's  love  and  men's  !                                        Window,  Spring  10 

fiend  best  knows  whether  w  or  man  be  the  worse.  Maud  /  i  75 

Rich  in  the  grace  all  women  desire,  „  x  13 
Nor  fronted  man  or  w,  eye  to  eye —                               Gareth  and  L.  112 

shyly  glanced  Eyes  of  pure  women,  „  314 

To  whom  the  w  weeping,  '  Nay,  my  lord,  „  341 
The  w  loves  her  lord.     Peace  to  thee,  w,  with  thy 

loves  and  hates !  „  372 

Than  ride  abroad  redressing  women's  wrong,  ,,  866 

massacring  Man,  w,  lad  and  girl —  „  1341 
And  loveliest  of  all  women  upon  earth.                        Marr.  of  Geraint  21 

This  too  the  women  who  attired  her  head,  „  62 

O  never  yet  had  w  such  a  pair  Of  suitors  „  439 

But  while  the  women  thus  rejoiced,  „  754 

she  cast  aside  A  splendour  dear  to  women,  „  808 
Stript  from  the  three  dead  wolves  of  w  bom                 Geraint  and  E.  94 

Call  for  the  w  of  the  house,'  „  263 

And  answer'd  with  such  craft  as  women  use,  „  352 

A  w  weeping  for  her  murder'd  mate  „  522 

A  tribe  of  women,  dress'd  in  many  hues,  „  598 


Woman  {continued)     women  they.  Women,  or  what  had 

been  those  gracious  thing's,  Geraint  and  E.  635 

all  the  men  and  women  in  the  hall  Rose  „            731 

Were  men  and  women  staring  and  aghast,  „            804 

To  worship  w  as  true  wife  beyond  Merlin  and  V.  23 

Save,  save  me  thou — W  of  women —  „            78 

'  Know  ye  the  stranger  w  ?  '  „           129 

vice  in  you  which  ruin'd  man  Thro'  w  the  first  hour ;  „          363 

they  never  mount  As  high  as  w  in  her  selfless  mood.  „           443 

'Man  dreams  of  Fame  while  w  wakes  to  love.'  „          460 

or  else  A  sudden  spurt  of  w's  jealousy, —  „          524 

A  w  and  not  trusted,  „          530 

And  as  to  w's  jealousy,  O  why  not  ?  „          537 

All  fighting  for  a  w  on  the  sea.  „          562 

Were  I  not  w,  I  could  tell  a  tale.  „          696 

Have  all  men  true  and  leal,  all  women  pure ;  „          794 

But  women,  worst  and  best,  as  Heaven  and  Hell.  „          815 

w's  love.  Save  one,  he  not  regarded,  Lancelot  and  E.  840 

And  never  w  yet,  since  man's  first  fall,  „            859 

love  Of  man  and  w  when  they  love  their  best,  „            869 

loved  me  with  a  love  beyond  all  love  In  women,  „          1294 

while  women  watch  Who  ^vins,  who  falls ;  Holy  Grail  84 

'  A  w,'  answer'd  Percivale,  '  a  nun,  „          68 

behold  a  w  at  a  door  Spinning ;  „        391 

And  kind  the  w's  eyes  and  innocent,  „        393 

none  but  phantoms  in  your  quest,  No  man,  no  w  ? '                  „        563 

And  women  were  as  phantoms.  „        566 

known  Scarce  any  but  the  women  of  his  isles,  Pelleas  and  E.  88 

'  Ay,'  said  Gawain,  '  for  women  be  so  light.'  „          362 

Men,  women,  on  their  sodden  faces.  Last  Tournament  474 

one  lone  w,  weeping  near  a  cross,  Stay'd  him.  „            493 

For  courtesy  wins  w  all  as  well  As  valour  may,  „            707 

'  this  is  all  w's  grief,  That  she  is  w,  Guinevere  218 

could  he  find  A  w  in  her  womanhood  as  great  „         299 

Yet  must  I  leave  thee,  w,  to  thy  shame.  „        511 

And  beauty  such  as  never  w  wore,  „        549 

The  moaning  of  the  w  and  the  child,  Lover's  Tale  i  520 

The  man  isn't  like  the  w.  First  Quarrel  63 
good  w,  can  prayer  set  a  broken  bone  ?  '                In  the  Child.  Hosp.  20 

Women  and  children  among  us,  Def.  of  iMcknow  8 

Valour  of  delicate  women  who  tended  „            87 

Horror  of  women  in  travail  among  the  dying  „            88 

women  and  children  come  out,  „          100 

What  omens  may  foreshadow  fate  to  man  And  w,  Tiresias  8 

is  a  man  to  be  loved  by  the  women  they  say.  The  Wreck  18 

I  sought  for  a  kindly  caress,  being  w  and  weak,  „          31 

speaking  aloud  To  women,  the  flower  of  the  time,  „          49 

'Never  the  heart  among  women,'  he  said,  „          96 

'  W ' — he  graspt  at  my  arm — '  stay  there ' —  „        120 

Danny  O'Roon  wid  his  ould  w,  Molly  Magee.  Tomorrow  88 

She  with  all  the  charm  of  w,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  48 

W  to  her  inmost  heart,  and  w  to  her  tender  feet,  „             50 

Very  w  of  very  w,  nurse  of  ailing  body  and  mind,  „              51 

Saving  women  and  their  babes,  „             64 

a  w  came  And  caught  me  from  my  nurse.  The  Ring  117 

place  a  hand  in  his  Like  an  honest  w's,  Forlorn  20 

and  choice  of  women  and  of  wines  ?  By  an  Evolution.  8 
While  man  and  w  are  still  incomplete,  I  prize 

that  soul  where  man  and  w  meet.                   On  One  who  eff.  E.  M.  1 

The  w,  gliding  toward  the  pyre.  To  Master  of  B.  18 

the  women  shrieking  "  Atheist "  flung  Filth  Akbar's  Dream  91 

I  am  dressing  the  grave  of  a  w  with  flowers.  Charity  2 

For  a  w  ruin'd  the  world,  „        3 

but  a  w,  God  bless  her,  kept  me  from  Hell.  „        4 

I  had  cursed  the  w  he  married,  „      24 

I  had  cursed  her  as  w  and  wife,  and  in  wife  and  w  I  found  „      31 

Great  and  greater,  and  greatest  of  women,  Kapiolani  5 

if  ever  a  w  should  handle  or  gather  the  berries  „        20 

if  ever  a  w  should  climb  to  the  dwelling  of  Peele  „        22 

Where  is  one  that,  bom  of  w,  Making  of  Man  1 

Woman-breasted    w-b  Sphinx,  with  wings  drawn  back,  Tiresias  148 

Woman-built    As  of  a  new-world  Babel,  w-b.  Princess  iv  487 

Woman-conquer'd    w-c  there  The  bearded  Victor  „       Hi  351 

Woman-conqueror    many  a  florid  maiden-cheek.  The  w-c ;  „            351 

Woman-grown    more  and  more,  the  maiden  tc-g,  Aylmer's  Field  108 


Woman-guard 


808 


Wonderful 


Woman-guard     Princess  with  her  monstrous  ui-g, 
Womanhood    Wearing  the  rose  of  w. 

0  miracle  of  noble  w  ! ' 
A  charr'd  and  wrinkled  piece  of  w, 
All  that  not  harms  distinctive  w. 
Came  out  of  her  pitying  w, 
and  with  all  grace  Of  w  and  queenhood, 
Could  call  him  (were  it  not  for  w) 
Beyond  mine  old  belief  in  w, 
And  roimd  her  limbs,  mature  in  w ; 
A  woman  in  her  w  as  great  As  he  was  in  his 

manhood. 
Beyond  all  dreams  of  Godlike  w, 
Queen,  as  true  to  m  as  Queenhood, 
Womankiiid    All  for  the  common  good  of  w.' 

1  take  her  for  the  flower  of  w, 
The  soft  and  milky  rabble  of  w, 
faith  in  w  Beats  with  his  blood, 

Womanlike     W,  taking  revenge  too  deep 

Woman-man    man-woman  is  not  w-m. 

Woman-markets    Here  in  the  w-m  of  the  west, 

Woman-post    A  w-j>  in  flying  raiment. 

Woman's-heart    Break  not,  O  w-h,  but  still  endure ; 

Woman-slough    what  was  left  of  faded  w-s 

Woman-soldier    My  w-s,  gallant  Kate, 

Woman-statue    Whereon  a  w-s  rose  with  wings 

Woman-vested    but  w-v  as  I  was  Plunged ; 

Woman-world    w-w  Of  wives  and  mothers. 

Woman-worshipper    The  w-w  ?    Yea,  God's  curse. 

Woman-yell    slew  Till  all  the  rafters  rang  with  w-y's, 

Womb    To  spirits  folded  in  the  w. 

Let  her,  that  is  the  w  and  tomb  of  all, 

can  remember  Love  in  the  w, 

within  her  w  that  had  left  her  ill  content ; 

Won    {See  also  Hard-won,  Well-won)     A  motion  from 
the  river  w  Ridged  the  smooth  level, 
things  outward  you  have  w  A  tearful  grace, 
'  That  w  his  praises  night  and  mom  ?  ' 
I  w  his  love,  I  brought  him  home. 
YoTj  might  have  w  the  Poet's  name, 
but  w  mysterious  way  Thro'  the  seal'd  ear 
when  your  sister  came  she  w  the  heart  Of  Ida : 
Imaginations  might  at  all  be  w. 
thus  I  w  Your  mother,  a  good  mother, 
w  it  -with  a  day  Blanch'd  in  our  annals, 
We  will  be  liberal,  since  our  rights  are  w. 
Clash'd  with  his  fiery  few  and  w ; 
has  w  His  path  upward,  and  prevail'd. 
Priest  was  happy.  His  victim  w : 
Faint  heart  never  w — 
Who  have  w  her  favour ! 
fair,  strong,  arm'd — But  to  be  w  by  force- 
That  save  he  w  the  first  by  force. 
So  large  mirth  lived  and  Gareth  w  the  quest. 
Has  ever  w  it  for  the  lady  with  him, 
What  I  these  two  years  past  have  w  for  thee, 
'  This  noble  prince  who  w  our  earldom  back. 
For  tho'  ye  w  the  prize  of  fairest  fair, 
Proclaim'd  him  Victor,  and  the  day  was  w. 
Had  Lancelot  w  the  diamond  of  the  year.  With 
purpose  to  present  them  to  the  Queen,  When 

all  were  w ;  Lancelot  and  E.  68 

That  if  I  went  and  if  I  fought  and  w  it  „  216 

W  by  the  mellow  voice  before  she  look'd,  „  243 

*  Lo,  Sire,  our  knight,  thro'  whom  we  w  tlie  day,  „  529 

'  Was  he  not  with  you  ?  w  he  not  your  prize  ?  '  „  573 

What  of  the  knight  with  the  red  sleeve  ?     '  He  w.'  „  621 

Hard-won  and  hardly  w  with  bruise  and  blow,  „  1165 

Take,  what  I  had  not  w  except  for  you,  „  1181 

Pelleas  for  his  lady  w  The  golden  circlet,  Pelleas  and  E.  13 

wearing  this  unsimny  face  To  him  who  w  tliee  glory  ! '  „  181 

My  Queen,  he  had  not  w.'  „  183 

yea  and  he  that  w  The  circlet  ?  „  320 

their  wills  are  hers  For  whom  I  w  the  circlet ;  „  325 

Lancelot  w  methought,  for  thee  to  wear.'  Last  Tournament  38 


Princess  iv  562 

Two  Voices  417 

Princess,  Pro.  48 

vQl 

vii  274 

Mavd  I  vi  64 

Marr.  of  Geraint  176 

Merlin  and  V.  786 

Lancelot  and  E.  955 

Pelleas  and  E.  73 

Guinevere  299 

Tiresias  54 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  25 

Princess  ii  209 

V  287 

vi  309 

„       vii  328 

Maud  I  Hi  5 

On  One  who  eff.  E.  M.  4 

Aylmer's  Field  348 

Princess  iv  376 

Ded.  of  Idylls  44 

Princess  v  40 

Kate  15 

Princess  i  210 

„       iv  181 

The  Ring  486 

Last  Tournament  447 

476 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  8 

Lucretius  244 

Lover's  Tale  i  159 

The  Revenge  51 


Arabian  Nights  34 

Margaret  11 

Mariana  in  the  S.  34 

The  Sisters  14 

Tou  might  have  won  1 

Aylmer's  Field  695 

Princess  Hi  87 

274 

V  165 

vi  62 

68 

Ode  on  Well.  100 

213 

The  Victim  62 

Window,  The  Answer  9 

Maud  I  xii  18 

Gareth  and  L.  105 

108 

1426 

Marr.  of  Geraint  490 

554 

619 

719 

Balin  and  Balan  90 


Won  {continued)    So   Tristram  w,  and  Lancelot  gave, 
the  gems.  Not  speaking  other  word  than  '  Hast 


thou  w  ? 

And  w  by  Tristram  as  a  tourney-prize, 

years  of  noble  deeds.  Until  they  w  her ; 

attracted,  w,  Married,  made  one  with. 

We  have  w  great  glory,  my  men  ! 

Whom  I  woo'd  and  w. 

who  can  tell  but  the  traitors  had  w  ? 

till  his  Word  Had  w  him  a  noble  name. 

'  Take  comfort  you  have  w  the  Painter's  fame,' 

sword.  That  only  conquers  men  to  conquer  peace. 
Has  w  me. 

And  less  will  be  lost  than  w, 
Won  (one)     {See  also  Wonn)     I  minds  when  i'  How- 

laby  beck  w  daay 
Wonder  (s)     Ever  the  w  waxeth  more  and  more. 

What  w,  if  in  noble  heat  Those  men  thine  arms 

But  when  he  saw  the  w  of  the  hilt, 

'  this  w  keeps  the  house.' 

this  w,  dead,  become  Mere  highway  dust  ? 

The  w  of  the  eagle  were  the  less, 

and  all  the  w  that  would  be. — (repeat) 

For  there  are  greater  w's  there.' 

'  What  w,  if  he  thinks  me  fair  ? '    What  w  I  was 
all  unwise, 

'  It  is  no  w,'  said  the  lords, 

and  rent  The  w  of  the  loom  thro'  warp  and  woof 

a  feast  Of  w,  out  of  West  and  East, 

The  w's  that  have  come  to  thee, 

skill'd  spear,  the  w  of  the  world — 

w's  ye  have  done ;  Miracles  ye  cannot : 

Rapt  in  the  fear  and  in  the  w  of  it ; 

Show'd  us  a  shrine  wherein  were  w's — 

My  daily  w  is,  I  love  at  all. 

What  w,  being  jealous,  that  he  sent 

Fire  in  dry  stubble  a  nine-days'  w  flared : 

Becomes  a  w,  and  we  know  not  why, 

Expectant  of  the  w  that  would  be. 

With  signs  and  miracles  and  w's, 

Or  what  of  signs  and  w's, 

the  land  was  full  of  signs  And  w's 

thy  wise  father  with  his  signs  And  w's, 

But  when  he  saw  the  w  of  the  hilt, 

Your  w  of  the  boiling  lake ; 

What  w  !     I  decreed  That  even  the  dog  was  clean. 

The  w's  were  so  wildly  new. 
Wonder  (verb)     riving  the  spirit  of  man.  Making  earth  w. 

And,  while  now  she  w's  blindly, 

swallows  coming  oiit  of  time  Will  w  why  they  came : 

I  w  he  went  so  young. 
•    You  w  when  my  fancies  play 

'  But  wherefore  would  ye  men  should  w  at  you  ? 

But  there  the  fine  Gawain  will  w  at  me. 

Heated  am  I  ?  you — ^you  w — 
Wonder'd     I  to  at  the  bounteous  hours, 

I  w,  while  I  paced  along : 

I  TO  at  her  strength,  and  ask'd  her  of  it : 

what  kind  of  tales  did  men  tell  men.  She  w, 

All  the  world  w :  (repeat) 

with  such  blows,  that  all  the  crowd  IF, 

Then  came  the  fine  Gawain  and  w  at  her, 

men  who  met  him  rounded  on  their  heels  And  w 

W  at  some  strange  light  in  Julian's  eyes 
Wonderful    Clothed  in  white  samite,  mystic,  w 
(repeat) 

W,  Prince  of  peace,  the  Mighty  God, 

Clothed  in  white  samite,  mystic,  w. 

This  work  of  his  is  great  and  w. 

A  thousand-fold  more  great  and  w 

felt  His  work  was  neither  great  nor  w, 

A  maid  so  smooth,  so  white,  so  w, 

Beyond  all  knowing  of  them,  w. 

Clothed  in  white  samite,  mystic,  w,  (repeat)  Pass,  of  Arthur  199, 312,  327 

W  cures  he  had  done,  O  yes,  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  5 


Last  Tournament  190 

746 

Guinevere  477 

Lover's  Tale  i  133 

The  Revenge  85 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  204 

Def.  of  Lucknow  66 

Dead  Prophet  36 

Itomney's  R.  43 

Akhar's  Dream  16 
The  Dreamer  22 

Church-warden,  etc.  27 

Sonnet  to 6 

England  and  Amer.  6 

M.  d' Arthur  85 

Gardener's  D.  119 

Love  and  Duty  10 

Golden  Year  39 

Locksley  Hall  16,  120 

Day-Dm.,  Depart.  28 

Ep.  4 

Beggar  Maid  7 

Princess  i  62 

Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  21 

In  Mem.  xli  22 

Gareth  and  L.  1223 

1324 

Marr.  of  Geraint  529 

Balin  and  Balan  109 

Merlin  and  V.  536 

580 

Lancelot  and  E.  735 

1029 

Holy  Grail  133 

Guinevere  222 

229 

233 

275 

Pass,  of  Arthur  253 

To  Ulysses  40 

Akhar's  Dream  52 

Mechanophilus  27 

The  Poet  52 

L.  of  Burleigh  53 

Princess  ii  432 

Grandmother  14 

In  Mem.  Ixvi  2 

Gareth  and  L.  570 

Lancelot  and  E.  1054 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  151 

Two  Voices  451 

454 

Sea  Dreams  113 

Princess,  Pro.  197 

Light  Brigade  31,  52 

Marr.  of  Geraint  565 

Lancelot  and  E.  1267 

Pelleas  and  E.  143 

Lover's  Tale  iv  205 

.¥.  d' Arthur  31,  144,  1.59 

Aylmer's  Field  669 

Com.  of  Arthur  285 

Geraint  and  E.  898 

914 

921 

Merlin  and  V.  566 

Holy  Grail  104 


Wonderful 


809 


Wood 


Wonderful  (continued)     sun  of  the  soul  made  day  in  the 

dark  of  his  w  eyes.  The  Wreck  55 

Wondering    w,  ask'd  her  '  Are  you  from  the  farm  ?  '  The  Brook  209 

And  only  w  wherefore  play'd  upon :  Gareth  and  L.  1252 

lifted  up  Their  eager  faces,  w  at  the  strength,  Merlin  and  V.  133 

I  sat,  Lonely,  but  musing  on  thee,  w  where,  Last  Tournament  613 

Wonderingly    w  she  gazed  on  Lancelot  So  soon  return'd,     Pelleas  and  E.  589 

Wonder-stricken     kiss'd  his  w-s  little  ones ;  Enoch  Arden  229 

Wondrous     From  many  a  w  grot  and  secret  cell  The  Kraken  8 

strike  Into  that  w  track  of  dreams  again,  D.  of  F.  Women  279 

0  thou  w  Mother- Age  !  Locksley  Hall  108 
yet  her  cheek  Kept  colour:  «  !  Aylmer's  Field  506 
His  prowess  was  too  w.  Lancelot  and  E.  542 
w  one  Who  passes  thro'  the  vision  of  the  night — ■  „  1405 

Wonn  (one)     (See  also  Won)     But  'e  reads  w  sarmin 

a  weeak,  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  28 

Wont  (s)     From  childly  w  and  ancient  use  I  call —  Lucretius  209 

'tis  her  w  from  night  to  night  To  rail  Princess  Hi  32 

So  said  the  small  king  moved  beyond  his  w.  „      vi  265 

Make  one  wreath  more  for  Use  and  W,  In  Mem.  xxix  11 

He  laugh'd  as  is  his  w,  and  answer'd  Com.  of  Arthur  401 

my  w  hath  ever  been  To  cat«h  my  thief,  Gareth  and  L.  821 

Such  is  my  w,  as  those,  who  know  me,  know.'  Lancelot  and  E.  365 

such  his  w,  as  we,  that  know  him,  know.'  ,,  475 

He  wore,  against  his  w,  upon  his  helm  ,,  603 

Lancelot  sad  beyond  his  w,  to  see  The  maiden  buried,  .,  1333 

Had  been,  their  w,  a-maying  and  return'd,  Gtiinevere  23 

Wont  (adj.)     Where  he  was  w  to  leap  and  climb,         Supp.  Confessions  165 
Psyche,  w  to  bind  my  throbbing  brow,  Princess  ii  250 

In  which  we  two  were  w  to  meet,  In  Mem.  viii  10 

When  I  was  w  to  meet  her  In  the  silent  woody  places  Maud  II  iv  5 
soldiers  w  to  hear  His  voice  in  battle,  Geraint  and  E.  174 

w  to  glance  and  sparkle  like  a  gem  Of  fifty  facets ;  „  294 

Wonted    As  year  by  year  the  labourer  tills  His  w  glebe,         In  Mem.  ci  22 
To  this  the  courteous  Prince  Accorded  with  his  w 

courtesy,  Lancelot  and  E.  638 

The  sound  not  w  in  a  place  so  still  „  818 

And  miss  the  w  number  of  my  knights,  Guinevere  498 

when  he  miss'd  The  w  steam  of  sacrifice,  Demeter  and  P.  119 

Woo    Thee  to  w  to  thy  tuwhit,  (repeat)  The  Owl  ii  11 

They  would  sue  me,  and  w  me,  and  flatter  me.  The  Mermaid  43 

W  me,  and  win  me,  and  marry  me,  „  46 

With  what  voice  the  violet  w's  Adeline  31 

And  once  again  to  w  thee  mine —  Miller's  D.  30 

1  w  thee  not  with  gifts.  CEnone  152 
There's  many  a  bolder  lad  '11  w  me  May  Queen  23 
gold  and  beauty,  wooing  him  to  w.  Aylmer's  Field  487 
thus  I  w  thee  roughly,  for  thou  carest  not  How  roughly 

men  may  w  thee  so  they  win —  Lucretius  272 

Fly  to  her,  and  pipe  and  w  her.  Princess  iv  115 

these  men  came  to  w  Your  Highness —  „       vi  328 

I  w  your  love ;  I  count  it  crime  In  Mem.  Ixxxv  61 

One  is  come  to  w  her.  Maud  I  xii  28 

whitens  ere  this  hour  W's  his  own  end ;  Last  Tournament  698 

W  her  and  gain  her  then :  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  39 

'  Let  us  revenge  ourselves,  your  Ulric  w's  my  wife ' —  Happy  63 

Wood  (trees)    (See  also  Cedar-wood,  Palmwood,  Pine-wood, 

Yew-wood)  the  w's  that  belt  the  gray  hill-side.  Ode  to  Memory  55 
From  the  evening-lighted  w,  Margaret  10 

field  and  w  Grow  green  beneath  the  showery  gray,  My  life  is  full  16 
The  pale  yellow  w's  were  waning,  L.  of  Shalott  iv  2 

The  w's  were  fill'd  so  full  with  song,  Two  Voices  455 

When  after  roving  in  the  w's  Miller's  D.  58 

cloisters,  branch'd  like  mighty  w's,  Palace  of  Art  26 

Lo  !  in  the  middle  of  the  w,  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  25 

I  had  wander'd  far  In  an  old  w :  D-  of  F.  Women  54 

'  Pass  freely  thro' :  the  w  is  all  thine  own,  „  83 

I  have  no  men  to  govern  in  this  w :  „  135 

Thridding  the  sombre  boskage  of  the  w,  „  243 

and  the  w's  and  ways  Are  pleasant,  On  a  Mourner  13 

From  the  w's  Came  voices  of  the  well-contented  doves.  Gardener's  D.  88 
And  like  an  oaken  stock  in  winter  w's.  Golden  Year  62 

The  w's  decay,  the  w's  decay  and  fall,  Tithonus  1 

Now  for  me  the  w's  may  wither,  Locksley  Hall  190 

A  summer  crisp  with  shining  w's.  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  8 


Wood  (trees)   (continued)     and  shows  At  distance 

like  a  little  w ;  I)ay-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  42 

Simimer  w's,  about  them  blowing,  L.  of  Burleigh  19 

And  hills  and  scarlet-mingled  w's  The  Voyage  47 
where  the  prone  edge  of  the  w  began  (repeat)          Enoch  Arden  67,  373 

Crept  down  into  the  hollows  of  the  w ;  „                    76 

To  go  with  others,  nutting  to  the  w,  ,,                  363 

calling,  here  and  there,  about  the  w.  ,.                  383 

remember'd  one  dark  hour  Here  in  this  «),  ,.                  386 

How  merrj^  they  are  down  yonder  in  the  w.  .,                  389 

sent  his  voice  beneath  him  thro'  the  w.  ..                   444 

all  the  w  stands  in  a  mist  of  green.  The  Brook  14 

Autumn's  mock  sunshine  of  the  faded  w's  Aylmer's  Field  610 

I  rose  and  past  Thro'  the  wild  w's  '       Princess  i  91 

and  the  shrieks  Of  the  wild  w's  together ;  ..          99 

O'er  it  shook  the  w's.  And  danced  the  colour,  ..    Hi  292 

when  all  the  lo's  are  green  ?  ..    iv  107 

'  0  Swallow,  flying  from  the  golden  w's,  ,.        114 

Across  the  w's,  and  less  from  Indian  craft  ,.        198 

With  Ida,  Ida,  Ida,  rang  the  w's ;  ,.         433 

mused  on  that  wild  morning  in  the  w's,  ,.      v  471 

strikes  On  a  w,  and  takes,  and  breaks,  „        527 

half-open'd  bell  of  the  w's  !  ..    vi  193 

Nightingales  sang  in  his  w's :  G.  of  Swainston  6 

And  a  worm  is  there  in  the  lonely  w,  The  Islet  34 

And  cattle  died,  and  deer  in  w.  The  Victim  18 

And  w's  are  sear.  And  fires  bum  clear,  Window,  Winter  3 

The  w's  are  all  the  searer,  „                      14 
Oh,  the  w's  and  the  meadows,  W's  where  we  hid 

from  the  wet,  „  Marr.  Mom.  5 

By  meadow  and  stile  and  w,  „                      14 

That  never  knew  the  summer  w's :  In  Mem.  xxvii  4 

And  bask'd  and  batten'd  in  the  w's.  ,.       xxxv  24 

I  foimd  a  w  with  thorny  boughs :  ..          Ixix  6 

hill  and  w  and  field  did  print  The  same  sweet  forms  ,.        Ixxix  7 

noise  of  rooks,  That  gather  in  the  waning  w's,  „      Ixxxv  72 

Thro'  all  the  dewy-tassell'd  w,  „      Ixxxvi  6 

With  banquet  in  the  distant  w's ;  „    Ixxxix  32 

Of  rising  worlds  by  yonder  w.  ,,            cv  25 

Above  the  w  which  grides  and  clangs  ,,         cvii  11 

To  range  the  w's,  to  roam  the  park,  „       Con.  96 

I  HATE  the  dreadful  hollow  behind  the  little  w,  Maud  I  il 

little  w  where  I  sit  is  a  world  of  plunder  ..      iv  24 

the  budded  peaks  of  the  w  are  bow'd  .,        vi  4 

Here  half-hid  in  the  gleaming  w,  ,.           69 

Where  was  Maud  ?  in  our  w ;  ..       xii  5 

Birds  in  our  w  sang  ,.             9 

Running  down  to  my  own  dark  w ;  „    xiv  30 

From  the  lake  to  the  meadow  and  on  to  the  iv,  .    xxii  37 

Our  w,  that  is  dearer  than  all ;  ..          38 

From  the  red-ribb'd  hollow  behind  the  lo,  ..  II  i  25 

Then  glided  out  of  the  joyous  w  ..          31 

Thick  with  wet  w's,  and  many  a  beast  therein.  Coin,  of  Arthur  21 

gazing  over  plain  and  w ;  Gareth  and  L.  668 

Down  the  long  avenues  of  a  boundless  w,  „            785 
Where  Arthur's  men  are  set  along  the  w ;  The  w  is 

nigh  as  full  of  thieves  as  leaves :  ,.             788 

Flying  from  out  of  the  black  w,  ,.             802 

somewhat  as  the  cleanser  of  this  w.  ..            828 

So  she  spake.     A  league  beyond  the  w,  ..            845 

damsel's  headlong  error  thro'  the  w —  „           1215 
a  forester  of  Dean,  Wet  from  the  w's,                        Marr.  of  Geraint  149 

Took  horse,  and  forded  Usk,  and  gain'd  the  w ;  „               161 

At  last  they  issued  from  the  world  of  w,  „              238 

In  the  first  shallow  shade  of  a  deep  w,  Geraint  and  E.  119 

'  There  lurk  three  villains  yonder  in  the  w,  „             142 

'  And  if  there  were  an  hundred  in  the  w,  „            147 

and  she  drove  them  thro'  the  w.  „            185 

keep  them  in  the  wild  ways  of  the  to,  „            187 

thro'  the  green  gloom  of  the  w  they  past,  „            195 

Which  sees  the  trapper  coming  thro'  the  w.  „            724 
in  those  deep  w's  we  found  A  knight                        Balin  and  Balan  120 

Reported  of  some  demon  in  the  w's  Was  once  a  man,         „  124 

who  will  hunt  for  me  This  demon  of  the  w's  ?  '  „              137 

and  rode  The  skyless  w's,  but  under  open  blue  „              293 


Wood 


810 


Wood-world 


Wood  (trees)  (continued)    thou  couldst  lay  the  Devil 
of  these  w's 
and  pass  And  vanish  in  the  w's ; 
the  canker'd  boughs  without  Whined  in  the  w ; 
and  old  boughs  Whined  in  the  to. 
and  tum'd  aside  into  the  w's, 
the  wholesome  music  of  the  w  Was  dumb'd 
Before  another  w,  the  royal  crown  Sparkled, 
yonder  lies  one  dead  within  the  w. 
I  dwell  Savage  among  the  savage  w's, 
she  smiled  '  And  even  in  this  lone  w.  Sweet  lord, 
W's  have  tongues,  As  walls  have  ears : 
shriek  of  bird  or  beast,  Thrill'd  thro'  the  tv's ; 
'  She  dwells  among  the  w's '  he  said 
the  wild  w's  of  Broceliande,  (repeat) 
Who  meant  to  eat  her  up  in  that  wild  w 
and  all  thro'  this  wild  w  And  all  this  morning 
chase  a  creature  that  was  current  then  In  these 

wild  w's. 
And  all  thro'  following  you  to  this  wild  w, 
the  dark  w  grew  darker  toward  the  storm 
dwelt  among  the  w's  By  the  great  river 
As  happy  as  when  we  dwelt  among  the  w's. 
And  laughter  at  the  limit  of  the  w, 
Again  she  said, '  O  wild  and  of  the  w's, 
'  Lead  then,'  she  said;  and  thro'  the  w's  they  went. 
Other  than  when  I  found  her  in  the  w's ; 
Rang  out  like  hollow  w's  at  hunting-tide. 
With  promise  of  large  light  on  w's  and  ways, 
hill  and  w  Went  ever  streaming  by  him 
At  Camelot,  high  above  the  yellowing  w's. 
Sir  Tristram  of  the  W's — Whom  Lancelot  knew. 
The  w's  are  hush'd,  their  music  is  no  more : 
I  made  it  in  the  w's.     And  heard  it  ring 
avenues  And  solitary  passes  of  the  w 
as  a  rustle  or  twitter  in  the  w  Made  dull  his  inner, 
and  when  thou  passest  any  w  Close  vizor, 
vows — I  am  a  woodman  of  the  w's. 
Next  morning,  while  he  past  the  dim-lit  w's, 
over  all  the  great  w  rioting  And  climbing, 
and  from  the  w's  That  belt  it  rise  three  dark, 
three  cypress-cones  That  spired  above  the  w ; 
From  out  the  yellow  w's  upon  the  hill 
The  cloud-pavilion'd  element,  the  w, 
foliage  from  the  dark  and  dripping  w's 
Fled  onward  to  the  steeple  in  the  w's : 
the  w's  upon  the  hill  Waved  with  a  sudden  gust 
fled  Wind-footed  to  the  steeple  in  the  w's. 
What  matter  ?  there  are  others  in  the  w. 
From  column  on  to  column,  as  in  a  w, 
rattled  down  upo'  poor  owd  Squire  i'  the  w, 
a  whirlwind  blow  these  w's,  as  never  blew 
These  ancient  w's,  this  Hall  at  last  will  go — 
He  left  us  weeping  in  the  w's ; 
all  the  summer  long  we  roam'd  in  these  wild  w's 
Wild  flowers  of  the  secret  w's, 
Wild  w's  in  which  we  roved  with  him. 
Wild  w's  in  which  we  rove  no  more, 
foalk  be  sa  scared  at,  i'  Gigglesby  w, 
stars  are  from  their  hands  Flung  thro'  the  w's, 
The  w's  with  living  airs  How  softly  fann'd. 
Mount  and  mine,  and  primal  w ;  Open. 

thridded  the  black  heart  of  all  the  w's, 
you  used  to  call  me  once  The  lonely  maiden-Princess 

of  the  w, 
Who  love  the  winter  w's,  to  trace 
She  comes  on  waste  and  w.  On  farm  and  field : 
w's  Plunged  gulf  on  gulf  thro'  all  their  vales  below, 
found  Paris,  a  naked  babe,  among  the  w's  Of  Ida, 
on  man  in  the  tropical  w. 

Wood  (substance)     (See  also,  Pinewood,  Satin-wood) 
Hard  w  I  am,  and  wrinkled  rind, 
a  noiselass  riot  underneath  Strikes  thro'  the  w, 
'  Ye  are  green  w,  see  ye  warp  not. 
draw  water,  or  hew  w,  Or  grosser  tasks ; 


Balin  and  Balan  298 
327 
346 
386 
433 
436 
462 
468 
486 
528 
530 
546 
614 

Merlin  and  V.  2,  204 
260 
285 

409 

440 

890 

Lancelot  and  E.  277 

1036 

Pelleas  and  E.  49 

99 

108 

328 

867 

394 

547 

Last  Tournament  3 

177 

276 

288 

361 

865 

534 

699 

Guinevere  251 

Lover's  Tale  i  403 

535 

a  39 

80 

108 


38 

56 

iv  162 

189 

Village  Wife  95 

The  Flight  12 

27 

37 

79 

82 

88 

84 

Spinsters  S's.  24 

Early  Spring  18 

19 

/.  and  C.  Exhib.  6 

Demeter  and  P.  69 

The  Ring  65 

To  Ulysses  14 

Prog,  of  Spring  22 

72 

Death  of  CEnone  54 

The  Dawn  3 

Talking  Oak  171 

Lucretius  186 

Princess  ii  75 

Gareth  and  L.  486 


Wood  (substance)  (continued)     Had  carved  himself  a 

knightly  shield  of  w,  Merlin  and  V.  473 

javelining  With  darted  spikes  and  splinters  of  the  w  „             937 

To  thee,  dead  w,  I  bow  not  head  nor  knees.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  128 

fell'd  the  foes  before  you  as  the  woodman  fells  the  w,  Happy  42 

Woodbine  (adj.)     rent  The  w  wreaths  that  bind  her,  Amphion  34 

And  the  w  spices  are  wafted  abroad,  Maud  I  xxii  5 

wind  Came  wooingly  with  w  smells.  Lover's  Tale  ii  36 

And  hour  by  hour  unfolding  w  leaves  Prog,  of  Spring  7 

Woodbine  (s)     w  and  eglatere  Drip  sweeter  dews  A  Dirge  23 

And  tell  me  if  the  w's  blow.  My  life  is  full  25 

as  sweet  As  w's  fragile  hold,  Talking  Oak  146 

Thorns,  ivies,  w,  mistletoes,  Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  43 

There  in  due  time  the  w  blows,  In  Mem.  cv  7 

my  oan  door-poorch  wi'  the  w  an'  jessmine  Spinster's  S's.  105 

Woodcraft     Look  to  thy  w,'  and  so  leaving  him,  Balin  and  Balan  30S 

Wood-devil     scream  of  that  W-d  I  came  to  quell ! '  „              548 

Wood-dove     Deeply  the  w-d  coos ;  Leonine  Eleg.  6 

Wooded     [See  also  Deep-wooded)     The  mountain  w  to 

the  peak,  Enoch  Arden  572 

And  hollow  lined  and  w  to  the  lips.  Lover's  Tale  i  398 

the  wave  again  Is  vocal  in  its  w  walls ;  In  Mem.  xix  14 

Beside  the  river's  w  reach,  „        Ixxi  13 

Wooden     When  from  her  w  walls, — lit  by  sure  hands, —  Buonaparte  5 

Woodland  (adj.)     Be  mine  a  philosopher's  life  in  the  quiet  w 

ways,  Maud  I  iv  49 

Gathering  w  lilies,  Myriads  blow  together.  ..         xii  7 

And  the  w  echo  rings ;  ,,    //  it;  38 

And  deem  it  carrion  of  some  w  thing,  Gareth  and  L.  748 

With  joy  that  blazed  itself  in  w  wealth  Balin  and  Balan  82 

A  damsel-errant,  warbling,  as  she  rode  The  w  alleys,  „            439 

.    Now  talking  of  their  w  paradise.  Last  Tournament  726 
My  Edwin  loved  to  call  us  then  '  His  two  wild  w  flowers.'     The  Flight  80 

While  round  her  brows  a  w  culver  flits,  Prog,  of  Spring  18 

Still  round  her  forehead  wheels  the  w  dove,  „              57 
Hear  thy  myriad  laureates  hail  thee  monarch  in 

their  w  rhyme.  Akbar's  D.,  Hymn  6 

Woodland  (S)     filter'd  tribute  of  the  rough  w.  Ode  to  Memory  63 

In  firry  w's  making  moan ;  Miller's  D.  42 

Slides  the  bird  o'er  lustrous  w,  Locksley  Hall  162 

That  grows  within  the  w.  Amphion  8 

When  the  rotten  w  drips.  Vision  of  Sin  81 

Illthian  w's,  echoing  falls  Of  water.  To  E.  L.  1 

the  broad  w  parcell'd  into  farms;  Aylmer's  Field  847 

forefoot  plies  His  function  of  the  w :  Lucretius  46 

as  the  golden  Autumn  w  reels  Athwart  the  smoke  Princess  vii  357 

Which  in  our  winter  w  looks  a  flower.  A  Dedication  13 

'  Fear  not,  isle  of  blowing  w,  Boddicea  38 

Made  the  noise  of  frosty  w's,  „        75 

And  w's  holy  to  the  dead ;  In  Mem.  xcix  8 

Now  rings  the  w  loud  and  long,  „           cxv  5 

flying  gold  of  the  ruin'd  w's  drove  thro'  the  air.  Maud  /  i  12 

a  flame  That  rages  in  the  w  far  below,  Balin  and  Balan  234 

left  the  ravaged  w  yet  once  more  To  peace ;  Merlin  and  V.  963 

Over  all  the  w's  flooded  bowers,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  20 

Thou  that  singest  wheat  and  w.  To  Virgil  9 

For  all  that  ample  w  whisper'd  '  debt,'  The  Ring  170 

and  glancing  at  Elf  of  the  w,  Merlin  and  the  G.  38 

Wood-louse     blue  w-l,  and  the  plmnp  dormouse.  Window,  Winter  9 

Woodman    see  the  w  lift  His  axe  to  slay  my  kin.  Talking  Oak  235 

they  came.  The  woodmen  with  their  axes :  Princess  vi  44 

a  w  there  Reported  of  some  demon  in  the  woods  Balin  and  Balan  123 

This  w  show'd  the  cave  From  which  he  sallies,  ..              131 

Came  on  the  hoarhead  w  at  a  bough  „              294 

To  whom  the  w  utter'd  wonderingly  „              297 

vows — I  am  w  of  the  woods,  Last  Tournament  699 

fell'd  the  foes  before  you  as  the  w  fells  the  wood,  Happy  42 

Wood-nymph     a  foot-fall,  ere  he  saw  The  w-w.  Palace  of  Art  111 

Woodpecker    As  laughters  of  the  w  Kate  4 

An  echo  like  a  ghostly  w.  Princess,  Pro.  217 

Before  her  skims  the  jubilant  w.  Prog,  of  Spring  16 

Wood-walk    dark  w-w's  drench'd  in  dew,  D.  of  F.  Women  75 

Wood-way     green  w-w's,  and  eyes  among  the  leaves ;  Pelleas  and  E.  139 

Woodwork     Fled  ever  thro'  the  w,  till  they  found  Lancelot  and  E.  440 

Wood-world     w-w  is  one  full  peal  of  praise.  Balin  and  Balan  450 


Woody 


811 


Word 


Woody     To  the  w  hollows  in  which  we  meet  Maud  J  xxii  43 

In  the  silent  w  places  By  the  home  that  gave  me  birth,     „  //  iv  6 

Woo'd    folded  leaf  is  w  from  out  the  bud  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  26 

he  w  and  wed  A  labourer's  daughter,  Bora  39 

who  would  love  ?     I  w  a  woman  once,  Audley  Court  52 

Drunk  even  when  he  w ;  Marr.  of  Geraint  442 

how  he  w  The  waters,  and  the  waters  answering  Lover's  Tale  i  543 

I  w  her  then,  nor  vmsuccessfully.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  125 

Whom  I  w  and  won.  „  204 

But  the  Bandit  had  w  me  in  vain,  Bandit's  Death  10 

Wooest     W  not,  nor  vainly  wranglest ;  Madeline  38 

Woof    Hues  of  the  silken  sheeny  w  „        22 

thro'  warp  and  w  From  skirt  to  skirt ;  Princess  i  62 

Wooing    his  long  w  her.  Her  slow  consent,  Enoch  Arden  707 

baits  Of  gold  and  beauty,  w  him  to  woo.  Aylmer's  Field  487 

All  my  w  is  done.  Window,  Marr.  Mom.  4 

Edith  had  welcomed  my  brief  w  of  her.  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  254 

sound  Which  to  the  w  wind  aloof  The  poplar  made,  Mariana  75 

Wool     Like  footsteps  upon  w.  (Enone  250 

needs  it  we  should  cram  our  ears  with  w  Princess  iv  65 

w  of  a  thistle  a-fl3dn'  an'  seeadin'  Spinster's  S's.  79 

but  w's  looking  oop  ony  how.  Church-warden,  etc.  6 

WooUy     And  w  breasts  and  beaded  eyes ;  In  Mem.  xcv  12 

Woorse  (worse)     W  nor  a  far-welter'd  yowe :  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  32 

Woost  (worst)     And  i'  the  w  o'  toimes  „  0.  S.  16 

Word     (See  also  Watch-word)     Shot  thro'  and  thro' 

with  cmming  w's.  Clear-headed  friend  17 

Her  w's  did  gather  thunder  as  they  ran,  The  Poet  49 

So  was  their  meaning  to  her  w's.  „        53 

and  with  his  w  She  shook  the  world.  „        55 

kiss  sweet  kisses,  and  speak  sweet  w's :  Sea-Fairies  34 

Wild  w's  wander  here  and  there :  A  Dirge  43 

And  your  w's  are  seeming-bitter  Rosalind  30 

And  kiss  away  the  bitter  w's  „        50 

How  may  measur'd  w's  adore  The  full-flowing  harmony       Elednore  45 
'  These  w's,'  I  said,  '  are  like  the  rest ;  Ttco  Voices  334 

The  thesis  which  thy  w's  intend —  „  338 

if  I  waste  w's  now,  in  truth  You  must  blame  Love.         Miller's  D.  191 
With  blessings  which  no  w's  can  find.  „  238 

Indeed  I  heard  one  bitter  w  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  37 

Tho'  I  cannot  speak  a  w,  I  shall  barken  May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  39 

the  clergyman,  has  told  me  w's  of  peace.  „  Con.  12 

say  to  Robin  a  kind  w,  and  tell  him  not  to  fret ;      „  45 

little  meaning  tho'  the  w's  are  strong ;  Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  119 

Her  slow  full  w's  sank  thro'  the  silence  drear,  D.  of  F.  Women  121 

My  w's  leapt  forth :  '  Heaven  heads  the  count  of 

crimes  „  201 

Because  all  w's,  tho'  cull'd  with  choicest  art,  „  285 

I  had  not  dared  to  flow  In  these  w's  toward  you,  To  J.  S.  7 

W's  weaker  than  your  grief  would  make  „       65 

But  gentle  w's  are  always  gain :  Love  thou  thy  land  23 

W'ould  serve  his  kind  in  deed  and  w,  „  86 

He  utter'd  w's  of  scorning ;  The  Goose  42 

Watch  what  thou  seest,  and  lightly  bring  me  w.'  M.  d' Arthur  38 

Watch  what  I  see,  and  lightly  bring  thee  w.'  „  44 

I  bad  thee,  watch,  and  lightly  bring  me  w.'  .,  81 

would  have  spoken,  but  he  found  not  w's,  „  172 

(My  w's  were  half  in  earnest,  half  in  jest,)  Gardener's  D.  23 

A  w  could  bring  the  colour  to  my  cheek ;  „  196 

And  in  the  compass  of  three  little  w's,  „  232 

Here,  then,  my  w's  have  end.  „  250 

he  and  I  Had  once  hard  w's,  and  parted,  Dora  18 

But  in  my  time  a  father's  w  was  law,  „     27 

Or  change  a  w  with  her  he  calls  his  wife,  ,,     44 

You  knew  my  w  was  law,  and  yet  you  dared  „     98 

I  set  the  w's,  and  added  names  I  knew.  Audley  Court  61 

Caught  in  flagrante — what's  the  Latin  w  ? —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  34 

And  well  his  w's  became  him :  Edwin  Morris  25 

Were  not  his  w's  delicious,  „  71 

That,  trust  me  on  my  w,  Talking  Oak  170 

w's  That  make  a  man  feel  strong  in  speaking  truth ;    Love  and  Duty  69 
These  measured  w's,  my  work  of  yestermom.  Golden  Year  21 

but  I  know  my  w's  are  wild,  Locksley  Hall  173 

And  order'd  w's  astmder  fly.  Day-Dm.,  Pro.  20 

With  w's  of  proniise  in  his  walk,  „     Arrival  23 


Word  (continued)     The  barons  swore,  with  many  w's,     Day-Dm.,  Revival  23 
In  courteous  w's  return'd  reply : 
'  Cruel,  cruel  the  w's  I  said  ! 
And  whisper  lovely  w's,  and  use 
Hours,  when  the  Poet's  w's  and  looks 
For  I  am  yours  in  w  and  in  deed. 
Down  they  dropt — no  w  was  spoken — 
She  was  more  fair  than  w's  can  say : 
But  in  my  w's  were  seeds  of  fire. 
Light  on  a  broken  w  to  thank  him  with, 
for  she  did  not  speak  a  w. 
Ev'n  as  she  dwelt  upon  his  latest  w's, 
Enoch  spoke  no  w  to  any  one, 
for  Enoch  himg  A  moment  on  her  w's, 
Poor  Philip,  of  all  his  lavish  waste  of  w's 
were  w's,  As  meted  by  his  measure  of  himself. 
Never  one  kindly  smile,  one  kindly  w : 
how  the  w's  Have  tmsted  back  upon  themselves, 
his  one  w  was  '  desolate ; ' 
but  not  a  w ;  she  shook  her  head. 
To  spread  the  W  by  which  himself  had  thriven.' 
Of  Heliconian  honey  in  living  w's, 
'  Doubt  my  w  again  ! '  he  said. 
At  those  high  w's,  we  conscious  of  ourselves, 
at  these  w's  the  snake.  My  secret, 
(for  still  My  mother  went  revolving  on  the  w) 
Then  came  these  dreadful  w's  out  one  by  one, 
The  truth  at  once,  but  with  no  w  from  me ; 
She  struck  such  warbling  fury  thro'  the  w's ; 
(our  royal  w  upon  it,  He  comes  back  safe) 
Arac's  w  is  thrice  As  ours  with  Ida : 
roll'd  himself  Thrice  in  the  saddle,  then  burst  out  in  w's. 
And  you  shall  have  her  answer  by  the  w.' 
and  rolling  w's  Oration-like, 
at  the  happy  w  '  he  lives '  My  father  stoop 'd. 
Say  one  soft  w  and  let  me  part  forgiven.' 
Not  one  w  ?  not  one  ? 
Not  one  w ;  No  !  tho'  your  father  sues : 
A  w,  but  one,  one  little  kindly  w, 
king  her  father  charm'd  Her  wounded  soul  with  w's  : 
Like  perfect  music  unto  noble  w's ; 
It  seems  you  love  to  cheat  yourself  with  w's : 
The  w's  are  mostly  mine : 

Who  spoke  few  w's  and  pithy,  such  as  closed  Welcome, 
To  fling  whate'er  we  felt,  not  fearing,  into  w's. 
we  will  not  spare  the  tyrant  one  hard  w. 
Taake  my  w  for  it,  Sammy,  N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  48 

To  put  in  w's  the  grief  I  feel ;  For  xo's,  like  Nature,  half 

reveal  In  Mem.  v  2 

In  w's,  like  weeds,  I'll  wrap  me  o'er,  „  9 

What  w's  are  these  have  f all'n  from  me  ?  „  xvi  1 

The  w's  that  are  not  heard  a^gain.  ,,       xviii  20 

That  out  of  w's  a  comfort  win ;  „  xx  10 

■  Where  truth  in  closest  w's  shall  fail,  „       xxxvi  6 

And  so  the  W  had  breath,  and  wrought  „  9 

And  hence,  indeed,  she  sports  with  w's,  „       xlviii  9 

My  w's  are  only  w's,  and  moved  „  Hi  3 

In  those  sad  w's  I  took  farewell :  „         Iviii  1 

The  w's  were  hard  to  understand.  „       Ixix  20 

In  fitting  aptest  w's  to  things,  „         Ixxv  6 

O  true  in  w,  and  tried  in  deed,  „       Ixxxv  5 

Your  w's  have  virtue  such  as  draws  „  13 

But  in  dear  w's  of  hiunan  speech  „  33 

The  wish  too  strong  for  w's  to  name ;  „       xdii  14 

strangely  on  the  silence  broke  The  silent-speaking  w's,  „         xeo  26 

So  w  by  w,  and  line  by  line,  „  33 

Vague  w's !  but  ah,  how  hard  to  frame  „  45 

And  if  the  w's  were  sweet  and  strong  „      cxxv  11 

To  change  the  bearing  of  a  w,  „  cxxviii  16 

living  w's  of  life  Breathed  in  her  ear.  „      Con.  52 

the  wealth  Of  w's  and  wit,  the  double  health,  „  103 

faith  in  a  tradesman's  ware  or  his  w  ?  Mand  7  i  26 

Dare  I  bid  her  abide  by  her  w  ?  „    xvi  25 

Had  given  her  w  to  a  thing  so  low  ?  „  27 

Can  break  her  w  were  it  even  for  me  ?  „  29 


30 

Edward  Gray  17 

WiU  Water.  11 

193 

Lady  Clare  74 

The  Captain  51 

Beggar  Maid  2 

The  Letters  28 

Enoch  Arden  347 

390 

454 

667 

873 

The  Brook  191 

Aylmer's  Field  315 

564 

754 

836 

Sea  Dreams  116 

197 

Lv,cretius  224 

Princess,  Pro.  176 

ii  67 

„  Hi  43 

54 

57 

61 

iv  586 

V  224 

226 

275 

327 

372 

vi  128 

219 

231 

239 

258 

346 

vii  286 

334 

„  Con.  3 

94 

Third  of  Feb.  6 

42 


Word 


812 


Wordless 


Word  {continued)    For  she,  sweet  soul,  had  hardly  spoken 

a  w,  Maud  II  i  11 
'  Man's  w  is  God  in  man :                                             Com.  of  Arthur  133 

For  bold  in  heart  and  act  and  w  was  he,  „            176 

And  simple  w's  of  great  authority,  ,,            261 

With  large,  divine,  and  comfortable  w's,  „            268 

spake  sweet  w's,  and  comforted  my  heart,  „            349 

Lash'd  at  the  wizard  as  he  spake  the  w,  „            388 

God  hath  told  the  King  a  secret  w.  „  489 
Repentant  of  the  w  she  made  him  swear,                       Gareth  and  L.  527 

Fair  w's  were  best  for  him  who  fights  for  thee ;  „            946 

And  seeing  now  thy  w's  are  fair,  „          1181 

Instant  were  his  w's.  „          1353 

and  then  paused,  and  spake  no  w.  „          1385 

he  spake  no  w ;  Which  set  the  horror  higher :  „  1393 
He  heard  but  fragments  of  her  later  w's,                  Marr.  of  Geraint  113 

refrain'd  From  ev'n  a  w,  and  so  returning  said :  „              214 

But  none  spake  w  except  the  hoary  Earl :  „              369 

Nor  did  she  lift  an  eye  nor  speak  a  w,  „              528 

In  w's  whose  echo  lasts,  they  were  so  sweet,  „              782 

that  at  a  w  (No  reason  given  her)  „  806 
not  to  speak  to  me.  No,  not  aw!'                                Geraint  and  E.  18 

And  loosed  in  w's  of  sudden  fire  the  wrath  „            106 

took  the  w  and  play'd  upon  it,  „            291 

speak  the  w :  my  followers  ring  him  round :  „            336 

speak  but  the  w :  Or  speak  it  not ;  „            342 

Low-spoken,  and  of  so  few  w's,  „            395 

Because  she  kept  the  letter  of  his  w,  „            455 

answering  not  one  w,  she  led  the  way.  „            495 

Prince,  without  a  w,  from  his  horse  fell.  „            508 

none  spake  w,  but  all  sat  down  at  once,  „            604 

And  Enid  could  not  say  one  tender  w,  „            746 

Tho'  pale,  yet  happy,  ask'd  her  not  a  w,  ,,  880 
Man's  w  is  God  in  man.'                                                  Balin  and  Balan  8 

And  spake  no  w  imtil  the  shadow  tum'd ;  „              45 

transitory  w  Make  knight  or  churl  or  child  „            161 

lad,  whose  lightest  w  Is  mere  white  truth  „            517 

Sir  Balin  spake  not  w.  But  snatch'd  „  553 
■eat  her  up  in  that  wild  wood  Without  one  w.             Merlin  and  V.  261 

knew  no  more,  nor  gave  me  one  poor  w ;  „            277 

Then  answer'd  Merlin  careless  of  her  w's :  „            700 

He  rose  without  a  w  and  parted  from  her :  „            742 

But  have  ye  no  one  w  of  loyal  praise  For  Arthur,  „            778 

Her  w's  had  issue  other  than  she  will'd.  „            806 

He  spoke  in  w's  part  heard,  in  whispers  part,  „             839 

Kill'd  with  a  w  worse  than  a  life  of  blows !  „  870 
half  her  realm,  had  never  spoken  w.                             Lancelot  and  E.  72 

He  never  spake  w  of  reproach  to  me,  „            124 

therefore  hear  my  w's :  go  to  the  jousts :  „            136 

Before  a  King  who  honours  his  own  w,  „            143 

Nor  often  loyal  to  his  w,  and  now  Wroth  „            559 

without  a  w,  Linger'd  that  other,  „            720 

Her  father's  latest  w  humm'd  in  her  ear,  „            780 

And  I  must  die  for  want  of  one  bold  w.'  „  927 
As  when  we  dwell  upon  a  w  we  know.  Repeating, 

till  the  w  we  know  so  well  Becomes  a  wonder,  „          1027 

as  she  devised  A  letter,  w  for  w ;  „          1104 

these  are  w's :  Your  beauty  is  your  beauty,  „          1185 

0  grant  my  worship  of  it  W's,  „  1188 
Such  sin  in  w's.  Perchance,  we  both  can  pardon :  „  1188 
Then  every  evil  w  I  had  spoken  once.  Holy  Grail  371 

1  remember'd  Arthur's  warning  w,  „  598 
Told  him  he  follow'd — almost  Arthur's  w's —  „  669 
since  the  living  w's  Of  so  great  men  „  712 
I  need  not  tell  thee  foolish  w's, —  „  855 
and  the  great  King,  Lighted  on  w's :  Pelleas  and  E.  253 
For  so  the  w's  were  flash'd  into  his  heart  „  503 
And  Percivale  made  answer  not  a  w.  „  534 
The  w's  of  Arthur  flying  shriek'd,  arose.  Last  Tournament  139 
Not  speaking  other  w  than  '  Hast  thou  won  ?  •„  191 
Tristram,  spake  not  any  w.  But  bode  his  hour,  „  385 
Arthur  deign'd  not  use  of  w  or  sword,  „  458 
fault  and  doubt — no  w  of  that  fond  tale —  „  578 
But  let  my  w's,  the  w's  of  one  so  small,  Guinevere  185 
To  honour  his  own  w  as  if  his  God's,  „        473 


Word  (continued)     teach  high  thought,  and  amiable  w's            Guinevere  481 
Watch   what   thou   seest,   and  lightly   bring 

me  w.'  Pass,  of  Arthur  206 

Watch  what  I  see,  and  lightly  bring  thee  w,'  „            212 

I  bad  thee,  watch,  and  lightly  bring  me  w.'  „            249 

would  have  spoken,  but  he  found  not  w's ;  „            340 

Be  cabin'd  up  in  w's  and  syllables.  Lover's  Tale  i  480 

her  w's  stole  with  most  prevailing  sweetness  „          553 
Her  w's  did  of  their  meaning  borrow  sound.  Her 

cheek  did  catch  the  colour  of  her  w's.  „          568 

While  her  w's,  syllable  by  syllable,  „          675 

for  henceforth  what  use  were  w's  to  me !  „          609 

deals  comfortable  w's  To  hearts  wounded  „          717 

To  all  their  queries  answer'd  not  a  w,  „      iv  333 

Not  to  break  in  on  what  I  say  by  w  Or  whisper,  „          352 

you  never  have  spoken  a  w.  Rizvah  14 

As  yet  I  had  not  boimd  myself  by  w's.  Sister's  (E.  and  E.)  137 

The  golden  gates  would  open  at  a  w.  „              145 

Not  by  the  sounded  letter  of  the  w,  „              162 

Cold  w's  from  one  I  had  hoped  to  warm  so  far  „              194 

when  we  parted,  Edith  spoke  no  w,  „              215 

Had  he  God's  w  in  Welsh  He  might  be  kindlier :  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  22 

for  in  thee  the  w  was  bom  again.  „            27 

Heaven-sweet  Evangel,  ever-living  w,  „            28 

and  that  was  clean  Against  God's  w :  Columbus  55 

You  will  not.    One  last  w.  „       221 

with  human  voices  and  w's ;  V.  of  Maeldune  28 

Remember  the  w's  of  the  Lord  „          120 

The  Achaeans — honouring  his  wise  mother's  w —  Achilles  over  the  T.  16 

To  cast  wise  w's  among  the  multitude  Tiresias  66 

— the  wise  man's  w.  Here  trampled  by  the  populace  „      173 

.  The  w  of  the  Poet  by  whom  the  deeps  The  Wreck  23 

language  beneath  and  beyond  the  w !  „         24 

A  madman  to  vex  you  with  wretched  w's.  Despair  108 

The  reels  not  in  the  storm  of  warring  w's.  Ancient  Sage  70 

My  w's  are  like  the  babblings  in  a  dream  ,,        106 

But  louder  than  thy  rhyme  the  silent  W  „        212 

revolving  in  myself  The  w  that  is  the  symbol  „        231 

unshadowable  in  w's.  Themselves  but  shadows  „        238 

but  w's  are  only  w's !  The  Flight  59 

We  never  changed  a  bitter  w,  „         86 

heart  batin'  to  music  wid  ivery  w !  Tomorrow  34 

I  couldn't  a'  stuck  by  my  w.  Spinster's  S's.  96 

when  they  'evn't  a  w  to  saay.  „          102 

lines  I  read  Nor  utter'd  w  of  blame.  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  18 

were  the  w's  Mutter'd  in  our  dismay ;  Heavy  Brigade  46 

Muses  often  flowering  in  a  lonely  w ;  To  Virgil  12 

till  his  W  Had  won  him  a  noble  name.  Dead  Prophet  35 

Ring  little  bells  of  change  From  w  to  w.  Early  Spring  42 

And  sacred  is  the  latest  w ;  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  37 

them  w's  be  i'  Scriptur —  Owd  Roa  15 
his  The  w's,  and  mine  the  setting.     '  Air  and  W's,' 

Said  Hubert,  The  Ring  24 

you — you  loved  me,  kept  your  w.  „      290 

those  three  sweet  Italian  w's,  became  a  weariness.  „      407 

Blister'd  every  w  with  tears.  Forlorn  81 

Foul !  foul !  the  w  was  yours  not  mine,  Happy  41 

parted  for  the  Holy  War  without  a  w  to  me,  „      77 

Be  needle  to  the  magnet  of  your  w.  To  Mary  Boyle  7 

hear  their  w's  On  pathway'd  plains ;  Prog,  of  Spring  82 

Why  should  I  so  disrelish  that  short  w  ?  Romney's  R.  11 

Vexing  you  with  w's !     W's  only,  „            29 

—w's.  Wild  babble.  „            31 

for  my  sake.  According  to  my  w?'  „          130 

those  three  w's  would  haunt  him  when  a  boy,  Far — far — away  8 

What  charm  in  w's,  a  charm  no  w's  could  give  ?  „              16 

O  dying  w's,  can  Music  make  you  live  „              17 

Two  w's,  '  My  rose '  set  all  your  face  aglow,  Roses  on  the  T.  3 

A  man  who  never  changed  a  w  with  men,  St.  Telemachus  10 

his  dying  w's.  Which  would  not  die,  „              75 

Worded    See  Iron-worded 

Wordily     As  here  to-day,  but  not  so  w —  Lover's  Tale  iv  355 

Wordless     And  Lancelot  marvell'd  at  the  w  man ;  Lancelot  and  E.  172 

Suddenly  speaking  of  the  w  man,  „              271 

The  little  senseless,  worthless,  w  babe.  The  Ring  304 


Wordless 


813 


Work 


Wordless  (continued)     And  w  broodings  on  the  wasted 

cheek —  Princess  vii  112 

Wordy     but  when  the  w  storm  Had  ended,  Sea  Breams  31 

And  keen  thro'  w  snares  to  track  Suggestion  In  Mem.  xcv  31 

And  w  trucklings  to  the  transient  hour,  To  the  Queen  ii  51 

Wore    (See  also  Ware,  Wear'd)    For  many  weeks  about 

my  loins  I  w  St.  S.  Stylites  63 

That  she  w  when  she  was  wed.'  L.  of  Burleigh  96 

A  gown  of  grsiss-green  silk  she  w,  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  24 

She  w  the  colours  I  approved.  The  Letters  16 
crime  Of  sense  avenged  by  sense  that  w  with  time.'     Vision  of  Sin  214 

another  w  A  close-set  robe  of  jasmine  Aylmer's  Field  157 

And  still  I  w  her  picture  by  my  heart,  Princess  i  38 

I  to  a  lilac  gown ;  Grandmother  57 

it  grew  so  tall  It  w  a  crown  of  light,  The  Flower  10 

Never  morning  w  To  evening.  In  Mem.  vi  7 

I  w  them  like  a  civic  crown :  „       Ixix  8 

In  which  of  old  I  w  the  gown ;  „  Ixxxvii  2 

since  he  neither  w  on  helm  or  shield  Com.  of  Arthur  49 

three  gay  suits  of  armour  which  they  w,  Geraint  and  E.  95 

his  the  prize,  who  w  the  sleeve  Of  scarlet,  Lancelot  and  E.  501 

He  w,  against  his  wont,  upon  his  helm  „               603 

he  w  your  sleeve :  Would  he  break  faith  „              684 

but  I  lighted  on  the  maid  Whose  sleeve  he  w ;  „              711 

With  knees  of  adoration  w  the  stone,  Holy  Grail  71 

all  she  w  Tom  as  a  sail  that  leaves  the  rope  „        211 

And  beauty  such  as  never  woman  w,  Guinevere  549 

She  deem'd  I  w  a  brother's  mind :  Lover's  Tale  i  741 

he  learnt  that  I  hated  the  ring  I  w,  The  Wreck  57 

w  it  till  her  death,  Shrined  him  within  the  temple  The  Bing  218 

Muriel  clench'd  The  hand  that  w  it,  „        262 

That  ever  w  a  Christian  marriage-ring.  Eomney's  R.  36 
Work  (s)     (See  also  Branch  -  work.  Chequer  -  work, 

Damask-work,    Frame-work,    Handmaid-work, 

Jacinth-work,  Mat-work,  Trellis-work,  Works  and 

Days)     At  his  w  you  may  hear  him  sob  and  sigh       A  spirit  haunts  5 

Now  is  done  thy  long  day's  w ;  A  Dirge  1 
Grave  mother  of  majestic  w's,  Of  old  sat  Freedom  13 
Thy  w  is  thine — The  single  note                              England  and  Amer.  18 

we  loved  the  man,  and  prized  his  lo ;  M.  d' Arthur,  Ep.  8 

'Tis  not  your  w,  but  Love's.  Gardener's  D.  24 

•     and  he  left  his  men  at  w,  And  came  and  said :  Bora  86 

Till  that  wild  wind  made  w  Talking  Oak  54 

To  that  man  My  w  shall  answer.  Love  and  Buty  29 

These  measured  words,  my  w  of  yestermorn.  Golden  Year  21 

He  works  his  w,  I  mine.  Ulysses  43 

Some  w  of  noble  note,  may  yet  be  done,  „      52 

A  vii^in  heart  in  w  and  will.  Sir  Galahad  24 

'  Thou  shalt  not  be  saved  by  w's :  Vision  of  Sin  91 

Nor  of  what  race,  the  w ;  Aylmer's  Field  224 

Small  were  his  gains,  and  hard  his  w ;  Sea  Breams  8 

the  woman  honest  W ;  „        137 

Which  things  appear  the  w  of  mighty  Gods.  Lucretius  102 

and  if  I  go  my  w  is  left  Unfinish'd — if  I  go.  „        103 

when  we  set  our  hand  To  this  great  w,  Princess  ii  60 

Your  own  w  marr'd :  „        230 

and  silver  litanies.  The  w  of  Ida,  „        478 

how  vast  a  w  To  assail  this  gray  preeminence  „   Hi  233 

That  we  might  see  our  own  w  out,  „        270 

as  the  workman  and  his  w.  That  practice  betters  ?  '  „        298 

Which  touches  on  the  workman  and  his  w.  „        322 

and  known  at  last  (my  w)  „    iv  347 

imderstanding  all  the  foolish  w  Of  Fancy,  „    vi  116 

The  treble  w's,  the  vast  designs  Ode  on  Well.  104 

Whose  life  was  w,  whose  language  rife  „            183 

Such  was  he :  his  w  is  done.  „            218 

There  must  be  other  nobler  w  to  do  „  256 
The  w's  of  peace  with  w's  of  war.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  28 
Fur  w  mun  'a  gone  to  the  gittin'                                N.  Farmer,  N.  S.  50 

bum  the  palaces,  break  the  w's  of  the  statuary,  Boddicea  64 

Man,  her  last  w,  who  seem'd  so  fair,  In  Mem.  hi  9 

I  shall  pass ;  my  w  will  fail.  „        Ivii  8 

my  passion  hath  not  swerved  To  w's  of  weakness,  „  Ixxxv  50 

Let  her  w  prevail.  •>       cxiv  4 

O  days  and  hours,  your  w  is  this  „      cxvii  1 


Work  (s)  (continued)     Contemplate  all  this  w  of  Time,         In  Mem.  cxviii  1 

If  so  he  type  this  w  of  time  Within  himself,  „             16 

By  thee  the  world's  great  w  is  heard  Beginning,  „    cxxi  10 

the  w's  of  the  men  of  mind,  Maud  /  i  25 

Awe-stricken  breaths  at  a  w  divine,  „        x  17 

Frail,  but  a  w  divine,  „    //  H  4 

Small,  but  a  w  divine,  „           23 

There  is  none  that  does  his  w,  not  one ;  „        v26 

cannot  will  my  will,  nor  work  my  w  Wholly,  Com.  of  Arthur  88 

Man  am  I  grown,  a  man's  w  must  I  do.  Gareth  and  L.  116 

rich  in  emblem  and  the  w  Of  ancient  kings  „            304 

Thralls  to  your  w  again,  „            710 

with  back  tum'd,  and  bow'd  above  his  w,  Marr.  of  Geraint  267 

And  there  is  scantly  time  for  half  the  iv.  ,,              288 

He  spoke  and  fell  to  w  again.  „              292 

the  w  To  both  appear'd  so  costly,  „              637 

This  w  of  his  is  great  and  wonderful.  Geraint  and  E.  898 

This  w  of  Edyrn  wrought  upon  himself  „               912 

felt  His  w  was  neither  great  nor  wonderful,  „              921 

Yet  needs  must  work  my  w.  Merlin  and  V.  505 

They  prove  to  him  his  w :  Lancelot  and  E.  158 

Yet  with  all  ease,  so  tender  was  the  w :  „              442 

Her  own  poor  w,  her  empty  labour,  left.  „              991 

Before  his  w  be  done ;  Holy  Grail  909 

I  will  be  leal  to  thee  and  work  thy  w,  Pelleas  and  E.  343 

This  evil  w  of  Lancelot  and  the  Queen  ?  Guinevere  307 

and  with  my  w  thus  Crown'd  her  clear  forehead.  Lover's  Tale  i  344 

But  w  was  scant  in  the  Isle,  First  Quarrel  43 

to  see  if  w  could  be  found ;  „            44 

*  I  ha'  six  weeks'  w,  little  wife,  „            45 

'  You  promised  to  find  me  w  near  you,  „            52 

'  I've  gotten  my  w  to  do ;  „             85 

I  ha'  six  weeks'  w  in  Jersey  „            88 

couldn't  do  naw  w  an'  all,  North.  Cobbler  77 
where  the  w's  of  the  Lord  are  reveal'd                   In  the  Child.  Hasp.  35 

Frail  were  the  w's  that  defended  the  hold  Def.  of  Lucknow  7 

Beyond  all  w  of  those  who  carve  the  stone,  Tiresias  53 

beyond  All  w  of  man,  yet,  like  all  w  of  man.  Ancient  Sage  85 

Undo  their  w  again.  And  leave  him,  „           112 

aisier  w  av  they  lived  be  an  Irish  bog.  Tomorrow  72 

but  'a  left  me  the  w  to  do.  Spinster's  S's.  55 

of  the  chasm  between  W  and  Ideal  ?  Eomney's  B.  64 

now  thy  long  day's  w  hath  ceased,  Epit.  on  Stratford  2 
W's  of  subtle  brain  and  hand.  Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  7 
Whose  Faith  and  W's  were  bells  of  full  accord.    In  Mem.,  W.  G.  Ward  2 

loosen,  stone  from  stone.  All  my  fair  w ;  Akbar's  Bream  189 

Work  (literary  production)    Botanic  Treatises,  And  W's 

on  Gardening  Am/phion  78 

My  golden  w  in  which  I  told  a  truth  Lucretius  260 

Work  (verb)     Then  let  wise  Nature  w  her  will.  My  life  is  fuU  21 
Hath  time  and  space  to  w  and  spread.               You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  16 

And  w,  a  joint  of  state,  that  plies  Its  office,  Love  thou  thy  land  47 

but  w  in  hues  to  dim  The  Titianic  Flora.  Gardener's  B.  170 

And  hired  himself  to  w  within  the  fields ;  Bora  38 

Mary,  let  me  live  and  w  with  you :  „  115 

w  for  William's  child,  until  he  grows  Of  age,  „  126 

Can  I  w  miracles  and  not  be  saved  ?  St.  S.  Stylites  150 

I  will  w  in  prose  and  rhyme,  Talking  Oak  289 

w  itself  Thro'  madness,  hated  by  the  wise.  Love  and  Buty  6 

That  unto  him  who  w's,  and  feels  he  w's,  Golden  Year  73 

He  w's  his  work,  I  mine.  Ulysses  43 

For  love  in  sequel  w's  with  fate,  Bay-Bm.,  Arrival  3 

I  must  w  thro'  months  of  toil,  Amphion  97 

All  parties  w  together.  Will  Water.  56 

Who  needs  would  w  for  Annie  to  the  last,  Enoch  Arden  180 

Scorning  an  alms,  to  w  whereby  to  live.  „            812 

but  labour  for  himself,  W  without  hope,  „            820 

all  things  w  together  for  the  good  Of  those ' —  Sea  Breams  158 

Embrace  our  aims :  w  out  your  freedom.  Princess  ii  89 

nor  would  we  w  for  fame ;  „     Hi  261 

But  in  the  shadow  will  we  w,  „          331 

but  w  no  more  alone  !     Our  place  is  much :  „     vii  266 

Make  and  break,  and  w  their  will ;  Ode  on  Well.  261 

And  all  men  w  in  noble  brotherhood.  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  38 

w's  Without  a  conscience  or  an  aim.  In  Mem.  xxxiv  7 


Work 


814 


World 


Work  (verb)  (continued)    To  one  that  with  us  w's,  and 

trust,  III  Mem.  cxxxi  8 

spirit  of  murder  w's  in  the  very  means  of  life,  Maud  /  t  40 

cannot  will  my  will,  nor  w  my  work  Wholly,  Com.  of  Arthur  88 

and  we  will  w  thy  will  Who  love  thee.'  „            259 

but  an  he  w.  Like  any  pigeon  will  I  cram  Gareth  and  L.  458 

Myself  would  w  eye  dim,  and  finger  lame,  Marr.  of  Geraint  628 

ruth  began  to  w  Against  his  anger  in  him,  Geraint  and  E.  101 

Vivien  ever  sought  to  w  the  charm  Merlin  and  V.  215 

But  w  as  vassal  to  the  larger  love,  „            491 

You  needs  must  w  my  work.  „            505 

To  all  the  foulness  that  they  w.  „             785 

Thanks,  but  you  w  against  your  own  desire ;  Lancelot  and  E.  1096 

Or  hers  or  mine,  mine  now  to  w  my  will —  ,,               1231 

to  whom  I  vow'd  That  I  would  w  Holy  Grail  784 

As  let  these  caitiffs  on  thee  w  their  will  ?  '  Pelleas  and  E.  323 

I  will  be  leal  to  thee  and  w  thy  work,  „            343 

I,  being  simple,  thought  to  w  His  will,  Pass,  of  Arthur  22 

And  life  and  limbs,  all  his  to  w  his  will.'  Lover's  Tale  iv  283 

an'  I  w  an'  I  wait  to  the  end.  First  Quarrel  7 

gave  All  but  free  leave  for  all  to  w  the  mines,  Columbus  133 

I  am  not  yet  too  old  to  w  his  will —  „        161 

hourly  w  their  brother  insect  wrong,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  202 

To  w  old  laws  of  Love  to  fresh  results.  Prog,  of  Spring  85 

art  thou  the  Prophet  ?  canst  thou  w  Miracles  ?  '  Akbar's  Dream  117 

Meanwhile,  my  brothers,  w,  and  wield  Mechanophilus  29 

Hold  thine  own,  and  w  thy  will !  Poets  and  Critics  13 

Work'd-Workt    But  my  full  heart,  that  work'd  below,  Two  Voices  44 

And  they  say  then  that  I  work'd  miracles,  St.  S.  Stylites  80 

thy  strong  Hours  indignant  work'd  their  wills,  Tithonus  18 

But  oft  he  work'd  among  the  rest  and  shook  Enoch  Arden  651 

Rose  from  the  clay  it  work'd  in  as  she  past,  Aylmer's  Field  170 

seeing  who  had  work'd  Lustier  than  any,  Gareth  and  L.  695 

I  ha'  work'd  for  him  fifteen  years.  First  Quarrel  7 

He  workl  me  the  daisy  chain —  „          13 

a  girl,  a  hussy,  that  workl  with  him  up  at  the  farm,  „          24 

but  the  creatures  had  worked  their  will.  Rizpah  50 
Because  the  simple  mother  loork'd  upon  By 

Edith  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  206 

This  power  hath  work'd  no  good  to  aught  that  lives,  Tiresias  77 

Worker    (See  also  Fellow-worker,  War-worker)    Men,  my 

brothers,  men  the  w's,  Locksley  Hall  117 

Workiiig    (See  also  Still-working)     A  labour  w  to  an  end.     Two  Voices  297 

Life,  that,  w  strongly,  binds —  Love  thou  thy  land  34 

Him,  like  the  w  bee  in  blossom-dust,  Enoch  Arden  366 

'  It  came,'  she  said,  '  by  w  in  the  mines : '  Sea  Dreams  114 

The  jest  and  earnest  w  side  by  side.  Princess  iv  563 

Or  been  in  narrowest  w  shut.  In  Mem.  xxxv  20 

His  being  w  in  mine  own,  „       Ixxxv  43 

Move  upward,  w  out  the  beast,  „       cxviii  27 

A  knight  of  Arthur,  w  out  his  will,  Gareth  and  L.  24 

(Sea  was  her  wrath,  yet  w  after  storm)  Lancelot  and  E.  1309 

Queen,  W  a  tapestry,  lifted  up  her  head.  Last  Tournament  129 

Demos  end  in  w  its  own  doom.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  114 

Workman    Which  wrought  us,  as  the  w  and  his  work,  Princess  Hi  298 

Which  touches  on  the  w  and  his  work.  „              322 

Workmen  up  at  the  Hall ! —  Maud  I  i  05 

Workmanship     I  admire  Joints  of  cunning  w.  Vision  of  Sin  186 

'  Look  what  a  lovely  piece  of  w  ! '  Aylmer's  Field  237 

Works  and  Days    more  than  he  that  sang  the  W  a  D,  To  Virgil  6 

Workt    See  Work'd 

Wo'ld  (world)     Tha  mun  tackle  the  sins  o'  the  W,  Church-warden,  etc.  46 

World  (See  also  Dream-world,  Half-world,  New-world, 
Old-world,  Shadow-world,  She-world,  Sister- 
world,   Water -world,   Wo'ld,    Woman -world, 

Wood-world)     'Tis  the  w's  winter ;  Nothing  will  Die  17 

The  w  was  never  made ;  „              30 

a  w  of  peace  And  confidence,  day  after  day ;  Supp.  Confessions  29 

w  hath  not  another  (Tho'  all  her  fairest  forms  Isabel  38 

which  possess'd  The  darkness  of  the  w,  Arabian  Nights  72 

the  w  Like  one  great  garden  show'd,  The  Poet  33 

and  with  his  word  She  shook  the  w.  „        56 

All  the  w  o'er,  (repeat)  Sea-Fairies  41 

Roof'd  the  w  with  doubt  and  fear,  Eleanore  99 

Kate  saith  '  the  w  is  void  of  might.'  Kate  17 


World  (continued)     All  the  inner,  all  the  outer  w  of  pain 
Shadows  of  the  w  appear. 
I  said  '  When  first  the  w  began. 
Look  up  thro'  night :  the  w  is  wide. 
Is  cancell'd  in  the  w  of  sense  ? ' 
to  present  The  w  with  some  development. 
And  full  of  dealings  with  the  w? 
There's  somewhat  in  this  w  amiss 
'  wliile  the  w  nms  round  and  round,' 
cycles  of  the  human  tale  Of  this  wide  w, 
And  let  the  w  have  peace  or  wars, 
'  No  voice  breaks  thro'  the  stillness  of  this  iv : 
and  all  the  w  is  still, 
girdled  with  the  gleaming  w : 
gently  comes  the  w  to  those  That  are  cast 
harmonies  of  law  The  growing  w  assume, 
general  decay  of  faith  Right  thro'  the  w, 
famous  knights  Whereof  this  w  holds  record 
Or  hath  come,  since  the  making  of  the  w. 
Which  was  an  image  of  the  mighty  w ; 
Lest  one  good  custom  should  corrupt  the  w. 
More  things  are  wrought  by  prayer  Than  this  w  dreams  of 
Not  wholly  in  the  busy  w,  nor  quite  Beyond  it,  Gardeners  D.  33 

And  Beauty  such  a  mistress  of  the  w.  ,,  58 

nor  from  her  tendance  tum'd  Into  the  w  without 
to  hold  Fronj  thence  thro'  all  the  w's : 
That  veil'd  the  w  with  jaundice, 
That  these  two  parties  still  divide  the  w— 
As  never  sow  was  higher  in  this  w — 
we  should  mimic  this  raw  fool  the  w, 
for  the  good  and  increase  of  the  w.'  (repeat) 
Among  the  powers  and  princes  of  this  w, 
O  this  w's  curse, — beloved  but  hated — 
If  all  the  w  were  falcons,  what  of  that  ? 
like  the  second  w  to  us  that  live ; 
arch  wherethro'  Gleams  that  imtravell'd  w, 
'Tis  not  too  late  to  seek  a  newer  w. 
Here  at  the  quiet  limit  of  the  w, 
comes  A  glimpse  of  that  dark  w  where  I  was  born 


//  /  were  loved  5 

L.  of  Slialott  a  12 

Two  Voices  16 

24 

42 

75 

Miller's  D.  8 

19 

Palace  of  Art  13 

147 

182 

:  „  259 

May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E.  24 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  113 

To  J.  S.  3 

England  and  Amer.  17 

The  Epic  19 

M.  d' Arthur  16 

208 

235 

242 

248 


145 
210 

Walk,  to  the  Mail  20 

77 

96 

106 

Edwin  Morris  51,  92 

St.  S.  Stylites  187 

Love  and  Duty  47 

Golden  Tear  38 

56 

Ulysses  20 

„      57 

Tithonus  7 

33 


Saw  the  Vision  of  the  w,  (repeat)  Locksley  Hall  16,  120 

the  Federation  of  the  w.  „                  128 

and  the  to  is  more  and  more.  „                   142 

Let  the  great  w  spin  for  ever  „                  182 
Like  hints  and  echoes  of  the  w                                 Day -Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  7 

In  that  new  w  which  is  the  old :  „             Depart.  4 

Thro'  all  the  w  she  foUow'd  him.  „                       32 

And  learn  the  w,  and  sleep  again ;  „            L' Envoi  8 

The  prelude  to  some  brighter  w.  „                        40 

And  all  the  w  go  by  them.  Will  Water.  48 

Ah  yet,  tho'  all  the  w  forsake,  „          49 

We  knew  the  merry  w  was  round.  The  Voyage  7 

We  lov'd  the  glories  of  the  w,  „        83 

We  know  the  merry  w  is  round,  „         95 

Ring'd  with  the  azure  w,  he  stands.  The  Eagle  3 

And  my  mockeries  of  the  w.  Vision  of  Sin  202 

he  sings  of  what  the  w  will  be  When  the  years  Poet's  Song  15 

not  to  see  the  w — For  pleasure  ? —  Enoch  Arden  297 

She  slipt  across  the  summer  of  the  w,  ..            531 

She  passing  thro'  the  summer  w  again,  „            534 

And  glories  of  the  broad  belt  of  the  w,  „            579 

Roll'd  a  sea-haze  and  whelm'd  the  w  in  gray ;  „             672 

And  beating  up  thro'  all  the  bitter  w,  „            802 

One  whom  the  strong  sons  of  the  w  despise ;  The  Brook  3 

Too  fresh  and  fair  in  our  sad  w's  best  bloom,  ,,      218 

With  half-allowing  smiles  for  all  the  w,  Aylmer's  Field  120 

the  w  should  ring  of  him  To  shame  these  „              395 

And  fain  had  haled  him  out  into  the  w,  „             467 

Against  the  desolations  of  the  w.  „             634 

Eight  that  were  left  to  make  a  purer  w —  „              638 

To  blow  these  sacrifices  thro'  the  w — ■  „              758 

Doubtless  our  narrow  w  must  canvass  it :  „              774 

And  left  their  memories  a  w's  curse —  „              796 

wife  Sat  shuddering  at  the  ruin  of  a  w ;  Sea  Dreams  30 

'  What  a  w,'  I  thought,  '  To  live  in  ! '  „          94 

think  that  in  our  often-ransack'd  w  „        129 


World 


815 


World 


World  (continued)     The  lucid  interspace  of  w  and  w,  Lucretius  105 

I  seem-'d  to  move  among  a  w  of  ghosts,  Princess  i  17 

One  rose  in  all  the  w,  your  Highness  that,  .,         ii  51 

'  This  w  was  once  a  fluid  haze  of  light,  „           116 

Two  in  the  tangled  business  of  the  w,  „           174 

Poets,  whose  thoughts  enrich  the  blood  of  the  w.'  „           181 

secular  emancipation  turns  Of  half  this  w,  „           290 

A  blessing  on  her  labours  for  the  w.  „           479 

whence  after-hands  May  move  the  w,  „      Hi  264 

weight  of  all  the  hopes  of  half  the  w,  „      iv  184 

women  kick  against  their  Lords  Thro'  all  the  w,  „          413 

dam  Ready  to  burst  and  flood  the  w  with  foam :  „          474 

tho'  all  the  gold  That  veins  the  w  were  pack'd  „          543 

I  seem'd  to  move  among  a  w  of  ghosts ;  „          561 

The  wrath  I  nursed  against  the  w :  ,.       v  437 

Shall  move  the  stony  bases  of  the  w.  „        vi  58 

when  a  w  Of  traitorous  friend  and  broken  system  „          194 

and  tarn  by  tarn  Expunge  the  w:  .,       vii  41 

So  blacken'd  all  her  w  in  secret,  „            42 

I  believed  that  in  the  living  w  My  spirit  closed  „          157 

notice  of  a  change  in  the  dark  w  Was  lispt  „          250 

These  were  the  rough  ways  of  the  w  till  now.  „          257 

Nor  lose  the  wrestling  thews  that  throw  the  to ;  „          282 

Then  reign  the  w's  great  bridals,  ,.          294 

Immei-sed  in  rich  foreshado wings  of  the  w,  .,          312 

0  we  will  walk  this  w.  Yoked  in  all  exercise  „  360 
and  down  rolls  the  w  In  mock  heroics  „  Con.  63 
This  fine  old  «  of  ours  is  but  a  child  „  77 
Thro' all  the  silent  spaces  of  the  w's,  „  114 
The  greatest  sailor  since  our  w  began.  Ode  on  Well.  86 
And  drill  the  raw  w  for  the  march  of  mind,  „  168 
Thro'  either  babbling  w  of  high  and  low ;  „  182 
Tho'  w  on  w  in  myriad  myriads  roll  Round  us,  „  262 
hold  against  the  w  this  honour  of  the  land.  Third  of  Feb.  48 
All  the  w  wonder'd :  (repeat)  Light  Brigade  31,  52 
diviner  air  Breathe  thro'  the  w  and  change  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  44 
And  howsoever  this  wild  w  may  roll,  „  48 
it  cost  me  a  w  of  woe,  Grandmother  23 
For  him  nor  moves  thel  oud  w's  random  mock,  Will  4 
Dark  is  the  w  to  thee :  High.  Pantheism  7 
As  one  who  feels  the  immeasurable  w,  A  Dedication  7 
wet  west  wind  and  the  w  will  go  on.  (repeat)  Window,  No  Answer  6, 12 
wet  west  wmd  and  the  w  may  go  on.  .,  18 
Over  the  w  to  the  end  of  it  „  Marr.  Mom.  23 
Help  thy  vain  w's  to  bear  thy  light.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  32 
The  sunbeam  strikes  along  the  w:  „  xv% 
Science  reaches  forth  her  arms  To  feel  from  w  to  w,  „  xxi  19 
Thou  fail  not  in  a  w  of  sin,  „  xxxiii  15 
The  total  w  since  life  began ;  „  xliii  12 
Upon  the  great  w's  altar-stairs  „  Iv  15 
breathes  a  novel  w,  the  while  His  other  passion  „  Ixii  9 
The  centre  of  a  w's  desire ;  „  Ixiv  16 
So  many  w's,  so  much  to  do,  „  Ixxiii  1 
The  w  which  credits  what  is  done  Is  cold  to  all  „  Ixxv  15 
In  whispers  of  the  beauteous  w.  „  Ixxix  12 
The  deep  pulsations  of  the  w,  „  xcv  40 
Of  rising  w's  by  yonder  wood.  „               cv  25 

1  would  the  great  w  grew  like  thee,  „  cxiv  25 
In  that  which  made  the  w  so  fair.  „  cxvi  8 
the  w's  great  work  is  heard  Beginning,  „  cxxi  10 
I  foimd  Him  not  in  w  or  sun,  „  cxxiv  5 
And  whispers  to  the  w's  of  space,  „  cxxvi  11 
And  mingle  all  the  w  with  thee.  „  cxxix  12 
and  let  the  w  have  its  way :  Mavd  I  iv  21 
wood  where  I  sit  is  a  w  of  plunder  and  prey.  „  24 
Who  knows  the  ways  of  the  w,  „  44 
the  suns  are  many,  the  w  is  wide.  „  45 
I  have  not  made  the  w,  „  48 
From  the  long-neck'd  geese  of  the  w  „  52 
If  I  find  the  w  so  bitter  „  w  33 
Then  the  w  were  not  so  bitter  (repeat)  „  38,  94 
a  w  in  which  I  have  hardly  mixt,  „  ...'^^ 
More  life  to  Love  than  is  or  ever  was  In  our  low  w,  „  xviii  48 
A  w  of  trouble  within !  ,.  xix  25 
makes  us  loud  in  the  w  of  the  dead ;  „      II  v  25 


World  (continued)     a  w  that  loves  him  not,  For  it  is  but  a 

w  of  the  dead.  Maud  II  v  39 

She  comes  from  another  stiller  w  of  the  dead,  „               70 

Fairer  than  aught  in  the  w  beside,  ,,               73 

spoke  of  a  hope  for  the  w  in  the  coming  wars —  ,,   III  vi  11 

in  a  weary  w  my  one  thing  bright ;  „               17 

His  loss  drew  like  eclipse,  Darkening  the  w.  Bed.  of  Idylls  15 
I  seem  as  nothing  in  the  mighty  w,                                Cotn.  of  Arthur  87 

And  power  on  this  dead  w  to  make  it  live.'  „               94 

the  w  Was  all  so  clear  about  him,  ,,              97 

the  Powers  who  walk  the  w  Made  lightnings  „             107 

deems  himself  alone  And  all  the  w  asleep,  „            119 

whatsoever  storms  May  shake  the  w,  „            293 

Graven  in  the  oldest  tongue  of  all  tlus  w,  „            302 

To  guard  thee  on  the  rough  ways  of  the  w.'  „             336 

And  hated  this  fair  w  and  all  therein,  „            344 

live  and  love,  and  make  the  w  Other,  ,,            472 

'  Blow  trumpet,  for  the  w  is  white  with  May ;  „            482 

Blow  thro'  the  living  w —  „            484 

The  slowly-fading  mistress  of  the  w,  .,            505 

working  out  his  will.  To  cleanse  the  w.  Gareth  and  L.  26 

or  half  the  w  Had  ventured —  „            64 

that  skill'd  spear,  the  wonder  of  the  w —  „        1223 

if  the  w  were  one  Of  utter  peace,  and  love,  .,        1288 

And  stay  the  w  from  Lady  Lyonors.  „         1412 
The  w's  loud  whisper  breaking  into  storm,                 Marr.  of  Geraint  27 

At  caitiffs  and  at  wrongers  of  the  w.  „              96 

At  last  they  issued  from  the  w  of  wood,  ,,            238 

cackle  of  your  bourg  The  murmur  of  the  w !  „            277 

the  great  wave  that  echoes  round  the  w ;  „            420 

Made  a  low  splendour  in  the  w,  .,            598 

thro'  the  feeble  twilight  of  this  w  Groping,  Geraint  aiid  E.  5 

The  being  he  loved  best  in  all  the  w,  „          103 

As  the  gray  dawn  stole  o'er  the  dewy  w,  „          385 

Henceforth  in  all  the  w  at  anything,  „           649 
The  w  will  not  believe  a  man  repents :  And  this  wise 

w  of  ours  is  mainly  right.  „          900 
I  have  quite  foregone  All  matters  of  this  w :            Balin  and  Balan  117 

the  Queen,  and  all  the  w  Made  music,  „                210 

Old  monk  and  nun,  ye  scorn  the  w's  desire,  „                445 

all  at  once  they  found  the  w.  Staring  wild-wide ;  „                595 
as  Arthur  in  the  highest  Leaven'd  the  w.                     Merlin  and  V.  141 

Dear  feet,  that  I  have  foUow'd  thro'  the  w,  „             227 

And  sweep  me  from  my  hold  upon  the  iv,  „             303 

Who  have  to  learn  themselves  and  all  the  w,  ,.            365 

noble  deeds,  the  flower  of  all  the  w.  „            413 

I  well  believe  that  all  about  this  w  „            541 

surm'd  The  w  to  peace  again :  ..             639 

The  brute  w  howling  forced  them  into  bonds,  ,.             744 

And  touching  other  w's.  „             838 
the  place  which  now  Is  this  w's  hugest,                        Lancelot  and  E.  76 

flower  of  all  the  west  and  all  the  w,  „             249 

Hid  from  the  wide  w's  rtunour  by  the  grove  Of  poplars  „            522 

this  and  that  other  w  Another  w  for  the  sick  man ;  ,.             873 

To  serve  you,  and  to  follow  you  thro'  the  w.'  ,.             939 

'  Nay,  the  w,  the  w.  All  ear  and  eye,  „            940 

'  For  Lancelot  and  the  Queen  and  all  the  w,  „           1107 

Then  might  she  follow  me  thro'  the  w,  ,,          1316 

For  never  have  I  known  the  w  without.  Holy  Grail  20 

And  heal  the  w  of  all  their  wickedness  !  „           94 

and  all  the  w  be  heal'd.'  „         128 

Then  flash'd  a  yellow  gleam  across  the  w,  ,.         402 

And  seem'd  to  me  the  Lord  of  all  the  w,  „         414 

Rejoice,  small  man,  in  this  small  w  of  mine,  ,.         559 

the  sea  rolls,  and  all  the  w  is  warm'd  ?  '  „         672 
'  0  happy  w,'  thought  Pelleas, '  all,  meseems,             Pdleas  arid  E.  136 

Than  all  the  ranged  reasons  of  the  w.  „              156 

That  follows  on  the  turning  of  the  w,  „              549 
brother,  thou  nor  I  have  made  the  w ;                      Last  Tournament  203 

Would  make  the  w  as  blank  as  Winter-tide.  „              221 

seeing  too  much  wit  Makes  the  w  rotten,  „              247 

the  w  Is  flesh  and  shadow —  „              315 

Who  fain  had  dipt  free  manhood  from  the  w —  „              446 
The  wide  w  laughs  at  it.    And  worldling  of  the  w 

am  I,  and  know  The  ptarmigan  „              695 


World 


816 


Worm 


World  (continued)    There  hold  thee  with  my  life  against 

the  w.'  Guinevere  115 

twain  together  well  might  change  the  w.  ,,         301 

The  most  disloyal  friend  in  all  the  w.'  „         340 

What  knowest  thou  of  the  w,  „         343 

To  serve  as  model  for  the  mighty  w,  ,,         465 

in  that  w  where  all  are  pure  We  two  may  meet  „         563 

Let  the  w  be ;  that  is  but  of  the  w  What  else  ?  „          629 

What  might  I  not  have  made  of  thy  fair  w,  „  655 
As  if  some  lesser  god  had  made  the  w,                         Pass,  of  Arthur  14 

Or  else  as  if  the  w  were  wholly  fair,  „              18 

Hath  folded  in  the  passes  of  the  w.'  ,,              78 

'  Hearest  thou  this  great  voice  that  shakes  the  w,  „            139 

famous  knights  Whereof  this  w  holds  record.  „            184 

Or  hath  come,  since  the  making  of  the  w.  „            371 

Which  was  an  image  of  the  mighty  w,  „  403 
More  things  are  wrought  by  prayer  Than  this  w 

dreams  of.  „            416 

stillness  of  the  dead  w's  winter  dawn  Amazed  him,  ,,            442 

As  from  beyond  the  limit  of  the  w,  „  458 
goal  of  this  great  w  Lies  beyond  sight :  To  the  Queen  ii  59 
Like  to  a  quiet  mind  in  a  loud  w,                                       Lover's  Tale  i  7 

And,  like  all  other  friends  i'  the  w,  „          108 

And  mellow'd  echoes  of  the  outer  w —  ,,          208 

In  giving  so  much  beauty  to  the  w,  „         212 

Gray  relics  of  the  nurseries  of  the  w,  „         290 

She  said,  '  The  evil  flourish  in  the  w.'  „          348 

having  always  prosper'd  in  the  w,  „          716 

(Huge  blocks,  which  some  old  trembling  of  the  w  „       ii  45 

A  flat  malarian  w  of  reed  and  rush !  „      iv  142 

hungering  for  the  gilt  and  jewell'd  w  About  him,  „         313 


I  am  all  alone  in  the  w 
all  the  ships  of  the  w  could  stare  at  him, 
ever  a  battle  like  this  in  the  w  before  ? 
Over  all  this  weary  w  of  ours, 
Over  all  this  ruin'd  w  of  ours. 
One  bright  May  morning  in  a  w  of  song, 
I  think  this  gross  hard-seeming  w  Is  our  mis- 
shaping vision  of  the  Powers  Behind  the  w, 
if  the  hope  of  the  w  were  a  lie  ? 
Must  learn  to  use  the  tongues  of  all  the  w. 
More  worth  than  all  the  kingdoms  of  this  w, 
Who  took  the  w  so  easily  heretofore. 
To  course  and  range  thro'  all  the  w, 
Grod  pardon  all — Me,  them,  and  all  the  w — 
And  came  upon  the  Mountain  of  the  W, 
Whatever  wealth  I  brought  from  that  new  w 
I  who  have  deceived  thee  or  the  w  ? 
Flower  into  fortune — our  w's  way — 
Which  he  unchain'd  for  all  the  w  to  come.' 
his  voice  was  low  as  from  other  w's. 
Thro'  all  this  changing  w  of  changeless  law, 
From  that  great  deep,  before  our  w  begins. 
From  that  true  w  within  the  w  we  see.  Whereof 

our  w  is  but  the  boimding  shore —  „  30 

For  in  the  w,  which  is  not  ours,  „  35 

pain  Of  this  divisible-indivisible  w  „  43 

With  power  on  thine  own  act  and  on  the  w.  „  56 

Son,  in  the  hidden  w  of  sight,  Tiresias  51 

I  am  flung  from  the  rushing  tide  of  the  vj  The  Wreck  6 

word  of  the  Poet  by  whom  the  deeps  of  the  w  are  stirr'd,  „      23 

By  the  low  foot-lights  of  the  w —  „      40 

Over  the  range  and  change  of  the  w  „      70 

dark  little  w's  running  round  them  were  w's  of  woe  like 

our  own —  Despair  18 

Of  a  worm  as  it  writhes  in  a  w  „      31 

Of  a  dying  worm  in  a  to,  „      32 

Never  a  cry  so  desolate,  not  since  the  w  began,  „      59 

In  a  w  of  arrogant  opulence,  „      78 

thy  to  Might  vanish  like  thy  shadow  in  the  dark.  Ancient  Sage  51 

Nor  canst  thou  prove  the  w  thou  movest  in,  „  58 

This  double  seeming  of  the  single  w ! —  „  105 

the  w  is  dark  with  griefs  and  graves,  „  171 

splendours  and  the  voices  of  the  w !  „  177 

show  us  that  the  w  is  wholly  fair.  „  182 


First  Quarrel  8 

Rizpah  38 

The  Revenge  62 

Sister's  (E.  and  E.)  12 

22 

82 

229 

In  the  Child.  Hasp.  24 

Sir  J.  Oldcastle  34 

77 

89 

120 

169 

Columbus  26 

„      101 

„      151 

„      167 

,.      215 

V.  of  Maeldune  117 

Be  Prof.,  Two  G.  6 

27 


World  (continued)    I  touch  thy  w  again — No  ill  no  good !     Ancient  Sage  249 
in  the  fatal  sequence  of  this  w  An  evil  thought  „  274 

know  the  love  that  makes  the  w  a  w  to  me  !  The  Flight  76 

ray  own  true  sister,  come  forth  !  the  w  is  wide.  „        96 

they  tell  me  that  the  w  is  hard,  and  harsh  of  mind,  „       101 

stood  up  strait  as  the  Queen  of  the  w —  Tomorrow  79 

old-world  dust  before  the  newer  w  begin.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  150 

Earth  at  last  a  warless  to,  ,.  165 

outworn  earth  be  dead  as  yon  dead  w  the  moon  ?  „  174 

perhaps  a  w  of  never  fading  flowers.  ,,  184 

All  the  w  is  ghost  to  me,  „  253 

In  w's  before  the  man  Involving  ours —  Epilogue  25 

like  a  flame  From  zone  to  zone  of  the  w,  Dead  Prophet  35 

This  ever-changing  w  of  circumstance,  To  Duke  of  Argyll  10 

And  warms  the  child's  awakening  w —  To  Prin.  Beatrice  5 

ask'd  the  waves  that  moan  about  the  w  Demeter  and  P.  64 

from  all  the  w  the  voices  came  '  We  know  not,  „  66 

And  saw  the  w  fly  by  me  like  a  dream,  The  Ring  180 

From  out  the  fleshless  w  of  spirits,  ,,        228 

In  all  the  w  my  dear  one  sees  but  you—  „        364 

All  the  w  will  hear  a  voice  Scream  Forlorn  27 

Wed  to  the  melody,  Sang  thro'  the  w ;  Merlin  and  the  G.  98 

And  yet  The  w  would  lose,  Romney's  R.  68 

in  the  loud  w's  bastard  judgment-day,  „  119 

Other  songs  for  other  w's  !  Parnassus  19 

His  dream  became  a  deed  that  woke  the  to,  St.  Telemachus  70 

Thro'  all  the  warring  w  of  Hindustan  Akbar's  Dream  26 

the  living  pulse  of  Alia  beats  Thro'  all  His  w.  ,.  42 

gaze  on  this  great  miracle,  the  W,  „  122 

For  a  woman  ruin'd  the  w,  Charity  3 

see  not  her  like  anywhere  in  this  pitiless  w  of  ours !  „    43 

can  escape  From  the  lower  to  within  him,  Making  of  Man  2 

And  loves  the  w  from  end  to  end.  The  Wanderer  7 

'  The  w  and  all  within  it  (repeat)  Voice  spake,  etc.  3,  9 

Nor  the  myriad  to.  His  shadow,  God  and  the  Univ.  6 

Eternal  Harmony  Whereto  the  w's  beat  time,      D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  16 
World-compelling    The  w-c  plan  was  thine, —  Ode  Inter.  Exhib.  10 

World-domain     Whose  will  is  lord  thro'  all  his  w-d —      W.  to  Marie  Alex.  2 
World-earthquake    In  that  w-e,  Waterloo  !  Ode  on  Well.  133 

Worlded    See  Myriad-worlded 

World-isle     W-i's  in  lonely  skies,  Epilogue  55 

Worldless     From  where  his  to  heart  had  kept  it  warm,     Aylmer's  Field  471 

Worldling    the  wind  like  a  broken  w  wail'd,  Maud  I  ill 

And  w  of  the  world  am  I,  Last  Tournament  696 

But  your  Judith — but  your  w —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  20 

She  the  w  bom  of  w's —  „  25 

Worldly     And  all  his  to  worth  for  this.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  43 

he  vext  her  and  perplext  her  With  his  w  talk  and  folly :       Maud  I  xx  7 

Some  rough  old  kmght  who  knew  the  w  way,  Pelleas  and  E.  192 

to  Priests  Who  fear  the  king's  hard  common-sense      Sir  J.  Oldcastle  65 

Like  w  beauties  in  the  Cell,  not  shown  The  Ring  143 

Worldly-wise    to-to  begetters,  plagued  themselves  Aylmer's  Field  482 

World-old    as  they  sat  Beneath  a  to-o  yew-tree,  Holy  Grail  13 

World-prophet    that  w-p  in  the  heart  of  man.  Ancient  Sage  213 

World-self    His  whole  W-s  and  all  in  all—  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  49 

World-to-be     Who  will  embrace  me  in  the  w-t-b  Enoch  Arden  893 

World-victor    great  W-v's  victor  will  be  seen  no  more.  Ode  on  Well.  42 

World-war     W^w  of  dying  flesh  against  the  life.  Merlin  and  V.  193 

World-wealth    venom  of  to-to  Into  the  church.  Sir  J.  Oldcastle  166 

World-whisper     vague  to-to,  mystic  pain  or  joy,  Far — far — away  7  i 

World-wide    to-to  whisper  of  the  south-wind  rushing  j 

warm,  Locksley  Hall  125 

w-to  fluctuation  sway'd  In  vassal  tides  In  Mem.  cxii  15 

Mourn  !     That  a  to-w  Empire  mourns  with  you,    D.  of  the  Duke  of  C.  5 

World-worn    the  w-to  Dante  gra-sp'd  his  song,  Palace  of  Art  135  j 

Worm    (See  also  Brother-worm,  Glow-worm,  Scorpion-  I 

worm.  Slow-worm)    fret  Of  that  sharp-headed 

to  begins  Supp.  Confessions  186 

Nothing  but  the  small  cold  w  A  Dirge  9 

every  w  beneath  the  moon  Draws  different  threads,        Two  Voices  178 

with  a  to  I  balk'd  his  fame.  D.  of  F.  Women  155 

As  ruthless  as  a  baby  with  a  to.  Walk,  to  the  Mail  108 

Below  were  men  and  horses  pierced  with  w's,  Vision  of  Sin  209 

Crown  thyself,  w,  and  worship  thine  own  lusts ! —     Aylmer's  Field  650 

And  a  to  IS  there  in  the  lonely  wood.  The  Islet  34 


Worm 

lonn  (continued)    for  the  life  of  the  w  and  the  fly  ?  Wages  7 

No  will  push  me  down  to  the  w,  Window,  No  Answer  10 

That  not  a  w  is  cloven  in  vain ;  In  Mem.  liv  9 

Strike  dead  the  whole  weak  race  of  venomous  w's,  Maud  II  i  46 

many  rings  (For  he  had  many,  poor  w)  „         ii  69 

Wroth  to  be  wroth  at  such  a  w,  Marr.  of  Geraint  213 

as  the  w  draws  in  the  wither'd  leaf  Geraint  and  E.  633 

And  the  high  purpose  broken  by  the  w.  Merlin  and  V.  196 

'A  w  within  the  rose.'  Pelleas  and  E.  399 

,     He  dies  who  loves  it, — if  the  w  be  there.'  „  409 

And  cast  him  as  a  w  upon  the  way ;  Guinevere  35 

The  guess  of  a  tc  in  the  dust  Despair  30 

Of  a  w  as  it  writhes  in  a  world  ,.,      31 

Of  a  dying  w  in  a  world,  „      32 

When  the  w  shall  have  writhed  its  last,  „      85 

'  0  w's  and  maggots  of  to-day  Aneient  Sage  210 

a  v>  which  writhes  all  day,  and  at  night  Stirs  up  Fastness  17 

You  that  would  not  tread  on  a  w  Forlorn  45 

flesh  at  last  is  filth  on  which  the  w  will  feast ;  Hapvy  30 

point  and  jeer,  And  gibber  at  the  w,  Bomney's  R.  137 

7onn-caiiker'd    Distill'd  from  some  w-c  homily ;  To  J.  M.  K.  6 

/orm-eaten    So  propt,  w-e,  ruinously  old,  Enoch  Arden  693 

(Tormwood     banquet,  where  the  meats  became  As  u;     Lancelot  and  E.  744 
7ormwood-bitter    were  w-b  to  me.  Balin  and  Balan  64 

7om    {See  also  Fever-worn,  Storm-worn,  Wave-worn,  Way- 
worn, Well-worn,  World -worn)     Weeded  and  tc  the 
ancient  thatch 
both  Brake  into  hall  together,  w  and  pale, 
where  the  tide  Plash'd,  sapping  its  w  ribs ; 
plaited  ivy-tress  had  wound  Round  my  w  limbs, 
And  weird  and  w  and  wizard-like  was  he. 
hearts  w  out  by  many  wars  And  eyes  grown 

dim 
took  it,  and  have  w  it,  like  a  king : 
theme  of  writers,  and  indeed  W  threadbare. 
Or  while  the  patch  was  w ; 
Till  now  the  dark  was  w, 
he  died  at  Florence,  quite  w  out, 
Those  winters  of  abeyance  all  w  out, 
Which  he  has  w  so  pure  of  blame, 
Till  slowly  w  her  earthly  robe, 
A  censer,  either  w  with  wind  and  storm ; 
W  by  the  feet  that  now  were  silent. 
It  never  yet  was  w,  I  trow : 
I  myself  unwillingly  have  w  My  faded  suit, 
and  the  mask  of  pure  W  by  this  court. 
King  Had  on  his  cuirass  w  our  Lady's  Head, 
w  Favour  of  any  lady  in  the  lists,  (repeat) 
When  these  have  w  their  tokens : 
Wasted  and  w,  and  but  a  tithe  of  them, 
took  it,  and  have  w  it,  like  a  king ; 
richly  garb'd,  but  w  From  wasteful  living, 
Never  w  by  a  worthier, 

had  stolen,  w  the  ring — Then  torn  it  from  her  finger, 
I  have  w  them  year  by  year — 


Mariana  7 

Pelleas  and  E.  587 

Lover's  Tale  i  56 

619 

The  Ring  196 

Lotos-Eater's,  C.  S.  86 

M.  d' Arthur  33 

Edwin  Morris  49 

Talking  Oak  64 

Love  and  Duty  71 

The  Brook  35 

Princess  iv  440 

Ode  on  Well.  72 

In  Mem.  Ixxxiv  33 

Gareth  and  L.  222 

Marr.  of  Geraint  321 

683 

705 

Merlin  and  V.  36 

Lancelot  and  E.  294 

„       363, 473 

769 

Holy  Grail  723 

Pass,  of  Arthur  201 

Ancient  Sage  4 

On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  8 

The  Ring  455 

Hajypy  102 


Irocn-ont    while  the  w-o  clerk  Brow-beats  his  desk 
■       This  w-o  Reason  dying  in  her  house 
Worried     W  his  passive  ear  with  petty  wrongs 
^orry    (See  also  Tew,  Tued)     a  dog  am  I,  To  w,  and  not 

to  flee —  Gareth  and  L.  1015 

^orse    (See  also  Woorse,  Wuss)    Is  boundless  better, 
boimdless  w. 

I  fear  to  slide  from  bad  to  w. 

And  ever  w  with  growing  time, 

There  is  confusion  w  than  death, 

laughingly  Would  hint  at  w  in  either. 

if  griefs  Like  his  have  w  or  better,_ 

the  song  Might  have  been  w  and  sinn'd 

some  cold  reverence  w  than  were  she  dead. 

Or  pines  in  sad  experience  w  than  death. 

Far  w  than  any  death  to  me.' 

Hexameters  no  w  than  daring  Germany  gave  us, 

woidd  make  Confusion  w  than  death, 

better  or  to  Than  the  heart  of  the  citizen 

fiend  best  knows  whether  woman  or  man  be  the  w 


To  J.  M.  K.  11 
Bomney's  R.  145 
Enoch  Arden  352 


Two  Voices  27 

231 

Palace  of  Art  210 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  83 

Enoch  Arden  481 

741 

Princess  iv  251 

i)92 

„      vii  315 

Sailor  Boy  24 

Trans,  of  Homer  5 

In  Mem.  xc  19 

Maud  I  i  23 

75 


Worse  (continued)    Sick  once,  with  a  fear  of  w, 
grew  up  to  wolflike  men,  W  than  the  wolves. 
A  w  were  better ;  yet  no  w  would  I. 
for  w  than  being  fool'd  Of  others, 
Shall  I  not  rather  prove  the  w  for  these  ? 
Kill'd  with  a  word  w  than  a  life  of  blows ! 
To  make  men  w  by  making  my  sin  known  ? 
That  did  not  shim  to  smite  me  in  w  way, 
and  expectancy  of  w  Upon  the  morrow. 
The  w  for  her,  for  me  !  was  I  content  ? 
I  am  handled  w  than  had  I  been  a  Moor, 
which  was  crueller  ?  which  was  w  ? 


817  Worst 

Maud  I  xix  73 

Com.  of  Arthur  33 

Gareth  and  L.  17 

1274 

Balin  and  Balan  228 

Merlin  and  V.  870 

Lancelot  and  E.  1417 

Guinevere  435 

Lover's  Tale  ii  151 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  126 

Columbus  107 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  88 

War  for  War's  own  sake  Is  fool,  or  crazed,  or  w ;  Epilogue  31 

cuckoo  of  a  w  July  Is  calUng  thro'  the  dark :     Pref.  Poem  Broth.  Son.  11 

and  paced  his  land  In  fear  of  w,  To  Mary  Boyle  30 

of  the  mind  Mine ;  w,  cold,  calculated.  Bomney's  B.  152 

Worse-confounded     Babel,  woman-built,  And  w-c :  Princess  iv  488 

Worship  (s)    (See  also  Sun-worship,  Wife-worship)    deck'd 

her  out  For  w  without  end ;  „      vii  169 

compass'd  her  with  sweet  observances  And  w,  Marr.  of  Geraint  49 

But  this  w  of  the  Queen,  Balin  and  Balan  179 

'  Old  priest,  who  mimible  w  in  your  quire —  „  444 

And  I  will  pay  you  w ;  Merlin  and  V.  228 

To  seat  you  sole  upon  my  pedestal  Of  w—  „  879 

now  my  loyal  w  is  allow'd  Of  all  men :  Lancelot  and  E.  110 

yet  O  grant  my  w  of  it  Words,  .,  1187 

It  will  be  to  thy  w,  as  my  knight,  „  1327 

Dame,  damsel,  each  thro'  w  of  their  Queen  Last  Tournament  146 

There  crown'd  with  w —  Tiresias  175 

Of  saner  w  sanely  proud ;  Freedom  30 

that  w  which  is  Fear,  Henceforth,  Demeter  and  P.  143 

harvest  hymns  of  Earth  The  w  which  is  Love,  „  149 

in  all  Man-modes  of  w ;  Akhar's  Dream  47 

Worship  (verb)     That  here  come  those  that  w  me  ?  St.  S.  Stylites  125 

When  you  may  w  me  without  reproach ;  „  193 

Crown  thyself,  worm,  and  w  thine  own  lusts  ! —         Aylmer's  Field  650 
He  w's  your  ideal : '  she  replied :  Princess  ii  52 

hive  of  Roman  liars  w  an  emperor-idiot.  Boadicea  19 

To  wage  my  wars,  and  w  me  their  King ;  Com.  of  Arthur  508 

'  Fair  damsel,  you  should  w  me  the  more,  Gareth  and  L.  1022 

Her  likewise  would  I  to  an  I  might.  Balin  and  Balan  185 

The  Queen  we  w,  Lancelot,  I,  and  all,  „  349 

To  w  woman  as  true  wife  beyond  Merlin  and  V.  23 

And  beasts  themselves  would  to ;  „  575 

For  Lancelot's  kith  and  kin  so  w  him  Holy  Grail  651 

'  Fair  damsels,  each  to  him  who  w's  each  Last  Tournament  207 

And  w  her  by  years  of  noble  deeds,  Guinevere  476 

There  also  will  I  w  thee  as  King.  Pass,  of  Arthur  149 

I  anger'd  Arundel  asking  me  To  w  Holy  Cross  !        Sir  J.  Oldcastle  136 
She  knelt — '  We  w  him ' —  Dead  Prophet  29 

I  w  that  right  hand  Which  fell'd  the  foes  Happy  41 

both,  to  w  Alia,  but  the  prayers,  Akbar's  Dream  9 

I  let  men  w  as  they  will,  „  66 

a  people  have  fashion'd  and  to  a  Spirit  Kapiolani  1 

WorshipfuUy     Sir  Lavaine  did  well  and  w ;  Lancelot  and  E.  491 

would  I  reward  thee  to.  Gareth  and  L,  829 

Worshipp'd-Worshipt    And  worshipt  their  own  darkness  in 

the  Highest  ?  Aylmer's  Field  643 

Sir  Lancelot  worshipt  no  unmarried  girl  Merlin  and  V.  12 

and  him  his  new-made  knight  Worshipt,  Pelleas  and  E.  155 

Thy  name  is  ever  worshipp'd  among  hours !  Lover's  Tale  i  493 

Truth,  for  Truth  is  Truth,  he  worshipt,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  59 

once  I  worshipt  all  too  well  this  creature  Happy  45 

Worshipper    (See  also  Woman-worshipper)    outlast  thy  Deity  ? 

Deity  ?  nay,  thy  w's.  Lucretius  73 

Worst    (See  also  Earthly-worst,  Woost)    '  Never,  dearest, 

never :  here  I  brave  the  w : '  Edwin  Morris  118 

And  women's  slander  is  the  to.  The  Letters  34 

His  w  he  kept,  his  best  he  gave.  You  might  have  won  26 

'  His  deeds  yet  live,  the  to  is  yet  to  come.  Sea  Dreams  314 

of  her  court  The  vnliest  and  the  w ;  Guinevere  29 

I  hold  that  man  the  to  of  public  foes  „      512 

W  of  the  to  were  that  man  he  that  reigns  !  „      523 

An'  she  wasn't  one  o'  the  to.'  First  Quarrel  61 

never  put  on  the  black  cap  except  for  the  to  of  the  w,  Riepah  65 

3   F 


Worst 


818 


Wounded 


Wtnt  (continued)    She  sees  the  Best  that  glimmers  thro' 

the  W,                                                     "  Ancient  Sage  72 
Do  your  best  to  charm  the  w,                                Locksley  H.,  Sixty  147 

Earth  would  never  touch  her  w,  „               270 

The  best  in  me  that  sees  the  w  in  me,  Eomney's  JR.  44 

For  with  thy  w  self  sacrifice  thyself,  Aylmer's  Field  646 

And  wretched  age — and  w  disease  of  all,  Lucretius  155 
put  on  thy  w  and  meanest  dress  And  ride  with  me.'   Marr.  ofGeraint  130 

Put  on  your  w  and  meanest  dress,'  „              848 

But  women,  to  and  best,  as  Heaven  and  Hell.  Merlin  and  V.  815 

Wortti  (adj.)    (See  also  Little-worth,  Nothing-worth)  Is 

w  a  hundred  coats-of-arms.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  16 
her  least  remark  was  w  The  experience  of  the  wise.      Edwin  Morris  65 

Is  three  times  w  them  all ;  Talking  Oak  72 

*  No  doubt  that  we  might  make  it  w  his  while.  Princess  i  184 

we  should  find  the  land  W  seeing ;  „     Hi  172 

beauty  in  detail  Made  them  w  knowing ;  „      iv  449 

a  good  mother,  a  good  wife,  W  wimiing ;  „       v  167 

is  not  Ida  right?    They  wit?  „          189 

Wamt  w  nowt  a  haiicre,  iV.  Farmer,  0.  S.  39 
hardly  w  my  while  to  choose  Of  things  all  mortal.      In  Mem.  xxxiv  10 

Whose  life,  whose  thoughts  were  little  w,  „         Ixxxv  30 

A  goodly  youth  and  w  a  goodlier  boon  !  Gareth  and  L.  449 

'  It  is  not  w  the  keeping :  let  it  go :  Merlin  and  V.  396 

gross  heart  Would  reckon  w  the  taking  ?  „              917 
snare  her  royal  fancy  with  a  boon  W  half  her  realm,     Lancelot  and  E.  72 

mebbe  w  their  weight  i'  gowd.'  Village  Wife  70 
What  life,  so  maim'd  by  night,  were  w  Our  living  out  ?       Tiresias  208 

Were  never  w  the  while' —  Ancient  Sage  128 

thou'd  not  'a  been  w  thy  milk.  Spinster's  S's.  54 

fuller  franchise — what  would  that  be  w —  The  Fleet  8 

change  of  the  tide — ^what  is  all  of  it  w  ?         _  Vastness  30 

Is  it  w  his  while  to  eat,                                   '  Voice  spake,  etc.  7 

Worth  (s)     //  aught  of  ancient  w  be  there;  To  the  Queen  12 

Old  letters,  breathing  of  her  w,  Mariana  in  the  S.  62 

To  make  him  trust  bis  modest  w,  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  46 

his  mute  dust  I  honour  and  his  living  w.  To  J.  S.  30 

And  draws  the  veil  from  hidden  w.  Day-Dm.,  Arrival  4 

I  grow  in  w,  and  wit,  and  sense,  Will  Water.  41 

most,  of  sterling  w,  is  what  Oiu;  own  experience  „          175 

couldst  thou  last.  At  half  thy  real  w?  „          204 

He  loves  me  for  my  own  true  w.  Lady  Clare  11 

'  O  Lady  Clare,  you  shame  your  w !  „          66 

And  all  his  worldly  w  for  this.  Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  43 

A  song  that  pleased  us  from  its  w ;  You  might  have  won  22 

they  might  be  proud ;  its  w  Was  being  Edith's.  Ayhner's  Field  378 

two  de^r  things  are  one  of  double  w.  Princess  ii  419 

TiU  all  men  grew  to  rate  us  at  our  w,  „       iv  145 

What  seem'd  my  w  since  I  began ;  In  Mem.,  Pro.  34 

I  know  transplajited  hiunan  w  „       Ixxxii  11 

defying  change  To  test  his  w ;  „            xcv  28 

the  w  of  half  a  town,  A  warhorse  of  the  best,  Gareth  and  L.  &11 

I  scarce  have  spent  the  w  of  one  ! '  Geraint  and  E.  411 

they  had  been  thrice  their  w  Being  your  gift,  Lancelot  and  E.  1212 

did  he  know  her  w.  Her  beauty  even  ?  Lover's  Tale  iv  150 

commission  one  of  weight  and  w  To  judge  Columbus  124 

and  was  noble  in  birth  as  in  w,  V.  of  Maeldune  3 
Worthier    many  a  w  than  I,  would  noake  him  happy 

yet.  May  Queen,  Con.  46 

I  find  him  w  to  be  loved.  In  Mem.,  Pro.  40 

Modred  for  want  of  w  was  the  judge.  Gareth  and  L.  28 

'  Forbear :  there  is  a  w,'  Marr.  of  Geraint  556 

ten-times  to  to  be  thine  Than  twenty  Balins,  Balin  and  Balan  68 

But  thine  are  w,  seeing  they  profess  Last  Tournament  82 

Never  worn  by  a  w,  On  Jub.  Q.  Victoria  8 

W  sold  was  he  than  I  am,  sound  and  honest, 

rustic  Squire,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  239 

Worthiest    and  of  those  halves  You  w ;  Princess  iv  462 

To  follow  up  the  w  till  he  die :  „            466 

Worthless    The  little  senseless,  w,  wordless  babe.  The  Ring  304 

Worthy    w  of  the  golden  prime  (repeat)  Arabian  Nights  98, 142 

W  a  Roman  spouse.'  I),  of  F.  Women  164 

Surely  a  precious  thing,  one  w  note,  M.  d' Arthur  89 

it  will  be  w  of  the  two.  Locksley  Hall  92 

Him  too  you  loved,  for  he  was  w  love.  Aylmer's  Field  712 


Worthy  (continued)    '  w  reasons  why  she  should  Bide  by  this 

issue :  Princess  v  325 

Call'd  him  w  to  be  loved,  „          vi  6 
this  is  he  JF  of  our  gorgeous  rites.  And  w  to  be  laid 

by  thee ;  Ode  on  Well.  93 

'  I  am  not  w  ev'n  to  speak  In  Mem.  xxxvii  11 

And  thou  art  w ;  full  of  power;  „            Con.  37 

We  are  not  w  to  live,  Maud  II  i  48 
loved  with  that  full  love  I  feel  for  thee,  nor  w  such  a 

love :  Gareth  and  L.  84 

And  pardonable,  w  to  be  knight —  „            654 

Strike,  thou  art  w  of  the  Table  Round —  „          1138 

'  Thou  art  not  w  ev'n  to  speak  of  him ; '  Marr.  ofGeraint  199 

not  w  to  be  knight ;  A  churl,  a  clown  ! '  Balin  and  Balan  285 

I,  feeling  that  you  felt  me  w  trust.  Merlin  and  V.  334 

the  quest  Assign'd  to  her  not  w  of  it,  Lancelot  and  E.  825 

Toward  one  more  w  of  her —  „            1320 

if  what  is  w  love  Could  bind  him,  „            1378 

'  I  am  not  w  of  the  Quest ; '  Holy  Grail  386 

I  had  liefer  ye  were  w  of  my  love,  Pelleas  and  E.  301 

Surely  a  precious  thing,  one  w  note,  Pass,  of  Arthur  257 

that  I  know  you  w  everyway  To  be  my  son,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  48 

An  old  and  w  name !  „                74 

Would-be    You  w-b  quenchers  of  the  light  to  be,  Princess  iv  536 
Would-be-widow    While  she  vows  '  till  death  shall 

part  us,'  she  the  w-b-w  wife.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  24 

Wound  (s)     then,  because  his  w  was  deep,  M.  d' Arthur  5 

I  fear  My  w  hath  taken  cold,  „      166 

Where  I  will  heal  me  of  my  grievous  w.'  „      264 

Like  flies  that  haunt  a  w,  or  deer,  or  men,  Ayhner's  Field  571 

My  father  stoop'd,  re-father'd  o'er  my  w's.  Princess  vi  129 

Lifting  his  grim  head  from  my  w's.  „            272 

To  save  her  dear  lord  whole  from  any  w.  Geraint  and  E.  45 

till  she  had  lighted  on  his  w,  „            513 

'  Sir  King,  mine  ancient  w  is  hardly  whole,  Lancelot  and  E.  93 

and  bare  him  in.  There  stanch'd  his  w ;  „            520 

Lancelot  who  hath  come  Despite  the  w  he  spake  of,              „            566 

added  w  to  w  And  ridd'n  away  to  die  ?  '  „            567 

Had  made  the  pretext  of  a  hindering  w,  „            582 

tho'  he  call'd  his  w  a  little  hurt  „            852 
Then  fared  it  with  Sir  Pelleas  as  with  one  Who  gets 
a  w  in  battle,  and  the  sword  that  made  it  plunges 

thro'  the  w  again,  Pelleas  and  E.  529 

Then,  because  his  w  was  deep,  Pass,  of  Arthur  174 

I  fear  My  w  hath  taken  cold,  „              334 

Where  I  will  heal  me  of  my  grievous  w.'  „             432 

after  healing  of  his  grievous  w  He  comes  again ;  „              45ti 

With  a  grisly  w  to  be  drest  he  had  left  the  deck.  The  Revenge  6(i 

told  them  of  his  wars,  and  of  his  w.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  6(1 

Death  to  the  dying,  and  w's  to  the  wounded,  Bef.  of  Lucknow  17 

the  w  that  would  not  be  heal'd,  „             84 
Wound  (to  wind)     as  the  boat-head  w  along  The  willowy 

hiUs  L.  of  Shalott  iv  2^1 

Where  Past  and  Present,  w  in  one,  Miller's  D.  19'^ 

that  my  arms  Were  w  about  thee,  CEnone  201  i 

her  hair  W  with  white  roses,  slept  St.  Cecily ;  Palace  of  Art  9!  I 

and  turning,  w  Her  looser  hair  in  braid.  Gardener's  D.  W: 

w  A  scarf  of  orange  round  the  stony  helm.  Princess,  Pro.  lOi 

we  w  About  the  cliffs,  the  copses,  out  and  in,  „            Hi  35;' 

Thro'  open  field  into  the  lists  they  w  Timorously ;  „               vii 

And  mine  in  this  was  w.  In  Mem.  xcv  3 1 

w  Bare  to  the  sun,  and  monstrous  ivy-stems  Marr.  of  Geraint  32 ' 

Thro'  the  rocks  we  xo :  Lover's  Tale  i  32 

plaited  ivy-tress  had  w  Round  my  worn  limbs,  „              61 

I  w  my  arms  About  her :  „          «  20 

Wound  (to  wound)     creaking  cords  which  w  and  eat  Supp.  Confessions  3' 

Tho'  men  may  w  him  that  he  will  not  die,  Com.  of  Arthur  42 
Wounded  (adj.  and  part.)    (See  also  Arrow-wounded, 

Deeply-wounded)    Till  himself  was  deadly  w  The  Captain  i 

With  w  peace  which  each  had  prick'd  to  death.  Aylmer's  Field  6 

Is  w  to  the  death  that  cannot  die ;  „           &t 

And  see  my  dear  lord  w  in  the  strife,  Marr.  of  Geraint  V.' 

For  those  that  might  be  w ;  Geraint  and  E.  5(> ! 

And  were  himself  nigh  w  to  the  death.'  „           91 

man  in  life  Was  w  by  blind  tongues  he  saw  not  Balin  and  Balan^  j 


I 


Wounded 


819 


Wreath 


Woonded  (adj.  and  part.)  {continued)    Hath  gone  sore 

w,  and  hath  left  his  prize  Lancelot  and  E.  530 

W  and  wearied  needs  must  he  be  near.  „               538 

So  that  he  went  sore  w  from  the  field :  „              600 

deals  comfortable  words  To  hearts  w  for  ever ;  Lover's  Tale  i  718 

he  was  w  again  in  the  side  and  the  head,  The  Revenge  68 

I  have  only  w  his  pride —  The  Wreck  14 

A  little  thing  may  harm  a  w  man.  .1/.  d' Arthur  42 

So  strode  he  back  slow  to  the  w  King.  „          65 

And  so  strode  back  slow  to  the  w  King.  „        112 
like  a  w  life  Crept  down  into  the  hollows  of  the  wood ;  Enoch  Arden  75 

when  like  a  w  life  He  crept  into  the  shadow :  „          386 

Nor  her  that  o'er  her  w  hunter  wept  Lucretius  89 
lordly  creature  floated  on  To  where  her  w  brethren  lay ;   Princess  vi  90 

king  her  father  charm'd  Her  w  soul  with  words :  „          346 

shining  in  upon  the  w  man  With  blush  and  smile,  „       vii  61 

A  w  thing  with  a  rancorous  cry,  Maud  I  x  M 

Kay  near  him  groaning  like  a  w  bidl —  Gareth  and  L.  648 

A  little  thing  may  harm  a  w  man ;  Pass,  of  Arthur  210 

So  strode  he  back  slow  to  the  w  King.  „             233 

And  so  strode  back  slow  to  the  w  King.  „             280 

Fought  in  her  father's  battles  ?  w  there  ?  Last  Tournament  592 

The  w  warrior  climbs  from  Troy  to  thee.  Death  of  CEnone  39 
Wounded  (s)     Death  to  the  dying,  and  wounds  to  the  u\  Def.  of  Lucknow  17 

and  we  sail'd  with  our  w  away.  V.  of  Maeldune  36 

Wounded  (verb)     brought  Her  own  claw  back,  and  w  her 

own  heart.  Merlin  and  V.  500 

Wounding     The  w  cords  that  bind  and  strain  Clear-headed  friend  A: 

iVove    Who  w  coarse  webs  to  snare  her  purity,  Aylmcr's  Field  780 

beneath  her  marriage  ring,  W  and  unwove  it,  Geraint  and  E.  260 

w  with  silver  thread  And  crimson  in  the  belt  Holy  Grail  153 

So  I  w  Ev'n  the  dull-blooded  poppy-stem.  Lover's  Tale  i  351 

^ov'n    honeysuckle  round  the  porch  has  w  its  wavy  bowers,  May  Queen  29 

music  winding  trembled,  W  in  circles:  Vision  of  Sin  18 

A  web  is  w  across  the  sky ;  In  Mem.  Hi  6 
The  kiss.  The  w  arms,  seem  but  to  be  W^eak  symbols      Miller's  D.  232 

Up-clomb  the  shadowy  pine  above  the  w  copse.  Lotos-Eaters  18 

Thro'  many  a  w  acanthus- wreath  divine !  „  C.  S.  97 

With  w  paces  and  with  waving  anns.  Merlin  and  V.  207 

Of  w  paces  and  of  waving  hands,  (repeat)  „      330,  968 

cobweb  w  across  the  cannon's  throat  Maud  III  vi  27 

Burst  from  the  garland  I  had  w.  Lover's  Tale  i  366 

Vowd  (wold)     tha'll  light  of  a  livin'  somewheers  i' 

the  W  or  the  Fen,  Church-warden,  etc.  47 

Vrack    lest  the  realm  should  go  to  w.  Com.  of  Arthur  208 

So  that  the  realm  has  gone  to  w :  „            227 

laith    0  hollow  w  of  dying  fame,  In  Mem.  Ixxiii  13 

The  ghastly  W  of  one  that  I  know ;  Maud  II  i  32 

And  w's  of  the  mountain.  Merlin  and  the  G.  43 

Rose,  like  the  w  of  his  dead  self,  Death  of  CEnone  28 

Vrangle     three  gray  linnets  w  for  the  seed :  Guinevere  255 

Vrangled     And  still  they  strove  and  w :  Sea  Dreams  229 

and  jangled  and  w  in  vain,  V.  of  Maeldune  109 

Vranglest    Wooest  not,  nor  vainly  w ;  Madeline  38 

Vrangling     And  haunted  by  the  w  daw ;  In  Mem.  c  12 

Vrap     When  a  blanket  w's  the  day.  Vision  of  Sin  80 

In  words,  like  weeds,  I'll  w  me  o'er,  In  Mem.  v  9 

Love  w's  his  wings  on  either  side  the  heart,  Lover's  Tale  i  467 

Now  w's  her  close,  now  arching  leaves  her  bare  Prog,  of  Spring  12 

Vntpp'd-Wrapt     (See  also  Happt)     Wrapt  in  dense  cloud 

from  base  to  cope.  Two  Voices  186 

'  These  things  are  wiapt  in  doubt  and  dread,  ,.           266 

I  wrapt  his  body  in  the  sheet.  The  Sisters  34 

Pitifiil  sight,  wrapp'd  in  a  soldier's  cloak,  Princess  v  56 

The  roots  are  lorapt  about  the  bones.  In  Mem.  ii  4 

And  wrapt  thee  formless  in  the  fold,  „  xxii  15 

Wrapt  in  a  cloak,  as  I  saw  him,  Maud  I  i  59 

Wrapt  in  drifts  of  lurid  smoke  „  //  iv  66 

'  Not  naked,  only  wrapt  in  harden'd  skins  Gareth  and  L.  1093 

Then  brought  a  mantle  down  and  wrapt  her  in  it,  Marr.  of  Geraint  824 

wra/pt  In  imremorsefiol  folds  of  rolling  fire.  Holy  Grail  260 

Wrapt  in  her  grief,  for  housel  or  for  shrift,  Guinevere  149 

■/rapping    w  her  all  over  with  the  cloak  He  came  in,  Lover's  Tale  iv  86 

/rapt    -S'ee  Wrapp'd 

7rath    No  sword  Of  w  her  right  arm  whirl'd,  The  Poet  54 


Wrath  {continued)    To  whom  replied  King  Arthur,  much 

in  w:  M.  d' Arthur  118 

Secret  w  like  smother'd  fuel  The  Captain  15 

Shame  and  w  his  heart  confounded,  „          61 

And  then  we  met  in  w  and  wrong.  The  Letters  11 

eyes  All  flooded  with  the  helpless  w  of  tears,  Enoch  Arden  32 
How  sweetly  would  she  glide  between  your  w's,        Aylmer's  Field  706 

A  rushing  tempest  of  the  w  of  God  „           757 

'  Let  not  the  sun  go  down  upon  your  w,'  Sea  Dreams  44 

Except  his  w  were  wreak'd  on  wretched  man,  Lucretius  128 

troubled  like  a  rising  moon.  Inflamed  with  w :  Princess  i  60 

then  he  chew'd  The  thrice-turn'd  cud  of  w,  „          66 

And  heated  thro'  and  thro'  with  w  and  love,  „    iv  163 

The  w  I  nursed  against  the  world :  „     v  437 

The  w  that  gamers  in  my  heart ;  In  Mem.  Ixxxii  14 

And  like  a  man  in  w  the  heart  „          cxxiv  15 

God's  just  w  shall  be  wreak'd  on  a  giant  liar ;  Maud  III  vi  45 

Then  Uther  in  his  w  and  heat  besieged  Com.  of  Arthur  198 

so  those  great  lords  Drew  back  in  w,  „            514 
on  the  damsel's  forehead  shame,  pride,  w  Slew  the 

May- white:  Gareth  and  L.  656 

by  this  entry  fled  The  damsel  in  her  w,  „            675 

loosed  in  words  of  sudden  fire  the  w  Geraint  and  E.  106 

Another,  flying  from  the  w  of  Doorm  „            530 

thy  just  w  Sent  me  a  three-years'  exile  Balin  and  Balan  58 

after  some  quick  burst  of  sudden  w,  „              216 

My  father  hath  begotten  me  in  his  w.  „              283 

And  Vivien  answer'd  smiling  as  in  w  :  Merlin  and  V.  526 

And  Vivien  answer'd  frowning  yet  in  w :  „              768 

So  all  in  w  he  got  to  horse  and  went ;  Lancelot  and  E.  563 

(Sea  was  her  w,  yet  working  after  storm)  „            1309 

this  persistence  turn'd  her  scorn  to  w.  Pelleas  and  E.  218 

Thereon  her  w  became  a  hate ;  „              224 

'  I  am  w  and  shame  and  hate  and  evil  fame,  „              568 
Until  he  groan'd  for  w —                                            Last  Tournament  183 

The  w  which  forced  my  thoughts  on  that  fierce  law,  Guinevere  537 

To  whom  replied  King  Arthur,  much  in  w :  Pass,  of  Arthur  286 

When  he  rose  in  his  w.  Dead  Pro'phet  63 

She  in  w  Return'd  it  on  her  birthday.  The  Ring  211 

Wrathful    but  w,  petulant.  Dreaming  some  rival,  Lucretius  14 

While  Enoch  was  abroad  on  w  seas,  Enoch  Arden  91 

cheek  and  blossom  brake  the  w  bloom  Princess  iv  383 

I  thought  on  all  the  w  king  had  said,  „         v  473 

Now  set  a  w  Dian's  moon  on  flame,  „        vi  368 
He  made  a  w  answer :  '  Did  I  wish  Your  warning       Geraint  and  E.  76 

To  which  he  flung  a  w  answer  back :  „            146 

he  but  gave  a  w  groan,  Saying,  „            398 

That  makes  me  passing  w ;  Merlin  and  V.  341 

'  Nay,  Master,  be  not  w  with  your  maid ;  „            380 

Strong  men,  and  w  that  a  stranger  knight  Lancelot  and  E.  468 

a  sudden  flush  of  w  heat  Fired  all  the  pale  face  Guinevere  356 

w  thunder  of  God  peal'd  over  us  all  the  day,  V.  of  Maeldune  113 

The  w  sunset  glared  against  a  cross  St.  Telemachus  5 

Wreak     I  remain  on  whom  to  w  your  rage.  Princess  iv  350 

I  w  The  wrath  that  gamers  In  Mem.  Ixxxii  13 

Kill  the  foul  thief,  and  w  me  for  my  son.'  Gareth  and  L.  363 

Wreak'd     Except  his  wrath  were  w  on  wretched  man,  Lucretius  128 

God's  just  wrath  shall  be  w  on  a  giant  liar ;  Maud  III  vi  45 

these  caitiff  rogues  Had  w  themselves  on  me ;  Gareth  and  L.  820 

thou  hast  w  his  justice  on  his  foes,  „          1268 

Wreath    {See  also  Acanthus-wreath,  Ivy-wreath)    thro'  the  w's 

of  floating  dark  upcurl'd.  The  Poet  35 

Lit  light  in  w's  and  anadems,  Palace  of  Art  186 

made  a  little  w  of  all  the  flowers  Dora  82 

The  w  of  flowers  fell  At  Dora's  feet.  „  102 

In  w  about  her  hair.  Talking  Oak  288 

and  rent  The  woodbine  w's  that  bind  her,  Amphion  34 

In  her  right  a  civic  w.  Vision  of  Sin  137 

lapt  in  w's  of  glowworm  light  The  mellow  breaker  Princess  iv  435 

'  for  this  wild  w  of  air.  This  flake  of  rainbow  „         v  318 

thousand  w's  of  dangling  water-smoke,  „      vii  213 

any  w  that  man  can  weave  him.  Ode  on  Well.  277 
But  when  the  w  of  March  has  blossom'd,                ToF.  D.  Maurice  43 

Make  one  w  more  for  Use  and  Wont,  In  Mem.  xxix  11 

The  head  hath  miss'd  an  earthly  w :  „       Ixxiii  6 


t  i 


Wreath 

Wreath  {continued)    thine  The  w  of  beauty,  thine  the 
crown  of  power, 
A  w  of  airy  dancers  hand-in-hand 
—its  w's  of  dripping  green— 
Darkening  the  w's  of  all  that  would  advance, 
This  w,  above  his  honour'd  head, 
I  caught  the  w  that  was  flung. 
Or  Love  with  w's  of  flowers. 
And  you,  that  wear  a  w  of  sweeter  bay, 
Wreath'd    (See  also  New-wreathed)    Love's  arms  were 
w  about  the  neck  of  Hope, 
Beneath  the  bower  of  w  eglantines : 
W  round  the  bier  with  garlands : 
the  belted  hunter  blew  His  w  bugle-hom. 
around  his  head  The  glorious  goddess  w  a  golden 
cloud. 
Wreathe    Now  w  thy  cap  with  doleful  crape. 
The  fancy's  tenderest  eddy  w, 
To  w  a  crown  not  only  for  the  king 
Wreathen    {See  also  Mist^wreathen)    the  sculptured 

ornament  That  w  round  it  _ 

Wreck  (s)    Hurt  in  that  night  of  sudden  ruin  and  w, 
sure  no  gladlier  does  the  stranded  w 
his  voyage,  His  w,  his  lonely  life, 
battle,  bold  adventure,  dungeon,  w,     ^ 
the  father  suddenly  cried,  '  A  w,  a  w  ! 
Kotting  on  some  wild  shore  with  ribs  of  w, 
My  father  raves  of  death  and  w, 
Tho'  his  vessel  was  all  but  a  w ; 
pranced  on  the  w's  in  the  sand  below, 
My  brain  is  full  of  the  crash  of  lo's, 
My  life  itself  is  a  w, 
the  one  man  left  on  the  w — 
they  had  saved  many  hundreds  from  w — 
about  the  shuddering  w  the  death-white  sea 
children  in  a  sunbeam  sitting  on  the  ribs  of  w. 
I  was  left  within  the  shadow  sitting  on  the  w  alone, 
and  sinking  with  the  sinking  w, 
Like  some  old  w  on  some  indrawing  sea, 
bodies  and  souls  go  down  in  a  common  w. 
Wreck  (verb)     sought'st  to  w  my  mortal  ark, 
May  w  itself  without  the  pilot's  guilt, 
my  craven  seeks  To  w  thee  villainously : 
love  is  wreck'd — if  Love  can  w — 
passive  sailor  w's  at  last  In  ever-silent  seas ; 
Wreck'd     W'  on  a  reef  of  visionary  gold.' 

when  their  love  is  w — if  Love  can  wreck — 
we  are  all  of  us  w  at  last — 
jy — your  train — or  all  but  w  ? 
Saved  when  your  life  was  w  ! 
Wren    '  Shall  eagles  not  be  eagles?  w  s  be  w  sj 

And  you  my  w  with  a  crown  of  gold,  \ou  iny 
queen  of  the  w's  !     You  the  queen  of  the  w  s— 
I'll  be  the  King  of  the  Queen  of  the  w's. 
The  fire-crown'd  king  of  the  w's, 
flit  like  the  king  of  the  w's  with  a  crown  of  hre. 
Tits,  w's,  and  all  wing'd  nothings  , 

Wrench'd    (^e«  aZso  Half-wrench'd)    Who  w  their 
rights  from  thee ! 
and  w  with  pains  Gain'd  in  the  service 
dearer  ghost  had—    Father.    — w  it  away. 
Wrenching    W  it  backward  into  his ; 
Wrestle    strive  and  w  with  thee  till  I  die : 
Had  ever  seem'd  to  w  with  burlesque. 
Wrestled     W  with  wandering  Israel, 
Wrestling    Nor  lose  the  w  thews  that  throw  the  world ; 
Wretch    Poor  w — no  friend ! — 
W  you  must  abide  it  .  .  . 
then  he  vawn'd,  for  the  w  could  sleep, — 
Wretched     Except  his  wrath  were  wreak'd  on  w  man. 
And  w  age — and  worst  disease  of  all, 
'  W  boy,  How  saw  you  not  the  inscription  on  the  gate, 
On  a  horror  of  shatter'd  limbs  and  a  w  swindler  s  lie? 
A  w  vote  may  be  gain'd. 
At  war  with  myself  and  a  w  race, 


820 


Wrong 


1 


Merlin  and  V.  79 

Guinevere  261 

Lover's  Tale  i  39 

To  Victor  Hugo  5 

Tiresias  213 

The  Wreck  40 

Epilogue  17 

Poets  and  their  B.  7 

Lover's  Tale  i  815 

"43 

79 

Palace  of  Art  64 

Achilles  over  the  T.  5 

My  life  is  full  14: 

In  Mem.  xlix  6 

Akbar's  Bream  23 

Merlin  and  V.  735 

Enoch  Arden  564 

828 

862 

Aylmer's  Field  98 

Sea  Dreams  59 

Princess  v  147 

Sailor  Boy  19 

The  Revenge  64 

V.  of  Maeldune  102 

The  Wreck  4 

5 

„     .119 

Despair  10 

The  Flight  47 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  14 

16 

64 

St.  Telemachus  44 

The  Dawn  13 

Two  Voices  389 

Aylmer's  Field  716 

Last  Tournament  549 

Lover's  Tale  i  804 

Ancient  Sage  136 

Sea  Dreams  139 

Lover's  Tale  i  804 

Despair  12 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  215 

The  Ring  305 

Golden  Year  37 

Window,  Spring  11 
15 

■Ay  8 

16 
Marr.  of  Geraint  275 

England  and  Amer.  5 

Columbus  235 

The  Ring  468 

Lucretius  221 

"  St.  S.  Siylites  119 

Princess,  Con.  16 

Clear-headed  friend  26 

Princess  vii  282 

Merlin  and  V.  75 

Forlorn  52 

Bandit's  Death  30 

Lucretius  128 

155 

Princess  ii  193 

Maud  7  i  56 

„      vi  56 

..       a;  35 


Wretched  (conimwei)    Yea  ev'n  of  w  meat  and  drink,  Maud  Ixv 

May  God  make  me  more  w  Than  ever  I  have  been  yet !  „    ^tx  94 

O  w  set  of  sparrows,  one  and  all,  Marr.  of  Geraint  278 

and  your  w  dress,  A  w  insult  on  you,  Geraint  and  h.  327 

pains  Of  the  hellish  heat  of  a  w  life  Despair^ 

A  madman  to  vex  you  with  w  words,  "      ^^ 

Wretchedest    W  age,  since  Time  began,  Maud  7i  r  Ji 

Wretchedness    But  bode  his  hour,  devising  w.  Last  Tournament  386 

Wrigglesby  beck    Loook  thou  theer  wheer  W  b  cooms 

out  by  the '11!  ^■ 

Wring    take  the  goose,  and  w  her  throat. 
Wrinkle    Whose  w's  gathered  on  his  face, 
The  busy  w's  round  his  eyes  ? 
A  million  w's  carved  his  skin ; 
Sown  in  a  w  of  the  monstrous  hill, 
Wrinkled    {See  also  Myriad-wrinkled)    Hard  wood  i  am, 
and  wrind,  .      „       ,    u 

cold  my  w  feet  Upon  thy  glimmering  thresholds, 
and  there  The  w  steward  at  his  task. 
The  w  sea  beneath  him  crawls; 
'  W  ostler,  grim  and  thin  ! 
w  benchers  often  talk'd  of  him  Approvingly, 
Down  from  the  lean  and  w  precipices, 

A  charr'd  and  w  piece  of  womanhood,  ■■    ,  ^  .   ,„ 

When  have  I  bow^d  to  her  father,  the  w  head  of  tlie  race  ?     iVW  /  zy  13 
God  help  the  w  children  that  are  Christ's  Sisters  (£.  and  E.)  \U 


.  Farmer,  N.  S.  53 

The  Goose  31 

Two  Voices  329 

Miller's  D.  4 

Palace  of  Art  138 

Will  19 


Talking  Oak  171 
Tithonus  67 
^Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  27 
The  Eagle  i 
Vision  of  Sin  63 
Aylmer's  Field  473 
Princess  iv  22 
v8l 


Princess  i  115 

„     vii  138 

Merlin  and  V.  551 

Pelleas  and  E.  338 

Merlin  and  V .  52 

Holy  Grail  762 

Merlin  and  V.  674 


Wrinkling    But  bland  the  smile  that  like  a  w  wind 
Wrist    I  sigh'd :  a  touch  Came  round  my  w, 

The  w  is  parted  from  the  hand  that  waved. 

But  I  will  slice  him  handless  by  the  w. 
Writ  (s)     saith  not  Holy  W  the  same  ?  '— 

Perhaps,  like  him  of  Cana  in  Holy  W, 
Writ  (verb)     PF  in  a  language  that  has  long  gone  by. 

wrote  The  letter  she  devised;  which  bemg  w  And  ^^^^^^^  ^^  ^  ^^^ 

old°wr1ters  Have  w  of  in  histories-  Batt.  of  Brur^nhurhllb 

Write    {See  also  Wroite)    To  make  me  w  my  random  rhymes,  Wdl  Water.  16 

you  shall  w,  and  not  to  her,  but  me :  Ayhner  s  Field  310 

'  W  to  me !     They  loved  me,  "  /^^ 

Shall  I  w  to  her?  shall  I  go?         .    ,  ^'"ITm^TJi 

One  w's,  that ' Other  friends  remain,  t        i  f    "^^iia^ 

Besought  Lavaine  to  w  as  she  devised  A  letter,       Lancelot  andE.  IIW 

Old  Virgil  who  would  w  ten  lines.  Poets  aiid  their  B.  2 

Writer    Seem  but  the  theme  of  w's,  ^?wi^y^r66 

Old  w's  push'd  the  happy  season  back,-  S^^^'^ll^fi 

old  w's  Have  writ  of  in  histories-  Batt.  of  BrunanburhlU 

Writhe    a  worm  which  w's  all  day,  ,,.,.,.  y  astness  i.^ 

Writhed  (^^.  and  part.)    Those  w  limbs  of  lightning  ^^^^^_^^^^^^^^^^^ 

WhCthe  worm  shall  have  w  its  la-st,  „wTn? 

Writhed  (verb)    w  his  wiry  arms  Around  him,  till  he  felt,  Gareth  andL  ll&L 

W  toward  him,  slided  up  his  knee  and  sat,  Merlvn  and  V.  2| 

down  his  robe  the  dragon  win  gold,  Lancelot  and  E.  ^ 

Down  on  the  great  King's  couch,  and  w  upon  it. 

She  roused  a  snake  that  hissing  w  away ; 
Writhen    See  Battle-writhen 
Writhing    read  W  a  letter  from  his  child, 

w  barbarous  lineaments. 

Sweat,  w's,  anguish,  labouring  of  the  lungs 
Writin'     o^-"'con  Mq  rAadin'  an'  w  'e  sniff t 


crazed  myself  over  their  horrible 


Death  of  (Enone  8E 

Aylmer's  Field  51'i 

Boddicea  74 

Pass,  of  AHhur  lit 

Village  Wife  M. 


Writing    {See  also  Writin') 
infidel  w's  ? 

Written    {See  also  Wrote)    it  is  w  that  my  race 
Hew'd  Ammon, 
w  as  she  found  Or  made  occasion. 
And  Willy's  wife  has  w :  (repeat) 
And  something  w,  something  thought; 
And  w  in  the  speech  ye  speak  yourself, 
'  Ye  have  the  book :  the  charm  is  «  m  it; 
oft  I  seem  as  he  Of  whom  was  w, 
Glorious  poet  who  never  hast  w  a  line, 
I  am  w  in  the  Lamb's  own  Book  of  Life 
scroll  w  over  with  lamentation  and  woe. 

Wroite  (write)    summun  I  reckons  'ull  'a  to  w. 

Wrong  (adj.)    he  was  w  to  cross  his  father  thus : 


Despair  81 


D.  of  F.  Women  23J 

Aylmer's  Field  47 1 

Grandmother  3,  lOf 

In  Mem.  vi  2( 

Com.  of  Arthur  3(> 

Merlin  and  V.  65^ 

Last  Tournament  IK 

To  A.  Tennyson ! 

Columbus  8f 

Despair  2( 

A".  Farmer,  0.  S.  5' 

Dora  I4i 


Wrong 


821 


Wrought 


WtOXig  (adj.)  {continued)    His  nerves  were  lo. 

am  I  right,  or  am  I  w,  (repeat) 

What !     I  am  not  all  as  w  As  a  bitter  jest 

I  was  ic,  I  am  always  bound  to  you, 

'  Would  I — was  it  w  ? ' 

And  so  I  often  told  her,  right  or  w, 

And,  right  or  w,  I  care  not :  this  is  all. 

Death  for  the  right  cause,  death  for  the  w  cause. 

She  ofEens  'ud  spy  summut  w 

W  there  !     The  painter's  fame  ? 
KTrong  (s)    There  seem'd  no  room  for  sense  of  w  \ 

lamentation  and  an  ancient  tale  of  w, 

I  heard  sounds  of  insult,  shame,  and  w, 

'  I  have  hid  my  feelings,  fearing  they  should  do 
mew;' 

we,  that  prate  Of  rights  and  w's. 

He  that  only  rules  by  terror  Doeth  grievous  w. 

Hush'd  all  the  groves  from  fear  of  to : 

And  then  we  met  in  wrath  and  to. 

Worried  his  passive  ear  with  petty  Mi's  Or  pleasures 

Began  to  chsife  as  at  a  personal  to. 

if  he  did  that  w  you  charge  him  with, 

He  can  do  no  more  10 :  forgive  him. 


(A  little  sense  of  w  had  touch'd  her  face 

Bow'd  on  her  palms  and  folded  up  from  w, 

Came  all  in  haste  to  hinder  to, 

Tho'  man,  yet  human,  whatsoe'er  your  w's, 

Tom  from  the  lintel — all  the  common  10 — 

chance  Were  caught  within  the  record  of  her  tc's, 

I  thought  her  half -right  talking  of  her  to's ; 

brawl  Their  rights  or  to's  like  potherbs  in  the  street 

'  ourselves  are  full  Of  social  to ; 

Till  public  to  be  crumbled  into  dust, 

He  suffers,  but  he  cannot  suffer  to : 

My  name  in  song  has  done  him  much  to, 

to  fight,  to  struggle,  to  right  the  to — 

Nor  hmnan  frailty  do  me  to. 

we  do  him  to  To  sing  so  wildly : 

Drug  down  the  blindfold  sense  of  to 

Thou  doest  expectant  nature  tc ; 

Bewail'd  their  lot ;  I  did  them  w : 

taking  revenge  too  deep  for  a  transient  w 

She  would  not  do  herself  this  great  to, 

teach  true  life  to  fight  with  mortal  vi^s. 

Or  to  say  '  Forgive  the  to,' 

peace  that  was  full  of  to's  and  shames, 

Whose  glory  was,  redressing  human  to ; 

speak  true,  right  to,  follow  the  King — 

from  the  to's  his  father  did  Would  shape  himseK 

Give  me  to  right  her  to,  and  slay  the  man.' 

Than  ride  abroad  redressing  women's  to, 

For  this  were  shame  to  do  him  iurther  to 

To  noble  hearts  who  see  but  acts  of  to : 

That  each  had  sufEer'd  some  exceeding  to. 

smoulder'd  to  that  burnt  him  all  within ; 

worse  than  that  dead  man ;  Done  you  more  to 

As  one  that  let  foul  w  stagnate  and  be, 

which  for  bribe  had  wink'd  at  to. 

Once  for  to  done  you  by  confusion, 

And  see,  yourself  have  own'd  ye  did  me  to. 

Th.ey  ride  abroad  redressing  human  to's  ! 

many  a  year  have  done  despite  and  to 

leaving  human  to's  to  right  themselves, 

Well — can  I  wish  her  any  huger  to 

deed  Of  prowess  done  redress'd  a  random  to. 

To  ride  abroad  redressing  hirnian  to's, 

Yet  who  had  done,  or  who  had  suffer'd  to  ? 

No,  no,  you  are  doing  me  to  ! 

Loving  the  other  ?  do  her  that  great  to  ? 

than  have  done  one  another  a  w. 

or  flamed  at  a  public  to, 

that  hourly  work  their  brother  insect  to, 

tho'  that  realm  were  in  the  to 

I  wrought  thee  bitter  to,  but  thou  forgive, 

wind  of  the  Night  shrilling  out  Desolation  and  w 


Walk,  to  the  Mail  105 

Day-Dm.,  L'Envoi  29,  33 

Vision  of  Sin  197 

Enoch  Arden  449 

The  Brook  111 

Princess  v  288 

290 

Vastness  8 

Owd  Rod  70 

Romney's  R.  48 

Two  Voices  456 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  118 

D.ofF.  Women  19 

Locksley  Hall  29 

Godiva  8 

The  Captain  2 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  13 

The  Letters  11 

I    Enoch  Arden  352 

474 

Sea  Dreams  279 

311 


Princess,  Pro.  219 

iv  288 

401 

425 

t?129 

143 

285 

459 

Con.  73 

Ode  on  Well.  167 

Will  3 

Spiteful  Letter  3 

Wages  3 

In  Mem.  Hi  8 

„       Ivii  3 

„      Ixxi  7 

„  IxxxiiiS 

„      ciii  46 

Maud  I  Hi  5 

a;  57 

„    omiii  54 

,.   7/ to  86 

„/7/t!t40 

Bed.  of  Idylls  9 

Gareth  and  L.  118 

347 

366 

866 

954 

Marr.  of  Geraint  438 

Geraint  and  E.  36 

107 

736 

891 

939 

Merlin  and  V.  307 

316 

693 

Lancelot  and  E.  1209 

Holy  Grail  898 

Last  Tournament  596 

Guinevere  459 

471 

L&ver's  Tale  i  726 

First  Quarrel  4 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  168 

V.  of  Maeldune  6 

The  Wreck  68 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  202 

Epilogue  34 

Death  of  (Enone  43 

The  Dreamer  15 


Wrong  (verb)     he  that  to's  his  friend  W's  himself  Sea  Dreams  172 

'  you  to  him  more  than  I  That  struck  him :  Princess  iv  245 

She  to's  herself,  her  sex,  and  me,  „        v  117 

You  w  yourselves — the  woman  is  so  hard  „       vi  222 

I  to  tlie  grave  with  fears  imtrue :  In  Mem.  li  9 

0  child,  you  to  your  beauty,  believe  it,  Maud  I  iv  17 
dream  That  any  of  these  would  to  thee,  to's 

thyself.  Balin  and  Balan  144 

— nay,  but  I  to  him.  Lover's  Tale  iv  73 

You  to  me,  passionate  little  friend.  Epilogue  10 

1  can  to  thee  now  no  more,  (Enone,  Death  of  (Enone  80 
Wrong'd  (part.)    I  knew  thee  to.    I  brake  upon  thy  rest,  Balin  and  Balan  499 


How  had  I  to  you  ?  surely  ye  are  wise, 

A  virtuous  gentlewoman  deeply  to, 

'  Can  he  be  w  who  is  not  ev'n  his  own, 

May'st  thou  never  be  to  by  the  name 

I  never  have  to  his  heart, 
Wrong'd  (s)     to  help  the  to  Thro'  all  our  reahn 

Then  Gareth, '  Bound  am  I  to  right  the  to, 

With  strength  and  will  to  right  the  to, 
Wrong'd  (verb)    to  and  lied  and  thwarted  us — 

judge  their  cause  from  her  That  to  it, 

he  never  to  his  bride.     I  know  the  tale. 

Hears  he  now  the  Voice  that  to  him  ? 
Wronger    this  Order  lives  to  crush  All  to's  of  the  Realm 

At  caitiffs  and  at  to's  of  the  world. 

Brutes,  the  brutes  are  not  your  to's — 
Wrote    round  about  the  prow  she  to 

W,  '  Mene,  mene,'  and  divided  quite 

and  a  tear  Dropt  on  the  letters  as  I  to. 

I  to  I  know  not  what.     In  truth, 

you  shall  have  that  song  which  Leonard  to : 

'  Then  I  took  a  pencil,  and  to  On  the  mossy  stone, 

tho'  Averill  to  And  bad  him  with  good  heart 

Who  first  w  satire,  with  no  pity  in  it. 

then.  Sir,  awful  odes  she  to,  Too  awful, 

and  I  sat  down  and  w,  In  such  a  hand 

take  this  and  pray  that  he  Who  to  it, 

and  sat  him  down,  and  to  All  things 

Then  he  to  The  letter  she  devised ; 

An'  he  to  '  I  ha'  six  weeks'  work, 

an'  sorry  for  what  she  w, 

Edith  to :  '  My  mother  bids  me  ask ' 

and  besides.  The  great  Augustine  to 

I  to  to  the  nurse  Who  had  borne  my  flower 

He  knows  not  ev'n  the  book  he  to, 

he  w  '  Their  kindness,'  and  he  to  no  more ; 

to  Name,  surname,  all  as  clear  as  noon. 

Up  she  got,  and  to  him  all. 
Wrote  (written)    An'  'e'd  to  an  owd  book,  his  awn  sen. 
Wroth    (See  also  Half-wroth)    Then  the  old  man  Was  to, 


Merlin  and  V.  288 

911 

Last  Tournament  524 

To  A.  Tennyson  7 

The  Wreck  14 

Gareth  and  L.  371 

804 

Holy  Grail  309 

Princess  iv  540 

„       vii  236 

Merlin  and  V.  729 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  269 

Gareth  and  L.  626 

Marr.  of  Geraint  96 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  97 

L.  of  Shalott  ivS 

Palace  of  Art  22J 

To  J.  S.  56 

„        57 

Golden  Year  1 

Edward  Gray  25 

Aylmer's  Field  543 

Sea  Dreams  202 

Princess  i  138 

»  .      .235 

A  Dedication  5 

Com.  of  Arthur  156 

Lancelot  and  E.  1108 

First  Quarrel  45 

87 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  180 

Columbus  52 

The  Wreck  142 

Ancient  Sage  148 

To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  35 

The  Ring  236 

Forlorn  79 

Village  Wife  46 

Dora  25 


Weakness  to  be  to  with  weakness  !  Locksley  Hall  149 

Sullen,  defiant,  pitying,  to,  Aylmer's  Field  492 

perforce  He  yielded,  to  and  red,  with  fierce  demur :  Princess  v  358 

A  third  is  to :  'Is  this  an  hour  For  private  sorrow's       In  Mem.  xxi  13 
PF  to  be  to  at  such  a  worm,  Marr.  of  Geraint  213 

my  new  mother,  be  not  w  or  grieved  At  thy  new  son,  „  779 

For,  be  he  to  even  to  slaying  me,  Geraint  and  E.  67 

it  made  him  w  the  more  That  she  could  speak  „  112 

neither  dame  nor  damsel  then  IF  at  a  lover's  loss  ?    Merlin  and  V.  607 
W  at  himself.    Not  willing  to  be  known, 
W  that  the  King's  command  to  sally  forth 
W,  but  all  in  awe,  For  twenty  strokes 
Fret  not  yourself,  dear  brother,  nor  be  to, 
And  to  at  Tristram  and  the  lawless  jousts, 
is  the  Demon-god  W  at  his  fall  ? ' 
Wrought    '  She  w  her  people  lasting  good; 
And  all  so  variously  to, 
With  royal  frame-work  of  to  gold ; 
who  to  Two  spirits  to  one  equal  mind — 
times  of  every  land  So  to,  they  will  not  fail, 
she  tum'd  her  sight  The  airy  hand  confusion  w,_ 
But  by  degrees  to  fulness  to 
W  by  the  lonely  maiden  of  the  Lake. 


Nine  years  she  to  it,  sitting  in  the  deeps 


Lancelot  and  E.  160 

560 

719 

1074 

Last  Tournament  237 

St.  Telemachus  20 

To  the  Queen  24 

Ttoo  Voices  457 

Ode  to  Memory  82 

Miller's  D.  235 

Palace  of  Art  148 

226 

You  ask  me,  why,  etc.  14 
M.  d' Arthur  104 


105 


Wrought 


822 


Year 


Wrought  {continued)    More  things  are  w  by  prayer  Than 

this  world  dreams  of.  '  '  M.  d' Arthur  247 
damask  napkin  w  with  horse  and  hound,  Audley  Court  21 
It  may  be  I  have  w  some  miracles,  St.  S.  Stylites  136 
Souls  that  have  toil'd,  and  w,  and  thought  with  me —  Ulysses  46 
and  w  To  make  the  boatmen  fishing-nets,  Enoch  Arden  814 
her  coimsel  all  had  w  About  them :  Ayhner's  Field  151 
w  Such  waste  and  havock  as  the  idolatries,  „  639 
'  Dare  we  dream  of  that,'  I  ask'd,  '  Which  w  us,  Princess  Hi  298 
our  device ;  w  to  the  life ;  „  303 
raised  A  tent  of  satin,  elaborately  w  „  348 
with  whom  the  bell-mouth'd  glass  had  w,  „  iv  155 
So  much  a  kind  of  shame  within  me  w,  „  194 
wherein  were  w  Two  grand  designs ;  „  vii  121 
Let  the  sound  of  those  he  w  for.  Ode  on  Well.  10 
When  he  with  those  deep  voices  w,  „  67 
Ye  know  no  more  than  I  who  w  In  Mem.  vi  17 
and  w  With  human  hands  the  creed  of  creeds  „  xxxvi  9 
Till  out  of  painful  phases  w  There  flutters  „  Ixv  6 
Cloud-towers  by  ghostly  masons  w,  „  Ixx  5 
Is  w  with  timiidt  of  acclaim.  ,.  Ixxv  20 
The  grief  my  loss  in  him  had  w,  „  Ixxx  6 
For  changes  w  on  form  and  face  ;  ,.  Ixxxii  2 
Her  lavish  mission  richly  w,  ,,  Ixxxiv  34 
Whatever  change  the  years  have  w,  ,,  xc  22 
For  what  was  it  else  within  me  w  Maud  I  vi  81 
W,  till  he  crept  from  a  gutted  mine  „  xQ 
W  for  his  house  an  irredeemable  woe  ;  „  II  i  22 
and  w  All  kind  of  service  with  a  noble  ease  Gareth  and  L  488 
So  for  a  month  he  w  among  the  thralls  ;  „  525 
hath  w  on  Lancelot  now  To  lend  thee  horse  and  shield  :  ,.  1323 
Themselves  had  w  on  many  an  innocent.  Geraint  and  E.  178 
I  schemed  and  w  Until  I  overturn'd  him ;  ,.  829 
And  w  too  long  with  delegated  hands,  ,.  893 
work  of  Edjmi  w  upon  himself  After  a  life  of  violence,  ,.  912 
Had  often  w  some  fury  on  myself,  Balin  and  Balan  62 
This  fellow  hath  w  some  foulness  with  his  Queen :  „  565 
What  evil  have  ye  w  ?  Rise  ! '  Merlin  and  V.  67 
*  None  w,  but  siifer'd  much,  an  orphan  maid  !  „  71 
Would  fain  have  w  upon  his  cloudy  mood  „  156 
which  if  any  w  on  anyone  With  woven  paces  ,,  206 
man  so  to  on  ever  seem'd  to  lie  „  208 
could  he  see  but  him  who  w  the  charm  Coming  and  going,  ,.  212 
those  who  w  it  first.  The  wrist  is  parted  „  550 
Some  charm,  which  being  w  upon  the  Queen  „  584 
Nor  saw  she  save  the  King,  who  w  the  charm,  ,,  643 
And  of  the  horrid  foulness  that  he  w,  „  748 
w  upon  his  mood  and  hugg'd  him  close.  „  948 
In  letters  gold  and  azure  ! '  which  was  w  There- 
after ;  Lancelot  and  E.  1345 
V)  into  his  heart  A  way  by  love  that  waken'd  love  Holy  Grail  10 
In  horror  lest  the  work  by  Merlin  w,  „  259 
grace  and  power,  JF  as  a  charm  upon  them,  Guinevere  144 
Hath  w  confusion  in  the  Table  Round  „  220 
My  love  thro'  flesh  hath  w  into  my  life  So  far,  „  558 
Which  w  the  ruin  of  my  lord  the  King.'  „  689 
W  by  the  lonely  maiden  of  the  Lake.     Nine  years 

she  w  it,  sitting  in  the  deeps  Pass,  of  Arthur  272 

More  things  are  w  by  prayer  Than  this  world  dreams  of.       „  415 

Were  w  into  the  tissue  of  my  dream  :  Lover's  Tale  ii  113 
she  w  us  harm.  Poor  soul,  not  knowing)               Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  184 

who  w  Not  Matter,  nor  the  finite-infinite,  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  53 

w  To  mould  the  dream  ;  To  E.  Fitzgerald  29 

and  whatsoe'er  He  w  of  good  or  brave  Epilogue  76 

He  that  w  my  ruin —  Forlorn  2 

I  w  thee  bitter  wrong,  but  thou  forgive,  Death  of  Qinone  43 

Wrong    Caught  at  his  hand,  and  w  it  passionately,  Enoch  Arden  328 

Daintily  she  shriek'd  And  w  it.  Princess,  Pro.  176 

From  our  first  Charles  by  force  we  w  our  claims.  Third  of  Feb.  26 

Lady  Lyonors  w  her  hands  and  wept,  Gareth  and  L.  1395 

The  griefs  by  which  he  once  was  w  Ancient  Sage  127 

Wud  (mad)     an'  screead  like  a  Howl  gone  w —  Owd  Rod  76 

WnSB  (worse)     Ye  be  w  nor  the  men-tommies,  you.  Spinster's  S's.  93 

a-tuggin'  an'  tearin'  me  w  nor  afoor,  Owd  Rod  66 

Wye    And  hushes  half  the  babbling  W,  In  Mem.  xix  7 


Wye  (continued)     The  W  is  hush'd  nor  moved  alonsr, 
Wyvem    Whose  blazing  w  weathercock'd  the  spire, 

Burst  his  own  w  on  the  seal, 

men  and  boys  astride  On  w,  lion,  dragon. 


Xanthns    between  the  ships  and  stream  Of  X 


In  Mem.  xix  9 

Arjlmer's  Field  17 

516 

Roly  Grail  350 


Spec,  of  Iliad  18 


4 


Yabbok  brook     Past  Y  h  the  livelong  night.  Clear-headed  friend  27 

YafOngale    hear  the  garnet-headed  y  Mock  them  :  Last  Tournament  700 

Yard    (iSee  aZso  Chapel-yard,  Olive-yard)     and  his  hair  A  2/ behind.  Godiva\9 

Only  a  y  beneath  the  street,  Mavd  II  vl 

by  two  y's  in  casting  bar  or  stone  Was  counted 

best ;  Gareth  and  L.  518 

Sa  I  runs  to  the  y  fur  a  lether,  Owd  Rod  82 

Yardwand    but  with  his  cheating  y,  home. —  Maud  I  i  52 

Yaupin'  (yelping)     a-yowlin'  an'  y'  like  mad  ;  Owd  Rod  88 

Yawl'd    Then  yelp'd  the  cur,  and  y  the  cat ;  The  Goose  33 

Yawn  (s)     and  toss  them  away  with  a  y.  The  Wreck  21 

Yawn  (verb)    '  Heaven  opens  inward,  chasms  y,  Two  Voices  304 

black  earth  y's  :  the  mortal  disappears  ;  Ode  on  Well.  269 

on  his  right  a  cavern-chasm  ¥  over  darkness,  Balin  and  Balan  313 

to  sigh,  and  to  stretch  and  y,  V.  of  Maeldune  91 

Fiend  would  yell,  the  grave  would  y.  The  Flight  51 

naked  glebe  Should  y  once  more  into  the  gulf,  Demeter  and  P.  43 

Yawn'd     y,  and  rubb'd  his  face,  and  spoke,  Day-Dm.,  Revival  19 

then  he  y,  for  the  wretch  could  sleep,  Bandit's  Death  30 

Yawning  (adj.  and  part.)     Hither  came  Cyril,  and  y  Princess  Hi  124 

And  crowds  that  stream  from  y  doors.  In  Mem.  Ixx  9 

Not  all  mismated  with  a  y  clown,  Geraint  and  E.  426 

But  saw  the  postern  portal  also  wide  Y  ;  Pelleas  and  E.  421 

earth  beneath  me  y  cloven  With  such  a  sound  Lover's  Tale  i  602 
up-shadowing  high  above  us  with  her  y  tiers  of  guns.      The  Revenge  41 

While  the  grave  is  y.  Forlorn  6( 

Yawning  (s)     The  y  of  an  earthquake-cloven  chasm.  Lover's  Tale  i  377 
Year    (See  also  After-years,  A-year,  Cycle-year,  New- 
year,   Nine  -  years  -  f oi^ht  -  for.    Nine  -  years- 
ponder'd.  Old-year,  Ta-year,  Three-years',  To- 

year)  and  clear  Delight,  the  infant's  dawning  y.  Supp.  Confessions  67 

The  lamb  rejoiceth  in  the  y,  „           157 

Because  they  are  the  earliest  of  the  y).  Ode  to  Memory  27 

music  flowing  from  The  illimitable  y's.  „           41 

A  SPiRn  haunts  the  y's  last  hours  A  Spirit  haunts .' 

And  the  y's  last  rose.  „         2li 

And  if  you  kiss'd  her  feet  a  thousand  y's.  The  form,  the  form  II 

mirror  clear  That  hangs  before  her  all  the  y,  L.  of  Shalott  ii  1. 

I  said,  '  The  y's  with  change  advance  :  Two  Voices  51 

I  said  that '  all  the  y's  invent ;  „         T 

'  I  found  him  when  my  y's  were  few ;  „        27 

For  is  not  our  first  y  forgot  ?  „        36.'- 

Oft  lose  whole  y's  of  darker  mind.  „        37^ 

Many  a  chance  the  y's  beget.  Miller's  D.  20 

Untouch'd  with  any  shade  of  y's,  „        21 

so  three  y's  She  prosper'd  :  Palace  of  Art  21 

So  when  four  y's  were  wholly  finished,  „  28 
To-morrow  'ill  be  of  all  the  y  the  maddest  merriest  da}'.  May  Queen  4 
The  good  old  y,  the  dear  old  time.                    May  Queen,  N.  Y's.  E. 

How  sadly,  I  remember,  rose  the  morning  of  the  y  !         „  Con. 

Which  men  call'd  Aulis  in  those  iron  ij's  :  D.  of  F.  Women  10 

And  the  old  y  is  dead.  „           24 

Desiring  what  is  mingled  with  past  y's,  „        _  28 

For  the  old  y  lies  a-dying.  D.  of  the  0.  Year 

Old  y,  you  must  not  die  ;  „ 

Old  y,  you  shall  not  die.  (repeat)  „       9,  2 

Old  y,  you  must  not  go ;  ..  1 
Old  y,  you  shall  not  go. 


n 


Tear 


823 


Year 


Year  {continued)    A  jollier  y  we  shall  not  see. 
Old  y,  if  you  mvist  die. 
Old  y,  we'll  dearly  rue  for  you : 
Two  y's  his  chair  is  seen  Empty  before  us. 
wisdom  of  a  thousand  y's  Is  in  them. 
Watch  what  main-currents  draw  the  y's  : 
The  Spirit  of  the  y's  to  come 
Nine  y's  she  wrought  it,  sitting  in  the  deeps 
the  days  darken  round  me,  and  the  y's, 
at  that  time  of  y  The  lusty  bird  takes  every  hour 
Call'd  to  me  from  the  y's  to  come, 
and  with  each  The  y  increased. 
The  daughters  of  the  y,  One  after  one, 


D.  of  the  0.  Year  20 

27 

43 

To  J.  S.  22 

Of  old  sat  Freedom  18 

Love  thou  thy  land  21 

55 

M.  d' Arthur  105 

237 

„       Ef.  10 

Gardener's  D.  180 

199 

200 


wish'd  this  marriage,  night  and  day.  For  many  tj's.'  Bora  22 

not  been  for  these  five  y's  So  full  a  harvest :  „    65 

as  y's  Went  forward,  Mary  took  another  mate  ;  „  170 

ten  y's  back — 'Tis  now  at  least  ten  y's —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  50 

My  sweet,  wild,  fresh  three  quarters  of  a  y,  Edwin  Morris  2 

This  not  be  all  in  vain,  that  thrice  ten  y's,  St.  S.  Stylites  10 

die  here  To-day,  and  whole  y's  long,  „  54 

Three  y's  I  lived  upon  a  pillar,  high  Six  cubits,  and  three 

y's  on  one  of  twelve ;  And  twice  three  y's 
I  grew  Twice  ten  long  weary  weary  y's 
good  old  Summers,  yhjy  Made  ripe  in  Stminer- 

chace  : 
I  circle  in  the  grain  Five  himdred  rings  of  y's — 
That  show  the  y  is  turn'd. 

or  2/  by  2/  alone  Sit  brooding  in  the  ruins  of  a  life. 
Art  more  thro'  Love,  and  greater  than  thy  y's, 
onward,  leading  up  the  golden  y.  (repeat) 
And  slow  and  sure  comes  up  the  golden  y. 
Thro'  all  the  season  of  the  golden  y. 
Enrich  the  markets  of  the  golden  y. 
Thro'  all  the  circle  of  the  golden  y  ?  ' 
As  on  this  vision  of  the  golden  y.' 
This  same  grand  y  is  ever  at  the  doors.' 
mortal  simimers  to  such  length  of  y's  should  come 
'  Never,  never,'  whisper'd  by  the  phantom  y's, 
excitement  that  the  coming  y's  would  yield, 
Better  fifty  y's  of  Europe  than  a  cycle  of  Cathay. 
The  fatal  byword  of  all  y'*  to  come. 
The  varying  y  with  blade  and  sheaf 
Y  after  y  unto  her  feet, 
'  I'd  sleep  another  hundred  y's, 
every  himdred  y's  to  rise  And  learn  the  world, 
And  all  that  else  the  y's  will  show, 
And  y's  of  cultivation. 
Or  this  first  snowdrop  of  the  y 
So  fares  it  since  the  y's  began, 
So  many  y's  from  his  due.' 
Y's  have  wander'd  by. 
Then,  in  the  boyhood  of  the  y. 
Came  floating  on  for  many  a  month  and  y, 
'  Change,  reverting  to  the  y's, 
When  the  y's  have  died  away.' 
Here  on  tins  beach  a  hundred  y's  ago, 
he  served  a  y  On  board  a  merchantman. 
And  merrily  ran  the  y's,  seven  happy  y's,  Seven  happj- 

y's  of  health  and  competence, 
two  y's  after  came  a  boy  to  be  The  rosy  idol 
so  ten  y's.  Since  Enoch  left  his  hearth 
That  he  who  left  you  ten  long  y's  ago 
That  after  all  these  sad  imcertain  y's. 
Yet  wait  a,y,  a,y  is  not  so  long  :  Surely  I  shall  be  wiser 

in  a  y : 
you  have  my  promise — in  a  y  :  Will  you  not  bide  your  y  as 

I  bide  mine  ?  '    And  Philip  answer'd  '  I  will  bide  my  y.' 
'  Is  it  a  2/  ?  '  she  ask'd. 
Till  half-another  y  had  slipt  away, 
sunny  and  rainy  seasons  came  and  went  Y  after  y. 
In  those  far-off  seven  happy  y's  were  born ; 
as  the  y  RoU'd  itself  round  again  to  meet  the  day 
And  I  have  borne  it  with  me  all  these  y's. 
For  here  I  came,  twenty  y's  back — 
name  About  these  meadows,  twenty  y's  ago.' 


86 
90 

Talking  Oak  39 

84 

176 

Love  and  Duty  11 

„  21 

Golden  Tear  26,  41 

31 

36 

46 

51 

58 

74 

Locksley  Hall  67 

83 

111 

184 

Godiva  67 

Day-Dm.,  Sleep.  P.  1 

Sleef.  B.  1 

„  Depart.  9 

„  L' Envoi  7 

13 

Amphion  98 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  11 

Will  Water.  169 

Lady  Clare  32 

The  Captain  66 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  19 

Vision  of  Sin  54 

159 

Poet's  Song  16 

Enoch  Arden  10 

52 


81 

89 

359 

404 

415 

432 

437 
458 
471 
624 
686 
821 
895 
The  Brook  77 
220 


Aylmer's  Field  34 

58 

79 

357 

382 

508 

601 

814 

837 

Sea  Dreams  3 

.  '^'^ 
Princess  i  35 

125 

„    a  11 


70 

Hi  155 

269 

tv74 

507 

«127 

vilS 

64 

m279 

Con.  95 

103 


Year  {continued)    The  same  old  rut  would  deepen  y 

byy; 
a  y  or  two  before  Call'd  to  the  bar, 
Leolin's  first  nurse  was,  five  y's  after,  hers  : 
I  lived  for  y's  a  stunted  sunless  life  ; 
These  partridge-breeders  of  a  thousand  y's. 
So  old,  that  twenty  y's  before, 
the  y's  which  are  not  Time's  Had  blasted  him — 
Seam'd  with  the  shallow  cares  of  fifty  y's  : 
Dead  for  two  y's  before  his  death  was  he  ; 
One  babe  was  theirs,  a  Margaret,  three  y's  old  : 
scrapings  from  a  dozen  y's  Of  dust  and  deskwork  : 
with  a  bootless  calf  At  eight  y's  old  ; 
I  think  the  y  in  which  oiu:  olives  fail'd. 
lies  the  child  We  lost  in  other  y's, 
Not  for  three  y's  to  correspond  with  home  ;  Not  for  three 

y's  to  cross  the  liberties  ;  Not  for  three  y's  to  speak  with 

any  men ; 
May  beat  admission  in  a  thousand  y's, 
a  race  Of  giants  living,  each,  a  thoxisand  y's, 
that  great  y  of  equal  mights  and  rights, 
Six  thousand  y's  of  fear  have  made  you 
The  desecrated  shrine,  the  trampled  y. 
Rose  a  nurse  of  ninety  y's, 
dames  and  heroines  of  the  golden  y  Shall  strip 
Yet  in  the  long  y's  liker  must  they  grow ; 
farewell,  and  welcome  for  the  y  To  follow : 
Give  up  their  parks  some  dozen  times  a  y 
Seventy  y's  ago,  my  darling,  seventy  y's  ago. 

(repeat)  Grandmother  24,  56 

in  a  himdred  y's  it  '11  all  be  the  same,  „  47 

Never  jealous — not  he  :  we  had  many  a  happy  y  ;  ,,  71 

And  that  was  ten  y's  back,  or  more,  „  75 

I've  'ed  my  quart  ivry  market-noight  for  foorty  y.   N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  8 
I  'a  managed  for  Squoire  coom  Michaelmas  thutty  y.  „  48 

Many  and  many  a  happy  y.  To  F.  D.  Maurice  48 

I  walk'd  with  one  I  loved  two  and  thirty  y's  ago.  V.  of  Cauteretz  4 

two  and  thirty  y's  were  a  mist  that  rolls  away ;  „  6 

Hebe,  it  is  here  the  close  of  the  y,  Spiteful  Letter  1 

His  beauty  still  with  his  y's  increased.  The  Victim  34 

Gone,  till  the  end  of  the  y.  Window,  Gone  2 

has  bitten  the  heel  of  the  going  y.  ,,         Winter  6 

Ay  is  life  for  a  hundred  y's,  „  No  Answer  9 

'  A  y  hence,  a  y  hence.'  „  When  5 

But  who  shall  so  forecast  the  y's  In  Mem.  t  5 

To  touch  thy  thousand  y's  of  gloom  :  „  H  12 

Some  pleasure  from  thine  early  y's.  „         iv  10 

Come  Time,  and  teach  me,  many  y's,  „       xiii  13 

Thro'  four  sweet  y's  arose  and  fell,  „        xxii  3 

This  y  I  slept  and  woke  with  pain,  „  xxwiii  13 

And  in  the  long  harmonious  y's  „        xlio  9 

And  those  five  y's  its  richest  field.  „       xlvi  12 

What  record  ?  not  the  sinless  y's  „         IH  11 

With  so  much  hope  for  y's  to  come,  „        lix  14 

And  o'er  the  number  of  thy  y's.  „       Ixvii  8 

'  More  y's  had  made  me  love  thee  more.  „      Ixxxi  8 

The  all-assuming  months  and  y's  „    Ixxxv  67 

A  friendship  for  the  y's  to  come.  „  80 

The  primrose  of  the  later  y,  „  119 

Whatever  change  the  y's  have  wrought,  „         xc  22 

The  hope  of  unaccomplish'd  y's  „         xci  7 

A  fact  within  the  coming  y  ;  „       xdi  10 

I  read  Of  that  glad  y  which  once  had  been,  „        xcu  22 

She  keeps  the  gift  of  y's  before,  „     xcvii  25 

And  yhyy  the  landscape  grow  „  ci  19 

As  2/  by  2/  the  labourer  tills  His  wonted  glebe,  „  21 

And  yhyy  our  memory  fades  „  23 

The  y  is  dying  in  the  night ;  „  cvi3 

The  y  is  going,  let  him  go ;  „  7 

Ring  in  the  thousand  y's  of  peace.  „  28 

Thro'  all  the  y's  of  April  blood  ;  „        cix  12 

The  men  of  rathe  and  riper  y's  :  „  cx2 

meets  the  y,  and  gives  and  takes  The  colours  „        cxvi  3 

A  cry  above  the  conquer'd  y's  „     cxxxi  7 

I  since  then  have  number'd  o'er  Some  thrice  three  y's  :         „     Con.  10 


Tear 

Yeas  (continued)    New  as  his  title,  buUt  last  v 
^ast  y,  I  caught  a  glimpse  of  his  face, 
He  may  stay  for  a  y  who  has  gone  for  a  week  : 
10  me,  her  friend  of  the  y's  before  • 
but  of  force  to  withstand,  Y  upon  y 
For  ys,a.  measureless  iU,  For  y's,  for  ever 
My  mood  .s  changed,  for  it  fell  at  a  time  of  y 
thro  all  this  tract  of  y's  Wearing 
Uiat  same  night,  the  night  of  the  new  v. 
This  y,  when  Merlin  (for  his  hour  had  come) 

^TflX.t'^^''^  l^^'  ^"^  ^^«"sb  "^y  prone  y, 

^Jt^^^^K^  use  thereof,  According  to  the  y's. 

What  I  these  two  y's  past  have  won 

toree  sad  y's  ago.  That  night  of  fire, 

Her  suitor  m  old  y's  before  Geraint, 
Jiarl,  if  you  love  me  as  in  former  y's 

and  my  purpose  three  y's  old, 

Arthur  call'd  His  treasurer,  one  of  many  y's, 

those  three  kmgless  y's  Have  pastr- 

from  the  presence  into  y's  Of  exile— 

Ay  ago— nay,  then  I  love  thee  not— 

Was  one  y  gone,  and  on  returning  found 

this  cut  is  fresh ;  That  ten  y's  back  • 

Once  every  y,  a  joust  for  one  of  these  : 

by  nme  y  s'  proof  we  needs  must  learn 

eight  y  5  past,  eight  jousts  had  been,  and  still  Had 

Lancelot  won  the  diamond  of  the  y 
However  marr'd,  of  more  than  twice  her  y's. 
Heard  from  the  Baron  that,  ten  y's  before 
now  for  forty  y's  A  hermit,  who  had  pray'd. 
This  many  a  y  have  done  despite  and  wrong 
not  to  love  again ;  Not  at  my  y's, 
Sprmg  after  spring,  for  half  a  hundred  y's : 

Ihen  came  a  y  of  miracle : 
Yea  rotten  with  a  hundred  y's  of  death, 


824 


Yearn 


Mavd  I  X  19 

xiii  27 

,,  awi  6 

„       xix  64 

„     //  n  25 

49 

„     ///  vi  4 

Bed.  of  Idylls  24 

Com.  of  Arthur  209 

228 

Gareth  and  L.  95 

345 

Marr.  of  Geraint  554 

633 

Geraint  and  E.  276 

355 

849 

Balin  and  Baton  5 

63 

156 

504 

Merhn  and  V.  708 

Lancelot  and  E.  22 

61 


67 

257 

272 

402 

1209 

1296 

Holy  Grail  19 

166 

496 


Hath  lain  for  y's  at  rest—  t^oi  t       "        ^"a 

The  snowdrop  only,  flowering  thro'  the  y,  ^''  TournamentM 

Made  answer,  '  I  had  liefer  twenty  y's  "            9„ 

memories  Of  Tristram  in  that  y  he  was  away.'  "            ilk 

S';SKt«  ae^.a:  ""^^- ''-  ^°'  '^•~  i 

months  wiir  add  themselves  and  make  the  y's.  The  v's              " 

wiU  roll  into  the  centuries,                        :/  .         i/ * 

there,  an  Abbess,  lived  For  three  brief  y's,  "        f^n 

iJum  d  at  his  lowest  in  the  rolling  v  r>„^^     f   'i  ^,      „' 

Nine  y's  she  wrought  it,  sitt'r^l^  I'he  deeps  ^''''-  "^  ^'•'^%?^ 

days  darken  round  me,  and  the  y's,  "            TA? 

And  the  new  sun  rose  bringing  the  new  y.  "            |^ 

r..^^'''^  ^/"i^""^.^  °"'  *  '^^^P  ^d  stormy  strait  Iter's  Tale  i  23 

nmny  y's,  (For  they  seem  many  and  my  most  of  life,  ig 

As  Love  and  I  do  number  equal  y's,  '            "            |^ 

careful  burthen  of  our  tender  y's  Trembled  "            o?? 

bweet  thro'  strange  y's  to  know  "            Hi 

Pass  we  then  A  term  of  eighteen  y's.  "            i^ 

Thou  art  blessed  in  the  y's,  divinest  day  !  "            fsR 

Had  dravyn  herself  from  many  thousand  y's,  "            t?n 

As  the  tall  ship,  that  many  a  dreary  y          '  "            2x2 

And  kept  It  thro' a  hundred  y's  of  gloom  "        •    To^ 

Picture  of  his  lady,  taken  Some  y's  before,  "        '"  J?? 

1  knew  a  man,  nor  many  y's  ago  ;  "            iti 

^^'  that  the  flower  of  a  y  and  a  half  is  thine.  To  A    "Tennvs^^ 

I  ha'  work'd  for  him  fifteen  y's,  v'  ,  ^'*2/«o»  ^ 

Harry  was  bound  to  the  Dorsetshire  farm  for  y's  an'  for  y's  ^"""^^'W 

y'i*  went  over  till  I  that  was  little       ""'^'2/^an  fory  s,        „  19 

tiU  he  told  me  that  so  many  y's  had  gone  by,  "          ql 

he  call'd  m  the  dark  to  me  y  If  terv—  p-      t.  !^ 

r  a^ter  «  in  the  misi  and  the  wind^  i^^^M  47 

back-end  o' June,  Ten  y  sin',  m^^h   n\i.i     VS 

our  house  has  held  Three  hundred  y's-  Sistelft  a^%  Jo 

On  a  sudden  after  two  Italian  y's  ^      ""^  ^'If^ 

and  in  the  second  y  was  born  A  second—  "  o«q 

thaw  nigh  upo'  seventy  y.  -rr  .„"     „.  ./^ 

/«  the  Child.  Hosp.  32 


Year  (continued)    Eighteen  long  y's  of  waste  n^j      i     o^ 

A  ong  the  y's  of  haste  and  ri[.domyS  De  Prof    tZg  It 

Of  Turkish  Islam  for  five  hundred  y's,  ifL^        tJ 

g^taa  by  thy  winter  weight  of  y's  Is  yet  unbroken.    To  ¥^^0] 
Kino,  that  hast  reign'd  six  hundred  v's.  t?;  ^^?  J 


^NO,  that  hast  reign'd  six  hundred  y's, 
And  dating  many  a  y  ago.  Has  hit  on  this, 
i.  WISH  I  were  in  the  y's  of  old 
five-fold  thy  term  Of  y's,  1  lay ; 
their  examples  reach  a  hand  Far  thro'  all  y's 
lo  spend  my  one  last  y  among  the  hills.        ' 
What  Power  but  the  Y's  that  make 
ihe  y  s  that  made  the  stripling  wise 
The  y's  that  when  my  Youth  began 
But  vain  the  tears  for  darken'd  y's 
Whin,  yer  Honour  ?  last  y— 
Danny  was  there,  yer  Honour,  for  forty  v 
as  ye  used  to  do  twelve  y  sin' ! 
Dead — and  sixty  y's  ago,  j 

floods  and  earthquakes  of  the  planet's  dawning  y's 
(jone  with  whom  for  forty  y's  my  life 
till  ten  thousand  y's  have  gone. 


To  DarUe  1 

To  E.  Fitzgerald  49 

Tiresias  1 

,.       34 

„    127 

Ancient  Sage  16 

91 

111 

155 

183 

ToinorrovD  1 

30 

Spinster's  S's.  59 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  37 

40 

47 

78 


177 
254 

267 


Here  we  met,  our  latest  meeting— Amy— sixty  y's 

far  and  far  from  here  is  all  the  hope  of  eighty  v's 
btrove  for  sixty  widow'd  y's  to  help  ^  -^  -^  • 
m  the  vanish'd  y,  You  saw  the  league-lone 

rampart-fire  ^         p»„  y    <-        „      ,     „„ 

glorying  in  the  blissful  y's  again  to  be,  '"• '"  ^'^f^^^'y,  ?« 

IS^^^S^t^t^^l^^,    Pref  Poe!'.toTBl 

through  twice  a  hundred  y's,  on  thee.  ToWrV     T"J 

Ceremonial  Of  this  y  of  her  Jubilee.                           '^'**-  ^-  ^'"'"'^  ^1 

And  this  y  of  her  Jubilee,  (repeat)  "           00    ft 

Henry's  fifty  y's  are  all  in  shadow,  "           '^^'  % 

l>iftyys  of  ever-broadening  Commerce!     Fifty  w's  " 
of  ever-brightening  Science  !     Fifty  y's  of  ever- 
widening  Empire  ! 

'  Hail  to  the  glorious  Golden  y  of  her  Jubilee  ' '  "                 ^ 
T^J^l^L'^^^l'^?^  ^^"^^  ^^«'e  y  with  me,     ■          Demeier  and  P.  iS 


When  thou  Shalt  dwell  the  whole  bright  y  with  me 

Ten  y  sin— Naay— naay  !  ' 

'ud  coom  at  the  fall  o'  the  y, 

hall  bower — an'  ten  y  sin ; 

Twelve  times  in  the  y  Bring  me  bliss. 

For  ten  thousand  y's  Old  and  new  ? 

Then  I  and  she  were  married  for  a  y,  One  y  without  a 

storni, 
And  you  my  Miriam  bom  within  the  y  ;  And  she  my 

Miriam  dead  within  the  y.  ^ 

for  twenty  y's  Bound  by  the  golden  cord 
1  have  worn  them  y  by  y — 
Till  earth  has  roll'd  her  latest  y — 
And  more  than  half  a  hundred  y's  ago, 
silver  y  should  cease  to  mourn  and  sigh— 


139 

Owd  Roa  20 

23 

116 

The  Ring  5 

„      19 

..     283 


285 

.,     428i 

Happy  IC 

To  Ulysses  £, 

To  Mary  Boyle  21 

51 


Prog,  of  Spring 


Lodge  with  me  all  the  y  ! 

mark  The  coming  y's  great  good  and  varied  ills,  o' 

^^iz\^'ZT.S'lk;fs  sr  ^^^"'^^^^'^  '-^-  ^TsS^it4- 

That  blush  of  fifty  y's  ago,  my  dekr,  ^''''  "'^  '^'  ^ 

^FA^!,"!?!  2/  m  under  the  blue.    Last  y  you  sang 


it  as  gladly.' 
'Here  again,  here,  here,  here,  happy  y  '  1 
Thro  all  the  clouded  y's  of  widowhood, 
I  bean  chuch-warden  mysen  i'  the  parish  fur 

fifteen  y. 
Y  will  graze  the  heel  of  y. 
Yearlong    'From  y  poring  on  thy  pictured  eyes, 
Yearly    Why  should  they  miss  their  y  due 
Yearn       Not  less  swift  souls  that  y  for  light 
I  y  to  breathe  the  airs  of  heaven  ' 

and  y  to  hurry  precipitously 


The  Throstle  5 
13 
Death  of  (Enone  103 

Church-warden,  etc.  8 

Poets  and  Critics  14 

Princess  vii  340 

In  Mem.  xxix  15 

Two  Voices  67 

Sir  Galahad  63 

Boddicea 


4 1 


II 


Yearn 


825 


Yew 


Yearn  {continued)    A  part  of  stillness,  y's  to  speak 
but  made  me  y  For  larger  glimpses 
and  the  miser  would  y  for  his  gold, 
¥,  and  clasp  the  hands  and  murmur, 


In  Mem.  Ixxxv  78 

Tiresias  20 

Despair  100 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  192 


Yellow  (adj.)  (continued)  From  out  the  y  woods  upon  the  hill  Lover's  Tale  ii  80 
Yellow  (s)     Shot  over  with  purple,  and  green,  and  y.  Dying  Swan  20 


y  to  lay  my  loving  head  upon  your  leprous  breast.  Happy  26 

Yeam'd    While  still  I  y  for  hmnan  praise.  Two  Voices  123 

And  y  toward  William  ;  but  the  j'outh,  Dora  6 

But  Enoch  y  to  see  her  face  again  ;  Enoch  Arden  717 

While  in  her  heart  she  y  incessantly  „            866 

Y  after  by  the  wisest  of  the  wise,  Lucretius  267 
y  To  hear  her  weeping  by  his  grave  ?  In  Mem.  xxxi  3 
And  y  to  burst  the  folded  gloom,  „  cxxii  3 
he  y  to  make  complete  The  tale  of  diamonds  Lancelot  and  E.  90 
Sprsuig  into  fire  and  vanish'd,  tho'  I  y  To  follow  ;  Holy  Grail  506 
I  y  and  strove  To  tear  the  twain  asunder  „  785 
now  y  to  shake  The  burthen  off  his  heart  Last  Tournament  179 
I  y  for  warmth  and  colour  which  I  found  In  Lancelot  Guinevere  647 
I  y  For  his  voice  again,  The  Wreck  103 
To  lure  those  eyes  that  only  y  to  see,  St.  Telemachus  36 

Yearning    {See  also  Heart-yearning)    A  nobler  y  never 

broke  her  rest  The  form,  the  form  2 

Some  y  toward  the  lamps  of  night ;  Two  Voices  363 

In  y's  that  can  never  be  exprest  By  signs  D.  of  F.  Women  283 

¥  to  mix  himself  with  Life.  Love  thou  thy  land  56 

Gave  utterance  by  the  y  of  an  eye,  Love  and  Duty  62 

gray  spirit  y  in  desire  To  follow  knowledge  Ulysses  30 

team  Which  love  thee,  y  for  thy  yoke,  Tithonus  40 

Y  for  the  large  excitement  Locksley  Hall  111 
profit  lies  in  barren  faith,  And  vacant  y,  In  Mem.  cviii  6 
Less  y  for  the  friendship  fled,  „  cxvi  15 
The  leaf  is  dead,  the  y  past  away  :  Last  Tournament  277 
y's  ? — ay  !  for,  hour  by  hour,  „  583 
Deeper  than  any  y's  after  thee  „  586 
The  boundless  y  of  the  Prophet's  heart —  Tiresias  81 

Yearningly    moving  again  to  a  melody  Y  tender,  Merlin  and  the  G.  91 

Yeasty     '  The  sands  and  y  surges  mix  Sailor  Boy  9 

Yell  (s)    {See  also  Connter-yell,  Woman-yell)    rings  to 

the  y  of  the  trampled  wife,  Maud  /  i  38 

I  was  near  him  when  the  savage  y's  Com.  of  Arthur  256 

j       He  ground  his  teeth  together,  sprang  with  a  y,  Balin  and  Balan  538 

,       weird  y,  Unearthlier  than  all  shriek  of  bird  „              544 

echoing  y  with  y,  they  fired  the  tower,  Last  Tournament  478 

volley  on  volley,  and  y  upon  y —  Def.  of  Lu^know  34 

Thro'  all  the  y  s  and  counter-yells  To  Duke  of  Argyll  8 

dog  :  it  was  chain'd,  but  its  horrible  y  Bandit's  Death  35 

Ydl  (verb)     Let  the  fox  bark,  let  the  wolf  y.  Pelleas  and  E.  472 

Who  y's  Here  in  the  still  sweet  summer  night,  „            472 

Fiend  would  y,  the  grave  would  yawn.  The  Flight  51 

Yell'd     score  of  pugs  And  poodles  y  within,  Edwin  Morris  120 

y  and  round  me  drove  In  narrowing  circles  till  I  y  again      Liusretius  56 


Princess  v  250 
Boadicea  6,  72 
77 
Pelleas  and  E.  572 
St.  Telemachus  46 
Akbar's  Dream  116 
Geraint  and  E.  733 
Locksley  H.,  Sixty  135 
That  sparkled  on 


they  made  a  halt ;  The  horses  y  ; 

Y  and  shriek'd  between  her  daughters  (repeat) 

Y  as  when  the  winds  of  winter  tear  an  oak 
•       '  Fight  therefore,'  y  the  youth, 

caged  beast  Y,  ashe  y  of  yore  for  Christian  blood 

Y  '  hast  thou  brought  us  down  a  new  Koran 
Yelling    and  fled  Y  as  from  a  spectre 

and,  y  with  the  y  street. 
Yellow  (adj.)    ("See  a^so  Dim-yellow) 

the  y  field,  L.  of  Shalott  Hi  8 

The  pale  y  woods  were  waning,  „  iv  2 

and  the  y  down  Border'd  with  palm,  Lotos- Eaters  21 

They  sat  them  down  upon  the  y  sand,  „  37 

turning  y  Falls,  and  floats  adown  the  air.  „     C.  S.  30 

Round  and  round  the  spicy  downs  the  y  Lotos-dust 

is  blown.  „  104 

And  in  the  chasm  are  foam  and  y  sands  ;  Enoch  Arden  2 

And  here  upon  a  y  eyelid  fall'n  Lucretius  141 

With  lengths  of  y  ringlet,  like  a  girl,  Princess  i  3 

Yet  the  y  leaf  hates  the  greener  leaf,  Spiteful  Letter  15 

;       y  vapours  choke  The  great  city  sounding  wide  ;  Maud  II  iv  63 

And  whit«  sails  flying  on  the  y  sea  ;  But  not  to 

goodly  hill  or  y  sea  Marr.  of  Geraint  829 

Then  flash'd  a  y  gleam  across  the  world.  Holy  Grail  402 

little  lake,  that,  flooding,  leaves  Low  banks  of  y  sand  ;    Lover's  Tale  i  535 


Eleanore  22 

A  spirit  haunts  2 

Sir  L.  and  Q.  G.  15 

Last  Tournament  3 

154 

241 

Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamley  1 


Yellow-banded    Or  the  y-b  bees, 
Yellowing    Dwelling  amid  these  y  bowers  : 

In  curves  the  y  river  ran. 

At  Camelot,  high  above  the  y  woods, 

and  y  leaf  And  gloom  and  gleam, 

High  over  all  the  y  Autumn-tide, 

Our  birches  y  and  from  each  The  light  leaf 
falling  fast. 
Yellow-ringleted    Thither  at  their  will  they  haled  the 

y-r  Britoness —  Boadicea  55 

Yellow-throated     And  y-t  nestling  in  the  nest.  Lancelot  and  E.  12 

Yelp  (s)     With  inward  y  and  restless  forefoot  Lucretius  45 

But  I  hear  no  y  of  the  beast.  By  an  Evolution.  19 

Yelp  (verb)     Lean-headed  Eagles  y  alone.  Princess  vii  211 

felt  the  goodly  hounds  Y  at  his  heart.  Last  Tournament  504 

Yelp'd-Yelpt    Then  yelp'd  the  cur,  and  yawl'd  the  cat ;  The  Goose  33 

that  chain'd  rage,  which  ever  yelpt  within,  Balin  and  Balan  319 

Yelping    See  Yaupin' 
Yeoman    And  let  the  foolish  y  go.  L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  72 

A  mockery  to  the  yoemen  over  ale,  Aylmer's  Field  497 

Yerl  (earl)     Then  'e  married  a  great  Y's  darter.  Church-warden,  etc.  20 

Yes     {See  also  Yis)     keen  shriek  '  Y  love,  y,  Edith,  y,'      Aylmer's  Field  582 

When  the  happy  Y  Falters  from  her  lips,  Maud  I  xvii  9 

brightens  at  the  clash  of  '  F  '  and  '  No,'  Ancient  Sage  71 

Yester    — and  y  afternoon  I  dream'd, —  Akbar's  Dream  169 

Yesterday    {See  also  Yisther-day)    for  y,  When  I  past  by,  a  wild 


and  wanton  pard, 
sharp  look,  mother,  I  gave  him  y. 
And  now,  As  tho'  'twere  y, 
'  Where  were  you  y  ?    Whose  child  is  that  ? 
'  O  y,  you  know,  the  fair  Was  holden  at  the  town  ; 
'  y  I  met  him  suddenly  in  the  street, 
I  curse  the  tongue  that  all  thro'  y  Reviled  thee. 
But  y  you  never  open'd  lip, 
the  prize  Of  Tristram  in  the  jousts  of  y, 
'  Friend,  did  ye  mark  that  fountain  y 
A  portion  of  the  pleasant  y, 
To-day  ?  but  what  oty? 
that  y  From  out  the  Ghost  of  Pindar 
I  climb'd  the  hill  with  Hubert  y, 

0  the  grief  when  y  They  bore  the  Cross 
Foimd  y — ^forgotten  mine  own  rhyme 

Yester-eve     But  light-foot  Iris  brought  it  y-e, 

Where  all  but  y-e  was  dustj^-dry. 

and  y-e,  While  ye  were  talking  sweetly 

And  y-e  I  would  not  tell  you  of  it, 
Yester-even    Lastly  yonder  y-e, 

1  saw  the  flash  of  him  but  y. 
Yestermorn    These  measured  words,  my  work  of  y. 

Too  harsh  to  your  companion  y  ; 

Long-closeted  with  her  the  y. 

What  if  he  had  told  her  y 

saw  him  ride  More  near  by  many  a  rood  than  y, 

tho'  mine  own  ears  heard  you  y — 

Had  I  not  dream'd  I  loved  her  y  ? 


CEnone  198 

May  Queen  15 

Gardener's  D.  82 

Dora  87 

Talking  Oak  101 

Sea  Dreams  145 

Gareih  and  L.  1322 

Merlin  and  V.  271 

Last  Tournament  8 

286 

Lover's  Tale  i  122 

Ancient  Sage  216 

To  Prof.  J  ebb  2 

The  Ring  152 

Happy  47 

To  Mary  Boyle  21 

CEnone  83 

Lucretius  32 

Marr.  of  Geraint  697 

702 

Boadicea  29 

Balin  and  Balan  303 

Golden  Year  21 

Princess  Hi  199 

iv  322 

Maud  I  vi  50 

Geraint  and  E.  442 

740 

Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  169 


Who  breaking  in  upon  us  y,  Akbar's  Dream  114 

Yesternight    Thy  tuwhoos  of  y,  The  Owl  ii  2 

Flinging  the  gloom  of  y  On  the  white  day  ;  Ode  to  Memory  9 

I  beheld  her,  when  she  rose  The  y.  Princess  v  176 

'  Sweet  brothers,  y  I  seem'd  a  curious  little  maid  Lancelot  and  E.  1034 

for,  y,  To  me,  the  great  God  Ares,  Tiresias  110 

Yet-loved    the  y-l  sire  would  make  Confusion  In  Mem.  xc  18 

Yet-unblazon'd     Returning  brought  the  y-u  shield,  Lancelot  and  E.  379 

Yet-unbroken     coimt  The  y-u  strength  of  all  his  knights.        Holy  Grail  326 

Yet-warm     and  now  lies  there  A  y-w  corpse,  Gareth  and  L.  80 

Yew     Death,  walking  all  alone  beneath  a  y,  Love  and  Death  5 

And  darkness  in  the  village  y.  Two  Voices  273 

Came  y's,  a  dismal  coterie ;  Amphion  42 

A  black  y  gloom'd  the  stagnant  air,  The  Letters  2 

and  stole  Up  by  the  wall,  behind  the  y ;  Enoch  Arden  739 

Sick  for  the  hollies  and  the  y's  of  home —  Princess,  Pro.  187 

Old  Y,  which  graspest  at  the  stones  In  Mem.  ii  1 

Dark  y,  that  graspest  at  the  stones  „     xxxix  4 


Yew 


826 


Yon 


Yew  (continued)    Before  the  mouldering  of  a  j/ ;  In  Mem.  Ixxvi  8 

And  oft  they  met  among  the  garden  y's,  Lancelot  and  E.  645 

He  foimd  her  in  among  the  garden  y's,  „              923 

to  whom  thro'  those  black  walls  of  y  „              969 
Break  thro'  the  y's  and  cypress  of  thy  grave,      Bed.  Poem  Prin.  Alice  12 

I  seem  to  see  a  new-dug  grave  up  yonder  by  the  y  !  The  Flight  98 
ew-tree   (See  also  Peacock-yewtree)    Up  higher  with 

the  y-t  by  it,       _  Walk,  to  the  Mail  13 

in  it  throve  an  ancient  evergreen,  A  y,  Enoch  Arden  736 

and  as  they  sat  Beneath  a  world-old  y-t.  Holy  Grail  13 

'  O  brother,  I  have  seen  this  y-t  smoke,  „          18 

Yew-wood     In  the  y-w  black  as  night,  Oriana  19 

Ygeme    Was  wedded  with  a  winsome  wife,  I':  Covi.  of  Arthur  188 
Uther  in  his  wrath  and  heat  besiegetl  Y  within 

Tintagil,  „              199 

'  Daioghter  of  Gorlois  and  Y  am  I ; '  „              316 

Yield    y  you  time  To  make  demand  of  modem  rhyme  To  the  Queen  10 

To  y  consent  to  my  desire  :  Miller's  D.  138 

But  y  not  me  the  praise :  St.  S.  Stylites  185 

To  strive,  to  seek,  to  find,  and  not  to  y.  Ulysses  70 

excitement  that  the  coming  years  would  y,  Locksley  Hall  111 

No  branchy  thicket  shelter  y's ;  Sir  Galahad  58 

a  little  will  I  y.  Princess  ii  291 

To  y  us  farther  furlough : '  and  he  went.  „        Hi  74 

rods  of  steel  and  fire ;  She  y's,  or  war.'  „        v  119 

No  more,  dear  love,  for  at  a  touch  ly;  „        vii  14 

She  still  were  loth  to  y  herself  to  one  „           232 

I  love  thee :  come,  Y  thyself  up :  „           364 

We  y  all  blessing  to  the  name  In  Mem.  xxxvi  3 

nature  rarely  y's  To  that  vague  fear  „           xli  13 

And  will  not  y  them  for  a  day.  „            xc  16 

That  will  not  y  each  other  way.  „            di  20 

Go  not,  happy  day,  Till  the  maiden  y's.  Maud  I  xvii  4 
brands  That  hack'd  among  the  flyers,  '  Ho  ! 

they  yV  Com.  of  Arthur  121 

Heaven  y  her  for  it,  but  in  me  put  force  Gareth  and  L.  18 

'  Not  an  hour.  So  that  ye  y  me —  „          133 

I  therefore  y  me  freely  to  thy  will ;  „          168 

Would  y  him  this  large  honour  all  the  more ;  „          397 

sent  her  wish  that  I  would  y  thee  thine.  „           551 

But  wilt  thou  y  this  damsel  harbourage  ? '  „          834 

But  an  this  lord  will  y  us  harbourage,  •              „          844 

'  Take  not  my  life :  ly.'  „          973 

Would  handle  scorn,  or  y  you,  asking,  „        1173 

crying,  '  Y,  y  him  this  again :  'tis  he  must  fight :  „         1321 

O  y  me  shelter  for  mine  innocency  Merlin  and  V.  83 

r"  my  boon.  Till  which  I  scarce  can  y  you  all  I  am ;  „             351 


till  one  could  y  for  weariness : 

But  since  I  will  not  y  to  give  you  power 

And  since  the  pirate  would  not  y  her  up. 

And  y  it  to  this  maiden,  if  ye  will.' 

when  you  y  your  flower  of  life  To  one 

Pray  for  my  soul,  and  y  me  burial. 

wilt  at  length  Y  me  thy  love  and  know  me  for  thy 

knight.' 
Only  to  y  my  Queen  her  own  again  ? 
Pale-blooded,  she  will  y  herself  to  God.' 
to  y  thee  grace  beyond  thy  peers.' 
y  me  sanctuary,  nor  ask  Her  name  to  whom  ye  y  it 
promise,  if  we  y,  to  let  us  go ; 
Our  title,  which  we  never  mean  to  y, 
daughter  y  her  life,  heart,  soul  to  one — 
shall  we  fight  her  ?  shall  we  y  ? 
Not  less  would  y  full  thanks  to  you 
Who  heats  our  earth  to  y  us  grain  and  fruit, 
Yielded    He  laugh'd,  and  y  readily  to  their  wish, 
At  once  the  costly  Sahib  y  to  her. 
perforce  He  y,  wroth  and  red,  with  fierce  demur : 
Nor  tho'  she  liked  him,  y  she, 
'  I  wish  she  had  not  y  ! ' 
was  but  a  dream,  yet  it  y  a  dear  delight 
the  field  was  pleassint  in  our  eyes,  We  y  not ; 
Loving  his  lusty  youthhood  y  to  him. 
He  might  have  y  to  me  one  of  those 
being  all  bone-batter'd  on  the  rock,  Y ; 


372 
373 
568 
Lancelot  and  E.  229 
952. 
1280 


Pelleas  and  E.  249 

Last  Tournament  106 

608 

743 

Guinevere  141 

The  Revenge  94 

Columbus  32 

The  Flight  28 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  115 

To  Ulysses  33 

Akbar's  Dream  105 

Enoch  Arden  370 

Aylmer's  Field  233 

Princess  v  358 

„      vii  76 

„     Con.  5 

Maud  III  vi  15 

Gareth  and  L.  338 

580 

739 

1051 


Yielded  (continued)    at  last — The  huge  pavilion 
slowly  y  up. 

Had  y,  told  her  all  the  charm, 

y ;  and  a  heart  Love-loyal  to  the  least  wish 

the  great  Queen  Have  y  him  her  love.' 

But  counterpressures  of  the  y  hand 

and  they  y  to  the  foe. 

and  had  y  her  will  To  the  master, 
Yielding    old  order  changeth,  y  place  to  new, 

In  silk -soft  folds,  upon  y  down. 

This,  y,  gave  into  a  grassy  walk 

old  order  changeth,  y  place  to  new ; 

shame  the  King  for  only  y  me  My  cliampion 

And  y  to  his  kindlier  moods, 
Yis  (yes)     an'  wur  niver  sa  nigh  saayin'  I'. 


Gareth  and  L.  1379 

Merlin  and  V.  966 

Lancelot  and  E.  88 

Last  Tournament  565 

Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  163 

The  Revenge  96 

Dead  Prophet  63 

M.  d'Arihur  240 

Elednore  28 

Gardener's  D.  Ill 

Com.  of  Arthur  509 

Gareth  and  L.  898 

Merlin  and  V.  174 

Spinster's  S's.  32 


Yisther-day  (yesterday)    like  a  bit  of  y-d  in  a  dhrame —        "      Tomorrow  8 

'Ymn  (hymn)    arter,  we  sing'd  the  'y  togither  North.  Cobbler  54 

Yniol     Had  married  Enid,  Y's  only  child,  Marr.  of  Geraint  4 

save,  It  may  be,  at  Earl  Y's,  o'er  the  bridge  „            291 

voice  of  Enid,  Y's  daughter,  rang  Clear  ,.            327 

by  the  bird's  song  ye  may  learn  the  nest,'  Said  Y ;  .,            360 

Y  caught  His  purple  scarf,  and  held,  „  376 
cried  Earl  Y, '  Art  thou  he  indeed,  Geraint,  ,  426 
Y's  heart  Danced  in  his  bosom,  ,,  504 
And  waited  there  for  Y  and  Geraint.  *  „  538 
Y's  rusted  arms  Were  on  his  princely  person,  „  543 
Then  Y's  nephew,  after  trumpet  blown,  „  551 
But  cither's  force  was  match'd  till  Y's  cry,  „  570 
Went  Y  thro'  the  town,  and  everywhere  „  693 
And  howsoever  patient,  Y  his.  „  707 
But  Y  goes,  and  I  full  oft  shall  dream  „  751 
r  made  report  Of  that  good  mother  making  Enid  gay  ,.            756 

Y  with  that  hard  message  went ;  „  763 
being  repulsed  By  Y  and  yourself,  Geraint  and  E.  829 

Yoke  (s)    Which  love  thee,  yearning  for  thy  y,  Tithonus  40 
she  walk'd  Wearing  the  light  y  of  that  Lord  of 

love,  Aylmer's  Field  708 

And,  if  thou  needs  must  bear  the  y.  Princess  vi  205 

loosed  their  sweating  horses  from  the  y,  Spec,  of  Iliad  2 

The  sooty  y  of  kitchen-vassalage ;  Gareth  and  L.  479 

bring  on  both  the  y  Of  stronger  states,  Tiresias  69 

Yoke  (verb)     the  care  That  y's  with  empire,  To  the  Queen  10 

Yoked    Whose  name  is  y  with  children's,  Princess  v  418 

Y  in  all  exercise  of  noble  end,  „    vii  361 
Yolk    (See  also  Half-yolk)     with  golden  y's  Imbedded  and 

injellied :  Audley  Court  25 

this  earth-narrow  life  Be  yet  but  y.  Ancient  Sage  130 

Yon    To  y  old  mill  across  the  wolds ;  Miller's  D.  240 

Behind  y  whispering  tuft  of  oldest  pine,  (Enone  88 

While  y  sun  prospers  in  the  blue.  The  Blackbird  22 

Where  y  dark  valleys  wind  forlorn.  On  a  Mourner  22 

Is  y  plantation  where  this  byway  joins  Walk,  to  the  Mail  4 

Thro  all  y  starlight  keen,  St.  Agnes'  Eve  22 

Y  orange  sunset  waning  slow :  Move  eastward  2 
what  is  it?  there?  2/ arbutus  Totters ;  Lucretius  184: 
O  love,  they  die  in  y  rich  sky,  Princess  iv  13 
Where  y  broad  water  sweetly  slowly  glides.  Requiescat  2 
Calm  and  still  light  on  y  great  plain  In  Mem.  xi  9 
On  y  swoll'n  brook  that  bubbles  fast  „  xcix  6 
To  y  hard  crescent,  as  she  hangs  „  cvii  10 
And  y  four  fools  have  suck'd  their  allegory  Gareth  and  L.  1199 
Else  y  black  felon  had  not  let  me  pass,  „  1293 
May  y  just  heaven,  that  darkens  o'er  me,  Merlin  and  V.  931 
As  y  proud  Prince  who  left  the  quest  to  me.  Lancelot  and  E.  762 
O  me,  be  y  dark  Queens  in  y  black  boat.  Pass,  of  Arthur  452 
y  big  black  bottle  o'  gin.  North.  Cobbler  70 
y  laady  a-steppin'  along  the  streeat,  „  107 
You  see  y  Lombard  poplar  on  the  plain.  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  79 
Down  y  dark  sea,  thou  comest,  darling  boy.  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  34 
No  stone  is  fitted  in  y  marble  girth  Tiresias  135 
but  seem  to  draw  From  y  dark  cave.  Ancient  Sage  10 
but  night  enough  is  there  In  y  dark  city :  „  253 
But  I  could  wish  y  moaning  sea  would  rise  The  Flight  11 
till  this  outworn  earth  be  dead  as  y  dead  world 

the  moon?  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  174 


Ton 


827 


Youth 


Yon  (continued)     Y  myriad -worlded  way — 

Young  and  old,  Like  y  oak, 

There  westward — ^under  y  slow-falling  star, 

'  Spirit,  nearing  y  dark  portal 
Yonder    In  y  hundred  million  spheres  ?  ' 

In  y  chair  I  see  him  sit, 

as  y  walls  Rose  slowly  to  a  music 

droves  of  swine  That  range  on  y  plain. 

To  dream  and  dream,  like  y  amber  light, 

So  great  a  miracle  as  y  hilt. 

I  lived  up  there  on  y  mountain  side. 

with  what  delighted  eyes  I  turn  to  y  oak. 

To  y  oak  within  the  field 

Many  a  night  from  y  ivied  casement, 

Deep  in  y  shining  Orient, 

To  y  shining  ground ; 

To  y  argent  round ; 

Met  me  walking  on  y  way, 

It  is  but  y  empty  glass 

'  Come  down,  O  maid,  from  y  mountain  height : 

Like  y  morning  on  the  blind  half-world ; 

Lastly  y  yester-even. 

And  roar  from  y  dropping  day : 

Would  dote  and  pore  on  y  cloud 

To  where  in  y  orient  star 

For  '  ground  in  y  social  mill 

And  drown'd  in  y  living  blue 

or  dives  In  y  greening  gleam, 

And  rise,  0  moon,  from  y  down, 

Of  the  long  waves  that  roll  in  y  bay  ? 

'  I  will  not  eat  Till  y  man  upon  the  bier  arise. 

Take  warning :  y  man  is  surely  dead ; 

Saint  who  stands  with  lily  in  hand  In  y  shrine. 

So  great  a  miracle  as  y  hilt. 

springs  Of  Dirc6  laving  y  battle-plain. 

How  simimer-bright  are  y  skies, 

But  some  in  y  city  hold,  my  son, 

0  yes,  if  y  hill  be  level  with  the  flat. 
A  gleam  from  y  vale, 
Falteringly, '  Who  lies  on  y  pyre  ? ' 
Strow  y  moimtain  flat. 

Yore    Strode  in,  and  claim'd  their  tribute  as  of  y. 

York    lands  in  Kent  and  messuages  in  Y, 
Y's  white  rose  as  red  as  Lancaster's. 

Young     And  I  was  y — too  y  to  wed : 
made  thee  famous  once,  when  y : 
She  stood,  a  sight  to  make  an  old  man  y. 
What  is  loathsome  to  the  y  Savours  well 
Have  all  his  pretty  y  ones  educated, 

1  wonder  he  went  so  y. 
'  O  boy,  tho'  thou  art  y  and  proud, 
'  Old  friend,  too  old  to  be  so  y,  depart, 
devil's  leaps,  and  poisons  half  the  y. 
'  Love  again,  song  again,  nest  again,  y  again,' 
Y  and  old.  Like  yon  oak. 
As  a  2/  lamb,  who  cannot  dream. 
To  the  y  spirit  present 
^y  gay  y  hawk,  my  Rosalind : 
Came  two  y  lovers  lately  wed ; 
F  Nature  thro'  five  cycles  ran. 
Since  I  beheld  y  Laurence  dead, 
sweeter  is  the  y  lamb's  voice  to  me 
I  wish'd  myself  the  fair  y  beech 
In  the  Spring  a  y  man's  fancy 


Epilogue  53 

The  Oak  3 

Akbar's  Dream  152 

God  and  the  Univ.  4 

Two  Voices  30 

Miller's  D.  9 

(Enone  40 

Palace  of  Art  200 

Lotos-Eaters,  C.  S.  57 

M.  d' Arthur  156 

St.  S.  Stylites  72 

Talking  Oak  8 

13 

Locksley  Hall  7 

154 

St.  Agnes'  Eve  14 

16 

Edward  Gray  2 

Will  Water.  207 

Princess  vii  192 

352 

Boddicea  29 

In  Mem.  xv  2 

16 

„  Ixxxvi  15 

„  Ixxxix  39 

cxv  7 

14 

„   Con.  109 

Maud  I  xviii  63 

Geraint  and  E.  657 

672 

Balin  and  Balan  262 

Pass,  of  Arthur  324 

Tiresias  139 

Ancient  Sage  23 

82 

Locksley  H.,  Sixty  111 

Early  Spring  33 

Death  of  (Enone  95 

Mechanofhilus  6 

Com.  of  Arthur  506 

Edwin  Morris  127 

Aylmer's  Field  51 

Miller's  D.  141 

The  Blackbird  16 

Gardener's  D.  141 

Vision  of  Sin  157 

Enoch  Arden  146 

Grandmother  14 

Sailor  Boy  7 

Balin  and  Balan  17 

Guinevere  522 

The  Throstle  9 

The  Oak  2 

Supp.  Confessions  170 

Ode  to  Memory  73 

Rosalind  34 

L.  of  Shalott  ii  34 

Two  Voices  17 

L.  C.  V.  de  Vere  28 

May  Queen,  Con.  6 

Talking  Oak  141 

Locksley  Hall  20 


her  cheek  was  pale  and  thinner  than  should  be  for  one 

so  y,  ,.  21 

r  ashes  pirouetted  down  Coquetting  with  y  beeches;  Amphion  27 

So  these  y  hearts  not  knowing  that  they  loved,  Aylmer's  Field  133 

'  Peace,  you  y  savage  of  the  Northern  wild  !  Princess  Hi  247 

remain'd  among  us  In  our  y  nursery  still  unknown,  „        iv  332 

fresh  y  captains  flash'd  their  glittering  teeth,  „  v  20 

Stays  all  the  fair  y  planet  in  her  hands —  „       vii  264 

As  thou  with  thy  y  lover  hand  in  hand  W.  to  Marie  Alex.  34 

How  y  Columbus  seem'd  to  rove.  The  Daisy  17 

Or  a  mowt  'a  taaen  y  Robins —  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  50 


Young  {continued)    My  yet  y  life  in  the  wilds  of  Time,  Maud  I  xw,21 

O  y  lord-lover,  what  sighs  are  those,  „       xxii  29 

and  his  wife  Nursed  the  y  prince.  Com:  of  Arthur  224 

With  Gawain  and  y  Modred,  her  two  sons,  „            244 

A  y  man  will  be  wiser  by  and  by ;  „             404 

But  felt  his  y  heart  hammering  in  his  ears,  Gareth  and  L.  322 

Some  y  lad's  mystery —  „             466 

Ate  with  y  lads  his  portion  by  the  door,  „             480 

being  y,  he  changed  and  came  to  loathe  Marr.  of  Geraint  593 

all  thro'  that  y  traitor,  cruel  need  „               715 

and  yet — God  guide  them — y.'  Merlin  and  V.  29 

And  found  a  fair  y  squire  who  sat  alone,  „            472 

said  y  Lavaine,  '  For  nothing.  Lancelot  and  E.  208 

P  as  I  am,  yet  would  I  do  my  best.'  .,              222 

Dearer  to  true  y  hearts  than  their  own  praise,  ,.              419 

Then  Lancelot  answer'd  y  Lavaine  and  said,  ,.              445 

With  y  Lavaine  into  the  poplar  grove.  ..              509 

In  so  y  youth,  was  ever  made  a  knight  Holy  Grail  138 

All  the  y  beauty  of  his  own  soul  to  hers,  Pelleas  and  E.  83 

For  Arthur,  loving  his  y  knight,  ,,             159 

'  O  y  knight.  Hath  the  great  heart  of  knighthood  „            595 

till  that  y  life  Being  smitten  in  mid  heaven  Last  Tournament  26 

For  y  Life  knows  not  when  y  Life  was  born.  Lover's  Tale  i  156 

To  greet  us,  her  y  hero  in  her  arms !  „        iv  171 

0  y  life  Breaking  with  laughter  from  the  dark ;  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  17 
Five  y  kings  put  asleep  by  the  sword-stroke,  Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  52 
Or  the  y  green  leaf  rejoice  in  the  frost  The  Wreck  20 
y  man  Danny  O'Roon  wid  his  ould  woman,  Tomorrow  88 
for  is  not  Earth  as  yet  so  y  ? —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  166 
Yonder  lies  our  y  sea-village —  „  245 
o'er  the  mountain-walls  Y  angels  pass.  Early  Spring  12 
That  y  eagle  of  the  West                                  Open.  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  28 

1  loved  you  first  when  y  and  fair,  Happy  29 
To  you,  yet  y,  who  breathe  the  balm  To  Ulysses  10 
if  his  y  music  wakes  A  wish  in  you  To  Mary  Boyle  63 
O  Y  Mariner,  You  from  the  haven  Merlin  and  the  G.  1 
O  y  Mariner,  Down  to  the  haven,  „              123 

Younger     Wherein  the  y  Charles  abode  Talking  Oak  297 
Thro'  the  shadow  of  the  globe  we  sweep  into  the  y 

day :  Locksley  Hall  183 

The  y  people  making  holiday,  Enoch  Arden  62 

While  all  the  y  ones  with  jubilant  cries  „          377 

To  Lady  Psyche,  y,  not  so  wise.  Princess  iv  316 

With  wisdom,  like  the  y  child :  In  Mem.  cxiv  20 

For  both  thy  y  brethren  have  gone  down  Gareth  and  L.  1102 

Not  many  a  moon  his  y,  '  My  fair  child,  „             1415 

Allow  him  !  but  Lavaine,  my  y  here,  Lancelot  and  E.  202 

And  let  the  y  and  unskill'd  go  by  „            1361 

Five  knights  at  once,  and  every  y  knight,  Holy  Grail  303 

My  y  knights,  new-made,  in  whom  your  flower  Last  Tournament  99 

The  leading  of  his  y  knights  to  me.  ,,              110 

He  spoke,  and  taking  all  his  y  knights,  ,.               126 

The  y  Julian,  who  himself  was  crown'd  Lover's  Tale  iv  296 

The  y  sister,  Evelyn,  enter'd — there,  Sisters  (E.  and  E.)  152 
we  past  to  this  ward  where  the  y  children  are 

laid :  In  the  Child.  Hasp.  27 

To  y  England  in  the  boy  my  son.  To  Victor  Hugo  14 

When,  in  our  y  London  days.  To  E.  Fitzgerald  54 

But  y  kindlier  Gods  to  bear  us  down,  Devieter  and  P.  131 

Some  y  hand  must  have  engraven  the  ring —  The  Ring  238 

You,  loved  by  all  the  y  gown  There  at  Balliol,  To  Master  of  B.  2 

Youngest     Y  Autumn,  in  a  bower  Grape-thicken'd  Elednore  35 

For  one,  the  y,  hardly  more  than  boy,  Enoch  Arden  563 

And  while  we  waited,  one,  the  y  of  lis,  Merlin  and  V.  415 

Youngster    Mangled  to  morsels,  A  y  m  war !  Batt.  of  Brunanhurh  75 

Younker     there  he  caught  the  y  tickling  trout —  Walk,  to  the  Mail  33 

Youth  (adolescence)     '  Yet,'  said  I,  in  my  morn  of  y,  Supp.  Confessions  139 

the  breathing  spring  Of  Hope  and  Y.  The  Poet  28 

His  early  rage  Had  force  to  make  me  rhyme  in  y,  Miller's  D.  193 

'  My  y,'  she  said,  '  was  blasted  with  a  curse :  D.  of  F.  Women  103 

Who  miss  the  brother  of  your  y?  To  J.  S.  59 

May  perpetual  y  Keep  dry  their  light  from 

tears ;                              '  Of  old  sat  Freedom  19 

Drive  men  in  manhood,  as  in  y.  Love  thou  thy  land  74 

At  such  a  distance  from  his  y  in  grief.  Gardener's  D.  54 


Youth 


828 


Zoroastrian 


Touth  (adolescence)  {continued)    Holding  the  folded 

annals  of  my  y ;  Gardener's  D.  244 

My  first,  last  love ;  the  idol  of  my  y,  „  277 

Nightmare  of  y,  the  spectre  of  himself  ?  Love  mid  Duty  13 

To  dwell  in  presence  of  immortal  y,  Tiihonus  21 

Immortal  age  beside  immortal  y,  „       22 

nourishing  a  y  sublime  With  the  fairy  tales  of  science,     Locksley  Hall  11 
social  wants  that  sin  against  the  strength  oiy\  „  59 

That  my  y  was  half  divine.  Vision  of  Sin  78 

his  full  tide  of  y  Broke  with  a  phosphorescence  Aylmer's  Field  115 

We  remember  love  ourselves  In  our  sweet  y :  Princess  i  123 

She  had  the  care  of  Lady  Ida's  y,  „      Hi  85 

'  We  remember  love  ourself  In  our  sweet  y;  „      v  208 

Confusions  of  a  wasted  y ;  In  Mem.,  Pro.  42 

And  in  the  places  of  his  2/.       _  „  xviii  8 

Whose  y  was  full  of  foolish  noise,  „  liii  3 

For  life  outliving  heats  of  y,  „  10 

It  is  the  trouble  of  my  y  That  foolish  sleep  „        Ixviii  15 

The  giant  labouring  in  his  y ;  „         cxviii  2 

Yet  Hope  had  never  lost  her  y ;  „  cxxv  5 

Maud  in  the  light  of  her  y  and  her  grace.  Maud  I  vl5 

For  my  dark-dawning  y,       ,     .  »     xix  7 

When  I  was  frequent  with  him  in  my  y,  Gareth  and  L.  124 

In  his  own  blood,  his  princedom,  y  and  hopes,  „  210 

Some  old  head-blow  not  heeded  in  his  j/  ,,  714 

In  so  yoimg  y,  was  ever  made  a  knight  Till  Galahad ;      Holy  Grail  138 
light-wing'd  spirit  of  his  y  retum'd  On  Arthur's 

heart ;  .  Balin  and  Balan  21 

lists  of  such  a  beard  as  y  gone  out  Had  left  in  ashes  :    Merlin  and  V.  245 
Full  many  a  love  in  loving  y  was  mine ;  I  needed 

then  no  charm  to  keep  them  mine  But  y  and  love ;  „  546 

By  all  the  sweet  and  sudden  passion  of  y  Lancelot  and  E.  282 

This  is  not  love :  but  love's  first  flash  in  y,  „  949 

Not  at  my  years,  however  it  hold  in  y.  „  1296 

I  told  her  that  her  love  Was  but  the  flash  of  y,  „  1318 

And  this  was  call'd  '  The  Tournament  oi  ¥:'  Pelleas  and  E.  158 

Whereto  we  move,  than  when  we  strove  in  y,  Pass,  of  Arthur  67 

And  some  had  visions  out  of  golden  y,  „  102 

opposite  The  flush  and  dawn  of  y,  Lover's  Tale  i  189 

Like  to  the  wild  y  of  an  evil  prince,  „  354 

from  prime  y  Well-known  well-loved.  „        ii  175 

I  till  the  things  familiar  to  her  y  „         iv  95 

Which  yet  retains  a  memory  of  its  y,  Sisters  {E.  and  E.)  66 

One  bloom  of  y,  health,  beauty,  „  120 

years  of  haste  and  random  y  Unshatter'd ;  De  Prof.,  Two  G.  21 

And  wind  the  front  of  y  with  flowers,  Ancient  Sage  97 

years  that  when  my  ¥  began  Had  set  the  lily  and  rose  „        155 

and  y  is  tum'd  to  woe.  The  Flight  16 

Gone  the  fires  of  y,  the  follies,  furies,  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  39 

Gone  the  tyrant  of  my  y,  „  43 

millions  one  at  length  with  all  the  visions  of  my  y?  „  162 

cry  your  '  forward,'  yours  are  hope  and  y,  but  I  „  225 

But  a  sun  coming  up  in  his  y !  Dead  Prophet  42 

A  soul  that,  watch'd  from  earliest  y,  To  Marq.  of  Dufferin  25 

Y  and  Health,  and  birth  and  wealth.  By  am,  Evolution.  8 

Her  husband  in  the  flush  of  y  and  dawn,  Death  of  CEnone  17 

'  I  am  losing  the  light  of  my  Y  The  Dreamer  4 

Youth  (yOTing  man)     And  yeam'd  towards  William;  but  the  y,         Dora  6 
A  y  came  riding  toward  a  palace-gate.  Visio7i  of  Sin  2 

And  of  her  brethren,  y's  of  puissance ;  Princess  i  37 

From  y  and  babe  and  hoary  hairs :  In  Mem.  Ixix  10 

ever  haunting  round  the  palm  A  lusty  y,  Gareth  and  L.  48 

•  A  goodly  y  and  worth  a  goodlier  boon  !  „  449 

younger  brethren  have  gone  down  Before  this  y ;  „        1103 

whisUe  of  the  y  who  scour'd  His  master's  armour ;    Marr.  of  Geraint  257 


Youth  (young  man)  (continued)    A  y,  that  following 

with  a  costrel  Marr.  of  Geraint  386 

There  came  a  fair-hair'd  y,  that  in  his  hand  Geraint  and  E.  201 

when  the  fair-hair'd  y  came  by  him,  „            205 

'  Yea,  willingly,'  replied  the  y ;  '  and  thou,  „            207 

'  Yea,  my  kind  lord,'  said  the  glad  y,  „            241 

some  few — ay,  truly — y's  that  hold  Merlin  and  V.  21 

successful  war  On  all  the  y,  they  sicken'd ;  ,.          572 

The  saintly  y,  the  spotless  lamb  of  Christ,  ,,          749 

passing  gayer  y  For  one  so  old,  „          927 

but  there  is  many  a  y  Now  crescent,  Lancelot  and  E.  447 
doors  Were  softly  simder'd,  and  thro'  these  a  y,  Pelleas,  Pelleas  and  E.  4 

Y,  we  are  damsels-errant,  and  we  ride,  ..            64 

'  Fight  therefore,'  yell'd  the  y,  „          572 

'  Lo,  there,'  said  one  of  Arthur's  y.  Last  Tournament  429 

Youthful    With  y  fancy  re-inspired.  Ode  to  Memory  114 

to  him  that  reaps  not  harvest  of  his  y  joys,  Locksley  Hall  139 

So  y  and  so  flexile  then,  Amphion  59 

'  Y  hopes,  by  scores,  to  all.  Vision  of  Sin  199 

Welcome  her,  all  things  y  and  sweet,  W.  to  Alexandra  8 

a  band  Of  y  friends,  on  mind  and  art.  In  Mem.  Ixxxvii  22 

knight  Had  vizor  up,  and  show'd  a  y  face,  Marr.  of  Geraint  189 

let  thine  own  hand  strike  Thy  y  pulses  Tiresias  157 
y  jealousy  is  a  liar.  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  240 
bare  dome  had  not  begim  to  gleam  Thro'  y  curls,        To  Mary  Boyle  42 

Youthhood    Loving  his  lusty  y  yielded  to  him.  Gareth  and  L.  580 

Yow  (ewe)    Fourscoor  y's  upon  it  an'  some  on  it  N.  Farmer,  O.  S.  40 

Yowe  (ewe)     Woorse  nor  a  far-welter'd  y :  „       A',  S.  32 
Yowling    See  A-yowlin' 

Yucca    My  y,  which  no  winter  quells,  To  Ulysses  21 

Yule    The  merry  merry  bells  of  Y.  In  Mem.  xxviii  20 

.  Glow'd  like  the  heart  of  a  great  fire  at  Y,  Marr.  of  Geraint  559 

'  Poor  men,  when  y  is  cold.  Holy  Grail  613 
Yule-block    faace  wur  as  red  as  the  Y-b  theer  i'  the  graate.        Owd  Rod  56 

Yule-clog    The  y-c  sparkled  keen  with  frost,  In  Mem.  l.v.wiii  5 


Zealous    z  it  should  be  All  that  it  might  be :  Princess  iv  423 

Zenith     that  branch'd  And  blossom'd  in  the  z,  Enoch  Arden  586 

holdeth  his  imdimned  forehead  far  Into  a  clearer  z,     Lover's  Tale  i  514 

Faith  at  her  z,  or  all  but  lost  in  the  gloom  Vastness  11 

And  stand  with  my  head  in  the  z,  Parnassus  6 

Zeus    Then  rose  Achilles  dear  to  Z ;  Achilles  over  the  T.  2 

Zig-zag     By  z-z  paths,  and  juts  of  pointed  rock,  M.  d'Arthur  50 

By  s  paths,  and  juts  of  pointed  rock,  Pass,  of  Arthur  218 

Zolaism     wallowing  in  the  troughs  of  Z, —  Locksley  H.,  Sixty  145 

Zone     Flowing  beneath  her  rose-hued  z ;  Arabian  Nights  140 

but  that  my  z  Unmann'd  me :  Princess  ii  420 

Like  those  three  stars  of  the  airy  Giant's  z,  „       v  260 

And  on  thro'  z's  of  light  and  shadow  To  F.  D.  Maurice  27 

And  four  great  z's  of  sculpture.  Holy  Grail  232 

Why  ye  not  wear  on  arm,  or  neck,  or  2  Last  Tournament  36 

none  could  breathe  Within  the  z  of  heat ;  Columbus  53 

like  a  flame  From  z  to  z  oi  the  world,  Dead  Prophet  35 

Gifts  from  every  British  z ;  Open  I.  and  C.  Exhib.  9 

On  broader  z's  beyond  the  foam.  To  Ulysses  30 

Mix  me  this  Z  with  that !  Mechanophilus  8 

Zoned    a  silken  hood  to  each.  And  z  with  gold ;  Princess  ii  18 

Watch'd  my  fair  meadow  z  with  airy  mom ;  Prog,  of  Spring  69 

Zoning    And  when  the  z  eve  has  died  On  a  Mourner  21 

Zoroastrian    they  rail  At  me  the  2.  Akbar's  Dream  104 


A  CONCORDANCE  to  the  DRAMATIC  WORKS 


OF 


ALFRED,  LORD  TENNYSON. 


A    that  all  the  louts  to  whom  Their  ^  B  C  is  darkness,    Queen  Mary  m  iv  35 
Aile  (ale)    They  ha'  broached  a  barrel  of  a  i'  the  long 


Abler    while  in  Normanland  God  speaks  thro'  a  voices,  Harold  i  i  167 

Abolish    to  cancel  and  a  all  bonds  of  human  allegiance,     Queen  Mary  v  iv  49 


bam, 
Abbacy    From  all  the  vacant  sees  and  abbacies. 
Abbess    I  think  our  A  knew  it  and  allow'd  it. 
Abbey    The  kingliest  A  in  all  Christian  lands, 

He  shelter'd  in  the  A  of  Pontigny. 

Hard  as  the  stones  of  his  a. 
Abbeyland    new  Lords  Are  quieted  with  their  sop 

of  A's, 
Abbot    there  were  A 's — but  they  did  not  bring  their 
women ; 

sits  and  eats  his  heart  for  want  of  money  to  pay  the  A .    Foresters  i  i  5 

he  borrowed  the  monies  from  the  A  of  York,  the  Sheriff's 

brother.     And  if  they  be  not  paid  back  at  the  end  of  the 
year,  the  land  goes  to  the  A. 

Those  two  thousand  marks  lent  me  by  the  A 

I  believed  this  A  of  the  party  of  King  Richard, 

Or  I  forfeit  my  land  to  the  A . 

You  shall  wait  for  mine  till  Sir  Richard  has  paid  the  A. 

I  fear  this  J  is  a  heart  of  flint, 

I  ran  into  my  debt  to  the  A ,  Two  thousand  marks  in  gold. 

We  spoil'd  the  prior,  friar,  a,  monk. 

Then  that  bond  he  hath  Of  the  A — 

I  have  sent  to  the  A  and  justiciary 

The  A  of  York  and  his  justiciary. 

it  was  agreed  when  you  borrowed  these  monies  from 
the^ 

these  monies  should  be  paid  in  to  the  A  at  York, 

Save  for  this  maiden  and  thy  brother  A , 

You,  my  lord  A ,  you  Justiciary,  I  made  you  A ,  you 
Jvisticiaiy : 

Oar  rebel  A  then  shall  join  your  hands, 

Here  A,  Sheriff — no — no,  Robin  Hood. 
Abear  (bear)     I  can't  a  to  think  on  'er  now, 

I  can't  a  to  see  her. 
Abel    light  darkness,  A  Cain,  The  sovd  the  body, 
Abetting    They  say,  his  wife  was  knowing  and  a. 
Abhor    all  of  us  a  The  venomoiis,  bestial,  devilish 
revolt 

and  refuse.  Reject  him,  and  a  him. 

— the  whole  world  A  you ; 
Abide    You  must  a  my  judgment,  and  my  father's, 

and  on  thee,  Edith,  if  thou  a  it, — 

King  will  not  a  thee  with  thy  cross. 

then  he  called  me  a  rude  naame,  and  I  can't  a 


Prom,  of  May  i  426 

Becket  i  iii  652 

V  ii  95 

Harold  m  i  204 

Becket  n  i  84 

Foresters  i  ii  270 

Queen  Alary  m  i  142 

Becket  in  iii  135 


I  168 

11264 

ii266 

I  ii  152 

I  ii  232 

iii  268 

ni463 

nil67 

iv85 

IV  87 

IT  334 


rv467 
IT  507 
IV  633 

IV  841 
IV  933 
IV  989 

Prom,  of  May  n  32 

in  758 

Becket  i  iii  715 

Harold  ii  ii  307 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  286 

IV  iii  279 

Becket  v  iii  184 

Queen  Mary  v  i  145 

Harold  in  i  317 

Becket  i  iii  488 


but  he  wur  so  rough  wi'  ma,  I  couldn't  a  'im. 

as  the  good  Sally  says,  '  I  can't  a  him ' — 

If  it  be  her  ghoast,  we  mun  a  it. 

but  a  with  me  who  love  thee. 
Ability    Hath  he  the  large  a  of  the  Emperor  ? 

Hath  he  the  lai^e  a  of  his  father  ? 
Able    The  man  is  a  enough — no  lack  of  wit, 


Prom,  of  May  ii  159 

ml04 

m  174 

in  460 

Foresters  ii  i  602 

Queen  Mary  i  v  323 

I  V  438 

Foresters  i  ii  103 


Abroach     Not  set  myself  a  And  run  my  mind  out 
Abrogation    Towards  the  a  and  repeal  Of  all  such 

laws 
Absalom    Deal  gently  with  the  young  man  A. 
Absence    Which  in  his  a  had  been  all  my  wealth. 
But  since  mine  a  will  not  be  for  long, 
Thine  a  well  may  seem  a  want  of  care, 
and  you  look  thin  and  pale.     Is  it  for  his  a  ? 
this  world  Is  brighter  for  his  a  as  that  other  Is 

darker  for  his  presence, 
but  can  he  trace  me  Thro'  five  years'  a, 

Absolution    Pole,  to  give  us  all  that  holy  a  which 

First  Citizen.     Old  Bourne  to  the  life !     Second 


The  Cup  I  ii  106 

Queen  Mary  ill  iii  141 

Becket  i  iii  757 

Queen  Mary  i  v  361 

in  vi  216 

HaroU  I  i  322 

Prom,  of  May  i  782 

n458 
n  615 


Citizen.     Holy  a ! 

Legate's  coming  To  bring  us  a  from  the  Pope. 

To  take  this  a  from  your  lips, 

Thro'  this  most  reverend  Father,  a, 

Stigand  shall  give  me  a  for  it — 

Hast  thou  had  a  for  thine  oath  ? 

Stigand'hath  given  me  a  for  it. 

Not  I,  the  Pope.     Ask  him  for  a. 
Absolve    commission  from  the  Pope  To  a  thee 

He  by  His  mercy  a  you ! 

Do  here  a  you  and  deliver  you  And  every  one  of  you, 

Cannot  the  Pope  a  thee  if  thou  sign  ? 

A  the  left-hand  thief  and  damn  the  right  ? 

Forgive  me  and  a  me,  holy  father. 

Son,  I  a  thee  in  the  name  of  God. 

He  shall  a  you  .  .  .  you  shall  have  redress. 

Our  Becket,  who  will  not  a  the  Bishops. 

he  shall  a  The  bishops — they  but  did  my  will — 

Oh,  if  you  have,  a  him  ! 

to  a  the  bishops  Whom  you  have  excommunicated. 

Save  that  you  will  a  the  bishops. 
Absolved    Tut,  tut,  I  have  a  thee : 
A-bumin'    Queen  Mary  gwoes  on  a-b  and  a-b, 

A-b,  and  a-b,  and  a-makin' 
Abused    Her  name  is  much  a  among  these  traitors. 

Modest  maiden  lily  a, 
A-bussin'  (kissing)    thou  and  me  a-b  o'  one  another 

t'other  side  o'  the  haaycock. 
Abysm    Steam'd  upward  from  the  undescendible  A. 
Abyss    rough  road  That  breaks  off  short  into  the  a'es- 
A-caUin'    they  ha'  ta'en  the  body  up  inter  your  chaumber, 

and  they  be  all  a-c  for  ye. 
Accept    France  would  not  a  her  for  a  bride 

beseech  Your  Highness  to  a  our  lowliest  thanks 

tell  him  That  I  a  the  diadem  of  Galatia — 

So  I  would,  Robin,  if  any  man  would  a  her. 

A  this  horn !  if  e'er  thou  be  assail'd 
Acceptable    more  the  love,  the  more  a  The  sacrifice 

nobler  The  victim  was,  the  more  a  Might  be  the 
sacrifice. 
Accepting    For  that  would  seem  a  of  your  love. 


Queen  Mary  i  iii  28 

ni  i  432 

„       m  ii  116 

„     III  iii  148 

Harold  n  ii  798 

„      HI  i  212 

„      in  i  213 

Becket  v  ii  379 

Queen  Mary  in  ii  53 

in  iii  209 

„        III  iii  214 

Becket  i  iii  230 

II  ii  392 

II  ii  441 

nii442 

vi86 

vi223 

vi253 

V  ii  131 

V  ii  376 
V  iii  120 

Harold  in  i  104 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  523 

IV  iii  531 

n  ii  110 

Foresters  n  ii  158 


Prom,  of  May  n  231 

Harold  i  i  16 

Prom,  of  May  1 230 


n571 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  67 

n  ii  131 

The  Cup  n  158 

Foresters  ni  74 

IV  423 

Harold  m  i  348 

The  Falcon  880 
739 


829 


Accepting 


830 


After-dinner 


Accepting  (continued)     Have  I  done  wisely,  then,  in 

a  him? 
Access    A  stranger  monk  desires  a  to  you. 
Mine  enemies  barr'd  all  a  to  the  boy. 
Accomplished    to  see  my  solemn  vow  A . 
The  purpose  of  my  being  is  a, 
To-day  he  hath  a  his  thirtieth  birthday. 
Account     There's  half  an  angel  wrong'd  in  your  a  ; 
King  Demands  a  strict  a  of  all  those  revenues 
dead ;  gone  to  his  a — dead  and  buried. 
Then  by  thine  own  a  thou  shouldst  be  mine. 
Accruing     Judgment,  and  pain  a  thereupon ; 
Accursed    my  men  Hold  that  the  shipwreckt  are  a  of  God ; 
for  the  two  were  fellow-prisoners  So  many  years 

in  yon  a  Tower —  Queen  Mary  i  iv  200 

With  that  vile  Cranmer  in  the  a  lie  Of  good  Queen 

Catharine's  divorce — 
'  We  pray  continually  for  the  death  Of  our  a  Queen 
and  Cardinal  Pole.' 

Nay,  ev'n  the  a  heathen  Saladeen Strike  ! 

Accuse     Lest  men  a  you  of  indifference  To  all  faiths.  Queen  Mary  m  iv  223 
Shall  these  a  him  to  a  foreign  prince  ?  „  iv  i  24 

must  A  himself,  excuse  himself;  TJie  Cup  n  115 

Accused     '  If  any  cleric  be  a  of  felony,  the  Church  shall  not 

protect  him ;  Becket  i  iii  87 

Accuser     appear  before  the  Pope,  And  answer  thine  a's  .  .  .       „    i  iii  603 

Queen  Mary  i  i  128 

I  i  124 

Becket  i  i  382 

Harold  V  i  581 

Queen  Mary  m  iii  107 

V  iii  30 

V  V  255 


From,  of  May  iii  184 

Becket  v  ii  65 

„     V  ii  451 

Harold  ni  i  308 

The  Falcon  926 

Foresters  I  i  298 

Queen  Mary  v  iii  2 

Becket  i  iii  650 

Prom,  of  May  in  145 

Foresters  iv  1038 

Queen  Mary  m  iii  219 

Harold  n  i  100 


in  iv  231 


v  ii  181 
Becket  rv  ii  251 


Achage    his  a,  and  his  breakage,  if  that  were  all 
Ache    full  of  a's  and  broken  before  his  day. 

Against  the  moral  excess  No  physical  a, 
Acies    A,  A  Prona  stematur ! 
Acknowledge    and  a  The  primacy  of  the  Pope  ? 
Acknowledged    Mary  hath  o  you  her  heir. 

She  knew  me,  and  a  me  her  heir, 
A-coomin'  (coming)     I  seed  that  one  cow  o'  thine  i'  the 

pinfold  agean  as  I  wur  a-c  'ere.  Prom,  of  May  1 191 

Acorn    On  nuts  and  a's,  ha !     Or  the  King's  deer  ?  Foresters  iv  882 

Acre  (seaport)  like  the  woman  at  A  when  the  Turk  shot  her  „  ii  i  307 
Acre  (land)    (See  also  Haacre,  Ten-aacre)    her  advowsons, 

granges,  farms.  And  goodly  a's —  Becket  i  i  163 

1  took  it  For  some  three  thousand  a's.  Prom,  of  May  xa  614 

Acrid     Ah,  what  an  a  wine  has  Luther  brew'd  !  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  545 

Acrisius  Danae  has  escaped  again  Her  tower,  and  her  A —  Becket  i  i  396 
A-crying  and  they  was  all  a-c  out  at  the  bad  times.  Prom,  of  May  1 138 
Act  (s)     he  begs  you  to  forget  it  As  scarce  his  a : —  Tine  Cup  ii  53 

Act  (verb)     (See  also  Be-act)     that  these  may  a  On  Harold 

when  they  meet.  Harold  n  ii  91 

King  would  a  servitor  and  hand  a  dish  to  his  son ;        Becket  in  iii  139 

Veiling  one  sin  to  a  another.  Prom,  of  May  in  773 

Actable    Is  naked  truth  a  in  true  life  ?  Harold  m  i  109 

Acted    why  should  not  the  parable  of  our  blessed  Lord  be 

a  again  ?  Becket  i  iv  77 

Who  made  the  second  mitre  play  the  first,  And  a  me  ?         „  in  iii  213 

Well  a,  was  it  ?     A  comedy  meant  to  seem  a  tragedy —      „    iv  ii  321 

and  a  on  would  yield  A  nobler  breed  The  Falcon  753 

Acting    tear  it  all  to  pieces,  never  dream'd  Of  a  on  it.         The  Cup  i  ii  248 

No  !  a,  playing  on  me,  both  of  them.  ~ 

Action     (See  also  Be-action)     A  and  re-action,  The 

miserable  see-saw  of  our  child-world. 
Act  of  Parliament    they  be  both  bastards  hy  A  o  P 
and  Council. 

Corroborate  by  your  a's  o  P: 
Actor    Should  play  the  second  a  in  this  pageant 
A-cnm  (come)     there  wur  an  owld  lord  a-c  to  duie  wi'  un. 
Adage    there's  An  old  world  English  a  to  the  point. 
Adam-clay    Cleaving  to  your  original  A-c, 
Add    Leave  it  with  him  and  a  a  gold  mark  thereto. 


Prom,  of  May  in  693 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  384 

li  24 

n  ii  173 

ni  iii  13 

IV  iii  504 

IV  i  175 

IV  iii  418 

Foresters  m  210 

Added    the  clauses  a  To  that  same  treaty  Queen  Mary  in  iii  68 

Adder    To  the  deaf  a  thee,  that  wilt  not  dance  Harold  i  i  385 

the  Norman  a  Hath  bitten  us ;  we  are  poison'd :  „      in  i  38 

he  that  lookt  a  fangless  one,  Issues  a  venomous  a.  Becket  i  iii  453 

Addled    Eggs  ?    FUvppo.    One,  but  a.  The  Falcon  129 

Address  (s)     All  bangs  on  her  a,  And  upon  you,  Lord 

Mayor.  Q^een  Mary  n  ii  55 

he  gave  me  no  c,  and  there  was  no  word  of 

marriage;  Prom,  of  May  m  332 


Address  (verb)     She  will  a  your  guilds  and  companies.    Q^een  Mary  ii  ii  15 
Adieu     Both  be  happy,  and  a  for  ever  and  for  evermore 

■ — a.  Foresters  ii  ii  196 

Adit     Here  His  turtle  builds ;  his  exit  is  our  a :  Becket  ni  ii  7 

Adjudge     at  this  time  A  him  to  the  death.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  38 

Admiral    Her  freaks  and  frolics  with  the  late  Lord  A?  „  i  iv  20 

Admiration    begets  An  a  and  an  indignation,  „        in  iv  170 

Admired     But  having  now  a  it  long  enough,  Becket  iv  ii  262 

'  To  the  a  Camma,  wife  of  Sinnatus,  the  Tetrarch,  The  Cup  i  i  36 

'  To  the  a  Camma, — beheld  you  afar  off —  ,,        i  ii  70 

Admit     Ay,  gentle  friend,  a  them.     I  will  go.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  110 

A-doing    What  be  he  a-d  here  ten  mile  an'  moor  fro'  a 

raail  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  209 

Adore     and  a  This  Vicar  of  their  Vicar.  Queen  Mary  in  iii  243 

Adorer    an  a  of  our  great  goddess,  Artemis,  The  Cup  i  i  38 

Adulterous    A  to  the  very  heart  of  Hell.  Queen  Mary  v  v  163 

A  dog !  (repeat)  The  Cup  i  iii  108,  122 

Adultery     She  seethed  with  such  adulteries.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  189 

Advance    A  our  Standard  of  the  Warrior,  Harold  iv  i  248 

told  me  he  would  a  me  to  the  service  of  a  great  lady,      Becket  in  i  123 


Foresters  n  i  628 

IV  534 

„   IV  735,  761 

Becket  i  iii  643 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  235 

Becket  n  i  152 

Foresters  n  i  415 

IV  621 
IV  1048 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  150 

V  i  301 

Becket  I  iii  112 

Queen  Mary  ni  iv  194 

Harold  i  i  116 

„       V  i  281 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  5 

V  ii  57 
Becket  v  ii  380 

•  ,.  V  ii  551 
I  i  161 
I  iii  79 


He  has  a  friend  there  will  a  the  monies. 

There  was  no  room  to  a  or  to  retire. 

A,  a\  (repeat) 
Advanced    A  thee  at  his  instance  by  the  Jews, 
Advantage    To  be  of  rich  a  to  our  realm, 

I,  that  taking  The  Fiend's  a  of  a  throne. 

We  have  him  at  last ;  we  have  him  at  a. 

0  no,  we  took  A  of  the  letter — 
Advent    To  celebrate  this  a  of  our  King ! 
Advice    With  our  a  and  in  our  company, 

and  your  Grace,  So  you  will  take  a  of  mine, 

and  by  the  a  of  his  Government.' 
Advise     I  would  a  That  we  should  thoroughly 

A  him  :  speak  him  sweetly,  he  will  hear  thee. 

could  do  No  other  than  this  way  a  the  king 
Advised     The  Queen  is  ill  a : 

He  cannot  dream  that  I  a  the  war; 

But  you  a  the  Pope. 
Advising     On  any  mjui's  a  but  your  own. 
Advowson    have  graspt  Her  livings,  her  a's, 

'  All  causes  of  a's  and  presentations, 
A-dying     I  ha'  three  sisters  a-d  at  home  o'  the  sweating 

sickness.  „       i  iv  246 

iEsop     Inverted  M — ^mountain  out  of  mouse.  Queeii  Mary  ii  i  67 

Afear'd  (afraid)     I  was  a  it  was  the  ghost,  your  worship.     Foresters  ii  i  225 

1  am  mortally  a  o'  thee,  thou  big  man,  „  iv  316 
Affable  you  were  bland  And  a  to  men  of  all  estates,  Queen  Mary  ni  vi  81 
Affair     His  Highness  is  so  vex'd  with  strange  a's- 

Mary.     That  his  own  wife  is  no  a  of  his. 

Has  let  his  farm,  all  his  a's,  I  fear, 

for  I  niust  hence  upon  The  King's  a. 
Affect    Her  Majesty  Hears  you  a  the  Prince — ■ 

what  shall  I  call  it,  a  her  thine  own  self. 

Your  lordship  a's  the  unwavering  perpendicular ; 
Affection    old  a  master'd  you.  You  falter'd  into  tears. 

from  you  except  Return  of  his  a — 

and  her  a's  Will  flower  toward  the  light 
Afltoity    the  man,  the  woman,  Following  their  best 

affinities. 
Affirm    and  a's  The  Queen  has  forfeited  her  right 
Affright    yet  the  word  A's  me  somewhat : 

Doth  this  a  thee  ? 
Affrighted    scurrying  of  a  rat  A  me, 


v  ii  560 

Prom,  of  May  n  420 

Foresters  iv  342 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  82 

Becket,  Pro.  513 

n  ii  325 

V  ii  143 

The  Falcon  111 

Prom,  of  May  i  484 


hallus  a-f  ma  off,  tho'  ye  knaws 


I  523 

Queen  Many  v  i  289 

I  iv  9 

Harold  I  i  23 

Queen  Mary  ni  v  144 


A-fobbing  (to  put  of) 

I  love  ye. 
A-follering  (following)     then  back  agean,  a-f  my  oan 

shadder — 
Afraid    (See  also  Afear'd,  Half-afraid)    I  was  o  of  her, 
and  I  hid  myself. 
I  am  half  a  to  pass. 

Be  not  a  of  me.  For  these  are  no  conventional  flourishes 
After    And  that  this  noble  realm  thro'  a  years  May 

in  this  unity  Queen  Mary  m  iii  156 

and  all  thy  flock  should  catch  An  a  ague-fit  of  trembling.   Becket  ni  iii  33 

After-dinner    Not  now,  not  now — ^with  a-d  grace.  Foresters  iv  937 


Prom,  of  May  1 108 

I  371 

1 551 
n328 
n561 


After-life 


831 


Alien 


m  402 
il 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  12 

II  i  82 

„      III  iv  412 

IV  ii  104 

V  ii  235 

Harold  v  i  330 

Becket  i  iii  249 

u  i  72 

Prom,  of  May  i  590 

u  633 

II  661 

m400 

ni  514 

Foresters  m  97 

Queen  Mary  v  i  227 

Becket  i  iv  61 


After-life     man  perceives  that  The  lost  gleam  of  an  a-l  Prom,  of  May  i  503 

greater  nearness  to  the  birthday  Of  the  a-l.  Foresters  n  i  45 

After-marriage    link  rusts  with  the  breath  of  the  first  a-m 

kiss,  Becket,  Pro.  362 

JUtemoon    {See  also  Artemoon)     The  clamour'd  darling  of 

their  a  !  The  Cup  n  125 

You  had  better  attend  to  your  hayfield.    Good  a.  Prom,  of  May  n  123 

Good  a,  my  friends.  „  iii  20 

Agatha    ask  his  forgiveness  before  he  dies. — Sisteb  A 

Sister  A  is  right. 
A-gawin'  (going)     Be  thou  a-g  to  the  long  bani  ? 
Age    (See  also  Lisping-age)     tho'  by  your  a,  And  by 
your  looks  you  are  not  worth  the  having, 

Song  flies  you  know  For  a's. 

it  is  an  a  Of  brief  life,  and  brief  purpose, 

'  what  am  I,  Cranmer,  against  whole  a's  ? ' 

gray  dawn  Of  an  old  a  that  never  will  be  mine 

From  child  to  child,  from  Pope  to  Pope,  from  a  to  a, 

he  would  be  mine  a  Had  he  lived  now ; 

A,  orphans,  and  babe-breasting  mothers — 

Will  enter  on  the  larger  golden  a  ; 

may  not  those,  who  march  Before  their  a, 

I  could  make  his  a  A  comfort  to  him — 

your  Father  must  be  now  in  extreme  old  a. 

poor  Steer  looks  The  very  type  of  4  in  a  picture 

borne  hollow-hearted  from  exceeding  a — 
Aged    How  doubly  a  this  Queen  of  ours  hath  grown 
A-getting    he  makes  moan  that  all  be  a-g  cold. 

when  I  was  a-g  o'  bluebells  for  your  ladyship's  nose 

to  smell  on —  „    ill  i  161 

A-^ttin'     and  my  missus  a-g  ower  'er  lyin'-in.  Prom,  of  May  in  74 

A-glorifying    our  master  been  a-g  and  a- velveting  and 

a-silking  himself,  The  Falcon  98 

A-going    We  be  a-g  home  after  our  supper  in  all  humbleness,  Becket  i  iv  206 
Agony    Fire — inch  by  inch  to  die  in  o  !  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  223 

in  her  a  The  mother  came  upon  her —  „  v  iv  19 

star  That  dances  in  it  as  mad  with  a  !  Harold  i  i  9 

all  promises  Made  in  our  a  for  help  from  heaven  ?  ,.  in  i  288 

Only  this  morning  in  his  a  Foresters  iv  453 

Agree    {See  also  'Grees)    A  with  him  quickly  again,  even 

for  the  sake  of  the  Church.  Becket  ii  ii  376 

Agreed    are  well  a  That  those  old  statutes  touching 

LoUardism  Queen  Mary  ni  iv  6 

it  was  a  when  you  borrowed  these  monies  from  the 

Abbot  Foresters  iv  465 

A-groanin'     He's  been  a-moanin'  and  a-g  in  'is  sleep.  Prom,  of  May  m  411 
Ague    Harvestless  autumns,  horrible  a's,  plague  Queen  Mary  v  i  98 

Wet,  famine,  a,  fever,  storm,  wreck,  wrath, —  „         v  v  108 

Agne-flt     thy  flock  should  catch  An  after  a-f  of  trembling.    Becket  ni  iii  33 
A-harrowin'     Hodge  'ud  ha'  been  a-h  o'  white  peasen 

i'  the  outfield  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  492 

A-hawking     A-h,  a-h  !     If  I  sit,  I  grow  fat.  Becket,  Pro.  413 

ride  a-h  with  the  help  of  the  men.  Foresters  i  i  213 

A-hell-fire    and  sets  the  church-tower  over  there  all  a-/j-/ 

as  it  were  ?  Becket  m  iii  51 

A-hunting     King's  verdurer  caught  him  a-h  in  the  forest,  „        i  iv  95 

Aid  (s)     But  with  Cecil's  a  And  others,  Qweew  ilfan/ v  v  279 

Aid  (verb)     as  I  love  The  people !  whom  God  a  !  „  v  iii  36 

Believing  I  should  ever  a  the  Church —  Becket,  Pro.  417 

Ail    What  a's  you  ?     Harold.     Speak.  Proin.  of  May  ni  661 

AUmer  (John,  Bishop  of  London)    A  and  Bifllingham, 

and  hundreds  more ;  Queen  Mary  iii  11 

Aim    stateliest  deer  in  all  the  herd — Beyond  his  a —  „        v  ii  427 

I  am  not  Beyond  his  a,  or  was  not.  »        v  ii  450 

man  that  hath  to  foil  a  murderous  a  May,  surely,  play 

with  words.  Harold  n  ii  417 

Their  a  is  ever  at  that  which  flies  highest —  Foresters  i  i  261 

Mine  eye  most  true  to  one  hair's-breadth  of  a.  „        iv  695 

Aim'd     spoil  and  sackage  a  at  by  these  rebels.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  248 

but  failure  it  may  be  Of  all  we  a  at. 

The  point  you  a  at,  and  pray  God  she  prove 
Aiming  in  a  at  your  love,  It  may  be  sometimes 
Air  (atmosphere)    Like  imiversal  a  and  sunshine 

A  and  sunshine.     I  would  we  had  you, 

Free  a  \  free  field ! 


Becket  i  i  383 

„     n  ii  77 

„      vi35 

Queen  Mary  ni  ii  182 

V  ii  605 

Harold  n  ii  230 


Air  (atmosphere)  {continued)    he  flings  His  brand  in  a  and 

catches  it  again,  Harold  v  i  494 

and  fling  them  out  to  the  free  a.  Becket  i  i  288 

Blurt  thy  free  mind  to  the  a?  „    i  iii  239 

when  I  flee  from  this  For  a  gasp  of  freer  a,  ,,      ii  i  29 

Let  all  the  a  reel  into  a  mist  of  odour.  The  Cup  u  185 

give  him  limbs,  then  a,  and  send  him  forth  „        ii  261 

come  as  freely  as  heaven's  a  and  mother's  milk  ?  Foresters  i  i  210 

We  should  be  free  as  a  in  the  wild  wood —  „       i  iii  124 

I  breathe  Heaven's  a,  and  Heaven  looks  down  on  me,        „         iv  725 
if  ye  cannot  breathe  but  woodland  a,  „         iv  953 

'Air  (hair)     I  ha'  heard  'im  a-gawin'  on  'ud  make  your 

'a — God  bless  it ! — stan'  on  end.  Prom,  of  May  1 135 

Air  (strain  of  music)     Play  the  a,  Little  John.  Foresters  in  418 

A  and  word,  my  lady,  are  maid  and  man.  „         in  419 

Aisle    {See  also  Minster-aisle)    The  nave  and  a's  all 

empty  as  a  fool's  jest !  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  286 

Did  not  a  man's  voice  ring  along  the  a,  Becket  v  ii  151 

Alarm     my  master  hears  with  much  a,  Queen  Mary  i  v  250 

Have  you  had  any  a  ?  no  stranger  ?  Becket  in  i  28 

Alarum     clang  and  clash  a  as  we  pass.  Queen  Mary  n  i  230 

A-laughin'     I'd  like  to  leather  'im  black  and  blue,  and 

she  to  be  a-l  at  it.  Prom,  of  May  n  596 

Alberighi  (Federigo  degli)    See  Federigo  degli  Alberighi 

Alchemic     and  jealousy  Hath  in  it  an  a  force  to  fuse    Queen  Mary  in  vi  181 

Alchemy    backward-working  a  Should  change  this  gold  to 

silver.  Foresters  iv  39 

Alder    We  parted  like  the  brook  yonder  about  the  a 

island.  Prom,  of  May  1 173 

Alder-island    Close  by  that  a-i  in  your  brook,  „  ii  535 

Aldred  (Archbishop  of  York)     take,  sign  it,  Stigand,  A  ! 

Sign  it,  Harold  in  i  198 

Ask  it  of  ^.  ,.      ui  i  226 

Come,  A,  join  our  hands  before  the  hosts,  „       iv  i  241 

Aldwyth  (daughter  of  Alfgar  and  widow  of  Griffyth,  King  of 

Wales)     The  Lady  A  Was  here  to-day,  i  ii  34 

not  like  A  .  .  .  For  which  I  strangely  love  him.    Should 

not  England  Love  A,  .,        i  ii  175 

Courage,  noble  A]  ,.        i  ii  183 

They  say  thou  art  to  wed  the  Lady  J.  „     m  ii  108 

A\  A\  (repeat)  „  iv  1 19,  25 

A,  Harold,  A\  „       rv  i  132 

His  conqueror  conquer'd  A.  „       iv  i  218 

A,  A,  Canst  thou  love  me,  „       iv  i  225 

Harold,  Harold  and  A  I  „       iv  i  244 

Hail !  Harold  !  A  !  hail,  budegroom  and  bride  ,.         iv  iii  1 

Hail,  Harold,  A  !  Bridegroom  and  bride !  „       iv  iii  42 

Leave  them !  and  thee  too,  A,  „     iv  iii  227 

Ale     {See  also  Aale)     Brain-dizzied  with  a  draught  of 

morning  a.  Queen  Mary  n  i  72 

and  she  brew'd  the  best  a  in  all  Glo'ster,  Becket  in  i  197 

I  am  misty  with  my  thimbleful  of  a.  Foresters  iv  278 

The  king's  good  health  in  a  and  Malvoisie.  „        iv  968 

Ale-house    spent  all  your  last  Saturday's  wages  at 

the  a-h ;  Provi.  of  May  in  79 

Alen90n    hast  thou  never  heard  His  savagery  at  A , —  Harold  ii  ii  382 

Alfgar  (Earl  of  Mercia)    {See  also  Half-Alfear)    light  enough 

for  J['s  house  To  strike  thee  down  „         i  i  307 

It  means  the  lifting  of  the  house  of  ^.  „         i  i  473 

feuds  that  part  The  sons  of  Godwin  from  the  sons  oi  A       ,.        i  ii  181 
Godwin  still  at  feud  with  A ,  And  A  hates  King  Harold.      „       iv  i  124 

Alfred  (the  Great,  King  of  the  West  Saxons)    They  blinded 

my  young  kinsman,  A —  ,.       ii  ii  511 

And  that  my  wife  descends  from  A?  „       n  ii  594 

tell  me  tales  Of  A  and  of  Athelstan  the  Great  „         ly  i  74 

Less  than  a  star  among  the  goldenest  hours  Of  A ,  ,,       iv  iii  52 

A  Was  England.     Ethelred  was  nothing.  „        v  i  373 

Alfwig    Abbot  .4,  Leofric,  and  all  the  monks  „        v  i  445 

sure  this  body  Is  A,  the  king's  uncle.  „         v  ii  68 

Alice  (a  Lady  in  Waiting  to  Queen  Mary)  Shall  A  sing 
you  One  of  her  pleasant  songs?  A,  my  child, 
Bring  us  your  lute.  Q^een  Mary  v  ii  354 

Alien    Philip's  no  sudden  a — the  Queen's  husband,  „  lu  iii  42 

forfeited  her  right  to  reign  By  marriage  with  an  a —      „  v  i  291 

So  strange  among  them — such  an  a  there,  The  Cup  ii  143 


Alight 


832 


Amaze 


Alight  (lighted)     Last  night,  I  dream'd  the  faggots 

were  a,  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  2 

Alighted    See  Lighted 

A-Umpin'     I  seed  tha  a-l  up  just  now  wi'  the  rooniatics 

i'  the  knee.  Prom,  of  May  i  384 

Alington     Ah,  gray  old  castle  of  A,  Queen  Mary  u  i  243 

Alive    (See  also  Half-alive)     become  Hideously  a  again 

from  head  to  heel,  „       iv  iii  447 

while  famished  rats  Eat  them  a.  „         v  ii  198 

Dead  or  a  you  cannot  make  him  happy.  „  v  v  71 

And  flay  me  all  a.  Harold  iv  i  191 

All    (See  also  All-but-nothing,  All-in-all,  Hall)    Long 

live  Queen  Mary  !  down  with  a  traitors  !  Queen  Mary  i  i  66 

but  a  things  here  At  court  are  known ;  „         i  iv  56 

but  God  hath  sent  me  here  To  take  such  order  with  a 

heretics  „  i  v  34 

now  that  a  traitors  Against  our  royal  state  have  lost 

the  heads  „        iii  iv  2 

The  devil  take  a  boots  were  ever  made  Since  man  went 

barefoot.  „     iii  v  197 

But  held  from  you  a  papers  sent  by  Rome,  „        v  ii  45 

That  a  day  long  hath  wrought  his  father's  work,  „       v  ii  118 

Methinks  I  am  a  angel,  that  I  bear  it  Without  more 

rufOing.  „         v  iii  3 

But  by  a  Saints —    Leofwin.     Barring  the  Norman  !        Harold  v  i  224 
and  a  left-handedness  and  under-handedness.  Becket,  Pro.  340 

Father,  I  am  so  tender  to  a  hardness !  „         i  i  316 

Mine  enemies  barr'd  a  access  to  the  boy.  „       v  ii  451 

Lady,  I  say  it  with  a  gentleness.  The  Cup  i  iii  99 

And  fill  a  hearts  with  fatness  and  the  lust  Of  plenty —        „         ii  272 
Richer  than  a  the  wide  world-wealth  of  May,  The  Falcon  466 

A  Quietist  taking  a  things  easily — why —  Prom,  of  May  i  290 

I've  hed  the  long  barn  cleared  out  of  a  the  machines,  „  1 451 

Who  leaves  me  a  his  land  at  Littlechester,  „  i  511 

drest  like  a  gentleman,  too.     Damn  a  gentlemen,  says  I !      „  ii  579 

and  they  both  love  me — I  am  a  in  a  to  both ;  „         iii  213 

a  in  a  to  one  another  from  the  time  when  we  first  peeped  „         m  273 
Push'd  from  a  doors  as  if  we  bore  the  pla2;ue,  „         in  804 

but  go  about  to  come  at  their  love  with  a  manner  of 

homages,  Foresters  i  i  102 

Sleep,  happy  soul !  a  life  will  sleep  at  last.  „       i  iii  48 

in  the  name  of  a  our  woodmen,  present  her  with  this 

oaken  chaplet  as  Queen  of  the  wood,  „         in  57 

Out  upon  a  hard-hearted  maidenhood !  „         iv  50 

And  a  I  love,  Robin,  and  a  his  men,  „        iv  722 

Are  a  our  guests  here  ?  „       iv  993 

All-bat-notlmig    if  a-6-»  be  anything,  and  one  plate  of 

dried  prunes  be  a-b-n,  The  Falcon  134 

All^iance    promise  full  A  and  obedience  to  the 

death.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  169 

to  cancel  and  abolish  all  bonds  of  human  a,  „  v  iv  50 

Lay  hands  of  full  a  in  thy  Lord's  And  crave  his  mercy,     Harold  v  i  11 
thou  hast  sworn  a  volimtary  a  to  him  ?  Becket  Pro.  439 

Allen  (a  farm  labourer)    so,  J,  I  may  as  well  begin 

with  you.  Prom,  of  May  rn  29 

I  spoke  of  your  names,  ^,  „  in  35 

But,  A ,  tho'  you  can't  read,  „  ni  42 

What  is  all  this.  A?  „  m  123 

Allen  (Sally)    See  Sally  Allen 

Allendale    The  warrior  Earl  of  >4,  Foresters  xiQ 

Alley    so  many  a's,  crossings.  Paths,  avenues —  Becket  rv  ii  6 

Alliance    Have  you  a's  ?     Bithynia,  Pontus,  Paphlagonia  ?   The  Cup  i  ii  99 
Break  thine  a  with  this  faithless  John,  Foresters  rv  323 

Allied    Art  thou  for  Richard,  or  a  to  John  ?    Richard.     I 

am  a  to  John.  „       rv  135 

for  how  canst  thou  be  thus  a  With  John,  „       rv  350 

All-in-all    (See  also  All)     Their  Flemish  go-between 

And  a-i-a.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  5 

Allow    your  Highness  will  a  Some  spice  of  wisdom  „  n  iv  133 

His  Highness  and  myself  (so  you  a  us)  „        in  iv  324 

rage  of  one  who  hates  a  truth  He  cannot  but  a.  „        m  vi  145 

A  me  the  same  answer  as  before —  „  v  i  237 

world  a's  I  fall  no  inch  Behind  this  Becket,  Becket  v  i  39 

A  me,  sir,  to  pass  you.  Prom,  of  May  ii  354 

.<1  me  to  go  with  you  to  the  farm.  „  u  574 


Allowance     I  can  make  a  for  thee.  Queen  Mary  i  v  326 

Make  no  a  for  the  naked  truth.  „  i  v  328 

To  make  a  for  their  rougher  fashions,  Harold  u  ii  8 

easier  then  for  you  to  make  A  for  a  mother —  I'he  Falcon  826 

ready  To  make  a's,  and  mighty  slow  To  feel 

offences.  Prom,  of  May  m  629 

Allow'd    tho'  a  stranger  fain  would  be  a  To  join  the  hunt.      The  Cup  i  i  196 
I  think  our  Abbess  knew  it  and  a  it.  Becket  v  ii  95 

All-prepared    The  best  of  all  not  a-p  to  die.  ,,   v  ii  564 

All-royal    Look  rather  thou  a^  as  when  first  I  met  thee.  „      n  i  46 

Almighty    floated  downward  from  the  throne  Of  God  .4.  Harold  iil9 

Harold  and  God  ^  !  „    v  i  526 

Almoner     This  A  hath  tasted  Henry's  gold.  Becket  i  iii  294 

Almost    See  (teunost 

Alms    his  wealth  A  fountain  of  perennial  a —  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  385 

she  holds  it  in  Free  and  perpetual  a,  Becket  i  iii  680 

boldness  of  this  hand  hath  won  it  Love's  a,  ,,       n  i  184 

pale  beggar-woman  seeking  a  For  her  sick  son,  The  Falcon  853 

sweet  saints  bless  your  worship  for  your  a  to  the  old 

woman  !  Foresters  ii  i  364 

0  your  honour,  I  pray  you  too  to  give  me  an  a.  „  ii  i  390 
Almshouses  Part  shall  go  to  the  a  at  Nottingham,  „  in  206 
Aloan  (alone)     Let  ma  a  afoor  foalk,  wilt  tha  ?               Proiri.  of  May  n  213 

1  tell'd  tha  to  let  ma  a !  „  n  229 
I  can't  let  tha  a  if  I  would,  Sally.                                         „           ii  233 

A-lodgin'     What  dost  a  knaw  o'  this  Mr  Hedgar  as  be 

a-Z'wi'ye?  „  1 200 

A-lolluping  (hanging  down)     tongue  on  un  cum  a-l 

out  o'  'is  mouth  as  black  as  a  rat.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  519 

Alone    (See  also  Alofin)     And  think  not  we  shall  be  a —         „  n  i  191 

and  not  a  from  this.  Likewise  from  any  other,  „  ii  ii  236 

Harold  Hear  the  king's  music,  all  a  with  him,  Harold  i  ii  194 

I  leave  thee  to  thy  talk  with  him  a;  :,    n  ii  324 

And  Wulfnoth  is  a  in  Normandy.  „      mi  81 

The  Church  a  hath  eyes — and  now  I  see  That  I  was 

blind—  Becket  nil  436 

So  many  happy  hours  a  together,  ,,     m  iii  39 

That  I  would  speak  with  you  once  more  a.  ,,    in  iii  41 

Can  I  speak  with  you  A,  my  father  ?  „       v  ii  70 

will  you  have  it  a,  Or  with  these  listeners  near  you  ?  „     v  ii  304 

We  are  all  a  with  him.  „      v  ii  312 

A  I  do  it.  „     V  ii  459 

Too  early  to  be  here  a  with  thee ;  The  Cup  i  iii  82 

Can  I  not  speak  with  you  once  more  a  ?  The  Falcon  689 

Ay,  the  dear  nurse  will  leave  you  a ;  „       ..703 

Let  him  a  !     A  worthy  messenger !  Foresters  i  iii  84 

Thou  art  a  in  the  silence  of  the  forest  „        iv  630 

Let  him  a  a  while.    He  loves  the  chivaliy  of  his  single  arm.    „         iv  784 

A-lookin'     then  a-scrattin  upon  a  bit  o'  paaper,  then 

a-l  agean ;  Prom,  of  May  i  203 

I'd  like  to  drag  'im  thruff  the  herse-pond,  and  she 

to  be  a-l  at  it.  „  n  594 

Alphabetical    (See  also  Halfabitical)    but  he  sent  me  an  a 

list  of  those  that  remain,  „  m  28 

Alphege  (Archbishop  of  Canterbury)    St.  Denis  of  France 

and  St.  A  of  England,  Becket  v  iii  165 

Altar    (See  also  Haltar)    Our  a  is  a  moimd  of  dead 

men's  clay.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  161 

a  dead  man  Rose  from  behind  the  a,  Harold  i  ii  79 

let  our  high  a  Stand  where  their  standard  fell  ...  ,.    v  ii  139 

look  how  the  table  steams,  like  a  heathen  a ;  nay,  like 

the  a  at  Jerusalem.  Becket  i  iv  69 

he  hath  made  his  bed  between  the  a's,  „   i  iv  264 

You  on  this  side  the  a.    You  on  that.  The  Cv/p  ii  254 

Altar-flame     Rouse  the  dead  a-f,  fling  in  the  spices,  „        n  182 

Alter    every  tongue  A's  it  passing.  Queen  Mary  ni  v  36 

Altered    He  is  much  a ;  but  I  trust  that  your  return —  Prom,  of  May  ni  420 

Alva  (Duke)     The  Duke  Of  ^,  an  iron  soldier.  Q^een  Mary  mi  194 

for  their  heresies,  A ,  they  will  fight ;  „         m  ii  204 

Duke  A  will  but  touch  him  on  the  horns,  „  v  i  155 

For  A  is  true  son  of  the  true  church —  „  v  i  159 

Always    .SeeHallus 

A-makin'     and  a-m'  o'  volk  madder  and  madder ;  ,,         iv  lu  532 

Amaze    one  step  in  the  dark  beyond  Our  expectation, 

that  a's  us.  The  Cup  i  i  213 


Queen  Mary  i  v  308 

I  V  566 

m  ii  21 

Foresters  i  i  130 

Queen  Mary  I  iv  110 

I  V  289 

I  V  342 

in  ii  169 

Becket  i  iii  584 

The  Cup  I  iii  137 

n  169 

Prom,  of  May  i  544 

ueen  Mary  m  iii  160 

V  ii  110 

viv  9 

viv28 

viv  30 

Becket,  Pro.  25 

Queen  Mary  m  i  227 

Becket  ui  iii  219 

The  Falcon  275 

Prom,  of  May  in  791 

Foresters  n  ii  51 

Becket  m  iii  229 


Amazed 

Amaied    (See  also  Maazed)    Madam,  I  am  a : 

brake  into  woman-tears,  Ev'n  Gardiner,  all  a, 

were  much  a  To  find  as  fair  a  sun 

Why  lookest  thou  so  a  ? 
Ambassador     King  of  France,  Noailles  the  A , 

The  A  from  France,  your  Grace. 

Who  waits  ?     Usher.     The  A  of  Spain, 
Ambition     The  proud  a's  of  Elizabeth, 

For  hath  not  thine  o  set  the  Church  This  day 

that  a  Is  like  the  sea  wave, 

a,  pride  So  bloat  and  redden  his  face — 
Ambush    Where  have  you  lain  in  a  all  the  morning  ? 
Amen    Serve  God  and  both  your  Majesties. 
Voices.     A. 

They  groan  o ;  they  swarm  into  the  fire 

A.    Come  on. 

4  to  all  Your  wish,  and  further. 

Deserts  !    A  to  what  ?    Whose  deserts  ? 
Amenable    Like  other  lords  a  to  law. 
Amends    They  make  a  for  the  tails. 

I  make  thee  full  a. 

To  make  a  I  come  this  day  to  break  my  fast 

I  cannot  find  the  word — forgive  it — A. 
Amiss     I  know  I  have  done  a,  have  been  a  fool. 
Amity     Are  now  once  more  at  perfect  a. 

Amnesty    more  of  olive-branch  and  a  For  foes  at  home —        „  v  ii  15 

A-moanin'  He's  been  a-m  and  a-groanin'  in  'is  sleep,  Prom,  of  May  m  411 
Amommn     Nard,  Cinnamon,  a,  benzoin.  The  Cup  n  184 

Amorous    If  I  tried  her  and  la — she's  a.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  17 

nor  yet  so  a  That  I  must  needs  be  husbanded  ;  „        n  ii  215 

a  Of  good  old  red  sound  liberal  Gascon  wine :  Becket,  Pro.  99 

Amoimt    How  much  might  that  a  to,  my  lord  Leicester  ?  „    i  iii  655 

Amour    Thomas,  lord  Not  only  of  your  vassals  but  a's,  „      v  i  205 

Amourist  he,  your  rustic  a,  The  polish'd  Damon  Prom,  of  May  m  561 
Amphisbsena    Two  vipers  of  one  breed — an  a,  Each 

end  a  sting :  Queen  Mary  in  iv  39 

Ampler    Farewell,  Madam,  God  grant  you  a  mercy 

at  your  call 
Amplier     A  than  any  field  on  our  poor  earth 
Amulet    that  are  a's  against  all  The  kisses  of  all  kind 

Mine  a  .  .  .  This  last  .  .  . 
Anabaptist    world-hating  beast,  A  haggard  A. 
Anathema    He  is  pronounced  a. 

LThe  Pope's  A — the  Holy  Rood  That  bow'd  to  me 
and  let  them  be  a,  And  all  that  speak  for  them  a. 
I  charge  thee,  upon  pain  of  mine  a, 
Go,  lest  I  blast  thee  with  a, 
gone  to  the  King  And  taken  our  a  with  him. 
^ematise    (See  also  De-Anathematise)    I  would  a  him. 

I  will  not  seal.  ,,  i  iii  314 

Inathematised    Cursed  and  a  us  right  and  left,  ,         v  i  4 

Anatomized    a  The  flowers  for  her —  Prom,  of  May  n  302 

;  Vncestor    bowl  my  a  Fetch'd  from  the  farthest  east —  The  Falcon  484 

'  ^cestral  lest  the  crown  should  be  Shorn  of  a  splendour.  Becket  i  iii  157 
■  Anchor  such  a  one  Was  without  rudder,  a,  compass —  Prom,  of  May  m  534 
Ancient    Who  now  recalls  her  to  His  a  fold.  Qv^en  Mary  m  iii  167 

Which  frights  you  back  into  the  a  faith  ;  „  iv  ii  143 

he  stood  More  like  an  a  father  of  the  Church,  „  iv  iii  598 

And  for  these  Royal  customs,  These  a  Royal  customs — 

Becket  i  i  167 

„     I  iii  7, 18 

V  ii  538 

The  Cup  n  358 

Queen  Mary  ni  iii  87 

Prom,  of  May  i  354 

Queen  Mary  i  v  377 

I  V  449 

I  V  625 

m  ii  16 

„  in  ii  144 

in  iii  180 


833 


Another 


IV  i  189 

in  iii  197 

Harold  I  ii  112 

„      I  ii  124 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  92 

IV  i  187 

Harold  v  i  382 

Becket  i  i  170 

..    I  iii  719 

..  rv  ii  287 

vii8 


they  are  Royal, 

These  a  laws  and  customs  of  the  realm,  (repeat) 

For  I  was  musing  on  an  a  saw, 

It  is  our  a  custom  in  Galatia 
Andrew,  St.    See  St  Andrew 
Andrew's    Laughs  at  the  last  red  leaf,  and  A  Day. 
^ew     Why,  tha  looks  haale  a  to  last  to  a  hoonderd 
Lngel    Let  the  great  a  of  the  church  come  with  him 

As  an  rt  among  a's. 

His  friends — as  A's  1  received  'em, 

flocks  of  swans,  As  fair  and  white  as  a's  ; 

True,  and  I  am  the  A  of  the  Pope. 

how  the  blessed  a's  who  rejoice  Over  one  saved 

There's  half  an  a  wrong'd  in  your  account ;  Methinks 
I  am  all  a. 

May  the  great  a's  join  their  wings. 


viiil 
V  iv  6 


Al^l  (continued)    Then  a  great  A  past  along  the  highest     Harold  m  i  134 

great  A  rose  And  past  again  along  „      mi  153 

Are  those  the  blessed  a's  quiring,  father  ?  „        v  i  472 

Whisper  !  God's  a's  only  know  it.    Ha  !  „         v  ii  31 

will  be  reflected  in  the  spiritual  body  among  the  a's.      Becket,  Pro.  398 

So  now  he  bears  the  standard  of  the  a's.  „       i  iii  497 

till  it  break  Into  yoimg  a's.  „       v  ii  257 
face  of  an  a  and  the  heart  of  a — that's  too  positive  !         The  Falcon  86 

Seem  my  good  a  who  may  help  me  from  it.  Prom,  of  May  n  388 

God's  good  A  Help  him  back  hither,  Foresters  i  ii  10 

Thou  comest  a  very  a  out  of  heaven.  „      n  i  105 

I  am  but  an  a  by  reflected  light.  „      n  i  108 

Your  heaven  is  vacant  of  your  o.  „       n  i  109 

Anger  (s)     no  more  rein  upon  thine  a  Than  any  child  !  Qu^en  Mary  in  iv  303 

The  King  is  quick  to  a  ;  if  thou  anger  him,  Becket  i  iii  165 

betwixt  thine  Appeal,  and  Henry's  a,  yield.  „       i  iii  623 

Our  brother's  a  puts  him.  Poor  man,  „       n  ii  234 

When  I  was  in  mine  a  with  King  Louis,  „    ni  iii  257 

A  noble  a  !  but  Antonius  To-morrow  The  Cup  i  ii  95 

My  five-years'  a  cannot  die  at  once,  Prom,  of  May  n  462 

Anger  (verb)     The  King  is  quick  to  anger ;  if  thou  a  him,       Becket  i  iii  165 

Nay — go.     What !  will  you  a  me  ?  „     m  i  209 

King  plucks  out  their  eyes  Who  a  him,  „    iv  ii  407 

talk  not  of  cows.    You  a  the  spirit.  Foresters  n  i  330 

A  the  scritch-owl.  „        ii  i  331 

A  brave  old  fellow  but  he  a's  me.  „        n  i  471 

Away,  away,  wife,  wilt  thou  a  him  ?  „         m  255 

Anger'd    And  if  her  people,  a  thereupon.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  90 

That  had  a  me  Had  I  been  William.  Harold  n  ii  386 

How  he  flamed  When  Tostig's  a  earldom  flimg  him,  „      m  i  54 

Tostig,  poor  brother,  Art  tJwu  so  a?  v  i  274 

I  deny  not  That  I  was  somewhat  a.  Becket  iv  ii  351 

and  yet  You  know  me  easily  a.  „        v  i  84 

But  a  at  their  flaunting  of  our  flag.  The  Falcon  628 

I  have  a  your  good  nurse  ;  „        706 

he  kneels  !  he  has  a  the  foul  witch,  Foresters  n  i  670 

Angerest    Thou  a  me,  man :  I  do  not  jest.  Becket,  Pro.  299 

Angle     A,  Jute,  Dane,  Saxon,  Norman,  Harold  n  ii  762 

yet  he  held  that  Dane,  Jute,  ^,  Saxon,  „         rv  i  77 

As  once  he  bore  the  standard  of  the  A's,  Becket  i  iii  495 

Angler's  Home    Close  by  that  alder-island  in  your 

brook  '  The  A  H.'  Prom,  of  May  n  536 

Anglia    Pereant,  pereant,  A  precatur.  Harold  v  i  534 

Angliae    Hostis  per  A  Plagas  bacchatur ;  „      v  i  510 

Angliam    Hostis  in  A  Ruit  praedator,  „      v  i  506 

Angry    Thro'  all  her  a  chronicles  hereafter  By  loss  of 

Calais.                                                       '  Queen  Mary  v  ii  304 

Animal    What,  is  not  man  a  hunting  a  ?  Foresters  iv  224 

Anjou  (French  province)     When  I  am  out  in  Normandy 

or  A.  Becket,  Pro.  144 

We  take  her  from  her  secret  bower  in  A  „     Pro.  182 

A  hundred,  too,  from  Normandy  and  A  :  „       n  ii  174 

My  A  bower  was  scarce  as  beautiful.  „  ni  i  52 
Glancing  at  the  days  when  his  father  was  only 

Earl  of  ^,  „    m  iii  150 

Anne  (Christian  name)     He  loved  the  Lady  A  ;  Foresters  i  i  7 

Anne  (Queen)    Queen  A  loved  him.    All  the  women 

loved  him.  Queen  Mary  n  i  33 

Anne  (Wharton)    (See  also  Anne  Wharton)    and  the 

Lady  A  Bow'd  to  the  Pyx ;  .,           i  v  41 

wherefore  bow  ye  not,  says  Lady  A,  ,,           i  v  46 

Anne  Wharton    (See  also  Anne)    with  her  Lady  A  W, 

and  the  Lady  Anne                        _  „          i  v  41 

Annex'd    and  the  legateship  A  to  Canterbury —  „         v  ii  37 

Anotiber    — a  recantation  Of  Cranmer  at  the  stake.  „     iv  iii  299 

There  !  there  !  a  paper  !  „        v  ii  329 

revolt  ?  A  new  Northumberland,  a  Wyatt  ?  „  v  v  188 
for  what  right  had  he  to  get  himself  wrecked  on  a 

man's  land  ?  Harold  n  i  60 

a  hill  Or  fort,  or  city,  took  it,  „  rv  i  49 
With  whom  I  fought  a  fight  than  this  Of  Stamford-bridge.  „  iv  iii  23 
And  then  a  wood,  and  in  the  midst  A  garden  and 

my  Rosamund.  Becket,  Pro.  168 

You  bad  me  take  revenge  a  way —  „        iv  ii  153 

There  is  yet  a  old  woman.  Foresters  ii  i  244 

3g 


Another 


834 


Apostle 


Another  (continued)    Your  worship  may  find  a  rhyme  if  you 


Foresters  n  i  322 
m  153 

Becket,  Pro.  276 

I  i  134 

„     III  iii  203 


care  to  drag  your  brains  for  such  a  minnow. 
Doubtless,  like  judges  of  a  bench, 
Anselm  (Archbishop  of  Canterbury)    And  I'll  have  no 
more  A's. 
Thou  art  the  man — be  thou  A  mightier  A. 
But  A  crown'd  this  Henry  o'er  again. 
Answer  (s)     Is  it  England,  or  a  party  ?     Now,  your  a.    Queen  Mary  i  v  143 
My  a  is,  I  wear  beneath  my  dress  A  shirt  of  mail :  „        i  v  144 

I  would  your  a  had  been  other,  Madam,  „        i  v  274 

It  craves  an  instant  a.  Ay  or  No.  ,,        i  v  589 

And  by  their  a's  to  the  question  ask'd,  „       n  ii  153 

Is  that  your  a?  „  v  i  68 

Allow  me  the  same  a  as  before —  ,.        v  i  237 

And  my  a  to  it — See  here —  Harold  i  ii  56 

Be  careful  of  thine  a,  my  good  friend.  „     n  ii  605 

How  ran  that  a  which  King  Harold  gave  „  iv  iii  108 

Take  thou  mine  a  in  bare  commonplace —  Becket,  Pro.  282 

My  heart  is  full  of  tears — I  have  no  a.  ,,      Pro.  407 

cannot  yield  thee  an  a  altogether  to  thy  satisfaction.  „  i  iv  21 

That  is  not  altogether  an  a,  my  lord.  „  i  iv  27 

With  Cain's  a  my  lord.     Am  I  his  keeper  ?  „        i  iv  186 

Your  a,  beauty  !  „         iv  ii  52 

Vouchsafe  a  gracious  a  to  your  Queen  ?  „       iv  ii  359 

had  she  but  given  Plain  a  to  plain  query  ?  „       iv  ii  386 

You  had  my  a  to  that  cry  before.  „       v  iii  124 

Answer  not ;  but  strike.     De  Tracy.     There  is  my 

a  then.  „      v  iii  187 

He  waits  your  a.  The  Cup  n  138 

Weant  ye  gi'e  me  a  kind  a  at  last  ?  Prom,  of  May  ii  64 

her  a — ^I  think  I  have  it  about  me — yes,  there  it  is  !  „       in  394 

Answer  (verb)     A  thou  for  him,  then  !  Queen  Mary  i  i  40 

We  a  him  with  ours,  and  there  are  messengers  „       i  iii  136 

And  a  them  in  song.  „  n  i  53 

And  cannot  a  sanely  .  .  .  What  it  means  ?  Harold  i  i  88 

but  thou  must  not  this  way  a  him.  „     n  ii  372 

To  which  the  lover  a's  lovingly  '  I  am  beside  thee.'  „     m  ii  13 

Full  hope  have  I  that  love  will  a  love.  „     iv  i  238 

A  them  thou  !     Is  this  our  marriage-banquet  ?  „       iv  iii  3 

A  then  !  „     iv  iii  44 

Our  javelins  A  their  arrows.  „      v  i  522 

let  me  go.     Henry.     A  me  first.  Becket,  Pro.  280 

he  shall  a  to  the  svunmons  of  the  King's  court  „         i  iii  88 

appear  before  the  Pope,  And  a  thine  accusers  ...  ,,       i  iii  603 

lustiest  and  lousiest  of  this  Cain's  brotherhood,  a.  „       i  iv  185 

Thou  wast  too  shamed  to  a.  .,  n  i  66 

I  cannot  a  it  Till  better  times,  „  in  i  2 

I  challenge  thee  to  meet  me  before  God.     A  me  there.       .,      iv  ii  255 
Madam,  I  will  not  a  you  one  word.  .,      iv  ii  363 

calls  you  oversea  To  a  for  it  in  his  Norman  courts.  „       v  ii  355 

A  not,  but  strike.     De  Tracy.    There  is  my 

answer  then.  „      v  iii  186 

Come  once  more  to  me  Before  the  crowning, — I  will 

a  you.  The  Cup  n  79 

No  chord  in  me  that  would  not  a  you  In  music.  The  Falcon  456 

And  ask'd  me  what  I  could  not  a.  Prom,  of  May  i  555 

I  cannot  Well  a  for  my  father ;  „  n  519 

he  would  a  nothing,  I  could  make  nothing  of  him  ;  „  in  495 

and  it  a's,  I  am  thine  to  the  very  heart  of  the  earth —  Foresters  i  i  336 
and  if  her  beauties  a  their  report.  „        i  ii  28 

•-•■■■  iii  33 

I  ii  136 

1  ii  140 

I  ii  220 

in  353 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  603 

Becket  I  i  82,  98 

„  n  ii  5 

in  i  121 

IV  ii  361 

V  ii  546 

Foresters  I  i  310 

Queen  Mary  n  i  84 

Harold  in  ii  91 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  95 


Yes,  my  lord,  fear  not.     I  will  a  for  you. 

My  Lady,  will  you  a  me  a  question  ? 

I  will  not  a  it,  my  lord, 

I  cannot  a  thee  till  Richard  come. 

And  a  it  in  flowers. 
Answer'd    Or  a  them  in  smiling  negatives  ; 

And  the  Lord  a  me,  '  Thou  art  the  man,  (repeat) 

he  a  me,  As  if  he  wore  the  crown  already — 

I  a  for  myself  that  I  never  spoke  more 

Rosamund  hath  not  o  you  one  word  ; 

Methought  I  a  moderately  enough. 

Thou  hast  a  for  me,  but  I  know  not 
Ant    Tut,  your  sonnet's  a  flying  a. 
Anthem    Their  a's  of  no  church,  how  sweet  they  are ! 
Antichrist    terms  Of  Satan,  liars,  blasphemy,  A, 


Antichrist     As  for  the  Pope  I  count  him  A,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  277 

Anti-marning    black,  bell-silencing,  a-m,  burial-hindering 

interdict  Becket  ni  iii  55 

Antioch    And  felt  the  sim  of  A  scald  our  mail,  ..       ii  ii  93 

Arab  soldan,  who.  When  I  was  there  in  A,  ..    iv  ii  301 

central  diamond,  worth,  I  think,  Half  of  the  A  ..       v  i  166 

Anti-papal    so  much  of  the  a-p  leaven  Works  in  him  yet.     Queen  Mary  iv  i  15 
Antipope    Who  had  my  pallmm  from  an  A  !  Harold  i  i  82 

prest  upon  By  the  fierce  Emperor  and  his  A.  Becket  i  iii  203 

And  then  thy  King  might  join  the  J,  ..     i  iii  211 

between  The  Pope  and  A —  ,-       n  ii  70    ^ 

Anti-Roman    Our  a- i?  faction  ?  The  CupiiW^Q    • 

I  have  enough — their  a-R  faction.  „        i  ii  200    \ 

Antonius  (a  Roman  General)    '  Pleader  of  the  Roman  legion.'    .,         i  i  167    ■ 
shrine  Of  our  great  Goddess,  in  some  city  where  A  past.     ,.  i  ii  58    , 

Most  like  the  city  rose  against  A^  „  i  ii  63 

A  To-morrow  will  demand  your  tribute —  „  i  ii  95 

Returns  with  this  ^ .  „        i  ii  179 

paper  sign'd  A — will  you  take  it,  read  it  ?  ,.        i  ii  226 

All  that  Lies  with  ^.  „        i  ii  293 

A,  So  gracious  toward  women,  ,,        i  ii  298 

wrong'd  Without  there,  knew  thee  with  ^ .  ,.        i  ii  320    , 

Where  is  ^  ?  (repeat)  The  Cup  i  iii  48,  79,  87,  97 

To  find  A  here.  The  Cup  i  iii  55 

walk  with  me  we  needs  must  meet  A  coming,  .,       i  iii  93 

A  would  not  suffer  me  to  break  Into  the  sanctuary.  ..     i  iii  120 

Our  A,  Our  faithful  friend  of  Rome,  „        n  243 

Welcome,  my  lord  A,  to  our  Temple.  „        n  252 

A,  Much  graced  are  we  that  our  Queen  „        n  333 

A,  Where  wast  thou  on  that  morning  „        n  389 

A — '  Gamma  !  '  who  spake  ?  „        ii  400 

A,  If  you  had  found  him  plotting  against  Rome,  ,.         ii  405 

A,  tell  the  Senate  I  have  been  most  true  to  Rome —  ,.        n  481 

^,  is /ie  there  ?  „         ii  496 

Antony  (an  adherent  of  Wyatt)    (See  also  Antony 

Knyvett,  Knyvett)     Come,  you  bluster,  A  !  Queen  Mary  ii  i  119 

Antony  Knjrvett    Here's  A  K.  „  n  i  73 

Antwerp    To  Strasburg,  A,  Frankfort,  Zurich,  .,  i  ii  1 

There  is  A  and  the  Jews.  „  v  i  182 

Anvil     A  on  hammer  bang —  Harold  iv  iii  161 

Hammer  on  a,  hammer  on  a.  „     iv  iii  162 

set  the  Church  This  day  between  the  hammer 

and  the  a —  Becket  i  iii  586 

Any  (See  also  Ony)     Nay,  if  by  chance  you  hear  of  a 

such.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  175 

Good  Prince,  art  thou  in  need  of  a  gold  ?  Foresters  i  ii  163 

Anyhow    See  Onyhow 
An3^hing    (See  also  Onythink,  Owt)     or  whether  They 

should  believe  in  a  ;  Qxieen  Mary  iv  iii  407 

A  or  nothing  ?     Filippo.    Well,  my  lord,  if  all-but- 

nothing  be  a.  The  Falcon  133 

then  there  is  a  in  your  lordship's  larder  at  your 

lordship's  service,  „  137 

tell  me  a  of  our  sweet  Eva  When  in  her  brighter 

girlhood.  Prom,  of  May  n  520 

Apart     Remain  within  the  chamber,  but  a.  Queen  Mary  v  iii  12 

A-parting    saw  your  ladyship  a-p  wi'  him  even  now  i' 

the  coppice,  Becket  ni  i  160 

A-passing    Who's  a-p  ?     King  Edward  or  King 

Richard  ?  Queen  Mary  i  i  31 

The  blessed  Mary's  a-p  !  ,.  i  i  36 

Apathy    And,  lest  we  freeze  in  mortal  a.  The  Cup  i  iii  130 

numb'd  me  into  a  Against  the  unpleasant  jolts         Prom,  of  May  i  227 

Ape     A  Parliament  of  imitative  a's  !  Queen  Mary  ni  iii  235 

a  feeder  Of  dogs  and  hawks,  and  a's,  Becket  i  i  80 

A-peacocking  (showing  off)    a-p  and  a-spreading  to  catch 

her  eye  for  a  dozen  year.  The  Falcon  9J' 

Apicius    that  Lucullus  or  A  might  have  sniffed  it  Becket  m  iii  117 

A-plaayin'  (playing)    a-p  the  saame  gaame  wi'  my 

Dora —  Prom,  of  May  ii  59] 

Apoplexy    O  would  it  were  His  third  last  a  !  The  Cup  n  171! 

Apostate     The  a  monk  that  was  with  Randulf  here.  Becket  v  ii  57't 

Apostle    His  prophets,  and  a's,  in  the  Testaments,      Queen  Mary  iv  iii  23" 

we  be  liker  the  blessed  A's  ;  they  were  fishers  of  men,        Harold  ii  i  3"! 

spirit  of  the  twelve  A's  enter'd  Into  thy  making.  Becket  i  i  & 


Apostolic 


835 


Argue 


Apostolic    And  from  the  A  see  of  Rome  ;  Queen  Mary  ni  iii  127 

by  your  intercession  May  from  the  A  see  obtain,  „  ill  iii  147 

And  we  by  that  authority  A  Given  imto  us,  his 
Legate,  „  m  iii  210 

/VppaU'd     And  yet  I  seem  a — on  such  a  sudden  Becket  i  i  137 

Appeal    for  their  sake  who  stagger  betwixt  thine  .4,  „     i  iii  623 

make  a  To  all  the  archbishops,  bishops,  „      v  ii  403 

Appealed     You  were  sent  for.  You  were  a  to,  Queen  Mary  iii  iv  256 

I  a  to  the  Sister  again,  her  answer —  From,  of  May  iii  394 

Appear    doth  a  this  marriage  is  the  least  Of  all  their 

quarrel.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  154 

And  cite  thee  to  a  before  the  Pope,  Becket  i  iii  602 

Appearance    for  a  sake,  stay  with  the  Queen.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  137 

Appen  (happen)    To  be  true  to  each  other, 

let  'a  what  maay,  (repeat)  Prom,  of  May  ii  206,  236,  257 

Appertaining    myself  Half  beast  and  fool  as  a  to  it ;    Queen  Mary  iv  iii  415 
Applaud     I  say  Ye  would  a  that  Norman  Harold  ii  ii  539 

Apple  (adj.)     No,  not  that  way — here,  under  the  a  tree.    Prom,  of  May  i  83 
Apple  (s)     cut  out  the  rotten  from  your  a,  Your  a  eats      Queen  Mary  ii  ii  6 

That  bears  not  its  own  a's.  „  in  i  23 

if  I  had  been  Eve  i'  the  garden  I  shouldn't  ha' 

minded  the  a,  for  what's  an  a,  Becket  iii  i  140 

you  have  robb'd  poor  father  Of  ten  good  a's.  Prom,  of  May  i  616 

\ppoint     Or  he  the  bridegroom  may  a  ?  Becket  i  iii  687 

Appointed    He,  whom  the  Father  had  a  Head  Of  all 

I  his  church.  Queen  Mary  ni  iii  206 

the  King,  till  another  be  a,  shall  receive  the  revenues 
thereof,'  Becket  i  iii  101 

ppreciation    commend  them  to  your  ladyship's  most 

peculiar  a.  The  Falcon  568 

Apprehend    '  Whosoever  will  a  the  traitor  Thomas 

Wyatt  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  59 

Approve     I  am  happy  you  a  it.  „  v  iii  63 

Which  you  woiild  scarce  a  of  :  Prom,  of  May  in  624 

Approved    the  Emperor  A  you,  and  when  last  he 

wrote,  Queen  Mary  m  vi  77 

When  I  was  made  Archbishop,  he  a  me.  „  v  ii  86 

Appurtenance    so  descend  again  with  some  of  her 

ladyship's  own  a's  ?  ■  The  Falcon  417 

Appy  (happy)     They  can't  be  many,  my  dear,  but  I 

'oapes  they'll  be  'a.  Prom,  of  May  i  353 

Apricot     walnut,  a.  Vine,  cypress,  poplar,  myrtle,  The  Cup  i  i  2 

April  (adj.)     Like  A  sap  to  the  topmost  tree,  Foresters  i  iii  24 

April  (s)     I  was  but  fourteen  and  an  A  then.  Becket  i  i  279 

Apt     And  a  at  arms  and  shrewd  in  policy.  Foresters  i  ii  104 

Aquitaine  (a  French  province)    but  our  sun  in  A  lasts 

longer.     I  would  I  were  in  A  again — 

'  Eleanor  of  A,  Eleanor  of  England  ! 

To  take  my  life  might  lose  him  A . 

Of  England  ?     Say  oi  A.     I  am  no  Queen  of  England. 

I  will  go  live  and  die  in  A.  (repeat) 

Ha,  you  of  .4  !     0  you  of  A  !     You  were  but  A  to 

Louis — no  wife  ;  You  are  only  A  to  me — 
I  be  wife  to  one  That  only  wedded  me  for  A  ? 
And  what  would  my  own  A  say  to  that  ? 
!^b     I  had  it  from  an  A  soldan,  who, 
liaby    free  wing  The  world  were  all  one  A. 
!luragon  (a  Spanish  province)    The  voices  of  Castille 
and  A, 
O  Saint  of  A,  with  that  sweet  worn  smile 
Arbour    See  Harbour 

fiirchbishop    {See  also  Chancellor-Archbishop.  Dis- 
Ardibishop)     The  false  a  fawning  on  him. 
That  when  I  was  a  held  with  me. 
Chief  prelate  of  our  Church,  a, 
bumin'  o'  the  owld  a  '11  bum  the  Pwoap 
When  I  was  made  A,  he  approved  me. 
Did  ye  not  outlaw  your  a  Robert, 
Ask  our  A.     Stigand  should  know  the  purposes  of 

Heaven. 
A  Robert !     Robert  the  A  ! 
No,  nor  a,  nor  my  confessor  yet. 
Why — look — is  this  a  sleeve  For  an  a  ? 
A  more  awful  one.     Make  me  a  ! 
Me  A  !     God's  favour  and  king's  favour 


Becket,  Pro.  328 
IV  ii  241 
IV  ii  396 
vilOO 
i  109,  143 


vill4 
vil21 

vil82 
IV  ii  300 
Queen  Mary  iii  v  210 

V  i  43 
V  v  198 


1  V  30 

IV  ii  160 

„  IV  iii  70 

„         IV  iii  535 

V  ii  85 

Harold  I  i  56 

„       I  i  63 

„  iiii528 

Becket,  Pro.  84 

.,      Pro.  251 

„      Pro.  289 

„      Pro.  293 


Archbishop  {continued)    My  liege,  the  good  A  is  no  more. 

And  this  plebeian  like  to  be  A  ! 
A?    I  can  see  further  into  a  man 

but  the  Chancellor's  and  the  A's  Together 

Make  an  ^4  of  a  soldier  ? 

'  My  young  A — thou  wouldst  make  A  stately  A  !  ' 

And  how  been  made  A  hadst  thou  told  him, 

The  A  !     Becket.     Ay  !  what  wouldst  thou, 

Come,  come,  my  lord  A  ; 

can  I  be  under  him  As  Chancellor  ?  as  ^  over  him  ? 

my  Lord  A,  'Tis  known  you  are  midwinter  to  all 
women, 

first  a  fled,  And  York  lay  barren  for  a  hundred  years. 

Is  it  thy  will.  My  lord  A, 

Loyally  and  with  good  faith,  my  lord  A  ? 

My  lord  A,  thou  hast  yet  to  seal. 

Say  that  a  cleric  murder'd  an  a, 

Hoped,  were  he  chosen  a. 

Now  as  A  goest  against  the  King  ; 

and  no  forsworn  A  Shall  helm  the  Church. 

To  see  the  proud  A  mutilated. 

Know  that  when  made  A  I  was  freed. 

That  none  should  wrong  or  injure  your  A. 

My  lord  A,  wilt  thou  permit  us — 

My  lord  A,  may  I  come  in  with  my  poor  friend, 
my  dog  ? 

Is  the  A  a  thief  who  gives  thee  thy  supper  ? 

if  the  barons  and  bishops  hadn't  been  a-sitting 
on  the  A. 

Where  is  my  lord  A  ? 

for  the  A  loves  humbleness,  my  lord  ; 

the  A  washed  my  feet  o'  Tuesday. 

for  the  A  likes  the  smell  on  it, 

I  bring  the  taint  on  it  along  wi'  me,  for  the  A  likes  it, 

for  to-night  ye  have  saved  our  A  ! 

My  friends,  the  A  bids  you  good  night. 

then  to  he  made  A  and  go  against  the  King 

nor  our  A  Stagger  on  the  slope  decks 

Blessed  be  the  Lord  A,  who  hath  withstood 

My  dear  Lord  A,  I  learn  but  now 

God  bless  the  great  A  ! 

you  had  safelier  have  slain  an  a  than  a  she-goat : 

What  more,  my  lord  A  ?     What  more,  Thomas  ? 

But  kinglike  fought  the  proud  a, — 

Down  with  King  Henry  !  up  with  the  A  ! 

I  told  him  I  was  bound  to  see  the  A  ; 

she  had  seen  the  A  once.  So  mild,  so  kind. 

No,  daughter,  you  mistake  our  good  A  ; 

How  the  good  A  reddens  ! 

To  all  the  a's,  bishops,  prelates,  barons. 

My  vassals — and  yet  threaten  your  A  In  his  own 
house. 

Here  is  the  great  A  !     He  lives  !  he  lives  ! 

my  lord  A,  A  score  of  knights  all  arm'd 

Where  is  the  A,  Thomas  Becket  ? 

Strike  our  A  in  his  own  cathedral  ! 

the  great  A  !     Does  he  breathe  ?     No  ? 

they  plimder — yea,  ev'n  bishops.  Yea,  ev'n  a's — 
Archbishoprick     as  his  successor  in  the  a. 

From  out  his  grave  to  this  a. 

and  chosen  me  For  this  thy  great  a, 

Save  from  the  throne  of  thine  a  ? 

I  care  not  for  thy  new  a. 

Shall  I  forget  my  new  o 

It  well  befits  thy  new  a  To  take  the  vagabond  woman 

Found  two  a's,  London  and  York  ? 

King  Would  throne  me  in  the  great  A  : 
Archdeacon    The  Pope  and  that  A  Hildebrand  His 

master,  Harold  in  ii  144 

Archiepiscopari    but  Nolo  A,  my  good  friend,  Becket,  Pro.  286 

Archiepiscopal^    As  magnificently  and  a  as  our  Thomas 

would  have  done  :  „      m  iii  87 

A-readin'     arter  she'd  been  a-r  me  the  letter  wi'  'er 

voice  a-shaakin'.  Prom,  of  May  ii  128 

Argue    and  I  can't  a  upon  it ;  Queen  Mary  i  i  55 


Becket,  Pro.  392 

„      Pro.  459 

„      Pro.  462 

I  i  23 

I  i  41 

I  i  65 

I  i  121 

I  i  185 

I  i  201 

r  i  349 

I  ii  26 
I  iii  53 
I  iii  272 
I  iii  279 
I  iii  306 
I  iii  399 
r  iii  442 

„  I  iii  530 
I  iii  597 

„  I  iii  614 
I  iii  707 
I  iii  755 

„  I  iv  5 

I  iv  93 
„       I iv  115 

I  iv  128 
„  I  iv  184 
I  iv  208 
I  iv  234 
I  iv  240 
I  iv  253 
I  iv  257 

I  iv  261 

II  i  237 
II  ii  105 
II  ii  275 
II  ii  426 
II  ii  452 
in  iii  68 

„     III  iii  217 

„      IV  ii  438 

V  i  261 

V  ii  100 

V  ii  119 

V  ii  138 

V  ii  298 

V  ii  404 

V  ii  505 

V  iii  29 

V  iii  70 
„  V  iii  109 
„  V  iii  180 
„      V  iii  202 

Foresters  iv  911 
Becket,  Pro.  402 
Pro.  420 
1 191 
iill9 
1 1217 
1 1220 
1 1225 
I  iii  50 
I  iii  694 


Argued 


836 


A-scratiin 


Argued    WhUe  this  same  marriage  question  was  being  a.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  38 

A^oment    And  thousand-times  recurring  a  ,,          iv  ii  93 

Arise     A  against  her  and  dethrone  the  Queen —  .,          i  iii  91 

And  over  thee  the  suns  a  and  set,  Harold  n  ii  433 

A,  Scatter  thy  people  home,  descend  the  hill,  „            v  i  9 

and  a  again  Disjointed  :  ,,        v  i  297 

a.  And  dash  thyself  against  me  that  I  may  slay  thee  !  Becket  iv  ii  194 

The  traitor's  dead,  and  will  a  no  more.      *        *  „      v  iii  200 

Ark    over  His  gilded  o  of  mummy-saints,  Harold  v  i  304 

Arm  (s)    her  babe  in  o's  Had  felt  the  faltering  Queen  Mary  n  ii  81 

Into  the  wide-spread  a's  of  fealty,  ,,          n  ii  264 

he  was  deliver'd  To  the  secular  a  to  bum  ;  ,,          iv  ii  214 

and  you  know  me  strong  of  a  ;  .,           v  ii  470 

I  felt  his  a's  about  me,  and  his  lips —  .,             v  v  99 

I  will  see  none  except  the  priest.    Your  o.  „           t  v  197 

Thou  art  my  nun,  thy  cloister  in  mine  a's.  Harold  i  ii  63 

I  touch  mine  a's,  My  limbs —  ,,     n  ii  794 

heads  And  a's  are  sliver'd  off  and  splinter'd  ,,      v  i  540 

Must  I  hack  her  a's  off  ?    How  shsJl  I  part  them  ?  „     v  ii  147 


Becket,  Pro.  252 
..       Pro.  256 


the  a  within  Is  Becket's,  who  hath  beaten  down 

A  soldier's,  not  a  spiritual  a. 

To  take  the  vagabond  woman  of  the  street  Into 

thine  a's !  „          i  i  229 

He  fast !  is  that  an  a  of  fast  ?  ,.        i  iii  520 

I  ha'  carried  him  ever  so  many  miles  in  my  a's,  ..          i  iv  99 

To  the  fond  a's  of  her  first  love,  Fitzurse,  „       iv  ii  334 

Mine  a  is  sever'd.    I  can  no  more —  ..       v  iii  188 

and  open  a's  To  him  who  gave  it ;  The  Cup  i  i  84 

Your  a — a  moment — It  will  pass.  „        n  448 
Give  me  your  a.     Lead  me  back  again.                   Prom,  of  May  in  473 

What  a  shape  !  what  lovely  a's  !  Foresters  i  i  109 

Take  thou  mine  a.    Who  art  thou,  gallant  knight  ?  ,,      n  i  439 

with  this  skill  of  fence  !  let  go  mine  a.  ..       n  ii  39 

Nor  care  to  leap  into  each  other's  a's,  ..           rn  7 
and  thine  a's,  and  thy  legs,  and  thy  heart,  and  thy 

liver,  „       rv  203 

He  loves  the  chivalry  of  his  single  a.  ,,       iv  786 

Ann  (vwb)     And  a  and  strike  as  with  one  hand,  Quee^i  Mary  n  ii  292 

Good  !  let  them  a.  Becket  v  ii  571 

Arm'd     a  thousand  of  them — more — All  o.  Queen  Mary  n  i  108 

And  see  the  citizens  a.    Good  day ;  „          n  ii  378 
And  a  men  Ever  keep  watch  beside  my  chamber  door,    Harold  u  ii  244 

There  is  an  a  man  ever  glides  behind  !  „     n  ii  247 

tell  him  we  stand  a  on  Senlac  Hill,  „        v  i  59 
Herbert,  take  out  a  score  of  a  men  To  guard  this 

bird  of  passage  to  her  cage  ;  Becket  i  i  328 

Why  dost  thou  presiune,  A  with  thy  cross,  ,.  i  iii  509 

He  rides  abroad  with  a  followers,  „        v  i  2 

My  lord,  the  city  if  full  of  a  men.  „   v  ii  188 

she  told  us  of  a  men  Here  in  the  city.  „   v  ii  227 

But  these  a  men — will  you  not  hide  yourself  ?  „   v  ii  247 

Ay — but  these  a  men — will  you  drowii  yourself?  „    v  ii  276 

These  a  men  in  the  city,  these  fierce  faces —  „      v  iii  3 

Those  a  men  in  the  cloister.  ,,    v  iii  49 

score  of  knights  all  a  with  swords  and  axes —  „    v  iii  71 

Aimfnl    for  who  could  embrace  such  an  a  of  joy  ?  Foresters  i  ii  71 

Aiming    the  knights  are  a  in  the  garden  Beneath  the 

sycamore.  Becket  v  ii  569 

Armour    fair  a  likeness  As  your  great  King  in  a  Queen  Mary  v  v  29 

Not  heavier  than  thine  a  at  Thoulouse  ?  Becket  i  i  26 

He  had  been  hurt,  And  bled  beneath  his  a.  Foresters  n  ii  5 

Beetle's  jewel  a  crack'd,  „     n  ii  160 

I  left  mine  horse  and  a  with  a  Squire,  „       rv  414 

Armour'd    Haled  thy  shore-swsJlow'd,  a  Normans  up  Harold  n  ii  57 

Arms    Ay,  all  in  a.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  3 

And  I  would  have  my  warrior  all  in  a.  „         v  v  34 

Thou  art  in  a  against  us.  Harold  rv  ii  8 

Our  Church  in  a — ^the  lamb  the  lion —  „    v  j  440 
To  a  !     Becket.     De  Morville,  I  had  thought  so  well 

of  you ;  Becket  v  ii  518 

And  apt  at  a  and  shrewd  in  policy.  Foresters  i  ii  104 

by  force  and  a  hath  trespassed  against  the  king  „       i  iii  62 

Army    Hold  office  in  the  household,  fleet,  forts,  a ;       Qv^en  Mary  m  iii  73 

I  am  foraging  For  Norway's  a.  Harold  iv  ii  6 

in  a  city  Uiro'  which  he  past  with  the  Roman  a :  The  Cup  i  i  43 


(repeat) 
.     The 


'Arold  (Harold)    '^  !  '^  !  '^  !  so  they  be. 

'  A  !  The  feller's  clean  daazed, 

Mr.  A,  Miss.     Bora.     Below  ? 

Please,  Mister '  A. 
Arouse    Thou  didst  a  the  fierce  Northmnbrians  ! 
Arraign    Who  dares  a  us,  king,  of  such  a  plot  ? 
Arrange     A  my  dress — the  gorgeous  Indian  shawl 
Arranged    they  are  a  here  acconiing  to  their  first 

letters. 
Arrant    Convicted  by  their  conscience,  a  cowards, 

I  know  them  a  knaves  in  Nottingham. 
Arrogance    I  always  hated  boimdless  a. 

our  John  By  his  Norman  a  and  dissoluteness, 
Arrogant    What,  daunted  by  a  garrulous,  a  girl ! 
Arrow    {See  also  Vane-arrow)    see  there  the  a's 
flying. 

Sanguelac  !  Sanguelac  !  the  a  !  the  a  ! 

It  is  the  a  of  death  in  his  own  heart — 

Sanguelac  !  Sanguelac  !    The  a  !  the  o  ! 

The  king's  last  word — '  the  o  ! ' 

What  is  that  whirring  sovmd  ?    Stigand 
Norman  a  ! 

Our  javelins  Answer  their  a's. 

The  Norman  sends  his  a's  up  to  Heaven, 

0  which  the  Saints  Sharpen'd  and  sent  against  him — 
Give  him  a  bow  and  a's — follow — ^follow, 
my  good  fellow.  My  a  struck  the  stag, 
besides  the  wind  Went  with  my  a. 
Why  so  I  said,  my  a.    Well,  to  sleep. 
Whose  a  is  the  plague — whose  quick  flash 
A's  whistle  all  about. 
Take  thou  my  bow  and  a  and  compel  them  to  pay  toll 

,  How  much  ?  how  much  ?    Speak,  or  the  a  flies. 
By  a  and  gray  goosewing, 
By  a  and  by  bowstring, 
like  a  deer  that  hath  escaped  thine  a  ! 
What  deer  when  I  have  mark'd  him  ever  yet  Escaped 

mine  a  ? 
Give  me  my  bow  and  a's. 
Each  of  us  has  an  a  on  the  cord  ; 

1  am  here,  my  a  on  the  cord. 
WiU  hear  our  a's  whizzing  overhead. 

Arrow-points     Prick  'em  in  the  calves  with  the  a-p — 
Art    illogically,  out  of  passion,  without  a — 

with  some  sense  of  a,  to  live  By  brush  and  pencil. 

Follow  my  a  among  these  quiet  fields, 
Artemis  (a  goddess)    himself  an  adorer  of  our  great 
goddess.  A, 

take  this  holy  cup  To  lodge  it  in  the  shrine  of  A. 

To  lodge  this  cup  Within  the  holy  shrine  of  A, 

A,  A,  hear  us,  O  Mother,  hear  us,  and  bless  us  ! 

A,  thou  that  art  life  to  the  wind, 

this  oracle  of  great  A  Has  no  more  power 

Great  A  I     O  Camma,  can  it  be  well, 

A,  A,  hear  him,  Ionian  A  ! 

A,  A,  hear  her,  Ephesian  A  ! 

A,  A,  hear  me,  Galatian  A  ! 

A,  A,  hear  her,  Galatian  A  ! 

These  are  strange  words  to  speak  to  A. 

many-breasted  mother  A  Emboss'd  upon  it. 

Our  A  Has  vanquish'd  their  Diana. 
Artemoon  (afternoon)    holler  laane  be  hallus  sa  dark 

i'  the  o, 
Arthur  (King)     The  veriest  Galahad  of  old  A's  hall. 
Article     Philip  by  these  a's  is  bound  From  stirring 
hand  or  foot 

In  every  a  of  the  Catholic  faith. 
Artillery    See  Real  Hard  Tillery 
Artist    {See  also  Hartist)     Eva  told  me  that  he  was 

taking  her  likeness.    He's  an  a. 
Asaph  (the  I«vite,  musician  to  King  David)    sing,  A  ! 

clash  The  cymbal,  Heman  ! 
Ascended    He  is  not  yet  a  to  the  Father. 
A-scrattin  (scratching)    then  a-s  upon  a  bit  o'  paaper, 
then  a-lookin'  agean ; 


Prom,  of  May  n  724 

„  n728 

m  478 

m  TOO 

Harold  v  i  347 

„     IV  i 168 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  538 

Prom,  of  May  m  36 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  9 

Foresters  m  301 

Becket  v  i  13 

Foresters  n  i  85 

„       IV  736 

Quee7i  Mary  n  iv  51 

Harold  in  i  402 

m  i404 

.,  V  i  262,  B72 

v  i  266 


vi483 

V  i  522 

vi666 

V  ii  167 

The  Ottp  I  i  208 

I  ii  28 

I  ii  32 

„      I  ii  385 

n291 

Foresters  n  ii  165 

III263 

m278 

in  427 

ni442 

iv61 


IT  64 

IV  603 

IV607 

IV  732 

IV  1090 

IV  561 

Becket,  Pro.  337 

Prom,  of  May  i  497 

I  743 

The  Cup  I  i  39 

I  ii  435 

I  iii  53 

nl 

nS 

n33 

n80 

n276 

n  310 

n312 

n  316 

n327 

n340 

n456 

Prom,  of  May  m  93 
Becket,  Pro.  129 

Queen  Mary  in  iii  59 
rv  iii  230 


Prom,  of  May  i  ifl 

Harold  in  i  187 
Becket  v  iii  150 


Prom,  of  May 


Ji 


Ash 


837 


Auieole 


Ash  (cmder )    (See  also  Ashes)    fain  had  calcined  all 

Northumbria  To  one  black  a,  Harold  m  i  57 

Ash  (tree)     (See  also  Ashtree)     And  wattled  thick  with  a  and 

\Tillow- wands  ;  „      v  i  190 

This  is  the  hottest  of  it :  hold,  o  !  hold,  ^tIIIow  !  „      v  i  628 

I  remember,  Scarlet  hacking  down  A  hollow  a.  Foresters  n  ii  96 

i^-shaakin'  (shaking)     arter  she'd  been  a-readin'  me 

the  letter  wi'  'er  voice  a-s.  From,  of  May  a  129 

Jkshamed    {See  also  Shaamed)    I  am  a  that  I  am 

Bagenhall,  English.  Queen  Mary  ui  iii  248 

Thou  mak'st  me  much  a  That  I  was  for  a  moment 

wroth  at  thee.  „  lu  iv  305 

Till  I  mj^self  was  half  a  for  him.  „  iv  ii  171 

I  am  a  to  lift  my  eyes  to  heaven,  „  iv  iii  127 

you  yourself  are  a  of  me,  and  I  do  not  wonder  at  it.  From,  of  May  m  269 

I  fall  beiore  thee,  clasp  Thy  knees.     I  am  a.  Foresters  ii  i  600 

Adies    (See  also  Ash)    those  a  Which  all  must  be.  The  Cup  i  iii  134 

to  such  a  heat  As  bums  a  wrong  to  o,  Foresters  ii  i  7(X) 

Astaridge    means  to  counsel  your  withdrawing  to  A,     Queen  Mary  i  iv  226 

Permission  of  her  Highness  to  retire  To  A,  ..  i  iv  237 

Ashtree    (See  also  Ash,  Entree)    always  told  Father 

that  the  huge  old  a   there  would  cause  an 

accident  some  day ;  Prom,  of  May  in  244 

A-silkJng  (dressiiig  in  silk)    master  been  a-glorifying 

and  a-velveting  and  a-s  himself,  2'A«  Fal<x)n  99 

A-4itting    if  the  barons  and  bishops  hadn't  been  a-s  on  the 

Archbishop.  Becket  i  iv  128 

Didn't  I  spy  'em  a-s  i'  the  woodbine  harbour 
I  togither  ?  Prom,  of  May  1 124 

Aak    (See  also  Ax)    Why  do  you  a  ?  you  know  it.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  34 

A  thou  Lord  Leofwin  what  he  thuiks  of  this !  Harold  i  i  40 

A  it  of  King  Edward !  ..        i  i  78 

a  of  m«  Who  had  my  pallium  from  an  Antipope  !  „        i  i  81 

A  our  broad  Earl.  .,       i  i  90 

I  a  thee,  wilt  thou  help  me  to  the  crown  ?  „   ii  ii  627 

A  me  for  this  at  thy  most  need,  son  Harold,  „     lu  i  14 

A  it  of  Aldred.  „   in  i  225 

A  me  not.  Lest  I  should  yield  it,  „    m  ii  46 

I  a  again  When  had  the  Lateran  and  the  Holy  Father  „       v  i  16 

I  have  a  power — would  Harold  a  me  for  it —  „     v  i  451 

I  o  no  more.     Heaven  bless  thee  !  hence !  Beeket  r  i  320 

That  which  you  a  me  Till  better  times.  „       m  i  6 

What  did  you  o  her  ?  .,      in  i  79 

Not  I,  the  Pope.    A  him  for  absolution.  „    v  ii  379 

I  a  no  leave  of  king,  or  mortal  man,  „     v  ii  458 

You  will  not  easily  make  me  credit  that.    Phoebe.    ^4  her.    The  Cup  n  26 
His  falcon,  and  I  come  to  a  for  his  falcon.  The  Falcon  220 

How  can  I  a  for  his  falcon  ?  „  234 

Yet  if  I  a,  He  loves  me,  and  he  knows  I  know  „  244 

How  can  I,  dare  I,  a  him  for  his  falcon  ?  .,  264 

Yet  I  come  To  a  a  gift.  „  299 

*        for  the  gift  I  a  for,  to  my  mind  „  778 

love  for  my  dying  boy,  Moves  me  to  a  it  of  50U.  ..  788 

Will  pardon  me  for  asking  what  I  a.  „  805 

Might  I  a  your  name  ?     Harold.     Harold.  Prom,  of  May  n  393 

Go  back  to  him  and  a  his  foi^veness  before  he  dies. —      „  in  401 

1  a  you  all,  did  none  of  you  love  young  Walter  Lea  ?       Foresters  i  i  54 
will  you  answer  me  a  question  ?     Marian.     Any  that 

you  may  a.  „      i  ii  137 

A  question  that  every  true  man  a's  of  a  woman  once 

in  his  life.  „      i  ii  139 

we  be  beggars,  we  come  to  a  o'  you.    We  ha'  nothing.  ,,       m  190 

bond  he  hath  Of  the  Abbot — wilt  thou  o  him  for  it  ?  „         iv  85 

I  fear  to  a  who  left  us  even  now.  ..       rv  808 

.Alk'd    (<S««  oZm  Axed,  Hazed)     And  by  their  answers 

to  the  question  a.  Queen  Mary  u  ii  153 

a  him,  childlike :  '  Will  you  take  it  off  „  in  i  401 

they  clapt  their  hands  Upon  their  swords  when  a;  „  v  i  174 

when  he  a  for  England  ?  Harold  iv  iii  110 

Was  there  not  someone  a  me  for  forgiveness  ?  „  v  ii  82 

I  o  the  way.     Rosamund.     I  think  so.  Becket  n  i  62 

I  but  a  her  One  question,  and  she  primm'd  her  mouth  „     m  i  73 

a  our  mother  if  1  could  keep  a  quiet  tongue  i'  my  head,         „  in  i  118 
I  a  A  ribbon  from  her  hair  to  bmd  it  with ;  The  Fnlroti  358 

jrou  a  to  eat  with  me.  ir         868 


Ask'd  (continued)    And  a  me  what  I  could  not  answer.    Protn.  of  May  1  555 
and  I  a  her  once  more  to  help  me,  „         m  387 

I  would  ha'  given  my  whole  body  to  the  £ang  had 

}ie  a  for  it.  Foresters  n  i  306 

criedst '  I  yield '  almost  before  the  thing  was  a,  „        11  i  567 

Asking    Have  for  thine  a  aught  that  I  can  give,  Qu^en  Mary  n  iii  7 

Will  pardon  me  for  a  what  I  ask.  The  Falcoti  805 

a  his  consent — ^you  wish'd  me —  Prom,  of  May  ni  493 

Asleep     wholesome  medicine  here  Puts  that  belief  a.  Becket  iv  ii  52 

Shall  I  find  you  a  when  I  come  back  ?  „      iv  ii  64 

with  as  little  pain  As  it  is  to  fall  a.  Prom,  of  May  n  342 

The  sick  lady  here  might  have  been  a.  „  m  344 

Some  hunter  in  day-dreams  or  half  o  Foresters  rv  1088 

A-spitting    you'll  set  the  Divil's  Tower  a-s.  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  103 

A-spreading    and  a-s  to  catch  her  eye  for  a  dozen  year,        The  Fal^xm  100 
Ass    with  an  a's,  not  a  horse's  head,  Queen  Mary  i  iii  169 

Sir  Thomas  Stafford,  a  bull-headed  a,  „  v  i  284 

Assail    And  might  a  you  passing  through  the  street,  „  iv  ii  34 

To  a  our  Holy  Mother  lest  she  brood  Too  long  Becket  v  ii  251 

Assail'd    if  e'er  thou  be  o  In  any  of  our  forests.  Foresters  iv  423 

woman's  fealty  when  A  by  Craft  and  Love.  The  Cup  1  i  177 

Assassin    even  now  You  seem  the  least  a  of  the  four.  Becket  v  ii  522 

Assaulted    my  house  hath  been  a.  Queen  Mary  1  v  147 

Assembled     And  Ckimmons  here  in  Parliament  n,  „       in  iii  114 

Assembly     But  there  the  great  A  choose  their  king,  Harold  11  ii  126 

Assent    This  marriage  had  the  a  of  those  Queen  Mary  n  ii  206 

Thine  is  a  half  voice  and  a  lean  o.  „  m  i  311 

That  were  but  as  the  shadow  of  an  a.  Becket  i  iii  195 

Assertion    See  Self-assertion 

Assessor     But  his  a  in  the  throne.  Queen  Mary  i  v  501 

Assize    See  'Size 

Assure    I  do  a  you,  that  it  must  be  look'd  to :  „  v  i  2 

I  do  most  earnestly  o  you  that  Your  likeness —  Prom,  of  May  n  563 
Assured  Art  thou  a  By  this,  that  Harold  loves  but  Edith  ?  Harold  i  ii  209 
A-stealin'  cotched  'im  once  a-s  coals  an'  I  sent  fur  'im,  Protn.  of  May  i  412 
Astride    with  the  Holy  Father  a  of  it  down  upon  his  own 

head.  Becket  m  iii  77 

Asunder    here  I  gash  myself  a  from  the  King,  „         i  i  175 

A-sapping    be  we  not  a-s  with  the  head  of  the  family  ?  „      1  iv  178 

They  be  dead  while  I  be  a-s.  „      i  iv  247 

A-swearing    I  be  af  eard  I  shall  set  him  a-s  like 

onythink.  Prom,  of  May  m  359 

At  (hat)     we  fun'  'im  out  a-walkin'  i'  West  Field  wi' 

a  white  'a,  „  m  135 

A-talkin'     What  feller  vrui  it  as  'a'  been  a-t  fur  haafe 

an  hour  wi'  my  Dora  ?  „  n  576 

A-telling    Robin  the  Earl,  is  always  a-t  us  that  every  man,   Foresters  i  i  95 

Atheling  (a  Saxon  prince)    The  A  is  nearest  to  the  throne.    Harold  n  ii  569 

So  that  ye  will  not  crown  the  A?  .,      n  ii  598 

Who  inherits  ?     Edgar  the  A?  ..       in  i  240 

Athelstan  (Kiitg  of  the  E^lish)    and  tell  me  tales  Of 

Alfred  and  of  A  the  Great  „         rv  i  74 

Or  ^,  or  English  Ironside  Who  fought  with  Knut,  „      rv  iii  53 

A-top    and  your  worship  a-t  of  it.  Queen  Maty  n  i  66 

A-trjrin'    if  she  weant  listen  to  me  when  I  be  a-t  to 

saave  'er —  Prom,  of  May  n  694 

Attainder     Ye  have  reversed  the  a  laid  on  us  Queen  Mary  m  iii  194 

Attainted    Thou  hast  disgraced  me  and  a  me,  „  m  ii  54 

Thou,  Robin  Hood  Earl  of  Himtingdon,  art  a  Foresters  1  iii  57 

Attend     so  you  well  a  to  the  king's  moves,  Queen  Mary  i  iii  152 

I  a  the  Queen  To  crave  most  hmnble  pardon —  „        in  iv  431 

You  should  o  the  ofl&ce,  give  them  heart.  Becket  v  ii  598 

Hb  said, '  A  the  office.'    Becket.    A  the  office  ?  „      v  ii  607 

You  had  better  a  to  your  hayfield.  Prom,  of  May  n  122 

I  am  sorry  Mr.  Steer  still  continues  too  unwell  to 

a  to  you,  w  m  22 

'  I  am  sorry  that  we  could  not  a  your  Grace's  party 
on  the  10th ! '  „         m  313 

Attendance    must  we  dance  a  all  the  day  ?  Foresters  iv  551 

Attending    I've  been  a  on  his  deathbed  and  his  burial.     Prom,  of  May  u.  4 
Attraction    fine  a's  and  repulses,  the  delicacies,  Becket,  Pro.  499 

Audience    Yoin  a  is  concluded,  sir.  Queen  Mary  i  v  337 

Aught    (See  also  Ought,  Owt)     Have  you  a  else  to  tell  me  ?     „        v  iii  100 
Augustine    See  Austin 
Aureole    Sees  ever  such  an  a  roimd  the  Queen,  m         ▼  ii  413 


Austin 


838 


Bagenhall 


Austin  (Augostine,  first  Archbishop  of  Canterbury)    Gregory 

bid  St.  A  here  Foiind  two  archbishopricks,  "     Beclet  i  iii  48 

bravest  in  our  roll  of  Primates  down  From  A —  „       v  ii  59 

Author     This  o,  with  his  charm  of  simple  style  Prom,  of  May  i  223 

Authority    Under  and  with  your  Majesties'  authorities,  Qneen  Mary  iii  iii  138 

we  by  that  a  Apostolic  Given  unto  us,  „         iir  iii  210 

And  under  his  o — I  depart.  Becket  i  iii  728 

Not  punish  of  your  own  a?  „      v  ii  450 

I  would  stand  Clothed  with  the  full  a  of  Rome,  „     v  ii  493 

Automatic  all  but  proving  man  An  a  series  of  sensations,  Prom .  of  May  1 226 
Autumn  (adj.)     Sick  as  an  a  swallow  for  a  voyage,  Harold  i  i  101 

Autumn  (s)  Harvestless  a's,  horrible  agues,  plague —  Queen  Mary  v  i  98 
Avarice  shakes  at  m.ortal  kings — her  vacillation,  A ,  craft —  Becket  n  ii  407 
A-velveting  (dressing  in  velvet)    master  been  a-glorifying 

and  a-v  and  a-silking  himself.  The  Falcon  98 

Avenge     Who  M'ill  a  me  of  mine  enemies —  Queen  Mary  iii  ii  166 

Avenged     that  blighted  vow  Which  God  a  to-day.  Harold  v  ii  157 

Avenue    — so  many  alleys,  crossings,  Paths,  a's —  Becket  i\  ii  7 

A-vire  (on  fire)  and  a  set  un  all  a-v,  so  'z  the  tongue  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  518 
Avoid     I  may  as  well  a  him.  Prom,  of  May  ii  619 

Avouch     I  dare  a  you'd  stand  up  for  yourself.  Queen  Mary  it  ii  860 

Await    My  lord  !  the  Duke  a's  thee  at  the  banquet.  Harold  ii  ii  805 

Awaked    {See  also  Half-waked)     He  bath  a  !  he 

hath  a  ! 
Awaken    Love  will  hover  round  the  flowers  when 

they  first  a ; 
Awaken'd    It  seems  her  Highness  hath  a. 
Awakening    See  New-wakening 
A-walkin'     we  fun'  'im  out  a-w  i'  West  Field  wi'  a 

white  'at, 
Award    Thou  shalt  receive  the  penitent  thief's  a, 
Awe    — they  cannot  speak — for  a ; 
Awful     A  more  a  one.    Make  me  archbishop  ! 
Awry    Nothing;  but  'come,  come,  come,'  and  all  a, 
Ax  (ask)     Shall  I  foller  'er  and  a  'er  to  maake  it  up  ? 
Axe    {See  also  Battle-axe,  War-axe)    there  is  a  and 
cord. 

How  oft  the  falling  a,  that  never  fell, 

I  have  a  mind  to  brain  thee  with  mine  a. 

Our  a's  lighten  with  a  single  flash 

Against  the  shifting  blaze  of  Harold's  a  ! 

score  of  knights  all  arm'd  with  swords  and  a's — 
Axed  (asked)    when  I  a  'im  why,  he  telled  me  'at 
sweet'arts 

an'  a  ma  to  be  'is  little  sweet'art. 
Axle    rear  and  run  And  break  both  neck  and  a. 


Queen  Mary  iii  ii  156 

V  ii  371 

V  ii  522 


Prom,  of  May  ill  134 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  87 

Harold  I  i  33 

Beclcet,  Pro.  288 

Queen  Mary  v  v  16 

Prom,  of  May  n  131 

Queen  Man/  in  iv  47 

■  III  V  134 

Harold  ii  i  74 

„     V  i  537 

„    V  i  587 

Becket  v  iii  72 

Prom,  of  May  II 155 

m  120 

Harold  i  i  374 


Baaby  (baby)     to  get  her  b  bom  ;  Quee^i  Mary  iv  iii  524 

Baaed    black  sheep  b  to  the  miller's  ewe-lamb,  Becket  i  iv  162 
BaSker  (baker)     and  B,  thaw  I  sticks  to  hoam-maade —  Prom,  of  May  1 448 

Baal    The  priests  of  B  tread  her  underfoot —  Becket  in  iii  179 
Babble    {See  also  Bird-babble)    B  in  bower  Under  the 

rose !  „          in  i  96 

Thou  art  cold  thyself  To  b  of  their  coldness.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  292 

And  doth  so  bound  and  b  all  the  way  „            v  v  86 

convene  This  conference  but  to  b  of  our  wives  ?  Becket  n  ii  90 

Not  while  the  rivulet  b's  by  the  door.  Foresters  i  ii  321 

Babbled     I  follow'd  You  and  the  child :  he  b  all  the  way.      Becket  iv  ii  140 

Babe    but  your  king  stole  her  a  b  from  Scotlanil  Queen  Mary  i  v  291 

her  b  in  arms  Had  felt  the  faltering  „             n  ii  80 

The  Queen  hath  felt  the  motion  of  her  b  !  „          in  ii  214 

baptized  in  fire,  the  b  Might  be  in  fire  for  ever.  „            v  iv  23 

The  b  enwomb'd  and  at  the  breast  is  cursed,  Harold  \  i  65 

B's,  orphans,  mothers  !  is  that  royal,  Sire  ?  Becket  n  i  80 

Out  of  the  mouths  of  b's  and  sucklings,  praise !  „   ii  ii  278 

Will  greet  us  as  our  b's  in  Paradise.  „    v  ii  225 

I  had  once  A  boy  who  died  a  b ;  The  Citp  i  ii  149 

be  curious  About  the  welfare  of  their  b's,  „        i  ii  362 

O  Thou  that  slayest  the  b  within  the  womb  „          n  279 

Babe-breaating    Age,  orphans,  and  b-b  mothers —  Becket  n  i  72 


Baby  (adj.)     some  waxen  doll  Thy  b  eyes  have  rested  on, 

belike ;  Queen  Mary  iv9 

whose  b  eye  Saw  them  sufficient.  Harold  in  ii  65 

Baby  (s)     (See  also  Baaby)    strike  Their  hearts,  and  hold 

their  babies  up  to  it.  „  i  i  35 

That's  all  nonsense,  you  know,  such  a  i  as  you  are.  Prom,  of  May  1 785 
King,  thy  god-father,  gave  it  thee  when  a  I.  Foresters  i  i  286 

Babyhood    Was  she  not  betroth'd  in  her  b  to  the  Great 

Emperor  Queen  Mary  i  i  118 

Baby-king     Stirring  her  b-k  against  me  ?  ha  !  Becket  v  i  106 

Bacchatur     Hostis  per  Angliae  Plagas  b ;  Harold  v  i  511 

Bachelor    See  Batchelor 

Back     bald  o'  the  b,  and  bursten  at  the  toes,  Queen  Mary  i  i  52 

show'd  his  b  Before  I  read  his  face.  „        ii  i  132 

scom'd  the  man.  Or  lash'd  his  rascal  b,  Harold  u  ii  507 

but  the  b  methought  was  Rosamund —  Becket,  Pro.  470 

be  bound  Behind  the  b  like  laymen-criminals  ?  „  i  iii  96 

so  dusted  his  J  with  the  meal  in  his  sack,  „         i  iv  174 

wi'  bare  b's,  but  the  b's  'ud  ha'  countenanced  one  another,  „  in  i  147 
Can't  you  hear  that  you  are  saying  behind  his  b  The  Falcon  107 

nor  behind  your  lordship's  b,  „        113 

When  I  vaulted  on  his  b,  Foresters  ii  ii  150 

which  longs  to  break  itself  across  their  b's.  „  iv  918 

Backbone     Stiff  as  the  very  b  of  heresy.  Queen  Mary  i  v  44 

Back'd     B  by  the  power  of  France,  and  landing  here,  „       ni  i  447 

Back'd    See  Broken-back'd 

Backward    courtesy  which  hath  less  loyalty  in  it  than 

the  b  scrape  of  the  clown's  heel —  Becket  in  iii  143 

my  child  is  so  young,  So  b  too  ;  „  iv  ii  85 

Backwardness     Hath  rated  for  some  b  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  307 

Backward-working     if  his  b-w  alchemy  Should  cliange  Foresters  iv  38 

Bad  (adj.)     I  will  take  Such  order  with  all  b,  heretical 

books  Queen  Mary  iv  i  95 

Eh,  my  rheumatizy  be  that  b  howiver  be  I  to  win 

to  the  bumin'.  „       iv  iii  474 

Eh,  but  I  do  know  ez  Pwoaps  and  vires  be  h  things ;  „       iv  iii  501 

And  love  to  hear  b  tales  of  Philip.  „  v  ii  429 

for  the  people  do  say  that  his  is  b  beyond  all  reckoning,   Becket  in  i  175 
There  are  good  fairies  and  b  fairies,  and  sometimes  she 
cries,  and  can't  sleep  sound  o'  nights  because  of  the 
b  fairies.  „       iv  i  29 

Very  b.    Somebody  struck  him.  „       iv  i  50 

and  they  was  all  a-crying  out  at  the  b  times.  Prom,  of  May  1 139 

But  I  taakes  'im  fur  a  b  lot  and  a  burn  fool,  „  1 153 

Thruf  slush  an'  squad  When  roads  was  b,  „  n  310 

And  what  harm  will  that  do  you,  so  that  you  do 

not  copy  his  b  manners  ?  „         in  361 

It  be  one  o'  my  b  daays.  „         in  465 

You  heard  him  say  it  was  one  of  his  b  days.  „         ni  469 

It  is  almost  the  last  of  my  b  days,  I  think.  „         in  471 

We  be  fairies  of  the  wood.  We  be  neither  b  nor  good.  Foresters  n  ii  119 
Robin,  I  do,  but  I  have  a  b  wife.  „  in  70 

they  put  it  upon  me  because  I  have  a  b  wife.  „  in  437 

Bad-bade  (verb)    Bad  you  so  softly  with  your  heretics 

here,  Queen  Mary  i  v  392 

Bad  me  to  tell  you  that  she  counts  on  you  „         n  ii  104 

Cranmer.  Fly  would  he  not,  when  all  men  bad  him  fly.  „  in  i  171 
I  bad  my  chaplain,  Castro,  preach  Against  these  burnings.  „  ni  vi  73 
And  bad  me  have  good  courage ;  „  iv  ii  8 

bad  the  king  Who  doted  on  him,  Harold  iv  i  101 

Edward  bad  me  spare  thee.  „      iv  ii  11 

And  bad  me  seal  against  the  rights  of  the  Church,  Becket  i  iii  312 

I  bad  them  clear  A  royal  pleasaunce  for  thee,  „      ii  i  127 

Thy  true  King  bad  thee  be  A  fisher  of  men  ;  „     n  ii  285 

bad  me  whatever  I  saw  not  to  speak  one  word,  „     in  i  132 

You  bad  me  take  revenge  another  way —  „     iv  ii  152 

life  which  Heniy  bad  me  Guard  from  the  stroke  „     iv  ii  269 

He  bad  me  put  her  into  a  nunnery —  „       v  i  214 

Bade  me  beware  Of  John :  Foresters  i  ii  255 

Badger    highback'd  polecat,  the  wild  boar,  The  burrow- 
ing b—  „        I  iii  121 

Baffle     AVe'll  b  them,  I  warrant.  Becket  i  i  299 

Bag     We'll  dust  him  from  a  6  of  Spanish  gold.  Queen  Mary  i  v  421 

Bagenhall    {See  also  Ralph,  Balph  Bagenhall)    B,  I  see  The 

Tudor  green  and  white.  „        m  i  112 


Ii 


Bagenhall 


839 


Baron 


Bagenhall  (continued)     Worth  seeing,  B  !  Queen  Mary  iii  iii  188 

I  am  ashamed  that  I  am  B,  English.  .,            iii  i  248 

For  freeing  my  friend  B  from  the  Tower ;  ,.              iii  vi  7 

Baited    summon'd  hither  But  to  be  mock'd  and  b.  „          iii  iv  270 

Bake     To  sing,  love,  marry,  chum,  brew,  b,  and  die,  „           iii  v  111 

I  can  b  and  I  can  brew.  Foresters  i  i  214 

Baker    (See  also  Baaker)     ah  !  she  said.  The  b  made 

him.  Queen  Alary  i  v  56 

Balance     But — if  let  be — b  and  compromise ;  „        v  v  223 
Bald     (See  also  E^-bald)     b  o'  the  back,  and  bursten  at 

the  toes,  ,.           i  i  52 

And  this  b  priest,  and  she  that  hates  me,  „       i  iv  282 

it  seems  that  we  shall  fly  These  b,  blank  fields,  „      iii  v  252 

Baldness    fierce  old  Gardiner — his  big  b,  „       i  iv  264 

Bale  (Bishop  of  Ossory)    Poinet,  Barlow,  B,  Scory,  Coverdale ;    „  i  ii  7 

Baleful    My  star !  a  b  one.  ,,        i  v  412 
Balk    come  to  London  Bridge  ;    But  how  to  cross  it  b's 

me.  „        n  iii  10 

power  to  b  Thy  puissance  in  this  fight  Harold  v  i  118 

Take  it  not  that  way — b  not  the  Pope's  will.  Becket  i  iii  242 

Balk'd    The  jealous  fool  b  of  her  will —  „     rv  ii  423 

Ball    I  have  lost  the  boy  who  play'd  at  b  with  me,  Harold  iv  iii  22 

same  head  they  would  have  play'd  at  b  with  The  Cup  n  127 
Is  but  a  b  chuck'd  between  France  and  Spain,        Queen  Mary  in  i  110 

Here  is  a  b,  my  boy,  thy  world,  Becket  ii  i  244 

Geoffrey  have  not  tost  His  b  into  the  brook  !  „      a  i  321 
I  saw  the  b  you  lost  in  the  fork  of  the  great  willow  over 

the  brook.  ,.      iv  ii  57 

you  bid  me  go,  and  I'll  have  my  b  anyhow.  „      iv  ii  63 

Ballad     But  there  I  am  sure  the  6  is  at  fault.  Foresters  i  i  122 

Balm    and  science  now  could  drug  and  b  us  Prom,  of  May  n  340 

We  know  all  b's  and  simples  of  the  field  Foresters  ii  ii  11 

Balmy    Thou  whose  breath  Is  b  wind  to  robe  our  hills  with 

grass.  The  Cup  n  265 

Or  in  the  b  breathings  of  the  night,  Foresters  iv  1068 

Balsam    Heart-comfort  and  a  6  to  thy  blood  ?  Becket  i  i  14 

Ban    hurl  the  dread  b  of  the  Church  on  those  „  iii  iii  210 

Band    (See  also  Swaddling-band)    who  went  with 

your  train  b's  To  fight  with  Wyatt,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  27 
who  be  those  three  yonder  with  bows  ? — not  of 

my  b —  Foresters  ii  i  172 

can  I  trust  myself  With  your  brave  b?  ,,         il  i  704 

She  is  my  queen  and  thine.  The  mistress  of  the  b.  „         ii  ii  42 

You  caught  a  lonely  woodman  of  our  b,  „         iii  360 

To  break  our  b  and  scatter  us  to  the  winds.  „         in  453 

For  those  of  thine  own  b  who  would  betray  thee  ?  „          iv  832 

I  never  foimd  one  traitor  in  my  b.  „         iv  836 

Bandit     Before  these  b's  brake  into  your  presence.  Becket  v  ii  556 

I  thank  you,  noble  sir,  the  very  blossom  Of  b's.  Foresters  in  248 

they  that  suffer  by  him  call  the  blossom  Of  b's.  „        ly  373 

Bandy    B  their  own  rude  jests  with  them.  The  Cup  i  ii  360 

Bang     Anvil  on  hammer  b- —  Harold  iv  iii  161 

Banish'd     J  us  to  Woodstock,  and  the  fields.  Queen  Mary  in  v  3 

From  lack  of  Tostig— thou  hast  b  him.  Harold  in  i  168 
That  brother  whom  I  love  beyond  the  rest.  My  b 

Tostig.  „      III  i  296 

For  when  your  people  b  Tostig  hence,  „        iv  i  97 

Robin  Hood  Earl  of  Huntingdon  is  outlawed  and  b.         Foresters  i  iii  68 

Art  thou  that  b  lord  of  Huntingdon,  „         ^^..139 

Banishment    In  quiet— home  your  b  countryman.  Queen  Mary  in  ii  31 

Thus,  after  twenty  years  of  b,  „            ni  ii  46 

After  my  twenty  years  of  b,  „             v  ii  69 

Our  sister  hates  us  for  his  b  ;  Harold  iii  i  78 

sanction  your  decree  Of  Tostig's  b,  „     iv  i  104 

So  thou  be  chasten'd  by  thy  6,  „     iv  ii  50 

on  a  Tuesday  pass'd  From  England  into  bitter  b ;  Becket  v  ii  289 

Bank    parch'd  b's  rolling  incense,  as  of  old.  Queen  Mary  i  v  91 

My  b  Of  wild-flowers.     At  thy  feet !  Becket  ii  i  125 

Past  the  b  Of  foxglove,  then  to  left  by  that  one  yew.     Foresters  rv  973 

Bank'd-up    like  A  b-u  fire  that  flashes  out  again  The  Cup  i  ii  166 

Banner    b.  Blaze  like  a  night  of  fatal  stars  Harold  iv  i  250 

The  king  of  England  stands  between  his  b's.  „        v  i  487 

He  stands  between  the  b's  with  the  dead  „        v  i  656 

And  join'd  my  b  in  the  Holy  Land,  Foresters  iv  1000 

Banns    When  shall  your  parish -parson  bawl  our  &  Prom,  of  May  i68Q 


Banquet     (See  also  Marriage-banquet)    murmurs  of  their 
b  clank  The  shackles 

My  lord !  the  Duke  awaits  thee  at  the  b. 

If  there  be  those  At  6  in  this  hall. 

Break  the  6  up  ...  Ye  four ! 

who  never  saw  nor  dreamed  of  such  a  b. 

I  must  leave  you  to  your  b. 

we  came  on  to  the  b,  from  whence  there  puffed 

prays  your  ladyship  and  your  ladyship's  father  to  be 
present  at  his  b  to-night. 

let  us  be  merry  to-night  at  the  b. 
Banquet-board    To  chain  the  free  guest  to  the  b-b  ; 
Baptized    being  but  b  in  fire,  the  babe  Might  be  in  fire 

that  thus  b  in  blood  Grew  ever  high  and  higher, 

and  on  a  Tuesday  B ; 
Bar  (s)     when  he  springs  And  maims  himself  against 
the  b's, 

feud  between  our  houses  is  the  b  I  cannot  cross ; 
Bar  (verb)    leagued  together  To  b  me  from  my  Philip. 

jail  you  from  free  life,  b  you  from  death. 

B  the  bird  From  following  the  fled  summer — 

wouldst  b  me  fro'  the  milk  o'  my  cow, 
Baiabbas    Still  choose  B  rather  than  the  Christ, 
Barbarism    Deigns  to  look  in  upon  our  b's. 
Barbarossa  (Surname  of  Frederick  I.,  Emperor) 
butts  him  from  his  chair, 

Crow  over  B — at  last  tongue-free. 
Barbarous    See  Semi-barbarous 
Barber    The  common  b  dipt  your  hair, 
Bare  (adj.)     Nay,  for  b  shame  of  inconsistency, 

and  flying  to  our  side  Left  his  all  b, 

Take  thou  mine  answer  in  b  commonplace — 

wi'  b  backs,  but  the  backs  'ud  ha'  countenanced  one 
another; 

how  b  and  spare  I  be  on  the  rib : 

A  thousand  winters  Will  strip  you  b  as  death. 
Bare  (verb)     he  hath  risen  again — he  b's  his  face — 

He  bows,  he  b's  his  head,  he  is  coming  hither. 
Barefoot    all  boots  were  ever  made  Since  man  went  b. 

crawl  over  knife-edge  flint  B, 
Barely    Where  there  is  b  room  to  shift  thy  side, 
Barer    throat  of  mine,  B  than  I  should  wish  a  man 

to  see  it, — 
Bargain    mine  hour !     I  b  for  mine  hour. 
Bargainer     Lady,  I  find  you  a  shrewd  b. 

But  you  will  find  me  a  shrewd  b  still. 
Barge    all  lost,  all  yielded  !     A  b,  a  bl 

We  had  your  royal  b,  and  that  same  chair. 


This£ 


Harold  U  ii  408 

u  ii  806 

IV  iii  93 

„     IV  iii  231 

Becket  i  iv  84 

„     I iv  151 

„  III  iii  114 


Foresters  i  i  300 

I  i  344 

Harold  n  ii  193 

Queen  Mary  V  iv  23 

Harold  in  i  146 

Becket  v  ii  286 

Queen  Mary  v  v  67 

The  Falcon  254 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  140 

in  v  172 

Becket  i  i  257 

Foresters  11  i  355 

Becket  n  ii  390 

The  Cup  u  337 


Becket,  Pro.  217 
n  ii  50 


Queen  Mary  iv  ii  131 

I  ii  39 

„  II  iii  5 

Becket,  Pro.  282 

in  i  146 

Foresters  i  i  50 

„    IV  1056 

Harold  V  i  557 

Becket  in  iii  34 

Queen  Mary  ui  v  198 

Becket  n  i  273 

Harold  n  ii  441 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  462 

Becket  n  i  212 

The  Falcon  757 

774 

Queen  Mary  n  iv  72 

„  III  ii  6 

Bark  (of  a  tree)     What  breadth,  height,  strength— torrents 

of  eddying  b  !  Foresters  m  95 

Bark  (verb)    And  when  to  b  and  how.  The  Cup  i  ii  114 

Bark  (vessel)     winds  than  that  which  crack'd  Thy  b  at 

Ponthieu, —  *  Harold  ii  ii  200 

Bark'd     I  have  but  b  my  hands.  „         .^^^ 

B  out  at  me  such  monstrous  charges,  Becket  iv  ii  342 

Barlow  (Bishop)     Poinet,  B,  Bale,  Scory,  Coverdale ;  Queen  Mary  i  ii  6 

Bam    broken  down  our  b's,  Wasted  our  diocese,  Becket  v  ii  430 

To  the  bleak  church  doors,  like  kites  upon  a  b.  Harold  iv  iii  38 

Be  thou  a-gawin'  to  the  long  b  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  2 

and  'e  telled  all  on  us  to  be  i'  the  long  b  by  one  o'clock,  „  i  8 

Why  coom  awaay,  then,  to  the  long  b.  „  i  36 

the  farming  men  'ull  hev  their  dinner  i'  the  long  b,  „         i  167 

They  ha'  broached  a  barrel  of  aale  i'  the  long  b,  „         i  427 

look  for  'im,  Eva,  and  bring  'im  to  the  b.  „        i  438 

I've  hed  the  long  b  cleared  out  of  all  the  machines,  „        i  451 

and  make  them  happy  in  the  long  b,  „        i  792 

Baron     But  that  my  b's  might  believe  thy  word,  Harold  ii  ii  725 

widow  And  orphan  child,  whom  one  of  thy  wild  b's —  Becket,  Pro.  189 
How  should  a  b  love  a  beggar  on  horseback,  „     Pro.  443 

Laics  and  b's,  thro'  The  random  gifts  of  careless  kings,        „         i  i  157 
And  many  a  b  holds  along  with  me — ■  „         i  ii  52 

Where  I  shall  meet  the  B's  and  my  King.  „  i  ii  84 

Save  the  King's  honour  here  before  his  b's.  „      i  iii  188 

B's  and  bishops  of  our  realm  of  England,  „      i  iii  336 

When  every  b  ground  his  blade  in  blood ;  „      i  iii  349 


Baron 

Ay,  my  lord,  and  divers  other  earls  and  Vs  "         "/J^q 

t^««e«ark  and  J'5,  that  clung  to  me,  "        I'Zf. 

They  shall  henceforward  be  my  earls'  and  b's~  "  !  g? 

Wshop.'      ^""^'P'  ^^^'*  ^""°  ^-«^"'"§  °»  the  Arch-     "        '  '^  ^^ 

?!T°M?"u*'*  5  '^''^  '^t^e^i-  counsel :  '      "J  j^?] 

for  he  did  his  best  To  break  the  Vs,  "        /:  \lt 

To  aU  the  archbishops,  bishops,  prelates,  Vs,  "       J;  4^5 

So  that  our  B's  bring  his  baseness  under  jt     ".         "  fV^ 

horn,  that  scares  Thi  B  at  the  totlSe  of  his  churls  "'''""  '  "  SJ 

these  proud  priests,  and  these  5'*,  Devils    '  ^''""^'  "         ^^J^  106 

Po«.M^''^-^''*^"'*^^^*oftheKing.  ■     JIhSs 

NnM/fAT,f°"''*>^^'=^t«tbeboy.  "     V    il? 

JVot  if  I  i  thee  up  in  thv  chamhpr  t^     "         ^?  ^■'• 

Barrel    They  ha' broLhed  a  ft  of^ilt  V  fh    ,  u                 Foresters  i  i  ZU 

cZ'rn'jlLr^^^'^^*^«"'"''^''----»hare        "  ^  ^  ^^' 

A^d  York  lay  ft  for  a  hundred  years.  ^''^^'''  ^'%ff, 

?ite  a  ft  shore  That  grew  salt  weeds  tC  r         oof 

"^S  th^^^T  ^°"^  ''^  throngingTo'  the  Vs ;  ltS7v°  Ig 

They  thunder  again  upon  the  ft's.  '  aaroiavib^i 

Bamn     and  ft  the  wet,  Hodge  'ud  ha'  been  a-  "  ^^^ 

harrowm  ^ 

ft  the  wind,  Dumble  wur  blow'd  wi'  the  wind  ^'""'       "^  "^  ••'•  f}. 

Barton,  Elizabeth    -Sw  Joan  of  Kent  Harold  yi  225 

""*    fXvdi^-^  ^"'^''^  '''^^  ^  say-Fitzurse  and  his 

^  a  ft'^in'""'  P^'P^"  "^*  ^™  ^^°"»  '^'^  J°or«  i^'ke      ^''^'' '"  '"  ^^ 

wT  l/?  ^?^*  *  ^**^«d  ^  ^"  exception  :  SSfcSTn'iil  w 

WoiUd  bow  to  such  a  ft  as  would  mak^e  me  ""''"  'f^'    ^ 

lJ^^\^Tl  ^^™°^  ^""^  ^  *  ^der.  ForesterYi      1  Tt 

Basket    -See  Lobster-baskat  -i  he  Falcon  540 

Basle    Zurich,  Worms,  Geneva,  2?—  n 

fc  J^^"nl^"^*  °^  loyal' harmonv,  ^"'''^       i?ii  28.? 

Bastard  (adj.)  then  the  ft  sprout,  My  sister,  is  far  "  "  "  ^^ 
fairer  than  myself.                               ,      ^cii 

1,  ^^i^te  bom  of  a  former  love.  Queen  Mary  r  v  71 

Bastard  (s)     It  means  a  ft  ^     Becket  mlU 

Why,  didn't  .the  Parliament  make  her  a  ft  ?  ^^'^^  '^"'^  \  \  \l 

Then  which  is  the  ft  ?  >.           1 1 16 

pXmi'n/o/*  ^^'^'^  °^  Parliament  and  Council.  Z  \  \  i 

OIH  N?iL^°  ""u^?  ^''^,'7  true-born  man  of  us  a  6.  '  ^ 
Old  Nokes,  can't  it  make  thee  aft'' 

and  so  they  can't  make  me  a  ft.  "  M  ^° 

But  if  Parliament  can  make  the  Queen  aft,  "  l]fa 

"Sne?s  ft  ^-*-^^  ^"^  *^^*  most- Aiam  the  "  ''^^ 

And  given  thy  realm  of  England  to  the  ft.  Harold  u  ii  773 

K^e¥:  I  f'^  '^'  ^^  -*^^  -°-  ••  ::  x'ih  li 

hath  borne  at  times  A  ft  false  83  William.  "    '"^  "|  |I^ 

^,  my  girl  no  tricks  in  him-No  ft  he !  "       l\^ 

ttL^VJe'i^T'd^Lycffinl'?^"  -^-""'^  *  ^-^-v  if 

)>    IV  u  45 


840 


Beach 


Bastard  (s)  {conttnued)     Then  is  thy  pretty  boy  a  ft  ? 
This  m  thy  bosom,  fool,  And  after  in  thy  ft's'  ' 
BastardK*    And  done  your  best  to  ft  our  Queen 
Bastard-making    that  was  afore  ft-w  began 
Bastardy    What  are  you  cackling  of  ft  under 
Bat    What's  here  ?  a  dead  ft  in  the  fairy  rimr— 
a  ft  flew  out  at  him  In  the  clear  noon, 
Crush  d  my  ft  whereon  I  flew  ! 
Batchelor    And  out  upon  all  simple  J'5  ' 
Batoe    To  ft  this  sacred  pavement  with  my  blood. 
Battel    we  should  have  better  b's  at  home 
Batter    Began  to  i;  at  your  English  Church,  ( 

B«lJ?I"^c      f  ®ii*?^'^f'S?'^  breaking  thro'  the  walls? 
Battle    (See  also  Mid-battle)    or  wave  And  wind  at 
their  old  ft : 
Hark,  there  is  ft  at  the  palace  gates 
I  myself  Will  down  into  the  ft  and  there  bide 
and  hurl  d  our  b's  Into  the  heart  of  Spain  • 
many  English  in  your  ranks  To  help  your  ft 
1  had  heard  of  him  in  ft  over  seas. 
For  thou  hast  done  the  ft  in  my  cause  • 
To  do  the  ft  for  me  here  in  England     ' 
than  his  league  With  Norway,  and  this  ft 
4I     !u  "l^  constant '  No '  For  all  but  instant  ft 
After  the  ft— after  the  ft.     Go. 
Whose  life  was  all  one  ft,  incarnate  war, 
Waste  not  thy  might  before  the  ft  ' 
I  will  bear  thy  blessing  into  the  ft 
until  I  find  Which  way  the  ft  balance. 
U  God  of  ft  s,  make  their  wall  of  shields 
Look  out  upon  the  ft— is  he  safe?  (repeat) 
U  God  of  b's,  make  his  battle-axe  keen 

0  God  of  b's,  they  are  three  to  one 
Look  out  upon  the  ft  ! 

build  a  church  to  God  Here  on  the  hill  of  ft  • 
femce  I  knew  ft  And  that  was  from  my  boyhood. 
Lest  there  be  ft  between  Heaven  and  Earth, 
Ihe  glory  and  grief  of  ft  won  or  lost 
a  nunour  then  That  you  were  kill'd  in  ft 
having  his  right  hand  Lamed  in  the  ft, 
ihe  story  of  your  ft  and  your  woimd 
m  this  same  ft  We  had  been  beaten— 

1  t«ar  away  The  leaves  were  darken'd  by  the  ft— 
if  he  had  not  gone  to  fight  the  king's  ft'/ 
I  saved  his  life  once  in  ft.  -»         . 


Becket  iv  ii  113 

„  IV  ii  258 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  238 

1 144 

1  i  59 

Foresters  u  ii  93 

II  ii  96 

n  ii  146 

XV  52 

Becket  v  iii  131 

Foresters  i  i  58 

Queen  Mary  m  iv  186 

Becket  v  ii  626 

Queen  Mary  i  v  357 
n  iv  47 
n  iv  85 
m  i  108 

V  i  112 

V  V  33 
Harold  u  ii  555 

„         IV  ii  70 

IV  iii  89 
V  i  7 

V  i  362 

V  i  397 

V  i  416 
vi435 

V  i  461 

V  i  478 
„  V  i  484, 654 

V  i  562 

V  i  575 

V  i  624 

V  ii  138 

V  ii  174 
Becket  i  iii  226 

The  Cup  I  ii  161 

The  Falcon  382 

445 

594 

602 

913 

Foresters  i  i  57 

1 1273 


ft^  Was  out  of  place;  it  should  have  been  the  bow.— 

With  nothing  but  my  b-a  and  him  To  spatter  his  brains  ' 

were  man's  to  have  held  The  b-a  by  thee  ' 

and  our  b-a's  broken  The  Raven's  wing 

we  must  use  our  b-a  to-day. 

My  b-a  against  your  voices. 

And  Loathing  wield  a  Saxon  b-a— 

Cowl,  helm  ;  and  crozier,  b-a. 

Tis.H^^%^  ^"?  u^^"  w  ^''•'"^  °"^"  sharp-dividing  justice, 
»  2l^^  h  ^°^d  b*^®  *  f°''  it  to  the  death. 
Battle-field    and  seen  the  red  of  the  ft-/ 
Battle-hymns    ghostly  horn  Blowing  continually,  and 

famt  b-h,  j>      ^  u      , ,       .  „  , 

l^r^^    fl-mg  them  streaming  over  the  ft'.  ^'"^'^  nil  39? 

Bawl    When  shall  your  parish-parson  ft  our  bamis  Prom  oTmIt  fiS-% 

^a  ^^    ^''  '^"'^  ^^^^"^  ^"'""  ^'t^  ^  blissful         ^       ^ 

And  over  this  Robin  Hood's  ft  !  -^^^  ^"^  "  ^^ 

Bay  (verb)    Tho'  all  the  world  should  ft  like  winter 
wolves. 

how  those  Roman  wolfdogs  howl  and  ft  him  ' 
Bayeux    I  saw  him  coming  with  his  brother  Odo  The 
B  bishop, 

from  Guy  To  mine  own  hearth  at  B 
Beadti    drave  and  crack'd  His  boat  on  p'onthieu  ft  • 

Ihey  stood  on  Dover  ft  to  murder  me 

A  child's  sand-castle  on  the  ft  ' 

And  the  great  breaker  beats  upon  the  ft  ! 


Iii  105 

II  ii  779 

IV  iii  13 

IV  iii  64 

vi205 

vi265 

vi414 

V  i  444 

..      V  i  563 

Foresters  n  i  664 

The  Falcon  549 


Foresters  u  ii  177 . 

Queen  Mary  11  ii  361| 
IV  iii  35^ 


Harold  11  ii 
>•         n  ii 
„         n  ii  c 
Becket  v  ii  4361 
The  Cup  I  ii  254| 
Foresters  i  ii  324 


Bead 


S41 


Beautiful 


Bead    Counts  his  old  b's,  and  hath  forgotten  thee.  Harold  ii  ii  447 

they  are  but  blue  b's — ^my  Piero,  The  Falcon  48 

Beak    His  buzzard  b  and  deep-incavem'd  eyes  Queen  Mary  i  iv  266 

Beam    (See  also  Side-beam)    so  the  b's  of  both  may 

shine  upon  us, 

My  grayhounds  fleeting  like  a  6  of  light, 

That  b  of  dawn  upon  the  opening  flower, 
Beaming    his  fine-cut  face  bowing  and  b  with  all  that 
courtesy 

Her  bright  face  b  starlike  down  upon  me 
Bear  (s)    Like  the  rough  b  beneath  the  tree. 

No,  my  b,  thou  hast  not. 

0  drunken  ribaldry  !     Out,  beast !  out,  b  ! 
Dares  the  b  slouch  into  the  lion's  den  ? 

Bear  (verb)    {See  also  Abear)    You  needs  must  b  it 
hardly. 
B  witness,  Renard,  that  I  live  and  die 
The  tree  that  only  b's  dead  fruit  is  gone. 
That  b's  not  its  own  apples. 
How  should  he  6  a  bridegroom  out  of  Spain  ? 
How  should  he  b  the  headship  of  the  Pope  ? 

1  think  the  Queen  may  never  b  a  child ; 
Lose  the  sweet  hope  that  I  may  b  a  prince. 
I  could  mould  myself  To  b  your  going  better ; 
yet  what  hatred  Christian  men  B  to  each  other, 
that  I  6  it  Without  more  ruffling. 
And  Tostig  is  not  stout  enough  to  b  it. 
And  thy  love  ?     Aldwyth.     As  much  as  thou  canst  b. 


I  can  b  all.  And  not  be  giddy. 
Let  all  men  b  witness  of  our  bond  ! 
That  mortal  men  should  b  their  earthly  heats 
I  will  b  thy  blessing  into  the  battle 
B  me  true  witness — only  for  this  once — 
My  punishment  is  more  than  I  can  b. 
Together  more  than  mortal  man  can  b. 
Permit  me,  my  good  lord,  to  6  it  for  thee. 
So  now  he  b's  the  standard  of  the  angels. 
I  am  the  Dean  of  the  province  :  let  me  b  it. 
Wherefore  dost  thou  presume  to  b  thy  cross. 
Let  York  6  his  to  mate  with  Canterbury. 
But  b  with  Walter  Map, 
— The  Cross  ! — who  b's  my  Cross  before  me  ? 
Would  that  I  could  b  thy  cross  indeed  ! 
It  Vs  an  evil  savour  among  women, 
body  of  that  dead  traitor  Sinnatus.     B  him  away, 
the  love  I  6  to  thee  Glow  thro'  thy  veins  ? 
The  love  I  6  to  thee  Glows  thro'  my  veins 
I  b  with  him  no  longer. 
And  he  will  have  to  b  with  it  as  he  may. 
But  if  it  be  so  we  must  b  with  John. 
Risk  not  the  love  I  b  thee  for  a  girl. 
It  is  the  King  Who  b's  all  down. 
Beard  (s)    tell  me,  did  you  ever  Sigh  for  a  &  ? 

Dare-devils,  that  would  eat  fire  and  spit  it  out  At 

Philip's  b:  „         m  i  158 

but  he  hath  a  yellow  b.  „        ni  i  216 

A  fine  b,  Bonner,  a  very  full  fine  b.  „      ni  iv  338 

His  long  white  b,  which  he  had  never  shaven  „       iv  iii  592 

Your  Philip  hath  gold  hair  and  golden  b;  .,  v  iii  57 

The  rosy  face,  and  long  down-silvering  b,  Harold  m  i  47 

The  rosy  face  and  long  down-silvering  b —  „      iv  i  262 

The  tan  of  southern  summers  and  the  b  ?  Prom,  of  May  ii  618 

thy  father  will  not  grace  our  feast  With  his  white  b 

to-day.  Foresters  iv  81 

Beard  (verb)     A  bold  heart  yours  to  b  that  raging  mob  !  Queen  Mary  i  iii  96 

Bearer    The  King  may  rend  the  b  limb  from  limb.  Becket  i  i  378 

He  all  but  pluck'd  the  b's  eyes  away.  „      i  iii  H 

Bearing  (adj.  and  part)    I,  b  this  great  ensign,  make  it 

clear  «    i  i"  544 

wherewithal  he  cleft  the  tree  From  off  the  b  trunk,         Harold  in  i  138 
— the  stream  is  6  us  all  down,  Foresters  i  i  239 

Bearing  (bringing  forth)    To  go  twelve  months  in  6  of 

a  child  ?  Queen  Mary  in  vi  91 

Her  fierce  desire  of  b  him  a  child,  „  iv  iii  429 

Since  she  lost  hope  of  6  us  a  child  ?  „  v  i  229 


m  iv  20 

Harold  I  ii  129 

Foresters  rv  3 

Becket  m  iii  141 

Prom,  of  May  ii  248 

Harold  1  i  327 

Becket,  Pro.  497 

I  i  231 

„      IV  ii  282 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  36 

„         n  iv  41 

m  i  19 

m  i  23 

m  iii  25 

m  iii  29 

m  V  231 

„      lu  vi  201 

iiivi236 

IV  iii  184 

V  iii  3 

Harold  I  i  402 

„     1 1484 

„     1 1485 

.,  nii698 

„     V  i  283 

„    V  i  434 

„   yiill5 

„  vii202 

Becket  i  i  24 

„  I  iii  490 

„  I  iii  496 

„   I  iii  499 

„   I  iii  504 

„   I  iii  512 

„  iiii307 

„    viieiO 

„   vii614 

The  Cup  1  iii  86 

„     I  iii  181 

II  426 

n428 

The  Falcon  884 

887 

Foresters  J  ii  102 

IV  742 

IV  784 

Queen  Mary  i  v  609 


Bearing  (mien)     Philip  shows  Some  of  the  b  of  your 

blue  blood —  Queen  Mary  i  v  434 

His  b  is  so  courtly-delicate  ;  „  ni  iv  397 
Beast    (See  also  Beast-body,  Wild-beast)    pounce  like 

a  wild  b  out  of  his  cage  to  worry  Craumer.  „                i  i  88 

world-hating  b,  A  haggard  Anabaptist.  „            ii  ii  91 

but  I  thought  he  was  a  b.  „           m  i  221 

Bonner  cannot  out-Bonner  his  own  self — B\ —  „          in  vi  28 

Because  these  islanders  are  brutal  b's?  „        in  vi  153 

and  in  itself  a  b.  „             iv  i  33 

creep  down  into  some  dark  hole  Like  ;i,  hurt  b,  ,,           iv  i  142 

Stand  watching  a  sick  b  before  he  dies  ?  ,,             iv  iii  7 

the  b  might  roar  his  claim  To  being  in  God's  image,  ,,  iv  iii  367 
I  conclude  the  King  a  b  ;   Verily  a  lion  if  you 

will — the  world  A  most  obedient  h  and  fool — 

myself  Half  b  and  fool  as  appertaining  to  it ;  ..         iv  iii  412 

Thou's  thy  way  wi'  man  and  b,  Tib.  „         rv  iii  499 

like  a  timorous  b  of  prey  Out  of  the  bush  Harold  i  ii  212 

The  wolf  !  the  6  !  „     n  ii  301 

0  drunken  ribaldry  !  Out,  b  !  out,  bear  !  Becket  i  i  231 
Poor  b,  poor  b  !  set  him  down.  ..  i  iv  105 
Like  the  wild  b — if  you  can  call  it  love.  iv  ii  121 
The  world  God  made — even  the  b — the  bird  !  ..  v  ii  243 
Ay,  still  a  lover  of  the  b  and  bird  ?  ..  v  ii  246 
How  should  you  guess  What  manner  of  6  it  is  ?  The  Cup  i  ii  371 
leaves  him  A  6  of  prey  in  the  dark.                              Prom,  of  May  i  505 

Beast-body     this  b-b  That  God  has  plunged  my  soul  in —         Becket  ii  i  149 
Beastly     These  b  swine  make  such  a  grunting  here,  Queen  Mary  i  iii  12 

Beat    I  can  play  well,  and  I  shall  b  you  there.  i  iii  129 

Make  all  tongues  praise  and  all  hearts  b  for  you.  ..          r  v  118 

which  every  now  and  then  B's  me  half  dead  :  ,.          i  v  525 

whether  It  b's  hard  at  this  marriage.  ..          iii  i  39 

for  to-day  My  heart  b's  twenty,  ..  in  ii  59 
Your  father  had  a  will  that  b  men  down  ;   Your 

father  had  a  brain  that  b  men  down —  ..         iv  i  108 

God  will  b  down  the  fury  of  the  flame,  ..         iv  iii  98 

1  wonder  at  tha',  it  b's  me  !  ,.  iv  iii  499 
You  b  upon  the  rock.  v  i  210 
How  Harold  used  to  b  him  !  Harold  i  i  432 
Leofwin  would  often  fight  me,  and  I  b  him.  ,.  i  i  434 
only  pulsed  for  Griffyth,  b  For  his  pursuer.  ,.  i  ii  151 
or  the  sword  that  b's  them  down.  ,.  ii  ii  136 
There  somewhere  b's  an  English  pulse  in  thee  !  ,,  ii  ii  266 
let  him  flap  The  wings  that  b  down  Wales  !  ..  iv  i  247 
I  should  b  Thy  kingship  as  my  bishop  Becket,  Pro.  90 
Yet  my  fingers  itch  to  b  him  into  nothing.  „  i  iv  229 
best  heart  that  ever  B  for  one  woman.  The  Falcon  668 
No  other  heart  Of  such  magnificence  in  courtesy  B's — 

out  of  heaven.  „          724 
would  you  b  a  man  for  his  brother's  fault  ?             Prom,  of  May  in  154 

broke  the  heart  That  only  b  for  you  ;  ,,           iii  763 

the  great  breaker  b's  upon  the  beach  !  Foresters  i  ii  323 

That  thou  mightst  b  him  down  at  quarterstafi  !  „          iv  517 

Will  chill  the  hearts  that  b  for  Robin  Hood  !  ..        iv  1064 

Beaten    You  are  b.  Becket,  Pro.  45 
I  loathe  being  b  ;  had  I  fixt  my  fancy  Upon  the 

game  I  should  have  b  thee,  ,,        Pro.  49 

beat  Thy  kingship  as  my  bishop  hath  b  it.  „        Pro.  91 

who  hath  b  down  my  foes.  „      Pro.  253 

Becket  hath  b  thee  again —  ,.      Pro.  314 

in  this  same  battle  We  had  been  b —  The  Falcon  603 

Our  Robin  b,  pleading  for  his  life  !  Foresters  n  i  674 

Lusty  bracken  b  flat,  „  n  ii  154 
Sit  here  by  me,  where  the  most  b  track  Runs  thro' 

the  forest,  ,,           in  89 

Or  else  be  boimd  and  b.  (repeat)  „  in  370,  390 
Beating  the  rain  b  in  my  face  all  the  way,  Prom,  of  May  in  367 
Beautiful    I  left  her  lying  still  and  b.  More  b                  Queen  Mary  v  v  261 

O  b  !  May  I  have  it  as  mine,  Becket  ii  i  297 

My  Anjou  bower  was  scarce  as  6.  „       in  i  52 

The  Lady  Camma,  Wise  I  am  sure  as  she  is  b.  The  Cup  i  ii  139 
She  b  :  sleek  as  a  miller's  mouse  !     Meal  enough, 

meat  enough,  well  fed  ;  but  b — bah  !  I'he  Falcon  164 

you  look  as  b  this  morning  as  the  very  Madonna  ,.           198 

A  lady  that  was  b  as  day  Sat  by  me  „          349 


Beaatifal 


842 


The  Falcon  353 

of  May  I  565 
I  566 


Beautiful  (continued)     Aiid  she  was  the  most  6  of  all ;  Then 
but  fifteen,  and  still  as  b. 
Come,  give  me  your  hand  and  kiss  me  This  h  May- 

moming.  Proh 

The  most  6  May  we  have  had  for  many  years  ! 

And  here  Is  the  most  b  morning  of  this  May.  ,.  i  569 

You,  the  most  h  blossom  of  the  May,  ..  1 574 

all  the  world  is  6  If  we  were  happy,  ..  1 577 

How  b  His  manners  are,  and  how  unlike  the  farmer's  !      „  n  530 

no  maids  like  English  maids  So  6  as  they  be.  Foresters  n  i  20 

And  love  is  joyful,  innocent,  b,  ,,      n  ii  64 

Beauty     a  head  So  full  of  grace  and  b  !  Queen  Mary  i  v  64 

B  passes  like  a  breath  and  love  is  lost  in  loathing  :  „         v  ii  365 

She  hath  won  upon  our  people  thro'  her  b,  Harold  iv  i  23 

cowling  and  clouding  up  That  fatal  star,  thy  B,  Becket  i  i  812 

Your  answer,  b\  ,.      iv  ii  53 

She  calls  you  b,  but  I  don't  like  her  looks.  ,,      iv  ii  61 

my  sleeping-draught  May  bloat  thy  b  out  of  shape,  „    iv  ii  170 

By  thy  leave,  b.    Ay,  the  same  !  „    iv  ii  203 

marvell'd  at  Our  unfamiliar  beauties  of  the  west ;  „    iv  ii  303 

You  have  b, — 0  great  6, — and  Antonius,  The  Cup  i  ii  297 

for  her  b,  stateliness,  and  power.  Was  chosen  Priestess        „  n  16 

To-day,  my  b,  thou  must  dash  us  down  The  Falcon  152 

With  other  beauties  on  a  mountain  meadow,  „  351 

I  whisper'd.  Let  me  crown  you  Queen  of  B,  „  361 

crown  you  Again  with  the  same  crown  my  Queen  of  B.  „  916 

like  the  Moslem  beauties  waiting  To  clasp  their 

lovers  Prom,  of  May  i  246 

■ — her  main  law  Whereby  she  grows  in  b —  „  i  283 

prize  The  pearl  of  B,  even  if  I  found  it  „         m  601 

and  if  her  beauties  answer  their  report.  Forsters  i  ii  27 

Becamest     when  thou  b  ]Man  in  the  Flesh,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  140 

Beck  (brook)     leastwaays  they  niver  cooms  'ere  but  fur 


the  trout  i'  our  b, 
Becket  (Chancellor  of  England,  1154-1162  Arch- 
bishop of  Canterbury,  1162-1170)  (See  also 
Dare  -  Becket,  Godstow  -  Becket,  Thomas, 
Thomas    Becket,    Thomas   of    Canterbury) 

As  proud  as  B. 

You  would  not  have  him  murder'd  as  B  was  ? 


Prom,  of  May  i  213 


Queen  Mary  in  i  332 
m  i  334 

the  arm  within  Is  B's,  who  hath  beaten  down  my  foes.  Becket,  Pro.  253 

The  chart  is  not  mine,  but  B's  :  take  it,  Thomas.  ,.  Pro.  311 

B  !  0 — aj- — and  these  chessmen  on  the  floor —  ..  Pro.  312 

B  hath  beaten  thee  again —  ,.  Pro.  314 

Ha,  B  !  thou  rememberest  our  talk  !  ,.  Pro.  404 

this  B,  her  father's  friend,  like  enough  staved  us  „  Pro.  517 

B,  I  am  the  oldest  of  the  Templars  ;  .,  i  iii  247 

Behold  thy  father  kneeling  to  thee,  B.  „  i  iii  253 

And  B  had  my  bosom  on  all  this  ;  „  i  iii  433 

Our  Lord  B's  our  great  sitting-hen  cock,  ,.  i  iv  125 

B,  beware  of  the  knife  !  ..  i  iv  133 

B  shall  be  king,  and  the  Holy  Father  shall  be  king,  ,.  i  iv  269 

With  B?     I  have  but  one  hour  with  thee —  ..  ii  i  23 

Why  thou,  my  bird,  thou  pipest  B,  B —  ..  ii  i  32 

Must  be  the  nightmare  breaking  on  my  peace  with 'Z/.'  ..  n  i  38 

We  have  but  one  bond,  her  hate  of  B.  ii  i  166 

Nay  !  nay  !  what  art  thou  muttering  ?    I  hate  B?  ..  n  i  168 

'Tis  true  what  B  told  me,  that  the  mother  ..  ii  ii  9 

and  B — B  should  crown  him  were  he  crown'd  at  all :  ..  ii  ii  16 

Brother  of  France,  what  shall  be  done  with  B  ?  ..  u  ii  65 

Master  B,  you  That  owe  to  me  your  power  over  me —  ,.  n  ii  151 

sure  to  wake  As  great  a  wrath  in  B Rosamund. 

Always  B  !  „  iii  i  88 

Henry — B  tells  him  this — To  take  my  life  ,.  iv  ii  394 

But  B  ever  moves  against  a  king.  „  v  i  25 

world  allows  I  fall  no  inch  Behind  this  B,  ,.  v  i  40 

B  hath  trodden  on  us  like  worms,  ,.  v  i  60 

scarcely  dare  to  bless  the  good  we  eat  Because  of  B.  „  v  i  72 

I  know — could  swear — as  long  as  B  breathes,  „  v  i  76 

The  brideless  B  is  thy  king  and  mine  :  ,.  v  i  107 

B  is  like  enough  to  make  all  his.  ,.  v  i  134 

Methought  I  had  recover'd  of  the  B,  „  v  i  137 

Why  do  you  thrust  this  B  on  me  again  ?  „  v  i  155 

Lest  B  thrust  you  even  from  your  throne.  „  v  i  159 

Your  B  knew  the  secret  of  your  bower.  „  v  i  177 


Becket  (continued)    Our  B,  who  will  not  absolve  the 

Bishops.  Becket  v  i  222 

I  think  ye  four  have  cause  to  love  this  B.  „      v  i  225 

You  are  no  King's  men — you — you— you  are  B's  men.  „      v  i  259 

What  say  ye  there  ot  B?  „      v  ii  56 

B,  it  is  too  late.  ..     v  ii  526 

Where  is  the  traitor  B  ?  „    v  iii  103 
Becket  (Gilbert)    See  Gilbert  Becket 

Beckon     the  right  hand  still  B's  me  hence.  Queen  Mary  v  v  138 

Becomes    nay,  it  well  b  him.  .,            i  v  436 
Bed    (See  also  Down,  Flower-bed)    As  tho'  the 

nightmare  never  left  her  6.  „            i  v  606 
Spain  in  our  ships,  in  our  forts,  in  our  liouses, 

in  our  b's  ?  „            ii  i  180 

No  Spain  in  our  b's —  ,.            n  i  182 

and  the  b's  I  know.     I  hate  Spain.  „            ii  i  184 

on  a  soft  b,  in  a  closed  room,  with  light,  ..            v  iv  36 

gather'd  one  From  out  a  i  of  thick  forget-me-nots,  „             v  v  94 

It  lies  beside  thee,  king,  upon  thy  b.  Harold  iii  i  196 

get  thee  to  thine  own  b.  Becket  i  i  8 

he  hath  made  his  b  between  the  altars,  ..  i  iv  264 

My  b,  where  ev'n  the  slave  is  private —  ,,    v  i  251 
I  measured  his  foot  wi'  the  mark  i'  the  b,  but  it 

wouldn't  fit  Prom,  of  May  i  414 
seen  us  that  wild  morning  when  we  found  Her  b 

unslept  in,  „            n  471 

Strike  up  a  song,  my  friends,  and  then  to  b.  Foresters  i  iii  31 
Bedingfield  (Sir  Henry)    See  Henry,  Henry  Bedingfield 

Bedroom     We  found  a  letter  in  your  b  torn  into  bits.  Prom,  of  May  ni  323 

Bee     As  the  first  flower  no  b  ha.s  ever  tried.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  63 

Are  you  the  b  to  try  me  ?  „            i  iv  64 

b's,  Ii  any  creeping  life  invade  their  hive  ,.           nr  iii  53 

.    your  wise  b's  had  stiing  him  first  to  death.  „          in  iii  64 

The  people  are  as  thick  as  b's  below,  They  hum  like  b's, —   Harold  I  i  31 

B  mustn't  buzz.  Whoop — but  he  knows,  (repeat)  Becket  in  i  98,  239 

So  rare  the  household  honeymaking  b,  „           v  ii  218 

As  happy  as  the  b's  there  at  their  honey  Proni.  of  May  i  606 

Swarm  to  thy  voice  like  b's  to  the  brass  pan.  Foresters  i  iii  108 

B's  rather,  flying  to  the  flower  for  honey.  „           iv  12 

The  b  buzz'd  up  m  the  heat.  ,.           iv  14 

And  the  b  buzz'd  do^vn  from  the  heat.  „            iv  20 

And  the  b  buzz'd  up  in  the  cold  „            iv  21 

And  the  b  buzz'd  off  in  the  cold.  „           iv  27 

And  yet  in  tune  with  Nature  and  the  b's.  „            iv  33 

Thy  b  should  buzz  about  the  Court  of  John.  „           iv  44 

Beech     Fine,  b  and  plane,  oak,  walnut.  The  Cup  i  i  1 

Beef     and  there  is  a  piece  of  b  like  a  house-side.  Prom,  of  May  i  793 

Beelzebub     By  Mahomid  I  could  dine  with  B  !  Foresters  iv  971 

Beer     Owd  Steer  gi'es  nubbut  cowd  tea  to  'is  men,  and 

owd  Dobson  gi'es  b.  Prom,  of  May  ii  225 
But  I'd  like  owd  Steer's  cowd  tea  better  nor 

Dobson's  b.  „            u  227 

That  6  be  as  good  fur  'erses  as  men,  „            n  315 

The  b's  gotten  oop  into  my  'ead.  „             n  320 
worked  at  all  the  worse  upon  the  cold  tea  than  you 

woiild  have  done  upon  the  b?  „            ni  57 

but  we'd  ha'  worked  better  upo'  the  b.  „            in  60 

Beeswax     By  bonds  of  b,  like  your  creeping  thing  ;  Queen  Mary  in  iii  62 

Beetle     B's  jewel  armour  crack'd,  Foresters  n  ii  160 

Befall     No  ill  b  on  him  or  thee  when  I  Am  gone.  Becket  ii  i  260 

get  you  hence  in  haste  Lest  worse  b  you.  „    iv  ii  28 

Befit    It  well  b's  thy  new  archbishoprick  „     i  i  225 

Befitting     But  ill  b  such  a  festal  day  Foresters  i  iii  37 

Beg    You  are  to  b  the  people  to  pray  for  you  ;  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  76 

— there  to  b,  starve,  die —  Becket  n  i  74 

I  will  b  my  bread  along  the  world  „    iv  ii  103 

he  b's  you  to  forget  it  As  scarce  his  act : —  The  Cup  ii  51 

Dare  b  him  to  receive  his  diamonds  back. —  The  Falcon  262 

B^et    sire  b's  Not  half  his  likeness  in  the  son.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  54 

b's  An  admiration  and  an  indignation,  „      in  iv  169' 

Beggar  (s)     How  should  a  baron  love  a  b  on  horseback,        Becket,  Pro.  444 

half-rag,  half-sore, — b's,  poor  rogues  „         i  iv  82 

If  the  King  hold  his  purpose,  I  am  myself  a  6.  „         i  iv  90 

— like  some  loud  b  at  thy  gate —  „        n  i  180 

mastiff,  That  all  but  kill'd  the  b,  Prom,  of  May  i  55» 


Beggar 


843 


Besotted 


(s)  {continued)     but  if  he  do  not  I  and  thou  are 
but  b's. 

Canst  thou  endure  to  be  a  6  m  hose  whole  life 

Here  come  three  b's. 

we  be  b's,  we  come  to  ask  o'  you.     We  ha'  nothing. 

B's,  you  are  sturdy  rogues  that  should  be  set  to  work. 

How  much  for  a  6  ? 

will  you  not  hear  one  of  these  b's'  catches  ? 

by  St.  Mary  these  b's  and  these  friars  shall  join  you. 
(verb)     Down  to  the  devil  with  this  bond  that  b's  me  ! 

She  has  6  him.  The  Falcon  157 

"He  hath  become  so  b,  that  his  falcon  „  229 

We  will  be  b  then  and  be  true  to  the  King.  Foresters  i  i  201 

B^garly     This  b  life,  This  poor,  flat,  hedged-in  field —  Prom,  of  May  u  343 
B%gar-woman    rags  Of  some  pale  6-w  seeking  abns  The  Falcon  852 

Begin     old  Gospeller,  sour  as  midwinter,  B  with  him.      Queen  Mary  i  iii  41 

But  he  6's  to  flutter. 

He  b's  at  top  with  me  : 

so,  Allen,  I  may  as  well  b  with  you. 
Beguming    In  your  old  place  ?  and  vespers  are  b. 
B^one    Do,  and  b  ! 
B^un    hath  b  to  re-edify  the  true  temple — 

Your  people  have  b  to  learn  your  worth. 

she  hath  b  Her  life-long  prayer  for  thee. 
Behaif    Stood  out  against  the  King  in  your  b, 
BebaviOlii    I  promise  you  that  if  you  forget  yourself 

in  your  b  to  this  gentleman. 
Behold     B  him —     People.     Oh,  unhappy  sight  ! 

B  him,  brethren  :  he  hath  cause  to  weep  ! — 
Beholden    Thanks,  Sir  Thomas,  we  be  b  to  you, 

Thou  art  much  b  to  this  foot  of  mine, 

But  I  am  much  b  to  your  King. 

I  am  much  b  to  the  King,  your  master. 

We  should  be  all  the  more  b  to  him. 
Being    From  the  dim  dawn  of  B — 
Belated     I  and  my  friend,  this  monk,  were  here  b, 
Belie!    wholesome  medicine  here  Puts  that  b  asleep. 
BeUeve    He  did  b  the  bond  incestuous. 

I  do  6  she'd  yield. 

I  b  you  mine  ;  And  so  you  maj-  continue  mine, 

I  myself  B  it  will  be  better  for  your  welfare. 

I  do  6  he  holp  Northumberland  Against  me. 

I  do  6,  I  have  dusted  some  already, 

some  b  that  he  will  go  beyond  him. 

his  fault  So  thoroughly  to  b  in  his  own  self. 

Yet  thoroughly  to  b  in  one's  own  self, 

I  b  Sir  Thomas  Stafford  ? 

And  I,  by  God,  b  myself  a  man. 

I  b  so,  cousin. 

who  not  B's  the  Pope,  nor  any  of  them  b — 

I  do  6  in  God,  Father  of  all ; 

men  Have  hardly  known  what  to  b,  or  whether  They 
should  6  in  anything  ; 

I  hear  unhappy  rumours — nay,  I  say  not,  I  b. 

And  I  b,  Spite  of  your  melancholy  Sir  Nicholas, 

I  do  6  I  lamed  his  Majesty's  For  a  day  or  two, 

He  had  his  gracious  moment,  Altho'  you'll  not  b  me. 

Lord  Leofwin,  dost  thou  b,  that  these  Three  rods 

an  honest  world  Will  not  b  them. 

And  makes  b  that  he  b's  my  word — 

For  they  will  not  b  thee— as  I  b. 

But  that  my  barons  might  b  thy  word, 

I  do  b  My  old  crook'd  spine  would  bud 

b  that  lying  And  ruling  men  are  fatal  twins 

prayers  go  up  as  fast  as  my  tears  fall,  I  well  b. 

Let  not  our  great  king  B  us  sullen — 

b  thee  The  veriest  Galahad  of  okl  Arthur's  hall. 

I  do  b  thee,  then.     I  am  the  man. 

Do  you  b  that  you  are  married  to  him  y  (repeat) 

I  should  b  it.     Eleanor.     You  must  not  b  it. 

Do  you  bit?     I  pray  you  then  to  take  my  sleeping- 
draught  ;  '•        i^'.  ii  68 

Do  you  bear  me  ?     B  oi  no,  I  care  not.  ,.      iv  ii  353 

/  6  him  The  bravest  in  our  roll  of  Primates  „  v..ii57 

But  she  would  not  b  me,  and  she  wish'd  „        v  ii  116 


Foresters  i  i  200 
I  i  205 
III  187 
m  189 
III  196 

..  Ill  216 
ni405 

,.  ni  417 
1 1340 


Harold  ii  ii  3 

Becket  i  iii  617 

Pro  III.  of  May  in  30 

Becket  v  ii  597 

I  i  233 

Queen  Mary  I  iii  58 

I  v  109 

Harold  iii  i  323 

Queen  Mary  rv  i  126 

Prom,  of  May  1 162 
Queen  Mary  iv  iii  1 

IV  iii  13 
n  iii  121 

,.         m  ii  49 
V  iii  99 

V  iii  111 
Foresters  iv  292 

Prom,  of  May  1  281 

Foresters  t  ii  193 

Becket  rv  ii  52 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  77 

I  iv  22 

I  iv  136 

I  iv  254 
I  V  278 
I  V  423 
I  V  440 

II  ii  386 
„       II  ii  387 

III  i  31 
,.       HI  i  168 

III  ii  72 
„  III  iii  238 
..     IV  iii  228 


„     IV  iii  405 
V  i  36 

V  ii  326 

V  ii  471 
V  V  39 

Harold  i  i  43 

..     I  i  348 

..  Iiii668 

,.  Iiii696 

,.  iiii725 

„     III  i  23 

„  III  i  126 

„  mi  167 

IV  i  7 

Becket,  Pro.  128 

I  i  135 

,.   IV  ii  46,54 

IV  ii  48 


Believe  (continued)     You  will  b  Now  that  lie  never  struck 

the  stag—  The  Cup  i  ii  429 
he  prays  you  to  b  him.     Camma.     I  pray  him  to  b — 

that  I  b  him.  „              ii  55 

I  scarce  b  it  !  Elisabetta.  Shame  upon  her  then  !  The  Falcon  517 
I  doant  b  he's  iver  a  'eart  under  his  waistcoat.          Prom,  of  May  1 130 

they  that  love  do  not  b  that  death  \Ki\\  part  them.  „             i  662 

My  father's  death,  Let  her  b  it  mine  ;  „  ii  454 
I  do  6  I  lost  my  heart  to  him  the  very  first  time  Me 

met,  „           ui  283 

I  do  6  I  could  forgive — well,  almost  anything —  „           m  630 

lower  and  baser  Than  even  I  can  well  h  you.  ,,           in  815 

but  I  b  there  lives  No  man  who  truly  loves  Foresters  ii  i  74 

1  b  She  came  with  me  into  the  forest  here.  ..      ii  i  484 

I  b  thou  fell'st  into  the  hands  Of  these  same  Moors  ,,  ii  i  562 
b  There  came  some  evil  fairy  at  my  birth  And  cursed 

me,  „     II  ii  107 

I  b  thee,  thou  art  a  good  fellow,  though  a  friar.  ,.       ni  341 

0  my  good  liege,  we  did  b  you  dead.  .,        iv  846 
Believed     His  friends  would  praise  him,  I  b  'em,              Queen  Mary  i  v  623 

Stigand  b  he  knew  not  what  he  spake.  Harold  m  ii  61 

— some  b  she  was  his  paramour.  „  v  ii  102' 
b  that  Rome  Made  war  upon  the  peoples  not  the  Gods.   The  Cup  i  ii  58 

1  b  thee  to  be  too  solemn  and  formal  to  be  a  ruifler.  Foresters  i  i  168 
I  b  this  Abbot  of  the  party  of  King  Richard,  ,.        i  i  266 

Believer    as  I  am  a  true  b  in  true  love  myself,  ,,       i  i  162 

Believing     B  I  should  ever  aid  the  Church —  Becket,  Pro.  417 

b  That  I  should  go  against  the  Church  with  him,  ,.            i  i  91 

b  that  our  brother  Had  wrong'd  you  ;  „  ii  ii  237 
Tlieer  ye  goas  ageiin.  Miss  niver  b  owt  I  saj-s  to 

ye — ■  Prom,  of  May  i  107 

Bell     (See  also  Minster-bell)     The  b's  are  ringing  at 

Maidstone.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  18 

The  b's  must  ring  ;  Te  Deums  must  be  sung  ;  ,.        in  ii  211 

Toll  of  a  b,  Stroke  of  a  clock,  ,.        iii  v  142 

clash'd  their  b's,  Shot  off  their  lying  cannon,  „         iii  vi  96 

A  passing  b  toll'd  in  a  dying  ear —  „  v  ii  41 
And  hear  my  peregrine  and  her  b's  in  heaven  ;  And 

other  b's  on  earth,  Harold  i  ii  131 

Our  scouts  have  heard  the  tinkle  of  their  b's.  „  v  i  221 
like  the  gravedigger's  child  I  have  heard  of,  trying 

to  ring  the  b,  Becket  m  iii  74 

— the  b's  rang  out  even  to  deafening,  „     v  ii  363 

Bell-silencing     black,  b-s,  anti-marrying,  burial-hindering 

interdict  „     ill  iii  54 

Belly    since  the  Sheriff  left  me  naught  but  an  empty  b.  Foresters  n  i  279 

Belonging    His  kin,  all  his  b's,  overseas  ;  Becket  ii  i  71 

Of  and  b  to  the  King  of  England,  „    iv  ii  23 

I  am  mine  own  self  Of  and  b  to  the  King.  „    iv  ii  30 

King  Hath  divers  ofs  and  ons,  ofs  and  6'^.-,  ,.    iv  ii  32 

It  is  the  cup  b  our  own  Temple.  2'he  Cup  ii  345 

B's,  paramours,  whom  it  pleases  liim  Becket  iv  ii  35 

Beloved    See  Well-beloved 

Bench     There  is  a  b.     Come,  wilt  thou  sit  ?  Becket  ii  i  124 
Help  me  to  move  this  b  for  him  into  the  sun.              Prom,  of  May  i  81 

Doubtless,  like  judges  of  another  b.  Foresters  in  153 

Bend    seeks  To  b  the  laws  to  his  own  will.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  184 

Bended    and  we'll  pray  for  you  all  on  our  b  knees.  „         n  iii  109 
and  we'll  pray  for  you  on  our  b  knees  till  our 

lives'  end.  „         n  iii  122 

Benedict    0  blessed  samt,  O  glorious  B, —  Becket  v  iii  2 

Benedicta    Ave  Maria,  gratia  plena,  B  tu  in 

mulieribus.  Queen  Mary  iii  ii  1 

Benedictus    Sit  b  fructus  ventris  tui !  '  „         in  ii  83 

Bent     (See  also  Bow-bent)     b  to  his  saddle-bow.  As  if  to 

win  the  man  ,.       ii  ii  310 

Benzoin    Nard,  Cinnamon,  amomum,  b.  The  Cup  n  184 

Bequeath     Edward  might  b  the  crown  Of  England,  Queen  Mary  i  ii  26 

Berkeley  (Sir  Maurice)    See  Maurice  Berkeley 

Berkhamstead    Due  from  his  castles  of  B  and  Eye  Becket  i  iii  628 

Beset  O  Renard,  I  am  much  b,  Queen  Mary  i  v  385 

I  should  be  hard  b  with  thy  fourscore.  Foresters  iv  17^ 

Beside    lost  and  found  together,  None  b  them.  Harold  in  ii  8 

'  I  am  b  thee.'  „      m  ii  14 

Besotted    One  half  b  in  religious  rites.  The  Cup  i  i  74 


Best 


844 


Bide 


Best  (adj.)     Bumble's  the  b  milcher  in  Islip. 

(repeat)  Qiieen  Mart/  iv  iii  478,  497 

The  blood  and  sweat  of  heretics  at  the  stake 

Is  God's  b  dew  upon  the  barren  field.  „  v  i  102 

You  had  b  go  home.     What  are  you  ?  „  v  iv  43 

Noble  Gurth  !     B  son  of  Godwin  !  Harold  v  i  135 

Serve  my  b  friend  and  make  him  ray  worst  foe  ;  Becket  i  iii  567 

Only  my  b  bower-maiden  died  of  late,  „       in  i  67 

Stain'd  with  the  blood  of  the  b  heart  that  ever  Beat 

for  one  woman.  The  Falcon  667 

yet  that  might  be  The  b  way  out  of  it,  Protn.  of  May  i  476 

Then  the  man,  the  woman,  Following  their  b  afl&nities,        „  i  523 

this  is  a  true  woodman's  bow  of  the  b  yew-wood  to 

slay  the  deer.  Foresters  ii  i  393 

Heaven  looks  down  on  me,  And  smiles  at  my  b  meanings,  „  iv  727 
Best  (s)     I  do  my  most  and  b.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  24 


it  is  a  day  to  test  your  health  Ev'n  at  the  b  : 

You  have  done  your  b.     Pole.     Have  done  my  b, 

But  thou  canst  hear  the  b  and  wisest  of  us. 

1  have  done  my  b.     I  am  not  learn'd. 

it's  all  for  the  b,  come  when  they  wiU — 

I  and  Filippo  here  had  done  our  b, 
Bested    See  Bl-bested 

Bestial    all  of  us  abhor  The  venomous,  b,  devilish 
revolt  Of  Thomas  Wyatt. 

Did  ye  not  cast  with  b  violence  Our  holy  Norman 
bishops  down 

0  6!     O  how  unlike  our  goodly  Sinnatus. 
Bethink    And  now,  I  do  6  me,  thou  wa.st  by 
Betray    Before  he  would  b  it. 

And  if  you  should  b  me  to  your  husband — 

Will  you  b  him  by  this  order  ? 

And  I  will  not  b  you. 

for  fear  or  monies,  might  B  me  to  the  wild  Prince 

For  those  of  thine  own  band  who  would  b  thee  ? 
Betray'd    Cast  off,  b,  defamed. 

They  have  b  the  treason  of  their  hearts  : 

Thou  hast  6  us  on  these  rocks  of  thine  ! 

0  Wulfnoth,  Wulfnoth,  brother,  thou  hast  b  me  ! 
Herbert,  Herbert,  have  I  b  the  Church  ? 
But  thou  the  shepherd  hast  b  the  sheep, 
hast  b  Thy  father  to  the  losing  d  his  land. 

Betroth    In  order  to  b  her  to  your  Dauphin. 
Betrothal  (adj.)    it  was  her  own  B  ring. 

Thou  hast  robb'd  my  girl  of  her  b  ring. 
Betrothal  (s)    Of  her  b  to  the  Emperor  Charles, 
Betroth'd    Was  she  not  b  in  her  babyhood  to  the 
Great  Emperor 

and  presently  That  I  and  Harold  are  b — 
Betrothing    Hapless  doom  of  woman  happy  in  6  ! 
Better    and  I  myself  Believe  it  will  be  b  for  your  welfare 

He  must  deserve  his  surname  b. 

A  b  and  a  worse — the  worse  is  here  To  persecute, 

1  could  mould  myself  To  bear  your  going  b ; 

The  b  for  him.    He  bums  in  Purgatory,  not  in  Hell. 

There  is  no  hope  of  b  left  for  him, 

Our  Daisy's  cheeses  be  b. 

I  thought  you  knew  me  b. 

I  am  not  well,  but  it  will  b  me, 

I  wish  her  Highness  b. 

Nay  !     B  die  than  lie ! 

Because  I  love  the  Norman  6 — no, 

and  left  me  time  And  peace  for  prayer  to  gain  a  b  one. 

B  die  than  lie  ! 

Is  it  not  b  still  to  speak  the  truth  ? 

B  methinks  have  slain  the  man  at  once  ! 

Who  hath  a  b  claim  then  to  the  crown 

b  die  Than  credit  this,  for  death  is  death, 

Hadst  thou  been  braver,  I  had  b  braved  All — 

the  king  like  his  own  man,  No  b ; 

I  could  pity  this  poor  world  myself  that  it  is  no  b 

ordered. 
Friend,  am  I  so  much  b  than  thyself 
You  have  had  the  6  of  us  In  secular  matters 


IV  ii  118 

v  ii  115 

Harold  i  i  300 

Becket  ill  i  24 

The  Falcon  201 

607 


Qv£en  Mary  ii  ii  287 

Harold  I  i  49 

The  Cup  II  172 

Foresters  ii  i  540 

Becket  ii  i  268 

The  Cup  I  ii  242 

.,       I  ii  244 

„      I  ii  316 

Foresters  ii  i  708 

IV  833 

Queen  Mary  i  v  26 

II  ii  156 

Harold  n  i  23 

„     II  ii  802 

Becket  i  iii  284 

„    I  iii  524 

Foresters  ii  i  569 

Queen  Mary  i  v  293 

Foresters  i  ii  295 

II  i  586 

Queen  Mary  v  v  233 


Queen 


iill8 

Harold  I  ii  223 

Mary  v  ii  364 

iiv254 

III  ii  197 

III  iv  114 

III  vi  236 
IV  i  55 

IV  iii  79 

IV  iii  484 

V  ii  186 

V  ii  554 

V  ii  615 
Harold  i  i  158 

„  1  i  171 
ii220 
n  ii  281 
II  ii  373 
II  ii  498 
11  ii  596 
m  ii  77 
m  ii  178 
IV  iii  59 


B  have  been  A  fisherman  at  Bosham,  my  good  Herbert, 


Becket,  Pro.  366 
ii3 
nii80 
II  ii  290 


Better  (continued)     I  cannot  answer  it  Till  b  times,  Becket  in  i  3 

That  which  you  ask  me  Till  b  times.  ,.       in  i  7 

And  I  thought  if  it  were  the  King's  brother  he  had 

a  b  bride  than  the  King, 
b  Than  raised  to  take  a  life  which  Henry  bad  me 
Why  then  B  perhaps  to  speak  with  them  apart, 
to  submit  at  once  Is  b  than  a  wholly-hopeless  war, 
I  meant  thee  to  have  follow'd — b  thus, 
that's  positive  again — that's  b  ! 
and  b  late  than  never — but  come  when  they  will — 
'  B  a  man  without  riches,  than  riches  without  a  man, 
Hath  served  me  b  than  her  living — 
Betting  6,  Mr.  Dobson. 

B  step  out  of  his  road,  then,  for  he's  walking  to  us, 
I'm  sorry  for  it,  for,  tho'  he  never  comes  to  church, 

I  thought  b  of  him. 
Niver  man  'ed  b  friends,  and  I  will  saay  niver 

master  'ed  b  men : 
thaw  I  says  it  mysen,  niver  men  'ed  a  6  master — 
So  much  the  b,  so  much  the  b. 
B  and  higher  than  Nature,  we  might  be  As  happy  as 

the  bees 
Noa;   I  knaws  a  deal  b  now. 
You  had  b  attend  to  your  hayfield. 
knaw'd  b  nor  to  cast  her  sister's  misfortin  inter  'er 

teeth 
But  I'd  like  owd  Steer's  cowd  tea  6  nor  Dobson's  beer. 
b  death  With  our  first  wail  than  life — 
Why,  you  look  b.     Eva.     And  I  feel  so  much  b, 
it  might  have  been  b  for  her,  for  him,  and  for  you. 
B  for  me  !     That's  good.     How  b  for  me  ? 
B  not.    Has  he  offered  you  marriage,  this  gentleman  ? 
but  you  seem  somewhat  b  to-day. 
if  you  cram  me  crop-full  I  be  little  b  than  Famine  in 

the  picture, 
we  should  have  b  battels  at  home. 
Till  b  times.     Robin.     But  if  the  b  times  should  never 

come  ? 
Why  then  I  will  be  b  than  the  time. 
Would  it  be  b  for  thee  in  the  wood  ? 
Am  I  worse  or  6  ?     I  am  outlaw'd. 
and  all  the  b  For  this  free  forest-life, 
B  than  heart-sick,  friar. 
Bevell'd     That  all  was  planed  and  b  smooth  again, 
Beware     B,  Lord  Legate,  of  a  heavier  crime  Than 
heresy  is  itself  ;  b,  I  say.  Lest  men  accuse 

you  of  indifference  Queen  Mary  in  iv  221 

Ay,  ay,  b  of  France.  „  iv  iii  434 

Bewitch'd     And  thought  thou  wert  b.  Foresters  n  i  684 

Bible     I'll  have  their  b's  burnt.     The  b  is  the  priest's.    Queen  Mary  in  i  284 


..    in  i  173 

.,  IV  ii  267 

„    vii310 

The  Cup  I  ii  141 

II  498 

The  Falcon  95 

199 

751 

901 

Prom,  of  May  i  69 

1  218 

I  261 , 

132 
I  32 

i43&^ 

16O4I 

n26 

nl22 

u  127 
n227 
n289 
ni220 
m  251 
in253 
ni  289 
lu  322 

Foresters  i  i  47 
I  i  58 

„      I  ii  286 

,.      I  ii  291 

„     I  iii  140 

ni49 

ni59 

„       IV  674 

Becket  r  i  138 


Look  to  your  B,  Paget !  we  are  fallen 

And  may  not  read  your  B, 

never  merry  \^orld  In  England,  since  the  B  came 
among  us. 

Till  all  men  have  their  B,  rich  and  poor. 
Bid     the  Lord  Chancellor.     Mary.     B  him  come  in. 

B  him  come  in.     Good  morning,  Sir  de  Noailles. 

Gregory  b  St.  Austin  here  Found  two  archbishopricks, 

And  b  him  re-create  me,  Gilbert  Foliot. 

My  friends,  the  Archbishop  b's  you  good  night. 

he  sends  me  to  b  you  this  night  pray  for  him 

you  b  me  go,  and  I'll  have  my  ball  anyhow. 

B  their  old  bond  farewell  with  smiles,  not  tears ; 

Do  not  till  I  b  you.     Eva.     No,  Philip,  no. 

Will  b  you  welcome,  and  will  listen  to  you. 

I  Titania  b  you  flit, 
Bidd'n    and  b  him  Charge  one  against  a  thousand. 

Was  not  my  lord  of  Leicester  b  to  our  supper  ? 


in  iv  80 
III  iv  83 

v  v241 

vv248 

IV  97 

I  v241 

Becket  i  iii  48 

.,    I  iii  126 

..    I  iv  261 

..    iiv266 

.,    IV  ii  63 

Pro7n.  of  Mat/ 1  524 

17321 

u522 

Foresters  11  ii  126 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  308 

Becket  i  iv  56 


Bide    and  there  b  The  upshot  of  my  quarrel. 


and  a  war  so  owld  a  couldn't  b  vor  his  dinner,  but 

a  had  to  b  howsomiver. 
But  now  I  cannot  b. 

Ay,  so  your  Grace  would  b  a  moment  yet. 
And  b  the  doom  of  God. 
tho'  I  can  drink  wine  I  cannot  b  water. 


Queen  Mary  11  iv  85 


„       IV  iii  505 

V  i  93 

v  ii  547 

Harold  v  i  61 

Becket  i  iv  220 


I 


Bide 


845 


Bit 


Bide  (continued)    in  Nottingham  they  say  There  b's  a. 

foul  witch  Foresters  u  i  203 

But  how  then  if  I  will  not  6  to  be  search'd  ?  „  rv  168 

Bided    so  they  b  on  and  on  till  vour  o'  the  clock,         Queen  Mary  iv  iii  509 

Biding    So  sick  am  I  with  h  for  this  child.  .,  in  vi  89 

Big    his  h  baldness,  That  irritable  forelock  which  he  rubs,     ,.  i  iv  264 

Is  that  it?     That's  a  h  lot  of  money.  ,.  n  iii  62 

Map,  tho'  you  make  your  butt  too  h,  you  overshoot  it.  Becket  iii  iii  122 

be  i'  the  long  bam  by  one  o'clock,  fur  he'll  gie  us  a  i 


dinner, 
and  a  plum-pudding  as  6  as  the  round  haystack, 
and  I  wur  hallus  scaared  by  a  6  word ; 
and  wheere  the  b  eshtree  cuts  athurt  it, 
I  am  mortally  afear'd  o'  thee,  thou  b  man, 

B  in  our  small  world  than  thou  art. 
Not  yet,  but  here  comes  one  of  b  mould. 
Bigot     To  be  nor  mad,  nor  b — have  a  mind — 
Bill  (beak)     gaping  b's  in  the  home-nest  Piping  for 
bread — 
No  bird?     Filippo.     Half  a  tit  and  a  hem's  J. 
Bill  (document)     In  several  b's  and  declarations, 
ay ;  if  Bonner  have  not  forged  the  b's. 


Prom,  of  May  I  9 

I  794 

ni  33 

in  94 

Foresters  IV  317 

Becket  v  i  128 

Foresters  TV  115 

Queen  Mary  v  v  216 

Becket  II  ii  300 

The  Falcon  131 

Queen  Mary  iv  i  48 

IV  i  51 


Billing     nor  priestly  king  to  cross  Their  b's  ere  they  nest.     Harold  in  ii  95 


Bind    To  b  me  first  by  oaths  I  could  not  keep. 

And  b  him  in  from  hamiing  of  their  combs. 

Which  b's  us  friendship-fast  for  ever ! 

The  shackles  that  will  b  me  to  the  wall. 

And  I  would  b  thee  more, 

b  a  score  All  in  one  faggot,  snap  it  over  knee, 

bound  To  that  necessity  which  b's  us  down ; 

Tho'  she  that  b's  the  bond,  herself  should  see 

I  will  b  up  his  wounds  with  my  napkin. 

striving  still  to  break  or  b  The  spiritual  giant 

I  ask'd  A  ribbon  from  her  hair  to  b  it  with ; 

if  you  will  b  love  to  one  for  ever, 

Thou  hast  risk'd  thy  life  for  mine :  b  these  two  men 
Bird    (See  also  Sea-bird)     These  b's  of  passage  come 

before  their  time :  Queen  Alary  i  iii  75 

To  kiss  and  cufE  among  the  b's  and  flowers —  „       m  v  258 

I  never  breathed  it  to  a  6  in  the  eaves, 

I  whistle  to  the  6  has  broken  cage,  And  all  in  vain 

let  fly  the  b  within  the  hand,  To  catch  the  b  again 

Poor  b  of  passage  !  so  I  was ;  but,  father, 

Bar  the  6  From  following  the  fled  sxmimer — 

To  guard  this  b  of  passage  to  her  cage ; 

6  that  moults  sings  the  same  song  again, 

I  wrong  the  b ;  she  leaves  only  the  nest  she  built, 

thou,  my  b,  thou  pipest  Becket,  Becket — 

B  mustn't  tell,  Whoop — he  can  see.  (repeat) 

I  have  lived,  poor  b,  from  cage  to  cage. 

The  world  God  made — even  the  beast — the  b  ! 

Ay,  still  a  lover  of  the  beast  and  b  ? 

See,  see,  my  white  6  stepping  toward  the  snare. 

Kear  that,  my  b  !     Art  thou  not  jealous  of  her  ? 

Buss  me,  my  6  ! 

No  6  ?    Filippo.    Half  a  tit  and  a  hem's  bill. 

A  noble  b,  each  perfect  of  the  breed. 

What  do  you  rate  her  at  ?    Count.    My  b  ? 

Nothing  but  my  brave  b,  my  noble  falcon, 

dying  of  my  noble  b  Hath  served  me  better  than  her  living — 

all  in  all  to  one  another  from  the  time  when  we 

first  peeped  into  the  b's  nest.  Prom,  of  May  m  274 

barred  thee  up  in  thy  chamber,  like  a  &  in  a  cage.  Foresters  i  i  315 


Queen  Mary  i  v  557 

ni  iii  57 

Harold  ii  ii  162 

..       n  ii  410 

..      II  ii  559 

IV  i  57 

V  i  108 
Beclcet  i  ii  76 

,.    I  iv  106 
,.  ivii443 
The  Falcon  359 
Prom,  of  May  i  644 
Foresters  iv  894 


V  ii  454 
V  V  19 

Harold  n  ii  65 

Becket  i  i  253 

„     I  i  258 

„     I  i  329 

,.  r  iii  447 

„     1  iv  45 

II  i  32 

Becket  iii  i  106,  254 

Becket  m  i  222 

V  ii  244 
„       T  ii  246 

The  Cup  I  iii  35 
The  Falcon  5 
29 
„  130 
,.  320 
,.  323 
.,  873 
900 


tree-Cupids  half-way  up  in  heaven,  The  b's- 

And  all  the  b's  that  sing  When  all  the  leaves  are  green ; 

And  live  with  us  and  the  b's  in  the  green  wood. 

Let  the  b's  sing,  and  do  you  dance  to  their  song. 

All  the  b's  in  merry  Sherwood  sing  and  sing  him  home 
again. 
Bird-babble    B-b  for  my  falcon !    Let  it  pass. 
Bird-echoing    Their  long  b-e  minster-aisles, — 
Birdlune    I  think  there  may  be  b  here  for  me ; 
Bird-Robin    If  my  man-Robin  were  but  a  b-R, 
Birth    every  rebel  b  That  passes  out  of  embryo. 

We  have  the  man  that  rail'd  against  thy  b. 


in  37 
ni440 
IV  325 
IV  556 


IV  1109 

The  Falcon  38 

Becket  m  i  44 

Queen  Mary  m  v  227 

Foresters  m  39 

Q^een  Mary  m  vi  51 

Harold  n  ii  486 


Birth  (continued)    The  child,  a  thread  within  the  house 

of  b.  The  Cwp  ii  260 

There  came  some  evil  fairy  at  my  b  Foresters  n  ii  108 

Birthdaay  (birthday)    Why,  o''coorse,  fur  it  be  the  owd 

man's  b.  Prom,  of  May  i  6 

Owd  Steer  wur  afeard  she  wouldn't  be  back  i'  time 

to  keep  his  b,  „  1 18 

I  be  coomed  to  keep  his  b  an'  all.  ,.  i  76 

— to  celebrate  my  b  i'  this  fashion.  „         i  321 

Birthday  (adj.)     A  b  welcome  !  happy  days  and  many  !  Harold  v  i  431 

Birthday  (s)     (See  also  Birthdaay)    My  father  on  a  6 

gave  it  me.  Queen  Mary  i  v  527 

Plots  and  feuds  !     This  is  my  ninetieth  b.  (repeat)  Harold  iv  i  121,  127 

■     ' ■  „  vi429 

V  ii  126 

Prom,  of  May  i  74 

Foresters  i  i  219 

I  i  222 

I  i  298 

I  ii  89 

Iii  125 

I  iii  12 

ni35 

n  i  44 

Becket  n  ii  293 


Thy  death !— to-day !    Is  it  not  thy  b  ? 

hath  kinglike  fought  and  fallen,  His  b,  too. 

I  came  back  to  keep  bis  b. 

but  is  not  to-day  his  b  ? 

that  thou  keepest  a  record  of  his  b's? 

To-day  he  hath  accomplished  his  thirtieth  b, 

last  time  When  I  shall  hold  my  b  in  this  hall: 

Cloud  not  thy  b  with  one  fear  for  me. 

I  am  only  merry  for  an  hour  or  two  Upon  a  b : 

It  is  my  b. 

greater  nearness  to  the  b  Of  the  after-life. 
Birthplace     Bosham,  my  good  Herbert,  Thy  b — 
Bishop  (ecclesiastic)     our  B's  from  their  sees  Or  fled, 
they  say,  or  flying — 

— and  now  that  your  good  b,  Bonner, 

Why,  my  lord  B?  (repeat) 

Some  six  or  seven  B's,  diamonds,  pearls, 

I  am  but  of  the  laity,  my  Lord  B, 

Thou  Christian  B,  thou  Lord  Chancellor  Of  England  ! 

Tut,  Master  B,  Our  bashful  Legate, 

B  Thirlby,  And  my  Lord  Paget  and  Lord  William 
Howard, 

These  are  but  natural  graces,  my  good  B, 

'  I  wunt  dine,'  says  my  Lord  B, 

'  Now,'  says  the  B,  says  he,  '  we'll  gwo  to  dinner; ' 

Our  holy  Norman  b's  down  from  all  Their  thrones  in 
England  ? 

I  saw  him  coming  with  his  brother  Odo  The  Bayeux  b, 

thou  art  but  deacon,  not  yet  b, 

beat  Thy  kingship  as  my  b  hath  beaten  it. 

Hell  take  thy  b  then,  and  my  kingship  too  ! 

Barons  and  b's  of  our  realm  of  England, 

B's — ^York,  London,  Chichester,  Westminster — 

where  our  b's  And  our  great  lords  will  sit  in  judgment 

Whatsay  the  J's? 

— and  these  craven  b's  ! 

if  the  barons  and  b's  hadn't  been  a-sitting  on  the 
Archbishop. 

Knights,  b's,  earls,  this  London  spawn — 

Our  Becket,  who  will  not  absolve  the  B's. 

he  shall  absolve  The  b's — they  but  did  my  will — 

to  absolve  the  b's  Whom  you  have  excommunicated. 

To  all  the  archbishops,  b's,  prelates,  barons, 

Save  that  you  will  absolve  the  b's. 

they  plunder — yea,  ev'n  b's,  Yea,  ev'n  archbishops — 
Bishop  (chess)    My  liege,  I  move  my  b. 

you  see  my  b  Hath  brought  your  king  to  a  standstill. 

Why,  there  then — down  go  b  and  king  together. 
Bishoprick    fill'd  All  ofiices,  all  b's  with  English — 

Saving  thro'  Norman  b's — 

'  When  a  b  falls  vacant,  the  King, 

And  let  another  take  his  b  ! 
Bit  (s)    smash  all  our  b's  o'  things  worse  than  Philip 
o'  Spain. 

Beant  Miss  Eva  gone  off  a  J  of  'er  good  looks  o' 
laate  ?     Man.     Noa,  not  a  b. 

fur  owd  Dobson  '11  gi'e  us  a  6  o'  supper. 

Taake  one  o'  the  young  'xms  fust,  Miss,  fur  I  be  a  6 
deaf,  „  ni  32 

We  found  a  letter  in  your  bedroom  torn  into  b's.  „         m  324 

b  by  6 — for  she  promised  secrecy — I  told  her  all.  „         in  379 

Bit  (verb)    if  a  mad  dog  b  your  hand,  my  Lord,  Qu£en  Mary  m  iv  204 


Queen  Mary  i  ii  3 

I  iii  35 

I  iv  223,  227 

mi  52 

miv  81 

in  iv  300 

III  iv  349 

IV  i  4 
rv  i  177 

IV  iii  507 
IV  iii  513 

Harold  i  i  50 

„  n  ii  348 

Becket,  Pro.  83 

„       Pro.  91 

„       Pro.  93 

„      I  iii  336 

„      I  iii  385 

„      I  iii  548 

„      I  iii  589 

I  iv  92 

„      I iv  127 
„      n  ii  143 

V  i  223 

V  i  254 
„  V  ii  376 
„  V  ii  404 
„     V  iii  120 

Foresters  iv  910 

Becket,  Pro.  28 

„       Pro.  43 

„      Pro.  47 

Harold  n  ii  535 

„      n  ii  538 

Becket  i  iii  99 

„  iiii260 


Queen  Mary  n  iii  104 

Prom,  of  May  i  33 
u  217 


Bit 


846 


Bless 


Bit  (verb)  (continued)    And  b  his  shield,  and  dash'd  it  on  the 

ground,  Harold  \  i  405 

And  I  was  6  by  a  mad  dog  o'  Friday,  Becket  i  iv  217 

Bite  (s)     The  mad  b  Must  have  the  cautery —  Queen  Mary  m  iv  275 

Bite  (verb)     to  turn  and  b  the  hand  Would  help  tliee  Harold  i  i  381 

anil  I  want  to  b,  I  want  to  b,  Becket  I  iv  221 

Well,  well,  well !     I  b  my  tongue.  The  Falcon  624 

Bithynia    Have  you  alliances?     B,  Pontus, 

Paphlagonia  ?  Tfie  Cup  i  ii  100 

Bitten     Would  you  not  chop  the  b  finger  off.  Queen  Mary  m  iv  206 

the  Norman  adder  Hath  6  us ;  we  are  poison'd :  Harold  in  i  39 

Bitter  (adj.)     Before  these  b  statutes  be  requicken'd.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  197 

And,  whether  it  bring  you  b  news  or  sweet,  „  m  v  201 

Hath,  like  a  brief  and  b  winter's  day,  „  iv  iii  430 

And  thrust  his  right  into  the  b  flame ;  „  iv  iii  610 

bound  me  too  With  b  obligation  to  the  Count —  Harold  n  ii  221 

To  plunge  into  this  b  world  again —  Becket  v  ii  81 

on  a  Tuesday  pass'd  From  England  into  J  banishment;  „   v  ii  289 

Bitter  (s)     The  b  in  the  sweet.  Queen  Mary  i  v  235 

Bitterer    And  mine  a  b  illegitimate  hate,  Becket  ii  i  173 

Bitterness    She  hath  wean'd  me  from  it  with  such  b.  Harold  iv  ii  28 

Bitters     and  I  put  the  b  on  my  breast  to  wean  him,  The  Falcon  189 

your  ladj'Ship  has  given  him  b  enough  in  this  world,  „  192 

B  before  dinner,  my  lady,  to  give  you  a  relish.  Foresters  ni  434 

Blaame  (blame)     but  summun  else — b'i  if  I  beant !        Prom,  of  May  ii  140 

Black     I  see  but  the  b  night,  and  hear  the  wolf.  Queen  Mary  i  v  413 

It  roll'd  as  6  as  death ;  „  ii  iii  20 

four  guns  gaped  at  me,  B,  silent  mouths :  „         n  iii  32 

or  you'll  make  the  White  Tower  a  b  'un  for  us  this 

blessed  day.  „        n  iii  100 

These  b  dog-Dons  Garb  themselves  bravely.  „        in  i  189 

I  thought  this  Philip  had  been  one  of  those  b  devils 

of  Spain,  „        ni  i  215 

Those  damp,  b,  dead  Nights  in  the  Tower ;  „       iii  v  138 

so  'z  the  tongue  on  un  cum  a-lolluping  out  o'  'is 

mouth  as  &  as  a  rat.  ,,      iv  iii  519 

A  drinker  of  b,  strong,  volcanic  wines,  „  v  ii  93 

lash'd  to  death,  or  lie  Famishing  in  b  cells,  „        v  ii  196 

For  twenty  miles,  where  the  b  crow  flies  five,  „  v  v  84 

Ay,  but  thou  liest  as  loud  as  the  b  herring-pond  behind 

thee.  Harold  u  i  26 

He  fain  had  calcined  all  Northumbria  To  one  b  ash,  „    ni  i  57 

Night,  as  J  as  a  raven's  feather ;  „     in  ii  6 

And  thou,  my  carrier-pigeon  of  b  news,  „  iv  iii  233 

I  have  an  inherited  loathing  of  these  b  sheep  of  the 

Papacy.  Becket,  Pro.  461 

Is  b  and  white  at  once,  and  comes  to  nought.  „  i  iii  32 

The  b  sheep  baaed  to  the  miller's  ewe-lamb,  „         i  iv  162 

B  sheep,  quoth  she,  too  b  a  sin  for  me.    And  what  said 

the  b  sheep,  my  masters?     We  can  make  a  b  sin 

white.  „         I  iv  165 

That  he  made  the  b  sheep  white.  „         i  iv  176 

Out  from  among  us ;  thou  art  our  b  sheep.  „         i  iv  181 

Then  I  saw  Thy  high  b  steed  among  the  flaming  furze,     „  n  i  55 

How  ghostly  sounds  that  horn  in  the  b  wood  !  „         in  ii  17 

Do  you  see  that  great  b  cloud  that  hath  come  over 

the  sun  „        in  iii  46 

It  is  this  b,  bell-silencing,  anti-marrying,  „        in  iii  54 

Who  else,  with  this  b  thunderbolt  of  Rome  Above 

him.  The  Cup  i  ii  265 

poor  worm,  crawl  down  thine  own  b  hole  To  the  lowest 

Hell.  „  II 495 

heat  and  fire  Of  life  will  bring  them  out,  and  b 

enough.  Prom,  of  May  n  287 

I'd  like  to  leather  'im  b  and  blue,  „  n  595 

and  the  b  river  Flow'd  thro'  my  dreams —  „  n  649 

It  mun  be  true,  fur  it  wur  i'  print  as  6  as  owt.  „  n  731 

the  river,  b,  slimy,  swirling  under  me  in  the  lamplight,     „  ni  369 

these  lilies  to  lighten  Sir  Richard's  b  room,  Foresters  i  i  3 

Sour  milk  and  b  bread.  „  n  i  272 

They  might  be  harder  upon  thee,  if  met  in  a  6  lane  at 

midnight :  „  in  224 

The  b  fiend  grip  her !  „  in  380 

B  news,  b  news  from  Nottingham !  „  ni  446 

Black-blooded    You  are  too  b-b.  Queen  Mary  in  i  126 


Black-blooded  {continued)     Yea,  you  yourself,  altho' 

you  are  b-b :  Queen  Mary  in  i  166 

You  call  me  too  b-b —  „          mi  347 

He  grovels  to  the  Church  when  he's  b-b,  Becket  iv  ii  437 

Blacken     I  will  bide  my  f ace,  5  and  gipsyfy  it ;  „       iv  ii  100 

Whose  lava-torrents  blast  and  b  a  province  The  Cup  u  302 

Blackest    Traced  in  the  b  text  of  Hell —  Queen  Mary  ni  i  426 

Black-faced     Philip  and  the  b-f  swarms  of  Spain,  „             ii  i  98 

Blackness     I  see  the  b  of  my  dungeon  loom  Harold  n  ii  405 

thirty  feet  below  the  smiling  day — In  b —  „      ii  ii  431 

But  what  a  blotch  of  b  underneath !  ■  The  Cup  i  ii  398 


Prom,  of  May  I  447 

Queen  Mary  v  v  175 

Becket  i  iii  349 

V  iii  82 

Queen  Mary  i  v  624 

Becket  i  iii  222 

The  Falcon  857 

Queen  Mary  i  v  600 

Becket  ii  ii  396 

The  Cup  II 154 

Becket  iv  ii  175 

Queen  Mary  in  vi  80 

„  III  V  252 

Provi.  of  May  ii  282 
Queen  Mary  m  ii  20 


Blacksmith     and  B,  thaw  he  niver  shoes  a  herse  to  my 
likings ; 

Blade     take  heed  !     The  b  is  keen  as  death. 
When  every  baron  ground  his  b  in  blood ; 

Blaise  (Bishop  of  Sebaste)    To  the  chapel  of  St.  B 
beneath  the  roof ! 

Blame    (See  also  Blaame)    His  foes  would  b  him,  and 
I  scorned  'em, 
it  is  the  Pope  Will  be  to  b — not  thou. 
I  was  to  b — the  love  you  said  you  bore  me — - 

Blamed     Praised,  where  you  should  have  b  him. 

Blameless     condemn  The  b  exile  ? — 

Blanch     And  b  the  crowd  with  horror. 

Blanch'd     A  doll-face  b  and  bloodless. 

Bland    you  were  b  And  affable  to  men  of  all  estates. 

Blank    it  seems  that  we  shall  fly  These  bald,  b  fields, 
A  poor  philosopher  who  call'd  the  mind  Of 
children  a  b  page, 

Blanketed     who  dream'd  us  b  In  ever-closing  fog. 

Blared     B  from  the  heights  of  all  the  thrones  of  her  kings,     Becket  v  ii  489 

Blasphemous    Monstrous  !  b  !     She  ought  to  bum.  Queen  Mary  i  v  57 

Blasphemy     terms  Of  Satan,  liars,  b,  Antichrist,  „  i  ii  95 

Blast  (s)  (See  also  Thunder-blast)   The  b  that  came  So  suddenly 

hath  fallen  as  suddenly —  Harold  ii  i  12 

Put  thou  the  comet  and  this  b  together —  ..       n  i  15 

Which  hunted  him  when  that  un-Saxon  b,  ..       ii  ii  31 

showers  of  blood  are  blown  Before  a  never  ending  b,  in  i  395 

The  sign  in  heaven — the  sudden  b  at  sea —  ,.      v  i  378 

Blast  (verb)     Would'st  thou  not  bum  and  b  them       Queeii  Mary  in  iv  282 
if  yon  weird  sign  Not  b  us  in  our  dreams. —  Harold  i  i  122 

b  your  infants,  dash  The  torch  of -war  among  your 

standing  corn,  ,.     ii  ii  747 

will  b  and  blind  you  like  a  curse.  Becket  i  iv  39 

To  b  my  realms  with  excommunication  And  interdict.  „       ii  ii  52 

Go,  lest  I  b  thee  with  anathema,  „    iv  ii  287 

— and  b  the  king  and  me.  The  Cup  ii  152 

Whose  lava-torrents  b  and  blacken  a  province  „        n  302 

That  b  our  natural  passions  into  pains  !  Prom,  af  May  in  724 

when  they  look  at  a  maid  they  b  her.  Foresters  i  i  257 

Blatant     But  lack  of  happiness  in  a  6  wife.  „      i  iii  132 

Blaze  (s)     hiss  Against  the  b  they  cannot  quench —  Harold  m  i  396 

Against  the  shifting  b  of  Harold's  axe  !  .,         v  i  587 

Blaze  (verb)     banner,  B  like  a  night  of  fatal  stars  ,,        iv  i  251 

But  b  not  out  before  the  Frenchmen  here.  Becket  ni  iii  221 

Blazed    B  false  upon  her  heart.  Queen  Mary  in  i  70 

Blazhig    A  sacred  cup  saved  from  a  b  shrine  The  Cu^  i  ii  54 

Bleak     and  those  b  manners  thaw,  Queen  Mary  ni  ii  160 


fierce  forekings  had  clench'd  their  pirate  hides  To  the 


b  church  doors. 
Bled     He  had  been  hurt.  And  h  beneath  his  armour, 

and  I  return  As  Peter,  but  to  b  thee : 
And  may  God  b  you,  Thirlby  ! 
God  b  him  ! 

owld  lord  fell  to  's  meat  wi'  a  will,  God  b  un  ! 
Let  all  thy  people  b  thee  ! 
And  b  the  Queen  of  England. 
And  even  as  I  should  b  thee  saving  mine, 
God  b  thee,  wedded  daughter.    Queen.    B  thou  too 

That  brother  whom  I  love  beyond  the  rest. 
All  the  sweet  Saints  b  him ! 
I  ask  no  more.    Heaven  b  thee  !  hence ! 
Wilt  thou  not  say,  '  God  b  you,'  ere  we  go  ?    Beckett 

God  b  you  all ! 
and  see  it  mounting  to  Heaven,  my  God  b  you, 


Harold  iv  iii  37 
Foresters  ii  ii  5 
Queen  Mary  in  ii  56 
IV  ii  197 
IV  iii  256 1 
„         IV  iii  515  i 
Harold  I  iilSi] 
I  ii  207  1 
,.      H  ii  651 

III  i  293  i 

III  i  1 

Becket  i  i  321 , 

„      I  iv  33  ! 
,.      I  iv  38'i 


Bless 


847 


Blood 


Bless  (continued)     beggars,  poor  rogues  (Heaven  b  'em)  Becket  i  iv  83 

God  b  the  great  Archbishop  !  „    n  ii  451 

all  on  us  ha'  had  to  go,  b  the  Saints,  wi'  bare  backs,  „    in  i  146 

We  scarcely  dare  to  b  the  food  we  eat  „       v  i  70 

To  b  thine  enemies Becket.     Ay,  mine,  not  Heaven's.  „      v  ii  24 

God  b  him  for  it.  „     y  ii  146 

hear  us,  0  Mother,  hear  us,  and  b  us  !  The  Cup  ii  2 

Why,  b  the  saints  !  The  Falcon  171 

and  b  your  sweet  face,  you  look  as  beautiful  „          197 
I  ha'  heard  'im  a-gawin'  on  'ud  make  your  'air — 

God  b  it ! — Stan'  on  end.  Prom,  of  May  1 135 

The  Lord  b  boath  on  'em !  „             1 341 

— the  Lord  b  'er — 'er  oan  sen ;  „              ii  40 

God  b  our  well-beloved  Robin,  Earl  of  Huntingdon.  Foresters  i  i  247 
sweet  saints  b  your  worship  for  your  alms  to  the  old 


u  i  363 

IV  1075 

Queen  Mary  i  i  36 

I  V  85 


woman 
those  poor  serfs  whom  we  have  served  will  b  us, 
Blessed-Blest    The  blessed  Mary's  a-passing  ! 
Holy  Virgin,  Plead  with  thy  blessed  Son ; 
or  you'll  make  the  White  Tower  a  black  'un  for  us 

Uiis  blessed  day.  „      n  iii  101 

Oh  how  the  blessed  angels  who  rejoice  „     in  iii  180 

And  God  hath  blest  or  cursed  me  with  a  nose —  „      ni  v  178 

And  Thy  most  blessed  Son's,  who  died  for  man.  „     iv  iii  154 

Have  I  not  heard  them  mock  the  blessed  Host  In  songs 

so  lewd,  „     IV  iii  365 

'  O  blessed  relics  ! '     '0  Holy  Peter  ! '  Harold  i  ii  169 

Nay  then,  we  be  liker  the  blessed  Apostles ;  „        n  i  33 

Yet  the  curse  is  on  him  For  swearing  falsely  by  those 

blessed  bones ;  „     m  i  246 

have  sent  him  back  A  holy  gonfanon,  and  a  blessed 

hair  Of  Peter, 
Thou  swarest  falsely  by  our  blessed  bones. 
Are  those  the  blessed  angels  quiring,  father  ? 
Yea,  by  the  Blessed  Virgin  ! 

Blessed  is  he  that  cometh  in  the  name  of  the  Lord  ! 
That  is  the  parable  of  our  blessed  Lord.     Becket. 

And   why  should    not    the   parable   of   our 

blessed  Lord  be  acted  again  ? 
Blessed  be  the  Lord  Archbishop,  who  hath  with- 
stood two  Kings 
Thanks  to  the  blessed  Magdalen,  whose  day  it  is. 
Man's  help  !  but  we,  we  have  the' Blessed  Virgin  For 

worship, 
'       O  blessed^ saint,  O  glorious  Benedict, — 

Row  to  the  blessed  Isles !  the  blessed  Isles  ! — 
in  hope  that  the  saints  would  send  us  this  blessed 

morning ; 
they  are  made  by  the  blessed  saints — these  marriages 
It  served  me  for  a  blessed  rosary, 
more  blessed  were  the  rags  Of  some  pale  beggar- 
woman  seeking  alms  For  her  sick  son, 
but  I  wur  so  ta'en  up  wi'  leadin'  the  owd  man 

about  all  the  blessed  mumin' 
For  all  the  blessed  souls  in  heaven  Are  both 

forgivers  and  forgiven.' 

0  brook,  that  brawlest  merrily  by  Thro'  fields  that 
once  were  blest, 

for  the  sake  of  the  great  blessed  Mother  in  heaven, 

1  keep  it  For  holy  vows  made  to  the  blessed  Saints 
Not  pleasures. 

My  mother.  For  whose  sake,  and  the  blessed  Queen 

of  Heaven, 
Devils,  that  make  this  blessed  England  hell. 
That  by  the  blessed  Mother  no  man. 
Our  Lady's  blessed  shrines  throughout  the  land  Be  all 

the  richer  for  us. 
iBlessiiig  (part.)    pauper,  who  had  died  in  his  misery 

b  God,  Prom,  of  May  m  378 

(s)     I  will  bear  thy  b  into  the  battle  Harold  v  i  434 

Was  not  the  people's  6  as  we  past  Heart-comfort  Becket  i  i  12 

Nay,  father,  first  thy  b.  „     i  i  317 

Our  humblest  thanks  for  your  b.  „    i  iv  42 

But  that  might  bring  a  Roman  b  on  us.  The  Cup  n  372 

This  b  is  for  Synorix  and  for  me.  „         ii  376 


„    niiil48 

.,      V  i  259 

.,       V  i  472 

Becket,  Pro.  520 

I  iii  758 


„         I  iv  75 

„      n  ii  274 
„    HI  iii  171 

„       v  ii  219 

„         V  iii  1 

The  Cup  u  525 

The  Falcon  186 
203 
632 

850 

Prom,  of  May  ni  3 
in  10 

in  202 

Foresters  i  i  96 

„      I  ii  175 

n  i  38 
in  127 
ni  239 


IV  1079 


(s)  (continued)     B's  on  your  pretty  voice,  Miss 

Dora.  Prom,  of  May  i  63 

and  the  old  woman's  b  with  them  to  the  last  fringe.  Foresters  n  i  195 

The  silent  b  of  one  honest  man  Is  heard  in  heaven — •  „         in  321 

Thou  shait  pronounce  the  b  of  the  Church  „         iv  927 

Blest    See  Blessed 

Blew     Rose  never  b  that  equall'd  such  a  bud.  Queen  Mary  in  i  373 

Until  the  powder  suddenly  b  him  dead.  „          iv  iii  340 

Of  Provence  b  you  to  your  English  throne ;  Becket  v  i  123 

Blighted     till  that  b  vow  Which  God  avenged  to-day.  Harold  v  ii  155 
Blind  (adj.)     (See  also  Stone-blind)     Are  you  b  ?      "     Quem  Mary  i  iv  151 

She,  with  her  poor  b  hands  feeling — '  where  is  it  ?  „            ni  i  407 

with  offal  thrown  Into  the  b  sea  of  forgetfulness.  ,.          in  iii  193 

There  is  a  movement  there,  A  b  one —  Harold  i  i  355 

now  I  see  That  I  was  b — suffer  the  phrase —  Becket  n  ii  438 
'  What  are  we,  says  the  b  old  man  in  Lear  ?              Prom,  of  May  i  262 

I  would  taake  the  owd  b  man  to  my  oan  fireside.  „              ii  74 

What  was  that  ?  my  poor  b  father — •  ..             ii  566 

Poor  b  Father's  little  guide,  Milly,  ..          in  231 
niver  been  surprised  but  once  i'  my  life,  and  I  went 

b  upon  it.  in  440 

That  Love  is  b,  but  thou  hast  proven  it  true.  Foresters  n  i  644 

Blind  (verb)     It  frights  the  traitor  more  to  maim  and  b.  Harold  ii  ii  504 

Say  that  he  b  thee  and  tear  out  thy  tongue.  Becket  i  iii  615 

will  blast  and  b  you  like  a  curse.  ,,         i  iv  40 

Blinded    into  some  more  costly  stone  Than  ever  b  eye.  Queen  Mary  i  v  371 

No,  no ;  her  innocent  blood  had  b  me.  „           in  i  346 

They  b  my  young  kinsman,  Alfred —  Harold  ii  ii  511 

be  sure  they  be,  but  he  b  'em  for  all  that,  Becket  in  i  128 

Not  caught,  maim'd,  b  him.  The  Cup  i  ii  271 

and  the  hunters,  if  caught,  are  6,  or  worse  than  b.  Foresters  iv  226 

Blindfold    was  a  pity  to  b  such  eyes  as  mine,  Becket  in  i  127 

Blindness     and  my  father's  breaking  down,  and  his  b.     Prom,  of  May  n  70 

My  father  stricken  with  his  first  paralysis.  And 

then  with  b—                           ^  .,           ii  482 

And  cheer  his  b  with  a  traveller's  tales  ?  „           n  515 

Blissful    bounteous  bays  And  havens  filling  with  a  b  sea.  The  Cup  ii  236 
Bloat    my  sleeping-draught  May  b  thy  beauty  out  of  shape,    Becket  iv  ii  170 

ambition,  pride  So  b  and  redden  his  face —  The  Cup  ii  170 
Block  (s)    The  Tower  !  the  i  !                                          Queen  Mary  i  y  470 

Like  that  poor  heart,  Northumberland,  at  the  b.  ,.           ii  ii  334 

Who  changed  not  colour  when  she  saw  the  b,  ,,          in  i  400 

To  say  '  I  did  not  ? '  and  my  rod's  the  b.  „         in  v  130 

My  heart  is  no  such  b  as  Bonner's  is :  „          iv  ii  174 

like  the  bloodless  head  Fall'n  on  the  b,  „            v  ii  21 

Block  (verb)     How  can  I  come  When  you  so  b  the  entry  ?  Becket  v  iii  37 

Block'd     All  passes  b.  Harold  n  ii  317 
Blood     of  royal  b,  of  splendid  feature,                                Queen  Mary  i  i  111 

Why  not  ?     I  am  king's  b.  „         i  iii  105 

I  am  the  noblest  b  in  Europe,  Madam,  „           i  iv  84 

I  have  sworn  upon  the  body  and  b  of  Christ  „          i  v  215 

Some  of  the  bearing  of  your  blue  b —  „          i  v  434 

Your  houses  fired — your  gutters  bubbling  b —  „        n  ii  280 

Scarlet,  as  if  her  feet  were  wash'd  in  b,  „          in  i  62 

No,  no ;  her  innocent  b  had  blinded  me.  „         in  i  346 

Her  dark  dead  b  is  in  my  heart  with  mine.  „        in  i  349 

Her  dark  dead  b  that  ever  moves  with  mine  ,,        in  i  352 

trusted  God  would  save  her  thro'  the  b  Of  Jesus  Christ  „        in  i  387 

a  little  letting  of  the  b.  .,         m  ii  40 

With  His  own  b,  and  wash'd  us  from  our  sins,  „      in  iii  203 

Nay,  I  know  They  hunt  my  b.  „         in  v  78 

'  Martyr's  i— -seed  of  the  Church.'  „         iv  i  146 

b  and  sweat  of  heretics  at  the  stake  Is  God's  best  dew       „  v  i  100 

And  panting  for  my  6  as  I  go  by.  „         v  ii  219 

Some  few  of  Gothic  b  have  golden  hair,  „          v  iii  60 

sure  she  hates  thee.  Pants  for  thy  h.  Harold  i  ii  39 

the  b  That  should  have  only  pulsed  for  Griffyth,  ,,     i  ii  149 

She  hath  but  b  enough  to  live,  not  love. —  ■.,     i  ii  161 

shown  And  redden'd  with  his  people's  b  „    i  ii  243 

'  This  Harold  is  not  of  the  royal  b,  „   n  ii  354 

Thou  art  of  my  b,  and  so  methinks,  my  boy,  „   n  ii  449 

helpless  folk  Are  wash'd  away,  wailing,  in  their  own  b —  „   ii  ii  472 

Dabble  your  hearths  with  your  own  b.  „   n  ii  751 

Where  they  eat  dead  men's  flesh,  and  drink  their  b.  „   n  ii  808 

he  soak'd  the  trunk  with  human  b,  „  in  i  143 


Blood 


848 


Blaster 


Blood  (continued)    thus  baptized  in  b  Grew  ever  high  and 

higher,  Harold  iii  i  147 

Senlac  !    Sanguelac,  The  Lake  of  B !  ..       in  i  386 

showers  of  b  are  blown  Before  a  never  ending  blast,  „      rir  i  393 

A  sea  of  b — we  are  drown'd  in  b —  ,,      ni  i  398 

Mixing  our  b's,  that  thence  a  king  may  rise  „        iv  i  142 

Trampling  thy  mother's  bosom  into  b?  ..        rv  ii  26 

sight  of  Danish  b  Might  serve  an  end  not  English —  „       iv  iii  97 

did  the  dead  man  call  it — Sanguelac,  The  lake  oi  b?  „         v  i  185 

Praise  the  Saints.     It  is  over.     No  more  bl  „        v  ii  195 

Ay !  b,  perchance,  except  thou  see  to  her.  Becket,  Pro.  175 

Heart-comfort  and  a  balsam  to  thy  b?  „           i  i  14 

like  Egypt's  plague,  had  flll'd  All  things  with  b;  „        i  iii  346 

When  every  baron  ground  his  blade  inb;  „       i  iii  350 

household  dough  was  kneaded  up  with  b;  „        i  iii  352 

The  millwheel  turn'd  inb;  ,.        i  iii  353 

God  redden  your  pale  b  !     But  mine  is  human-red ;  „          i  iv  35 

there  be  those  about  our  King  who  would  have  thy  b.'      „  i  iv  55 

Which  it  will  quench  in  &  !  ,,      iv  ii  192 

not  life  shot  up  in  b,  But  death  drawn  in ; — •  „       iv  ii  381 

Save  him,  his  b  would  darken  Henry's  name ;  „        v  iii  10 

To  bathe  this  sacred  pavement  with  my  b.  „       v  iii  132 

hand  Red  with  the  sacred  b  of  Sinnatus  ?  The  Cup  ii  84 

Hot  b,  ambition,  pride  So  bloat  and  redden  „       ii  169 

Wine  Ran  down  the  marble  and  lookt  like  b,  like  b.  „      ii  205 

frost  That  help'd  to  check  the  flowing  of  the  b.  The  Falcon  646 

Stain'd  with  the  b  of  the  best  heart  that  ever  Beat  ,.          666 

servants  Are  all  but  flesh  and  b  with  those  they  serve.  ,.          709 
would  not  crush  The  fly  that  drew  her  b ;                From,  of  May  n  494 

We  Steers  are  of  old  b,  tho'  we  be  fallen.  „           m  604 

thro'  the  b  the  wine  leaps  to  the  brain  Foresters  i  iii  22 

Red  with  his  own  and  enemy's  b —  „         ii  i  32 

soul  of  the  woods  hath  stricken  thro'  my  b,  „          n  i  67 

one  of  those  mercenaries  that  suck  the  b  of  England.  „        ii  i  175 

I  wouldn't  have  thy  b  on  my  hearth.  „        n  i  356 

clothes  itself  In  maiden  flesh  and  b,  „         in  117 

And  thou  wouldst  run  more  wine  than  b.  „         ni  338 

Boldness  is  in  the  b,  Truth  in  the  bottle.  „         rv  240 

Blooded    See  Black-blooded,  Blae-blooded,  Hot-blooded, 
Norman-blooded,  Bed-blooded 

Bloodier    Why,  she's  grown  b ! 

Bloodless     And  look'd  as  b. 

What  makes  thy  favour  like  the  b  head  Fall'n  on 

the  block, 
mortal  men  should  bear  their  earthly  heats  Into 

yon  b  world, 
A  doll-face  blanch'd  and  b, 

Blood-red     that  these  Three  rods  of  b-r  fire  up  yonder 
This  b-r  line  ?     Henry.     Ay !  blood,  perchance. 

Bloody     King's  courts  would  use  thee  worse  than  thy  dog 
— they  are  too  b. 

Bloom  (s)    To  me,  tho'  all  your  b  has  died  away. 

Bloom  (verb)    You  b  again,  dead  movintain-meadow  flowers.' 

Blossom    (See  also  Myrtle-blossom)    She  to  shut  up  my  b  in 

the  dark  !  Harold  i  ii  62 

one  fancy  hath  taken  root,  and  borne  b  too,  Becket,  Pro.  481 

were  more  than  I  buzzing  round  the  b —  „      Pro.  522 

wither'd  wreath  is  of  more  worth  to  me  Than  all  the  b,  The  Falcon  339 

never  saw  The  land  so  rich  in  6  as  this  year.  ,.          342 
tree  that  my  lord  himself  planted  here  in  the  b  of  his 

boyhood —  „          563 

dead  garland  Will  break  once  more  into  the  living  b.  „          920 
The  b  had  open'd  on  every  bough ;                              Prom,  of  May  i  42 

Look  how  full  of  rosy  6  it  is.  „            i  84 

Theer  be  redder  b's  nor  them.  Miss  Dora.  „            i  85 

they'll  hev'  a  fine  cider-crop  to-year  if  the  b  'owds.  „          i  316 

You,  the  most  beautiful  b  of  the  May.  ,,          i  574 


Queen  Mary  ni  i  416 
n  ii  84 

V  ii  19 

Harold  v  i  285 

Becket  iv  ii  175 

Harold  I  i  44 

Becket,  Pro.  174 


I  iv  103 

The  Falcon  468 
470 


happy  as  the  bees  there  at  their  honey  In  these  sweet  b's 

But,  look,  how  wasteful  of  the  b  you  are ! 

upon  me  Thro'  that  rich  cloud  of  b, 

the  b  of  his  youth.  Has  faded,  falling  fruitless — 

I  that  held  the  orange  b  Dark  as  the  yew  ? 


I  607 
I  612 
1x250 
n332 
11629 


whose  whole  life  hath  been  folded  like  a  6  in  the  sheath,    Foresters  i  i  206 
I  thank  you,  noble  sir,  the  very  b  Of  bandits.  „        in  247 

they  that  suffer  by  him  call  the  b  Of  bandits,  „         rv  372 


Blossom'd    sow'd  therein  The  seed  of  Hate,  it  b 

Charity.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  172 

That  ever  b  on  this  English  isle.  Foresters  I  ii  124 

Blossoming     And  a  salt  wind  burnt  the  b  trees ;  Prom,  of  May  i  57 

Blot     I'll  have  the  paper  back — b  out  my  name.  Becket  i  iii  286 

Blotch     But  what  a  6  of  blackness  underneath  !  The  Cup  i  ii  398 
Blotted    (See  also  Self-blotted)     And  b  by  her  tears. 

This  cannot  last.  Queen  Mary  r  v  17 

if  a  state  submit  At  once,  she  may  be  b  out  The  Cup  i  ii  157 

That  desolate  letter,  b  with  her  tears,  Prom,  of  May  n  475 
Blow  (s)     b's — Hark,  there  is  battle  at  the  palace 

gates.  Queen  Mary  ii  iv  46 

To  strike  too  soon  is  oft  to  miss  the  b.  „        iii  vi  72 

The  b  that  brains  the  horseman  cleaves  the  horse,  Harold  v  i  593 

Nor  ever  strike  him  &  for  6 ;  Prom,  of  May  ill  6 

Blow  (verb)     b  this  Philip  and  all  Your  trouble  to  the 

dogstar  Queen  Mary  i  iv  290 

Daisies  grow  again.  Kingcups  b  again,  „           m  v  90 

Which  way  does  it  6  ?  Harold  ii  ii  151 

b  the  trumpet,  priest !  v      ni  i  188 

we  must  fight.     How  b's  the  wind  ?  ,,     ni  ii  135 

William's  or  his  own  As  wind  b's,  or  tide  flows :  ..        v  i  163 

As  one  that  b's  the  coal  to  cool  the  fire.  Becket  v  ii  548 

Where  do  they  b,  Mr.  Dobson  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  87 

b  upon  it  Three  mots,  this  fashion — listen  !  Foresters  rv  424 

Wait  till  he  b  the  horn.  -        iv  787 

I  b  the  horn  against  this  rascal  rout !  „        rv  794 

Blow'd    but  Dumble  wui  b  wi'  the  wind,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  477 

barrin'  the  wind,  Diunble  wur  b  wi'  the  wind,  „           rv  iii  494 

Blowest    Thou  b  hot  and  cold.     Where  is  she  then  ?  Foresters  ii  i  490 

Why  b  thou  not  the  horn  ?  „          iv  790 

Blowing    there  are  trumpets  b  now:  what  is  it?  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  13 

Why  are  the  trumpets  b,  Father  Cole  ?  „          rv  ii  23 

B  for  England,  ha?     Not  yet.  Harold  u  ii  152 

The  cold,  white  lily  b  in  her  cell :  „      ni  i  274 

A  ghostly  horn  B  continually,  •■      ni  i  373 

Were  the  great  trumpet  b  doomsday  dawn,  „        v  i  227 

B  the  world  against  me,  Becket  v  ii  491 

Not  like  the  vintage  b  round  your  castle.  The  Falcon  579 

Blown    fate  hath  b  me  hither,  bound  me  too  Harold  n  ii  219 

showers  of  blood  are  b  Before  a  never  ending  blast,  ..      ni  i  394 

He  hath  b  himself  as  red  as  fire  with  curses.  ,-          v  i  86 
B  everyway  with  every  gust  and  wreck  On  any 

rock ;  Prom,  of  May  ni  536 

Her  face  on  flame,  her  red  hair  all  b  back,  Q^een  Mary  n  ii  70 

for  any  rough  sea  B  by  the  breath  of  kings.  Becket  n  ii  108 

B  like  a  true  son  of  the  woods.  Foresters  iv  427 

Blubber'd     knelt  And  b  like  a  lad,                    ,  Queen  Mary  m  i  150 

Blue    Philip  shows  Some  of  the  bearing  of  your  b 

blood—  M            I V  434 
This  old  thing  here,  they  are  but  b  beads — my  Piero,       The  Falcon  48 

And  your  eyes  be  as  6  as —  Prom,  of  May  i  91 

Noa,  Miss  Dora;  as  6  as — (repeat)  „      i  95,  99 
The  sky  ?  or  the  sea  on  a  6  day  ?    Dobson.    Naay 

then.     I  mean'd  they  be  as  6  as  violets.  „          1 101 
An'  the  midders  all  mow'd,  an'  the  sky  sa  b — 

(repeat)  Prom,  of  May  ii  177, 189,  201 

I'd  like  to  leather  'im  black  and  b,  Prom,  of  May  n  595 

Bluebell    B,  harebell,  speedwell,  bluebottle,  „              1 97 
when  I  was  a-getting  o'  b's  for  your  ladyship's  nose  to 

smell  on—  Becket  ni  i  162 
Blue-blooded    this  fine  6-6  Courtenay  seems  Too 

princely  for  a  pawn.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  165 

Bluebottle    speedwell,  b,  succory,  forget-me-not  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  98 

Bluff    He  comes,  a  rough,  6,  simple-looking  fellow.  The  Cup  i  i  173 

Blunt    Ever  a  rough,  b,  and  uncourtly  fellow—  Qv-een  Alary  v  v  120 

Blur    would  not  6  A  moth's  wing  by  the  touching ;  Prom,  of  May  n  491 

Blurt     But  if  thou  6  thy  curse  among  our  folk,  Harold  v  i  89 

B  thy  free  mind  to  the  air?  Becket  i  iii  239 

Blush    Make  6  the  maiden-white  of  oiu-  tall  cliffs,  Harold  n  ii  332 

Blush'd     That  heaven  wept  and  earth  6.  Qfueen  Mary  ni  iv  193 

every  doorway  6,  Dash'd  red  with  that  imhallow'd 

passover ;  Becket  I  iii  347 

Bluster  (verb)    Come,  you  6,  Antony !  Queen  Mary  n  i  118 

Bluster  (s)    One  of  much  outdoor  6.  ,.         n  ii  381 


Boar 

Boar    highback'd  polecat,  the  wild  b,  The  burrowing 
badger — 
Venison,  and  wild  b,  hare,  geese. 
Board  (for  a  game)    thou  hast  kicked  down  tlie  b. 

thee  of  old. 
Board  (ship)    thy  leave  to  set  my  feet  On  b, 
Board  (table)    See  Banquet-board 
Boast  (s)    make  your  b  that  after  all  She  means 

The  pleasure  of  his  eyes — b  of  his  hand — 
Boast  (verb)    Let  all  that  be.     I  6  not : 

And  b  that  he  hath  trampled  it. 
Boat    hardly,  save  by  b,  swimming,  or  wings. 

There  yet  is  time,  take  b  and  pass  to  Wmdsor. 
b's  that  follow'd,  were  as  glowing-gay  As  regal 

gardens; 
in  that  last  inhospitable  plunge  Our  b  hath  burst  her 

ribs ; 
drave  and  crack'd  His  b  on  Ponthieu  beach ; 
Tho'  all  the  world  should  go  about  in  b's. 
Boaz  (a  brass  pillar,  entrance  to  Solomon's  Temple) 

my  two  pillars,  Jachin  and  B  ! — 
Bodily    You  do  not  own  The  b  presence  in  the 
Eucharist, 
Look  on  me  as  I  were  thy  b  son, 
Body     {See  also  Beast-bods)     quiet  as  a  dead  6.  ■    loo  lo-r 

(repeat)  Queen  Mary  i  iv  loJ,  lo7 


Foresters  i  iii  120 
IV  191 
I  know 

Becket,  Pro.  315 
Harold  i  i  229 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  88 

The  Fcdcon  221 

Becket  v  i  46 

Foresters  i  ii  112 

Queen  Mary  n  iii  12 

II  iv  27 


in  ii  12 

Harold  n  i  3 

„   iiii36 

Foresters  iv  671 

HaroU  ni  i  192 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  44 
Becket  i  iii  263 


lo! 


I  have  sworn  upon  the  b  and  blood  of  Christ 

and  all  rebellions  lie  Dead  bodies  without  voice. 

Some  fruit  of  mine  own  b  after  me. 

Presenting  the  whole  b  of  this  realm  Of  England, 

Lest  your  whole  b  should  madden  with  the  poison  ? 

secular  kingdom  is  but  as  the  b  Lacking  a  soul ; 

soul  descending  out  of  heaven  Into  a  b  generate. 

before  The  flame  had  reach'd  his  b ; 

and  soft  raiment  about  your  b ; 

peril  mine  own  soul  By  slaughter  of  the  b  ? 

Harold  slain  ? — I  cannot  find  his  b. 

They  are  stripping  the  dead  bodies  naked  yonder, 

I  am  sure  this  b  Is  Alfwig,  the  king's  uncle. 

And  what  b  is  this  ?    Edith.    Harold,  thy  better ! 

Will  not  thy  b  rebel,  man,  if  thou  flatter  it  ? 

will  be  reflected  in  the  spiritual  b  among  the  angels. 

The  soul  the  b,  and  the  Church  the  Throne, 

and  make  Thy  b  loathsome  even  to  thy  child ; 

b  of  that  dead  traitor  Sinnatus.     Bear  him  away. 

they  ha'  ta'en  the  6  up  inter  your  chavmiber,  and 
they  be  all  a-callin'  for  ye. 

The  b  ! — Heavens !     I  come  ! 

given  my  whole  b  to  the  King  had  he  asked  for  it. 

Who  hunger  for  the  b,  not  the  soul — 

Marriage  is  of  the  soul,  not  of  the  b. 
Boil'd    bum'd,  b,  buried  alive,  worried  by  dogs  ; 
Bold     A  b  heart  yours  to  beard  that  raging  mob  ! 

You've  a  b  heart ;  keep  it  so. 

Wherefore  be  b,  and  with  your  lawful  Prince 

he  hath  been  so  b  to-day, 

Magdalen,  sin  is  6  as  well  as  dull. 

Stupid  soldiers  oft  are  b. 

I  would  not  be  b,  Yet  hoped  ere  this  you  might-- 

that  I  was  b  enough  To  take  it  down, 

Shall  I  be  6  ?  shall  I  touch  her  ? 

no  men  like  Englishmen  So  tall  and  b  as  they  be. 
Bolder    why  should  I  be  6  than  the  rest, 

At  your  trial  Never  stood  up  a  6  man  than  you ; 
Boldness     I  won  by  b  once. 

was  it  b  Or  weakness  that  won  there  ? 

No  !  6,  which  will  give  my  followers  b. 

happy  b  of  this  hand  hath  won  it  Love's  alms. 

This  friar  is  of  much  b,  noble  captain. 

B  out  of  the  bottle ! 

5  is  in  the  blood.  Truth  4n  the  bottle.         ^ 
Bole     Pillaring  a  leaf-sky  on  their  monstrous  b  s, 
Boleyn     Who  knows  if  B's  daughter  be  my  sister  ? 

a  B,  too.  Glancing  across  the  Tudor — 
Bolingbroke  (Harry)    See  Harry  Bolingbroke 


IV  214 
iii80 

nii223 

III  iii  116 
in  iv  207 

IV  132 
ivi36 

IV  iii  616 
viv33 

V  vl69 
Harold  v  ii  20 

V  ii  34 

V  ii  67 

V  ii  87 
Becket,  Pro.  102 

Pro.  397 

I  iii  717 

IV  ii  172 

The  Cup  I  iii  179 

Prom,  of  May  Ii  570 

n  572 

Foresters  n  i  306 

„       IV  700 

rv720 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  210 

I  iii  96 

I  iv  269 

II  ii  240 
II  ii  347 

V  ii  442 
v  ii  446 

Becket  ni  i  64 

The  Falcon  427 

Foresters  i  i  125 

ni8 

Queen  Mary  in  i  438 

IV  ii  122 

I  v  548 

I  V  559 

II  iii  70 
Becket  ii  i  182 

Foresters  iv  235 

„      IV  238 

„      IV  240 

„     in  101 

Queen  Mary  v  v  194 

V  V  227 


849  Book 

Bolster'd    Who  so  b  up  The  gro.ss  King's  headship      Queen  Mary  ni  iY.244 
O  6  up  with  stubbornness  and  pride,  Becket  1 1"  3* 

Bolt  (S)     One,  whose  b's,  That  jail  you  from  free  life.  Queen  Mary  in  v  171 
And  b's  of  thunder  moulded  in  high  heaven  Harold  n  u  32 

heavy  As  thine  own  b's  that  fall  on  crimeful  heads  „       v  i  565 

That  so  the  Papal  b  may  pass  bv  England,  Becket,  Pro.  226 

to  stay  his  hand  Before  "he  flash'^d  the  b.  „  n  i  275 

Bolt  (verb)     And  will  you  b  them  out,  and  have  them  slain  ?      „  v  in  60 

Bond    (See  also  C!hurch-bond,  CJounter-bond)    He  did  ,. 

believe  the  b  incestuous.  Qv^en  Mary  i  u  77 

........  111!  36 

„         I  iv  46 

I  iv  48 

„       II  ii  198 

III  iii  62 

„      III  iii  76 

„    III  iv  280 

„      IV  ii  241 

„        V  iv  50 

Harold  ii  ii  646 

„      n  ii  666 

„   .  nii693 

„      n  ii  698 

Becket  i  i  347 

„       I  ii  76 

^^  ^ ^ ^ „    I  iii  435 

every  b  and  debt  and  obligation  Incurr'd  as  Chancellor.         „     i  iii  710 
broken  Your  b  of  peace,  your  treaty  with  the  King —  „     v  u  350 

Prate  not  of  b's,  for  never,  oh,  never  again  ,,  ,  ^  "  f^^ 

Bid  their  old  b  farewell  with  smiles,  not  tears ;         Prom,  of  May  i  5J4 
Altho'  at  first  he  take  his  b  for  flowers,  «  i  646 

Down  to  the  devil  with  this  b  that  beggars  me  !  ForesUrs  1 1  340 

Then  that  b  he  hath  Of  the  Abbot—  ,.  iv  84 

if  they  come  I  will  not  tear  the  6,  ..  i'''9° 

What  wilt  thou  do  with  the  b  then  ?  "         ^  T/^ 

I  bring  the  b.  '•         ^^  109 

There  is  our  b.     Robin.     I  thank  thee.  ..  ^  T^ 

Here  is  my  father's  b.  "         rv  46d 

but  you  see  the  b  and  the  letter  of  the  law.  „         iv  ow 

Look  o'er  these  b's,  my  liege.  -         iv  8d9 

for  the  moment  strike  the  b's  From  these  three  men.  „  rv  yoz 


Boimer,  who  hath  lain  so  long  under  b's  for  the  faith — 

hatred  of  another  to  us  Is  no  true  b  of  friendship. 

Be  the  rough  preface  of  some  closer  b  ? 

And  thro'  this  common  knot  and  b  of  love, 

By  b's  of  beeswax,  like  your  creeping  thing ; 

The  b  between  the  kingdoms  be  dissolved ; 

thou  That  layest  so  long  in  heretic  b's  with  me , 

And  I :  lead  on ;  ye  loose  me  from  my  b's. 

to  cancel  and  abolish  all  b's  of  human  allegiance, 

For  thou  art  truthful,  and  thy  word  thy  b. 

He  call'd  my  word  my  b  ! 

Thy  naked  word  thy  b  ! 

Let  all  men  here  bear  witness  of  our  b  ! 

The  worldly  b  between  us  is  dissolved, 

Tho'  she  that  binds  the  b,  herself  should  see 

If  ever  man  by  b's  of  gratefulness 


Bond-breaking    Shall  the  waste  voice  of  the  b-b  sea 
Bone    dog  that  snapt  the  shadow,  dropt  the  b. — 

our  good  King  Kneels  mumbling  some  old  b — 

The  holy  b's  of  all  the  Canonised 

For  swearing  falsely  by  those  blessed  b's ; 

Thou  swarest  falsely  by  our  blessed  b's, 

Give  him  a  b,  give  him  a  b  ! 

Has  left  his  b's  upon  the  way  to  Rome  Unwept, 

once  I  wish'd  to  scourge  them  to  the  b's. 

Bruised ;  but  no  b's  broken 


we  be  dogs  that  have  only  the  b's,  till  we  be  only  b  s 
our  own  selves. 
Bonner  (Bishop  of  London)    {See  also  Out-Bonner)    B, 

who   hath  lain  so   long   under   bonds   for   the 


Becket  v  ii  358 

Harold  i  ii  189 

„      n  ii  469 

„      n  ii  734 

„      III  i  247 

V  i  259 

Becket  i  iv  108 
„     nil  409 

The  Cup  I  i  28 
Prom,  of  May  ill  242 


Foresters  i  i  25 


faith- 


Speak,  friend  B,  And  tell  this  learned  Legate  he 

lacks  zeal. 
A  fine  beard,  B,  a  very  full  fine  beard. 
B,  it  will  be  carried. 
Pleasure  as  well  as  duty,  worthy  B, — 
B  cannot  out-Bonner  his  own  self — 
Gardiner  burns.  And  B  burns ; 
ay ;  if  5  have  not  forged  the  bills. 
Writ  by  himself  and  B  ? 
O  B,itl  ever  did  you  kindness — 
My  heart  is  no  such  block  as  B's  is : 
this  B  or  another  Will  in  some  lying  fashion  misreport 
'twas  I  and  B  did  it,  And  Pole ; 
Book    {See  also  Boook)     I  in  my  country  hall  Been  reading 

some  old  b, 
Hath  not  your  Highness  ever  read  his  b, 
take  Such  order  with  all  bad,  heretical  b's 
and  retract  That  Eucharistic  doctrine  in  your  b. 
Without  a  friend,  a  b,  my  faith  would  seem  Dead 


Queen  Mary  i  iii  35 


ni iv  271 

ni iv  338 

in  iv  405 

in  iv  430 

ni  vi27 

in  vi  60 

rvi50 

IV  193 

IV  ii  152 

rv  ii  174 

IV  ui  325 

vvl41 

ni  144 
ivi91 
IV  195 
IV  ii  81 
ivii96 


3   H 


Book 


.850 


Bounden 


Book  (continiied)    same  b  You  wrote  against  my 

Lord  of  Winchester ;  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  264 

I  hold  by  all  I  wrote  within  that  b.  „       iv  iii  275 

thank'd  her  father  sweetly  for  his  b  Against  that  god- 
less German.  „         v  v  237 
There  is  a  pleasant  fable  in  old  b's,                                    Harold  rv  i  56 
fur  him  as  be  handy  wi'  a  b  bean't  but  haafe  a 

hand  at  a  pitchfork.  Prom,  of  May  i  188 

for  he's  walking  to  us,  and  with  a  i  in  his  hand.  „  i  220 

I'll  git  the  b  agean,  and  lam  mysen  the  rest,  „  in  12 

Bookman    A  b,  flying  from  the  heat  and  tussle,  Queen  Mary  in  iv  251 

Boon  (adj.)    My  comrade,  b  companion,  my  co-reveller,  BecJcet  i  iii  460 

Boon  (s)     Wyatt,  but  now  you  promised  me  a  h.  Queen  Mary  n  iii  82 

My  life  is  not  so  happy,  no  such  b,  „  iv  i  130 

And  after  those  twelve  years  a  b,  my  king,  Harold  i  i  226 

And  afterwards  a  6  to  crave  of  you.  The  Falcon  712 

to  let  me  know  the  b  By  granting  which,  „  766 

First,  king,  a  b  !  Foresters  iv  945 

Boook  (book)     An'  I  haates  b's  an'  all,  fur  they  puts 

foalk  off  the  owd  waays.  Prom,  of  May  i  221 

Boot    Your  b's  are  from  the  horses.  Queen  Mary  m  v  180 

0  God,  sir,  do  you  look  upon  your  b's,  „  ni  v  191 

1  thought  not  on  my  b's  ;  The  devil  take  all  b's  „  ui  v  196 
Seeams  to  me  the  mark  wur  maade  by  a  Lunnon  b.  Prom,  of  May  1 416 
and  I  think  ye  wears  a  Lunnon  b.                                         „  1 461 

Boot  (in  addition)     A  man  of  this  world  and  the  next  to  b.   Becket,  Pro.  259 
and  the  weight  of  the  church  to  &  on  my  shoulders.         Foresters  i  ii  58 
Booth    citizens  Stood  each  before  his  shut-up  b.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  63 

Booty     a  troop.  Laden  with  b  and  with  a  flag  of  ours  The  Falcon  612 

Bote     I  never  found  he  b  me  any  spite.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  474 

Of  this  dead  King,  who  never  b  revenge.  Harold  v  ii  85 

My  mother,  ere  she  b  me,  Dream'd  that  twelve  stars  Becket  i  i  45 

When  Canterbury  hardly  b  a  name.  „     i  iii  60 

As  once  he  b  the  standard  of  the  Angles,  „   i  iii  494 

— the  love  you  said  you  b  me —  The  Falcon  858 

Push'd  from  all  doors  as  if  we  b  the  plague,  Prom,  of  May  in  804 

Bom  (See  also  Bum,  English-bom,  Galatian-bom,  Half- 
bom,  Tnie-bom)  thou  was  b  i'  the  tail  end  of  old 
Harry  the  Seventh.  Queen  Mary  i  i  42 

„  Ii45 

I  i  54 

I  ii  66 
I  V  301 
„  m  iii  246 
„  ni  vi  203 
„  m  vi  206 
.,     rv  iii  524 

V  iv  21 
Harold  in  i  210 

„      m  ii  165 

rv  i  85 

„       IV  i 110 

V  i  302 
V  ii  122 

Becket  i  iv  232 

n  i  9,  19 
uil74 
n  ii  145 
vil25 
v  ii  284 
v  ii  472 


I  was  b  true  man  at  five  in  the  forenoon 
I  was  i  of  a  true  man  and  a  ring'd  wife. 
True,  Mary  was  b,  But  France  would  not  accept  her 

for  a  bride  As  being  b  from  incest ; 
Yea,  were  there  issue  b  to  her. 
Would  I  had  been  B  Spaniard  ! 
If  such  a  prince  were  b  and  you  not  here  ! 
I  should  be  here  if  such  a  prince  were  b. 
to  get  her  baaby  b  ; 
in  her  agony  The  mother  came  upon  her — a  child 

was  b— 
wise  and  holy  men  That  shall  be  b  hereafter, 
laughter  in  old  Rome  Before  a  Pope  was  b. 
Not  made  but  6,  like  the  great  king  of  all, 
Wild  was  he,  b  so  :  but  the  plots  against  him 
for  a  spark  Of  self-disdain  b  in  me 
My  day  when  I  was  b. 

I  was  b  with  it,  and  sulphur  won't  bring  it  out  o'  me. 
Love  that  is  6  of  the  deep  coming  up  with  the  sim  from 

the  sea.  (repeat) 
A  bastard  hate  6  of  a  former  love. 
I  had  sooner  have  been  b  a  Mussulman — 
And  this  no  wife  has  b  you  four  brave  sons. 
On  a  Tuesday  was  I  6, 
Because  thou  wast  b  excommunicate, 
slayest  the  babe  within  the  womb  Or  in  tlie  being  b,       The  Cup  n  280 
wasn't  my  lady  b  with  a  golden  spoon  in  her  ladyship's 

mouth.  The  Falcon  401 

left  his  heir,  B,  happily,  with  some  sense  of  art.       Prom,  of  May  i  497 
though  fortune  had  b  you  into  the  estate  of  a  gentleman,    „  n  120 

O  this  mortal  house.  Which  we  are  b  into,  „  n  274 

Yet  I,  b  here,  not  only  love  the  coimtry,  „  ir  544 

Wasn't  Miss  Vavasour,  our  schoolmistress  at  Little- 

chester,  a  lady  b?  „         iii  299 

shamed  of  her  among  The  ladies,  b  his  equals.  „         in  582 

— they  were  b  and  bred  on  it — it  was  their  mother —     Foresters  i  i  332 


Foresters  ii  i  374 

Queen  Mary  m  iv  168 

„  IV  iii  410 

Harold  v  i  174 

Becket,  Pro.  481 

n  ii  305 


the 


Bom  (continued)     saints  were  so  kind  to  both  on  us  that 

he  was  dead  before  he  was  b. 
Borne     (See  also  Shield-bome)     And  their  strong 
torment  bravely  b, 
they  see  not  how  they  are  b,  Nor  whither. 
Good  for  good  hath  b  at  times 
one  fancy  hath  taken  root,  and  b  blossom  too. 
You  had  not  b  it,  no,  not  for  a  day. 
Borrowed    he  b  the  monies  from  the  Abbot  of  York 
Sheriff's  brother, 
it  was  agreed  when  you  b  these  monies  from  the  Abbot 
Bosham    To-morrow — first  to  B,  then  to  Flanders. 

Better  have  been  A  fisherman  at  B,  my  good  Herbert, 
Bosom  (adj.)  Should  fiy  like  b  friends  when  needed  most. 
Bosom  (s)     come  to  cast  herself  On  loyal  hearts 

and  b's.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  263 

received  into  the  b  And  unity  of  Universal  Church  ;  „         m  iii  154 

we  restore  you  to  the  b  And  unity  of  Universal  Church.  ,,         in  iii  220 


Foresters  I  i  67 
IV  466 
Harold  I  ii  239 
Becket  n  ii  292 
The  Falcon  527 


And  put  it  in  my  b,  and  all  at  once  I  felt  his  arms 

Trampling  thy  mother's  b  into  blood  ? 

twelve  stars  fell  glittering  out  of  heaven  Into  her  b. 

And  Becket  had  my  b  on  all  this  ; 

To  rest  upon  thy  b  and  forget  him — 

Beware  of  opening  out  thy  b  to  it, 

that  b  never  Heaved  under  the  King's  hand 

This  in  thy  b,  fool,  And  after  in  thy  bastard's  ! 
Bottle    like  a  b  full  up  to  the  cork,  or  as  hollow  as  a  kex, 

He  hath  got  it  from  the  b,  noble  knight. 

Boldness  out  of  the  b  I 

Boldness  is  in  the  blood,  Truth  in  the  b. 

so  she  glided  up  into  the  heart  O'  the  b. 
Bottom    not  even  Hope  Left  at  the  b  ! 

We  are  almost  at  the  b  of  the  well : 

as  they  call  it  so  truly,  to  the  grave  at  the  b, 

why  did  you  write  '  Seek  me  at  the  b  of  the  river  ' 

Hoam  ?  fro'  the  b  o'  the  river  ? 

She  lay  so  long  at  the  b  of  her  well 

The  deer  fell  dead  to  the  b. 
Bough    shot  out  sidelong  b's  across  the  deep 

Were  there  no  b's  to  hang  on.  Rivers  to  drown  in  ? 

The  blossom  had  open'd  on  every  b  ; 

The  tawny  squirrel  vaulting  thro'  the  b's. 
Bought    (See  also  Bowt)     God  rest  his  honest  soul,  he  b  'em 
for  me, 

She  rich  enough  to  have  b  it  for  herself  ! 

But  the  King  hath  b  half  the  College  of  Redhats. 
Botmd  (limit)     More  like  a  school-boy  that  hath 
broken  b's, 

Put  on  your  hood  and  see  me  to  the  b's. 

That  your  own  people  cast  you  from  their  b's. 
Bound  (part)    if  I  save  him,  he  and  his  Are  b  to  me 

and  when  her  innocent  eyes  were  b. 


V  V  98 

Harold  iv  ii  26 

Becket  i  i  48 

,.    I  iii  433 

,.      n  i  31 

..  in  iii  30 

„  iviil88 

..  rv  ii  257 

Foresters  iv  210 

IV  237 

rv  239 

IV  241 

IV  245 

Prom,  of  May  nSid 

ra  161 

m  193 

?  ..  in  364 

in  443 

Foresters  iv  242 

IV  543 

Harold  in  i  150 

The  Cup  I  ii  77 

Prom,  of  May  i  42 

Foresters  i  iii  118 


Philip  by  these  articles  is  b  From  stirring  hand  or  foot 

b  me  too  With  bitter  obligation  to  the  Covmt — 

I  am  doubly  b  to  thee  ... 

Ay  !     No  !— he  hath  not  b  me  by  an  oath —  „ 

I  mean  to  be  a  liar — I  am  not  b—  ,, 

we  be  not  b  by  the  king's  voice  In  making  of  a  king,  „ 

Rood  itself  were  b  To  that  necessity  which  binds  us  down ;  „ 

to  whom  thou  art  b  By  Holy  Church.  Becket 

be  b  Behind  the  back  like  laymen-criminals  ?  „ 

For  which  the  King  was  b  security.  „ 

I  am  b  For  that  one  hour  to  stay  with  good  King  Louis,      „    in  iii  246 

Or  else  be  b  and  beaten,  (repeat)  Foresters  ni  370,  390 

Bound  (past  of  bind)     chain.  Wherewith  they  b  him  to 

the  stake.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  596 

And  b  me  by  his  love  to  secrecy  Till  his  own  time.  Becket  in  i  228 

but  I  b  the  seller  To  silence.  The  Falcon  72 

I  b  myself,  and  by  a  solemn  vow,  „        679 

Bound  (verb)     And  doth  so  b  and  babble  all  the  way      Queen  Mary  v  v  86 


The  Falcon  49 

62 

Becket  ii  ii  373 

Queen  Mary  I  v  171 

Becket  in  i  95 

The  Cvp  1  i  138 

Queen  Mary  ii  iv  125 

nii406 

III  iii  59 

Harold  n  ii  219 

n  ii  557 

n  ii  660 

n  ii  797 

„       ni  i  236 

vil07 

Pro.  67 

I  iii  95 

I  iii  645 


Wherever  the  horn  sound,  and  the  buck  b. 
Wherever  the  buck  b,  and  the  horn  sound, 
Bounden    ruler  of  a  land  Is  b  by  his  power  and 
place  to  see 
and  would  myself  Be  b  to  thee  more. 


Foresters  m  346 
„       m  355 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  212 
Harold  n  ii  561 


Bounden 


851 


Bracken 


Bounden  (continued)    The  crime  be  on  bis  bead — not  b — no.     Harold  u  ii  670 

Being  b  by  my  coronation  oath  To  do  men  justice.  Becket  i  iii  396 

holy  Pahner,  b  by  a  vow  not  to  show  bis  face,  Foresters  i  ii  236 

Boundless    I  always  hated  b  arrogance.  Becket  v  i  12 

Here  crawling  in  this  b  Nature.  Prom,  of  May  in  637 

Bounteous    the  b  bavs  And  havens  filling  with  a  blissful 

sea.  '  The  Cup  ii  234 

Bourne     I  cannot  catch  what  Father  B  is  saying.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  14 

Old  B  to  the  life  !  „        '  i  iii  30 

Bout    Come  now,  I  fain  would  have  a  b  with  thee.  Foresters  ii  i  552 

but  thyself  Shalt  play  a  b  with  me,  „         iv  252 

I  am  overbreathed,  Friar,  by  my  two  b's  at  quarter- 

stafi. 

Bow  (s)    (See  also  Saddle-bow)    battle-axe  Was  out  of 

place ;  it  should  have  been  the  b. — 

and  Death  has  drawn  the  b — 

Give  him  a  b  and  arrows — follow — follow. 

shoot  almost  as  closely  with  the  b  as  the  great  Earl 

himself, 
but  who  be  those  three  yonder  with  b's  ? — 
who  art  more  bow-bent  than  the  very  b  thou  carriest  ? 
This  is  no  b  to  hit  nightingales  ;  this  is  a  true  woodman's 

b  of  the  best  yew-wood  to  slay  the  deer. 
Take  thou  my  b  and  arrow  and  compel  them  to  pay 

toU. 
Give  me  my  b  and  arrows. 
Bow  (verb)    wherefore  b  ye  not,  says  Lady  Anne, 
Lords  and  Commons  will  b  down  before  him — 
He  b's,  he  bares  his  head,  he  is  coming  hither, 
or  I  Would  b  to  such  a  baseness  as  would  make  me 
But  crowns  must  b  when  mitres  sit  so  high. 
Life  yields  to  death  and  wisdom  b's  to  Fate, 
Bow-bent    who  art  more  b-b  than  the  very  bow  thou 

carriest  ? 
Bowd  (part,  and  adj.)    over  his  b  shoulder  Scowl'd  that 

world-hated  and  world-hating  beast,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  89 

Men  now  are  6  and  old,  the  doctors  tell  you,  „      m  iv  408 

Now,  even  now,  when  b  before  my  time,  „  v  ii  64 

They  told  me  that  the  Holy  Rood  had  lean'd  And  b 


IV  267 

Harold  i  ii  107 

„      in  i  401 

The  Cup  I  i  208 

Foresters  i  i  216 
nil72 
ni378 


ni391 

ni263 

IV  603 

Queen  Mary  i  v  45 

in  i  433 

Becket  ill  iii  34 

„    ivii234 

„    IV  ii  297 

The  Cup  n  89 

„      II  i  378 


above  me ; 
b  To  the  earth  he  came  from,  to  the  grave  he 

goes  to, 
B  to  the  dust  beneath  the  burthen  of  sin. 
Had  she  but  b  herself  to  meet  the  wave 
Bow'd  (verb)     and  the  Lady  Anne  B  to  the  Pyx  ; 
all  the  rest  of  England  b  theirs  to  the  Norman, 
Whether  it  b  at  all  but  in  their  fancy  ;  Or  if  it  b, 
the  Holy  Rood  That  b  to  me  at  Waltham — 
Bowel    bury  her  Even  in  the  b's  of  the  earth 
JBower    (See  also  Haveringatte-bower,  Vine-bower)    I 

have  built  a  secret  b  in  England,  Thomas, 
take  her  from  her  secret  b  in  Anjou  And  pass  her  to 

her  secret  b  in  England. 
This  chart  with  the  red  line  !  her  b  !  whose  b  ? 
one  rose  will  outblossom  the  rest,  one  rose  in  a  6. 
chart  with  the  red  line — thou  sawest  it — her  b. 

Fitzurse.     Rosamund's  ? 
To  pass  thee  to  thy  secret  b  to-morrow. 
Must  speed  you  to  your  b  at  once, 
heard  her  cry  '  Where  is  this  b  of  mine  ?  ' 
With  the  red  line — '  her  b.' 
thou  my  golden  dream  of  Love's  own  b. 
Thine  enemy  knows  the  secret  of  my  b. 
warder  of  the  b  hath  given  himself  Of  late  to  wine. 
Springs  from  the  loneliness  of  my  poor  b, 
My  Ajijou  b  was  scarce  as  beautiful. 
Babble  in  b  Under  the  rose  ! 
Kiss  in  the  b,  Tit  on  the  tree  ! 
John  of  Salisbury  committed  The  secret  of  the  6, 
Know  you  not  this  b  is  secret, 
Foimd  out  her  secret  b  and  murder'd  her. 
Your  Becket  knew  the  secret  of  your  b. 
The  monk's  disguise  thou  gavest  me  for  my  b  : 
When  first  he  meets  his  maiden  in  a  b. 
I  have  lodged  my  pretty  Katekin  in  her  b. 


Harold  v  i  104 

Prom,  of  May  in  514 

in  521 

Becket  iv  ii  388 

Queen  Mary  i  v  42 

n  i  160 

Harold  v  i  109 

„      V  i  383 

Foresters  in  462 

Becket,  Pro.  153 

Pro.  181 
Pro.  308 
Pro.  346 

Pro.  428 

1 1249 

ii291 

iii  42 

iii  62 

ni35 

ni265 

m  i  30 

in  i  41 

HI  i  52 

in  196 

mi  104 

in  iii  6 

IV  ii  22 

vil75 

vil78 

v  ii  94 

The  Cup  X  iii  42 

Foresters  n  i  418 


Bowering-in    myrtle,  b-i  The  city  where  she  dwells.  The  Cup  i  i  3 

Bower-maiden    Only  my  best  b-m  died  of  late,  Becket  iii  i  67 
Bowing    his  fine-cut  face  b  and  beaming  with  all  that 

courtesy  „     in  iii  141 

Bowl     b  my  ancestor  Fetch'd  from  the  farthest  east —  2'he  Falcon  483 

as  she  has  broken  My  china  b.  „          524 

Bowl'd    no  man  yet  has  ever  b  me  down.  Foresters  iv  288 

more  of  a  man  than  to  be  b  over  like  a  ninepin.  ,.        iv  304 

Bowman     Our  bowmen  are  so  true  They  strike  the  deer  iv  524 

Bowstring     By  arrow  and  by  b,  in  442 
Bowt  (bought)     an'  it  belongs  to  the  Steers  agean  :  I 

b  it  back  agean  ;  Prom,  of  May  ni  452 

Boxed    if  you  b  the  Pope's  ears  with  a  purse,  you  might 

stagger  him,  Becket  ii  ii  370 
Boy  (See  also  School-boy)     After  him  b's  !  and  pelt  him 

from  the  city.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  85 


while  the  b  she  held  Mimick'd  and  piped  her 

So  wife-like  humble  to  the  trivial  b 

seven-years'  friend  was  with  me,  my  young  b  ; 

the  b  Not  out  of  him — ^but  neither  cold, 

I  am  eleven  years  older  than  he.  Poor  b  ! 

That  was  a  lusty  b  of  twenty-seven  ; 

Why — how  they  fought  when  b's — 

Why,  6'.'!  will  fight.     Leofwin  would  often  fight  me, 

The  b  would  fist  me  hard,  and  when  we  fought 

Thou  art  the  Queen  ;  ye  are  b  and  girl  no  more  : 

stufE'd  the  b  with  fears  that  these  may  act 

Father.     William.     Well,  b. 

Why,  b  ?     Rufu^.     Because  I  broke  The  horse's  leg — 

methinks,  my  b.  Thy  fears  infect  me  beyond  reason. 

B,  thou  hast  forgotten  That  thou  art  English. 

I  have  lost  the  b  who  play'd  at  ball  with  me. 

How  the  b  grows  ! 

Dost  thou  know,  my  b,  what  it  is  to  be  Chancellor  of 

England  ? 
It  is,  my  b,  to  side  with  the  King  when  Chancellor, 
Here  is  a  ball,  my  b,  thy  world, 
A  pretty  lusty  b.     Rosamutid.     So  like  to  thee  ; 
I  spoke  of  late  to  the  b,  he  answer'd  me, 
I  love  thy  mother,  my  pretty  b. 
The  b  so  late  ;  pray  God,  he  be  not  lost. 
Geoffrey,  my  b,  I  saw  the  ball  you  lost 
— let  me  go  With  my  young  b, 
beg  my  bread  along  the  world  With  my  young  b, 
Then  is  thy  pretty  b  a  bastard  ? 
I  will  fly  with  my  sweet  b  to  heaven. 
Even  when  you  both  were  b's  at  Theobald's. 
How  fares  thy  pretty  b,  the  little  Geoffrey  ? 
Mine  enemies  barr'd  all  access  to  the  b. 
B,  dost  thou  know  the  house  of  Sinnatus  ? 
My  b,  Take  thou  this  letter  and  this  cup 
Why,  whither  runs  the  b  ? 
I  had  once  A  b  who  died  a  babe  ; 
As  helplessly  as  some  unbearded  b's 
or  after  slayest  him  As  &  or  man, 

0  my  sick  b  !    My  daily  fading  Florio, 
But  my  b — No,  no  !  not  yet — 
That  bright  inheritor  of  your  eyes — ^your  b  ? 
How  charm'd  he  was  !  what  wonder  ? — A  gallant  b, 
love  for  my  dying  b,  Moves  me  to  ask  it  of  you. 
How  often  has  my  sick  b  yeam'd  for  this  ! 
The  b  may  die  :  more  blessed  were  the  rags 
Our  men  and  b's  would  hoot  him,  stone  him, 
the  b  was  taken  prisoner  by  the  Moors. 
Come,  b  !  'tis  but  to  see  if  thou  canst  fence. 

1  am  like  a  b  now  going  to  be  whipt ; 
'  This  b  will  never  wed  the  maid  he  loves, 

Boyhood    knew  battle,  And  that  was  from  my  b, 

tree  that  my  lord  himself  planted  here  in  the  blossom 
of  his  b — 
Boy-king    b-k,  with  his  fast-fading  eyes  Fixt  hard 
Brace    Out  of  the  church,  you  b  of  cursed  crones. 
Braced    Are  b  and  brazen'd  up  with  Christmas  wines 
Bracelet    A  man  may  hang  gold  b's  on  a  bush, 
Bracken    Lusty  b  beaten  flat, 


n  ii  72 

m  i  364 

III  iii  48 

v  ii  480 

V  V  47 

v  v48 

Harold  1  i  430 

I  i  433 

1 1444 

1  i  455 

n  ii  90 

„     u  ii  104 

..     II  ii  108 

..     II  ii  450 

,.     II  ii  473 

.,     IV  iii  21 

Becket  ii  i  217 


II  i  231 
ni235 
ni244 
n  i  247 
II  ii  5 
IV  i  45 
IV  ii  1 
IV  ii  56 

IV  ii  98 
IV  ii  104 
IV  ii  112 
IV  ii  237 

vilO 

V  ii  167 
vii452 

The  Cup  I  i  49 

1 160 

1 1  70 

.,      I  ii  149 

I  Hi  40 

u  281 

The  Falcon  235 

303 

307 

319 

787 

829 

850 

Prom,  of  May  ii  425 

Foresters  1 1  60 

..      n  1  571 

n  ii  50 

..     II 11  111 

Harold  v  ii  175 


The  Falcon  564 

Qiibeen  Mary  i  ii  30 

„     IV  iii  539 

Becket  \  ii  423 

Harold  n  1  87 

Foresters  ii  11 154 


Bragging 


852 


Break 


Bragging     is  be  b  still  that  he  will  come 
Brain  (s)     what,  have  you  eyes,  ears,  b's  ? 

Your  father  had  a  b  that  beat  men  down — 

With  nothing  but  mj'  battle-axe  and  him  To  spatter 

his  b's  ! 
All  my  b  is  full  of  sleep, 
thro'  the  blood  the  wine  leaps  to  the  b 
if  you  care  to  drag  your  b's  for  such  a  minnow. 
Brain  (verb)     I  have  a  mind  to  b  thee  with  mine  axe. 

blow  that  b's  the  horseman  cleaves  the  horse, 
Brain-dazing    After  the  long  b-d  colloquies, 
Brain-dizzied     B-d  with  a  draught  of  morning  ale. 
Brain'd    Methought  they  would  have  6  me  with  it,  John 
Brainless    over  this  the  b  loons  That  cannot  spell 

Esaias  from  St.  Paul,  Queen  Mary  iii  i  280 

Brake    (See  also  Broke)     those  hard  men  b  into  woman- 
tears,  Ev'n  Gardiner, 
some  fool  that  once  B  bread  with  us,  perhaps  : 
Who  b  into  Lord  Tostig's  treasure-house 
Before  these  bandits  b  into  your  presence. 
Branch    {See  also  Olive-branch)    Would'st  thou  not 

bum  and  blast  them  root  and  b  ?  Queen  Mary  ni  iv  283 

Brand  (a  sword)     flings  His  b  in  air  and  catches  it  again,         Harold  v  i  494 
Brand  (verb)     So  b's  me  in  the  stare  of  Christendom 

A  heretic  ! 
Brandish    With  hands  too  limp  to  b  iron- — • 
Brandished    See  Treble-brandi^'d 
Brass    Swarm  to  thy  voice  like  bees  to  the  b  pan. 
Brat     The  washerwoman's  b  ! 
Brave  (adj.)     For  all  that,  Most  honest,  b,  and  skilful 
No,  girl ;  most  b  and  loyal,  b  and  loyal. 
b  Lord  William  Thrust  him  from  Ludgate, 
There's  a  b  man,  if  any. 

Might  it  not  be  the  other  side  rejoicing  In  his  b  end  ? 
that  our  b  English  Had  sallied  out  from  Calais 
B,  wary,  sane  to  the  heart  of  her — 
And  being  b  he  must  be  subtly  cow'd, 
thou,  b  banner.  Blaze  like  a  night  of  fatal  stars 
No,  no — b  Gurth,  one  gash  from  brow  to  knee  ! 
Hate  him  ?  as  b  a,  soldier  as  Henry  and  a  goodlier 

man  : 
And  this  no  wife  has  born  you  four  b  sons. 
Why  said  you  not  as  much  to  my  b  Sinnatus  ? 
B — ay — too  b,  too  over-confident, 
a  b  one  Which  you  shall  see  to-morrow. 
That  this  b  heart  of  mine  should  shake  me  so, 
I  am  sure  that  more  than  one  b  fellow  owed  His  death  The  Falcon  633 
Nothing  but  my  b  bird,  my  noble  falcon,  „  873 

She  struck  him,  my  b  Marian,  struck  the  Prince,  Foresters  ii  i  134 

A  b  old  fellow  but  he  angers  me.  „        ii  i  471 

he  As  gentle  as  he's  b —  „        n  i  659 

I  know  not,  can  I  trust  myself  With  your  b  band  ?  „        ii  i  704 

Honour  to  thee,  b  Marian,  and  thy  Kate.  „         in  299 

For  our  b  Robin  is  a  man  indeed.  „        iv  1037 

Brave  (verb)     Nay,  nay,  my  lord,  thou  must  not  b  the  King.  Becket  i  iii  515 
I  must  hence  to  b  The  Pope,  King  Louis,  and  this 

turbulent  priest. 
To  break  the  barons,  and  now  b's  the  King. 
I  dare  not  b  my  brother.  Break  with  my  km. 
I  cannot  b  my  brother — but  be  sure 
Braved    Hadst  thou  been  braver,  I  had  better  b  All — 
Brave-hearted    My  b-h  Rose  !     Hath  he  ever  been  to  see 

thee? 
Braver    Hadst  thou  been  b,  I  had  better  braved  All- 
Bravest     b  in  our  roll  of  Primates  down  From  Austin— 

the  b  Engli-sh  heart  Since  Hereward  the  Wake 
Brawl  (s)     witness  the  b's,  the  gibbets. 
Peace,  friends  !  what  idle  b  is  this  ? 
Wakening  such  b's  and  loud  disturbances  In  England, 
brazen'd  up  with  Christmas  wines  For  any  murderous  b 
yet  they  prate  Of  mine,  my  b's,  when  those, 
This  last  to  rid  thee  of  a  world  of  b's  ! 
His  grandsire  struck  my  grandsire  in  a  6  At  Florence, 
Brawl  (verb)    You  b  beyond  the  question  ;  speak. 

Lord  Legate  !  Queen  Mary  m  iv  97 


Harold  iv  iii  124 
Queen  Mary  n  i  97 
„       IV  i 110 

Harold  II  ii  781 

The  Cuf  I  ii  445 

Foresters  I  iii  23 

„      n  i  323 

Harold  n  i  73 

„     v  i  593 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  92 

II  i  71 

Becket  v  ii  612 


I  V  564 
„  III  V  45 

Harold  iv  i  114 
Becket  v  ii  556 


Queen  Mary  v  ii  62 
Harold  v  i  449 

Foresters  i  iii  108 

Harold  iv  iii  172 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  383 

n  iv  11 

II  iv  91 

in  i  175 

IV  iii  358 

V  ii  255 

V  v224 
Harold  n  ii  75 

.,     IV  i  250 

V  ii  70 

Becket,  Pro.  436 

V  i  125 
The  Cup  I  ii  260 

I  ii  261 
I  ii  431 
I  iii  38 


Brawler    torn  Down  the  strong  wave  of  b's.  Queen  Mary  in  i  Ifi 

Even  this  b  of  harsh  truths —  Foresters  iv  948 

Brawlest     O  brook,  that  b  merrily  by  Prom,  of  May  m  201 

Brazen'd     Are  braced  and  b  up  with  Christmas  wines  Becket  v  ii  423 

Bread    (See  also  Manchet-bread)    when  the  traitor  wife 

came  out  for  b  Queen  Mary  in  i  12 


„      n  i  311 

„      V  i  235 

The  Falcon  255 

741 

Harold  in  ii  179 

Becket  u  i  287 

Harold  ni  ii  178 

Becket  v  ii  58 

Foresters  ii  i  686 

Queen  Mary  v  i  85 

Becket  i  ii  3 

„   vii352 

„   vii425 

„   vii427 

„  V  iii  199 

The  Falcon  251 


fool  that  once  Brake  b  with  us,  perhaps  : 

Fed  with  rank  b  that  crawl'd  upon  the  tongue, 

had  they  remained  true  to  me  whose  b  they  have 

partaken, 
live  by  the  King's  venison  and  the  b  o'  the  Lord, 
gaping  bills  in  the  home-nest  Piping  for  b — 
and  to  win  my  own  b, 

I  will  beg  my  b  along  the  world  With  my  young  boy. 
The  slave  that  eat  my  b  has  kick'd  his  King  ! 
How  oft  in  coming  hast  thou  broken  b  ? 
No  b  ?     Filippo.     Half  a  breakfast  for  a  rat ! 
Sour  milk  and  black  b. 

and  her  b  is  beyond  me  :  and  the  milk — faugh  ! 
In  the  sweat  of  thy  brow,  says  Holy  Writ,  shalt  thou 
eat  b, 
Breadth    What  b,  height,  strength — torrents  of  eddying 

bark  ! 
Break     draw  back  your  heads  and  your  horns  before  I  b 
them. 
Pray  God  he  do  not  be  the  first  to  b  them, 
It  b's  my  heart  to  hear  her  moan  at  night 
These  Kentish  ploughmen  cannot  b  the  guards. 
The  King  of  France  will  help  to  b  it. 
Beheld  our  rough  forefathers  b  their  Gods, 
You  must  b  them  or  they  b  you. 
B's  into  feather'd  merriments. 
Whose  colours  in  a  moment  b  and  fly. 
Whose  colours  in  a  moment  b  and  fly  !  ' 
And  b  your  paces  in,  and  make  you  tame  ; 
to  b  down  all  kingship  and  queenship, 
for  thy  brother  b's  us  With  over-taxmg— 
lest  they  rear  and  run  And  b  both  neck  and  axle, 
close  as  our  shield-wall.  Who  b's  us  then  ? 
to  swear  Vows  that  he  dare  not  b. 
— it  was  mine  own  to  b  ; 
I  like  to  have  my  toys,  and  b  them  too. 
And  may  I  b  his  legs  ? 
Tho'  scarce  at  ease  ;  for,  save  our  meshes  b, 
Or  is  it  the  same  sin  to  b  my  work  As  b  mine  oath  ? 
Enough  !     Thou,  wilt  not  b  it ! 
Ye  take  a  stick,  and  b  it ; 
Who  made  this  Britain  England,  b  the  North  : 
B  the  banquet  up  ...  Ye  four  ! 
our  shield  wall — Wall — b  it  not — b  not — b — 
made  too  good  an  use  of  Holy  Church  To  b  her  close  ! 
he  holp  the  King  to  b  down  our  castles, 
it  is  the  will  of  God  To  b  me, 
Nay,  if  I  cannot  b  him  as  the  prelate. 
If  pretty  Geoffrey  do  not  b  his  own, 
striving  still  to  b  or  bind  The  spiritual  giant 
And  b  the  soul  from  earth, 
for  he  did  his  best  To  b  the  barons, 
till  it  b  Into  young  angels 


Antonius  would  not  suffer  me  to  b  Into  the  sanctuary. 

They  will  b  in  the  earth — I  am  sinking — 

I  dare  not  brave  my  brother,  B  with  my  kin. 

I  come  this  day  to  b  my  fast  with  you. 

I  did  b  it,  my  lord  :  it  is  broken  ! 

How  shall  I  6  it  to  him  ?  how  shall  I  tell  liim  ? 

I  b  with  him  for  ever  !  „  889 

dead  garland  Will  b  once  more  into  the  living  blossom.  „  919' 

She  will  b  fence.     I  can't  keep  her  in  order.  Prom,  of  May  1 194 

rough  road  That  b's  off  short  into  the  abysses —  „  i  230 


m  V  45 
IV  iii  442^ 

Becket  i  iv  150  * 
..     I  iv  272-  ' 
.,     n  ii  301 
.,     m  i  11& 
„    iviilOS 
„      V  i  242 

Harold  IV  iii  200 
The  Falcon  122 

Foresters  ii  i  272: 
..      n  i  292 

IV  202: 

m94 

Queen  Mary  i  i  5 

„       I  V  269- 

„      I  V  603 

„      n  iv  17 

„     in  i  105 

„    in  ii  120 

„    inii205 

„     m  V  13 

„  IV  iii  leg' 

„      V  ii  206 

„    V  iii  121 

„      V  iv  47 

Harold  i  i  10& 

„       I  i  374 

ii40O 

n  ii  77 

„     n  ii  111 

„     n  ii  112- 

„     II  ii  115 

„     n  ii  141 

„     n  ii  664 

„     n  ii  753- 

„       rv  i  5T 

„  IV  iii  154 

„  IV  iii  231 

„      V  i  233. 

„      V  i  314 

Becket,  Pro.  447 

I  iii  292- 

„       I  iii  333 

„      IV  ii  177 

„      IV  ii  442" 

„  V  i  44 

V  i  235 
V  ii  256 

The  Cup  I  iii  120 

n  477 

The  Falcon  257 

276- 

494 

848 


There  !  let  me  b  some  off  for  you. 

B's  thro'  them,  and  so  flies  away  for  ever ; 

If  that  should  b  before  we  meet  again  ? 

B  !  nay,  but  call  for  Philip  when  you  will, 

And  as  ready  to  b  it  again. 

I  think  That  I  should  b  my  heart, 


i609 
I  650 
I  755 
I  757 
m8& 
ni556. 


Break 


853 


Bride 


Sreak  {continued)     I  would  b  through  bheni  all,  like  the 
King  of  England. 

I  will  b  thy  sconce  with  my  quarterstaff. 

Who  b's  the  stillness  of  the  morning  thus  ? 

Why  b  you  thus  upon  my  lonely  hour  ? 

b  it  all  to  pieces,  as  you  b  the  poor, 

he  would  b,  Far  as  he  might,  the  power  of  John — 

To  b  our  band  and  scatter  us  to  the  winds.     ' 

The  chief  of  these  outlaws  who  b  the  law  ? 

being  out  of  the  law  how  should  we  b  the  law  ?  if  we 
broke  into  it  again  we  should  b  the  law, 

B  thine  alliance  with  this  faithless  John, 

I  cannot  b  it,  Robin,  if  I  wish'd. 

Then  on  the  instant  I  will  b  thy  head. 

That  thou  wilt  b  our  forest  laws  a^ain 

They  b  thy  forest  laws — nay,  by  the  rood 

which  longs  to  b  itself  across  their  backs. 

And  have  thy  fees,  and  b  the  law  no  more. 
Breakage    his  acbage  and  his  b,  if  that  were  all : 

we  never  use  it  For  fear  of  b — 
Breaker    the  great  b  beats  upon  the  beach  ! 
Breakfast     No  bread  ?     FUijrpo.    Half  a  6  for  a  rat ! 

Call  him  back  and  say  I  come  to  b  with  him. 

Holy  Mother  !     To  6  ! 
Breaking  (part.)    (See  also  Bond-breaking)    Is  guiltier 
keeping  this,  than  b  it. 

the  nightmare  b  on  my  peace  '  With  Becket.' 

0  God  !  some  dreadful  truth  is  b  on  me — 
B  already  from  thy  noviciate  To  plunge 
Battering  the  doors,  and  b  thro'  the  walls  ? 
Fairy  realm  is  b  down 

Breaking  (s)     His  b  with  Northumberland  broke 
Northumberland. 
A  day  may  save  a  heart  from  b  too. 
what  with  the  fear  of  b  it,  I  did  break  it, 
and  my  father's  b  down,  and  his  blindness. 

Breast  (s)    natural  brother  Of  the  same  roof,  same  b 
The  babe  enwomb'd  and  at  the  b  is  cursed, 
Parthian  shaft  of  a  forlorn  Cupid  at  the  King's  left  b, 
On  this  left  b  before  so  hard  a  heart, 

1  put  the  bitters  on  my  b  to  wean  him, 
but  in  the  sweat  of  thy  brow,  and  thy  b, 

Breast  (verb)     there  make  strength  to  b  Whatever  chance. 

Breasted    See  Many-breasted 

Breath     Did  not  his  last  b  Clear  Courtenay 

All  her  b  should,  incenselike.  Rise  to  the  heavens 

it  takes  my  b  : 

All  that  is  gracious  in  the  b  of  heaven 

Pray  with  one  b,  one  heart,  one  soul  for  me. 

Beauty  passes  like  a  b  and  love  is  lost  in  loathing : 

He  hath  swoon'd  !     Death  ?  .  .  .  no,  as  yet  a  b. 

Ab  that  fleets  beyond  this  iron  world, 

link  rusts  with  the  b  of  the  first  after-marriage  kiss, 

there  stole  into  the  city  a  b  Full  of  the  meadows, 

— John,  and  out  of  b  ! 

and  they  do  say  the  very  b  catches. 

stay  it  But  for  a  6. 

any  rough  sea  Blown  by  the  b  of  kings. 

Thou  whose  b  Is  bakny  wind  to  robe 

Breathe    let  them  sit.     I  must  have  time  to  b. 
that  she  b's  in  England  Is  life  and  lungs 
And  every  soul  of  man  that  b's  therein. 
B  the  free  wind  from  off  our  Saxon  downs, 
for  the  sake  Of  any  king  that  b's. 
I  know — could  swear — as  long  as  Becket  b's. 
And  b  one  prayer  for  my  liege-lord  the  King, 
the  great  Archbishop  !     Does  he  J  ?     No  ? 
That  I  might  b  for  a  moment  free  of  shield 
I  b  Heaven's  air,  and  Heaven  looks  down  on  me. 
Then,  if  ye  cannot  b  but  woodland  air, 

Breathed    (See  also  Over-breathed)     Girl  never  b  to 
rival  such  a  rose  ; 
I  never  6  it  to  a  bird  in  the  eaves, 
since  I  6,  A  houseless  head  beneath  the  sun 
lips  that  never  b  Love's  falsehood  to  true  maid 


Foresters  i  i  325 
r  ii  75 
I  iii  50 
n  i  93 
II  i  285 
.  II  i  695 
in  453 
IV  141 

IV  145 
IV  323 
IV  327 
IV  680 
IV  888 
IV  907 
IV  918 

IV  955 
Queen  Mary  i  i  128 

The  Falcon  487 
Foresters  i  ii  323 

The  Falcon  123 
213 
215 

Harold  m  i  231 

Becket  n  i  36 

„  m  i  266 

„     V  ii  79 

„   vii626 

Foresters  u  ii  134 

Queen  Mary  n  iv  13 
m  vi  241 

The  Falcon  494 

Prom,  of  May  ii  69 

Qtteen  Mary  iv  iii  191 

Harold  v  i  65 

Becket,  Pro.  340 

„      Pro.  375 

The  Falcon  190 

Foresters  iv  203 

Harold  v  i  127 

Queen  Mary  in  i  134 

m  iii  163 

III  V  190 

m  vi  224 

IV  iii  104 

V  ii  365 

Harold  III  i  319 

„      III  ii  197 

Becket,  Pro.  361 

1 1262 

1 1389 

I  iv  222 
uil78 

II  ii  108 
The  Cup  n  264 

Qtieen  Mary  i  v  546 

ui  vi  49 

„      in  vi  107 

Harold  ii  ii  186 

Becket  n  ii  221 

V  i  77 
.,  V  ii  191 
„     V  iii  203 

Foresters  iv  128 
IV  725 
IV  952 

Queen  Man/  in  i  372 

„       '    vii453 

Foresters  n  i  63 

IV  72 


Breathing  (part.)     B  an  easy  gladness  .  .  .  not  like 

Ald^vyth  .  .  .  Harold  i  ii  174 

Breathing  (s)     Like  sun-gilt  b's  on  a  frosty  dawn —  Queen  Mary  v  iii  50 

Or  in  the  balmy  b's  of  the  night.  Foresters  iv  1068 

Breathing-time     But  in  this  narrow  b-t  of  life  The  Cup  i  i  29 

Breathing-while    a  b-w  To  rest  upon  thy  bosom  Becket  ii  i  29 

Breathless    lying  chain'd  In  b  dungeons  over  steam- 
ing sewers.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  440 

Bred     That  b  the  doubt  !  but  I  am  wiser  now  .  .  .  Harold  v  ii  111 

Tho'  I  b  thee  The  full-train'd  marvel  The  Falcon  24 
— they  were  born  and  b  on  it — it  was  their  mother —     Foresters  i  i  332 

Traitors  are  rarely  b  Save  under  traitor  kings.  ,,        ii  i  80 
only  they  that  be  b  in  it  can  find  their  way  a-nights  in  it.     ,,      ii  i  264 

Breed  (s)     Two  vipers  of  one  b — an  amphisbaana,  Queen  Mary  in  iv  39 

Thy  b  will  die  with  thee,  and  mine  with  me  :  The  Falcon  18 

A  noble  bird,  each  perfect  of  the  b.  „        320 

A  nobler  b  of  men  and  women.  „         755 

Breed  (verb)     And  if  I  6  confusion  anyway —  Queen  Mary  i  iii  93 
world  would  grow  mouldy,  would  only  b  the  past 

again.  Becket,  Pro.  410 

And  if  my  pleasure  b  another's  pain.  Prom,  of  May  i  278 

Breeding    (See  also  Fever-breeding)    In  b  godless 

vermin.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  329 

b  A  fierce  resolve  and  fixt  heart-hate  „              ni  vi  31 

Bree2se     which  a  &  of  May  Took  ever  and  anon.  The  Cup  i  ii  406 

Brethren    (See  also  Brother)     Behold  him,  b  :  lie 

hath  cause  to  weep  ! —  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  13 

I  pray  you  all  to  live  together  Like  b;  „         iv  iii  182 

seeming  not  as  b.  But  mortal  foes  !  „         iv  iii  185 

Hear  him,  my  good  b.  „         iv  iii  227 

Join  hands,  let  b  dwell  in  unity  ;  Harold  i  i  397 

To  help  us  from  their  b  yonder  ?  „     in  i  221 

Can  ye  not  Be  6  ?     Godwin  still  at  feud  with  Alfgar,  „     iv  i  123 

Have  thy  two  b  sent  their  forces  in  ?  „       v  i  342 

have  I  fought  men  Like  Harold  and  his  b,  „      v  ii  179 

Stay,  Dine  with  my  b  here,  Foresters  iv  346 

Brett  (adherent  of  Wyatt)    You  know  that  after  The 

Captain  B,  Queen  Mary  n  ii  26 

B,  when  the  Duke  of  Norfolk  moved  against  us  „            u  iii  1 

for  which  I  love  thee,  B.  ,,            ii  iii  6 

Last  night  I  climb'd  into  the  gate-house,  B,  „          n  iii  15 

Brevity    Tit,  for  love  and  b.  Foresters  ii  ii  128 

Brew     To  sing,  love,  marry,  chum,  b,  bake,  and  die,  Qii^en  Mary  in  v  111 

b  from  out  This  Godstow-Becket  intermeddling  Becket  iv  ii  455 

I  can  bake  and  I  can  b.  Foresters  i  i  215 

Brew'd     what  an  acrid  wine  has  Luther  b.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  545 

and  she  b  the  best  ale  in  all  Glo'ster,  Becket  in  i  196 

Briar     Wi'  the  b  sa  green,  an'  the  wilier  sa  graay,  Prom,  of  May  n  186 

Bribe     b's  our  nobles  with  her  gold.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  202 

but  they  b  Each  other,  and  so  often,  Harold  i  i  346 

— b  all  the  Cardinals —  Becket  n  ii  473 

Bribed     Except  this  old  hag  have  been  b  to  lie.     Robin. 

We  old  hags  should  be  b  to  speak  truth.  Foresters  n  i  235 

Brickwork     This  labyrinthine  b  maze  in  maze,  Becket,  Pro.  166 

Bpdal     tore  away  My  marriage  ring,  and  rent  my  b  veil ;  Harold  i  ii  80 

Like  the  Love-goddess,  with  no  b  veil.  Prom,  of  May  i  596 

Bride     France  would  not  accept  her  for  a  b  Queen  Mary  i  ii  68 

Were  I  in  Devon  with  my  wedded  b,  ,,         i  iv  119 

Had  mark'd  her  for  my  brother  Edward's  b  ;  „           i  v  290 

I  live  and  die  The  true  and  faithful  b  of  Philip —  ,,          n  iv  43 

To  purchase  for  Himself  a  stainless  b  ;  „       in  iii  205 

White  as  the  light,  the  spotless  b  of  Christ,  „       in  iv  199 

King  hath  wearied  of  his  barren  b.'  ,,       in  vi  141 

there  is  one  Death  stands  behind  the  B —  .,          v  ii  168 

B  of  the  mightiest  sovereign  upon  earth  ?  „          v  ii  544 
Hail !     Harold  !     Aldwyth  !  hail,  bridegroom  and  b  !       Harold  iv  iii  2 

Hail,  Harold,  Aldwyth  !     Bridegroom  and  b  !  ..     iv  iii  43 

Full  thanks  for  your  fair  greeting  of  my  b  !  ..     iv  iii  47 

I  could  not :  Thou  art  my  6  !  ,.       v  i  322 

Who  but  the  bridegroom  dares  to  judge  the  b.  Becket  i  iii  686 
thought  if  it  were  the  King's  brother  he  had  a  better  b 

than  the  King,  .,     in  i  173 

I  had  dream'd  I  was  the  b  of  England,  and  a  queen.  „       v  i  103 

while  you  dream'd  you  were  the  b  of  England, —  „       v  i  105 

and  our  Mother  Church  for  b;  „     v  ii  222 


Bride 


854 


Broken 


Bride  {continued)    And  Camma  for  my  b — The  people 

love  her —  The  Cup  i  iii  152 

I  am  the  b  of  Death,  and  only  Marrj'  the  dead.  „  n  28 

The  king  should  pace  on  purple  to  his  b,  „  n  190 

She  too — she  too — the  b  !  the  Queen  !  and  I —  ,,  n  467 

An  outlaw's  b  may  not  be  wife  in  law.  Foresters  n  ii  90 

This  other,  Milly-nilly,  for  his  b.  ,,         iv  768 

Bridegroom    (See  also  Groom)     How  should  he  bear  a 

b  out  of  Spain  ?  Queen  Mary  ui  iii  25 

But  softly  as  a  fe  to  his  own.  Harold  n  ii  758 

Hail !     Harold  !     Aldwyth  !  hail,  b  and  bride  1  „         iv  iii  2 

Hail,  Harold,  Aldwyth  !  B  and  bride  !  „       iv  iii  43 

Who  but  the  b  dares  to  judge  the  bride.     Or  he  the  b 

may  appoint  ?  Becket  i  iii  685 

Brideless    The  b  Becket  is  thy  king  and  mine  :  „      v  i  107 

Bridesmaid    Our  b's  are  not  lovely — Disappointment,    Queen  Mary  v  ii  154 

Bridge    And  broken  b,  or  spavin'd  horse,  „  i  v  355 

thro'  thine  help  we  are  come  to  London  B  ;  „  ii  iii  9 

On  over  London  B  We  cannot :  stay  we  cannot ;  ,.  ii  iii  41 

we  must  round  By  Kingston  B.  .,  n  iii  48 

And  then  a  brook,  a  b  ;  Becket,  Pro.  164 

This  b  again  !     How  often  have  I  stood  With  Eva 

here  !  Prom,  of  May  ii  295 

.madman,  is  it,  Gesticulating  there  upon  the  b?  „  n  327 

I  dozed  upon  the  b,  and  the  black  river  „  ii  649 

dead  midnight  when  I  came  upon  the  b;  „  in  369 

Bridged    and  brooks  Were  b  and  damm'd  with  dead,  Harold  in  ii  130 

Brief     it  is  an  age  Of  b  life,  and  b  purpose,  and  b 

patience.  As  I  have  shown  to-day.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  413 

Care  more  for  our  b  life  in  their  wet  land,  „  iii  vi  62 

Latimer  Had  a  b  end — not  Ridley.  „  iv  ii  225 

in  b,  so  miserable,  „  iv  iii  78 

Hath,  like  a  b  and  bitter  winter's  day,  „  iv  iii  430 

Suffer  not  That  my  b  reign  in  England  be  defamed        „  v  ii  302 

Brief-sighted     And  warble  those  b-s  eyes  of  hers  ?  „  in  vi  155 

B-s  tho'  they  be,  I  have  seen  them,  „  ni  vi  157 

Bright    And  dazzled  men  and  deafen'd  by  some  b  Loud 
venture, 
the  b  sky  cleave  To  the  very  feet  of  God, 
the  b  link  rusts  with  the  breath  of  the  first  after- 
marriage  kiss. 
Gleam  upon  gloom,  B  as  my  tlream. 
To-day  they  are  fixt  and  b — 
Ay,  how  is  he.  That  b  inheritor  of  your  eyes — your 

boy  ?  The  Falcon  306 

And  the  day's  b  like  a  friend,  Prom,  oj  May  i  79 

I  remember  Her  b  face  beaming  starlike  down  upon  me    „  n  248 

To  sleep  !  to  sleep  !     The  long  b  day  is  done.  Foresters  i  iii  41 

So  now  the  forest  lawns  are  all  as  b  As  ways  to  heaven,        „      n  i  631 
Brighten    or  it  is  but  past  That  b's  in  retiring  ?  Prom,  of  May  n  645 

Brighter     Cousin  Pole,  You  are  fresh  from  b  lands.      Queen  Mai-y  in  iv  322 
this  world  Is  b  for  his  absence  as  that  other  Is 

darker  for  his  presence.  Prom,  of  May  n  458 

but  if  you  Can  tell  me  anything  of  our  s-weet  Eva 

When  in  her  b  girlhood,  „  n  521 

Brightest    In  Britain's  calendar  the  b  day  Queen  Mary  m  ii  118 

Brim    Fill  to  the  b.  Foresters  ra  343 

To  the  b  and  over  till  the  green  earth  „       m  349 

Brimming    green  field  Beside  the  b  Medway,  Queen  Mary  n  i  244 

Bring    I  do  but  b  the  message,  know  no  more.  „  i  iv  228 

I'll  have  one  mark  it  And  b  it  me.  „  i  v  373 

messenger  Who  b's  that  letter  which  we  waited  for —      „  i  v  586 

This  marriage  should  b  loss  or  danger  to  you,  „  n  ii  227 

Find  out  his  name  and  b  it  to  me  „  ni  i  253 

Legate's  coming  To  ft  us  absolution  from  the  Pope.  „  mi  432 

second  actor  in  this  pageant  That  b's  him  in  ;  „  ni  iii  15 

To  b  the  heretic  to  the  stake,  „  in  iv  9 

'  I  come  not  to  b  peace  but  a  sword  '  ?  „  m  iv  88 

sends  His  careful  dog  to  b  them  to  the  fold.  „        m  iv  105 

And,  whether  it  b  you  bitter  news  or  sweet,  „         in  v  201 

b  it  Home  to  the  leisure  wisdom  of  his  Queen,  „  m  vi  22 

lo  !  thou  art  reclaim'd  ;  He  b's  thee  home  :  „  iv  iii  84 

you  b  the  smoke  Of  Cranmer's  burning  with  you.  „         iv  iii  560 

B's  the  new  learning  back.  „  v  i  202 

My  liege,  I  b  you  goodly  tidings.  „  v  i  279 


m  i  452 
Harold  n  ii  741 

Becket,  Pro.  361 

in  i  278 

The  Cup  II  20 


v  ii  556 

V  ii  592 

Harold  I  i  241 

..       I  ii  234 

n  ii  73 

..     II  ii  461 

,.     m  i  260 

,.   rv  iii  203 

Beclet,  Pro.  530 

I  iii  38 

I  iii  511 

I  iv  23? 

I  iv  252 


n  ii  364 

in  iii  135 

rv  ii  154 

V  ii  301 


Th,' 


Bring  (continued)     Why  do  you  b  me  these  ?  Queen  Mary  v  ii  185 

Why  do  they  i!>  me  these  ?  ..  v  ii  198 

he  may  b  you  news  from  Philip.  ,.  v  ii  229 

I  b  your  Majesty  such  grievous  news  I  grieve  to  b  it.        „  v  ii  239 

Alice,  my  child,  B  us  your  lute.  ,.  v  ii  357 

No,  no,  he  b's  a  letter.  ..  v  ii  548 

to  read  the  letter  which  you  b.     Feria.     JNIadam,  I  b 

no  letter.    Mary.     How  !  no  letter  ? 
that  I  am  in  state  to  b  forth  death — 
I  pray  thee,  let  me  hence  and  b  him  home, 
thunder  may  b  down  That  which  the  flash 
I  want  thy  voice  with  him  to  b  him  round  ; 
make  A  league  with  William,  so  to  b  him  back  ? 
wilt  thou  b  another,  Edith,  upon  his  head  ? 
B  not  thy  hollo wness  On  our  full  feast. 
b  her  to  the  level  of  the  dust,  so  that  the  King— 
And  b  us  all  to  shame  ? 
If  Canterbury  b  his  cross  to  court, 
I  was  bom  with  it,  and  sulphur  won't  b  it  out  o'  me. 
I  b  the  taint  on  it  along  wi'  me,  for  the  Arclibishop  likes  it, 
till  the  weight  of  Germany  or  the  gold  of  England  b's 

one  of  them  down  to  the  dust — 
there  were  Abbots — but  they  did  not  b  their  women  ; 
To  b  her  to  the  dust  .  .  . 

we  b  a  message  from  the  King  Beyond  the  water  ; 
Moon  b  him  home,  b  him  home  Safe  from  the  dark  and 

the  cold.  Home,  sweet  moon,  b  him  home, 
B  me  The  costly  wines  we  use  in  marriages. 
But  that  might  b  a  Roman  blessing  on  us. 
Lady,  you  b  your  light  into  my  cottage 
look  for  'im,  Eva,  and  b  'im  to  the  barn. 
.   but  I  thowt  I'd  b  tha  them  roses  fust. 
And  &  us  to  confusion, 
the  heat  and  fire  Of  life  will  b  them  out, 
Let  me  b  you  in  here  where  there  is  still  full  daylight 
and  the  man  must  b  it  out  of  her. 
So  that  our  Barons  b  his  baseness  under. 
I  trust  he  b's  us  news  of  the  King's  coming. 
To  6  their  counter-bond  into  the  forest. 
I  b  the  bond. 

I  can  b  down  Fourscore  tall  fellows  on  thee. 
Shall  I  not  after  him  and  b  him  back  ? 
Bristle    So  that  he  b  himself  against  my  will. 
Bristled     monarch  mane  B  about  his  quick  ears — 
Britain    In  B's  calendar  the  brightest  day 

sons  of  those  Who  made  this  B  England, 
Brito    (Richard  de)    (knight  of  King  Henry  II.'s  household) 
(See  also  De  Brito,  Richard)     France  !     Ha  !     De 
Morville,  Tracy,  B — fled  is  he  ?  Becket  i  iv  199 

Brittany    brought  Thy  war  with  jB  to  a  goodlier  close  Harold  n  ii  49 

one  that  should  be  grateful  to  me  overseas,  a  Count  in  5—  Foresters  i  i  271 
Broach    See  Abroach 

Broached     They  ha'  b  a  barrel  of  aale  i'  the  long  barn.    Prom,  of  May  i  426 
Broad     What  it  means  ?     Ask  our  b  Earl.  Harold  i  i  90 

he  is  b  and  honest.  Breathing  an  easy  gladness.  ...  „    i  ii  172 

Brocade     — 0  he  Flamed  in  b —  Queen  Mary  m  i  76 

Broider     these  poor  hands  but  sew,  Spin,  b —  Harold  rv  iii  11 

maidens  who  can  only  b  and  mayhap  ride  a-hawking      Foresters  i  i  213 
Broke    (See  also  Brake)     When  Henry  b  the  carcase  of 

your  church  Queen  Mary  I  v  397 

His  breaking  mth  Northumberland  b  Northimiberland.   „  n  iv  13 

Charing  Cross ;  the  rebels  b  us  there,  „  ii  iv  76 

Because  I  b  The  horse's  leg —  Harold  n  ii  109 

I  trod  upon  him  even  now,  my  lord,  in  my  hurrj-, 

and  b  him.  '  The  Falcon  410 

Immanuel  Goldsmiths  was  b  into  o'  Monday  night.  Prom,  of  May  i  392 
b  the  heart  That  only  beat  for  you ;  „         iii  761 

I  have  shelter'd  some  that  b  the  forest  laws.  Foresters  i  iii  70 

She  b  my  head  on  Tuesday  with  a  dish.  „       i  iii  133 

if  we  b  into  it  again  we  should  break  the  law,  „         iv  145 

This  young  warrior  B  his  prison  „  iv  999 

Broken    (See  also  Brokken,  Neck-broken)     I  hear  that 

he  too  is  full  of  aches  and  b  before  his  da}\  Queen  Mary  i  i  125 

that  b,  out  you  flutter  Thro'  the  new  world,  „  i  iv  52 

More  like  a  school-boy  that  hath  b  bounds,  „  ill' 


Cup  I  ii  5 

n  364 

n  371 

The  Falcon  283 

Prom,  of  May  I  438 

n  50  * 

n  279 

n  287 

in  217 

Foresters  i  i  118 

„      I  ii  117 

„       I  iii  53 

IV  89 

IV  109 

IV  175 

IV  812 

Harold  n  ii  19 

The  Cup  I  ii  121 

Queen  Mary  m  ii  118 

Harold  IV  iii  154 


1 


Broken 


855 


Brother 


Broken  {continued)     And  b  bridge,  or  spavin'd  horse, 

or  wave  And  wind  at  their  old  battle :  Qzieen  Mary  i  v  355 

And  I  have  b  with  my  father —  „          i  v  528 

Wyatt,  your  Grace,  hath  b  thro'  the  guaus  „         ii  iv  20 

They  are  too  crush'd,  too  b,  „      iv  iii  360 

And  I  am  b  there.  „          v  i  211 

I  have  b  oft  the  head.  ,,  v  ii  3 
Saints,  I  have  rebuilt  Your  shrines,  set  up  j^our  b  images ;  ..         v  ii  300 

thou  Hast  b  all  my  foes,  Harold  i  i  217 

the  teeth  That  shall  be  b  by  us — ■  „     i  ii  245 

my  son  !  Are  all  oaths  to  be  b  then,  .,    in  i  286 

and  our  battle-axes  b  The  Raven's  wing,  „    iv  iii  64 

How  oft  in  coming  hast  thou  b  bread  ?  „  iv  iii  200 

Have  we  not  b  Wales  and  Norseland  ?  ,•     v  i  395 

They  have  b  the  commandment  of  the  king  !  „     v  i  614 

His  oath  was  b — 0  holy  Nonnan  Saints,  „      v  i  616 

chessmen  on  the  floor— the  king's  crown  b  !  Becket,  Pro.  314 

Thou  hast  b  thro'  the  pales  Of  privilege,  ,,    iir  iii  193 

While  this  but  leaves  thee  with  a  b  heart,  ,,      iv  ii  173 

It  must  be  b  for  him.  „      iv  ii  178 

Hath  b  all  his  promises  to  thyself,  ,.            v  i  3 

Not  one  whose  back  his  priest  has  b.  ,.        v  i  146 

every  thread  of  thought  Is  b  ere  it  joins —  ,.       v  ii  207 

You  have  b  Your  bond  of  peace,  your  treaty  „       v  ii  349 

have  b  down  our  bams,  Wasted  our  diocese,  ,.       v  ii  429 

And  the  great  deeps  were  b  up  again,  ,,        v  iii  43 

I  did  break  it,  my  lord  :  it  is  6  !  The  Falcon  495 

my  mu^e  has  b  The  thread  of  my  deatl  flowers,  as  she 

has  6  „          521 

I  have  b  My  fast  already.  „          574 

poor  father,  utterly  b  down  By  losing  her —  Prom,  of  May  ii  417 

Bruised ;  but  no  bones  b.  ,,          in  242 

the  poor  young  heart  B  at  last — all  still —  „          in  681 

Not  having  b  fast  the  livelong  day —  Foresters  iv  186 

though  he  be  the  chief  of  rogues,  he  hath  never  b  his  word.      ,.       rv  433 

Hast  b  all  our  Norman  forest  laws,  „       iv  886 

Broken-back'd    Reed  I  rock'd  upon  b-b,  ,.    ii  ii  162 

Brokken  (broken)     the  walls  sa  thin,  and  the  winders  b.  Prom,  of  May  ni  73 

Brood     lest  she  b  Too  long  o'er  this  hard  egg,  Becket  v  ii  252 

drew  the  light  From  heaven  to  b  upon  her.  The  Cii/p  i  iii  58 

To-day  ?     Too  sudden.     I  will  b  upon  it.  „           ii  73 

Brooding     I  was  b  Upon  a  great  unhappiness  Prom,  of  May  n  381 

Brook  (s)     (See  also  Beck)     There  runs  a  shallow  b 

across  our  field  Queen  Mary  v  v  83 

both  were  silent,  letting  the  wild  b  Speak  for  us—  „  v  v  91 
dykes  and  Vs  Were  bridged  and  damm'd  with  dead,      Harold  in  ii  129 

wolf  Mudded  the  b  and  predetermined  all.  „             v  i  3 

And  then  a  6,  a  bridge ;  Becket,  Pro.  164 

drop  The  mud  I  carried,  like  yon  b,  „        ii  i  159 

Geoffrey  have  not  tost  His  ball  into  the  61  ,.        n  i  321 

the  voice  Of  the  perpetual  b,  „         in  i  46 

The  b's  voice  is  not  yours,  and  no  flower,  „  in  i  55 
I  saw  the  ball  you  lost  in  the  fork  of  the  great  willow 

over  the  b.  „        iv  ii  58 

We  parted  like  the  b  yonder  about  the  alder  island,  Prom,  of  May  i  773 

The  b  among  its  flowers !     Forget-me-not,  ,.           n  297 

Close  by  that  alder-island  in  your  b,  .,           n  535 

0  b,  that  brawlest  merrily  by  Thro'  fields  „  m  201 
waded  in  the  b,  ran  after  the  butterflies,  „          ni  275 

Brook  (verb)    Will  b  nor  Pope  nor  Spaniard  here  to 

play  The  tyrant.  Queen  Mary  i  v  189 

ye  will  not  b  that  anyone  Should  seize  our  person,  „        n  ii  177 

B  for  an  hour  such  brute  malignity  ?  „       iv  iii  544 

1  cannot  b  the  turmoil  thou  hast  raised.  Becket  i  iii  575 
I  will  not  b  to  see  Three  upon  two.  Foresters  n  i  423 
maiden  freedom  which  Would  never  b  the  tyrant.  „         in  121 

Brother  (See  also  Brethren,  Foster-brother,  Traitor- 
brother)  '  Thou  Shalt  not  wed  thy  b's  wife.'  Queen  Mary  i  ii  63 
as  tho'  My  father  and  my  b  had  not  lived.  „  i  v  36 
My  b  rather  hated  me  than  loved ;  .,  i  v  82 
Had  mark'd  her  for  my  b  Edward's  bride ;  „  i  v  289 
dallying  over  seas  Even  \^hen  his  b's,  „  ni  iv  294 
Ay,  one  and  all,  dear  b's,  pray  for  me ;  „  iv  iii  103 
Hurt  no  man  more  Than  you  would  harm  your 
loving  natural  b             '  „      iv  iii  190 


Brother  (continued)     What  sort  of  b's  then  be  those 

that  lust  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  197 

B  !  why  so  pale  ?  Harold  i  i  28 

for  thy  b  breaks  us  With  over-taxing —  „     i  i  109 

mysteries  of  heaven  Than  thou,  good  b. 
B,  the  king  is  wiser  than  he  seems ; 
Well,  b,  When  didst  thou  hear  from  thy  Northumbria 
Leave  me  alone,  b,  with  my  Northumbria : 
My  most  worthy  b,  Thou  art  the  quietest  man 
Like  the  rough  bear  beneath  the  tree,  good  b, 

0  Tostig,  O  dear  b — If  they  prance, 
B,  b  !     Tostig.    Away ! 

1  leave  thee,  b. 

Against  thy  b  Tostig's  governance ; 
Poor  b  !  still  a  hostage  ! 
Why,  b,  so  he  will ;  But  on  conditions. 
And,  b,  we  will  find  a  way,'  said  he — ■ 
for  my  sake,  oh  6  !  oh !  for  my  sake  ! 
Not  ev'n  for  thy  sake,  b,  would  I  lie. 
Ay,  b — ^for  the  sake  of  England — ay. 
Swear,  dearest  b,  I  beseech  thee,  swear  ! 
O  Wulfnoth,  Wulfnoth,  b,  thou  hast  betray'd  me  ! 
Forgive  me,  b,  I  will  live  here  and  die. 
Good  b,  By  all  the  truths  that  ever  priest 
Bless  thou  too  That  b  whom  I  love  beyond  the  rest. 
There  might  be  more  than  b  in  my  kiss. 
Good  even,  my  good  b  ! 
Our  hapless  b,  Tostig — He, 
Thou  art  Tostig's  b,  Who  wastes  the  land. 
This  b  comes  to  save  Your  land  from  waste ; 
I,  who  loved  my  b,  bad  the  king  Who  doted  on  him. 
King  !  thy  b,  if  one  may  dare  to  speak  the  truth, 
not  his  fault,  if  our  two  houses  Be  less  than  b's. 
0  b,  What  art  thou  doing  here  ? 
Ob,b,0  Harold— 
— b — /  have  not  sworn — 
Tell  that  again  to  all.     Gurth.     I  will,  good  b. 
O  b,  from  my  ghastly  oubliette  I  send  my  voice 
No  more,  no  more,  dear  b,  nevermore — 
O  b,  most  unbrotherlike  to  me, 
Tostig,  poor  b.  Art  thou  so  anger'd  ? 
Him  who  crown'd  Stephen — King  Stephen's  b  ! 
Henry  the  King  hath  been  my  friend,  my  b, 

0  b  ! — I  may  come  to  martyrdom, 
my  good  lord  Leicester,  The  King  and  I  were  b's. 
for  he  would  murder  his  b  the  State. 
B  of  France,  what  shall  be  done  with  Becket  ? 
B,  you  have  traffick'd  Between  the  Emperor  and  the  Pope, 
ay,  good  b,  They  call  you  the  Monk-King. 
Come,  confess,  good  b, 

and,  b,  Holy  Church  May  rock,  but  will  not  wreck, 
B  of  France,  you  have  taken, 
believing  that  our  b  Had  wrong'd  you ; 

1  wish  you  joy  o'  the  King's  b. 
I  thought  if  it  were  the  King's  b  he  had  a  better  bride 

than  the  King, 
whom  you  call — ^fancy — my  husband's  b's  wife. 
Spare  this  defence,  dear  b. 
Son,  husband,  b  gash'd  to  death  in  vain, 
I  dare  not  brave  my  b.  Break  with  my  kin.     My  b 

hates  him, 
I  cannot  brave  my  b — but  be  sure 
Is  this  your  b's  order  ? 
not  you  !  My  b  '  my  hard  b  !     O  Federigo,  Federigo,  I 

love  you !    Spite  of  ten  thousand  b's,  Federigo.  „  895 

I  will  make  Your  b  love  me.  „  912 

What's  become  of  your  b  ?  Prom,  of  May  in  107 

Then  yon  mim  be  his  b,  an'  we'll  leather  'im .  „  in  150 

I  never  heard  that  he  had  a  b.  „  m  153 

would  you  beat  a  man  for  his  b's  fault  ?  „  m  155 

he  borrowed  the  monies  from  the  Abbot  of  York,  the 

Sheriff's  b.  Foresters  i  i  69 

I  would  pay  My  b  all  his  debt  and  save  the  land.  „    i  ii  218 

Himself  would  pay  this  mortgage  to  his  b,  ,.    i  ii  264 

Sheriff  Would  pay  this  cursed  mortgage  to  his  b  „    n  i  145 


1 1201 

1 1272 

1 1280 

1 1285 

11311 

1 1328 

11371 

11416 

11461 

nil  290 

II  ii  329 

II 11  342 

n  11  367 

n  11401 

n  11  420 

n  ii  638 

n  11  720 

nil  801 

II  li  803 
mi  96 

III  1  295 
nili83 

III  ii  117 

III  11 121 

IV  192 

IV  194 

IV  i  101 
IV  1107 
IV  1 131 

IV  113 

IV  1161 
vil21 

V  1 199 
vi244 
V  1 247 
vi250 
vi273 

Becket,  Pro.  274 


11361 
I  iii  661 

I  ivl90 
nil  64 
nil  66 
II  li  72 
II 11  82 

II  ii  102 
II  ii  154 

II  ii  238 

III  i  156 


III  i  173 
in  i  202 
V  iii  168 
The  Cup  I  ii  143 

The  Falcon  256 
741 
745 


Brother 


856 


Burn 


Brother  (continued)    Thou  art  her  b,  and  her  voice  is 

thine,  Foresters  ii  i  478 
Thou  art  Her  b — I  forgive  thee.     Come  be  thou  My 

b  too.  „      II  i  516 

0  thou  unworthy  6  of  my  dear  Marian  !  „  ii  i  538 
That  such  a  b — she  marry  the  Sheriff !  „  ii  i  550 
go  not  yet,  stay  with  us,  and  when  thy  b —  „  ii  i  641 
to  dream  that  he  My  b,  my  dear  Walter —  „  n  i  652 
See,  thou  hast  wrong'd  my  b  and  mjraelf.  „  ii  i  665 
Ha,  6.  Toll,  my  dear?  the  toll  of  love.  „  m  270 
For  so  this  maid  would  wed  our  b,  „  iv  483 
When  Richard  comes  he  is  soft  enough  to  pardon 

His  6 ;  „         IV  748 

What !  go  to  slay  his  b,  and  make  me  The  monkey  „         iv  804 

Thou  art  tann'd  almost  beyond  my  knowing,  b.  „      iv  1016 

Brotherhood    lustiest  and  lousiest  of  this  Cain's  6,  answer.     Becket  i  iv  185 

find  The  common  h  of  man  has  been  Wrong'd  Prom,  of  May  ni  543 

Brother-like     That  is  not  b-l.  Foresters  n  i  504 

Brought    {See  also  Browt)     and  he  b  his  doubts  And 

fears  to  me.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  74 

And  b  us  back  the  mass.  „  i  v  184 
Hast  thou  B  me  the  letter  which  thine  Emperor 

promised  „          i  v  347 

cause  that  hath  b  us  together  is  not  the  cause  „         n  i  161 

They  have  b  it  in  large  measure  on  themselves.  „  iv  iii  863 
Indian  shawl  That  Philip  b  me  in  our  happy  days  ! —        „         v  ii  540 

Madam,  I  b  My  King's  congratulations ;  „         v  ii  569 

h  Thy  war  with  Brittany  to  a  goodlier  close  Harold  n  ii  48 

And  b  the  sunder'd  tree  again,  „    mi  144 

Alas  !  poor  man.  His  promise  b  it  on  me.  „    mi  338 

being  o  before  the  courts  of  the  Church,  Becket,  Pro.  12 

my  bishop  Hath  b  your  king  to  a  standstill.  „       Pro.  44 

1  b  them  In  from  the  wood,  and  set  them  here.  „  ii  i  130 
My  li^e,  what  hast  thou  &  me  ?  „  ii  i  223 
I  h  not  ev'n  my  crucifix.  Henry.  Take  this.  „  n  i  295 
and  so  h  me  no-hows  as  I  may  say,  „  in  i  129 
Your  old  child  b  me  hither  !  ,,  iv  ii  13 
B  me  again  to  her  own  city  ?—  The  Cup  i  i  14 
but  this  day  has  b  A  great  occasion.  The  Falcon  488 
I  think  I  never  can  be  b  to  love  any  man.  Prom,  of  May  ii  78 
Superstitious  fool,  What  b  me  here  ?  „  ii  351 
now  that  you  have  been  b  to  us  as  it  were  from 

the  grave,  „          iii  235 

If  marriage  ever  b  a  woman  happiness  „          iii  639 

Thro'  that  dishonour  which  you  b  upon  us,  „          in  765 

could  be  b  to  love  me  As  I  loved  you—  „          m  779 

new  term  B  from  the  sacred  East,  his  harem  ?  Foresters  iv  705 

like  the  man  In  Holy  Writ,  who  b  his  talent  back ;  „         iv  981 

Brow     The  Vs  unwrinkled  as  a  summer  mere. — •  Harold  m  i  48 

— brave  Gurth,  one  gash  from  b  to  knee  !  „      v  ii  71 

There's  no  jest  on  the  Vs  of  Herbert  there.  Becket,  Pro.  390 

Life  on  the  face,  the  b's — clear  innocence  !  „         ii  i  195 

Ay,  and  his  Vs  are  thine ;  „         ii  i  218 

bust  of  Juno  and  the  Vs  and  eyes  Of  Venus ;  The  Cup  i  i  120 
In  the  sweat  of  thy  b,  says  Holy  Writ,  shalt  thou 

eat  bread,  but  in  the  sweat  of  thy  b  Foresters  iv  201 

Browt  (brought)    I  ha'  b  these  roses  to  ye — I  forgits 

what  they  calls  'em.  Prom,  of  May  n  14 

so  I  alius  b  soom  on  'em  to  her ;  „            n  20 

to  saay  he's  b  some  of  Miss  Eva's  roses  „          ni  346 

Bruised     as  having  been  so  b  By  Harold,  King  of  Norway;       Harold  iv  i  9 

B ;  but  no  bones  broken.  Prom,,  of  May  in  242 

Honest  daisy  deadly  b.  Foresters  n  ii  156 

And  b  him  almost  to  the  death,  „           in  361 

Brunanbu^     What's  B  To  Stamford-bridge  ?  Harold  iv  iii  142 

And  chanting  that  old  song  ol  B  „          v  i  215 

Brush  (s)     with  some  sense  of  art,  to  live  By  h  and 

pencil.  Prom,  of  May  I  499 

Brush  (verb)     and  b  This  Wyatt  from  our  shoulders.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  293 

Her  cap  would  b  his  heels.  „             in  i  14 

Brussels    We  meet  at  B.  „         m  vi  215 

Brutal     Because  these  islanders  are  b  bea-sts  ?  „         in  vi  153 

almost  h,  and  matched  with  my  Harold  Prom,  of  May  in  175 

Curse  on  your  b  strength !  „             in  732 

Brute  (adj.)     Brook  for  an  hour  such  b  malignity  ?  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  544 


Brute  (s)    {See  also  Baron-brute)    Mutilated,  poor  b, 

my  sumpter-mule,  Becket  v  ii  440 

Bubble    Many  so  dote  upon  this  b  world.  Queen  Mary  vf  iii  168 

'  O  b  world.  Whose  colours  in  a  moment  break  and  fly  ! '     „  v  ii  204 

Bubbled    you  so  b  over  with  hot  terms  Of  Satan,  „  i  ii  94 

Buck     B ;  deer,  as  you  call  it.  Becket  i  iv  139 

Wherever  the  horn  sound,  and  the  b  bound,  Foresters  ni  345 

Wherever  the  b  bound,  and  the  horn  sound,  ,,        in  355 

Buckingham  (Duke  of)     And  I  the  race  of  murder'd 

B —  Queen  Mary  ni  i  454 

Bud  (s)     Rose  never  blew  that  equall'd  such  a  b.  „  in  i  373 

that  shoots  New  Vs  to  heaven.  Foresters  i  iii  26 

Bud  (verb)     court  is  always  May,  b's  out  in  masques.     Queen  Mary  iii  v  11 

believe  My  old  crook'd  spine  would  b  out  two  young 

wings  Harold  in  i  24 

Buffet  (s)     I  will  give  thee  a  6  on  the  face.  Foresters  i  i  146 

Then  thou  shalt  play  the  game  of  Vs  witli  us.  „        iv  259 

I  give  thee  A  b,  and  thou  me.  ,,        iv  263 

Buffet  (verb)    you  stroke  me  on  one  cheek,  B  the  other.  Queen  Mary  n  i  118 

Build    Too  gross  to  be  thrust  out,  will  b  him  round,  „  in  iii  55 

help  to  6  a  throne  Out-towering  hers  of  France  .  .  .       Harold  n  ii  763 

I  vow  to  6  a  church  to  God  Here  on  the  hill  of  battle ;        .,        v  ii  137 

Here  His  turtle  Vs ;  his  exit  is  our  adit :  Becket  m  ii  7 

as  she  was  helping  to  b  the  mound  against  the  city.      Foresters  ii  i  309 

would  cower  to  any  Of  mortal  b.  ,,         n  i  690 

whose  return  B's  up  our  house  again  ?  „         iv  1(X)9 

Builded     (See  also  Built)     I  have  b  the  great  church  of  Holy 

Peter:  Harold  li  11% 

Builder     she  leaves  only  the  nest  she  built,  they  leave  the  b.     Becket  i  iv  47 

Built     (See  also  Builded)     They  have  b  their  castles  here ;       Harold  m  i  36 

I  have  b  the  Lord  a  house — (repeat)  Harold  in  i  178,  180,  186 

loftiest  minster  ever  b  To  Holy  Peter  in  our  English 

isle  !  Harold  in  i  206 

I  have  b  a  secret  bower  in  England,  Thomas,  Becket,  Pro.  153 

I  wrong  the  bird ;  she  leaves  only  the  nest  she  b,  „         i  iv  46 

Bull-headed     Sir  Thomas  Stafford,  a  b-h  ass.  Queen  Mary  v  i  284 

BuHingham  (Nicholas,  afterwards  Bishop  of  Worcester) 

Ailmer  and  B,  and  hundreds  more ;  ,,  i  ii  11 

Bullock     I'd  like  to  fell  'im  as  dead  as  a  6  !  Prom,  of  May  n  597 

Bully     Keep  silence,  b  friar,  before  the  King.  Foresters  iv  919 

Bulrush    Had  1  a  i  now  in  this  right  hand  For  sceptre,  ..  iii  76 

Bulwark     A  b  against  Throne  and  Baronage.  Becket  i  i  17 

Burgher    My  b's  son — Nay,  if  I  cannot  break  .,  i  iii  331 

Burgundy    all  France,  all  B,  Poitou,  all  Christendom  Harold  iii  ii  149 

Burial    We  will  not  give  him  A  Christian  b:  ,,        v  ii  154 

I've  been  attending  on  his  deathbed  and  his  b.  Prom,  of  May  n  4 

Burial-hindering    bell-silencing,  anti-marrying,  b-h  interdict    Becket  in  iii  55 

Buried  (part,  and  adj.)    boil'd,  b  alive,  worried  by  dogs  ;  Queen  Mary  ii  i  210 

There  lies  a  treasure  b  down  in  Ely:  Harold  in  i  11 

Let  me  be  b  there,  and  all  our  kings,  ,.     iii  i  208 

Buried  (verb)     traitor-brother,  Tostig,  him  Reverently  we  b.      ,.     iv  iii  85 

Bum     but  I  and  my  old  woman  'ud  b  upon  it,  Queen  Mary  i  i  56 

her  hate  Will  b  till  you  are  burn'd.  ,.         "  i  ii  59 

I  wrote  it,  and  God  grant  me  power  to  &  !  ..  i  ii  99 

Monstrous !  blasphemous !     She  ought  to  b.  .,  i  v  58 

and  b  the  throne  Where  you  should  sit  with  Philiii :  „         i  v  509 

Let  the  dead  letter  b  !  ,.       in  iv  41 

If  we  could  b  out  heresy,  my  Lord  Paget,  ,.       in  iv  53 

yet  I  would  not  say  B  !  and  we  cannot  b  whole  towns;       ..     in  iv  175 

many  of  them  Would  b — have  burnt  each  other ;  ..     in  iv  217 

Would'st  thou  not  b  and  blast  them  root  and  branch?        ..     hi  iv  282 

He'll  b  a  diocese  to  prove  his  orthodoxy.  ,.     in  iv  353 

Smiles  that  b  men.  ,,     ni  iv  404 

they  play  with  fire  as  children  do.  And  b  the  house.  „       in  vi  30 

Gardiner  b's.  And  Bonner  b's  ;  ..       in  vi  59 

Did  not  More  die,  and  Fisher?  he  must  b.  ,,  iv  i  53 

The  better  for  him.     He  b's  in  Purgatory,  not  in  Hell.        ,.  iv  i  56 

The  heretic  must  b.  „        iv  i  123 

But  if  you  b  him, — well,  your  Highness  knows  ,.        iv  i  144 

It  were  more  merciful  to  b  him  now.  „        iv  i  153 

Philip's  will,  and  mine,  that  he  should  b.  ,,        iv  i  186 

It  is  against  all  precedent  to  b  One  who  recants ;  „         iv  ii  49 

Well,  b  me  or  not  b  me  I  am  fixt ;  „         iv  ii  54 

Will  they  b  me,  Thirlby  ?  „       iv  ii  181 

And  they  will  surely  b  me  ?  „       iv  ii  190 


Burn 


857 


Buzzing 


Bum  (continued)    he  was  deliver'd  To  the  secular  arm 

to  b; 
You  shall  b  too,  B  first  when  I  am  burnt. 
What  sort  of  brothers  then  be  those  that  lust  To  b 

each  other  ? 
And  watch  a  good  man  b. 
all  her  bumins'  'ill  never  b  out  the  hypocrisy 
There's  nought  but  the  vire  of  God's  hell  ez  can  b 

out  that. 
'11  b  the  Pwoap  out  o'  this  'ere  land  vor  iver  and  iver 
B  more  !     Mary.     I  will,  I  will ;  and  you  will  stay? 
They  know  nothing ;  They  b  for  nothing. 
Thou  hast  burnt  others,  do  thou  b  thyself,  Or  I  will 

b  thee ; ' 
Seize  him  and  b  him  for  a  Lutheran. 
How  her  hand  b's  !  (repeat) 

Gardiner  b's  Already ;  but  to  pay  them  full  in  kind, 
sir,  in  Guernsey,  I  watch'd  a  woman  b  ; 
And  b  the  tares  with  imquenchable  fire  !     B  !— 

Fie,  what  a  savour ! 
but  take  back  thy  ring.     It  b's  my  hand — 
They  b  themselves  within-dooT. 
grow  to  such  a  heat  As  b's  a  wrong  to  ashes, 
Burn  (bom)     But  I  taakes  'im  fur  a  bad  lot  and  a  b 

fool, 
but  I  taakes  'im  for  a  Lunnun  swindler,  and  a  b  fool 
b  a  plowman,  and  now,  as  far  as  money  goas, 
afoor  ony  o'  ye  wur  ft— ye  all  knaws  the  ten  aiicre 
but  I  were  b  afoor  schoolin-time. 
Bum'd    {See  also  Burnt)    her  hate  Will  burn  till  you 

are  b.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  59 

b,  boil'd,  buried  alive,  worried  by  dogs ;  ,,  ii  i  210 

Hooper  b  Three-quarters  of  an  hour, 
hand  ! '    So  held  it  till  it  all  was  b. 
Burner    are  profitless  to  the  b's,  And  help  the  other  side. 

My  fancy  takes  the  b's  part, 
Bumin'    my  rheiraiatizy  be  that  bad  howiver  be  I  to 

win  to  the  b. 
wi'  dree  hard  eggs  for  a  good  pleace  at  the  b ; 
but  all  her  b's'  'ill  niver  bum  out  the  hypocrisy 
the  b  o'  the  owld  archbishop  '11  bum 
Burning  (part.)    (See  also  A-bumin')     Ridley  was  longer  b ; 

but  he  died  As  manfully 
Bnming  (s)    (See  also  Bumin')    bad  my  chaplain,  Castro, 

preach  Against  these  b's.  „        in  vi  75 

His  learning  makes  his  b  the  more  just.  ,,         iv  i  159 

these  6's  will  not  help  The  purpose  of  the  faith ;  „        iv  ii  183 

'twas  you  That  sign'd  the  o  of  poor  Joan  of  Kent ;  „        iv  ii  206 

these  6's,  As  Thirlby  says,  are  profitless  to  the  burners,       „        iv  ii  217 
You  have  not  gone  to  see  the  b?  „       iv  iii  290 

I  warrant  you  they  talk  about  the  b.  „       iv  iii  463 

you  bring  the  smoke  Of  Cranmer's  b  with  you.  .,       rv  iii  562 

this  cup  rescued  from  the  b  of  one  of  her  shrines  The  Cup  i  i  41 

Bumish'd     I'll  have  it  b  firelike ;  Queen  Mary  i  v  373 

I  flash  out  at  times  Of  festival  like  b  summer-flies,        Foresters  i  ii  276 
Burnt    (See  also  Bum'd)    I'll  have  you  flogg'd  and  b  too.     Queen  Mary  i  i  60 
she  said  that  no  one  in  her  time  should  be  b  for  heresy.  „  i  i  97 

I'll  have  their  bibles  b.    The  bible  is  the  priest's.  „      in  i  285 

many  of  them  Would  bum — have  b  each  other;  „    in  iv  217 

It  would  have  b  both  speakers.  „    in  vi  164 

Bum  first  when  I  am  b.  „      iv  ii  222 

my  hand  shall  first  be  b  ;  So  I  may  come  to  the  fire.  „     iv  iii  250 

When  we  had  come  where  Ridley  b  with  Latimer,  „     iv  iii  585 

Thou  hast  b  others,  do  thou  burn  thyself,  •  „       v  ii  176 

hands  that  write  them  should  be  b  clean  off  As  Cranmer's,      „       v  ii  191 
Gardiner,  out  of  love  for  him,  B  it,  .,       v  ii  503 

We  have  but  b  The  heretic  priest,  „       v  v  105 

Sir,  you  were  b  for  heresy,  not  for  treason,  „       v  v  139 

sacred  shrine  By  chance  was  b  along  with  it.  The  Cup  i  ii  66 

And  a  salt  wind  b  the  blossoming  t rees ;  From,  of  May  i  57 

Burrow     far-off  b  where  the  King  Would  miss  her  and 

for  ever.  Becket  iv  ii  158 

Burrowing     the  wild  boar.  The  b  badger —  Foresters  i  iii  121 

Burst  (adj.)     And  like  a  river  in  flood  thro'  a  b  dam  Harold  u  ii  466 

Burst  (s)     This  b  and  bass  of  loyal  hannony,  Queen  Mary  n  ii  285 


Queen  Mary  iv  ii  214 
IV  ii  220 

IV  iii  198 
IV  iii  293 
IV  iii  525 


IV  iii  527 

IV  iii  535 

V  i  103 

V  ii  114 

V  ii  176 

V  ii  245 
„    V  ii  552,  616 

V  iv  13 

V  iv  18 

V  V  114 
Harold  in  ii  186 

Becket  i  i  289 
Foresters  n  i  700 

Prom,  of  May  i  153 
I  309 
I  330 
I  366 
III  40 


IV  ii  226 
IV  iii  615 
IV  ii  219 
IV  ii  231 

IV  iii  474 
IV  iii  490 
IV  iii  524 
IV  iii  535 

IV  iii  342 


Burst  (verb)     (See  also  Bust)    in  that  last  inhospitable 

plunge  Our  boat  hath  b  her  ribs ;  Harold  ii  i  3 

Hot-headed  fools — to  b  the  wall  of  shields  !  „    v  i  612 

Fly,  fly,  my  lord,  before  they  b  the  doors !  Becket  v  iii  56 

Bursten     b  at  the  toes,  and  down  at  heels.  Queen  Mary  i  i  52 

Burthen  (load)     the  monk-king,  Louis,  our  former  b,  Becket  iv  ii  306 

One  slow,  fat,  white,  a  6  of  the  hearth ;  „       v  ii  211 

grave  he  goes  to,  Beneath  the  b  of  years.  Prom,  of  May  in  517 

Bow'd  to  the  dust  beneath  the  b  of  sin.  „            ill  521 

Burthen  (refrain)     That  is  the  b  of  it — lost  and  found  Harold  in  ii  9 

Bury     B  him  and  his  paramour  together.  „     v  ii  150 

b  me  in  the  mound,  says  the  woman.  Foresters  ii  i  312 

let  him  b  her  Even  in  the  bowels  of  the  earth  „          iii  461 

Bush     like  a  timorous  beast  of  prey  Out  of  the  b  by  night  ?      Harold  i  ii  214 

A  man  may  hang  gold  bracelets  on  a  b,  „        n  i  88 

To  catch  the  bird  again  within  the  b\  „       n  ii  67 

A  nest  in  a  b.     Becket.     And  where,  my  liege  ?  Becket,  Pro.  155 

stray'd  From  love's  clear  path  into  the  common  b,              „       in  i  248 

Miss  Eva,  she  set  the  b  by  my  dairy  winder  Prom,  of  May  n  18 

Softly  !  softly !  there  may  be  a  thief  in  every  b.  Foresters  n  i  368 

Crouch  all  into  the  b\  „          iv  596 

Business  (adj.)     whether  thou  be  Hedgar,  or  Hedgar's 

b  man.  Prom,  of  May  ii  735 

Business  (s)    pray'd  me  to  confess  In  Wyatt's  b.  Queen  Mary  in  v  167 

Your  Grace's  b  will  not  suffer,  sire,  „          in  vi  244 

Sire,  the  b  Of  thy  whole  kingdom  waits  me :  Becket,  Pro.  277 

Well,  b.     I  must  leave  you,  love,  to-day.  Prom,  of  May  i  624 

for  as  I  used  to  transact  all  his  b  for  him,  „            ii  719 
whether  thou  be  Hedgar,  or  Hedgar's  business  man, 

thou  hesn't  naw  b  'ere  wi'  my  Dora,  „            ii  735 
I  trust  I  may  be  able  by-and-by  to  help  you  in  the 

6  of  the  farm;  „          in  223 

That  b  which  we  have  in  Nottingham —  Foresters  in  229 

And  may  your  b  thrive  in  Nottingham  !  „         in  244 

Buss     B  me,"  niy  bird  !  The  Falcon  28 

Bussing    See  A-bussin' 

Bust     b  of  Juno  and  the  brows  and  eyes  Of  Venus ;  The  Cup  i  i  120 
Bust  (burst)     he  be  fit  to  b  hissen  wi'  spites  and 

jalousies.  Prom,  of  May  ii  164 

Let  'im  b  hissen,  then,  for  owt  I  cares.  „             n  166 

Bustle    gather  your  men — ^Myself  must  b.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  374 

Butcher     they  call  me  now.  The  scourge  and  b  „            v  ii  106 

What,  Mr.  Dobson  ?     A  b's  frock  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  94 

Butt     This  Barbarossa  b's  him  from  his  chair,  Becket,  Pro.  217 

Butter     Our  Daisy's  b's  as  good  'z  hern.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  481 

the  making  of  your  b,  and  the  managing  of  j-our 

poultry  ?  Prom,  of  May  n  93 

Butterfly    like  a  J  in  a  chrysalis.  You  spent  your  life ;     Q^een  Mary  i  iv  51 

but  now  I  called  you  b.  „          i  iv  66 

I  love  not  to  be  called  a  b  :  Why  do  you  call  me  J  ?           „           i  iv  68 

Wi'  the  butterflies  out,  and  the  swallers  at  plaay.  Prom,  of  May  n  198 

waded  in  the  brook,  ran  after  the  butterflies,  „             ni  275 

Buy     Gardiner  b's  them  With  Philip's  gold.  Queen  Mary  mi  144 

B  you  their  cheeses,  and  they'll  side  with  you ;  „         iv  iii  548 

if  we  will  b  diamond  necklaces  To  please  our  lady,  The  Falcon  44 

And  sold  thine  own  To  b  it  for  her.  >,             77 

but  I  couldn't  b  my  darter  back  agean  when  she 

lost  hersen,  Prom,  of  May  in  453 

How  hadst  thou  then  the  means  to  i  a  cow  ?  Foresters  ii  i  304 

Would  b  me  for  a  thousand  marks  in  gold —  „          iv  652 

Who  thought  to  b  your  marrying  me  with  gold.  „          iv'  718 

Buzz  (s)     Little  doubt  This  b  will  soon  be  silenced ;  Queen  Mary  v  i  293 

We  make  but  one  hour's  b.  Foresters  i  ii  277 
Buzz  (verb)     Bee  mustn't  b,  Whoop — but  he  knows. 

(repeat)  Becket  in  i  98,  240 

Thy  bee  should  b  about  the  Court  of  John.  Foresters  iv  44 

Buzzard  (adj.)     His  b  beak  and  deep-incavem'd  eyes  Queen  Mary  i  iv  266 

Buzzard  (s)     Hawk,  b,  jay,  the  mavis  and  the  merle.  Foresters  i  iii  115 

Buzzed     Were  freely  b  among  them.  Queen.  Mary  n  ii  98 

The  bee  b  up  in  the  heat.  Foresters  iv  14 

And  the  bee  b  down  from  the  heat.  n        rv  20 

And  the  bee  b  up  in  the  cold  „        iv  21 

And  the  bee  b  off  in  the  cold.  ,.         iv  27 

Buzzing     were  more  than  I  b  round  the  blossom —  Becket,  Pro.  521 

For  ever  b  at  your  lady's  face.  Foresters  iv  11 


By-and-by 


858 


Call 


By-and-by    I  trust  I  shall  forgive  him— 6-a-6— not  now.  Prom,  of  May  ii  466 
She  said  herself  She  would  forgive  him,  b-a-b.  not 
now— For  her  own  sake  then,  if  not  for  mine — 
not  now— But  6-a-6.  .        ..       ^  "  "  ^°i 

B-a-b— eh,  lad,  dosta  knaw  this  paaper  ?  ..  n  b»t. 

Eh,  lad,  dosta  knaw  what  tha  means  wi  b-a-b  f  „  n  ©yi 

then,  b-a-b,  if  she  weant  listen  to  me  when  I  he 

a-tryin'  to  saave  'er —  '■  "  "''^ 

I  trust  I  may  be  able  b-a-b  to  help  you  in  the 

business  of  the  farm;  '         /"  •  on 

Let  me  rest.     I'll  call  you  &  a  6.  ^fF^'KY.\^^. 

Byblow    TheFalaiseft!  ,  ^f  I'' '"^  •  •'•  i  iS 

B\^one  (adj.)    and  smile  At  b  things  till  that  eternal  peace.    2  he  Cup  i  in  172 

sSe  s)    Let  6'5  be  6's.    Go  home!    Good-night!     Prom.  o/Ma^/ in  156 

By-thing    These  are  b-t's  In  the  great  cause.  hecket  iii  lu  11 

The  i-t's  of  the  Lord  Are  the  wrong'd  innocences  ,,      "M^?  i^ 

Byway    The  leprous  flutterings  of  the  b.  Queen  Mar,/  iv  ui  7b 

From  all  the  hidden  6-w's  of  the  world  Beck^tniinl^ 

Byword     I  am  a  6.     Heretic  and  rebel  Point  at  me        Queen  Mar;/  v  u  dlb 


Cabin    Show  me  some  cave  or  c  where  I  may  rest.  Foresters  n  1 130 

Cackling    What  are  you  c  of  bastardy  under  Queen  Mary  1 1  5b 

Cadaver    Perinde  ac  c— as  the  priest  says,  ..       i  »v  !»" 

Cade    And  he  will  prove  an  Iden  to  this  C,  "       niidoy 

Csesar     (-See  oZso  Scizzars)     kindly  rendering  Of '  Bender  . 

untoC...                             ^  Harold  nixrl^ 

the  first  Christian  C  drew  to  the  East  ,,          Ji^^ 
make  the  soil  For  Cs,  Cromwells,  and  Napoleons   Prom,  of  May  iii  593 

Cage  (s)    pounce  like  a  wild  beast  out  of  his  c  Queen  Mary  1 1  8» 

It  is  the  heat  and  narrowness  of  the  c  "     ™  ^  "^l, 

I  whistle  to  the  bird  has  broken  c,  And  all  m  vain.  ,,         v  v^ 

To  guard  this  bird  of  passage  to  her  c ;  becket  1 1  rfZ9 

I  have  lived,  poor  bird,  from  c  to  c,  .^    ™\-.i 

fondest  pair  of  doves  will  jar,  Ev'n  m  a  c  of  gold,  „      rv  ii  4Z 

barred  thee  up  in  thy  chamber,  like  a  bird  m  a  c.  Foresters  i  i  315 
Cage  (verb)     Catch  the  wild  cat,  c  him,  and  when  he 

springs  ^«**'*  ^^"'''y  ^Y.^ 

Cain     And  mark'd  me  ev'n  as  C,         ,     ,     ,  ^'  ,  .VfiW^a 

light  darkness,  Abel  C,  The  soul  the  body,  Becket  imUQ 

Thou  the  lustiest  and  lousiest  of  this  C's  brotherhood,  . 

„         I  IV  ISO 

answer. 

With  C's  answer,  my  lord.    Am  I  his  keeper  ?  Thou 

shouldst  call  him  C,  not  me.  "      i  ^^  leo 

With  C  belike,  in  the  land  of  Nod,  -      ^3^- r= 

Caitiff     From  councillor  to  c-fallen  so  low.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  i5 

Av,goinpeace,c,c!                      .        ^      ^  ^^^'^^^  ^ "   '  f^ 

Cake  'He  speaks  As  if  it  were  a  c  of  gii^erbread.  „       n  x  J3U 

Caked     And  c  and  plaster 'd  with  a  hundred  mires  i?aroM  iv  m  177 

Calais     mthdraw  I^rt  of  our  garrison  at  C.  Mary.  C\    Queen  Mary  i  v  123 

take  mine  eyes,  mine  heart.  But  do  not  lose  me  C.  ,.          i  v  lan 

C  is  but  ill-garrison'd,  in  Guisnes  •■            _^.  i  * 

Or  you  will  lose  your  C.  '            V  1 7 

And  you  must  look  to  C  when  I  go.  ••           ^v_i  xt 

sharpe^r  harm  to  England  and  to  Rome,  Than  C  taken.      ..  v  ii  30 

Madam,  C  is  taken.                   „.   ,      , ,        ^,  '         ZWita 

that  our  brave  English  Had  sallied  out  from  C  ■•         v  u  25b 

Let  every  craft  that  carries  sail  and  gun  Steer  toward  C.     ••         v  11  27b 

Ah  !  much  heresy  Shelter'd  in  C.  ■•         ^  1|  ^^ 

angry  chronicles  hereafter  By  loss  of  C.    Grant  me  C.  .,         ^  "  ^"^ 

C  lone— Guisnes  gone,  too— and  Philip  gone !  ,-           v  v  2J 

you  wUl  find  written  Two  names,  Phihp  and  C  ;  .      ,AT;^r 

Calcmed    fain  had  c  all  Northumbria  To  one  black  ash,  J^";;"'''  "^  >  ^^ 

te&ted    -all  seen,-all  c,  All  known  by  Rome.  T^e  C«p     1  255 

lender     In  Britain's  c  the  brightest  day  Queen  Mary  in  11 118 

Calf  (Of  the  leg)     Prick  'em  in  the  caZ,;es  with  the  arrow- 

points— prick  'em  m  the  calves.  Jf  01  esters  iv  ow 

Prick  him  in  the  coZue« !                           ,      ,         ^_  "        ^ '^^^ 

Calf  (yoong  of  the  cow,  etc)     By  God's  death,  thou  shalt  ,  ,    ... ,«. 

stick  him  like  a  c !  Becket  i  m  184 

but  Salisbury  was  a  c  cowed  by  Mother  Church,  „     in  ui  95 


Calf  (young  of  the  cow,  etc.)  (continued)     the  fatting  of 

youTr  caZ^es,  the  making  of  your  butter,  P*-"'^  »/ ^f  «2/ n  93 

Calixtus  (the  first.  Pope)     The  day  of  St.  C,  and  the  day,       Harold  v  11 121 


Call  (s)    There's  no  c  As  yet  for  me ; 
and  no  c  for  sonnet-sorting  now, 
God  grant  you  ampler  mercy  at  your  c 
Heaven  curse  him  if  he  come  not  at  your  c  ! 
He  did  it  so  well  there  was  no  c  for  me. 
Call  (verb)    let  me  c  her  our  second  Virgin  .Mary, 
C  him  a  Knight,  That,  with  an  ass's. 
Why  do  you  c  me  butterfly  ? 
They  c  him  cold,  Haughty,  ay,  worse. 
I  do  not  love  your  Grace  should  c  me  coward. 
Why  do  they  c  him  so  ? 
I  cannot  tell  you  why  tbey  c  him  so. 
You  c  me  too  black-blooded — 
William  the  Silent  They  c  hhn— 
Or  a  high-dropsy,  as  the  doctors  c  it. 
We  come  not  to  compel,  but  c  again ; 
c  they  not  The  one  true  faith,  a  loathsome  idol-worship .-' 
And  let  him  c  me  truckler. 
Nor  shame  to  c  it  nature. 
New  learning  as  they  c  it ; 
Ay— gentle  as  they  c  you— Uve  or  die  ! 
Did  I  c  him  heretic  ?     A  huge  heresiarch  ! 
if  thou  c  on  God  and  all  the  saints, 
so  past  martyr-Uke— Martyr  I  may  not  c  him— 
Ay,  ay ;  but  many  voices  c  me  hence. 
What  voices  c  you  Dearer  than  mine 
He  c's  us  worse  than  Jews,  Moors,  Saracens, 
they  c  me  now.  The  scourge  and  butcher  of  their 

English  church. 
They  c  him  away :    Ye  do  him  wrong, 
C  it  to  temporize ;  and  not  to  lie ; 
They  c  me  near,  for  I  am  close  to  thee 
C  me  not  King,  but  Harold. 
He  c's  us  little !  ^       ,    , 

Somewhere  hard  at  hand.     C  and  she  comes. 
What  did  the  dead  man  c  it — Sanguelac, 
C  when  the  Norman  moves — 
C  not  for  help  from  me.     I  knew  him  not. 
what  shall  I  c  it,  affect  her  thine  own  self. 
As  Canterbury  c's  them,  wandering  clouds, 
Or  constitutions,  or  whate'er  ye  c  them, 
C  in  the  poor  from  the  streets,  and  let  them  feast. 
C  in  the  poor  ! 
C  them  in,  I  say. 

Buck ;  deer,  as  you  c  it. 

Thou  shouldst  c  him  Cain,  not  me. 

I'll  c  thee  little  Geoffrey.    Henry.    C  him  ! 

See  if  our  pious— what  shall  I  c  him,  Jolin  .''— 

Ay,  ay,  good  brother.  They  c  you  the  Monk-King. 

Who  c's  me?  she  That  was  my  wife, 

if  the  city  be  sick,  and  I  cannot  c  the  kennel  sweet. 

They  c  thee  John  the  Swearer.  ^ 

whom  you  c— fancy— my  husband's  brother  s  wife. 

They  c  her — But  she  lives  secret,  you  see. 

What  does  she  c  him  ?    Geoffrey.    My  hege. 

whom  it  pleases  him  To  c  his  wives ; 

She  c's  you  beauty,  but  I  don't  like  her  looks. 

Like  the  wild  beast— if  you  can  c  it  love. 

Let  me  rest.     I'll  c  you  by  and  by. 

Then  you  have  done  it,  and  I  c  you  cruel. 

I  know  not  why  You  c  these  old  thmgs  back 

c's  you  oversea  To  answer  for  it  in  his  Nonnan  courts. 

Who  is  our  guest  ?     Sinnatus.     Strato  he  c's  himself. 

they  c  it  so  in  Rome.     Sinnatus.     Province  ! 

C  first  upon  the  Goddess,  Synorix.  . 

I  c  thee  To  make  my  marriage  prosper  to  my  wish  . 

I  c  on  our  own  Goddess  in  our  own  Temple. 

Speak  freely,  tho'  to  c  a  madman  mad 

if  your  lordship  care  to  c  for  it.  .  .  ,  • 

C  him  back  and  say  I  come  to  breakfast  with  him. 

my  nobleness  Of  nature,  as  you  deign  to  c  it. 


Queen  Mary  n  i  24l 

ni59j 

„       IV  i 1891 

Prom,  of  May  I  105' 

Foresters  11  i  548 

Queen  Mary  I  iii  57 

I  iii  167 


I  IV 

I  V  431 

„         n  iv 

in  i  199 

m  i  205 

in  i  347 

niiil93 

ni  ii  225,, 

„      in  iii  187i 

in  iv  218 

III  iv  i 

m  V  71 

IV  i  78] 
IV  ii  161' 

„  IV  iii  45 
,,  IV  iii  96 
„       IV  iii  625 

V  i  32 

V  i  36 

V  i  150 

V  ii  104 
Harold  I  ii  14 
„  II  ii  415 
„  in  i  6 
„  inii33 
IV  i  41 
„  IV  i 186 
„  V  i  184 
„    vi229 

V  ii  54 
Becket,  Pro.  513 

I  iii  70 

I  iii  138 

I  iv  72 

„  I  iv  78 

I  iv  85 

I  iv  139 

I  iv  188 
n  i  214 
u  ii  38 
n  ii  73 

„  n  ii  74 

II  ii  348 
n  ii  462 
m  i  202 

IV  i  11 

IV  i  18 

IV  ii  37 

„  IV  ii  61 

IV  ii  121 

V  i  90 

V  ii  135 

V  ii  270 

V  ii  354 
The  Cup  I  ii  48 

I  ii  93 

n  256 

n  307 

n  314 

The  Falcon  81 

139 

211 

811 


my  noDieness  ui  imtuic,  <»  j-u"  ^»v-.g..  --  -  -,  „„ 

he  cooms  up,  and  he  c's  out  among  our  oan  men,     Prom,  of  May  1 139 


CaU 


859 


Gamma 


Call  (verb)  (conimued)    Would  c  this  vice ;  but  one 

times  vice  Prom,  of  May  i  534 

grant  you  what  they  c  a  license  To  marrj-.  ..             i  695 

but  c  for  Philip  when  you  will,  And  he  returns.  ,.             i  757 

I  ba'  browt  these  roses  to  ye — I  forgits  what  they  e's  'em,     „  n  15 

Might  I  c  Upon  your  father —  „          n  512 

C  if  you  will,  and  when  you  will.  ,,           ii  517 

— the  crowd  would  c  it  conscience —  ,.           n  638 

'  I  c  you,  Philip  Edgar,  Philip  Edgar  !  ,.           ii  657 

an'  whether  thou  c's  thysen  Hedgar  or  Harold,  .,           n  737 

as  they  c  it  so  truly,  to  the  grave  at  the  bottom,  ..          in  193 

Master  Hedgar,  Harold,  or  whativer  They  c's  ye,  ,,          in  728 

The  fool-people  c  her  a  witch —                          ~  Foresters  n  i  178 

I  have  forgotten  my  horn  that  c's  my  men  together.  ..         n  i  185 

And  you  dare  to  c  me  Tit.  ..        ii  ii  127 

Wouldst  thou  c  my  Oberon  Ob  ?  „        n  ii  131 

but  c  Kate  when  you  will,  for  I  am  close  at  hand.  ,.            ni  49 

Sit  there,  knaves,  till  the  captain  c  for  you.  „          m  220 

Do  you  c  that  in  my  honoui-  ?  ,.          ra  432 

did  ye  not  c  me  king  in  your  song  ?  ,.          iv  220 

I  could  but  sneak  and  smile  and  c  it  courtesy,  ,.           rv  366 

they  that  suffer  by  him  c  the  blossom  Of  bandits.  ,.          iv  371 

shall  I  c  it  by  that  new  tema  Brought  ..          iv  703 

men  will  c  him  An  Eastern  tyrant,  ..           iv  902 

Call'd    took  her  hand,  c  her  sweet  sister,  Qreen  Mary  i  i  80 

but  now  I  c  you  butterfly.  „         i  iv  66 

I  love  not  to  be  c  a  butterfly :  „         i  iv  68 

c  my  friends  together.  Struck  home  and  won.  ,.        i  v  552 

and  ye  have  c  me  to  be  your  leader.  „        ii  i  165 

Lo  !  thou  hast  c  them  up  !  here  they  come —  „       m  i  233 

The  islands  c  into  the  dawning  church  ,.     in  iii  172 

You  know  I  never  come  till  I  be  c.  „      in  v  215 

He  c  my  word  my  bond  !  Harold  n  ii  665 

when  that  which  reign'd  C  itself  God —  „     iii  ii  167 

Cram  thy  crop  full,  but  come  when  thou  art  c.  „     iv  iii  235 

well  train 'd,  and  easily  c  Off  from  the  game.  Becket,  Pro.  120 

I  sign'd  them — being  a  fool,  as  Foliot  c  me.  ,.        i  iii  562 
father's  eye  was  so  tender  it  would  have  c  a  goose  off 

the  green,  „     in  iii  102 

And  thereupon  he  c  my  children  bastards.  „         iv  ii  44 

I  am  most  sure  that  some  one  c.  The  Cup  n  509 

then  I  was  c  away ;  And  presently  aU  rose.  The  Falcon  365 
then  he  c  me  a  rude  naame,  and  I  can't  abide  'im.   Prom,  of  May  ii  158 

Her  phantom  c  me  by  the  name  she  loved.  „           n  242 

who  c  the  mind  Of  children  a  blank  page,  „           n  281 

not  forgotten  his  promise  to  come  when  I  c  him.  „          m  330 

I  that  have  been  c  a  SociaUst,  A  Communist,  a  Nihilist^ —      „  iii  584 

a  fine  !  he  hath  c  plain  Kobin  a  lord.  Foresters  in  215 

Sit  there  till  you  be  c  for.  „        in  296 

fine  him  !  he  hath  c  plain  Kobin  an  earl.  „          iv  151 

a  fine  !     He  hath  c  plain  Robin  a  king.  ,,          iv  218 

Tfftll'nc  (part)     (See  also  A-callin')     ten  thousand  men 

on  Penenden  Heath  all  c  after  Queen  Mary  n  i  61 

Calling  (s)     The  dog  followed  his  c,  my  lord.  Becket  i  iv  97 

Callous     c  with  a  constant  stripe,  Unwoundable.  Queen  Mary  v  v  171 

Calm     and  less  than  I  would  in  a  c.  Harold  ii  i  68 

lest  ye  should  draw  together  like  two  ships  in  a  c.  Becket  ni  iii  298 

Calumny     Twice  did  thy  malice  and  thy  calumnies  Exile  me      ,,  i  iii  42 

Calved    See  Cawved 

Cambridge    Thou  art  but  yesterday  from  C,  Grim ;  „           v  ii  55 

Came    [See  also  Ooomed,  Cum)    my  good  mother  c  (God 

rest  her  soul)  Of  Spain,  Queen  Mary  i  v  11 

Your  royal  mother  c  of  Spain,  ,.             i  v  16 

and  his  right  c  down  to  me,  -,         n  ii  171 

when  the  traitor  wife  c  out  for  bread  „           in  i  11 

I  c  to  feel  the  pulse  of  England,    «  ..           in  i  37 

as  the  new-made  couple  C  from  the  Minster,  .,           iii  i  95 

She  c  upon  the  scaffold,  „         in  i  375 

C  with  a  sudden  splendour,  shout,  and  show,  „         in  i  449 

And  how  c  you  round  again  ?  .,          in  ii  36 

And  you  c  and  kiss'd  me  milking  the  cow.  (repeat)  ,.    in  v  91,  98 

Robin  c  behind  me,  „          in  v  92 
I  f  to  thank  her  Majesty  For  freeing  my  friend 

Bagenhall  ,.          in  vi  5 

She  c  upon  it,  read  it,  and  then  rent  it,  „       in  vi  142 


Came  (continued)     c  to  the  fire  on  earth.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  60 

So  worshipt  of  all  those  that  c  across  him ;  „         iv  i  162 

hands  C  from  the  crowd  and  met  his  own ;  „       iv  iii  583 

when  I  c  to  wed  your  majesty,  Lord  Howard,  ,.             v  i  56 

I  c  to  sue  Your  Council  and  yourself  (repeat)  „  v  i  107,  114 

what  you  said  When  last  you  c  to  Englaml  ?  „         v  ii  568 

the  child  c  not,  and  the  husband  c  not ;  „          v  ii  581 

and  in  her  agony  The  mother  c  upon  Iier —  „  v  iv  20 
never  merry  world  In  England,  since  the  Bible  c 

among  us.  ,.         v  v  241 

These  meteors  c  and  went  before  our  day,  Harold  i  i  131 

An  evil  dream  that  ever  c  and  went—  ,,        i  ii  70 

blast  that  c  So  suddenly  hath  fallen  as  suddenly —  „         n  i  13 

We  be  fishermen ;  I  c  to  see  after  my  nets.        '  „         ii  i  27 

He  c  not  to  see  me,  had  past  me  by           .  „       n  ii  27 

whereby  we  c  to  know  Thy  valour  and  tliy  value,  „     n  ii  201 

Your  comet  e  and  went.  „     in  i  359 

The  Lord  was  God  and  c  as  man —  „    in  ii  172 

Since  Tostig  c  with  Norway—  „  iv  i  173 
Last  night  King  Edward  c  to  me  in  dream.s — 

(repeat)  Harold  iv  i  259,  265 

and  woke  and  c  Among  us  again,  Harold  iv  iii  151 

Our  guardsmen  have  slept  well,  since  v.e  c  in ?  „          v  i  208 

who  c  before  To  tell  thee  thou  shouldst  win  „          v  i  235 

There  is  one  Come  as  Goliath  c  of  yore —  „          v  i  493 

then  the  King  c  honeying  about  her,  Becket,  Pro.  516 

What  c  of  that  ?     The  first  archbishop  fled,  „         i  iii  52 

When  Heniy  c  into  his  own  again,  „       i  iii  153 

I  c,  your  King !     Nor  dwelt  alone,  „       i  iii  356 

I  c  on  certain  wholesome  usages,  „       i  iii  412 

Which  c  into  thy  hands  when  Chancellor.  „       i  iii  653 

But  the  miller  c  home  that  night,  „       i  iv  173 

Besides,  we  c  away  in  such  a  heat,  „        ii  i  293 

I  c  to  England  suddenly,  „         in  i  86 

we  c  on  to  the  banquet,  from  whence  there  puffed  „     in  iii  113 

Ha,  you !     How  c  you  hither  ?  „        rv  ii  12 

No,  for  it  c  to  nothing — only  a  feint.  „      iv  ii  398 

The  fellow  that  on  a  lame  jade  c  to  court,  „        v  i  246 

we  c  upon  A  wild-fowl  sitting  on  her  nest,  „        v  ii  232 

at  Pontigny  c  to  me  The  ghostly  warning  „        v  ii  290 

C  to  the  front  of  the  wood —  The  Cup  i  ii  119 

I  dare  not  tell  him  how  I  c  to  know  it ;  „         i  ii  275 

Why  c  ye  not  before  ?  „       i  iii  176 

c  To  plead  to  thee  for  Sinnatus's  life,  „           ii  391 

c  back  last  night  with  her  son  to  the  castle.  The  Falcon  3 

when  he  c  last  year  To  see  me  hawking,  „    312 

I  c  In  person  to  return  them.  „     726 

c  and  dipt  your  sovereign  head  Thro'  these  low  doors,  „  866 
""             '  '     '        '   '         ■     '          "                                  Prom,  of  May  1 39 

I  73 
n  622 

in  232 
in  368 
in  515 
in  750 

m  772 

Foresters  i  i  132 

,.      n  i  124 

„      11  i  254 

„      II  i  485 

„     II  ii  108 

ni  240 

in  436 

IV  537 


The  maid  to  her  dairy  c  in  from  the  cow, 

I  c  back  to  keep  his  birthday. 

stateliness  and  sweetness  !     How  c  she  by  it  ? — 

who  c  to  us  three  years  after  you  were  gone,  how 

should  she  know  you  ? 
dead  midnight  when  I  c  upon  the  bridge ; 
bow'd  To  the  earth  he  c  from. 
Only  fifteen  when  first  you  c  on  her, 
to  her  you  c  Veiling  one  sin  to  act  another. 
I  c  to  give  thee  the  first  kiss,  and  thou  hast  given 

it  me. 
I  c  To  eat  him  up  and  make  an  end  of  him. 
How  c  we  to  be  parted  from  our  men  ? 
I  believe  She  c  with  me  into  the  forest  here. 
There  c  some  evil  fairy  at  my  birth  And  cursed  me, 
no  man,  so  His  own  true  wife  c  with  him, 
first  part — made  before  you  c  among  us — 
delicate-footed  creature  C  stepping  o'er  him. 


Cameleon     such  a  c  he !  "  Queen  Mary  in  iii  15 

Camest     When  c  thou  thither  ?    Gamel.    To-day,  good  Earl.  Harold  i  i  105 
How  c  thou  hither  ?     Geoffrey.     On  my  legs. 
Pretty  one,  how  c  thou  ? 
Show  me  where  thou  c  out  of  the  wood. 
Camma  (wife  of  Sinnatus,  afterwards  Priestess  in  the  Temple 
of  Artemis)     'To  the  admired  C,  wife  of  Sinnatus, 
the  Tetrarch, 
Take  thou  this  letter  and  this  cup  to  C, 


Becket  iv  i  4 
IV  120 
IV  i  45 


The  Cup  1  i  36 
I  i  62 


C^mma 


860 


Careless 


Camma  (continued)    '  To  the  admired  C, — belieli  you  arar 

off—  The  Clip  1  ii  71 

C,  A\'ise  I  am  sure  as  she  is  beautiful,  „      i  ii  138 

C,  Rome  has  a  glimpse  of  this  conspiracy;  „       i  ii  232 

C  the  stately,  C  the  great-hearted,  ,,       i  iii  72 

And  C  for  my  bride — Thy  people  love  ber —  „     i  iii  151 

C — well,  well,  I  never  found  the  woman  „     i  iii  165 

Since  C  fled  from  Synorix  to  our  Temple,  .,           ii  14 

Great  Artemis !     O  C,  can  it  be  well,  „          n  80 

shout  of  Synorix  and  C  sitting  Upon  one  throne,  „         ii  146 

I  thank  thee,  C, — I  thank  thee,  (repeat)  „  ii  331, 355 

There,  C !     I  have  almost  drain'd  the  cup —  „         ii  384 

Antonius — '  C  ! '  who  spake  ?  „         n  401 

Synorix,  first  King,  C,  first  Queen  o'  the  Realm,  „         ii  440 

Thou — coming  my  way  too — C — good-night.  „         ii  492 

and  though  a  Roman  I  Forgive  thee,  C.  „         ii  506 
'  C !  '—why  there  again  I  am  most  sure  that  some  one 

call'd.  „         II 507 

^C,  C  \'  Sinnatus,  Sinnatus  !  „         ii  536 

€amp     In  the  full  face  of  all  the  Roman  c?  „      i  ii  269 

I  hardly  gain'd  The  c  at  midnight.  „       i  iii  19 

I  must  lure  my  game  into  the  c.  „       i  iii  64 

The  c  is  half  a  league  without  the  city;  .,       i  iii  89 

or  at  least  shall  find  him  There  in  the  c.  .,       i  iii  95 

Cancel     to  c  and  abolish  all  bonds  of  human  allegiance,  Queen  Mary  v  iv  49 

spites  at  Rome,  Is  like  enough  to  c  them.  The  Cup  i  i  92 

Cancell'd  (adj.)     all  Our  c  Marrior-gods,  our  grim  Walhalla,  Harold  m  ii  73 

Cancell'd  (verb)     Not  know  that  Edward  c  his  own  promise  ?    „  v  i  51 

€andle    (See  also  Corpse-candles)     a  c  in  the  smi  Is  all 

but  smoke —  Queen  Alary  v  i  77 

Canker'd     for  there  are  men  Of  c  judgment  everywhere —  Becket  v  ii  61 

Cannon     clash'd  their  bells.  Shot  off  their  lying  c,         Queen  Mary  iii  vi  97 

Canon  (adj.)     There  wore  his  time  studying  the  c  law  Becket  ii  i  85 

Canon  (s)    seem  According  to  the  c's  pardon  due  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  33 

No,  daughter,  but  the  c's  out  of  Waltham,  Harold  v  i  474 

since  your  c  will  not  let  you  take  Life  for  a  life,  Becket  i  iii  389 

Canonical    Stigand  is  not  c  enough  Harold  iii  i  215 

J     was  thine  own  election  so  c.  Good  father?  Becket  i  iii  121 

by  that  c  obedience  Thou  still  hast  owed  thy  father,  „       i  iii  274 

Canomsed     bones  of  all  the  C  From  all  the  holiest  shrines  Harold  ii  ii  734 

Canonists    The  G  and  Schoolmen  were  with  me.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  61 

Canopy    moving  side  by  side  Beneath  one  c,  „          in  i  97 

Cant^bury  (adj.)    Methought  I  stood  in  C  Minster,  Becket  i  i  73 

Because  I  had  my  G  pallium.  From  one  whom  they 

dispoped  ?  Harold  iii  i  106 

Canterbury  (s)     slander'd  you  For  setting  up  a  mass  at 

C  To  please  the  Queen.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  88 

and  the  legateship  Annex'd  to  C —  „          v  ii  37 
Who  shall  crown  him  ?     C  is  dying.     Becket.     The 

next  C.  Becket,  Pro.  240 

This  C  is  only  less  than  Rome,  „         i  i  147 

I  cast  upon  the  side  of  C — Our  holy  mother  C,  .,         i  i  155 

Now  I  am  C  and  thou  art  York.  „         i  iii  44 

And  is  not  York  the  peer  of  C  ?  „         i  iii  47 

When  C  hardly  bore  a  name.  „         i  iii  60 

Who  made  thee,  London  ?     Who,  but  C?  „         i  iii  67 

As  C  calls  them,  wandering  clouds,  ,,         i  iii  70 

among  you  those  that  hold  Lands  reft  from  C.  «       i  iii  141 

Shall  I  do  less  for  C  Than  Henry  for  the  crown?  ,,       i  iii  147 

Shall  I  do  less  for  mine  own  C?  ■,       i  iii  159 
Because  my  lord  of  C !    Be  Tracy.     Ay,  This  lord 

of  C—  „       1  iii  424 

Claim'd  some  of  our  crown  lands  for  C—  „       i  iii  459 
If  C  bring  his  cross  to  court.  Let  York  bear  his  to 

mate  with  C.  „       i  iii  511 
I  would,  my  lord  Thomas  of  C,  Thou  wert  plain 
Thomas  and  not  C,   Or  that  thou  wouldst 

deliver  C  „       i  iii  577 

This  C,  like  a  wounded  deer,  Has  fled  our  presence  „         ii  ii  21 

Reseat  him  on  his  throne  of  C,  „       ii  ii  118 

Our  castle,  my  lord,  belongs  to  C.  „       ii  ii  262 

that  hath  squeezed  out  this  side-smile  upon  C,  ..      iii  iii  57 

And  send  thee  back  again  to  C  ?  in  iii  184 
crowning  thy  young  son  by  York,  London  and 

Salisbury — not  C.  „    in  iii  196 


Canterbury  (s)  (continued)    York  crown'd  the  Conqueror^ 

not  C.    Becket.    There  was  no  C  in  William's  time.   Becket  in  iii  198 

My  friend  of  C  and  myself  Are  now  once  more  „     in  iii  228 

York  against  C,  York  against  God  !  „         y  ii  66 

Divide  me  from  the  mother  church  of  England,  My  C.        „       v  ii  362 

And  trampled  on  the  rights  of  C.  „       y  ii  394 

The  holy  follower  founded  C —  „          v  iii  5 

Save  that  dear  head  which  now  is  C,  „          v  iii  6 

And  all  the  tutelar  Saints  of  C.  .,      v  iii  167 

Cantrip    Save  from  some  hateful  c  of  thine  own.  .,        y  i  140 

Canvas     Madam,  you  have  but  cut  the  c  out ;  Queen  Mary  v  v  183 

Canvass    Would  freely  c  certain  Lutheranisms.  ,,               y  ii  76 

Cap  (s)    Her  c  would  brush  his  heels.  .,              m  i  14 

Knave,  wilt  thou  wear  thy  c  before  the  Queen  ?  ,,             in  i  237 

Knock  off  his  c  there,  some  of  you  about  him  !  ..             in  i  241 

Cap  (verb)     You  would  not  c  the  Pope's  commissioner —      ,,  iv  ii  123 

Capering    And  c  hand  in  hand  with  Oberon.  Foresters  n  i  498 

What  are  you  c  for  ?  „         ly  514 

Caprice     I  am  a  man  not  prone  to  jealousies,  C's,  Prom,  of  May  iii  627 

Captain    Then  followed  the  thunder  of  the  c's  and  the 

shouting,  Becket  m  iii  112 

Ah  dear  Robin  !  ah  noble  c,  friend  of  the  poor  !  Foresters  11  i  182 

It  is  the  very  c  of  the  thieves  !  .,        11  i  412 

C,  we  saw  thee  cowering  to  a  knight  ,,        n  i  682 

Sit  there,  knaves,  till  the  c  call  for  you.  .,         m  220 

C,  nay,  it  wasn't  me.  .,         m  364 

This  friar  is  of  much  boldness,  noble  c.  ,,          iv  235 

Captive     That  makes  the  c  testy ;  Queen  Mary  m  v  208 

First,  free  thy  c  from  her  hopeless  prison.  Becket  v  i  183 

Captivity     Translating  his  c  from  Guy  Harold  n  ii  42 

Caraffa     But  this  new  Pope  C,  Paul  the  Fourth,  Queen  Mary  v  ii  32 

Carcase     When  Henry  broke  the  c  of  your  church  „          i  v  397 

and  make  thine  old  c  a  target  for  us  three.  Foresters  n  i  404 

Card     Hath  no  more  mortice  than  a  tower  of  c's ;  Queen  Mary  in  i  443 

Cardinal    again  to  her  cousin  Reginald  Pole,  now  C;  .,             i  i  123 

Yet  my  Lord  C —    Pole.     I  am  your  Legate ;  „         iii  iv  178 

— this  C's  fault — I  have  gulpt  it  down.  ,.         m  iv  376 

Good  morrow,  my  Lord  C;  „              iv  i  42 

'  We  pray  continually  for  the  death  Of  our  accursed 

Queen  and  C  Pole.'  „           y  ii  181 

So  is  C  Pole.  „              y  iy  5 

thy  King  swore  to  our  c's  He  meant  no  harm  Becket  i  iii  215 

The  c's  have  finger'd  Henry's  gold.  „       i  iii  295 

— bribe  all  the  C's —  „      n  ii  473 

Cardinalate     Pope  could  dispense  with  his  C,  Queen  Mary  i  i  127 

Cardinal-Deacon    You,  Lord  Legate  And  C-B,  „        m  iy  261 

Care  (s)    (See  also  Take  care)    'Tis  the  good  Count's  c 

for  thee  !  Harold  n  ii  251 
C  dwell  with  me  for  ever,  when  I  cease  To  care  for  thee   Becket  n  i  120 
Care  (verb)     You  do  right  well.     I  do  not  c  to  know ;    Queen  Mary  i  iv  189 

But  will  he  c  for  that?  „        "      i  v  69 

Spit  them  like  larks  for  aught  I  c.  „             i  v  395 

And  c  but  little  for  the  life  to  be.  „           in  iv  60 

And  if  he  did  I  c  not,  my  Lord  Howard.  „           iv  i  129 

will  hardly  c  to  overlook  This  same  petition  .,           iv  i  192 

They  c  for  nothing  else.  „         iv  iii  171 

I  do  much  fear  that  England  will  not  c.  „            y  ii  283 

And  cried  I  was  not  clean,  what  should  I  c?  .,           y  ii  325 

C  not  for  me  who  love  thee.  Harold  in  ii  113 

And  what  c  I  for  that  ?  Becket  i  i  200 

1  c  not  for  thy  new  archbishoprick.  ..      i  i  217 

And  1  say,  I  c  not  for  thy  saying,  (repeat)  ..      11  i  112 

who  c's  not  for  the  word.  Makes  '  c  not ' — c.  ..     n  i  116 

Care  dwell  with  me  for  ever,  when  I  cease  To  c  for  thee  ..     11  i  120 

Return  to  Sens,  where  we  will  c  for  you.  „    n  ii  445 

But  if  you  should  not  c  to  take  it —  ,,     iv  ii  71 

Let  'im  bust  hissen,  then,  for  o\^  /  c's.  Prom,  of  May  11  167 

He  is  all  for  love,  he  c's  not  for  the  land.  Foresters  iv  489 

Cared     Thou  hast  but  c  to  make  thyself  a  king —  Harold  iv  ii  74 

if  you  c  To  live  some  time  among  them.  Prom,  of  May  11  549 
Careful    but  sends  His  c  dog  to  bring  them  to  the 

fold.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  105 

Be  c  of  thine  answer,  my  good  friend.  Harold  u  ii  604 

Carefuller    made  him  all  the  c  To  find  a  means  „      in  i  340 

Careless     thro'  The  random  gifts  of  c  kings,  Becket  i  i  159 


Careless 


861 


Catch 


{continued)     like  a  c  sleeper  in  the  down ;  Foresters  i  i  207 

Caress     in  some  lewd  c  Has  wheedled  it  off  the  King's  neck      Becket  iv  ii  200 
Carew    (See  also  Peter  Carew)     I  do  not  hear  from  C  or 

the  Duke  Of  Suffolk,  Queen  Mary  ii  i  2 

C  stirs  In  Devon :  ,,  n  i  4 

I  must  not  move  Until  I  hear  from  C  and  the  Duke.  ,.       ii  i  122 

C  is  there,  and  Thomas  Stafford  there.  „       v  i  125 

Carle    little  help  without  our  Saxon  c's  Against  Hardrada.      Harold  iv  i  35 
Carlos     But  is  Don  C  such  a  goodly  match?  Queen  Mary  x  iii  86 

Don  C,  Madam,  is  but  twelve  years  old.  ,,  v  iii  87 

Don  C?  Madam,  if  you  marry  Philip,  „        v  iii  117 

Carnage     So  packt  with  c  that  the  dykes  and  brooks  HaroW,  iii  ii  128 

Carpet    Lay  down  the  Lydian  c's  for  the  king.  The  Cup  ii  187 

Carried     Bonner,  it  will  be  c.  Queen  Mary  iii  iv  405 

I  ha'  c  him  ever  so  many  miles  in  my  arms.  Becket  i  iv  98 

drop  The  mud  I  c,  like  yon  brook,  „      ii  i  159 

c  off  the  casks,  Kill'd  half  the  crew,  „      v  ii  442 

one  shock  upon  the  field  when  all  The  harvest  has 
been  c. 

you  kept  your  veil  too  close  for  that  when  they  c 
you  in ; 
Carrier-pigeon     And  thou,  my  c-p  of  black  news, 
Carriest    who  art  more  bow-bent  than  the  very  bo« 

thou  c  ? 
Carrion  (adj.)     didst  thou  ever  see  a  c  crow  Stand 
watching  a  sick  beast 

and  dumb'd  his  c  croak  From  the  gray  sea  for  ever. 

I'd  think  na  moor  o'  maakin'  an  end  o'  tha  nor  a 

c  craw —  Prom,  of  May  ii  697 

Carrion  (S)     And  rolls  himself  in  c  like  a  dog.  Queen  Mary  i  v  169 

Carrion-nosing    Made  even  the  c-»i  mongrel  vomit  „       iv  iii  448 

Carrot    Like  a  c's,  as  thou  say'st,  and  English  c  's  better        „         in  i  218 
Carry    I  trust  that  he  will  c  you  well  to-day, 

For  all  that  I  can  c  it  in  my  head. 

If  you  can  c  your  head  upon  your  shoulders. 

I  fear  you  come  to  c  it  off  my  shoulders, 

that  every  Spaniard  carries  a  tail  like  a  devil 

Let  every  craft  that  carries  sail  anil  gun 

C  her  off  among  you ; 

We  shall  be  overwhelm'd.     Seize  him  and  c  him  ! 

C  fresh  rushes  into  the  dining-hall, 

C  her  off,  and  let  the  old  man  die. 

Seize  him  and  truss  him  up,  and  c  hei'  off. 

Seize  her  and  c  her  off  into  my  castle. 
Cart    fur  she  tell'd  ma  to  taake  the  c  to  Littlechester. 

Dan  Smith's  c  hes  runned  ower  a  laady  i'  the 
holler  laane. 

Besides  it  was  you  that  were  driving  the  c — 

our  horse  and  our  little  c — 
Carter    our  c's  and  our  shepherds  Still  find  a  comfort 

there.     Harold.     C's  and  shepherds  !  Prom,  of  May  m  527 

Cartwhip    and  doant  laay  my  c  athurt  'is  shou'ders,  „  n  138 

Carve     And  c  my  coat  upon  the  walls  again  ! 

to  c  One  lone  hour  from  it, 
Casa    C  crematur,  Pastor  fugatur 
Case    And  first  I  say  it  is  a  grievous  c, 

Is  that  my  c  ?  so  if  the  city  be  sick, 

as  the  c  stood,  you  had  safelier  have  slain  an  arch- 
bishop than  a  she-goat :  jt     in  iii  67 
Casement    moonlight  c's  pattem'd  on  the  wall,                  Queen  Mary  v  v  9 

Ay  !  yonder  is  her  c.  Prom,  of  May  ii  246 

storm  and  shower  lashing  Her  c,  i.  n  473 

Then  I  would  drop  from  the  c,  like  a  spider.  Foresters  i  i  317 

Cask     carried  off  the  c's,  Kill'd  have  the  crew,  Becket  v  ii  443 

c  of  wine  whereof  we  plunder'd  The  Norman  prelate  ?    Foresters  ni  306 
Casket    Close  as  a  miser's  c.    Listen :  Queen  Mary  i  iv  108 

Hand  me  the  c  with  my  father's  sonnets.  ,.  ii  i  43 

Cast     C  off,  betray'd,  defamed,  divorced,  forlorn  ! 

C  myself  down  upon  my  knees  before  them, 

come  to  c  herself  On  loyal  hearts  and  bosomS; 

She  c  on  him  a  vassal  smile  of  love,  „  ni  i  98 

pine  in  Italy  that  c  its  shadow  Athwart  a  cataract ;  „        m  iv  136 

to  c  myself  Upon  the  good  Queen's  mercy ;  „         ni  v  167 

and  then  C  on  the  dunghill  naked,  ..        iv  iii  446 

The  Pope  would  c  the  Spaniard  out  of  Naples :  „  v  i  148 


The  Falcon  302 

Prom,  of  May  iii  227 
Harold  iv  iii  233 

Foresters  ii  i  379 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  6 
Harold  iv  iii  65 


I  iv  145 

II  i  88 

II  i  89 

II  i  91 

HI  i  223 

V  ii  275 

Becket,  Pro.  524 

V  iii  142 

Foresters  i  i  80 

„    IV  677 

„    IV  690 

„    IV  738 

Prom,  o/ May  u  322 

II  568 

III  88 
Foresters  Ii  i  192 


Que&)i  Mary  ii  iv  110 

Foresters  ii  i  42 

Harold  V  i  512 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  167 

Becket  ii  ii  347 


IV  26 
IV  562 
n  ii  261 


Cast  (continued)     His  early  follies  c  into  his  teeth.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  124 

C  it  o'er  again.  „             v  iii  4 

Did  ye  not  c  with  bestial  violence  Harold  i  i  49 

I  c  me  down  prone,  praying ;  ,.     v  i  100 

I  c  upon  the  side  of  Canterburj- — •  Becket  i  i  155 

Let  either  c  hiin  away  like  a  dead  dog  !  ,,    ii  ii  257 

black  cloud  that  hath  come  over  the  sim  and  c  as  all 

into  shadow?  „  in  iii  47 

your  own  people  c  you  from  their  bounds.  The  Cup  i  i  137 

His  own  true  people  c  him  from  their  doors  ,,       i  ii  351 

I  cannot  help  the  mould  that  I  was  c  in.  „        i  iii  25 

Might  c  my  largess  of  it  to  the  crowd  !  „         ii  224 
knaw'd  better  nor  to  c  her  sister's  misfortin  inter 

'er  teeth  Prom,  of  May  ii  127 

Be  not  so  c  down,  my  sweet  Eva.  „            in  468 

Would  you  c  An  eye  of  favour  on  me.  Foresters  i  ii  216 

That  if  I  c  an  eye  of  favour  on  him,  „         iii  261 

to  c  All  threadbare  household  habit,  ,,       i  iii  111 

C  them  into  our  treasury,  the  beggars'  mites,  „          in  204 

Castaly     wells  of  C  are  not  wasted  upon  the  desert.  Becket,  Pro.  387 

Castille     voices  of  C  and  Aragon,  Granada,  Queen  Mary  v  i  42 

Castle  (adj.)     AH  in  the  c  garden,  Foresters  i  i  10 

Castle  (s)    (See  also  Sand-castle)    Ah,  gray  old  c  of 

Alington,  Queen  Mary  u  i  243 

They  have  built  their  c's  here  ;  Harold  ill  i  36 

he  holp  the  King  to  break  down  our  c's,  Becket,  Pro.  447 

De  Tracy  and  De  Brito,  from  our  c.  ,,           i  i  278 

Lord  Fitzurse  reported  this  In  passing  to  the  C  even  now.    ,,  i  ii  13 

You  are  going  to  the  C,  „           i  ii  45 

My  drift  is  to  the  C,  Where  I  shall  meet  the  Barons  „            i  ii  83 

To  the  C  ?     De  Broc.     Ay !  „            i  ii  86 

thou,  De  Broc,  that  boldest  Saltwood  C —  „        i  iii  160 

Due  from  his  c's  of  Berkhamstead  and  Eye  „        i  iii  628 

Here  is  a  missive  left  at  the  gate  by  one  from  the  c.           „          i  iv  50 

Our  c,  my  lord,  belongs  to  Canterbury.  „        n  ii  261 

cursed  those  De  Brocs  That  hold  our  Saltwood  C  „        ii  ii  269 

Perchance  the  fierce  De  Brocs  from  Saltwood  C,  „        v  ii  249 

dungeon'd  the  other  half  In  Pevensey  C —  „        v  ii  446 

Undo  the  doors :  the  Church  is  not  a  c :  „          v  iii  63 

came  back  last  night  with  her  son  to  the  c.  The  Falcon  4 
there  is  Monna  Giovanna  coming  down  the  hill  from  the  c.       „         161 

mount  with  your  lordship's  leave  to  her  ladyship's  c,  „         414 

Not  like  the  vintage  blowing  round  your  c.  „        580 

Shall  I  return  to  the  c  with  you  ?  „        793 
I  would  set  my  men-at-arms  to  oppose  thee,  like  the 

Lord  of  the  C.  Foresters  I  i  324 

and  seeing  the  hospitable  lights  in  your  c,  „      i  ii  195 

he  hath  seized  On  half  the  royal  c's.  ,.       i  iii  83 

whereon  she  struck  him.  And  fled  into  the  c.  ,.      n  i  118 

Seize  her  and  carry  her  off  into  my  c.  „       iv  738 

Thy  c  ?  (repeat)  Foresters  iv  739,  743 

Castro    I  bad  my  chaplain,  C,  preach  Against  these 

burnings.  Queen  Mary  ill  vi  73 

Cat    Catch  the  wild  e,  cage  him,  and  when  he  springs  „               v  v  65 

He  hath  as  much  of  c  as  tiger  in  him.  Harold  i  i  154 

Milk  ?     Filippo.     Three  laps  for  a  c  !  The  Falcon  125 

And  a  c  to  the  cream,  and  a  rat  to  the  cheese  ;  Prom,  of  May  i  53 
If  a  c  may  look  at  a  king,  may  not  a  friar  speak 

to  one  ?  Foresters  iv  921 

Cataract    (See  also  Winter-cataracts)    A  pine  in  Italy 
that  cast  its  shadow  Athwart  a  c ;  firm  stood 

the  pine — The  c  shook  the  shadow.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  137 

c  typed  the  headlong  plunge  and  fall  Of  heresy  „          in  iv  140 

Catch    I  cannot  c  what  Father  Bourne  is  saying.  „               i  iii  14 

We  have  our  spies  abroad  to  c  her  tripping,  „              i  v  468 
there's  no  Renard  here  to  '  c  her  tripping.'     C  me 
who  can  ;  yet,  sometime  I  have  wish'd  That  I 

were  caught,  „           ni  v  159 

C  the  wild  cat,  cage  him,  and  when  he  springs  „               v  v  65 

Fellow,  dost  thou  c  crabs  ?  Harold  n  i  66 

I  have  a  mind  that  thou  shalt  c  no  more.  „        n  i  71 

To  c  the  bird  again  within  the  bush  !  „       n  ii  67 

flings  His  brand  in  air  and  c'es  it  again,  „      v  i  494 
You  c  'em,  so.  Softly,  and  fling  them  out  to  the  free 

air.  Becket  i  i  286 


Catch 


862 


Chair'd 


Catch  (continued)     and  they  do  say  the  very  breath  c'es.  Becket  i  iv  222 

thy  flock  should  c  An  after  ague-fit  of  trembling.  „    in  iii  32 

Take  thy  one  chance  ;   C  at  the  last  straw.  „     iv  ii  221 

and  a-spreading  to  c  her  eye  for  a  dozen  year,  The  Falcon  100 

c  A  glimpse  of  them  and  of  their  fairy  Queen —  Foresters  n  ii  102 

And  c  the  winding  of  a  phantom  horn.  „         iv  1091 

Catechize  But  who  art  thou  to  c  me —  „  ni  14 
Catharine    (first  queen  of  Henry  Vin.)    you  divorced 

Queen  C  and  her  father  ;  Queen  Mary  i  ii  57 

accursed  lie  Of  good  Queen  Cs  divorce —  „  ni  iv  232 
Cathedral    nor  any  ground  but  English,  Where  his  c 

stands.  Becket  in  iii  262 

Take  refuge  in  your  own  c,  (repeat)  „  v  ii  584, 590 

Strike  our  Archbishop  in  his  own  c  !  „  v  iii  180 
Catholic  (adj.)     But  if  this  Philip,  the  proud  C 

prince,  Queen  Mary  i  iv  280 

where  you  gave  your  hand  To  this  great  C  King.  „            in  ii  92 

Can  we  not  have  the  C  church  as  well  „          in  iii  97 

Which  in  the  C  garden  are  as  flowers,  „  iv  i  178 
Have  you  remain'd  in  the  true  C  faith  I  left  j-ou 

in  ?  Cranmer.  In  the  true  C  faith,  „  iv  ii  17 
Yet  wherefore  should  he  die  that  hath  return 'd  To 

the  one  C  Universal  Church,  .,           iv  iii  21 

In  every  article  of  the  C  faith,  „         iv  iii  230 

Peters,  you  know  me  C,  but  English.  „  iv  iii  566 
The  Queen  of  Scots  at  least  is  C.     Philip.    Ay, 

Madam,  C;  „            ^  }.P^ 

But — ^he  would  have  me  C  of  Rome,  „  v  iii  93 
Catholic  (s)    for  we  are  many  of  us  C's,  but  few 

Papists,  .,  I  i  114 
a  pious  C,  Mumbling  and  mixing  up  in  his  scared 

prayers  „             n  ii  85 

there  be  some  disloyal  C's,  And  many  heretics  loyal ;  „  ni  iv  43 
tho'  a  C,  I  would  not,  For  the  pure  honour  of  our 

common  nature,  „         iv  iii  296 

I  do  hold  The  C,  if  he  have  the  greater  right,  „         iv  iii  382 

Peters,  my  gentleman,  an  honest  C,  „         iv  iii  553 

It  is  a  saying  among  the  C's.  „           v  v  245 

Cattle    Hath  harried  mine  own  c — God  confound  him  !  Harold  iv  iii  190 

Caught    (See  also  Cotched)     And  then  if  c,  to  the 

Tower.  Queen  Mary  i  v  469 

sometime  I  have  wish'd  That  I  were  c,  .,         iii  v  163 

He  c  a  chill  in  the  lagoons  of  Venice,  „           v  ii  515 

if  I  c  them,  they  should  hang  Cliff-gibbeted  Harold  n  i  95 

I  shame  to  quote  'em — c,  my  lord,  Becket  i  ii  7 

King's  verdurer  c  him  a-hunting  in  the  forest,  .,   i  iv  95 

Not  c,  maim'd,  blinded  him.  The  Cap  i  ii  271 

when  you  put  it  in  green,  and  your  stack  c  fire.  Prom,  of  May  n  56 

I  am  outlaw'd,  and  if  c,  I  die.  Foresters  i  iii  163 

He  c  her  round  the  waist,  „        n  i  116 

You  c  a  lonely  woodman  of  our  band,  .,         ni  359 

and  the  hunters,  if  c,  are  blinded,  or  worse  than  blinded.    „  rv  226 

Cause  (s)     you  had  time  and  c  enough  To  sicken  Queen  Mary  i  v  23 


the  c  that  hath  brought  us  together  is  not  the  c 

under  colour  Of  such  a  e  as  hath  no  colour. 

This  was  the  c,  and  hence  the  judgment  on  her. 

Crave,  in  the  same  c,  hearing  of  your  Grace. 

Behold  him,  brethren  :  he  hath  c  to  weep  ! — 

thro'  the  fear  of  death  Gave  up  his  c, 

there  c's  Wherefore  our  Queen  and  Council 

Much  less  shall  others  in  like  c  escape, 

I  come  to  the  great  c  that  weighs  Upon  my  conscience 

I  will  move  then  in  your  c  again, 

and  mine  own  natural  man  (It  was  God's  c) ; 

We  fought  like  great  states  for  grave  c  ; 

I  have  given  her  c — I  fear  no  woman. 

For  thou  hast  done  the  battle  in  my  c  ; 

Refer  my  c,  my  crown  to  Rome  !  .  .  . 

'  All  c's  of  advowsons  and  presentations, 

For  the  King's  pleasure  rather  than  God's  c 

My  lord.  We  have  claspt  your  c, 

That  in  thy  c  were  stirr'd  against  King  Henry, 

These  are  by-things  In  the  great  c. 

as  one  That  mars  a  c  with  over- violence. 

In  mine  own  c  I  strove  against  him  there, 


niieO 

II  ii  183 

ni iv  187 

IV  18 
IV  iii  14 
IV  iii  28 
IV  iii  35 

IV  iii  62 
IV  iii  237 

vil78 

V  ii  104 
Harold  i  i  441 

„       I  ii  41 

„  II  ii  555 

vil 

Becket  i  iii  78 

„     I  iii  698 

„     n  ii  237 

„     n  ii  429 

„    m  iii  12 

„    ivii327 

V  i  14 


Prom,  of  Mail  ui  245 

The  Cup  n  298 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  276 

„  HI  i  51 

Harold  I  i  192 

Becket  I  iii  177 

Foresters  ii  i  130 


Pro 


Cause  (s)  (continued)     And  in  thy  c  I  strive  against  him  now.     Becket  v  i  16 
I  do  commend  my  c  to  God,  the  Virgin,  „  v  iii  163 

not  so  much  for  the  c  as  for  the  Earl.  Foresters  i  ii  38 

I  cannot  sleep  o'  nights  by  c  on  'em.  ,.      n  i  384 

What  rightfiU  c  could  grow  to  such  a  heat  ..      n  i  698 

I  can  defend  my  c  against  the  traitors  „       iv  898 

Cause  (verb)  always  told  Father  that  the  huge  old 
ashtree  there  would  c  an  accident  some 
day ; 

Causest     Who  c  the  safe  earth  to  shudder  and  gape. 

Cautery    mad  bite  Must  have  the  c — tell  him — 

Cavalier     And  Counts,  and  sixty  Spanish  c's. 

Cave     seven  sleepers  in  the  c  at  Ephesus  Have  turn'd 
As  find  a  hare's  form  in  a  lion's  c 
Show  me  some  c  or  cabin  where  I  may  rest. 

Cawved  (calved)    Hes  the  cow  c  ?    Dora.    No, 
Father. 

Cease     When  will  ye  c  to  plot  against  my  house  ? 
when  I  c  To  care  for  thee  as  ever  ! 
Well,  well,  until  they  c  to  go  together, 

Ceased     Until  your  throne  had  c  to  tremble. 

Cecil  (William,  Baron  Burghley,  Queen  Elizabeth's  chief 
Minister)      C  .  .  .  God  guide  me  lest  I  lose  the 
way. 
But  with  C's  aid  And  others, 

Cedar    now  you  are  enclosed  with  boards  of  c. 

Cede    now  and  then  to  c  A  point  to  her  demand  ? 

Ceded    father  c  Naples,  that  the  son  Being  a  King, 

Ceiling    under  no  c  but  the  cloud  that  wept  on  them. 

Celebrate    — c — to  c  my  birthdaiiy  i'  this  fashion. 
To  c  this  advent  of  our  King  ! 

Celibate     Dan  John,  how  much  we  lose,  we  c's. 

Cell     lash'd  to  death,  or  lie  Famishing  in  black  c's, 
The  cold,  white  lily  blowing  in  her  c  : 
In  cold,  white  c's  beneath  an  icy  moon — 

Cellar     Our  c  is  hard  by.     Take  him,  good  Little  John, 

Censure    (8ee  also  Church-censure)    release  from 

danger  of  all  c's  Of  Holy  Church  Queen  Mary  in  iii  151 

All  schism,  and  from  all  and  every  c,  „  in  iii  217 

I  refuse  to  stand  By  the  King's  c,  Becket  i  iii  723 

pass  the  c's  of  the  Church  On  those  that  crown'd  ..     v  ii  390 


of  May  in  427 

Harold  IV  i  161 

Beclcet  II  i  121 

Foresters  n  ii  67 

Queen  Mary  I  v  393 


v  v209 

V  V  279 
in  ii  102 

in  vi  169 

in  i  74 

viv39 

Prom,  of  May  I  321 

Foresters  iv  1048 

Becket  v  ii  197 

Queen  Man/  v  ii  196 

Harold  111  i  274 

V  i  325 
Foresters  il  i  468 


Centavur    That  C  of  a  monstrous  Commonweal, 
Central     Not  ev'n  the  c  diamond,  worth,  I  think. 
Centre     Henceforth  a  c  of  the  living  faith. 

And  oublietted  in  the  c — No  ! 

weight  of  the  very  land  itself,  Down  to  the 
inmost  c. 
Century    fire  that  flashes  out  again  From  c  to  c. 
Ceremony     Why  do  you  palter  with  the  c  ? 

But  wherefore  slur  the  perfect  c  ? 
Certain    I  am  not  c  but  that  Philibert  Shall  be  the 
man ; 

because  I  am  not  c :  You  understand,  Feria. 

Would  freely  canvass  c  Lutheranisms. 

I  came  on  c  wholesome  usages, 

No,  no  !  we  have  c  news  he  died  in  prison. 
Chafe     Why  c  me  then  ? 
Chain  (s)     this  golden  c — My  father  on  a  birthday 

c,  Wherewith  they  bound  him  to  the  stake, 

here  is  a  golden  c  I  will  give  thee 

Thou  art  happier  than  thy  king.     Put  him  in  c's. 
Chain  (verb)     This  c's  me  to  your  service. 

To  c  the  free  guest  to  the  banquet-board  ; 

if  he  be  conspirator,  Rome  will  c.  Or  slay  liim. 
Chain'd    lying  c  In  breathless  dungeons  over  steam- 
ing sewers,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  439 
Chair     (See  also  Cheer)     How  deathly  pale  ! — a  c,  your 
Highness. 

same  c.  Or  rather  throne  of  purple,  on  the  deck. 

The  Eternal  Peter  of  the  changeless  c. 

Out  friends,  the  Normans,  holp  to  shake  his  c. 

sat  within  the  Norman  c  A  ruler  all  for  England — 

This  Barbarossa  butts  him  from  his  c, 

let  me  place  this  c  for  your  ladyship. 
Chair'd    yea,  and  thou  C  in  his  place. 


Queen  Alary  in  iv  163 

Becket  v  i  164 

Queen  Mary  lit  ii  155 

Becket  iv  ii  150 

Foresters  iv  1027 

The  Cup  I  ii  167 

n  420 

n  431 

Queen  Mary  v  i  263 

V  i  268 

„  V  ii  76 

Becket  i  iii  412 

Foresters  iv  778 

Harold  i  i  296 

Quee7i  Mary  i  v  526 

„       IV  iii  595 

Becket  iv  i  40 

Foresters  rv  838 

Qmen  Mary  i  v  537 

Harold  n  ii  193 

The  Cup  I  i  18 


I  V  636 

„  in  ii  7 

ra  iv  380 

Harold  i  i  86 

„  nii533 

Becket,  Pro.  217 

The  Falcon  178 

Harold  i  ii  247 


Challenge 


863 


Charge 


Becket  n  ii  165 
„     IV  ii  254 

Harold  ii  ii  245 


Challenge    — a  shift,  a  trick  Whereby  to  c, 
fitrike  !     I  c  thee  to  meet  me  before  Gotl. 

Chamber  (adj.)     arm'd  men  Ever  keep  watch  beside  my 
<•  door, 

Chamber  (s)     {See  also  Chaumber)     I  hear  them  stirring 

in  the  Council  C.  Queen  Mary  i  v  628 

And  in  this  very  c,  fuse  the  glass,  „  iii  v  54 

Remain  within  the  c,  but  apart.  ,,  v  iii  12 

Is  not  yon  light  in  the  Queen's  c  ?  „  v  iv  2 

To  shake  my  throne,  to  push  into  my  c —  Becket  v  i  250 

Peace,  let  him  be  :  it  is  the  c  of  Death  !  Prom,  of  May  m  741 

Not  if  I  barred  thee  up  in  thy  c.  Foresters  I  i  315 

Chamberlain    As  if  the  c  were  Death  himself !  Queen  Mary  v  v  204 

Chance  (adj.)     may  but  hang  On  the  c  mention  of  some 

fool  „  m  V  43 

And  save  for  that  c  arrow  which  the  Saints  Sharpen'd     Harold  v  ii  167 


Chance  (s)    if  by  c  you  hear  of  any  such, 

Looms  the  least  c  of  peril  to  our  realm. 

was  no  wicked  wilfulness,  Only  a  natural  c 

A  c — perchance  One  of  those  wicked  wilfuls 

That  lies  within  the  shadow  of  the  c. 

So  less  c  for  false  keepers. 

Remains  beyond  all  Ps  and  all  churches. 

What  c  That  he  should  ever  spread  into  the  man 

the  c  gone.  She  lives — but  not  for  him  ; 

drowning  man,  they  say,  remembers  ail  The  c's  of 
his  life, 

I  fear  some  strange  and  evil  c  Coming  upon  me, 

would  dare  the  c  Of  double,  or  losing  all. 
Chance  (verb)     may  c  That  I  shall  never  look  upon 
you  more. 

It  may  c,  that  England  Will  be  Mistress  of  the 
Indies  yet, 

we  might  c — perchance — To  guess  their  meaning. 

it  c's,  child.  That  I  am  his  main  paramour. 
Chanced    Before  I  c  upon  the  messenger 

there  hath  c  A  sharper  harm  to  England  and  to  Rome, 

how  it  c  That  this  young  Earl  was  sent  on  foreign 
travel. 
Chancellor    Gardiner  for  one,  who  is  to  be  made  Lord  C, 

The  Lord  C  (I  count  it  as  a  kind  of  virtue  in  him. 

Who  waits,  sir  ?      Usher.    Madam,  the  Lord  C. 

that  were  hard  upon  you,  my  Lord  C. 

The  Lord  C  himself  is  on  our  side. 

Renard  and  the  C  sharpen'd  them. 

No,  my  Lord  Legate,  the  Lord  C  goes. 

Hush  !  hush  !     You  wrong  the  C  : 

Thou  Christian  Bishop,  thou  Lord  C  Of  England  ! 

My  Lord  C,  You  have  an  old  trick  of  offending  us  ; 

I  have  gone  beyond  your  late  Lord  C, — 

Sir  Nicholas  Heath,  the  C,  Would  see  your  Highness. 

Madam,  your  C,  Sir  Nicholas  Heath. 

When  Wyatt  sack'd  the  C's  house  in  Southwark. 

longed  much  to  see  your  Grace  and  the  C  ere  he 
past, 

and  the  King  gave  it  to  his  C. 

but  thou — dost  thou  love  this  C, 

Is  it  so  much  heavier  than  thy  C's  robe  ?     Becket. 
No  ;  but  the  C's  and  the  Archbishop's  Together 

I  served  King  Henry  well  as  C  ; 

And  all  the  wisdom  of  the  C, 

Make  him  thy  prisoner.     I  am  C  yet. 

C£m  I  be  under  him  As  C  ?  as  Archbishop  over  him  ? 

For  he,  when  having  dofit  the  C's  robe — 

As  C  thou  wast  against  the  Church, 

Which  came  into  thy  hands  when  C. 

every  bond  and  debt  and  obligation  Incurr'd  as  C, 

Dost  thou  know,  my  boy,  what  it  is  to  be  C  of 
England  ? 

It  is,  my  boy,  to  side  with  the  King  when  C, 

when  I  was  C  to  the  King,  I  fear  I  was  as  cruel  as 
the  King. 

sworn  Yourselves  my  men  when  I  was  C — 
Chancellor-Archbishop     C-A,  he  might  well  have  sway'd 
Chancellorship    He  did  prefer  me  to  the  c. 


Queen  Alary  i  iv  175 

II  ii  238 

m  V  73 

„  in  V  74 

Harold  ii  ii  464 

II  ii  688 

„     III  ii  182 

Becket  m  i  21 

„    IV  ii  414 

„     V  ii  274 

The  Cup  I  iii  75 

„       I  iii  147 

Queen  Mary  n  i  245 

„  V  iii  75 

Harold  iv  i  137 

Becket  iv  ii  37 

Queen  Mary  i  v  585 

vii28 


vii488 
1 187 

I  iv  191 
IV  96 

rvl59 

II  i  193 
in  i  5 

III  ii  152 

III  iii  67 

in  iv  300 

III  iv  313 

vii98 

v  ii  225 

vii248 

vii504 


Becket,  Pro.  399 
„  Pro.  432 
„      Pro.  438 

I  i  21 

I  i  144 

I  i  153 

I  i  332 

I  i  349 

„       I  iii  454 

I  iii  528 

I  iii  653 

I  iii  712 

II  i  232 
II  i  236 

v  ii  122 

v  ii  502 

I  iii  466 

„      Pro.  416 


Chancellorship  {continued)    in  my  c  I  more  than  once  have 
gone  against  the  Church, 
often  in  your  c  you  served  The  follies  of  the  King. 
What  say'st  thou  to  the  C  of  England  ? 
Change  (s)    in  the  whirl  of  c  may  come  to  be  one. 
Beyond  the  seas — a  c  ! 

They  are  but  of  spring.  They  fly  the  winter  c — 
Beyond  all  c  and  m  the  eternal  distance 
Sudden  c  is  a  house  on  sand  ; 
can  he  trace  me  Thro'  five  years'  absence,  and  my 

c  of  name.  Prom,  oj  May  n  615 

Change  (verb)     God  c  the  pebble  which  his  kingly 
foot 
and  may  c  a  word  again. 
He  falters,  ha  ?  'fore  God,  we  c  and  c ; 
it  we  c  at  all  We  needs  must  do  it  quickly  ; 
And  I  to  c  my  manners,  Simon  Renard, 
offal  of  the  city  would  not  c  Estates  with  him  ; 
the  currents  So  shift  and  c. 
You  do  mistake.     I  am  not  one  to  c. 
They  are  not  so  true.  They  c  their  mates. 
I  will  never  c  word  with  you  again, 
backward-working  alchemy  Should  c  this  gold  to 
silver, 
Changed    c  not  colour  when  she  saw  the  block, 
I  have  c  a  word  with  him  In  coming. 
Pray  you,  remembering  how  yourself  have  c. 
Do  not  seem  so  c.    Say  go  ; 
Much  c,  I  hear.  Had  put  off  levity  and  put 

graveness  on. 
William  the  Norman,  for  the  wind  had  c — 
The  sun  himself,  should  he  be  c  to  one. 
To  see  if  years  have  c  her. 
Changeless    The  Eternal  Peter  of  the  c  chair, 
wherefore  waste  your  heart  In  looking  on  a 
chill  and  c  Past  ? 
Channel    His  Highness  makes  his  moves  across 
the  C, 
Back  thro'  their  widow'd  c  here. 
Chant    c's  and  hymns  In  all  the  churches, 
Chanted    they  led  Processions,  c  litanies. 
Chanting    And  c  that  old  song  of  Brunanburg 

He  is  c  some  old  warsong. 
Chaos    and  all  her  loves  and  hates  Sing  again  into  c. 
Chapel    she  was  passing  Some  c  down  in  Essex, 
To  the  c  of  St.  Blaise  beneath  the  roof ! 
the  election  shall  be  made  in  the  C  Royal, 
Chaplain    I  bad  my  c,  Castro,  preach  Against  these 
burnings, 
to  bear  it  for  thee.  Being  thy  c. 
Chaplet    And  softly  placed  the  c  on  her  head. 
Ah  !  she  had  thrown  my  c  on  the  grass. 
Had  she  not  thro^vn  my  c  on  the  grass, 
I  wore  the  lady's  c  round  my  neck  ; 
And  then  this  c — No  more  feuds,  but  peace, 
present  her  with  this  oaken  c  as  Queen  of  the  wood. 
Chapman    We  spared  the  craftsman,  c. 
Chapter    the  King  shall  summon  the  c  of  that  Church 
to  court, 
sometimes  been  moved  to  tears  by  a  c  of  fine 

writing  in  a  novel ;  Prom,  of  May  in  209 

Char     c  us  back  again  into  the  dust  We  spring  from.      Queen  Mary  m  v  55 
Charge  (care)     We  gave  thee  to  the  c  of  John  of 

Salisbury,  Becket  i  i  247 

thou  wast  not  happy  taking  c  Of  this  wild  Rosamund  .,      i  i  391 

Nor  am  I  happy  having  c  of  her —  .,      i  i  394 

Charge  (imputation,  etc.)    from  the  c  Of  being  his 

co-rebels  ?  Queen  Mary  in  i  136 

I  free  From  this  foul  c —  Harold  n  ii  518 

By  oath  and  compurgation  from  the  c.  „     n  ii  521 

Bark'd  out  at  me  such  monstrous  c's,  Becket  iv  ii  342 

Charge  (to  enjoin)    this  I  c  you.  Tell  Courtenay 

nothing.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  189 

I  c  thee,  upon  pain  of  mine  anathema,  Becket  i  iii  719 

c  you  that  ye  keep  This  traitor  from  escaping.  „     v  ii  509 


Becket  I  i  28 

„      I  ii  29 

„  ni225 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  106 

Harold  I  i  104 

„      III  ii  97 

„    III  ii  101 

Becket  in  iii  59 


Queen  Alary  i  v  368 
in  iv  16 
in  iv  406 
in  iv  410 

III  vi  151 

IV  iii  77 

IV  iii  409 
vi218 

Harold  in  ii  105 
Prom,  of  May  i  163 

Foresters  iv  40 

Queen  Mary  in  i  399 

„  in  iv  14 

IV  ii  156 

V  i  215 

V  ii  509 
Harold  iv  iii  182 

Becket  in  i  57 

The  Cup  I  i  125 

Queen  Mary  m  iv  380 

Prom,  of  Alay  n  504 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  135 

I  V  89 

Becket  v  ii  365 

Queen  Mary  in  vi  95 

Harold  v  i  215 

„       V  i  495 

Foresters  I  ii  330 

Queen  Mary  i  v  40 

Becket  v  iii  82 

„     I  iii  111 

Queen  Mary  m  vi  73 

Becket  i  iii  492 

The  Falcon  362 

368 

378 

631 

909 

Foresters  m  59 

„       inl63 

Becket  i  iii  109 


\ 


Charge 


864 


Child 


Charge  (to  enjoin)  (continued)  Back  !  back  !  I  c  thee,  back  !  Foresters  n  i  425 
Charge  (to  accuse)  dare  you  c  the  King  with  treachery  ?  Becket  v  ii  396 
Charge  (to  rush)     and  bidd'n  him  C  one  against  a 

thousand,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  309 

Charged  (enjoined)    no,  nor  if  the  Pope,  C  him  to  do  it —      „  iv  iii  558 

He  c  me  not  to  question  any  of  those  About  me.  Becket  ni  i  210 

Charged  (filled)     Tho^  c  with  all  the  wet  of  all  the  west.         Harold  zi  ii  \9iS 
C  with  the  weight  of  heaven  wherefrom  they  fall  !  „         v  i  567 

one  So  e  with  tongue,  that  every  thread  of  thought  Becket  v  ii  205 

Charing  Cross    From  C  C  ;  the  rebels  broke  us  there,    Queen  Mary  n  iv  75 

Charity    sow'd  therein  The  seed  of  Hate,  it  blossom'd  C.       „  iv  i  172 

Let  them  flow  forth  in  c,  „         iv  iii  208 

To  rival  him  in  Christian  c.  Becket  iii  iii  233 

Your  Christian's  Christian  c  !  ,.        v  ii  476 

Perhaps  you  judge  him  With  feeble  c  :  The  Cup  i  ii  186 

Charles  (V.,  King  of  Spain,  Emperor)    rumour  that  C, 

the  master  of  the  world.  Queen  Mary  i  i  104 

He  is  every  way  a  lesser  man  than  C  ;  ..  i  v  330 

My  master,  C,  Bad  you  go  softly  with  your  heretics  .,  i  v  391 

And  C,  the  lord  of  this  low  world,  is  gone  ;  ,.  v  v  54 

prattling  to  her  mother  Of  her  betrothal  to  the 

Emperor  C,  „  v  v  233 

Charm  (s)     To  draw  him  nearer  with  a  c  Like  thine  to  thine.     Harold  i  ii  8 
more  than  one  brave  fellow  owed  His  death  to  the  c 

in  it.  The  Falcon  635 

with  his  c  of  simple  style  And  close  dialectic,  Prom,  of  May  i  223 

And  her  c  Of  voice  is  also  yours  ;  „  ii  380 

and  the  country  Has  many  c's,  „  n  541 

Might  have  more  c  for  me  than  all  the  country.  „  n  553 

True  soul  of  the  Saxon  churl  for  whom  song  has  no  c.  Foresters  ii  i  386 

Charm  (verb)     In  hope  to  c  them  from  their  hate  of 

Spain.  Queen  Mary  lu  vi  82 

May  serve  to  c  the  tiger  out  of  him.  Harold  i  i  153 

kiss  that  c's  thine  eyelids  into  sleep,  „    i  ii  139 

I  do  not  then  c  this  secret  out  of  our  loyal  Thomas,       Becket,  Pro.  466 
how  to  c  and  waste  the  hearts  of  men.  Foresters  ii  i  502 

Charm'd    that  wilt  not  dance  However  wisely  c.  Harold  i  i  387 

When  you  have  c  our  general  into  mercy,  The  Cup  i  ii  311 

How  c  he  was  !  what  wonder  ? — A  gallant  boy.  The  Falcon  318 

ruddiest  cheek  That  ever  c  the  plowman  of  your 

wolds  Prom,  of  May  ui  488 

Charon     Not  be  my  C  to  the  counter  side  ?  Queen  Mary  m  ii  149 

Chart     This  c  here  mark'd  '  Her  Bower,'  Becket,  Pro.  160 

but  this  Draws  thro'  the  c  to  her.  ,,      Pro.  173 

This  c  with  the  red  line  !  her  bower  !  „      Pro.  308 

The  c  is  not  mine,  but  Becket's  :  take  it,  Thomas.  „      Pro.  310 

Fitzurse,  that  c  with  the  red  line — thou  sawest  it —  „      Pro.  42,1 

c  which  Henry  gave  you  With  the  red  line —  ,,  i  ii  60 

Charter    Your  rights  and  c's  hobnail'd  into  slush —       Queen  Mary  n  ii  278 
Where  is  the  c  of  our  Westminster  ?  Harold  in  i  194 

Chase  (s)     thyself  wast  wont  To  love  the  c:  „         i  i  228 

More  sacred  than  his  forests  for  the  c  ?  Becket  iv  ii  25 

running  down  the  c  is  kindlier  sport  Ev'n  than  the 

death.  „   rv  ii  218 

climb  The  moimtain  opposite  and  watch  the  c.  The  Cup  i  i  118 

I  am  a  life-long  lover  of  the  c,  „  i  i  195 

Roused  by  the  clamour  of  the  c  he  woke,  „        i  ii  117 

Chased     C  deer-like  up  his  mountains,  Harold  i  ii  148 

would  have  c  the  stag  to-day  In  the  full  face  The  Cup  i  ii  267 

I  am  c  by  my  foes.  Foresters  ii  i  184 

Chasm    o'er  the  c  I  saw  Lord  William  Howard  Queen  Mary  n  iii  28 

and  flatten  in  her  closing  c  Domed  cities,  hear.  The  Cup  n  300 

Chaste     C  as  your  Grace  !  Queen  Mary  i  v  456 

Your  Grace  hath  a  most  c  and  loving  wife.  „        in  vi  129 

The  Queen  of  Philip  should  be  c.  „        m  vi  132 

no  wives  like  English  wives  So  fair  and  c  as  they  be.       Foresters  n  i  16 

Chasten'd     So  thou  be  c  by  thy  banishment,  Harold  iv  ii  50 

Chastest    Thro'  c  honour  of  the  Decalogue  Becket  \  i  206 

Chattel    thou  art  dispossessed  of  all  thy  lands,  goods, 

and  c's  ;  Foresters  I  iii  60 

Chaomber  (chamber)     winder  at  the  end  o'  the  passage, 

that  goas  by  thy  c.  Prom,  of  May  i  397 

Did  'e  git  into  thy  c  ?  „  1 400 

they  ha'  ta'en  the  body  up  inter  your  c,  „  n  570 

By  haafe  a  scoor  o'  naames — out  o'  the  c.  „         m  730 


Chaumber  (chamber)  (continued)    Out  o'  the  c  !    I'll 
mash  tha  into  nowt. 

Out  o'  the  c,  dang  tha  ! 
Check     I  never  knew  thee  c  thy  will  for  ought 

C— you  move  so  wildly. 

frost  That  help'd  to  c  the  flowing  of  the  blood. 
Cheek    you  stroke  me  on  one  c,  Buffet  the  other. 

'  Wyatt,'  as  red  as  she  In  hair  and  c ; 

gave  me  a  great  pat  o'  the  c  for  a  pretty  wench, 

a  c  like  a  peach  and  a  heart  like  the  stone  in  it — 

ruddiest  c  That  ever  charm'd  the  plowman  of 
your  wolds 

Here — give  me  one  sharp  pinch  upon  the  c 
Cheeked    See  Bed-cheek'd 
Cheer  (s)    good  c  !  thou  art  Harold,  I  am  Etlith  ! 

You,  Strato,  make  good  c  till  I  return. 

Yeas,  yeas  !     Three  c's  for  Mr.  Steer  ! 
Cheer  (verb)     And  c  his  blindness  with  a  traveller's  tales  ? 
Cheer  (chair)  they  wimt  set  i'  the  Lord's  c  o'  that 

daay.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  470 

Cheerful    He,  with  a  c  smile,  as  one  whose  mind  Is 

all  made  up,  „  rv  iii  587 

Cheerless     Your  people  are  as  c  as  your  clime  ;  „  v  i  83 

For  me,  whose  c  HourLs  after  death  Are  Night  and 


Prom,  of  May  in  734 

in  737 

Harold  ii  ii  120 

Becket,  Pro.  40 

The  Falcon  645 

Queen  Mary  n  i  117 

n  ii  76 

Becket  m  i  125 

The  Falcon  93 

Prom,  of  May  in  487 
Foresters  iv  1012 

Harold  v  i  391 
•  The  Cup  I  ii205 
Prom,  of  May  i  455 
n  515 


Silence, 
Cheese     Our  Daisy's  c's  be  better. 

Buy  you  their  c's,  and  they'll  side  with  you  ; 

C  !     Filippo.     A  supper  for  twelve  mites. 

And  a  cat  to  the  cream,  and  a  rat  to  the  c  ; 
Cherish'd    c  him  Who  thief-like  fled  from  his  own  church 
Cherubim    golden  c  With  twenty-cubit  wings 


Prom,  of  May  i  249 

Queen  Mary  rv  iii  484 

„  IV  iii  548 

The  Falcon  126 

Prom,  of  May  I  54 

Becket  ii  ii  155 

Harold  in  i  183 


Chess     The  Game  of  C.  (repeat)  Queen  Mary  i  iii  127 

Strange  game  of  c  !  a  King  That  with  her  own  powers     „  i  iii  161 

Chessmen    and  these  c  on  the  floor —  Becket,  Pro.  313 

Chest     Did  the  c  move  !  did  it  move  ?  Harold  n  ii  799 

Chichester     Bishops — York,  London,  C,  Westminster —  Becket  i  iii  385 

Chief  (adj.)     C  prelate  of  our  Church,  archbishop, 

first  In  Council,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  70 

Before  the  Prince  and  c  Justiciary,  Becket  i  iii  709 

Did  not  some  old  Greek  Say  death  was  the  c  good  ?        The  Cup  n  515 
Chief  (s)     The  c  of  these  outlaws  who  break  the  law  ?  Foresters  iv  141 

Child    (See  also  Childer,  Children)     of  the  good  Lady 
Jane  as  a  poor  innocent  c 

c  by  c,  you  know.  Were  momentary  sparkles 

I  think  she  entreats  me  like  a  c. 

she  is  but  a  c.    We  do  not  kill  the  c  for  doing  that 

the  c  obey'd  her  father. 

perchance  A  c  more  innocent  than  Lady  Jane. 

nursery-cocker'd  c  will  jeer  at  aught 

He  is  c  and  fool,  and  traitor  to  the  State. 

That  if  the  Queen  should  die  without  a  c, 

no  more  rein  upon  thine  anger  Than  any  c  ! 

Threaten  the  c ;  '  I'll  scourge  you  if  you  did  it :  ' 

What  weapon  hath  the  c,  save  his  soft  tongue, 

I  think  the  Queen  may  never  bear  a  c  ; 

So  sick  am  I  with  biding  for  this  c.  Is  it  the  fashion 
in  this  clime  for  women  To  go  twelve  months  in 
bearing  of  a  c  ? 

Her  fierce  desire  of  bearing  him  a  c. 

Since  she  lost  hope  of  bearing  us  a  c  ? 

Alice,  my  c.  Bring  us  your  lute. 

But  the  c  came  not,  and  the  husband  came  not ; 

in  her  agony  The  mother  came  upon  her — a  c  was 
bom — 

Now  the  spoilt  c  sways  both. 

my  c  ;  Thou  hast  misread  this  merry  dream  of  thine, 

tenfold,  than  this  fearful  c  can  do  ; 

But  sickly,  slight,  half-witted  and  a  c, 

From  c  to  c,  from  Pope  to  Pope,  from  age  to  age, 

widow  And  orphan  c,  whom  one  of  thy  wild  barons —   Becket,  Pro.  188 

And  when  I  was  a  c.  The  Virgin,  „  i  i  52 

The  c  Is  there  already.     Rosamund.    Yes — the  c — 

the  c—  "         I. » 292 

Who  misuses  a  dog  would  misuse  a  c —  „       i  iv  109 

Why,  the  c  will  drown  himself.  „        n  i  322 


Queen  Mary  i  i  94 
I  ii  71 

I  iii  112 
I  V  61 

I  V  493 
I  V  502 
n  ii  394 

II  ii  403 
„  m  iii  75 
„      in  iv  304 

in  V  126 
in  V  128 
in  V  232 


in  vi  89 

IV  iii  429 

vi230 

V  ii  356 

V  ii  581 

V  iv  20 
Harold  i  i  453 

.,  I  ii  97 

.,  Iii  143 

..  nii572 

„  V  i  329 


ChUd 


865 


Christ 


Child  (continued)    And  one  fair  c  to  fondle !  Becket  ni  i  12 

the  c  We  waited  for  so  long — heaven's  gift  at  last —  ,.      m  i  13 

But  then  the  c  is  such  a  c.  ,.      m  1  20 

what's  an  apple,  you  know,  save  to  a  e,  and  I'm  no  c,  „     in  1 141 
like  the  gravedigger's  c  I  have  heard  of,  trying  to  ring 

the  bell,  „    m  iii  73 

Thou  art  the  prettiest  c  I  ever  saw.  „        iv  i  7 

Your  own  c  brought  me  hither  !  ,,     iv  ii  13 

C,  I  am  mine  own  self  Of  and  belonging  to  the  King.  „     iv  ii  29 

so  it  chances,  c,  That  I  am  his  main  paramour,  ,.      iv  ii  38 

— ^my  c  is  so  young,  So  backward  too  ;  ,,      iv  ii  84 
But  the  c  is  so  young.     You  have  children — his  ;  And 

mine  is  the  King's  c  ;  ,.      iv  ii  89 

I  follow'd  You  and  the  c  :  he  babbled  all  the  way.  „    iv  ii  140 

and  make  Thy  body  loathsome  even  to  thy  c  ;  ,,    iv  ii  172 

The  c  .  .  .  No  .  .  .  mercy  !     No  !  „    iv  ii  185 

His  c  and  mine  own  soul,  and  so  return.  „     v  ii  193 

Lacking  the  love  of  woman  and  of  c.  ,,     v  ii  199 

Save  him,  he  saVed  my  life,  he  saved  my  c,  „        v  iii  9 
A  c's  sand-castle  on  the  beach  For  the  next  wave —      The  Cup  i  ii  253 

that  dost  inspire  the  germ  with  life.  The  c,  „          n  259 
and  she,  A  girl,  a  c,  then  but  fifteen.                                  The  Falcon  537 

My  one  c  Florio  lying  still  so  sick,  „          678 
best  way  out  of  it,  if  the  c  could  keep  Her  counsel.  Prom,  of  May  i  476 


my  c,  your  prayers  will  do  more 


I  585 

i640 

1771 

I  781 

I  796 

n289 

n419 

n480 

ra362 

m397 

ni542 

ni711 

III  759 


Iii  311 

niill3 

IV  5 

IV  643 


when  the  man.  The  c  of  evolution,  flings  aside 
C,  do  you  love  me  now  ? 

I         For  ever,  you  foolish  c  !     What's  come  over  you  ? 
Ay,  c ;  and  you  look  thin  and  pale. 
Well,  my  c,  let  us  join  them. 
So  the  c  grow  to  manhood  : 
— she  was  his  favourite  c — 
Our  old  nurse  crying  as  if  for  her  own  c, 
so  that  you  do  not  copy  his  bad  manners  ?    Go,  c. 
'  My  dear  C, — I  can  do  no  more  for  you. 
C,  read  a  little  history,  you  will  find 
C,  can't  you  see  ?    Tell  them  to  fly  for  a  doctor. 
A  c,  and  all  as  trustfid  as  a  c  ! 

C,  thou  shouldst  marry  one  who  will  pay  the  mortgage.  Foresters  i  i  279 
by  this  Holy  Cross  Which  good  King  Richard  gave  me 

when  a  c — 
Nor  leave  a  c  behind  him  ' 
Has  never  glanced  upon  me  when  a  c. 
C,  thou  shalt  wed  him.  Or  thine  old  father  will  go  mad 
Childer  (childrea)     theer  be  a  thousand  i'  the  parish, 
taakin'  in  the  women  and  e  ; 
Them  be  what  they  lams  the  c'  at  school, 
Childhood     Away  from  Philip,  Back  in  her  c — 
Childish     No — the  c  fist  That  cannot  strike  again. 
Childless    'Tis  written,  '  They  shall  be  c' 

Evil  for  good,  it  seems.  Is  oft  as  c  of  the  good 
Than  all  my  c  wealth,  if  mine  must  die. 
^Childlike    ask'd  him,  c :  '  Will  you  take  it  ofi 
i       great  motion  of  laughter  among  us,  p&rt  real, 

1  part  e,  Becket  in  iii  155 

'  i        part  c  again — when  we  felt  we  had  laughed  too  long  „     m  iii  159 

iHiildlike- jealous    And  c-j  of  him  again —  Qv^en  Mary  v  v  234 

^3uldren     (See  also  Child,  Childer)     These  princes  are 
like  c,  must  be  physick'd, 
Dumb  c  of  my  father,  that  will  speak 
cannot  tell  How  mothers  love  their  c ; 
naturally  may  love  his  people  As  these  their  c  ; 
The  man  had  c,  and  he  whined  for  those. 
Away  !     Women  and  c  ! 
So  that  we  may,  as  c  penitent, 
Watch'd  c  playing  at  their  life  to  be. 
They  had  not  reach'd  right  reason  ;  little  c  ! 
wholesome  scripture,  '  Little  c,  Love  one  another.' 
but  they  play  with  fire  as  c  do,  And  burn  the  house. 
His  c  and  his  concubine,  belike. 
To  the  poor  flock — to  women  and  to  c — 
fire  seem  To  those  three  c  like  a  pleasant  dew. 
burnt  The  heretic  priest,  workmen,  and  women  and  c. 
Old,  miserable,  diseased,  Incapable  of  c. 
That  tread  the  kings  their  c  imder-heel — 


Prom,  of  May  1 146 

in  39 

Queen  Mary  v  v  231 

Harold  IV  iii  30 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  65 

Harold  v  i  172 

The  Falcon  855 

Queen  Mary  m  i  401 


and  her  c — canst  thou  not — that  secret  matter 


IV  234 
ni  77 
niil90 
n  ii  193 
n  ii  335 
n  iii  97 
m  iii  153 
iniv63 
niiv  73 
m  iv  85 
in  vi28 
IV  i  165 
IV  ii  159 
IV  iii  91 
vvl07 
vvl79 
Becket,  Pro.  213 


Children  (continued) 
for  me 

And  thereupon  he  call'd  my  c  bastards. 

You  have  c — ^his ;  And  mine  is  the  King's  child  ; 

new-made  c  Of  our  imperial  mother  see  the  show. 

More  specially  sick  c,  have  strange  fancies, 

who  call'd  the  mind  Of  c  a  blank  page, 

they  tell  me  that  you — and  you  have  six  c — 

and  when  the  c  grew  too  old  for  me, 

love  that  c  owe  to  both  I  give  To  him  alone. 
Child-world    The  miserable  see-saw  of  our  c-w, 
Chill  (adj.)     Come,  come,  you  are  c  here  ; 

wherefore  waste  your  heart  In  looking  on  a  c  and 

changeless  Past  ?  Prom,  of  May  a  504 

Chill  (s)     He  caught  a  c  in  the  lagoons  of  Venice,  Queen  Alary  v  ii  515 

Chill  (verb)    — your  north  c's  me.  Becket,  Pro.  330 

Will  c  the  hearts  that  beat  for  Robin  Hood  !  Foresters  rv  1064 

Chilled    He  warmed  to  you  to-day,  and  you  have  c  him 

again. 
Chime    fawn  upon  him  ?     C  in  with  all  ? 

Low  words  best  c  with  this  solemnity. 

world  is  beautiful  If  we  were  happy,  and  could  c  in 

with  it.  Prom,  of  May  i  678 

Chin     both  her  knees  drawnupward  to  her  c.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  392 


Becket  i  iv  143 

„       rvii44 

ivii90 

The  Cup  n  164 

The  Falcon  817 

Prom,  of  May  n  282 

in77 

m  386 

Foresters  rv  7 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  385 

m  V  275 


Becket  u  ii  375 
Harold  1  ii  167 
The  Cup  n  217 


Pro.  486 


Not  in  my  c,  I  hope  !     That  threatens  double 
China    as  she  has  broken  My  c  bowl. 
Chink  (crevice)     A  twilight  conscience  lighted  thro'  a  c ; 

— a  c — he's  out.  Gone  ! 
Chink  (verb)     wholesome  use  of  these  To  c  against  the 

Norman, 
Chirp    we  will  c  among  our  vines,  and  smile 
Chivalry    yet  I  hate  him  for  his  want  of  c. 

He  loves  the  e  of  his  single  arm. 
Choice    The  c  of  England  is  the  voice  of  England. 
William.    I  will  be  king  of  England  by  the 
laws.  The  c,  and  voice  of  England. 
Tostig's  banishment,  and  c  of  Morcar, 
To  do  with  England's  c  of  her  own  king  ? 
weight  down  all  free  c  beneath  the  throne. 
The  wiser  c,  because  my  sleeping-draught 
Choir    To  the  c,  to  the  c  !     Becket.    Shall  I  too  pass  to 

the  c. 
Choose    not  so  set  on  wedlock  as  to  c  But  where  I 
list, 
dead  I  cannot  c  but  love  her. 
Pray  God  the  people  c  thee  for  their  king  ! 
there  the  great  Assembly  c  their  king, 
C  therefore  whether  thou  wilt  have  thy  conscience 
c  A  hundred  of  the  wisest  heads  from  England, 
Still  c  Barabbas  rather  than  the  Christ, 
Choosing    old  Northumbrian  crown.  And  longs  of  our 

own  c. 
Chop    Would  you  not  c  the  bitten  finger  off. 
Chord     touch  No  c  in  me  that  would  not  answer 
Chosen     thought  I  might  be  c  Pope,  But  then  with- 
drew it. 
coming  from  the  people.  And  c  by  the  people — 
c  by  his  people  And  fighting  for  his  people  ! 
and  c  me  For  this  thy  great  archbishoprick, 
Hoped,  were  he  c  archbishop, 

for  her  beauty,  statehness,  and  power,  Was  c  Priestess 
Christ    (See  also  Christ  Jesus,  Jesus  Christ)    And  stand 
within  the  porch,  and  C  with  me  : 
and  kindled  with  the  palms  of  C  ! 
sworn  upon  the  body  and  blood  of  C  I'll  none 

but  Philii). 
And  keep  with  C  and  conscience — 
And  clasp  the  faith  in  C ; 
what  saith  C  ?    '  Compel  them  to  come  in.' 
White  as  the  light,  the  spotless  bride  of  C, 
Like  C  himself  on  Tabor, 
And  be  with  C  the  Lord  in  Paradise. 
Either  to  live  with  C  in  Heaven  with  joy, 
seen  the  true  men  of  C  lying  famine-dead  by  scores, 
the  one  King,  the  C,  and  all  things  in  common, 


Becket  n  i  250 

The  Falcon  524 

Harold  m  i  66 

Becket  i  i  259 

Harold  m  i  22 

The  Cup  I  iii  170 

Foresters  I  ii  107 

IV  786 


Harold  n  ii  128 

IV  i  104 

V  i  19 

Becket  i  iii  118 

„    rv  ii  168 

„      V  iii  73 

Qu^n  Mary  n  ii  214 

m  i  340 

Harold  i  i  314 

„     n  ii  127 

„     n  ii  282 

Becket  n  ii  170 

„      n  ii  390 


Harold  rv  i  33 

Queen  Mary  m  iv  206 

The  Falcon  456 


Queen  Mary  v  ii  82 

Harold  v  i  387 

„      V  i  490 

Becket  i  i  90 

„   I  iii  442 

The  Cup  n  17 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  51 
I  V  94 

I  V  215 

I  V  558 

m  ii  122 

m  iv  29 

m  iv  200 

„      m  iv  201 

„         IV  iii  88 

IV  iii  220 

V  iv  38 

„  V  iv  53 


3  I 


Christ 


866 


Church 


Harold  v  i  332 

Becket  i  iv  241 

„     II  ii  216 

„     n  ii  391 


Queen  Mary  i  ii  9 

n  i  64 

V  ii  62 

Harold  in  ii  150 

Becket  i  iii  116 

„    ivii325 


Harold  ii  i  63 

Queen  Mary  v  iv  55 
Becket  i  iv  87 

„     V  ii  424 

Queen  Mary  i  i  30 

„        III  V  46 

V  ii  304 

The  Cup  I  ii  158 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  51 

III  i  110 


Christ  {c<mtinued)    Or  till  the  Pope  be  C  s. 

for  I  be  his  lord  and  master  i'  C,  my  lord. 

if  they  were  defective  as  St.  Peter  Denying  C, 

Still  choose  Barabbas  rather  than  the  C, 
Christchurch     Deans  Of  C,  Durham,  Exeter,  and 

W'ells 

Christendom    your  worship  the  first  man  in  Kent  and  C, 

So  brands  me  in  the  stare  of  C  A  heretic  ! 

Poitou,  all  C  is  raised  against  thee  ; 

make  Our  island-Church  a  schism  from  C, 

vou  are  known  Thro'  all  the  courts  of  C 

'''^f  Sanl'""  ""  ^"'"''  '""  '""'  "^'"^^  V-  Mary  in  iv  300 
yet  what  hatred  C  men  Bear  to  each  other,  „  rr  i»  182 

The  C  manhood  of  the  man  who  reigns  !  Harold  n    iU4 

The  kingliest  Abbey  in  all  C  lands,  "     "i  i  ^* 

We  willnot  give  him  A  C  burial :  "  J'     ^^ 

To  rival  him  in  C  charity.  ^«^''«« '"  \»  233 

Your  Christian's  C  charity  !  "        *  |  **^ 

Christian  (s)     But  for  your  C,  look  you,  you  shall  have  „        ii  J  ^^' 

Your  C's  Christian  charity  !  „        v  n  *<  j 

More  like  the  picture  Of  C  in  my  '  Pilgrun  s 

Progress'  ^       .    „  From,  of  May  niblQ 

Christian-charitiest    human-heartedest,  C-c  of  all  crab 

Christ  Jesus    (See  also  Christ,  Jesus  Christ)    as  in  the 
day  of  the  first  church,  when  C  J  was  King, 
our  lords  and  masters  in  C  J. 
Christmas  (adj.)     Are  braced  and  brazen  d  up  with  C 

wines 
Christmas  (s)     for  thou  art  as  white  as  three  C  ses. 
Chronicle    and  my  poor  c  Is  but  of  glass. 

be  defamed  Thro'  all  her  angry  c's  hereafter 
And  swallow'd  in  the  conqueror's  c. 
Chrysalis    like  a  butterfly  in  a  c,  You  spent  your  life  ; 
Chlik'd    England  now  Is  but  a  ball  c  between  France 
and  Spain,  „,    ^u    ui    i 

Church  (adj.)    clench'd  their  pirate  hides  To  the  bleak  c        ^^^^^^  ^^  jjj  37 

stirZt'yet  This  matter  of  the  C  lands.  Queen  Maryi  v  409 

Thou  art  the  man  to  fill  out  the  C  robe  ;  Becket,  Pro.  262 

In  the  c  rope  ?— no.  .  , ,  „.  "      ^° "'  ^ 

Church  (s)    {See  also  Island-Church)    not  to  yield  His  .rH'^R 

C  of  England  to  the  Papal  wolf  And  Mary  ;  Queen  Mary  i  n  36 

Have  I  climb'd  back  into  the  primal  c, 
All  the  c  is  grateful. 

to  play  The  tyrant,  or  in  commonwealth  or  c. 
Let  the  great  angel  of  the  c  come  with  him  ; 
Henry  broke  the  carcase  of  your  c  To  pieces, 
Steadying  the  tremulous  pillars  of  the  C — 
Ay,  even  in  the  c  there  is  a  man — Cranmer. 
Can  we  not  have  the  Catholic  c  as  well 
of  all  censures  Of  Holy  C  that  we  be  fall'n  mto, 
received  into  the  bosom  And  unity  of  Universal  C  ; 
islands  call'd  into  the  dawning  c  Out  of  the  dead, 
Father  hath  appointed  Head  Of  all  his  c, 

to  the  bosom  And  unity  of  Universal  C. 
but  now.  The  unity  of  Universal  C,  Mary  would 
have  it ;  -.in 

Old  Rome,  that  first  made  martyrs  m  the  C, 

What,  my  Lord  !     The  C  on  Peter's  rock  ?  never  ! 

It  was  the  shadow  of  the  C  that  trembled  ; 

Your  c  was  but  the  shadow  of  a  c, 

Began  to  batter  at  your  English  C, 

we  should  thoroughly  cleanse  the  C  withm 

bolster'd  up  The  gross  King's  headship  of  the  C, 

The  C's  evil  is  not  as  the  King's, 

Legate  Is  here  as  Pope  and  Master  of  the  C, 

I  kept  my  head  for  use  of  Holy  C ; 

and  plunge  His  foreign  fist  into  our  island  G 

Then  have  my  simple  headstone  by  the  c, 

that  His  c  May  flourish. 

Yet  to  save  Cranmer  were  to  serve  the  C, 

'  Martyr's  blood—seed  of  the  C    Mary.    Of  the 
true  C ;  but  his  is  none, 


Queen 


Church  (s)  (continued)     read  your  recantation  Before 
the  people  in  St.  Mary's  C. 
farewell ;  Until  I  see  you  in  St.  Mary's  C. 
Against  the  huge  corruptions  of  the  C, 
O  higher,  holier,  earlier,  purer  c, 
in  the  c  Repeat  your  recantation  in  the  ears 
that  hath  return'd  To  the  one  Catholic  Universal  C, 
So  poisoning  the  C,  so  long  continuing. 
Chief  prelate  of  our  C,  archbishop, 
misreport  His  ending  to  the  glory  of  their  c. 
Crying  '  Forward  ! ' — set  our  old  c  rocking. 
Out  of  the  c,  you  brace  of  cursed  crones, 
stood  More  like  an  ancient  father  of  the  C, 
For  Alva  is  true  son  of  the  true  c — 
When  I  should  guide  the  C  in  peace  at  home. 
The  scourge  and  butcher  of  their  English  c. 
as  in  the  day  of  the  first  c,  when  Christ  .Jesus 

was  King. 
And  done  such  mighty  things  by  Holy  C, 
and  your  c'es  Uncouth,  unhandsome, 
I  have  builded  the  great  c  of  Holy  Peter : 
and  saw  the  c  all  fiU'd  With  dead  men 
king  Hath  given  his  virgin  lamb  to  Holy  C 
loved  within  the  pale  forbidden  By  Holy  C  : 
Scared  by  the  c— 

Their  anthems  of  no  c,  how  sweet  they  are  ! 
Remains  beyond  all  chances  and  all  c'es. 
Our  Saints  have  moved  the  C  that  moves  the  world, 
made  too  good  an  use  of  Holy  C  To  break  her  close  ! 
Our  C  in  arms— the  lamb  the  lion— 
I  vow  to  build  a  c  to  God  Here  on  the  hill  of  battle ; 
being  brought  before  the  courts  of  the  C, 
The  C  in  the  pell-mell  of  Stephen's  time 
The  C  should  hold  her  baronies  of  me, 
to  whom  thou  art  bound  By  Holy  C. 
I,  true  son  Of  Holy  C— no  croucher  to  the  bregones 
King,  C,  and  State  to  him  but  foils  wherein 
Believing  I  should  ever  aid  the  C — 
if  there  ever  come  feud  between  C  and  Crown, 
The  people  know  their  C  a  tower  of  strength, 
I  more  than  once  have  gone  against  the  C. 
C  should  pay  her  scutage  like  the  lords.  ,  .    ,    „ 

That  I  should  go  against  the  C  with  him.  And  1  shall 
go  against  him  with  the  C, 
I  ii  50  My  truest  and  mine  utmost  for  the  C  ? 

I  v  178  For  how  have  fought  thine  utmost  for  the  C, 

I  v  192    •  'I  mean  to  fight  mine  utmost  for  the  C,  Against  the 

IV  377  King'? 

I  V  398  I  am  his  no  more,  and  I  must  serve  tne  c. 

I  V  518  they  are  Royal,  Not  of  the  C— 

III  i  169  these  new  railers  at  the  C  May  plaister 

in  iii  97  Knowing  how  much  you  reverence  Holy  C, 

III  iii  152  Are  not  so  much  at  feud  with  Holy  (^ 

III  iii  155  That  C  must  scorn  herself  whose  fearful  Priest 

in  iii  172  The  C  must  play  into  the  hands  of  kings ; 

in  iii  208  And  take  the  C's  danger  on  myself. 

in  iii  221  The  customs  of  the  C  are  Peter  s  rock. 

Wilt  thou  destroy  the  C  in  fighting  for  it, 
III  iii  229  '  If  any  cleric  be  accused  of  felony,  the  C  shall  not 

III  iv  127  protect  him ;      .  ., ,    ^     ^  ^,  „ 

III  iv  134  Is  not  the  C  the  visible  Lord  on  earth  :* 

m  iv  144  A  fit  place  for  the  monies  of  the  C, 

in  iv  146  the  King  shall  summon  the  chapter  of  that  c  to  court, 

ni  iv  186  He  meant  no  harm  nor  damage  to  the  C. 

ni  iv  196  He  heads  the  C  against  the  King  with  thee, 

ni  iv  246  Herbert,  Herbert,  have  I  betray  d  the  C  if 

in  iv  273  bad  me  seal  against  the  rights  of  the  C, 

ni  iv  347  murders  done  By  men,  the  scum  and  offal  of  the  c  ; 

in  iv  359  C  and  Crown,  Two  sisters  gliding  in  an  equal  dance, 

III  iv  364  As  Chancellor  thou  wast  against  the  C, 

in  V  114  The  spire  of  Holy  C  may  prick  the  graves— 

in  vi  69  The  C  will  hate  thee.  . 

IV  i  136  Fight  for  the  C,  and  set  the  C  agamst  me  ! 

set  the  C  This  day  between  the  hammer  and  the  anvil 
IV  i  147  and  no  forsworn  Archbishop  Shall  helm  the  C. 


Mary  iv  ii  1 
„  IV  ii  41 

IV  ii  101 
IV  ii  108] 
IV  ii  IS 
IV  iii  2] 
IV  iii 
IV  iii  70 
„       IV  iii  32 
,,       rv  iii 

IV  iii  53 
,.       IV  iii  58 

V  i  16 

V  ii( 
V  ii  IC 

V  iv  55 

V  V  74 
Harold  i  i  164 

I  i  179 
I  ii  81 
„     in  i  3a5 
„      ni  ii  24 
in  ii  87 
,.      in  ii  91 
„    iniil83 
V  i  41 
„      V  i  313 
,.      V  i  440 
„     V  ii  137 
Becket,  Pro.  13 
„       Pro.  19 
„  •    Pro.  24 
„       Pro.  68 
„     Pro.  211 
„     Pro.  268 
„     Pro.  417 
„     Pro.  465 
I  i  15 
1 130 
I  i  34 

I  i  93 
I  i  114 
I  i  118 

I  i  124 

I  i  146 

I  i  169 

I  i  307 

I  ii  48 

„         I  ii  54 

„         I  ii  64 

„  I  ii  68 

I  ii  72 

I  iii  24 

I  iii  36 

I  iii  87 
I  iii  93 
I  iii  105 
I  iii  109 
I  iii  217 
I  iii  245 
I  iii  285 
I  iii  313 
I  iii  409 
I  iii  443 
I  iii  529 
I  iii  553 
I  iii  565 
I  iii  569 
I  iii  584 
I  iii  598 


Chnrcb 


867 


City 


Church  (s)  {continued)     now  the  ^lory  of  the  C  Hath 
swallow'd  up  the  gloiy  of  the  King; 
Whatever  the  C  owns — she  holds  it  in  Free  and 

perpetual  alms, 
The  soul  the  body,  and  the  C  the  Throne, 
The  King,  these  customs,  all  the  C, 
The  C  is  ever  at  variance  with  the  kings, 
Were  the  C  king,  it  would  be  otherwise, 
for  the  sake  of  the  C  itself,  if  not  for  my  own, 
And  I  have  been  as  royal  with  the  C. 
Shrink  from  me,  like  a  daughter  of  the  C. 
Quarrel  of  Crown  and  C— to  rend  again. 
We  never  hounded  on  the  State  at  home  To  spoil  the  C. 
Holy  C  May  rock,  but  will  not  WTeck, 
Who  thief -like  fled  from  his  own  c  by  night, 
all  the  C  of  France  Decide  on  their  decision, 
thanks  of  Holy  C  are  due  to  those  That  went  before  us 
we  grant  the  C  King  over  this  world's  kings, 
— the  green  field — the  gray  c —  ,    ,     -n 

Agree  with  him  quickly  again,  even  for  the  sake  of  the  C. 
The  C  alone  hath  eyes— and  now  I  see  That  I  was 

blind- 
Perish  she,  I,  all,  before  The  C  should  suffer  wrong ! 
I  have  been  more  for  the  King  than  the  C  in  this 

matter — yea,  even  for  the  sake  of  the  C : 
so  violated  the  immemorial  usage  of  the  C, 
half-hanged  himself  in  the  rope  of  the  C,  or  rather 
pulled  all  the  C 

but  Salisbiiry  was  a  calf  cowed  by  Mother  C, 
puffed  out  such  an  incense  of  unctuosity  into  the 

nostrils  of  our  Gods  of  C  and  State, 
hurl  the  dread  ban  of  the  C  on  those 

The  State  will  die,  the  C  can  never  die. 
God's  grace  and  Holy  C  deliver'd  us. 

He  grovels  to  the  C  when  he's  black-blooded. 

The  C  is  all— the  crime  to  be  a  king. 

I  have  overshot  My  duties  to  our  Holy  Mother  C, 

Are  push'd  from  out  communion  of  the  C. 

Hath  used  the  full  authority  of  his  C 

The  C !  the  C  !  God's  eyes  !     I  would  the  C  were  down 
in  hell ! 

crying  On  Holy  C  to  thunder  out  her  rights 

she  would  not  believe  me,  and  .she  wish\l  The  C  were 
king: 

and  our  Mother  C  for  bride ; 

Divide  me  from  the  mother  c  of  England,  My  Canterbury 

chants  and  hymns  In  all  the  c'es, 

pass  the  censures  of  the  C  On  those  that  crown  d  young 
Henry 

my  dream  foretold  my  martyrdom  In  mine  own  c. 

Undo  the  doors :  the  c  is  not  a  castle : 

Seen  by  the  C  in  heaven,  the  C  on  earth — 

Except  they  make  submission  to  the  C. 

—for  thy  C,  O  Lord— Into  thy  hands,  . 

tho'  he  never  comes  to  c,  I  thought  better  of  him.    Prom,  of  May  i  2bl 

Thrones,  c'es,  ranks,  traditions,  customs,  >.  i  ^^ 

Ring,  trinket  of  the  C,  , ,         ,       ,  "  I  aZt 

Not  in  our  c— I  think  I  scarce  could  hold  my  head  up       „  i.t>»» 

and  the  weight  of  the  c  to  boot  on  my  shoulders.  Foresters  i  ii  58 

weight  of  the  flesh  at  odd  times  overbalance  the 
weight  of  the  c, 

which  a  pious  son  of  the  C  gave  me  this  mommg 

Thou  hast  roU'd  over  the  C  militant 

C  and  Law,  halt  and  pay  toll ! 

When  the  C  and  the  law  have  forgotten  God  s  music, 

Beware,  O  King,  the  vengeance  of  the  C. 

let  me  execute  the  vengeance  of  the  C  upon  them. 

the  vengeance  of  the  C !     Thou  shalt  pronounce  the 
blessing  of  the  C  ..  , , ,  •..  ,  • 

tararoh-bond    that  stale  C-b  which  Imk'd  me  with  him 
Church-censure    I  fear  C-c's  like  your  King. 

OiiSch-land    We  have  given  the  c-Z's  back:  ^^^,1^^  i  S32 

Churchless    Back  from  her  c  commerce  with  the  King  Becket  iv  ii  66^ 

{Jhurchman    her  needle  perfect,  and  her  learning  ,    qao 

B^ond  the  churchmen;  Quern  Mary  in  i  362 


Becket  i  iii  665 

„       I  iii  679 

I  iii  717 
„      I  iii  726 

1  iv  78 
..  I  iv  104 
.,      I  iv  153 

n  i  83 
„       n  i  278 

n  ii  56 

nii97 

II  ii  102 
n  ii  156 
n  ii  176 
II  ii  190 
II  ii  242 
uii296 
II  ii  378 

II  ii  436 
m  iii  20 

III  iii  65 

III  iii  73 

m  iii  76 
in  iii  96 

in  iii  116 
in  iii  210 
in  iii  336 

IV  ii  309 
ivii436 

vi26 

vi38 

vi59 

vi207 

vi216 
vii31 


V  ii  118 

V  ii  221 
vii360 

V  ii  367 

V  ii  391 
vii634 

V  iii  62 

V  iii  98 

V  iii  123 

V  iii  194 


iii  62 
in  281 
IV  272 
IV  429 
IV  554 
IV  914 
iv916 


IV  926 

Becket  iv  ii  447 

„      IV  ii  434 


Cbxactmasi  (continued)     being  English  c  How  should  __ 

he  bear  the  headship  of  the  Pope  ?  Quem  Mary  in  in  28 

And  by  the  c's  pitiless  doom  of  fire,  ..  ™*^ioi 

lives  Of  many  among  your  churchmen  were  so  foul  „         in  iv  191 

Statesman  not  C  he.  ^i^^ket,  Fro.  450 

thou,  that  art  c  too  In  a  fashion.  Foresters  iv  410 

Church-policy    State-policy  and  c-p  are  conjoint.  Queen  Mary  iii  ii  76 

Church-tower    sets  the  e-i  over  there  all  a-hell-fire  a^ 

it  were  ?  Becket  in  in  51 

Churchwarden    C  be  a  coomin,  thaw  me  and 'im  we 

niver  'grees  about  the  tithe  ;  Prom.,  of  May  I  446 

Churl    Thine,  thine,  or  King  or  c  !  Harold  m  u  37 

he  speaks  to  a  noble  as  tho'  he  were  a  c,  and  to  a  c        Becket,  Fro.  'idb 
C!     I  will  have  thee  frighted  into  France,  „  .^.."q^c 

Yea,  heard  the  c  against  the  baron—  ,,        ' '"  ^SR 

Lout,  c,  clown  !  P^om.  of  May  ni  739 

True  soul  of  the  Saxon  c  for  whom  song  has  no 

charm.  Foresters  n  i  o8o 

scares  The  Baron  at  the  torture  of  his  c's,  „         ni  106 

Chum    To  sing,  love,  marry,  c,  brew,  bake,  and  die.    Queen  Mary  in  v  111 
Cider-crop    they'll  hev'  a  fine  c-c  to-year  if  the  blossom 

'o^yds.  Prom,  of  May  i  316 

Cinder    I  wish  some  thunderbolt  Would  make  this 

Cole  a  c  Queen  Mcinj  iv  in  II 

lava-torrents  blast  and  blacken  a  province  To  a  c, 
hear.  ^''*  ^^V  "  ^^ 

Cinnamon    Nard,  C,  amomum,  benzoin.  -        ^  J|* 

Cipher    Ha!    Courtenay's  c.  Queen  Mary  tii}M 

Circe    Our  woodland  C  that  hath  witch'd  the  King  ?  Becket  m.  n  d2 

Circling    See,  first,  a  c  wood,  "    ^'"O- 161 

Circumbendibuses    all  manner  of  homages,  and  observ- 

ances,  andc.  „     ^"'ViV^^^ 

Circumstance    The  painful  c's  which  I  heard—  Prom,  of  May  n  mz 

Cistercian    as  I  hate  the  dirty  gap  in  the  face  of  a  C  monk,    Becket  ii  ii  381 

Cite     And  c  thee  to  appear  before  the  Pope,  ,,       i  "l."^ 

Cited    He  hath  c  me  to  Rome,  for  heresy.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  4Z 

Citizen    (See  also  Fellow-citizen)    c's  Stood  each  before 

his  shut-up  booth, 

With  execrating  execrable  eyes.  Glared  at  the  c. 

we  pray  That  we,  you  true  and  loyal  c's. 

And  see  the  c's  arm'd.     Good  day ; 

Ay,  and  for  Gardiner  !  being  English  c. 

The  c's  heir  hath  conquer'd  me  For  the  moment. 

Our  gallant  c's  murder'd  all  in  vain. 

Would  clap  his  honest  c's  on  the  back, 

Here  comes  a  c,  and  I  think  his  wife. 

City    After  him,  boys  !  and  pelt  him  from  the  c. 

make  Your  c  loyal,  and  be  the  mightiest  man 

How  look'd  the  c  When  now  you  past  it  ? 

Like  our  Council,  Your  c  is  divided. 

So  I  say  Your  c  is  divided, 

on  you.  In  your  own  c,  as  her  right,  my  Lord, 

I  leave  Lord  William  Howard  in  your  c, 

We  thank  your  Lordship  and  your  loyal  c. 

I  have  notice  from  our  partisans  Within  the  c 

scum  And  offal  of  the  c  would  not  change  Estates 

with  him;                                            ,    „             ..  "    ,^  ^^.'."  I!J 

Saints  to  scatter  sparks  of  plague  Thro'  all  your  cities,  Harold  n  ii  747 

A  hill,  a  fort,  a  c— that  reach'd  a  hand  »          ^^  !  ^ 

another  hill  Or  fort,  or  c,  took  it,  ..          iv  i  50 

Would  God  she  were— no,  here  withm  the  c.  Becket,  Fro.  im 

Last  night  I  followed  a  woman  in  the  c  here.  ,.       Pro.  469 

there  stole  into  the  c  a  breath  Full  of  the  meadows,  .,           1 1  261 

where  to  seek  ?  I  have  been  about  the  c.  ■•          i.i  ^98 

I  made  him  porcelain  from  the  clay  of  the  c—  ,.        i  lu  439 

if  the  c  be  sick,  and  I  cannot  call  the  kennel  sweet,  .,         n  ii  348 


n  ii  62 

n  ii  68 

n  ii  135 

n  ii  378 

„        in  iii  24 

Becket  n  ii  60 

The  Cup  I  ii  142 

„       I  ii  358 

Foresters  m  227 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  86 

n  ii  19 

n  ii  57 

n  ii  60 

n  ii  99 

n  ii  106 

II  ii  245 

11  ii  301 

„  n  iii  52 


plagues  That  smite  the  c  spare  the  solitudes. 

My  lord,  the  c  is  full  of  armed  men. 

she  told  us  of  arm'd  men  Here  in  the  c. 

These  arm'd  men  in  the  c,  these  fierce  faces — 

myrtle,  bowering-in  The  c  where  she  dwells. 

Brought  me  again  to  her  own  c  ?— 

in  a  c  thro'  which  he  past  with  the  Roman  anny ; 

in  some  c  where  Antonius  past. 

Most  hke  the  c  rose  against  Antonius, 


viil73 

V  ii  187 

v  ii  228 

V  iii  3 

The  Cup  I  i  4 

„     I  i  14 

„     ii42 

„     I  ii  56 

„     I  ii  62 


City 


868 


CSty  (continued)    The  Roman  is  encampt  without  your  c —    The  Cup  i  ii  84 
The  camp  is  half  a  league  without  the  c;  „       i  iii  90 

and  flatten  in  her  closing  chasm  Domed  cities,  hear.  „         ii  301 

as  she  was  helping  to  build  the  mound  against  the  c.    Foresters  n  i  309 
CSvil    Would  perish  on  the  c  slaughter-field,  Queen  Mary  in  i  118 

The  c  wars  are  gone  for  evermore :  „  in  v  150 

for  that  would  drag  The  cleric  before  the  c  judgment-seat,  Becket  i  iii  84 
Civil-spoken    He's  a  Somersetshire  man,  and  a  very  c-s 

gentleman.  Prom,  of  May  i  207 

'  Good  daay  then,  Dobson ! '     C-s  i'deed  !  „  i  301 

Claim  (s)    beast  might  roar  his  c  To  being  in  God's 

image,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  368 

know'st  my  c  on  England  Thro'  Edward's  promise :  Harold  n  ii  12 

Who  hath  a  better  c  then  to  the  crown  „     ii  ii  596 

Wilt  thou  uphold  my  c  ?  „     ii  ii  603 

Claim  (verb)     the  people  C  as  their  natural  leader —      Queen  Mary  i  iv  210 

Foliot  may  c  the  pall  For  London  too.  Becket  i  iii  55 

Claim'd     C  some  of  our  crown  lands  for  Canterbury —  „     i  iii  458 

Clamour     Roused  by  the  c  of  the  chase  he  woke.  The  Cup  i  ii  117 

with  no  fear  Of  the  world's  gossiping  c,  Prom,  of  May  i  528 

Clamour'd    The  c  darling  of  their  afternoon !  The  Cup  n  125 

Clan    The  weakness  and  the  dissonance  of  our  c's,  „         i  i  24 

'  I  go  to  fight  in  Scotland  With  many  a  savage  c ; '  Foresters  i  i  15 

Clang     evexy  parish  tower  Shall  c  and  clash  Queen  Mary  ii  i  230 

Iron  on  iron  c,  Harold  rv  iii  160 

Clank     c  The  shackles  that  wiU  bind  me  to  the  waU.  „         ii  ii  409 

Clap     Except  I  c  thee  into  prison  here,  Becket  v  i  110 

Would  c  his  honest  citizens  on  the  back,  The  Cup  i  ii  358 

Clapt  (adj.)     we  shall  hear  him  presently  with  c  wing  Crow 

over  Barbarossa —  Becket  u  ii  49 

Clapt  (verb)    Which  a  young  lust  had  c  upon  the  back,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  401 

they  c  their  hands  Upon  their  swords  when  ask'd ;  „  v  i  172 

wicked  sister  c  her  hands  and  laugh'd ;  Harold  v  ii  48 

i'  the  poorch  as  soon  as  he  c  eyes  of  'er.  Prom,  of  May  i  23 

Clarence  (lady  in  waiting  to  Queen  Mary)    C,  they 

hate  me ;  even  when  I  speak 

he  may  bring  you  news  from  Philip.     Mary. 

C,  C,  what  have  I  done  ? 

Our  C  there  Sees  ever  such  an  aureole 

Clash  (s)    cries,  and  c'es,  and  the  groans  of  men ; 

Clash  (verb)    every  parish  tower  Shall  clang  and  c 

Let  all  the  steeples  c, 

If  ever,  as  heaven  grant,  we  c  with  Spain, 

Smooth  thou  my  way,  before  he  c  witli  me ; 

sing,  Asaph !  c  The  cymbal,  Heman  ! 

and  king's  favour  might  so  c  That  thou  and  I — 

Clash'd    c  their  bells,  Shot  off  their  l3dng  cannon, 

Tho'  earth's  last  earthquake  c  the  minster-bells, 

Clashing     Ye  make  this  c  for  no  love  o'  the  customs 

Sceptre  and  crozier  c,  and  the  mitre  Grappling 

Less  c  with  their  priests — 

C  of  swords — three  upon  one,  and  that  one  our  Robin  !  Foresters  ii  i  419 

Clasp     And  c  the  faith  in  Christ ;  Queen  Mary  in  ii  122 

c  a  hand  Red  with  the  sacred  blood  of  Sinnatus  ?  The  Cup  rr  82 

waiting  To  c  their  lovers  by  the  golden  gates.  Prom,  of  May  i  248 

I  fall  before  thee,  c  Thy  knees.  ~" 

I  thought  I  saw  thee  c  and  kiss  a  man 

Thou  see  me  c  and  kiss  a  man  indeed, 

Fancied  he  saw  thee  c  and  kiss  a  man. 

I  have  seen  thee  c  and  kiss  a  man  indeed, 

Claspt    Then  c  the  cross,  and  pass'd  away  in  peace. 

My  lord,  We  have  c  your  cause. 
Clause     the  c's  added  To  that  same  treaty 
Claw    Such  hold-fast  c's  that  you  perforce 
Clay     (See  also  Adam-clay)    Statesmen  that  are  wise 
Shape  a  necessity,  as  a  sculptor  c, 
Our  altar  is  a  mound  of  dead  men's  c, 
I  made  him  porcelain  from  the  c  of  the  city — 
Clean    (See  also  Cle&Q)     And  cried  I  was  not  c,  what 
should  I  care  ? 
May  plaister  his  c  name  with  scurrilous  rhymes ! 
that  Is  c  against  God's  honour — 
Only  see  your  cloth  be  c. 
Clean    The  feller's  c  daazed,  an'  maazed,  an'  maated,  Prom,  of  May  n  728 
Cleanse    we  should  thoroughly  e  the  Church  within    Queen  Mary  in  iv  195 


Cloak 

Queen  Mary  1  i 


1 


Queen  Mary  v  ii  214 
So,  C.       ,.  V  ii  230 

V  ii  338 

V  ii  412 
Harold  m  i  375 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  230 

III  ii  237 

„       IV  iii  346 

Harold  n  ii  69 

„    m  i  187 

Becket,  Pro.  296 

Queen  Mary  ni  vi  95 

Becket  v  iii  41 

„     I  iii  136 

H  i  25 

.,     n  ii  147 


Foresters  n  i  599 

n  ii  72 

n  ii  76 

ra23 

IV  1035 
Queen  Mary  v  v  259 

Becket  n  ii  237 

Queen  Mary  m  iii  67 

Becket  n  ii  86 

Queen  Mary  in  iii  33 

V  ii  162 
Becket  i  iii  438 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  324 

Becket  i  i  308 

„    n  ii  163 

The  Falcon  420 


in  iv  230 
V  iii  115 


Clear  (adj.)    Stand  back,  keep  a  c  lane  ! 

In  c  and  open  day  were  congruent  With  that  vile 
Cranmer 

So  from  a  c  sky  falls  the  thunderbolt ! 

I  think  that  they  would  Molochize  them  too,  To  have 

the  heavens  c.  Harold  i  i  38 

Like  on  the  face,  the  brows — c  innocence  !  Becket  n  i  195^ 

Hath  he  stray'd  From  love's  c  path  into  the  conmion  bush,     „     m  i  247 

a  bat  flew  out  at  him  In  the  c  noon,  and  hook'd  him 

by  the  hair,  Foresters  n  ii  97 

Clear  (verb)    his  last  breath  C  Courtenay  and  the 

Princess  Queen  Mary  ra  i  135. 

I  bad  them  c  A  royal  pleasaunce  for  thee,  Becket  ii  i  127 

I  say  that  those  Who  went  before  us  did  not  wholly  c 
The  deadly  growths  of  earth,  „     n  ii  202 

Fasts,  disciplines  that  c  the  spiritual  eye,  „         v  i  42 

Clear'd     The  king,  the  lords,  the  people  c  him  of  it.  Harold  n  ii  522 

I've  bed  the  long  barn  c  out  of  all  the  machines,      Prom,  of  May  i  451 
Clearer    gray  dawn  Of  an  old  age  that  never  will  be 

mine  Is  all  the  c  seen.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  236. 

Cleave  (to  adhere)     and  c  unto  each  other  As  man  and 
wife? 

in  hope  the  crown  Would  c  to  me  that  but  obey'd 

— if  I  win  her  love.  They  too  will  c  to  me, 

I'll  c  to  you  rich  or  poor. 

C  to  him,  father !  he  will  come  home  at  last. 
Cleave  (to  divide)     bright  sky  c  To  the  very  feet  of  God, 

C  heaven,  and  send  thy  saints  that  I  may  say 

blow  that  brains  the  horseman  c's  the  horse,  ~ 
Cleaved     thro'  all  this  quarrel  I  still  have  c  to  the  crown, 
Cleaving    Is  like  the  c  of  a  heart ; 

C  to  your  original  Adam-clay, 
Cleft    c  the  tree  From  off  the  bearing  trunk. 

And  c  the  Moslem  turban  at  my  side. 
Clench'd    fierce  forekings  had  c  their  pirate  hides 
Cleric    A  c  lately  poison'd  his  own  mother, 

whether  between  laymen  or  c's,  shall  be  tried  in  the 
King's  court.' 

would  drag  The  c  before  the  civil  judgment-seat, 

'  If  any  c  be  accused  of  felony,  the  Church  shall  not 
protect  him ; 

A  c  violated  The  daughter  of  his  host, 

Say  that  a  c  murder'd  an  archbishop, 

the  lady  holds  the  c  Lovelier  than  any  soldier, 

Your  c  hath  your  lady. 

Lifted  our  produce,  driven  our  c's  out — 
Clever    And  speak  for  him  af ter^-you  that  are  so  c ! 
Cliff    Make  blush  the  maiden-white  of  our  tall  c's, 

make  their  wall  of  shields  Firm  as  thy  c's, 

voice  of  the  deep  as  it  hollows  the  c's  of  the  land 
Cliff-gibbeted     they  should  hang  C-g  for  sea-marks : 
Clifford    (See  also  Rosamund,  Rosamund  de  Clifford) 
minded  me  Of  the  sweet  woods  of  C, 

The  mouth  is  only  C,  my  dear  father. 

I  am  a  C,  My  son  a  C  and  Plantagenet. 
Climb     we  will  c  The  mountain  opposite  and  watch  the 
chase. 

He  c's  the  throne.     Hot  blood,  ambition, 
Climb'd    Have  I  c  back  into  the  primal  church. 

Last  night  I  c  into  the  gate-house,  Brett, 

Hath  c  the  throne  and  almost  clutch'd  the  crown ; 

That  hath  c  up  to  nobler  company. 

his  poUtic  Holiness  Hath  all  but  c  the  Roman  perch 


V  ii  137 
Becket  v  i  50 

The  Cup  I  iii  154 

Foresters  i  i  155 

I  i  197 

Harold  n  ii  742 

n  ii  785- 

V  i  593 
Becket  v  i  48 

Queen  Alary  in  vi  196 

„  rv  iii  418 

Harold  m  i  137 

Foresters  TV  1001 

Harold  rv  iii  35 

Becket,  Pro.  10 

I  iii  80 
I  iii  84 

I  iii  86> 
„  I  iii  382 
„  I  iii  399 
„  v  i  193 
„  V  i  200 
„  V  ii  432 
Prom,  of  May  i  620 
Harold  ii  ii  333 

V  i  480 
Becket  n  i  4 

Harold  n  i  97 


and  it 


Becket  i  i  264 
„  II  i  220' 
„   IV  ii  226 


The  Cup  I  i  116 

n  168 

Queen  Mary  I  ii  49 

„        n  iii  14 

Becket,  Pro.  21 

I  i  351 

n  ii  46 


Clime     Is  it  the  fashion  in  this  c  for  women 
Your  people  are  as  cheerless  as  your  c ; 
Cling    now  thy  love  to  mine  Will  c  more  close, 
C  to  their  love ;  for,  now  the  sons  of  Godwin 
women  C  to  the  conquer'd,  if  they  love, 
I  c  to  you  all  the  more. 
Your  names  wiU  c  like  ivy  to  the  wood. 
Clinging    c  thus  Felt  the  remorseless  outdraught 

c  to  thee  Closer  than  ever. 
Clip    rather  than  so  c  The  flowery  robe  of  Hymen 
dipt    The  common  barber  c  your  hair, 
Cloak    like  his  c,  his  manners  want  the  nap 


Queen  Mary  in  vi  90' 

V  i  84 

in  ii  160 

Harold  i  i  324 

„     IV  i  213 

Foresters  i  i  160 

IV  1085 

Harold  n  i  7 

Becket  n  i  285 

The  Cup  n  435 

}iieen  Mary  iv  ii  131 

ni  V  69 


Cloak 


869 


Cold 


Cloak  (continued)     Wrap  them  together  in  a  purple 

A  ragged  c  for  saddle — he,  he,  he, 
Clock    Toll  of  a  bell,  Stroke  of  a  c, 

so  they  bided  on  and  on  till  vour  o'  the  c. 
Cloister    Thou  art  my  nun,  thy  c  in  mine  arms. 

then  would  find  Her  nest  within  the  c. 

Get  thou  into  thy  c  as  the  king  Will'd  it : 

Those  arm'd  men  in  the  c. 
Cloister'd    She  must  be  c  somehow,  lest  the  king 

The  silent,  c,  solitary  life. 
Cloistral     Retiring  into  c  solitude 
Close  (adj.  and  adv.)    Can  you  bee?    Elizabeth.    Can 
you,  my  Lord?     Courtenay.     C  as  a  miser's 
casket.    Listen :  „  i  iv  106 

They  call  me  near,  for  I  am  c  to  thee  And  England —        Harold  in  i  6 

with  his  charm  of  simple  style  And  c  dialectic.         Prom,  of  May  i  225 


Harold  v  ii  158 

Becket  v  i  248 

Queen  Mary  iil  v  143 

„  IV  iii  510 

Harold  I  ii  63 

„    IV  i  234 

.,      V  i  309 

Becket  v  iii  50 

Harold  I  ii  157 

,,     III  i  277 

Queen  Mary  in  vi  209 


n361 
II  535 


ni  227 

Foresters  ill  50 


From  the  farm  Here,  c  at  hand 

C  by  that  alder-island  in  your  brook, 

you  kept  your  veil  too  c  for  that  when  they  carried 
you  m ; 

but  call  Kate  when  you  will,  for  I  am  c  at  hand. 
Close  (an  end)     Gone  narrowing  down  and  darkening 
M  to  a  c.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  432 

war  with  Brittany  to  a  goodlier  c  Than  else  had  been,      Harold  ii  ii  49 

And  never  a  flower  at  the  c ;  (repeat)  Becket,  Pro.  332,  342 

<9ose  (verb)     all  too  much  at  odds  to  c  at  once  Quec-n,  Mary  i  v  632 

Tell  her  to  come  and  c  my  dying  eyes,  .,  v  ii  599 

tell  the  cooks  to  c  The  doors  of  all  the  offices  below.        ..  v  v  116 

To  make  all  England  one,  to  c  all  feuds,  Harold  rv  i  141 

Over!  the  sweet  summer  c'*,  (repeat)  Becket,  Pro.  302,  324,  331 

that  the  rift  he  made  May  c  between  us,  .,  n  ii  132 

C  the  great  gate — ho,  there — upon  the  town.      .,  v  ii  529 

Will  c  with  me  that  to  submit  at  once  The  Cup  i  ii  140 

c  not  yet  the  door  upon  a  night  That  looks  half  day.  „        i  ii  387 

She — c  the  Temple  door.     Let  her  not  fly. 

and  warm  hands  c  with  warm  hands, 
dosed  (adj.  and  part.)     on  a  soft  bed,  in  a  c  room,  with 

light,  fire,  physic,  tendance ;  Queen  Mary  v  iv  36 

Thro'  all  c  doors  a  dreadful  whisper  crept  Becket  v  ii  88 

or  c  For  ever  in  a  Moorish  tower.  Foresters  ii  i  655 

CSOBed  (verb)     King  c  with  me  last  July  That  I  should  pass    Becket  v  ii  388 
CSoser    Might  it  not  Be  the  rough  preface  of  some  c 

^  bond? 

So  that  your  sister  were  but  look'd  to  c. 

Hast  thou  not  mark'd — come  c  to  mine  ear — 

clinging  to  thee  C  than  ever. 

Why,  an  old  woman  can  shoot  c  than  you  two. 
flOoset    listening  In  some  dark  c. 

Get  thee  into  the  c  there. 
Closing    gulf  and  flatten  in  her  c  chasm  Domed  cities,  hear. 
Cloth    {See  also  Cloth  of  gold,  Dust-doth)     Only  see  your 

c  be  clean.  The  Falcon  420 

see  your  c  be  white  as  snow !  „  498 

2\oQxe    His  faith  shall  c  the  world  that  will  be  liis.      Queen  Mary  in  ii  180 

And  tropes  are  good  to  c  a  naked  truth, 

c's  itself  In  maiden  flesh  and  blood, 
:!lothed    stand  C  with  the  full  authority  of  Rome, 

C  with  the  mystic  silver  of  her  moon. 
31oth  of  gold    That  royal  commonplace  too,  cog, 
]loud  (s)    {See  also  Thunder-cloud)     then  King  Harry 
look'd  from  out  a  c, 

under  no  ceiling  but  the  c  that  wept  on  them, 

be  as  the  shadow  of  a  c  Crossing  your  liglit. 

Come,  Harold,  shake  the  c  off ! 

Fall,  c,  and  fill  the  house — 

Customs,  traditions, — c's  that  come  and  go ; 

As  Canterbury  calls  them,  wandering  c's. 

My  sun,  no  c  !    Let  there  not  be  one  frown  in  this  one  hour, 

Out  of  the  c,  my  Sun — out  of  the  eclipse 


n460 
Foresters  i  iii  20 


Queen  Mary  i  iv  48 

I  V  461 

V  i  225 

Becket  n  i  286 

Foresters  n  i  400 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  217 

Foresters  ii  i  215 

The  Cup  II  300 


in  iv  150 

Foresters  in  115 

Becket  v  ii  493 

Foresters  n  i  608 

Queen  Mary  in  i  54 

„  IV  ii  7 

„  V  iv  40 

Harold  n  ii  177 
in  i  74 
„       III  i  190 
Becket  i  iii  22 
I  iii  71 
ni42 
II  i  202 
black  c  that  hath  come  over  the  sun  and  cast  ..  ni  iii  46 

King  at  last  is  fairly  scared  by  this  c — this  interdict.  .,  in  iii  64 

My  princess  of  the  c,  my  plumed  purveyor  The  Falcon  7 

upon  me  Thro'  that  rich  c  of  blossom.  Prom,  of  May  n  250 

Aiid  the  white  c  is  roll'd  along  the  sky !  Foresters  i  ii  319 

Flung  by  tJhe  golden  mantle  of  the  c,  „  ii  i  28 


Cloud  (verb)  C  not  thy  birthday  with  one  fear  for  me.  Foresters  i  ii  125 
Cloudless  But  c  heavens  which  we  have  foimd  together  The  Cup  i  ii  415 
Clown    Their  A  B  C  is  darkness,  c's  and  grooms  May 

read  it !  Qiteen  Mary  in  iv  35 

one  that  pares  his  nails ;  to  me  ?  the  c  !  „  iii  v  66 

Insolent  c.     Shall  I  smite  him  Becket  i  iv  223 

less  loyalty  in  it  than  the  backward  scrape  of  the  c's  heel —  „    in  iii  144 
parish-parson  bawl  our  banns  Before  your 

gaping  c's  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  687 

How  the  c  glared  at  me  !  that  Dobbins,  is  it,  „  n  611 

Lout,  churl,  c !  „         in  739 

Club    See  Wa>club 

Cluckt    The  hen  c  late  by  the  white  farm  gate,  „  i  38 

Clumsy     O  the  c  word  !     Rohin.     Take  thou  this  light 

kiss  for  thy  c  word.  Foresters  ill  133 

You  lovers  are  such  c  summer-flies  „  iv  10 

Clung    these  earls  and  barons,  that  c  to  me,  Becket  i  iv  66 

Clutdi    Here  is  one  would  c  Our  pretty  Marian  for  his 

paramour,  Foresters  iv  766 

Clutch'd     and  almost  c  the  crown ;  Becket,  Pro.  22 

Coal     {See  also  Coal)     As  one  that  blows  the  c  to  cool  the 

fire.  „       V  ii  549 

my  father  and  I  forgave  you  stealing  our  c's.  Prom,  of  May  m  69 

Co&l    cotched  'im  once  a-stealin'  c's  an'  I  sent  fur  'im,  „  i  412 

Coalscuttle    fell  agean  c  and  my  kneea  gev  waay  „  i  403 

Coarse     This  hard  c  man  of  old  hath  crouch'd  to  me    Queen  Mary  iv  ii  169 

but  neither  cold,  c,  cruel.  And  more  than  all —  „  v  ii  481 

Coarseness    This  c  is  a  want  of  phantasy.  „  v  ii  438 

Coat    And  carve  my  c  upon  the  walls  again !  „  ii  iv  110 

This  Gardiner  tum'd  his  c  in  Henry's  time ;  ,,  in  iii  17 

Down  with  him,  tear  his  c  from  his  back.  Foresters  i  iii  73 

Cobbled     for  mine  own  father  Was  great,  and  c.  Harold  iv  i  91 

Cobbler     the  psahn-singing  weavers,  c's,  scum —  Queen  Mary  iii  iv  290 

Cock     Our  Lord  Becket's  our  great  sitting-hen  c,  Becket  i  iv  126 

He  was  the  c  o'  the  walk ;  Foresters  n  i  320 

Cockboat    he  look'd  the  Great  Harry,  You  but  his  c ;     Queen  Mary  v  ii  147 

Cocker'd    See  Nursery-cocker'd 

Cockerel     thou'rt  no  such  c  thyself,  „  i  i  41 

Cockle-shell    Scuttle  his  c-s  ?  Harold  iv  iii  142 

Cocksbody    It  must  be  thus ;  and  yet,  c !  Queen  Mary  in  iii  4 

He's  here,  and  king,  or  will  be — yet  c  !  „        in  iii  45 

Codlin     as  sleek  and  as  round-about  as  a  mellow  c.  Foresters  i  i  43 

Coesnon     from  the  liquid  sands  of  C  Haled  Harold  n  ii  56 

Coffin     like  Mahound'^s  c  hung  between  heaven  and  earth —    Becket  u  ii  361 

Cognisant     told  Sir  Maurice  there  was  one  C  of  this.    Queen  Mary  ii  iv  ICX) 

Wyatt  did  confess  the  Princess  C  thereof,  „  ir  iv  113 

Coif     Disguise  me — thy  gown  and  thy  c.  Foresters  u  i  187 

^Y^  ^Yj  gown,  c,  and  petticoat,  „        ii  i  194 

Coil'd     And  c  himself  about  her  sacred  waist.  „        n  i  138 

Coin     He  can  but  read  the  king's  face  on  his  c's.  Harold  i  i  71 

Spare  not  thy  tongue  !  be  lavish  with  our  c's,  Becket  ii  ii  470 

cast  him  from  their  doors  Like  a  base  c.  The  Cup  i  ii  353 

Then  after  we  have  eased  them  of  their  c's  Foresters  ni  173 

Co-king    C-k's  we  were,  and  made  the  laws  together.  Becket  n  ii  123  ' 

Cold  (adj.)     {See  also  Cowd,  Ice-cold)    Madam,  me- 

thinks  a  c  face  and  a  haughty.  Queen  Mary  i  v  196 

If  c,  his  life  is  pure.  „  i  v  333 

They  call  him  c.  Haughty,  ay,  worse.  „  i  v  431 

know  that  whether  A  wind  be  warm  or  c,  „  i  v  620 

Ay,  and  then  as  c  as  ever.     Is  Calais  taken  ?  „  v  ii  26 

Ah,  Madam,  but  your  people  are  so  c ;  „  v  ii  281 

Thou  art  c  thyself  To  babble  of  their  coldness.  „         v  ii  290 

but  neither  c,  coarse,  cruel.  And  more  than  all —  „         v  ii  481 

The  c,  white  lily  blowing  in  her  cell :  Harold  in  i  274 

Vying  a  tear  with  our  c  dews,  „        v  i  151 

In  c,  white  cells  beneath  an  icy  moon —  „        v  i  325 

John  of  Salisbury  Hath  often  laid  a  c  hand  on  my  heats,     Becket  i  i  384 
he  makes  moan  that  all  be  a-getting  c.  „      i  iv  62 

C  after  warm,  winter  after  summer,  ,,      i  iv  64 

frosted  off  me  by  the  first  c  frown  of  the  King.    C,  but 

look  how  the  table  steams,  „      i  iv  68 

You  are  too  c  to  know  the  fashion  of  it.  „    n  ii  126 

And  when  the  c  corners  of  the  King's  mouth  began  To 

thaw,  „  III  iii  153 

To  warm  the  c  boimds  of  our  dying  life  The  Cup  i  iii  128 


Cold 


870 


Come 


The  Falcon  578 

Foresters  I  ii  242 

11  i  490 

III  1 

III  4 

IV  243 

Prom .  of  May  iii  56 

The  Cup  I  ii  6 

The  Falcon  449 

Foresters  iv  21 

IV  27 

Becket  in  i  18 


The  Falcon  642 


Cold  (adj.)  {continued)    It  is  but  thin  and  c,  Not  like  the 
vintage 

Why,  what  a  c  grasp  is  thine — 

Thou  blowest  hot  and  c.    Where  is  she  then  ? 

What  makes  you  seem  so  c  to  Robin,  lady 't 

What  makes  thee  think  I  seem  so  c  to  Robin  ? 

In  the  c  water  that  she  lost  her  voice, 

Did  you  find  that  you  worked  at  all  the  m  orse 
upon  the  c  tea 
Cold  (s)    bring  him  home  Safe  from  the  dark  and  the  c, 

0  heavens  !  the  very  letters  seem  to  shake  With  c, 
And  the  bee  buzz'd  up  in  the  c. 
And  the  bee  buzz'd  oS  in  the  c. 

Colder    To-day  I  almost  fear'd  your  kiss  was  c — 
Cold-manner'd    c-m  friend  may  strangely  do  us  The  truest 

service. 

Coldness    Thou  art  cold  thyself  To  babble  of  their  c.    Queen  Mai-y  v  ii  292 

God's  revenge  upon  this  realm  For  narrowness  and  c:       Harold  i  i  174 

Cole    Why  are  the  trumpets  blowing.  Father  C  ?  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  24 

1  wish  some  thunderbolt  Would  make  this  C  a  cinder,  „  iv  iii  11 
Collar  on  his  neck  a  c,  Gold,  thick  with  diamonds ;  ,.  m  i  79 
Colleagued  yet  the  Pope  is  now  c  with  France ;  „  v  i  140 
Collect    c  the  fleet ;  Let  every  craft  that  carries                       „          v  ii  273 

Morcar,  c  thy  men  ;  Edwin,  my  friend —  Harold  iv  i  256 

College     But  the  King  hath  bought  half  the  C  of  Redhats.     Becket  uii  374 
CoUoquy     After  the  long  brain-dazing  colloquies,  Queen  Mary  rv  ii  92 

' „  V  ii  613 

IV  i  101 
II  ii  182 
II  ii  321 

„   •      III  1399 

„  in  V  5 

IV  iii  169 

IV  iii  226 

V  ii  206 
The  Falcon  364 

Prom,  of  May  u  666 
Foresters  i  i  250 

Prom,  of  May  ii  559 
The  Falcon  364 
Becket,  Pro.  514 


Her  Highness  is  too  ill  for  c. 

Colossal    Your  father  was  a  man  Of  such  c  kinghood, 

Colonr  (s)    under  c  Of  such  a  cause  as  hath  no  c. 
The  c  freely  play'd  into  her  face. 
Who  changed  not  c  when  she  saw  the  block. 
The  c's  of  our  Queen  are  green  and  white, 
Whose  c's  in  a  moment  break  and  fly, 
declare  to  you  my  very  faith  Without  all  c. 
Whose  c's  in  a  moment  break  and  fly ! ' 
A  c,  which  has  colour'd  all  my  life, 
C  Flows  thro'  my  life  again. 
He  wore  thy  c's  once  at  a  tourney. 

OolOTir  (verb)    She  c's  !    Bora.    Sir ! 

Colour'd    A  colour,  which  has  c  all  my  life, 

Colt    c  winced  and  whinnied  and  flung  up  Jier  heels ; 

Be  the  c  dead  ?     Dora.     No,  Father.  Prom,  of  May  ni  429 

deer  from  a  dog,  or  a  e  from  a  gad-fly.  Foresters  n  i  434 

Column    For  smooth  stone  c's  of  the  sanctuary,  Harold  i  ii  101 

hurls  the  victor's  c  down  with  him  That  crowns  it,  The  Cup  n  295 

Co-mate    C-^n's  we  were,  and  had  our  sport  together,  Becket  n  ii  121 

Comb    And  bind  him  in  from  harming  of  their  c's.       Queen  Mary  m  iii  58 

Combat    My  lords,  is  this  a  c  or  a  council  ?  Becket  i  iii  133 

Come    (See  also  A-cum,  Coom,  Coomed)    They  love 

thee,  and  thou  canst  not  c  to  harm.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  67 

These  birds  of  passage  c  before  their  tune :  .,  i  iii  75 

And  in  the  whirl  of  change  may  c  to  be  one.  ,.  i  iii  107 

Prince  of  fluff  and  feather  c  To  woo  you,  „         i  iv  163 

This  c's  of  parleying  with  my  Lord  of  Devon.  ,,         i  iv  251 

Your  time  will  c.    Elizabeth.    I  think  my  time 

will  c.  „         1  iv  255 

C,  e,  I  will  go  with  you  to  the  Queen.  ,.         i  iv  297 

Madam,  the  Lord  Chancellor.     Mary.     Bid  him  c  in.        „  i  v  97 

C  you  to  tell  me  this,  my  Lord  ?  „  i  v  106 

Bid  him  c  in.     Good  morning,  Sir  de  Noailles.  „  i  v  241 

Let  the  great  angel  of  the  church  c  with  him ;  „  i  v  377 

To  save  your  crown  that  it  must  c  to  this.  „  i  v  479 

No,  Renard ;  it  must  never  c  to  this.  „  i  v  482 

he  will  not  c  Till  she  be  gone.  „  i  v  512 

For  Philip  c's,  one  hand  in  mine,  „  i  v  515 

No,  say  I  c.     I  won  by  boldness  once.  „  i  v  547 

Why  c  s  that  old  fox-Fleming  back  again  ?  „  i  v  581 

Her  Highness  c's.  „  i  v  635 

No  new  news  that  Philip  c's  to  wed  Mary,  „  u  i  16 

Ay,  for  the  Saints  are  c  to  reign  again.  „  ii  i  21 

I  fear  you  c  to  carry  it  off  my  shoulders,  ,,  ii  i  91 

C  locusting  upon  us,  eat  us  up,  „  ii  i  101 

C,  you  bluster,  Antony !  „  n  i  118 

and  if  Philip  c  to  be  King,  0,  my  God !  ,.  n  i  199 

C,  now,  you're  sonnetting  again.  „         n  i  247 


Come  (continued)    I  trust  the  Queen  c's  hither  with 

her  guards.  Queen 

One  word  before  she  c's.  ,, 

Queen  had  written  her  word  to  c  to  court :  „ 

Here  c's  her  Royal  Grace.  „ 

In  mine  own  person  am  I  c  to  you, 

Your  lawful  Prince  hath  c  to  cast  herself 

C,  sirs,  we  prate ;  hence  all —  „ 

Wyatt  c's  to  Southwark  ; 

thro'  thine  help  we  are  c  to  London  Bridge ; 

make  Those  that  we  c  to  serve  our  sharpest  foes  ?  ,. 

we  know  that  ye  be  c  to  kill  the  Queen,  ,, 

I  have  not  c  to  kill  the  Queen  Or  here  or  there :  ,. 

Whence  c  you,  sir  ? 

Philip  would  not  c  Till  Guildford  Dudley 

An  hour  will  c  \^^hen  they  will  sweep  her  from  the  seas.     ,. 

here  they  c— a  pale  horse  for  Death 

The  Queen  c's  first,  Mary  and  Philip. 

C  to  me  to-morrow. —  ,. 

He  c's,  and  my  star  rises.  „ 

Oh,  Philip,  c  with  me ;  „ 

Nay  c  with  me — one  moment !  „ 

We  c  not  to  condemn,  but  reconcile;  We  c  not  to 
compel,  but  call  again;  We  c  not  to  destroy, 
but  edify ;  "  , 

what  saith  Christ  ?     '  Compel  them  to  c  in.'  ,. 

'  I  c  not  to  bring  peace  but  a  sword '  ? 

The  end's  not  c.    Pole.     No — nor  this  way  will  c, 

I  c  for  counsel  and  ye  give  me  feuds, 

pray  Heaven  That  you  may  see  according  to  our 
sight.    C,  cousin. 

C,  c,  the  morsel  stuck — this  Cardinal's  fault — 

Rogers  and  Ferrar,  for  their  time  is  c, 

not  like  a  word.  That  c's  and  goes  in  uttering.  ,, 

Is  like  a  word  that  c's  from  olden  days,  ,. 

But  there  hath  some  one  c ; 

C,  Robin,  Robin,  C  and  kiss  me  now ;  ,. 

C  behind  and  kiss  me  milking  the  cow  !  „ 

Rose  hand  in  hand,  and  whisper'd,  '  c  away  ! 

Thou  last  of  all  the  Tudors,  c  away !  „ 

When  next  there  c's  a  missive  from  the  Queen  „ 

For  I  will  c  no  nearer  to  your  Grace ;  „ 

You  know  I  never  c  till  I  be  call'd.  „ 

C,  c,  the  worst !  ,. 

You  are  to  e  to  Court  on  the  instant;  „ 

C,  c,  you  are  chill  here ; 

the  fools,  of  this  fair  prince  to  c ; 

As  else  we  might  be — here  she  c's. 

Here  c  the  Cranmerites  ! 

Cranmer,  I  e  to  question  j'ou  again ; 

refusing  none  That  c  to  Thee  for  succour,  unto  Thee, 
Therefore,  I  c ; 

forasmuch  as  I  have  c  To  the  last  end  of  life, 

I  c  to  the  great  cause  that  weighs  Upon  my  conscience      „ 

So  I  may  c  to  the  fire. 

So  that  she  c  to  rvde  us.  „ 

When  we  had  c  where  Ridley  burnt  with  Latimer, 

C  out,  my  Lord,  it  is  a  world  of  fools. 

Knows  where  he  nested — ever  c's  again.  „ 

I  am  faint  with  fear  that  you  will  c  no  more.  ,. 

Sire,  I  obey  you.    C  quickly.  „ 

Hast  thou  not  mark'd — c  closer  to  mine  ear —  „ 

When  back  he  c's  at  evening  hath  the  door  „ 

they  c  back  upon  my  dreams. 

what  good  could  c  of  that  ?  „ 

And  says,  he  will  c  quickly. 

you  said  more ;  You  said  he  would  c  quickly.  „ 

And  yet  he  will  c  quickly  ... 

And  teU  him  that  I  know  he  c's  no  more.  „ 

Tell  her  to  c  and  close  my  dying  eyes. 

Amen.    C  on.  „ 

'  I  am  dying,  Philip ;  c  to  me.' 

Nothing ;  but '  c,  c,  c'  and  all  awry, 

I  cannot  doubt  but  that  he  c's  again ; 

No,  Philip  c's  and  goes,  but  never  goes.  „ 


Come 


871 


Come 


Oome  (continued)    C  thou  down.     Lie  there.  Queen  Mary  v  v  179 

Madam,  your  royal  sister  c's  to  see  you.  „  v  v  192 

C,  c !  as  yet  thou  art  not  gone  so  wild  Harold  i  i  298 

C,  c,  Join  hands,  let  brethi'en  dwell  in  unity ;  „        i  i  395 

Love  is  c  with  a  song  and  a  smile, 

I  will  demand  his  ward  From  Edward  when  I  c  again. 

C,  thou  shalt  dream  no  more  such  dreams ; 

tho'  I  would  not  That  it  should  c  to  that. 

Not  to  c  back  till  Tostig  shall  have  shown 

Here  c's  the  would-be  what  I  will  be  .  .  . 

the  lark  sings,  the  sweet  stars  c  and  go, 

I  will  not  hear  thee — WiUiam  c's. 

C  hither,  I  have  a  power ; 

C,  Harold,  shake  the  cloud  off  ! 

Spare  and  forbear  him,  Harold,  if  he  c's  ! 

Pray  God  that  c  not  suddenly  ! 

not  so  with  us — No  wings  to  c  and  go. 

Ill  news  hath  c !     Our  hapless  brother, 

— the  Pope  Is  man  and  c's  as  God. — 

This  brother  c's  to  save  Your  land  from  waste ; 

Somewhere  hard  at  hand.     Call  and  she  c's. 

Who  is  it  c's  this  way  ?    Tostig  ? 

I  c  for  mine  own  Earldom,  my  Northumbria ; 

C  back  with  him.     Know  what  thou  dost ; 

C  thou  back,  and  be  Once  more  a  son  of  Godwin. 

Nay  then,  c  thou  back  to  us ! 

bracing  still  that  he  will  c  To  thrust  our  Harold's  throne 

Let  him  c !  let  him  c. 

Cram  thy  crop  full,  but  c  when  thou  art  call'd. 

C  yet  once  more,  from  where  I  am  at  peace, 

There  is  one  C  as  Goliath  came  of  yore — 

And  thou  art  c  to  rob  them  of  their  rings ! 

C,  c,  thou  art  but  deacon,  not  yet  bishop, 

C,  c,  I  love  thee  and  I  know  thee,  I  know  thee, 

C,  I  would  give  her  to  thy  care  in  England 

Whatever  c  between  us  ?     Becket.     What  should  c 

Between  us,  Henry  ? 
Well — whatever  c  between  us. 
C  to  me  to-morrow. 
C  with  me.     Let  me  learn  at  full  The  manner  of  his 

death, 
and  if  there  ever  c  feud  between  Church  and  Crown, 
C,  c,  my  lord  Archbishop ; 

0  brother ! — I  may  c  to  martyrdom. 
Customs,  traditions, — clouds  that  c  and  go ; 
Is  black  and  white  at  once,  and  c's  to  nought, 
but  an  he  c  to  Saltwood,  By  God's  death, 
should  harm  c  of  it,  it  is  the  Pope  Will  be  to  blame — 
snake  that  sloughs  c's  out  a  snake  again. 
Arm'd  with  thy  cross,  to  c  before  the  King  ? 
The  King's  '  God's  eyes ! '  c  now  so  thick  and  fast, 
C  on,  c  on !  it  is  not  fit  for  us  To  see  the  proud  Arch- 
bishop mutilated. 

My  lord,  I  c  imwiUingly. 

may  I  c  in  with  my  poor  friend,  my  dog  ? 

C,  c !  thou  hadst  thy  share  on  her. 

1  must  fly  to  France  to-night.    C  with  me. 
C,  you  filthy  knaves,  let  us  pass. 
There  is  a  bench.     C,  wilt  thou  sit  ? 
no  hand  to  mate  with  her,  If  it  should  c  to  that. 
C,  c,  mine  hour ! 
The  word  should  c  from  him. 
I  pray  you  c  and  take  it. 
For  here  he  c's  to  conmient  on  the  time. 
No  one  c's,  Nor  foe  nor  friend ; 
Always  Becket !     He  always  c's  between  us. 
for  here  c's  my  lady,  and,  my  lady, 

j  if  it  should  c  to  that ! — To  that — to  what  ? 
when  the  horn  sounds  she  c's  out  as  a  wolf. 
black  cloud  that  hath  c  over  the  sun  and  cast  us  all 

into  shadow  ? 
so  that  the  smell  of  their  own  roast  had  not  c  across  it 
from  those,  as  I  said  before,  there  may  c  a  conflagration- 
ere  Pope  or  King  Had  c  between  us  ! 
That  perfect  trust  may  c  again  between  its, 


liilO 

iii60 

iiil08 

1 11227 

I  ii  241 

II  ii  138 

II  ii  434 

II  ii  480 

in  i  5 

mi  73 

mi  300 

mi  364 

ra  ii  99 

miil20 

in  ii  174 

ivi94 

IV  i  186 

IV  ii  1 

IV  ii  29 

ivii  47 

rvii59 

IV  ii  64 

IV  iii  125 

IV  iii  132 

IV  iii  234 

vi238 

vi493 

vii36 

Becket,  Pro.  82 

Pro.  95 

„      Pro,  142 

„  Pro.  194 
„  Pro.  199 
„      Pro.  410 

.,      Pro.  424 

„      Pro.  464 

I  i  201 

I  i  361 

I  iii  22 

I  iii  32 

I  iii  182 

I  iii  220 

I  iii  449 

I  iii  509 

I  iii  609 

I  iii  613 

I  iii  648 

I  iv  93 

I  iv  123 
„       I  iv  154 

I  iv  203 

II  i  124 
n  i  191 

II  i  212 
„  u  ii  134 
,.       II  ii  263 

n  ii  308 

III  i  37 
III  i  90 

m  i  153 
in  i  259 
m  ii  23 

„  m  iii  46 

„  m  iii  120 

„  ui  iii  164 

„  in  iii  268 

„  in  iii  351 


Come  {continued)    C  to  me,  little  one.     How  earnest  thou 

hither  ?  Becket  iv  i  3 

Ay,  but  some  one  c's  to  see  her  now  and  then.  „     iv  i  15 

C,  here  is  a  golden  chain  I  will  give  thee  „     iv  i  40 

C  along,  then  ?  we  shall  see  the  silk  here  and  there,  „     iv  i  55 
I  sent  this  Margery,  and  she  c's  not  back ;  I  sent  another, 

and  she  c's  not  back.  „      iv  ii  3 

C  with  me,  love,  And  I  will  love  thee  ...  „  iv  ii  154 

C  hither,  man ;  stand  there.  „  iv  ii  219 

C  thou  with  me  to  Godstow  nunnery,  „  iv  ii  366 

What !     Is  the  end  c  ?  „     v  i  148 

C  you  to  conf&ss  ?  „     v  ii  71 

Hark!     Is  it  they?    C!  „    v  iii  15 

C,  then,  with  us  to  vespers.  ,,     v  iii  34 

How  can  I  c  When  you  so  block  the  entry  ?  „    v  iii  36 

C  in,  my  friends,  c  in  !  „    v  iii  68 

C  with  us — ^nay — thou  art  our  prisoner— c  !  „  v  iii  143 

C ;  as  he  said,  thou  art  our  prisoner.  „  v  iii  155 

You  c  here  with  your  soldiers  to  enforce  The  Cup  i  i  75 

Stand  aside.  Stand  aside ;  here  she  c's  !  „      I  i  105 

He  c's,  a  rough,  bluff,  simple-looking  fellow.  ,,      i  i  172 

c  upon  her  Again,  perhaps,  to-day — her.  „      i  i  179 

Nay,  here  he  c's.  „       i  ii  25 

C,  c,  we  will  not  quarrel  about  the  stag.  „       i  ii  38 

Think, — torture,--death, — and  c.  „     i  ii  314 

C,  c,  could  he  deny  it  ?     What  did  he  say  ?  „     i  ii  344 

If  I  be  not  back  in  half  an  hour,  C  after  me.  „     i  ii  439 

Will  she  c  to  me  Now  that  she  knows  me  Synorix  ?  „      i  iii  19 

Nay,  she  will  not  c.  „      i  iii  31 

Why  c  we  now  ?    Whom  shall  we  seize  upon  ?  „    i  iii  177 

C  once  more  to  me  Before  the  crowning, —  „         ii  78 

Let  him  c — a  legion  with  him,  if  he  will.  „       n  250 

Why  c's  he  not  to  meet  me  ?  „       n  528 

C,  c,  Filippo,  what  is  there  in  the  larder  ?  The  Falcon  117 

I  knew  it  would  c  to  this,  (repeat)  „  156, 174 

I  always  knew  it  would  c  to  this  !  (repeat)  „  158, 175 

C  in.  Madonna,  c  in.  „          176 
— but  c  when  they  will — then  or  now^it's  all  for  the 

best,  c  when  they  will —  „           200 

Call  him  back  and  say  I  c  to  breakfast  with  him.  „           213 

His  falcon,  and  I  c  to  ask  for  his  falcon,  „           220 

I  c  this  day  to  break  my  fast  with  you.  „           276 

Yet  I  c  To  ask  a  gift.  ..          298 
That  seem'd  to  c  and  go. 

who  c's  To  rob  you  of  your  one  delight  on  earth 
tho'  he  never  c's  to  church,  I  thought  better  of 

him. 
when  Thought  C's  down  among  the  crowd. 
Heaven  curse  him  if  he  c  not  at  your  call ! 
For  ever,  you  foolish  child  !     What's  c  over  you  ? 
to  c  together  again  in  a  moment  and  to  go  on  together 

again, 
C,  then,  and  make  them  happy  in  the  long  barn. 
What  are  you  ?     Where  do  you  c  from  ? 
The  body  ! — Heavens  !     I  c ! 
C,  you  will  set  all  right  again, 
if  the  farming-men  be  c  for  their  wages,  to  -send  them 

up  to  me.  „          m  16 

C,  c,  you  worked  well  enough,  ,.           m  61 

that  you  did  not  c  into  the  hayfield.  „           m  82 

C,  c,  keep  a  good  heart !  ,.         ni  252 

not  forgotten  his  promise  to  c  when  I  called  him.  ..         in  330 

Well,  Milly,  why  do  you  c  in  so  roughly  ?  ,,         m  342 

a  Sister  of  Mercy,  c  from  the  death-bed  of  a  pauper,  .,         ui  376 

She  would  have  persuaded  me  to  c  back  here,  „         in  384 

Must  c  to  in  our  spring-and-winter  workl  „         m  510 

C,  c,  my  girl,  enough  Of  this  strange  talk.  „         m  619 

C,  a,  why  do  ye  loiter  here  ?  Foresters  i  i  79 

to  c  at  their  love  with  all  manner  of  homsiges,  „      i  i  102 

'  You  have  c  for  you  saw  Wealth  coming,'  „      i  i  152 

Cleave  to  him,  father !  he  will  c  home  at  last.  ,.      i  i  198 

have  c  as  freely  as  heaven's  air  and  mother's  milk  ?  ,.      i  i  209 

Say,  we  will  c.  „      i  i  302 

I  c  here  to  see  this  daughter  of  Sir  Richard  of  the  Lea  ,.      i  ii  26 

the  Earl  and  Sir  Richard  c  this  way.  ,.    i  ii  148 


650 

827 

Prom,  of  May  i  261 
I  501 
1764 
I  772 


1 774 
I  790 
n359 
u572 
n658 


Come 

Come  (contintted)    I  cannot  answer  thee  till  Richard  c. 

Sheriff.    And  when  he  c's  ?    Marian.    Well,  voii 

must  wait  till  then. 
C  away,  daughter. 

But  if  the  better  times  should  never  c  ? 
And  if  the  worst  time  c  ? 
Have  they  c  for  me  ?    Here  is  the  witch's  hut. 
C  m,  c  in ;  I  would  give  my  life  for  thee, 
Cm,cin.    John.    Why  did  ye  keep  us  at  the  door  so  long  ' 
He  will  c  to  the  gibbet  at  last. 
And  here  c's  another. 

C  now,  I  fain  would  have  a  bout  with  thee. 
C  to  him.     Marian.    O  my  poor  father ! 
there  c's  a  deputation  From  our  finikin  fairy  nation 
warm  thy  heart  to  Little  John.     Look  where  he  c's  ' 
we  be  beggars,  we  c  to  ask  o'  you.     We  ha'  nothing 
Here  cs  a,  citizen,  and  I  think  his  wife. 


872 


Common 


Foresters  i  ii  221 
I  ii  283 
I  ii  288 

I  ii  290 
ni  177 
nil88 

II  i  222 
ni328 
II  i  399 
ui552 

n  ii  7 

II  ii  144 

in  46 

III  190 

m227 

m413 

in  422 

IV  18 

IV  25 

IV  36 


and  I  pray  you  to  c  between  us  again, 

c  between  me  and  my  Kate  and  make  us  one  again 

So  c,  c !      '  Hum ! ' 

But  c,c\'    ' Hum ! ' 

Till  thou  thyself  shalt  c  to  sing  it — in  time. 

thou  seest  the  land  has  c  between  us,  And  my  sick  father 
here  has  c  between  us  And  this  rich  Sheriff  too  has  c 
between  us ; 

But  will  they  c  ? 

if  they  c  I  will  not  tear  the  bond, 

but  here  c's  one  of  bigger  mould. 

Rogue,  we  c  not  alone. 

save  King  Richard,  when  he  c's,  forbid  me. 

C,  girl,  thou  shalt  along  with  us  on  the  instant. 

You,  Prince,  our  king  to  c — 

When  Richard  c's  he  is  soft  enough  to  pardon  His  brother  • 

and  she  will  not  marry  till  Richard  c. 

But  look,  who  c's  ? 

C  from  out  That  oak-tree ! 
Comedy    A  c  meant  to  seem  a  tragedy — 

players  In  such  a  c  as  our  court  of  Provence 
Comelier    She  looks  c  than  ordinary  to-day  • 
Comely    {See  also  Coomly)    Master  Dobson^  you  are  a  c 

man  to  look  at.  p^^  ^j-  ^^y  ^  jgg 


IV  53 

iv91 

iv97 

IV114 

IV  573 

IV  665 

rv678 

IV  696 

IV  746 

IV  773 

IV  977 

IV  996 

Becket  iv  ii  322 

V  i  189 

Queen  Mary  i  i  70 


Comest    Why  c  thou  like  a  death's  head  at  my  feast  ? 

Thou  c  a  very  angel  out  of  heaven. 
Comet    and  look  upon  my  face.  Not  on  the  c. 

That  were  too  small  a  matter  for  a  c ! 

Too  small !  a  c  would  not  show  for  that ! 

Put  thou  the  c  and  the  blast  together — 

Your  c  came  and  went. 
O^eth    Blessed  is  he  that  c  in  the  name  of  the  Lord  ' 
Comfort    (See  also  Heart-comfort)    And  it  would  be 
your  c,  as  I  tnist ; 

when  last  he  wrote,  declared  His  c  in  your  Grace 

I  could  make  his  age  A  c  to  him — 

01^  carters  and  our  shepherds  Still  find  a  c  there. 
ComiOTtable    set  up  your  broken  images ;  Be  c  to  me 
Comforted     Be  c.     Thou  art  the  man- 
Coming  (adj.  and  part.)    (See  also  A-<50omin',  Coomin) 

I'^Z^l  ®P^^K  \u   J^^  ""^Q^een  !  .  Queen  Mary  i  iii  83 

C^ardmer,  c  with  the  Queen,  And  meeting  Pembroke,  ,         n  ii  309 

same  tide  Which,  c  with  our  coming,  seem'd  to  smile 

They  are  c  now. 

Legate's  c  To  bring  us  absolution  from  the  Pope. 

there  s  the  face  c  on  here  of  one  Who  knows  me 

I  fain  would  hear  him  c !  .  .  . 

leave  them  for  a  year,  and  c  back  Find  them  again. 

I  saw  him  c  with  his  brother  Odo  The  Bayeux  bishop, 

^ot  c  fiercely  like  a  conqueror,  now, 

First  of  a  line  that  c  from  the  people, 

why,  then  it  is  my  will— Is  he  c  ? 

voice  c  up  with  the  voice  of  the  deep  from  the  strand. 

One  c  up  with  a  song 
Love  that  is  bom  of  the  deep  c  up  with  the  sun  from 

the  sea.  (repeat) 
Some  dreadful  thing  is  c  on  me. 
He  bows,  he  bares  his  head,  he  is  c  hither. 


Foresters  i  ii  210 

n  i  105 

Harold  i  i  27 

„     I  i  471 

„     I  i  474 

.,      n  i  15 

.,  Ill  i  359 

Becket  i  iii  758 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  225 

m  vi  79 

Prom,  of  May  ii  662 

m  529 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  301 

Becket  i  i  132 


n  iii  22 

m  i  181 

ni  i  431 

m  i  470 

Harold  i  ii  5 

„     II  i  89 

„  n  ii  347 

„  ri  ii  757 

„  vi386 

Becket  i  iii  474 

»  II  i  5 


11  i  9, 19 
mi  267 
ni  iii  34 


Coming  (adj.  and  part.)  (continued)    Is  he  c  ?  I  thought  I 
heard  A  footstep.  ' 

I  fear  some  strange  and  evil  chance  C  upon  me, 
walk  with  me  we  needs  must  meet  Antonius  c, ' 
Thou-;-c  my  way  too — Gamma— good-night, 
there  is  Monna  Giovanna  e  down  the  hill  from  the 

castle. 
C  to  visit  my  lord,  for  the  first  time  in  her  life  too  ' 
I  m  c  down,  Mr.  Dobson. 
But  see  they  are  c  out  for  the  dance  already. 
Hark,  Dora,  some  one  is  c. 
'  You  have  come  for  you  saw  Wealth  c,' 
But  they  are  c  hither  for  the  dance- 
but  the  twilight  of  the  c  day  already  glimmers  in  the  east 
Is  c  with  a  swarm  of  mercenaries  To  break  our  band 
mark  d  if  those  two  knaves  from  York  be  c  ? 


The  Cwp  I  ii  10 
I  iii  76 
I  iii  93 
II  492 


The  Falcon  160 

169 

Prom,  of  May  i  45 

I  795 

III  339 
Foresters  i  i  152 

iii  52 
I  ii  247 
ni452 

IV  113 


Coming  (s)     At  his  c  Your  star  will  rise. 

at  once  may  know  The  wherefore  of  this  c, 

same  tide  Which,  coming  with  our  e,  seem'd  to  smile 

I  have  changed  a  word  with  him  In  c, 

and  think  of  this  in  your  c.     '  Maby  the  Queen.' 

And  wait  my  c  back. 

How  oft  in  c  hast  thou  broken  bread  ? 

with  my  lady's  c  that  had  so  flurried  me, 

I  trust  he  brings  us  news  of  the  King's  c. 

To  warn  us  of  his  c ! 

We  told  the  Prince  and  the  Sheriff  of  our  c. 
Command  (s)    so  my  Lord  of  Pembroke  in  c  Of  all  her 

tJ.Tp'^V^,®'-         .    „  Queen  Mary  nil  305 

Lord  Pembroke  in  c  of  all  our  force  n  iv  3 

I  have  the  Count's  c's  to  follow  thee.  Harold  ii  ii  235 

1  nave  the  Count  s  c  s.  „  jj  239 

But  by  the  King's  c  are  written  down,  Becket  i  iii  72 

by  the  King's  c  I,  John  of  Oxford,  r  i,i  74 

Now,  sirs,  the  King's  c's  !  "    y  j"  322 

Command  (verb)    Her  Grace  the  Queen  c's  you  to  the  "   " 


Queen  Mary  i  v  410 

II  ii  138 

n  iii  22 

miv  16 

m  V  224 

III  vi  219 

Harold  iv  iii  199 

The  Falcon  492 

Foresters  i  iii  54 

ni458 

IV  576 


Queen  Mary  in  iii  270 
Harold  m  ii  41 

V  i  340 

V  i  456 
Becket  i  iii  752 

V  ii  325 

V  ii  375 

V  ii  383 
Foresters  iv  868 

Harold  v  i  359 

„       V  i  614 

Becket  in  i  194 

,.      Pro.  418 

I  i  324 

„      V  iii  163 

The  Falcon  567 


Tower 
and  c  That  kiss  my  due  when  subject 
The  king  c's  thee,  woman  ! 
Power  now  from  Harold  to  c  thee  hence 
King  c's  you  upon  pain  of  death, 
C's  you  to  be  dutiful  and  leal  To  your  young  King 
King  c's  you  to  absolve  the  bishops 
King  c's  you.     We  are  all  King's  men. 
How  if  the  King  c  it  ? 
Commandment    Obey  my  first  and  last  c.    Go  ! 
They  have  broken  the  c  of  the  king  ! 
she  kept  the  seventh  c  better  than  some  I  knoAv  on. 
Commend    He  c's  me  now  From  out  his  grave 
when  thou  seest  him  next,  C  me  to  thy  friend. 
I  do  c  my  cause  to  God,  the  Virgin, 

c  them  to  your  ladyship's  most  peculiar  appreciation.      ^  ,„  ^  .*,.i,v«  ^u, 

Commendation    his  last  words  were  a  c  of  Thomas  Becket  Becket,  Pro  401 

commended    It  has  been  much  c  as  a  medicine.  The  Falcon  587 

Comment    here  he  comes  to  c  on  the  time.  Becket  11  ii  308 

Commerce    Back  from  her  churchless  c  with  the  King  iv  ii  332 

Commission    That  hastes  with  full  c  from  the  Pope       Queen  Maru  ni  ii  51 

That  our  c  is  to  heal,  not  harm ;  „         in  iii  185 

Our  letters  of  c  will  declare  this  plainlier.  "         m  m  222 

Commission'd    Thou  art  c  to  Elizabeth,  And  not  to  me !       "  v  ii  594 

I  have  c  thee  to  save  the  man :  Harold  n  ii  98 

Commissioner    You  would  not  cap  the  Pope's  c~        Queen  Mary  iv  ii  123 

Commit    to  whom  The  king,  my  father,  did  c  liis 

trust ;  JJ  Jj  208 

Committed    John  of  Salisbury  c  The  secret  of  the  bower,      '' Becket  in  iii  4 
Common  (adj.)     the  tongue  yet  quiver'd  with  the  jest 

When  the  head  leapt-«o  c  !  Queen  Mary  1  v  477 

And  thro'  this  c  knot  and  bond  of  love,  „  u  jj  193 

The  c  barber  dipt  your  hair,  "         „  jj  131 

For  the  pure  honour  of  our  c  nature,  '         jv  iii  297 

Things  that  seem  jerk'd  out  of  the  c  rut  Of  Nature  " Harold  1  i  137 

JNow  must  I  send  thee  as  a  c  friend  Becket  1  i  341 

when  murder  c  As  nature's  death,  j  jij  343 

Hath  he  stray 'd  From  love's  clear  path  into  the  c  bush,        ,',    ni  i  247 
Lost  in  the  c  good,  the  c  wrong,  ,,       v  ii  40 


Common 


873 


Consent 


Oommon  (adj.)  (continvM)    you  will  find  The  c 

brotherhood  of  man  has  been  Wrong'd  Prom,  of  May  m  543 

Common  (s)    lanker  than  an  old  horse  turned  out  to  die  on 

the  c.  Foresters  i  i  52 

iJommoner    Should  we  so  doat  on  courage,  were  it  c  ?  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  340 

Oommonplace    That  royal  c  too,  cloth  of  gold,  „  ni  i  54 

Take  thou  mine  answer  in  bare  c —  Becket,  Pro.  282 

Oommoos     however  the  Council  and  the  C  may  fence    Queen  Mary  n  i  171 


Lords  and  C  will  bow  down  before  him 

And  C  here  in  Parliament  assembled, 
Commonweal    That  Centaur  of  a  monstrous  C, 
Commonwealth    to  play  The  tyrant,  or  in  c  or  church. 
Communion    It  is  but  a  c,  not  a  mass :  (repeat) 

you  have  put  so  many  of  the  King's  household  out 
of  c, 

Are  push'd  from  out  c  of  the  Church. 
Commmiist    I  that  have  been  call'd  a  Socialist,  A  C, 

a  Nihilist, — 
Companion    Leave  me  now.  Will  you,  c  to  myself, 
sir? 

My  comrade,  boon  c,  my  co-reveller. 

His  one  c  here — ^nay,  I  have  heard  That, 
Company    With  our  advice  and  in  our  c. 

She  will  address  your  guilds  and  companies. 

and  these  our  companies  And  guilds  of  London, 

I,  Lord  Mayor  Of  London,  and  our  guilds  and  companies 

Three  voices  from  our  guilds  and  companies  ! 

With  all  your  trades,  and  guilds,  and  companies. 

That  hath  climb'd  up  to  nobler  c. 

Oh,  do  not  damn  yourself  for  c  ! 

Ay,  prune  our  c  of  thine  own  and  go  ! 
Compass  (s)    such  a  one  Was  without  rudder,  anchor, 

c —  Prom,  of  May  ni  534 

Compass  (verb)     To  c  which  I  wrote  myself  to  Borne,     Queen  Mary  v  ii  49 

Not  small  for  thee,  if  thou  canst  c  it.  Harold  i  i  477 

Compel     We  come  not  to  c,  but  call  again ;  Queen  Mary  iii  iii  187 

what  saith  Christ  ?    '  C  them  to  come  in.'  „  in  iv  29 

for  the  sake  of  Sinnatus  your  husband,  I  must  c  you.    The  Cup  i  iii  102 

Take  thou  my  bow  and  arrow  and  c  them  to  pay  toll.     Foresters  ui  263 


rni433 

III  iii  114 

III  iv  163 

I  V  191 

.,    IV  ii  56,  111 

Becket  in  iii  311 
V  i  58 

Prom,  of  May  iii  585 

Queen  Mary  ni  v  212 

Becket  i  iii  460 

The  Falcon  225 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  151 

n  ii  15 

II  ii  128 

II  ii  141 

II  ii  256 

II  ii  297 

Becket  i  i  351 

„    v  ii  523 

The  Falcon  695 


Complain    If  this  be  so,  c  to  your  young  King, 
Complexion    The  peoples  are  imlike  as  their  e ; 
Compliment    Mere  c's  and  wishes. 
Comport    And  how  did  Roger  of  York  c  himself  ? 
Compose    to  c  the  event  In  some  such  form  as  least 
Compromise     But — if  let  be — balance  and  c ; 
Compurgation    freed  himself  By  oath  and  c 
Comrade    My  c,  boon  companion,  my  co-reveller. 

My  c  of  the  house,  and  of  the  field. 

C's,  I  thank  you  for  your  loyalty, 
Conciliation    No  more  feuds,  but  peace,  Peace  and  c  ! 
Conclude    I  c  the  King  a  beast ;  Verily  a  lion 
Concluded    Your  audience  is  c,  sir. 
Concubine    His  children  and  his  c,  belike. 
Condemn    We  come  not  to  c,  but  reconcile : 

c  The  blameless  exile  ? — 

The  King  c's  your  excommunicating — 

If  the  King  C  us  without  trial, 
Condemn'd    said  she  was  c  to  die  for  treason  ; 
Condition    Nay — but  there  be  c's,  easy  ones, 

C's  ?     What  c's  ?  pay  him  back  His  ransom  ? 

I  must  not  hence  Save  on  c's. 

Obey  the  Coimt's  c's,  my  good  friend. 

But  on  c's.    Canst  thou  guess  at  them  ? 


Becket  v  ii  448 
Queen  Mary  v  i  89 

V  ii  596 
Becket  m  iii  85 

Queen  Mary  i  v  223 

V  V  223 
Harold  ii  ii  520 

Becket  i  iii  460 

The  Falcon  875 

Foresters  in  78 

The  Falcon  911 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  411 

I  V  337 

IV  i  165 

ni  iii  186 

Becket  n  ii  395 

„       V  ii  317 

Foresters  iv  902 

Queen  Mary  in  i  377 

Harold  n  ii  206 

n  ii  212 

n  ii  262 

.,       n  ii  276 

n  ii  343 


Conduct    (See  also  Safe-conduct)     They  have  given  me 

a  safe  c :  Queen  Mary  i  ii  101 

Conduit    The  c  painted — the  nine  worthies — ay  !  „  ni  i  258 

Confer     and  c  with  her  ladyship's  seneschal.  The  Falcon  415 

Conference    We'll  have  no  private  c.    Welcome  to 

England  !  Queen  Mary  v  iii  13 

convene  This  c  but  to  babble  of  our  wives?  Becket  n  ii  90 

Wyatt  did  c  the  Princess  Cognisant  thereof,   Queen  Mary  n  iv  111 
Went  on  his  knees,  and  pray'd  me  to  c  In  Wyatt's 

business,  „  ni  v  166 

c  Your  faith  before  all  hearers ;  „  iv  ii  79 

Thou  shalt  c  all  thy  sweet  sins  to  me.  Becket  ii  i  291 


Confess  (continued)     Come,  c,  good  brother,  Becket  n  ii  82 

Come  you  to  c  ?  „       v  ii  71 

I'll  be  bound  to  c  her  love  to  him  at  last.  The  Falcon  172 
Confessed    Father  Philip  that  has  c  our  mother  for  twenty 

years,  Becket  in  i  111 
Confession    Shamed  a  too  trustful  widow  whom  you  heard 

In  her  c ;  Foresters  in  387 

Confessor    Saving  my  c  and  my  cousin  Pole.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  527 

No,  nor  archbishop,  nor  my  c  yet.  Becket,  Pro.  84 

for  I  should  find  An  easy  father  c  in  thee.  „       Pro.  88 

And  it  is  so  lonely  here — no  c.  „       n  i  290 

Thou  art  the  Earl's  c  and  shouldst  know.  Foresters  i  ii  55 
Confident    iSee  Over-confident 

Confirm    Thy  naked  word  thy  bond  !  c  it  now  Before  Harold  n  ii  693 

Name  him ;  the  Holy  Father  will  c  him.  Becket,  Pro.  245 

Confirm'd     By  Heaven's  grace,  I  am  more  and  more  c.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  22 

Confiscate    C  lands,  goods,  money —  „           n  i  102 
Conflagration    that  hath  squeezed  out  this  side-smile 

upon  Canterbury,  whereof  may  come  c.  Becket  in  iii  58 

from  those,  as  I  said  before,  there  may  come  a  c —  „    m  iii  165 

Confound    Their  Graces,  our  disgraces  !    God  c  them  !  Queen  Mary  in  i  415 

and  weave  the  web  That  may  c  thee  yet.  Harold  i  i  212 

Hath  harried  mine  own  cattle — God  c  him  !  „   iv  iii  190 

Confounded     Lest  you  should  be  c  with  it.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  178 

I  am  c  by  thee.     Go  in  peace.  Becket  i  iii  731 

Confounder    A  shaker  and  c  of  the  realm ;  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  40 

Confuse    C  her  not ;  she  hath  begun  Her  life-long  prayer.    Harold  m  i  322 

Confused    Myself  c  with  parting  from  the  King.  Becket  ni  i  237 

Confusion    And  if  I  breed  c  anyway —  Queen  Mary  i  iii  93 

I  have  heard  the  Normans  Count  upon  this  c —  Harold  n  ii  459 

see  c  fall  On  thee  and  on  thine  house.  „       n  ii  489 

that  had  found  a  King  Who  ranged  c's,  Becket  i  iii  371 

I  see  it — some  c.  Some  strange  mistake.  „      m  i  234 

And  bring  us  to  c.                  "  Prom,  of  May  ii  279 

C  !— Ah  well,  well !  „            ni  508 

Congratulate     Kiss  and  c  me,  my  good  Kate.  Foresters  iv  1033 

Congratulation    Madam,  I  brought  My  King's  c's ;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  570 

Congruent    In  clear  and  open  day  were  c  With  that  vile 

Cranmer  „        m  iv  230 

Conjecture  (s)    My  liege,  to  your  c.  Becket  i  ii  50 

Conjecture  (verb)    If  Mary  will  not  hear  us — well — c —  Queen  Mary  i  iv  117 

Conjoint    State-policy  and  church-policy  are  c,  „           ni  ii  73 

Conjured     C  the  mightier  Harold  from  his  North  Harold  rv  ii  68 

Conquer    He  told  me  I  should  c : —  „     rv  i  263 

And  told  me  we  should  c.  „     iv  i  267 

Conqner'd    and  when  we  fought  I  c,  „       i  i  446 

we  are  Danes,  Who  c  what  we  walk  on,  „       rv  i  38 

and  women  Cling  to  the  c,  if  they  love,  „     rv  i  213 

His  conqueror  c  Aldwyth.  „     rv  i  218 

when  at  thy  side  He  c  with  thee.  „     rv  iii  29 

chanting  that  old  song  of  Brunanburg  Where  England  c.      „       v  i  216 

citizen's  heir  hath  c  me  For  the  moment.  Becket  n  ii  60 

Conqueror     Not  coming  fiercely  like  a  c,  now,  Harold  ii  ii  757 

If  not,  they  cannot  hate  the  c.  „       iv  i  215 

His  c  conquer'd  Aldwyth.  „       rv  i  218 

York  crown'd  the  C — not  Canterbury.  Becket  in  iii  197 

■ — fight  out  the  good  fight — die  C.  „        v  iii  191 

And  swallow'd  in  the  c's  chronicle.  The  Cup  i  ii  158 

Conscience    And  keep  with  Christ  and  c —  Queen  Mary  i  v  558 

Convicted  by  their  c,  arrant  cowards,  ,,              n  ii  9 

This  was  against  her  c — would  be  murder !  „          m  i  418 

which  God's  hand  Wrote  on  her  c,  „          in  i  422 

cause  that  weighs  Upon  my  c  more  than  anything  „        iv  iii  238 

have  thy  c  White  as  a  maiden's  hand,  Harold  n  ii  283 

A  c  for  his  own  soul,  not  his  realm ;  „        m  i  63 

A  twilight  c  lighted  thro'  a  chink ;  ,.        m  i  65 

That  scared  the  dying  c  of  the  king,  „        v  i  211 

Who  like  my  c  never  lets  me  be.  Becket  v  ii  75 

— the  crowd  would  call  it  c —  Prom,  of  May  n  638 

What  pricks  thee  save  it  be  thy  e,  man  ?  Foresters  iv  626 

Consecrate    sware  To  c  my  virgin  here  to  heaven —  Harold  in  i  276 

Consent  (s)     with  the  c  of  our  lord  the  King,  and  by  the 

advice  Becket  i  iii  111 
Consent  (verb)    I  would  never  C  thereto,  nor  marry 


while  I  live ; 


Queen  Alary  ii  ii  231 


Consent 


874 


Cottage 


Harold  \  i  6 

Becket  i  iii  138 

Queen  Mary  I  v  271 

III  i  210 

III  ii  237 

„      III  iv  389 

Harold  ii  ii  644 

Becket  u  ii  178 

„      n  ii  182 

mill 

Queen  Mary  v  i  144 

Becket  m  i  7 

Queen  Mary  I  iv  137 

Prom,  of  May  in  22 
Queen  Mary  iv  iii  48 
IV  176 


Consent  (verb)  {continued)    Ay  ...  if  the  Witan  will  c  to 

this.  Harold  ii  ii  616 

Consider     Pray — c —  Queen  Mary  i  iv  141 

But  as  to  Philip  and  your  Grace — c, —  ,.  v  iii  65 

Consistory    In  full  c,  When  I  was  made  Archbishop,  „  v  ii  84 

Consonant    As  may  be  c  with  mortality.  „         iv  iii  419 

Consort    I  dream'd  I  was  the  c  of  a  king,  Becket  v  i  144 

Conspiracy    With  some  c  against  the  woli.  The  Cup  i  ii  16 

There  will  be  more  conspiracies,  I  fear.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  433 

Tliis  is  the  fifth  c  hatch  d  in  France ;  „  v  i  297 

Rome  has  a  glimpse  of  this  c ;  The  Cup  i  ii  233 

Conspirator     But  if  he  be  c,  Rome  wUl  chain,  Or  slay  him.        „  i  i  18 

Rome  never  yet  hath  spar'd  c.  „        i  ii  234 

Constancy    draws  From  you,  and  from  my  c  to  you.  Tlie  Fahon  812 

Constant     callous  with  a  c  stripe,  Unwoundable.  Queen  Mary  v  v  171 

and  had  my  c  '  No '  For  aU  but  instant  battle. 
Constitution    for  no  love  o'  the  customs,  Or  c's. 
Content  (adj.)    Must  be  c  with  that;  and  so,  farewell. 

They  smile  as  if  c  with  one  another. 

So  the  wine  run,  and  there  be  revelry,  C  am  I. 

Is  now  c  to  grant  you  full  forgiveness, 

I  am  c.  For  thou  art  truthful. 

Decide  on  their  decision,  I  am  c. 

Let  him  do  the  same  to  me — I  am  c. 

No  woman  but  should  be  c  with  that — 
Content  (verb)     C  you,  Madam ;  You  must  abide  my 
judgment, 

Let  it  c  you  now  There  is  no  woman  that  I  love 
Continue    And  so  you  may  c  mine,  farewell, 

I  am  sorry  Mr.  Steer  still  c's  too  unwell  to  attend 
to  you. 
Continuing    So  poisoning  the  Church,  so  long  e, 
Control    but  I  am  Tudor,  And  shall  c  them. 

Controversy  I  here  dehver  all  this  c  Into  your  royal  hands.  Becket  ii  ii  136 
Convene  did  we  c  This  conference  but  to  babble  of  our  wives  ?  „  ii  ii  89 
Convent    praised  The  c  and  lone  life — within  the  pale —  Harold  i  ii  47 

\\'hat  monk  of  w'hat  c  art  thou  ?  Foresters  i  ii  205 

Conventional     Then,  if  we  needs  must  be  c.  Prom,  of  May  i  684 

For  these  are  no  c  flourishes.  „  n  562 

Conventionalism    C,  Who  shrieks  by  day  at  m  hat  she 

does  by  night. 
Conversion    He  is  glorified  In  thy  c : 

doubt  The  man's  c  and  remorse  of  heart. 
Converted    Ay,  that  am  I,  new  c. 
Convicted    C  by  their  conscience,  arrant  cowartls. 
Coo     Ringdoves  c  again,  All  things  woo  again. 
Coo'd    The  stock-dove  c  at  the  fall  of  night, 

And  the  stock-dove  c,  till  a  kite  dropt  down. 
Cook    tell  the  c's  to  close  The  doors  of  all  the  offices 
below. 

But  the  hour  is  past,  and  our  brother,  Master  C, 
Cookery     I  know  your  Norman  c  is  so  spiced. 
Cool  (adj.)     C  as  the  light  in  old  decaying  wood ; 
Cool  (verb)     As  one  that  blows  the  coal  to  c  the  fire. 

Noa ,  not  yet.     Let  'er  c  upon  it ; 
Cooler    What  power  this  c  sun  of  England  hath 
Coom  (come)     Why  c  awaay,  then,  to  the  long  bam. 

he  c's  up,  and  he  calls  out  among  our  oan  men, 

and  see  that  all  be  right  and  reg'lar  fur  'em  af oor  he  c. 

leastwaays  they  niver  c's  'ere  but  fur  the  trout  i'  our  beck, 

but  c,  c  !  let's  be  gawin. 

C  along  then,  aU  the  rest  o'  ye  ! 

C,  c,  that's  a  good  un. 

but  if  iver  I  c's  upo'  Gentleman  Hedgar  agean. 

Why,  c  then,  owcl  feller,  I'll  tell  it  to  you ; 

now  she  be  fallen  out  wi'  ma,  and  I  can't  c  at  'er. 

How  c  thou  to  be  sa  like  'im,  then  ? 

An'  ow  c  thou  by  the  letter  to  'im  ? 

she  moant  c  here.     What  would  her  mother  saay  ? 

but  he'll  c  up  if  ye  lets  'im. 
Coomberland  (Comberland)     .\n'  how  did  ye  leave  the  owd 
uncle  i'  C? 

So  the  owd  uncle  i'  C  be  dead.  Miss  Dora, 
Coom'd  (came)     I  c  upon  'im  t'other  daay  lookin'  at  the 

coontry,  „  1 201 


I  531 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  83 

IV  iii  108 

I  iii  47 

n  ii  9 

III  V  103 

From,  of  May  i  41 

I  55 

Queen  Mary  v  v  116 

Becket  i  iv  60 

Harold  u  ii  810 

Queen  Mary  TV  ii  5 

Becket  v  ii  549 

Prcrn.  of  May  II  132 

Qiieev  Mary  ni  iv  327 

I'rom.  of  May  i  35 

I  139 

1 170 

I  212 

I  425 

I  442 

I  467 

II 136 

II  202 

II  601 

II  712 

n716 

in  458 

in  481 

i68 
nl 


Coom'd  (came)  {continued)     afoor  I  c  up  he  got  thruff 
the  winder  agean. 
He  c  up  to  me  yisterdaay  i'  the  haayfield, 
when  owd  Dobson  c  upo'  us  ? 
Coomed  (come)    Miss  Dora  be  c  back,  then  ? 
I  be  c  to  keep  his  birthdaay  an'  all. 
I  warrants  ye'll  think  moor  o'  this  young  Squire  Edgar 

as  ha'  c  among  us — 
you  be  c — what's  the  newspaaper  word,  Wilson  ? 
darters  to  marry  gentlefoiilk,  and  see  what's  c  on  it. 
The  owd  man's  c  agean  to  'issen, 
Coomin  (coming)     Churchwarden  be  a  r,  thaw  me  and  'im 
we  niver  'grees  about  the  tithe ; 
'ow  should  I  see  to  laame  the  laady,  and  mea  c  along 
pretty  sharp  an'  all  ? 
Coomly  (comely)     C,  says  she.     I  niver  thowt  o'  mysen  i' 
that  waay ; 
'  C  to  look  at,'  saj'S  she — but  she  said  it  spiteful- 
like.    To  look  at — yeas,  '  c ' ; 
Coontry  (comitry)     I  coom'd  upon  'im  t'other  daay  lookin' 

at  the  c. 
Cope    How  should  we  c  with  John  ? 

I  cannot  c  with  him :  my  wrist  is  strain'd. 
Coppice    saw  your  ladyship  a-parting  wi'  him  even  now  i' 

the  c. 
Copse    how  he  fells  The  mortal  c  of  faces ! 
Copy    so  that  you  do  not  c  his  bad  manners  ? 
Cord    there  is  axe  and  c. 

Each  of  us  has  an  arrow  on  the  c ; 
I  am  here,  my  arrow  on  the  c 
Core     For  thou  and  thine  are  Roman  to  the  c. 

Sound  at  the  c  as  we  are. 
Co-rebels    from  the  charge  Of  being  his  c-r's  ? 
Co-reveller    My  comrade,  boon  companion,  my  c-r, 
Cork     like  a  bottle  full  up  to  the  c,  or  as  hollow  as  a  kex. 
Com    dash  The  torch  of  war  among  your  standing  c, 

Much  c,  repeopled  towns,  a  realm  again. 
Comer    do  not  you  Be  seen  in  c's  with  my  Lord  of 
Devon. 
And  whisking  roimd  a  c,  show'd  his  back 
skulk  into  c's  Like  rabbits  to  their  holes. 
The  hog  hath  tumbled  himself  into  some  c, 
the  cold  c's  of  the  King's  mouth  began  to  thaw 
Comhill    Where  dost  thou  live  ?    Man.     In  C 
Comwall    C's  hand  or  Leicester's :  they  write  marvellously 

aUke. 
Cornwallis  (Sir  Thomas)    Sent  C  and  Hastings  to  the 


Prom,  of  May  i  405 

n  150 

II  232 

I  13 

I  75 


1 110 

I  319 

nll7 

III  702 

I  443 

ni96 


1 175  I 
1 179 


I  202 

Foresters  i  iii  7& 
IV  312 

Becket  m  i  161 

Harold  v  i  589 

Prom,  of  May  m  361 

Queen  Mart/  m  iv  47 

Foresters  TV  607 

IV  733 

Queen  Mary  in  ii  230 

Foresters  m  102 

Queen  Mary  ni  i  137 

Becket  i  iii  460 

Foresters  iv  210 

Harold  n  ii  750 

Becket  i  iii  377 

Queen  Man/  i  iv  154 

Hi  131 

„  II  iv  55 

Becket  I  i  370 

„  in  iii  153 

Queen  Mary  in  i  317 

Becket  i  iv  51 


Being  bounden  by  my  c  oath  To  <lo  men 


een  Mary  n  ii  31 


Becket  i  iii  396 

„      V  ii  329 

„      V  ii  542 

Harold  V  i  67 

„   nii381 


traitor. 
Coronation  (adj.) 

justice. 
Coronation  (s)    would  make  his  c  void  By  cursing  those 
Corpore    Gratior  in  pulchro  c  virtus. 
Corpse    c  thou  whelmest  with  thine  earth  is  cursed, 
Corpse-candles     C-c  gliding  over  nameless  graves — 

Corridor    My  window  look'd  upon  the  c ;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  459 

I  was  in  the  c,  I  saw  him  coming  with  his  brother  Harold  n  ii  346 

Corroborate    C  by  your  acts  of  Parliament :  Queeti  Mary  n  ii  173 

Cormpt    Manners  be  so  c,  and  these  are  the  days  of  Prince 

John.  Foresters  i  i  177 

Cormption     Against  the  huge  c's  of  the  Church,  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  100 

sucking  thro'  fools'  ears  The  flatteries  of  c —  Becket  i  iii  362 

Cost  (s)    be  The  one  man,  he  shall  be  so  to  his  c.        Queen  Mary  in  iii  276 


mi  201 

IV  i  173 

I  V  370 

Becket  rv  ii  29& 

The  Cup  II  365 

The  Fahon  228 


Cost  (verb)    some  secret  that  may  c  Philip  his  life 

'  After  his  kind  it  c's  him  nothing,' 
Costly     into  some  more  c  stone  Than  ever  blinded  eye. 

Well— WeU— too  c  to  be  left  or  lost. 

Bring  me  The  c  wines  we  use  in  marriages. 

And  this  last  c  gift  to  mine  own  self, 
Cotched  (caught)     my  kneea  gev  waay  or  I'd  ha'  c  'im.  Prom,  of  May  i  404 

c  'im  once  a-stealin'  coals  an'  I  sent  fur  'im,  „  i  412 

'A  c  ma  about  the  waaist.  Miss,  „  ni  118 

Cottage  (adj.)     while  the  smoke  floats  from  the  c  roof,  Foresters  i  ii  318 

Cottage  (s)    Stops  and  stares  at  our  c.  The  Falcon  162 

Welcome  to  this  poor  c,  my  dear  lady.  „  270 

And  welcome  turns  a  c  to  a  palace.  „  273 


Cottage 


875 


Courage 


Cottage  (s)  (continued)    Lady,  you  bring  vour  light  into 

my  c                                                   "  The  Falcon  284 
My  palace  wanting  you  was  but  a  c ;  My  c,  while  you 

grace  it,  is  a  palace.  „          287 

In  c  or  in  palace,  being  still  Beyond  your  fortunes,  „           289 

you  could  whitewash  that  c  of  yours  Prom,  of  May  ni  43 

Make  for  the  c  then  !  Foresters  u  i  210 

Couch'd     with  mine  old  hound  C  at  my  heartli.  Queen  Mary  ni  i  46 

Cough     No  fever,  c,  croup,  sickness  ?  Becket  v  ii  169 

Could     How  c  you — Oh,  how  c  you  ? — nay,  how  c  I  ?      Prom,  of  May  i  716 

Council  (adj.)     I  hear  them  stirring  in  the  C  Chamber.  Queen  Mary  i  v  628 

Council  (s)     both  bastards  by  Act  of  Parliament  and  C.  ..             i  i  25 

the  c  and  all  her  people  wish  her  to  marry.  i  i  112 

Those  that  are  now  her  Privy  C,  sign'd  Before  me :  ..            i  ii  22 

She  cannot  pass  her  traitor  c  by,  ..             i  ii  40 

The  C,  people,  Parliament  against  him ;  ,.            i  v  78 

we  will  leave  all  this,  sir,  to  our  c.  ..          i  v  318 

Your  C  is  in  Session,  please  your  Majesty.  ..          i  v  543 

And  when  the  C  would  not  crown  me —  ,.           i  v  555 

An  instant  Av  or  No  !  the  C  sits.  ,.          i  v  591 

The  C  !     Mary.     Ay!     My  Philip  is  all  mine.  ,.           i  v  639 

Gardiner  knows,  but  the  C  are  all  at  odds,  ,.          ii  i  139 

however  the  C  and  the  Commons  may  fence  round 

his  power  ,.          n  i  171 

The  C,  the  Court  itself,  is  on  our  side.  ..          ii  i  192 

And  four  of  her  poor  C  too,  my  Lord,  ..           ii  ii  42 

What  do  and  say  Your  C  at  this  houry  ii  ii  46 

The  C,  The  Parliament  as  well,  are  troubled  waters ;  ..           n  ii  49 

Like  our  C,  Your  city  is  divided.  „           ii  ii  59 

But  we  sent  divers  of  our  C  to  them,  .,         ii  ii  152 

theretoward  unadvised  Of  all  our  Privy  C;  ..         ii  ii  205 

heard  One  of  your  C  fleer  and  jeer  at  him.  ..         ii  ii  393 

Lord  Paget  Waits  to  present  oiu-  C  to  the  Legate.  ..          iii  ii  98 

And  she  impress  her  wrongs  upon  her  C,  ..       ni  vi  184 

Cranmer,  it  is  decided  by  the  C  That  you  to-day  ..          iv  ii  26 

Or  seek  to  rescue  me.     I  thank  the  C.  ..          iv  ii  39 

I  must  obey  the  Queen  and  C,  man.  ..        iv  ii  164 

causes  Wherefore  our  Queen  and  C  at  this  time  ,.         iv  iii  36 

which  our  Queen  And  C  at  this  present  ,.         iv  iii  56 

first  In  C,  second  person  in  the  realm,  .,         rv  iii  72 
came  to  sue  Your  C  and  jourself  to  tleclare  war. 

(repeat)  ,.  v  i  108,  114 

Alas  !  the  C  will  not  hear  of  war.  ,.          v  i  163 

the  C  (I  have  talked  with  some  already)  are  for  war.  ..          v  i  294 

Tell  my  mind  to  the  C — to  tlie  Parliament :  „         v  ii  288 

Then  our  great  C  ^vait  to  crown  thee  King — ■  Harold  m  i  3 

Siding  with  our  great  C  against  Tostig,  „     in  i  59 

Nay — but  the  c,  and  the  king  himself,  ,.  ni  i  170 

And  oiur  great  C  wait  to  crown  thee  King.  „  ni  i  406 

Thou  gavest  thy  voice  against  me  in  the  C —  .,    iv  ii  78 

I,  John  of  Oxford,  The  President  of  this  C,  Becket  i  iii  76 

My  lords,  is  this  a  combat  or  a  c  ?  .,     i  iii  134 

whene'er  your  royal  rights  Are  mooted  in  our  c's —  ,.     i  iii  431 

Let  us  go  in  to  the  C,  where  our  bishops  „    i  iii  547 
Councillor     Place  and  displace  our  c's,                           Queen  Mary  n  ii  160 

Your  faithful  friend  and  trusty  c.  ..             iv  i  89 

From  c  to  caitiff — fallen  so  low,  .,           iv  iii  75 
is  it  then  with  thy  goodwill  that  I  Proceed  against 

thine  evil  c's,  Becket  in  iii  209 

It  may  be  they  were  evil  cs.  „       in  iii  216 
Counsel  (advice)    I  follow  your  good  c,  gracious  uncle.    Queen  Mary  i  iv  186 

She  hath  harken'd  evil  c —  ..              i  v  54 

So  would  your  cousin,  Cardinal  Pole  ;  ill  c !  „            i  v  406 

I  come  for  c  and  ye  give  me  feuds,  ,.        in  iv  307 

Good  c  yours — No  one  in  waiting  ?  ..           v  v  202 
Good  c  truly !     I  heard  from  my  Northumbria 

yesterday.  Harold  i  i  330 

Good  c  tho'  scarce  needed.  „      i  i  376 

My  one  grain  of  good  c  which  you  will  not  swallow.  Becket  ii  ii  379 

second  grain  of  good  c  I  ever  proffered  thee,  .,    in  iii  318 

Summon  your  barons ;  take  their  c:  ,,           v  i  75 

a  man  may  take  good  c  Ev'n  from  his  foe.  ,.            v  ii  3 
Counsel  (deliberation)    You  should  have  taken  c  with  your 

frientls  „        v  ii  555 

My  c  is  already  taken,  John.  „        v  ii  560 


Counsel  (deliberation)  (continued)    Have  shut  you 

from  our  c's. 
Counsel  (secret)     if  the  child  could  keep  Her  c. 
Counsel  (verb)     means  to  c  your  withdrawing  To 
Ashridge, 
Till  when,  my  Lords,  I  c  tolerance. 
Harold,  I  do  iioL  c  thee  to  lie. 

0  good  son  Louis,  do  not  c  me, 
Counsell'd     Emperor  c  me  to  fly  to  Flanders. 

1  had  c  him  To  rest  from  vain  resistance. 


Queen  Mary  in  iv  320 
Prom,  of  May  i  478 


Queen  Mary  i  iv  224 

III  iv  203 

Harold  n  ii  416 

Becket  ii  ii  219 

Queen  Mary  i  v  549 

The  Clip  II  413 

Counsellor     who  am  your  friend  And  ever  faithful  c,      Queen  Mary  i  v  135 
Count  (S)     and  C's,  and  sixty  Spanish  cavaliers,  ..  m  i  51 

I  might  dare  to  tell  her  that  the  C —  ,.  y  ii  524 

What  C  ?     Magdalen.     The  Count  de  Feria,  Z  \  ii  530 

Sir  C,  to  read  the  letter  which  you  bring.  .,  v  ii  555 

My  Lord  C  ?     Her  Highness  is  too  ill  for  colloquy.  1  v  ii  612 

I  shine !     What  else,  Sir  C?  „  v  iii  17 

Is  not  the  Norman  C  thy  friend  and  mine  ?  'Harold  1  i  247 

C  of  the  Normans,  thou  hast  ransom'd  us,  .,  u  ii  157 

C,  I  thank  thee,  but  had  rather  Breathe  the  free  wind  ..'   11  ii  184 

With  bitter  obligation  to  the  C —  .,   u  {{  221 

I  have  the  C's  commands  to  follow  thee.  ,.   n  ii  234 

I  have  the  C's  commands.  n  ii  239 

'Tis  the  good  C's  care  for  thee !  |]   n  ii  251 

Obey  the  C's  conditions,  my  good  friend.  .,  n  ii  276 

C  !  if  there  sat  within  the  Norman  chair  .'   h  ii  532 

Sir  C,  He  had  but  one  foot,  _    jj  ii  574 

I,  the  C — the  King — Thy  friend —  ."  h  ii  753 

perjury-mongering  C  Hath  made  too  good  an  use  "     V  i  311 

The  Norman  C  is  down.  ',     y  i  553 

Can  I  speak  with  the  C  ?  The  Falcon  180 

Where  is  the  C  ?    Elisabetta.     Just  gone  To  fly  his 

falcon,  208 

'  Get  the  C  to  give  me  his  falcon,  '.  241 

'  I  should  be  well  again  If  the  good  C  would  give  me '     ,,  838 

There  is  one  that  should  be  grateful  to  me  overseas,  a 

C  in  Brittany—  Foresters  1  i  271 

Count  (verb)     (I  c  it  as  a  kind  of  virtue  in  him.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  193 

she  c's  on  you  And  on  myself  as  her  tw  0  hands ;  „  11  ii  104 

As  for  the  Pope  I  c  him  Antichrist,  „         jy  iii  277 

C's  his  old  beads,  and  hath  forgotten  thee.  Harold  n  ii  447 

I  have  heard  the  Normans  C  upon  this  confusion —  „       11  ii  459 

Take  and  slay  me,  I  say.  Or  I  shall  c  thee  fool.  „         tv  ii  16 

tho'  I  c  Henry  honest  enough,  yet  when  fear  creeps        Becket  in  iii  60 

Why  now  I  c  it  all  but  miracle,  The  Cup  i  iii  37 

However,  staying  not  to  c  how  many,  The  Falcon  627 

C  the  money  and  see  if  it's  all  right.  Prom,  of  May  ni  64 

Count-crab    and  our  great  C-c  will  make  his  nippers  Harold  11  i  76 

Counted    When  all  men  c  Harold  would  be  king,  „    v  n  132 

Countenanced     but  the  backs  'ud  ha'  c  one  another,  Becket  in  i  147 

Counter     not  Spear  into  pruning-hook — the — c  way—  Harold  v  i  442 

Counter-bond     To  bring  their  c-b  into  the  forest.  Foresters  iv  89 

Counterpoint     Veer  to  the  c,  and  jealousy  Queen  Mary  in  vi  180 

Country  (adj.)     Far  liefer  had  I  in  my  c  hall  ,.  m  i  43 

She  means  to  counsel  your  withdrawing  To 

Ashridge,  or  some  other  c  house.  „  j  ly  226 

Country  (s)     (See  also  Coontry)     there's  no  gloiy  Like 

his  who  saves  his  c :  ,.  11  i  110 

I  swear  you  do  your  c  wrong.  Sir  Ralph.  ,',  m  i  153 

and  the  c  Has  many  charms.  Prom,  of  May  ii  540 

not  only  love  the  c.  But  its  inhabitants  too ;  „  n  545 

Might  have  more  charm  for  me  than  all  the  c.  „  n  554 

to  save  his  c,  and  the  liberties  of  his  people !  Foresters  i  i  246 

You  are  those  that  tramp  the  c,  „        m  193 

Countryfolk     Not  leave  these  c  at  court.  Becket  11  i  129 

Countryman    —home  your  banish'd  c.  Queen  Mary  in  ii  31 

Earls,  Thanes,  and  all  our  countrymen  !  Harold  iv  iii  48 

Country-wives    poor  garrulous  c-^c.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  547 

County    is  not  the  cause  of  a  c  or  a  shire,  „  u  i  i62 

and  make  Musters  in  all  the  cowities;  ,'  y  ii  272 

went  abroad  Thro'  all  my  counties,  '  Becket  i  iii  363 

Couple     as  the  new-made  c  Came  from  the  Minster,        Queen  Mary  in  i  94 

They  hunt  in  c's,  and  when  they  look  at  a  maid  Foresters  1  i  256 

Courage     C,  sir,  That  makes  or  man  or  woman  Qneen  Mary  n  ii  328 

Should  we  so  doat  on  c,  were  it  commoner  ?  „  n  ii  33^ 


Conrage 


876 


Cow 


Courage  (continued)    All  greed,  no  faith,  no  c ! 

And  bad  me  have  good  c; 

Have  c,  your  reward  is  Heaven  itself. 

C,  noble  Aldwyth ! 

C,  c !  and  all  will  go  well. 
Course    So  far  my  c,  albeit  not  glassy-smooth, 

sat  Thro'  every  sensual  c  of  that  full  feast 


Queen  Man/  in  i  146 

IV  ii  8 

v  ii  108 

Harold  I  ii  182 

Prom,  of  May  III  215 

Beckei  i  iii  379 

Prom,  of  May  n  254 


Court  (s)     (See  also  Hampton  Court)     You've  but  a  duU 

life  in  this  maiden  c,  Queen  Mary  i  iii  114 

And  certain  of  his  c.  ,,           i  iii  133 

but  all  things  here  At  c  are  known ;  ,,            i  iv  58 

I  freed  him  from  the  Tower,  placed  him  at  C ;  „           i  v  164 

You  have  sent  her  from  the  c,  „           i  v  462 

heard  Slanders  against  Prince  Philip  in  our  C?  „  i  v  571 
a  fine  courtier  of  the  old  C,  old  Sir  Thomas.     Wyatt. 

Courtier  of  many  c's,  „            ii  i  46 

The  Council,  the  G  itself,  is  on  our  side.  „           ii  i  192 

Queen  had  written  her  word  to  come  to  c :  „         ii  ii  118 

Before  our  own  High  C  of  Parliament,  „         ii  ii  234 

Your  c's  of  justice  will  determine  that.  „         u  iv  130 

But  c  is  always  May,  buds  out  in  masques,  „          iii  v  11 

his  manners  want  the  nap  And  gloss  of  c ;  „          in  v  71 

You  are  to  come  to  C  on  the  instant ;  „        in  v  223 

you  want  the  sun  That  shines  at  c ;  „        ni  v  277 

trifling  royally  With  some  fair  dame  of  c,  „       m  vi  160 

The  foreign  c's  report  him  in  his  manner  „          v  ii  511 

scarce  touch'd  or  tasted  The  splendours  of  our  G.  Harold  n  ii  175 

Am  I  in  danger  in  this  c  ?  „         ii  ii  237 

being  brought  before  the  c's  of  the  Church,  Becket,  Pro.  12 
My  C's  of  Love  would  have  held  thee  guiltless  of  love —  „  Pro.  498 
whether  between  laymen  or  clerics,  shall  be  tried  in  the 

King's  c'  „        I  iii  81 
he  shall  answer  to  the  summons  of  the  King's  c  to  be 

tried  therein.'  ,,         i  iii  89 
the  King  shall  summon  the  chapter  of  that  church  to  c,       „      i  iii  110 

sat  in  mine  own  c's  Judging  my  judges,  „       i  iii  368 

Ye  haled  this  tonsured  devil  into  your  c's ;  ,,      i  iii  388 

If  Canterbury  bring  his  cross  to  c,  ,.      i  iii  511 

The  King's  c's  would  use  thee  worse  than  thy  dog —  „       i  iv  102 

Not  leave  these  countryfolk  at  c.  „        ii  i  129 

you  are  known  Thro'  all  the  c's  of  Christendom  „      tv  ii  325 

such  a  comedy  as  our  c  of  Provence  Had  laugh'd  at.  „        v  i  189 

The  fellow  that  on  a  lame  jade  came  to  c,  „        v  i  247 

I  said  it  was  the  King's  c's,  not  the  King ;  .,       v  ii  114 

caUs  you  oversea  To  answer  for  it  in  his  Norman  c's.  „       v  ii  355 

The  bee  should  buzz  about  the  C  of  John.  Foresters  iv  44 

ye  shall  with  us  to  c.  „      iv  951 

And  we  must  hence  to  the  King's  e.  „    iv  1050 

Court  (verb)     Why  will  you  c  it  By  self-exposure  ?  Becket  i  i  281 
Courtenay  (Earl  of  Devon)    (See  also  Devon  (Earl  of)) 

C,  to  be  made  Earl  of  Devon,  Queen  Mary  i  i  110 

Son  G,  wilt  thou  see  the  holy  father  Murdered  .,          i  iii  63 

AC!  aC!  „          I  iii  74 

this  fine  blue-blooded  C  seems  Too  princely  for  a  pawn.  „        i  iii  165 

A  C  of  Devon,  and  her  cousin.  „          i  iv  86 

I  charge  you,  Tell  G  nothing.  „        i  iv  192 

Hath  taken  to  this  C.  „        i  iv  201 

And  when  your  Highness  talks  of  C —  „         i  v  198 

C,  Save  that  he  fears  he  might  be  crack'd  in  using,  „             ii  i  6 

Ha !     G's  cipher.  „         ii  i  134 

The  names  of  Wyatt,  Elizabeth,  C,  ,,          ii  ii  95 

die  with  those  That  are  no  cowards  and  no  C's.  ,,         n  iv  87 

breath  Clear  C  and  the  Prince&s  from  the  charge  „        iii  i  135 

So  they  have  sent  poor  C  over  sea.  „          in  v  2 

C,  belike —    Mary.     A  fool  and  featherhead !  „          v  i  127 

with  full  proof  Of  G's  treason  ?  „        v  ii  499 

Courteous    a  man  Of  such  colossal  kinghood,  yet  so  c,  „        iv  i  101 

C  enough  too  when  he  wills ;  Foresters  i  ii  105 

Courteousness    They  shall  be  handled  with  all  c.  „          iv  102 

Courtesan     He  wrecks  his  health  and  wealth  on  c's,        Queen  Mary  i  v  168 

There  may  be  c's  for  aught  I  know  The  Cup  i  ii  192 

Courtesy    But  lest  we  turn  the  scale  of  c  Harold  ri  ii  164 

that  c  which  hath  less  loyalty  in  it  than  Becket  in  iii  142 

Might  not  your  c  stoop  to  hand  it  me  ?  „       iv  ii  295 

yet  of  his  c  Entreats  he  may  be  present  The  Cup  ii  247 


Courtesy  (continued)     you  are  still  the  king  Of  c  and 
liberality. 

I  trust  I  stiU  maintain  my  c ; 

No  other  heart  Of  such  magnificence  in  c 

turn  back  at  times,  and  make  C  to  custom  ? 

thou  didst  repent  thy  c  even  in  the  doing  it. 

Richard's  the  king  of  c, 

I  could  but  sneak  and  smile  and  call  it  c. 

And  that  is  only  c  by  c — But  Robin  is  a  thief  of  c 

There — to  be  a  thief  of  c — 
Courtier    He  was  a  fine  c,  he ;  Queen  Anne  loved  him. 

a  fine  c  of  the  old  Court,  old  Sir  Thomas.     Wyatt. 
C  of  many  courts, 

and  a  favourer  Of  players,  and  a  c. 
Courtly    He  said  it  was  not  c  to  stand  helmeted  Before 

the  Queen. 
Courtly-delicate    His  bearing  is  so  c-d ; 
Cousin    (See  also  Dear-cousin,  Legate-cousin,  Side-cousin, 
Royal-cousin)     again  to  her  c  Reginald  Pole,  now 
Cardinal ; 

but  you,  c,  are  fresh  and  sweet  As  the  first  flower 

A  Courtenay  of  Devon,  and  her  c. 

Nay,  pout  not,  c. 

So  would  your  c.  Cardinal  Pole ; 

with  what  haste  I  might  To  save  my  royal  c. 

Loyal  and  royal  c,  humblest  thanks. 

We  heard  that  you  were  sick  in  Flanders,  c. 

c,  as  the  heathen  giant  Had  but  to  touch  the  ground. 

My  heart  beats  twenty,  when  I  see  you  c.    Ah,  gentle  c. 

True,  good  c  Pole ;  And  there  were  also  those 

I  believe  so,  c. 

No,  c,  happy — Happy  to  see  you ; 

Sweet  c,  you  forget  That  long  low  minster 

True,  c,  1  am  happy. 

Our  good  Queen  8  c — dallying  over  seas 

see  according  to  our  sight.     Come,  c. 

C,  there  hath  chanced  A  sharper  harm 

And  so  must  you,  good  c ; — 

I  knew  it,  c,  But  held  from  you  all  papers  sent  by  Rome, 

To  sleep,  to  die — I  shall  die  of  it,  c. 

Poor  c  !     Have  not  I  been  the  fast  friend  of  your  life 

Ah,  c,  I  remember  How  I  would  dandle  you  upon  my 
knee 

Peace,  c,  peace !     I  am  sad  at  heart  myself. 

Your  pardon,  Sweet  c,  and  farewell ! 

Thou  knowest  I  am  his  c, 

seem  at  most  Sweet  guests,  or  foreign  c's. 
Cover  (s)     I  saw  the  c's  laying.     Philip.     Let  us 
have  it. 

'  Will  your  Ladyship  ride  to  c  to-day  ? 
Cover  (verb)    That  c's  aU. 

I  saw  the  hand  of  Tostig  c  it. 
Coverdale  (Bishop  of  Exeter)    Poinet,  Barlow,  Bale, 

Scory,  C; 
Coveted    your  hand  Will  be  much  c  !     What  a  delicate 

one !  „       V  iii  44 

Covetousness     '  Lust,  Prodigality,  C,  Craft,  Prom,  of  May  n  284 

Cow     with  my  hands  Milking  the  c  ?  (repeat)    Queen  Mary  in  v  88,  95,  102 

you  came  and  kiss'd  me  milking  the  c.  (repeat)   Queen  Mary  in  v  91,  98 

Come  behind  and  kiss  me  milking  the  c !  ,,  iii  v  105 

the  c  kick'd,  and  all  her  milk  was  spilt.  „  in  v  266 

I  had  kept  My  Robins  and  my  c's  in  sweeter  order         „  in  v  270 

The  maid  to  her  dairy  came  in  from  the  c,  Prom,  of  May  i  40 

I  seed  that  one  c  o'  thine  i'  the  pinfold  agean  „  1 190 

An'  if  tha  can't  keep  thy  one  c  v  border,  „  i  197 

take  to  the  milking  of  your  c's,  the  fatting  of  your 
calves,  „  n  92 

Hes  the  c  cawved  ?    Dora.     No,  Father.  „         in  427 

Thou  hast  a  c  then,  hast  thou  ?  Foresters  n  i  298 

How  hadst  thou  then  the  means  to  buy  a  c  ?  „        ii  i  304 

but  the  c  ?     Robin.     She  was  given  ine.  „         n  i  314 

That  c  was  mine.     I  have  lost  a  c  from  my  meadow.  „        n  i  325 

O  sweet  sir,  talk  not  of  c's.  „        ii  i  330 

wouldst  bar  me  fro'  the  milk  o'  my  c,  „        n  i  355 

or  the  c  that  jumped  over  the  moon.  „        ii  i  435 


The  Falcon  293 

295 

723 

Prom,  of  May  u  635 

Foresters  i  ii  243 

IV  363 

IV  367 

IV369 

IV  374 

Queen  Mary  n  i  33 

„  n  i  45 

Becket  i  i  79 

Queen  Mary  v  v  35 
in  iv  397 


I  i  123 
I  iv  61 
I  iv  86 

I  iv  134 

IV  405 

II  iv  78 
m  ii  3 

niu34 
m  ii  42 

III  ii  60 
ni  ii  68 
m  ii  72 
in  ii  86 
III  ii  89 

in  ii  113 
„  III  iv  292 
„      in  iv  332 

V  ii  28 

V  ii  39 

V  ii  44 

V  ii  128 

V  ii  132 

V  ii  140 

V  ii  159 

V  ii  204 
Harold  ii  ii  593 

Becket  n  i  135 


Queen  Mary  in  vi  258 

Prom,  of  ^lay  in  310 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  542 

Harold  iv  iii  82 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  7 


Coward 


877 


Creature 


Coward     Convicted  by  their  conscience,  arrant  c's,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  10 

die  with  those  That  are  no  c's  and  no  Courtenays.  ,,          ii  iv  87 

I  do  not  love  your  Grace  should  call  me  c.  „          ii  iv  89 

The  soft  and  tremulous  c  in  the  flesh  ?  „        iv  ii  107 

We  have  so  play'd  the  c ;  „        v  v  110 

True  test  of  c,  ye  follow  with  a  yell.  Becket  i  iii  745 

I  cannot  tell  why  monks  should  all  be  c's.  „      v  ii  582 

Why  should  all  monks  be  c's  ?  „      v  ii  588 

what,  a  truckler  !  a  word-eating  c !  Foresters  iv  162 

Cowardice    Coveteousness,  Craft,  C,  Murder' —  Prom,  of  May  ii  285 

Cowd  (cold)     Owd  Steer  gi'es  nubbut  c  tea  to  'is  men, 
and  owd  Dobson  gi'es  beer.    Sally.     But  I'd 

like  owd  Steer's  c  tea  better  nor  Dobson's  beer.  „           u  224 

we  worked  naw  wuss  upo'  the  c  tea ;  ,.             m  59 

and  the  winders  brokken,  and  the  \\eather  sa  c,  ,,            m  73 

Cow'd     The  knaves  are  easily  c.  Queen  Mary  in  i  330 

And  being  brave  he  must  be  subtly  c,  Harold  ii  ii  75 

but  Salisbury  was  a  calf  c  by  Mother  Church,  Becket  m  iii  95 

Cower    My  sister  c's  and  hates  me.  Queen  Alary  i  v  83 

would  c  to  any  Of  mortal  build  Foresters  ii  i  688 

Cowering    we  saw  thee  c  to  a  knight  „        ii  i  682 

Oow-heid     only  grandson  To  Wulfnoth,  a  poor  c-h.  Harold  iv  i  70 
this  c-h,  like  my  father,  Who  shook  the  Norman  scoundrels     „       iv  i  79 

Cowl    C,  helm ;  and  crozier,  battle-axe.  „      v  i  444 

I  scatter  all  their  c's  to  all  the  hells.  Becket  ii  i  93 

so  that  you  keep  the  c  down  and  speak  not  ?  Foresters  i  ii  22 

Why  wearest  thou  thy  c  to  hide  thy  face  ?  „       i  ii  206 

Cowling    c  and  clouding  up  That  fatal  star,  thy  Beauty,  Becket  i  i  311 

Onb    {See  also  Count-crab)     thou  didst  stand  by  her  and 

give  her  thy  c's,  Harold  ii  i  49 

And  I'll  give  her  my  c's  again,  „      ii  i  52 

Fellow,  dost  thou  catch  c's  ?  „      ii  i  66 

I  crawl'd  like  a  sick  c  from  my  old  shell,  Foresters  iv  126 

Crabb'd     by  the  patient  Saints,  she's  as  c  as  ever.  Harold  ii  i  51 

Crab-catcher    human-heartedest,  Christian-charitiest  of  all 


CMbstick     I  have  a  stout  c  here,  which  longs  to  break 

itself 
Ciack'd     he  fears  he  might  be  c  in  using, 

drave  and  c  His  boat  on  Ponthieu  beach  ; 

winds  than  that  which  c  Thy  bark  at  Ponthieu, — 

thou  wouldst  hug  thy  Cupid  till  his  ribs  c — 

one  piece  of  earthenware  to  serve  the  salad  in  to  my 
lady,  and  that  c  ! 

Beetle's  jewel  armour  c, 
CStackled     fire.  Like  that  which  lately  c  underfoot 
Ciaft  (art,  etc.)    — a  sweet  violence.  And  a  sweet  c. 

violence  and  the  c  that  do  divide  The  world 

shakes  at  mortal  kings — her  vacillation,  Avarice,  c- 

woman's  fealty  when  Assailed  by  C  and  Love. 

'  Lust,  Prodigality,  Covetousness,  C, 
Craft  (vessel)     Let  every  c  that  carries  sail  and  gun 
Craftier    shall  I  play  The  c  Tostig  with  him  ? 

Men  would  but  take  him  for  the  c  liar. 
Craftsman    We  spared  the  c,  chapman. 
Crafty    Robin  was  violent.  And  she  was  c — 
Cram    if  the  truth  be  gall,  C  me  not  thou  with  honey, 

C  thy  crop  full,  but  come  when  thou  art  call'd. 

if  you  c  me  crop-full  I  be  little  better  than  Famine 
in  the  picture, 
Cramm'd    dog  I  c  with  dainties  worried  me  ! 
Cramner  (Archbishop  of  Canterbury)    pounce  like  a  wild 
beast  out  of  his  cage  to  worry  C. 

Fly,  C  !  were  there  nothing  else,  your  name 

even  in  the  church  there  is  a  man — C. 

Ay,  Lambeth  has  ousted  C. 

were  congruent  With  that  vile  C  in  the  accursed  lie 

Our  old  friend  C,  Your  more  especial  love, 

C  and  Hooper,  Kidley  and  Latimer, 

To  spare  the  life  of  C. 

That  C  may  withdraw  to  foreign  parts, 

never  seen  That  any  one  recanting  thus  at  full.  As 
C  hath, 

C  is  head  and  father  of  these  heresies. 

You  sit  upon  this  fallen  C's  throne  ; 


„      II  i  63 

Foresters  iv  917 

Queen  Mary  n  i  7 

Harold  ii  ii  35 

„     n  ii  199 

Becket,  Pro.  505 


The  Falcon  482 

Foresters  n  ii  160 

Queen  Mary  ni  v  53 

ra  V  109 

ni  V  120 

—       Becket  u  ii  407 

The  Cup  I  i  177 

Prom,  of  May  ii  284 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  275 

Harold  i  ii  165 

„     m  i  114 

Foresters  iii  163 

Queen  Mary  m  v  108 

Harold  iv  i  16 

„  IV  iii  234 

Foresters  i  i  46 
Becket  v  i  244 

Quee7i  Mary  i  i  89 

I  ii  15 

m  i  170 

„      ra  ii  133 

„     m  iv  231 

„     in  iv  417 

,.     ni  iv  424 

IV  i  4 

IV  i  45 

ivi60 

rv  i  76 

„       IV  i  114 


Cranmer  (Archbishop  of  Canterbuiy)  (continued)    To 

ours  in  plea  for  C  than  to  stand  Queen  Mary  iv  i  119 

Yet  to  save  C  were  to  serve  the  Church,  „           iv  i  135 

Than  you  have  shown  to  C.  „           iv  i  190 

petition  of  the  foreign  exiles  For  C's  life.  ,,           iv  i  194 

C,  I  come  to  question  you  again  ;  ,.            iv  ii  15 

C,  it  is  decided  by  the  Council  That  you  to-day  .,            iv  ii  25 

Pray  you  write  out  this  paper  for  me,  C.  „            iv  ii  61 

'  what  am  I,  C,  against  whole  ages  ?  '  „          rv  ii  104 

And  make  you  simple  C  once  again.  „          iv  ii  129 

Which  was  not  pleasant  for  you.  Master  C.  ,,          iv  ii  137 

How  are  the  mighty  fallen,  Master  C  !  ..          rv  ii  147 

We  are  ready  To  take  you  to  St.  Mary's,  Master  C.  ..          iv  ii  239- 

Yet,  C,  be  thou  glad.     This  is  the  work  of  God.  ..           iv  iii  81 

Speak,  Master  C,  Fulfil  your  promise  made  me,  ,,         iv  iii  111 

Be  plainer,  Master  C.  „         iv  iii  235 

another  recantation  Of  C  at  the  stake.  „         iv  iii  30Q 
Think  you  then  That  C  read  all  papers  that  he 

sign'd  ?  ,.         IV  iii  318 

We  talk  and  C  suffers.  ,.         rv  iii  420 

Who  follow'd  with  the  crowd  to  C's  fire.  ,.         iv  iii  554 

you  bring  the  smoke  Of  C's  burning  with  you.  „         iv  iii  562 

smoke  of  C's  burning  wrapt  me  round.  „         iv  iii  564 

But  C,  as  the  helmsman  at  the  helm  Steers,  „         iv  iii  578 

but  C  only  shook  his  head,  „         rv  iii  601 

Then  C  lifted  his  left  hand  to  heaven,  ..         iv  iii  608 

and  needs  must  moan  for  him  ;   0  C  !  ,.         iv  iii  637 
hands  that  write  them  should  be  burnt  clean  off 

As  C's,  V  ii  192 

If  C's  spirit  were  a  mocking  one,  „            v  ii  210 

Cranmerite    Here  come  the  C's !  ,,             rv  i  40 

Crash     (See  also  War-crash)     may  come  a  c  and  embroil- 
ment as  in  Stephen's  time  ;  Becket,  Pro.  485 

Crater    One  c  opens  when  another  shuts.  Queen  Mary  in  i  322 

Crave    meant  to  c  Permission  of  her  Highness  „           i  iv  235 

It  c's  an  instant  answer,  Ay  or  No.  ,,            i  v  589 

So  that  you  c  full  pardon  of  the  Legate.  „        ni  iv  391 

I  attend  the  Queen  To  c  most  himible  pardon —  „        in  iv  432 

C,  in  the  same  cause,  hearing  of  your  Grace.  „               iv  i  8 

allegiance  in  thy  Lord's  And  c  his  mercy,  Harold  v  i  12 

I  c  Thy  pardon — I  shall  still  thy  leave  Becket  v  ii  43 

And  afterwards  a  boon  to  c  of  you.  The  Falcon  712 

I  c  your  worship's  pardon.     '  Foresters  n  i  243 

Robin — I  c  pardon — you  always  seem  to  me  „           ni  53 

I  c  pardon,  I  always  think  of  you  as  my  lord,  „         in  409 

Craven     Did  the  chest  move  !  did  it  move  !     I  am 

utter  c  !  Harold  ii  ii  800 

The  c  !     There  is  a  faction  risen  again  for  Tostig,  „       rv  i  171 
Forty  thousand  marks  !  forty  thousand  devils — and 

these  c  bishops  ?  Becket  i  iv  91 

than  the  swords  of  the  c  sycophants  would  have  done  „     i  iv  148 
if  the  followers  Of  him,  who  heads  the  movement, 

held  him  c  ?  Foresters  n  i  702 

Craw  (crow)     I'd  think  na  moor  o'  maakin'  an  end  o' 

tha  nor  a  carrion  c —  Prom,  of  May  n  697 

Crawl    c  over  knife-edge  flint  Barefoot,  Becket  n  i  271 

c  down  thine  own  black  hole  To  the  lowest  Hell.  The  Cup  n  494 

Crawl'd    Fed  with  rank  bread  that  c  upon  the  ^ 

tongue,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  442 

I  c  like  a  sick  crab  from  my  old  shell,  Foresters  iv  126 

Crawling    Foul  maggots  c  in  a  fester'd  vice  !  Queen  Mary  v  v  161 

Here  c  in  this  boundless  Nature.  Prom,  of  May  ni  637 

I  see  two  figures  c  up  the  hill.  Foresters  iv  333 

Crazed     She  is  c  !     Edith.     That  doth  not  matter  Harold  v  ii  61 
Did  you  not  tell  me  he  was  c  with  jealousy.            Prom,  of  May  ni  565 

I  am  c  no  longer,  so  I  have  the  land.  Foresters  rv  855 

I  had  despair'd  of  thee — that  sent  me  c  „      iv  1022 

Crazeling    And  this  old  c  in  the  litter  there.  „       iv  634 

Cream    And  a  cat  to  the  c,  and  a  rat  to  the  cheese  ;         Prom,  of  May  i  53 

Create    (See  also  Re-create)    Shall  hands  that  do  c  the 

Lord  be  boimd  Becket  i  iii  94 

Creator    Illorum  lanceas  Frange  C  !  Harold  v  i  584 

Creature     By  God's  light  a  noble  c,  right  royal !  Queen  Mary  i  i  69 

the  red  man,  that  good  helpless  c,  „        ii  i  209 

— we  are  fallen  c's  ;  Look  to  your  Bible,  „      in  iv  79 


Creature 


878 


Crown 


Creature  (continued)     says  she  will  live  And  die  true 

maid — a  goodly  c  too.  Queen  Mary  m  vi  46 

aiid  yet  We  are  self-uncertain  c's,  Becket  v  ii  48 

strange  starched  stiff  c,  Little  John,  the  Earl's  man.       Foresters  i  i  184 

Man,  lying  here  alone,  Moody  c,  „     ii  ii  187 

delicate-footed  c  Came  stepping  o'er  him,  „        iv  536 

Credit  (s)     Tell,  tell  me  ;  save  my  c  with  myself.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  452 

for  heaven's  c  Makes  it  on  earth  :  Harold  i  i  141 

Credit  (verb)     better  die  Than  c  this,  for  death  is  death,  „      m  ii  79 

You  will  not  easily  make  me  c  that.  The  Cup  n  25 

Creed     Your  c  \viU  be  your  death.  Queen  Mary  r  ii  46 

The  heathen  priesthood  of  a  heathen  c  !  Becket  i  iii  64 

Creek    See  Sea-creek 

Creel    Tell  him  what  hath  crept  into  our  c,  Harold  ii  i  56 

Creep     and  c's,  c's  snake-like  about  our  legs  Queen  Mary  ii  i  203 

He  can  but  c  6iOVfn  into  some  dark  hole  ,,         iv  i  140 

I  would  c,  crawl  over  knife-edge  flint  Becket  ii  i  271 

fear  c's  in  at  the  front,  honesty  steals  out  at  the  back,           „     in  iii  61 

Creep'st    Why  c  thou  like  a  timorous  beast  Harold  i  ii  212 

Creeping     By  bonds  of  beeswax,  like  your  c  thing  ;  Queen  Mary  in  iii  63 

And  all  manner  of  c  things  too  ?  Becket  in  iii  132 

Crematur    Casa  c.  Pastor  fugatur  Harold  v  i  512 

Crept     1  c  along  the  gloom  and  saw  They  had  hewn  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  17 

Out  c  a  wasp,  with  half  the  swann  behind.  „           ui  iii  49 

Tell  him  what  hath  c  into  our  creel,  Harold  u  i  56 

dreadful  lights  c  up  from  out  the  marsh —  „  ni  i  379 

c  Up  even  to  the  tonsure,  and  he  groan'd,  Becket  i  iii  326 

Thro'  all  closed  doors  a  dreadful  whisper  c  „       v  ii  89 

Poverty  c  thro'  the  door.  Foresters  i  i  157 

The  serpent  that  had  c  into  the  garden  „      n  i  136 

Crescent    I  that  have  tum'd  their  Moslem  c  pale —  „       iv  793 

Crew     Kill'd  half  the  c,  dungeon'd  the  other  half  Becket  v  ii  444 

Cried     C  no  God-bless-her  to  the  Lady  Jane,  Queen  Mary  iii  iv  45 

He  c  Enough  ?  enough  ?  before  his  death. —  „           v  ii  100 

And  c  1  was  not  clean,  what  should  I  care  ?  „           v  ii  324 

If  the  field  C  out  '  I  am  mine  own  ;  '  Harold  iv  i  49 

she  c  out  on  him  to  put  me  forth  in  the  world  Becket  in  i  115 

Rome  !  Rome  !     Twice  I  c  Rome.  The  Cup  i  iii  175 

So  they  c  Sinnatus  Not  so  long  since —  „            ii  110 

C  out  against  the  cruelty  of  the  King.  Becket  v  ii  112 

Cried'st     Thou  c  '  A  Wyatt  !  '  and  flying  to  our  side  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  3 

Crime    of  a  heavier  c  Than  heresy  is  itself  ;  „      ni  iv  221 

The  c  be  on  his  head — ^not  bounden — ^no.  Harold  ii  ii  670 

0  crowning  c  !     Hast  murder'd  thine  own  guest,  „      iv  ii  36 
The  Church  is  all — the  c  to  be  a  king.  Becket  v  i  26 

Crimefol    heavy  As  thine  own  bolts  that  fall  on  c  heads  Harold  v  i  565 

Criminal    See  Laymen-criminals 

Crimson     We  might  go  softlier  than  with  c  rowel  And 

streaming  lash.  Queen  Mary  m  iv  182 

Crippled     man  Fell  with  him,  and  was  c  ever  after.  Foresters  iv  545 

Critic     You  as  poor  a  c  As  an  honest  friend  :  Queen  Mary  ii  i  115 

Croak     (See  also  Baven-croak)     dumb'd  his  carrion  c  From 

the  gray  sea  for  ever.  Harold  iv  iii  66 

1  grieve  I  am  the  Raven  who  c's  it.  Foresters  in  448 
Cromwell    make  the  soil  For  Caesars,  C's,  and 

Napoleons 
Crone    Out  of  the  church,  you  brace  of  cursed  c's, 
Crookback    Speak  straight  out,  c. 
Crooked    His  eighty  years  Look'd  somewhat  c 

I  do  believe  My  old  c  spine  would  bud  out  two  young 
wings 
Crop  (of  a  bird)    Cram  thy  c  full,  but  come  when  thou 

art  call'd. 
Crop  (verb)     If  possible,  here  !  to  c  the  flower  and 

pass.  Prom,  of  May  i  253 
Crop-full    if  you  cram  me  c-f  I  be  little  better  than  Famine 

in  the  picture,  Foresters  i  i  46 

Cross  (adj.)     but  look,  there  is  a  c  line  o'  sudden  death.  „      n  i  353 

Cross  (s)    (See  also  Charing  Cross)    Our  silver  c 

sparkled  before  the  prow. 

The  triumph  of  St.  Andrew  on  his  c, 

Then  claspt  the  c,  and  pass'd  away  in  peace. 

Forward  I     Forward  !     Harold  and  Holy  C  ! 

Harold  and  Holy  C  ! 

Harold  and  Holy  C  !     Out !  out ! 


Prom,  of  May  in  593 

Queen  Mary  rv  iii  539 

Foresters  ii  i  271 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  332 


Harold  in  i  24 


IV  iii  234 


Queen  Mary  ui  ii  9 

„         IV  iii  94 

vv  259 

Harold  iv  i  269 

„      V  i  439 

„      V  i  519 


Becket,  Pro.  370 
I  iii  477 
I  iii  480 
I  iii  483 
I  iii  489 
I  iii  504 
I  iii  509 
I  iii  511 
n  i  188 
„       IV  ii  199 

IV  ii  2a5 
V  i  161 

V  ii  610 

V  ii  615 

Foresters  i  i  284 

I  i  289 

..      I  ii  309 


Cross  (s)  (continued)     swear  nay  to  that  by  this  c  on 
thy  neck.     God's  eyes  !  what  a  lovely  c  ! 
holds  his  c  before  him  thro'  the  crowd. 
His  c  !     Roger  of  York.     His  c  !     I'll  front  liim,  c  to  c. 
His  c  !  it  is  the  traitor  that  imputes 
King  will  not  abide  thee  with  thy  c. 
Wherefore  dost  thou  presume  to  bear  thy  c, 
Why  dost  thou  presume,  Arm'd  with  thy  c. 
If  Canterbury  bring  his  c  to  court, 
There  may  be  c'es  in  my  line  of  life. 
By  very  God,  the  c  I  gave  the  King  ! 
sworn  on  this  my  c  a  hundred  times  Never  to  leave  him 

— and  that  merits  death.  False  oath  on  holy  c — 
Do  you  know  this  c,  my  liege  ? 
Why  then — The  C  ! — who  bears  my  C  before  me  ? 
Would  that  I  could  bear  thy  c  indeed  ! 
Father,  you  see  this  c  ? 

on  this  c  I  have  sworn  that  till  I  myself  pass  away, 
by  this  Holy  C  Which  good  King  Richard  gave  me 

Cross  (verb)     come  to  London  Bridge  ;   But  how  to  c  it 

balks  me.  Queen  Mary  n  iii  10 

her  shadow  c's  one  by  one  The  moonlight  casements  ,,  v  v  7 

The  winds  so  c  and  jostle  among  these  towers.  Harold  ii  ii  155 

but  stark  as  death  To  those  that  c  him. —  .,     n  ii  322 

nor  priestly  king  to  c  Their  billings  ere  they  nest.  ,.      m  ii  94 

C  me  not  !     I  am  seeking  one  who  wedded  me  ,.        v  ii  28 

No  man  without  my  leave  shall  c  the  seas  Becket,  Pro.  35 

I  mean  to  c  the  sea  to  France,  ,.     i  iii  124 

Wilt  not  be  suffer'd  so  to  c  the  seas  ..     i  iii  129 

C  swords  all  of  you  !  swear  to  follow  him  !  ..     i  iv  199 

feud  between  our  houses  is  the  bar  I  carmot  c  ;  The  Falcon  255 

Crossing  (part.)     be  as  the  shadow  of  a  cloud  C  your 

light.  Harold  n  ii  178 

Crossing  (s)    so  many  alleys,  c's.  Paths,  avenues —  Becket  iv  ii  6 

Cross-staff    Shall  I  not  smite  him  with  his  own  c-s  ?  ,.    v  ii  313 

Crost     C  and  recrost,  a  venomous  spider's  web —  ,.    ii  i  199 

Thou  hast  c  him  in  love,  Foresters  n  i  343 

You  c  him  with  a  quibble  of  your  law.  ,.  iv  850 

Crouch     C  even  because  thou  hatest  him  ;  Becket  iv  ii  223 

C  all  into  the  bush  !  Foresters  iv  596 

Crouch'd    This  hard  coarse  man  of  old  hath  c  to 


Croucher    no  c  to  the  Gregories  That  tread  the  kings 
Croup     No  fever,  cough,  c,  sickness  ? 


Queen  Man/  iv  ii  170 

Becket,  Pro.  211 

,.        v  ii  169 


Crow  (s)     (See  also  Crow)     didst  thou  ever  see  a  carrion 
c  Stand  watching 

where  the  black  c  flies  five. 

You  ought  to  dangle  up  there  among  the  c's. 
Crow  (verb)     C  over  Barbarossa — at  last  tongue-free 
Crowd    Friend  Roger,  steal  thou  in  among  the  c. 

Stave  off  the  c  upon  the  Spaniard  there. 

here's  a  c  as  thick  as  herring-shoals. 

I  stand  so  squeezed  among  the  c 

Push'd  by  the  c  beside — 

Who  foUow'd  with  the  c  to  Cranmer's  fire. 

You  saw  him  how  he  past  among  the  c  ; 

hands  Came  from  the  c  and  met  his  own  ; 

With  a  c  of  worshippers, 

holds  his  cross  before  him  thro'  the  c, 

There  is  a  movement  yonder  in  the  c — 

The  c  that  hungers  for  a  crown  in  Heaven 

for  I  have  pleasure  in  the  pleasure  of  c's. 

The  c  are  scattering,  let  us  move  away  ! 

not  fear  the  c  that  hunted  me  Across  the  woods, 

And  blanch  the  c  with  horror. 

Might  cast  my  largess  of  it  to  the  c  ! 

when  Thought  Comes  down  among  the  c, 

the  c  May  wreak  my  wrongs  upon  my  wrongers. 

— the  c  would  call  it  conscience — 
Crown  (adj.)     King  Stephen  gave  Many  of  the  c  lands 
to  those  that  helpt  him  ; 

Claim'd  some  of  our  c  lands  for  Canterbury — 
Crown  (s)     That  gave  her  royal  c  to  Lady  Jane. 

Edward  might  bequeath  the  c  Of  England, 

Yet  by  your  c  you  are. 


Queen  Mary  iv  iii  6 

V  V  84 

Foresters  in  367 

Becket  n  ii  50 

Q^een  Mary  l  iii  38 

I  iii  77 

ni  i  182 

in  i  239 

IV  iii  397 

IV  iii  554 

IV  iii  575 

IV  iii  5a3 

Becket  i  iii  475 

..     I  iii  478 

n  ii  37 

,.    n  ii  282 

..     in  iii  82 

..   in  iii  357 

The  Cup  I  iii  16 

n  154 

n  224 

Prom,  of  May  i  501 

1 506 

n  637 

Becket  i  iii  150 

„     I  iii  458 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  19 

I  ii  27 


ll 


Crown 

'Ctown  (s)  (coiUinued) 
ours, 


879 


Cruor 


To  make  the  c  of  Scotland  one  with 

Queen  Mary  i  v  287 


Spain  and  we,  One  c,  might  rule  the  world. 

To  save  your  c  that  it  must  come  to  this. 

that  young  girl  who  dared  to  wear  your  c  ? 

and  in  that  passion  Gave  me  my  c. 

let  Rebellion  Roar  till  throne  rock,  and  c  fall. 

in  whose  c  our  Kent  is  the  fairest  jewel. 

I  trust  this  day,  thro'  God,  I  have  saved  the  c 

I  pass  to  Windsor  and  I  lose  my  c. 

And  leave  the  people  naked  to  the  c,  Ami  the  c 

naked  to  the  people  ; 
And  nothing  of  the  titles  to  the  c  ; 
'  You  will  give  me  my  true  c  at  last, 
Were  but  a  thankless  policy  in  the  c. 
We  reck  not  tho'  we  lost  this  c  of  Eiigland— 
and  you  know  The  c  is  poor. 
And  wear  my  «,  and  dance  upon  iny  grave 
God  save  the  C  !  the  Papacy  is  no  more. 
That  thou  wouldst  have  his  promise  for  the  c  ? 
Jighten'd  for  me  The  weight  of  this  poor  c, 
Their  old  c  Is  yet  a  force  among  them, 
I  want  his  voice  in  England  for  the  c, 
Can  have  no  right  to  the  c,' 
Who  hath  a  better  claim  then  to  the  c 
Good,  good,  and  thou  wilt  help  me  to  the  c  ? 
I  ask  thee,  wilt  thou  help  me  to  the  c  ? 
Swear  thou  to  help  me  to  the  c  of  England. 
I  swear  to  help  thee  to  the  c  of  England 
(repeat) 


IV  303 
IV  479 

IV  492 

I  V  568 
u  i  145 

II  i  163 
u  ii  303 
n  iv  30 

m  i  119 
m  i  383 
m  i  395 
ni  iv  51 
III  iv  55 

V  i  170 

V  ii  601 

V  v  285 
Harold  i  i  204 

I  i  218 
„       Ii305 

n  ii  72 
„  n  ii  355 
„  n  ii  597 
„  II  ii  614 
,.  n  ii  628 
„    II  ii  705 


old  Northumbrian  c,  And  kings  of  our  own  choosing 
Your  old  c  Were  little  help  without  our  Saxon  carles 
Refer  my  cause,  my  c  to  Rome  !  .  .  . 
Wash  up  that  old  c  of  Northumberland. 
I  have  lost  both  c  And  husband, 
climb'd  the  throne  and  almost  clutch'd  tlie  c  ■ 
Surely  too  young  Even  for  this  shadow  of  a  c- 
chessmen  on  the  floor— the  king's  c  broken  !    ' 
if  there  ever  come  feud  between  Church  and  C 
he  would  grant  thee  The  c  itself.  ' 

Sign,  and  obey  the  c  !     Becket.     The  c  ?     Shall  I  do 

less  for  Canterbury  Than  Henry  for  the  c  ? 
lest  the  c  should  be  Shorn  of  ancestral  splendour. 
Church  and  C,  Two  sisters  gliding  in  an  equal  dance 
and  the  mitre  Grappling  the  c — 
leave  the  royalty  of  my  c  Unlessen'd  to  mine  heirs 
he  answer'd  me,  As  if  he  wore  the  c  already— 
Quarrel  of  C  and  Church — to  rend  again. 
I  thank  you,  sons  ;  when  kings  but  hold  by  c's.  The 

crowd  that  hungers  for  a  c  in  Heaven 
m  her  time  when  she  had  the  '  C     Rosamoiid.     The  c  ' 

who  ? 
But  c's  must  bow  when  mitres  sit  so  high, 
lord  of  more  land  Than  any  c  in  Europe, 
thro'  all  this  quarrel  I  still  have  cleaved  to  the  c,  in 
hope  the  c  Would  cleave  to  me  that  but  obey'd  the  c, 

his  poor  tonsure  A  c  of  Empire. 

Rather  than  dim  the  splendour  of  his  c 

We  must  not  force  the  c  of  martyrdom. 

I  heard  in  Rome,  This  tributary  c  may  fall  to  you 

The  king,  the  c  I  their  talk  in  Rome  ? 

I  here  return  like  Tarquin — ^for  a  c. 

play'd  into  their  hands.  Means  me  the  c. 

She  will  be  gjad  at  last  to  wear  my  c. 

This  all  too  happy  day,  c — queen  at  once. 

Have  I  the  c  on  ?     I  will  go  To  meet  him. 

It  is  the  c  Offends  him — 

crown  you  Again  with  the  same  c  my  Queen  of 
Beauty. 

When  the  fairy  slights  the  c. 

all  the  c's  Of  all  this  world, 
Ciown  (verb)     Look  to  you  as  the  one  to  c  their  ends. 

And  when  the  Council  would  not  c  me — 

your  people  will  not  c  me — 

So  that  ye  will  not  c  the  Atheling  ? 


Harold  u  ii  713,  721 


IV  132 

IV  134 

vil 

vil67 

vii39 

Becket,  Pro.  22 

Pro.  231 

Pro.  313 

Pro.  465 

Iiii30 

I  iii  145 
I  iii  155 
I  iii  443 
ni27 
nil07 
nil  7 
II  ii  56 


II  ii  281 

mi  198 

IV  ii  297 

vi30 

vi48 

vil96 

vii344 

V  iii  28 

Cup  I  i 97 

1 198 

Ii  142 

I  iii  151 

I  iii  168 

11451 

n518 

u529 


The 


The  Falcon  915 

Foresters  ii  ii  135 

„  IV  404 

xen  Mary  i  iv  171 

„  I  V  555 

v  i  81 

Harold  ii  ii  598 


Crown  (verb)  (continued)    our  great  Council  wait  to  c 
thee  King —  (repeat) 
Should  they  not  know  free  England  c's  herself  ? 
Who  shall  c  him  ?     Canterbury  is  dying. 
Becket  should  c  him  were  he  crown'd  at  all : 
For  England,  c  young  Henry  there, 
to  Westminster  and  c  Young  Henry  there  to-morrow. 
And  thou  shalt  c  my  Henry  o'er  again, 
will  you  c  my  foe  My  victor  in  mid-battle  ? 
The  prelates  whom  he  chose  to  c  his  son  ! 
This  very  day  the  Romans  c  him  king 
When  do  they  c  him  ?     Messenger.     Even  now. 
kick'd  it  featureless — they  now  would  c. 
Yea,  that  ye  saw  me  c  myself  withal. 
Ay,  there  they  c  him. 


Harold  in  i  3,  406 

v  i  48 

Becket,  Pro.  239 

II  ii  17 

II  ii  456 

in  ii  9 

„     III  iii  205 

v  i  148 

v  ii  399 

The  Cup  II  64 

II  74 

„      II 129 

„      II  159 

hurls  the  victor's  column  down  with  liini  That  c's  it,  hear.      ','       n  297 
I  whisper'd.  Let  me  c  you  Queen  of  Beauty,  The  Falcon  360 

-  you  Again  with  the  same  crown  my  Queen  of  Beauty.      „  914 


honour,  worship  thee,  C  thee  with  flo\vers  ; 
Crown'd     never  yet  so  happy  Since  I  was  c. 

C  slaves  of  slaves,  and  mitred  kings  of  kings, 

C,  c  and  lost,  c  King — and  lost  to  me  ! 

Than  ere  they  c  me  one. 

My  young  son  Henry  c  the  King  of  England, 

Him  who  c  Stephen— King  Stephen's  brother  ! 

You  have  not  c  young  Henry  yet, 

C  !  by  God's  eyes,  we  will  not  have  him  c. 

We  will  not  have  him  c. 

Not  have  him  c  ? 

Becket  should  crown  him  were  he  c  at  all : 

England  scarce  would  hold  Young  Henry  king,  if 
only  c  by  York, 

I  go  to  have  young  Henry  c  by  York. 

Hereford,  you  know,  c  the  first  Henrj'.     Becket. 
Anselm  c  this  Henry  o'er  again. 

coronation  void  By  cursing  those  who  c  him. 

On  those  that  c  young  Henry  in  this  realm. 

As  you  would  force  a  king  from  being  c. 

Is  he  c  ?     Phoebe.     Ay,  there  they  crown  him. 

Across  the  hills  when  I  was  being  c. 

I  will  go  To  meet  him,  c  !  c  victor  of  my  will — 

one  sweet  face  C  with  the  wreath. 
Crowning  (adj.  and  part)     c  thy  young  son  by  York, 
London  and  Salisbury — not  Canterbury. 

that  but  obey'd  the  crown,  C  your  son  ; 

0  c  crime  !     Hast  murder'd  thine  own  guest,  the 
son  of  Orm, 

Crowning  (s)     He  glitters  on  the  c  of  the  hill. 

hath  in  this  c  of  young  Henry  by  York  and  London 

1  was  at  the  c,  for  I  have  pleasure 
Come  once  more  to  me  Before  the  c, — 

Crownling    as  to  the  young  c  himself,  he  look'd  so  mala- 
pert in  the  eyes, 
Crozier    Cowl,  helm  ;  and  c,  battle-axe. 

And  smite  thee  with  my  c  on  the  skull  ? 
and  lay  My  c  in  the  Holy  Father's  hands. 
Sceptre  and  c  clashing,  and  the  mitre  Grappling 
Crucified    They  c  St.  Peter  downward. 
Crucifix     I  brought  not  ev'n  my  c.     Henry.     Take  this. 
Crucifying    Horrible  !  flaying,  scourging,  c — 
Cruel    And  c  at  it,  killing  helpless  flies  ; 

but  neither  cold,  coarse,  c.  And  more  than  all- 
lost  and  found  Together  in  the  c  river  Swale 
I  fear  I  was  as  e  as  the  King. 
C  ?     Oh,  no— it  is  the  law,  not  he  ; 
Then  you  have  done  it,  and  I  call  you  c. 
Crueller    and  makes  The  fire  seem  even  c  than  it  is. 

if  he  have  the  greater  right,  Hath  been  the  c. 
Cruellest    The  hardest,  c  people  in  the  world, 
Cruelty    haughtiness  of  their  nobles  ;  the  c  of  their 
priests, 
loathed  the  cruelties  that  Rome  Wrought  on  her 

vassals. 
Wrong'd  by  the  cruelties  of  his  religions 
Cruor    Illorum  in  lacrymas  C  fundatur  ! 


Foresters  ii  ii  19 

Queen  Mary  in  ii  88 

in  iv  381 

Harold  111  ii  1 

„      III  ii  54 

Becket,  Pro.  224 

.,      Pro.  273 

n  ii  1 

n  ii  3 

II  ii  8 

II  ii  14 

n  ii  17 


But 


nii32 
II  ii  478 

„     m  iii  202 
v  ii  331 

V  ii  392 

V  iii  26 
The  Cup  II 180 

n  321 

n  519 

The  Falcon  649 

Becket  111  iii  194 
V  i  52 

Harold  iv  ii  35 

V  i  488 
Becket  m  iii  70 

ui  iii  81 
The  Cup  n  79 

Becket  ni  iii  108 

Harold  v  i  444 

Becket  i  i  221 

„    I  iii  125 

„      n  i  25 

„    I  iii  619 

.,     n  i  295 

The  Cup  I  ii  235 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  65 

V  ii  482 

Harold  in  ii  10 

Becket  v  ii  124 

„     V  ii  125 

„     V  ii  136 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  233 

IV  iii  383 

n  i  100 

n  i  169 


The  Cup  I  ii  373 

Prom,  of  May  ni  545 

Harold  v  i  532 


Queen  Mary  iii  vi  84 

Harold  i  i  356 

I  i  359 

Becket  I  iii  334 

The  Cup  I  i  25 

„      I  ii  131 

Prom,  of  May  n  493 

Quee7i  Mary  ii  iv  91 

IV  iii  359 

Becket  v  i  68 

The  Falcon  640 

Foresters  ii  ii  146 

Becket  iii  i  114 

I  iv  210 

I  iv  254 


Crush 

Crush    In  hope  to  c  all  heresy  under  Spain. 
C  it  at  once  With  all  the  power  I  have  ! — 
I  must — I  will ! — C  it  half-bom  ! 
I'll  c  him  as  the  subject. 
And  how  to  c  them  easily. 
Rome  Will  c  you  if  vou  wrestle  with  her  • 
would  not  c  The  fly  that  drew  her  blood  • 
Crnsh'd    Over,  your  Grace,  all  c ; 
They  are  too  c,  too  broken, 
Being  so  c  and  so  humiliated  We  scarcely  dare 
C,  hack'd  at,  trampled  imderfoot. 
C  my  bat  whereon  I  flew  ! 
fonst    and  to  speak  truth,  nigh  at  the  end  of  our  last  c 
Cratch    we  daren't  fight  you  with  our  c'es,  ' 

C'es,  and  itches,  and  leprosies,  and  ulcers. 
Cry  (s)     (See  also  War-cry)     Their  c  is,  Philip  never 
shall  be  king. 
Will  front  their  c  and  shatter  them  into  dust. 
Cries  of  the  moment  and  the  street — 
Will  stir  the  living  tongue  and  make  the  c. 
Whereat  Lord  Williams  gave  a  sudden  c  : — 
Or  you,  for  heretic  cries  ? 
A  c  !     What's  that  ?     Elizabeth  ?  revolt  ? 
And  cries,  and  clashes,  and  the  groans  of  men  : 
Thou  hast  sold  me  for  a  c. — 

0  God,  the  God  of  truth  hath  heard  my  c. 
may  at  least  have  my  c  against  him  and  her,— 
hast  thou  heard  this  c  of  Gilbert  Foliot 
make  my  c  to  the  Pope,  By  whom  I  will  be  judged  • 

1  heard  your  savage  c.  ' 
My  savage  c  ?    Why,  she— she— when  I  strove 
trumpets  in  the  halls.  Sobs,  laughter,  cries  : 
You  had  my  answer  to  that  c  before. 
And  her  c  rang  to  me  across  the  years, 
The  phantom  c  !      You — did  you  hear  a,  c? 
he  flutter'd  his  wings  with  a  sweet  little  c. 

Cry  (verb)     all  men  e.  She  is  queenly,  she  is  goodly, 
If  ever  I  c  out  against  the  Pope 
Swallows  fly  again,  Cuckoos  c  again, 
I  heard  An  angel  c  '  There  is  more  joy  in  Heaven,'- 
One  who  cries  continually  with  sweat  and  tears 
I  likewise  c  '  no  more.' 
Why  c  thy  people  on  thy  sister's  name  ? 
Is  thy  wrath  Hell,  that  I  should  spare  to  c, 
he  licks  my  face  and  moans  and  cries  out  against 

the  King, 
innocences  that  will  c  From  all  the  hidden  by-ways 
sometimes  she  cries,  and  can't  sleep  sound  o'  nights 
She  shall  c  no  more  ;  she  shall  sleep  sound  enough 
c  out  for  thee  Who  art  too  pure  for  earth. 
one  half,  but  half-alive,  Cries  to  the  King. 
What  made  the  King  c  out  so  furiously  ? 
When  you  c  '  Rome,  Rome,'  to  seize 
Dost  thou  c  out  upon  the  Gods  of  Rome  ? 
throat  might  gape  before  the  tongue  could  c  who  ? 
The  Sheriff !     This  ring  cries  out  against  thee. 
Crying  (part.)     (See  also  A-crying)     Thro'  many  voices  c 
right  and  left, 
And  Ignorance  c  in  the  streets, 
C,  '  Forward  ! ' — set  our  old  church  rocking, 
c,  in  his  deep  voice,  more  than  once, 
What  are  you  c  for,  when  the  sun  shines  ? 
when  c  On  Holy  Church  to  thimder  out  her  rights 
Our  old  nurse  c  as  if  for  her  own  child, 
She  must  be  c  out '  Edgar '  in  her  sleep.     Harold 
Who  must  be  c  out '  Edgar  '  in  her  sleep  ? 
yyJPg  (8)    ye  did  wrong  in  c  '  Down  with  John  : ' 
Crypt    Her  c  among  the  stars. 

No,  to  the  c  !    Twenty  steps  down. 
«_v.F°  i^®  "  ^  no— no.  To  the  chapel  of  St.  Blaise 
Cnbit    See  Twenty-cubit 

S?*^  hK^'^'^l^^  ^^•'fe  ^>  '^^  ^^'  ««««"  ^'^ry  m  v  97 

"™  J^J}^  *o  c  the  rogue  For  mfant  treason.  m  i;;  k\ 

C  lum  could  I  ?  with  my  hands  Milking  the  cow  ?  "  nr  v  94 

10  kiss  and  c  among  the  birds  and  flowers—  in  y  258 


880 


Curse 


Queen  Mary  n  iv  1 

II  iv  5 

II  iv  128 

„        III  i  355 

IV  iii  605 

V  ii  326 

V  V  187 
Harold  in  i  375 

rv  ii  76 

V  i  601 
Becket,  Pro.  510 

I  i  36 
I  iii  723 
IV  ii  320 

IV  ii  338 
V  ii  368 

V  iii  124 
Prom,  of  May  ii  655 

III  651 
Foresters  i  i  154 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  343 

m  i  351 

in  V  97 

—       „  IV  ii  10 

»  V  iv  44 

Harold  i  i  389 

IV  i  20 

V  i  38 

Becket  i  iv  100 

.,      m  iii  14 

IV  i  29 

IV  i  32 

,.     rv  ii  132 

vi65 

v  i  220 

The  Cup  I  iii  5 

II454 

Foresters  m  226 

IV  69 


Queen  Mary  i  ii  48 

IV  iii  377 

IV  iii  403 

rv  iii  611 

Becket  m  i  269 

V  ii  30 

Prom,  of  May  n  479 

in653 

Foresters  i  ii  96 

Becket  i  iii  555 

V  iii  77 

„      V  iii  81 


Cuirass    And  c  in  this  forest  where  I  dream'd 

Cum  (came)     I  e  behind  tha,  gall,  and  couldn't  make 

tJllhl^^^'"'      •  .        ,u  Q^tem  i¥a«/ IV  iii  465 

till  his  man  c  m  post  vro'  here,  rv  iii  511 

the  tongue  on  un  c  a-lolluping  out  o'  'is  mouth 

as  black  as  a  rat. 

Cumberland    (See  also  Coomberland)    In  C  Mr. 

Dobson.  ' 

I  met  her  first  at  a  farm  in  C— Her  uncle's 

Cup    wmes  Of  wedding  had  been  dash'd  into  the  c's  Of 

Th^J^a.  Harold^  mi 

Hath  stumbled  on  our  c'5  ?  "  jviinTQ 

not  at  all ;  the  c's  empty.  becket  Pro  478 

Ye  have  eaten  of  my  fish  and  drunken  of  mv  c  for  a  ' 

dozen  years.  ^  i  iv  30 

and  now  this  c—l  never  felt  such  passion  The  Cup  i  i  33 


Foresters  iv  130 


IV  iii  518 

Prom,  of  May  i  66 
u  397 


sends  you  this  c  rescued  from  the  burning 

it  is  the  c  we  use  in  our  marriages. 

Take  thou  this  letter  and  this  c  to  Camma, 

Take  thou  this  c  and  leave  it  at  her  doors. 

Is  that  the  c  you  rescued  from  the  fire  ? 

now  this  pious  c  Is  passport  to  their  house, 

sacred  c  saved  from  a  blazing  shrine  Of  our  great 
Goddess, 

Had  you  then  No  message  with  the  c  ? 

sends  you  this  c — the  c  we  use  in  our  marriages — 

know  myself  am  that  Galatian  Who  sent  the  c 

take  this  holy  c  To  lodge  it  in  the  shrine  of  Artemis. 

To  lodge  this  c  Within  the  holy  shrine  of  Artemis 

the  marriage  c  Wherefrom  we  make  libation         ' 

You  see  this  c,  my  lord. 

It  is  the  c  belonging  our  own  Temple. 

That  Synorix  should  drink  from  his  own  c. 

They  two  should  drink  together  from  one  c, 

I  have  almost  drain'd  the  c — A  few  drops  left. 

Have  I  not  drunk  of  the  same  c  with  thee  ? 

Here,  here — a  c  of  wine — drink  and  begone  ' 
Cupid     (See  also  Tree-cupid)     Parthian  shaft  of  a  forlorn 
C  at  the  King's  left  breast, 

thou  wouldst  hug  thy  C  till  his  ribs  cracked— 

St.  C,  that  is  too  irreverent. 
Cur    as  a  mastiff  dog  May  love  a  puppy  c 

Why  did  you  slink  away  like  a  c  ? 
Curb     their  children  imder-heel — ^Must  c  her ; 

Because  we  seek  to  c  their  viciousness. 
Curb'd    Your  lavish  household  c. 
Cure     I  trust  the  kingly  touch  that  c's  the  evil 
Cunous    be  c  About  the  welfare  of  their  babes, 

You  see  this  cup,  my  lord.     Antonius.    Most  c  ' 
Cunousness    I  have  some  time,  for  c,  my  Lord, 
Current    (See  also  Side-current)    the  c's  So  shift  and 

change,  ^^  ^^  ^y  ^^ 

that  one  tmie  sway  to  the  c,  And  to  the  wind  another.    Becket  i  iii  594 
If  nian  be  only  A  willy-nilly  c  of  sensations—  Prom  of  May  n  263 


ii41 
I  i  44 
I  i  61 
I  i  67 
I  i  71 
1 182 

I  ii  54 

I  ii  68 

I  ii  72 

..      I  ii  210 

.,      I  ii  434 

I  iii  52 
n  198 
n  338 
n345 
n  354 
n  362 
n385 

II  463 
Foresters  I  iii  89 


Becket,  Pro.  340 

„       Pro.  504 

V  i  198 

Qu^en  Mary  i  iv  195 

Becket  iv  ii  431 

„      Pro.  215 

Foresters  m  393 

Queen  Mary  i  v  113 

Harold  i  i  152 

The  Cup  I  ii  361 

n  339 

Queen  Mary  ill  iv  61 


Curse  (s)     the  c  is  on  him  For  swearing  falsely 

those  heavenly  ears  have  heard,  Their  c  is  on  him  ■ 

prayer  against  the  a  That  lies  on  thee  and  England. 

Then  on  thee  remains  the  c, 

lamb  to  Holy  Church  To  save  thee  from  the  c. 

To  find  a  means  whereby  the  c  might  glance 

and  the  second  c  Descend  upon  thine  head, 

Fool  and  wise,  I  fear  This  c,  and  scorn  it. 

It  burns  my  hand — a  c  to  thee  and  me. 

The  c  of  England  !  these  are  drown'd  in  wassail. 

He  hath  blown  himself  as  red  as  fire  with  c's. 

if  thou  blurt  thy  c  among  our  folk,  I  know  not— 

will  blast  and  blind  you  like  a  c. 

God's  full  c  Shatter  you  all  to  pieces 

My  c  on  all  This  world  of  mud, 


Harold  m  i  244 
m  i  260J 
ra  i  278 
in  i  315 
„      m  i  336' 
„      m  i  342 
„        in  ii  48 
in  ii  68 
„      in  ii  186 
„     IV  iii  222 
v  i  87 
V  i  89 
Becket  i  iv  40J 
„  V  iii  134 1 
Prom,  of  May  ni  721 


C  on  your  brutal  strength  !     I  cannot  pass  that  vfky.       ',       '  xn  731 
Curse  (verb)    God  c  her  and  her  Legate  !  Quern,  Man/  v  iv  12, 

you  c  so  loud,  The  watch  will  hear  you.  v  iv  62 

The  Pope,  the  King,  will  c  you—  Becket  v  iii  182 

Heaven  c  him  if  he  come  not  at  your  call !  Prom,  of  May  i  764 


Curse 


881 


Damn 


Curse  (verb)  (continued) 

me. 
Corsed    God  hath  blest  or  c  me  with  a  nose — 


C  him  !  but  thou  art  mocking 

Foresters  n  i  514 
Queen  Mary  m  v  178 


Out  of  the  church,  you  brace  of  c  crones, 

Why  let  earth  rive,  gulf  in  These  c  Nonnans — 

He  hath  c  thee,  and  all  those  who  fight  for  thee, 

The  King  hath  c  him,  if  he  marry  me  ;   The  Pope 
hath  c  him,  marry  me  or  no  ! 

The  realm  for  which  thou  art  forsworn  is  c,  The  babe 
enwomb'd  and  at  the  breast  is  c  The  corpse  thou 
whelmest  with  thine  earth  is  c.  The  soul  who 
fighteth  on  thy  side  is  c,  The  seed  thou  sowest  in 
thy  field  is  c,  The  steer  wherewith  thou  plowest  thy 
field  is  c.  The  fowl  that  fleeth  o'er  thy  field  is  c, 

But  since  he  c  My  friends  at  Veselay, 

C  be  Jolin  of  Oiord,  Roger  of  York,  And  Gilbert 
Foliot !  c  those  De  Brocs  That  hold  our  Saltwood 
Castle  from  our  see  !  C  Fitzurse,  and  all  the 
rest  of  them 

C  and  anathematised  us  right  and  left, 

0  the  SheriS  Would  pay  this  c  mortgage  to  his 
brother 

came  some  evil  fairy  at  mj^  birth  And  c  me, 
Corsii^    Our  Tostig  parted  c  me  and  England  ; 

coronation  void  By  c  those  who  crown'd  him. 
Curtsey     C  to  him,  wife,  and  thank  him. 
Cushion    Throw  c's  on  that  seat,  and  make  it  throne 

like. 
Custom    you  that  have  kept  your  old  c's  upright, 

But  by  the  royal  c's  of  our  realm 

And  for  these  Royal  c's,  These  ancient  Royal  c's — 

Will  you  subscribe  the  c's  ? 

we  might  take  your  side  against  the  c's — 

sign'd  These  ancient  laws  and  c's  of  the  realm. 

to  obey  These  ancient  laws  and  c's  of  the  realm  ? 

C's,  traditions, — clouds  that  come  and  go  ;  The  c's 
of  the  Church  are  Peter's  rock. 

these  c's  are  no  longer  As  Canterbury  calls  them, 

another  of  these  c's  thou  Wilt  not  be  suffer'd 

for  no  love  o'  the  c's  Or  constitutions, 

ye  set  these  c's  by  my  death  Ringing  their  own 
death-knell 

That  thou  wilt  hear  no  more  o'  the  c's. 

And  swear  to  obey  the  c's. 

Good  royal  c's — had  them  written  fair 

1  promised  The  King  to  obey  these  c's. 
Are  these  your  c's  ? 
The  King,  these  c's,  and  the  Church, 
as  you  suspended  yourself  after  sub-writing  to  the  c's. 
our  recoverer  and  upholder  of  c's  hath  in  this  crowning 
and  I  warrant  the  c's.     Did  the  King  Speak  of  the  c's  ? 
spiritual  giant  with  our  island  laws  And  c's, 
smce  we  likewise  swore  to  obey  the  c's, 
it  is  the  law,  not  he  ;  The  c's  of  the  realm.     Becket. 

The  c's  !  c's  !  „     v  ii  127 

It  is  our  ancient  c  in  Galatia  That  ere  two  souls  The  Cup  n  358 

Thrones,  churches,  ranks,  traditions,  c's.  Prom,  of  May  i  520 

turn  back  at  times,  and  make  Courtesy  to  c  ?  „  n  635 

according  to  the  law  and  c  of  the  kingdom  of  England  Foresters  i  iii  66 
It  is  our  forest  c  they  should  revel  Along  with  Robin.  „       m  174 

Doftomaiy    decide  on  what  was  c  In  olden  days,  Becket  u  ii  175 

CSnt    c  out  the  rotten  from  your  apple,  Queen  Mary  n  ii  5 

'  I  would  they  were  c  off  That  trouble  you.'  ,,      m  iv  32 

C  with  a  diamond;    so  to  last  like  truth.  „       m  v  25 

Madam,  you  have  but  c  the  canvas  out ;  „       v  v  183 

King's  verdurer  caught  him  a-hunting  in  the  forest, 

and  c  off  his  paws.  Becket  i  iv  96 

wheere  the  big  eshtree  c's  athurt  it,  it  gi'es  a 

turn  like,  Prom,  of  May  m  94 

he  would  never  c  it  down,  because  one  of  the  Steers  „  m  246 

if  we  kill  a  stag,  our  dogs  have  their  paws  c  off,  Foresters  iv  225 

iot    See  also  Fine-cnt,  Stone-cut 

iyillbal    sing,  Asaph  !  clash  The  c,  Heman  !  Harold  m  i  188 

apricot,  Vine,  c,  poplar,  myrtle.  The  Cup  i  i  3 

Again  this  Richard  is  the  lion  of  C,  Foresters  rr  391 


rv  iii  539 
Harold  n  ii  783 
„    ra  ii  152 

«   raiil89 


vi64 
Becket  n  i  88 


„  nii265 
V  i  4 

Foresters  u  i  144 

„     n  ii  109 

Harold  m  i  76 

Becket  v  ii  331 

Foresters  m  248 

Queen  Mary  V  ii  536 

n  i  158 

Becket,  Pro.  23 

I  i  166 

I  ii  46 

I  ii  57 

I  iii  7 

I  iii  18 

I  iii  22 

I  iii  69 

..     1  iii  128 

„     I  iii  137 


I  iii  170 
I  iii  256 
I  iii  270 
I  iii  415 
I  iii  557 
I  iii  659 
I  iii  726 
nii352 
in  iii  70 
in  iii  331 
ivii445 
V  i55 


Daay  (day)    {See  also  Wedding-daay)    What  a  day, 

what  a  day  !  nigh  upo'  judgement  d  loike.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  468 

they  wimt  set  i'  the  Lord's  cheer  o'  that  d.  „        iv  iii  470 

He  be  heighty  this  very  d,  and  'e  telled  Prom,  of  May  i  7 

When  theer  wur  a  meeting  o'  farmers  at  Littlechester 

to'ther  d,  „        1 138 

I  coom'd  upon  'im  t'other  d  lookin'  at  the  coontry,  „        1 201 

'  Good  d  then,  Dobson  ! '    Civil-spoken  i'deed  !  „        1 300 

fur  thaw  I  be  heighty  this  very  d,  „       i  359 

and  the  larks  'ud  sing  i'  them  d's,  „        i  374 

plaay  the  planner,  if  ye  liked,  all  d  long,  like  a 

laady,  „      n  IQl 

At  the  end  of  the  d,  For  the  last  load  hoam  ':• 

(repeat)  Prom,  of  May  u  183, 194 

Till  the  end  of  the  d  And  the  last  load  hoiim.  „  n  208 

Till  the  end  o'  the  d  An'  the  last  load  hoam.'  (repeat)  „  ii  238,  292 

To  the  end  o'  the  d  An'  the  last  load  hoam.'  „  n  259 

Naay,  but '  Good  d,  Dobbins.'  „  n  732 

'  Good  d,  Dobbins.'    Dang  tha !  „  n  741 

Taake  me  awaay,  little  gell.    It  be  one  o'  my 
bad  d's.  „  m  466 

Daazed  (dazed)    feller's  clean  d,  an'  maazed,  an' 

maated,  „  n  729 

Dabble    B  your  hearths  with  your  own  blood.  Harold  n  ii  751 

Daft    Is  he  deaf,  or  dumb,  or  d,  or  drunk  Foresters  i  ii  208 

Da^er     With  fingers  pointed  like  so  many  d's.  Queen  Mary  i  v  149 

Or  I  will  dig  thee  with  my  d.  „         n  iii  96 

even  while  I  speak  There  lurks  a  silent  d,  „         v  ii  216 

I  have  my  d  here  to  still  their  throats.  Becket  ni  ii  49 

stand  beside  thee  One  who  might  grapple  with  thy  d,  ..    rv  ii  230 

Take  up  your  d ;  put  it  in  the  sheath.  .,    rv  ii  293 

Madam,  I  saw  your  d  at  her  throat ;  „    iv  ii  319 

sure  my  d  was  a  feint  Till  the  worm  tum'd —  „    iv  ii  379 

I  go,  but  I  will  have  my  d  with  me.  The  Cup  i  ii  457 

mine  own  d  driven  by  Synorix  found  All  good  „  n  85 

Daily    Save  for  my  d  range  Among  the  pleasant  fields 

of  Holy  Writ  Queen  Mary  m  v  78 

and  England's  sake  That  suffers  in  the  d  want  of  thee,    Harold  n  ii  275 
The  more  or  less  of  d  labour  done — The  pretty  gaping 
bills  in  the  home-nest  Piping  for  bread — the  a  want 
supplied—  Becket  n  ii  299 

Some  d  something-nothing.  „        m  i  80 

0  my  sick  boy !    My  d  fading  Florio,  The  Falcon  236 

Dainty     dog  I  cramm'd  with  dainties  worried  me  !  Becket  v  i  244 

Dairy  (adj.)    she  set  the  bush  by  my  d  winder  afoor  she 

went  to  school  Prom,  of  May  n  18 

Dairy  (s)  The  maid  to  her  d  came  in  from  the  cow,  „  i  39 

Daisy  (a  plant)    Daisies  grow  again,  Kingcups  blow 

again,  Qu^en  Mary  m  v  89 

O  graves  in  daisies  drest,  Prom,  of  May  m  204 

Honest  d  deadly  bruised,  Foresters  n  ii  156 

Daisy  (name  of  a  cow)    Our  D's  as  good  'z  her.    Tib. 

Noa,  Joan.  Quern  Mary  rv  iii  479 

Our  D's  butter's  as  good  'z  hem.  „  iv  iii  481 

Our  D's  cheeses  be  better.  „  rv  iii  484 

Dale    Among  these  happy  d's,  run  clearer,  Becket  n  i  157 

Dallied     But  d  with  a  single  lettuce-leaf ;  The  Falcon  673 

Dally    We  d  with  our  lazy  moments  here,  Queen  Mary  v  iii  108 

♦     On  those  sweet  lips  that  dare  to  d  with  it.  Foresters  rv  75 

Dallying    d  over  seas  Even  when  his  brother's,  Queen  Mary  ni  iv  292 

Dam  (mother)     '  Ewe  lamb,  ewe  lamb,  I  am  here  by  the  d.'      Becket  i  iv  172 

Dam  (obstruction)    like  a  river  in  flood  thro'  a  burst  d         Harold  n  ii  466 

Damage    He  meant  no  harm  nor  d  to  the  Church.  Becket  x  iii  216 

Dame    trifling  royally  With  some  fair  d  of  court.        Queen  Mary  m  vi  160 

Damn    {See  also  Dang)    hear  him ;  let  his  own  words 

d  the  Papist.  „  i  iii  53 

Absolve  the  left-hand  thief  and  d  the  right  ?  Becket  n  ii  392 

Oh,  do  not  d  yourself  for  company  !  „      v  ii  523 

— drest  like  a  gentleman,  too.    D  all  gentlemen, 

says  I !  Prtm.  of  May  n  579 

3    K 


Damn'd 


882 


Darkness 


Daom'd    my  Lord,  He  is  d  enough  already. 

and  brooks  Were  bridged  and  d  with  dead, 
Damon  The  polish'd  D  of  your  pa,storal  here. 
Damp    hand,  D  with  the  sweat  of  death, 


Queen.  Mary  n  ii  407 

Harold  in  ii  130 

Prom,  of  May  in  562 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  33 


Queen  Mary  v  ii  170 

Becket  i  iii  444 

The  Falcon  54 

Prom,  of  May  i  428 

I  796 

Foresters  i  ii  53 

Quecfii  Mary  in  ii  238 

ni  V  252 

V  ii  601 

Harold  i  i  9 

„  I  i  386 

Prom,  of  May  i  429 


lii  204 
IV  550 
IV  552 


Those  d,  black,  dead  Nights  in  the  Tower ;  dead —  „    ni  v  137 

Damsel    I  love  him  as  a  e^  of  his  day  Foresters  i  i  227 

if  ever  A  Norman  d  fell  into  our  hands,  ,.       ni  181 

You  hide  this  d  in  your  forest  here,  „        iv  476 

D,  is  this  the  truth  ?  Marian.     Ay,  noble  knight.  „        rv  769 

DanaS     included  D  has  escaped  again  Her  tower,  Becket  i  i  395 

Dance  (s)    {See  also  Diamond-dance)    Have  you  been 

looking  at  the  '  D  of  Death '  ? 

Two  sisters  gliding  in  an  equal  d, 

She  saw  it  at  a  d,  upon  a  neck  Less  lovely 

and  the  lads  and  lasses  'all  hev  a  d. 

But  see  they  were  coming  out  for  the  d  already. 

But  they  are  coming  hither  for  the  d — • 

Dance  (verb)     Till  the  sun  d,  as  upon  Easter  Day, 

and  d  into  the  sun  That  shines  on  princes. 

And  wear  my  crown,  and  d  upon  my  grave. 

star  That  d's  in  it  as  mad  with  agony  ! 

that  wilt  not  d  However  wisely  charm'd. 

D  !  small  heart  have  I  to  d. 

weight  of  the  church  to  boot  on  my  shoulders,  I  would 

d  too.  Foresters  i  ii  59 

Go  now  and  ask  the  maid  to  d  with  thee,  „       i  ii  185 

Pretty  mistress,  will  you  d  ? 
What  ?  must  we  d  attendance  all  the  day  ? 
Z> !  ay,  by  all  the  saints  and  all  the  devils  ye  shall  d. 
they  shall  d  to  the  music  of  the  wild  wood.     Let  the 

birds  sing,  and  do  you  d  to  their  song.  „        iv  555 

Rouge,  I  am  full  of  gout.     I  cannot  d.  „        iv  563 

for  by  my  life,  you  shall  d  till  he  can.  „        iv  566 

Prick  him  where  thou  wilt,  so  that  he  d.  „        iv  572 

Let  us  hang,  so  thou  d  meanwhile ;  „        iv  581 

Take  care,  take  care  !     I  d — I  will  d — I  d.  „        iv  586 

Dancing     I  watch'd  you  d  once  With  your  huge  father ;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  143 

I  should  seem  to  be  d  upon  a  grave.  Prom,  of  May  i  431 

Dandle     I  would  d  you  upon  my  knee  At  lisping-age.     Queen  Mary  v  ii  141 

Dane    Angle,  Jute,  D,  Saxon,  Norman,  Harold  ii  ii  763 

we  are  D's,  Who  conquer'd  what  we  walk  on,  „        rv  i  37 

Thou  art  but  a  West  Saxon :  we  are  D's  !    Harold.    My 

mother  is  a  D,  and  I  am  English ;  „         iv  i  53 

Athelstan  the  Great  Who  drove  you  D's;   and  yet  he 

held  That  D,  Jute,  Angle,  Saxon,  „        rv  i  75 

or  Knut  who  coming  D  i)ied  English.  .,      rv  iii  55 

Dang  (damn)     '  Good  daay,  Dobbins.'    D  tha  !  Prom,  of  May  ii  742 

Out  o'  the  chaumber,  d  tha  „  m  73 

Danger     But  your  own  state  is  full  of  d  here.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  169 

This  marriage  should  bring  loss  or  d  to  you,  „         n  ii  227 

release  from  d  of  all  censures  Of  Holy  Church  „       m  iii  150 

How  dense  a  fold  of  d  nets  him  round,  Harold  n  ii  17 

Am  I  in  <i  in  this  court  ?  „     n  ii  236 

And  take  the  Church's  d  on  myself.  Becket  i  ii  72 

is  there  d  ?     Gamma.     Nay,  None  that  I  know :  The  Cwp  i  ii  440 

Dangerous     therefore  is  he  d.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  161 

he  is  d  everyway.  „  i  iv  164 

Not  every  d  that  way,  my  good  uncle.  „  i  iv  166 

Altho'  we  grant  when  kings  are  d  Becket  i  ii  67 

Dangle    You  ought  to  d  up  there  among  the  crows.  Foresters  in  366 

Dangled    The  traitor  husband  d  at  the  door.  Queen  Mary  in  i  10 

Daniel    I  am  the  messenger  of  God,  His  Norman  D  !  Harold  v  i  35 

Danish    that  sight  of  D  blood  Might  serve  an  end  not 

English — 
Dan  Smith  (farm  labourer)    D  8,  fur  I  cotched  'im  once 

a-stealin'  coals  Prom,  of  May  i  411 

D  S's  cart  hes  runned  ower  a  laady  i'  the  holler  laane, 
D  8,  my  father  and  I  forgave  you  stealing  our  coals. 
But,  D  8,  they  tell  me  that  you — 
Dare    I  d  not  leave  my  post.  Queen 

for  all  that  I  d  not  stay. 
I  caimot,  and  I  d  not, 
Yet  others  are  that  d  the  stake  and  fire. 
Before  I  d  to  glance  upon  your  Grace. 
This  last — I  d  not  read  it  her. 


IV  iii.96 


ni68 

m76 

I  Mary  i  ii  55 

„        Iii  102 

I  V  49 

„     m  iv  167 

„      m  V  186 

v  ii  183 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  379 

V  ii  523 

V  V  251 
Harold  n  ii  481 

in  ii  86 
..     in  ii  187 

IV  i  108 
Becket  iv  ii  282 
The  Cv/p  II 155 


Dare  (continued)    How  d  you  say  it  ? 

I  might  d  to  tell  her  that  the  Count — 

The  Queen  is  dying,  or  you  d  not  say  it. 

I  d  not  well  be  seen  in  talk  with  thee. 

I  d  not.     Harold.     Scared  by  the  church — 

I  d  not  wear  it.     Harold.     But  I  d.     God  with  thee  ! 

If  one  may  d  to  speak  the  truth, 

D's  the  bear  slouch  into  the  lion's  den  ? 

I  d  not,  sir !  Throne  him — and  then  the  marriage — 

D  beg  him  to  receive  his  diamonds  back — -How  can 

I,  d  I,  The  Falcon  262 

I  do  not  d,  like  an  old  friend,  to  shake  it.  Prom,  of  May  ii  526 

That  I  (i  not  tell  how  much  I  love  him.  „         "in  287 

Dare-Becket     only  there  was  a  dare-devil  in  liis  eye — I 

should  say  a  d-B.  '  Becket  ni  iii  89 

Dared     If  they  d  To  harm  you,  I  would  blow  Q^een  Mary  i  iv  289 

Ev'n  that  young  girl  who  d  to  wear  your  crown  ? 
Mary.    D  ?  nay,  not  so ; 

Howrfhe?     Magdalen.     Stupid  soldiers  oft  are  bold 

Nobles  we  d  not  touch. 

Which  even  Peter  had  not  d  ? 

How  d  you  ?     Know  you  not  this  bower  is  secret. 

He  d  not — liar !  yet,  yet  I  remember — 

May  they  not  say  you  d  not  show  yourself 

but  to-day  I  d  not — so  much  weaker, 
Dare-devil    D-d's,  that  would  eat  fire  and  spit  it  out     Queen  Mary  in  i  156 

only  there  was  a  d-d  in  his  eye — I  should  say  a  dare- 

Becket.  Becket  ni  iii  88 

Daring    ice-cold — no  dash  of  d  in  him.  Queen  Mary  i  v  331 

Dark  (adj.)    For  I  foresee  d  days.  „  i  v  275 


I  v  491 

v  ii  444 

V  V  104 

Becket  n  ii  395 

,.       IV  ii  21 

V  i  211 

..      V  ii  594 

The  Falcon  832 


true  enough  Her  d  dead  blood  is  in  my  heart  with  mine 

Her  d  dead  blood  that  ever  moves  with  mine 

He  can  but  creep  down  into  some  d  hole 

listening  In  some  d  closet,  some  long  gaUei-y, 

D  among  gems  and  gold ; 

My  fatal  oath — the  dead  Saints — the  d  dreams — 

Gloom  upon  gleam,  D  as  my  doom — 

Have  track'd  the  King  to  this  d  inland  wood : 

And  far  on  in  the  d  heart  of  the  wood 

D  even  from  a  side  glance  of  the  moon. 

Growing  d  too — but  light  enough  to  row. 

What,  I  that  held  the  orange  blossom  D  as  the 

yew  ?  Prom,  of  May  n  631 

Ye  sees  the  holler  laane  be  hallus  sa  d  i'  the  arternoon,  „  ni  93 

How  d  your  room  is  !  „         m  217 

even  if  I  found  it  D  with  the  soot  of  slums.  „         ni  602 

our  King  is  gone,  the  light  Of  these  d  hours ;  Foresters  i  ii  85 

O  look  !  before  the  shadow  of  these  d  oaks  ,,     n  i  604 

A  maiden  now  Were  ill-bested  in  these  d  days  of  John,  „      n  ii  45 


mi  349 
ni  i  352 

IV  i  140 

V  ii  217 
Harold  iv  i  249 

V  i  380 

Becket  in  i  282 

„         m  ii  3 

„       in  ii  47 

„     IV  ii  148 

The  Cup  II  523 


In  this  d  wood  when  all  was  in  our  power 
Dark  (s)     Your  master  works  against  me  in  the  d 

She  to  shut  up  my  blossom  in  the  d  ! 

I  am  in  the  d. 

one  step  in  the  d  beyond  Our  expectation. 

Safe  from  the  d  and  the  cold, 

I  runned  arter  thief  i'  the  d, 

leaves  him  A  beast  of  prey  in  the  d, 

Death  As  against  Life  !  all,  all,  into  the  d— 

and  saay  it  to  ye  afoor  d ; 
Darken    Save  him,  his  blood  would  d  Henry's  name ; 


.,      in  182 

Queen  Mary  i  v  277 

Harold  i  ii  62 

Becket  m  i  221 

The  C2ip  I  i  212 

„  I  ii  6 

Prom,  of  May  i  403 

I  505 

II  338 

ml4 

Becket  v  iii  10 


Darken'd     I  tear  away  The  leaves  were  d  by  the  battle —     The  Falcon  913 

Darkening     Gone  narrowing  down  and  dto  a  close.    Qwem  Mary  iv  iii  431 

Darker    Thy  Duke  will  seem  the  d.    Hence,  I  follow.  Harold  n  ii  817 

They  told  me,  from  the  farm — sind  d  news.  Prom,  of  May  n  408 

this  world  Is  brighter  for  his  absence  as  that  other 

Is  d  for  his  presence.  „  n  459 

Darkness    He  stirs  within  the  d  !  Queen  Mary  m  ii  158 

that  all  the  louts  to  whom  Their  A  B  C  is  d,  „  m  iv  35 

— the  Lord  hath  dwelt  In  d.  Harold  m  i  180 

As  gold  Outvalues  dross,  light  d,  Becket  i  iii  715 

Could  shine  away  the  d  of  that  gap  ,.        m  i  59 

Stumble  not  in  the  d.  Lest  they  should  seize  thee.  „       v  iii  78 

And  fear  not  I  should  stumble  in  the  d,  Not  tho'  it  be 

their  hour,  the  power  of  d,  But  my  hour  too,  the 

power  of  light  in  dl  „       v ill 


* 


Darkness 


883 


Day 


i|   Darkness  (continued)     I  am  not  in  tlie  d,  but  the  li«ht,  Becket  v  iij  97 

i  in  the  gulf  Of  never-dawning  d  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  542 

)  lie  down  there  together  in  the  d  which  would  seem 


in  194 

Foresters  i  ii  87 

I  iii  42 

IV  975 

Becket  iv  ii  200 

The  Cwp  n  125 

Prom,  of  May  ii  410 

The  Falcon  45 

41 
Becket,  Pro.  377 


Harold  n  ii  748 

vi640 

Becket  ii  ii  150 

„     rv  ii  195 

The  Falcon  152 

629 

Harold  in  i  140 

Becket  i  iii  348 

Queen  Mary  v  i  57 

Harold  v  i  405 


but  for  a  moment, 
i  but  this  new  moon,  I  fear.  Is  d. 

I  And  d  rises  from  the  fallen  sun. 

'j  You  see  the  d  thro'  the  lighter  leaf. 

I  Darling    His  village  d  in  some  lewd  caress 
•'  The  clamour'd  d  of  their  afternoon  ! 

She  has  disappear'd,  poor  d,  from  the  world 
Dam  necklaces  To  please  our  lad}%  we  must  d. 
Darning    What  art  thou  doing  there  ?    Elisabetta.    D 

your  lordship. 
Dart    To  hide  the  scar  left  by  thy  Parthian  d. 

Darter  (daughter)    I  ha'  nine  d's  i'  the  spital  that  be  dead       „        i  iv  249 

to  turn  out  boiith  my  d^s  right  down  fine  laadies.     Prom,  of  May  i  336 

Thy  feyther  eddicated  his  d's  to  marry  gentlefoalk,  „  n  116 

but  I  couldn't  buy  my  d  back  agean  when  slie  lost 

hersen,  „  m  453 

Dash  (8)     ice-cold — no  d  of  daring  in  him.  Queen  Mary  1  v  331 

Dadl  (v«b)     d  The  torch  of  war  among  your  standing 

com, 

wields  His  war-club,  d'es  it  on  Gurth, 

I  d  myself  to  pieces — I  stay  myself — 

d  thyself  against  me  that  I  may  slay  thee  ! 

thou  must  d  us  down  Our  dinner  from  the  skies. 

iDash'd  (rushed)     We  mounted,  and  we  d  into  the  lieart 

of  'em. 
Dash'd  (sprii^ed)     then  he  d  and  drench'd.  He  dyed, 

D  red  with  that  mihallow'd  passover ; 
Dash'd  (threw)    insolent  shot  that  d  the  seas  Upon  us, 

bit  his  shield,  and  d  it  on  the  ground, 
Dash'd  (thrown)    wines  Of  wedding  had  been  d  into  the 

cups  Of  victory,  „      rv  iii  7 

Daub    This  is  a  <Z  to  Philip.  Queen  Mary  1  v  447 

Daughter    (See  also  Darter)    Mary,  the  lawful  and 

legitimate  d  of  Harry  the  Eighth !  ,,  i  i  8 

(I  have  a  d  in  her  service  who  reported  it)  „  i  i  76 

my  d  said  that  when  there  rose  a  talk  of  the  late 

rebellion,  „  i  i  91 

I  am  Harry's  d,  Tudor,  and  not  Fear.  „  11  iv  52 

'  Hail,  D  of  God,  and  saver  of  the  faith.  .,  in  ii  82 

I  am  Harry's  i:  ,,  m  v  117 

Who  knows  if  Boleyn's  d  be  my  sister?  .,  v  v  194 

God  bless  thee,  wedded  d.  Harold  m  i  293 

so  will  I,  d,  until  I  find  Which  way  the  battle  balance.      „         v  i  459 
No,  d,  but  the  canons  out  of  Waltham, 
Look,  d,  look.    Edith.     Nay,  father,  look  for  me ! 
No,  d,  no — they  fall  behind  the  horse — 
A  cleric  violated  The  d  of  his  host. 
Shrink  from  me,  like  a  a!  of  the  Church, 
like  the  Greek  king  when  his  d  was  sacrificed. 
The  d  of  Zion  lies  beside  the  way — 
D,  the  world  hath  trick'd  thee.     Leave  it,  d ;  Cbme 

thou  with  me  to  Godstow  nunnery, 
I  am  grieved,  my  d. 

D,  d,  Deal  not  with  things  you  know  not. 
No,  d,  you  mistake  our  good  Archbishop ; 
D,  my  time  is  short,  I  shall  not  do  it. 
Liker  the  King.     Becket.     No,  d. 

Tho'  you  are  a  gentleman,  I  but  a  farmer's  d —        Prom,  of  May  1  668 
—a  d  of  the  fields,  This  Dora  !  „  n  622 

shamed  of  his  poor  farmer's  d  among  the  ladies  in  his 

drawing-room  ?  „  m  294 

if  a  gentleman  Should  wed  a  farmer's  d,  „  ni  579 

only  there  was  left  A  second  d,  „  in  772 

I  come  here  to  see  this  d  of  Sir  Richard  of  the  Lea         Foresters  i  ii  26 
Come  away,  d.  „       i  ii  283 

then  each  man  That  owns  a  wife  or  d,  „        in  460 

dishonour  The  d's  and  the  wives  of  your  own  faction —        „        iv  698 
taimted    What,  dhj  a.  garrulous,  arrogant  girl !  „         iv  736 

laiQhm     In  order  to  betroth  her  to  your  D.  Queen  Mary  1  v  293 

Mary  of  Scotland,  married  to  your  D,  „  i  v  296 

your  Scottish  namesake  marrying  The  D,  „  v  i  136 

The  Queen  of  Scots  is  married  to  the  D,  „  v  v  53 


V  i  474 

V  i  535 
„         V  i  545 

Becket  i  iii  383 
„  n  i  277 
„  m  iii  105 
„    m  iii  177 

„      IV  ii  364 

V  ii  83 

V  ii  132 

V  ii  137 

V  ii  157 

V  ii  182 


David    gloom  of  Saul  Was  lighten'd  by  young  D's  haip 

And  no  D  To  meet  him  ? 
Dawn  (s)    If  Ludgate  can  be  reach'd  by  d  to-morrow, 
gray  d  Of  an  old  age  that  never  will  be  mine 
Like  sun-gilt  breathings  on  a  frosty  (^— 
Shall  see  the  dewy  kiss  of  d  no  more 
by  dead  Norway  without  dream  or  d  ! 
Were  the  great  trumpet  blowing  doomsday  d, 
wind  of  the  d  that  I  hear  in  the  pine  overhead  ? 
In  the  gray  d  before  the  Temple  doors. 
I  rise  to-morrow  In  the  gray  d, 
Hang'd  at  mid-day,  their  traitor  of  the  d 
From  the  dim  d  of  Being — 
That  beam  of  d  upon  the  opening  flower, 
yet  I  think  these  oaks  at  d  and  even, 
Dawn  (verb)    day  of  peril  that  d's  darkly  and  drearily 
Dawning    (See  also  Never-dawning)    The  islands 

call'd  into  the  d  church  Out  of  the  dead. 
Day    (See  also  Daay,  Gala-day,  Grood-day,  Mid-day, 

Saint's-day)     too  full  of  aches  and  broken 

before  his  d.     . 
I  have  seen  enough  for  this  d. 
For  I  foresee  dark  d's.     Mary.     And  so  do  I,  sir ; 
and  be  the  mightiest  man  This  d  in  England. 
I  trust  this  d,  thro'  God,  I  have  saved  the  crown. 
And  see  the  citizens  arm'd.     Good  d ;  good  d. 
a  black  'un  for  us  this  blessed  d. 
the  brightest  d  Beheld  our  rough  forefathers 
Might  not  St.  Andrew's  be  her  happiest  d  ?     Mary. 

Then  these  shall  meet  upon  St.  Andrew's  d. 
Till  the  sun  dance,  as  upon  Easter  D. 
St.  Andrew's  d ;  sit  close,  sit  close,  we  are  friends. 
Laughs  at  the  last  red  leaf,  and  Andrew's  D. 
Should  not  this  d  be  held  in  after  years 
This  is  the  loveliest  d  that  ever  smiled  On  England. 
I  found  One  d,  a  wholesome  scripture. 
In  clear  and  open  d  were  congruent  With  that  vile 

Cranmer 
Is  like  a  word  that  comes  from  olden  d's, 
Queen  hath  been  three  d's  in  tears  For  Philip's 

going- 
Still  Parleying  with  Renard,  all  the  d  with  Renard, 
And  scarce  a  greeting  all  the  d  for  me — 
Methinks  that  would  you  tarry  one  d  more 
Madam,  a  d  may  sink  or  save  a  realm.     Mary.    A 

d  may  save  a  heart  from  breaking  too.     Philip. 

Well,  Simon  Renard,  shall  we  stop  ad?    Renard. 

Your  Grace's  business  will  not  suffer,  sire.  For 

one  d  more,  so  far  as  I  can  tell.    Philip.     Then 

one  d  more  to  please  her  Majesty. 
Good  d,  old  friend ;  what,  you  look  somewhat  worn ; 
yet  it  is  a  <Z  to  test  your  health 
Win  thro'  this  d  with  honour  to  yourself. 
It  is  a  <f  of  rain. 

Hath,  like  a  brief  and  bitter  winter's  d, 
Expectant  of  the  rack  from  d  to  d, 
What  a  d,  what  a  d !  nigh  upo'  judgement  ilaay 
What,  not  one  d  ? 

That  all  d  long  hath  wrought  his  father's  work, 
believe  I  lamed  his  Majesty's  For  a  d  or  t\\  o, 
Indian  shawl  That  Philip  brought  me  in  our  happy 

d'sl— 
On  all  the  road  from  Dover,  d  and  night ;  On  all 

the  road  from  Harwich,  night  and  d ; 
as  in  the  d  of  the  first  church,  when  Christ  Jesus 

was  King. 
Ah,  those  d's  Were  happy. 
These  meteors  came  and  went  before  our  d, 
wilt  thou  fly  my  falcons  this  fair  d  ? 
Down  thirty  feet  below  the  smiling  d — 
in  thy  father's  d  They  blinded  my  young  kinsman, 
O  friends,  I  shall  not  overlive  the  a. 
Lost,  lost,  the  light  of  d. 
The  d  is  won ! 
the  d.  Our  d  beside  the  Derwent  will  not  shine 


Queen  Mary  v  ii  359 

Harold  v  i  496 

Queen  Mary  n  iii  53 

V  ii  234 
„           V  iii  51 

Harold  n  ii  331 
„     IV  iii  122 

V  i  228 
Becket  nil 

The  Cwp  I  ii  295 

I  ii  434 

n  124 

Prom,  of  May  I  281 

Foresters  iv  3 

„  IV  1067 

Becket  i  iv  145 

Queen  Mary  in  iii  172 


iil25 

iil31 

IV  275 

nil  20 

nii302 

n  ii  378 

n  iii  101 

in  ii  119 

ni  ii  124 
ni  ii  238 
in  iii  1 
III  iii  87 
in  iii  89 
in  iii  161 
ni  iv  84 

in  iv  230 
niv34 

ni  vi  12 
in  vi  116 
in  vi  118 
ni  vi  233 


ni  vi  238 
IV  ii  115 
IV  ii  117 
IV  ii  165 
ivii229 
IV  iii  430 
IV  iii  437 
IV  iii  467 
vi209 

V  ii  118 

V  ii  472 

V  ii  541 

V  ii  577 

viv54 

V  V  239 
Harold  i  i  132 

,.  n  ii  147 

„  n  ii  430 

„  II  ii  510 

„  in  i  233 

„  in  ii  12 

„  IV  i  270 

„  IV  iii  49 


Day 


884 


Dead 


Tias  (continued)    guest,  As  haggard  ^  a  fast  of  forty  d's,     Harold  r^m  116 

I  have  ridden  night  and  d  from  Pevensey—  .,     iv^»j  J^^ 

but  leave  this  d  to  me.  "            .  „^ 

Because  I  loved  thee  in  my  mortal  rf,  -         l\i^ 

I  am  dead  as  Death  this  <i  to  ought  of  earth  s  .■         v  i  4^0 

that  happy  d!     A  birthday  welcome !  happy  d  sand  ^  .  ^^ 

Stigand,  O  father,  have  we  won  the  <t?  "         \  lo-t^ 

and  enough  of  death  for  this  one  d,  The  d  ol  ^  ;;  1 90 

St.  Calixtus,  and  the  i,  M7  (i       ,  „      , ,  ,  "        v  ;•  190 

His  d,  with  aU  his  rooftree  nngmg    Harold,'  ,,        v  u  l^ 
A  sauce-deviser  for  thy  d's  of  fish,                                     ^'"^'^^^506 

Follow  me  this  Rosamund  d  and  night,  ,.      ^^''•^fl 

Thou  art  wearied  out  With  this  d's  work,  .,             y  ' 

That  havock'd  all  the  land  in  Stephen's  d.  "          t  i  206 

O  rare,  a  whole  long  d  of  open  field.  "       ^  i.»  ^^^ 

made  the  twilight  d,                  ,  ■    ,    j  "       t  iii  414 

Lost  in  desuetude,  of  my  grandsire  sd,  ,-1 

set  the  Church  This  d  between  the  hammer  and  the  ^ ...  ^^^ 

Gr^t  me  one  d  To  ponder  these  demands.  „       1 1"  668 

d  of  peril  that  dawns  darkly  and  drearily  „       1  •^  :|** 

yea,  and  in  the  d  of  judgment  also,                ,  • ,  ,    _  "       '  !v  9^1 

that  be  dead  ten  times  o'er  1'  one  d  wi'  the  putrid  fever ;  „       i  iv  -i&l 

Like  sudden  night  in  the  main  glare  of  d.  ,•          "  \n^ 

decide  on  what  was  customary  In  olden  ds,  "       „  ii  2^Q 

but  this  d  he  profEer'd  peace.  "       „\-^^ 

You  had  not  borne  it,  no,  not  for  a  d.  ..       ttt  »f  17 

In  the  great  d  against  the  wronger.             ,    „    ,    ,  "      i" 

Glancing  at  the  d's  when  his  father  was  only  Earl  of  ^^  _  ^^^ 

Thanks"to  the  blessed  Magdalen,  whose  d  it  is.  „     m  iii  172 

out  with  Henry  in  the  d's  When  Henry  loved  me,  „       v  1  Jdl 

What  d  of  the  week?     Tuesday?          ^,       ,  „       v  u  z»i 

to  people  heaven  in  the  great  d  When  God  makes  up  ^  ..  ^^^ 

his  iewels.                                     ,  , ,      ,  <^  "        ^  ,•;  <;Rfi 

Do  they  not  fight  the  Great  Fiend  dbjd?  ,,     J  "  5»b 
Fair  Sk,  a  happy  rf  to  you!                                              ^'''' ^"^^  Vii  40 

I  have  had  a  weary  (Z  in  watching  you.          ,    .    ,.  ,  "        .  i^M 

close  not  yet  the  door  upon  a  night  That  looks  half  d.  „        i  n6^ 

This  very  d  the  Romans  crown  him  king  "            "  °^ 

He  wills  you  then  this  d  to  marry  him,  .<          J\^ 

And  join  your  life  this  d  with  h^,  -.          "wo 

to  make  the  d  memorial,  when  Synorix,  first  King,  „          n  *o» 

This  all  too  happy  d,  crown— queen  at  once.  ..  _      °  7?^ 

be^  on  my  kneL^  e^ery  d  for  these  half-dozen  years  The  Falcon  184 

I  come  this  d  to  break  my  fast  wth  you.  "          f^P 

A  lady  that  was  beautiful  as  d  Sat  by  me  ,-          ^» 

but  this  d  has  brought  A  great  occasion.  "          *°' 
80  much  worse  For  last  d's  journey.            ... 

^,sifi,'^'„Si"  "'• '  '""'• ""' "" ""     ^-  »/««>- -iS 

The  sky ?  or  the  sea  on  a  blue  d?  "          t  9Q4 

Goodd!     Wilson.    Good  d,  sir.  "          J  ^|? 

Good  d,  then,  Dobson.  ■  "          t  ^^ 

Many  happy  returns  of  the  d,  father.  "          ^?V^ 

Who  shrieks  by  d  at  what  she  does  by  night,  ..          1 00^ 

and  it  seems  to  me  nobbut  t'other  d.  »            ]?  ' 

My  name  is  Harold !     Good  d,  Dobbms !  »         "  '-^o 
always  told  Father  that  the  huge  old  ashtree  there 

would  cause  an  accident  some  d;  "       „Ann 
may  drop  ofi  any  <Z,  any  hour.    You  must  see  at  once.        „        m  4U^ 

You  heard  him  say  it  was  one  of  his  bad  d's,  „       m  ^o^ 

It  is  almost  the  last  of  my  bad  d's,  I  think.  »        ™  *'fi 

Or  ever  the  d  began,                   ^  ^  Foresters  1 1 11 

and  these  are  the  d's  of  Prince  John.  "       i  J  ^ '  * 

I  love  him  as  a  damsel  of  his  d  "       l;  tli 

Sufficient  for  the  d,  dear  father !                  .    ,,.         .  "      J^iioln 

twilight  of  the  coming  d  abeady  ghmmers  in  the  east.  „      i  lyfti 

Butill  befitting  such  a  festal  d  "       ^  \?.  ^ ' 

To  sleep!  to  sleep  !     The  long  bright  <Z  is  done,  „       '^^^ 

Whate'er  thy  joys,  they  vanish  vritb  the  d;  „       i  ui  44 
There  is  no  land  like  England  Where'er  the 

light  of  i  be ;  (repeat)  Foresters  n  j  2  6,  14,  18 

king  of  d  hath  stept  from  oft  his  throne,  Foresters  n  1 26 


Day  {continued)    Perchance  this  d  may  sink  so  gloriously.     Foresters  11 1  31 
Whene'er  this  d  should  come  about,  "        ^}. 

A  maiden  now  Were  ill-bested  in  these  dark  d  s  of  John,         „       °.."^    . 

In  the  night,  in  the  d,  '•     n  "  |»^ 

Dear,  in  these  <i's  of  Norman  license,  "       i"  ^ ' ' 

having  lived  For  twenty  d's  and  nights  in  mail,  „        rv  i.^4 

Not  having  broken  fast  the  livelong  d—  "       rv  iSb 

must  we  dance  attendance  all  the  d?  d"  ,  ,  "^  ^Xi 

Daybreak    Send  the  Great  Seal  by  d.  "^f^  ''i^ 

Day-dream    Some  hunter  in  d-d's  or  half  asleep  Fom<m  iv  1088 

Daylight  (adj.)    Hath  shock'd  me  back  into  the  d  truth  Queen  Mary  m  v  135 

Daylight  (s)     Let  me  bring  you  in  here  where  there  is 
^     still  full  d.  „    ,       Prom,  of  May  m2lS 

Dazed    (See  also  Daaxei)     Edward  wakes  !—X'— he  hath  . 

seen  a  vision.  ^^"'W  "^  »  ^^l 

Dazing    <See  Brain-dazing  ■       ,      ,.     4. 

Deacon    (-See  also  Cardinal-deacon)    thou  art  but  d,  not  yet  ^  ^^^^  ^^^  ^^ 

Dead(adi.)    (^ee  aiso  Dead,  Famine-dead)    You  know  . 

your  Latin— quiet  as  a  d  body.  Q^een  Mary  i  iv  181 

Quiet  as  a  d  body.  "          \^l  \°]. 

which  every  now  and  then  Beats  me  halt  d:  „           i  v  p^» 

When  I  and  thou  and  all  rebellions  lie  D  bodies  „             n  1  ew 

The  tree  that  only  bears  d  fruit  is  gone.  „            in  n» 
Sir,  this  d  fruit  was  ripening  overmuch.  And  had 
to  be  removed  lest  living  Spain  Should  sicken 

at  d  England.    Stafford.    Not  so  d,  But  that  a  . 

shock  may  rouse  her.  "            ™. '  ^ 

d  I  cannot  choose  but  love  her,                        .  >.          ™  }  o^o 

true  enough  Her  dark  d  blood  is  in  my  heart  with  mine.  „          m  1  6^ 

Her  dark  d  blood  that  ever  moves  with  mine  ,-          ni  1  rfo^ 

And  unto  no  d  world ;  but  Lambeth  palace,  „         m  "  ^^ 

The  islands  caU'd  into  the  dawmng  church  Out  of  ... 

the  d,  deep  night                    ^             .  ,      ,^  -        ™  ":Vift 

should  be  No  longer  a  d  letter,  but  requicken  d.  -,          ni  iv  iv 

Let  the  d  letter  live.'  -          ™ }!  i^ 

Let  the  (Z  letter  bum !                                              .u,  "          Trrvm 

d— with  the  fear  of  death  Too  d  ev'n  for  a  death-watch  !  „         m  v  idtf 

my  faith  would  seem  D  or  half-drown'd,  ..           ^-"04? 

Until  the  power  suddenly  blew  him  <Z.  "         JI^^Tft 

The  parson  from  his  own  spire  swung  out  d,  „        it  111  oto 

Our  altar  is  a  mound  of  d  men's  clay,  >-           "^  "  ■'■''^ 

A  letter  which  the  Count  de  Noailles  wrote  To  that  .. 

d  traitor  Wyatt,  "           lf:trS> 

Let  d  things  rest.            ..   ,        .    ^  "           vH591 

Tell  him  at  last  I  know  his  love  is  d,  „              '  v  71 

J>  or  alive  you  cannot  make  him  happy.  »                  ici 

Women,  when  lamd,  Open  my  heart,  ..           ^  v  iw 

The  Queen  is  d.  "        , j  ^  ;  o^n 

For  mv  d  father's  loyalty  to  thee  ?  Sarold  11  240 

a  d  man  Rose  from  behind  the  altar,  ..        i  "  '<» 

saw  the  church  all  fill'd  With  d  men  upright  from  theu  .. 

graves  and  all  The  d  men  made  at  thee  to  murder  thee,       .,        i  .u  »a 
The  shadows  of  a  hundred  fat  d  deer  For  d  men's  ghosts.     „      i  u  IW 

Where  they  eat  d  men's  flesh,  and  drink  theu-  blood.  ,.     n  u  ew 

Dry  as  an  old  wood-fungus  on  a  d  tree,      ^         ,   ^  "      ^.  \,^ 
and  sell  not  thou  Our  Uving  passion  for  a  d  man's  dream ;     „      m  u  w 

Our  dear,  d,  traitor-brother,  Tostig,  "     iviuoo 

How  ran  that  answer  which  King  Harold  gave  To  his  ...  ^^^ 

(i  namesake,  "  y^  m  loi 

Sound  sleep  to  the  man  Here  by  d  Norway  »  iv  11  1^ 

By  God,  we  thought  him  d—  "  ^  ";  {^ 

What  did  the  d  man  call  it— Sanguelac,  .-      ^  i  io» 

Mv  fatal  oath— the  i  Saints— the  dark  dreams—  „      v  ^0^ 

I  am  d  as  Death  this  day  to  ought  of  earth  s  ,.      v  1 4^ 

They  are  stripping  the  rf  bodies  naked  yonder,  „       v  u  ^ 

I  tell  thee,  girl,  I  am  seeking  my  d  Harold,  ..       v  u 
being  the  true  wife  Of  this  d  King,  who  never  bore  revenge.     „       v  n  ^ 

And  this  d  king's  Who,  king  or  not,  "     I  li  144 

Pluck  the  d  woman  off  the  d  man,  Malet !  ..    T^u  i 

D  is  he,  my  Queen  ?                       ^      .  ^^  -S*^^*''  ^'^-  ^ 

A  d  man's  dying  wish  should  be  of  weight.  .,        nH  167 

We  wait  but  the  King's  word  to  strike  thee  d.  „        i  "i  ^^j 

They  be  d  while  I  be  a-supping.  "        J  ?    250 
that  be  d  ten  times  o'er  i'  one  day  wi'  the  putnd  fever ,     ,.        i  iv  ^v 


Dead 


885 


Dear 


Dead  (adj.)  (continued)    Let  either  cast  him  away  like  a  d 

dog !  Becket  n  ii  257 

For  tho'  the  drop  may  hollow  out  the  d  stone,  .,     rn  iii  315 

Trodden  one  half  <Z ;  one  half ,  but  half -alive,  .,          v  i  63 

Would  he  were  d  !  (repeat)  .,    v  i  91,  95 
She  sends  it  back,  as  being  d  to  earth.  So  d  henceforth 

to  you.     Henry.     D  !  you  have  murder'd  her,  .,         v  i  170 

Why,  then  you  are  a  d  man ;  flee !  „      v  iii  126 

The  traitor's  d,  and  will  arise  no  more.  .,      v  iii  200 

No,  Reginald,  he  is  d.  ..      v  iii  204 
The  body  of  that  d  traitor  Sinnatus.                                The  Cup  i  iii  179 

Rouse  the  d  altar-flame,  fling  in  the  spices,  „           n  182 

My  liberality  perforce  is  d  Thro'  lack  of  means  of  giving.  The  Falcon  296 


437 
460 
470 
476 


519 
651 
654 
659 
918 


D  mountain.'     Nay,  for  who  could  trace  a  hand 
'  D  mountain  flowers,  d  mountain-meadow  flowers. 
You  bloom  again,  d  mountain-meadow  flowers.' 
'  D  flowers ! 

'  D  mountain  flowers ' — Ah  well,  my  nurse  has  broken 
The  thread  of  my  d  flowers,  as  she  has  broken  My 
china  bowl.    My  memory  is  as  (2. 
They  left  us  there  for  d  ! 
Ay,  and  I  left  two  fingers  there  for  d. 
I  left  him  there  for  d  too  ! 

I  could  almost  think  that  the  d  garland  Will  break 
is  haunted  by  The  ghosts  of  the  d  passions  of  d 

men ;  Pro  in.  of  May  ii  275 

if  the  wretch  were  d  I  might  forgive  him ;  We 

know  not  whether  he  be  d  or  living. 
One  Philip  Edgar  of  Toft  Hall  in  Somerset  Is  lately 

d.     Dora.     D  !— 
That  one,  is  he  then — d ! 
D  !  and  this  world  Is  brighter  for  his  absence 
for  I  am  closely  related  to  the  d  man's  family. 
He's  d,  man — d ;  gone  to  his  account — d  and  buried. 
Shall  I  tell  her  he  is  <i  ?     No ;  she  is  still  too  feeble. 
d  midnight  when  I  came  upon  the  bridge ; 
Living  .  .  .  d  .  .  .  She  said  '  all  still. 
She  hid  this  sister,  told  me  she  was  d — I  have  wasted 

pity  on  her — not  d  now — 
■ — not  d  now — a  swoon — a  scene — Yet — 
Yes,  deathlike  !    D?  1  dare  not  look :  if  d. 
For  be  he  d,  then  John  may  be  our  King. 


II  433 

II  447 
II  452 
II  457 
11715 
III  144 
HI  337 
III  368 
III  683 

III  690 
III  696 

III  716 
Foresters  i  ii  98 

II  i  91 
.,      II  i  147 

„      II  i  311 

„      n  i  373 

.,      n  i  657 

n  ii  69 

n  ii  93 

.,     n  ii  147 

IV  543 
IV  846 
IV  847 

Qv^en  Mary  iv  ii  12 

and  the  d  were  found  Sitting,  and  in  this  fashion ;  „          v  ii  395 

Peace  is  with  the  d.  .,          v  v  268 

Peace  with  the  d,  who  never  were  at  peace !  .,          v  v  273 

With  looking  on  the  d.     And  1  so  white  ?  Harold  ii  ii  815 

dykes  and  brooks  Were  bridged  and  damm'd  with  d,  „     iii  ij  130 

Drink  to  the  d  who  died  for  us.  ■•       rv  iii  69 

Hail  to  the  living  who  fought,  the  d  who  fell !  ..     iv  iii  106 

with  the  d  So  piled  about  him  he  can  hardly  move.  .,        v  i  657 

What  art  thou  doing  here  among  the  d?  ■,         v  ii  33 

Then  all  the  d  fell  on  him.  ,          v  ii  50 

Love  that  can  lift  up  a  life  from  the  d.  Becket  ii  i  14 

I  am  the  bride  of  Death,  and  only  Marry  the  d.  The  Cup  ii  30 
Is  not  this  To  speak  too  pitilessly  of  the  d  ?             Prom,  of  May  u  461 

it  is  not  So  easy  to  forgive — even  the  d.  „            n  486 

— ^how  she  made  her  wail  as  for  the  d\  „           m  699 

sheeted  d  Are  shaken  from  their  stillness  in  the  grave  Foresters  ii  i  45 
Bid  (adj.)    So  the  owd  uncle  i'  Coomberland  be  d,           Prom,  of  May  u  2 

I'd  like  to  fell  'im  as  d  as  a  bullock  !  „        ii  597 

D!     It  mun  be  true,  fur  it  wur  i'  print  as  black  as  owt.  „        ii  730 


being  outlaw'd  in  a  land  Where  law  lies  d, 

and  the  son  Is  most  like  d — 

I  ha'  served  the  King  living,  says  she,  and  let  me  serve 

him  d, 
saints  were  so  kind  to  both  on  us  that  he  was  d  before 

he  was  bom. 
or  wreckt  And  d  beneath  the  midland  ocean, 
I  am  but  a  stone  and  a  d  stock  to  thee. 
What's  here ?  ad  bat  in  the  fairy  ring — 
Found  him  d  and  drench'd  in  dew. 
The  deer  fell  d  to  the  bottom, 
0  my  good  liege,  we  did  believe  you  d. 
Was  justice  d  because  the  King  was  d  ? 
*ead  (s)     And  after  that,  the  trumpet  of  the  d. 


Prom,  of  May  in  429 

„       in  433 

Queen  Mary  in  vi  88 


Becket  u  ii  203 

Harold  i  i  385 

Becket  i  iii  604 

,,       V  iii  65 


Prom,  of  May  m  32 

in  660 

Foresters  i  ii  208 

Queen  Mary  in  i  451 


DeSd  (adj.)  (continued)     Be  the  colt  d  ?    Dora.    No, 
Father. 
Be  he  d  ?    Dora.     Not  that  I  know. 
Deadly    Tho'  I  be  ever  d  sick  at  sea. 

Who  went  before  us  did  not  wholly  clear  The  d 
growths  of  earth. 
Deaf    To  the  d  adder  thee,  that  will  not  dance 
Art  thou  d  ?     Becket.     I  hear  you. 
Are  you  d  ?    What,  have  I  lost  authority  among  you  ? 
I  be  a  bit  d,  and  I  wur  hallus  scaared  by  a  big 

word; 
I  am  not  d !  you  fright  me. 
Is  he  d,  or  dumb,  or  daft,  or  drunk  belike  ? 
Deafen'd    and  d  by  some  bright  Loud  venture, 

Edward's  prayers  Were  d  and  he  pray'd  them  dumb,         Harold  i  ii  22 

Deal     (See  also  Deal)     To  d  with  heresy  gentlier.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  58 

D  gently  with  the  young  man  Absalom.  Becket  i  iii  756 

D  not  with  things  you  know  not.  „      v  ii  133 

So  that  they  d  with  us  like  honest  men.  Foresters  iv  101 

And  I  might  d  with  four.  „         iv  171 

Deal    Noa ;  I  knaws  a  d  better  now.  Prom,  of  May  n  26 

Dealt    We  d  in  the  wild  justice  of  the  woods.  Foresters  rv  1072 

Dean    D's  Of  Christchurch,  Durham,  Exeter,  and  Wells —  Queen  Mary  i  ii  8 

I  am  the  D  of  the  province :  let  me  bear  it. 
De-anathematise    Can  the  King  d-a  this  York  ? 
Dear    I  fear,  I  fear,  I  see  you,  D  friend,  for  the  last 
time; 
Ay,  one  and  all,  d  brothers,  pray  for  me ; 
seeing  now  The  poor  so  many,  and  all  food  so  d. 
Low,  d  lute,  low ! 

It  is  the  Count  de  Feria,  my  d  lady. 
D  Madam,  Philip  is  but  at  the  wars  ; 
Mightily,  my  d  lady ! 
My  most  d  Master,  What  matters  ? 

0  Tostig,  O  d  brother — If  they  prance.  Rein  in, 
War,  my  d  lady,  War,  waste,  plague,  famine, 
he  shall  be  my  d  friend  As  well  as  thine, 
we  are  poison'd :  our  d  England  Is  demi-Norman. 
and  d  son,  swear  When  thou  art  king,  to  see  my  solemn 

vow  Accomplish'd. 
Nay,  d  lord,  for  I  have  sworn  Not  to  swear  falsely  twice 
Our  d,  dead,  traitor-brother,  Tostig, 
No  more,  no  more,  d  brother,  nevermore — 
Given  me  by  my  d  friend  the  King  of  England — 
O,  my  d  friend,  the  King !     0  brother ! 
The  mouth  is  only  Clifford,  my  d  father. 
Then,  my  d  liege,  I  here  deliver  all  this  controversy 
My  d  lord  Archbishop,  I  learn  but  now  that  those  poor 

Poitevins, 
Save  that  d  head  which  now  is  Canterbury, 
Spare  this  defence,  d  brother. 

1  fear  my  d  lord  mixt  With  some  conspiracy  against 

the  wolf.  The  Cwp  i  ii  14 

Welcome  to  this  poor  cottage,  my  d  lady.  The  Fcdcon  270 

O  my  d  son,  be  not  unkind  to  me.  „  509 

Giovanna,  my  d  lady,  in  this  same  battle  We  had  been 

beaten—  „  601 

And  thou  too  leave  us,  my  d  nurse,  alone.  „  701 

Ay,  the  d  nurse  will  leave  you  alone ;  „  702 

Giovanna,  d  Giovanna,  I  that  once  The  wildest  of  the 

random  youth  „  806 

D  Philip,  all  the  world  is  beautiful  If  we  were 

happy.  Prom,  of  May  i  576 

D  Eva  Was  always  thought  the  prettier.  „  ii  378 

Wa.sn't  d  mother  herself  at  least  by  one  side  a  lady  ?         ,,  in  300 

But,  0  d  friend.  If  thro'  the  want  of  any —  ,,  in  549 

Take  it  again,  d  father.  Foresters  i  i  341 

~  ■  "    ■  I i  343 

I  iii  159 

II  i  103 
nil82 

II I  538 
n  i  597 
ni652 

ni232 


Becket  i  iii  498 
V  ii  10 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  103 
IV  iii  102 
IV  iii  209 
V  ii  376 
vii529 
vv24 
Harold  i  i  24 
„     I  i  194 
„     I  i  371 
„     1 1465 
„    II  ii  79 
„    in  i  40 


„  ni  i  304 
,.  Ill  i  309 
„  IV  iii  83 
„  V  i  247 
Becket  i  i  337 
..  I  i  359 
..  n  i  220 
..    niil35 

,.   nii426 

V  iii  6 

„  V  iii  168 


Sufficient  for  the  dw,  d  father ! 

And  thou,  d  Little  John,  Who  hast  that  worship  for  me 

thou  art  the  very  woman  who  waits  On  my  d  Marian. 

Ah  d  Robin !  ah  noble  captain,  friend  of  the  poor ! 

O  thou  unworthy  brother  of  my  d  Marian ! 

O  my  d  Marian,  Is  it  thou  ?  is  it  thou  ? 

to  dream  that  he  My  brother,  my  d  Walter — 

O  d  wife,  we  have  fallen  into  the  bands  Of  Robin  Hood. 


Dear 


886 


Debonair 


Dear  (continued)    why,  the  silver  Were  d  as  gold,  Foresters  rr  42 

You  Much,  you  Scarlet,  your  d  Little  Jolin,  „  iv  1083 

Dear-cousin    Do  so  d-c  and  royal-cousin  him,               Qveen  Mary  ni  iv  400 

Dearer    What  voices  call  you  I)  than  mine  that  should 

he  dearest  to  you  ?  ,,  v  i  38 

B  than  when  you  made  your  mountain  gay.  The  Falcon  463 

Dearest    not  with  gold,  But  d  links  of  love.  Queen  Mar;/ 1  v  539 

What  voices  call  you  Dearer  than  mine  that  should 

be  d  to  you  ?  ,.  v  i  38 

Nay,  d  Lady,  see  your  good  physician.  „  ^.'^^^ 

Swear,  d  brother,  I  beseech  thee,  swear  !  Harold  ii  ii  719 
And  ail  is  safe  again.     O  d  lady.                                     The  Cup  i  ii  313 

'  D  Dora, — I  have  lost  myself,  and  am  lost  for  ever  Prom,  of  May  ii  83 
But  now  that  you  have  been  brought  to  us  as  it 

were  from  the  grave,  d  Eva,  „  in  236 

Death    God  save  her  grace ;  and  d  to  Northumberland  !     Queen  Mary  i  i  67 

transparent  hand.  Damp  with  the  sweat  of  d,  ,.  ^  ||  ^ 

Your  creed  will  be  your  <Z.  „  i  ii  46 

Fly  and  farewell,  and  let  me  die  the  d.  „  i  ii  106 

when  you  put  Northumberland  to  d,  ,.  i  v  486 

another,  mute  as  d,  And  white  as  her  own  milk ;  ,.  n  ii  79 

fromise  full  Allegiance  and  obedience  to  the  d.  ,,  ii  ii  169 

t  roll'd  as  black  asd;  „  n  iii  20 

He'll  be  the  d  on  us ;  „  n  iii  102 

D  and  the  Devil — ^if  he  find  I  have  one —  „  in  i  231 

a  pale  horse  for  B  and  Gardiner  for  the  Devil.  ..  m  i  235 

since  your  Herod's  d.  How  oft  hath  Peter  knock'd  ,.  ni  ii  62 

But  yovu"  wise  bees  had  stung  him  first  to  d.  ..  in  iii  65 

with  the  fear  of  d  Too  dead  ev'n  for  a  deatli-watch  !  ,.  in  v  140 

For  there  was  life — And  there  was  life  in  d —  ..  in  v  146 

bolts.  That  jail  you  from  free  life,  bar  you  from  d.  ,.  iii  v  173 

what  think  you.  Is  it  life  ot  d?  ,.  ni  v  194 

Z>  would  not  grieve  him  more.  "  ,,  iv  i  25 

thro'  the  fear  of  d  Gave  up  his  cause,  ,.  rv  "i  27 

Queen  and  Council  at  this  time  Adjudge  him  to  the  rf.        ,.  iviii38 

Didst  thou  yield  up  thy  Son  to  human  d;  ,,  iv  iii  145 

some  saying  that  may  live  After  his  d  „  iv  iii  160 

For  d  gives  life's  last  word  a  power  to  live,  ,.  iv  iii  161 

Written  for  fear  of  d,  to  save  my  life,  ,.  rv  iii  242 

I  saw  the  d's  of  Latimer  and  Ridley.  ..  iv  iii  295 

— he  is  white  as  rf.  ,.  iv  iii  559 

Where  he  shall  rest  at  night,  moved  to  his  d;  ..  rv  iii  581 

beard,  which  he  had  never  shaven  Since  Henry's  d,  ,.  rv  iii  594 

He  cried  Enough  !  enough  !  before  his  d.—  ,.  v  ii  101 
there  is  one  B  stands  behind  the  Groom,  And  there 

is  one  B  stands  behind  the  Bride—  ..  v  ii  165 

Have  you  been  looking  at  the  '  Dance  of  -D '  ?  ,,  v  ii  170 
'  We  pray  continually  for  the  d  Of  our  accursed  Queen 

and  Cardinal  Pole.'  ,.  v  ii  180 

lash'd  to  d,  or  lie  Famishing  in  black  cells,  ,.  v  ii  194 

My  people  hate  me  and  desire  my  d.  „  v  ii  345 

My  husband  hates  me,  and  desires  my  d.  ,.  v  ii  348 

I  hate  myself,  and  I  desire  my  d.  „  v  ii  352 

that  I  am  in  state  to  bring  forth  d —  ,.  v  ii  593 

God's  d  !  and  wherefore  spake  you  not  before  ?  „  v  iii  106 

Then  I  and  he  will  snaffle  your  '  God's  d,'  ,•  v  iii  120 

God's  d,  forsooth — you  do  not  know  King  Philip.  „  v  iii  123 

poor  Pole  pines  of  it,  As  I  do,  to  the  d.  „  v  v  130 

take  heed  f    The  blade  is  keen  as  d.  „  v  v  175 

As  if  the  chamberlain  were  B  himself !  „  v  v  204 

a  Tudor  School'd  by  the  shadow  of  d — •  „  v  v  226 

but  stark  as  d  To  those  that  cross  him. —  Harold  n  ii  321 

Delay  is  d  to  thee,  ruin  to  England.  „  n  ii  717 

My  lord !  thou  art  white  as  d.  „  ii  ii  814 

If  this  be  d,  Then  our  great  Council  ^\ait  „  m  i  2 

He  hath  swoon'd  !    B?  ...  no,  as  yet  a  breath.  ,,  in  i  319 

ThLs  lightning  before  d  Plays  on  the  word, —  „  ni  i  387 

fill'd  the  quiver,  and  B  has  drawn  the  bow —  „  mi  400 

It  is  the  arrow  of  d  in  his  own  heart —  „  in  i  404 

for  d  is  d,  or  else  Lifts  us  beyond  the  lie.  ,.  m  ii  79 

and  threaten  us  thence  Unschool'd  of  B  ?  „  v  i  287 

Two  d's  at  every  swing,  ran  in  upon  us  „  v  i  409 
I  am  dead  as  D  this  day  to  ought  of  earth's  Save 

William's  d  or  mine.     Edith.     Thy  dl—  „  v  i  425 

our  good  Gurth  hath  smitten  him  to  the  d.  „  v  i  503 


I  iii  169 
I  iii  183 
I  iii  402 
I  iii  405 
I  iii  753 , 
ni41 
ni300 
IV  ii  207 
IV  ii  215 

IV  ii  271 
rv  ii  382 

V  ii  153 
v  ii  210 

V  ii  559 

V  ii  605 

V  iii  100 
V  iii  184 

The  Cup  I  ii  143 

I  ii  216 

I  ii  274 

I  ii  314 

I  ii  454 

I  iii  104 

n29 

II  89 

n  360 

II  409 
n  515 

The  Falcon  635 


Death  (continued)     B ! — and  enough  of  d  for  this  one  day,      Harold  v  ii  119 
move  as  true  with  me  To  the  door  of  d.  „       v  ii  186 

Let  me  learn  at  fuU  The  manner  of  his  d,  Becket,  Pro.  426 

Strike,  and  I  die  the  d  of  martyrdom ;  Strike,  and  ye 

set  these  customs  by  my  d 
By  God's  d,  thou  shall  stick  him  like  a  calf ! 
Degrade,  imprison  him — Not  d  for  d. 
I,  my  liege,  could  swear.  To  d  for  d. 
King  commands  you,  upon  pain  of  d, 

0  my  life's  life,  not  to  smile  Is  all  but  d  to  me. 
Thine — as  I  am — till  d  !     Rosamund.     B?  no  ! 
that  merits  d,  False  oath  on  holy  cross — 
ruiming  down  the  chase  is  kindlier  sport  Ev'n  than  tlie  d. 
dooms  thee  after  d  To  wail  in  deathless  flame, 
not  life  shot  up  in  blood,  But  d  drawn  in ; — 
'  The  King  is  sick  and  almost  unto  d.'  > 
Thrills  to  the  topmost  tile — no  hope  but  d; 
They  seek — you  make — occasion  for  your  d. 
Some  would  stand  by  you  to  the  d. 
The  power  of  life  in  d  to  make  her  free  ! 
whole  w5rld  Abhor  you ;  ye  will  die  the  d  of  dogs ! 
Son,  husband,  brother  gash'd  to  d  in  vain, 
keep  it,  or  you  sell  me  To  torment  and  to  d. 

1  know  they  mean  to  torture  him  to  d. 
Think, — torture, — d,- — and  come. 
Shall  I  go  ?    Shall  I  go  ?    B,  torture- 
Stay  ! — too  near  is  d. 

I  am  the  bride  of  B,  and  only  Many  the  dead. 
Life  yields  to  d  and  wisdom  bows  to  Fate, 
ere  two  souls  be  knit  for  life  and  d, 
Would  you  have  tortm^d  Sinnatus  to  d!  ?    Antonius. 

No  thought  was  mine  of  torture  or  of  d, 
some  old  Greek  Say  d  was  the  chief  good  ? 
more  than  one  brave  fellow  owed  His  d  to  the  charm 

in  it. 
whose  cheerless  Horn-is  after  d  Are  Night  and 

Silence,  Prom,  of  May  i  250 

'  Till  d  us  part ' — those  are  the  only  words,  „  i  658 

they  that  love  do  not  believe  that  d  Will  part  them.  „  i  663 

better  d  With  our  first  wail  than  life—  „  n  290 

not  so  much  for  B  As  against  Life  !  ..  ii  337 

My  father's  d,  Let  her  believe  it  mine  ;  „  n  453 

Not  all  at  once  with  d  and  him.  „  ii  464 

the  man  himself,  When  hearing  of  that  piteous  d,  „  n  500 

but  I  mun  git  out  on  'is  waay  now,  or  I  shall  be  the 

d  on  'im. 
I  have  been  telling  her  of  the  d  of  one  Pliilip  Edgar 

of  Toft  Hall,  Somei-set. 
Look  there — under  the  d's. 
and  that,  I  am  sure,  would  be  the  d  of  him. 
Peace,  let  him  be :  it  is  the  chamber  of  B ! 
Laid  famine-striken  at  the  gates  of  B — 
but  if  you  stai-ve  me  I  be  Gafier  B  himself. 
I  think  I  should  have  stricken  him  to  the  d. 
the  scritch-owl  bodes  d,  my  lord, 
there  is  a  cross  line  o'  sudden  d. 
Not  mortal !  after  d,  if  after  d Robin.    Life,  life. 

I  know  not  d.    Why  do  you  vex  me  With  raven- 
croaks  of  d  and  after  d  ? 
I  would  have  battled  for  it  to  the  d. 
And  bruised  him  almost  to  the  d, 
They  strike  the  deer  at  once  to  d — 
A  thousand  winters  Will  strip  you  bare  as  d, 
Deathbed     I've  been  attending  on  his  d  and  his  burial, 
a  Sister  of  INIercy,  come  from  the  d-b  of  a  pauper, 
Death-knell     Kinging  their  own  d-k  thro'  all  the  realm. 
Deathless    ghosts  of  Luther  and  Zuinglius  fade  Into 

the  d  hell  Queen  Mary  in  ii  175 

stroke  that  dooms  thee  after  death  To  wail  in  d 

flame.  Becket  iv  ii  272 

Deathlike    Yes,  d  !     Dead  ?     I  dare  not  look :  Prom,  of  May  m  716 

Deathly     How  d  pale  ! — a  chair,  your  Highness.  Queen  Mary  i  v  636 

Death-watch    Too  dead  ev'n  for  a  d-w  !  „         irrvl41 

Debased    downfallen  and  d  From  councillor  to  caitiff —  „  iv  iii  74 

Debonair    only  d  to  those  That  follow  where  he  leads,  Harold  n  ii 


n  610 

n  706 

n  710 

in  167 

ni  741 

ni808 

Foresters  i  i  48 

„      n  i  141 

„      II  i  333 

„      II  i  354 


II i  619 
II  i  664 

III  361 

IV  525 
IV  1056 

Prom,  of  May  ii  4 

in37T 

Be-cket  i  iii  172 


I 


De  Brito 


887 


Deliver 


De  Brito  (knight  of  King  Henry  II. 's  household)    (See  also 

Brito,  Richard)     De  Tracy — even  that  flint  1)  B.        Becket,  Pro.  523 
De  Tracy  and  I)  B,  from  our  castle.  „         i  i  278 

De  Broc    thou,  D  B,  that  boldest  Saltwood  Castle —  „      i  iii  160 

cursed  those  D  B's  That  hold  our  Saltwood  Castle  „      n  ii  267 

Perchance  the  fierce  D  B's  from  Saltwood  Castle,  ,,       v  ii  249 

your  friends,  those  ruffians,  the  D  B's,  „       v  ii  435 

And  one  of  the  D  B's  is  with  them,  ,,       v  ii  572 

Debt    Your  pious  wish  to  pay  King  Edward's  d'^;  Queen  Mary  i  v  112 

Pray'd  me  to  pay  her  d's,  and  keep  the  Faith ;  „  v  v  257 

— thou  art  drowned  in  d—  Becket,  Pro.  491 

every  bond  and  d  and  obligation  Incurr'd  as  Chancellor.       „     i  iii  710 
but  the  ill  success  of  the  farm,  and  the  d's,  Prom,  of  May  n  69 

I  would  pay  My  brother  all  bis  d  Foresters  i  ii  218 

For  whom  I  ran  into  my  d  to  the  Abbot,  ,.        n  i  462 

No,  not  an  hour :  the  d  is  due  to-day.  ..         iv  448 

he  Would  pay  us  all  the  d  at  once,  „         rv  485 

The  d  hath  not  been  paid.  ,.         iv  612 

Decalogue    Thro'  chastest  honour  of  the  B  Becket  v  i  206 

Decaying    Cool  as  the  light  in  old  d  wood ;  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  5 

Decent    We  be  more  like  scarecrows  in  a  field  than  d  serving 

men ;  Foresters  I  i  35 

Decide     d  on  what  was  customary  In  olden  days,  Becket  n  ii  175 

all  the  Church  of  France  D  on  their  decision,  „      ii  ii  178 

Decided     Cranmer,  it  is  d  by  the  Council  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  25 

Decision     all  the  Church  of  France  Decide  on  their  d,  Becket  it  ii  178 

Deck     Stand  on  the  d  and  spread  his  wings  for  sail !      Queen  Mar;/ 1  v  379 
same  chair.  Or  ratlier  throne  of  purple,  on  the  d.  „  m  ii  8 

Stagger  on  the  slope  d's  for  any  rough  sea  Becket  ii  ii  106 

Declaration     In  several  biUs  and  d's,  Queen  Manj  iv  i  48 

Declare    d  our  penitence  and  grief  For  our  long  schism  ,.      iii  iii  128 

Our  letters  of  commission  will  d  this  plainlier. 
D  the  Queen's  right  to  the  throne ; 
I  shall  d  to  you  my  very  faith  Without  all  colour, 
came  to  sue  Your  Coimcil  and  yourself  to  d  war. 
(repeat) 

Declared    when  last  he  wrote,  d  His  comfort  in  j'our  Grace 
As  I  have  many  a  time  d  to  you — 

Decline    d  The  judgment  of  the  King  ? 

Decree    sanction  yom-  d  Of  Tostig's  banishment. 

Deed    With  golden  d's  and  iron  strokes  that  bi"ought 

Some  said  it  was  thy  father's  d.     Harold.     They  lieil. 
Nothing,  so  thy  promise  be  thy  d. 
The  d's  done— Away  ! 

Deem    needs  must  d  This  love  by  you  retum'd  as 

heartily ;  Queen  Mary   ii  ii  196 

Who  d's  it  a  most  just  and  holy  war.  ..  v  i  147 

Deeming    D  him  one  that  thro'  the  fear  of  death  ..  iv  iii  26 

Deep  (adj.  and  adv.)     D — I  shall  fathom  him.  i  iii  158 

islands  call'd  into  the  dawning  church  Out  of  the 
dead,  d  night  of  heathendom, 
B        And  crying,  in  his  d  voice,  more  than  once, 

strike  hard  and  d  into  The  prey  they  are  rending 

from  her — 
There  thou  prick'st  me  d. 

Drink  and  drink  d — our  marriage  will  be  fruitful. 
Drink  and  drink  d,  and  thou  wilt  make   me 
happy. 
We  lie  too  d  down  in  the  shadow  here. 
I  only  wish  This  pool  were  d  enough. 
Lead  us  thou  to  some  d  glen, 

deep  (s)     outdraught  of  the  d  Haul  like  a  great  strong  fellow  Harold  ii  i  10 
boughs  across  the  d  That  dropt  themselves,  „   m  i  151 

voice  of  the  d  as  it  hollows  the  cliffs  of  the  land.  Becket  ii  i  3 

voice  coming  up  with  the  voice  of  the  d  from  the  strand,         ..       ii  i  6 
Love  that  is  bom  of  the  d  coming  up  with  the  sun  from 

the  sea.  (repeat)  -•  h  i_9, 19 

And  the  great  d's  were  broken  up  again,  ..  v  iii  43 

)eep-down     And  deeper  still  the  d-d  oubliette,  Harold  ii  ii  428 

)eeier    see  D  into  the  mysteries  of  heaven  „  i  i  200 

D  still.     Widfnoth.     And  d  still  the  deep-down 

oubliette,  „       "  ii  427 

that  tempest  which  will  set  it  trembUng  Only  to  base 

it  d.  Becket,  Pro.  210 

>eepest    Simk  in  the  d  pit  of  pauperism.  Prom,  of  May  iii  803 


„       III  iii  222 

IV  ii  78 

IV  iii  225 

..  v  i  108,  116 

in  vi  78 

The  Cwp  II  48 

Becket  I  iii  675 

Harold  iv  i  103 

II  ii  47 

„      a  ii  513 

Becket  iii  iii  224 

V  iii  207 


HI  iii  173 
IV  iii  611 

V  ii  267 
Harold  ii  ii  424 


The  Cup  II  380 

The  Falcon  581 

Prom,  of  May  ii  304 

Foresters  ii  ii  168 


Deep-incavem'd    His  buzzard-beak  and  d-i  eyes  Half 

fright  me.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  266 

Deer    You  are  the  stateliest  d  in  all  the  herd —  „            v  ii  425 

The  shadows  of  a  hvmdred  fat  red  d  Harold  i  ii  103 

Buck  ;  d,  as  you  call  it.  Becket  i  iv  139 

This  Canterbury,  Uke  a  wounded  d,  „        ii  ii  21 
Huntsman,  and  hoimd,  and  d  were  all  neck-broken !        The  Cup  i  ii  23 

That  hold  by  Richard,  tho  they  kill  his  d.  Foresters  i  iii  101 

The  d,  the  lughback'd  polecat,  the  wild  boar,  .,        i  iii  119 
true  woodman's  bow  of  the  best  yew-wood  to  slay  the  d.    ..        ii  i  393 

Robin,  like  a  d  from  a  dog,  ..        ii  i  433 

By  all  the  d  that  spring  Thro'  wood  and  lawn  ..         in  424 

Gone,  like  a  d  that  hath  escaped  thine  arrow !  „           iv  60 

What  d  when  I  have  mark'd  him  ever  yet  Escaped  ,,            iv  62 

They  strike  the  d  at  once  to  death —  .,          iv  525 

He  drove  his  knife  into  the  heart  of  the  d,  The  d  fell 

dead  to  the  bottom,  ..          iv  542 

On  nuts  and  acorns,  ha  !     Or  the  King's  d?  ..         iv  884 

Deer-like    Chased  d-l  up  his  mountains,  Harold  i  ii  148 

Defamed     be  tray 'd,  d,  divorced,  forlorn  !  Queen  Mary  i  v  26 

Suffer  not  That  my  brief  reign  in  England  be  d  „        v  ii  302 

Defeat    What !  are  thy  people  sullen  from  d  ?  Harold  iv  i  2 

and  now  but  shims  The  semblance  of  d ;  Becket  i  iii  191 

Defect    We  hold  by  his  defiance,  not  his  d.  ..    ii  ii  218 

Defective    seeing  they  were  men  D  or  excessive,  „     ii  ii  213 

Nay,  if  they  were  d  as  St.  Peter  Denying  Christ,  .    ii  ii  215 

Defence    or  any  harm  done  to  the  people  if  my  jest  be  in  d 

of  the  Truth  ?  ..    ii  ii  340 

And  private  hates  with  our  d  of  Heaven.  ,.       v  ii  52 

Spare  this  d,  dear  brother.  v  iii  168 

Whereas  in  wars  of  freedom  and  d  The  Cup  i  ii  160 

Defend     I  pray  you.  Do  not  d  yourself.  Becket  ii  ii  112 

Except  she  could  d  her  innocence.  Foresters  ii  ii  47 

I  can  d  my  cause  against  the  traitors  „          iv  898 

Defender    The  great  unborn  d  of  the  Faith,  Queen  Mary  in  ii  165 

Till  Truth  herself  be  shamed  of  her  d.  Becket  n  ii  345 

Defensoribus    Non  d  istis,  Walter  Map.  „     n  ii  346 

Defiance    We  hold  by  his  d,  not  his  defect.  ..     ii  ii  218 

Defied    who  yet  d  the  tyrant,  ii  ii  216 

— kinglike  D  the  Pope,  and,  like  his  kingly  sires,  „    iv  ii  440 

Defy     I  hate  thee,  and  despise  thee,  and  d  thee.  Harold  iv  ii  79 

Boldness  out  of  the  bottle  !     I  d  thee.  Foresters  iv  239 

Nay,  I  d  thee  still.  „        iv  276 

Degradation    scarce  have  spoken  with  you  Since 

when  ? — your  d.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  120 

papers  by  my  hand  Sign'd  since  my  d —  „           xv  iii  244 

What  doth  hard  murder  care  For  d  ?  Becket  i  iii  394 

Degrade     and  d  the  realm  By  seeking  justice  Queen  Mary  iv  i  18 

B,  imprison  him — Not  death  for  deatli.  Becket  i  iii  400 

Degraded     the  courts  of  the  Church,  They  but  d  him.  „      Pro.  14 

ye  but  d  him  Where  I  had  hang'd  him.  „      i  iii  391 

Degree     There  stands  a  man,  once  of  so  high  d.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  69 

Dei     Ha — Verbum  B — verbum — word  of  God  !  „          m  i  262 

Deign    my  nobleness  Of  nature,  as  you  d  to  call  it,  The  Falcon  811 

Who  d  to  honour  this  my  thirtieth  year.  Foresters  i  ii  79 

If  you  will  d  to  tread  a  measure  with  me.  „     i  ii  132 

Deign'd     Who  never  d  to  shine  into  my  palace.  The  Falcon  285 

The  diamonds  that  you  never  d  to  wear.  „          761 

Dejiciatur    Equus  cum  equite  B '.  Harold  v  i  580 

Delay    B  is  death  to  thee,  ruin  to  England.  „      n  ii  717 

Delicacy     repulses,  the  delicacies,  the  subtleties.  Becket,  Pro.  500 

Delicate    (See  also  Courtly-delicate)    your  hand  Will 

be  much  coveted  !     What  a  d  one  !  Queen  Mary  v  iii  44 

Be  men  less  d  than  the  Devil  himself  ?  Harold  in  i  116 

I  have  been  a  lover  of  wines,  and  d  meats,  Becket  i  i  76 

That's  a  d  Latin  lay  Of  Walter  Map :  „    v  i  191 

I  am  none  of  your  d  Norman  maidens  Foresters  i  i  212 

Delicate-footed    the  d-f  creature  Came  stepping  o'er  him,  „         iv  535 

Delight  (s)    comes  To  rob  you  of  your  one  d  on  earth.  I'he  Falcon  828 

but  I  Take  some  d  in  sketching.  Prom,  of  May  n  539 

Delight  (verb)    B  to  wallow  in  the  grossness  of  it,  Becket  n  ii  343 

Delighted     Affrighted  me,  and  then  d  me.  Queen  Mary  iii  v  144 

Deliver    Do  here  absolve  you  and  d  you  And  every 

one  of  you,  „         in  iii  214 

wouldst  d  Canterbury  To  our  King's  hands  again,  Becket  i  iii  580 


Deliver 


888 


DevU 


Deliver  (continiied)    I  here  d  all  this  controversy  Into 
your  royal  hands. 

I  might  d  all  things  to  thy  hand — 
Delivered    '  The  Queen  of  England  is  d  of  a  dead 
dog!' 

he  was  d  To  the  secular  arm  to  bum ; 

God's  grace  and  Holy  Chxu-ch  d  us. 

are  d  here  in  the  wild  wood  an  hour  after  noon. 
Demand  (s)    then  to  cede  A  point  to  her  d  ? 

Grant  me  one  day  To  ponder  these  d's. 
Demand  (verb)     I  will  d  his  ward  From  Edward 

the  King  d's  three  himdred  marks, 

the  King  d's  seven  hundred  marks, 

the  King  d's  five  hundred  marks. 

King  D's  a  strict  account  of  all  those  revenues 

Antonius  To-morjow  will  d  your  tribute — 


Beclcet  ii  ii  136 
„    iniii270 

Queen  Mary  m  ii  219 

IV  ii  213 

Becket  iv  ii  309 

Foresters  iv  509 

Queen  Mary  ni  vi  170 

Becket  i  iii  669 

Harold  I  ii  58 

Becket  i  iii  626 

„       I  iii  634 

„       I  iii  641 

„       I  iii  650 

The  Cwp  I  ii  97 


Demanded    d  Possession  of  her  person  and  the  Tower.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  40 

Demi-Norman    our  dear  England  Is  d-N.  Harold  iii  i  41 

De-miracled    fish,  they  d-m  the  miraculous  draught,  Becket  m  iii  124 
Democracy    when  the  tide  Of  full  d  has  overwhelm'd 

This  Old  world.  Prom,  of  May  i  593 
When  the  great  I>  Makes  a  new  world —  ,,             i  670 
De  Morville  (kmght  of  tihe  household  of  King  Henry  n.) 
(See  also  Hugh)    France!    Ha!    D  M,  Tracy, 
Brito— fled  is  he  ?  Becket  i  iv  198 
D  M,l  had  thought  so  well  of  you ;  „       v  ii  519 
This  wanton  here.    D  M,  Hold  her  away.  .,      v  iii  171 
Den    Who  dragg'd  the  scatter'd  limbs  into  their  d.  Queen  Mary  i  v  402 
hottest  hold  in  all  the  devil's  d  „           v  iv  15 
Dares  the  bear  slouch  into  the  lion's  d  ?  Becket  iv  ii  282 
Denial    Treble  d  of  the  tongue  of  flesh,  Harold  in  i  281 
Denied     Kenard  d  her,  Ev'n  now  to  me.  Queen  Mary  ni  vi  2 
or  more  I)  the  Holy  Father !  „        ni  iv  248 
St.  Peter  in  his  time  of  fear  I)  his  Master,  „        m  iv  264 
Albeit  I  have  d  him.  „         rv  ii  236 
Nay,  but,  my  Lord,  he  d  purgatory.  „        iv  iii  629 
Would  not — if  penitent — have  d  him  her  Forgive- 
ness. Prom,  of  May  ii  496 
Denis  (Bishop  of  Paris  and  Patron  Saint  of  France)    St.  D, 

that  thou  shouldst  not.  Becket,  Pro.  89 

By  St.  I) De  Brito.     Ay,  by  St.  D,  now  will  he 

flame  out.  And  lose  his  head  as  old  St.  D  did.  ,.       v  ii  477 

St.  D  of  France  and  St.  Alphege  of  England,  .,      v  iii  165 

Denmark     the  King  of  D  is  with  us ;  Queen  Mary  ii  i  195 

Dense    How  d  a  fold  of  danger  nets  him  round,  Harold  ii  ii  17 

Deoy     I  d  not  to  have  been  Your  faithful  friend  Queen  Mary  iv  i  88 

against  the  Norseman,  If  thou  d  them  this.  Harold  iv  i  159 

D  not  thou  God's  honour  for  a  king.  Becket  n  ii  424 

Nay,  I  d  not  That  I  was  somewhat  anger'd.  „      iv  ii  350 

Come,  come,  could  he  d  it  ?    What  did  he  say  ?  The  Cup  i  ii  345 

can  d  Nothing  to  you  that  you  require  of  him.  The  Falcon  717 

Denying    if  they  were  defective  as  St.  Peter  D  Christ,  Becket  ii  ii  216 

Depart    And  under  his  authority — I  d.  „       x  iii  728 

Departed    And  presently  all  rose,  and  so  d.  The  Falcon  367 

Depend     all  d's  Upon  the  skill  and  swiftness  Queen  Mary  i  iii  142 

All  d's  on  me — Father,  this  poor  girl,  Prom,  of  May  in  211 

Deputation     comes  a  d  From  our  finikin  fairy  nation.  Foresters  ii  ii  144 

Derwent    Where  lie  the  Norsemen  ?  on  the  D  ?  Harold  iv  i  253 

Our  day  beside  the  D  will  not  shine  „       rv  iii  50 

Descend    D's  the  ruthless  Norman —  „      ii  ii  467 

And  that  my  wife  d's  from  Alfred  ?  „       u  ii  594 

the  second  curse  D  upon  thine  head,  „       in  ii  49 

Scatter  thy  people  home,  d  the  hill,  „          v  i  10 

so  d  again  with  some  of  her  ladyship's  own 

appurtenances  ?  The  Falcon  416 
Descending    as  the  soul  d  out  of  heaven  Into  a  body 

generate.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  35 

Desert  (merit)    fierier  than  fire  To  yield  them  their  d's.  „           v  iv  27 

D'sl  Amen  to  what?  Whose  d's?  „  v  iv  30 
Desert  (waste)  wells  of  Castaly  are  not  wasted  upon  the  d.  Becket,  Pro.  388 
Deserve  He  must  d  his  surname  better.  Queen  Mary  in  ii  197 
that  worship  for  me  which  Heaven  knows  I  ill  d —  Foresters  i  iii  162 
Designer  See  IMsh-designer 
Desire  (s)     She  had  no  d  for  that,  and  wrung  her 

hands,  Queen  Mary  in  i  384 


Desire  (s)  {continued)    And  hot  d  to  imitate ; 
Her  fierce  d  of  bearing  him  a  child, 

0  yield  them  all  their  d ! 

and  no  need  Of  veiling  their  d's. 
The  love  of  freedom,  the  d  of  God, 
Desire  (verb)    My  people  hate  me  and  d  my  death. 
My  husband  hates  me,  and  d's  my  death. 

1  hate  myself,  and  I  d  my  death. 
A  stranger  monk  d's  access  to  you. 

Desolate    That  d  letter,  blotted  with  her  tears, 
Despair    I  am  almost  in  d. 

Shall  I  d  then  ?— God  forbid  ! 

but  O  girl,  girl,  I  am  almost  in  d. 
Despair'd    I  had  d  of  thee — that  sent  me  crazed. 
Despise    Those  of  the  wrong  side  will  d  the  man, 

Make  us  (i  it  at  odd  hours,  my  Lord. 

I  hate  thee,  and  d  thee,  and  defy  thee. 
Despite    d  his  fearful  heresies,  I  loved  the  man. 

And  he  hath  learnt,  d  the  tiger  in  him, 


Queen  Mary  in  iv  171 

IV  iii  429 

The  Cup  n  8 

Prom,  of  May  i  530 

Foresters  n  i  68 

Qtieen  Mary  v  ii  345 

V  ii  348 

V  ii  351 
Becket  v  ii  65 

Prom,  of  May  ii  475 

Queen  Mar'/ 1  v  385 

IV  iii  129 

Foresters  i  i  263 

„      IV  1021 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  25 

IV  iii  386 

Harold  iv  ii  79 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  633 

Harold  i  i  147 


d  his  kingly  promise  given  To  our  own  self  of  pardon,     Becket  ii  ii  431 
Despondency    When  left  alone  in  my  d,  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  95 

Destiny    Moved  in  the  iron  grooves  of  i>  ?     Remorse 

then  is  a  part  of  D,  Prom,  of  May  n  267 

Destroy     We  come  not  to  d,  but  edify ;  Queen  Mary  in  iii  188 

Take  heed,  lest  he  d  thee  utterly.  Becket  i  iii  13 

Wilt  thou  d  the  Church  in  fighting  for  it,  „     i  iii  36 

Desuetude    wholesome  usages,  Lost  in  d,  „    i  iii  413 

Determine    Your  courts  of  justice  will  d  that.  Queen  Mary  ii  iv  131 

Dethrone     Arise  against  her  and  d  the  Queen —  „  i  iii  91 

De  Tracy  (Sir  William,  knight  of  the  household  of  King 

Henry  H.)     {See  also  Tracy)     D  T— even  that 

flint  De  Brito.  Becket,  Pro.  522 

D  T  and  De  Brito,  from  our  castle.  „  i  i  278 

Deum    bells  must  ring ;  Te  D's  must  be  sung ;  Queen  Mary  in  ii  211 

Deus     Jacta  tonitrua  D  bellator  !  Harold  v  i  570 

Fulmina,  fulmina  D  vastator  !  „       v  i  574 

Device    put  some  fresh  d  in  lieu  of  it —  Queen  Mary  in  i  268 

but  follow'd  the  d  of  those  Her  nearest  kin :  „  in  i  379 

Devil    {See  also  Dare-devil,  Divil)     has  offer'd  her  his 

son  Philip,  the  Pope  and  the  D.  „  i  i  106 

all  Your  trouble  to  the  dogstar  and  the  d.  „  i  iv  292 

His  foes — the  D  had  subom'd  'em,  „  i  v  626 

ordnance  On  the  White  Tower  and  on  the  D's  Tower,    „  n  iii  44 

Philip  had  been  one  of  those  black  d's  of  Spain,  „  in  i  215 

that  every  Spaniard  carries  a  tale  like  a,d  „  in  i  224 

Death  and  the  D — if  he  find  I  have  one —  „  m  i  231 

a  pale  horse  for  Death  and  Gardiner  for  the  D.  „  in  i  235 

Not  for  the  seven  d's  to  enter  in  ?  „  in  ii  140 

d  take  all  boots  were  ever  made  Since  man  went 

barefoot.  „  iii  v  197 

Or  to  be  still  in  pain  with  d's  in  hell ;  „  iv  iii  222 

With  all  his  d's  doctrines ;  „  iv  iii  278 

Pole  Will  tell  you  that  the  d  belpt  them  thro'  it.  „  iv  iii  352 

give  the  D  his  due,  I  never  found  he  bore  me  any 

spite  „  V  ii  472 

I  were  whole  diti  wrong'd  you.  Madam.  „  v  iii  6 

hottest  hold  in  all  the  d's  den  „  v  iv  15 

wrath  of  Heaven  hath  three  tails,  The  d  only  one.  Harold  i  i  62 

Fishermen  ?  d's !     Who,  while  ye  fish  for  men  with  your 

false  fires,  Let  the  great  D  fish  for  your  own  souls.  „      n  i  29 

Like  Jonah,  than  have  known  there  were  such  d's.  „      n  i  39 

would  make  the  hard  earth  rive  To  the  very  D's  horns,  „   n  ii  741 

Be  men  less  delicate  than  the  D  himself  ?  I  thought  that 

naked  Truth  would  shame  the  D  The  D  is  so  modest.         „   m  i  117 
A  lying  d  Hath  haunted  me—  „     v  i  317 

Ye  haled  this  tonsured  d  into  your  courts ;  ■    Becket  i  iii  387 

Forty  thousand  marks  !  forty  thousainl  d's —  „        i  iv  91 

Saving  the  D's  honour,  his  yes  and  no.  „      n  ii  142 

if  this  if  be  like  the  D's  '  if  Thou  wilt  fall  (lo^^  n  and 

worship  me.'  „    in  iii  285 

O  d,  can  I  free  her  from  the  grave  ?  „        v  i  185 

Down  to  the  d  with  this  bond  that  beggars  nie  !  Foresters  i  i  340 

By  all  the  d's  in  and  out  of  Hell !  „         n  ii  27 

proud  priests,  and  these  Barons,  D's,  „         in  127 

And  wake  the  D,  and  I  may  sicken  by  'em.  „         in  325 


Devil 


889 


Die 


Foresters  iv  553 
IV  594 


III  6 
11  ill 


Devil  {continued)     by  all  the  saints  and  all  the  d's  ye  shall 
dance. 
Or,  like  the  Z>'5  they  are,  straight  up  from  Hell. 
Devilisb    all  of  us  abhor  The  venomous,  bestial,  d 

revolt  Of  Thomas  Wyatt.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  287 

Devilry    What  game,  what  juggle,  what  d  are  you  playing  ?    Becket  v  i  153 

Devilstow    Into  Grodstow,  into  Hellstow,  /> !  „      v  i  215 

Devon  (Couni^)    Were  lin  D  with  my  wedded  bride.   Queen  Mary  i  iv  119 

Carew  stirs  In  D: 

should  be  in  Z>  too. 

Devon  (Earl  of)    (See  also  Courtenay)    Courtenay,  to 

be  made  Earl  of  D, 

Good-day,  my  Lord  of  D ; 

What  are  you  musing  on,  my  Lord  of  Z)  ? 

This  dress  was  made  me  as  the  Earl  of  D  To  take 

my  seat  in ; 
A  Courtenay  of  D,  and  her  cousin. 
Was  that  mj  Lord  of  Z>  ?  do  not  you  Be  seen  in 

comers  with  my  Lord  of  D. 
What  was  my  Lord  of  D  telling  you  ? 
This  comes  of  parleying  with  my  Lord  of  D. 
But  our  young  Earl  of  D —     Mary.     Earl  of  Z)  ? 
I  freed  him  from  the  Tower,  placed  him  at  Court ; 
I  made  him  Earl  of  D,  and — the  fool — 
My  Lord  of  i)  is  a  pretty  man. 
and  party  thereimto.  My  Lord  of  D. 
not  now  and  save  the  life  Of  D : 
could  have  wedded  that  poor  youth.  My  Lord  of  D — 
Lord  D,  ^irls !  what  are  you  whispering  here  ? 
Devour    run  m  upon  her  and  d  her,  one  and  all 
Dew    To  those  three  children  like  a  pleasant  d. 
Is  God's  best  d  upon  the  barren  field. 
Vying  a  tear  with  our  cold  d's, 
hath  the  fire  in  her  face  and  the  d  in  her  eyes. 
Found  him  dead  and  drench'd  in  d, 
Dewy    I  Shall  see  the  d  kiss  of  dawn  no  more 
Diadem    He  sends  you  This  d  of  the  first  Galatian  Queen, 

tell  him  That  I  accept  the  d  of  Galatia — 
Diagonalise    if  he  move  at  all,  Heaven  stay  him,  is  fain  to 
d.      Herbert.      Dl    thou  art  a  word-monger.      Our 
Thomas  never  will  d.    Thou  art  a  jester  and  a  verse- 
maker.    D ! 

■  Dialectic    with  his  charm  of  simple  style  And  close  d,    Prom,  of  May  i  225 

Diamond  (adj.)    if  we  wiZZ  buy  <i  necklaces  To  please  oui- lady,   The  Falcon  Ai 

Diamond  (s)    set  it  round  with  gold,  with  pearl,  with  d.    Queen  Mary  i  v  376 

Some  six  or  seven  Bishops,  d's,  pearls,  „  iii  i  52 

A  d,  And  Philip's  gift,  as  proof  of  Philip's  love,  „  iii  i  66 

on  his  neck  a  collar,  Gold,  thick  with  d's ;  „  iii  i  80 

Cut  with  Sid;  so  to  last  l^e  truth.  .,  iii  v  25 

Not  ev'n  the  central  d,  worth,  I  think,  Becket  v  i  164 

Dare  beg  him  to  receive  his  d's  back —  The  Falcon  262 

Then  I  require  you  to  take  back  your  d's —  „  720 

But  have  you  ever  worn  my  d's  ?  .,  737 

The  d's  that  you  never  deign'd  to  wear.  ..  761 

I  cannot  keep  your  d's,  for  the  gift  I  ask  for,  „  776 

These  d's  are  both  yours  and  mine —  .,  903 

Diamond-dance    ripples  twinkled  at  their  d-d.  Queen  Mary  in  ii  10 

Dian     Behold  a  pretty  D  of  the  wood.  Foresters  iii  267 

Diana    Our  Artemis  Has  vanquish'd  their  D.  The  Cup  ii  457 

Dickon    here's  little  D,  and  little  Robin,  and  little 

Jenny — 

This  paper,  D.     I  found  it  fluttering  at  the  palace 

gates : — 

Die    Fly  and  farewell,  and  let  me  d  the  death. 

order  with  all  heretics  That  it  shall  be,  before  I  d, 

D  like  the  torn  fox  dumb, 

I  live  and  d  The  true  and  faithful  bride  of  Philip— 

or  d  with  those  That  are  no  cowards  and  no  Courtenays.      „  ii  iv  86 

And  Lady  Jane  had  left  us.     Mary.     They  shall  d.     Renard. 

And  your  so  loving  sister  ?   Mary.  She  shall  d.     Queen  Mary  ii  iv  140 
Did  not  Lord  SufiEolk  d  like  a  true  man  ?  „  iii  i  164 

Did  you  see  her  d?  „  in  i  344 

said  she  was  condemn'd  to  d  for  treason ;  „  in  i  377 

light  of  this  new  learning  wanes  and  d's :  „  in  ii  173 

That  if  the  Queen  should  d  without  a  eliild,  „  ni  iii  74 


lilll 
I  iii  95 

iiv27 

iiv73 
iiv86 

I  iv  152 
iivl83 
iiv252 


IV  161 
I  V  614 

II  iv  101 
II  iv  124 

V  ii  477 
vii486 

Becket,  Pro.  525 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  92 

V  i  102 

Harold  v  i  151 

Foresters  i  i  167 

n  ii  147 

Harold  ii  ii  331 

The  Cup  u  132 

II 158 


Becket  n  ii  330 


Queen  Mary  n  iii  112 

in  ii  217 

I  ii  106 
IV  36 

II  ii  331 

II  iv  42 


Die  {continued)    Thou  knowest  we  had  to  dodge,  or 

duck,  or  d ; 
To  sing,  love,  marry,  chum,  brew,  bake,  and  d, 
says  she  will  Uve  And  d  true  maid — 
Did  not  More  d,  and  Fisher  ?  he  must  bum. 
and  hide  himself  and  d ; 
— they  give  the  poor  who  d. 
Ay — ^gentle  as  they  call  you — ^live  or  d  ? 
Fire — inch  by  inch  to  d  in  agony ! 
Stand  watching  a  sick  beast  before  he  d's  ? 
Yet — It  is  expedient  for  one  man  to  d.  Yea,  for  the 

people,  lest  the  people  d.    Yet  Avherefore  should 

he  a  that  bath  retum'd 
therefore  he  must  d,  For  warning  and  example. 
Hurls  his  soil'd  life  against  the  pikes  and  d's. 
howsoever  hero-like  the  man  D's  in  the  fire. 
And  you  saw  Latimer  and  Ridley  d  ? 
Did  he  d  bravely  ?    Tell  me  that,  or  leave  All  else 

untold. 
To  sleep,  to  d — I  shall  d  of  it,  cousin. 
I  may  a  Before  I  read  it.    Let  me  see  him  at  once. 
Make  me  full  fain  to  Uve  and  d  a  maid. 
Nay !     Better  d  than  lie ! 
Better  d  than  lie  ! 

Forgive  me,  brother,  I  will  live  here  and  d. 
better  d  Than  credit  this,  for  death  is  death, 
Blaze  Uke  a  night  of  fatal  stars  on  those  Who  read 

their  doom  and  d. 
till  her  voice  D  with  the  world. 
To  tell  thee  thou  shalt  d  on  Senlac  hill — 
I  shall  d — I  d  for  England  then,  who  lived  for  England 

— What  nobler  ?  men  must  d. 
live  or  d,  I  would  I  were  among  them  ! 
honeymoon  is  the  gall  of  love ;  he  d's  of  his 

honeymoon, 
old  men  must  d,  or  the  world  would  grow  mouldy, 
Lo  !  I  must  out  or  d.     Becket.     Or  out  and  d. 
For  we  would  live  and  d  for  thee,  my  lord. 
Strike,  and  I  d  the  death  of  martyrdom ; 
— there  to  beg,  starve,  d — 
you  still  move  against  him,  you  may  have  no  less  than 

to  d  for  it ; 
To  d  for  it — I  live  to  d  for  it,  I  d  to  live  for  it, 

State    will    d,   the    Church  can  never   d. 

King's  not  like  to   d  for   that   which  d's 

I  must  d  for  that  which  never  d's. 
I  am  not  so  happy  I  could  not  d  myself, 
I  am  to  d  then,  tho'  there  stand  beside  thee 
both  of  us  will  d,  And  I  will  fly  with  my  sweet  boy 
I  will  go  live  and  d  in  Aquitaine.  (repeat) 
The  chances  of  his  life,  just  ere  he  d's. 
foremost  of  their  files,  who  d  For  God, 
I  am  prepared  to  d. 
The  best  of  all  not  all-prepared  to  d. 
D  \vith  him,  and  be  glorified  together. 
And  d  upon  the  Patriarchal  throne  Of  all  my  predecessors  ? 
whole  world  Abhor  you ;  ye  will  d  the  death  of  dogs  ! 
■ — -fight  out  the  good  fight — d  Conqueror. 
I'd  sooner  d  than  do  it. 
A  woman  I  could  live  and  d  for.     What !     Z>  for  a 

woman,  what  new  faith  is  this  ? 
I  will  be  faithful  to  thee  till  thou  d. 
to  live  And  d  together. 

Thy  breed  will  d  with  thee,  and  mine  m  ith  me : 
The  boy  may  d :  more  blessed  were  the  rags 
Than  all  my  childless  wealth,  if  mine  nmst  d. 
She  had  to  d  for  it — she  died  for  you. 
'  Let  us  eat  and  drink,  for  to-morrow  we  d.' 
I  shall  go  mad  for  utter  shame  and  d. 
And  poor  old  father  not  d  miserable. 
My  five-years'  anger  cannot  d  at  once, 
and  father  Will  not  d  miserable.' 
Go  back  to  him  and  ask  his  forgiveness  before  he  d's.— 
I  would  almost  d  to  have  it !     Dora.    And  he  may  d 

before  he  gives  it ; 


Queen  Mary  iii  iv  358 

in  V  112 

in  vi  46 

rvi62 

IV  i  143 

IV  ii  53 

IV  ii  162 

IV  ii  223 

„  IV  iii  8 


,  IV  iii  17 

,  rv  iii  51 

rv  iii  312 

IV  iii  325 

rv  iii  328 

IV  iii  568 
v  ii  127 

V  ii  549 

V  iii  98 
Harold  i  i  158 

„  n  ii  281 
„  II  ii  804 
„     III  ii  78 

„  IV  i  252 
„  IV  iii  76 
„      V  i  241 

„  V  i  267 
„      V  i  463 

Becket,  Pro.  365 

„      Pro.  409 

I  i  268 

I  ii  16 
I  iii  168 

II  i  75 


The 
The 
But 


in  iii  326 


„    m  iii  334 

IV  ii  87 
„  IV  ii  228 
.,  IV  ii  236 
„  V  i  109, 142 

V  ii  274 

V  ii  495 

V  ii  562 

V  ii  564 

V  iii  31 

V  iii  75 

V  iii  184 

V  iii  190 
The  Cup  I  ii  224 

I  iii  65 

u330 

II  111 

The  Falcon  18 

850 

856 

877 

Prom,  of  May  i  260 

I  682 

I  722 

n463 

n660 

m402 

ni405 


Die 


890 


Dissolved 


Die  (continued)    d,  and  make  tbe  soil  For  Caesars, 

Cromwells,  From,  of  May  m  591 

lanker  than  an  old  hoi-se  turned  out  to  d  on  the  common.  Foresters  i  i  52 

0  Lord,  I  will  live  and  d  for  Kiiw  Richard —  „        i  ii  37 

1  am  outlaw'd,  and  if  caught,  la.  ,,  i  iii  163 
But  if  you  follow  me,  you  may  d  with  me.  „  i  iii  166 
We  will  live  and  d  with  thee,  (repeat)  ,.  i  iii  168 
That  we  would  d  for  a  Queen —  .,  in  444 
and  if  thou  prick  me  there  I  shall  d.  ..  iv  570 
Garry  her  off,  and  let  the  old  man  d.  ..  iv  677 
He  d's  who  dares  to  touch  thee.                                               ,.       iv  734 

Died     doubtless  you  can  tell  me  how  she  d  ?  Queen  Mara  iii  i  357 

And  Thy  most  blessed  Son's,  who  d  for  man.  ,.         iv  iii  154 

he  d  As  manfully  and  boldly,  and,  'fore  God,  „        iv  iii  342 

Until  they  d  of  rotted  limbs ;  „         iv  iii  445 

My  Lord,  he  d  most  bravely.  iv  iii  570 

Ay,  and  with  him  who  d  Alone  in  Italy.  „  v  ii  507 

caught  a  chill  in  the  lagoons  of  Venice,  And  d  in 

Padua.     Mary.    D  in  the  true  faith  ?  „  v  ii  516 

That  she  would  see  your  Grace  before  she — d.  ..         v  iii  105 

or  Knut  who  coming  Dane  D  English.  Harold  iv  iii  56 

Drink  to  the  dead  who  d  for  us,  the  living  AVho  fought 

and  would  have  d,  „      iv  iii  69 

ran  in  upon  us  And  d  so,  „        v  i  411 

remembering  One  who  d  for  thee,  Becket  n  i  307 

Only  my  best  bower-maiden  d  of  late,  „       in  i  68 

She  d  of  leprosy.  „     v  ii  268 

I  had  once  A  boy  who  d  a  babe ;  The  Cup  i  ii  149 

To  me,  tho'  all  your  bloom  has  d  away.  The  Falcon  468 

She  had  to  die  for  it — she  d  for  you,  „  877 

Oh,  yes,  indeed,  I  would  have  d  for  you.  Prom,  of  May  i  714 

pauper,  who  had  d  in  his  misery  blessing  God,  ..  m  378 

when  the  mistress  d,  and  I  appealed  to  the  Sister  again,    „  ni  393 

we  have  certain  news  he  d  in  prison.  Foresters  iv  778 

Dies  Ilia     Their  '  d  I,'  which  will  test  their  sect.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  428 

Dies  &8e    Their  hour  is  hard  at  hand,  their  '  d  /,'  „  in  iv  426 

Differing    where  the  man  and  the  woman,  only  d  as 

the  stronger  and  the  weaker.  Prom,  of  May  m  190 

Dig     Or  I  will  d  thee  with  my  dagger.  Queen  Mary  n  iii  96 

And  d  it  from  the  root  for  ever.  .  Becket  rv  ii  77 

Dilated     Seem'd  thro'  that  dim  d  world  of  hers.  Queen  Mart/  ii  ii  324 

Dim  (adj.)     Seem'd  thro'  that  d  dilated  world  of  hers,  „       '   n  ii  324 

You  droop  in  yom-  d  London.  „  v  ii  609 

Mine  eyes  are  d  :  what  hath  she  written  ?  read.  .,  v  v  1 

Well — is  not  that  the  course  of  Nature  too.  From 

the  d  dawn  of  Being —  Prom,  of  May  i  281 

Dim  (verb)     Rather  than  d  the  splendour  of  his  crown  Becket  v  ii  343 

Dimple     silver  Were  dear  as  gold,  the  wi'inkle  as  the  d.  Foresters  iv  43 

Dine     there  ^vur  an  owld  lord  a-cum  to  d  wi'  un,         Queen  Mary  iv  iii  504 

'  I  wunt  d,'  says  my  Lord  Bishop,  „  iv  iii  507 

He  wishes  you  to  d  along  with  us,  Prom,  of  May  i  618 

Stay,  D  with  my  brethren  here,  Foresters  iv  346 

bonds  From  these  three  men,  and  let  them  d  Avith  us,  .,       iv  963 

By  Mahound  I  could  d  with  Beelzebub !  ..       iv  971 

there's  yet  one  other :  I  will  not  d  without  him.  .,      iv  996 

Dined     let  that  wait  till  we  have  d.  iv  992 

Dingle     And  loves  and  dotes  on  every  d  of  it.  „      iv  390 

Dining-hall    Carry  fresh  i-ushes  into  the  d-h,  .,        i  i  81 

Dinner     (See  also  After-dinner)     and  a  ^^•ur  .so  owld 

a  couldn't  bide  vor  his  d,  Queen  .Mary  iv  iii  506 

'  Now,'  says  the  Bishop,  says  he,  '  we'll  gwo  to  rf ; '       „  iv  iii  513 

thou  must  dash  us  down  Our  d  from  the  skies.  The  Falcon  154 

his  falcon  Ev'n  wins  his  d  for  him  in  the  field.  ,,  231 

fur  he'll  gie  us  a  big  d.  Prom,  of  May  i  9 

there  wudn't  be  a  d  for  nawbody,  and  I  should  ha' 

lost  the  pig.  „        1 149 

the  farming  men  'uU  hev  theii-  d  i'  the  long  barn,  .,        i  166 

Why  if  Steer  han't  haxed  schoolmaster  to  d,  „        i  185 

and  we'll  git  'im  to  speechify  for  us  arter  d.  „        i  440 

his  monies,  his  oxen,  his  d's,  himself.  Foresters  i  i  234 

I  love  my  d — but  I  can  fast,  I  can  fast ;  ,.        i  ii  64 

Bitters  before  d,  my  lady,  to  give  you  a  relish.  „       ni  434 

he  that  pays  not  for  his  d  must  fight  for  it.  „        iv  200 

thou  fight  at  quarterstaff  for  thy  d  with  our  Robin,  „        iv  208 

So  now  which  way  to  the  <i  ?  „        rv  972 


Diocese    He'll  burn  ad  to  prove  his  orthodoxy. 

Wasted  our  d,  outraged  our  tenants, 
Dip     A  lake  that  d's  in  William  As  well  as  Harold. 
Dipping    Have  I  been  d  into  this  again 
Dipt     d  your  sovereign  head  Thro'  these  low  doors. 
Directed     Half  a  score  of  them,  all  d  to  me — 


Queen  Mary  ni  iv  353 

Becket  v  ii  431 

Harold  v  i  186 

Prom,  of  May  I  292 

The  Falcon  866 

Prom,  of  May  ii  722 


Dirty  as  I  hate  the  d  gap  in  the  face  of  a  Cistercian  monk,  Becket  u.  ii  381 
Disaffected  The  d,  heretics,  reformers,  Look  to  you  Queen  Mary  r  iv  170 
Disappear  my  voice  Is  martyr'd  mute,  antl  this  man  d's,  Becket  m  iii  350 
Disappear'd     She  has  d,  They  told  me,  from  the 

farm —  Prom,  of  May  ii  406 

She  has  d,  poor  darling,  from  the  v  orld —  „  n  409 

Disappointment  L,  Ingratitude,  Injustice,  Evil- 
tongue,  Queen  Mary  v  ii  154 
Dis-archbishop  after  that.  We  had  to  d-a  and  unlord,  „  iv  ii  128 
Disarm  Is  it  not  easy  to  a!  a  woman  ?  The  Cup  i  iii  106 
Disastrous  And  fared  so  ill  in  this  d  world.  Quem  Mar  if  v  ii  344 
Discipline  d's  that  clear  the  spiritual  eye,  Becket  v  i  42 
Disconsolate  I  pray  you  be  not  so  d;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  129 
Discontent  Hath  made  me  king  of  all  the  d  Foresters  n  i  87 
Discourage  to  d  and  lay  lame  The  plots  of  France,  Queen  Mary  v  i  187 
Discourtesy  I  shall  remember  this  D.  Becket  i  i  239 
Discrown  Who  did  d  thine  husband,  unqueen  thee  ?  Harold  iv  i  193 
Disdain    (See  also  Self-disdain)    for  I  much  d  thee,  but  if 

ever  Thou  see  me  clasp  Foresters  ii  ii  74 

Diseased     Old,  miserable,  d,  Incapable  of  children.         Queen  Mary  v  v  178 

Disgrace     Their  Graces,  our  d's !    God  confound  them !         ,.  mi  414 

Disgraced    Thou  hast  d  me  and  attainted  me,  „  ni  ii  54 

Why  do  you  so  my-lord  me,  Who  am  d?  „  iv  ii  177 

D,  dishonour'd! — not  by  them,  „  iv  ii  200 

Disguise  (s)     No  !  the  d  was  perfect.     Let's  away.  „  r  iii  178 

The  monk's  d  thou  gavest  me  for  my  bower :  Becket  v  ii  93 

Shall  I  be  known  ?  is  my  d  perfect  ?  Foresters  i  ii  18 

Disguise  (verb)     D  me — thy  gown  and  thy  coif.  „      n  i  186 

Disguised     I  am  ilj  d.  Queen  Mary  in  i  33 

Ay,  but  you  go  d.  Becket  i  i  297 

Tliou  art  no  old  woman — thou  art  d —  Foresters  n  i  410 

this  is  Maid  Marian  Flying  from  John — d.  „         ii  i  680 

Dish     which  cannot  tell  A  good  d  from  a  bad,  Becket,  Pro.  106 

Ye  have  eaten  of  my  d  and  drunken  of  my  cup  for  a 

dozen  years.  ..         i  iv  29 

King  would  act  servitor  and  hand  a  d  to  his  son  ;  ,.    in  iii  139 

She  broke  my  head  on  Tuesday  with  a  d.  Foresters  i  iii  134 

Dish-designer     A  d-d,  and  most  amorous  Becket,  Pro.  99 

Dishonour  (s)     — did  D  to  our  wives.  The  Cup  i  ii  184 

willing  wives  enough  To  feel  d,  honour.  „        i  ii  189 

courteous  for  aught  I  know  Whose  life  is  one  d.  „        i  ii  194 

Thro'  that  d  which  you  brought  upon  us.  Prom,  of  May  in  765 

Dishonom  (verb)     you  that  d  The  daughters  and  wives  of 

your  own  faction —  Foresters  iv  697 

Dishonour'd     Disgraced,  d  ! — not  by  them.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  200 

old  man.  Seven-fold  d  even  in  the  sight  Of  thine 

own  sectaries —  „  v  v  133 

1  have  not  d  thee — I  trust  I  have  not ;  Becket  i  i  354 

Dislocation     And  lamed  and  maim'd  to  d,  „   iv  ii  267 

Disloyal    Yet  there  be  some  d  Catholics,  Queen  Mary  m  iv  42 

Disobedience    and  grief  For  our  long  schism  and  cZ,  „        in  iii  129 

Disobey     and  that  you  might  not  seem  To  d  his  HoUness.      „  v  ii  53 

Dispense     the  Pope  could  d  with  hLs  Cardinalate,  „  i  i  127 

Displace     Place  and  d  our  councilloi-s,  „  ii  ii  160 

Displease     sheathe  your  swords,  ye  will  d  the  King.  Becket  i  iii  179 

l""or  whatsoever  may  d  him —  „      ii  ii  162 

Something  that  would  d  me.  „       in  i  245 

If  the  phrase  '  Return '  d  you,  we  will  say—  The  Falcon  729 

Dispoped     From  one  whom  they  d  ?  Harold  in  i  107 

Dispossessed     thou  art  d  of  all  thy  lands,  goods,  and 

chattels ;  Foresters  i  iii  59 

Disruption     shake  the  North  With  earthquake  and  d —  Harold  i  ii  200 

Dissemble     D  not;  play  the  plain  Christian  man.         Queen  Mary  iv  iii  267 

I  did  d,  but  the  hour  has  come  For  utter  truth 

and  plainness ;  „  iv  iii  272 

Dissembler    Liar  !  d !  traitor !  to  the  fire !  „  iv  iii  259 

Dissoluteness     om*  John  By  his  Nonnan  arrogance  and  d.     Foresters  ii  i  85 

Dissolved     The  bond  between  the  kingiloms  be  d ;         Queen  Mary  iii  ui  11 

The  worldly  bond  between  us  is  d,  Becket  i  i  347, 


ll 


Dissonance 


891 


DoU 


Dissonance    The  weakness  and  the  d  of  our  clans.  The  Cup  i  i  23 

Distance     in  the  eternal  d  To  settle  on  the  Truth.  Harold  iii  ii  102 

1  lur  prophet  hopes  Let  in  the  happy  d.  The  Cnp  i  ii  414 

This  poor,  flat,  hedged-in  field — no  d —  Prom,  of  May  ii  344 

what  full  hands,  may  be  Waiting  you  in  the  rf  ?  „  n  511 

Distaste    Philip  Mith  a  glance  of  some  d,  Queen  Mary  in  i  99 

Distracted    I  could  hate  her  for  it  But  that  she  is  d.  The  Cup  ii  179 

Distress     Queen  in  that  d  Sent  Cornwallis  and  Hastings  Qiieen  Mary  n  ii  30 

Distrust     Philip  and  Mary !     Gardiner.     I  d  thee.  „         mi  310 

Disturb     no  more  feuds  D  our  peaceful  vassalage  to  Rome.      The  Cup  ii  71 

Disturbance    such  brawls  and  louil  d's  In  England,  Becket  v  ii  352 

Loud  d's  !     Oh,  ay — the  bells  rang  out  ..      v  ii  362 

Ditch    hog  hath  tumbled  himself  into  some  corner.  Some  d,       ..        i  i  371 

Divers    D  honest  fellows,  The  Duke  of  Suffolk  lately 

freed  from  prison.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  119 

hath  trespassed  against  the  king  in  d  mannei'S,  Foresters  i  iii  64 

Diverse     But  Janus-faces  looking  d  ways.  Queen  Mai-y  m  ii  75 

Divide    that  do  d  The  world  of  nature ;  .,  m  v  120 

God  gave  us  to  d  us  from  the  m  olf !  Harold  iv  iii  101 

moon  D^s  the  whole  long  street  with  light  and  shade.         Becket  i  i  365 

D  me  from  the  mother  church  of  England,  My  Canterbiuy.  ,,    v  ii  360 

Divided     (tho'  some  say  they  be  much  d)  Queen  Mary  i  i  79 

so  this  unhappy  land,  long  d  in  itself,  ,,  i  iii  21 

Like  our  Council,  Your  city  is  d.  „         ii  ii  60 

So  I  say  Your  city  is  d,  „         ii  ii  99 

Dividing    See  Sharp-dividing 

Divil  (devil)     niver  'a  been  talkin'  haiife  an  hour  wi' 

the  d  'at  killed  her  oan  sist«r,  Prom,  of  May  ii  604 

we'd  as  lief  talk  o'  the  D  afoor  ye  as  'im,  ,.  in  130 

you'll  set  the  D's  Tower  a-spitting,  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  102 

Division     With  earthquake  and  disruption^ — some  d —  Harold  i  ii  201 

Divoice    lie  Of  good  Queen  Catharine's  d —  Queen  Mary  m  iv  232 

when  I  forget  Her  foul  d — my  sainted  mother — • 

No  !—  ..  IV  i  81 

when  the  King's  d  was  sued  at  Home,  ..  iv  iii  41 

Divorced  (adj.)    Cast  off,  betray'd,  defamed,  d,  forlorn  !  i  v  26 

Divorced  (verb)     I,  that  thro'  the  Pope  d  King  Louis,  Becket  iv  ii  417 

you  d  Queen  Catharine  and  her  father ;  Queen  Mary  i  ii  56 

Dimied    See  Brainndizzied 
Dizziness    you  were  sick  in  Flanders,  cousin.      Pole. 

A  d.  Queen.  Mary  ill  ii  35 

Dizzying     I  have  a  d  headache.     Let  me  rest.  Becket  v  i  88 

Doat    Should  we  so  d  on  courage,  were  it  commoner  ?  Queen  Mary  n  ii  339 
not  old  enough  To  d  on  one  alone.  I'he  Cup  i  iii  70 

Doated     And  how  you  d  on  him  then  !  Becket  ni  i  16 

Dobbins  (Edgar's  mistake  for  Dobson)    D,  1  think. 

Dohson.     D,  you  thinks ;  Prom,  of  May  i  459 

that  D,  is  it,  With  whom  I  used  to  jar  ?  ii  612 

May  not  this  B,  or  some  other,  spy  Edgar  in  Harold  ?  ..         ii  673 

D,  I  think.     Dohson.     I  beant  T).  ..         ii  699 

My  name  is  Harold.     Good  day,  D\  ,.        n  727 

Naay,  but '  Good  daay,  D:  ..        ii  732 

'  Good  daay,  D.'     Dang  tha  !  ..         ii  742 

Dobson  (a  fanner)    (See  also  Dobbins)    I'm  coming 

down,  Mr.  D.  ..  1 46 

In  Cumberland,  Mr.  D.  „  1 66 

Getting  better,  Mr.  D.  „  1 69 

The  owd  man  be  heighty  to-daay,  beant  he  ?     Dora. 

Yes,  Mr.  D.  ,.  1 78 

Where  do  they  blow,  Mr.  D?  „  1 88 

What,  Mr.  D?     A  butcher's  frock ?  „  1 93 

Perhaps,  Master  D.     I  can't  tell,  ..  i  114 

Master  D,  did  you  hear  what  I  said  ?  „  1 171 

Very  likely,  Mr.  D.     She  will  break  fence.  ,,  i  193 

Nor  I  either,  Mr.  D.  „         1 237 

But  I  have  Mr.  D.     It's  the  old  Scripture  text,  „  i  258 

D.     Edgar.     Good  day,  then,  D.  .,  1 298 

'  Good  daay  then,  D  ! '    Civil-spoken  i'dfied !  ..  i  300 

You  never  find  one  for  me,  Mr.  D.  „         i  306 

Beant  there  house-breakers  down  in  Littlechester,  D —         „  i  389 

Yes,  Mr.  D,  I've  been  attending  on  his  deathbed  ..  u  3 

Hesn't  he  lef  t  ye  nowt  ?     Dora.     No,  Mr. />.  ,.  ii8 

Cannot  you  vmderstand  plain  words,  Mr.  D?  ,.        n  113 

That  is  enough.  Farmer  D.  ,.        n  118 

you  would  still  have  been.  Farmer  Z>.  „         n  122 


Dobson  (a  farmer)  (continued)    '  Farmer  D  ! '    Well,  I 

be  Farmer  D ;  but  I  thinks  Fanner  D's  dog         Prom,  of  May  ii  124 
Farmer  D  [     I  be  Farmer  D,  sewer  anew ;  „  n  135 

why  then  I  beant  Farmer  D,  but  summuu  else —  „  n  139 

an'  owd  D  should  be  glad  on  it.  „  ii  146 

fur  owd  D  '11  gi'e  us  a  bit  o'  supper.     Sally.     1  weant 

goa  to  owd  D;  „  II 216 

Owd  Steer  gi'es  nubbut  cowd  tea  to  'is  men,  and  owd 
D  gi'es  beer.  Sally.  But  I'd  like  owd  Steer's  cowd 
tea  better  nor  D's  beer.  ,.  ii  225 

when  owd  D  coom'd  upo'  us  ?  ,.  ii  232 

Sally  Allen,  you  worked  for  Mr.  D,  didn't  you?  „         iii  102 

Farmer  D,  were  I  to  marry  him,  has  promised  „         ni  168 

Mr.  D  telled  me  to  saay  he  s  browt  some  of  Miss  Eva's  roses  „  in  345 
This  D  of  your  idyU  ?  „         m  563 

Doctor     Or  a  high-dropsy,  as  the  d's  call  it.  Queen  Mary  in  ii  225 

the  d's  tell  you.  At  three-score  years ;  „  in  iv  408 

Ay,  ay,  but  mighty  d's  doubted  there.  „  iv  i  83 

Tell  them  to  fly  for  a  d.  Prom,  of  May  m  712 

Doctrine    hatred  of  the  d's  Of  those  who  rule,  Queefti  Mary  in  iv  159 

and  retract  That  Eucharistic  d  in  your  book.  „  rv  ii  81 

With  all  his  devil's  d's ;  „  iv  iii  278 

Dodge    Thou  knowest  we  had  to  d,  or  duck,  or  die ;  „  ni  iv  357 

And  see  you,  we  shall  have  to  d  again,  „  m  iv  360 

Doe     I  found  this  white  d  wandering  thro'  the  wood,  Foresters  n  i  95 

Dofft     For  he,  when  having  d  the  Chancellor's  robe —  Becket  i  iii  454 

Dog     (See  also  House-dog)     as  a  mastiff  d  May  love  a 

puppy  cur  for  no  more  reason  Queen  Mary  i  iv  194 

And  roUs  himself  in  carrion  like  a,  d.  „  i  v  169 

boil'd,  buried  alive,  worried  by  d's ;  „  n  i  211 

'  The  Queen  of  England  is  delivered  of  a  dead  dl'  „  in  ii  220 

sends  His  careful  d  to  bring  them  to  the  fold.  „         m  iv  105 

if  a  mad  d  bit  your  hand,  my  Lord,  „         m  iv  204 

Like  d's  that  set  to  watch  their  master's  gate,  ,,         in  iv  309 

The  d  that  snapt  the  shadow,  dropt  the  bone. —  Harold  i  ii  188 

play  the  note  Whereat  the  d  shall  howl  and  run,  ,,       i  ii  192 

d,  with  thy  lying  lights  Thou  hast  betray'd  us  „        n  i  21 

—d's'  food  thrown  upon  thy  head.  .■     u  ii  431 

Better  to  be  a  liar's  d,  and  hold  Mv  master  honest,  ,.     iii  i  124 

Old  d,  Thou  art  drunk,  olddl        "  ,.   iv  iii  163 

Good  d's,  my  liege,  well  train'd,  Becket,  Pro.  119 

a  feeder  Of  d's  and  hawks,  and  apes,  and  Uons,  „  i  i  80 

may  I  come  in  with  my  poor  friend,  my  d?  „  i  iv  94 

The  d  followed  his  calling,  my  lord.  ,,  i  iv  97 

Better  thy  d  than  thee.     The  King's  courts  would  use 

thee  worse  than  thy  d —  „         i  iv  101 

Who  misuses  a  d  would  misuse  a  child — •  „         i  iv  109 

Away,  d  !     Beggar.     And  I  was  bit  by  a  mad  d  o' 

Friday,  an'  I  be  half  d  „         i  iv  216 

Shame  fall  on  those  who  gave  it  a  d's  name —  „  n  i  141 

Let  either  cast  him  away  like  a  dead  d\  ..         ii  ii  257 

The  d  I  cramm'd  with  dainties  worried  me  !  ,,  v  i  244 

whole  world  Abhor  you ;  ye  will  die  the  deatli  of  d's  !  „  v  iii  184 
two-legg'd  d's  Among  us  who  can  smell  a  true  occasion,  2'he  Cup  i  ii  112 
Adulterous  d  !     Synorix.     What !  will  you  have  it  ?  „       i  iii  108 

'  Adulterous  d  ! '  that  red-faced  rage  at  me  !  „       i  iii  122 

Farmer  Dobson's  d  'ud  ha'  knaw'd  better  nor  to 

cast  Prom,  of  May  ii  126 

and  we  be  d's  that  have  only  the  bones.  Foresters  i  i  25 

Robin,  like  a  deer  from  a  d,  ,,      ii  i  433 

if  we  kill  a  stag,  our  d's  have  their  paws  cut  off,  ..        iv  225 

Dog-Dons     These  black  d-D  Garb  themselves  bravely.  Queen  Mary  in  i  189 

Dogma    Whose  d's  I  have  reach'd :  „  iv  ii  212 

they  swarm  into  the  fire  Like  flies — ^for  what  ?  no  d.         ,,  v  ii  112 

Dogstar    and  all  Your  trouble  to  the  d  and  the  devil.  „  i  iv  292 

Doin'     it  be  the  Lord's  d,  noan  o'  mine ;  Prom,  of  May  in  49 

Doing  (part.)     (See  also  A-doing)    for  d  that  His  father 

whipt  him  into  d —  Queen  Mary  i  v  62 

O  brother.  What  art  thou  d  here  ?  Harold  iv  ii  4 

The  Norman,  What  is  he  d  ?  „     v  i  218 

What  art  thou  d  here  among  the  dead  ?  „     v  ii  32 

Doing  (s)     (See  also  Doin')     Whose  d's  are  a  horror  to  the 

east,  A  hissing  in  the  west ! '  Becket  iv  ii  244 

Dolefully     then  what  is  it  That  makes  you  talk  so  d?  Prom,  of  May  in  572 

Doll    some  waxen  d  Thy  baby  eyes  have  rested  on,  Queen  Mary  i  v  8 


Doll-face 


892 


Down 


Doll-face    A  d-f  blanch'd  and  bloodless,  Becket  iv  ii  175 

Domed    gulf  and  flatten  in  her  closing  chasm  D  cities,  hear.    The  Cup  ii  301 

Domine    illorum,  D,  Scutum  scindatur !  Harold  v  i  508 

lUos  trucida,  B.  „      v  i  515 

Dominion    realm  Of  England,  and  d's  of  the  same,     Queen  Mary  in  iii  117 

all  the  resdm  And  its  d's  from  aU  heresy,  „          in  iii  216 

To  leave  the  Pope  d  in  the  West.  Harold  v  i  23 

Don  Carlos    See  Carlos 

Doom  (s)    some  great  d  when  God's  just  hour  Peals —  Queen  Mary  i  iv  261 

Into  the  deathless  hell  which  is  their  d  .,          in  ii  175 

And  by  the  churchman's  pitiless  d  of  fire,  „           in  iv  49 

Reversed  his  d,  and  that  you  might  not  seem  „             v  ii  51 

Hapless  d  of  woman  happy  in  betrothing  !  „           v  ii  364 

mean  The  d  of  England  and  the  wrath  of  Heaven  ?  Harold  i  i  46 

War  there,  my  son  ?  is  that  the  d  of  England  ?  „     i  i  125 

Why  not  the  d  of  all  the  world  as  well  ?  „      i  i  127 

Crying  '  the  d  of  England,'  and  at  once  He  stood  „  in  i  134 

along  the  highest  crying  '  The  d  of  England  ! ' —  .,  in  i  157 
Blaze  like  a  night  of  fatal  stars  on  those  Who  read  their 

d  and  die.  ..   iv  i  252 

And  bide  the  d  of  God.  „      v  i  61 

If  I  faU,  I  fall— The  d  of  God  !  .,     v  i  136 

And  not  on  thee — nor  England— fall  God's  dl  ,.     v  i  371 

And  front  the  d  of  God.  „    v  i  436 

the  man  shall  seal,  Or  I  will  seal  his  d.  Becket  i  iii  331 

Dark  as  my  d —  „     ni  i  282 

To  draw  you  and  your  husband  to  your  d.  The  Cup  i  ii  223 

thy  d  and  mine — Thou — coming  my  way  too — ■  „           ii  490 

Doom  (verb)     stroke  that  d's  thee  after  death  To  wail  Becket  iv  ii  270 

Doomsday  (adj.)     Were  the  great  trumpet  blowng  d  dawn,     Harold  v  i  227 

Doomsday  (s)     Till  d  melt  it.  Qv£en  Mary  in  v  51 

Door    (See  also  Hall-door,  In-door,  Within-door)    The 

traitor  husband  dangled  at  the  d,  ,,           in  i  10 

hath  the  d  Shut  on  him  by  the  father  whom  he  loved,  „           v  ii  121 

tell  the  cooks  to  close  The  d's  of  all  the  offices  below.  „           v  v  117 

arm'd  men  Ever  keep  watch  beside  my  chamber  d,  Harold  n  ii  245 

clench'd  their  pirate  hides  To  the  bleak  church  d's,  „       rv  iii  37 

move  as  true  with  me  To  the  d  of  death.  „       v  ii  186 

I  saw  that  d  Close  even  now  upon  the  woman.  Becket  i  i  202 
when  he  hears  a  d  open  in  the  house  and  thinks  '  the 

master.'  ■•  ni  iii  98 

Thro'  all  closed  d's  a  dreadful  whisper  crept  „      v  ii  88 

No,  look  !  the  d  is  open :  let  him  be.  „    v  ii  315 

Battering  the  d's,  and  breaking  thro'  the  walls  ?  ,.    v  ii  626 

Shut  the  d's  !     We  will  not  have  him  slain  ..     v  iii  53 

Fly,  fly,  my  lord,  before  they  burst  the  d's\  .,     v  iii  57 

Undo  the  d's :  the  church  is  not  a  castle :  ,.     v  iii  62 

Take  thou  this  cup  and  leave  it  at  her  d's.  The  Cup  i  i  68 

In  the  gray  dawn  before  the  Temple  d's.  ..     i  ii  295 

this  d  Opens  upon  the  forest !     Out,  begone  !  >    ^  I!  ^^8 

His  own  true  people  cast  him  from  their  d's  „    i  ii  352 

close  not  yet  the  d  upon  a  night  That  looks  half  day.  „    i  ii  387 

Fling  wide  the  d's  and  let  the  new-made  children  „       ii  163 

She — close  the  Temple  d.    Let  her  not  fly.  „       n  460 

and  dipt  your  sovereign  head  Thro'  these  low  d's.  The  Falcon  868 
Push'd  from  all  d's  as  if  we  bore  the  plague.           From,  of  May  m  804 

As  Wealth  walk'd  in  at  the  d.  Foresters  i  i  151 

Poverty  crept  thro'  the  d.  „          i  i  157 

Not  while  the  rivulet  babbles  by  the  d,  „         i  ii  322 

open,  or  I  will  drive  the  d  from  the  door-post.  „        n  i  220 

Why  did  ye  keep  us  at  the  d  so  long  ?  „        ii  i  224 

Door-post    open,  or  I  will  drive  the  door  from  the  d-p.  „        ii  i  220 

I  will  fasten  thee  to  thine  own  d-p  „        ii  i  403 

Doorway    when  every  d  blush'd,  Dash'd  red  Becket  i  iii  346 

Dora  (daughter  of  Farmer  Steer)    (See  also  Dora  Steer) 

an'  Miss  D,  an'  Miss  Eva,  an'  all !  Prom,  of  May  1 11 

Miss  D  be  coomed  back,  then  ?  ,,            1 12 

Blessings  on  your  pretty  voice.  Miss  D.  „            i  64 

Theer  be  redder  blossoms  nor  them,  Miss  D.  „           i  86 

Under  your  eyes,  Miss  D.  „            1 89 

Noa,  Miss  D ;  as  blue  as —  (repeat)  „      i  95,  99 

He'll  be  arter  you  now,  Miss  D.  „          1 119 
And  I  tells  ye  what,  Miss  D:  he's  no  respect  for  the 

Queen,  „          1 131 

I  thank  you  for  that.  Miss  D,  oiiyhow.  „          1 158 


Dora  (daughter  of  Farmer  Steer)  (continiied)    They  say 

yom-  sister,  D,  has  retum'd.  Prom,  of  May  i  546 

Oh,  Z>,  D,  how  long  you  have  been  away  from  home !  „         i  767 

So  the  owd  uncle  i'  Coomberland  be  dead,  Miss  D,  n  2 

Not  like  me,  Miss  B ;  and  I  ha'  browt  these  roses  to  ye —  u  13 

and  now  she  be  gone,  will  ye  taake 'em.  Miss  Z)  ?  n  21 

an'  weant  ye  taake  'em  now,  Miss  I),  n  41 

I  feel  sewer,  Miss  B,  that  I  ha'  been  noan  too  sudden  wi'  you.  ..  n  60 

'  Dearest  B, — I  have  lost  myself,  .,  ii  83 

Are  you — you  are — that  B,  The  sister.  ..        n  363 

Miss  B,  Dan  Smith's  cart  hes  runned  ower  a  laady  ..        n  567 

What  feller  wur  it  as  'a'  been  a-talkin'  fur  haafe  an  hour 

wi'  my  B?  „        u  576 

a-plaayin'  the  saaine  gaame  wi'  my  B —  „        n  591 

— a  daughter  of  the  fields.  This  Bl  „        n  624 

if  ye  be  goin'  to  sarve  our  Z>  as  ye  sai-ved  our  Eva —  ..        ii  692 

What  hasta  been  saayin'  to  my  B?  ..        u  704 

thou  hesn't  naw  business  'ere  with  my  B,  as  1  knaws  on,  ,,  n  736 
Miss  B,  mea  and  my  maates,  us  three,  we  wants  to  hev 

three  words  wi'  ye.  ,,       m  124 

Has  anyone  found  me  out,  B?  ..in  225 

See  B ;  you  yourself  are  shamed  of  me,  ,,       m  268 

and  I  love  him  so  much —     Eva.    Poor  Bl  ..       ni  286 

0  B,  he  signed  himself  '  Yours  gratefully ' — ^fancy,  B,  ..  m  333 
Hark  !  B,  some  one  is  coming.  ..  in  339 
Oh,  B,B\  .;  in  425 
Miss  B !  Miss  B I  Bora.  Quiet !  quiet !  ..  in  475 
You  are  pale,  my  B  !  but  the  ruddiest  cheek  ,.  in  486 
B,  If  marriage  ever  brought  a  woman  happiness  .,  in  638 
OB,Bl                                                                                    ..       ui  787 

Dora  Steer  (See  also  Dora)  doant  tha  knaw  he  be  sweet  upo'  BS,  ii  161 

kill'd  her  oan  sister,  or  she  beant  B  S.  n  605 

Dotage    love  her  less  For  such  a  d  upon  such  a  man.     Queen  Mary  v  ii  421 

Stigand,  unriddle  This  vision,  canst  thou  ?   Stigand.   B  !   Harold  in  i  176 

Dote    Many  so  d  upon  this  bubble  world,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  168 

The  old  man  d^s.  Foresters  ii  ii  83 

And  loves  and  d's  on  every  duigle  of  it.  ,,         iv  390 

Doted     bad  the  king  Who  d  on  him,  Harold  iv  i  103 

Doter     A  d  on  white  pheasant-flesh  at  feasts,  Becket,  Pro.  97 

Double  (adj.)    this  d  thundercloud  That  lours  on  England —   Harold  in  ii  159 

Double  (s)    Fight  thou  with  thine  own  d,  not  with  me,  „      iv  iii  168 

would  dare  the  chance  Of  d,  or  losing  all.  The  Cup  i  iii  148 

Doubly     1  a,md  bound  to  thee  .  .  .  Harold  n  ii  557 

Doubt  (s)     he  brought  his  d's  And  feai-s  to  me.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  75 

Which  f oimd  me  full  of  foolish  d's,  „         i  v  530 

but  there  are  d's.  „       u  ii  307 

all  my  d's  I  fling  from  me  like  dust,  Becket  i  i  148 

Doubt  (verb)     I  <£  it  not,  Madam,  most  loyal.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  2i8 

B  not  they  will  be  speedily  overthrown.  „  n  ii  200 

1  not  d  that  God  will  give  me  strength,  „  iv  ii  234 
lest  anyone  among  you  d  The  man's  conversion  „  iv  iii  107 
I  cannot  d  but  that  he  comes  again ;  „  \-  v  26 
Thanks,  truthful  Earl;  I  did  not  d  thy  word,  Harold  ii  ii  724 
what  is  it  you  d  ?  Behold  your  peace  at  hand.  -ffee/ce/ ii  ii  199 
Wherefore  should  you  d  it  ?  The  Cup  i  ii  340 
I  d  not  they  are  yours.  The  Falcrm  721 
I  d  not,  I  d  not,  and  though  I  be  down  in  the  mouth,     Foresters  i  ii  43 

Doubted     ay,  but  mighty  doctors  d  there.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  84 

Dough     household  d  was  kneaded  up  mth  blood ;  Becket  i  iii  351 

Dove    (See  also  Stock-dove)    d,  who  flutters  Between  thee 

and  the  porch,  Harold  iv  i  230 

But  since  the  fondest  pair  of  d's  will  jar,  Becket  iv  ii  40 

Dovecote    Our  d  flown  !     I  cannot  tell  why  monks  ..     v  ii  580 

Dover     Your  Majesty  shall  go  to  B  with  me,  Queen  Mary  in  vi  218 

To  B?  no,  I  am  too  feeble.  „  in  vi  220 

On  all  the  road  from  B,  day  and  night ;  „  v  ii  577 

We  could  not  move  from  B  to  the  Humber  Harold  ii  ii  536 

They  stood  on  B  beach  to  murder  me,  Becket  v  ii  436 

Down  (adj.)     (See  also  Deep-down)     and  bursten  at  the 

toes,  and  d  at  heels.  Queen  Mary  i  i  53 

ha  !  he  is  d  !     Edith.     He  d.     Who  d  ?     Stigand.     The 

Noniaan  Count  is  d.  Harold  v  i  551 

Down  (bed)     like  a  careless  sleeper  in  the  d ;  Forester.^  i  i  207 

And  make  B  for  their  heads  to  heaven !  Queen  Mary  v  iv  8 

Down  (hill)     Breathe  the  free  wind  from  off  our  Saxon  d's,  Harold  ii  ii  18' 


1 


Downfall 


893 


Drench'd 


Downiall    The  d  of  so  many  simple  souk, 
Downfallen    d  and  debased  From  councillor  to  caitifE- 
Down-silvering    The  rosy  face,  and  long  d-s  beard, 

The  rosy  face,  and  long  d-s  beard — 
Down-sweeping    d-s  to  the  chain.  Wherewith  they 

bound  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  594 

Downward    One  d  plunge  of  his  paw  would  rend  away  Becket  iv  ii  283 

Doze     He  d's.     I  have  left  her  watching  him.  Foresters  n  ii  80 

Dozed     I  d  upon  the  bridge,  and  the  black  river  Prom,  of  May  ii  649 

Dozen    ('SVe  also  Half-dozen)     And  drunken  of  my  cup  for 
a  d  years. 

a-peacocking  and  a-spreading  to  catch  her  eye  for  a  d 
year, 
Drag     To  d  us  with  them.     Fishermen?  devils  ! 

would  d  The  cleric  before  the  civil  judgment-seat, 

Nay,  d  me  not.     We  must  not  seem  to  fly. 

I  wUl  not  only  touch,  but  d  thee  hence. 

The  women  of  the  Temple  d  her  in. 

I'd  like  to  d  'im  thruff  the  herse-pond,  and  she  to 
be  a-lookin'  at  it. 

They  d  the  river  for  her  !  no,  not  they  ! 

if  you  care  to  d  your  brains  for  such  a  minnow. 
Dragg'd    Who  d  the  scatter'd  limbs  into  their  den. 

and  we  d  The  Littlechester  river  all  in  vain : 
Dcagon    Our  Wessex  d  flies  beyond  the  Humber, 

Set  forth  our  golden  D, 

by  the  d  of  St.  George,  we  shall  Do  some  injustice, 
Dtain    And  d's  the  heart  and  marrow  from  a  man. 
Drain'd    thou  hast  d  them  shallow  by  thy  tolls, 

I  have  almost  d  the  cup — A  few  drops  left. 
Oranght    {See  also  Sleeping-drau^t)     Brain-dizzied 
with  a.doi  morning  ale. 

they  de-miracled  the  miraculous  d, 

No  not  a  <i!  of  milk,  no  not  an  egg, 

drink  Her  health  along  with  us  in  this  rich  d, 


d  and  crack'd  His  boat  on  Ponthieu 


Slave    (See  also  Drove) 

beach ; 
Draw    d  back  your  heads  and  your  horns  before  I  break 
them, 

JD  with  your  sails  from  our  poor  land, 

where  Edward  d's  A  faint  foot  hither. 

To  d  him  nearer  with  a  charm  Like  thine  to  thine. 

D  nearer, — I  was  in  the  corridor, 

JD  thou  to  London,  there  make  strength 

but  this  D's  thro'  the  chart  to  her. 

Did  not  your  barons  d  their  swords  against  me  ? 

we  pray  you,  d  yourself  from  under  The  wings  of  France. 

lest  ye  should  d  together  like  two  ships  in  a  calm. 

To  a  you  and  your  husband  to  your  doom. 

d's  From  you,  and  from  my  constancy  to  you. 

If  thou  d  one  inch  nearer, 

I  will  not  harm  thee.     D  ! 

'tis  but  to  see  if  thou  canst  fence.    D  ! 
Drawbridge    I'll  have  the  d  hewn  into  the  Thames, 

They  had  hewn  the  d  down  into  the  river. 


Queen  Mary  i  ii  54 

„        IV  iii  74 

Harold  in  i  46 

„    IV  i  261 


Becket  i  iv  30 

The  Falcon  101 

Harold  n  i  28 

Becket  i  iii  83 

„    vii636 

„  V  iii  152 

The  Cup  I  iii  118 


Prom,  of  May  n  593 

III  694 

Foresters  ii  i  323 

Queen  Mary  i  v  401 

Prom,  of  May  ii  413 

Harold  rv  i  3 

„  IV  i  245 

Foresters  rv  939 

„      II  i  672 

Harold  I  i  319 

The  Cup  n  385 

Queen  Mary  n  i  71 
Becket  iii  iii  124 
The  Falcon  871 
Foresters  in  352 


Harold  n  ii  34 

Queen  Mary  i  i  4 

„  III  vi  226 

Harold  I  i  143 

I  ii  7 

„    nii345 

„     V  i  126 

Becket,  Pro.  173 

I  iii  501 

n  ii  247 

m  iii  297 

The  Cup  I  ii  222 

The  Falcon  811 

Foresters  i  i  145 

.,      n  i  556 

„      n  i  573 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  376 

n  iii  18 

Foresters  i  i  319 


I  would  hoist  the  d,  like  thy  mast«r. 

Drawing-room    shamed  of  his  poor  farmer's  daughter 

among  the  ladies  in  his  d-r  ?  Prom,  of  May  iii  295 

Shamed  of  me  in  a  d-r !  (repeat)  „    m  296,  307 

Dnwl'd    fat  fool !     He  d  and  prated  so,  Harold  rv  ii  41 

Drawn    Will  he  be  <i  to  her  ?  Queen  Mary  i  v  73 

fain  have  some  fresh  treaty  d  between  you.  ,.        i  v  261 

I  say  they  have  d  the  fire  On  their  own  heads :  „     rv  iii  379 

In  some  dark  closet,  some  long  gallery,  d,  „       v  ii  218 

With  both  her  knees  d  upward  to  her  chin.  „       v  ii  391 

hath  mainly  d  itself  From  lack  of  Tostig —  Harold  m  i  167 

fill'd  the  quiver,  and  Death  has  d  the  bow —  „      in  i  401 

Hast  not  thou  d  the  short  straw  ?  Becket  i  iv  3 

not  life  shot  up  in  blood.  But  death  d  in  ;—  „  rv  ii  382 

We  are  almost  at  the  bottom  of  the  well ;  little 
more  to  be  i  from  it —  Prom,  of  May  m  162 

Dread  (adj.)     And  hurl  the  d  ban  of  the  Church  on  those      Becket  m  iii  210 

Dread  (s)    not  for  d  Of  these  alone,  but  from  the  fear 

of  Him  Quee^i  Mary  iv  iii  178 

Dread  (verb)    lied  like  a  lad  That  d's  the  pendent  scourge,    Harold  n  ii  658 


Dread  (verb)  (continued)    They  fear  you  slain :  they  d  they 

know  not  what.  Becket  v  ii  600 

Dreadful    And  d  shadows  strove  upon  the  hill,  Harold  in  i  377 

0  God  !  some  d  truth  is  breaking  on  me — Some  d  thing 

is  coming  on  me.  Becket  in  i  265 

Thro'  all  closed  doors  a  d  whisper  crept  „  v  ii  88 
Left  but  one  d,  line  to  say,  that  we  Should  find  her 

in  the  river ;  Prom,  of  May  ii  411 

that  d  night !  that  lonely  walk  to  Littlechester,  „           ni  366 

Dreading    But  d  God's  revenge  upon  this  reahn  Harold  i  i  172 
Dream  (s)    (See  also  Day-dream,  Love-dream)    men-at- 
arms  Guard  my  poor  d's  for  England.                     Queen  Mary  i  v  154 

It  was  a,  d;  1  must  not  dream,  not  wink,  „         in  v  153 

they  come  back  upon  my  d's.  „          v  ii  189 

Wide  of  the  mark  ev'n  for  a  madman's  d.  „           v  iii  82 

Nor  let  Priests'  talk,  or  d  of  worlds  to  be,  „          v  v  217 

if  yon  weird  sign  Not  blast  us  in  our  d's. — *  Harold  i  i  122 

An  evil  d  that  ever  came  and  went —  „       i  ii  70 

what  a  d !     Harold.    Well,  well,— a  d — no  more  !  „      i  ii  91 

Did  not  Heaven  speak  to  men  in  d's  of  old ?  „       iii  95 

Thou  hast  misread  this  merry  d  of  thine,  ,.       r  ii  98 

Come,  thou  shalt  dream  no  more  such  d's ;  ,.     i  ii  108 

upon  thine  eyelids,  to  shut  in  A  happier  d.  ,.     i  ii  127 

Our  living  passion  for  a  dead  man's  d;  .,  m  ii  60 
Last  night  King  Edward  came  to  me  in  d's — 

(repeat)  Harold  iv  i  259,  266 

1  am  no  woman  to  put  faith  in  d's.  „  iv  i  264 
by  dead  Norway  without  d  or  dawn !  „  iv  iii  122 
only  d's — where  mine  own  self  Takes  part  „  v  i  298 
My  fatal  oath — the  dead  Saints- — the  dark  d's —  „  v  i  381 
D,  Or  prophecy,  that  ?  Becket  i  i  55 
Well,  d  and  prophecy  both.  ..  i  i  57 
thou  my  golden  d  of  Love's  own  bower,  ..  n  i  34 
Bright  as  my  d,  ..mi  278 
my  d  foretold  my  martyrdom  In  mine  own  church.  ,,  v  ii  632 
the  black  river  Flow'd  thro'  my  d's — if  d's  they 

were.  Prom,  of  May  n  651 

which  is  my  d  of  a  true  marriage.  „         m  179 

I  have  freed  myself  From  all  such  d's  „         in  595 
Dream  (verb)     It  was  a  dream  ;  I  must  not  d,  not 

wink.  Queen  Mary  m  v  154 

He  cannot  d  that  /  advised  the  war ;  „              v  ii  57 

Come,  thou  shalt  d  no  more  such  dreams ;  Harold  i  ii  108 

Good-night,  and  d  thyself  Their  chosen  Earl.  „       i  ii  248 

Who  knows  I  may  not  d  myself  their  king !  „       i  ii  251 

He  sees  me  not — and  yet  he  d's  of  me,  „      n  ii  144 

I  did  not  d  then  I  should  be  king. —  ,.      m  i  270 

king  can  scarcely  d  that  we,  who  know  „      iv  i  163 

Tell  him  the  Saints  are  nobler  than  he  d's,  ,.         v  i  56 

that  none  may  <i!  I  go  against  God's  honour —  Becket  n  ii  167 

D  of  it,  then,  all  the  way  back.  Foresters  i  i  140 

to  d  that  he  My  brother,  my  dear  Walter —  „      n  i  651 

You  dared  to  d  That  our  great  Earl,  „      n  i  685 

I  fear  Id.  „      rv  1010 
Dream'd    who  d  us  blanketed  In  ever-closing  fog.          Queen  Mary  m  ii  19 

Not  d  of  by  the  rabidest  gospeller.  „        m  vi  138 

Last  night,  I  d  the  faggots  were  alight,  „  iv  ii  1 
and  I  d  that  I  loved  Louis  of  France :  and  I  loved 

Henry  of  England,  and  Henry  of  England  d  that 

he  loved  me : 
D  that  twelve  stars  fell  glittering  out  of  heaven 
who  never  saw  nor  d  of  such  a  banquet. 
I  had  d  I  was  the  bride  of  England,  and  a  queen, 
while  you  d  you  were  the  bride  of  England, — 
I  dl  was  the  consort  of  a  king. 
This  mountain  shepherd  never  d  of  Rome, 
tear  it  all  to  pieces,  never  d  Of  acting  on  it. 
Who  knows  that  he  had  ever  d  of  flying  ? 


Becket,  Pro.  356 

ii46 

iiv84 

vil02 

vil04 

vil44 

The  Cwp  I  ii  17 

„      I  ii  247 

Prom,  of  May  i  654 

cuirass  in  this  forest  where  I  d  That  all  was  peace —      Foresters  rv  130 

Dreaming    old  enough  To  scare  me  into  d,  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  103 

I  am  cZ ;  for  the  past  Look'd  thro'  the  present,        Prom,  of  May  n  639 

I  was  d  of  it  all  the  way  hither.  Foresters  i  i  139 

Dree  (three)    and  awaay  betimes  wi'  d  hard  eggs  for 

a  good  pleace  at  the  bumin' ;  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  489 

Drench'd    then  he  dash'd  and  d.  He  dyed,  Harold  m  i  141 


Drench'd 


894 


Dug 


Drench'd  (continued)    Found  him  dead  and  d  in  dew,  Foresters  n  ii  147 

Dress    This  d  was  made  me  as  the  Earl  of  Devon  Queen  Mary  i  iv  72 

I  wear  beneath  my  d  A  shirt  of  mail :  „          i  v  145 

And  what  was  Mary's  d?  „         ni  i  56 

I  was  too  sorry  for  tlie  woman  To  mark  the  d.  „         in  i  59 

An-ange  my  d — the  gorgeous  Indian  shawl  „        v  ii  538 

if  I  hadn't  a  sprig  o'  wickentree  sewn  into  my  d.  Foresters  ii  i  250 


Damn  all  gentlemen, 

Prom,  of  May  n  578 
m204 


Drest    — d  like  a  gentleman,  too. 
says  I ! 

0  graves  in  daisies  d, 
Drew     He  d  this  shaft  against  me  to  the  head,  Queen  Mary  v  ii  80 

Earl,  the  first  Christian  Caesar  d  to  the  East  Harold  v  i  22 

thereupon,  methought.  He  d  toward  me,  Becket  i  i  102 

loveliest  life  that  ever  d  the  light  From  heaven  The  Cup  i  iii  56 

D  here  the  richest  lot  from  Fate,  „         ii  442 

would  not  crush  The  flv  that  d  her  blood  ■  Prom,  of  May  u  494 
Robin  fancied  me  a  man.  And  d  his  sword  upon  me.        Foresters  in  21 

Drewest    And  never  d  sword  to  help  the  old  man  „      n  i  541 

Drift     That  is  your  d.  Queen  Mary  i  v  305 
And  queens  also  !     What  is  your  <Z  ?     Becket.     My 

d  is  to  the  Castle,  Becket  i  ii  82 

1  see  your  d  ...  it  may  be  so  .  .  .  „  v  i  82 
Drill  how  should  thy  one  tooth  d  thro'  this  ?  Foresters  ii  i  276 
Drill-sergeant  yet  are  we  now  d-s  to  his  lordship's  lettuces,  The  Falcon  550 
Drink     thou  could'st  d  in  Spain  if  I  remember.  Qu£en  Mary  ii  i  38 

eat  dead  men's  flesh,  and  d  their  blood.  Harold  n  ii  808 

Z>  to  the  dead  who  died  for  us,  „       rv  iii  69 

tho'  I  can  d  wine  I  cannot  bide  water,  Becket  i  iv  220 
which  the  more  you  d,  The  more  you  thirst — yea — d 

too  much.  The  Cwp  i  iii  139 

That  Synorix  should  d  from  his  own  cup.  .,           ii  353 

They  two  should  d  together  from  one  cup,  „           ii  361 

See  here,  I  fill  it.     Will  you  d,  my  lord  ?  „           ii  367 

make  libation  to  the  Goddess,  And  now  I  d.  „           ii  378 
D  and  d  deep — our  marriage  will  be  fruitful.    D  and 

d  deep,  and  thou  wilt  make  me  happy.  ,,           u  380 

'  Let  us  eat  and  d,  for  to-morrow  we  die.'  Prom,  of  May  i  259 

D  to  the  Lion-heart  Every  one !  Foresters  i  ii  5 

Here,  here — a  cup  of  wine— <i  and  begone  !  „      i  iii  89 

Shall  d  the  health  of  our  new  woodland  Queen.  .,     ni  314 

till  the  green  earth  d  Her  health  along  with  us  „     ui  350 

D  to  the  health  of  our  new  Queen  o'  the  woods,  „      m  368 

We  d  the  health  of  thy  new  Queen  o'  the  woods.  „      in  372 

D  to  the  Queen  o'  the  woods,  „      m  388 

And  lie  with  us  among  the  flowers,  and  d —  „      rv  966 

Drinker    A  d  of  black,  strong,  volcanic  wines,  Queen  Mary  v  ii  93 

Drive    Do  you  mean  to  d  me  mad  ?  „         v  ii  200 

applaud  that  Norman  who  should  d  The  stranger  Harold  n  ii  540 

and  3?et  I  saw  thee  d  him  up  his  hills —  .,       iv  i  211 

he  join'd  with  thee  To  d  me  outlaw'd.  .,        iv  ii  14 

FoUow  them,  follow  them,  d  them  to  the  sea !  „        v  i  602 

Louis  Returning,  ah  !  to  <i  thee  from  his  realm.  Becket  n  ii  418 

as  men  Have  done  on  rafts  of  wreck — it  d's  you  mad.    The  Cu-p  i  iii  142 

and  I'd  d  the  plow  straait  as  a  line  Prom,  of  May  i  369 

open,  or  I  will  d  the  door  from  the  door-post.  Foresters  ii  i  220 

Driven    The  guards  are  all  d  in,  Queen  Mary  n  iv  54 

and  d  back  The  Frenchmen  from  their  trenches  ?  „          v  ii  256 

eat  it  like  the  serpent,  and  be  d  out  of  her  paradise.      Becket,  Pro.  533 

Lifted  our  produce,  d  our  clerics  out —  „        v  ii  432 

mine  own  dagger  d  by  Synorix  found  The  Cwp  ii  86 

Have  our  loud  pastimes  d  them  all  away  ?  Foresters  ii  ii  105 

Driving    it  was  you  that  were  d  the  cart —  Prom,  of  May  ni  87 

Droop    faith  that  seem'd  to  d  will  feel  your  light,  Queen  Mary  ni  iv  22 

You  d  in  your  dim  London.  „            v  ii  609 

Drooping    and  maiden  moon  Our  d  Queen  should  know  !      „  v  ii  457 

Drop  (s)     And  putrid  water,  every  d  a  worm,  „          iv  iii  444 

tho'  the  d  may  hollow  out  the  dead  stone,  Becket  ni  iii  314 

I  have  almost  drain'd  the  cup — A  few  d's  left.  The  Cup  n  386 

niver  touched  a  d  of  owt  till  my  oan  wedding- 

daay,  Prom,  of  May  i  362 

p'raps  ye  hears  'at  I  soomtimes  taakes  a  d  too  much ;        „  n  108 

voice  a-shaakin',  and  the  d  in  'er  eye.  „           n  130 

Drop  (verb)     His  in  whose  hand  she  d's ;  Queen  Mary  in  i  112 

not  d  the  mask  before  The  masquerade  is  over —  „          lU  vi  109 

d  The  mud  I  carried,  like  yon  brook,  Becket  n  i  158 


Drop  (verb)  (continued)     may  d  off  any  day,  any  hour. 

You  must  see  him  at  once.  Prom,  of  May  in  407 

Then  I  would  d  from  the  casement,  like  a  spider.  Foresters  i  i  316 

Dropsy     (See  also  High-dropsy)    but  I  hear  she  hath 

a  d,  lad.  Queen  Mary  m  ii  224 

Fie  on  her  d,  so  she  have  ad!  „  in  ii  226 

Dropt     Have  I  d  it  ?     I  have  but  shown  a  loathing  face      „  lu  vi  112 

dog  that  snapt  the  shadow,  d  the  bone. —  Hamld  i  ii  188 

boughs  across  the  deep  That  d  themselves,  „     mi  152 

He  sat  down  there  And  d  it  in  his  hands,  Becket  i  iii  324 

royal  promise  might  have  d  into  thy  mouth  „    in  iii  276 

and  d  Their  streamers  earthward,  The  Cup  i  ii  404 

And  the  stock-dove  coo'd,  till  a  kite  d  down.  Prom,  of  May  i  55 

dosta  knaw  this  paaper?     Ye  d  it  upo'  the  road.  ,.         n  687 

Wealth  d  out  of  the  window,  Foresters  i  i  156 

Dross     As  gold  Outvalues  d,  light  darkness,  Becket  i  iii  715 

Drove    (See  also  Drave)     When  he  we  speak  of  d  the 

window  back.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  464 

my  father  d  the  Normans  out  Of  England  ? —  Harold  i  i  251 

thou  and  he  d  our  good  Normans  out  From  England,  ,.    n  ii  524 

Athelstan  the  Great  Who  d  you  Danes ;  „      iv  i  75 

my  father  d  him  and  his  friends,  De  Tracy  Becket  i  i  276 

d  me  From  out  her  memory.  Prom,  of  May  n  404 

My  lord  John,  In  wrath  because  you  d  him  from  the 

forest.  Foresters  m  450 

He  d  his  knife  into  the  heart  of  the  deer,  ..  iv  541 

Drown    Why,  the  child  will  d  himself.  Becket  ii  i  322 

but  these  arm'd  men — will  you  d  yourself?  „     v  ii  276 

even  d  you  In  the  good  regard  of  Rome.  The  Cup  i  i  150 

Were  there  no  boughs  to  hang  on,  Rivers  to  d  in  ?  ,.  i  ii  79 

Must  all  Galatia  hang  or  d  herself  ?  ..         i  ii  87 

d  all  poor  self-passion  in  the  sense  Of  public  good  ?  ..  ii  101 

how  often  justice  d's  Between  the  law  and  the  letter 

of  the  law  !  Foresters  iv  512 

Drown'd     (See  also  Half-drown'd)     A  sea  of  blood — we 

are  d  in  blood —  Harold  in  i  398 

The  curse  of  England  !  these  are  d  in  wassail,  ,,      iv  iii  223 

— thou  art  d  in  debt —  Becket.  Pro.  491 

all  d  in  love  And  gUttering  at  full  tide — ■  The  Cap  n  233 

Drowning    The  d  man,  they  say,  remembers  all  The  chances 

of  his  life,  Becket  v  ii  272 

Drudge    went  into  service — the  a!  of  a  lodging-house —  Prom,  of  May  m  392 

Drug  (s)     B's — but  he  knows  they  camiot  help  me—       Queen  Mary  v  v  60 

Drug  (verb)     and  science  now  could  d  and  balm  us        Prom,  of  May  n  339 

Drunk     has  d  and  gambled  out  All  that  he  had.  Queen  Mary  n  iii  87 

Make  themselves  d  and  mad,  „  ni  i  282 

and  our  marriage  and  thy  glory  Been  d  together !  Harold  iv  iii  9 

Old  dog,  Thou  art  d,  old  dog  !  „    iv  iii  164 

Too  d  to  fight  with  thee  !  „    iv  iii  165 

Thou  hast  d  deep  enough  to  make  me  happy.  The  Cup  n  424 

Have  I  not  d  of  the  same  cup  with  thee  ?  ,.        n  463 

you  were  stupid  d  all  Sunday,  and  so  ill  in  conse- 
quence all  Monday,  Prom,  of  May  in  80 
Is  he  deaf,  or  dumb,  or  daft,  or  d  belike  ?  Foresters  i  ii  208 

Drunken    My  Lord,  the  world  is  like  a  d  man.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  393 

0  d  ribaldry !     Out,  beast !  out,  bear  !  Becket  i  i  230 
Ye  have  eaten  of  my  dish  and  d  of  my  cup  for  a  dozen  years.  ..      i  iv  30 

Drunkenness     to  snore  away  his  d  Into  the  sober  headache, —      ,,      i  i  371 
Dry     D  as  an  old  wood-fmigus  on  a  dead  tree,  Harold  in  i  8 

if  you  follow  Not  the  d  light  of  Rome's  straight-going 

policy.  The  Cup  i  i  145 

Duchy     You  have  her  D,  The  point  you  aim'd  at,  Becket  n  ii  76 

You  did  your  best  or  worst  to  keep  her  D.  „      n  ii  84 

Duck     Thou  knowest  we  had  to  dodge,  or  d,  or  die ;  Queen  Mary  ni  iv  357 
Duck'd    Or  I  will  have  you  dl  „  iv  iii  540 

Dudley  (Guildford)    See  Guildford  Dudley 
Due  (adj.)    D  from  his  castles  of  Berkhamstead  and  Eye        Hecket  i  iii  628 

thanks  of  Holy  Church  are  d  to  those  That  went  „      n  ii  190 

According  to  the  canon's  pardon  d  To  him  that 

so  repents.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  33 

No,  not  an  hour :  the  debt  is  d  to-day.  Ponders  iv  448 

Due  (s)    command  That  kiss  my  d  when  subject,  Harold  m  ii  42 

Dug    D  from  the  grave  that  yawns  for  us  beyond ;        Queen  Mary  v  ii  163 

1  d  mine  into  My  old  fast  friend  the  shore,  Harold  n  i  6 
The  trenches  d,  the  palisades  uprear'd  „    v  i  189 


Duke 


895 


Ear 


Duke    The  D  hath  gone  to  Leicester ;  Quern  Mary  ix  i  4 

Until  I  hear  from  Carew  and  the  D.  „       n  i  122 

it  is  thought  the  D  will  be  taken.  „       n  i  136 

Is  Peter  Carew  fled  ?     Is  the  D  taken  ?  „      n  i  142 

Ay,  if  D's,  and  Earls,  And  Counts,  „       in  i  50 

Our  D  is  all  between  thee  and  the  sea.  Our  D  is  all 

about  thee  like  a  God ;  Harold  n  ii  314 

yield  this  iron-mooded  D  To  let  me  go.  .,       n  ii  340 

My  lord  !  the  D  awaits  thee  at  the  banquet.  .,       ii  ii  805 

Thy  D  will  seem  the  darker.     Hence,  I  follow.  „       n  ii  817 

a  himdred  Gold  pieces  once  were  offer'd  by  the  D.  The  Falcon  325 

Dulcimer    Organ  and  pipe,  and  d,  chants  and  hymns  Hecket  v  ii  365 

Dull    You've  but  a  d  life  in  this  maiden  court,  Queen  Mary  i  iii  113 

Sin  is  too  d  to  see  beyond  himself.  „  v  ii  441 

Magdalen,  sin  is  bold  as  well  as  d.  ..  v  ii  443 

we  were  d  enough  at  first,  but  in  the  end  we  flourished 
out  Becket  m  iii  136 

Dulness  part  real,  part  childlike,  to  be  freed  from  the  d —  „  nt  iii  156 
Dumb  (adj.)     anfl  he  pray'd  them  d,  and  thus  I  dumb  thee 

too,  Harold  i  ii  22 

be  not  wroth  at  the  d  parchment.  Foresters  i  i  342 

Is  he  deaf,  or  d,  or  daft,  or  drunk  belike  ?  „        i  ii  208 

D  children  of  my  father,  that  will  speak  Queeti  Mary  n  i  77 

Die  like  the  torn  fox  d,  „         ii  ii  331 

Dumb  (verb)     and  he  pray'd  them  dumb,  and  thus  I  d 

thee  too,  Harold  i  ii  24 

Dumbd    d  his  carrion  croak  From  the  gray  sea  for  ever.  „    rv  iii  65 

Dumbfounded     and  your  heresy  D  half  of  us.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  127 

Dumble  (name  of  a  cow)    but  D  %vur  blow'd  wi'  the 

wind,  and  D^s 

barrin'  the  wind,  D  wur  blow'd  wi'  the  winil, 

D's  the  best  milcher  in  Islip. 
Dungeon     In  breathless  d's  over  steaming  sewers, 

blackn&ss  of  my  d  loom  Across  their  lamps  of  revel, 
Dungeon'd    d  the  other  half  In  Pevensey  Castle — 
Dunghill     But  on  the  heretic  d  only  weeds.     Howard. 
Such  weeds  make  d's  gracioas. 

and  then  Cast  on  the  d  naked, 
Dunstan  (Archbishop  of  Canterbury)    by  St.  D,  old  St. 

Thor — By  God,  we  thought  him  dead — 
Durham    Deans  Of  Christchurch,  2),  Exeter,  and  WelLs- 
Dust  (s)     (See  also  Ch)ld-dust)     Will  front  their  cry  and 
shatter  them  into  d. 

Who  rub  their  fawning  noses  in  the  d, 

char  us  back  again  into  the  d  We  spring  from. 

A  low  voice  from  the  d  and  from  the  grave 

bring  her  to  the  level  of  the  d,  so  that  the  King — 

all  mj-  doubts  I  fling  from  me  like  d, 

till  the  weight  of  Germany  or  the  gold  of  England 
brings  one  of  them  down  to  the  d — 

leave  Lateran  and  Vatican  in  one  d  of  gold — 

To  bring  her  to  the  d  .  .  . 

Bow'd  to  the  d  beneath  the  burthen  of  sin.  Prom,  of  May  ru  521 

Dust  (verb)  We'll  d  him  from  a  bag  of  Spanish  gold.  Queeti  Mary  i  v  421 
Dust-cloth  slut  whose  fairest  linen  seems  Foul  as  her  d-c,  Becket  v  ii  203 
Dusted     I  do  believe,  I  have  d  some  already,  Queen  Mary  i  v  423 

so  d  his  back  with  the  meal  in  his  sack,  Becket  i  iv  174 

Dutchman  And  the  D,  Now  laughing  at  some  je-st  ?  Queen  Mary  m  i  195 
Duteous     being  ever  d  to  the  King,  Becket  u  ii  464 

Dutiful  Commands  you  to  be  d  and  leal  To  your  young  King  „  v  ii  325 
Duty     the  d  which  as  Legate  He  owes  himself,  Queen  Mary  m  iv  401 

I  feel  it  but  a  rf— you  will  find  in  it  Pleasure  as 
well  as  d,  „  in  iv  429 

Morcar,  it  is  all  but  d  in  her  To  hate  me ;  Harold  iv  i  153 

I  have  overshot  My  duties  to  our  Holy  Mother  Church,       Becket  v  i  38 
Dwarft     Till  famine  d  the  race — 

Dwell    in  Normanland  God  speaks  thro'  abler  voices,  as  He 
d's  In  statelier  shrines. 

Join  hands,  let  brethren  d  in  unity ; 

Care  d  with  me  for  ever, 

myrtle,  bowering-in  The  city  where  she  d's. 

never  I  trust  to  roam  So  far  again,  but  d  among  his 
own. 
Dwelt    the  Lord  hath  d  In  darkness. 

Nor  d  alone,  like  a  soft  lord  of  the  East, 


„  IV  iii  476 

IV  iii  493 

IV  iii  496 

„         IV  iii  440 

Harold  n  ii  406 

Becket  v  ii  444 

Queen  Mary  iv  i  180 
„        rv  iii  446 

Harold  iv  iii  146 
Queen  Mary  i  ii  9 

„       n  iv  6 

„  m  iii  242 

in  V  55 

„     V  ii  385 

Becket,  Pro.  531 

I  i  149 

n  ii  365 
n  ii  475 
IV  ii  154 


I  iii  356 

Harold  i  i  167 

„      I  i  397 

Becket  n  i  120 

The  Cup  I  i  4 


Foresters  rv  1100 

Harold  ni  i  179 

Becket  i  iii  358 


Dwelt  (continued)    So  d  on  that  they  rose  and  darken'd 

Heaven.  Becket  ii  ii  205 

If  Synorix,  who  has  d  three  years  in  Rome  The  Cup  i  ii  175 

Dyed     He  d,  he  soak'd  the  trunk  with  hmnan  blood,  Harold  in  i  142 

Djring  (adj.  and  part)    (See  also  A-dying)    A  passing 

bell  toll'd  in  a  d  ear —  Qu^en  Mary  v  ii  41 

Tell  her  to  come  and  close  my  d  eyes,  „        v  ii  600 

They  say  she's  d.     First.     So  is  Cardinal  Pole.  „            v  iv  4 

'  I  am  d,  Philip ;  come  to  me.'  „             v  v  3 

The  Queen  is  d,  or  you  dare  not  say  it.  „        v  v  250 

That  never  English  monarch  d  left  England  so  little.  „         v  v  277 

Sleeping  or  d  there  ?     If  this  be  death,  Harold  m  i  1 

when  thro'  his  d  sense  Shrills  'lost  thro'  thee.'  „    m  i  33 

No,  but  to  please  our  d  king,  „  m  i  328 
Your  second-sighted  man  That  scared  the  d  conscience  of 

the  king,  „    v  i  211 

And  fighting  for  And  d  for  the  people —  „     v  i  389 

So  then  our  good  Archbishop  Theobald  Lies  d.  Becket,  Pro.  3 

Who  shall  crown  him  ?    Canterbury  is  d.  „  Pro.  240 

A  dead  man's  d  wish  should  be  of  weight.  „   Pro.  422 

You  will  do  much  To  rake  out  all  old  d  heats,  „    n  ii  114 

To  warm  the  cold  boimds  of  our  d  life  The  Cup  i  iii  128 

Love  ?  it  is  love,  love  for  my  d  boy.  The  Falcon  787 

I  reverence  all  women,  bad  me,  d.  Foresters  ii  i  40 

Speak  not.     I  wait  upon  a  d  father.  .,        ly  611 

Dying  (s)     the  d  of  my  noble  bird  Hath  serveil  me  better 

than  her  living —  The  Falcon  900 

Dyke    the  d's  and  brooks  Were  bridged  and  damn'd  with 

dead,  Harold  iii  ii  128 


E     See  here — an  interwoven  H  and  E  !  Harold  i  ii  57 
Each    an  amphisbsena,  E  end  a  sting :                           Queen  Mary  in  iv  40 
we  two  Might  make  one  flesh,  and  cleave  unto  e 

other  „            v  ii  138 

but  they  bribe  E  other,  and  so  often,  Harold  i  i  347 
We  never  kept  a  secret  from  e  other ;  Prom,  of  May  i  552 
and  prattled  to  e  other  that  we  would  marry  fine 

gentlemen,  ,,         ni  276 

E  man  for  liis  own.  Foresters  i  iii  105 

But  shout  and  echo  play'd  into  e  other  .,          n  i  258 

Nor  care  to  leap  into  e  other's  arms.  „              ni  7 

where  twelve  Can  stand  upright,  nor  touch  e  other.  ,,           iii  310 

then  e  man  That  owns  a  wife  or  daughter,  ,,           m  458 
'Ead(head)    it  be  i' wy  natur  to  knock 'im  o' the '«  now ;   Prom,  of  May  1 298 

The  beer's  gotten  oop  into  my  'e.  „  n  320 
says  the  master  goas  clean  off  his  'e  when  he  'ears 

the  naame  on  'im ;  „         m  132 

Eagle    My  sight  is  e,  but  the  strife  so  thick —  Harold  v  i  627 

Eagle-height    At  such  an  e-h  I  stand  and  see  Becket  i  i  139 

Eagle-like    swoop  down  upon  him  E-l,  lightning-like —  The  Falcon  14 
Ear    Your  e ;  You  shall  be  Queen.                                    Queen  Mary  i  iv  121 

what,  have  you  eyes,  e's,  brains  ?  „  ii  i  97 
I  have  e's  to  hear.     Gardiner.     Ay,  rascal,  if  I 

leave  thee  e's  to  hear.  „          in  i  250 

thou  shalt  lose  thine  e's  and  find  thy  tongue,  „          in  i  256 

Repeat  your  recantation  in  the  e's  Of  all  men,  „         iv  ii  193 

Hast  thou  not  mark'd — come  closer  to  mine  e —  ,,            v  i  226 

A  passing  bell  toll'd  in  a  dying  e —  „            v  ii  41 

but  those  heavenly  e's  have  heard,  Harold  m  i  258 

would  deign  to  lend  an  e  Not  overscomful,  „        iv  i  136 

Thou  didst  possess  thyself  of  Edward's  e  „         v  i  345 

And  where,  my  liege  ?     Henry.     Thine  e.  Becket,  Pro.  157 

Good  e's  too !  „           i  ii  44 

My  lord,  thine  e  !     I  have  the  e  of  the  Pope.  ,,        i  iii  199 

sucking  thro'  fools'  e's  The  flatteries  of  corruption —  „  i  iii  361 
if  you  boxed  the  Pope's  e's  with  a  purse,  you  might 

stagger  him,  „        n  ii  370 

They  say  that  walls  have  e's ;  „         iv  ii  80 

You  have  lost  The  e  of  the  King.  „       iv  ii  355 

monarch  mane  Bristled  about  his  quick  e's —  The  Cup  i  ii  121 


Ear 

Em  (continued)     For  your  e  only— I  love  you— 
'Ear  (hear)    says  the  master  goas  clean  off  his  'eacl 

when  he  'e's  the  naame  on  'im ; 
^^(?«a^)..  Well,  I  never  'e  the  likes  o'  that  afoor 

Why,  Wilson,  tha  'e  'im  thysen— 
Earl    Ay,  if  Dukes,  and  E's,  And  Counts, 
this  yoimg  E  was  sent  on  foreign  travel 
Ask  our  broad  E.  ' 

Art  thou  sick,  good  E  ? 

When  earnest  thou  hither?     Gamel.    To-day,  good  £; 
Ihe  Kmg  hath  made  me  E ;  make  me  not  fool !     Nor' 

make  the  King  a  fool,  who  made  me  E I 
Who  made  the  King  who  made  thee,  make  thee  E 
Tostig,  Edward  hath  made  him  E : 
Follow  my  lead,  and  I  will  make  thee  e 
Good-night,  and  dream  thyself  Their  chosen  E 
E  first,  and  after  that  Who  knows  I  may  not  dream  myself 

tneir  king !  •' 

E,  wilt  thou  fly  my  falcons  this  fair  day  ? 
Thy  valour  and  thy  value,  noble  e. 
•  Look  not  amazed,  fair  e  ! 

And  I  will  make  thee  my  great  E  of  E's, 

Thou  must  swear  absolutely,  noble  E. 

Thanks,  truthful  £;  I  did  not  doubt  thy  word 

Who  make  thy  good  their  own— all  England    E 

E  s  and  Thanes  !     Full  thanks  for  your  fair  greeting  of 

mv  bride  !     E's,  Thanes,  and  all  our  countrymen  ! 
ii,  the  first  Christian  Caesar  drew  to  the  East 
So  !— did  he  ?—E—l  have  a  mind  to  play  The  William 
JL — ay— thou  art  but  a  messenger  of  William 
Ay,  my  lord,  and  divers  other  e's  and  barons 
golden  leaves,  these  e's  and  barons,  that  clung  to  me, 
Ihey  shall  henceforward  be  my  e's  and  barons— 
flights,  bishops,  e's,  this  London  spawn- 
The  lady  gave  a  rose  to  the  E,  (repeat) 
The  lady  gave  her  hand  to  the  E,  (repeat) 
Farewell,  farewell,  my  warrior  E  ! ' 
She  gave  a  weeping  kiss  to  the  E,  (repeat) 
never  was  an  Eao  true  a  friend  of  the  people 
A  gallants.     I  love  him  as  I  hate  John, 
shoot  almost  as  closely  with  the  bow  as  the  great  E 

himself.  * 

so  flustered  me  that  I  forgot  my  message  from  the  E 
I  am  a  silent  man  myself,  and  all  the  more  wonder 

at  our  E. 
not  so  much  for  the  cause  as  for  the  E.    O  Lord 
I  am  easily  led  by  words,  but  I  think  the  E 
hath  right.    Scarlet,  hath  not  the  E  right  ^ 
I  will  swear  by  the  head  of  the  E. 
Thou  Much,  miller's  son,  hath  not  the  E  right? 
but  for  all  that  I  will  swear  the  E  hath  right. 
Thou  art  the  E's  confessor  and  shouldst  know, 
the  E  and  Sir  Richard  come  this  way. 
•    And  learn  from  her  if  she  do  love  this  E. 
Ay,  noble  E,  and  never  part  with  it. 
Robin,  i?—    Robin.    Let  be  the  E. 
You  dared  to  dream  That  our  great  E, 
E—-   Robin.    Nay,  no  ^^  am  I.    I  am  English  yeoman. 

But,  E,-d  thou  be  he Friar  Tuck.    Fine  him  ' 

fine  him  !  he  hath  called  plain  Robin  an  e. 
Robin,  Earl  of  Huntingdon,  For  E  thou  art  again 
Earldom    yet  hear !  thine  e,  Tostig,  ' 

I  would  it  went  as  well  as  with 'mine  e, 
I  have  to  make  report  of  my  good  e  To  the  good  king 
It  means  the  fall  of  Tostig  from  his  e. 
In  mine  e  A  man  may  hang  gold  bracelets 
Thou  art  a  mighty  man  In  thine  own  e ! 
We  have  few  prisoners  in  mine  e  there, 
ever-jarring  E's  move  To  music  and  in  order- 
he  flamed  When  Tostig's  anger'd  e  flung  him 
I  come  for  mine  own  E,  my  Northumbria  •    ' 
be  chasten'd  by  thy  banishment.  Some  easier  e. 
t  am  had  I  kept  thine  e  in  thy  hands 
Earlier    O  higher,  hoUer,  e,  purer  church, 
Early     Not  here  as  yet.     You  are  too  e  for  him 


896 


Eased 


The  Cup  I  ii  217       Early  (continued)    As  I  said  before,  you  are  stiU  too  e 
Comma.    Too  «  to  be  here  alone  with  thee ; 
His  e  follies  cast  into  his  teeth, 
Eam'd     Hast  thou  not  fought  for  it,  and  e  it  ' 
Earshot    Stand  out  of  e  then, 
'Eart  (heart)     I  doant  believe  he's  iver  a  'e  under  his 

waistcoat. 
Earth    To  him  within  there  who  made  Heaven  and  E  ?  "qZuMZVyts 
m  his  scared  prayers  Heaven  and  e's  Maries  •  n  ii  °° 

Between  the  two  most  high-set  thrones  on  e, 
Amplier  than  any  field  on  our  poor  e 
With  heaven  for  e. 

Julius,  God's  Vicar  and  Viceregent  upon  e, 
That  heaven  wept  and  e  blush'd. 
God  upon  e  ?  what  more  ? 
As  Cranmer  hath,  came  to  the  fire  on  e. 
On  e ;  but  saved  in  heaven  By  your  recanting. 
I  have  offended  against  heaven  and  e 
And  I  can  find  no  refuge  upon  e. 
You  are  the  mightiest  monarch  upon  e, 
Bride  of  the  mightiest  sovereign  upon  e  ? 
Should  make  the  mightiest  empire  e  has'known 
for  heaven's  credit  Makes  it  on  e : 
In  heaven  signs  !     Signs  upon  e  ! 
Not  stagger'd  by  this  ominous  e  and  heaven  •  But 

heaven  and  e  are  threads 
And  other  bells  on  e,  which  yet  are  heavens  • 
would  make  the  hard  e  rive  To  the  very  Devil's  horns 
let  e  rive,  gulf  in  These  cursed  Normans—  ' 

And  signs  on  e !     Knowest  thou  Senlac  hill  ? 
Seven  feet  of  Enghsh  e,  or  something  more, 
corpse  thou  whelmest  with  thine  e  is  cursed 
dead  as  Death  this  day  to  ought  of  e's  ' 

Is  not  the  Church  the  visible  Lord  on  e  ? 
Lest  there  be  battle  between  Heaven  and  E,  And  E 

should  get  the  better — 
and  when  ye  shall  hear  it  is  poured  out  upon  e, 
did  not  whoUy  clear  The  deadly  growths  of  e, 
like  Mahound's  cofiin  hung  between  heaven  and  e— 
-c  s  faises  are  heaven's  truths, 
cry  out  for  thee  Who  art  too  pure  for  e. 
And  break  the  soul  from  e. 
She  sends  it  back,  as  being  dead  to  e, 
Flash  sometimes  out  of  e  against  the  heavens. 
Tho  all  the  loud-lung'd  trumpets  upon  e 
Too  late  on  e  may  be  too  soon  in  hell. 
Tho  e's  last  earthquake  clash'd  the  minster-bells, 
w?,?  ^J  *^^  Church  in  Heaven,  the  Church  on  e— 
Will  the  e  gape  and  swallow  us  ? 
and  enrich  E  with  her  shadow  ! 
Who  causest  the  safe  e  to  shudder  and  gape 
They  will  break  in  the  e—l  am  sinking— 
Thou  art  the  last  friend  left  me  upon  e— 
Outvalues  all  the  jewels  upon  e. 
comes  To  rob  you  of  your  one  delight  on  e. 
For  all  the  souls  on  e  that  live  To  be  forgiven 
bow  d  To  the  e  he  came  from, 
fiercest  storm  That  ever  made  e  tremble— 
for  the  love  of  his  own  little  mother  on  e, 
It  answers,  I  am  thine  to  the  very  heart  of  the  e— 
till  the  green  e  drink  Her  health  along  with  us 
bu^  ber  Even  in  the  bowels  of  the  e 
Earthly    Is  it  possible  That  mortal  men  should  bear  their  e 
heats 
unsubject  to  Our  e  sceptre. 
Earthquake    and  underfoot  An  e ;  n 

shake  the  North  With  e  and  disruption- 
midriff -shaken  even  to  tears,  as  springs  gush  out 
after  e's —  r  — =.   » 

Tho'  earth's  last  e  clash'd  the  minster-bells, 
Earthware    one  piece  of  e  to  serve  the  salad  in  to  my 

E^'^tH',  ^^^'  r'f'  ""  ^"  ^'''^  «^^^  °'  "«'         Prom^oiut^Z  il 
fc    tL  ^/r  ^*  'i  ^°^'  ^^Z''  °"^  "^"^^^^  break,  Raroldxx  ii  140 

Eased    Then  after  we  have  e  them  of  their  coins  i^orestm  m  m 


From,  of  May  m  132 

I  255 

I  302 

Queen  Mary  in  i  50 

v  ii  489 

Harold  i  i  90 

,     lilOO 

,     iil06 

,     I  i  288 

,     1 1295 

,    iiil86 

iii217 

iii249 

iii250 
„  nil  146 
,.  nil  202 
„  nil  494 
„  uii629 
„  n  ii  716 
.,  n  ii  723 
„  ni  i  331 

..  IV  iii  45 

V  i  21 

.,      V  i  25 

„      vi29 

Becket  i  iv  59 

I  iv  66 

.,      I  iv  86 

„    n  ii  143 

Foresters  i  i  12, 105 

1  i  16,  92 

1 1 18 

I  i  20, 119 

1 1 188 

I  i  190 

I  i  217 
I  i  297 

I  ii  36 


Iii  39 

iii45 

iii  47 

Iii  51 

1 1155 

I  ii  147 

I  ii  188 

I  ii  303 

I  iii  93 

ni686 

inl29 


IV  148 

IT  830 

Harold  i  i  303 

1 1337 

1 1406 

11469 

ni  86 

11193 

nil  687 

nil  760 

mi  54 

rvii29 

IT  1151 

„      V  i  275 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  108 

The  Cup  1  iii  60 


The  Cup  I  iii  81 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  124 

Foresters  iv  345 

Harold  ii  ii  240 

Prom,  of  May  1 130 


„  in  ii  107 
„  in  iii  197 
„  ni  iii  201 
,.  ni  iii  213 
,.  ni  iv  193 
,.  ni  iv  383 
rv  i  61 

IV  ii  178 
„  IV  iii  124 
,.     rv  iii  128 

V  i  52 

V  ii  545 

V  iii  70 
Harold  I  i  142 

„       1 1160 

..  I  i  207 
I  ii  133 
-  n  ii  740 
..  n  ii  781 
..  in  1  360 
..  IV  iii  112 
V  i  68 

V  i  426 
Becket  i  iii  93 


„    I  iii  227 
„      I  iv  37 
„    n  ii  203 
„    n  ii  362 
„  in  iii  348 
„   IV  ii  134 
„        V  i  44 
„      V  1 171 
„       V  ii  37 
„     V  ii  488 
„     V  ii  528 
„     V  iii  41 
„     V  iii  99 
„   V  iii  205 
The  Cup  I  iii  60 
n298 
n  477 
The  Falcon  32 
779 
828 
Prom,  of  May  in  7 
m  515  ' 
m  798 
Foresters  i  i  98 
I  i  337 
„       ni350 
ni462 


Harold  v  i  283 

Becket  i  iii  681 

'leen  Mary  iv  iii  399 

Harold  I  ii  200 

Becket  ni  iii  163  ■ 
V  iii  41 


Easier 

Easier    Thy  life  at  home  Is  e  than  mine  here.  Harold  i  i  97 

So  thou  be  chasten'd  by  thy  banishment,  Some  e  earldom.        „  iv  ii  51 

which  we  Inheriting  reap  an  e  harvest.  Becket  u  ii  194 

It  might  be  e  then  for  you  to  make  Allowance  for  a 

mother —  The  Falcon  825 

East  (adj.)     but  the  wind  e  like  an  enemy.  Prom,  of  May  i  80 

East  (s)    {See  also  North-east)     And  all  the  fair  spice- 
islands  of  the  E. 
the  first  Christian  Caesar  drew  to  the  E 
dwelt  alone,  like  a  soft  lord  of  the  E, 
We  fought  in  the  E,  And  felt  the  sun  of  Antioch 
Whose  doings  are  a  horror  to  the  e,  A  hissing  in  the  west ! '     „    iv  ii  244 
bowl  my  ancestor  Fetch'd  from  the  farthest  e —  The  Falcon  485 

twilight  of  the  coming  day  already  glimmers  in  the  e.   Foresters  i  ii  248 
new  tenn  Brought  from  the  sacred  E,  his  harem  ?  ,.         iv  705 

Easter     Till  the  sun  dance,  as  upon  E  Day.  Queen  Mary  ui  ii  238 

Easton    We  have  hail  our  leagues  of  old  with  E  kings.       The  Cup  i  ii  102 
men  will  call  him  An  E  tyrant,  not  an  English  king. 


897 


Edward 


Queen  Mary  v  i  50 

Harold  v  i  22 

Becket  i  iii  359 

II  ii  92 


Easy 


Breathing  an  e  gladness 


Foresters  iv  904 


not 


Eat 


(See  also  ESsy) 

like  Aldwyth  . 
Nay — but  there  be  conditions,  e  ones, 
'  e ' — that  were  e— nay — No  money-lover  he  ! 
for  I  should  find  An  e  father  confessor  in  thee. 
Rest  you  e,  For  I  am  e  to  keep.     I  shall  not  fly. 
Is  it  not  e  to  disarm  a  woman  ? 
then  you  would  know  it  is  not  So  e  to  forgive — 

Maake  thysen  e.     I'll  hev  the  winder  naailed  up, 
I  could  put  all  that  o'  one  side  e  anew. 

I  couldn't  e  in  Spain,  I  couldn't  sleep  in  Spain. 
Come  locusting  upon  as,  e  us  up, 
Your  apple  e's  the  better.     Let  them  go. 
Dare-devils,  that  would  e  fire  and  spit  it  out 
while  famish'd  rats  E  them  alive. 
Where  they  e  dead  rtien's  flesh, 
Sit  down,  sit  do^vn,  and  e, 
Let  her  e  it  like  the  serpent, 
We  scarcely  dai-e  to  bless  the  food  we  e 
slave  that  e  my  bread  has  kick'd  his  King  ! 
I  could  not  e,  sleep,  pray : 
Sit  and  e,  And  take  a  himtcr's  vengeance 
Will  you  not  e  a  little  ? 
Will  you  not  e  -tvith  me,  my  lord  ? 
I  can  e  no  more  ! 
you  ask'd  to  e  with  me. 
'  Let  us  e  and  drink,  for  to-mon-ow  we  die.' 
sits  and  e's  his  heart  for  want  of  money  to  pay  the 

Abbot. 
I  came  To  e  him  up  and  make  an  end  of  him. 
Well,  set  them  forth.     I  could  e  anything, 
before  j^ou  can  e  it  you  must  hack  it  with  a  hatchet. 
Something  to  e.     Robin.     And  thou  shalt  have  it,  man. 
in  the  sweat  of  thy  brow,  says  Holy  Writ,  shalt  thou  e 

bread, 
in  the  fear  of  thy  life  shalt  thou  e  the  King's  venison — 
Baten    Ye  have  e  of  my  dish  and  drunken  of  my  cup  for  a 

dozen  years.  Becket  i  iv  29 

— we  have  e — we  are  heated.     Wine  !  The  Cup  i  ii  45 

Not  e  anything.  The  Fdcon  674 

she  that  has  e  the  yolk  is  scarce  like  to  swallow  the  shell.       „  704 

Bating     (See  also  Word-eating)    so  thou  be  Squeamish  at  e 


Harold  i  ii  174 

..     n  ii  206 

.,     II  ii  214 

Becket,  Pro.  88 

.,      V  ii  512 

The  Cup  I  iii  106 

Prom,  of  May  ii  486 

I  419 

u  111 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  36 

II  i  101 

II  ii  7 

mi  156 

V  ii  198 

Harold  n  ii  807 

„    IV  iii  207 

Becket,  Pro.  532 

V  i  71 

v  i  242 

V  ii  92 

The  Cup  I  ii  42 

„      I  ii  425 

The  Falcon  570 

670 

868 

Prom,  of  May  i  259 

Foresters  I  i  4 
.    n  i  125 

.    n  i  274 

.     m  284 
IV  187 


IV  202 
IV  206 


the  King's  venison. 
'Eaven  (heaven)    Granny  says  marriages  be  maade 

i'  'e. 

Baves     I  never  breathed  it  to  a  bird  in  the  e, 
Bcho  (s)     But  shout  and  e  play'd  into  each  other 

The  wood  is  full  of  e'es,  owls,  elfs. 

When  horn  and  e  ring, 

I  am  but  the  e  of  the  lips  of  love. 
Echo  (verb)     my  wish  E'es  your  Majesty's.     Pole. 
shall  be  so. 

Mine  e'es  both  your  Graces' ; 

yells  of  thief  And  rogue  and  liar  e  down  in  HeU, 
Elcho'd    The  trumpets  of  the  fight  had  e  down, 
Echoing    See  Bird-echoing 
Bdipse    out  of  the  e  Narrowing  my  golden  hour ! 


Foresters  iv  194 

Prom,  of  May  Iii  709 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  454 

Foresters  u  i  258 

n  i  262 

HI  428 

IV  892 

It 

Queen  Mary  m  iii  93 

„  in  iii  95 

Foresters  in  324 

The  Falcon  605 

Becket  n  i  202 


Eddicated  (educated)    Thy  feyther  e  his  darters  to  marry 

gentlefoalk.  Prom,  of  May  u  IIS 

I  e  boiith  on  'em  to  marry  gentlemen,  „          ni  454 

Eddying    torrents  of  e  bark  !  Foresters  ni  95 

Eden    To  make  this  Sherwood  E  o'er  again,  „    n  i  168 

Eiderunt     Sederunt  principes,  e  pauperes.  Becket  i  iv  132 
Edgar  (afterwards  Mr.  Harold)   See  also  Harold,  Hedgar, 
Philip,    Philip    Edgar,    Philip    Harold,    Philip 
Hedgar)     I  warrants  ye'll  think  moor  o'  this 
yoimg  Squire  E  as  ha'  coomed  among  us —           Prom,  of  May  1 110 

Wheer  be  Mr.  E  ?  about  the  premises  ?  „  1 432 
where  is  this  Mr.  ?J  whom  you  praised  so  in  your 

first  letters  ?  „           1 776 
I  thought  Mr.  E  the  best  of  men,  and  he  has  proved 

himself  the  worst.  „            n  85 

that  villain,  E,  If  he  should  ever  show  his  face  .,           n  422 

What  E  ?     Bora.     Philip  Edgar  of  Toft  HaU  „           u  437 

This  E,  then,  is  hving  ?  Harold.  Living  ?  well —  „  n  443 
But  she  hates  E.    May  not  this  Dobbins,  or  some 

other,  spy  E  in  Harold  ?  ,,          ii  672 

then  she  will  forgive  E  for  Harold's  sake.  „          n  679 

Nor  am  I  E,  my  good  fellow.  „  n  701 
Mr.  E  ?  Allen.  Theer,  Miss !  You  ha'  naamed  'im —  „  m  141 
She  must  be  crying  '  £ '  in  her  sleep.     Harold.     Who 

must  be  crying  out '  JB '  in  her  sleep  ?  „         m  653 

Happy!    What?    £?     Is  it  so?  „         m  668 

Edgar  (the  Atheling)     Who  inherits  ?    E  the  Atheling  ?  Harold  ni  i  240 
Edge    (See  also  KnJie-edge)    Shall  I  smite  him  with  the  e  of 

the  sword  ?  Becket  i  iv  224 
Edify    (See  also  Re-edify)     We  come  not  to  destroy, 

but  e ;                                                                   Queen  Mary  m  iii  188 
Edith  (ward  of  King  Edward,  the  Confessor)    Art  thou  assured 

By  this,  that  Harold  loves  but  E  ?  Harold  i  ii  210 

Then  for  thine  E  ?  „     n  ii  422 

I  know  the  Norman  license — thine  own  E —  „     n  ii  478 

Harold,  if  thou  love  thine  E,  ay.  „     n  ii  622 

wilt  thou  bring  another,  E,  upon  his  head  ?  „     m  i  262 

and  on  thee,  E,  if  thou  abide  it, —  „    in  i  317 

Look  up  !  look  up  !  £ !  „    m  i  321 

E,  Tho  somewhat  less  a  king  to  my  true  self  ,,     m  ii  52 

Good  even,  gentle  E.  „  m  ii  118 

E,  Hadst  thou  been  braver,  I  had  better  braved  All —  „  m  ii  177 

E,  E,  Get  thou  into  thy  cloister  as  the  king  Will'd  it :  „      v  i  308 

E,  The  sign  in  heaven — the  sudden  blast  at  sea —  „      v  i  377 

E,  if  I,  the  last  English  King  of  England—  „      v  i  383 

thou  art  Harold,  I  am  £ !  „      v  i  392 

O  E,  art  thou  here  ?  „         v  ii  1 

O  £,  if  I  ever  wrought  against  thee,  „       v  ii  21 

0  E,  E,l  have  lost  both  crown  And  husband.  „  v  ii  38 
E,  E—    Edith.    What  was  he  like,  „       v  ii  51 

Edmund  (King  of  the  East  English,  martyred  in  870)    By 

St.  E  I  overmeasure  him.  „  iv  iii  119 

Educated    See  Eddicated 

Edward  (the  Confessor)    Ask  it  of  King  El  „        i  i  78 

look,  where  E  draws  A  faint  foot  Sther,  „       i  i  143 

E  loves  him,  so  Ye  hate  him.  ,,       i  i  427 

E's  prayers  Were  deaf  en'd  and  he  pray'd  them  dumb,  „        i  ii  21 

foes  in  E's  hall  To  league  against  thy  weal.  ,,  i  ii  32 
she  held  with  E,  At  least  methought  she  held  with 

holy  E,  „        I  ii  50 

1  will  demand  his  ward  From  E  when  I  come  again.  „  i  ii  60 
Our  wild  Tostig,  E  hath  made  him  Earl :  „  i  ii  186 
thine  host  in  England  when  I  went  To  visit  E.  „  n  ii  6 
know'st  my  claim  on  England  Thro'  E's  promise :  „  n  ii  13 
did  E  know  of  this  ?  „  n  ii  304 
Then  let  me  hence  With  Wulfnoth  to  King  E.  „  n  ii  563 
And  hath  King  E  not  pronoimced  his  heir  ?  „  n  ii  575 
if  that  but  hung  upon  King  E's  will.  „  n  ii  601 
Accoixling  as  King  E  promises.  „  n  ii  714 
Thou  art  English,  E  too  is  English  now,  „  in  i  28 
E  wakes  !— Dazed — he  hath  seen  a  vision.  „  mi  129 
And  E  would  have  sent  a  host  against  vou,  „  rv  i  99 
Since  Griffyth's  head  was  sent  To  E,  '  „  rv  i  222 
Last  night  King  E  came  to  me  in  dreanw — 

(repeat)  Harold  iv  i  259,  265 

3    L 


Edward 


898 


Enclosed 


Edward  (the  Confessor)  (continued)  Take  and  slay  me,  For 
E  loved  me.  Harold.  E  bad  me  spare  thee.  Tostig. 
I  hate  King  E,  for  he  join'd  with  thee  To  drive  me 
outlaw'd.  Harold  rv  ii  10 

Of  Alfred,  or  of  E  his  great  son,  „     iv  iii  52 

They  know  King  E's  promise  and  thine — thine.  ..         v  i  45 

Not  know  that  E  cancell'd  his  own  promise  ?  ,,         v  i  51 

Thou  didst  possess  thyself  of  E's  ear  „       v  i  345 

Edwardjthe  First)    In  William's  time,  in  om*  first 

Queen  Mary  ill  iii  226 


E's  time, 
Edward  (the  Fourth)     Who's  a-passing  ?     King  E  or 

King  Richard  ? 
Edward  (tihe  Sixth)    our  young  E  might  bequeath  the 
crown  Of  England, 

Yet  I  stood  out,  till  E  sent  for  me. 

Have  we  not  heard  of  her  in  E's  time, 

Your  pious  wish  to  pay  King  E's  debts, 

Had  mark'd  her  for  my  brother  E's  bride ; 

Did  she  not  In  Henry's  time  and  E's  ? 

imprisonment,  my  Lord,  Under  yoimg  E. 
Edwin  (Earl  of  Merda)    Morcar  and  E  have  stirr'd  up  the 
Thanes 

have  overthrown  Morcar  and  E. 

Again !    Morcar  !    E !     What  do  they  mean  ? 

Morcar  and  E,  When  will  ye  cease  to  plot 

Morcar  and  E,  will  ye,  if  I  yield, 

Morcar  and  E,  will  ye  upon  oath.  Help  us 

E,  my  friend — Thou  lingerest. — Gurth, — ■ 

Gurth,  Leof win,  Morcar,  JB ! 

Eel    wriggle  out  of  them  like  an  e  When  the  time  serves.       Becket  ii  ii  187 

EfEaced    he  is  e.  Self-blotted  out ;  Queen  Mary  rv  i  137 

Egg    wi'  dree  hard  e's  for  a  good  pleace  at  the 

bumin' ; 

sat  Stone-dead  upon  a  heap  of  ice-cold  e's. 

brood  Too  long  o  er  this  hard  e,  the  world, 

E's.    Filippo.    One,  but  addled. 

No  not  a  draught  of  milk,  no  not  an  e, 

and  each  of  'em  as  full  of  meat  as  an  e, 

or  the  shambles-oak,  or  a  weasel-sucked  e, 
E^-bald    may  give  that  e-b  head  The  tap  that  silences. 
Egypt    like  E's  plague,  had  fill'd  All  things  with  blood  ; 

I  heard  a  saying  in  E,  that  ambition 

tho'  the  fire  should  run  along  the  ground.  As  once 

it  did  in  E.  Prom,  of  May  i  705 

Eight    Seventeen — and  knew  e  languages —  Qtieen  Mary  m  i  369 

Eis^ty    His  e  years  Look'd  somewhat  crooked  on  him 

in  his  frieze ;  „        iv  iii  331 

Eittier    You  were  the  one  sole  man  in  e  house  „        ni  iii  253 

I  am  the  one  sole  man  in  e  house,  „         in  iii  266 

true  To  e  fimction,  holding  it ;  Becket  i  iii  538 

Yea,  since  he  flouts  the  will  of  e  realm,  „      ii  ii  256 

Oh,  no,  not  e  way,  nor  any  way  „       v  iii  86 

Elbow     fray'd  i'  the  knees,  and  out  at  e.  Queen  Mary  i  i  52 

look  at  our  suits,  out  at  knee,  out  at  e.  Foresters  i  i  33 

Elbowing     and  almost  e  her,  So  else  they  stood.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  76 

Elder    Made  younger  e  son,  violated  the  whole  Tradition  Prom,  of  May  1 494 
Eleanor  (of  Aquitaine,  Queen  of  England)    so  this 

Rosamund,  my  true  heart-wife,  Not  E  !  Becket,  Pro.  132 

and  the  soul  of  E  from  hell-fire.  „       Pro  151 

secret  out  of  our  loyal  Thomas,  I  am  not  E.  „       Pro.  467 

and  make  Our  waning  E  all  but  love  me  !  „        ii  ii  458 

Oh,  Queen  E.    Yes,  my  lady  ;  „        m  i  203 

E.E,  have  I  Not  heard  ill  things  of  her  „        in  i  230 

'  E  of  Aquitaine,  E  of  England  !    Murder'd  by  that 

adulteress  E,  „       rv  ii  241 

Why  should  I  swear,  E,  who  am,  or  was,  „       rv  ii  403 

Election    dost  thou  think  the  King  Forced  mine  e?    Herbert. 

I  do  think  the  King  Was  potent  in  the  e,  „  i  i  127 

the  e  shall  be  made  in  the  Chapel  Royal,  „        i  iii  110 

was  thine  own  e  so  canonical.  Good  father  ?  „        i  iii  120 

Eleven    I  am  «  years  older  than  he  is.  Queen  Mary  i  v  68 

I  am  e  years  older  than  he,  „  v  v  46 

Elf    The  wood  is  full  of  echoes,  owls,  e's.  Foresters  n  i  263 

E,  with  spiteful  heart  and  eye,  „        ii  ii  172 

Elfin    Nay,  an  please  your  E  Grace,  „        n  ii  132 


1 182 

iii  26 

iii  29 

liv  18 

I  V  111 

IV  289 

m  iv  132 

miv  244 

Harold  ii  ii  288 
m  ii  132 
rvil33 
rvi  160 
ivil75 
IV  i  179 
IV  1256 
IV  iii  221 


IV  iii  490 

Becket  v  ii  240 

„     V  ii  253 

The  Falcon  128 

872 

Foresters  i  i  42 

„      IV  212 

Harold  v  i  90 

Becket  i  iii  344 

The  Cup  I  iii  137 


Elisabetta  (nurse  to  Count  Federigo  degli  Alberighi)    you 

Would  find  it  stain'd Count.     Silence,  El 

Elizabeth  (Princess,  afterwards  Queen  of  England)    No ; 
it  was  the  Lady  E. 

the  Lady  E  is  the  more  noble  and  royal. 

I  mean  the  Lady  E. 

be  no  peace  for  Mary  till  E  lose  her  head.' 

'  Long  live  E  the  Queen  ! ' 

And  get  the  swine  to  shout  E. 

we'll  have  no  pope  here  while  the  Lady  E  fives. 

we'll  have  no  virgins  here — we'll  have  the  Lady  E ! 

If  E  lose  her  head — That  makes  for  France. 

married  The  mother  of  E — a  heretic  Ev'n  as  she  is ; 

Wyatt,  shaU  we  proclaim  E  ? 

The  names  of  Wyatt,  E,  Courtenay, 

E — Her  name  is  much  abused  among  those  traitors. 

whom  did  you  say  ?    Messenger.    E  ?    Your  Royal  sister. 

Can  I  strike  E  ? — not  now  and  save  the  life  Of  Devon : 

The  proud  ambitions  of  E, 

Quoth  E,  prisoner. 

this  re-action  not  re-act  Yet  fiercelier  under  Queen  E, 

You  must  proclaim  E  your  heir,  (repeat) 

E,  How  fair  and  royal — like  a  Queen,  indeed  ? 

E — To  PhiUbert  of  Savoy,  as  you  know, 

Thou  art  commission'd  to  E,  And  not  to  me  ! 

Aery!     What's  that?     J5?  revolt? 

God  save  E,  the  Queen  of  England  ! 
Elizabeth  Barton    See  Joan  of  Kent 
Ely  (Bishop  [Thirlby]  of)    My  Lord  of  E,  this.     After  a 

riot  We  hang  the  leaders.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  72 


The  Falcon  66 

Queen  Mary  i  i  18 ' 

I  i  72 

I  i  75 

„  I  iii  5 

I  iii  8 

I  iii  39 

I  iii  44 

I  iii  62 

I  iii  88 
I  V  32 

II  i  239 
II  ii  94 

II  ii  109 

II  iv  116 

II  iv  123 

in  ii  169 

m  v21 

IV  iii  389 

i  191,  204 

vi234 

V  i  246 

V  ii  594 
vvl87 

V  v283 


Ely  (city)     There  lies  a  treasure  buried  down  in  E : 
Emboss'd    many-breasted  mother  Artemis  E  upon  it. 
Embrace    on  thee  remains  the  curse,  Harold,  if  thou 
e  her : 

great  and  soimd  policy  that :  I  could  e  him  for  it : 

for  who  could  e  such  an  armful  of  joy  ? 

Wilt  thou  e  thy  sweetheart  'fore  my  face  ? 

I  E  thee  with  the  kisses  of  the  soul. 

E  me,  Marian,  and  thou,  good  Kate, 
Embroilment    may  come  a  crash  and  e  as  in  Stephen's 

time; 
Embryo    every  rebel  birth  That  passes  out  of  e. 
Emerald     English  Garter,  studded  with  great  e's, 
Emperor  (s)     betroth'd  in  her  babyhood  to  the  Great  E 

Most  goodly.  Kinglike  and  an  E's  son, — 

Hath  he  the  large  abiUty  of  the  E? 

letter  which  thine  E  promised  Long  since, 

I  am  English  Queen,  not  Roman  E. 

The  E  counsell'd  me  to  fly  to  Flanders. 

I  fear  the  E  much  misvalued  me. 

The  E's  highness  happily  symboU'd 

treaty  which  the  e  sent  us  Were  mainly  Gardiner's ; 

And  the  E  Approved  you,  and  when  last  he  wrote, 

prattling  to  her  mother  Of  her  betrothal  to  the  /:-' 
Charles, 

prest  upon  By  the  fierce  E  and  his  Antipope. 

When  he  hath  shaken  off  the  E, 

you  have  traifick'd  Between  the  E  and  the  Pope, 

Threaten  our  junction  with  the  E — • 
Empire    Should  make  the  mightiest  e  earth  has 

known.  Queen  Mary  v  iii  70 

the  first  Fell,  and  the  next  became  an  E.  Harold  iv  i  51 

push'd  one  way  by  the  E  and  another  by  England,  Becket  n  ii  327 


Harold  mill 
The  Cup  n  341 

Harold  m  i  316 

Becket,  Pro.  452 

Foresters  i  ii  70 

n  ii  28 

m  143 

,.      IV 1031 

Becket,  Pro.  485 
Queen  Mary  m  vi  52 
ni  i  85 
I  i  119 
I  v2 
I  V  324 
I  V  348 
I  V  504 
I  V  549 
III  ii  76 
ni  ii  108 
in  iii  69 
in  vi  76 

V  v  233 

Becket  i  in  203 

I  iii  244 

n  ii  68 

„      n  ii  471 


his  poor  tonsure  A  crown  of  E. 
Employ    E  us,  heat  us,  quicken  us,  help  us, 
Empress     But — shamed  of  you,  my  E ! 
Emptiness     I  had  but  e  to  set  before  you, 

course  of  that  full  feast  That  leaves  but  e. 
Empty    Most  fruitful,  yet,  indeed,  an  e  rind, 

nave  and  aisles  all  e  as  a  fool's  jest ! 

Why  then  the  throne  is  e.     Who  inherits  ? 

since  the  Sheriff  left  me  naught  but  an  e  belly, 
Encampt    The  Roman  is  e  without  your  city — 
Enchanted    the  people  Believe  the  wood  e. 
Enclosed    now  you  are  e  with  boards  of  cedar, 


.,       V  i  196 

The  Cup  I  iii  131 

Prom,  of  May  m  599 

The  Falcon  870 

Prom,  of  May  ii  258 

Queen  Mary  in  ii  202 

IV  iii  286 

Harold  m  i  235 

Foresters  n  i  279 

The  Cup  I  ii  83 

Becket  m  i  36 

Queen  Mary  in  ii  101 


Encumbered 


899 


England 


Encumbered     E  as  we  are,  who  would  lend  us  any- 

thimr  ? 
End  (s)     born  i'  the  tail  e  of  old  Harry  the  Seventh 
Look  to  you  as  the  one  to  cro\vii  their  e's. 
She  fear'd  it  might  unman  him  for  his  e. 
to  what  e  ?     For  yet  the  faith  is  not  established  there. 
Gardiner.     The  e's  not  come.     Pole.     No — nor  this 
way  wiU  come,  Seeing  there  lie  two  ways  to  every  e, 
Latimer  Had  a  brief  e — not  Ridley, 
as  I  have  come  To  the  last  e  of  life. 
Might  it  not  be  the  other  side  rejoicing  In  his  brave  e  ? 
Who  cannot  move  straight  to  his  e — 
sight  of  Danish  blood  Might  serve  an  e  not  English — 
And  to  what  e  ? 

and  to  speak  tioith,  nigh  at  the  e  of  our  last  crust, 
an'  it  'ud  be  weU  for  me  in  the  e, 
but  in  the  e  we  flourished  out  into  a  merriment; 
What !     Is  the  e  come  ? 
•The  e  is  mine. 
If  once  our  e's  are  gain'd  ? 
harm  at  times,  may  even  Hasten  their  e. 
At  the  e  of  the  daay,  For  the  last  load  hoiini  ? 
(repeat)  Prom,  of  Mai/  u  183,  194 


Prom,  of  May  iii  162 

Queen  Mary  i  i  42 

I  iv  172 


III  iv  108 
IV  ii  225 

IV  iii  218 
IV  iii  358 
IV  iii  394 

Harold  iv  iii  98 

Becket  i  ii  63 

„   III  i  114 

.,   mi  134 

..  m  iii  137 

„     v  i  148 

.,     V  i  151 

Tlie  Cup  I  i  32 

The  Falcon  823 


(repeat) 


II  208 

II  238,  292 

u  259 

Foresters  ii  i  125 

IV  332 

IV  716 

Becket  ii  ii  315 

The  Cup  1  iii  126 

Queen  Mary  in  v  115 

Becket,  Pro.  305 

Pro.  335 

Foresters  iv  1049 


Till  the  e  of  the  daay  And  the  last  load  hoiim. 

Till  the  e  o'  the  daay  An'  the  last  load  hoam  ? 

To  the  e  o'  the  daay  An'  the  last  load  hoam.' 

I  came  To  eat  him  up  and  make  an  e  of  him. 

at  the  far  e  of  the  glade  I  see  two  figures 

To  his  own  unprincely  e's. 
End  (verb)     Ay,  if  he  do  not  «  in  smoke  again. 

So  e  all  passions.     Then  what  use  in  passions  ? 
Elided    all  things  lived  and  e  honestly. 

Thou  shalt  not  go.     I  have  not  e  with  thee. 

That  was  not  the  way  I  «  it  first — 

Our  forest  games  are  e,  our  free  life, 
Ending  (adj.)    showei-s  of  blood  are  blown  Before  a  never 

e  blast,  Harold  ni  i  395 

Ending  (s)     Other  reasons  There  be  for  this  man's  e,     Queen  Mary  iv  iii  54 

misreport  His  e  to  the  glory  of  their  church.  „         rv  iii  327 

Endure    Canst  thou  e  to  be  a  beggar  Foresters  i  i  204 

Enemy     Thou  speakest  of  the  e  of  thy  king.  Queen  Mary  i  v  327 

Stand  fast  against  our  enemies  and  yours,  ,,  u  ii  242 

Makes  enemies  for  himself  and  for  his  king ;  „  ii  ii  399 

Who  will  avenge  me  of  mine  enemies —  .,         in  ii  166 

But  he  was  evermore  mine  e,  „  v  ii  91 

Thou  hast  given  it  to  the  e  of  our  house.  Harold  iv  ii  31 

So  perish  all  the  enemies  of  Harold  !  ,,        v  i  504 

So  perish  all  the  enemies  of  England  !  „        v  i  554 

Be  sweet  to  her,  she  has  many  enemies.  Becket  i  i  404 

Is  he  thy  e  ?    Henry.    He  ?  who  ?  ay  !     Rosamund. 
Thine  e  knows  the  secret  of  my  bower. 

To  bless  thine  enemies Becket.    Ay,  mine,  not  Heaven's. 

Mine  enemies  barr'd  aU  access  to  the  boy. 

My  lord,  we  force  you  from  your  enemies 


Henceforth  I  am  thy  mortal  e. 


I  was  but  wounded  by  the  e  there  And  then  imprison'd. 
day's  bright  like  a  friend,  but  the  wind  east  like 


Hi  262 
vii25 
V  ii  451 
„     V  iii  24 
The  Cwp  I  ii  330 
The  Falcon  388 


Prom,  of  May  i  80 

They  say,  we  should  forgive  our  enemies.  „         n  432 

Bed  with  his  own  and  e's  blood —  Foresters  u  i  32 

Enforce    to  e  The  long-withholden  tribute :  The  Cup  i  i  76 

Enframed    powers  of  the  house  of  Godwin  Are  not  e  in  thee.  Harold  i  i  317 

Engelram  de  We    mightiest  knight  of  France,  Sir  E  d  T, —  Becket  i  iii  748 

England     Edward  might  bequeath  the  crown  Of  E,         Queen  Mary  i  ii  28 

not  to  yield  His  Church  of  E  to  the  Papal  wolf  And 

Mary ;  „  i  ii  36 

— for  to  wed  with  Spain  Would  treble  E —  „  i  v  76 

I  am  Queen  of  E ;  take  mine  eyes,  „         i  v  127 

Would  I  marry  Prince  Philip,  if  all  E  hate  him  ?  „         i  v  139 

Is  it  E,  or  a  party  ?     Now,  your  answer.  „         i  v  142 

men-at-arms  Guard  my  poor  dreams  for  E.  „         i  v  154 

if  this  Philip  be  the  titular  king  Ot  E,  ,         i  v  255 

— after  me  Is  heir  oi  E;  ..         i  v  286 

Would  make  our  E,  France ;  Mary  of  E,  joining  hands 
with  Spain,  „  i  v  297 


England  [continued)    Heir  of  this  E  and  the 

Netherlands  !  Queen  Mary  i  v  418 

Men  of  Kent ;  Eot  E:  .,          ii  i  157 

all  the  rest  of  E  bow'd  theirs  to  the  Norman,  „          n  i  159 

county  or  a  shire,  but  of  this  E,  „          u  i  163 

he  wiU  be  King,  King  of  E,  my  masters ;  „          n  K}'^^ 

and  be  the  mightiest  man  This  day  in  E.  „           n  ii  20 

my  father  was  the  rightful  heir  Of  E,  „          n  ii  171 

or  impair  in  any  way  This  royal  state  of  E,  ,.         n  ii  230 

The  Queen  of  E — or  the  Kentish  Squire  ?  „         ii  ii  269 

The  Queen  of  E  or  the  rabble  of  Kent  ?  „         u  ii  273 

'  Who  knows  ?  '     I  am  for  E.  „          ii  ii  412 

They  are  the  flower  of  E ;  set  the  gates  wide.  „          ii  iv  70 

lest  living  Spain  Should  sicken  at  dead  E.  „           m  i  28 

I  came  to  feel  the  pulse  of  E,  „           in  i  37 
E  now  Is  but  a  ball  chuck'd  between  France  and  Spain,  „         mi  109 

'  The  Queen  of  E  is  delivered  of  a  dead  dog ! '  „        m  ii  219 

Presenting  the  whole  body  of  this  realm  Of  E,  „       m  iii  117 

This  is  the  loveliest  day  that  ever  smiled  On  E.  „       m  iii  163 

But  stretch  it  wider ;  say  when  E  fell.  .,       m  iii  261 

Perchance  in  E,  loves  her  like  a  son.  „       m  iii  267 
We  reck  not  tho'  we  lost  this  crown  of  E — Ay !  tho' 

it  were  ten  E's  !  ,,         m  iv  56 

Thou  Christian  Bishop,  thou  Lord  Chancellor  Oi  E  I  „        in  iv  302 

What  power  this  cooler  sun  of  E  hath  ,,       m  iv  327 

She  troubles  E  :  that  she  breathes  in  E  „          in  vi  49 

I  cannot  be  True  to  this  realm  of  E  „            iv  i  27 

made  us  lower  our  kingly  flag  To  yours  of  jB.  ,,              v  i  60 

lower  his  flag  To  that  of  E  in  the  seas  oi  E.  ,.              v  i  66 

Being  Queen  of  E,  I  have  none  other.  ,.              v  i  69 

he  would  weld  France,  E,  Scotland,  ,.            v  i  137 

They  say  your  wars  are  not  the  wars  of  E.  „           v  i  166 

The  King  of  France  the  King  of  E  too.  „            v  i  198 

sharper  harm  to  E  and  to  Rome,  Than  Calais  taken.  ,,             v  ii  29 

Send  out :  let  £^  as  of  old  Rise  lionlike,  ..          v  ii  265 

I  do  much  fear  that  E  will  not  care.  „           v  ii  282 

Suffer  not  That  my  brief  reign  in  E  be  defamed  „           v  ii  302 

Your  i?  is  as  loyal  as  myself.  ,.          v  ii  328 

remember  what  you  said  When  last  you  came  to  E?  „           v  ii  568 

Welcome  to  £ !  „           v  iii  14 

What  hinders  but  that  Spain  and  E  join'd,  „            v  iii  68 
Spain  would  be  E  on  her  seas,  and  E  Mistress  of  the 

Indies.  ,,           v  iii  72 

E  Will  be  the  Mistress  of  the  Indies  yet,  „           v  iii  76 

never  meri-y  world  In  E,  since  the  Bible  came  among  us.  .,           v  v  241 

It  never  will  be  merry  world  in  E,  ,,           v  v  247 

That  never  English  monarch  dying  left  E  so  little.  „           v  v  278 

— we  will  make  E  great.  ,-           v  v  281 

God  save  Elizabeth,  the  Queen  of  -E  !  .,           v  v  284 

Yon  grimly-glaring,  treble-brandish'd  scourge  Of  E  !  Harold  i  i  5 

mean  The  doom  of  E  and  the  wrath  of  Heaven  ?  .,     i  i  46 

bishops  down  from  all  Their  thrones  in  El  ,,     i  i  51 

is  this  pendent  hell  in  heaven  A  harm  to  E?  „    I  i  77 

he  may  tell  thee,  I  am  a  harm  to  E.  „    i  i  80 

War  there,  my  son  ?  is  that  the  doom  oi  E?  ,.  i  i  126 

For  all  the  world  sees  it  as  well  as  E.  •■  i  i  130 

but  after  I  am  gone  Woe,  woe  to  E\  •,  i  i  190 

E  loves  thee  for  it.  „  i  i  221 

my  father  drove  the  Normans  out  Of  E  ? —  .,  i  i  253 

Be  there  not  fair  woods  and  fields  In  E?  ■■  i  i  263 

sons  of  Godwin  Sit  topmost  in  the  field  of  E,  ,,  i  i  326 

Griffyth  I  hated ;  why  not  hate  the  foe  Oi  E?  .,  i  ii  146 

If  he  were  King  of  E,  I  his  queen,  „  i  ii  154 

Should  not  E  Love  Aldwyth,  ..  i  ii  177 

Pronounced  his  heir  of  E.  .■  i  ii  195 
Peace-lover  is  our  Harold  for  the  sake  Of  E's  wholeness —        ..  i  ii  198 

And  bless  the  Queen  of  E.  „  i  ii  207 

a  whale  to  a  whelk  we  have  swallowed  the  King  oi  E.  ,.    n  i  45 

thine  host  in  E  when  I  went  To  visit  Edward.  .,     n  ii  4 

know'st  my  claim  on  E  Thro'  Edward's  promise :  „    u  ii  12 

I  want  his  voice  in  E  for  the  crown,  „    ii  ii  71 

E  our  own  Thro'  Harold's  help,  „    n  ii  77 

Who  shall  be  kings  of  E.     I  am  heir  Of  E  ,,  a  ii  124 
The  choice  of  £  is  the  voice  of  E.     William.    I  will  be 

king  of  E  by  the  laws,  The  choice,  and  voice  of  E.  „  ii  ii  128 


England 


900 


English 


England  (continued)     Blowing  for  E,  ha  ?     Not  yet.  Harold  ii  ii  152 

Not  ever  fair  for  £  ?                                      '  „  n  ii  258 

for  my  mother's  sake  I  love  your  E,  „  n  ii  269 

Then  for  my  mother's  sake  and  E's  sake  „  ii  ii  274 
or  whether  E  Be  shatter'd  into  fragments.    Harold. 

News  from  E?  „  ii  ii  285 

Yea,  yea,  he  would  be  king  of  E.  „  ii  ii  369 

And  for  our  Mother  E  ?  „  ii  ii  425 

And  all  thine  E  hath  forgotten  thee ;  „  ii  ii  443 

he  drove  our  good  Normans  out  From  E,  „  ii  ii  526 

sat  within  the  Nomian  chair  A  ruler  all  for  E —  „  ii  ii  534 

Why  then  the  heir  of  E,  who  is  he  ?  ,.  ii  ii  568 

and  a  cliild,  Will  E  have  him  king  ?  ,.  ii  ii  573 

promiseii  that  if  ever  he  were  king  In  E.  „  n  ii  588 

Thou  art  the  mightiest  voice  in  E,  man,  ,.  ii  ii  618 

Foremost  in  E  and  in  Normandy ;  „  ii  ii  631 

And  thou  be  my  vice-king  in  E.  „  ii  ii  635 

Ay,  brother — for  the  sake  of  E — ^ay.  „  n  ii  638 

Swear  thou  to  help  me  to  the  crown  of  E.  „  n  ii  705 
I  swear  to  help  thee  to  the  crown  oi  E  .  .  . 

(repeat)  Harold  u  ii  713,  722 

Delay  is  death  to  thee,  ruin  to  E.  Harold  ii  ii  718 

When  thou  art  home  in  E,  with  thine  own,  „  n  ii  728 

The  wind  is  fair  For  E  now  ...  „  n  ii  767 

for  I  am  close  to  thee  And  E —  „  iii  i  7 

our  dear  E  Is  demi -Norman.  „  iii  i  40 

Our  Tostig  parted  cursing  me  and  E ;  ,.  iii  i  76 

He  hath  gone  to  kindle  Norway  against  E,  „  iii  i  80 

Crying  '  the  doom  of  E,'  and  at  once  He  stood  „  in  i  134 

along  the  highest  ciying  '  The  doom  oi  El' —  „  in  i  157 

Be  there  no  Saints  of  E  To  help  us  „  in  i  220 

he  hath  served  me :  none  but  he  Can  rule  all  E.  „  in  i  244 

Not  mean  To  make  our  E  Norman.  „  ni  i  250 

prayer  against  the  curse  That  lies  on  thee  and  E.  „  in  i  279 

Who  make  thy  good  their  own— all  E,  Earl.  „  ni  i  331 

whereby  the  curse  might  glance  From  thee  and  E.  „  m  i  344 

thou  be  only  King  of  the  moment  over  E.  „  m  ii  51 

And  well  for  thee  and  E — and  for  her —  „  m  ii  111 

And  given  thy  realm  of  £  to  the  bastard.  „  ni  ii  154 

thimder-cloud  That  lours  on  E — laughter  !  „  in  ii  161 

but  our  help  Is  Harold,  king  of  E.  „  iv  i  11 

Dane,  Jute,  Angle,  Saxon,  were  or  should  be  all  One  E,     ,,  iv  i  79 

To  make  all  E  one,  to  close  all  feuds,  „  rv  i  141 

one  to  rule  All  E  beyond  question,  beyond  quarrel.  „  iv  i  145 

For  E,  for  thy  poor  white  dove,  „  iv  i  230 

Thou  art  nothing  in  thine  E,  save  for  Norway,  „  iv  ii  22 

To  do  the  battle  for  me  here  in  E,  „  rv  ii  70 

both  have  life  In  the  large  mouth  of  E,  „  iv  iii  74 

namesake,  when  he  ask'd  for  E?  „  iv  iii  111 

sons  of  those  Who  made  this  Britain  E,  „  iv  iii  154 

The  men  that  guarded  E  to  the  South  „  rv  iii  209 

The  curse  of  E  !  these  are  drown'd  in  wassail,  „  rv  iii  223 

Holy  Father  Hath  given  this  realm  of  E  to  the  Norman.        „  v  i  13 

To  do  with  E's  choice  of  her  own  king  ?  „  v  i  19 

Should  they  not  know  free  E  crowns  herself  ?  „  v  i  48 

should  the  King  of  E  waste  the  fields  Of  E,  ,.  v  i  140 

No  Norman  horse  Can  shatter  E,  .,  v  i  196 

chanting  that  old  song  of  Brunanburg  Where  E  conquer'd.     ,.  v  i  216 

our  old  songs  are  prayers  for  E  too  !  „  v  i  223 

I  die  for  E  then,  who  lived  for  E —  „  v  i  268 

I  left  our  E  naked  to  the  South  „  v  i  289 

not  for  myself — ^For  E — yet  not  wholly—  „  v  i  307 

This  memory  to  thee  ! — and  this  to  E,  ,.  v  i  327 

Thou  hast  been  false  to  E  and  to  me  ! —  „  v  i  349 

And  not  on  thee — nor  E — fall  God's  doom  !  „  v  i  370 
And  thou  art  E  !    Alfred  Was  E.    Ethelred  was  nothing. 

E  Is  but  her  king,  and  thou  art  Harold  !  „  v  i  373 

Edith,  if  1,  the  last  English  King  of  E—  „  v  i  384 

The  king  of  E  stands  between  his  banners.  „  v  i  486 

So  perish  all  the  enemies  oi  El  „  v  i  555 

Here  fell  the  truest,  manliest  hearts  of  E.  „  v  ii  59 

Why  then  of  E.    Madam,  fear  us  not.  „  v  ii  96 

When  I  visited  E,  Some  held  she  was  his  wife  „  v  ii  99 

I  am  king  of  E,  so  they  thwart  me  not,  „  v  ii  196 
I  would  give  her  to  tliy  care  in  E                                    Becket,  Pro.  143 


England  (continued)    I  have  built  a  secret  bower  in  E, 

Thomas, 
And  pass  her  to  her  secret  bower  in  E. 
Ay,  ay,  but  swear  to  see  to  her  in  E. 
fulminations  from  the  side  of  Rome,  An  interdict  on 

E — I  will  have  My  young  son  Henry  crown'd  the 

King  of  E,  That  so  the  Papal  bolt  may  pass  by  E, 
I  loved  Henry  of  E,  and  Henry  of  E  dreamed  that  he 

loved  me ; 

0  thou  Great  Seal  of  E,  Given  me  by  my  dear  friend 
the  King  of  E— 

Barons  and  bishops  of  our  realm  of  E, 

Flung  the  Great  Seal  of  E  in  my  face — 

he  might  well  have  sway'd  All  E  under  Henry, 

Barons  of  E  and  of  Normandy, 

What  say'st  thou  to  the  Chancellorship  oi  E? 

Dost  thou  know,  my  boy,  what  it  is  to  be  Chancellor 

otE? 
But  E  scarce  would  hold  Young  Henry  king, 
A  hundred  of  the  wisest  heads  from  E, 
pushed  one  way  by  the  Empire  and  another  by  E, 
till  the  weight  of  Germany  or  the  gold  of  E  brings 

one  of  them  down  to  the  dust — 
Save  for  myself  no  Rome  were  left  in  JS, 

1  strike  into  my  former  path  For  E, 
I  came  to  E  suddenly, 

I  should  be  back  In  E  ev'n  for  this. 

My  Lords  of  France  and  E,  My  friend  of  Canterbury 

And  so  farewell  until  we  meet  in  E.    Becket.    1  fear, 

my  liege,  we  may  not  meet  in  E. 
Come,  stay  with  us,  then,  Before  you  part  for  E. 
thy  life  Was  not  one  hour's  worth  in  E 
.    more  wolves  that  he  can  tame  in  his  woods  of  E, 
the  wolves  of  E  Must  murder  her  one  shepherd, 
let  us  move  away !     And  thence  to  E. 
Of  and  belonging  to  the  King  of  E, 
'  Eleanor  of  Aquitaine,  Eleanor  of  E ! 
My  liege,  the  Queen  of  E.    Henri/.    God's  eyes  !    Eleanor. 

Of  -E?    Say  of  Aquitaine.      I  am  no  Queen  of  E.    I 

had  dream'd  I  was  the  bride  of  E,  and  a  queen.    Henry. 

Andj^while  you  dream'd  you  were  the  bride  of  E, — 
Thomas,  I  would  thou  hadst  return'd  to  E, 
on  a  Tuesday  pass'd  From  E  into  bitter  banishment ; 
such  brawls  and  loud  disturbances  In  E, 
Divide  me  from  the  mother  church  of  E,  My  Canterbury. 
Tho'  all  the  swords  in  E  flash'd  above  me 
Priest  of  God,  Primate  of  E. 
St.  Denis  of  France  and  St.  Alphege  of  E. 
your  Robin,  all  E's  Robin,  fights  not  for  himself  but 

for  the  people  of  E. 
I  would  break  through  them  all,  like  the  King  of  E. 
according  to  the  law  and  custom  of  the  kingdom  of  E 
But  shall  we  leave  our  E  ? 
There  is  no  land  like  E  (repeat) 
And  these  will  strike  for  E 
To  sing  the  songs  of  E 
King  of  E  Perchance  this  day  may  sink 
made  me  King  of  all  the  discontent  Of  E 
one  of  those  mercenaries  that  suck  the  blood  of  E. 
these  Barons,  Devils,  that  make  this  blessed  E  hell 
What  was  this  realm  of  E,  all  the  crowns 
I  have  been  away  from  E  all  these  years, 
English     but  took  To  the  E  red  and  white. 
I  am  E  queen,  not  Roman  Emperor. 
E  Garter,  studded  with  great  emeralds, 
and  E  carrot's  better  than  Spanish  licorice ; 
tell  you  that  all  E  heretics  have  tails, 
and  for  Gardiner !  being  E  citizen, 
being  E  churchman  How  should  he  bear  the  headship 

of  the  Pope? 
Began  to  batter  at  your  E  Church, 
there's  An  old  world  E  adage  to  the  point. 
I  know  them  heretics,  but  right  E  ones, 
to  the  intent  That  you  may  lose  your  E  heritage. 
The  scourge  and  butcher  of  their  E  church. 


Becket  Pro.  153 

Pro.  184 

„       Pro.  191 


Pro.  223 
Pro.  357 

1  i  336 

I  iii  336 
1  iii  456 
I  iii  468 
I  iii  741 

II  i  226 

ni232 

n  ii  30 

n  ii  172 

n  ii  328 

nii364 
n  ii  387 
nii456 
in  186 
in  iii  10 
m  iii  227 

ra  iii  237 
m  iii  245 
in  iii  251 
ni  iii  323 
in  iii  343 
ra  iii  359 
IV  ii  23 
IV  11241 


V  197 
viil2 

V  ii  289 

V  ii  354 
vii361 

V  ii  484 

V  iii  114 

V  iii  165 


Foresters  i  i  236 

I  i  326 

1  iii  67 

I  iii  92 

Foresters  n  i  1,  5,  13,  17 

Foresters  n  i  9 

ni23 

ni30 

ni88 

n  i  175 

iu  127 

IV  403 

IV  816 

Queen  Mary  i  v  18 

I  V  503 

in  i  84 

ni  i  219 

mi  229 

ni  iii  24 

m  iii  28 
ra  iv  186 

IV  i  175 

rv  iii  344 

vil33 

viil06 


1 


English 

English  {continued)     That  never  E  monarch  dying 
left  England  so  little. 
There  somewhere  beats  an  E  pulse  in  thee  ! 
Boy,  thou  hast  forgotten  That  thou  art  E. 
Thou  art  E,  Edward  too  is  E  now, 
To  Holy  Peter  in  our  E  isle  ! 
My  mother  is  a  Dane,  and  I  am  £ ; 
Seven  feet  of  E  land,  or  something  more. 


901 


Eternal 


or  E  Ironside  Who  fought  with  Knut,  or  Knut  who 

coming  Dane  Died  E. 
sight  of  Danish  blood  Might  serve  an  end  not  E~ 
'  Seven  feet  of  E  earth,  or  something  more, 
Edith,  if  I,  the  last  E  King  of  England — 
I  do  not  hear  our  E  war-cry. 
I  held  it  with  him  in  his  E  halls. 
And  where  is  she  ?     There  in  her  E  nest  ? 
01  Provence  blew  you  to  your  E  throne ; 
That  ever  blossom'd  on  this  E  isle. 
There  are  no  hearts  like  E  hearts 
There  are  no  wives  like  £  wives 
There  are  no  maids  like  E  maids 
the  bravest  E  heart  Since  Hereward  the  Wake, 
Nay,  no  Earl  am  I.     1  a.m  E  yeoman, 
when  Our  E  maidens  are  their  prey, 
men  will  call  him  An  Eastern  tyrant,  not  an  E  kins 


Queen  Mary  v  v  277 

Harold  ii  ii  266 

II  ii  475 

m  i  28 

„      III  i  207 

IV  i  55 

IV  ii  54 


Look ;  can  you  make  it  E? 

Word  of  God  In  E ! 

said  the  Miserere  Mei— But  all  in  E,  mark  you 

These  Spaniel-Spaniard  E  of  the  time, 

I  am  ashamed  that  I  am  Bagenhall,  E. 

Peters,  you  know  me  Catholic,  but  E. 

Howard  is  all  £ ! 


IV  iii  53 

IV  iii  98 
,.     IV  iii  112 

V  i  384 

V  i  651 

V  ii  128 
Becket,  Pro.  178 

,    „        V  i  123 

Foresters  i  ii  124 

II  i  3 

II  i  15 

II  i  19 

II  i  686 

III  131 
in  179 

IV  904 


Quee^i  Mary  ii  i  127 

ni  i  280 

HI  i  392 

III  iii  240 

III  iii  249 

IV  iii  567 
vi61 


there  are  many  E  in  your  ranks  To  help  vour  battle.  Z           v  i  110 

that  our  brave  E  Hail  salliefl  out  from  Calais  v  ii  255 

one  who  mi'd  All  offices,  all  bishopricks  with  E~  Harold  ii  ii  535 

That  art  half  E.  Take  them  away  !  ,.  v  ii  135 
fought  men  Like  Harold  and  his  brethren,  and  his  guard 

Of  E.  ^^  y  jj  jgj 
Make  them  again  one  people  —  Norman,  E;  And  E, 

Norman  ;  ^,  jj  jgg 

That's  the  E  of  it.  Becket  i  iv  275 

Not  on  French  ground,  nor  any  ground  but  E,  .,  m  iij  261 
and  your  owti  name  Of  Harold  sounds  so  E  and 

««,n.»f'i^'''     Qu  u  Prom,  of  May  III  QIO 

Mngnsn-Dom    Shame,  shame,  my  masters  !  are  you 

■»— ij-v.^'*'      A-              ■           ,           ,  Queen  Mary  i  iii  70 

Blglishman     \  ou  are  shy  and  proud  like  Englishmen,  ..        n  ii  257 

Here  swings  a  Spaniard — there  an  j^;  „            v  i  87 

1          Sailing  from  France,  with  thirty  Englishmen,  !,          v  i  285 

There  are  no  men  like  Englishmen  Foresters  ii  i  7 

Englishwoman    Malet,  thy  mother  was  an  E;  Harold  ii  ii  265 
Enlisted    See  Xisted 

Enliven     We  might  e  you.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  119 
Enough    (See  also  Anew)     E,  my  I^rds.     It  is  God's 

will,  the  Holy  Father's  will,  .,           iv  i  183 

The  prison  fare  is  good  e  for  me.  "            ly  jj  42 

old  e  To  scare  me  into  dreaming,  '  what  am  I,  ].          iv  ii  102 

E !     Thou  wilt  not  break  it !  Harold  11  ii  752 

wouldst  hug  thy  Cupid  till  his  ribs  cracked— e  of  this.    Becket,  Pro  505 

E,  my  lord,  e\  ,1  {,;  74Q 

E,  my  lord.     Becket.     More  than  e.  .,        j  jij  749 

They  are  plagues  e  in-door.  ,.'         u  jj  91 

Ay,  ay  !  the  King  humbles  himself  e.  ..  n  a  135 
But  thou  art  like  e  to  make  him  thine.     Eleanor. 

Becket  is  like  e  to  make  all  his.  ,,         v  i  132 

their  spites  at  Kome,  Is  like  e  to  cancel  them,  The  Cup  i  i  92 

That  is  €,  Farmer  Dobson.  Prom,  of  May  n  118 
E !     Dora.     It  seem'd  so ;  only  there  was  left  A 

second  daughter,  ,,           m  759 

Enrich    and  e  Earth  with  her  shadow  !  The  Cup  i  Hi  59 

Ensign     I,  bearing  this  great  e,  make  it  clear  Becket  i  iii  544 

Entanglement     I  must  free  myself  from  this  e.  Prom,  of  May  i  480 

Enter    Not  for  the  seven  devils  to  «  in  ?  Queen  Mary  m  ii  140 
'  How  hard  it  is  For  the  rich  man  to  e  into 

I             Heaven;'  „           iv  iii  2fJ5 


Enter  (continued)    Ah  !— let  him  e.     Nay,  you  need 

wi!^*J!l9     T.u-  Queen  Mart/ V  iii  10 

wSf .       ,u  ¥*  ^"^  '\.  The  Cup  n  39 

VVill  e  on  the  larger  golden  age ;  Prom  of  Maui  590 

Enter  d    spmt  of  the  twelve  Apostles  e  Into  thy  making.        '   Becket  li  50 

Vr.iJtZV'Z  ^-  T""  Pf  *^  "?'''  **'**  "  '^^^•'  •  Foresters  11  i  240 

Entertain  d    Mamtam'd,  and  e  us  royally  !  Harold  11  ii  159 

Entertainment    My  lord,  we  thank  you  for  your  e.  The  Falcon  859 

1  fear  you  scarce  Will  thank  me  for  your  e  now.  882 
Entreat    does  your  gracious  Queen  e  you  kingUke  ' 
Courtenay.     'Fore  God,  I  think  she  e's  like  a 

P«?v..' w  If     iu  .    J    .u  Qit-een  Man/  i  iii  110 

Poor  Wulfnoth  !  do  they  not  e  thee  well  ?  Harold  11  ii  404 

Madam,  we  will  e  thee  with  all  honour.  v  ii  199 

my  good  lord,  I  do  e  thee^ign.  Becket  1  iii  185 

Fnh.«^  %?-ti^  r  Jl^^"*  ^\  "'"'  "ja^i^e.  The  Cup  11  248 

Enteeaty     Still  plied  him  with  e  and  reproach :  Queen  Mary  rv  iii  577 

^«^  How  can  I  come  When  you  so  block  the  e  ?  Becket  v  iii  37 

^nvied     1  e  bmnatus  when  he  married  her.  The  Cuv  i  i  129 

iSwomh^H  ^'^Thl"  h  l''''^'  "'  7^*'i°'^*y  *'?•''  ^^'^^^^  "  i  100 

Ijnwomb  d    The  babe  e  and  at  the  breast  is  cursed,  Harold  v  i  65 

4-phesian    Artemis,  Artemis,  hear  her,  E  Artemis !  The  Cuv  n  311 

Ephesus    seven  sleepers  in  the  cave  at  E  Have  tum'd  Harold  liV^ 

Episcopan    Nolo  e.  Becket  Pro  284 

fSwo^  ^^'^h  "^®  *^f  stone-cut  e.  Queen  Mary  rv  iii  163 

Equal  (adj. )     I  am  not  «  to  it  yet.  P^om.  of  May  m  239 

We  have  heard  Of  thy  just,  mild,  and  «  governance ;       Harold  n  ii  690 

F„.,«[^?  ""^^'^  ^•^'^T  ^^  ""^  ^^^"•='''  J^'^'^^^t  I  i»  444 

liqual  (s)    never  since  have  met  Her  e  for  pure  innocence    Prom,  of  Man  11 372 

shamed  of  her  among  The  ladies,  bom  his  e's.  m  582 

Equ^     l^cumpeditePraepediatur!  Harold  vi  529 

Equite     Equus  cum  e  Dejiciatur  !  v  i  57Q 

Equus  cum  e  Prsecipitatur.  "       y  j  59S 

Eqmty    and  golden  provinces  So  that  were  done  in  e.  Becket  v  ii  348 

Equus     £  cum  equite  Dejiciatur  !  Harold  v  1579 

E  cum  equite  Prsecipitatur.  y  j  590 

vZ'A  '^"/o  l^T  fu  '  ^  ^^J^^^  ^""^'^  ^'^''^  «^««  -^^««/  IV  i  30 

Err  d    As  he  hath  ever  e  thro'  vanity.  iv  i  31 

I  have  e  with  him ;  with  him  I  have  recanted.  "  ly  i  66 

Thought  that  I  knew  him,  e  thro'  love  of  him,  Becket  1  iii  440 

Error    Repentant  of  his  g's  ?  Queen  Man/ rviii^ 

Etse  (horse)     That  beer  be  as  good  fur  'e's  as  men.       Prom,  'of  Mau  11  315 

Esalas    loons  That  cannot  spell  E  from  St.  Paul,  Queen  Man,  rri  i  281 

Escape     (See  also  'Scape)    Much  less  shall  others  in 

like  cause  e,  ^  ^y  jy  gg 

Who  will  be  martyr  when  he  might  e.  "Becket  v  ii  280 

Escaped     (See  also  Scaped)     Danae  has  e  again  Her  tower, 

and  her  Acrisius —  ^  j  ogg 

She  hath  e.  The  Cup  i  iii  121 

1  his  IS  my  son  but  late  e  from  prison.  Foresters  11  i  460 

Gone,  like  a  deer  that  hath  e  thine  arrow  !     Robin. 

What  deer  when  I  have  mark'd  him  ever  yet  E 

mine  arrow  ?  iv  60 

Escaping    charge  you  that  ye  keep  This  traitor  from  e.  Becket  v  ii  511 

Eshtree  (ash-tree)     wheere  the  big  e  cuts  athurt  it,  Prom,  of  May  iii  94 

Especial     A  token  of  His  more  e  Grace ;  Queen  Man/  iii  iii  170 

(Air  old  friend  Granmer,  Your  more  e  love,  '    m  jy  418 

Essex    she  was  passing  Some  chapel  down  in  E,  "  i  v  40 

Established     For  yet  the  faith  is  not  f  there.  "  m  iv  1^ 

Estate  (condition)     bland  And  affable  to  men  of  all  e's,  m  yj  gl 

oiTal  of  the  city  would  not  change  E's  with  him ;  iv  iii  78 

Estate  (property)     that  boldest  thine  e's  In  fee  and 

barony  Becket  i  iii  674 

Esteem'd     Who  not  alone  e  it  honourable,  Queen  Maru  ii  ii  209 

Estimation     Doth  not  the  fewness  of  anything  make  the 

fulness  of  it  in  e  ?  Becket  iir  iii  303 

Eternal     The  E  Peter  of  the  changeless  chair.  Queen  Man/  in  iv  380 

our  grim  Walhalla,  E  war,  ^  Harold  in  ii  75 

wng'd  souls  flying  Beyond  all  change  and  in  the 

e  distance  jjj  jj  iq. 

Who  stands  aghast  at  her  e  self  Becket  n  ii  404 

Then  with  one  quick  short  stab— e  peace.  The  Cup  i  iii  124 

and  smile  At  bygone  things  till  that  e  peace.  i  iij  173 


Ethelred 


902 


Excommunicate 


Ethelred    (King  of  Saxon  England,  979-1016)    Alfred  Was 

England.  E  was  nothing.  Harold  v  i  374 
Eucharist     You  do  not  own  The  bodily  presence  in 

the  E,  Queen  Mary  i  ii  44 

Eucharistic    and  retract  That  E  doctrine  in  your  book.  „        iv  ii  81 

Europe     I  am  the  noblest  blood  in  E,  Madam,  „         i  iv  85 

lord  of  more  land  Than  any  crown  in  E,  Becket  v  i  30 

oaks,  Gnarl'd — older  than  the  thrones  of  E !  Foresters  m  93 

Eva  (daughter  of  Farmer  Steer)    an'  Miss  Dora,  an'  Miss 

£,  an'  all !  Prom,  of  May  1 11 

Foalks  says  he  likes  Miss  E  the  best.  „            1 25 

Beant  Miss  E  gone  ofE  a  bit  of  'er  good  looks  „            1 32 

I  haven't  seen  E  yet.    Is  she  anywhere  in  the  garden  ?  ,.            i  46 

He's  been  arter  Miss  E,  haan't  he  ?  „          1 121 
E  told  me  that  he  was  taking  her  likeness.     He's  an 

artist.  „          1 126 

Hev'  ony  o'  ye  seen  E  ?    Dohson.     Noa,  Mr.  Steer.  „          i  313 
I  likes  'im,  and  E  likes  'im.    E  can  do  owt  wi'  'im ; 

look  for  'im,  E,  „          1 436 

Jealous  of  me  with  £ !     Is  it  so  ?  „          i  471 

My  sweet  E,  Where  have  you  lain  in  ambush  „          i  543 

Well,  E !     Eva.     Oh,  Dora,  Dora,  „          1 766 

Fonder  of  poor  E — like  everybody  else.  „           ii  11 

Ihallus  gi'edsoom  on'em  to  Miss£^at  this  timeo' year.       „  ii  16 

fur  Miss  E,  she  set  the  bush  by  my  dairy  winder  „           ii  17 
I  take  them,  then,  for  E's  sake.    Dohson.     E's  saake. 

Yeas.     Poor  gel,  poor  gel !  „           n  29 

or  you  may  find  me  at  the  bottom  of  the  river — E.'  „           n  88 

Poor  E !     O  my  God,  if  man  be  only  A  willy-nilly  „         ii  261 

How  often  have  I  stood  With  E  here  !  „         ii  297 

E\     Dora.     E\     Harold.     What  are  you?  ,.         n  356 

You  knew  E,  then  ?  „         ii  367 

Dear  E  Was  always  thought  the  prettier.  „         n  378 
tell  me  anything  of  our  sweet  E  When  in  her  brighter 

girlhood,  „         ii  520 
.E's  eyes  thro'  hers — A  spell  upon  me  !     Surely  I 

loved  E  More  than  I  knew  !  ,,         ii  641 

if  ye  be  goin'  to  sarve  our  Dora  as  ye  sarved  our  E —  ,.         ii  692 
now  that  you  have  been  brought  to  us  as  it  were  from 

the  grave,  dearest  E,  „        iii  236 
to  saay  he's  browt  some  of  Miss  E's  roses  for  the  sick 

laady  to  smell  on.  „        ni  347 
E,  why  did  you  write  '  Seek  me  at  the  bottom  of  the 

river '  ?  „        III  363 

E  has  come  home.  „        ni  442 

Be  not  so  cast  down,  my  sweet  E.  ,.       m  468 

You  know  her,  E.    Harold.    E !  ,.        ni  663 

O  she  has  fainted.    Sister,  E,  sister !  „        in  672 
Eve    if  I  had  been  E  i'  the  garden  I  shouldn't  ha'  minded 

the  apple,  Becket  iii  i  139 
Even  (adj.)  a  jest  In  time  of  danger  shows  the  pulses  e.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  357 
Even  (s)     Good  e,  my  good  brother  !    Gurth.    Good  e, 

gentle  Edith.     Edith.    Good  e,  Gurth.  Harold  m  ii  116 

yet  I  think  these  oaks  at  dawn  and  e,  Foresters  rv  1067 

Etetang    When  back  he  comes  at  e  hath  the  door         Queen  Mary  v  ii  120 

Event    to  compose  the  e  In  some  such  form  „            i  v  224 

stay  Yet  for  awhile,  to  shape  and  guide  the  e.  „            v  i  304 

And  the  e — our  fallows  till  d,  Becket  i  iii  375 

Ever     {iSee  also  Iver)     who  am  your  friend  And  e  faithful 

counsellor.  Queen  Mary  i  v  135 

Ever-closing    who  dream'd  as  blanketed  In  e-c  fog,  „         in  ii  21 

Ever-jarring    e-j  Earldoms  move  To  music  and  in  order —  Harold  ii  ii  760 
Everlasting    Open,  ye  e  gates  !     The  King  is  here  ! —  Queen  Mary  iii  ii  183 

Ever-rising     Beneath  an  e-r  sun — I  see  him —  The  Cwp  u  535 

Ever-shining    There — league  on  league  of  e-s  shore  „        ii  533 
Every     Parliament  can  make  e  true-bom  man  of  us  a 

bastard.  Qveen  Mary  i  i  27 

Skips  e  way,  from  levity  or  from  fear.  ,,       i  iii  170 
That  e  morning  of  your  Majesty  May  be  most  good, 

is  e  morning's  prayer  „        i  v  1(X) 

He  is  e  way  a  lesser  man  than  Charles ;  „        i  v  330 
but  e  parish  tower  Shall  clang  and  clash  alarum  as 

we  pass,  ,.        n  i  228 

In  «  London  street  a  gibbet  stood.  „           m  i  7 

Certain  I  had  heard  that  e  Spaniard  carries  a  tail  „       ni  i  223 


Every  (continued)    e  Spanish  priest  will  tell  you  that 

all  English  heretics  have  tails.  Queen  Mary  m  i  228 

Do  here  absolve  you  and  deliver  you  And  e  one  of  you,  „         ni  iii  215 
and  from  all  and  e  censure.  Judgment,  „         ni  iii  217 

Seeing  there  lie  two  ways  to  e  end,  ,,         in  iv  113 

e  tongue  Alters  it  passing,  till  it  spells  and  speaks  „  in  v  35 

that  she  breathes  in  England  Is  life  and  lungs  to  e 

rebel  birth  „  in  vi  51 

And  e  soul  of  man  that  breathes  therein.  „         in  vi  107 

And  for  thy  soul  shall  masses  here  be  sung  By  e  priest 

in  Oxford.  ,,         iv  iii  101 

Good  people,  e  man  at  time  of  death  Would  fain  set  forth   „         iv  iii  156 
In  e  article  of  the  Catholic  faith.  And  e  syllable  taught 

us  by  our  Lord,  „         iv  iii  230 

Let  e  craft  that  carries  sail  and  gun  Steer  toward  Calais.    „  v  ii  275 

when  our  good  hive  Needs  e  sting  to  save  it.  Harold  iv  i  18 

E  man  about  his  king  Fought  like  a  king ;  ,,     iv  iii  56 

E  man  about  his  king  Fell  where  he  stood.  „     v  ii  181 

when  e  doorway  blush'd,  Becket  i  iii  346 

When  e  baron  ground  his  blade  in  blood ;  „      i  iii  349 

From  e  bond  and  debt  and  obligation  Incurr'd  as  Chancellor.  ..     i  iii  710 
that  e  thread  of  thought  Is  broken  ere  it  joins —  ,.      v  ii  205 

I  am  sure  of  being  e  way  malign'd.  The  Cup  i  ii  241 

I  would  that  e  man  made  feast  to-day  „  ii  225 

for  I've  been  on  my  knees  e  day  for  these  haK-dozen 

years  The  Falcon  184 

The  blossom  had  open'd  on  e  bough ;  Prom,  of  May  i  42 

and  sat  Thro'  e  sensual  course  of  that  full  feast  „         n  254 

might  be  Blown  everyway  with  e  gust  and  wreck  „         in  536 

is  always  a-telling  us  that  e  man,  Foresters  i  i  95 

Softly  !  softly  !  there  may  be  a  thief  in  e  bush.  „      n  i  366 

for  being  e  inch  a  man  I  honour  e  inch  of  a  woman.  „         in  6c 

Ay,  for  old  Much  is  e  inch  a  man.  ,.       iv  28& 

And  loves  and  dotes  on  e  dingle  of  it.  „        iv  39Ci 

Everyway     {See also'E\eiy)     Her  ghost  is  e  about  me 

here.  Prom,  of  May  ii  35i< 

might  be  Blown  e  with  every  gust  and  wreck  „  in  53fJ 

Evil  (adj.)     She  hath  harken'd  e  counsel — ah!  Queen  Mary  v  i  54 

but  last  night  An  e  dream  that  ever  came  and  went —      Harold  i  ii  70 

with  thy  goodwill  that  I  Proceed  against  thine  e 

councillors,  Becket  m  iii  2(X' 

It  may  be  they  were  e  councillors.  „      ni  iii  21(i 

A^^hose  «  song  far  on  into  the  night  „         v  ii  20f^ 

I  fear  some  strange  and  e  chance  Coming  upon  me.        The  Cup  i  iii  7-1 
It  bears  an  e  savour  among  women.  „        i  iii  8t' 

There  came  some  e  fairy  at  my  birth  And  cursed  me,  Foresters  ii  ii  lOt 
E  fairy  !  do  you  hear  ?  „         n  ii  111 

Evil  (s)    spring  Of  all  those  e's  that  have  flow'd  upon  us;  Queen  Mary  in  iv  23-1 
The  Church's  e  is  not  as  the  King's,  „  ni  iv  27 

kingly  touch  that  cures  the  e  May  serve  to  charm  the 

tiger  Harold  i  i  15: 

E  for  good,  it  seems,  Is  oft  as  childless  of  the  good  as  e 

For  e.  „       V  i  17 

Evil-tongue    Ingratitude,  Injustice,  E-t,  Labour-in -vain.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  16' 

Evolution     when  the  man.  The  child  of  e,  Prom,  of  May  i  58 

Evre-lamb     black  sheep  baaed  to  the  miller's  e-l,  Becket  i  iv  16 

'■  El,  el,  I  am  here  by  the  dam.'  „     i  iv  17 

Exalt    Hugh,  how  proudly  you  e  your  head  I  „     v  ii  45 

Example     he  must  die.  For  warning  and  e.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  5 

Take  therefore,  all,  e  by  this  man,  ,.  rv  iii  5 

Exceeding    With  most  e  willingness,  I  will ;  ,,         ni  v  21 

Fourthly,  to  those  that  own  e  wealth,  „         iv  iii  20 

Some  hollow-hearted  from  e  age- —  Foresters  in  9 

Exceedingly     I  wish  you  and  your  ladyship's  father  a  most 

e  good  morning.  „       i  i  30 

Excellent     Look  at  the  hilt.     \^'hat  e  workmanship.  Becket  iv  ii  31 

Excess     Nature's  moral  Against  e.  „         i  i  37 

Against  the  moral  e  No  physical  ache,  „         i  i  38 

his  fond  e  of  wine  Springs  from  the  loneliness  ,,         in  i  3 

Excessive     seeing  they  were  men  Defective  or  e,  „       n  ii  21 

Exchange     we  va  ill  say — e  them  For  your — for  your —  The  Falcon  72 

Exchequer     the  realm  is  poor,  The  e  at  neap-tide :  Queen  Mary  i  v  12 

I  am  sorry  my  e  runs  so  low  I  cannot  help  you  Foresters  i  ii  27 

E!xcommunicate     No  man  without  my  leave  shall  e  !My 

tenants  or  my  household.  Becket.  Pro.  l 


Excommunicate 


903 


Face 


Excommunicate  (continued)    Ah  !     Thomas,  e  them  all ! 

Smite  the  sheep  and  the  shepherd  will  e  thee. 

More  like  is  he  to  e  me. 

my  poor  heretic  heart  would  e  His  excommunication, 

That  thou  wouldst  e  the  King. 

He  thought  to  e  him — 

How  could  I  e  him  then  ?     Rosamund.     And  wilt  thou 
e  him  now  ? 

to  e  The  prelates  whom  he  chose  to  crown  his  son  ! 

What !  will  he  e  all  the  world  ? 

Because  thou  wast  horn  e. 
Excommunicated    My  loid,  you  have  not  e  him  ? 

to  absolve  the  bishops  \Vhom  you  have  e. 

I  should  be  grateful — He  hath  not  «  we. 
Excommunicating    The  King  condemns  your  e — 
Excommunication    heart  Mould  excommunicate  His  e. 

To  blast  my  reakns  with  e  And  interdict. 
Excuse    must  Accuse  himself,  e  himself ; 


Becket  i  iii  573 

I  iv  228 

II  i  270 
II  i  283 

v  ii  90 

V  ii  141 

V  ii  154 

V  ii  398 
v  ii  466 
v  ii  472 

V  ii  130 

V  ii  377 

V  ii  471 

V  ii  318 
II  i  285 
II  ii  52 

The  Cup  n  115 
Execrable  With  execrating  e  eyes,  Glared  at  the  citizen.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  67 
Execrating    With  e  execrable  eyes.  Glared  at  the  citizen.  „        ii  ii  67 

Execute  let  me  e  the  vengeance  of  the  Church  upon  them.  Foresters  iv  915 
Execution  to  the  saving  of  their  souls,  Before  your  e.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  195 
Exeter    Deans  Of  Christchurch,  Durham,  E,  and  Wells —  „  i  ii  9 

Exhibited    Our  suppUcation  be  e  To  the  Lord  Cardinal 

Pole,  „        III  iii  123 

Exhort    E  them  to  a  pure  and  virtuous  life ;  „  iv  ii  77 

Exigency     But  help  lier  in  this  e,  „  n  ii  18 

I  cannot  help  you  in  this  e ;  Foresters  i  ii  273 

Exile  (s)    I  know  a  set  of  e's  over  there,  Qu^en  Mary  in  i  155 

long  petition  from  the  foreign  e's  To  spare  the  life 

of  Cranmer.  „  iv  i  3 

This  same  petition  of  the  foreign  e's  „  iv  i  193 

condemn  The  blameless  e  ? —  Becket  ii  ii  396 

'Tis  not  the  King  who  is  guilty  of  mine  e,  ,,       ii  ii  415 

Send  back  again  those  e's  of  my  kin  „    iii  iii  186 

On  a  Tuesday  from  mine  e  I  retum'd,  „       v  ii  293 

Exile  (verb)     E  me  from  the  face  of  Theobald.  „         i  iii  43 

Exit    Here  His  turtle  builds ;  his  e  is  our  adit:  ,,         in  ii  7 

Expectant    E  of  the  rack  from  day  to  day,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  437 

Expectation    one  step  in  the  dark  beyond  Our  e,  that 

amazes  us.  The  Cup  i  i  213 

Expedient    And  all  om'  loving  subjects,  most  e.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  211 

It  is  e  for  one  man  to  die,  „  iv  iii  17 

which  our  Queen  And  Council  at  this  present  deem 

it  not  £  to  be  known.  „  iv  iii  57 

Experience     And  all  the  heap'd  e's  of  life,  Becket  i  i  154 

Exposure    See  Self -exposure 

Extreme  yoxu-  Father  must  be  now  in  e  old  age.  From,  of  May  iii  400 
Eye  (a  place)  Due  from  his  castles  of  Berkhamstead  and  E  Becket  i  iii  629 
Eye  I  shall  judge  with  my  own  e's  Queen  Mary  i  i  134 
-.      -       .           .  jjj2Q 

I  iv  267 
I  v9 
I  V  127 
I  V  371 
II  i  96 
n  ii  67 
ni  i  64 

III  i  405 
m  ii  18 

„       HI  iv  337 
m  V  61 

III  vi  155 

IV  i  104 

IV  iii  127 
IV  iii  304 

V  ii  600 
„  V  V  1 

Harold  iii  110 
„  n  ii  225 
„  11  ii  389 
,.  II  ii  491 
„  II  ii  626 
,.  Ill  ii  66 
V  i  368 


with  his  fast-fading  e's  Fixt  hard  on  mine, 

and  deep-incavern'd  e's  Half  fright  me. 

some  waxen  doll  Thy  baby  e's  have  rested  on, 

take  mine  e's,  mine  heart.  But  do  not  lose  me  Calais. 

into  some  more  costly  stone  Than  ever  blinded  e. 

what,  have  you  e's,  ears,  brains  ? 

With  execrating  execrable  e's.  Glared  at  the  citizen. 

Were  your  e's  Eo  bashful  that  you  look'd  no  higher  ? 

and  when  her  innocent  e's  were  bound, 

Wore  in  mine  e's  the  green  of  Paradise. 

Fine  e's — but  melancholy,  irresolute — 

I  read  his  honest  horror  in  his  e's. 

And  warble  those  brief -sighted  e's  of  hers  ? 

you  scarce  could  meet  his  e  And  hold  your  own ; 

I  am  ashamed  to  lift  my  e's  to  heaven. 

His  e  was  like  a  soldier's,  whom  the  general 

Tell  her  to  come  and  close  my  dying  e's, 

Mine  e's  are  dim :  what  hath  she  written  ? 

I  swear  it.  By  mine  own  e's — 

There  lodged  a  gleaming  grimness  in  his  e's. 

He  tore  their  e's  out,  sliced  their  hands  away. 

Tear  out  his  e's,  And  plunge  him  into  prison. 

Thine  '  ifs '  will  sear  thine  e's  out— ay. 

whose  baby  e  Saw  them  sufficient. 

I  saw  it  in  her  e's  ! 


Becket,  Pro.  148 

„       Pro.  371 

I  i  213 

I  ii  38 

I  iii  11 

I  iii  464 

I  iii  609 

niiS 

II  u  436 
m  i  127 

m  iii  89 
m  iii  101 

„      III  iii  109 

IV  ii  406 

vi43 

V  198 

vi  217 


Eye  {continued)    God's  e's  !     I  know  all  that — 
God's  e's !  what  a  lovely  cross ! 
for  thine  e's  Glare  stupid-vrild  with  wine. 
He  had  good  e's  ! 

He  all  but  pluck'd  the  bearer's  e's  away. 
God's  e's !     I  had  meant  to  make  him  all  but  king. 
The  King's  '  God's  e's  ! '  come  now  so  thick  and  fast, 
by  God's  e's,  we  will  not  have  him  crown'd. 
The  Church  alone  hath  e's — and  now  I  see 
was  a  pity  to  blindfold  such  e's  as  mine, 
only  there  was  a  dare-devil  in  his  e — I  should  say  a 

dare-Becket. 
father's  e  was  so  tender  it  would  have  called 
as  to  the  young  crownUng  himself,  he  looked  so 

malapert  in  the  e's. 
King  plucks  out  their  e's  W^ho  anger  him, 
disciplines  that  clear  the  spiritual  e. 
My  liege,  the  Queen  of  England.    Henry.     God's  e's  ! 
The  Church !  the  Church  !     God's  e's  ! 

bust  of  Jimo  and  the  brows  and  e's  Of  Venus ;  The  Cup  i  i  121 

What  follows  is  for  no  wife's  e's.  „      i  ii  231 

Yea, — with  our  e's, — our  hearts,  „      i  ii  412 

mark'd  Her  e's  were  ever  on  the  marble  floor  ?  „  ii  19 

and  a-spreading  to  catch  her  e  for  a  dozen  year,  till  he 

hasn't  an  e  left  The  Falcon  100 

The  pleasure  of  his  e's — boast  of  his  hand —  "  „  221 

That  bright  inheritor  of  your  e's — your  boy  ?  „  306 

i'  the  poorch  as  soon  as  he  clapt  e's  of  'er.  Prom,  of  May  1 23 

Under  your  e's,  Miss  Dora.  „  1 89 

And  your  e's  be  as  blue  as —  „  1 91 

voice  a-shaakin',  and  the  drop  in  'er  e.  „         ii  130 

Eva's  e's  thro'  hers — A  spell  upon  me  !  „         n  641 

hath  the  fire  in  her  face  and  the  dew  in  her  e's.  Foresters  i  i  167 

Would  you  cast  An  e  of  favour  on  me,  „      i  ii  217 

How  close  the  Sheriff  peer'd  into  thine  e's  !  „      i  ii  253 

That  if  I  cast  an  e  of  favour  on  him,  „      i  ii  261 

Elf,  with  spiteful  heart  and  e,  „     ii  ii  172 

Not  an  e  to  survey,  „     ii  ii  181 

Robin,  the  sweet  light  of  a  mother's  e,  .  iv  2 

Mine  e  most  true  to  one  hair's-breadth  of  aim.  „       iv  694 

I  cannot  meet  his  e's.  „       iv  799 

Eyebrow    Why  do  you  lift  your  e  at  me  thus  ?  Queen  Mary  in  vi  102 

Eyed    See  Far-eyed 

Eyeless    — tongueless  and  e,  prison'd —  Harold  n  ii  496 

Eyelid    Mine  amulet  .  .  .  This  last  .  .  .  upon  thine  e's,  ,,        i  ii  125 

kiss  that  charms  thine  e's  into  sleep,  „        i  ii  140 

Eyeshot    and  keep  me  still  In  e.  „      n  ii  242 

Eyesight    play  The  William  with  thine  e  and  thy  tongue.  „  v  i  27 

rend  away  E  and  manhood,  life  itself,  Becket  iv  ii  285 

Has  lost  his  health,  his  e,  even  his  mind.  Prom,  of  May  ni  767 


F 


Foresters  i  ii  59 


Fa    I  would  dance  too.    F,  la,  la,  /  la,  la. 

Faace  (face)    plow  straait  as  a  line  right  i'  the  /  o'  the 

sun,  Prom,  of  May  1 370 

— then  hup  agean  i'  the  /  o'  the  sun.  „  i  372 

thaw  the  feller's  gone  and  maade  such  a  litter  of  his  /.       „  n  589 

she  niver  knawed  'is  /  when  'e  wur  'ere  af oor ;  „  ii  606 

Fable    There  is  a  pleasant  /  in  old  books,  Harold  iv  i  56 

Face  (s)   (See  also  Faace,  Janus-faces,  Long-face)   wilt 

thou  see  the  holy  father  Murdered  before  thy  /?  Queen  Mary  i  iii  65 


Is  this  the  /  of  one  who  plays  the  tyrant  ? 

Madam,  methinks  a  cold  /  and  a  haughty. 

Show  me  your  f's ! 

show'd  his  back  Before  I  read  his  /. 

Here  was  a  young  mother.  Her  /  on  flame. 

The  colour  f reeljr  play'd  into  her  /, 

thro'  that  dim  dilated  world  of  hers.  To  read  our  f's ; 

before  the  Queen's  /  Gardiner  buys  them  With 

Philip's  gold, 
there's  the  /  coming  on  here  of  one  Who  knows  me. 
Pole  has  the  Plantagenet  /, 


IV  194 
IV  197 
iv307 
nil33 
iiu70 
n  ii  321 
II  ii  326 

m  i  143 

HI  i  470 

ui iv  334 


Face 


904 


Fair 


leen  Mary  in  vd  113 

rv  iii  4 

IV  iii  338 

Harold  i  i  26 

„      I  i  67 


Ay, 


Face  (s)  (continued)    I  have  but  shown  a  loathing  / 
to  you. 
See  how  the  tears  run  down  his  fatherly  /. 
wash'd  his  hands  and  all  his  /  therein, 
and  look  upon  my  /,  Not  on  the  comet. 
I  cannot  read  the  /  of  heaven ; 
He  can  but  read  the  king's  /  on  his  coins.     Stigand. 

ay,  young  lord,  there  the  king's  /  is  power, 
send  thy  saints  that  I  may  say  Ev'n  to  their /'s, 
The  rosy  /,  and  long  down-silvering  beard, 
turn  not  thou  Thy  /  away. 
The  rosy  /and  long  down -silvering  beard — 
he  hath  risen  again — he  bares  his  / — 
how  he  feUs  The  mortal  copse  of  /'«  ! 
They  have  so  maim'd  and  murder'd  all  his  / 
I  left  him  with  peace  on  his  / — 
Her  /  was  veiled,  but  the  back  methought 
Exile  me  from  the  /  of  Theobald, 
when  he  sign'd,  his  /  was  stormy-red — 
Flung  the  Great  Seal  of  England  in  my  / — 
he  licks  my  /  and  moans  and  cries  out  against  the  King, 
and  glass  The  faithful  /  of  heaven — 
Life  on  the  /,  the  brows — clear  innocence  ! 
who  hath  withstood  two  Kings  to  their /'«  for  the 

honour  of  God. 
as  I  hate  the  dirty  gap  in  the  /  of  a  Cistercian  monk, 
or  I  couldn't  look  your  ladyship  i '  the  /, 
and  to  read  the  f's  of  men  at  a  great  show, 
ran  a  twitch  across  his  /  as  who  should  say 
and  once  he  strove  to  hide  his  /, 

his  fine-cut  /  bowing  and  beaming  with  all  that  courtesy 
scared  the  red  rose  from  your  /  Into  your  heart  ? 
I  will  hide  my  /,  Blacken  and  gipsyf y  it ; 
Nay,  what  imcomely  /  's,  could  he  see  you ! 
These  arm'd  men  in  the  city,  these  fierce  f's — 
We  will  not  have  him  slain  before  our  /. 
shun  To  meet  her/  to  /  at  once  ! 
brows  and  eyes  Of  Venus ;  /  and  form  immatchable ! 
She — no,  not  ev'n  my  /. 

Who  are  with  him  ?     I  see  no  /  that  knows  me. 
In  the  full/  of  all  the  Roman  camp  ? 
Only  one,  And  he  perhaps  mistaken  in  the  /. 
His  /  was  not  malignant,  and  he  said 
ambition,  pride  So  bloat  and  redden  his  /— 
far  as  the  /  goes  A  goodlier-looking  man 
/of  an  angel  and  the  heart  of  a — that's  too  positive  ! 
what  you  see  you  are  saying  afore  his  /?     Count.     Let 
hirn — he  never  spares  me  to  my  / !     Filippo.     No, 
my  lord,  I  never  spare  your  lordship  to  your  lord- 
sbup's  /, 
nor  to  round  about  and  back  to  your  lordship's  /  again, 
and  bless  your  sweet  /,  you  look  as  beautiful 
colour'd  all  my  life,  Flush'd  in  her/; 
one  sweet  /  Crown'd  with  the  wreath, 
her  affections  Will  flower  toward  the  light  in  some 

new  /.  Prom,  of  May  i  487 

"         ,.  n248 

n423 

m  367 

ra389 

Foresters  i  i  146 

I  i  167 

I  ii  145 

1  ii  207 

I  ii  237 

..  iii  245,  251 

I  iii  19 

u  i  480 

n  ii  29 

u  ii  133 

IV  11 

IV  777 

IV  887 

Becket  ii  ii  165 


I  ill 

„  II  ii  787 

..    m  i  46 

..  oi  ii  40 

..  IV  i  261 

..    V1557 

..    vi589 

,     V  ii  77 

Becket,  Pro.  396 

,.      Pro.  469 

I  iii  43 

I  iii  320 

I  iii  457 
iiv99 

nil61 
II  i  195 

II  ii  276 
iiii381 
m  i  196 
m  iii  83 
m  iii  94 

III  iii  104 

m  iii  141 

IV  ii  74 

IV  ii  99 

V  i  201 
„  V  iii  4 
„         V  iii  55 

The  Cup  I  i  59 

I  i  122 

I  i  132 

I  i  183 

„      I  ii  269 

..      I  ii  343 

..       I  ii  451 

n  170 

n  175 

The  Falcon  86 


108 
115 
197 
365 
648 


Her  bright  /  beaming  starlike  down  upon  me 

If  he  should  ever  show  his  /  among  us, 

the  rain  beating  in  my  /  all  the  way, 

'  Go  home ; '  but  I  hadn't  the  heart  or  /  to  do  it. 

I  will  give  thee  a  buffet  on  the  /. 

bath  the  fire  in  her  /  and  the  dew  in  her  eyes. 

How  she  looks  up  at  him,  how  she  holds  her  / ! 

Why  wearest  thou  thy  cowl  to  hide  thy  /? 

bounden  by  a  vow  not  to  show  his  /, 

I  hate  hidden /'s.  (repeat) 

and  old  /  's  Press  roimd  us,  and  warm  hands 

Her  /  is  thine,  and  if  thou  be  as  gentle 

Wilt  thou  embrace  thy  sweetheart  'fore  my  /? 

Never  Ob  before  his  /. 

For  ever  buzzing  at  your  lady's  /. 

It  is  not  he— his  / — tho'  very  like — 

And  scruplest  not  to  flaunt  it  to  our  / 

Face  (verb)    /  me  out  of  all  My  regal  rights. 

Faced    •SV«  Black-faced.  Red-faced 


Facile     be  /  to  my  hands.     Now  is  my  time.  Becket,  Pro. 

Facility    translated  that  hard  heart  into  our  Provencal 

facilities.  Pro. 

to  spare  us  the  hardness  of  your  /?  Pro.  '■ 

Faction    There  is  a  /  risen  again  for  Tostig,  Harold  iv  i  11 

Our  anti-Roman  /  ?  The  Cwp  i  ij  19 

I  have  enough — their  anti- Roman  /.  „        i  it  T' 
dishonour  The  daughters  and  the  wives  of  your 

own  / —  Foresters  iv  I 

Fade    /  Into  the  deathless  hell  which  is  their  doom  Queen  Mary  iii  ii  ITl 

we  /  and  are  forsaken —  „            v  ii  3T| 

Faded     Flower,  she !     Half  / !  „              i  iv  ( 
this  /  ribbon  was  the  mode  In  Florence  ten  years  back.  The  Falcon  • 

blossom  of  his  youth,  Has/,  falling  fruitless —  Prom,  of  May  n  ! 

Fading    (See  also  Fast -fading)     O  my  sick  boy !    My  daily 

/  Florio,  The  Falcon  236 

Faggot     then,  who  lights  the  /  ?     Not  the  full  faith,  Queen  Mary  lu  iv  123 

Last  night,  I  dream'd  the  /'*  were  alight,  ..                iv  ii  2 

WiHi  my  f's  Be  wet  as  his  were  ?  „            rv  ii  22) 

bind  a  score  AU  in  one  /,  snap  it  over  knee,  Harold  iv  i  i 

Faggot-band    Snap  not  the  f-b  then.  „      iv  i  ( 

Fail     I  /  Where  he  was  fullest :  Queen  Mary  u  i  J 

All  traitors  /  Uke  Tostig  !  Harold  iv  iii ' 

Solders  a  race  together — ^yea — tho'  they  /,  The  Cup  i  ii  Ifl 

Lest  he  should  /  to  pay  these  thousand  marks  Foresters  iv  " 

Fail'd     Few  things  have  /  to  which  I  set  my  will.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  I 

\^'yatt  was  a  good  soldier,  yet  he  /,  ,,          m  i  T 

On  my  last  voyage — but  the  wind  has  /—  The  Cup  u  53 

We  ever  /  to  light  upon  thy  son.  Foresters  iv  f" 

Failing     F  her,  my  Lord,  Dotli  not  as  gi-eat  Queen  Mary  i  iv  I 

Failure    but  /  it  may  be  Of  all  we  aim'd  at.  Becket  i  i  T 

Fain     Make  me  full  /  to  live  and  die  a  maid.  Queen  Mary  v  iii  I 

Faint     I  am  somewhat /  \^ith  our  long  talk.  ..            i  v 53 

I  am  /  with  fear  that  you  will  come  no  more.  „              v  i  i 

but  look,  where  Edward  draws  A  /  foot  hither,  Harold  i  i  14 

Tostig,  I  am  /  again.  ,,      i  i 
A  ghostly  horn  Blowing  continually,  and  /  battle-hymns,      .,  iii  i 

I  am  /  and  sleepy.     Leave  me.  Becket  iii  i 

I  am  very  /.     I  must  lie  down.  Prom,  of  May  m  4! 

'  I  am  /  for  your  honey,  my  sweet.'  Foresters  rv  ' 

Move  me  no  more !     I  am  sick  and  /  with  pain !  „      rv 

Fainted     O  she  has  /.     Sister,  Eva,  sister !  Prom,  of  May  m 

Fair     Even  so,  /  lady.  Qiieen  Mary  i  iv 


left  about  Like  loosely-scatter'd  jewels,  in  /  order, 

As  /  and  white  as  angels ; 

were  much  amazed  To  find  as  /  a  sun  as  might  have 

flash'tl 
you  perchance  were  trifling  royally  With  some  / 

dame  of  court. 
And  all  the  /  spice-islands  of  the  East. 
How  /  and  royal — like  a  Queen,  indeed  ? 
F  island  star .' 

Were  you  in  Spain,  this  fine  /  gossamer  gold — 
I  never  look'd  upon  so  /  a  likeness 
Be  there  not  /  woods  and  fields  In  England  ? 
Then  fling  mine  own  /  person  in  the  gap  A  sacrifice  to 

Harold, 
then  a  /  life  And  bless  the  Queen  of  England. 
Earl,  wUt  thou  fly  my  falcons  this  /  day  ? 
So  thou,  /  friend,  will  take  them  easily. 
Not  ever  /  for  England  ? 
Obey  him,  speak  him  /, 
O  speak  him  /,  Harold,  for  thine  own  sake. 
Look  not  amazed,  /  earl ! 
The  wind  is  /  For  England  now  .  .  . 
Full  thanks  for  your  /  greeting  of  my  bride ! 
Good  royal  customs — had  them  wTitten  / 
And  one  /  child  to  fondle  ! 
jf^  Sir,  a  happy  day  to  you  ! 
Leaving  your  /  Marian  alone  here. 
There  are  no  wives  like  English  wives  So/ and  chaste 

as  they  be. 
Fare  you  well,  /  lady  ! 

but  see  /  play  Betwixt  them  and  Sir  Richard — 
But  thou  art  /  as  ever,  my  sweet  sister. 


ni: 
inii ! 


in  u; 


in  vi  Iq 
„  vii 

vi; 

V  iii ' 

„  V  vl 

Harold  i  i  2^ 

,.  I  ii ! 
I  ii : 
n  ii  H 

II  ii ! 

u  ii ! 

..     n  ii  31 

..     uiil 

..     II  ii  494 

..     II  ii  "66 

..     IV  iii  46 

Becket  i  iii  416 

ni  i  12 

The  Cup  I  i  188 

Foresters  i  ii  154 

n  i  16 
ui243 

IV  98 
IV  1017 


Fairer 


905 


FaU 


Queen  Mary  i  v  72 

m  i  92 
Becket,  Pro.  117 


Fairer    My  sister,  is  far  /  than  myself. 

How  look'd  the  Queen  ?    BagenhaU.     No  /  for  her 

jewels, 
and  the  flowers  Are  all  the  /. 

fairest    but  of  this  England,  in  whose  crown  our  Kent 

is  the  /  jewel.  Queen  Mary  n  i  163 

Find  one  a  slut  whose  /  linen  seems  Foul  Becket  v  ii  202 

Who  art  the  /  flower  of  maidenhood  Foresters  i  ii  123 

rair-hair'd    little  f-h  Norman  maid  Lived  in  my  mother's 

house :  Becket  \  ii  259 

"toly    My  King  would  know  if  you  be  /  served.  Queen  Mary  v  iii  20 

•■"airy  (adj.)    ^Tiat's  here  ?     A  dead  bat  in  the  /  ring—  Foresters  n  ii  93 

A  glimpse  of  them  and  of  their  /  Queen —  ..      n  ii  103 

F  realm  is  breaking  down  u  ii  134 

there  comes  a  deputation  From  our  finikin  /  nation.  ..      n  ii  145 

f$iry  (s)    wish  before  the  word  Is  man's  good  F —        Queen  Mary  i  iv  240 
I  thought  if  I  followed  it  I  should  find  the  fairies. 
Eleanor.     I  am  the  /,  pretty  one,  a  good  /  to 

thy  mother.  Becket  iv  i  24 

There  are  good  fairies  and  bad  fairies,  iv  i  28 

can't  sleep  sound  o'  nights  because  of  the  bad  fairies.  iv  i  31 
I  am  her  good  /.     Geoffrey.     But  you  don't  look  like  a 

good  /.     Mother  does.  iv  i  34 

And  leave  you  alone  with  the  good  /.  iv  ii  61 

She  may  have  lighted  on  your  fairies  here.  Foresters  n  i  496 

My  men  say  The  fairies  haunt  this  glade ; —  n  ii  101 

There  came  some  evil  /  at  my  birth  ,,        n  ii  108 

Evil  / !  do  jou  hear  ?  ..        n  ii  116 

We  be  faines  of  the  wooti,  ..        n  ii  118 

When  the  /  slights  the  crown.  .,        n  ii  135 

airy-ring    And  now  be  skipping  in  their  f-r's,  „         n  i  497 
aitb    My  flight  were  such  a  scandal  to  the  /,                   Queen  Mary  i  ii  53 

long  divided  in  itself,  and  sever'd  from  the  /,  i  iii  22 

Bonner,  who  hath  lain  so  long  imder  bonds  for  the/ —  t  iii  36 

Art  thou  of  the  true  /,  fellow,  i  iii  45 

No,  being  of  the  true  /  with  myself.  i  v  74 

we  two  wll  lead  The  living  waters  of  the  F  again  i  v  88 

But  here's  some  Hebrew.    F,  I  half  forgot  it.  „         n  i  125 

Good  /,  I  was  too  sorry  for  the  woman  ,,          m  i  57 

All  greed,  no  /,  no  courage  !  „        m  i  145 

*HaiI,  Daughter  of  God,  and  saver  of  the/.  ,,         m  ii  82 

And  clasp  the  /  in  Christ ;  „       in  ii  122 

Henceforth  a  centre  of  the  living/.  ,,       m  ii  155 

The  great  imbom  defender  of  the  F,  „       in  ii  165 

His  /shall  clothe  the  world  that  will  be  liis,  ,.       m  ii  180 

/  that  seem'd  to  droop  will  feel  your  light,  in  iv  22 

track  of  the  true  /  Your  lapses  are  far  seen.  m  iv  94 

For  yet  the  /  is  not  established  there.  ..      m  iv  109 

'  because  to  persecute  Makes  a  /  hated,  and  is  further- 
more No  perfect  witness  of  a  perfect  /  .,  m  iv  116 
Not  the  full  /,  no,  but  the  lurking  doubt.  m  iv  124 
When /is  wavering  makes  the  waverer  pass  m  iv  157 
call  they  not  The  one  true/,  a  loathsome  idol-worship  ?  in  i  v  219 
accuse  you  of  indifference  To  all/ 's,  all  religion;  m  iv  224 
the  Queen,  the  Holy  Father,  The /itself.  ..  m  vi  35 
Upon  the  /  and  honour  of  a  Spaniard,  ..  m  vi  254 
Have  you  remain'd  in  the  true  Catholic  / 1  left  you 

in  ?     Cranmer.     In  the  true  Catholic  /,  .,          iv  ii  17 

confess  Your  /  before  all  hearers ;  ..          rv  ii  80 

my  /  would  seem  Dead  or  laalf-drown'd,  ..          iv  ii  96 

WTiich  frights  you  back  into  the  ancient /;  ..        xv  ii  144 

Power  hath  been  given  you  to  try  /  by  fire —  rv  ii  153 

these  burnings  will  not  help  The  purpose  of  the  /;  iv  ii  185 

he  seal  his  /  In  sight  of  all  with  flaming  martyrdom.  ..         rv  iii  28 

proclaim  Your  true  undoubted  /,  that  all  may  hear.  ..      rv  iii  114 

declare  to  you  my  very  /  Without  all  colour.  rv  iii  225 

In  every  article  of  the  Catholic  /,  rv  iii  230 

No  /  with  heretics,  my  Lord !  rv  iii  458 

Died  in  the  true  /?  v  ii  518 

sunk  rocks;  no  passionate / —  v  v  222 

Pray 'd  me  to  pay  her  debts,  and  keep  the  P;  „        v  v  258 

What's  up  is  /,  what's  down  is  heresy.  Harold  i  i  84 

yet  to  us,  in  /,  A  happy  one —  ..  n  ii  200 

That  runs  thro'  all  the/'*  of  all  the  world.  ..  lu  i  352 

aU  the/'«  Of  this  grown  world  of  ours,  ,,    in  ii  &4 


Faith  {continued)     Loyally  and  with  good  /,  my  lord 

Archbishop  ?  Becket  i  iii  278 

with  all  that  loyalty  and  good  /  Thou  still  „       i  iii  281 

Mail'd  in  the  perfect  panoply  of  /,  „       v  ii  494 

Die  for  a  woman,  what  new  /  is  this  ?  The  Cup  i  iii  67 
learnt  at  last  that,  all  His  old-world  /,                        Prom,  of  May  n  332 

— will  he  ever  be  of  one  /  with  his  wife  ?  „             ni  178 
Beware,  man,  lest  thou  lose  thy  /  in  me.                        Foresters  i  ii  179 

on  the  /  and  honour  of  a  king  The  land  is  his  again.  „          iv  851 

Faithful    who  am  your  friend  And  ever  /  counsellor.       Queen  Mary  i  v  135 

that  I  live  and  die  That  true  and  /  bride  of  Philip —         ..  n  iv  43 

Yoiu*  /  friend  and  trusty  councillor.  ..            iv  i  89 

Have  done  my  best,  and  as  a  /  son,  v  ii  117 
herself  should  see  That  king's  are/to  their  marriage  vow.     Becket  i  ii  78 

A  /  traitress  to  thy  royal  fame.  „      u  i  97 

and  glass  The  /  face  of  heaven —  „    ii  i  161 

and  be  to  Rome  More  /  than  a  Roman.  The  Cup  i  i  103 
This  veiy  day  the  Romans  crown  him  king  For  all  his 

/services  to  Rome.  ,.           u  65 

Our  Antonius,  Our  /  friend  of  Rome,  ..         n  244 

I  will  be  /  to  thee  till  thou  die.  ,.        n  330 

Faithless     Break  thine  alliance  with  this  /  John,  Foresters  iv  323 

Falaise     The  F  byblow  !  Harold  rv  iii  174 

Falcon     wilt  thou  fly  my  /'s  this  fair  day  ?  „        ii  ii  146 

Bird-babble  for  my  / !     Let  it  pass.  The  Falcon  38 

Just  gone  To  fly  his/.  210 

His  /,  and  1  come  to  ask  for  his  /,  219 

his  /  Ev'n  wins  his  dinner  for  him  in  the  field.  230 

How  can  I  ask  for  his  /?  234 

'  Get  the  Count  to  give  me  his  /,  ..        242 

How  can  I,  dare  I,  ask  him  for  his  /?  264 

and  once  you  let  him  fly  your  /.  ..        317 
His-F.    Count.    My/!    Giovanna.    Yes,  your/,  Federigo !         „         840 

Nothing  but  my  brave  bird,  my  noble  /,  874 

Falconry    The  full-train 'd  marvel  of  all /,  25 
plunge  and  /  Of  heresy  to  the  pit :                           Queen  Mary  m  iv  141 

Fall  (S)     have  I  that  I  am  fixt,  Fixt  beyond  /;                      „  it  ii  90 

It  means  the  /  of  Tostig  from  his  earldom.  Harold  i  i  468 

Except  it  be  a  soft  one,  And  undereaten  to  the  /.  „      i  ii  123 
Do  you  still  suffer  from  your  /  in  the  hollow 

lane  ?  Prom,  of  May  ui  241 

She  said  '  It's  the  /  of  the  year,  Foresters  rv  24 

Fall  (verb)     Hast  thou  let /those  papers  in  the  palace  ?     Queen  Mary  i  iii  1 

No — being  traitor  Her  head  will/:  „          i  v  60 

let  Rebellion  Roar  till  throne  rock,  and  crown  /.  „        u  i  145 

hoped  to  /  Into  the  wide-spread  anns  of  fealty,  ,,       n  ii  263 

Like  dogs  that  set  to  watch  their  master's  gate,  F,  ,.    m  iv  311 

in  the  daylight  truth  That  it  may  /  to-day  !  „      ui  v  137 

If  war  should  /  between  yourself  and  France ;  ..            v  i  9 

So  from  a  clear  sky /'«  the  thunderbolt !  „      v  iii  115 

Come  /  not  foul  on  me.  Harold  i  i  460 

see  confusion  /  On  thee  and  on  thine  house.  „     n  ii  489 

My  prayers  go  up  as  fast  as  my  tears  /,  .,     ni  i  166 

F,  cloud,  and  fill  the  house —  m  i  190 

And  on  it/'*  the  shadow  of  the  priest;  in  ii  70 

If  the  king  /,  may  not  the  kingdom  /?     But  if  I  /,  I  /,  ..       v  i  123 

K  I  /,  I  /—The  doom  of  God !  „      v  i  135 

I  cannot  /  into  a  falser  world —  ,.      v  i  271 

And  not  on  thee — ^nor  England — /  God's  doom !  „      v  i  370 

F''s — and  another/'*.  ,,       v  i -500 

No,  daughter,  no — they  /  behind  the  horse —  „       v  i  545 

As  thine  own  bolts  that  /  on  crimef  ul  heads  .,       v  i  565 

Charged  with  the  weight  of  heaven  wheref rom  they  / !  v  i  568 

They  /  on  those  within  the  palisade  !  .,      v  i  668 
As  seeming  his,  not  mine,  and  /  abroad.                           Becket,  Pro.  228 
God  make  not  thee,  but  thy  foes,  /.     Becket.     I  fell. 
Why/?     \Miy  did  He  smite  me  ?     What?    Shall 

I  /  off — to  please  the  King  once  more  ?  ..          i  i  107 

Thou  caast  not/  that  way.  „          i  i  115 

'  When  a  bishoprick/'s  vacant,  the  King,  „        i  iii  100 

\Mien  thieves /out,  honest  men —  „        i  iv  114 

A\'hen  honest  men  /  out,  thieves —  „         i  iv  118 

Shame  /  on  those  who  gave  it  a  dog's  name —  „         n  i  141 

the  sea-creek — the  petty  rill  That/'*  into  it —  .,        n  ii  295 

Devil's  •  if  Thou  wilt  /  down  and  worship  me.'  „     m  iii  286 


FaU 


906 


Farewell 


I  could  /  down,  and  worship  thee, 


Fall  (verb)  (continued) 
my  Thomas, 
Go.     See  that  you  do  not  /  in.    Go. 
world  allows  I  /  no  inch  Behind  this  Becket, 
Ready  to  /  at  Henry's  word  or  yours— 
I  heard  in  Rome,  This  tributary  crown  may  /  to  you. 
So  f's  the  throne  of  an  hour, 


Becket  iii  iii  288 

IV  ii  59 
V  i  39 

V  ii  486 
The  Cup  I  i  97 

II  486 


^dth  as  little  pain  As  it  is  to  /  asleep.  .   From,  of  May      342 

But  for  the  slender  help  that  I  can  give,  F  into  rum.  "  "  *^^ 

f/ before  thee,  clasp  Thy  knees.  F or e.'^ters  n  .598 

When  heaven  f's,  I  may  light  on  such  a  lark  !  -  m  i^ 

he  f's  And  knows  no  more.        ,,,,,, 


m  i  123 
III  iii  152 

III  iv  80 

IV  i  114 
IV  ii  146 

IV  iii  75 
V  ii  6 

V  ii  21 

V  ii  372 
Harold  II  i  14 

..  IV  iii  214 
..       V  i  634 

V  i  636 
..     V  ii  125 

Becket  in  iii  176 

„  IV  ii  8 

The  Falcon  309 

Prom,  of  May  i  324 

II  600 

III  605 

Foresters  i  iii  42 

II  i  509 

,.  Ill  232, 297 

m  412 

Queen  Mary  iii  v  134 

Becket  ni  ii  52 

Prom,  of  May  ii  334 

Becket  i  iii  376 


We  are  /,  and  as  I  thhik,  Never  to  rise  again, 
of  all  censures  Of  Holy  Church  that  we  be  /  into, 
we  are /creatures;  Look  to  your  Bible,  Paget !  we  are/. 
You  sit  upon  this  /  Cranmer's  throne ; 
How  are  the  mighty  /,  Master  Cranmer  ! 
From  councillor  to  caitiff—/  so  low, 
That  should  have  /,  and  may  rise  again, 
like  the  bloodless  head  F  on  the  block. 
Love  will  fly  the  /  leaf,  and  not  be  overtaken ; 
blast  that  came  So  suddenly  hath  /  as  sutldenly- 
Many  are  /  At  Stamford-bridge  •  •  ;    ,  .        .     ,    , ,    . 
Gurth  hath  leapt  upon  him  And  slam  him:  he  hatli  J. 
Glory  to  God  in  the  Highest !  /,  /! 
hath  kinglike  fought  and  /,  His  birthday,  too. 
spouse  of  the  Great  King,  thy  King,  hath/— 
The  folds  have  /  from  the  mystery, 
he  hath  /  Into  a  sickness,  and  it  troubles  me 
thaw  I  mav  ha'  /  out  wi'  ye  sometimes,  ^ 

and  now  she  be  /  out  wi'  ma,  and  I  can  t  coom  at  er 
We  Steers  are  of  old  blood,  tho'  we  be  /. 
And  darkness  rises  from  the  /  sun. 
Or  haply  /  a  victim  to  the  wolf . 
we  have  /into  the  hands  Of  Robin  Hood,  (repeat) 
my  lady,  Kate  and  I  have  /  out  again, 
bulling  How  oft  the  /  axe,  that  never  fell, 
not  to-night— the  night  is/, 
blossom  of  his  youth,  Has  faded,  /  fruitless- 
Fallow  — our  / 's  till'd.  Much  com,  ,  „  on 
fSS  (adj.  and  adv.)  The  /  archbishop  fawning  on  him,  Queen  Maryiv  30 
0  madam,  if  this  Pembroke  should  be  /  ?  v  n  v  ±u 
F  to  Northumberland,  is  he  /  to  me  ?  "  "  '*  ^^ 
tho'  a  true  one,  Blazed  /  upon  her  heart.  -  i"  UV 
And  whether  this  flash  of  news  be  /  or  trae,  „  xii  u  Mi 
No  pardon  !— Why  that  was  j;:  -  J  ^  ^^° 
Who,  while  ye  fish  for  men  with  your  /  fires,  Harold  n  i  rfl 
So  less  chance  for  /  keepers.  .  ,_  ,  .  ^  ,,1111000 
Good  for  good  hath  borne  at  times  A  bastard  /  as 

William. 
Thou  hast  been  /  to  England  and  to  me  !— 
As      .  .  in  some  sort  ...  I  have  been  /  to  thee. 
He  that  was /  in  oath  to  me,  it  seems  Was  /  to  his  own 

\nd  that  the  /  Northumbrian  held  aloof, 

F  to  myself— it  is  the  will  of  God  (repeat) 

F  to  himself,  but  ten-fold  /  to  me ! 

F  figure.  Map  would  say.  . 

F  oath  on  holy  cross— for  thou  must  leave  him  ^  ..  ^^ 

RoWn^Tever  held  that  saying  /  That  Love  is  blind,     Foresters  11  i  643 

No,  no,  /  knight,  thou  canst  not  hide  thyself  »         "  11  ^^ 

False  (8      Earth's /'«  are  heaven's  truths.  ^^^'^'^I'Jil 

FlSehood    lips  that  never  breathed  Love's  /  to  true  maid     foresters   v  73 

fS    when  I  sware  F  to  him,  the  falser  Norman,  Harold  v    303 

Falser    I  cannot  fall  into  a/  world—  "      „i  qA^ 

when  I  sware  Falsely  to  him,  the  /  Nonnan,  .•      v  1  ^u^ 

Falter    And  yet  methinks  he  / 's :  ^    ^  ^"''^  ^^^"'^'Z  °  1  Sfi 

He  / '»,  ha  ?  'fore  God.  we  change  and  change  ;  „  "^ ^  f^ 

Falter'd    old  afiection  master'd  you.  You  /  into  toars.  Becket  v"  14& 

Faltering    felt  the  /  of  his  mother's  heart.  Queen  Mary  u  11  82 

Fame     A  faithful  traitress  to  thy  royal /.    Henry,    i-  !  what 

care  I  for/?  Becket  ui  98 


Fame  (continued)    F  of  to-day  is  infamy  to-morrow  ;  Infamy 

of  to-day  is /to-morrow:  11    Tm 

—thy  /  too  :  I  say  that  should  be  royal.  »     n  1  ^^ 

You  heed  not  how  you  soil  her  maiden  /,  Foresters  iv  480 

Familiar    Yea,  some  /  spirit  must  have  help'd  him.  ,j  „  ;:  r7q 

^^WUli^m.     Woe  knave  to  thy /and  to  thee!  Harold  nn  619 

Family     Be  we  not  of  the  /?  be  we  not  a-supping  with  the  ,,,.„„ 

for  I  am  closely'related  to  the  dead  man's  /.  Prom,  of  May  11  715 

It  is  the  trick  of  the  /,  my  lord. 
Famine     Wet,  /,  ague,  fever,  storm,  wreck,  wrath,- 
War,  waste,  plague,  /,  all  malignities. 
F  is  fear,  were  it  but  Of  being  starved. 
Till  /  dwarf t  the  race—  t:,  ■    .u 

if  vou  cram  me  crop-fuU  I  be  little  better  than  jP  m  the  . 

•'  ■  ,  Foresters  I  1  47 

picture,  ^,    .     ,   .       ,  J , 

Famine-dead    seen  the  true  men  of  Christ  lying  f-d  by 


V  i  176 

V  i  349 
vi352 

,   v  ii  151 

.   V  ii  165 

Becket  1  iii  290,  328 

I  iii  472 

III  iii  346 


Foresters  1  iii  151 

Queen  Mary  v  v  108 

Harold  i  i  466 

„  IV  iii  204 

Becket  i  iii  356 


Famine-stricken    Laid  f-s  at  the  gates  of  Death— 

Famine-wasted    Who  wander /-w  thro'  the  world. 

Famish'd     I  am  footsore  and  /  therewithal. 

while  /  rats  Eat  them  alive.     ^  .    , ,    ,      ,, 

Famishing    lash'd  to  death,  or  lie  F  m  black  cells, 

Fan  (s)     that  his  /  may  thoroughly  purge  his  floor. 

Fan  (verb)     it  serves  to  /  A  kindled  fire. 

Fapcied    Have  you  /  yourself  m  love  with  hun  . 
Why,  my  good  Robin  /  me  a  man, 
F  he  saw  thee  clasp  and  kiss  a  man.     Kate. 
fee/  that  /  fancy  a  man  Other  than  him, 

Fancy  (s)    My  /  takes  the  burner's  part, 

this  ghastly  glare  May  heat  their  fancies. 

Who  sow'd  this  /  here  among  the  people  .-' 

Whether  it  bow'd  at  all  but  in  their  /; 

had  I  fixt  my  /  Upon  the  game  I  should  have  beaten 

thee. 
And  thy  thoughts,  thy  fancies  i  ^      ^    , 

I  speak  after  my  jfancies,  for  I  am  a  Troubadour, 
would  she  were  but  his  paramour,  for  men  tire  of  their 
fancies ;  but  I  fear  this  one  /  hath  taken  root. 


Queen  Man/  v  iv  3S 

Prom,  of  May  ni  807 

Becket  in  iii  18t 

Foresters  11  i  267 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  19(1 

..  v  ii  196 

III  iv  360 

I  V  620 

Prom,  of  May  1  78il 

Foresters  iii  2(» 

Well,  if 

III  2;' 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  231 

Harold  i  i  31l 

..    rv  i  141 

..      V  i  lO. 


Becket,  Pro.  & 
.,  Pro.  11- 
..    Pro.  34 

Pro.  48i 


That  you  may  feed  your  /  on  the  glory  ot  it. 
And  aU  Thro'  following  of  my  /.  . 

specially  sick  children,  have  strange  fancies, 
I  have  ta'en  a  sudden  /  to  thee. 

Fancy  (verb)    You  must  /  that  which  follow  d, 
Can  I  /  him  kneeling  with  me,  and  uttering 
if  he  fancied  that  7  /  a  man  Other  than  him, 

Fancy-ridd'n    known  a  semi-madman  m  my  time  bo  /-r 

Fancy-sick    F-s ;  these  things  are  done. 


The  Cup  n  13 

The  Falcon  14 

81 

Foresters  iv  42 

Queen  Mary  in  i  40 

Prom,  of  May  in  17 

Foresters  ill  2 

Queen  Mary  11  i  1 

IV  iii  45 


Becket  i  iii  45 


Far 


Fangiess    he  that  lookt  a  /  one,  Issues  a  venomous  adder. 

Fanny  ^^F  be  the  naame  i'  the  song,  hut  I  swopt  it       ^^^^^^  ^^  ^^^^^^  ^^  ^j 

(sZ  dso  Var)    My  sister,  is  /  fairer  than  myself.     Queen  Mary  i  v  ^ 

F  liefer  had  I  in  my  country  hall  Been  reading  some 
old  book, 

and  rooted  in  /  isles  Beyond  my  seeing  : 

at  the  /  end  of  the  glade  I  see  two  figures  crawhng  up 
the  hill.  ,        »  -  •  I      J- 

Farce    comedy  meant  to  seem  a  tragedy— A  feint,  a  /. 

You  have  spoilt  the  /. 

There  was  the  /,  the  feint — not  mine. 
Fare  (s)     The  prison  /  is  good  enough  for  me. 
Fare  (verb)     F  you  well.  Sir  Ralph. 

I  must  leave  you.     F  you  well,  ,    ^    ^       „ 

How  f's  thy  pretty  boy,  the  httle  Geoffrey .'' 

F  vou  well.     Synorix.     Farewell ! 

Sir  Richard  and  my  Lady  Marian  /  wellnigh  as  sparely  ^^^^^^^^  ^  j , 
as  their  people.  j  21 

Where  is  she  ?  and  how  f's  she  .■'  "      ^^^  ^ 

^I  Tnd7^o  miSs  disastrous  world.         ^  Queen  Mary  v  ii  3 

FareweU  (adj.)     she  means  to  make  A  /  present  to  your 

Farewefust   heard  She  would  not  take  a  last  /  of  Wm, 
Farewell  (verb,  and  inter.)    /,  and  fly.     Cranmer.    Fly 
and/, 


„  III  i  4 

Harold  in  i  If 


Foresters  iv  3i 

Becket  iv  ii  31 

IV  ii  3i 

„      IV  ii  3' 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii ' 

n  ii  4( 

„  III  i  4' 

Becket  v  ii  V 

The  Cup  I  i  Ii 


iiv2 
III  i3 


liil 


Farewell 


907 


Father 


nurewell  (verb,  and  inter.)  (ctmtinued)    And  so  you  may 

continue  mine,  /,  Queen  Mary   i  iv  137 

Must  be  content  with  that ;  and  so,  /.  ,.            i  v  271 

F.     I  am  somewhat  faint  With  our  long  talk.  „            i  v  519 

F,  and  trust  me,  Philip  is  youi's.  „            i  v  539 

F,  your  Graces.  ..          iit  ii  146 

F,  Madam,  God  grant  you  ampler  mercy  „            iv  i  188 

For  a  little  space,  /;  „            rv  ii  46 

Have  you  good  hopes  of  mercy !     So,  /.  „            iv  ii  87 

Your  pardon.  Sweet  cousin,  and  / !  ,,           v  ii  204 

F.  my  king.     Harold.     Not  yet,  but  then — my  queen.  Harold  i  ii  137 

F  for  ever !  ..      rv  ii  81 

F !  Harold.     'Sot  yet.     Stay.  ..       v  i  336 

Stigand  will  see  thee  safe.  And  so — F.  ..       v  i  420 

F  !     I  am  dead  as  Death  this  day  to  ought  of  earth's  ,,       v  i  424 

F !     Becket.     F,  friends  !  /,  swallows !  Becket  i  iv  43 

that  will  swallow  anything.     F.  ,.     n  ii  383 

And  so  /  untU  we  meet  in  England.  ..  m  iii  236 

/,  my  lord.     Becket.     JF,  my  liege  !  ..in  iii  271 

F !     I  must  foUoM'  the  King.  .,  ni  iii  329 

Ev"n  so  :  but  think  not  of  the  King :  /!  .,     v  ii  186 

city  is  full  of  armed  men.     Becket.     Ev'n  so :  /!  „     v  ii  189 

Fare  you  well.     Synorix.     F  !  The  Cuf  i  i  160 

Remember!     Away — /!     Canniia.    F\                     .  „      i  iii  115 
Nothing  more,  /.                                                             Prom,  of  May  i  749 

•  F,  f,  my  warrior  Earl !  '  Foresters  i  i  18 

We  thank  you,  and  /.     Robin.     F,f.  „     i  ii  249 

F,  Sir  Richard  :  /,  sweet  Marian.  „     i  ii  284 

F,  good  fellows !  ,.        m  86 

F  at  once,  for  I  must  hence  upon  The  King's  affair.  ..      iv  341 

F !     I  left  mine  horse  and  armour  with  a  Squire,  .,       iv  413 

Blown  like  a  true  son  of  the  woods.    F\  .,      iv  428 

Meanwhile,  /  Old  friends,  old  patriarch  oaks.  „     iv  1053 

Far-eyed     My  f-c  queen  of  the  winds —  The  Falcon  9 
Farm  (adj.)     The  hen  cluckt  late  by  the  white  /gate,      Prom,  of  May  i  38 
Farm  (s)     her  advowsons,  granges,  f's,  And  goodly  acres —     Becket  i  i  162 
but  the  ill  success  of  the  /,  and  the  debts.                  Prom,  of  May  n  68 

S'iver  I  mim  git  along  back  to  the  /,  „          n  321 

From  the  /  Here,  close  at  hand.  „          n  360 

I  met  her  first  at  a  /  in  Cumberland — Her  uncle's.  ,.          ii  396 

She  has  disappear'd,  They  told  me,  from  the  / —  „          ii  407 

Has  left  his  /,  all  his  affairs,  I  fear,  ,.           ii  420 

hunt  him  With  pitchforks  off  the  /,  „           n  427 

Allow  me  to  go  with  you  to  the  /.  .,          ii  574 

rose  From  the  foul  flood  and  pointed  toward  the  /,  „           ii  654 

The  work  of  the  /  will  go  on  still,  but  for  how  long  ?  „         in  159 

Father,  this  poor  girl,  the  /,  everything  ;  „         in  212 
I  trust  I  may  be  able  by-and-by  to  help  you  in  the 

business  of  the  /;  „         ui  223 

And  in  the  winter  I  will  fire  their  /  's.  Foresters  iv  95 
Farm  (verb)     feller  couldn't  find  a  Mister  in  his  mouth 


fur  me,  as  f's  five  hoonderd  haacre. 


Prom,  of  May  I  303 
I  137 


I 


n46 
n532 


m294 
in  579 


1 165 


Fanner     When  theer  wut  a  meeting  o'  f's  at  Littlechester 

Tho'  you  are  a  gentleman,  I  but  a,  f's  daughter — 

F,  you  should  be  in  the  hayfield  looking  after  your 

men; 
How  beautiful  His  manners  are,  and  how  unlike  the/' 
shamed  of  his  poor/'s  daughter  among  the  ladies  in 

his  drawing-room  ? 
if  a  gentleman  Should  wed  a  /  '5  daughter. 
Farm-gate    She  gave  her  hand,  unask'd,  at  the  f-g ; 
Farming    Mi.ss,  the  /  men  'uU  hev  their  dinner  i'  the 

long  bam, 
FarmJng-men    if  the  f-m  be  come  for  their  wages,  to  send 

them  up  to  me. 
Farmstead    and  scare  lonely  maidens  at  the  /. 
Far-off     I  have  a  f-o  buiTOw  where  the  King  Would  miss 

her  and  for  ever. 
Farther     Your  Grace's  policy  hath  a  /  flight  Than 

mine  Queen  Mary  i  v  312 

Farthest     that  flower'd  bowl  my  ancestor  Fetch'd  from  the 

y  east —  ^he  Falcon  485 

Fadlion    red  and  white,  the  /  of  our  land.  Queen  Mary  i  y  10 

Is  it  the  /  of  this  clune  for  women  „        in  vi  90 

WiU  in  some  lying  /  misreport  His  ending 


UI  15 
Foresters  in  201 


Becket  iv  ii  158 


IV  iii  326 


Fashion  (continued)     the  dead  were  found  .Sitting,  and 

in  this  /;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  397 

To  make  allowance  for  their  rougher  / '5,  Harold  n  ii  9 

You  are  too  cold  to  know  the  /  of  it.  Becket  n  ii  126 

Or  scarce  would  smile  that /.  „     in  iii  28 

■ — to  celebrate  my  birthdaay  i'  this  /.  Prom,  of  May  i  322 

your  Ladyship  hatii  sung  the  old  proverb  out  of  /.  Foresters  1  i  164 

that  he  may  see  The  /  of  it.  ..         iv  254 

thou,  that  art  churchman  too  In  a  /,  ..         iv  412 

blow  upon  it  Three  mots,  this/ — listen  I  „         iv  425 

Fashion'd    {See  also  Old-fashioned)     I  liave  had  it/,  see,  to 

meet  my  hand.  Harold  v  i  422 

Fast  (adi .  and  adv. )    {See  also  Hold-fast,  Friendship-fast) 

Do  ye  stand  /  by  that  which  ye  resolved  ?  Queen  Mary  ni  iii  103 

Have  not  I  been  the  /  friend  of  your  life  „  v  ii  133 

I  dug  mine  into  My  old  /  friend  the  shore,  Harold  11  i  7 

come  now  so  thick  and  /,  Becket  i  iii  610 

Fast  (s)     If  /  and  prayer,  the  lacerating  scourge —  „     i  iii  303 

He  fast !  is  that  an  arm  of  /?  ,,      i  iii  520 

In  scourgings,  macerations,  mortifyings,  F's,  „         v  i  42 

I  come  this  day  to  break  my  /  with  you  The  Falcon  276 

I  have  broken  My  /  already.  „  575 

Not  having  broken  /  the  livelong  day —  Foresters  rv  186 

Fast  (verb)     Your  Foliot/'s  and  fawns  too  much  for  me.      Becket,  Pro.  264 
He /'s,  they  say,  this  mitred  Hercules!     Hefl  is  that 


an  arm  of  fast  ? 

F,  scourge  thyself,  and  mortify  thy  flesh, 

I  love  my  dimier — but  I  can/,  I  can  /; 
Fasten  I  will  /  thee  to  mine  own  door-post 
Fasten'd     And  that  myself  was/  to  the  stake, 

not  at  the  moment  who  had  /  About  his  throat — 
Faster     F  than  ivy.     Must  I  hack  her  arms  off  ? 

Come  in,  my  friends,  come  in  !     Nay;  /,  / ! 
Fastest     I  am  thy /friend  in  Normandy. 
Fast-fading     with  his/-/ eyes  Fixt  hard  on  mine. 
Fasting     A  life  of  prayer  and  /  well  mav  see 
Fat    " 


I  iii  518 

I  iii  539 

Foresters  i  ii  64 

„      n  i  403 

Queen  Alary  rv  ii  3 

The  Cup  n  50 

Harold  v  ii  146 

Becket  v  iii  69 

Harold  n  ii  556 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  30 

Harold  I  i  199 

„     I  ii  103 

„     rv  ii  40 

Becket,  Pro.  414 

V  ii  211 


The  shadows  of  a  hundred  /  dead  deer 
The  slow,  /  fool !     He  drawl'd  and  prated  so, 
A-hawking,  a-hawking  !     If  I  sit,  I  grow  /. 
One  slow,  /,  white,  a  burthen  of  the  hearth ; 
That  fine,  /,  hook-nosed  uncle  of  mine,  old  Harold,  Prom,  of  May  i  509 

Fatal     mling  men  are  /  twins  that  cannot  Move  one  with- 
out the  other.  Harold  ni  i  127 

Blaze  like  a  night  of  /  stars  on  those  Who  read  „     rv  i  251 

My  /  oath — the  dead  Saints — the  dark  dreams—  „       v  i  380 

cowling  and  clouding  up  That /star,  thy  Beauty,  Becket  i  i  312 

Fatality    foul  fatalities  That  blast  our  natural  passions   Prom,  of  May  m  723 

Fate    /  Which  hunted  him  when  that  un-Saxon  blast,  Harold  n  ii  29 

/  hath  blown  me  hither,  bound  me  too  „     n  ii  219 

She  is  my  / — else  wherefore  has  my  /  The  Cuf  i  i  12 

I  fling  all  that  upon  my  /,  my  star.  ..       i  iii  27 

Life  yields  to  death  and  wisdom  bows  to  F,  ..          n  90 

The  wheel  of  F  has  roll'd  me  to  the  top.  ..        n  221 

Drew  here  the  richest  lot  from  F,  ..        n  442 

is  it  thou  ?  the  F's  are  throned,  not  we —  „        n  488 

He  had  my  /for  it,  Poison'd.  ,.        n  516 

Fated     Rome  is/  To  rule  the  world.  ..        ix  415 

Father  (s)    {See  also  Feyther,  God-father)     Let  /  alone, 

my  masters  !  Q^een  Mary  i  i  38 

child  who  had  but  obeyed  her/;  ,.           i  i  95 

putting  by  his  f's  will.  ,.          i  ii  28 

you  divorced  Queen  Catharine  and  her/:  ..          i  ii  57 
Courtenay,  wilt  thou  see  the  holy  /  Miu'der'd  before 

thy  face  ?  ..         i  iii  64 

Your  royal /  (For  so  they  say)  \\as  all  pure  lily  „          i  v  19 

as  tho' My /and  my  brother  liad  not  lived.  ,.          i  v  36 

for  doing  that  His/  whipt  him  into  iloing — ■  ..          i  v  63 

My  hard  /  hated  me ;  ..         i  v  80 
my  royal  /,  To  make  the  crown  of  Scotland  one  with  ours,     ..        i  v  286 

Hath  he  the  large  ability  of  his/?  ,.        i  v  439 

thing  Was  no  such  scarecrow  in  your  f's  time.  ..        i  v  473 
the  child  obey'd  her/.     Spite  of  her  tears  her/  forced 

it  on  her.  ,.       i  v  494 
My /on  a  birthday  gave  it  me,  And  I  have  broken  with 

my  /—  „       I  v  527 


Father 


908 


Father 


Father  (s)  (continued)     were  a  pious  work  To  string 

my  /'*■  sonnets, 
Hand  nie  the  casket  with  my/'s  sonnets. 
JJumb  children  of  my  /,  that  will  speak 
I  know  Spain.     I  have  been  there  with  my/; 
my  /  was  the  rightful  heir  Of  England, 
to  whom  The  king,  my/,  did  commit  his  trust; 
The  /  ceded  Naples,  that  the  son  Being  a  King, 
Against  the  Holy  F's  primacy. 
Thro'  this  most  reverend  F,  absolution. 
He,  whom  the  F  hath  appointed  Head 
or  more  Denied  the  Holy  F ! 
As  once  the  Holy  F  did  with  mine. 
Before  my  f  married  my  good  mother, — 
Against  the  King,  the  Queen,  the  Holy  F, 
What  your  imperial  /  said,  my  liege, 
you  know  my  /,  Retiring  into  cloistral  solitude 
The  Holy  F  in  a  secular  kingdom  Is  as  the  soul 
Cranmer  is  head  and  /  of  these  heresies, 
Your /was  a  man  Of  such  colossal  kinghood, 
Your  /  had  a  will  that  beat  men  down ;  Your  /  had  a 

brain  that  beat  men  down — 
It  is  God's  will,  the  Holy  F's  will. 
As  if  he  had  been  the  Holy  F,  sat  And  judged  it. 
O  God,  F  of  Heaven  !     O  Son  of  God, 

0  God  the  F,  not  for  little  sins 
Forgive  me,  F,  for  no  merit  of  mine, 

1  do  believe  in  God,  F  of  all ; 

stood  More  like  an  ancient/  of  the  Chiu-ch, 

You  must  abide  my  judgment,  and  my  f's, 

And  yet  I  must  obey  the  Holy  F, 

That  all  day  long  hath  wrought  his/'s  work, 

Shut  on  him  by  the/  whom  he  loved, 

I  watch'd  you  dancing  once  With  your  huge  /; 

O  would  I  were  My  /  for  an  hour ! 

We  have  made  war  upon  the  Holy  F  All  for  your  sake : 

No,  Madam,  not  against  the  Holy  F, 

There  was  an  old-world  tomb  beside  my  f's, 

My  sister's  marriage,  and  my  f's  marriages, 

It  was  his  f's  policy  against  France. 

Holy  F  Has  ta'en  the  legateship  from  our  cousin  Pole — 

She  thank'd  her  /  sweetly  for  his  book 

0  /,  mock  not  at  a  public  fear, 
For  my  dead  f's  loyalty  to  thee  ? 

my  /  drove  the  Normans  out  Of  England  ? — 

F.     William.     Well,  boy. 

But  for  my  /  I  love  Normandy. 

in  thy  f's  day  They  blinded  my  young  kuisman, 

Alfred — ay,  Some  said  it  was  thy  f's  deed. 
Thank  thee,  /!     Thou  art  English, 
Harold,  shake  the  cloud  off !     Harold.     Can  I,/? 

1  have  heard  a  saying  of  thy  /  Godwin, 

F,  we  80  Joved —    Aldred.    The  more  the  love, 

Hush,/,  hush!  . 

for  this  cow-herd,  like  my  /, 

for  mine  own  /  Was  great,  and  cobbled. 

Holy  F  Hath  given  this  realm  of  England  to  the  Norman. 

Holy  F  To  do  with  England's  choice  of  her  own  king  ? 

What  power,  holy/? 

Are  those  the  blessed  angels  quiring,  /? 

Ay,  good/. 

Look,  daughter,  look.     Edith.     Nay,  /,  look  for  me  ! 

Stigand,  O  /,  have  we  won  the  day  ? 

The  Holy  F  strangled  him  with  a  hair  Of  Peter 

the  Holy  F,  while  This  Barbarossa  butts  him,  from 

his  chair. 
Name  him ;  the  Holy  F  will  confirm  him. 
Becket,  her  f's  friend,  like  enough  staved 
Save  me,  /,  hide  me — they  follow  me — 
but,  /,  They  say  that  you  are  wise  in  winged  things, 
my  /  drove  him  and  his  friends,  De  Tracy  and  De  Brito 
F,  I  am  so  tender  to  all  hardness !     Nay,  /, 
Wedded  ?     Rosamund.     F ! 
O,  holy  /,  when  thou  seest  him  next, 
and  lay  My  crozier  in  the  Holy  F's  hands, 


Queen  Mary  ii  i  27 

II  i  44 

n  i  77 

..       II  i  167 

..      II  ii  170 

..      II  ii  208 

in  i  74 

..    Ill  iii  131 

..    Ill  iii  148 

.,    Ill  iii  206 

.,    Ill  iv  248 

..     Ill  V  243 

..     Ill  V  245 

..      Ill  vi  33 

III  vi  56 

..    Ill  vi  208 

IV  i  34 

IV  i  76 

..      IV  i  100 


IV  i  108 
..      IV  i  184 

IV  iii  44 
„  IV  iii  117 
,.  IV  iii  143 
,.  IV  iii  152 
„  IV  iii  228 
„    IV  iii  598 

V  i  146 

V  ii  38 

V  ii  118 
.,       V  ii  122 

V  ii  145 
..       V  ii  294 

V  ii  307 

V  ii  312 
..       V  ii  394 

V  iii  96 

V  V  45 

V  V  125 

V  V  236 
Harold  i  i  74 

.,  I  i  240 
..  I  i  251 
..  II  ii  103 
„  II  ii  270 

..  II  ii  510 
„  III  127 
„  III  i  75 
„  III  i  111 
,.  Ill  i  345 
..  mi  389 
„  IV  i  80 
..  IV  i  90 
..  V  i  12 
..  V  i  17 
..  V  i  454 
..  vi473 
..  vi516 
..  vi536 
,.  vi543 
„     V  ii  45 


Becket,  Pro.  215 

„      Pro.  244 

„      Pro.  517 

I  i  181 

ii254 

1 1276 

1 1315 

1 1319 

1 1322 

I  iii  125 


Father  (s)  [continued)     Have  I  the  orders  of  the  Holy  F?       Becket  i  iii  233 

The  secret  whisper  of  the  Holy  F.  ..  i  iii  236 

I  knew  thy/;  he  would  be  mine  age  Had  he  lived  now ;     „  i  iii  249 

think  of  me  as  thy  /!     Behold  thy  /  kneeling  .,  i  iii  251 

F,  I  am  the  youngest  of  the  Templars,  ..  i  iii  260 

Sons  sit  in  jutlgment  on  their  / ! —  .,  i  iii  552 

Becket  shall  be  king,  and  the  Holy  F  shall  be  king,  .,  i  iv  270 

The  mouth  is  only  Clifford,  my  dear/.  „  n  i  221 

I  would  that  thou  hadst  been  the  Holy  F.  „  n  ii  398 

I  am  the  King,  his/.  And  I  will  look  to  it.  .,  iii  i  26 

Hath  not  thy  /  left  us  to  oiu«elves  ?  ..mi  271 

with  the  Holy  /  astride  of  it  down  upon  his  own  head.  ..  in  iii  77 

f's  eye  was  so  tender  it  would  have  called  .,  in  iii  101 

Glancing  at  the  days  when  his  /  was  only  Earl  of  Anjou,    ..  iii  iii  150 

nay,  Geoffrey  Plantaganet,  thine  own  husband's/ —  ..  iv  ii  250 

His  /  gave  him  to  my  care,  and  I  Became  his  second  /:  ..  v  ii  335 

And  love  him  next  after  my  lord  his  /.  ..  v  ii  342 

scare  me  from  my  loj'alty  To  God  and  to  the  Holy  F.  ..  v  ii  483 

He  is  not  yet  ascended  to  the  F.  ,.  v  iii  150 
and  send  him  forth  The  glory  of  his  / —  2'he  Cwp  ii  263 
happy  was  the  prodigal  son,  For  he  return'd  to  the 

rich/;  The  Falcon]^ 

Many  happy  returns  of  the  day,  /.  Prom,  of  May  i  351 

Did  'e  git  into  thy  chaumber  ?     Eva.     F I  „  i  401 

No,  no,  / !     Towser'll  tear  him  all  to  pieces.  ..  i  423 

I  hate  Traditions,  ever  since  my  narrow  /,  ..  i  492 

Oh,  Philip,  F  heard  you  last  night.  ,.  i  557 

you  have  robb'd  poor  /  Of  ten  good  apples.  ..  i  615 

nor  /,  Sister,  nor  you,  shall  ever  see  me  more.  „  i  675 

And  poor  old  /  not  die  miserable.  „  i  722 

make  them  happy  in  the  long  barn,  for/ is  in  his  glory,  ..  i  792 

mentioned  her  name  too  suddenly  before  my  /.  ,.  ii  24 

and  my  / 's  breaking  down,  and  his  blindness.  ii  69 
I  have  lost  myself,  and  am  lost  for  ever  to  you  and 

my  poor/.  „  ii  85 

my  poor  /,  utterly  broken  down  By  losing  her —  „  ii  417 

My  f's  death,  I^t  her  believe  it  mine ;  „  ii  453 

My  /  stricken  with  his  first  paralysis,  ,,  ii  481 

Might  I  call  Upon  your  /—  .,  ii  513 

I  cannot  Well  answer  for  my/;  .,  ii  519 

What  was  that  ?  my  poor  blind  / —  „  ii  566 

and  /  Will  not  die  miserable.'  „  ii  659 

my  /  and  I  forgave  you  stealing  our  coals.  „  in  68 

which  F,  for  a  whole  life,  lias  been  getting  together,  „  in  165 

F,  this  poor  girl,  the  farm,  everything ;  „  in  211 

Poor  blind  F's  little  guide,  Milly,  „  m  231 

will  you  not  speak  with  F  to-day  ?  „  in  237 

always  told  F  that  the  huge  old  ashtree  „  iii  243 

he  will  be  willing  that  you  and  F  should  live  with  us ;  „  in  261 

That  last  was  my  F's  fault,  poor  man.  ..  iii  279 

And  then — what  would  F  say  ?  „  in  390 

your  F  must  be  now  in  extreme  old  age.  „  m  400 

Don't  you  long  for  F's  forgiveness  !  „  in  404 
You  must  not  expect  to  find  our  F  as  he  was  five  years 

ago.  ,,  m  419 

Hes  the  cow  cawved  ?     Dora.     No,  F.  „  in  428 

Be  the  colt  deiid  ?     Bora.     No,  F.  „  m  430 

Well,  F,  I  have  a  surprise  for  you.  „  in  438 

No,  F,  that  was  a  mistake.     She's  here  again.  „  in  445 

lost  hei-sen  i'  the  river.     Bora.     No.     F,  she's  here.  „  in  457 

speaking  with  Your/,  asking  his  consent —  „  in  493 

state  Of  my  poor  /  puts  me  out  of  heart.  „  in  504 

I  told  you— My  /.  „  m  574 

he,  the  /,  Thro'  that  dishonour  which  you  brought  „  in  764 
Marian  !     Marian.     F  !                                                       Foresters  i  i  180 

Cleave  to  him,  / !  he  will  come  home  at  last.  „  i  i  197 

Tut,  / !     I  am  none  of  your  delicate  Norman  maidens  „  i  i  211 

F,  you  see  this  cross  ?  „  i  i  284 
prays  your  ladyship  and  your  ladyship's  /  to  be  present 

at  his  banquet  to-night.  „  i  i  300 
I  wish  you  and  your  ladyship's/  a  most  exceeding  good 

morning.  ,.  i  j  309 

and  my  own  / — they  were  bom  and  bred  on  it —  „  i  i  331 

Take  it  again,  dear  /,  be  not  wroth  „  i  i  341 

SuflScient  for  the  day,  dear  / !  „  i  i  343 


ii 


Father 


Feather 


Father  (s)  (continued)     My  lord,  myself  and  my  good  / 
pray 
Not  her,  the  /  's  power  upon  her. 
Much,  the  miller  s  son,  I  knew  thy  /: 
but  my  /  will  not  lose  his  land, 
betray'd  Thy  /  to  the  losing  of  his  land, 
your  good  /  had  his  draught  of  wine 
b  my  poor  / ! 

0  lead  me  to  my/!  (repeat) 
•^he  will  not  marry  till  her  /  yield. 
There  is  a  fence  I  cannot  overleap,  Mj  f's  will. 
And  were  my  kindly  /  sound  again, 
He  was  mv  /,  mother,  both  in  one. 
And  my  sick  /  here  has  come  between  us 
Quiet,  cjuiet !  or  I  m  ill  to  my  /. 

thy  /  wiD  not  grace  our  feast  With  his  white  beard  to-day 
Here  is  my  f's  bond. 
You  scheme  against  her  f's  weal  and  hers, 

1  remain  Beside  mv  F's  litter. 
Speak  not.     I  wait  upon  a  dying  /. 
It  seems  thy  f's  land  is  forfeited, 
thou  shalt  wed  him.  Or  thine  old  /  will  go  mad — 
F,  I  cannot  marry  till  Richard  comes, 
the  Sheriff,  /,  ^^'oukl  buy  me  for  a  thousand  marks 
But  pity  for  a  /,  it  may  be, 
I  grieve  to  say  it  was  thy  f's  son. 
Art  thou  my  son?     Walter  Lea.     I  am,  good/, 

'father  (verb)     No— munler  / 's  murder : 
fathered    had  I  /  him  I  had  given  him  more  of  the  rod 
than  the  sceptre, 
all  the  souls  we  saved  and  /  here  Will  greet  us 
^'ather-king    And  the  f-k  ? 
Tather-like    Julius  the  Third  ^^'as  ever  just,  and  mild, 

and  f-l ; 
Tathtt ly    See  how  the  teai-s  run  down  his  /  face. 
•'athom    Deep — I  shall  /  him. 

Thou  stirrest  up  a  grief  thou  canst  not  /. 
''atness    fill  all  hearts  with  /  and  the  lust  Of  plenty — 
^atter    yonder's  /  game  for  you  Than  this  old  gaping 

gurgoyle : 
i'attiiig    the  /  of  your  calves,  the  making  of  your 

butter, 
'augh    F  !  we  shall  all  be  poisoned.     Let  us  go. 
'ault    his  /  So  thoroughly  to  beheve  in  his  own  self. 
— this  Cardinal's  f—1  have  gulpt  it  down. 
To  veil  the  /  of  my  most  outward  foe — 
O  God  the  Son,  Not  for  slight  f's  alone, 
not  his  /,  if  our  two  houses  Be  less  than  brothers 
And  yet  she  plagues  me  too — no  /  in  her — 
he  had  his  /  's,  For  which  I  would  have  laid 
the  /,  mebbe,  «Tir  as  much  mine  as  yours ; 
Be  that  my/? 

making  us  feel  guilty  Of  her  own  f's. 
would  you  beat  a  man  for  his  brother's  /? 
That  last  was  my  Father's  /,  poor  man. 
!  aultless    The  /  Gardiner ! 
anlty    Some  of  my  former  friends  Would  find  my 

logic  /; 
avonr     He  hath  fallen  out  of  /  with  the  Queen. 
What  makes  thy  /  like  the  bloodless  head 
GKxl's  /  and  king's  /  might  so  clash 
So  that  you  grant  me  one  slight  /. 
Would  you  cast  An  eye  of /on  me, 
That  if  I  cast  an  eye  of  /  on  him, 
ivour'd    he  would  pay  The  mortgage  if  she  /  hinj. 
ivomer     Because  they  think  me  /  of  this  marriage. 

and  a  /  Of  playere,  and  a  courtier, 
ivonrite    utterly  broken  down  By  losing  her — she 
was  his  /  child — 
for  you  know,  my  dear,  you  were  always  his  / — 
IWB    /  upon  him  ?     Chime  in  with  all  ? 

Your  Foliot  fasts  and  /  's  too  much  for  nie. 
/  upon  him  For  thy  life  and  thy  son's. 
.wniiig    The  false  Archbishop  /  on  him, 
Who  rub  their  /  noses  in  tne  dust, 


Foresters  i  ii  127 

I  iii  9 

1  iii  147 

ri  i  522 

„       II  i  570 

,.  u  ii  1 

n  ii  8 

„  II  ii  22,  48 

II  ii  82 
in  10 

III  81 
IV  6 

„  IV  55 

IV  78 
IV  79 

IV  463 
IV  481 
IV  605 
IV  611 
IV  640 
IV  645 
IV  648 
IV  651 
IV  659 
IV  811 

IV  1020 
Queen  Mary  in  i  335 

Becket  iii  iii  110 

V  ii  223 
„      III  iii  100 

Quee^i  Mary  v  ii  31 

IV  iii  4 
I  iii  158 

ui  iv  299 
The  Cup  II  272 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  79 

Prom,  of  May  u  92 

Becket  i  iv  243 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  385 

III  iv  376 
IV  ii  106 

IV  iii  139 
Harold  iv  i  129 
Becket,  Pro.  59 

V  ii  337 

Prom,  of  May  i  325 

II  89 

u  270 

III  155 
in  280 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  96 

Prom,  of  May  n  665 
Queen  Mary  i  iv  156 

V  ii  19 
Becket,  Pro.  295 

„  I  ii  58 

Foresters  i  ii  217 

I  ii  262 

I  iii  7 

Queen  Alary  i  v  156 

Becket  i  i  78 

Prom,  of  May  n  418 

in  423 

Harold  i  ii  165 

Becket,  Pro.  264 

IV  ii  224 

Queen  Mary  i  v  30 

„     m  iii  242 


Fay    To  a  land  where  the  /,  Foresters  n  ii  180 

Fealty     Into  the  wide-spreatl  amis  of  /,  Queen  Mary  u  ii  264 

F  to  the  King,  obedience  to  thyself  ?  Becket  i  iii  587 

That  goes  against  om/  to  the  King.  „       v  ii  508 

Not  one  to  keep  a  woman's  /  The  Cup  i  i  176 

Fear  (s)     he  brought  his  doubts  And  f's  to  me.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  76 

Skips  eveiy  way,  from  levity  or  from  /.  „         i  iii  170 

There  lies  your/.     That  is  your  drift.  „  i  v  304 

I  am  Harry's  daughter,  Tuilor,  and  not  F.  ,,  n  iv  53 

St.  Peter  in  his  time  of /Denied  his  Master,  „       in  iv  263 

my  father  married  my  good  mother, — For/  of  Spain.  ,.  iii  v  247 
from  the/of  Him  Whose  ministei's  tliey  be  to  govern  you.  „       iv  iii  179 

0  father,  mock  not  at  a  public  /,  Harold  i  i  75 
That's  a  truer/!  .,  i  ii  66 
stuS'd  the  boy  with/'s  that  these  may  act  „  n  ii  90 
Thy/ 's  infect  me  beyond  reason.  Peace!  „  u  ii  451 
Famine  is/,  were  it  but  Of  being  starved.  „  iv  iii 204 
Yet  if  a  /,  Or  shadow  of  a  /,  „  v  i  114 
To  lodge  a  /  in  Thoma.s  Becket's  heart  Becket  i  iii  176 
Nay — no  /!  More  like  is  he  to  excommunicate  me.  „  u  i  269 
yet  what/?  the  people  Believe  the  wood  enchanted.  „  ni  i  35 
/  creeps  in  at  the  front,  honesty  steals  out  at  the  back,  ..  in  iii  61 
No/!  Grim.  No/,  myloixl.  „  v  ii  578 
from  maiden /'s  Or  reverential  love  for  him  I  loved,       The  Cup  n  196 

1  do  remember  your  first-marriage /'s.  .,  n  207 
I  have  no /'«  at  this  my  second  marriage.  .,         ii  208 

Fear  (verb)     I  /,  I  /,  I  see  you.  Dear  friend,  Queen  Mary  i  ii  102 

dull  life  in  this  maiden  court,  I  /,  my  Lord  ?  „  i  iii  115 

She /'s  the  Lords  may  side  with  you  '  ..  i  iv  158 

Do  not  /  it.     Of  that  hereafter.  „  i  v  130 

Courtenay,  Save  that  he  f's  he  might  be  crack'd  in 

using,  „  n  i  7 

I  /  the  mine  is  fii-ed  before  the  time.  ,,  n  i  123 

I  /  we  be  too  few,  Sir  Tliomas.  „  n  i  224 

and  I  /  One  scruple,  this  or  that  way,  „  ii  ii  99 

And  /  them  not.     I  /  them  not.  „  n  ii  243 

how  to  cross  it  balks  me.     I  /  we  cannot.  „  ii  iii  10 

1/ the  Emperor  much  misvalued  me.  „  m  ii  76 

This  Howard,  whom  they  /,  what  was  he  saying  ?  „  in  vi  54 

nor  /  but  that  to-day  Thou  shalt  receive  „  iv  iii  84 

There  will  be  more  conspiracies,  I  /.  ,.         iv  iii  433 

1  do  much  /  that  England  will  not  care.  „  v  ii  282 

I  have  given  her  cause — I  /  no  woman.  Harold  i  ii  42 

Why  then  of  England.     Madam,  /  us  not,  „       v  ii  97 

that  I  /  the  Queen  would  have  her  life.  Becket,  Pro.  61 

We  /  that  he  may  reave  thee  of  thine  o^vn.  ..       i  iii  611 

1  /  Church-censures  like  your  King.  ..      iv  ii  434 

They  /  you  slain :  they  dread  they  know  not  what.  „       v  ii  600 

Tut — /  me  not ;  I  ever  had  my  victories  among  women.  The  Cup  i  i  152 
I  /  not.     Synorix.     Then  do  not  tell  him.  „       i  ii  308 

Yes,  my  lord,  /  not.     I  will  answer  for  you.  Foresters  i  ii  32 

And  /  not  thou  !     Each  of  us  has  an  arrow  on  the  conl ;       „        iv  606 

Fear'd     She  /  it  might  unman  him  for  his  end.  Queen  Mary  in  i  368 

Cannot  ?     Even  so  !     I  /  as  much.  The  Falcon  846 

Fearful    Paget,  despite  his/  heresies,  I  loved  the  man.    Queen  Mary  iv  iii  633 
whose  /  Priest  Sits  winking  at  the  license  of  a  king,  Becket  i  ii  65 

More,  tenfold,  than  this  /  child  can  do ;  Harold  i  ii  143 

thou  Wast  ever  /.  „      n  ii  351 

Too /still!  „      nii412 

Fearing    /  for  her,  sent  a  secret  missive,  Queen  Mary  n  ii  121 

Feast  (s)     No  sacrifice,  but  a  life-giving/!  „  iv  ii  112 

Bring  not  thy  hollowness  On  our  full/.  Harold  iv  iii  204 

A  doter  on  white  pheasant-flesh  at  f's,  Becket,  Pro.  97 

I  would  that  every  man  made  /  to-day  The  Cup  n  225 

of  that  full  /  That  leaves  but  emptiness.  Prom,  of  May  n  255 

Why  comest  thou  like  a  death's  head  at  my/?  Foresters  i  ii  211 

And  join  your/'s  and  all  your  forest  games  „  in  84 

thy  father  will  not  grace  our/  With  his  white  beard  to-day.  „  iv  80 

Our  /  is  yonder,  spread  beneath  an  oak,  '    „  iv  189 

Feast  (verb)    Call  in  the  poor  from  the  streets,  and  let  them  /.  Becket  i  iv  73 
Feed,  /,  and  be  merry.  „    i  iv  151 

Feather    if  this  Prince  of  fluff  and  /  come  Queen  Mary  i  iv  162 

Night,  as  black  as  a  raven's/;  Harold  in  ii  6 

strike,  make  his  f's  Glance  in  mid  heaven.  The  Falcon  15 

We  cannot  flamit  it  in  new  /'*■  now :  „  42 


Feather' d 


910 


Felt 


Feather'd     Breaks  into  /  merriments,  and  flowers  Qneen  Mary  iii  v  13 

Featherhead    Courtenay,  belike —    Mary.    A  fool  and  / !  „  v  i  128 

Feature    of  royal  blood,  of  splendid  /,  „  i  i  112 

equal  for  pm'e  innocence  of  nature,  And  loveliness 


of/. 


Featureless    play'd  at  ball  with  And  kick'd  it  /— 
Fed    swoU'n  and  /  With  indraughts  and  side-currents, 

F  with  rank  bread  that  crawl'd  upon  the  tongue, 

pray  for  him  who  hath  /  you  in  the  wilderness. 

Meal  enough,  meat  enough,  well/; 

You  be  /  with  tit-bits,  you, 

I  am  /  with  tit-bits  no  more  than  you  are, 

those  pale  moutlis  which  we  have  /  will  praise  us — 
Federigo    {See  also  Federigo  degli  Alberighi)    my  Lord  F, 
he  hath  fallen  Into  a  sickness. 

My  lord  F,  Can  I  not  speak  with  you  once  more 

Yes,  your  falcon,  F  ! 

O  F,  F,l  love  you  !     Spite  of  ten  thousand  brothers,  F. 

And  I  am  happy  !     Giovanna.     And  I  too,  F 


From,  of  May  n  373 

The  Cup  11 128 

Queen  Mary  n  i  233 

„        IV  iii  442 

Becket  i  iv  266 

The  Falcon  166 

Foresters  i  i  24 

I  i  27 

„    IV  1076 


The  Falcon  309 
687 
843 
897 
928 


Federigo  d^li  Alberighi     Poor  Fd  A  Takes  nothing  in  return         „  715 

Fee  (s)     In  /  and  barony  of  the  King,  Becket  i  iii  675 

I  hold  Nothing  in  /  and  barony  of  the  King.  ..       i  iii  678 

Take /'s  of  tyranny,  wink  at  sacrilege,  „       ii  ii  394 

And  have  thy/'s,  and  break  the  law  no  more.  Foresters  iv  955 

Fee  (verb)     he  will  /  thee  as  freely  as  he  will  wrench  Harold  n  i  57 

if  you  cared  To  /  an  over-opulent  superstition,         Prom,  of  May  i  693 

Feeble    To  Dover  ?  no,  I  am  too  /.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  221 

If  Rome  be  /,  then  should  I  be  firm.  Becket  i  iii  240 

Perhaps  you  judge  him  With  /  charity :  The  Cup  i  ii  186 

Shall  I  tell  her  he  is  dead  ?    No ;  she  is  still  too  /.     Prom,  of  May  in  338 

Feed     F,  feast,  and  be  merry.  Becket  i  iv  151 

So  that  the  fool  King  Louis  /  them  not.  .,         ii  i  76 

that  the  sheep  May  /in  peace.  „  in  iii  346 

That  you  may  /  your  fancy  on  the  glory  of  it,  The  Cup  ii  133 

Feeder    a  /  Of  dogs  and  hawks,  and  apes,  Becket  i  i  79 

Feel     I  came  to  /  the  pulse  of  Eiigland,  Queen  Mary  m  i  37 

faith  that  seem'd  to  droop  will/ your  light,  .,         iii  iv  22 

I  /  it  but  a  duty — you  wll  find  in  it  Pleasure  ..       in  iv  429 

your  Grace,  your  Grace,  1/  so  happy :  „       m  v  250 

And  it  were  well,  if  thou  shouldst  let  him  /,  Harold  n  ii  16 

I  can  /  for  thee.     Eleanor.     Thou  /  for  me  ! —  Becket,  Pro.  472 

The  man  shall/  that  I  can  strike  him  yet.  „  n  i  78 

And  /  it  too.  „        in  iii  48 

willing  wives  enough  To  /  dishonour,  honour.  The  Cup  i  ii  189 

Will /no  shame  to  give  themselves  the  lie.  ..  n  117 

Dost  thou  not  /  the  love  I  bear  to  thee  „  n  426 

As  years  go  on,  hef's  them  press  upon  him,  Prom,  of  May  i  647 

I  /  sewer,  Miss  Dora,  that  I  ha'  been  noan  too 

sudden  wi'  you,  .,  n  59 

I  /  so  much  better,  that  I  trust  I  may  be  able  ,.  in  221 

As  yet  I  scarcely  /  it  mine.  ..  in  613 

and  mighty  slow  To  /  offences.  „  in  630 

churchman  too  In  a  fashion,  and  shouldst  /  Avith  him.    Foresters  iv  412 
he  will.  He  will — he  f's  it  in  his  head.  „        iv  646 

That  I  may  /  thou  art  no  phantom —  „       iv  1013 

Feeling     with  her  poor  blind  hands  / — '  where  is  it  ?      Queen  Mary  ni  i  407 
F  my  native  land  beneath  my  foot,  „  ui  ii  47 

Feel'st    thou  /  into  the  hands  Of  these  same  Moors  Foresters  ii  i  562 

when  thou  /  with  me  The  ghost  returns  to  Marian,  „        iii  113 

Feigning     F  to  treat  with  him  about  her  marriage —      Queen  Mary  ii  ii  33 

Feint    comedy  meant  to  seem  a  tragedy — A  /,  a  farce.  Becket  iv  ii  323 

There  was  the  farce,  the  /—not  mine.     And  yet  I  am 
all  but  sure  my  dagger  was  a  /  Till  the  worm 


tum'd- 
— this  was  no  /  then  ?  no. 
No,  for  it  came  to  nothing — only  a  /. 
I'll  swear  to  mine  own  self  it  was  a  /. 
Fell     Who  stood  upright  when  both   houses  /. 

Bagenhall.    The  houses/ !   Officer.    I  mean 

the  bouses  knelt 
But  stretch  it  wider ;  say  when  England  /. 
God's  righteous  judgment  /  upon  you 
nay,  his  noble  mother's,  Heaa  / — 
How  oft  the  falling  axe,  that  never  /, 
owld  lord  /  to  's  meat  wi'  a  will,  God  bless  un  ! 


IV  ii  377 
IV  ii  383 
IV  ii  398 
IV  ii  402 


Queen  Mary  m  iii  255 
m  iii  262 
iniv240 
m  iv  296 
m  V  134 
IV  iii  514 


Fell  (contmued)     Like  Peter's  when  he  /,  and  thou  wilt 
the  first  F,  and  the  next  became  an  Empire. 
Hail  to  the  living  who  fought,  the  dead  who  / ! 
how  he  /  's  The  mortal  copse  of  faces  ! 
Then  all  the  dead  /  on  him. 
Here  /  the  truest,  manliest  hearts  of  England. 
Before  he  /  into  the  snare  of  Guy ; 
high  altar  Stand  where  their  standard  /  .  .  . 
Every  man  about  his  king  F  where  he  stood. 


Harold  iii  i  283 

IV  i  51 
..      IV  iii  106 

V  i  588 

V  ii  50 

V  ii  58 

V  ii  131 

V  ii  140 

V  ii  182 


twelve  stars  /  glittering  out  of  heaven  Into  her  bosom.         Becket  I  i  46 
smote  me  down  upon  the  Minster  floor.     I  /.  ..     i  i  105 

If.     \yhj  fall  ?     Why  did  He  smite  me  ?  ..     i  i  108 

they  mock'd  us  and  we  /  upon  'em,  i  ii  15 

names  of  those  who  fought  and  /  are  like  The  Cup  i  ii  164 

F  with  her  motion  as  she  rose,  and  she,  The  Falcon  536 

how  long  we  strove  before  Our  horses  /  beneath  us,  ,,  639 

'er  an'  the  owd  man  they  /  a  kissin'  o'  one  another    Prom,  of  May  i  21 
/  agean  coalscuttle  and  my  kneea  gev  waay  ..  i  403 

as  I  telled  'er  to-daay  when  she  /  foul  ..  u  582 

I'd  like  to  /  'im  as  dead  as  a  bullock  !  ,.  ii  597 

if  ever  A  Norman  damsel  /  into  our  hands,  Foresters  in  181 

The  deer/ dead  to  the  bottom,  and  the  man  F  with  him,       ..        iv  543 
Feller  (fellow)     the  /  couldn't  find  a  Mister  in  his  mouth 

fur  me.  Prom,  of  May  i  302 

Why,  coom  then,  owd  /,  I'll  tell  it  to  you ;  ..  n  202 

What/  wur  it  as  'a'  been  a-talkin'  ..  ii  575 

thaw  the /'5  gone  and  maade  such  a  litter  of  his  faiice.     ..  n  588 

The/'s  clean  daazed,  an' maazed,  an' maated,  ,.  ii  728 

Fellow     (See  also  Feller)     Art  thou  of  the  true  faith,  /,     Queen  Mary  i  iii  46 
Divers  honest /'s,  ,.         i  iii  120 

I  will  be  there ;  the /'«  at  his  tricks —  ,.         i  iii  157 

A  goodlier-looking  /  than  tliis  Philip.  ,.  i  iv  3 

and  I  warrant  this  fine/ 's  life.  ,.         n  iii  84 

I  know  some  lusty /'s  there  in  France.  ,,        in  i  128 

Ay  !  /,  what !     Stand  staring  at  me  !  ,.        in  i  286 

Ever  a  rough,  blunt,  and  uncourtly  / —  ,,         v  v  120 

Haul  like  a  great  strong  /  at  my  legs,  Harold  ii  i  11 

F,  dost  thou  catch  crabs  ?  .,      n  i  65 

my  f's  know  that  I  am  all  one  scale  like  a  fish.  Becket  i  iv  212 

The  /  that  on  a  lame  jade  came  to  court,  „       v  i  246 

He  comes,  a  rough,  bluff,  simple-looking  /.  The  Cup  i  i  173 

I  tell  thee,  my  good  /,  My  arrow  struck  tlie  stag.  „  i  ii  27 

I  mil,  I  will.     Poor  / !  The  Falcon  282 

more  than  one  brave  /  owed  His  death  to  the  charm  in  it.         „  634 

You  hear,  Filippo  ?    My  good  /,  go  !  „  691 

Nor  am  I  Edgar,  my  good  /.  Prom,  of  May  ii  702 

Foot  f's  !  Foresters  i  i  91 

there  is  a  lot  of  wild/'s  in  Sherwood  Forest  who  hold 

by  King  Richard.  ..        i  ii  73 

good  f's  there  in  merry  Sherwood  That  hold  by  Richard,     „       i  iii  98 

A  brave  old  /  but  he  angers  me.  ..      ii  i  471 

Farewell,  good/ 's !  ..         m87 

I  believe  thee,  thou  art  a  good  /,  though  a  friar.  ..       in  342 

Thou  pay  est  easily,  like  a  good  /,  ..        iv  156 

I  can  bring  down  Fourscore  tall  /  's  on  thee.  ..        iv  177 

now  I  love  thee  mightily,  thou  tall/.  ..        iv  322 

Were  some  strong  /  here  in  the  wild  wood,  ,.        iv  515 

man  of  ours  Up  in  the  North,  a  goodly  /  too,  ,.        iv  53C 

Fellow-citizen    Swear  with  me,  noble  f-c's,  all.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  296 

Fellow-prisoner     Thus  Gardiner — for  the  two  were  f-p's         „  i  iv  196 

Fellow-pupil    Were  not  our  f-p's  all  ladies  ?  Prom,  of  May  in  29t 

Fellow-trickster    one  should  be  This  William's  f-t's ; —  Harold  ni  ii  71 

Felony     '  If  any  cleric  be  accused  of  /,  the  Church  Becket  i  iii  8i 

Felt     I  have  /  within  me  Stirrings  of  some  great  doom    Queen  Mary  i  iv  25J 

babe  in  amis  Had/  the  faltering  of  his  mother's  heart,      „  n  ii  Si 

The  Queen  hath  /  tlie  motion  of  her  babe  !  .,  in  ii  21J 

and  the  power  They  /  in  killing.  ..  m  iv  7* 

if  I  knew  you  /  this  parting,  Philip,  As  I  do  !  ..         ni  vi  25] 

I  /  his  arms  about  me,  and  his  hps —  ,.  v  v  9i 

Hate  not  one  who  /  Some  pity  for  thy  hater !  Harold  i  ii  4i 

F  the  remorseless  outdraught  of  the  deep  „        ii  i  1' 

I  /  it  in  the  middle  of  that  fierce  fight  .,  iv  iii  _18;' 

And  /  the  sun  of  Antioch  scald  our  mail,  Becket  ii  li  9!' 

we  /  we  had  laughed  too  long  and  could  not  stay 

ouraelves —  „  m  iii  16< 


Felt 


911 


Fierce 


The  Cup  I  i  34 

Foresters  i  i  208 

IV  627 

Queen  Mary  m  i  122 

n  ii  52 

I  iv  203 

V  V  266 

Foresters  n  ii  39 

ni8 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  171 

Foresters  n  i  572 

Queen  Mary  ni  ii  104 

Becket  m  iii  278 


ueen  Mary  v  i  224 
vi269 
vii400 
vii529 
V  ii  531 
V  iii  8 
T  iii  84 
Harold  v  i  149 


i  lUt  {cmitinued)     I  never  /  such  passion  for  a  woman. 
?  who  never  hast  /  a  want,  to  whom  all  things, 

By  my  halidome  1/  him  at  my  leg  stiU. 

Female    the  crown  F,  too  ! 

Fen    yet  like  waters  of  the  /  they  know  not 

Fence  (s)    hath  no  /  when  Gardiner  questions  him; 
To  reign  is  restless  /,  Tierce,  quart,  and  trickery, 
witli  this  skill  of  / !  let  go  mine  arm. 
There  is  a  / 1  cannot  overleap,  My  father's  will. 

Fence  (verb)     may  /  round  his  power  with  restriction, 
'tis  but  to  see  if  thou  canst  /.     Draw  ! 

Fenced     You  are  doubly  /  and  shielded  sitting  here 
He  /  his  royal  promise  with  an  if. 

Feria  (attendant  on  Kii^  Philip  of  Spain)    F  !    Hast 
thou  not  mark'd — 
because  I  ani  not  certain :     You  understand,  F. 
Madam,  the  Count  de  F  waits  without. 
It  is  the  Count  de  F,  my  dear  lady. 
Count  de  F,  from  his  Majesty  King  Philip. 
Count  de  F,  from  the  King  of  Spain. 
Count  de  jf-",  I  take  it  that  the  King  hath  spoken  to  you ; 

Fern    nun  Vying  a  tress  against  our  golden  /. 

Ferrar  (Bishop  of  St.  David's)    Rogers  and  F,  for  tlieir 

time  is  come,  Queen  Mary  m  iv  425 

Festal     But  ill  befitting  such  a  /  day  Foresters  i  iii  37 

Fester'd     Foul  maggots  crawling  in  a  /  vice  !  Queen  Mary  v  v  161 

Festival    Sat  by  me  at  a  rustic  /  The  Falcon  350 

times  Of  /like  burnish 'd  summer-fiies.  Foresters  i  ii  276 

Fetch     I  am  sent  to  /  you.  Queen  Mary  m  iv  393 

and  he  sent  me  wi'  the  gig  to  Littlechester  to  /  'er ;  Prom,  of  May  i  20 
Go  men,  and  /  him  hither  on  the  litter.  Foresters  iv  461 

Fetched     but  we  /  her  round  at  last.  Queen  Man/  iv  iii  495 

Let  her  be  /.  Harold  v  i  153 

bowl  my  ancestor  F  from  the  farthest  east —  The  Falcon  485 

Fetid    if  the  /  gutter  had  a  voice  And  cried  I  was  not 

clean.  Quern  Mary  y  ii  322 

Fetter'd    now,  perhaps,  F  and  lash'd,  a  galley-slave.  Foresters  ii  i  654 

Fetters    hast  thou  no  /  For  those  of  thine  own  band  „  iv  831 

Feud     1  come  for  counsel  and  ye  give  me  f's.  Queen  Mary  lu  iv  308 

if  she  stay  the  f's  that  part  The  sons  of  Godwin  Harold  i  ii  178 

Godwin  still  at  /  with  Alfgar,  ..         iv  i  123 

Plots  and  f's  !     This  is  my  ninetieth  bu-thday.  (repeat)     ,.  iv  i  120, 126 
To  make  all  England  one,  to  close  all/'*,  „         iv  i  141 

if  there  ever  come  /  between  Church  and  Crown,  Becket,  Pro.  464 

Are  not  so  much  at  /  with  Holy  Church  „  i  ii  54 

/  between  our  houses  is  the  bar  1  cannot  cross ;  The  Falcon  254 

No  more/'s,  but  peace.  Peace  and  conciliation !  „  909 

no  more  f's  Disturb  our  peaceful  vassalage  to  Rome.        The  Cup  n  70 
[alism    Tut !  you  talk  Old  /.  Prom,  of  May  i  670 

Fever     U'et,  famine,  ague,  /,  storm,  wreck,  wrath, —     Queen  Mary  v  v  108 
I  have  a  Nonnan  /  on  me,  son,  Harold  i  i  87 

i        when  I  was  down  in  the  /,  she  was  down  „      n  i  47 

that  be  dead  ten  times  o'er  i'  one  day  wi'  the  putrid  /;    Becket  i  iv  251 
No  /,  cough,  croup,  sickness  ?  ,,       v  ii  169 

whitewash  that  cottage  of  yours  where  your  grand- 
son had  the  /.  Prom,  of  May  iii  44 
if  the  /spread,  the  parish  will  have  to  thank  you 

for  it.  „  m  46 

d'ye  think  Fd  gi'e  'em  the  /?  „  m  50 

Smitten  with  /  in  the  open  field,  „         in  806 

fever-breeding    a  foul  stream  Thro'  f-b  levels, — at  her  side,    Becket  ii  i  156 

'ew    for  we  are  many  of  us  Catholics,  but  /  Papists,       Queen  Mary  i  i  115 
In  some  /  minutes.     She  will  address  your  guilds 

and  companies.  „         u  ii  14 

F  things  have  fail'd  to  which  I  set  my  will.  „         ii  ii  22 

We  have  /  prisoners  in  mine  earldom  there,  Harold  n  ii  686 

I  have  almost  drain'd  the  cup — A  /  drops  left.  The  Cup  ii  386 

and  why  ye  have  so  /  grains  to  peck  at.  Foresters  i  i  77 

How  /  Jimes  Will  heat  our  pulses  quicker  !    How  /frosts 

Will  chill  the  hearts  that  beat  for  Robin  Hood !  „    iv  1060 

'emiess     Doth  not  the  /  of  anything  make  the  fulness         Becket  ni  iii  301 

'eyiher  (father)     Thy  /  eddicated  his  darters  to  marry 

gentlefoiilk.  Prom,  of  May  ii  115 

I  faiaw'd  'im  when  I  seed  'im  agean  an'  I  telled/ 
on  'im.  „         ni  122 


Fib     you  told  me  a  great  /:  it  wasn't  in  the  willow.  Becket  iv  ii  371 

Nip,  nip  him  for  his  /.  Foresters  ii  ii  121 

Fiction    A  shadow,  a  poetical  / —  ,,           iv  219 

No  figure,  no  /,  Robin.  „           rv  222 

Fiddler    and  the  /  be  theer,  and  the  lads  and  lasses  Prom,  of  May  i  427 
Fie    These  are  the  things  that  madden  her.     F 

upon  it !  Queen  Mary  in  ii  222 

F  on  her  dropsy,  so  she  have  a  dropsy !  „            m  ii  226 

F !     To  stand  at  ease,  and  stare  as  at  a  show,  „          iv  iii  291 
Field    {See  also  Battle-field,  Slaughter-field)    To  read 

and  rhyme  in  solitary  /  's,  ,.               n  i  51 

green  /  Beside  the  brimming  Medway,  „              n  i  243 

Amplier  than  any  /  on  our  poor  earth  „          in  iii  197 

banish'd  us  to  Woodstock  and  the  f's.  „              m  v  4 

These  /'s  are  only  green,  they  make  me  gape.  „               iii  v  7 

range  Among  the  pleasant  /'s  of  Holy  Writ  .,            m  v  80 

seems  that  we  shall  fly  These  bald,  blank  f's,  ,.           m  v  252 

Is  God's  best  dew  upon  the  barren  /.  ..              v  i  102 

There  runs  a  shallow  brook  across  our  /  „               v  v  83 

Be  there  not  fair  woods  and  f's  In  England  ?  Harold  i  i  262 

sons  of  Godwin  Sit  topmost  in  the  /  of  England,  ,.        i  i  326 

But  walk'd  our  Norman  /,  ..     ii  ii  173 

Free  air  !  free  / !  ..     ii  ii  230 

men  are  at  their  markets,  in  their /'s,  ii  ii  437 
in  some  wide,  waste  /  With  nothing  but  my  battle-axe         ..     ii  ii  778 

and  hurl'd  it  from  him  Three  /'s  away,  ,,      m  i  140 

and  in  a  /  So  packt  with  carnage  ,,    ni  ii  127 

Who  conquer'd  what  we  walk  on,  our  own  /.  ,,       iv  i  39 

that  reach'd  a  hand  Down  to  the  /  beneath  it,  ,.        iv  i  45 

If  the  /  Cried  out  '  I  am  mine  own ; '  „        iv  i  48 
The  seed  thou  sowest  in  thy  /  is  cursed,  The  steer  where- 
with thou  plowest  thy  /  is  cursed.  The  fowl  that  fleeth 

o'er  thy /is  cursed,  „        v  i  70 

And  be  thy  hand  as  winter  on  the  /,  „       v  i  132 

should  the  King  of  England  waste  the  f's  Of  England,  „      v  i  141 

0  rare,  a  whole  long  day  of  open  /.  Becket  i  i  296 
Be  yet  within  the  /.  „  n  ii  42 
— the  green  / — the  gray  church- —  .,  n  ii  295 
to  overstep  and  come  at  all  things  in  the  next/?  „  tn  iii  283 
Moon  on  the  /  and  the  foam.  The  Cv/p  i  ii  3 
bis  falcon  Ev'n  wins  his  dinner  for  him  in  the  /.  The  Falcon  231 
To  find  one  shock  upon  the  /  when  all  The  harvest  „  301 
And,  having  passed  unwounded  from  the  /,  „  609 
My  comrade  of  the  house,  and  of  the  /.  „  876 
Follow  my  art  among  these  quiet /'s.  Prom,  of  May  i  743 
and  he  sent  'im  awaay  to  t'other  end  o'  the  /;  „  ii  154 
This  poor,  flat,  hedged-in  / — no  distance—  „  ii  344 
this,  for  the  moment.  Will  leave  me  a  free  /.  „  ii  456 
— a  daughter  of  the  f's.  This  Dora !  ..  u  628 
we  fun'  'im  out  a-walkin'  i'  West  F  wi'  a  white  'at,  ..  in  136 
Thro'  f's  that  once  were  blest,  m  202 
Smitten  with  fever  in  the  open  /,  ,.  m  806 
We  be  more  like  scarecrows  in  a  /  than  decent  serving 

men ;  Foresters  i  i  34 

We  know  all  balms  and  simples  of  the  /  „      n  ii  12 

Fiend     and  the  f's  that  utter  them  Tongue-tom  Queen  Mary  \  ii  192 

Norman  who  should  drive  The  stranger  to  the  /  's  !  Harold  n  ii  541 

taking  The  F's  advantage  of  a  throne,  Becket  ii  i  152 

Do  they  not  fight  the  Great  F  day  by  day  ?  „     v  ii  586 

Hence  to  the/!  ..    v  iii  107 

The  black  /  grip  her  !  Foresters  in  380 

Fierce    how  /  a  letter  you  wrote  against  Their 

superstition  Queen  Mary  i  ii  84 

but  this  /  old  Gardiner — his  big  baldness,  ..        i  iv  263 

So  /  against  the  Headship  of  the  Pope,  ,,        in  iii  11 

are  breeding  A  /  resolve  and  fixt  heart-hate  in  men  ..        in  vi  32 

suddenly  fill  With  such  /  fire —  ..      ni  vi  162 

You  have  been  more  /  against  the  Pope  than  1 ;  ,.       rv  ii  148 

Remember  how  God  made  the  /  fire  seem  ..        iv  iii  89 

she  lost  Her  /  desire  of  bearing  him  a  child,  ,,  iv  iii  429 
the  ti-uth  Was  lost  in  that/  North,  where  they  were  lost,  Harold  m  ii  26 

Lest  thy  /  Tostig  spy  me  out  alone,  „       rv  i  190 

Thy  /  forekings  had  clench'd  their  pirate  bides  „       rv  iii  35 

1  felt  it  in  the  middle  of  that /fight  At  Stamford- bridge.  „  iv  iii  184 
Thou  didst  arouse  the  /  Northumbrians !  „        v  i  347 


Fierce 


912 


Find 


Fierce  (continued)     sorely  presfc  upon  By  the  /  Emperor  and 

his  Antipope.  Becket  i  iii  203 

Perchance  the  /  De  Brocs  from  Saltwood  Castle,  ,,      v  ii  249 

These  arm'd  men  in  the  city,  these  /  faces — •  „        v  iii  3 

may  not  be  seized  With  some  /  passion,  Prom,  of  May  ii  336 

Fiercelier     Heaven  help  that  this  re-action  not  re-act 

Yet  /  under  Queen  Elizabeth,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  389 

Fiercest    Out  in  the  /  storm  That  ever  made  earth 

tremble —  Prom,  of  May  iii  796 

Fierier    That  ever  make  him  /.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  95 

something  /  than  fire  To  yield  them  their  deserts.  .,  v  iv  26 

Fieriest    And  ail  her /partisans — are  pale  Before  my  star !       „        ni  ii  170 

Fiery     And  then  our  /  Tostig,  while  thy  hands  Are  palsied 

here,  Harold  ii  ii  453 

Fiery-choleric     And  hates  the  Spaniard — f-c.  Queen  Alary  v  ii  92 

Fifth    This  is  the  /  conspiracy  hatch'd  in  France ;  „  v  i  297 

Fifty     We  may  have  left  their  /  less  by  five.  The  Falcon  625 

F  leagues  Of  woodland  hear  and  know  my  horn.  Foresters  in  102 

Fight  (s)     I  have  fought  the  /  and  go —  Harold  i  i  184 

I  fought  another  /  than  this  Of  Stamford-bridge.  ..    iv  iii  23 

I  felt  it  in  the  middle  of  that  fierce  /  At  Stamford-bridge.      ,.  iv  iii  184 

power  to  balk  Thy  puissance  in  tbis  /  „      v  i  119 

I  can  no  more — fight  out  the  good  /—die  Conqueror.       Becket  v  iii  189 

The  Cup  I  ii  154 

The  Falcon  605 

613 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  28 
u  ii  313 
III  i  457 

III  i  466 

III  ii  204 

III  iv  92 

V  V  189 

Harold  i  i  433 

„      I  i  436 

..     II  ii  59 

„  in  ii  134 

„  ni  ii  153 

„  IV  iii  165 

.,  IV  iii  167 

.,     V  i  137 

Becket  i  i  112 

I  i  123 

I  iii  545 

„     I  iii  569 

..     I  iv  210 

.,     V  ii  585 

„     V  iii  189 

The  Cup  II  92 

Foresters  i  i  14 

I  i  57 

„       I  i  232 

„       I  i  236 

„      n  i  557 

„      II  i  575 

„      II  i  577 

,.       IV  200 

„       IV  207 

Harold  v  i  69 

„    V  i  388 

„     V  i  491 

Becket  i  iii  36 

„  I  iv  160 

Foresters  n  i  543 

IV  821 

Becket  in  iii  165 

„    m  iii  346 

Foresters  iv  221 

IV  222 

IV  333 

Queen  Mary  in  v  157 

Foresters  in  198 

Harold  V  i  468 


in  the  front  rank  of  the  /  With  scarce  a  pang 

The  trumpets  of  the  /  had  echo'd  down, 

and  with  a  flag  of  ours  Ta'en  in  the  / — 
Fight  (verb)     who  went  with  your  train  bands  To  / 
with  Wyatt, 

Is  he  so  safe  to  /  upon  her  side  ? 

I  trust  that  you  would  /  along  with  us. 

would  you  not  /  then  ?     Bagenhall.    I  think  I  should 
/  then. 

for  their  heresies,  Alva,  they  will/; 

Paget,  You  stand  up  here  to  /  for  heresy, 

I'll  /  it  on  the  threshold  of  the  grave. 

boys  will  /.     Leofwin  would  often  /  me. 

Even  old  Gurth  would  /. 

Normans  up  To  /  for  thee  again  ! 

Well  then,  we  must  /.     How  blows  the  wind  ? 

He  hath  cui-sed  thee,  and  all  those  who  /  for  thee, 

Too  drunk  to  /  with  thee  ! 

F  thou  with  thine  own  double,  not  with  me, 

How  should  the  people  /  When  the  king  flies  ? 

Not  / — tho'  somehow  traitor  to  the  King — 

'  I  mean  to  /  mine  utmost  for  the  Church, 

make  it  clear  Under  what  Prince  I  /. 

F  for  the  Church,  and  set  the  Church  against  me  ! 

we  daren't  /  you  with  our  crutches. 

Do  they  not  /  the  Great  Fiend  day  by  day  ? 

I  can  no  more — /  out  the  good  fight— die  Conqueror. 

We  cannot  /  imperial  Rome, 

'  I  go  to  /  in  Scotland  With  many  a  savage  clan ; ' 

if  he  had  not  gone  to  /  the  king's  battles, 

if  he  dare  to  /  at  all,  would  /  for  his  rents, 

f's  not  for  himself  but  for  the  people  of  England. 

I  would  /  with  any  man  but  thee. 

No,  Sir  Earl,  I  will  not  /  to-day. 

Well,  I  will  /  to-morrow. 

lie  that  pays  not  for  his  dinner  must  /  for  it. 

thou  /  at  quarterstaff  for  thy  dinner  with  our  Robin, 
Fighteth     The  soul  who  /  on  thy  side  is  cursed, 
Fighting    And  /  for  And  dying  for  the  people — 

chosen  by  his  people  And  /  for  his  people  ! 

Wilt  thou  destroy  the  Church  in  /  for  it, 

thej'  were  /  for  her  to-day  in  the  street. 

to  help  the  old  man  When  he  was  /. 

Were  /  underhand  unholy  wars 
Figure     to  keep  the  /  moist  and  make  it  hold  water, 

False  /,  Map  would  say. 

— a  mere  /.     Let  it  go  by. 

No  /,  no  fiction,  Robin. 

I  see  two  f's  crawling  up  the  hill. 
Filch     a  fox  may  /  a  hen  by  night, 

/  the  linen  from  the  hawthorn, 
Fili    Salva  F,  Salva  Spiritus, 


Filippo  (foster  brother  to  Count  Federigo  degli  Alberighi) 

Sh— sh— F  !  (repeat)  Tlie  Falcon  96,  105 

Come,  come,  F,  what  is  there  in  the  larder  ?  .,  117 

out  of  those  scraps  and  shreds  F  spoke  of. 
Away,  F  ! 

What  is  it,  F  ?     Filippo.     Spooas,  your  lordship. 
I  thank  thee,  good  F. 

so  I,  F,  being,  with  your  ladyship's  pardon, 
F  !     Giovanna.     Will  3'ou  not  eat  with  me. 
Wine  !     F,  wine  ! 
F  !  wiU  you  take  the  word  out  of  your  master's  own 

mouth  ? 
I  and  F  here  had  done  our  best, 
F  !     Count.     A  troop  of  horse — 
And  we  kill'd  'em  by  the  score.     Elisabetta.     F  ! 
See,  my  lady  !     Giovanna.     I  see,  F  ! 
And  why,  F  ? 

tree  that  his  lordship Giovanna.     Not  now,  F. 

You  hear,  F  ?     My  good  fellow,  go  ! 

But  the  prunes  that  your  lordship Elisabetta.     F  ! 

F  !     Filippo.     Well,  well !  the  women  ! 
Fill     no  foreign  prince  or  priest  Should  /  my  throne. 


suddenly  /  With  such  fierce  fire 

And  we  will  /  thee  full  of  Norman  sun, 

and  /  the  sky  With  free  sea-laughter — 

Fall,  cloud,  and  /  the  house — ■ 

God  of  truth  F  all  thine  hours  with  peace  ! — 

Thou  art  the  man  to  /  out  the  Church  robe  ; 

And  /  all  hearts  with  fatness  and  the  lust 

See  here,  I  /  it.     Will  you  drink,  my  lord  ? 

F  to  the  brim. 
Fill'd    saw  the  church  all  /  With  dead  men 

one  who  /  All  offices,  all  bishopricks  with  English — 

God  Has  /  the  quiver,  and  Death  has  drawn  the  bow- 

'  And  when  the  vacancy  is  to  be  /  up, 

like  Egypt's  plague,  had  /  All  things  with  blood  ; 
Filthy    Come,  you  /  knaves,  let  us  pass. 

What  /  tools  our  Senate  works  with  ! 
Find     Whose  play  is  all  to  /  herself  a  Kin: 

And  f's  you  statues. 

Death  and  the  Devil — if  he  / 1  have  one — • 

F  out  his  name  and  bring  it  me. 

thou  shalt  lose  thine  ears  and  /  thy  tongue, 

amazed  To  /  as  fair  a  sun  as  might  have  fla-sh'tl 

Did  you  /  a  scripture,  '  I  come  not  to  bring 

Till,  by  St.  James,  I  /  myself  the  fool. 

And  I  can  /  no  refuge  upon  earth. 

I  shall  /  Heaven  or  else  hell  ready  to  swallow  me. 

And  I  have  often  found  them.     Mary.     F  me  one  ! 

you  will  /  written  Two  names,  Philip  and  Calais  ; 

You  will  /  Philip  only,  policy,  policy, — 

To  /  the  sweet  refreshment  of  the  Saints. 

and  coming  back  F  them  again. 

And,  brother,  we  will  /  a  way,'  said  he — 

To  /  a  means  whereby  the  curse  might  glance 

then  would  /  Her  nest  within  the  cloister. 

Know  what  thou  dost ;   and  we  may  /  for  thee, 

mitil  I  /  Which  way  the  battle  balance. 

Harold  slain  ? — I  cannot  /  his  body. 

Go  further  hence  and  /  him. 

for  I  should  /  An  easy  father  confessor  in  thee. 

Thou  M'ilt  /  her  Back  in  her  lodging. 

As  /  a  hare's  form  in  a  lion's  cave. 

Shall  1  /  you  one  ? 

makes  after  it  too  To  /  it. 

To  /  my  stray  sheep  back  within  the  fold. 

I  thought  if  I  followed  it  I  should  /  the  fairies. 

but  I  don't  know  if  I  can  /  the  way  back  again. 

Shall  I  /  you  asleep  when  I  come  back  ? 

this  will  /  it  there,  And  dig  it  from  the  root 

We  /  that  it  is  miglitier  than  it  seems — • 

Follow  us,  my  son,  and  we  will  /  it  for  thee — 

F  one  a  slut  whose  fairest  linen  seems  Foul 

Here,  here,  here  will  you  /  me. 

To  /  Antonius  here. 


148 
155 
396 
554 

564 
569 
577 

597 
607 
616 
622 
655 
6£.8 
686 
690 
694 
697 
Queen  Mary  in  v  237 


m  vi  161 

Harold  n  ii  180 

n  ii  336 

ni  i  190 

V  i  316 

Becket,  Pro.  262 

The  Cup  n  272 

n  366 

Foresters  in  343 

Harold  I  ii  82 

..     n  ii  534 

„     ni  i  400 

Becket  1  iii  108 

I  iii  345 

„     I iv  203 

Tlie  Cup  I  i  156 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  164 

H  ii  265 


III  i  232 

in  i  253 

in  i  256 

„  III  ii  22 

III  iv  87 

m  vi  101 

IV  iii  128 

IV  iii  223 

vii223 

V  V  153 

V  V  158 
Harold  i  i  177 

n  i  91 
..  n  ii  367 
..  in  i  342 
,  IV  i  233 
IV  ii  48 
..      V  i  460 

V  ii  20 

V  ii  6C 
Becket,  Pro.  87 

I  i  39£ 

I  iii  171 

I  iv  24 

„      II  i  32£ 

.    Ill  iii  35f 

IV  i  2^ 

IV  i  4^ 

IV  ii  6^ 

IV  ii  7f 

,.    IV  ii  26; 

..    IV  ii  37; 

..      V  ii  201 

,,      V  ii  51' 

The  Cwp  I  iii 


II 


Find 


913 


Firm 


The 


Prom. 


Find  {continued)    or  at  least  shall  /  him  There  in  the  camp 
Whose  winter-cataracts  /  a  realm  and  leave  it 
I  sought  him  and  I  could  not  /  him. 
To  /  one  shock  upon  the  field  when  all  The  harvest 
I  /  a  written  scroll  That  seems  to  run  in  rhymings. 

you  Would /it  stain 'd Count.    Silence,  Elisabetta  ! 

Lady,  I  /  you  a  shrewd  bargainer. 

But  you  will  /  me  a  shrewd  bargainer  still. 

An'  how  d'ye  /  the  owd  man  'ere  ? 

feller  couldn't  /  a  Mister  in  his  mouth  fur  me. 

You  never  /  one  for  me,  Mr.  Dobson. 

or  you  may  /  me  at  the  bottom  of  the  river. — 

that  we  Should  /  her  in  the  river  ; 

Some  of  my  former  friends  Would  /  my  logic  faulty ; 

Did  you  /  that  you  worked  at  all  the  worse 

You  must  not  expect  to  /  our  Father  as  he  was  five 

years  ago. 
our  carters  and  our  shepherds  Still  /  a  comfort  there, 
you  will  /  The  common  brotherhood  of  man 
I  cannot  /  the  word — ^forgive  it — Amends, 
only  they  that  be  bred  in  it  can  /  their  way  a-nights 

in  it. 
Your  worship  may  /  another  rhjrme  if  you  care 
Sheriff,  thou  wilt  /  me  at  Nottingham.    Sheriff.    If 

anywhere,  I  shall  /  thee  in  hell 


The  Cwp  I  iii  93 

n305 

n397 

Falcon  301 

431 

664 

757 

774 

)f  May  J  11 

I  302 


I  305 
n88 
n412 
n665 
ni55 

ni419 
m529 
m542 
ra789 


Foresters  n  i  265 
n  i  322 

IV  801 


in  iv  337 

IV  i  170 

V  iii  48 

V  iii  53 

V  V  214 
Becket,  Pro.  499 

„       m  ii  44 

„      rv  ii  261 

The  Falcon  546 

556 

561 

Prom,  of  May  i  316 

I  337 
I  509 

in209 


,?ilie  (adj.)     If  you  have  falsely  painted  your/  Prince  ;  Queen  Mary  i  v  598 
\       Carew  stirs  In  Devon :  that  /  porcelain  Courtenay,  „  n  i  6 

Ay,  why  not,  Sir  Thomas  ?    He  was  a  /  comrtier,  he  ;      „  n  i  33 

a  f  courtier  of  the  old  Court,  old  Sir  Thomas.  „  n  i  45 

Ay,  and  I  warrant  this  /  fellow's  life.  „  n  iii  83 

Lord  !  they  be  / ;  I  never  stitch'd  none  such.  „  in  i  226 

F  eyes — but  melancholy,  irresolute — A  /  beard, 

Bonner,  a  very  full  /  beard. 
Of  such  /  mould,  that  if  you  sow'd  therein  The  seed 

of  Hate, 
Were  you  in  Spain,  this  /  fair  gossamer  gold — 
Is  it  so  /  ?    Troth,  some  have  said  so. 
but  therein  Simk  rocks — they  need  /  steering — 
the  /  attractions  and  repulses,  the  delicacies. 
Now  let  the  King's  /  game  look  to  itself. 
My  lord,  we  know  you  proud  of  your  /  hand, 
Here's  a  /  salad  for  my  lady, 
Here's  a  /  fowl  for  my  lady  ; 
And  here  are  /  fruits  for  my  lady — 
Well,  I  reckons  they'll  hev'  a  /  cider-crop  to-year 
but  I  ha  taaen  good  care  to  turn  out  boath  my 

darters  right  down  /  laadies. 
That  /,  fat,  hook-nosed  vmcle  of  mine,  old  Harold, 
sometimes  been  moved  to  tears  by  a  chapter  of  / 

writing  in  a  novel ; 
and  prattled  to  each  other  that  we  would  marry  / 

gentlemen,  „        m  277 

Ay,  how  /  they  be  in  their  liveries.  Foresters!  i  40 

Because  thou  sayest  such  /  things  of  women,  „     i  iii  137 

ine  (s)    A  roimd  /  likelier.    Your  pardon.  Queen  Mary  m  iii  279 

A  /,  a  / !  he  hath  called  plain  Robin  Hood  a  lord.  Foresters  m  214 

i      A  / !  a  / !     He  hath  called  plain  Robin  a  king.  „       iv  217 

jine  (verb)     F  him  !  /  him  !  he  hath  called  plain  Robin  an 

j  earl.  „       iv  150 

ine-cat    his  f-c  face  bowing  and  beaming  with  all  that 

courtesy  Becket  m  iii  141 

iner    Mai^ery  ?  no,  that's  a  /  thing  there.     How  it 

glitters !  „  rv  i  2 

populace.  With  f's  pointed  like  so  many 

daggers.  Queen  Mary  i  v  149 

I  wear  Upon  this  /),  ye  did  promise  full  Allegiance  „        n  ii  168 

Would  you  not  chop  the  bitten  /  off,  „      m  iv  206 

You  have  a  gold  ring  on  your  /,  »  v  iv  32 

A  lesson  worth  F  and  thumb— thus  Harold  i  ii  55 

How  their  pointed  f's  Glared  at  me  !  „  n  ii  790 

his  /  on  her  harp  (I  heard  him  more  than  once)  „  rv  i  203 

Yet  my  f's  itch  to  beat  him  into  nothing.  Becket  i  iv  229 

Ay.  and  I  left  two  f's  there  for  dead.  The  Falcon  653 

ye'il  think  more  on  'is  little  /  than  hall  my  hand 

at  the  haltar.  Prom,  of  May  1 112 

to  pass  it  down  A  /  of  that  hand  Foresters  i  ii  299 


Finger  (continued)    she  swore  it  never  Should  leave  her  /.  Foresters  ii  i  593 

Finger'd    The  cardinals  have  /  Henry's  gold.  Becket  i  iii  295 

Fingernail  and  he's  as  like  the  King  as  /  to  /,  „  ni  i  165 
Finger-point  I  Scraped  from  your /-p's  the  holy  oil;  Qu^en  Mary  iv  ii  132 
Fiidkin    there  comes  a  deputation  From  our  /  fairy 

nation.  Foresters  n  ii  145 

Finish    I  am  your  I-egate  ;  please  you  let  me  /.  Queen  Mary  ni  iv  180 

Finish'd    It  is  /.  (repeat)                                           Harold  m  i  177,  203,  211 

They  are  /.    Synorix.    How  !  The  Cwp  n  422 

Have  you  not  /,  my  lord  ?  Foresters  n  i  341 

Fire  (s)    {See  also  A-hell-fire,  A-vire,  Fool-fire,  Hell-fire, 

Vire)    practise  on  my  life,  By  poison,  /,  shot,     Queen  Mary  i  iv  285 

Stamp  out  the  /,  or  this  Will  smoulder  and  re-flame,  „            i  v  508 

it  serves  to  fan  A  kindled  /.  „           i  v  621 

the  rack,  the  thumbscrew,  the  stake,  the  /.  „           n  i  201 

Dare-devils,  that  would  eat  /  and  spit  it  out  „          mi  156 

Rascal ! — this  land  is  like  a  hill  of  /,  „           m  i  321 

I  will  show  /  on  my  side — stake  and  / —  „          mi  327 

Let  the  dead  letter  live  !     Trace  it  in  /,  „          m  iv  34 

by  the  churchman's  pitiless  doom  of  /,  „          in  iv  50 

Yet  others  are  that  dare  the  stake  and  /,  „        m  iv  167 

I  am  on  /  until  I  see  them  flame.  ,,        m  iv  287 

Or  a  second  /,  Like  that  which  lately  crackled  „           m  v  52 

but  of  this  /  he  says,  Nay  swears,  ,.           m  v  71 

but  they  play  with  /  as  children  do,  „          in  vi  28 

you  may  strike  /  from  her.  Not  hope  to  melt  her.  „          m  vi  38 

suddenly  fill  With  such  fierce  / — ^had  it  been  /  indeed  ,.        m  vi  162 

As  Cranmer  hath,  came  to  the  /  on  earth.  „            rv  i  60 

Power  hath  been  given  you  to  try  faith  by  / —  „          iv  ii  154 

F — inch  by  inch  to  die  in  agony  !  „          rv  ii  223 

makes  The  /  seem  crueller  than  it  is.  „          rv  ii  233 

Remember  how  God  made  the  fierce  /  seem  „          rv  iii  89 

The  patience  of  St.  Lawrence  in  the  /.  „          rv  iii  95 

So  I  may  come  to  the  /.  „         iv  iii  251 

Liar  !  dissembler  !  traitor  !  to  the  / !  „         iv  iii  259 

Harm  him  not,  harm  him  not !  have  him  to  the  / !  „         iv  iii  285 

howsoever  hero-like  the  man  Dies  in  the  /,  „         iv  iii  325 

I  say  they  have  drawn  the  /  On  their  own  heads :  „         rv  iii  380 

To  whom  the  /  were  welcome,  „        iv  iii  438 

Who  follow'd  with  the  crowd  to  Cranmer's  /.  „         rv  iii  555 
they  swarm  into  the  /  Like  files — ^for  what  ?  no 

dogma.  „           V  ii  111 
sir,  they  hurl'd  it  back  into  the  /,  That,  being  but 

baptized  in  /,  the  babe  Might  be  in  /  for  ever.  „            v  iv  22 

something  fierier  than  /  To  yield  them  their  deserts.  „            v  iv  26 

in  a  closed  room,  with  light,  /,  physic,  tendance ;  „           v  iv  37 

And  bum  the  tares  with  imquenchable  / !  „           v  v  114 

that  these  Three  rods  of  blood-red  /  up  yonder  Harold  i  i  44 

For  if  the  North  take  /,  I  should  be  back  ;  „      i  ii  67 

while  ye  fish  for  men  with  your  false  f's,  „      n  i  31 

hath  blown  himself  as  red  as  /  with  curses.  „      v  i  87 

the  /,  the  light.  The  spirit  of  the  twelve  Apostles  Becket  i  i  49 

Make  it  so  hard  to  save  a  moth  from  the  /?  ,.     i  i  284 

Set  all  on  /  against  him  !  „      i  ii  89 

the  /,  when  first  kindled,  ssiid  to  the  smoke,  „  n  ii  317 

As  one  that  blows  the  coal  to  cool  the  /.  ,,   v  ii  549 

Is  that  the  cup  you  rescued  from  the  /  ?  The  Cwp  i  i  71 

like  A  bank'd-up  /  that  flashes  out  again  „      i  ii  166 

to  the  wave,  to  the  glebe,  to  the  / !  „            n  4 
a  red  /  woke  in  the  heart  of  the  town,                         Prom,  of  May  i  50 

tho'  the  /  should  run  along  the  ground,  „         i  703 

when  you  put  it  in  green,  and  your  stack  caught  /.  „          n  56 

heat  and  /  Of  life  will  bring  them  out,  „        n  286 

She  hath  the  /  in  her  face  and  the  dew  in  her  eyes.  Foresters  i  i  166 

mantle  of  the  cloud.  And  sets,  a  naked  /.  „        n  i  29 

Who  melts  a  waxen  image  by  the  /,  „  n  i  671 
Fire  (verb)     Upon  their  lake  of  Garda,  /  the  Thames ;    Qiieen  Mary  m  ii  23 

And  in  the  winter  I  will  /  their  farms.  Foresters  rv  95 
Fired    so  in  this  pause,  before  The  mine  be  /,                   Queen  Mary  n  i  26 

I  fear  the  mine  is  /  before  the  time.  „          n  i  123 

The  mine  is  /,  and  I  will  speak  to  them.  „          n  i  155 

Your  houses  / — your  gutters  bubbling  blood —  „        n  ii  280 

city  rose  against  Antonius,  Whereon  he  /  it.  The  Cup  i  ii  64 
Firelike  I'll  have  it  bumish'd  / ;  Qaeen  Mary  i  v  374 
Fireside    I  would  taake  the  owd  blind  man  to  my  oan/.    Prom,  of  May  n  74 

Firin    make  their  wall  of  shields  F  as  thy  clifis,  Harold  v  i  480 

3  M 


Firm 


914 


Flanders 


Finn  (continued)    by  thy  wisdom  Hast  kept  it  /  from 

shaking  ;  Becket,  Pro.  204 

If  Rome  be  feeble,  then  should  I  be  /.  „       i  iii  241 

My  hand  is  /,  Mine  eye  most  true  to  one  hair's-breadth 

of  aim.  Foresters  iv  693 

First  (adj.)     are  fresh  and  sweet  As  the  /  flower  no  bee 

has  ever  tried.  Qiieen  Mary  i  iv  63 

and  your  worship  the  /  man  in  Kent  and  Christendom,     „  ii  i  64 

In  William's  time,  in  our  /  Edward's  time,  „      in  iii  226 

as  in  the  day  of  the  /  church,  when  Clu-ist  Jesus  was 

King.  ,,  V  iv  55 

Earl,  the  /  Christian  Caesar  drew  to  the  East  Harold  v  i  21 

wherefore  now  Obey  my  /  and  last  commandment.     Go  !       „    v  i  359 
the  bright  link  rusts  with  the  breath  of  the  /  after- 
marriage  kiss,  Becket,  Pro.  362 
The  /  archbishop  fled,  And  York  lay  barren  for  a 

hundred  years.  „         i  iii  53 

frosted  off  me  by  the  /  cold  frown  of  the  King.  „         i  iv  67 

But  Hereford,  you  know,  crown'd  the  /  Henry.  „    in  iii  202 

To  the  fond  arms  of  her  /  love,  Fitzurse,  ,,      iv  ii  334 

You  kiss'd  me  there  For  the  /  time.  The  Cup  i  ii  419 

F  kiss.     There  then.    You  talk  almost  as  if  it  Might 

be  the  last.  „      i  ii  421 

He  sends  you  This  diadem  of  the  /  Galatian  Queen,  „        ii  132 

when  Synorix,  /  King,  Camma,  /  Queen  o'  the  Realm,  „        n  440 

Coming  to  visit  my  lord,  for  the  /  time  in  her  life  too  !   The  Falcon  170 
I  lay  them  for  the  /  time  roimd  your  neck.  „  907 

But  where  is  this  Mr.  Edgar  whom  you  praised  so 

in  your /letters  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  111 

better  death  With  our  /  wail  than  life —  „  ii  291 

My  father  stricken  with  his  /  paralysis,  „  n  481 

as  they  are  arranged  here  according  to  their  /  letters.        „  m  37 

I  do  believe  I  lost  my  heart  to  him  the  very  /  time 

we  met,  „  m  284 

shall  I  give  her  the  /  kiss  ?     O  sweet  Kate,  my  /  love, 

the  /  kiss,  the  /  kiss  !  Foresters  i  i  126 

but  I  came  to  give  thee  the  /  kiss,  and  thou  hast  given 

it  me.  „         I  i  132 

does  it  matter  so  much  if  the  maid  give  the  /  kiss  ? 
Little  John.  I  cannot  tell,  but  I  had  sooner  have 
given  thee  the  /  kiss.  „  i  i  136 

if  a  man  and  a  maid  love  one  another,  may  the 

maid  give  the  /  kiss  ?  „  i  i  173 

You  shall  give  me  the  /  kiss.  ,,        i  ii  227 

The  /  part — ^made  before  you  came  among  us —  „         rri  435 

First  (s)     We  strove  against  the  papacy  from  the  /,     Qiieen  Mary  ill  iii  225 

Who  knew  it  from  the  /.  „  ni  vi  114 

First-marriage     I  do  remember  your  f-m  fears.  The  Cup  ii  206 

Fish  (s)     I  had  liefer  that  the  /  had  swallowed  me,  Harold  ii  i  36 

Rolf,  what  /  did  swallow  Jonah  ?     Rolf.     A  whale  !  „      ii  i  41 

A  sauce-deviser  for  thy  days  of  /,  Becket,  Pro.  98 

my  fellows  know  that  I  am  all  one  scale  like  a/,  „     i  iv  213 

as  to  the  /,  they  de-miracled  the  miraculous  draught,  „  in  iii  123 

Fish  (verb)     while  ye  /  for  men  with  your  false  fires.  Let 

the  great  Devil  /  for  your  own  souls.  Harold  ii  i  30 

But  'e  doant  /  neither.  Prom,  of  May  i  214 

Well,  it's  no  sin  in  a  gentleman  not  to  /.  „  i  216 

Fisher     Apostlas  ;   they  were  f's  of  men,  Harold  n  i  34 

Thy  true  King  bad  thee  be  A  /  of  men  ;  Becket  ii  ii  286 

Fisher  (John,  Bishop  of  Rochester)    Did  not  More  die, 

and  F?  he  must  bum.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  52 

Fisherman    We  be  fishermen ;  I  came  to  see  after  my  nets.     Harold  u  i  27 

Fishermen  ?  devils  !     Who,  while  ye  fish  for  men  „       ii  i  29 

Better  have  been  A  /  at  Bosham,  my  good  Herbert,         Becket  ii  ii  292 

Fist  (s)     and  plunge  His  foreign  /  into  our  island 

Church  Queen  Mary  in  iv  364 

the  childish  /  That  cannot  strike  again.  Harold  iv  iii  30 

Fist  (verb)     The  boy  would  /  me  hard,  and  when  we  fought       „         i  i  444 
Fit  (adj.)     Is  the  King's  treasury  A  /place  for  the  monies 

of  the  Church,  Becket  i  iii  105 

it  is  not  /  for  us  To  see  the  proud  Archbishop  mutilated.       „     i  iii  613 
he  be  /  to  bust  hissen  wi'  spites  and  jalousies.  Prom,  of  May  n  164 

Fit  (verb)     I  measured  his  foot  wi'  the  mark  i'  the  bed, 

but  it  wouldn't  /  „  1 414 

Fit    See  also  Agoe-flt 
Fitter    thousand  times  F  for  this  grand  function.  Becket,  Pro.  293 


Fitzurse    (Reginald,  knight  of  Henry  n.'s  household)    {See 

also  Reginald,  Reginald  Fitzurse)     F,  that  chart  with 

the  retl  line — 
what  hast  thou  to  do  with  this  F  ? 
And  watch  F,  and  if  he  follow  thee, 
No  footfall — no  F.     We  have  seen  her  home. 
liOrd  F  reported  this  In  passing  to  the  Castle 
F- — Becket.     Nay,  let  him  be. 
My  lord,  F  beheld  her  in  your  lodging. 
Cursed  F,  and  all  the  rest  of  them 
—F  and  his  following — who  would  look  down  upon 

them  ? 
F,  The  running  down  the  chase  is  kindlier 
Kneel  to  thy  lord  F ;  Crouch  even  because  thou 

hatest  him ; 
My  lord  F- — ■ —    Becket.    He  too  !  what  dost  thou  here  ? 
You  have  wrong'd  F.     I  speak  not  of  myself, 
fond  arms  of  her  first  love,  F,  Who  swore  to  mari-y  her. 
Five     that  she  met  the  Queen  at  Wanstead  with  / 

hundred  horse.  Queen  Mary  i  i  78 

God's  righteous  judgment  fell  upon  you  In  your  / 

years  of  imprisonment,  „      in  iv  242 

My  lord,  the  King  demands  /  hundred  marks,  Becket  i  iii  641 

Monks,  knights,  /  hundred,  that  were  there  and  heard.  „      v  ii  406 

F  hundred  !     Count.     Say  fifty  !  The  Falcon  618 

the  feller  couldn't  find  a  Mister  in  his  mouth  fur 

me,  as  farms  /  hoonderd  haacre.  Prom,  of  May  1 304 


Becket  Pro.  427 
1  i  271 
I  i  330 
I  i  367 
I  ii  12 
r  ii  23 
I  ii  33 
n  ii  271 

,.     Ill  iii  308 
,.      IV  ii  212 


IV  ii  222 
IV  ii  280 
IV  ii  328 
IV  ii  335 


n  0 

n67 

n  82 

H  615 

in  140 

in  420 

m  761 
Foresters  iv  283 


II  i  149 

Prom,  of  May  n  462 

Qu-een  Mary  i  ii  31 

„  IV  ii  55 

IV  ii  89 

Becket,  Pro.  49 

The  Cup  II  20 


It  be  /  year  sin'  ye  went  afoor  to  him. 

We  have  been  in  such  grief  these  /  years. 

Poor  sister,  I  had  it  /  years  ago. 

but  can  he  trace  me  Thro'  /  years'  absence. 

Him  as  did  the  mischief  here,  /  year'  sin'. 

You  must  not  expect  to  find  our  Father  as  he  was 
/  years  ago. 

F  years  of  shame  and  suffering  broke  the  heart 

and  can  make  F  quarts  pass  into  a  thimble. 

Nay,  my  tongue  tript — f  hundred  marks  for  use. 
Five-fold     and  they  rate  the  land  /-/  The  worth  of  the 

mortgage. 
Five-years'    My  f-y  anger  cannot  die  at  once, 
Fixt     with  his  fast-fading  eyes  F  hard  on  mine, 

Well,  burn  me  or  not  burn  me  I  am  / ; 

have  I  that  I  am  /,  F  beyond  fall ; 

had  I  /  my  fancy  Upon  the  game  I  should 

To-day  they  are  /  and  bright — -they  look  straight  out, 
Flag     made  us  lower  our  kingly  /  To  yours  of 

England.  Queen  Mary  v  i 

must  lower  his  /  To  that  of  England  in  the  seas  of 
England. 

Our /hath  floated  for  two  hundred  years  Is  France 
again. 

and  with  a  /  of  ours  Ta'en  in  the  fight — 

But  anger'd  at  their  flaunting  of  our  /, 
Flame  (s)     (See  also  Altar-flame,  Re-fl^ae)    Here  was  a 
young  mother.  Her  face  on  /, 

And  found  it  all  a  visionary  /, 

God  will  beat  down  the  fury  of  the  /, 

gather'd  with  his  hands  the  starting  /, 

And  thrust  his  right  into  the  bitter  / ; 

before  The  /  had  reach'd  his  body  ; 

Unmoving  in  the  greatness  of  the  /, 

and  cannot  scape  the  /. 

Fling  not  thy  soul  into  the  f's  of  hell. 

dooms  thee  after  death  To  waU  in  deathless  /. 


vi65 


V  ii  261 
The  Falcon  612 


Queen  Mary  n  ii  70 

IV  ii  4 

IV  iii  98 

IV  iii  337 

IV  iii  610 

IV  iii  616 

IV  iii  622 

Harold  i  i  13 

Becket  ii  i  316 

„    IV  ii  272 

He  miss  the  searching  /  of  purgatory,  „       v  iii  13 

Flame  (verb)     I  am  on  fire  until  I  see  them/.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  288 

'Tis  out — mine  f's.  „  v  v  124 

by  St.  Denis,  now  will  he  /  out.  And  lose  his  head  Becket  v  ii  479 

Flamed    — O  he  F  in  brocade —  Queen  Mary  in  i  76 

How  he  /  When  Tostig's  anger'd  earldom  Harold  in  i  53 

Flaming     In  sight  of  all  with  /  martyrdom.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  29 

What  with  this  /  horror  overhead  ?  Harold  i  i  231 

Then  I  saw  Thy  high  black  steed  among  the  /  furze,  Becket  n  i  55 

Flanders     prince  is  known  in  Spain,  in  F,  Queen  Mary  i  v  207 

Emperor  counsell'd  me  to  fly  to  F.  „  i  v  550 

We  heard  that  you  were  sick  in  F,  cousin.  „         in  ii  34 


Flanders 

I  Flanders  (continued) 

i  In  F. 

I  To  follow  thee  to  F  !     Must  thou  go  ? 

I  kisses  of  all  kind  of  womankind  In  F, 

'  To-morrow — first  to  Bosham,  then  to  F. 

Flap     let  him  /  The  wings  that  beat  down  Wales  ! 

Flare    fly  out  and  /  Into  rebellions. 


915 


Floor 


Why  then  to  F.    I  will  hawk  and  hunt 

Harold  i  i  258 
.,  *  iii27 
„  I  ii  114 
„  I  ii  240 
„  IV  i  246 
Queen  Mary  ill  i  283 


It  glares  in  heaven,  it/'5  upon  the  Thames,  Harold  i  i  29 

Flash  (s)     whether  this  /  of  news  be  false  or  true,  Queen  Mary  iii  ii  234 

It  is  the  /  that  murders,  the  poor  thunder  Harold  i  ii  231 

That  which  the  /  hath  stricken.  „      i  ii  235 

Our  axes  lighten  with  a  single  /  ,"       v  i  538 

lest  there  should  be  f'es  And  fulminations  Becket,  Pro.  221 

whose  quick  /  splits  The  mid-sea  mast,  The  Cup  li  293 

Flash  (verb)     Thou  shalt  /  it  secretly  Among  the  good  Harold  i  ii  219 

I  will  both  /  And  thimder  for  thee.  „      i  ii  228 

F  sometimes  out  of  earth  against  the  heavens.  Becket  v  ii  37 

tire  that  f'es  out  again  From  century  to  century.  The  Cup  i  ii  166 

though  my  men  and  I  /  out  at  times  Of  festival  Foresters  i  ii  274 

Flash'd    as  might  have  /  Upon  their  lake  of  Garda,  Queen  Mary  m  ii  22 

to  stay  his  hand  Before  he  /  the  bolt.  Becket  n  i  275 

And  when  he  /  it  Shrink  from  me,  .,      n  i  276 

iTho'  all  the  swords  in  England  /  above  me  .,      v  ii  484 

noblest  light  That  ever  /  across  my  life.  Foresters  m  142 

The  hunter's  passion  /  into  the  man,  „          iv  539 

Flashing     I  see  the  /  of  the  gate.s  of  pearl—  Harold  i  i  186 

Flask     and  mine  old  /  of  wine  Beside  me,  Queen  Mary  ra  i  46 

send  you  down  a  /  or  two  Of  that  same  vintage  ?  Falcon  585 

Flat  (adj.)     but  tramples  /  Whatever  thwarts  him  ;  Harold  iiii  379 

and  a  foot  to  stamp  it  ...   i*".  „      v  ii  194 

This  beggarly  life,  This  poor,  /,  hedged-ui  field—  From,  of  May  ii  344 

Lusty  bracken  beaten  /,  Queen.  Foresters  ii  ii  154 

'lat  (s)     No,  nor  with  the  /  of  it  either.  Becket  i  iv  225 

Jlatten    gulf  and  /  in  her  closing  chasm  Domed  cities.  The  Cup  u  300 

Jlatter     You  know  to  /  ladies.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  98 

I  am  safe  enough  ;  no  man  need  /  me.  „        n  ii  317 

Will  not  thy  body  rebel,  man,  if  thou  /  it  ?  Becket,  Pro.  103 

— /  And  fright  the  Pope —  „       n  ii  472 
You  /  me.     Dear  Eva  Was  always  tliought  the 

prettier.  Prom.  of  May  ii  378 

riatter'd     Flutter'd  or  /  by  your  notice  of  her.  The  Falcon  538 

nattering     As  if  to  win  the  man  by  /  him.  Queen  Mary  u  ii  312 
ilattery   sucking  thro'  fools'  ears  The  flatteries  of  corruption—   Becket  i  iii  362 

'launt    We  cannot  /  it  in  new  feathers  now  :  The  Falcon  42 

And  scruplest  not  to  /  it  to  our  face  Foresters  iv  887 

ilaunting    But  anger'd  at  their/ of  our  flag.  The  Falcon  628 

lay    And  /  me  all  alive.  Harold  iv  i  191 

lay'd    starved,  maim'd,  flog:g'd,  /,  bum'd,  Qtieen  Mary  ii  i  210 

laying    Horrible  !  /,  scourging,  crucifying —  The  Cup  i  ii  235 

lea    like  a  /  That  might  have'  leapt  upon  us  Queen  Mary  n  ii  294 
'led  (adj.  and  part.)    our  Bishops  from  their  sees  Or 

1          /,  they  say,  or  flying—  „              i  ii  5 

'  Sir  Peter  Carew  /  to  France  :  ,.          ii  i  135 

Is  Peter  Carew/?     Is  the  Duke  taken  ?  „          ii  i  142 

Bar  the  bird  From  following  the  /  summer —  Becket  i  i  259 

France  !     Ha  !     De  Morville,  Tracy,  Brito— /is  he  ?  „     i  iv  199 
Love  that  can  shape  or  can  shatter  a  life  till  the  life  shall 

have  /?  „        II  i  12 

Has  /  our  presence  and  our  feeding-grounds.  „      ii  ii  22 
led  (verb)     Left  him  and  / ;  and  thou  that  would'st 

be  King,  Queen  Mary  ii  iv  82 

first  archbishop  /,  And  York  lay  barren  Becket  i  iii  53 

Who  thief -like  /  from  his  own  church  by  night,  „   ii  ii  156 

I  /,  and  found  thy  name  a  charm  to  get  me  Food,  „     v  ii  96 

Once  I  / — Never  again,  and  you —  .,    v  ii  498 

Since  Gamma  /  from  Synorix  to  our  Temple,  The  Cup  ii  14 

whereon  she  struck  him,  And/  into  the  castle.  Foresters  ii  i  118 

for  Oberon  /  away  Twenty  thousand  leagues  to-day.  „       n  ii  142 

Then  whither  should  I  /  for  any  help  ?  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  126 

Griffyth  when  I  saw  him  /,  Chased  deer-like  Harold  i  ii  147 

when  I  /  from  this  For  a  gasp  of  freer  air,  Becket  ii  i  27 

then  you  are  a  dead  man  ;  / !  „  v  iii  126 

ieece    hanging  down  from  this  The  Golden  F —  Queen  Mary  ui  i  82 

leer    heard  One  of  your  Council  /  and  jeer  at  him.  „        n  ii  393 

The  statesman  that  shall  jeer  and  /  at  men,  ,,        ii  ii  397 

leet  (s)    Mine  is  the  /  and  all  the  power  at  sea —  „         i  iv  287 


Fleet  (s)  (continued)     To  seize  upon  the  forts  and  /,  Queen  Mary  ill  i  464 

Hold  office  in  the  household,  /,  forts,  anny  ;  .,        lu  iii  72 

and  the  French  /  Rule  in  the  narrow  seas.  „              v  i  6 

collect  the  / ;  Let  every  craft  that  carries  „         v  ii  274 

Fleet  (verb)     A  breath  that  f's  beyond  this  iron  world,  Harold  ill  ii  197 

Fleeted    and  makes  it  Foam  over  all  the  /  wealth  of  kings     The  Cup  ii  289 

Fleeth    fowl  that  /  o'er  thy  field  is  cursed,  Harold  v  i  73 

Fleeting    My  grayhounds  /  like  a  beam  of  light,  „    i  ii  129 

Fleming    See  Fox-Fleming 

Flemish    Their  F  go-between  And  all-in-all.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  4 
Flesh    (See  also  Pheasant-flesh)    with  right  reason, 

flies  that  prick  the  /.  „         iii  iv  71 

The  soft  and  tremulous  coward  in  the  /?  „        iv  ii  107 

when  thou  becamest  Man  in  the  F,  „       iv  iii  141 

it  was  thought  we  two  Might  make  one  /,  „         v  ii  137 
we  were  not  made  One  /  in  happiness,  no  happiness 

here  ;    But  now  we  are  made  one  /  in  misery  ;  „         v  ii  150 

Where  they  eat  dead  men's  /,  Harold  ii  ii  808 

Treble  denial  of  the  tongue  of  /,  „      in  i  282 

Fast,  scourge  thyself,  and  mortify  thy  /,  Becket  i  iii  540 

And  as  for  the  /  at  table,  a  whole  Peter's  sheet,  „  m  iii  128 

That  I  would  touch  no  /  till  he  were  well  The  Falcon  680 

servants  Are  all  but  /  and  blood  with  those  they  serve.  .,            709 

And  these  take  /  again  with  our  own  /,  Prom,  of  May  ii  277 
weight  of  the  /  at  odd  times  overbalance  the  weight 

of  the  church,  Foresters  i  ii  61 

and  as  to  other  frailties  of  the  /—  „          i  ii  65 

clothes  itself  In  maiden  /  and  blood,  „         ui  117 

Flesh-fallen     Look  !  am  I  not  Work-wan,  /-/  ?  Harold  i  i  99 

Flew    in  a  narrow  path.     A  plover  /  before  thee.  Becket  ii  i  54 

a  bat  /  out  at  him  In  the  clear  noon.  Foresters  ii  ii  96 

Crush'd  my  bat  whereon  I  /  !  ..       ii  ii  146 

Flickering    Pertest  of  our  /  mob,  u  ii  130 

Fliest    stay,  fool,  and  tell  me  why  thou  /.  Becket  in  ii  35 

Flight    My  /  were  such  a  scandal  to  the  faith,  Queen  Mary  i  ii  53 

hath  a  farther  /  Than  mine  into  the  future.  ,,          i  v  312 

Fling    We  /  ourselves  on  you,  my  Lord.  „          ii  ii  48 

why  /  Jback  the  stone  he  strikes  me  with  ?  „        iv  ii  150 

Then  /  mine  own  fair  person  in  the  gap  Harold  i  ii  202 

he  f's  His  brand  in  air  and  catches  it  again,  „      v  i  493 

all  my  doubts  I  /  from  me  like  dust,  Becket  i  i  148 

and  /  them  out  to  the  free  air.  „     i  i  287 

F  not  thy  soul  into  the  flames  of  hell :  „    n  i  316 

I  /  all  that  upon  my  fate,  my  star.  The  Cup  i  iii  27 

F  wide  the  doors  and  let  the  new-made  children  .,           u  163 

/  in  the  spices,  Nard,  Cinnamon,  amomum,  ,,          u  183 

child  of  evolution,  f's  aside  His  swaddling-bands,  Prom,  of  May  i  585 

To  /  myself  over,  when  I  heard  a  voice,  „           in  374 

Flint    in  all  this,  my  Lord,  her  Majesty  Is  /  of  /,  Queen  Mary  ni  vi  38 

All  your  voices  Are  waves  on  /.  „           iv  i  122 

crawl  over  knife-edge  /  Barefoot,  Becket  ii  i  272 

I  fear  this  Abbot  is  a  heart  of  /,  Foresters  i  ii  269 

Flit    We  must  /  for  evermore.  n  ii  123 

I  Titania  bid  you /,  ii  ii  126 

Float    while  the  smoke  f's  from  the  cottage  roof,  i  ii  317 

Floated    /  downward  from  the  throne  Of  God  Almighty.  Harold  i  i  17 

Our  flag  hath  /  for  two  hundred  years  Is  France 

again.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  261 

Floating    gonfanon  of  Holy  Peter  F  above  their  helmets —    Harold  v  i  550 

Flock  (s)    your/'sofswjins,  As  fair  and  white  as  angels;  Queen  Mary  uiii  lA 

doth  not  kill  The  sheep  that  wander  from  his  /,  „        in  iv  103 

To  the  poor  / — to  women  and  to  children —  „          iv  ii  158 

and  all  thy  /  should  catch  An  after  ague-fit  Becket  in  iii  31 

Shatter  you  all  to  pieces  if  ye  harm  One  of  my  / !  „    v  iii  136 

Home  with  the  /  to  the  fold — •  The  Cup  i  ii  8 

Flock  (verb)    — thousands  will  /  to  us.  Queen  Mary  n  i  192 

Flogg'd    I'll  have  you  /  and  burnt  too,  „               i  i  60 

starved,  maim'd,  /,  flay'd,  bum'd,  „            n  i  210 

Flood    some  mischance  of  /,  And  broken  bridge,  „            i  v  354 

like  a  river  in  /  thro'  a  burst  dam  Harold  n  ii  465 

had  in  it  Wales,  Her  f's,  her  woods,  her  hills :  „     iv  i  207 

from  that  /  will  rise  the  New,  Prom,  of  May  i  594 

She  rose  From  the  foul  /  and  pointed  toward  the  fann,     „  n  653 

Floor     that  his  fan  may  thoroughly  purge  his  /.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  370 

these  chessmen  on  the  / — the  king's  crown  broken  !       Becket,  Pro.  313 

And  smote  me  down  upon  the  Minster  /.  „         i  i  104 


Floor 


916 


Fly 


Floor  (continued)   mark'd  Her  eyes  were  ever  on  the  marble/?    The  Cup  n  19 

Florence     I  left  it  privily  At  F,  in  her  palace  The  Falcon  75 

His  grandsire  struck  my  grandsire  in  a  brawl  At  F,  ,,  252 

True  tears  that  year  were  shed  for  you  in  F.  „  385 

this  faded  ribbon  was  the  mode  JnF  „  423 

he  would  marry  me  to  the  richest  man  In  F ;  „  749 

The  wildest  of  the  random  youth  of  F  „  809 

Florio    O  my  sick  boy  !    My  daily  fading  F,  ,.  236 

My  one  child  F  lying  still  so  sick,  ,,  678 

Flourish  (s)     For  these  are  no  conventional  f'es.  Prom,  of  May  n  562 

Flourish  (verb)     Lift  head,  and  / ;  Qiieen  Mary  ni  iv  24 

hasn't  an  eye  left  in  his  own  tail  to  /  The  Falcon  102 

Flourished    but  in  the  end  we  /  out  into  a  merriment ;         BecTcet  m  iii  137 


n  ii  255 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  54 

IV  iii  208 

Harold  v  i  163 

Prom,  of  May  n  667 

Qv^n  Mary  rn  iv  234 

Prom,  of  May  u  651 


Flout    since  he  fs  the  will  of  either  realm, 

Flow    waters  of  the  fen  they  know  not  Which  way  to/, 

Let  them  /  forth  in  charity, 

William's  or  his  own  As  wind  blows,  or  tide  f's : 

Colour  F's  thro'  my  Ufe  again, 
Flow'd    spring  Of  all  those  evils  that  have  / 

the  black  river  F  thro'  my  dreams — 
Flower  (s)    (See  also  Wild-flower)    now  would  settle 
Upon  this  /,  now  that ; 

F,  she  !     Half  faded  ! 

As  the  first  /  no  bee  has  ever  tried. 

They  are  the  /  of  England  ;  set  the  gates  wide. 

To  kiss  and  cufi  among  the  birds  and  f's — 

Which  in  the  CathoUc  garden  are  as  f's, 

Love  will  hover  round  the  f's  when  they  first  awaken ; 

Palms,  f's,  pomegranates,  golden  cherubim 

A  goodly  /  at  times. 

Men  are  God's  trees,  and  women  are  God's  f's  ; 

and  the  f's  Are  all  the  fairer. 

And  never  a  /  at  the  close  ;  (repeat) 

I  love  them  More  than  the  garden  f's, 

these  golden  slopes  Of  Solomon-shaming  f's — 

The  brook's  voice  is  not  yours,  and  no  /, 

— would  have  made  my  pathway  f's, 

mountain  f's  grew  thickly  roimd  about. 

if  but  to  guess  what  f's  Had  made  it ; 

'  Dead  moimtain/'s,  dead  mountain-meadow /'s, 

You  bloom  again,  dead  mountain-meadow  f's.' 

A  word  with  you,  my  lord  !     Count.    '  0  moimtain  f's  ! ' 

A  word,  my  lord  !     Count.    '  Dead  f's  ! ' 

my  nurse  has  broken  The  thread  of  my  dead  f's, 

If  possible,  here  !  to  crop  the  /  and  pass. 

Altho'  at  first  he  take  his  bonds  for  f's. 

The  brook  among  its  f's  !     Forget-me-not, 

anatomized  The  f's  for  her — 

but,  my  /,  You  look  so  weary  and  so  worn  ! 

then  the  sweetest  /  of  all  the  wolds. 

He  that  can  pluck  the  /  of  maidenhood 

Who  art  the  fairest  /  of  maidenhood 

worship  thee.  Crown  thee  with  f's  ; 

And  answer  it  in  f's. 

That  beam  of  dawn  upon  the  opening  /, 

Bees  rather,  flying  to  the  /  for  honey. 

The  /  said  '  Take  it,  my  dear, 

When  the  /  was  wither'd  and  old. 

And  lie  with  us  among  the  f's,  and  drink — 
Flower  (verb)    and  f's  In  silken  pageants. 

Mercy,  that  herb-of -grace,  F's  now  but  seldom. 

and  her  affections  Will  /  toward  the  light 
Flower-bed    but  he  left  the  mark  of  'is  foot  i'  the  f-b ; 
Flower'd    that  /  bowl  my  ancestor  Fetch'd  from  the 

farthest  east — 
Flowery     Nay,  rather  than  so  clip  The  /  robe  of  Hymen, 
Flowing  (part)     Two  rivers  gently  /  side  by  side — 

And  here  the  river  /  from  the  sea,  Queen  Mary  m  ii  26 

Flowing  (s)    frost  That'help'd  to  check  the  /  of  the  blood.    The  Falcon  645 

Flown    Our  dovecote  / !     I  cannot  tell  why  monks  BecTcet  v  ii  580 

Hollow  Pandora-box,  With  all  the  pleasures  /,         Prom,  of  May  ii  347 

Fhifl    if  this  Prince  of  /  and  feather  come  Queen  Mary  i  iv  162 

Flung    /  them  streaming  o'er  the  battlements  Harold  n  ii  391 

flamed  When  Tostig's  anger'd  earldom  /  him,  „        m  i  54 

colt  winced  and  winnied  and  /  up  her  heels  ;  BecTcet,  Pro.  515 

F  the  Great  Seal  of  England  in  my  face —  „       i  iii  456 


Queen  Mary  i  iv  56 
iiv60 
iiv63 
niv69 
m  v259 

IV  i  179 

V  ii  370 
Harold  m  i  182 

„       IV  i 151 

BecTcet,  Pro.  112 

Pro.  116 

„  Pro.  332, 342 

nil33 

nii48 

mi  56 

V  ii  371 

The  Falcon  355 

430 

461 

471 

474 

476 

522 

Prom,  of  May  i  253 
I  646 
n298 
n303 
m  498 
ra  751 
Foresters  i  ii  108 

I  ii  123 

II  ii  19 
ra  353 

IV  4 

ivl3 

IV  16 

IV  22 

IV  965 

Queen  Mary  in  v  14 

„  m  vi  10 

Prom,  of  May  i  486 

I  409 

The  Falcon  4^ 
The  Cup  n  436 
BecTcet  i  iii  445 


BecTcet  in  iii  168 

The  Cup  I  ii  300 

I  ii  455 

Foresters  n  i  28 

IV  406 

The  Falcon  493 


BecTcet  n  i  8 
Queen  Mary  ni  iv  351 
The  Falcon  365 

Queen  Mary  m  iv  12 

Foresters  i  i  186 

I  i  296. 

'—  „  ni  33 


Flung  (continued)    if  Thomas  have  not  /  himself  at  the 
King's  feet. 

never  yet  F  back  a  woman's  prayer. 

'  He  never  yet  /  back  a  woman's  prayer  ' — 

F  by  the  golden  mantle  of  the  cloud, 

/  His  life,  heart,  soul  into  those  holy  wars 
Flurried    with  my  lady's  coming  that  had  so  /  me. 
Flush    coming  up  with  a  song  in  the  /  of  the  glimmering 

red  ? 
Flnsh'd    Our  bashful  Legate,  saw'st  not  how  he  /  ? 

colour'd  all  my  life,  F  in  her  face  ; 
Fluster'd    what  hath  /  Gardiner  ?  how  he  rubs  His 
forelock  ! 

and  is  /  by  a  girl's  kiss. 

your  woman  so  /  me  that  I  forgot  my  message 
Fluting     F,  and  piping  and  luting  '  Love,  love,  love 
Flutter  (s)     kill'd  away  at  once  Out  of  the  /.  Queen  Mary  m  v  1(4 

Flutter  (verb)    broken,  out  you  /  Thro'  the  new  world,         ,,  i  iv  53 

one  half  Wjll  /  here,  one  there.  „  m  vi  197 

But  he  begins  to  /.  Harold  n  ii  3 

dove,  who  f's  Between  thee  and  the  porch,  „     iv  i  231 

/  out  at  night  ?  BecTcet  i  i  282 

Begins  to  /in  them,  and  at  last  Breaks  Prom,  of  May  i  649' 

Flutter'd     F  or  flatter'd  by  your  notice  of  her,  TTie  Falcon  538 

he  /  his  wings  with  a  sweet  little  cry.  Foresters  i  i  154 

he  /  his  wings  as  he  gave  me  the  lie,  „         i  i  159 

Fluttering  (part.)     I  found  it  /  at  the  palace  gates  : —    Queen  Mary  m  ii  218 
Fluttering  (s)    The  leprous  f's  of  the  byway,  „  iv  iii  76 

Fly  (s)     (See  also  Gad-fly)     And  cruel  at  it,  killing 

helpless  flies ;  „  in  iv  65 

with  right  reason,  flies  that  prick  the  flesh.  „  in  iv  70' 

they  swarm  into  the  fire  Like  flies — for  what  ?  no 
dogma.  „  V  ii  112 

As  flies  to  the  Gods  ;  they  kill  us  for  their  sport.'     Prom,  of  May  1 264 


Cannot  Tie  take  his  pastime  like  the  flies  ? 
that  her  flies  Must  massacre  each  other  ? 
would  not  crush  The  /  that  drew  her  blood  ; 
Fly  (verb)     Hooper,  Eidley,  Latimer  will  not  /. 
Martyr.     F,  Cranmer  ! 
might  be  forgiven.     I  tell  you,  /,  my  Lord. 
F,  my  Lord,  / ! 

farewell,  and  /.     Cranmer.     F  and  farewell, 
I  thank  my  God  it  is  too  late  to  /. 
You  /  your  thoughts  Uke  kites. 
Emperor  counseU'd  me  to  /  to  Flanders. 
Song  flies  you  know  For  ages. 

Cranmer.     F  would  he  not,  when  aU  men  bad  him  /. 
/  out  and  flare  Into  rebellions. 
Swallows  /  again.  Cuckoos  cry  again, 
seems  that  we  shall  /  These  bald,  blank  fields, 
Whose  colours  in  a  moment  break  and  /, 
Whose  colours  in  a  moment  break  and  / !  ' 
Love  will  /  the  f aUen  leaf,  and  not  be  overtaken ; 
where  the  black  ciow  flies  five, 
who  skips  and  flies  To  right  and  left, 
F  thou  to  WilUam ;  tell  him  we  have  Harold, 
let  /  the  bird  within  the  hand, 
wilt  thou  /  my  falcons  this  fair  day  ? 
two  young  wings  To  /  to  heaven  straight  with, 
are  but  of  spring.  They  /  the  winter  change — 
Our  Wessex  dragon  flies  beyond  the  Humber, 
How  should  the  people  fight  When  the  king  flies  ? 
and  they  / — the  Norman  flies. 
They  /  once  more,  they  /,  the  Norman  flies  ! 
Thou  knowest  he  was  forced  to  /  to  France  ; 
When  what  ye  shake  at  doth  but  seem  to  /, 
'  F  at  once  to  France,  to  King  Louis  of  France  : 
I  must  /  to  France  to-night. 

F  thou  too.    The  King  keeps  his  forest  head  of  game  here, 
Linger  not  till  the  third  horn.    F ! 
I  will  /  with  my  sweet  boy  to  heaven, 
on  a  Tuesday  did  I  /  Forth  from  Northampton ; 
I  shaU  not  /.    Here,  here,  here  will  you  find  me. 
drag  me  not.    We  must  not  seem  to  /. 
F,  f,  my  lord,  before  they  burst  the  doors ! 
I  have  it  in  my  heart — to  the  Temple — /— 


1 277 
I  284 
n  494 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  14 

Iii  43 

Iii  96 

Iii  104 

I  ii  112 

IV  390 

IV  549 
ni80 

ra  i  171 

rai283 

ra  v96 

ni  V  251 

IV  iii  170 

V  ii  207 
V  ii  372 

V  v85 

Harold  i  i  H 

„    nillO 

„     n  ii  65 

„  nil  146 

„    ra  i  26 

„    in  ii  91 

„       IX  iS 

„    vilSi 

.,    vi54] 

„    vi59( 

BecTcet  i  iii  204 

„     I  iii  74^ 

I  iv  5i 

„     I  iv  15^ 

raii3« 

ra  ii  41 

,.    IV  ii  231 

„     V  ii  28( 

„     V  ii  515 

„     V  ii  631 

„      V  iii  5(' 

The  Cup  iviU!^ 


Fly 

3  Hy  (verb)  (continued)    She — close  the  Temple  door.     Let 


917 


Follow 


her  not  /. 

Just  gone  To  /  his  falcon. 

and  once  you  let  him  /  your  falcon. 

Should  /  like  bosom  friends  when  needed  most. 

Breaks  thro'  them,  and  so  flies  away  for  ever ; 

Shall  I  say  it  ? — f  with  me  to-day. 

I  will  /  to  you  thro'  the  night,  the  storm — 

Will  he  not  /  from  you  if  he  learn  the  story  of  my 
shame 

Tell  them  to  /  for  a  doctor. 

Their  aim  is  ever  at  that  which  flies  highest — 

while  the  lark  flies  up  and  touches  heaven  ! 

We  must  /  from  Robin  Hood 

You  see  why  We  must  leave  the  wood  and  /. 

How  much?  how  much?    Speak,  or  the  aiiow  flies. 
Hying    from  their  sees  Or  fled,  they  say,  or/ — 

Tut,  your  sonnet's  a  /  ant,  Wing'd  for  a  moment. 

and  /  to  our  side  Left  his  all  bare, 

see  there  the  arrows  /. 

and  the  traitor  /  To  Temple  Bar, 

A  bookman,  /  from  the  heat  and  tussle. 

But  wing'd  souls  /  Beyond  all  change 

Whither  away,  man  ?  what  are  you  /  from  ? 

when  I  was  /  from  My  Tetrarchy  to  Rome. 

Who  knows  that  he  had  ever  dream'd  of  /? 

Prince  John  again.     We  are  /  from  this  John. 

this  is  Maid  Marian  F  from  John — disguised. 

Bees  rather,  /  to  the  flower  for  honey. 
Foalk  (folk)    F's  says  he  likes  Miss  Eva  the  best. 

I  knaws  nowt  o'  what/'s  says,  an'  I  caares  nowt 
neither. 

F's  doesn't  hallus  knaw  thessens ; 

An'  I  haates  boooks  an'  all,  fur  they  puts  /  off  the 
owd  waays. 

Let  ma  aloan  af  oor  /,  wilt  tha  ? 
Foam  (s)    Moon  on  the  field  and  the  /, 
Foam  (verb)     Who  mouth  and  /  against  the  Prince  of 
Spain. 

F  at  the  mouth  because  King  Thomas, 

F  over  all  the  fleeted  wealth  of  kings 
Fobbing    See  A-!obbing 
Foe    the  Queen  Is  both  my  /  and  yours : 


The  Cup  II  461 

The  Falcon  210 

317 

527 

Prom,  of  May  i  650 

I  678 

I  701 

m256 

in  712 

Foresters  i  i  262 

„       I  ii  315 

„      II  ii  138 

n  ii  174 

m  278 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  5 

ni83 

„        n  iii  3 

II  iv  51 

„      II  iv  93 

„  ni  iv  251 

Harold  m  ii  100 

Hecket  in  ii  18 

The  CufiiQ 

Prom,  of  May  i  655 

Foresters  n  i  448 

n  i  680 

IV  12 

Prom,  of  May  i  24 

I  27 
I  28 

I  222 

n  213 

The  Cup  I  ii  3 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  250 

Becket  v  i  203 

The  Cup  II  289 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  42 

You  cannot  Learn  a  man's  nature  from  his  natural  /.  „          i  v  340 

His  /  's  would  blame  him,  and  I  scom'd  'em,  „          i  v  624 

His/'5 — the  Devil  had  subom'd 'em.  .,          i  v  626 

make  Those  that  we  come  to  serve  our  sharpest  /'s  ?  ,.         ii  iii  78 

hath  shut  the  gates  On  friend  and  /.  „         ii  iv  62 

My  f's  are  at  my  feet  and  I  am  Queen.  „       n  iv  119 

My  f's  are  at  my  feet,  and  Philip  King.  „        n  iv  143 

To  veil  the  fault  of  my  most  outward  / —  .,       iv  ii  106 

seeming  not  as  brethren.  But  mortal  f's  !  „      iv  iii  186 

thou  Hast  broken  all  my  f's,  Harold  i  i  217 

f's  in  Edward's  hall  To  league  against  thy  weal.  „        i  ii  31 

GrifEyth  I  hated :  why  not  hate  the  /  Of  England  ?  „      i  ii  145 

To  leave  the  /  no  forage.  „      v  i  133 

arm  within  Is  Becket's,  who  hath  beaten  down  mj  f's.  Becket,  Pro.  254 

God  make  not  thee,  but  thy  f's,  fall.  „          i  i  107 
Serve  my  best  friend  and  make  him  my  worst  /; 
No  one  comes,  Nor  /  nor  friend ; 
will  you  crown  my  /  My  victor  in  mid-battle  ? 
a  man  may  take  good  counsel  Ev'n  from  his  /. 
more  of  olive-branch  and  amnesty  For  f's  at  home — 


II 


'  O  man,  forgive  thy  mortal  /, 

I  am  chased  by  my  /  's. 
'og    who  dream'd  us  blanketed  In  ever-closing  /, 
'oible     Not  scorn  him  for  the  f's  of  his  youth. 
'oil    man  that  hath  to  /  a  murderous  aim 

but  f's  wherein  To  set  the  precious  jewel. 

To  /  and  spoil  the  t3Tant 
oil'd    And  may  be  /  like  Tarquin,  if  you  follow 
old  (as  for  sheep)     will  retiu-n  into  the  one  true  /, 

And  be  regather'd  to  the  Papal  /? 

Who  now  recalls  her  to  His  ancient  /. 

sends  His  careful  dog  to  bring  them  to  the  /. 


Prom 


I  iii  568 
ni  i  38 

V  i  149 
V  ii  4 

V  ii  16 
of  May  III  5 

Foresters  n  i  184 

Queen  Mary  iii  ii  21 

Becket  v  ii  328 

Harold  n  ii  417 

Becket,  Pro.  268 

Foresters  n  i  11 

The  Cup  I  i  143 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  22 

„       III  ii  117 

„     in  iii  167 

„     m  iv  105 


Fold  (as  for  sheep)  (continued)    that  our  wolf-Queen  Is 

prowling  round  the  /.  Becket  in  iii  8 

To  find  my  stray  sheep  back  within  the  /.  „  m  iii  356 

Home  with  the  flock  to  the  / —  The  Cup  i  ii  8 

Safe  from  the  wolf  to  the  / —  „      i  ii  20 

Fold  (thing  folded)    How  dense  a  /  of  danger  nets  him 

round,  Harold  ii  ii  17 

The  /  's  have  fallen  from  the  mystery,  Becket  iv  ii  8 

Fold    See  also  Five-fold 

Folded     It  lies  there  /:  is  there  venom  in  it  ?  Queen  Mary  m  v  216 

whole  life  hath  been  /like  a  blossom  in  the  sheath,        Foresters  i  i  206 

Foliot  (Gilbert,  Bishop  of  London)    (See  also  Gilbert  Folioi) 

Your  F  fasts  and  fawns  too  much  for  me.  Becket,  Pro.  264 

not  the  soldier  As  F  swears  it. —  „         i  i  388 

F  may  claim  the  pall  For  London  too.  „         i  iii  56 

F,  let  me  see  what  I  have  sign'd.  „       i  iii  307 

I  sign'd  them — being  a  fool,  as  F  call'd  me.  „       i  iii  561 

and  tho'  you  suspend  F  or  another,  „       u  ii  358 

F  is  the  holier  man,  perhaps  the  better.  „      in  iii  91 

Folk     (See  also  Foalk,  Volk)      Among  the  good 

Northumbrian  /,  Harold  i  ii  220 

our  helpless  /  Are  wash'd  away,  wailing,  „     ii  ii  470 

blurt  thy  curse  among  our  /,  I  know  not —  ,,        v  i  89 

sent  his  /,  His  kin,  and  all  his  belongings,  Becket  n  i  70 
Live  with  these  honest  / — And  play  the  fool !           Prom,  of  May  i  744 

Folkmote    The  London  /  Has  made  him  all  but  king.  Foresters  i  iii  80 

Foller  (follow)    be  room  anew  for  all  o'  ye.    F  me.         Prom,  of  May  i  454 

Shall  I  /  'er  and  ax  'er  to  maake  it  up  ?  „          ii  131 

Follow    (See  also  Foller)    it  f's  all  the  more  that  they 

can  make  thee  one,  Queen  Mary  i  i  49 

will  you  not  /  the  procession  ?  „         i  i  129 

Well,  I  shall/;  „         i  i  132 
made  you  /  The  Lady  Suffolk  and  the  Lady  Lennox  ? —      „         i  iv  30 

I  /your  good  counsel,  gracious  uncle.  „       i  iv  186 

F  their  Majesties.  „      m  i  331 

Mary  would  have  it ;  and  this  Gardiner  /'s ;  „    m  iii  231 

Philip  would  have  it ;  and  this  Gardiner  /'s  !  .,    in  iii  234 

Indeed,  I  cannot  /  with  your  Grace :  „      m  iv  99 

I  do  not  /.  „        III  V  38 

And  in  a  moment  I  shall  /  him.  „         v  v  57 

by  God's  grace.  We'll  /  Philip's  leading,  „       v  v  112 

worst  that  /'s  Things  that  seem  jerk'd  Harold  i  i  136 

To  /  thee  to  Flanders  !    Must  thou  go  ?  „       i  ii  27 

F  my  lead,  and  I  will  make  thee  earl.  „     iii  216 
I  need  thee  not.     Why  dost  thou  /  me  ?     Man-at-arms. 

I  have  the  Coimt's  commands  to  /  thee.  ,.    ii  ii  232 

debonair  to  those  That  /  where  he  leads,  ..    n  ii  320 

Thy  Duke  will  seem  the  darker.     Hence,  If.  ,.    n  ii  818 

'  Wulfnoth  is  sick,'  he  said ;  '  he  cannot  /; '  .,     in  i  86 

That  these  will  /  thee  against  the  Norsemen,  „    iv  i  157 

will  ye,  if  I  yield,  F  against  the  Norsemen  ?  „    iv  i  177 

An  honest  fool !    F  me,  honest  fool,  ,,       v  i  88 

F  them,  /  them,  drive  them  to  the  sea !  >,     v  i  602 

They  murder  all  that/.  „     v  i  610 

F  me  this  Rosamxmd  day  and  night,  Becket,  Pro.  505 

they  /  me — and  I  must  not  be  known.  „          i  i  182 

And  then  what/'s ?     Let  me /  thee.  „          i  i  190 

F  him  out !  „          i  i  237 

And  watch  Fitzurse,  and  if  he  /  thee,  „          i  i  330 

True  test  of  coward,  ye  /  with  a  yell.  „        i  iii  745 

Cross  swords  all  of  you  !  swear  to  /  him  !  „        i  iv  200 

must  we  /  All  that  they  overdid  or  underdid  ?  ,,        ii  ii  213 
ran  a  twitch  across  his  face  as  who  should  say  what's  to  /?  „       in  iii  95 

Farewell !     I  must  /  the  King.  „     ui  iii  329 

I  /  out  my  hate  and  thy  revenge.  „       iv  ii  151 

F  us,  my  son,  and  we  will  find  it  for  thee —  „       iv  ii  372 
if  you  /  Not  the  dry  light  of  Rome's  straight-going 

policy.  The  Cup  i  i  144 

Give  him  a  bow  and  arrows — f—f.  „        i  i  208 

What/'s  is  for  no  wife's  eyes.  „       iii  231 
F  my  art  among  these  quiet  fields.                            Prom,  of  May  i  743 

Reaction  needs  must  /  revel — yet —  „          u  264 

'  Well  now  you  would  fain  /  Wealth,'  Foresters  i  i  158 

And  I  will/  thee,  and  God  help  us  both.  „       i  i  277 

Ay,  so  she  did  not  /  me  to  the  wood.  „     i  iii  142 


Follow 


918 


Foot 


Follow  (continued)     But  if  you  /  me,  you  may  die  with 

me.  Foresters  i  iii  166 

and  be  silent  in  the  wood.    F  me.  „        ii  i  366 

Quick,  friar,  /  them :  „       u  i  429 

They /us.  „         iv  579 

thy  match  shall  /  mine.  „       iv  1045 

Follow  d    some  fifty  That  /  me  from  Penenden  Heath  Quee^i  Mary  ii  i  151 

but  /  the  device  of  those  Her  nearest  kin  :  „         iii  i  379 

You  must  fancy  that  which  /,  „         m  i  410 

boats  that  /,  were  as  glowing-gay  As  regal  gardens ;  „          in  ii  12 

Who  /  with  the  crowd  to  Cranmer's  fire.  .,        iv  iii  554 

I /thee.  Harold  iii  215 

Why  am  I  /,  haunted,  harass'd,  „      ii  ii  248 

Normans  left  among  us,  Who  /  me  for  love !  „      iii  i  304 

She  hath  /  with  our  host,  and  suffer'd  all.  „        iv  i  28 

The  king's  foundation,  that  have  /  him.  „        v  i  476 

Last  night  I  /  a  woman  in  the  city  here.  Becket,  Pro.  468 

why,  my  lord,  I  /— /  one Becket.    And  then 

what  follows  ?  „          I  i  188 

The  woman  that  I  /  hither.  „          i  i  195 

My  lord,  I  /  Reginald  Fitzurse.  „          i  i  235 

The  dog  /  his  calling,  my  lord.  „          i  iv  97 
Then  /  the  thunder  of  the  captains  and  the  shouting,        ,.      in  iii  111 

I  thought  if  I  /  it  I  should  find  the  fairies.  „          iv  i  24 

I  watched  her  and  /  her  into  the  woods,  „         iv  ii  16 

1/  You  and  the  child :  he  babbled  all  the  way.  „       iv  ii  139 

Why,  these  are  our  own  monks  who  /  us  !  „         v  iii  59 

I  meant  thee  to  have  / — better  thus.  The  Cwp  ii  498 

She  /  thee  into  the  forest  here  ?  Foresters  ii  i  486 

The  Sheriff !  the  Sheriff,  /  by  Prince  John  „         iv  588 

Followedst    Art  thou  so  sure  thou  /  anything  ?  Becket  i  i  210 

Follower    boldness,  which  will  give  my  f's  boldness.  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  71 

A  worldly  /  of  the  wordly  strong.  Becket  i  iii  543 

He  rides  abroad  with  armed /'«,  „           vi2 

Thy  holy  /founded  Canterbury —  „         v  iii  5 

but  can  keep  his/ 's  true.         '  Foresters  iiin 

if  the  f's  Of  him,  who  heads  the  movement,  „      ii  i  700 
FoUowing    {See  also  A-follering)     but  all  the  ladies  of 

her  /.  Queen  Mary  1 1  82 

hang  the  leaders,  let  their /go.  „         iv  i  74 

F  her  like  her  sorrow.  „         v  v  11 

And  slew  two  himdred  of  his  /,  Harold  iv  i  116 

Bar  the  bird  From  /  the  fled  summer —  Becket  i  i  259 

Fitzurse  and  his  / — who  would  look  down  upon  them  ?  „  in  iii  308 

And  all  Thro'  /  of  my  fancy.  The  Falcon  144 

the  man,  the  woman,  F  their  best  affinities,  Prom,  of  May  i  523 

He,  /  his  own  instincts  as  his  God,  „            1 588 

who  truly  loves  and  truly  rules  His  /,  Foresters  ii  i  77 

Folly    i^,  my  good  Lord.     Courtenay.     How/?  Queen  Mary  liv  %9 

the  /  of  sill  follies  Is  to  be  love-sick  for  a  shadow.  ,,           i  v  533 

if  he  jeer  not  seeing  the  true  man  Behind  his  /,  ,,         ii  ii  401 

His  early  follies  cast  into  his  teeth,  „         v  ii  124 
in  your  chancellorship  you  served  The  follies  of  the 

King.     Becket.     No,  not  these  follies  !  Becket  i  ii  31 

I  am  sure  I  told  liim  that  his  plot  was/.  The  Cup  i  ii  284 

Fond     Unalterably  and  pesteringly  / !  Queen  Mary  v  i  120 

his  /  excess  of  wine  Springs  from  the  loneliness  of  my 

poor  bower,  Becket  in  i  38 

To  the  /  arms  of  her  first  love,  Fitzurse,  „  iv  ii  334 

But  he  were  mighty  /  o'  ye,  wam't  he  ?  Prom,  of  May  n  9 

You  see,  they  are  so  /  o'  their  own  voices  Foresters  n  i  382 

Fonder    F  of  poor  Eva — like  everybody  else.  Prom,  of  May  n  11 

Fondest     But  since  the  /pair  of  doves  will  jar,  Becket  iv  ii  40 

Fondle     And  one  fair  child  to/!  „       in  i  12 

Food     (logs'  /  thrown  upon  thy  head.  Harold  n  ii  431 

seeing  now  The  poor  so  many,  and  all  /  so 

dear.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  209 

We  scarcely  dare  to  bless  the  /  we  eat  Becket  v  i  70 

foimd  thy  name  a  charm  to  get  me  F,  roof,  and  rest.  „     v  ii  98 

what  should  you  know  o'  the  /  o'  the  poor  ?  Foresters  n  i  283 

Fool    and — the  /—He  wrecks  his  health  Qieen  Mary  i  v  166 

It  may  be,  thro'  mine  honesty,  like  a/.  „            i  v  237 

he  is  thrice  the  /;  „           n  ii  401 

He  is  child  and  /,  and  traitor  to  the  State.  „          n  ii  403 

some  /  that  once  Brake  bread  with  us,  ,.           ni  v  43 


Fool  (continued)    and  her  priests  Have  preach'd, 

the  /  's, 
Till,  by  St.  James,  I  find  myself  the  /. 
nave  and  aisles  all  empty  as  a,  f's  jest ! 
— the  world  A  most  obedient  beast  and  / — myself 

Half  beast  and  /  as  appertaining  to  it ; 
The/'s!  (repeat) 

Come  out,  my  Lord,  it  is  a  world  oi  f's. 
Courtenay,  belike —     Mary.     A  /  and  featherhead  ! 
F,  think'st  thou  I  would  peril  mine  own  soul 
hot  religious  /,  Who,  seeing  war  in  heaven, 
make  me  not  / !     Nor  make  the  King  a  /, 
lest  I  make  myself  a  /  Who  made  the  King 
F  still !  or  wisdom  there, 
Be  not  a  / ! 

To  marry  and  have  no  husband  Makes  the  wife  /. 
I  think  I  am  a  /  To  think  it  can  be  otherwise 
Thou  uncanonical  /,  Wilt  thou  play  with  the  thimder  ? 
F  and  wise,  I  fear  This  curse,  and  scorn  it. 
Take  and  slay  me,  I  say,  Or  I  shall  count  thee  /. 
The  slow,  fat  / !     He  drawl'd  and  prated  so. 
An  honest  / !     Follow  me,  honest  /, 
Hot-headed /'s — to  burst  the  wall  of  shields  ! 
Peace,  f's  !     Becket.     Peace,  friends  ! 
F  !     I  will  make  thee  hateful  to  thy  King, 
sucking  thro'  f's'  ears  The  flatteries  of  corruption — 
For,  like  a  /,  thou  knowest  no  middle  way. 
I  sign'd  them — being  a  /,  as  Foliot  call'd  me. 
I  play  the  /  again, 
stajf,  /,  and  tell  me  why  thou  fliest. 
This  in  thy  bosom,  /,  And  after  in  thy  bastard's  ! 
The  jealous  /  balk'd  of  her  will — 
honour  me,  obey  me  !     Sluggards  and  f's  ! 
Sluggards  and  /  's,  why  do  you  stand  and  stare  ? 
I  have  play'd  the  sudden  /. 


Queen  Mary  in  vi  99 
in  vi  101 
IV  iii  287 


,         IV  iii  414 

,  IV  iii  521, 530 

IV  iii  639 

V  i  128 

V  V  167 
Harold  i  i  139 

„  I  i  289 
„  I  i  293 
„  I  i  359 
„  n  i  19 
„  niiSlO 
„  in  i  102 
„  in  1390 
„  in  ii  67 
„  IV  ii  16 
„  IV  ii  40 
V  i  88 
„  V  i  612 
Becket  i  ii  1 
„  I  ii  91 
„  I  iii  360 
„  I  iii  532 
„  I  iii  561 
„  I  iii  751 
„  mil  34 
„  ivii257 
„  ivii423 
„  vi241 
„  V  i  256 
The  Cup  1  iii  162 


But  I  taakes  'im  fur  a  bad  lot  and  a  bum  /,  Prom,  of  May  i  154 

but  I  taakes  'ini  for  a  Lunnun  swindler,  and  a  burn/.         „  i  309 


Live  with  these  honest  folk — And  play  the  / 

Superstitious/,  What  brought  me  here? 

There,  there,  I  am  a  / ! 

More  /  he  !     What  I  that  have  been  call'd  a  Socialist, 

Thou  speakest  like  a  /  or  a  woman. 

There — there — be  not  a  /  again. 

thou  art  /  again — I  am  all  as  loyal  as  thyself. 

Why  do  you  listen,  man,  to  the  old  /? 

I  know  I  have  done  amiss,  have  been  a  /. 

I  have  been  a  /  and  I  have  lost  my  Kate. 

or  the  head  of  a  /,  or  the  heart  of  Prince  John, 

See  thou  thwart  me  not,  thou/! 

If  thou  be  king,  Be  not  a  / ! 
Fool-flre     But  the  /-/  of  love  or  lust, 
Fool-friar     Back,  thou  /-/ !     Knowest  thou  not  the 

Prince  ? 
Foolhardy     But  that's  /.     Wyatt.     No !  boldness, 
Foolish     Which  found  me  full  of  /  doubts, 

For  ever,  you  /  child  !     What's  come  over  you  ? 

Some  /  mistake  of  Sally's  ;  but  what ! 

And  all  the  /  world  is  pressing  thither. 
Fool-people    The  f-p  call  her  a  witch — 
Foot     Yearns  to  set  /  upon  your  island  shore. 

the  pebble  which  his  kingly  /  First  presses 

It  lies  there  in  six  pieces  at  your  feet ; 

set  no  /  theretoward  unadvised  Of  all  our  Privy 
Council ; 

a  sound  Of  feet  and  voices  thickening  hither — 

My  foes  are  at  my  feet  and  I  am  Queen. 

My  foes  are  at  my  feet,  and  Philip  King. 

as  if  her  feet  were  wash'd  in  blood. 

Feeling  my  native  land  beneath  my  /, 

Thou  art  much  beholden  to  this  /  of  mine, 

where  Edward  draws  A  faint  /  hither, 

thy  leave  to  set  my  feet  On  board, 

sea  shall  roll  me  back  To  tumble  at  ihj  feet. 

Down  thirty /«e<  below  the  smiling  day- 
He  had  but  one  /,  he  must  have  hopt  away. 


I  745 
II  350 

III  207 
in  583 

Foresters  i  i  204 
I  i  261 
I  i  293 
II  i  358 
n  ii  52 
n  ii  78 

IV  213 
IV  745 
IV  790 

The  Cup  I  i  147 


Foresters  iv  682 

Queen  Mary  n  iii  69 

I  V  530 

Prom,  of  May  i  771 

in  153 

Foresters  in  147 

„      n  i  178 

Queen  Mary  i  v  367 

I  v  369 

II  i  87 

n  ii  204 

„  n  iv  45 

II  iv  119 

II  iv  143 

„  HI  i  61 

„  m  ii  47 

m  ii  49 

Harold  i  i  144 

„       I  i  228 

„     I  ii  115 

„    nii430 

„    nii675 


I 


Foot 


919 


Forget 


l?00t  (continued)    bright  sky  cleave  To  the  veiy  feet  of  God,  Harold  n  ii  743 

f        Seven  feet  of  English  land,  or  something  more, 

I        '  Seven  feet  of  English  earth,  or  something  more, 

I        Then  for  the  bastard  Six  feet  and  nothing  more  ! 

I        Our  guardsman  hath  but  toil'd  his  hand  and  /,  I  hand,  /, 

{        They  turn  on  the  pursuer,  horse  against  /, 

and  a  /  to  stamp  it  .  .  .  Flat. 

the  Archbishop  washed  my  feet  o'  Tuesday. 

My  bank  Of  wild-flowers.     At  thy  feet ! 

if  Thomas  have  not  flimg  himself  at  the  King's  feet. 

o'erleaps  a  jutting  rock  And  shoots  three  hundred 
feet. 

tho'  Rome  may  set  A  free  /  where  she  will. 

My  feet  are  tons  of  lead.  They  will  break 

but  he  left  the  mark  of  'is  / 1'  the  flower-bed 

I  measured  his  /  wi'  the  mark  i'  the  bed, 

I  thinks  I'd  like  to  taake  the  measure  o'  your  /. 

is  a  gentleman  ?    Dora.     That  he  is,  from  head  to  /. 

land  now  And  wealth.  And  lay  both  at  your  feet. 

whenever  I  set  my  own  /  on  it  I  say  to  it. 

Far  from  solid  /  of  men, 
'ooted    See  Delicate-footed,  Four-footed 
'ootfall    No  / — no  Fitzurse.     We  have  seen  her  home. 
'ootsore    I  am  /  and  famish'd  therewithal, 
'ootstep    I  thought  I  heard  A  /. 
"ootstool    There  let  them  lie,  your  /! 
^or    See  Vor,  Vor't 
'orage    To  leave  the  foe  no  /. 
''oraging    I  am  /  For  Norway's  anny. 
'orbad    So  royal  that  the  Queen  /  you  wearing  it 

The  King /it.     True,  my  liege, 
'orbear    Spare  and  /  him,  Harold,  if  he  comes  ! 

How  long  shall  we  /  him  ? 
'orbid    Shall  I  despair  then  ? — God  /! 

No,  God  / !    Henry.     No  !     God  / ! 

God/!  (repeat) 

Ay  God  /,  But  if  it  be  so  we  must  bear  with  John 

save  King  Richard,  when  he  comes,  /  me. 

if  the  King  /  thy  marrying  With  Robin, 
'orbiddea    loved  within  the  pale  /  By  Holy  Church : 
'orce  (s)    in  full  /  Roll  upon  London. 

so  my  Lord  of  Pembroke  in  command  Of  all  her  / 
be  safe ; 

Lord  Pembroke  in  command  of  all  our  /' 

jesilousy  Hath  in  it  an  alchemic  /  to  fuse 

No  power  mine  To  hold  their  /  together  .  .  . 

Have  thy  two  brethren  sent  their  f's  in? 

Then  there's  no  /  in  thee  ! 

*  A  Galatian  serving  by  f  in  the  Roman  Legion.' 

*  A  Galatian  serving  by  '  in  the  Roman  Legion.' 
Serve  by  /?     No  /  Could  make  me  serve  by  /. 
The  /  of  Rome  a  thousand-fold  our  own. 

'OBOe  (verb)    Why  do  you  /  me  thus  against  my  will  ? 

Grim.    My  lord,  we  /  you  from  your  enemies. 

Becket.     As  you  would  /  a   king  from   being 

crown'd.     John  of  Salisbury.     We  must  not/ 

the  crown  of  martyrdom. 
I  could  not  /  or  wheedle  to  my  will. 
OBOed    Spite  of  her  tears  her  father  /  it  on  her. 
so  'z  we  was  /  to  stick  her, 
When  being  /  aloof  from  all  my  guard, 
dost  thou  think  the  King  F  mine  election  ? 
see  you  yon  side-beam  that  is  /  from  under  it, 
onfaiher     Beheld  our  rough  f's  break  their  Gods, 
My  /  friends,  who  dream'd  us  blanketed  In 

ever-closing  fog, 
That  Gardiner,  once  so  one  with  all  of  us  Against 

this  /  marriage, 
and  plunge  His  /  fist  into  our  island  Church 
no  /  prince  or  priest  Should  fill  my  throne, 
A  long  petition  from  the  /  exiles  To  spare  the  life  of 

Cranmer. 
Shall  these  accuse  him  to  a  /  prince  ? 
That  Cranmer  may  withdraw  to  /parts. 
This  same  petition  of  the  /  exiles  For  Cranmer's  life. 


IV  ii  54 
IV  iii  112 
IV  iii  116 

vi201 
vi609 

V  ii  192 
Becket  i  iv  234 

..      II  i  126 
„  m  iii  169 


The  Cuv  1  i  111 
n246 
II  476 
Prom,  of  May  i  409 
I  413 
I  464 
III  282 
III  616 
Foresters  i  i  335 
„       II  ii  169 


Becket  I  i  367 

Foresters  n  i  266 

The  Cup  I  ii  12 

Queen  Mary  ii  iv  121 

Harold  v  i  133 

„         IV  ii  5 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  77 

Foresters  iv  865 

Harold  in  i  299 

Becket  v  ii  417 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  129 

Becket  n  ii  222 

Foresters  i  ii  93,  1(X) 

I  ii  101 

IV  665 

IV  874 

Harold  III  ii  23 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  235 


II  ii  306 

,.  II  iv  4 

m  vi  181 

Harold  iv  iii  213 

v  i  342 

V  i  344 

The  Cup  I  i  47 

..      I  ii  75 

,.       I  ii  79 

.,       I  ii  85 


Becket  v  iii  21 

The  Cup  I  iii  167 

Queen  Mary  i  v  495 

„        IV  iii  494 

Harold  IV  iii  15 

Becket  i  i  127 

„   III  iii  50 

Queen  Mary  iii  ii  120 

III  ii  19 

„  in  iii  7 

III  iv  364 
III  V  235 


IV  i  3 

IV  124 

IV  i  45 

IV  i  193 


Foreign  (continued)    how  it  chanced  That  this  young 

Earl  was  sent  on  /  travel.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  489 

The  /  courts  report  him  in  his  manner  Noble  „  v  ii  511 

that  seem  at  most  Sweet  guests,  or  /  cousins,  Becket  ii  i  135 

Foreigner     that  no  /  Hold  ofl&ce  in  the  household.         Queen  Mary  in  iii  71 

Forekings     fierce  /  had  clench'd  their  private  hides  Harold  iv  iii  35 

Forelead     twin  sister  of  the  morning  star,  F  the  sun.  The  Cup  i  iii  47 

Forelock    That  irritable  /  which  he  rubs.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  265 

what  hath  fluster'd  Gardiner?  how  he  rubs  His/!  „  in  iv  13 

Foremost     First  of  the  /  of  their  files,  who  die  For  God,  Becket  v  ii  495 

F  in  England  and  in  Normandy ;  Harold  ii  ii  631 

Forenoon     I  was  born  true  man  at  five  in  the  /  Queen  Mary  i  i  46 

Foresee     For  I  /  dark  days.     Mary.     And  so  do  I,  sir ;  „         i  v  275 

and  there  was  Lambert ;  Who  can  /  himself  ?  „      iv  ii  216 

Foreseeing    F,  with  whate'er  unwillingness,  ,,         i  v  253 

Foreshorten    That  so /'s  greatness,  ,.        ni  v  41 

Forespeak     I  can  /  your  speaking.  „        i  v  137 

Forest  (adj.)    The  King  keeps  his  /  head  of  game  here,  Becket  in  ii  37 

I  have  shelter'd  some  that  broke  the  /  laws.  Foresters  i  iii  70 

up  thro'  all  the  /  land  North  to  the  Tyne :  ,.         n  i  88 

So  now  the  /  lawns  are  all  as  bright  As  ways  to  heaven,      „       ii  i  630 

And  join  our  feasts  and  all  your  /  games  ,.  ni  85 

It  is  our  /  custom  they  should  revel  Along  with  Robin.       „        in  174 

Have  ye  glanced  down  thro'  all  the  /  ways  „         iv  111 

Ay,  ay,  Robin,  but  let  him  know  our  /  laws :  „         iv  199 

Hast  broken  all  our  Norman  /  laws,  ,,         iv  886 

That  thou  wilt  break  our  /  laws  again  „         iv  888 

They  break  thy  /  laws — nay,  by  the  rood  ,.         iv  907 

Our  /  games  are  ended,  our  free  life,  „       iv  1049 

Forest  (s)     King's  verdurer  caught  him  a-hunting  in  the  /,        Becket  i  iv  96 

More  sacred  than  his  /  's  for  the  chase  ?  „     iv  ii  24 

this  door  Opens  upon  the  / !     Out,  begone  !  The  Cup  i  ii  329 

there  is  a  lot  of  wild  fellows  in  Sherwood  /  who  hold  by 

King  Richard.  Foresters  i  ii  73 

In  Sherwood  F.     I  have  heard  of  them.  „     i  iii  102 

I  believe  She  came  with  me  into  the  /  here.     Robin. 

She  foUow'd  thee  into  the  /  here  ?  „      n  i  485 

myself  Would  guide  you  thro'  the  /  to  the  sea.  ,,      n  i  638 

out  of  the  /  and  over  the  hills  and  away,  „     ii  ii  175 

most  beaten  track  Runs  thro'  the  /,  „         m  90 

My  lord  John,  In  wrath  because  you  drove  him  from  the  /,  ,.        in  451 

To  bring  their  counter-bond  into  the /.  iv  90 

cuirass  in  this  /  where  I  dream'd  That  all  was  peace —         „        iv  130 

Thou  art  the  king  of  the  /,  iv  232 

if  e'er  thou  be  assail'd  In  any  of  our  /  's,  „        iv  424 

Thou  told'st  us  we  should  meet  him  in  the  /,  ,,        iv  440 

You  hide  this  damsel  in  your  /  here,  ,,        iv  476 

Thou  art  alone  in  the  silence  of  the  /  ,.        rv  631 

Thou  Robin  shalt  be  ranger  of  this  /,  ,.        iv  954 

We  leave  but  happy  memories  to  the  /.  ,.      iv  1071 

Forester    He  was  a  /good ;  „      n  i  319 

Forest-horn    if  I  wind  This  f-h  of  mine  „       iv  175 

Forest-life    and  all  the  better  For  this  free  f-l,  „        n  i  60 

Foretold    my  dream  /  my  martyrdom  Li  mine  own  church.    Becket  v  ii  632 

Forfeit    Or  I  /  my  land  to  the  Abbot.  Foresters  i  ii  151 

if  they  were  not  repaid  within  a  limited  time  your  land 

should  be  /.  „        iv  469 

Forfeited    affirms  The  Queen  has  /  her  right  to  reign      Queen  Mary  v  i  290 

It  seems  thy  father's  land  is  /.  Foresters  iv  640 

Forgave    my  father  and  I  /  you  stealing  our  coals.         Prom,  of  May  ni  69 

— her  last  word  F — and  I  forgive  you.  „  in  811 

Forged    ay ;  if  Bonner  have  not  /  the  bills.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  51 

Forget    (See  also  Forgit)    you  /  That  long  low  minster 

where  you  gave  your  hand  „         ni  ii  89 

may  God  F  me  at  most  need  when  I  /  Her  foul 

divorce —  „  iv  i  80 

if  that  May  make  your  Grace  /  yourself  a  little.  „  v  v  81 

Shall  I  /  my  new  archbishoprick  Becket  i  i  220 

To  rest  upon  thy  bosom  and  /  him —  „       ii  i  31 

Foi^etting  that  F's  me  too.  „       ii  i  50 

You  were.     I  never  /  anything.  „    v  ii  413 

he  begs  you  to  /  it  As  scarce  his  act : —  The  Cup  n  51 

I  promise  you  that  if  you/  yourself  in  your 

behaviour  to  this  gentleman,  Prom,  of  May  1 161 

I  am  old  and/.    Was  Prince  John  there?  Foresters  i  i  251 


Forget 

Fo^et  (continued)    Not  till  she  clean  /  thee,  noble  Earl, 
Marian.    F  him — ^never — by  this  Holy  Cross 

Till  Nature,  high  and  low,  and  great  and  small  F's 
herself, 

'Turn!  turn !' but  I / it. 
Forgetfulness    offal  thrown  Into  the  blind  sea  of  /. 
Foi^et-me-not    From  out  a  bed  of  thick  f-m-n's, 

speedwell,  bluebottle,  succory,  f-m-n  ? 

F-m-n,  meadowsweet,  willow-herb. 
Forgetting    F  that  Forgets  me  too. 
Forgit  (forget)     I  ha'  browt  these  roses  to  ye — If's 

what  they  calls  'em. 
Forgive    She  never  will  /  you. 

F  me.  Father,  for  no  merit  of  mine, 

F  me,  brother,  I  will  live  here  and  die. 

F  me  thou,  and  help  me  here  ! 

Not  help  me,  nor  /  me  ? 

I  say  it  now,  /  me  ! 

We  do  /  you  For  aught  you  wrought  against  us 

F  me  and  absolve  me,  holy  father. 

and  though  a  Roman  I  F  thee,  Gamma. 

I/her,  I/her! 

They  say,  we  should  /  our  enemies. 

if  the  wretch  were  dead  I  might  /  him ; 

I  trust  I  shall  /  him — by-and-by — 

not  So  easy  to  / — even  the  dead. 

sure  am  I  that  of  your  gentleness  You  will  /  him. 

then  she  will  /  Edgar  for  Harold's  sake. 

said  herself  She  would  /  him,  by-and-by, 

'  0  man,  /  thy  mortal  foe, 

souls  on  earth  that  live  To  be  forgiven  must  /.    F 
him  seventy  times  and  seven ; 

0  /  me  !  /  me  !    Steer.    Who  said  that  ? 

1  do  believe  I  could  / — well,  almost  anything — 
Make  her  happy,  then,  and  I  /  you. 
I  cannot  find  the  word — ■/  it — Amends. 
— ^her  last  word  Forgave — and  I  /  you.     If  you  ever 

F  yourself. 

He  never  will/  her. 

Thou  art  Her  brother — I  /  thee. 
Forgiven    That  might  be  /.     I  tell  you,  fly,  my  Lord. 

And,  when  the  headsman  pray'd  to  be  /, 

These  are  / — ^matters  of  the  past — 

And  be  /  for  it  ? 

to  speak  a  single  word  That  could  not  be  /. 

Ancf  she  loved  much :  pray  God  she  be/. 

Forgotten  and  /  by  them  and  thee. 

souls  on  earth  that  Uve  To  be  /  must  forgive. 

souls  in  Heaven  Are  both  f orgivers  and  /.' 

Didn't  I  say  that  we  had  /  you  ? 

I  kneel  once  more  to  be  /. 
Forgiveness     the  King — that  traitor  past  /, 

Is  now  content  to  grant  you  full  /, 

Was  there  not  some  one  ask'd  me  for/? 

Would  not — if  penitent — have  denied  him  her  F. 

Go  back  to  him  and  ask  his  /  before  he  dies. — 

Don't  you  long  for  Father's/! 

Speak  but  one  word  not  only  of  /, 
Forgiver    souls  in  Heaven  Are  both  f's  and  forgiven.' 
Forgot    some  Hebrew.     Faith,  I  half  /  it. 

1/  to  tell  you  He  wishes  you  to  dine  along  with  us, 

that  I  /  my  message  from  the  Earl. 
Forgotten    I  had  /  How  these  poor  libels  trouble  you. 

F  and  forgiven  by  them  and  thee. 

And  woo  their  loves  and  have  /  thee ; 

And  all  thine  England  hath  /  thee ; 

Counts  his  old  beads,  and  hath  /  thee. 

Boy,  thou  hast  /  That  thou  art  English. 

nurse,  I  had  /  thou  wast  sitting  there. 

Ay,  and  /  thy  foster-brother  too. 

he  had  not  /  his  promise  to  come  when  I  called 
him. 

I  have  /  my  horn  that  calls  my  men  together. 

Shame  on  thee,  Little  John,  thou  hast  / — 


920 


Fought 


i 


When  the  Church  and  the  law  have  /  God's  music, 


Foresters  i  ii  306 

I  ii  328 
„      I  iii  155 

Queen  Mary  ill  iii  193 

V  v  94 
Prom,  of  May  i  98 

II  299 
Becket  ii  i  49 

Prom,  of  May  ii  14 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  96 

„       IV  iii  152 

Harold  ii  ii  803 

V  ii  22 

V  ii  24 

V  ii  27 
Becket  ii  ii  109 

„      II  ii  441 

I'he  Cup  u  506 

The  Falcon  173 

Prom,  of  May  ii  431 

n  434 

II  466 

n  486 

II  489 

n  677 

II  681 
m  5 

m8 
III  462 
III  631 
m  667 
III  790 

III  811 
Foresters  ii  i  142 

II  i  516 
Queen  Mary  i  ii  42 

III  i  394 

„     III  iii  190 

„     III  vi  124 

„     III  vi  127 

V  V  272 

Harold  I  i  255 

Prom,  of  May  ni  8 

in  11 

III  75 
Foresters  ii  i  668 

Queen  Mary  i  v  29 

„     III  iv  389 

Harold  v  ii  83 

Prom,  of  May  ii  498 

III  401 

in  404 

Foresters  ii  i  610 

Prom,  of  May  in  11 

Q^een  Mary  ii  i  126 

Prom,  of  May  i  616 

Foresters  i  i  296 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  201 

Harold  i  i  255 

„     n  ii  438 

„    n  ii  443 

„    II  ii  447 

„    II  ii  474 

The  Falcon  35 

36 

Prom,  of  May  in  329 

Foresters  ii  i  185 

m  238 

„  IV  554 


Prom,  of  May  ii  181 

n  192 

Queen  Mary  i  v  27 

n  ii  185 

V  ii  238 


Forkin'     And  you  an'  your  Sally  was/  the  haay. 

When  me  an'  my  Sally  was  /  the  haay, 
Forlorn    betray'd,  defamed,  divorced,  / ! 

and  yield  Full  scope  to  persons  rascal  and  /, 

F  I  am,  and  let  me  look  /. 

The  last  Parthian  shaft  of  a  /  Cupid  at  the  King's  left 

breast,  Becket,  Pro.  339 

Form    to  compose  the  event  In  some  such  /  Queen  Mary  i  v  225 

The  public  /  thereof.  „  iv  ii  71 

face  and  /  unmatchable  !  The  Cup  i  i  122 

Formal    a  /  offer  of  the  hand  Of  Philip  ?  Queen  Mary  i  v  349 

The  /  offer  of  Prince  Philip's  hand.  „  i  v  588 

And  that  more  freely  than  your  /  priest,  Prom,  of  May  in  632 

I  believed  thee  to  be  too  solemn  and  /  to  be  a  ruffler.     Foresters  i  i  168 

Former    we  shall  still  maintain  All/  treaties  with  his 

Majesty.  Queen  Mary  i  v  266 

A  bastard  hate  bom  of  a  /  love.  Becket  ii  i  174 

Why  then  I  strike  into  my  /  path  For  England,  ,.     ii  ii  455 

To  the  monk-king,  Louis,  our  /  burthen,  „    iv  ii  305 

Some  of  my  /friends  Would  find  my  logic  faulty ;     Prom,  of  May  n  663 
because  one  of  the  Steers  had  planted  it  there  in  / 

times.  „  III  247 

Forsaken    we  fade  and  are  / —  Queen  Mary  v  ii  375 

Forsware     That  he  /  himself  for  all  he  loved,  Harold  v  i  622 

Forswear    to  guard  the  land  for  which  He  did  /  himself —  .,      v  ii  163 

Forsworn    realm  for  which  thou  art  /  is  cursed,  „         v  i  63 

But  we  hold  Thou  art/;  and  no  /  Archbishop  Shall 


helm  the  Church, 
Fort    Spain  in  our  ships,  in  our  /  's, 

To  seize  upon  the  f's  and  fleet. 

Hold  office  in  the  household,  fleet,  /  's,  army ; 

A  hill,  a  /,  a  city — that  reach'd  a  hand 

another  hill  Or  /,  or  city,  took  it. 
Fortifying     I  spent  thrice  that  in  /  his  castles. 
Fortiter    Suaviter  in  mode,  i  in  re. 
Fortune    seem'd  to  smile  And  sparkle  like  our  / 

still  Beyond  your  /  '5,  you  are  still  the  king 

though  /  had  born  you  into  the  estate  of  a 
gentleman. 
Forty     As  haggard  as  a  fast  of  /  days. 

Some  thirty — f  thousand  silver  marks. 

What !  /  thousand  marks  ! 

F  thousand  marks  !  /  thousand  devils — 

These  two  have  /  gold  marks  between  them,  Robin.      Foresters  in  202 
Forward    F  to  London  with  me  I  /  to  London  !  Queen  Mary  11  i  214 


Becket  i  iii  596 

Queen  Mary  11  i  179 

ui  i  464 

in  iii  72 

Harold  iv  i  44 

IV  i  50 

Becket  1  iii  632 

„      V  ii  539 

Queen  Alary  n  iii  24 

The  Falcon  291 


Prom,  of  May  n  120 

Harold  iv  iii  176 

Becket  i  iii  657 

..      I  iii  704 

I  iv  90 


/  to  London  !     Crowd.    F  to  London  ! 

A  Wyatt !  a  Wyatt !     F ! 

To  Kingston,/! 

F\    Fl    Harold  and  Holy  Cross  ! 
Foster-brother     Ay,  and  forgotten  thy  f-b  too. 

as  your  ladyship  knows,  his  lordship's  own  f-b, 
Fought    I  have  /  the  fight  and  go — 

Why — ^how  they  /  when  boys — 

We  /  like  great  states  for  grave  cause ; 

boy  would  fist  me  hard,  and  when  we  / 1  conquer'd. 

And  thou  for  us  hast  /  as  loyally. 

Have  I  not  /  it  out  ? 

I  /  another  fight  than  this  Of  Stamford-bridge. 

or  English  Ironside  Who  /  with  Knut, 

Every  man  about  his  king  F  like  a  king ; 

the  living  Who  /  and  would  have  died. 

Hail  to  the  living  who  /,  the  dead  who  fell ! 

hath  kinglike  /  and  fallen,  His  birthday  too. 

And  but  that  Holy  Peter  /  for  us, 

have  I  /  men  Like  Harold  and  his  brethren. 

For  how  have  /  thine  utmost  for  the  Church, 

I  led  seven  hundred  knights  and  /  his  wars. 

We  /  in  the  East,  And  felt  the  sun  of  Antioch 

But  kinglike  /  the  proud  archbishop, 

names  of  those  who  /  and  fell  are  like 

but  we  /  for  it  back.  And  kill'd — 

both  /  against  the  tyranny  of  the  kings,  the  Normans.   Foresters  i  i  229 

Who  be  those  three  that  I  have  /  withal  ?  „        11  i  443 

Thou  shouldst  have  ta'en  his  place,  and /for  him.  ,,        11  i  546 

Hast  thou  not  /  for  it,  and  eam'd  it  ?  „         iv  3 14 


II  i  216 

II  i  237 

n  iii  124 

Harold  iv  i  268 

The  Falcon  37 

566 

Harold  i  i  184 

„       I i  430 

„       1 1440 

..       I  i  445 

,.    n  ii  160 

,.    II  ii  222 

,.     IV  iii  23 

,.     IV  iii  64 

„     IV  iii  57 

,.     IV  iii  71 

,.   IV  iii  105 

,.     V  ii  124 

„     V  ii  164 

„     V  ii  178 

Becket  i  i  117 

..     I  iii  639 

..      u  ii  92 

,.    IV  ii  438 

2'he  Cup  I  ii  164 

Tlie  Falcon  614 


Fought 


921 


France 


IV  i  81 

V  V  161 

Harold  n  ii  518 

Becket  n  i  154 

„      V  ii  203 

Prom,  of  May  n  653 

m  723 

Foresters  ii  i  203 

n  i  670 

Becket  v  ii  203 


.  Fought  (continued)     Give  me  that  hand  which  /  for 

Richard  there.  Foresters  rv  1029 

Foul    lives  Of  many  among  youi  churchmen  were  so  /    Queen  Mary  in  iv  192 

may  God  Forget  me  at  most  need  when  I  forget 

Her  /  divorce — 
F  maggots  crawling  in  a  fester'd  vice  ! 
I  free  From  this  /  charge — 
a /stream  Thro'  fever-breeding  levels, — 
slut  whose  fairest  linen  seems  F  as  her  dust-cloth, 
She  rose  From  the  /  flood  and  pointed  toward  the 

farm, 
all  the  /  fatalities  That  blast  our  natural  passions 

into  pains ! 
in  Nottingham  they  say  There  bides  a  /  witch  some 

where  hereabout, 
he  has  anger'd  the  /  witch, 

slut  whose  fairest  linen  seems  F  as  her  dust-cloth. 
Found    {See  also  Pun')     All  my  hope  is  now  It  may  be 

/  a  scandal.  Queen  Mary  i  v  231 

Which  /  me  full  of  foolish  doubts,  „           i  v  530 

Happily  or  not,  It  /  her  sick  indeed.  „          ii  ii  124 

I've  /  this  paper ;  pray  your  worship  read  it ;  „          ii  iii  55 

I        We  /  him,  your  worship,  a  plundering  „           n  iii  72 

I  /  it  fluttering  at  the  palace  gates : —  „        in  ii  218 

yet  I  /  One  day,  a  wholesome  scripture,  „         iii  iv  83 

And  /  it  all  a  visionary  flame,  „             rv  ii  4 

I  have  /  thee  and  not  leave  thee  any  more.  „         iv  ii  109 

Have  /  a  real  presence  in  the  stake,  „         iv  ii  142 

so  long  continuing.  Hath  /  his  pardon ;  „          iv  iii  50 

libellous  papers  which  I  /  Strewn  in  your  palace.  „          v  ii  172 

And  I  have  often  /  them.     Mary.     Find  me  one !  „          v  ii  222 

God  pardon  me  !     I  have  never  yet  /  one.  „          v  ii  335 

and  the  dead  were  /  Sitting,  and  in  this  fashion ;  .,          v  ii  396 

I  never/  he  bore  me  any  spite.  .,          v  ii  474 

Have  vou  /  mercy  there.  Grant  it  me  here :  ..          v  v  144 

If  he /me  thus,  Harold  might  hate  me ;  Harold  i  ii  171 

I  /  him  all  a  noble  host  should  be.  ..        ii  ii  10 

because  we  /  him  A  Norman  of  the  Normans.  „      ii  ii  581 

Both  were  lost  and  /  together,  „        iii  ii  7 

lost  and  /  Together  in  the  cruel  river  Swale  „        m  ii  9 

Tho'  we  be  lost  and  be  /  together.'  „      in  ii  21 

I  have  /  him,  I  am  happy.  „        v  ii  81 

That  I  have  /  it  here  again  ?  .,      v  ii  116 
He  /  me  once  alone.     Nay — nay — ^I  cannot  Tell  you :         Becket  i  i  274 

They  said — her  Grace's  people — thou  wast  / —  „        i  ii  6 

that  had  /  a  King  Who  ranged  confusions,  „    i  iii  369 

I  /  a  himdred  ghastly  murders  done  By  men,  „    i  iii  407 

and  went  on  till  I  /  the  light  and  the  lady,  .,    iv  ii  18 

He  is  easily  /  again.  „    iv  ii  67 

F  out  her  secret  bower  and  murder'd  her.  „     v  i  175 

/  thy  name  a  charm  to  get  me  Food,  roof,  and  rest.  „      v  ii  96 

have  /  together  In  our  three  married  years  !  The  Cup  i  ii  416 

we  /  a  goat-herd's  hut  and  shared  His  fruits  „        iii  426 

I  never  /  the  woman  I  could  not  force  or  wheedle  ,,       i  iii  165 

/  All  good  in  the  true  heart  of  Sinnatus,  „            ii  86 

If  you  had  /  him  plotting  against  Rome,  „          n  406 

But  had  I /him  plotting,  I  had  counsell'd  „          ii  412 

chaplet  on  the  grass,  And  there  I  /it.  The  Falcon  370 
I  have  /  it  once  again  In  your  own  self.                    Prom,  of  May  ii  375 

seen  us  that  wild  morning  when  we/Her  bed  unslept  in,       ,,  ii  470 

Has  anyone  /  me  out,  Dora  ?  „           m  225 

We  /  a  letter  in  your  bedroom  torn  into  bits.  ,,           in  323 

even  if  I  /  it  Dark  with  the  soot  of  slums.  „           in  601 

I  /  this  white  doe  wandering  thro'  the  wood,  Foresters  ii  i  95 

F  him  dead  and  drench'd  in  dew,  .,      n  ii  147 

the  warm  wine,  and  /  it  again.  „        iv  245 

I  never  /  one  traitor  in  my  band.  „         iv  836 

Oimdatioii    Waltham,  my  /  For  men  who  serve  the  neighbour,  Harold  v  i  97 

The  king's  /,  that  have  follow'd  him.  .,     v  i  476 

oantain  (adj.)     Were  seated  sadly  at  a  /  side.  The  Falcon  610 

onntain  (s)    his  wealth  A  /  of  perennial  alms —  Queen  Mary  n  ii  385 

OUT    (See  also  Vour)    /  guns  gaped  at  me.  Black, 

silent  mouths :  „            n  iii  30 
I  know  Some  three  or  /  poor  priests  a  thousand  times 

Fitter  Becket,  Pro.  291 


Four  (continued)  And  this  no  wife  has  born  you  /  brave  soas,  Becket  v  i  125 
There  then,  /  hundred  marks.  '  Foresters  rv  497 

Four-and-twenty    We  will  away  in  f-a-t  hours,  „        i  iii  91 

Four-footed    all  manner  of  game,  and  /-/  things,  and 

fowls—  Becket  m  iii  130 

Fourscore     This  forest-horn  of  mine  I  can  bring  down  F 

tall  fellows  on  thee.  Foresters  iv  177 

Fowl    (See  also  Wild-fowl)     The  /  that  fleeth  o'er  thy  field 

is  cursed,  Harold  v  i  73 

all  manner  of  game,  and  four-footed  things,  and  f's —  Becket  xn  iii  131 


Here's  a  fine  /  for  my  lady ; 
Fox     Die  like  the  torn  /  dumb, 

a  /  may  filch  a  hen  by  night, 

a  /  from  the  glen  ran  away  with  the  hen, 
Fox-Fleming    Why  comes  that  old  f-F  back  again  ? 
Foxglove     Past  the  bank  Of  /,  then  to  left  by  that  one 

yew. 
Fox-lion    sorrow'd  for  my  random  promise  given  To 

yon  f-l. 
Fragment    or  whether  England  Be  shatter'd  into  f's. 
FraU    his  /  transparent  hand.  Damp  with  the  sweat  of 

death. 
Frailer    At  least  mine  own  is  /:  you  arc  laming  it. 
Frailty    and  as  to  other  frailties  of  the  flesh — 
France    F  would  not  accept  her  for  a  bride 

That  makes  for  F.  (repeat) 

But  we  play  with  Henry,  King  of  F, 

The  King  of  F,  Noailles  the  Ambassador, 

Our  one  point  on  the  main,  the  gate  of  F ! 

The  Ambassador  from  F,  your  Grace. 

Would  make  our  England,  F ; 

Would  be  too  strong  for  F. 

I  must  needs  wish  all  good  things  for  F. 

'  Sir  Peter  Carew  fled  to  F: 

The  King  of  F  is  with  us  ; 

The  King  of  F  will  help  to  break  it 
F !     We  once  had  half  of  F, 

England  now  Is  but  a  ball  chuck'd  between  F  and 
Spain, 

I  know  some  lusty  fellows  there  in  F. 

Back'd  by  the  power  of  F,  and  landing  here, 

Not  so  well  holpen  in  our  wars  with  F, 

Ay,  ay,  beware  of  F. 

If  war  should  fall  between  yourself  and  F ; 

To  declare  war  against  the  King  of  F. 

soon  or  late  you  must  have  war  with  F ; 

he  would  weld  F,  England,  Scotland, 

yet  the  Pope  is  now  colleagued  with  F ; 

to  discourage  and  lay  lame  The  plots  of  F, 

The  King  of  F  the  King  of  England  too. 

There  will  be  war  with  F,  at  last,  my  liege ; 

Sailing  from  F,  with  thirty  Englishmen, 

This  is  the  fifth  conspiracy  hatch'd  in  F ; 

Our  flag  hath  floated  for  two  hundred  years  Is  F  again. 

You  did  but  help  King  Philip's  war  with  F, 

As  far  as  F,  and  into  Philip's  heart. 

It  was  his  father's  policy  against  F. 

help  to  build  a  throne  Out-towering  hers  oi  F  .  .  . 

and  all  F,  all  Burgundy,  Poitou,  all  Christendom 

Louis  of  F  loved  me,  and  I  dreamed  that  I  loved 
Louis  of  F : 

I  will  have  thee  frighted  into  F, 

I  mean  to  cross  the  sea  to  F, 

Thou  knowest  he  was  forced  to  fly  to  F ; 

But  I  that  threw  the  mightiest  knight  of  F, 

'  Fly  at  once  to  F,  to  King  Louis  of  F : 

I  must  fly  to  F  to-night. 

or  in  the  land  of  F  for  aught  I  know. 

F\    Ha !     De  Morville,  Tracy,  Brito— fled  is  he  ? 

one  who  lives  for  thee  Out  there  in  F ; 

Brother  of  F,  what  shall  be  done  with  Becket  ? 

claws  that  you  perforce  again  Shrank  into  F. 

Brother  of  F,  you  have  taken, 

all  the  Church  of  F  Decide  on  their  decision, 

we  pray  you,  draw  yourself  from  under  The  wings  of  F. 


The  Falcon  556 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  331 

„         ni  V  157 

Prom,  of  May  i  51 

Queen  Mary  i  v  581 

Foresters  iv  974 

Harold  m  i  270 
„      n  ii  286 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  31 

Becket  iv  ii  264 

Foresters  i  ii  65 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  67 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  89,  92,  94 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  132 

I  iv  110 
IV  126 
IV  239 
IV  297 
iv300 
IV  310 
nil35 

II  i  195 


ni  i  105 

m  i  110 

ni  i  129 

III  i  447 

ni  vi  189 

IV  iii  434 

vilO 

V  i  117 

vil22 

vil36 

vil40 

vil89 

vil98 

vi283 

vi285 

vi298 

vii263 

V  ii  314 

V  iii  18 
V  v45 

Harold  u  ii  765 
in  ii  149 

Becket,  Pro.  355 
iii  94 
I  iii  124 
I  iii  205 
I  iii  747 
iiv53 
I  iv  154 
I  iv  196 

I  iv  198 
n  i  310 
nii64 
n  ii  88 

II  ii  154 
n  ii  177 
n  ii  249 


France 


922 


Friend 


I 


I  am  glad  that  F  hath  scouted  him 


France  (continued) 
at  last : 

you  have  quenched  the  warmth  of  F  toward  you, 

The  wine  and  wealth  of  all  our  F  are  yours ; 

have  I  Not  heard  ill  things  of  her  in  ^  ?     Oh,  she's 
The  Queen  of  F. 

My  Lords  of  F  and  England,  My  friend  of  Canterbury 

we  will  to  F  and  be  Beforehand  with  the  King, 

For  once  in  F  the  King  had  been  so  harsh, 

St.  Denis  of  F  and  St.  Alphege  of  England, 
Franche-Comt^  (a  French  province)    voices  of  F-C,  and 

the  Netherlands, 
Frange     Illorum  lanceas  F  Creator  ! 
Frankfort    To  Strasbm-g,  Antwerp,  F,  Zurich, 
Fray'd    /  i'  the  knees,  and  out  at  elbow. 
Freak     ilevf's  and  frolics  with  the  late  Lord  Admiral? 
Free  (adj.)     (See  also  Tongue-free)     To  make  /  spoil  and 
havock  of  your  goods. 

but  we  can  save  your  Grace.    The  river  still  is  /. 

he  is  /  enough  in  talk.  But  tells  me  nothing. 

That  jaU  you  from /life,  bar  you  from  death. 

with  /  wing  The  world  were  all  one  Araby. 

but  had  rather  Breathe  the  /  wind  from  off  oui  Saxon 
downs. 

To  chain  the  /  guest  to  the  banquet-board  ; 

J^air!  /field! 

and  fill  the  sky  With  /  sea-laughter — 

Should  they  not  know  /  England  crowns  herself  ? 

Softly,  and  fling  them  out  to  the  /  air. 

And  weight  down  all  /  choice  beneath  the  throne. 

couldst  thou  always  Blurt  thy  /  mind  to  the  air  ? 

she  holds  it  in  F  and  perpetual  alms. 

To  speak  without  stammering  and  like  a /man  ? 

but  God  and  his  /  wind  grant  your  lordship  a  happy 
home-return 

Give  me  the  poison ;  set  me  /  of  him  ! 

The  power  of  life  in  death  to  make  her  / ! 

tho'  Rome  may  set  A  /  foot  where  she  will. 

While,  had  you  left  him  /  use  of  his  wings, 

for  the  moment.  Will  leave  me  a  /  field. 


Becket  ii  ii  252 
„  n  ii  311 
„      n  ii  446 

.,      m  i  231 

„    m  iii  227 

„      IV  ii  453 

V  ii  139 

V  iii  165 

Queen  Mary  v  i  45 

Harold  v  i  584 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  2 

I  i  51 

I  iv  20 

„  II  ii  186 

„  II  iv  25 

„  m  ii  193 

„  in  V  172 

„  III  V  208 

Harold  ii  ii  186 

„      II  ii  193 

,.      II  ii  230 

„      II  ii  337 

V  i  47 

Becket  i  i  287 

.,    I  iii  118 

„    I  iii  239 

.,    I  iii  680 

I  iv  8 


„  m  iii  327 

„    IV  ii  165 

„    v  iii  101 

The  Cup  II  246 

Prom,  of  May  i  652 
II  456 


We  should  be  /  as  air  in  the  wild  wood —  Foresters  i  iii  124 

And  these  will  strike  for  England  And  man  and  maid 
be/ 

And  these  shall  wed  with  freemen.  And  all  their  sons  be  /, 

and  all  the  better  For  this  /  forest-life. 

That  I  might  breathe  for  a  moment /of  shield  And  cuirass 

Friends,  your  /  sports  have  swallow'd  my  /  hour. 

while  our  Robin's  life  Hangs  by  a  thread,  but  he  is  a 
/man. 

Our  forest  games  are  ended,  our  /  life. 
Free  (verb)     I  /  From  this  foul  charge — 

Take  thee,  or  /  thee,  F  thee  or  slay  thee, 

if  thou  light  upon  her — /  me  from  her  ? 

First,  /  thy  captive  from  her  hopeless  prison, 

O  devil,  can  I  /  her  from  the  grave  ? 

That  sought  to  /  the  tomb-place  of  the  King 
Freed     Duke  of  Suffolk  lately  /  from  prison, 

Earl  of  Devon  ?     I  /  him  from  the  Tower, 

he  /  himself  By  oath  and  compurgation  from  the  charge.   Harold  ii  ii  519 

Know  that  when  made  Archbishop  I  was  /,  Becket  i  iii  708 

?art  real,  part  childlike,  to  be  /  from  the  dulness —  „   in  iii  156 

have  /  myself  From  all  such  dreams,  Proin.  of  May  in  594 

Freedom    Whereas  in  wars  of  /  and  defence  The  Cup  i  ii  160 

The  love  of  /,  the  desire  of  God,  Foresters  n  i  68 

maiden  /  which  Would  never  brook  the  tyrant.  „        in  119 

Freeing     For  /  my  friend  Bagenhall  from  the  Tower ;     Queen  Mary  in  vi  7 
Freely    that  more  /  than  your  formal  priest.  Prom,  of  May  in  632 

Freeman    wrench'd  All  hearts  of  freemen  from  thee.  Harold  v  i  279 

And  these  shall  wed  with  freemen,  Foresters  u  i  21 

Freer    and  when  I  flee  from  this  For  a  gasp  of  /  air,  Becket  ii  i  29 

Free-will    now  the  stronger  motive,  Misnamed  f-w —    Prom,  of  May  ii  637 
Freeze     And,  lest  we  /  in  mortal  apathy.  The  Cup  i  iii  130 


nilO 
ni22 
ni  60 
IV  128 
IV  339 


IV  385 

IV  1049 
Harold  n  ii  517 

„        IV  ii  17 
Becket,  Pro.  493 

V  i  183 
V  i  185 

Foresters  iv  408 

Queen  Mary  I  iii  121 

I  V  163 


French  (adj.)    F,  I  must  needs  wish  all  goods  things  for 


not  mix  us  any  way  With 


Queen  Mary  ni  iii  79 

vi6 

Becket  i  iv  113 

„    in  iii  260 


France. 
The  F  King  winks  at  it, 


Queen  Mary  i  v  309 
ni  i  160 


French  (adj.)  (continued) 
his  F  wars — 

and  the  F  fleet  Rule  in  the  narrow  seas 

Swine,  sheep,  ox — here's  a  F  supper. 

Not  on  F  ground,  nor  any  ground  but  English, 
French  (s)     it  threatens  us  no  more  Than  F  or  Norman.  Harold  i  i  135 

talk  a  little  F  like  a  lady ;  play  a  little  like  a  lady  ?  Prom,  of  May  in  303 
Frenchman    You  must  be  sweet  and  supple,  like  a  F.    Queen  Mary  v  i  276 

and  driven  back  The  Frenchmen  from  their  trenches  ?       „  v  ii  258 

But  blaze  not  out  before  the  Frenchmen  here.  Becket  in  iii  221 

FreQuency    and  so  cannot  suffer  by  the  rule  of  /.  „       ni  iii  319 

Fresh    but  you,  cousin,  are  /  and  sweet  As  the  first 

flower  Queen  Mary  i  iv  61 

Would  fain  have  some  /  treaty  drawn  between  you 
Mary.     Why  some  /  treaty  ? 

And  put  some  /  device  in  lieu  of  it — ■ 

Cousin  Pole,  You  are  /  from  brighter  lands. 

Carry  /  rushes  into  the  dining-hall. 
Friar     (See  also  Fool-friar)     Of  those  two  f's  ever  in 
my  prison, 

as  he  walk'd  the  Spanish  f's  Still  plied  him 

f's  Plied  him,  but  Cranmer  only  shook  his  head, 

overbalance  the  weight  of  the  church,  ha/? 

Quick,  /,  follow  them : 

Nay,  nay,  but  softly,  lest  they  spy  thee,  / ! 

We  spoil'd  the  prior,  /,  abbot,  monk, 

Here  come  three  f's. 

Thou  and  thy  woman  are  a  match  for  three  f's. 

How  should  poor  f's  have  money  ? 

These  f's,  thieves,  and  liars.  Shall  drink 

I  believe  thee,  thou  art  a  good  fellow,  though  a  /. 

by  St.  Mary  these  beggars  and  these  f's  shall  join  you. 

This  /  is  of  much  boldness,  noble  captain. 

I  am  overbreathed,  F,  by  my  two  bouts  at  quarterstaff. 

our/ is  so  holy  That  he's  a  miracle-monger. 

Keep  silence,  bully  /,  before  the  King. 

If  a  cat  may  look  at  a  king,  may  not  a  /  speak  to  one  ? 

— I  trust  Half  truths,  good/: 

You,  good  /,  You  Much,  you  Scarlet,  you  dear  Little  John, 
Friar  Tuck  (follower  of  Robin  Hood)    coming  hither  for  the 
dance — be  they  not,  FT? 

Besides,  tho'  F  T  might  make  us  one, 
Friday  And  I  was  bit  by  a  mad  dog  o'  F, 
Friend    fear,  I  see  you.  Dear  /,  for  the  last  time ; 

Ay,  gentle  /,  admit  them.     I  will  go. 

By  the  mass,  old  /,  we'll  have  no  pope  here 

Unless  my  f's  and  mirrors  lie  to  me. 

Queen  Is  both  my  foe  and  yours :  we  should  be  f's. 

Not  many  f's  are  mine,  except  indeed  Among  the  many. 

Speak  not  thereof — no,  not  to  your  best  /, 

who  am  your  /  And  ever  faithful  counsellor, 

call'd  my  f's  together,  Struck  home  and  won. 

His  f's  would  praise  him,  I  believed  'em, 

His /'s— as  Angels  I  received  'em. 

You  as  poor  a  critic  As  an  honest  /: 

No,  my/;  war /or  the  Queen's  Grace — 

world  as  yet,  my  /,  Is  not  half -waked ; 

Ay,  aj',  my/;  not  read  it? 

My  f's,  I  have  not  come  to  kill  the  Queen 

Be  happy,  I  am  your  /. 

hath  shut  the  gates  On  /  and  foe. 

My  foreign /'s,  who  dream'd  us  blanketed 

St.  Andrew's  day;  sit  close,  sit  close,  we  are/ '5. 

My  seven-years'  /  was  with  me,  my  young  boy ; 

Our  old  /  Cranmer,  Your  more  especial  love. 

To  reach  the  hand  of  mercy  to  my  /. 

why  my  /  Should  meet  with  lesser  mercy 

Your  faithful  /  and  trusty  councillor. 

Without  a  /,  a  book,  my  faith  would  seem  Dead 

Or  am  I  slandering  my  most  inward  /, 

Good  day,  old  /;  what,  you  look  somewhat  worn ; 

F  for  so  long  time  of  a  mighty  King ; 

And  I  and  learned /'s  among  ourselves 

Have  not  I  been  the  fast /of  your  life  Since  mine  began, 

He  is  my  good  /,  and  I  would  keep  him  so ; 


I  V  261 
in  i  268 

„      in  iv  322 
Foresters  i  i  80 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  94 

„       IV  iii  576 

IV  iii  600 

Foresters  i  ii  62 

ni429 

II  i  438 
in  167 
in  256 
in  262 
in  276 
ni312 
ni342 
ni  417 
IV  234 
IV  267 
IV  280 
IV  919 
IV  922 
IV  950 

IV  1082 

iii  54 
nil  88 
Becket  i  iv  218 
Qu,een  Mary  i  ii  103 
I  ii  110 
I  iii  42 
iiv2 
I  iv  43 
iivl35 
I  iv  177 

I  V  134 
IV  552 
IV  623 
IV  625 
n  i  116 
nil88 
n  i  227 

II  iii  64 
n  iii  116 
n  iii  123 

niv62 

miil9 

in  iii  2 

ni  iii  47 

m  iv  416 

IV  165 

IV  169 

IV  189 

IV  ii  96 

IV  ii  105 

rv  ii  115 

IV  iii  73 

vii  74 

viil33 

viii) 


II 


Friend 


923 


Fruitful 


v?riend  (continued)     F,  tho'  so  late,  it  is  not  safe  to 
preach. 
Our/'s,  the  Xomians,  holp  to  shake  his  chair. 
Stand  by  hiin,  mine  old  /, 
Is  not  the  Norman  Count  thy  /  and  mine  ? 
F's,  in  that  last  inhospitable  plunge 
I  dug  mine  into  My  old  fast  /  the  shore, 
Thou  art  his  / :  thou  know'st  my  claim  on  England 
he  shall  be  my  dear  /  As  well  as  thine, 
So  thou,  fair  /,  will  take  them  easily. 
Obey  the  Count's  conditions,  my  good  /. 
I  am  thy  fastest  /  in  Nonnandy. 
Be  careful  of  thine  answer,  my  good  /. 
Harold,  I  am  thy  /,  one  Ufe  with  thee, 
Mv  /,  thou  hast  gone  too  far  to  palter  now. 
I, "the  Count— the  King— Thy/— 

0  f's,  I  shall  not  overlive  the  day. 
Edwin,  my  / — Thou  lingerest. — Gurth, — 
F's,  had  I  been  here,  Without  too  large  self-lauding 
King  Loves  not  as  statesman,  but  true  lover  and  /. 
Nolo  Archiepiscopari,  my  good  /,  Is  quite  another 

matter. 
Becket,  her  father's  /,  Uke  enough  staved 
F,  am  I  so  much  better  than  thyself 
Henry  the  King  hath  been  mj'  /,  my  brother, 
my  father  drove  him  and  his  f's,  De  Tracy 
when  thou  seest  him  next,  Commend  me  to  thy  /. 

What/?     Rosamund.     The  King. 
My  /,  the  King  !  .  .  .     O  thou  Great  Seal  of  England, 

Given  me  by  my  dear  /  the  King  of  England — 
Now  must  I  send  thee  as  a  common  /  To  tell  the  King, 

my  /,  I  am  against  him.     We  are  f's  no  more  : 
Go  therefore  like  a  /  slighted  by  one 
O,  my  dear  /,  the  King  !     O  brother  ! — 
Peace,  fools  !     Becket.     Peace,  f's  ! 
Serve  my  best  /  and  make  him  my  worst  foe  ; 
Farew  ell,  /  's  !  farewell,  swallows  ! 
may  I  come  in  with  my  poor  /,  my  dog  ? 
My  f's,  the  Archbishop  bids  you  good  night. 
Be  f's  with  him  again — I  do  beseech  thee. 
But  since  he  cursed  My  f's  at  Veselajr, 

1  kneel  to  thee — be  f's  >vith  him  again. 
Be,  both,  the  f's  you  were.     Henry.     The  f's  we  were  ! 

Co-mates  we  were, 
No  one  comes.  Nor  foe  nor  / ; 

My  /  of  Canterbury  and  myself  Are  now  once  more 
It  must  be  so,  my  / ! 
Soon  as  she  learnt  I  was  a  /  of  thine, 
Why  they,  your/'s,  those  ruffians,  the  De  Brocs, 
I       My  two  good  /  's.  What  matters  murder'd  here, 
1      Come  in,  my/ 's,  come  in  ! 

Some  f's  of  mine  would  speak  with  me  v  ithout 
my  f's  may  spy  him  And  slay  him  as  he  runs. 
Our  Antonius,  Our  faithful  /  of  Rome, 
Thou  art  the  last  /  left  me  upon  earth — 
No,  no — a  /  of  hers. 
i      For  fear  of  losing  more  than  /,  a  son  ; 
I      Should  fly  like  bosom  f's  when  needed  most. 
^      cold-manner'd  /  may  strangely  do  us  The  truest  service, 
I  lay's  bright  like  a  /,  but  the  wind  east  like  an 

enemy.  Prom,  of  May  i  79 

forget  yourself  in  your  behaviour  to  this  gentleman, 

my  father's  /, 
Niver  man  'ed  better  f's,  and  I  will  saay  niver  master 

'ed  better  men : 
I  trust,  my  dear,  we  shall  be  always  f's. 
After  all  that  has  gone  between  us— /'s  !     What, 

only  f's  ? 
All  that  has  gone  between  us  Should  surely  make  us  f's. 
I  do  not  dare,  like  an  old  /,  to  shake  it. 
Some  of  my  former  f's  Would  find  my  logic  faulty  ; 
But,  O  dear  /,  If  thro'  the  want  of  any — 
a  /  just  now,  One  that  has  been  much  wrong'd, 
80  true  a  /  of  the  people  as  Lord  Robin  of 

Himtingdon. 


Queen  Mary  v  iv  41 

Harold  i  i  85 

„      I  i  113 

.,     1 1  247 

nil 

II  i  7 

..     11  ii  11 

..     II  ii  80 

,.  iiii207 

.,  iiii277 

..  iiii556 

„  iiii605 

„  iiii649 

..  iiii706 

,.  II  ii  755 

.,  mi  232 

..   rvi257 

..   IV  iii  85 

Becket,  Pro.  81 

„    Pro.  286 

„    Pro.  518 

ii3 

I  i  87 

„       I  i  277 

„       I  i  324 


1 1335 

1 1342 
ii350 
1 1359 
iii2 
I  iii  567 
I  iv  44 
I  iv  94 

I  iv  261 
II 121 
II 189 

II  i  317 

n  ii  119 

,.       Ill  i  38 

,.  Ill  iii  228 

„  m  iii  342 

„     V  ii  110 

,.      V  ii  434 

„      V  ii  629 

„      V  iii  68 

The  Cup  I  ii  202 

I  ii  390 

II  244 

The  Falcon  31 

59 

332 

527 

642 


I  163 

I  323 
I  632 

I  634 
I  638 
n526 
n664 
m549 
III  574 


Foresters  i  i  188 


Friend  (continued)     Tliis  Robin,  this  Earl  of  Huntingdon 

— he  is  a  /  of  Richard —  Foresters  i  i  282 

My  guests  and  f's,  Sir  Richard,  „          i  ii  77 

Dost  thou  mistrust  me  ?     Am  I  not  thy  /  ?  ,.        i  ii  178 
as  I  am  thy  /,  I  promise  thee  to  make  this  Marian 

thine.  ..        i  ii  182 

I  and  my  /,  this  monk,  were  here  belated,  ,.        i  ii  193 

Sheriff,  thy  /,  this  monk,  is  but  a  statue.  ,.        i  ii  233 

F's,  I  am  only  merry  for  an  hour  or  two  „         i  iii  10 

Strike  up  a  song,  my  f's,  and  then  to  bed.  „         i  iii  30 

Ah  dear  Robin  ?  ah  noble  captain,  /  of  the  poor  !  „        ii  i  182 

Nay — that,  my  /,  I  am  sure  I  did  not  say.  „        ii  i  488 

He  has  a  /  there  will  advance  the  monies,  „        ii  i  628 

We  never  robb'd  one  /  of  the  true  King.  ,,         iii  157 

Robin,  the  people's  /,  the  King  o'  the  woods  !  ,,         ni  347 

F's,  your  free  sports  have  swaJlow'd  my  free  hour.  ..         iv  33& 

Meanwhile,  farewell  Old  f's,  old  patriarch  oaks.  .,       iv  1054 

Friendly-fiendly    m  ith  that  /-/  smile  of  his,  Harold  iii  i  86 

Friendship    hatred  of  another  to  us  Is  no  true  bond 

of  /.  Qusen  Mary  i  iv  46 

I  hate  a  split  between  old  f's  Becket  ii  ii  380 

No  /  sacred,  valuas  neither  man  Nor  woman  Foresters  iv  713 

Friendship-fast     Which  binds  us  /-/  for  ever  !  Harold  ii  ii  162 

Frieze     Look'd  somewhat  crooked  on  him  in  his  / ;      Queen  Alary  iv  iii  333 

Fright  (s)     what  maakes  tha  sa  white  ?     Eva.     F, 

father  !  Prom,  of  May  i  418 

Since  Tostig  came  with  Norway—/  not  love.  Harold  iv  i  173 

Fright  (verb)     and  deep-incavem'd  eyes  Half  /  me.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  268 

Which  f's  you  back  into  the  ancient  faith ;  „          iv  ii  143 

They  /  not  me.  Harold  i  i  39 

It  f's  the  traitor  more  to  maim  and  blind.  „  ii  ii  503 

— flatter  And  /  the  Pope —  Becket  ii  ii  473 

I  see  now  Your  purpose  is  to  /  me —  „    iv  ii  180 

Why  do  you  jest  with  me,  and  try  To  /  me  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  666 

I  am  not  deaf  :  you  /  me.  „         iii  660 

To  /  the  wild  hawk  passing  overhead.  Foresters  in  318 

Frighted     Are  /  back  to  Tostig.  Harold  iv  i  119 

I  will  have  thee  /  into  France,  Becket  i  ii  93 

Fringe    Some  golden  /  of  gorgeousness  beyond  Old  use.         The  Cup  ii  438 

old  woman's  blessing  with  them  to  the  last  /.  Foresters  ii  i  196 

Frith  (John)    But  you  were  never  raised  to  plead  for  F,  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  211 

Frock     What,  Mr.  Dobson  ?     A  butcher's  /  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  94 

Frog     Quash'd  my  /  that  used  to  quack  Foresters  ii  ii  149 

Frolic     Her  freaks  and  f's  with  the  late  Lord  Admiral  ?    Queen  Mary  i  iv  20 

After  my  /  with  his  tenant's  girl,  Prom,  of  May  i  493 

Can  have  /  and  play.  Foresters  ii  ii  183 

From    See  Vro' 

Front  (adj.)     Would  set  him  in  the  /  rank  of  the  fight  The  Cup  i  ii  153 

Front  (verb)    That  is  Your  question,  and  I  /it  with 

another  :  Queen  Mary  i  v  141 

Will  /  their  cry  and  shatter  them  into  dust.  „              li  iv  5 

And  /  the  doom  of  God.  Harold  v  i  436 

I'll  /  him,  cross  to  cross.  Becket  i  iii  481 

Frost     had  a  touch  of  /  That  help'd  to  check  The  Falcon  644 

How  few  f's  Will  chill  the  hearts  Foresters  iv  1063 

Frosted    /  off  me  by  the  first  cold  frown  of  the  King.  Becket  i  iv  67 

Frosty     Like  smi-gilt  breathings  on  a  /  dawn —  Queen  Mary  v  iii  50 

Frown  (s)    frosted  off  me  by  the  first  cold  /  of  the  King.  Becket  i  iv  67 

Let  there  not  be  one  /  in  this  one  hour.  „      ii  i  43 

Frown  (verb)     should  not  /  as  Power,  but  smile  Harold  i  i  365 

However  kings  and  queens  may  /  on  thee.  Becket  i  ii  19 

Frowned    The  King  hath  /  upon  me.  ,.     i  iv  25 

he  /  '  No  mate  for  her,  if  it  should  come  to  that ' —  ,,  iii  i  258 

Frozen    snow  had  /  round  her,  and  she  sat  Stone-dead  „    v  ii  237 

Fructus    Sit  benedictus  /  ventris  tui ! '  Queen  Mary  ui  ii  83 

Fruit    should  leave  Some  /  of  mine  own  body  after  me,  „          ii  ii  223 

The  tree  that  only  bears  dead  /  is  gone.  „            iii  i  19 

this  dead  /  was  ripening  overmuch,  „            iii  i  25 

Can  render  thanks  in  /  for  being  sown,  „         iii  iii  198 
when  the  full  /  of  the  royal  promise  might  have  dropt   Becket  iii  iii  275 

and  shared  His  f's  and  milk.    Liar  !  The  Cup  i  ii  428 

strows  our  f's,  and  lays  Our  golden  grain,  „        ii  285 

And  here  are  fine  f's  for  my  lady —  The  Falcon  561 

Fruitful    Most  /,  yet,  indeed,  an  empty  rind.  Queen  Mary  in  ii  202 

Drink  and  drink  deep — our  marriage  will  be  /.  The  Clip  ii  381 


Fugatur 


924 


GaU'd 


Fugatur    Pastor  /  Grex  trucidatur — 

Fulfil    SpeEik,  Master  Cranmer,  F  your  promise  made 


Pulfill'd    wish  /  before  the  word  Was  spoken, 

Pull    but  I  hear  that  he  is  too  /  of  aches  and  broken 

before  his  day. 
But  your  own  state  is  /  of  danger  here. 
a  head  So  /  of  grace  and  beauty  ! 
in  /  force  Roll  upon  London, 
ye  did  promise  /  Allegiance  and  obedience  to  the 

death, 
and  yield  F  scope  to  persons  rascal  and  forlorn, 
And  pointed  /  at  Southwark  ; 
That  hastes  with  /  commission  from  the  Pope 
And  /  release  from  danger  of  all  censures  Of  Holy 

Church 
Not  the  /  faith,  no,  but  the  lurking  doubt. 
A  fine  beard,  Bonner,  a  very  /  fine  beard. 
Is  now  content  to  grant  you  /  forgiveness. 
So  that  you  crave  /  pardon  of  the  Legate, 
but  it  was  never  seen  That  any  one  recanting  thus 

at/, 
In  /  consistory.  When  I  was  made  Archbishop, 
with  /  proof  Of  Courtenay's  treason  ? 
Make  me  /  fain  to  live  and  die  a  maid, 
but  to  pay  them  /  in  kind, 

Pour  not  water  In  the  /  vessel  running  out  at  top 
And  we  will  fill  thee  /  of  Norman  sun, 
F  hope  have  I  that  love  will  answer  love. 
F  thanks  for  your  fair  greeting  of  my  bride  ! 
The  cup's  / !     Harold.     I  saw  the  hand  of  Tostig 

cover  it. 
Bring  not  thy  hollowness  On  our  /  feast. 
Cramp  thy  crop  /,  but  come  when  thou  art  call'd. 
Lay  hands  of  /allegiance  in  thy  Lord's  And  crave 

his  mercy, 
My  heart  is  /  of  tears — I  have  no  answer. 
And  there  stole  into  the  city  a  breath  F  of  the 

meadows, 
if  the  Latin  rhymes  be  rolled  out  from  a  /  mouth  ? 
What  more,  Thomas  ?     I  make  thee  /  amends, 
when  the  /  fruit  of  the  royal  promise  might  have  dropt 

into  thy  mouth 
Hath  used  the  /  authority  of  his  Church 
My  lord,  the  city  is  /  of  armed  men. 
But  /  mid-sunmier  in  those  honest  hearts. 
Plunder'd  the  vessel  /  of  Gascon  wine, 
I  would  stand  Clothed  with  the  /  authority  of  Rome, 
but  God's  /  curse  Shatter  you  all  to  pieces 
In  the  /  face  of  all  the  Roman  camp  ?  The 

All  my  brain  is  /  of  sleep, 
but  now  all  drown'd  in  love  And  glittering  at  /  tide — 


Harold  v  i  513 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  112 
I  iv  232 


I  i  124 

I  iv  168 
I  V  64 

II  i  234 

II  ii  168 
II  ii  185 
II  iii  46 
in  ii  51 

ni  iii  150 
„  HI  iv  124 

III  iv  338 
m  iv  389 
III  iv  391 

IV  i  59 
v  ii  84 

V  ii  498 

V  iii  98 
„              V  iv  14 

Harold  i  i  378 
„  II  ii  180 
.,  IV  i  237 
„     IV  iii  46 

„  IV  iii  80 
„  IV  iii  204 
„  IV  iii  234 

V  i  11 
Becket,  Pro.  406 


1 1263 
,  u  ii  338 
,     ni  iii  219 

,     ni  iii  275 
V  i  207 

V  ii  187 

V  ii  373 

V  ii  441 

V  ii  493 
,  V  iii  134 
Cu/p  I  ii  269 
,        I  ii  445 

II  234 


Thank  you.     Look  how  /  of  rosy  blossom  it  is.  Prom,  of  May  i  84 

when  the  tide  Of  /  democracy  has  overwhelm'd 

This  Old  world,  „  1 593 

and  sat  Thro'  every  sensual  course  of  that  /  feast  .,  ir  254 

with  what  /  hands,  may  be  Waiting  you  in  the  distance  ?  „  ii  509 

Why  should  I  pay  you  your  /  wages  ?  „  iii  83 

Let  me  bring  you  in  here  where  there  is  still  /  daylight.  „  iii  218 


and  each  of  'em  as  /  of  meat  as  an  egg, 

The  wood  is  /  of  echoes,  owls,  elfs,  ouphes,  oafs, 

though  thou  wert  like  a  bottle  /  up  to  the  cork. 

Rogue,  I  am  /  of  gout.     I  cannot  dance. 

In  this  /  tide  of  love.  Wave  heralds  wave  : 
Fullest     I  fail  Where  he  was  / : 

Let  all  be  done  to  the  /  in  the  sight 
Full-throated    to  close  at  once  In  one  f-t  No  ! 
Full-train'd    The  /-/  marvel  of  all  falconry, 
Fulmina     F,  f  Deus  vastator  ! 
Fulmination    flashes  And  f's  from  the  side  of  Rome, 
Fulness     Doth  not  the  fewness  of  anything  make  the  /  of 

it  in  estimation  ? 
Pun'  (found)    you  be  a  pretty  squire.     I  ha'  /  ye  out, 

I  bev.  Prom,  of  May  ii  689 

we  /  'im  out  a-walkin'  i'  West  Field  wi'  a  white  'at,  „  iii  134 


Foresters  i  i  42 

„      II  i  262 

IV  210 

IV  562 

„      IV  1042 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  56 

The  Cuf  II  433 

Qv^en  Mary  i  v  634 

The  Falcon  25 

Harold  v  i  573 

Becket,  Pro.  222 


m  iii  302 


Function    thousand  times  Fitter  for  this  grand  /. 

I  will  suspend  myself  from  all  my  f's. 

true  To  either  /,  holding  it ; 
Fundatur    Illonim  in  lacrymas  Cruor  / ! 
Funeral    look'd  As  grim  and  grave  as  from  a  /. 
Fungus    See  Wood-fungus 
Furrow    plow  Lay  rusting  in  the  f's  yellow  weeds, 

Vein'd  marble— not  a  /  yet- 
Further     Go  f  hence  and  find  him. 
Fury     God  will  beat  down  the  /  of  the  flame, 
Furze     Thy  high  black  steed  among  the  flaming  /, 
Fuse     And  in  this  very  chamber,  /  the  glass, 

alchemic  force  to  /  Almost  into  one  metal 

Iron  wiU  /,  and  marble  melt ; 
Future    hath  a  farther  flight  Than  mine  into  the  /. 


Becket,  Pro.  293 

I  iii  301 

„       I  iii  538 

Harold  v  i  532 

Queen  Mary  Ii  ii  65 

Becket  i  iii  355 

„      II  i  197 

Harold  v  ii  60 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  98 

Becket  ii  i  56 

Queen  Mary  in  v  54 

III  vi  181 

Prom,  of  May  ii  505 

Queen  Mary  i  v  313 


Gaame  (game)     a-plaayin'  the  saame  g  wi'  my  Dora —   Prom,  of  May  ii  591 
Gaay  (gay)     Wi'  the  wild  white  rose,  an'  the  woodbine  sa  g,      „  ii  175 

Oad-fly    deer  from  a  dog,  or  a  colt  from  a  g-f,  Foresters  ii  i  434 

Gailer     but  if  you  starve  me  I  be  G'  Death  himself. 
Gaiety    So  winsome  in  her  grace  and  g. 
Gain  (s)     JNIore  g  than  loss  ;  for  of  your  wives 
Gain  (verb)     Not  to  g  paradise  :  no,  nor  if  the  Pope, 

time  And  peace  for  prayer  to  ^  a  better  one. 

I  may  trust  to  g  her  then  When  I  shall 
Gain'd    She  lives — but  not  for  him  ;  one  point  is  g. 

If  once  our  ends  are  g  ? 

I  hardly  g  The  camp  at  midnight. 
Gainsay    which  he  G's  by  next  suarising — 
Gala-day    This  is  the  g-d  of  thy  return. 
Galahad  (a  knight)    The  veriest  G  of  old  Arthur's  hall. 
Oalatia    Well — I  shall  serve  G  taking  it, 

Must  all  G  hang  or  drown  herseU  ? 

I  know  of  no  such  wives  in  all  G. 

Then  that  I  serve  with  Rome  to  serve  G. 

my  serving  Rome  To  serve  G : 

I  am  much  maUgn'd.     I  thought  to  serve  G. 

And  I  will  make  G  prosperous  too, 

tell  him  That  I  accept  the  diadem  of  G — 

It  is  our  ancient  custom  in  G 

The  sovereign  of  G  weds  his  Queen. 
Galatian  (adj.)     What  is  Synorix  ?    Sinnatv^.     G,  and  not 
know  ? 

He  sends  you  This  diadem  of  the  first  G  Queen, 

Artemis,  Artemis,  hear  me,  G  Artemis  ! 

Artemis,  Artemis,  hear  her,  G  Artemis  ! 

Thy  turn,  G  King. 
Galatian  (s)    'AG  serving  by  force  in  the  Roman 
Legion.' 

That  we  6^'^  are  both  Greek  and  Gaul. 

'  A  G  serving  by  force  in  the  Roman  Legion.' 

know  myself  am  that  G  Who  sent  the  cup. 
Galatian-bom     But  he  and  I  are  both  G-b, 

Thou  art  G-b. 
Gall  (bile)     if  the  truth  be  g.  Cram  me  not  thou  with 
honey, 

honeymoon  is  the  g  of  love ;  he  dies  of  his  honey- 
moon. Becket,  Pro.  364 

Ay,  whether  it  be  g  or  honey  to  'em —  Foresters  iv  967 

Gall  (girl)     I  cum  behind  tha,  g,  and  couldn't  make 

tha  hear.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  465 

Gall  (verb)    ye  three  must  g  Poor  Tostig.     Leofwin. 

Tostig,  sister,  g's  himseU  ; 
Gallant    Our  g  citizens  murder'd  all  in  vain, 

A  g  boy,  A  noble  bird,  each  perfect  of  the  breed 

A  g  Earl.     I  love  him  as  I  hate  John. 

Who  art  thou,  g  knight  ? 

This  g  Prince  would  have  me  of  his — what  ? 

My  masters,  welcome  g  Walter  Lea. 
GaU'd    His  heart  so  g  with  thine  ingratitude, 


Prom,  of  May  in  754 

Becket  v  ii  200 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  557 

Harold  I  i  220 

The  Cup  I  i  19 

Becket  iv  ii  416 

The  Cup  I  i  32 

I  iii  18 

Becket  iv  ii  278 

Foresters  iv  959 

Becket.  Pro.  129 

The  Cup  I  i  100 

I  ii  87 

.,      I  ii  191 

.,      I  ii  213 

„      I  ii  279 

„      I  ii  324 

„     I  iii  169 

II 158 

n  358 

n  432 


I  ii  181 
II 132 
II 313 
II  317 
II  379 

1 147 

1 1203 

iii  75 

Iii  209 

II  94 

11456 


Harold  iv  i  15 


Harold  i  i  419 

The  Cup  I  ii  142 

The  Falcon  319 

Foresters  i  i  190 

„      II i  440 

IV  701 

„     IV  1002 

Becket  i  iii 


1: 


Gallery  925 

Gallery    And  I  wiU  out  upon  the  9.  Queen  Mary  n  iv  49 

In  some  dark  closet,  some  long  g,  drawn,  „  v  ii  217 

Galley    more  than  one  Row'd  in  that  ^—Gardiner  to  wit       "  iv  i  87 

Galley-slave    now,  perhaps,  Fetter'd  and  lash'd,  a  g-s,      '  Foresters  u  i  654 


Gate 


Gallop  (s)     On  the  g,  on  the  g,  Robin,  like  a  deer 
Gallop  (verb)     'at  I  tell'd  'em  to  g  'im. 
Gallows    What !  the  ^  ? 
Gamble     G  thyself  at  once  out  of  mv  sight, 
Gambled    has  drunk  and  g  out  AU  that  he  had. 

He  has  g  for  his  life,  and  lost,  he  hangs. 
Game  (pastime)    (See  also  Gaame)    The  G  of  Chess. 
(repeat) 

such  a  g,  sir,  were  whole  years  a  playing. 

Strange  g  of  chess  !  a  King  That  with  her  own  pawns 

Simon  Renard  spy  not  out  our  g  Too  early. 

With  whom  they  play'd  their  g  against  the  king  ! 

fixt  my  fancy  Upon  the  g  I  should  have  beaten  thee, 

a  perilous  g  For  men  to  play  with  God. 

Is  this  a  g  for  thee  to  play  at  ?     Away. 

All  our  g's  be  put  to  rout. 

And  join  your  feasts  and  all  your  forest  g's 

Then  thou  shalt  play  the  g  of  buffets  with  us. 

Our  forest  g's  are  ended,  our  free  life, 
I  Game  (thing  limited)    fatter  g  for  you  Than  this  old 
gaping  gargoyle : 

well  train'd,  and  easily  call'd  Off  from  the  g. 

When  they  ran  down  the  g  and  worried  it. 

The  King  keeps  his  forest  head  of  g  here, 

let  the  King's  fine  g  look  to  itself. 

with  all  manner  of  g,  and  four-footed  things,  and  fowls—   ,     in  iii  130 

No  rushing  on  the  j— the  net,— the  net.  The  Cup  i  i  170 

And  I  may  strike  your  g  when  you  are  gone.  „        i  a  36 

I  must  lure  my  g  into  the  camp.  "       ^  jij  54 

You  run  down  your  g,  We  ours.     What  pity  have 
i  fl— .  v^*'"  for  your  g  ?  Foresters  iv  520 

I  Wmekeepw    Have  I  not  seen  the  g,  the  groom,  Queen  Maru  iv  iii  371 

lOamel  (a  Northumbrian  Thane)    G,  son  of  Orm,  What 


n  i  432 
Prom,  of  May  m  433 
Queen  Mary  in  i  24 
n  iii  95 
II  iii  87 
II  iii  91 


I  iii  127 
I  iii  139 
I  iii  161 

I  iii  173 
Harold  v  ii  13 

Becket,  Pro.  51 
n  ii  70 
Foresters  n  i  426 

II  ii  166 
m85 

IV  259 
IV  1049 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  80 

Becket,  Pro.  121 

.,      Pro.  123 

m  ii  37 

III  ii  44 


thinkest  thou  this  means  ?  (repeat) 

Hail,  G,  son  of  Onn, 

Albeit  no  rolling  stone,  my  good  friend  G, 

Is  the  North  quiet,  G  ? 

I  trust  he  may  do  well,  this  G, 

that  was  his  guest,  G,  the  son  of  Orm  : 

murder'd  thine  own  guest,  the  son  of  Orm,  G, 
Gamester    no  such  g  As,  having  won  the  stake, 
Gangrene    this  rag  fro'  the  g  i'  my  leg. 

and  g's,  and  running  sores,  praise  ye  the  Lord, 
Gap    Sheep  at  the  g  which  Gardiner  takes. 

Then  fling  mine  own  fair  person  in  the  g 

as  I  hate  the  dirty  g  in  the  face  of  a  Cistercian  monk, 

Could  shine  away  the  darkness  of  that  g 

thaw  he  niver  mended  that  j  i'  the  glebe  fence 
Gape    These  fields  are  only  green,  they  make  me  g. 

Will  the  earth  g  and  swallow  us  ? 

causest  the  safe  earth  to  shudder  and  g, 

throat  might  g  before  the  tongue  could  cry  who  ? 
Gaped    four  guns  g  at  me.  Black,  silent  mouths  : 

The  nurses  yawn'd,  the  cradle  g, 
Gaping    yonder's  fatter  game  for  you  Than  this  old  g 
gurgoyle : 

Stand  staring  at  me  !  shout,  you  g  rogue  !  „  mi  ^00 

The  pretty  g  bills  in  the  home-nest  Piping  for  bread —     Becket  n  ii  300 

When  shall  your  parish-parson  bawl  our  banns 
Before  your  g  clowns  ? 
Jrarb    These  black  dog-Dons  G  themselves  bravely. 
jarda  (Villa)    See  Villa  Garcia 
jarda    might  have  flash'd  Upon  their  lake  of  G, 
jarden  (adj.)    I  love  them  More  than  the  g  flowers, 

matched  with  my  Harold  is  like  a  hedge  thistle 
by  a  y  rose. 
jrarden  (s)    were  as  glowing-gay  As  regal  g's ; 

Which  in  the  Catholic  g  are  as  flowers, 

and  in  the  midst  A  g  and  my  Rosamund. 

into  a  g  and  not  into  the  world, 

not  to  speak  one  word,  for  that's  the  rule  0'  the  g, 


Harold  I  i  20,  463 

1 191 

1 194 

iil07 

I  ii  190 

nii299 

IV  ii  39 

The  Cup  I  iii  145 

Becket  i  iv  237 

„      I iv  255 

Queen  Mary  m  iii  236 

Harold  i  ii  202 

Becket  11  ii  381 

m  i  60 

Prom,  of  May  i  446 

Queen  Mary  in  v  8 

Becket  v  iii  205 

The  Cup  n  299 

Foresters  ni  225 

Queen  Mary  n  iii  31 

ni  vi  93 

I  iii  81 
mi  288 


Prom,  of  May  i  687 
Queen  Mary  m  i  190 

HI  ii  23 
Becket  n  i  133 

Prom,  of  May  m  176 

Queen  Mary  m  ii  14 

IV  i  178 

Becket,  Pro.  169 

„      m  i  131 

,.      in  i  138 


Garden  (s)  {continued)    if  I  had  been  Eve  i'  the  g  I  shouldn't 

f  K    J  "^^^^^  *^^  *PP^^'.      u  Secket  ni  i  139 

the  kmghts  are  arming  in  the  g  Beneath  the  sycamore.        „       v  ii  569 
There  sprouts  a  salad  in  the  g  still.  The  Falcon  149 

A  u^^?u  s^®'^,^^^  yet-    Is  she  anywhere  in  the  g  ?  Prom,  of  May  1 47 

^nl^n*  r^",^  ^'  „■      •  Foresters  I  i  10 

totole  on  her,  she  was  walking  in  the  g,  „  ;  1 10 

The  serpent  that  had  crept  into  the  g  "     n  i  137 

Gardener    the  groom,  G,  and  huntsman,  in  the 

ft««,o„^^T'' P^""^' .    u  •  Queen  Mary  lY  iii  373 

Garden-stuff    profess  to  be  great  in  green  things  and 

in  g-s. 
Gardiner  (Bishop  of  Winchester  and  Lord  Chancellor) 
{See  also  Out-Gardiners,  Stephen  Gardiner)     G 
for  one,  who  is  to  be  made  Lord  Chancellor, 
so  that  G  And  Simon  Renard  spy  not  out  our  game 
Thus  G — for  the  two  were  fellow-prisoners 
He  hath  no  fence  when  G  questions  him  ; 
this  fierce  old  G — his  big  baldness, 
G  is  against  him  ;  The  Council, 
It  then  remains  for  your  poor  G, 
Paget  is  ours.     G  perchance  is  ours  ; 
brake  into  woman-tears,  Ev'n  G,  all  amazed, 
G  knows,  but  the  Council  are  all  at  odds, 
I  hear  that  G,  coming  with  the  Queen, 
G  buys  them  With  Philip's  gold, 
a  pale  horse  for  Death  and  G  for  the  Devil, 
how  strange  That  6^,  once  so  one  with  all 
This  G  tum'd  his  coat  in  Henry's  time  ; 
Ay,  and  for  G  !  being  English  citizen, 
which  the  emperor  sent  us  Were  mainly  G's : 
Mary  would  have  it ;  and  this  G  follows  ; 
Philip  would  have  it ;  and  this  G  foUows  ! 
Sheep  at  the  gap  which  G  takes, 
what  hath  fiuster'd  G  ?  how  he  rubs  His  forelock  ' 
The  faultless  Gl 
G  would  have  my  head. 
The  gray  rogue,  G,  Went  on  his  knees, 
G  out-Gardiners  G  in  his  heat, 
G  bums.  And  Bonner  bums  ; 
more  than  one  Row'd  in  that  galley — G  to  wit, 
summun  towld  summun  o'  owld  Bishop  G's  end  • 
G  wur  struck  down  like  by  the  hand  0^  God        ' 
did  not  G  intercept  A  letter  which  the  Count  de 

NoaiUes  wrote 
Some  say  that  G,  out  of  love  for  him, 
G  bums  Already  ;  but  to  pay  them  full  in  kind. 
Garland    {See  also  Marriage-garland)    your  ladyship  were 

Ho^H^^w-I^T'^  I''  ^°°''  upon  the  g  The  Falcon  663 

dead  Cr  Will  break  once  more  into  the  hvmg  blossom.  gig 

Gamer    g  the  wheat ;  And  bum  the  tares  Queen  Maru  v  v  113 

Ganush  d    We  have  had  it  swept  and  g  after  him.  ,        rn  ii  139 

Garrison    we  might  withdraw  Part  of  our  g  at  Calais.  "         r  v  l?'^ 

Garrison'd    See  Hl-garrison'd  " 

Garrulous    poor  y  country-wives.  Queen  Mary  it  iii  547 

R«rfoY   p '   vT^    ^^J"^ ^i  arrogant  girl !  Foresters  w  736 

Garter    Enghsh  G,  studded  with  great  emeralds,  Queen  Mary  m  i  84 

Gascon    amorous  Of  good  old  red  sound  liberal  G  wine  :      Becket  Pro  100 

when  the  G  wine  moxmts  to  my  head,  ' 

Plunder'd  the  vessel  full  of  G  wine. 

Gash  (s)    — brave  Gurth,  one  g  from  brow  to  knee  ! 

Gash  (verb)    here  I  g  myself  asunder  from  the  King 

Gash'd    Son,  husband,  brother  g  to  death  in  vain,    ' 

Gasp    when  I  flee  from  this  For  a  ^  of  freer  air, 

Gasping    '  No,  madam,'  he  said,  G  ; 

Gate    {See  also  Farm-gate)     Our  one  point  on  the 

main,  the  g  of  France  ! 

At  the  park  g  he  hovers  with  our  guards. 

Hark,  there  is  battle  at  the  palace  g's, 

they  have  shut  the  g's  ! 

hath  shut  the  g's  On  friend  and  foe. 

cry  To  have  the  g's  set  wide  again. 

They  are  the  flower  of  England  ;  set  the  g's  wide 

How  oft  hath  Peter  knock'd  at  Mary's  g  I 

Open,  Ye  everlasting  g's  ! 


The  Falcon  552 


Queen  Mary  i  i  86 
I  iii  172 
I  iv  198 
iiv204 
iiv263 
IV  76 
IV  220 
IV  386 
IV  566 
nil38 
n  ii  308 
m  i  143 
in  i  235 
niiii  6 
in  iii  16 
m  iii  23 
m  iii  71 
in  iii  230 
m  iii  233 
m  iii  236 
mivl2 
iniv96 
in  v  118 
in  V  165 
m  vi25 
m  vi58 
IV  187 
IV  iii  503 
IV  iii  515 

vii494 
vii501 
vivlS 


Pro.  113 

«       v  ii  441 

Harold  v  ii  70 

Becket  i  i  175 

The  Cup  I  ii  143 

Becket  n  i  29 

Queen  Mary  m  i  405 


IV  125 
nivl5 
n  iv  47 
niv59 
niv61 
niv65 
n  iv  70 
mii  63 
in  ii  183 


Gate 


926 


Gate  (continued)     I  found  it  fluttering  at  the  palace 

Life  d^  that  set  to  watch  their  master's  g,         ^""'"^  ^'^^^H  l]?, 
I  see  the  flashing  of  the  g's  of  pearl-  "  ^^  J",'  l\  V^" 

my  men  will  guard  you  to  the^'5.  X£  i    lo? 

kL'!„*„"^,^5.^ Jl*:.'^*  *^«.  ?  by  on«  from  the  castle.  i  j v  50 


Gentleness 


— like  some  loud  beggar  at  thy  g — 
Close  the  great  9— ho,  there-Aipon  the  town 
Was  not  the  great  g  shut  ? 
waiting  To  clasp  their  lovers  by  the  golden  g's 
Laid  famine-stricken  at  the  g's  of  Death— 
Gate-house    Last  night  I  climb'd  into  the  g-h,  Brett 
Gateway    g  to  the  mainland  over  which  Our  flag  hath 

floated 
Gather    g  your  men— Myself  must  bustle. 

g  all  From  sixteen  years  to  sixty ; 
Gathered    these  our  companies  And  guilds  of  London 
g  here,  ' 

And  g  with  his  hands  the  starting  flame, 
I  g  from  the  Queen  That  she  would  see  your  Grace 
g  one  From  out  a  bed  of  thick  forget-me-nots 
^\  as  not  the  year  when  this  was  g  richer  ?       ' 
confinn  it  now  Before  our  g  Norman  baronage 
Gaul     That  we  Galatians  are  both  Greek  and  G      ' 
Gave     (See  also  Gev,  Gie'd)     That  g  her  royal  crown  to 
Lady  Jane. 
My  father  on  a  birthday  g  it  me, 
and  in  that  passion  G  me  my  Crown, 
where  you  g  your  hand  To  this  great  Catholic  King 
thro'  the  fear  of  death  G  up  his  cause. 

Whereat  Lord  Williams  g  a  sudden  cry  : 

G  up  the  ghost ;  and  so  past  martyr-like— 

reft  me  of  that  legateship  Which  Julius  g  me, 

Ixiok'd  hard  and  sweet  at  me,  and  g  it  me. 

To  the  good  king  who  g  it— not  to  j'ou — 

G  his  shorn  smile  the  lie. 

God  g  us  to  divide  us  from  the  wolf  ! 

answer  which  King  Harold  g  To  his  dead  namesake 

He  g  him  all  the  kingdoms  of  the  Wfest. 

and  the  King  9  it  to  his  Chancellor. 

G  me  the  golden  keys  of  Paradise. 

We  g  thee  to  the  charge  of  John  of  Salisbury 

^art  which  Henry  g  you  With  the  red  line-- 

King  Stephen  g  Many  of  the  crown  lands 

Shame  fall  on  those  who  g  it  a  dog's  name 

and  gme  a  great  pat  o'  the  cheek  for  a  pretty  wench 

save  King  Henry  g  thee  first  the  kiss  of  peace.  ' 

By  very  God,  the  cross  I  9  the  King  ! 

me  Saved  as  by  miracle  alone  with  Him  Who  g  it. 

I  ^  It  you,  and  you  your  paramour  ; 

His  father  g  him  to  my  care, 

and  open  arms  To  him  who  g^  it ; 

He  g  me  liis  hand  : 

she  that  g  herself  to  me  so  easily 

She  g  her  hand,  unask'd,  at  the  farm-gate  ; 


..  II  i  181 
,.  v  ii  530 
.,    viiil37 

Prom,  of  May  i  248 
m  807 

Qwen  Mary  11  iii  15 

v  ii  260 
II  ii  372 

V  ii  272 

II  ii  129 

IV  iii  336 
V  iii  102 

V  V  92 
The  Falcon  345 
Harold  n  ii  695 
The  Cup  1  i  204 

Qtieen  Mary  i  ii  19 
I  V  527 
I  V  568 
m  ii  90 
IV  iii  28 
IV  iii  604 
IV  iii  623 

V  ii  35 

V  V  95 
Harold  i  i  407 

-.  II  ii  226 
„  IV  iii  101 
.,  rv  iii  109 

V  i  24 
Becket,  Pro.  431 

ii54 

1 1247 

Iii  61 

I  iii  149 

Uil41 

ui  i  125 

III  iii  253 

IV  ii  199 

IV  ii  369 

vil68 

V  ii  335 
The  Cn/p  1  i  85 

The  Falcon  836 

Prom,  of  May  1  746 

11625 


he  </  me  no  address,  and  there  was  no  word  of  marriage  ;  m  3S2 

^l  !^?  ^  ^  ^°?«  to  the  Eari  (repeat)  foresters  i  i  I2!  iS 


The  lady  g  her  hand  to  the  Earl,  (repeat) 

She  g  a  weeping  kiss  to  the  Earl,  (repeat) 

the  man  had  given  her  a  rose  and  she  g  him  another. 

King,  thy  god-father,  g  it  thee  when  a  baby. 

ihis  nng  my  mother  y  me  : 

by  this  Holy  Cross  Which  good  King  Richard  a  me 

when  a  child—  ^ 

9me  this  morning  on  my  setting  forth. 
'^u   '^^^y  '^*^*'  taken  away  the  toy  thou  g  me 
rhou  g  thy  voice  against  me  in  the  Council— 
Ihou  g  thy  voice  against  me  in  my  life, 
The  monk's  disguise  thou  g  me  for  my  bower : 

Uawm  (going)     but  coom,  coom  !  let's  be  g 
Do  ye  think  I  be  g'  to  tell  it  to  you, 

so^  U     ^^'  ®'°'"™8f-8ay)     Why  do  you  go 
Dearer  than  when  you  made  your  mountain  g, 

wear    Have  you  had  enough  Of  all  this  g? 


I  i  16,  92 

I  i  20,  119 

lilll 

ii286 

I  ii  293 

I  ii  310 

in  281 

Harold  n  ii  106 

,,       IV  ii  77 

V  i  252 

Becket  v  ii  93 

Prom,  of  May  i  425 

II 190 


Queen  Mary  i  iv  70 

The  Falcon  464 

Queen  Mary  iii  i  88 


Gee  OOP  (a  call  to  horses  to  start)    G  0  !  whoa  ' 

G  o  !  whoa  !  (repeat) 
Gel  (girl)     they  be  two  0'  the  purtiest  g's  ye  can 
see  of  a  summer  murnin'. 
Eva's  saake.     Yeas.     Poor  g,  poor  g  ! 
Taake  me  awaay,  little  g.     It  be  one  o'  my 
bad  daays. 
Gem    Standard  of  the  Warrior,  Dark  among  q's  and 

gold  ; 
Gemini     Nay,  by  St.  G,  I  ha'  two  ; 
General    \vhom  the  g  He  looks  to  and  he  leans  on  as 
his  God, 
Poor  lads,  they  see  not  what  the  g  sees. 
When  you  have  charm'd  our  g  into  mercy. 
Generate    Is  as  the  soul  descending  out  of  heaven  Into 

a  body  g. 
Generous    You  are  g,  but  it  cannot  be. 
Geneva    Zurich,  Worms,  G,  Basle- 
Genial     I  know  that  I  am  jr,  I  would  be  Happy 
Gemus    There  is  a  trade  of  g,  there's  glory  ! 
Gentle     O,  kind  and  g  master,  the  Queen's  Officers 
Ay,  g  friend,  admit  them.     I  will  go. 
Peruse  it ;  is  it  not  goodly,  ay,  and  g  ? 
Ah,  g  cousin,  since  your  Herod's  deatli, 
if  you  knew  him  As  I  do,  ever  g,  and  so  gracious. 
Ay— 9  as  they  call  you— live  or  die  ! 
and  see,  he  smiles  and  goes,  G  as  in  life. 
A  g,  gracious,  pure  and  saintly  man  ! 
Good  even,  g  Edith. 

Well,  well,  we  will  be  g  with  him,  gracious- 
He  IS  g,  tho'  a  Roman. 

If  thou  be  as  g  Give  me  some  news  of  my  sweet 

Marian, 
he  As  g  as  he's  brave— that  such  as  he 
Gentlefoalk  (gentlefolk)     We  laays  out  o'  the  waav  fur 
g  altogither —  •' 

Thy  feyther  eddicated  his  darters  to  marry  g 
I  should  ha'  thowt  they'd  bed  anew  o'  g, 
The  Steers  was  all  g's  i'  the  owd  times,  an'  I  worked 
early  an  laate  to  make  'em  all  g's  ageiin. 
Gentleman    he  says  he's  a  poor  g.     Wyatt.     G  '  a 
thief  ! 
and  g  he  was.     We  have  been  glad  together ; 
Take  thy  poor  g\  n  , 

But  you,  my  Lord,  a  polish'd  g, 
Out,  girl !  you  wrong  a  noble  g. 
Peters,  my  g,  an  honest  Catholic, 
I  have  small  hope  of  the  g  gout  in  my  great  toe 
1  promise  you  that  if  you  forget  yourself  in  your 

behaviour  to  this  g. 
He's  a  Somersetshire  man,  and  a  very  civil-SDoken 

g.     Dobson.     Gl  •'  i- 

Well,  it's  no  sin  in  a  g^  not  to  fish, 
and  now,  as  far  as  money  goas,  I  be  a  o 
while  I  wur  maakin'  mysen  a  g,  ' 

Tho'  you  are  a  g,  I  but  a  fanner's  daughter— 
and  you,  a  g,  Told  me  to  trust  you  : 
And  I  would  loove  tha  moor  nor  ony  g  'ud  loove  tha 
though  fortune  had  born  you  into  the  estate  of  a  o 
drest  like  a  g,  too.     Damn  all  gentlemen,  says  I  ' 
and  prattled  to  each  other  that  we  would  marrv 

fine  gentlemen, 
And  this  lover  of  yours— this  Mr.  Harold— is  a  o  '? 
Has  he  offered  you  marriage,  this  g  ? 
I  eddicated  boiith  on  'em  to  marry  gentlemen, 
that  if  a  9  Should  wed  a  farmer's  daughter 
you  are  tenfold  more  a  g,  ' 

He  may  be  prince  ;  he  is  not  g. 
Gentlemen-at-arms    your  g-a-a,  If  this  be  not  your 

Grace's  order. 
Gentleness    Lady,  I  say  it  mth  all  g, 

G,  Low  words  best  chime  with  this  solemnity 
sure  am  I  that  of  your  g  You  will  forgive  him". 
She,  you  mourn  for,  seem'd  A  miracle  of  g— 


Prom,  of  May  11  307,  31 
i3( 

II  a: 

III  461 


Harold  iv  i  24J 
Foresters  u  i  27^ 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  30S 
„  V  ii  441 

The  Cup  I  ii  311 

Qv^en  Mary  iv  i  36 

Prom,  of  May  11  76 

Q,ueen  Mary  i  ii  3 

The  Cup  I  iii  28 

Foresters  iv  375 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  107 

I  ii  110 

I  V  195 

III  ii  61 

IV  i  1.56 
IV  ii  161 

V  V  147 
Harold  11  ii  584 

„  III  ii  118 
Becket  11  ii  128 
The  Cup  II 502 


Foresters  11  i  480 
„      n  i  659 

Prom,  of  May  1  211 
II 116 
II  581 

III  447 


Queen  Mary  11  iii  74 
II  iii  89 

II  iii  94 
in  iv  250 

III  V  68 
IV  iii  553 

The  Falcon  657 

Prom,  of  May  I  162 

I  207 
I  215 
1 333 
I  335 
1666 
I  708 
nl05 
II 121 
II  579 

III  277 
m  281 
III  290 
III  455 
III  578 
in  742 
Foresters  iv  685 


Queen  Mary  n  iv  62 

The  Cup  I  iii  99 

u  216 

Prom,  of  May  11  488 

II  491 


Gentlier 


927 


Girl 


Gentlier     my  liege,  To  deal  with  heresy  g.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  58 

GeofErey  (son  of  Rosamund  and  Henry)  (See  also  Geotttey 
Plantagenet,  Plantagenet)  I'll  call  thee  little  G. 
Henry.     Call  him  !     Rosamund.     G  !  Becket  ii  i  214 

if  little  G  have  not  tost  His  ball  into  the  brook  !  ,,      ii  i  319 

the  child  wall  drown  himself.     Rosamund.     G\  G  \  „      ii  i  324 

G  !     Geoffrey.     ^Vhat  are  you  crying  for,  .,     in  i  268 

Gy  the  pain  thou  hast  put  me  to  1  .,      iv  ii  10 

G,  my  boy,  I  saw  the  ball  you  lost  in  the  fork  ..      iv  ii  56 

K  pretty  G  do  not  break  his  own,  ..    iv  ii  177 

How  fares  thy  pretty  boy,  the  little  G?  .,      v  ii  168 

Geoffrey  Plantagenet    nay,  G  P,  thine  o«  n  husband's 

father —  .,    iv  ii  249 

Geoi^e  (patron  saint  of  England)    by  the  dragon  of  St.  G, 

we  shall  Do  some  injustice,  Foresters  iv  939 

Germ     <)  Thou,  that  dost  inspire  the  g  with  life,  The  Cup  ii  258 

German     for  his  book  Against  that  godless  G.  Queen  Mary  v  v  238 

Germany     till  the  weight  of  G  or  the  gold  of  England 

brings  one  of  them  down  to  the  dust—  Becket  ii  ii  363 

'  Gesticulatii^    madman,  is  it,  G  there  upon  the 

bridge  ?  Proni,.  of  May  ii  327 

Get     {See  also  Git)     if  I  can  g  near  enough  I  shall  judge 

with  my  own  eyes  Queen  Mary  i  i  133 

And  g  the  swine  to  shout  Elizabeth.  „  i  iii  39 

But  so  I  y  the  laws  against  the  heretic,  „        in  i  323 

to  g  her  baaby  bom  ;  „       iv  iii  523 

G  you  home  at  once.  „  v  iv  63 

TiU  thou  wouldst  g  him  all  apart,  Harold  i  i  447 

G  thee  gone  !     He  means  the  thing  he  says.  „       v  i  83 

G  thou  into  thy  cloister  as  the  king  Will'd  it :  „     v  i  309 

g  thee  to  thine  own  bed.  Becket  i  i  7 

G  ye  hence,  Tell  what  I  say  to  the  King.  „  i  iii  563 

G  you  hence  !  a  man  passed  in  there  to-day  :  .,  in  ii  24 

g  you  hence  in  haste  Lest  worse  befall  you.  „  iv  ii  26 

found  thy  name  a  charm  to  g  Food,  roof,  and  rest.  „    v  ii  97 

G  thee  back  to  thy  nunnery  with  all  haste  ;  .,  v  ii  163 

g  you  back  !  go  on  with  the  office.  „   v  iii  32 

What  can  I  do — what  can  I  g  for  thee  ?     He  answers, 

'  G  the  Count  to  give  me  his  falcon.  The  Falcon  239 

next  time  you  waste  them  at  a  pot-house  you  g 

no  more  from  me.  Prom,  of  May  iii  100 

Sir  Richard  mast  scrape  and  scrape  till  he  g  to  the  land 

again.  Foresters  i  i  79 

1         G  thee  into  the  closet  there,  „      ii  i  214 

Getting     (<See  aZso  A-getting)     G  better,  Mr.  Dobson.         Prom,  of  May  i  69 

which  Father,  for  a  whole  life,  has  been  g  together,  „     in  166 

Gev  (gave)     fell  agean  coalscuttle  and  my  kneea  g 

waay 
:  Ghastly     how  grim  and  g  looks  her  Grace, 
nay,  this  g  glare  May  heat  their  fancies. 
Strange  and  g  in  the  gloom  And  shadowing 
from  your  g  oubliette  I  send  my  voice  across  the 

narrow  seas — 
I  found  a  hundred  g  murders  done  By  men, 
Grhittem     that  I  can  touch  The  g  to  some  purpose. 
Shoast  (ghost)     If  it  be  her  g,  we  mun  abide  it.     We 

can't  keep  a  g  out. 
Sbost     {See  also  Ghoast)     The  g's  of  Luther  and 
Zuinglius  fade  Into  the  deathless  hell 
Gave  up  the  g  ;  and  so  past  martyr-like — 

shadows  of  a  hundred  fat  dead  deer  For  dead  men's  g's.  Harold  i  ii  104 
One  g  of  all  the  g's — as  yet  so  new.  The  Cup  ii  141 

haunted  by  The  g's  of  the  dead  passions  Prom,  of  May  n  275 

-----  „  n  352 


Prom,  of  May  i  404 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  390 

Harold  i  i  308 

.,    ni  ii  157 

.,      V  i  245 

Becket  i  iii  407 

The  Faleon  799 

Prom,  of  May  in  460 

Queen  Mary  in  ii  174 
IV  iii  623 


To  see  her  grave  ?  her  g  ?     Her  g  is  everyway 
I  was  afear'd  it  was  the  g,  your  worship.     Prince 

.John.  G  !  did  one  in  white  pass  ? 
oafs,  g's  o'  the  mist,  wills-o'-the-wisp  ; 
Love  himself  Seems  but  a  g,  but  when  thou  feel'st 

with  me  The  g  returns 
They  must  have  sprung  like  G's  from  underground, 
iOlOBt^     A  g  horn  Blowing  continually,  and  faint  battle^ 

hymns, 
at  Pontigny  came  to  me  The  g  warning  of  my 

martyrdom ; 
and  make  a  g  wail  ever  and  anon  to  scare  'em. 


Foresters  n  i  226 
n  i  263 


in  113 
IV  592 


Harold  m  i  372 


Becket  v  ii  292 
Foresters  n  i  215 


Giant  (adj.)     He,  and  the  g  King  of  Norway,  Harold 

Hardrada,  Harold  in  ii  122 

Giant  (s)     as  the  heathen  g  Had  but  to  touch  the 

ground.  Queen  Mary  in  ii  43 

or  something  more.  Seeing  he  is  a  g.  Harold  iv  ii  56 

or  something  more,  Seeing  he  is  a  gr !  '  „     iv  iii  114 

spiritual  g  with  our  island  laws  And  custonLS,  Becket  iv  li  444 

Giant-Mng    Their  g-k,  a  mightier  man-in-anns  Harold  v  i  399 

Gibbet     In  every  London  street  a  g  stood.  Queen  Mary  in  i  7 

witness  the  brawls,  the  g's.  „             v  i  86 

He  wiU  come  to  the  g  at  last  ?  Foresters  n  i  328 

Gibbeted    See  Cliff-gibbeted 

Giddy     I  can  bear  all.  And  not  be  g.  Harold  i  i  486 

Gie  (give)     fur  he'll  3  us  a  big  dinner,  Prom,  of  May  i  9 

Gi'e  (give)     and  s'pose  I  kills  my  pig,  and  g's  it  among  'em,         „          1 147 

Weant  ye  g  me  a  kind  answer  at  last  ?  „          n  63 

fur  owd  Dobson  '11  ^  as  a  bit  o'  supper.  „        11  216 
Owd  Steer  g's  nubbut  cowd  tea  to  'is  men,  and  owd 

Dobson  g's  beer.  „         n  223 

G  us  a  buss  fust,  lass.  „         11  228 

d'ye  think  Fd  g  'em  the  fever  ?  „         in  49 
and  wheere  the  big  eshtree  cuts  athurt  it,  it  g's  a 

turn  like,  ,,         iii  95 

Gie'd  (gave)     but  I  hallus  g  soom  on  'em  to  Miss  Eva  ,,          11 15 

Gift     A  diamond.  And  Philip's  g,  as  proof  of  Philip's 

love.  Queen  Mary  in  i  67 

An  honest  g,  by  all  the  Saints,  Harold  i  i  344 

thro'  The  random  g's  of  careless  kings,  Becket  i  i  159 

Then  he  took  back  not  only  Stephen's  g's,  ,,   i  iii  154 

I  thought  it  was  a,  g  ;  „   i  iii  646 

Shall  God's  good  g's  be  wasted  ?  „     i  iv  71 

child  We  waited  for  so  long — heaven's  g  at  last —  ,.     in  i  14 

A  strange  g  sent  to  me  to-day.  The  Ctip  i  ii  52 

is  another  sacred  to  the  Goddess,  The  g  of  Synorix  ;  „         n  347 

In  honour  of  his  g  and  of  our  marriage,  ,.         n  351 

And  this  last  costly  g  to  mine  o^vii  self,  The  Falcon  228 

Yet  I  come  To  ask  a  g.  „          299 

g  I  ask  for,  to  my  mind  and  at  this  present  „           777 

Gig     and  he  sent  me  wi'  the  g  to  Littlechester  to 

fetch  'er  ;  Prom,  of  May  i  20 

Gilbert  Becket  (father  of  Thomas  Becket)    me,  Thomas,  son 

Of  G  B,  London  Merchant.  Becket  n  ii  231 

Gilbert  Foliot  (Bishop  of  London)    {See  also  Foliot)    There's 

G  F,     Henry.     He  !  too  thin,  too  thin.  ,,    Pro.  260 

But  hast  thou  heard  this  cry  ot  G  F  „          i  i  36 

Ay,  For  G  F  held  himself  the  man.  ,,          i  i  43 

If  it  were  not,  G  F,I  mean  to  cross  the  sea  to  France,  ,.     i  iii  123 

And  bid  him  re-create  me,  G  F.  „     i  iii  126 

Thou  still  hast  owed  thy  father,  G  F.  „     i  iii  276 

Thou  still  hast  shown  thy  primate,  G  F.  „     i  iii  282 

G  F,  A  worldly  follower  of  the  worldly  strong.  „     i  iii  541 

Cursed  be  John  of  Oxford,  Roger  of  York,  And  G  Fl           ,.     n  ii  267 

Gild     It  g's  the  greatest  wronger  of  her  peace,  Queen  Mary  v  n  415 

Gilded     over  His  g  ark  of  mummy-saints,  Harold  v  i  304 

Gilt    Sec  Sun-gilt 

Gingerbread    He  speaks  As  if  it  were  a  cake  of  g.  Becket  11  i  230 

Giovanna    {See  also  Monna  Giovanna)    the  Lady  G,  who 

hath  been  awav  so  long.  The  Falcon  2 

G  here !     Ay,  rufte  thyself — be  jealous  !  ..      21 

yet  if  G  Be  here  again — No,  no  !  ..       27 

G,  my  dear  lady,  in  this  same  battle  ..     601 

G,  dear  G,  I  that  once  The  wildest  ..     806 

Yes,  G,  But  he  will  keep  his  love  to  you  for  ever  !  ,.     891 

Gipsyfy     I  will  hide  my  face,  Blacken  and  g  it ;  Becket  iv  ii  100 

Gipsy-stuff     Life  on  the  hand  is  naked  g-s ;  „         n  i  194 

Girl     {See  also  Gall,  Gel)     A  king  to  be, — is  he  not 

noble,  g  ?  Queen  Mary  i  v  4 

that  young  g  who  dared  to  wear  your  crown  ?  ,,         i  v  491 
G ;  hast  thou  ever  heard  Slanders  against  Prince 

Philip  „        I  v  569 

No,  g ;  most  brave  and  loyal,  „        n  iv  11 

G  never  breathed  to  rival  such  a  rose ;  „      m  i  372 

There's  whitethorn,  g.  „         m  v  9 

But  truth  of  story,  which  I  glanced  at,  g,  „        m  v  33 

Out,  g !  you  wrong  a  noble  gentleman.  ,.       in  v  67 


Girl 


928 


Given 


Girl  (continued)    Lord  Devon,  g's  !  what  are  you 

whispering  here  ?  Queen  Mary  v  ii  485 

I  could  not,  g,  Not  this  way —  „       v  v  170 

That  art  the  Queen ;  ye  are  boy  and  g  no  more :  Harold  i  i  455 

My  g,  what  was  it  ?  „       i  ii  73 

My  g,  thou  hast  been  weeping :  „    m  ii  38 

thou  art  not  A  holy  sister  yet,  my  g,  „    m  ii  82 

Ay,  my  g,  no  tricks  in  him —  „     v  i  401 

I  tell  thee,  g,  I  am  seeking  my  dead  Harold.  „      v  ii  42 

Not  true,  my  g,  here  is  the  Queen  !  ,,      v  ii  91 

Where  is  he,  g  ?  The  Cup  i  i  106 

My  g-,  I  am  the  bride  of  Death,  „          n  28 

My  g,  At  times  this  oracle  of  great  Artemis  „          n  32 

and  she,  A  y,  a  child,  then  but  fifteen,  The  Falcon  537 

After  my  frolic  with  his  tenant's  g,  Prom,  of  May  i  493 

may  not  a  g's  love-dream  have  too  much  romance  in  it       ..        ni  184 

Father,  this  poor  g,  the  farm,  everything ;  m  211 

Can't  a  g  when  she  loves  her  hixsband,  and  he  her,  „        iii  304 

I  heard  a  voice,  '  G,  what  are  you  doing  there  ?  '  „        ui  375 

Come,  come,  my  g,  enough  Of  this  strange  talk.  „        in  619 

and  is  flustered  by  a  g's  kiss.  Foresters  i  i  186 

but  0  g,  g,  I  am  almost  in  despair.  „       i  i  262 

Thou  hast  robb'd  my  g  of  her  betrothal  ring.  ,,  n  i  586 
to  mistrust  the  g  you  say  you  love  Is  to  mistrust  your 

own  love  for  your  g\  .,11  ii  57 

Come,  g,  thou  shalt  along  with  us  on  the  instant.  ,,       iv  678 

What,  daunted  by  a  garrulous,  arrogant  gl  „       iv  737 

Risk  not  the  love  I  bear  thee  for  a  g.  „  iv  742 
Girlhood    tell  me  anything  of  our  sweet  Eva  When  in 

her  brighter  g,  Prom,  of  May  ii  521 


Git  (get)    Did  'e  g  into  thy  chaumber  ? 

an'  we'll  g  'im  to  speechify  for  us  arter  dinner. 

G  along  wi'  ye,  do  ! 

S'iver  I  mun  g  along  back  to  the  farm, 

I  mun  g  out  on  'is  waay  now,  or  I  shall  be  the 

death  on  'im. 
I'll  g  the  book  agean,  and  lam  mysen  the  rest. 
Give    (See  also  Gie,  Gi'e,  Gi'ed)    to  ^  us  all  that  holy 

absolution  which — 
grant  me  my  prayer :  G  me  my  Philip ; 
G  it  me  quick. 

Have  for  thine  asking  aught  that  I  can  g, 
G  me  a  piece  of  paper  ! 
boldness,  which  will  g  my  followers  boldness. 
'  You  will  g  me  my  true  crown  at  last, 
I  come  for  counsel  and  ye  g  me  feuds, 
I  will  g  your  message. 
Ay,  but  to  g  the  poor. 
To  g  the  poor — they  g  the  poor  who  die. 
It  is  the  last.     Cranmer.    G  it  me,  then. 
I  not  doubt  that  God  will  g  me  strength. 
Or  g  thee  saintly  strength  to  luidergo. 
For  death  g's  life's  last  word  a  power  to  live, 
G  to  the  poor.  Ye  ^  to  God. 
G  me  the  lute.     He  hates  me  ! 
g  the  Devil  his  due,  I  never  found  he  bore  me 

any  spite, 
in  happy  state  To  g  him  an  heir  male. 
Ay,  ever  g  yourselves  your  own  good  word. 
As  much  as  I  can  g  thee,  man ; 
thou  didst  stand  by  her  and  g  her  thy  crabs, 
And  I'll  g  her  my  crabs  again, 
would  g  his  kingly  voice  To  me  as  his  successor. 
6  me  thy  keys. 

Stigand  shall  g  me  absolution  for  it — 
I  may  g  that  egg-bald  head  The  tap  that  silences. 
I  g  my  voice  agaiast  thee  from  the  grave — 
We  g  our  voice  against  thee  out  of  heaven  ! 
We  will  not  g  him  A  Christian  burial : 
I  would  g  her  to  thy  care  in  England 
G  him  a  bone,  g  him  a  bone ! 
Is  the  Archbishop  a  thief  who  g's  thee  thy  supper  ? 
Something  good,  or  thou  wouldst  not  g  it  me. 
but  g  it  me,  and  I  promise  thee  not  to  turn  the  world 
Kind  of  the  witch  to  g  thee  warning  tho'.; 


I  399 
I  439 
II  235 
II  321 

II  609 
m  12 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  28 

IV  87 
IV  592 

n  iii  7 
II  iii  66 
II  iii  71 
mi  395 
m  iv  307 
in  vi  40 
ivii43 

IV  ii  52 
ivii65 

iTii234 

IT  iii  99 

IV  iii  161 

IV  iii  212 

V  ii  362 

V  ii  472 

V  ii  573 
Harold  i  i  342 

„  I  i  479 
n  i  49 
II  i  52 
„  nii588 
„  nii681 
„    n  ii  798 

V  i  90 
„  V  i  254 
„  V  i  260 
„    viil53 

Becket,  Pro.  143 
I  iv  107 
I  iv  116 
n  i  234 
n  i  241 
.        m  ii  29 


Give  {continued)    G  me  thy  hand.    My  Lords  of  France 

and  England,  Becket  ui  iii  225 

I  sware  I  would  not  g  the  kiss  of  peace,  „  m  iii  259 

here  is  a  golden  chain  I  will  g  thee  „  iv  i  40 

G  her  to  me.  „  iv  ii  135 

G  her  to  me  to  make  my  honeymoon.  „  iv  ii  142 

G  me  the  poison ;  set  me  free  of  him !  „  iv  ii  164 

G  to  the  King  the  things  that  are  the  King's,  „  v  ii  461 

You  should  attend  the  office,  g  them  heart.  „  v  ii  598 

I  g  you  here  an  order  To  seize  upon  him.  The  Cup  i  i  163 

G  him  a  bow  and  arrows — follow — follow.  „  i  i  208 

Will  feel  no  shame  to  g  themselves  the  lie.  „  n  117 

And  g  him  limbs,  then  air,  and  send  him  forth  „  n  261 

G  it  me  again.     It  is  the  cup  belonging  our  own  Temple.    „  n  343 

Well,  Madam,  I  will  g  your  message  to  him.  The  Falcon  217 

'  Get  the  Count  to  g  me  his  falcon,  ..  241 

I  y  it  my  sick  son,  and  if  you  be  Not  quite  recover'd  589 

I  can  g  my  time  To  him  that  is  a  part  of  you,  „  79Ci 

If  the  good  Count  would  g  me '     Count.    G  me.  „  838 

G  her  a  month  or  two,  and  her  affections                  Prom,  of  May  i  484 

Come,  g  me  your  hand  and  kiss  me  „  1 563 

But  for  the  slender  help  that  I  can  g,  ,,  n  421 

But  g  me  first  your  hand :  „  n  525 

And  he  may  die  before  he  g's  it ;  „  m  407 

will  g  him,  as  they  say,  a  new  lease  of  life.  „  iii  423 

G  me  your  arm.     Lead  me  back  again.  ,,  m  473 

I  g  him  back  to  you  again.  „  iii  675 

shall  I  g  her  the  first  kiss  ?  Foresters  i  i  126 
I  came  to  g  thee  the  first  kiss,  and  thou  hast  given 

it  me.  „  I  i  132 

matter  so  much  if  the  maid  g  the  first  kiss  ?  „  i  i  136 
now  thou  hast  given  me  the  man's  kiss,  let  me  g 

thee  the  maid's.  „  i  i  143 

I  will  g  thee  a  buffet  on  the  face.  „  i  i  146 

Wilt  thou  not  g  me  rather  the  little  rose  for  Little  John  ?    ,,  i  i  147 

may  the  maid  g  the  first  kiss  ?  „  i  i  173 

said  that  whenever  I  married  he  would  g  me  away,  „  i  i  288 

there  is  no  other  man  that  shall  g  me  away.  „  i  i  291 

I  would  g  thee  any  gold  So  that  myself  „  i  ii  165 

You  shall  g  me  the  first  kiss.  „  i  ii  227 

G  me  thy  hand  and  tell  him —  „  i  ii  241 

what  we  wring  from  them  we  g  the  poor.  „  n  i  56 

I  would  g  my  life  for  thee,  „  n  i  189 

I  can  spell  the  hand.    G  me  thine.  „  n  i  351 

I  will  g  thee  a  silver  penny  if  thou  wilt  show  „  n  i  359 

0  your  honour,  I  pray  you  too  to  g  me  an  alms.  „  n  i  389 
G  me  a  draught  of  wine.  „  n  i  458 
Take  him,  good  Little  John,  and  g  him  wine.  „  ii  i  469 
G  me  some  news  of  my  sweet  Marian.  „  ii  i  481 
G  me  thy  glove  upon  it.  „  ii  i  579 
G  it  me,  by  heaven,  Or  I  will  force  it  from  thee.  „  n  i  593 
g  us  guides  To  lead  us  thro'  the  windings  of  the  wood.  „  ii  i  632 
'  Sell  all  thou  hast  and  g  it  to  the  poor ; '  Take  all 

they  have  and  y  it  to  thyself !  „  in  169 

Bitters  before  dinner,  my  lady,  to  g  you  a  relish.  „  m  435 

love  that  children  owe  to  both  I  gT!o  him  alone.  „  rv  7 

G  me  thy  hand  on  that  ?     Marian.    Take  it.  „  rv  66 

1  am  glad  of  it.  G  him  back  his  gold  again.  „  iv  182 
that  will  g  thee  a  new  zest  for  it,  „  rv  208 
G  him  the  quarterstafi.  „  iv  250 
I  g  thee  A  buffet,  and  thou  me.  „  iv  262 
G  me  thy  hand.  Much ;  I  love  thee.  At  him,  Scarlet !  „  iv  309 
G  him  another  month,  and  he  will  pay  it.     Justiciary. 

We  cannot  g  a  month.  „  rv  443 

G  me  my  bow  and  arrows.  „  rv  603 

g  me  one  sharp  pinch  upon  the  cheek  „  iv  1011 

G  me  that  hand  which  fought  for  Richard  there.  „  iv  1029 
Given    They  have  g  me  a  safe  conduct :                           Queen  Mary  i  ii  100 

g  A  token  of  His  more  especial  Grace ;  „  ni  iii  169 
God  hath  g  Grace  to  repent  and  sorrow  for  their 

schism ;  „  ni  iii  176 

we  by  that  authority  Apostolic  G  unto  us,  „  m  iii  211 

God  hath  g  your  Grace  a  nose,  or  not,  „  m  v  203 

Power  hath  been  g  you  to  try  faith  by  fire —  „  iv  ii  153 

Done  right  against  the  promise  of  this  Queen  Twice  g.  „  iv  iii  457 


Given 


929 


Go 


Hven  (continued)    We  have  g  the  church-lands  back :    Queen  Mary  v  i  170 
I  have  g  her  cause — I  fear  no  woman.  Harold  i  ii  40 

(jtod  and  the  sea  have  g  thee  to  our  hands —  „     ii  ii  548 

Stigand  hath  g  me  absolution  for  it.  „     iii  i  213 

sorrow'd  for  my  random  promise  g  To  yon  fox-lion.  „     iii  i  269 

king  Hath  g  his  virgin  lamb  to  Holy  Church  „     iii  i  334 

And  g  thy  realm  of  England  to  the  bastard.  „    iii  ii  154 

Thou  hast  g  it  to  the  enemy  of  our  house.  „      iv  ii  31 

Holy  Father  Hath  g  this  realm  of  England  to  the  Norman.   „         v  i  13 


0  me  by  my  dear  friend  the  King  of  England- 

1  pra)^  God  I  haven't  g  thee  my  leprosy, 
kingly  pronnse  g  To  our  own  self  of  pardon, 
warder  of  the  bower  hath  g  himself  Of  late  to  wine, 
had  I  fathered  him  I  had  g  him  more  of  the  rod  than 

the  sceptre. 

1  think,  time  g,  I  could  have  talk'd 

liad  she  but  g  Plain  answer  to  plain  query  ? 

your  ladyship  has  g  him  bitters  enough  in  tliis  world, 

i  he  man  had  g  her  a  rose  and  she  gave  him  another. 

I  came  to  give  thee  the  first  kiss,  and  thou  hast  g  it  me. 

Ijut  I  had  sooner  have  g  thee  the  first  kiss. 

now  thou  hast  g  me  the  man's  kiss,  let  me  give  thee 
the  maid's. 

(/  my  whole  body  to  the  King  had  he  asked  for  it, 

but  the  cow  ?     Robin.     She  was  g  me. 
iver    if  g  And  taker  be  but  honest ! 

if  She  knew  the  g ;  but  I  bound  the  seller 
iving    (See  also  Life-giving)    My  liberality  perforce  is  dead 

Thro'  lack  of  means  of  g. 
lad    We  have  been  g  together ;  let  him  live. 

Cranmer,  be  thou  g.     This  is  the  work  of  God. 

g  to  wreak  our  spite  on  the  rosefaced  minion 

I  am  g  that  France  hath  scouted  him  at  last : 

She  will  be  g  at  last  to  wear  my  crown. 

I  am  g  I  shall  not  see  it. 

an'  owd  Dobson  should  be  g  on  it. 

1  am  g  it  pleases  you ; 

There,  I  am  g  my  nonsense  has  made  you  smile  ! 

if  this  life  of  ours  Be  a  good  g  thing, 

I  am  g  of  it.     Give  him  back  his  gold  again, 
ade    My  men  say  The  fairies  haunt  this  g ; — 

See  that  men  be  set  Along  the  gr's  and  passes  of  the  wood 

Look,  Robin,  at  the  far  end  of  the  g 


Becket  I  i  337 
„  I  iv  214 
„  II  ii  432 
„       III  i  30 

„  m  iii  110 

„    ivii311 

„    IV  ii  385 

The  Falcon  192 

Foresters  i  i  110 

I  i  133 

I  i  138 

I  i  143 

II  i  305 

II  i  315 

Harold  i  i  345 

The  Falcon  72 

297 

Queeri  Mary  ii  iii  90 

„  IV  iii  81 

Becket,  Pro.  528 

n  ii  251 

The  Cup  I  iii  168 

II  512 

Prom,  of  May  ii  147 

11  543 

m  314 

Foresters  i  iii  13 

IV  182 

„      II  ii  101 

III  457 

IV  332 
adness  Breathirig  an  easy  g  .  .  .  not  like  Aldwyth  .  .  .  Harold  i  ii  174 
ance  (s)     Philip  with  a  ^  of  some  distaste.                     Queen  Mary  iii  i  99 

No  g  yet  Of  the  Northumbrian  helmet  on  the  heath  ?       Harold  v  i  142 

Dark  even  from  a  side  g  of  the  moon,  Becket  iv  ii  148 

to  'scape  The  g  of  John —  Foresters  ni  463 

I  ance  (verb)     Before  1  dare  to  g  upon  your  Grace.      Queen  Mary  iii  v  186 

J     whereby  the  curse  might  g  From  thee  and  England.       Harold  in  i  343 

1     Tlio'  in  one  moment  she  should  g  away.  Foresters  ii  i  161 

janoed     But  truth  of  story,  which  1  g  at,  girl,  Queen  Mary  in  v  33 

Has  never  g  upon  me  when  a  child.  Foresters  iv  5 

Have  ye  g  down  thro'  all  the  forest  ways  „     iv  110 

ancing    a  Boleyn,  too,  G  across  the  Tudor —  Queen  Mary  v  v  228 

Then,  g  thro'  the  story  of  this  realm,  Becket  i  iii  410 

now  and  then  g  about  him  like  a  thief  at  night  „      iii  iii  97 

G  at  the  days  when  his  father  was  only  Earl  of  Anjou,         „    in  iii  149 

ire  (s)     this  ghastly  g  May  heat  their  fancies. 

from  the  squint  Of  lust  and  g  of  malice. 

Like  sudden  night  in  the  main  g  of  day. 

■  ire  (verb)    It  g's  in  heaven,  it  flares  upon  the  Thames, 

for  thine  eyes  G  stupid-wild  with  wine. 

ued    execrable  eyes,  G  at  the  citizen. 

How  their  pointed  fingers  G  at  me  ! 


Harold  i  i  309 
Becket  i  i  313 
„       II  i  57 
Harold  i  i  29 
Becket  I  i  214 
Queen  Mary  Ii  ii  68 
Harold  n  ii  791 


How  the  clown  g  at  me  !  that  Dobbins,  is  it, 
tiring    See  Grimly-glaring 
\\sa  (barometer)    weather's  well  anew,  but  the  gr  be  a 

bit  shaiiky. 
I  iss  (substance)     and  my  poor  chronicle  Is  but  of  g. 

fuse  the  g.  And  char  us  back  again  into  the  dust 
( iss  (verb)     and  g  The  faithful  face  of  heaven — 
( isses  (spectacles)     You  see  thro'  warping  g. 
i  issy-smooth    So  far  my  course,  albeit  not  g-s, 
( lam    G  upon  gloom, 


Prom,  of  May  n  611 


Prom,  of  May  ii  51 

Queen  Mary  in  v  47 

„  III  V  54 

Becket  ii  i  160 

Queen  Mary  i  v  212 

Becket  i  iii  379 

„     ui  i  277 


Gleam  (continued)     Gloom  upon  g,  Becket  iii  i  281 

I  never  spied  in  thee  one  g  of  grace.  „       v  ii  474 

man  perceives  that  The  lost  g  of  an  after-life  Prom,  of  May  i  503 

This  world  of  mud,  on  all  its  idiot  g's  Of  pleasure,  „          m  722 

Gleaming     There  lodged  a  g  grimness  in  his  eyes,  Harold  ii  ii  224 

Glebe  (adj.)     thaw  he  niver  mended  that  gap  i'  the  g 

fence  Prom,  of  May  i  446 

Glebe  (s)     to  the  wave,  to  the  g,  to  the  fire  !  The  Cup  ii  4 

Glen     a  fox  from  the  g  ran  away  with  the  hen,  Prom,  of  May  i  51 

Lead  us  thou  to  some  deep  g,  Foresters  n  ii  168 

Glide     Seem'd  as  a  happy  miracle  to  make  g —  Queen  Mary  in  ii  30 

There  is  an  arm'd  man  ever  g's  behind  !  Harold  u  ii  247 

G  like  a  light  across  these  woodland  ways  !  Foresters  ii  i  159 

Glided    so  she  g  up  into  the  heart  O'  the  bottle,  „          iv  244 

Gliding     Corpse-candles  g  over  nameless  graves —  Harold  in  i  381 

Two  sisters  g  in  an  equal  dance,  Becket  i  iii  444 

Glimmer    twilight  of  the  coming  day  already  g's  in  the 

east.  Foresters  i  ii  248 
Glimmering    One  coming  up  with  a  song  in  the  flush  of 

the  g  red  ?  Becket  n  i  8 

Glimpse     Rome  has  a  gr  of  this  conspiracy ;  The  Cup  i  ii  233 

catch  A  ^  of  them  and  of  their  fairy  Queen —  Foresters  ii  ii  103 

Glitter     He  g's  on  the  crowning  of  the  hill.  Harold  v  i  488 

that's  a  finer  thing  there.     How  it  g's  !  Becket  iv  i  2 

Glittering    all  drown'd  in  love  And  g  at  full  tide —  The  Cup  n  234 

Gloom     I  crept  aloiig  the  g  and  saw  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  17 

g  of  Saul  Was  lighten'd  by  young  David's  harp.  „          v  ii  358 

Strange  and  ghastly  in  the  g  Harold  in  ii  158 

Gleam  upon  g,  Becket  in  i  277 

G  upon  gleam,  „      in  i  281 

Glorified     He  is  g  In  thy  convei-sion :  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  82 

But  that  Thy  name  by  man  be  g,  „         iv  iii  153 

Die  with  him,  and  be  g  together.  Becket  v  iii  31 

Glorify     God  grant  me  grace  to  g  my  God  !  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  166 

Gloriftring    See  A-glorifying 

Glorious     O  blessed  saint,  O  g  Benedict, —  Becket  v  iii  1 

Glory     there's  no  g  Like  his  who  saves  his  country :  Queen  Mary  n  i  109 

But  for  the  wealth  and  g  of  our  realm,  „          ii  ii  210 

misreport  His  ending  to  the  g  of  their  church.  „        iv  iii  327 

I  have  wrought  miracles — to  God  the  g —  Harold  i  i  182 

and  our  marriage  and  thy  g  Been  drunk  together  !  „       iv  iii  8 

whether  it  symbol'd  iiiin  Or  g,  who  shall  tell  ?  „      v  i  111 

G  to  God  in  the  Highest !  fallen,  fallen  !  „      v  i  636 
All  I  had  I  lavish'd  for  the  g  of  the  King ;  I  shone 
from  him,  for  him,  his  g,  his  Reflection :  now  the 
g  of  the  Church  Hath  swallow'd  up  the  g  of  the 

King ;  Becket  i  iii  663 

Power  and  great  g — for  thy  Church,  0  Lord —  „     v  iii  194 

The  g  and  grief  of  battle  won  or  lost  The  Cup  i  ii  161 

Hear  thy  priestesses  hymn  thy  g\  „               n  7 

That  you  may  feed  your  fancy  on  the  g  of  it,  „           n  134 

and  send  him  forth  The  g  of  his  father — •  „           ii  263 

make  them  happy  in  the  long  barn,  for  father  is  in 

his  g.  Prom,  of  May  i  792 

There  is  a  trade  of  genius,  there's  g !  Foresters  rv  375 

Gloss     his  manners  want  the  nap  And  g  of  court ;  Queen  Mary  m  v  71 

Glo'ster  (Gloucester)    and  she  brew'd  the  best  ale  in  all  &,     Becket  in  i  197 

Glove     Give  me  thy  g  upon  it.  Foresters  n  i  579 

A  pair  of  g's,  a  pair  of  g's,  sir ;  ha  ?  Queen  Mary  in  i  270 

The  man  shall  paint  a  pair  of  g's.  „           in  i  274 

Glow    Dost  thou  not  feel  the  love  I  bear  to  thee  G 

thro'  thy  veins  ?    Synorix.    The  love  I  bear 

to  thee  G's  thro'  my  veins  The  Cup  u  427 

Glowing-gay    were  as  g-g  As  regal  gardens ;  Queen  Mary  in  ii  12 

Glowworm    yellow  silk  here  and  there,  and  it  looked  pretty 

like  a  g,  Becket  iv  i  23 

No,  by  wisp  and  g,  no.  Foresters  ii  ii  136 
Glum    What  maakes  'im  alius  sag?    Sally  Allen.    G ! 

he  be  wuss  nor  g.  Prom,  of  May  n  148 

Gnarl'd    hundreds  of  huge  oaks,  G —  Foresters  in  92 

Gnat     A  g  that  vext  thy  pillow  !  Harold  i  ii  71 

Gnawed     The  I'ats  have  g  'em  already.  Foresters  i  i  88 

Go    (See  also  Goa,  Gwo)    God  be  with  you  !    G.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  83 

gentle  friend,  admit  them.    I  will  g.  „         i  ii  111 

My  mother  said,  G  up ;  and  up  I  went.  „          i  iii  98 

3if 


Go 


930 


Go 


Go  (continued)    there  are  messengers  That  g  between 


g  zigzag,  now  would  settle  Upon  this  flower, 

Why  do  you  g  so  gay  then  ? 

Cbme,  come,  I  will  g  with  you  to  the  Queen. 

Your  people,  and  I  g  with  them  so  far. 

Bad  you  g  softly  with  your  heretics  here, 

some  believe  that  he  will  g  beyond  him. 

she  goes,  I  warrant,  not  to  hear  the  nightingales. 

Your  apple  eats  the  better.     Let  them  g.    They  g 

like  those  old  Pharisees  in  John 
Sir  Thomas,  pray  you  g  away, 

Don't  ye  now  g  to  think  that  we  be  for  Philip  o'  Spain, 
come  to  save  you  all.  And  I'll  g  further  off. 
Pray  you  g  on.  (repeat) 
I  will  g  with  you  to  the  waterside. 
No,  my  Lord  Legate,  the  Lord  Chancellor  goes. 
His  sceptre  shall  g  forth  from  Ind  to  Ind  ! 
We  might  g  softlier  than  with  crimson  rowel 
And  Hhe  g  not  with  you — 
not  like  a  word,  That  comes  and  goes  in  uttering, 
leisure  wisdom  of  his  Queen,  Before  he  g, 
for  women  To  g  twelve  months  in  bearing 
And  goes  to-morrow. 

0  Philip  !     Nay,  must  you  g  indeed  ? 
But  must  you  g  ? 
Your  Majesty  shall  g  to  Dover  with  me, 

1  will  g  to  Greenwich,  So  you  will  have  me  with  you ; 
bang  the  leaders,  let  their  following  g. 
you  must  look  to  Calais  when  I  g.    Mary.    G  ?  must 

you  g,  indeed — 
G  in,  I  pray  you. 
Say  g ;  but  only  say  it  lovingly. 
And  panting  for  my  blood  as  I  ^  by. 
Ah  ! — let  him  enter.     Nay,  you  need  not  ^ : 
You  had  best  g  home.     What  are  you  ? 

Why,  you  long-winded Sir,  you  g  beyond  me. 

Good  night !    G  home.     Besides,  you  curse  so  loud. 

Thou  light  a  torch  that  never  will  g  out ! 

see,  he  smiles  and  goes.  Gentle  as  in  life.    Alice. 

Madam,  who  goes  ?    King  Philip  ?   Mary.    No, 

Philip  comes  and  goes,  but  never  goes. 
before  I  g.  To  find  the  sweet  refreshment  of  the  Saints. 
I  have  fought  the  fight  and  g — 
if  it  pass.     G  not  to  Normandy — g  not  to  Normandy. 
I  pray  thee,  do  not  g  to  Normandy. 
Harold,  I  will  not  yield  thee  leave  to  g. 
G — the  Saints  Pilot  and  prosper  all  thy  wandering 
How  goes  it  then  with  thy  Northumbria  ? 
To  follow  thee  to  Flanders  !    Must  thou  g  ? 
When  Harold  goes  and  Tostig,  shall  I  play 
And  when  doth  Harold  g  ?    Morcar.     To-morrow — 
— I  will  g  with  thee  to-morrow — 
'  I  pray  you  do  not  g  to  Normandy.' 
G  not  to  Normandy —  (repeat) 
yield  this  iron-mooded  Duke  To  let  me  g. 
'  Marry,  the  Saints  must  g  along  with  us, 
the  lark  sings,  the  sweet  stars  come  and  g, 
Or  lash'd  his  rascal  back,  and  let  him  g. 
And  let  him  g?    To  slander  thee  again  ! 
My  prayers  g  up  as  fast  as  my  tears  fall, 
not  so  with  us — No  wings  to  come  and  g. 
I  am  weary — g :  make  me  not  wroth  with  thee  ! 
Gurth,  Leofwin,  g  once  more  about  the  hill — 
G  round  once  more ;  See  all  be  sound  and  whole. 
Leave  me.     No  more — Pardon  on  both  sides — G  ! 
Obey  my  first  and  last  commandment.    G  ! 
After  the  battle — after  the  battle.    G.    Aldwyth 
G  further  hence  and  find  him. 
business  Of  thy  whole  kingdom  waits  me :  let  me  g. 
Thou  shalt  not  gr.     I  have  not  ended  with  thee. 
Follow  me  this  Rosamund  day  and  night,  whithersoever 

ahe  goes ; 
That  I  should  g  against  the  Church  with  him.  And  I 
shall  g  against  him  with  the  Clmrch, 


Go  (continued)    G  home,  and  sleep  thy  wine  off,  for  thine  eyes 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  138  What  shall  it  be  ?     I'll  jf  as  a  nun. 

I  iv  54  G  like  a  monk,  cowling  and  clouding  up 

I  iv  70  G  therefore  like  a  friend  slighted  by  one 

I  iv  297  Not  slighted — all  but  moan'd  for :  thou  must  g. 

I  V  188  G  with  her — at  once — To-night — 

I  V  392  G,  g — no  more  of  this  ! 

I  V  441  Customs,  traditions, — clouds  that  come  and  g ; 

I  V  463  for  if  thou  g  against  thy  King,  Then  must  he  Ukewise 
g  against  thy  King, 

II  ii  7  Let  us  gr  in  to  the  Council,  where  our  bishops 

II  iii  99  I  am  confounded  by  thee.    G  in  peace. 
II  iii  105  Ay,  g  in  peace,  caitiff,  caitiff  ! 

II  iii  119  No ;  yet  all  but  all.    G,  g  ! 
in  1374, 389  Wilt  thou  not  say,  'God  bless  you,'  ere  we  g? 

III  ii  148  Well,  then,  how  does  it  g? 
Ill  ii  152  we  shall  all  be  poisoned.     Let  as  g. 
Ill  ii  177  I'll  g  back  again.     I  hain't  half  done  yet. 

Ill  iv  182  then  to  be  made  Archbishop  and  g  against  the  King 

in  iv  348  G  try  it,  play. 

HI  V  30  I  must  g ;  but  when  thou  layest  thy  lip  To  this, 

III  vi  24  Mince  and  g  back  !  his  politic  Holiness 

III  vi  91  that  none  may  dream  I  g  against  God's  honour — 

HI  vi  119  said  to  the  smoke,  'G  up,  my  son,  straight  to  Heaven.' 

Ill  vi  192  And  the  smoke  said,  '  I  ? ; ' 

III  vi  207  it  WEis  in  him  to  g  up  straight  if  the  time  had  been  quieter. 

in  vi  218  there  they  g — both  backs  are  tum'd  to  me — 

III  vi  221  I  ^  to  have  young  Henry  crown'd  by  York. 

IV  i  75  'Must  you  g,  my  liege.  So  suddenly  ? 
all  on  us  ha'  had  to  g,  bless  the  Saints, 

V  i  17  G,  you  shall  tell  me  of  her  some  other  time. 

V  i  214  Nay — g.     What !  will  you  anger  me  ? 
V  i  216  I  hear  Margery :  I'll  g  play  with  her. 

V  ii  219  I  g  myself — so  many  alleys, 

V  iii  11  G.     See  that  you  do  not  fall  in.     G. 

V  iv  43  you  bid  me  g,  and  I'll  have  my  ball  anyhow. 

V  iv  58  let  me  g  With  my  young  boy,  and  I  will  hide  my  face, 

V  iv  61  Wilt  thou  g  with  him  ?  he  will  marry  thee. 

V  V  122  The  worm  !  shall  I  let  her  g  ? 
G,  lest  I  blast  thee  with  anathema, 
Lest  I  remember  thee  to  the  lion,  g. 

.,         V  V  146  rather  g  beyond  In  scourgings,  macerations,  mortifyings, 

Harold  i  i  176  That  goes  against  our  fealty  to  the  King. 

„       I  i  185  Valour  and  holy  life  should  g  together. 

„       I  i  235  1  9  to  meet  my  King  ! 

I  i  249  It  is  God's  will.    G  on. 

„       I  i  257  get  you  back  !  g  on  with  the  office. 

„       I  i  263  Back,  I  say  !     G  on  with  the  office. 

„       I  i  332  I  will  g  out  and  meet  them. 

„        I  ii  28  Wake  me  before  you  g,  I'll  after  you — 

„      I  ii  163  Shall  Ig?    Shall  Ig?     Death,  torture— 

„      I  ii  238  I  g,  but  I  will  have  my  dagger  with  me. 

„     II  ii  204  whither  g  you  now  ?    Gamma.    To  lodge  this  cup 

„     II  ii  218  Pray  you,  G  on  with  the  marriage  rites. 

„     II  ii  327  G  on  with  the  marriage  rites. 

„     II  ii  341  I  will  g  To  meet  him,  crown'd  ! 

„     II  ii  365  There  goes  a  musical  score  along  with  them, 

„     II  ii  435  That  seem'd  to  come  and  g. 

„     II  ii  507  You  hear,  Filippo  ?    My  good  fellow,  g  ! 

„     II  ii  508  Ay,  prune  our  company  of  thine  own  and  g  ! 

„     HI  i  166  I  g.    Master  Dobson,  did  you  hear  what  I  said  ? 

„      III  ii  99  to  come  together  again  in  a  moment  and  to  g  on 
„         V  i  31  together  again, 

„       v  i  182  Now  I  must  g. 

„       v  i  192  Allow  me  to  g  with  you  to  the  farm. 

„       V  i  354  Let  bygones  be  bygones.    G  home  !     Good-night ! 

„       V  i  359  Courage,  courage  !  and  all  will  g  well. 

„       V  i  363  so  that  you  do  not  copy  his  bad  manners  ?    G,  child. 

„        V  ii  60  '  C  home ; '  but  I  hadn  t  the  heart  or  face  to  do  it. 

Becket,  Pro.  279  G  back  to  him  and  ask  his  forgiveness  before  he  dies. — 

Pro.  305  You  see  she  is  lamed,  and  cannot  g  down  to  him. 

to  the  grave  he  goes  to,  Beneath  the  burthen  of  years. 

Pro.  507  Than  even  I  can  well  believe  you,  G ! 

'  I  gi  to  fight  in  Scotland  With  many  a  savage  clan ; ' 

r  i  93  I  am  all  but  sure  of  him.     I  will  g  to  him. 


Becket  i  i  21: 
ii30] 
liSl] 
ii35( 

lias; 

Ii40( 
iii2( 
I  iii  2; 

1  iii  20' 
I  iii  54' 
I  iii  73: 
I  iii  73i 
iiv2l 
livS: 
I  iv  111 
I  iv  24 

I  iv  251 

II  i  23' 
II  i  24( 
II  i  30J 

II  ii  4i 
II  ii  161 

II  ii  31 
n  ii  32 
II  ii  45 

II  ii  47 
mi  8 

III  i  14 
III  i  19 

III  i  20 
ni  i  27 

IV  ii 
IV  ii5 
IV  ii  6 

IV  ii9 

IV  ii  1ft 
IV  ii  19 
IV  ii  2.i 
IV  ii  29: 

V  i  4 

V  ii  5(1 

V  ii  58 
viiGi: 

V  ii  6;i 

V  iii  ;> 

V  iii !! 

V  iii  .1 
The  Cwp  1  ii  41 

I  ii  4'' 
I  ii  4"^ 
I  iii  ;i 

II 3; 

II  4. 

u5i 
The  Falcon  4: 


I?. 


Prom,  of  May  1 1 


I  7 

n  5: 

II 5 

III  1 

m  2 

III  3' 

III  8 

„         in  4 

„         III  4 

in  I 

„         III  h 

Foresters  i  i 


Go 


931 


God 


]0  (continued)     but  I  know  not  i£  I  will  let  thee  g. 
Marian.     I  mean  to  g. 
Well,  thou  shalt  g,  but  O  the  land  !  the  land  ! 
More  water  goes  by  the  mill  than  the  miller  wots  of, 

and  more  goes  to  make  right 
G  now  and  ask  the  maid  to  dance  with  thee, 
What  say  you  ?  shall  we  g  ? 
Then,  Scarlet,  thou  at  least  wilt  g  with  me. 
G  with  him.     I  will  talk  with  thee  anon. 
I  saw  a  man  g  in,  my  lord. 

let  me  g  to  make  the  mound  :  bury  me  in  the  mound, 
Shall  we  not  g? 

I  pray  thee  g,  g,  for  tho'  thou  wouldst  bar 
there  goes  one  in  the  moonUght.     Shoot  ! 
Missed  !     There  goes  another.     Shoot,  Sheriff  ! 
But  g  not  yet,  stay  with  us,  and  when  thy  brother — 
Yet  are  they  twins  and  always  g  together.     Kate. 

Well,  well,  until  they  cease  to  g  together, 
Wherefore,  wherefore  should  we  g 
Only  wherefore  should  we  ^  ? 
One  half  of  this  shall  g  to  those  they  have  wrong'd, 
— a  mere  figure.     Let  it  g  by. 
is  not  he  that  goes  against  the  king  and  the  law 
I  J  to  Nottingham. 

What !  g  to  slay  liis  brother,  and  make  me 
ai  (go)    Theer  ye  g's  agean.  Miss, 
But  let  that  g  by. 

noan  o'  the  parishes  g's  by  that  naame  'ereabouts. 
and  now,  as  far  as  money  g's,  I  be  a  gentleman, 
winder  at  the  end  o'  the  passage,  that  g's  by  thy 

chaumber. 
Theer  she  g's  !     Shall  I  foller  'er  and  ax  'er 
I  weant  g  to  owd  Dobson  ; 
and  wants  a  hand,  and  I'll  g  to  him. 
Scizzars  an'  Pumpy  was  good  ims  to  g  (repeat) 
says  the  master  g*s  clean  off  his  'ead  when  he  'ears  the 

naame  on  'im  ; 
I  warrants  that  ye  g's  By  haafe  a  scoor  o'  naames — 
Kll    I  see  the  g  and  halt  the  way  to  it. — 

in  the  racing  toward  this  golden  g  He  turns 
•at    See  Scape-goat,  She-goat 
lat-herd    we  found  a  g-h's  hut  and  shared 
i-between    Their  Flemish  g-b  And  all-in-all. 
•d  (s)     {See  also  Warrior-god)     G  save  her  Grace  ; 
By  G's  hght  a  noble  creature,  right  royal ! 
G  be  with  you.     Go. 

I  wrote  it,  and  G  grant  me  power  to  bum  ! 
I  thank  my  G  it  is  too  late  to  fly. 
'Fore  G,  I  think  she  entreats  me  Uke  a  cliild. 
some  great  doom  when  G's  just  hour  Peals — 
my  good  mother  came  ( G  rest  her  soul) 
O,  just  G  !     Sweet  mother, 
6  hath  sent  me  here  To  take  such  order  with  all 

heretics 
I  am  all  thanks  To  G  and  to  your  Grace  : 
Pray  G  he  do  not  be  the  first  to  break  them, 
G  change  the  pebble  which  his  kingly  foot 
G  lay  the  waves  and  strow  the  storms  at  sea, 
I  pray  G  No  woman  ever  love  you. 
By  G,  you  are  as  poor  a  poet,  Wyatt, 
and  if  PhiUp  come  to  be  King,  0,  my  G  I 
Or — ^if  the  Lord  G  will  it — on  the  stake. 
— 'fore  G,  the  rogues — 

0  send  her  well ;  Here  comes  her  Royal  Grace. 

1  thank  G,  I  have  Uved  a  virgin,  and  1  noway  doubt 
But  that  with  G's  grace,  I  can  live  so  stiU.  Yet 
if  it  might  please  G  that  I  should  leave  Some  fruit 

Speak  !  in  the  name  of  G  ? 

•I  trust  this  day,  thro'  G,  I  have  saved  the  crown. 
But  o'  G's  mercy  don't  ye  kill  the  Queen  here. 
And  I,  by  G,  believe  myself  a  man. 

G  save  their  Graces  !  (repeat)  Queen  Mary  iii  i  177,  187,  342,  412 

G's  passion  !  knave,  thy  name  ?  Queen  Mary  m  i  248 

Ha  —  Verbum   Dei  —  verbum  —  word   of    G  !     G's 
passion  !  do  you  know  the  knave  that  painted  it  ?       ,,  III  i  2(53 


Foresters  i  i  312 
I  i  327 


iii48 
I  ii  185 

I  iii  126 

I  iii  145 

II  i  132 

II  i  207 
II  i  311 
II  i  349 
n  i  354 
II  i  394 
II  i  397 
II 1640 


II  ii  66 
II  ii  125 
n  ii  137 

III  303 

IV  221 
IV  229 
IV  799 
IV  804 

Prom,  of  May  I  106 
1 199 
I  268 
I  331 

I  397 
nl30 
1x218 
11222 
u  308,  319 


III  132 

III  728 

Harold  I  ii  196 

„     II  ii  377 

The  Cup  I  ii  426 
Queen  Mary  ill  vi  4 


I II  82 
Iii  98 

I  ii  112 
I  iii  111 

I  iv  261 

IV  11 
IV  22 

IV  33 
IV  186 
IV  269 
IV  368 
IV  381 
IV  601 
n  i  113 
II 1200 

II  i  251 
II  ii  96 

n  ii  125 


n  ii  217 
n  ii  272 
II  ii  302 
II  iii  110 
m  i  168 


God  (s)  (continued)    Word  of  G  In  English  !  Queen 

trusted  G  would  save  her  thro'  the  blood 
Their  Graces,  our  disgraces  !     G  confound  them  ! 
which  G's  hand  Wrote  on  her  conscience. 
But  all  is  well ;  'twas  ev'n  the  will  of  G, 
'  Hail,  Daughter  of  G,  and  saver  of  the  faith. 
Beheld  our  rough  forefathers  break  their  G's, 
Serve  G  and  both  your  Majesties. 
G  to  this  realm  hath  given  A  token 
first  whom  G  hath  given  Grace  to  repent 
By  him  who  sack'd  the  house  of  G  ; 
Julius,  G's  Vicar  and  Viceregent  upon  earth. 
Trembled  for  her  own  g's,  for  these  were  trembling — 
For  which  G's  righteous  judgment  fell  upon  you 
Nay,  G's  passion,  before  me  !  speak  ! 
G  upon  earth  !  what  more  ?  what  would  you  have  ? 
He  falters,  ha  ?  'fore  ^,  we  change  and  change  ; 
G  grant  it  last,  And  witness  to  your  Grace's  innocence, 
G  save  the  Queen  ! 
G  hath  blest  or  cursed  me  with  a  nose — 

0  G,  sir,  do  you  look  upon  your  boots, 
G  hath  given  your  Grace  a  nose,  or  not, 
Pray  G,  we  'scape  the  sunstroke. 
These  are  the  means  G  works  with. 

To  whom  he  owes  his  loyalty  after  G, 

may  G  Forget  me  at  most  need  when  I  forget  Her 

foul  divorce — 
It  is  G's  will,  the  Holy  Father's  will, 
G  grant  you  ampler  mercy  at  your  call 
May  G  help  you  Thro'  that  hard  hour  !     Craniner. 

And  may  G  bless  you,  Thirlby  ! 

1  not  doubt  that  G  will  give  me  strength, 
Cranmer,  be  thou  glad.     This  is  the  work  of  G. 
Remember  how  G  made  the  fierce  fire 

if  thou  call  on  G  and  all  the  saints,  G  will  beat 

down  the  fury  of  the  flame, 
O  G,  Father  of  Heaven  !    O  Son  of  G,  Redeemer 

of  the  world  ! 
Three  persons  and  one  G,  have  mercy  on  me. 
Shall  I  despair  then  ?—G  forbid  !     O  G.     For  thou 

art  merciful,  refusing  none  That  come  to  Thee 
0  Lord  G,  although  my  sins  be  great, 
O  G  tlie  Son,  Not  for  slight  faults  alone, 

0  G  the  Father,  not  for  little  sins 

truth  of  G,  which  I  have  proven  and  known. 

G  grant  me  grace  to  glorify  my  G  ! 

'  Love  of  this  world  is  hatred  against  G.'    Again, 

I  pray  you  all  that,  next  to  G, 
Albeit  he  think  himself  at  home  with  G, 
Give  to  the  poor,  Ye  give  to  G. 

1  do  believe  in  G,  Father  of  all ; 
G  bless  him  ! 

He  looks  to  and  he  leans  on  as  his  G, 
died  As  manfully  and  boldly,  and,  'fore  G, 
beast  might  roar  his  claim  To  being  in  6"i"  image, 
owld  lord  fell  to  's  meat  wi'  a  will,  G  bless  un  ! 

but  Gardiner  wur  struck  down  like  by  the  hand 

o'G 
There's  nought  but  the  vire  of  G's  hell  ez  can  bum 

out  that. 
Why  then  to  heaven,  and  G  ha'  mercy  on  him. 
Is  G's  best  dew  upon  the  barren  field, 
and  therefore  G  Is  hard  upon  the  people, 
and  mine  own  natural  man  (It  was  G  s  cause) ; 
1  hoped  I  had  served  G  with  all  my  might ! 
G  pardon  me  !     I  had  never  yet  found  one. 
Mother  of  G,  Thou  knowest  never  woman 
G  help  me,  but  methinks  I  love  her  less 
by  G's  providence  a  good  stout  staff  Lay  near  me ; 
light  enough,  G  knows.  And  mixt  with  Wyatt's 

rising — 
as  I  love  The  people  !  whom  G  aid  ! 
G's  death  !  and  wherefore  spake  you  not  before  ? 
Then  I  and  he  will  snaffle  your  '  G's  death,' 
G's  death,  forsooth — you  do  not  know  King  Philip. 


Mary  iii  i  279 
III  i  386 

,  nx  i  415 

III  i  421 

III  ii  77 
m  ii  82 

III  ii  121 
III  iii  159 
HI  iii  168 
III  iii  175 
lu  iii  195 
III  iii  213 
III  iv  128 

III  iv  240 
ni  iv  285 
m  iv  383 
in  iv  406 

ni  V  49 
in  V  170 
m  vl78 
in  V  191 
in  V  203 
m  v279 
m  vi  68 

IV  123 

IV  179 

IV  i  184 
IV  i  189 

rv  ii  195 

IV  ii  234 
IV  iii  82 
rv  iii  89 

rv  iii  96 

IV  iii  116 
IV  iii  121 

IV  iii  129 
IV  iii  135 
IV  iii  138 
IV  iii  143 
IV  iii  149 
IV  iii  166 

IV  iii  174 
IV  iii  193 
IV  iii  214 
IV  iii  228 
IV  iii  256 
rv  iii  306 
IV  iii  343 
IV  iii  369 


IV  iii  515 

IV  iii  527 

IV  iii  631 
vil02 
vil75 

viil04 
vii296 

V  ii  334 
v  ii  341 
vii420 
vii468 

V  ii  477 

V  iii  36 

V  iii  106 

V  iii  119 

V  iii  123 


God 


932 


God 


God  (s)  (continued)     G  curse  her  and  her  Legate  ! 


Queen  Mary  v  iv  12 


cries  continually  with  sweat  and  tears  to  the  Lord  G       „  v  iv  46 

Poor  enough  in  G's  grace  !  „             v  v  50 

I  trust  that  G  will  make  you  happy  yet.  „             v  v  76 

O  G\     I  have  been  too  slack,  too  slack ;  „           v  v  100 

but  by  G's  grace,  We'll  follow  Philip's  leading,  „           v  v  111 

Ay,  Madam,  but  o'  G's  mercy —  „           v  v  165 

0  G,  I  have  kill'd  my  Philip  !  „  vv  180 
G  guide  me  lest  I  lose  the  way.  „  v  v  209 
she  loved  much  :  pray  G  she  be  forgiven.  „  v  v  271 
G  save  Elizabeth,  the  Queen  of  England  ! 

Bagenhall.     G  save  the  Crown !    the 

Papacy  is  no  more.  „           v  v  283 

G  save  the  Queen !  „           v  v  288 

floated  downward  from  the  throne  Of  G  Almighty.  Harold  i  i  19 

in  Normanland  G  speaks  thro'  abler  voices,  „     i  i  167 

But  dreading  G's  revenge  upon  this  realm   »  „      i  i  172 

1  have  wrought  miracles — to  G  the  glory —  „  i  i  181 
Pray  G  the  people  choose  thee  for  their  king  !  „  i  i  314 
that  the  shipwreckt  are  accm'sed  of  G  ; —  „  ii  i  101 
by  the  splendour  of  G,  no  guest  of  mine.  „  ii  ii  26 
My  G,  I  should  be  there.  „  ii  ii  310 
Our  Duke  is  all  about  thee  like  a.  G  ;  „  n  ii  316 
G  and  the  sea  have  given  thee  to  our  hands —  „  ii  ii  548 
bright  sky  cleave  To  the  very  feet  of  G,  „  ii  ii  743 
O  G,  that  I  were  in  some  wide,  waste  field  „  ii  ii  777 
That  sun  may  G  speed  !  „  m  i  72 
G  bless  thee,  wedded  daughter.  „  m  i  293 
for  the  king  Is  holy,  and  hath  talk'd  with  G,  „  ni  i  355 
Pray  G  that  come  not  suddenly  !  „  iii  i  364 
G  Has  fill'd  the  quiver,  and  Death  has  drawn  the  bow —  „  iii  i  399 
O  G  \  I  cannot  help  it,  but  at  times  „  in  ii  63 
when  that  which  reign'd  Call'd  itself  G. —  „  in  ii  167 
The  Lord  was  G  and  came  as  man — the  Pope  Is  man 

and  comes  as  G. —  „  iii  ii  172 

But  I  dare.     G  with  thee  !  „  iii  ii  188 

G  help  me  !  I  know  nothing —  „  in  ii  193 

in  the  name  of  the  great  G,  so  be  it  !  „   iv  i  240 

peace  with  what  G  gave  us  to  divide  us  „  iv  iii  101 

Here's  to  him,  sink  or  swim  !     Thane,     G  sink  him  !  „  iv  iii  135 

By  G,  we  thought  him  dead —  „  iv  iii  148 

Hath  harried  mine  own  cattle — G  confound  him  !  „  iv  iii  190 

And  all  the  Heavens  and  very  G  :  they  heard —  „       v  i  43 

Tell  him  that  G  is  nobler  than  the  Saints,  „      v  i  57 

And  bide  the  doom  of  G.  „      v  i  61 

If  I  fall,  I  fall— The  doom  of  (?  !  „    v  i  136 

A  snatch  of  sleep  were  like  the  peace  of  G.  «     v  i  181 

great  G  of  truth  Fill  all  thine  hours  with  peace  ! —  „     v  i  315 

And  not  on  thee — nor  England — ^fall  G's  doom  !  „    v  i  371 

And  front  the  doom  of  G.  ..    v  i  436 

O  (j  of  battles,  make  their  wall  of  shields  „    v  i  478 

G  save  King  Harold  !  ,,    v  i  489 

Harold  and  G  Almighty  !  „    v  i  526 

O  G  of  battles,  make  his  battle-axe  keen  „    v  i  562 

O  G  of  battles,  they  are  three  to  one,  „    v  i  575 

O  G,  the  G  of  truth  hath  heard  my  cry.  „     v  i  600 

Glory  to  G  in  the  Highest !  fallen,  fallen  !  „     v  i  636 

Whisper  !     G's  angels  only  know  it.  „     v  ii  31 

my  G,  They  have  so  maim'd  and  murder'd  all  his  face  „     v  ii  75 

build  a  church  to  G  Here  on  the  hill  of  battle  ;  ,,   v  ii  137 

till  that  blighted  vow  Which  G  avenged  to-day.  „   v  ii  157 

by  the  splendour  of  G — have  I  fought  men  „   v  ii  177 

?ray  G  My  Normans  may  but  move  as  true  „   v  ii  183 

would  to  G  thou  wert,  for  I  should  find  Becket,  Pro.  86 

Men  are  G's  trees,  and  women  are  G's  flowers  ;  „    Pro.  Ill 

No,  my  liege,  no  ! — not  once — in  G's  name,  no  !  „    Pro.  126 

G's  eyes  !     I  know  all  that —  „    Pro.  148 

Would  G  she  were — no,  here  within  the  city.  „    Pro.  179 

G's  favour  and  king's  favour  might  so  clash  „    Pro.  295 

G's  eyes  !  what  a  lovely  cross  !  „    Pro.  370 

And  spake  to  the  Lord  G,  and  said,  „         i  i  74 

•  O  Lord  my  G,  Henry  the  King  hath  been  my  friend,  „         i  i  86 

G  make  not  thee,  but  thy  foes,  fall.  „       i  i  106 

'Fore  G,  I  am  a  mightier  man  than  thou.  „       i  i  223 

By  G's  death,  thou  shalt  stick  him  like  a  calf !  „     i  iii  183 


God  (s)  (continued)     it  is  the  will  of  G  To  break  me, 
'  False  to  myself  !     It  is  the  will  oi  G\'     Henry. 

G's  will  be  what  it  will, 
The  King's  will  and  G's  will  and  justice  ; 
G's  eyes  !     I  had  meant  to  make  him  all  but  king. 
The  will  of  G — why,  then  it  is  my  will^ — • 
The  King's  '  G's  eyes  ! '  come  now  so  thick  and  fast, 
For  the  King's  pleasure  rather  than  G's  cause 
G  from  me  withdraws  Himself,  And  the  King  too. 
That  thou  obey,  not  me,  but  G  in  me. 
Wilt  thou  not  say,  '  G  bless  you,  'ere  we  go  ? 

Becket.     '  G  bless  you  all !     G  redden  your 

pale  blood  !     But  mine  is  human-red  ; 
and  see  it  mounting  to  Heaven,  my  G  bless  you. 
Shall  G's  good  gifts  be  wasted  ? 
his  paws  are  past  help.     G  help  him. 
dawns  darkly  and  drearily  over  the  house  of  G — 
I  pray  G  I  haven't  given  thee  my  leprosy, 
this  beast-body  That  G  has  plunged  my  soul  in — 
May  G  grant  No  ill  befall  or  him  or  thee 
by  G's  eyes,  we  will  not  have  him  crown'd. 
a  perilous  game  For  men  to  play  with  G. 
and  pray  G  she  prove  True  wife  to  you. 
Saving  G's  honour  ! 
— that  Is  clean  against  G's  honour — 
that  none  may  dream  I  go  against  G's  honour — • 
Would  G  they  had  torn  up  all  By  the  hard  root, 
to  suppress  G's  honour  for  the  sake  Of  any  king  that 

breathes.     No,  G  forbid  !     Henry.     No  !     G  forbid  ! 
No  G  but  one,  and  Mahound  is  his  prophet, 
you  shall  have  None  other  G  but  me — 
who  hath  withstood  two  Kings  to  their  faces  for  the 

honour  of  G. 
I  pray  G  pardon  mine  infirmity. 
Yet  you  both  love  G. 

O  G,  how  many  an  innocent  Has  left  his  bon&s 
Deny  not  thou  G's  honour  for  a  king, 
surrendering  G's  honour  to  the  pleasure  of  a  man. 
Son,  I  absolve  thee  in  the  name  of  G. 
G  bless  the  great  Archbishop  ! 
G  help  her,  That  she  was  sworn  to  silence. 
G  help  her,  she  had  'em  from  her  mother, 

0  G  !  some  dreadful  truth  is  breaking  on  mo — 
puffed  out  such  an  incense  of  unctuosity  into  the 

nostrils  of  our  G's  of  Church  and  State, 
before  G  I  promise  you  the  King  hath  many 
G  and  his  free  wind  grant  your  lordship  a  happy 

home-return 
The  boy  so  late  ;  pray  G,  he  be  not  lost, 
and  G  will  be  our  guide. 
By  very  G,  the  cross  I  gave  the  King  ! 
Strike  !     I  challenge  thee  to  meet  me  before  G. 
G's  grace  and  Holy  Church  deliver'd  us. 
If  G  would  take  him  in  some  sudden  way — ■ 
My  liege,  the  Queen  of  England.     Henry.     G's  eyes  ! 
The  Church  !  the  Church  !   G's  eyes  ! 
Thou  hast  waged  G's  wars  against  the  King  ; 
York  against  Canterbury,  York  against  G  ! 
G  bless  him  for  it. 

G  save  him  from  all  sickness  of  the  soul  ! 
this  mother,  runs  thro'  all  The  world  G  made — 
G  help  thee  ! 

things  that  are  the  King's,  And  those  of  G  to  G. 
scare  me  from  my  loyalty  To  G  and  to  the  Holy  Father, 
foremost  of  their  files,  who  die  For  G, 
to  people  heaven  in  the  great  day  When  G  makes  up 

his  jewels. 
G's  will  be  done  !  (repeat) 
It  is  G's  will.     Go  on. 
No  traitor  to  the  King,  but  Priest  of  G, 
G  pardon  thee  and  these,  but  G's  full  curse 

1  clo  commend  my  cause  to  G,  the  Virgin, 
O  G,  O  noble  knights,  O  sacrilege  ! 
O  G's  !     She  is  my  fate — 
Rome  Made  war  upon  the  peoples  not  the  G's. 


Becket  i  iii  291 


„     V  ii  49' 

Becket  v  ii  565,  56' 

Becket  \  ii&i 

„    V  iii  11> 

„    V  iii  13.' 

„    V  iii  IK 

„    viiil7( 

2'he  Cup  I  i  1' 

1  ii  0 


God 

'I  Od  (s)  {continued)    to  victory— I  hope  so— Like  phantoms 
of  the  G's. 
for  by  the  G's  I  seem  Strange  to  myself, 
to  the  fullest  in  the  sight  Of  all  the  G's. 

0  all  ye  G's — Jupiter  ! — Jupiter  ! 
Dost  thou  cry  out  upon  the  G's  of  Rome  ? 
by  the  G's  of  Rome  and  all  the  world, 
G  rest  his  honest  soul,  he  bought  'em  for  me 

1  ha'  heard  'im  a-gawin'  on  'ud  make  your  'air — 
G  bless  it ! — stan'  on  end. 

As  flies  to  the  G's  ;  they  kill  us  for  their  sport. 

The  G's  !  but  they,  the  shadows  of  ourselves, 

He,  following  his  own  instincts  as  his  G, 

O  my  G,  if  man  be  only  A  willy-nilly  current  of 
sensations — 

At  Michaehnas,  Miss,  please  G. 

pauper,  who  had  died  in  his  misery  blessing  G, 

— the  heart,  O  G  ! — the  poor  young  heart 

G  bless  our  well-beloved  Robin,  Earl  of  Huntingdon. 

And  I  will  follow  thee,  and  G  help  us  both. 

G's  good  Angel  Help  him  back  hither, 

6  forbid  !  (repeat) 

Ay  G  forbid.  But  if  it  be  so  we  must  bear  with  John. 

The  love  of  freedom,  the  desire  of  G, 

My  G,  thou  art  the  very  woman  who  waits 

for,  G  help  us,  we  he  by  nature. 

Is  she  not  here  with  thee  ?     Robin.     Would  G  she  were  ! 

My  G — That  such  a  brother — 

0  G  !     What  sparkles  in  the  moonlight  on  thy  hand  ? 

O  G,l  would  the  letter  of  the  law 

When  the  Church  and  the  law  have  forgotten  G's 

music, 
Take  the  left  leg  for  the  love  of  G. 
by  that  same  love  of  G  we  will  hang  thee, 
— G  help  the  mark — 
6  save  the  King  ! 
d  (verb)     How  the  good  priest  g's  himself  !  Becket  v  iii  149 

«d-bless-her    Cried  no  G-b-h  to  the  Lady  Jane,  Queen  Man  iir  iv  45 

'ddess    ('See  aZso  Love-goddess)     himself  an  adorer  of  our 

great  g,  Artemis,  The  Cup  i  i  38 

I  ii  56 
„      I  ii  219 

II  201 
II  256 
II  281 
u  314 


933 


Gold-dust 


The  Cup  I  ii  170 
»  I  iii  76 
II  434 
II  453 
II  455 
II  465 
The  Falcon  49 

Prom,  of  May  1 135 
I  264 
I  270 
I  589 

n  261 
III  113 

III  378 
in  679 

Foresters  i  i  247 

1  i  278 

I  ii  10 

„  Iii 93, 100 

„      I  ii  101 

n  i  68 

„      n  i  101 

II  i  237 

II  i  493 

II  i  549 

II  i  581 

IV  514 

IV  555 
IV  578 
IV  582 
IV  714 
IV  857 


Godwin  (Earl  of  the  West  Saxons)  (continued)    Noble  Gurth  ! 


cup  saved  from  a  blazing  shrine  Of  our  great  G, 

I  love  you — ^for  your  love  to  the  great  G. 

Wherefrom  we  make  libation  to  the  G 

Call  first  upon  the  G,  Synorix. 

G,  whose  storm-voice  Unsockets  the  strong  oak, 

I  call  on  our  own  G  in  our  own  Temple. 

Here  is  another  sacred  to  the  G,  The  gift  of  Synorix  : 
and  the  G,  '         ^  j  , 

Making  Ubation  to  the  G. 

See  first  I  make  hbation  to  the  G, 

Libation  to  the  G. 
'    Why  then  the  G  hears. 

'iJ-father    King,  thy  g-f,  gave  it  thee  when  a  baby. 
( iless    this  cooler  sun  of  England  hath  In  breed- 
ing g  vermin. 

She  thank'd  her  father  sweetly  for  his  book 
Against  that  g  German. 
( Jric    More  hkely  G. 
('istow  (adj.)    Come  thou  with  me  to  G  nunnery, 

To  put  her  into  G  nunnery,  (repeat) 
tistow  (s)     Into  G,  into  Hellstow,  Devilstow  ! 
(istow-Becket    Tliis  G'-5  intermeddling  such 
Clwin(Earlof  the  West  Saxons)    (^ee  a/so  Half-Godwin) 

])Owers  of  the  liouse  of  G  Are  not  enframed  in  thee. 

sons  of  G  Sit  topmost  in  the  field  of  England, 

1  nwholesome  talk  For  G's  house  ! 

1 1 'lids  that  part  The  sons  of  G  from  the  sons  of  Alfgar 

Am  I  Harold,  Harold,  son  Of  our  great  G  ? 

I ; '-main  a  hostage  for  the  loyalty  Of  G's  house.' 

I  have  heard  a  saying  of  thv  father  G, 

I  here  spake  G,  Who  hated  all  the  Normans  ; 

''  still  at  feud  with  Alfgar, 

'i'hat  is  noble  !     That  sounds  of  G. 

Come  thou  back,  and  be  Once  more  a  son  of  G. 

Thou  hast  no  passion  for  the  House  of  G — 


II  346 
II  364 
II  377 
II  387 
II  388 
Foresters  i  i  285 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  329 

V  V  238 
Harold  v  ii  66 

Becket  iv  ii  366 
„  V  i  208,  209 

V  i  215 
IV  ii  457 


Harold  i  i  316 

I  i  325 

I  i  391 

„      I  ii  180 

„     II  ii  793 

III  i  91 

„     in  i 112 

„     III  i  251 

„     IV  i 123 

„      IV  ii  58 

„      IV  ii  60 

>.      IV  ii  73 


Best  son  of  G  I 
advise  the  king  Against  the  race  of  G. 
and  the  race  of  G  Hath  ruin'd  G. 
Ooest     And  waste  the  land  about  thee  as  thou  g. 
Thou  g  beyond  thyself  in  petulancy  ! 
_  Now  as  Archbishop  g  against  the  King  ; 
Going  (part.)    (See  also  A-gawin',  A-going,  Gawin, 
Straight-going)    g  now  to  the  Tower  to  loose 
the  prisoners 
Well,  I  am  g. 

He  can  but  stay  a  moment :  he  is  g. 
Oh  !  that  thou  wert  not  g  ! 
You  are  g  to  the  Castle, 
G  to  the  Holy  Land  to  Richard  ! 
Going  (s)     three  days  in  tears  For  Philip's  g — 
I  could  mould  myself  To  bear  your  g  better ; 
And  you  will  stay  your  g  ? 
Then  it  is  done  ;  but  you  will  stay  your  g 
Gold     Velvet  and  g.     This  dress  was  made  me 
set  it  round  with  g,  with  pearl,  with  diamond. 
We'll  dust  him  from  a  bag  of  Spanish  g. 
not  with  g,  But  dearest  links  of  love. 
Spain  moves,  bribes  our  nobles  with  her  g, 
on  his  neck  a  collar,  G,  thick  with  diamonds  ; 
Gardiner  buys  them  With  Philip's  g. 
Were  you  in  Spain,  this  fine  fair  gossamer  g — 
Your  PhiUp  hath  g  hair  and  golden  beard  ; 
You  have  a  g  ring  on  your  finger. 
In  mine  earldom  A  man  may  hang  g  bracelets  on 

a  bush, 
if  not  with  g,  With  golden  deeds  and  iron  strokes 
jewel  of  St.  Pancratius  Woven  into  the  g. 
Red  g — a  hundred  purses — yea,  and  more  ! 
Standard  of  the  Warrior,  Dark  among  gems  and  g  ; 
thou  shalt  have  our  love,  our  silence,  and  our  g — 
This  Abnoner  hath  tasted  Henry's  g.     The  cardinals 

have  finger'd  Henry's  g. 
Aa  g  Outvalues  dross,  Ught  darkness, 
till  the  weight  of  Germany  or  the  g  of  England 
leave  Lateran  and  Vatican  in  one  dust  of  g — 
she  sits  naked  by  a  great  heap  of  g  in  the  middle  of 

the  wood, 
No — no  g.    Mother  says  g  spoils  all.    Love  is  the 

only  9- 
fondest  pair  of  doves  will  jar,  Ev'n  in  a  cage  of  g, 
I  would  that  happiness  were  g, 
a  hundred  G  pieces  once  were  offer'd  by  the  Duke, 
ransomed  for  two  thousand  marks  in  g. 
nor  of  the  g,  nor  the  man  who  took  out  the  g : 
I  have  lost  my  g,  I  have  lost  my  son, 
Good  Prince,  art  thou  in  need  of  any  g  ?     Prince  John. 
G  ?  why  ?  not  now.     Sheriff.     I  would  give  thee  any 
g  So  that  myself 
I  ran  into  my  debt  to  the  Abbot,  Two  thousand  marks 

ing. 
These  two  have  forty  g  marks  between  them,  Robin. 
Leave  it  with  him  and  add  a  g  mark  thereto. 
Take  his  penny  and  leave  him  liis  g  mark. 
I  have  one  mark  in  g  which  a  pioas  son  of  the  Church 
Well,  as  he  said,  one  mark  in  g. 
One  mark  in  g. 

they  have  each  ten  marks  in  g. 
alchemy  Should  change  this  g  to  silver,  why,  the  silver 

Were  dear  as  g, 
But  being  o'  John's  side  we  must  have  thy  g. 
I  am  glad  of  it.     Give  him  back  his  g  again. 
But  I  had  Uefer  than  this  g  again — 
Would  buy  me  for  a  thousand  marks  in  g — 
Much  hghter  than  a  thousand  marks  in  g  ; 
Is  weightier  than  a  thousand  marks  in  g. 
Who  thought  to  buy  your  marrying  me  with  g. 
Here  is  thy  g  again.     I  am  sorry  for  it. 
The  g — ^my  son — my  g,  my  son,  the  land — 


Gold-dust    For  that  is  Philip's  g-d,  and  adore 


Harold  V  i  135 

„      V  i  282 

„       V  i  293 

„      V  i  131 

Becket  i  iii  65 

„   I  iii  530 


Queen  Mary  i  i  108 

„       in  vi  171 

Harold  i  ii  4 

„      I  ii  75 

Becket  i  ii  45 

ForeUers  i  ii  240 

Queen  Mary  ni  vi  14 

m  vi  236 

vil86 

vi206 

liv  71 

IV  375 

IV  422 

IV  538 
II  i  203 
in  i  80 

mi  145 

V  iii  49 
V  iii  56 
viv32 

Harold  ii  i  87 
„  n  ii  46 
„  n  ii  701 
„  III  i  18 
„  IV  1249 
Becket,  Pro.  492 

I  iii  294 

I  iii  714 

n  ii  364 

„        II  ii  475 

in  ii  21 

»  ivi42 

,,         IV  ii  42 

The  Cup  II  223 

The  Falcon  324 

Foresters  i  i  65 

I  i  74 

1 1338 


I  ii  163 

ni464 
HI  202 
in  211 
m  218 
ni  280 
in  285 
ni287 
in  292 

IV  40 
IV  158 
IV  183 
IV  185 
IV  653 
IV  658 
IV  661 
IV  719 
IV  985 
IV  987 


Queen  Mary  ni  iii  243 


Oolden 


934 


Good 


Harold  n  ii  47 


1 154 

iiv65 

ni34 

II  i  203 

II  ii  85 

III  i  46 
III  iii  180 

IV  140 
V  ii  346 

The  Cup  II  269 
II  287 

II  438 


Golden    yet  stay,  this  g  chain — My  father  on  a  birthday 

gave  it  me,  Queen  Mary  i  v  526 

hanging  down  from  this  The  G  Fleece —  „  in  i  82 

Your  Philip  hath  gold  hair  and  g  beard  ;  „  v  iii  57 

Some  few  of  Gothic  blood  have  g  hair,  „  v  ill  61 

With  g  deeds  and  iron  stakes  that  brought  Thy  war 
with  Brittany 

For  in  the  racing  toward  this  g  goal  He  turns  not 
right  or  left,  „     n  11  377 

Lay  thou  thy  hand  upon  this  g  pall !  „     ii  11  699 

Set  forth  our  g  Dragon,  let  him  flap  The  wings  „     iv  1  245 

saw  thy  wiUy-nilly  nun  Vying  a  tress  against  our  g  fern.       „      v  1 149 

for  marriage,  rose  or  no  rose,  has  killed  the  g  violet.      Becket,  Pro.  351 

Gave  me  the  g  keys  of  Paradise. 

winter  after  summer,  and  the  g  leaves. 

Yea,  thou  my  g  dream  of  Love's  own  bower, 

out  of  the  eclipse  Narrowing  my  g  hour  ! 

Only  the  g  Leopard  printed  in  it  Such  hold-fast  claws 

these  g  slopes  Of  Solomon-shaming  flowers — 

The  g  ornaments  are  stolen  from  her — 

Come,  here  is  a  jr  chain  I  will  give  thee 

and  g  provinces  So  that  were  done  in  equity. 

And  roU  the  g  oceans  of  our  grain, 

and  lays  Our  g  grain,  and  rmis  to  sea  and  makes  it 

we  would  add  Some  g  fringe  of  gorgeousness  beyond 
Old  use, 

for  wasn't  my  lady  bom  with  a  g  spoon  in  her  ladyship's 
mouth,  and  we  haven't  never  so  much  as  a  silver  one 
for  the  g  lips  of  her  ladyship.  The  Falcon  401 

like  the  Moslem  beauties  waiting  To  clasp  their 

lovers  by  the  g  gates.  Prom,  of  May  i  248 

Will  enter  on  the  larger  g  age ;  „  1 590 

Who  can  tell  What  g  hours,  with  what  full  hands,  „  ii  509 

Flung  by  the  g  mantle  of  the  cloud.  Foresters  ii  i  28 

Goldenest    Less  than  a  star  among  the  g  hours  Of  Alfred,     Harold  iv  iii  51 
Goldsmiths  (Immanuel)    iSee  Inunanuel  Goldsmiths 
Goliasing    There  again,  G  and  Goliathising  ! 
Goliath    There  is  one  Come  as  G  came  of  yore — 
Goliathising    There  again,  Goliasing  and  G  I 
Gone     he  will  not  come  Till  she  be  g. 

The  Duke  hath  g  to  Leicester  ; 

had  g  over  to  him  With  all  his  men, 

tree  that  only  bears  dead  fruit  is  g. 

Hence,  let's  be  g.     Usher.    Well  that  you  be  not 
g,  My  Lord. 

The  civil  wars  are  g  for  evermore  : 

She  has  g,  Maid  Marian  to  her  Robin — 

should  her  love  when  you  are  g,  my  liege, 

Be  somewhat  pitiful,  after  I  have  g, 

G  narrowing  down  and  darkening  to  a  close. 

in  pursuing  heresy  1  have  g  beyond  your  late  Lord 
Chancellor, — 

G  beyond  him  and  mine  own  natural  man 

Philip  g  !     And  Calais  g  !     Time  that  I  were  g  too  ! 

Calais  g — Guisnes  g,  too — and  Philip  g  ! 

Charles,  the  lord  of  this  low  world,  is  g  ; 

but  after  I  am  g  Woe,  woe  to  England  ! 

— That  was  many  a  summer  g — 

thou  art  not  g  so  wild  But  thou  canst  hear 

Yea, — get  thee  g  ! 

My  friend,  thou  hast  g  too  far  to  palter  now. 

He  hath  g  to  kindle  Norway  against  England, 

Many  are  g — Drink  to  the  dead  who  died  for  us. 

Get  thee  g  !     He  means  the  thing  he  says. 

Over  and  g  with  the  roses,  (repeat) 

And  over  and  g  with  the  sun. 

Not  over  and  g  with  the  rose. 

I  more  than  once  have  g  against  the  Church. 

— a  chink — he's  out,  G  ! 

Hadst  thou  not  slgn'd,  I  had  g  along  with  thee  ; 

No  ill  befall  or  him  or  thee  when  I  Am  g. 

I  stay  myself — Puff — it  is  g. 

g  to  the  King  And  taken  our  anathema  with  him 

he  had  g  too  far  Into  the  King's  own  woods  ; 

Going  or  g  to-day  To  hunt  with  Sinnatus. 


Becket  in  iii  126 

Harold  v  1  493 

Becket  in  ill  127 

Queen  Mary  i  v  513 

n  1  4 

n  ii  28 

ml  19 

ni iv  385 

III  V  150 
in  V  155 

in  vi  173 

IV  ii  157 
IV  111  431 


V  11  ys 

V  ii  102 

V  ii  319 
vv22 

V  V  55 
Harold  1 1  189 

11254 

11299 

n  ii  117 

II 11  707 

m  1  79 

IV  iii  68 

vi83 

Becket,  Pro.  326,  333 

Pro.  327 

Pro.  344 

1129 

I  1261 

I  iii  522 

II  i  261 

n  ii  151 

vii6 

V  ii  107 
The  Cup  I  i  64 


Gone  (continued)     And  I  may  strike  your  game  when  you 

are  g.  The  Cup  i  ii  SI 

He  is  g  already.    Oh,  look, —  „      1 11 39S 

Just  g  To  fly  his  falcon.  The  Falcon  20£ 
Beant  Miss  Eva  gr  off  a  bit  of  'er  good  looks  o' 

laate  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  3S 

if  I  could  ha'  g  on  wi'  the  plowin'  „         1 37f 

After  all  that  has  g  between  us — friends  !  „         1 632 

All  that  has  g  between  us  Should  surely  make  us  friends.      „  i  63( 

He  has  g  to  London.  „         1 78( 

and  now  she  be  g,  will  ye  taake  'em,  Miss  Dora  ?  „          u  21 
who  came  to  us  three  years  after  you  were  g,  how 

should  she  know  you  ?  „       in  23S 

Pledge  the  Plantagenet,  Him  that  is  g.  Foresters  i  ii  I 

Now  that  the  sun  our  King  is  g,  „        i  ii  8i 

All  g  ! — my  ring — I  am  happy —  „         i  iii  1 

make  us  merry  Because  a  year  of  it  is  gr  ?  ,,       i  iii  l-' 

G,  and  it  may  be  g  for  evermore  !  ,,      n  i  15c 

G,  like  a  deer  that  hath  escaped  thine  arrow  !  „         iv  6( 

By  old  St.  Vitus  Have  you  g  mad  ?  „       iv  BK 

Where  be  they  g  to  ?  „       iv  62J 

Gonfanon     and  have  sent  him  back  A  holy  g,  Harold  iii  ii  14f 

g  of  Holy  Peter  Floating  above  their  helmets —  '„        v  i  .54{ 
Good     and  of  the  g  Lady  Jane  as  a  poor  innocent  child      Queen  Mary  i  i  94 

I  know  it,  my  g  Lord.  „          i  ii  9^ 

— and  now  that  your  g  bishop,  Bonner,  „         i  iii  34 

I  shall  fathom  him.     G  morning,  Noailles.  „       i  iii  15S 

G  now,  my  Lady  Queen,  tho'  by  your  age,  „         i  iv  13 

Folly,  my  g  Lord.  „         i  iv  8fJ 

Not  very  dangerous  that  way,  my  g  imcle.  „       i  iv  16" 

I  follow  your  g  counsel,  gracious  uncle.  „       i  iv  18f 

Do  they  say  so,  g  uncle  ?  „       i  iv  214 
Ay,  g  niece  !     You  should  be  plain  and  open  with  me,        „       i  iv  21fi 

No,  g  uncle.  „       i  iv  22(i 

to  have  the  wish  before  the  word  Is  man's  g  Fairy —  „       i  iv  24(^ 

But  my  g  mother  came  (God  rest  her  soul)  Of  Spain,  „          i  v  1] 

G  morning,  my  g  Lord.  „          i  v  9^ 

That  every  morning  of  your  Majesty  May  be  most  g,  „        i  v  M 

G,  then,  they  will  revolt :  but  I  am  Tudor,  „        i  v  174 

Bid  him  come  in.     G  morning,  Sir  de  Noailles.  „        i  v  241' 
and  your  g  master,  Pray  God  he  do  not  be  the  first 

to  break  them,  ,;        i  v  26i 

French,  I  must  needs  wish  all  g  things  for  France.  „        i  v  3(Xj 

G  Madam,  when  the  Roman  wish'd  to  reign,  „        i  v  491 

G  Lord  !  but  I  have  heard  a  thousand  such.  „        i  v  57^ 

Why,  g  Lord,  Write  you  as  many  sonnets  as  you  will.  „          il  i  9- 
By  God,  you  are  as  poor  a  poet,  Wyatt,  As  a  y  soldier.       „        ii  i  11  = 

that  g  helpless  creature,  starved,  maim'd,  flogg'd,  „        ii  i  20!' 

And  see  the  citizens  arm'd.     G  day  ;  g  day.  „       ii  ii  37b 

and  they  With  their  g  battleaxes  will  do  you  right  „       ii  iv  6ii 

G,  was  it  splendid  ?  „        m  J  * 
G  faith,  I  was  too  sorry  for  the  woman  To  mark  the 

dress.  »>        in  i  ^^ 

Wyatt  was  a  g  soldier,  yet  he  fail'd,  „      in  i  131 
Methinks  the  g  land  heard  me,  for  to-day  My  heart 

beats  twenty,  „       m  ii  5 

True,  g  cousin  Pole ;  ,.       m  ii^^ 
G  news  have  I  to  tell  you,  news  to  make  Both  of  us 

happy—  „     I"  ii  1* 

G  !     Well,  Madam,  this  new  happiness  of  mine  ?  „     m  ii  20 

G  sir,  for  this,  if  Philip—  „      m  iii  8: 

Why,  g  !  what  then  ?  granted  ! — we  are  fallen  _   ^ 

creatures;  ..      ^".  *^,i! 

And  tropes  are  g  to  clothe  a  naked  truth,  „    m  iv  19 
With  that  vile  Cranmer  in  the  accursed  lie  Oi  g 

Queen  Catharine's  divorce —  ,>    hi  iv  23 

Ha  !  (7  !  it  seems  then  I  was  summon'd  hither  „     ni  iv  -6 

But  this  most  noble  prince  Plantagenet,  Our  g  _ 

Queen's  coasin —  -.     "'  i^  ^ 

Upon  the  g  Queen's  mercy  ;  ay,  when,  my  Lord  ?  „      ni  v  lO'" 

Before  my  father  married  my  g  mother, —  „     m  v  24 

fi' morrow,  my  Lord  Cardinal ;  „         ^^■\t 

These  are  but  natural  graces,  my  g  Bishop,  „       iv  i  IV 

And  bad  mo  have  g  courage ;  »         '^..'V 

The  prison  fare  is  g  enough  for  me.  »       i^'  "  ' 


Good 


935 


Good 


j3ood  (continued)    Have  you  g  hopes  of  mercy  !     So, 
a  farewell. 

G  hopes,  not  theirs,  have  I  that  I  am  fixt,  Fixt 

beyond  fall ; 
G  day,  old  friend  ;  what,  you  look  somewhat  worn ; 
Weep  not,  g  Thirlby. 
G  people,  every  man  at  time  of  death  Would  fain 

set  forth 
But  do  you  g  to  all  As  much  as  in  you  lieth. 
Hear  him,  my  g  brethren. 
And  watch  a  g  man  bum. 
Out  Daisy's  as  g  'z  her. 
Oiu-  Daisy's  butter's  as  ^  'z  hem. 
for  a  g  pleace  at  the  bumin' ; 
I  wish  you  a  g  morning,  g  Sir  Nicholas  : 
So  far,  g.    I  say  I  came  to  sue  your  Council  and  yourself 
G,  now ;  methinks  my  Queen  is  like  enough  To 

leave  me  by  and  by. 
G  !     Renard,  I  will  stay  then. 
And  so  must  you,  g  cousin  ; — worse  than  all. 
What  said  you,  my  g  lord,  that  our  brave  English 
what  g  could  come  of  that  ? 
G  Lord  !  how  grim  and  ghastly  looks  her  Grace, 
But  by  God's  providence  a  g  stout  staff  Lay  near  me  ; 
He  is  my  g  friend,  and  I  would  keep  him  so  ; 
Ah,  g  neighbour,  "There  should  be  something  fierier 

than  fire 
G  night !     Go  home.     Besides,  you  curse  so  loud. 
Nay,  dearest  lady,  see  your  g  physician. 
G  counsel  yours — No  one  in  waiting  ?  still, 
How  is  the  g  Queen  now  ? 
Albeit  no  rolling  stone,  my  g  friend  Gamel, 
To-day,  g  Eari. 

Deeper  into  the  mysteries  of  heaven  Than  thou,  g  brother. 
What  Ues  upon  the  mind  of  our  g  king 
Like  the  rough  bear  beneath  the  tree,  g  brother, 
G  coimsel  truly  !     I  heard  from  my  Northumbria 

yesterday. 
Ay,  ever  give  yourselves  your  own  g  word. 
G  again  !  G  counsel  tho'  scarce  needed. 
I  have  to  make  report  of  my  g  earldom  To  the  g  king 

who  gave  it — 
Nay,  my  g  sister — 
Thou  shalt  flash  it  secretly  Among  the  g  Northumbrian 

folk, 
Help  the  g  ship,  showing  the  sunken  rock, 
G  !     But  lest  we  tum  the  scale  of  courtesy 
Tis  the  g  Count's  care  for  thee  ! 
Obey  the  Count's  conditions,  my  g  friend. 
our  g  King  Kneels  mumbUng  some  old  bone — 
But  thou  and  he  drove  our  g  Normans  out  From  England, 
Be  careful  of  thine  answer,  my  g  friend. 
G,  g,  and  thou  wilt  help  me  to  the  crown  ? 
O  brother.  By  all  the  truths  that  ever  priest  hath 

preach'd. 
Sign  it,  my  g  son  Harold,  Gurth,  and  Leofwin, 
and  those  Who  make  thy  g  their  own — 

0  g  son  !     That  knowledge  made  him  all  the  carefuller 

1  know  all  Sussex  ;  A  g  entrenchment  for  a  perilous  hour  ! 
Where  all  g  things  are  lost,  where  Tostig  lost  The  g 

hearts  of  his  people. 
G  even,  my  g  brother  !     Gurth.     G  even,  gentle 

Edith.     Edith.     G  even,  Gurth. 
The  G  Shepherd  !    Take  this,  and  render  that, 
when  our  g  hive  Needs  every  sting  to  save  it. 
So  the  g  king  would  deign  to  lend  an  ear  Not 

overscomful, 
With  g  will ;  Yes,  take  the  Sacrament  upon  it,  king. 
We  never — oh  !  g  Morcar,  speak  for  us. 
Evil  for  g,  it  seems,  Is  oft  as  childless  of  the  g  as  evil 

For  evil. 
G  for  g  hath  borne  at  times  A  bastard  false  as  William. 
I  will,  g  brother, 
perjury-mongering  Count  Hath  made  too  g  an  use  of 

Holy  Church 


Good  {continued)    Yea  so,  g  cheer  !  thou  art  Harold,  I  am 
Queen  Mary  iv  ii  8G  Edith  ! 

Lo  !  our  g  Gurth  hath  smitten  liim  to  the  death. 

IV  ii  88  Ay,  g  father. 

IV  ii  115  So  then  our  g  Archbishop  Theobald  Lies  dying. 
,        IV  ii  172  and  most  amorous  Of  g  old  red  sound  liberal  Gascon 

wine  : 
,      IV  iii  156  That  palate  is  insane  wliich  cannot  tell  A  g  dish  from 

,       IV  iii  186  a  bad, 

,       IV  iii  227  G  dogs,  my  liege,  well  train'd, 

IV  iii  293  My  g  liege,  if  a  man  Wastes  himself  among  women, 

,       IV  iii  479  but  Nolo  Archiepiscopari,  my  g  friend, 

,       IV  iii  481  My  liege,  the  g  Archbishop  is  no  more. 

,       IV  iii  489  The  g  old  man  would  sometimes  have  his  jest — 

,  v  i  13  Our  g  John  Must  speed  you  to  your  bower  at  once. 

,  V  i  113  What,  not  g  enough  Even  to  play  at  mm  ? 

G  night !  g  night ! 
,  V  i  241  Send  the  Great  Seal  by  daybreak.     Both,  g  night ! 

,  V  i  305  He  had  g  eyes  ! 

V  ii  39  G  ears  too  ! 

V  ii  254  Ay,  g  Madam  ! 
,          V  ii  309  And  with  g  reason  too, 

V  ii  389  And  was  thine  own  election  so  canonical,  G  father  ? 

V  ii  468  O  my  g  lord,  I  do  entreat  thee — sign. 

V  iii  91  Loyally  and  with  g  faith,  my  lord  Archbishop  ? 

0  ay,  with  all  that  loyalty  and  g  faith 

V  iv  24  G  royal  cousins — had  them  written  fair  For  John  of 

V  iv  61  Oxford 
V  V  59               Permit  me,  my  g  lord,  to  bear  it  for  thee, 

V  V  202  O  my  g  lord  Leicester,  The  King  and  I  were  brothers. 

V  V  229  Shall  God's  g  gifts  be  wasted  ? 
Harold  i  i  93  My  friends,  the  Archbishop  bids  you  g  night. 

„      I  i  106  Something  g,  or  thou  wouldst  not  give  it  me. 

„     I  i  201  Ay,  ay,  g  brother,  They  call  you  the  Monk-King. 

„     I  i  269  Come,  confess,  g  brother, 

„     I  i  328  O  g  son  Louis,  do  not  counsel  me, 

my  g  lord.  We  that  are  kings  are  something  in  this  world, 
„     I  i  330  Better  have  been  A  fisherman  at  Bosham,  my  g  Herbert, 

„     I  i  343  My  one  grain  of  g  counsel  which  you  will  not  swallow. 

„     I  i  375  Long  live  the  g  King  Louis  ! 

1  am  bound  For  that  one  hour  to  stay  with  g  King 
„     I  i  406  Louis, 
„     I  i  462              This  is  the  second  grain  of  g  counsel  I  ever  proffered 

thee, 
„    I  ii  220  I  am  the  fairy,  pretty  one,  a  g  fairy  to  thy  mother. 

„  II  ii  100  There  are  g  fairies  and  bad  fairies, 

„  II  ii  163  I  am  her  g  fairy.     Geoffrey.     But  you  don't  look  Uke 

„   II  ii  251  a  g  fairy. 

„   II  ii  276  And  leave  you  alone  with  the  g  fairy. 

„  II  ii  467  My  g  Fitzurse,  The  nmning  down  the  chase  is  kindlier 

„  II  ii  525  sport 

„  II  ii  605  that  our  g  Henry  Says  many  a  thing  in  sudden  heats, 

„  II  ii  613  when  I  strove  To  work  against  her  license  for  her  g, 

York  and  myself,  and  our  g  Salisbury  here, 
„    m  i  96  Yes  :  a  man  may  take  g  counsel  Ev'n  from  his  foe. 

n  ni  i  199  when  he  lets  his  whole  self  go  Lost  in  the  common  g, 

„  III  i  330  1  know  him  ;  our  g  John  of  Sahsbury. 

„  III  i  339  No,  daughter,  you  mistake  our  g  Archbishop  ; 

„  III  i  363  How  the  g  Archbishop  reddens  ! 

0  my  g  lord,  Speak  with  them  privately  on  this  hereafter. 
„    III  ii  28               G]  let  them  arm. 

My  two  g  friends,  What  matters  murder'd  here,  or 
„  m  ii  116  murder'd  there  ? 

„  m  ii  169  How  the  g  priest  gods  himself ! 

„     IV  i  17  ye  will  die  the  death  of  dogs  !  Nay,  nay,  g  Tracy. 

1  can  no  more — fight  out  the  g  fight — die  Conqueror. 
„    IV  i  135               may  even  drown  you  In  the  g  regard  of  Rome. 
„    IV  i  182              I  tell  thee,  my  g  fellow.  My  arrow  stmck  the  stag. 
„    IV  i  216              My  g  Lord  Sinnatus,  I  once  was  at  the  hunting  of  a  Uon. 

You,  Strato,  make  g  cheer  till  I  return. 
„     V  i  171  G  !     Camma.    If  I  be  not  back  in  half  an  hour,  Come 

„     V  i  174  after  me. 

„     V  i  199  Or  g,  or  wise,  that  you  should  clasp  a  hand 

6^ !  mine  own  dagger  driven  by  Synorix  found  All  j'  in 
»,     V  i  312  the  true  heart  of  Sinnatus, 


Harold  v  i  391 
„  V  i  502 
„      V  i  516 

Becket,  Pro.  1 

„    Pro.  100 

„  Pro.  106 
„  Pro.  119 
„  Pro.  136 
„  Pro.  286 
„  Pro.  392 
I  i  61 

I  i  290 

I  i  303 
„  I  i  313 
„       1 1406 

I  ii  38 
„        I  ii  44 

I  ii  90 

I  iii  58 
„  1  iii  122 
„  I  iii  185 
„  I  iii  278 
„     I  iii  281 

„  I  iii  415 
„  I  iii  490 
„  I  iii  660 
»  I  iv  71 
„  I iv  261 
„  n  i  233 
„       II  ii  72 

II  ii  82 
n  ii  219 
II  ii  244 
II  ii  292 
n  ii  378 
nii451 

m  iii  247 

m  iii  318 
ivi26 
IV  128 

IV  134 

IV  ii  61 

IV  ii  211 
IV  ii  275 

IV  ii  341 
vi56 
vii3 

vii40 
vii  77 

V  ii  138 
vii  298 

V  ii  418 
V  ii  571 


„     V  ii  629 

„    V  iii  148 

„    V  iii  185 

„    V  iii  189 

The  Cup  I  i  151 

Iii  27 

I  ii  115 

Iii  205 

1 11436 

n82 

II  85 


Good 


936 


Gorge 


Good  (continued)    And  drown  all  poor  self-passion  in  the 

sense  Of  public  g?  The  Cup  n  103 

Did  not  some  old  Greek  Say  death  was  the  chief  g?  „  ii  515 
G  mother,  happy  was  the  prodigal  son,                              The  Falcon  140 

And  yet  to  speak  white  truth,  my  g  old  mother,  „          504 

G  !  let  it  be  but  one.  „          511 

You  hear,  Filippo  ?    My  g  fellow,  go !  „          690 

I  have  anger'd  yovu"  g  nui-se ;  „          707 

*  I  should  be  weU  again  If  the  g  Count  would  give  me '  „          838 

Beant  Miss  Eva  gone  off  a  bit  of  'er  g  looks  o' 

laate  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  33 

G  day !  Wilson.  G  day,  sir.  „  1 294 
G  day,  then,  Dobson.    JDobson.    '  G  daay  then, 

Dobson ! '  „  1 299 
G  mumin',  neighbours,  and  the  saame  to  you,  my 

men.  „  1 317 
but  I  ha  taaen  g  care  to  turn  out  boath  my  darters 

right  down  fine  laadies.  „          1 335 

Coom,  coom,  that's  a  g  'un.  „          1 467 

G  wishes,  not  reproaches ;  „          1 526 

you  have  robb'd  poor  father  Of  ten  g  apples.  „          i  616 

You  had  better  attend  to  your  hayfield.    G  afternoon.  „         ii  123 

S«izzars  an'  Pumpy  was  g  uns  to  goa  (repeat)  „  ii  308, 318 

That  beer  be  as  ^  fur  'erses  as  men.  „         ii  315 

And  you  Seem  my  g  angel  who  may  help  me  from  it.  „         ii  388 

Now  am  I  Edgar,  my  g  fellow.  „         ii  701 

My  name  is  Harold !     G  day,  Dobbins !  „         ii  726 

Naay,  but '  G  daay,  Dobbins.'  „         ii  732 

'  G  daay,  Dobbins.'    Dang  tha !  „         n  741 

G  afternoon,  my  friends.  „         iii  20 

You  are  as  j  as  a  man  in  the  hayfield.  „        m  106 

and  the  man  has  doubtless  a  g  heart,  „        iii  171 

though  I  can  be  sorry  for  him — as  the  g  Sally  says,  „        iii  173 

Come,  come,  keep  a  g' heart !     Better  for  me" !     That's  gr.  „        iii  252 

and  tho'  you  are  g  and  gentle.  Yet  if  thro'  any  want—  „        ni  538 

G ;  then  what  is  it  That  makes  you  talk  so  dolefully  ?  „  in  571 
but  I  keep  a  g  heart  and  make  the  most  of  it.  Foresters  i  i  28 
he  hath  wasted  his  revenues  in  the  service  of  our  g  king 

Richard  „  i  i  194 
I  wish  you  and  your  ladyship's  father  a  most  exceedingly 

g  morning.  „       i  i  309 

God's  g  Angel  Help  him  back  hither,  „  i  ii  10 
myself  and  my  g  father  pray  Thy  thirtieth  summer  may 

"be  thirty-fold  „     i  ii  127 

G  Prince,  art  thou  in  need  of  any  gold  ?  „     i  ii  162 

O  g  Sir  Richard,  I  am  sorry  my  exchequer  runs  so  low  „  i  ii  271 
by  this  Holy  Cross  Which  g  King  Richard  gave  me  when 

a  child—  „     I  ii  310 

if  this  life  of  ours  Be  a  9  glad  thing,  „      i  iii  13 

There  be  g  fellows  there  in  merry  Sherwood  „      i  iii  98 

Not  now,  g  Much !     And  thou,  dear  Little  John,  „    i  iii  158 

O  my  g  lord,  I  am  but  an  angel  by  reflected  light.  „     11  i  107 

The  fool-people  call  her  a  witch — a  g  witch  to  me  !  „    11  i  179 

Quick,  y  mother,  quick  !  „     n  i  193 

He  was  a  forester  g;  ,,     11  i  319 

Take  him,  g  Little  John,  and  give  him  wine.  „     11  i  469 

Knight,  your  g  father  had  his  draught  of  wine  „       11  ii  1 

We  be  neither  bad  nor  g.  „  n  ii  119 

Why,  my  g  Robin  fancied  me  a  man,  „       m  19 

0  ^"Kate— If  my  man-Robin  were  but  a  bird-Robin,  „  iii  38 
Farewell,  g  fellows  !  „  m  87 
Art  thou  not  hard  upon  them,  my  g  Robin  ?  „  in  222 
G  !     Roll  it  in  here.  „     m  311 

1  believe  thee,  thou  art  a  g  fellow,  though  a  friar.  „  in  342 
Quiet,  g  Robin,  quiet !  „  iv  9 
G !  but  having  lived  For  twenty  days  and  nights  in  mail,  „  iv  122 
Thou  payest  easily,  like  a  g  fellow,  „  iv  156 
G,  g,  I  love  thee  for  that !  „  iv  173 
Up,  g  Much.  „  IV  284 
6',  now  I  love  thee  mightily,  thou  tall  fellow,  „  iv  321 
For  if  he  did  me  the  g  grace  to  kick  me  „  iv  1564 
My  g  friend  Robin,  Earl  of  Huntingdon,  For  Earl  thou 

art  again,  „     iv  828 

0  my  o  liege,  we  did  believe  you  dead.  „     iv  845 

1  thank  thee,  g  Sir  Richard.  „     iv  858 


Foresters  iv  876 

IV  950 

IV  968 

IV  980 

„     IV  1020 

„     IV  1031 


„      IV  1081 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  168 

Prom,  of  May  ii  227 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  95 

I  iii  160 

n  ii  378 

Prom,  of  May  1 294 

l299 

II  726 

Queen  Mary  I  v  7 

„      n  ii  345 


Good  [continued)     But  if  the  King  forbid  thy  manying 
With  Robin,  our  g  Earl  of  Huntingdon. 
I  trust  Half  tmths,  g  friar : 
The  king's  g  health  in  ale  and  Malvoisie. 

0  g  Sir  Richard,  I  am  like  the  man  In  Holy  Writ, ' 

1  am,  g  father,  I  am. 
Embrace  me,  Marian,  and  thou,  g  Kate,  Kiss  and 

congratulate  me,  my  g  Kate. 
You,  g  friar.  You  Much,  you  Scarlet,  you  dear  Little 
John, 

Good-bye     I'll  say  something  for  you — so — g-h. 
G-b.     James.     Gi'e  us  a  buss  fust,  lass. 

Good-day     (See  also  Good)     G-d,  my  Lord  of  Devon ; 
G-d,  my  Lord. 

And  see  the  citizens  arm'd.     G  d;  g  d. 
G  d  !     Wilson.    G  d,  sir. 
G  d,  then,  Dobson. 
Mj'  name  is  Harold  !    G  d,  Dobbins  ! 

Goodlier    and  yet,  methinks,  I  have  seen  g. 
Yet  she's  no  g ; 
brought  Thy  war  with  Brittany  to  a  g'  close  Than  else 

had  been,  Harold  n  ii  49 

as  brave  a  soldier  as  Henry  and  a  g  man :  Becket,  Pro.  437 

Goodlier-looking     A  g-l  fellow  than  this  Philip.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  3 

A  g-l  man  than  Sinnatas.  The  Cup  n  176 

Goodliest     That  makes  or  man  or  woman  look  their  g.  Queen  Mary  11  ii  330 

Goodly    Most  g,  Kinglike  and  an  Emperor's  son, —  „  i  v  2 

6'  enough,  your  Grace,  and  yet,  methinks,  I  have 

seen  goodlier.  „  i  v  5 

Peruse  it ;  is  it  not  g,  ay,  and  gentle  ?  „  i  v  195 

Ay,  true — a  g  one.     I  would  his  life  Were  half  as  y.        „  i  v  200 

I  have  never  seen  her  So  queenly  or  so  g.  „  11  ii  327 

And  all  men  cry.  She  is  queenly,  she  is  g.  „  11  ii  344 

Should  look  more  g  than  the  rest  of  us.  „  n  ii  349 

G  ?     I  feel  most  g  heart  and  hand,  „  11  ii  351 

says  she  will  live  And  die  true  maid — a  g  creature  too.     „  in  vi  46 

My  liege,  I  bring  j'ou  g  tidings.  „  v  i  279 

But  is  Don  Carlos  such  a  g  match  ?  „  v  iii  86 

Who  knows  what  sows  itself  among  the  people  ?     A  g 

flower  at  times.  Harold  iv  i  151 

G  news !     Morcar.     Doubt  it  not  thou  !  ,.      iv  i  219 

have  graspt  Her  livings,  her  advowsons,  granges,  farms. 

And  g  acres —  Becket  i  i  163 

Well — if  that  isn't  g  wine Beggar.     Then  there  isn't 

a  g  wench  to  serve  him  with  it :  „   i  iv  157 

the  g  way  of  women  Who  love,  for  which  I  love  them.  „    11  i  256 

O  bestial !     O  how  unlike  our  g  Sinnatus.  The  Cup  n  173 

True,  she  is  a  g  thing.  Foresters  n  ii  140 

There  was  a  man  of  ours  Up  in  the  north,  a  g  fellow  too,       „  iv  530 

Goodman     I  mean  your  g,  your  husband,  my  lady,  Becket  in  i  158 

Where  is  thy  g-m  ?  Foresters  n  i  370 

Good-night    G  n\    Go  home.     Besides,  you  curse  so 

loud.  Queen  Mary  v  iv  61 

G-n,  and  dream  thyself  Their  chosen  Earl.  Harold  1  ii  247 

Gn[  g  n\  Becket  1  i  313 

Both,  gn\  „      i  i  406 

My  friends,  the  Archbishop  bids  you  g  n.  „     i  iv  261 

Thou — coming  my  way  too — Gamma — g-n.  The  Cup  n  493 

Let  bygones  be  bygones.     Go  home  !     G-n  !  Prom,  of  May  in  157 

Goods     Confiscate  lands,  g,  money —  Queen  Mary  11  i  102 

To  make  free  spoil  and  havock  of  your  g.  „  11  ii  187 

thou  art  dispossessed  of  all  thy  lands,  g,  and  chattels ;  Foresters  i  iii  60 
Sheriff  had  taken  all  our  g  for  the  King  without  paying,      „       n  i  190 

Goodwill     If  but  to  prove  your  Majesty's  g,  Queen  Mary  i  v  260 

"       ■     ~  ■  //aro/d  IV  i  182 


With  g  w  ;  Yea,  take  the  Sacrament  upon  it, 
is  it  then  with  thy  g  that  I  Proceed  against  thine  evil 
comicillors, 
Goose     father's  eye  was  so  tender  it  would  have  called  a  g 
off  the  green. 
Venison,  and  wild  boar,  hare,  geese. 
Geese,  man !  for  how  canst  thou  be  allied  With  John, 
and  serve  King  Richard  save  thou  be  A  traitor  or  a  ^  ? 
Goosewing     By  arrow  and  gray  g. 
Gorge    (See  also  Side-gorge)    not  like  thine  To  g  a 

heretic  whole,  Queen  Mary  m  iv  344 


Becket  ni  iii  207 

„      ni  iii  102 
Foresters  iv  191 


IV  349 
in  427 


-ii 


Gorgeous 

I  Gorgeous     the  g  Indian  sliawl  That  Phih'p  brought 
1  me  in  our  happy  days  ! — 

'  Go^eousness    Some  golden  fringe  of  g  beyond 
:  Gospeller    and  the  Hot  Cl's  will  go  mad  upon  it. 

Yon  gray  old  G,  sour  as  midwinter, 

Not  dream'd  of  by  the  rabidest  g. 

there  be  two  old  gossips — g's,  I  take  it ; 

There  are  Hot  G's  even  among  our  guards — 


937 


Gracious 


Queen  Mary  v  ii  538 

The  Cup  II  438 

Queen  Mary  i  i  115 

I  iii  40 

„       III  vi  138 

IV  iii  460 

V  V  102 


Gossamer    Were  you  in  Spain,  this  fine  fair  g  gold —  „  v  iii  48 

Gossip     Hist !  there  be  two  old  g's — gospellers,  „       iv  iii  460 

Gossiping    with  no  fear  Of  the  world's  g  clamour,  Prom,  of  May  i  528 

Got    And  I  g'  it.     I  woke  Sir  Henry —  Queen  Mary  iii  v  59 

J         afoor  I  coomed  up  he  g  thruff  the  winder  agean. 

I  Eva.     G  thro'  the  window  again  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  405 

I         Then  she  ^  me  a  place  as  nursery  governess,  „  iii  385 

Gothic     Some  few  of  G  blood  have  golden  hair,  Queen  Mary  v  iii  60 

Gotten    (3wd  Steer's  g  all  his  grass  down  and  wants  a 

hand.  Prom,  of  May  ii  221 

The  beer's  g  oop  into  my  'ead,  „  ii  320 

Gout    small  hope  of  the  gentleman  g  in  my  great  toe.  The  Falcon  657 

'  I  hope  your  Lordship  is  quite  recovered  of 

your  g  ?  '  Prom,  of  May  iii  309 

Rogue,  I  am  full  of  g.     I  cannot  dance.  Foresters  iv  562 

Sweat  out  your  g,  friend,  for  by  my  life,  „         iv  565 

Govom     Whose  ministers  they  be  to  </  you.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  180 

Ye  g  milder  men.  Harold  i  i  339 

Ctovemance     Against  thy  brother  Tostig's  g;  „     ii  ii  290 

We  have  heard  Of  thy  just,  mild,  and  equal  g ;  »     ii  ii  690 

Grovemess     Then  she  got  me  a  place  as  a  nursery  g,      Prom,  of  May  in  385 

Grovemment     We  have  made  them  milder  by  just  g.  Harold  i  i  341 

and  by  the  advice  of  his  G.'  Becket  i  iii  113 

jown     Disguise  me — thy  g  and  thy  coif.  Foresters  ii  i  186 

Ay,  ay,  g,  coif,  and  petticoat,  „        ii  i  194 

jraay  (gray)     Wi'  the  briar  sa  green,  an'  the  wilier 

sa  g.  Prom,  of  May  ii  187 

jrace  (s)     (See  also  Herb-of-grace)     God  save  her  G ;        Queen  Mary  i  i  67 

whether  her  G  incline  to  this  splendid  scion  of 

Plantagenet.  „         i  i  134 

i        The  Queen  would  see  your  G  upon  the  moment.  „       i  iv  222 

Your  G  will  hear  her  reasons  from  herself.  „       i  iv  230 

Whereof  'tis  like  enough  she  means  to  make  A  farewell 

present  to  your  G.  „       i  iv  245 

Goodly  enough,  your  G,  and  yet,  methinks,  I  have  seen 

goodlier.  „  i  v  5 

By  your  G's  leave  Your  royal  mother  came  of  Spain,  „  i  v  15 

I  cannot,  and  I  dare  not,  tell  your  G  What  Lady  Jane 

replied.  ,,  i  v  49 

• — a  head  So  full  of  g  and  beauty  !  „  i  v  64 

I  say  your  G  is  loved.  „        i  v  131 

I  am  all  thanks  To  God  and  to  your  G:  „        i  v  186 

Hath  your  G  so  sworn  ?  „        i  v  217 

In  some  such  form  as  least  may  hann  your  G.  „        i  v  226 

your  G  And  kingdom  will  be  suck'd  into  the  war,  „        i  v  256 

Nay,  pure  phantasy,  your  G.  „         i  v  280 

but  I  protest  Your  G's  policy  hath  a  farther  flight  „        i  v  312 

Who  waits  ?    Usher.    The  Ambassador  of  Spain,  your  G.    „        i  v  343 
Nay,  your  G,  it  hath  not  reach'd  me.  „        i  v  351 

You  are  happy  in  him  there.  Chaste  as  your  G\  „         i  v  456 

What  slandere  ?    I,  your  G ;  no,  never.    Mary.    Nothing  ? 

Alice.     Never,  your  G.  „        i  v  572 

I  scarce  had  left  your  G's  presence  „        i  v  583 

must  we  levy  war  against  the  Queen's  G  ?  Wyatt.  No, 
mv  friend,  war  for  the  Queen's  G — to  save  her  from 
herself  and  Philip—  ,,        n  i  187 

When  willher  G  be  here  ?  „         ii  ii  13 

Here  comes  her  Royal  G.  ,,       ii  ii  126 

But  that  with  God's  G,  I  can  live  so  still.  „       ii  ii  219 

but  we  can  save  your  G.    The  river  still  is  free.  „       ii  iv  24 

No,  no,  your  G ;  see  there  the  arrows  flying.  „        ii  iv  50 

The  porter,  please  your  G,  hath  shut  the  gates  On  friend 
and  foe.  Your  gentlemen-at-arms,  If  this  be  not  your 
G's  order,  ,.       « iv  61 

I  do  not  love  your  G  should  call  me  coward.    Messenger. 

Over,  your  G,  all  crush'd ;  „        ii  iv  88 

God  save  their  G's.  (repeat).  Queen  Mary  in  i  178,  187,  343,  413 


Grace  (s)  (continued)     Seventeen — a  rose  of  g  !  Queen  Mary  in  i  371 

Their  G's,  our  di^races !     God  confound  them  !  „  in  i  415 

Farewell,  your  G's. 
Mine  echoes  both  your  G's' ; 
Lo  !  once  again  God  to  this  realm  hath  given  A  token 

of  His  more  especial  G ; 
G  to  repent  and  Gorvow  for  their  schism ; 
their  two  G's  Do  ^  dear-cousin  and  royal-cousin  him, 
Why  do  they  keep  us  here  ?    Why  still  suspect  j'our  G  ? 
And  witness  to  your  G's  innocence, 
Before  I  dare  to  glance  upon  your  G. 
See,  I  lay  it  here,  For  1  will  come  no  nearer  to  your  G ; 
And  God  hath  given  your  G  a  nose,  or  not, 

0  Lord  !  your  G,  your  G, 
And  had  your  G  a  Robin  ? 
A  ^  to  me  !     Mercy,  that  herb-of-grace, 
when  last  he  wrote,  declared  His  comfort  in  your  G 
Your  G  hath  a  most  chaste  and  loving  wife. 
Your  G's  business  will  not  suffer,  sire, 
Crave,  in  the  same  cause,  hearing  of  your  G. 
Health  to  your  G  !    Good  morrow,  my  Lord  Cardinal ; 

We  make  our  humble  prayer  unto  your  G 
Ay,  ay,  your  G ;  but  it  was  never  seen  That  any  one 

recanting  thus  at  full, 
These  are  but  natural  g's,  my  good  Bishop, 
After  this,  Your  G  will  hardly  care  to  overlook 
By  Heaven's  g,  I  am  more  and  more  confirm'd. 
Sire,  if  your  G  hath  mark'd  it,  so  have  I. 
That  if  your  G  hath  mark'd  her,  so  have  I. 
and  your  G,  So  you  will  take  advice  of  mine. 
Your  G  hath  been  More  merciful  to  many  a  rebel  head 
what  sin  Beyond  all  g,  all  pardon  ? 
Your  G  hath  a  low  voice. 

Good  Lord  !  how  grim  and  ghastly  looks  her  G, 
Ay,  so  your  G  would  bide  a  moment  yet. 

1  trust  your  G  is  well. 

But  shall  I  take  some  message  from  your  G  ? 
Then  I  may  say  your  G  will  see  your  sister  ?    Your 

G  is  too  low-spirited. 

But  as  to  Philip  and  your  G — consitler, — 

I  gather'd  from  the  Queen  That  she  would  see  your 
G  before  she — died. 

Poor  enough  in  God's  g  ! 

I  will,  if  that  May  make  your  G  forget  yourself  a  little. 

by  God's  g,  We'll  follow  Philip's  leading, 

I  never  spied  in  thee  one  gleam  of  g. 

Is  strength  less  strong  when  hand-in-hand  with  g  ? 

and  '  your  G '  are  all  growing  old-fashioned  Prom,  of  May  in  318 

So  winsome  in  her  g  and  gaiety,  „  in  754 

Nay,  an  please  your  Elfin  G,  Foresters  n  ii  132 

For  if  he  did  me  the  good  g  to  kick  me  „  iv  364 

Not  now,  not  now — with  after-dinner  g.  „  iv  938 

Grace  (verb)     To  g  his  memory.  Queen  Mary  n  i  31 

My  cottage,  while  you  g  it,  is  a  palace.  The  Falcon  288 

thy  father  will  not  g  our  feast  With  his  white  beard 

to-day.  Foresters  iv  80 

Graced    Much  g  are  we  that  our  Queen  Rome  in  you  The  Cup  n  335 

Graceless     That  were  a  g  hospitality  To  chain  the  free  quest  Harold  n  ii  192 
Gracious    seeing  that  our  g  Virgin  Queen  hath —  Queen  Mary  i  iii  23 

— and  since  our  G  Queen,  let  me  call  her  our  second 
Virgin  Mary, 

But  does  your  g  Queen  entreat  you  kinglike  ? 

I  follow  your  good  counsel,  g  uncle. 

would  that  mine  Were  half  as  g  1 

A  g  guard  Truly ;  shame  on  them  !  they  have  shut  the 
gates  ! 

That  by  your  g  means  and  intercession 

and  there  watch  All  that  is  g  in  the  breath  of  heaven 

O,  Madam,  if  you  knew  him  As  I  do,  ever  gentle,  and  so  g, 

Such  weeds  make  dunghills  g. 

He  had  his  g  moment,  Altho'  you'll  not  believe  me. 

A  gentle,  g,  pure,  and  saintly  man  ! 

Well,  well,  we  will  be  gentle  with  him,  g — Most  g. 

will  not  your  Holiness  Vouchsafe  a  g  answer  to  your 
Queen  ?  „     iv  ii  359 


in  ii  146 
in  iii  96 

III  iii  170 
in  iii  177 
in  iv  398 

III  V  17 
in  V  50 

m  V  186 
m  v200 
in  V  203 
in  V  248 
ni  V  273 
in  vi  9 
in  vi  79 
in  vi  129 
in  vi  244 

IV  i  9 

IV  i  41 

IV  i  57 

IV  i  176 
IV  i  192 

IV  ii  21 
vi231 
vi239 
vi300 

V  ii  4 
v  ii  340 

V  ii  378 

V  ii  390 

V  ii  546 

V  ii  551 

V  11597 

vii603 

V  iii  64 

V  iii  104 

v  v50 

v  v81 

will 

Becket  v  ii  474 

„      v  ii  541 


I  iii  56 
I  iii  109 

I  iv  186 
IV  66 

II  iv  56 
ni  iii  121 
III  vi  224 

IV  i  156 
IV  i  182 
V  v37 
Harold  n  ii  584 
Becket  n  ii  129 


Gracions 


938 


Great 


Gracious  (continued)    So  g  toward  women,  never  yet  Flung 

back  a  woman's  prayer.  The  Cup  i  ii  299 

And  be  you  G  enough  to  let  me  know  the  boon  The  Falcon  765 

It  will  be  all  the  more  g  of  her  if  she  do.  Foresters  i  i  175 

Grafted     And  g  on  the  hard-grain'd  stock  of  Spain —  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  426 
Grain  (com)     And  roll  the  golden  oceans  of  our  g.  The  Cup  ii  269 

strows  our  fruits,  and  lays  Our  golden  g,  „        ii  287 

and  why  ye  have  so  few  g's  to  peck  at.  Foresters  i  i  77 

Grain  (particle)    My  one  g  of  good  counsel  which  you  will 
not  swallow. 

second  g  of  good  counsel  I  ever  proffered  thee, 
Grain'd    See  Hard-grain'd 
Gramercy    G  for  thy  preachment ! 
Granada    G,  Naples,  Sicily,  and  Milan, — 
Grand     a  thousand  times  Fitter  for  this  g  function. 
Grandfather    My  g — of  him  They  say,  that  women- 

my  great  great  great  g,  my  great  great  g,  my  great  g, 
my  g,  and  my  own  father — ■ 
Grandsire    Lost  in  desuetude,  of  my  g's  day — 

His  g  struck  my  gr  in  a  brawl  At  Florence,  and  my  g 
stabb'd 
Grandson    only  g  To  Wulfnoth,  a  poor  cow-herd. 

cottage  of  yours  where  your  g  had  the  fever. 
Grange    her  advowsons,  g's,  farms,  And  goodly  acres 
Granny    G  says  marriages  be  maade  i'  'eaven. 
Grant    I  wrote  it,  and  God  g  me  power  to  burn ! 

g  me  my  prayer :  Give  me  my  Philip ; 

Sir  Thomas,  we  may  g  the  wine. 

Is  now  content  to  g  you  full  forgiveness, 

God  g  it  last.  And  witness  to  your  Grace's  innocence, 

God  g  your  ampler  mercy  at  your  call 

God  g  me  grace  to  glorify  my  God  ! 

If  ever,  as  heaven  g,  we  clash  with  Spain, 

By  loss  of  Calais.     G  me  Calais. 

Have  you  found  mercy  there,  G  it  me  here : 

So  that  you  g  me  one  slight  favour. 

we  g  when  kings  are  dangerous  The  Church  must  play 

he  would  g  thee  The  crown  itself. 

G  me  one  day  To  ponder  these  demands. 

May  God  g  No  ill  befall  or  him  or  thee 

we  g  the  Church  King  over  this  world's  kings. 


Becket  ii  ii  378 
„    in  iii  317 

Foresters  iv  397 

Queen  Mary  v  i  44 

Becket,  Pro.  293 

Prom,  of  May  ii  271 

Foresters  i  i  329 
Becket  i  iii  413 

The  Falcon  250 

Harold  iv  i  69 

Prom,  of  May  in  44 

—  Becket  i  i  161 

Prom,  of  May  in  709 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  98 

IV  85 

II 140 

,      III  iv  389 

,         III  V  49 

IV  i  189 
,  IV  iii  166 
,      IV  iii  346 

V  ii  305 
,  V  V  145 
Becket  i  ii  58 

„  I  ii  67 
„  I  iii  29 
„  I  iii  667 
„  II  i  259 
„   iiii241 


God  and  his  free  wind  g  your  lordship  a  happy  home-return  „  in  iii  327 

By  granting  which,  if  aught  be  mine  to  g.  The  Falcon  768 

Then  they  would  g  you  what  they  call  a  licence  Prom,  of  May  i  694 

Granted     Old  Sir  Thomas  always  g  the  wine.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  42 

Why,  good !  what  then ?  g] —  „        in  iv  78 

It  shall  be  g  him,  my  king ;  Harold  in  i  227 

Granting     let  me  know  the  boon  By  g  which,  The  Falcon  767 

Grape    These  g's  are  for  the  house  of  Sinnatus —  The  Cup  i  i  51 

may  this  mouth  Never  suck  g  again.  Foresters  iv  394 

Grape-bunches    sway  the  long  g-b  of  our  vines,  The  Cup  n  270 

Grapple    stand  beside  thee  One  who  might  g  with  thy 

dagger,  Becket  iv  ii  230 

He  would  g  with  a  lion  like  the  King,  Foresters  i  i  185 

Grappling    and  the  mitre  G  the  crown —  Becket  ii  i  27 

Grasp  (s)     in  his  ^  a  sword  Of  lightnings,  Harold  in  i  136 

Why,  what  a  cold  g  is  thine —  Foresters  i  ii  242 

Grasp  (verb)    should  have  a  hand  To  g  the  world  with,  Harold  v  ii  192 

Graspt    have  g  Her  livings,  her  advowsons,  Becket  i  i  160 

Grass     balmy  wind  to  robe  our  hills  with  g,  The  Cup  n  266 

she  had  thrown  my  chaplet  on  the  g,  The  Falcon  369 

Had  she  not  thrown  my  chaplet  on  the  g,  „          378 

if  you'd  like  to  measure  your  own  length  upon  the  g.  Prom,  of  May  1 466 

Owd  Steer's  gotten  all  his  g  down  and  wants  a  hand,  „          n  221 

Grasshopper    G,  g,  Whoop — you  can  hear.  Becket  iii  i  102 

Grateful     All  the  church  is  g.  Queen  Mary  i  v  179 

Most  loyal  and  most  g  to  the  Queen.  „          v  iii  25 

You  should  be  g  to  my  master,  too.  „          v  iii  27 

And  g  to  the  hand  that  shielded  him,  Harold  n  ii  586 

— am  g  for  thine  honest  oath,  „       ii  ii  755 

For  which  she  should  be  duly  g.  Becket  i  ii  74 

I  should  be  g — He  hath  not  excommunicated  me.  „    v  ii  470 

f  that  I  show'd  her  The  weakness  The  Cup  i  i  21 

iind  the  Goddess,  being  For  this  most  g,  „       ii  349 

That  one,  then,  should  be  g  for  your  preference.  Prom,  of  May  u  556 


Grateful  (continued)    one  that  should  be  g  to  me  overseas, 

a  Count  in  Brittany —  Foresters  i  i  270 

so  you  would  make  it  two  I  should  be  g.  „        in  195 
Gratefully    0  Dora,  he  signed  himself  '  Yours  g ' — 

fancy,  Dora,  '  ^ ' !     '  Yours  g ' !  Prom,  of  May  iii  334 

Gratefulness     If  ever  man  by  bonds  of  g —  Becket  i  iii  435 

Gratia     Ave  Maria,  g  plena,  Benedicta  tu  in  mulieribus.    Queen  Mary  in  ii  1 

Grating    Close  to  the  gi  on  a  winter  morn  The  Falcon  441 

Gratior     G  in  pulchro  corpore  virtus.  Becket  v  ii  542 

Grave  (adj.)     look'd  As  grim  and  g  as  from  a  funeral.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  65 

We  fought  like  great  states  for  g  cause ;  Harold  i  i  440 

Grave  (s)     Dug  from  the  g  that  yawns  for  us  beyond ;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  163 

A  low  voice  from  the  dust  and  from  the  g  „           v  ii  386 

And  wear  my  crown,  and  dance  upon  my  g.  „           v  ii  602 

I'll  fight  it  on  the  threshold  of  the  g.  „           v  v  190 

With  dead  men  upright  from  their  g's,  Harold  i  ii  83 

And  thou  art  upright  in  thy  living  g,  „   n  ii  440 

Corpse-candles  gliding  over  nameless  g's —  „  in  i  382 

I  give  my  voice  against  thee  from  the  g —  „     v  i  255 

He  commends  me  now  From  out  his  g  Becket,  Pro.  420 

And  I  shall  live  to  trample  on  thy  g.  „           i  ii  95 

spire  of  Holy  Church  may  prick  the  g's —  „        i  iii  554 

0  devil,  can  I  free  her  from  the  g?  „          v  i  186 

1  should  seem  to  be  dancing  upon  a  g.  Prom,  of  May  i  431 
And  he  would  hear  you  even  from  the  g.  „  i  763 
I  told  her  I  should  hear  her  from  the  g.  „  ii  245 
To  see  her  g  ?  her  ghost  ?  „  n  352 
as  they  call  it  so  truly,  to  the  g  at  the  bottom,  „  in  193 
O  g's  in  daisies  drest,  „         in  204 


in  235 
III  515 

Foresters  n  i  47 

Becket  ni  iii  73 


I  iii  40 
ni49 

ni243 

H  iii  16 

III  V  164 

v  ii  234 


But  now  that  you  have  been  brought  to  us  as  it  were 

from  the  g, 
to  the  g  he  goes  to.  Beneath  the  burthen  of  years, 
stillness  in  the  g  By  the  last  trumpet. 
Gravedigger    like  the  g's  child  I  have  heard  of,  trying  to 

ring  the  bell, 

Graveness     Had  put  off  levity  and  put  g  on.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  510 

Gray    {See  also  Graay)    Yon  g  old  Gospeller,  sour  as 

midwinter, 
he  loved  the  more  His  own  g  towers. 
Ah,  g  old  castle  of  Alington,  green  field  Beside  the 

brimming  Medway, 
And  scared  the  g  old  porter  and  his  wife. 
The  g  rogue,  Gardiner,  Went  on  his  knees, 
And  the  g  dawn  Of  an  old  age  that  never  will  be  mine 
and  dumb'd  his  carrion  croak  From  the  g  sea  for  ever.  Harold  iv  iii  67 
the  green  field — the  g  church —  Becket  ii  ii  296 

He  will  pass  to-morrow  In  the  g  dawn  before  the 

Temple  doors.  The  Cup  i  ii  295 

I  rise  to-morrow  In  the  g  dawn,  and  take  this  holy  cup         „       i  ii  434 

And  g  before  his  time  as  thou  art,  Much.  Foresters  i  iii  149 

By  arrow  and  g  goosewing,  „  in  427 

Grayhound    My  g's  fleeting  like  a  beam  of  light,  Harold  i  ii  129 

Graze     would  not  g  The  Prince  of  Spain.  Queen  Mary  i  v  453 

Grazing     Our  horses  g  by  us,  when  a  troop.  The  Falcon  611 

Greasy    so  g,  and  smell  so  vilely  that  my  Lady  Marian  Foresters  i  i  82 

that  very  word  '  g '  hath  a  kind  of  unction  in  it,  „         i  i  86 

Great     Was  she  not  betroth'd  in  her  babyhood  to  the  G 

Emperor  himself  ?  Queen  Mary  i  i  118 

How  folly  ?  a,  g  party  in  the  state  Wills  me  to  wed 

her. 
Doth  not  as  9  a  party  in  the  state  Will  you  to  wed  me  ? 
Is  no  g  party  in  the  state  as  yet. 
G,  said  you  ?  nay,  you  shall  be  g.     I  love  you, 
I  have  felt  within  me  Stirrings  of  some  g  doom  when 

God's  just  hour  Peals — 
Let  the  g  angel  of  the  church  come  with  him ; 
Spain  in  all  the  g  offices  of  state ; 
were  to  do  G  things,  my  Lord, 
and  round  his  knee,  misplaced.  Our  English  Garter, 

studded  with  g  emeralds, 
where  you  gave  your  hand  To  this  g  Catholic  King. 
The  g  unborn  defender  of  the  Faith, 
Ay,  sir ;  Inherit  the  G  Silence. 
Saying,  O  Lord  God,  although  my  sins  be  g,  For  thy 

g  mercy  have  mercy  I 


I  iv  91 

iiv95 

iivl02 

livlOS 

I  iv  261 
IV  377 
n  i  178 

II  ii  390 

in  184 

III  ii  92 
m  ii  165 
in  ii  199 

IV  iii  136 


Oreat 


989 


Oreat  (continued)     when  tlioii  becamest  Man  in  the 

Fl^b,  was  the  g  mystery  wrought ;  Oueen  Marv  iv  iii  1 41 

now  I  come  to  the  ;,  cause  that  weighs  Upon  mv  ^ 

conscience 
he  look'd  the  G  Harry,  You  but  his  cockboat  • 
May  the  g  angels  join  their  wings,  and  make 
I  never  look'd  upon  so  fair  a  likeness  As  your  g 

King  in  armour  there, 
— we  will  make  England  g. 
Thou  art  a  g  voice  in  Northumberland  ! 
I  have  builded  the  g  church  of  Holy  Peter : 
We  fought  like  g  states  for  grave  cause ;  but  Tostig— 
Haul  like  a  g  strong  fellow  at  my  legs, 
Let  the  g  Devil  fish  for  vour  own  soul's. 
and  our  ^  Count-crab  will  make  his  nippers  meet  in  thine 

But  there  the  g  Assembly  choose  their  king. 

And  I  will  make  thee  my  g  Earl  of  Earls 

Am  I  Harold,  Harold,  son  Of  our  g  Godwin  ? 

Then  our  g  Council  wait  to  crown  thee  King— 

thy  patriot  passion  Siding  with  our  g  Coimcil  against 

Then  a  g  Angel  past  along  the  highest  Crying 

the  gr  Angel  rose  And  past  again  along  the  highest  crying 

And  our  g  Council  wait  to  crown  thee  King. 

Let  not  our  g  king  Believe  us  sullen — 

Not  made  but  bom,  like  the  g  king  of  all, 

for  mine  own  father  Was  g,  and  cobbled. 

he  fain  Had  made  her  g : 

Then  in  the  name  of  the  g  God,  so  be  it ! 

Is  there  so  y  a  need  to  tell  the  why  ? 

Of  Alfred,  or  of  Edward  his  g  son. 

Were  the  g  trumpet  blowing  doomsday  dawn, 

There  the  g  God  of  truth  Fill  all  thine  hours  with  peace  ! 

A  g  and  sound  policy  that : 

and  chosen  me  For  this  thy  g  archbishoprick, 

0  thou  G  Seal  of  England, 

Let  the  G  Seal  be  sent  Back  to  the  King  to-morrow. 

Send  the  G  Seal  by  daybreak.     Both,  good  night ' 

Thy  sending  back  the  G  Seal  madden'd  him, 

Did  not  G  Gregory  bid  St.  Austin  here  Found  two 
archbishopricks. 

Flung  the  G  Seal  of  England  in  my  face— 

I,  bearing  this  g  ensign,  make  it  clear  Under  what 

Prince  I  fight. 
where  our  bishops  And  our  g  lords  will  sit  in  judgment 

on  him. 
King  Would  throne  me  in  the  g  Archbishoprick : 
Our  Lord  Becket's  our  g  sitting-hen  cock, 
He  hath  retired  to  rest,  and  being  in  g  jeopardy  of  his  life, 
God  bless  the  g  Archbishop  ! 

And  on  a  y  occasion  sure  to  wake  As  g'  a  wrath  in  Becket — 
and  he  told  me  he  would  advance  me  to  the  service  of 

a  g  lady, 
and  gave  me  a  g  pat  o'  the  cheek  for  a  pretty  wench, 
for  there  were  g  ones  who  would  look  after  me,  and  to 

be  sure  I  ha'  seen  g  ones  to-day — 
she  sits  naked  by  a  gr  heap  of  gold  in  the  middle  of  the 

wood, 
These  are  by-things  In  the  g  cause, 
hidden  by-ways  of  the  world  In  the  g  day  against  the 

wronger. 
Do  you  see  that  g  black  cloud  that  hath  come  over  the 

sun 
and  to  read  the  faces  of  men  at  a  ^  shoM'. 
'g  honour,'  says  he,  'from  the  King's  self  to  the  King's 

son.' 
there  was  a  g  motion  of  laughter  among  us. 
The  spouse  of  the  G  King,  thy  King,  hath  fallen- 
Is  not  virtue  prized  mainly  for  its  rarity  and  g  baseness 
I  saw  the  ball  you  lost  in  the  fork  of  the  g  willow  over 

the  brook, 
there  is  g  wrong  done  Somehow  ; 
Our  g  High-priest,  will  not  your  Holiness  Vouchsafe 
Mother,  you  told  me  a  ^  fib :  it  wasn't  in  the  willow. 


Green 


IV  iii  237 

V  ii  146 
»            V  iv  6 

„  V  V  29 

vv  282 

Harold  i  i  114 
„  I  i  179 
„       I  i  440 

II  i  11 
II 132 

II 175 
II  ii  126 
n  ii  629 

II  ii  793 

III  13 

III  i  59 

III  i  133 
III  i  154 

III  i  406 

IV  i  6 

IV  185 
IV  191 

IV  i  203 
IV  i  240 
IV  iii  39 
IV  iii  52 

vi227 

V  i  314 
Becket,  Pro.  451 

1 191 
11336 
ii374 
11405 

I  iii  9 

I  iii  48 
I  iii  456 

I  iii  544 

I  iii  549 
I  iii  694 
I  iv  125 

I  iv  263 

II  ii  452 
III  i  87 

HI  i  124 
in  i  125 

III  i  135 

III  ii  21 
III  iii  12 

III  iii  17 

III  iii  45 
III  iii  83 

HI  iii  144 
HI  iii  154 
III  iii  175 
III  iii  304 


Becket  v  ii  496 
„  V  ii  530 
„       V  ii  585 

V  iii  29 

V  iii  43 
„  V  iii  137 
„      V  iii  194 


IV  ii  57 

IV  ii  93 

IV  ii  357 

IV  ii  370 


Great  (continued)     to  people  heaven  in  the  g  day  When 
God  makes  up  his  jewels. 
Close  the  g  gate— ho,  there— upon  the  town- 
Do  they  not  fight  the  G  Fiend  day  by  day  ? 
Here  is  the  g  Archbishop  !     He  lives  !  he  lives  ! 
And  the  g  deeps  were  broken  up  again 
Was  not  the  y  gate  shut  ? 

At  the  right  hand  of  Power— Power  and  g  glory- 
have  we  still'd  him  ?     What !  the  g  Archbishop  ' 

Does  he  breathe  ?                                               ^ '  -  j  oao 

himself  an  adorer  of  our  g  goddess,  Artemis,  The  Cuv  i  i  38 
And  that  g  break  of  precipice  that  runs  Thro'  all  the  wood,     „        i  ii  21 

A  sacred  cup  saved  from  a  blazing  shrine  Of  our  g  Goddess.  i  ii  56 

I  love  you— for  your  love  to  the  g  Goddess,  i  ii  21 8 

lou  have  beauty,— O  g  beauty,— and  Antonius,  "       r ;;  oq? 

At  times  this  oracle  of  g  Artemis  Has  no  more  power  "          n  -i^ 

G  Artemis !     O  Camma,  can  it  be  well,  "           i"  on 

g  Goddess  whose  storm-voice  Unsockets  the  strong  oak  "         n  281 

She  would  have  robb'd  me  then  of  a  ^  pleasure.  The  Falcon  65 

but  this  day  has  brought  A  g  occasion.  a^ 

and  profess  to  be  g  in  green  things  and  in  garden-stuff  "          551 

xx"u      .u^^T^^^^P^o^^^eg^it-lemangoutinmyotoe.         "  657 
\V  hen  the  ^Democracy  Makes  a  new  world-           From,  of  May  i  670 

1  was  brooding  Upon  a  jrunhappiness  when  you  spoke.  11  38S 

for  the  sake  of  the  ^  blessed  Mother  in  heaven,            .  Foresters  I'i^fi 
1  can  shoot  almost  as  closely  with  the  bow  as  the  a  Earl 

himself.  .  n-in 

me  who  worship  Robin  the  g  Earl  of  Huntingdon  ?  "       i\  ^\ 

Now  your  g  man,  your  Robin,  all  England's  Robin,  "       t  i  235 

but  our  g  man,  our  Robin,  against  it.  i  i  241 

how  often  m  old  histories  have  the  ^  men  striven  a<'ainst 
the  stream,  °  .  „  .„ 

must  the  g  man  strive  against  it  again  to  save  his  ..  1    4rf 

country, 
my  gg  g  grandfather,  my  g  g  grandfather,  my  g  grand-        " 

t3,tQ6rj  .  qoq 

And  the  g  breaker  beats  upon  the  beach  !     Never—  "  /;;  S2S 
Ii  1  Nature,  high  and  low,  and  g  and  small  Foisets 

herself,                                                                 ^  ..  „„ 

In  that  g  heat  to  wed  her  to  the  Sheriff  "  ,*■  tfi 

You  dared  to  dream  That  our  g  Earl,  "  "  \  '^ 

we  must  at  times  have  wrought  Some  g  injustice,  "  m  i  ^fi 

G  woodland  king,  I  know  not  quarterstaff.  "  jy  21^ 

^®*S  h.  V"^  "Vf ''y  ""  w*  ^  ^u^^u^^  ^"  «^-  Q^"^  Mary  iv  iii  151 

if  he  have  the  g  right,  Hath  been  the  crueUer.  ^  ,v  iii  ^89 

A  g  King  Than  thou  art.  Love,  who  cares  not  for  " 

the  word,  p    7.  ,      •  , , . 

My  lord,  wiU  you  be  g  than  the  Saints,  Jieclcetni  114 

so  to  meditate  Upon  my  g  nearness  to  the  birthday  Of 

the  after-life,  v      t  •  aa 

Greatest     But  for  the  g  sin  that  can  be  sinn'd.  Queen  Maly7v"i  ut 

It  gilds  the  gf  wronger  of  her  peace,  v     41^ 

Great-hearted     Camma  the  stately,  Camma  the  g-h,  "The  Cuv  i  iii  72 

Greatness    That  so  foreshortens  ^,  "    '       Queen  Mori ..r^  J 

Unmoving  in  the  g  of  the  flame,  ^''''''  iv  iii  fiS 

Greed    All  ^,  no  faith,  no  courage !  "  ,  "  flf 

Greek  (adj.)     like  the  G  king  when  his  daughter  was         " 

sacrificed,  R^^i-^/  ttt  •••  in^ 

No  Roman  name?     Synorix.     A  (7,  my  lord;  TheCuvil^t 

Greek  (s)     That  we  Galatians  are  both  G  and  Gaul.  ^ne^up  11  201 

some  old  G  Say  death  was  the  chief  good  ?  "         „  fu 

Green  (adj.)     (See  also  Life-green)     Ah,  gray  old  castle  " 

Thlf  fi^ "'  ^  ^''l*^  ^*'!j!^®  ^^^  brimming  Medway,  Queen  Mary  11  i  243 

These  fields  are  only  g,  they  make  me  gape.  m  v  7 

The  g  tree  !     Then  a  great  Angel  past  along  the  " 

highest  r/      7j       •  -loo 

The  rest  you  see  is  colour'd  g~  SeJklt  plo  }?? 

-the  g  field-the  gray  church^  ^""''^'  \:\\  ^g 
and  profess  to  be  great  in  g  things  and  in  garden-stuff.   The  Falcon  551 

when  you  put  it  m  g,  and  your  stack  caught  fire.  Prom,  of  May  nil 

Wi'  the  briar  sa  g,  an'  the  wilier  sa  graii^  ^  may  11  00 

ti  1  the  g  earth  drink  Her  health  along  with  us  Foresters  in  350 

When  all  the  leaves  are  g  ■  (repeat)  iii  426  441 

And  live  with  us  and  the  birds  in  the  g  wood.  "          tv  ^p 

I  scent  it  in  the  y  leaves  of  the  wood.  ",         jy  q^ 


Green 


940 


Guess'd 


Green  (s)     Bagenhall,  I  see  The  Tudor  g  and  white.      Queen  Mary  iii  i  180 
The  colours  of  our  Queen  are  g  and  white,  „  in  v  5 

father's  eye  was  so  tender  it  would  have  called  a 

goose  off  the  g,  Becket  iii  iii  103 

Greenwich    I  will  go  to  G,  So  you  will  have  me  Queen  Mary  iii  vi  221 

Greenwood     Beneath  the  g  tree,  (repeat)  Foresters  n  i  12,  24 

'Grees  (agree)     thaw  me  and  'im  we  niver  'g  about  the 

tithe  ;  Prom,  of  May  i  444 

Greet    Wessex  dragon  flies  beyond  the  Humber,  No  voice 

to  g  it.  Harold  iv  i  5 

Will  9  us  as  our  babes  in  Paradise.  Becket  v  ii  225 

And  music  there  to  g  my  lord  the  king.  The  Cup  ii  191 

Greeting    Makes  me  his  mouth  of  holy  g.  Queen  Mary  iii  ii  80 

And  scarce  a  ^  all  the  day  for  me —  „        in  vi  118 

Full  thanks  for  your  fair  g  of  my  bride  !  Harold  iv  iii  46 

G  and  health  from  Synorix  !  (repeat)  The  Cup  ii  40,  130 

Gregory  (Pope)    no  croucher  to  the  Gregories  That  tread 

the  kings  Becket,  Pro.  212 

G  bid  St.  Austin  here  Found  two  archbishopricks,  „  i  iii  48 

Not  to  a  G  of  my  throning !     No.  „  v  i  33 

Gresham  (Sir  Thomas)    See  Thomas  Gresham 

Grew     thus  baptized  in  blood  G  ever  high  and  higher,  Harold  iii  i  148 

like  a  barren  shore  That  g  salt  weeds,  The  Cup  ii  232 

mountain  flowers  g  thickly  round  about.  The  Falcon  355 

and  when  the  children  g  too  old  for  me,  Prom,  of  May  in  386 

Grex     Pastor  fugatur  G  trucidatur —  Harold  v  i  514 

Grey  (Lady  Jane)    See  Jane 

Grief     Thou  stirrest  up  a  ^  thou  caast  not  fathom.      Queen  Mary  m  iv  298 
mine  own,  a  j  To  show  the  scar  for  ever — ■  Becket  i  i  177 

0  g  for  the  promise  of  May,  (repeat)  Prom,  of  May  i  59,  60,  750,  752 
We  have  been  in  such  g  these  five  years,  Prom,  of  May  ii  66 
how  should  I,  with  this  g  still  at  my  heart,  „  ii  91 
One  that  has  been  much  wrong'd,  whose  g's  are  mine,  „  in  577 
Whate'er  thy  g's,  in  sleep  they  fade  away.                       Foresters  i  iii  45 

Grieve     Death  would  not  g  him  more.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  25 

1  bring  your  Majesty  such  grievous  news  I  j  to 

bring  it  „  v  ii  241 

Igl  cannot ;  but,  indeed —  Prom,  of  May  i  621 

Igl  am  the  Raven  who  croaks  it.  Foresters  m  447 

I  9  to  say  it  was  thy  father's  son.  „         iv  810 

Grieved     I  am  vastly  g  to  leave  your  Majesty.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  255 

I  am  g  to  know  as  much.  "  Becket,  Pro.  4 

I  am  g,  my  daughter.  „       v  ii  82 

The  Sheriff — I  am  g  it  was  the  Sheriff ;  Foresters  n  i  449 

Grievous    And  first  I  say  it  is  a  j  ceise,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  167 

I  bring  your  Majesty  such  g  news  I  grieve  to 

bring  it.  „  v  ii  240 

in  their  mood  May  work  them  g  harm  at  times,  The  Falcon  821 

Griffyth  (King  of  Wales)  G  I  hated :  why  not  hate  the  foe 
Of  England  ?  G  when  I  saw  him  flee.  Chased  deer- 
like up  his  mountains,  all  the  blood  That  should  have 
only  pulsed  for  G,  Harold  i  ii  145 

Since  G  s  head  was  sent  To  Edward,  „     iv  i  221 

With  a  love  Passing  thy  love  for  6^  ?  „       v  i  357 

Grim  (adj.)     look'd  As  g  and  grave  as  from  a  funeral.     Queen  Mary  n  ii  65 
how  g  and  ghastly  looks  her  Grace,  „         v  ii  389 

Our  cancell'd  warrior-gods,  our  g  Walhalla,  Harold  in  ii  73 

Grim  (a  monk)     Thou  art  but  yesterday  from  Cambridge,  G ;    Becket  v  ii  55 
Grimly-glaring    Yon  g-g,  treble-brandish'd  scourge  Of 

England  !  Harold  i  i  3 

Grimness    There  lodged  a  gleaming  g  in  his  eyes,  „  n  ii  224 

Grip     The  black  fiend  g  her  ?  Foresters  in  380 

Griping    and  g  mine,  Whisper'd  me.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  34 

Grisly     Spite  of  this  g  star  ye  three  miLst  gall  Poor  Tostig.      Harold  i  i  418 
Groan  (S)     cries,  and  clashes,  and  the  g's  of  men ;  „     in  i  375 

Misheard  their  snores  for  g's.  „      v  i  213 

Groan  (verb)     They  g  amen ;  they  swarm  into  the  fire    Queen  Mary  v  ii  110 
Groan'd    crept  Up  even  to  the  tonsure,  and  he  g,  Becket  i  iii  327 

Groaning    See  A-gro&nin' 

Groining     The  g  hid  the  heaveas ;  Foresters  n  i  62' 

Groom  (a  servant)    clowns  and  g's  May  read  it !  Queen  Mary  in  iv  36 

the  g.  Gardener,  and  huntsman,  in  the  parson's 
place,  „         IV  iii  372 

Groom  (bridegroom)    (See  also  Bridegroom)    there  is 

one  Death  stands  behind  the  G,  „  Y  ii  166 


Groove    Moved  in  the  iron  g's  of  Destiny  ? 

Gross    invade  their  hive  Too  g  to  be  thrust  out, 
Who  so  bolster'd  up  The  g  King's  headship  of 

the  Church, 
your  Priests  G,  worldly,  simoniacal,  unlearn'd  ! 

Grossness     Delight  to  wallow  in  the  g  of  it, 

Ground    We  but  seek  Some  settled  g  for  peace 
as  the  heathen  giant  Had  but  to  touch  the  g, 
bit  his  shield,  and  dash'd  it  on  the  g, 
tho'  the  fire  should  run  along  the  g, 
Not  while  the  swallow  skims  along  the  g, 

Group    Many  such  g's. 

Grove     Oh  look, — yon  g  upon  the  mountain. 

Grovel     He  g's  to  the  Church  when  he's  black-blooded. 


Prom,  of  May  n  267 
Queen  Mary  iii  iii  55 

in  iv  246 

Harold  i  i  162 

Becket  ii  ii  343 

Queen  Mary  i  v  315 

„  in  ii  44 

Harold  v  i  406 

Prom,  of  May  i  704 

Foresters  i  ii  314 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  93 

The  Cup  I  ii  394 

Becket  iv  ii  436 

Queen  Mary  n  iv  105 

ni  V  89 

Harold  i  i  68 

„     ui  i  12 

Becket,  Pro.  409 

Pro.  414 

II  i  217 

Prom,  of  May  i  283 

n  289 

Foresters  II  i  698 

The  Cup  II  523 


Grow    1  shall  g  into  it — I  shall  be  the  Tower, 
Daisies  g  again.  Kingcups  blow  again. 
Perhaps  our  vines  will  g  the  better  for  it. 
If  e'er  the  Norman  g  too  hard  for  thee, 
old  men  must  die,  or  the  world  would  g  mouldy, 
If  I  sit,  I  g  fat. 
How  the  boy  g's  ! 

— her  main  law  Whereby  she  g's  in  beauty — 
So  the  child  g  to  manhood : 
What  rightful  cause  could  g  to  such  a  heat 

Growing    G  dark  too — but  light  enough  to  row. 
I  have  heard  that '  your  Lordship,'  and  '  your 
Ladyship,'  and '  your  Grace '  are  all  9  old- 
fashioned  !  Prom,  of  May  in  318 

He  hath  been  hurt,  was  g  whole  again,  Foresters  iv  451 

Grown     Why,  she's  g  bloodier  !  Queen  Mary  in  i  416 

How  doubly  aged  this  Queen  of  ours  hath  g  „            v  i  228 

all  the  faiths  Of  this  g  world  of  ours,  Harold  in  ii  65 
were  he  living  And  g  to  man  and  Sinnatus  will'd  it,       The  Cup  i  ii  151 

Growth    did  not  wholly  clear  The  deadly  g's  of  earth,  Becket  n  ii  203 

Grudge     tho'  I  g  the  pretty  jewel,  that  I  Have  worn.     Prom,  of  May  i  473 

Grunting     These  beastly  swine  make  such  a  g  here.         Queen  Mary  i  iii  12 

Guard  (s)      I  trust  the  Queen  comes  hither  with 

her  g's.  „               11  ii  2 

I  must  set  The  g  at  Ludgate.  „           11  ii  409 
I  saw  Lord  William  Howard  By  torchlight,  and 

liis  g;  „            II  iii  30 

At  the  park  gate  he  hovers  with  our  g's.  „            11  iv  16 

These  Kentish  ploughmen  cannot  break  the  g's.  „            n  iv  18 

broken  thro'  the  g's  And  gone  to  Ludgate.  „            n  iv  20 

The  g's  are  all  driven  in,  skulk  into  corners  „            n  iv  54 

A  gracious  g  Truly  ;  shame  on  them  !  „           n  iv  57 

And  tear  you  piecemeal :  so  you  have  a  g.  „            iv  ii  37 

There  are  Hot  Gospellers  even  among  our  g's —  „            v  v  103 

When  being  forced  aloof  from  all  my  g,  Harold  iv  iii  16 
fought  men  Like  Harold  and  his  brethren,  and  his  g 

Of  English.  v  ii  180 

I  have  my  g  about  me.  The  Cup  i  iii  14 

Guard  (verb)     men-at-arms  G  my  poor  dreams  for 

England.  Queen  Mary  i  v  154 

To  g  and  keep  you  whole  and  safe  „         11  ii  246 

The  lion  needs  but  roar  to  g  his  yomig  ;  „        in  v  123 

not  the  living  rock  Which  g's  the  land.  Harold  1  ii  121 

voice  of  any  people  is  the  sword  That  g's  them,  „     n  ii  136 

to  g  the  land  for  which  He  did  forswear  himself —  „      v  ii  161 

To  g  this  bird  of  passage  to  her  cage  ;  Becket  i  i  329 

my  men  will  g  you  to  the  gates.  „      i  i  -402 

G  from  the  stroke  that  dooms  thee  after  death  „  iv  ii  270 

high  Heaven  g  thee  from  his  wantonness.  Foresters  i  ii  121 

And  there  be  men-at-arms  to  g  her.  „        i  ii  158 

Guarded     The  men  that  g  England  to  the  South  Harold  iv  iii  209 

Guardsman     Our  g  hath  but  toil'd  his  hand  and  foot,  „      v  i  200 

Our  guardsmen  have  slept  well,  since  we  came  in  ?  „       v  i  207 

Guernsey     in  G,  I  watch'd  a  woman  burn  ;  Qu^en  Mary  v  iv  16 

Guess     G  what  they  be.     Edith.     He  cannot  g  who 

knows.  Harold  1  ii  135 

But  on  conditions.     Canst  thou  g  at  them  ?  „     11  ii  343 

might  chance — perchance — To  g  their  meaning.  „     iv  i  139 

How  should  you  g  What  manner  of  beast  it  is  ?  The  Cup  i  ii  370 

if  but  to  g  what  flowers  Had  made  it ;  The  Falcon  429 

Guess'd     You  are  more  than  g  at  as  a  heretic,  Queen  Mary  in  iv  93 


Guest 


941 


fiail 


Harold  n  ii  24 
II  ii  26 
„    n  ii  193 
„     n  ii  298 
„     11  ii  302 
„      IV  ii  37 
„  IV  iii  175 
Becket  ii  i  92 
„      II  i  135 
The  Cup  I  ii  47 
„      I  ii  108 
„      I  ii  327 
Foresters  i  ii  77 
IV  993 
Becket  iv  ii  105 
Prom,  of  May  ill  232 


My  lord,  he  is  thy  g. 

by  the  splendour  of  God,  no  g  of  mine. 

To  chain  the  free  g  to  the  banquet-board ; 

Hath  massacred  the  Thane  that  was  liis  g, 

lU  news  for  g's,  ha,  Malet  ! 

Hast  murder'd  thine  own  g,  the  son  of  Orm, 

what  late  g,  As  haggard  as  a  fast  of  forty  days, 

That  if  they  keep  him  longer  as  their  g, 

seem  at  most  Sweet  g's,  or  foreign  cousins. 

Who  is  our  g  ?     Sinnatus.     Strato  he  calls  himself, 

a  random  g  Who  join'd  me  in  the  hunt. 

They  shall  not  hann  My  g  within  my  house. 

My  g's  and  friends,  Sir  Richard, 

Are  all  our  g's  here  ? 
Guide  (s)    and  God  will  be  our  g. 

Poor  blind  Father's  little  g,  Milly, 

give  us  g's  To  lead  us  thro'  the  windings  of  the  wood.    Foresters  ii  i  633 
Guide  (verb)  stay  Yet  for  awhile,  to  shape  and  g  the  event.  Queen  Mary  v  i  303 

When  I  should  g  the  Church  in  peace  at  home,  „  v  ii  67 

Two  young  lovers  in  winter  weather,  None  to  g  them,        Harold  iii  ii  4 

'  Love,  I  will  g  thee.'  „      m  ii  16 

How  should  this  old  lamester  g  us?  Foresters  ii  i  370 

myself  Would  g  you  thro'  the  forest  to  the  sea.  „      ii  i  638 

Guild    She  will  address  your  g's  and  companies.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  15 

and  these  our  companies  And  g's  of  London,  „         ii  ii  129 

I,  Lord  Mayor  Of  London,  and  our  g's  and  companies.      „         ii  ii  141 

Three  voices  from  our  g's  and  companies  !  „         ii  ii  255 

With  all  your  trades,  and  g's,  and  companies.  „         ii  ii  297 

:  Guildford  Dudley    Spared  you  the  Duke  of  Suffolk,  G  D,         „  i  v  489 

Till  G  D  and  the  Duke  of  Suffolk,  „        ii  iv  137 

Guilt    To  absolve  thee  from  thy  g  of  heresy.  „  iii  ii  53 

Guiltier    for  he  Who  vows  a  vow  to  strangle  his  own 

mother  Is  g  keeping  this,  Harold  iii  i  231 

Guiltless  My  Courts  of  Love  would  have  held  thee  g  of  love —   Becket,  Pro.  499 
Guilty     Lest  thou  be  sideways  g  of  the  violence.  Harold  i  i  458 

'Tis  not  the  King  who  is  g  of  mine  exile.  But  Rome,         Becket  ii  ii  414 

Not  g  of  ourselves — thy  doom  and  mine —  The  Cup  ii  490 

making  us  feel  g  Of  her  own  faults.  Prom,  of  May  u  269 

in  G  Are  scarce  two  hundred  men,  Queen  Mary  v  i  4 

G  is  not  taken  yet  ?  (repeat)  „     v  ii  276 

Calais  gone — G  gone,  too — and  Philip  gone  !  „       v  v  22 

'Gulf  (s)    you  would  fling  your  Uves  into  the  g.  „     iii  i  459 

in  the  g  Of  never-dawning  darkness  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  541 

Gulf  (verb)     let  earth  rive,  g  in  These  cursed  Normans —        Harold  ii  ii  782 

And  g  and  flatten  in  her  closing  chasm  The  Cup  ii  300 


Queen  Alary  iii  iv  377 

II  i  221 

II  iii  30 

V  ii  275 

I  iii  81 

Harold  i  i  302 

ii338 


Gulpt    1  have  g  it  down 

Gun    to  take  the  g's  From  out  the  vessels 

four  g's  gaped  at  me,  Black,  silent  mouths  : 

that  carries  sail  and  g  Steer  towards  Calais. 
3-ui^oyle    fatter  game  for  you  Than  this  old  gaping  g  : 
jrurfii  (Earl  of  East  Anglia)    So  says  old  G,  not  I : 

as  well  with  mine  earldom,  Leqfwin's  and  G's. 

Even  old  G  would  fight. 

much  ado  To  hold  mine  own  against  old  G.    Old  G, 

Be  thou  not  stupid-honest,  brother  G  ! 

Harold,  G,  where  am  I  ? 

Sign  it,  my  good  son  Harold,  G,  and  Leofwin, 

The  voice  of  G  I     Good  even,  my  good  brother  ! 

Good  even,  G. 

Edwin,  my  friend — Thou  lingerest. — G, — 

G,  Leofwin,  Morcar,  Edwin  ! 

Thanks,  G  !     The  simple,  silent,  selfless  man 

G,  when  I  past  by  Waltham, 

Noble  G  !     Best  son  of  Godwin  ! 

G,  Leofwin,  go  once  more  about  the  hill — 

our  good  G  hath  smitten  him  to  the  death. 

G  hath  leapt  upon  him  And  slain  him  : 

dashes  it  on  G,  and  G,  Our  noble  G,  is  down  ! 

— brave  G,  one  gash  from  brow  to  knee  ! 
iush    midriff-shaken  even  to  tears,  as  springs  g  out 

after  earthquakes — 
lUSt    mere  with  sudden  wreckf  ul  g's  From  a  side-gorge. 

Blown  everyway  with  every  g  and  wreck  On  any 
rock  ;  Prom,  of  May  iii  536 

latter    Your  houses  fired — your  g's  bubbling  blood —  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  280 


1 1436 

1 1438 

III  i  123 

III  i  193 

III  i  199 
III  ii  115 

III  ii  119 

IV  i  258 

IV  iii  220 
vi80 
vi96 

vi  134 
vi  182 
vi502 
vi632 
vi640 
vii70 


Becket  in  iii  163 
Harold  in  i  51 


Gutter  {continued)    if  the  fetid  g  had  a  voice  And  cried 

I  was  not  clean,  Qv^en  Mary  v  ii  322 

I  raised  him  from  the  puddle  of  the  g,  Becket  i  iii  437 

Guy     Run  thou  to  Count  G  ;  he  is  hard  at  hand.  Harold  ii  i  55 

G,  Count  of  Ponthieu  ?  „        n  i  81 

where  our  friend  G  Had  wrung  his  ransom  from  him  „       ii  ii  37 

Translating  his  captivity  from  G  To  mine  own  hearth 

at  Bayeux,  „       ii  ii  42 

Before  he  fell  into  the  snare  of  G' ;  „     v  ii  131 

Gwo  (go)    says  the  Bisliop,  says  he, '  we'll  g  to  dinner  ; '  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  513 
Queen  Mary  g'es  on  a-bu'min'  and  a-bumin',  „  iv  iii  523 


H    See  here — an  interwoven  //  and  E  !  Harold  i  ii  57 
Haacre  (acre)    feller  couldn't  find  a  Mister  in  his  mouth 

fur  me,  as  farms  five  hoonderd  h.  Prom,  of  May  i  304 

Haafe  (half)     and  h  th'  parish  '11  be  theer,  „              1 10 

Ay,  h  an  hour  ago.     She  be  in  theer  now.  „              1 14 
fur  him  as  be  handy  wi'  a  book  bean't  but  h  a  hand 

at  a  pitchfork.  „            i  188 
What  feller  wur  it  as  'a'  been  a-talkin'  fur  h  an  hour 

wi'  my  Dora  ?  „           n  576 
niver  'a  been  talkin'  h  an  hour  wi'  the  divil  'at  killed 

her  oan  sister,  „          n  603 

*      'at  I  ha'  nobbut  lamed  mysen  h  on  it.  „             in  4 

for  1  warrants  that  ye  goas  By  ^  a  scoor  o'  naames —  „         in  729 

Haale  (hale)     tha  looks  h  anew  to  last  to  a  hoonderd.  „           i  354 

H  !  why  shouldn't  1  be  ^i  ?  „            1 357 

Why  shouldn't  1  be  h  ?  „            1 364 

But,  Steer,  thaw  thou  be  h  anew  „            i  38t 

Haate  (hate)     and  I  h's  the  very  sight  on  him.  „           1 154 

Noii,  but  I  h's  'im.  „            1 217 

An'  I  h's  boooks  an'  all,  fur  they  puts  foalk  off  the 

owd  waiiys.  „            1 221 

Yeas ;  but  I  h's  'im.  „            1 312 

fur  I  h's  'im  afoor  I  knaws  what  'e  be.  „          n  584 

Haay  (hay)     And  you  an'  your  Sally  was  forkin'  the  h,  „           n  i82 

When  me  an'  my  Sally  was  forkin'  the  h,  „          ii  193 

Haaycock  (haycock)     thou  and  me  a-bussin'  o'  one 

another,  t'other  side  o'  the  h,  „          ii  232 
Haayfield  (hayfleld)    He  coom'd  up  to  me  yisterdaiiy 

i'  the  h,  „           11  151 

he  wur  rude  to  me  i'  tha  h,  „          ii  219 

Habit     to  cast  All  threadbare  household  h.  Foresters  i  iii  112 
Hack     Into  one  sword  to  h  at  Spain  and  me.                    Queen  Mary  v  i  138 

I'll  h  my  way  to  the  sea.  Harold  ii  ii  312 

Must  I  h  her  arms  off  !     How  shall  I  part  them  ?  „       v  ii  146 

before  you  can  eat  it  you  must  h  it  with  a  hatchet.  Foresters  u  i  284 
as  you  would  h  at  Robin  Hood  if  you  could  hght 

upon  him.  „        ii  i  286 

Hack'd     Crush'd,  h  at,  trampled  underfoot.  The  Falcon  640 

Hacking     I  remember.  Scarlet  h  down  A  hollow  ash.  Foresters  ii  ii  95 
Hades     tliat  Lucullus  or  Apicius  might  have  sniffed  it  in 

their  H  of  heathenism,  Becket  in  iii  118 
Hag     Except  this  old  h  have  been  bribed  to  he.     Robin. 

We  old  h's  should  be  bribed  to  speak  truth,  Foresters  ii  i  234 

Old  h,,  how  should  thy  one  tooth  drill  thro'  this  ?  „        ii  i  275 

And,  old  h  tho'  I  be,  I  can  spell  the  hand.  „        ii  i  350 

Haggard    guest.  As  fe  as  a  fast  of  forty  days,  Harold  iv  iii  176 

that  world-iiated  and  world-hating  beast,  A  h 

Anabaptist.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  92 

ELaggardness    Stare  in  upon  me  in  my  h;  „          v  v  177 

Hail    '  //,  Daughter  of  God,  and  saver  of  the  faith.  „          in  ii  81 

//,  Gamel,  Son  of  Orm  !  Harold  i  i  91 

//  !     Harold  !     Aldwyth  !  h,  bridegroom  and  bride  !  „     iv  iii  1 

//  !     Harold,  Aldwyth  !     Bridegroom  and  bride  !  „  iv  iii  42 

till  her  voice  Die  with  the  world.     // — h  !  „   iv  iii  76 
//  to  the  hving  who  fought,  the  dead  who  fell ! 

Voices.     H,h\  „  iv  iii  105 

H,  King  !    Synorix.     H,  Queen  ■  The  Cup  ii  219 

H,  knight,  and  help  us.  Foresters  iv  764 


HaU'd 


942 


Hand 


Hail'd     As  we  past,  Some  h,  some  hiss'd  us.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  61 

Hair    {See  also  'Air)    her  red  h  all  blown  back,  She 
shrilling 
as  red  as  she  In  h  and  cheek  ; 
The  common  barber  dipt  your  A, 
No  h  is  harm'd. 
and  held  up  by  the  h  ? 
Let  me  first  put  up  your  h  ; 
Philip  !  quick  !  loop  up  my  h  ! 

Your  Philip  hath  gold  h  and  golden  beard ;  There 
must   be  ladies  many  with  h  Uke  mine.     Feria. 
Some  few  of  Gothic  blood  have  golden  h, 
Heard,  heard —     Harold.     The  wind  in  his  h  ? 
and  a  blessed  h  Of  Peter,  and  all  France, 
Holy  Father  strangled  him  with  a  h  Of  Peter, 
I  ask'd  A  ribbon  from  her  h  to  bind  it  with  ; 
a  bat  flew  out  at  him  In  the  clear  noon,  and  hook'd 
him  by  the  h, 
Hair'd    See  Fair-hair'd 

Hair's-breadth    Mine  eye  most  true  to  one  h-b  of  aim. 
Hale  (robust)    See  Haale 
Hale  (verb)    stop  the  heretic's  mouth  !     H  him 
away  ! 
H  him  hence  ! 
Haled     H  thy  shore-swallow'd,  armour'd  Normans 

Ye  h  this  tonsured  devil  into  your  courts  ; 
Half    (See  also  Haafe)    Flower,  she  !  H  faded  ! 

His  buzzard  beak  and  deep-incavern'd  eyes  H  fright 

me. 
and  the  remission  Of  h  that  subsidy  levied  on  the 

people, 
which  every  now  and  then  Beats  me  h  dead  : 
The  sire  begets  Not  h  his  likeness  in  the  son. 
And  the  h  sight  which  makes  her  look  so  stern, 
'tis  not  written  H  plain  enough. 
Thine  is  a  A  voice  and  a  lean  assent. 
Out  crept  a  wasp,  with  h  the  swarm  behind, 
one  h  Will  flutter  here,  one  there. 
Till  I  myself  was  h  ashamed  for  him. 
myself  H  beast  and  fool  as  appertaining  to  it ; 
There's  h  an  angel  wrong'd  in  your  account ; 
I  say  not  this,  as  being  H  Norman-blooded,  . 

That  marriage  was  h  sin. 
I  see  the  goal  and  h  the  way  to  it. — 
And  yon  huge  keep  that  hinders  h  the  heaven. 
Better  leave  undone  Than  do  by  halves — 
Thou  art  h  English.     Take  them  away  ! 
an'  I  be  A  dog  already  by  this  token, 
I'll  go  back  again.     I  hain't  h  done  yet. 
or  foreign  cousins,  not  h  speaking  The  language  of  the 

land. 
Not  h  her  hand — no  hand  to  mate  with  her, 
But  the  King  hath  bought  h  the  College  of  Redhats. 
Trodden  one  h  dead  ;  one  h,  but  half-alive. 
He  loses  h  the  meed  of  martyrdom  Who  will  be  martyr 

when  he  might  escape. 
Hugh,  I  know  well  thou  hast  but  h  a  heart 
They  are  thronging  in  to  vespers — /*  the  town. 
One  h  besotted  in  religious  rites. 
close  not  yet  the  door  upon  a  night  That  looks  h  day. 
If  I  be  not  back  in  h  an  hour.  Come  after  me. 
How  many  of  you  are  there  ?     Publius.    Some  h  a 

score. 
The  camp  is  A  a  league  without  the  city ; 
Beside  this  temple  h  a  year  ago  ? 
H  a  breakfast  for  a  rat  ! 
H  a  tit  and  a  hern's  bill. 
Have  we  not  h  a  score  of  silver  spoons  ?     Filippo. 

H  o'  one,  my  lord  !     Count.     How  h  of  one  ? 
//  an  hour  late  !  why  are  you  loitering  here  ? 
I  am  h  afraid  to  pass. 
H  a  score  of  them,  ajl  directed  to  me — 
could  it  look  But  h  as  lovely, 
they  have  trodden  it  for  A  a  thousand  years, 
and  he  hath  seized  On  h  the  royal  castles. 


II  ii  70 
II  ii  76 
IV  ii  131 
vil61 
vii22 

V  ii  232 

V  ii  535 


„  V  iii  56 

Harold  in  i  371 

„      III  ii  148 

V  ii  46 

The  Falcon  359 

Foresters  ii  ii  98 

IV  694 


Queen  Mary  iv  iii  283 

Harold  n  i  108 

„       II  ii  57 

Becket  i  iii  387 

Queen  Alary  i  iv  61 


I  iv  268 

I  V  115 

I  V  525 

„  II  i  55 

II  ii  322 
„          II  iii  66 

III  .1311 
„  III  iii  49 
„  III  vi  196 
„  IV  ii  171 
„  IV  iii  415 
„  V  iii  1 
Harold  I  i  169 

I  ii  53 
„  I  ii  196 
„  II  ii  228 
„  II  ii  496 
„  V  ii  135 
Becket  i  iv  218 
„     I iv  259 

„      II  i  135 

„      II  i  189 

„     II  ii  374 

v  i  63 

„  v  ii  278 
„  v  iii  129 
„  V  iii  139 
The  Cup  1  i  74 
„  I  ii  389 
„      I  ii  438 

„       I  iii  13 

I  iii  89 

II  393 

The  Falcon  123 

131 


405 
Prom,  of  May  ii  324 
II  328 
II  721 
III  491 
Foresters  i  i  333 
I  iii  83 


Half  (continued)    I  have  paid  him  h.    That  other  thousand —  Foresters  ii  i  465 

I  trust  H  truths,  good  friar  :  „        iv  950 

Some  hunter  in  day-dreams  or  h  asleep.  „      iv  1088 
Halfabitical  (alphabetical)     //  !     Taiike  one  a'  the 

young  'uns  fust.  Prom,  of  May  iii  31 

Half-a&aid    Still  I  am  h-a  to  meet  her  now.  „             1 488 
Half-Alfgar    thence  a  king  may  rise  Half-Godwin 

and  h-A,  Harold  iv  i  144 

Half-alive     one  half,  but  h-a,  Cries  to  the  King.  Becket  v  i  64 

Half-bom     I  must — I  will ! — Crush  it  h-b  !  Harold  i  i  359 
Half-dozen    for  I've  been  on  my  knees  every  day  for  these 

h-d  years  The  Falcon  185 

Half-drown'd    my  faith  would  seem  Dead  or  h-d.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  98 
Half-Godwin     thence  a  king  may  rise  H-G  and  half- 

Alfgar,  Harold  iv  i  144 
Half-hanged    he  hath  h-h  himself  in  the  rope  of  the 

Church,  Becket  ni  iii  75 

Half-rag    h-r,  half-sore — beggars,  poor  rogues  „        i  iv  81 

Half-ruin'd     The  house  h-r  ere  the  lease  be  out ;  Qioeen  Mary  v  ii  66 

Half-shamed    1  seem  h-a  at  times  to  be  so  tall.  „         v  ii  423 

Half-sore    half-rag,  h-s — beggars,  poor  rogues  Becket  i  iv  82 
HaU-Spanish    Hard-natured  Queen,  h-S  in  herself,      Queen  Mary  iv  iii  424 

Half-waked    world  as  yet,  my  friend.  Is  not  h-w  ;  „             n  i  228 
Half-way    I  am  h-w  down  the  slope — will  no  man 

stay  me  ?  Becket  u  ii  148 

Those  sweet  tree-Cupids  h-w  up  in  heaven,  Foresters  in  35 

Half-witted     H-w  and  a  witch  to  boot !  „      ii  i  375 

But  sickly,  sUght,  h-w  and  a  child,  Harold  ii  ii  571 

Halidome     By  my  A  I  felt  him  at  my  leg  still.  Foresters  iv  627 

Hall    (See  also  Dining-hall)     Far  Uefer  had  I  in  my 

country  h  Queen  Mary  in  i  43 

Is  this  a  place  To  wail  in,  Madam,  what !  a  pubUc  h.      „  v  i  213 

foes  in  Edward's  h  To  league  against  thy  weal.  Harold  i  ii  32 

And  Tostig  in  his  own  h  on  suspicion  „   ii  ii  295 

At  banquet  in  this  h,  and  hearing  me —  „   iv  iii  93 

I  held  it  with  him  in  his  English  h's,  „    v  ii  128 

The  veriest  Galahad  of  old  Arthur's  h.  Becket,  Pro.  129 

In  mine  own  h,  and  sucking  thro'  fools'  ears  „       i  iii  360 

trumpets  in  the  h's.  Sobs,  laughter,  cries  :  „       v  ii  367 

Philip  Edgar  of  Toft  H  in  Somerset.  Prom,  of  May  u  438 

One  Philip  Edgar  of  Toft  H  in  Somerset  Is  lately  dead.    „  ii  445 
I  have  been  telUng  her  of  the  death  of  one  PhiUp 

Edgar  of  Toft  H,  Somerset.  „            ii  706 

'  O'  the  17th,  Philip  Edgar,  o'  Toft  H,  Soomerset.'  „            ii  712 

last  time  When  I  shall  hold  my  birthday  in  this  h  :  Foresters  i  ii  90 

sat  Among  my  thralls  in  my  baronial  h  „        ii  i  61 

Hall  (all)     ye'll  think  more  on  'is  little  finger  than  h  my 

hand  at  the  haltar.  Prom,  of  May  1 112 

Hall-door     Shut  the  h-d's.  Becket  v  ii  532 

Hallus  (always)     Foalks  doesn't  h  knaw  thessens  ;  Prom,  of  May  i  28 

h  a-fobbing  ma  off,  tho'  ye  knaws  I  love  ye.  „          1 107 

thaw  'e  knaws  I  was  h  agean  heving  schoolmaster 

i'  the  parish  !  „          i  18G 

h  hup  at  sunrise,  and  I'd  drive  the  plow  straiiit  as  a  line       „          i  368 

H  about  the  premises  !  „          i  134 
but  I  h  gi'ed  soom  on  'em  to  Miss  Eva  at  tliis  time  o' 

year.  „          ii  15 

But  h  ud  stop  at  the  Vine-an'-the-Hop,  „         ii  311 

and  I  wur  h  scaared  by  a  big  word  ;  „         in  33 

Ye  sees  the  holler  laane  be  h  sa  dark  i'  the  artemoon,  „         in  93 

Halt     That  business  which  we  have  in  Nottingham 

Little  John.     H  !  Foresters  in  231 

Church  and  Law,  h  and  pay  toll  !  „          iv  429 
Haltar  (altar)     ye'll  think  more  on  'is  little  finger  than 

hall  my  hand  at  the  h.  Prom,  of  May  1 113 

Haman     will  hang  as  high  As  H.  Foresters  iv  752 

Hammer  (s)     Anvil  on  h  bang —  Harold  iv  iii  161 

H  on  anvil,  h  on  anvil.  „     iv  iii  162 

set  the  Church  This  day  between  tlie  h  and  the 

anvil — ■  Becket  i  iii  585 
Hampton  Comi;    In  H  C  My  window  look'd  upon 

the  corridor  ;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  458 
Hand  (s)     (See  also  Left-hand)     took  her  h,  call'd  her 

sweet  sister,  „              i  i  T" 

h,  Damp  with  the  sweat  of  death,  „              i  iig 


iig. 


Hand 


943 


Hand 


9bDld  (s)  (continued)    I  love  you,  Lay  my  life  in 

your  h's.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  105 

I  left  her  with  rich  jewels  in  her  h,  „           i  iv  242 

Mary  of  England,  joining  h's  with  Spain,  „            i  v  298 

a  formal  offer  of  the  h  Of  Philip  ?  „            i  v  349 

For  Philip  comes,  one  h  in  mine,  „            i  v  515 

The  formal  offer  of  Prince  Philip's  h,  „            i  v  588 

counts  on  you  And  on  myself  as  her  two  h's  ;  „          ii  ii  105 

And  arm  and  strike  as  with  one  h,  „          n  ii  292 

I  feel  most  goodly  heart  and  h,  „          ii  ii  352 

His  in  whose  h  she  drops  ;  „          ni  i  112 

I  cannot  lift  my  h's  unto  my  head.  „          in  i  240 

See  there  be  others  that  can  use  their  h's.  „          mi  243 

She  had  no  desire  for  that,  and  wrung  her  h's,  „          in  i  385 

with  her  poor  blind  h's  feeling — '  where  is  it  ?  „          in  i  407 

which  God's  h  Wrote  on  her  conscience,  „          iii  i  421 

where  you  gave  your  h  To  this  great  Catholic  King.         „  in  ii  91 

From  stirring  h  or  foot  to  wrong  the  realm.  „          ni  iii  60 

The  sword  Is  in  her  Grace's  h  to  smite  with.  „          m  iv  90 

What,  if  a  mad  dog  bit  your  h,  my  Lord,  „        ni  iv  205 

Their  hour  is  hard  at  h,  „        in  iv  426 
with  my  h's  Milking  the  cow  ?  (repeat)       Queen  Mary  in  v  87,  94,  101 

Rose  h  in  h,  and  whisper'd,  '  come  away  !  Queen  Mary  ni  v  148 

"    "  „             IV  i  20 

IV  i  65 


By  seeking  justice  at  a  stranger's  h 

To  reach  the  h  of  mercy  to  my  friend. 

By  mine  own  self — by  mine  own  h  !     0  thin- 

skinn'd  h  and  jutting  veins, 
papers  by  my  h  Sign'd  since  my  degradation — by 

this  h 
since  my  h  offended,  having  written  Against  my 

heart,  my  h  shall  first  be  burnt,  So  I  may  come 

to  the  fire, 
gather'd  with  his  h's  the  starting  flame,  And  wash'd 

his  h's  and  all  his  face  therein, 
Gardiner  wur  struck  down  like  by  the  h  o'  God 
I  could  see  that  many  silent  h's  Came  from  the  crowd 
Then  Cranmer  lifted  his  left  h  to  heaven, 
'  This  hath  offended — this  unworthy  h  !  ' 
they  clapt  their  h's  Upon  their  swords  when  ask'd  ; 
The  h's  that  write  them  should  be  burnt  clean  off 
And,  like  a  thief,  push'd  in  his  royal  h ; 
How  her  h  bums  !  (repeat) 
your  h  Will  be  much  coveted  !     What  a  delicate 

one  ! 
King  in  armour  there,  his  h  Upon  his  helmet. 
there  is  the  right  h  still  Beckons  me  hence. 
To  sleek  and  supple  himself  to  the  king's  h. 
Our  Tostig  loves  the  h  and  not  the  man. 
to  turn  and  bite  the  h  Would  help  thee 
Join  h's,  let  brethren  dwell  in  vmity  ; 
I  have  but  bark'd  my  h's. 
Rim  thou  to  Count  Guy ;  he  is  hard  at  h. 
let  fly  the  bird  within  the  h, 
Thou  hast  but  seen  how  Norman  h's  can  strike, 
have  thy  conscience  White  as  a  maiden's  h. 
He  tore  their  eyes  out,  sUced  their  h's  away, 
while  thy  h's  Are  palsied  here, 
God  and  the  sea  have  given  thee  to  our  h's — • 
And  grateful  to  the  h  that  shielded  him. 
Lay  thou  thy  h  upon  this  golden  pall ! 
but  take  back  thy  ring.     It  bums  my  h — ■ 
that  reach'd  a  h  Down  to  the  field  beneath  it, 
Somewhere  hard  at  h.    Call  and  she  comes. 
join  our  h's  before  the  hosts.  That  all  may  see. 
these  poor  h's  but  sew.  Spin,  broider — 
I  saw  the  h  of  Tostig  cover  it. 
Cannot  h's  which  had  the  strength  To  shove 
And  be  thy  h  as  winter  on  the  field. 
Our  guardsman  hath  but  toil'd  his  h  and  foot,  I  h, 

foot, 
Fain  had  I  kept  thine  earldom  in  thy  h's 
I  have  had  it  fashion'd,  see,  to  melt  my  h. 
Stigand,  With  h's  too  Ump  to  brandish  iron — 
wicked  sister  clapt  her  h's  and  laugh'd ; 
we  should  have  a  fe  To  grasp  the  world  with, 


IV  ii  203 
rv  iii  243 


IV  iii  247 

rv  iii  336 

„         IV  iii  516 

IV  iii  582 

IV  iii  608 

„         IV  iii  614 

V  i  173 

V  ii  190 

V  ii  467 
„    vii552,  616 

V  iii  43 
V  V  30 

V  V  137 
Harold  i  i  150 

iil56 

1 1382 

1 1397 

II  i  5 

II  i  55 

nii66 

n  ii  171 

n  ii  284 

n  ii  389 

n  ii  454 

n  ii  549 

n  ii  586 

n  ii  699 

in  ii  186 

IV  i  44 

IV  i  185 

IV  i  241 

IV  iii  9 

IV  iii  81 

IV  iii  136 

vil32 

vi201 
vi276 
vi423 
vi449 
vii48 

V  ii  191 


Hand  (s)  (continued)    be  facile  to  my  h's.    Now  is  my 

time. 
Thou  hast  but  to  hold  out  thy  h. 
He  sued  my  h.    I  shook  at  him. 
May  the  h  that  next  Inherits  thee  be  but  as  true 
Hath  often  laid  a  cold  h  on  my  heats. 
Church  must  play  into  tlie  h's  of  kings  ; 
Shall  h's  that  do  create  the  Lord  be  bound 
lay  My  crozier  in  the  Holy  Father's  h's. 
For,  Uke  a  son,  I  lift  my  h's  to  thee. 
He  sat  down  there  And  dropt  it  in  his  h's, 
woifldst  deliver  Canterbury  To  our  King's  h's  again, 
Which  came  into  thy  h's  when  Chancellor. 
Cornwall's  h  or  Leicester's  :  they  write  marvellously 

ahke. 
if  thou  hast  not  laid  h's  upon  me  ! 
let  the  h  of  one  To  whom  thy  voice  is  all  her  music, 
happy  boldness  of  this  h  hath  won  it  Love's  alms. 
Not  half  her  h — no  h  to  mate  with  her, 
Life  on  the  h  is  naked  gipsy-stuff  ; 
to  stay  his  h  Before  he  flash'd  the  bolt. 
I  here  deliver  all  this  controversy  Into  your  royal  h's 
primm'd  her  mouth  and  put  Her  h's  together — 
Give  me  thy  h.    My  Lords  of  France  and  England, 
I  might  deliver  all  things  to  thy  h — 
bosom  never  Heaved  under  the  King's  h 
My  lord,  we  know  you  proud  of  your  fine  A, 
so  still  I  reach'd  my  h  and  touch'd  ; 
I  cannot  bear  a  h  upon  my  person. 
At  the  right  h  of  Power — 
Into  Thy  h's,  0  Lord— into  Thy  h's  I— 
There  is  my  h — if  such  a  league  there  be. 
For  I  have  always  play'd  into  their  h's, 
More  than  once  You  have  refused  his  h. 
clasp  a  h  Red  with  the  sacred  blood  of  Sinnatus  ? 
So  shook  within  my  h,  that  the  red  wine  Ran  down 
See  here — I  stretch  my  h  out — hold  it  there, 
and  my  h's  are  too  sleepy  To  lift  it  off. 
Shame  on  her  that  she  took  it  at  thy  h's. 
The  pleasure  of  his  eyes — boast  of  his  h — 
who  could  trace  a,  h  So  wild  and  staggering  ? 
having  his  right  h  Lamed  in  the  battle. 
He  gave  me  his  h  : 
ye'U  think  more  on  'is  little  finger  than  hall  my  h 

at  the  haltar. 
fur  him  as  be  handy  wi'  a  book  bean't  but  haafe 

a.h  At  SL  pitchfork, 
he's  walking  to  us,  and  with  a  book  in  his  h. 
storm  is  hard  at  h  will  sweep  away  Thrones, 
Come,  give  me  your  h  and  kiss  me 
Owd  Steer's  gotten  aU  his  grass  down  and  wants 

a  h. 
From  the  farm  Here,  close  at  h. 
what  full  h's,  may  be  Waiting  you  in  the  distance  ? 
But  give  me  first  your  h  : 
She  gave  her  h,  imask'd,  at  the  farm-gate  ; 
should  walk  h  in  h  together  down  this  valley  of 

tears. 
The  lady  gave  her  h  to  the  Earl,  The  maid  her  h  to 

the  man.  (repeat) 
That  is  no  true  man's  h.    I  hate  hidden  faces. 
A  finger  of  that  h  which  should  be  mine 
and  warm  h's  close  with  warm  h's, 
Your  h's,  your  h's  ! 
Your  h's  again. 

old  hag  tho'  I  be,  I  can  spell  the  h. 
And  capering  hin  h  with  Oberon. 
feU'st  into  the  h's  Of  these  same  Moors 
What  sparkles  in  the  moonlight  on  thy  h  ? 
O  hold  thy  h  !  this  is  our  Marian, 
call  Kate  when  you  will,  for  I  am  close  at  h. 
bulrush  now  in  this  right  h  For  sceptre, 
all  that  live  By  their  own  h's,  the  labourer,  the 

poor  priest ; 
if  ever  A  Norman  damsel  fell  into  our  h's. 


Becket,  Pro.  219 

Pro.  412 

ii273 

1 1357 

1 1384 

1 1168 

I  iii  94 

I  iii  125 

I  iii  264 

I  iii  324 

I  iii  581 

I  iii  653 


I  iv  51 

I  iv  212 
nil76 
nil82 
u  i  189 

II  i  193 
II  i  274 

,  II  ii  137 
in  i  76 
,  in  iii  226 
,  ni  iii  270 
,  IV  ii  189 
,      IV  ii  261 

V  ii  235 

V  iii  20 
,  V  iii  193 
,  V  iii  196 
Cuf  I  ii  103 

I  iii  150 

n43 

n83 

n  202 

n210 

n530 

The  Falcon  61 

222 

438 

444 

836 


The 


Prom,  of  May  1 112 


1 188 
I  220 
I  517 
I  564 

n222 
n361 
n510 
u525 
u625 

in  191 


Foresters  i  i  16,  92 

I  ii  245 

I  ii  299 

I  iii  20 

I  iii  127 

I  iii  164 

ni351 

ni498 

ni  563 

ni583 

nii36 

in  51 

in  76 

ml65 
HI  181 


Band 


944 


Happy 


Hand  (s)  {continued)    we  have  fallen  into  the  h's  Of 

Robin  Hood,  (repeat)  Foresters  iii  233,  298 

Give  me  thy  h  on  that  ?  Marian.  Take  it.  „  iv  66 
Give  me  thy  h,  Much  ;  I  love  thee.     At  him, 

Scarlet !  „  iv  309 
My  h  is  firm,  Mine  eye  most  true  to  one  hair's- 

breadth  of  aim.  „                iv  693 

Our  rebel  Abbot  then  shall  join  your  h's,  „                iv  934 

Give  me  that  h  which  fought  for  Richard  there.  „              iv  1029 
Hand  (verb)     H  me  the  casket  with  my  father's 

sonnets.  Queen,  Mary  ii  i  43 

H  it  me,  then  !     I  thank  you.  „            iv  ii  44 

King  would  act  servitor  and  h  a  dish  to  his  son  ;  Becket  m  iii  139 

Might  not  your  courtesy  stoop  to  h  it  me  ?  „        iv  ii  296 

Handed    See  Two-handed 

Handedness    See  Left-handedness,  Under-handedness 
Hand-in-hand     (See  also  Hand)     Is  strength  less  strong 

when  h-i-h  with  grace  ?  Becket  v  ii  540 

Handle     In  all  that  h's  matter  of  the  state  Harold  i  i  412 

h  all    womankind    gently,    and    hold    them    in  all 

honour,  Foresters  i  i  99 

Handled     They  shall  be  h  with  all  courteousness.  „        iv  102 

Handsome     and  he  so  /t— and  bless  your  sweet  face,  2'lie  Falcon  197 
Handy    fur  him  as  be  /i  wi'  a  book  bean't  but  haafe  a 

hand  at  a  pitclifork.  Prom,  of  May  i  187 
Hang     All  h's  on  her  address,  And  upon  you,  Lord 

Mayor.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  54 

Gentleman  ?  a  thief  !     Go  h  him.  „           n  iii  76 

H  him,  I  say.  „          n  iii  80 

He  has  gambled  for  his  life,  and  lost,  he  h's.  „          ii  iii  92 

may  but  h  On  the  chance  mention  of  some  fool  „          m  v  42 

After  a  riot  We  h  the  leaders,  „            iv  i  74 

H's  all  my  past,  and  all  my  life  to  be,  „        iv  iii  219 

A  man  may  h  gold  bracelets  on  a  bush,  Harold  ii  i  87 

they  should  h  Clifi-gibbeted  for  sea-marks  ;  „  ii  i  96 
Were  there  no  boughs  to  h  on.  Rivers  to  drown  in  ?        The  Cup  i  ii  78 

Must  all  Galatia  h  or  drown  herself  ?  „        i  ii  87 

I  am  like  to  h  myself  on  the  hooks.  The  Falcon  121 

while  our  Robin's  life  H's  by  a  thread,  Foresters  iv  385 

You  will  all  of  you  h.  „        iv  580 

Let  us  h,  so  thou  dance  meanwhile  ;  „        iv  581 

we  will  h  thee,  prince  or  no  prince,  sherii5  or  no  sheriff.  „        iv  583 

twist  it  round  thy  neck  and  h  thee  by  it.  ,,        iv  688 

Avill  h  as  high  As  Haman.  „        iv  750 
Haog'd    (See  also  Half-hanged)     A  hundred  here  and 

hundreds  h  in  Kent.  Queen  Mary  iii  i  2 

There  were  not  many  h  for  Wyatt's  rising.  „           v  ii  8 

I  hope  they  whipt  him.     I  would  have  h  him.  Becket,  Pro.  16 

ye  but  degraded  him  Where  I  had  h  him .  „     i  iii  392 

H  at  mid-day,  their  traitor  of  the  dawn  The  Cup  ii  123 

thaw  they  h  ma  at  'Size  fur  it.  Prom,  of  May  u  697 
Fftilging    (See  also  A-loIluping)    h  down  from  this  The 

Golden  Fleece—  Queen  Mary  iii  i  80 

Hapless     /f  doom  of  woman  happy  in  betrothing  !  „         v  ii  364 
Our  h  brother,  Tostig — He,  and  the  giant  King  of 

Norway,  Harold  iii  ii  121 

0  h  Harold  !     Khig  but  for  an  hour  !  „        v  i  257 
Happen    See  'Appen 

Happen'd    ever  have  h  thro'  the  want  Of  any  or  all 

of  them.  Prom,  of  May  iii  546 
Happier    it  would  seem  this  people  Care  more  for 

our  brief  life  in  their  wet  land,  Than  yours 

in  h  Spain.  Queen  Mary  iii  vi  64 

H  he  than  I.  „            v  ii  520 

upon  thine  eyelids,  to  shut  in  Ah  dream.  Harold  i  ii  127 

and  pray  in  thy  behalf  For  h  homeward  winds  „  ii  ii  198 
the  living  Who  fought  and  would  have  died,  but  h 

lived.  If  A  be  to  live  ;  „  iv  iii  72 
Whispering  '  it  will  be  h,'  and  old  faces  Press 

round  as,  Foresters  i  iii  18 

1  should  be  h  for  it  all  the  year.  „  ii  i  163 
Thou  art  k  than  thy  king.     Put  him  in  chains.  „       iv  837 

Happiort    but  after  that  Might  not  St.  Andrew's  bo 

her  h  day  ?  Queen  Mary  ill  ii  123 

Sit  down  here :  Tell  me  thiue  h  hour.  „              vv  79 


Happiest  (continued)     being  King  And  happy  !  h.  Lady,  in 

my  power  To  make  you  happy.  The  Cup  n  239 

Happily     Ay,  Madam,  h.     Mary.     Happier  he  than  I.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  519 


Happiness     Well,  Madam,  this  new  h  of  mine  ? 

we  were  not  made  One  flesh  in  /;,  no  h  here  ; 

What  is  the  strange  thing  h  ? 

My  liege,  your  will  and  h  are  mine. 

I  would  that  h  were  gold,  that  I 

If  marriage  ever  brought  a  woman  h 

But  lack  of  A  in  a  blatant  wife. 
Happy     (See  also  'Appy)     Well,  sir,  I  look  for  h  times. 


HI  ii  208 

v  ii  1.50 

V  V  78 

Becket  m  iii  43 

The  Cup  II  223 

Prom,  of  May  ill  639 

Foresters  i  iii  132 

Queen  Mary  i  i  99 


A  h  morning  to  your  Majesty.     Mary.     And  I  should 

some  time  have  a  h  morning  ; 
You  are  h  in  him  there, 
I  am  h  in  him  there.     Renard.     And  would  be 

altogether  h.  Madam, 
Be  h,  I  am  your  friend. 
Seem'd  as  a  A  miracle  to  make  gUde — 
No,  cousin,  h—H  to  see  you  ;  never  yet  so  h 
True,  cousin,  I  am  h. 
Good  news  have  I  to  tell  you,  news  to  make  Both 

of  us  h — 
by  and  by  Both  h  ! 
your  Grace,  your  Grace,  I  feel  so  h  : 
My  life  is  not  so  h,  no  such  boon, 

ever  looking  to  the  h  haven  Where  he  shall  rest  at  night, 
Hapless  doom  of  woman  h  in  betrothing  ! 
gorgeous  Indian  shawl  That  Philip  brought  me  in 

our  h  days ! — 
it  was  hoped  Your  Highness  was  once  more  in  h  state 
I  am  h  you  approve  it. 
Dead  or  alive  you  cannot  make  him  h. 
I  trust  that  God  will  make  you  h  yet. 
and  babble  all  the  way  As  if  itself  were  h. 
Ah,  those  days  Were  h. 

A  h  one — whereby  we  came  to  know  Thy  valour 
Ay,  and  perchance  a  h  one  for  thee. 
Ay,  that  h  day  !     A  birthday  welcome  !  h  days 

and  many  ! 
I  have  found  him,  I  am  h. 
And  Harold  was  most  /*. 

thou  wast  not  h  taking  charge  Of  this  wild  Rosamund 
Nor  am  I  h  having  charge  of  her— 
at  her  side.  Among  these  h  dales. 
The  h  boldness  of  this  hand  hath  won  it  Love's  alms, 
and  known  Nothing  but  him — h  to  know  no  more. 
So  many  h  hours  alone  together, 
but  God  and  his  free  wind  grant  your  lordship  a  h 

home-return  „  in  iii  327 

I  am  not  so  h  I  could  not  die  myself,  „    iv  ii  87 

Fair  Sir,  a  h  day  to  you  !  The  Cup  i  i  188 

our  hearts,  our  prophet  hopas  Let  in  the  h  distance,  „      iii  414 

I  would  be  //,  and  make  all  others  h  so  n       i  iii  29 

speak  I  now  too  mightily,  being  King  And  h  ! 

happiest.  Lady,  in  my  power  To  make  you  h. 
make  me  h  in  my  marriage  ! 
Drink  and  drink  deep,  and  thou  wilt  make  me  h. 
Thou  hast  drunk  deep  enough  to  make  me  h. 
This  all  too  h  day,  crown — queen  at  once. 
h  was  the  prodigal  son,  For  he  retum'd 
and  tell  her  all  about  it  and  make  her  h  ? 
made  more  h  than  I  hoped  Ever  to  be  again. 
And  I  am  h  !     Giovanna.     And  I  too,  Federigo. 
Many  h  returns  of  the  day,  father. 
I  am  sure  I  wish  her  h. 
that  should  make  you  h,  if  you  love  her  ! 
all  the  world  is  beautiful  If  we  were  h, 
As  h  as  the  bees  there  at  their  honey 
I  have  been  in  trouble,  but  I  am  h—1  think,  quite 

h  now. 
and  make  them  h  in  the  long  barn, 
'  O  h  lark,  that  warblest  high  Above  thy  lowly  nest. 
He  said  we  had  been  most  /*  together, 
I  doubt  not  I  can  make  you  h.     Dora.     You  make 

mc  H  already. 


I  V  243 
„        IV  454 

I  V  457 
„      II  iii  123 

III  ii  29 
„  III  ii  86 
„      III  ii  113 

„  III  ii  188 
„  III  V  157 
„      III  V  250 

IV  i  130 
„     IV  iii  579 

V  ii  364 

V  ii  540 

V  ii  571 
„        V  iii  63 

V  V  71 

V  V  76 

V  V  87 

V  V  240 
Harold  n  ii  201 

II  ii  203 

V  i  430 

V  ii  81 

V  ii  134 
Becket  i  i  391 

„  I J  394 
„  II  i  157 
„  II  i  182 
„  III  i  224 
„  III  iii  39 


II  239 

II  274 

II  383 

II  425 

II  451 

The  Falcon  140 

183 

769 

927 

Prom,  of  May  i  350 

I  479 

I  547 

I  578 

i606 

i78g 

I  791 

III  199 

III  327 

mm 

i 


Happy 


945 


Harold 


Happy  (continued)    Make  her  h,  then,  and  I  forgive 

you.     Dora.     H  !  Prom,  of  May  ni  666 

So  h  in  herself  and  in  her  home —  „           ni  756 

As  A  as  any  of  those  that  went  before.  Foresters  i  ii  129 

— my  ring — I  am  h — ^should  be  h.  „           i  iii  2 

Sleep,  h  soul !  all  life  will  sleep  at  last.  „         i  iii  48 

Both  be  h,  and  adieu  for  ever  and  for  evermore —  „       ii  ii  196 

Shall  Iheh?     H  vision,  stay.  „       n  ii  199 

C!ould  live  as  A  as  the  larks  in  heaven,  „           in  82 

We  leave  but  h  memories  to  the  forest.  „       iv  1070 

I  am  most  h — Art  thou  not  mine  ? — and  h  that 

our  King  „       iv  1096 

^  Harass'd    Why  am  I  follow'd,  haunted,  h,  watch'd  ?  Harold  n  ii  248 

'  Harbour    At  last  a  h  opens ;   but  therein  Sunk 

rocks —  Queen  Mary  v  v  213 

Harbour  (arbour)     Didn't  I  spy  'em  a-sitting  i'  the 

woodbine  h  togither  ?  Prom,  of  May  1 125 

Hard    ("S'ee  also  Stone-hard)    That's  a  h  word, 

legitimate  ;  what  does  it  mean  ?  Queen  Mary  i  i  11 

My  h  father  hated  me  ;  „          i  v  80 

And  that  were  h  upon  you,  my  Lord  Chancellor.  „        i  v  158 

And  those  h  men  brake  into  woman-tears,  „        i  v  564 

the  provinces  Are  h  to  rule  and  must  be  hardly  ruled  ;        „      iii  ii  201 

You  are  h  to  please.  „    m  iv  154 

Their  hour  is  h  at  hand,  their  '  dies  Irae,'  „     in  iv  426 

H  upon  both.  „       m  v  18 

This  h  coarse  man  of  old  hath  crouch'd  to  me  „      iv  ii  169 

May  God  help  you  Thro'  that  h  hour  !  „  iv  ii  196 
'  How  h  it  is  For  the  rich  man  to  enter  into  Heaven  ; ' 

Let  all  rich  men  remember  that  h  word.  „     iv  iii  203 
and  awaay  betimes  wi'  dree  h  eggs  for  a  good 

pleace  at  the  bumin' ;  „     iv  iii  489 

and  therefore  God  Is  h  upon  the  people.  „  v  i  176 
strike  h  and  deep  into  The  prey  they  are  rending 

from  her —  „       v  ii  267 

Look'd  h  and  sweet  at  me,  and  gave  it  me.  „         v  v  95 

Tostig  says  true  ;  my  son,  thou  art  too  k,  Harold  i  i  206 
The  boy  would  fist  me  h,  and  when  we  fought  I 

conquer'd,  „       i  i  444 

Run  thou  to  Count  Guy  ;  he  is  A  at  hand.  „  ii  i  55 
would  make  the  h  earth  rive  To  the  very  Devil's 

horns,  „     n  ii  739 

If  e'er  the  Norman  grow  too  h  for  thee,  „      ni  i  12 

a  war-crash,  and  so  h,  So  loud,  that,  by  St.  Dunstan, 

old  St.  Thor—  „  iv  iii  145 

a        Harsh  is  the  news  !  h  is  our  honeymoon  !  „  iv  iii  229 

I        Take  it  and  wear  it  on  that  h  heart  of  yours — there.  Becket,  Pro.  373 

On  this  left  breast  before  so  ^  a  heart,  „      Pro.  376 

Nay,  if  I  took  and  translated  that  h  heart  into  our 

Proven9al  facilities,  „      Pro.  380 

Make  it  so  A  to  save  a  moth  from  the  fire  ?  „         i  i  283 

What  doth  h  murder  care  For  degradation  ?  „       i  iii  393 

Would  God  they  had  torn  up  all  By  the  h  root,  „  ii  ii  209 
To  assail  our  Holy  Mother  lest  she  brood  Too  long 

o'er  this  h  egg,  „       v  ii  253 

it  is  thou  Hath  set  me  this  h  task,  The  Falcon  237 

It  will  be  h,  I  fear.  To  find  one  shock  upon  the  field  „          300 

She  smiles  at  him — how  h  the  woman  is  !  „           661 

My  brother  !  my  h  brother  !  „  895 
The  storm  is  h  at  hand  will  sweep  away  Thrones,  Prom,  of  May  i  517 
I  fear  this  Abbot  is  a  heart  of  flint,  H  as  the  stones 

of  his  abbey.  Foresters  i  ii  270 
Our  cellar  is  h  by.     Take  him,  good  Little  John,  and 

give  him  wine.  „        ii  i  468 

Art  thou  not  h  upon  them,  my  good  Robin  ?  „         iir  221 

I  should  be  h  beset  with  thy  fourscore.  „          iv  179 

[aider    might  be  h  upon  thee,  if  met  in  a  black  lane  „         in  223 
[ardest    The  h,  cruellest  people  in  the  world,                 Queen  Mary  ii  i  100 

[ard-grain'd    And  grafted  on  the  h-g  stock  of  Spain —  „         iv  iii  426 

[ard-hearted    Out  upon  all  h-h  maidenhood  !  Foresters  iv  50 
'ard-natured     H-n  Queen,  half-Spanish  in  herself,       Queen  Mary  iv  iii  424 

hardness    spare  us  the  h  of  your  facility  ?  Becket,  Pro.  386 

Father,  I  am  so  tender  to  all  ^  !  „         i  i  316 
ardrada  (King  of  Norway)    (See  also  Harold)    the  giant 

g          King  of  Norway,  Harold  H —  Harold  in  ii  123 


Hardrada  (King  of  Norway)  (continued)    httle  help  without 
our  Saxon  carles  Against  H. 

striking  at  H  and  his  madmen  I  had  wish'd 

May  all  invaders  perish  like  H  ! 
Hard  Tillery  (artillery)     'Listed  for  a  soadger.  Miss,  i' 

the  Queen's  Real  H  T. 
Hardy  Too  h  with  thy  king  ! 
Hare     As  find  a  h's  form  in  a  lion's  cave. 

Venison,  and  wild  boar,  h,  geese, 
Harebell     Bluebell,  h,  speedwell,  bluebottle. 
Harem    new  term  Brought  from  the  sacred  East,  his  h  ? 
Harfleur    To-morrow  we  will  ride  with  thee  to  H, 

To-morrow  will  we  ride  with  thee  to  H. 

To-morrow  will  I  ride  with  thee  to  H. 

For  when  I  rode  with  William  down  to  H, 
Hark    H !  the  trumpets. 

H,  there  is  battle  at  the  palace  gates, 

H,  how  those  Roman  wolfdogs  howl  and  bay  him ! 

H !     Madam !     Eleanore.     Ay, 

J^!     Is  it  they?     Coming! 

The  murderers,  h !     Let  us  hide ! 

H  !  Dora,  some  one  is  coming. 
Harken'd  She  hath  h  evil  counsel — 
Harlot    She  play  the  h  !  never. 

They  are  so  much  holier  than  their  h's  son 


Harold  iv  i  36 
„  IV  iii  17 
„     IV  iii  78 


Prom,  of  May  in  109 

Harold  I  i  198 

Becket  i  iii  177 

Foresters  iv  191 

Prom,  of  May  I  97 

Foresters  iv  705 

Harold  ii  ii  196 

II  ii  648 

II  ii  770 

in  i  83 

Queen  Mary  i  i  64 

II  iv  47 

„       IV  iii  354 

Becket  in  ii  14 

„      V  iii  15 

„      V  iii  46 

Prom,  of  May  in  339 

Queen  Mary  i  v  54 

in  vi  136 

Harold  v  ii  11 


kill  with  knife  or  venom  One  of  his  slanderous  h's  ?         Becket  iv  ii  411 
Harm  (s)     and  thou  canst  not  come  to  h.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  68 

sharper  h  to  England  and  to  Rome,  Than  Calais  taken.    „  v  ii  29 

What  h  ?     She  hath  but  blood  enough  to  live,  Harold  i  ii  160 

He  meant  no  h  nor  damage  to  the  Church.  Becket  i  iii  216 

and  should  h  come  of  it,  it  is  the  Pope  Will  be  to 

blame—  „      i  iii  220 

or  any  h  done  to  the  people  if  my  jest  be  in  defence 

of  the  Truth  ?  „      n  ii  339 

I  never  meant  you  h  in  any  way.  „      iv  ii  106 

May  work  them  grievous  h  at  times,  The  Falcon  821 

And  what  A  will  that  do  you.  Prom,  of  May  in  360 

Harm  (verb)     If  they  dared  To  h  you,  I  would  blow 

this  Phihp  Queen  Mary  i  iv  290 

In  some  such  form  as  least  may  h  your  Grace.  „  i  v  225 

That  our  commission  is  to  heal,  not  h ;  „         m  iii  185 

Than  you  would  h  your  loving  natural  brother  „         iv  iii  189 

H  him  not,  h  him  not !  have  him  to  the  fire  !  „         iv  iii  284 

scorn'd  her  too  much  To  h  her.  Becket  iv  ii  394 

God's  full  curse  Shatter  you  all  to  pieces  if  ye  A  One  of 

my  flock  !  „      v  iii  135 

They  shall  not  h  My  guest  within  my  house.  The  Cup  i  ii  326 

It  is  but  pastime — nay,  I  will  not  h  thee.  Foresters  11  i  554 

Came  stepping  o'er  him,  so  as  not  to  h  him —  „  iv  538 

Harm'd     No  hair  is  h.  Queen  Mary  v  i  161 

the  poor  thunder  Never  h  head.  Harold  i  ii  233 

Harming     And  bind  him  in  from  h  of  their  combs.       Queen  Mary  m  iii  57 

came  and  went  before  our  day,  Not  h  any :  Harold  1  i  133 

Harmony    This  burst  and  bass  of  loyal  h,  Queen  Mary  n  ii  285 

Harold  (Earl  of  Wessex,  afterwards  King  of  England)    (See 

also  Harold  the  Saxon)    //,   I  will  not  yield  thee 

leave  to  go.  Harold  i  i  256 

Son  H,  I  will  in  and  pray  for  thee.  „       i  i  267 

My  wise  head-shaking  H?  „       i  i  361 

H  always  hated  him.  „       i  i  429 

How  H  used  to  beat  him  !  „       i  i  432 

lest  the  king  Should  yield  his  ward  to  H's  will.  „     i  ii  159 

When  H  goes  and  Tostig,  shall  I  play  The  craftier  Tostig 

with  him?  „     i  ii  163 

If  he  found  me  thus,  H  might  hate  me ;  „     i  ii  172 

H  Hear  the  king's  music,  all  alone  with  him,  „     i  ii  I93 

Peace-lover  is  our  H  for  the  sake  Of  England's  „     i  ii  197 

A  sacrifice  to  H,  a  peace-ofiering,  „     i  ii  203 

thou  assured  By  this,  that  H  loves  but  Edith  ?  ,,     i  ii  210 

that  I — That  H  loves  me — yea,  and  presently  That  I  and 

H  are  betroth'd — and  last — Perchance  that  H  wrongs  me ;    „     i  ii  222 
And  when  doth  H  go?    Morcar.     To-morrow —  „     i  ii  237 

H  ?    Earl  of  Wessex !  „       11  i  82 

Fly  thou  to  William ;  tell  him  we  have  H.  „     n  i  HI 

they  are  not  like  to  league  With  H  against  vie.  „      n  ii  54 

3  o 


Harold 


946 


Hate 


Harold  (Earl  of  Wessex,  afterwards  King  of  England)  (continued) 

England  our  own  Thro'  H's  help,  Harold  ii  ii  79 

that  these  may  act  On  H  when  they  meet.  „     n  ii  92 

I  can  but  love  this  noble,  honest  H.  „     ii  ii  95 

Yea,  lord  ff.  „    ii  ii  243 

Thou  canst  not,  H ;  Our  Duke  is  all  between  thee  „    ii  ii  313 

'  This  H  is  not  of  the  royal  blood,  „    ii  ii  354 

O  speak  him  fair,  H,  for  thine  own  sake.  „    ii  ii  395 

H,  I  do  not  counsel  thee  to  lie.  „    n  ii  416 

H,  for  my  sake  and  for  thine  own !  ..    n  ii  607 

H,  if  thou  love  thine  Edith,  ay.  „    n  ii  622 

H,  I  am  thy  friend,  one  life  with  thee,  „    ii  ii  649 

AmlH,  H,  son  Of  our  great  Godwin  ?  „    ii  ii  791 

Ask  me  for  this  at  thy  most  need,  son  H,  „      in  i  15 

Come,  H,  shake  the  cloud  off !  „  m  i  73 
Let  H  serve  for  Tostig !     Queen.    H  served  Tostig  so  ill, 

he  cannot  serve  for  Tostig  !  „    m  i  159 

H  ?    Gurth,  where  am  I  ?  ,,    in  i  193 

Sign  it,  my  good  son  H,  Gurth,  and  Leofwin,  >.    m  i  199 

No,  no,  but  H.    I  love  him :  „    m  i  241 

but  their  Saints  Have  heard  thee,  H.  „    m  i  254 

Spare  and  forbear  him,  H,  if  he  comes  !  „    m  i  299 

And  let  him  pass  unscathed ;  he  loves  me,  HI  „    m  j  302 

on  thee  remains  the  curse,  Z?,  if  thou  embrace  her :  ,;    iii  i  316 

noble  H,  I  would  thou  couldst  have  sworn.  „  m  i  325 
It  is  HI     H  the  King !     Harold.     Call  me  not  King, 

but  H.  „    in  ii  31 

H,  H  !     Harold.     The  voice  of  Gurth  !  „  iii  ii  114 

can  but  pray  For  H — pray,  pray,  pray —  „  m  ii  195 

but  our  help  Is  H,  king  of  England.  „      iv  i  11 

Hear  King  H  !  he  says  true  !  „      iv  i  60 

And  Alfgar  hates  King  H.  „    iv  i  125 

Old  man,  H  Hates  nothing ;  „    iv  i  128 

Aldwyth,  H,  Aldwyth  !  „    iv  i  132 

Thine  own  meaning,  H,  To  make  all  England  one,  „    iv  i  140 

H,  H  and  Aldwyth  !  „    iv  i  244 

Forward !     Forward  !     H  and  Holy  Cross  !  ,,    iv  i  269 

O  brother,  brother,  O  H—  „     iv  ii  63 

Conjured  the  mightier  H  from  his  North  „     iv  ii  68 

Hail !     H  !     Aldwyth  !  hail,  bridegroom  and  bride  !  „     iv  iii  1 

Hail,  H,  Aldwyth  !     Bridegroom  and  bride  !  „   iv  iii  42 

answer  which  King  H  gave  To  his  dead  namesake,  „  iv  iii  109 

To  thrust  our  H's  throne  from  under  him  ?  „  iv  iii  126 

Thou  hast  lost  thine  even  temper,  brother  HI  „       v  i  95 

A  lake  that  dips  in  William  As  weU  as  H.  >.     v  i  187 

Son  H,  I  thy  King,  who  came  before  To  tell  thee  ,,    v  i  234 

O  hapless  H  !     King  but  for  an  hour !  ,.    v  i  258 

0  H !  husband  !  Shall  we  meet  again  ?  "  ^  !  ^^ 
England  Is  but  her  king,  and  thou  art  H  \  „  v  i  376 
thou  art  H,  I  am  Edith  !  „  v  i  392 
jff  and  Holy  Cross  !  (repeat)                                HaroM  v  i  439,  519,  662 

1  have  a  power — would  H  ask  me  for  it —  Harold  v  i  451 
Power  now  from  H  to  command  thee  hence  „  v  i  455 
God  save  King  HI  „  v  i  489 
So  perish  all  the  enemies  ot  H  I  ,<  v  i  505 
H  and  God  Almighty  !  „  v  i  526 
Against  the  shifting  blaze  of  H's  axe !  ,.  v  i  587 
Look  out  upon  the  hill — is  H  there  ?  '  „    v  i  670 

0  H,  H — Our  H — we  shall  never  see  him  more.  „  v  ii  2 
H  slain  ? — I  cannot  find  his  body.  „     v  ii  18 

1  tell  thee,  girl,  I  am  seeking  my  dead  H.  „  v  ii  43 
E?  Oh  no — najr,  if  it  were — my  God,  „  v  ii  74 
And  what  body  is  this  ?  Edith.  H,  thy  better  !  „  v  ii  88 
with  all  his  rooftree  ringing  '  H,'  „  v  ii  130 
When  all  men  coimted  H  would  be  king.  And  H  „  v  ii  132 
have  I  fought  men  Like  H  and  his  brethren,  „   v  ii  179 

Harold  (King  of  Norway)    (See  also  Hardrada)    the  giant  King 

of  Norway,  H  Hardrada —  „  m  ii  123 

as  having  been  so  bi-uised  By  //,  king  of  Norway ;  „     iv  i  10 
Harold  (Mr.  Philip  Edgar)    (See  also  'Arold,  Edgar, 
Philip,  Philip  Edgar,  Philip  Harold,  Philip 
Hedgar)     That  fine,  fat,  hook-nosed  uncle 

of  mine,  old  //,  Prom,  of  May  i  510 

Not  /?  !     *  Philip  Edgar,  Philip  Edgar ! '  ,.           n  240 

Might  I  ask  your  name  ?    Harold.    H.  „           ii  394 


Prom,  of  May  ii  451 


11675 
n723 
11726 
II  738 

III  175 
III  281 
III  610 
HI  726 


Harold  (Mr.  Philip  Edgar)  (continued)    Nay — ^now — ^not 
one,  for  I  am  Philip  H. 
Dobbins,  or  some  other,  spy  Edgar  in  H  ?    Well 
then,   I  must  make  her  Love  H  first,   and 
then  she  will  forgive  Edgar  for  H's  sake. 
Half  a  score  of  them,  all  directed  to  me — H. 
My  name  is  H  !     Good  day,  Dobbins  ! 
an'  whether  thou  calls  thysen  Hedgar  or  H, 
matched  with  my  H  is  like  a  hedge  thistle  by  a 

garden  rose. 

And  this  lover  of  yours — this  Mr.  H — is  a  gentleman? 

your  own  name  Of  H  sounds  so  English 

Master  Hedgar,  H,  or  whativer  They  calls  ye, 

Harold  the  Saxon  (Earl  of  Wessex,  afterwards  King  of 

England)     (See  also  Harold)    have  loved  H  t  S, 

or  Hereward  the  Wake.  Foresters  i  i  228 

Ha  Ron    H  R\    H  R\  (repeat)         Harold  v  i  437,  528,  631,  650,  661,  664 
Harp  (s)     his  finger  on  her  h  (I  heard  him  more  than  once)  Harold  iv  i  204 
gloom  of  Saul  Was  lighten'd  by  young  David's  h.   Queen  Mary  v  ii  359 
Harp  (verb)     That  he  should  h  this  way  on  Normandy  ?  Harold  i  i  270 

Harried    Hath  h  mine  own  cattle — God  confound  him  !  „  iv  iii  190 

Harrowing    See  A-harrowin' 
Harry  (great  ship)    he  look'd  the  Great  H,  You  but  his 

cockboat ;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  146 

Harry  (Henry)  Bolingbroke    such  a  one  As  H  B  hath  a 
lure  in  it. 
H  o  B  Had  holpen  Richard's  tottering  throne  to 
stand,  Could  H  have  foreseen  that  all  our  nobles 
Harry  (Henry  the  Eighth)    (See  also  Henry)    Mary,  the 
lawful  and  legitimate  daughter  of  H  the  Eighth  ! 
Our  sovereign  Lady  by  King  H's  will ; 
I  am  H's  daughter,  Tudor,  and  not  Fear. 
But  then  what's  here  ?     King  H  with  a  scroll. 
I  am  H's  daughter : 
then  King  H  look'd  from  out  a  cloud, 
Harry  (Henry  the  Seventh)    bom  i'  the  tail  end  of  old 
H  the  Seventh, 
bom  true  man  at  five  in  the  forenoon  i'  the  tail 
of  old  H, 
Harry  (Henry  the  Sixth?)    It's  H  !    Third  Citizen.    It's 

Queen  Mary. 

Harsh    //  is  the  news !  hard  is  our  honeymoon  ! 

but  my  voice  is  h  here,  not  in  tune. 

For  once  in  France  the  King  had  been  so  h, 

Even  this  brawler  of  h  trutlis — 

Hartist  (artist)     What's  a  A?     I  doant  believe  he's  iver  Prom.ofMayilW 

Harvest  (adj.)     the  h  moon  is  the  ripening  of  the  harvest,    Becket,  Pro.  362 

Harvest  (s)     Were  scatter'd  to  the  A  .  .  .  Harold  iv  iii  211 

which  we  Inheriting  reap  an  easier  h.  Becket  ii  ii  194 

find  one  shock  upon  the  field  when  all  The  h  has  been 

carried.  The  Falcon  302 

Harvestless    H  autumns,  horrible  agues,  plague—  Queen  Mary  v  i  98 

Harwich    On  all  the  road  from  H,  night  and  day ;  „         v  ii  579 

Haste  (s)     with  what  h  I  might  To  save  my  royal  cousin.         „         ii  iv  77 
in  h  put  off  the  rags  They  had  mock'd  his  misery  with,         „      iv  iii  589 
Haste  (verb)    That  h's  with  full  commission  from  the  Pope         „         in  ii  51 
Hasten     harm  at  times,  may  even  H  their  end.  The  Falcon  823 

Hastings  (Francis,  second  Earl  of  Huntingdon)    Sent 

Cornwallis  and  H  to  the  traitor,  Queen  Mary  n  ii  31 

Hastings  (town  in  Sussex)     lay  them  both  upon  the  waste 

sea-shore  At  H,  Harold  v  ii  161 

Hat    See 'At 

Hatch     But  h  you  some  new  treason  in  the  woods.         Queen  Mary  i  v  465 
Hateh'd    This  is  the  fifth  conspiracy  h  in  France ;  „  v  i  297 

Hatchet    before  you  can  eat  it  you  must  hack  it  with  a  h,  Foresters  n  i  285 
Hate  (s)     (See  also  Heart-hate)     her  h  Will  burn  till  you 

are  burn'd.  Quee7i  Mary  i  ii  58 

In  hope  to  charm  them  from  their  h  of  Spain.  „        in  yi  82 

to  fuse  Almost  into  one  metal  love  and  h, —  „      ni  vi  182 

sow'd  therein  The  seed  of  H,  it  blossom'd  Charity.  „        iv  i  172 

carrion-nosing  mongrel  vomit  With  h  and  horror.  „      iv  iii  45C 

when  she  touch'd  on  thee.  She  stammer'd  in  her  h ;  Harold  i  ii  37 

If  H  can  kill.  And  Loathing  wield  a  Saxon  battle-axe —        „     v  i  412 
his,  a  h  Not  ever  to  be  heal'd.  Becket  i  i  17f 

We  have  but  one  bond,  her  h  of  Becket. 


livlO 

ni  i  112 

ii9 

II  ii  268 

II  iv  52 

in  1260 

in  V  116 

IV  ii6 

ii'43 


1 134 

HaroU  iv  iii  229 

Becket,  Pro.  349 

V  ii  140 

Foresters  iv  948 


ll 


Hate 


947 


Head 


Hate  (s)  (continued)    And  mine  a  bitterer  illegitimate  h,  A 
bastard  h 

That  sow  this  h  between  my  lord  and  me ! 

I  follow  out  my  h  and  thy  revenge. 

And  private  h's  with  our  defence  of  Heaven. 

and  aU  her  loves  and  h's  Sink  again  into  chaos. 
Hate  (verb)     (See  also  Haate)    this  bald  priest,  and  she 

that  h's  me,  Queen  Mary  i  iv  282 

My  sister  cowers  and  h's  me.  „  i  v  83 

Would  I  marry  Prince  Philip,  if  all  England  h  him  ? 

Lord  of  Devon  is  a  pretty  man.     I  ft  him. 

no  old  news  that  all  men  h  it. 

and  the  beds  I  know.     I  h  Spain. 

Ajr,  since  you  ft  the  telling  it. 

With  all  the  rage  of  one  who  h's  a  truth 

H  me  and  mine : 

They  ft  me  also  for  my  love  to  you,  My  Philip ; 

Heft's  Philip ;  He  is  all  Italian,  and  he  h's  the  Spaniard ; 

but  I  know  it  of  old,  he  h's  ihe  too ; 

And  h's  the  Spaniard — fiery -choleric, 

Clarence,  they  ft  me ;  even  while  I  speak 

'  Your  people  ft  you  as  your  husband  h's  you.' 

My  people  ft  me  and  desire  my  death. 

My  husband  h's  me,  and  desires  my  death. 

I  A  myself,  and  I  desire  my  death. 

Give  me  the  lute.    He  ft'*  me ! 

Even  for  that  he  h's  me. 

Edward  loves  him,  so  Ye  ft  him. 

I  am  sure  she  h's  thee,  Pants  for  thy  blood. 

H  not  one  who  felt  Some  pity  for  thy  hater ! 

H  him  ?     I  could  love  him  More, 

Griffyth  I  hated  :  why  not  ft  the  foe  Of  England  ? 

If  he  found  me  thus,  Harold  might  A  me ; 

many  among  our  Norman  lords  H  thee  for  this, 

Juggler  and  bastard — bastard — he  ft's  that  most — 

Our  sister  h's  us  for  his  banishment ; 

And  Alfgar  h's  King  Harold. 

Old  man,  Harold  H's  nothing ; 

Morcar,  it  is  all  but  duty  in  her  To  A  me ;  I  have  heard 
she  A's  me. 

If  not,  they  cannot  A  the  conqueror. 

I  A  King  Edward,  for  he  join'd  with  thee 

il  A  myself  for  all  things  that  I  do. 
I  A  thee,  and  daspise  thee,  and  defy  thee. 
I  loved  him  as  I  A  This  liar  who  made  me  liar, 
how  your  Grace  must  A  him.     Eleanor.     H  him  ? 
break  down  our  castles,  for  the  which  I  A  him. 
The  Church  will  A  thee. 
He  h's  my  will,  not  me. 

I  A  a  split  between  old  friendships  as  I  ft  the  dirty  gap 
I  A  him  for  his  insolence  to  all. 
i      I  ft  him  for  I  ft  him  is  my  reason.  And  yet  I  A  him  for 
a  hypocrite. 
I  A  the  man  !     What  filthy  tools  our  Senate 
I  could  A  her  for  it  But  that  she  is  distracted. 
My  brother  A's  him,  scorns  The  noblest-natured  man 
I  A  tears.     Marriage  is  but  an  old  tradition.     I  A 

Traditions,  ever  since  my  narrow  father.  Prom,  of  May  i  489 

It  seems  to  me  that  I  A  men,  ever  since  my  sister 

left  us. 
But  she  A's  Edgar. 

Scorn  !     I  A  scorn  !     A  Soul  with  no  religion — 
A  gallant  Earl.     I  love  him  as  I  A  John, 
yet  I  A  him  for  his  want  of  chivalry. 
1  A  him,  I  A  the  man.     I  may  not  A  the  King 
Beware  of  John  !     Marian.     I  ft  him. 
I A  hidden  faces,  (repeat) 
kted    (See  also  Woili-YiateA)    My  hard  father  A  me; 

My  brother  rather  A  me  Queen  Mary  i  v  81 

Old  Sir  Thomas  would  have  A  it.  „  ii  i  18 

So  ft  here  !     1  watch'd  a  hive  of  late ;  „       m  iii  46 

because  to  persecute  Makes  a  faith  A,  „      ni  iv  116 

Harold  always  ft  him.  Harold  i  i  429 

Griffyth  I  A :  why  not  hate  the  foe  Of  England?  „      i  ii  145 

There  spake  Godwin,  Who  A  all  the  Normans ;  „    in  i  252 


Becket  ii  i  173 

„    iiii272 

„   IV  ii  151 

„       V  ii  52 

Foresters  i  ii  329 


IV  139 

I  v616 
iiil7 

II  i  185 

III  i  89 
III  vi  143 

v  185 
vi95 
v  ii  54 
v  ii60 
v  ii  92 

V  ii  214 

V  ii  336 

V  ii  345 

V  ii  347 

V  ii  351 

V  ii  363 

V  ii  380 
Harold  i  i  429 

iu38 
Iii  43 
I  ii  141 
I  ii  145 
I  ii  172 
II  ii  546 
II  ii  773 
in  178 
IV  i  125 
IV  i  129 


IV  i  154 
IV  i  215 
IV  ii  12 
IV  ii  45 

IV  ii  79 
vi411 

Becket,  Pro.  434 

Pro.  448 

I  iii  566 

II  ii  27 

u  ii  380 

V  i  226 

V  i  230 

The  Cup  I  i  155 

II  178 

The  Falcon  257 


II  79 

II  672 

in  531 

Foresters  i  i  191 

I  ii  107 

I  ii  113 

I  ii  215 

„  1 11245,250 


Hated  (continued)     Out,  beast  monk  !     I  ever  A  monks.  Harold  v  i  76 

Roger  of  York,  you  always  A  him,  Becket  V  i  9 

I  always  A  boundless  arrogance.  „     v  i  12 

I  held  for  Richard,  and  I  h  John.  Foresters  ii  i  52 

Hateful    make  her  as  A  to  herself  and  to  the  King,  Becket,  Pro.  526 

Fool !     I  will  make  thee  A  to  thy  King.  „  i  ii  92 

Save  from  some  A  cantrip  of  thine  own.  „  v  i  140 

Hate-philtre    such  A  strong  h-p  as  may  madden  him —  „       iv  ii  458 

Hater     Hate  not  one  who  felt  Some  pity  for  thy  A  !  Harold  i  ii  44 

Hatest    Thou  A  him,  A  him.  „  iii  i  172 

Crouch  even  because  thou  A  him ;  Becket  iv  ii  223 

Hating    See  World-hating 
Hatred    the  A  of  another  to  us  Is  no  true  bond 

A  of  the  doctrines  Of  those  who  rule,  which  A  by 
and  by  Involves  the  ruler 

'  Love  of  this  world  is  A  against  God.' 

yet  what  A  Christian  men  Bear  to  each  other, 
EEaugbtiness  have  marked  the  A  of  their  nobles ; 
Haughty    Madam,  methinks  a  cold  face  and  a  ft. 

They  call  him  cold,  H,  ay,  worse. 

Why,  ev'n  the  A  prince,  Northumberland, 
Haul  H  like  a  great  strong  fellow  at  my  legs. 
Haunt    There  A  some  Papist  ruffians  hereabout 

My  men  say  The  fairies  ft  this  glade ; — 
Haunted    Why  am  I  follow'd.  A,  harrass'd, 

A  lying  devil  Hath  ft  me — 

is  ft  by  The  ghosts  of  the  dead  passions  of  dead  men ;    Prom,  of  May  ii  274 
Haven    looking  to  the  happy  ft  Where  he  shall  rest     Queen  Mary  iv  iii  579 

bays  And  ft's  filling  with  a  blissful  sea.  ~' 

Haveringatte-Bower    nightingales  in  H-B  Sang  out 
Havings    Your  ft  wasted  by  the  scythe  and  spade— 
Havock     To  make  free  spoil  and  A  of  your  goods. 
Havock'd    That  A  all  the  land  in  Stephen's  day. 
Hawk  (s)     Sick  for  an  idle  week  of  A  and  hound 

a  feeder  Of  dogs  and  A's,  and  apes, 

H,  buzzard,  jay,  the  mavis  and  the  merle. 

To  fright  the  wild  A  passing  overhead, 
Hawk  (verb)    and  hunt  and  A  beyond  the  seas ! 

I  wiU  A  and  hunt  In  Flanders. 

had  past  me  by  To  hunt  and  A  elsewhere. 
Hawking    (See  also  A-hawking)    Gone  A  on  the  Nene, 

when  he  came  last  year  To  see  me  A,  he  was  well 
enough : 
Hawking-phrases    then  I  taught  him  all  our  h-p. 
Hawthorn    filch  the  linen  from  the  A, 
Haxed  (asked)    Why  if  Steer  han't  A  schoolmaster  to 

dinner, 
Hay    See  Haay 
Haycock    See  Haaycock 

Hayfield    (See  also  Haayfield)    you  should  be  in  the  h 
looking  after  your  men ; 

You  had  better  attend  to  your  A. 

that  you  did  not  come  into  the  A. 

You  are  as  good  as  a  man  in  the  A. 
Haystack    and  a  plum-pudding  as  big  as  the  round  A. 
Head  (s)     (See  also  'Ead)    draw  back  your  A's  and  your 

horns  Queen  Mary  i  i  4 


Queen  Mary  i  iv  44 

„      III  iv  159 

IV  iii  173 

„       IV  iii  182 

II  i  168 

I  V  197 

I  V  432 

m  i  147 

Harold  n  i  11 

Queen  Mary  iii  v  174 

Foresters  u  ii  101 

Harold  n  ii  248 

vi318 


The  Cup  n  236 

Harold  i  ii  18 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  276 

„     '  II  ii  186 

Becket  i  i  242 

Harold  i  i  103 

Becket  i  i  80 

Foresters  i  iii  115 

in  318 

Harold  i  i  229 

I  i  259 

n  ii  28 

Becket  i  iii  2 

The  Falcon  313 

314 

Foresters  ni  199 

Prom,  of  May  1 185 


Prom,  of  May  n  47 

n  123 

in  82 

m  106 

I  794 


be  no  peace  for  Mary  till  Elizabeth  lose  her  A.' 

If  Ehzabeth  lose  her  A — 

with  an  ass's,  not  a  horse's  A, 

Stand  further  off,  or  you  may  lose  your  A.     Courtenay. 

I  have  a  ft  to  lose  for  your  sweet  sake. 
No — ^being  traitor  Her  ft  will  fall : 
a  ft  So  full  of  grace  and  beauty  ! 
When  the  A  leapt — so  common  ! 
For  all  that  I  can  carry  it  in  my  A. 
If  you  can  carry  your  A  upon  j'our  shoulders. 
I'll  have  my  A  set  higher  m  the  state ; 
Have  made  strong  A  against  ourselves  and  you. 
I  cannot  lift  my  hands  unto  my  ft. 
He,  whom  the  Father  hath  appointed  H 
I  had  held  my  ft  up  then. 
What !  will  she  have  my  ft  ? 
lost  the  ft's  Wherewith  they  plotted  in  their  treasonous 

malice, 


I  iii  5 
I  iii  88 
I  iii  169 

I  ivl29 
I  v60 
iv63 

I  v477 
ni88 
ni89 

II  i  250 
11  ii  146 
in  i  240 

in  iii  207 
in  iii  246 
III  iii  278 

III  iv  3 


Head 


948 


Hear 


Head  (s)  (continued)    Lift  h,  and  flourish ;  Queen  ^«'^  f  A\^^ 

"bis  brother's,  nay,  his  noble  mother's,  H  fell-  „  n    v  29b 

I  kept  my  h  for  lise  of  Holy  Church ;  ,.  ^ '^  359 

Gardiner  would  have  mj  h.           ^^  ^  ^u  ^  t  ^i,-  i  "   m  v  ISl 

I  never  lay  my  h  upon  the  pillow  But  that  I  thmk,  „  ni  v  idi 

Cranmer  is  fe  and  father  of  these  heresies,  ,.      ly  i  <  o 

I  say  they  have  drawn  the  fire  On  their  own  hs:  „  rv      mx 

become  Hideously  alive  again  from  h  to  heel,  „  iv  lu  ^^ 
but  Cranmer  only  shook  his /i,  ,  ,,,  ^  ■  v,  '  \r  i  TSR 
and  of  his  holy  h—For  Alva  is  true  son  of  the  true  church—  „      v  ^  io» 

I  have  broken  off  the /i.  ,  , ,  ,  -n  "  v  a  li 
More  merciful  to  many  a  rebel  h  That  should  have  fallen,     „         v  ii  o 

like  the  bloodless  h  Fall'n  on  the  block,  «       ^  ii  ^u 

He  drew  this  shaft  against  me  to  the  h,  ..        V" o=o 

Methought  some  traitor  smote  me  on  the  h.  «     ^  i  ^^ 

sent  on  foreign  travel.  Not  lost  his /i.  "     "'i-J'o 

and  make  Down  for  their  h's  to  heaven !  v  "  ij  ^  VonR 

all  the  sins  of  both  The  houses  on  mine  h—  Harold  1 1  zuo 

the  poor  thunder  Never  harm'd  h.  "       \  ]] 

Upon  the  h's  of  those  who  walk'd  withm—  ..     "  "  ^»^ 

dogs'  food  thrown  upon  thy  h.  "      „  a  fi7n 

The  crime  be  on  his  /i— not  bounden— no.  ..      J^ij  ^^^ 

Tostig,  raise  my  ^ !              . ,  .   ,      ,  "      ttt  i  1  fi3 

raise  his  h,  for  thou  hast  laid  it  low !  "      ttt  !  9fi2 

wilt  thou  bring  another,  Edith,  upon  his  h?  „     ™/.f °^ 

and  the  second  curse  Descend  upon  thme  h,  »      ™;  ooi 

Since  Griffyth's  h  was  sent  To  Edward,  ..      i^  ^  ^^x 

may  give  that  egg-bald  h  The  tap  that  silences.  „        J  '  »^ 

hand  and  foot,  I  hand,  foot,  heart  and  h.  ,>       I J  ^^^ 

and  h's  And  arms  are  shver'd  off  and  sphnter  d  "        v    ^fifi 

As  thine  own  bolts  that  fall  on  cnmeful  A  s  ..        ;  '  ^"" 

And  when  the  Gascon  wine  mounts  to  my  h,  necKe.,  rro.  xx-t 

That  rang  Within  my  i^  last  n^ht,  "        .  i^  179 

be  we  not  a-supping  with  the /i  of  the  family?  ,.        f^^X  | ' f 

A  hundred  of  the  wisest  ;*'«  from  England,  ..        "  ;  i^i 
asked  our  mother  if  I  could  keep  a  quiet  tongue  1  my  h,  „        ra  1  liy 

He  bows,  he  bares  his  ;i,  he  is  coming  hither.  „        ™  |H  ^* 
with  the  Holy  Father  astride  of  it  down  upon  his  own  h.  „       in  111  (o 

Hugh,  how  proudly  you  exalt  your  h\  "         I ;!  Iro 

And  lose  his  fe  as  old  St.  Denis  did.  ..            "ilffi 

Save  that  dear  h  which  now  is  Canterbury,  ..         ^^-'ooV 

They  howl  for  thee,  to  rend  thee  h  from  hmb.  The  Cup  1  u  321 

that  same  h  they  would  have  play  d  at  ball  with  „          h  ^^o 

and  rears  his  root  Beyond  his  h,  "    j,  ,       qq 

you  that  have  not  the  hoi  a  toad,  J  ««  ^  '^'"'\^ 

And  softly  placed  the  chaplet  on  her  h.  >•        ^"^ 

Set,  as  you  say,  so  lightly  on  her  h,  » 

and  dipt  your  sovereign  h  Thro'  these  low  doors,  .  ,y      ,  ftSQ 
I  think  I  scarce  could  hold  my  h  up  there.                From,  of  Alayi  689 

has  promised  to  keep  our  h's  above  water ;  ..          m  j.  lu 

—is  a  gentleman?    Dora.    That  he  is,  from  A  to  ^^  ^^^ 

Now1fshekisshim,IwiUhavehis;..  ^omie^  i  ii  146 

Why  comest  thou  Uke  a  death's  /i  at  my  feast  ?  „        i  "  ^^" 

She  broke  mv  fe  on  Tuesday  with  a  dish.  ..       1 1"  -^^^ 

A  houseless  h  beneath  the  sun  and  stars,  ..          "  »  "| 

A  price  is  set  On  this  poor  h;  "         ,„  010 

or  the  ;i  of  a  fool,  or  the  heart  of  Prince  John,  „         iv  ^^ 

he  wiU,  He  wiU— he  feels  it  in  his  ;i.  "         i;9?" 

Then  on  the  instant  I  will  break  thy  h.  ..         ^l  0°^ 

Thou  hast  saved  my  h  at  the  peril  of  thme  own.  „         ly  ' »» 

Head  (verb)     And  h  them  with  a  lamer  rhyme  of  mme,    Queen  Mary  11 1  29 

Illffthe  Church  against  the  King  with  thee.  Becket  1 111  245 

if  the  followers  Of  him,  who  h's  the  movement,  ,f  %f  Tf  °.^  ]% 

Headache    And  heal  your /..  Q««e.  Mar^/     v  146 

what  ft  ?     Heartache,  perchance ;  not  h.  ..         J  '*  ^^' 

to  snore  away  his  drunkenness  Into  the  sober  h,—  Becket  11  a  16 

I  have  a  dizzying  ft.     Let  me  rest. 

Headed    <S'ee  Bull-headed,  Hot-headed  ^^.^otttrir 

Hwdiog    i?  the  holy  war  against  the  Moslem,  ^'^m'"  '  ifl? 

HmS    To  make  me  ft.  ^''r    w7t  n  gSi 

H^OTg    both  of  us  Too  ft  for  our  office.  5ecfee<  n  u  290 

The  cataract  typed  the  ft  plunge  and  fall  Of 

heresy  to  the  pit :  Q^een  Mary  ni  iv  1^ 

Head-shakiDg    My  wise  ft-5  Harold  ?  Harold  11  361 


Queen  Mary  in  iii  11 J 
„  miii29l 

m  iv  248] 
ni  i  39$1 
„  m  v  113 

Becket,  Pro.  23 
Qu^en  Mary  i  iv  14 
„        ni  iii  185j 
The  Falcon  92aJ 
Queen  Mary  ni  iv  274 
Becket  i  i  178 
Queen  Mary  1  v  167j 
„  IV  i  41 

„     IV  ii  in 

Becket  i  iv  15 
„   in  iii  26 
The  Cup  n  41, 13 
From,  of  May  ni  76T 
Foresters  in  Slf 
ni351 
ni  3C 
ni  372 
IV  968 
Queen  Mary  in  v  260 


Headship    So  fierce  against  the  H  of  the  Pope, 
How  should  he  bear  the  ft  of  the  Pope  ? 
bolster'd  up  The  gross  King's  ft  of  the  Church, 
Headsman    when  the  ft  pray'd  to  be  forgiven 
Headstone    Then  have  my  simple  ft  by  the  church, 
Headstrong    A  strain  of  hard  and  ft  in  him. 
Heal    And  ft  your  headache. 

That  our  commission  is  to  ft,  not  harm ; 
We  two  together  Will  help  to  ft  your  son— 
Heal'd    Cannot  be  ft  by  stroking. 
his,  a  hate,  Not  ever  to  be  ft. 
Health    He  wrecks  his  ft  and  wealth  on  courtesans, 
H  to  your  Grace  !  ,  ^  ,      .  ..     u    ^ 

yet  it  is  a  day  to  test  your  ft  Ev'n  at  the  best : 
Here — all  of  you — my  lord's  ft. 
That  ft  of  heart,  once  ours, 
Greeting  and  ft  from  Synorix !  (repeat) 
Has  lost  his  ft,  his  eyesight,  even  his  mind. 
Shall  drink  the  ft  of  our  new  woodland  Queen, 
till  the  green  earth  drink  Her  ft  along  with  us 
Drink  to  the  ft  of  our  new  Queen  0'  the  woods. 
We  drink  the  ft  of  thy  new  Queen  o'  the  woods. 
The  king's  good  ft  in  ale  and  Malvoisie. 
Healthful    A  right  rough  life  and  ft.  -jjr  ^f 

Heap    she  sits  naked  by  a  great  ft  of  gold  in  the  middle  of 
the  wood,  ,j      _ 

she  sat  Stone-dead  upon  a  ft  of  ice-cold  eggs. 
Heap'd    And  all  the  ft  experiences  of  life. 
Hear    (See  also  "E&r)    Did  you  ft  (I  have  a  daughter  m  .^^ 

her  service  ,  ,     ,  t  i  124 

I  ft  that  he  too  is  full  of  aches  and  broken  -         1 1  ■i'^* 

ft  what  the  shaveling  has  to  say  for  himself. 
Hush— ft  !     Bourne,     —and  so  this  unhappy  land, 
Peace  !  ft  him ;  let  his  own  words  damn  the  Papist. 
Her  Majesty  H's  you  affect  the  Prince- 
She  h's  you  make  your  boast  that  after  all 
If  Mary  will  not  ft  us— well— conjecture— 
You  speak  too  low,  my  Lord ;  I  cannot  h  you. 
Nay,  if  by  chance  you  ft  of  any  such, 
Your  Grace  will  ft  her  reasons  from  herself. 
I  will  not  ft  of  him. 

Madam,  my  master  h's  with  much  alarm. 
Will  you  ft  why  ?    Mary  of  Scotland,— 
I  see  but  the  black  night,  and  ft  the  wolf, 
not  to  ft  the  nightingales.  But  hatch  you  some  new  treason 
See  that  you  neither  ft  them  nor  repeat  1 
It  breaks  my  heart  to  ft  her  moan  at  night 
I  ft  them  stirring  in  the  Council  Chamber. 
I  do  not  ft  from  Carew  or  the  Duke 
Doesn't  your  worship  ft  ? 
Until  I  ft  from  Carew  and  the  Duke, 
from  Penenden  Heath  in  hope  To  ft  you  speak. 
Your  Highness  h's  This  burst  and  bass  of  loyal  harmony, 
H  us  now  make  oath  To  raise  your  Highness 
I  ft  that  Gardiner,  coming  with  the  Queen, 
I  have  ears  to  ft.     Gardiner.    Ay,  rascal,  if  I  leave  thee 

ears  to  ft.  ,    .  ,     1  i.  • 

I  ft  this  Legate's  coming  To  bring  us  absolution 
You'll  ft  of  me  again.     Bagenhall.     Upon  the  scaffold. 
Ay ;  but  I  ft  she  hath  a  dropsy,  lad. 
Did  you  ft  'em  ?  were  you  by  ? 
Well,  they  shall  ft  my  recantation  there. 
Ye  ft  him,  and  albeit  there  may  seem 
Yourselves  shall  ft  him  speak.    ,  .  ,      .    ^    ,,  , 

proclaim  Your  true  undoubted  faith,  that  aU  may  ft. 
H  him,  my  good  brethren.  .      ^,  ^  <. 

H  what  I  might— another  recantation  Of  Cranmer  at 

the  stake.    Paget.    You'd  not  ft  that. 
Nay,  you  sicken  me  To  ft  you.  ,     .u    j. 

I  cum  behind  tha,  gall,  and  couldn't  make  tha  ft. 
'  not  till  I  h's  ez  Latimer  and  Ridley  be  a-vire ; 
I  ft  unhappy  rumours— nay,  I  say  not,  I  believe. 
Alas  !  the  Council  will  not  ft  of  war. 
Lost  in  a  wilderness  where  none  can  ft ! 
She  neither  sees  nor  h's, 


Becket  m  ii  21 

„     V  ii  239 

I  i  154 


I  iii  17 

I  iii  19 

I  iii  52 

iiv82 

iiv87 

I  iv  117 

I  iv  125 

I  iv  175 

iiv230 

IV  173 

IV  249 

IV  283 

IV  413 

I  V  464 
IV  576 
IV  603 

IV  628 
nil 

II 120 
nil22 
nilo3 

II  ii  284 
n  ii  288 
II  ii  308 

in  1250 
mi  430 
mi  474 
ra  ii  223 
m  iv  395 
IV  ii  199 
IV  iii  31 
IV  iii  110 
rv  iii  115 
IV  iii  227 

IV  iii  299 
IV  iii  452 
IV  iii  466 
IV  iii  508 
vi34 
vil64 

V  ii  383 
vii405 


Hear 


949 


-BxxaicoTUinued)    And  lore  to  A  bad  tales  of  Philip.      Queen  Mary  v  ii  429 
Much  changed,  I  h.  Had  put  off  levity  v  li  ^ 

There's  the  Queen's  light.     I  h  she  cannot  live  "  v  i v  11 

you  curse  so  loud,  The  watch  will  h  you.  "  I  \l  cq 

speak  him  sweetly,  he  will  h  thee.  "//«r/,7//  t  ,•  i T7 

When  didst  thou  h  from  thy  Northumbria  ?     Tostig 
When  did  I  h  aught  but  this  '  When '  from  thee  ?  * 
But  thou  canst  h  the  best  and  wisest  of  us. 
yet  h  !  thine  earldom,  Tostig,  hath  been  a  kingdom. 
I  fain  would  h  him  coming !  .  .  . 
And  h  my  peregrine  and  her  bells  in  hoaven ; 
Harold  H  the  king's  music,  all  alone  with  him 
Come,  Malet,  let  us  A  !  ' 

No  more  !     I  will  not  h  thee — William  comes. 
We  h  he  hath  not  long  to  live. 
H  King  Harold  !  he  says  true  ! 

I A  no  more.     Margot.    H  me  again— for  the  last  time. 
H  me  again !     Our  Saints  have  moved  the  Chiu-ch 
H  it  thro'  me. 

I  do  not  h  our  English  war-cry. 
That  thou  wilt  h  no  more  o'  the  customs. 
Dost  thou  not  h  ? 

till  I  A  from  the  Pope  I  will  suspend  myself 
Art  thou  deaf  ?    Becket.    I  h  you.    Hilary.    Dost  thou 

h  those  others  ?     Becket.     Ay  ! 
H  first  thy  sentence  !     The  King  and  all  his  lords— 

Becket.    Son,  first  h  me ! 
Nay,  but  h  thy  judgment. 
H  me  son.     As  gold  Outvalues  dross, 
and  when  ye  shall  h  it  is  poured  out  upon  earth, 
wind  of  the  dawn  that  I  A  in  the  pine  overhead  ? 
I  will  not  h  it. 

we  shall  h  him  presently  with  clapt  wing 
Out !     I A  no  more. 

Grasshopper,  grasshopper,  Whoop — you  can  h. 
I  did  not  A  aright, 
I  would  not  h  him. 
I A  Margery:  I'll  go  play  with  her. 
I  holla'd  to  him,  but  he  didn't  A  me : 
I A  the  yelping  of  the  hounds  of  hell, 
when  he  A's  a  door  open  in  the  house  and  thinks  '  the 

master.' 
Did  you  A  the  young  King's  quip  ? 
The  King  shall  never  A  of  me  again. 
Do  you  A  me  ?     BeUeve  or  no,  I  care  not. 
Threats !  threats  !  ye  h  him. 
You  A  them,  brother  John ; 
Can  you  not  A  them  yonder  like  a  storm. 
Do  you  A  that  ?  strike,  strike. 

Artemis,  Artemis,  A  us,  O  Mother,  A  us,  and  bless  us  ! 
H  thy  people  who  praise  thee  ! 
E  thy  priestesses  hymn  thy  glory  ! 
Artemis,  Artemis,  A  him,  Ionian  Artemis ! 
all  the  fleeted  wealth  of  kings  And  peoples,  A. 
hurls  the  victor's  column  down  with  him  That  crowns  it,  A. 
gulf  and  flatten  in  her  closing  chasm  Domed  cities,  A. 
Whose  lava-torrents  blast  and  blacken  a  province 
To  a  cinder,  A.     Whose  winter  -  cataracts  find  a 
realm  and  leave  it  A  waste  of  rock  and  ruin,  A. 
Artemis,  Artemis,  A  her,  Ephesian  Artemis  !     Camma. 

Artemis,  Artemis,  A  me,  Galatian  Artemis  ! 
Why  then  the  Goddess  h's. 
E  that,  my  bird  !     Art  thou  not  jealous  of  her  ? 
h  that  you  are  saying  behind  his  back 
by  yoiu-  leave  if  you  would  A  the  rest,  The  writing. 
E  that,  my  lady  !  (repeat) 

You  A,  Filippo  ?    My  good  fellow,  go  !  „         „j,y 

Master  Dobson,  did  you  h  what  I  said  ?  Prom,  of  May  1 172 

Heaven  h's  you,  Phihp  Edgar !  „  1 760 

And  he  would  A  you  even  from  the  grave.  ,','  i  752 

f'raps  ye  h's  'at  I  soomtimes  taakes  a  drop  too  much ;  ",  n  107 

told  her  I  should  A  her  from  the  grave.  „  n  244 

Tou — did  you  A  a  cry  ?  "         jjj  552 

Sweet,  do  you  A  me  ?  ^^'         jjj  gijrg 

You  wrong  me  there  !  A,  A  me  !  \\         m  775 


Heard 


ii281 
1 1300 
1 1303 
lii  5 
I  ii  131 
I  ii  194 
II  ii  211 
II  ii  479 
II  ii  565 
IV  160 
V  i  7 
vi39 
vi62 
..      V  i  651 
Becket  1  iii  255 
I  iii  267 
I  iii  299 

I  iii  605 

I  iii  670 
I  iii  682 

I  iii  713 
iiv36 

nil 

II  i  211 
II  ii  48 

II  ii  233 

III  i  103 
III  i  235 
mi  257 
mi  274 
mil  26 
in  ii  48 

m  iii  98 
m  iii  146 
IV  ii  102 

IV  ii  352 
V  11465 

V  ii  534 
V  ii  624 

..     V  iii  161 
The  Cup  n  1 
n5 
II  7 
n277 
II  290 
II  297 


„    II 301 

„    n  310 

„    II 388 

The  Falcon  5 

106 

529 

„  636,  652 


Seta  {continued)    You  A  !    Sheriff.    Yes,  my  lord,  fear  not.     Foresters  i  ii  31 

but  no  !     We  A  he  IS  m  prison.  h  j  34 

Did  we  not  A  the  two  would  pass  this  way  ?  "      11  i  197 

Ay  do  you  A?    There  may  be  murder  done.  "      n  i  339 

Evil  fairy !  do  you  A  ?  "     „  ij  ^g 

Up  with  you,  all  of  you,  out  of  it !  A  and  obey.  ''     n  ii  184 

l"ifty  leagues  Of  v,oodland  A  and  know  my  horn,  m  104 

will  you  not  A  one  of  these  beggars'  catches  ?  m  405 

You  A  your  Queen,  obey!  ;;       i„  454 

WiU  A  our  arrows  whizzing  overhead,  ly  1090 
Heard    {See  also  'Eard,  Heard,  Heerd)    Have  we  not  A 

T  K°^  ^^l  ^"  JE^ward's  time.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  18 

1  Have  h,  the  tongue  yet  quiver'd  with  the  jest  i  v  475 

hast  thou  ever  A  Slanders  against  Prince  Philip  ,          i  v  569 

but  I  have  A  a  thousand  such.  ^]         j  y  579 

and  your  worship's  name  A  into  Maidstone  market,  "           11  i  63 

I  have  A  One  of  your  Council  fieer  and  jeer  „         n  ii  392 

I  had  A  that  every  Spaniard  carries  "        m  j  222 

A  She  would  not  take  a  last  farewell  of  him,  "        m  j  366 

We  A  that  you  were  sick  in  Flanders,  cousin.  "         in  ii  33 

Methinks  the  good  land  A  me,  ]]        m  ij  57 

I  A  An  angel  cry  '  There  is  more  joy  in  Heaven,'—  "           iv  ii  9 

yet  have  A  Of  aU  their  wretchedness.  '      iv  iii  211 

Our  prayers  are  A !  ''      j^  jy  255 

Have  I  not  A  them  mock  the  blessed  Host  "      iv  iii  365 

And  A  these  two,  there  might  be  sport  for  him.  ,"         v  ii  212 

I  never  A  him  utter  worse  of  you  "         y  a  431 

If  ever  I A  a  madman, — let's  away !  !!          v  iv  56 

I  had  A  of  him  in  battle  over  seas,  "           v  v  33 

I  A  from  my  Northumbria  yesterday.  Harold  1  i  331 

1  A  from  thy  Northumberland  to-day.  i  i  350 

And  he  spoke— I  A  him—  "^     „  jj  353 

hast  thou  never  A  His  savagery  at  Alencon,—  ''     n  ii  381 

I  have  A  the  Normans  Count  upon  this  confusion —  ,"     n  ii  457 

We  have  A  Of  thy  just,  mild,  and  equal  governance ;  ,"     n  ii  689 

Would  he  A  me  !     O  God,  that  I  were  in  some  wide,  n  ii  776  ■ 

I  have  A  a  saying  of  thy  father  Godwin,  m  i  m 

but  their  Saints  Have  A  thee,  Harold.  "    m  i  254 

but  those  heavenly  ears  have  A,  ^    m  i  259 

H,  h —    Harold.     The  wind  in  his  hair  ?  ",     m  i  370 

that  Archdeacon  Hildebrand  His  master,  A  him,  "   m  ii  146 

I  have  A  she  hates  me.  ^'     jy  i  154 

Ye  A  one  witness  even  now.  H     ly  j  27Q 

his  finger  on  her  harp  (I  A  him  more  than  once)  ,"     iv  i  205 

but  our  old  Thor  H  his  own  thunder  again,  „  ly  iii  159 

H  how  the  war-horn  sang,  ]'  j^  jy  257 

H  how  the  shield-wall  rang,  ^  jy  jii  jgg 

And  all  the  Heavens  and  very  God :  they  A —  ",        v  i  44 

who  made  And  A  thee  swear —  "      y  { 121 

Nor  seen,  nor  A ;  thine,  "      y  [  jgj 

Our  scouts  have  A  the  tinkle  of  their  bells.  ,"      y  i  220 

0  God,  the  God  of  truth  hath  A  my  cry.  "  y  i  601 
And  I  am  A.  ''  y  j  gg- 
hast  thou  A  this  cry  of  Gilbert  Foliot  Becket  i  i  36 

1  A  him  swear  revenge.  j  i  2gn 
And  A  her  cry  '  Where  is  this  bower  of  mine  ? '  ,','  i  ii  42 
I  have  A  him  say  He  means  no  more ;  ,"  i  iii  jgj 
Yea,  A  the  churl  against  the  baron —  "  i  m  3^5 
have  A  say  that  if  you  boxed  the  Pope's  ears  ,','  n  ii  369 
have  I  Not  A  ill  things  of  her  in  France  ?  !!  m  i  231 
like  the  gravedigger's  child  I  have  A  of,  trying  to  ring  the 

oesl,  ^^  jjj  jij  7^ 
But  I  A  say  he  had  had  a  stroke,  or  you'd  have  A  his  horn       „    iv  i  53 

I  have  A  of  such  that  range  from  love  to  love,  ','  ly  ii  I19 

I  have  A  of  such — yea,  even  among  those  ][  jy  ii  123 

Have  we  not  A  Raymond  of  Poitou,  thine  own  uncle —  ,"  iv  ii  246 

I  A  your  savage  cry.  "^  jy  ^  329 
knights,  five  hundred,  that  were  there  and  A.     Nay, 

you  yourself  were  there :  you  A  yourself.  „  v  ii  407 
I  A  in  Rome,  This  tributary  crown  may  fall  to  you.         The  Cup  i  i  95 

I  have  A  them  say  in  Rome,  j  i  jog 

I  thought  I A  a  footstep.  "      j  ii  1  j 

you  A  him  on  the  letter.  |'    j  ij  279 

I A  a  saying  in  Egypt,  that  ambition  Is  like  the  sea  wave,  "  1  iii  137 

I  never  A  of  this  request  of  thine.  ,,      u  354 


Heard 


950 


Heart 


Heard  (continued)    I  have  h  these  poisons  May  be  walk'd      ^^^  ^^^  ^^  ^^^ 

I  h^vTfe  That,  thro'  his  late  magnificence  The  Falcon  226 
Oh,  Phihp,  Father  ^i  you  last  night.              .             Prom,  of  May  i  5&7 

I  have  A  of  you.     The  likeness  Is  very  striking.  „          n  ^o4 

I  never  h  her  mention  you.  "           ,t  402 

The  painful  circumstances  which  I  ft —  "          "  T^ 

I  never  /"i  that  he  had  a  brother.                       ,    .  •    >  " 
I  have  /f  that '  your  Lordship,'  and  '  your  Ladyship, 

and  '  your  Grace  '  are  all  growing  old-fashioned  !  „         m  ^lo 

I  ;i  a  voice,  '  Girl,  what  are  you  doing  there  ?  '  „         ni  ^ (o 

You  h  him  say  it  was  one  of  his  bad  days.  »         i"  ^d» 

I  have  h  the  Steers  Had  land  in  Saxon  times  ;  ,.         ni  pu  < 

I  may  be  outlaw'd,  I  have  h  a  rumour.  Foresters  i  u  91 

I  A  this  Sheriff  tell  her  he  would  pay  »        .?in^ 

I  have  h  of  them.    Have  they  no  leader  ?  >.     i  "}  ^^^ 

I  have  ;i  him  swear  he  will  be  even  wi'  thee.  ,.      n  J  ^Tt 

silent  blessing  of  one  honest  man  Is  h  in  heaven—  „  "i  o^^ 
Shamed  a  too  trustful  widow  whom  you  h  In  her 

p         •  ..           Ill  OOD 

confession ;  "             ^r^f- 

I  have  /i  'em  in  the  market  at  Mansfield.  »       "i  ^;^" 

We  h  Sir  Kichard  Lea  was  here  with  Robin.  »        iv  » (o 

HeSid    I  ha'  h  'im  a-gawin'  on  'ud  make  your  'aii^ 

^^  God  bless  it  !-stan'  on  end.  Prom,  of  May  1 134 

and  I  h  the  winder— that's  the  winder  at  the  end  ^  ^^^ 

Heardst     He  sddTthou  A  him)  that  I  must  not  Haro?(£  iiii  260 
SSrer     confess  Your  faith  before  all  h^s  ;                         Qt^«e«  Mart/  iv  ii  80 

Hearing    Crave,  in  the  same  cause,  fe  of  your  Grace.  „      7^.^i-;qq 

At  banquet  in  this  hall,  and  h  me-  ^'"''ff^^-lXffi 
If /»,  would  have  spurn'd  her ;  ^  ^  ^  ^'f^'^"5m 
the  man  himself.  When  h  of  that  piteous  death.      Prom,  of  May  u  &UU 

Heart    (^See  aZso 'Eart,  Lion-heart)    A  bold /i  yours  ^ ;;;  qa 
"^     to  beard  that  raging  mob  !                                         Queen  Mary  im  96 

I  meant  True  matters  of  the  h.  "           IZim 

My  h,  my  Lord,  Is  no  great  party  in  the  state  „           i  |v  iw. 

I  have  the  jewel  of  a  loyal  h.  "           l  \l  ^^' 

You've  a  bold  h  ;  keep  it  so.  "           \^l  f  "7 

Make  all  tongues  praise  and  all  h's  beat  for  you.  „            i  v  11  < 

take  mine  eyes,  mine  h.  But  do  not  lose  me  Calais.  „            i  v  x|o 

I  am  not  Queen  Of  mine  own  h,  "            ^  I  m^ 

It  breaks  my  h  to  hear  her  moan  at  night  ..            „  n  8^ 

felt  the  faltering  of  his  mother's  h,  ..             ";:  iiq 

I  scarce  have  h  to  mingle  in  this  matter,  ,.           "  }]  |^^ 

They  have  betray'd  the  treason  of  their  h  s  :  „          "  H  ^0  * 

come  to  cast  herself  On  loyal  h's  and  bosoms,  „          "  H  ^^ 

never  whine  Like  that  poor  h,  Northumberland,  „           "  ]}  ^^^ 

I  feel  most  goodly  h  and  hand,  "          "  \v  84 

And  hast  not  h  nor  honour.  «           "  J\  ° 

Blazed  false  upon  her  k        ,     ,     ,^     .  "          ttt  i  10Q 

and  hurl'd  our  battles  Into  the  h  of  Spam  ;  „          ™  |  ^^ 

Her  dark  dead  blood  is  in  my  h  with  mine.  „          "i !  ^n 

If  you  have  7i  to  do  it  !                                              .  "            m  ii  W 

to-day  My  h  beats  twenty,  when  I  see  you,  cousm.  „           m  .n  o» 

Is  Uke  the  cleaving  of  a  7i ;  "        °' ^J  040 

A  day  may  save  a  /i  from  breaking  too.  „        "i Ji  f'*^ 

beget  A  kindness  from  him,  for  his  h  was  rich,  ,,           iv  1  low 

My  A  is  no  such  block  as  Bonner's  is  :  „         ^.\\  j  <* 

Pray  with  one  breath,  one  h,  one  soul  for  me.  „         iv  111  lu* 

doubt  The  man's  conversion  and  remorse  of  h,  „        iv  111  luy 

Against  the  truth  I  knew  within  my  A,    ^     .    ^  ,      "         ^I^j-oIq 
since  my  hand  offended,  having  written  Against  my  h,    „         iv  111  _^4y 

That  might  live  always  in  the  sun's  warm  h,  „              '^.i  ^^ 

■Reginald  Pole,  what  news  hath  plagued  my  A  ?  „            \ ."  ^° 

I  am  sad  at  fe  myself.          .  ,    „         ^  '    "           ^  i!  419 

I  used  to  love  the  Queen  with  all  my  ft—  ..           T,  •••  iq 

As  far  as  France,  and  into  Philip's  h.  ..            ^  >"  ^^ 

Women,  when  I  am  dead,  Open  my  h,  "I1 1^ 

Adulterous  to  the  very  h  of  HeU.  ..           !.  v  224 

Brave,  wary,  sane  to  the  h  of  her—  ..          ZZteu 

I  swear  I  have  no  A  To  be  your  Queen.  ,,          7.,-^ 

strike  Their  h's,  and  hold  their  babies  up  to  it.  Harotd  1 1  d& 

will  make  his  nippers  meet  in  thine  h ;  "      ".  y' 

It  is  the  arrow  of  death  in  his  own /i —  "  "^  l.^ 

where  Tostig  lost  The  good  h's  of  his  people.  «    i"  "  ^" 


Heart  (continued)     hand  and  foot,  I  hand,  foot,  h  and  head.     Harold  v  1  21 
violent  will  that  wrench'd  AlU's  of  freemen  from  thee.  „      '^  \^'* 

Here  fell  the  truest,  manUest  h's  of  England.  ,.       v  u  58, 

Take  it  and  wear  it  on  that  hard  h  of  yours—  Becket,  rro.  61. 


On  this  left  breast  before  so  hard  a,h, 

translated  that  hard  h  into  our  Provencal  facilities. 

That  the  h  were  lost  in  the  rhyme  and  the  matter 

My  h  is  full  of  tears — I  have  no  answer. 

His  h  so  gall'd  with  thine  ingratitude. 

To  lodge  a  fear  in  Thomas  Becket's  h 

That  ray  poor  heretic  h  would  excommunicate 

And  push'd  our  lances  into  Saracen  h's. 

in  the  dark  h  of  the  wood  I  hear  the  yelping 

That  health  of  h,  once  ours, 

scared  the  red  rose  from  your  face  Into  your  h  i 

While  this  but  leaves  me  with  a  broken  h, 

shall  not  I,  the  Queen,  Tear  out  her  h — 

and  send  Her  whole  h's  heat  into  it, 

full  mid-summer  in  those  honest  h's. 

You  should  attend  the  office,  give  them  h. 

I  know  well  thou  hast  but  half  a  h 

I  thank  you  from  my  h. 

Yea, — with  our  eyes, — our  h's. 

That  this  brave  h  of  mine  should  shake  me  so, 

I  have  it  in  my  /i— to  the  Temple— fly — 

found  All  good  in  the  true  h  of  Sinnatus, 

I  have  no  h  to  do  it. 

As  in  the  midmost  h  of  Paradise. 

fill  all  h's  with  fatness  and  the  lust  Of  plenty— 

The  stately  widow  has  no  h  for  me. 

you  that  have  the  face  of  an  angel  and  the  h  of  a— 
that's  too  positive  !  You  that  have  a  score  of 
lovers  and  have  not  a  h  for  any  of  them — 

and  not  a  h  like  the  jewel  in  it — 

cheek  like  a  peach  and  a  h  hke  the  stone  in  it — 

Pride  of  his  ft — the  solace  of  his  hours — 

I  had  no  h  to  part  with  her  for  money. 

We  mounted,  and  we  dash'd  into  the  h  of  'em. 

best  h  that  ever  Beat  for  one  woman. 

No  other  h  Of  such  magnificence  in  courtesy 

a  red  fire  woke  in  the  h  of  the  town, 

small  h  have  I  to  dance. 

Keep  up  your  h  until  we  meet  again. 

I  wear  it  next  my  A. 

how  should  I,  with  this  grief  still  at  my  ft, 

0  sir,  you  seem  to  have  &h\ 
But  wherefore  waste  your  h  In  looking 
the  man  has  doubtless  a  good  h,  and  a  true  and 

lasting  love  for  me  : 
Come,  come,  keep  a  good  h\  „    ^  ^. 

1  do  believe  I  lost  my  h  to  him  the  very  first  time 

we  met,  ^    j    •. 

'  Go  home  ; '  but  I  hadn't  the  h  or  face  to  do  it. 
What  is  it  Has  put  you  out  oih'i  .    ,     ,  .. 

It  puts  me  in  h  Again  to  see  you  ;  but  mdeed  the 

state  Of  my  poor  father  puts  me  out  of  h. 
I  think  That  I  should  break  my  h, 
—the  h,  0  God  !— the  poor  young  h  Broken 
broke  the  h  That  only  beat  for  you  ; 
sits  and  eats  his  h  for  want  of  money  to  pay  the 

Abbot.  ,       ,     ^^  ^    ... 

but  I  keep  a  good  h  and  make  the  most  of  it, 
it  answers,  I  am  thine  to  the  very  h  of  the  earth — 
I  fear  this  Abbot  is  a  A  of  flint, 
when  I  loved  A  maid  with  all  my  h 
Sleep,  mournful  h.  and  let  the  past  be  past ! 
There  are  no  h's  like  English  h's  Such  h's  of  oak 
I  have  shot  her  thro'  the  h.     Kate.    He  lies,  my 

lord.    I  have  shot  him  thro'  the  h. 
That  I  had  shot  him  thro'  the  h, 
my  h  so  down  in  my  heels  that  if  I  stay,  I  can  t  run, 
how  to  charm  and  waste  the  h's  of  men. 
And  drains  the  7i  and  marrow  from  a  man. 
the  bravest  English  h  Since  Hereward  the  Wake, 
Elf,  with  spiteful  h  and  eye, 


Pro.  37« 
„      Pro.  3i 
„      Pro.  3e 
„      Pro. 
„  I  iii '. 

I  iii  ni 

II  i  28 
II  ii ! 
ni  ii  41 
„     III  iii  26 

IV  ii  7S 
,.  IV  ii  174 
„      IV  ii ' 

V  ii  23 
v  ii  31i 

„       V  ii  59 

„      V  iii  IS 

The  Cup  I  ii  211* 

I  ii  412 

I  iii  38 

„       I  iii  111 

n  87 

n  166 

II 186 

II  272 

The  Falcon  30 


87 
91 
93 
223 
326 
630 
667 

»        ^!^ 

Prom,  of  May  I  50 

I  429 

I  754 
n82 

II  91 
n468 

II  503 

III  171 
III  253 

in  283 
in  389 

III  501 

in  502 
in  556 
in  679 

m  762 

Foresters  I  i  4 

I  i  28 

„       I  i  337 

„      I  ii  268 

„      I  ii  297 

I  iii  47 

ni3 

n  i  98 
„  n  i  123 
ni346 
ni502 
n  i  672 
ni687 
n  ii  172 


Heart 


951 


Heaven 


And  that  would  quite  wwrnan  him,  h 


Heart  {continued) 

and  soul.  Foresters  in  30 

And  let  them  warm  thy  h  to  Little  John.  „         m  44 

but  I' hold  thee  The  husband  of  my  h,  ,"       m  140 

and  thy  legs,  and  thy  h,  and  thy  liver,  ,]        iv  204 

or  the  head  of  a  fool,  or  the  h  of  Prince  John,  „        iv  213 

so  she  glided  up  into  the  h  0'  the  bottle,  „        iv  244 

flung  His  life,  h,  soul  into  those  holy  wars  ,.        iv  407 

He  drove  his  knife  into  the  h  of  the  deer,  „        iv  541 

A  woman's  h  is  but  a  Uttle  thing,  \\        iv  656 

Will  chill  the  h's  that  beat  for  Robin  Hood  !  ,"      iv  1064 
Heartache    what  headache  ?     H,  perchance  ;                Queen  Mary  i  iv  149 

Heart-comfort     II-c  and  a  balsam  to  thy  blood  ?  Becket  i  i  14 
Hearted    Sec  Brave-hearted,  Great-hearted,  Hard-hearted,  High- 
hearted, Hollow-hearted,  Poor-hearted 
Heartedest    See  Human-heartedest 

Hearth     with  mine  old  hound  Couch'd  at  my  h,  Queen  Mary  ni  i  46 

The  stranger  at  his  h,  and  all  his  house —  „         iv  i  163 

King  Henry  warms  your  traitors  at  his  h.  „          v  i  124 
Translating  his  captivity  from  Guy  To  mine  own  h 


at  Bayeux, 
Dabble  your  h's  with  our  own  blood, 
son  of  Orm,  Gamel,  at  thine  own  h. 
none  could  sit  By  his  own  h  in  peace  ; 
a  son  stone-blind  Sat  by  his  mother's  h  : 
One  slow,  fat,  white,  a  burthen  of  the  h  ; 
I  wouldn't  have  thy  blood  on  my  h. 

Heart-hate    fierce  resolve  and  fixt  h-h  in  men 

Heart-sick     Better  than  h-s,  friar. 

Heart-wife    so  this  Rosamund,  my  true  h-w,  Not 
Eleanor — 

Heat  (s)     There  must  be  h — there  must  be  h  enough 
A  bookman,  flying  from  the  h  and  tussle. 
It  is  the  h  and  narrowness  of  the  cage 
Gardiner  out-Gardiners  Gardiner  in  his  h, 


Harold  n  ii  43 

„     n  ii  751 

„      IV  ii  39 

Becket  i  iii  342 

„     V  ii  106 

„     V  ii  212 

Foresters  n  i  356 

Queen  Mary  in  vi  32 

Foresters  iv  674 

Becket,  Pro.  130 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  26 

„         ni  iv  251 

ni  V  207 

in  vi  26 


men  should  bear  their  earthly  h's  Into  yon  bloodless 
world, 

Hath  often  laid  a  cold  hand  on  my  h's, 

Besides,  we  came  away  in  such  a  h, 

do  much  To  rake  out  all  old  dying  h's. 

Hell's  own  k  So  dwelt  on  that  they  rose 

Henry  Says  many  a  thing  in  sudden  h's, 

and  send  Her  whole  heart's  h  into  it, 

h  and  fire  Of  hfe  will  bring  them  out, 

In  that  greal  h  to  wed  her  to  the  Sheriff 

The  bee  buzz'd  up  in  the  h. 
I         And  the  bee  buzz'd  down  from  the  h. 
Heat  (verb)     this  ghastly  glare  May  h  their  fancies. 
I         secret  matter  which  would  h  the  King  against  thee. 

Why  should  you  h  yourself  for  such  as  these  ? 

Employ  us,  h  us,  quicken  us,  help  us. 

How  few  Junes  Will  h  our  pulses  quicker  ! 
(Heated    — we  have  eaten — we  are  h.     Wine  ! 
Seath     ten  thousand  men  on  Penenden  H  all  calhng 
after 

They  roar  for  you  On  Penenden  H, 

I        fifty  That  foUow'd  me  from  Penenden  //  in  hope 
Of  the  Northumbrian  helmet  on  the  h  ? 
No,  but  a  shoal  of  wives  upon  the  h, 
iSeath  (Sir  Nicholas)    See  Nicholas,  Nicholas  Heath 
heathen  (adj.)     Ay,  cousin,  as  the  h  giant  Had  but  to 
touch  the  ground, 
The  h  priesthood  of  a  A  creed  ! 
Cold,  but  look  how  the  table  steams,  like  a  h  altar ; 
heathen  (s)    Why  do  the  h  rage  ? 
ieathendom    Out  of  the  deep,  deep  night  of  h.  Queen  Mary  ni  iii  173 

ileathenism    that  Lucullus  or  Apicius  might  have  sniffed 

it  in  their  Hades  of  h, 
'■  leather     Walk'd  at  night  on  the  misty  h  ; 
ieaved     that  bosom  never  H  under  the  King's  hand 
leaven     {See  also  'Eaven)     To  him  within  there  who 
made  H  and  Earth  ? 
banks  rolling  incense,  as  of  old,  To  h. 
Yea,  by  H,  The  text — Your  Highness  knows  it, 
i       in  his  scared  prayers  H  and  earth's  Maries  ; 


Harold  v  i  284 

Becket  i  i  384 

„    ni294 

„  niill4 

„  11  ii  204 

„  IV  ii  276 

„    vii255 

Prom,  of  May  11  285 

Foresters  11  i  584 

IV  14 

IV  20 

Harold  I  i  310 

Becket,  Pro.  487 

„       V  ii  544 

The  Cuf  I  iii  131 

Foresters  iv  1062 

The  Cup  I  ii  46 

Queen  Alary  n  i  61 

n  i  106 

II  i  151 

Harold  v  i  145 

„       V  i  147 


Queen  Mary  III  ii  43 
Becket  i  iii  63 
I  iv  69 
„      V  ii  628 


Becket  ni  iii  118 

Harold  in  ii  5 

Becket  iv  ii  189 

Queen  Mary  i  v  47 

I  V  93 

I  V  450 

n  ii  88 


Heaven  {continued)     Ah,  h  !     Pole.     Unwell,  your 

Grace  ?  (J 

Rise  to  the  h's  in  grateful  praise  of  Him 
With  h  for  earth. 
That  h  wept  and  earth  blush'd. 
pray  H  That  you  may  see  according  to  our  sight. 
To  yield  the  remnant  of  his  years  to  h, 
All  that  is  gracious  in  the  breath  of  h 
soul  descending  out  of  h  Into  a  body  generate. 
An  angel  cry  '  There  is  more  joy  in  H,' — 
By  H's  grace,  I  am  more  and  more  confirm'd. 
On  earth  ;  but  saved  in  h  By  your  recanting. 

0  God,  Father  of  H  [     0  Son  of  God, 

1  have  offended  against  h  and  earth 
I  am  ashamed  to  lift  my  eyes  to  h, 

'  How  hard  it  is  For  the  rich  man  to  enter  into  H  ; ' 

Either  to  live  with  Christ  in  H  with  joy, 

find  H  or  else  hell  ready  to  swallow  me. 

If  ever,  as  h  grant,  we  clash  with  Spain, 

H  help  that  this  re-action  not  re-act 

Then  Cranmer  Ufted  his  left  hand  to  h. 

Why  then  to  h,  and  God  ha'  mercy  on  him. 

Have  courage,  your  reward  is  H  itself. 

and  make  Down  for  their  heads  to  h  ! 

It  glares  in  h,  it  flares  upon  the  Thames, 

To  have  the  h's  clear. 

mean  The  doom  of  England  and  the  wrath  oi  H  ? 

Why  should  not  H  be  wroth  ? 

Is  there  no  reason  for  the  wrath  oi  H  ?     Leofwin. 

Why  then  the  wrath  of  H  hath  three  tails,  The 

devil  only  one. 
Stigand  should  know  the  purposes  of  H.    Stigand. 

Not  I.     I  cannot  read  the  face  of  h  ; 
is  this  pendent  heU  in  ^  A  harm  to  England  ? 
reUgious  fool,  Who,  seeing  war  in  h,  for  h's  credit 
In  h  signs  !     Signs  upon  earth  ! 
see  Deeper  into  the  mysteries  of  h  Than  thou. 
Not  stagger'd  by  this  ominous  earth  and  h  :  But  h 

and  earth  are  threads 
Did  not  H  speak  to  men  in  dreams  of  old  ? 
and  her  bells  in  h  ;  And  other  bells  on  earth,  which 

yet  are  h's  ; 
thunder  moulded  in  high  h  To  serve  the  Norman 

purpose, 
yon  huge  keep  that  hinders  half  the  h. 
Cleave  h,  and  send  thy  saints  that  I  may  say 
two  young  wings  To  fly  to  h  straight  with, 
swear  To  consecrate  my  virgin  here  to  h — ■ 
all  promises  Made  in  our  agony  for  help  from  h  ? 
more  the  love,  the  more  acceptable  The  sacrifice  of 

both  your  loves  to  h.     No  sacrifice  to  h,  no  help 

from  h ; 
there  are  signs  in  h — 
H  yield  us  more  !  for  better, 
Yon  h  is  wroth  with  thee  ? 
And  all  the  H's  and  very  God  :  they  heard — 
a  sigh  With  these  low-moaning  h's. 
We  give  our  voice  against  thee  out  of  h  ! 
The  sign  in  h — the  sudden  blast  at  sea — 
Charged  with  the  weight  of  h  wherefrom  they  fall ! 
Ye  that  are  now  of  h,  and  see  beyond 
The  Norman  sends  his  arrows  up  to  H, 
twelve  stars  fell  ghttering  out  of  h  Into  her  bosom. 
Why  should  not  H  have  so  inspired  the  King  ? 
I  ask  no  more.     H  bless  thee  !  hence  ! 
Lest  there  be  battle  between  H  and  Earth, 
Strong — not  in  mine  own  self,  but  H  ; 
and  see  it  mounting  to  H,  my  God  bless  you, 
beggars,  poor  rogues  ( H  bless  'em) 
and  glass  The  faithful  face  of  h— 
dwelt  on  that  they  rose  and  darken'd  H. 
said  to  the  smoke, '  Go  up,  my  son,  straight  to  H.' 
if  he  move  at  all,  H  stay  him,  is  fain  to  diagonalise. 
like  Mahound's  coffin  hung  between  h  and  earth — 
child  We  waited  for  so  long — h's  gift  at  last — 


\ueen  Mary  in  ii  84 
„  in  iii  165 
„  III  iii  201 
„  ni  iv  193 
„  m  iv  330 
„  ra  vi  211 
„      in  vi  225 

IV  i  35 
„          IV  ii  11 

IV  ii  21 

IV  ii  179 

IV  iii  117 

„       rv  iii  124 

„       rv  iii  127 

IV  iii  205 

IV  iii  220 

IV  iii  224 

IV  iii  346 

rv  iii  388 

IV  iii  609 

„       rv  iii  631 

viil09 

V  iv  8 
Harold  1  i  29 

I  i  38 

I  i  47 

„       I  i  53 


ii59 

ii65' 

1 176 

iil4G 

iil59 

1 1200 


1 1194 
I  ii  132 

n  ii  33 
n  ii  229 
n  ii  785 

III  i  26 
III  i  276 
in  1288 


„  mi  349 
„  in  1358 
„  III  ii  71 
„  V  i  39 
„  V  i  43 
„  V  i  152 
„  V  i  261 
„  V  i  378 
„  vi567 
„  V  i  618 
„  vi667 
Becket  i  i  47 
„  I  i  130 
„  I  i  321 
„  I  iii  226 
„  1111537 
„  I  iv  38 
„  I  iv  83 
„  nil61 
„  nil  206 
„  nil  319 
„  nil  329 
„  nil  362 
„     in  i  14 


Heaven 


952 


HeU 


Bechet  in  jii  234 
niiii348 

IV  ii  26 
IV  ii  132 
IV  ii  238 

vii26 

vii36 
v  ii  53 

V  ii  496 
„          V  iii  17 

V  iii  39 

V  iii  98 
The  Cup  I  ii  408 

I  ii  415 

I  iii  58 

The  Falcon  16 

447 

682 


(continued)    All  praise  to  H,  and  sweet  St. 

Magdalen  ! 
Earth's  falses  are  Wx  truths. 
H  help  you  ;  get  you  hence  in  haste 
thy  true  home — the  Ws — cry  out  for  thee 
I  will  fly  with  my  sweet  boy  to  h, 

To  bless  thine  enemies Becket.    Ay,  mine,  not  R's 

lightnings  that  we  think  are  only  H's  Flash  sometimes 

out  of  earth  against  the  h's. 
And  private  hates  with  our  defence  of  H. 
to  people  h  in  the  great  day  When  God  makes  up 

his  jewels. 
He  is  not  here — Not  yet,  thank  h.     0  save  him  ! 
Shall  not  H  be  served  Tho'  earth's  last  earthquake 
Seen  by  the  Church  in  H,  the  Church  on  earth — 
open'd  out  The  purple  zone  of  hill  and  h  ; 
cloudless  h  which  we  have  found  together 
drew  the  light  From  h  to  brood  upon  her, 
strike,  make  his  feathers  Glance  in  mid  h. 

0  Ws  !  the  very  letters  seem  to  shake  With  cold, 
Here,  or  else  weU  in  H,  where  all  is  well. 
No  other  heart  Of  such  magnificence  in  courtesy  Beats — 

out  of  h.  „        724 

And  so  return — H  help  him  ! — to  our  son.  „        861 

H  hears  you,  Philip  Edgar  !  Prom,  of  May  i  760 

H  curse  him  if  he  come  not  at  your  call !  „  i  764 

The  body  I— H's  !     I  come  !  „  ii  572 

For  all  the  blessed  souls  in  H  „  m  10 

to  be  realised  all  at  once,  or  altogether,  or  anywhere 

but  inH?  „         III  187 

1  pray  H  we  may  not  have  to  take  to  the  rushes.  Foresters  i  i  89 

"  '  --------  ^^  ^   .   g^ 

I  i  210 

„      I  ii  121 

„      I  ii  316 

I  iii  26 

„     I  iii  161 

n  i  39 

n  i  62 

„      n  1105 

„      u  i  109 

„      n  i  173 

„      II  i  594 

„      n  i  607 

„      II  i  632 

nil2 

III  36 

ni  83 

ni  322 

IV  666 

IV  725 


for  the  sake  of  the  great  blessed  Mother  in  h, 

come  as  freely  as  h's  air  and  mother's  milk  ? 

The  high  H  guard  thee  from  his  wantonness, 

while  the  lark  flies  up  and  touches  h  ! 

topmost  tree,  that  shoots  New  buds  to  h, 

that  worship  for  me  which  H  knows  I  ill  deserve — 

and  the  blessed  Queen  of  H, 

The  groining  hid  the  h's  ; 

Thou  comest  a  very  angel  out  of  h. 

Your  h  is  vacant  of  your  angel. 

— the  Sheriff,  and  by  h,  Prince  John  himself 

Give  it  me,  by  h.  Or  I  will  force  it  from  thee. 

Thou  seem'st  a  saintly  splendour  out  from  h, 

forest  lawns  are  all  as  bright  As  ways  to  h, 

When  h  falls,  I  may  light  on  such  a  lark  ! 

Those  sweet  tree-Cupids  half-way  up  in  h, 

Could  live  as  happy  as  the  larks  in  h, 

silent  blessing  of  one  honest  man  Is  heard  in  h — 

Sweet  h's,  I  could  wish  that  all  the  land 

I  breathe  H's  air,  and  H  looks  down  on  me. 

Heavenly    I  know  He  knew  not,  but  those  h  ears  have 
heard, 

Heavier     Is  it  so  much  h  than  thy  Chancellor's  robe  ? 
Not  h  than  thine  armour  at  Thoulouse  ? 
Beware,  Lord  Legate,  of  a  A  crime  Than  heresy 
is  itself  ; 

Heavy    Too  h  for  me,  this,  off  with  it,  Herbert ! 
h  As  thine  own  bolts  that  fall  on  crimeful  heads 

Hebrew     But  here's  some  H. 

Hedgar  (Edgar)    What  dost  a  knaw  o'  this  Mr.  H  as 
be  a-lodgin'  wi'  ye  ? 
but  if  iver  I  cooms  upo'  Gentleman  H  agean, 
Philip  H  o'  Soomerset !  (repeat) 
whether  thou  be  H,  or  H's  business  man, 
an'  whether  thou  calls  thysen  H  or  Harold, 
Master  H,  Harold,  or  whativer  They  calls  ye. 

Hedge    matched  with  my  Harold  is  like"  a  h  thistle  by 
a  garden  rose. 

Hedged-in    This  poor,  flat,  h-i  field — no  distance — 

Hedge-pig    besides  H-p's,  a  savoury  viand. 

Hedge-priest    He  is  but  h-v,  Sir  King. 

Hedge-rose    like  the  wild  h-r  Of  a  soft  winter, 


Harold  in  i  258 

Becket  i  i  20 

I  i  25 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  221 

Becket  i  i  18 

Harold  v  i  564 

Queen  Mary  n  i  125 

Pro7n.  of  May  i  200 
n  137 
n  586 
n  734 
n  737 
in  726 


Heed    (See  also  Take  heed) 
maiden  fame, 


You  h  not  how  you  soil  her 


in  176 

n344 

Foresters  iv  193 

IV  930 

Queen  Mary  ni  vi  14 


Foresters  iv  479 


Heed  (continued)     I  have  had  a  year  of  prison-silence, 

Robin,  And  h  him  not —  Foresters  rv  925 
Heel    (See  also  Under-heel)    bursten  at  the  toes,  and 

down  at  h's.  Queen  Mary  i  i  53 

Her  cap  would  brush  his  h's.  „        in  i  14 

become  Hideously  alive  again  from  head  to  h,  „     iv  iii  447 

colt  winced  and  whinnied  and  flung  up  her  h's  ;  Becket,  Pro.  516 
less  loyalty  in  it  than  the  backward  scrape  of  the 

clown's  h —  „    in  iii  144 

not  yield  To  lay  your  neck  beneath  your  citissen's  h.  „  v  i  32 
my  heart  so  down  in  my  h's  that  if  I  stay,  I  can't 

run.  Foresters  n  i  347 
Heerd  (heard)    I  h  summat  as  summun  towld  summun 

o'  owld  Bishop  Gardiner's  end  ;  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  501 

Height     (See  also  Eagle-height)    from  that  h  something  was 

said  to  me  Becket  n  i  59 

Blared  from  the  h's  of  all  the  thrones  of  her  kings,  „  v  ii  489 
What  breadth,  h,  strength — torrents  of  eddying  bark  !  Foresters  in  94 
Heir    You,  The  h  presumptive.                                          Queen  Mary  i  iv  33 

— after  me  Is  X  of  England  ;  ,,         i  v  286 

H  of  this  England  and  the  Netherlands  !  „          i  v  418 

my  father  was  the  rightful  h  Of  England,  „         n  ii  170 

You  must  proclaim  Elizabeth  your  h.  (repeat)  „  v  i  191,  204 

in  happy  state  To  give  him  an  h  male.  „         v  ii  573 

Mary  hath  acknowledged  you  her  h.  „          v  iii  31 

She  knew  me,  and  acknowledged  me  her  h,  „         v  v  256 

Pronounced  his  h  of  England.  Harold  i  ii  195 

I  am  A  Of  England  by  the  promise  of  her  king.  „     n  ii  124 

Why  then  the  h  of  England,  who  is  he  ?  „     n  ii  567 

hath  King  Edward  not  pronoimced  his  h?  „  n  ii  576 
leave  the  royalty  of  my  crown  Unlessen'd  to 

mine  h's.  Becket  n  i  108 

citizen's  h  hath  conquer'd  me  For  the  moment.  „  n  ii  60 
left  his  h,  Born,  happily,  with  some  sense  of  art.      Prom,  of  May  i  496 

And  cursed  me,  as  the  last  h  of  my  race  :  Foresters  n  ii  109 
Held    the  boy  she  h  Mimick'd  and  piped  her  '  Wyatt,'    Queen  Mary  ii  ii  73 

this  day  be  h  in  after  years  More  solemn  „         in  iii  89 

I  had  h  my  head  up  then.  ,,      in  iii  246 

were  he  wroth  indeed.  You  h  it  less,  or  not  at  all.  „          iv  i  107 

That  when  I  was  Archbishop  h  with  me.  „        iv  ii  160 

So  h  it  tiU  it  all  was  burn'd,  „       iv  iii  615 

and  h  up  by  the  hair  ?  „           v  ii  21 

But  h  from  you  all  papers  sent  by  Rome,  „  v  ii  45 
nor  as  some  have  h.  Because  I  love  the  Norman 

better —  Harold  i  i  170 
she  h  with  Edward,  At  least  methought  she  h  with 

holy  Edward,  „        i  ii  49 

yet  he  h  that  Dane,  Jute,  Angle,  Saxon,  „       iv  i  75 

He  h  with  Morcar. —  „      iv  ii  43 

were  man's  to  have  h  The  battle-axe  by  thee  !  „     iv  iii  12 

whether  that  which  h  it  Had  weaken'd,  „      v  i  105 

Some  h  she  was  his  wife  in  secret —  „      v  ii  1(X) 

I  A  it  with  him  in  his  English  halls,  „     v  ii  128 

And  that  the  false  Northumbrian  h  aloof,  „      v  ii  165 

For  Gilbert  FoUot  h  himself  the  man.  Becket  i  i  43 
I  that  h  the  orange  blossom  Dark  as  the  yew  ?        Prom,  of  May  n  629 

True,  I  have  h  opinions,  hold  some  still,  „           in  622 

I  h  for  Richard,  and  I  hated  John.  Foresters  n  i  52 

I  ever  h  that  saying  false  That  Love  is  blind,  „      ii  i  642 

who  heads  the  movement,  h  him  craven  ?  „  n  i  701 
Tho'  you  should  queen  me  over  aU  the  realms  H  by 

King  Richard,  „  iv  709 
but  all  those  that  h  with  him.  Except  I  plead  for  them,  „  iv  748 
Hell     (See  also  A-hell-flre)     Look  at  the  New  World — a 

paradise  made  h  ;  Queen  Mary  n  i  208 

Traced  in  the  blackest  text  of  H— '  Thou  shalt ! '  „          in  i  426 

Into  the  deathless  h  which  is  their  doom  „         m  ii  175 

The  unity  of  Universal  H,  „        in  iii  232 

He  bums  in  Purgatory,  not  in  H.  „             iv  i  56 

Or  to  be  still  in  pain  with  devils  in  A  ;  „         rv  iii  222 

find  Heaven  or  else  h  ready  to  swallow  me,  „  iv  iii  224 
There's  nought  but  the  vire  of  God's  h  ez  can  burn 

out  that.  „        IV  iii  527 

Adulterous  to  the  very  heart  of  H.  „           v  v  163 

like  a  spirit  in  H  who  skips  and  flies  Harold  i  i  11 


Hell 

{continued)    is  this  pendent  h  in  heaven  A  harm  to 
England? 

Is  thy  wrath  H,  that  I  should  spare  to  cry, 

H  take  thy  bishop  then,  and  my  kingship  too  ! 

With  a  wanton  in  thy  lodging — H  requite  'em  ! 

I  scatter  all  their  cowls  to  all  the  h's. 

Fling  not  thy  soul  into  the  flames  of  h  : 

which  H's  own  heat  So  dwelt  on  that  they  rose 

I  hear  the  yelping  of  the  hoimds  of  h. 

I  would  the  Church  were  down  in  h  ! 

Too  late  on  earth  may  be  too  soon  in  h. 

She  lies  !     They  are  made  in  H. 

By  all  the  devils  in  and  out  of  H  ! 

Devils,  that  make  this  blessed  England  h. 

yells  of  tliief  And  rogue  and  har  echo  down  in  H, 

Maid  ?     Friar.     Paramour  !     Friar.     H  take  her  ! 

Or,  like  the  Devils  they  are,  straight  up  from  H. 

If  anjrwhere,  I  shall  find  thee  in  h. 
Hellebore    madden  Against  his  priest  beyond  all  h. 
Hell-fire    and  the  soul  of  Eleanor  from  h-f. 
Hellstow    Into  Godstow,  into  H,  Devilstow  ! 
Helm  (armour  for  the  head)    Cowl,  h ;  and  crozier, 

battle-axe. 
Helm  (as  of  a  boat)     Cranmer,  as  the  hebnsman  at 

the  h  Steers, 
Helm  (verb)     wherefore  not  H  the  huge  vessel  of 
your  state, 

and  no  forsworn  Archbishop  Shall  h  the  Church. 
Helmet    his  hand  Upon  his  h. 

Of  the  Northumbrian  h  on  the  heath  ? 

gonfanon  of  Holy  Peter  Floating  above  their  h's — 
Helmeted    not  courtly  to  stand  h  Before  the  Queen. 
Helmsman    Cranmer,  as  the  h  at  the  helm  Steers, 
Help  (s)     thro'  thine  h  we  are  come  to  London  Bridge  ; 

Then  whither  should  I  flee  for  any  h  ? 

Without  the  h  of  Spain. 

England  our  own  Thro'  Harold's  h, 

all  promises  Made  in  our  agony  for  h  from  heaven  ? 

No  sacrifice  to  heaven,  no  h  from  heaven  ; 

Eray,  pray,  pray — no  h  but  prayer, 
ut  our  h  Is  Harold,  king  of  England, 
old  crown  Were  little  h  without  our  Saxon  carles 
Call  not  for  h  from  me.     I  knew  him  not. 
butts  him  from  his  chair.  Will  need  my  h — 
Past  h  !  his  paws  are  past  h.    God  help  him  ! 
Man's  h  !  but  we,  we  have  the  Blessed  Virgin 
But  for  the  slender  h  that  I  can  give, 
lelp  (verb)     I  cannot  h  it. 

I  will  h  you,  Madam,  Even  to  the  utmost. 
But  h  her  in  this  exigency, 
The  King  of  France  wiU  h  to  break  it. 
H  it  can  I  ?  with  my  hands  Milking  the  cow  ? 
H  me  :  what  think  you,  Is  it  life  or  death  ? 
I'll  h  you,  if  I  may. 

these  burnings  will  not  h  The  purpose  of  the  faith  ; 
May  God  h  you  Thro'  that  dark  hour  ! 
are  profitless  to  the  burners.  And  h  the  other  side. 
Heaven  h  that  this  re-action  not  re-act 
Not  to  h  me?    They  hate  me  also  for  my  love  to  you, 
many  English  in  your  ranks  To  h  your  battle. 
Will  you  not  h  me  here  ? 
You  did  but  h  King  Philip's  war  with  France, 
God  h  me,  but  methinks  I  love  her  less 
Drugs — but  he  knows  they  cannot  h  me — 
— H  me  hence. 
Would  h  thee  from  the  trap. 
H  the  good  ship,  showing  the  sunken  rock, 
Good,  good,  and  thou  wilt  h  me  to  the  crown  ? 
I  ask  thee,  wilt  thou  h  me  to  the  crown  ? 
Swear  thou  to  h  me  to  the  crown  of  England. 
I  swear  to  h  thee  to  the  crown  of  England  .  .  . 
^  (repeat) 
h'io  build  a  throne  Out-towering  hers  of  France 
To  A  us  from  their  brethren  yonder  ? 


Oh  God  !     I  cannot  h  it,  but  at  times  They  seem  to  me 


Harold  i  i  76 

„      V  i  37 

Becket,  Pro.  93 

iii9 

11 193 

II  i  316 
n  ii  204 

III  ii  48 
vi218 

V  ii  528 
Prom,  of  May  iii  711 

Foresters  n  ii  27 
in  128 
ni324 

III  403 

IV  595 

IV  803 
Becket  iv  ii  460 

„      Pro.  151 
v  i  215 

Harold  v  i  444 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  578 

V  i  73 
Becket  i  iii  598 

Queen  Mary  v  v  31 

Harold  v  i  144 

„       V  i  550 

Queen  Mary  v  v  36 

„       IV  iii  578 

n  iii  8 

IV  iii  126 

V  iii  78 
Harold  n  ii  79 

„     III  i  288 

„     III  i  350 

„   Iiiiil95 

IV  i  10 

„       IV  i  35 

„        V  ii  54 

Becket,  Pro.  218 

„     I iv  110 

„      v  ii  219 

Prom,  of  May  ii  421 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  60 

I  V  177 

II  ii  18 
m  i  105 

m  V  101 
ni  V  192 

III  V  205 

IV  ii  184 

IV  ii  195 

IV  ii  220 
IV  iii  388 

vi94 
vill2 
v  i  161 

V  ii  313 
v  ii  420 

V  V  61 

V  V  200 
Harold  i  i  383 

„  n  ii  100 

„  II  ii  614 

„  II  ii  627 

„  II  ii  705 

Harold  ii  ii  712,  721 

.  .     Harold  II  ii  763 

III  i  221 


Help  (verb)  (continued)    God  A  me  !     I  know  nothing- 
To  h  the  realm  from  scattering, 
will  ye  upon  oath,  H  us  against  the  Norman  ? 
I  cannot  find  his  body.     O  A  me  thou  ! 
Forgive  me  thou,  and  h  me  here  ! 
Not  h  me,  nor  forgive  me  ? 


953  Henry 

Harold  iiiiil93 
IV  i  106 
IV  i  181 

V  ii  20 

V  ii  22 
„          V  ii  24 

thou  didst  h  mc  to  my  throne  In  Theobald's  time,  Becket,  Pro.  200 

Shall  I  not  h  your  lordship  to  your  rest  ?  „             i  j  i 

better  than  thyself  That  thou  shouldst  hme?  „             i  f  5 

H  me  off,  Herbert,  with  this —  .,           1 110 

Past  help  !  his  paws  are  past  help.     God  h  him  !  ^]       i  iv  110 

God  h  her.  That  she  was  sworn  to  silence.  „        in  i  77 

Heaven  k  you ;  get  you  hence  in  haste  „        rv  ii  26 

H\  h\     Eleanor.    They  say  that  walls  have  ears ;  „        iv  ii  78 

God  h  thee  !  „       v  ii  296 

laid  mine  own  life  down  To  h  him  from  them,  ,"       v  ii  340 

I  cannot  h  the  mould  that  I  was  cast  in.  The  Cup  i  iii  25 

Employ  us,  heat  us,  quicken  us,  h  us,  „     i  iii  131 

0  hus  from  all  that  oppress  us  !  „  n  5 
Will  hardly  h  to  make  him  sane  again.  The  Falcon  83 
Not  quite  recover'd  of  your  wound,  the  wine  Might  h  you.  „  592 
And  so  return — Heaven  h  him  ! — to  our  own.  „  861 
We  two  together  Will  h  to  heal  your  son —  ,','  923 
H  me  to  move  this  bench  for  him  into  the  sun.  Prom,  of  May  i  80 
Seem  my  good  angel  who  may  h  me  from  it.  „  n  388 
How  can  I  h  him  ?  ,,         n  392 

1  trust  I  may  be  able  by-and-by  to  h  you  in  the 
business  of  the  farm  ;  „       m  222 

and  I  asked  her  once  more  to  h  me,  „       m  388 

And  I  wiU  follow  thee,  and  God  h  us  both.  Foresters  i  i  278 

God's  good  Angel  H  him  back  hither,  „        i  ii  n 

I  must  pass  overseas  to  one  that  I  trust  will  h  me.  „      i  ii  153 

I  cannot  h  you  in  this  exigency  ;  .,       i  ii  273 

A  worthy  messenger  !  how  should  ha  hit?  „'       i  jii  86 

for,  God  h  us,  we  lie  by  nature.  „      u  j  237 

to  h  the  old  man  When  he  was  fighting.  .,      u  i  541 

balms  and  simples  of  the  field  To  A  a  wound.  „       n  ii  13 

Robin's  an  outlaw,  but  he  h's  the  poor.    While  Richard 

hath  outlaw'd  himself,  and  h's  Nor  rich,  nor  poor.  „        iv  358 

—  God  h  the  mark —  „        jy  714 

Hail,  knight,  and  h  us.  'I       ly  765 

Help'd-helpt    (See  also  Holp,  Holpen)     Pole  Will  tell 

you  that  the  devil  helft  them  thro'  it.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  352 

some  familiar  spirit  must  have  hely'd  him.  Harold  n  ii  677 

The  Norseman's  raid  Hath  helft  the  Norman,  „        v  i  292 

and  his  brother  Tostig  helft ;  „         v  ii  47 

King  Stephen  gave  Many  of  the  crown  lands  to  those 

that  helft  him  ;  Becket  1  iii  151 

King  Louis,  Who  helft  me  when  none  else.  „    nr  iii  249 

frost  That  helf'd  to  check  the  flowing  of  the  blood.         The  Falcon  645 
Helping    as  she  was  h  to  build  the  mound  against  the 

city.  Foresters  ir  i  308 

Helpless    the  red  man,  that  good  h  creature,  starved, 

maim'd,  flogg'd.  Queen  Mary  11  i  209 

And  cruel  at  it,  killing  h  flies  ;  „  ni  iv  65 

our  h  folk  Are  wash'd  away,  wailing,  in  their  own 

blood—  Harold  11  ii  470 

Helpt    (SeeHelp'd 

Heman  (a  singer)    sing,  Asaph  !  clash  The  cymbal,  H  !  „      m  i  188 

Hen     (See  also  Sitting-hen)     a  fox  may  filch  a  A  by 

night.  Queen  Mary  in  v  157 

Who  stole  the  widow's  sitting  h  0'  Sunday,  Becket  1  iv  121 

Sitting  h  !     Our  Lord  Becket's  our  great  sitting-hen  cock,    „     i  iv  124 
The  h  cluckt  late  by  the  white  farm  gate,  Prom,  of  May  1  38 

a  fox  from  the  glen  ran  away  with  the  h,  „  i  52 

Henceforward    none  shall  hold  them  in  his  house  and 

live,  H.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  98 

Henry  (Bedingfield)    (See  also  Henry  Bedingfield)    I  woke 

Sir  H — and  he's  true  to  you —  „  m  y  60 

Henry  (King  of  France)    but  we  play  with  H,  King  of 

France,  „         i  iii  131 

King  H  warms  your  traitors  at  his  hearth.  „  y  i  123 

this  H  Stirs  up  your  land  against  you  „  y  i  130 

Henry  (son  of  Henry  H.)    I  will  have  My  young  son  H 
m  ii  63  crown'd  the  King  of  England,  Becket,  Pro.  224 


Henry 


954 


Heretic 


Henry  (son  of  Henry  H.)  (continued)    You  have  not  crown'd 

young  H  yet,  Becket  ii  ii  2 

England  scarce  would  hold  Young  H  king,  „     ii  ii  32 

For  England,  crown  young  H  there,  „   ii  ii  456 

I  go  to  have  young  H  crown'd  by  York.  „   ii  ii  478 

and  crown  Young  H  there  to-morrow.  „    iii  ii  10 

hath  in  this  crowning  of  young  H  by  York  and  London  „  in  iii  71 

And  thou  shalt  crown  my  H  o'er  again.  „  in  iii  206 

On  those  that  crown'd  young  H  in  this  realm,  „    v  ii  392 

Henry  (the  Eighth)     (See  also  Harry  the  Eighth, 
Herod-Henry)     When  H  broke  the  carcase 

of  your  church  Queen  Mary  i  v  397 

This  Gardiner  tum'd  his  coat  in  H's  time  ;  „  xii  iii  17 

And  in  my  master  H's  time  ;  „         ni  iii  228 

Did  she  not  In  H's  time  and  Edward's  ?  „         iii  iv  132 

for  since  H  for  a  doubt —  „         iv  iii  399 

beard,  which  he  had  never  shaven  Since  H's  death,         „         iv  iii  594 

Henry  (the  First)  Hereford,  you  know,  crown'd  the  first 
H.  Becket.  But  Anselm  crown'd  this  H  o'er 
again. 

Henry  (the  Second)    (See  also  Henry  of  England)    What 
should  come  Between  us,  H  ? 
as  brave  a  soldier  as  H  and  a  goodlier  man  : 
I  can  see  further  into  a  man  than  our  hot-headed  H, 
H  had  many,  and  I  loved  him  none  the  less — 
For  H  could  not  work  a  miracle — 
H  the  King  hath  been  my  friend,  my  brother, 
I  served  King  H  well  as  Chancellor  ; 
chart  which  //  gave  you  With  the  red  line — 
Didst  thou  not  promise  H  to  obey  These  ancient  laws 
King  H  sware  That,  saving  his  King's  kingship. 
Shall  I  do  less  for  Canterbury  Than  H  for  the  crown  ? 
When  H  came  into  his  own  again. 
This  did  H. 

Hath  H  told  thee  ?  hast  thou  talk'd  with  him  ? 
This  Almoner  hath  tasted  H's  gold.     The  cardinals 

have  finger'd  H's  gold, 
might  well  have  sway'd  All  England  under  H, 
betwixt  thine  Appeal,  and  H's  anger,  yield. 
I  had  been  so  true  To  H  and  mine  office 
obey,  not  me,  but  God  in  me,  Rather  than  H. 
That  in  thy  cause  were  stirr'd  against  King  H, 
tho'  I  count  H  honest  enough,  yet  when  fear  creeps 
save  King  H  gave  thee  first  the  kiss  of  peace. 
life  which  //  bad  me  Guard  from  the  stroke 
H  Says  many  a  thing  in  sudden  heats, 
H — Becket  tells  him  this — To  take  my  life 
I  that  wedded  H,  Honouring  his  manhood — 
Down  with  King  H  !  up  with  the  Archbishop  ! 
was  out  with  H  in  the  days  When  //  loved  me, 
Ready  to  fall  at  H's  word  or  yours — 
Save  him,  his  blood  would  darken  H's  name  ; 

Henry  Bedingfield    (See  also  Henry)    Sir  H  B  May 
spht  it  for  a  spite. 
Sir  H  B  \     I  will  have  no  man  true  to  me, 

Henry  of  England  (the  Second)    I  loved  H  o  E,  and 
H  0  E  dreamed  that  he  loved  me  ; 

Henry  of  Winchester  (Bishop  of  Winchester,  brother  of 
King  Stephen)  H  o  W  ?  Henry.  Him  who 
crown'd  Stephen — 

Henry  the  Seventh    See  Harry  the  Seventh 

Her     Yet  h — what  A  ?  he  hinted  of  some  h — 

Herald     In  this  full  tide  of  love,  Wave  h's  wave  : 

Herb    See  Willow-herb 

Herbert  (of  Bosham)    There's  no  jest  on  the  brows  of  H 

there.     What  is  it,  H  ?  Becket,  Pro.  391 

Leave  me  with  H,  friend.    Help  me  off,  H,  „  i  i  9 

Too  heavy  for  me,  this  ;  off  with  it,  H  I  „  i  i  19 

()  //,  H,  in  my  chancellorship  I  more  than  once  „  i  i  27 

0  H,  here  I  gash  myself  asunder  from  the  King,  „  i  i  174 
Pass  in  with  H  there.  „  i  i  184 
H,  take  out  a  score  of  armed  men  „         i  i  327 

1  am  martyr  in  myself  already. —  HI  „  i  i  362 
And  H  hath  rebuked  me  even  now.  „  i  i  385 
H,  H,  have  I  betrav'd  the  Church  ?  „       i  iii  284 


Herbert  (of  Bosham)  (continued)     H,  till  I  hear  from  the 

Pope  I  will  suspend  myself  Becket  i  iii  299 

H,  for  the  sake  of  the  Church  itself,  „        i  iv  152 

Better  have  been  A  fisherman  at  Bosham,  my  good  H,  „       n  ii  292 


Becket  m  iii  202 

Pro.  196 

Pro.  437 

Pro.  464 

Pro.  476 

I  i  40 

I  i  87 

I  i  144 

I  ii  61 

I  iii  17 

I  iii  27 

I  iii  148 

I  iii  153 

I  iii  158 

I  iii  258 

I  iii  294 
I  iii  468 
I  iii  623 
I  iii  693 

I  iii  722 

II  ii  430 

III  iii  60 
„      in  iii  253 

IV  ii  268 
IV  ii  275 
IV  ii  394 
IV  ii  420 

V  i  260 

V  ii  230 

V  ii  486 
„          V  iii  11 


Queen  Mary  ni  v  47 
III  V  63 

Becket,  Pro.  357 


„      Pro.  272 

Becket  m  i  242 
Foresters  iv  1044 


H,  When  I  was  in  mine  anger  with  King  Louis, 
Herb-of-grace    Mercy,  that  h-o-g,  Flowers  now  but 

seldom. 
Hercules     He  fasts,  they  say,  this  mitred  H  ! 
Herd     You  are  the  stateliest  deer  in  all  the  h — ■ 
Hereafter    Do  not  fear  it.     Of  that  h. 
Hereford  (Bishop  of)     H,  you  know,  crown'd  the  first 

Henry. 
Heresiarch    Did  I  call  him  heretic  ?     A  huge  h  ! 
Heresy    no  one  in  her  time  should  be  burnt  for  h. 

Stiff  as  the  very  backbone  of  h. 

There  is  no  h  there. 

To  absolve  thee  from  thy  guilt  of  h. 

All  hollow'd  out  with  stinging  heresies  ;  And  for  their 
heresies, 

all  the  realm  And  its  dominions  from  all  h, 

heat  enough  To  scorch  and  wither  h  to  the  root. 

If  we  could  bum  out  h,  my  Lord  Paget, 

Paget,  You  stand  up  here  to  fight  for  h, 

wherein  have  been  Such  holocausts  of  h ! 

plunge  and  fall  Of  h  to  the  pit : 

of  a  heavier  crime  Than  h  is  itself ; 

you  are  art  and  part  with  us  In  purging  h. 

To  deal  with  h  gentlier. 

In  hope  to  crush  all  h  under  Spain. 

He  hath  recanted  all  his  heresies. 

Cranmer  is  head  and  father  of  these  heresies. 

Your  learning,  and  your  stoutness,  and  your  h. 

Pitiful  to  this  pitiful  h  ? 

despite  his  fearful  heresies,  I  loved  the  man, 

He  has  cited  me  to  Rome,  for  h, 

and  what  h  since  ? 

in  pursuing  h  1  have  gone  beyond  your  late  Lord 
Chancellor, — 

Ah  !  much  h  Shelter'd  in  Calais. 

you  were  burnt  for  h,  not  for  treason, 

What's  up  is  faith,  what's  down  is  h. 
Heretic  (adj.)     Gardiner  perchance  is  ours ;  But  for  our 
h  Parliament 


in  iii  256 

Queen  Mary  in  vi  9 

Becket  I  iii  519 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  426 

I  V  131 

Becket  in  iii  201 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  46 

Ii97 

I  V  44 

in  i  272 

in  ii  53 


m  ii  203 

ni  iii  216 

in  iv  28 

III  iv  53 
in  iv  92 

m  iv  108 

in  iv  142 

ni  iv  222 

in  iv  317 

in  vi  58 

in  vi  84 

ivi49 

ivi76 

IV  ii  126 
IV  ii  163 

IV  iii  634 
vii42 
vii89 

vii97 

V  ii  298 

vvl39 

Harold  I  i  84 


Queen  Mary  i  v  388 


III  ii  134 
in  ii  178 
in  iv  44 
III  iv  280 
IV  i  131 
IV  i  180 
IV  iii  43 


vii 


326 


v  V  106 
Becket  n  i  283 


It  was  not  meet  the  h  swine  should  live  In  Lambeth 

His  sword  shall  hew  the  h  peoples  down  ! 

h  throats  Cried  no  God-bless-her  to  the  Lady  Jane, 

That  layest  so  long  in  h  bonds  with  me  ; 

That  I  should  spare  to  take  a  h  priest's. 

But  on  the  h  dunghill  only  weeds. 

He  here,  this  h  metropolitan. 

And  cried  I  was  not  clean,  what  should  I  care  ? 

Or  you,  for  h  cries  ? 
We  have  but  burnt  The  h  priest,  workmen,  and 

women  and  children. 
That  my  poor  h  heart  would  excommunicate  His 

excommunication, 
Heretic  (s)    (See  also  Traitor-heretic)    disaffected,  h's, 

reformers.  Look  to  you  Queen  Mary  i  iv  170 

married  The  mother  of  Elizabeth — a  h  Ev'n  as  she 

is;  but  God  hath  sent  me  here  To  take  such 

order  with  all  h's 
Bad  you  go  softly  with  your  h's  here, 
tell  you  that  all  English  h's  have  tails. 
But  so  I  get  the  laws  against  the  h, 
As  traitor,  or  as  h,  or  for  what  ? 
To  bring  the  h  to  the  stake. 
For  h  and  traitor  are  all  one : 

there  be  some  disloyal  Catholics,  And  many  h's  loyal ; 
We  kill  the  h's  that  sting  the  soul — 
You  are  more  than  guess 'd  at  as  a  /i, 
I  would  not,  were  I  Queen,  tolerate  the  h, 
To  gorge  a  h  whole,  roasted  or  raw. 
and  the  Pope  Together,  says  the  h. 
The  h  must  burn. 
Yet  a  h  still. 


I  v32 

IV  392 

1X1  i  229 

in  i  323 

in  iii  272 

III  iv  9 
in  iv  38 
ni  iv  44 
in  iv  68 
in  iv  93 

m  iv  210 
in  iv  344 

IV  i  29 
IV  i  122 
IV  i  168 


I 


Heretic 


955 


Hoam 


And  there  be  many  Vs  in  the 


Queen  Mary  iv  ii  30 

IV  iii  45 
IV  iii  282 
IV  iii  344 
IV  iii  436 
IV  iii  458 
IV  iii  599 

vilOl 
vi200 
vii63 
V  ii  71 
vii79 
vii89 
vii95 

V  ii  175 
V  ii  316 

m  iv  352 

ivi95 

'oresters  i  i  228 

II  i  688 


!C  (s)  {continued) 
town, 

Did  I  call  him  h?     A  huge  heresiarch  ! 

Ay,  stop  the  h's  mouth !     Hale  him  away ! 

I  "know  them  h's,  but  right  English  ones. 

I  have  seen  h's  of  the  poorer  sort, 

No  faith  with  h's,  my  Lord  ! 

Than  h  of  these  times ; 

blood  and  sweat  of  h's  at  the  stake  Is  God's  best  dew 

But  she's  a  h,  and,  when  I  am  gone. 

So  brands  me  in  the  stare  of  Christendom,  A  h  ! 

all  my  lifelong  labour  to  uphold  The  primacy — a  h. 

A  h  !     He  drew  his  shaft  against  me  to  the  head, 

have  sent  me  Legate  hither.  Deeming  meh? 

I,  a  A  ?    Your  Highness  knows  that  in  pursuing  heresy 

the  Pope  Pointing  at  me  with  '  Pole,  the  h, 

H  and  rebel  Point  at  me  and  make  merry. 
leal     Touch  him  upon  his  old  h  talk, 

I  will  take  Such  order  with  all  bad,  h  books 

the  Wake  have  loved  Harold  the  Saxon,  orHt  W. 

our  great  Earl,  the  bravest  English  heart  Since  H  t  W, 
to  the  intent  That  you  may  lose  your 
English  h.  Queen  Mary  v  i  133 

Yea,  let  a  stranger  spoil  his  h,  Becket  ii  ii  259 

lem     No  bird  ?     Filippo.     Half  a  tit  and  a  h's  bill.  The  Falcon  131 

iem  (hers)     Our  Daisy's  butter's  as  good  'z  h.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  482 

ierod    since  your  H's  death,  How  oft  hath  Peter  „  iii  ii  61 

ierod-Henry    When  H-H  first  Began  to  batter  „  iii  iv  184 

iero-like    howsoever  h-l  the  man  Dies  in  the  fire,  „  iv  iii  324 

ierring-pond    Hest  as  loud  as  the  black  h-j>  behind  thee.        Harold  ii  i  26 
lerring-shoal    here's  a  crowd  as  thick  as  h-s's.  Queen  Mary  iii  i  182 

iers    See  Hem 
lerse  (horse)     Blacksmith,  th.aw  be  niver  shoes  a  A  to 

my  likings  ;  Prom,  of  May  i  448 

lerse-pond  (horse-pond)     I'd  like  to  drag  'im  thruff  the 

h-p,  and  she  to  be  a-lookin'  at  it.  „  ii  593 

lew     His  sword  shall  h  the  heretic  peoples  ilown  !       Qtieen  Mary  ni  ii  178 
lewn     I'll  have  the  drawbridge  h  into  the  Thames,  „  ii  ii  376 

They  had  h  the  drawbridge  down  into  the  river.  „  n  iii  18 

lid    with  his  brother  Odo  The  Bayeux  bishop,  and  I  h 

myself.  Harold  ii  ii  348 

I  was  afraid  of  her,  and  I  h  myself.  Prom,  of  May  i  551 

She  h  this  sister,  told  me  she  was  dead —  „  in  689 

The  groming  h  the  heavens  ;  Foresters  n  i  62 

[idden     Then  h  in  the  street  He  watch'd  her  pass  Becket  i  ii  39 

From  all  the  h  by-ways  of  the  world  „  ni  iii  15 

I  hate  h  faces,  (repeat)  Foresters  i  ii  245,  251 

tide  (skin)     town  Hung  out  raw  h's  along  their  walls,  Harold  n  ii  383 

clench'd  their  pirate  h's  To  the  bleak  church  doors,  „       iv  iii  36 

(ide  (verb)     and  h  himself  and  die ;  Queen  Mary  rv  i  142 

j       To  h  the  scar  left  by  thy  Parthian  dart.  Becket,  Pro.  377 

Save  me,  father,  h  me — they  follow  me —  „  i  i  181 

and  once  he  strove  to  h  his  face,  „       ni  iii  103 

I  will  h  my  face,  Blacken  and  gipsyfy  it ;  „  iv  ii  98 

But  these  arm'd  men — will  you  not  A  yourself  ?  „  v  ii  247 

Pray  you,  h  yourself.  „  v  ii  257 

The  nmrderers,  hark !     Let  us  /i !  let  us  A  !  „  v  iii  47 

Why  wearest  thou  thy  cowl  to  h  thy  face  ?  Foresters  i  ii  206 

thou  canst  not  h  thyself  From  her  who  loves  thee.  „  n  ii  24 

You  h  this  damsel  in  your  forest  here,  „  iv  476 

ide  and  seek     You  play  a,th  a  s.  Queen  Mary  i  v  305 

iggins  (a  farm  labourer)  H,  Jackson,  Luscombe,  Nokes,  Prom,  of  May  in  52 
igh     Before  our  own  H  Court  of  Parliament,  Queen  Mary  n  ii  234 


There  stands  a  man,  once  of  so  h  degree. 

And  bolts  of  thimder  moulded  in  h  heaven  To  serve  the 

Norman  purpose, 
that  thus  baptized  in  blood  Grew  ever  h  and  higher, 
let  our  h  altar  Stand  where  their  standard  fell  .  .  . 
Then  I  saw  Thy  h  black  steed  among  the  flaming  furze, 
And  is  the  King's  if  too  h  a  stile  for  your  lordship  to 

overstep 
But  crowns  must  bow  when  mitres  sit  so  h. 
The  h  Heaven  guard  thee  from  his  wantonness, 
Till  Nature,  h  and  low,  and  great  and  small  Forgets 

herself, 


IV  iii  68 

Harold  n  ii  32 

„     in  i  148 

„      V  ii  138 

Becket  ii  i  55 

„  m  iii  281 

„    IV  ii  298 

Foresters  i  ii  121 

I  ii  326 


Foresters  i  iii  IIJ^ 

Queen  Mary  in  ii  225 

n  i  250- 

m  165 

IV  ii  108' 

Harold  ni  i  148 

The  Falcon  583- 


Highback'd    The  deer,  the  h  polecat,  the  wild  boar, 

High-dropsy    Or  a  h-d,  as  the  doctors  call  it. 

Higher     I'll  have  my  head  set  h  in  the  state ; 
eyes  So  bashful  that  you  look'd  no  h? 
O  h,  holier,  earlier,  purer  church. 
Grew  ever  high  and  h,  beyond  my  seeing, 
Your  ladyship  lives  h  in  the  sun. 
strain  to  make  ourselves  Better  and  h  than  Nature,   Prom,  of  May  i  604 

Highest     That  all  of  you,  the  h  as  the  lowest,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  64 

great  Angel  past  along  the  h  Crying  Harold  m  i  133^ 

Angel  rose  And  past  again  along  the  h  „       ni  i  156- 

Glory  to  God  in  the  //  !  fallen,  fallen  !  „         v  i  636- 

High-hearted     Then  the  maid  is  not  h-h  enough.  Foresters  i  i  258 

High-priest    I  have  it  .  .  .  My  lord  Paramount,  Our 

great  H-p,  Becket  iv  ii  357 

High-set    sitting  here  Between  the  t^o  most  h-s 

thrones  on  earth,  Queen  Mary  iii  ii  106- 

Hildebrand  (afterwards  Pope  Gregory  VH.)    and  that  Arch- 
deacon H  His  master,  Harold  in  ii  144 

Hill     this  land  is  like  a  h  of  fire.  Queen  Alary  in  i  321 

signs  on  earth  !     Knowest  thou  Senlac  h  ?  Harold  in  i  361 

passing  by  that  h  three  nights  ago —  „       ni  i  366- 

And  dreadful  shadows  strove  upon  the  h,  „       ni  i  378- 

A  A,  a  fort,  a  city — that  reach'd  a  hand  „         rv  i  44 

another  h  Or  fort,  or  city,  took  it,  „         iv  i  49 

had  in  it  Wales,  Her  floods,  her  woods,  her  h's :  „       iv  i  207 

and  yet  I  saw  thee  drive  him  up  his  h's —  „       rv  i  211 

Scatter  thy  people  home,  descend  the  h,  „           v  i  10 

tell  him  we  stand  arm'd  on  Senlac  H,  „          v  i  60 

Gurth,  Leofwin,  go  once  more  about  the  h —  „        v  i  183 

To  tell  thee  thou  shalt  die.on  Senlac  h —  „        v  i  242 

He  glitters  on  the  crowning  of  the  h.  „        v  i  488- 

All  the  Norman  foot  Are  storming  up  the  h.  „        v  i  523 
axes  lighten  with  a  single  flash  About  the  summit  of  the  h,     „        v  i  539 

their  horse  Swallow  the  h  locust-like,  „        v  i  560' 

The  horse  and  horseman  roll  along  the  h,  „        v  i  595 

Look  out  upon  the  h — is  Harold  there  ?  „        v  i  669 

build  a  church  to  God  Here  on  the  h  of  battle ;  „        v  ii  138 

open'd  out  The  purple  zone  of  h  and  heaven ;  The  Cup  i  ii  408 

whose  breath  Is  balmy  wind  to  robe  our  h's  with  grass,        „  n  265 

storm  was  drawing  hither  Across  the  h's  „          n  320- 
there  is  Monna  Giovanna  coming  down  the  h  from  the 


castle 

out  of  the  forest  and  over  the  h's  and  away, 

Old  as  the  h's. 

I  see  two  figures  crawling  up  the  h. 
Hillo    H,  the  stag  !     What,  you  are  all  unfumish'd  ? 

H\     HI 
Hilt    Look  at  the  h.     What  excellent  workmanship. 
Himself    See  'Issen 
Hinder     I'd  make  a  move  myself  to  h  that : 

What  h's  but  that  Spain  and  England  join'd. 

What  h's  me  to  hold  with  mine  own  men  ? 

yon  huge  keep  that  h's  half  the  heaven. 
Hindering    See  Burial-hindering 
Hinted     Yet  her — what  her  ?  he  h  of  some  her — 
Hip     Back  and  side  and  h  and  rib, 
Hiss     and  h  Against  the  blaze  they  cannot  quench — 
Hiss'd    As  we  past.  Some  hail'd,  some  h  us. 

And  h  against  the  sun  ? 
Hissing     Stab  me  in  fancy,  h  Spain  and  Philip  ; 

Whose  doings  are  a  horror  to  the  east,  A  h  in  the  west 
History    how  often  in  old  histories  have  the  great  men 
Hit     This  is  the  likelier  tale.     We  have  h  the  place. 

This  is  no  bow  to  h  nightingales ; 

H  !     Did  I  not  tell  you  an  old  woman  could  shoot 
better? 
Hive    So  hated  here  !     I  watch'd  a  A  of  late ; 

bees.  If  any  creeping  life  invade  their  h 

when  our  good  h  Needs  every  sting  to  save  it. 
Hoam  (home)     H  wi'  it,  then.     Haymaker.     Well,  it 


The  Falcon  161 

Foresters  ii  ii  176- 

IV  301 

IV  333 

The  Cup  I  i  205- 
I  i  214 

Becket  iv  ii  314 

Queen  Mary  iii  i  127 

V  iii  68- 

Harold  ii  i  102 

„      II  ii  22& 

Becket  in  i  243 

Foresters  ii  ii  120' 

Harold  in  i  395 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  61 

Becket  v  iii  45 

Queen  Mary  i  v  150' 

Becket  iv  ii  245 

Foresters  i  i  242 

Becket  in  ii  43 

Foresters  n  i  391 

n  i  406- 

Queen  Mary  in  iii  46 

„  in  iii  54 

Harold  iv  i  17 


be  the  last  load  h.  Prom,  of  May  ii  143 

as  I  said  afoor,  it  be  the  last  load  h ;  do  thou  and 

thy  sweet'art  sing  us  A  to  supper —  „  n  1Q& 

—'  The  Last  Load  H.'  (repeat)  „   n  171, 172 


Hoam 


956 


Holy 


Hoam  (home)  (continued)     At  the  end  of  the  daay, 

Por  the  last  load  h  ?  (repeat)  Prom,  of  May  ii  184, 195 


Hold  (verb)  (continued)  but  I  h  thee  The  husband  of  my  heart,  Foresters  lu  139 


Till  the  end  of  the  daay  And  the  last  load  h. 

Till  the  end  o'  the  daay  An'  the  last  load  h.' 

To  the  end  o'  the  daay  An'  the  last  load  h.' 

An'  the  last  load  h,  Load  h.' 

H  ?  fro'  the  bottom  o'  the  river  ? 
Hogm-maade  (home-made)    and  Baaker,  thaw  I 

sticks  to  h-m — 
Hoarse     I  have,  my  Lord,  shouted  till  I  am  h. 
Hobnail'd     Your  rights  and  charters  h  into  slush — 
Hodge    H  'ud  ha'  been  a-harrowin'  o'  white  peasen  i'  the 

outBeld —  „         IV  iii  491 

Hog    The  h  hath  tumbled  himself  into  some  corner,  Becket  i  i  369 

Hoist     But  I  would  h  the  drawbridge,  like  thy  master.  Foresters  i  i  318 

Hold  (s)   (See  also  Holt)   hottest  A  in  all  the  devil's  den  Queen  Mary  v  iv  15 
Hold  (verb)     (See  also  'Owd)    Seek  to  possess  our 
person,  h  our  Tower, 

I  may  be  wrong,  sir.     This  marriage  will  not  h. 

There's  a  brave  man,  if  any.     Bagenhall.     Ay  ;  if  it  h. 

that  no  foreigner  H  office  in  the  household. 

So  then  you  h  the  Pope — ■    Gardiner.     I  h  the  Pope  ! 
What  do  I  A  him  ?  what  do  I  A  the  Pope  ? 

none  shall  h  them  in  his  house  and  live, 

could  scarce  meet  his  eye  And  h  your  own ; 

I  A  by  all  I  wrote  within  that  book. 

I  do  ft  The  Catholic,  if  he  have  the  greater  right, 

strike  Their  hearts,  and  h  their  babies  up  to  it. 

much  ado  To  h  mine  own  against  old  Gurth. 

thine  eyelids  into  sleep.  Will  h  mine  waking. 

R  thine  own,  if  thou  canst ! 

my  men  H  that  the  shipwreckt  are  accursed  of  God ; — 
What  hinders  me  to  h  with  mine  own  men  ? 

We  h  our  Saxon  woodcock  in  the  springe. 

Yet  I  h  out  against  them,  as  I  may,  Yea — would  h  out, 

Better  to  be  a  liar's  dog,  and  h  My  master  honest, 

And  Morcar  h's  with  us. 

must  h  The  sequel  had  been  other  than  his  league 

No  power  mine  To  h  their  force  together  .  .  . 

This  is  the  hottest  of  it :  h,  ash  !  h,  willow ! 

The  Church  should  h  her  baronies  of  me, 

Thou  hast  but  to  h  out  thy  hand. 

And  many  a  baron  Vs  along  with  me — 

among  you  those  that  h  Lands  reft  from  Canterbury. 

And  mean  to  h  it,  or Becket.    To  have  my  life. 

Wilt  thou  h  out  for  ever,  Thomas  Becket  ? 

Ks  his  cross  before  him  thro'  the  crowd, 

I  h  not  by  my  signing. 

But  we  h  Thou  art  forsworn ; 

I  h  Nothing  in  fee  and  barony  of  the  King.    Whatever 
the  Church  owns — she  h's  it  in  Free  and  perpetual  alms. 

If  the  King  h  his  purpose.  I  am  myself  a  beggar. 

England  scarce  would  h  Young  Henry  king. 

We  h  by  his  defiance,  not  his  defect. 

cursed  those  De  Brocs  That  h  our  Saltwood  Castle  from 
our  see ! 

Map  scoffs  at  Rome.     I  all  but  h  with  Map. 

keep  the  figure  moist  and  make  it  h  water, 

the  lady  h's  the  cleric  Lovelier  than  any  soldier, 

Who  h  With  York,  with  York  against  me. 

De  Morville,  H  her  away.    De  Morville.     I  h  her. 

See  here — I  stretch  my  hand  out — h  it  there. 

I  am  sinking — h  me — Let  me  alone. 

I  think  I  scarce  could  h  my  head  up  there. 

True,  I  have  held  opinions,  h  some  still, 

Lady  Marian  h's  her  nose  when  she  steps  across  it. 

handle  all  womankind  gently,  and  h  them  in  all  honour, 
there  is  a  lot  of  wild  fellows  in  Sherwood  Forest  who  h 
by  King  Richard. 

last  time  When  I  shall  h  my  birthday  in  this  hall : 

How  she  looks  up  at  him,  how  she  h's  her  face ! 

I  fear  you  be  of  those  who  h  more  by  John  than  Richard. 

good  fellows  there  in  merry  Sherwood  That  h  by  Richard, 

They  h  by  Richard — the  wild  wood  ! 

O  h  thy  hauid  !  this  is  our  Marian. 


II  209 
u239 
II  260 
II  293 
III  443 


I  449 
Queen  Mary  m  i  291 
II  ii  278 


II  ii  158 
in  i  103 
m  i  176 

m  iii  72 

m  iv  371 

IV  196 
IV  i  105 

IV  iii  275 

IV  iii  381 

Harold  I  i  35 

1 1438 

I  ii  141 
II 179 

II  ilOO 
II  ii  1 

II  ii  552 

in  i  125 

IV  ii  46 

IV  iii  87 

IV  iii  213 

vi628 

Becket,  Pro.  24 

„      Pro.  412 

I  ii  52 

I  iii  140 

I  iii  162 

„       I  iii  265 

„       I  iii  477 

I  iii  563 

I  iii  595 

I  iii  677 
iiv89 
II  ii  31 

II  ii  218 

II  ii  269 
„  n  ii  385 
„    in  iii  166 

V  i  193 
V  ii  62 

„      V  iii  173 

The  Cup  n  210 

n  478 

Prom,  of  May  i  689 

m  622 

Foresters  i  i  83 

I  i  99 

„  I  ii  73 
„  I  ii  89 
iii  144 
I  ii  198 
I  iii  100 
I  iii  110 
nu36 


You  hope  to  h  and  keep  her  for  yourself, 

mate  with  one  that  h's  no  love  is  pure, 

if  you  h  us  here  Longer  from  our  own  venison. 

Holdest    thou,  De  Broc,  that  h  Saltwood  Castle — 
that  h  thine  estates  In  fee  and  barony 

Hold-fast    Such  h-f  claws  that  you  perforce  again 

Holding    true  To  either  function,  h  it ; 

Hold'st    Thou  h  with  him  ?  (repeat) 

Hole    skulk  into  comers  Like  rabbits  to  their  h's. 
creep  down  into  some  dark  h  Like  a  hurt  beast, 
crawl  down  thine  own  black  h  To  the  lowest  HeU. 

Holiday    a  boon,  my  king,  Respite,  a  h : 


IV  477 

,.      IV  711 

„      IV  941 

Becket  i  iii  160 

„      I  iii  674 

n  ii  86 

„      I  iii  538 

Foresters  n  i  526,  530 

Queen  Mary  ii  iv  56 

IV  i  141 

The  Cup  II  495 

Harold  i  i  227 


n346 

m90 

in  241 

Foresters  n  ii  96 


Holier     O  higher,  h,  earlier,  purer  church.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  108 

They  are  so  much  h  than  their  harlot's  son  Harold  v  ii  11 

Foliot  is  the  h  man,  perhaps  the  better.  Becket  ni  iii  92 

Holiest     From  all  the  h  shrines  in  Normandy  !  Harold  ii  ii  735 

The  H  of  our  H  one  should  be  This  William's  fellow- 
tricksters  ;  „       m  ii  76 

More,  what  the  mightiest  and  the  h  Of  all  his  predecessors  Becket  ii  ii  179 
Holiness     that  you  might  not  seem  To  disobey  his  H.     Queen  Mary  v  ii  53 

his  politic  H  Hath  all  but  climb'd  the  Roman  perch  Becket  n  ii  45 

His  H,  pushed  one  way  by  the  Empire  and  another  by 

England,  „    ii  ii  327 

will  not  your  H  Vouchsafe  a  gracious  answer  „    iv  ii  358 

Holla'd  (shouted)     I  A  to  him,  but  he  didn't  hear  me :  „     iii  ii  25 

Holler  (hollow)     Dan  Smith's  cart  hes  runned  ower  a 

laady  i'  the  h  laane,  Prom,  of  May  n  569 

Ye  sees  the  h  laane  be  hallus  sa  dark  i'  the  arternoon,       „  m  92 

Hollow  (adj.)     (See  also  Holler)    — no  distance — this  H 
Pandora-box, 

when  you  lamed  the  lady  in  the  h  lane. 

Do  you  still  suffer  from  your  fall  in  the  h  lane. 

Scarlet  hacking  down  A  h  ash,  a  bat  flew  out  at  him 

though  thou  wert  like  a  bottle  full  up  to  the  cork,  or 

as  /i  as  a  kex,  „         iv  211 

Hollow  (verb)     voice  of  the  deep  as  it  h's  the  cliffs  of  the  land.    Becket  u  i  4 

tho'  the  drop  may  h  out  the  dead  stone,  Becket  in  iii  315 

Hollow'd     All  h  out  with  stinging  heresies ;  Queen  Mary  in  ii  203 

Hollow-hearted    Some  h-h  from  exceeding  age —  Foresters  m  96 

Hollowness     Bring  not  thy  h  On  our  full  feast.  Harold  iv  iii  203 

Holocaust    wherein  have  been  Such  h's  of  heresy  !      Queen  Mary  ni  iv  108 
Holp     (See  also  Help'd)     he  h  the  King  to  break  down  our 

castles,  Becket,  Pro.  446 

I  do  believe  he  h  Northumberland  Against  me.        Queen  Mary  i  v  278 
Holpen     (See  also  Help'd)     Had  h  Richard's  tottering 

throne  to  stand,  „         m  i  114 

Not  so  well  h  in  our  wars  with  France,  „       in  vi  188 

All  widows  we  have  h  pray  for  us.  Foresters  iv  1078 

Holt  (hold)     and  tells  un  ez  the  vire  has  tuk  h.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  512 

Holy  — hath  sent  for  the  h  legate  of  the  h  father 
the  Pope,  Cardinal  Pole,  to  give  us  all  that 
absolution  which — 

H  absolution !  h  Inquisition  ! 

Son  Courtenay,  wilt  thou  see  the  h  father  Murdered 

No,  by  the  h  Virgin,  being  noble.  But  love  me  only : 

H  Virgin,  Plead  with  thy  blessed  Son ; 

Makes  me  his  mouth  of  h  greeting. 

sent  here  as  Legate  From  our  most  H  Father  Julius, 
Pope, 

Against  the  H  Father's  primacy, 

of  all  censures  Of  H  Church  that  we  be  fall'n  into, 

Unto  the  h  see  and  reigning  Pope  Serve  God 

Our  Lord  and  H  Father,  Julius,  God's  Vicar 

or  more  Denied  the  H  Father  ! 

I  kept  my  head  for  use  of  H  Church; 

range  Among  the  pleasant  fields  of  H  Writ 

As  once  the  H  Father  did  with  mine. 

Against  the  King,  the  Queen,  the  H  Father, 

The  H  Virgin  will  not  have  me  yet  Lose  the  sweet  hope 

The  H  Father  in  a  secular  kingdom  Is  as  the  soul 

It  is  God's  will,  the  H  Father's  will, 

and  I  Scraped  from  your  finger-points  the  h  oil ; 

As  if  he  had  been  the  H  Father,  sat  And  judged  it. 

For  if  our  H  Queen  not  pardon  him, 


I  iii  26 
I  iii  31 
I  iii  64 
IV  70 
iv83 
mii80 

III  iii  12e 

in  iii  131 

in  iii  152 

in  iii  15f 

ui  iii  21; 

ni  iv  24i 

in  iv  35E 

in  v8( 

in  V  24; 

in  vi3; 

in  vi  19! 

IV 13-; 

IV  i  IS-i 

IV  ii  13;: 

IV  iii  4*1 

IV  iii  6] 


Holy 


967 


Homo 


{continued)    O  H  Ghost !  proceeding  from  them 

both, 
Who  deems  it  a  most  just  and  h  war. 
and  of  his  h  head — 
And  yet  I  must  obey  the  H  Father, 
We  have  made  war  upon  the  H  Father  All  for  your 

sake: 
No,  Madam,  not  against  the  H  Father ; 
And  done  such  mighty  things  by  H  Church, 
set  up  The  H  Office  here — gamer  the  wheat, 
E  Father  Has  ta'en  the  legateship  from  our  cousin 

Pole— 
Our  h  Norman  bishops  down  from  all  Their  thrones 

in  England  ? 
I  have  builded  the  great  Church  of  H  Peter : 
And,  H  Mary !     How  Harold  used  to  beat  him  ! 
At  least  methought  she  held  with  h  Edward, 
•  O  blessed  relics ! '    OH  Peter  ! ' 
And  that  the  H  Saints  of  Normandy  When  thou  art 

home  in  England, 
The  h  bones  of  all  the  Canonised 
I  would  I  were  As  h  and  as  passionless  as  he  ! 
H?  ay,  ay,  forsooth,  A  conscience  for  his  own  soul, 
loftiest  minster  ever  built  To  H  Peter  in  our  English  isle  ! 
And  all  our  just  and  wise  and  h  men  That  shall  be  bom 

hereafter. 
Our  h  king  Hath  given  his  virgin  lamb  to  H  Church 
for  the  king  Is  h,  and  hath  talk'd  with  God, 
loved  within  the  pale  forbidden  By  H  Church : 
Kiss  me — thou  art  not  A  h  sister  yet,  my  girl, 
and  have  sent  him  back  A  h  gonf  anon, 
Forward !     Forward !     Harold  and  H  Cross  ! 
E  Father  Hath  given  this  realm  of  England  to  the  Norman. 
E  Father  To  do  with  England's  choice  of  her  own  king  ? 
the  H  Rood  had  lean'd  And  bow'd  above  me ; 
made  too  good  an  use  of  H  Church  To  break  her  close ! 
the  H  Rood  That  bow'd  to  me  at  Waltham — 
Harold  and  H  Cross !  (repeat)  Harold  v  i  439,  519,  662 

What  power,  h  father  ?  Harold  v  i  454 

fonfanon  of  H  Peter  Floating  above  their  helmets — 
lis  oath  was  broken — O  h  Norman  Saints, 
The  H  Father  strangled  him  with  a  hair  Of  Peter, 
And  but  that  H  Peter  fought  for  us, 
to  whom  thou  art  bound  By  H  Church. 
I,  tme  son  Of  H  Church — no  croucher  to  the  Gregories 
the  H  Father,  while  This  Barbarossa  butts  him  from 

his  chair. 
Name  him ;  the  H  Father  will  confirm  him. 
30ur  h  mother  Canterbury,  who  sits  With  tatter'd  robes. 
O,  h  father,  when  thou  seest  him  next. 
Knowing  how  much  you  reverence  H  Church, 
Are  not  so  much  at  feud  with  H  Church 
and  lay  My  crozier  in  the  H  Father's  hands, 
Have  I  the  orders  of  the  H  Father  ? 
The  secret  whisper  of  the  H  Father. 
The  spire  of  H  Church  may  prick  the  graves — 
Becket  shall  be  king,  and  the  H  Father  shall  be  king. 
The  h  Thomas  !     Brother,  you  have  traffick'd  Between 

the  Emperor  and  the  Pope, 
B  Church  May  rock,  but  will  not  wreck, 
thanks  of  H  Chmch  are  due  to  those  That  went  before 

us  „       n  ii  190 

Thee,  thou  h  Thomas !     I  would  that  thou  hadst  been 

the  H  Father.  „       n  ii  398 

I  would  have  done  my  most  to  keep  Rome  h,  „       n  ii  401 

Forgive  me  and  absolve  me,  h  father.  „       ii  ii  441 

with  the  H  Father  astride  of  it  down  upon  his  own 

head.  „      in  iii  77 

False  oath  on  h  cross — for  thou  must  leave  him  To-day,    „      iv  ii  209 
God's  Grace  and  H  Church  deliver'd  us.  „      iv  ii  309 

sometimes  I  have  overshot  My  duties  to  our  H  Mother 

Church,  „  V  i  38 

crying  On  H  Church  to  thunder  out  her  rights  „         v  ii  31 

Nor  make  me  traitor  to  my  h  office.  „       v  ii  149 

To  assail  our  H  Mother  lest  she  brood  Too  long  „        v  ii  251 


Queen  Mary  iv  iii  119 
vil47 
vil57 
vii38 


V  ii  307 

V  ii  312 
V  V  74 

V  vll3 

vvl25 

Harold  i  i  50 
„  I  i  180 
„  I  i  431 
„  I  ii  51 
„    Iii  171 

„  nii727 

„  nii734 

„  m  i  43 

„  ni  i  61 

„  mi  206 

„   mi  209 

.,   m  i  334 

„    III  1355 

„     III  ii  24 

„    III  ii  81 

„  III  ii  148 

IV  i  269 

vil2 

vil7 

vil02 

vi312 

vi382 


vi549 
„  V  i  616 
„  V  ii  45 
„  V  ii  164 
Becket,  Pro.  68 
„     Pro.  211 

„     Pro.  215 

„     Pro.  244 

I  i  156 

I  i  322 

I  ii  48 

„  I  ii  54 

I  iii  125 

I  iii  233 

I  iii  236 

I  iii  553 

I  iv  270 

n  ii  66 
n  ii  102 


Holy  (continued)    scare  me  from  my  loyalty  To  God  and  to 
the  H  Father. 
Valour  and  h  life  should  go  together. 
Thy  h  follower  founded  Canterbury — 
and  take  this  h  cup  To  lodge  it  in  the  shrine  of 

Artemis. 
To  lodge  this  cup  Within  the  h  shrine  of  Artemis, 
H  mother !     To  breakfast !     Oh  sweet  saints  ! 
I  keep  it  For  h  vows  made  to  the  blessed  Saints 
he  is  a  ^  Palmer,  bounden  by  a  vow  not  to  show  his  face, 
till  he  join  King  Richard  in  the  H  Land.     Robin. 

Going  to  the  H  Land  to  Richard  ! 
by  this  H  Cross  Which  good  King  Richard  gave  me 
For  playing  upside  down  with  H  Writ. 
And  you  three  h  men. 
In  the  sweat  of  thy  brow,  says  H  Writ,  shalt  thou  eat 

bread. 
The  H  Virgin  Stand  by  the  strongest. 
our  friar  is  so  h  That  he's  a  miracle-monger, 
he  flung  His  life,  heart,  soul  into  those  h  wars 
Heading  the  h  war  against  the  Moslem, 
like  the  man  In  H  Writ,  who  brought  his  talent  back ; 
And  join'd  my  banner  in  the  H  Land, 
Holy  Ghost    0  H  G\  proceeding  from  them  both. 
Homage    Then  here  she  stands  !  my  h. 

all  manner  of  h's,  and  observances,  and  circum- 
bendibases. 
Home    (See  also  Hoam)    Struck  h  and  won. 
nearer  h,  the  Netherlands,  Sicily,  Naples, 
A  smile  abroad  is  oft  a  scowl  at  h. 
bring  it  H  to  the  leisure  wisdom  of  his  Queen, 
thou  art  reclaim'd ;  He  brings  thee  h : 
Albeit  he  think  himself  at  h  with  God, 
When  I  should  guide  the  Church  in  peace  at  h, 
You  had  best  go  h.    What  are  you  ? 
Good  night !     Go  h.     Besides,  you  curse  so  loud,  The 

watch  will  hear  you.     Get  you  h  at  once. 
Thy  life  at  ^  Is  easier  than  mine  here. 
I  pray  thee,  let  me  hence  and  bring  him  h. 
I  should  let  him  h  again,  my  lord. 
Since  thou  hast  promised  Wulfnoth  h  with  us.  Be  h  again 

with  Wulfnoth. 
poor  lad  !  how  sick  and  sad  for  h  ! 
When  thou  art  h  in  England,  with  thine  own, 
No  footfall — no  Fitzurse.     We  have  seen  her  h. 
We  be  a-going  h  after  our  supper  in  all  humbleness, 
thy  true  h — the  heavens — cry  out  for  thee 
Moon  bring  him  h,  bring  him  h 
H,  sweet  moon,  bring  him  h,  H  with  the  flock 
A  miracle  that  they  let  him  h  again. 
Strange  that  the  words  at  h  with  me  so  long 
how  long  you  have  been  away  from  h ! 
Close  by  that  alder-island  in  your  brook,  '  The 

Angler's  H.' 

Let  bygones  be  bygones.    Go  h  !     Good-night ! 

'  Go  A ; '  but  I  hadn't  the  heart  or  face  to  do  it. 

Eva  has  come  h.    Steer.     Hoam  ? 

So  happy  in  herself  and  in  her  h — 

we  should  have  better  battels  at  h. 

Cleave  to  him,  father !  he  will  come  h  at  last. 

till  King  Richard  come  h  again. 

Now  the  King  is  h  again,  and  nevermore  to  roam  again. 

Now  the  King  is  h  again,  the  King  will  have  his  own 

again,  H  again,  h  again,  and  each  will  have  his  own 

again.  All  the  birds  in  merry  Sherwood  sing  and  sing 

bun  h  again. 

Homely    You  have  but  trifled  with  our  h  salad, 

Home-made    See  Hoam-maade 

Home-nest    gaping  bills  in  the  h-n  Piping  for  bread — 
Home-return    God  and  his  free  wind  grant  your  lordship 

a  happy  h-r 
Homeward    prosper  all  thy  wandering  out  And  h. 

and  pray  in  thy  behalf  For  happier  h  winds 
Homo    H  sum.    I  love  my  dinner — 
H  sum,  sed  virgo  sum, 


Becket  V  ii  483 
„  v  ii  587 
„        V  iii  5 

The  Cv/p  I  ii  434 

I  iii  53 

The  Falcon  214 

Foresters  i  ii  175 

I  ii  23& 

I  ii  239 

I  ii  309 
in  168 
ra  382 

IV  201 
IV  263 
IV  280 
IV  407 
IV  818 
IV  981 
„  IV 1000 
Queen  Mary  iv  iii  119 

V  T  254 

Foresters  i  i  103 

Queen  Mary  i  v  554 

n  i  212 

in  i  213 

m  vi  23 

„        IV  iii  84 

IV  iii  192 

vii68 

V  iv  43 

v  iv  61 

Harold  i  i  96 

„    1 1242 

„    nii63 

„  n  ii  167 

„  n  ii  326 

„  n  ii  728 

Becket  i  i  368 

„    iiv206 

„  iviil32 

The  Cup  I  ii  5 

»        I  ii  7 

„    I  ii  270 

The  Falcon  525 

Prom,  of  May  I  768 

II  53& 
III  157 
III  389 
in  442 
in  756 

Foresters  i  i  58 
„  I i 198 
„     I  ii  141 


IV  1103 
The  Falcon  672 

Becket  n  ii  30O 

„  HI  iii  328 

Harold  i  i  266 

„    Iiiil98 

Foresters  i  ii  63 

I  ii  66 


Honest 


958 


Hope 


Honest     (See  also  Stupid-honest)     Divers  h  fellows,       Queen  Mary  i  iii  119 

You  as  poor  a  critic  As  an  h  friend :  „              ii  i  116 

For  all  that,  Most  h,  brave,  and  skilful ;  „             ii  ii  383 

I  read  his  h  horror  in  his  eyes.  „            iii  v  61 

Right  h  and  red-cheek'd ;  Robin  was  violent,  „           m  v  106 

Peters,  my  gentleman,  an  h  Catholic,  „          iv  iii  553 

He  is  passionate  but  h.  Harold  i  i  118 


An  h  gift,  by  all  the  Saints,  if  giver  And  taker  be  but  h  ! 
he  is  broad  and  h,  Breathing  an  easy  gladness  .  .  . 
I  can  but  love  this  noble,  h  Harold. 
I,  the  Count — the  King— Thy  friend — am  grateful  for 

thine  h  oath. 
Better  to  be  a  liar's  dog,  and  hold  My  master  h, 
He  hath  blown  himself  as  red  as  fire  with  curses.     An 

h  fool !     Follow  me,  h  fool, 
To  be  h  is  to  set  all  knaves  against  thee 
When  thieves  fall  out,  h  men — 
When  h  men  fall  out,  thieves — no,  it  can't  be  that. 
H  John  !     To  Rome  again  !  the  storm  begins  again, 
but  most  on  'em  know  an  h  woman  and  a  lady  when 

they  see  her, 
for  I  never  knew  an  h  woman  that  could  make  songs, 
but  none  on  'em  ever  made  songs,  and  they  are  all  h. 
and  tho'  I  count  Henry  h  enough, 

My  h  lord,  you  are  known  Thro'  all  the  courts  of  Christendom 
But  fuU  mid-smnmer  in  those  h  hearts. 
Would  clap  his  h  citizens  on  the  back, 
Did  he,  h  man  ? 

God  rest  his  h  soul,  he  bought  'em  for  me, 
for  I'm  h,  your  lordship. 
Live  with  these  h  folk — And  play  the  fool ! 
You  are  an  h  pair.     I  will  come  to  your  wedding, 
H  daisy  deadly  bruised.  Queen. 
The  silent  blessing  of  one  h  man  Is  heard  in  heaven- 
So  that  they  deal  with  us  like  h  men. 


1 1344 

I  ii  173 

„     II  ii  95 

„    II  ii  755 
„   mi  126 

V  i  88 

Becket  i  iii  571 

„      I  iv  114 

„      I iv  118 

„     II  ii  467 

„  III  i  179 
„  HI  i  182 
„  III  i  189 
„  III  iii  61 
IV  ii  323 

V  ii  373 
The  Cup  I  ii  358 

I  ii  376 

The  Falcon  49 

116 

Prom,  of  May  I  744 

III  114 

Foresters  ii  ii  156 

III  321 

IV  101 
Honester  bolder  than  the  rest,  Or  h  than  all  ?  Queen  Mary  iii  i  439 
Honesty    It  may  be,  thro'  mine  h,  like  a  fool.                         „            i  v  237 

Yea,  h  too,  paint  her  what  way  they  will.  Becket  ii  i  101 

fear  creeps  in  at  the  front,  h  steals  out  at  the  back,  „     iii  iii  62 

Honey     if  the  truth  be  gall.  Cram  me  not  thou  with  h,  Harold  iv  i  16 

Prom,  of  May  i  606 

Foresters  ii  i  295 

IV  13 

IV  15 

IV  23 

IV  967 

Queen  Mary  v  i  278 

Becket,  Pro.  516 

V  ii  217 
Harold  IV  iii  229 

Becket,  Pro.  364 

IV  ii  143 

Foresters  iv  757 

Queen  Mary  ii  iv  84 

„       III  vi  254 

IV  i  139 

IV  ii  165 

IV  iii  297 

Harold  ii  ii  691 

V  ii  200 
Becket  i  iii  20 

I  iii  187 

I  iii  200 

II  ii  140 
II  ii  142 
II  ii  163 
II  ii  168 
II  ii  220 
II  ii  424 
II  ii  440 


As  happy  as  the  bees  there  at  their  h 

Here's  a  pot  o'  wild  h  from  an  old  oak. 

Bees  rather,  flying  to  the  flower  for  h. 

'  I  am  faint  for  your  h,  my  sweet.' 

'  Have  you  still  any  h,  my  dear  ? ' 

Ay,  whether  it  be  gall  or  h  to  'em — 
Honeycomb    She  is  none  of  those  who  loathe  the  h 
Honeying    then  the  King  came  h  about  her, 
Honeymaking    So  rare  the  household  h  bee. 
Honeymoon    Harsh  is  the  news  !  hard  is  our  h  ! 

and  the  h  is  the  gall  of  love ;  he  dies  of  his  h. 

Give  her  to  me  to  make  my  h. 

For  she  shall  spend  her  h  vnth  me. 
Honour  (s)     And  hast  not  heart  nor  h. 

Upon  the  faith  and  A  of  a  Spaniard, 

so  wounded  in  his  h.  He  can  but  creep  down 

Win  thro'  this  day  with  h  to  yourself, 

For  the  pure  h  of  our  common  nature, 

H  to  thee  ?  thou  art  perfect  in  all  h  ! 

Madam,  we  will  entreat  thee  with  all  h. 

Saving  the  h  of  my  order — ay. 

Save  the  King's  h  here  before  his  barons. 

As  thou  hast  h  for  the  Pope  our  master, 

Saving  God's  h ! 

Saving  the  Devil's  h,  his  yes  and  no. 

— that  Is  clean  against  God's  h — 

that  none  may  dream  I  go  against  God's  h — 

to  suppress  God's  h  for  the  sake  Of  any  king 

Deny  not  thou  God's  h  for  a  king. 

surrendering  God's  h  to  the  pleasure  of  a  man. 

'  great  h,'  says  he,  '  from  the  King's  self  to  the  King's 
son.' 

Thro'  chastest  h  of  the  Decalogue 

willing  wives  enough  To  feel  dishonour,  h. 

In  h  of  his  gift  and  of  our  marriage, 


Honour  (s)  (continued)    handle  all  womankind  gently,  and 

hold  them  in  all  h.  Foresters  i  i  100 

O  your  h,  I  pray  you  too  to  give  me  an  alms.  „       ii  i  389 

H  to  thee,  brave  Marian,  and  thy  Kate.  „        m  299 
we  have  made  a  song  in  your  h,  so  your  ladyship  care 

to  listen.  „        in  414 

Do  you  call  that  in  my  h?  „        iii  433 

on  the  faith  and  h  ot  a,  king  The  land  is  his  again.  „         iv  852 
Honour  (verb)     you  would  h  my  poor  house  to-night,    Queen  Mary  i  iii  117 


For  the  which  I  h  him 

No  man  to  love  me,  h  me,  obey  me  ! 

Who  deign  to  h  this  my  tliirtieth  year. 

All  here  will  prize  thee,  /;,  worship  thee, 

being  every  inch  a  man  I  h  every  inch  of  a  woman, 

Why  art  thou  mute  ?     Dost  thou  not  h  woman  ? 

Honourable    Who  not  alone  esteem'd  it  h, 
How,  Malet,  if  they  be  not  h  ! 
Most  h  Sheriff ! 

Honour'd    I  am  much  h — yes — Do  what  I  told  thee. 
No,  my  most  h  and  long-worshipt  lady. 

Honouring    I  that  wedded  Henry,  H  his  manhood 


Becket,  Pro.  449 

V  i  239 

Foresters  i  ii  79 

II  ii  17 

ni64 

in  68 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  209 

Harold  ii  ii  279 

Foresters  ii  i  153 

The  Falcon  278 

713 

Becket  iv  ii  421 


h  all  womankind,  and  more  especially  my  lady  Marian,  Foresters  in  55 
Hood  (a  cowl)  Put  on  your  h  and  see  me  to  the  bounds.  Becket  in  i  94 
Hood  (Robin)    iSee  Huntingdon,  Robin,  Robin  Hood,  Robin 

of  Huntingdon 
Hook     (See  also  Pruning-hook)    Shelves  and  h's,  shelves 

and  h's,  and  when  I  see  the  shelves  I  am  like  to 

hang  myself  on  the  h's. 
Hook'd    bat  flew  out  at  him  In  the  clear  noon,  and  h  him 

by  the  hair, 
Hook-nosed    That  fine,  fat,  h-n  uncle  of  mine,  old 

Harold,  Pro7n.  of  May  i  509 

Hoonderd  (hundred)    feller  couldn't  find  a  Mister  in  his 

mouth  fur  me,  as  farms  five  h  haacre.  „  1 304 

I,  mun  ha'  plowed  it  moor  nor  a  h  times ;  „  i  368 

and  ower  a  h  pounds  worth  o'  rings  stolen.  „  1 393 

Hooper  (Bishop  of  Gloucester  and  Worcester)    H,  Ridley, 


The  Falcon  119 
Foresters  ii  ii  97 


Queen  Alary  i  ii  14 

„     III  iv  424 

„      IV  ii  225 

Prom,  of  May  ii  '125 


Latimer  will  not  fly. 

Cranmer  and  H,  Ridley  and  Latimer, 

H  bum'd  Three-quarters  of  an  hour. 
Hoot     Our  men  and  boys  would  h  him,  stone  him, 
Hope  (s)     All  my  h  is  now  It  may  be  found  a 
scandal. 

from  Penenden  Heath  in  h  To  hear  you  speak. 

In  h  to  charm  tliem  from  their  hate  of  Spain.     Philip. 
In  h  to  crush  all  heresy  under  Spain. 

Lose  the  sweet  h  that  I  may  bear  a  prince. 

Have  you  good  h's  of  mercy  !     So,  farewell. 

Good  h's,  not  theirs,  have  I  that  I  am  fixt. 

There  is  no  h  of  better  left  for  him. 

Since  she  lost  h  of  bearing  us  a  child  ? 

There  yet  is  h. 

Count  de  Feria  waits  without.  In  h's  to  see  your 

Highness.  „         v  ii  401 

Full  h  have  I  that  love  will  answer  love.  Harold  iv  i  237 

our  prophet  h's  Let  in  the  happy  distance.  The  Cup  i  ii  413 

in  h  that  the  saints  would  send  us  this  blessed  morning ;  The  Falcon  185 


Queen  Mary  i  v  230 
II  i  152 


in  VI  82 

III  vi  201 

IV  ii  86 

IV  ii  88 

IV  iii  79 
vi229 

V  ii  279 


„  in  iii  144 

„     vi206 

The  Cup  I  ii  189 

n  351 


small  h  of  the  gentleman  gout  in  my  great  toe. 
not  even  H  Left  at  the  bottom  ! 
but  H  Smiles  from  the  threshold  of  the  year 
The  h  of  larger  life  hereafter, 
Hope  (verb)     (See  also  'Oape)    may  strike  fire  from 

her.  Not  A  to  melt  her. 
I  h  they  whipt  him.     I  would  have  hang'd  him. 
We  h  not,  my  lord. 

Not  in  my  chin,  I  h !     That  threatens  double. 
Richard,  if  he  be  mine — I  h  him  mine. 
Mercy,  mercy.  As  you  would  h  for  mercy. 
May  lead  them  on  to  victory — I  h  so — 
I  A  he  be  not  underdone,  for  we  be  imdone  in  the 

doing  of  him. 
*  I  h  your  Lordship  is  quite  recovered  of  your 

gout  ? ' 
What  did  vou  h  to  make  ?  (repeat) 
You  h  to  hold  and  keep  her  for  yourself, 


656 

Prom,  of  May  ii  348 
Foresters  i  iii  15 


Queen  Mary  in  vi  40 

Becket,  Pro.  14 

„        I  iv  41 

„       II  i  250 

v  i  130 

„     V  iii  176 

The  Cup  1  ii  168 

The  Falcon  557 

Prom,  of  May  ni  308 

„  m  784,  788 

Foresters  iv  477 


Hoped 


959 


Hoped     '«  to  fall  Into  the  wide-spread  arms  of  fealty,   queen  Mary  ii  ii  263 
I  A  I  had  served  God  with  all  my  might !  v  ii  "96 

It  was  h  Your  Highness  was  once  more  in  happy  state   "  v  ii  570 

H,  were  he  chosen  archbishop,  ""■'  Berket  t  iii  449 

I  would  not  be  bold,  Yet  h  ere  this  you  might—  m  i^ 

T'^^^?A^^  "^^^^  *?^'' }  ^  ^r''  ^  ^«  ^*in-  Th^  Falcon  770 

rlT     X}^^""  ""*¥'  ^°  "'*^^~  P^om.  of  May  in  782 

.pefol    and  leaves  me  As  A.  Queen  Mar^ i  y  532 

(See  also  Wholly-hopeless)     Ho  there  !  thy  rest  of 
life  is  h  prison,  Becket  v  i  180 

^         First,  free  thy  captive  from  her  h  prison.  v  i  183 

'Hopt     He  had  but  one  foot,  he  must  have  h  away,  Harold  u  ii  675 

,Horder  (order)    if  tha  can't  keep  thy  one  cow  i' A  how 

can  tha  keep  aU  thy  scholards  i'  A  ?  p^om  of  Mav  i  IQ? 

Horizon    past  is  like  a  traveU'd  land  now  sunk  Below  ^     -^^i 

Horn    (See  also  Forest-horn,  War-horn)    draw  back  your  ^^ 

heads  and  your  A'5  Queen  Mary  ii5 

Pope  has  pushed  his  h's  beyond  his  mitre —  v  i  152 

Alva  wiU  but  touch  him  on  the  h's,  And  he  withdraws ;       "       v  i  156 

Had  I  been  by,  I  would  have  spoil'd  his  h.  Harold  i  ii  73 

would  make  the  hard  earth  rive  To  the  very  Devil's  h's 

A  ghostly  h  Blowing  continually,  ' 

How  ghostly  sounds  that  h  in  the  black  wood  ! 

when  the  h  sounds  she  comes  out  as  a  wolf. 

when  that  h  sounds,  a  score  of  wolf-dogs  are  let  loose 

Linger  not  till  the  third  h.     Fly  ! 

or  you'd  have  heard  his  h  before  now. 

have  forgotten  my  h  that  calls  my  men  together. 

Fifty  leagues  Of  woodland  hear  and  know  my  h, 

Wherever  the  h  sound  and  the  buck  bound, 

Wherever  the  buck  bound,  and  the  h  soimd, 

When  h  and  echo  ring, 

Accept  this  h  !  if  e'er  thou  be  assail'd 

Wait  till  he  blow  the  h. 

Why  blowest  thou  not  the  h  ? 

I  blow  the  h  against  this  rascal  rout ! 

And  catch  the  winding  of  a  phantom  h. 
'Horologe    always  in  suspense,  Hke  the  tail  of  the  h— 
Horrible    scourge  Of  England !     Courtier.    HI 

From  all  the  hoUest  shrines  in  Normandy ! 

Harvestless  autumns,  h  agues,  plague — 
I        H I  flaying,  scourging,  crucifying — 
Honor     I  read  his  honest  h  in  his  eyes. 

carrion-nosirig  mongrel  vomit  With  hate  and  h. 

What  with  this  flaming  h  overhead  ? 

hath  talk'd  with  God,  and  seen  A  shadowing  h  • 


Hour 


A  troop  of  h Filippo.    Five 


II  ii  741 
„  mi  372 

Becket  ui  ii  16 
„      in  ii  23 

III  ii  38 
„  III  ii  41 
„        IV  i  55 

Foresters  ii  i  185 
III  104 
ni345 

III  355 
m428 

IV  423 
IV  787 
IV  791 
IV  794 

IV  1092 
Becket  n  ii  366 

Harold  I  i  6 
Harold.     HI       „  ii  ii  736 
Queen  Mary  v  i  99 
The  Cup  I  ii  235 
Queen  Mary  m  v  61 
„         IV  iii  450 
Harold  i  i  232 
mi  357 


Whose  doings  are  a  A  to  the  east,  A  hissing  in  the  west ! '  Becket  iv  ii  244 
And  make  thpp  n  wnrlH'a  h  ••  r.„„ 


And  make  thee  a  world's  h. 
And  blanch  the  crowd  with  h. 

Horse    (See  also  'Erse,  Herse)    she  met  the  Queen  at 

I  Wanstead  with  five  hundred  h, 

with  an  ass's,  not  a  h's  head, 
that's  a  noble  h  of  youi-s,  my  Lord. 
And  broken  bridge,  or  spavin'd  h, 
a  pale  h  for  Death  and  Gardiner  for  the  Devil. 
Your  boots  are  from  the  h's. 
I  had  h's  On  all  the  road  from  Dover, 
H's  there,  without ! 

Why  did  you  keep  me  prating  ?     H's,  there  ! 
Because  I  broke  The  h's  leg — 
Thousands  of  h's,  hke  as  many  lions 
No  Norman  h  Can  shatter  England, 
No  h — thousands  of  h's — our  shield  wall — 
range  of  knights  Sit,  each  a  statue  on  his  h, 
they  fall  behind  the  A— Their  A  are  thronging 
all  their  A  Swallow  the  hill  locust-hke. 
The  A  and  horseman  cannot  meet  the  shield,  The 
blow  that  brains  the  horseman  cleaves  the  A, 
The  A  and  horseman  roll  along  the  hill, 
They  turn  on  the  pursuer,  A  against  foot, 
No,  no,  his  A — he  mounts  another — 
Three  h's  had  I  slain  beneath  me : 
I  could  tear  him  asunder  with  wild  A's 
Our  A's  grazing  by  us,  when  a  troop, 


IV  ii  288 
The  Cup  II 154 

Queen  Mary  i  i  78 
I  iii  169 
I  iv  143 
I  V  355 
III  i  234 
III  V  180 

V  ii  576 

V  iii  109 

V  iii  113 
Harold  n  ii  110 

„  IV  iii  196 
„  V  i  195 
„       V  i  231 

V  i  525 
„       V  i  546 

V  i  559 


„  V  i  591 
„  V  i  608 
„  V  i  638 
„  V  ii  171 
Becket  n  i  267 
The  Falcon  611 


Horse  (continued) 

hundred !  Th    F  I       Ri7 

how  long  we  strove  before  Our  h's  fell  beneath  us  ;  ^    '' <">»  oi? 

lanker  than  an  old  A  turned  out  to  die  on  the  common.  Foresters  i  i  51 
our  A  and  our  httle  cart—  »«ra  x  io± 

when  the  Sheriff  took  my  Httle  A  for  the  King  without 


II  i  301 
„      IV  414 

„      IV  797 
Becket,  Pro.  444 


Harold  v  i  591 


paying  for  it 

I  left  mine  A  and  armour  with  a  Squire, 

A  A  !  a  A  !     I  must  away  at  once  ; 

Horseback     How  should  a  baron  love  a  beggar  on  A 

Horseman    The  horse  and  A  cannot  meet  the  shield'  The 

blow  that  brams  the  A  cleaves  the  horse,  The  horae 

and  A  roll  along  the  hill. 

Horse-pond    See  Herse-pond 

Horsiness     To  rose  and  lavender  my  A,  Queen  Maru  m  v  tfi.^ 

iSaf  VspiS"^  *''  '  "^''^ '"  ^°"^  '''''''  ^or:Zf\  Ii  Im 

Hospitality     a  graceless  A  To  chain  the  free  guest  Harold  ii  ii  192 

knowing  the  fame  of  your  A,  we  ventured  in  uninvited.  Foresters  i  ii  196 

Host  (a  consecrated  wafer)    Have  I  not  heard  them 

mock  the  blessed  H  Ovefi'r,  Mr,,-,,  rxr  a;  qra 

Host  (array  of  men)     and  send  her  A'.  Of  injured  Saint    "  &"  H  ?S 

And  Ldward  would  have  sent  a  h  against  you,  iv  i  QQ 

join  our  hands  before  the  A's,  That  all  may  see.  "        iv  i  249 

Host  (entertainer  of  guests)    He  was  thine  A  in  England 

when  I  went  To  visit  Edward.  „  ::  a 

I  found  him  all  a  noble  A  should  be.  "         „  ii  10 

She  hath  follow'd  with  our  A,  and  suffer'd  all.  "  ry  i  2q 

A  cleric  violated  The  daughter  of  his  A,  Becket  i  iii  383 

Hostage    four  of  her  poor  Council  too,  my  Lord,  As  A's.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  44 


Is  not  my  brother  Wulfnoth  A  there 
Poor  brother  !  still  a  A  ! 
They  did  thee  wrong  who  made  thee  A ; 
Remain  a  A  for  the  loyalty  Of  Godwin's  house.' 
Hostis    H  in  Angliam  Ruit  praeJator, 
//  per  Angliae  Plagas  bacchatur  ; 
Hot    and  the  H  Gospellers  will  go  mad  upon  it. 

But  you  so  bubbled  over  with  A  terms  Of  Satan, 
And  A  desire  to  imitate  ; 

There  are  H  Gospellers  even  among  our  guards — 
jerk'd  out  of  the  common  rut  Of  Nature  in  the  A 

religious  fool, 
H  blood,  ambition,  pride  So  bloat  and  redden  his 

face — 
Thou  blowest  A  and  cold.     Where  is  she  then  ? 
Hot-blooded    H-b  !     I  have  heard  them  say  in  Rome 
Hot-headed    H-h  fools— to  burst  the  wall  of  shields  ! 
I  can  see  further  into  a  man  than  our  A-A  Henry, 
Hottest    This  is  the  A  of  it :  hold,  ash  !   hold,  willow ' 
The  A  hold  in  all  the  devil's  den  Were  but  a  sort" 
of  winter; 
Hound    with  mine  old  A  Couch'd  at  my  hearth. 
Sick  for  an  idle  week  of  hawk  and  A 
I  hear  the  yelping  of  the  A's  of  hell. 
Huntsman,  and  A,  and  deer  were  all  neck-broken  ' 
You  saw  my  A's  True  to  the  scent ; 
Homided    We  never  A  on  the  State  at  home  To  spoil  the 

Church. 
Hour    Ay,  that  was  in  her  A  of  joy ; 

some  great  doom  when  God's  just  A  Peals — 
What  do  and  say  Your  Council  at  this  A  ? 
Who  knows  ?  the  man  is  proven  by  the  A.     White. 
The  man  should  make  the  A,  not  this  the  man ;  * 
An  A  will  come  When  they  will  sweep  her  from  the  seas 
do  triumph  at  this  A  In  the  reborn  salvation 
tolerate  the  heretic.  No,  not  an  A. 
Their  A  is  hard  at  hand. 
Ay,  for  an  A  in  May. 
It  shall  be  all  my  study  for  one  A 
in  strange  A's,  After  the  long  brain-dazing  colloquies 
May  God  help  you  Thro'  that  hard  A  ! 
Hooper  bunrd  Three-quarters  of  an  A. 
the  A  has  come  For  utter  truth  and  plaiimess  • 
Make  us  despise  it  at  odd  A's,  my  Lord.  ' 

Brook  for  an  A  such  brute  malignity  ? 


Harold  I  i  239 

„    II  ii  32» 

„    II  ii  350 

m  i  90 

„      V  i  506 

„      V  i  510 

Queen  Mary  i  i  115 

I  ii  94 

ni  iv  171 

V  V  102 

Harold  i  i  139 

The  Cup  ii  168 

Foresters  n  i  490 

The  Cup  I  i  135 

Harold  v  i  612 
Becket,  Pro.  463 

Harold  v  i  628 

Qu^en  Mary  v  iv  15 

»  mi  45 

Harold  i  i  103 

Becket  in  ii  48 

The  Cup  I  ii  23 

»      I  ii  110 

Becket  n  ii  96 

Queen  Mary  i  i  84 

I  iv  262 

nii46 


uii364 

mi  160 

m  iii  181 

m  iv  211 

in  iv  426 

m  vlO 

m  V  184 

IV  ii  91 

IV  ii  196 

IV  ii  227 

IV  iii  272 

IV  iii  386 

IV  iii  544 


Houi 


960 


mm  (continued)    0  would  I  were  My  father  for  an  A !     Queen  Mary  yu2U 

And  may  not  speak  for  7»s.      ,        .    ,,  "           ^-,79 

Sit  down  here :  Tell  me  thme  happiest  h.  „         J  J  ' » 

worse  than  that— not  one  h  true  to  me  !  „  v  v  loy 
A  good  entrenchment  for  a  perilous  h  !                             Harold  iii  1  363 

among  the  goldenest  T^'s  Of  Alfred,  ,.       i^  111  51 

0  hapless  Harold!  King  but  for  an /. !  „  vi258 
God  of  truth  FiU  all  thine  A's  with  peace  !—  »  Z-^ia 
But  the  h  is  past,  and  our  brother,  Master  Cook,  Becket  i  iv  59 

1  have  but  one  A  with  thee-^  "  „  ;  44 
Let  there  not  be  one  frown  in  this  one  h.  ..  "  »  *^ 
out  of  the  eclipse  Narrowing  my  golden  hi  ,,  n  ^^^ 
Come,  come,  mine  h  !  I  bargam  for  mine  h.  „  n  ziz 
our  mother 'ill  sing  me  old  songs  by  the  ;i,  ,.  m  1100 
We  have  had  so  many  h's  together,  Thomas,  feo  many  ^^  ...  ^^ 

bo&Fo^r  that  one  7^  to  stay  with  good  King  Louis,  „  m  iii  247 

thv  Ufe  Was  not  one  h's  worth  in  England  „  m  111  zox 

Your  Grace  will  never  have  one  qmet  h.  „       v  i  i» 

tho'  it  be  their  h,  the  power  of  darkness,  But  my  A  ^  ...  ^^ 

If  The  not  back  in  half  an  h,  Come  after  me.  The  clp  1  ii  g8 

So  faUs  the  throne  of  an  h.  Th^^nlmn  224 

Pride  of  his  heart-the  solace  of  his  Ks-  The  FaUonJZi 
iy,  haafe  an  h  ago.    She  be  in  thcer  now.                  Prom-  of  May  il^ 

Half  an  h  late  !  why  are  you  loitering  here  ?  "          !i  \7^ 

Who  can  tell  What  golden  h's,  with  what  full  hands,  „  n  509 
What  feller  wur  it  as  'a'  been  a-talkin'  fur  haafe  an 

fe  wi  my  Dora  .''  ,.,,,,••,  j  4. 

niver  'a  been  talkin'  haafe  an  h  wi'  the  dml  at 

killed  her  oan  sister,                              ^        1,- 
may  drop  off  any  day,  any  7i.    You  must  see  him  ^^^^^ 

theVghTbf  these  dark  h's  ;  ^-^^^^Viim 

We  make  but  one  A's  buzz,                        ,  •  ,uj  „  "       tin  11 

I  am  only  merry  for  an  h  or  two  Upon  a  birthday  .  „       i      ^^ 

We  wll  away  in  four-and-twenty  fe  s,  "       J- "^^ 

My  lonely  7i!     The  king  of  day  hath  stept  „        n  1 /o 

to  carve  One  lone  h  from  it>      ,       ,    ,  „  "        n  i  94 

Why  break  you  thus  upon  my  lonely  hi  «        "  »  ^* 

The  ruler  of  an  h,  but  lawful  King,  «       ^^^^f g 

Try  me  an  h  hence.           „     , ,         .       j.  "       tv  S4r) 

your  free  sports  have  swallow'd  my  free  h.  «       iv  ^ 

No.  not  an  h :  the  debt  is  due  to-day.  ,.       iv  v±i 

are  deUvered  here  in  the  wild  wood  an  ^  after  noon.  „       iv  509 
HouriSg  whose  cheerless  E  after  death  Are  Night  and    ^^^^  ^^^^^  ^  ^^^ 

Wnnm   ^(lee  a'Zso  Ale-honse,  Gate-house,  Treasure-house)  ... 

^°So  ;ou  woulfh^nour  my  poor  h  to-night,  Qzteen  Mary  1 111 118 

To  Ashridge,  or  some  other  country  h.  ..          i  v  ^^o 

seek  In  that  lone  h,  to  practise  on  my  hfe,  „           yv  ^»4 

my  A  hath  been  assaulted,                                       u  j„  0  "  rriiRn 

Splin  in  our  ships,  in  our  forts,  in  our  ^.,  in  our  beds  ?  „  n    180 

Your  h's  fircd-your  gutters  bubbling  blood-  „          n  "  f^SO 

a  plundering  o'  Bishop  Winchester's  h  ;  ,.           "  1 "  '^ 

Here  by  this  h  was  one  ;                j     o-    -d  1  1,  9  "          ttt  i  4S.5 

You  ari  of  the  h  ?  what  will  you  do,  Sir  Ralph  ?  „          m  1  4.^5 

there  were  those  within  the  A  Who  would  not  have  It.     „  n     66 

also  those  without  the  A  Who  would  not  have  It.  „           m  n  70 

When  will  you  that  we  summon  both  our  A  s  ,,         m  u  no 

My  lords  of  the  upper  h,  And  ye,  my  masters,  of  ^^^ ...  ^^^ 

the  lower  h,                          ,        •  ,_.     u      u„.u  " 
sole  man  in  either  h  Who  stood  "^'8^*  ^^en  bo.h 

the  h's  feU.    Bagenhall.    The  X's  feU  !     OSicer. 

I  mean  the  ;.'s  knelt        .  "        ^"/j^^^^ 

I  am  the  one  sole  man  m  either  A,  »        """-;oo 

The  h  is  all  in  movement.    Hence,  and  see.  „           m  v  »^ 

play  with  fire  as  children  do  And  bum  the  h.  „          n  v  60 

none  shall  hold  them  in  his  h  and  hve,  „            iv  1  »o 

The  stranger  at  his  hearth,  and  all  his  h—  ..           ^W^l^ 

The  ft  half-ruin'd  ere  the  lease  be  out ;  ..             *  "  "" 

When  Wyatt  sack'd  the  Chancellor's  ft  in  ^  . .  ^^ 

ligKSior  Alfgar's  ft  To  strike  thee  down  "flaroW  i  i  307 

powers  ofthe  ft  of  Godwin  Are  not  enframed  m  thee.  „       1 1  <il0 


House  (continued)    running  out  at  top  To  swamp  the  ft 
Unwholesome  talk  For  Godwin's  ft  ! 
It  means  the  lifting  of  the  ft  of  Alfgar. 
all  the  sins  of  both  The  h's  on  mine  head- 
see  confusion  fall  On  thee  and  on  thine  ft-  .   ^ 
Remain  a  hostage  for  the  loyalty  Of  Godwin  s  ft. 


Huge        V 

Harold  i  i  379 
„  I  i  391 
„  I  i  473 
„  I  ii  206 
„  n  ii  490 
„  III  i  91 
i'ha've"biIiit'the°Lord  a  ft—  '(repeat)  Harold  in  i  178  181, 186 

Fall,  cloud,  and  fill  the  ft—  ,       ,  Harold  iiiim 

not  ftis  fault,  if  our  two  ft' s  Be  less  than  brothers.  „     ^^  »  j^^ 

When  will  ye  cease  to  plot  against  my  ft  ?  ,.     iv  1  iW 

Thou  hast  given  it  to  an  enemy  of  our  ft.  ,.      iv  11  rfi 

Thou  hast  no  passion  for  the  H  of  Godwin—  „      iv  a  U 

When  I  and  thou  were  youths  in  Theobald's  ft,  Becket  1 111 41 

Not  he  That  is  not  of  the  ft,  but  from  the  street  „  i  lu  t)B9 

dawns  darkly  and  drearily  over  the  ft  of  God—  „  i  iv  .14b 

Sudden  change  is  a  ft  on  sand  ;  ^    ,  .  ,     .^1,  „  m  111  bU 

when  he  hears  a  door  open  in  the  ft  and  thinks    the 

master.'  "  ™  V'  "'^ 

I  wiU  be  Sole  master  of  my  ft.  »   J}.]f}. 

and  in  thy  name  I  pass'd  From  ft  to  ft.               ,.  ,    ,            "    Illofit 

Uttle  fair-hair'd  Norman  maid  Lived  in  my  mother  s  ft :  „   v  u  Jbl 

yet  threaten  your  Archbishop  In  his  own  ft.  --   v  11  pUb 

dost  thou  know  the  ft  of  Sinnatus  ?  1  he  Cup  11 49 

These  grapes  are  for  the  ft  of  Sinnatus—  >.         1 1  ^^ 

this  pious  cup  Is  passport  to  their  ft,  >.         }  1  »^ 

They  shall  not  harm  My  guest  within  my  ft.  ,.      i  "  d/ ( 

The  child,  a  thread  within  the  ft  of  birth,  »        n  ^0^ 

feud  between  our  h's  is  the  bar  I  cannot  cross  ;  The  Falcon  254 

My  comrade  of  the  ft,  and  of  the  field.  »          »*» 

O  this  mortal  ft.  Which  we  are  born  into.  Prom,  of  May  11  273 

would  fight  for  his  rents,  his  leases,  his  ft's,  i'  oresters  1 1  233 

whose  return  Builds  up  our  ft  again  ?  "     iv  luw 
House.breaker_Beant  there  h-b's  down  i'  Littlechester,  ^^^^^  ^^  ^^^  ^  ^^^ 

House-di^Jlch  the  linen  from  the  hawthorn,  poison  ^^^^^^^^^  ^  ^^ 

Household  (adj.)  The  ft  dough  was  kneaded  up  with  blood ;  Becket  i  iii  351 
So  rare  the  ft  honeymaking  bee,  "     J}}J,\' 

to  cast  AU  threadbare  ft  habit,  i^ore^ters  1 111 112 

Household  (S)     Your  lavish  ft  curb'd  Q«ee«  Jl/ar^/ 1  v  113 

no  foreigner  Hold  office  m  the  ft,  fleet,  ..  muu-s 

No  man  without  my  leave  shall  excommunicate  My  „  ,.^  „  ,9 
tenants  or  my  ft.  ,^,    ^  5ec/:e<,  Pro.  32 

And  when  I  was  of  Theobald's  ft,  once—  „         1 1  w 

you  have  put  so  many  of  the  King's  ft  out  of  ^  ...  ^^^ 

PrinrrJlTkavemeofhis-what?     fl?  J'ore'i^.r.  iv  703 

Houseless    A  ft  head  beneath  the  sun  and  stars,  ,,        n  1  w 

House-Side    and  there  is  a  piece  of  beef  like  a  ft-5.  Prom,  of  May  1  793 

HoveT  At  the  park  gate  he  h's  with  our  guards.  Queen  Mary  u  iv  Id 

Love  wiU  ft  round  the  flowers  when  they  first  awaken  ;    „  v  11  d/u 

That  ft's  round  your  shoulder—  .    ,      •     ,         v      ij  JjVW'i 

sea-bird  rouse  himself  and  ft  Above  the  mndy  ripple,      Harold  11 11  iS> 

How    See'Ovr  ,.,>,«      7 

Howard  (Lord  William,  Lord  High  Admiral)    (See  also 
William,  William  Howard)    had  H  spied  me 

thereA^d  made  them  speak,  .  Qwee^  Mar</ 11 11  32 

This  H,  whom  they  fear,  what  was  he  saying  .•*  „          m  )'^^ 

And  if  he  did  I  care  not,  my  Lord  H.  «           i^  >  i 

Lord  H,  Sending  an  insolent  shot  that  dash  d  „              v  ^" 
H  is  all  English  !                    .      ^    .r,  .  ^.  a  r.  u    r 
Howiver  (however)    my  rheumatizy  be  that  bad  h  be  i 

to  win  to  the  bumm'.  "            ,  „  419 

Howl    if  your  wolf  the  while  should  ft  for  more,  „             ••■054 

how  those  Roman  wolfdogs  ft  and  bay  him  !  „         iv  i»  ^ 

note  Whereat  the  dog  shall  ft  and  run,  /w  „h    ^4 

if  it  suit  their  purpose  to  ft  for  the  King,  rhfcTih  32 

They  ft  for  thee,  to  rend  thee  head  from  hmb.  The  Cup  i  u  ^-i 

Howsopver    tS'eg  Howsomiver,  S'iver                           ^  ,,          ■■■  rnn 
HSwSver(howsSever)    but  a  had  to  bide  ft,           ^^^'''^  S  Pro  5W 

Hug    thou  wouldst  ft  thy  Cupid  tiU  his  ribs  cracked-  Becket,  Pro.  504 

Huge    or  else  swam  heavily  Against  the  ft  corruptions  .v  ii  IOC 
""^     of  the  Church,       .^     ^,,       .      ^,                Qwee«  Marj,  iv  a  lOJ 

Did  I  call  him  heretic  ?     A  ft  heresiarch  !  ,.                ',73 
But  wherefore  not  Helm  the  ft  vessel  of  your  state, 


Huge 


961 


Huppads 


Huge  (continued)     I  watch'd  you  dancing  once  With 

your  h  father  ;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  145 

And  yon  h  keep  that  hinders  half  the  heaven.  Harold  ii  ii  228 

I  have  always  told  Father  that  the  h  old  ashtree 

there  would  cause  an  accident  some  day  ;  Prom,  of  May  in  244 

hundreds  of  h  oaks,  Gnarl'd — older  than  the  thrones 
of  Europe—  Foresters  m  90 

Hugest    therefore  have  we  shatter'd  back  The  h  wave  from 

Norseland  ever  yet  Surged  on  us,  Harold  iv  iii  62 

Hugh  (de  Morville,  knight  of  the  household  of  King  Henry  n.) 
(See  also  De  Morville)  H,  H,  how  proudly  you  exalt 
yoiu-  head  !  Beclcet  v  ii  454 

H,  I  know  well  thou  hast  but  half  a  heart  „    v  iii  129 

Hum    thick  as  bees  below,  They  h  like  bees, — ■  Harold  i  i  32 

So  come,  come  !  '    '  H  ! '  Foresters  iv  19 

But  come,  come  \'    '  H  I'  „         iv  26 

Buman    What  h  reason  is  there  why  my  friend  Should 
i  meet  Queen  Mary  iv  i  68 

not  for  little  sins  Didst  thou  yield  up  thy  Son  to  h 

death ;  „       iv  iii  144 

to  cancel  and  abolish  all  bonds  of  h  allegiance,  „  v  iv  50 

He  dyed,  He  soak'd  the  trunk  with  h  blood,  Harold  m  i  143 

not  strange  !    This  was  old  h  laughter  in  old  Rome  „     iii  ii  163 

It's  humbling — it  smells  o'  h  natur'.  Becket  i  iv  238 

Were  I  h,  were  I  h,  I  could  love  you  like  a  woman.      Foresters  n  ii  190 
luman-heartedest    Thou  art  the  h-h,  Christian-charitiest 

of  all  crab-catchers.  Harold  ii  i  62 

lumankind     After  his  death  and  better  h  ;  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  160 

luman-red    God  redden  your  pale  blood  !     But  mine 

is  h-r  ;  Beclcet  i  iv  36 

[umber  (river)    all  the  North  of  H  is  one  storm.  Harold  n  ii  291 

We  could  not  move  from  Dover  to  the  H  „       n  ii  537 

Are  landed  North  of  H,  and  in  a  field  „     izi  ii  126 

Our  Wessex  dragon  flies  beyond  the  H,  „  iv  i  4 

[amble    So  wife-hke  h  to  the  trivial  boy  Queen  Mary  in  i  364 

Do  make  most  h  suit  unto  your  Majesties,  „        nt  iii  118 

So  to  set  forth  this  h  suit  of  ours  „        in  iii  145 

Sir,  I  attend  the  Queen  To  crave  most  h  pardon —  „        ni  iv  432 

We  make  our  h  prayer  unto  your  Grace  „  iv  i  43 

a     Therefore  I  come  ;  h  myself  to  Thee  ;  „        iv  iii  133 

Ay,  ay  !  the  King  h's  himself  enough.  Becket  n  ii  184 

nfnWMiflgn    W'e  be  a-going  home  after  our  supper  in  all  h, 

my  lord  ;  for  the  Archbishop  loves  h,  „       i  iv  207 

umblest    Loyal  and  royal  cousin,  h  thanks.  Queen  Mary  m  ii  4 

Our  h  thanks  for  your  blessing.    Farewell !  Becket  i  iv  42 

umbling    It's  h — it  smeUs  o'  human  natur'.  „  i  iv  238 

jumiliated    Being  so  crush'd  and  so  h  We  scarcely 

dare  -  „       v  i  69 

lumiliation    bow'd  herself  to  meet  the  wave  Of  h,  „  iv  ii  390 

iomoor    man  not  prone  to  jealousies,  Caprices,  A's,    Prom,  of  May  m  627 
jmpt    Ay,  ay,  no  doubt ;  and  were  I  h  behind,  Becket  n  i  255 

ondred    {See  also  Hoonder'd)    that  she  met  the  Queen 

at  Wanstead  with  five  h  horse.  Queen  Mary  i  i  78 

And  when  I  sleep,  a  h  men-at-arms  Guard  my  poor 

dreams  „        i  v  152 

I  would  not ;  but  a  h  miles  I  rode,  „        i  v  551 

'  Whosoever  will  apprehend  the  traitor  Thomas 

Wyatt  shall  have  a  h  pounds  for  reward.'  „       ii  iii  61 

A  h  here  and  h's  hang'd  in  Kent.  „  mil 

in  Guisnes  Are  scarce  two  h  men,  „  v  i  5 

That  gateway  to  the  mainland  over  which  Our  flag 

hath  floated  for  two  h  years  Is  France  again.  „       v  ii  261 

The  shadows  of  a  A  fat  dead  deer  For  dead  men's 

ghosts.  Harold  i  ii  103 

Red  gold — a  h  purses — yea,  and  more  !  „      ni  i  18 

lost  and  found  Together  in  the  cruel  river  Swale  Ah 

years  ago  ;  „     in  ii  11 

And  caked  and  plaster'd  with  a  h  mires,  „  iv  iii  177 

a  h  thousEuid  men — Thousands  of  horses,  „  iv  iii  194 

A  h  pathways  running  everyway,  Becket,  Pro-  163 

And  York  lay  barren  for  a  h  years.  „         i  iii  54 

I  found  a  h  ghastly  muxders  done  By  men,  „       i  iii  407 

My  lord,  the  King  demands  three  h  marks,  „       i  iii  626 

My  lord,  the  King  demands  seven  h  marks,  „       i  iii  634 

'  I  led  seven  h  knights  and  fought  his  wars.  „       i  iii  638 


IV  496 
IV  497 

IV  499 

IV  502 

„     IV 1046 

„     IV  1087 

Harold  ii  ii  383 

„     II  ii  600 

Becket  n  ii  361 

Harold  n  i  48 

Becket  u  ii  282 

Foresters  iv  700 


Hundred  (continued)    My  lord,  the  King  demands  five  h 

marks,  Becket  i  lii  641 

crawl  over  knife-edge  flint  Barefoot,  a  h  leagues,  „      ii  i  273 

I  warrant  Thou  hast  sworn  on  this  my  cross  a  h  times  „    iv  ii  206 

Monks,  knights,  five  h,  that  were  there  and  heard.  „     v  ii  406 

But  after  rain  o'erleaps  a  jutting  rock  And  shoots 

three  h  feet.  The  Cup  i  i  111 

It  is  old,  I  know  not  How  many  h  years.  „        ii  343 

My  bird  ?  a,h  Gold  pieces  once  were  offer'd  by  the 

Duke.  The  Falcon  323 

A  troop  of  horse Filippo.    Five  h  !    Count.    Sav 

fifty!  '  „  €18 

A  h  times  more  worth  a  woman's  love.  Than 

this.  Prom,  of  May  m  743 

She  was  murdered  here  a  h  year  ago.  Foresters  n  i  245 

Ay,  ay,  but  there  is  use,  four  h  marks. 
There  then,  four  h  marks. 
What  did  I  say  ?     Nay,  my  tongue  tript — five  h  marks 

for  use. 
A  h  more  ?    There  then,  a  h  more, 
a  h  lovers  more  To  celebrate  this  advent  of  our  King  ! 
And  here  perhaps  a  h  years  away  Some  hunter  in 
day-dreams 
Hung    town  H  out  raw  hides  along  their  walls, 
if  that  but  h  upon  King  Edward's  will. 
Uke  Mahound's  coffin  h  between  heaven  and  earth — 
Hunger  (s)    when  I  was  down  in  the  fever,  she  was  down 

with  the  h. 
Hunger  (verb)    crowd  that  h's  for  a  crown  in  Heaven 

Who  h  for  the  body,  not  the  soul — 
Hunger-nipt    on  a  land  So  h-n  and  wretched  ;  Queen  Mary  v  i  168 

Hunt  (s)     tho'  a  stranger  fain  would  be  allow'd  To  join 

the  h.  The  Cup  i  i  197 

a  random  guest  Who  join'd  me  in  the  h.  „      i  ii  109 

Hunt  (verb)     Nay,  I  know  They  h  my  blood.  Queen  Mary  in  v  78 

and  h  and  hawk  beyond  the  seas  !  Harold  i  i  229 

I  will  hawk  and  h  In  Flanders.  „       i  i  259 

had  past  me  by  To  h  and  hawk  elsewhere,  „      n  ii  28 

Going  or  gone  to-day  To  h  with  Sinnatus.  The  Cup  i  i  65 

Have  let  him  h  the  stag  with  you  to-day.  „    i  ii  379 

h  him  With  pitchforks  ofE  the  farm.  Prom,  of  May  n  426 

They  h  in  couples,  and  when  they  look  at  a  maid  Foresters  i  i  255 

Hunted    Which  h  him  when  that  un-Saxon  blast,  Harold  n  ii  30 

not  fear  the  crowd  that  h  me  Across  the  woods,  The  Cup  i  iii  16 

Hunter    he  stood  there  Staring  upon  the  h.  „      i  ii  123 

And  take  a  h's  vengeance  on  the  meats.  „         i  ii  43 

and  the  h's,  if  caught,  are  bUnded,  or  worse  than 

blinded. 
The  h's  passion  flash'd  into  the  man, 
Some  h  in  day-dreams  or  half  asleep 
Hunting    (See  also  A-hunting)    I  once  was  at  the  h  of 
a  lion. 
Why,  is  not  man  a  h  animal  ? 
Huntingdon  (Robin  Hood,  Earl  of)    (See  also  Robin, 
Robin  Hood,  Robin  of  Huntingdon)    I  pray 
you,  look  at  Robin  Earl  of  H's  men. 
as  true  a  friend  of  the  people  as  Lord  Robin  of  H. 
me  who  worsliip  Robin  the  great  Earl  ot  H  ? 
God  bless  our  weU-beloved  Robin,  Earl  of  H. 
This  Robin,  this  Earl  of  H — he  is  a  friend  of  Richard — 
Thou,  Robin  Hood  Earl  of  H,  art  attainted  and  hast 

lost  thine  earldom  of  H. 
by  virtue  of  this  writ,  whereas  Robin  Hood  Earl  of  H 
Robin  Hood  Earl  of  H  is  outlawed  and  banished. 
Art  thou  that  banish'd  lord  of  H, 
My  good  friend  Robin,  Earl  of  H, 
if  the  King  forbid  thy  marrying  ^Yith  Robin,  our  good 
Earl  of  H. 
Huntsman    Gardener,  and  h,  in  the  parson's  place, 
H,  and  hound,  and  deer  were  all  neck-broken  ! 
Hup  (up)    haUus  h  at  sunrise,  and  I'd  drive  the  plow 
straait  as  a  line  right  i'  the  faace  o'  the  sim,  then 
back  agean,  a-foHering  my  oan  shadder — then 
h  agean 
Huppads  (upwards)    an'  then  I  wur  turned  h  o'  sixty. 


Foresters  iv  226 

rv  539 

„     IV  1088 

The  Cup  I  ii  116 
Foresters  iv  223 


ii36 
iil89 
ii226 
ii248 
1 1281 

I  iii  57 
I  iii  62 
I  iii  68 
IV  140 
IV  829 


IV  87.S 
Queen  Mary  rv  iii  373 
The  Cup  I  ii  23 


Prom,  of  May  i  369 
'  I  363 


3  p 


Hwl 


962 


Immortal 


Hnri     H's  his  soil'd  life  against  the  pikes  and  dies.     Queen  Mary  ixni  311 

if  his  Northumbrians  rise  And  h  him  from  them  -  ^orMun  |57 

1S\  the  dread  ban  of  the  Church  on  those  *^f/'c "      295 

AnH  h'l  the  victor's  column  do^vn  with  him  i««  ^up  ii  ^»o 

H«l^  and  ?our  battles  Into  the  heart  of  Spain ;        Queen  Mary  m  iWT 

sir,  they  h  it  back  into  the  fire,  "               j  j3g 

and  fe  it  from  him  Three  fields  away.  ^JcS  i  iv  2?4 

Hnitah     fl  !    Vive  le  Roy  !  ,     :i   •    _„  j. 

Hnrry  (s)    I  trod  upon  him  even  now,  my  lord,  in  my  h,       ^^^  ^^^^^^  ^^^ 

Hurry  (verb^Whrdo  they;,  out  there?  Queen  Mary  nii  A 

Sy  He  can  but  creep  down  into  some  dark  hole  Like  ^^         ^^  .  ^^ 

a  A  beast,  "       tv  iii  187 

fl  no  man  more  Than  you  would  harm  Torestersii  ii  A 

He  had  been-  h,  And  bled  beneath  his  armour.  i  orestersii  n^ 

He  hath  been  h,  was  growing  whole  again,  " 

Husband    The  traitor  ;»  dangled  at  the  door.  Queen  ^"'^  "^j\J^ 

happily  symboll'd  by  The  King  your  ^  ..        ^°     {^^ 

Oh  Philip,  /i !  now  thy  love  to  mine  WiU  cling  „       in  "  ^J» 
Philip's  no  sudden  aUen— the  Queen  s  fe, 

parting  of  a  /i  and  a  wife  Is  hke  the  cleaving  of  a  ^^       ^^^  ^.  ^^^ 

heart ;                                 „,      ,  •               i,  "            v  i  64 

not  were  he  ten  times  king,  Ten  times  our /(,  »            ^ 

'  Your  people  hate  you  as  your  h  hates  you.  >.         ^  . .  ^^^ 

My  A  hates  me,  and  desires  my  death.  "         v  ii  581 

the  child  came  not,  and  the  h  came  not ;  « 

To  marry  and  have  no  h  Makes  the  wife  fool  Haro/rf  n  n  duy 

Who  did  discrown  thine  h,  unqueen  thee  .-'     Uiast  ^^  .  ^^^ 

thou  not  love  thine  '*?,,,,  "       iv  i  224 

I  had  rather  She  would  have  loved  her  h.  "       '^^ 

Q  Harold  !  h  !     ShaU  we  meet  ^ain  ?  "        v  i  649 

because  I  love  The  h  of  another  !  "         v  ii  40 

I  have  lost  both  crown  And  ft.  "          v  ii  52 

What  was  he  Uke,  this  h  ?  hke  to  thee  ?  »        ^ 

I  mean  your  goodman,  your  h,  my  lady,  ^««^«'         ^^^ 

for  her  ft.  King  Loms ^osamwnd.     Hush!  „       "M^2 

whom  you  call-fancy-my  hs  brother's  ^vife.  2^.,'b,  Ji  i  U3 

Son,  ft,  brother  gash'd  to  death  in  vam,  J-  he  Owp  i  ii  i|o 

To  draw  you  and  your  ft  to  your  doom.  ..        ^  . .  ^^ 

\nd  if  you  should  betray  me  to  your  ti—  "        ^  ..  ^^ 

Still— I  should  tell  My  ft.  "         ^  j^j  33 

She  may,  perchance,  to  save  ttiis  ft.  "          ...  ,qj 

And  for  the  sake  of  Sinnatus  your  ft,  "          ^^  ^^ 

SrfgMtSiV4U%'«\a„dheher,  ^-"^^  «",»;■■  ?» 

but  I  hold  thee  The  ft  Of  my  heart,  i'omters  in  1^ 

Husbanded    nor  yet  so  amorous  That  I  must  needs  ^^^^^  ^^^^  ^^ . .  ^^^ 

Husba^d-i^law     H-i-?,  our  smooth-shorn  suzerain  Becket  11  ii  40 

Hush   ^^^-hear!     Bourne,     -and  so  this  unhappy  ^^^.^^  ^^^^  ,  ijj  19 

/f ^rft  !    You  wrong  the  Chancellor :  ^^^^^^  "^  '."366 

S  Kind,  King  Louis—    «osa.-^.     HI        gf ^^^  J  g^ 

Oft'     O  peace  !     This  violence  ill  becomes  1  he  Lupii  zi^ 

Husk    n  we  may  judge  the  kernel  by  the  ft,  " 

gr  we  found  /goat-herd's  ft  and  shared  His  fruits  ,.^^^  i  u  427 

Here  is  the  witch  s  ft.              .              j        ,    j,  it  i  200 

They  must  have  past.     Here  is  a  woodman  s  ft.  »        11 1 1^ 

Not  in  this  ft  I  take  it.           ...     1.  "        11  i  242 

There  is  but  one  old  woman  in  the  h-  "  „          ^gg 

Hymen    rather  than  so  clip  The  flowery  robe  of  ff ,  Ihe  Cup  11  4^0 

gSn(s)    (<S.e«/.o  Battle-hymns. 'Ymn)    chants  and  ft.  jggg 

In  all  the  churches,  .    •     •      *k^ 

stan^ng^up  side  by  side  with  me,  and  singing  the  ^^^^^  ^^  ^^^  ^^  ^^^ 

Hymn(vOTb)    Hear  thy  priestesses  ft  thy  glory  !  The  Cup  11 1 

Hypocrisy    never  bum  out  the  ft  that  makes  the  q^,,^  3^       ^^  iu  525 

water  m  her.               ,  .      ,         i.  R<.^l-rf  v  i  232 

Hypocrite    And  yet  I  hate  him  for  a  ft,  FarTstersix  tto 

From  whom  he  knows  are  h's  and  liars.  J^oresters  iv  oou 


SSU'"S,X::Srs?S:d  i^ff  our  shores^.  fi«^  -  in  Ig 

fcS  Jtone-hard,  ^'-^  ^lash  of  danng  m  him.       Q^eenM^.  v.  331 

Iceland  ''^;aTrelanS!t  0^11^.^  ^^'^  "Vj  g 

Icy    white  cells,  beneath  an  i  mo«n-  q^,^  ]i/„,y  „  ii  369 

Iden    And  he  wiU  prove  an  /  to  this  baae,  ^<^  ■  j 

Idiot    This  world  of  mud,  on  aU  its  ^  gleams  Of  ^^^  ^^  ^^^^^  ^^^  .^^ 

Idiotci£^^  W'at  are  all  tbese|^-;j,  Utopian  i.  .  -588 

Idle     But  this  IS  I  of  you.     ^velI,  sir  mcu,  '^«  ./  ^. .  ^^^ 

Idyll    This  Dobson  of  your  t?                                         ^^  Harold  11  Hm 

H    Thine  '  t's  '  will  sear  thine  eyes  out    ay.  RecfceUii  iii  279 

He  fenced  his  royal  pomise  with  an  i.         ....  ^ecm  iiiiu  ^u 

is  the  King's  i  too  high  a  stile  for  your  lordship  to  ^^      ^^^ ...  ^^ 

overstep  r»»,.;v= ' ;  ',',      "i  "i  284 

I^„^i;"^v;aSSrh'lt»a-vith..pub,ic.^«..».«»,..iiM 

Imorwit    She  is  i  of  all  but  that  I  love  hen 

SSW    I  am  sure  (Knowing  the  man,  he  wrought  ^^^^^  ^^^^  ^^  .  ^^^ 

111    The  Queen  is  z  advised:  shall  I  turn  traitor?  „  1 /^ 

i  counsel!     These  let  them  keep  at  present ;  ,.  ^^^  .^ 

I  am  i  disguised.  "  vii344 

\nd  fared  so  i  in  this  disastrous  worlci.  ..  ..jigis 

Aladam,  you  do  i  to  scorn  wedded  love.  j^ecicet,  no.oo 

May  God  grant  No  i  befall  or  him  or  thee  when  I  ^^        ^^ .  ^ 

El^or?  Eleanor,  have  I  Not  heard  i  things  of  her  ^^ .  ^3^ 

TMs  vLTnce  i  becomes  The  silence  of  our  Temple.  The  Cup  n  211 

but  you  turn  right  ugly  when  you  re  in  an  ^  ^^^^^  ^^  ^^^  ^  ^^ 

but^irisuccessof  the  farm,  and  the  debts,  ..          ^^^^ 

and  so  i  in  consequence  all  Monday,  Foresters  1  iii  3: 
Rut  i  befitting  such  a  festal  day 

Who  hast  that  worship  for  me  which  Heaven  knows  ^ ...  ^^ 

lUa    Tiii?'^Is"l,'  which  wiU  test  their  sect.  Queen  Ma^y  m  iv  42> 

niiested    A  maiden  now  Were  i-h  in  these  dark  days  ^^^^^^^^^  ^^  ..^ 

of  John,  .  .  Becket  11  i  IT' 

Illegitimate    And  mine  a  batterer  t  hate  ^^     ,  ■ 

lU-garrison'd    Calais  is  but.t-9,  m  Guisnes  V  ^.^^  33 

SSf^ea^S=?^S?K^p:G&^   Q^eenM^^^ 
^et  up  your  Iroken  i's  ;  Be  com  ortable  to  me.  ]:,^^,,,,,;,;i  61 

Who  melts  a  waxen  i  by  the  hre,  ^  ^      53 

Imagine    And  can  you  not  i  that  the  wreath,  ^he  ra       ^^ 

I  said  you  might  t  it  was  so.  ilfar/iii  iv  17 

Imitate    And  hot  desire  to  i;  '*«'  -^  ^  jji^ 

Tmiffttive    A  Parliament  of  i  apes  !  ,  a.     j  ^         " 

atuel  Goldsmiths     /  G  was  broke  into  0'  Monday   ^^^^  ^^  ^^^  ^  3^ 

Immediate  *'and  they  threaten  The  i  thunder-blast  of  ^^^^^^  ^^^  .„  ^ 

interdict :                       .                  ,     pv,i.r^Vi  ..    in  iii 

Immemorial    so  violated  the  i  usage  of  the  Church,  ,^^^^  ^^ .  g. 

Immortal    Lovers  hold  True  love  t.  ^^  jo 

Tom  seem,  as  it  were,  /,  and  we  mortal.  ^j^^  ^^ . j  5, 

We  have  respect  for  man  s  *  soul. 


Imp 


963 


Invisible 


1  p  Venal  i !  What  say'st  thou  to  the  Chancellorship  Becket  n  i  224 
1  pair  or  i  in  any  way  This  royal  state  of  England,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  229 
1  perial    What  your  i  father  said,  my  liege,  To  deal 

with  heresy  gentlier.  „  iii  vi  56 

We  cannot  fight  i  Rome,  The  Cup  ii  92 

let  the  new-made  children  Of  our  i  mother  see  the  show.        „      ii  165 
I  plore    I  thus  i  vou,  low  upon  my  knees.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  64 

I  port    It  much  t's  me  I  should  know  her  name. 

it  may  i  her  all  as  much  Not  to  be  known. 
1  portance    policy  in  some  matter  Of  small  i 
I  possible     /  ;  Except  you  put  Spain  down. 
I  press    And  she  i  her  wrongs  upon  her  Council, 
I  prison    Degrade,  i  him — Not  death  for  death. 

Too  politic  for  that.      /  me  ? 
I  Drison'd    I  was  but  woimded  by  the  enemy  there  And 

then  i.  The  Falcon  389 

I  prisonment    In  j- our  five  years  of  i,  Queen  Mary  iii  iv  242 

I  pugn    Which  might  i  or  prejudice  the  same  ;  „  m  iii  133 

loute    it  is  the  traitor  that  t's  Treachery  to  his  King  !  Becket  i  iii  484 

Weak  natures  that  i  Themselves  to  their  unUkes,  Foresters  n  i  691 


Becket  i  i  192 

„     I  i  197 

Queen  Mary  in  vi  168 

„  V  iii  79 

III  vi  183 

Becket  i  iii  400 

IV  ii  397 


lalculable    Yea,  even  such  as  mine,  i, 

I  apable    Old,  miserable,  diseased,  /  of  children. 

I  amate    Whose  life  was  all  one  battle,  i  war, 

1  avemd    See Deep-incavem'd 

I  ense    parch'd  banks  rolhng  i,  as  of  old, 

puffed  out  such  an  i  of  unctuosity  into  the  nostrils  of 

our  Gods  of  Church  and  State,  Becket  m  iii  115 

benselike    All  her  breath  should,  i,  Rise  Queen  Mary  in  iii  164 


Queen  Mary  iv  iii  147 

V  V  179 

Harold  v  i  397 

Queen  Mary  i  v  91 


Lest    As  being  bom  from  i  ; 

Iiestuous    Peter,  I'll  swear  for  him  He  did  believe 

the  bond  i. 
Ii  h    Fire — i  by  i  to  die  in  agony  ! 
If  thou  draw  one  i  nearer, 

being  every  i  a  man  I  honour  every  i  of  a  woman. 
I  for  old  Much  is  every  i  a  man, 
bline    whether  her  Grace  i  to  this  splendid  scion  of 

I       Plantageoet. 
Iiiuded    The  i  Danae  has  escaped  again  Her  tower, 
iDnsistency     Nay,  for  bare  shame  of  i, 
Iijrr'd    every  bond  and  debt  and  obUgation  /  as 

Chancellor, 
[i     His  sceptre  shall  go  forth  from  /  to  /  ! 
£;  ?tenniiiate    But  a  weak  mouth,  an  i — ha  ? 

/  shawl  That  Philip  brought  me  in  our  happy 


Iii  69 

.,  I  ii  77 

IV  ii  223 

Foresters  i  i  145 

„         III  63 

IV  290 

Queen  Mary  i  i  134 

Becket  I  i  395 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  39 

Becket  i  iii  712 

Queen  Mary  in  ii  177 

III  iv  340 

ii538 


days ! — 
£^ies    Spain  would  be  England  on  her  seas,  and  England 
j      Mistress  of  the  I. 
\  England  Will  be  Mistress  of  the  /  yet, 
^ilfference    accuse  you  of  i  To  all  faiths,  all  reUgion  ; 
Ii!gnation    begets  An  admiration  and  an  i, 
'.I  oor    They  are  plagues  enough  i-d. 
I  aught    swoll'n  and  fed  With  i's  and  side- 
currents, 
Iilmgeon'd     /  from  one  whisper  of  the  wind, 
inllible    of  her  most  Royal,  /,  Papal  Legate- 

I     coxisin. 
lUmous     /  wretch.    Shall  I  tell  her  he  is  dead  ? 
jamy    Fame  of  to-day  is  i  to-morrow  ;   /  of  to-day 

is  fame  to-morrow  ;  Becket  ii  i  103 

Jliat  (adj.)     I  had  to  cuff  the  rogue  For  i  treason.       Queen  Mary  in  iii  52 
nlat  (s)     blast  your  i's,  dash  The  torch  of  war  among         Harold  ii  ii  747 


V  iii  74 

V  iii  77 
m  jv  223 
in  iv  170 

Becket  ii  ii  91 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  234 
Becket  iv  ii  146 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  433 
From,  of  May  in  336 


toated    ■ — i — -To  sue  you  for  his  life  ? 
nJ3t    Thy  fears  i  me  beyond  reason.     Peace  ! 
ndte    that  it  would  please  Him  out  of  His  i  love  to 

break  down  all  kingship  and  queenship, 
Hjmity    And  /,  that  knew  mine  own  i, 
i  I  pray  God  pardon  mine  i. 
aatitode     /,  Injustice,  Evil-tongue,  Labour-in- 
vain. 
i  His  heart  so  gall'd  with  thine  i, 
ajbitant    altho'  the  i's  Seem  semi-barbarous, 
not  only  love  the  country,  But  its  i's  too  ; 
Then  one  at  least  of  its  i's 
lOiTit    Ay,  sir;    /  the  Great  Silence. 
i  Why  then  the  throne  is  empty.    Who  i's  ? 


Queen  Mary  iv  i  10 
Harold  n  ii  451 

Queen  Mary  v  iv  47 

Becket  i  iii  696 

„     II  ii  353 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  156 

Becket  i  iii  4 

From,  of  May  n  541 

II  546 

n  552 

Qu^n  Mary  in  ii  199 

Harold  m  i  235 


Inherit  (continued)     AMio  i's  ?     Edgar  the  Atheling  ?  Harold  in  i  239 

hand  that  next  Fs  thee  be  but  as  true  to  thee  Becket  i  i  358 

Thou  wilt  i  the  land,  And  so  wouldst  sell  Foresters  ii  i  534 

Inherited    some  will  say  because  I  have  i  my  Uncle.     Prom,  of  May  in  598 
True,  and  I  have  an  i  loathing  of  these  black  sheep 

of  the  Papacy.  Becket,  Fro.  460 

Inheriting    which  we  /  reap  an  easier  harvest.  Becket  n  ii  194 

Inheritor     That  bright  i  of  your  eyes — your  boy  ?  The  Falcon  306 

Inhospitable     Friends,  in  that  last  i  plunge  Our  boat 

hath  burst  her  ribs  ;  Harold  ii  i  1 

Injure    That  none  should  wrong  or  i  your  Archbishop.  Becket  i  iii  754 

Injured    send  her  hosts  Of  i  Saints  to  scatter  sparks  of 

plague  Harold  n  ii  745 

Injury    not  be  wanting  Those  that  will  urge  her  i —    Qu,een  Mary  in  vi  176 

Injustice     Ingratitude,  /,  Evil-tongue,  Labour-in- vain.  „              v  ii  156 


Shall  we  too  work  i  ? 

we  must  at  times  have  wrought  Some  great  i. 

If  the  king  and  the  law  work  i. 

Do  some  i,  if  you  hold  us  here  Longer 
Ink    is  written  in  invisible  i's  '  Lust,  Prodigality, 
Inland    we  two  Have  track'd  the  King  to  this  dark  i 

wood ; 
Inmost    weight  of  the  very  land  itself,  Down  to  the  i 

centre. 
Inn    at  the  wayside  i  Close  by  that  alder-island 
Innocence    And  witness  to  your  Grace's  i, 

Life  on  the  face,  the  brows — clear  i  ! 

i's  that  will  cry  From  all  the  hidden  by-ways 

equal  for  pure  i  of  nature.  And  loveliness  of 
feature. 

Except  she  could  defend  her  i. 
Innocent  (adj.)     and  of  the  good  Lady  Jane  as  a  poor  i 
child  who  had  but  obeyed  her  father  ; 

perchance  A  child  more  i  than  Lady  Jane. 

No,  no  ;  her  i  blood  had  blinded  me. 

and  when  her  i  eyes  were  bound,  She, 

And  love  is  joyful,  i,  beautiful,  And  jealousy  is 
wither'd,  sour  and  ugly  : 

and  another — worse  !— An  i  maid. 
Innocent  (s)     O  God,  how  many  an  i  Has  left  his  bones 
Inquisition    Holy  absolution  !  holy  /  ! 

cited  me  to  Rome,  for  heresy.  Before  his  /. 
Insane    That  palate  is  i  which  cannot  tell 


Foresters  i  iii  87 
in  156 
IV  229 

IV  941 
I'rom.  of  May  ii  283 

Becket  in  ii  3 

Foresters  iv  1027 

Prom,  of  May  n  534 

Queen  Mary  in  v  50 

Becket  n  i  195 

„  in  iii  14 

Prom,  of  May  ii  372 
Foresters  ii  ii  47 

Queen  Mary  i  i  94 

I  V  502 

in  i  345 

„       III  i  405 

Foresters  n  ii  64 

ni  389 

Becket  n  ii  408 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  32 

V  ii  43 
Becket,  Pro.  104 

Insolence     I  hate  him  for  his  i  to  all.     De  Tracy.     And 

I  for  all  his  i  to  thee.  „        v  i  226 

Insolent    Sending  an  i  shot  that  dash'd  the  seas  Upon  us,    Queen  Mary  v  i  57 

I  clown.    Shall  I  smite  him  Mith  the  edge  of  the  sword  ?     Becket  i  iv  223 

Inspire    O  Thou,  that  dost  i  the  germ  with  life.  The  Cup  n  257 

Inspired     Why  should  not  Heaven  have  so  i  the  King  ?  Becket  i  i  130 

Instant  (adj.)     It  craves  an  i  answer,  Ay  or  No.     Mary. 

An  i  Ay  or  No  !    the  Council  sits.    Give  it  me 

quick.  Queen  Mary  i  v  589 

and  had  my  constant '  No  '  For  all  but  i  battle.  Harold  v  i  7 

Instant  (s)    You  are  to  come  to  Court  on  the  i ;  Queen  Mary  in  v  223 

Come,  girl,  thou  shalt  along  with  us  on  the  i.     Friar 

Tuck.     Then  on  the  i  I  will  break  thy  head.  Foresters  iv  679 

Instinct    following  his  own  i's  as  his  God, 
Insured    I  were  i.  Miss,  an'  I  lost  nowt  by  it. 
Intent    to  the  i  That  you  may  lose  your  English 

heritage. 
Intercept    did  not  Gardiner  i  A  letter  which 
Intercession    That  by  your  gracious  means  and  i 

by  your  i  May  from  the  Apostolic  see  obtain. 
Interdict    from  the  side  of  Rome,  An  i  on  England — 

To  blast  my  realms  with  excommunication  And  i. 

The  immediate  thunder-blast  ot  i: 

bell-silencing,  anti-marrying,  burial-hindering  { 

King  at  last  is  fairly  scared  by  tliis  cloud — this  i. 
Intermeddling    This  Godstow- Becket  i  such 
Interpreter    Is  he  thy  mouthpiece,  thine  i  ? 
Interwoven    See  here — an  i  H  and  E  ! 
Invade    bees.  If  any  creeping  life  i  their  hive 
Invader    May  all  i's  perish  like  Hardrada  ! 
Inverted     /  jEsop — mountain  out  of  mouse. 
Invisible    There,  there,  is  written  in  i  inks 


Prom,  of  May  i  588 
»  u  57 

Queen  Mary  v  i  132 

V  ii  495 

in  iii  121 

„       III  iii  146 

Becket,  Pro.  223 

II  ii  53 

m  iii  26 

in  iii  56 

in  iii  64 

IV  ii  457 

Foresters  I  ii  212 

Harold  I  ii  57 

Queen  Mary  in  iii  54 

Harold  iv  iii  77 

Queen  Mary  n  i  67 

Prom,  of  May  u  283 


Involve 


964 


Jester 


Involve    which  hatred  by  and  by  I's  the  ruler  Queen  Mary  iii  iv  161 

Inward    Or  am  I  slandering  my  most  i  friend,  „  iv  ii  105 

Inwrought    white  satin  his  trunk-hose,  /  with  silver, —       „  iii  i  78 

Ionian    Artemis,  Artemis,  hear  him,  /  Artemis  !  The  Cup  ii  277 

Irse     Their  hour  is  hard  at  hand,  their  '  dies  /,'  Queen  Mary  ni  iv  426 

Ireland    — ^Scotland,  /,  Iceland,  Orkney,  Harold  iii  ii  124 

Iron  (adj.)     The  Duke  Of  Alva,  an  i  soldier.  Queen  Mary  iii  i  194 

\^'ith  golden  deeds  and  i  strokes  that  brought  Harold  ii  ii  47 

A  breath  that  fleets  beyond  this  i  world,  „    rn  ii  197 

knowing  that  he  must  have  Moved  in  the  i  grooves 

of  Destiny  ?  From,  of  May  ii  267 

Iron  (s)      /  on  i  clang,  Harold  iv  iii  160 

A^'ith  hands  too  limp  to  brandish  i —  „         v  i  449 

flask  or  two  Of  that  same  vintage.     There  is  i  in  it.        The  Falcon  586 

/  will  fuse,  and  marble  melt ;  Prom,  of  May  ii  505 

Iron-mooded    make  yield  this  i-m  Duke  To  let  me  go.  Harold  ii  ii  339 

Ironside    or  English  /  Who  fought  with  Knut,  „       iv  iii  53 

Irregular    This  is  i  and  the  work  of  John.    ['  /,  i  !  Foresters  i  iii  71 

Irresolute     Fine  eyes — but  melancholy,  i —  Queen  Mary  iii  iv  337 

Irreverent    St.  Cupid,  that  is  too  i.  Becket  v  i  198 

Irritable    That  i  forelock  which  he  rubs,  Queen  Mary  i  iv  265 

Iscariot    Not  red  like  I's.  „  m  i  217 

Island  (adj.)     Yearns  to  set  foot  upon  your  i  shore.  „  i  v  367 

and  plunge  His  foreign  fist  into  our  i  Church  „         ni  iv  364 

Fair  i  star !     Elizabeth.     I  shine  !  „  v  iii  15 

And  send  thee  back  among  thine  i  mists  With  laughter.     Harold  ii  ii  181 

The  spiritual  giant  with  our  i  laws  And  customs,  Becket  iv  ii  444 

Island  (s)    (See  also  Alder-island,  Spice-island)    or  the 

stout  old  i  will  become  A  rotten  Umb  Queen  Mary  ii  i  104 

The  i's  call'd  into  the  dawning  church  „         iii  iii  172 

We  parted  like  the  brook  yonder  about  the  alder  i,     From,  of  May  i  773 
Island-Church    Mould  make  Our  t- C  a  schism  from 

Christendom,  Becket  liiilld 

Islander     Because  these  i's  are  brutal  beasts  ?  Queen  Mary  iii  vi  153 

Isle     and  rooted  in  far  i's  Beyond  my  seeing  :  Harold  iii  i  153 

To  Holy  Peter  in  our  English  i  !  „       iii  i  207 

Keep  him  away  from  the  lone  Uttle  i.  Becket  n  i  16 

Eow  to  the  blessed  I's  !  the  blessed  I's  !  The  Cup  ii  525 

That  ever  blossom'd  on  this  English  i.  Foresters  i  ii  124 

Islip    it  be  a  var  waay  vor  my  owld  legs  up  vro'  7.     Queen  Mary  iv  iii  473 

Dumble's  the  best  milcher  in  /.  (repeat)  „  iv  iii  478,  497 

'Issen  (himself)     the  owd  man's  coom'd  agean  to  'i,      Prom,  of  May  iii  703 

Issue  (s)     Yea,  were  there  i  bom  to  her,  Queen  Mary  i  v  301 

Issue  (verb)     he  that  lookt  a  fangless  one,  I's  a  venomous 

adder.  Becket  i  iii  453 

Istis     Non  defensoribus  i,  Walter  Map.  „     ii  ii  346 

Italian    Catholic  church  as  well  Without  as  with  the 

I  ?  Queen  Mary  iii  iii  99 

He  is  all  I,  and  he  hates  the  Spaniard  ;  „  v  ii  55 

Italy     I  have  seen  A  pine  in  /  that  cast  „         iii  iv  136 

Tainted  with  Lutheranism  in  /.  „        iii  iv  227 

In  your  soft  /  yonder  !  „        iii  iv  254 

To  plump  the  leaner  pouch  of  I.  „        m  iv  365 

You  make  your  wars  upon  him  down  in  I : —  „  v  i  142 

Your  troops  were  never  down  in  /.  „  v  ii  315 

and  with  him  who  died  Alone  in  /.  „  v  ii  508 

Itch  (s)     Crutches,  and  i'es,  and  leprosies,  and  ulcers,  Becket  i  iv  254 

Itch  (verb)     Yet  my  fingers  i  to  beat  him  into  nothing.  „     i  iv  229 

Iver  (ever)     I  doant  believe  he's  i  a  'eart  under  his 

waistcoat.  From,  of  May  i  130 

but  if  i  I  coonxs  upo'  Gentleman  Hedgar  agean,  „  ii  136 

bumin'  o'  the  owld  archbishop  '11  bum  the  Pwoap 

out  o'  this  'ere  land  vor  i  and  i.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  536 

Ivy     Faster  than  i.     Must  I  hack  her  arms  ofE  ?  Harold  v  ii  146 

Your  names  will  cling  like  i  to  the  wood.  Foresters  iv  1085 


Jacta     J  tonitrua  Deus  bellator  ! 
Jade    fellow  that  on  a  lame  /  came  to  court, 
Jail    whose  bolts.  That  j  you  from  free  life, 
Jailor    My  / —     Bedingfield.     One,  whose  bolts, 

Hast  thou  such  trustless  j's  in  thy  North  ? 
Jalousies  (jealousies)    he  be  fit  to  bust  hissen  wi' 

spites  and  j. 
James     J,  didst  thou  ever  see  a  carrion  crow 
James,  St.    See  St.  James 

Jane  (Lady  Jane  Grey)    and  of  the  good  Lady  J  as  a 
poor  innocent  child 

That  gave  her  royal  crown  to  Lady  J. 

saying  of  this  Lady  J,  Now  in  the  Tower  ? 

Lady  J  stood  up  Stiff  as  the  very  backbone 

tell  your  Grace  What  Lady  J  replied. 

A  child  more  innocent  than  Lady  J. 

Or  Lady  /  ?     Wyatt.     No,  poor  soul ;  no. 

And  Lady  J  had  left  us. 

Lady  J  ?     Crowd.    God  save  their  Graces  ! 

Cried  no  God-bless-her  to  the  Lady  J, 
Janus-faces  But  J-f  looking  diverse  ways. 
Jar    since  the  fondest  pair  of  doves  wiU  j, 


Harold  v  i 

Becket  v  i 

Queen  Mary  iii  v 

„  III  v 

Harold  ii  ii 

Prom,  of  May  ii 
Queen  Mary  iv 


V  IV 

II  i 

„  II  iv 

„  III  i 

III  i' 
„  III  i 

Becket  iv  i 


Prom,  of  May  n 
Becket  i  iii 


Jachin  (a  brass  pillar,  entrance  to  Solomon's  temple)    lo  ! 

my  two  pillars,  J  and  Boaz  ! — 
Jackson  (labourer  to  Fanner  Dobson)    Higgins,  J, 


Harold  iii  i  192 


Luscombe,  Nokes, 


Prom,  of  May  ill  53 


that  Dobbins,  is  it.  With  whom  I  used  to  j  ? 
Jarr'd     but  suddenly  J  on  this  rock. 
Jarring    See  Ever-jarring 

Javelin     Our  ys  Answer  their  arrows.  Harold  v  i 

Jay     Hawk,  buzzard,  /,  the  mavis  and  the  merle.  Foresters  i  iii 
Jealous     (See  also  Childlike-jealous)     and  thou  in  thy  way 

shouldst  be  /  of  the  King,  Becket,  Fro. 
will  he  not  mock  at  me  The  j  fool  balk'd  of  her  will —         „      iv  ii 

Art  thou  not  j  of  her  ?  The  Falc 

Ay,  ruffle  thyself — be  j  !     Thou  shouldst  be  j  of  her.  „ 

J  of  me  with  Eva  !     Is  it  so  ?  From,  of  May  i 
Jealousy     (See  also  Jalousies)     and  j  Hath  in  it  an 

alchemic  force  Queen  Mary  iii  vi 

Did  you  not  tell  me  he  was  crazed  with  /,  From,  of  May  in 

I  am  a  man  not  prone  to  jealousies,  '    „           in 

O  Kate,  true  love  and  ;  are  twins.  Foresters  ii : 

And  j  is  wither'd,  sour  and  ugly  :  „       ii 

J,  j  of  the  king.  „     ii  ii 

Elf,  with  spiteful  heart  and  eye.  Talk  of  /  ?  „     ii  ii 

Jean     they  were  fishers  of  men,  Father  J  says.  Harold  n 

Jeer     heard  One  of  your  Council  fleer  and  j  at  him.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii 

nursery-cocker'd  child  will  j  at  aught  „           ii  ii 

The  statesman  that  shall  /  and  fleer  at  men,  „           ii  ii 

if  he  j  not  seeing  the  true  man  Behind  his  folly,  „           ii  ii 

if  he  see  the  man  and  still  will ;",  ,,           ii  ii 

J^nny    here's  little  Dickon,  and  little  Robin,  and 

little  J —  „          II  iii 

Jeopardy    being  in  great  j  of  his  life,  he  hath  made  Becket  i  iv 

Jerk     Let  be  thy  jokes  and  thy  j's,  man  !  The  Falcov 

Jerk'd     Things  that  seem  /  out  of  the  common  rut  Harold  i  '•■ 
Jerusalem    table  steams,  like  a  heathen  altar  ;  nay,  like  the 

altar  at  J.  Becket  i 
smell  o'  the  mou'd  'ud  ha'  maade  ma  live  as  long 

as  J.  Prom,  of  May  . 

Jest  (s)     the  tongue  yet  quiver'd  with  the  /  Queen  Mary  i  ]i 

a  /  In  time  of  danger  shows  the  pulses  even.  „          ii  ii 

And  the  Dutchman,  Now  laughing  at  some  j  ?  „           in  i 

nave  and  aisles  all  empty  as  a  fool's  ;  !  „         iv  ii 

Thy  j — no  more.     Why — look — is  this  a  sleeve  Becket,  Pro 

Then  for  thy  barren  j  Take  thou  mine  answer  ,,      Pro 

— That  were  a  j  indeed  !  „      Pro 

There's  no  j  on  the  brows  of  Herbert  there.  „      Fro 

good  old  man  would  sometimes  have  his  j —  „           i 

J  or  prophecy  there  ?     Herbert.     Both,  Thomas,  both.        „  J 
or  any  harm  done  to  the  people  if  my  j  be  in  defence 

of  the  Truth  ?  "       "  j' 

if  the  j  be  so  done  that  the  people  Delight  „      n  i: 

Bandy  their  o^vn  rude  j's  with  them,  The  Cup  i  i 

Jest  (verb)     Ha!  ha!  sir;  but  you  /  ;  I  love  it:  Queen  Mary  n\ 

Thou  angerest  me,  man :  I  do  not  /.  Becket,  Pro 

We  did  but  j.  „       Fro 

Why  do  you  j  with  me,  and  try  To  fright  me?  From,  of  May  \ 

Jester     Thou  art  a  ;'  and  a  verse-maker.  Becket  u  ii 


Jesting 


965 


Journey 


tag    if  you  be  not  /,  Neither  the  old  world, 

1  They  are  ;  at  us  yonder,  mocking  us  ? 

|s  Christ    (See  also  Christ,  Christ  Jesus)    save  her 

thro'  the  blood  Oi  J  C 
on    range  with  j  and  with  ofial  thrown 

He  calk  us  worse  than  J's,  Moors,  Saracens. 
There  is  Antwerp  and  the  J's. 
Advanced  thee  at  his  instance  by  the  J's, 
1  (adj.)     Beetle's  ;  armoiu"  crack'd,  Queen. 
1  (s)     I  left  her  with  rich  j's  in  her  hand, 
I  have  the  /  of  a  loyal  heart, 
left  about  Like  loosely-scatter'd  j's, 
in  whose  crown  our  Kent  is  the  fairest  /. 
Eow  look'd  the  Queen  ?    Bagenhall.    No  fairer 

for  her  j's. 
To  set  that  precious  /,  Roger  of  York, 
jod's  eyes  !  what  a  lovely  cross  !  what  j's ! 
oo  people  heaven  in  the  great  day  When  God  makes 

up  his  j's. 
Behold  the  /  of  St.  Pancratias 
ho'  I  grudge  the  pretty  /,  that  I  Have  worn, 
ind  not  a  heart  like  the  ;  in  it — 
Outvalues  all  the  j's  upon  earth. 

Has  my  simple  song  set  you  j  ? 
(oouutfy  wife)     Pwoaps  be  pretty  things,  J, 
)ur  Daisy's  as  good  'z  her.    Tib.    Noa,  J.    Joan. 

Our  Daisy's  butter's  as  good  'z  hem.      Tib. 

Noa,  J.    Joan.    Our  Daisy's  cheeses  be  better. 

Tib.     Noa,  J. 
ly,  J,  and  my  owld  man  wur  up  and  awaay 
ly,  J ;  and  Queen  Mary  gwoes  on  a  bumin' 
xxi  tek  thou  my  word  vor't,  J, — 
3f  Kent  (Elizabeth  Barton,  executed  1534)    'twas 

you  That  sign'd  the  burning  of  poor  J  o  K ; 
•n  (Bishop  of  Salisbury)    (See  also  Salisbury)     No 

saying  of  mine — J  of  Salisburj'. 
I  :G08pel  of  St.)     They  go  like  those  old  Pharisees 

in  J 
[Little)    .S'e«  Little  John 

of  Oxford,  called  the  Swearer)    (See  also  John  of 

Oxford,  John  the  Swearer)    See  if  our  pious — 

what  shall  I  call  him,  J  ? — 
,  Thou  hast  served  me  heretofore  with  Rome — 
ionest  J  !    To  Rome  again  !  the  storm  begins  again. 
tfof  Salisbury)    (See  also  John  of  Salisbury,  Salisbury) 

ur  good  J  Must  speed  you  to  your  bower 

an  J  with  a  nun,  That  Map, 

-J,  and  out  of  breath  ! 

Tiy,  J,  my  kingdom  is  not  of  this  world. 

an  J,  how  much  we  lose,  we  celibates, 

ou  hear  them,  brother  J  ;  Why  do  you  stand  so 

silent,  brother  J  ? 

it  so,  Dan  J  ?  well,  what  should  I  have  done  ? 

y  counsel  is  already  taken,  J. 

ethought  they  wovdd  have  brain'd  me  with  it,  J. 
l|Prmce,  afterwards  King  of  England)    and  these  are 

the  days  of  Prince  J. 

gallant  Earl.     I  love  him  as  I  hate  J. 

the  service  of  our  good  king  Richard  against  the 

^arty  of  J, 

lis  J — this  Norman  tjTanny — 

am  old  and  forget.    Was  Prince  J  there  ?    Marian. 

The  Sheriff  of  Nottingham  was  there — not  J.    Sir 

Sichard.   Beware  of  J  and  the  Sheriff  of  Nottingham.         „        i  i  251 

hath  sold  himself  to  that  beast  J —  „        i  i  268 

)wn  with  J  !  (repeat)  Foresters  I  ii  4,  12,  16,  17,  30 

irfect — who  shoidd  know  you  for  Prince  J,  Foresters  i  ii  21 

did  wrong  in  crying  '  Down  mth  J ; '  For  be  he 

dead,  then  J  may  be  our  King.  „        i  ii  97 

it  if  it  be  so  we  must  bear  with  J.  „      i  ii  102 

ear  you  be  of  those  who  hold  more  by  J  than 

Richard.    Sheriff.     True,  for  through  J  I  had 

my  sheriffship.     I  am  J's  till  Richard  come 

back  again,  and  then  1  am  Richard's.  „      i  ii  199 

■ware  (5  J !     Marian.     I  hate  him,  „       i  ii  214 


Prom,  of  May  i  673 
Foresters  iv  676 

Queen  Mary  iii  i  388 

m  iii  191 

V  i  150 

v  i  183 

Becket  i  iii  644 

Foresters  ii  ii  160 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  242 

I  iv  247 
II  i  28 

II  i  164 

III  i  92 

Becket,  Pro.  270 
„       Pro.  371 


V  ii  497 

Harold  ii  ii  700 

Prom,  of  May  I  473 

The  Falcon  91 

779 

Becket,  Pro.  379 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  469 


IV  iii  480 
IV  iii  488 
IV  iii  522 
IV  iii  533 


IV  ii  206 

Becket  ii  ii  372 

Queen  Mary  u  ii  8 


Becket  n  ii  39 
„  II  ii  459 
„    n  ii  467 

I  i  290 

„       I  i  305 

I  i  388 

V  ii  18 

„     V  ii  197 

„  V  ii  534 

„  V  ii  552 

„  V  ii  561 

„  V  ii  613 

Foresters  i  i  178 
I  i  191 

I  i  195 

I  i  238 


John  (Prince,  afterwards  King  of  England)  (continued)    Bad 

me  beware  Of  J :  what  maid  but  would  beware  oiJ?    Foresters  i  ii  256 
This  is  irregular  and  the  work  of  J.  „       i  iii  71' 

How  should  we  cope  with  J  ?  „       i  iii  79 

I  held  for  Richard,  and  I  hated  J.  „        u  i  52 

Our  vice-king  J,  True  king  of  vice —  .,        ii  i  82 

our  J  By  his  Norman  arrogance  and  dissoluteness,  „        ii  i  84 

J — Shame  on  him  ! — Stole  on  her,  „      n  i  HQ 

the  Sheriff,  and  by  heaven.  Prince  /  himself  „      nil  73 

Prince  J,  the  Sheriff,  and  a  mercenary.     Sir  Richard. 

Prince  J  again.     We  are  flying  from  this  J.  „      ii  i  445 

be  there  wolves  in  Sherwood  ?     Marian.     The  wolf,  J !        „       ii  i  513 
this  is  Maid  Marian  Flying  from  J — disguised.  „      ii  i  680 

break.  Far  as  he  might,  the  power  of  J—  „      n  i  696 

A  maiden  now  Were  ill-bested  in  these  dark  days  of  J,  „       ii  ii  46 

That  J  last  week  retum'd  to  Nottingham,  „       m  147 

We  robb'd  the  traitors  that  are  leagued  ^\-ith  J ;  „       in  160 

My  lord  J,  In  wrath  because  you  drove  him  from  the 
forest,  „       in  449 

to  'scape  The  glance  of  J .,       m  463 

The  bee  should  buzz  about  the  Court  of  •/.     No  ribald 

J  is  Love,  no  wanton  Prince,  „         iv  45 

Art  thou  for  Richard,  or  allied  to  J?    Richard.    I  am 

allied  to  J.  „        iv  136 

But  being  0'  J's  side  we  must  have  thy  gold.  „        iv  157 

But  I  am  more  for  Richard  than  for  J.  „        iv  160 

or  the  head  of  a  fool,  or  the  heart  of  Prince  J,  „        iv  213 

Break  thine  alliance  with  this  faithless  J,  „        iv  324 

Still  I  am  more  for  Richard  than  for  J.  „        iv  330 

for  how  canst  thou  be  thus  allied  With  •/,  „        iv  351 

The  Sheriff  !  the  Sheriff,  foUow'd  by  Prince  J  „        iv  588 

My  liege.  Prince  J—    Richard.     Say  thou  no  word 

against  my  brother  J.  „        iv  823 

John  (St.)    See  John  (Gospel  of  St.),  St.  John 
John  of  Oxford    (ASee  a^so  John,  John  the  Swearer)    l,JoO, 

The  President  of  this  Council,  Becket  i  iii  74 

For  J  0  0  here  to  read  to  you.  „     i  iii  417 

Cursed  be  J  o  0,  Roger  of  York,  And  Gilbert  Foliot !  „     n  ii  265 

John  of  Salisbury    (See  also  John,  Salisbury)    We  gave  thee 

to  the  charge  of  J  o  S,  „       i  i  247 

J  0  S  Hath  often  laid  a  cold  hand  on  my  heats,  „       i  i  38.3 

He  watch'd  her  pass  with  J  o  S  „       i  ii  40 

priest  whom  J  o  S  trusted  Hath  sent  another.  „      in  i  69 

J  0  S  committed  The  secret  of  the  bower,  „     in  iii  4 

I  know  him ;  our  good  J  o  S.  „      v  ii  77 

make  me  not  a  woman,  J  0  S,  „    v  ii  148 

John  the  Swearer    (See  also  John,  John  of  Oxford)    They 

call  thee  J  t  S.  „    n  ii  462 

Join     To  j  a  voice,  so  potent  with  her  Highness,  Queen  Mary  iv  i  117 

May  the  great  angels  j  their  wings,  „  v  iv  6 

J  hands,  let  brethren  dwell  in  unity  ;  Harold  i  i  397 

j  our  hands  before  the  hosts,  That  all  may  see.  ,,     iv  i  241 

And  then  thy  King  might  j  the  Antipope,  Becket  i  iii  211 

every  thread  of  thought  Is  broken  ere  it  j's —  „       v  ii  207 

I'll  /  with  him :  I  may  reap  something  from  him —        The  Cup  1  i  177 

tlio'  a  stranger  fain  would  be  allow'd  To  /  the  hunt.  „        i  i  197 

And  /  your  life  this  day  with  his,  „  11  135 

Well,  my  child,  let  us  ]  them.  Prom,  of  May  1  797 

till  he  /  King  Richard  in  the  Holy  Land.  Foresters  i  ii  238 

And  j  our  feasts  and  all  your  forest  games  ,,  in  84 

by  St.  Mary  these  beggars  and  these  friars  shall  j  you.         „  in  417 

./  them  and  they  are  a  true  marriage ;  „         ni  420 

Our  rebel  Abbot  then  shall  /  your  hands,  „         iv  933 

Join'd     What  hinders  but  that  Spain  and  England  j,     Queen  Mary  v  iii  69 

he  /  with  thee  To  drive  me  outlaw'd.  Harold  iv  ii  13 

a  random  guest  Who  j  me  in  the  hunt.  The  Cup  1  ii  109 

And  j  my  banner  in  the  Holy  Land,  Foresters  iv  1000 

Joining    Mary  of  England,  j  hands  with  Spain,  Queen  Mary  i  v  298 

Joke     Let  be  thy  j's  and  thy  jerks,  man  !  The  Falcon  132 

Jolt     ^\gainst  the  unpleasant  j's  of  this  rough  road         Prom,  of  May  i  228 

Jonah     that  the  fish  had  swallowed  me.  Like  ./,  Harold  n  i  38 

Rolf,  what  fish  did  swallow  J  ?     Rolf.     A  whale  !  „       11  i  42 

Jostle    winds  so  cross  and  /  among  these  towers.  „    n  ii  1.55 

Journey     I  am  an  old  man  wearied  with  my  j.  Queen  Mary  in  ii  128 

make  ready  for  the  j.  „  m  v  278 


Journey 


966 


Keep 


Journey  (continued)     so  much  m  orse  For  last  day's  /.  The  Falcon  834 

Joy     Ay,  that  was  in  her  hour  of  j ;  Queen  Mary  i  i  84 

wearied  with  my  journey,  Ev'n  with  my  j.  „      iii  ii  129 

An  angel  cry  '  There  is  more  j  in  Heaven,' —  „        iv  ii  10 

Either  to  live  with  Christ  in  Heaven  with  j,  „     iv  iii  221 

I  wish  you  j  o'  the  King's  brother.  BecTcet  iii  i  155 

0  j  for  the  promise  of  May,  (repeat)      Prom,  oj  May  i  43,  44,  723,  725 

1  reel  beneath  the  weight  of  utter  j —  The  Cup  ii  450 
for  who  could  embrace  such  an  armful  of  j  ?  Foresters  i  ii  71 
Whate'er  thy  j's,  they  vanish  with  the  day ;  „         i  iii  44 

Joyful     And  love  is  j,  innocent,  beautiful,  „        ii  ii  64 

Judas-lover     J-l  of  our  passion-play  Hath  track'd  us  hither.  Becket  iv  ii  136 

Judge  (s)     J's  had  pronoimced  That  our  yoimg  Edward  Queen  Mary  l  ii  24 

if  I'm  any  j.  By  God,  you  are  as  poor  a  poet,  „         ii  i  112 

sat  in  mine  own  courts  Judging  my  fs,  Beclcet  i  iii  369 

Doubtless,  like  fs  of  another  bench.  Foresters  iii  153 

Judge  (verb)     I  shall  j  with  my  own  eyes  Queen  Mary  i  i  133 

From  thine  own  mouth  I  j  thee —  „  i  iii  54 

You  cannot  j  the  liquor  from  the  lees.  „       iv  iii  550 

Who  but  the  bridegroom  dares  to  j  the  bride.  Becket  i  iii  685 

If  we  may  j  the  kernel  by  the  husk.  The  Cup  i  i  174 

Perhaps  you  j  him  With  feeble  charity :  „       i  ii  185 

Sit  here,  my  queen,  and  j  the  world  with  me.  Foresters  iii  152 

But  will  the  King,  tlien,  j  us  all  unheard  ?  „       iv  897 

Judged     As  if  he  had  been  the  Holy  Father,  sat  And 

/  it.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  45 

The  Lord  be  /  again  by  Pilate  ?     No  !  Becket  i  iii  97 

make  my  cry  to  the  Pope,  By  whom  I  will  be  j ;  „     i  iii  725 

Judgement    what  a  day  !  nigh  upo'  j  daay  loike.         Queen  Mary  iv  iii  468 

Judging    sat  in  mine  own  courts  J  my  judges,  Becket  i  iii  369 

Judgment    (See  also  Judgement)     J,  and  pain 

accruing  thereupon ;  Queen  Mary  iii  iii  219 

This  was  the  cause,  and  hence  the  j  on  her.  „  iii  iv  187 

For  which  God's  righteous  j  fell  upon  you  „  in  iv  240 

and  these  j's  on  the  land —  „  v  i  96 

You  must  abide  my  j,  and  my  father's,  „  v  i  145 

And  our  great  lords  will  sit  in  j  on  him.  Becket  i  iii  549 

Sons  sit  in  j  on  their  father  ! —  „      i  iii  551 

decline  The  j  of  the  King  ?  „      i  iii  676 

IS'av,  but  hear  thy  /.     The  King  and  all  his  barons 

Becket.     J\     Barons!  „      i  iii  682 

Ay,  the  princes  sat  in  j  against  me,  „      i  iv  129 

yea,  and  in  the  day  of  j  also,  „       i  iv  147 

there  are  men  Of  canker'd  j  e very \^  here —  „         v  ii  61 

by  the  j  of  the  officers  of  the  said  lord  king.  Foresters  i  iii  64 

Judgment-seat    drag  The  cleric  before  the  civil  j-s,  Becket  i  iii  84 

Juggle     What  game,  what  j,  what  devilry  are  you  playing  ?         „      v  i  153 

Juggled     She  knew  me  from  the  first,  she  j  with  me.    Prom,  of  May  in  687 

Ju^ler    J  and  bastard — bastard — he  hates  that  most —       Harold  n  ii  773 

And  for  my  part  therein — Back  to  that  j,  „  v  i  54 

Julius  (the  Third,  Pope)    Legate  From  our  most  Holy 

Father  J,  Pope,  Queen  Mary  in  iii  126 

Our  Lord  and  Holy  Father,  J,  „  in  iii  212 

JtheThird  Was  ever  just,  and  mild,  and  father-like;      „  v  ii  30 

reft  me  of  that  legateship  Which  J  gave  me,  „  v  ii  35 

July     King  closed  with  me  last  J  That  I  should  pass  the 

censures  of  the  Church  Becket  v  ii  389 

Jumieges    Did  ye  not  outlaw  your  archbishop  Robert,  Robert 

of  J —  Harold,  i  i  57 

Robert  the  Archbishop  !     Robert  of  J,  „  ii  ii  530 

Jumped     or  the  cow  that  j  over  the  moon.  Foresters  ii  i  435 

Junction    Threaten  our  /  with  the  Emperor —  Becket  n  ii  471 

June     They  did  not  last  three  J's.  Prom,  of  May  in  589 

How  few  J's  Will  heat  our  pulses  quicker !  Foresters  iv  1061 

Juno    bust  of  J  and  the  brows  and  eyes  Of  Venus ;  The  Cup  i  i  120 

Jupiter    O  all  ye  Gods— J  I— J !  „        n  453 

Just    0, 7  God  !    Sweet  mother,  you  had  time  and  cause 

enough  Queen  Mary  i  v  22 

His  learning  makes  his  burning  the  more  /.  „        iv  i  160 

Who  deems  it  a  most  j  and  holy  war.  „         v  i  147 

Julius  the  Third  Was  ever  j,  and  mild,  and  father- 
like; „  vii31 
We  have  heard  Of  thy  j,  mild,  and  equal  governance ;    Harold  ii  ii  690 
And  all  our  j  and  m  ise  and  holy  men  That  shall  be 
bom  hereafter.                                                                   „      m  i  209 


Just  (continued)     for  it  seem'd  to  me  but  /  The  Church  should 

pay  her  scutage  like  the  lords.  Becket  i  i 

All  that  you  say  is  j.     I  cannot  aaswer  it  Till  better  times,     „     in 

Justice     Your  courts  of  j  will  determine  that.  Queen  Mary  n  iv 

By  seeking  j  at  a  stranger's  hand  „  iv  i 

make  his  battle-axe  keen  As  thine  own  sharp-dividing  j,   Harold  v  i  j 
Ay,  and  the  King  of  kings.  Or  / ;  Becket  i  i 

I  trust  I  have  not ;  Not  mangled  j.  „    i  i  1 

churl  a^gainst  the  baron — yea.  And  did  him  j;  „  i  iii : 

The  King's  will  and  God's  will  and  j ;  „  i  iii 

he's  no  respect  for  the  Queen,  or  the  parson,  or  the 

j  o'  peace,  or  owt.  Prom,  of  May  i '. 

That  were  a  wild  j  indeed.  ,,         in ! 

how  often  j  drowns  Between  the  law  and  the  letter  of 

the  law  !  Foresters  iv  i 

Was  /  dead  because  the  King  was  dead  ?  „        iv  I 

AVe  dealt  in  the  wild  j  of  the  woods.  „      iv  ll 

Justiciary     Before  the  Prince  and  chief  J,  Becket  i  iii 

I  have  sent  to  the  Abbot  and  j  Foresters  n 

The  Abbot  of  York  and  his  j.  „      iv ; 

You,  my  lord  Abbot,  you  J,  I  made  you  Abbot,  you  J:         „       iv i 

Jute     Angle,  J,  Dane,  Saxon,  Norman,  Harold  ii  ii 

yet  he  held  that  Dane,  J,  Angle,  Saxon,  „         iv  i 

Jutting     O  thin-skinn'd  hand  and  j  veins.  Queen  Mary  w  ii 

But  after  rain  o'erleaps  a  j  rock  And  shoots  three 
hundred  feet.  The  Cup  i  i 


Foresteri 


Kate  (attendant  on  Marian)     You  do  well.  Mistress  K,  to 
sing  and  to  gather  roses. 
I  would  like  to  show  you.  Mistress  K, 

0  sweet  K,  my  first  love,  the  first  kiss, 

1  have  played  at  the  foils  too  with  K : 
to  stand  between  me  and  your  woman,  K. 
Speak  to  me,  K,  and  say  you  pardon  me  ! 

0  K,  true  love  and  jealousy  are  twins, 

1  have  been  a  fool  and  I  have  lost  my  K. 
O  good  K — ^If  mj'  man- Robin  were  but  a  bird-Robin, 
call  K  when  you  will,  for  I  am  close  at  hand. 
Why,  where  is  K  ?     Marian.     K  ! 
Search  them,  K,  and  see  if  they  have  spoken  truth. 
Honour  to  thee,  brave  Marian,  and  thy  K. 
my  lady,  K  and  I  have  fallen  out  again, 
come  between  me  and  my  K  and  make  us  one  again. 
Embrace  me,  Marian,  and  thou,  good  A',  Kiss  and  con 

gratulate  me,  my  good  K. 
Katekin    I  have  lodged  my  pretty  K  in  her  bower. 
Keen     Take  heed,  take  heed  !    The  blade  is  A;  as  death.  Queen  Mary  v 

make  his  battle-axe  k  As  thine  own  sharp-dividing 
justice. 
Keep  (s)     he  is  here.  And  yonder  is  thy  k.' 
Keep  (verb)     Stand  back,  k  a  clear  lane  ! 

Have  you,  my  Lord  ?     Best  k  it  for  your  own. 

You've  a  bold  heart ;  k  it  so. 

That  I  may  k  you  thus,  who  am  your  friend 

These  let  them  k  at  present ; 

To  bind  me  first  by  oaths  I  could  not  k.  And  k 

To  guard  and  k  you  whole  and  safe  from  all 

He  k's,  they  say,  some  secret  that  may  cost 

Why  do  they  k  us  here  ? 

He  is  my  good  friend,  and  I  would  k  him  so  ; 

Why  did  you  k  me  prating  ?    Horses,  there  ! 

Pray'd  me  to  pay  her  debts,  and  k  the  Faith ; 

and  k  me  still  In  eyeshot. 

arm'd  men  Ever  k  watch  beside  my  chamber  door, 

He  did  not  mean  to  k  his  vow. 

K  that  for  Norman  William  ! 

chart  here  mark'd  '  Her  Bower'  Take,  k  it,  friend. 

AA'ast  thou  not  told  to  k  thyself  from  sight  ? 

And  mean  to  k  them.  In  spite  of  thee  ! 

A'  him  awav  from  the  lone  little  isle. 


Harold  v  i 
„  II  ii 
Queen  Mary 
„  liv 
„  lir 
„  I  V 
>,     i^' 

„       I  V 

„    n  ii 

„    HI  i 

„    in  1 

„     vii 

„  viii 

>>     V  V 

Harold  ii  ii 

„      II  ii 

»      ini 

„    IV  iii 

Becket,  Pro. 

„         li 

I  iii 


I 


Keep  967 

Wp  (verb  (continued)    That  if  they  k  him  longer  as  their  guest,  Becket  ii  i  91 
" .,.-..  ,      nil  83 


Kindly 


„    iiii368 

„    iiii401 

„    mi  119 

„    III  ii  37 

„  III  iii  165 

„  IV  ii  145 

„    vii513 

The  Cwp  I  i  108 

I  i  176 

I  ii  214 

„      I  iii  132 

The  Falcon  772 

776 


I  74 
1 194 


You  did  your  best  or  worse  to  k  her  Duchy, 

we  make  the  time,  we  k  the  time,  aj',  aud  we  serve  the 

time ; 
I  would  have  done  my  most  to  k  Eome  holy, 
asked  our  mother  if  I  could  k  a  quiet  tongue  i'  my  head. 
The  King  fc's  his  forest  head  of  game  here, 
to  k  the  figure  moist  and  make  it  hold  water, 
k  her  Indungeon'd  from  one  whisper  of  the  \^ind, 
Kest  you  easy.  For  I  am  easy  to  k. 
That  in  the  summer  k's  the  mountain  side. 
Not  one  to  A;  a  woman's  fealty  when  Assailed 
k  it,  or  you  sell  me  To  torment  and  to  death. 
k  us  From  seeing  all  too  near  that  urn. 
Then  k  your  wreath,  l?ut  you  will  find  me 
I  cannot  k  your  diamonds,  for  the  gift  I  ask  for, 

But  he  will  k  his  love  to  you  for  ever  !  „  892 

Owd  Steer  wur  afeard  she  wouldn't  be  back  i'  time 

to  k  his  birthdaay,  Prom,  of  May  1 17 

I  came  back  to  k  his  birthday.     Dohson.     Well  I 

be  coomed  to  k  his  birthdaay  an'  all. 
She  icill  break  fence.     I  can't  k  her  in  order. 
if  tha  can't  k  thy  one  cow  i'  hoixler,  how  can  tha  k 

all  thy  scholards  i'  border  ? 
Let  him  k  awaay,  then ;  but  coom, 
if  the  child  could  k  Her  counsel. 
But  k  us  lovers. 

K  up  your  heart  until  we  meet  again. 
Noa,  noa  !     K  'em.     But  I  bed  a  word  to  saay  to  ye, 
has  promised  to  k  our  heads  above  Mater ; 
Ck)me,  come,  k  a  good  heart ! 
but  I  ^•  a  good  heart  and  make  the  most  of  it. 
Shall  I  k  one  little  rose  for  Little  John  ? 
so  that  you  k  the  cowl  down  and  speak  not  ? 
I  fc  it  For  holy  vows  made  to  the  blessed  Saints 
but  can  k  his  followers  true. 
Why  did  ye  k  us  at  the  door  so  long  ? 
I  fc  it  to  kill  nightingales. 
He  is  old  and  almost  mad  to  k  the  land. 
I  A;  it  for  her.     Robin.     Nay,  she  swore  it  never 
You  hope  to  hold  and  k  her  for  youi-self. 
We  all  A;  watch. 
And  we  shall  k  the  land. 
K  silence,  bully  friar,  before  the  King. 
6per    So  less  chance  for  false  k's. 

With  Cain's  answer,  my  loixl.     Am  I  his  A:  ? 
epest     that  thou  A;  a  record  of  his  birthdays  ? 
?!eping    Might  strengthen  thee  in  A;  of  thy  word, 
'    Is  guiltier  k  this,  than  breaking  it. 
I  have  done  wrong  in  A;  your  secret ; 


1 196 
1 424 

1  477 
I  639 

I  753 

II  44 
III  170 

III  252 
Foresters  i  i  28 

„  I  i  112 
„  I  ii  21 
„  I  ii  174 
II  i  77 
„  II  i  223 
„  II  i  380 
„  II  i  528 
„     II  i  591 

IV  477 
„  IV  608 
„  IV  637 
„      IV  919 

Harold  ii  ii  688 

Becket  i  iv  187 

Foresters  i  i  221 

Harold  ii  ii  730 

„      III  i  231 

Prom,  of  May  iii  399 


Knnel  if  the  city  be  sick,  and  I  cannot  call  the  k  sweet,  Becket  ii  ii  349 
I  at  your  worship  the  first  man  in  K  and  Christendom,  Queen  Mary  u  i  64 
,     Men  of  K ;  England  of  England ;  „  ii  i  157 

I    in  whose  crown  our  K  is  the  fairest  jewel.  „  ii  i  163 

Or  tamperers  with  that  treason  out  of  K.  „  ii  ii  12 

i     these  rebels  out  of  K  Have  made  strong  head  „         ii  ii  145 

j    The  Queen  of  England  or  the  rabble  of  £"  ?  „        ii  ii  274 

And  strong  to  throw  ten  Wyatts  and  all  K.  „        ii  ii  354 

he  was  my  neighbour  once  in  K.  „         ii  iii  86 

A  hundred  here  and  hundreds  hang'd  in  K.  „  iii  i  2 

'twas  you  That  sign'd  the  burning  of  poor  Joan  oi  K;       „       iv  ii  206 
happy  home-return  and  the  King's  kiss  of  peace  in  K.    Becket  in  iii  329 
]  Qtish    The  Queen  of  England — or  the  K  Squire  ?      Queen  Mary  ii  ii  269 
"    '       "  -       -     .  .  ^^  II  iv  17 

II  i  158 

III  iv  359 

III  V  269 

Harold  ii  ii  739 

V  i  275 

Becket,  Pro.  204 

III  i  193 
Prom,  of  May  i  552 


These  K  ploughmen  cannot  break  the  guards. 
pt    you  that  have  k  your  old  customs  upright, 
I  A:  my  head  for  use  of  Holy  Church ; 
I  had  k  My  Robins  and  my  cows  in  sweeter  order 
thou  hast  sworn  an  oath  Which,  if  not  A-, 
Fain  had  I  A;  thine  earldom  in  thy  hands 
by  thy  wisdom  Hast  A;  it  firm  from  shaking ; 
she  k  the  seventh  commandment  better  than  some  I 

know  on, 
We  never  k  a  secret  from  each  other ; 
you  k  your  veil  too  close  for  that  w  hen  they  carried 
you  in ; 


in  226 


Kernel    If  we  may  judge  the  k  by  the  husk.  The  Cup  lA  1174 

Kex    like  a  bottle  full  up  to  the  cork,  or  as  hollow  as  a  A-,    Foresters  iV-211 
Key     Give  me  thy  k's.  Harold  iiii  681 

See  here  this  little  A;  about  my  neck  !  „         in  i  JO 

Gave  me  the  golden  A;'s  of  Paradise.  Becket  id  54 

Kick     if  he  did  me  the  good  grace  to  A;  me  Foresters  ivB64: 

Kick'd     the  cow  A;,  and  all  her  milk  was  spilt.  Queen  Mary  in  v  266 

thou  hast  k  down  the  board.     I  know  thee  of  old.  Becket,  Pro.  315 

slave  that  eat  my  bread  has  A;  his  King  !  „  v  i  242 

play'd  at  ball  with  And  k  it  featureless —  The  Cup  ii  128 

Kill    We  do  not  A;  the  child  for  doing  that  Queen  Mary  i  v  62 

we  know  that  ye  be  come  to  A;  the  Queen, 

don't  ye  k  the  Queen  here.  Sir  Thomas ; 

we  pray  you  to  k  the  Queen  further  off, 

1  have  not  come  to  k  the  Queen  Or  here  or  there : 

We  A;  the  heretics  that  sting  the  soul — 

the  shepherd  doth  not  A;  The  sheep  that  wander 

you  must  A;  him  if  you  would  have  him  rest— 

If  Hate  can  A;,  And  Loathing  wield  a  Saxon  battle-axe — ■ 

k,  k  with  knife  or  venom  One  of  his  slanderous  harlots  ? 

s'pose  I  k's  my  pig,  and  gi'es  it  among  'em, 

'  As  flies  to  the  Gods  ;  they  A;  us  for  their  sport.' 

It  is  Nature  k's,  And  not  for  her  sport  either. 

That  hold  by  Richard,  tho'  they  k  his  deer. 

I  keep  it  to  A;  nightingales. 

if  we  A;  a  stag,  our  dogs  have  their  paws  cut  off, 
Kill'd     Thy  A;  but  for  their  pleasure  and  the  power 

and  A;  away  at  once  Out  of  the  flutter. 

0  God,  I  have  k  my  Philip  ! 
rose  or  no  rose,  has  k  the  golden  violet. 
K  half  the  crew,  dungeon'd  the  other  half 
a  rumour  then  That  you  were  A;  in  battle, 
but  we  fought  for  it  back,  And  A; — 
And  we  k  'em  by  the  score  ! 
mastiff,  That  all  but  k  the  beggar, 
niver  'a  been  talkin'  haafe  an  hour  wi'  the  divil  'at 

k  her  oan  sister. 

If  it  had  k  one  of  the  Steers  there  the  other  day, 

K  the  sward  where'er  they  sat, 
E[iIIing     And  cruel  at  it,  k  helpless  flies ; 

and  the  power  They  felt  in  A;. 
Kin     but  follow'd  the  device  of  those  Her  nearest  k : 

Let  kith  and  A;  stand  close  as  our  shield-wall. 

His  k,  all  his  belongings,  overseas  ; 

restore  his  A:,  Reseat  him  on  his  throne  of  Canterbury, 

Send  back  again  those  exiles  of  my  A; 

From  whom,  as  being  too  A:,  you  know, , 

1  dare  not  brave  my  brother.  Break  with  my  k. 
Kind    O,  k  and  gentle  master,  the  Queen's  Officers, 

she  had  seen  the  Archbishop  once.  So  mild,  so  k. 
Weant  ye  gi'e  me  a  A;  answer  at  last  ? 
saints  were  so  k  to  both  on  us  that  he  was  dead 
before  he  was  bom. 
Kindle     He  hath  gone  to  k  Norway  against  England, 

And  A;  all  our  vales  with  myrtle-blossom, 
Kindled    sparkles  out  as  quick  Almost  as  k ; 
and  A;  with  the  palms  Of  Christ ! 
you  should  know  that  whether  A  wind  be  warm  or 

cold,  it  serves  to  fan  A  A;  fire, 
after  much  smouldering  and  smoking,  be  k  again 

upon  yoxu"  quarter, 
the  fire,  when  first  k,  said  to  the  smoke. 
Kindlier    The  running  down  the  chase  is  k  sport 

and  will  pray  for  you  That  you  may  thrive,  but  in 

some  k  trade.  Foresters  iii.258 

Kindliest     The  k  man  I  ever  knew ;  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  421 

Kindly     Be  k  to  the  Normans  left  among  us,  Harold  in  i  303 

A  k  rendering  Of  '  Render  unto  Caesar.'  ...  „      in  ii  167 

Thou  art  too  A:.  „      iv  iii  32 

Not  A;  to  them  ?    Sinnatus.    K?    O  the  most  k  Prince 

in  all  the  world  !  The  Cup  i  ii  354 

Yet  he  seem'd  A;,  And  said  he  loathed  the  cruelties  „       i  ii  372 

he  always  took  you  so  A;,  he  always  took  the  world 

so  A-.  The  Falcon  187 

made  a  wry  mouth  at  it,  but  he  took  it  so  A;,  „  191 


H  iii  108 

II  iii  110 

„      II  iii  114 

„      II  iii  117 

„      HI  W  68 

„    inivl02 

V  V  69 

Harold  v  i  413 

Becket  iv  ii  409 

Prom,  of  May  1 147 

I  264 

1-272 

Foresters  i  iii  100 

ni380 

IV.224 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  74 

in  V  163 

vvlSl 

Becket,  Pro.  351 

„       V  ii  444 

The  FalconM2 

615 

v620 

Prom,  of  May  I  559 

n.604 

ni-249 

Foresters  n  ii  152 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  65 

„  iniv  76 

in  i  380 

Harold  I  i  398 

Becket  ii.i  71 

„  niill7 

„  in  iiil87 

„  IV  ii  307 

The  Falcon  257 

Queen  Mary  I  iil07 

Becket  v  ii  120 

Prom,  of  May  II-.63 

Foresters  n  i  372 

Harold  iii.i  79 

The  Cup  n-267 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  74 

I  V  93 

I  V.621 

Becket  n  ii  313 
„  u  ii  31« 
„    IV  ii  213 


Kindly 


968 


King 


Kindly  (continued)     he  always  took  you  so  k —  The  Falcon  195 

And  were  my  k  father  sound  again,  Foresters  iii  81 

Kindn^s    beget  A  k  from  him,  for  his  heart  was  rich,  Queen  Mary  iv  i  169 

0  Bonner,  if  I  ever  did  you  k —  „  iv  ii  152 
but  smile  As  k,  watching  all,  Harold  i  i  367 

King  (See  also  Baby-king,  Boy-king,  Co-king,  Father- 
king,  Giant-king,  Mock-king,  Monk-kiag,  Vice- 
king)     and  this  wrought  Upon  the  ^- ;  Qween  Mary  \  Vi  11 

You  look'd  a  fc.                                -  «  i  iii  103 

but  we  play  with  Henry,  K  of  France,  „  i  iii  131 

The  K  is  skilful  at  it  ?  „  i  iii  144 

And  so  you  well  attend  to  the  k's  moves,  „  i  iii  152 
a  K  That  with  her  own  pawns  plays  against  a 

Queen,  Whose  play  is  all  to  find  herself  z,K.  ,.  i  iii  161 

make  him  K  belike.  „  i  iv  212 

A  k  to  be — is  he  not  noble,  girl  ?  „  i  v  4 

then  the  K — that  traitor  past  forgiveness,  „  i  v  28 

What  says  the  K  your  master  ?  „  i  v  248 

if  this  Philip  be  the  titular  k  Of  England,  „  i  v  254 

but  your  k  stole  her  a  babe  from  Scotland  „  i  v  291 

Thou  speakest  of  the  enemy  of  thy  k.  „  i  v  327 

he  will  be  K,  K  of  England,  my  masters ;  „  ii  i  173 

and  if  Philip  come  to  be  K,  O  my  God  !  „  n  i  199 

to  whom  The  k,  my  father,  did  commit  his  trust ;  „  ii  ii  208 

To  be  your  k,  ye  would  rejoice  thereat,  „  ii  ii  224 

Makes  enemies  for  himself  and  for  his  k;  ,,  ii  ii  399 

Their  cry  is,  Philip  never  shall  be  k.  „  ii  iv  2 

Left  him  and  fled ;  and  thou  that  would'st  be  K,  „  n  iv  83 

My  foes  are  at  my  feet,  and  Philip  K.  „  ii  iv  143 
Nay,  he  is  K,  you  know,  the  K  of  Naples.     The 
father  ceded  Naples,  that  the  son  Being  a  K, 

might  wed  a  Queen —  „  iii  i  72 

The  K  of  France  will  help  to  break  it.  „  in  i  105 

The  French  K  winks  at  it.  „  in  i  160 

Long  live  the  K  and  Queen,  Philip  and  Mary !  „  in  i  208 

There  be  both  K  and  Queen,  Philip  and  Mary.    Shout !    „  m  i  296 

where  you  gave  your  hand  To  this  great  Catholic  K.  „  in  ii  92 

happily  symboll'd  by  The  K  your  husband,  ,,  ni  ii  110 

The  K  is  here  ! — My  star,  my  son  !  „  in  ii  183 

He's  here,  and  k,  or  will  be — yet  cocksbody  !  „  in  iii  44 

The  K  and  I,  my  Lords,  now  that  all  traitors  „  in  iv  1 

the  K  And  you  together  our  two  suns  in  one ;  „  iir  iv  18 

bolster'd  up  The  gross  K's  headship  of  the  Church,  „  in  iv  246 

The  Church's  evil  is  not  as  the  K's,  „  iii  iv  273 

But  not  the  force  made  them  our  mightiest  Vs.  „  in  iv  336 

Crown'd  slave  of  slaves,  and  mitred  k  of  k's.  „  ni  iv  38.1 
'  It  is  the  K's  wish,  that  you  should  wed  Prince 

Philibert  of  Savoy.  „  iii  v  221 

Why  then  the  K\  for  I  would  have  him  bring  it  „  iii  vi  21 

Against  the  K,  the  Queen,  the  Holy  Father,  „  in  vi  33 

'~The  K  hath  wearied  of  his  barren  bride.'  „  in  vi  140 

K  and  Queen,  To  whom  he  owes  his  loyalty  „  iv  i  21 

Stood  out  against  the  K  in  your  behalf,  „  iv  i  126 

And  when  the  K's  divorce  was  sued  at  Rome,  „  iv  iii  41 

Friend  for  so  long  time  of  a  mighty  K;  „  iv  iii  73 

Obey  your  K  and  Queen,  and  not  for  dread  „  iv  iii  177 

1  conclude  the  K  a  beast ;  Verily  a  lion  if  you  will —  „  iv  iii  411 
Here  is  the  K.  „  v  i  15 
There  is  no  k,  not  were  he  ten  times  k,  „  v  i  62 
The  K  of  France  the  K  of  England  too.  „  v  i  198 
Madam,  I  brought  My  K's  congratulations ;  „  v  ii  570 
My  K  would  know  if  you  be  fairly  served,  „  v  iii  20 
I  take  it  that  the  k  hath  spoken  to  you ;  „  v  iii  85 
Ay,  tell  the  K  that  I  will  muse  upon  it ;  „  v  iii  89 
But  I  am  much  beholden  to  your  K.  „  v  iii  99 
I  am  much  beholden  to  your  K,  your  master.  „  v  iii  111 
the  one  K,  the  Christ,  and  all  things  in  common,  as 

in  the  day  of  the  first  church,  when  Christ  Jesus 

was  K.  „  V  iv  53 

lair  a  likeness  As  your  great  K  in  armour  „  v  v  29 
He  can  but  read  the  k's  face  on  his  coins.    Stigand.    Ay, 

ay,  young  lord,  there  the  k's  face  is  power.  Harold  i  i  71 

To  sleek  and  supple  himself  to  the  k's  hand.  „     i  i  149 

Too  hardy  with  thy  k\  „     i  i  198 

alter  those  twelve  years  a  boon,  my  k,  ,,     i  i  226 


King  (coMinued)     What  lies  upon  the  mind  of  our  good  k        Harold  i  i  269 
Brother,  the  k  is  wiser  than  he  seems ;  And  Tostig  knows 
it;   Tostig  loves   the   k.     Harold.      And    love   should 

know ;  and — be  the  k  so  wise, —  „     i  i  272 
The  k  hath  made  me  Earl ;  make  me  not  fool !     Nor 

make  the  K  a  fool,  who  made  me  Earl !  ,»      i  i  288 

Who  made  the  K  who  made  thee,  make  thee  Earl.  „     i  i  294 

Pray  God  the  people  choose  thee  for  their  k\  ?,     i  i  315 

Ana  thou  art  ever  here  about  the  K :  „     i  i  321 

To  the  good  k  who  gave  it — not  to  you —  „      i  i  407 

The  k  !  the  k  is  ever  at  his  prayers  ;  „      i  i  410 

In  all  that  handles  matter  of  the  state  I  am  the  k.  ,,     i  i  413 

thou  hast  taught  the  A;  to  spoil  him  too;  „      i  i  451 

Farewell,  my  A;.     Harold.     Not  yet,  but  then — my  queen.  ,,    i  ii  137 

If  he  were  K  of  England,  I  his  queen,  „    i  ii  154 

lest  the  k  Should  yield  his  ward  to  Harold's  will.  :,    i  ii  158 

'  0  thou  more  saint  than  kl'  „    i  ii  168 

Tostig,  Edward  hath  made  him  Earl:  he  would  be  k: —  „    i  ii  187 

Harold  Hear  the  k's  music,  all  alone  with  him,  „    i  ii  194 

Who  knows  I  may  not  dream  myself  their  A; !  .,    i  ii  252 

a  whale  to  a  whelk  we  have  swallowed  the  K  of  England.  „      n  i  45 
Who  shall  be  k's  of  England.     I  am  heir  Of  England  by 

the  promise  of  her  k.  „  n  ii  123 

there  the  great  Assembly  choose  their  k,  „  n  ii  127 

I  ^vill  be  k  of  England  by  the  laws,  „  ii  ii  130 

More  kinglike  he  than  like  to  prove  a  k.  „  ii  ii  143 

What  said  the  K?     'I  pray  you  do  not  „  n  ii  217 

Yea,  yea,  he  would  be  k  of  England.  „  ii  ii  369 

And  he  our  lazy-pious  Norman  K,  „  ii  ii  444 

our  good  K  Kneels  mumbling  some  old  bone —  „  ii  ii  468 

The  k,  the  lords,  the  people  clear'd  him  of  it.  „  ii  ii  522 

and  a  child.  Will  England  have  him  k?  „  ii  ii  573 

]OTomised  that  if  ever  he  were  k  In  England,  „  ii  ii  587 

Ay  ...  if  the  k  have  not  revoked  his  promise.  „  ii  ii  609 

Thou  Shalt  be  verily  k — all  but  the  name —  „  ii  ii  632 

I,  the  Count— the  AT— Thy  friend—  „  ii  ii  754 

Then  our  great  Council  wait  to  crown  thee  K —  „       m  i  4 

sickness  of  our  saintly  k,  for  whom  My  prayers  „  in  i  164 

Nay — but  the  council,  and  the  k  himself,  „  in  i  171 

It  lies  beside  thee,  k,  upon  thy  bed.  „  in  i  195 

Let  me  be  buried  there,  and  all  our  k's,  „  in  i  208 

It  shall  be  granted  him,  my  k ;  „  in  i  228 
we  be  not  bound  by  the  k's  voice  In  making  of  a  k,  yet 

the  k's  voice  „  in  i  236 

my  lord,  my  k  !     He  knew  not  whom  he  sware  by.  ,,  in  i  255 

I  did  not  dream  then  I  should  be  k. —  „  in  i  271 

and  dear  son,  swear  When  thou  art  k,  „  in  i  306 

but  to  please  our  dying  k,  and  those  Who  make  „  iii  i  329 

Our  holy  k  Hath  given  his  virgin  lamb  to  Holy  Church  „  in  i  333 

for  the  it  Is  holy,  and  hath  talk'd  with  God,  „  in  i  354 

And  our  great  Council  wait  to  crown  thee  ll.  „  in  i  407 

Crown'd,  crown'd  and  lost,  crown'd  K —  „     in  ii  2 
Harold  the  K  !     Harold.    Call  me  not  K,  but  Harold. 

Edith.     Nay,  thou  art  K  !  „   in  ii  32 

Thine,  thine,  or  K  or  churl !  „    in  ii  36 

rather  let  me  be  K  of  the  moment  to  thee,  „   in  ii  41 

than  to  reign  K  of  the  world  without  it.  „    in  ii  45 

thou  be  only  K  of  the  moment  over  England.  „    in  ii  51 

Tho'  somewhat  less  a  A;  to  my  true  self  „   in  ii  53 

nor  priestly  A;  to  cross  Their  billings  ere  they  nest.  „    in  ii  93 

He,  and  the  giant  K  of  Norway,  „  in  ii  122 

The  K  hath  cursed  him,  if  he  marry  me ;  „  in  ii  189 
Let  not  our  great  k  Believe  us  sullen — only  shamed  to 
the  quick  Before  the  k  —  as  having  been  so  bruised 
By  Harold,  A;  of  Norway;  but  our  help  Is  Harold,  k 
of  England.     Pardon  us,  thou  !     Our  silence  is  our 

reverence  for  the  A; !  „       iv  i  6 

old  Northumbrian  crown.  And  A;'*  of  our  own  choosing.  „     iv  i  33 

Had  in  him  kingly  thoughts — a  A;  of  men,  „     iv  i  83 

Not  made  but  born,  like  the  great  A;  of  all,  „     iv  i  85 

bad  the  A;  Who  doted  on  him,  „   iv  i  102 

K !  thy  brother.  If  one  may  dare  to  speak  the  truth,  „  iv  i  107 

good  A;  would  deign  to  lend  an  ear  Not  overscomful,  „  iv  i  135 

thence  a  A;  may  rise  Half-Godwin  and  half-Alfgar,  „  iv  i  142 

The  A;  can  scarcely  dream  that  we,  „  iv  i  163 


King 


969 


King 


King  (contimied)    Who  dares  arraign  us,  k,  of  such  a  plot  ?    Harold  iv  i  168      Ehig  (continued)   However  k's  and  queens  may  frown  on  thee.    Beckd  i  ii  18 


Yea,  take  the  Sacrament  upon  it,  k. 

The  nimble,  wild,  red,  wiry,  savage  k — 

Thou  hast  but  cared  to  make  thyself  a  k — ■ 

Every  man  about  his  k  Fought  like  a  k ;  the  k  like  his 

own  man, 
My  lord  the  K  !     William  the  Norman, 
To  do  with  England's  choice  of  her  own  k? 
It  the  A;  fall,  may  not  the  kingdom  fall  ?    But  if  I  faU,  I 

fall,  and  thou  art  k ;  And,  if  I  win,  I  win,  and  thou 

art  k; 
How  should  the  people  fight  When  the  k  flies  ? 
How  should  the  K  of  England  waste  the  fields  Of  England, 
That  scared  the  dying  conscience  of  the  k, 
I  thy  k,  who  came  before  To  tell  thee 

0  hapless  Harold !    K  but  for  an  hour ! 
The  k's  last  word — '  the  arrow  !  ' 
advise  the  k  Against  the  race  of  Godwin. 
Get  thou  into  thy  cloister  as  the  k  Wiird  it: 

1  have  not  spoken  to  the  k  One  word ; 
The  k  commands  thee,  woman  ! 
England  Is  but  her  k,  and  thou  art  Harold  ! 
Edith,  if  I,  the  last  English  K  of  England- 
all  the  monks  of  Peterboro'  Strike  for  the  k ; 
k  of  England  stands  between  his  banners. 
They  have  broken  the  commandment  of  the  k ! 
With  whom  they  play'd  their  game  against  the  k  ! 

Aldwyth.     The  k  is  slain,  the  kingdom  overthrown  ! 
being  the  true  wife  Of  this  dead  K, 
And  this  dead  k's  Who,  k  or  not, 
When  all  men  counted  Harold  would  be  k, 
Every  man  about  his  k  Fell  where  he  stood. 
I  am  K  of  England,  so  they  thwart  me  not. 
Look  to  your  k. 

my  bishop  Hath  brought  your  fc  to  a  standstill. 
Why,  there  then — down  go  bishop  and  k  together, 
to  the  statesman  Who  serves  and  loves  his  k,  and  whom 

the  k  Loves  not  as  statesman, 
That  tread  the  k's  their  children  under-heel^ 
My  young  son  Henry  crown'd  the  K  of  England, 
K,  Church,  and  State  to  him  but  foils  wherein 
God's  favour  and  k's  favour  might  so  clash 
Parthian  shaft  of  a  forlorn  Cupid  at  the  K's  left  breast, 
and  the  K  gave  it  to  his  Chancellor, 
but  because  he  had  the  love  of  the  A', 
retinue  of  three  k's  behind  him,  outroyalling  royalty  ? 
he  holp  the  K  to  break  down  our  castles, 
you  could  not  see  the  K  for  the  kinglings. 
she,  whom  the  K  loves  indeed,  is  a  power  in  the  State. 
Kival ! — ay,  and  when  the  K  passes, 
secret  matter  which  would  heat  the  K  against  thee 
thou  in  thy  way  shouldst  be  jealous  of  the  K, 
then  the  K  came  honeying  about  her, 
make  her  as  hateful  to  herself  and  to  the  K, 
wreak  our  spite  on  the  rosefaced  minion  of  the  K,  and 

bring  her  to  the  level  of  the  dust,  so  that  the  K — 
To  please  the  K  !     Becket.     Ay,  and  the  K  of  k's, 
Shall  I  fall  off — to  please  the  K  once  more  ? 
Not  fight — tho'  somehow  traitor  to  the  K — 
•*  I  mean  to  fight  mine  utmost  for  the  Church,  Agamst 

the  K '  ?    Becket.    But  dost  thou  think  tlie  K  Forced 

mine  election?     Herbert.     I  do  think  the  K  Was 

potent  in  the  election,  and  why  not  ?     Why  should 

not  Heaven  have  so  inspired  the  A'  ? 
The  rift  that  runs  between  me  and  the  K. 
thro'  The  random  gifts  of  careless  k's, 
here  I  gash  myself  asunder  from  the  K, 
What  friend !     Rosamund.     The  K. 
My  friend,  the  A  !  .  .  .     O  thou  Great  Seal  of  England, 

Given  me  by  my  dear  friend  the  A  of  England — 
To  tell  the  A,  my  friend,  I  am  against  him. 
O,  my  dear  friend,  the  K  !     O  brother  !— 
Let  the  Great  Seal  be  sent  Back  to  the  A  to-morrow. 
The  A  may  rend  the  bearer  limb  from  limb.   . 
Of  this  wild  Rosamund  to  please  the  A, 


,,   IV  i 

183 

„  IV  i 

198 

„  IV  ii  75 

„  IV  iii  56 

„iviii 

180 

„   V  i  20 

J,  V  i 

123 

„     V  i 

138 

, 

„  V  i 

140 

i>  V  i 

212 

»  vi 

235 

«  y  i 

258 

„     V  i 

266 

,.  V  i 

281 

1.  V  i 

309 

,,     V  i 

335 

„     V  i 

340 

>.  V  i 

376 

„     V  i 

384 

»  V  i 

447 

..  "*"  i 

486 

«  V  i 

615 

V  ii  14 

„   V  ii  85 

„  V  ii 

123 

„  V  ii 

133 

1.  V  ii 

181 

„  vii 

196 

ec 

ket,  Pro.  33 

Pre 

.44 

Pre 

.48 

Pre 

.78 

Pro. 

213 

Pro. 

224 

Pro. 

268 

Pro. 

295 

Pro. 

340 

Pro. 

431 

Pro. 

443 

Pro. 

445 

Pro. 

446 

Pro. 

453 

Pro. 

482 

Pro. 

484 

Pro. 

488 

Pro. 

512 

Pro. 

516 

Pro. 

527 

Pro. 

530 

ii31 

1  i 

110 

I  i 

113 

iil25 
iil41 
iil59 
I  i  175 
ii326 

ii335 
ii343 
ii360 
1 1376 
ii378 
ii393 


in  your  chancellorship  you  served  The  follies  of  the  A'. 
Priest  Sits  winking  at  the  license  of  a  k,  Altho'  we  grant 

when  k's  are  dangerous  The  Church  must  play  into 

the  hands  of  k's ; 
That  k's  are  faithful  to  their  marriage  vow. 
Where  I  shall  meet  the  Barons  and  my  A. 
Stir  up  the  A,  the  Lords ! 
I  will  make  thee  hateful  to  th/  A. 
Where  is  the  A  ?     Soger.     Gone  hawking  on  the  Nene, 
But  by  the  K's  command,  are  written  down,  And  l)y  the 

K's  command  I,  John  of  Oxford, 
whether  between  laymen  or  clerics,  shall  be  tried  in  the 

K's  court.' 
he  shall  answer  to  the  summons  of  the  A'*  court  to  be 

tried  therein.' 
the  A,  till  another  be  appointed,  shall  receive  the 

revenues  thereof.' 
Is  the  K's  treasuiy  A  fit  place  for  the  monies  of  the  Church, 
the  A  shall  summon  the  chapter  of  that  church  to  court, 
with  the  consent  of  our  lord  the  A,  and  by  the  advice 
Without  the  license  of  our  lord  the  K. 
Are  ye  my  masters,  or  my  lord  the  A  ? 
The  A  is  quick  to  anger ; 
sheathe  your  swords,  ye  will  displease  the  A. 
Save  the  K's  honour  here  before  his  barons. 
He  pray'd  me  to  pray  thee  to  pacify  Thy  A ;  for  if  thou 

go  against  thy  K,  Then  must  he  likewise  go  against 

thy  A,  And  then  thy  A  may  join  the  Antipope, 
A  swore  to  our  cardinals  He  meant  no  harm 
He  told  me  thou  shouldst  pacify  the  K, 
He  heads  the  Church  against  the  A  with  thee. 
I  came,  your  K !     Nor  dwelt  alone, 
that  had  found  a  K  Who  ranged  confusions. 
The  master  of  his  master,  the  K's  k. — God's  eyes  !     I 

had  meant  to  make  him  all  but  k.     Chancellor- 
Archbishop,  he  might  well  have  sway'd  All  England 

inider  Henry,  the  j'oung  K, 
it  is  the  traitor  that  imputes  Treachery  to  his  K ! 
The  A  will  not  abide  thee  with  thy  cross. 
Make  not  thy  A  a  traitorous  murderer. 
Arm'd  with  thy  cross,  to  come  before  the  A  ? 
Nay,  nay,  my  lord,  thou  must  not  hrnYe  the  A. 
Now  as  Archbishop  goest  against  the  A ; 
Ay,  ay  !  but  art  thou  stronger  than  the  A  ? 
I  promised  The  A  to  obey  these  customs, 
Tell  what  I  say  to  the  A. 
deliver  Canterbury  To  our  K's  hands  again, 
Fealty  to  the  k,  obedience  to  thyself  ? 
But  the  A  rages — -most  are  with  the  A ; 
The  K's  '  God's  eyes  ! '  come  now  so  thick  and  fast, 
the  A  demands  three  hundred  marks, 
Tell  the  A  I  spent  thrice  that  in  fortifying  his  castles, 
the  A  demands  seven  hundred  marks.  Lent  at  the  siege 

of  Thoulouse  by  the  A. 
the  A  demands  five  hundred  marks. 
For  which  the  A  was  bound  security, 
A  Demands  a  strict  account  of  all  those  revenues 
my  good  lord  Leicester,  The  A  and  I  were  brothers. 

All  I  had  I  lavish'd  for  the  glory  of  the  K ; 

The  A  and  all  his  lords Becket.     Son,  first  hear  me ! 

In  fee  and  barony  of  the  A,  decline  The  judgment  of 

the  A  ?     Becket.     The  A  !    I  hold  Nothing  in  fee 

and  barony  of  the  A. 
The  A  and  all  his  barons Becket.    Judgment ! 

Barons  ! 
K  would  throne  me  in  the  great  Archbishoprick : 
For  the  K's  pleasure  rather  than  God's  cause 
God  from  me  withdraws  Himself,  And  the  A  too. 
Why  thou,  the  A,  the  Pope,  tlie  Saints,  the  world, 
I  refuse  to  stand  By  the  K's  censure, 
The  A,  these  customs,  all  the  Church, 
A  commands  you,  upon  pain  of  death. 
The  A  hath  frowned  upon  me. 
there  be  those  about  our  K  who  would  have  thy  blood.' 


Iii  31 


iii66 
Iii  78 
I  ii85 
Iii  88 
Iii  92 
I  iii  1 

I  iii  72 

I  iii  81 

I  iii  89 

I  iii  100 
I  iii  104 
I  iii  108 
I  iii  112 
I  iii  130 
I  iii  135 
I  iii  164 
I  iii  180 
I  iii  187 


I  iii  207 
I  iii  215 
I  iii  225 
I  iii  245 
I  iii  357 
I  iii  370 


iii  462 
iii  485 
iii  488 
iii  500 
iii  510 
iii  515 
iii  531 
iii  535 
iii  557 
iii  564 
iii  581 
iii  587 
iii  591 
iii  609 
iii  626 
iii  631 

iii  634 
iii  641 
iii  645 
iii  649 

iii  661 
iii  671 


iii  675 

iii  683 
iii  693 
iii  697 
iii  703 
iii  705 
iii  723 
iii  726 
iii  752 
I  iv25 
I  iv  55 


King 


970 


King 


King  {continued)    frosted  off  me  by  the  first  cold  frown  of 

the  A'.  Becket  i  iv  68 

The  Church  is  ever  at  variance  with  the  h's,  „      i  iv  79 

If  the  K  hold  his  purpose,  I  am  myself  a  beggar.  „       i  iv  89 

K's  verdurer  caught  him  a-hunting  in  the  forest,  „       i  iv  95 

he  licks  my  face  and  moans  and  cries  out  against  the  K.  „     i  iv  100 

Were  the  Church  k,  it  would  be  otherwise.  „    i  iv  104 

K's  meat !  By  the  Lord,  „  i  iv  140 
Becket  shall  be  k,  and  the  Holy  Fattier  shall  be  k,  and 

the  world  shall  live  by  the  K's  venison  „    i  iv  270 

A  greater  K  Than  thou  art.  Love,  „  ii  i  115 
It  is,  my  boy,  to  side  m  ith  the  K  when  Chancellor, 

and  then  to  be  made  Archbishop  and  go  against 

the  K  „      II  i  236 

England  scarce  would  hold  Young  Henry  k,  „       ii  ii  32 

for  any  rough  sea  Blowii  by  the  breath  of  k's.  „  ii  ii  108 
rift  he  made  Mav  close  between  us,  here  I  am 

wholly  fc,         '  „     iiiil33 

Ay,  ay  !  the  K  humbles  himself  enough.  „     ii  ii  184 

suppress  God's  honour  for  the  sake  Of  any  k  „  ii  ii  221 
we  grant  the  Church  K  over  this  world's  k's,  yet,  my 

good  lord,  We  that  are  k's  are  something  in  this 

world,  „  II  ii  243 
who  hath  withstood  two  K's  to  their  faces  for  the 

honour  of  God.  „  ii  ii  276 
I  thank  you,  sons  ;  when  k's  but  hold  by  crowns,  The 

crowd  that  himgers  for  a  crown  in  Heaven  Is  my 

true  k.  „     II  ii  280 

Thy  true  K  bad  thee  be  A  fisher  of  men  ;  „     ii  ii  285 

I  am  too  like  the  K  here  ;  „     ii  ii  288 

But  the  K  hath  bought  half  the  College  of  Eedhats.  „     ii  ii  373 

shakes  at  mortal  k's — her  vacillation.  Avarice,  craft —  „  ii  ii  405 
The  K  had  had  no  power  except  for  Eome.     'Tis  not 

the  K  who  is  guilty  of  mine  exile,  „  ii  ii  412 
Deny  not  thou  God's  honour  for  a  k.    The  K  looks 

troubled.  „     ii  ii  424 

being  ever  duteous  to  the  K,  „     ii  ii  464 

I  am  the  K,  his  father.  And  I  will  look  to  it.  „  iii  i  26 
and  I  ha'  seen  the  K  once  at  Oxford,  and  he's  as  like 

the  K  „  III  i  163 
thought  at  first  it  was  the  K,  only  you  know  the  K's 

married,  „  m  i  166 
I  thought  if  it  were  the  K's  brother  he  had  a  better 

bride  than  the  K,  „     in  i  173 

JMyself  confused  with  parting  from  the  K.  „    iii  i  238 

Have  track'd  the  K  to  this  dark  inland  wood  ;  „       in  ii  3 

Our  woodland  Circe  that  hath  witch'd  the  K  ?  „     in  ii  33 

The  K  keeps  his  forest  head  of  game  here,  „     in  ii  37 

let  the  K's  fine  game  look  to  itself.  „     in  ii  44 

There  is  the  K  talking  with  Walter  Map  ?  „  iii  iii  22 
K  at  last  is  fairly  scared  by  this  cloud — this  intenlict. 

I  have  been  more  for  the  A'  than  the  Church  in  this 

matter —  „  in  iii  63 
He  thought  less  of  two  k's  than  of  one  Roger  the  k 

of  the  occasion.  „     in  iii  90 

like  the  Greek  k  when  his  daughter  was  sacrificed,  „  in  iii  104 

K  would  act  servitor  and  hand  a  dish  to  his  son  ;  „  in  iii  138 

part  royal,  for  K  and  kingling  both  laughed,  „  in  iii  157 

if  Thomas  have  not  flung  himself  at  the  K's  feet.  „  in  iii  169 
Ay,  K  !  for  in  thy  kingdom,  as  thou  knowest.  The 

spouse  of  the  Great  A,  thy  A',  hath  fallen —  „  in  iii  173 

ere  Pope  or  K  Had  come'  between  us  !  „  in  iii  267 
is  the  K's  if  too  high  a  stile  for  your  lordship  to 

overstep  „  ni  iii  280 

You  wrong  the  A :  he  meant  what  he  said  to-day.  „  in  iii  299 

A'  hath  many  more  wolves  than  he  can  tame  „  m  iii  321 

if  it  suit  their  purpose  to  howl  for  the  A,  „  ni  iii  324 

Farewell.    I  must  follow  the  A.  „  in  iii  330 

Uid  the  A  Speak  of  the  customs  ?  „  in  iii  332 

The  K's  not  like  to  die  for  that  which  dies  ;  „  in  iii  338 
I  am  mine  own  self  Of  and  belonging  to  the  K.    The 

A  Hath  di^  irs  ofs  and  ons,  ofs  and  belongings,  „      iv  ii  30 

Tiie  A  shall -...^vr  hear  of  me  again,  „    iv  ii  102 

burrow  where  the  /•'  Would  miss  her  and  for  ever.  „    iv  ii  158 

By  very  God,  tb«  CK«8  I  gave  tlie  A  !  „    iv  ii  199 


King  (continued)    Has  wheedled  it  off  the  K's  neck  to  her 

own.  Becket  iv  ii  201 
We  thought  to  scare  this  minion  of  the  A  Back  from 

her  churchless  commerce  with  the  A  .,      iv  ii  331 

The  A  himself,  for  love  of  his  own  sons,  ,.      iv  ii  344 

You  have  lost  The  ear  of  the  A'.  „      iv  ii  355 

The  world  hath  trick'd  her — that's  the  K  ;  „      iv  ii  376 

A  plucks  out  their  eyes  Who  anger  him,  „      iv  ii  405 
Madam,  I  am  as  much  man  as  the  k.     Madam,  I  fear 

Church-censures  like  your  A'.  „      iv  ii  433 

we  will  to  France  and  be  Beforehand  with  the  K,  „      iv  ii  455 
Before  you  made  him  k.     But  Becket  ever  moves 

against  a,k.  „           v  i  24 

The  Chvirch  is  all — -the  crime  to  be  a  k.  ,,           v  i  27 

one  half,  but  half-alive.  Cries  to  the  A'.  „          v  i  65 

The  brideless  Becket  is  thy  A;  and  mine  :  „         v  i  108 

I  dream'd  I  was  the  consort  of  a  k,  „        v  i  144 

What  made  the  A  cry  out  so  furiously  ?  „         v  i  220 
he  did  his  best  To  break  the  barons,  and  now  braves 

the    A.     Eleanor.     Strike,  then,   at  once,  the  A 

would  have  him —  „        v  i  236 

slave  that  eat  my  bread  has  kick'd  his  A  !  „         v  i  243 

gone  to  the  A  And  taken  our  anathema  with  him.  ,,            v  ii  7 

Can  the  A  de-anathematise  this  York  ?  „          v  ii  10 

Thou  hast  waged  God's  war  against  the  K  ;  „         v  ii  47 

That  thou  wouldst  ex-communicate  the  A'.  „          v  ii  91 

he  had  gone  too  far  Into  the  K's  own  woods  ;  „        v  ii  108 
Cried  out  against  the  cruelty  of  the  A.     I  said  it  was 

the  K's  courts,  not  the  A  ;  „       v  ii  113 

and  she  wish'd  The  Church  were  k:  „       v  ii  118 
when  I  was  Chancellor  to  the  A,  I  fear  I  was  as  cruel 

.  as  the  A.  „       v  ii  123 

For  once  in  France  the  A  had  been  so  harsh,  „       v  ii  139 

'  The  A  is  sick  and  almost  unto  death.'  „       v  ii  152 
Liker  the  K.    Becket.    No,  daughter.    Rosamund.    Ay, 

but   wait   Till  his  nose   rises ;    he   will   be  very   k. 

Becket.     Ev'n  so  :  but  think  not  of  the  A  :  „        v  ii  181 

breathe  one  prayer  for  my  liege-lord  the  A',  „       v  ii  192 

we  bring  a  message  from  the  A  Beyond  the  water  ;  „       v  ii  302 

The  A  condemns  your  excommunicating —  „        v  ii  317 
Now,  sirs,  the  A'5  commands  !     Fitzurse.     The  A 

beyond  the  water,  thro'  our  voices.  Commands  you 

to  be  dutiful  and  leal  To  your  young  A  on  this 

side  of  the  water,  „       v  ii  322 

broken  Your  bond  of  peace,  your  treaty  with  the  K —  „       v  ii  351 

A  commands  you  to  absolve  the  bishops  „       v  ii  375 

The  A  commands  you.     We  are  all  K's  men.  „        v  ii  383 

A'*  men  at  least  should  know  That  their  own  A  „       v  ii  386 

What !  dare  you  charge  the  A  with  treachery  ?  „       v  ii  397 

He  makes  the  A  a  traitor,  me  a  liar.  „       v  ii  415 

If  this  be  so,  complain  to  your  young  A',  „        v  ii  449 

I  ask  no  leave  of  A,  or  mortal  man,  „        v  ii  458 

Give  to  the  A  the  things  that  are  the  K's,  „       v  ii  461 

Blared  from  the  heights  of  all  the  thrones  of  her  k's,  „       v  ii  490 

That  goes  against  our  fealty  to  the  A'.  „       v  ii  508 

I  go  to  meet  my  K  !     Grim.     To  meet  the  A  ?  „        v  ii  620 

As  you  would  force  a  k  from  being  crown'd.  „        v  iii  25 

Here,  here,  K's  men  !  „      v  iii  102 

Where  is  this  treble  traitor  to  the  A  ?  „      v  iii  108 

No  traitor  to  the  K,  but  Priest  of  God,  „      v  iii  112 

The  Pope,  the  A,  will  curse  you —  „      v  iii  182 

and  throne  One  k  above  them  all.  The  Cup  i  i  93 

The  k,  the  crown  !  their  talk  in  Rome  ?  „         i  i  98 

We  have  had  our  leagues  of  old  with  Eastern  k's,  „      i  ii  102 

There  then  I  rest,  Rome's  tributary  k.  „     i  iii  156 

This  very  day  the  Romans  crown  him  k  „           ii  64 

— and  blast  the  k  and  me,  „        ii  152 
Lay  down  the  Lydian  carpets  for  the  k.     The  k 

should  pace  on  purple  to  his  bride,  „        n  188 

And  music  there  to  greet  my  lord  the  k.  „        n  192 

Hail,  A  !     Synorix.     Hail,  Queen  !  „         n  219 

speak  I  now  too  mightily,  being  A  And  happy  !  „         n  238 

I  oam  over  all  the  fleeted  wealth  of  k's  And  peoples,  „        n  289 

Words  are  not  always,  what  thev  seem,  my  A'.  „        n  329 

Thy  turn,  Galatian  A'.               "  „        n  37» 


King 


971 


Kiss 


King  {continued)     Synorix,  first  A',  C'amma,  first  Queen  o' 

the  Realm,  The  Cup  ii  440 

you  are  still  the  k  Of  courtesy  and  liberality.  The  Falcon  292 

He  would  grapple  with  a  liou  like  the  A',    "  Foresters  i  i  186 

We  will  be  beggar'd  then  and  be  tme  to  the  A'.  „  i  i  202 

both  fought  against  the  tyranny  of  the  k's,  the  Nomians.     „  i  i  230 

the  A',  thy  god-father,  gave  it  "thee  when  a  baby.  „  i  i  285 

I  would  break  through  them  all,  like  the  A'  of  England.       „  i  i  326 

Now  that  the  sum  our  A'  is  gone,  „  i  ii  83 

For  be  he  dead,  then  John  may  be  our  A'.  „  i  ii  99 

I  may  not  hate  the  K  For  aught  I  know,  „  i  ii  115 

I  think  they  mil  be  mightier  than  the  fc.  „  i  ii  120 

I  trust  he  brings  us  news  of  the  K's  coming.  „  i  iii  53 
by  force  and  arms  hath  trespassed  against  the  k  in 

"  divers  manners,  „  i  iii  63 

The  London  folkmote  Has  made  him  all  but  k,  „  i  iii  81 
Traitors  are  rarely  bred  Save  under  traitor  k's.     Our 

vice-king  John,  True  k  of  vice —  „  ii  i  81 

Hath  made  me  k  of  all  the  discontent  Of  England  „  ii  i  87 
Sheriff  had  taken  all  our  goods  for  the  A'  without 

paying,  „  ii  i  191 
when  the  Sheriff  took  my  little  horse  for  the  A'  without 

paying  for  it —  „  ii  i  301 

given  my  whole  body  to  the  A'  had  he  asked  for  it,  „  ii  i  306 
I  ha'  served  the  A'  living,  says  she,  and  let  me  serve 

him  dead,                            '  „  ii  i  310 

He  was  the  k  o'  the  Mood.  „  ii  i  321 

Jealousy,  jealousy  of  the  k.  „  ii  ii  141 

We  never  robb'd  one  friend  of  the  true  A'.  „  iii  158 

Our  Robin,  A'  o'  the  woods,  „  iii  344 

Robin,  the  people's  friend,  the  A'  o'  the  woods  !  „  in  347 
We  care  so  much  for  a  K  ;  (repeat)  Foresters  in  429,  443 
The  ruler  of  an  hour,  but  la^rful  A',                                   Foresters  iv  47 

if  these  knaves  should  know  me  for  their  A'  ?  „  iv  134 
Great  woodland  k,  I  know  not  quarterstaff.     Little 

John.     A  fine  !    a  fine  !      He  hath  called  plain 

Robin  a  k.  „  iv  215 

did  ye  not  call  me  k  in  your  song  ?  „  iv  220 
Is  that  to  be  a  A;  ?     If  the  k  and  the  law  work  injustice, 

is  not  he  that  goes  against  the  k  and  the  law  the  true 

k  in  the  sight  of  the K  of  k's  ?   Thou  art  the  k  of  the 

forest,  and  I  would  thou  wert  the  k  of  the  land.  „  iv  228 

We  had  it  i'  the  Red  K's  time,  „  iv  303 

for  I  must  hence  upon  The  K's  affair.  „  iv  342 

Richard's  the  k  of  courtesy,  „  iv  362 

and  call  it  courtesy.  For  he's  a  k.  „  iv  368 
Richard,  again,  is  k  over  a  realm  He  hardly  knows, 

and  Robin  k  of  Sherwootl,  „  iv  387 
if  the  land  Were  ruleable  by  tongue,  thou  shouldst 

be  k.    And  yet  thou  know'st  how  little  of  thy  k\  „  iv  400 

free  the  tomb-place  of  the  A'  Of  all  the  world  ?  „  iv  409 

You,  Prince,  our  k  to  come —  „  iv  696 

Woe  to  that  land  shall  own  thee  for  her  k  !  „  iv  760 

It  is  the  K  Who  bears  all  down.  „  iv  783 

If  thou  be  k.  Be  not  a  fool  !  „  iv  789 

fighting  underhand  unholy  \vars  Against  your  lawful  k.  „  iv  822 

Thou  art  happier  than  thy  k.     Put  him  in  chains.  „  iv  838 

You  both  are  utter  traitors  to  your  k.  „  iv  844 

^^'as  justice  dead  because  the  K  was  dead  ?  „  iv  848 

on  the  faith  and  honour  of  a  ^  The  land  is  his  again.  „  iv  852 

God  save  the  A'  !  ~  „  iv  857 
The  K  forbad  it.     True,  my  liege.     King  liichard. 

How  if  the  K  command  it  ?  „  iv  865 

if  the  K  forbid  thy  marrying  With  Robin,  „  iv  874 

My  k,  I  am  but  the  echo  of  the  lips  of  love.  ,,  iv  891 

But  will  the  A',  then,  judge  as  all  unheard  ?  „  iv  896 
If  the  K  Condemn  us  without  trial,  men  will  call 

him  An  Eastern  tyrant,  not  an  English  k.  „  iv  901 

Beware,  O  A',  the  vengeance  of  the  Church.  „  iv  913 
Keep  silence,  bully  friar,  before  the  K.    Friar  Tuck.    If 

a  cat  may  look  at  a  k,  may  not  a  friar  speak  to  one  ?        „  iv  920 

He  is  but  hedge-priest,  Sir  A'.  „  iv  931 

The  k's  good  health  in  ale  and  INIalvoisie.  „  iv  968 

To  celebrate  this  advent  of  our  A' !  „  iv  1048 

And  we  must  hence  to  the  K's  court.  „  iv  1050 


King  (continued)     and  happy  that  our  A'  Is  here  again.       Foresters  iv  1098 

Now  the  K  is  home  again,  and  nevermore  to  roam 

again.  Now  the  AT  is  home  again,  the  A'  will  have 

his  own  again,  „      iv  1103 

Kingcup     Daisies  grow  again,  K's  blow  again.  Queen  Mary  in  v  90 

Kingdom    your  Grace  And  k  will  be  suck'd  into  the  war,        „  i  v  257 

Not  for  myself,  but  for  the  k—  „         in  i  455 

make  Both  of  us  happy — ay,  the  K  too.  „        m  ii  188 

The  bond  between  the  k's  be  dissolved  ;  „         in  iii  76 

A  secular  k  is  but  as  the  body  Lacking  a  soul ;  „  iv  i  32 

The  Holy  Father  in  a  secular  k  Is  as  the  soul  „  iv  i  34 

thine  earldom,  Tostig,  hath  been  a  k.  Harold  i  i  304 

The  k's  of  this  world  began  with  little,  „       iv  i  42 

He  gave  him  all  the  k's  of  the  West.  „        v  i  24 

If  the  king  fall,  may  not  the  A;  fall  ?  „      v  i  123 

The  king  is  slain,  the  k  overthrown  !  „        v  ii  16 

the  business  Of  thy  whole  k  waits  me  :  Becket,  Pro.  278 

it  was  but  the  sacrifice  of  a  A;  to  his  son,  a  smaller 

matter  ;  „    in  iii  107 

in  thy  i",  as  thou  knowest.  The  spouse  of  the  Great  King,    „     in  iii  173 

Why,  John,  my  k  is  not  of  this  world.  „  v  ii  18 

Kinghood     Your  father  was  a  man  Of  such  colossal  k.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  101 

Kingless     While  thou  and  others  in  our  k  realms  Were 

fighting  Foresters  iv  819 

Kinglier     which  will  make  My  kingship  k  to  me  Harold  in  ii  44 

Kingliest    The  k  Abbey  in  all  Christian  lands,  „     in  i  204 

Kinglike    does  your  gracious  Queen  entreat  you  k  ?        Queen  Mary  i  iii  110 

Most  goodly,  K  and  an  Emperor's  son, —  „  i  v  2 

Here  comes  the  would-be  what  I  will  be  .  .  .  fc  .  .  .      Harold  n  ii  139 

More  k  he  than  like  to  prove  a  king.  „     n  ii  142 

hath  k  fought  and  fallen.  His  birthday,  too.  „      v  ii  124 

But  k  fought  the  proud  archbishop, —  Becket  iv  ii  438 

— k  Defied  the  Pope,  and,  like  his  kingly  sires,  „      iv  ii  439 

Kingling — you  could  not  see  the  King  for  the  k's.  „      Pro.  453 

part  royal,  for  King  and  k  both  laughed,  „     in  iii  157 

Kingly    God  change  the  pebble  which  his  k  foot  First 

presses  Queen  Mary  i  v  369 

made  us  lower  our  k  flag  To  yours  of  England.  „  v  i  59 

I  trust  the  k  touch  that  cures  the  evil  May  serve  Harold  i  i  151 

he  would  give  his  k  voice  To  me  as  his  successor.  „    n  ii  588 

Nor  k  priest,  nor  priestly  king  to  cross  Their  billings  „     in  ii  93 

Ay,  but  thou  art  not  k,  only  grandson  To  Wolfnoth,  „       iv  i  68 

Had  in  him  k  thoughts — a  king  of  men,  „       iv  i  83 

despite  his  k  promise  given  To  our  own  self  of  pardon,     Becket  ii  ii  431 
Nay,  can  I  send  her  hence  Without  his  k  leave  ?  ,,     mi  220 

and,  like  his  k  sires.  The  Normans,  „    iv  ii  440 

that  stale  Church-bond  which  link'd  me  with  him  To 

bear  him  A;  sons.  „    iv  ii  449 

King-parliament    So  your  k-p  suffer  him  to  land.  Queen  Mary  i  v  365 

Kingship    to  break  down  all  k  and  queenship,  „  v  iv  48 

which  will  make  My  k  kinglier  to  me  Harold  in  ii  44 

I  should  beat  Thy  k  as  my  bishop  hath  beaten  it. 

Henry.     Hell  take  thy  bishop  then,  and  my  k  too  !      Becket,  Pro.  91 

Queen  should  play  his  k  against  thine  !  „    Pro.  236 

King  Henry  sware  That,  saving  his  King's  k,  „       i  iii  28 

mother  Would  make  him  play  his  k  against  mine.  „       il  ii  11 

E^ingston  (adj.)     we  must  round  By  A'  Bridge,  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  48 

Kingston  (s)     Be  happy,  I  am  your  friend.    To  K,  forward  !   „       n  iii  124 


Kinsman    They  blinded  my  young  k,  Alfred 
Kiss  (s)     k'es  of  all  kind  of  womankind  In  Flanders, 
The  k  that  charms  thine  eyelids  into  sleep, 
Shall  see  the  dewy  k  of  dawn  no  more 
and  command  That  k  my  due  when  subject, 
There  might  be  more  than  brother  in  my  k, 
For  there  was  more  than  sister  in  my  k, 
link  rasts  with  the  breath  of  the  first  after- 
marriage  k, 
thy  k — Sacred  !     I'll  kiss  it  too. 
To-day  I  almost  fear'd  your  k  was  colder — 
A'  in  the  bower.  Tit  on  the  tree  ! 
save  King  Henry  gave  thee  first  the  k  of  peace. 
I  sware  I  would  not  give  the  k  of  peace, 
happy  home-re  turn  and  the  King's  k  of  peace  in  Kent 
First  k.    There  then.    You  talk  almost  as  if  it 
by  this  true  k,  you  are  the  first  I  ever 


Harold  ii  il  511 

I  ii  113 

I  ii  139 

„       n  ii  331 

,,        III  ii  42 

„        III  ii  84 

V  ii  6 

Becket,  Pro.  362 

n  i  184 

in  i  18 

„      ni  i  104 

„    ni  iii  253 

„    III  iii  259 

„    in  iii  328 

The  Cup  I  ii  421 

Prom,  of  May  in  647 


Kiss 


972 


Knew 


Foresters  i  i  20 
I  i  119 


Eias  (s)  (continued)     She  gave  a  weeping  k  to  the  Earl, 
And  the  maid  a  A:  to  the  man. 
She  gave  a  weeping  k  to  the  Earl,  The  maid  a  A:  to 

the  man. 
shall  I  give  her  the  first  k?    O  sweet  Kate,  my  first 

love,  the  first  k,  the  first  k\                           '  i  i  126 
I  came  to  give  thee  the  first  k,  and  thou  hast  given  it  me.     ,','       i  i  132 
does  it  matter  so  much  if  the  maid  give  the  first  k? 
lAttle  John.     I  cannot  tell,  but  I  had  sooner  have 

given  thee  the  first  k.  j  j  236 
now  thou  hast  given  me  the  man's  k,  let  me  give  thee 

the  maid's.  j. ;  -iao 

may  the  maid  give  the  first  k?  "       j  i  173 

and  is  flustered  by  a  girl's  k.  "       j  j  jgg 

You  shall  give  me  the  first  k.  "      j  jj  228 

In  k'es.     Kate.     You,  how  dare  you  mention  k'es  ?  !i      11  i  126 

Take  thou  this  light  k  for  thy  clumsy  word.  '        m  134 

I  Embrace  thee  with  the  k'es  of  the  soul.  ,''       m  143 
Kiss  (verb)     K  me  would  you  ?  Mith  my  hands  Milking 

the  cow  ?  Queen  Mary  in  v  87 

Come,  Kobm,  Robm,  Come  and  k  me  now  ;  „         m  y  iqq 

Come  behind  and  k  me  milking  the  cow  !  "         m  y  195 

To  k  and  cuff  among  the  birds  and  flowers —  "         m  y  258 

K  me— thou  art  not  A  holy  sister  yet,  Harold  ni  ii  80 

*^y  ^iss— Sacred  !     I'll  fc  it  too.  Becket  11  i  185 

K  me,  httle  one,  Nobody  near  !  jjj  j  jqq 

Sirmatus,  k  me  now  The  Cuf  1  ii  419 

and  A;  me  This  beautiful  May-morning.  Prom.  of  May  1  564 

I  A  it  as  a  prelude  to  that  privilege  n  528 

Now  if  she  k  him,  I  will  have  his  head.  Foresters  i  ii  146 

Is  It  made  up  ?     Will  you  A;  me  ?  j  ji  226 

I  thought  I  saw  thee  clasp  and  k  a  man  ,"        h  ji  72 

Thou  see  me  clasp  and  k  a  man  indeed,  "        n  a  7^ 

Fancied  he  saw  thee  clasp  and  k  a  man.  "           m  23 

K  rne  again.     Marian.     Robin,  I  will  not  A;  thee,  "         m  136 

K  him.  Sir  Richard — A;  him,  my  sweet  :Marian.  ','        iv  1003 

K  and  congratulate  me,  my  good  Kate.  "        iv  IO33 

I  have  seen  thee  clasp  and  "A;  a  man  indeed,  "       jy  io35 
Well  then,  who  k'es  first  ?     Little  John.     K  both 

together.  1040 

Kiss'd    A;  not  her  alone,  but  all  the  ladies  Queen  Maru  i  i  80 

you  came  and  A:  me  milking  the  cow.  (repeat)  in  y  91  98 

K  me  well  I  vow ;  "          jjj  ^  g3 

You  k  me  there  For  the  first  time.  The  Cup  i  ii  417 

should  have  told  us  how  the  man  first  A;  the  maid.  Foresters  1  i  123 
Kissin      er  an'  the  owd  man  they  fell  a  A;  0'  one 

Tri«i„^*"°*j*^^4  K      •  .  TT-    •  ,  Prom,  of  May  X  21 
Kissing    See  A-bussin ,  Kissin 

i^^  ^^-^V    7T.^^  ^'°''!  thoughts  like  k's.  Queen  Mary  i  v  390 

Kite  (burd)     And  the  stock-dove  coo'd,  till  a  k  dropt 

tA°i!!^ki     1     u      u^          v,     ,,  Prom,  of  May  1 55 

ir-fi,     T  t^e  blea,k  church  doors,  like  A:'*  upon  a  barn.  Harold  iv  iii  37 

iutn    L«t  k  and  km  stand  close  as  our  shield-wall  t  i  ^q« 

K°a'«    Shout,  fc'5!                                                     '  Queen  Mary  lit 

Say  for  ten  thousand  ten— and  pothouse  A:'s,  n  i  70 

K,  wilt  thou  wear  thy  cap  before  the  Queen  ?  "     m  j  236 

Thy  name,  thou  k  ?    Man.     I  am  nobody,  my  Lord.  "     m  i  246 

God's  passion  !  A:,  thy  name  ?  "    m  i  249 

iT,  thou  Shalt  lose  thine  ears  and  find  thy  tongue,  "     m  i  255 

Cjod  8  passion  !  do  you  know  the  A;  that  painted  it  ?  "     in  i  264 

What  hast  thou  shouted,  k?  Jn  [  I93 

K,  there  be  two.    There  be  both  King  and  Queen,  "     nr  i  295 

Must  It  be  .so,  my  Lord  ?     Gardiner.     Ay,  k.  m  i  308 

Where,  A:,  where  ?    Man.    Sign  of  the  Talbot.  ,"     nr    318 

The  k's  are  easily  cow'd.  jj^  |  3^9 

\vi^\ *^f  h"  'f  ^-'7  P"*^"^''  s?ape  ?  Harold  n  ii  672 

Woe  k  to  thy  familiar  and  to  thee  !  „  ,;  570 

To  be  honest  is  to  set  all  k's  against  thee.  Becket  i  iii  572 

Oome,  you  filthy  k's,  let  us  pass.  ,  ;„  ons 

it  tW  %^,  Hnl^''^  fellows  in  Sherwood  Forest        Foresters  i  ii  72 

Sit  there,  k  s,  till  the  captain  call  for  you,  m  21Q 

I  know  them  arrant  A;'*  in  Nottingham.  "       ttt  qm 

Louder,  louder,  ye  A:'5.  "       ™  ^"^ 

mark'd  if  those  two  k's  from  York  be  coming  '  "       \y  no 

If  these  A:  s  should  know  me  for  their  King  ?  ][        iv  133 


Knaw  (know      I  A;'s  nowt  o'  what  foiilks  says,  an'  I 
caiires  nowt  neither.     Foalks  doesn't  hallus  A; 

hallus  a-fobbing  ma  off,  tho'  ye  k's  I  love  ye.  *"""*'       ^   '^VlOS 

Squire  Edgar  as  ha'  coomed  among  us— the  Lord  " 

k's  how —  I  m 
tha  'e  k's  I  was  hallus  agean  heving  schoolmaster  i' 

the  parish  !  i  isfi 

What  dost  a  A;  o'  this  Mr.  Hedgar  as  be  a-lodgin'  wi'  ve  ?      "  i  199 

and  I  A:  s  what  men  be,  and  what  masters  be,  '          t  39a 

— ye  all  k's  the  ten-aacre —  "             0^7 

Noa ;  1  A;'5  a  deal  better  now.  "              .,,j 

doant  tha  k  he  be  sweet  upo'  Dora  Steer,  "        jj  iqq 

k's  the  back  on  'im — drest  like  a  gentleman,  "         h  57a 

fur  1  haiites  'im  afoor  I  k's  what  'e  be.  "         „  kLk 

I'll  maake  her  A; !  (repeat)  "         „  ^g 

dosta  k  this  paaper  ?     Ye  dropt  it  upo'  the  road.  "        n  687 

dosta  A;  what  tha  means  wi'  by-and-by  ?  "        jj  g9o 

thou  hesn't  naw  business  'ere  wi'  my  Dora,  as  I  k's  on  "        u  736 

Knaw  d  (knew)    A;  better  nor  to  cast  her  sister's  '          " 

misfortin  inter  'er  teeth  jj  226 

Fur  boath  on  'em  k  as  well  as  mysen  "         u  323 

she  niver  k  'is  faace  when  'e  wur  'ere  afoor  ;  "        „  606 

I  k  'im  when  I  seed  'im  agean  an  I  telled  feyther  " 

on  'im.  ,.-,, 

I  beant  sa  sewer  0'  that,  fur  Sally  A;  'im  ;  "       m  247 

Knaw'd  (known)    fur  they  be  k  as  far  as  Littlechester.  "         i  213 

Kneaded     household  dough  was  k  up  with  blood  ;  Becket  i  iii  351 

Knee    (See  also  Kneea)    fray'd  i'  the  k's,  and  out  at 

elbow.  Queen  Mary  i  i  51 

Cast  myself  down  upon  my  A;'*  before  them,  j  y  sgo 

we'll  pray  for  you  all  on  our  bended  k's.  "      n  iij  iq^ 

on  our  k's,  we  pray  you  to  kill  the  Queen  "      u  m  214 

pray  for  you  on  our  bended  A;'s  till  our  hves'  end.  "     n  iii  l'>-^ 

round  his  A;,  misplaced,  Our  Enghsh  Garter,  "         ttt  j  m 

gray  rogue,  Gardiner,  Went  on  his  A:'^,  "     m  y  iqq 

1  thus  implore  you,  low  upon  my  k's,  "         iv  i  64 

I  would  dandle  you  upon  my  A;  At  hsping-age.  ,"       y  a  242 

With  both  her  A:'s  drawn  upward  to  her  chin.  '       v  ii  391 

Ihis  old  Wulfnoth  Would  take  me  on  his  A:'s  iv  i  70 

-brave  Gurth,  one  gash  from  brow  to  A; !  "       v  ii  71 

been  on  my  A;'s  every  day  for  these  half-dozen  years  The ' Falcon  184 
1  seed  tha  a-hmpin  up  just  now  wi'  the  roomatics 

jIJ^Zh         7  1    .    •  u.  .  Prom,  of  May  1 385 

1  laame  t  my  A;  last  night  running  arter  a  thief.  i  387 

look  at  our  suits,  out  at  A;  out  at  elbow.  F^esters  i  i  33 

1  fall  before  thee,  clasp  Thy  k's.  „  ,  qqq 
Kneea  (knee)    fell  agean  coalscuttle  and  my  A;  gev 

B-„«»i  ^^T  .      7  .  P^O"i-  of  May  i  404 

Kneel    prelates  fc  to  you.-  q^,^  i^      {  -^  ^^ 

And  worse  than  all,  you  had  to  k  to  me  ;  iv  ii  134 

?Tf  ^}!^  ^u*  ™pnbling  some  old  bone—  Harold  n  ii  469 

1  A;  to  thee— be  friends  with  him  again.  Becket  11  i  317 

A  to  thy  lord  Fitzurse  ;  Crouch  even  jy  ii  921 

h-5^°"f  >!"r  *"*  ^^  f,0J-gijen.  Foreslers  n  i  667 

he  A;  s  !  he  has  anger'd  the  foul  witch,  t,  ;  rrq 

Kneeling     Behold  thy  father  A:  to  thee,  Becket.  Becket  i  iii  252 
Can  i  fancy  him  k  with  me,  and  uttering  the  same 

Tr„«u  ^t'^r^iVT  uu    ,,,-,        ,    ,  Prom,  of  May  m  im 

Knelt    A:  And  blubber'd  like  a  lad.  Queen  Mary  m  i  149 

Then  A;  and  said  the  Miserere  Mei—  i„  j  390 

I  mean  the  houses  k  Before  the  Legate.  "        m  ii,  257 

Knew    (See  also  Knaw'd)     I  k  they  would  not  do  me 

any  wrong,  j  jjj  200 

if  I  either  thought  or  A;  This  marriage  "           h  jj  226 

Seventeen — and  k  eight  languages —  "  m  j  350 
she  thought  they  A;  the  laws.     But  for  herself,  she 

k  but  httle  law,  .„  ;  ocn 

Who  A;  it  from  the  first.  "        m"^|  jf" 

0  if  I  A-  you  felt  this  parting,  Philip,  As  I  do  !  "  ni  vi  251 
if  you  k  him  As  I  do,  ever  gentle,  and  so  gracious.  "  iv  i  155 
Against  the  truth  I  A;  wthin  my  heart.  ly  iji  041 

1  A;  it  would  be  so.  "^  '  "  y  ?t? 
The  kindliest  man  I  ever  A; ;  ,"        ^  jjj  421 


Knew 


973 


Know 


Knew  (conlinued)     I  k  it,  cousin,  But  held  from  you  all 

Eapers  Queen  Mary  v  ii  44 

at  then,  he  kl  was  no  Lutheran.  „           v  ii  78 

I  thought  you  k  me  better.  „         v  ii  186 

Too  young  !     And  never  k  a  Philip.  „          v  ii  361 

She  k  me,  and  acknowledged  me  her  heir,  „         v  v  255 

I  k  thy  purpose  ;  he  and  Wulfnoth  never  Have  met,  Harold  n  ii  84 

I  never  k  thee  check  thy  will  for  ought  „     n  ii  120 

Far  as  he  &  in  this  poor  world  of  ours —  „     ii  ii  363 

He  k  not  whom  he  sware  by.  „     iii  i  256 

I  know  He  k  not,  but  those  heavenly  ears  have  heard,  „     iii  i  258 

Stigand  beheved  he  k  not  what  he  spake.  „      iii  ii  61 

I  k  him  brave  :  he  loved  his  land  :  „     iv  i  201 

I  smote  him  suddenly,  I  k  not  what  I  did.  „      iv  ii  43 

by  whom  I  k  not  that  I  sware, — not  for  myself —  „       v  i  305 

Call  not  for  help  from  me.     I  k  him  not.  „       v  ii  54 

Since  I  k  battle.  And  that  was  from  my  boyhood,  „      v  ii  174 
I  k  thy  father ;  he  would  be  mine  age  Had  he  lived 

now  ;  Becket  i  iii  249 

Thought  that  I  k  him,  err'd  thro'  love  of  him,  „     i  iii  440 

And  I,  that  A;  mine  own  infirmitj-,  „     i  iii  696 

something  was  said  to  me  I  A:  not  what.  „        n  i  61 

I  never  k  an  honest  woman  that  could  make  songs,  „     iii  i  182 

I  never  saw  any  such.  Never  k  any  such,  „    iv  ii  127 

Your  Becket  k  the  secret  of  your  bower.  „       v  i  177 

I  think  our  Abbess  k  it  and  allow'd  it.  „       v  ii  95 

They  k  he  loved  me.  ,,      v  ii  453 

wrong'd  Without  there,  k  thee  with  Antonius.  The  Cup  i  ii  320 

One  of  the  men  there  k  him.  „        i  ii  341 

He  k  not  at  the  moment  who  had  fasten'd  „            ii  49 

but  he  k  I  meant  to  marry  him.  The  Falcon  51 

if  She  k  the  giver ;  but  I  bound  the  seller  „            72 

Ikii  would  come  to  this,  (repeat)  „  156, 174 

I  always  k  it  would  come  to  this  !  (repeat)  „  158,  175 
You  k  Eva,  then  ?                                                      From,  of  May  n  367 

Surely  I  loved  Eva  More  than  I  A; !  „            ii  644 

She  k  me  from  the  first,  she  juggled  with  me,  „           iii  687 

Much,  the  miller's  son,  I  k  thy  father  :  Foresters  i  iii  146 

So  hollowly  we  k  not  which  was  which.  „          ii  i  260 

far  as  we  k,  We  never  robb'd  one  friend  „           m  156 

Knife    Hast  thou  a  A;  ?  Queen  Mary  v  v  164 

callous  with  a  constant  stripe,  Unwoundable.    The  A; !      „         v  v  173 

Becket,  beware  of  the  k  !  Becket  i  iv  133 

As  at  this  loveless  k  that  stirs  the  riot,  „    iv  ii  191 

kill,  with  k  or  venom  One  of  liis  slanderous  harlots  ?  „    iv  ii  409 

And  my  k  there — and  blast  the  king  and  me.  The  Cup  ii  152 

He  drove  his  k  into  the  heart  of  the  deer.  Foresters  iv  541 

Knife-edge    crawl  over  k-e  flint  Barefoot,  Becket  ii  i  272 

Knight    Call  him  a  K,  That,  with  an  ass's.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  168 

They  have  taken  away  the  toy  thou  gavest  me,  The 

Norman  k.  Harold  ii  ii  107 

thou  shalt  have  another  Norman  kl  »     n  ij  114 

range  of  k's  Sit,  each  a  statue  on  his  horse,  „       v  i  524 

I  led  seven  hundred  k's  and  fought  his  wars.  Becket  i  iii  638 

But  I  that  threw  the  mightiest  k  of  France,  „     i  iii  746 

K's,  bishops,  earls,  this  London  spawn —  „     ii  ii  143 

Monks,  k's,  five  hundred,  that  were  there  and  heard.  „      v  ii  406 
the  k's  are  arming  in  the  garden  Beneath  the  sycamore.        ,,      v  ii  569 

A  score  of  k's  all  arm'd  with  swords  and  axes —  „      v  iii  71 

O  God,  O  noble  k's,  O  sacrilege  !  „    v  iii  178 

Did  two  k's  pass  ?  Foresters  ii  i  230 

Take  thou  mine  arm.     Who  art  thou,  gallant  k?  „        ii  i  440 

Seize  on  the  A;  !  wTench  his  sword  from  him  !  „        ii  i  676 
we  saw  thee  cowering  to  a  A;  And  thought  thou  wert 

bewltch'd.                                                 .  ,.        ii  i  683 

K,  your  good  father  had  his  draught  of  wine  „           ii  ii  1 

No,  no,  false  k,  thou  canst  not  hide  thyself  „         n  ii  23 

Quick  with  thy  sword  !  the  yoeman  braves  the  A;.  „         ii  ii  31 

Art  thou  a  A;  ?  „          iv  116 

How  much  is  it,  Robin,  for  a  A;  ?  „          iv  152 

He  hath  got  it  from  the  bottle,  noble  A-.  „          iv  237 

Shall  I  undertake  The  k  at  quarterstaff,  „          iv  248 

Thou  seest.  Sir  K,  our  friar  is  so  holy  »          iv  279 

Hail,  A-,  and  help  us.                                           .  „          iv  765 

Knit    ere  t>vo  souls  be  k  for  life  and  death,  The  Cup  ii  359 


Knock     K  off  his  cap  there,  some  of  you  about  him  !    Queen  Mary  iii  i  241 

K,  and  it  shall  be  open'd.  '  Becket  v  iii  64 
it  be  i'  my  natur  to  k  'im  o'  the  'eiid  now  ;  Prom,  of  May  i  288 
K  again  !  A;  again  !                                                             Foresters  ii  i  212 

Knock'd     How  oft  hath  Peter  A;  at  Mary's  gate  !  Queen  Mary  in  ii  63 

Knot     And  here  a  A;  of  ruffians  all  in  rags,  „  ii  ii  66 

thro'  this  common  k  and  bond  of  love,  „  ii  ii  198 

Know     (See  also  Ejoaw)     thou  shouldst  k,  for  thou  art 

as  white  as  three  Christmasses.  „  i  i  29 

I  k  not  if  you  A;.  „  i  i  101 

child  by  child,  you  A;,  Were  momentary  sparkles  „  i  ii  72 

I  A;  it,  my  good  Lord.  „  i  ii  92 

and  then,  who  k's —  „  i  iv  25 

Why  do  you  ask  ?  you  k  it.  „  i  iv  35 

You  A;  to  flatter  ladies.  „  i  iv  98 

You  A;  your  Latin^ — quiet  as  a  dead  body.  „  i  iv  181 

You  do  right  well.     I  do  not  care  to  A; ;  „  i  iv  189 

because  they  A;  him  The  last  White  Rose,  „  i  iv  206 

I  do  but  bring  the  message,  k  no  more.  „  i  iv  229 

I  am  of  sovereign  nature,  that  I  A:,  „  i  iv  258 

yet  I  A;  well.  Your  people,  and  I  go  with  them  so  far,       ,,  i  v  186 

Ay,  Simon  Renard  k's  it.  ..  i  v  218 

I  A;  it  a  scandal.  „  i  v  229 

1  A;  not  wherefore — ^some  mischance  of  flood,  „  i  v  353 

Yet  I  k  the  Prince,  „  i  v  364 

The  text — Your  Highness  A;'s  it,  „  i  v  451 

you  should  A;  that  whether  A  wind  be  warm  or  cold,         „  i  v  619 

Song  flies  you  A;  For  ages.  „  n  i  81 

You  A;  I  A;  all  this.  „  n  i  120 

Gardiner  k's,  but  the  Council  are  all  at  odds,  „  ii  i  138 

I  k  Spain.     I  have  been  there  with  my  father  ;  „  ii  i  166 

and  the  beds  I  A;.     I  hate  Spain.  „  ii  i  185 

ye  k,  my  masters,  that  wherever  Spain  hath  ruled  „  n  i  205 

You  A;  that  after  The  Captain  Brett,  „  n  ii  25 

K  too  what  Wyatt  said.  „  ii  ii  35 

I  A;  it.     What  do  and  say  Your  Council  at  this  hour  ?      „  ii  ii  45 

waters  of  the  fen  they  k  not  Which  way  to  flow.  „  ii  ii  52 

at  once  may  k  The  wherefore  of  this  coming,  „  n  ii  137 

To  tell  you  what  indeed  ye  see  and  A:,  „  ii  ii  144 

Now  what  I  am  ye  A;  right  well — your  Queen  ;  „  ii  ii  162 

Ye  k  my  father  was  the  rightful  heir  „  n  ii  170 

I  A;  you  loyal.  „  ii  ii  271 

Who  k's  ?  the  man  is  proven  by  the  hour.  „  ii  ii  363 

'  Who  k's?  '    I  am  for  England.    But  who  A;'*,  That  A;'*-    „  ii  ii  411 

I  A;  not  my  letters  ;  the  old  priests  taught  me  nothing.    „  n  iii  57 

we  A;  that  ye  be  come  to  kill  the  Queen,  „  ii  iii  107 

he  is  King,  you  A:,  the  King  of  Naples.  „  in  i  73 

studded  with  great  emeralds.  Rubies,  I  A:  not  what.  „  iii  i  86 

I  k  some  lusty  fellows  there  in  France.  „  lu  i  128 

I  A;  a  set  of  exiles  over  there,  „  in  i  155 

God's  passion  !  do  you  A;  the  knave  that  painted  it  ?       „  iir  i  264 

there's  the  face  coming  on  here  of  one  Who  k's  me.  „  iii  i  472 

I  A;  that  she  was  ever  sweet  to  me.  „  m  ii  228 

— all  times  for  aught  I  A:.  „  in  iv  67 

for  you  k  Right  well  that  you  yourself  „  ni  iv  224 

He  k's  not  where  he  stands,  „  m  iv  420 

Nay,  I  k  They  hunt  my  blood.  „  in  v  77 

You  A;  I  never  come  tiU  I  be  call'd.  „  iii  v  215 

Best  wisdom  is  to  A;  the  worst  at  once.  „  in  v  220 

I  A;  that  these  are  breeding  A  fierce  resolve  „  m  vi  30 

Simon  Renard  K's  me  too  well  to  speak  „  m  vi  126 

but,  my  Lord,  you  A;  what  Vii^il  sings,  „  m  vi  133 

you  A;  my  father.  Retiring  into  cloistral  solitude  „  ni  vi  208 

Not  sued  for  that — he  A;'s  it  were  in  vain,  „  iv  i  13 

I  k  not  if  he  did  ;  „  iv  i  128 

your  Highness  k's  The  saying,  '  Martyr's  blood —  „  iv  i  145 

You  A;  that  you  recanted  all  you  said  „  iv  iii  261 

Of  recantation  yield  again,  who  k's  ?  „  iv  iii  315 

I  A;  them  heretics,  but  right  English  ones.  „  iv  iii  344 

but  I  do  A;  ez  Pwoaps  and  vires  be  bad  things  ;  „  iv  iii  500 

Peters,  you  A;  me  CathoUc,  but  English.  „  iv  iii  566 

K's  where  he  nested — ever  comes  again.  „  v  i  26 

and  you  A;  The  crown  is  poor.  „  v  i  169 
Elizabeth — To  PhiUbert  of  Savoy,  as  you  A;,  We 

meant  to  wed  her ;  „  v  i  247 


Know 


974 


Know 


Enow  {cotUimied)     but  I  k  it  of  old,  he  hates  me  too ;     Queen  Mary  v  ii  60 
Your  Highness  k's  that  in  pursuing  heresy  „  v  ii  96 

They  k  nothing  ;  They  burn  for  nothing. 
who  said  that  ?    Ik  not — true  enough  ! 
Our  drooping  Queen  should  k  ! 
and  you  fc  me  strong  of  arm  ; 

light  enough,  God  k's,  And  mixt  with  Wyatt's  rising — 
And  tell  him  that  I  fc  he  comes  no  more.     Tell  him  at 

last  I  k  his  love  is  dead, 
My  King  would  k  if  you  be  fairly  served, 
Who  fc  my  right,  and  love  me, 
God's  dea'th,  forsooth — you  do  not  fc  King  Philip. 
Drugs — but  he  k's  they  cannot  help  me — 
I  took  it,  tho'  I  did  not  fc  I  took  it. 
Who  k's  if  Boleyn's  daughter  be  my  sister  ? 
Stigand  should  fc  the  purposes  of  Heaven. 
I  fc  it,  son  ;  I  am  not  thankless  : 
And  Tostig  k's  it ;  Tostig  loves  the  king.     Harold. 

And  love  should  fc  ;  and — be  the  king  so  wise, — 
He  cannot  guess  who  k's. 
Who  k's  I  may  not  dream  myself  their  king  ! 
we  came  to  fc  Thy  valour  and  thy  value, 
did  Edward  fc  of  this  ? 
I  fc  the  Norman  license — 

Edward  not  pronounced  his  heir  ?     Harold.    Not  that  I  fc. 
None  that  I  fc  ...  if  that  but  hung 
But  hath  he  done  it  then  ?     Harold.     Not  that  I  fc. 
He  is  a  liar  who  k's  I  am  a  liar, 
I  fc  your  Norman  cookery  is  so  spiced, 
Yea,  I  fc  He  knew  not,  but  those  heavenly  ears 
I  fc  all  Sussex  ;  A  good  entrenchment  for  a  perilous 

hour ! 
Do  they  ?     I  did  not  fc  it. 
God  help  me  !     I  fc  nothing— 
Who  k's  what  sows  itself  among  the  people  ? 
who  fc  His  prowess  in  the  mountains  of  the  West, 
K  what  thou  dost ;  and  we  may  find  for  thee, 
They  fc  King  Edward's  promise  and  thine  —  thine. 

Harold.    Should  they  not  fc  free  England  crowns  her- 
self ?     Nor  fc  that  he  nor  I  had  power  to  promise  ? 

Not  fc  that  Edward  cancell'd  his  own  promise  ? 
blurt  thy  curse  among  our  folk,  I  fc  not — 
Whisper  !     God's  angels  only  fc  it.    Ha  ! 
I  am  grieved  to  fc  as  much, 
dost  thou  fc  I  am  not  wedded  to  her.     Becket.    How 

should  I  fc  ? 
I  love  thee  and  I  fc  thee,  I  fc  thee. 
How  shouldst  thou  fc  that  never  hast  loved  one  ? 
God's  eyes  !     I  fc  all  that — 
Nay — I  fc  not,  Thomas. 
I  fc  Some  three  or  four  good  priests 
thou  hast  kicked  down  the  board.     I  fc  thee  of  old. 
The  people  fc  their  Church  a  tower  of  strength. 
It  much  imports  me  I  should  fc  her  name. 
let  me  pass,  my  lord,  for  I  must  fc. 
And  fc  the  ways  of  Nature. 
Well — you  fc — the  minion,  Rosamund. 
Shame,  wrath,  I  fc  not  what. 
K  that  when  made  Archbishop  I  was  freed, 
or  in  the  land  of  France  for  aught  I  fc. 
my  fellows  fc  that  I  am  all  one  scale  like  a  fish. 
cursed  My  friends  at  Veselay,  I  have  let  them  k, 
— thine  !  thine  !     Rosamurui.     I  fc-  it. 
Dost  thou  fc,  my  boy,  what  it  is  to  be  Chancellor  of 

England  ? 
Thine  enemy  k's  the  secret  of  my  bower. 
You  are  too  cold  to  fc  the  fashion  of  it. 
I  would  have  made  Rome  fc  she  still  is  Rome — 
Bee  mustn't  buzz.  Whoop — but  he  k's.  (repeat) 
what's  an  apple,  you  fc,  save  to  a  child, 
only  you  k  the  King's  married,  for  King  Louis — 
most  on  'em  fc  an  honest  woman  and  a  lady  when 

they  see  her, 
she  kept  the  seventh  conunandment  better  than  some 

I  fc  on, 


v  ii  113 

V  ii  208 

V  ii  457 

V  ii  469 
v  ii  478 

V  ii  589 
vii20 

V  iii  34 
V  iii  123 

vv60 
V  V  97 

V  V  194 
Harold  I  i  64 

„     I  i  215 

.,  I  i  274 
„  Iii  136 
.,  I  ii  251 
„  iiii201 
.,  iiii304 
..  II  ii  477 
.,  II  ii  577 
.,  n  ii  599 
„  nii612 
„  nil  667 
„  nii810 
„  mi  257 

„  III  i  362 
„  III  ii  106 
„  III  ii  193 
„  IV  i  149 
.,  IV  i  164 
„   IV  ii  48 


„      V  i  45 

„      V  i  90 

„     V  ii  31 

Becket,  Pro.  4 

Pro.  72 

Pro.  95 

Pro.  140 

Pro.  148 

Pro.  197 

Pro.  290 

Pro.  316 

Iil5 

iil93 

ii206 

11257 

iii  36 

I  iii  322 

I  iii  707 

I  iv  197 

I  iv  213 
II 190 

II  i  163 

II  i  231 

II 1264 

II  ii  126 

11  ii  402 

Becket  iii  i  99,  241 

Becket  iii  i  141 

„     III  i  166 


in  i  179 
HI  i  195 


Enow  (continued)     known  Nothing  but  him — happy  to  fc  no 

more,  Becket  in  i  224 

Whoop — but  he  k's,  Whoop — but  he  fc"*'.  .,     iii  i  263 

I  fc  Thy  meaning.  „     iii  iii  18 

Hereford,  you  fc,  crown'd  the  first  Henry.  .,  in  iii  201 

Even  now — Who  fc's  ? — I  might  deliver  all  things  „  in  iii  269 

Why  ?     Geoffrey.     Don't  fc  why.  „       iv  i  14 

but  I  don't  fc  if  I  can  find  the  way  back  again.  ,,       iv  i  48 

K  you  not  this  bower  is  secret,  ,,      iv  ii  21 

none  shall  fc  me  ;  The  King  shall  never  hear  „    iv  ii  100 

Who  k's  but  that  thy  lover  May  plead  so  pitifully,  „    iv  ii  215 

we  fc  you  proud  of  your  fine  hand,  „    iv  ii  260 

you  fc  thro'  all  this  quarrel  I  still  have  cleaved  ,^        v  i  46 

I  fc — could  swear — as  long  as  Becket  breathes,  „         v  i  76 

and  yet  You  fc  me  easily  anger'd.  „         v  i  84 

Do  you  fc  this  cross,  my  Uege  ?  ,,      v  i  161 

I  fc  him  ;  our  good  John  of  Salisbury.  „  v  ii  77 
Deal  not  with  things  you  fc  not.     Rosamund.     I  fc  him.         „      v  ii  133 

I  fc  not  why  You  call  these  old  things  „     v  ii  269 

I  marvel  at  you — Ye  fc  what  is  between  us.  „     v  ii  500 

K  you  not  You  have  spoken  to  the  peril  „      v  ii  515 

He  k's  the  twists  and  turnings  of  the  place.  ,,      v  ii  576 

Hugh,  I  fc  well  thou  hast  but  half  a  heart  „     v  iii  129 

Boy,  dost  thou  fc  the  house  of  Sinnatus  ?  The  Cup  i  i  49 

You  fc  the  waterfall  That  in  the  summer  .,       i  i  107 

Shefc'sit?    Ha!  „       i  i  131 

Who  are  with  him  ?     I  see  no  face  that  k's  me.  ,,       i  i  183 

fc  That  we  Galatians  are  both  Greek  and  Gaul.  ,,       i  i  202 

Scarce  fc  what  she  has  done.  „      i  ii  135 

I  fc  of  no  such  wives  in  all  Galatia.  „     i  ii  191 

fc  myself  am  that  Galatian  Who  sent  the  cup.  „  i  ii  209 
I  fc  they  mean  to  torture  him  to  death.     I  dare  not  tell 

him  how  I  came  to  fc  it ;  „  i  ii  273 
I  say  it  to  you — you  are  wiser — Rome  k's  all,  But  you 

fc  not  the  savagery  of  Rome.  „      i  ii  286 

is  there  danger  ?     Camma.     Nay,  None  that  I  fc :  „      i  ii  442 

Will  she  come  to  me  Now  that  she  fc's  me  Synorix  ?  „       i  iii  21 

I  fc  that  I  am  genial,  I  would  be  Happy,  ,,       i  iii  28 

as  you  fc  The  camp  is  half  a  league  A^ithout  the  city ;  „       i  iii  88 

We  will  let  her  fc.  „          n  13 

the  world  may  fc  You  twain  are  reconciled,  „          n  68 

It  is  old,  I  fc  not  How  many  hundred  years.  „        n  312 

She  not  fc  ?    She  k's  There's  none  such  other —  The  Falcon  77 

He  loves  me,  and  he  k's  I  fc  he  loves  me  !  „      .  245 

as  your  ladyship  k's,  his  lordship's  own  foster-brother,  .,        566 

You  fc,  my  lord,  I  told  you  I  was  troubled.  „        676 

you  fc  the  saying — '  Better  a  man  without  riches,  „        749 

let  me  fc  the  boon  By  granting  which,  „         765 

You  fc  that  I  can  touch  The  ghittern  „         797 

You  fc  sick  people.  More  specially  sick  children,  ,,  815 
I  don't  fc  why  I  sing  that  song ;  I  don't  love  it.  Prom,  of  May  i  61 
He's  been  arter  Miss  Eva,  haan't  he  ?    Dora.    Not 

that  I  fc.  „          1 123 

She  k's  nothing.     Man  only  k's,  „          1 273 

Who  k's  that  he  had  ever  dreani'd  of  flying  ?  „          i  654 

That's  all  nonsense,  you  fc,  such  a  baby  as  you  are.  „          i  784 

Perhaps  you  k  him  ?  „         n  439 

then  you  would  fc  it  is  not  So  easy  to  forgive —  „         n  484 

has  suffer'd  JNIore  than  we  fc.  „         n  502 

When  you  shall  fc  me  better.  „  n  529 
who  came  to  us  three  years  after  you  were  gone, 

how  should  she  fc  you  ?  „  in  234 
was  a  mockery,  you  fc,  for  he  gave  me  no  address, 

and  there  was  no  word  of  marriage ;  „        in  331 

for  you  fc,  my  dear,  you  were  always  his  favourite —  .,        in  422 

Be  he  dead  ?     Bora.     Not  that  I  fc.  „        m  434 

He  will  be  sure  to  fc  you  to-morrow.  „        in  470 

I  fc  more  fully  that  he  can  What  poor  earthworms  „        in  634 

You  fc  her,  Eva.     Harold.     Eva !  „        m  663 

She — she  k's  me — now  ...  „        in  686 

but  now  ye  fc  why  we  live  so  stintedly,  Foresters  i  i  76 

I  fc  not,  but  he  may  save  the  land,  „       i  i  282 

but  I  k  not  if  I  wiU  let  thee  go.  „       i  i  311 

Him  that  is  gone.     Who  k's  whither  ?  „          i  ii  9 

Perfect — who  should  fc  you  for  Prince  John,  „        i  ii  20 


Know 


975 


Lady 


Foresters  i  ii  50 
„  I  ii  55 
.,  I  ii  116 
.,  I  iii  161 
.,  II  i  120 
„  II  i  176 
.,  II  i  282 
II  i  494 
.,  II  i  589 
„  II  i  622 
..      II  i  703 

II  ii  11 
.,        II  ii  51 

III  lai 

III  301 
HI  334 

IV  92 

IV  134 
IV  199 
IV  216 
IV  257 
IV  336 
IV  380 
IV  388 
IV  527 


Know  {continued)    and  more  goes  to  make  right  than  I 
A  of, 
Thou  art  the  Earl's  confessor  and  sliouldst  k. 
I  may  not  hate  the  King  For  aught  I  A-, 
that  worship  for  me  which  Heaven  k's  I  ill  deserve- 
Have  past  away,  I  k  not  where ; 
My  people  are  all  scattered  I  k  not  where, 
what  should  you  k  o'  the  food  o'  the  poor  ? 
If  not  with  thee  I  k  not  where  she  is. 
What  ?  do  I  not  k  mine  own  ring  ? 
Life,  life.     I  k  not  death. 

I  k  not,  can  I  trust  myself  With  your  brave  band  ? 
We  k  all  balms  and  simples  of  the  field 
I  A;  I  have  done  amiss,  have  been  a  fool. 
Fifty  leagues  Of  woodland  hear  and  k  my  horn, 
I  k  them  arrant  knaves  in  Xottingham. 
Do  me  the  service  to  tap  it,  and  thou  wilt  k. 
If  not  I  have  let  them  k  Their  lives  misafe 
if  these  knaves  should  k  me  for  their  King? 
but  let  him  k  our  forest  laws : 
Great  woodland  king,  I  k  not  quarterstaff. 
I  A;  no  quarterstaff. 

They  k  me.    I  must  not  as  yet  be  known. 
From  whom  he  fc's  are  hypocrites  and  Uars. 
Richard,  again,  is  king  over  a  realm  He  hardly  A;'s, 
he  falls  And  k's  no  more. 

Knowest    Thou  k  we  had  to  dodge,  or  duck,  or  die ;   Queen  Mary  iii  iv  357 
Thou  k  I  bad  my  chaplain,  „  iii  vi  73 

Thou  k  never  woman  meant  so  well,  „  v  ii  342 

Thou  k  I  soon  go  wild.  Harold  i  i  297 

K  thou  this  ?     Harold.     I  learn  it  now.  „     ii  ii  589 

Thou  k  I  am  his  cousin,  „    ii  ii  592 

And  signs  on  earth  !    K  thou  Senlac  hill  ?  „    iii  i  361 

chances  and  all  churches,  And  that  thou  k.  „   iii  ii  184 

I  doubt  not  but  thou  A;  Why  thou  art  suimnon'd.  .,     iv  i  187 

O  Thou  that  A,  let  not  my  strong  praver  .,      v  i  646 

K  thou  this  other  ?  "  „       v  ii  98 

Thou  k  he  was  forced  to  fly  to  France ;  Becket  i  iii  204 

in  thy  kingdom,  as  thou  A,  The  spouse  of  the  Great  King,      „    iii  iii  174 
Thou  A;  that  the  Sheriff  of  Nottingham  loves  thee.  Foresters  i  i  222 

K  thou  not  the  Prince  ?  „        ly  683 

Knowing    (K  the  man)  he  wrought  it  ignorantly,         Qv£en  Mary  ui  i  276 
They  say,  his  wife  was  k  and  abetting.  Harold  ii  ii  306 

Canst  thou  love  me,  thou  k  where  I  love  ?  „      iv  i  226 

K  how  much  you  reverence  Holy  Church,  Becket  i  ii  48 

K  right  well  with  what  a  tenderness  He  loved  my  son.  „      v  i  20 

k  the  fame  of  your  hospitality,  we  ventured  in 

uninvited.  Foresters  i  ii  195 

Have  I  the  pleasure,  friend,  of  k  you  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  297 

k  that  he  must  have  Moved  in  the  iron  grooves  „  ii  265 

and  A  as  I  did  That  I  had  shot  him  thro'  the  heart,      Foresters  n  i  122 
Thou  art  tann'd  almost  beyond  my  A,  brother.  „        iv  1016 

Knowledge     That  k  made  him  all  the  carefuUer  Harold  in  i  340 

teach  this  Rome — from  k  of  our  people—  The  Cu'p  ii  96 

Known    (See  also  E[naw'd)     but  all  things  here  At 

court  are  A ;  Queen  Mary  i  iv  58 

The  prince  is  k  in  Spain,  in  Flanders,  „  i  v  207 

(I  have  A  a  semi-madman  in  my  time  So  fancy-ridd'n)        „  ii  i  9 

it  will  be  A  that  we  have  moved ;  „  ii  i  198 

— And  I  have  k  such  women  more  than  one —  „       m  vi  178 

never  was  it  A  That  any  man  so  writing,  „         iv  iii  46 

Council  at  this  present  deem  it  not  Expedient  to  be  k.         „         iv  iii  57 
The  truth  of  God,  which  I  had  proven  and  A.  „       iv  iii  150 

men  Have  hardly  k  what  to  believe,  „      iv  iii  405 

Should  make  the  mightiest  empire  earth  has  A.  „  v  iii  71 

than  have  A  there  were  such  devils.  Harold  ii  i  38 

for  thou  Art  A  a  speaker  of  the  truth,  „  ii  ii  517 

they  follow  me — and  I  must  not  be  A.  Becket  i  i  183 

it  may  import  her  all  as  much  Not  to  be  A.  „      i  i  199 

'Tis  k  you  are  midwint«r  to  all  women,  „       i  ii  27 

and  A  Nothing  but  him — happy  to  know  no  more,  „  in  i  223 

you  are  A  Thro'  all  the  courts  of  Christendom  „  iv  ii  324 

for  how  sUghtly  have  I  k  myself.  Prom,  of  May  ii  442 

but  I  must  not  be  A  yet.  „  m  224 

Shall  I  be  A  ?  is  my  disguise  perfect  ?  Foresters  i  ii  18 


Known  (continued)    thee  however  mask'd  I  should  have  A.     Foresters  ii  i  650 

I  must  not  as  yet  be  A.  „        iv  338 

Know'st     thou  A  my  claim  on  England  Thro'  Edward's  Harold  ii  ii  12 

And  yet  thou  A  how  little  of  thy  king  !  Foresters  iv  401 

Knut  (Canute,  the  Dane)     or  English  Ironside  Who  fought 

with  K,  or  K  Harold  iv  iii  54 

Knyvett  (adherent  of  Wyatt)    (See  also  Antony,  Antony 

Knyvett)     Open  the  window,  K ;  Queen  Mary  ii  i  154 

I'll  think  upon  it,  K.  „  ii  i  240 


La     I  would  dance  too.     Fa,  I,  I,  fa,  I,  I.  Foresters  i  ii  59 

Laabourer  (labourer)    fur  I  wur  nobbut  a  I,  and  now 

I  be  a  landlord —  Prom,  of  May  i  329 

Laady  (lady)     to  turn  out  boath  my  darters  right  down 

fine  laadies.  „  1 337 

and  you  should  sit  i'  your  oan  parlour  quite  like  a  I,  „  ii  98 

plaay  the  planner,  if  ye  liked,  all  daay  long,  hke  a  I,  ,,  ii  101 

likes  'er  all  the  better  fur  taakin'  me  down,  like  a  I,  .,  ii  134 

Dan  Smith's  cart  hes  rumied  ower  a  Z  i'  the  holler 

laane,  „  ii  568 

'ow  should  I  see  to  laame  the  I,  and  mea  coomin' 

along  pretty  sharp  an'  all  ?  „  in  96 

to  saay  he's  browt  some  of  ^liss  Eva's  roses  for  the 
sick  I  to  smell  on.  „         iii  347 

Laame't  (limed)     1 1  my  knee  last  night  running  arter  a 

thief.  „  1 386 

Laane  (lane)     Dan  Smith's  cart  hes  rmined  ower  a  laady 

i'  the  holler  I,  .,,  ii  569 

the  holler  I  be  hallus  sa  dark  i'  the  arternoon,  „  in  92 

Laay  (lay)     We  I's  out  o'  the  waay  fur  gentlefoalk 

altogither—  „  1 210 

and  doant  I  my  cartwhip  athurt  'is  shou'ders,  „  n  138 

Labour  (s)     And  all  my  lifelong  I  to  uphold  The  primacy 

• — a  heretic.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  70 

The  more  or  less  of  daily  I  done—  Becket  ii  ii  299 

I  fear  me  we  have  lost  our  I,  then.  Foresters  ii  i  233 

Labourer     (See  also  Laabourer)     all  that  live  By  their  own 

hands,  the  I,  the  poor  priest ;  „         in  165 

Labour-in-vain    Ingratitude,  Injustice,  Evil-tongue, 

L-i-v.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  157 

Labyrinthine    after  that  This  I  brickwork  maze  in  maze,      Becket,  Pro.  166 
Lacerating    If  fast  and  prayer,  and  I  scourge —  „        i  iii  303 

Lack  (s)    Mj  liberality  perforce  is  dead  Thro'  I  of  means  of 

giving.  The  Falcon  297 

The  man  is  able  enough- — no  I  of  wit.  Foresters  i  ii  103 

'Tis  for  no  I  of  love  to  you,  my  lord,  But  I  of  happiness       „        i  iii  130 

thro'  thy  I  of  manhood  hast  betray'd  Thy  father  „         n  i  568 

Lack  (verb)      And  tell  this  learned  Legate  he  I's 

zeal.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  272 

Do  you  I  any  money  ?  „  iv  ii  40 

I Z  a  spiritual  soldier,  Thomas —  Becket,  Pro.  257 

Lacking    secular  kingdom  is  but  as  the  body  L  a  soul ;  Queen  Mary  iv  i  33 

L  the  love  of  woman  and  of  cliild.  Becket  v  ii  199 

Lacrymas    Illorum  in  I  Cruor  f  undatur  !  Harold  v  i  531 

Lacrymation    I  should  say  rather,  the  i  of  a  lamentation ;   Becket  in  iii  167 

Lad    knelt  And  blubber'd  like  a  I,  Queen  Mary  mi  150 

but  I  hear  she  hath  a  dropsy,  I,  „         ill  ii  224 

He  stood  upright,  a  Z  of  twenty-one,  ,,        iv  iii  335 

Poor  Vs,  they  see  not  what  the  general  sees,  .,  v  ii  447 

poor  I !  how  sick  and  sad  for  home  !  Harold  n  ii  325 

lied  Uke  a  I  That  dreads  the  pendent  scourge,  „       ii  ii  657 

and  the  Vs  and  lasses  'uU  hev  a  dance.  Prom,  of  May  i  428 

Eh  I,  if  it  be  thou,  I'll  Philip  tha !  „  n  590 

I,  dosta  knaw  this  paaper  ? — Ye  dropt  it  upo'  the  road.         „  n  686 

Eh,  I,  dosta  knaw  what  tha  means  wi'  by-and-by  ?  „  ii  690 

Eh,  I,  but  whether  thou  be  Hedgar,  „  ii  733 

Laden     a  troop,  L  with  booty  and  with  a  flag  of  ours  The  Falcon  612 

Lady    (See  also  La&dy)    but  all  the  ladies  of  her  following.  Queen  Mary  i  i  81 

Even  so,  fair  I.  „       liv  97 

You  know  to  flatter  ladies.  „        i  iv  98 


Lady 


976 


Land 


Lady  (continued)    lily  and  rose  In  his  youtli,  and  like  a  I.  Queen  Mary  i  v  21 

Our  sovereign  L  by  Kin<;  Harry's  will ;  ,,       ii  ii  268 

Ay,  my  L.    When  next  there  comes  a  missive  „      iii  v  181 

Our  Spanish  ladies  have  none  such —  „        v  iii  46 

There  must  be  ladies  with  hair  like  mine.  „        v  iii  58 

up  and  down,  poor  I,  up  and  down.  „           v  v  6 

Nay,  dearest  L,  see  j'our  good  physician.  „         v  v  58 

War,  my  dear  I !  Harold  i  i  22 

Mightily,  my  dear  l\  „        i  i  24 

War,  my  dear  /,  War,  waste,  plague,  „  i  i  465 
told  me  he  would  advance  me  to  the  service  of  a  great  /,  BecJcet  iii  i  124 

but  more  a  woman  o'  the  world  than  my  I  here,  „      in  i  143 

I  am  as  well-shaped  as  my  I  here,  „      in  i  150 

for  here  comes  my  /,  and,  my  I,  „  in  i  153 
most  on  'em  know  an  honest  woman  and  a  I  when  they 

see  her,  „      in  i  180 

and  went  on  and  on  till  I  found  the  light  and  the  I,  „       iv  ii  19 

the  I  holds  the  cleric  Lovelier  than  any  soldier,  „        v  i  193 

Your  cleric  hath  your  /.  „        v  i  200 

O  dearest  I,  Think, — torture, — death, —  The  Cup  i  ii  313 

L,  I  say  it  with  all  gentleness,  „         i  iii  99 

happiest,  L,  in  my  power  To  make  you  happy.  „           n  239 

if  we  will  buy  diamond  necklaces  To  please  our  I,  The  Falcon  45 

Welcome  to  this  poor  cottage,  my  dear  I.  „        271 

L,  you  bring  your  light  into  my  cottage  „        283 

A I  that  was  beautiful  as  day  Sat  by  me  „  349 
wasn't  my  I  born  with  a  golden  spoon  in  her  ladyship's 

mouth,  „        401 

with  my  I's  coming  that  had  so  flurried  me,  „        492 

No,  my  most  honour'd  and  long-worshipt  I,  „        714 

L,  I  find  you  a  shrewd  bargainer.  „  756 
when  you  lamed  the  I  in  the  hollow  lane.                  Prom,  of  May  m  89 


Lake  {continued)    A  I  that  dips  in  William  As  well  as  Harold.     Harold  V  i  186 
Lamb     {See  also  Ewe-lamb)     king  Hath  given  his  virgin  I  to 

Holy  Church  „      m  i  334 

Our  Church  in  arms — ^the  I  the  lion —  „        v  i  441 

'  Ewe  I,  ewe  /,  I  am  here  by  the  dam.'  Becket  i  iv  171 

Lambert    there  was  L ;  Who  can  foresee  himself  ?        Queen  Mary  iv  ii  215 


marry  fine  gentlemen,  and  played  at  being  fine  ladies  ? 

shamed  of  his  poor  farmer's  daughter  among  the 
ladies  in  his  drawing-room  ? 

Wasn't  Miss  Vavasour,  our  schoolmistress  at  Little- 
chester,  a  I  bom?  Were  not  our  fellow-pupils 
all  ladies?  ^^'asn't  dear  mother  herself  at  least 
by  one  side  a.  I?  Can't  I  speak  like  a  Z;  pen  a 
letter  like  a  I ;  talk  a  little  French  like  a  I ;  play 
a  little  like  a,  I? 

The  sick  I  here  might  have  been  asleep. 

Say  that  the  sick  I  thanks  him  ! 

Tell  him  I  cannot  leave  the  sick  I  just  yet. 

Tell  him  that  I  and  the  I  here  wish  to  see  him. 

Sooner  or  later  shamed  of  her  among  The  ladies, 

The  I  loved  the  master  well. 

The  I  gave  a  rose  to  the  Earl,  (repeat) 

The  I  gave  her  hand  to  the  Earl,  (repeat) 

part  to  the  shrine  of  our  L. 

I  have  sworn  by  our  L  if  they  come 

Our  L's  blessed  shrines  throughout  the  land 
Ladylike    L !     Lilylike  in  her  stateliness 
Laggard    Where  is  this  I  Richard  of  the  Lea  ? 
Lagoon    He  caught  a  chill  in  the  Vs  of  Venice, 
Laic    L's  and  barons,  thro'  The  random  gifts 
Laid    spousal  ring  whereof,  Not  ever  to  be  I  aside, 

attainder  Z  on  us  By  him  who  sack'd  the  house  of 
God ;  „        in  iii  194 

raise  his  head,  for  thou  hast  I  it  low  !  Harold  m  i  163 

Hath  often  I  a  cold  hand  on  my  heats,  Becket  i  i  384 

There  now,  if  thou  hast  not  I  hands  upon  me  !  „    i  iv  212 

I  would  have  I  mine  own  life  down  „    v  ii  338 

L  famine-stricken  at  the  gates  of  Death —  Prom,  of  May  iii  807 

Lain     Bonner,  who  hath  I  so  long  under  bonds  for  the 

faith —  Queen  Mary  i  iii  35 

Long  have  I Z  in  prison,  yet  have  heard  „      iv  iii  210 

Where  have  you  I  in  ambush  all  the  morning  ?         Prom,  of  May  i  544 
Lais    With  Phryne,  Or  L,  or  thy  Rosamimd,  Becket,  Pro.  56 

My  Rosamund  is  no  L,  Thomas  Becket ;  „      Pro.  57 

Laity    I  am  but  of  the  Z,  my  Lord  Bishop,  Queen  Mary  in  iv  81 

Lake    might  have  flash'd  Upon  their  I  of  Garda,  „  in  ii  23 

Scnlac  !     Sanguelac,  The  L  of  Blood  !  Harold  in  i  386 

— a  Z,  A  sea  of  blood — we  are  drown'd  in  blood  „      in  i  397 

call  it— Sanguelac,  The  I  of  blood  ?  „        v  i  185 


in  278 
in  295 


in  298 

ni  343 

ni  349 

III  353 

in  414 

in  582 

Foresters  i  i  8 

„  I  i  12, 105 

„    I  i  16,  92 

in  207 

IV  96 

„      IV  1079 

Prom,  of  May  ii  620 

Foresters  iv  449 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  515 

Becket  i  i  157 

Qiuen  Mary  n  ii  167 


Lambeth  (adj.)     And  unto  no  dead  world ;  but  L  palace, 
Lambeth  (s)     seen  your  steps  a  mile  From  me  and  L  ? 

Permit  me  to  withdraw.     To  X  ? 

Ay,  L  has  ousted  Cranmer. 

was  not  meet  the  heretic  swine  should  live  In  L. 
Lame    And  further  to  discourage  and  lay  I  The  plots 
of  France, 

The  fellow  that  on  a  Z  jade  came  to  court. 
Lamed     {See  also  Laame't)     ann ;  I  do  believe  I Z  his 
Majesty's 

And  Z  and  maim'd  to  dislocation, 

having  his  right  hand  L  in  the  battle, 

when  you  Z  the  lady  in  the  hollow  lane. 

You  see  she  is  I,  and  cannot  go  down  to  him 


in  ii  154 
Iii  82 
in  ii  131 
ni  ii  132 
in  ii  136 

v  i  188 
Becket  v  i  246 


Queen  Mary  v  ii  471 
Becket  iv  ii  266 
The  Falcon  445 

Prom,  of  May  ill  89 
ni  416 


Lamentation     I  sliould  say  rather,  the  lacrymation  of  a  Z ;   Becket  in  iii  167 

Lamer     And  head  them  with  a  Z  rhyme  of  miae, 

Lamester    How  should  this  old  Z  guide  us  ? 

Laming     At  least  mine  own  is  frailer :  you  are  Z  it. 

Lammas     And  that's  at  latter  L — never  perhaps. 

Lamp    loom  Across  their  Vs  of  revel, 

Lamplight    river,  black,  slimy,  swirling  under  me  in 

theZ, 
Lance    for  how  their  Vs  snap  and  shiver 

And  push'd  our  Vs  into  Saracen  hearts. 
Lanceas     Illorum  Z  Frange  Creator  ! 
Land  (s)    {See  also  Church-land)    so  this  unhappy  Z, 
long  divided  in  itself, 

red  and  white,  the  fashion  of  our  I. 

And  here  at  I  among  the  people  ! 

stir  not  yet  This  matter  of  the  Church  Vs. 

Confiscate  Vs,  goods,  money — 

I  have  seen  them  in  their  own  Z ; 

clash  alarum  as  we  pass.  And  pour  along  the  I, 

Rascal ! — this  Z  is  like  a  hill  of  fire. 

Feeling  my  native  Z  beneath  my  foot, 

'  Ah,  native  Z  of  mine,  Thou  art  much  beholden 

Methinks  the  good  Z  heard  me. 

In  the  reborn  salvation  of  a  Z  So  noble. 

The  ruler  of  a  Z  Is  bounden  by  his  power 

You  are  fresh  from  brighter  Vs.     Retire  with  me. 

Care  more  for  our  brief  life  in  their  wet  Z, 

So  weary  am  I  of  this  wet  Z  of  theirs. 

Draw  with  your  sails  from  our  poor  I, 

Unhappy  Z !     Hard-natured  Queen, 

'11  bum  the  Pwoap  out  o'  this  'ere  Z  vor  iver  and  iver. 

this  Henry  Stirs  up  your  I  against  you 

They  will  not  lay  more  taxes  on  a  Z 

not  the  living  rock  Which  guards  the  Z. 

get  himself  wrecked  on  another  man's  Z  ? 

Large  lordship  there  of  Vs  and  territory. 

In  mine  own  1 1  should  have  scom'd  the  man, 

in  thine  own  Z  in  thy  father's  day 

The  kinghest  Abbey  in  all  Christian  Vs, 

Thou  art  Tostig's  brother.  Who  wastes  the  Z.     Harold. 
This  brother  comes  to  save  Your  Z  from  waste  ; 

I  knew  him  brave  :  he  loved  his  Z : 

He  looks  for  I  among  us,  he  and  his. 

Seven  feet  of  English  Z,  or  something  more, 

Hath  wasted  all  the  Z  at  Pevensey — 

Neighing  and  roaring  as  they  leapt  to  Z— 

And  waste  the  Z  about  thee  as  thou  goest, 

to  guard  the  Z  for  which  He  did  forswear  himself — 

That  havock'd  all  the  Z  in  Stephen's  day. 

among  you  those  that  hold  L's  reft  from  Canterbury. 

Many  of  the  crown  Vs  to  those  that  helpt  him  ; 

Claim'd  some  of  oiu^  crown  Vs  for  Canterbury — 

With  Cain  belike,  in  the  Z  of  Nod,  or  in  the  Z  of  France 

voice  of  the  deep  as  it  hollows  the  cHfTs  of  the  Z. 

not  half  speaking  The  language  of  the  Z. 


Queen  Mary  il  i  29 

Foresters  n  i  370 

Becket  iv  ii  265 

Foresters  n  ii  86 

Harold  ii  ii  407 

Prom,  of  May  in  370 

Harold  v  i  585 

Becket  n  ii  94 

Harold  v  i  583 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  20 

I  V  10 

I  V  383 

I  V  409 

n  i  102 

n  i  168 

n  i  232 

in  i  321 

III  ii  47 

„        ni  ii  48 

in  ii  57 

„      in  iii  182 

„      in  iv  211 

„      in  iv  322 

in  vi  63 

„      in  vi  106 

„      in  vi  226 

„      IV  iii  423 

„      IV  iii  536 

V  i  131 

V  i  167 
Harold  I  ii  121 

n  i  61 

n  ii  83 

„     n  ii  505 

„     n  ii  510 

„     III  i  205 

IV  i  93 

„  IV  i  201 

„  IV  ii  53 

„  IV  ii  54 

„  IV  iii  189 

„  IV  iii  198 

„  V  i  131 

„  V  ii  161 
Becket  i  i  242 

„  I  iii  141 

„  I  iii  150 

„  I  iii  459 

„  I iv  196 

„  II  i  4 

„  II  i  137 


Land 


977 


Last 


Land  (s)  (continued)    from  the  salt  lips  of  the  I  we  two  Have 

track'd  Becket  in  ii  2 

lord  of  more  I  Than  any  crown  in  Europe,  „        v  i  29 

And  wrought  his  worst  against  his  native  I,  The  Cup  i  ii  178 

past  is  Uke  a  travell'd  I  now  sunk  Below  the  horizon —       „  ii  230 

I  never  saw  The  I  so  rich  in  blossom  as  this  year.  The  Falcon  342 

'  The  I  belongs  to  the  people  !  '  Prom,  of  May  1 140 

s'pose  my  pig's  the  I,  and  you  says  it  belongs  to  the 

parish,  „  1 144 

violated  the  whole  Tradition  of  our  I,  „  1 496 

Who  leaves  me  all  his  I  at  Littlechester,  „  1 511 

pacing  my  new  I's  at  Littlechester,  „  n  647 

We  shall  have  to  sell  all  the  I,  „         ni  165 

The  I  belonged  to  the  Steers  i'  the  owd  times,  „         m  450 

I  have  heard  the  Steers  Had  I  in  Saxon  times  ;  „         ni  608 

I  have  I  now  And  wealth,  and  lay  both  at  your  feet.  „         m  615 

not  with  all  your  wealth.  Your  I,  your  life  !  „         in  796 

if  they  be  not  paid  back  at  the  end  of  the  year,  the 

I  goes  to  the  Abbot.  Foresters  i  i  70 

Sir  Richard  must  scrape  and  scrape  till  he  get  to  the  I  again.  „         i  i  79 
must  be  paid  in  a  year  and  a  month,  or  I  lose  the  I.  „       i  i  269 

but  he  may  save  the  I,  (repeat)  „       i  i  283 

Well,  thou  Shalt  go,  but  O  the  Z!  the  H  „       i  i  328 

and  I  shall  lose  my  I  also.  „       i  i  339 

Or  I  forfeit  my  I  to  the  Abbot.  „      i  ii  151 

pay  My  brother  all  his  debt  and  save  the  I.  „      i  ii  219 

till  he  join  King  Richard  in  the  Holy  L.     Robin. 

Going  to  the  Holy  L  to  Richard  !  „      i  ii  239 

pay  his  mortgage  to  his  brother,  And  save  the  I.  „      i  ii  265 

thou  art  dispossessed  of  all  thy  I's,  goods,  and  chattels ;        „       i  iii  60 
There  is  no  I  like  England  (repeat)  Foresters  n  i  1, 5, 13, 17 

thro'  all  the  forest  I  North  to  the  Tyne :  being  outlaw'd 

in  a  Z  Where  law  lies  dead,  Foresters  n  i  88 

— if  so  the  I  may  come  To  Marian,  and  they  rate  the 
I  fivefold  The  worth  of  the  mortgage,  and  who 
marries  her  Marries  the  I.  „      ii  i  147 

and  couldst  never  pay  The  mortgage  on  my  I.  „      ii  i  454 

but  my  father  will  not  lose  his  I,  „      n  i  523 

He  is  old  and  almost  mad  to  keep  the  I.  „      n  i  529 

what  sort  of  man  art  thou  For  I,  not  love  ?    Thou 

wilt  inherit  the  I,  „      n  i  534 

betray'd  Thy  father  to  the  losing  of  his  I.  „      n  i  570 

Now  he  cries  '  The  I !  the  I ! '    Come  to  him.  „         n  ii  7 

To  a  I  where  the  fay,  „     n  ii  180 

thou  seest  the  I  has  come  between  us,  „         rv  53 

and  I  would  thou  wert  the  king  of  the  I.  „        rv  233 

if  the  I  Were  ruleable  by  tongue,  „       iv  398 

if  they  were  not  repaid  within  a  Umited  time  your  I 

should  be  forfeit.  „       rv  468 

The  I]  the  n  (repeat)  Foresters  iv  470,  491,  854 

one  thousand  marks,  Or  else  the  I.  Foresters  iv  475 

old  Sir  Richard  might  redeem  his  I.    He  is  all  for 

love,  he  cares  not  for  the  I.  „       iv  488 

Out  of  our  treasury  to  redeem  the  I.  „        iv  493 

And  Sir  Richard  cannot  redeem  his  I.  „       iv  565 

And  we  shall  keep  the  I.  „        iv  637 

It  seems  thy  father's  I  is  forfeited.  „        iv  640 

He  shall  wed  thee  :  The  I  shall  still  be  mine.  „        iv  643 

I  could  wish  that  all  the  I  Were  plunged  „        iv  667 

Woe  to  that  I  shall  own  thee  for  her  king  !  „        iv  759 

on  the  faitli  and  honour  of  a  king  The  I  is  his  again.  „        iv  853 

I  am  crazed  no  longer,  so  I  have  the  I.  „        iv  856 

The  gold — my  son — my  gold,  my  son,  the  I —  „        iv  988 

And  join'd  my  banner  in  the  Holy  L,  ,.      iv  1000 

weight  of  the  very  I  itself,  Down  to  the  inmost  centre.  „      iv  1025 

Our  Lady's  blessed  shrines  throughout  the  I  „      iv  1080 

land  (verb)     So  your  king-parliament  suffer  him  to  I,     Queen  Mary  i  v  366 

Landed     Are  I  North  of  Humber,  and  in  a  field  Harold  in  ii  126 

William  hath  I,  ha  ?     Thane.     L  at  Pevensey — I  am 

from  Pevensey —  «     iv  iii  185 

TjiTiiling     Back'd  by  the  power  of  France,  and 

I  here.  Queen  Mary  in  i  448 

Landless    Specially  not  this  I  PhiHbert  Of  Savoy  ;  „         iii  v  240 

Landlord    fur  1  wur  nobbut  a  laabourer,  and  now  I  be 

a  Ir—  Prom,  of  May  i  830 


Land-surveyor    and  I  taaked  'im  fur  soom  sort  of  a  l-s — 

but  a  beant.  Prom,  of  May  1 204 

Lane     {See  also  Laane)     Stand  back,  keep  a  clear  I !  Queen  Mary  i  i  2 

when  you  lamed  the  lady  in  the  hollow  I.  Prom,  of  May  in  90 

Do  you  still  suffer  from  your  fall  in  the  hollow  I?  „         m  241 

if  met  in  a  black  I  at  midnight :  Foresters  in  224 

Language    Seventeen — and  knew  eight  I's —  Queen  Mary  in  i  359 

not  half  speaking  The  I  of  the  land.  Becket  ii  i  137 

His  wickedness  is  like  my  wretchedness — Beyond 

aU  I.  Prom,  of  May  in  748 

Lanker    I  be  Z  than  an  old  horse  turned  out  to  die  on  the 

conamon.  Foresters  i  i  51 

Lap    Milk  ?     Filippo.     Three  I's  for  a  cat  !  The  Falcon  125 

Lapse     track  of  the  true  faith  Your  I's  are  far  seen.       Queen  Mary  in  iv  95 

Lapwing    The  I's  Ues,  says  '  here  '  when  they  are  there.        „  ni  v  124 

Larder    Come,  come,  Filippo,  what  is  there  in  the  I  ?  The  Falcon  118 

then  there  is  anything  in  your  lordship's  I  at  your 

lordship's  service,  „  137 

Large     Hath  he  the  I  ability  of  the  Emperor  ?  Queen  Mary  i  v  323 

Hath  he  the  I  ability  of  his  father  ?  „  i  v  438 

They  have  brought  it  in  I  measure  on  themselves.  „       rv  iii  363 

thou  thyself  shalt  have  L  lordship  there  of  lands  and 

territory.  Harold  n  ii  83 

they  both  have  life  In  the  I  mouth  of  England,  „     rv  iii  74 

Without  too  I  self-lauding  I  must  hold  The  sequel  „     iv  iii  87 

Larger     Will  enter  on  the  Z  golden  age  ;  Prom,  of  May  i  590 

The  hope  of  I  life  hereafter,  more  Tenfold  than  under 

roof.  Foresters  n  i  69 

Largess    Might  cast  my  I  of  it  to  the  crowd  !  The  Cup  n  224 

Lark     Spit  them  like  I's  for  aught  I  care.  Queen  Mary  i  v  395 

The  I  above,  the  nightingale  below,  „  n  i  52 

the  I  sings,  the  sweet  stars  come  and  go,  Harold  n  ii  434 

I  first  takes  the  sunlight  on  his  wing,  The  Cup  i  iii  43 

thou  that  canst  soar  Beyond  the  morning  I,  The  Falcon  11 

and  the  I's  'ud  sing  i'  them  daays.  Prom,  of  May  i  374 

'  O  happy  I,  that  warblest  high  Above  thy  lowly  nest,  „         in  199 

while  the  I  flies  up  and  touches  heaven  !  Foresters  i  ii  315 

When  heaven  falls,  I  may  light  on  such  all  „         in  13 

Could  live  as  happy  as  the7's  in  heaven,  „         in  82 

Lam  (learn,  teach)     Wheer  did  they  I  ye  that  ?     Dora. 

In  Cumberland,  Mr.  Dobson.  Prom,  of  May  i  64 

I'll  git  the  book  agean,  and  I  mysen  the  rest,  „         m  12 

Them  be  what  they  I's  the  childer'  at  school,  „         ni  39 

Lamed  (leamed,  taught)    'at  I  ha'  nobbut  I  mysen  haafe  on  it.      „  in  4 

Lash  (verb)     If  they  prance.  Rein  in,  not  I  them,  Harold  i  i  372 

Lash  (whip)     with  crimson  rowel  And  streaming  I.      Queen  Mary  in  iv  184 

Lash'd    I  to  death,  or  lie  Famishing  in  black  cells,  „  v  ii  194 

scorn'd  the  man.  Or  I  his  rascal  back,  Harold  n  ii  507 

now,  perhaps,  Fetter'd  and  I,  a  galley-slave.  Foresters  n  i  654 

Lashing    storm  and  shower  I  Her  casement,  Prom,  of  May  ii  472 

Lass     Ay,  I,  but  when  thou  be  as  owd  as  me  „  i  380 

Why,  I,  what  maakes  tha  sa  red  ?  „  1 398 

and  the  lads  and  I'es  'ull  hev  a  dance.  „  i  428 

Last    Dear  friend,  for  the  I  time  ;  farewell,  and  fly.        Queen  Mary  i  ii  103 

because  they  know  him  the  I  White  Rose,  the  I 

Plantagenet  „  i iv  207 

L  night  I  cUmb'd  into  the  gate-house,  Brett,  „  n  iii  14 

Did  not  his  I  breath  Clear  Courtenay  and  the  Princess     „  in  i  134 

I  have  heard  She  would  not  take  a  I  farewell  of  him,        „  in  i  367 

Laughs  at  the  I  red  leaf,  and  Andrew's  Day.  „  in  iii  87 

Thou  I  of  all  the  Tudors,  come  away  !     With  us 

is  peace  !  '     The  I  ?     It  was  a  dream  ;  „  in  v  151 

A  missive  from  the  Queen  :  I  time  she  wrote,  I  had 

like  to  have  lost  my  life  :  „         in  v  188 

L  night,  I  dream'd  the  faggots  were  alight,  „  iv  ii  1 

It  is  the  I.     Cranmer.     Give  it  me,  then.  „  iv  ii  64 

For  death  gives  life's  I  word  a  power  to  live,  „        rv  iii  161 

forasmuch  as  I  have  come  To  the  I  end  of  life,  „         rv  iii  218 

This  I — I  dare  not  read  it  her.  „  v  ii  183 

and  I  say  it  For  the  I  time  perchance,  Harold  i  i  176 

but  I  night  An  evil  dream  that  ever  came  and  went —  „        i  ii  69 

Friends,  in  that  I  inhospitable  plunge  Our  boat  hath 

burst  her  ribs ;  „         n  i  1 

L  night  King  Edward  came  to  me  in  dreams — 
(repeat)  Harold  iv  i  259,  265 

3  Q 


Last 


978 


Law 


Last  {continued)    Hear  me  again — for  the  I  time.  Harold  v  i  8 

Then  for  the  I  time,  monk,  I  ask  again  „    v  i  15 

Peace  !     The  king's  I  word — '  the  arrow  ! '    I  shall  die —         „  v  i  266 
wherefore  now  Obey  mv  first  and  I  commandment. 

Gro !  '  1.  V  i  359 

Edith,  if  I,  the  I  EngUsh  King  of  England—  „  v  i  384 

but  our  sun  in  Aquitaine  I's  longer.  Becket,  Pro.  328 

The  I  Parthian  shaft  of  a  forlorn  Cupid  at  the  King's 

left  breast, 
and  his  I  words  were  a  commendation  of  Thomas  Becket 
L  night  I  followed  a  woman  in  the  city  here. 
That  rang  Within  my  head  I  night, 
at  I  tongue-free  To  blast  my  realms  with  exconummi- 

cation 
nigh  at  the  end  of  our  I  crust,  and  that  mouldy. 
He  hath  the  Pope's  I  letters,  and  they  threaten 
Take  thy  one  chance  ;  Catch  at  the  I  straw. 
Let  this  be  thy  I  trespass. 
King  closed  with  me  I  July  That  I  should  pass  the 

censures  of  the  Church 
Shall  not  Heaven  be  served  Tho'  earth's  I  earthquake 

clash'd  the  minster-bells, 
I  need  not  fear  the  crowd  that  hunted  me  Across  the 

woods,  I  night. 
He  entreats  you  now  For  your  I  answer. 

0  would  it  were  His  third  I  apoplexy  ! 

1  had  a  touch  of  this  I  year — in — Rome, 
crown'd  victor  of  my  will — On  my  I  voyage — 
came  back  I  night  with  her  son  to  the  castle. 
Thou  art  the  I  friend  left  me  upon  earth — 
And  this  I  costly  gift  to  mine  own  self, 
when  he  came  I  year  To  see  me  hawking, 
>Iy  I  sight  ere  I  swoon'd  was  one  sweet  face  Crown'd 
so  much  weaker,  so  much  worse  For  I  day's  journey. 
tha  looks  haale  anew  to  Z  to  a  hoonderd.     Steer. 

An'  why  shouldn't  I  lio  a  hoonderd  ? 
Noa ;  I  laame't  my  knee  I  night  running  arter  a 

thief. 
Oh,  Philip,  Father  heard  you  I  night. 
but  you  must  not  be  too  sudden  with  it  either,  as 

you  were  I  year. 
The  I  on  it,  eh  ?     Haymaker.     Yeas. 
Well,  it  be  the  I  load  hoam. 
Well  but,  as  I  said  afoor,  it  be  the  I  load  hoam ; 
'  The  L  Load  Hoam  . '  (repeat) 

At  the  end  of  the  daay.  For  the  I  load  hoam  ?  (repeat) 
Till  the  end  of  the  daay  And  the  I  load  hoam. 
Till  the  end  o'  the  daay  An'  the  I  load 

hoam.'  (repeat) 
To  the  end  o'  the  daay.  An'  the  I  load  hoam 
Only  I  week  at  Littlechester,  drove  me  From  out 

her  memory. 
Oh,  I  night.  Tired,  pacing  my  new  lands  at  Littlechester, 
spent  all  your  I  Saturday's  wages  at  the  ale-house  ; 
It  is  almost  the  I  of  my  bad  days,  I  think. 
They  did  not  I  three  Jimes. 

But  she  there — her  I  word  Forgave — and  I  forgive  you. 
Nay,  this  may  be  the  I  time  When  I  shall  hold  my 

birthday  in  this  hall :  Foresters  i  ii  87 

from  their  stillness  in  the  grave  By  the  I  trumpet.  „        ii  i  48 

and  the  old  woman's  blessing  with  them  to  the  I  fringe.        „      n  i  196 
We  have  him  at  Z ;  we  have  him  at  advantage.  „      n  i  414 

There  came  some  evil  fairy  at  my  birth  And  cursed 

me,  as  the  I  heir  of  my  race  :  „     ii  ii  109 

is  it  true  ? — ^That  John  I  week  retum'd  to  Nottingham,         „       iii  147 
Lasting    and  the  man  has  doubtless  a  good  heart,  and 

a  true  and  I  love  for  me  :  Prom,  of  May  in  172 

Late  (adj.  and  adv.)     my  daughter  said  that  when 
there  rose  a  talk  of  the  I  rebellion, 
I  will  go.     I  thank  my  God  it  is  too  I  to  fly. 
Her  freaks  and  frolics  with  the  I  Lord  Admiral  ? 
My  Lord,  you  I  were  loosed  from  out  the  Tower, 
Who  loathe  you  for  your  I  return  to  Rome, 
in  pursuing  heresy  I  have  gone  beyond  your  I  Lord 
Chancellor,— 


Late  (adj.  and  adv.)  (continued) 
not  safe  to  preach. 


Friend,  tho'  so  I,  it  is 


Cecil 


God  guide  me  lest  I  lose 


Q^een  Mary  v  iv  41 


Pro.  339 

Pro.  400 

Pro.  468 

1 171 

II  ii  50 
m  i  114 

III  iii  24 

IV  ii  221 

V  ii  165 

V  ii  388 

V  iii  41 


The  Cup  I  iii  17 

II  46 

u  172 

II  446 

II  521 

The  Falcon  3 

31 

228 

312 

647 

834 

Prom,  of  May  i  355 

1 387 
I  557 


n54 
II 141 
II 144 
II 169 
II 171 
II 184, 195 
II  209 

n  239,  293 
n260 

n404 
n645 
m78 
in  471 
III  589 
in  810 


Queen  Mary  i  i  92 
I  ii  112 
I  iv  20 
I  iv  49 
IV  ii  32 


V  V  208 

Harold  rv  iii  175 

Becket  i  iii  288 

„  IV  ii  1 

V  ii  524 

V  ii  526 
The  Cup  II  480 
The  Falcon  200 

227 
Foresters  n  i  427 


vii98 


Am  I  too  I  ? 

the  way. 
Ay,  but  what  I  guest.  As  haggard  as  a  fast  of  forty 

days. 
Too  I,  my  lord  :  you  see  they  are  signing  there. 
The  boy  so  I ;  pray  God,  he  be  not  lost. 
Is  it  too  I  for  me  to  save  your  soul  ? 
Becket,  it  is  too  I.     Becket.     Is  it  too  I  ?     Too  I  on 

earth  may  be  too  soon  in  heU. 
Too  I — -thought  myself  wise — A  woman's  dupe. 
— and  better  I  than  never — 

I  have  heard  That,  thro'  his  I  magnificence  of  living 
I  am  too  I  then  with  my  quartersta£E ! 
Late  (s)     There  was  one  here  of  I — WiUiam  the  Silent   Queen  Mary  in  ii  191 
Later     Sooner  or  I  shamed  of  her  among  The  ladies,      Provi.  of  May  m  581 
Lateran     When  had  the  L  and  the  Holy  Father  Harold  v  i  17 

leave  L  and  Vatican  in  one  dust  of  gold —  Becket  n  ii  475 

Latimer  (Bishop  of  Worcester)    Hooper,  Ridley,  L  wiU 

not  fly.  Qv^en  Mary  i  ii  14 

Cranmer  and  Hooper,  Ridley  and  L,  „       ni  iv  424 

L  Had  a  brief  end — not  Ridley.  „        iv  ii  224 

I  saw  the  deaths  of  L  and  Ridley.  „       iv  iii  295 

And  you  saw  L  and  Ridley  die  ?     L  was  eighty, 

was  he  not  ? 
'  not  till  I  hears  ez  L  and  Ridley  be  a-vire  ; ' 
When  we  had  come  where  Ridley  burnt  with  L, 
L  !     Sir,  we  are  private  with  our  women  here — - 
Latimer-sailor    Our  Ridley-soldiers  and  our  L-s's 
Latin  (adj.)     for  my  verses  if  the  L  rhymes  be  roUed  out 
from  a  full  mouth  ? 
That's  a  deUcate  L  lay  Of  Walter  Map  : 
Latin  (s)     You  know  your  L — quiet  as  a  dead  body, 
Laugh    And  that's  at  I  Lammas — never  perhaps. 
Oh  L's  at  the  last  red  leaf,  and  Andrew's  Day. 
so  !  I  not !  .  .  .  Strange  and  ghastly 
Latter    we  could  not  but  Z,  as  by  a  royal  necessity — 
Lauding    See  Self-lauding 

Laugh'd     William  I  and  swore  that  might  was  right. 
The  wicked  sister  clapt  her  hands  and  I ; 
part  royal,  for  King  and  kingUng  both  I, 
when  we  felt  we  had  I  too  long  and  could  not  stay 

ourselves — 
such  a  comedy  as  our  court  of  Provence  Had  I  at. 
Laughing    (See  also  A-laughin')     And  the  Dutchman, 

Now  I  at  some  jest  ?  Queen  Mary  in  i  196 

Laughter     (See  also  Sea-laughter)     among  thine  island 

mists  With  I.  Harold  ii  ii  183 

thunder-cloud  That  lours  on  England — I !  „     ni  ii  161 

human  I  in  old  Rome  Before  a  Pope  was  born,  „     in  ii  163 

great  motion  of  I  among  us,  part  real,  part  childlike,      Becket  in  iii  155 

trumpets  in  the  halls,  Sobs,  I,  cries  :  „         v  ii  368 

I  Shall  not  be  made  the  I  of  the  village.  Prom,  of  May  i  720 

Lava-torrents    Whose  l-t  blast  and  blacken  a  province  The  Cup  n  302 

Lavender    To  rose  and  I  my  horsiness.  Queen  Mary  ni  v  185 

Lavish    Spare  not  thy  tongue  !  be  I  with  our  coins,  Becket  ii  ii  469 

Your  I  household  curb'd,  and  the  remission  Queen  Mary  i  v  113 

Lavish'd     AH  I  had  1 1  for  the  glory  of  the  King  ;  Becket  i  iii  663 

Law  (s)     the  Queen,  and  the  l's,  and  the  people,  his 

slaves.  Queen  Mary  n  i  174 

when  I  was  wedded  to  the  realm  And  the  realm's  Vs       „  n  ii  165 

seeks  To  bend  the  Vs  to  his  own  will,  „  ii  ii  184 

But  so  I  get  the  Vs  against  the  heretic,  „  in  i  323 

she  thought  she  knew  the  Vs.     But  for  herself,  she 

knew  but  Uttle  I,  „  ni  i  381 

Either  in  making  Vs  and  ordinances  „        in  iii  130 

Of  all  such  Vs  and  ordinances  made  ;  „         ni  iii  142 

I  will  be  King  of  England  by  the  Vs,  Harold  n  ii  131 

For  I  shall  rule  according  to  your  Vs,  „     n  ii  759 

I  will  rule  according  to  their  Vs.  „     v  ii  198 

Like  other  lords  amenable  to  I.    I'll  have  them  written 

down  and  made  the  I.  Becket,  Pro.  25 

sign'd  These  ancient  Vs  and  customs  of  the  reabn.  „         i  iii  7 

to  obey  These  ancient  Vs  and  customs  of  the  realm  ?  «       i  iii  18 


IV  iii  328 
IV  iii  508 
IV  iii  586 
V  vll8 
IV  iii  348 


Becket  n  ii  337 

V  i  191 
Queen  Mary  i  iv  181 

Foresters  ii  ii  86 

Queen  Mary  in  iii  87 

Harold  in  ii  157 

Becket  ni  iii  158 

Harold  n  ii  361 

V  ii  49 
Becket  ni  iii  158 

„    m  iii  160 

V  i  191 


Law 


979 


Lean 


Law  (s)  (continued)     and  I  From  madness.  Becket  i  iii  374 

There  wore  his  time  studying  the  canon  I  „         n  i  86 

Co-kings  we  were,  and  made  the  Vs  together.  „      u  ii  123 

spiritual  giant  with  our  island  Vs  And  customs,  „      iv  ii  444 

it  is  the  I,  not  he  ;  The  customs  of  the  realm.  „       v  ii  126 

— her  main  I  Whereby  she  grows  in  beauty —  Prom,  oj  May  i  282 

according  to  the  I  and  custom  of  the  kingdom  of 

England 
I  have  shelter'd  some  that  broke  the  forest  Vs. 
being  outlaw'd  in  a  land  Where  I  Ues  dead,  we  make 

ourselves  the  I. 
An  outlaw's  bride  may  not  be  \vife  in  I. 
We  robb'd  the  lawyer  who  went  against  the  I ; 
chief  of  these  outlaws  who  break  the  I  ? 
being  out  of  the  I  how  should  we  break  the  I  ?  if  we 

broke  into  it  we  should  break  the  I, 
Ay,  ay,  Robin,  but  let  him  know  our  forest  Vs  : 
If  the  king  and  the  I  work  injustice,  is  not  he  that 

goes  against  the  king  and  the  I  the  true  king 
Church  and  L,  halt  and  pay  toll  ! 
you  see  the  bond  and  the  letter  of  the  I. 
Between  the  I  and  letter  of  the  I !     0  God,  I  would 

the  letter  of  the  I  Were  some  strong  fellow 
When  the  Church  and  the  I  have  forgotten  God's  music. 
Sweet  Marian,  by  the  letter  of  the  I 
You  crost  him  with  a  quibble  of  your  I. 
Hast  broken  all  our  Norman  forest  Vs, 
That  thou  wilt  break  our  forest  Vs  again 
They  break  thy  forest  Vs — ^nay,  by  the  rood 
And  have  thy  fees,  and  break  the  I  no  more. 

Law  (inter.)     (See  also  Lor)     0  I — yeas,  Sir  !     I'll  run 

fur  'im  mysen.  Prom,  of  May  iii  713 

Law-bench    Spain  in  the  pulpit  and  on  the  l-b  ;  Queen  Mary  n  i  178 

Lawful    Long  live  Queen  Mary,  the  I  and  legitimate 
daughter  Of  Harry  the  Eighth  ! 
with  vour  I  Prince  Stand  fast  against  our  enemies 

and  yours. 
Your  I  Prince  hath  come  to  cast  herself  On  loyal 

hearts  and  bosoms, 
The  ruler  of  an  hour,  but  I  King, 
Were  fighting  underhand  unholy  waip  Against  your  I  king. 

Lawn    forest  Vs  are  all  as  bright  As  ways  to  heaven, 
Thro'  wood  and  I  and  hng, 

Lawrence  (Saint)     The  patience  of  St.  L  in  the  fire. 

Lawyer    leastwaays,  I  should  be  wi'  a  I. 

We  robb'd  the  I  who  went  against  the  law  ; 

Lay  (s)     That's  a  delicate  Latin  I  Of  Walter  Map  : 

lay  (verb,  trans.)    (See  also  Laay)    I  love  you,  L  my 

Ufe  in  your  hands.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  105 

God  I  the  waves  and  strow  the  storms  „  J  v  381 

'  Will  you  take  it  off  Before  1 1  me  down  ?  '  „  m  i  403 

I  never  I  my  head  upon  the  pillow  But  that  I  think,  „  iii  v  131 
See.  I  nt  here.  For  I  will  come  no  nearer  „         iii  v  198 

They  will  not  I  more  taxes  on  a  land  „  v  i  167 

to  discourage  and  I  lame  The  plots  of  France,  „  v  i  188 

L  thou  thy  hand  upon  this  golden  pall !  Harold  n  ii  699 

L  hands  of  fuU  allegiance  in  thy  Lord's  „         v  i  11 

I  them  both  upon  the  waste  sea-shore  At  Hastings,  „     v  ii  159 

I  My  crozier  in  the  Holy  Father's  hands,  Becket  i  iii  124 
not  yield  To  I  your  neck  beneath  your  citizen's  heel.  „  v  i  31 
Where  to  I  on  her  tribute — heavily  here  And  lightly  there.  The  Cup  ii  98 
L  down  the  Lydian  carpets  for  the  king.  „  u  187 
strows  our  fruits,  and  Vs  Our  golden  grain,  „  ii  286 
But  I  them  there  for  a  moment !                                         The  Falcon  763 

I I  them  for  the  first  time  round  your  neck.  „  907 
land  now  And  wealth,  and  I  both  at  your  feet.       Prom,  of  May  in  616 

lay  (past  tense  [of  Lie])    by  God's  providence  a  good 


Foresters  i  iii  66 

I  iii  70 

„       II  i  91 

II  ii  91 

III  162 

IV  142 

IV  144 
IV  199 

IV  228 
IV  429 
IV  505 

IV  513 
IV  554 
IV  639 
IV  850 


IV  907 
IV  955 


lis 

II  ii  240 

n  ii  261 

Foresters  iv  47 

IV  822 

II  i  630 

„      m  425 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  95 

Prom,  of  May  m  34 

Foresters  m  161 

Becket  y  i  192 


Layest  (trans.)  but  when  thou  I  thy  lip  To  this,  Becket  n  i  306 
Lajring  I  saw  the  covers  I.  Philip.  Let  us  have  it.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  258 
Layman    whether  between  laymen  or  clerics,  shall  be 

tried  in  the  King's  court.'  Becket  i  iii  80 

Lasrmen-criminals    be  boimd  Behind  the  back  like  l-c  ?  „      i  iii  96 

Lazar    I  marked  a  group  of  Vs  in  the  marketplace —  „      i  iv  81 

Lazarus     Am  I  a  prisoner  ?     Leicester.     By  bt.  L,  no  !  „    i  iii  730 


stout  staff  L  near  me ; 
And  York  /  barren  for  a  hundred  years. 
plow  L  rusting  in  the  furrow's  yellow  weeds. 
The  town  I  still  in  the  low  sun-hght. 
She  I  so  long  at  the  bottom  of  her  well 
The  man  I  down — the  delicate-footed  creature 
Layest  (intrans.)     thou  That  I  so  long  in  heretic  bonds 
with  me ; 


Queen  Mary  v  ii  469 

Becket  i  iii  54 

„     I  iii  355 

Prom,  of  May  i  37 

Foresters  iv  242 

IV  535 

Queen  Mary  iii  iv  280 


Lazy     We  dally  with  our  I  moments  here, 
Lazy-pious     And  he  our  l-p  Norman  King, 
Lea     I  come  here  to  see  this  daughter  of  Sir  Richard  of 
the  L 

Robin,  I  am  Sir  Richard  of  the  L. 

Where  is  this  old  Sir  Richard  of  the  L  ? 

Where  is  this  laggard  Richard  of  the  L  ? 
Lea  (Sir  Richard)    See  Richard,  Richard  Lea,  Richard  of  the  Lea 
Lea  (Walter)    See  Walter,  Walter  Lea 
Lead  (direction)     Follow  my  I,  and  I  will  make  thee  earl. 


Queen  Mary  v  iii  108 
Harold  n  ii  444 

Foresters  i  ii  27 

„      ir  i  442 

IV  438 

IV  450 


Morcar.     What  I  then  ? 
Lead  (metal)     My  feet  are  tons  of  I,  They  will  break  in 

the  earth — 
Lead  (verb)     we  two  will  I  The  living  waters  of  the 

Faith 
Z  on  ;  ye  loose  me  from  my  bonds, 
debonair  to  those  That  follow  where  he  Vs, 
Thy  voice  will  I  the  Wi  tan — shall  I  have  it  ? 
if  thou  wilt  I  me  to  thy  mother. 
Save  by  that  way  which  Vs  thro'  night  to  light, 
and  at  last  May  I  them  on  to  victory — 
Give  me  your  arm.     L  me  back  again. 
To  Z  us  thro'  the  windings  of  the  wood. 

0  I  me  to  my  father  !  (repeat) 
L  us  thou  to  some  deep  glen. 

Leader    the  people  Claim  as  their  natural  I — 
All  arm'd,  waiting  a  I ; 
and  ye  have  called  me  to  be  your  I. 
Northumberland,  The  I  of  our  Reformation, 
After  a  riot  We  hang  the  Vs, 

1  am  no  soldier,  as  he  said — at  least  No  I. 
'  Antonius  I  of  the  Roman  Legion.' 
I  have  heard  of  them.     Have  they  no  I? 
Be  thou  their  I  and  they  wiU  all  of  them 
and  their  own  want  Of  manhood  to  their  I ! 

Leadin'     so  ta'en  up  wi'  I  the  owd  man  about  all  the 

blessed  murnin' 
Leading    (See  also  Leadin')    by  God's  grace.  We'll 

foUow  Phihp's  I, 
Leaf    (See  also  Lettuce-leaf)     Laughs  at  the  last  red  I 
and  Andrew's  Day. 

Love  will  fly  the  fallen  I,  and  not  be  overtaken  ; 

golden  leaves,  these  earls  and  barons,  that  clung  to  me 

all  the  I  of  this  New-wakening  year. 

I  tear  away  The  leaves  were  darken'd  by  the  battle — 

How  happily  would  we  hit  among  the  leaves 

When  all  the  leaves  are  green  ;  (repeat) 

By  all  the  leaves  of  spring, 

I  scent  it  in  the  green  leaves  of  the  wood. 

You  see  the  darkness  thro'  the  hghter  I. 
Leaf-sky     Pillaring  a  l-s  on  their  monstrous  boles. 
League  (alliance)     may  he  not  make  A  I  with  WiUiam, 

sequel  had  been  other  than  his  I  With  Norway, 

We  have  had  our  Vs  of  old  with  Eastern  kings. 

There  is  my  hand — ^if  such  a  I  there  be. 
League  (measure)    crawl  over  knife-edge  flint  Barefoot, 
a  hundred  Vs, 

The  camp  is  half  a  I  without  the  city  ; 

There — I  on  I  of  ever-shining  shore 

for  Oberon  flew  away  Twenty  thousand  Vs  to-day. 

Fifty  Vs  Of  woodland  hear  and  know  my  horn. 
League  (verb)     foes  in  Edward's  hall  To  I  against  thy  weal, 

they  are  not  like  to  I  With  Harold  against  me 


Harold  i  ii  216 

The  Cup  n  476 

Queen  Mary  I  v  87 

„      IV  ii  240 

Harold  u  ii  320 

„     II  ii  619 

Becket  iv  i  41 

„       v  iii  88 

The  Cup  I  ii  168 

Prom,  of  May  in  474 

Foresters  n  i  634 

„    II  ii  22,  48 

„       II  ii  168 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  210 

II  i  108 

n  i  165 

HI  i  149 

IV  i  74 

Becket  i  iii  299 

The  Cup  I  i  167 

Foresters  i  iii  104 

I  iii  106 

n  i  694 

Prom,  of  May  in  2 

Queen  Mary  v  v  112 


„        III  iii  87 

V  ii  372 

Becket  i  iv  65 

The  Falcon  339 

913 

Foresters  in  41 

,  in  426, 441 

m439 

IV  944 

IV  976 

mlOO 

Harold  n  ii  461 

„     IV  iii  88 

The  Cup  I  ii  101 

„      I  ii  103 

Becket  n  i  273 

The  Cup  I  iii  89 

n  533 

Foresters  n  ii  143 

in  103 

Harold  I  ii  33 

n  ii  53 


Leagued    I  together  To  bar  me  from  my  PhiUp.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  139 

We  robb'd  the  traitors  that  are  I  with  John  ;  Foresters  ni  159 

Leal    Commands  you  to  be  dutiful  and  I  To  your  young 

King  Becket  v  ii  325 

Lean  (adj.)     worse  off  than  any  of  you,  for  I  be  Z  by  nature,  Foresters,  i  i  45 


Lean 


980 


Leaven 


Lean  (adj.)  (continued)    I  distrust  thee.     Thine  is 

a  half  voice  and  a  I  assent. 
Lean  (verb)     He  looks  to  and  he  I's  on  as  his  God, 

I  marvel  why  you  never  I  On  any  man's 
Lean'd    the  Holy  Rood  had  I  And  bow'd  above  me  ; 
Leaner    To  plump  the  I  pouch  of  Italy. 
Leaning    A  faint  foot  hither,  I  upon  Tostig. 
Leap    thro'  the  blood  the  wine  I's  to  the  brain 

Nor  care  to  I  into  each  other's  arms. 
Leapt    When  the  head  I — ^so  common  ! 

That  might  have  I  upon  us  unawares. 

Neighing  and  roaring  as  they  I  to  land — 

Gurth  hath  I  upon  him  And  slain  him  : 
Lear  (Shakespeare's  play)    '  What  are  we,'  says  the 
blind  old  man  in  i  ? 

Then  the  owd  man  i'  L  should  be  shaamed  of 
hissen. 
Learn    (See  also  Lam)     Your  people  have  begun  to  I 
your  worth. 

You  cannot  L  a  man's  nature  from  his  natural  foe. 

and  so  I  Your  royal  will,  and  do  it. — 

to  I  That  ev'n  St.  Peter  in  his  time  of  fear 

Will  let  you  I  in  peace  and  privacy 

May  I  there  is  no  power  against  the  Lord. 

Knowest  thou  this  ?     Harold.     I  I  it  now. 

Let  me  I  at  full  The  manner  of  his  death, 

I I  but  now  that  those  poor  Poitevins, 
Nor  you,  nor  I  Have  now  to  I,  my  lord. 
Will  he  not  fly  from  you  if  he  I  the  story  of  my 

shame  Prom,  of  May  in  256 

And  I  from  her  if  she  do  love  this  Earl.  Foresters  i  ii  187 

Leamed-Leam'd  (adj.)    but  you  still  preferr'd 

Your  learned  leisiu-e. 

And  tell  this  learned  Legate  he  lacks  zeal. 

And  I  and  learned  friends  among  ourselves 

I  have  done  my  best.     I  am  not  learn'd. 

Taught  her  the  learned  names,  anatomized  The 

flowers  for  her — 

Learned  (verb)    See  Lamed 

Learning  (part.)    Or  I  witchcraft  of  your  woodland 

witch. 
Learning  (s)     and  her  I  Beyond  the  churchmen  ; 
The  Ught  of  this  new  I  wanes  and  dies  : 
New  I  as  they  call  it ; 

ever  gentle,  and  so  gracious.  With  all  his  I — 
His  I  makes  his  burning  the  more  just. 
Your  I,  and  your  stoutness,  and  your  heresy, 
Brings  the  new  I  back. 
Leamt     Thou  hast  learnt  Thy  lesson,  and  I  mine. 
He  hath  leamt  to  love  our  Tostig  much  of  late. 
Leofwin.     And  he  hath  leamt,  despite  the  tiger 
in  him. 
Thou  hast  not  leamt  thy  quarters  here. 
When  all  the  world  hath  learnt  to  speak  the  truth, 
'  We  have  leamt  to  love  him,  let  him  a  little  longer 
but  belike  Thou  hast  not  leamt  his  measure. 
Soon  as  she  leamt  I  was  a  friend  of  thine. 
When  man  has  surely  learnt  at  last  that  all 
Lease    The  house  half-ruin'd  ere  the  I  be  out ; 
will  give  him,  as  they  say,  a  new  I  of  life, 
would  fight  for  his  rents,  his  I's,  his  houses. 
Least  (adj.)     out  of  which  Looms  the  I  chance  of  peril 
to  our  realm, 
even  now  You  seem  the  I  assassin  of  the  four. 
Anyhow  we  must  Move  in  the  line  of  I  resistance 
Least  (s)     Ev'n  to  the  I  and  meanest  of  my  own. 

Then  one  at  I  of  its  inhabitants 
Leather  (beat)    I'd  like  to  I  'im  black  and  blue,  and  she 

to  be  a-laughin'  at  it.  „  n  595 

all  on  us,  wi'  your  leave,  we  wants  to  I  'im.  „  ni  137 

Then  you  mun  be  his  brother,  an'  we'll  I  'im.  „  ni  151 

Leave  (permission)    By  your  Grace's  I  Your  royal  mother  Queen  Mary  i  v  15 
thy  I  to  set  my  feet  On  board,  Harold  i  i  228 

Harold,  I  will  not  yield  thee  I  to  go.  „     i  i  257 

No  man  without  my  I  shall  excommunicate  Becket,  Pro.  30 


Queen  Mary  ni  i  311 

IV  iii  306 

Becket  v  ii  550 

Harold  v  i  103 

Queen  Mary  m  iv  365 

Harold  I  i  144 

Foresters  i  iii  22 

ni  7 

Queen  Mary  i  v  477 

n  ii  295 

Harold  iv  iii  197 

V  i  632 

Prom,  of  May  i  263 

I  267 

Queen  Mary  i  v  109 

I  V  340 

II  ii  138 

m  iv  262 

ni  iv  326 

IV  iii  66 

Harold  ii  ii  591 

Becket,  Pro.  425 

11  ii  427 

„      IV  ii  274 


in  iv  258 

ni  iv  272 

„  V  ii  74 

Becket  m  i  25 

Prom,  of  May  n  302 


Foresters  n  i  500 
Queen  Mary  m  i  361 
m  ii  172 
IV  178 
IV  i  157 
IV  i  159 
IV  ii  125 
vi202 
Queen  Mary  v  ii  584 


Harold  I  i  145 

„     n  ii  153 

„       in  i  68 

ni  i  88 

„  IV  iii  118 

Becket  v  ii  110 

Prom,  of  May  ii  330 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  66 

Prom,  of  May  in  424 

Foresters  i  i  233 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  238 
Becket  v  ii  522 

Prom,  of  May  n  670 
Becket  n  ii  181 

Prom,  of  May  II  552 


Feria. 


Leave  (permission)  (corUinued)    No  man  without  my  I  shall 
cross  the  seas 

can  I  send  her  hence  Without  his  kingly  I  ? 

By  thy  I,  beauty.     Ay,  the  same  ! 

— I  have  stiU  thy  I  to  speak. 

mount  with  your  lordship's  I  to  her  ladyship's  castle, 

by  your  I  if  you  would  hear  the  rest.  The  writing. 
Leave  (verb)     I  dare  not  I  my  post. 

You  ofiend  us  ;  you  may  t  us. 

we  will  I  all  this,  sir,  to  our  council. 

and  I's  me  As  hopeful. 

that  I  should  I  Some  fruit  of  mine  own  body 

1 1  Lord  William  Howard  in  your  city, 

And  I  the  people  ilaked  to  the  crown, 

Ay,  rascal,  if  I  i  thee  ears  to  hear. 

And  shalt  be  thankful  if  I Z  thee  that. 

I  must  I  you.     Fare  you  well, 

L  me  now.  Will  you, 

pass  And  I  me,  PhiUp,  with  my  prayers  for  you. 

I  am  vastly  grieved  to  I  your  Majesty. 

I  have  foimd  thee  and  not  I  thee  any  more. 

Tell  me  that,  or  I  All  else  untold. 

my  Queen  is  hke  enough  To  I  me  by  and  by. 
To  I  you,  sire  ? 

so  my  Queen  Would  I  me — as — ^my  wife. 

L  me  alone,  brother,  with  my  Northumbria : 

I  I  thee,  brother.  

And  I  them  for  a  year,  and  coming  back  ' 

I Z  thee  to  thy  talk  with  him  alone  ; 

Better  I  vmdone  Than  do  by  halves — 

L  them  !  and  thee  too,  Aldwyth,  must  1 1 — 

To  I  the  Pope  dominion  in  the  West. 

but  I  this  day  to  me. 

To  I  the  foe  no  forage. 

L  me.     No  more — Pardon  on  both  sides — Go  ! 

L  them.     Let  them  be  ! 

L  me  with  Herbert,  friend. 

I I  that.  Knowing  how  much  you  reverence  Holy  Church 
My  lord,  permit  us  then  to  I  thy  service. 
My  Lord,  we  I  thee  not  without  tears. 
I  wrong  the  bird  ;  she  I's  only  the  nest  she  built,  they 

I  the  builder. 
I  must  /  you  to  your  banquet. 
I  mean  to  I  the  royalty  of  my  crown  Unlessen'd 
Not  I  these  count^olk  at  court, 
the  Pope  will  not  I  them  in  suspense, 
I  Lateran  and  Vatican  in  one  dust  of  gold — 
— And  to  meet  it  I  needs  must  I  as  suddenly. 
I  am  faint  and  sleepy.     L  me. 
And  I  you  alone  with  the  good  fairy. 
I  cannot  I  him  yet. 

While  this  but  I's  thee  with  a  broken  heart, 
sworn  on  this  my  cross  a  himdred  times  Never  to  I  him— 
for  thou  must  I  him  To-day,  but  not  quite  yet. 
L  it,  daughter  ;  Come  thou  with  me  to  Godstow 

nunnery, 
and  I  it  A  waste  of  rock  and  ruin,  hear. 
And  if  he  I  me — all  the  rest  of  hfe — 
And  thou  too  I  us,  my  dear  nurse,  alone. 
Ay,  the  dear  nurse  wiU  I  you  alone  ; 
An'  how  did  ye  I  the  owd  imcle  i'  Coomberland  ? 
but  I's  him  A  beast  of  prey  in  the  dark. 
Who  I's  me  all  his  land  at  Littlechester, 
I  must  I  you,  love,  to-day.     Eva.     L  me,  to-day  ! 
that  full  feast  That  I's  but  emptiness, 
this,  for  the  moment,  WiU  I  me  a  free  field. 
Tell  him  I  cannot  I  the  sick  lady  just  yet. 
Milly,  my  dear,  how  did  you  I  Mr.  Steer  ? 
But  shall  we  I  our  England  ? 
You  see  why  We  must  I  the  wood  and  fly. 
L  it  with  him  and  add  a  gold  mark  thereto. 
L  them  each  what  they  say  is  theirs. 
We  I  but  happy  memories  to  the  forest. 
Leaven     the  old  I  sticks  to  my  tongue  yet. 

so  much  of  the  anti-papal  I  Works  in  him  yet, 


Becket  Pro.  34 

„      in  i  220 

„     IV  ii  203 

„        v  ii  44 

The  Falcon  413 

529 

Queen  Mary  r  ii  55 

I  V  210 

I  V  317 

I  V  531 

u  ii  222 

„       n  ii  245 

„       m  i  119 

„      m  i  251 

„      m  i  257 

„      m  i  472 

„     m  V  210 

„     in  vi  228 

„     ni  vi  255 

„      IV  ii  109 

„     rv  iii  568 


V  i  243 

V  i  252 
Harold  i  i  285 

1 1461 

ni89 

n  ii  324 

n  ii  495 

IV  iii  227 

vi23 

vil28 

vil33 

vi353 

y  ii  149 

Becket  i  i  9 

I  ii  47 

„     1  iv  10 

„     1  iv  16 

„  I  iv  45 
„  Iivl50 
„  nil07 
„  nil29 
„  nil  359 
„  n  ii  474 
„  m  i  92 
„  mi  208 
„  iviiGO 
„  rvii85 
„  IV  ii  173 
„  ivii207 
„  ivii210 


„  IV 11365 

The  Cwp  n  306 

The  Falcon  334 

700 

703 

Prom,  of  May  i  67 

I  503 

I  511 

I  624 

n256 

n456 

ni352 

in410 

Foresters  i  iii  92 

„     n  ii  174 

m  210 

in  293 

„     IV  1070 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  48 

„  rv  i  15 


Leaven 


981 


Leofwin 


be  something  Of  this  world's  I  in  thee 


Leaven  {continued) 

too, 
Leaving    But  I  light  enough  for  Alfgar's  house 

L  so  many  foes  in  Edward's  hall 

Tho'  I  each,  a  wound  ; 

To  steel  myself  against  the  I  her  ? 

How  could  I  think  of  I  him  ? 

L  your  fair  Marian  alone  here. 
Led    they  I  Processions,  chanted  litanies, 

1 1  seven  hundred  knights  and  fought  his  wars. 

S'iver  we've  I  moast  on  it. 

()  Lord,  I  am  easily  I  by  words. 
Ledge    He  met  a  stag  there  on  so  narrow  a  I — 
Lees     You  cannot  judge  the  liquor  from  the  I. 
Left  (adj.)     The  last  Parthian  shaft  of  a  forlorn  Cupid  at 

the  King's  I  breast,  Becket,  Pro.  340 

On  this  I  breast  before  so  hard  a  heart,  „      Pro.  375 

Take  the  I  leg  for  the  love  of  God.  Foresters  iv  577 

L^  (s)     reels  Now  to  the  right,  then  as  far  to  the  Z,    Queen  Mary  iv  iii  396 


Becket  v  ii  29 

Harold  I  i  307 

„      I  ii  31 

Becket  i  i  176 

Prom,  of  May  i  293 

II  71 

Foresters  i  ii  154 

Queen  Mary  in  vi  94 

Becket  i  iii  638 

Prom,  of  May  n  52 

Foresters  i  ii  39 

„       IV  532 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  550 


Left  (verb)     I  shall  be  I  alone.     No  : 
1 1  her  with  rich  jewels  in  her  hand, 
I  scarce  had  I  your  Grace's  presence 
As  tho'  the  nightmare  never  Z  her  bed. 
I  about  Like  loosely-scatter'd  jewels, 
flying  to  our  side  L  his  all  bare. 
Their  voice  had  I  me  none  to  tell  you  this. 
Where  is  Pembroke  ?     Courtenay.     I Z  him  somewhere 

in  the  thick  of  it.     Mary.     L  him  and  fled  ;    and 

thou  that  would'st  be  King, 
And  Lady  Jane  had  Z  us. 
L  Mary  a  wife-widow  here  alone, 
Have  you  remain'd  in  the  true  Catholic  faith  1 1 

you  in  ? 
When  I  alone  in  my  despondency, 
There  is  no  hope  of  better  I  for  him. 
Her  life,  since  PhiUp  I  her,  and  she  lost 
Methinks  there  is  no  manhood  Z  among  us. 
I Z  her  lying  still  and  beautiful. 
Be  kindly  to  the  Normans  Z  among  us, 
Then  I  him  for  the  meaner  !  thee  ! —  „ 

I  saw  her  even  now :  She  hath  not  Z  us.  „ 
I Z  our  England  naked  to  the  South  To  meet  thee 

I I  him  with  peace  on  his  face —  Becket 
Save  for  myself  no  Rome  were  Z  in  England, 
how  many  an  innocent  Has  Z  his  bones  upon  the  way  to 

Rome  V 

darkness  of  the  gap  L  by  that  lack  of  love. 
Hath  not  thy  father  Z  us  to  ourselves  ?  „ 

And  I  all  naked,  I  were  lost  indeed.  „ 

Well — well — too  costly  to  be  I  or  lost.  „ 

live  what  may  be  Z  thee  of  a  life  Saved 
I  surely  should  have  Z  That  stroke  to  Rome, 
Thou  art  the  last  friend  Z  me  upon  earth — 
and  I  Z  it  privily  At  Florence,  in  her  palace, 
hasn't  an  eye  Z  in  his  own  tail  to  flourish 
Ay,  ay  !  stare  at  it :  it's  all  you  have  I  us. 
We  may  have  Z  their  fifty  less  by  five. 
They  Z  us  there  for  dead  ! 
Ay,  and  I Z  two  fingers  there  for  dead. 
I Z  him  there  for  dead  too  ! 
had  you  Z  him  free  use  of  his  wings, 
Hesn't  he  I  ye  nowt  ?     Dora.     No,  Mr.  Dobson. 


Iii  13 
I  iv  242 
IV  583 
IV  605 
Hi  27 
II  iii  5 
n  iii  36 


Since  I Z  her  Here  weeping,  I  have  j anged  the  world, 
L  but  one  dreadful  line  to  say. 
Some  of  our  workmen  have  Z  us, 
— all  still — and  nothing  I  To  Uve  for. 

I  Was  Z  alone,  and  knowing  as  I  did 
since  the  Sheriff  I  me  naught  but  an  empty  belly, 
He  dozes.     I  have  I  her  watching  him. 

I I  mine  horse  and  armour  with  a  Squire, 
Left-hand    Absolve  the  l-h  thief  and  damn  the  right  ? 
Xeft-handedness    all  l-h  and  imder-handedness. 
Leg    about  our  I's  till  we  cannot  move  at  all ; 

it  be  a  var  waay  vor  my  owld  I's  up  vro'  Islip 
Haul  like  a  great  strong  fellow  at  my  I's, 


II  iv  80 
II  iv  139 

III  i  462 

IV  ii  19 

IV  ii  95 

IV  iii  79 
IV  iii  428 

V  ii  284 

V  V  261 
Harold  in  i  303 

IV  ii  71 

V  i  159 
V  i  289 

Pro.  395 
II  ii  386 

II  ii  409 

III  i  61 
„  III  i  271 
„  IV  ii  9 
„  IV  ii  299 
„      IV  ii  367 

The  Cuf  I  iii  159 

The  Falcon  31 

74 

101 

163 

625 

651 

653 

659 

Prom,  of  May  i  652 

n7 

II  251 

II  411 

III  28 
in  681 

Foresters  ii  i  122 
n  i  278 
n  ii  80 

IV  414 
Becket  n  ii  392 

„    Pro.  341 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  204 

„         IV  iii  472 

Harold  Ii  i  11 


Leg  {continued)     Because  I  broke  The  horse's  Z —  Harold  ii  ii  110 

And  may  I  break  his  I's  ?  „      ii  ii  116 

this  rag  fro'  the  gangrene  i'  my  Z.  Becket  i  iv  237 

On  my  I's.     Eleanor.     And  mighty  pretty  I's  too.  „           iv  i  5 

and  thy  I's,  and  thy  heart,  and  thy  liver.  Foresters  iv  204 

I  have  a  swollen  vein  in  my  right  Z,  „        iv  569 

Take  the  left  I  for  the  love  of  God.  „        iv  577 

By  my  halidome  I  felt  him  at  my  Z  still.  „        iv  628 

Legacy    My  Z  of  war  against  the  Pope  Harold  v  i  328 
Legate    holy  I  of  the  holy  father  the  Pope,  Cardinal 

Pole,  Queen  Mary  i  iii  26 

L's  coming  To  bring  us  absolution  from  the  Pope.  ,,        in  i  431 

Well  said,  Lord  L.  „         in  ii  93 

Lord  Paget  Waits  to  present  our  Council  to  the  L.  „         in  ii  98 

No,  my  Lord  L,  the  Lord  Chancellor  goes.  „       in  ii  151 

all  one  mind  to  supplicate  The  L  here  for  pardon,  „       in  iii  107 

L  From  our  most  Holy  Father  Julius,  Pope,  „       in  iii  125 

authority  Apostolic  Given  unto  us,  his  L,  „       in  iii  211 

I  mean  the  houses  knelt  Before  the  L.  „      in  iii  258 

You  brawl  beyond  the  question ;  speak,  Lord  L  !  „         in  iv  98 

I  am  your  L ;  please  you  let  me  finish.  „      in  iv  179 

Beware,  Lord  L,  of  a  heavier  crime  Than  heresy  „       in  iv  221 

You,  Lord  L  And  Cardinal-Deacon,  „       m  iv  260 

4nd  tell  this  learned  L  that  he  lacks  zeal.  „      in  iv  272 

Your  violence  and  much  roughness  to  the  L,  „       in  iv  319 

yet  the  L  Is  here  as  Pope  and  Master  of  the  Church,  „      in  iv  346 

Our  bashful  L,  saw'st  not  how  he  flush'd  ?  „      in  iv  350 

So  that  you  crave  full  pardon  of  the  L.  „      m  iv  392 

the  duty  which  as  L  He  owes  himself,  „       in  iv  401 

it  would  more  become  you,  ray  Lord  L,  „         iv  i  116 

And  how  should  he  have  sent  me  L  hither,  „           v  ii  87 

God  curse  her  and  her  LI  ,,          v  iv  12 

Legate-cousin    Royal,  Infallible,  Papal  L-c.  „      iii  iv  433 
Legateship     reft  me  of  that  Z  Which  Julius  gave  me,  and 

the  Z  Annex'd  to  Canterbury — •  „            v  ii  34 

Holy  Father  Has  ta'en  the  Z  from  our  cousin  Pole —  „         v  v  126 
Legg'd    See  Two-legg'd 
Legion    '  A  Galatian  seeving  by  foece  in  the  Roman 

L.'  The  Cup  1 143 

'  Antonius  leader  of  the  Roman  L.'  ,,       i  i  167 

'  A  Galatian  seeving  by  foece  in  the  Roman  L.'  ,,       i  ii  76 

Let  him  come — a  Z  with  him,  if  he  will.  „        ii  250 

Legitimate    Long  live  Queen  Mary,  the  lawful  and  Z 

daughter  of  Harry  the  Eighth  !  Queen  Mary  i  i  8 

That's  a  hard  word,  Z ;  what  does  it  mean  ?  „         i  i  12 
Leicester  (Lord)    How  much  might  that  amount  to,  my 

lord  L  ?  Becket  i  iii  656 

my  good  lord  L,  The  King  and  I  were  brothers.  „      i  iii  660 

Cornwall's  hand  or  L's :  they  write  marvellously  alike.        „        i  iv  51 

Was  not  my  lord  of  L  bidden  to  our  supper  ?  „        i  iv  56 

Leicester  (town)     The  Duke  hath  gone  to  L ;  Queen  Mary  n  i  4 

Leisure  (adj.)    for  I  would  have  him  bring  it  Home  to 

the  Z  wisdom  of  his  Queen,  „        in  vi  23 

Leisure  (s)     but  you  still  preferr'd  Your  learned  Z.  „      in  iv  258 

Lend    would  deign  to  Z  an  ear  Not  overscornful,  Harold  iv  i  136 

Encumbered  as  we  are,  who  would  Z  us  anything  ?    Prom,  of  May  iii  163 

Length    if  you'd  hke  to  measure  your  own  I  upon  the  grass.  „            i  466 

Lenient    I  was  too  Z  to  the  Lutheran,  Queen  Mary  v  ii  73 

Lennox    The  Lady  Suffolk  and  the  Lady  L  ? —  „          i  iv  31 

Lent    L  at  the  siege  of  Thoulouse  by  the  King.  Becket  i  iii  636 

Those  two  thousand  marks  Z  me  by  the  Abbot  Foresters  i  i  264 

Leofric    L,  and  aU  the  monks  of  Peterboro'  Harold  v  i  446 

Leofwin  (Earl  of  Kent  and  Essex)    Ask  thou  I-ord  L  what  he 

thinks  of  this !     Morcar.     Lord  L,  dost  thou  believe, 

that  these  „         i  i  40 

as  well  as  with  mine  earldom,  L's  and  Gurth's.  „       i  i  338 

L,  thou  hast  a  tongue,  „       i  i  391 

Vex  him  not,  L.  »       i  i  403 

L  would  often  fight  me,  and  I  beat  him.  „       i  i  434 

Sign  it,  my  good  son  Harold,  Gurth,  and  Z,  „    ni  i  200 

Gurth,  L,  Morcar,  Edwin !  „  iv  iii  220 

And,  L,  art  thou  mad  ?  »      v  i  138 

Gurth,  L,  go  once  more  about  the  hill —  „      v  i  182 

And  L  is  down  !  »      v  i  644 

And  here  is  L.    Edith.    And  here  is  Hfi !  „       vii72 


Leopard 


982 


Lie 


Leopard    Only  the  golden  L  printed  in  it  Becket  ii  ii  85 

Leprosy    I  pray  God  I  haven't  given  thee  my  I,  „    i  iv  215 

Crutches,  and  itches,  and  leprosies,  and  ulcers,  „    i  iv  255 

She  died  of  Z.  „    v  ii  268 

Leprous    The  I  flutterings  of  the  byway,  scum  And 

offal  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  76 

Less    when  we  fought  I  conquer'd,  and  he  loved  me  none 

the  I,  Harold  i  i  446 

So  I  chance  for  false  keepers.  „    n  ii  688 

not  his  fault,  if  our  two  houses  Be  I  than  brothers.  „     iv  i  131 

This  Canterbury  is  only  I  than  Rome,  Becket  i  i  147 

courtesy  which  hath  I  loyalty  in  it  than  the  backward 

scrape  of  the  clown's  heel —  „  in  iii  142 

Friend  Scarlet,  art  thou  I  a  man  than  Much  ?  Foresters  ni  65 

He  is  every  way  a  I  man  than  Charles ;  Queen  Mary  i  v  330 

What  human  reason  is  there  why  my  friend  Should 

meet  with  I  mercy  than  mysefi  ?  „  iv  i  70 

Thou  hast  learnt  Thy  I,  and  I  mine.  „         v  ii  585 

A  I  worth  Finger  and  thumb — thus  Harold  i  ii  54 

Letter  (epistle)    how  fierce  a  I  you  wrote  against  Queen  Mary  i  ii  85 

I  which  thine  Emperor  promised  Long  since,  „         i  v  347 

Sent  out  my  I's,  call'd  my  friends  together,  „         i  v  552 

Who  brings  that  I  which  we  waited  for —  „         i  v  586 

Methought  I  smelt  out  Eenard  in  the  I,  „       n  ii  120 

And  what  a  I  he  wrote  against  the  Pope  !  „        in  i  173 

Our  I's  of  commission  will  declare  this  plainlier.  „     in  iii  222 

A  I  which  the  Count  de  Noailles  wrote  „        v  ii  496 

No,  no,  he  brings  a  Z.  „        v  ii  548 

Sir  Count,  to  read  the  I  which  you  bring.  „        v  ii  555 

Madam,  I  bring  no  I.     Mary.    How !  no  Z  ?  „        v  ii  557 

He  hath  the  Pope's  last  Fs,  Becket  in  iii  25 

Take  thou  this  I  and  this  cup  to  Camma,  The  Cup  i  i  61 

you  heard  him  on  the  I.  „      i  ii  280 

where  is  this  Mr.  Edgar  whom  you  praised  so  in 

your  first  I's  ? 
arter  she'd  been  a-readin'  me  the  I  wi'  'er  voice  a- 

shaakin', 
That  desolate  I,  blotted  with  her  tears, 
An'  ow  coom  thou  by  the  I  to  'im  ? 
I  had  to  look  over  his  I's. 
Can't  I  speak  like  a  lady ;  pen  a  I  like  a  lady ; 
We  found  a  Z  in  your  bedroom  torn  into  bits. 
Letter  (character)    I  know  not  my  I's ;  the  old  priests 
tavight  me  nothing, 
the  very  I's  seem  to  shake  With  cold, 
they  are  arranged  here — according  to  their  first  I's. 
L's !  Yeas,  I  sees  now. 
Letter  (literal  meaning)    be  No  longer  a  dead  I,  but 
requicken'd. 
'  Let  the  dead  I  live  !    Trace  it  in  fire, 
Let  the  dead  I  burn  ! 
you  see  the  bond  and  the  I  of  the  law. 
The  I — 0  how  often  justice  drowns  Between  the  law 
and  the  I  of  the  law  !     O  God,  I  would  the  I  of  the 
law  Were  some  strong  fellow 

0  no,  we  took  Advantage  of  the  I- — 
Sweet  Marian,  by  the  I  of  the  law 

Letter'd    he  loved  the  more  His  own  gray  towers,  plain 

life,  and  I  peace,  Queen  Mary  n  i  50 

Letters    your  name  Stands  first  of  those  who  sign'd  the 

L  Patent  „  i  ii  18 

Letting    And  mine,  a  little  I  of  the  blood.  „         m  ii  40 

1  the  wild  brook  Speak  for  us —  „  v  v  90 
Lettuce  yet  are  we  now  drill-sergeant  to  his  lordship's  l's,  The  Falcon  550 
Lettnce-1^  But  dallied  with  a  single  Z-Z;  „  673 
Level  a  foul  stream  Thro'  fever-breeding  l's, — at  her  side,  Becket  n  i  156 
Levied  half  that  subsidy  I  on  the  people,  Queen  Mary  i  v  115 
Levity    Skips  every  way,  from  I  or  from  fear.                           „         i  iii  170 

Had  put  ofi  I  and  put  graveness  on.  „         v  ii  510 

Not  for  love  of  I.  Foresters  n  ii  129 

Lewd    mock  the  blessed  Host  In  songs  so  I,  Queen  Mary  rv  iii  367 

His  village  darling  in  some  I  caress  Has  wheedled  it  off 

the  King's  neck  Becket  iv  ii  200 

Liar    terms  Of  Satan,  l's,  blasphemy,  Antichrist,  Queen  Mary  i  ii  95 

L !  dissembler !  traitor !  to  the  fire  !  „     rv  iii  259 


Prom,  of  May  i  111 


nl29 
n475 
n717 
n720 
m302 
m323 


Qaeen  Mary  n  iii  57 

The  Falcon  448 

Prom,,  of  May  ni  37 

in  38 

Queen  Mary  ui  iv  10 

m  iv  33 

„  ni  iv  40 

Foresters  rv  505 


IV  511 
IV  621 
rv638 


Liar  {continued)    Were  such  murderous  l's  In  Wessex —  Harold  ii  i  94 

He  is  a  I  who  knows  I  am  a  I,  „   ii  ii  667 

they  are  a  l's — I  mean  to  be  a  I —  „   ii  ii  796 

Men  would  but  take  him  for  the  craftier  I.  ■     „   ni  i  115 

Better  to  be  a  l's  dog,  and  hold  My  master  honest,  „    in  i  124 

And  thou,  usurper,  I —    Harold.    Out,  beast  monk  !  „       v  i  74 

I  loved  him  as  I  hate  This  I  who  made  me  I.  „     v  i  412 

l's  all  of  you.  Your  Saints  and  all !  „    v  ii  104 

L's  !  I  shame  to  quote  'em — caught,  my  lord,  Becket  i  ii  7 

He  dared  not — I !  yet,  yet  I  remember —  „  v  i  211 

He  makes  the  King  a  traitor,  me  a  I.  „  v  ii  416 

and  shared  His  fruits  and  milk.     L  !  The  Cup  i  ii  428 
Nature  a  I,  making  us  feel  guilty                                Prom,  of  May  n  269 

These  friars,  thieves,  and  l's,  Shall  drink  Foresters  iii  313 

yells  of  thief  And  rogue  and  I  echo  down  in  Hell,  „        in  324 

From  whom  he  knows  are  hypocrites  and  l's.  „        iv  381 

Libation    Wherefrom  we  make  I  to  the  Goddess  The  Cup  n  200 

Making  I  to  the  Goddess.  „        n  364 

See  first  I  make  I  to  the  Goddess,  „        n  377 

L  to  the  Goddess.  „        ii  387 

Libel    I  had  forgotten  How  these  poor  l's  trouble  you.    Queen  Mary  v  ii  202 

No,  Madam ;  these  are  l's.  „          v  ii  350 

Libellous    but  these  I  papers  which  I  found  Strewn  in 

your  palace.  „          v  ii  171 

Liberal    and  most  amorous  Of  good  old  red  sound  I  Gascon 

wine :  Becket,  Pro.  100 

Liberality    you  are  still  the  king  Of  courtesy  and  I.  The  Falcon  293 

My  I  perforce  is  dead  Thro'  lack  of  means  „          296 

Libertine     as  the  I  repents  who  cannot  Make  done  undone,     Harold  iii  i  31 

Liberty    If  ye  love  your  liberties  or  your  skins.  Queen  Mary  n  i  216 

to  save  his  country,  and  the  liberties  of  his  people  !  Foresters  i  i  247 

License    I  know  the  Norman  I —  Harold  n  ii  477 

Priest  Sits  winking  at  the  I  of  a  king,  Becket  i  ii  66 

Without  the  I  of  our  lord  the  King.  „  i  iii  130 

strove  To  work  against  her  I  for  her  good,  „  iv  ii  340 
grant  you  what  they  call  a  Z  To  marry.                       Prom,  of  May  i  695 

Dear,  in  these  days  of  Norman  I,  Foresters  in  178 

Licensed     Why,  nature's  I  vagabond,  the  swallow.  Queen  Mary  v  i  20 

Lick    he  l's  my  face  and  moans  and  cries  out  against  the 

King.  Becket  n  iv  99 

Cannot  a  smooth  tongue  I  him  whole  again  „     n  ii  25 

Licorice    and  English  carrot's  better  than  Spanish  I ;    Queen  Mary  in  i  220 

Lie  (s)     accursed  I  Of  good  Queen  Catherine's  divorce —  „    in  iv  231 

Gave  his  shorn  smile  the  I.  Harold  n  ii  226 

Of  all  the  l's  that  ever  men  have  lied,  „        in  i  99 

death  is  death,  or  else  Lifts  us  beyond  the  I.  „       in  ii  80 

I  fain  Had  made  my  marriage  not  a,  I;  „         v  i  320 

Truth  !  no ;  a  Z ;  a  trick,  a  Norman  trick  !  „         v  i  606 

Will  feel  no  shame  to  give  themselves  the  I.  The  Cup  ii  118 

he  flutter'd  his  wings  as  he  gave  me  the  I,  Foresters  i  i  159 

He  hath  spoken  truth  in  a  world  of  Vs.  „        in  212 

These  be  the  l's  the  people  tell  of  us,  „        in  392 

Lie  (speak  falsely)     Unless  my  friends  and  mirrors  I  to 

me.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  2 

world  of  nature ;  what  is  weak  must  I ;  „    in  v  122 

The  lapwing  l's,  says  '  here '  when  they  are  there.  ,,    in  v  124 

One  that  would  neither  misreport  nor  /,  „    iv  iii  556 

Nay  !  better  die  than  I !  Harold  i  i  158 

Better  die  than  Z !  „     u  ii  281 
Call  it  to  temporize ;  and  not  to  I ;  Harold,  I  do  not 

counsel  thee  to  Z.  „     n  ii  415 

Not  ev'n  for  thy  sake,  brother,  would  1 1.  „    ii  ii  421 
people  do  say  that  his  is  bad  beyond  all  reckoning, 

and Rosamund.    The  people  I.  Becket  m  i  177 

Tha  Vs.  (repeat)  Prom,  of  May  n  703,  708 

She  Vs !     They  are  made  in  Hell.                                 „  in  710 

He  Vs,  my  lord.    I  have  shot  him  thro'  the  heart.  Foresters  n  i  99 

Except  this  old  hag  have  been  bribed  to  I.  „      ii  i  235 

for,  God  help  us,  we  I  by  nature.  „      n  i  237 

Lie  (verb)    There  Vs  your  fear.     That  is  your  drift.       Queen  Mary  i  v  304 

and  all  rebellions  Z  Dead  bodies  without  voice.  „            ii  i  79 

It  Vs  there  in  six  pieces  at  your  feet ;  „            n  i  87 

There  let  them  Z,  your  footstool !  „        ii  iv  120 

all  that  in  us  Vs  Towards  the  abrogation  „       in  iii  140 

Seeing  there  Z  two  ways  to  every  end,  „       in  iv  113 


Lie 


983 


Life 


that  I  think,  '  Wilt  thou  I  there 


Lie  (verb)  {continued) 
to-morrow  ? ' 

It  Vs  there  folded :  is  there  venom  in  it  ? 

lash'd  to  death,  or  I  Famishing  in  black  cells. 

Come  thou  down.     L  there. 

What  Vs  upon  the  mind  of  our  good  king 

That  Vs  within  the  shadow  of  the  chance. 

Nay  let  them  I.    Stand  there  and  wait  my  will. 

There  Vs  a  treasure  buried  down  in  Ely : 

It  Vs  beside  thee,  king,  upon  thy  bed. 

curse  That  Vs  on  thee  and  England. 

Where  I  the  Norsemen  ?  on  the  Derwent  ? 

He  Vs  not  here :  not  close  beside  the  standard. 

their  standards  fell  .  .  .  where  these  two  I. 

So  then  our  good  Archbishop  Theobald  L's  dying 

— there  Vs  the  secret  of  her  whereabouts, 

The  daughter  of  Zion  Vs  beside  the  way — 

All  that  L's  with  Antonius. 

We  I  too  deep  down  in  the  shadow  here. 

I  down  there  together  in  the  darkness  which 
would  seem  but  for  a  moment, 

I  am  very  faint.     I  must  I  down. 

Where  Vs  that  cask  of  wine  whereof 

And  I  with  us  among  the  flowers,  and  drink — 
Lied    To  sit  high  Is  to  be  I  about. 

Some  said  it  was  thy  father's  deed.    Harold. 

I  like  a  lad  That  dreads  the  pendent  scourge 

Of  all  the  lies  that  ever  men  have  I, 
Lief    we'd  as  I  talk  o'  the  Divil  afoor  ye  as  'im, 
Liefer    Far  I  had  I  in  my  country  hall 

I  had  I  that  the  fish  had  swallowed  me, 

But  I  had  I  than  this  gold  again — 
Li^e    My  Vs  and  my  lordi.  The  thanks  of  Holy  Church 
Liege-lord    breathe  one  prayer  for  my  l-l  the  King, 
Liest    thou  I  as  loud  as  the  black  herring-pond 

Norman,  thou  I !  liars  all  of  you, 
Lieth    do  you  good  to  all  As  much  as  in  you  I. 

So  he  said  who  I  here. 


Queen  Mary  m  v  132 

m  V  216 

V  ii  195 

TV  180 

Harold  I  i  268 

„    n  ii  463 

„    n  ii  682 

„      III  i  11 

„    m  i  195 

„    in  i  279 

„     IV  i  253 

V  ii  56 

„     V  ii  141 

Becket,  Pro.  3 

„   Pro.  430 

„  m  iii  177 

The  Cup  I  ii  293 

The  Falcon  581 

Prom,  of  May  m  194 

ni  473 

Foresters  in  306 

IV  965 

Queen  Mary  i  v  430 

TheyZ.    Harold  iiii5U 

„       n  ii  656 

III  i  99 

Prom,  of  May  Iii  130 

Queen  Mary  in  i  43 

Harold  n  i  36 

Foresters  iv  184 

Becket  ii  ii  189 

„       V  ii  191 

Harold  n  i  25 

„     V  ii  104 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  187 

Foresters  n  ii  117 


Lieu    put  some  fresh  device  in  I  of  it — 


Life    (See  also  After-life,  Forest-life)    Old  Bourne  to  the  I ! 
You've  but  a  duU  I  in  this  maiden  court,  1  fear,  my 

Lord  ?     Courtenay.     A  /  of  nods  and  yawns. 
like  a  butterfly  in  a  chrysalis,  You  spent  your  I ; 
I  love  you.  Lay  my  I  in  your  hands, 
to  practise  on  my  I,  By  poison,  fire,  shot,  stab — 
I  would  his  I  Were  haU  as  goodly. 
If  cold,  his  I  is  pure. 
A  very  wanton  I  indeed. 
Of  a  pure  I  ? 
And  wastes  more  I. 
plain  I  and  letter'd  peace, 
and  I  warrant  this  fine  fellow's  I. 
He  has  gambled  for  his  I,  and  lost,  he  hangs. 

Eray  for  you  on  our  bended  knees  till  our  lives'  end. 
la,  to  whistle  out  my  I, 
and  save  the  I  Of  Devon :  if  I  save  him, 
some  secret  that  may  cost  Phihp  his  I. 
you  would  fling  your  lives  into  the  guH . 
scarlet  thread  of  Rahab  saved  her  I ; 
bees,  If  any  creeping  I  invade  their  hive 
To  take  the  lives  of  others  that  are  loyal, 
Paget,  you  are  all  for  this  poor  I  of  ours,  And  care 

but  little  for  the  I  to  be. 
Watch'd  children  playing  at  their  I  to  be, 
the  lives  Of  many  among  your  churchmen 
it  is  an  age  Of  brief  I,  and  brief  purpose, 
For  there  was  I — And  there  was  I  in  death — 
whose  bolts.  That  jail  you  from  free  I, 
I  had  like  to  have  lost  my  I : 
what  think  you.  Is  it  I  or  death  ? 
A  right  rough  I  and  healthful. 
Is  I  and  lungs  to  every  rebel  birth 
Care  more  for  our  brief  I  in  their  wet  land, 
The  sunshine  sweeps  across  my  I  again. 
To  spare  the  I  of  Cranmer. 


Q^een  Mary  in  i  268 


I  iii  30 

I  iii  113 

iiv52 

I  iv  105 

I  iv  284 
IV  201 
IV  333 
IV  336 
IV  448 
IV  507 

II  i49 

II  iii  84 

II  iii  91 
n  iii  122 
n  iv  109 
n  iv  123 
in  i  202 
III  i  459 

III  ii  39 
ni  iii  54 
in  iv  48 

in  iv  59 

ni  iv  63 

m  iv  190 

ni iv  413 

in  V  145 

ni  V  172 

m  V  189 

m  V  194 

m  V  260 

in  vi  51 

ni  vi  62 

in  vi  250 

IV  i  4 


Life  {continued)    To  sue  you  for  his  L  ?    Mary.    His  I  ? 

Oh,  no ;  Queen  Mary  iv  i  11 

Or  into  private  I  within  the  realm.  „            iv  i  47 

once  he  saved  your  Majesty's  own  Z ;  „          iv  i  125 

My  I  is  not  so  happy,  no  such  boon,  „          iv  i  130 

if  he  have  to  live  so  loath'd  a  Z,  „          iv  i  152 

petition  of  the  foreign  exiles  For  Cranmer's  I.  „          iv  i  194 

Exhort  them  to  a  pure  and  virtuous  Z;  „           iv  ii  77 

For  death  gives  Vs  last  word  a  power  to  live,  „        iv  iii  161 
as  I  have  come  To  the  last  end  of  Z,  and  thereupon 

Hangs  all  my  past,  and  all  my  I  to  be,  „        iv  iii  218 

Or  said  or  done  in  all  my  Z  by  me ;  „        iv  iii  239 

Written  for  fear  of  death,  to  save  my  I,  „       iv  iii  242 

have  been  a  man  loved  plainness  all  my  I;  „        iv  iii  271 

Hurls  his  soil'd  Z  against  the  pikes  and  dies.  „        iv  iii  311 

his  best  Of  Z  was  over  then.  „        iv  iii  330 

Her  Z,  since  Phihp  left  her,  and  she  lost  „        rv  iii  428 

Philip  is  as  warm  in  Z  As  ever.  „             v  ii  24 

fast  friend  of  your  Z  Since  mine  began,  „          v  ii  134 

Your  Majesty  has  lived  so  pure  a  Z,  „             v  v  73 

see,  he  smiles  and  goes.  Gentle  as  in  Z.  „          v  v  147 

More  beautiful  than  in  I.  „           v  v  262 

Her  Z  was  winter,  for  her  spring  was  nipt :  „          v  v  269 

Thy  Z  at  home  Is  easier  than  mine  here.  Harold  i  i  96 

I  have  hved  a  Z  of  utter  purity :  „      i  i  178 

A  Z  of  prayer  and  fasting  well  may  see  „     i  i  199 

Love  will  stay  for  a  whole  Z  long.  „       i  ii  17 

praised  The  convent  and  lone  Z — within  the  pale —  „       i  ii  47 

then  a  fair  Z  And  bless  the  Queen  of  England.  „     i  ii  206 

We  seldom  take  man's  Z,  except  in  war ;  „   ii  ii  502 

Archbishop  Robert  hardly  scaped  with  Z.  „   n  ii  527 

Harold,  1  am  thy  friend,  one  I  with  thee,  '        „   n  ii  650 

Is  naked  truth  actable  in  true  Z  ?  „   m  i  110 

silent,  cloister'd,  solitary  Z,  A  Z  of  life-long  prayer  „   ni  i  277 

'  Love  for  a  whole  I  long '  When  was  that  sung  ?  „    in  ii  88 

they  both  have  Z  In  the  large  mouth  of  England,  „   iv  iii  73 

Thou  gavest  thy  voice  against  me  in  my  Z,  „     v  i  253 

Whose  Z  was  all  one  battle,  incarnate  war,  „     v  i  397 

that  I  fear  the  Queen  would  have  her  Z.  Becket,  Pro.  62 

The  Z  of  Rosamund  de  Chfford  more  Than  that  „       Pro.  70 
not  my  purveyor  Of  pleasures,  but  to  save  a  Z — her  Z ;         „     Pro.  150 

And  all  the  heap'd  experiences  of  Z,  „         i  i  154 

And  mean  to  hold  it,  or Becket.     To  have  my  Z.         „       i  iii  163 

since  your  canon  will  not  let  you  take  L  for  a  I,  „      i  iii  391 

being  in  great  jeopardy  of  his  Z,  he  hath  made  „      i  iv  263 

or  can  shatter  a  I  till  the  I  shall  have  fled  ?  ,,         ii  i  12 

Love  that  can  Uft  up  a  Z  from  the  dead.  „         n  i  14 

O  my  Vs  I,  not  to  smile  Is  all  but  death  ,,         n  i  39 

There  may  be  crosses  in  my  line  of  Z.  „       n  i  188 

L  on  the  hand  is  naked  gipsy-stuff ;  X  on  the  face,  „       ii  i  193 

He  said  thy  Z  Was  not  one  hour's  worth  „    ni  iii  250 

Thy  Z  is  worth  the  wrestle  for  it :  „     iv  ii  194 

fawn  upon  him  For  thy  Z  and  thy  son's.  „     iv  ii  225 

to  take  a  Z  which  Henry  bad  me  Guard  „      rv  ii  268 

rend  away  Eyesight  and  manhood,  Z  itself,  ,,      iv  ii  285 

a  Z  Saved  as  by  miracle  alone  with  Him  Who  gave  it.  „     iv  ii  367 

not  Z  shot  up  in  blood,  But  death  drawn  in  ; —  „     iv  ii  380 

To  take  my  Z  might  lose  him  Aquitaine.  „     iv  ii  396 

thy  rest  of  Z  is  hopeless  prison.  „        v  i  180 

Thanks  in  this  Z,  and  in  the  Z  to  come.  „       v  ii  161 
drowning  man,  they  say,  remembers  all  The  chances 

of  his  Z,  „      V  ii  274 

laid  mine  own  Z  down  To  help  him  from  them,  „       v  ii  339 

You  have  spoken  to  the  peril  of  your  Z  ?  „       v  ii  516 

Valour  and  holy  Z  should  go  together.  „       v  ii  587 

Save  him,  he  saved  my  Z,  he  saved  my  child,  „         v  iii  8 

The  power  of  Z  in  death  to  make  her  free  !  „     v  iii  100 
What  would  ye  have  of  me  ?    Fitzurse.    Your  Z.    De 

Tracy.     Your  I.  „ 

But  in  this  narrow  breathing-time  of  Z  The 
courtesans  for  aught  I  know  Whose  Z  is  one  dishonour.         , 

However  I  thank  thee ;  thou  hast  saved  my  I.  , 

loveliest  Z  that  ever  drew  the  light  From  heaven  , 

To  warm  the  cold  bounds  of  our  dying  I  , 

He  saved  my  I  too.    Did  he  ?  , 


V  iii  117 
Cup  I  i  29 
I  ii  194 
I  ii  333 
1  iii  56 
I  iii  129 
I  iii  160 


Life 


984 


Like 


Life  {continued)    thou  that  art  I  to  the  wind,  to  the  wave, 
L  yields  to  death  and  wisdom  bows  to  Fate, 
And  join  your  I  this  day  with  his, 
For  all  my  truer  I  begins  to-day. 
that  dost  inspire  the  germ  with  I,  The  child, 
ere  two  souls  be  knit  for  I  and  death, 
came  To  plead  to  thee  for  Sinnatios's  I, 
Coming  to  visit  my  lord,  for  the  first  time  in  her  I 


The  Cup  II  3 

„  II 89 

„  n  135 

„  n  229 

„  II 258 

„  II 359 

„  II 392 


The  Falcon  ni 

334 

364 

Prom,  of  May  i  178 

I  345 


And  if  he  leave  me— all  the  rest  of  I — 

A  colour,  which  has  colour'd  all  my  I, 

I'd  slaave  out  my  I  fur  'er. 

And  long  I  to  boath  on  'em. 

I  have  all  my  I  before  me — so  has  she — 

heat  and  fire  Of  I  will  bring  them  out, 

better  death  With  our  first  wail  than  I — 

not  so  much  for  Death  As  against  L  ! 

This  beggarly  I,  This  poor,  flat,  hedged-in  field — 

Colour  Flows  thro'  my  I  again, 

which  Father,  for  a  whole  I,  has  been  getting  together, 

0  Love  and  L,  how  weary  am  I, 
will  give  him,  as  they  say,  a  new  lease  of  I. 
niver  been  surprised  but  once  i'  my  I,  and  I  went 

bhnd  upon  it. 
Had  threaten'd  ev'n  your  I,  and  would  say  anything  ? 
'Twere  best  to  make  an  end  of  my  lost  I. 
not  with  all  your  wealth,  Your  land,  your  I ! 
whose  whole  I  hath  been  folded  like  a  blossom  in  the 

sheath, 

1  saved  his  I  once  in  battle. 
A  question  that  every  true  man  asks  of  a  woman  once 

in  his  I. 

if  this  I  of  ours  Be  a  good  glad  thing, 

Sleep,  happy  soul !  all  I  will  sleep  at  last. 

mix  with  all  The  lusty  I  of  wood  and  imderwood, 

The  hope  of  larger  I  hereafter, 

I  would  give  my  I  for  thee. 

Ay,  ay,  the  line  o'  I  is  marked  enow ; 

Mislead  us,  and  I  will  have  thy  I ! 

L,  I.     I  know  not  death. 

Our  Robin  beaten,  pleading  for  his  I ! 

noblest  light  That  ever  flash'd  across  my  I, 

Whose  writ  will  run  thro'  all  the  range  of  I. 

Their  lives  unsafe  in  any  of  these  our  woods, 

in  the  fear  of  thy  I  shalt  thou  eat  the  King's  venison — 

Richard  risks  his  I  for  a  straw.  So  lies  in  prison — while 
our  Robin's  I  Hangs  by  a  thread, 

flung  His  I,  heart,  soul  into  those  holy  wars 

for  by  my  Z,  you  shall  dance  till  he  can. 

Thou  hast  risk'd  thy  I  for  mine :  bind  these  two  men. 

Our  forest  games  are  ended,  our  free  I, 
Life-giving    No  sacrifice,  but  a  l-g  feast !  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  112 

Life-green    a  thousand  summers  Robe  you  l-g  again.  Foresters  iv  1058 


I  482 
II  287 
II  291 
II  338 
II  343 
II  667 
III  165 
m205 
III  424 

III  440 
III  567 
in  786 
in  796 


Foresters  i  i  205 
I  i  272 


I  ii  139 
I  iii  12 
I  iii  48 

I  iii  114 
iii69 

n  i  189 

II  i  352 
ni377 
n  i  621 

II  i  675 
in  142 

IV  49 

IV  93 

IV  205 

IV  382 
IV  407 
IV  566 
IV  894  . 
IV  1049 


Life-long    To  plunge  thee  into  l-l  prison  here : — 

A  life  of  l-l  prayer  against  the  curse 

she  hath  begun  Her  l-l  prayer  for  thee. 

And  all  my  I  labour  to  uphold  The  primacy- 
heretic. 

I  am  a  l-l  lover  of  the  chase, 
Lift    I  cannot  I  my  hands  unto  my  head. 

L  head,  and  flourish ; 

Why  do  you  I  your  eyebrow  at  me  thus  ? 

I  am  ashamed  to  I  my  eyes  to  heaven, 

death  is  death,  or  else  L's  us  beyond  the  lie. 

For,  like  a  son,  1 1  my  hands  to  thee. 

Love  that  can  Z  up  a  life  from  the  dead. 

I  pray  you  I  me  And  make  me  walk  awhile. 

my  hands  are  too  sleepy  To  I  it  o£E. 
Lifted    Then  Cranmer  I  his  left  hand  to  heaven, 

L  our  produce,  driven  our  clerics  out — 
Lifting    It  means  the  I  of  the  house  of  Alfgar. 
Light  (adj.)    My  Lord  of  Devon — I  enough,  God 
knows, 

GroMring  dark  too — but  I  enough  to  row. 

Take  thou  this  I  kiss  for  thy  clumsy  word. 


Harold  ii  ii  550 
„  m  i  278 
„      in  i  324 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  70 

The  Cup  I  i  194 

Queen  Mary  in  i  240 

„  III  iv  24 

in  vi  102 

IV  iii  127 

Harold  ni  ii  80 

Becket  i  iii  264 

n  i  14 

The  Cup  II  472 

n  531 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  608 

Becket  v  ii  432 

Harold  i  i  472 

Qu^en  Mary  v  ii  477 

The  Cup  n  523 

Foresters  ni  134 


Light  (s)     By  God's  I  a  noble  creature,  Queen  Mary  i  i  68 

The  I  of  this  new  learning  wanes  and  dies :  ,,     in  ii  172 

faith  that  seem'd  to  droop  will  feel  your  I,  ,.       in  iv  23 

yet  not  I  alone.  There  must  be  heat —  .,       m  iv  24 
springs  to  I  That  Centaur  of  a  monstrous  Commonweal,        ,,     in  iv  1 62 

White  as  the  I,  the  spotless  bride  of  Christ,  „    m  iv  199 

in  a  pale  I,  Rose  hand  in  band,  ,,      ni  v  147 

Cool  as  the  I  in  old  decaying  wood ;  „          iv  ii  5 

Unpardonable, — sin  against  the  I,  „     iv  iii  148 

Is  not  yon  I  in  the  Queen's  chamber  ?  „           v  iv  1 

There's  the  Queen's  I.    I  hear  she  cannot  live.  „        v  iv  10 

in  a  closed  room,  with  I,  fire,  physic,  tendance ;  „         v  iv  36 

My  grayhounds  fleeting  like  a  beam  of  I,  Harold  i  ii  130 

dog,  with  thy  lying  l's  Thou  hast  betray'd  .,        ii  i  22 

villains  with  their  lying  l's  have  wreck'd  us  !  ,,        ii  i  84 

be  as  the  shadow  of  a  cloud  Crossing  your  I.  „    n  ii  178 

dreadful  l's  crept  up  from  out  the  marsh —  „    m  i  379 

Lost,  lost,  the  I  of  day,  ,,     m  ii  12 

But  a  little  I ! — And  on  it  falls  the  shadow  „     ni  ii  69 

A  I  among  the  oxen.  „      iv  i  87 

Lower  the  I.     He  must  be  here.  „       v  ii  63 

the  fire,  the  I,  The  spirit  of  the  twelve  Apostles  Becket  i  i  49 

moon  Divides  the  whole  long  street  with  I  and  shade.  „    i  i  365 

As  gold  Outvalues  dross,  I  darkness,  „  i  iii  715 

L  again  !  I  again  !     Margery  ?  „      iv  i  1 

and  went  on  and  on  till  I  found  the  I  and  the  lady,  „  iv  ii  18 

Save  by  that  way  which  leads  thro'  night  to  I.  „  v  iii  89 

I  am  not  in  the  darkness  but  the  I,  „  v  iii  97 

the  dry  I  of  Rome's  straight-going  policy.  The  Cup  i  i  145 

drew  the  I  From  heaven  to  brood  upon  her,  „        i  iii  57 

Lady,  you  bring  your  I  into  my  cottage  The  Falcon  283 
her  affections  Will  flower  toward  the  I  in  some  new 

face.  Prom,  of  May  i  486 

to  be  wakened  again  together  by  the  I  of  the 

resurrection,  „         in  196 

the  Z  Of  these  dark  hours ;  Foresters  i  ii  84 

and  seeing  the  hospitable  l's  in  your  castle,  ,,      i  ii  194 

I  am  but  an  angel  by  reflected  I.  .,      n  i  108 

Glide  like  a  Z  across  these  woodland  ways !  „      ii  i  159 

I  of  the  seas  by  the  moon's  long-silvering  ray  !  ,.    ii  ii  178 

noblest  Z  That  ever  flash'd  across  my  life,  „      in  141 

Robin,  the  sweet  I  of  a  mother's  eye,  „          iv  2 

Light  (to  come  upon)    if  thou  Z  upon  her — free  me  from  her  ?  Becket,  Pro.  493 

Light  (to  kindle)    then,  who  l's  the  faggot  ?     Not 

the  full  faith,  Queen  Mary  in  iv  122 

Thou  I  a  torch  that  never  will  go  out !  „               v  v  122 

Lighted  (come  upon)    and  I  have  I  On  a  new  pleasure.     Prom,  of  May  n  668 

She  may  have  I  on  your  fairies  here.  Foresters  ii  i  496 

Lighted  (shone)     A  twilight  conscience  Z  thro'  a  chink ;  Harold  in  i  65 

Lighten  (to  brighten)     these  Ulies  to  Z  Sir  Richard's  black 

room,  Foresters  i  i  3 

Lighten  (to  gleam)     Our  axes  Z  with  a  single  flash  Harold  v  i  537 

Lighten'd    gloom  of  Saul  Was  I  by  young  David's  harp.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  359 

I  for  me  The  weight  of  this  poor  crown,  Harold  i  i  217 

Lighter    Much  Z  than  a  thousand  marks  in  gold ;  Foresters  iv  657 

You  see  the  darkness  thro'  the  I  leaf.  „        iv  975 

Lightning    sword  Of  l's,  wherewithal  he  cleft  the  tree  Harold  in  i  137 

This  I  before  death  Plays  on  the  word, —  „       in  i  387 

are  sliver'd  off  and  splinter'd  by  Their  Z —  „         v  i  541 

The  l's  that  we  think  are  only  Heaven's  Flash  Becket  v  ii  35 

Lightning-like     swoops  down  upon  him  Eagle-like,  l-l —  The  Falcon  14 

Like  (adj.  and  adv.)    These  princes  are  I  children, 

must  be  physick'd.  Queen  Mary  I  v  234 

Is  this  Z  him  ?     Renard.     Ay,  somewhat ;  „           i  v  442 

Rascal ! — this  land  is  Z  a  hill  of  fire,  „         in  i  321 

Much  less  shall  others  in  Z  cause  escape,  „         rv  iii  62 

How  fair  and  royal — Z  a  Queen,  indeed  ?  „           v  i  235 

methinks  my  Queen  is  Z  enough  To  leave  me  by  and  by.    ..  v  i  242 

I  mean  not  Z  to  hve.     Elizabeth —  .,           v  i  245 

There  must  be  ladies  many  with  hair  Z  mine.  .,          v  iii  58 

To  draw  him  nearer  with  a  charm  L  thine  to  thine.  Harold  i  ii  9 

What  was  he  Z,  this  husband  ?  Z  to  thee  ?  „    v  ii  52 

have  I  fought  men  L  Harold  and  his  brethren,  „  v  ii  179 
A  pretty  lusty  boy.    Rosamund.    So  Z  to  thee ;  Z  to  be 

Uker.  Becket  ii  i  248 


Like 


985 


Little 


Like  (adj.  and  adv.)  (continued)    I  am  loo  I  the  King  here ;    Becket  ii  ii  288 

He  is  marvellously  I  thee.  „     v  ii  180 

I  am  I  a  boy  going  to  be  whipt ;  Foresters  ii  ii  50 
Had  I  a  bulrush  now  in  this  right  hand  For  sceptre,  I 

were  I  a  queen  indeed.  „  m  77 
By  St.  Nicholas  They  must  have  sprung  I  Ghosts  from 

underground,  .,         iv  592 

It  is  not  he — ^his  face — tho'  very  I — No,  no  !  ,.         iv  777 

0  good  Sir  Richard,  I  am  Z  the  man  In  Holy  Writ,  „  iv  980 
Your  names  will  cling  I  ivy  to  the  wood.  „       iv  1085 

Like  (verb)     He  I's  it,  my  lord.  Becket  i  iv  235 

1  I's  'im,  and  Eva  Vs  'im.  Prom,  of  May  i  436 
I  Vs  'er  all  the  better  fur  taakin'  me  down,  „           ii  133 

Like    See  also  Brother-like,  Deer-like,  Eagle-like,  Father- 
like,  Hero-like,  Locust-like,  Spiteful-like,  Martyr- 
like,  Thief -like.  Throne-like,  Wife-like 
Likelier     A  round  fine  I.     Your  pardon.  Queen  Mary  in  iii  279 

This  is  the  I  tale.     We  have  hit  the  place.  Becket  in  ii  42 

Likeness    sire  begets  Not  half  his  I  in  the  son.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  55 

fair  a  Z  As  your  great  King  in  armour  „  v  v  28 
Eva  told  me  that  he  was  taking  her  I.     He's  an 

artist.  Prom,  of  May  i  127 

I  have  heard  of  you.    The  I  Is  very  striking.  „           ii  365 

I  do  most  earnestly  assure  you  that  Your  I — •  „           u  564 

Liker    we  be  I  the  blessed  Apostles :  Harold  ii  i  33 

So  Uke  to  thee ;  Like  to  be  Z.  Becket  ii  i  249 

L  the  King.    Becket.     No,  daughter.  „      v  ii  181 

Likings     Spanish  in  myself,  And  in  my  Z.  Queen  Mary  i  v  14 

Lilt     How  happily  would  we  Z.  among  the  leaves  Foresters  m  40 

Lily     was  all  pure  Z  and  rose  In  liis  youth,  Qv^en  Mary  i  v  20 

To  sicken  of  his  lilies  and  his  roses.  „           i  v  25 

The  cold,  whit«  Z  blowing  in  her  cell :  Harold  in  i  274 

— she  Was  the  world's  l.^  Becket  v  ii  265 

Might  wish  its  rose  a  Z,  Prom,  of  May  m  490 

these  lilies  to  lighten  Sir  Richard's  black  room,  Foresters  j  i  2 

Modest  maiden  I  abused,  „  n  ii  158 

Lilylike     L  in  her  stateliness  and  sweetness  !  Prom,  of  May  n  621 

Limb     Who  dragg'd  the  scatter'd  Vs  into  their  den.  Queen  Mary  i  v  401 

island  will  become  A  rotten  Z  of  Spain.  „           n  i  105 

Until  they  died  of  rotted  Vs ;  „        iv  iii  445 

I  touch  mine  arms,  My  Vs —  Harold  ii  ii  795 

The  King  may  rend  the  bearer  Z  from  Z.  Becket  i  i  378 

They  howl  for  thee,  to  rend  thee  head  from  Z.  The  Cup  i  ii  322 

give  him  Vs,  then  air,  and  send  him  forth  „           ii  261 

Limp     With  hands  too  Z  to  brandish  iron —  Harold  v  i  449 

Limpet     Be  Vs  to  this  pillar,  or  we  are  torn  Queen  Mary  in  i  184 

Limping    See  A-limpin' 

Line     First  of  a  Z  that  coming  from  the  people,  Harold  v  i  386 

Look,  this  Z — The  rest  you  see  is  colour'd  green—  Becket,  Pro.  170 

This  blood-red  Z  ?     Henry.     Ay,  blood,  perchance,  .,       Pro.  174 

This  chart  with  the  red  Z  !  her  bower  !  ,.       Pro.  308 

chart  with  the  red  Z — thou  sa west  it —  ,.       Pro.  428 

chart  which  Henry  gave  you  With  the  red  Z —  „          i  ii  62 

There  may  be  crosses  in  my  I  of  Ufe.  v         n  i  188 

plow  straait  as  a  Z  right  i'  the  faace  o'  the  sun,  Prom,  of  May  i  370 

Left  but  one  dreadful  I  to  say,  ,,            n  411 

we  must  Move  in  the  Z  of  least  resistance  .,  n  670 
Ay,  ay,  the  Z  o'  life  is  marked  enow ;  but  look,  there 

is  a  cross  Z  o'  sudden  death.  Foresters  n  i  352 
Linen    slut  whose  fairest  Z  seems  Foul  as  her  dust-cloth,         Becket  v  ii  202 

filch  the  Z  from  the  hawthorn.  Foresters  m  199 

Ling    Thro'  wood  and  lawn  and  Z,  „        m  425 

Linger     i  not  till  the  third  horn.     Fly!  Becket  mii  40 

Lingerest    Edwin,  my  friend — Thou  Z. — Gurth, —  Harold  iv  i  258 

Link    not  with  gold.  But  dearest  Vs  of  love.  Queen  Mary  x  v  539 

bright  Z  rusts  with  the  breath  of  the  first  Becket,  Pro.  361 

Link'd    that  stale  Church-bond  which  Z  me  with  him  „       iv  ii  448. 
Lion    (See  also  Fox-lion)     The  Z  needs  but  roar  to 

guard  his  young ;  Qu^en  Mary  iii  v  123 
I  conclude  the  King  a  beast ;  Verily  a  Z  if  you 

^viU „          IV  iii  413 

be  those  I  fear  who  prick'd  the  Z  To  make  him  spring,   Harold  iv  iii  95 

Thousands  of  horses,  hke  as  many  Vs  „    iv  iii  196 

Our  Church  in  arms — the  lamb  the  Z —  „        v  i  441 

and  hawks,  and  apes,  and  Vs,  and  lynxes.  Becket  i  i  80 


Lion  (continued)    As  find  a  hare's  form  in  a  Vs  cave.  Becket  i  iii  177 

Dares  the  bear  slouch  into  the  Vs  den  ?  „  iv  ii  282 

Lest  I  remember  thee  to  the  Z,  go.  ..  iv  ii  292 

I  once  was  at  the  hunting  of  a  Z.  The  Cup  i  ii  116 

He  would  grapple  with  a  Z  like  the  King,  Foresters  i  i  185 

this  Richard  is  the  Z  of  Cyprus,  Robin,  the  Z  of  Sherwood —      „        iv  391 

Be  not  the  nobler  Z  of  the  twain.  ,.        iv  396 

Lioness    for  she  hath  somewhat  of  the  Z  in  her,  „       i  ii  157 

Lion-heart     Drink  to  the  L-h  Every  one !  „  i  ii  5 

Lionlike     let  England  as  of  old  Rise  I,  Queen  Mary  v  ii  267 

Lip     From  your  own  royal  Vs,  at  once  may  know  „  ii  ii  136 

To  take  this  absolution  from  your  Vs,  „         m  ii  116 

I  felt  his  arms  about  me,  and  his  Vs —  „  v  v  99 

but  when  thou  layest  thy  Z  To  this,  Becket  n  i  306 

Up  from  the  salt  Vs  of  the  land  we  two  ,,        in  ii  1 

never  so  much  as  a  silver  one  for  the  golden  Vs  of  her 

ladyship.  The  Falcon  404 

the  Vs  that  never  breathed  Love's  falsehood  to  true 

maid  will  seal  Love's  truth  On  those  sweet  Vs  Foresters  iv  71 

I  am  but  the  echo  of  the  Vs  of  love.  „       iv  892 

Liquid     A  marvel,  how  He  from  the  Z  sands  of  Coesnon  Harold  ii  ii  56 

Liquor    You  cannot  judge  the  Z  from  the  lees.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  550 

Lisping-age     dandle  you  upon  my  knee  At  l-a.  „  v  ii  143 

List  (desire)     not  so  set  on  wedlock  as  to  choose  But 

where  I Z,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  215 

List  (roll  of  names)     but  he  lent  me  an  alphabetical  Z 

of  those  that  remain,  ,,  ni  29 

'Listed  (enlisted)     'L  for  a  soadger,  Miss,  i'  the 

Queen's  Real  Hard  Tillery.  Prom,  of  May  ni  108 

Listen    L  -.  The  King  of  France,  Noailles  Queen  Mary  i  iv  109 

Will  bid  you  welcome,  and  will  Z  to  you.  Prom,  of  May  n  522 

if  she  weant  Z  to  me  when  I  be  a-tryin'  to  saave 

'er—  „  II 693 

Did  I  not  promise  not  to  Z  to  him,  „  lu  569 

Why  do  you  Z,  man,  to  the  old  fool  ?  Foresters  n  i  357 

But  Z — overhead — ^Fluting,  and  piping  and  luting  ,.  in  32 

— what  merry  madness — I !  .,  iii  43 

we  have  made  a  song  in  your  honour,  so  your  lady- 
ship care  to  Z.  .,  in  415 
blow  upon  it  Three  mots,  this  fashion — Z !                             ,.  iv  425 
Listen'd     if  he  had  not  Z,  I  might  have  sent  him                      The  Cup  n  417 
Listener    will  you  have  it  alone,  Or  with  these  Vs  near  you  ?    Becket  v  ii  305 
Listening    Z  In  some  dark  closet.                                     Queen  Mary  v  ii  216 
Lit     '  Make  short !  make  short ! '  and  so  they  Z  the  wood.         „         iv  iii  607 
Litany     they  led  Processions,  chanted  litanies,                         ,,          in  vi  95 
Litter     Go  men,  and  fetch  him  hither  on  the  Z.                       Foresters  iv  462 
Take  up  the  Z !                                                                          „        iv  597 
I  remain  Beside  my  Father's  Z.                                                  „         iv  605 
And  this  old  crazeling  in  the  I  there.                                      „        iv  634 
let  me  out  of  the  Z.     He  shall  wed  thee :                                  ,,         iv  642 
Little    look  ye,  here's  Z  Dickon,  and  Z  Robin,  and  I 

Jenny —  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  112 

And  mine,  a  Z  letting  of  the  blood.  „  in  ii  40 

Our  Z  sister  of  the  Song  of  Songs  !  „  in  ii  103 

And  care  but  Z  for  the  life  to  be.  „  ui  iv  60 

Z  children  !     They  kill'd  but  for  their  pleasure  „  in  iv  73 

'  L  children,  Love  one  another.'  „  in  iv  84 

The  Z  murder'd  princes,  in  a  pale  light,  „  in  v  147 

For  a  Z  space,  farewell ;  Until  I  see  you  in  St. 

Mary's  Church.  „  iv  ii  46 

not  for  Z  sins  Didst  thou  yield  up  thy  Son  to  human 

death ;  „  iv  iii  143 

Altho'  your  Lordship  hath  as  Z  of  each  ,,         iv  iii  416 

You  are  the  mightiest  monarch  upon  earth,  I  but 

a  Z  Queen :  ,,  v  i  53 

A  Z  Queen !  but  when  I  came  to  wed  your  majesty,       „  v  i  55 

L  doubt  This  buzz  will  soon  be  silenced ;  ,,  v  i  292 

Love  can  stay  but  a  Z  while.  Harold  i  ii  13 

Save  for  the  prattling  of  thy  Z  ones.  „    n  ii  122 

See  here  this  I  key  about  my  neck  !  „      ni  i  10 

let  him  a  Z  longer  Remain  a  hostage  for  the  loyalty  Of 

Godwin's  house.'  „      in  i  89 

But  a  Z  light ! — And  on  it  falls  the  shadow  of  the  priest ;       „     in  ii  68 
Your  old  crown  Were  Z  help  without  our  Saxon  carles 

Against  Hardrada.  „      iv  i  35 


Little 


986 


Live 


Little  (continued)    L !  we  are  Danes,  Who  conquer'd  what 

we  walk  on,  our  own  field. 
He  calls  us  I !    Harold.    The  kingdoms  of  this  world 

began  with  I, 
Keep  him  away  from  the  lone  I  isle. 
I'll  call  thee  I  Geoffrey. 
Look,  look !  if  I  Geof&ey  have  not  tost  His  ball  into  the 

brook ! 
Kiss  me,  I  one,  Nobody  near ! 
Come  to  me,  I  one.    How  earnest  thou  hither  ? 
We  can't  all  of  us  be  as  pretty  as  thou  art — I  bastard. 
How  fares  thy  pretty  boy,  the  I  Geoffrey  ? 
There  was  a  I  fair-hair'd  Norman  maid 
Nay,  see,  why  she  turns  down  the  path  through  our  I 

vineyard. 
When  he  was  a  I  one,  and  I  put  the  bitters  on  my 

breast  to  wean  him, 
ye'll  think  more  on  'is  I  finger  than  hall  my  hand  at 

the  haltar.  Prom,  of  May  1 112 

How  gracefully  there  she  stands  Weeping — the  I 

Niobe! 
into  nescience  with  as  I  pain  As  it  is  to  fall  asleep. 
The  I  'ymn  ?     Yeas,  Miss ; 
an'  axed  ma  to  be  'is  I  sweet-art, 
Poor  blind  Father's  I  guide,  Milly, 
talk  a  I  French  like  a  lady ;  play  a  I  like  a  lady  ? 
Who  said  that  ?     Taake  me  awaay,  I  gell. 
Child,  read  a  I  history,  you  will  find  The  common 

brotherhood 
and  if  you  cram  me  crop-full  I  be  Z  better  than  Famine 

in  the  picture.  Foresters  i  i  46 

and  for  the  love  of  his  own  I  mother  on  earth,  „        i  i  98 

O  the  sacred  I  thing  !     What  a  shape  !  „       i  i  108 

Shall  1  keep  one  I  rose  for  Little  John  ?    No.  „      i  i  112 

But  he  flutter'd  his  wings  with  a  sweet  I  cry,  „       i  i  154 

But  then  your  Sheriff,  your  I  man,  ,,       i  i  231 

and  our  I  Sheriff  will  ever  swim  with  the  stream  !  „      i  i  239 

the  Sheriff  had  taken  all  our  goods  for  the  King 

without  paying,  oiu:  horse  and  our  I  cart —  „     ii  i  192 

for  when  the  Sheriff  took  my  I  horse  for  the  King 

without  paying  for  it —  „     ii  i  301 

Littlechester  (adj.)     and  we  dragg'd  The  L  river  all  in 

vain :  Prom,  of  May  ii  414 

Littlechester  (s)     When  theer  wur  a  meeting  o'  farmers 

at  L  t'other  daay, 
fur  they  be  knaw'd  as  far  as  L. 
Beant  there  house-breakers  down  i'  L,  Dobson — 
Who  leaves  me  all  his  land  at  L, 
afoor  she  went  to  school  at  L — 
fur  she  tell'd  me  to  taake  the  cart  to  L. 
Only  last  week  at  L,  drove  me  From  out  her  memory, 
pacing  my  new  lands  at  L, 
Wasn't  Miss  Vavasour,  our  schoolmistress  at  L,  a  lady 

bom? 
that  dreadful  night !  that  lonely  walk  to  L, 
Little  John  (a  follower  of  Robin  Hood)    She  hath  looked 

well  at  one  of  'em,  L  J. 


Harold  iv  i  37 

„      IV  i  41 
Becket  ii  i  15 
„    n  i  214 

ni319 
„  m  i  100 
IV  i  3 
,.  IV  i  39 
„  viil67 
„    vii259 

The  Falcon  168 

389 


I  736 
II  341 
ml 
III  120 
III  231 
III  303 
III  465 

m542 


1 137 
I  214 
I  389 
I  511 
nl9 
n323 
n404 
n647 

ni298 
ni367 


ShaU  I  keep  one  little  rose  for  X  J  ?     No. 

Wilt  thou  not  give  me  rather  the  little  rose  f or  Z  J  ? 

thou  hast  ruffled  my  woman,  L  J. 

starched  stiff  creature,  L  J,  the  Earl's  man. 

L  J,  Who  hast  that  worship  for  me 

Take  him,  good  L  J,  and  give  him  wine. 

thou  That  hast  not  made  it  up  with  L  J  !    Kate.    I 

wait  till  i  J  makes  up  to  me. 
L  J  Fancied  he  saw  thee  clasp  and  kiss  a  man. 
And  let  them  warm  thy  heart  to  L  J. 
I  Z  J,  he  Much  the  miller's  son,  and  he  Scarlet, 
1  LJ,  he,  yoimg  Scarlet,  and  he,  old  Much,  and  all  the 

rest  of  us. 
Search  them,  L  J. 

Shame  on  thee,  L  J,  thou  hast  forgotten — 
Play  the  air,  L  J. 
Strike  up  our  music,  L  J. 
You,  good  friar,  You  Much,  you  Scarlet,  you  dear  L  J, 


Foresters  i  i  39 

„  I  i  113 

„  I  i  148 

„  I  i  166 

„  I  i  184 

„  I  iii  159 

„  n  i  469 

ni  15 

ni21 

„        ni44 

in  54 

in60 
ra201 

III  237 
in  418 

IV  559 
IV  1083 


Live    Long  I  Queen  Mary,  (repeat)  Queen  Mary  i  i  7,  65 

'  Long  I  Elizabeth  the  Queen ! '  „  i  iii  7 

we'll  have  no  pope  here  while  the  Lady  Elizabeth  Vs. 
But  that  with  God's  grace,  I  can  I  so  still, 
never  Consent  thereto,  nor  marry  while  I  I ; 
Long  I  Queen  Mary  !   Down  with  Wyatt !   The  Queen  ! 
We  have  been  glad  together ;  let  him  I. 
I  it  and  die  The  true  and  faithful  bride  of  Philip — 
Long  I  the  King  and  Queen,  Philip  and  Mary  ! 
Long  I  Queen  Mary  ! 

Where  dost  thou  I  ?     Man.     In  Cornhill. 
was  not  meet  the  heretic  swine  should  I  In  Lambeth. 
Let  the  dead  letter  I !     Trace  it  in  fire, 
says  she  will  I  And  die  true  maid — 
none  shall  hold  them  hi  his  house  and  I, 
if  he  have  to  I  so  loath'd  a  life, 
Ay — gentle  as  they  call  you — I  or  die  ! 
set  forth  some  saying  that  may  I  After  his  death 

and  better  humankind ;  For  death  gives  life's 

last  word  a  power  to  I, 
I  pray  you  all  to  I  together  Like  brethren ; 
Either  to  I  with  Clirist  in  Heaven  with  joy. 
That  might  I  always  in  the  sun's  warm  heart, 
I  mean  not  like  to  I. 

Long  I  your  Majesty  !     Shall  Ahce  sing  you 
Make  me  full  fain  to  I  and  die  a  maid. 
There's  the  Queen's  light.     I  hear  she  cannot  I. 
She  hath  but  blood  enough  to  I,  not  love. — ■ 
We  hear  he  hath  not  long  to  I. 
Forgive  me,  brother,  I  will  I  here  and  die. 
but  happier  lived,  If  happier  be  to  Z ; 
I  or  die,  I  would  I  were  among  them  ! 
And  if  I Z,  No  man  without  my  leave 
For  we  would  I  and  die  for  thee,  my  lord, 
And  I  shall  I  to  trample  on  thy  grave, 
and  the  world  shall  I  by  the  King's  veniison 
one  who  I's  for  thee  Out  there  in  France ; 
Long  I  the  good  King  Louis  ! 
I Z  to  die  for  it,  I  die  to  I  for  it. 
They  call  her — But  she  Vs  secret,  you  see. 
Madam,  let  her  I. 

And  I  what  may  be  left  thee  of  a  life 
She  Vs — but  not  for  him  ;  one  point  is  gain'd. 
I  will  go  I  and  die  in  Aquitaine.  (repeat) 
Here  is  the  great  Archbishop  !     He  Vs  !  he  Vs  ! 
A  woman  I  could  I  and  die  for. 

Might  I  not  I  for  that,  And  drown  all  poor  self-passion 
to  I  And  die  together, 
as  I Z,  there  is  Slonna  Giovanna  coming  down  the  hill 

from  the  castle. 
Yoxir  ladyship  Vs  higher  in  the  sun. 
For  her  sick  son,  if  he  were  like  to  Z, 
What  can  a  man,  then,  I  for  but  sensations, 
smell  o'  the  mou'd  'ud  ha'  maade  ma  I  as  long  as 

Jerusalem, 
with  some  sense  of  art,  to  Z  By  brush  and  pencil. 
L  with  these  honest  folk — And  play  the  fool ! 
if  you  cared  To  Z  some  time  among  them. 
For  all  the  souls  on  earth  that  I 
will  be  willing  that  you  and  Father  should  Z  with  us ; 
in  our  spring-and-winter  world  If  we  Z  long  enough  ! 
— all  still — and  nothing  left  To  Z  for. 
She  said  '  all  still.     Nothing  to  Z  for.' 
but  now  ye  know  why  we  Z  so  stintedly, 
a  Count  in  Brittany — he  Vs  near  Quimper. 
Long  I  Richard,  (repeat) 

Long  I  Robin,  Robin  and  Richard !     Long  Z  Robin, 
'  Long  Z  King  Richard  ! ' 

0  Lord,  I  will  Z  and  die  for  King  Richard — 
We  will  Z  and  die  with  thee,  (repeat) 

1  believe  there  Vs  No  man  who  truly  loves 
You  gentles  that  Z  upo'  manchet-bread  and  marchpane. 
Then  I  roast  'em,  for  I  have  nought  else  to  I  on. 
Could  Z  as  happy  as  the  larks  in  heaven, 
L  thou  maiden !     Thou  art  more  my  wife  so  feeling. 


I  iii  44 
n  ii  219 
n  ii  231 
II  ii  252 
II  iii  90 

II  iv  41 

III  i  208 
ni  i  294 
III  i  316 

in  ii  135 

III  iv  33 
in  vi  45 

IV  197 

IV  i  152 
IV  ii  162 


IV  iii  159 

rv  iii  181 

IV  iii  220 

vi22 

vi245 

vii353 

V  iii  98 

V  iv  11 
Harold  i  ii  161 

„     II  ii  565 

„     n  ii  804 

„     IV  iii  73 

„      V  i  463 

BecTcet,  Pro.  29 

I  ii  16 

I  ii  95 

I  iv  271 

II  i  309 
n  ii  450 

„  ni  iii  335 
IV  i  12 
„  IV  ii  157 
„  IV  ii  367 
„  IV  ii  415 
„vil09,142 

V  iii  30 
The  Cup  I  iii  65 

II  99 
n  443 


The  Falcon  159 

583 

854 

Prom,  of  May  i  241 


I  378 

I  498 

I  744 

n  550 

ni  7 

ra  261 

in  512 

in  682 

ni  68& 

Foresters  i  i  76 

„      I  i  272 

„     I  ii  1,  3 

I  ii  13 

I  ii  25 

I  ii  37 

„     I  iii  168 

n  i  75 

„     n  i  281 

„     II  i  388 

ni  82 

„      in  121 


Live 


987 


Long 


Live  {continued)     all  that  I  By  their  own  hands,  the 

labourer,  the  poor  priest ;  Foresters  iii  164 

And  I  with  us  and  the  birds  in  the  green  wood.  „       iv  325 

We  needs  must  I.     Our  bowmen  are  so  true  „        iv  523 

Then  will  I  I  for  ever  in  the  wild  wood.  „        iv  878 

Lived    {See  also  Short-lived)     as  tho'  My  father  and  my 

brother  had  not  I.  Queen  Mary  i  v  36 

I  thank  Grod,  I  have  I  a  virgin,  „        ii  ii  218 

You  I  among  your  vines  and  oranges,  „      iii  iv  253 

And  all  things  I  and  ended  honestly.  „       iii  v  115 

Your  Majesty  has  I  so  pure  a  life,  „  v  v  73 

I  have  I  a  life  of  utter  purity :  Harold  i  i  178 

but  happier  I,  It  happier  be  to  live ;  „     iv  iii  72 

I  die  for  England  then,  who  I  for  England —  „      v  i  268 

he  would  be  mine  age  Had  he  I  now ;  Becket  i  iii  250 

I  have  Z,  poor  bird,  from  cage  to  cage,  „      in  i  222 

little  fair-hair'd  Norman  maid  L  in  my  mother's  house :       „       v  ii  261 

having  I  For  twenty  days  and  nights  in  mail,  Foresters  iv  123 

Livelong    Not  having  broken  fast  the  I  day —  „        iv  186 

Liver    and  thy  legs,  and  thy  heart,  and  thy  I,  „        iv  205 

Livery    Ay,  how  fine  they  be  in  their  liveries,  „  i  i  41 

Living  (adj.  and  part.)    and  we  two  will  lead  The  I 

waters  of  the  Faith  again 

And  had  to  be  removed  lest  I  Spain  Should  sicken 

at  dead  England. 
Will  stir  the  I  tongue  and  make  the  cry. 
but  Lambeth  palace,  Henceforth  a  centre  of  the  I  faith 
not  the  I  rock  Which  guards  the  land. 
And  thou  art  upright  in  thy  I  grave, 


Qxieen  Mary  i  v  88 

III  i  27 

III  i  354 

,,       in  ii  155 

Harold  i  ii  119 

II  ii  440 

III  ii  60 

IV  iii  70 
IV  iii  105 

vi390 


and  sell  not  thou  Our  I  passion  for  a  dead  man's  dream ; 

the  I  Who  fought  and  would  have  died. 

Hail  to  the  I  who  fought,  the  dead  who  fell ! 

And  dying  for  the  people — Edith.    L — I ! 

doth  not  the  Z  skin  thicken  against  perpetual  whippings  ?  Becket  in  iii  316 

were  he  I  And  grown  to  man  and  Sinnatus  will'd  it.      The  Cup  i  ii  150 

dead  garland  WUl  break  once  more  into  the  /  blossom.    The  Falcon  919 

We  know  not  whether  he  be  dead  or  I.  From,  of  May  ii  436 

ThisEdgar,  then,  isZ?     Harold,     i  ?  well—  „  ii  443 

were  she  I,  Would  not — if  penitent — have  denied  „  ii  495 

Will  he  not  fly  from  you  if  he  learn  the  story  of  my 

shame  and  that  I  am  still  Z  ?  -•  in  258 

Is  yours  yet  I  ?    Harold.     No— I  told  you.  „  m  505 

I  never  said  As  much  before  to  anv  woman  I.  „  in  645 

L  .  .  .  dead  ...  She  said  '  all  still.  „  m  683 

I  ha'  served  the  King  I,  says  she,  and  let  me  serve 

him  dead,  "  Foresters  n  i  310 

Living  (s)     have  graspt  Her  I's,  her  advowsons,  Becket  i  i  161 

That,  thro'  his  late  magnificence  of  I  The  Falcon  227 

Hath  served  me  better  than  her  I —  „         901 

Load     Well,  it  be  the  last  I  hoam.  Prom,  of  May  n  145 

as  I  said  afoor,  it  be  the  last  I  hoam ;  ,,  n  169 

'  The  Last  L  Hoiim.'  (repeat)  .,   n  171,  172 

At  the  end  of  the  daiiy.  For  the  last  I  hoam  ?  (repeat)         .,    ii  184,  195 
Till  the  end  of  the  daay  And  the  last  I  hoiim.  .,  n  209 

Till  the  end  o'  the  daay  An'  the  last  I  hoam.'  .,  n  239 

To  the  end  o'  the  dsiay  An'  the  last  I  hoam.'  „  n  260 

An'  the  last  I  hoam,  L  hoam.'  „  n  293 

Loan     raise  us  I's  and  subsidies  Among  the  merchants ;  Queen  Mary  v  i  179 

Loathe     Who  Z  you  for  your  late  return  to  Rome,  „  iv  ii  32 

She  is  none  of  those  who  I  the  honeycomb.  „  v  i  277 

I  I  being  beaten ;  had  I  fixt  my  fancy  Becket,  Pro.  49 

Loath'd     if  he  have  to  live  so  I  a  life.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  152 

and  great  baseness  Z  as  an  exception  :  Becket  ni  iii  304 

worshipt  whom  she  Z,  I  should  have  let  her  be,  „       iv  ii  391 

I  the  cruelties  that  Rome  Wrought  on  her  vassals.         The  Cup  i  ii  373 

Loathing  (adj.)     I  have  but  shown  a  Z  face  to  you.      Queen  Mary  in  vi  113 

Loathing  (s)     Beauty  passes  like  a  breath  and  love  is 

lost  in  Z :  „  V  ii  366 

And  L  wield  a  Saxon  battle-axe —  Harold  v  i  414 

I  have  an  inherited  Z  of  these  black  sheep  of  the 

Papacy.  Becket,  Pro.  461 

sane  and  natural  Z  for  a  soul  Purer,  „        n  i  171 

Loathsome    call  they  not  The  one  true  faith,  a  Z 

idol-worship  ?  Queen  Mary  in  iv  219 

make  Thy  body  I  even  to  thy  child;  Becket  iv  ii  172 


Lobster-basket    The  simple  l-b,  and  the  mesh — 
Locusting    Come  Z  upon  us,  eat  us  up. 
Locust-like    their  horse  Swallow  the  hill  l-l, 
Lodge    To  Z  a  fear  in  Thomas  Becket's  heart 

take  this  holy  cup  To  Z  it  in  the  shrine  of  Artemis 

To  Z  this  cup  Within  the  holy  shrine  of  Artemis, 

in  some  of  these  may  Z  That  baseness 
Lodged    if  you  be  fairly  served,  And  Z,  and  treated. 

There  Z  a  gleaming  grimness  in  his  eyes, 

I  have  Z  my  pretty  Katekin  in  her  bower. 
Lodging    {See  also  A-lodgin')    You  see  the  Z,  sir, 

track  her,  if  thou  canst,  even  into  the  King's  I, 

Thou  wilt  find  her  Back  in  her  I. 

With  a  wanton  in  thy  I — Hell  requite  'em  ! 

My  lord,  Fitzurse,  beheld  her  in  your  I. 
Lodging-house    went  into  service — the  drudge  of 

a  l-h — 
Loftiest    The  lordliest,  I  minster  ever  built  To  Holy  Peter 
Logic     Some  of  my  former  friends  Would  find  my  Z 

faulty ; 
Loiter    Come,  come,  why  do  ye  Z  here  ? 
Loitering    Half  an  hour  late  !  why  are  you  Z  here  ? 
Lollardism    That  those  old  statutes  touching  L 
Lolluping    See  A-lolluping 
Lombardy    the  Netherlands,  Sicily,  Naples,  L. 
London  (adj.)     {See  also  Lunnon)     For  thro'  thine  help 
we  are  come  to  L  Bridge  ; 

On  over  L  Bridge  We  cannot :  stay  we  cannot ; 

In  every  L  street  a  gibbet  stood. 

To  this  son  of  a  i  merchant — how  your  Grace  must 
hate  him. 

Knights,  bishops,  earls,  this  L  spawn^ — ^by  Mahoimd, 

Thomas,  son  Of  Gilbert  Becket,  L  merchant. 

The  L  folkmote  Has  made  him  all  but  king, 
London  (bishop)     Who  made  thee  L  ?    Who,  but 
Canterbury  ? 

Bishops— York,  L,  Chichester,  Westminster — 

hath  in  this  crowning  of  young  Henry  by  York  and  L 

crowning  thy  yoimg  son  by  York,  L  and  Salisbury— 
not  Canterbury. 
London  (bishoprick)     Found  two  archbishopricks,  L  and 
York? 

Foliot  may  claim  the  pall  For  L  too 


Becket  ii  ii  29T 

Queen  Mary  u  i  101 

Harold  v  i  560 

Becket  i  iii  176- 

The  Cup  I  ii  435- 

I  ii  52 

Foresters  n  ii  705 

Queen  Mary  v  iii  22. 

Harold  n  ii  224 

Foresters  n  i  417 

Queen  Mary  v  iii  23' 

Becket,  Pro.  508 

I  i  40O 

I  ii  9 

I  ii  34 

Prom,  of  May  in  392 
Harold  in  i  20& 


Prom,  of  May  ii  665 

Foresters  i  i  80 

Prom,  of  May  n  324 

Queen  Mary  ni  iv  7 

n  i  213- 

„  n  iii  9- 

II  iii  41 

III  i  7 

Becket,  Pro.  433 

„       II  ii  143 

n  ii  231 

Foresters  i  iii  80 

Becket  i  iii  66 
„  I  iii  385 
„     III  iii  71 


„  ni  iii  19d 

I  iii  50 
I  iii  57 

London  (city)  "  Forward  to  L  with  me  !  forward  to  L  !  Queen  Mary  n  i  214 
forward  to  L  !     Crowd.     Forward  to  Z  !  „       '  n  i  217 

in  full  force  Roll  upon  L.  „  n  i  236 

these  our  companies  And  guilds  of  L,  gathered  here,  „         n  ii  129 

I,  Lord  Mayor  Of  L,  and  our  guilds  and  companies.  „         n  ii  141 

You  droop  in  your  dim  L.  „  v  ii  609 

Draw  thou  to  L,  there  make  strength  to  breast  Harold  v  i  126 

For  L  had  a  temple  and  a  priest  Becket  i  iii  59 

Do  I  wish  it  ?     Edgar.     In  L.  Prom.,  of  May  i  698 

He  has  gone  to  L.  „  1 780 

Lone  seek  In  that  Z  house,  to  practise  on  my  Ufe,  Queen  Mary  i  iv  284 
she  so  praised  The  convent  and  Z  life — within  the  pale —  Harold  i  ii  47 
Thine  ear.     Becket.     That's  Z  enough.  Becket,  Pro.  158 

Keep  him  away  from  the  I  little  isle.  „  ii  i  15 

I  am  as  I  and  loveless  as  thyself.  The  Falcon  20 

Loneliness    Springs  from  the  Z  of  my  poor  bower,  Becket  in  i  40 

Lonely     And  if  I  walk  within  the  Z  wood,  Harold  n  ii  246 

And  it  is  so  Z  here — no  confessor.  Becket  n  i  290 

that  dreadful  night  !  that  I  walk  to  Littlechester,  Prom,  of  May  in  36& 
My  Z  hour  !     The  king  of  day  hath  stept  from  off  his 

throne.  Foresters  ii  i  25 

Why  break  you  thus  upon  my  Z  hour  ?  „        n  i  93 

and  scare  Z  maidens  at  the  farmstead.  „       ni  200 

You  caught  a  Z  woodman  of  our  band,  „       in  359 

Long  (adj,  and  adv.)     Nay  ;  not  so  1 1  trust.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  141 

I  am  somewhat  faint  With  our  Z  talk.  „  i  v  521 

L  live  Queen  Mary  !  „  in  i  294 

you  forget  That  I  low  minster  where  you  gave  your 

hand  To  this  great  Catholic  King.  „  in  ii  90 

And  do  declare  our  penitence  and  grief  For  our  2 

schism  and  disobeoience,  „        m  iii  129 

thou  That  layest  so  Z  in  heretic  bonds  with  me  ;  „        ui  iv  280 


Long 


988 


Look 


Long  (adj.  and  adv.)  (continued)    How  many  names  in  the 

I  sweep  of  time  That  so  foreshortens  greatness,        Queen  Mary  m  v  40 
A  I  petition  from  the  foreign  exiles  To  spare  the  life 

of  Cranmer.  „  iv  i  3 

After  the  I  brain-dazing  colloquies,  „  iv  ii  92 

Friend  for  so  I  time  of  a  mighty  King :  „         iv  iii  73 

L  have  I  lain  in  prison,  yet  have  heard  Of  all  their 

wretchedness.  „       iv  iii  210 

His  I  white  beard,  which  he  had  never  shaven  Since 

Henry's  death,  „       iv  iii  592 

Look  !     I  have  play'd  with  this  poor  rose  so  Z I  have 

broken  off  the  head.  „  v  ii  2 

That  all  day  I  hath  wrought  his  father's  work,  „         v  ii  118 

listening  In  some  dark  closet,  some  I  gallery,  drawn,  „         v  ii  217 

The  rosy  face,  and  I  down-silvering  beard,  Harold  in  i  46 

The  rosy  face  and  I  down-silvering  beard —  „     iv  i  261 

O  rare,  a  whole  I  day  of  open  field.  Becket  i  i  296 

and  the  moon  Divides  the  whole  I  street  with  light 

and  shade.  „      i  i  365 

Their  I  bird-echoing  minster-aisles, —  „     in  i  44 

We  have  watch'd  So  I  in  vain,  he  hath  pass'd  out  again,        „    in  ii  12 
And  sway  the  I  grape-bunches  of  our  vines,  The  Cup  n  270 

'Tis  I  since  we  have  met !  The  Falcon  274 

Be  thou  a-gawin'  to  the  I  bam  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  2 

and  'e  telled  all  on  us  to  be  i'  the  I  bam  by  one  o'clock,         „  i  8 

Why  coom  awaay,  then,  to  the  I  bam.  „  i  36 

Miss,  the  farming  men  'all  hev  their  dinner  i'  the  I 

bam,  „        I  166 

And  I  life  to  boath  on'  em.  „        i  345 

the  smell  o'  the  mou'd  'ud  ha'  maade  ma  live  as  Z  as 

Jerusalem.  ,,        1 378 

They  ha'  broached  a  barrel  of  aale  i'  the  I  bam,  „        i  426 

and  I've  hed  the  I  barn  cleared  out  of  all  the  machines,  ,,        i  451 

Oh,  Dora,  Dora,  how  I  you  have  been  away  from  home  !         ,,        i  767 
■Come,  then,  and  make  them  happy  in  the  I  bam,  „        i  791 

And  plaay  the  pianner,  if  ye  liked,  all  daay  I,  like  a 

laady,  „       ii  101 

Whoy,  O  lor.  Miss  !  that  wur  so  I  back,  and  the  walls 

sa  thin,  „       m  71 

the  state  we  all  Must  come  to  in  our  spring-and-winter 

world  If  we  live  I  enough  !  „     m  512 

and  how  often  in  the  I  sweep  of  years  to  come  Foresters  i  i  244 

L  live  Richard,  Eobin  and  Richard  !     L  live  Richard  !        „  i  ii  1 

L  live  Robin,  Robin  and  Richard  !     L  live  Robin,  .,        i  ii  13 

'  L  live  King  Richard  !  '  „        i  ii  25 

To  sleep  !  to  sleep  !     The  I  bright  day  is  done,  „       i  iii  41 

Why  did  ye  keep  us  at  the  door  so  I?  „      n  i  224 

She'lay  so  I  at  the  bottom  of  her  well  In  the  cold  water        „       iv  242 
Xong  (verb)     And  how  1 1  for  rest.'  Prom,  of  May  ni  206 

Longed    he  I  much  to  see  your  Grace  and  the  Chancellor 

ere  he  past,  Becket,  Pro.  398 

Less  lovely  than  her  own,  and  I  for  it.  The  Falcon  56 

Longer    should  be  No  Z  a  dead  letter,  but  requicken'd.     Queen  Alary  m  iv  10 
Stays  I  here  in  our  poor  north  than  you  : —  „  v  i  24 

these  customs  are  no  I  As  Canterbury  calls  them,  Becket  i  iii  69 

That  if  they  keep  him  I  as  their  guest,  n  i  91 

And  were  it  I — well — I  should  not  do  it.  „    v  ii  159 

and  then  we  were  no  I  outlaws.  Foresters  iv  147 

The  land  !  the  land  !     I  am  crazed  no  I,  so  I  have 

the  land.  „       iv  855 

if  you  hold  us  here  L  from  our  own  venison.  „       rv  942 

Long-face    Who's  the  l-f  there,  Qween  Mary  ni  i  191 

Longing    have  strange  fancies.  Strange  Vs  ;  The  Falcon  819 

Long-silvering     Up  thro'  the  light  of  the  seas  by  the 

moon's  l-s  ray  !  Foresters  ii  ii  179 

Long-togged-at    l-l-a,  threadbare-worn  Quarrel  of  Crown  and 

Church —  Becket  u  ii  54 

Long-winded    Why,  you  l-w — Sir,  you  go  beyond  me.    Queen  Mary  v  iv  58 

Long-withholden    to  enforce  The  Uw  tribute  :  The  Cup  i  i  77 

Long-worshipt    my  most  honour'd  and  l-w  lady,  The  Falcon  714 

Look  (s)     tho'  by  your  age.  And  by  your  I's  Queen  Mary  i  iv  13 

She  calls  you  beauty,  but  I  don't  like  her  Vs.  Becket  iv  ii  62 

Beant  Miss  Eva  gone  off  a  bit  of  'er  good  I's  o' 

laate  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  33 

Look  (verb)    She  I's  comelier  than  ordinary  to-day ;  Queen  Mary  i  i  70 


Look  (verb)  (continued)    Well,  sir,  1 1  for  happy  times. 
I  you  there — The  Prince  of  Spain  coming  to  wed 
I's  it  not  right  royal  ? 
L  to  you  as  the  one  to  crown  their  ends. 
L  to  it,  niece.  He  hath  no  fence  when  Gardiner 
L  you,  Master  Wyatt,  Tear  up  that  woman's  work 
L  ;  can  you  make  it  English  ? 
L  at  the'  New  World — a  paradise  made  hell ; 
chance  That  I  shall  never  I  upon  you  more, 
the  half  sight  which  makes  her  I  so  stem. 
That  makes  or  man  or  woman  I  their  goodliest. 
Should  I  more  goodly  than  the  rest  of  us. 
Be  merry  !  yet,  Sir  Ralph,  you  I  but  sad. 
L's  very  Spain  of  very  Spain  ? 
But  then  he  l's  so  merry. 
L  to  your  Bible,  Paget  !  we  are  fallen. 
L  to  the  Netherlands,  wherein  have  been 
And  make  it  I  more  seemly, 
let  'em  I  to  it,  Cranmer  and  Hooper, 

0  God,  sir,  do  you  I  upon  your  boots, 
what,  you  I  somewhat  worn  ; 

He  l's  to  and  he  leans  on  as  his  God, 

And  you  must  I  to  Calais  when  I  go. 

L  !  I  have  play'd  with  this  poor  rose  so  long 

L  you  here — the  Pope  Pointing  at  me  with  '  Pole, 

how  grim  and  ghastly  l's  her  Grace, 

she  l's  a  corpse. 

Doth  he  not  I  noble  ? 

L  you,  there's  a  star  That  dances  in  it 

and  I  upon  my  face.  Not  on  the  comet. 

L  to  the  skies,  then  to  the  river, 

L  !  am  I  not  Work-wan,  flesh-fallen  ? 

but  I,  where  Edward  draws  A  faint  foot 

She  is  my  mistress,  let  me  I  to  her  ! 

L  thee,  Rolf,  when  I  was  down  in  the  fever, 

L,  he's  here  !     He'll  speak  for  himself  ! 

L  thou,  here  is  Wulfnoth  ! 

L  not  amazed,  fair  earl ! 

L  at  him — -The  rosy  face, 

i  up  !  Z  up  !     Edith  ! 

He  l's  for  land  among  us,  he  and  his. 

1  am  Edith  !     i  not  thus  wan  !     Edith 
how  1 1  ? 

L,  I  will  bear  thy  blessing  into  the  battle 

L  out  upon  the  battle — is  he  safe  ?  (repeat) 

L,  daughter,  I.     Edith.     Nay,  father,  I  for  me  ! 

L  out  upon  the  battle  ! 

L  out  upon  the  hill— is  Harold  there  ? 

L  you,  we  never  meant  to  part  again. 

For  I,  our  marriage  ring  ! 

L  to  your  king. 

L,  this  line — The  rest  you  see  is  colour'd  green — 

L  !  I  would  move  this  wanton  from  his  sight 

L  on  me  as  I  were  thy  bodily  son, 

L  to  it,  your  own  selves  ! 

It  is  not  safe  for  me  to  I  upon  him. 

I  how  the  table  steams,  like  a  heathen  altar  ; 

L  rather  thou  all-royal  as  when  first  I  met  thee. 

L,  II  if  little  Geoffrey  have  not  tost  His  ball 

will  but  I  into  The  wrongs  you  did  him. 

The  King  l's  troubled. 

I  am  the  King,  his  father.  And  I  will  Z  to  it. 

for  there  were  great  ones  who  would  Z  after  me, 

or  I  couldn't  I  your  ladyship  i'  the  face, 

L  !     He  bows,  he  bares  his  head, 

were  all,  my  lord,  as  noble  as  yourself,  who  would  I  up 

to  you  ? 
Fitzurse  and  his  following — who  would  I  down  upon 

them  ? 
But  you  don't  Z  like  a  good  fairy.    Mother  does. 
L  at  the  hilt.     What  excellent  workmanship. 
L  !  how  tliis  love,  this  mother,  nms  thro'  all 
Why  do  you  Z  at  her  so  lingeringly  ? 
To-day  they  are  fixt  and  bright — they  Z  straight  out. 
L  for  me  ! 


What  matters 


Queen  Mary  i  i  98 
I  iii  81 
I  iv  74 
I  iv  171 

I  iv  201 
n  i  74 

H  i  127 

II  i  207 
II  i  246 

II  ii  322 

II  ii  329 

u  ii  349 

n  ii  358 

in  i  192 

mi  203 

in  iv  80 

in  iv  106 

ni  iv  152 

iniv423 

ra  vl91 

IV  ii  116 

IV  iii  30(5 

vil7 

v  ii  1 

V  ii  173 
y  ii  390 

V  ii  397 
vv32 

Harold  i  i  7 
„  I  i  25 
„  I  i  34 
„  I  i  97 
„  iil42 
„  ii287 
„  n  i  46 
„  n  i  78 
„nii322 
„  II  ii  494 
.,  HI  i  44 
„  m  i  320 
„  IV  ii  53 


„  V  i  393 

„  V  i  434 

Harold  v  i  484,  654 

Harold  v  i  535 

„      V  i  623 

„      V  i  669 

V  ii  80 

„     V  ii  108 

Becket,  Pro.  33 

„    Pro.  169 

I  ii  70 

„     I  iii  263 

„     I  iii  397 

„     I  iii  486 

I  iv  68 

ni46 

„      n  i  319 

„     n  ii  115 

„     II  ii  425 

„      m  i  27 

„     in  i  135 

„     in  i  195 

„    m  iii  33 


„  m  iii  306 

„  ni  iii  309 

„       IV  i  35 

„    ivii313 

„     V  ii  241 

The  Cup  I  i  123 

n21 

n  167 


Look 


Look  (verb)  (continued)    I  wonder  if  I Z  as  pale  as  she  ?  The  Cup  n  322 

Deigns  to  I  in  upon  our  barbarisms.  „         u  337 

you  I  as  beautiful  this  morning  as  the  very  Madonna  The  Falcon  198 
your  ladyship  were  not  Too  proud  to  I  upon  the  garland,        „  663 

Coomly  to  I  at,'  says  she — but  she  said  it  spiteful- 
like.     To  I  at — yeas,  Prom,  of  May  1 179 
tha  ^5  haiile  anew  to  last  to  a  hoonderd.  „  i  354 
and  you  I  thin  and  pale.     Is  it  for  his  absence  ?                   „  i  781 
sweet  upo'  Dora  Steer,  and  she  weant  sa  much  as  I 

at  'im  ?  „  n  162 

How  worn  he  I's,  poor  man  !  who  is  it,  I  wonder.  „  n  390 

/  to  thysen,  for,  by  the  Lord,  I'd  think  „  n  695 

L  there — mider  the  deaths.  „  n  710 

I  had  to  I  over  his  letters.  „  ii  720 

could  it  I  But  half  as  lovely.  „         in  490 

but,  my  flower,  You  I  so  weary  and  so  worn  !  „         ni  499 

L  up  !     One  word,  or  do  but  smile  !  „         m  675 

Yes,  deathlike  !     Dead  ?     I  dare  not  I :  if  dead,  „         m  717 

How  she  I's  up  at  him,  how  she  holds  her  face  !  Foresters  i  ii  144 

He  often  I's  in  here  by  the  moonshine.  „        n  i  336 

L,  my  lord,  there  goes  one  in  the  moonlight.  „        n  i  394 

0  I !  before  the  shadow  of  these  dark  oaks  „  ii  i  604 
i  !  l\  he  kneels  !  he  has  anger'd  the  foul  witch,  „  ii  i  669 
L,  there  comes  a  deputation  ,.  n  ii  144 
warm  thy  heart  to  Little  John.  L  where  he  comes  !  .,  m  46 
and  I's  at  once  Maid  Marian,                                                     „         m  117 

1  I  on  the  King's  venison  as  my  own.  „  rv  197 
If  a  cat  may  Z  at  a  king,  may  not  a  friar  speak  to  one  ?       „  rv  921 

Look'd-looked-lookt     You  hok'd  a  king.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  103 

So  that  your  sister  were  but  look'd  to  closer.  „  i  v  460 

How  look'd  the  city  When  you  past  it  ?     Quiet  ?  „  ii  ii  57 

and  look'd  As  grim  and  grave  as  from  a  funeral.  „  n  ii  64 

And  look'd  as  bloodless.  „  n  ii  84 

eyes  So  bashful  that  you  look'd  no  higher  ?  „  m  i  65 

How  look'd  the  Queen  ?  „  ni  i  91 

then  King  Harry  look'd  from  out  a  cloud,  „  iv  ii  6 

His  eighty  years  Look'd  somewhat  crooked  on  him  „         iv  iii  332 

I  do  assure  you,  that  it  must  be  look'd  too  :  „  v  i  2 

It  must  be  look'd  to.  If  war  should  fall  „  v  i  8 

It  shall  be  look'd  to ;  „  y  i  12 

he  look'd  the  Great  Harry,  You  but  his  cockboat ;  „  v  ii  145 

In  Hampton  Court  My  window  look'd  upon  the  corridor  ;    „  v  ii  459 

I  never  look'd  upon  so  fair  a  likeness  „  v  v  28 

L  hard  and  sweet  at  me,  and  gave  it  me.  „  y  v  95 

but  he  that  lookt  a  fangless  one.  Issues  Becket  i  iii  451 

as  to  the  young  crownling  himself,  he  looked  so  malapert 

in  the  eyes,  „  m  iii  109 

yellow  silk  here  and  there,  and  it  looked  pretty  like 

a  glowworm,  „       iv  i  22 

wine  Ran  down  the  marble  and  lookt  like  blood,  The  Cup  ii  204 

Glows  thro'  my  veins  since  first  I  look'd  on  thee.  „        n  429 

You  never  had  look'd  in  on  me  before,  The  Falcon  865 

for  the  past  Look'd  thro'  the  present.  Prom,  of  May  ii  641 

She  hath  looked  well  at  one  of  'ern.  Little  John.  Foresters  i  i  38 

Lookest     Why  I  thou  so  amazed  ?  „       i  i  130 

Looketh     '  Whosoever  L  after  a  woman,'  Queen  Mary  i  v  453 

Lookin'     (^SVe  also  A-lookin')     I  coom'd  upon  'im 

t'other  daay  I  at  the  coontry.  Prom,  of  May  i  201 

Looking  (part)  {See  also  Lookin',  Nobler  -  looking, 
Groodlier-looking,  Simple-looking)  But  Janus- 
faces  I  diverse  ways.  Queen  Mary  iii  ii  75 
ever  I  to  the  happy  haven  Where  he  shall  rest  at  night,  „  iv  iii  579 
Have  you  been  I  at  the  '  Dance  of  Death  '  ?  „  v  ii  169 
{ thro'  my  reign,  I  found  a  himdred  ghastly  murders  Becket  i  iii  406 
you  should  be  in  the  hayfield  I  after  your  men  ;         Prom,  of  May  ii  47 

Loolong  (s)     With  I  on  the  dead.     Am  I  so  white  ?  Harold  ii  ii  815 

In  Z  on  a  chiil  and  changeless  Past  ?  Prom,  of  May  ii  504 

Lookt    See  Look'd 

Loom  (s)     heaven  and  earth  are  threads  of  the  same  I,  Harold  i  i  210 

Loom  (verb)    out  of  which  L's  the  least  chance  of  peril    Queen  Mary  u  ii  238 
blackness  of  my  dungeon  I  Across  their  lamps  Harold  ii  ii  406 

Loon    the  brainless  l's  That  cannot  spell  Queen  Mary  in  i  280 

Loop     Philip  !  quick  !  I  up  my  hair  !  „  v  ii  534 

Loose  (adj.)     a  score  of  wolf-dogs  are  let  I  that  will  tear 

thee  piecemeaL  Becket  m  ii  39 


989  Lord 

Loose  (verb)    going  now  to  the  Tower  to  I  the  prisoners  Queen  Mary  i  i  109 

lead  on  ;  je  I  me  from  my  bonds.  „        iv  ii  240 

Loosed    you  late  were  I  from  out  the  Tower,  „           i  iv  50 

Loosely-scatter'd    left  about  Like  l-s  jewels,  „           n  i  28' 
Loove  (love)     And  I  would  I  tha  moor  nor  ony 

gentleman  'ud  I  tha.  Prom,  of  May  n  104 

Lor  (inter.)     {See  also  Law)     Whoy,  0  I,  Miss  !  that 

wur  sa  long  back,  ,,            ni  71 

0  I,  Miss  !  noa,  noa,  noa  !  „             rn  91 
Lord     {See  also  Liege-lord,  My-lord)     Gardiner  for  one, 

who  is  to  be  made  L  Chancellor,  Queen  Mary  i  i  87 

Her  freaks  and  f rohcs  with  the  late  L  Admiral  ?  „         i  iv  20 

She  fears  the  L's  may  side  with  you  „  i  iv  158 
The  L  Chancellor  (I  count  it  as  a  kind  of  virtue  in  him,  „  i  iv  191 
Why,  my  I  Bishop  ?  (repeat)  Queen  Mary  i  iv  223,  227 
Who  waits,  sir  ?    Usher.    Madam,  the  L  Chancellor.    Queen  Mary  i  v  96 

that  were  hard  upon  you,  my  L  Chancellor.  „          i  v  159 

The  L  Chancellor  himself  is  on  our  side.  „          n  i  193 

Or — if  the  L  God  will  it — on  the  stake.  „          n  i  251 

All  hangs  on  her  address,  And  upon  you,  L  Mayor.  „           u  ii  56 

I,  the  L  Mayor,  and  these  our  companies  And  guilds  „         ii  ii  127 

I,  L  Mayor  Of  London,  and  our  guilds  and  companies.  „         ir  ii  139 

tho'  my  L  Mayor  here,  By  his  own  rule,  „         ii  ii  345 

new  L's  Are  quieted  with  their  sop  of  Abbeylands,  „        iii  i  141 

No,  my  L  Legate,  the  L  Chancellor  goes.  „        in  ii  151 

We,  the  L's  Spiritual  and  Temporal,  „      m  iii  113 

The  L  who  hath  redeem'd  us  With  His  own  blood,  „      in  iii  202 

1  am  but  of  the  laity,  my  L  Bishop,  „  m  iv  81 
Yet  my  L  Cardinal —  Pole.  I  am  your  Legate  ;  „  in  iv  178 
Till  when,  my  L's,  I  counsel  tolerance.  „  ni  iv  203 
Thou  Christian  Bishop,  thou  L  Chancellor  Of  England  !  „  m  iv  30O 
My  L  Chancellor,  You  have  an  old  trick  of  offending  us  ;  „       ni  iv  313 

0  L  !  your  Grace,  your  Grace,  „        m  v  248 

1  told  my  L  He  should  not  vex  her  Highness  ;  „  m  vi  65 
And  my  L  Paget  and  L  William  Howard,  „  rv  i  6 
Good  morroM',  my  L  Cardinal ;  „  rv  i  42 
My  L  of  Ely,  this.  After  a  riot  We  hang  the  leaders,  „  rv  i  72 
And  if  he  did  I  care  not,  my  L  Howard.  „  iv  i  129 
You  are  too  politic  for  me,  my  L  Paget.  „  iv  i  150 
May  learn  there  is  no  power  against  the  L.  „  iv  iii  67 
And  be  with  Christ  the  L  in  Paradise.  „         iv  iii  88 

0  L  God,  although  my  sins  be  great,  „  iv  iii  135 
And  every  syllable  taught  us  by  our  L,  „  iv  iii  231 
No,  here's  L  William  Howard.  What,  my  L,  „  iv  iii  288 
Thank  the  L  therevore.  (repeat)  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  496,  520,  529 
there  wur  an  owld  I  a-cum  to  dine  wi'  un.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  504 
'  I  wunt  dine,'  says  my  L  Bishop,  „  iv  iii  507 
the  owld  I  fell  to  's  meat  wi'  a  will,  God  bless  im  !  „  iv  iii  514 
but  when  I  came  to  wed  your  majesty,  L  Howard,  „              v  i  56 

1  have  gone  beyond  your  late  L  Chancellor, —  „  v  ii  98 
cries  continually  with  sweat  and  tears  to  the  L  God  „  v  iv  46 
Charles,  the  I  of  this  low  world,  is  gone  ;  „  v  v  54 
Ask  thou  L  Leofwin  what  he  thinks  of  this  !  Harold  i  i  40 
L  Leofwin,  dost  thou  believe,  „  i  i  42 
Yea,  I  Harold.  „  n  ii  243 
The  king,  the  l's,  the  people  clear'd  him  of  it,  „  ii  ii  522 
many  among  our  Norman  l's  Hate  thee  for  this,  „  ii  ii  545 
I  have  built  the  L  a  house —  (repeat)  Harold  in  i  178,  180,  186 
the  L  hath  dwelt  In  darkness.  Harold  in  i  178 
The  L  was  God  and  came  as  man —  „  in  ii  172 
Thou  art  one  of  those  Who  brake  into  L  Tostig's 

treasure-house  „       iv  i  114 

Lay  hands  of  full  allegiance  in  thy  L's  „           v  i  11 

Like  other  l's  amenable  to  law.  Becket,  Pro.  25 

Church  should  pay  her  scutage  like  the  l's.  „  i  i  35 
And  spake  to  the  L  God,  and  said  '  0  X,  I  have  been 

a  lover  of  wines,  „         i  i  74 

And  the  L  answer'd  me,  '  Thou  art  the  man,  (repeat)  „   i  i  82,  98 

'  O  L  my  God,  Henry  the  King  hath  been  my  friend,  „          i  i  86 

Stir  up  the  King,  the  L's  !  „  i  ii  88 
Is  not  the  Church  the  visible  L  on  earth  ?    Shall  hands 

that  do  create  the  L  be  bound  „       i  iii  92 

The  L  be  judged  again  by  Pilate  ?     No  !  „       i  iii  97 

My  I  Archbishop,  that  we  too  should  sign  ?  „     i  iii  272 

Loyally  and  with  good  faith,  my  I  Archbishop  ?  „     i  iii  279 


Lord  990 

Lord  {continiied)     dwelt  alone,  like  a  soft  I  of  the  East,  Becket  i  iii  358 

And  our  great  I's  will  sit  in  judgment  on  him.  „  i  iii  549 

I  would,  my  I  Thomas  of  Canterbury,  ,'  i  iii  577 

How  much  might  that  amount  to,  my  I  Leicester  ?  ,,  i  iii  656 

0  my  good  I  Leicester,  The  King  and  I  were  brothers.  .,  i  iii  660 

The  King  and  all  his  Z's Becket.    Son,  first  hear  »?»e  !  .,  i  iii  671 

Blessed  is  he  that  cometh  in  the  name  of  the  LI  .,  i  iii  759 

My  ;  Archbishop,  wilt  thou  permit  us —  ,,  i  iv  5 
That  is  the  parable  of  our  blessed  L.     Becket.     And 

why  should  not  the  parable  of  our  blessed  L  be 

acted  again  ?  „  r  iv  75 

our  I's  and  masters  in  Christ  Jesus.  ..  i  iv  87 
My  I  Archbishop,  may  I  come  in  with  my  poor  friend, 

my  dog  ?  .,  I  iv  93 

and  the  L  hath  prepared  your  table —  „  i  iy  130 

Where  is  my  I  Archbishop  ?  "  j  iy  154 

because  the  L  hath  set  his  mark  upon  him  ',  i  iv  191 

for  I  be  liis  I  and  master  i'  Christ,  ''  i  jy  241 

gangrenes,  and  running  sores,  praise  ye  the  L,  '!  i  iy  256 
world  shall  live  by  the  King's  venison  and  the  bread 

.  °'  *^^  ^'  „     I  iv  272 

smce  we  would  be  I  of  our  own  manor,  ,        u  ii  19 

My  lieges  and  my  I's,  The  thanks  of  Holy  Church  ',',     ir  ii  189 

That  sow  this  hate  between  my  I  and  me  !  „     n  ii  272 

by-things  of  the  L  Are  the  wrong'd  innocences  "     m  iii  13 

If  ...  but  I  say  no  more  .  .  .  farewell,  my  I.  „  in  iii  272 

It  must  be  so — my  visions  in  the  L:  ,.  m  iji  342 

I  of  more  land  Than  any  crown  in  Europe,  ',]        v  i  28 

Thomas,  I  Not  only  of  your  vassals  but  amours,  "      v  i  204 

for  thy  Church,  0  Z— Into  thy  hands,  0  L—  y  iii  195 
The  L  bless  boiith  on  'em  !                                         p^m.  of  May  i  341 

—the  L  bless  'er — 'er  oan  sen  ;  „             u  39 

it  be  the  L's  doin',  noan  o'  mine  ;  ''  m  43 
I  would  set  my  men-at-arms  to  oppose  thee,  like  the 

n  ^  ''t  *^n  r*^"®-  .  .  ■  Foresters  i  i  324 

O  X,  I  will  hve  and  die  for  King  Richard—  „        i  ii  37 

0  i,  I  am  easily  led  by  words,  "  j  a  39 
-^'s  and  Commons  wiU  bow  down  before  him—  Queen  Maru  in  i  433 

Lordliest    The  I,  loftiest  minster  ever  built  To  Holy  Peter 

■T^«ic>.-!^T^"ffK''^^l,     .        .  Harold  in  i20& 

^^rdstaip     Large  I  there  of  lands  and  terntory.  Harold  n  ii  83 

'■•^^^T,  ^,.'^°  P^f<^f  /°"^  ^I^^y  till  EUzabeth  I  her  head.'       Queen  Mary  i  iii  5 

If  Ehzabeth  I  her  head —  ^^  \  iii  §3 

Stand  further  off,  or  you  may  I  your  head.  Courtenay. 

1  have  a  head  to  I  for  your  sweet  sake.  „  j  iy  128 
what  have  you  done  to  i  her  ?  '  x  iv  296 
But  do  not  I  me  Calais.  "  i  y  129 
To  go  back  Were  to  I  all.  \]  „  iii  40 

1  pass  to  Windsor  and  I  Z  my  crown.  "  u  iy  29 
thou  Shalt  I  thine  ears  and  find  thy  tongue,  "  m  i  255 
L  the  sweet  hope  that  I  may  bear  a  prince.  "  m  vi  201 
Or  you  will  I  your  Calais.  /  „  v  i  11 
to  the  intent  That  you  may  I  your  English  heritage.  "  y  i  133 
Ood  gmde  me  lest  1 1  the  way.  v  v  209 
Yet  thee  I  would  not  Z,  and  sell  not  thou  Harold  m  ii  58 
ro  take  my  hfe  might  I  him  Aquitaine.  Becket  iv  ii  396 
lie  I  s  half  the  meed  of  martyrdom  v  ii  278 
And  I  his  head  as  old  St.  Denis  did.  "  y  ii  450 
which  well  May  make  you  I  yourself.  The  Cup  i  i  149 
I  might  plunge  And  j  myself  for  ever.  Prom,  of  May  11  306 
and  I  shaU  I  my  land  also.  Foresters  i  i  339 
Beware,  man,  lest  thou  I  thy  faith  in  me.  i  ii  179 
but  my  father  will  not  I  his  land,  "  „  i  523 
Or  Z  all  hope  of  pardon  from  us —  "       ^y  935 

iMSa^    would  dare  the  chance  Of  double,  or  I  all.  The  Cup  i  iii  148 

l^rTL     ^  "^?^%  than  friend,  a  son  ;  The  Falcon  332 

C^Im  Til    f^u^  ^/"h,^"  ^'''^  ^y  ^  ^^^-  P^o^-  of  May  11  418 

T          ^^  ^  ^^y  ^^^^^^  *o  ^^^  I  of  Ws  land.  Foresters  u  i  570 

liOSS     Ihis  marn^e  should  bring  I  or  danger  to  you.  Queen  Maru  11  ii  227 

angry  chronicles  hereafter  By  Z  of  Calais.  v     305 

More  gain  than  I  ■  for  of  your  wives  "secket  v  ii  201       Lot 

"^I  haVe'fm'Jnltfficr    '  '''"  ''"  '  '  "''^"  ^"^"  """'^  '  '^  lit 

He  has  gambled  for  his  life,  and  I,  he  hangs.  "  A  Iii  92 

Madam,  I  much  fear  That  aU  is  Z;  ];  „  •"  23 


Lost  {continued)     All  I,  all  I,  all  yielded  !     A  barge,  a 
barge  ! 
traitors  Against  our  royal  state  have  I  the  heads 

We  reck  not  tho'  we  I  this  crown  of  England — 

I  had  Uke  to  have  I  my  life  : 

I  Her  fierce  desire  of  bearing  him  a  child, 

a  star  beside  the  moon  Is  all  but  I ; 

So  ;  but  it  is  not  I — Not  yet. 

Beauty  passes  Hke  a  breath  and  love  is  I  in  loathing : 

i  in  a  wilderness  where  none  can  hear  ! 

sent  on  foreign  travel.  Not  I  his  head. 

was  I  When  Wyatt  sack'd  the  Chancellor's  house 

For  having  I  myself  to  save  myself, 

thro'  his  dying  sense  Shrills  '  I  thro'  thee.' 

Crown'd,  crown'd  and  I,  crown'd  King — and  Z  to  me  ! 

Both  were  I  and  found  together, 

I  and  found  Together  in  the  cruel  river  Swale 

L,  I,  the  light  of  day, 

L,  I,  we  have  I  the  way. 

into  the  river.  Where  we  two  may  be  I  together.  And 
/  for  ever  ?  '  Oh  !  never,  oh  !  never,  Tho'  we  be 
I  and  be  found  together.' 

the  truth  Was  I  in  that  fierce  North,  where  they  were  I, 
Where  all  good  things  are  I,  where  Tostig  I 

I  have  I  Somewhat  of  upright  stature 

I  have  I  the  boy  who  play'd  at  ball  with  me. 

Thou  hast  I  thine  even  temper,  brother  Harold  ! 

when  all  was  I,  he  yell'd.  And  bit  his  shield, 

I  have  I  both  crown  And  husband. 

I Z  it  somehow — 1 1  it,  playing  with  it 

twice  I  thought  that  all  was  I. 

That  the  heart  were  I  in  the  rhyme 

certain  wholesome  usages,  L  in  desuetude, 

I  think  so.     So  I Z  mine. 

I  have  I  all  trust  in  him. 

The  boy  so  late  ;  pray  God,  he  be  not  I. 

nay,  if  1 1  him,  now  The  folds  have  fallen  from  the 

mystery,  And  left  all  naked,  I  were  I  indeed. 
I  her  and  went  on  and  on  till  I  found  the  light  and 

the  lady, 
I  saw  the  ball  you  I  in  the  fork  of  the  great  willow 

over  the  brook. 
Well — well — too  costly  to  the  left  or  I 
You  have  I  The  ear  of  the  King. 
L  in  the  common  good,  the  common  wrong, 
have  1 1  authority  among  you  ? 
The  glory  and  grief  of  battle  won  or  I 
I  have  I  a  friend  of  late 


Lot 


Queen  Mary  n  iv  71 

in  iv  3 

in  iv  55 

m  V  189 

IV  iii  428 

V  i  81 

V  ii  264 

V  ii  365 

V  ii  382 

V  ii  491 

V  ii  503 
Harold  11  ii  654 

m  i  35 

in  ii  1 

m  ii  7 

„         in  ii  9 

III  ii  12 

ni  ii  15 


in  ii  18 

ui  ii  26 

m  ii  55 

,,       IV  iii  21 

V  i  94 

V  i  403 

V  ii  38 

V  ii  109 

V  ii  173 
Becket,  Pro.  383 

I  iii  413 

II  i  64 

„       n  ii  434 

IV  ii  2 

..  IV  ii  7 

„        IV  ii  17  ] 

„  IV  ii  57  ; 
„  ivii299  i 
„      ivii354 

V  ii  40 

V  iii  66 
The  Cup  I  ii  161 

The  Falcon  329 
9  a  dinner  tor  nawDody,  and  1  should 

ha'  I  the  pig.  Prom.  of  May  1 149 

and  man  perceives  that  The  I  gleam  of  an  after-life 

but  leaves  him  j  5Q3 

I  were  insured.  Miss,  an'  1 1  nowt  by  it.  \\            u  53 
I  have  I  myself,  and  am  I  for  ever  to  you  and  my 

poor  father.  ^             jj  gg 
I  do  believe  1 1  my  heart  to  him  the  very  first  time 

we  met,  ^^         jjj  233 
but  I  couldn't  buy  my  darter  back  agean  when  she 

I  hersen,  ^^         ^  454 

an  one  on  'em  went  an'  I  hersen  i'  the  river.  „         ni  456 

Has  I  his  health,  his  eyesight,  even  his  mind.  "        m  767 

'Twere  best  to  make  an  end  of  my  I  life.  „'         m  736 

I  have  Z  my  gold,  I  have  Z  my  son,  Foresters  i  i  338 
art  attainted,  and  hast  Z  thine  earldom  of  Huntingdon.         „       i  iii  58 

I  fear  me  we  have  Z  our  labour,  then.  „      n  i  232 

I  have  Z  a  cow  from  my  meadow.  ,''      u.  i  326 

I  have  been  a  fool  and  I  have  Z  my  Kate.  ,"       n  ii  79 

In  the  cold  water  that  she  Z  her  voice,  „       jy  243 

Have  I Z  her  then  ?  [\       jy  gig 

L  her  ?     O  no,  we  took  Advantage  of  the  letter —  ,',       rv  619 
The  I  of  Princes.     To  sit  high  Is  to  be  lied  about.  Queen  Mary  1  v  428 

I  say  no  more — only  this,  their  Z  is  yours,  „           n  i  214 

Is  that  it  ?    That's  a  big  Z  of  money.  „           u  m  62 

Drew  here  the  richest  Z  from  Fate,  The  Cup  n  442 

That  never  be  thy  Z  or  mine  ! —  Foresters  ni  98 


there  wudn't  be  a  dinner  for  nawbody,  and  I  should 


Loud 


991 


Love 


Loud    And  dazzled  men  and  deafen'd  by  some  bright 

L  venture,  Quern  Mary  ni  i  453 

Not  so  I !     Our  Clarence  there  Sees  ever  an  aureole         „  v  ii  411 

Not  so  I.    Lord  Devon,  girls  !  „  v  ii  484 

Go  home.     Besides,  you  curse  so  Z.  „  v  iv  62 

So  I,  that,  by  St.  Dunstan,  old  St.  Thor—  Rarold  iv  iii  146 

Why  there — Uke  some  I  beggar  at  thy  gate —  Becket  ii  i  180 

Wakening  such  brawls  and  I  disturbances  In  England,  „     v  ii  352 

L  disturbances  !     Oh,  ay — -the  bells  rang  out  even  to 
deafening,  „     v  ii  362 

Have  our  I  pastimes  driven  them  all  away  ?  Foresters  ii  ii  105 

Louder     L  I  1 1    Maid  Marian,  Queen  o'  the  woods  !  „         in  374 

Z,  I,  ye  knaves.  „         ni  396 

Loud-lung'd    Tho'  aU  the  l-l  trumpets  upon  earth  Becket  v  n  487 

Louis  (King  of  France)     L  of  France  loved  me,  and  I 
dreamed  that  I  loved  L  of  France  : 

King  L  had  no  paramours,  and  I  loved  him 

*  Fly  at  once  to  France,  to  King  L  of  France  : 

So  that  the  fool  King  L  feed  them  not. 

brave  The  Pope,  King  L,  and  this  turbulent  priest. 

O  good  son  L,  do  not  counsel  me. 

My  lord,  I  see  this  L  Returning,  ah  ! 

Long  live  the  good  King  L  ! 

know  the  King's  married  for  King  L Rosamund. 

Married  !     Margery.    Years  and  years,  my  lady, 
for  her  husband,  King  L Rosamund.     Hush  ! 

bound  For  that  one  hour  to  stay  with  good  King  L, 

He  said  so  ?     L,  did  he  ? 

When  I  was  in  mine  anger  with  King  L, 
.my  much  constancy  To  the  monk-king,  L, 

I,  that  thro'  the  Pope  divorced  King  L, 

You  were  but  Aquitaine  to  L — no  wife  ; 
Lours     thimder-cloud  That  I's  on  England — laughter 


Pro.  355 

Pro.  474 

iiv53 

II 176 

II  i  312 

II  ii  219 

n  ii  417 

II  ii  451 


„  III  i  167 
„  III  iii  248 
„  III  iii  255 
„  III  iii  258 
„  ivii305 
„  IV  ii  418 
„  V  i  116 
Harold  in  ii  161 


Lousiest    Thou  the  lustiest  and  I  of  this  Cain's  brotherhood, 

answer.  Becket  i  iv  185 

Lout     that  all  the  I's  to  whom  Their  A  B  C  is  darkness.    Queen  Mary  in  iv  34 

L,  churl,  clown  !  Prom,  of  May  ni  739 

Love  (adj.)     What  matters  ?     State  matters  ?  I  matters  ?     Becket,  Pro.  320 

Love  (s)     0,  my  lord  to  be.  My  I,  for  thy  sake  only.  Queen  Mary  i  v  67 


not  with  gold.  But  dearest  links  of  I. 

deem  This  I  by  you  retum'd  as  heartily  ;  And  thro' 

this  common  knot  and  bond  of  I, 
A  diamond.  And  Phihp's  gift,  as  proof  of  PhiUp's  1, 
She  cast  on  him  a  vassal  smile  of  I, 
thy  I  to  mine  Will  cling  more  close, 
make  me  shamed  and  tongue-tied  in  my  I. 
Cranmer,  Your  more  especial  I, 
should  her  I  when  you  are  gone,  my  liege, 
should  her  I — And  I  have  known  such  women 
to  fuse  Almost  into  one  metal  I  and  hate, — 
'  L  of  this  world  is  hatred  against  God.' 
They  hate  me  also  for  my  I  to  you,  My  Philip  ; 
Beauty  passes  hke  a  breath  and  I  is  lost  in  loathing  : 
L  will  hover  roimd  the  flowers  when  they  first  awaken 
L  will  fly  the  fallen  leaf,  and  not  be  overtaken  ; 
Some  say  that  Gardiner,  out  of  I  for  him, 
he  sends  his  veriest  I,  And  says,  he  will  come  quickly. 
Tell  him  at  last  I  know  his  I  is  dead, 
that  it  would  please  Him  out  of  His  infinite  I 
And  I  should  know  ;  and — -be  the  king  so  wise, — 
Cling  to  their  I ;  for,  now  the  sons  of  Godwin 
Thy  I  ?     Aldwyih.     As  much  as  I  can  give  thee. 
And  thy  I  ?     Aldwyth.     As  much  as  thou  canst  bear. 
L  is  come  ^vith  a  song  and  a  smile,  Welcome  L  with  a 

smile  and  a  song  :   L  can  stay  but  a  little  while. 
L  will  stay  for  a  whole  hfe  long. 
Sang  out  their  Vs  so  loud. 
And  woo  their  I's  and  have  forgotten  thee  ; 
Normans  left  among  us.  Who  foUow'd  me  for  I ! 
The  more  the  I,  the  mightier  is  the  prayer ;  The  more 

the  I,  the  more  acceptable  The  sacrifice  of  both  your 
Vs  to  heaven. 
'  L,  I  will  guide  thee.' 

*  i  for  a  whole  life  long  '  When  was  that  sung  ? 
Since  Tostig  came  with  Norway — ^fright  not  I. 


I  V  539 

n  ii  197 

in  i  67 

m  i  98 

in  ii  159 

in  ii  163 

„       ni  iv  418 

„      in  vi  172 

in  vi  177 

„      ni  vi  182 

IV  iii  173 

V  i  95 

v  ii  365 

V  ii  370 

V  ii  372 
v  ii  502 
v  ii  564 

V  ii  590 
„  V  iv  47 
HaroU  i  i  276 

I  i  324 
I  i  478 
I  i  483 

I  ii  10 

I  ii  17 

I  ii  20 

„     n  ii  438 

„     in  i  304 


III  i  346 
m  ii  16 

III  ii  88 

IV  i  174 


Love   (s)    {continued)      Full   hope   have   I   that   I  will 

answer  I.  Harold  iv  i  273 

— a  sin  against  The  truth  of  I.  „       v  i  171 

With  a  I  Passing  thy  I  for  Griffyth  !  „  v  i  356 
What  matters  ?     State  matters  ?  love  matters  ? 

Henry.     My  I  for  thee,  and  thine  for  me.  Becket,  Pro.  321 

Madam,  you  do  ill  to  scorn  wedded  I.  „      Pro.  354 

honeymoon  is  the  gall  oil;  he  dies  of  his  honejonoon.  „  Pro.  364 
Not  for  my  I  toward  him,  but  because  he  had  the  I 

of  the  King.  „      Pro.  441 

thou  shalt  have  our  I,  our  silence,  and  our  gold —  „      Pro.  492 

My  Courts  of  L  would  have  held  thee  guiltless  of  I —  „      Pro.  498 

worldly  bond  between  us  is  dissolved.  Not  yet  the  I:  „          i  i  348 

Ye  make  this  clashing  for  no  I  o'  the  customs  „       i  iii  136 

Thought  that  I  knew  him,  err'd  thro'  I  of  him,  „       i  iii  441 

Took  it  upon  me — err'd  thro'  I  of  him.  „  i  iii  699 
L  that  is  born  of  the  deep  coming  up  with  the  sun 

from  the  sea.  (repeat)  „      n  i  9, 19 

L  that  can  shape  or  can  shatter  a  life  „          n  i  11 

L  that  can  lift  up  a  hfe  from  the  dead.  „          ii  i  13 

thou  my  golden  dream  of  L's  own  bov/er,  „          n  i  34 

A  greater  King  Than  thou  art,  L,  „        ii  i  116 

A  bastard  hate  born  of  a  former  I.  „        n  i  174 

Speak  only  of  thy  I.  .,        n  i  179 

boldness  of  this  hand  hath  won  it  L's  alms,  ,.        n  i  184 

0  by  thy  I  for  me,  all  mine  for  thee,  .,  n  i  314 
the  gap  Left  by  the  lack  of  I.  Henry.  The  lack  otV.  ..  in  i  61 
bound  me  by  his  I  to  secrecy  Till  his  own  time.  ,.  in  i  228 
stray'd  From  l's  clear  path  into  the  common  bush,  '  „  mi  247 
L  is  the  only  gold.  „         iv  i  43 

1  have  heard  of  such  that  range  from  I  to  I,  Like  the 

wild  beast — ^if  you  can  call  it  I.  „      iv  ii  120 

Come  with  me,  I,  And  I  will  love  thee  ...  „      iv  ii  155 

King  himself,  for  I  of  his  own  sons,  „      iv  ii  344 

in  aiming  at  your  I,  It  may  be  sometimes  „           v  i  36 

Would  he  were  dead  !     I  have  lost  all  I  for  him.  „          v  i  92 

Lacking  the  I  of  woman  and  of  child.  „       v  ii  199 

how  this  I,  this  mother,  nms  thro'  all  „  v  ii  241 
But  the  fool-fire  of  /  or  lust.                                             The  Cup  i  i  147 

woman's  fealty  when  Assailed  by  Craft  and  L.  „        i  i  177 

I  love  you — -for  your  I  to  the  great  Goddess.  „  i  ii  218 
there  You  told  your  I ;  and  like  the  swaying  vines —  „  i  ii  •.  .^ 
— if  I  win  her  I,  They  too  will  cleave  to  me,  „  i  iii  153 
all  else  Was  I  for  you  :  he  prays  you  to  believe  him.  „  n  55 
from  maiden  fears  Or  reverential  I  for  him  I  loved,  „  n  197 
all  drown'd  in  I  And  ghttering  at  full  tide —  „         n  233 

I I  bear  to  thee  Glow  thro'  thy  veins  ?  „  n  426 
The  Z I  bear  to  thee  Glows  thro'  my  veins  ,,  ii  428 
But  hath  she  yet  retum'd  thy  I  ?  The  Falcon  67 
I'll  be  bound  to  confess  her  I  to  him  at  last.  „  172 
Will  he  not  pray  me  to  return  his  I —  „  247 
Hath  she  return'd  thy  I  ?  Count.  Not  yet !  „  513 
For  that  would  seem  accepting  of  your  I.  „  740 
It  should  be  I  that  thus  outvalues  all.    You  speak  like 

I,  and  yet  you  love  me  not.     I  have  nothing  in  this 
world  but  I  for  you.     Lady  Giovanna.     L?  it  is  I,  I 

for  my  dying  boy,  „        780 

— the  I  you  said  you  bore  me — ■  „         857 

But  he  will  keep  his  I  to  you  for  ever  !  „  892 
for  the  senses,  I,  are  for  the  world ;                            Prom,  of  May  i  580 

if  you  will  bind  I  to  one  for  ever,  „            i  644 

That  was  only  true  I ;  and  I  trusted —  „            i  712 

Have  you  fancied  yourself  in  I  with  him  ?  „            i  783 

all  of  them  Loved  her,  and  she  was  worthy  of  all  L  „  n  430 
the  man  has  doubtless  a  good  heart,  and  a  true  and 

lasting  Z  for  me :  .,         in  172 

0  L  and  Life,  how  weary  am  I,  .,  in  205 
But  the  I  of  sister  for  sister  can  never  be  old-fashioned.       .,         in  319 

A  himdred  times  more  worth  a  woman's  I,  ,.         iii  744 

for  the  I  of  his  own  little  mother  on  earth.  Foresters  i  i  97 

come  at  their  I  with  all  manner  of  homages,  ,,      i  i  102 

L  flew  in  at  the  window  As  Wealth  walk'd  „       i  i  150 

as  I  am  a  true  believer  in  true  I  myself,  ,,      i  i  162 

and  all  her  l's  and  hates  Sink  again  into  chaos.  „     i  ii  328 

'Tis  for  no  lack  of  Z  to  you,  my  lord,  „    i  iii  130 


Love 


992 


Love 


Love  (S)  (continued)    The  I  of  freedom,  the  desire  of  God,      Foresters  u_i^6^ 

Thou  hast  crost  him  in  I,  "       tt  i  534 
what  sort  of  man  art  thou  For  land,  not  I  f 

Mortal  enough,  If  I  for  thee  be  mortal.     Lovers  ^^  .  ^^^ 

hold  True  Hmmortal.      „,    ^  ^  .    , ,.    ,  "       „  i  644 

ever  held  that  saying  false  That  L  is  bhnd,  ,.        l\i^t 
Stay  with  us  here,  sweet  £,  Maid  Marian, 
How  should  you  love  if  you  misti-ust  your  I  f    JMtLe 

John.    O  Kate,  true  I  and  jealousy  are  twins, 

And  I  is  joyful,  innocent,  beautiful,  ..        "..",90 

Tit,  for  I  and  brevity.  Not  for  I  of  levity.  ..      "  " -^^° 

Fluting,  and  piping  and  luting  ^L,l,l  —  "          ^  ^ 

lilt  among  the  leaves  '  L,  1, 1,1' —  "               en 

take  and  wear  this  symbol  of  your  I ;  "          " iiV 

L  himself  Seems  but  a  ghost,  "        ttt  971 

Ha,  brother.    ToU,  my  dear  ?  the  toll  of  ?.  "        ™f'^ 

The  I  that  children  owe  to  both  I  give  "          ^    ' 

No,  sweetheart !  out  of  tune  with  L  and  me.  „          ^^  ^^ 

No  ribald  John  is  L,  no  wanton  Prmce,  ..          ^^  ■*" 

iips  that  never  breathed  L's  falsehood  to  true  maid  ^^  ^^ 

vfill  seal  L's  truth                     ,     ,      ,  "         tv  4R0 

He  is  all  for  I,  he  cares  not  for  the  land.  »         ^v  ^o^ 

mate  with  one  that  holds  no  I  is  pure,  "         ^^  '^ 

Risk  not  the  1 1  bear  thee  for  a  girl.  "         :J*  '3t 

I  am  but  the  echo  of  the  Ups  of  I.  »       ^^  ,^4^ 

In  this  full  tide  of  I,  Wave  heralds  wave :  »       ly  xyao 
Love  (verb)    up,  son,  and  save  him  !     They  Zthee,          Queer,  Mary  1  in  g 

I  Z  not  to  be  caUed  a  butterfly :  "         /: '  im 

I Z  you,  Lay  my  life  in  your  hands.  "         J  J^  j.u^ 

as  a  mastiff  dog  May  Z  a  puppy  cur  -         t  Iv  274 

you  are  one  Who  I  that  men  should  smile  upon  you,  „         i  iv  ^ (^ 

by  the  holy  Virgin,  being  noble.  But  I  me  only :  „            i  v  a 

I  pray  God  No  woman  ever  I  you,  "          ^  X  ^ 
If  ye  Z  your  liberties  or  your  skins, 
cannot  teU  How  mothers  I  their  children ;  yet,  methmks, 

A  prince  as  naturally  may  I  his  people  As  these  their  „  •  ■  .  on 

children ;  and  be  sure  your  Queen  So  Z  s  you,  „         n  "  ^^V 

Ha!  ha!  sir;  but  you  j&st;  I  Z  it:         ,  .  ^  ^  , ,,  "         «  »  ^°» 
flying  to  our  side  Left  his  all  bare,  for  winch  I Z  thee, 

I  do  not  Z  your  Grace  should  caU  me  coward.  ,.  niv88 
It  was  a  sin  to  Z  her  married,  dead  I  cannot  choose 

but  Z  her.  t,t  iii  9fi7 

Perchance  in  England,  Z's  her  hke  a  son.  ..      ""Yv  Sfi 

wholesome  scripture,  '  Little  children,  i  one  another.  „        m  iv  »t) 

To  sing,  I,  marry,  chum,  brew,  bake,  and  die,  „       i"  v  i±± 

Here  by  the  side  of  her  who  l's  you  most  ?  ..            ^  1  '^ 

altho'  you  Z  her  not.  You  must  proclaim  Ehzabeth  „         J    ioy 

I  used  to  Z  the  Queen  with  all  my  heart—  >.  ^  11  *io 
I Z  her  less  For  such  a  dotage  upon  such  a  man.  „  v  11  ^  j 
And  Z  to  hear  bad  tales  of  PhiUp.  ^  ^  . ,  ,  "  v  JiiH4 
and  Z  me,  as  I  Z  The  people !  whom  God  aid  !  ,,  ^  "i  ^ 
He  never  loved  me— nay,  he  could  not  Z  me.  ,,  v  v  ^ 
He  hath  learnt  to  Z  our  Tostig  much  of  late.  Harold  i  14& 
Our  Tostig  Z's  the  hand  and  not  the  man.  >.  t  i  171 
Because  I Z  the  Norman  better— no,  "  i  i  221 
England  l's  thee  for  it.  "  .  ^oc 
thyself  wast  wont  To  I  the  chase :  "  t  974 
And  Tostig  knows  it ;  Tostig  l's  the  king.  "       1 J  | '  ^ 

I I  the  man  but  not  his  phantasies.  "  '_  ]  ^'^ 
Edward  l's  him,  so  Ye  hate  him.  "  ^  jf' 
1 1  thee  for  itr— ay,  but  stay  a  moment ;  "  t  J 1 42 
Hate  him  ?  I  could  I  him  More,  "  \  "  :^3^ 
I Z  him  or  think  I Z  him.  "  l  ])  !^%% 
Nay,  I  do  Z  him.—  ,.  .  ,  "  J  !  ifi2 
She  hath  but  blood  enough  to  live,  not  '•—,,,.  "  ^  "  ^""^ 
not  Uke  Aldwyth  ...  For  which  I  strangely  Z  him.  . 

Should  not  England  L  Aldwyth,  ..      ^^}.%!.?. 

Art  thou  assured  By  this,  that  Harold  l's  but  Edith  ?  ..      ^  H  ^^" 

that  I— That  Harold  Z's  me— yea,  "      i  "  ^'^'^ 

I  can  but  Z  this  noble,  honest  Harold.     Wtlluim.    L  . 

him !  why  not  ?  thine  is  a  loving  office.  ,.      "-"0=0 

The  Normans  I  thee  not,  nor  thou  the  Normans,  „    "  "  ^^o 

for  my  mother's  sake  I Z  your  England,  But  for  my  .. 

lather  I Z  Normandy.  »    "  "  ^'^^ 


Harold,  if  thou  Z  thine  Edith, 


Love  (verb)  {continued) 

'  We  have  learnt  to  Z  him,  let  him  a  little  longer 

No,  no,  but  Harold.     I Z  him :  he  hath  served  me : 

They  Z  the  white  rose  of  virginity, 

Son,  there  is  one  who  l's  thee  : 

Bless  thou  too  That  brother  whom  I Z  beyond  the  rest, 

And  let  him  pass  unscathed ;  he  Vs  me,  Harold  ! 

Care  not  for  me  who  Z  thee. 

— but  I  Z  thee  and  thou  me — 

and  I Z  him  now,  for  mine  own  father  Was  great. 

Canst  thou  Z  one  Who  did  discrown  thine  husband 

unqueen  thee  ?    Didst  thou  not  Z  thine  husband  .-' 
women  Chng  to  the  conquer'd,  if  they  Z,  the  more  ; 
Canst  thou  Z  me,  thou  knowing  where  I Z  ? 
Canst  thou  I  one,  who  cannot  Z  again  ? 
save  for  Norway,  Who  Vs  not  thee  but  war. 
because  1 1  The  husband  of  another ! 
I  cannot  Z  them.  For  they  are  Norman  saints- 
Take  them  away,  I  do  not  Z  to  see  them, 
to  the  statesman  Who  serves  and  l's  his  king,  and  whom 

the  king  L's  not  as  statesman, 
I Z  thee  and  I  know  thee,  I  know  thee 
Well,  who  l's  wine  Vs  woman, 
whom  I  I  indeed  As  a  woman  should  be  loved— 
how  should  he  Z  A  woman,  as  a  woman  should  be 

loved  ?  ,       T  ,  .- 

She  is  ignorant  of  all  but  that  I Z  her. 
and  tho'  1 1  him  heartily,  I  can  spy  already 
but  thou — dost  thou  I  this  Chancellor, 
How  should  a  baron  Z  a  beggar  on  horseback, 
she,  whom  the  King  Vs  indeed,  is  a  power  m  the  State, 
for  the  Archbishop  Vs  humbleness, 
I Z  them  More  than  the  garden  flowers, 
I  I  them  too.  Yes. 

something  I  had  to  say— 1 1  thee  none  the  less— 
—the  goodly  way  of  women  Who  I,  for  which  1 L  them. 
Yet  you  both  Z  God. 

and  make  Our  waning  Eleanor  all  but  Z  me  ! 
There  is  no  woman  that  I  Z  so  well. 
Of  one  we  I.     Nay,  I  would  not  be  bold, 
I  do  not  Z  her.    Must  you  go,  my  hege, 
So  that  he  loved  me— and  he  Vs  me— 
Wilt  thou  I  me  ?     Geoffrey.     No ;  I  only  I  mother. 
I Z  thy  mother,  my  pretty  boy. 
so,  if  you  Z  him— Nay,  if  you  Z  him, 
there  are  those  Who  say  you  do  not  Z  him— 
Come  with  me,  love.  And  I  will  I  thee  .  .  . 
if  he  Z  thee.  Thy  life  is  worth  the  wrestle 
'  None  of  such  ? '  I Z  her  none  the  more. 
I  am  not  so  sure  But  that  I  Z  him  still. 
I  think  ye  four  have  cause  to  Z  this  Becket. 

I  do  not  Z  him,  for  he  did  his  best  To  break  the  barons, 
No  man  to  Z  me,  honour  me,  obey  me ! 
The  people  Z  thee,  father. 
And  Z  him  next  after  my  lord  his  father, 
iher,  do  you?  ,  ^    ,. 

I I  you — for  your  love  to  the  great  Goddess. 
Camma  for  my  bride— The  people  Z  her- 
And  I  thee  and  thou  me,  yet  if  Giovanna 
He  Vs  me,  and  he  knows  I  know  he  Vs  me  ! 
You  speak  Uke  love,  and  yet  you  Z  me  not. 

0  Federigo,  Federigo,  I Z  you  ! 

1  will  make  Your  brother  Z  me.  ^  ,     ,,  ,  ., 
I  don't  know  why  I  sing  that  song;  I  don  t  Z  it. 
hallus  a-fobbing  ma  off,  tho'  ye  knaws  I Z  ye. 
that  should  make  you  happy,  if  you  I  her ! 
Oh,  1 1  her  so,  I  was  afraid  of  her, 
Child,  do  you  Z  me  now  ? 
Then  vou  should  wish  us  both  to  Z  for  ever, 
they  that  I  do  not  believe  that  death  Will  part  them. 
I  cannot  Z  you;  nay,  I  think  I  never  can  be  brought  to 

I  any  man.  .     .  ,    ,  .^     .    i. 

not  only  Z  the  country.  But  its  inhabitants  too ; 
Well  then,  I  must  make  her  L  Harold  first, 


Harold  11  ii  622 

III  i  88 
„  m  i  242 
„  m  i  273 
„  m  i  28& 
„  m  i  295 
„  m  i  301 
„  m  ii  113 
„     in  ii  180 

IV  i  89 

„  IV  i 192 
„  IV  i  213 
„  IV  i  226 
„  IV  i  235 
„       IV  ii  24 

V  i  648 
V  ii  8 

„      V  ii  142 

Becket,  Pro.  78 
„  Pro.  95 
„  Pro.  108 
„    Pro.  132 

„    Pro.  138 

„    Pro.  185 

„    Pro.  233 

„    Pro.  438 

„    Pro.  443 

„    Pro.  482 

„     I iv  208 

„      II  i  132 

„      II  i  137 

„      n  i  207 

„      II  i  258 

„     II  ii  376 

„     II  ii  458 

in  i  9 

„      m  i  63 

„      m  i  83 

„    m  i  226 

IV  i  8 

„       IV  i  44 

„      IV  ii  92 

„      IV  ii  97 

„    iviil56 

„    iviil93 

„    rvii413 

„    IV  ii  451 

vi224 

vi233 

vi239 

„     V  ii  120 

„     V  ii  342 

The  Cwp  I  i  127 

„       I  ii  218 

„      I  iii  153 

The  Falcon  26 

245 

782 

897 

912 

Prom,  of  May  I  62 

1 108 

I  548 

I  550 

I  640 

I  643 

I  662 

II  77 
II  544 
II67T 


Love 


993 


Love-sick 


Love  (verb)  (continued)     and  they  both  I  me — I  am 
all  in  all  to  both ;  and  he  I's  me  too, 
and  1 1  him  so  much —    Eva.    Poor  Dora ! 
Could  I  I  him  else  ? 

Can't  a  girl  when  she  I's  her  husband,  and  he  her, 
for  you  have  taught  me  To  I  you. 

I  I  you  and  you  me. 
He  is  yours  again — he  will  I  you  again ; 
Could  I  me,  could  be  brought  to  I  me 
ask  you  all,  did  none  of  you  /  yoimg  Walter  Lea  ? 
if  a  man  and  a  maid  I  one  anotlier, 
A  gallant  Earl.     I  I  him  as  I  hate  John. 
Dost  thou  I  him  indeed. 
Thou  knowest  that  the  Sheriff  of  Nottingham  I's  thee. 

Marian.     The  Sheriff  dare  to  /  me  ? 

I I  him  as  a  damsel  of  his  day  might  have  loved 

I  I  my  dinner — but  I  can  fast,  I  can  fast ; 

I I  thee  much ;  and  as  I  am  Miy  friend. 
And  learn  from  her  if  she  do  I  this  Earl. 
She  took  my  ring.     I  trust  she  I's  me — yet 
you  I  me,  all  of  you,  But  I  am  outlaw'd. 
No  man  who  truly  I's  and  truly  rules 
Come  be  thou  My  brother  too.     She  I's  me. 
Do  you  doubt  me  when  I  say  she  I's  me,  man  ? 
but  abide  with  me  who  I  thee. 

tho'  1 1  thee,  We  cannot  come  together  in  this  world. 
thou  canst  not  hide  thyself  From  her  who  I's  thee. 
to  mistrust  the  girl  you  say  you  I  Is  to  mistrust  your 

own  love  for  your  girl !     How  should  you  I  if  you 

mistrust  your  love  ? 
'  This  boy  will  never  wed  the  maid  he  I's, 
I  could  I  you  like  a  woman. 
And  you  I  her  and  she  I's  you ; 
I  I  you  all  the  same.     Proceed. 
Good,  good,  1 1  thee  for  that ! 

Give  me  thy  hand,  Mueli ;  I  i!  thee.    At  him.  Scarlet ! 
now  1 1  thee  mightily,  thou  tall  fellow. 
And  I's  and  dotes  on  every  dingle  of  it. 
I  cannot  I  the  Sheriff. 
And  all  I  I,  Robin,  and  all  his  men. 
He  I's  the  chivalry  of  his  single  arm. 
Loveable    Is  she  less  I,  Less  lovely,  being  wholly 

mine  ? 
Loved     Whisper'd  me,  if  I  I  him,  not  to  yield 
My  brother  rather  hated  me  than  I ; 
I'd  have  you  yet  more  / : 
I  say  your  Grace  is  I. 
Queen  Anne  /  him.     All  the  women  /  him 
he  I  the  more  His  own  gray  towers, 
She  is  I  by  all  of  us. 
We  are  not  I  here,  and  would  be  then 
I  have  been  a  man  /  plainness  all  my  life ; 
I  I  the  man,  and  needs  must  moan  for  him ; 
I  never  I  you  more. 
Shut  on  him  by  the  father  whom  lie  I, 
,         How  he  smiles  As  if  he  Z  me  yet ! 

He  never  I  me — nay,  he  could  not  love  me. 

I  was  walking  with  the  man  11.     11  him,  but  I 

thought  I  was  not  I. 
she  I  much :  pray  God  she  be  forgiven. 
Yet  she  I  one  so  much — I  needs  must  say — 
I  conquer'd,  and  he  I  me  none  the  less, 
When  he  was  here  in  Normandy,  He  I  us 
Father,  we  so  I —    Aldred.    The  more  the  love, 
they  I  within  the  pale  forbidden  By  Holy  Church : 
Then  I,  who  I  my  brother,  bad  the  king 
I  knew  him  brave :  he  I  liis  land : 

I  had  rather  She  would  have  I  her  husband. 
Take  and  slay  me,  For  Edward  I  me. 
Because  1 1  thee  in  my  mortal  day. 
To  part  me  from  the  woman  that  1 1 ! 
Alas,  my  lord,  I  I  thee. 
Alas,  my  lord,  she  I  thee. 

I I  him  as  I  hate  This  liar  who  made  me  liar. 
That  he  forsware  himself  for  all  he  I, 


1 1  him, 


Prom,  of  May  ni  212 
HI  284 
HI  291 
111304 
III  558 
m620 
m  673 
m778 
Foresters  i  i  55 
iil72 
iil90 
1 1220 


1 1223 

1 1226 

iii63 

I  ii  181 

I  ii  187 
iiii3 

I  iii  162 
II  i  76 

II  i  518 

II  i  521 
II  i  602 
Hi  616 
II  ii  25 


II  ii  58 
II  ii  112 
II  ii  191 
II  ii  195 

III  438 

IV  173 
IV  310 
IV  321 
IV  390 
IV  662 
IV  722 
IV  786 


Prom,  of  May  I  740 
Queen  Mary  i  ii  35 

I  V  82 
I  V  119 
I  V  132 

II  i  34 
II  i  48 

II  ii  112 
,  III  vi  186 
,  IV  iii  270 
,      IV  iii  635 

V  i  219 
V  ii  123 

V  V  41 

V  v43 


V  V  88 

V  V  271 

V  V  275 
Harold  I  i  446 

„  II  ii  580 
„  III  i  345 
„  III  ii  22 
„  IV  i 101 
„  IV  i  201 
„  IV  i  224 
„  IV  ii  10 
„  V  i  240 
„  V  i  346 
„  V  i  355 
„  V  i  366 
„  V  i  411 
„       V  i  622 


Loved  (continued)    They  I  him ;  and,  pray  God  My  Normans  Harold  v  ii  182 
whom  I  love  indeed  As  a  woman  should  be  I —  Becket,  Pro.  133 

how  should  he  love  A  woman,  as  a  woman  should  be 
I  ?     Henry.     How  shouldst  thou  know  that  never 
hast  I  one  ? 
Louis  of  France  I  me,  and  I  dreamed  that  1 1  Louis 
of  France  :  and  1 1  Henry  of  England,  and  Henry 
of  England  dreamed  that  he  I  me ; 
King  Louis  had  no  paramours,  and  I  I  him  none  the 
more.     Henry  had  many,  and  I  I  him  none  the 
less — 
Madam,  I  have  I  her  in  my  time. 

I  I  according  to  the  main  purpose  and  intent  of  nature. 
So  that  he  I  me — and  he  loves  me — ■ 
I  am  none  such.     I  never  /  but  one. 
with  what  a  tenderness  He  I  my  son. 
out  with  Henry  in  the  days  When  Henry  I  me, 
Reginald,  all  men  know  I  I  the  Prince. 
To  help  liim  from  them,  since  indeed  I  I  him, 
They  knew  he  I  me. 

worshipping  in  her  Temple,  and  I  you  for  it, 
beheld  you  afar  off — I  you — sends  you  this  cup — 
from  maiden  fears  Or  reverential  love  for  him  1 1, 
I  that  I  her.     Gamma.     I  I  him. 
Her  phantom  call'd  m&  by  the  name  she  I. 
all  of  them  L  her,  and  she  was  worthy  of  all  love. 
Surely  I  I  Eva  More  than  I  knew  ! 
you  are  the  first  I  ever  have  I  truly. 
So  I  by  all  the  village  people  here, 
could  be  brought  to  love  me  As  I  Z  you — 
He  Z  the  Lady  Anne ;  The  lady  I  the  master  well.  The 

maid  she  I  the  man. 
have  Z  Harold  the  Saxon,  or  Hereward  the  Wake, 
when  I  Z  A  maid  with  all  my  heart  to  pass  it  down 
Said  I  not,  I  Z  thee,  man  ? 
Love-dream    may  not  a  girl's  l-d  have  too  much 

romance  in  it 
Love-goddess    Like  the  L-g,  with  no  bridal  veil. 
Loveless     As  at  this  I  knife  that  stirs  the  riot, 

I  am  as  lone  and  Z  as  thyself. 
Lovelier     the  lady  holds  the  cleric  L  than  any  soldier, 

white  In  the  sweet  moon  as  with  a  Z  snow ! 
Loveliest    This  is  the  Z  day  that  ever  smiled  On 
England. 
The  Z  life  that  ever  drew  the  light  From  heaven 
Loveliness    but  naked  Nature  In  all  her  I. 
Lovely    Our  bridemaids  are  not  Z — Disappointment, 
God's  eyes  !  what  a  I  cross  !  what  jewels  ! 

She  saw  it  at  a  dance,  upon  a  neck  Less  I  than  her  own.  The  Falcon  56 
Is  she  lass  loveable.  Less  Z,  being  wholly  mine  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  741 
But  you  are  young,  and — pardon  me — As  Z  as  your 

sister, 
could  it  look  But  half  as  Z. 
So  I  in  the  promise  of  her  May, 
What  a  shape  !  what  Z  arms  ! 
Lover    (See  also  Judas-lover,  Money-lover,  Peace-lover) 
Two  young  I's  in  winter  weather. 
To  which  the  Z  answers  lovingly 
not  as  statesman,  but  true  Z  and  friend. 
I  have  been  a  Z  of  wines,  and  dehcate  meats. 
Who  knows  but  that  thy  Z  May  plead  so  pitifully. 
Ay,  still  a  Z  of  the  beast  and  bird  ? 
I  am  a  life-long  Z  of  the  chase, 
have  a  score  of  Vs  and  have  not  a  heart  for  any  of 

them—  The  Falcon  88 

waiting  To  clasp  their  I's  by  the  golden  gates.  Prom,  of  May  i  248 

But  keep  us  Vs.  „  i  639 

You  tell  me  you  have  a  I.  „  iii  255 

And  this  I  of  yours — this  Mr.  Harold — is  a  gentleman  ?  „  iii  280 
L's  hold  True  love  immortal.  Foresters  ii  i  614 

You  never  whisper  close  as  l's  do,  „  iii  6 

You  l's  are  such  clumsy  summer-flies  „  iv  10 

hundred  l's  more  To  celebrate  this  advent  of  our  King !      „      rv  1047 
Love-sick     Is  to  be  l-s  for  a  shadow.  Queen  Mary  i  v  535 

so  should  all  the  l-s  be  sea-sick.  Foresters  iv  673 

3   B 


Pro.  139 


Pro.  356 


Pro.  475 
Pro.  495 
Pro.  501 

III  i  226 

IV  ii  118 
V  i  22 

V  ii  232 

V  ii  334 

V  ii  341 

V  ii  453 
The  Cup  I  i  40 

„      I  ii  71 
„      II 197 
„      II 469 
Prom,  of  May  ii  243 
II  429 
II  643 
III  649 
III  755 
III  780 

Foresters  i  i  7 
„  I  i  227 
„  iii  296 
„    IV  740 

Prom,  of  May  iii  185 

I  596 

Becket  IV  ii  191 

The  Falcon  20 

Becket  v  i  194 

The  Cup  I  ii  396 

Queen  Mary  ni  iii  161 

The  Cup  1  iii  56 

Prom,  of  May  i  600 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  154 

Becket,  Pro.  371 


II  508 

m  491 

in  753 

Foresters  i  i  109 

Harold  ni  ii  3 

„     m  ii  13 

Becket,  Pro.  80 

I  i  76 

„     IV  ii  216 

„      V  ii  245 

The  Cup  1  i  194 


Loving 


994 


Lying 


II  ii  103 

in  ii  90 

IV  iii  75 

V  ii  367 

V  ii  374 

V  ii  377 

V  ii  378 

V  ii  380 

V  ii  385 

V  ii  388 

vii434 

V  ii  439 
V  V  54 

Harold  iii  i  163 
The  Cup  u  217 


Loving    And  as  ye  were  most  I  unto  him,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  174 

and  so  I,  needs  must  deem  This  love  by  you  retum'd      „  ii  ii  195 

.\nd  all  our  I  subjects,  most  expedient.  „  ii  ii  211 

And  your  so  I  sister  ?  „         ii  iv  141 

Your  Grace  hath  a  most  chaste  and  I  wife.  „        iii  vi  129 

Hurt  no  man  more  Than  you  would  harm  your  I 

natural  brother  „        iv  iii  189 

Love  him  !  why  not  ?  thine  is  a  I  office,  Harold  n  ii  97 

Yet  if  she  be  a  true  and  I  wife  She  may,  The  Cup  i  iii  32 

Low    You  speak  too  I,  my  Lord ;  Queen  Mary  i  iv  123 

Wherefore  now  the  Queen  In  this  I  pulse  and  palsy 

of  the  state, 
you  forget  That  long  I  minster  where  you  gave  your 

hand 
and  debased  From  councillor  to  caitiff — fallen  so  I, 
L,  my  lute ;  speak  I,  my  lute,  but  say  the  world  is 

nothing — L,  lute,  I ! 
L,  my  lute  !  oh  I,  my  lute  !  we  fade  and  are  forsaken 

— L,  dear  lute,  I ! 
Take  it  away !  not  I  enough  for  me  ! 
Your  Grace  hath  a  I  voice. 

A  I  voice  Lost  in  a  wilderness  where  none  can  hear  ! 
A  I  voice  from  the  dust  and  from  the  grave 
There,  am  1 1  enough  now  ? 
Does  he  think  L  stature  is  I  nature,  or  all  women's 

L  as  his  own  ? 
It  is  the  I  man  thinks  the  woman  I ; 
And  Charles,  the  lord  of  this  I  world,  is  gone  ; 
Ay,  raise  his  head,  for  thou  hast  laid  it  I ! 
Gentleness,  L  words  best  chime  with  this  solemnity. 
And  when  you  came  and  dipt  your  sovereign  head 

Thro'  these  I  doors.  The  Falcon  868 

The  town  lay  still  in  the  I  sun-light.  Prom,  of  May  i  37 

I  sank  so  I  that  I  went  into  service —  „       in  391 

Till  Nature,  high  and  I,  and  great  and  small  Forgets 

herself,  Foresters  i  ii  326 

could  I  stoop  so  Z  As  mate  with  one  that  holds  no  love 

is  pure,  „  iv  710 

Lower  (adj.)     And  ye,  my  masters,  of  the  I  house.      Queen  Mary  in  iii  102 
you  are  even  I  and  baser  Than  even  I  can  well 
believe  you.     Go  ! 
Lower  (verb)    made  us  I  our  kingly  flag  To  yours  of 
England, 
but  must  I  his  flag  To  that  of  England 
L  the  light.    He  must  be  here. 
Lowest  (adj.)    poor  worm,  crawl  down  thine  own  black  hole 

To  the  I  Hell.  The  Cup  ii  496 

Lowest  (s)     That  all  of  you,  the  highest  as  the  I,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  65 

Lowliest    beseech  Your  Highness  to  accept  our  I  thanks         „  ii  ii  131 

Lowly    '  O  happy  lark,  that  warblest  high  Above  thy 

I  nest.  From,  of  May  m  200 

Low-moanii^    a  sigh  With  these  l-m  heavens.  Harold  v  i  152 

Low-spirited    Your  Grace  is  too  l-s.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  605 

Low-statured    Than  that  you  were  l-s.  „  v  ii  432 

Loyal    My  Lord,  I  have  the  jewel  of  a  Z  heart.    Gardiner. 

I  doubt  it  not.  Madam,  most  I.  „  i  iv  247 

is  every  morning's  prayer  Of  your  most  I  subject,  „  i  v  104 

But  help  her  in  this  exigency,  make  Your  city  I,  „  ii  ii  19 

on  you,  In  your  own  city,  as  her  right,  my  Lord, 

For  you  are  I.  „  ii  ii  107 

and  we  pray  That  we,  your  true  and  I  citizens,  „  ii  ii  135 

Your  lawful  Prince  hath  come  to  cast  herself  On  I 

hearts  and  bosoms,  „  ii  ii  263 

The  Queen  of  England — or  the  Kentish  Squire  ? 

I  know  you  I.  „  ii  ii  271 

Your  Higlmess  hears  This  burst  and  bass  of  I  harmony,  „  ii  ii  285 

We  thank  your  Lordship  and  your  I  city.  „  ii  ii  301 

No,  girl ;  most  brave  and  I,  brave  and  I.  „  ii  iv  11 

L  and  royal  cousin,  humblest  thanks.  „  m  ii  3 

Yet  there  be  some  disloyal  Catholics,  And  many 

heretics  I ;  „  m  iv  44 

To  take  the  lives  of  others  that  are  I.  „  m  iv  48 

Nay,  Madam,  there  be  I  papers  too,  „  v  ii  221 

Your  England  is  as  Z  as  myself.  „  v  ii  328 

Said  you  not  Many  of  these  were  I?  „  V  ii  331 


Prom,  of  May  ill  813 

Queen  Mary  v  i  59 

vi64 

Harold  V  ii  63 


Jjoy&l  {continued)    and  am  in  everything  Most  Z  and 

most  grateful  to  the  Queen.  Queen  Mary  v  iii  25 

and  I  do  not  then  charm  this  secret  out  of  our  I 

Thomas,  I  am  not  Eleanor.  Becket,  Pro.  467 

for  which  our  I  service,  And  since  we  likewise  swore  to 

obey  the  customs,  „  v  i  52 

I  am  all  as  Z  as  thyself,  but  what  a  vow  !  what  a  vow  !  Foresters  i  i  293 

Loyally    L  and  with  good  faith,  my  lord  Archbishop  ?  Becket  1  iii  278 

Loyalty    To  whom  he  owes  his  I  after  God,  Queen  Mary  iv  i  23 

less  Z  in  it  than  the  backward  scrape  of  the  clown's 

heel—  Becket  in  iii  143 

Comrades,  I  thank  you  for  your  Z,  Foresters  in  78 

Lucullos    that  L  or  Apicius  might  have  sniffed  it  in  their 

Hades  of  heathenism,  Becket  in  iii  117 

Ludgate     I  must  set  The  guard  at  L.  Queen  Mary  11  ii_409 

If  L  can  be  reach'd  by  dawn  to-morrow.  „  n  iii  53 

hath  broken  thro'  the  guards  And  gone  to  L.  „  n  iv  21 

brave  Lord  William  Thrust  him  from  Z,  „  n  iv  92 

Lung    Is  life  and  Vs  to  every  rebel  birth  „  in  vi  51 

Lung'd    See  Loud-lung'd 

Lunnun  (London)    but  I  taakes  'im  for  a  L  swindler, 

and  a  burn  fool.  Prom.,  of  May  i  309 

seeams  to  me  the  mark  wur  maade  by  a  i  boot.  „  i  416 

and  I  thinks  ye  wears  a  L  boot.  „  i  461 

Lure  (s)    such  a  one  As  Harry  Bolingbroke  hath  a 

Z  in  it.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  10 

Lure  (verb)     I  must  Z  my  game  into  the  camp.  The  Cup  1  iii  64 

Lurk     even  while  I  speak  There  I's  a  silent  dagger.        Queen  Mary  v  ii  216 

Lurking    Not  the  full  faith,  no,  but  the  Z  doubt.  „        in  iv  124 

Luscombe    L,  Nokes,  Oldham,  Skipworth  !  Prom,  of  May  ill  53 

Lust  (s)     Which  a  young  Z  had  clapt  upon  the  back,    Queen  Mary  iv  iii  401 

from  the  squint  Of  Z  and  glare  of  malice.  Becket  i  i  313 

.  But  the  fool-fire  of  love  or  Z,  The  Cup  1  i  147 

He  steep'd  himself  In  all  the  Z  of  Rome.  „      i  ii  369 

fill  all  hearts  with  fatness  and  the  Z  Of  plenty —  „        n  273 

'  L,  Prodigality,  Covetousness,  Craft,  Prom,  of  May  11  284 

Lust  (verb)     be  those  that  Z  To  bum  each  other  ?         Q;>ieen  Mary  iv  iii  197 

Lustiest    Thou  the  Z  and  lousiest  of  this  Cain's  brotherhood, 

answer.  Becket  i  iv  184 

Lusty    I  know  some  Z  fellows  there  in  France.  Queen  Mary  in  i  128 

That  was  a  Z  boy  of  twenty-seven ;  „  v  v  48 

A  pretty  Z  boy.  Becket  n  i  247 

mix  with  all  The  Z  life  of  wood  and  underwood,  Foresters  i  iii  114 

L  bracken  beaten  flat.  Queen.  „        n  ii  154 

Lute     Alice,  my  child.  Bring  us  your  Z.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  357 

Give  me  the  Z.     He  hates  me  !  „  v  ii  362 

Low,  my  Z ;  speak  low,  my  Z,  but  say  the  world  is 

nothing — Low,  Z,  low !  „  v  ii  367 

Low,  my  Z !  oh  low,  my  Z !  we  fade  and  are  forsaken 
— Low,  dear  Z,  low  !  „  v  ii  374 

Lather  (Martin)    ghosts  of  L  and  Zuinglius  fade  Into 

the  deathless  hell  „         in  ii  174 

Ah,  what  an  acrid  wine  has  L  brew'd,  „        iv  iii  545 

Lutheran    possibly  The  L  may  be  won  to  her  again ;  „        in  iv  202 

I  was  too  lenient  to  the  L,  „  v  ii  73 

What  then,  he  knew  I  was  no  L.  „  v  ii  78 

Seize  him  and  burn  him  for  a.  L.  „  v  ii  245 

Lutheranism    Tainted  with  L  in  Italy.  „        in  iv  227 

Would  freely  canvass  certain  L's.  „  v  ii  76 

Luting    Fluting,  and  piping  and  Z '  Love,  love,  love ' —  Foresters  ni  33 

Lydian    Lay  down  the  L  carpets  for  the  king.  The  Cup  n  187 

Lying  (adj.  and  part.)    to  take  the  guns  From  out  the 

vessels  Z  in  the  river.  Queen  Mary  11  i  222 

Shot  off  their  Z  cannon,  and  her  priests  Have 

preach'd,  „         in  vi  97 

this  Bonner  or  another  Will  in  some  Z  fashion  mis- 
report  His  ending  „        iv  iii  326 
I  left  her  Z  stiU  and  beautiful,                                             „  v  v  261 
dog,  with  thy  Z  lights  Thou  hast  betray'd  us  on  these 

rocks  of  thine  !  Harold  11  i  21 

Thy  villains  with  their  Z  lights  have  wreck'd  us  !  „       n  i  83 

than  believe  that  Z  And  ruling  men  are  fatal  twins  that 

cannot  Move  one  without  the  other.  „  in  i  126 

A  Z  devil  hath  haunted  me — mine  oath — my  wife —  „     v  i  316 

Man,  Z  here  alone,  Moody  creature,  Foresters  11  ii  186 


Lying 


995 


Madness 


Lying  (s)    And  I  were  self-murder  by  that  state  Which  was 

the  exception.  Harold  in  i  70 

Lyin'-in    and  my  missus  a-gittin'  ower  'er  l-i.  Prom,  of  May  m  74 

L3mx     and  hawli,  and  apes,  and  lions,  and  Ves.  Becket  i  i  81 


Ma&de  (made)    seeams  to  me  the  mark  wur  m  by  a 
Lunnun  boot. 


thaw  the  feller's  gone  and  m  such  a  litter  of  his  f aace. 
Maake  (make)    ftu:  I  'ednt  naw  time  to  m  mysen  a 
scholard 

Why,  lass,  what  m's  tha  sa  red  ? 

Why,  now,  what  m's  tha  sa  white  ? 

M  thysen  easy.     I'll  hev  the  winder  naailed  up, 

Shall  I  f  oiler  'er  and  ax  'er  to  m  it  up  ? 

What  m's  'im  alius  sa  glum  ? 

I'll  m  'er  knaw  !  (repeat) 

an'  I  worked  early  an'  laate  to  m  'em  all  gentlefoalks 
agean. 
Maakin'  (making)     while  I  wur  m  mysen  a  gentleman, 

I'd  think  na  moor  o'  m  an  end  o'  tha  nor  a  carrion 
craw — 
Maate  (mate)    Miss  Dora,  mea  and  my  m's,  us  three, 

we  wants  to  hev  three  words  wi'  ye. 
Maated  (confused)     an'  maazed,  an'  m,  an'  muddled  ma. 
Maazed  (mazed)    an'  m,  an'  maated,  an'  muddled  ma, 
Vace    The  reeking  dimgfork  master  of  the  m  ! 
Maceration    In  scourgings,  m's,  mortifyings,  Fasts, 
Machine    I've  hed  the  long  barn  cleared  out  of  all 

the  m's. 
Mad    the  Hot  Gospellers  wiU  go  m  upon  it. 

Make  themselves  drunk  and  m. 

What,  if  a  m  dog  bit  your  hand,  my  Lord, 

The  m  bite  Must  have  the  cautery — tell  him — and  at 
once. 

The  world's  m.    Paget.    My  Lord,  the  world  is  like 
a  drunken  man. 

Do  you  mean  to  drive  me  m  ? 

To  be  nor  m,  nor  bigot — have  a  mind — 

star  That  dances  in  it  as  m  with  agony  ! 

M  for  thy  mate,  passionate  nightingale  .  .  . 

And,  Leofwin,  art  thou  m  ? 

And  I  was  bit  by  a  m  dog  o'  Friday,  an'  I  be  half  dog 
already  by  this  token, 

I  am  not  m,"not  sick,  not  old  enough  To  doat  on  one 
alone.     Yes,  m  for  her,  Camma  the  stately, 

So  m,  I  fear  some  strange  and  evil  chance 

as  men  Have  done  on  rafts  of  wreck — ^it  drives  you  to. 

Speak  freely,  tho'  to  call  a  madman  m 

I  shall  go  m  for  utter  shame  and  die. 

I  was  so  m,  that  I  mounted  upon  the  parapet — 

The  old  wretch  is  m,  and  her  bread  is  beyond  me : 

He  is  old  and  almost  m  to  keep  the  land. 

Are  the  men  all  to  ?  there  then,  and  there  ! 

By  old  St.  Vitus  Have  you  gone  m  ? 

thou  shalt  wed  him.  Or  thine  old  father  will  go  to- 


Prom,  of  May  I  415 


11589 

i333 
1 399 
I  417 
I  419 
II 131 
II 147 
II  607 

III  449 
I  334 

u696 

in  125 

n729 

n729 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  275 

Becket  v  i  41 

Prom,  of  May  i  452 

Queen  Mary  i  i  116 

in  i  282 

in  iv  204 

„      III  iv  274 

„       IV  iii  391 

V  ii  200 

V  V  216 
Harold  i  i  9 

„      I  ii  I 
„  V  i  139 

Becket  I  iv  218 

The  Cup  I  iii  69 

„        I  iii  74 

„      I  iii  143 

The  Falcon  82 

Prom,  of  May  i  682 

in  371 

Foresters  n  i  291 

n  i  528 

n  ii  34 

IV  616 
IV  645 


Hadden  These  are  the  things  that  m  her.   Fie  upon  it !  Qu£en  Mary  in  ii  222 
Lest  your  whole  body  should  TO  with  the  poison  ? 
such  A  strong  hate-philtre  as  may  to  him — m 

Madden'd    the  plots  against  him  Had  to  tamer  men. 
Thy  sending  back  the  Great  Seal  to  him. 

Madder    and  a-makin'  o'  volk  to  and  711 ; 

JSade    (See  also  Maade,  New-made)    Gardiner  for  one, 
who  is  to  be  to  Lord  Chancellor, 
Courtenay,  to  be  to  Earl  of  Devon, 
TO  you  follow  The  Lady  Suffolk  and  the  Lady 

Lennox  ?—  ..  i  iv  30 

This  dress  was  to  me  as  the  Earl  of  Devon  „  i  iv  72 

To  him  within  there  who  m  Heaven  and  Earth  ?  „  i  v  47 

ah !  she  said,  The  baker  m  him.  „  i  v  56 

I  TO  him  Earl  of  Devon,  and — the  fool  „  i  v  165 

Look  at  the  New  World — a  paradise  m  hell ;  „  n  i  208 


m  iv  207 
Becket  iv  ii  458 
Harold  iv  i  112 
Becket  i  iii  9 
Qv^en  Mary  rv  iii  532 

1 186 
lillO 


Queen  Mary  n  ii  146 

II  ii  203 

n  iii  34 

in  i  445 

in  iv  126 

in  iv  335 

m  V  197 

IV  iii  89 
IV  iii  448 
IV  iii  589 

vi59 
vii85 

V  ii  149 
V  ii  152 


Nor 


Made  {continued)    Have  to  strong  head  against  our- 
selves and  you. 

imderstand  We  to  thereto  no  treaty  of  ourselves, 

had  Howard  spied  me  there  And  to  them  speak, 

if  I  And  others  to  that  move  I  touch'd  upon. 

Old  Rome,  that  first  to  martyrs  in  the  Church, 

But  not  the  force  m  them  our  mightiest  kings. 

all  boots  were  ever  to  Since  man  went  barefoot. 

Remember  how  God  to  the  fierce  fire 

M  even  the  carrion-nosing  mongrel  vomit 

as  one  whose  mind  Is  all  to  up, 

TO  us  lower  our  kingly  flag  To  yours  of  England. 

When  I  was  to  Archbishop,  he  approved  me. 

No — we  were  not  to  One  flesh  in  happiness. 

But  now  we  are  to  one  flesh  in  misery ; 

We  have  to  war  upon  the  Holy  Father  All  for  your 
sake: 

The  King  hath  to  me  Earl ;  make  me  not  fool ! 
make  the  King  a  fool,  who  to  me  Earl ! 

Who  TO  the  King  who  to  thee. 

We  have  to  them  milder  by  just  government. 

The  dead  men  to  at  thee  to  murder  thee, 

Tostig,  Edward  hath  to  him  Earl : 

They  did  thee  wrong  who  m  thee  hostage ; 

I  TO  thee  swear. — Show  him  by  whom  he  hath  sworn. 

all  promises  M  in  our  agony  for  help  from  heaven  ? 

That  knowledge  to  him  all  the  carefuUer 

And  touches  Him  that  m  it. 

Not  TO  but  born,  like  the  great  king  of  all, 

he  loved  his  land :  he  fain  Had  to  her  great : 

who  TO  And  heard  thee  swear — 

Count  Hath  to  too  good  an  use  of  Holy  Church 

I  fain  Had  to  my  marriage  not  a  lie ; 

I'll  have  them  written  down  and  to  the  law. 

Who  TO  thee  London  ?     Who,  but  Canterbury  ? 

and  that  to  me  muse.  Being  bounden  by  my  coronation 
oath 

— m  an  uproar.     Henry.     And  Becket  had  my  bosom 

I  TO  him  porcelain  from  the  clay  of  the  city — 

That  he  to  the  black  sheep  white. 

he  hath  m  his  bed  between  the  altars, 

then  to  be  to  Archbishop  and  go  against  the  King  who 
TO  him, 

Co-kings  we  were,  and  m  the  laws  together. 

I  would  have  to  Rome  know  she  still  is  Rome — 

none  on  'em  ever  to  songs,  and  they  were  all  honest. 

They  have  to  it  up  again — for  the  moment. 

Who  TO  the  second  mitre  play  the  first,  And  acted  me  ? 

TO  me  for  the  moment  proud  Ev'n  of  that  stale  Church- 
bond  „      IV  ii  446 

What  TO  the  King  cry  out  so  furiously  ?  „         v  i  220 

Hath  she  to  up  her  mind  to  marry  him  ?  The  Cup  n  22 

he  TO  a  wry  mouth  at  ii,  but  he  took  it  so  kindly,  The  Falcon  190 

and  he  never  to  a  wry  mouth  at  you,  „  193 

— they  are  to  by  the  blessed  saints — ■  „  202 

I  to  a  wreath  with  some  of  these  ;  „  357 

if  but  to  guess  what  flowers  Had  to  it ;  „  431 

When  he  that  to  it,  having  his  right  hand  „  443 

TO  me  A  Quietist  taking  all  things  easily.  Prom,  of  May  1 231 

I  Shall  not  be  to  the  laughter  of  the  village,  „  i  720 

— how  she  TO  her  wail  as  for  the  dead  !  „         in  698 

Is  it  TO  up  ?     Will  you  kiss  me  ?  Foresters  i  ii  226 

thou  That  hast  not  to  it  up  with  Little  John  !  „         m  15 

we  have  to  a  song  in  your  honour,  so  your  ladyship 

care  to  Hsten. 

first  part — m  before  you  came  among  us — 

Madman    {See  also  Semi-madman)     Peace,  to  ! 

Thou  stirrest  up  a  grief 

Wide  of  the  mark  ev'n  for  a  m's  dream. 

If  ever  I  heard  a  m, — let's  away  ! 

striking  at  Hardrada  and  his  madmen 

M  anywhere.    Speak  freely,  tho'  to  call  a  to  mad  The  Falcon  80 

Some  TO,  is  it.  Gesticulating  there  upon  the  bridge  ?  Prom,  of  May  n  326 

Madness    and  law  From  to.  Becket  i  iii  375 

— what  merry  to — listen  !  Foresters  va  43 


V  ii  307 

Harold  i  i  288 
„  I  i  294 
„  I  i  340 
I  ii  85 
„  I  ii  186 
„  nil 350 
„  nii732 
„  mi  288 
„  mi  340 
„  miil98 
„  IV  i  85 
„  IV  i  203 
„  V  i  120 
„  V  i  312 
„  V  i  320 
Becket,  Pro.  26 
I  iii  66 

„  I  iii  394 
„  1  iii  432 
I  iii  438 
„  I iv  176 
„      I  iv  264 

n  i  237 
„  II  ii  123 
„  n  ii  402 
„  ui  i  188 
„  ni  iii  170 
„    in  iii  212 


„      m414 
„       ra436 

Queen  Mary  iii  iv  297 

V  iii  86 

„  V  iv  51 

Harold  iv  iii  71 


Madonna 


996 


Make 


Uadonna     Come  in,  M,  come  in.  The  Falcon  176 

you  look  as  beautiful  this  morning  as  the  very  M  „  *        199 

No,  no,  not  quite,  M,  not  yet,  not  yet.  „  392 

This  was  penn'd,  M,  Close  to  the  grating  „  440 

I  bear  with  him  no  longer.     Count.     No,  M !  „  886 

Mad-woman    O  murderous  m-w  !     I  pray  you  lift  The  Cup  ii  471 

Magdalen  (a  character  in  "  Queen  Mary  ")    Ah,  M, 

sin  is  bold  as  well  as  dull.  Qiieen  Mary  v  ii  442 

Magdalen  (St.  Mary)    Thanks  to  the  blessed  M,  whose  day 

it  is.  Becket  iii  iii  171 

All  praise  to  Heaven,  and  sweet  St.  M  !  „     ni  iii  235 

Maggot     Foul  m's  crawling  in  a  fester'd  vice  !  Queen  Mary  v  v  161 

Magistrate    all  the  m's,  all  the  nobles,  and  all  the  wealthy  ;     „  v  iv  50 

Magnificence     I  have  heard  That,  thro'  his  late  m  of  living  The  Falcon  227 

No  other  heart  Of  such  m  in  courtesy  Beats —  „  723 

Magpie     Peace,  m  !     Give  him  the  quarterstafl.  Foresters  iv  249 

Mahonnd    by  M,  I  had  sooner  have  been  bom  a 
MussiJman — 

No  God  but  one,  and  M  is  his  prophet. 

like  M's  coffin  hung  between  heaven  and  earth- 
By  ilf  I  could  dine  with  Beelzebub  ! 
Maid    says  she  will  live  And  die  true  m — 

Make  me  full  fain  to  live  and  die  a  m. 

little  fair-hair'd  Norman  m  Lived  in  my  mother's 
house  : 

The  m  to  her  dairy  came  in  from  the  cow, 

The  m  she  loved  the  man. 

The  m  a  rose  to  the  man.  (repeat) 

The  w  her  hand  to  the  man.  (repeat) 

the  m  a  kiss  to  the  man.  (repeat) 

should  have  told  us  how  the  man  first  kissed  the  m. 

if  a  man  and  a  m  care  for  one  another,  does  it  matter 
so  much  if  the  m  give  the  first  kiss  ? 

now  thou  hast  given  me  the  man's  kiss,  let  me  give 
thee  the  m's. 

if  a  man  and  a  m  love  one  another,  may  the  m  give 
the  first  kiss  ? 

when  they  look  at  a  m  they  blast  her. 

Then  the  m  is  not  high-hearted  enough. 

Go  now  and  ask  the  m  to  dance  with  thee, 

what  m  but  would  beware  of  John  ? 

when  I  loved  A  m  with  all  my  heart  to  pass  it  down 

man  and  m  be  free  To  foil  and  spoil  the  tyrant 

There  are  no  m's  like  English  m's 

'  This  boy  will  never  wed  the  m  he  loves, 

and  another — worse  ! — An  innocent  m. 

— to  this  m,  this  Queen  o'  the  woods. 

M  !     Friar.     Paramour  !     Friar.    Hell  take  her  ! 

Air  and  word,  my  lady,  are  m  and  man. 

lips  that  never  breathed  Love's  falsehood  to  true  m 

For  so  this  m  would  wed  our  brother. 
Maiden  (adj.)     You've  but  a  dull  life  in  this  m  court, 
I  fear,  my  Lord  ? 

Would  not  for  all  the  stars  and  m  moon 

whether  from  m  fears  Or  reverential  love  for  him 
I  loved. 

Modest  m  lily  abused.  Queen. 

clothes  itself  In  m  flesh  and  blood. 

Live  thou  m  !     Thou  art  more  my  wife  so  feeling, 

You  heed  not  how  you  soil  her  m  fame, 
Haiden  (s)     (See  also  Bower-maiden)    My  pretty  m, 
tell  me,  did  you  ever  Sigh  for  a  beard  ? 

my  pretty  m,  A  pretty  man  for  such  a  pretty  m. 

Then,  pretty  m,  you  should  know  that  whether 

Peace,  pretty  m.     I  hear  them  stiiTing 

have  thy  conscience  White  as  a  m's  hand, 

A  m  slowly  moving  on  to  music  Among  her  m's  to  this 
Temple—  The  Cup  i  i  9 

When  first  he  meets  his  m  in  a  bower.  „     i  iii  41 

I  am  none  of  your  delicate  Norman  m's  Foresters  i  i  212 

A  m  now  Were  ill-bested  in  these  dark  days  „       n  ii  44 


Becket  n  ii  144 

n  ii  225 

„       II  ii  361 

Foresters  iv  970 

Queen  Mary  iii  vi  46 

V  iii  98 

Becket  v  ii  260 

Prom,  of  May  i  39 

Foresters  i  i  9 

Foresters  i  i  13, 106 

„       I  i  17,  93 

„     I  i  21,  120 

I  i  124 


iil34 

iil44 

iil72 

1 1256 

1 1258 

I  ii  185 

I  ii  256 

I  ii  297 

nilO 

iiil9 

II  ii  111 

III  388 

m394 

III  401 

III  420 
IV  73 

IV  483 


Queen  Mary  i  iii  114 
„  V  ii  455 

The  Cup  II 196 
Foresters  ii  ii  158 

III  117 
in  122 

IV  479 

Queen  Mary  i  v  607 
I  V  612 
I  V  618 
I  V  627 
Harold  II  ii  284 


Maidenhood    He  that  can  pluck  the  flower  of  m  Foresters  i  ii  108 

Who  art  the  fairest  flower  of  m  „       i  ii  123 

Out  upon  all  hard-hearted  m\  „  iv  50 

Maiden-white    Make  blush  the  m-w  of  our  tall  cliffs,  Harold  ii  ii  332 

Maiden-wife     0  m-w.  The  oppression  of  our  people  Foresters  ni  108 

Maid  Marian  (daughter  of  Sir  Richard  Lea)    {See  also 

Marian)     She  has  gone,  M  M  to  her  Robin —    Queen  Mary  in  v  156 
this  is  M  M  Flying  from  John — disguised.     Men. 

MM?  she  ?  Foresters  ii  i  67» 

Stay  with  us  here,  sweet  love,  M  M,  „         ii  ii  15 

and  looks  at  once  M  M,  „         iii  119 

M  M,  Queen  o'  the  woods  !  (repeat)     Foresters  iii  357, 374, 376, 397, 39» 


and  all  your  forest  games  As  far  as  m  might, 
when  Our  English  m's  are  their  prey, 
and  scare  lonely  m's  at  the  farmstead. 
Save  for  this  m  and  thy  brother  Abbot, 


ni86 
nil79 
ni200 
IV  632 


M  M.     Marian.     Yes,  King  Richard. 
Maidstone    The  beUs  are  ringing  at  M. 

and  your  worship's  name  heard  into  M  market, 
Mail     I  wear  beneath  my  dress  A  shirt  of  m  : 

And  felt  the  sun  of  Antioch  scald  our  m, 

having  lived  For  twenty  days  and  nights  in  m, 
Mail'd     M  in  the  perfect  panoply  of  faith. 
Maim    when  he  springs  And  m's  himself  against  the 
bars. 

It  frights  the  traitor  more  to  m  and  blind. 
Maim'd     starved,  m,  flogg'd,  flay'd,  bum'd, 

They  have  so  m  and  murder'd  all  his  face 

And  lamed  and  m  to  dislocation. 

Not  caught,  m,  bhnded  him. 
Main  (adj.)    Madam,  I  loved  according  to  the  m  purpose 
and  intent  of  nature. 

Like  sudden  night  in  the  m  glare  of  day. 

That  I  am  his  m  paramour,  his  sultana. 

her  m  law  Whereby  she  grows  in  beauty — 
Main  (s)     Calais  !     Our  one  point  on  the  m. 

Had  prosper'd  in  the  m,  but  suddenly  Jarr'd 
Mainland  gateway  to  the  m  over  which  Our  flag 
Maintain    we  shall  still  m  All  former  treaties 

I  trust  I  still  m  my  courtesy  ; 
Maintain'd    M,  and  entertain'd  us  royally  ! 
Majestic     Be  somewhat  less — m  to  your  Queen. 
Majesty    When  will  her  M  pass,  sayst  thou  ? 

Her  M  Hears  you  afTect  the  Prince — 

A  happy  morning  to  your  M. 

maintain  All  former  treaties  with  his  M. 

Follow  their  Majesties. 

my  wish  Echoes  your  M's.     Pole.     It  shall  be  so. 

Do  make  most  humble  suit  unto  your  Majesties, 

Whereon  we  humbly  pray  your  Majesties, 

Serve  God  and  both  your  Majesties. 

My  Lords,  you  cannot  see  her  M. 

in  all  this,  my  Lord,  her  M  Is  flint  of  flint, 

Your  M  shall  go  to  Dover  with  me. 

Then  one  day  more  to  please  her  M. 

I  am  vastly  grieved  to  leave  your  M. 

Long  live  your  M  !     Shall  Alice  sing  you 

Your  M  has  lived  so  pure  a  life. 
Make     {See  also  Maake)     m  what  noise  you  will  with 
your  tongues, 

didn't  the  Parliament  m  her  a  bastard  ? 

Parhament  can  m   every  true-bom  man  of  us  a 
bastard.     Old  Nokes,  can't  it  m  thee  a  bastard  ? 

so  they  can't  m  me  a  bastard. 

if  Parliament  can  m  the  Queen  a  bastard,  why,  it 
follows  all  the  more  that  they  can  m  thee  one. 

To  m  me  headless. 

These  beastly  swine  m  such  a  gnmting  here. 

That  m's  for  France,  (repeat) 

His  Highness  m's  his  moves  across  the  Channel, 

m  your  boast  that  after  all  She  means  to  wed  you. 

That  you  shall  marry  him,  m  him  King  beHke. 

she  means  to  m  A  farewell  present  to  your  Grace. 

M  all  tongues  praise  and  all  hearts  beat  for  you. 

To  m  the  crown  of  Scotland  one  with  ours, 

Would  m  our  England,  France  ; 

I  can  m  aUowance  for  thee, 

M  no  allowance  for  the  naked  tmth. 

Pope  would  have  you  m  them  render  these  ; 


Foresters  iv  85^ 
Queen  Mary  ii  i  19 

n  i  ea 

I  V  146 

Becket  ii  ii  9^ 

Foresters  iv  124 

Becket  v  ii  494 

Queen  Mary  v  v  67 

Harold  n  ii  505 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  20& 

Harold  v  ii  76 

Becket  iv  ii  26d 

The  Cup  I  ii  271 


Becket,  Pro.  502 

II  i  57 

IV  ii  39 

Prom,  of  May  i  281 

Queen  Mary  i  v  125 

Becket  i  iii  381 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  260 

I  V  265 

The  Falcon  294 

Harold  ii  ii  159 

Queen  Mary  in  vi  149 

ii2 

iiv81 

IV  244 

IV  266 
in  i  331 
in  iii  93 

III  iii  119 
in  iii  143 
ui  iii  159 
ni  vi20 
III  vi  37 
m  vi  21& 
nivi248- 
in  vi255 

V  ii  354 
V  v72 

ii5 
iil6 

1 127 
ii4T  T 

ii49 

iii  41 

I  iii  12 

I  iii  89,  92,  94 

I  iii  134 

iiv87 

I  iv  212 

I  iv  244 

IV  117 

IV  287 

IV  297 

IV  326 

IV  328 

IV  403 


Make 


997 


Make 


Jttake  (continued)    Your  Highness  is  all  trembling. 

Mary.     M  way.  Queen  Mary  i  v  595 

Look ;  can  you  m  it  English  ?                                             „  ii  i  127 

m  Your  city  loyal,  and  be  the  mightiest  man                  „  n  ii  18 

To  m  free  spoil  and  havock  of  your  goods.  „  u  ii  186 

Hear  us  now  m  oath  To  raise  your  Highness  „  u  ii  288 

the  half  sight  which  m's  her  look  so  stern,  „  n  ii  322 

Courage,  sir,  That  m's  a  man  or  woman  „  ii  ii  329 

man  should  m  the  hour,  not  this  the  man  ;  „  ii  ii  365 

M's  enemies  for  himself  and  for  his  king  ;  „  ii  ii  399 
Shall  we  vi  Those  that  we  come  to  serve  our  sharpest 

foes  ?  „  II  iii  76 

you'll  m  the  White  Tower  a  black  'un  „  ii  iii  100 

cloth  of  gold.  Could  m  it  so.  „  m  i  55 

I'd  m  a  move  myself  to  hinder  that :  „  iii  i  127 

You  would  but  TO  us  weaker,  Thomas  Stafford.  „  iii  i  130 

They  m  amends  for  the  tails.  „  in  i  227 

M  themselves  drunk  and  mad,  „  in  i  282 

Will  stir  the  living  tongue  and  m  the  cry.  „  in  i  354 

She  could  not  m  it  white —  „  in  i  424 

and  7»  us  A  Spanish  province  ;  „  m  i  465 

Seem'd  as  a  happy  miracle  to  m  glide —  „  in  ii  29 

I  return  As  Peter,  but  to  bless  thee  :  to  me  well.'  „  in  ii  56 

M's  me  his  mouth  of  holy  greeting.  „  in  ii  80 

That  TO  me  shamed  and  tongue-tied  in  my  love.  „  ni  ii  162 

news  to  m  Both  of  us  happy — ay,  the  Kingdom  too.      „  in  ii  187 

Do  m  most  himible  suit  unto  your  Majesties,  „  in  iii  118 

because  to  persecute  M's  a  faith  hated,  „  in  iv  116 

And  m  it  look  more  seemly.  „  in  iv  152 

m's  the  waverer  pass  Into  more  settled  hatred  „  in  iv  157 

These  fields  are  only  green,  they  m  me  gape.  „  ni  v  7 

One  of  those  wicked  wilfuls  that  men  to,  „  in  v  76 

And  m  a  morning  outcry  in  the  yard  ;  „  in  v  158 

narrowness  of  the  cage  That  m's  the  captive  testy ;  „  in  v  208 

m  ready  for  the  journey.  „  iii  v  277 

Than  any  sea  could  m  me  passing  hence,  „  iii  vi  87 

We  TO  our  humble  prayer  unto  your  Grace  „  iv  i  43 

His  learning  m's  his  burning  the  more  just.  „  iv  i  159 

M  out  the  writ  to-night.  „  iv  i  195 

No  man  can  m  his  Maker —  „  iv  ii  58 

And  TO  you  simple  Cranmer  once  again.  „  iv  ii  129 

and  m's  The  fire  seem  even  crueller  than  it  is.  „  iv  ii  232 

I  wish  some  thunderbolt  Would  to  this  Cole  a  cinder,     „  iv  iii  11 

M  us  despise  it  at  odd  hours,  my  Lord.  „  iv  iii  386 

I  cum  behind  tha,  gall,  and  couldn't  to  tha  hear.  „  iv  iii  466 
never  bum  out  the  hypocrisy  that  m's  the  water 

in  her.  „  iv  iii  525 

*  M  short !  TO  short ! '  and  so  they  Ut  the  wood.  „  iv  iii  606 

You  m  your  wars  upon  him  down  in  Italy : —  „  v  i  141 

What  m's  thy  favour  Uke  the  bloodless  head  „  v  ii  19 

wines.  That  ever  7/1  him  fierier.  „  vii95 

it  was  thought  we  two  Might  m  one  flesh,  „  v  ii  137 

and  TO  Musters  in  all  the  counties ;  „  v  ii  271 

Heretic  and  rebel  Point  at  me  and  m  merry.  „  v  ii  318 

Should  TO  the  mightiest  empire  earth  has  known.  „  v  iii  70 

M  me  full  fain  to  Uve  and  die  a  maid.  „  X.^."^^ 

And  break  yoiu*  paces  in,  and  to  you  tame  ;  „  v  iii  121 

-and  to  Down  for  their  heads  to  heaven  !  „  v  iv  7 

Dead  or  aUve  you  cannot  m  him  happy.  „  v  v  71 

I  trust  that  God  will  to  you  happy  yet.  „  v  v  76 

if  that  May  to  your  Grace  forget  yourself  „  v  v  81 

— we  will  TO  England  great.  „  v  v  281 
for  heaven's  credit  M's  it  on  earth  :  Harold  i  i  142 
m  me  not  fool !     Nor  m  the  Kir^  a  fool,  who  made 

me  Earl !     Harold.     No,  Tostig — lest  I  to  myself 

a  fool  Who  made  the  King  who  made  thee,  to  thee 

Earl.  ,,       I  i  288 

M  not  thou  The  nothing  something.  „       i  i  362 

the  true  must  Shall  to  her  strike  as  Power  :  „       i  i  369 

would  but  shame  me.  Rather  than  to  me  vain.  „      i  ii  117 

Follow  my  lead,  and  I  will  to  thee  earl.  „      i  ii  217 

<!ount-crab  will  to  his  nippers  meet  in  thine  heart ;  „        n  i  76 

To  TO  allowance  for  their  rougher  fashions,  „         n  ii  8 

To  marry  and  have  no  husband  M's  the  wife  fool.  „     ii  ii  310 

M  blush  the  maiden-white  of  our  tall  cliffs,  „     n  ii  332 


Make  (continued)     may  he  not  m  A  league  with  William, 

M  thou  not  mention  that  I  spake  with  thee. 

And  I  will  TO  thee  my  great  Earl  of  Earls, 

And  m's  behave  that  he  believes  my  word — 

would  m  the  hard  earth  rive  To  the  very  Devil's  horns, 

TO  your  ever-jarring  Earldoms  move  To  music 

If  thou  canst  iii  a  wholesome  use  of  these 

as  the  libertine  repents  who  cannot  M  done  undone, 

Not  mean  To  to  our  England  Norman. 

and  those  Who  m  thy  good  their  own — 

which  will  TO  My  kingship  kinglier  to  me 

To  TO  all  England  one,  to  close  all  feuds, 

Thou  hast  but  cared  to  to  thyself  a  king — 

M  not  our  Morcar  sullen  :  it  is  not  wise. 

I  am  weary — ^go  :  m  me  not  wroth  with  thee  ! 

there  m  strength  to  breast  Whatever  chance, 

TO  their  wall  of  shields  Firm  as  thy  cliffs, 

m  liis  battle-axe  keen  As  thine  own  sharp-dividing 
justice, 

M  thou  one  man  as  three  to  roll  them  down  ! 

M  them  again  one  people — Norman,  EngUsh ; 

A  more  a\vful  one.     M  me  Archbishop  ! 

TO  her  as  hateful  to  herself  and  to  the  King, 

M  an  Archbishop  of  a  soldier  ? 

we  will  TO  her  whole  ;  Not  one  rood  lost. 

M  it  so  hard  to  save  a  moth  from  the  fire  ? 

if  he  follow  thee,  M  him  thy  prisoner. 

I  wiU  TO  thee  hateful  to  thy  King. 

Ye  TO  this  clashing  for  no  love  o'  the  customs 

I  had  meant  to  to  him  all  but  king. 

M  not  thy  King  a  traitorous  murderer. 

TO  it  clear  Under  what  Prince  I  fight. 

Serve  my  best  friend  and  m  him  my  worst  foe  ; 

TO  my  cry  to  the  Pope,  By  whom  I  will  be  judged  ; 

he  m's  moan  that  all  be  a-getting  cold.     Becket.     And 

I  TO  my  moan  along  with  him. 
We  can  to  a  black  sin  white, 
let  him  to  it  his  own,  let  him  reign  in  it — 
who  cares  not  for  the  word,  M's  '  care  not ' — 
m's  after  it  too  To  find  it. 

mother  Would  to  him  play  his  kingship  against  mine. 
So  we  TO  our  peace  with  him. 
we  TO  the  time,  we  keep  the  time,  ay,  and  we  serve 

the  time ; 
and  TO  Our  waning  Eleanor  all  but  love  me  ! 
and  to  m  me  a  woman  of  the  world, 
they  say,  she  m's  songs,  and  that's  against  her,  for  I 
never  knew  an  honest  woman  that  could  to  songs, 
tho'  you  TO  your  butt  too  big,  you  overshoot  it. 
keep  the  figure  moist  and  to  it  hold  water, 
I  TO  thee  full  amends. 
How,  do  you  to  me  a  traitor  ? 
Doth  not  the  fewness  of  anytliing  m  the  fulness  of  it 

in  estimation  ? 
she  says  she  can  to  you  sleep  o'  nights. 
Give  her  to  me  to  m  my  honeymoon. 
TO  Thy  body  loathsome  even  to  thy  child ; 
baseness  as  would  to  me  Most  worthy  of  it : 
And  VI  thee  a  world's  horror. 
But  thou  art  Uke  enough  to  m  him  thine. 
TO  me  not  a  woman,  John  of  Sahsbury,  Nor  w  me  traitor 
you  would  TO  his  coronation  void  By  cursing 
He  m's  a  King  a  traitor,  me  a  har. 
They  seek — you  m — occasion  for  your  death. 
Ay,  TO  him  prisoner,  do  not  harm  the  man. 
which  well  May  m  you  lose  yourself, 
I  would  be  Happy,  and  to  all  others  happy  so 
And  I  will  TO  Galatia  prosperous  too, 
You  wiU  not  easily  to  me  credit  that. 
— m  me  happy  in  my  marriage  ! 
To  TO  my  marriage  prosper  to  my  wish  ! 
See  first  I  to  libation  to  the  Goddess, 
Thou  hast  drunk  deep  enough  to  to  me  happy. 
Will  hardly  help  to  to  him  sane  again, 
and  tell  her  all  about  it  and  to  her  happy  ? 


Harold  n  ii  460 
n  ii  483 
n  ii  629 
n  ii  668 
n  ii  739 

II  ii  760 
III  i  20 
in  i  33 

III  i  250 
in  i  330 
in  ii  43 

IV  i  141 

IV  ii  74 
IV  iii  102 

vi31 
vil26 
vi478 

vi562 
vi577 

V  ii  188 
Becket,  Pro.  289 

„      Pro.  526 

I  i  41 

I  i  163 

I  i  283 

I  i  332 

I  ii  91 

„       I  iii  136 

I  iii  464 

I  iii  500 

„       I  iii  544 

I  iii  568 

I  iii  723 

I  iv  61 

I  iv  169 

II  i  17 
n  i  118 

II  i  321 
II  ii  11 
II  ii  62 

II  ii  367 
„  II  ii  457 
„       III  i  116 

„  lu  i 181 

„  HI  iii  121 

„  in  iii  166 

„  in  iii  219 

„  m  iii  240 

„    in  iii  302 

IV  ii  19 
„  IV  ii  142 
„  IV  ii  171 
„  IV  ii  235 
„      IV  ii  288 

V  i  132 

V  ii  147 
vii329 

„       V  ii  415 

V  ii  558 
„      V  iii  145 

The  Cup  I  i  149 

I  iii  29 

„     I  iii  169 

n25 

n  274 

II  308 

n  377 

u425 

The  Falcon  83 

183 


Make 


998 


Man 


Prom,  of  May  i  134 
I  572 
I  672 
I  791 
11  634 
II  660 
n  676 
m305 
in  324 

in  373 
m572 

HI  641 
III  666 


Make  (eontinued)    to  give  me  his  falcon,  And  that  will  m 

nie  weU.'  The  Falcon  243 

I  ha'  heard  'im  a-gawin'  on  'ud  m  your  'air — God 

bless  it ! — stan'  on  end. 
you  m  The  May  and  morning  still  more  beautiful, 
When  the  great  Democracy  M's  a  new  world — 
and  m  them  happy  in  the  long  bam, 
turn  back  at  times,  and  m  Courtesy  to  custom  ? 
I  could  m  his  age  A  comfort  to  him — 
Well  then,  I  must  m  her  Love  Harold  first, 
m  herself  anything  he  wishes  her  to  be  ? 
I  couldn't  m  it  out.     What  was  it  ? 
I  mounted  upon  the  parapet Dora.    You  m  me 

shudder ! 
then  what  is  it  That  m's  you  talk  so  dolefully  ? 
I  doubt  not  I  can  m  you  happy.     Dora.    You  m 

me  Happy  already. 
M  her  happy,  then,  and  I  forgive  you. 
I  wish'd,  I  hoped  To  m,  to  m Dora.     What 

did  you  hope  to  m  ?     Harold.    'Twere  best  to 

m  an  end  of  my  lost  Ufe.     O  Dora,  Dora  !     Dora. 

What  did  you  hope  to  m  ?     Harold.     M,  m\  „         in  783 

I  keep  a  good  heart  and  m  the  most  of  it,  Foresters  i  i  29 

What  m's  thee  so  down  in  the  mouth  ?  „         i  ii  42 

My  Lady  Marian  you  can  m  it  so  If  you  will  deign  „      i  ii  131 

I  promise  thee  to  m  this  Marian  thine.  „      i  ii  183 

We  TO  but  one  hour's  buzz,  „      i  ii  277 

m  us  merry  Because  a  year  of  it  is  gone  ?  ..       i  iii  14 

Where  law  Ues  dead,  we  m  ourselves  the  law.  „        n  i  91 

I  came  To  eat  him  up  and  m  an  end  of  him.  „      n  i  125 

To  TO  this  Sherwood  Eden  o'er  again,  „      n  i  168 

M  for  the  cottage  then  !  „      n  i  210 

and  m  a  ghostly  wail  ever  and  anon  to  scare  'em.  „      ii  i  215 

let  me  go  to  m  the  mound  :  „      ii  i  312 

but  m  haste  then,  and  be  silent  in  the  wood.  „      n  i  364 

Besides,  tho'  Friar  Tuck  might  m  us  one,  „       n  ii  88 

What  m's  you  seem  so  cold  to  Robin,  lady  ?     Marian. 

What  m's  thee  think  I  seem  so  cold  to  Robin  ?  „  in  1 

I  wait  till  Little  John  m's  up  to  me.  „         in  17 

so  you  would  m  it  two  I  should  be  grateful.  „       ni  194 

come  between  me  and  my  Kate  and  m  us  one  again.  „       m  423 

and  can  m  Five  quarts  pass  into  a  thimble.  „        iv  282 

M  at  him,  all  of  you,  a  traitor  coming  „        iv  780 

m  me  The  monkey  that  should  roast  „        iv  804 

Maker  (Gtod)     No  man  can  make  his  M —  Queen  Mary  rv  ii  58 

Maker    See  Verse-maker 

Mak'st    Thou  m  me  much  ashamed  „       in  iv  304 

Mftl""g  (part.)    (See  also  A-makin',  Maakin')    M  libation 

to  the  Goddess.  The  Cu-p  n  364 

m  us  feel  guilty  Of  her  own  faults.  Prom,  of  May  ii  269 

Making  (s)    {See  also  Bastard-making,  Sonnet-making) 

Either  in  to  laws  and  ordinances  Queen  Mary  in  iii  130 

we  be  not  bound  by  the  king's  voice  In  to  of  a  king, 

yet  the  king's  voice  Is  much  toward  his  to.  Harold  in  i  237 

spirit  of  the  twelve  Apostles  enter'd  Into  thy  to.  Becket  i  i  51 

the  TO  of  your  butter,  and  the  managing  of  your 

poultry  ?  Prom,  of  May  n  93 

Malapert    as  to  the  young  crownling  himself,  he  looked 

so  TO  in  the  eyes,  Becket  in  iii  109 

Male    it  was  hoped  Your  Highness  was  once  more  in 

happy  state  To  give  him  an  heir  to.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  573 

Malet    Come  M,  let  us  hear  !  Harold  n  ii  211 

M,  thy  mother  was  an  Englishwoman  ;  „       n  ii  264 

How,  M,  if  they  be  not  honourable  !  „       n  ii  278 

I  should  be  there,  M,  I  should  be  there  !  „       n  ii  293 

111  news  for  guests,  ha,  M  \  „       n  ii  302 

M,  1  vow  to  build  a  church  to  God  „       v  ii  137 

Pluck  the  dead  woman  ofl  the  dead  man,  Ml  „       v  ii  145 

Malice    he  wrought  it  ignorantly,  And  not  from 

any  to.  Queen  Mary  ni  i  278 

Wherewith  they  plotted  in  their  treasonous  to,  „  in  iv  5 

from  the  squint  Of  lust  and  glare  of  m.  Becket  i  i  313 

Twice  did  thy  m  and  thy  calumnies  Exile  me  „       i  iii  42 

Malign    For  whether  men  w  thy  name,  or  no,  The  Cup  i  iii  84 

Malignant    His  face  was  not  to,  and  he  said  „      i  ii  451 


Malign'd     I  am  sure  of  being  every  way  ?». 

I  am  much  m.     I  thought  to  serve  Galatia. 

and  he  said  That  men  m  him. 
MalUinity    Brook  for  an  hour  such  brute  m  ? 

War,  waste,  plague,  famine,  all  malignities. 
Malvoisie  (a  malmsey  wine)    I  marvel  is  it  sack  or  Jf  ? 

The  king's  good  health  in  ale  and  M. 
Man  (See  also  Farming-men,  Goodman,  Man-in-arms, 
Men-at-arms),    That  was  after,    m  ;    that  was 
after. 


The  Cup  I  ii  241 

„      I  ii  32» 

„      I  ii  452 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  544 

Harold  i  i  466 

Foresters  in  332 

IV  969 


Parhament  can  make  every  true-born  vi  of  us  a  bastard 

I  was  born  true  to  at  five  in  the  forenoon 

was  bom  of  a  true  to  and  a  ring'd  wife, 

thinkest  thou  that  anyone  Suspected  thee  to  be  my  m  ? 

wish  before  the  word  Is  m's  good  Fairy — 

Who  love  that  men  should  smile  upon  you, 

Men  would  murder  me. 

He  is  every  way  a  lesser  m  than  Charles  ; 

You  cannot  Learn  a  m's  nature  from  his  natural  foe. 

And  those  hard  men  brake  into  woman-tears, 

A  pretty  w  for  such  a  pretty  maiden.     Alice.    My 

Lord  of  Devon  is  a  pretty  m. 
no  old  news  that  all  men  hate  it. 
ten  thousand  men  on  Penenden  Heath  all  calling 
your  worship  the  first  to  in  Kent  and  Christendom, 
Men  of  Kent ;  England  of  England  ; 
If  this  TO  marry  our  Queen, 
the  red  to,  that  good  helpless  creature, 
I  have  striven  in  vain  to  raise  a  m  for  her. 
and  be  the  mightiest  to  This  clay  in  England, 
had  gone  over  to  him  With  all  his  me7i, 
To  raise  your  Highness  tliirty  thousanil  men. 
As  if  to  win  the  to  by  flattering  him. 
If  not,  there's  no  ??*  safe.     White.    Yes,  Thomas 

White.     I  am  safe  enough  ;  no  m  need  flatter 

me.     Second  Alderman.     Nay,  now  need;  but 

did  you  mark  our  Queen  ? 
That  makes  or  m  or  woman  look  their  goodhest. 
The  TO  had  children,  and  he  whined  for  those. 

Methinks  most  men  are  but  poor-hearted, 
all  men  cry,  She  is  queenly,  she  is  goodly. 
Who  knows  ?  the  w  is  proven  by  the  hour.     White. 

The  TO  should  make  the  hour,  not  this  the  to  ; 
gather  your  men — Myself  must  bustle. 
The  statesman  that  shall  jeer  and  fleer  at  men, 
if  he  jeer  not  seeing  the  true  m.  Behind  his  folly,  he 

is  thrice  the  fool ;   And  if  he  see  the  w  and  still 

will  jeer, 
There,  any  to  can  read  that. 
Stafford,  I  am  a  sad  to  and  a  serious. 
We  have  no  men  among  us. 
No  men  ?     Did  not  Lord  Suffolk  die  like  a  true  to  ? 

Is  not  Lord  William  Howard  a  true  m  ? 
And  I,  by  God,  believe  myself  a  to.     Ay,  even  in  the 

church  there  is  a  to — Cranmer.    Fly  would  he  not, 

when  all  men  bad  him  fly. 
There's  a  brave  to,  if  any. 
Thou  art  one  of  Wyatt's  men?    Man.    No,  my 

Lord,  no. 
The  TO  shall  paint  a  pair  of  gloves. 
(Knowing  the  to)  he  wrought  it  ignorantly, 
I  say  There  is  no  m — there  was  one  woman  with  us — 
dazzled  men  and  deafen'd  by  some  bright 
1  am  an  old  to  wearied  with  my  journey. 
You  were  the  one  sole  to  in  either  house  Who  stood 

upright 
I  say  you  were  the  one  sole  m  who  stood.     Bagenhall. 

I  am  the  one  sole  m  in  either  house, 
Well,  you  one  to,  because  you  stood  upright, 
If  any  to  in  any  way  would  be  The  one  m, 
when  men  are  tost  On  tides  of  strange  opinion, 
Lest  men  accuse  you  of  indifference  To  all  faiths. 
Smiles  that  bum  men. 

Men  now  are  bow'd  and  old,  the  doctors  tell  you, 
One  of  those  wicked  wilfuls  that  men  make, 


Queen  Mary  i  i  19 


ii27 
ii45 
1 154 
I  iii  176 
iiv24(> 
I  iv  274 
IV  155 
IV  330 
IV  340 

I  V  564 

IV  613 

nil7 

ni61 

II 164 

nil57 

nil70 

ni208 

niil7 

II  ii  19 
nii29 

n  ii  291 
nii312 


II  ii  315 
II  ii  329 

II  ii  335 
nii343 

II  ii  363 
n  ii  373 
II  ii  398 


uii40a 
niii6& 
ni  i  41 

ni  i  140 

in  i  163 


in  1168 
ni  i  175 

ni  i  244 
ni  i  274 
m  i  276 
ni  i  337 
in  i  451 
in  ii  127 

m  iii  252 

HI  iii  264 
in  iii  268 
m  iii  274 
in  iv  118 
in  iv  223 
in  iv  404 
in  iv408 
III  V  75 


Man 


999 


Man 


Han  (continued)    Are  you  so  small  am?  Queen  Mary  ni  v  192 

all  boots  were  ever  made  Since  m  went  barefoot.  „         in  v  198 

fierce  resolve  and  fixt  heart-hate  in  men  „  m  vi  32 

bland  And  affable  to  men  of  all  estates,  „  in  vi  81 

And  every  soul  of  m  that  breathes  therein.  „        iii  vi  107 

Your  father  was  a  m  Of  such  colossal  kinghood,  „  iv  i  100 

Your  father  had  a  will  that  beat  7nen  down  ;  Your 

father  had  a  brain  that  beat  men  do^vn —  „  rv  i  108 

No  m  can  make  his  Maker —  „  iv  ii  58 

At  your  trial  Never  stood  up  a  bolder  m  than  you  ;         „  iv  ii  122 

I  must  obey  the  Queen  and  Council,  m.  „  iv  ii  164 

This  hard  coarse  m  of  old  hath  crouch'd  to  me  „  iv  ii  169 

Repeat  your  recantation  in  the  ears  Of  all  men,  „  iv  ii  194 

It  is  expedient  for  one  m  to  die,  „  iv  iii  17 

Those  of  the  wrong  side  will  despise  the  m,  „  iv  iii  25 

That  any  m  so  writing,  preaching  so,  „  iv  iii  47 

Other  reasons  There  be  for  this  m's  ending,  „  iv  iii  54 

Take  therefore,  all,  example  by  this  m,  „  iv  iii  60 

There  stands  a  to,  once  of  so  high  degree,  „  rv  iii  68 

doubt  The  m's  conversion  and  remorse  of  heart,  „         iv  iii  108 

Most  miserable  sinner,  wretched  m.  „        iv  iii  123 

when  thou  becamest  M  in  the  Flesh,  „         iv  iii  141 

But  that  Thy  name  by  m  be  glorified.  And  Thy 

most  blessed  Son's,  who  died  for  m.    Good 

people,  every  to  at  time  of  death  Would  fain 

set  forth 
After  the  vanish'd  voice,  and  speak  to  men. 
yet  what  hatred  Christian  men  Bear  to  each  other, 
Hurt  no  to  more  Than  you  would  harm 
'  How  hard  it  is  For  the  rich  m  to  enter  into  Heaven  ; ' 

Let  all  rich  men  remember  that  hard  word. 
Dissemble  not ;  play  the  plain  Christian  to. 
I  have  been  a  m  loved  plairmess  all  my  life  ; 
And  watch  a  good  to  bum. 

the  m  Hurls  his  soil'd  life  against  the  pikes  and  dies, 
howsoever  hero-like  the  to  Dies  in  the  fire, 
and  all  men  Regarding  her  ? 
My  lord,  the  world  is  like  a  drunken  to, 
men  Have  hardly  known  what  to  believe, 
The  kindliest  to  I  ever  knew  ; 
ez  thou  hast  wi'  thy  owld  to.     Tib.    Ay,  Joan,  and 

my  owld  m  wur  up  and  awaay 
Thou's  thy  way  wi'  to  and  beast,  Tib. 
tin  his  TO  cum  in  post  vro'  here, 
I  loved  the  w,  and  needs  must  moan  for  him  ; 
in  Guisnes  Are  scarce  two  hundred  men, 
I  am  not  certain  but  that  Philibert  Shall  be  the  m  ; 
and  mine  own  natural  to  (It  was  God's  cause) ; 
and  cleave  unto  each  other  As  m  and  wife  ? 
Our  altar  is  a  mound  of  dead  men's  clay, 
love  her  less  For  such  a  dotage  upon  such  a  to. 
It  is  the  low  m  thinks  the  woman  low  ; 
throat  of  mine,  Barer  than  I  would  wish  a  to  to 

see  it, — 
I  will  see  no  m  hence  for  evermore, 
seen  the  true  men  of  Christ  lying  famine-dead  by 

scores, 
I  was  walking  ■with  the  m  I  loved, 
weak  and  meek  old  to.  Seven-fold  dishonour'd 
Till  all  men  have  their  Bible,  rich  and  poor. 
Not  he  the  to — for  in  our  windy  world 
Our  Tostig  loves  the  hand  and  not  the  to. 
Thou  art  the  to  to  rule  her  ! 
I  love  the  to  but  not  his  phantasies. 
Thou  art  the  quietest  to  in  all  the  world — 
Waits  till  the  to  let  go. 
Ye  govern  milder  men. 
As  much  as  I  can  give  thee,  m  ; 
a  dead  to  Rose  from  behind  the  altar, 
saw  the  church  all  fill'd  With  dead  men  upright  from 

their  graves,  and  all  The  dead  men  made  at  thee  to 

murder  thee. 
Did  not  Heaven  speak  to  men  in  dreams  of  old  ? 
fat  dead  deer  For  dead  men's  ghosts. 
while  ye  fish  for  men  with  your  false  fires, 


IV  iii  153 
IV  iii  1 65 
IV  iii  183 
rv  iii  187 

IV  iii  205 
rv  iii  268 
IV  iii  270 
rv  iii  293 
rv  iii  310 
IV  iii  324 
IV  iii  378 
IV  iii  393 
rv  iii  404 
rv  iii  421 

IV  iii  487 
IV  iii  498 
IV  iii  510 
IV  iii  635 
V  i  5 
vi265 

V  ii  103 

V  ii  139 

V  ii  162 

V  ii  421 

V  ii  439 

V  ii  462 

V  ii  525 

viv38 
V  v88 

V  vl32 
vv248 

Harold  i  i  83 

„  I  i  157 

„  1  i  223 

„  I  i  279 

„  I  i  312 

„  I  i  329 

„  1  i  339 

„  I  i  480 

„  I  ii  78 


Iii  83 

Iii  94 

Iii  104 

ni30 


Man  {continued)    Apostles  ;  they  were  fishers  of  men, 
get  himself  wrecked  on  another  m's  land  ? 
A  TO  may  hang  gold  bracelets  on  a  bush. 
Thou  art  a  mighty  to  In  thine  own  earldom  ! 
my  men  Hold  that  the  shipwreckt  are  accursed  of  God  ; 

What  hinders  me  to  hold  with  mine  own  men  ? 
The  Christian  manhood  of  the  to  who  reigns  ! 
I  have  commission'd  thee  to  save  the  to  : 
arm'd  men  Ever  keep  M'atch  beside  my  chamber  door. 
There  is  an  arm'd  m  ever  gUdes  behind  ! 
The  TO  that  hath  to  foil  a  murderous  aim 
Words  are  the  m. 

And  men  are  at  their  markets,  in  their  fields. 
We  have  the  m  that  rail'd  against  thy  birth. 
Better  methinks  have  slain  the  m  at  once  ! 
We  have  respect  for  m's  immortal  soul, 
scom'd  the  m.  Or  lash'd  his  rascal  hack, 
A  gentle,  gracious,  pure  and  saintly  to  ! 
Thou  art  the  mightiest  voice  in  England,  w, 
Let  all  men  bear  witness  of  our  bond  ! 
Where  they  eat  dead  men's  flesh. 
Of  all  the  Ues  that  ever  men  have  lied, 
That,  were  a  to  of  state  nakedly  true.  Men  would  but 

take  him  for  the  craftier  liar.     Leofwin.     Be  men 

less  delicate  than  the  Devil  himself  ? 
that  lying  And  ruling  men  are  fatal  twins 
and  holy  men  That  shall  be  bom  hereafter. 
Alas  !  poor  to.  His  promise  brought  it  on  me. 
cries,  and  clashes,  and  the  groans  of  men  ; 
Our  living  passion  for  a  dead  m's  dream  ; 
The  Lord  was  God  and  came  as  m — the  Pope  Is  to 

and  comes  as  God. — ■ 
What  would  ye,  men  ? 

Had  in  him  kingly  thoughts — a  king  of  men, 
plots  against  him  Had  madden'd  tamer  mere. 
Old  TO,  Harold  Hates  nothing ; 
Morcar,  collect  thy  men  ;  Edwin,  my  friend — 
No  TO  would  strike  with  Tostig,  save  for  Norway. 
Never  shall  any  m  say  that  I  that  Tostig 
were  m's  to  have  held  The  battle-axe  by  thee  ! 
Every  to  about  his  king  Fought  like  a  king  ;  the  king 

like  his  own  to, 
Sound  sleep  to  the  m  Here  by  dead  Norway 
A  thousand  ships — a  hundred  thousand  men — 
The  men  that  guarded  England  to  the  South 
selfless  TO  Is  worth  a  world  of  tonguesters. 
Waltham,  my  foundation  For  men  who  serve  the 

neighbour. 
What  did  the  dead  to  call  it — Sanguelac, 
second-sighted  to  That  scared  the  dying  conscience 
What  nobler  ?  men  must  die. 
I  have  done  no  m  wrong. 

That  mortal  men  should  bear  their  earthly  heats 
Make  thou  one  to  as  three  to  roll  them  down  ! 
There  is  no  to  can  swear  to  him. 
When  all  men  counted  Harold  would  be  king. 
Pluck  the  dead  woman  off  the  dead  m,  Malet ! 
have  I  fought  men  Like  Harold  and  his  brethren, 
Every  m  about  his  king  Fell  where  he  stood, 
we  must  have  a  mightier  m  than  he  For  his 

successor. 
No  TO  without  my  leave  shall  excommunicate 
No  m  without  my  leave  shall  cross  the  seas 
Will  not  thy  body  rebel,  m,  if  thou  flatter  it  ? 
Men  are  God's  trees,  and  women  are  God's  flowers  ; 
if  a  m  Wastes  himself  among  women, 
A  m  of  this  world  and  the  next  to  boot. 
Thou  art  the  to  to  fill  out  the  Church  robe  ; 
Thou  angerest  me,  m  :  I  do  not  jest. 
old  men  must  die,  or  the  world  would  grow  mouldy, 
dead  m's  dying  wish  should  be  of  weight. 
as  brave  a  soldier  as  Henry  and  a  goodlier  m  : 
I  can  see  further  into  am  than  our  hot-headed  Henry, 
would  she  were  but  his  paramour,  for  men  tire  of  their 

fancies ; 


Harold  n  i  34 
II 161 
ni87 
ni92 

ni99 
nilOS 
nii99 
n  ii  244 
n  ii  247 
n  ii  417 
n  ii  419 
nii436 
n  ii  485 
n  ii  499 
nii500 
n  ii  506 
n  ii  585 
II  ii  618 
n  ii  698 
II  ii  807 
mi  99 


„  mills 
„  m  i  127 
„  mi  209 
„  mi  337 
„  mi  376 
„    mii60 

„  ra  ii  173 
„  IV  i  30 
„  rv  i  84 
„  rvill2 
„  IV  i 128 
„  IV  i  256 
„  ivii20 
„  ivii66 
„  IV  iii  12 

„  IV  iii  56 
„  IV  iii  121 
„  rv  iii  195 
„  IV  iii  209 
„      V  i  81 

„  V  i  98 

„  V  i  184 

„  V  i  210 

„  V  i  270 

„  V  i  272 

„  V  i  283 

„  vi577 

„  V  ii  78 

„  viil32 

„  V  ii  144 

„  viil78 

„  viilSl 

Becket,  Pro.  7 

„  Pro.  30 

„  Pro.  34 

„  Pro.  102 

„  Pro.  Ill 

„  Pro.  136 

„  Pro.  259 

„  Pro.  262 

„  Pro.  299 

„  Pro.  408 

„  Pro.  422 

„  Pro.  437 

„  Pro.  463 

„  Pro.  479 


Man 


1000 


Man 


Han  (continued)    Together  more  than  mortal  m  can  bear.  Becket  i  i  24 

That  I  am  not  the  m  to  be  your  Primate,  „  i  i  38 
For  Gilbert  Foliot  held  himself  the  m.     Becket.     Am 

I  the  m  ?    My  mother,  ere  she  bore  me,  „  i  i  43 

good  old  7n  would  sometimes  have  his  jest —  „  i  i  61 

Am  I  the  m  ?  That  rang  Within  my  head  „  i  i  70 
Am  /  the  m  ?     And  the  Lord  answer'd  me,  '  Thou 

art  the  m,  and  all  the  more  the  ni.'  (repeat)  „  i  i  82,  98 

Thou  art  the  m — be  thou  A  mightier  Anselm.  „  i  i  132 

I  do  believe  thee,  then.     I  am  the  w.  „  i  i  136 

Back  m  !     Fitzurse.     Then  tell  me  who  and  what  she  is.       „  i  i  207 

Back,  m,  I  tell  thee  !  „  i  i  218 

'Fore  God,  I  am  a  mightier  m  than  thou.  „  i  i  223 

Herbert,  take  out  a  score  of  armed  men  „  i  i  328 

my  men  will  guard  you  to  the  gates.  „  i  i  402 

the  m  shall  seal.  Or  I  will  seal  his  doom.  „  i  iii  330 

bounden  by  my  coronation  oath  To  do  tnen  justice.  „  i  iii  397 

a  hundred  ghastly  murders  done  By  men,  „  i  iii  408 

If  ever  m  by  bonds  of  gratefulness—  „  i  iii  435 

Deal  gently  with  the  young  7n  Absalom.  „  i  iii  757 

To  speak  without  stammering  and  Uke  a  free  m  ?  „  i  iv  8 

When  thieves  fall  out,  honest  mere —  „  i  iv  114 

When  honest  men  fall  out,  thieves —  „  i  iv  118 
Lord  hath  set  his  mark  upon  him  that  no  m  should 

murder  him.  „  i  iv  192 

The  m  shall  feel  that  I  can  strike  him  yet.  „  ii  i  78 

a  perilous  game  For  men  to  play  with  God.  „  ii  ii  71 

Out  upon  thee,  m  !     Saving  the  Devil's  honour,  „  ii  ii  141 

I  am  half-way  down  the  slope — will  no  m  stay  me  ?  ,,  ii  ii  149 

fled  from  his  own  church  by  night,  No  m  pursuing.  „  n  ii  158 

seeing  they  were  men  Defective  or  excessive,  „  ii  ii  212 

Poor  m,  beside  himself — not  wise.  „  ii  ii  235 

I  told  the  Pope  what  manner  of  m  he  was.  „  ii  ii  253 

Thy  true  King  bad  thee  be  A  fisher  of  men  ;  „  ii  ii  286 

surrendering  God's  honour  to  the  pleasure  of  a  m.  „  ii  ii  440 

ever  spread  into  the  m  Here  in  our  silence  ?  „  iii  i  22 

Whither  away,  m  ?  what  are  you  flying  from  ?  „  iii  ii  18 

a  m  passed  in  there  to-day  :  I  holla'd  to  him,  „  in  ii  24 

and  to  read  the  faces  of  men  at  a  great  show.  „  in  iii  83 

Foliot  is  the  hoher  m,  perhaps  the  better.  „  iii  iii  92 

Have  I  not  promised,  m,  to  send  them  back  ?  „  in  iii  190 
when  my  voice  Is  martyr'd  mute,  and  this  m  disappears,      „  in  iii  350 

Come  hither,  m  ;  stand  there.  „  iv  ii  219 

if  he  Had  aught  of  m,  or  thou  of  woman  ;  „  iv  ii  232 

My  pleasure  is  to  have  a  m  about  me.  „  iv  ii  430 

Madam,  I  am  as  much  m  as  the  King.  „  iv  ii  432 

Thou  as  much  m  !     No  more  of  that ;  „  iv  ii  452 

No  m  to  love  me,  honour  me,  obey  me  !  „  v  i  239 
You  are  no  King's  men — you — you — you  are  Becket's 

men.  „  v  i  258 
Will  no  m  free  me  from  this  pestilent  priest  ?     Eleanor. 

A  re  ye  king's  men  ?     I  am  king's  woman,  I.     Knights. 

King's  men  !     King's  men  !  „  v  i  262 

a  m  may  take  good  counsel  Ev'n  from  his  foe.  „  v  ii  2 

there  are  wen  Of  canker'd  judgment  everywhere —  „  v  ii  60 

Did  not  a  m's  voice  ring  along  the  aisle,  „  v  ii  150 

My  lord,  the  city  is  fuU  of  armed  men.  „  v  ii  188 

M's  help  !  but  we,  we  have  the  Blessed  Virgin  „  v  ii  219 

she  told  us  of  arm'd  mew  Here  in  the  city.  „  v  ii  227 

But  these  arm'd  men — will  you  not  hide  yourself  ?  „  v  ii  247 

drowning  m,  they  say,  remembers  all  The  chances  „  v  ii  272 

but  these  arm'd  m,en — will  you  drown  yourself  ?  „  v  ii  276 

Reginald,  all  men  know  I  loved  the  Prince.  „  v  ii  333 
King  commands  you.     We  are  all  King's  men,     Becket. 

King's  men  at  least  should  know  „  v  ii  385 

I  ask  no  leave  of  king,  or  mortal  m,  „  v  ii  458 

sworn  Yourselves  my  men  when  I  was  Chancellor —  „  v  ii  502 

On  any  m's  advising  but  your  own.  „  v  ii  551 

Ay,  monks,  not  men.  „  v  ii  602 

These  arm'd  men  in  the  city,  these  fierce  faces —  „  v  iii  3 

Those  arm'd  men  in  the  cloister.  „  v  iii  49 

Here,  here,  King's  men  !  „  v  iii  102 

then  you  are  a  dead  m ;  flee  !  „  v  iii  126 

Av,  make  him  prisoner,  do  not  harm  the  m.  „  v  iii  146 

Thou  art  my  m,  thou  ai'  my  va.ssal.  „  v  iii  153 


Man  {continued)     I  hate  the  m  !     What  filthy  tools  our 

Senate  works  with  !  The 

What  would  you  with  me,  m  ? 

were  he  livin'j  And  grown  to  m  and  Sinnatus  will'd  it. 
My  lord,  tie  mvn  ! 
One  of  the  men  tliere  knew  him. 
Did  he,  honest  m  ? 

and  he  sail  Tiiafc  7nen  malign'd  him. 
Or  m,  or  woman,  as  traitors  unto  Rome. 
For  whether  men  malign  thy  name,  or  no, 
drink  too  much,  as  men  Have  done  on  rafts  of  wreck — 
— having  proof  enough  Against  the  m, 
that  m  from  Synorix,  who  has  been  So  oft  to  see  the 

Priestess, 
Did  not  this  m  Speak  well  ? 
A  gooilier-loaking  m  tlian  Sinnatus. 
I  wouli  that  every  m  made  feast  to-day 
or  after  slayest  liira  As  boy  or  m, 

Let  be  thy  jokes  and  thy  jerks,  m  !  The 

scorns  Tlie  noblest-naturoi  m  alive,  and  I— 
Why — no,  m.     Only  see  your  cloth  be  clean, 
he  would  marry  me  to  the  richest  m  In  Florence ; 
'  Better  a  m  witliout  riclies,  tlian  riches  without  a  m.' 
A  nobler  breed  of  men  and  women. 

Why,  o'  coorse,  fur  it  be  the  owd  m'.i  birthdaiiy.  Prom. 

'er  an'  the  owd  m  they  fell  a  kissin'  o'  one  another 
But  he'll  never  be  the  same  m  again.     Dohson.     An' 

how  d'ye  find  the  owd  m  'ere  ? 
The  owd  m  be  heighty  to-daay,  beant  he  ? 
he  cooms  up,  and  he  calls  out  among  our  oan  men, 
the  farming  men  'ull  hev  their  dinner  i'  the  long  barn. 
He's  a  SomersoLSi  lire  m,  and  a  very  civil-spoken  gentleman, 
all  but  proving  m  An  automatic  series  of  sensations, 
What  can  a  m,  then,  live  for  but  sensations, 
men  of  old  would  undergo  Unpleasant  for  the  sake  of 
pleasant  ones  Hereafter, 

'  What  are  we,  says  the  blind  old  m  in  Lear  ? 

Then  the  owd  m  i'  Lear  should  be  shaamed  of  hissen, 

M  only  knows,  the  worse  for  him  ! 

Good  mumin',  neighbours,  and  the  saiime  to  you,  my  me»(. 

Niver  m  'ed  better  friends,  and  I  will  saay  niver  master 
'ed  better  men : 

thaw  1  says  it  mysen,  niver  men  'ed  a  better  master — 
and  1  knaws  wliat  men  be, 

theer  be  noiin  o'  my  men,  thinks  I  to  mysen, 

and  m  perceives  that  The  lost  gleam  of  an  after-life 

Then  the  m,  the  woman.  Following  their  best  affinities, 

And  when  the  m,  The  child  of  evolution, 

I  seed  how  the  owd  m  wur  voxt. 

an'  ony  o'  Steer's  men,  an'  ony  o'  my  men 

you  should  be  in  the  hayfield  looking  after  your  men ; 

as  long  as  the  m  sarved  for  'is  sweet'art  i'  Scriptur'. 

I  would  taake  the  owd  blind  m  to  my  oan  fireside. 

I  think  I  never  can  be  brought  to  love  any  m.    It  seems 
to  me  that  I  hate  men,  ever  since  my  sister  left  us. 

I  thought  Mr.  Edgar  the  best  of  men,  and  he  has  proved 
himself  the  worst. 

Owd  Steer  gi'es  nubbut  cowd  tea  to  'is  men,  and  owd 
Dohson  gi'es  beer. 

if  m  be  only  A  willy-nilly  current  of  sensations — 

The  ghosts  of  the  dead  passions  of  dead  men ; 

That  beer  be  as  good  fur  'erses  as  men. 

When  m  has  surely  learnt  at  last  that  all 

How  worn  he  looks,  poor  m  !  who  is  it,  I  wonder. 

Our  men  and  boys  would  hoot  him,  stone  him, 

the  m  himself.  When  hearing  of  that  piteous  death. 

Well,  my  m,  it  seems  that  you  can  read. 

for  I  am  closely  related  to  the  dead  m's  family. 

whether  thou  be  Hedgar,  or  Hedgar's  business  m, 

so  ta'en  up  wi'  leadin'  the  owd  m  about  all  the  blessed 
mumin' 

'  O  m,  forgive  thy  mortal  foe, 

You  are  as  good  as  a  m  in  the  hayfield. 

He's  dead,  m — dead  ;  gone  to  his  account — 

would  you  beat  a  m  for  his  brother's  fault  ? 


Cuf  I  i 155 
iil93 
I  ii  151 
I  ii  195 
.  I  ii  341 
,  I  ii  376 
,      I  ii  452 

I  iii  9 
I  iii  84 

,      I  iii  141 
,     I  iii  159 

n9 

n91 

n  176 

II  225 
II  281 

Falcon  133 
259 
419 
748 
751 
755 

of  Mav  I  6 
I  21 

I  70 
I  76 
1 140 
1166 
I  206 
I  225 
I  241 

I  243 

I  263 
I  266 
I  275 
I  318 

I  322 

I  327 
I  410 
I  501 
I  521 

I  584 
n  27 
n  34 
n47 
n  62 
n74 

II  78 

n  86 

„   II 224 

„   II 262 

n  276 

n  316 

n  330 

H  391 

II  425 

n  498 

..   u  709 

„   n  715 

„   n  735 

in  3 
»  ni5 
„  in  106 
„  nil44 
„   m  155 


Man 


1001 


Mannerless 


Man  (continued)     the  m  has  doubtless  a  good  heart, 

and  a  true  and  lasting  love  for  me :  Prom 

where  the  m  and  the  woman,  only  differing  as  the 

stronger  and  the  weaker, 
That  last  was  my  Father's  fault,  poor  m. 
He  be  saayin'  a  word  to  the  owd  m, 
brotherhood  of  m  has  been  Wrong'd  by  the  cruelties 
Not  ev'n  to  see  the  m  ? 
I  am  a  m  not  prone  to  jealousies, 
The  owd  m's  coom'd  agean  to  'issen. 
Not  that  way,  ?«  !     Curse  on  your  brutal  strength  ! 
The  maid  she  loved  the  m. 
The  maid  a  rose  to  the  m.  (repeat) 
The  maid  lier  hand  to  the  m.  (repeat) 
the  maid  a  kiss  to  the  m.  (repeat) 
We  be  more  like  scarecrows  in  a  field  than  decent 

serving  men ; 
I  pray  you,  look  at  Robin  Earl  of  Huntingdon's  men. 
nor  of  the  gold,  nor  the  m  who  took  out  the  gold : 
Robin  the  Earl,  is  always  a-telling  us  that  every  m, 
A  rose  to  the  m  !     Ay,  the  m  had  given  her  a  rose 
and  the  »»  must  bring  it  out  of  her. 
should  have  told  us  how  the  m  first  kissed  the  maid, 
if  a  wi  and  a  maid  care  for  one  another, 
now  thou  hast  given  me  the  m's  kiss,  let  me  give  thee  the 

maid's, 
if  a  m  and  a  maid  love  one  another, 
starched  stiff  creature.  Little  John,  the  Earl's  m. 
ride  a-hawking  with  the  help  of  the  men. 
But  then  your  Sheriff,  your  little  m, 
Now  your  great  m,  your  Robin,  all  England's  Robin, 
but  our  great  m,  our  Robin,  against  it. 
have  the  great  men  striven  against  the  stream, 
great  m  strive  against  it  again  to  save  his  country, 
there  is  no  other  m  that  shall  give  me  away. 
I  am  a  silent  w  myself,  and  all  the  more  wonder  at  our 

Earl. 
Ay,  ay,  and  but  that  I  am  a  w  of  weight, 
The  m  is  able  enough — no  lack  of  wit, 
I  hate  him,  I  hate  the  m. 
A  question  that  every  true  m  asks  of  a  woman  once  in 

his  life. 
Beware,  to,  lest  thou  lose  thy  faith  in  me. 
What  art  thou,  m  ?    Sheriff  of  Nottingham  ? 
That  is  no  true  tn's  hand.     I  hate  hidden  faces. 
For  though  my  men  and  I  flash  out  at  times 
Ho  there  !  ho  there,  the  Sheriff's  men  without !     Robin. 

Nay,  let  them  be,  m,  let  them  be.     We  yield. 
I  am  no  more  Than  plain  m  to  plain  m.     Tuck.     Well, 

then,  plain  m. 
Each  TO  for  his  own.     Be  thou  their  leader 
I  knew  thy  father :     He  was  a  manly  to. 
There  are  no  ^nen  like  Englishmen 
m  and  maid  be  free  To  foil  and  spoil  the  tyrant 
lives  No  TO  who  truly  loves  and  truly  rules 
I  have  forgotten  my  horn  that  calls  my  men  together. 
I  saw  a  m  go  in,  my  lord. 
There  was  a  to  just  now  that  enter'd  here  ? 
How  came  we  to  be  parted  from  our  men  ? 
Robin  may  be  hard  by  wi'  three-score  of  his  men. 
Why  do  you  listen,  m,  to  the  old  fool  ? 
bow  to  charm  and  waste  the  hearts  of  men. 
perchance  Up  yonder  with  the  to  i'  the  moon. 
Do  you  doubt  me  when  I  say  she  loves  me,  to? 
what  sort  of  to  art  thou  For  land,  not  love  ? 
to  help  the  old  to  When  he  was  fighting. 
I  would  fight  with  any  m  but  thee. 
And  drains  the  heart  and  marrow  from  a  m. 
till  thou  wed  what  to  thou  wilt. 
Are  the  men  all  mad  ?  there  then,  and  there  ! 
I  thought  I  saw  thee  clasp  and  kiss  a  to 
Thou  see  me  clasp  and  kiss  a  to  indeed, 
The  old  TO  dotes. 

My  men  say  The  fairies  haunt  this  glade ; — 
Far  from  solid  foot  of  men, 


of  May  III  171 


III  189 
III  280 
III  481 
in  543 
III  570 
III  626 
III  702 
III  731 
Foresters  i  i  9 
I  i  13, 106 
I  i  17,  93 
1 121, 120 

1 135 

1 137 

1 175 

li  96 

1 1109 

li  117 

11123 

iil34 

1 1143 
1 1171 
1 1184 
11214 
11231 
11235 
11241 
11243 
11245 
11291 

1 1134 

iii57 

1  ii  103 

I  ii  114 

I  ii  139 
I  ii  179 
I  ii  190 
1 11245 
I  ii  274 

I  ill  76 

I  iii  96 
I  iii  105 

I  iii  148 
II 1  7 

II 110 

ni76 

nil86 

II  i  207 
ni239 
II  i  255 
II  i  336 
ni358 
II  i  503 
II  i  507 
II  i  521 
II  i  533 
II  i  542 
II  i  558 
II  i  673 
II  ii  15 
II  11  34 
II  ii  72 
II  ii  76 
nil  83 

II  ii  100 
II  ii  169 


Man  (continued)     M,  lying  here  alone,  Moody  creature 

M,  TO,  You  shall  wed  your  Marian. 

Why,  my  good  Robin  fancied  me  a  to. 

Little  John  Fancied  he  saw  thee  clasp  and  kiss  a  to. 

that  /  fancy  a  m  Other  than  him,  he  is  not  the  to  for 
me. 

being  every  inch  a  ?re  I  honour  every  inch  of  a  woman. 

Friend  Scarlet,  art  thou  less  a  to  than  Much  ? 

So  I  would,  Robin,  if  any  m  would  accept  her. 

no  m,  so  His  own  true  wife  came  with  him, 

They  are  all  mark'd  men. 

silent  blessing  of  one  honest  m  Is  heard  in  heaven — 

And  you  three  holy  men,  You  worshippers  of  the  Virgin, 

Air  and  word,  my  lady,  are  maid  and  m. 

See  that  m,en  be  set  Along  the  glades  and  passes 

then  each  to  That  owns  a  wife  or  daughter, 

So  that  they  deal  with  us  like  honest  men, 

And  thou  shalt  have  it,  m. 

What,  is  not  to  a  hunting  animal  ? 

And  show  thyself  more  of  a  to  than  me.  Much.  Well, 
no  TO  yet  has  ever  bowl'rt  me  down.  Scarlet.  Ay,  for 
old  Much  is  every  inch  a  m. 

I  am  the  oldest  of  thy  7nen,  and  thou 

always  so  much  more  of  a  m  than  my  youngsters  old  Much. 

may  be  more  of  a  to  than  to  be  bowled  over  like  a  ninepin 

I  am  mortally  afear'd  o'  thee,  thou  big  to, 

Geese,  to  !  for  how  canst  thou  be  thus  allied 

Robin's  a  wise  m,  Richard  a  wiseacre, 

but  he  is  a  free  to. 

Have  you  no  pity  ?  must  you  see  the  to  ? 

Go  men,  and  fetch  him  hither  on  the  litter. 

There  was  a  m  of  ours  Up  in  the  north. 

The  TO  lay  down — the  delicate-footed  creature 

The  hunter's  passion  flash'd  into  the  to, 

the  TO  Fell  with  him,  and  was  crippled  ever  after.     I 
fear  I  had  small  pity  for  that  to.— 

What  pricks  thee  save  it  be  thy  conscience,  to  ? 

Carry  her  off,  and  let  the  old  to  die. 

And  all  I  love,  Robin,  and  all  his  men, 

Said  I  not,  I  loved  thee,  to  ? 

Thou  hast  risk'd  thy  life  for  mine :  bind  these  two  men. 

men  will  call  him  An  Eastern  tyrant, 

my  liege,  these  men  are  outlaws,  thieves, 

strike  the  bonds  From  these  three  men, 

like  the  m  In  Holy  Writ,  who  brought  his  talent  back ; 

I  have  seen  thee  clasp  and  kiss  a  to  indeed.  For  our 
brave  Robin  is  a  man  indeed. 
Managing     making  of  your  butter,  and  the  to  of  your 

poultry  ? 
Manchet-bread    You  gentles  that  live  upo'  m-b  and 

marchpane. 
Mane    his  monarch  to  Bristled  about  his  quick  ears — 
Mangle  .  and  the  sacks,  and  the  taaters,  and  the  m's. 
Manhood    Methinks  there  is  no  m  left  among  us. 

The  Christian  to  of  the  man  who  reigns  ! 

rend  away  Eyesight  and  to,  life  itself, 

I  that  wedded  Henry,  Honouring  his  to — 

So  the  child  grow  to  to  : 

Rogues,  have  you  no  m  ? 

thro'  thy  lack  of  to  hast  betray'd  Thy  father 

and  their  own  want  Of  to  to  their  leader ! 
Man-in-arms    a  mightier  m-i-a  Than  WiUiam. 
Manlier     we  \vill  find  it  for  thee — Or  something  m. 
Manliest    Here  fell  the  truest,  to  hearts  of  England. 
Manlike    Thou  art  to  perfect. 

Thou  standest  straight.     Thou  speakest  to. 
Manly    He  was  a  to  man,  as  thou  art.  Much, 
Manner    foreign  courts  report  liim  in  his  to 

Let  me  learn  at  full  The  m  of  his  death, 

with  all  TO  of  game,  and  four-footed  things,  and  fowls- 
Herbert.     And  all  m  of  creeping  things  too  ? 

by  force  and  arms  hath  trespassed  against  the  king 
in  divers  m's, 
Manner'd    See  Cold-manner'd 
Mannerless    M  wolves  !  Becket  i  iii  739 


Foresters  ii  ii  186 

„     II  ii  192 

III  20 

III  24 

HI  26 
III  63 
III  66 
in  74 
HI  239 
in  290 
III  321 
ni382 
III  420 
III  456 

III  459 

IV  101 
IV  188 
IV  223 


IV  286 
IV  294 
IV  298 
IV  304 
IV  317 
IV  349 
IV  357 
IV  386 
IV  458 
IV  461 
IV  529 
IV  535 
IV  540 

IV  544 
IV  626 
IV  677 
IV  722 
IV  741 
IV  895 
IV  902 
IV  905 
IV  963 
IV  980 

IV  1035 


Prom,  of  May  ii  94 

Foresters  ii  i  281 

The  Cup  I  ii  120 

Prom,  of  May  i  453 

Queen  Mari)  v  ii  284 

Harold  ii  i  104 

Becket  iv  ii  285 

„      IV  ii  421 

Prom,  of  May  ii  289 

Foresters  ii  i  421 

II  i  568 

II  1  694 

Harold  v  i  399 

Becket  iv  ii  374 

Harold  v  ii  58 

Becket  n  i  252 

Foresters  n  i  409 

I  iii  148 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  512 

Becket,  Pro.  426 

„      III  iii  130 

Foresters  I  iii  64 


Manners 


1002 


Marriage 


Manners    and  those  bleak  m  thaw,  Queen  Mary  iii  ii  161 

like  his  cloak,  his  m  want  the  nap  And  gloss  of 

court;  ,.  Ill  V  69 

Am  I  to  change  my  m,  Simon  Renard,  „       m  vi  151 

How  beautiful  His  m  are,  and  how  unlike  the 

farmer's  !  Prom,  of  May  ii  531 

so  that  you  do  not  copy  his  bad  m?  „  m  362 

M  be  so  corrupt,  and  these  are  the  days  of  Prince  John.    Foresters  i  i  176 

Manor    since  we  would  be  lord  of  our  own  m,  Becket  n  ii  20 

They  slew  my  stags  in  mine  own  m  here,  „     v  ii  438 

Man-Robin    If  my  m-R  were  but  a  bird-Robin,  Foresters  rn  39 

Mansfield    I  have  heard  'em  in  the  market  at  M.  „      m  407 

Mantle    Flung  by  the  golden  m  of  the  cloud,  „       ii  i  28 

Many     Thro'  m  voices  crying  right  and  left,  Queen  Mary  i  ii  48 

The  downfall  of  so  m  simple  souls,  „  i  ii  54 

for  the  two  were  fellow-prisoners  So  m  years  in  yon 

accursed  Tower —  „       i  iv  200 

there  were  m  wolves  among  you  Who  dragg'd  the 

scatter'd  limbs  „        I  v  399 

For  tho'  we  touch'd  at  m  pirate  ports.  Foresters  rv  983 

Many-breasted    The  m-b  mother  Artemis  Emboss'd  upon  it.  The  Cup  ii  340 
Map     {See  also  Walter  Map)     That  M,  and  these  new  railers 

at  the  Church  Becket  i  i  306 

M  scoffs  at  Rome.     I  all  but  hold  with  M.  „    n  ii  384 

M,  tho'  you  make  your  butt  too  big,  you  overshoot  it.  „  m  iii  121 

False  figure,  M  would  say.  „  m  iii  346 

Mar     as  one  That  m's  a  cause  with  over-violence.  „  iv  ii  327 

Marah    this  bitter  world  again — These  wells  of  M.  „      v  ii  82 

Marble  (adj.)     have  you  not  mark'd  Her  eyes  were  ever  on 

the  m  floor  ?  The  Cup  n  19 

Marble  (s)     Vein'd  m — not  a  furrow  yet —  Becket  n  i  197 

wine  Ran  down  the  m  and  lookt  like  blood.  The  Cup  ii  204 

Iron  will  fuse,  and  m  melt ;  Prom,  of  May  n  505 

This  is  mere  m.     Old  hag,  how  should  thy  one  tooth     Foresters  ii  i  275 

March    may  not  those,  who  m  Before  their  age,  Prom,  of  May  ii  632 

Marchpane    You  gentles  that  live  upo'  manchet-bread 

and  m.  Foresters  ii  i  282 

Margery    I  hear  M :  I'll  go  play  with  her.  Becket  iii  i  274 

M  ?  no,  that's  a  finer  thing  there.    How  it  glitters  !  „  iv  i  1 

I  sent  this  M,  and  .she  comes  not  back ;  „  iv  ii  3 

You  said  you  couldn't  trust  M,  „       iv  ii  16 

Maria     Ave  M,  gratia  plena,  Benedicta  tu  in  mulieribus.  Queen  Mary  ni  ii  1 

Marian  (daughter  of  Sir  Richard  Lea)    {See  also  Maid  Marian) 

These  roses  for  my  Lady  M ;  Foresters  i  i  2 

Sir  Richard  and  my  Lady  M  fare  wellnigh  as  sparely  as 

their  people.  „       i  i  30 

Lady  M  holds  her  nose  when  she  steps  across  it.  „      i  i  83 

M !     Marian.     Father !  „     i  i  179 

Lady  M,  your  woman  so  flustered  me  that  I  forgot  „     i  i  295 

My  Lady  M  you  can  make  it  so  If  you  will  deign  „    i  ii  130 

Leaving  your  fair  M  alone  here.  „    i  ii  154 

I  promise  thee  to  make  this  M  thine.  „    i  ii  183 

Farewell,  Sir  Richard ;  farewell,  sweet  M.  „   i  ii  285 

thou  art  the  very  woman  who  waits  On  my  dear  M.  „    ii  i  103 

She  struck  him,  my  brave  M,  struck  the  Prince,  „    ii  i  134 

Sheriff  Would  pay  this  cursed  mortgage  to  his  brother  If 

M  would  marry  him ;  „    ii  i  146 

— if  so  the  land  may  come  To  M,  „    n  i  149 

Thou  wilt  not  see  My  M  more.  „    ii  i  456 

Give  me  some  news  of  my  sweet  M.       Where  is  she? 

Marian.    Thy  sweet  M?    I  believe  She  came  with  me       „    ii  i  481 
O  thou  unworthy  brother  of  my  dear  M  \  „    n  i  539 

O  my  dear  M,  Is  it  thou,  is  it  thou  ?  „   n  i  597 

O  hokl  thy  hand  !  this  is  our  M.  „    n  ii  37 

You  shall  wed  your  M.     She  is  true,  and  you  are  true,  „  ii  ii  193 

honouring  all  womankind,  and  more  especially  my  lady  M,     „      iii  57 
thou  feel*st  with  me  The  ghost  returns  to  M,  „     in  115 

M,  thou  and  thy  woman,  Why,  where  is  Kate  ?  „    iii  257 

Honour  to  thee,  brave  M,  and  thy  Kate.  „    in  300 

And  they  shall  pledge  thee,  M,  „    ni  316 

M !     Marian.     Speak  not.  „     iv  609 

Sweet  M,  by  the  letter  of  the  law  It  seems  „     iv  638 

would  clutch  Our  pretty  M  for  his  paramour,  „     xv  767 

On  those  two  here,  Robin  and  M.  „     iv  929 

Ki«8  him,  Sir  Richard — kiss  him,  my  sweet  M.  „   iv  1004 


Marian  (daughter  of  Sir  Richard  Lea)  (continued)    Embrace 

me,  M,  and  thou,  good  Kate,  Foresters  iv  1031 

these  old  oaks  will  murmur  thee  M  along  with  Robin.  „  iv  1095 
Maries  in  his  scared  prayers  Heaven  and  earth's  M ;  Queen  Mary  n  ii  88 
Mark  (an  object)    (See  also  Sea-marks)    Wide  of  the 

m  ev'n  for  a  madman's  dream. 
Mark  (coin)     the  King  demands  three  himdred  m's, 

the  King  demands  seven  hundred  m's, 

the  King  demands  five  hundred  vi's, 

Some  thirty — forty  thousand  silver  m's. 

What !  forty  thousand  m's  ! 

Forty  thousand  m's  !  forty  thousand  devils — 

ransomed  for  two  thousand  m's  in  gold. 

Those  two  thousand  m's  lent  me  by  the  Abbot 

I  ran  into  my  debt  to  the  Abbot,  Two  thousand  m's  in  gold. 

These  two  have  forty  gold  m's  between  them,  Robin. 

Leave  it  with  him  and  add  a  gold  m  thereto. 

Take  his  penny  and  leave  him  his  gold  m. 

i  have  one  m  in  gold  which  a  pious  son  of  the  Church 

Well,  as  he  said,  one  m  in  gold. 

One  m  in  gold. 

they  have  each  ten  m's  in  gold. 

take  the  twenty-seven  m's  to  the  captain's  treasury. 

How  much  is  it,  Robin,  for  a  knight  ?     Eobin.     A  m. 

I  had  one  w.     Robin.     What  more. 

Where  he  would  pay  us  down  his  thousand  m's. 

Lest  he  should  fail  to  pay  these  thousand  m's 

What  more  ?  one  thousand  m's.  Or  else  the  land. 

Here  be  one  thousand  m's  Out  of  our  treasury 

Ay,  ay,  but  there  is  use,  four  hundred  m's.     Robin. 
There  then,  four  hundred  m's. 

my  tongue  tript — five  hundred  m's  for  use. 

Would  buy  me  for  a  thousand  m's  in  gold — 

Much  lighter  than  a  thousand  m's  in  gold  ; 

Is  weightier  than  a  thousand  m's  in  gold. 

Thou  art  worth  thy  weight  in  all  those  m's  of  gold, 
Mark  (impression)     Lord  hath  set  his  m  upon  him  that  no 
man  should  murder  him. 

but  he  left  the  m  of  'is  foot  i'  the  flower-bed ; 

I  measured  his  foot  wi'  the  m  i'  the  bed,  but  it 
wouldn't  fit — seeams  to  me  the  m  wur  maade 
by  a  Lunnun  boot. 
Mark  (verb)     I'll  have  one  m  it  And  bring  it  me. 

no  man  need  ;  but  did  you  »«  our  Queen  ? 

I  was  too  sorry  for  the  woman  To  m  tho  dress. 

said  the  Miserere  Mei — But  all  in  English,  m  you  ; 

Nor  m  the  sea-bird  rouse  himself  and  hover 

hereafter  Shall  m  out  Vice  from  Virtue 
Mark'd    Had  m  her  for  my  brother  Edward's  bride  ; 

have  m  the  haughtiness  of  their  nobles  ; 

And  m  me  ev'n  as  Cain, 

I  stood  near — M  him — 

Hast  thou  not  m — come  closer  to  mine  ear — 

if  your  Grace  hath  m  it,  so  have  I.     Philip.    Hast 
thou  not  likewise  m  Elizabeth, 

That  if  your  Grace  hath  m  her,  so  have  I. 


V  iii  81 

Becket  i  iii  627 

„      I  iii  635 

„      I  iii  642 

„      I  iii  658 

„      1  iii  704 

I  iv  90 

Foresters  i  i  65 

„       I  i  264 

ni464 

ni20a 

in211 

m218 

m28a 

m285 

in287 

ra292 

ra295 

IV153 

IV  165 

IV  442 

rv  455 

IV  474 

IV  492 

IV  496 
IV  499 
IV  652 
IV  657 
IV660 
IV  1024 


Becket  i  iv  192 
Prom,  of  May  i  408 

I  414 

Queen  Mary  I  v  372 

II  ii  320 

III  i  59 

m  i  392 

Harold  n  ii  334 

Prom,  of  May  i  540 

Queen  Man/  I  v  289 

'  n  i  168 

„  III  ii  55 

IV  iii  618 

V  i  225 

vi231 
vi239 


m  the  sons  of  those  Who  made  this  Britain  England,    Harold  iv  iii  152 

M  how  the  war-axe  swang,  „       iv  iii  156 

M  how  the  spear-head  sprang,  „       iv  iii  158 

This  chart  here  vi '  Her  Bower,'  Becket,  Pro.  160 

I  m  a  group  of  lazars  in  the  marketplace —  „         i  iv  80 

m  Her  eyes  were  ever  on  the  marble  floor  ?  The  Cup  ii  18 

Ay,  ay,  the  line  o'  life  is  m  enow  ;  Foresters  ii  i  352 

They  are  all  m  men.  „       in  290 
What  deer  when  I  have  m  him  ever  yet  Escaped 

mine  arrow  ?  „         iv  63 

m  if  those  two  knaves  from  York  be  coming  ?  „       iv  112 

Market    And  your  worship's  name  heard  into 

Maidstone  m.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  63 

men  are  at  their  m's,  in  their  fields,  Harold  n  ii  436 

have  won  Their  value  again — beyond  all  m's —  The  Falcon  905 

I  have  heard  'em  in  the  m  at  Mansfield.  Foresters  in  407 

Blarketplace     I  marked  a  group  of  lazars  in  the  m —  Becket  i  iv  81 

Marriage  (adj.)     While  this  same  m  question  was  being 

argued,  Queen  Mary  n  ii  37 


Marriage 


1003 


Martyr 


Karriage  (adj.)  {continued)    lore  away  My  m  ring,  and  rent 

my  bridal  veil ;  Harold  i  ii  80 

/  am  his  wife  !  and  she — For  look,  our  m  ring  !  „      v  ii  108 
herself  should  see  That  kings  are  faithful  to  their  m 

vow.  Becket  i  ii  78 
the  m  cup  Wherefrom  we  make  libation  to  the 

Goddess  The  Cup  ii  198 

Go  on  with  the  m  rites,  (repeat)  „  ii  399,  421 
Marriage  (s)    (See  also  After-marriage,  First-marriage) 

Have  sworn  this  Spanish  m  shall  not  be.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  115 

side  with  you  and  him  Against  her  m;  „           i  iv  160 

Because  they  think  me  favourer  of  this  m.  „            i  v  157 

Feigning  to  treat  with  him  about  her  m —  „             n  ii  34 

this  m  is  the  least  Of  all  their  quarrel.  „          n  ii  154 

As  to  this  m,  ye  shall  understand  „           n  ii  202 

This  m  had  the  assent  of  those  to  whom  „          n  ii  206 

This  m  should  bring  loss  or  danger  to  you,  „           ii  ii  227 

Moreover,  if  this  m  should  not  seem,  „          n  ii  232 

whether  It  beats  hard  at  this  m.  „            ni  i  39 

I  may  be  wrong,  sir.    This  m  will  not  hold.  „          mi  103 

with  all  of  us  Against  this  foreign  m,  „            ni  iii  7 

forfeited  her  right  to  reign  By  m  with  an  alien —  „            v  i  291 

My  sister's  m,  and  my  father's  m's,  „            v  iii  96 

That  m  was  half  sin.  Harold  i  ii  53 

a  peace-offering,  A  scape-goat  m —  „    i  ii  204 

and  our  m  and  thy  glory  Been  drunk  together  !  „     iv  iii  8 

I  fain  Had  made  my  m  not  a  lie  ;  „     v  i  320 

for  m,  rose  or  no  rose,  has  killed  the  golden  violet.  Becket,  Pro.  350 

it  is  the  cup  we  use  in  our  m's.  The  Cup  i  i  44 

sends  you  this  cup — -the  cup  we  use  in  our  m's —  „        i  ii  73 

Throne  him — and  then  the  m — ay  and  tell  him  „        n  156 

I  have  no  fears  at  this  my  second  m.  „        n  209 

Entreats  he  may  be  present  at  our  m.  „        n  249 

— make  me  happy  in  my  7n  !  „        ii  275 

To  make  my  m  prosper  to  my  wish  !  „        n  308 

In  honour  of  his  gift  and  of  our  m,  „        n  351 

Bring  me  The  costly  wines  we  use  in  m's.  „        n  365 

Drink  and  drink  deep — our  m  will  be  fruitful.  „        n  380 
they  are  made  by  the  blessed  saints — these  m's.    Lady 

Giovanna.     M's  ?     I  shall  never  marry  again  !  The  Falcon  203 
She  will  urge  m  on  me.     I  hate  tears.    M  is  but 

an  old  tradition.  Prom,  of  May  i  489 

M  !     That  fine,  fat,  hook-nosed  imcle  of  mine,  „           i  508 
oust  me  from  his  wiU,  if  I  Made  such  a  m.     And  m 

in  itself —  „            1 515 

traditions,  customs,  m  One  of  the  feeblest !  „           1 520 

I  have  no  thought  of  m,  my  friend.  „            ii  65 

which  is  my  dream  of  a  true  m.  „         m  179 

I  had  once  a  vision  of  a  pure  and  perfect  m,  „         m  189 

Has  he  offered  you  to,  this  gentleman  ?  „         m  290 

are  you  quite  sure  that  after  m  „         m  293 

he  gave  me  no  address,  and  there  was  no  word  of  m  ;  „         m  333 

If  m  ever  brought  a  woman  happiness  „         m  639 
an'  wants  To  hev  a  word  wi'  ye  about  the  m.     Harold. 

The    what?     Milly.     The    m.     Harold.     The    to? 

Milly.    Yeas,  the  m.    Granny  says  m's  be  maade 

i'  'eaven.  „         m  704 

Robin,  I  wiU  not  kiss  thee,  For  that  belongs  to  m ;  Foresters  rn  138 

Join  them  and  they  are  a  true  m  ;  „       ni  421 

Af  if  of  the  soul,  not  of  the  body.  „        1^720 

Marriage-banquet    Answer  them  thou  !     Is  this  our  m-h  ?  Harold  iv  iii  5 

Marriage-garland    the  m-g  withers  ever  with  the  putting 

on,  Becket,  Pro.  359 

Marriage-mom    For  so  methought  it  was  our  to-to,  Harold  i  ii  76 
Married     to  The  mother  of  Elizabeth—                                Queen  Mary  i  v  31 

Mary  of  Scotland,  to  to  your  Dauphin,  „          i  v  295 

It  was  a  sin  to  love  her  to,  >,         ni  i  339 

Before  my  father  to  my  good  mother, —  „        ni  v  245 

The  Queen  of  Scots  is  to  to  the  Dauphin,  „           v  v  52 

I  TO  her  for  Morcar — a  sin  against  The  truth  of  love.  Harold  v  i  169 

only  you  know  the  King's  to,  for  King  Louis 

Rosamund.     M  !  Becket  iii  i  167 

Do  you  believe  that  you  are  to  to  him  ?  (repeat)  „  iv  ii  46, 54 

Will  you  not  say  you  are  not  to  to  him  ?  „     iv  ii  109 

m  Since — m  Sinnatus,  the  Tetrarch  here —  The  Cup  i  i  15 


Married  (continued)    I  envied  Sinnatus  when  he  to  her.  The  Cup  i  i  130" 
cloudless  heaven  which  we  have  found  together  In  our 

three  to  years  !  „      i  ii  417 

In  symbol  of  their  to  unity,  „         ii  363 

Why  should  I  ?     I  am  not  to  be  ?».  „        ii  370 
That  was  the  very  year  before  you  w.     Lady  Giovanna. 

When  I  was  to  you  were  at  the  wars.  The  Falcon  374 
to  go  on  together  again,  till  one  of  us  be  m.  Prom,  of  May  i  776' 
And  your  sweetheart — when  are  you  and  he  to  be 

TO  ?  „         ni  111 

I  am  sure  that  when  we  are  m  he  will  be  willing  „         m  260' 

said  that  whenever  I  to  he  would  give  me  away,  Foresters  I  i  288 

Marrow     And  drains  the  heart  and  to  from  a  man.  „      n  i  672 
Marry    coimcil  and  all  her  people  wish  her  to  m.             Queen  Mary  i  i  113 

some  say.  That  you  shall  m  him,  „         I  iv  212 

Would  I  TO  Prince  Philip,  if  all  England  hate  him  ?  „          i  v  138' 

Madam,  take  it  bluntly  ;  m  Philip,  „          i  v  205 

That  you  may  to  Philip,  Prince  of  Spain —  „          i  v  251 

if  we  TO,  we  shall  still  maintain  All  former  treaties  „          i  v  265 

If  this  man  to  our  Queen,  „          ii  i  170' 

never  Consent  thereto,  nor  w  while  I  live  ;  „         n  ii  231 

To  sing,  love,  to,  chum,  brew,  bake,  and  die,  „       in  v  111 

I  think  I  will  not  to  anyone,  „        m  v  239 

To  m  and  have  no  husband  Makes  the  wife  fool.  Harold  n  ii  309' 

'  M,  the  Saints  must  go  along  with  us,  „       n  ii  365 
The  King  hath  cursed  him,  if  he  to  me  ;  The  Pope 

hath  cursed  him,  to  me  or  no  !  „      in  ii  190 

Wilt  thou  go  with  him  ?  he  will  to  thee.  Becket  iv  ii  162 

arms  of  her  first  love,  Fitzurse,  Who  swore  to  to  her.  „      iv  ii  336- 
Hath  she  made  up  her  mind  to  to  him  ?     Priestess. 

To  TO  him  who  stabb'd  her  Sinnatus.  The  Cup  n  22 

You  will  not  TO  Synorix  ?  „         n  27 

I  am  the  bride  of  Death,  and  only  M  the  dead.  „         ii  30' 

You  mean  to  to  him  ?     Camma.     I  mean  to  to  him —  „         n  60- 

He  wills  you  then  this  day  to  to  him,  „        n  66 

I  am  sure  you  will  not  to  him.  „       n  105- 

but  he  knew  I  meant  to  m  him.  The  Falcon  51 

Marriages  ?    I  shall  never  to  again  !  „        205 

To  TO  him  ? — I  can  never  to  him.  „        248- 

but  be  sure  That  I  shall  never  to  again,  „         742 

he  would  TO  me  to  the  richest  man  In  Florence  ;  „         747 
Philip,  Philip,  if  you  do  not  m  me.                              Prom,  of  May  i  681 

grant  you  what  they  call  a  license  To  m.  „            i  696- 

Thy  feyther  eddicated  his  darters  to  m  gentlefoalk,  „          n  116- 

Farmer  Dobson,  were  I  to  m  him,  has  promised  „         m  169 
and  prattled  to  each  other  that  we  would  to  fine 

gentlemen,  „         ni  277 

I  eddicated  boath  on  'em  to  to  gentlemen,  „         tn  455 
asking  his  consent — you  wish'd  me — That  we 

should  TO :  „         III  495 

thou  shouldst  TO  one  who  will  pay  the  mortgage.  Foresters  i  i  280 

mortgage  to  his  brother  If  Marian  would  to  him  ;  „      ii  i  146 

and  who  marries  her  Marries  the  land.  „      n  i  152 

That  such  a  brother — she  m  the  Sheriff !  „      n  i  550 
Thou  shalt  not  to  The  Sheriff,  but  abide  with  me  who 

love  thee.  „      ii  i  601 

She  will  not  to  till  her  father  yield.  „       n  ii  82 

— and  she  will  not  to  till  Richard  come,  „       n  ii  84 

Father,  I  cannot  to  till  Richard  comes.  „        rv  648^ 

and  she  will  not  to  tiU  Richard  come.  „        iv  773 
Thou  wouldst  TO  This  Sheriff  when  King  Richard  came          „        iv  861 

If  you  would  m  me  with  a  traitor  sheriff,  „        iv  870 
Marrying    (See  also  Anti-marrying)    your  Scottish 

namesake  to  The  Dauphin,  Queen  Mary  v  i  134 

from  the  sons  of  Alfgar  By  such  a  to  ?  Harold  i  ii  182 

Art  thou— still  bent— on  m  ?  The  Cup  n  324 

Who  thought  to  buy  your  m  me  with  gold.  Foresters  rv  718 

if  the  King  forbid  thy  to  With  Robin,  „        iv  875 

Marsh    dreadful  lights  crept  up  from  out  the  to—  Harold  ni  i  380 
Martjrr  (s)     Old  Rome,  that  first  made  m's  in  the 

Church,  Queen  Mary  ni  iv  126 

'  M's  blood — seed  of  the  Church.'  „             iv  i  146 

so  past  martyr-like — M  I  may  not  call  him —  „           iv  iii  625 

I  am  TO  in  myself  already. — Herbert !  Becket  i  i  362 

Who  wiU  be  to  when  he  might  escape.  „    V  ii  279^ 


Martyr 


1004 


Master 


"Martyr  (verb)    but  a  voice  Among  you  :  murder,  m  me  if  ye 

will —  Harold  v  i  78 

Jtfartsnrdom    seal  his  faith  In  sight  of  all  with  flam- 
ing m.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  29 

0  brother  ! — I  may  come  to  »i.  Becket  i  i  361 
Strike,  and  I  die  the  death  of  w  ;  „  i  iii  169 
He  loses  half  the  meed  of  m  Who  will  be  martyr  „  v  ii  278 
The  ghostly  warning  of  my  m  ;  „  v  ii  292 
my  dream  foretold  my  m  In  mine  own  church.  „  v  ii  632 
We  must  not  force  the  crown  of  m.  „    v  iii  28 

JIartyr'd    when  my  voice  Is  m  mute,  and  this  man 

disappears,  „  ni  iii  350 
JHartyr-like    so  past  m-l — Martyr  I  may  not  call 

him —  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  623 

Harvel  (s)     A  m,  how  He  from  the  liquid  sands  Harold  ii  ii  55 

The  full-train'd  m  of  all  falconry.  The  Falcon  25 
Marvel  (verb)    and  you — I  m  at  you — ^Ye  know  what  is 

between  us.  Becket  v  ii  499 
My  lord,  I  m  why  you  never  lean  On  any  man's  advising      „     v  ii  550 

1  w  is  it  sack  or  Malvoisie  ?  Foresters  in  331 
Marvell'd  m  at  Our  unfamiliar  beauties  of  the  west ;  Becket  iv  ii  301 
Hary  (Queen  of  England)    (See  also  Maries,  Mary  of 

England)     Long  live  Queen  M,  (repeat)  Queen  Mary  i  i  8,  65 

It's  Harry  !     Third  Citizen.     It's  Queen  M.     Old 

Nokes'  The  blessed  M's  a-passing !  „  i  i  35 
not  to  yield  His  Church  of  England  to  the  Papal 

wolf  And  M;  „  i  ii  37 
True,  M  was  bom,  But  France  would  not  accept 

her  „              I  ii  65 

be  no  peace  for  M  till  Elizabeth  lose  her  head.'  „               i  iii  5 

let  me  call  her  our  second  Virgin  M,  „             i  iii  58 

Virgin  M  !  we'll  have  no  virgins  here —  „             r  iii  60 

,  If  M  will  not  hear  us — well — conjecture —  „           i  iv  117 

No  new  news  that  Pliilip  comes  to  wed  M,  „              ii  i  16 

■we  will  teach  Queen  M  how  to  reign.  „            ir  i  147 

Pliilip  shall  not  wed  M ;  „  ii  i  164 
Long  Uve  Queen  M  !     Down  with  Wyatt !     The 

Queen  !  „           n  ii  252 

And  what  was  M's  dress  ?  „  in  i  56 
Philip  and  M,  PhiUp  and  M  !     Long  live  the  King 

and  Queen,  Philip  and  M  !  „          m  i  206 

Long  live  Queen  M  !  „  m  i  294 
There  be  both  King  and  Queen,  Phihp  and  M. 

Shout !  „  in  i  297 
The  Queen  comes  first,  M  and  PhiUp.     Gardiner. 

Shout,  then,  M  and  Philip  !     Man.    M  and 

Philip  !  „  III  i  299 
shouted  for  thy  plea.sure,  shout  for  mine  !     Philip 

and  M !  „          m  i  306 

Philip  and  M !     Gadiner.     I  distrust  thee.  „           m  i  309 

M  rubb'd  out  pale —  „          in  i  422 

'  Thou  shalt  !  '     And  sign'd  it— M  !  „           in  i  428 

Left  M  a  wife-widow  here  alone,  „  in  i  462 
How  oft  hath  Peter  knock'd  at  M's  gate  !     And  M 

would  have  risen  and  let  him  in,  But,  M,  there 

were  those  within  the  house  „           in  ii  63 

M  would  have  it ;  and  this  Gardiner  follows  ;  „        in  iii  230 

But  shouted  in  Queen  M.  „          m  iv  46 

and  think  of  this  in  your  coming.     '  M  the  Queen  !  „         in  v  225 

Queen  M  gwoes  on  a-bumin'  and  a-burnin',  „         iv  iii  522 

M  hath  acknowledged  you  her  heir.  „            v  iii  30 

Uary  (Virgin  Mary)    {See  also  Maria,  Maries)    and,  Holy  M  ! 

How  Harold  used  to  beat  him  !  Harold  i  i  431 

by  St.  M  these  beggars  and  these  friars  shall  join  you.  Foresters  in  416 
Mary  of  England  (Queen  Mary)    M  o  E,  joining  hands 

with  Spain,  Queen  Mary  i  v  298 

Mary  of  Scotland  (daughter  of  James  V.)    {See  also  Scots 

[Mary,  Queen  of  ])  Mo  S, — for  I  have  not  own'd 

My  sister, —  „            i  v  284 

M  o  S,  married  to  your  Dauphin,  „  i  v  295 
Mash  (smash)     Out  o'  the  chaumber  !     I'll  m  tha  into 

nowt.  Prom,  of  May  in  735 

Mask  (s)     not  drop  the  m  before  The  masquerade  is 

over —  Queen  Mary  iii  vi  110 

Vice  and  Virtue  Are  but  two  m's  of  self ;  Prom,  of  May  i  538 


Mask  (verb)     Norman  cookery  is  so  spiced,  It  m's  all 

this. 
Mask'd    thee  however  m  I  should  have  known. 
Masque     court  is  always  May,  buds  out  in  m's, 


Harold  ii  ii  812 

Foresters  n  i  649 

Queen  Mary  m  v  12 


Masquerade    not  drop  the  mask  before  The  m  is  over —  „        in  vi  111 
Mass     setting  up  a  m  at  Canterbury  To  please  the  Queen. 

Cranmer.     It  was  a  wheedling  monk  Set  up  the  m.  „              i  ii  88 

By  the  m,  old  friend,  we'll  have  no  pope  here  „            i  iii  42 

that  swearest  by  the  m  ?  „             i  iii  46 

by  the  m  we'll  have  no  m  here.  „             i  iii  51 

And  brought  us  back  the  m.  „            i  v  184 

It  is  but  a  communion,  not  a  m  :  (repeat)  „    iv  ii  56,  111 

shall  m'es  here  be  sung  By  every  priest  in  Oxford.  „         iv  iii  100 
Who  stole  the  widow's  one  sitting  hen  o'  Sunday, 

when  she  was  at  m  ?  Becket  i  iv  122 
Massacre    that  her  flies  Must  m  each  other  ?                   Prom,  of  May  i  285 


Massacred    Hath  >»  the  Thane  that  was  his  guest. 

Mast     whose  quick  flash  splits  The  mid-sea  m. 

Master    {See  also  Mister,  HSi.)    Let  father  alone,  my  m's  ! 

rumour  that  Charles,  the  m  of  the  world, 

kind  and  gentle  m,  the  Queen's  Officers 

Quiet  a  moment,  my  m's  ; 

Shame,  shame,  my  m's  !  are  you  English-born, 

My  m's,  yonder's  fatter  game  for  you 

What  says  the  King  your  m  ?     Noailles.     Madam, 
my  m  hears  with  much  alarm, 

wherefore,  my  m.  If  but  to  prove  your  Majesty's 
goodwill, 

your  good  m,  Pray  God  he  do  not  be  the  first 

Your  m  works  against  me  in  the  dark. 

My  m,  Charles,  Bad  you  go  softly  with  your  heretics 

he  vfiii.  be  King,  King  of  England,  my  m's  ; 

ye  know,  my  m's,  that  wherever  Spain  hath  ruled 

You  are  shy  and  proud  Uke  Englishmen,  my  m's, 

The  reeking  dungfork  m  of  the  mace  ! 

And  ye,  my  m's,  of  the  lower  house. 

And  in  my  m  Henry's  time  ; 

St.  Peter  in  his  time  of  fear  Denied  his  M, 

Like  dogs  that  set  to  watch  their  m's  gate, 

Legate  Is  here  as  Pope  and  M  of  the  Church, 

Which  was  not  pleasant  for  you,  M  Cranmer. 

How  are  the  mighty  fallen,  M  Cranmer  ! 

We  are  ready  To  take  you  to  St.  Mary's,  M  Cranmer, 

Speak,  M  Cranmer,  Fulfil  your  promise  made  me, 

Be  plainer,  M  Cranmer. 

You  should  be  grateful  to  my  m,  too. 

I  am  much  beholden  to  the  King,  your  m. 

My  most  dear  M,  What  matters  ? 

Better  to  be  a  liar's  dog,  and  hold  My  m  honest, 

and  that  Archdeacon  Hildebrand  His  m, 

Are  ye  my  m's,  or  my  lord  the  King  ? 

As  thou  hast  honour  for  the  Pope  our  m. 

The  m  of  his  m,  the  King's  king. — ■ 

our  lords  and  m's  in  Christ  Jesus. 

And  what  said  the  black  sheep,  my  m's  ? 

for  I  be  his  lord  and  m  i'  Christ, 

hears  a  door  open  in  the  house  and  thinks  '  the  m.' 

I  will  be  Sole  m  of  my  house. 

0  women.  Ye  will  have  Roman  m's. 
m  been  a-glorifying  and  a-velveting  and  a-silldng 

himself, 
will  you  take  the  word  out  of  your  m's  own  mouth  ? 
Perhaps,  M  Dobson.     I  can't  tell,  for  I  have  never 

seen  him. 
M  Dobson,  you  are  a  comely  man  to  look  at. 
and  the  m  'ud  be  straange  an'  pleased  if  you'd  step 

in  fust, 

1  go.     M  Dobson,  did  you  hear  what  I  said  ? 
Niver  man  'ed  better  friends,  and  I  will  saay  niver 

m  'ed  better  men  : 
and,  thaw  I  says  it  mysen,  niver  men  'ed  a  better  m- 
An'  the  saame  to  you,  M. 
An'  the  saame  to  you,  M  Steer,  Ukewise. 
fur  they  says  the  m  goas  clean  of?  his  'ead  when  he 

'eiirs  the  naame  on  'im  ; 


Harold  u  ii  297 
The  Cup  n  293 
Queen  Mary  i  i  38 
I  i  105 
I  ii  107 
I  iii  16 
I  iii  70 
I  iii  79 

I  V  248 

I  V  259 
I  V  268 
I  V  277 

I  V  391 
n  i  173 

II  i  205 
n  ii  258 
u  ii  275 

„     in  iii  102 

„    ni  iii  228 

„    ni  iv  264 

„     ni  iv  309 

„    m  iv  347 

„      IV  ii  137 

IV  ii  147 

„      IV  ii  239 

„     IV  iii  111 

,.     IV  iii  235 

V  iii  28 

„      V  iii  112 

Harold  i  i  194 

„     m  i  126 

„    m  ii  146 

Becket  i  iii  135 

„     I  iii  201 

„     I  iii  462 

I  iv  87 

.,     I  iv  168 

.,     I  iv  241 

.,    m  iii  99 

„      V  i  151 

The  Cup  n  511 

The  Falcon  98 
598 

Prom,  of  May  1 114 
1 156 

1 167 
1 171 

r  323 
I  327 
I  344 
I  347 

ml31 


Master 


1005 


Meant 


{continued)    You,  M  Hedgar,  Harold,  or  what- 

iver  They  calls  ye.  Prom,  of  May  m  726 

The  lady  loved  the  m  well.  Foresters  i  i  8 

My  m,  Robin  the  Earl,  is  always  a-telling  us  „        i  i  94 

I  would  hoist  the  drawbridge,  like  thy  m.  „      i  i  319 

I  am  a  vii^in,  my  m's,  I  am  a  virgin.     Much.     And 

a  vii^,  my  m's,  three  yards  about  the  waist  „       i  ii  67 

My  m's,  welcome  gallant  Walter  Lea.  „    ly  1002 

Strike  up  a  stave,  my  m's,  all  is  well.  „    iv  1101 

Naster'd    old  affection  m  you,  You  falter'd  into  tears.  Becket  v  ii  143 

Uastiff  (adj.)     as  a  m  dog  May  love  a  puppy  cur  for  no 

more  reason  Queen  Mary  i  iv  194 

Mastiff  (s)     Our  savage  m,  That  all  but  kill'd  the 

beggar.  Prom,  of  May  i  558 

Hatch  (an  equal)     Thou  and  thy  woman  are  a  m  for  three 

friars.  Foresters  m  262 

Match  (marriage)     But  is  Don  Carlos  such  a  goodly  m  ?   Queen  Mary  v  iii  86 

That  was,  my  lord,  a  m  of  pohcy.  Harold  iv  i  199 

thy  m  shall  follow  mine.  Foresters  iv  1044 

Match  (verb)     If  such  a  one  as  you  should  m  with 

Spain,  Queen  Mary  v  iii  66 

Match'd     You  do  misname  me,  m  with  any  such,  Becket  iv  ii  128 

and  m  with  my  Harold  is  like  a  hedge  thistle  by 

a  garden  rose.  Prom,  of  May  m  175 

Mate  (s)     (See  also  C!o-mate,  Maate)     News,  m's  !  a 

miracle,  a  miracle  !  Qu^en  Mary  iii  ii  209 

Mad  for  thy  m,  passionate  nightingale  .  .  .  Harold  i  ii  1 

They  are  not  so  true.  They  change  their  m's.  „  ni  ii  105 

he  frown'd  '  No  m  for  her,  if  it  should  come  to  that ' —    Becket  iii  i  259 
I  would  thou  hadst  a  m  !  The  Falcon  17 

Mate  (verb)     Let  York  bear  his  to  m  with  Canterbury.  Becket  i  iii  512 

Not  half  her  hand — no  hand  to  m  with  her,  „       ii  i  190 

As  m  with  one  that  holds  no  love  is  pure.  Foresters  iv  711 

Mated    See  Maated 

Blater    Salva  patriam,  Sancta  M.  Harold  v  i  471 

Matilda  (or  Maud,  daughter  of  Henry  L)    So  did  M,  the 

King's  mother.  Becket  i  iii  152 

Matter  (s)     stir  not  yet  Tliis  m  of  the  Church  lands.        Queen  Mary  i  v  409 
I  scarce  have  heart  to  mingle  in  this  m,  „  ir  ii  114 

These  are  forgiven — jn's  of  the  past —  „        m  iii  190 

might  it  not  be  pohcy  in  some  m  Of  small  importance     „         ni  vi  167 
And  if  you  be  not  secret  in  this  m,  „  v  i  272 

That  were  too  small  a  to  for  a  comet  !  Harold  i  i  470 

No  m  !      Aldwyth.     How  no  to,  Harold  slain  ? —  „        v  ii  17 

No  m  !      Aldwyth.     Not  help  me,  „       v  ii  23 

my  mind  wjis  set  upon  other  m's.     Eleanor.     What 

m's  ?     State  m's  ?  love  m's  ?  Becket,  Pro.  318 

and  the  to  in  the  metre.  „      Pro.  384 

that  secret  m,  which  would  heat  the  King  against  thee.        „      Pro.  487 
And  on  a  m  wholly  spiritual.  „         i  iii  85 

You  have  had  the  better  of  us  In  secular  m's.  „         n  ii  81 

I  have  been  more  for  the  King  than  the  Church  in 

this  TO —  „      ni  iii  66 

it  was  but  the  sacrifice  of  a  kingdom  to  liis  son,  a 

smaller  to  ;  „     ni  iii  107 

This  is  no  secret,  but  a  public  to.  „        v  ii  320 

No  TO  !  see  your  cloth  be  white  as  snow  !  The  Falcon  498 

A  moment  for  some  m  of  no  moment !  Foresters  ii  i  474 

Matter  (verb)     No,  no  ;  what  m's  ?     Forlorn  I  am.         Queen  Mary  v  ii  237 
What  m's  how  I  look  ?  Harold  v  i  394 

That  doth  not  to  either.  „        v  ii  62 

What  m's  ?     Royal — I  mean  to  leave  the  royalty  Becket  ii  i  106 

That  m's  not.     Take  thou  this  cup  and  leave  it  The  Cup  i  i  66 

Savage,  is  he  ?     What  m's  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  563 

Maurice    {See  also  Maurice  Berkeley)    told  Sir  M  there 

was  one  Cognisant  of  this.  Queen  Mary  ii  iv  99 

Maurice  Berkeley     there  by  Sir  M  B  Was  taken 

prisoner.  „  ii  iv  94 

Mavis     Hawk,  buzzard,  jay,  the  to  and  the  merle.  Foresters  i  iii  115 

May     Ay,  for  an  hour  in  M.     But  court  is  always  M, 

buds  out  in  masques,  Queen  Mary  ill  v  10 

which  a  breeze  of  M  Took  ever  and  anon.  The  Cup  i  ii  406 

Richer  than  all  the  wide  world-wealth  of  M,  The  Falcon  467 

O  joy  for  the  promise  of  M,  of  M,  0  joy  for  the 

promise  of  M.  (repeat)  Prom,  of  May  i  43,  723 


May  {continued)    O  grief  for  the  promise  of  M,  of 

M,  O  grief  for  the  promise  of  M.  (repeat)      Prom,  of  May  i  59,  750 
most  beautiful  M  we  have  had  for  many  years  !  „  i  567 

Is  the  most  beautiful  morning  of  this  M.  „  i  57Q 

you  make  The  M  and  morning  still  more  beautiful, 

You,  the  most  beautiful  blossom  of  the  M.  „  i  573- 

So  lovely  in  the  promise  of  her  M,  „  m  753 

Maybe    See  Mebbe 

May-morning    and  kiss  me  This  beautiful  M-m.  Prom,  of  May  i  565- 

Mayn't    and  she  to  be  so  fur  out  theer.  „  1 181 

Mayor   All  hangs  on  her  address.  And  upon  you.  Lord  M.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  5& 

I,  the  Lord  M,  and  these  our  companies  And  guilds  „         n  ii  127 

I,  Lord  M  Of  London,  and  our  guilds  and  companies.        „         ii  ii  139' 

tho'  my  Lord  M  here.  By  his  own  rule,  „         ii  ii  345 

May-time    It  was  M-t,  And  I  was  walking  „  v  v  87 

or  a  stump-tailed  ox  in  M-t,  Foresters  ii  i  43& 

Maze     This  labyrinthine  brickwork  m  in  m, 

Mazed    See  Maazed 

Meadow    {See  also  Midder,  Mountain-meadow)    there 
stole  into  the  city  a  breath  Full  of  the  m's. 
With  other  beauties  on  a  mountain  m, 
I  have  lost  a  cow  from  my  m. 
Meadowsweet    Forget-me-not,  to,  wiUow-herb. 
Meal  (ground  com)    so  dusted  his  back  with  the  m  in 
his  sack, 
M  enough,  meat  enough,  well  fed  ; 
Meal  (repast)    make  Thy  slender  to  out  of  those  scraps 

and  shreds 
Mean    That's  a  hard  word,  legitimate  ;  what  does  it 
m  ?    Second  Citizen.    It  m's  a  bastard.     Third 
Citizen.     Nay,  it  m's  true-born. 
I  to  the  Lady  Elizabeth, 
boast  that  after  all  She  m's  to  wed  you. 
she  m's  to  counsel  your  withdrawing  To  Ashridge, 
she  m's  to  make  A  farewell  preseht  to  your  Grace, 
they  to  to  pardon  me. 
I  TO  not  like  to  live. 
Do  you  TO  to  drive  me  mad  ? 
Gamel,  son  of  Orm,  What  thinkest  thou  this  m's  ? 

(repeat) 
TO  The  doom  of  England  and  the  wrath  of  Heaven  ? 
And  cannot  answer  sanely  .  .  .  What  it  m's  ? 
It  m's  the  fall  of  Tostig  from  his  earldom. 
It  m's  the  lifting  of  the  house  of  Alfgar. 
What  did  he  to  ? 
He  did  not  m  to  keep  his  vow.     Harold,    Not  m 

To  make  our  England  Norman. 
Morcar  !     Edwin  !     What  do  they  to  ? 
Look  you,  we  never  to  to  part  again. 
I  have  heard  him  say  He  m's  no  more  ; 
sworn  upon  his  side.  And  ever  m  to  do  it. 
What  is  it  you  to  ?     Margery.     I  to  your  goodman, 
I  TO  her  whom  you  call — fancy — 
Me&n'd  (meant)     I  m  they  be  as  blue  as  violets. 
Meaner    Then  left  him  for  the  to  !  thee  ! — 
Meanest    Ev'n  to  the  least  and  m  of  my  own. 
Meaning    might  chance — ^perchance — To  guess  their  to. 
Morcar.    Thine  own  to,  Harold,  To  make  all 
England  one, 
I  know  Thy  to.     Perish  she,  I,  all, 
And  smiles  at  my  best  m's. 
Means    stakes  high  ?     Noailles.     But  not  beyond 

your  TO.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  147 

That  by  your  gracious  to  and  intercession  „        ni  iii  121 

These  are  the  m  God  works  with,  „  m  vi  68 

My  liberality  perforce  is  dead  Thro'  lack  of  to  of  giving.   The  Falcon  297 


Becket,  Pro.  166. 


Becket  i  i  263 

The  Falcon  352 

Foresters  ii  i  326- 

Prom,  of  May  n  299 

Becket  i  iv  174 
The  Falcon  165- 

146. 


Queen  Mary  i  i  12 

I  i  74 

I  iv  89- 

I  iv  224 

I  iv  243 

„        IV  ii  50 

v  i  245 

v  ii  200 

Harold  i  i  21,  464 

ii45 

ii8» 

ii468 

ii472 

u  ii  223 

III  i  248 

IV  i  134 
vii80 

Becket  i  iii  193 
„     II  ii  466 
„     III  i  157 
„     m  i  201 
Prom,  of  May  1 103 
Harold  IV  ii  71 
Becket  ii  ii  181 


Harold  rv  i  139 
Becket  in  iii  19 
Foresters  rv  727 


How  hadst  thou  then  the  to  to  buy  a  cow  ? 
Meant    {See  also  Mean'd)    I  to  True  matters  of  the 

heart. 
Elizabeth — To  Philibert  of  Savoy,  as  you  know, 

We  TO  to  wed  her  ; 
Thou  knowest  never  woman  to  so  well. 
Said  '  ay  '  when  I  to  '  no,'  Ued  like  a  lad 
He  m  no  harm  nor  damage  to  the  Church. 
I  had  m  to  make  him  all  but  king. 


Foresters  ii  i  303 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  99 

V  i  248 

V  ii  342 

Harold  ii  ii  656 

Becket  i  iii  216 

„     I  iii  464 


Meant 

Meant  {cofUinued)    I  never  m  you  harm  in  any  way. 

Not  if  you  m  it,  I  am  sure. 

I  m  thee  to  have  foUow'd— better  thus. 

but  he  knew  I  m  to  marry  him. 

Why  ?  because  I  m  it ! —  ,.„  »i,     -lu- 

Measure  (s)    (5ee  aZso  Over-measure)    stiUAU  within 

They  have  brought  it  in  large  m  on  themselves. 

And  he  is  with  you  in  a  m  still. 

but  belike  Thou  hast  not  learnt  his  m. 

I  thinks  I'd  Uke  to  taake  the  m  o'  your  foot. 

If  you  will  deign  to  tread  a  m  with  me. 
Measure  (verb)     if  you'd  like  to  m  your  own  length 
upon  the  grass.  ,  -,  ^,     u  j 

Measured    an'  I  w  his  foot  wi'  the  mark  i  the  bed, 
Meat    owld  lord  fell  to  's  m  wi'  a  will,  God  bless  un  ! 

I  have  been  a  lover  of  wines,  and  dehcate  m  s, 

King's  m  !     By  the  Lord,  ^ 

And  take  a  hunter's  vengeance  on  the  m  s 

Meal  enough,  m  enough,  well  fed  ; 

each  of  'em  as  full  of  7n  as  an  egg. 


1006 


Merriest 


Becket  iv  ii  106 

„    iviil84 

The  Cup  n  498 

The  Falcon  51 

Prom,  of  May  ni  365 

Queen  Mary  i  v  436 

„        IV  iii  363 

V  V  27 

Harold  iv  iii  118 

Prom,  of  May  i  464 

Foresters  i  ii  132 

Prom,  of  May  i  465 

,,  1 413 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  514 

Becket  i  i  77 

„   I iv  140 

The  Cup  I  ii  44 

The  Falcon  165 

Foresters  i  i  42 


Melancholy    Fine  eyes-but  m,  irresolute-  Qiteen  Mary  in  iy  337 

mSw    and  as  sleek  and  as  round-about  as  a  m  codhn.         Foresters  1 1 43 


eacn  oi  em  as  luii  oi  ■/«  <»  an  egg.  r>  x  i/„„  r  ^9^; 

Mebbe  (maybe)   the  fault,  m,  wur  as  much  mine  as  yours ;  Prom,  of  May  i  325 


and  Parson  m,  thaw  he  niver  mended  that  gap 
Meddle    I'll  not  m  wi'  'im  if  he  doant  m  wi'  mea.^ 
I  promised  one  of  the  Misses  I  wouldn't  m  wi  ye, 
She  telled  me  once  not  to  m  wi'  'im,        ,    ^ ,    ,.  ( 
Medicine     I  have  a  wholesome  m  here  Puts  that  behet 

It  has  been  much  commended  as  a  m. 
Meditate    so  to  m  Upon  my  greater  nearness 
Medway  (river)     green  field  Beside  the  brimmmg  M, 
Meek    yet  so  m,  so  modest.  So  wife-Uke  humble 

Ah^  weak  and  m  old  man. 
Meet     When  do  you  m  ?     Noailles.     To-mght. 

these  shall  m  upon  St.  Andrew's  day. 

It  was  not  m  heretic  swine  should  hve  In  Lambetn. 

We  m  at  Brussels. 

why  my  friend  Should  m  with  a  lesser  mercy 

you  scarce  could  m  his  eye  And  hold  your  own  ; 

Count-crab  will  make  his  nippers  m  in  thine  heart ; 

shall  they  7^1  In  private  ? 

fears  that  these  may  act  On  Harold  when  they  m. 
William.     Then  let  them  m  ! 

To  m  thee  in  the  North.  _ 

0  Harold  !  husband  !     Shall  we  m  again  f 

1  have  had  it  fashion'd,  see,  to  m  my  hand. 
And  no  David  To  m  him  ?  ,       u-  i^ 
The  horse  and  horseman  cannot  m  the  shield, 
Where  I  shall  m  the  Barons  and  my  King. 
—And  to  m  it  I  needs  must  leave  as  suddenly. 
And  so  farewell  until  we  m  in  England.     Becket. 

fear,  my  liege,  we  may  not  m  in  England. 
Strike  !     I  challenge  thee  to  m  me  before  God. 
bow'd  herself  to  m  the  wave  Of  humiUation, 
But  he  and  he  must  never  m  again.        • 
I  go  to  m  my  King  !     Grim.    To  m  the  King  f 
I  will  go  out  and  m  them. 
shun  To  m  her  face  to  face  at  once  ! 
When  first  he  m's  his  maiden  in  a  bower, 
walk  vnth  me  we  needs  must  m  Antonius  coming, 
I  will  go  To  TO  him,  crown'd  ! 
Why  comes  he  not  to  to  me  ? 
Still  I  am  half-afraid  to  m  her  now. 
Keep  up  your  heart  until  we  m  again. 
If  that  should  break  before  we  m  again  ? 
and  he  trusted  that  some  time  we  should  m  agam, 
If  ever  I  to  thee  there,  I  will  break  thy  sconce 
they  can  m  upon  anything  thro'  a  millstone. 
I  will  not  to  him  yet,  I'll  watch  him 
Thou  told'st  us  we  should  to  him  in  the  forest, 
I  cannot  to  his  eyes. 
Meeting  (part)     Gardiner,  coming  with  the  Queen, 

And  m  Pembroke, 
Meeting  (s)     When  theer  wur  a  to  o'  farmers  at  Little- 
chester  t'other  daiiy, 


i445 
1 173 
I  470 
n  599 

Becket  iv  ii  50 

The  Falcon  588 

Foresters  ii  i  43 

Queen  Mary  n  i  244 

III  i  362 

vvl31 

I  iii  154 

III  ii  125 

in  ii  134 

in  vi  214 

ivi70 

IV  i  104 

Harold  n  i  76 

„     n  ii  87 

„  n  ii  92 
„  V  i  290 
„  V  i  361 
„  V  i  422 
„  V  i  497 
„  V  i  591 
Becket  I  ii  84 
„  in  i  91 
[ 

„  in  iii  237 

„  IV  ii  254 

„  IV  ii  388 

„  IV  ii  425 

„  vii620 

„    V  iii  52 

The  Cuf  I  i  59 

„     I  iii  41 

„     I  iii  92 

„      n  519 

„      n  528 

Prom,  of  May  i  488 

I  754 

I  756 

in  329 

Foresters  i  ii  74 

„      n  i  280 

in  47 

IV  439 

IV  799 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  310 

Prom,  of  May  1 137 


Queen  Mary  nrv  51 

„  m  vi  40 

Prom,  of  May  n  505 

Foresters  n  i  671 

Queen  Mary  i  v  529 

Harold  V  i  326 

The  Falcon  524 

Prom,  of  May  n  405 

Foresters  iv  1070 

Queen  Mary  iii  v  241 

Becket  iv  ii  348 


Melt    Till  doomsday  TO  it. 

may  strike  fire  from  her.  Not  hope  to  to  her. 
Iron  will  fuse,  and  marble  to  ; 
Who  m's  a  waxen  image  by  the  fire, 
Memorial    wear  it  as  m  of  a  morning 
Memory    This  m  to  thee  !— and  this  to  England, 
My  TO  is  as  dead, 
drove  me  From  out  her  to. 
We  leave  but  happy  memories  to  the  forest. 
Menace    if  PhiUp  to  me,  I  think  that  I  will  play 
Menaced    whereupon  I  to  her  with  this, 
Men-at-arms    m-a-a  Guard  my  poor  dreams  for 
England. 
I  would  set  my  m-a-a  to  oppose  thee, 
and  there  be  m-a-a  to  guard  her. 
Mended    he  niver  m  that  gap  i'  the  glebe  fence  as  1 

tell'd  'im  ;  ,   ^^  „ 

Mene    M,  M,  Tekel !     Is  thy  wrath  HeU, 
Mention  (s)     hang  On  the  chance  7n  of  some  fool 

Make  thou  not  to  that  I  spake  with  thee. 
Mention  (verb)     I  never  heard  her  to  you. 
An'  we  weant  m  naw  naames, 
You,  how  dare  you  m  kisses  ? 
Mentioned    You  haven't  even  m  liim  in  your  last .-' 
you  7n,  her  name  too  suddenly  before  my  father. 
And  if  she  never  to  me,  .     ,,_  ,       ,   .,     ui„„j 

Mercenary    one  of  those  mercenaries  that  suck  tne  biooa 
of  England. 
Strike,  Sheriff !     Strike,  w  ! 
Prince  John,  the  Sheriff,  and  a  to. 
Is  coming  with  a  swarm  of  mercenaries 
f oUow'd  by  Prince  John  And  all  his  mercenaries^ ! 
Merchant    raise  us  loans  and  subsidies  Among  the  m  s  ; 
To  this  son  of  a  London  to — 
Thomas,  son  Of  Gilbert  Becket,  London  to. 
Mercians     Earl  of  the  M  !  if  the  truth  be  gaU, 
Merciful    It  were  more  to  to  bum  him  now. 
O  God,  For  thou  art  to,  refusing  none 
Your  Grace  hath  been  More  to  to  many  a  rebel  head 
Mercy    Yet  too  much  m  is  a  want  of  to. 
He  by  His  to  absolve  you  ! 
to  cast  myself  Upon  the  good  Queen  s  w  ; 
M,  that  herb-of-grace,  Flowers  now  but  seldom. 
To  reach  the  hand  of  m  to  my  friend, 
why  my  friend  Should  meet  with  lesser  m  than  myself  ( 
God  grant  you  ampler  to  at  your  call 
Will  they  have  to  on  me  ?      Villa  Garcia.     Have 

you  good  hopes  of  to  !  So,  farewell. 
Three  persons  and  one  God,  have  to  on  me, 
For  thy  great  to  have  to  ! 
Thy  TO  must  be  greater  than  all  sin. 
Why  then  to  heaven,  and  God  ha'  m  on  him. 
Have  you  found  m  there.  Grant  it  me  here  : 
Ay,  Madam,  but  o'  God's  to — 
aUegiance  in  thy  Lord's  And  crave  his  to,  . 

Have  TO  on  us  !  (repeat)  ,  Ii<^rold  v  i  501 

The  child  ...  No  ...  to  !     No  ! 
M,  TO,  As  you  would  hope  for  m. 
When  you  have  charm'd  our  general  mto  to, 
a  Sister  of  M,  come  from  the  death-bed  of  a 
pauper,  . 

Mere  (adj.)     M  compliments  and  wishes. 
The  TO  wild-beast ! 

This  is  TO  marble.  . 

A  shadow,  a  poetical  fiction— did  ye  not  call  me  king  ^  ^^ 

in  your  song  ?— a  to  figure.  TiLnl<1  m  i  49 

Mere  (s)     The  brows  unwrinkled  as  a  summer  to.—  HaroLd  m  i  4y 

A  summer  to  with  sudden  wreckful  gusts  »      Yh  150 

Merit  (s)     Forgive  me.  Father,  for  no  m  of  mine.  Queen  Mary  iv  m  IbZ 

Merit  (verb)    and  that  to's  death-False  oath  on  holy  ^^^^^^  ^^  .^  ^^^ 

Merle  "nfwk,  buzzard,  jay,  the  mavis  and  the  to  %^S.\^iim 

Merriest    beyond  The  to  murmurs  of  their  banquet  clank      EaroU  11  u  408 


Queen  Mary  1  y  152 

Foresters  i  i  323 

„      I  ii  158 

Prom,  of  May  1  446 

Harold  v  i  35 

Queen  Mary  in  v  43 

Harold  n  ii  483 

Prom,  of  May  n  395 

in  129 

Foresters  n  i  127 

Prom,  of  May  i  778 

,,  n23 

n400 

Foresters  n  i  174 

n  i  416 

n  i  446 

in  452 

IV  589 

Queen  Mary  v  i  180 

Becket,  Pro.  434 

„       II  ii  231 

Harold  iv  i  14 

Queen  Mary  iv  i  153 

IV  iii  131 

v  ii  5 

IV  505 

III  iii  208 

ni  V  168 

III  vi  9 

IV  165 
IV  170 

IV  i  189 

IV  ii  84 
IV  iii  121 
IV  iii  137 
IV  iii  151 
IV  iii  632 

V  V  144 
V  V  166 

Harold  v  i  12 
_,  611,  643,  645 
Becket  iv  ii  186 
„    V  iii  175 
The  Cup  1  ii  312 

Prom,  of  May  in  376 
Queen  Mary  v  ii  596 
Prom,  of  May  m  736 
Foresters  11  i  275 


Merriment 


1007 


Militant 


Queen  Mary  m  v  13 

Becket  m  iii  138 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  358 

ra  i  203 

V  ii  318 

V  V  240 

V  V  246 
Harold  i  ii  98 

HaroU  ii  ii  768,  771 

Becket  i  iv  152 

Foresters  i  i  344 

„       I  iii  11 

I  iii  14 


I  111  98 
in  42 


Merriment     Breaks  into  feather'd  Hi's, 

in  the  end  we  flourished  out  into  a  m ; 

Merry     Be  m  !  yet,  Sir  Ralph,  you  look  but  sad. 
But  then  he  looks  so  m. 
Heretic  and  rebel  Point  at  me  and  make  m. 
It  was  never  m  world  In  England,  since  the  Bible 

came  among  us. 
It  never  will  be  m  world  in  England, 
Thou  hast  misread  this  m  dream  of  thine, 
To-night  we  will  be  m.  (repeat) 
Feed,  feast,  and  be  m. 
let  us  be  m  to-night  at  the  banquet. 
I  am  only  m  for  an  hour  or  two  Upon  a  birthday  : 
why  should  we  make  us  w  Because  a  year  of  it  is  gone  ? 
There  be  good  fellows  there  in  m  Sherwood  That  hold 

by  Richard, 
'  Love,  love,  love,  love  ' — what  m  madness — listen  ! 
All  the  birds  in  m  Sherwood  sing  and  sing  him  home 
again.  „     iv  1109 

Sesh     Tho'  scarce  at  ease  ;  for,  save  our  m'es  break,  Harold,  n  ii  140 

The  simple  lobster-basket,  and  the  to —  Becket  n  ii  298 

I  do  but  bring  the  m,  know  no  more.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  228 

I  wiU  give  your  m.  „  iii  vi  41 

But  shall  I  take  some  m  from  your  Grace  ?  „  v  ii  597 

we  bring  a  m  from  the  King  Beyond  the  water  ;  Becket  v  ii  301 

Had  you  then  No  m  with  the  cup  ?  The  Cup  i  ii  68 

Well,  Madam,  I  will  give  your  m  to  him.  The  Falcon  217 

that  I  forgot  my  m  from  the  Earl.  Foresters  i  i  297 

and  there  are  m's  That  go  between  us.         Queen  Mary  i  iii  137 
I  chanced  upon  the  to  Who  brings  that  letter  „  i  v  585 

Not  thee,  my  son  :  some  other  to.  Harold  i  i  244 

— thou  art  but  a  m  of  William.  „         v  i  29 

I  am  the  m  of  God,  His  Norman  Daniel !  „        y  i  33 

The  TO  from  Synoris  who  waits  Before  the  Temple  ?  The  Cup  ii  37 

too  rich  a  prize  To  trust  with  any  m.  The  Falcon  726 

It  is  a  royal  to,  my  lord  :  Foresters  i  iii  52 

A  worthy  m  !  how  should  he  help  it  ?  „       i  iii  85 

she  TO  the  Queen  at  Wanstead  Queen  Mary  i  i  77 

hands  Came  from  the  crowd  and  m  his  o\vn  ;  „     iv  iii  583 

Thou  hast  rounded  since  we  to.  Harold  i  i  95 

he  and  Wulfnoth  never  Have  to,  except  in  public  ;  „     n  ii  86 

Look  rather  thou  all-royal  as  when  first  I  to  thee.  Becket  n  i  47 

I  m  a  robber  once,  I  told  him  I  was  bound  „      v  ii  98 

'Tis  long  since  we  have  to  !  The  Falcon  274 

never  since  have  m  Her  equal  for  pure  innocence    Prom,  of  May  n  371 


Met 


I  TO  her  first  at  a  farm  in  Cumberland — Her  uncle's 

he  teUs  me  that  he  to  you  once  in  the  old  times, 

I  do  believe  I  lost  my  heart  to  him  the  very  first 
time  we  m, 

if  m  in  a  black  lane  at  midnight : 

He  TO  a  stag  there  on  so  narrow  a  ledge — 
Metal     to  fuse  Almost  into  one  to  love  and  hate, — 
Meteor     These  to'5  came  and  went  before  our  day, 
Methinks    and  yet,  to,  I  have  seen  goodUer. 

Madam,  to  a  cold  face  and  a  haughty. 

m,  A  prince  as  naturally  may  love  his  people 

M  most  men  are  but  poor-hearted, 

M  the  good  land  heard  me, 

M  that  under  our  Queen's  regimen  We  might  go 

And  yet  to  he  falters  : 

M  that  would  you  tarry  one  day  more 

m  my  Queen  is  like  enough  To  leave  me  by  and  by. 

M  there  is  no  manhood  left  among  us. 

m  I  love  her  less  For  such  a  dotage  upon  such  a  man 

M  I  am  all  angel,  that  I  bear  it 

so  TO,  my  boy.  Thy  fears  infect  me  beyond  reason. 

Better  m  have  slain  the  man  at  once  ! 
Methought    glance  of  some  distaste.  Or  so  m, 

retum'd. 
Methosaleh    live  as  long  as  Jerusalem.     Eva.    M, 

father. 
Metre    and  the  matter  in  the  to. 
Metropolitan    He  here,  this  heretic  m, 
Mexico    The  voices  of  Peru  and  M, 
Michaelmas    At  M,  Miss,  please  God. 


11396 
in  262 


III  284 
Foresters  in  224 

IV  531 
Queen  Mary  ni  vi  182 

Harold  I  i  131 

Queen  Mary  i  v  6 

IV  196 

n  ii  191 

H  ii  337 

m  ii  57 

m  iv  181 

III  iv  398 

in  vi  232 

vi241 

V  ii  284 

vii420 

viii3 

Harold  n  ii  450 

n  ii  498 

Queen  Mary  in  i  101 

Prom,  of  May  i  379 

Becket,  Pro.  384 

Queen  Mary  rv  iii  43 

„  V  i  47 

Prcmi.  of  May  m  112 


Mid    strike,  make  his  feathers  Glance  in  to  heaven.  The  Falcon  16 

Mid-battle     will  you  crown  my  foe  My  victor  in  m-b  ?  Becket  v  i  150 

Mid-day    Hang'd  at  m-d,  their  traitor  of  the  dawn  The  Cup  n  123 

Midder  (meadow)     An'  the  m's  all  mow'd,  an'  the 

sky  sa  blue—  (repeat)  Prom,  of  May  ii  176,  188,  200 

Middle  (adj.)     For,  like  a  fool,  thou  knowest  no  to  way.  Becket  i  iii  532 

Middle  (s)    in  the  m  of  that  fierce  fight  At  Stamfordbridge.    Harold  iv  iii  183 
Midland     or  wreckt  And  dead  beneath  the  to  ocean.  Foresters  ii  i  657 

Midmost     As  in  the  to  heart  of  Paradise.  The  Cup  ii  186 

Midnight    I  hardly  gain'd  The  camp  at  to.  „      i  iii  19 

dead  m  when  I  came  upon  the  bridge ;  Protn.  of  May  iii  368 

if  met  in  a  black  lane  at  m :  Foresters  in  224 

Midriff-shaken    many  m-s  even  to  tears,  as  springs  gash 

out  after  earthquakes—  Becket  ui  iii  162 

Mid-sea    whose  quick  flash  splits  The  m-s  mast,  The  Cup  n  293 

Mid-summer    full  to-s  in  those  honest  hearts.  Becket  v  ii  373 

Midwinter     Yon  gray  old  Gospeller,  sour  as  to,  Queen  Mary  i  iii  40 

'Tis  known  you  are  to  to  all  women,  Becket  i  ii  27 

Save  that  it  was  m-w  in  the  street,  „    v  ii  372 

Might  (s)     '  Thine  is  the  right,  for  thine  the  to ;  Harold  ii  ii  357 

William  laugh'd  and  swore  that  to  was  right,  „       n  ii  362 

Waste  not  thy  to  before  the  battle !  „        v  i  415 

Might  (verb)    See  Mowt 

Mightier    but  those  of  Normanland  Are  to  than  our  own.      Harold  in  i  225 
The  more  the  love,  the  m  is  the  prayer;  „       m  i  347 

that  Tostig  Conjured  the  to  Harold  from  his  North  „        iv  ii  68 

Their  giant-king,  a  to  man-in-arms  Than  William.  „        v  i  399 

But  we  must  have  a  m  man  than  he  For  his  successor.      Becket,  Pro.  6 
Thou  art  the  man — be  thou  A  to  Anselm.  „      i  i  184 

'  Fore  God,  I  am  a  m  man  than  thou.  „      i  i  223 

We  find  that  it  is  to  than  it  seems —  „  ly  ii  263 

I  think  they  will  be  m  than  the  king.  Foresters  i  iiild 

Mightiest  (adj.)    and  be  the  to  man  This  day  in  England.    Queen  Mary  n  ii  19 
But  not  the  force  made  them  our  to  kings.  „      in  iv  335 

You  are  the  m  monarch  upon  earth,  I  but  a  little 

Queen :  „  v  i  52 

Bride  of  the  to  sovereign  upon  earth  ?  „        v  ii  544 

Should  make  the  m  empire  earth  has  known.  „         y  iii  70 

Thou  art  the  to  voice  in  England,  man,  Harold  n  ii  617 

But  I  that  threw  the  m  knight  of  France,  Becket  i  iii  746 

Mightiest  (s)    More,  what  the  m  and  the  holiest  Of  all  his 

predecessors  „      u  ii  179 

Mighty  (adj.  and  adv.)    For  I  am  m  popular  with 

them,  Noailles.  Queeti  Mary  i  iii  101 

Ay,  ay,  but  to  doctors  doubted  there.  „  iv  i  83 

Friend  for  so  long  time  of  a  w  King ;  „  iv  iii  73 

And  done  such  to  things  by  Holy  Church,  „  v  v  74 

Thou  art  a  to  man  In  thine  own  earldom  !  Harold  n  i  92 

And  TO  pretty  legs  too.    Thou  art  the  prettiest  child  I 

ever  saw.  Becket  iv  i  6 

But  my  sister  wrote  that  he  was  to  pleasant.  Prom,  of  May  1 116 

But  he  were  to  fond  o'  ye,  warn't  he  ?  „  n  9 

ready  To  make  allowances,  and  m  slow  To  feel  offences.        „         in  629 

Mighty  (s)    How  are  the  to  fallen.  Master  Cranmer !     Qu^en  Mary  iv  ii  146 

Milan  (town)    Granada,  Naples,  Sicily,  and  M,—  „  v  i  44 

Milcher  (milch-cow)     Dumble's  the  best  to  in  Islip. 

(repeat)  „  iv  iii  478, 497 

Mild    Your  to  Legate  Pole  Will  tell  you  that  the  devil 

helpt  them  thro'  it.  „  iv  iii  351 

Julius  the  Third  Was  ever  just,  and  to,  and  father- 
like; „  vii31 
We  have  heard  Of  thy  just,  to,  and  equal 

governance ;  "  Harold  ii  ii  690 

she  had  seen  the  Archbishop  once.  So  to,  so  kind.  Becket  v  ii  120 

Milder    Ye  govern  to  men.    Gurth.    We  have  made  them  m 

by  just  government.  Harold  i  i  339 

Mile    seen  your  steps  a  m  From  me  and  Lambeth  ?  Queen  Mary  i  ii  iSl 

I  would  not ;  but  a  himdred  m's  I  rode,  „         i  v  551 

we  must  round  By  Kingston  Bridge.    Brett.    Ten 

m's  about.  „        n  iii  49 

brook  across  our  field  For  twenty  m's,  „         v  v  84 

I  ha'  carried  him  ever  so  many  m's  in  my  arms,  Becket  i  iv  98 

What  be  he  a-doing  here  ten  to  an'  moor  fro'  a 

raail  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  209 

Militant    Thou  hast  roU'd  over  the  Church  m  Foresters  iv  273 


Milk 


1008 


Miss 


Milk     mute  as  death,  And  white  as  her  own  m ;  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  80 

the  cow  kick'd,  and  all  her  m  was  spilt.  „         m  v  266 

and  shared  His  fruits  and  m.     Liar  !  The  Cup  i  ii  428 

M  ?    Filippo.     Three  laps  for  a  cat !  The  Falcon  124 

No  not  a  draught  of  m,  no  not  an  egg,  „  871 

come  as  freely  as  heaven's  air  and  mother's  m  ?  Foresters  i  i  210 

Sour  m  and  black  bread.  „        ii  i  272 

and  her  bread  is  beyond  me :  and  the  m — faugh  !  „        n  i  293 

wouldst  bar  me  fro'  the  m  o'  my  cow,  „        n  i  355 

MHlring    with  my  hands  M  the  cow  ?  (repeat)     Queen  Mary  ni  v  88,  95, 102 

you  came  and  kiss'd  me  m  the  cow.  (repeat)        „  ni  v  91,  98 

Come  behind  and  kiss  me  m  the  cow  !  „  iii  v  ]  05 

take  to  the  m  of  your  cows,  the  fatting  of  your 

calves.  Prom,  of  May  ir  92 

Milkmaid     I  would  I  were  a  m.  To  sing,  Queen  Mary  iii  v  110 

I  wish'd  myself  the  m  singing  here,  „  m  v  256 

Your  Highness  such  am?  „  in  v  268 

Mill    More  water  goes  by  the  m  than  the  miller  wots  of.       Foresters  i  ii  48 

Old  as  the  m.  „         iv  302 

Miller    black  sheep  baaed  to  the  m's  ewe-lamb.  The  m's 

away  for  to-night :  Becket  i  iv  163 

But  the  m  came  home  that  night,  „      i  iv  173 

She  beautiful :  sleep  as  a  Hi's  mouse  !  The  Falcon  165 

Thou  Much,  m's  son,  hath  not  the  Earl  right  ?     Much. 

More  water  goes  by  the  mill  than  the  m  wots  of,         Foresters  i  ii  46 

Much,  the  m's  son,  I  knew  thy  father :  „     i  iii  146 

they  can  meet  upon  anything  thro'  a  m.  „       ii  i  280 

I  Little  John,  he  Much  the  m's  son,  and  he  Scarlet,  „         in  55 

Millwbeel    The  m  turn'd  in  blood ;  Becket  i  iii  353 

Milly  (servant  to  Farmer  Dobson)    ye  ringed  fur  that. 

Miss,  didn't  ye  ?     Dora.     No,  M ;  Prom,  of  May  in  15 

no  one  has  seen  you  but  myself.     Eva.     Yes — this 

M.    Dora.     Poor  blind  Father's  little  guide,  M,  „  in  230 

It  is  only  M.     Dora.     Well,  M,  why  do  you  come 

in  so  roughly  ?  „  in  341 

M,  my  dear,  how  did  you  leave  Mr.  Steer?  ,,  ni  409 

Mimick'd     boy  she  held  M  and  piped  her  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  74 

Mince     M  and  go  back  !  his  politic  Holiness  Becket  n  ii  45 

Mind  (s)     to  my  m  the  Lady  Elizabeth  is  the  more  noble    Qv-een  Mary  i  i  71 

all  one  m  to  supplicate  The  Legate  here  for  pardon,  „     in  iii  105 

We  are  all  one  m.  „    in  iii  110 

To  my  m.  The  cataract  typed  the  headlong  plunge  „    m  iv  139 

as  one  whose  m  Is  all  made  up,  „     iv  iii  588 

To  be  nor  mad,  nor  bigot — have  a  m —  „       v  v  216 

What  lies  upon  the  m  of  our  good  king  Harold  i  i  268 

I  have  a  m  that  thou  shalt  catch  no  more.  „       n  i  70 

I  have  a  TO  to  brain  thee  with  mine  axe.  „       n  i  73 

my  TO  was  set  upon  other  matters.  Becket,  Pro.  317 

Blurt  thy  free  m  to  the  air  ?  „         i  iii  239 

run  my  to  out  to  a  random  guest  Who  join'd  me  The  Cwp  i  ii  107 

Hath  she  made  up  her  m  to  marry  him  ?  „  ii  22 

who  call'd  the  m  Of  children  a  blank  page,  Prom,  of  May  n  281 

Has  lost  his  health,  his  eyesight,  even  his  m.  „  in  768 

Mind  (remind)     M,  ma  o'  summun.  „  n  583 

Minded    it  m  me  Of  the  sweet  woods  of  Clifford,  Becket  i  i  263 

Mine  (poss.)     M — but  not  yet  aU  to.  Queen  Mary  i  v  542 

May  I  have  it  as  m,  till  m  Be  m  again  ?  Becket  ii  i  298 

Mine  (S)     in  this  pause,  before  The  m  be  fired,  Qv^en  Mary  n  i  26 

I  fear  the  to  is  fired  before  the  time.  „       Hi  123 

The  m  is  fired,  and  I  will  speak  to  them.  „         ii  i  155 

Mingle     I  scarce  have  heart  to  m  in  this  matter,  „       n  ii  113 

Minion    glad  to  wreak  our  spite  on  the  rosefaced  to  Becket,  Pro.  529 

Well — you  know — the  to,  Rosamund.  „  i  ii  37 

We  thought  to  scare  this  to  of  the  King  „      iv  ii  330 

Minister     Whose  m's  they  be  to  govern  you.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  180 

Minnow    if  you  care  to  drag  your  brains  for  such  a  to.        Foresters  n  i  324 

Minster  (adj.)     And  smote  me  down  upon  the  M  floor.  Becket  i  i  104 

Minster  (s)    as  the  new-made  couple  Came  from  the  M,   Queen  Mary  in  i  95 

That  long  low  to  where  you  gave  your  hand  „  ni  ii  90 

Mcthought  I  stood  in  Canterbury  M,  Becket  i  i  73 

loftiest  TO  ever  built  To  Holy  Peter  Harold  in  i  206 

Minster-aisle     Their  long  bird-echoing  m-a's, —  Becket  in  i  44 

Minster-bell    Tho'  earth's  last  earthquake  clash'd  the  m-b's,        „     v  iii  42 

Minute    In  some  few  m's.    She  will  address  your  guilds    Queen  Mary  ii  ii  14 

Your  pardon  for  a  to.    She  must  be  waked.  Prom,  of  May  ni  657 


Miracle    Our  voyage  by  sea  was  all  but  to  ; 

Seem'd  as  a  happy  to  to  make  glide — 

News,  mates  !  a  to,  a  to  !  news ! 

— would  be  deem'd  a  m. 

I  have  wrought  m's — to  God  the  glory — And  m's 

For  Henry  could  not  work  a  m — ■ 

life  Saved  as  by  to  alone  with  Him  Who  gave  it. 

A  TO  that  they  let  him  home  again. 

Why  now  I  count  it  all  but  to. 

She,  you  moiun  for  seem'd  A  to  of  gentleness — 
Miracled    See  De-miracled 

Miracle-monger    our  friar  is  so  holy  That  he's  a  to-to, 
Miraculous    For  as  to  the  fish,  they  de-miracled  the  m 

draught, 
Mire     caked  and  plaster'd  with  a  himdred  m's, 

from  the  street  Stain'd  with  the  to  thereof. 

From  off  the  stalk  and  trample  it  in  the  to, 
Mirror  Unless  my  friends  and  m's  lie  to  me, 
Mischance  some  m  of  flood.  And  broken  bridge, 
Mischief  Him  as  did  the  m  here,  five  year'  sin.' 
Miser  Close  as  a  m's  casket.  Listen : 
Miserable  scum  And  offal  of  the  city  would  not 
change  Estates  with  him ;  in  brief,  so  to. 

Most  7«  sinner,  wretched  man. 

The  TO  see-saw  of  our  child-world. 

Old,  TO,  diseased. 

And  poor  old  father  not  die  to. 

and  father  Will  not  die  to.' 


Queen  Mary  m  ii  25- 

m  ii  29 

ni  ii  20^ 

„  V  iii  55 

Harold  i  i  181 

Becket  i  i  40 

„  IV  ii  368- 

The  Cwp  I  ii  270 

I  iii  37 

Prom,  of  May  n  491 

Foresters  iv  281 

Becket  in  iii  124 

Harold  iv  iii  178 

Becket  i  iii  691 

Foresters  i  ii  111 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  2 

I  v  353 

Prom,  of  May  ni  139 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  108 

IV  iii  78 
IV  iii  123 
IV  iii  385 

V  V  178 
Prom,  of  May  i  722 

n  660 


Miserere  Mei    said  the  M  M — But  all  in  English,  mark 

you ;  Queen  Mary  in  i  391 

Misery    put  off  the  rags  They  had  mock'd  his  to  with,  „         iv  iii  590 

But  now  we  are  made  one  flesh  in  to  ;  „  v  ii  153 

pauper,  who  had  died  in  his  m  blessing  God,  Prom,  of  May  in  378 

Misfortin  (misfortune)     knaw'd  better  nor  to  cast  hes 


sister's  to  inter  'er  teeth 
Mishandled    If  she  should  be  to. 
Misheard     M  their  snores  for  groans. 
Mislead     M  us,  and  I  will  have  thy  life  ! 
Misleader    were  there  but  three  or  four  Of 

these  m's, 
Mismatch'd    M  with  her  for  policy  ! 
Misname    You  do  to  me,  match'd  with  any  such. 
Misnamed    now  the  stronger  motive,  M  free-will — 
Misplaced    round  his  knee,  to,  Our  English  Garter, 
Misread     Thou  hast  w  this  merry  dream  of  thine, 
Misreport    Will  in  some  lying  fashion  to  His  ending 

One  that  would  neither  to  nor  lie. 
Miss  (s)     (See  also  Misses)     and  haafe  th'  parish  '11  be 
theer,   an'    M   Dora,   an'    M    Eva,    an'    all! 
Man.     M  Dora  be  coomed  back,  then  ? 

Foalks  says  he  likes  M  Eva  the  best. 

Beant  M  Eva  gone  off  a  bit  of  'er  good  looks  o'  laate  ? 

Noa,  M.     I  ha'n't  seed  'er  neither. 

Blessings  on  your  pretty  voice,  M  Dora. 

Theer  be  redder  blossoms  nor  them,  M  Dora. 

Under  your  eyes,  M  Dora. 

Noa,  M  Dora;  as  blue  as —  (repeat) 

Theer  ye  goas  agean,  M  niver  believing  owt  I  says 
to  ye — 

He'll  he  arter  you  now,  M  Dora. 

He's  been  arter  M  Eva,  haan't  he  ? 

And  I  tells  ye  what,  M  Dora : 

I  thank  you  for  that,  M  Dora,  onyhow. 

M,  the  farming  men  'uU  hev  their  dinner  i'  the  long 
barn. 

So  the  owd  uncle  i'  Coomberland  be  dead,  M  Dora, 

Not  like  me,  M  Dora ; 

but  I  hallus  gi'ed  soom  on  'em  to  M  Eva  at  this  time 
o'  year.     Will  ya  taake  'em  ?  fur  M  Eva, 

and  now  she  be  gone,  will  ye  taake  'em,  M  Dora  ? 

an'  weant  ye  taake  'em  now,  M  Dora, 

I  were  insured,  M,  an'  I  lost  nowt  by  it.     But  I  weant 
be  too  sudden  wi'  it ;  and  I  feel  sewer,  M  Dora, 

but  that  be  all  along  o'  you,  M, 

M  Dora,  Dan  Smith's  cart  hes  runned  ower  a  laady 


n  127 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  115 

Harold  V  i  213 

Foresters  n  i  376 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  174 

in  i  365 

Becket  iv  ii  128 

Prom,  of  May  n  637 

Queen  Mary  ni  i  83 

Harold  i  ii  98 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  326 

„  IV  iii  556 


Prom,  of  May  i  10 
I  25 
I  32 
I  48 
I  64 
I  86 
I  89 
I  95,  99 

1 106 
Ills 
1 121 
1 131 
1 157 

1 165 

n2 

nl3 

nl6 
n21 
n41 

n57 
Hl09 
n567 


Miss 


1009 


Molehill 


Miss  (s)  (continued)  ye  ringed  fur  that,  M,  didn't  ye  ?  Bora. 
No,  Milly;  but  if  the  farming-men  be  come  for 
their  wages,  to  send  them  up  to  me.  Milly. 
Yeas,  M.  Prom,  of  May  iii  14 


Taake  one  o'  the  young  'luis  fust,  M  ? 

Noa,  M ;  we  worked  naw  wuss  upo'  the  cowd  tea ; 

All  right,  M ;  and  thank  ye  kindly. 

Whoy,  0  lor,  M ! 

O  lor,  M !  noa,  noa,  noa  ! 

Yeas,  M ;  but  he  wur  so  rough  wi'  ma, 

'Listed  for  a  soadger,  M,  V  the  Queen's  Real  Hard 

Tillery. 
At  Michaelmas,  M,  please  God. 
An'  I  thanks  ye  fur  that,  M,  moor  nor  fur  the  waage. 
'  A  cotched  ma  about  the  waaist,  M, 
Why,  M  Dora,  mea  and  my  maates,  us  three,  we 

wants  to  hev  three  words  wi'  ye.      Higgins. 

That  be   'im,   and  mea,   M.     Jackson.      An' 

mea,  M. 
Theer,  M  !     You  ha'  naamed  'im — not  me. 
Wasn't  M  Vavasour,  our  schoolmistress  at  Littlechester, 
Please,  M,  Mr.  Dobson  telled  me  to  saay  he's  browt 

some  of  M  Eva's  roses  for  the  sick  laady  to  smell  on. 
Yeas,  M;  and  he  wants  to  speak  to  ye  partic'lar. 
Yeas,  M ;  but  he  says  he  wants  to  tell  ye  summut 

very  partic'lar. 
Why,  M?    I  be  afeard  I  shall  set  him  a-swearing 

like  onythink. 
You  see  she  is  lamed,  and  cannot  go  down  to  him. 

Milly.     Yeas,  M,  I  will. 
M  Dora  !    M  Dora  !    Dora.    Quiet !  quiet !    What 

is  it  ?     Milly.     Mr.  'Arold,  M.     Dora.     Below  ? 

Milly.     Yeas,  M. 
Tell  him,  then,  that  I'm  waiting  for  him.    Milly. 

Yeas,  M. 


in  32 
III  58 
III  66 
m71 
in  91 
nil03 

III  108 
in  112 
mll6 
nill9 


ni  124 
in  142 
ni297 

ni345 
ni350 

in  354 

ni358 

m417 


in  475 

III  485 
Miss  (verb)    I  m  something.    The  tree  that  only  bears    Queen  Mary  ni  i  18 
To  strike  too  soon  is  oft  to  m  the  blow.  „        in  vi  72 

burrow  where  the  King  Would  m  her  and  for  ever.         Becket  iv  ii  159 
He  m  the  searching  flame  of  pulsatory,  „         v  iii  13 

Why  didst  thou  m  thy  quarry  ye.ster-even  ?  The  Falcon  150 

if  thou  m  I  will  fasten  thee  to  thine  own  door-post       Foresters  n  i  403 
Missed    M !     There  goes  another.     Shoot,  Sheriff ! 

Sheriff.     M]  „        ii  i  396 

They  have  m  the  vein.  „  iv  636 

Misses    {See  also  Miss)     but  I  promised  one  of  the  M  I 

wouldn't  meddle  wi'  ye,  and  I  weant.  Prom,  of  May  i  469 

Missive    fearing  for  her,  sent  a  secret  m,  Queen  Mary  n  ii  121 

When  next  there  comes  a  m  from  the  Queen  „  ni  v  182 

A  m  from  the  Queen :  „  ni  v  187 

Here  is  a  w  left  at  the  gate  by  one  from  the  castle.  Becket  i  iv  49 

Misstate     Swear  and  unswear,  state  and  m  thy  best !  „     ii  ii  476 

Mist     among  thine  island  m's  With  laughter.  Harold  n  ii  182 

oafs,  ghosts  o'  the  m,  wills-o'-the-wisp ;  Foresters  ii  i  263 

Mistake  (s)     I  see  it — some  confusion,  Some  strange  m.  Becket  ni  i  235 

Some  foolish  m  of  Sally's ;  Prom,  of  May  in  153 

No,  Father,  that  was  a  m.    She's  here  again.  „  iii  445 

Mistake  (verb)     You  do  m.    I  am  not  one  to  change.     Queen  Mary  v  i  217 

No,  daughter,  you  m  our  good  Archbishop ;  Becket  v  ii  138 

Mistaken    Only  one,  And  he  perhaps  m  in  the  face.  The  Cup  i  ii  343 

Mister    {See  also  Master,  Mr.)    feller  couldn't  find  a  M 

in  his  mouth  fur  me,  as  farms  five  hoonderd 

haacre.  Prom,  of  May  i  303 

Please  M  'Arold.     Harold.     Well  ?  „         in  700 

Mistradition    Monsters  of  m,  old  enough  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  102 

Mistress    Spain  would  be  England  on  her  seas,  and 

England  M  of  the  Indies.  „  v  iii  74 

England  Will  be  the  M  of  the  Indies  yet,  „  v  iii  77 

She  is  my  m,  let  me  look  to  her !  Harold  i  i  287 

I  shall  have  my  tetrarchy  restored  By  Rome,  our  m,        The  Cup  i  i  21 
when  the  m  died,  and  I  appealed  to  the  Sister 

again.  Prom,  of  May  in  393 

You  do  well,  M  Kate,  Foresters  I  i  23 

I  would  like  to  show  you,  M  Kate.  „        i  i  49 

Pretty  m  !    Robin.    What  art  thou,  man  ?  „     i  ii  189 

Pretty  m,  will  you  dance  ?  ,.     i  ii  203 


Mistress  {continued)    She  is  my  queen  and  thine,  The  w  of 

the  band.  Foresters  n  ii  42 

I  remain  M  of  mine  own  self  and  mine  own  soul.  „         iv  729 

Mistrust     Doth  thou  m  me  ?     Am  I  not  thy  friend  ?  „        i  ii  177 

to  m  the  girl  you  say  you  love  Is  to  m  your  own  love  „         ii  ii  57 

How  should  you  love  if  you  m  your  love  ?  „         n  ii  60 

Misty     Walk'd  at  night  on  the  m  heather ;  Harold  in  ii  5 

I  am  m  with  my  thimbleful  of  ale.  Foresters  iv  278 

Misuse    Who  m's  a  dog  would  m  a  child —  Becket  i  iv  108 

Misused    she  will  not  have  thee.  Thou  hast  m  her :  Harold  rv  ii  35 

Misvalued    I  fear  the  Emperor  much  m  me.  Queen  Mary  m  ii  76 

Mite    Cheese  ?    Filippo.     A  supper  for  twelve  m's.  The  Falcon  127 

Cast  them  into  our  treasury,  the  beggars'  m's.  Foresters  m  205 

Mitre     Wanting  the  Papal  m.  Queen  Mary  m  iv  148 

The  Pope  has  pushed  his  horns  beyond  his  m—  „  v  i  153 

He  took  his  m  off,  and  set  it  on  me,  Becket  i  i  63 

and  the  m  Grappling  the  crown —  „       n  i  26 

Who  made  the  second  m  play  the  first.  And  acted  me?  „  in  iii  212 

crowns  must  bow  when  m's  sit  so  high.  „  rv  ii  297 

The  M  !     Salisbury.     Will  you  wear  it  ? — ■  „    v  ii  616 

Mitred    Crown 'd  slave  of  slaves,  and  m  king  of  kings.    Queen  Mary  ni  iv  381 

He  fasts,  they  say,  this  m  Hercules  !  Becket  i  iii  618 

Mix    M  not  yourself  with  any  plot  I  pray  you ;  Queen  Mary  i  iv  173 

Philip  should  not  m  us  any  way  With  his  French 

wars—  „  ni  iii  78 

m  our  spites  And  private  hates  with  our  defence  Becket  v  ii  50 

m  with  all  The  lusty  life  of  wood  and  underwood.        Foresters  i  iii  112 

Mixing    Catholic,  Mumbling  and  m  in  his  scared  prayers  Queen  Mary  n  ii  86 

M  our  bloods,  that  thence  a  king  may  rise  Harold  iv  i  142 

Mixt    And  m  with  Wyatt's  rising —  Queen  Mary  v  ii  479 

I  fear  my  dear  lord  m  With  some  conspiracy  The  Cup  i  ii  15 

Moan  (s)     he  never  uttered  m  of  pain :  Qv^en  Mary  iv  iii  618 

But  your  m  is  useless  now :  „  iv  iii  638 

he  makes  m  that  all  be  a-getting  cold.  Becket  i  iv  61 

And  I  make  my  m  along  with  him.  „       i  iv  63 

Moan  (verb)     It  breaks  my  heart  to  hear  her  m  at  night  Queen  Mary  i  v  603 

and  needs  must  m  for  him ;  O  Cranmer  !  „       iv  iii  635 

he  licks  my  face  and  m's  and  cries  out  against  the  King.   Becket  i  iv  99 

Moan'd     Ran  sunless  down,  and  m  against  the  piers.      Queen  Mary  n  iii  26 

Not  slighted— all  but  m  for :  thou  must  go.  Becket  i  i  352 

Moaning    See  A-moanin',  Low-moanii^ 

Moant  (must  not)     Here  !  she  m  coom  here.  Prom,  of  May  m  458 

Moat     And  I  would  swim  the  m,  like  an  otter.  Foresters  i  i  321 

Mob     A  bold  heart  yours  to  beard  that  raging  m  !  Qiieen  Mary  i  iii  97 

Pertest  of  our  flickering  m.  Foresters  n  ii  130 

Mock  (adj.)     (See  also  Mock-king)     All  the  church  is 

grateful.     You  have  ousted  the  m  priest,  Queen  Mary  i  v  180 

Mock  (verb)    Have  I  not  heard  them  m  the  blessed  Host  „      rv  iii  365 

0  father,  m  not  at  a  pubhc  fear,  Harold  i  i  74 

M  me  not.     I  am  not  even  a  monk.  Becket,  Pro.  247 

They  m  us ;  he  is  here.  „        i  iv  202 

will  he  not  m  at  me  The  jealous  fool  balk'd  „       iv  ii  422 

Mock'd    summon'd  hither  But  to  be  m  and  baited.     Queen  Mary  in  iv  270 

put  off  the  rags  They  had  m  his  misery  with,  „  iv  iii  590 

then  they  m  us  and  we  fell  upon  'em,  Becket  i  ii  15 

Mockery    And  if  your  penitence  be  not  m.  Queen  Mary  m  iii  179 

that  was  a  m,  you  know,  for  he  gave  me  no 

address,  and  there  was  no  word  of  marriage ;      Prom,  of  May  m  331 

Mocking     but  thou  art  m  me.     Thou  art  Her  brother —      Foresters  n  i  515 

They  are  jesting  at  us  yonder,  w  us  ?  „  iv  676 

If  Cranmer's  spirit  were  a  m  one.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  211 

Mock-king    M-k,  I  am  the  messenger  of  God,  Harold  v  i  33 

Mode     this  faded  ribbon  was  the  m  In  Florence  The  Falcon  422 

Model     as  a  sculptor  clay,  To  their  own  m.  Qv^en  Mary  ni  iii  34 

Statesmen  that  are  wise  Take  truth  herself  for  m.  „  m  iii  37 

Moderate    I  pride  myself  on  being  m.  „  v  iv  60 

Moderately    Methought  I  answer'd  m  enough.  Becket  v  ii  546 

Modest    yet  so  meek,  so  m,  Queen  Mary  in  i  363 

Then  our  m  women — I  know  the  Norman  license —        Harold  n  ii  476 

I  thought  that  naked  Truth  would  shame  the  Devil 

The  Devil  is  so  m.  „     m  i  120 

M  maiden  hly  abused.  Queen.  Foresters  n  ii  158 

Modo    Suaviter  in  m,  fortiter  in  re,  Becket  v  ii  539 

Moist    tho',  to  keep  the  figure  m  and  make  it  hold  water,  „   in  iii  166 

Molehill    My  nurse  would  tell  me  of  a  m  Harold  iv  iii  128 

3  s 


Molochize 


1010 


Moon 


Molochize    I  think  that  they  would  M  them  too,  Harold  i  i  36 

Homent    Quiet  a  m,  my  masters ;  Queen  Mary  i  iii  16 

Queen  would  see  your  Grace  upon  the  m.  „         i  iv  222 

Or  will  be  in  a  m.  ,.         i  iv  289 

sonnet's  a  flying  ant,  Wing'd  for  am.  „            u  i  85 

Cries  of  the  m  and  the  street —  „        n  iv  128 

Nay  come  with  me — one  m  !  „        m  ii  189 

That  I  was  for  a  m  wroth  at  thee.  „      m  iv  306 

Yet,  a  m  since,  I  wish'd  myself  tlie  milkmaid  „        ni  v  255 

Whose  colours  in  a  m  break  and  fly,  „       iv  iii  169 

seeing  in  a  m,  I  shall  find  Heaven  or  else  hell  „       rv  iii  223 

Whose  colours  in  a  m  break  and  fly  ! '  „         v  ii  206 

so  your  Grace  would  bide  a  m  yet.  „         v  ii  547 
We  dally  with  our  lazy  m's  here,  And  hers  are  number'd.    „        v  iii  108 

He  had  his  gracious  m,  Altho'  you'll  not  believe  me.  „           v  v  38 

And  in  a  m  I  shall  follow  him.  „           v  v  57 

but  stay  a  m  ;  He  can  but  stay  a  m :  Harold  i  ii  3 

but  rather  let  me  be  King  of  the  m  to  thee,  „  ni  ii  41 

thou  be  only  King  of  the  m  over  England.  „  in  ii  51 

There  was  a  to  When  being  forced  aloof  „  iv  iii  14 

A  TO  !  thou  didst  help  me  to  my  throne  Becket,  Pro.  200 

citizen's  heir  hath  conquer'd  me  For  the  to.  „         ii  ii  62 

They  have  made  it  up  again — for  the  to.  „     ni  iii  170 
made  me  for  the  to  proud  Ev'n  of  that  stale  Church-bond      „      iv  ii  445 

Aw!     If  you  track  this  Sinnatus  In  any  treason,  The  Cup  i  i  161 


And  that  sets  her  against  me — for  the  to, 

He  knew  not  at  the  m  who  had  fasten'd 

Your  arm — a  to — It  will  pass. 

But  lay  them  there  for  a  to  ! 

this,  for  the  m,  Will  leave  me  a  free  field. 

lie  down  there  together  in  the  darkness  which 
would  seem  but  for  a  to, 

The  shelter  of  your  roof — not  for  one  to — 

Tho'  in  one  to  she  should  glance  away. 

Young  Walter,  nay,  I  pray  thee,  stay  a  m.  Marian. 
A  TO  for  some  matter  of  no  to  !  Well — take  and 
use  your  to,  while  you  may. 

That  I  might  breathe  for  a  to  free  of  shield 

We  sighted  'em  Only  this  to. 

for  the  TO  strike  the  bonds  From  these  three  men, 
Momentary    Were  m  sparkles  out  as  quick  Almost  as 
kindled ; 

are  only  like  The  rainbow  of  a  w  sim. 
Monarch  (adj.)     his  to  mane  Bristled  about  his  quick  ears —  The  Cup  i  ii  120 
Monarch  (s)     You  are  the  mightiest  to  upon  earth.  Queen  Mary  v  i  52 

That  never  English  w  dying  left  England  so  httle.  „        v  v  277 

Monday  (adj.)     Immanuel  Goldsmiths  was  broke  into  o' 


I  iii  164 

II  49 

II  449 

The  Falcon  763 

Prom,  of  May  ii  455 

m  195 

III  801 

Foresters  ii  i  161 


II  i  473 
IV  128 
IV  591 
IV  961 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  73 
Foresters  i  ii  279 


M  night, 
Monday  (s)     I'll  hev  it  done  o'  M. 

you  were  stupid  dnmk  all  Sunday,  and  so  ill  in 
consequence  all  M, 
Money    Confiscate  lands,  goods,  m — 
Is  that  it  ?    That's  a  big  lot  of  m. 
Do  you  lack  any  to  ? 
A  fit  place  for  the  monies  of  the  Church, 
I  had  no  heart  to  part  with  her  for  to.    Giovanna. 

not  for  TO. 
and  now,  as  far  as  m  goas,  I  be  a  gentleman, 
Count  the  m  and  see  3  it's  all  right, 
sits  and  eats  his  heart  for  want  of  m  to  pay  the  Abbot, 
he  borrowed  the  monies  from  the  Abbot  of  York,  the 

Sheriff's  brother, 
his  monies,  his  oxen,  his  diimers,  himself. 
He  has  wonies.     I  will  go  to  him. 
Must  you  have  these  monies  before  the  year  and  the 

month  end  ? 
He  has  a  friend  there  will  advance  the  monies. 
That  baseness  which  for  fear  or  monies, 
how  much  to  hast  thou  in  thy  purse  ? 
How  should  poor  friars  have  m  ? 
and  took  His  monies. 
it  was  agreed  when  you  borrowed  these  monies  from  the 

Abbot 
these  monies  should  be  paid  in  to  the  Abbot  at  York, 
You  have  the  monies  and  the  use  of  them. 


Prom,  of  May  i  393 
„  III  45 

III  81 

Queen  Mary  n  i  102 

„  n  iii  63 

„  IV  ii  40 

Becket  i  iii  105 

No, 

The  Falcon  326 

Prom,  of  May  i  331 

in  64 

Foresters  i  i  5 

„  I  i  67 
„  I  i  234 
„    I  i  273 

„  I  ii  149 

„  II  i  629 

„  II 1706 

„  III  273 

„  m  276 

„  m363 

„  IV  466 
„  IV  506 
„    IV  548 


Money  (continued)   Sir  Richard  paid  his  monies  to  the  Abbot.  Foresters  iv  849 

Money-lover     No  m-l  he  !  Harold  ii  ii  216 

Monger    See  Miracle-monger,  Word-monger 

Mongering    See  Perjury-mongering 

Mongrel     Made  even  the  carrion-nosing  to  vomit 

Monk     It  was  a  wheedling  m  Set  up  the  mass. 

M,  Thou  hast  said  thy  say, 

m,  I  ask  again  When  had  the  Lateran  and  the  Holy  Father 

Out,  beast  to  !     I  ever  hated  m's. 

Leofric,  and  all  the  m's  of  Peterboro' 


Queen  Mary  iv  iii  448 

I  ii  90 

Harold  v  i  4 

vi  15 

vi75 

vi446 


Mock  me  not.     I  am  not  even  a  m.  Becket,  Pro.  248 

Go  like  a  to,  cowling  and  clouding  up  „         i  i  311 

as  I  hate  the  dirty  gap  in  the  face  of  a  Cistercian  to,  „      ii  ii  382 

A  stranger  to  desires  access  to  you.  „         v  ii  65 

The  m's  disguise  thou  gavest  me  for  my  bower  :  „         v  ii  93 

M's,  knights,  five  hundred,  that  were  there  and  heard.        „      v  ii  406 
Robert,  The  apostate  to  that  was  with  Randulf  „      v  ii  574 

I  cannot  tell  why  m's  should  all  be  cowards.  „       v  ii  581 

Why  should  all  m's  be  cowards  ?  „      v  ii  588 

Ay,  m's,  not  men.     Grim.     I  am  a  to,  my  lord.  „       v  ii  602 

these  are  our  own  m's  who  foUow'd  us  !  .,       v  iii  59 

I  and  my  friend,  this  m,  were  here  belated,  Foresters  i  ii  193 

What  m  of  what  convent  art  thou  ?  „         i  ii  205 

Sheriff,  thy  friend,  this  to,  is  but  a  statue.  „        i  ii  233 

We  spoil'd  the  prior,  friar,  abbot,  to,  „         m  167 

Monkery    divorced  King  Louis,  Scorning  his  to, —  Becket  iv  ii  419 

Monkey    The  m  that  should  roast  his  chestnuts  for  him  !     Foresters  iv  806 
Monk-king    good  brother.  They  call  you  the  M-K.  Becket  ii  ii  73 

I  am  proud  of  my  '  M-K,'  „     ii  ii  101 

my  much  constancy  To  the  m-k,  Louis,  „    iv  ii  305 

Monna  Giovanna    {See  also  Giovanna)    Ah,  M  G,  you  here 

again  !  The  Falcon  85 

and  all  along  o'  you,  M  G,  „        103 

there  is  If  G  coming  down  the  hill  from  the  castle.  „        160 

Monster     M's  of  mistradition,  old  enough  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  102 

Monstrous    M  !  blasphemous  !     She  ought  to  burn.  „  i  v  57 

(thus  there  springs  to  light  That  Centaur  of  a  m 

Commonweal,  The  traitor-heretic)  „        in  iv  163 

Bark'd  out  at  me  such  to  charges,  Becket  iv  ii  342 

She  too — she  too — the  bride  !  the  Queen !  and  I — M  ! 

I  that  loved  her.  The  Cup  n  469 

and  some  Pillaring  a  leaf -sky  on  their  to  boles.  Foresters  in  100 

Month    for  women  To  go  twelve  tn's  in  bearing  Queen  Mary  in  vi  91 

Give  her  a  to  or  two,  and  her  affections  Prom,  of  May  i  484 


must  be  paid  in  a  year  and  a  to,  or  I  lose  the  land 
Must  you  have  these  monies  before  the  year  and  the 

TO  end  ? 
Give  him  another  m,  and  he  will  pay  it.     Justiciary. 

We  cannot  give  a  to. 
paid  in  to  the  Abbot  of  York,  at  the  end  of  the  to  at 

noon. 
Mood     I  am  in  no  to  :  I  should  be  as  the  shadow 

to  thwart  them  in  their  m  May  work  them  grievous 

harm 
man  not  prone  to  jealousies,  Caprices,  humours. 

m's; 
Mooded    See  Iron-mooded 
Moody    You,  Scarlet,  you  are  always  to  here. 

Man,  lying  here  alone,  M  creature, 
Moon    a  star  beside  the  to  Is  all  but  lost ; 

Would  not  for  all  the  stars  and  maiden  to 

Not  must,  but  will.     It  is  but  for  one  to. 

In  cold,  white  cells  beneath  an  icy  to — 

the  harvest  to  is  the  ripening  of  the  harvest, 

m  Divides  the  whole  long  street  with  light  and  shade. 

Dark  even  from  a  side  glance  of  the  to. 

No  Sinnatus  yet — and  there  the  rising  to.     M  on  the 

field  and  the  foam,  M  on  the  waste  and  the  wold, 

M  bring  him  home,  bring  him  home 
Home,  sweet  to,  bring  him  home. 
In  the  sweet  to  as  with  a  lovelier  snow  ! 
but  this  new  to,  I  fear,  Is  darkness, 
or  the  cow  that  jumped  over  the  m. 
perchance  Up  yonder  with  the  man  i'  the  to. 
Clothed  with  the  mystic  silver  of  her  m. 


Foresters  i  i  269 
I  ii  150 


IV  443 


rv  508 
Harold  ii  ii  176 

The  Falcon  820 

Prom,  of  May  iii  627 


Foresters  i  iii  128 

II  ii  187 

Queen  Mary  v  i  80 

V  ii  456 

Harold  i  ii  30 

„      V  i  325 

Becket,  Pro.  363 

I  i  364 

IV  ii  149 


The  Cup  I  ii  2 

„        I  ii  7 

„    Iii  396 

Foresters  i  ii  85 

„      n  i  436 

„      n  i  507 

„     ni609 


Moon 


1011 


Mother 


Foresters  ii  ii  179 

Queen  Mary  v  v  9 

Foresters  ii  i  395 

n  i  582 

II  i  337 

Becket  ii  i  52 

Prom,  of  May  I  109 
I  209 
I  368 

II  104 


Voon  (corttinued)    light  of  the  seas  by  the  «i's  long- 
silvering  ray  ! 

Hoonlight  (adj.)     And  how  her  shadow  crosses  one  by 
one  The  m  casements 

Moonlight  (s)     there  goes  one  in  the  m.    Shoot ! 
What  sparkles  in  the  m  on  thy  hand  ? 

Moonshine    He  often  looks  in  here  by  the  m. 

Moor    I  remember  it  well.     There  on  the  m's. 

Moor  (more)     I  warrants  ye'U  think  m  o'  this  young 
Squire  Edgar  as  ha'  coomed  among  us — 
What  be  he  a-doing  here  ten  mile  an'  m  fro'  a  raail  ? 
I'  mun  ha'  plowed  it  m  nor  a  hoonderd  times  ; 
And  I  would  loove  tha  m  nor  ony  gentleman  'ud 

loove  tha. 
I'd  think  na  m  o'  maakin'  an  end  o'  tha  nor  a  carrion 

craw —  „  II 696 

An'  I  thanks  ye  fur  that,  Miss,  m  nor  fur  the  waage.  „  iii  117 

Moorish     or  closed  For  ever  in  a  M  tower.  Foresters  ii  i  656 

Moors     He  calls  us  worse  than  Jews,  M,  Saracens.         Queen,  Mary  v  i  150 
the  boy  was  taken  prisoner  by  the  M.  Foresters  i  i  61 

fell'st  mto  the  hands  Of  these  same  M  „      ii  i  564 

Mooted     whene'er  your  royal  rights  Are  m  in  our  councils —  Becket  i  iii  431 

Moraine     I  have  seen  it  like  the  snow  on  the  m.  The  Falcon  506 

Moral  (adj.)     Against  the  m  excess  No  physical  ache,  Becket  i  i  381 

Moral  (s)     Nature's  m  Against  excess.  „      i  i  373 

His  swaddling-bands,  the  m's  of  the  tribe.  Prom,  of  May  i  586 

Morcar  (Earl  of  Northumbria)    M  !    Why  creep'st  thou 

like  a  timorous  be  st  Harold  i  ii  211 

M  and  Edwin  have  ^ti^r'd  up  the  Thanes  „     ii  ii  288 

have  overthrown  M  and  Edwin.  „  iii  ii  132 

Tostig's  banishment,  and  choice  of  M,  „     iv  i  105 

Again  !     M !     Edwin  !     What  do  they  mean  ?  „    iv  i  133 

M,  it  is  all  but  duty  in  her  To  hate  me  ;  „     iv  i  153 

M  and  Edwin,  When  will  ye  cease  to  plot  „     iv  i  160 

M  and  Edwin,  will  ye,  if  I  yield,  „     iv  i  175 

M  and  Edwin,  will  ye  upon  oath,  Help  us  „     iv  i  179 

We  never — oh !  good  M,  speak  for  us,  „    iv  i  216 

M,  collect  thy  men ;  Edwin,  my  friend —  „     iv  i  256 

He  held  with  M. —  „     iv  ii  44 

And  M  holds  with  us.  „     iv  ii  46 

Make  not  our  M  sullen :  it  is  not  wise,  „  iv  iii  103 

Gurth,  Leofwin,  M,  Edwin  !  „  iv  iii  220 

Nought  of  M  then  ?  "     ^\  160 

I  married  her  for  M — a  sin  against  The  truth  of  love.  „      v  i  169 

More    'SVf  Moor 

More  (Sir  Thomas,  Lord  Chancellor)    Did  not  M  die, 

and  Fisher  ?  he  must  bum.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  52 

Moreing    thou  and  thy  youngsters  are  always  muching  and 

m  me.  Foresters  iv  296 

Mom    {See  also  Marriage-mom)    Close  to  the  grating  on  a 

winter  m  The  Falcon  441 

Morning  (adj.)     Brain-dizzied  with  a  draught  of  m  ale.    Queen  Mary  ii  i  71 
And  make  a  m  outcry  in  the  yard ;  „       ni  v  158 

But  you,  twin  sister  of  the  m  star. 
Their  shield-borne  patriot  of  the  m  star 
thou  that  canst  soar  Beyond  the  m  lark. 

Morning  (s)    (jSee  aZso  May-morning,  Mumin')    Good 

m,  Noailles.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  159 

Good  m,  my  good  Lord.     Gardiner.     That  every 

m  of  your  Majesty  May  be  most  good,  „  i  v  98 

Good  m.  Sir  de  Noailles.    Noailles.    A  happy  m 
to  your  Majesty.     Mary.    And  I  should  some 
time  have  a  happy  m ; 
take  And  wear  it  as  memorial  of  a  m 
I  am  sure  Her  m  wanted  sunUght, 
on  that  m  when  I  came  To  plead  to  thee 
and  I  sneezed  three  times  this  m. 
in  hope  that  the  saints  would  send  us  this  blessed  m ; 
you  look  as  beautiful  this  m  as  the  very  Madonna 
Where  have  you  lain  in  ambush  all  the  m  ? 
Is  the  most  beautiful  m  of  this  May. 


Morning  (s)  (continued) 
thus  ? 

gave  me  this  m  on  my  setting  forth. 

Only  this  m  in  his  agony 
Morrow     Good  m,  my  Lord  Cardinal ; 


Who  breaks  the  stillness  of  the  m 

Foresters  i  iii  51 

III  282 

IV  453 
Queen  Alary  iv  i  42 


The  Cum  i  iii  45 

n  122 

The  Falcon  11 


I  V  242 

I  V  529 

Harold  I  ii  45 

The  Cup  II  390 

The  Falcon  169 

186 

198 

Prom,  of  May  i  545 
I  569 


Morsel,    (See  also  Mossel)     Come,  come,  the  m  stuct 

this  Cardinal's  fault —  „        in  iv  375 

Not  a  TO,  not  one  m.  I  have  broken  My  fast  already.  The  Falcon  573 
Mortal    seeming  not  as  brethren,  But  m  foes  !  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  186 

Because  I  loved  thee  in  my  m  day,  Harold  v  i  240 

Is  it  possible  That  m  men  should  bear  their  earthly  heats  „  v  i  283 
how  he  fells  The  to  copse  of  faces  !  „       v  i  589 

but  the  Chancellor's  and  the  Archbishop's  Together 

more  than  to  man  can  bear.  Becket  i  i  24 

Who  stands  aghast  at  her  eternal  self  And  shakes  at  to 

kings —       "^  „  11  ii  405 

I  ask  no  leave  of  king,  or  w  man,  „  v  ii  458 

Out,  begone  !     Henceforth  I  am  thy  m  enemy.  The  Cup  i  ii  330 

And,  lest  we  freeze  in  to  apathy,  „       i  iii  130 

O  this  TO  house.  Which  we  are  born  into.  Prom,  of  May  ii  273 

'  O  man,  forgive  thy  to  foe,  „  iii  5 

But  to  show  thou  art  to.    Marian.    M  enough,  If  love 


you  make  The  May  and  to  still  more  beautiful, 
seen  us  that  wild  to  when  we  f  oimd  Her  bedjunslept  in, 
and  I  wish  you  and  your  ladyship's  father  a  most 
exceeding  good  m. 


I  573 
n469 

Foresters  i  i  309 


for  thee  be  to. 

Not  TO  !  after  death,  if  after  death — 

would  cower  to  any  Of  to  build. 

You  seem,  as  it  were.  Immortal,  and  we  to. 
Mortality     As  may  be  consonant  with  to. 
Mortally     I  am  m  afear'd  o'  thee,  thou  big  man. 
Mortgage    thou  shouldst  marry  one  who  wiU  pay  the  m. 

Himself  would  pay  this  to  to  his  brother, 

he  would  pay  The  ?»  if  she  favour'd  him. 

Sheriff  Would  pay  this  cursed  to  to  his  brother 

rate  the  land  fivefold  The  worth  of  the  to, 

and  couldst  never  pay  The  to  on  thy  land. 
Mortgaged    I  am  ?»  as  thyself. 
Mortice     Hath  no  more  to  than  a  tower  of  cards ; 
Mortify    Fast,  scourge  thyself,  and  to  thy  flesh. 
Mortifying     In  scourgings,  macerations,  m's,  Fasts, 
Moslem    like  the  M  beauties  waiting  To  clasp 

I  that  have  turn'd  their  M  crescent  pale — 

Heading  the  holy  war  against  the  M, 

And  cleft  the  M  turban  at  my  side. 
Mossel  (morsel)    avore  a  could  taste  a  to. 
Most     I  do  my  to  and  best. 

Mot    blow  upon  it  Three  vi's,  this  fashion — hsten  ! 
Moth    Make  it  so  hard  to  save  a  m  from  the  fire  ? 

would  not  blur  A  m's  wing  by  the  touching  ; 
Mother    My  to  said.  Go  up ;  and  up  I  went. 

my  good  to  came  (God  rest  her  soul)  Of  Spain, 

Your  royal  to  came  of  Spain, 

TO,  you  had  time  and  cause  enough  To  sicken 

married  The  m  of  Ehzabeth — a  heretic 

Here  was  a  young  to,  Her  face  on  flame, 

felt  the  faltering  of  his  m's  heart, 

I,  that  was  never  to,  cannot  tell  How  m's 

nay,  his  noble  m's,  Head  fell — 

Before  my  father  married  my  good  to, — 

Her  foul  divorce — my  sainted  to — No  ! — 

M  of  God,  Thou  knowest  never  woman  meant  so 
well, 

and  in  her  agony  The  to  came  upon  her — 

prattling  to  her  to  Of  her  betrothal 

Malet,  thy  to  was  an  Enghshwoman ; 

for  my  m's  sake  I  love  your  England, 

Speak  for  thy  m's  sake,  and  tell  me  true.     Malet. 
Then  for  my  to's  sake,  and  England's  sake 

And  for  our  M  England  ? 

for  he  Who  vows  a  vow  to  strangle  his  own  to 

My  m  is  a  Dane,  and  I  am  English ; 

TrampUng  thy  m's  bosom  into  blood  ? 

A  cleric  lately  poison'd  his  own  ?«., 

My  TO,  ere  she  bore  me,  Dream'd  that  twelve  stars 

So  did  Matilda,  the  King's  to. 

took  back  not  only  Stephen's  gifts.  But  his  own  m's 

Age,  orphans,  and  babe-breasting  m's — 


Foresters  ii  i  612 

II  i  619 

II  i  690 

IV  1060 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  419 

Foresters  iv  316 

I  i  280 
„  I  ii  263 
„  I  iii  7 
„  II  i  144 
„  II  i  151 
„  II  i  454 
„       I  ii  280 

Queen  Mary  in  i  442 

Becket  i  iii  539 

V  i  41 

Prom,  of  May  i  246 

Foresters  iv  793 

IV  818 

„      IV  1001 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  517 

II  ii  24 
Foresters  iv  425 

Becket  i  i  283 

Prom,  of  May  ii  492 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  98 

IV  11 


I  V  16 
IV  23 
IV  32 

II  ii  69 

II  ii  82 

II  ii  189 

III  iv  295 

HI  V  246 

IV  181 

vii340 
viv20 
V  v232 
Harold  ii  ii  264 
„      II  ii  268 

„      II  ii  271 

„      II  ii  425 

„      III  i  230 

„        IT  i  54 

IV  ii  26 

Becket,  Pro.  11 

1 144 

„      I  iii  152 

I  iii  155 

II  i  73 


Mother 


1012 


Move 


Mother  (continued)    Babes,  orphans,  m's !  is  that  royal,  Sire  ?  Bechet  n  i  80 


that  the  m  Would  make  him  play  his  kingship 

Father  Philip  that  has  confessed  our  m  for  twenty  years 

asked  our  to  if  I  could  keep  a  quiet  tongue  i'  my  head, 

our  TO  'ill  sing  me  old  songs  by  the  hour, 

she  had  'em  from  her  m,  and  her  m  from  her  m  back 

The  crown  !  who  ?     Margery.     M. 

but  Salisbury  was  a  calf  cowed  by  M  Church, 

I  only  love  to.     Eleanor.     Ay  ;  and  who  is  thy  m  ? 

a  good  fairy  to  thy  to.     Take  me  to  her. 

But  you  don't  look  like  a  good  fairy.    M  does.    You 

are  not  pretty,  like  to. 
golden  chain  I  will  give  thee  if  thou  wilt  lead  me  to 

thy  TO.     Geoffrey.     No — no  gold.     M  says   gold 

spoils  all. 
I  love  thy  vi,  my  pretty  boy. 
M,  you  told  me  a  great  fib  : 

I  have  overshot  My  duties  to  our  Holy  M  Church, 
a  son  stone-blind  Sat  by  his  m's  hearth  : 
and  the  poor  m,  Soon  as  she  learnt  I  was  a  friend 
and  our  M  Church  for  bride  ; 
this  love,  this  to,  runs  thro'  all  The  world 
To  assail  our  Holy  M  lest  she  brood  Too  long 
Divide  we  from  the  to  church  of  England,  My 

Canterbury. 
Artemis,  Artemis,  hear  us,  O  M,  hear  us,  and  bless  us  ! 
new-made  children  Of  our  imperial  to  see  the  show, 
many-breasted  to  Artemis  Emboss'd  upon  it 
Good  TO,  happy  was  the  prodigal  son. 
Holy  TO  !     To  breakfast ! 
yet  to  speak  white  truth,  my  good  old  to, 
easier  for  you  to  make  Allowance  for  a  to — 


II  ii  10 
ni i  112 
ni  i  118 
mi  184 
mi  186 
ml  200 
m  iii  96 
IV  19 

IV  126 

IV  136 


„  IV  i  41 
IV  i  44 

„  IV  11370 

„  V  i  38 

„  viiioe 

„  V  ii  109 

„  V  ii  221 

„  V  ii  241 

„  V 11251 

„    V  ii  360 
The  Cup  n  1 
„     n  165 
„     n  340 
The  Falcon  140 
214 
504 
826 
I  was  just  out  of  school,  I  had  no  to —  Prom,  of  May  i  707 

Wasn't  dear  m  herself  at  least  by  one  side  a  lady  ?  „         m  300 

she  moant  coom  here.     What  would  her  to  saay  ?  „         m  459 

My  TO  used  to  say  that  such  a  one  Was  without  rudder,      „         m  533 
for  the  sake  of  the  great  blessed  M  in  heaven,  and 

for  the  love  of  his  own  little  to  on  earth, 
come  as  freely  as  heaven's  air  and  m's  milk  ? 
they  were  bom  and  bred  on  it — it  was  their  to — 
This  ring  my  to  gave  me  : 
My  TO,  For  whose  sake,  and  the  blessed  Queen 
Quick,  good  TO,  quick  ! 
That  by  the  blessed  M  no  man, 
Robin,  the  sweet  light  of  a  m's  eye, 
He  was  my  father,  to,  both  in  one. 
Mother-wit     Put  thou  thyself  and  m-w  together. 
Motion    The  Queen  hath  felt  the  to  of  her  babe  ! 
great  to  of  laughter  among  us,  part  real,  part 

childUke, 
Fell  with  her  to  as  she  rose,  and  she, 
Motive    now  the  stronger  m.  Misnamed  free-will — 

when  The  stronger  to  rules. 
Mon'd  (mould)     and  the  smell  o'  the  to  an'  all. 

the  smell  o'  the  to  'ud  ha'  maade  ma  live  as  long 
as  Jerusalem. 
MonU  (earth)     (See  also  Mou'd)    such  fine  to,  that  if 

you  sow'd  therein  Queen  Mary  iv  i  170 

Mould  (shape)     I  cannot  help  the  to  that  I  was  cast  in.         The  Cup  i  iii  25 
Not  yet,  but  here  comes  one  of  bigger  to.  Foresters  iv  115 

Moold  (verb)     I  could  to  myself  To  bear  your  going 

better  ;  Queen  Mary  m  vi  234 

Moulded    bolts  of  thunder  to  in  high  heaven  Harold  ii  ii  32 

Mouldwarp    wild  hawk  passing  overhead,  The  to 

underfoot. 
Mouldy    old  men  must  die,  or  the  world  would  grow  to, 

nigh  at  the  end  of  our  last  crust,  and  that  to. 
Moult    bird  that  m's  sings  the  same  song  again, 

Mound     Our  altar  is  a  m  of  dead  men's  clay,  Queen  Mary  v  a  161 

as  she  was  helping  to  build  the  to  against  the  city.        Foresters  n  i  309 
let  me  go  to  make  the  to  :  bury  me  in  the  to. 
Mount    No,  no,  his  horse — he  m's  another — 
when  the  Gascon  wine  m's  to  my  head, 
m  with  your  lordship's  leave  to  her  ladyship's 

castle,  The  Falcon  412 


Foresters  i  i  97 

I  i  210 

„       I  i  333 

„      I  ii  293 

n  1  37 

„      n  i  193 

m  239 

IV  2 

rv6 

Harold  II  i  17 

Queen  Mary  ra  ii  213 

Becket  m  iii  154 

The  Falcon  536 

Prom,  of  May  n  636 

n  671 

I  375 

I  377 


Foresters  in  319 
Becket,  Pro.  409 
„  m  i  115 
I  iii  447 


ni312 
Harold  v  i  639 
Becket,  Pro.  113 


Mountain  (adj.)    You  know  the  waterfall  That  in  the 

summer  keeps  the  to  side.  The  Cup  i  i  108 

This  TO  shepherd  never  dream'd  of  Rome.  „        i  ii  IT 

With  other  beauties  on  a  m  meadow,  The  Falcon  351 

The  m  flowers  grew  thickly  round  about.  „           355 

'  Dead  m  flowers,  dead  mountain-meadow  flowers,  „          461 

'  O  TO  flowers  !  '  „          474 

Dead  to  flowers ' „          519 

Mountain  (s)     Inverted  iEsop — -m  out  of  mouse.  Queen  Mary  11  i  67 

Chased  deer-like  up  his  m's,  Harold  i  ii  148 

who  know  His  prowess  in  the  m's  of  the  West,  „     iv  i  165 

crying  To  a  m  '  Stand  aside  and  room  for  me  !  '  „  iv  iii  130 

cUmb  The  to  opposite  and  watch  the  chase.  The  Cup  i  i  117 

Oh  look, — yon  grove  upon  the  w,  „      i  ii  394 

'  Dead  to.'     Nay,  for  who  could  trace  a  hand  The  Falcon  437 

Dearer  than  when  you  made  your  to  gay,  „          463 

snow  yonder  on  the  very  tip-top  o'  the  w.  „          502 

Mountain-meadow    (See  also  Meadow)    '  Dead  mountain 

flowers,  dead  m-m  flowers,  „          461 

You  bloom  again,  dead  to-to  flowers.'  „          470 

Mounted    We  to,  and  we  dash'd  into  the  heart  of  'em.  „          629 
I  was  no  mad,  that  I  to  upon  the  parapet —           Prom,  of  May  m  372 

Moimting    and  see  it  to  to  Heaven,  my  God  bless  you,  Becket  1  iv  37 

Mourn     She,  you  to  for,  seem'd  A  miracle  of 

gentleness—  Prom,  of  May  11  489 

Mournful    Sleep,  m  heart,  and  let  the  past  be  past !  Foresters  i  iii  47 

Mouse     Inverted  ^Esop — movmtain  out  of  to.  Queen  Mary  n  i  68 

She  beautiful :  sleek  as  a  miller's  to  !  The  Falcon  165 

Mouth  (s)     From  thine  own  m  I  judge  thee —  Queen  Mary  i  iii  54 

four  guns  gaped  at  me.  Black,  silent  m's  :  „          n  iii  32 

Makes  me  his  to  of  holy  greeting.  „          m  ii  80 
But  a  weak  to,  an  indeterminate — -ha  ?     Bonner. 

Well,  a  weak  vi,  perchance.  „      m  iv  340 

stop  the  heretic's  m  !     Hale  him  away  !  „       iv  iii  282 

tongue  on  un  cum  a-lolluping  out  0'  'is  to  „       iv  iii  519 

both  have  life  In  the  large  to  of  England,  Harold  iv  iii  74 

The  TO  is  only  Clifford,  my  dear  father.  Becket  n  i  220 

Out  of  th   m's  of  babes  and  suckhngs,  praise  !  „     n  ii  278 
for  my  verses  if  the  Latin  rhymes  be  rolled  out  from 

a  full  TO  ?  „     n  ii  338 

primm'd  her  to  and  put  Her  hands  together —  „      m  i  75 

cold  comers  of  the  King's  to  began  to  thaw,  „  in  iii  153 

royal  promise  might  have  dropt  into  thy  to  „  m  iii  276 

Foam  at  the  to  because  King  Thomas,  „      v  i  203 

he  made  a  wry  to  at  it,  but  he  took  it  so  kindly.  The  Falcon  191 

and  he  never  made  a  wry  to  at  you,  „          194 
wasn't  my  lady  bom  with  a  golden  spoon  in  her 

ladyship's  to,  „          402 

will  you  take  the  word  out  of  your  master's  own  to  ?  „          598 
feller  couldn't  find  a  Mister  in  his  to  fur  me,  as 

farms  five  hoonderd  haacre.  Prom,  of  May  i  303 

What  makes  thee  so  down  in  the  to  ?  Foresters  i  ii  42 

though  I  be  down  in  the  to,  I  will  swear  „        i  ii  44 

may  this  to  Never  suck  grape  again,  „        iv  393 

those  pale  m's  which  we  have  fed  will  praise  us —  „     iv  1076 

Mouth  (verb)    Who  m  and  foam  against  the  Prince  of 


Spain 
Mouthpiece    Is  he  thy  to,  thine  interpreter  ? 
Move  (s)     His  Highness  makes  his  m's  across  the 
Channel, 

so  you  well  attend  to  the  king's  m's, 

I'd  make  a  m  myself  to  hinder  that : 

if  I  And  others  made  that  to  I  touch'd  upon, 

It  is  your  to. 
Move  (verb)     Why  should  he  to  against  you  ? 

and  till  then  I  should  not  to. 

I  must  not  TO  Until  I  hear  from  Carew  and  the  Duke. 

M,  if  you  TO,  at  once.' 

if  we  TO  not  now,  yet  it  will  be  known 

If  we  TO  not  now,  Spain  m's, 

about  our  legs  till  we  cannot  to  at  all ; 

dark  dead  blood  that  ever  m's  with  mine 

Who  cannot  to  straight  to  his  end — 

Sir,  I  will  TO  them  in  your  cause  again, 

could  not  TO  from  Dover  to  the  Humber 


Queen  Mary  u  ii  250 
Foresters  i  ii  212 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  134 

I  iii  152 
in  i  127 

„  mi  445 

Becket,  Pro.  17 

Queen  Mary  I  v  282 

ni3 

n  i  121 

II  i  141 
n  i  197 
n  i  201 
n  i  204 

m  i  352 

rv  iii  394 

v  i  178 

Harold  n  ii  536 


1 


Move 


1013 


Mnrder 


Move  (verb)  (continued)    ever-jarring  Earldoms  m  To  music 

and  in  order —  Harold  n  ii  761 

Did  the  chest  w  ?  did  it  m  ?  „       n  ii  799 

twins  that  cannot  M  one  without  the  other.  „       m  i  129 

Our  Saints  have  moved  the  Church  that  m's  the  world,       „  v  i  42 

Call  when  the  Norman  m's —  „        v  i  230 

The  Norman  m's  !  „         v  i  438 

dead  So  piled  about  him  he  can  hardly  m.  „        v  i  658 

pray  Groa  My  Normans  may  but  m  as  true  with  me  „       v  ii  184 

My  liege,  I  m  my  bishop.  Becket,  Pro.  28 

Well— will  you  m  ?  .,      Pro.  38 

Check — ^you  m  so  wildly.  „      Pro.  40 

and  the  walks  Where  I  could  m  at  pleasure,  „       i  i  266 

I  would  m  this  wanton  from  his  sight  „        i  ii  70 

if  he  m  at  all.  Heaven  stay  him,  is  fain  to  diagonalise.  „     ii  ii  329 

you  still  m  against  him,  you  may  have  no  less  than  to  die        .,  m  iii  325 
The  crowd  are  scattering,  let  us  m  away  !  „  iii  iii  357 

I  cannot  think  he  m's  against  my  son,  „         v  i  18 

But  Becket  ever  m's  against  a  king.  „         v  i  25 

Why  do  you  m  with  such  a  stateliness  ?  „      v  ii  622 

Would  I  could  m  him,  Provoke  him  any  way  !  The  Cup  i  ii  136 

love  for  my  dying  boy,  M's  me  to  ask  it  of  you.  The  Falcon  788 

Help  me  to  m  this  bench  for  him  into  the  sun.  Prom,  of  May  i  80 

— the  crowd  would  call  it  conscience — M's  me —  „        ii  639 

we  must  M  in  the  line  of  least  resistance  ,,        ii  670 

The  oppression  of  our  people  m's  me  so.  Foresters  ni  109 

M  me  no  more  !     I  am  sick  and  faint  with  pain  !  „       iv  598 

Robin,  shall  we  not  m?  .,       iv  782 

Moved    it  will  be  known  that  we  have  m ;  Queen  Mary  ii  i  198 

when  the  Duke  of  Norfolk  m  against  us  „  n  iii  2 

I  never  saw  your  Highness  m  till  now.  „        m  vi  104 

Where  he  shall  rest  at  night,  m  to  his  death  ;  „        iv  iii  580 

Our  Saints  have  m  the  Church  that  moves  the  world,         Harold  v  i  41 
Thomas,  thou  art  m  too  much.  Becket  i  i  172 

state  more  cruelly  trampled  on  Than  had  she  never  m.     The  Cup  i  ii  147 
■     ■  -  _      .      -  Prom,  of  May  ii  267 

III  208 

Foresters  ii  i  164 

Queen  Mary  in  v  83 

Harold  I  i  354 

Becket  n  ii  36 

Foresters  ii  i  701 

Queen  Man/  xix  i  95 

The  Cup  I  i  9 


M  in  the  iron  grooves  of  Destiny  ? 

sometimes  been  m  to  tears  by  a  chapter  of  fine 

writing  in  a  novel ; 
would  she  to  beside  me  like  my  shadow  ! 
Movement    The  house  is  all  in  m.     Hence,  and  see. 
There  is  a  m  there,  A  blind  one — 
There  is  a  m  yonder  in  the  crowd — 
if  the  followers  Of  him,  who  heads  the  m. 
Moving    m  side  by  side  Beneath  one  canopy, 

A  maiden  slowl}'  to  on  to  music 
Mow'd     An'  the  midders  all  m,  an'  the  sky 

sa  blue —  (repeat)  Prom,  of  May  n  176,  188,  200 

Mowt  (might)     What  we  m  saay,  and  what  we  m  do.     Prom,  of  May  n  191 
Vr.    (See  also  Master,  Mister)    I'm  coming  down,  M 

Dobson. 
Wheer  did  they  lam  ye  that  ?     Dora.    In 

Cumberland,  M  Dobson. 
(Setting  better,  M  Dobson. 
The  owd  man  be  heighty  to-daay,  beant  he  ?     Dora, 

Yes,  M  Dobson. 
Where  do  they  blow,  M  Dobson  ? 
And  your  eyes  be  as  blue  as Dora.     What, 

M  Dobson  ? 
Very  likely,  M  Dobson.     She  will  break  fence. 
What  dost  a  knaw  o'  this  M  Hedgar  as  be  a-lodgin' 

wi'  ye? 
Nor  I  either,  M  Dobson. 
But  I  have,  M  Dobson. 
You  never  find  one  for  me,  M  Dobson. 
Hev'  ony  o'  ye  seen  Eva  ?     Dobson.     Noa,  M  Steer. 
Wheer  be  M  Edgar  ?  about  the  premises  ? 
Yeas,  yeas  !     Three  cheers  for  M  Steer  ! 
But  where  is  this  M  Edgar  whom  you  praised  so 

in  your  first  letters  ? 
Yes,  M  Dobson,  I've  been  attending  on  his  death- 
bed and  his  burial. 
Hesn't  he  left  ye  nowt  ?     Dora.    No,  M  Dobson. 
I  thought  M  Edgar  the  best  of  men,  and  he  has 

proved  himself  the  worst. 
Cannot  you  understand  plain  words,  M  Dobson  ? 


I  46 

I  66 

I  69 

I  78 
I  87 

I  93 
1 193 

1 199 
I  236 
I  257 
I  306 
I  314 

I  432 
1 456 

1776 

nS 
n8 

II  85 
nll3 


Mr.  (continue)    Sally  Allen,  you  worked  for  M 

Dobson,  didn't  you  ?  Prom,  of  May  III  102 

Him  as  did  the  mischief  here,  five  year'  sin'.     Dora. 

M  Edgar  ?  „  m  141 

And  this  lover  of  yours — this  M  Harold— is  a 

gentleman  ?  „  m  281 

Please,  Miss.  M  Dobson  telled  me  to  saay  he's  browt 

some  of  INIiss  Eva's  roses  „  m  345 

Milly,  my  dear,  how  did  you  leave  M  Steer  ?  „  in  410 

What  is  it  ?     Milly.     M  'Arold,  Miss.  „  m  478 

Much    Madam,  my  master  hears  with  m.  alarm.  Queen  Mary  iv  250 

He  hath  learnt  to  love  our  Tostig  m  of  late.  Harold  i  i  145 

He  hath  as  to  of  cat  as  tiger  in  him.  „       i  i  154 

Too  TO  !     What !  we  must  use  our  battle-axe  to-day.  „      v  i  204 

But  wonder'd  more  at  my  to  constancy  To  the  monk-king,  Becket  IV  ii  304 


Madam,  I  am  as  to  man  as  the  King. 

Thou  as  TO  man  !     No  more  of  that ; 

Pray  for  me  too  :  to  need  of  prayer  have  I. 

This  friar  is  of  to  boldness,  noble  captain. 

M  would  have  more,'  says  the  proverb ; 
Much  (a  companion  of  Robin  Hood)    Thou  M,  miller's 
son,  hath  not  the  Earl  right  ? 

-¥,  the  miller's  son,  I  knew  thy  father ;  He  was  a 
manly  man,  as  thou  art,  M,  And  gray  before  his 
time  as  thou  art,  M. 

I  can  sing  it.     Robin.     Not  now,  good  M  ! 

I  Little  John,  he  M  the  miller's  son,  and  he  Scarlet, 

he,  young  Scarlet,  and  he,  old  M,  and  all  the  rest  of  us. 

And  I,  old  M,  say  as  much, 

Friend  Scarlet,  art  thou  less  a  man  than  M  ? 

Up,  good  M.  Tuck.  And  show  thyself  more  of  a 
man  than  me. 

Ay,  for  old  M  is  every  inch  a  man. 

always  so  much  more  of  a  man  than  my  youngsters  old  M. 

Well,  we  M'es  be  old. 

'  Much  would  have  more,'  says  the  proverb  ;  but  M 
hath  had  more 

Give  me  thy  hand,  M ;  I  love  thee.     At  him.  Scarlet ! 

You,  good  friar,  You  M,  you  Scarlet,  you  dear  Little 
John, 
Muching    thou  and  thy  youngsters  are  always  m  and 

moreing  me. 
Mud     (See  also  Squad)     I'll  have  the  scandal  sounded 
to  the  m. 

drop  The  to  I  carried,  like  yon  brook, 

I  am  snow  to  to. 

My  curse  on  all  This  world  of  to, 
Mudded    wolf  M  the  brook  and  predetermined  all. 
Muddled    an'  maazed,  an'  maated,  an'  to  ma. 
Mule    See  Sumpter-mule 

Mulieribus    Ave  Maria,  gratia  plena,  Benedicta  tu  in  to. 
Mumbling    Catholic,  M  and  mixing  up  in  his  scared 
prayers 

our  good  King  Kneels  to  some  old  bone — 
Mummy-saints    over  His  gilded  ark  of  m's, 
Mun  (must)    There  to  be  summat  wrong  theer,  Wilson, 
fur  I  doant  understan'  it. 

S'iver  I  to  git  along  back  to  the  farm, 

It  TO  be  him.     Noa  ! 

Naay,  but  I  to  git  out  on  'is  waay  now. 

Dead  !    It  to  be  true,  fur  it  wur  i'  print  as  black  as  owt 

Then  yon  to  be  his  brother,  an'  we'll  leather  'im. 

If  it  be  her  ghoast,  we  w-  abide  it. 
Murder  (s)    (See  also  Self-murder)    No — m  fathers  to  : 

This  was  against  her  conscience — would  be  m  ! 

'  Thou  shalt  do  no  w,' 

when  TO  common  As  nature's  death. 

What  doth  hard  w.  care  For  degradation  ? 

I  found  a  hundred  ghastly  m's  done  By  men, 

Covetousness,  Craft,  Cowardice,  M  ' — 

whenever  a  to  is  to  be  done  again  she  yells  out  i' 
this  way — 

Ay,  do  you  hear  ?    There  may  be  to  done. 
Murder  (verb)    Men  would  to  me, 

some  Papist  ruffians  hereabout  Would  m  you. 


ivii432 
IT  ii  461 
V  ii  195 

Foresters  TV  234 
IV  308 

I  ii  46 


I  iii  146 
I  iii  158 
ui54 
in  61 
in  62 
in  66 

IV  284 
IV  289 
IV  299 
nrSOO 

IV  308 
IV  310 

IV  1083 

IV  296 


Qweew  Mary  i  v  228 

Becket  n  i  159 

„    IV  ii  130 

Prom,  of  May  m  722 

Harold  v  i  3 

Prom,  of  May  11  729 

Queen  Mary  in  ii  2 

„  u  ii  I 

Harold  11  ii 
„      V  i  3(/ 

Prom,  of  May  il 


Queen  Ma 


4t 


32 

439 
,735 
%58 
;130 
1 149 


Murder 


1014 


Naked 


Hnider  (verb)  {continued)     Robert  of  Jumi^es — well-nigh  m 

him  too  ?  Harold  i  i  57 

Tlie  deati  men  made  at  thee  to  m  thee,  „      i  ii  85 

It  is  the  flash  that  m's,  the  poor  thunder  „    i  ii  231 

but  a  voice  Among  you  :  m,  martyr  me  if  ye  will —  „       v  i  78 

They  m  all  that  follow.  „     v  i  610 

for  he  would  m  his  brother  the  State.  Beclcet  i  iv  190 
Lord  hath  set  his  mark  upon  him  that  no  man  should 

m  him.  „       i  iv  193 

the  wolves  of  England  Must  to  her  one  shepherd,  „    ni  iii  344 

They  stood  on  Dover  beach  to  m  me,  „       v  ii  436 

Win  me  you  cannot,  to  me  you  may.  Foresters  iv  721 
Huider'd    see  the  holy  father  M  before  thy  face  ?            Queen  Mary  i  iii  65 

You  would  not  have  him  to  as  Becket  was  ?  „         in  i  334 

And  I  the  race  of  m  Buckingham —  „         in  i  454 

The  Uttle  m  princes,  in  a  pale  light,  „        iii  v  147 

Hast  m  thine  own  guest,  the  son  of  Orm,  Harold  iv  ii  37 

They  have  so  maim'd  and  to  all  his  face  „       v  ii  76 
A  cleric  violated  The  daughter  of  his  host,  and  m  him.     Becket  i  iii  383 

Say  that  a  cleric  m  an  archbishop,  „     i  iii  399 

Am  I  to  be  m  to-night  ?  „       i  iv  47 

M  by  that  adulteress  Eleanor,  .,    iv  ii  243 
Dead  !  you  have  m  her.  Found  out  her  secret  bower 

and  m  her.  „       v  i  173 

What  matters  m  here,  or  m  there  ?  „      v  ii  630 

Our  gallant  citizens  to  all  in  vain.  The  Cup  i  ii  142 

She  wa.s  m  here  a  hundred  year  ago.  Foresters  ii  i  245 

Murderer     Make  not  thy  King  a  traitorous  to.  Becket  i  iii  500 

The  to's,  hark  !     Let  us  hide  !  „       v  iii  46 

Murderess     M  !     Eleanor.     My  lord,  we  know  you  proud  „     iv  ii  259 

Murderous    Were  such  w  liars  In  Wessex —  Harold  ii  i  94 

The  man  that  hath  to  foil  a  to  aim  May,  „  n  ii  417 

braced  and  brazen'd  up  with  Christmas  wines  For  any 

TO  brawl.  Becket  \  ii  425 

0  TO  mad-woman  !     I  pray  you  lift  me  And  make  me 

walk  awhile.  The  Cup  n  471 

Murmur  (s)    there  be  m's,  for  thy  brother  breaks  us  Harold  i  i  108 

merriest  m's  of  their  banquet  clank  The  shackles  „     n  ii  408 

Murmur  (verb)    these  old  oaks  will  to  thee  Marian  along 

with  Robin.  Foresters  iv  1094 
Mumin'  (momii^)     and  he  wur  in  a  tew  about  it  all 

the  TO  ;  Prom,  of  May  1 19 

they  be  two  o'  the  purtiest  gels  ye  can  see  of  a 

summer  to.  „           1 31 
Good  TO,  neighbours,  and  the  saame  to  you,  my 

men.  „         j  317 
sa  ta'en  up  wi'  leadin'  the  owd  man  about  all  the 

blessed  to  „           hi  3 

nine  o'clock,  upo'  Tuesday  to,  „       in  136 

He  wur  sa  bellows'd  out  wi'  the  wind  this  to,  „       in  432 

Muse    I  will  not  TO  upon  it.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  230 

tell  the  King  that  I  will  m  upon  it ;  „              v  iii  90 

that  made  me  m,  Being  boxmden  by  my  coronation 

oath  Becket  i  iii  395 

Music    in  to  Peerless — ^her  needle  perfect,  Queeti  Mary  ni  i  359 

Thou  art  my  w  !  Harold  i  ii  25 

Harold  Hear  the  king's  to,  all  alone  with  him,  „      i  ii  194 

ever-jarring  Earldoms  move  To  to  and  in  order —  „     n  ii  762 

hand  of  one  To  whom  thy  voice  is  all  her  to,  Becket  ii  i  177 

A  maiden  slowly  moving  on  to  m  The  Cup  i  i  9 

And  TO  there  to  greet  my  lord  the  king.  „      n  191 

Repeat  them  to  their  to.      Count.     You  can  touch 

No  chord  in  me  that  would  not  answer  you  In  to.  The  Falcon  454 
When  the  Church  and  the  law  have  forgotten  God's 

TO,  they  shall  dance  to  the  m  Foresters  iv  555 

Strike  up  our  m,  Little  John.  „       iv  559 

Moncal     There  goes  a  to  score  along  with  them,  The  Falcon  452 

I  Musically    That  is  m  said.  „          458 

])i Musing     What  are  you  to  on,  my  Lord  of  Devon  ?  Queen  Mary  i  iv  26 

Well,  I  was  TO  upon  that ;  „          i  iv  40 

For  I  wa.s  to  on  an  ancient  saw,  Becket  v  ii  537 

2[(<nasnlman     I  had  sooner  have  been  bom  a  M —  „     ii  ii  145 

and  turn  me  M  I     No  God  but  one,  „     n  ii  224 

Abnost  as  many  as  your  true  M —  „      iv  ii  34 

list    See  Mofint,  Mun 


Muster     and  make  M's  in  all  the  counties  ;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  272 

Mutable     Woman  is  various  and  most  to.  „         in  vi  135 

Mute    another,  to  as  death,  And  white  as  her  own  milk ;        „  n  ii  78 

And  when  my  voice  Is  martyr'd  to,  and  this  man 

disappears,  Becket  in  iii  350 

Why  art  thou  m  ?     Dost  thou  not  honour  woman  ?         Foresters  m  67 
Mutilated     M,  poor  brute,  my  sumpter-mule,  Becket  v  ii  440' 

Mutter     What  is  that  you  to  ?  Queen  Mary  i  v  203 

Muttering    And  to  to  himself  as  heretofore.  „  m  i  16 

My-lord     Why  do  you  so  m-l  me.  Who  am  disgraced  ?  „        iv  ii  176 

Myriad    sent  his  m's  hither  To  seize  upon  the  forts  „        in  i  463 

Myrtle    apricot,  Vine,  cypress,  poplar,  w.  The  Cup  i  i  S 

Myrtle-blossom    And  kindle  all  our  vales  with  m-b,  „      ii  267 

Mysen  (myself)     I  niver  tliowt  o'  to  i'  that  waay  ;  Prom,  of  May  1 17& 

and,  thaw  I  says  it  to,  niver  men  'ed  a  better  master —       „  i  327 

fur  I  'ednt  naw  time  to  maake  w  a  scholard  while  I 

wur  maakin'  to  a  gentleman,  „  1 333 


I  410 

n33 

n314 

ni  4 

in  13 

in  714 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  141 

Harold  i  i  200 

Becket  iv  ii  8 

Foresters  ii  i  608 


now  theer  be  noan  o'  my  men,  thinks  I  to  to, 

fur  I'd  ha'  done  owt  fur  'er  to  ; 

Fur  boath  on  'em  Jinawed  as  well  as  to 

'at  I  ha'  nobbut  lamed  to  haafe  on  it. 

But  I'll  git  the  book  agean,  and  lam  to  the  rest, 

O  law — yeas.  Sir  !     I'll  nm  fur  'im  to. 
Mystery    was  the  great  m  wrought ; 

see  Deeper  into  the  mysteries  of  heaven 

The  folds  have  fallen  from  the  to, 
Mystic    Clothed  with  the  to  silver  of  her  moon. 


N 


Naailed  (nailed)     I'll  hev  the  winder  n  up,  and  put 

Towser  under  it.  Prom,  of  May  i  420 

Naame  (name)     noan  o'  the  parishes  goas  by  that  n 

'ereabouts.  „            1 268 

then  he  called  me  a  mde  n,  and  I  can't  abide  'im.  „           n  159 

Fanny  be  the  n  i'  the  song,  but  I  swopt  it  fur  she.  „          n  211 

An'  we  weant  mention  naw  n's,  „         m  130 
says  the  master  goas  clean  off  his  'ead  when  he 

'ears  the  n  on  'im ;  „         m  133 

I  warrants  that  ye  goas  By  haafe  a  scoor  o'  n's —  „         in  729 

Naamed  (named)     Theer,  Miss  !     You  ha'  n  'im — ^not  me.  „         m  142 

Naay  (nay)      N,  I  knaws  nowt  o'  what  foalks  says,  „             i  26 

N  then.     I  mean'd  they  be  as  blue  as  violets.  „            1 103 

N,  but  I  hev  an  owd  woman  as  'ud  see  to  all  that ;  „            n  95 

iV,  but  I  mun  git  out  on  'is  waay  now,  „          n  609' 

Nail     tigress  had  unsheath'd  her  n's  at  last,  Queen  Mary  in  i  3 

But  one  that  pares  his  n's  ;  to  me  ?  „          ni  v  65 

There  you  strike  in  the  n.  „         v  ii  437 

Nailed    See  Naailed 

Naked    Make  no  allowance  for  the  w  truth.  Queen  Mary  i  v  329 

And  leave  the  people  n  to  the  croAvn,  And  the 

crown  n  to  the  people ;  „          in  i  119 

And  tropes  are  good  to  clothe  a  n  truth,  „        in  iv  151 
To  ours  in  plea  for  Cranmer  than  to  stand  On  n 

self-assertion.  „           iv  i  120 

and  then  Cast  on  the  dunghill  n,  „         iv  iii  446 

Thy  n  word  thy  bond  !  confirm  it  now  Harold  n  ii  693 
I  that  so  prized  plain  word  and  n  truth  Have  sinn'd 

against  it — ■  „        in  i  93 

Is  n  truth  actable  in  true  life  ?  „       in  i  109 
I  thought  that  n  Truth  would  shame  the  Devil  The 

Devil  is  so  modest.  „       in  i  118 
I  left  our  England  n  to  the  Soutli  To  meet  thee 

in  the  North.  „         vi  289 

They  are  stripping  the  dead  bodies  n  yonder,  „         v  ii  34 

Life  on  the  hand  is  n  gipsy-stuff  ;  Becket  n  i  193^ 
she  sits  w  by  a  great  heap  of  gold  in  the  middle  of 

the  wood,  „     in  ii  21 

And  left  all  n,  I  were  lost  indeed.  „        iv  ii  9 

but  n  Nature  In  all  her  loveUness.  Prom,  of  May  i  598 

Flung  by  the  golden  mantle  of  the  cloud,  And  sets, 

a  n  fire.  Foresters  ii  i  29 


Nakedly 


1015 


Nawbody 


Nakedly    That,  were  a  man  of  state  n  true,  Harold  in  i  113 

Nakedness    to  spy  my  n  In  my  poor  North  !  „         i  i  352 
Name  (s)    (See  also  Naame)    your  n  Stands  first  of 

those  who  sign'd  Queen  Mary  i  li  16 

your  worship's  n  heard  into  Maidstone  market,  „            ii  i  62 

The  n's  of  Wyatt,  Ehzabeth,  Courtenay,  „           n  ii  94 

Elizabeth — Her  n  is  much  abused  „         n  ii  110 

Speak  !  in  the  n  of  God  !  „  ii  ii  271 
Thy  w,  thou  knave  ?     Man.    I  am  nobody,  my  Lord.       „        ni  i  246 

God's  passion  !  knave,  thy  n?  „        iii  i  249 

Find  out  his  n  and  bring  it  me.  „         iii  i  253 

What  is  thy  n  ?     Man.     Sanders.  „         iii  i  312 

In  our  own  n  and  that  of  all  the  state,  „       in  iii  120 

How  many  n's  in  the  long  sweep  of  time  „          in  v  39 

But  that  Thy  n  by  man  be  glorified,  „       iv  iii  153 

Ay,  but  they  use  his  n.  „          v  i  129 

you  will  find  written  Two  n's,  Philip  and  Calais ;  „         v  v  155 

miracles  will  in  my  7i  be  wrought  Hereafter. —  Harold  i  i  183 

Thou  shalt  be  verily  king — all  but  the  n —  „     n  ii  633 

Why  cry  thy  people  on  thy  sister's  n?  „       iv  i  21 

in  the  n  of  the  great  God,  so  be  it !  „     iv  i  239 

no  ! — not  once — in  God's  n,  no  !  Becket,  Pro.  126 

It  much  imports  me  I  should  know  her  n.  „          i  i  193 

May  plaister  his  clean  n  with  scurrilous  rhymes  !  „         i  i  308 

When  Canterbury  hardly  bore  aw.  „         i  iii  60 

I'll  have  the  paper  back — blot  out  my  n.  „       i  iii  287 

Blessed  is  he  that  cometh  in  the  n  of  the  Lord  !  „       i  iii  758 

Shame  fall  on  those  who  give  it  a  dog's  n —  „        n  i  142 

Son,  I  absolve  thee  in  the  n  of  God.  „       ii  ii  443 

foimd  thy  n  a  charm  to  get  me  Food,  roof,  and  rest.  „         v  ii  96 

in  thy  n  I  pass'd  From  house  to  house.  „       v  ii  102 

if  Kosamumd  is  The  world's  rose,  as  her  n  imports  „       v  ii  263 

in  his  n  we  charge  you  that  ye  keep  This  traitor  „       v  ii  509 

Save  him,  his  blood  would  darken  Henry's  n;  ,,  v  iii  11 
Your  n  ?     Synorix.     Strato,  my  n.     Sinnatus.     No 

Roman  n  ?     Synorix.     A  Greek,  my  lord  ;  The  Cup  i  i  198 

n's  of  those  who  fought  and  fell  are  like  „      i  ii  164 

For  whether  men  maUgn  thy  n,  or  no,  „       i  iii  84 

in  your  lordship's  and  her  ladyship's  n.  The  Falcon  415 
mentioned  her  n  too  suddenly  before  my  father.        Prom,  of  May  u  23 

Her  phantom  call'd  me  by  the  n  she  loved.  „           ii  242 

Taught  her  the  learned  n's,  anatomized  „          n  302 

Might  I  ask  your  n  ?     Harold.     Harold.  „          ii  393 

five  years'  absence,  and  my  change  of  n,  „          ii  616 

My  n  is  Harold  !     Good  day,  Dobbins  !  „           ii  726 

I  spoke  of  your  n's,  AUen,  „           iii  35 

your  own  n  Of  Harold  sounds  so  English  „         ni  609 

And  what  was  Your  n  before  ?  „         in  618 

0  yes  !  In  the  n  of  the  Regent.  Foresters  i  iii  55 
Ay,  ay,  because  I  have  a  n  for  prowess.  „  ii  i  560 
in  the  n  of  all  our  woodmen,  present  her  with  „  in  57 
a  traitor  coming  In  Richard's  n —  „  iv  781 
Your  n's  will  cling  like  ivy  to  the  wood.  „      iv  1085 

Name  (verb)      N  him  ;  the  Holy  Father  will  confirm 

him.  Becket,  Pro.  244 

My  fault  to  n  him  !  „        ii  i  175 

when  those,  that  n  themselves  Of  the  King's  part,  „        v  ii  428 
Named     {See  also  Naamed)    proud  of  my  '  Monk-King,' 

Whoever  w  me  ;  „       n  ii  102 

Nameless     Corpse-candles  gliding  over  n  graves —  Harold  in  i  381 
Namesake     your  Scottish  n  marrying  The  Dauphin,        Queen  Mary  v  i  134 

which  King  Harold  gave  To  his  dead  n,  Harold  iv  iii  110 
Nap     his  manners  want  the  n  And  gloss  of  court ;           Queen  Mary  tii  v  70 

Napkin     I  will  bind  up  his  wounds  with  my  n.  Becket  i  iv  107 
Naples     the  Netherlands,  Sicily,  N,  Lombardy.               Queen  Mary  n  i  212 

he  is  King,  you  know,  the  King  of  N.     The  father 

ceded  N,  that  the  son  Being  a  King,  „             in  i  73 

Granada,  N,  Sicily,  and  Milan, —  „              v  i  44 

The  Pope  would  cast  the  Spaniard  out  of  iV'  :  „             v  i  149 
Napoleon     make  the  soil  For  Caesars,  Cromwells, 

and  N's  Prom,  of  May  m  593 

Nard     N,  Cinnamon,  amomum,  benzoin.  The  Cup  ii  184 

Narrow     and  the  French  fleet  Rule  in  the  n  seas.  Queen  Mary  v  i  7 

but  at  times  They  seem  to  me  too  n,  Harold  in  ii  64 

1  send  my  voice  across  the  n  seas —  „        v  i  246 


Narrow  (continued)    And  in  a  w  path, 
thee. 
But  in  this  n  breathing-time  of  life 
I  hate  Traditions,  ever  since  my  n  father. 
He  met  a  stag  there  on  so  w  a  ledge — 

Narrowing    Gone  n  down  and  darkening  to  a  close 
out  of  the  eclipse  N  my  golden  hour  ! 

Narrowness    It  is  the  heat  and  n  of  the  cage 

God's  revenge  upon  this  realm  For  n  and  coldness  : 

Nation     comes  a  deputation  From  our  finikin  fairy  n. 


A  plover  flew  before 

Becket  u  i  53 

The  Cup  I  i  29 

Prom,  of  May  I  492 

Foresters  if  531 

Queen  Alary  iv  iii  431 

Becket  n  i  203 

Queen  Mary  m  v  207 

Harold  I  i  174 

Foresters  n  ii  145 


IV  340 
in  V  73 


IV  121 
rvil76 


IV  iii  189 


V  ii  102 
Becket  n  i  171 

Prom,  of  May  m  724 
II  714 
n718 


Native     Feehng  my  n  land  beneath  my  foot,  I  said 

thereto  :  '  Ah,  n  land  of  mine.  Queen  Mary  ni  ii  47 

And  wrought  his  worst  against  his  n  land,  The  Cup  i  ii  177 

Natur  (nature)     N  \   N  \     Well,  it  be  i'  my  n  to  knock  Prom,  of  May  i  287 

Natur'  (nature)     It's  humbUng — it  smells  o'  human  n.  Becket  i  iv  238 

Natural     the  people  Claim  as  their  n  leader —  Queen  Mary  i  iv  210 

You  cannot  Learn  a  man's  nature  from  his  n  foe 
Nay  swears,  it  was  no  wicked  wilfulness,  Only  a 

n  chance. 
By  seeking  justice  at  a  stranger's  hand  Against 

my  n  subject. 
These  are  but  n  graces,  my  good  Bishop, 
Hurt  no  man  more  Than  you  would  harm  your 

loving  n  brother 
Gone  beyond  him  and  mine  own  n  man  (It  was 

God's  cause) ; 
A  sane  and  n  loathing  for  a  soul  Purer, 
all  the  foul  fataUties  That  blast  our  n  passions 
into  pains  ! 

Naturally     N  enough  ;  for  I  am  closely  related 

N  again  ;  for  as  I  used  to  transact  all  his  business 

Nature     (See  also  Natur)     I  am  of  sovereign  n,  that  I 

know.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  258 

You  cannot  Learn  a  man's  n  from  his  natural  foe.  „  i  v  340 

Nor  shame  to  call  it  n.  „  in  v  77 

craft  that  do  divide  The  world  of  m  ;  „  m  v  121 

For  the  pure  honour  of  our  common  n,  „         iv  iii  298 

Why,  n's  licensed  vagabond,  the  swallow,  „  v  i  20 

Does  he  think  Low  stature  is  low  n,  „  v  ii  434 

Things  that  seem  jerk'd  out  of  the  common  rut  Of  N       Harold  i  i  139 
I  loved  according  to  the  main  purpose  and  intent 

of  n.  Becket,  Pro.  502 

And  know  the  ways  of  N.  „         i  i  257 

N's  moral  Against  excess.  „  i  i  373 

when  murder  common  As  n's  death,  „       i  iii  344 

I  doubt  not  from  your  nobleness  of  n,  The  Falcon  804 

my  nobleness  Of  n,  as  you  deign  to  call  it,  „  811 

It  is  N  kiUs,  And  not  for  her  sport  either.  Prom,  of  May  i  272 

— ^is  not  that  the  course  of  N  too,  „  i  279 

this  poor  N  !     Dohson.     Natur !     Natur !  „  1 286 

but  naked  N  In  all  her  loveliness.  „  1 599 

strain  to  make  ourselves  Better  and  higher  than  N,  „  i  604 

N  a  liar,  making  us  feel  guilty  Of  her  own  faults.  „  ii  269 

equal  for  pure  innocence  of  n.  And  loveliness  of 

feature.  >,  n  372 

Here  crawUng  in  this  boundless  N.  „         ni  637 

worse  ofi  than  any  of  you,  for  I  be  lean  by  n.  Foresters  i  i  45 

Till  N,  high  and  low,  and  great  and  small  „    i  ii  326 

for,  God  help  us,  we  lie  by  n.  „    n  i  238 

Weak  n's  that  impute  Themselves  to  their  unlikes,  „    n  i  690 

Of  a  w  Stronger,  sadder  than  my  own,  „  ii  ii  188 

yet  in  tune  with  N  and  the  bees.  „        iv  32 

Natured    See  Hard-natured,  Noblest-natured 

Naught    (See  also  Nought)     and  since  the  Sheriff  left 

me  n  but  an  empty  belly.  Foresters  n  i  279 

Nave     n  and  aisles  all  empty  as  a  fool's  jest !  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  286 

Navy     and  might  have  sunk  a  n —  Becket  ill  iii  125 

Naw  (no)    thaw  I  beant  n  scholard,  fur  I  'ednt  n  time 

to  maake  mysen  a  scholard  Prom,  of  May  i  332 

He  'ant  n  pride  in  'im,  and  we'll  git  'im  to  speechify 

for  us  arter  dinner.  „  1 439 


thou  hesn't  n  business  'ere  wi'  my  Dora, 
we  worked  n  wuss  upo'  the  cowd  tea  ; 
An'  we  weant  mention  n  naames, 
Nawbody  (nobody)     why  there  wudn't  be  a  dinner  for  n, 


n735 
ni58 

in  130 
1 149 


Nawbody 


1016 


News 


Nawbody  (nobody)  (continued)    When  ye  thowt  there 

were  n  watchin'  o'  you,  Prom,  of  May  u  179 

Nay    See  Naay 

Neap-tide    the  reahn  is  poor,  The  exchequer  at  n-t :        Queen  Mary  i  v  121 

Near    They  call  me  n,  for  I  am  close  to  thee  And 

England —  Harold  ni  i  6 

Stay  1 — too  n  is  death.  The  Cup  i  iii  104 

Nearer    For  I  will  come  no  n  to  your  Grace  ;  Queen  Mary  ni  v  200 

No  n  to  me  !  back  !  Foresters  iv  692 

Nearest  (adj.)    She  had  but  follow'd  the  device  of 

those  Her  n  kin  :  Queen  Mary  in  i  380 

Nearest  (s)     Who  stands  the  n  to  her.  „  v  ii  416 

The  Atheling  is  n  to  the  throne.  Harold  ii  ii  569 

Nearness     Upon  my  greater  n  to  the  birthday  Foresters  ii  i  44 

Necessity    Statesmen  that  are  wise  Shape  a  n,  Queen  Mary  in  iii  33 

bound  To  that  n  which  binds  us  down  ;  Harold  v  i  108 

so  we  could  not  but  laugh,  as  by  a  royal  n —  Becket  in  iii  159 

Neck    on  his  m  a  collar,  Gold,  thick  with  diamonds  ;        Queen  Mary  in  i  78 
and  weight  of  all  the  world  From  off  his  n  to  mine.  „        iii  vi  214 

rear  and  run  And  break  both  n  and  axle.  Harold  i  i  374 

See  here  this  little  key  about  my  n  !  „       in  i  10 

swear  nay  to  that  by  this  cross  on  thy  n.  Becket,  Pro.  370 

Has  wheedled  it  off  the  King's  n  to  her  own.  „      iv  ii  201 

not  yield  To  lay  your  n  beneath  your  citizen's  heel,  „  v.  i  31 

upon  a  n  Less  lovely  than  her  own.  The  Falcon  55 

I  wore  the  lady's  chaplet  round  my  n  ;  „         631 

I  lay  them  for  the  first  time  round  your  n.  „         908 

Swear  to  me  by  that  relic  on  thy  n.     Prince  John.     I 

swear  then  by  this  relic  on  my  n —  Foresters  i  ii  170 

twist  it  round  thy  n  and  hang  thee  by  it.  „        iv  688 

Neck-broken    Huntsman,  and  hound,  and  deer  were  all 

n-h  !  The  Cup  i  ii  24 

Necklace    if  we  will  buy  diamond  n's  To  please  our  lady,        The  Falcon  44 
She  should  return  thy  n  then.  „  70 

Need  (s)     Ask  me  for  this  at  thy  most  n,  son  Harold,  At 

thy  most  n —  Harold  ni  i  14 

No  n  I  no  n  \  .  .  .     There  is  a  bench.  Becket  n  i  123 

Good  Prince,  art  thou  in  n  of  any  gold  ?  Foresters  i  ii  162 

Need  (verb)     I  n  thee  not.     Why  dost  thou  follow  me  ?         Harold  n  ii  231 

Needed     fly  like  bosom  friends  when  n  most.  The  Falcon  527 

Needle    — in  music  Peerless — her  n  perfect,  Queen  Mary  iii  i  360 

Negative    (See  also  Positive-negative)    Or  answer'd  them 

in  smiling  n's ;  „  iv  iii  603 

not  a  heart  like  a  jewel  in  it — that's  too  n  ;  The  Falcon  92 

Neighbour     he  was  my  n  once  in  Kent.  Queen  Mary  n  iii  85 

good  n.  There  should  be  something  fierier  than 

fire  „  V  iv  25 

my  foundation  For  men  who  serve  the  n,  Harold  v  i  98 

Good  murnin',  n's,  and  the  saame  to  you,  my  men.     Prom,  of  May  i  31 7 

Neighing     N  and  roaring  as  they  leapt  to  land —  Harold  iv  iii  197 

Neither     No  friendship  sacred,  values  n  man  Nor  woman 

save  as  tools — •  Foresters  iv  713 

Nene  (river)    Gone  hawking  on  the  N,  Becket  i  iii  3 

Nescience     Back  into  n  with  as  little  pain  Prom,  of  May  ii  341 

Nest  (s)     (See  also  Home-nest)     then  would  find  Her  n 

within  the  cloister,  Harold  iv  i  234 

A  n  in  a  bush.     Becket.     And  where,  my  liege  ?  Becket,  Pro.  155 

And  where  is  she  ?     There  in  her  English  n?  „      Pro.  178 

I  wrong  the  bird  ;  she  leaves  only  the  n  she  built,  „         i  iv  46 

came  upon  A  wild-fowl  sitting  on  her  n,  „       v  ii  234 

lark,  that  warblest  high  Above  thy  lowly  «,  Prom,  of  May  m  200 

all  in  all  to  one  another  from  the  time  when  we 

first  peeped  into  the  bird's  n,  „  ni  274 

When  I  and  thou  will  rob  the  n  of  her.  Foresters  i  ii  161 

So  that  myself  alone  may  rob  the  n.     Prince  John. 

Well,  well  then,  thou  shalt  rob  the  n  alone.  „        i  ii  166 

Nest  (verb)     nor  priestly  king  to  cross  Their  billings  ere 

they  n.  Harold  m  ii  95 

Nested     Knows  where  he  n — ever  comes  again.  Queen  Mary  v  i  26 

Net  (s)    We  be  fishermen  ;  I  came  to  see  after  my  n's.  Harold  n  i  27 

thou  hast  them  in  thy  n.  Becket  n  ii  287 

No  rushing  on  the  game — the  n, — the  n.  The  Cup  i  i  170 

Net  (verb)     How  dense  a  fold  of  danger  n's  him  round,  Harold  n  ii  17 

Netherlands    Heir  of  this  England  and  the  N  !  Queen  Mary  i  v  418 

nearer  home,  the  N,  SicUy,  Naples,  Lombardy.  „  n  i  212 


Qv^en  Mary  iii  iv  106 
V  i  46 


Netherlands  (continued)     Look  to  the  N,  wherein 

have  been 
The  voices  of  Franche-Comt€,  and  the  N, 
Never    See  Niver 
Never-dawning    Shall  mark  out  Vice  from  Virtue  in 

the  gulf  Of  n-d  darkness  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  542 

New  (adj.)     out  you  flutter  Thro'  the  n  world,  go  zigzag.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  54 

But  hatch  you  some  n  treason  in  the  woods.  „        i  v  465 
None  so  n,  Sir  Thomas,  and  none  so  old,  Sir  Thomas. 

No  n  news  that  Philip  comes  to  wed  Mary,  no  old 

news  that  all  men  hate  it.  „  n  i  14 
Look  at  the  N  World — a  paradise  made  hell ;  ..  ii  i  207 
The  n  Lords  Are  quieted  with  their  sop  of  Abbey- 
lands,  ,,  ni  i  140 
The  light  of  this  n  learning  wanes  and  dies  :  „  ni  ii  172 
Well,  Madam,  this  n  happiness  of  mine  ?  „  in  ii  208 
N  learning  as  they  call  it ;  „  iv  i  78 
in  the  Testaments,  Both  Old  and  N.  „  iv  iii  234 
But  she's  a  heretic,  and  when  I  am  gone,  Brings 

the  n  learning  back.  „        v  i  202 

But  this  n  Pope  CaraflEa,  Paul  the  Fourth,  ,.         v  ii  32 

A  n  Northumberland,  another  Wyatt  ?  „       v  v  188 
That  palate  is  insane  which  cannot  tell  A  good  dish 

from  a  bad,  n  wine  from  old.  Becket,  Pro.  106 
I  care  not  for  thy  n  archbishoprick.  „  i  i  217 
Shall  I  forget  my  n  archbishoprick  And  smite  thee  „  i  i  220 
It  well  befits  thy  n  archbishoprick  To  take  the  vaga- 
bond woman  ,.  i  i  225 
That  Map,  and  these  n  railers  at  the  Church  .,  i  i  306 
What,  this  !  and  this  ! — what !  n  and  old  together  !  „  i  iii  309 
Die  for  a  woman,  what  n  faith  is  this  ?  The  Cup  i  iii  67 
One  ghost  of  all  the  ghosts — as  yet  so  n,  „  ii  142 
We  cannot  flaunt  it  in  n  feathers  now  :  The  Falcon  42 
and  her  affections  Will  flower  toward  the  light  in 

some  n  face.  Prom,  of  May  i  486 

tide  Of  full  democracy  has  overwhelm'd  This  Old 

World,  from  that  flood  ^vill  rise  the  N,  „           i  595 

When  the  great  Democracy  Makes  a  n  world —  „           i  672 

Neither  the  old  world,  nor  the  n,  nor  father,  „           i  674 
Oh,  last  night.  Tired,  pacing  my  n  lands  at 

Littlechester,  „          n  647 

and  I  have  Ughted  On  a  n  pleasure.  ,.          n  669 

will  give  him,  as  they  say,  a  n  lease  of  life.  ,.         m  424 

but  this  n  moon,  I  fear.  Is  darkness.  Foresters  i  ii  85 
whereon  the  throstle  rock'd  Sings  a  n  song  to  the 

n  year —  „       i  iii  28 
We  must  fly  from  Robin  Hood  And  this  n  queen 

of  the  wood.  „     ii  ii  139 

Shall  drink  the  health  of  our  n  woodland  Queen.  „       ni  314 

Drink  to  the  health  of  our  n  Queen  o'  the  woods,  „       in  368 

We  drink  the  health  of  thy  n  Queen  o'  the  woods.  „       iii  372 
so  thou  fight  at  quarterstaS  for  thy  dinner  with 

our  Robin,  that  will  give  thee  a  n  zest  for  it,  „       iv  209 
or  shall  I  call  it  by  that  n  term  Brought  from  the 

sacred  East,  „       iv  704 
New  (adv.)     Ay,  that  am  I,  n  converted,  but  the  old 

leaven  sticks  to  my  tongue  yet.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  47 

New-made    n-m  children  Of  our  imperial  mother  see  the 

show.  The  Cup  n  164 
And  I  could  see  that  as  the  n-m  couple  Game  from 

the  Minster,  Queen  Mary  in  i  93 

News     N  to  me  !     It  then  remains  for  your  poor 

Gardiner,  .,            i  v  219 

N  abroad,  William  ?  „             n  i  13 
No  new  n  that  Philip  comes  to  wed  Mary,  no  old 

n  that  all  men  hate  it.  „             n  i  16 

There  is  n,  there  is  n,  „             ii  i  58 

Good  n  have  I  to  tell  you,  n  to  make  „         in  ii  186 

iV,  mates  !  a  miracle,  a  miracle  !  «  !  „         m  ii  209 

whether  this  flash  of  n  be  false  or  true,  „         m  ii  234 

whether  it  bring  you  bitter  n  or  sweet,  „         in  v  201 

(The  n  was  sudden)  I  could  mould  myself  „        m  vi  234 

Reginald  Pole,  what  n  hath  plagued  thy  heart  ?  „             v  ii  17 

Madam,  he  may  bring  you  n  from  Philip.  „           v  ii  '229 

I  bring  your  Majesty  such  grievous  n  „           v  ii  240 


News 


1017 


Noa 


_      Ifews  (continued) 
for  thee. 


there  is  a  post  from  over  seas  With  n 


N  from  England  ? 

Ill  w  for  guests,  ha,  Malet ! 

Ill  n  hath  come  !     Our  hapless  brother, 

but  worse  n  :  this  William  sent  to  Rome, 

Goodly  n  !     Morcar.     Doubt  it  not  thou  ! 

Harsh  is  the  n  !  hard  is  our  honeymoon  ! 

And  thou,  my  carrier-pigeon  of  black  n, 

disappear'd,  They  told  me,  from  the  farm — and 
darker  n. 

No  n  of  young  Walter  ? 

but  we  have  no  n  of  Richard  yet, 

I  trust  he  brings  us  n  of  the  King's  coming. 

Give  me  some  n  of  my  sweet  Marian. 

Black  n,  black  n  from  Nottingham  ! 

we  have  certain  n  he  died  in  prison. 
Newspaaper  (newspaper)    — what  s  the  n  word,  Wilson  ? 

— celebrate —  Prom,  of  May  i  320 

New-wakeoing    all  the  leaf  of  this  N-w  year.  The  Falcon  340 

New  year     Sings  a  new  song  to  the  n  y —  Foresters  i  iii  28 

Ne^     Who  shall  crown  him  ?     Canterbury  is  dying. 

Becket.     The  n  Canterbury. 

And  is  the  King's  if  too  high  a  stile  for  your  lordship 
to  over-step  and  come  at  all  things  in  the  n  field  ? 

which  he  Gainsays  by  n  sunrising — 

A  child's  sand-castle  on  the  beach  For  the  n  wave — 

the  n  time  you  waste  them  at  a  pothouse  you  get 


Harold  n  ii  210 
n  ii  287 
n  ii  302 
in  ii  120 

III  ii  140 
IV  i  219 

IV  iii  229 
IV  iii  233 

Prom,  of  May  n  408 
Foresters  i  i  72 
,.  I  ii  94 
„  I  iii  53 
„  II 1481 
„  III  446 
„     IV  778 


Becket,  Pro.  241 

„    m  iii  282 

„      IV  ii  278 

The  Cup  I  ii  255 


no  more  from  me. 
Nicholas  (Archbishop  of  York  and  Lord  Chancellor) 

{See  also  Nicholas  Heath)     I   wish  you  a 

good  morning,  good  Sir  N : 
Sir  N  tells  you  true, 

Sir  iV  !     I  am  stunn'd — Nicholas  Heath  ? 
Spite  of  your  melancholy  Sir  N, 
Nicholas  Heath    Sir  N  H,  the  Chancellor,  Would  see  your 

Highness. 
Madam,  your  Chancellor  Sir  N  H.    Mary.    Sir  Nicholas  ! 

I  am  stunn'd— TV  H  ? 
Nicholas  (Saint)     By  St.  N  I  have  a  sudden  passion 

By  St.  N  They  must  have  sprung  hke  Ghosts 
Niece     Prince  of  fluff  and  feather  come  To  woo  you,  n, 
Look  to  it,  n,  He  hath  no  fence  when  Gardiner 
Ay,  good  n !     You  should  be  plain  and  open  with 

me,  n. 
love  that  men  should  smile  upon  you,  n. 
They  will  not,  n.    Mine  is  the  fleet 
Night     (See  also  Grood-night,  To-night)     I  see  but  the 

black  n,  and  hear  the  wolf. 
It  breaks  my  heart  to  hear  her  moan  at  n 
Last  n  I  climb'd  into  the  gate-house,  Brett, 
Out  of  the  dead,  deep  n  of  heathendom. 
Those  damp,  black,  dead  N's  in  the  Tower ; 
a  fox  may  filch  a  hen  by  n, 
Last  n,  I  dream'd  the  faggots  were  alight, 
happy  haven  Where  he  shall  rest  at  n, 
horses  On  all  the  road  from  Dover,  day  and  n ;  On 

all  the  road  from  Harwich,  n  and  day ; 
Good  n !     Go  home.     Besides,  you  curse  so  loud, 
there  once  more — this  is  the  seventh  n  ! 
last  n  An  evil  dream  that  ever  came  and  went — 
beast  of  prey  Out  of  the  bush  by  w  ? 
passing  by  that  hill  three  n's  ago — 
Walk'd  at  n  on  the  misty  heather ;  N,  as  black  as  a  raven's 

feather ; 
banner,  Blaze  like  a  »i  of  fatal  stars 
Last  n  King  Edward  came  to  me  in  dreams — 

(repeat) 
I  have  ridden  n  and  day  from  Pevensey — 
Last  n  I  followed  a  woman  in  the  city  here. 
Follow  me  this  Rosamund  day  and  n. 
That  rang  Within  my  head  last  n, 
flutter  out  at  n  ? 
Good  n  !  good  n  ! 
Both,  good  n ! 


Prom,  of  May  ni  99 


Queen  Mary  v  i  14 
V  i  16 

V  ii  250 
v  ii  327 

V  ii  225 


V  ii  249 

Foresters  i  iii  121 

IV  591 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  164 

I  iv  202 


I  iv  216 
I  iv  275 
I  iv  286 

IV  413 

IV  604 
n  iii  14 

III  iii  173 
in  V  139 

III  V  157 
IV  ii  1 

IV  iii  580 

V  ii  578 
viv61 

Harold  i  i  2 

„    I  ii  69 

„  iii214 

mi  366 

in  ii5 
IV 1251 


Harold  iv  i  259,  265 

IV  iii  192 

Becket,  Pro.  468 

Pro.  506 

1 171 

1 1282 

11313 

ii406 


Night  (continued)     But  the  miller  came  home  that  n,  Becket  i  iv  173 

My  friends,  the  Archbishop  bids  you  good  n.  „      i  iv  262 

to  bid  you  this  n  pray  for  him  who  hath  fed  „      i  iv  266 

Like  sudden  n  in  the  main  glare  of  day.  „         ii  i  57 

Who  thief-like  fled  from  his  o^vn  church  by  n,  „      ii  ii  157 

Madam,  not  to-night — the  n  is  falling.  „      iii  ii  52 

she  says  she  can  make  you  sleep  o'  n's.  „       iv  ii  20 

evil  song  far  on  into  the  n  Thrills  to  the  topmost  tile —        „      v  ii  208 

Save  by  that  way  which  leads  thro'  n  to  light.  „       v  iii  88 

close  not  yet  the  door  upon  a  n  That  looks  hjjf  day.     The  Cup  i  ii  388 

crowd  that  hunted  me  Across  the  woods,  last  n.  ..        i  iii  17 

came  back  last  n  with  her  son  to  the  castle.  The  Falcon  3 

The  n,  As  some  cold-manner'd  friend  „       641 

The  stock-dove  coo'd  at  the  fall  of  n,  Prom,  of  May  i  41 

whose  cheerless  Houris  after  death  Are  N  and  Silence,  „         i  251 

I  laame't  my  knee  last  n  running  arter  a  thief. 

Immanuel  Goldsmiths  was  broke  into  o'  Monday  n, 

Who  shrieks  by  day  at  what  she  does  by  n, 

Oh,  Philip,  Father  heard  you  last  n. 

I  will  fly  to  you  thro'  the  n,  the  storm — 

last  n  Tired,  pacing  my  new  lands  at  Littlechester, 

that  dreadful  n  !  that  lonely  walk  to  Littlechester, 

I  cannot  sleep  o'  n's  by  cause  on  'em. 

In  the  n,  in  the  day, 

having  lived  For  twenty  days  and  n's  in  mail, 

Or  in  the  babny  breathings  of  the  n. 
Nightingale    not  to  hear  the  n's,  But  hatch  you  some 
new  treason 

The  lark  above,  the  71  below. 

Mad  for  thy  mate,  passionate  n  .  .  . 

The  n's  in  Haveringatte-Bower 

I  dumb  thee  too,  my  wingless  n  ! 

Here  to  the  n's. 

not  in  tune,  a  n  out  of  season ; 

I  keep  it  to  kill  n's.     John.     N's  ? 

This  is  no  bow  to  hit  n's ; 
Nightmare    As  tho'  the  n  never  left  her  bed. 

Must  be  the  n  breaking  on  my  peace 
Nihilist    I  that  have  been  call'd  a  Socialist,  A  Com- 
munist, a  N — 
Nimble     The  n,  wild,  red,  wiry,  savage  king — 
Nine    The  conduit  painted — the  n  worthies — ay ! 

And  I  ha'  n  darters  i'  the  spital  that  be  dead 

And  the  other  n  ?     Filippo.     Sold  ! 
Ninepin    more  of  a  man  than  to  be  bowled  over  like  a  n 
Nineteen    After  the  n  winters  of  King  Stephen — 
Ninetieth    Tliis  is  my  n  birthday,  (repeat) 
Niobe    How  gracefully  there  she  stands  Weeping — 

the  little  TV! 
Nip    N,  n  him  for  his  fib. 

N  him  not,  but  let  him  snore. 
Nipper     Count-crab  will  make  his  n's  meet 
Nipt     Her  life  was  winter,  for  her  spring  was  n : 
Niver  (never)     Theer  ye  goas  agean,  Miss,  n  believing 
owt  I  says  to  ye — 

I  n  thowt  o'  mysen  i'  that  waay ; 

leastwaays  they  n  cooms  'ere  but  fur  the  trout 

N  man  'ed  better  friends,  and  1  will  saay  n  master 
'ed  better  men ; 

and,  thaw  I  says  it  mysen,  n  men  'ed  a  better  master— 

I  n  'es  sa  much  as  one  pin's  prick  of  paain ; 

fur  I  n  touched  a  drop  of  owt  till  my  oan  wedding-daiiy, 

thaw  me  and  'im  we  n  'grees  about  the  tithe ; 

thaw  he  n  mended  that  gap  i'  the  glebe  fence 

Blacksmith,  thaw  he  n  shoes  a  herse  to  my  likings 

he  tell'd  me  'at  sweet'arts  n  worked  well  togither ; 

Fur  she'd  n  'a  been  talkin'  haafe  an  hour 

Fur  she  n  knawed  'is  f aace  when  'e  wur  'ere  afoor ; 

I  ha  w  been  surprised  but  once  i'  my  life, 
No    See  Naw,  Noft 
NoS  (No)    N,  Joan,  (repeat)  Quem  Mary  iv  iii  480,  483,  485 

N,  not  a  bit.  Pmm.  of  May  i  34 

N,  Miss.     I  ha'n't  seed  'er  neither.  „  1 48 

N,  Miss  Dora ;  as  blue  as —  (repeat)  „      i  95,  99 

N,  but  I  haates  'im.  ,,  i  217 


I  387 
I  393 
I  533 

I  557 
I  702 
II  646 

III  366 
Foresters  11  i  384 

„       II  ii  182 

IV  124 
IV  1068 

Qv,een  Mary  i  v  464 

n  i  52 

Harold  i  ii  2 

„    I  ills 

„     I  ii  24 

„  mil 90 

Becket,  Pro.  350 

Foresters  11  i  380 

IT  i  391 

Queen  Mary  i  v  605 

Becket  II  i  36 


Prom,  of  May  in  585 

Harold  iv  i  197 

Queen  Mary  in  i  258 

Becket  i  iv  249 

The  Falcon  411 

Foresters  iv  305 

Becket  i  iii  338 

Harold  IV  i  121, 127 

Prom,  of  May  i  736 

Foresters  n  ii  121 

II  ii  122 

Harold  11  i  76 

Queen  Mary  v  v  270 

Prom,  of  May  1 107 
I  176 
I  212 


I  322 
I  327 
I  359 
I  361 
i444 
i446 
I  447 
nl56 
n603 
II  606 
in  439 


Noa 


1018 


Norman 


No&  (no)  (contimied)    N,  fur  thou  be  nobbut  school- 
master; 
N,  Mr.  Steer. 

N ;  I  laame't  my  knee  last  night  numing  arter  a  thief 
N ;  I  knaws  a  deal  better  now. 
N,  n  !  Keep  'em. 
N,  not  yet. 

Philip  Hedgar  o'  Soomerset ! — N — yeas — 
It  mim  be  him.     N  ! 
m — thaw  they  hanged  ma  at  'Size  fur  it. 
N,  Miss ;  we  worked  naw  \niss  upo'  the  cowd  tea ; 

0  lor,  Miss  !  n,n,n\ 
Noailles  (French  Ambassador)    I  am  mighty  popular 

with  them,  N. 
Good  morning,  N. 
King  of  France,  N  the  Ambassador, 
Good  morning.  Sir  de  N. 
A  letter  which  the  Count  de  N  wrote 
Noan  (none)     but  n  o'  the  parishes  goas  by  that  name 

'ereabouts. 
now  theer  be  n  o'  my  men,  thinks  I  to  mysen, 
Miss  Dora,  that  I  ha'  been  n  too  sudden  wi'  you, 
Mea  ?  why,  it  be  the  Lord's  doin',  n  o'  mine ; 
Nobbnt  (only)     {See  also  Nubbut)     Noa,  fur  thou  be  n 

schoolmaster ; 
fur  I  wur  n  a  laabourer, 
if  I  could  ha'  gone  on  wi'  the  plowin'  n  the  smell  o' 

the  mou'd 
and  it  seems  to  me  n  t'other  day. 
and  if  ye  would  n  hev  me, 
'at  I  ha'  n  larned  mysen  haafe  on  it. 
Noble  (adj.)     By  God's  light  a  n  creature,  right  royal ! 
but  to  my  mind  the  Lady  Elizabeth  is  the  more  n 

and  royal. 
Well,  that's  a  n  horse  of  yours,  my  Lord. 
A  king  to  be, — is  he  not  n,  girl  ? 
No,  by  the  holy  Virgin,  being  n, 
Swear  with  me,  n  fellow-citizens,  all. 
And  that  this  n  realm  thro'  after  years 
do  triumph  at  this  hour  In  the  reborn  salvation  of  a 

land  So  n. 
But  this  most  n  prince  Plantagenet,  Our  good  Queen's 

cousin — dallying  over  seas  Even  when  his  brother's, 

nay,  his  n  mother's.  Head  fell — 
Out,  girl,  you  wrong  a  n  gentleman. 
N  as  his  young  person  and  old  shield. 
Doth  he  not  look  n?     I  had  heard  of  him  in  battle 

over  seas. 
Courage,  n  Aldwyth  !     Let  all  thy  people  bless  thee ! 

1  found  him  all  a  n  host  should  be. 
I  can  but  love  this  n,  honest  Harold, 
■whereby  we  came  to  know  Thy  valour  and  thy  value,  n  earl. 
Thou  must  swear  absolutely,  n  Earl. 
'  If  ye  side  with  William  Ye  are  not  w.' 
O  «  Harold,  I  would  thou  couldst  have  sworn. 
This  is  n  !     That  sounds  of  Godwin. 
N  Gurth  !     Best  son  of  Godwin  !     If  I  faU,  I  fall- 
dashes  it  on  Gurth,  and  Gurth,  Our  n  Gurth,  is  down ! 
for  were  all,  my  lord,  as  n  as  yourself,  who  would 

look  up  to  you  ?  Becket  ni  iii  306 

0  God,  O  n  knights,  O  sacrilege  !  „        v  iii  178 
A  n  anger !  but  Antonius  To-morrow  will  demand  yoiu- 

tribute—  The  Cup  i  ii  95 

A  gallant  boy,  A  n  bird,  each  perfect  of  the  breed.  The  Falcon  320 

A  n  saying — and  acted  on  would  yield  A  nobler  breed 

of  men  and  women.  „  753 

Nothing  but  my  brave  bird,  my  n  falcon,  „  873 

Why  then  the  dying  of  my  n  bird  Hath  served  me  better 

than  her  living —  „  900 

Ay,  n  Earl,  and  never  part  with  it.  Foresters  i  ii  303 

Not  till  she  clean  forget  thee,  n  Earl.  „        i  ii  306 

Av  dear  Robin !  ah  n  captain,  friend  of  the  poor !  „        ii  i  182 

iv  Robin.  „         m  185 

1  thank  you,  n  sir,  the  very  blossom  Of  bandits.  „         in  246 
I  thank  you,  n  sir,  and  wiU  pray  for  you                              „         in  250 


Prorti.  of  May  1 307 
I  314 
I  386 
n26 
n44 
n  132 
n588 
n602 
n  697 
in  58 
ni92 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  102 
I  iii  159 
I  iv  110 
I  V  242 
V  ii  496 

Prom,  of  May  i  268 
I  409 
n60 
m  49 

I  307 
I  329 

I  376 
n6 

II  73 
„             in  4 

Queen  Mary  i  i  69 

I  i  72 

„      I  iv  143 

I  V  4 

I  V  70 
„  n  ii  296 
„    m  iii  156 

„    in  iii  183 


„    in  iv  291 

m  v  68 

„       V  ii  513 

V  V  32 

Harold  i  ii  182 

,.      II  ii  10 

„      n  ii  94 

nil  202 

n  ii  716 

n  ii  789 

III  i  325 

IV  ii  57 

vil34 

vi642 


Noble  (adj.)  (continued)  This  friar  is  of  much  boldness, 
n  captain.  Rohin.  He  hath  got  it  from  the  bottle, 
n  knight.  Foresters  IV  235 

Damsel,  is  this  the  truth  ?     Marian.     Ay,  n  knight.  „  iv  771 

Noble  (S)     have  marked  the  haughtiness  of  their  n's ;      Queen  Mary  n  i  169 
Spain  moves,  bribes  our  n's  with  her  gold,  „  n  i  202 

Could  Harry  have  foreseen  that  all  our  ?i.'s  Would  perish     „  mill? 

We  have  given  the  church-lands  back:     The  n's 

would  not ;  „  v  i  172 

all  the  magistracy,  aU  the  w's,  and  all  the  wealthy ;  „  v  iv  51 

N's  we  dared  not  touch.  „  v  v  104 

he  speaks  to  a  ?i  as  tho'  he  were  a  churl,  and  to  a  churl 

as  if  he  were  a  n.  Becket,  Pro.  455 

Nobleness     I  doubt  not  from  your  n  of  nature.  The  Falcon  803 

Nobler     Tell  him  the  Saints  are  n  than  he  dreams.  Tell  him 

that  God  is  n  than  the  Saints,  Harold  v  i  55 

What  n  ?  men  must  die.  „     v  i  270 

Go  therefore  like  a  friend  slighted  by  one  That  hath 

climb'd  up  to  n  company.  Becket  i  i  351 

A  sane  and  natural  loathing  for  a  soul  Purer,  and  truer 

and  n  than  herself ;  „    n  i  172 

and  acted  on  would  yield  A  n  breed  of  men  and  women.    The  Falcon  755 
n  The  victim  was,  the  more  acceptable  Might  be  the 

sacrifice.  „  879 

if  our  true  Robin  Be  not  the  n  lion  of  the  twain.  Foresters  iv  396 

Nobler-looking     Ay,  but  n-l.  Queen  Mary  i  v  322 

Noblest     I  am  the  n  blood  in  Europe,  Madam,  „  i  iv  84 

the  n  light  That  ever  flash'd  across  my  life.  Foresters  in  140 

Noblest-natored    scorns  The  7i-n  man  alive,  and  I —  The  Falcon  259 

Nobody     (See  also  Nawbody)     Thy  name,  thou  knave  ? 

31a7i.     I  am  n,  my  Lord.  Queen  Mary  ni  i  247 

Nod     A  life  of  n's  and  yawns.  „  i  iii  116 

With  Cain  belike,  in  the  land  of  N,  Becket  i  iv  196 

No-hows  (unsatisfactorily)     and  so  brought  me  n-h  as  I  may 

say,  „      m  i  129 

Noise     make  what  n  you  will  with  your  tongues,  Queen  Mary  i  i  6 

What  n  was  that  ?  she  told  us  of  arm'd  men  Becket  v  ii  226 

Nokes  (a  character  in  Queen  Mary)    Old  iV',  can't  it  make 

thee  a  bastard  ?  Queen  Mary  i  i  28 

No,  old  .Y.     Old  Nokes.     It's  Harry !  „  i  i  33 

Nokes  (a  farm  hand)    Luscombe,  N,  Oldham, 

Skipworth  !  Prom,  of  May  ni  53 

Nolo    N  episcopari.    Henry.    Ay,  but  N  Archiepiscopari,      Becket,  Pro.  284 
None    See  Noan 
Nonsense    That's  all  n,  you  know,  such  a  baby  as  you 

are.  Prom,  of  May  il?)^ 

I  am  glad  my  n  has  made  you  smile  !  „  in  314 

Noon     a  bat  flew  out  at  him  In  the  clear  n,  Foresters  n  ii  97 

monies  should  be  paid  in  to  the  Abbot  of  York,  at  the 
end  of  the  month  at  n,  and  they  are  delivered  here 
in  the  wild  wood  an  hour  after  n.  „  iv  508 

Norfolk  (Duke  of)     when  the  Duke  of  N  moved 

against  us  Queen  Mary  n  iii  2 

Norman  (adj.)  (See  also  Demi-Norman)  Did  ye  not  cast 
with  bestial  violence  Our  holy  N  bishops  down  from 
all  Their  thrones  Harold  i  i  50 

I  have  a  N  fever  on  me,  son,  And  cannot  answer  sanely  ...    „       i  i  87 
Is  not  the  N  Count  thy  friend  and  mine  ?  »     i  i  247 

And  bolts  of  thunder  moulded  in  high  heaven  To  serve 

the  A'  purpose,  „    n  ii  34 

They  have  taken  away  the  toy  thou  gavest  me.  The  N 

knight.  „  n  ii  lOT 

Well,  thou  shalt  have  another  N  knight !  .,  n  ii  114 

Stay— as  yet  Thou  hast  but  seen  how  N  hands  can  strike. 

But  walk'd  our  N  field,  „  ii  ii  171 

And  we  will  fill  thee  full  of  iY  sun,  „  u  ii  180 

And  he  our  lazy-pious  iY  King,  „  n  ii  444 

Then  our  modest  women — I  know  the  N  license — thine 

own  Edith—  „  n  ii  477 

if  there  sat  within  the  iY  chair  A  ruler  all  for  England —        „  n  ii  533 
We  could  not  move  from  Dover  to  the  Humber  Saving 

thro'  N  bishopricks —  „  n  ii  538 

Ay,  ay,  but  many  among  our  iY  lords  Hate  thee  for  this,        „  n  ii  544 
confirm  it  now  Before  our  gather'd  N  baronage,  „  n  ii  695 

I  know  your  iY  cookery  is  so  spiced.  It  masks  all  this.  „  n  ii  810 


Norman 


1019 


Northumbria 


Norman  (adj.)  (continued)    They  have  built  their  castles  here ; 

Our  priories  are  N ;  the  N  adder  Hath  bitten  us :  Harold  iii  i  37 

To  save  thee  from  the  wrath  of  N  Saints.    Stigand. 

N  enough  !  „  m  i  217 

Not  mean  To  make  our  England  N.  ,.  mi  250 

Or  N  ?    Voices.     No  !  „     iv  i  64 

Who  shook  the  N  scoundrels  off  the  throne,  „    iv  i  81 

Keep  that  for  N  William  !  „  iviii  169 

William  the  N,  for  the  wind  had  changed —  „  iv  iii  181 

His  N  Demiel  !  Mene,  Mene,  Tekel !  „  v  i  35 
No  N  horse  Can  shatter  England,  standing  shield  by 

shield ;  „     v  i  194 

But  by  all  Saints —    Leofwin.     Barring  the  N\  „     v  i  225 

The  N  arrow  !  „    v  i  483 

All  the  N  foot  Are  storming  up  the  hill.  „    v  i  522 

The  N  Coimt  is  down.  „    v  i  553 

Truth  !  no  ;  a  lie ;  a  trick,  a  N  trick  !  „     v  i  607 

His  oath  was  broken — O  holy  iV  Saints,  „    v  i  617 

and  see  beyond  Your  A'  shrines,  pardon  it,  pardon  it,  „    v  i  620 

I  cannot  love  them,  For  they  are  N  saints^ —  „  v  ii  9 
Make  them  again  one  people — i\',  EngUsh ;  And 

English,  N ;  „  v  ii  188 
There  was  a  httle  fair-hair'd  N  maid  Lived  in  my 

mother's  house :  Becket  v  ii  260 

that  he  calls  you  oversea  To  answer  for  it  in  his  N  courts.  „  v  ii  355 
I  am  none  of  your  delicate  N  maidens  who  can  only 

broider  Foresters  i  i  212 

This  John — this  N  tyranny — the  stream  is  bearing  us 

all  down,  „        i  i  238 

our  John  By  liis  -V  arrogance  and  dissoluteness,  „  ii  i  85 
Dear,  in  these  days  of  N  license,  when  Our  English 

maidens  are  their  prey,  if  ever  A  N  damsel  fell 

into  our  hands,  „  iii  178 
Where  lies  that  cask  of  wine  whereof  we  plunder'd 

The  A' prelate?  „  m  308 
Earl,  thou  when  we  were  hence  Hast  broken  all  our 

N  forest  laws,  „  rv  886 
Norman  (s)  rest  of  England  bow'd  theirs  to  the  N,  Queen  Mary  n  i  160 
Our  friends,  the  N's,  holp  to  shake  his  chair.     I  have  a 

Norman  fever  on  me,  son,  Harold  i  i  85 

it  threatens  us  no  more  Than  French  or  N.  „      i  i  135 

Because  I  love  the  N  better — no,  „      i  i  171 

my  father  drove  the  N's  out  Of  England  ? —  „      i  i  252 

As  up  To  fight  for  thee  again  !  „     n  ii  58 

Count  of  the  A''s,  thou  hast  ransom'd  us,  „    n  ii  157 

The  N's  love  thee  not,  nor  thou  the  N's,  „  ii  ii  253 
And  he  our  lazy-pious  Norman  King,  With  all  his  N's 

roimd  him  once  again,  „    n  ii  445 

I  have  heard  the  N's  Count  upon  this  confusion —  „    n  ii  458 

Descends  the  ruthless  A'—  „   n  ii  467 

thou  and  he  drove  our  good  N's  out  From  England,  „  n  ii  525 
Saving  thro'  Norman  bishopricks — I  say  Ye  would 

applaud  that  A'  who  should  drive  „    n  ii  539 

because  we  found  him  A  A^  of  the  N's.  „    n  ii  582 

Angle,  Jute,  Dane,  Saxon,  A',  „    n  ii  763 

let  earth  rive,  gulf  in  These  cursed  N's —  „    u  ii  783 

If  e'er  the  N  grow  too  hard  for  thee,  „     in  i  12 

wholesome  use  of  these  To  chink  against  the  A^,  „  m  i  22 
Not  mean  To  make  oiu:  England  Norman.     Edward. 

There  spake  Godwin,  Who  hated  all  the  N's ;  „    ni  i  252 

Be  kindly  to  the  N's  left  among  us,  „    ni  i  303 

will  ye  upon  oath.  Help  us  against  the  A^  ?  „  iv  i  181 
Holy  Father  Hath  given  this  realm  of  England  to  the  A^      „        v  i  14 

The  N,  What  is  he  doing?  „      v  i  217 

Call  when  the  N  moves —  „      v  i  230 

The  Norseman's  raid  Hath  helpt  the  A^,  „      v  i  292 

when  I  sware  Falsely  to  him,  the  falser  N,  „      v  i  303 

The  A^  moves  !  „      v  i  438 

and  they  fly — the  N  flies.  „      v  i  541 

They  fly  once  more,  they  fly,  the  A'^  flies  !  „      v  i  596 

The  A^  sends  his  arrows  up  to  Heaven,  „      v  i  666 

A^,  thou  liest !  liars  all  of  you,  „     v  ii  104 

My  N's  may  but  move  as  true  with  me  ,,  v  ii  184 
like  his  kingly  sires.  The  N's,  striving  still  Becket  iv  ii  442 
both  fought  against  the  tyranny  of  the  kings,  the  N's.  Foresters  i  i  230 


Norman-blooded     I  say  not  this,  as  being  Half  N-b,  Harold  i  i  16^ 

Normandy    if  it  pass.  Go  not  to  A — go  not  to  N.    Harold. 

And  wherefore  not,  my  king,  to  A^  ?  „      i  i  235 

And  why  not  me,  my  lord,  to  A^  ?  „      i  i  246 

I  pray  thee,  do  not  go  to  N.  „     i  i  250- 

That  he  should  harp  this  way  on  A'  ?  „     i  i  271 

'  I  pray  you  do  not  go  to  A.'  „   n  ii  218 

But  for  my  father  I  love  A^.  „  n  ii  270- 

Go  not  to  A' —  (repeat)  „   n  ii  327 

I  am  thy  fastest  friend  in  N.  „  ii  ii  556 

When  he  was  here  in  N,  He  loved  us  and  we  him,  „  n  ii  579- 

Foremost  in  England  and  in  A^ ;  „  n  ii  631 

For  I  shall  most  sojourn  in  A^ ;  „  n  ii  634 

And  that  the  Holy  Saints  of  N  „  ii  ii  727 

From  all  the  holiest  shrines  in  A  !  „  n  ii  735- 

And  W\jlfnoth  is  alone  in  A.  „     in  i  81 

Praying  for  A" ;  „     v  i  219 

When  I  am  out  in  A'  or  Anjou.  Becket,  Pro.  144 

Barons  of  England  and  of  A',  „        i  iii  742: 

A  hundred,  too,  from  N  and  Anjou :  „        ii  ii  173 

Normanism     He  hath  clean  repented  of  his  A^.  Harold  ni  i  30 

Normanize — Plays  on  the  word, — and  A"s  too  !  „     ni  i  388 

Normanland    in  A^  God  speaks  thro'  abler  voices,  „       i  i  165 

but  those  of  N  Are  mightier  than  our  own.  „     m  i  223 

Norseland    hugest  wave  from  A^  ever  yet  Surged  on  us,  „     iv  iii  62 

Have  we  not  broken  Wales  and  A^  ?  „       v  i  395 

Norseman     Would  ye  be  Norsemen  ?      Voices.     No  !  „       iv  i  62 

That  these  wiU  follow  thee  against  the  Norsemen,  „     iv  i  158- 

will  ye,  if  I  yield,  Follow  against  the  N  ?  „     iv  i  177 

Where  Ue  the  Norsemen  ?  on  the  Derwent  ?  „     iv  i  253 

Why  didst  thou  let  so  many  Norsemen  hence  ?  „     iv  iii  33 

The  N's  raid  Hath  helpt  the  Norman,  „       v  i  290' 

North    Stays  longer  here  on  our  poor  n  than  you  : —        Queen  Oiary  v  i  24 

Hath  taken  Scarboro'  Castle,  n  of  York  ;  „         v  i  287 

Is  the  A^  quiet,  Gamel  ?  Harold  i  i  107 

to  spy  my  nakedness  In  my  poor  A' !  „        i  i  353 

For  if  the  A^  take  fire,  I  shoiild  be  back  ;  „        i  ii  67 

shake  the  A^  With  earthquake  and  disruption —  „      i  ii  199- 

And  all  the  A^  of  Humber  is  one  storm.  „     n  ii  291 

Hast  thou  such  trustless  jailors  in  thy  A^  ?  „     n  ii  685 

A^  and  South  Thunder  together,  „     in  i  391 

the  truth  Was  lost  in  that  fierce  A',  „      m  ii  2& 

Are  landed  A'  of  Humber,  and  in  a  field  „    m  ii  126 

Well  then,  we  will  to  the  A^.  „    in  ii  139- 

Should  care  to  plot  against  him  m  the  A'.  „     iv  i  167 

Conjured  the  mightier  Harold  from  his  A^  „      iv  ii  69 

send  the  shatter'd  A'  again  to  sea,  „   iv  iii  140* 

Who  made  this  Britain  England,  break  the  A' :  „   iv  iii  155 

in  South  and  A'  at  once  I  could  not  be.  „   iv  iii  218 

To  meet  thee  in  the  A^  „       v  i  290 

— your  n  chills  me.  Becket,  Pro.  330 

thro'  all  the  forest  land  A'  to  the  Tyne  :  Foresters  n  i  89 

There  was  a  man  of  ours  Up  in  the  n,  „        iv  530 

Northampton    on  a  Tuesday  did  I  fly  Forth  from  A^ ;  Becket  v  ii  287 

North-east    the  N-e  took  and  turned  him  South-west,  then         „ 

the  South-west  turned  him  N-e,  „     n  ii  320' 

Northmnberland  (Northumbria)   Thou  art  a  great  voice  in  A" !     Harold  i  i  114 

I  heard  from  thy  A  to-day.  „       i  i  350 

Wash  up  that  old  crown  of  A.  „       v  i  167 

Northumberland  (Earl  of)     and  death  to  N  !  Queen  Mary  i  i  67 

she  spoke  even  of  A'  pitifully,  „           i  i  93 

I  do  believe  he  holp  A'  „        i  v  27& 

when  you  put  A^  to  death,  „        i  v  485 

never  whine  Like  that  poor  heart,  A^,  „       n  ii  333 

Was  not  Lord  Pembroke  with  A'  ?  „         n  iv  8 

His  breaking  with  A^  broke  A^.  „        n  iv  13 

False  to  N,  is  he  false  to  me  ?  „        n  iv  39 

Why,  ev'n  the  haughty  prince,  A^,  „      in  i  147 

The  stormy  Wyatts  and  N's,  „      in  ii  168 

A  new  A^,  another  Wyatt  ?  „       v  v  188 

Northumbria  (ancient  earldom)    When  didst  thou  hear 

from  thy  N  ?  Harold  i  i  281 

Leave  me  alone,  brother,  with  my  A' :  „       i  i  286- 

I  heard  from  my  A^  yesterday.  „       i  i  331 

How  goes  it  then  with  thy  A^  ?  „       i  i  333- 


Northumbria 


1020 


Oan 


Tforthumbria  (ancient  earldom)  (continued)  fain  had  calcined 

all  N  To  one  black  ash,  Harold  mi  56 

I  come  for  mine  o^vn  Earldom,  my  N  ;  ,,      iv  ii  30 

N  threw  thee  off,  she  will  not  have  thee,  „      iv  ii  33 

Northumbrian  (adj.)    Among  the  good  N  folk,  „      i  ii  220 

Our  old  N  crown,  And  kings  of  our  own  choosing.  ,,       iv  i  31 

Of  the  N  helmet  on  the  heath  ?  „       v  i  144 

Northumbrian  (s)    if  his  N's  rise  And  hurl  him  from  them, —      „     ii  ii  455 

Thou  didst  arouse  the  fierce  N's  !  „      v  i  347 

And  that  the  false  N  held  aloof,  „      v  ii  165 

Norway  (country)    and  the  giant  King  of  N,  Harold 

Hardrada —  .,    iii  ii  122 

as  having  been  so  bruised  By  Harold,  king  of  iV ;  .,       iv  i  10 

Norway  (King)     He  hath  gone  to  kindle  N  against  England,       „       iii  i  79 

Since  Tostig  came  with  N —  „     iv  i  173 

I  am  foraging  For  N's  army.  „        iv  ii  6 

Free  thee  or  slay  thee,  N  will  have  war  ;  No  man 
would  strike  with  Tostig,  save  for  N. 

Thou  art  nothing  in  thine  England,  save  for  N, 

What  for  N  then  ?     He  looks  for  land  among  us, 

sequel  had  been  other  than  his  league  With  N, 

Here  by  dead  N  without  dream  or  dawn  ! 
Nose    cackling  of  bastardy  under  the  Queen's  own  n  ? 

Who  rub  their  fawning  n's  in  the  dust, 

God  hath  blest  or  cursed  me  with  a  n — 

God  hath  given  your  Grace  a  n,  or  not, 

rose  but  pricks  his  n  Against  the  thorn, 

when  I  was  a-getting  o'  bluebells  for  your  ladyship's 
n  to  smell  on — 

wait  Till  his  n  rises  ;  he  will  be  very  king. 

Lady  Marian  holds  her  n  when  she  steps  across  it. 
Nosing    See  Carrion-nosing 
Nostril    puffed  out  such  an  incense  of  unctuosity  into 

the  n's  of  our  Gods  of  Church  and  State, 
Note     He  never  yet  could  brook  the  n  of  scorn. 

play  the  n  Whereat  the  dog  shall  howl 
Nothing    (See  also  Naught,  Nought,  Nowt,  Something- 
nothing)     N  ?    Alice.    Never,  your  Grace. 

What  such  a  one  as  Wyatt  says  is  n  : 

And  n  of  the  titles  to  the  crown  ; 

he  is  free  enough  in  talk,  But  tells  me  n. 

They  know  n  ;  They  bum  for  n. 

but  say  the  world  is  n — 

N,  Madam,  Save  that  methought  I  gather'd 

N ;  but '  come,  come,  come,'  and  all  awry, 

quiet,  ay,  as  yet — N  as  yet. 

Make  not  thou  The  n  something. 

On  a  sudden— at  a  something — for  a  n — 

Anything  or  w  ? 

he  would  answer  n,  I   could  make  n  of  him  ; 

N  from  you  !  (repeat) 

we  be  beggars,  we  come  to  ask  o'  you.     We  ha'  n 

Second  Beggar.     Rags,  n  but  our  rags.  Foresters  iii  190 

Notice     I  have  n  from  our  partisans  Within  the  city       Queen  Mary  ii  iii  51 

A  n  from  the  priest,  Becket  iii  iii  3 

Flutter'd  or  flatter'd  by  your  n  of  her,  The  Falcon  538 

Nottingham    Thou  knowest  that  the  Sheriff  of  N  loves 

thee.  .  Foresters  i  i  223 

The  Sheriff  of  N  was  there — not  John.  „       i  i  252 

Beware  of  John  and  the  Sheriff  of  N.  ,.       i  i  255 

What  art  thou,  man  ?    Sheriff  ot  N?  „      i  ii  191 

in  N  they  say  There  bides  a  foul  witch  „      ii  i  202 

if  thou  wilt  show  us  the  way  back  to  N.  „      ii  i  361 

is  it  true  ? — That  John  last  week  retum'd  to  iV,  „       iii  147 

Part  shall  go  to  the  almshouses  at  N,  „       iii  206 

That  business  which  we  have  in  N —  „       in  230 

And  may  your  business  thrive  in  iV  !  „       in  245 

I  know  them  arrant  knaves  in  N.  „       in  302 

Black  news,  black  news  from  N  !  „       iii  447 

I  go  to  N.    Sheriff,  thou  wilt  find  me  at  N.  „       iv  800 

No,  let  him  be.     Sheriff  of  N,  „       iv  815 

Honest  (nothing)    There's  n  but  the  vire  of  God's 

hell  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  526 

M0T6l    sometimes  been  moved  to  tears  by  a  chapter 

of  fine  writing  in  a  n ;  Prom,  of  May  iii  209 


„      IV  ii  18 

„      rv  ii  23 

„      IV  ii  52 

„     IV  iii  89 

.,   IV  iii  122 

Queen  Mary  i  i  59 

„     HI  iii  242 

„     in  V  179 

„     in  V  203 

EaroU  i  i  422 

Becket  iii  i  162 

V  ii  184 

Foresters  I  i  84 


Becket  m  iii  116 

V  ii  299 
Harold  I  ii  191 

Qu^en  Mary  i  v  574 

ni  i  139 

in  i  383 

in  ii  194 

v  ii  113 

V  ii  368 
v  iii  101 

V  V  15 

Harold  i  i  111 

I  i  363 

1 1443 

The  Falcon  133 

Prom,  of  May  in  496 

III  802,  809 


Noviciate     Breaking  already  from  thy  n  Becket  v  ii  80 

Small  peace  was  mine  in  my  n,  „      v  ii  87 

Noway    and  I  n  doubt  But  that  with  God's  grace,  I 

can  live  so  still.  Quun  Mary  n  ii  218 

Nowt  (nothing)     I  knaws  n  o'  what  foalks  says.  Prom,  of  May  i  27 

N — what  could  he  saay  ?  „          1 152 

But  if  that  be  n  to  she,  then  it  be  n  to  me.  „          1 182 

Hesn't  he  left  ye  n  ?     Dora.    No,  Mr.  Dobson.  „            n  7 

I  were  insured,  Miss,  an'  I  lost  n  by  it.  „          ii  58 

Out  o'  the  chaumber  !     I'll  mash  tha  into  n.  „       ni  735 

Nubbut  (only)   (See  also  Nobbut)   Owd  Steer  gi'es  n  cowd 

tea  to  'is  men,  and  owd  Dobson  gi'es  beer.  „        n  224 

Numb'd    Has  often  n  me  into  apathy  Against  the  „          1 227 

Number'd     We  dally  with  our  lazy  moments  here, 

And  hers  are  n.  Queen  Mary  \  iii  109 

Nun     Thou  art  my  n,  thy  cloister  in  mine  arms.  Harold  i  ii  63 

saw  thy  willy-nilly  n  Vying  a  tress  „       v  i  148 
What  shall  it  be  ?     I'll  go  as  a  m.     Becket.     No. 
Rosamund.     What,  not  good  enough  Even  to 
play   at  n?     Becket.     Dan    John  with   a  n, 

That  Map,  Becket  i  i  301 

thy  solitude  among  thy  n's,  May  that  save  thee  !  „     v  ii  176 

Nunnery     Put  her  away  into  an!  „      Pro.  65 

Come  thou  with  me  to  Godstow  n,  „    iv  ii  366 

To  put  her  into  Godstow  n.  (repeat)  Becket  y  i  208,  210 

He  bad  me  put  her  into  a  n —  Becket  v  i  214 

Get  thee  back  to  thy  n  with  all  haste ;  „     v  ii  163 

Nurse  (s)     The  n's  yawn'd,  the  cradle  gaped.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  93 

My  n  would  tell  me  of  a  molehill  Harold  iv  iii  128 
My  good  old  n,  I  had  forgotten  thou  wast  sitting 

there.  The  Falcon  34 

You  can  take  it,  «  !  „        490 

my  n  has  broken  The  thread  of  my  dead  flowers,  „        521 

I  thank  you,  ray  good  n.  „         560 

And  thou  too  leave  us,  my  dear  n,  alone.  „        701 

Ay,  the  dear  n  will  leave  you  alone  ;  „        702 

1  have  anger'd  your  good  n  ;  „         707 

Our  old  n  crying  as  if  for  her  own  child.  Prom,  of  May  n  479 

Nursery  (adj.)    Then  she  got  me  a  place  as  n  governess,  „          m  385 

Nursery  (s)     That  may  seem  strange  beyond  his  w.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  396 

Nursery-cocker'd    The  n-c  child  will  jeer  at  aught  „            n  ii  394 

Nursery-tale    That  n-t  Still  read,  then  ?  Prom,  of  May  ni  525 

Nut    woodland  squirrel  sees  the  n  Behind  the  shell,  Foresters  ii  i  647 

On  n's  and  acorns,  ha  !     Or  the  King's  deer  ?  „       iv  882 


Oaf    o's,  ghosts  o'  the  mist,  wills-o'-the-wisp  ;  Foresters  n  i  263 

Oak    (See  also  Shambles-oak)     Pine,  beech  and  plane, 

o,  walnut.  The  Cv/p  i  i  1 

whose  storm-voice  Unsockets  the  strong  o,  „      n  283 

Such  hearts  of  o  as  they  be.  Foresters  n  i  4 

And  these  rough  o's  the  palms  of  Paradise  !  „    n  i  169 

Here's  a  pot  o'  wild  honey  from  an  old  o,  „    n  i  296 

before  the  shadow  of  these  dark  o's  .,    n  i  605 

hundreds  of  huge  o's,  Gnarl'd —  „       m  91 

In  that  o,  where  twelve  Can  stand  upright,  „     m  309 

Our  feast  is  yonder,  spread  beneath  an  o,  „      iv  190 

Meanwhile,  farewell  Old  friends,  old  patriarch  o's.  „    iv  1054 

yet  I  think  these  o's  at  dawn  and  even,  „    rv  1066 
these  old  o's  will  murmur  thee  Marian  along  with  Robin.        „    iv  1093 

Oaken    present  her  with  this  o  chaplet  as  Queen  of  the  wood,       „       in  59 

Oak-tree    Come  from  out  That  o-t !  „     iv  998 

Oan  (own)     and  he  calls  out  among  our  o  men, '  The 

land  belongs  to  the  people  ! '  Prom,  of  May  1 140 

fur  I  niver  touched  a  drop  of  owt  till  my  o 

wedding-daay,  „           1 362 

then  back  agean,  a-follering  my  o  shadder —  „           i  371 

an'  them  theer  be  soom  of  her  o  roses,  „            n  38 

the  Lord  bless  'er — 'er  o  sen  ;  „            n  40 

I  would  taake  the  owd  blind  man  to  my  o  fireside.  „            n  74 


Oan 


1021 


Old 


Ofin  (own)  (continued)    and  you  should  sit  i'  your  o 

parlour  quite  like  a  laady,  ye  should  !  Prom,  of  May  ii  97 
Fur  she'd  niver  'a  been  talkin'  haafe  an  hour  wi' 

the  divil  'at  killed  her  o  sister,  „          n  604 
'Oape  (hope)     They  can't  be  many,  my  dear,  but  I  'o's 

they'll  be  'appy.  „           1 353 

Oath     To  bind  me  first  by  o's  I  could  not  keep,  Queen  Mary  i  v  557 

he  freed  himself  By  o  and  compurgation  Harold  n  ii  520 
he  hath  not  bound  me  by  an  o— Is  '  ay '  an  o  ?  is 

'  ay  '  strong  as  an  o  ?  „       n  ii  661 

same  sin  to  break  my  word  As  break  mine  o?  „       n  ii  665 

thou  hast  sworn  an  o  Which,  if  not  kept,  „       n  ii  738 

— am  grateful  for  thine  honest  o,  „       n  ii  756 

Hast  thou  had  absolution  for  thine  o?  „       ni  i  212 

0  son,  when  thou  didst  tell  me  of  thine  o,  „  in  i  268 
my  son  !  Are  all  o's  to  be  broken  then,  „  mi  286 
lost  Somewhat  of  upright  stature  thro'  mine  o,  „  ni  ii  57 
will  ye  upon  o,  Help  us  against  the  Norman  ?  ,,  iv  i  180 
devil  Hath  haimted  me — mine  o — my  wife —  ,.  v  i  318 
My  fatal  o — the  dead  Saints — the  dark  dreams —  „  v  i  380 
His  o  was  broken^ — O  holy  Norman  Saints,  „  v  i  616 
He  that  was  false  in  o  to  me,  „  v  ii  151 
Being  bounden  by  my  coronation  o  To  do  men  justice.  Becket  i  iii  396 
that  merits  death, — False  o  on  holy  cross —  „      iv  ii  209 

Ob     Wouldst  thou  call  my  Oberon  O  ?  Foresters  n  ii  131 

Never  O  before  his  face.  „       ii  ii  133 

Obedience    promise  full  Allegiance  and  o  to  the 

death.                                                               _  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  169 

in  this  unity  and  o  Unto  the  holy  see  „         in  iii  157 

His  tractate  upon  True  O,  „             iv  i  92 

serviceable  In  all  o,  as  mine  own  hath  been  :  Harold  iii  i  292 

by  that  canonical  o  Thou  still  hast  owed  Becket  i  iii  275 

Fealty  to  the  King,  o  to  thyself  ?  „       i  iii  587 

Obedient    — the  world  A  most  o  beast  and  fool —        Queen  Mary  rv  iii  414 

Oberon    And  capering  hand  in  hand  with  0.  Foresters  ii  i  498 

Wouldst  thou  call  my  0  Ob  ?  „       n  ii  131 

for  0  fled  away  Twenty  thousand  leagues  to-day.  „       n  ii  142 

Obey    Well,  well,  you  must  o  ;  Queen  Mary  i  iv  253 

1  must  o  the  Queen  and  Council,  man.  „  iv  ii  164 
O  your  King  and  Queen,  and  not  for  dread  „  iv  iii  177 
Sire,  I  0  you.  Come  quickly.  „  v  i  220 
And  yet  I  must  0  the  Holy  Father,  „  ^.."^® 
O  the  Count's  conditions,  my  good  friend.  Harold  ii  ii  276 
Seem  to  o  them.  „  n  ii  280 
O  him,  speak  him  fair,  „       u  ii  317 

0  my  first  and  last  commandment.  Go  !  „  v  i  359 
Didst  thou  not  promise  Henry  to  o  These  ancient  laws  Becket  i  iii  17 
Sign  and  o  !  „  i  iii  132 
Sign,  and  o  the  crown  !  „  i  iii  144 
And  swear  to  o  the  customs.  „     i  iii  270 

1  promised  The  King  to  o  these  customs,  „  i  iii  557 
That  thou  o,  not  me,  but  God  in  me,  „  i  iii  721 
since  we  likewise  swore  to  o  the  customs,  „  v  i  54 
No  man  to  love  me,  honour  me,  o  me  !  „  v  i  240 
Still  I  must  0  them.  Fare  you  well.  The  Cup  i  i  158 
Up  with  you,  all  of  you,  out  of  it !  hear  and  o.  Foresters  ii  ii  185 
You  hear  your  Queen,  o  !  «         m  464 

Obeyed     who  had  but  o  her  father  ;  Queen  Mary  i  i  95 

the  child  o  her  father.  „       i  v  494 

crown  Would  cleave  to  me  that  but  o  the  crown,  Becket  v  i  50 

Oblil^tion    With  bitter  o  to  the  Count—  Harold  n  ii  221 

every  bond  and  debt  and  o  Incurr'd  as  Chancellor.  Becket  i  iii  710 

Obliged    you  worked  well  enough,  and  I  am  much  o 

to  all  of  you.  From,  of  May  m  62 
Observance    all  manner  of  homages,  and  o's,  and  circum- 
bendibuses. Foresters  i  i  103 
Obtain    by  your  intercession  May  from  the  Apostolic 

see  0,  Queen  Mary  m  iii  147 

Occasion    on  a  great  o  sure  to  wake  As  great  a  wrath  in 

Beckett-  Becket  m  i  87 

They  seek — you  make — o  for  your  death.  „      v  ii  558 

two-legg'd  dogs  Among  us  who  can  smell  a  true  o,        The  Cup  i  ii  113 

but  this  day  has  brought  A  great  o.  The  Falcon  489 

Occupy    that  anyone  Should  seize  our  person,  o  our 

state,  Qu^en  Mary  n  ii  178 


Ocean    And  roll  the  golden  o's  of  our  grain.  The  Cup  ii  26^ 

or  wreckt  And  dead  beneath  the  midland  o,  Foresters  ii  i  657 

Odd  (adj.)     Make  us  despise  it  at  o  hours,  my  Lord.     Queen  Mary  iv  iii  386 
I  have  to  pray  you,  some  o  time,  „  v  i  258 

But  doth  not  the  weight  of  the  flesh  at  o  times  over- 
balance the  weight  of  the  church,  ha  friar  ?  Foresters  i  ii  61 

Odd  (s)    They  are  all  too  much  at  o's  to  close  at  once    Queen  Mary  i  v  632 


n  i  139 

Foresters  iv  318 

Harold  n  ii  347 

„       II  ii  356 

The  Cup  n  185 

I  i  110 


Queen  Mary  m  iii  191 

„  IV  iii  77 

Becket  I  iii  408- 

Queen  Mary  III  iii  144 

Prom,  of  May  iii  630- 

Queen  Mary  i  v  210 


Gardiner  knows,  but  the  Council  are  all  at  o's, 
But  seeing  valour  is  one  against  all  o's, 

Odo  (Bishop  of  Bayeux)    coming  with  his  brother  0  The 
Bayeux  bishop, 
and  O  said,  '  Thine  is  the  right. 

Odour    Let  all  the  air  reel  into  a  mist  of  o, 

O'erleap    after  rain  o's  a  jutting  rock  And  shoots 

Offal    with  0  thrown  Into  the  blind  sea  of  forget- 
fulness. 
scum  And  o  of  the  city  would  not  change 
men,  the  scum  and  o  of  the  Church  ; 

Offence    As  persons  undefiled  with  our  o, 
and  mighty  slow  To  feel  o's. 

Offend    You  o  us  ;  you  may  leave  us. 

You  o  us.     Gardiner.     These  princes  are  like  childreiri,      „  i  v  232 

It  is  the  crown  O's  him —  The  Cup  n  530' 

Offended     1  have  o  against  heaven  and  earth  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  124 

since  my  hand  o,  having  written  Against  my  heart,        „  iv  iii  247 

'  This  hath  o — this  unworthy  hand  !  '  „           rv  iii  613 

Offending    You  have  an  old  trick  of  o  us  ;  „          m  iv  315 

Offer     a  formal  o  of  the  hand  Of  Philip  ?  „              i  v  349- 

The  formal  o  of  Prince  Philip's  hand.  „              i  v  588 

Offer'd    has  o  her  his  son  Philip,  the  Pope  and  the  Devil.     „  i  i  105 

a  hundred  Gold  pieces  once  were  o  by  the  Duke.  The  Falcon  324 

Has  he  o  you  marriage,  this  gentleman  ?  Prom,  of  May  in  289- 

Offering    See  Peace-offering 

Office     I  have  lost  mine  o.  Queen  Mary  i  v  236 

Spain  in  all  the  great  o's  of  state  ;  „            ii  i  17& 

no  foreigner  Hold  o  in  the  household,  „           m  iii  72. 

set  up  The  Holy  O  here — ^garner  the  wheat,  „            v  v  113 

tell  the  cooks  to  close  The  doors  of  all  the  o's  below.        „  v  v  117 

Love  him  !  why  not  ?  thine  is  a  loving  o,  Harold  n  ii  97 

fill'd  All  o's,  all  bishopricks  with  EngUsh —  „     ii  ii  535 

I  had  been  so  true  To  Henry  and  mine  o  Becket  i  iii  693 

both  of  us  Too  headlong  for  our  o.  „     ii  ii  290- 

Nor  make  me  traitor  to  my  holy  o.  „      v  ii  149 

You  should  attend  the  o,  give  them  heart.  „     v  ii  598 

He  said,  '  Attend  the  o.'     Becket.     Attend  the  o?  „      v  ii  608- 

get  you  back  !  go  on  with  the  o.  „       v  iii  33 

Back,  I  say  !     Go  on  with  the  o.  „      v  iii  39' 

Officer    the  Queen's  O's  Are  here  in  force  Queen  Mary  i  ii  108 

by  the  judgment  of  the  o's  of  the  said  lord  king,  Foresters  i  iii  65 

Ofs     King  Hath  divers  o  and  ons,  o  and  belongings,  Becket  rv  ii  32: 

Oftener     But  you  were  o  there.     I  have  none  but  you.  „      in  i  5^ 

Oil    I  Scraped  from  your  finger-points  the  holy  o  ;  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  133 

Olaf  (a  Norwegian  king)    St.  O,  not  while  I  am  by  !  Harold  i  i  395 


Old  (adj.)     (See  also  Owd,  Owld)     0  Nokes,  can't  it  make 

thee  a  bastard  ? 
No,  0  Nokes.     Old  Nokes.     It's  Harry, 
for  thou  was  born  i'  the  tail  end  of  o  Harry  the  Seventh. 
I  was  born  true  man  at  five  in  the  forenoon  i'  the  tail 

of  o  Harry, 
but  I  and  my  o  woman  'ud  bum  upon  it. 
Ay,  but  he's  too  o. 
0  Bourne  to  the  life  ! 

Yon  gray  o  Gospeller,  sour  as  midwinter.  Begin  with  him. 
By  the  mass,  o  friend,  we'll  have  no  pope  here 
Ay,  that  am  I,  new  converted,  but  the  o  leaven  sticks 

to  my  tongue  yet. 
but  this  fierce  o  Gardiner — his  big  baldness, 
or  wave  And  wind  at  their  o  battle  :  he  must  have 

written. 
Not  yet ;  but  your  o  Traitors  of  the  Tower — 
Why  comes  that  o  fox-Fleming  back  again  ? 
None  so  new.  Sir  Thomas,  and  none  so  o,  Sir  Thomas. 

No  new  news  that  Philip  comes  to  wed  Mary,  no 

0  news  that  all  men  hate  it.     0  Sir  Thomas  would 

have  hated  it. 


Queen  Mary  i  i  28' 
1 133 
1 142 

ii4& 
ii5& 
Iil21 
I  iii  3a 
I  iii  40 
I  iii  42 

I  iii  48 
iiv263 

IV  357 
IV  483. 
IV  581 


nil5 


Old 


1022 


Old 


Old  (adj.)  (continued)     0  Sir  Thomas  always  granted  the 

wine.  Queen  Mary  n  i  41 

Ay — sonnets — a  fine  courtier  of  the  o  court,  o  Sir 

Thomas. 
Wake,  or  the  stout  o  island  will  become  A  rotten 

limb  of  Spain, 
you  that  have  kept  your  o  customs  upright, 
I  have  been  there  with  o  Sir  Thomas,  and  the  beds 

I  know. 
Ay,  gray  o  castle  of  Alington,  green  field  Beside  the 

brimming  Medway, 
They  go  like  those  o  Pharisees  in  John  Convicted 

by  their  conscience. 
And  scared  the  gray  o  porter  and  his  wife. 
I  know  not  my  letters  ;  the  o  priest  taught  me  nothing, 
Far  liefer  had  I  in  my  country  hall  Been  reading 

some  o  book,  with  mine  o  hound  Couch'd  at  my 

hearth,  and  mine  o  flask  of  wine  Beside  me, 
I  am  an  o  man  wearied  with  my  journey,  Ev'n  with 

my  joy. 
and  are  well  agreed  That  those  o  statutes  touching 

Lollardism 

0  Rome,  that  first  made  martyrs  in  the  Church, 
You  have  an  o  trick  of  offending  us  ; 
Touch  him  upon  his  o  heretical  talk, 
^len  now  are  bow'd  and  o,  the  doctors  tell  you, 
Our  0  friend  Cranmer,  Your  more  especial  love, 
there's  An  o  world  English  adage  to  the  point. 
Cool  as  the  light  in  o  decaying  wood  ; 
Monsters  of  mistradition,  o  enough  To  scare  me 

into  dreaming, 
Good  day,  o  friend  ;  what,  you  look  somewhat  worn  ; 
in  the  Testaments,  Both  0  and  New. 
Crying,  '  Forward  ! ' — set  our  o  church  rocking, 
[       Hist !  there  be  two  o  gossips — gospellers. 

And  the  gray  dawn  Of  an  o  age  that  never  will  be 

mine 
Probing  an  o  state-secret — how  it  chanced  That  this 

young  Earl 
Noble  as  his  yoxmg  person  and  o  shield. 
Ah,  weak  and  meek  o  man.  Seven-fold  dishonour'd 

0,  miserable,  diseased, 
/  am  a  harm  to  England.     0  imcanonical  Stigand — 

Stand  by  him,  mine  o  friend. 

So  says  o  Gurth,  not  I :  yet  hear  !  thine  earldom, 

Tostig,  hath  been  a  kingdom.     Their  o  crown  Is 

yet  a  force  among  them, 
and  I  beat  him.     Even  o  Gurth  would  fight.     I  had 

much  ado  To  hold  mine  own  against  o  Gurth. 

O  Gurth, 

1  dug  mine  into  My  o  fast  friend  the  shore, 
Counts  his  o  beads,  and  hath  forgotten  thee. 
our  good  King  Kneels  mumbling  some  o  bone — 

1,  0  shrivell'd  Stigand,  I,  Dry  as  an  o  wood-fungus 
on  a  dead  tree, 

I  do  believe  My  o  crook'd  spine  would  bud  out  two 

young  wings 
No,  not  strange  This  was  o  human  laughter  in  o  Rome 
Our  o  Northumbrian  crown.  And  kings  of  our  own 

choosing. 
Your  0  crown  Were  little  help  without  our  Saxon 

carles 
There  is  a  pleasant  fable  in  o  books, 
This  o  WuUnoth  Would  take  me  on  his  knees  and 

tell  me  tales 
0  man,  Harold  Hates  nothing  ;  not  his  fault, 
So  loud,  that,  by  St.  Dunstan,  o  St.  Thor — 
but  our  o  Thor  Heard  his  own  thunder  again, 
0  dog.  Thou  art  drunk,  o  dog  ! 
Wash  up  that  o  crown  of  Northumberland. 
And  chanting  that  o  song  of  Brunanburg  Where 

England  conquer'd. 
And  our  o  songs  are  prayers  for  England  too  ! 
but  I,  o  wretch,  o  Stigand,  With  hands  too  limp 

to  brandish  iron —  „    v  i  447 


II 146 

nil04 
nil58 

II  i  184 

II 1243 

nils 
n  iii  16 

n  iii  57 


„         ni  i  44 

„     in  ii  127 

„  m  iv  7 

„  in  iv  126 

„  in  iv  315 

„  in  iv  352 

„  in  iv  408 

„  III  iv  416 

„  IV  i  175 

„  IV  ii  5 

„  IV  ii  102 

„  IV  ii  115 

„  IV  iii  234 

„  IV  iii  403 

„  IV  iii  460 

V  ii  234 

V  ii  487 

V  ii  513 

V  V  132 

V  V  178 
Harold  i  i  81 

1 1112 


1 1302 


11436 

n  i  7 

nii447 

n  ii  469 

mi  7 

mi  24 
m  ii  163 

IV  131 

IV  134 
IV  156 

IV  i  71 

IV  i  128 

IV  iii  146 

IV  iii  149 

IV  iii  163 

vil67 

vi215 

vi222 


Old  (adj.)  (continued)     He  is  chanting  some  o  warsong.  Harold  v  1  495 

War-woodman  of  o  Woden,  how  he  fells  The  mortal 

copse  of  faces  ! 
and  most  amorous  Of  good  o  red  sound  liberal 

Gascon  wine  : 
believe  thee  The  veriest  Galahad  of  o  Arthur's  hall. 
Well,  well,  o  men  must  die,  or  the  world  would  grow 

mouldy. 
The  good  o  man  would  sometimes  have  his  jest — 
You  will  do  much  To  rake  out  all  o  dying  heats, 
I  hate  a  split  between  o  friendships  as  I  hate  the 

dirty  gap 
And  that  o  priest  whom  John  of  Salisbury  trusted 

Hath  sent  another, 
for  to  be  sure  it's  no  more  than  a  week  since  our  o 

Father  Philip 
tho'  to  be  sure  our  mother  'ill  sing  me  o  songs 
for  the  0  King  would  act  servitor  and  hand  a  dish 

to  his  son  ; 
Mine  o  friend,  Thomas,  I  would  there  were  that 

perfect  trust  between  us, 
You  could  not — o  affection  master'd  you, 
I  know  not  why  You  call  these  o  things  back  again. 
The  0  King's  present,  carried  off  the  casks. 
And  lose  his  head  as  o  St.  Denis  did. 
May  they  not  say  you  dared  not  show  yourself  In 

your  o  place  ? 
I  am  not  mad,  not  sick,  not  o  enough  To  doat  on  one 

alone. 
It  is  o,  I  know  not  How  many  hundred  years, 
we  would  add  Some  golden  fringe  of  gorgeousness 

beyond  0  use, 
Did  not  some  o  Greek  Say  death  was  the  chief  good  ? 
This  0  thing  here  they  are  but  blue  beads — my  Piero, 
Ay,  my  lady,  but  won't  you  speak  with  the  o  woman  first. 
And  yet  to  speak  white  truth,  my  good  o  mother, 
It's  the  0  Scripture  text,  '  Let  us  eat  and  drink, 

for  to-morrow  we  die.' 
'  What  are  we,'  says  the  blind  o  man  in  Lear  ? 
I  hate  tears.     Marriage  is  but  an  o  tradition. 
That  fine,  fat,  hook-nosed  uncle  of  mine,  o  Harold, 
will  each  Bid  their  o  bond  farewell  with  smiles,  not 

tears  ; 
for  when  the  tide  Of  full  democracy  has  overwhelm'd 

This  0  world, 
Tut  !  you  talk  O  feudalism. 
Neither  the  o  world,  nor  the  new,  nor  father, 
And  poor  o  father  not  die  miserable. 
Our  o  nurse  crying  as  if  for  her  own  child, 
I  do  not  dare,  like  an  o  friend,  to  shake  it. 
I  have  always  told  Father  that  the  huge  o  ashtree 

there  would  cause  an  accident  some  day  ; 
for,  indeed,  he  tells  me  that  he  met  you  once  in 

the  o  times, 
and  when  the  children  grew  too  o  for  me, 
your  Father  must  be  now  in  extreme  o  age. 
We  Steers  are  of  o  blood,  tho'  we  be  fallen, 
and  your  own  name  Of  Harold  sounds  so  English 

and  so  o 
I  be  lanker  than  an  o  horse  turned  out  to  die  on  the 

common, 
and  your  Ladyship  hath  sung  the  o  proverb  out  of 

fashion. 
And  how  often  in  o  histories  have  the  great  men  striven 

against  the  stream, 
I  am  0  and  forget.    Was  Prince  John  there  ? 
o  faces  Press  roimd  us,  and  warm  hands  close  with 

warm  hands, 
Ay,  ay,  gown,  coif,  and  petticoat,  and  the  o  woman's 

blessing  with  them  to  the  last  fringe. 
Except  this  o  hag  have  been  bribed  to  lie.     Robin. 

We  0  hags  should  be  bribed  to  speak  truth, 
There  is  but  one  o  woman  in  the  hut. 
There  is  yet  another  o  woman. 
0  hag,  how  should  thy  one  tooth  drill  thro'  this  ? 


„      V  i  588 

Becket,  Pro.  100 
„      Fro.  129 

„      Pro.  408 

I  i  61 

„       n  ii  114 

II  ii  380 


„       in  i 110 
in  i  184 

„     m  iii  138 

„     ni  iii  262 

V  ii  143 

V  ii  270 

V  ii  442 

V  ii  480 

V  ii  596 

The  Cup  I  iii  69 
n342 


II  439 
n513 
The  Falcon  47 
182 
504 


Prom,  of  May  i  258 
I  263 
I  491 
1 510 

I  524 

I  594 
I  670 
I  674 
I  722 
n479 
n526 

m244 

m263 
m387 
ra400 
m604 

in  610 

Foresters  i  i  51 '  j 

I  i  164 


11242 
11250 

I  iii  18 

11  i  195 

ni234 
11  i  241 
ui244 
ni275 


Old 


1023 


One 


Old  (adj.)  (continiied)    There's  for  you,  and  there's  for 

you — and  the  o  woman's  welcome.  Foresters  ii  i  290 

The  0  wretch  is  mad,  and  her  bread  is  beyond  me  :  „      ii  i  291 

Here's  a  pot  o'  wild  honey  from  an  o  oak,  „      n  i  296 

And,  o  hag  tho'  I  be,  I  can  spell  the  hand.  „      n  i  350 

Why  do  you  listen,  man,  to  the  o  fool  ?  „  n  i  358 
All  the  sweet  saints  bless  your  worship  for  your  alms 

to  the  o  woman  !  „      ii  i  364 

How  should  this  o  lamester  guide  us  !  „      ii  i  369 

Why,  an  o  woman  can  shoot  closer  than  you  two.  „      n  i  400 

and  make  thine  o  carcase  a  target  for  us  three.  „      ii  i  404 

Did  I  not  tell  you  an  o  woman  could  shoot  better  ?  „  ii  i  407 
Thou  art  no  o  woman — thou  art  disguised — thou  art 

one  of  the  thieves.  „      u  i  410 

0  as  I  am,  I  will  not  brook  to  see  Three  upon  two.  „  ii  i  422 
A  brave  o  fellow  but  he  angers  me.  „  ii  i  471 
He  is  o  and  almost  mad  to  keep  the  land.  „  ii  i  528 
thou  wast  by  And  never  drewest  sword  to  help  the  o 

man  „      ii  i  541 

The  o  man  dotes.  „  u  ii  83 
And  I,  o  Much,  say  as  much,  for  being  every  inch  a 

man  1  honour  every  inch  of  a  woman.  „         m  62 

When  the  flower  was  wither'd  and  o.  „         iv  22 

at  last  I  crawl'd  like  a  sick  crab  from  my  o  shell,  „        iv  126 

Ay,  for  o  Much  is  every  inch  a  man.  „  iv  289 
Because  thou  art  always  so  much  more  of  a  man  than 

my  youngsters  o  Much.     Much.     Well,  we  Muches 

be  o.    Robin.    O  as  the  hills.    Much.    0  as  the  mill.  „        iv  299 

Where  is  this  o  Sir  Richard  of  the  Lea  ?  „        iv  438 

and  thus  This  o  Sir  Richard  might  redeem  his  land.  „        iv  487 

By  0  St.  Vitus  Have  you  gone  mad  ?  „        iv  614 

And  this  o  crazeling  in  the  litter  there.  „  iv  634 
Child,  thou  shalt  wed  him.  Or  thine  o  father  Avill 

go  mad — ^he  will,  „        iv  645 

Carry  her  off,  and  let  the  o  man  die.  „       iv  677 

Meanwhile,  farewell  0  friends,  o  patriarch  oaks.  „  iv  1054 
And  surely  these  o  oaks  will  murmur  thee  Marian 

along  with  Robin.  „  iv  1093 
Old  (s)     and  watch  The  parch'd  banks  rolling  incense, 

as  of  o,  Queen  Mary  i  v  92 

Should  not  this  day  be  held  in  after  years  More 

solemn  than  of  o  ?  „        m  iii  91 

This  hard  coarse  man  of  o  hath  crouch'd  to  me  „        iv  ii  169 

but  I  know  it  of  o,  he  hates  me  too  ;  „  v  ii  60 
Did  not  Heaven  speak  to  men  in  dreams  of  o  ? 

Harold.     Ay — well — of  o.  Harold  i  ii  95 

What,  this  !  and  this  ! — what !  new  and  o  together  !  Becket  i  iii  310 

We  have  had  our  leagues  of  o  with  Eastern  kings.  The  Cup  i  ii  101 

Perhaps  I  thought  with  those  of  o,  The  Falcon  878 
Olden     Is  like  a  word  that  comes  from  o  days.                 Queen  Mary  ni  v  34 

Let  these  decide  on  what  was  customary  In  o  days,  Becket  ii  ii  176 

I  am  eleven  years  o  than  he  is.  Queen  Mary  i  v  68 

1  am  eleven  years  o  than  he.  Poor  boy  !  „  v  v  46 
oaks,  Gnarl'd — o  than  the  thrones  of  Europe —  Foresters  in  92 

Oldest     Becket,  I  am  the  o  of  the  Templars  ;  Becket  i  iii  247 

I  am  the  o  of  thy  men,  and  thou  and  thy  youngsters  Foresters  iv  294 
Old-fashioned     I  have  heard  that '  your  Lordship,'  and 
'  your  Ladyship,'  and  '  your  Grace  '  are  all  grow- 
ing o-f !                                                                      Prom,  of  May  in  318 

But  the  love  of  sister  for  sister  can  never  be  o-f.  „           m  320 

Oldham    Luscombe,  Nokes,  0,  Skipworth !  „            ni  53 
Old-world     There  was  an  o-w  tomb  beside  my 

father's,  Queen  Mary  v  ii  393 

these  o-w  servants  Are  all  but  flesh  and  blood  The  Falcon  707 

full  democracy  has  overwhelm'd  This  O  w,  Prom,  of  May  i  594 

learnt  at  last  that  all  His  o-w  faith,  „          n  332 

<Nive-branch    more  of  o-b  and  amnesty  For  foes  at  home —      Becket  v  ii  15 

Ominous     Not  steigger'd  by  this  o  earth  and  heaven  :  Harold  i  i  207 

Ommost  (almost)     Seeams  I  o  knaws  the  back  on  'im —  Prom,  of  May  n  577 

One    There  is  but  o  thing  against  them.  Queen  Mary  i  i  100 

and  sever'd  from  the  faith,  will  return  into  the  o 

true  fold,  „           i  iii  22 

Calais  !     Our  o  point  on  the  main,  the  gate  of  France  !     „          i  v  125 

Spain  and  we,  O  crown,  might  rule  the  world.  „          i  v  303 

But  Philip  never  writes  me  o  poor  word,  „          i  v  360 


One  (continued)    For  Philip  comes,  o  hand  in  mine, 

and  o  Steadying  the  tremulous  pillars  of  the 

Church^  Queen  Mary  i  v  515 

They  are  all  too  much  at  odds  to  close  at  once  In 

o  full-throated  No  ! 
you  stroke  me  on  o  cheek.  Buffet  the  other. 
So  I  say  Your  city  is  divided,  and  I  fear  0  scruple. 
Am  I  Thomas  White  ?     O  word  before  she  comes. 
And  arm  and  strike  as  with  o  hand, 
moving  side  by  side  Beneath  o  canopy, 
They  smile  as  if  content  with  o  another. 

0  crater  opens  when  another  shuts. 
but  I  say  There  is  no  man — there  was  o  woman 

with  us — 
Nay  come  with  me — o  moment  ! 
You  were  the  o  sole  man  in  either  house  Who 

stood  upright 

1  say  you  were  the  o  sole  man  who  stood. 
I  am  the  o  sole  man  in  either  house. 
Well,  you  o  man,  becaase  you  stood  upright, 
If  any  man  in  any  way  would  be  The  o  man,  he 

shall  be  so  to  his  cost. 

yet  I  found  0  day,  a  wholesome  scripture, 

call  they  not  The  o  true  faith,  a  loathsome  idol- 
worship  ? 

there  comes  a  missive  from  the  Queen  It  shall 
be  all  my  study  for  o  hour 

with  free  wing  The  world  were  all  o  Araby. 

0  half  Will  flutter  here,  o  there. 
Methinks  that  would  you  tarry  o  day  more  (The 

news  was  sudden) 
For  0  day  more,  so  far  as  I  can  tell. 
Then  o  day  more  to  please  her  Majesty, 
retum'd  To  the  a  Catholic  Universal  Church, 

Repentant  of  his  errors  ? 
Pray  with  o  breath,  o  heart,  o  soul  for  me. 
What,  not  o  day  ? 

and  it  was  thought  we  two  Might  make  o  flesh, 
No — we  were  not  made  0  flesh  in  happiness,  no 

happiness  here  ;  But  now  we  are  made  o  flesh 

in  misery ; 
And  there  is  o  Death  stands  behind  the  Groom, 

And  there  is  o  Death  stands  behind  the  Bride — 
and  to  send  us  again,  according  to  His  promise, 

the  0  King,  the  Christ, 
Ay,  worse  than  that — not  o  hour  true  to  me  ! 
Why  then  the  wrath  of  Heaven  hath  three  tails. 

The  devil  only  o. 
But  heaven  and  earth  are  threads  of  the  same  loom, 

Play  into  o  another. 
It  is  but  for  o  moon. 

And  all  the  North  of  Hmnber  is  o  storm. 
Harold,  I  am  thy  friend,  o  life  \vith  thee. 
Sir  Count,  He  had  but  o  foot,  he  must  have  hopt  away, 
were  or  should  be  all  0  England,  for  this  cow-herd,  like 

my  father. 
Ye  heard  o  witness  even  now. 

1  have  not  spoken  to  the  king  0  word  ;  and  o  I  must. 
Farewell ! 

Whose  life  was  all  o  battle,  incarnate  war, 

Make  thou  o  man  as  three  to  roll  them  down  ! 

No,  no — brave  Gurth,  o  gash  from  brow  to  knee  ! 

But  0  woman  !     Look  you,  we  never  mean  to  part  again. 

Death  ! — and  enough  of  death  for  this  o  day. 

Of  o  self-stock  at  first,  Make  them  again  o  people — 

True,  0  rose  will  outblossom  the  rest,  o  rose  in  a 

bower, 
but  I  fear  this  o  fancy  hath  taken  root, 
And  goodly  acres — we  will  make  her  whole ;  Not  o 

rood  lost. 
So  that  you  grant  me  o  sUght  favour. 
And  some  are  reeds,  that  o  time  sway  to  the  current, 
Grant  me  o  day  To  ponder  these  demands, 
she  holds  it  in  Free  and  perpetual  alms,  unsubject 

to  0  earthy  sceptre.  „       i  iii  681 


IV  634 
II  i  117 
n  ii  100 
II  ii  109 

II  ii  292 
m  i  97 

mi  211 
mi  322 

III  i  337 
in  ii  189 

in  iii  252 
III  iii  263 
III  iii  265 
III  iii  268 

III  iii  276 
III  iv  84 

m  iv  219 

III  V  184 
m  V  210 
in  vi  196 

ni  vi  233 
ni  vi246 

III  vi  247 

IV  iii  21 

IV  iii  104 
vi209 

V  ii  137 


V  ii  150 
viil65 

viv53 

V  vl59 

Harold  i  i  62 

„  I  i  211 
„  I  ii  30 
„  nii291 
„  nii649 
„  nii675 

„  IV  i  79 
„   IV  i 170 

„  V  i  336 

„  V  i  397 

„  V  i  577 

„  V  ii  70 

.,  V  ii  79 

„  viil20 

„  viil86 


Becket,  Pro.  345 
„      Pro.  480 

I  i  165 

I  ii  58 

I  iii  593 

I  iii  668 


One 


1024 


Open 


One  (continued)    Who  stole  the  widow's  o  sitting  hen  o' 

Sunday,  when  she  was  at  mass  ?  Becket  i  iv  121 

And  I  ha'  nine  darters  i'  the  spital  that  be  dead  ten 

times  o'er  i'  o  day  wi'  the  putrid  fever ;  „       i  iv  251 

With  Becket !     I  have  but  o  hour  with  thee —  „          ii  i  24 

Let  there  not  be  o  frown  in  this  o  hour.  „          n  i  43 

We  have  but  o  bond,  her  hate  of  Becket.  „        n  i  165 

My  o  grain  of  good  counsel  which  you  will  not  swallow.  „       n  ii  378 

leave  Lateran  and  Vatican  in  o  dust  of  gold —  „       n  ii  475 

And  0  fair  child  to  fondle  !  „  in  i  12 
I  but  ask'd  her  0  question,  and  she  primm'd  her  mouth      „        m  i  74 

and  bad  me  whatever  I  saw  not  to  speak  o  word,  „  in  i  133 
and  then  not  to  speak  o  word,  for  that's  the  rule  o'  the 

garden,  „  in  i  137 
tho'  I  shouldn't  speak  o  word,  I  wish  you  joy  o'  the 

King's  brother.  „  mi  154 
Yet  o  thing  more.     Thou  hast  broken  thro'  the  pales 

Of  privilege,  „  in  iii  192 
I  am  bound  For  that  o  hour  to  stay  with  good  King  Louis,      „     in  iii  247 

He  said  thy  life  Was  not  o  hour's  worth  in  England  „  m  iii  251 
O  word  further.     Doth  not  the  fewness  of  anything 

make  the  fulness  of  it  in  estimation  ?  „     in  iii  301 

the  wolves  of  England  Must  murder  her  o  shepherd,  „  in  iii  344 
Could  you  keep  her  Indungeon'd  from  o  whisper  of 

the  wind,  „      iv  ii  146 

Take  thy  o  chance  ;  Catch  at  the  last  straw.  „  rv  ii  220 
0  downward  plunge  of  his  paw  would  rend  away 

Eyesight  „  iv  ii  283 
Rosamund  hath  not  answer'd  you  o  word  ;  Madam,  I 

■will  not  answer  you  o  word.  „      iv  ii  362 

She  lives — but  not  for  him  ;  o  point  is  gain'd.  „      iv  ii  415 

Your  Grace  will  never  have  o  quiet  hour.  „  v  i  78 
But  o  question — How  fares  thy  pretty  boy,  the  little 

Geoffrey  ?  „       v  ii  165 

And  breathe  o  prayer  for  my  liege-lord  the  King,  „       v  ii  191 

0  slow,  fat,  white,  a  burthen  of  the  hearth  ;  „       v  ii  211 

1  never  spied  in  thee  o  gleam  of  grace.  „  v  ii  474 
I  pray  you  for  o  moment  stay  and  speak.  „  v  ii  525 
and  throne  O  king  above  them  all.  The  Cup  i  i  93 
It  is  the  0  step  in  the  dark  beyond  Our  expectation,  „  i  i  212 
put  forth  0  paw.  Slew  four,  and  knew  it  not,  „  i  ii  126 
There  may  be  courtesans  for  aught  I  know  Whose  life 

is  0  dishonour.  „     iii  194 

No,  not  o  step  with  thee.  „     i  iii  96 

Then  with  o  quick  short  stab — eternal  peace.  „  i  iii  124 
Tell  him  there  is  o  shadow  among  the  shadows,  0  ghost 

of  all  the  ghosts —  „  n  139 
The  shout  of  Synorix  and  Camma  sitting  Upon  o  throne,        „      n  148 

They  two  should  drink  together  from  o  cup,  „  n  361 
and  0  plate  of  dried  primes  be  all-but-nothing.                The  Falcon  135 

Oh  sweet  saints  !  o  plate  of  primes  !  „          215 

His  0  companion  here — nay,  I  have  heard  That,  „          225 

It  will  be  hard,  I  fear.  To  find  o  shock  upon  the  field  „  301 
we  have  but  o  piece  of  earthenware  to  serve  the  salad 

in  to  my  lady,  „          481 

My  0  thing  left  of  value  in  the  world  !  „          496 

And  o  word  more.    Good  !  let  it  be  but  o.  „          510 

I  cannot.  Not  a  morsel,  not  o  morsel.  „  573 
I  am  sure  that  more  than  o  brave  fellow  owed  His 

death  to  the  charm  in  it.  „          633 

My  last  sight  ere  I  swoon'd  was  o  sweet  face  „          647 

My  0  child  Florio  lying  still  so  sick,  „          678 

who  comes  To  rob  you  of  your  o  delight  on  earth.  „  828 
and  'er  an'  the  owd  man  they  fell  a  kissin'  o'  o 

another  Prom,  of  May  i  21 

I  seed  that  o  cow  o'  thine  i'  the  pinfold  agean  as  I 

wur  a-coomin'  'ere.  „          1 190 

An'  if  tha  can't  keep  thy  o  cow  i'  border,  „          1 197 

I  niver  'es  sa  much  as  o  pin's  prick  of  paain  ;  „  i  359 
but  when  thou  be  as  owd  as  me  thou'll  put  o  word 

fur  another  as  I  does.  „          1 381 

but  o  time's  vice  may  be  The  virtue  of  another ;  „         i  534 

I  could  put  all  that  o'  o  side  easy  anew.  „  n  111 
when  mea  and  my  sweet'art  was  a  workin'  along  o* 

o  side  wi'  o  another,  „        n  152 


One  {continued)    wasn't  thou  and  me  a-bussin'  o'  o 

another  t'other  side  o'  the  haaycock. 
Left  but  o  dreadful  Une  to  say,  that  we  Should 

find  her  in  the  river  ; 
will  he  ever  be  of  o  faith  with  liis  wife  ? 
Wasn't  dear  mother  herself  at  least  by  o  side  a  lady  ? 
Look  up  !   0  word,  or  do  but  smile  ! 
and  to  her  you  came  Veiling  o  sin  to  act  another. 
The  shelter  of  your  roof — not  for  o  moment — 
Shall  I  keep  o  little  rose  for  Little  John  ?     No. 
But  if  a  man  and  a  maid  care  for  o  another. 
If  thou  draw  o  inch  nearer,  I  will  give  thee  a  buffet 

on  the  face, 
if  a  man  and  a  maid  love  o  another,  may  the  maid 

give  the  first  kiss  ? 
Cloud  not  thy  birthday  with  o  fear  for  me. 
We  make  but  o  hour's  buzz,  are  only  like  The  rainbow 
I  have  reign'd  o  year  in  the  wild  wood, 
to  carve  0  lone  hour  from  it, 
Tho'  in  0  moment  she  should  glance  away. 
There  is  but  o  old  woman  in  the  hut. 
Old  hag,  how  should  thy  o  tooth  drill  thro'  this  ? 
Speak  but  o  word  not  only  of  forgiveness. 
We  never  robb'd  o  friend  of  the  true  King. 
I  have  but  o  penny  in  pouch, 
I  have  0  mark  in  gold  which  a  pious  son  of  the  Church 

gave  me 
Well,  as  he  said,  o  mark  in  gold.     Marian.     And 

thou  ?     Friar.     0  mark  in  gold. 

0  half  of  this  shall  go  to  those  they  have  wrong'd, 

0  half  shall  pass  into  our  treasury. 
How  much  hast  thou  about  thee  ?     King  Richard. 

1  had  0  mark. 
What  more  ?  o  thousand  marks.  Or  else  the  land. 
Here  be  o  thousand  marks  Out  of  our  treasuiy  to 

redeem  the  land. 
Mine  eye  most  true  to  o  hair's-breadth  of  aim. 

1  never  found  o  traitor  in  my  band. 
Past  the  bank  Of  foxglove,  then  to  left  by  that  o  yew. 
No — there's  yet  o  other :  I  will  not  dine  without  him. 
Here — ^give  me  o  sharp  pinch  upon  the  cheek 

Only    {See  also  Nobbnt,  Nubbut)    I  am  the  o  rose  of  all  the 
stock  That  never  thom'd  him  ; 

Mother  says  gold  spoils  all.     Love  is  the  o  gold. 

'  Till  death  us  part ' — those  are  the  o  words, 
0ns     King  Hath  divers  ofs  and  o,  ofs  and  belongings, 
Ony  (any)     or  o  waay,  I'd  slaave  out  my  fife  fur  'er. 

Hev'  0  o'  ye  seen  Eva  ? 

afoor  0  o'  ye  wur  burn — 

doant  ye  hear  of  o  ? 

an'  0  o'  Steer's  men,  an'  o  o'  my  men 

an'  she  wur  as  sweet  as  o  on  'em — 

And  I  would  loove  tha  moor  nor  o  gentleman  'ud 
loove  tha. 
Onyhow  (anyhow)     I  thank  you  fur  that,  Miss  Dora,  o. 
Onythink  (anything)    Why,  Miss,  I  be  afeard  I  shall  set 

him  a-swearing  like  o. 
Oop  (up)    The  beer's  gotten  o  into  my  'ead. 

but  I  thinks  he  be  wakkenin'  o. 
Ooze     All  o's  out ;  yet  him —  Queen  Mary  i  iv  205 

Open  (adj.)     You  should  be  plain  and  o  with  me,  niece.  „         i  iv  217 

In  clear  and  o  day  were  congruent  With  that  vile  Cranmer  „        ni  iv  230 

0  rare,  a  whole  long  day  of  o  field.  Becket  i  i  296 

1  am  0  to  him.  „  v  ii  68 
No,  look  !  the  door  is  o  :  let  him  be.  „  v  ii  316 
and  0  arms  To  him  who  gave  it ;  The  Cup  i  i  83 
Smitten  with  fever  in  the  o  field.                              Prom,  of  May  iii  806 

Open  (verb)    0  the  window,  Knyvett :  Queen  Mary  u  i  154 

One  crater  o's  when  another  shuts.        ,  „         ni  i  322 

O,  Ye  everlasting  gates !  „        ni  ii  182 

Women,  when  I  am  dead,  0  my  heart,  „  v  v  153 

o  his, — So  that  he  have  one, —  „  v  v  155 

At  last  a  harbour  o's ;  but  therein  Sunk  rocks —  „  v  v  213 

this  door  O's  upon  the  forest !     Out,  begone !  The  Cup  i  ii  329 

O,  0,  or  I  will  drive  the  door  from  the  door-post.  Foresters  ii  i  219 


Prom,  of  May  n  231 


n  411 
ni  178. 
nr  301 
in  677 
ni  773 
ni  800 
Foresters  i  i  112 
I  i  135 

I  i  145 

„  I  i  172 
„  I  ii  126 
„  I  ii  277 
n  i  36 
n  i  43 
„  n  i  161 
„  n  i  241 
„  n  i  276 
„  n  i  610 
„  in  157 
„       ni  193 

m  280 

„       ni  284 

„       m  303 

IV  165 
IV  473 

IV  492 
IV  694 
IV  836 
IV  974 
IV  994 
„     IV  1011 


Harold  i  i  425 

Becket  iv  i  43 

Prom,  of  May  i  658 

BeckH  IV  ii  32 

Prom,  of  May  1 177 

I  313 

I  366 

I  390 

n34 

n39 

nl05 
1 158 

in  359 
n320 
ni  413 


Open'd 


1025 


Overlook 


Open'd    this  was  o,  and  the  dead  were  found  Sitting,    Queen  Mary  \  ii  395 
into  thy  mouth  hadst  thou  but  o  it  to  thank  him.  Becket  iii  iii  277 

Knock,  and  it  shall  be  o.  „         v  iii  64 

o  out  The  purple  zone  of  hill  and  heaven ;  The  Cup  i  ii  407 

The  blossom  had  o  on  every  bough ;  Prom,  of  May  i  42 

Opening     Beware  of  o  out  thy  bosom  to  it,  Becket  in  iii  30 

That  beam  of  dawn  upon  the  o  flower,  Foresters  iv  3 

Opinion     when  men  are  tost  On  tides  of  strange  o.      Queen  Mary  in  iv  119 
Tnie,  I  have  held  o's,  hold  some  still,  Prom,  of  May  m  622 

Opportunity    our  o  When  I  and  thou  will  rob  the  nest  of 

ber.  Foresters  i  ii  160 

Oppose     I  would  set  my  men-at-arms  to  o  thee,  „         i  i  323 

^posite    we  will  climb  The  mountain  o  and  watch  the 

chase.  The  Cup  i  i  117 

Oppress    The  walls  o  me,  And  yon  huge  keep  Harold  ii  ii  227 

0  help  us  from  all  that  a  us !  The  Cup  ii  6 
Oppression  The  o  of  our  people  moves  me  so.  Foresters  in  109 
Opulent    See  Over-opulent 

Onxis    this  o  of  great  Artemis  Has  no  more  power  than 

other  o's  The  Cup  n  33 

Oran  (in  Algeria)     Timis,  and  0,  and  the  Philippines,  Queen  Mary  v  i  48 

Orange  (plant)     You  lived  among  your  vines  and  o's,  „    in  iv  253 

1  that  held  the  o  blossom  Dark  as  the  yew  ?  Prom,  of  May  n  629 
Orange  (town)  William  of  0,  William  the  Silent.  Queen  Mary  m  i  197 
Order  (arrangement,  etc.)  Like  loosely-scatter'd  jewels, 

in  fair  o,  ,,  n  i  28 

my  cows  in  sweeter  o  Had  I  been  such.  „         in  v  271 

ever-jarring  Earldoms  move  To  music  and  in  o —  Harold  n  ii  762 

She  will  break  fence.     I  can't  keep  her  in  o.  Prom,  of  May  1 195 

Order  (command,  etc.)    {See  also  Border)    To  take  such 

0  with  all  heretics  Queen  Mary  i  v  34 

If  this  be  not  your  Grace's  o,  „        n  iv  64 

Have  I  the  o's  of  the  Holy  Father  ?    Philip  de  Eleemosyna. 

O's,  my  lord — why,  no ;  for  what  am  I  ?  Becket  i  iii  232 

I  give  you  here  an  o  To  seize  upon  him.  The  Cup  i  i  164 

WiU  you  betray  him  by  this  o?  „      i  ii  245 

Is  this  your  brother's  o  ?  The  Falcon  745 

Order  (rank,  etc.)     Saving  the  honour  of  my  o — ay.  Becket  i  iii  21 

Saving  thine  o  !  „      i  iii  26 

Saving  thine  o,  Thomas,  Is  black  and  white  „      i  iii  30 

Ordered    pity  this  poor  world  myself  that  it  is  no  better  o.  „  Pro.  367 

Ordinance     Either  in  making  laws  and  o's  Queen  Mary  iii  iii  130 

Of  all  such  laws  and  o's  made ;  „  ni  iii  142 

Against  the  solemn  o  from  Rome,  Becket  i  iii  505 

Ordinary    She  looks  comelier  than  o  to-day ;  Queen  Mary  i  i  71 

Ordnance    there  is  o  On  the  White  Tower  and  on  the 

Devil's  Tower,  „        n  iii  43 

Organ    0  and  pipe,  and  dulcimer,  chants  and  hymns  Becket  v  ii  365 

Original    Cleaving  to  your  o  Adam-clay,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  41 8 

Orkney    — Scotland,  Ireland,  Iceland,  0,  Harold  m  ii  125 

Onn    Gamel,  son  of  0,  What  thinkest  thou  this  means  ? 

(repeat)  „    i  i  20,  463 

Hail,  Gamel,  son  of'O !  „  i  i  92 

that  was  his  guest,  Gamel,  the  son  of  0 :  „        n  ii  299 

murder'd  thine  own  guest,  the  son  of  0,  Gamel,  „         rv  ii  38 

Ornament    The  golden  o's  are  stolen  from  her —  Becket  m  iii  180 

Orphan  (adj.)     a  widow  And  o  child,  whom  one  of  thy  wild 

barons —  „       Pro.  188 

Orphan  (s)     Age,  o's,  and  babe-breasting  mothers —  „  n  i  72 

Babes,  o's,  mothers  !  is  that  royal.  Sire  ?  „  n  i  80 

Orthodoxy    He'll  burn  a  diocese  to  prove  his  o.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  353 

Other    {See  also  T'other)     counsel  your  withdrawing 

To  Ashridge,  or  some  o  country  house.  „  i  iv  226 

As  Thirlby  says,  are  profitless  to  the  burners. 

And  help  the  o  side.  „  iv  ii  _220 

0  reasons  There  be  for  this  man's  ending,  „  iv  iii  53 

Might  it  not  be  the  o  side  rejoicing  In  his  brave 

end  ?  „  IV  iii  356 

0  things  As  idle ;  a  weak  Wyatt !  „  v  i  291 

Not  thee,  my  son :  some  o  messenger.  Harold  i  i  244 

And  0  beUs  on  earth,  which  yet  are  heaven's;  „     i  ii  133 

lake  0  lords  amenable  to  law.  Becket,  Pro.  25 

Than  that  of  o  paramours  of  thine  ?  „      Pro,  71 

True  enough,  my  mind  was  set  upon  o  matters.  „    Pro.  318 

Ay,  my  lord,  and  divers  o  earls  and  barons.  „       i  iv  59 


Becket  n  ii  229 


n  ii  323 
in  i  191 
m  ii  13 
vii  74 
V  ii  444 


Other  {continued)    look  you,  you  shall  have  None  o  God  but 
me — 
then  the  South-west  turned  him  North-west,  and  so  of 

the  0  winds ; 
Go,  you  shall  tell  me  of  her  some  o  time, 
he  hath  pass'd  out  again.  And  on  the  o  side. 
Then  speak  ;  this  is  my  o  self, 
dungeon'd  the  o  half  In  Pevensey  Castle — 
At  times  this  oracle  of  great  Artemis  Has  no  more  power 

than  0  oracles  The  Cup  n  34 

With  0  beauties  on  a  mountain  meadow.  The  Falcon  351 

And  the  o  nine  ?     Filippo.     Sold !  „  411 

No  o  heart  Of  such  magnificence  in  courtesy  Beats —  „  721 

Is  there  no  o  way  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  691 

If  it  had  killed  one  of  the  Steers  there  the  o  day,  „         in  250 

there  is  no  o  man  that  shall  give  me  away.  Foresters  i  i  290 

That  o  thousand — shall  I  ever  pay  it  ?  „       n  i  466 

Other-world     that  sweet  o-w  smile,  which  wiU  be  reflected    Becket,  Pro.  396 

Otter     And  I  would  swim  the  moat,  like  an  o.  Foresters  i  i  321 

Oubliette     but  in  our  o's  Thou  shalt  or  rot  or  ransom.  Harold  n  i  107 

And  deeper  still  the  deep-down  o,  „     n  ii  429 

from  my  ghastly  o  I  send  my  voice  „       v  i  245 

Oublietted     And  o  in  the  centre — No  !  Becket  iv  ii  150 

Ought    {See  also  Aught,  Owt)     I  am  dead  as  Death  this  day 

to  o  of  earth's  Harold  v  i  425 

Ouphe     o's,  oafs,  ghosts  o'  the  mist,  wills-o'-the-wisp  ;         Foresters  n  i  263 
Oust     Stir  up  thy  people :  o  him  !  Harold  i  i  482 

would  0  me  from  his  will,  if  I  Made  such  a  marriage.   Prom,  of  May  1 513 
Ousted    You  have  o  the  mock  priest,  Queen  Mary  i  v  180 

Ay,  Lambeth  has  o  Cranmer.  „        in  ii  132 

Outblossom     one  rose  will  o  the  rest,  one  rose  in  a  bower.    Becket,  Pro.  345 

Queen  Mary  iii  vi  27 

m  V  158 

„  n  ii  380 

Harold  n  i  9 


Out-Boimer     Bonner  cannot  o-B  his  own  self- 
Outcry     And  make  a  morning  o  in  the  yard ; 
Outdoor    One  of  much  o  bluster. 
Outdraught    Felt  the  remorseless  o  of  the  deep 
Outfield  (outlying  field)      Hodge  'ud  ha'  been  a- 

harrowin'  o'  white  peasen  i'  the  o 
Out-Gardiners    Gardiner  q-G  Gardiner  in  his  heat, 
Outlander    wrench  this  o's  ransom  out  of  him — 
Outlaw  (s)     Thou  art  an  o,  and  couldst  never  pay 

An  o's  bride  may  not  be  wife  in  law. 

The  chief  of  these  o's  who  break  the  law  ? 

and  then  we  were  no  longer  o's. 

Robin's  an  o,  but  he  helps  the  poor. 

my  hege,  these  men  are  o's,  thieves. 
Outlaw  (verb)     Did  ye  not  o  your  archbishop  Robert, 
Outlaw'd     he  join'd  with  thee  To  drive  me  o. 

I  may  be  o,  I  have  heard  a  rumour. 

Robin  Hood  Earl  of  Huntingdon  is  o  and  banished. 

I  am  o,  and  if  caught,  I  die. 

Am  I  worse  or  better  ?     I  am  o. 

being  o  in  a  land  Where  law  lies  dead. 

While  Richard  hath  o  himself, 
Out-passion'd    with  our  great  Council  against  Tostig,  0-p 

his! 
Outraged     Wasted  our  diocese,  o  our  tenants. 
Out-towering    help  to  build  a  throne  0-t  hers  of  France  .  . 
Outvalue    As  gold  O's  dross,  light  darkness, 

wreath  That  once  you  wore  o's  twenty-fold 

O's  all  the  jewels  upon  earth. 

It  should  be  love  that  thus  o's  all. 
Outward    To  veil  the  fault  of  my  most  o  foe — 
Outwoman'd    She  could  not  be  unmann'd — no,  nor 
Over    See  Ower 
Overbalance    weight  of  the  flesh  at  odd  times  o  the  weight 

of  the  church.  Foresters  i  ii  61 

Overbold    Thou  art  o.    Robin.    My  king,  „        iv  890 

Over-breathed    I  am  o-b.  Friar,  by  my  two  bouts  at 

quarterstafE.  „         iv  265 

Over-confident     Brave — ay — too  brave,  too  o-c,  The  Cup  i  ii  262 

Overdid    must  we  follow  All  that  they  o  or  underdid  ?  Becket  n  ii  214 

Overhead    loud  enough  To  fright  the  wild  hawk  passing  o.  Foresters  ni  318 
Overleap    There  is  a  fence  I  cannot  o.  My  father's  will.  „  m  9 

Overlive     O  friends,  I  shall  not  o  the  day.  Harold  in  i  232 

Overlook    would  hardly  care  to  o  This  same  petition    Queen  Mary  iv  i  192 

3  T 


Queen  Mary  iv  iii  492 

„  ni  vi  25 

Harold  ii  i  58 

Foresters  n  i  452 

n  ii  90 

IV  141 

IV  147 

IV  358 

IV  906 

Harold,  i  i  55 

„   IV  ii  14 

Foresters  i  ii  91 

I  iii  68 

„      I  iii  163 

n  i  50 

n  i  89 

IV  360 


Harold  m  i  61 

Becket  v  ii  431 

Harold  n  ii  765 

Becket  i  iii  715 

The  Falcon  759 

779 

781 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  106 

in  i  370 


Over-measure 


1026 


Own 


Orer-measure     By  St.  Edmund  I  o-m,  him.  Harold  iv  iii  120 

Overmach    Sir,  this  dead  fruit  was  ripening  o,  Queen  Mary  ni  i  26 

Then  without  tropes,  my  Lord,  An  o  severeness,  „       in  iv  156 

Over-opulent    if  you  cared  To  fee  an  o-o  superstition,     Prom,  of  May  i  693 
Overscomfol    would  deign  to  lend  an  ear  Not  o,  Harold  iv  i  137 

Oversea    And  o  they  say  this  state  of  yours  Queen  Mary  in  i  441 

His  kin,  all  his  belongings,  o's ;  Becket  ii  i  71 

calls  you  a  To  answer  for  it  in  his  Norman  courts.  „    v  ii  354 

one  that  should  be  grateful  to  me  o's,  a  Count  in 
Brittany — 

I  must  pass  o's  to  one  that  I  trust  will  help  me. 

And  I  and  he  are  passing  o's : 
Overshoot    tho'  you  make  your  butt  too  big,  you  o  it, 
Overshot    I  have  o  My  duties  to  our  Holy  Mother  Church 
Overstep    is  the  King  s  if  too  high  a  stile  for  your  lordship 

to  o 
Overtaken    Love  will  fly  the  fallen  leaf,  and  not 

be  o; 
Over-taxing    for  thy  brother  breaks  us  With  o-t— 
Overthrown     Doubt  not  they  will  be  speedily  o. 

have  0  Morcar  and  Edwin. 

The  king  is  slain,  the  kingdom  o  ! 
Overturn    when  they  seek  to  o  our  rights. 
Over-violence    as  one  That  mars  a  cause  with  o-t). 
Overwhelm'd    We  shall  be  o.    Seize  him  and  carry  him !  „    v  iii  141 

full  democracy  has  o  This  Old  world.  Prom,  of  May  i  593 


Foresters  i  i  271 

„       I  ii  152 

n  i  627 

^Becket  in  iii  122 

V  i  37 

ni  iii  281 


Queen  Mary  v  ii  372 

Harold  I  i  110 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  200 

Harold  in  ii  131 

viil6 

Becket  v  ii  456 

„    IV  ii  327 


'Ow  (how)     and  'o  should  I  see  to  laame  the  laady, 
'Owd  (hold)     they'll  hev'  a  fine  cider-crop  to-year  if  the 

blossom  'o's. 
Owd  (old)     Why,  o'  coorse,  fur  it  be  the  o  man's  birthdaay. 

0  Steer  wur  sifeard  she  wouldn't  be  back  i'  time  to 
keep  his  birthdaay, 

and  'er  an'  the  o  man  they  fell  a-kissin'  o'  one  another 

An'  how  did  ye  leave  the  o  uncle  i'  Coomberland  ? 

An'  how  d'ye  find  the  o  man  'ere  ? 

The  0  man  be  heighty  to-daay,  beant  he  ? 

An'  I  haates  boobks  an'  all,  fur  they  puts  foalk  off 

the  0  waays. 
Then  the  o  man  i'  Lear  should  be  shaamed  of  hissen, 
but  when  thou  be  as  o  as  me  thou'll  put  one  word 

fur  another  as  I  does. 
So  the  o  uncle  i'  Coomberland  be  dead,  Miss  Dora, 

beant  he  ? 

1  seed  how  the  o  man  wur  vext. 

I  would  taake  the  o  blind  man  to  my  oan  fireside. 

Naay,  but  I  hev  an  o  woman  as  'ud  see  to  all  that : 

Yeas,  an'  o  Dobson  should  be  glad  on  it. 

Why,  coom  then,  o  feller,  I'll  tell  it  to  you ; 

Ye  shall  sing  that  agean  to-night,  fur  o  Dobson  '11 

gi'e  us  a  bit  o'  supper.    Sally.    I  weant  goa  to 

o  Dobson ; 
0  Steer's  gotten  all  his  grass  down  and  wants  a  hand, 

and  I'll  goa  to  him. 

0  Steer  gi'es  nubbut  cowd  tea  to  'is  men,  and  o  Dobson 
gi'es  beer.  Sally.  But  I'd  like  o  Steer's  cowd  tea 
better  nor  Dobson's  beer.     Good-bye. 

when  0  Dobson  coom'd  upo'  us  ? 

but  I  wur  so  ta'en  up  wi'  leadin'  the  o  man  about  all 

the  blessed  mumin' 
The  Steers  was  all  gentlefoalks  i'  the  o  times. 
The  land  belonged  to  the  Steers  i'  the  o  times, 
He  be  saayin'  a  word  to  the  o  man,  but  he'll  coom 

up  if  ye  lets  'im. 
The  0  man's  coom'd  agean  to  'issen,  an'  wants  To 

hev  a  word  wi'  ye 
Owe    the  duty  which  as  Legate  He  o's  himself. 
To  whom  he  o's  his  loyalty  after  God, 
unto  him  you  o  That  Mary  hath  acknowledged 
you  That  o  to  me  your  power  over  me — 

1  o  you  thanks  for  ever, 
love  that  children  o  to  both  I  give  To  him  alone. 

Owed    Thou  still  hast  o  thy  father,  Gilbert  Foliot. 

more  than  one  brave  fellow  o  His  death 
Ower  (oyer)     I  should  saay  'twur  o  by  now, 


ni95 

I  317 
i6 

1 16 
I  21 
I  68 
I  71 
I  76 

I  222 
1 266 

I  381 

nl 

n27 

u74 

n95 

n  146 

n202 


n216 
n220 


n223 
n232 

m2 
in  448 
ni451 

m481 

in  702 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  402 

„  IV  i  23 

„  v  iii  29 

Becket  n  ii  152 

The  Cup  I  ii  249 

Foresters  rv  7 

Becket  i  iii  276 

The  Falcon  634 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  475 


and  o  a  hoonderd  pounds  worth  o'  rings  stolen.       Prom,  of  May  i  393 


Ower  (over)  (continued)     Dan  Smith's  cart  hes  runned 

0  a  laady  i'  the  holler  laane,  Prom,  of  May  n  568 

and  my  missus  a-gittin'  o  'er  lyin'-in,  „            m  74 
Owl    (See  also  Scritch-owl)     The  wood  is  full  of  echoes, 

o's,  elfs.  Foresters  n  i  263 
Owld  (old)  it  be  a  var  waay  vor  my  o  legs  up  vro'  Islip.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  472 
Eh,  then  ha'  thy  waay  wi'  me,  Tib ;  ez  thou  hast 

wi'  thy  o  man.  „          iv  iii  487 

Ay,  Joan,  and  my  o  man  wur  up  and  awaay  betimes  „          iv  iii  488 
I  heerd  summat  as  summun  towld  summun  o'  o 

Bishop  Gardiner's  end ;  „          iv  iii  503 
there  wur  an  o  lord  a-cum  to  dine  wi'  im,  and  a 

wur  so  0  a  couldn't  bide  vor  his  dinner,  ,,           iv  iii  504 

and  the  o  lord  fell  to  's  meat  wi'  a  wiU,  „          iv  iii  514 
the  bumin'  o'  the  o  archbishop  '11  bum  the  Pwoap 

out  o'  this  'ere  land  vor  iver  and  iver.  „           iv  iii  535 
Own  (adj.)     (See  also  OSn)     What  are  you  cackling  of 

bastardy  under  the  Queen's  o  nose  ?  „                i  i  59 
I  shall  judge  with  my  o  eyes  whether  her  Grace 

incline  „              i  i  134 
Peace  !  hear  him ;  let  his  o  words  damn  the  Papist. 

From  thine  o  mouth  I  judge  thee — tear  him  down !  „              i  iii  53 

a  King  That  with  her  o  pawns  plays  against  a  Queen,  „            i  iii  162 

But  your  o  state  is  full  of  danger  here.  „            i  iv  168 

'Tis  mine  o  wish  fulfill'd  before  the  word  Was  spoken,  .,  i  iv  232 

Tho'  Queen,  I  am  not  Queen  Of  mine  o  heart,  „             i  v  523 

he  loved  the  more  His  o  gray  towers,  „               n  i  49 

Well,  for  mine  o  work,  „               ii  i  86 

I  have  seen  them  in  their  o  land ;  „             u  i  167 

mute  as  death.  And  white  as  her  o  milk ;  „              n  ii  80 
on  you.  In  your  o  city,  as  her  right,  my  Lord,  For 

you  are  loyal.  „             ii  ii  106 

From  your  o  royal  lips,  at  once  may  know  „            ii  ii  136 

In  mine  o  person  am  I  come  to  you,  „            ii  ii  142 

seeks  To  bend  the  laws  to  his  o  will,  „            ii  ii  184 
that  I  should  leave  Some  fruit  of  mine  o  body 

after  me,  „            n  ii  223 

Before  our  o  High  Court  of  Parliament,  „            ii  ii  234 

By  his  0  rule,  he  hath  been  so  bold  to-day,  „             ii  ii  347 

his  fault  So  thoroughly  to  believe  in  his  o  self.  „             ii  ii  386 
Yet  thoroughly  to  believe  in  one's  o  self,  So  one's 

o  self  be  thorough,  „            n  ii  388 
Well,  the  tree  in  Virgil,  sir.  That  bears  not  its  o 

apples.  „              m  i  23 

the  Pope's  Holiness  By  mine  o  self.  „           m  ii  112 
Statesmen  that  are  wise  Shape  a  necessity,  as  a 

sculptor  clay.  To  their  o  model.  „           m  iii  34 

In  our  0  name  and  that  of  all  the  state,  „          in  iii  120 

As  well  for  our  o  selves  as  all  the  realm,  „         in  iii  136 

The  Lord  who  hath  redeem'd  us  With  his  o  blood,  „         in  iii  203  J 
and  not  sure  Of  their  o  selves,  they  are  wroth  with                                   : 

their  o  selves,  „         in  iv  120 

Trembled  for  her  o  gods,  for  these  were  trembling —  „         m  iv  128 
But  the  wench  Hath  her  o  troubles  ;  she  is  weeping 

now ;  „          m  V  262 

Bonner  cannot  out-Bonner  his  o  self —  „           m  vi  27 

he  hath  pray'd  me  not  to  sully  Mine  o  prerogative,  „              iv  i  18 
Yet  once  he  saved  your  Majesty's  o  life ;  Stood  out 

against  the  King  in  your  behalf.  At  his  o  peril.  „            iv  i  125 

By  mine  o  self — by  mine  o  hand  !  „           iv  ii  202 

The  parson  from  his  o  spire  swung  out  dead,  „         iv  iii  375 

I  say  they  have  drawn  the  fire  On  their  o  heads :  „         iv  iii  381 
I  could  weep  for  them  And  her,  and  mine  o  self 

and  all  the  world.  „              v  ii  12 
Gone  beyond  him  and  mine  o  natural  man  (It  was 

God's  cause) ;  „            v  ii  102 

That  his  o  wife  is  no  affair  of  his.  „            v  ii  561 

Nay,  but  I  speak  from  mine  o  self,  not  him ;  „            v  iii  42 
Seven-fold  dishonour'd  even  in  the  sight  Of  thine 

0  sectaries —  „            v  v  134 

Ay,  ever  give  yourselves  your  o  good  word.  Harold  i  i  343 

I  swear  it,  By  mine  o  eyes — and  these  two  sapphires —  „      i  ii  110 

Swear  thou  to-day,  to-morrow  is  thine  o.  „    n  ii  711 

A  cleric  lately  poison'd  his  o  mother,  Becket,  Pro.  11 

what  shall  I  call  it,  aSect  her  thine  o  self.  „     Pro.  513 


Own 


1027 


Oxford 


Becket  i  i  8 
„   iiiil20 


„  I  iii  155 

„  I  iii  172 

„  I  iii  342 

„  I  iii  360 

„  I  iii  367 

„  1  iii  398 

„  I  iii  536 

„  I  iii  696 

„  I  iv  23 

„  I iv  180 

„  n  i  35 

„  II  ii   19 

„  II  ii  156 

„  II  ii  204 


Own  (adj.)  (continued)    Thou  art  wearied  out  With  this 

day's  work,  get  thee  to  thine  o  bed. 
And  was  thine  o  election  so  canonical,  Good  father  ? 
But  his  0  mother's,  lest  the  crown  should  be  Shorn 

of  ancestral  splendour.     This  did  Henry.     Shall 

I  do  less  for  mine  o  Canterbury  ? 
Kinging  their  o  death-knell  thro'  all  the  realm, 
when  none  could  sit  By  his  o  hearth  in  peace ; 
In  mine  o  hall,  and  sucking  thro'  fools'  ears  The 

flatteries  of  corruption — 
sat  in  mine  o  courts  Judging  my  judges. 
Look  to  it,  your  o  selves  ! 
Strong — ^not  in  mine  o  self,  but  Heaven ; 
And  I,  that  knew  mine  o  infirmity, 
I  warrant  you,  or  your  o  either. 
be  we  not  in  my  lord's  o  refractory  ? 
Yea,  thou  my  golden  dream  of  Love's  o  bower. 
But,  since  we  would  be  lord  of  our  o  manor, 
cherish'd  him  Who  thief-like  fled  from  his  o  church 

by  night, 
which  Hell's  o  heat  So  dwelt  on  that  they  rose  and 

darken'd  Heaven. 
Yea — on  mine  o  self  The  King  had  had  no  power 

except  for  Rome.  „  ii  ii  411 

despite  his  kingly  promise  given  To  our  o  seU  of  pardon,  „  ii  ii  433 
and  to  win  my  o  bread,  whereupon  he  asked  our  mother  „  iii  i  117 
And  bound  me  by  his  love  to  secrecy  Till  his  o  time.  „   iii  i  229 

or  rather  pulled  all  the  Church  with  the  Holy  Father 

astride  of  it  down  upon  his  o  head.  „  ni  iii  78 

so  that  the  smell  of  their  o  roast  had  not  come  across  it —  „  iii  iii  119 
Your  o  child  brought  me  hither  !  „    iv  ii  13 

Child,  I  am  mine  o  self  Of  and  belonging  to  the  King.  „    iv  ii  29 

Have  we  not  heard  Raymond  of  Poitou,  thine  o  uncle — 

nay,  Geoffrey  Plantagenet,  thine  o  husband's  father —  „  iv  ii  247 
that  The  King  himself,  for  love  of  his  o  sons,  If  hearing,  „  iv  ii  344 
I'll  swear  to  mine  o  selJE  it  was  a  feint.  „  iv  ii  401 

In  mine  o  cause  I  strove  against  him  there,  „       v  i  14 

And  what  would  my  o  Aquitaine  say  to  that  ?  «     v  i  181 

crying  On  Holy  Church  to  thunder  out  her  rights 

And  thine  o  wrong  so  pitilessly  ?  „     v  ii  33 

Strikes  truest  ev'n  for  his  o  self.  „     v  ii  42 

he  had  gone  too  far  Into  the  King's  o  woods ;  „   v  ii  108 

His  child  and  mine  o  soul,  and  so  return.  „   v  ii  193 

Shall  I  not  smite  him  with  his  o  cross-staff  ?  „   v  ii  313 

For  which  I  would  have  laid  mine  o  Hie  down  „   v  ii  338 

That  their  o  King  closed  with  me  last  July  „   v  ii  388 

They  slew  my  stags  in  mine  o  manor  here,  „   v  ii  438 

Not  punish  of  your  o  authority  ?  „   v  ii  450 

and  yet  threaten  your  Archbishop  In  his  o  house.  „   v  ii  506 

Take  refuge  in  your  o  cathedral,  Thomas.  „   v  ii  584 

I  say,  take  refuge  in  your  o  cathedral.  „   v  ii  590 

And  yet  my  dream  foretold  my  martyrdom  In  mine 

0  church.  „  v  ii  634 
Why,  these  are  our  0  monks  who  follow'd  us !  „  v  iii  58 
Strike  our  Archbishop  in  his  o  cathedral !  „  v  iii  180 
else  wherefore  has  my  fate  Brought  me  again  to  her  o 

city  ?  The  Cup  i  i  14 

Is  vengeance  for  its  o  sake  worth  the  while,  „        i  i  30 

That  your  o  people  cast  you  from  their  bounds,  „      i  i  137 

Save  for  some  slight  report  in  her  o  Senate  „     i  ii  133 

His  o  true  people  cast  him  from  their  doors  Like  a  base  coin.  „  i  ii  351 
Bandy  their  o  rude  jests  with  them,  „     i  ii  360 

Then  for  your  o  sake.  Lady,  I  say  it  with  all  gentleness,  „  i  iii  98 
Good  !  mine  o  dagger  driven  by  Synorix  found  All  good  „  n  85 
I  call  on  our  o  Goddess  in  our  o  Temple.  „       n  314 

It  is  the  cup  belonging  our  o  Temple.  „       n  345 

That  Synorix  should  drink  from  his  o  cup.  „       ii  353 

poor  worm,  crawl  down  thine  o  black  hole  To  the  lowest 

HeU.  „       n  495 

Thou  art  one  With  thine  o  people,  and  though  a  Roman 

1  Forgive  thee,  Camma.  „  ii  504 
till  he  hasn't  an  eye  left  in  his  o  tail  to  flourish  among 

the  peahens.  The  Falcon  102 

you  look  as  beautiful  this  morning  as  the  very 

Madonna  her  o  self —  ,.  199 


Own  (adj.)  {continued)  And  this  last  costly  gift  to  mine  o  self.  The  Falcon  228 
and  so  descend  again  with  some  of  her  ladyship's  o 

appurtenances  ?  „  417 

his  lordship's  o  foster-brother,  would  commend  them  to 

your  ladyship's  most  peculiar  appreciation.  „  566 

Fifippo  !  will  you  take  the  word  out  of  your  master's  o 

mouth?  „  598 

Ay,  if  you'd  like  to  measure  your  o  length  upon  the 

grass.  Prom,  of  May  i  466 

He,  following  his  o  instincts  as  his  God,  „  1 588 

Nature  a  liar,  making  us  feel  guilty  Of  her  o  faults.  „  n  270 

And  these  take  flesh  again  with  our  o  flesh,  „  ii  277 

I  have  found  it  once  again  In  your  o  self.  „  ii  377 

Our  old  nurse  crying  as  if  for  her  o  child,  „  ii  479 

so  be  more  at  peace  With  mine  o  self.  „  ii  663 

For  her  o  sake  then,  if  not  for  mine — not  now — But 

by-and-by.  „  ii  683 

and  your  o  name  Of  Harold  sounds  so  English  and  so  old  „  ni  608 

till  we  be  only  bones  our  o  selves.  Foresters  i  i  26 

and  for  the  love  of  his  o  little  mother  on  earth,  „         i  i  98 

my  great  great  grandfather,  my  great  grandfather,  my 

grandfather,  and  my  o  father —  „       i  i  331 

and  whenever  I  set  my  o  foot  on  it  I  say  to  it,  „       i  i  335 

This  ring  my  mother  gave  me :  it  was  her  o  Betrothal  ring.  „  i  ii  294 
You  see,  they  are  so  fond  o'  their  o  voices  „     ii  i  383 

and  if  thou  miss  I  will  fasten  thee  to  thine  o  doorpost  „     ii  i  403 

What !  do  I  not  know  mine  o  ring  ?  „     n  i  590 

and  their  o  want  Of  manhood  to  their  leader  !  „     u  i  693 

Is  to  mistrust  your  o  love  for  your  girl !  „       ii  ii  59 

all  that  live  By  their  o  hands,  the  labourer,  the  poor  priest ;  „  iii  165 
so  His  0  true  wife  came  with  him,  „       in  240 

you  that  dishonour  The  daughters  and  the  wives  of  your 

0  faction —  „      iv  699 

God  help  the  mark — To  his  o  unprincely  ends.  „      iv  716 

I  remain  Mistress  of  mine  o  self  and  mine  o  soul.  „       iv  729 

hast  thou  no  fetters  For  those  of  thine  o  band  who  would 

betray  thee  ?  „       iv  832 

if  you  hold  us  here  Longer  from  our  o  venison.  „      iv  942 

Then  by  thine  o  account  thou  shouldst  be  mine.  „     iv  1038 

Own^s)    you  scarce  could  meet  his  eye  And  hold  your  o ;  Queen  Mary  rv  i  105 

Harold  n  ii  758 

Becket  i  iii  153 

„      I  iii  612 


But  softly  as  a  bridegroom  to  his  o 

When  Henry  came  into  his  o  again, 

We  fear  that  he  may  reave  thee  of  thine  o. 

Now  the  King  is  home  again,  the  King  will  have  his 

o  again,  Home  again,  home  again,  and  each  will 

have  his  o  again, 
Own  (verb)     You  do  not  o  The  bodily  presence  in  the 

Eucharist, 
And  you,  that  would  not  o  the  Real  Presence, 
Whatever  the  Church  o's — she  holds  it  in  Free  and 

perpetual  alms, 
then  each  man  That  o's  a  wife  or  daughter. 
Woe  to  that  land  shall  o  thee  for  her  king  ! 
Own'd    — ^for  I  have  not  o  My  sister,  and  I  will  not, — •  Queen  Mary  i  v  284 
Owt  (anjrthing)     (See  also  Anght,  Ought)    Theer  ye  goas 

agean.  Miss,  niver  believing  o  I  says  to  ye —  Prom,  of  May  i  107 

or  the  parson,  or  the  justice  o'  peace,  or  o.  „  1 133 

fur  I  niver  touched  a  drop  of  o  tul  my  oan  wedding- 

daay,  „  1 362 


Foresters  iv  1106 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  43 
IV  ii  140 

Becket  i  iii  679 
Foresters  in  460 
IV  759 


Eva  can  do  o  wi'  'im ; 

fur  I'd  ha'  done  o  fur  'er  mysen ; 

an'  all  the  parish  'ud  ha'  done  o  fur  'er. 

Let  'im  bust  hissen,  then,  fur  o  I  cares. 

Dead !     It  mun  be  true,  fur  it  wur  i'  print  as  black 
as  o. 
Ox    A  light  among  the  oxen. 

Swine,  sheep,  o — here's  a  French  supper. 

his  monies,  his  oxen,  his  dinners,  himself. 

or  a  stump-tailed  o  in  May-time, 
Oxford  (adj.)     Right  as  an  0  scholar, 


I  437 

n33 

u36 

II 167 


II  731 

Harold  iv  i  87 

Becket  1  iv  112 

Foresters  i  i  234 

„       ui435 

ii59 


Oxford  (s)     masses  here  be  sung  By  every  priest  in  0.    Queen  Mary  iv  iii  101 
John  of  O,  The  President  of  this  Council,  Becket  i  iii  74 

For  John  of  0  here  to  read  to  you.  „   i  iii  417 

Cursed  be  John  of  0,  Roger  of  York,  And  Gilbert  Foliot !      „  n  ii  265 
and  I  ha'  seen  the  King  once  at  0,  „  in  i  164 


Faain 


1028 


Paain  (pain)    I  niver  'es  sa  much  as  one  pin's  prick  of  p ;  Prom,  of  May  1 360 

Pasper  (paper)     then  a-scrattin  upon  a  bit  o'  p,  then  a-  ^  ^^ 

lookin'  agean ;  .  ,   ,  ,  "         tt  rr7 

dosta  knaw  this  p  ?    Ye  dropt  it  upo' the  road.  ,.        ^  do  ( 

Pace  (s)    break  your  p's  in,  and  make  you  tame ;         Qwem  Mary  v  m  1^1 

Paw  verb)     kin^  should  p  on  purple  to  his  bride,  The  Cup  n  189 

S    prW'd  me  to  pray  thee  to  p  Thy  King ;  Becket  i  m  206 

He  told  me  thou  shouldst  p  the  King,  ,,      i  "  2^4 

Pacing    P  my  new  lands  at  Littlechester,  Prom,  of  May  n  b47 

"^      But?  am  weary  p  thro' the  wood  ^u'''\Trni\l^ 

Packt    So  1?  with  carnage  that  the  dykes  and  brooks  HaroU  mni^^ 

K  (city'^Df  Venetia)     And  died  in  P.  Queen  ^a^  v  n  516 

Pagan    The  p  temple  of  a  p  Rome !  ^«cftet  i  m  ox 

Pale     who  call'd  the  mind  Of  children  a  blank  p,  Prom,  of  May  ii  ,^8^ 

^eant    second  actor  in  this  p  That  brings  him  in ;     Queen  Mary  ni  ui  14 

and  flowers  In  silken  p's.  .  "  ™  I  n\ 

Paget  (Lord)    P  is  for  him— for  to  wed  with  Spam  „  i  v  /o 

P  is  ours.     Gardiner  perchance  is  ours ;  „  i  v  ooo 

Lord  P's  '  Ay '  is  sure— who  else  ?  "  ^  ^  oo  i 

Spite  of  Lord  P  and  Lord  William  Howard  „  "V-fo^ 

Lord  P  Waits  to  present  our  Council  to  the  Legate.  „  "in  y < 

If  we  could  burn  out  heresy,  my  Lord  P,  „  i"  ly  Hi 

P,  you  are  all  for  this  poor  life  of  ours,  „         m  iv  oy 

L^ok  to  your  Bible,  P  !  we  are  faUen.  „         m  jv  8" 

P,  You  stand  up  here  to  fight  for  heresy,  „         ™    i^i 

they  are  many,  As  my  Lord  P  says.  „        ""Lt« 

my  Lord  P  and  Lord  William  Howard,  Crave,  „  ij  i  o 

You  are  too  politic  for  me,  my  Lord  P.  „  ^.}.  ^°A 

Av,  av,  P,  They  have  brought  it  in  large  measure  „        rv  in  ao6 

yet,  P,  I  do  hold  The  Catholic,  .        i^  i^  ^.°\ 

0  P,  P  !     I  have  seen  heretics  of  the  poorer  sort,  „        rv  in  4rfO 
P,  despite  his  fearful  heresies,                                             »        JJ  i".  P^^ 

Paid    he  phis  ransom  back.  %°''^°    I^R 

1  have  once  more  p  them  aU.  P«"«.  "/  May  iii  158 
if  thev  be  not  p  back  at  the  end  of  the  year,  the  land  . 

goes  to  the  Abbot.  ,         ^    ^     ^         Pomfm  1 1  69 

must  be  p  in  a  year  and  a  month,  or  I  lose  the  land.  „      1 1  ^oo 

You  shall  wait  for  mine  till  Sir  Richard  has  p  the  .. 

Abbot.  "        •  Aoci 

I  have  p  him  haU.    That  other  thousand—  ,.    "^  tn? 

these  monies  should  be  p  in  to  the  Abbot  at  York,  „      iv  wi 

The  debt  hath  not  been  p.  "      ^Z  m  fi 

Has  it  been  p?    Abbot.    O  yes.  "      ^  o^o 

Not  p  at  York— the  wood— prick  me  no  more !  „      rp  oz^ 

Sir  Richard  p  his  monies  to  the  Abbot.  "      i"^  °^^ 

Pain    (-See  also  Paain)     Judgment,  and  p  accruing  ,-oiq 

thereupon;  Qw«e«  Mar2/ m  m  219 

Or  to  be  still  in  p  with  devils  in  heU ;  »  ^  ]]}  j^j^ 

he  never  uttered  moan  of  p  :  "   d    7  f!."-  ^q"! 

evilly  used  And  put  to  p.  5««^««  "  ".  .^34 

Geoffrey,  the  p  thou  hast  put  me  to  !  »       ^J^^r 

This  ^what  is  it  ?-again  ?  _  The  Cup  11  445 

With  cold,  with  p  perhaps,  poor  prisoner  !  -^  hebalcon  449 

And  if  my  pleasure  breed  another's  p,  Prom-  "/  May  i  ^j» 

with  as  little  p  As  it  is  to  fall  asleep.  ..  "  ^^1 

to  spare  myself,  And  her  too,  p,p,p'f  "         ™  '^'^ 

That  blast  our  natural  passions  into  p's\  -r.  "  .      ™  ino 

Move  me  no  more  !     I  am  sick  and  faint  with  p  !  Foresters  iv  599 

Painful    perhaps  The  p  circumstances  which  I  „  ,  „  ^rvo 

heard—  Prom,  of  May  11  ^2 

Paint    TeU  him  to  p  it  out,  Qwem  Mary  ni  i  267 

The  man  shall  p  a  pair  of  gloves.  ..  ™  \  ^ '* 

honesty  too,  p  her  what  way  they  wiU.  Becket  n  1  lUi 

Painted    If  you  have  falsely  p  your  fine  Prince ;  Queen  Maryiv  &y» 

The  conduit  p — the  nine  worthies— ay !  ,.         ™  ?  i^r 

God's  passion  !  do  you  know  the  knave  that  p  it  ?  „        ni  1  <ib5 

Pair     But  since  the  fondest  p  of  doves  will  jar,  Becket  rv  11  40 

You  are  an  honest  p.     I  will  come  to  your 

wedding.  Prom,  of  May  in  114 

Pair'd    Ay,  if  Wisdom  P  not  with  Good.  Harold  \  1 178 


Palace  (adj.)    Hark,  there  is  battle  at  the  p  gates, 

I  found  it  fluttering  at  the  p  gates  :— 
Palace  (s)     Hast  thou  let  fall  those  papers  in  the  p  ^ 

And  unto  no  dead  world ;  but  Lambeth  p. 

There  was  a  paper  thrown  into  the  p, 

which  I  found  Strewn  in  your  p. 

I  left  it  privily  At  Florence,  in  her  p. 

And  welcome  turns  a  cottage  to  a  p. 

Who  never  deign'd  to  shine  into  my  p 


Paper 

Q^ieen  Mary  u  iv  47 
in  ii  218 
I  iii  2 
in  ii  154 
m  vi  139 
v  ii  173 
The  Falcon  75 
273 
286 


My  p  wanting  you  was  but  a  cottage ;  My  cottage,  while 

you  grace  it,  is  a  p. 
In  cottage  or  in  p,  being  still  Beyond  your  fortunes. 


287 
290 


Palate    That  p  is  insane  which  cannot  tell 

Pale  (adj.)     The  word  has  turn'd  your  Highness  p ; 

How  deathly  p  !  a  chair,  your  Highness. 

a  p  horse  for  Death  and  Gardiner  for  the  Devil 

Mary  rubb'd  out  p — 

fieriest  partisans— are  p  Before  my  star ! 

The  little  murder'd  princes,  in  a  p  light, 

Peters,  how  p  you  look  !  you  bring  the  smoke 

Brother !  why  so  p  ? 

God  redden  your  p  blood ! 

I  wonder  if  I  look  as  p  as  she  ? 

more  blessed  were  the  rags  Of  some  p  beggar-woman 


Becket,  Pro.  104 

Queen  Mary  i  v  471 

„  IV  636 

m  i  234 

ni  i  423 

niiil70 

in  V  147 

„        IV  iii  560 

Harold  i  i  28 

Becket  i  iv  35 

The  Cup  n  322 

The  Falcon  852 


and  you  look  thin  and  p.     Is  it  for  his  absence  ?      Prom,  of  May  1  (82 
You  are  p,  my  Dora !  but  the  ruddiest  cheek  „         ni  4»b 

I  that  have  turn'd  their  Moslem  crescent  p—  Foresters  iv  795 

All  those  p  mouths  which  we  have  fed  will  praise  us—         ,,      iv  lum 
Pale  (S)     praised  The  convent  and  lone  life— within  the  p—     HaroldJ  u  4» 


loved  within  the  p  forbidden  By  Holy  Church 
Thou  hast  broken  thro'  the  p's  Of  privilege. 
Paleness    a  p.  Like  the  wan  twilight  after  sunset. 
Palisade    The  trenches  dug,  the  p's  uprear'd 
strengthen  their  p's ! 
They  fall  on  those  within  the  p  ! 
Pall    Lay  thou  thy  hand  upon  this  golden  p  ! 
Foliot  may  claim  the  p  For  London  too. 
The  P  !     I  go  to  meet  my  King ! 
Pallium    Who  had  my  p  from  an  Antipope  ! 

Because  I  had  my  Canterbury  p, 
Palm    and  kindled  with  the  p's  of  Christ ! 

P's,  flowers,  pomegranates,  golden  cherubim 
And  these  rough  oaks  the  p's  of  Paradise  ! 
Palmer    he  is  a  holy  P,  bounden  by  a  vow  not  to  show 
Palsied    while  thy  hands  Are  p  here, 
Palsy    In  this  low  pulse  and  p  of  the  state, 
Palter    My  friend,  thou  hast  gone  too  far  to  p  now. 

Why  do  you  p  with  the  ceremony  ? 
Pan    Swarm  to  thy  voice  like  bees  to  the  brass  p. 
Pancratius  (St.  Pancras)    jewel  of  St.  P  Woven  into  the 
gold. 

Pander     I  am  your  subject,  not  your Henry.    P. 

Profligate  p  !     Fitzurse.     Do  you  hear  that  ? 
Pandora-box    this  Hollow  P-b,  With  all  the  pleasures 

flown. 
Pang    in  the  front  rank  of  the  fight  With  scarce  a  p. 
Panoply    Mail'd  in  the  perfect  p  of  faith. 
Pant    sure  she  hates  thee,  P's  for  thy  blood. 
Panting     And  p  for  my  blood  as  I  go  by. 
Papacy    We  strove  against  the  p  from  the  first, 
God  save  the  Crown  !  the  P  is  no  more, 
inherited  loathing  of  these  black  sheep  of  the  P. 
that  would  shake  the  P  as  it  stands. 


ni  ii  22 

Becket  m  iii  193 

I  iii  325 

Harold  v  i  189 

„      V  i  481 

„      V  i  668 

„     u  ii  699 

Becket  i  iii  56 

„     V  ii  619 

Harold  i  i  82 

„  in  i  106 

Queen  Mary  i  v  93 

Harold  m  i  182 

Foresters  n  i  169 

I  ii  236 

Harold  n  ii  455 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  103 

Harold  n  ii  707 

The  Cup  II  419 

Foresters  i  iii  109 


Harold  n  ii  70O 

Becket,  Pro.  147 

V  iii  160 

Pro7n.  of  May  11  346 

The  Cup  I  ii  155 

Becket  v  ii  494 

Harold  i  ii  39 

Qiieen  Mary  v  ii  219 

ni  iii  225 

V  V  286 

Becket,  Pro.  462 

I  iii  213 


Papal     {See  also  Anti-papal)     not  to  yield  His  Church  of 
England  to  the  P  wolf  And  Mary ; 

And  be  regather'd  to  the  P  fold  ? 

Wanting  the  P  mitre. 

of  her  most  Royal,  Infallible,  P  Legate-cousin. 

That  so  the  P  bolt  may  pass  by  England, 
Paper    {See  also  Paaper)     Hast  thou  let  fall  those  p's 
in  the  palace  ? 

I've  found  this  p  ;  pray  your  worship  read  it ; 

This  p,  Dickon.     I  found  it  fluttering  at  the  palace 


There  was  a  p  thrown  into  the  palace, 


Queen  Mary  i  ii  36 

„      m  ii  117 

„     ni  iv  148 

„     m  iv  433 

Becket,  Pro.  226 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  2 
„       n  iii  56 

„      m  ii  217 
„     m  vi  139 


Paper 


1029 


Part 


Qu^en  Mary  in  vi  174 

IV  ii  61 

IV  iii  243 


IV  iii  314 
vii  45 

V  ii  171 

V  ii  221 
vii  329 

Becket  i  iii  286 

„      I  iii  317 

The  Cup  I  ii  225 


Paper  (continued)    when  you  are  gone,  my  liege, 
Witness  these  p's, 

Pray  you  write  out  this  p  for  me,  Cranmer. 

the  p's  by  my  hand  Sign'd  since  my  degradation — 

might  not  after  all  those  p's  Of  recantation  yield 
again,  who  knows  ?  Paget.  P's  of  recantation  ! 
Think  you  then  That  Cranmer  read  all  p's  that 
he  sign'd  ? 

But  held  from  you  all  p's  sent  by  Rome, 

these  libellous  p's  which  I  found  Strewn  in  your  palace 

Nay,  Madam,  there  be  loyal  p's  too, 

There !  there !  another  p  !     Said  you  not 

I'll  have  the  p  back — blot  out  my  name. 

hath  he  sign'd  ?  show  me  the  p's  ! 

This  p  sign'd  Antonius — will  you  take  it. 

Yes ;  it  was  in  the  Somersetshire  p's.  Prom,  of  May  ui  149 

Paphlagonia    Have  you  alliances  ?    Bithynia,  Pontus,  P  ?     The  Cup  i  ii  100 
Papist  (adj.)     There  haunt  some  P  rufiSans  hereabout 

Would  murder  you.  Queen  Mary  in  v  174 

Papist  (s)    for  we  are  many  of  us  Catholics,  but  few  P's,      „  i  i  115 

Down  with  the  P !  „  i  iii  38 

let  his  own  words  damn  the  P.  „  i  iii  53 

Patable     That  is  the  p  of  our  blessed  Lord.  Becket  i  iv  74 

why  should  not  the  p  of  our  blessed  Lord  be  acted  again  ?      „      i  iv  77 
Paradise    Look  at  the  New  World — a  p  made  hell ;        Qv^en  Mary  ii  i  208 

Wore  in  mine  eyes  the  green  of  P.  „  in  ii  18 

And  be  with  Clu-ist  the  Lord  in  P.  „  iv  iii  88 

Not  to  gain  p ;  no,  nor  if  the  Pope,  „        iv  iii  557 

and  be  driven  out  of  her  p.  Becket,  Pro.  533 

Gave  me  the  golden  keys  of  P.  „  i  i  54 

Will  greet  us  as  our  babes  in  P.  „        v  ii  225 

And  pass  at  once  perfect  to  P.  „         v  iii  14 

As  in  the  midmost  heart  of  P.  The  Cup  ii  186 

And  these  rough  oaks  the  palms  of  P  !  Foresters  ii  i  170 

Paralysis    My  father  stricken  with  his  first  p.  Prom,  of  May  ii  481 

He  is  stricken  with  a  slight  p.  Foresters  iv  456 

Paramonnt    I  have  it .  .  .  My  lord  P,  Our  great  High-priest,    Becket  iv  ii  356 
Paramour    Well — some  believed  she  was  his  p. 

Bury  him  and  his  p  together. 

more  Than  that  of  other  p's  of  thine  ? 

was  Rosamund — his  p — thy  rivaJ. 

p — rival !     King  Louis  had  no  p's, 

I  would  she  were  but  his  p,  for  men  tire  of  their  fancies ; 

Belongings,  p's,  whom  it  pleases  him  To  call  his  wives  ; 

That  I  am  his  main  p,  his  sultana. 

I  gave  it  you,  and  you  your  p ; 

Maid?     Friar.     P\     Friar.     Hell  take  her! 

clutch  Our  pretty  Marian  for  his  p. 


Harold  V  ii  102 

V  ii  150 

Becket,  Pro.  71 

Pro.  471 

Pro.  473 

Pro.  479 

IV  ii  35 

IV  ii  39 

vil69 

Foresters  in  402 

IV  767 


Parapet    I  was  so  mad,  that  I  mounted  upon  the  p —    Prom,  of  May  m  372 
Parch'd    and  watch  The  p  banks  rolling  incense,  as  of  old.  Qv^en  Mary  i  v  91 


Parchment    be  not  wroth  at  the  dumb  p 
Pardon  (s)     all  one  mind  to  supplicate  The  Legate 
here  for  p, 

A  roimd  fine  likelier.    Your  p. 

So  that  you  crave  full  p  of  the  Legate. 

I  attend  the  Queen  To  crave  most  humble  p — 

Your  p,  then ;  It  is  the  heat  and  narrowness 

According  to  the  canons  p  due  To  him  that  so 
repents, 

so  long  continuing,  Hath  found  his  p ; 

Your  p.  Sweet  cousin,  and  farewell  f 

what  sin  Beyond  all  grace,  all  p  ? 

No  p  ! — Why  that  was  false : 

hard  is  our  honeymoon  !     Thy  p. 

Leave  me.     No  more — P  on  both  sides — Go  ! 

— I  pray  yoiu^  p. 

kingly  promise  given  To  our  own  self  of  p, 

A  policy  of  wise  p  Wins  here  as  well  as  there. 

I  crave  Thy  p — I  have  still  thy  leave  to  speak. 

Your  p.     Salisbv/ry.     He  said,  '  Attend  the  ofl&ce.' 

Thy  p.  Priestess ! 

with  your  ladyship's  p,  and  as  your  ladyship  knows, 

Your  p  for  a  minute.     She  must  be  waked.  " 

I  crave  your  worship's  p. 

Or  lose  all  hope  of  p  from  us — 


Foresters  i  i  342 

Qu^en  Mary  ni  iii  107 
in  iii  280 
in  iv  391 
in  iv  432 
in  V  206 

IV  iii  33 

IV  iii  50 

V  ii  203 
vii  340 
V  V  135 

Harold  iv  iii  230 

V  i  353 
Becket,  Pro.  37 

„      n  ii  433 

V  ii  23 
„  V  ii  44 
„       V  ii  606 

The  Cup  n  373 

The  Falcon  565 

Prom,  of  May  m  657 

Foresters  n  i  243 

IV  935 


Pardon  (verb)     She  said — pray  p  me,  and  pity  her —  Queen  Mary  i  y  52 

they  mean  to  p  me.  „        iv  ii  50 

For  if  our  Holy  Queen  not  p  him,  „       iv  iii  61 

God  p  me  !     I  have  never  yet  found  one.  „        v  ii  334 

P  us,  thou !     Our  silence  is  our  reverence  Harold  iv  i  11 

see  beyond  Your  Norman  shrines,  p  it,  p  it,  „       v  i  620 

I  pray  God  p  mine  infirmity.  Becket  n  ii  353 

God  p  thee  and  these,  but  God's  full  curse  „     v  iii  133 

Pray,  p  me  !  The  Falcon  395 

I  pray  you  p  me  again  !  „          478 

Will  p  me  for  asking  what  I  ask.  „          805 
you  are  young,  and — p  me — As  lovely  as  your 

sister.  Prom,  of  May  n  507 

And  p  me  for  saying  it —  „          m  552 

P  him,  my  lord :  he  is  a  holy  Palmer,  Foresters  i  ii  235 

P  him  again,  I  pray  you ;  „        i  ii  246 

Speak  to  me,  Kate,  and  say  you  p  me !  „         n  ii  53 

^d  it  was  but  a  woman.    P  me.  „         n  ii  73 
When  Richard  comes  he  is  soft  enough  to  p  His 

brother ;  „          iv  747 

Pardonablest    lies  that  ever  men  have  lied.  Thine  is  the  p.   Harold  ni  i  100 

Pardon'd     That  must  be  p  me ;  Queen  Mary  i  v  311 

Why  surely  ye  are  p.  Foresters  iv  947 

Pare     But  one  that  p's  his  nails  ;  to  me  ?  Q;u,een  Mary  m  v  65 

Parish  (adj.)     every  p  tower  Shall  clang  and  clash 

alarum  „            ii  i  228 

Parish  (s)     and  haafe  th'  p  '11  be  theer,  an'  Miss  Dora, 

an'  Miss  Eva,  an'  all !  Prom,  of  May  i  10 
and  you  says  it  belongs  to  the  p,  and  theer  be  a 

thousand  i'  the  p,  „  1 145 
thaw  'e  knaws  I  was  hallus  agean  heving  school- 
master i'  the  p  !  „  I  187 
noan  o'  the  p'es  goas  by  that  naame  'ereabouts.  ,.  i  268 
an'  all  the  p  'ud  ha'  done  out  fur  'er,  „  n  36 
if  the  fever  spread,  the  p  will  have  to  thank  you  for  it.        „  ni  47 

Parish-parson    When  shall  your  p-p  bawl  our  banns  „          i  685 

Park    At  the  p  gate  he  hovers  with  our  guards.  Queen  Mary  n  iv  15 

Parleying    This  comes  of  p  with  my  Lord  of  Devon.  „           i  iv  251 

Still  P  with  Renard,  all  the  day  with  Renard,  „         in  vi  116 

Parliament    {iSee  also  King-Parliament)    didn't  the  P 

make  her  a  bastard?  „               i  i  15 
they  be  both  bastards  by  Act  of  P  and  Coimcil. 
Citizen.    Ay,  the  P  can  make  every  true-born 

man  of  us  a  bastard.  „               i  i  24 

But  if  P  can  make  the  Queen  a  bastard,  „                i  i  48 

Council,  people,  P  against  him ;  „              i  v  78 

But  for  our  heretic  P —  „            i  v  388 

That,  soon  or  late,  your  P  is  ours.  „            i  v  424 

shall  we  have  Spain  on  the  throne  and  in  the  p ;  „            n  i  176 

Council,  The  P  as  well,  are  troubled  waters ;  „            ii  ii  50 

Corroborate  by  your  acts  of  P :  „           n  ii  173 

Before  our  own  High  Court  of  P,  „          n  ii  234 

And  others  of  our  P,  revived,  „          in  i  326 

And  Commons  here  in  P  assembled,  „        in  iii  114 

A  P  of  imitative  apes  !  „        ui  iii  235 

And  these  again  upon  her  P —  „        in  vi  185 

Tell  my  mind  to  the  Council — to  the  P :  „           v  ii  289 

Parlour    and  you  should  sit  i'  your  oan  p  quite  like  a 

laady.  Prom,  of  May  n  97 

Parson     (See  also  Parish-parson)    Gardener,  and 

huntsman,  in  the  p's  place,  The  p  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  373 

he's  no  respect  for  the  Queen,  or  the  p,  or  the 

justice  o  peace,  or  owt.  Prom,  of  May  1 133 

and  P  mebbe,  thaw  he  niver  mended  that  gap  „            i  445 

Part  (s)    you  are  art  and  p  with  us  In  purging  heresy,    Qvxen  Mary  in  iv  316 

And  for  my  p  therein — Back  to  that  juggler,  Harold  v  i  53 

I  could  but  read  a  p  to-day,  because —  Becket  i  iii  422 

when  those,  that  name  themselves  Of  the  King's  p,  „      v  ii  429 

The  first  p — made  before  you  came  among  us —  Foresters  la  435 

Part  (verb)     To  p  me  from  the  woman  that  I  loved !  Harold  v  i  346 

Look  you,  we  never  meant  top  again.  „       v  ii  80 

Must  I  hack  her  arms  ofi  ?    How  shall  I  p  them  ?  „      v  ii  148 

'  Till  death  us  p ' — those  are  the  only  words.  Prom,  of  May  i  658 
they  that  love  do  not  beUeve  that  death  Will  p 

them.  „          1 664 


Part 


1030 


Fast-Pass'd 


Part  (verb)  (ccUinued)   Ay,  noble  Earl,  and  never  p  with  it.  Foresters  in  304 

precious  ring  I  promised  Never  to  p  with-  »        «  ^  »"^ 

partjiken    had  they  remained  true  to  me  whose  bread  they   ^^^^^  ^  .^  ^^^ 

Parted'N:,^orwetrustthey,intheswine.  Q-^Simi'^ 

Our  Tostig  p  cursing  me  and  England ,  « «™^«         g^ 

We  have  ^  from  our  wife  without  reproach,  ^         ^  ^^^ 

I  772 

Foresters  i  i  181 

..      II  i  254 


Foresters  ii  i  22» 

„      II  i  230 

III  71 

ni  176- 

ni  305 

IV  283 


It  seemed  to  me  that  we  were  p  for  ever. 


Becket,  Pro.  339 
Pro.  377 


It  seemeu  tu  mc  uuau  "v-  ..■^•^  ^  —  -   ---       . 
We  p  like  the  brook  yonder  about  the  alder  islana, 
Who  p  from  thee  even  now  ? 
How  came  we  to  be  p  from  our  men? 
Parthian    P  shaft  of  a  forlorn  Cupid  at  the  King  s  left 

To  hide  the  scar  left  by  thy  P  dart.  '/if««TTi351 

Partic'lar    Yeas,  Miss ;  and  he  wants  to  speak  to  ye  p.  Prom,  of  May  m  ^01 

but  he  says  he  wants  to  tell  ye  summut  very  p.  ,.  ™  ^^^ 

Parting    (See  also  A-parting)    p  of  a  husband  and  a 
'^"^wife  Is  like  the  cleaving  of  a  heart ;  Q^^^**  ^«'^  i«  ^  1»* 

if  I  knew  you  felt  this  p,  Phil.p,  As  I  do  !  "seckd  mi  237 

Myself  confused  with  p  from  the  King.  ^f  m„,7tti  197 

and  no  more  v's  for  ever  and  for  ever.  .       Prov> .  of  May  m  i^i 

PartS    I  hive  notice  from  our  p's  Within  the  city     Queen  Mary  n  iii^51 

And  all  her  fieriest  p's — 
Party     I  should  be  still  A  p  in  the  state ; 

a  great  p  in  the  state  Wills  me  to  wed  her. 

as  great  a  p  in  the  state  Will  you  to  wed  me .'' 

My  heart,  my  Lord,  Is  no  great  p  in  the  state 

Is  it  England,  or  a  p  ?     Now,  your  answer. 

and  p  thereunto,  My  Lord  of  Devon. 

Princess  Cognisant  thereof,  and  p  thereunto. 

Stirr'd  up  a  p  there  against  your  son—  ^ 

'  ^  ^  '?lV^f\  ^"  '""^'^  ""'  ^°"'  Prom,  of  May  m  313 

P  on  the  10th!  -^™    jj^^^„;/n  ii  317 

^SLg  the  gtad  std  pVs  of  the  wood  Forest^s  ui  457 

Pass  (vCTb)     When  will  he? Majesty  p,  sayst  thou?  Queer,  Mary  1 1^3 

She  cannot  p  her  traitor  council  by, 
as  we  p.  And  pour  along  the  land. 
There  yet  is  time,  take  boat  and  p  to  Windsor.    Manj. 
I  p  to  Windsor  and  I  lose  my  crown.    Gardiner,    r, 
then,  I  pray  your  Highness,  to  the  Tower, 
makes  the  waverer  p  Into  more  settled  hatred 
if  this  p.  We  two  shall  have  to  teach  him  ; 
And  p  es  thro'  the  peoples : 

and  p  And  leave  me,  Philip,  ,     ^v,- 

Beauty  p'es  like  a  breath  and  love  is  lost  in  loathing : 
Well,  when  it  p'es  then.    Edward.     Ay  if  it  p.     Cio  not 

to  Normandy —  tt      u  i 

And  let  him  p  unscathed;  he  loves  me,  Harold ! 
And  p  her  to  her  secret  bower  in  England. 
That  so  the  Papal  bolt  may  p  by  England, 
when  the  King  p'es,  there  may  come  a  crash 
P  in  with  Herbert  there. 
let  me  p,  my  lord,  for  I  must  know. 
To  p  thee  to  thy  secret  bower  to-morrow. 
He  watch'd  her  p  with  John  of  Salisbury 
Come,  you  filthy  knaves,  let  us  p.    3rd  Beggar. 

my  lord,  let  us  p. 
But  it  p'es  away, 

<  P  r\n  '  Via  aairl     i 


m  ii  170 
iiv24 
iiv91 
iiv95 

I  iv  102 
IV  142 

n  iv  100 

II  iv  113 
Becket  v  i  6 


111  40 
II  i  231 


Nay, 


„  n  iv  27 
„  III  iv  158 
„  III  iv  421 
„  III  V  35 
„  m  vi  227 
„      V  ii  365 

Harold  i  i  233 

„    mi  301 

Becket,  Pro.  183 

„      Pro.  226 

„      Pro.  484 

I  i  184 

I  i  206 

I  i  249 

iii40 


Pass  (verb)  (continued)     Ghost !  did  one  in  white  p  ? 
Did  two  knights  p  ?  .       o      i  ^ 

Then  let  her  p  as  an  exception,  bcariet. 
And  if  a  woman  p — 
One  half  shall  p  into  our  treasury, 
and  can  make  Five  quarts  p  into  a  thimble. 
Passage     that's  the  winder  at  the  end  o'  the  p,  that 

goas  by  thy  chaumber. 
Pass'd    See  Past  .  .     .      u        = 

Passing  (adj.  and  part.)    (See  afoo  A-passing)    she  was 
p  Some  chapel  down  in  Essex,   ' 
every  tongue  Alters  it  p, 
Than  any  sea  could  make  me  p  hence. 
And  might  assail  you  p  through  the  street, 
A  p  bell  toU'd  in  a  dying  ear— 
Who  p  by  that  hill  three  nights  ago— 
With  a  love  P  thy  love  for  Griffyth ! 
And  I  and  he  are  p  overseas : 
To  fright  the  wild  hawk  p  overhead, 
Passing  (s)    In  p  to  the  Castle  even  now. 

should  be  stay'd  From  p  onward. 
Passion    (See  aZso  Self-passion)    and  in  that  p  Gave 
me  my  Crown. 
God's  p  !  knave,  thy  name  !  •  .„^  u  o 

God's  p  !  do  you  know  the  knave  that  pamtea  it . 
Nay,  God's  p,  before  me  !  speak  ! 
within  the  pale— Beyond  the  p. 
thy  patriot  p  Siding  with  our  great  Council 
Our  Uving  p  for  a  dead  man's  dream ; 
Thou  hast  no  p  for  the  House  of  Godwin — 
illogically,  out  of  p,  without  art— 
with  such  true  v  As  at  this  loveless  knife 
I  never  felt  such  p  for  a  woman. 
So  end  all  p's.     Then  what  use  in  p  s  ? 
The  ghosts  of  the  dead  p's  of  dead  men ; 
may  not  be  seized  With  some  fierce  p. 
That  blast  our  natural  p's  into  pains  ! 
I  have  a  sudden  p  for  the  wild  wood — 
The  hunter's  p  flash'd  into  the  man, 
Passionate    no  p  faith-Bu^-if  let  be-balance  and  ^,^^221 

compromise ;  ^         ^^^/^ ,  ,  ^g 

He  is  p  but  honest.  _  .  jj  i 

Mad  for  thy  mate,  p  nightingale  ...  I  love  thee  for  it—      „  i  "  ^ 

Passion'd    See  Out-passion'd  m  i  43 

Sonless     I  would  I  were  As  holy  and  as  p  as  he  ..      ni^ 

P?     How  he  flamed  When  Tostig's  anger'd earldom,  ,,      m  i  5 J 

Passion-play    Judas-lover  of  our  p-p  Hath  track'd  us  hither,  ^ecfceirv     137 


'  P  on,*  he  said,  and  in  thy  name  1  pass  d 

I  will  but  p  to  vespers.  And  breathe  one  prayer 

That  I  should  p  the  censures  of  the  Church 

And  p  at  once  perfect  to  Paradise. 

Shall  I  too  p  to  the  choir, 

He  will  p  to-morrow  In  the  gray  dawn 

Your  arm — a  moment — It  will  p. 

Bird-babble  for  my  falcon !     Let  it  p. 

If  possible,  here !  to  crop  the  flower  and  p. 

I  am  half  afraid  to  p. 

AUow  me,  sir,  to  p  you. 

I  cannot  p  that  way. 

on  this  cross  I  have  sworn  that  till  I  myself  p  away, 

I  must  v  overseas  to  one  that  I  trust  will  help  me. 

to  p  it  aown  A  finger  of  that  hand 

Did  we  not  hear  the  two  would  p  this  way  ? 


iiv204 

",      III  i  280 

„       V  ii  102 

„       v  ii  190 

„       V  ii  390 

„        v  iii  14 

V  iii  74 

The  Cup  I  ii  294 

„         n449 

The  Falcon  39 

Prom,  of  May  i  254 

II  328 

II  355 

ni  733 

Foresters  i  i  290 

„       I  ii  152 

„       I  ii  297 

..      II  i  198 


Prom,  of  May  I  397 


Queen  Mary  i  v  39' 

„        in  v  36^ 

III  vi  87 

IV  ii  34 
V  ii  41 

Harold  in  i  366 

V  i  357 
Foresters  ii  i  626- 

ni  318 

Becket  i  ii  13 

Foresters  ni  242 

Queen  Mary  i  v  567 

„         ni  i  ii48 

„         m  i  1364 

„       III  iv  285 

Harold  i  ii  49 

„      III  i  58 

„     HI  ii  60 

„     IV  ii  72 

Becket,  Pro.  337 

„       IV  ii  190 

The  Cup  I  i  34 

„   I  iii  126 

Prom,  of  May  n  275 

II  336 

III  724 
Foresters  i  iii  122 

IV  539- 


Passover     Dash'd  red  with  that  unhallow'd  p ; 

Passport     this  pious  cup  Is  p  to  their  house, 

Past  (s)     These  are  forgiven— matters  of  the  p — 
Hangs  all  my  p,  and  all  my  life  to  be, 
see,  see,  I  speak  of  him  in  the  p. 
The  p  is  like  a  travell'd  land  now  sunk 
In  looking  on  a  chill  and  changeless  P? 
the  P  Remains  the  P. 
for  the  p  Look'd  thro'  the  present, 
or  is  it  but  the  p  That  brightens  in  retirmg  r* 
Sleep,  nioumful  heart,  and  let  the  p  be  past ! 

Past-Pass'd    he's  past  your  questioning. 

The  sentence  having  past  upon  them  all, 

How  look'd  the  city  When  now  you  past  it  :* 

As  we  past,  Some  hail'd,  some  hiss'd  us. 

Before  he  go,  that  since  these  statutes  past. 

He  pass'd  out  smUing,  and  he  walk'd  upright; 

You  saw  him  how  he  past  among  the  crowd; 

—pas<— but  whither?     Paget.     To  purgatory,  man. 

And  all  his  wars  and  wisdoms  past  away ; 

Then  claspt  the  cross,  and  pass'd  away  in  peace. 

had  past  me  by  To  hunt  and  hawk  elsewhere, 

Then  a  great  Angel  past  along  the  highest 

great  Angel  rose  And  past  again  along  the  highest 

when  I  past  by  Waltham,  my  foundation  For  men 

longed  much  to  see  your  Grace  and  the  Chancellor  ere 

But^tL  hour  is  past,  and  our  brother,  Master  Cook, 


I  iii  348 

The  Cztp  1  i  83 

Queen  Mary  ni  iii  190 

,,  IV  iii  219 

IV  iii  42^ 

The  Cup  n  230 

Prom,  of  May  u  504 

n  505 

n640 

n644 

Foresters  i  iii  47 

Queen  Mary  i  i  39 

„        IV  487 

II  ii  58 

u  ii  60 

„      m  vi  24 

„    IV  iii  302 

„    IV  iii  574 

„    IV  iii  625 

V  v5« 

„       V  V  258 

Harold  u  ii  27 

„    in  i  13S 

„    inil5e 

vi9( 


Becket,  Pro.  40( 
I  iv  6( 


Fast-Fass'd 


1031 


Peace 


Past-Pass'd  (continued)     Past  help  !  his  paws  are  past  help.     Becket  i  iv  110 
he  hath  pass'd  out  again,  And  on  the  other  side.  „      iii  ii  12 

a  man  passed  in  there  to-day :  I  holla'd  to  him,  „      ni  ii  24 

and  in  thy  name  I  pass'd  From  house  to  house.  „      v  ii  103 

on  a  Tuesday  pass  d  From  England  into  bitter 

banishment ;  „     v  ii  288 

She  past  me  here  Three  years  ago  when  I  was  flying  The  Cup  i  i  4 

in  a  city  thro'  which  he  past  with  the  Roman  army :  „      i  i  43 

in  some  city  where  Antonius  past.  „     i  ii  58 

having  pass'd  imwounded  from  the  field,  The  Falcon  608 

but  they,  the  shadows  of  ourselves,  Have  past  for 

ever.  Pro^n.  of  May  i  272 

You  never  told  her,  then,  of  what  has  past 

Between  us.  „  i  729 

Sleep,  mournful  heart,  and  let  the  past  be  past !  Foresters  i  iii  47 

She  and  Sir  Richard  Have  past  away,  „        ii  i  120 

They  must  have  past.    Here  is  a  woodman's  hut.  „        ii  i  199 

You  see  he  is  past  himself.    What  would  you  more  ?  „         iv  471 

Past  the  bank  Of  foxglove,  then  to  left  by  that  one 

yew.  „         IV  973 

Pastime    While  you  can  take  your  p  in  the  woods.  The  Cup  i  i  190 

Cannot  he  take  his  p  like  the  flies  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  277 

It  is  but  p — nay,  I  will  not  harm  thee.  Foresters  U  i  554 

Have  our  loud  p's  driven  them  all  away  ?  „        ii  ii  105 

Pastor    P  fugatur  Grex  trucidatur —  Harold  v  i  513 

Pastoral     The  polish'd  Damon  of  your  p  here,  Prom,  of  May  ni  562 

Pat    gave  me  a  great  p  o'  the  cheek  for  a  pretty  wench,       Becket  m  i  125 

Patch    I  must  p  up  a  peace —  „        ii  ii  53 

Patent    your  name  Stands  first  of  those  who  sign'd  the 

Letters  P  Queen  Mary  i  ii  18 

State  secrets  should  be  p  to  the  statesman  Becket,  Pro.  76 

Pater     Salva  patriam  Sancte  P,  Harold  v  i  467 

Path    in  a  narrow  p.     A  plover  flew  before  thee.  Becket  ii  i  53 

I  strike  into  my  former  p  For  England,  „  n  ii  455 

stray'd  From  love's  clear  p  into  the  common  bush,  „  iii  i  247 

so  many  alleys,  crossings,  P's,  avenues—  „      iv  ii  7 

she  turns  down  the  p  through  our  little  vineyard.  The  Falcon  167 

Pathway    A  hundred  p's  running  everyway,  Becket,  Pro.  163 

— would  have  made  my  p  flowers,  „        v  ii  370 

Patience     age  Of  brief  life,  and  brief  purpose,  and 

brief  p.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  414 

The  p  of  St.  Lawrence  in  the  fire.  „  iv  iii  95 

Patient    with  that  sweet  worn  smile  Among  thy  p 

wrinkles —  „  v  v  200 

till  now,  by  the  p  Saints,  she's  as  crabb'd  as  ever.  Harold  ii  i  50 

Patriam    Salva  p  Sancte  Pater,  „      v  i  466 

Salva  p,  Sancta  Mater.  „      v  i  470 

Patriarchal    And  die  upon  the  P  throne  Of  all  my 

predecessors  ?  Becket  v  iii  75 

Patrimony     When  I  was  ruler  in  the  p,  Queen  Mary  v  ii  72 

That  be  the  p  of  the  poor  ?  Becket  i  iii  106 

Patriot  (adj.)     but  that  thy  p  passion  Siding  with  our  great 

Council  against  Tostig,  Harold  in  i  57 

Patriot  (s)     Their  shield-borne  f  of  the  morning  star  The  Cup  ii  121 

Patriotism    you  suspect  This  Smnatus  of  playing  p,  „        i  i  78 

Pattem'd     moonlight  casements  p  on  the  waU,  Queen  Mary  v  v  9 

Paul  (Saint)     (See  also  St.  Paul)    what  saith  P  ?     '  I 

would  they  were  cut  off  ,.      ni  iv  31 

Paul  the  Fourth  (Pope)     But  this  new  Pope  Caraffa,  P  t  F,       „        v  ii  32 
Panper    a  Sister  of  Mercy,  come  from  the  death-bed 

of  a  p.  Prom,  of  May  iii  377 

Pauper'd     Why  then,  my  lord,  we  are  p  out  and  out.  The  Falcon  268 

Pauperes    Sederunt  principes,  ederunt  p.  Becket  i  iv  132 

Pauperis     And  one  an  uxor  p  Ibyci.  »      v  ii  216 

Pauperism    Simk  in  the  deepest  pit  of  p.  Prom,  of  May  m  803 

Pause  (s)     so  in  this  p,  before  The  mine  be  fired,  Queen  Mary  ii  i  25 

Pause  (verb)     Wherefore  p  you — what?  „  v  iii  39 

Pavement    To  bathe  this  sacred  p  with  my  blood.  Becket  v  iii  131 

Paw     King's  verdurer  caught  him  a-hunting  in  the  forest, 

and  cut  off  his  p's.  »         i  iv  96 

Past  help  !  his  p's  are  past  help.  „       i  iv  111 

One  downward  plunge  of  his  p  would  rend  away  „      iv  ii  283 

if  we  kill  a  stag,  our  dogs  have  their  p's  cut  off.  Foresters  iv  225 

Fawn    a  King  That  with  her  own  p's  plays  against  a 

Queen,  Queen  Mary  i  iii  162 


Pawn  (continued)     Courtenay  seems  Too  princely 

for  a  p.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  167 

Pay    Your  pious  wish  to  p  King  Edward's  debts,  „           i  v  111 

but  to  p  them  full  in  kind,  „           v  iv  14 

Pray'd  me  to  p  her  debts,  and  keep  the  Faith ;  „          v  v  257 

What  conditions  ?  p  him  back  His  ransom  ?  Harold  ii  ii  213 

Church  should  p  her  scutage  like  the  lords.  Becket  i  i  34 
and  he  p's  me  regular  every  Saturday.                       Prom,  of  May  i  311 

Why  should  I  p  you  your  full  wages  ?  „            iii  83 
sits  and  eats  his  heart  for  want  of  money  to  p  the  Abbot.  Foresters  i  i  5 

thou  shouldst  marry  one  who  will  p  the  mortgage.  „     i  i  280 

I  would  p  My  brother  all  his  debt  and  save  the  land.  „   i  ii  217 

Himself  would  p  this  mortgage  to  his  brother,  „  i  ii  263 

he  would  p  The  mortgage  if  she  favour'd  him.  „      i  iij  6 

Sheriff  Would  p  this  cursed  mortgage  to  his  brother  „  n  i  144 

and  couldst  never  p  The  mortgage  on  my  land.  „  n  i  453 

That  other  thousand — shall  I  ever  pit?  „  n  i  466 
Take  thou  my  bow  and  arrow  and  compel  them  to  p  toll.       „    m  263 

he  that  p's  not  for  his  dinner  must  fight  for  it.  „    iv  199 

Church  and  Law,  halt  and  p  toll !  „    iv  430 

Where  he  would  p  us  down  his  thousand  marks.  „    rv  441 

Give  him  another  month,  and  he  will  p  it.  „    rv  444 

Lest  he  should  faiil  to  p  these  thousand  marks  „    rv  454 

he  Would  p  us  all  the  debt  at  once,  „    iv  485 

Payest    Thou  p  easily,  like  a  good  fellow,  „    iv  155 
Paying     but  the  schoolmaster  looked  to  the  p  you         Prom,  of  May  m  23 
Sheriff  had  taken  aU  oiu:  goods  for  the  King  without  p,  Foresters  u  i  191 
when  the  Sheriff  took  my  Uttle  horse  for  the  King 

without  p  for  it —  „      n  i  302 
Pea    See  Peasen 

Peace     be  no  p  for  Mary  till  Elizabeth  lose  her  head.'       Queen  Mary  i  iii  4 

P  !  hear  him  !  let  his  own  words  damn  the  Papist.  „          i  iii  52 

Ay,  tho'  you  long  for  p ;  „         i  v  258 

Some  settled  ground  for  p  to  stand  upon.  „         i  v  315 

P,  pretty  maiden.     I  hear  them  stirring  „         i  v  627 

plain  life  and  letter'd  p,  „           n  i  50 

P.     False  to  Northumberland,  is  he  false  to  me  ?  „         n  iv  38 

The  second  Prince  of  P—  „       lu  ii  164 

P — the  Queen,  Philip,  and  Pole.  „       ni  iii  83 

'  I  come  not  to  bring  p  but  a  sword '  ?  „       in  iv  88 

P,  madman  !     Thou  stirrest  up  a  grief  „     ni  iv  297 

Will  let  you  learn  in  p  and  privacy  „     in  iv  326 

With  us  is  p  ! '    The  last  ?     It  was  a  dream ;  „      in  v  152 

P  among  you,  there  !  „      iv  iii  199 

When  I  should  guide  the  Church  in  p  at  home,  „         v  ii  67 

P,  cousin,  p  !     I  am  sad  at  heart  myself.  „        v  ii  159 

It  gilds  the  greatest  wronger  of  her  p,  „        v  ii  415 

sleeping  after  all  she  has  done,  in  p  and  quietness,  „        v  iv  35 

Then  claspt  the  cross,  and  pass'd  away  in  p.  „        v  v  260 

P  is  with  the  dead.  „       v  v  267 

P  with  the  dead,  who  never  were  at  p  !  „        v  v  273 

left  me  time  And  p  for  prayer  to  gain  Harold  i  i  220 

Ay,  ay  and  wise  in  p  and  great  in  war —  „       i  i  313 

Thy  fears  infect  me  beyond  reason.    P  \  „    n  ii  452 

P  be  with  him  !  „    iv  iii  89 

p  with  them  Likewise,  if  they  can  be  at  p  „    iv  iii  98 

A  snatch  of  sleep  were  like  the  p  of  Goa.  „     v  i  180 

Come  yet  once  more,  from  where  I  am  at  p,  ,>     v  i  239 

P !     The  king's  last  word — '  the  arrow ! '  „     v  i  265 

God  of  truth  FiU  all  thine  hours  with  p\ —  „     v  i  316 
P  to  his  soul !                                                                       Becket,  Pro.  394 

I  left  him  with  p  on  his  face —  „       Pro.  395 

P,  fools !     Becket.     P,  friends  1  „              i  ii  1 

P,  p,  my  lords  !  these  customs  are  no  longer  „          i  iii  68 

none  could  sit  By  his  own  hearth  in  p ;  „        i  iii  342 

To  our  King's  hands  again,  and  be  at  p.  „        i  iii  582 
1  am  confounded  by  thee.     Go  in  p.    De  Broc.    In  p 

now — but  after.    Take  that  for  earnest.  „        i  iii  731 

Ay,  go  in  p,  caitiff,  caitiff !  „        i  iii  735 
P !     Beggar.    The  black  sheep  baaed  to  the  miller's 

ewe-lamb,  „        i  iv  161 

P !     Beggar.    '  Ewe  lamb,  ewe  lamb,  „        i  iv  170 

the  nightmare  breaking  on  my  p  With  '  Becket.'  „           n  i  37 

I  must  patch  up  a  p—  „         n  ii  53 

So  we  make  our  p  with  him.  „         n  ii  63 


Peace 


1032 


People 


Becket  n  ii  200 
„  n  ii  240 
„  n  ii  448 
„  III  iii  254 
„  in  iii  259 
„  III  iii  328 
.,   in  iii  346 

V  ii  84 

V  ii  86 
„      V  ii  350 

The  Cup  I  iii  125 

I  iii  173 

n  214 

The  Falcon  910 


Peace  (continued)     what  it  is  you  doubt  ?     Behold  your  p 
at  hand, 
but  this  day  he  proffer'd  p. 
Rest  in  our  realm,  and  be  at  p  with  all. 
save  King  Henry  gave  thee  first  the  kiss  of  p. 
I  sware  I  would  not  give  the  kiss  of  p, 
happy  home-return  and  the  King's  kiss  of  p  in  Kent. 
that  the  sheep  May  feed  in  p. 
I  thought  that  I  had  made  a  p  for  thee. 
Small  p  was  mine  in  my  noviciate, 
brken  Your  bond  of  p,  your  treaty  with  the  King — 
Then  with  one  quick  short  stab — eternal  p. 
and  smile  At  bygone  things  till  that  eternal  p. 
0  bush  !     Op!     This  violence  ill  becomes 
No  more  feuds,  but  p,  P  and  conciliation  ! 
he's  no  respect  for  the  Queen,  or  the  parson,  or  the 

justice  o'  p,  or  owt.  Prom,  of  May  1 133 

— so  be  more  at  p  With  mine  own  self.  „  n  662 

P,  let  him  be :  it  is  the  chamber  of  Death  !  „         in  740 

P,  my  lord  ;  the  Earl  and  Sir  Richard  come  this  way.  Foresters  i  ii  147 
capering  hand  in  hand  with  Oberon.    Robin.    P !  „        n  i  499 

cuirass  in  this  forest  where  I  dream'd  That  all  was  p^      „         iv  131 
P,  magpie !     Give  him  the  quarterstaff.  „         iv  249 

0  p !  Father,  I  cannot  marry  till  Richard  comes.  „  iv  647 
Peaceful  and  no  more  feuds  Disturb  our  p  vassalage  to  Rome.  The  Cup  n  71 
Peace-lover  P-l  is  our  Harold  for  the  sake  Hat-old  i  ii  197 
Peace-ofEering  a  p-o,  A  scape-goat  marriage —  „  i  ii  203 
Peach  a  cheek  like  a  p  and  a  heart  like  the  stone  in  it —  The  Falcon  93 
Peacock  Never  p  against  rain  Scream'd  as  you  did  Queen  Mary  ni  v  56 
Peacocking    See  A-peacocking 

Peahen    eye  left  in  his  own  tail  to  flourish  among  the  p's.     The  Falcon  102 
Peal    some  great  doom  when  God's  just  hour  P's — -      Queen  Mary  i  iv  263 
Pearl    set  it  round  with  gold,  with  p,  with  diamond 
Some  six  or  seven  Bishops,  diamonds,  p's, 

1  see  the  flashing  of  the  gates  of  p— 
prize  The  p  of  Beauty,  even  if  I  found  it 

Peasen  (peas)    Hodge  'ud  ha'  been  a-harrowin'  o' 

white  p  i'  the  outfield — 
Pebble    God  change  the  p  which  his  kingly  foot 
Peck     and  why  ye  have  so  few  grains  to  p  at. 
Peculiar    would  commend  them  to  your  ladyship's  most  p 

appreciation. 
Pedite     Eques  cum  p  Prsepediatur ! 
Peeped    all  in  all  to  one  another  from  the  time  when 

we  first  p  into  the  bird's  nest, 
Peer    And  is  not  York  the  p  of  Canterbury  ? 
Peer'd    How  close  the  Sheriff  p  into  thine  eyes ! 
Peerless    in  music  P — her  needle  perfect, 
Pell-mell    Church  in  the  p-m  of  Stephen's  time 
Pelt    After  him,  boys  !  and  p  him  from  the  city. 
Pembroke  (Earl  of)    so  my  Lord  of  P  in  command  Of 

all  her  force  be  safe  ;  „         ii  ii  305 

Gardiner,  coming  with  the  Queen,  And  meeting  P,  „        n  ii  310 

Lord  P  in  command  of  all  our  force  „  n  iv  3 

Was  not  Lord  P  with  Northumberland  ?    O  mad- 
man, if  this  P  should  be  false  ?  „  n  iv  7 
The  traitor !  treason  !  P !                                                     „         ii  iv  36 
Where  is  P  ?     Courtenay.    I  left  him  somewhere 

in  the  thick  of  it.  „         ii  iv  79 

Pen     Can't  I  speak  like  a  lady ;  p  a  letter  like  a  lady ;  Prom,  of  May  ni  302 
Pencil    with  some  sense  of  art,  to  hve  By  brush  and  p.  „  i  499 

Pendent     But  tell  us,  is  this  p  hell  in  heaven  A  harm  to 

England  ?  Harold  i  i  76 

lied  like  a  lad  That  dreads  the  p  scourge,  „  ii  ii  658 

Penenden  Heath    ten  thousand  men  on  P  S  all  calling 
after  your  worship, 
They  roar  for  you  On  P  H, 
some  fifty  That  follow'd  me  from  P  H  in  hope  To 
hear  you  speak. 
Penitence    declare  our  p  and  grief  For  our  long  schism 

And  if  your  p  be  not  mockery, 

Penitent    So  that  we  may,  as  children  p, 

Thou  shalt  receive  the  p  thief's  award, 

Would  not — if  p — ^have  denied  him  her  Forgiveness.  Prom,  of  May  ii  496 

Penn'd    This  was  p.  Madonna,  Close  to  the  grating  The  Falcon  440 


IV  375 

m  i  53 

Harold  i  i  186 

Prom,  of  May  in  601 

Queen  Mary  IV  iii  492 

I  V  368 

Foresters  i  i  77 


The  Falcon  568 
Harold  V  i  529 

Prom,  of  May  in  274 

Becket  i  iii  47 

Foresters  i  ii  253 

Q,ueen  Mary  in  i  360 

Becket,  Pro.  19 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  85 


Queen  Mary  n  i  61 
II  i  106 


H  i  151 
in  iii  128 
ni  iii  179 
m  iii  153 

IV  iii  ■ 


Penny    I  will  give  thee  a  silver  p  if  thou  wilt  show  Foresters  n  i  360 

I  have  but  one  p  in  pouch,  „         ni  193 

He  hath,  as  he  said,  but  one  p.  „         m  209 

Take  his  p  and  leave  him  his  gold  mark.  „         in  217 

People  (s)     {See  also  Fool-people)     council  and  all  her  p 

wish  her  to  marry.  Queen  Mary  i  i  113 

And  if  her  p,  anger'd  thereupon,  „  i  iii  90 

The  p  there  so  worship  me — 
the  p  Claim  as  their  natural  leader — 
The  Council,  p.  Parliament  against  him; 
Your  p  have  begun  to  learn  your  worth, 
remission  Of  half  that  subsidy  levied  on  the  p, 
Your  p,  and  I  go  with  them  so  far, 
And  here  at  land  among  the  p  ! 
The  hardest,  cruellest  p  in  the  world, 
the  Queen,  and  the  laws,  and  the  p,  his  slaves. 
A  prince  as  naturally  may  love  his  p 
And  leave  the  p  naked  to  the  crown.  And  the  crown 

naked  to  the  p ; 
and  the  p  so  unquiet — 
His  sword  shall  hew  the  heretic  p's  down  ! 
For  as  this  p  were  the  first  of  all 
bounden  by  his  power  and  place  to  see  His  p  be  not 

poison'd. 
And  passes  thro'  the  p's  : 
seem  this  p  Care  more  for  our  brief  life 
read  your  recantation  Before  the  p  in  St.  Mary's  Church 
You  are  to  beg  the  p  to  pray  for  you  ; 
Yea,  for  the  p,  lest  the  p  die. 
Good  p,  every  man  at  time  of  death 
your  p  will  not  crown  me — Your  p  are  as  cheerless 
The  p's  are  unlike  as  their  complexion ; 
.  and  therefore  God  Is  hard  upon  the  p. 
Ah,  Msidam,  but  your  p  are  so  cold ; 
'  Yovu"  p  hate  you  as  your  husband  hates  you.' 
My  p  hate  me  and  desire  my  death. 
No,  not  to  her  nor  him ;  but  to  the  p, 
love  me,  as  I  love  The  p  !  whom  God  aid ! 
The  p  are  as  thick  as  bees  below. 
Pray  God  the  p  choose  thee  for  their  king ! 
Stir  up  thy  p :  oust  him  ! 
Let  all  thy  p  bless  thee  ! 
shown  And  redden'd  with  his  p's  blood 
voice  of  any  p  is  the  sword  That  guards  them, 
The  king,  the  lords,  the  p  clear'd  him  of  it. 
where  Tostig  lost  The  good  hearts  of  his  p. 
What !  are  thy  p  sullen  from  defeat  ? 
Why  cry  thy  p  on  thy  sister's  name  ? 
She  hath  won  upon  our  p  thro'  her  beauty. 
For  when  your  p  banish  d  Tostig  hence. 
Who  sow'd  this  fancy  here  among  the  p  ?     Morcar.     Who 

knows  what  sows  itself  among  the  p  ? 
the  p  stupid-sure  Sleep  like  their  swine  .  .  . 
Scatter  thy  p  home,  descend  the  hill, 
How  should  the  p  fight  When  the  king  flies  ? 
waste  the  fields  Of  England,  his  own  p  ? — 
First  of  a  line  that  coming  from  the  p.  And  chosen  by  the 
p —  Harold.  And  fighting  for  And  dying  for  the  p— 
chosen  by  his  p  And  fighting  for  his  p  ! 
Make  them  again  one  p — -Norman,  English ; 
— like  a  song  of  the  p. 
Was  not  the  p's  blessing  as  we  past 
The  p  know  their  Church  a  tower  of  strength, 
They  said — her  Grace's  p — thou  wast  found — 
spied  my  p's  ways ;  Yea,  heard  the  churl  against 
any  harm  done  to  the  p  if  my  jest  be  in  defence  of  the 
Truth  ?  Becket.  Ay,  if  the  jest  be  so  done  that  the 
p  Delight  ..       n  ii  339 

the  p  Believe  the  wood  enchanted.  ,,         m  i  35 

p  do  say  that  he  is  bad  beyond  all  reckoning — and 

Rosamund.     The  p  lie.  ,.        mi  174 

of  the  p  there  are  many  with  me.  ..     m  iii  292 

The  p  love  thee,  father.  „        v  ii  120 

What  do  these  p  fear  ?  „         v  iii  48 

your  own  p  cast  you  from  their  boimds,  The  Cv/p  i  i  137 


liv  120 
iiv209 
IV  78 
IV  109 
IV  116 
IV  188 
IV  383 
nilOO 
n  i  175 
n  ii  192 

m  i  119 

mi  453 

m  ii  178 

m  iii  171 

m  iv  213 
in  V  35 
in  vi  61 

IV  ii  29 
ivii76 

IV  iii  18 
IV  iii  156 

vi81 
vi89 

V  i  176 

V  ii  280 

V  ii  336 

V  ii  345 

V  iii  33 

V  iii  36 
HaroU  I  i  31 

.,  I  i  314 
„  I  i  482 
.,  iii  184 
.,  Iii  243 
..  u  ii  134 
„  n  ii  522 
..  niii30 
IV  i  1 
„  IV  i  20 
„  IV  i  23 
IV  197 

IV  i  148 

IV  iii  215 

vilO 

vil37 

vil42 


vi386 

„    vi491 

„  V  ii  188 

Becket,  Pro.  338 

I  i  12 

I  i  15 

„  I  ii  5 

I  iii  363 


People 


1033 


Phantom 


Rome  Made  war  upon  the  p's  not 


People  (s)  (continued) 
\j^j    the  Gods. 

His  own  true  p  cast  him  from  their  doors 

Camma  for  my  bride — The  p  love  her — 
r  '    Hear  thy  p  who  praise  thee  ! 
£^  _     throned  together  in  the  sight  Of  all  the  p, 

teach  this  Rome — from  knowledge  of  our  p — 

all  the  fleeted  wealth  of  kings  And  p's,  hear. 

if  my  p  must  be  thralls  of  Rome, 

Thou  art  one  With  thine  own  p,  and  though  a  Roman 

You  know  sick  p,  More  specially  sick  children, 

'  The  land  belongs  to  the  p  ! '  From,  of  May  i  i  141 

So  loved  by  all  the  village  p  here,  „  m  755 

Sir  Richard  and  my  Lady  Marian  fare  wellnigh  as 
sparely  as  their  p. 

soTtrue  a  friend  of  the  p  as  Lord  Robin  of  Huntingdon. 

fights  not  for  himself  but  for  the  p  of  England. 

to  save  his  coimtry,  and  the  liberties  of  his  p  ! 

My  p  are  all  scattered  I  know  not  where. 

The  oppression  of  our  p  moves  me  so, 

Robin,  the  p's  friend,  the  King  o'  the  woods  ! 

These  be  the  lies  the  p  tell  of  us, 
People  (verb)     to  p  heaven  in  the  great  day  When  God 

makes  up  his  jewels.  Becket  v  ii  496 

Perceive  man  jo's  that  The  lost  gleam  of  an  after-hfe  Prom,  of  May  1  i  502 
Perch  liis  politic  HoUness  Hath  all  but  climb'd  the  Roman  p  Becket  niiAQ 
Perch 'd  Him  p  up  there  ?  I  wish  some  thunderbolt  Queen  Mary  rv  iii  9 
Pereant    P,  p,  Anglia  precatur.  Harold  v  i  533 

Peregrine    And  hear  my  p  and  her  bells  in  heaven ;  „      i  ii  131 

Perennial    and  his  wealth  A  fountain  of  p  alms —         Queen  Mary  11  ii  385 


The  Cup  I  ii  60 
I  ii  351 
I  iii  153 
II  5 
n68 
n97 
II  290 
II  500 
II  504 
The  Falcon  816 


Foresters  i  i  31 

„  I  i  188 

„  I  i  237 

„  I  i  247 

„  II  i  176 

„  III  109 

„  ni  347 

„  HI  392 


Perfect    No  !  the  disguise  was  p.     Let's  away 

her  needle  p,  and  her  learning  Beyond  the  churchmen ; 

and  is  furthermore  No  p  witness  of  a  p  faith  In  him 
who  persecutes : 

Thou  art  manlike  p. 

My  friend  of  Canterbury  and  myself  Are  now  once 
more  in  p  amity. 

I  would  there  were  that  p  trust  between  us, 

That  p  trust  may  come  again  between  us, 

Mail'd  in  the  p  panoply  of  faith. 

Honour  to  thee  !  thou  art  p  in  all  honour ! 

But  wherefore  slur  the  p  ceremony  ? 

A  gallant  boy,  A  noble  bird,  each  p  of  the  breed. 

And  yet  I  had  once  a  vision  of  a  pure  and  p 
marriage, 

Shall  I  be  known  ?  is  my  disguise  p  ?    Sheriff. 
who  should  know  you  for  Prince  John, 
Perhaps    See  P'raps 
Peril    Looms  the  least  chance  of  p  to  our  realm. 

are  you  not  in  p  here  ?     Stafford.     I  think  so. 

in  your  behalf,  At  his  own  p. 

day  of  p  that  dawns  darkly  and  drearily 

At  their  p,  at  their  p — ■ 

Thou  hast  saved  my  head  at  the  p  of  thine  own, 
PbeQous    Many  points  weather'd,  many  p  ones, 

A  good  entrenchment  for  a  p  hour ! 

a  p  game  For  men  to  play  with  God. 

all  these  walks  are  Robin  Hood's  And  sometimes  p. 


I  iii  178 
m  i  360 

ra  iv  117 
Becket  n  i  253 

„  m  iii  229 

„  lu  iii  264 

„  in  iii  351 

„     V  ii  494 

Harold  11  ii  691 

The  Cup  n  431 

The  Falcon  320 

Prom,  of  May  m  188 

Foresters  i  ii  19 

Queen  Mary  11  ii  238 
in  i  34 
rv  i  127 
Beckei  1  iv  145 
„    III  iii  313 
Foresters  TV  796 
Queen  Marii  v  v  212 
Harold  ni  i  363 
Becket  n  ii  70 
Foresters  IV  121 
PiBnsh     Would  p  on  the  civil  slaughter-field.  Queen  Alarij  m  i  118 

May  all  invaders  p  like  Hardrada  !  Harold  iv  iii  77 

So  p  all  the  enemies  of  Harold !  „        v  i  504 

So  p  all  the  enemies  of  England  !  „        v  i  554 

P  she,  I,  all,  before  The  Church  should  suffer  wrong  !      Becket  in  iii  20 
Pecjnred    And  thou  art  p,  and  thou  wilt  not  seal.  „       i  iii  526 

And  that  too,  p  prelate — and  that,  turncoat  shaveling  !       „       i  iii  736 
1  Perjnry-mongering     the  p-m  Count  Hath  made  too  good  an 

use  Harold  v  i  310 

Permission    P  of  her  Highness  to  retire  To  Ashridge,    Queen  Mary  i  iv  236 

Permit    P  me  to  withdraw  To  Lambeth  ?  „         in  ii  129 

P  me,  my  good  lord,  to  bear  it  for  thee,  Becket  i  iii  490 

wilt  thou  p  us Becket.     To  speak  without 

stammering  „  i  iv  6 

My  lord,  p  us  then  to  leave  thy  service.  „  i  iv  9 

Perpendicular    Your  lordship  affects  the  unwavering  p ;  „     n  ii  326 

Perpetual     Their  wafer  and  p  sacrifice :  Queen  Mary  i  ii  45 


Perpetual  (continued)    she  holds  it  in  Free  and  p  alms,  Becket  1  iii  680 

the  voice  Of  the  p  brook,  these  golden  slopes  „       in  i  46 

doth  not  the  living  skin  thicken  against  p  whippings  ?  „    in  iii  316 
Close  to  the  grating  on  a  winter  morn  In  the  p  twUight 

of  a  prison.  The  Falcon  441 

Persecute     the  worse  is  here  To  p,  because  to  p  Queen  Mary  in  iv  115 

of  a  perfect  faith  In  him  who  p's :  „           in  iv  118 

Person    demanded  Possession  of  her  p  and  the  Tower.  „               u  ii  41 

In  mine  own  p  am  I  come  to  you,  „              n  ii  142 

Seek  to  possess  our  p,  hold  our  Tower,  „             n  ii  158 

that  anyone  Should  seize  our  p,  occupy  our  state,  „              n  ii  178 

yield  Full  scope  to  p's  rascal  and  forlorn,  „              n  ii  185 

As  p's  undefiled  with  our  offence,  „           iii  iii  144 

first  In  Council,  second  p  in  the  realm,  „              iv  iii  72 

Three  p's  and  one  God,  have  mercy  on  me,  „            iv  iii  121 

Noble  as  his  young  p  and  old  shield.  „              v  ii  513 

if  our  p  be  secured  From  traitor  stabs —  „             v  v  280 

Then  fling  mine  own  fair  p  in  the  gap  A  sacrifice  Harold  i  ii  202 

I  cannot  bear  a  hand  upon  my  p,  BeckH  v  iii  20 

I  came  In  p  to  return  them.  The  Falcon  727 

Persuaded    She  would  have  p  me  to  come  back  here.   Prom,  of  May  in  383 

Pertest    P  of  our  flickering  mob,  ~ 

Peru    The  voices  of  P  and  Mexico, 

Peruse     P  it ;  is  it  not  goodly,  ay,  and  gentle  ? 
wherefore  dost  thou  so  p  it  ? 

Pesteringly     Unalterably  and  p  fond ! 

Pestilent    \M11  no  man  free  me  from  this  p  priest  ? 

Peter     The  Eternal  P  of  the  changeless  chair, 


Peter  (Peter  Martyr)     P,  I'll  swear  for  him  He  did  beUeve 
Peter  (Saint)     (See  also  St.  Peter)    and  I  return  As  P, 
but  to  bless  thee : 

How  oft  hath  P  knock'd  at  Mary's  gate !  „ 

The  Church  on  P's  rock  ?  never  !  „ 

I  have  builded  the  great  church  of  Holy  P : 

'  O  blessed  reUcs  ! '    '0  Holy  P  ! ' 

loftiest  minster  ever  built  To  Holy  P 

Like  P's  when  he  fell,  and  thou  wilt  have  To  wail  for  it 
like  P. 

and  a  blessed  hair  Of  P,  and  all  France, 

gonfanon  of  Holy  P  Floating  above  their  helmets — 

Holy  Father  strangled  him  with  a  hair  Of  P, 

And  but  that  Holy  P  fought  for  us. 

The  customs  of  the  Church  are  P's  rock. 

Which  even  P  had  not  dared  ? 

And  as  for  the  flesh  at  table,  a  whole  P's  sheet, 
Peterboro'     Leofric,  and  all  the  monks  of  P 
Peter  Carew    (See  also  Carew)    Sir  P  C  and  Sir 
Thomas  Wyatt, 

Duke  of  Suffolk  and  Sir  P  C, 

'  Sir  P  C  fled  to  France : 

Is  P  C  fled  ?     Is  the  Duke  taken  ? 
Peters  (Gentleman  of  Lord  Howard)    P,  my  gentleman, 
an  honest  Cathohc, 

P,  how  pale  you  look  !  you  bring  the  smoke 

P,  you  know  me  Catholic,  but  English. 

Ay,  Master  P,  tell  us. 
Petition    long  p  from  the  foreign  exiles  To  spare 

This  same  p  of  the  foreign  exiles  For  Cranmer's  life. 
Petticoat    Ay,  ay,  gown,  coif,  and  p. 


Foresters  11  ii  130 

Queen  Mary  v  i  47 

I  V  195 

Berket  n  i  186 

Queen  Mary  v  i  120 

Becket  v  i  262 

Queen  Mary  m  iv  380 


Iii  76 

III  ii  56 
ni  ii  63 

III  iv  134 
Harold  1  i  180 

„      I  ii  171 
■„    in  i  207 

..    in  i  283 

„  in  ii  149 

„      V  i  549 

V  ii  47 

„     V  ii  164 

Becket  i  ni  24 

„    n  ii  395 

„  in  iii  129 

Harold  v  i  446 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  123 
I  iv  112 
n  i  135 
n  i  142 

„        IV  iii  553 

IV  iii  560 
IV  iii  566 
IV  iii  573 

rvi3 

rv  i  193 

Foresters  u  i  195 

Petty     To  still  the  p  treason  therewithin.  Queen  Mary  in  i  13 

the  sea-creek— the  p  rUl  That  falls  into  it —  Becket  n  ii  293 

Petulancy    Thou  goest  beyond  thyself  in  p  !  „        r  iii  65 

Pevensey    dungeon'd  the  other  half  In  P  Castle —  „       v  ii  446 

Landed  at  P — I  am  from  P — Hath  wasted  all  the  land 

at  P—  Harold  iv  iii  188 

I  have  ridden  night  and  day  from  P —  „      iv  iii  192 

Phantasy     Nay,  pure  p,  your  Grace.  Queen  Mary  i  v  280 

Not  as  from  me,  but  as  your  p ;  „  v  i  260 

This  coarseness  is  a  want  of  p.  ,,         v  ii  438 

I  love  the  man  but  not  his  phantasies.  Harold  i  i  279 

Phantom  (adj . )    The  p  ciy  !    You — did  you  hear  a  cry  ?  Prom,  of  May  m  651 

And  catch  the  winding  of  a  p  horn.  Foresters  iv  1091 

Phantom  (s)     to  victory — I  hope  so — Like  p's  of  the  Gods.    The  Cup  r  ii  170 

Her  p  call'd  me  by  the  name  she  loved.  Prom,  of  May  n  242 

That  I  may  feel  thou  art  no  p —  Foresters  iv  1013 


Pharisees 


1034 


Philip  Edgar 


Riarisees     They  go  like  those  old  P  in  John  Queen  Mary  n  ii  8 

Pheasant-flesh     A  doter  on  white  p-/  at  feasts,  Becket,  Fro.  97 

Fhilibert  (Prince  of  Savoy)    {See  also  Philibert  of  Savoy) 

I  think  that  I  will  play  with  P,—  Queen  Mary  m  v  242 

I  am  not  certain  but  that  P  Shall  be  the  man ;  „  v  i  264 

Fhilibert  of  Savoy    '  It  is  the  King's  wish,  that  you 

should  wed  Prince  P  o  S. 
Specially  not  this  landless  P  0  S  ; 
She  will  not  have  Prince  P  o  S, 
Elizabeth— To  P  o  8,  as  you  know, 
She  will  not  have  Prince  P  o  S. 
Philip  (Father)    Father  P  that  has  confessed  our  mother 

for  twenty  years, 
Philip  (King  of  Naples  and  Sicily,  afterwards  King  of 

Spain)     has  ofEer'd  her  his  son  P,  the  Pope 

and  the  Devil. 
A  goodUer-looking  fellow  than  this  P. 
leagued  together  To  bar  me  from  my  P. 
But  if  this  P,  the  proud  Catholic  prince, 
would  blow  this  P  and  all  Your  trouble 
grant  me  my  prayer :  Give  me  my  P ; 
Would  I  marry  Prince  P,  if  all  England  hate  him  ? 
Stab  me  in  fancy,  hissing  Spain  and  P ; 
Madam,  take  it  bluntly ;  marry  P, 
prince  is  known  in  Spain,  in  Flanders,  ha !     For  P- 
swom  upon  the  body  and  blood  of  Christ  I'll  none 

but  P. 
That  you  may  marry  P,  Prince  of  Spain — 
if  this  P  be  the  titular  king  Of  England, 
Have  you  seen  P  ever  ?    Noailles.    Only  once. 

Mary.    Is  this  like  P  ? 
a  formal  offer  of  the  hand  Of  P  ? 
P  never  writes  me  one  poor  word, 
P  shows  Some  of  the  bearing  of  your  blue  blood — 
P  Is  the  most  princelike  Prince  beneath  the  aim. 

This  is  a  daub  to  P. 
bimi  the  throne  Where  you  should  sit  with  P : 
For  P  comes  one  hand  in  mine, 
Farewell,  and  trust  me,  P  is  yours, 
heard  Slanders  against  Prince  P  in  our  Court  ? 
The  formal  offer  of  Prince  P's  hand. 
Ay  !    My  P  is  all  mine. 
No  new  news  that  P  comes  to  wed  Mary, 
This  P  and  the  black-faced  swarms  of  Spain, 
P  shall  not  wed  Mary ; 
to  save  her  from  herseft  and  P — 
and  if  P  come  to  be  King,  O,  my  God  ! 
smash  all  our  bits  o'  things  worse  than  P  o'  Spain. 
Don't  ye  now  go  to  think  we  be  for  P  o'  Spain, 
Their  cry  is,  P  never  shall  be  king. 
I  live  and  die  The  true  and  faithful  bride  of  P — 
P  would  not  come  Till  Guildford  Dudley 
My  foes  are  at  my  feet,  and  P  King. 
A  diamond,  And  P's  gift,  as  proof  of  P's  love, 
P  with  a  glance  of  some  distaste, 
yet  he  fail'd.  And  strengthen'd  P. 
Gardiner  buys  them  With  P's  gold, 
eat  fire  and  spit  it  out  At  P's  beard : 
some  secret  that  may  cost  P  his  life. 
P  and  Mary,  P  and  Mary  !    Long  live  the  King 

and  Queen,  P  and  Mary  ! 
I  thought  this  P  had  been  one  of  those  black  devils 

of  Spain, 
There  be  both  King  and  Queen,  P  and  Mary.    Shout 
The  Queen  comes  first,  Mary  and  P.     Gardiner. 

Shout,  then,  Mary  and  P !    Man.    Mary  and  P !  „        ni  i  299 

shouted  for  thy  pleasure,  shout  for  mine  !    P  and  Mary !  „        m  i  306 
P  and  Mary !    Gardiner.    I  distrust  thee.  „        in  i  309 

P  and  the  Pope  Must  have  sign'd  too.  „        in  i  429 

But  if  this  P,  as  he's  like  to  do,  „       ni  i  460 

Oh,  P,  husband !  now  thy  love  to  mine  „       m  ii  159 

Oh,  P,  come  with  me ;  „      tn  ii  185 

P's  no  sudden  alien — the  Queen's  husband,  „        in  iii  42 

'  P ! '  says  he.    I  had  to  cuff  the  rogue  For  infant 

treason.  „       in  iii  51 


in  V  222 

m  V  240 

m  vi  43 

vi247 

vi254 

Becket  m  i  111 


Queen  Mary  i  i  106 

I  iv  3 

I  iv  140 

I  iv  280 

I  iv  290 

I  V  87 
I  V  139 
I  V  151 
I  V  205 
I  V  209 

I  V  216 
I  V  251 
I  V  254 

I  V  319 
IV  350 
I  V  359 
I  V  433 

„  IV  444 
I  V  511 
I  V  515 
I  V  541 
I  V  570 

I  V  588 
IV  640 

n  i  16 

II  i  98 
n  i  164 
n  i  190 

II  i  199 
n  iii  104 

„       n  iii  106 
„  n  iv  1 

II  iv  43 
„       II  iv  135 

n  iv  143 
m  i  67 

III  i  99 
in  i  133 

„  mi  145 
m  i  158 
in  i  202 

m  i  206 

in  i  214 

m  i  297 


Philip  (King  of  Naples  and  Sicily,  afterwards  King  of 

Spain)  {continued)    P  by  these  articles  is  bound 

From  stirring  hand  Queen 

P  should  not  mix  us  any  way  With  his  French  wars.      ,, 
Good  sir,  for  this,  if  P Third  Member.     Peace 

— the  Queen,  P,  and  Pole.  , 

P  would  have  it ;  and  this  Gardiner  follows  ! 
For  that  is  P's  gold-dust,  and  adore  ,, 

but,  if  P  menace  me,  I  think  that  I  will  play  ,, 

three  days  in  tears  For  P's  going—  „ 

The  Queen  of  P  should  be  chaste.  „ 

0  P !     Nay,  must  you  go  indeed  ?  „ 

and  pass  And  leave  me,  P,  „ 

if  1  knew  you  felt  this  parting,  P,  As  I  do  !  „ 

And  P's  will,  and  mine,  that  he  should  bum.  „ 

Her  life,  since  P  left  her,  and  she  lost  „ 

They  hate  me  also  for  my  love  to  you,  My  P ;  „ 

P,  can  that  be  well  ?  „ 

P  ? —    Pole.    No,  P  is  as  warm  in  life  As  ever.  „ 

He  hates  P ;  He  is  all  Italian,  „ 

He  strikes  thro'  me  at  P  and  yourself.  „ 

he  may  bring  you  news  from  P.  „ 

P,  We  have  made  war  upon  the  Holy  Father  „ 

You  did  but  help  King  P's  war  with  France,  „ 

P  gone !     And  Calais  gone  !     Time  that  I  were 

gone  too !  „ 

Too  young  !     And  never  knew  a  P.  „ 

And  all  along  Of  P. 
Ay,  this  P ;  I  used  to  love  the  Queen  with  all  my 

heart —  „ 

And  love  to  hear  bad  tales  of  P.  „ 

Count  de  Feria,  from  his  Majesty  King  P.    Mary. 

P !  quick  !  loop  up  my  hair  !  „ 

Indian  shawl  That  P  brought  me  in  our  happy 

days ! —  „ 

no  need  For  P  so  to  shame  himself  again.  „ 

As  far  as  France,  and  into  P's  heart.  „ 

You  will  be  Queen,  And,  were  I  P — •  „ 

Your  P  hath  gold  hair  and  golden  beard ;  „ 

But  as  to  P  and  your  Grace — consider, —  „ 

Madam,  if  you  marry  P,  „ 

God's  death,  forsooth — you  do  not  know  King  P.  „ 

'  I  am  dying,  P ;  come  to  me.'  „ 

Calais  gone^ — Guisnes  gone,  too — and  P  gone  ! 

Lady  Clarence.     Dear  Madam,  P  is  but  at 

the  wars;  „ 

by  God's  grace.  We'll  follow  P's  leading,  „ 

Madam,  who  goes  ?     King  P  ?     Mary.    No,  P 

comes  and  goes,  but  never  goes.  „ 

you  will  find  written  Two  names,  P  and  Calais ; 
You  will  find  P  only,  policy,  policy, —  „ 

This  P  shall  not  Stare  in  upon  me  in  my  haggardness ;       „ 

0  God,  I  have  kill'd  my  P  ! 

Away  from  P.     Back  in  her  childhood — •  „ 

Philip  (Philip  Edgar,  afterwards  Mr.  Harold)  (See  also 
Edgar,  Harold,  Philip  Edgar,  Philip  Harold, 
Philip  Hedgar)  Oh,  P,  Father  heard  you  last 
night.  Prom 

will  be  placed  Beneath  the  window,  P. 

Dear  P,  aU  the  world  is  beautiful 

P,  P,  if  you  do  not  marry  me. 

Do  not  till  I  bid  you.     Eva.    No,  P,  no. 

Did  you  speak,  P  ? 

call  for  P  when  you  will.  And  he  returns. 

Eh  lad,  if  it  be  thou,  I'll  P  tha  ! 
Philip  Edgar  (afterwards  Mr.  Harold)  Heaven  hears  you,  P  E  ! 

Not  Harold  !     'P  E,P  E\' 

P  £  of  Toft  Hall  In  Somerset. 

One  P  E  ot  Toft  Hall  in  Somerset  Is  lately  dead. 

« I  caU  you,  P  E,P  E\ 

'P  E,  Esq.'     Ay,  you  be  a  pretty  squire. 

1  have  been  telling  her  of  the  death  of  one  P  Eoi  Toft 
Hall,  Somerset. 

'  O'  the  17th,  P  E,  o'  Toft  HaU,  Soomerset.' 

you  are  the  first  I  ever  have  loved  truly.    Eva.    P  E ! 


Mary  m  iii  591 
in  iii  78- 


of  May  1  556 
I  561 
I  576. 
leSO' 
I  733 
1748- 
I  758 
n  590 
I  760 
II  240 
II  138 
11  !  15 
II  ()57 
n  ()88 


Philip  Harold 


1035 


Plague 


Prom,  of  May  n  451 

n  586 

Queen  Mary  v  i  48 

Prom,  of  May  n  281 

The  Cup  n  9 

Queen  Man/  ni  iii  260 

Bec'ket  II  ii  438 

The  Falcon  728 

Becket,  Pro.  55 


Philip  Harold  (Philip  Edgar)     Nay— now — not  one, 

for  I  am  P  H. 
Philip  Hedgar  (Edgar)    P  H  o'  Soomerset !  (repeat) 
Philippines    Timis,  and  Oran,  and  the  P, 
Philosopher    A  poor  p  who  call'd  the  mind 
Phoebe    P,  that  man  from  Synorix,  who  has  been 
Phrase    Do  not  scrimp  your  p, 

now  I  see  That  I  was  blind — suffer  the  p — 

If  the  j> '  Return '  displease  you,  we  will  say — 
Phryne    With  P,  Or  Lais,  or  thy  Rosamund, 

Physic    in  a  closed  room,  with  light,  fire,  p,  tendance;  Queen  Mary  v  iv  37 
Plqrsical    Against  the  moral  excess  No  p  ache,  Becket  i  i  382 

Pt^cian     Nay,  dearest  Lady,  see  your  good  p.  Queen  Mary  v  v  59 

Physick'd    These  princes  are  like  children,  must  be  p,  „         i  v  234 

Pianner  (piano)    plaay  the  p,  if  ye  liked,  all  daay  long, 

likealaiidy.  Prom,  of  May  n  100 

Pick    What  should  I  say,  I  cannot  p  my  words —       Queen  Mary  in  vi  147 
Fictore    we  prize  The  statue  or  the  p  all  the  more  Prom,  of  May  i  738 

poor  Steer  looks  The  very  type  of  Age  in  a  p, 

More  like  the  p  Of  Christian  in  my  '  Pilgrim's 
Progress ' 

if  you  cram  me  crop-full  I  be  little  better  than  Famine 

in  the  p,  Foresters  i  i  47 

Piece    Henry  broke  the  carcase  of  your  church  To  p's,  Queen  Mary  i  v  399 

It  Ues  there  in  six  p's  at  your  feet ;  —  •  °" 

Give  me  a  p  of  paper ! 

A  p  in  this  long-tugged-at,  threadbare-wom  Quarrel 

I  dash  myself  to  p's — I  stay  myself — 

God's  full  curse  Shatter  you  all  to  p's  if  ye  harm 

I  tear  it  all  to  p's,  never  dream'd  Of  acting  on  it. 

a  hundred  Gold  p's  once  were  offer'd  by  the  Duke. 

but  one  p  of  earthenware  to  serve  the  salad  in  to  my  lady, 

Towser'ill  tear  him  all  to  p's.  Pro 


III  514 
ni518 


Hi  87 

II  iii  66 

Becket  II  ii  54 

„     II  ii  150 

„    v  iii  135 

The  Cup  I  ii  247 

ThejFalcon  324 

481 

of  May  1 423 


Harold  v  i  156 
The  Falcon  48 


Pro)n.  of  May  1 147 

Queen  Mary  rv  iii  311 
Becket  i  iii  97 
Harold  v  i  658 


and  there  is  a  p  of  beef  like  a  house-side,  „         '  i  793 

break  it  all  to  p's,  as  you  would  break  the  poor,  Foresters  u  i  285 

Piecemeal    And  tear  you  p :  so  you  have  a  guard.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  36 
a  score  of  wolf-dogs  are  let  loose  that  will  tear  thee  p.      Becket  ni  ii  40 

Pier    Ran  sunless  down,  and  moan'd  against  the  p's.  Queen  Mary  n  iii  27 

Pierced    Tho'  we  have  p  thro'  all  her  practices ;  _      .  -     . 

Piero    they  are  but  blue  beads — my  P, 

Pig  (See  also  Hedge-pig)  s'pose  I  kills  my  p,  and 
gi'es  it  among  'em,  why  there  wudn  t  be  a 
dinner  for  nawbody,  and  I  should  ha'  lost 
the  p. 

Pigeon    See  Carrier-pigeon 

Pike    Hurls  his  soil'd  hfe  against  the  p's  and  dies. 

Pilate    The  Lord  be  judged  again  by  P  ?     No  ! 

Piled    dead  So  p  about  him  he  can  hardly  move. 

'  Pilgrim's  Progress '    More  like  the  picture  Of  Christian 

in  my  '  P  P'  Prom,  of  May  ni  519 

Pillage  (s)     The  p  of  his  vassals.  Foresters  m  107 

Richard  sacks  and  wastes  a  town  With  random  p,  „        xv  378 

Pillage  (verb)     they  p  Spain  already.  Queen  Mary  in  i  158 

Pillar    Steadying  the  tremulous  p's  of  the  Church —  „             i  v  517 

Be  limpets  to  this  p,  or  we  are  torn  „            m  i  184 

stand  behind  the  p  here ;  „          iv  iii  462 

But  thou  didst  back  thyself  against  a  p,  Harold  i  ii  88 

Taken  the  rifted  p's  of  the  wood  „    i  ii  100 

lo  !  my  two  p's,  Jachin  and  Boaz  ! —  „  in  i  191 

Pillaring    P  a  leaf-sky  on  their  monstrous  boles,  Foresters  in  100 

Pillow     I  never  lay  my  head  upon  the  p  Queen  Mary  ni  v  131 

A  gnat  that  vext  thy  p  !  Harold  i  ii  71 

Pilot    Saints  P  and  prosper  all  thy  wandering  out  „      i  i  265 

Pincer    fiends  that  utter  them  Tongue-torn  with  p's,  Queen  Mary  v  ii  194 

Pinch    give  me  one  sharp  p  upon  the  cheek  Foresters  rv  1011 

Pine  (tcee)    I  have  seen  A  p  in  Italy  that  cast  its 

shadow  Athwart  a  cataract ;  firm  stood  the  p —  Queen  Mary  ni  iv  136 

the  p  was  Rome.     You  see,  my  Lords,  „          m  iv  142 

wind  of  the  dawn  that  I  hear  in  the  p  overhead  ?  Becket  ii  i  2 

P,  beech  and  plane,  oak,  walnut.  The  Clip  i  i  1 

Beneath  the  shadow  of  our  p's  and  planes !  „     n  227 

Pine  (verb)    poor  Pole  p's  of  it,  As  I  do,  to  the 

death.  Queen  Mary  v  v  128 

Pinfold    I  seed  that  one  cow  'o  thine  i'  the  p  agean  Prom,  of  May  1 191 

Pinned    What's  here  ?  a  scroll  P  to  the  wreath.  The  Falcon  425 


Pious    Your  p  wish  to  pay  King  Edward's  debts, 
it  were  a  p  work  To  string  my  father's  sonnets, 
Here  a  p  Catholic,  Mumbling  and  mixing  up  in  his 

scared  prayers 
See  if  our  p — what  shall  I  call  him,  John? — 
now  this  p  cup  Is  passport  to  their  house, 
I  have  one  mark  in  gold  which  a  p  son  of  the  Church 
gave  me  this  morning 
Pipe     Organ  and  p,  and  dulcimer,  chants  and  hymns 
Piped    boy  she  held  Mimick'd  and  p  her 
Pipest     thou,  my  bird,  thou  p  Becket,  Becket — 
Piping    gaping  bills  in  the  home-nest  P  for  bread — 
Fluting,  and  p  and  luting  '  Love,  love,  love ' 


Queen  Mary  i  v  111. 
n  i  2ft 

II  ii  84 

Becket  n  ii  38 

The  Cup  I  i  81 

Foresters  ni  281 

Becket  v  ii  365 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  74 

Becket  n  i  32' 

„  n  ii  301 

Foresters  ni  33- 

Pirate     Thy  fierce"  f orekings  had  clench'd  their  p  hides  To 

the  bleak  church  doors,  Harold  iv  iii  36 

For  tho'  we  touch'd  at  many  p  ports.  Foresters  iv  983 

Pit     plunge  and  fall  Of  heresy  to  the  p :  Queen  Mary  m  iv  142' 

Sunk  in  the  deepest  p  of  pauperism,  Prom,  of  May  in  803 

Pitchfork    fur  him  as  be  handy  wi'  a  book  bean't  but 

haafe  a  hand  at  a  p.  „  1 189 

hunt  him  With  p's  on  the  farm,  „  n  427 

Piteous    perhaps  the  man  himself.  When  hearing  of 

that  p  death,  „  n  500- 

Pitifol     Be  somewhat  p,  after  I  have  gone.  Queen  Mary  rv  ii  157 

„  iviil63 

,  m  iv  49 

Harold  i  ii  44 

Becket  i  iii  202 

„      n  ii  31(y 

„      m  i  126 

„     rv  ii  131 

Prom,  of  May  m  691 

Foresters  iv  457 

IV  519' 

rv521 

P,  p  I — There  was  a  nian  of  ours  Up  in  the  north,  „        iv  528- 

I  fear  I  had  small  p  for  that  man. —  „        rv  547 

But  p  for  a  father,  it  may  be,  „        rv  659 

Pity  (verb)    She  said— pray  pardon  me,  and  p  her—        Queen  Mary  i  v  53 

I  could  p  this  poor  world  myseK  that  it  is  no  better 

ordered.  Becket,  Pro.  365^ 

and  I  have  none— to  p  thee.  „        iv  ii  81 

Plaay  (play)     And  p  the  pianner,  if  ye  liked,  all  daay 

long,  like  a  laady.  Prom,  of  May  n  100 

Wi'  the  butterflies  out,  and  the  swallers  at  p,  „  n  199 

Place  (s)    (See  also  Pleace,  Tomb-place)    Is  bounden 

by  his  power  and  p  to  see  Queen  Mary  iii  iv  212 

No  p  for  worse.  „  iv  iii  80 

Gardener,  and  huntsman,  in  the  parson's  p,  „  rv  iii  374 

Is  this  a  p  To  wail  in.  Madam  ?  „  v  i  212 

battle-axe  Was  out  of  p ;  it  should  have  been  the  bow. —    Harold  i  ii  106 
yea,  and  thou  Chair'd  in  his  p.  „     i  ii  247 

Then  shalt  thou  step  into  my  p  and  sign.  Becket  i  iii  15  ■ 

A  fit  p  for  the  monies  of  the  Church,  „    i  iii  105 

This  IS  the  Ukelier  tale.    We  have  hit  the  p.  „     niii43- 

And  weeps  herself  into  the  p  of  power ;  „    v  ii  214 

He  knows  the  twists  and  turnings  of  the  p.  „    v  ii  577 

not  show  yourself  In  your  old  p  ?  „    vii596 

Thou  shouldst  have  ta'en  his  p,  and  fought  for  him.     Foresters  n  i  546- 


P  to  this  p  heresy  ? 
Pitiless    And  by  the  churchman's  p  doom  of  fire, 
Pity  (s)     Hate  not  one  who  felt  Some  p  for  thy  hater ! 
the  Pope  our  master.  Have  p  on  nim, 
P,  my  lord,  that  you  have  quenched  the  warmth 
said  it  was  a  p  to  blindfold  such  eyes  as  mine 
more  the  p  then  That  thy  true  home — 
I  have  wasted  p  on  her — not  dead  now — 
Have  you  no  p  ?  must  you  see  the  man  ? 
Have  you  no  p  ? 
What  p  have  you  for  your  game  ? 


Place  (verb)    P  and  displace  our  councillors, 
We  therefore  p  ourselves  Under  the  shield 
let  me  p  this  chair  for  your  ladyship. 

Placed    freed  him  from  the  Tower,  p  him  at  Court ; 
And  softly  p  the  chaplet  on  her  head, 
will  be  p  Beneath  the  window,  Philip. 

Plagas    Hostis  per  Angliae  P  bacchatur ; 

Plague  (s)     so  the  p  Of  schism  spreads ; 

Harvestless  autumns,  horrible  agues,  p — 

War,  waste,  p,  famine,  all  malignities. 

Saints  to  scatter  sparks  of  p  Thro'  all  your  cities, 

like  Egypt's  p,  had  fiU'd  All  things  with  blood ; 

They  are  p's  enough  in-door. 

The  p's  That  smite  the  city  spare  the  solitudes. 

Whose  arrow  is  the  p — whose  quick  flash 

Push'd  from  all  doors  as  if  we  bore  the  p. 


Queen  Mary  n  ii  160 

Becket  i  iii  599 

The  Falcon  178 

Queen  Mary  i  v  163 

The  Falcon  362 

Prom,  of  May  i  560 

Harold  v  i  511 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  171 

V  i  99 

Harold  i  i  466 

„     II  ii  746 

Becket  i  iii  344 

n  ii  91 

„      V  ii  172 

The  Cup  II  291 

Prom,  of  May  III  805- 


Plague 


1036. 


Please 


Plague  (verb)     And  yet  she  p's  me  too — no  fault  in  her —      Becket,  Pro.  59 
Plagued    what  news  hath  p  thy  heart  ?  Queen  Mary  v  ii  18 

Plain    You  should  be  p  and  open  with  me,  niece.  „         i  iv  217 
he  loved  the  more  His  own  gray  towers,  p  life  and 

letter'd  peace.  „           ii  i  49 
'tis  not  written  Half  p  enough.     Give  me  a  piece  of 

paper !  „         u  iii  66 

play  the  f  Christian  man.  „     iv  iii  267 

I  that  so  prized  p  word  and  naked  truth  Harold  ni  i  93 

Thou  wert  p  Thomas  and  not  Canterbury,  Becket  i  iii  578 

had  she  but  given  F  answer  to  p  query  ?  ..  iv  ii  386 
Cannot  you  understand  p  words,  Mr.  Dobson?  Prom,  of  May  ii  112 
Henceforth  I  am  no  more  Than  p  man  to  p  man. 

Ttu;k.     Well,  then,  p  man  Foresters  i  iii  96 

A  fine,  a  fine !  he  hath  called  p  Robin  a  lord.  „        iii  215 

I  am  the  yeoman,  p  Robin  Hood,  „         iv  143 

Fine  him !  fine  him !  he  hath  called  p  Robin  an  earl.  ,,         rv  151 

A  fine  !  a  fine  !     He  hath  called  p  Robin  a  king.  „         iv  218 

Plainer     Be  p,  Master  Cranmer.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  235 

Plainness     I  have  been  a  man  loved  p  all  my  life ;  I 

did  dissemble,  but  the  hour  has  come  For  utter 

truth  and  p ;  „            iv  iii  270 

Plaister    May  p  his  clean  name  with  scurrilous  rhymes  !  Becket  i  i  308 

Plane     Pine,  beech  and  p,  oak,  walnut,  The  Cup  i  i  1 

Beneath  the  shadow  of  our  pines  and  p's !  „     ii  228 

Planed     That  all  was  p  and  bevell'd  smooth  again,  Becket  v  i  138 
Plantagenet    {See  also  Geoffrey,  Geoffrey  Planiigenet) 
whether  her  Grace  incline  to  this  splendid  scion 

of  P.  Queen  Mary  i  i  135 

The  last  White  Rose,  the  last  P  „        i  iv  207 

But  this  most  noble  prince  F,  ,.      iii  iv  291 

Pole  has  the  F  face,  „      iii  iv  333 

My  son  a  Clifford  and  P.  Becket  iv  ii  227 

Pledge  the  P,  Him  that  is  gone.  Foresters  i  ii  7 
Planted    tree  that  my  lord  himself  p  here  in  the  blossom 

of  his  boyhood —  The  Falcon  563 

because  one  of  the  Steers  had  p  it  there  in  former 

times.  Prom,  of  May  iii  247 

Plaster'd    caked  and  p  with  a  hundred  mires,  Harold  iv  iii  177 

Plate    and  one  p  of  dried  prunes  be  all-but-nothing,  The  Falcon  135 

0  sweet  saints  !  one  p  of  prunes !  ,,          216 
Play  (s)    {See  also  Passion-play)    Whose  p  is  all  to 

find  herself  a  King.  Que&n,  Mary  i  iii  164 

True  king  of  vice— true  p  on  words —  Foresters  ii  i  83 

Can  have  frolic  and  p.  „      n  ii  183 

but  see  fair  p  Betwixt  them  and  Sir  Richard —  „          iv  98 

Play  (veib)     {See  also  Plaay)     we  p.     Courtenay.     At 

what?     Noailles.     The  Game  of  Chess.  Queen  Mary  \  iii  \2b 

1  can  p  well,  and  I  shall  beat  you  there.    Noailles. 

Ay,  but  we  p  with  Henry,  King  of  France,  „           i  iii  129 

with  her  own  pawns  p's  against  a  Queen,  „           i  iii  162 

You  should  not  p  upon  me.  „           r  iv  219 

Pope  nor  Spaniard  here  to  p  The  tyrant,  „           i  v  190 

Is  this  the  face  of  one  who  f's  the  tyrant  ?  ,,           i  v  194 

You  v  at  hide  and  seek.  „            i  v  305 

And  ne  will  p  the  Walworth  to  this  Wat ;  „          ii  ii  370 

Should  p  the  second  actor  in  this  pageant  „          iii  iii  13 

Then  must  I  p  the  vassal  to  this  Pole.  „        iii  iii  111 

I  think  that  I  will  p  with  Philibert,—  „         iii  v  242 

but  they  p  with  fire  as  children  do,  „         iii  vi  28 

She  p  the  harlot !  never.  „        iii  vi  136 

Dissemble  not ;  p  the  plain  Christian  man.  „        iv  iii  267 

P  into  one  another,  and  weave  the  web  Harold  i  i  211 

shall  I  p  The  craftier  Tostig  with  him  ?  „      i  ii  164 

this  Gamel,  whom  I  p  upon,  that  he  may  p  the  note  „      i  ii  191 

May,  surely,  p  with  words.  „    n  ii  418 

This  lightning  before  death  P's  on  the  word, —  ,.    mi  388 

Wilt  thou  p  with  the  thunder  ?  „    ni  i  391 

I  have  a  mind  to  p  The  William  with  thine  eyesight  „        v  i  26 

Queen  should  p  his  kingship  against  thine  !  Becket,  Pro.  236 

I  could  so  p  about  it  with  the  rhyme —  „       Pro.  381 

What,  not  good  enough  Even  to  p  at  nun  ?  „         i  i  304 

Church  must  p  into  the  hands  of  kings ;  „          i  ii  68 

I  p  the  fool  again.  „       i  iii  750 

to  turn  anyway  and  p  with  as  thou  wilt —  „        ii  i  245 


Play  (verb)  {continued)    Go  try  it,  p.  Becket  n  i  246 

mother  Would  make  him  p  his  kingship  „      n  ii  11 

a  perilous  game  For  men  to  p  with  God.  „      n  ii  71 

I  hear  Margery :  I'll  go  p  with  her.  „    lu  i  274 

Who  made  the  second  mitre  p  the  first,  And  acted  me  ?        ,,  iir  iii  212 

— a  troubadour  You  p  with  words.  „    iv  ii  182 
P\  .  .  .  that  bosom  never  Heaved  imder  the  King's 

hand  „   iv  ii  187 

Lest  thou  shouldst  p  the  wanton  there  again.  „      v  i  112 

Live  with  these  honest  folk — And  p  the  fool !  Prom,  of  May  i  745 

talk  a  little  French  like  a  lady ;  p  a  little  like  a  lady  ?        „  m  303 

Is  this  a  game  for  thee  to  p  at  ?     Away.  Foresters  ii  i  426 

P  the  air,  Little  John.  .,          in  418 

but  thyself  Shalt  p  a  bout  with  me,  „          iv  252 

Then  thou  shalt  p  the  game  of  buffets  with  us.  „          iv  258 

Play'd    The  colour  freely  p  into  her  face.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  321 

I  have  p  with  this  poor  rose  so  long  „               v  ii  1 

We  have  so   the  coward ;  „           v  v  110 

I  have  lost  the  boy  who  p  at  ball  with  me,  Harold  iv  iii  22 

With  whom  they  p  their  game  against  the  king !  „         v  ii  13 

For  I  have  always  p  into  their  hands.  The  Cup  i  iii  150 

I  have  p  the  sudden  fool.  ,,        i  iii  162 

same  head  they  would  have  p  at  baU  with  „           n  127 
marry  fine  gentlemen,  and  p  at  being  fine  ladies  ?  Prom,  of  May  iii  277 

I  have  p  at  the  foils  too  with  Kate :  Foresters  i  i  217 

But  shout  and  echo  p  into  each  other  „       n  i  258 

Player     Upon  the  skiU  and  swiftness  of  the  p's.  Qu^en  Mary  i  iii  143 

I'm  the  first  of  p's.     I  shall  win.  „           i  iii  149 

and  a  favourer  Of  p's,  and  a  courtier,  Becket  i  i  79 

both  of  us  are  p's  In  such  a  comedy  as  our  court  .,  v  i  188 

Playest    Thou  p  in  tune.  Harold  i  i  384 

Flaying     {See  also  A-plaayin')     such  a  game,  sir,  were 

whole  years  a  p.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  140 

Watch'd  children  p  at  their  life  to  be,  „           in  iv  63 

I  lost  it,  p  with  it  when  I  was  wild.  Harold  v  ii  110 

Did  she  not  tell  me  I  was  p  on  her?  Becket  iv  ii  399 

What  game,  what  juggle,  what  devilry  are  you  p  ?  „         v  i  154 

you  suspect  This  Sinnatus  of  p  patriotism.  The  Cup  i  i  78 
No  !  acting,  p  on  me,  both  of  them.                       Prom,  of  May  ni  693 

P  on  me — ^not  dead  now — a  swoon —  „            in  696 

For  p  upside  down  with  Holy  Writ.  Foresters  m  168 
Thou  art  p  with  us.     How  should  poor  friars  have 

money  ?  „        ni 275 

Plea     To  ours  in  f  for  Cranmer  than  to  stand  Qiieen  Mary  iv  i  119 

Pleace  (place)    wi'  dree  hard  eggs  for  a  good  p  at  the 

burnin' ;  „         rv  iii  490 

Plead     Holy  Virgin,  P  with  thy  blessed  Son ;  „              i  v  85 

But  you  were  never  raised  to  p  for  Frith,  „         rv  ii  210 

Who  knows  but  that  thy  lover  May  p  so  pitifully,  Becket  iv  ii  217 

P  to  him,  I  am  sure  you  will  prevail.  The  Cup  i  ii  300 

Will  he  let  you  p  for  him  To  a  Roman  ?  „        i  ii  305 

came  To  p  to  thee  for  Sinnatus's  life,  „           n  392 
but  all  those  that  held  with  him.  Except  I  p  for  them,  Foresters  iv  750 

Pleaded    Some  have  p  for  him,  Becket  i  iii  590 

Pleading    Our  Robin  beaten,  p  for  his  life !  Foresters  u  i  674 

Pleasant     Had  you  a  p  voyage  up  the  river  ?  Queen  Mary  in  ii  5 

Among  the  p  fields  of  Holy  Writ  I  might  despair.  „         in  v  80 

Which  was  not  p  for  you,  Master  Cranmer.  ,,       iv  ii  136 
God  made  the  fierce  fire  seem  To  those  three 

children  like  a  p  dew.  „        iv  iii  91 

Shall  Alice  sing  you  One  of  her  p  songs  ?  ,        v  ii  355 

There  is  a  p  fable  in  old  books,  Harold  iv  i  56 

But  my  sister  wrote  that  he  was  mighty  p.  Prom,  of  May  1 117 
What  can  a  man,  then,  live  for  but  sensations,  P 
ones?  men  of  old  would  undergo  Unpleasant 

for  the  sake  of  p  ones  Hereafter,  „            1 243 
whose  cheerless  Houris  after  death  Are  Night  and 

Silence,  p  ones —  »            1 251 

Pleasantness    thro'  her  beauty,  And  p  among  them.  Harold  iv  i  24 

Pleasaunce     A  royal  p  for  thee,  in  the  wood,  Becket  n  i  128 

Please     {See  also  Please)     setting  up  a  mass  at 

Canterbury  To  p  the  Queen.  Qu^en  Mary  i  ii  89 

Your  Council  is  in  Session,  p  your  Majesty.  „         l  v  544 

it  might  p  God  that  I  should  leave  Some  fruit  „        n  ii  221 

porter,  p  your  Grace,  hath  shut  the  gates  „         n  iv  flO 


Please 


•1037 


Pole 


(continued)     You  are  hard  to  p. 
Then  one  day  more  to  p  her  Majesty. 
So  p  your  Majesty,  A  long  petition 
Might  I  not  say — to  p  your  wife,  the  Queen  ? 
that  it  would  p  Him  out  of  His  infinite  love 
to  p  our  dying  king,  and  those  Who  make 
Well,  weU,  I  swear,  but  not  to  p  myself. 


Queen  Mary  m  iv  154 
„         in  vi  247 
IV  i  2 
V  1  307 
„  V  iv  46 

Harold  m  i  328 
Becket,  Pro.  193 


Doth  it  p  you  ?     Take  it  and  wear  it  on  that  hard  heart    „      Pro.  372 
To  p  the  King  ?  „  i  i  31 

Shall  I  fall  ofl — to  p  the  King  once  more  ?  „  i  i  110 

Of  this  wild  Rosamund  to  p  the  King,  „         i  i  392 

whom  it  p's  him  To  call  his  wives ;  „        rv  ii  35 

if  we  will  buy  diamond  necklaces  To  p  our  lady.  The  Falcon  45 

I  am  glad  it  f's  you ;  Prom,  of  May  n  543 

Nay,  an  p  your  Elfin  Grace,  Foresters  ii  ii  132 

P,  Miss,  Mr.  Dobson  telled  me  to  SEiay  Prom,  of  May  m  345 

All  p  you  SO  at  first.  Becket  in  i  50 

and  the  master  'ud  be  straange  an'  p  if  you'd  step 


in  fust. 
Pleasure     Thou  hast  shouted  for  thy  p,  shout  for 

mine ! 
They  kill'd  but  for  their  p  and  the  power 
you  will  find  in  it  P  as  well  as  duty, 
For  thine  own  p  ? 

not  my  purveyor  Of  p's,  but  to  save  a  life — 
and  the  walks  Where  I  could  move  at  p. 
For  the  King's  p  rather  than  God's  cause 
daily  want  supplied — The  daily  p  to  supply  it 
for  I  have  p  in  the  p  of  crowds, 
Here,  Madam,  at  your  p.     Eleanor. 

a  man  about  me. 
She  would  have  robb'd  me  then  of  a  great  p, 
The  p  of  his  eyes — boast  of  his  hand — ■ 
And  if  my  p  breed  another's  pain. 


Prom,  of  May  1 168 

Queen  Mary  m  i  304 

ni  iv  74 

III  iv  430 

Harold  m  i  327 

Becket,  Pro.  150 

I  i  266 

I  iii  697 

II  ii  303 
,.      m  iii  82 

My  p  is  to  have 

„      IV  ii  428 

The  Falcon  65 

221 

Prom,  of  May  i  278 

Have  I  thep,  friend,  of  knowing  you?  „  1 297 

No  p  then  taboo'd :  for  when  the  tide  Of  full  democracy   „  i  591 

Hollow  Pandora-box,  With  all  the  -p's  flown,  „  ii  347 

and  I  have  lighted  On  a  new  p.  „  n  669 

on  all  its  idiot  gleams  Of  p,  „  ni  723 

Not  -p^s,  women's  matters.  Foresters  i  ii  176 

Plebeian     Pride  of  the  p  !     Fitzurse.     And  this  p  like  to 

be  Archbishop  !  Becket,  Pro.  457 

Pledge  (s)     I  be  ready  to  taake  the  p.  Prom,  of  May  ni  85 

Pledge  (verb)     I  p  you,  Strato.     Synorix.     And  I  you,  my 
lord. 

I  will  p  you.     Wine !     Filippo,  wine  ! 

P  the  Piantagenet,  Him  that  is  gone. 

And  they  shall  p  thee,  Marian, 

They  p  me,  Robin  ? 
Pleiads     To  the  P,  uncle ;  they  have  lost  a  sister. 
Plenty     will  be  p  to  simder  and  unsister  them  again 

fill  all  hearts  with  fatness  and  the  lust  Of  p — 
Plied     Still  p  him  with  entreaty  and  reproach : 

and  still  the  friars  P  him, 
Plot  (s)     Mix  not  yourself  with  any  p  I  pray  you ; 

to  discourage  and  lay  lame  The  f^s  of  France, 

the  p's  against  him  Had  madden'd  tamer  men. 

P's  and  feuds  !     This  is  my  ninetieth  birthday,  (repeat) 

Who  dares  arraign  us,  king,  of  such  a  p  ? 

Hath  Sinnatus  never  told  you  of  this  p  ?     Gamma. 

What  p  ?  ^he  Cup  i  ii  251 

I  am  sure  I  told  him  that  his  p  was  folly.  „         i  ii  283 

Plot  (verb)     When  will  ye  cease  to  p  against  my  house  ?        Harold  iv  i  161 

Should  care  to  p  against  him  in  the  North.  „       rv  i  166 

Plotted     Wherewith  they  p  in  their  treasonous  malice.   Queen  Mary  m  iv  4 
Plotting     They  have  been  p  here  !  Harold  rv  i  40 

If  you  had  found  him  p  against  Rome,  The  Cup  n  406 

But  had  I  found  him  p,  I  had  counsell'd  him  „         n  412 

Ploughman-Plowman    These  Kentish  ploughmen  cannot 

break  the  guards.  Queen  Mary  n  iv  17 

biun  a  plowman,  and  now,  as  far  as  money  goas.     Prom,  of  May  i  330 

That  ever  charm'd  the  plowman  of  your  wolds 
Plover    in  a  narrow  path.     A  p  flew  before  thee. 
Plow    p  Lay  rusting  in  the  furrow's  yellow  weeds, 

and  I'd  drive  the  p  straait  as  a  line 


The  Cup  I  ii  49 

The  Falcon  575 

Foresters  i  ii  7 

„      III  316 

„      III  320 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  293 

I  i  84 

r/i«CMpii274 

Queen  Mary  rv  iii  577 

rv  iii  601 

I  iv  173 

V  i  189 

Harold  rv  i  110 

„  IV  i  120, 125 

IV  i  169 


m488 

Becket  n  i  54 

„    I  iii  354 

Prom,  of  May  i  369 


Plowed    I  ha'  p  the  ten-aacre — it  be  mine  now —  Prom,  of  May  i  365 
I  mun  ha'  p  it  moor  nor  a  hoonderd  times ;  „             i  367 
Plowest    steer  wherewith  thou  p  thy  field  is  cursed,  Harold  v  i  71 
Plowin'     if  I  could  ha'  gone  on  wi'  the  p  Prom,  of  May  i  376 
Pluck     P  the  dead  woman  off  the  dead  man,  Malet !  Harold  v  ii  144 
King  p's  out  their  eyes  Who  anger  hun,  Becket  rv  ii  405 
He  that  can  p  the  flower  of  maidenhood  Foresters  i  ii  108 
Pluck'd     He  all  but  p  the  bearer's  eyes  away.  Becket  i  iii  11 
Plumed     My  princess,  of  the  cloud  my  p  purveyor,  The  Falcon  7 
Flump     To  p  the  leaner  pouch  of  Italy.                         Queen  Mary  iii  iv  365 
Plum-pudding    and  a  p-p  as  big  as  the  roimd  haystack.  Prom,  of  May  i  794 
Plunder     they  p — yea,  ev'n  bishops.  Yea,  even  arch- 
bishops—  Foresters  rv  909 
Plunder'd    P  the  vessel  full  of  Gascon  wine,  Becket  v  ii  441 
cask  of  wine  whereof  we  p  The  Norman  prelate  ?  Foresters  m  307 
Plundering     a  p  o'  Bishop  Winchester's  house ;  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  73 
Plunge  (s)     Our  short-lived  sun,  before  his  winter  p,  „         in  iii  86 
headlong  p  and  fall  Of  heresy  to  the  pit :  „        in  iv  140 
last  inhospitable  p  Our  boat  hath  burst  her  ribs  ;  Harold  n  i  2 
One  downward  p  of  his  paw  would  rend  Becket  iv  ii  283 
Plunge  (verb)     and  p  His  foreign  fist  into  our  island 

Church  Queen  Mary  in  iv  363 

Tear  out  his  eyes,  And  p  him  into  prison.  Harold  u  ii  492 

To  p  thee  into  hfe-long  prison  here : —  „       n  ii  550 

To  p  into  this  bitter  world  again —  Becket  v  ii  81 

I  might  p  And  lose  myself  for  ever.  Prom,  of  May  ii  305 

Plunged     beast-body  That  God  has  p  my  soul  in —  Becket  n  i  150 

Were  p  beneath  the  waters  of  the  sea.  Foresters  rv  668 

Pocket    but  he  would  p  the  purse.  Becket  n  ii  371 

Poena     lUorum  scelera  P  sequatur !  (repeat)  Harold  v  i  518,  605 

Poet     you  are  as  poor  a  p,  Wyatt,  As  a  good  soldier.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  113 

There  !  my  lord,  you  are  a  p.  The  Falcon  533 

Poetical    A  shadow,  a  p  fiction— did  ye  not  call  me  king 

in  your  song  ?  Foresters  iv  219 
Poinet  (John,  Bishop  of  Winchester)    P,  Barlow,  Bale, 

Scory,  Coverdale ;  Queen  Mary  i  ii  5 

Point  (s)    (See  also  Finger-point)    Calais  !    Our  one  p  on 

the  main,  „        i  v  125 

then  to  cede  A  p  to  her  demand  ?  „     m  vi  170 

there's  An  old  world  English  adage  to  the  p.  „       rv  i  175 

Many  p's  weather'd,  many  perilous  ones,  „       vv211 

The  p  you  aim'd  at,  and  pray  God  she  prove  Becket  ii  ii  77 

She  fives — but  not  for  him ;  one  p  is  gain'd.  „    iv  ii  415 
Point  (verb)     Heretic  and  rebel  P  at  me  and  make 

merry.  Qu£en  Mary  v  ii  318 

Shouts  something — he  p's  onward —  Harold  v  i  558 

Pointed    With  fingers  p  like  so  many  daggers,  Queen  Mary  i  v  149 

And  p  full  at  Southwark ;  „          n  iii  46 

How  their  p  fingers  Glared  at  me  !  Harold  n  ii  789 

rose  From  the  foul  flood  and  p  toward  the  farm.  Prom,  of  May  ii  653 

Pointing     the  Pope  P  at  me  with  '  Pole,  the  heretic,  Queen  Mary  v  ii  175 

Poison  (s)     practise  on  my  life,  By  p,  fire,  shot,  stab —  „          i  iv  285 

Lest  your  whole  body  should  madden  with  the  p  ?  „        ni  iv  208 

Give  me  the  p ;  set  me  free  of  him  !  Becket  iv  ii  164 

I  have  heard  these  p's  May  be  walk'd  down.  The  Cup  n  474 

Poison  (verb)    filch  the  linen  from  the  hawthorn,  p  the 

house-dog.  Foresters  m  199 

Poison'd     to  see  His  people  be  not  p.  Queen  Mary  m  iv  213 

the  Norman  adder  Hath  bitten  us ;  we  are  p :  Harold  m  i  39 

A  cleric  lately  p  his  own  mother,  Becket,  Pro.  10 

we  shall  all  be  p.     Let  us  go.  „      i  iv  244 

I  am  p.    She — close  the  Temple  door.  The  Cup  n  459 

He  had  my  fate  for  it,  P.  „        n  517 

Poisoning     So  p  the  Church,  so  long  continuing,  Qwee»  Mary  rv  iii  48 

Poitevins    I  learn  but  now  that  those  poor  P  Becket  n  ii  427 

Poitou     and  all  France,  all  Burgundy,  P,  all  Christendom    Harold  in  ii  150 

Have  we  not  heard  Raymond  of  P,  thine  own  xmcle —   Becket  iv  ii  247 

Pole  (Reginald,  Cardinal  and  Papal  Legate)    (See  also 

Reginald  Pole)     holy  legate  of  the  holy  father 

the  Pope,  Cardinal  P,  Queen,  Mary  i  iii  28 

(Nay,  there  is  Cardinal  P,  too),  .,         i  iv  208 

So  would  your  cousin.  Cardinal  P ;  „          i  v  405 

True,  good  cousin,  P ;  And  there  were  also  those  ,,         m  ii  68 

Peace — the  Queen,  Philip,  and  P.  „         m  iii  84 

Then  must  I  play  the  vassal  to  this  P  „       in  iii  112 


Pole 


1038 


Poor 


Pole  (Reginald,  Cardinal  and  Papal  L^ate)  (continued) 

Our  supplication    be    exhibited  To   the    Lord 
Cardinal  P,  Queen  Mary  in  iii  124 

Cousin  P,  You  are  fresh  from  brighter  lands.  „  in  iv  321 

P  has  the  Plantagenet  face, 

Doth  P  yield,  sir,  ha ! 

I  am  sorry  for  it  If  P  be  like  to  turn. 

Write  to  him,  then.    Pole.    I  wiU.    Mary.     And 
sharply,  P. 

P  WiU  tell  you  that  the  devil  helpt  them  thro'  it. 

Reginald  P,  what  news  hath  plagued  thy  heart  ? 

the  Pope  Pointing  at  me  with  '  P,  the  heretic, 

for  the  death  Of  our  accursed  Queen  and  Cardinal  P.' 

let  my  cousin  P  Seize  him  and  burn  him 

Saving  my  confessor  and  my  cousin  P. 

They  say  she's  dying.    First.    So  is  Cardinal  P. 

Holy  Father  Has  ta'en  the  legateship  from  our 
cousin  P — Was  that  well  done  ?  and  poor  P 
pines  of  it.  As  I  do,  to  the  death. 

'twas  I  and  Bonner  did  it,  And  P ; 
Polecat    The  deer,  the  highback'd  p,  the  wild  boar, 
Policy    (See  also  Church-policy,  State-policy)    Your 
Grace's  p  hath  a  farther  flight 

Mismatch'd  with  her  for  p  ! 

Were  but  a  thankless  p  in  the  crown, 

might  it  not  be  p  in  some  matter 

It  was  his  father's  p  against  France. 

You  will  find  Philip  only,  p,  p, — 

That  was,  my  lord,  a  match  of  p. 

A  great  and  soimd  p  that :  I  could  embrace  him  for  it : 

A  p  of  wise  pardon  Wins  here  as  well  as  there. 

the  dry  light  of  Rome's  straight-going  p, 

The  One  Who  shifts  his  p  suffers  something. 

And  apt  at  arms  and  shrewd  in  p. 
Polish'd    But  you,  my  Lord,  a  p  gentleman. 
Politic    You  are  too  p  for  me,  my  Lord  Paget. 

If  this  be  p,  And  well  for  thee  and  England — 

his  p  Holiness  Hath  all  but  climb'd  the  Roman  perch 
again. 

Too  p  for  that.     Imprison  me  ? 
Pomegranate     Palms,  flowers,  p's,  golden  cherubim 
Pompey    See  Pumpy 
Pond    See  Herring-pond,  Herse-pond 
Ponder    Grant  me  one  day  To  p  these  demands. 
Ponthien  (adj.)    drave  and  crack'd  His  boat  on  P  beach; 
Ponthieu  (s)     Guy,  Count  of  P  ? 

winds  than  that  which  crack'd  Thy  bark  at  P, — 
Pontigny    He  shelter'd  in  the  Abbey  of  P. 

On  a  Tuesday  at  P  came  to  me  The  ghostly  warning 
Pontus  Have  you  alliances  ?  Bithynia,  P,  Paphlagonia  ?  The  Cup  i  ii  100 
Pooh  P,  p,  my  Lord !  poor  garrulous  country-wives.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  546 
Pool    storznless  shipwreck  in  the  p's  Of  sullen  slimiber,  Harold  v  i  296 

I  only  wish  This  p  were  deep  enough,  Prom,  of  May  n  304 

Poor  (adj.)    and  of  the  good  Lady  Jane  as  a  p  innocent 

child  Queen  Mary  i  i  94 

So  you  would  honour  my  p  house  to-night,  „       i  iii  118 

the  realm  is  p,  The  exchequer  at  neap-tide :  „        i  v  120 

a  hundred  men-at-arms  Guard  my  p  dreams  for  England  „        i  v  154 

It  then  remains  for  your  p  Gardiner,  ,,        i  v  220 

But  Philip  never  writes  me  one  p  word,  „        i  v  360 

but,  if  I'm  any  judge,  By  God,  you  are  as  p  a  poet, 

Wyatt,  As  a  good  soldier.  „        ii  i  113 

You  as  p  a  critic  As  an  honest  friend :  „        n  i  115 

No,  p  soul ;  no.  „        ii  i  242 

And  four  of  her  p  Coimcil  too,  my  Lord,  As  hostages.         „         ii  ii  42 

he  says  he's  a  p  gentleman.  „        ii  iii  74 

He's  p  enough,  has  drunk  and  gambled  out  All  that 
he  had,  „        n  iii  87 

Take  thy  p  gentleman !  „        n  iii  94 

She,  with  ner  p  blind  hands  feeling — '  where  is  it  ?  „       mi  407 

Amplier  than  any  field  on  our^  earth  Can  render  thanks     „     in  iii  197 

Paget,  you  are  all  for  this  p  life  of  ours,  „       ni  iv  59 

So  they  have  sent  p  Courtenay  over  sea.  ,.  m  v  1 

and  my  p  chronicle  Is  but  of  glass.  „        m  v  46 

Draw  with  your  sails  from  our  p  land,  „     in  vi  226 


To  the  p  flock — to  women 


in  iv  333 
III  iv  394 

III  iv  416 

IV  139 

IV  iii  351 

V  ii  17 

V  ii  175 

V  ii  182 
vii244 

V  ii  527 
V  iv  5 


V  V  127 
v  V  143 

Foresters  i  iii  119 

Queen  Mary  i  v  312 
III  i  365 

III  iv  51 
ni  vi  166 

V  V  45 

V  vl58 
Harold  iv  i  199 
Becket,  Pro.  451 

v  ii  22 

The  Cup  I  i  146 

n  113 

Foresters  i  ii  104 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  250 

IV  i  150 
Harold  in  ii  110 

Becket  n  ii  45 

„    IV  ii  397 

Harold  in  i  182 


Becket  i  iii  669 

Harold  ii  ii  36 

n  i  81 

„      II  ii  200 

Becket  ii  i  84 

v  ii  290 


Poor  (adj.)  (continued)  ^ 

and  to  children —  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  158 

but  my  p  voice  Against  them  is  a  whisper  to  the 

roar  Of  a  spring-tide, 
'twas  you  That  sign'd  the  burning  of  p  Joan  of  Kent ; 
Pooh,  pooh,  my  Lord !  p  garrulous  country-wives. 
Stays  longer  here  in  our  p  north  than  you : — 
and  you  know  The  crown  is  p. 
I  have  play'd  with  this  p  rose  so  long  I  have  broken 

off  the  head. 
And  the  p  son  tum'd  out  into  the  street  To  sleep, 
I  still  will  do  mine  utmost  with  the  Pope.     P  cousin ! 
I  had  forgotten  How  these  p  libels  trouble  you. 
P  lads,  they  see  not  what  the  general  sees, 
this  p  throat  of  mine,  Barer  than  I  should  wish  a 

man  to  see  it, — 
I  would  she  coiild  have  wedded  that  p  youth, 
There — up  and  down,  p  lady,  up  and  down. 
I  am  eleven  years  older  than  he,  P  boy ! 
P  enough  in  God's  grace ! 
and  p  Pole  pines  of  it.  As  I  do,  to  the  death. 
Why  would  you  vex  yourself,  P  sister  ? 
lighten'd  for  me  The  weight  of  this  p  crown. 
From  spies  of  thine  to  spy  my  nakedness  In  my  p.  North  ! 
Spite  of  this  grisly  star  ye  three  must  gall  P  Tostig. 
the  p  thunder  Never  harm'd  head. 
How  wan,  p  lad  !  how  sick  and  sad  for  home ! 
P  brother !  still  a  hostage  ! 
Far  as  he  knew  in  this  p  world  of  ours — 
P  Wulfnoth  !  do  they  not  entreat  thee  well  ? 
Alas  !  p  man,  His  promise  brought  it  on  me. 
only  grandson  To  Wulfnoth,  a  p  cow-herd. 
For  England,  for  thy  p  white  dove,  who  flutters 
these  p  hands  but  sew.  Spin,  broider — 
thy  victories  Over  our  own  p  Wales, 
Tostig,  p  brother,  Art  thou  so  anger'd  ? 
Praying  perchance  for  this  p  soul  of  mine  In  cold, 
I  know  Some  three  or  four  p  priests  a  thousand  times   Becket,  Pro.  291 
I  could  pity  this  p  world  myself  that  it  is  no  better 

ordered. 
P  bird  of  passage !  so  I  was ;  but,  father, 
P  soul !  p  soul !     My  friend,  the  King  !  .  .  . 
p  rogues  (Heaven  bless  'em)  who  never  saw  nor 

dreamed  of  such  a  banquet. 
My  lord  Archbishop,  may  I  come  in  with  my  p 

friend,  my  dog  ? 
P  beast !  p  beast !  set  him  down. 
That  my  p  heretic  heart  would  excommunicate  His 

excommunication, 
P  man,  beside  himself — not  wise. 
I  learn  but  now  that  those  p  Poitevins, 
his  fond  excess  of  wine  Springs  from  the  loneliness  of 

my  p  bower, 
I  have  lived,  p  bird,  from  cage  to  cage, 
In  our  p  west  We  cannot  do  it  so  well, 
his  p  tonsure  A  crown  of  Empire, 
p  mother,  Soon  as  she  learnt  I  was  a  friend  of  thine, 
Mutilated,  p  brute,  my  sumpter-mule, 
And  drown  all  p  self -passion  in  the  sense  Of  pubUc 

good? 
Thy  way  ?  p  worm,  crawl  down  thine  own  black  hole 
Welcome  to  this  p  cottage,  my  dear  lady. 
I  wiU,  I  wiU.    P  fellow ! 
you  have  said  so  much  Of  this  p  wreath  that  I  was 

bold  enough 
very  letters  seem  to  shake  With  cold,  with  pain 

perhaps,  p  prisoner ! 
P  Federigo  degli  Alberighi  Takes  nothing  in  return 
that  her  flies  Must  massacre  each  other  ?  this  p 

Nature  !  Prom,  of  May  i  285 

you  have  robb'd  p  father  Of  ten  good  apples.  „  i  615 

And  p  old  father  not  die  miserable.  „  1 722 

Fonder  of  p  Eva — like  everybody  else.  „  n  11 

Eva's  saake.    Yeas.     P  gel,  p  gel !  „  n  31 

P  sister,  I  had  it  five  years  ago.  „  n  82 


IV  ii  185 
IV  ii  206 
IV  iii  546 

V  124 

V  i  170 

vii2 

V  ii  125 
v  ii  132 

V  ii  202 

V  ii447 

V  ii  460 

V  ii  476 

V  v6 

V  v47 

V  v50 

V  V  128 

V  v264 
Harold  I  i  218 

..  I  i  353 
..       I  i  420 

I  ii  231 
n  ii  325 
II  ii  329 
nii363 
n  ii  403 
ni  i  337 

)  V  i  70 
IV  i  230 

rv  iii  9 
IV  iii  27 

v  i  272 

vi323 


Pro.  366 
I  i  253 
I  i  334 

I  iv  82 

I  iv  94 

I  iv  105 

n  i  283 

II  ii  235 

II  ii  427 

„         in  i  40 

III  i  222 

IV  ii  316 
V  i  194 

V  ii  109 

V  ii  440 

The  Cup  II 101 

n  494 

The  Falcon  270 

281 

427 

449 
715 


Poor 


1039 


Port 


Toot  (adj.)  (continued)     I  have  lost  myself,  and  am  lost 

for  ever  to  you  and  my  p  father.  Prom,  of  May  n  85 

P  Eva !     O  my  God,  if  man  be  only  A  willy-nilly 

current  of  sensations — 
'         He  was  only  A  p  philosopher  who  call'd  the  mind 
This  beggarly  life,  This  p,  fiat,  hedged-in  field — 
How  worn  he  looks,  p  man  !  who  is  it,  I  wonder. 
She  has  disappear'd,  p  darling,  from  the  world — 
And  my  p  father,  utterly  broken  down  By  losing  her — 
her  p  spaniel  wailing  for  her, 
f        What  was  that  ?  my  p  blind  father — 

All  depends  on  me — Father,  this  p  girl,  the  farm, 

everything ; 
P  blind  Father's  little  guide,  Milly, 
That  last  was  my  Father's  fault,  p  man. 
P  Dora ! 
after  marriage  this  gentleman  will  not  be  shamed  of 

his  p  farmer's  daughter 
but  indeed  the  state  Of  my  p  father  puts  me  out  of 

heart, 
and  p  Steer  looks  The  very  type  of  Age  in  a  picture, 
What  p  earthworms  are  all  and  each  of  us, 
the  p  young  heart  Broken  at  last — all  still — 
P  fellows ! 

I'll  cleave  to  you  rich  or  p. 
A  price  is  set  On  this  p  head ; 
O  my  p  father ! 
all  that  live  By  their  own  hands,  the  labourer,  the  p 

priest ; 
How  should  p  friars  have  money  ? 
All  those  p  serfs  whom  we  have  served  will  bless  us, 
Foot  (s)     Ay,  but  to  give  the  p. 

To  give  the  p — they  give  the  p  who  die. 
seeing  now  The  p  so  many,  and  all  food  so  dear. 
Give  to  the  p,  Ye  give  to  God.     He  is  with  us  in 

the  p. 
Till  all  men  have  their  Bible,  rich  and  p. 
That  be  the  patrimony  of  the  p  ? 
Gall  in  the  p  from  the  streets,  and  let  them  feast. 
Call  in  the  p.     The  Church  is  ever  at  variance  with  the 

kings,  and  ever  at  one  with  the  p.  „        i  iv  78 

and  there  shall  be  no  more  p  for  ever.  „      i  iv  273 

what  we  wring  from  them  we  give  the  p.  Foresters  ii  i  57 

Ah  dear  Robin !  ah  noble  captain,  friend  of  the  p  !  ,,      n  i  183 

what  should  you  know  o'  the  food  o'  the  p  ?  „      n  i  283 

break  it  all  to  pieces,  as  you  break  the  p,  „      n  i  286 

'  Sell  all  thou  hast  and  give  it  to  the  p ; '  „       in  170 

Robin's  an  outlaw,  but  he  helps  the  p.  „        iv  359 

and  helps  Nor  rich,  nor  p.  „        iv  362 

Poordh  (porch)     kissin'  o'  one  another  like  two  sweet' arts 

i'  the  p  Prom,  of  May  i  22 

Poorer     I  have  seen  heretics  of  the  p  sort,  Queen  Mary  rv  iii  436 


II  261 
II  281 
n344 
n  391 
II  409 
II 417 
II  473 

II  565 

m  211 
ra  231 

ni  280 

III  286 

III  294 

m  504 

III  512 
III  635 
III  680 

Foresters  i  i  91 

„       I  i  ]55 

II  i  74 

II  ii  8 


„       III  166 
m  276 
„     IV 1074 
Queen  Mary  iv  ii  43 
IV  ii  52 


IV  iii  213 

V  V  249 

Becket  i  iii  106 

I  iv  72 


Poor-hearted    Methinks  most  men  are  but  p-fe. 
Pope    {See  also  Antipope,  Pwoap)    has  offer'd  her  son 

Philip,  the  P  and  the  Devil. 
O,  the  P  could  dispense  with  his  Cardinalate, 
our  gracious  Virgin  Queen  hath Crowd.     No 

p  !  no  p  !    Roger.    — hath  sent  for  the  holy  legate 

of  the  noly  father  the  P,  Cardinal  Pole, 
we'll  have  no  p  here  while  the  Lady  Elizabeth  lives. 
Will  brook  nor  P  nor  Spaniard  here  to  play 
P  would  have  you  make  them  render  these ; 
That  knows  the  Queen,  the  Spaniard,  and  the  P, 
And  what  a  letter  he  wrote  against  the  P ! 
If  ever  I  cry  out  against  the  P 
Philip  and  the  P  Must  have  sign'd  too.     I  hear 

this  Legate's  coming  To  bring  us  absolution 

from  the  P. 
commission  from  the  P  To  absolve  thee 
the  P's  Holiness  By  mine  own  self, 
and  I  am  the  Angel  of  the  P. 
Is  reconciled  the  word  ?  the  P  again  ? 
So  fierce  against  the  Headship  of  the  P, 
How  should  he  bear  the  headship  of  the  P  ? 
but  the  P— Can  we  not  have  the  Catholic  church 


n  ii  337 


iil06 
iil26 


I  iii  25 
I  iii  43 
IV  189 
IV  403 
II  ii  414 
in  i  174 
in  i  351 


mi  429 
in  ii  52 
m  ii  110 
in  ii  145 
ra  iii  3 
III  iii  12 
in  iii  30 
m  iii  96 


Pope  (continued)     if  we  cannot.  Why  then  the  P.         Queen  Mary  in  iii  100 

and  acknowledge  The  primacy  of  the  P  ?  „           in  iii  109 

Legate  From  our  most  Holy  Father  Julius,  P,  „          in  iii  126 

obedience  Unto  the  holy  see  and  reigning  P  „          lu  iii  158 

Given  tinto  us,  his  Legate,  by  the  P,  „           in  iii  211 

who  not  Believes  the  P,  „           iii  iii  238 

Legate  Is  here  as  P  and  Master  of  the  Church,  „          in  iv  347 

And  let  the  P  trample  our  rights,  „  in  iv  362 
So  then  you  hold  the  P —    Gardiner.    I  hold  the  P  ! 

What  do  I  hold  him  ?  what  do  I  hold  the  P?  „  in  iv  371 
I  am  wholly  for  the  P,  Utterly  and  altogether 

for  the  P,  „          HI  iv  378 

this  realm  of  England  and  the  P  Together,  „               rv  i  28 

The  P  himself  waver'd;  „               iv  i  85 

You  would  not  cap  the  P's  commissioner —  „            iv  ii  123 

Now  you,  that  would  not  recognise  the  P,  „            iv  ii  139 

And  so  you  have  recanted  to  the  P.  „             iv  ii  145 

You  have  been  more  fierce  against  the  P  than  I ;  „             iv  ii  149 

As  for  the  P  I  count  him  Antichrist,  „           iv  iii  277 

no,  nor  if  the  P,  Charged  him  to  do  it —  „            iv  iii  557 

yet  the  P  is  now  colleagued  with  France ;  „              v  i  139 

The  P  would  cast  the  Spaniard  out  of  Naples :  „              v  i  148 

The  P  has  pushed  his  horns  beyond  his  mitre —  „               v  i  152 

But  this  new  P  Caraffa,  Paul  the  Fourth,  „                v  ii  32 

till  the  P,  To  compass  which  I  wrote  myself  „                v  ii  48 

thought  I  might  be  chosen  P,  But  then  withdrew  it.  „                v  ii  83 

I  stiU  will  do  mine  utmost  with  the  P.  „              v  ii  131 

the  P  Pointing  at  me  with  '  Pole,  the  heretic,  „              v  ii  174 

The  P  and  that  Archdeacon  Hildebrand  His  master,  Harold  in  ii  144 

human  laughter  in  old  Rome  Before  a  P  was  born,  „      in  ii  165 

— the  P  Is  man  and  comes  as  God. —  „      in  ii  173 

The  P  hath  cursed  him,  marry  me  or  no  !  „      in  ii  191 

To  leave  the  P  dominion  in  the  West.  _  „  v  i  23 
My  legacy  of  war  against  the  P  From  child  to  child, 

from  P  to  P,  from  age  to  age,  ,.         v  i  328 

Or  till  the  P  be  Christ's.  ,.  v  i  332 
The  P's  Anathema— the  Holy  Rood  That  bow'd  to  me       „         v  i  382 

shall  cross  the  seas  To  set  the  P  against  me —  Becket,  Pro.  36 
I  have  the  ear  of  the  P.     As  thou  hast  honour  for  the 

P  our  master,  „       i  iii  199 

it  is  the  P  Will  be  to  blame — not  thou.  „       i  iii  221 

Cannot  the  P  absolve  thee  if  thou  sign  ?  „       i  iii  230 

Take  it  not  that  way — balk  not  the  P's  will.  „       i  iii  243 

till  I  hear  from  the  P  I  will  suspend  myself  „  i  iii  300 
Under  the  shield  and  safeguard  of  the  P,  And  cite  thee 

to  appear  before  the  P,  „      i  iii  601 

Why  thou,  the  King,  the  P,  the  Saints,  the  world,  „       i  iii  705 

make  my  cry  to  the  P,  By  whom  I  will  be  judged ;  „  i  iii  724 
to  brave  The  P,  King  Ijouis,  and  this  turbulent  priest.  „  n  i  312 
you  have  traffick'd  Between  the  Emperor  and  the  P, 

between  The  P  „        nii68 

I  told  the  P  what  manner  of  man  he  was.  „  n  ii  253 
for  tho'  you  suspended  yourself,  the  P  let  you  down 

again ;  „  n  ii  357 
the  P  will  not  leave  them  in  suspense,  for  the  P  him- 

seK  is  always  in  suspense,  „  ii  ii  368 
if  you  boxed  the  P's  ears  with  a  purse,  you  might 

stagger  him,  „      ii  ii  370 

—flatter  And  fright  the  P—  „      ii  ii  473 

He  hath  the  P's  last  letters,  „     in  iii  24 

ere  P  or  King  Had  come  between  us !  „    in  iii  267 

I,  that  thro'  the  P  divorced  King  Louis,  „     rv  ii  417 

— kinglike  Defied  the  P,  and,  like  his  kingly  sires,  „     iv  ii  440 

Not  I,  the  P.     Ask  him  for  absolution.  „      v  ii  379 

But  you  advised  the  P.  „      v  ii  380 

The  P,  the  King,  will  curse  you —  „     v  iii  182 

Poplar  apricot.  Vine,  cypress,  p,  myrtle.  The  Cup  i  i  3 
Populace    p,  With  fingers  pointed  like  so  many 

daggers.  Queen  Mary  i  v  148 

Popular    I  am  mighty  p  with  them,  Noailles.  „        i  iii  101 

Porcelain  I  made  him  p  from  the  clay  of  the  city —  Becket  i  iii  438 
Porch    (See  also  Poorch)    stand  within  the  p,  and 

Christ  with  me :  Queen  Mary  i  ii  51 

dove,  who  flutters  Between  thee  and  the  p,  Harold  iv  i  232 

Port    For  tho'  we  touch'd  at  many  pirate  p's.  Foresters  iv  983 


Porter 


1040 


Pray 


Porter     And  scared  the  gray  old  p  and  his  wife.  Queen  Mary  n  iii  16 

The  p,  please  your  Grace,  hath  shut  the  gates  „  ii  iv  60 

Positive     and  the  heart  of  a — that's  too  p  !  The  Falcon  87 

heart  like  the  stone  in  it — that's  f  again —  „  94 

Positive-Illative    not  a  heart  for  any  of  them — that's  f-n :  „  89 

Possess     Seek  to  p  our  person,  hold  our  Tower,  Queen  Mary  n  ii  158 

Thou  didst  p  thyself  of  Edward's  ear  Harold  v  i  345 

Possession    demanded  P  of  her  person  and  the  Tower.   Queen  Mary  ii  ii  41 

Possible    hedge-rose  Of  a  soft  winter,  p,  not  probable,  „        in  vi  16 

Is  it  p  That  mortal  men  should  bear  their  earthly  heats  Harold  v  i  282 

Pos  t  (messenger)     there  is  a  p  from  over  seas  With  news 

for  thee.  Harold  li  ii  208 

Post  (position)     I  dare  not  leave  my  p.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  5g 

Post  (post-haste)     till  his  man  cum  in  p  vro'  here,       Queen  Mary  iv  iii  511 

Post    See  Door-post 

Pot    Here's  a  p  o'  wild  honey  from  an  old  oak, 

Potato    See  Taater 

Potent    To  join  a  voice,  so  p  with  her  Highness,  Q 

I  do  think  the  King  Was  p  in  the  election, 

Pothouse    next  time  you  waste  them  at  a  p  you  get  no 

more  from  me.  Prom,  of  May  m  99 

Pouch    To  plump  the  leaner  p  of  Italy.  Queen  Mary  m  iv  365 

I  have  but  one  penny  in  p,  Foresters  m  194 

Poultry    making  of  your  butter,  and  the  managing  of 
your  p? 

Pounce    p  like  a  wild  beast  out  of  his  cage 

Pound    shall  have  a  hundred  p's  for  reward.' 

Pour    as  we  pass,  And  p  along  the  land, 

P  not  water  In  the  full  vessel  running  out  at  top 

Poured     and  when  ye  shall  hear  it  is  p  out  upon  earth, 

Pont    Nay,  p  out,  cousin. 

Poverty     I  But  add  my  p  to  thine. 
P  crept  thro'  the  door. 

Powder     Until  the  p  suddenly  blew  him  dead. 

Power    and  God  grant  me  p  to  bum !  „ 

Mine  is  the  fleet  and  all  the  p  at  sea —  „ 

may  fence  round  his  p  with  restriction,  „ 

Back'd  by  the  p  of  France,  and  landing  here,  „ 

and  the  p  They  felt  in  killing.  „ 

Is  bounden  by  his  p  and  place  to  see  „ 

What  would'st  thou  do  hadst  thou  his  p,  „ 

What  p  this  cooler  sun  of  England  hath  „ 

P  hath  been  given  you  to  try  faith  by  fire —  „ 

May  learn  there  is  no  p  against  the  Lord.  „ 

I  am  but  a  woman,  I  have  no  p. —  „ 

ay,  young  lord,  there  the  king's  face  is  p. 
p's  of  the  house  of  Godwin  Are  not  enframed 
Crush  it  at  once  With  all  the  p  I  have ! — 
Wisdom  when  in  p  And  wisest,  should  not  frown  as  P, 
the  true  must  Shall  make  her  strike  as  P : 
Come  hither,  I  have  a  p ; 
wood-fungus  on  a  dead  tree,  I  have  a  p  ! 
when  Tostig  hath  come  back  with  p. 
No  p  mine  To  hold  their  force  together  .  .  . 
Not  know  that  he  nor  I  had  p  to  promise  ? 

fto  balk  Thy  puissance  in  this  fight 
have  a  p — would  Harold  ask  me  for  it — I  have  a  p. 
What  p,  holy  father  ?    Stigand.    P  now  from  Harold  to 

command  thee  hence 
she,  whom  the  King  loves  indeed,  is  a  p  in  the  State, 
you  That  owe  to  me  your  p  over  me — 
The  King  had  had  no  p  except  for  Rome, 
who  am,  or  was,  A  sovereign  p  ? 
And  weeps  herself  into  the  place  of  p ; 
tho'  it  be  their  hour,  the  p  of  darkness,  But  my  hour 

too,  the  p  of  light 
The  p  of  life  in  death  to  make  her  free ! 
At  the  right  hand  of  P — P  and  great  glory — 
have  you  p  with  Rome  ?  use  it  for  him ! 
Alas !     I  nave  no  such  p  with  Rome. 
Has  no  more  p  than  other  oracles 
happiest,  Lady,  in  my  p  To  make  you  happy, 
and  Napoleons  To  root  their  p  in. 
Not  her,  the  father's  p  upon  ner. 
break,  Far  as  he  might,  the  p  of  John — 


Power  (continued)     In  this  dark  wood  when  all  was  in  our  p    Foresters  in  183 
Practice     Tho'  we  have  pierced  thro'  all  her  p's ;  Harold  \  i  156 

Practise     to  p  on  my  life,  By  poison,  fire,  shot,  stab —  Queen  Mary  i  iv  284 
I  am  tender  enough.     Why  do  you  p  on  me  ?    Synorix. 


Foresters  ii  i  295 

leen  Mary  rv  i  117 
Becket  i  i  129 


Prom,  of  May  n  94 

Queen  Mary  i  i  87 

„       n  iii  61 

„       n  i  232 

Harold  i  i  376 

Becket  i  iv  37 

Q^een  Mary  i  iv  134 

The  Falcon  143 

Foresters  I  i  ]  57 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  340 

I  ii  99 

I  iv  287 

II  i  172 

m  i  447 

„  m  iv  75 

m  iv  212 

m  iv  279 

ni  iv  327 

IV  ii  153 

IV  iii  66 

V  V  131 
Harold  i  i  73 

1 1316 

1 1357 

1 1364 

1 1369 

III  i  5 

nii9 

IV  i  118 

rv  iii  212 

vi49 

vill7 

vi45] 


V  i  454 
Pro.  483 
II  ii  152 
II  ii  412 
IV  ii  405 
V  ii  215 


V  iii  93 

V  iii  100 

V  iii  193 

The  Cup  I  ii  289 

I  ii  292 

u34 

II  240 

Prom,  of  May  ni  594 

Foresters  i  iii  9 

,.     n  i  696 


Why  should  I  p  on  you  ? 
Prsecipitatur    Equus  cum  equite  P. 
Prsedator    Hostis  in  Angliam  Ruit  p, 
Prsepediatur     Equus  cum  pedite  P ! 
Praise  (s)     in  grateful  p  of  Him  Who  now  recalls 

Out  of  the  mouths  of  babes  and  sucklings,  p  ! 

All  p  to  Heaven,  and  sweet  St.  Magdalen  ! 
Praise  (verb)    Make  all  tongues  p  and  all  hearts  beat 
for  you. 

His  friends  would  p  him,  I  believed  'em, 

P  the  Saints.     It  is  over.     No  more  blood ! 

gangrenes,  and  running  sores,  p  ye  the  Lord, 

Hear  thy  people  who  p  thee  ! 

those  pale  mouths  which  we  have  fed  will  p  us— 
Praised    P,  where  you  should  have  blamed  him, 

she  so  p  The  convent  and  lone  life — 

where  is  this  Mr.  Edgar  whom  you  p  so  in  your  first 
letters  ? 
Prance     If  they  p.  Rein  in,  not  lash  them. 
P'raps  (perhaps)     And  p  ye  hears  'at  I  soomtimes 

taakes  a  drop  too  much ; 
Prate     Come,  sirs,  we  p ;  hence  all — 

P  not  of  bonds,  for  never,  oh,  never  again 

yet  they  p  Of  mine,  my  brawls,  when  those, 
Prated    fat  fool !     He  drawl'd  and  p  so. 
Prating    Why  did  you  keep  me  p  ?     Horses,  there  ! 
Prattled    and  p  to  each  other  that  we  would  marry 

fine  gentlemen, 
Prattling    p  to  her  mother  Of  her  betrothal 

Save  for  the  p  of  thy  little  ones. 
Pray    P — consider — 

Mix  not  yourself  with  any  plot  I  p  you; 

And  so  take  heed  I  p  you — 

P  God  he  do  not  be  the  first  to  break  them, 

I  p  God  No  woman  ever  love  you, 

and  we  p  That  we,  your  true  and  loyal  citizens, 

I've  f oimd  this  paper ;  p  your  worship  read  it ; 

Sir  Thomas,  p  you  go  away, 

we'll  p  for  you  all  on  our  bended  knees. 

we  V  you  to  kill  the  Queen  further  off, 

we'll  p  for  you  on  our  bended  knees 

Pass  then,  I  p  your  Highness,  to  the  Tower. 

P  you  go  on.  (repeat) 

Whereon  we  humbly  p  your  Majesties, 

And  p  Heaven  That  you  may  see  according  to  our  sight 

P  God,  we  'scape  the  sunstroke. 

P  you  write  out  this  paper  for  me,  Cranmer. 

You  are  to  beg  the  people  to  p  for  you ; 

So,  so  ;  this  will  I  say — thus  will  I  p. 

P  you,  remembering  how  yourself  have  changed, 

P  for   him.     Cranmer.     Ay,   one   and   all,   dear 
brothers,  p  for  me ;  P  with  one  breath. 

Again,  I  p  you  all  that,  next  to  God, 

I  p  joM  all  to  Uve  together  Like  brethren ; 

Go  m,  I  p  you. 

I  have  to  p  you,  some  odd  time, 

I  p  you  be  not  so  disconsolate ; 

'  We  p  continually  for  the  death  Of  our  accursed  Queen 

she  loved  much :  p  God  she  be  forgiven. 

I  p  thee,  let  me  hence  and  bring  him  home. 

I  p  thee,  do  not  go  to  Normandy. 

Son  Harold,  I  will  in  and  p  for  thee. 

P  God  the  people  choose  thee  for  their  king ! 

p  in  thy  behalf  For  happier  homeward  winds 

'  I  p  you  do  not  go  to  Normandy.' 

can  but  p  For  Harold — p,  p,  p — 

p  God  My  Normans  may  but  move  as  true  with  me 

— I  p  your  pardon. 

My  liege,  I  p  thee  let  me  hence : 

May  we  not  p  you.  Madam,  to  spare  us  the  hardness 

pray'd  me  to  p  thee  to  psicify  Thy  King ; 


The  Cup  I  ii  23& 

Harold  v  i  599 

„      V  i  507 

„       V  i  530 

Queen  Mary  iii  iii  165 

Becket  ii  ii  279 

„   m  iii  234 

Queen  Mary  i  v  117 

I  V  623 

Harold  v  ii  194 

Becket  i  iv  256 

The  Cup  II  5 

Foresters  rv  1077 

Queen  Mary  I  v  600 

Harold  I  ii  46 

Prom,  of  May  i  777 
Harold  i  i  371 

Prom,  of  May  ii  107 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  372 

Becket  v  ii  356 

„      V  ii  426 

Harold  rv  ii  41 

Queen  Mary  v  iii  113 

Prom,  of  May  m  276 

Queen  Mary  v  v  231 

Harold  n  ii  122 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  141 

I  iv  173 

I  iv  273 
IV  269 
IV  601 

II  ii  134 
n  iii  56 
n  iii  99 

n  iii  109 
II  iii  114 

II  iii  121 
II  iv  31 

,  mi  374,  389 
ni  iii  143 
ni  iv  329 

III  V  279 
ivii60 

IV  ii  76 

IV  ii  114 
IV  ii  155 

IV  iii  101 

IV  iii  175 

rv  iii  181 

vi214 

V  i  257 

V  ii  129 
vii]80 

V  v271 
Harold  i  i  241 

„  I  i  249 

„  I  i  267 

„  I  i  314 

„  II  ii  197 

„  II  ii  218 

„  m  ii  194 

„  V  ii  183 
Becket,  Pro.  36 

„  Pro.  186 

„  Pro.  385 

„  I  iii  206 


Pray 


Fray  (continued)     won't  we  p  for  your  lordship  !  Becket  i  iv  141 

I  p  God  I  haven't  given  thee  my  leprosy,  .,      i  iv  214 

bid  you  this  night  p  for  him  who  hath  fed  „      i  iv  266 

and  p  God  she  prove  True  wife  to  you.  „       n  ii  77 

I  p  you,  Do  not  defend  yourself.  „     n  ii  111 

we  p  you,  draw  yourself  from  under  The  wings  of  France.       „     u  ii  247 
I  p  you  come  and  take  it.  ,,      ii  ii  263 

I  p  you  then  to  take  my  sleeping-draught ;  „       iv  ii  69 

but  p  you  do  not  work  upon  me.  „         v  i  81 

I  could  not  eat,  sleep,  p :  „        v  ii  92 

P  for  me  too :  much  need  of  prayer  have  I.  „      v  ii  195 

P  you,  hide  yourself.  „      v  ii  257 

I  p  you  for  one  moment  stay  and  speak.  „      v  ii  525 

he  p's  you  to  believe  him.     Camma.     I  p  him  to  believe 

— that  I  believe  him. 
Are  you  so  sure  ?     I  p  you  wait  and  see. 
P  you,  Go  on  with  the  marriage  rites. 
I  p  you  lift  me  And  make  me  walk  awhile. 
P  thee  make  Thy  slender  meal  out  of  those  scraps 
Will  he  not  p  me  to  return  his  love — 
P,  pardon  me ! 
I  p  you  pardon  me  again  ! 
Nay,  nay,  I  p  you  rise. 

I  p  you,  look  at  Robin  Earl  of  Huntingdon's  men. 
Spare  me  thy  spare  ribs,  I  p  thee ; 
I  p  Heaven  we  may  not  have  to  take  to  the  rushes. 
I  p  you,  my  lady,  if  a  man  and  a  maid  love  one  another, 
he  j>'s  your  ladyship  and  your  ladyship's  father 
I  p  you,  my  lady,  to  stEind  between  me 
My  lord,  myself  and  my  good  father  p 
Pardon  him  again,  I  p  you ; 
I  p  thee  go,  go,  for  tho'  thou  wouldst  bar 

0  your  honour,  I  p  you  too  to  give  me  an  alms. 

1  p  thee  give  us  guides  To  lead  us 
and  will  p  for  you  That  you  may  thrive, 
and  I  p  you  to  come  between  us  again, 
I  p  you,  my  lady,  come  between  me  and  my  Kate 
I  p  you,  my  liege,  let  me  execute  the  vengeance  of  the 

Church  upon  them. 
I  p  thee,  for  the  moment  strike  the  bonds 
All  widows  we  have  holpen  p  for  us, 

Pray'd    when  the  headsman  p  to  be  forgiven, 

'■      and  p  me  to  confess  In  Wyatt's  business, 
p  me  not  to  suUy  Mine  own  prerogative, 
P  me  to  pay  her  debts,  and  keep  the  Faith ; 
Edward's  prayers  Were  deafen'd  and  he  p  them  dumb,      Harold  i  ii  22 
He  p  me  to  pray  thee  to  pacify  Thy  King ;  Becket  i  iii  206 

She  p  me  when  I  loved  A  maid  with  all  my  heart         Foresters  i  ii  295 

Prayer    grant  me  my  p :     Give  me  my  Philip ;  Queen  Mary  i  v  86 

is  every  morning's  p  Of  your  most  loyal  subject,  „         i  v  103 

Catholic,  Mumbling  and  mixing  up  in  his  scared  p's  „         n  ii  87 

leave  me,  Philip,  with  my  p's  for  you.  „     ni  vi  228 

doubtless  I  shall  profit  by  your  p's.  „     in  vi  231 

We  make  our  hmnble  p  unto  your  Grace  „         iv  i  43 

Our  p'5  are  heard  !  „     rv  iii  254 

A  life  of  p  and  fasting  well  may  see  Harold  i  i  199 

and  left  me  time  And  peace  for  p  "       ^  !  ^^^ 

the  king  is  ever  at  his  'p's  ;  „       i  i  411 

Edward's  f's  Were  deafen'd  and  he  pray'd  them  dumb,         „       i  ii  21 
My  p's  go  up  as  fast  as  my  tears  fall,  „    in  i  166 

A  life  of  life-long  p  against  the  curse  „    in  i  278 

she  hath  begun  Her  life-long  p  for  thee.  „    in  i  324 

more  the  love,  the  mightier  is  the  p ;  „    mi  347 

pray,  pray,  pray — no  help  but  p,  „  ni  ii  196 

our  old  songs  are  p's  for  England  too  !  "     ^  ?  ^^^ 

let  not  my  strong  p  Be  weaken'd  in  thy  sight,  „     v  i  647 

If  fast  and  p,  the  lacerating  scourge —  Becket  i  iii  303 

your  'p's  will  do  more  for  me  in  the  day  „      i  iv  144 

breathe  one  p  for  my  liege-lord  the  King,  „      v  ii  191 

Pray  for  me  too :  much  need  of  p  have  I.  „      v  ii  196 

never  yet  Flung  back  a  woman's  p.  The  Cup  i  ii  300 

'  He  never  yet  flung  back  a  woman's  p.' —  „        i  ii  456 

Can  I  fancy  him  kneeling  with  me,  and  uttering 

the  same  p ;  Prom,  of  May  in  181 

Praying    I  cast  me  down  prone,  p ;  Harold  v  i  100 


1041  Press 

Fraying  (continued)  P  for  Normandy ;  Harold  v  i  219 

P  perchance  for  this  poor  soul  of  mine  „       v  i  323 
Preach    bad  my  chaplain,  Castro,  p  Against  these 

burnings.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  74 

Friend,  tho'  so  late,  it  is  not  safe  to  p.  „            v  iv  42 

Preach'd     and  her  priests  Have  p,  the  fools,  „          in  vi  99 

By  all  the  truths  that  ever  priest  hath  p,  Harold  ni  i  98 

Preaching    That  any  man  so  writing,  p  so,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  47 

Preachment    Graraercy  for  thy  p  !  Foresters  iv  398 

Precatur  Pereant,  pereant,  Aiiglia  p.  Harold  v  i  534 
Precedent  It  is  against  all  p  to  burn  One  who  recants ;  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  48 
Precious    the  State  to  him  but  foils  wherein  To  set  that  p 


The  Cup  II  55 

„      n  106 

„      II 397 

„      n  472 

The  Falcon  144 

247 

395 

478 

921 

Foresters  i  i  35 

I  i  54 

I  i  89 

Ii  171 

1 1299 

1 1303 

I  ii  127 

I  ii  246 

ni354 

n  i  389 

ni632 

m251 

ni  412 

in  421 


„      IV  915 

„      IV  961 

„    IV  1078 

Queen  Mary  ni  i  393 

ni  V  166 

IV  i  16 

V  V  257 


jewel,  Roger  of  York,  "    Becket,  Pro.  270 

Would  wrest  from  me  the  p  ring  I  promised  Never  to 

part  with —  Foresters  n  i  660 

Precipice     break  of  p  that  runs  Thro'  all  the  wood.  The  Cup  i  ii  21 

A  p  above,  and  one  below —  Foresters  iv  533 

Predecessor     Of  all  his  p's  may  have  done  Becket  ii  ii  180 

die  upon  the  Patriarchal  throne  Of  all  my  p's  ?  „       v  iii  76 

Predetermined    wolf  Mudded  the  brook  and  p  all.  Harold  v  i  3 

Preface     Be  the  rough  p  of  some  closer  bond  ?  Queen  Mary  i  iv  48 

Prefer    He  did  p  me  to  the  chancellorship,  Becket,  Pro.  415 

Preference  That  one,  then,  should  be  grateful  for  your  p.  Prom,  of  May  n  556 
Preferr'd     but  you  still  p  Your  learned  leisure.  Queen  Mary  ni  iv  257 

Prejudice     Which  might  impugn  or  p  the  same ;  „  m  iii  133 

V  iv  49 
iiv82 
IV  iii  70 
,  IV  iii  542 

Harold  in  i  222 
Becket  i  iii  333 
„       I  iii  736 
to  excommunicate  The  p's  whom  he  chose  to  crown  his  son ;  „       v  ii  399 
To  all  the  archbishops,  bishops,  p's,  barons,  „       v  ii  404 

cask  of  wine  whereof  we  plunder'd  The  Norman  p  ?       Foresters  in  308 
Prelude     I  kiss  it  as  a  p  to  that  privilege  Prom,  of  May  n  528 

Premises     Wheer  be  Mr.  Edgar  ?  about  the  p  ?    Dohson. 

Hallus  about  the  p !  „  1 433 

Prepare     I  ought  to  p  you.    You  must  not  expect  to  find  „         in  418 

Prepared     (See  also  All-prepared)     and  the  Lord  hath  p  your 

table —  Becket  I  iv  131 

I  am  p  to  die.  „      v  ii  562 

Prerogative    pray'd  me  not^to  sully  Mine  ownp.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  18 


Prelacy    and  queenship,  all  priesthood  and  p ; 
Prelate    p's  kneel  to  you. — 

Chief  p  of  our  Church,  archbishop. 

For  how  should  reverend  p  or  throned  prince 

P,  The  Saints  are  one. 

Nay,  if  I  cannot  break  him  as  the  p. 

And  that  too,  perjured  p- 


Presence    You  do  not  own  The  bodily  p  in  the  Eucharist, 

I  scarce  had  left  your  Grace's  p 

our  lowliest  thanks  For  your  most  princely  p  ; 

I  sign  it  with  my  p,  if  I  read  it. 

And  you,  that  would  not  own  the  Real  P,  Have 
foimd  a  real  p  in  the  stake. 

Has  fled  our  p  and  our  feeding-grounds. 

Before  these  bandits  brake  into  your  p. 

this  world  Is  brighter  for  his  absence  as  that  other 
Is  darker  for  his  p. 

I  cannot  tell,  tho'  standing  in  her  p. 
Present  (gift)     means  to  make  A  farewell  p  to  your 
Grace. 

The  old  King's  p,  carried  off  the  casks. 

My  lord,  I  have  a  p  to  return  you. 
Present  (time)     These  let  them  keep  at  p ; 

at  this  p  deem  it  not  Expedient  to  be  known. 

for  the  past  Look'd  thro'  the  p, 

Enough  at  any  rate  for  the  p. 

to  whom  all  things,  up  to  this  p, 
Present  (verb)     Lord  Paget  Waits  to  p  our  Council  to 
the  Legate. 

p  her  with  this  oaken  chaplet  as  Queen  of  the  wood, 
Presentation     '  All  causes  of  advowsons  and  p's, 
Presenting    P  the  whole  body  of  this  realm  Of 

England, 
President    I,  John  of  Oxford,  The  P  of  this  Council, 
Press    pebble  which  his  kingly  foot  First  p'es 

So  p  on  him  the  duty  which  as  Legate 

Hate  thee  for  this,  and  p  upon  me — 

As  years  go  on,  he  feels  them  p  upon  him, 

old  faces  P  round  us,  and  warm  hands 


iii  44 
I  V  584 
n  ii  133 
IV  ii  73 

„        rv  ii  141 

Becket  n  ii  22 

„     V  ii  557 

Prom,  of  May  n  459 
n  558 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  245 

Becket  v  ii  442 

The  Falcon  711 

Queen  Mary  i  v  407 

„         IV  iii  56 

Prom,  of  May  n  641 

ml9 

Foresters  i  i  209 

Queen  Mary  ni  ii  98 

Foresters  in  58 

Becket  i  iii  79 


Queen  Mary  in  iii  116 

Becket  i  iii  76 

Queen  Mary  i  v  370 

„       in  iv  401 

Harold  n  ii  546 

Prom,  of  May  i  647 

Foresters  i  iii  20 

3  u 


Pressing 


1042 


Prince 


Pressiiig    And  all  the  foolish  world  is  p  thither.  Foresters  m  149 

Pressure     By  too  much  p  on  it,  I  would  fain,  Harold  n  ii  165 

almost  think  she  half  retum'd  the  p  Of  mine.         Prom,  of  May  n  628 

Prest    p  upon  By  the  fierce  Emperor  and  his  Antipope.         Becket  i  iii  202 

Presume     Wherefore  dost  thou  p  to  bear  thy  cross,  „      i  iii  503 

Why  dost  thou  p,  Arm'd  with  thy  cross.  „      i  iii  507 

Presumed    So — so — I  have  p  Beyond  my  strength.  Foresters  u  i  456 

Presumptive    You,  The  heir  p.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  33 

Presumptuous    a  traitor  so  p  As  this  same  Wyatt,  „         n  ii  179 

Pretext    That  was  their  p — so  they  spake  at  first —  „         n  ii  150 

Prettier    Dear  Eva  Was  always  thought  the  p.  Prom,  of  May  n  379 

P  than  that  same  widow  which  you  wot  of.  Foresters  iii  268 

Prettiest    (See  also  Purtiest)     Thou  art  the  p  child  I  ever  saw.    Becket  rv  i  7 

Prettily    p  you  did  it,  And  innocently.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  147 

Pretty    That's  not  a  p  question.  „  i  v  610 

I  mean,  my  p  maiden,  A  p  man  for  such  a  p  maiden. 

Alice.   My  Lord  of  Devon  is  a  p  man.    I  hate  him.         „  i  v  612 

Then,  p  maiden,  you  should  know  that  whether  „  i  v  618 

Peace,  p  maiden.     I  hear  them  stirring  in  the 

Council  Chamber.  „  i  v  627 

Pwoaps  be  p  things,  Joan,  but  they  wunt  set  i'  the 

Lord's  cheer  o'  that  daay.  „         rv  iii  469 

A  p  lusty  boy.  Becket  n  i  247 

The  p  gaping  bills  in  the  home-nest  Piping  for  bread —        „     n  ii  300 
and  gave  me  a  great  pat  o*  the  cheek  for  a  p  wench,  „     ni  i  126 

And  mighty  p  legs  too.  „         rv  i  6 

P  one,  how  camest  thou  ?  „       iv  i  20 

I  am  the  fairy,  p  one,  a  good  fairy  to  thy  mother.  „       iv  i  25 

You  are  not  p,  like  mother.    Eleanor.    We  can't  all  of 

us  be  as  p  as  thou  art— little  bastard.  „       iv  i  37 

I  love  thy  mother,  my  p  boy.  „        rv  i  45 

Then  is  thy  p  boy  a  bastard  ?  „    iv  ii  112 

over  which  If  p  Geoffrey  do  not  break  his  own,  „    iv  ii  177 

How  fares  thy  p  boy,  the  little  Geoffrey  ?  „     v  ii  167 

Blessings  on  your  p  voice.  Miss  Dora.  Prom,  of  May  i  63 

Well,  tho'  I  grudge  the  p  jewel,  that  I  Have  worn,  „         i  473 

Ay,  you  be  a  p  squire.  „        n  689 

and  mea  coomin'  along  p  sharp  an'  all  ?  „         in  97 

P  mistress !  Foresters  i  ii  189 

P  mistress,  will  you  dance  ?  „        i  ii  203 

I  have  lodged  my  p  Katekin  in  her  bower,  „        n  i  417 

Behold  a  p  Dian  of  the  wood,  „         ru  267 

Here  is  one  would  clutch  Our  p  Marian  for  his  paramour,      „  iv  767 

Prevail     Plead  to  him,  I  am  sure  you  will  p.  The  Cup  i  ii  302 

Prey    The  p  they  are  rending  from  her —  Queen  Mary  v  ii  268 

leaves  him  A  beast  of  p  in  the  dark,  Prom,  of  May  i  505 

when  Our  English  maidens  are  their  p,  Foresters  m  179 

Price    A  p  is  set  On  this  poor  head ;  „        n  i  72 

Prick    with  right  reason,  flies  that  p  the  flesh.  Queen  Mary  m  iv  70 

rose  but  p's  his  nose  Against  the  thorn,  Harold  i  i  422 

spire  of  Holy  Church  may  p  the  graves —  Becket  i  iii  553 

This  wild  one — nay,  I  shall  not  p  myself — Is  sweetest.        „        n  i  144 
not  thorn  enough  to  p  him  for  it,  Ev'n  with  a  word  ?  „      m  i  251 

were  I  taken  They  would  p  out  my  sight.  Foresters  u  i  72 

P  'em  in  the  calves  with  the  arrow-points — p  'em  in 

the  calves.  „        rv  560 

P  him  in  the  calves  !  „        rv  567 

and  if  thou  p  me  there  I  shall  die.     Eobin.     P  him 

where  thou  wilt,  so  that  he  dance.  „        iv  569 

Not  paid  at  York — the  wood — p  me  no  more !  „        iv  623 

What  p's  thee  save  it  be  thy  conscience,  man  ?  „        iv  625 

Prick'd    be  those  I  fear  who  p  the  lion  To  make  him  spring,    Harold  iv  iii  94 

Prick'st    There  thou  p  me  deep.  „      n  ii  423 

Pride  (s)     P  of  the  plebeian !  Becket,  Pro.  457 

O  bolster 'd  up  with  stubbornness  and  p,  „         i  iii  35 

Smooth  thou  his  p — thy  signing  is  but  form ;  „        i  iii  218 

ambition,  p  So  bloat  and  redden  his  face —  The  Cup  n  169 

P  of  his  heart — the  solace  of  his  hours —  The  Falcon  223 

my  sister  wrote  that  he  was  mighty  pleasant,  and 

had  no  p  in  him.  Prom,  of  May  1 117 

He  'ant  naw  p  in  'im,  and  we'll  git  'im  „  1 439 

Pride  (verb)    I  p  myself  on  being  moderate.  Queen  Mary  v  iv  60 

Priest    (See  also  Hedge-priest,  High-priest)    Perinde  ac 

cadaver — as  the  p  says,  „         i  iv  180 

And  this  bald  p,  and  she  that  hates  me,  „        i  iv  282 


Priest  (continued)    You  have  ousted  the  mock  p,  Queen  Mary  i  v  180 

the  cruelty  of  their  p's.  „  n  i  169 

every  Spanish  p  will  tell  you  that  all 
The  bible  is  the  p's. 

no  foreign  prince  or  p  Should  fill  my  throne, 
her  p's  Have  preach  d,  the  fools, 
spare  to  take  a  heretic  p's,  Who  saved  it 
masses  here  be  sung  By  every  p  in  Oxford, 
burnt  The  heretic  p,  workmen,  and  women  and  children. 
I  will  see  none  except  the  p.     Your  arm. 
Nor  let  P's  talk,  or  dream  of  worlds  to  be, 
your  P's  Gross,  worldly,  simoniacal,  imlearn'd  ! 
By  all  the  truths  that  ever  p  hath  preach'd, 
blow  the  trumpet,  priest ! 
And  on  it  falls  the  shadow  of  the  p ; 
Nor  kingly  p,  nor  priestly  king  to  cross 
three  or  four  poor  p's  a  thousand  times 
fearful  P  Sits  winking  at  the  license  of  a  king, 
For  London  had  a  temple  and  a  p 
brave  The  Pope,  King  Louis,  and  this  turbulent  p. 
Less  clashing  with  their  p's — 
old  p  whom  John  of  SaUsbury  trusted  Hath  sent 

another. 
A  notice  from  the  p, 
The  p's  of  Baal  tread  her  underfoot — 
madden  Against  his  p  beyond  all  hellebore. 
Not  one  whose  back  his  p  has  broken. 
Will  no  man  free  me  from  this  pestilent  p  ? 
No  traitor  to  the  King,  but  P  of  God, 
How  the  good  p  gods  himself ! 


in  1229 
m  i  286 
m  V  236 
m  vi98 
iyil32 
IV  iii  101 

V  vl06 

V  vl96 

V  V  217 
Harold  i  i  161 

„      ni  i  97 

„    in  i 189 

„     ni  ii  70 

„     m  ii  93 

Becket,  Pro.  291 

iii  65 

I  iii  59 

n  i  313 

n  ii  147 

mi  69 
uiiii  3 
III  iii  179 
ivii460 
vil45 
vi263 

V  iii  112 
v  iii  149 

Prom,  of  May  in  633 
Foresters  in  125 

in  166 

The  Cup  n  7 

„      n  11 

„      n  17 

„    n  350 

„     II 374 

Priesthood    and  queenship,  all  p  and  prelacy ;  Queen  Mary  v  iv  48 

The  heathen  p  of  a  heathen  creed  !  Becket  i  iii  63 

Priestly     nor  p  king  to  cross  Their  billings  ere  they  nest.        Harold  iii  ii  93 

Primacy    and  acknowledge  The  p  of  the  Pope  ?  Queen  Mary  ni  iii  109 

Against  the  Holy  Father's  p,  „  m  iii  131 

all  my  Ufelong  labour  to  uphold  The  p — a  heretic.        „  v  ii  71 

Primal    Have  I  chmb'd  back  into  the  p  church,  „  i  ii  49 

Primate    That  I  am  not  the  man  to  be  your  P,  Becket  i  i  39 

Thou  still  hast  shown  thy  p,  Gilbert  Foliot.  „  i  iii  282 

bravest  in  our  roll  of  P's  down  From  Austin —  „    v  ii  58 

Priest  of  God,  P  of  England.  „  v  iii  114 

Primm'd    p  her  mouth  and  put  Her  hands  together —  „    m  i  74 

Prince    Her  Majesty  Hears  you  affect  the  P —  Queen  Mary  i  iv  82 

•  -   ■       -  iivl62 

I  iv  281 
IV  207 
IV  233 
IV  364 
IV  426 
IV  428 
I  V  445 
IV  599 
n  ii  188 
n  ii  192 
n  ii  241 
n  ii  261 

III  i  71 
in  i  147 

m  ii  164 
m  V  147 
m  V  235 
ni  V  254 
m  vi  100 
m  vi  202 
lu  vi  206 

IV  124 


that  more  freely  than  your  formal  p, 
than  if  my  wife  And  siding  with  these  proud  p's, 
all  that  live  By  their  own  hands,  the  labourer,  the 
poor  p ; 
Priestess    Hear  thy  p'es  hymn  thy  glory ! 
who  has  been  So  oft  to  see  the  P, 
for  her  beauty,  stateliness,  and  power.  Was  chosen  P 
wills,  thro'  me  her  P,  In  honour  of  his  gift 
Thy  pardon,  P ! 


if  this  P  of  fluff  and  feather  come  To  woo  you, 

this  Phihp,  the  proud  Catholic  p.  And  this  bald  priest. 

The  p  is  known  in  Spain,  in  Flanders, 

These  p's  are  like  children,  must  be  physick'd. 

Yet  I  know  the  P, 

Why  do  they  talk  so  foully  of  your  P,  Renard  ? 

The  lot  of  P's.    To  sit  high  Is  to  be  lied  about. 

the  most  princelike  P  beneath  the  sun. 

If  you  have  falsely  painted  your  fine  P ; 

Now  as  your  P,  1  say,  I, 

A  p  as  naturally  may  love  his  people 

your  lawful  P  Stand  fast  against  our  enemies 

Your  lawful  P  hath  come  to  cast  herself 

But  this  proud  P —     Bagenhall.     Nay,  he  is  King, 

Why,  ev'n  the  haughty  p,  Northumberland, 

The  second  P  of  Peace — 

little  murder'd  p's,  in  a  pale  light, 

no  foreign  p  or  priest  Should  fill  my  throne, 

dance  into  the  sim  That  shines  on  p's. 

of  this  fair  p  to  come ; 

that  I  may  bear  a  p.     If  such  a  p  were  bom 

I  should  be  here  if  such  a  p  were  born. 

Shall  these  accuse  him  to  a  foreign  p  ? 


Prince 

Prince  {continued)    how  should  reverend  prelate 
or  throned  p 
make  it  clear  Under  what  P  I  fight. 
Before  the  P  and  chief  Justiciary, 
Ay,  the  p's  sat  in  judgment  against  me, 
Like  some  wise  p  of  this  world  from  his  wars, 
Reginald,  all  men  know  I  loved  the  P. 
And  you  a  P  and  Tetrarch  in  this  province — 
O  the  most  kindly  P  in  all  the  world ! 
Good  P,  art  thou  in  need  of  any  gold  ? 


1043 


Promise 


Queen  Mary  xv  iii  543 

Becket  i  iii  545 

„      I  iii  709 

I  iv  129 

V  ii  13 

„       V  ii  334 

The  Cup  I  ii  89 

„      I  ii  356 

Foresters  i  ii  162 


She  struck  him,  my  brave  Marian,  struck  the  P,  „        ii  i  135 

might  Betray  me  to  the  wild  P.  „        ii  i  708 

No  ribald  John  is  Love,  no  wanton  P,  „           iv  46 

We  told  the  P  and  the  Sheriff  of  our  coming.  „         iv  575 

we  will  hang  thee,  p  or  no  p,  sheriff  or  no  sheriff.  ,,         iv  583 

Knowest  thou  not  the  P?  „         iv  683 

He  may  be  p ;  he  is  not  gentleman.  „         iv  685 

You,  P,  our  king  to  come —  „          iv  696 

This  gallant  P  would  have  me  of  his —  „          iv  701 
Frincelike    but  your  Philip  Is  the  most  p  Prince 

beneath  the  sun.  Queen  Mary  i  v  445 

Princely    Coiu-tenay  seems  Too  p  for  a  pawn.  „         i  iii  167 

Your  star  will  be  your  p  son,  „           i  v  416 

beseech  Your  Highness  to  accept  our  lowliest  thanks 

For  your  most  p  presence ;  „          ii  ii  133 

Princess    The  P  there  ?     If  I  tried  her  and  la —  „           i  iv  16 

Also  this  Wyatt  did  confess  the  P  Cognisant  thereof,        „        ii  iv  112 

Clear  Courten^  and  the  P  from  the  chaise  „         mi  135 

To  sound  the  P  carelessly  on  this ;  „           v  i  259 

My  p  of  the  cloud,  my  plimied  purveyor,  The  Falcon  7 

Principes     Sederunt  p,  ederunt  pauper es.  Becket  i  iv  131 

Print     It  mmi  be  true,  fur  it  wur  i'  p  as  black  as  owt.  Prom,  of  May  n  731 

Printed    Only  the  golden  Leopard  p  in  it  Becket  ii  ii  85 

Prior     We  spoil'd  the  p,  friar,  abbot,  monk,  Foresters  ni  167 

Priory     Our  priories  are  Norman ;  Harold  in  i  37 

Prison  (adj.)     The  p  fare  is  good  enough  for  me.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  42 

Prison  (s)     Duke  of  Suffolk  lately  freed  from  p,  „          i  iii  122 

Of  those  two  friars  ever  in  my  p,  „           iv  ii  94 

Long  have  I  lain  in  p,  yet  have  heard  „        iv  iii  210 

Tear  out  his  eyes,  And  plunge  him  into  p.  Harold  u  ii  492 

To  plunge  thee  into  life-long  p  here : —  „      n  ii  550 

Except  I  clap  thee  into  p  here,  Becket  v  i  111 

Ho  there  !  thy  rest  of  life  is  hopeless  p.  „      v  i  180 

First,  free  thy  captive  from  her  hopeless  p.  „       v  i  184 

In  the  perpetual  twilight  of  a  p,  The  Falcon  442 

but  no  !     We  hear  he  is  in  p.  Foresters  ii  i  34 

This  is  my  son  but  late  escaped  from  p,  „     ii  i  461 

Richard  risks  his  life  for  a  straw,  So  lies  in  p —  „       iv  384 

No,  no  !  we  have  certain  news  he  died  in  p.  „       iv  779 

This  young  warrior  broke  his  p  „       iv  999 

Prison'd    — tongueless  and  eyeless,  p —  Harold  u  ii  497 

Prisoner    {See  also  Fellow-prisoner)    She  is  going  now 

to  the  Tower  to  loose  the  p's  Queen  Mary  i  i  109 

I  shall  but  be  their  p  in  the  Tower.  „         ii  iv  33 

there  by  Sir  Maurice  Berkeley  Was  taken  p.  „         ii  iv  96 

Quoth  Elizabeth,  p.  „         m  v  21 

But  I  am  royal,  tho'  your  p,  „       in  v  177 

where  he  sits  My  ransom'd  p.  Harold  ii  ii  45 

but  he  had  p's,  He  tore  their  eyes  out,  „    n  ii  388 

Knave,  hast  thou  let  thy  p  scape  ?  „    n  ii  673 

We  have  few  p's  in  mine  earldom  there,  „    n  ii  686 

if  he  follow  thee.  Make  him  thy  p.  Becket  i  i  332 

Am  I  A  p.     Leicester.     By  St.  Lazarus,  no  !  „    i  iii  729 

Come  with  \is — nay — thou  art  our  p —  „  v  iii  143 

Ay,  make  him  p,  do  not  harm  the  man.  „  v  iii  145 

Come ;  as  he  said,  thou  art  our  p.  „  v  iii  156 

I  might  have  sent  him  p  to  Rome.  The  Cwp  n  418 

With  cold,  with  pain  perhaps,  poor  p !  The  Falcon  450 

the  boy  was  taken  p  by  the  Moors.  Foresters  i  i  60 

Prison-silence     I  have  had  a  year  of  p-s,  Robin,  „       iv  924 
Privacy    Will  let  you  learn  in  peace  and  p                  Queen  Mary  m  iv  326 

Private    Or  into  p  hfe  within  the  realm.  „               ly  i  47 

We'll  have  no  p  conference.  „               v  iii  13 

Sir,  we  are  p  with  our  women  here —  „             v  v  119 

My  bed,  where  ev'n  the  slave  is  p — he —  Becket  v  i  251 


Private  {continued)    mix  our  spites  And  p  hates  with  our 

defence  of  Heaven.  Becket  v  ii  52 

Privil^e    Thou  hast  broken  thro'  the  pales  Of  p,  „  in  iii  194 

I  kiss  it  as  a  prelude  to  that  p  Prom,  of  May  n  528 

Privy    Those  that  are  now  her  P  Coimcil,  sign'd  Before 

™e :  Queen  Mary  i  ii  22 

theretoward  unad'.nsed  Of  all  our  P  Council ;  „       n  ii  205 

Prize  (s)     too  rich  a  p  To  trust  with  any  messenger.  The  Falcon  725 

Prize  (verb)  we  «  The  statue  or  the  picture  all  the  more    Prom,  of  May  i  737 

p  The  pearl  of  Beauty,  even  if  I  fornid  it  „        'm  600 

All  here  will  p  thee,  honour,  worship  thee.  Foresters  ii  ii  17 

Prized     I  that  so  p  plain  word  and  naked  truth  Harold  ni  i  93 

Is  not  virtue  p  mainly  for  its  rarity  Becket  m  iii  303 

Probable    wild  hedge-rose  Of  a  soft  winter,  possible, 

__  , .    not  J?,  Queen  Mary  m  \i  Yl 

Probing    P  an  old  state-secret —  „  v  ii  486 

Proceed    is  it  then  with  thy  goodwill  that  I  P  against 


thine  evil  coimcUlors, 

I  love  you  all  the  same.     P. 
Proceeding    0  Holy  Ghost !  p  from  them  both, 
Procession    will  you  not  foUow  the  p  ? 

they  led  P's,  chanted  litanies, 
Proclaim    Wyatt,  shall  we  p  Elizabeth  ? 

and  p  Your  true  undoubted  faith, 

You  must  p  Elizabeth  your  heir,  (repeat) 

P's  himself  protector,  and  aflBrms  The  Queen 

P  it  to  the  winds. 
Prodigal    happy  was  the  p  son.  For  he  return'd  to  the  rich 

father;  The  Falcon  \A1 

Prodigality    '  Lust,  P,  Covetousness,  Craft,  Prom,  of  May  n  284 

""''""■'  '  ■  '    ■  Becket  yii4S2 


Becket  m  iii  209 
Foresters  m  438 
Queen  Mary  iv  iii  119 
iil29 
in  vi95 
ni238 
IV  iii  112 
v  i  191, 204 
vi289 
vii290 


Produce    Lifted  our  p,  driven  our  clerics  out — 

Profess    and  p  to  be  great  in  green  things  and  in  garden 

stuff. 
ProfEer'd    but  this  day  he  p  peace. 

second  grain  of  good  counsel  I  ever  p  thee. 
Profit    doubtless  I  shall  p  by  your  prayers.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  230 

Profitless    are  p  to  the  burners.  And  help  the  other 

side. 
Profligate    P  pander  !    Fitzurse.     Do  you  hear  that  ? 
Promise  (s)     Speak,  Master  Cranmer,  Fulfil  your  p 

made  me.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  112 

Done  right  Eigainst  the  p  of  this  Queen  Twice  given.         „  iv  iii  455 

and  to  send  us  again,  according  to  His  p. 

That  thou  wouldst  have  his  p  for  the  crown  ? 

know'st  my  claim  on  England  Thro'  EdwEird's  p : 

I  am  heir  Of  England  by  the  p  of  her  king. 

Ay  ...  if  the  king  have  not  revoked  his  p. 

sorrow'd  for  my  random  p  given  To  yon  fox-lion. 

all  p's  Made  in  our  agony  for  help  from  heaven  ? 

poor  man.  His  p  brought  it  on  me. 

They  know  King  Edward's  p  and  thine — thine. 

Not  know  that  Edward  cancell'd  his  own  p  ? 

kingly  p  given  To  our  own  self  of  pardon, 

and  the  more  shame  to  him  after  his  p, 

Nothing,  so  thy  p  be  thy  deed. 

royal  p  might  have  dropt  into  thy  mouth 

He  fenced  his  royal  p  with  an  if. 

Hath  broken  all  his  p's  to  thyself, 

O  joy  for  the  p  of  May,  (repeat)  Prom,  of  May  i  43,  44,  723,  725 

0  grief  for  the  p  of  May,  (repeat)  „  1 59,  60,  750,  752 
he  had  not  forgotten  his  p  to  come  when  I  called 

him.  Prom,  of  May  in  330 

So  lovely  in  the  p  of  her  May,  „  m  753 

She  is  mine.     I  have  thy  p.  Foresters  rv  754 

Promise  (verb)     ye  did  p  full  Allegiance  and  obedience   Qu£en  Mary  n  ii  168 
According  as  King  Edward  p's.  Harold  11  ii  714 

Not  know  that  he  nor  I  had  power  to  p?  „  v  i  50 

Didst  thou  not  p  Henry  to  obey  These  ancient  laws  Becket  i  iii  16 

1  p  thee  on  my  salvation  That  thou  wilt  hear 
and  I  p  thee  not  to  turn  the  world  upside  down 
before  God  I  p  you  the  King  hath  many  more  wolves 
I  p  you  that  if  you  forget  yourself  in  your  behaviour 

to  this  gentleman.  Prom,  of  May  1 161 

Did  /  not  p  not  to  listen  to  him,  „        ni  569 

I  p  thee  to  make  this  Marian  thine.  Foresters  1  ii  183 


The  Falcon  551 
Becket  11  ii  240 
in  iii  318 


IV  ii  218 
Becket  v  iii  160 


viv53 

Harold  i  i  203 

„      n  ii  13 

.,    niil25 

„    niieiO 

„    m  i  269 

„   mi  286 

„   mi  338 

V  145 

„       V  i  52 

Becket  n  ii  431 

„     ni  i  131 

„   m  iii  224 

„   in  iii  275 

„   m  iii  278 

vi3 


I  iii  254 
„  n  i  241 
„  in  iii  321 


Promised 


1044 


Purchase 


Promised    letter  which  thine  Emperor  p  Long  since.      Queen  Mary  i  v34S 

Wyatt,  but  now  you  p  me  a  boon.  „  n  lu  »JL 

Since  thou  hast  p  Wulfnoth  home  with  us,  HaroLd  ii  n  Ibi 

He  p  that  if  ever  he  were  king  In  England,  „      nn  587 

I  p  The  King  to  obey  these  customs,  Becket  i  in  ooo 

Have  I  not  p  to  restore  her,  Thomas,  ,,  ni  in  18J 

Have  I  not  p,  man,  to  send  them  back  ?  „  'i  A"  "^  ion 

I  p  one  of  the  Misses  I  wouldn't  meddle  wi'  ye.        Prom,  of  May  i  4by 

has  p  to  keep  our  heads  above  water ;  „         m  169 

bit  by  bit— for  she  p  secrecy— I  told  her  all.  „  ni  6m 

precious  ring  I  p  Never  to  part  with—  Foresters  n  i  bfal 

fair  play  Betwixt  them  and  Sir  Richard — p  too,  „  ..^,nr 

Promisiiig    By  this  our  supplication  p,  Queen  Mary  in  iii  1^6 

Prona     Acies  Acies,  P  stematur !  Harold  v  i  58J 

Prone     I  cast  me  down  p,  praying ;  -r.  .  ',V     "^  ^  aoa 

I  am  a  man  not  p  to  jealousies,  Prom,  of  May  in  b^b 

Pronounce    Thou  shalt  p  the  blessing  of  the  Church  Foresters  iv  9^7 

Pronounced    Judges  had  p  That  our  young  Edward        Queen  Mary  i  u  2^ 

He  is  p  anathema.  "       /^.\  ]°' 

P  his  heir  of  England.  Harold  i  ii  195 

hath  King  Edward  not  p  his  heir  ?  „      n  "  57fa 

Proof     A  diamond.  And  Philip's  gift,  as  p  of  Philip's 

love,  Queen  Mary  lUiQl 

There  was  no  p  against  him.  ,.  v  u  49^ 

with  full  p  Of  Courtenay's  treason  ?  ,^,    /^  "^  "  •  aV 

You  have  yet  No  p  against  him :  Phe  Cup  1 1  ol 

— having  p  enough  Against  the  man,  ,.     i  m  I5v 

Prophecy     Dream,  Or  p,  that  ?  becket  1 1  5b 

Well,  dream  and  p  both.  ..      ^l^' 

Jest  or  p  there  ?    Herbert.     Both,  Thomas,  both.  „      no/ 

Prophet  (adj.)     our  hearts,  our  p  hopes  Let  in  the  happy  . 

distance  ^"^  ^"P  ^  M  * 

Prophet  (s)    Hi's  p's,  and  apostles,  in  the  Testaments,    Queen  Mary  rv  iii  232 

No  God  but  one,  and  Mahound  is  his  p.  Becket  n  u  22b 

Thou  art  no  p,  Nor  yet  a  p's  son.  „      "  ".421 

And  some  of  you  were  p's  that  I  might  be  Foresters  i  u  »1 

Prosper     Saints  Pilot  and  p  all  thy  wandering  out  Harold  1 1  2b5 

If  you  p.  Our  Senate,  wearied  of  their  tetrarchies,  The  Cup  1 1  o» 

To  make  my  marriage  p  to  my  wish  !  ,,        n  308 

Prosper'd    Had  p  in  the  main,  but  suddenly  Becket  i  in  6bx. 

Prosperous    Ancl  I  will  make  Galatia  p  too,  The  Cup  i  in  169 

Protect    '  If  any  cleric  be  accused  of  felony,  the  Church  _ 

shall  not  p  him ;  becket  i  in  88 

No :  it  must  p  me.  »     i  "}  ^"^ 

Protector    Proclaims  himself  p,  and  affirms  The  Queen     Queen  Mary  \  i  ^»y 

Protest     I  p  Your  Grace's  policy  hath  a  farther  flight  „  i_v  dll 

we  do  p  That  our  commission  is  to  heal,  ,.        m  "J  lo* 

By  St.  James  I  do  p,  ..        ^i  yi  2M 

Frond     But  if  this  Philip,  the  p  Catholic  prince,  „  i  iv  ^°)i 

You  are  shy  and  p  like  Englishmen,  »  n  n  257 

But  this  p  Prince—    Bagenhall.     Nay,  he  is  King, 

you  know,  ..  ^\  ^  ^  1 

As  p  as  Becket.  ..  "^  ^  ^^^ 

The  p  ambitions  of  Elizabeth,  And  all  her  fieriest  . 

partisans-  ^       »     ,    "^.^^  ^^^ 

it  is  not  fit  for  us  To  see  the  p  Archbishop  mutilated.      Becket  i  in  bi4 
I  am  p  of  my  '  Monk-King,'  ..      n  ?i  101 

we  know  you  p  of  your  fine  hand,  "     rv  n  /bi 

But  kinglike  fought  the  p  Archbishop,— kinglike  „     rv  ii  4d8 

p  Ev'n  of  that  stale  Church-bond  which  link'd  „     iv  n  44b 

ladyship  were  not  Too  p  to  look  upon  the  garland.         The  Falcon  66d 
fur  we  was  all  on  us  p  on  'er,  Prom,  of  May  ii  37 

I  am  sure  you  must  be  p  of  it.  »         ^^  ^^ 

than  if  my  wife  And  sicling  with  these  p  priests,  Foresters  iii  125 

■e    If  but  to  p  your  Majesty's  goodwill,  Queen  Mary  i  v  260 


Proven  (adj.)     And  thou  thyself  a  p  wanton  ?  5ecfcet  iv  ii  115 

Proven  (verb)    Who  knows  ?  the  man  is  p  by  the  hour.    Queen  Mary  n  n  6Mk 


niv2a 

m  vi  17 

„  IV  iii  149 

Foresters  ii  i  644 

Becket,  Pro.  380 

V  i  123 

v  i  189 

Foresters  i  i  164 

IV  308 

Harold  n  ii  204 


Much  suspected,  of  me  Nothing  p  can  be 

However  you  have  p  it. 

The  truth  of  God,  which  I  had  p  and  known. 

That  Love  is  blind,  but  thou  hast  p  it  true. 
Provencal    translated  that  hard  heart  into  our  P  f  acihties, 
Provence    Of  P  blew  you  to  your  English  throne ; 

such  a  comedy  as  our  court  of  P  Had  laugh'd  at. 
Proverb    your  Ladyship  hath  sung  the  old  p  out  of  fashion 

'  Much  would  have  more,'  says  the  p ; 
Provided    perchance  a  happy  one  for  thee,  P—  . 

Providence    by  God's  p  a  good  stout  staff  Lay  near  me ;   Queen  Mary  ^  n  ^^ 
Province    and  make  us  A  Spanish  p ;  "        i".i  T^ 

Sometime  the  viceroy  of  those  p's^  >.        ™  ■  •  onn 

p's  Are  hard  to  rule  and  must  be  hardly  ruled ;  „        in  n  ^uu 

beyond  his  mitre— Beyond  his  p.  ..       ,   T.|  i^* 

I  am  the  Dean  of  the  p  :  let  me  bear  it.  Becket  i  in  ^ 

Out  of  thy  p?         ,  ,      ,,        ,  "      Vii346 

With  revenues,  realms,  and  golden  p's  "       ^  "  P^ 

you  a  Prince  and  Tetrarch  in  this  p—    Smnatus.    P !    The  Cup  i  n  9U 
they  call  it  so  in  Rome.     Sinnatus.     P\  „         i  ii  »* 

Whose  lava-torrents  blast  and  blacken  a  p  To  a  cinder,        „        n  mh 
Proving    all  but  p  man  An  automatic  series  of 

sensations,  -P'"'"^-  "/  ^o^V }.  225 

Provoke    Would'  I  could  move  him,  P  him  any  way  !  The  Cup  i  n  137 

Prow     Our  silver  cross  sparkled  before  the  p.  Queen  Mary  ui  n  9 

Prowess     who  know  His  p  in  the  mountains  of  the  West,      Harold  iv  i  lb£> 

Ay,  ay,  because  I  have  a  name  for  p. 
Prowling    that  our  wolf-Queen  Is  p  round  the  fold. 
Prune  (s)     and  one  plate  of  dried  p's  be  all-but-nothing, 
Oh  sweet  saints  !  one  plate  of  p's  ! 
p's,  my  ladv,  from  the  tree  that  my  lord 
the  p's,  my"  lady,  from  the  tree  that  his  lordship — 
But  the  p's  that  your  lordship- 
Prune  (verb)     Ay,  p  our  company  of  thine  own  and  go ! 
Pruning-hook    not  Spear  into  p-h —  . 

Psahn-singing    Ay,  the  p-s  weavers,  cobblers,  scum—  Queen  Mary  m  ly  289 
Psalter    They  scarce  can  read  their  P ;  HaroU  1 1 163 

^^^'  iSr  JI,^'"'  """^  ''''''  '"'""'''  ^''"^  ""  ^       «-^^  '"'^  °  "•■''' 
The  p  form 'thereof .  ,      ,        ^  »  "  ^/Vr^ 

Is  this  a  place  To  wail  in.  Madam  ?    what !  a  p  hall.  „  J  i  .-^A^ 

O  father,  mock  not  at  a  p  fear,  J^f,     ••  \\a 

This  is  no  secret,  but  a  p  matter.  ^,  ^  o    ^^T^^'-^ftn 

And  drown  all  poor  self -passion  in  the  sense  Of  p  good  ?  The  Cup  n  lU^ 
Public  (s)  he  and  Wulfnoth  never  Have  met,  except  in  p ;  Harold  ii  ii  bb 
PubUus     P!     Pnblius.     Here!  ^''^  ^TifiYiJ 

P!     P!     No,  "   ^ii"-^-^^ 

Pudding    .See  Plum-pudding  „   7^\-:^Qft 

Puddle    I  raised  him  from  the  p  of  the  gutter,  5ecfcrfiin4db 

Puff(s)     And  that  a  p  would  do  it-  Queen  Mary  Jn  i  ^^ 

Puff  (inter.)     I  stay  myself— P— it  is  gone.  5ecfc«<nnlol 

Puffed    p  out  such  an  incense  of  unctuosity  into  the  •••  1 1  j. 

nostrils  of  our  Gods  of  Church  and  State,  „    ni  in  ii* 

Puissance     And  all  the  p  of  the  warrior,  ,."     _  -■  ora 

Ml    '  P  him  down  !     Away  with  him ! '  Queen  Mary  iv  in  280 

Pulled    or  rather  p  all  the  Church  with  the  Holy  Father       Becket  in  in  7b 


Foresters  u.  i  560 

Becket  in  iii  8 

The  Falcon  136 

216 

562 

684 

692 

095 

Harold  v  i  442 


Prove    If  but  to  p  your  Majesty's  goodwill, 

And  Thomas  White  will  p  this  Thomas  Wyatt, 
And  he  will  f  an  Iden 

He'll  bum  a  diocese  to  p  iris  orthodoxy. 

More  kinglike  he  than  like  to  p  a  king. 

p  me  nothing  of  myself ! 

and  pray  God  she  p  True  wife  to  you. 

to  p  Bigger  in  our  small  world  than  thou  art. 

I  fear  1  might  p  traitor  with  the  sheriff. 
Proved     I  thought  Mr.  Edgar  the  best  of  men,  and  he 
has  p  himself  the  worst. 


Pulpit     Spain  in  the  p  and  on  the  law-bench ; 
Would  make  this  Cole  a  cinder,  p  and  all. 
Pulpited    See  Re-pulpited 
Pulse     In  this  low  p  and  palsy  of  the  state, 

a  jest  In  time  of  danger  shows  the  p's  even. 
I  came  to  feel  the  p  of  England, 
There  somewhere  beats  an  English  p  in  thee ! 
How  few  Junes  Will  heat  our  p's  quicker  ! 
n  ii  367      Pulsed    blood  That  should  have  only  p  for  Griffyth, 
"      in  iv  353      Pumpy  (Pompey,  name  of  horse)    Scizzars  an  P 
HaroU  u  ii  142  was  good  uns  to  goii  (repeat) 

J?ecA;en  iii  292      Punish    Not  p  of  your  own  authority .-' 

II  ii  78      Punishment    My  p  is  more  than  i  can  bear. 
V  i  127      Pupil    See  Fellow-pupil 
Foresters  iv  872      Puppy    as  a  mastiff  dog  May  love  a  p  cur  for  no  more 
reason 
Prom,  of  May  n  86      Purchase    To  p  for  Himself  a  stainless  bride ; 


Queen  Mary  Ii  i  177 
,,  IV  iii  11 

n  ii  103 

n  ii  357 

ni  i  37 

Harold  n  ii  266 

Foresters  rv  1062 

Harold  i  ii  150 

Prom,  o/ilfat/n  308,  318 
Becket  v  ii  450 
Harold  v  ii  201 


Queen  Mary  i  iv  196 
m  iii  205 


Purchased 


1045 


Queen 


.Purchased     I  stept  between  and  p  him,  Harold  ii  ii  40 

Pure    Your  royal  father  (For  so  they  say)  was  all  p  hly 

and  rose  Queen  Mary  ii  v  20 

Nay,  «  phantasy,  your  Grace.  „        i  v  280 

If  cold,  nis  life  is  p.  „        i  v  333 

Of  a  p  life  ?     Benard.     As  an  angel  among  angels.  „         i  v  448 

Exhort  them  to  a  p  and  virtuous  life ;  „        iv  ii  77 

For  the  p  honour  of  our  common  nature,  „     iv  iii  297 

Your  Majesty  has  lived  so  p  a  life,  „         v  v  73 

A  gentle,  gracious,  p  and  saintly  man  !  Harold  ii  ii  584 

the  heavens — cry  out  for  thee  Who  art  too  p  for  earth.     Becket  iv  ii  134 
never  since  have  met  Her  equal  for  p  innocence  of 

'  natxu:e,  Prom,  of  May  ii  372 

And  yet  I  had  once  a  vision  of  a  p  and  perfect 

marriage,  „  m  188 

could  I  stoop  so  low  As  mate  with  one  that  holds  no 

love  is  p,  Foresters  iv  712 

'Purer     O  higher,  holier,  earlier,  p  church.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  108 

A  saiie  and  natural  loathing  for  a  soul  P,  and  truer  Bechet  ii  i  172 

Purgatory     He  bums  in  P,  not  in  Hell.  Queen  Mary  rv  i  56 

To  p,  man,  to  p.     Peters.     Nay,  but,  my  Lord  he 

denied  p.  „      iv  iii  627 

He  miss  the  searching  flame  of  p,  Becket  v  iii  13 

Purge    that  his  fan  may  thoroughly  p  his  floor.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  369 

Puling    you  are  art  and  part  with  us  In  p  heresy,  „  in  iv  317 

Purity     I  liave  lived  a  life  of  utter  p :  Harold  i  i  178 

Purple     He  slew  not  him  alone  who  wore  the  p,  Queen  Mary  i  v  500 

same  chair,  Or  rather  throne  of  p,  on  the  deck.  „  in  ii  8 

and  open'd  out  The  p  zone  of  hill  and  heaven ;  The  Cup  i  ii  408 

The  king  should  pace  on  p  to  his  bride,  „  ii  189 

Wrap  them  together  in  a  p  cloak  And  lay  them  both      Harold  v  ii  158 

Purpose     it  is  an  age  Of  brief  life,  and  brief  p.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  413 

these  burnings  will  not  help  The  p  of  the  faith ;  „  iv  ii  185 

"        Somewhat  beyond  your  settled  p?  „  v  i  207 

Stigand  should  know  the  p's  of  Heaven.  Harold  i  i  64 

thunder  moulded  in  high  heaven  To  serve  the  Norman  p,       „     n  ii  34 
I  knew  thy  p ;  he  and  Wulfnoth  never  Have  met,  „    n  ii  84 

I  loved  according  to  the  main  p  and  intent  of  nature.    Becket,  Pro.  502 
If  the  King  hold  his  p,  I  am  myself  a  beggar.  „  i  iv  89 

if  it  suit  their  p  to  howl  for  the  King,  „       ni  iii  324 

I  see  now  Your  p  is  to  fright  me — -  „        iv  ii  180 

can  touch  The  ghittern  to  some  p.  The  Falcon  799 

The  p  of  my  being  is  accomplish'd,  „  926 

^urse    Red  gold— a  hundred  p's — -yea,  and  more !  Harold  ni  i  18 

if  you  boxed  the  Pope's  ears  with  a  p,  you  might 

stagger  him,  but  he  would  pocket  the  p.  Becket  n  ii  370 

how  much  money  hast  thou  in  thy  p  ?  Foresters  in  274 

Pursue     retire  To  Ashridge,  and  p  my  studies  there.      Queen  Mary  i  iv  237 

Pursuer     only  pulsed  for  Griffyth,  beat  For  his  p.  Harold  i  ii  152 

They  turn  on  the  p,  horse  against  foot,  „       v  i  608 

Pursuing^    Your  Highness  knows  that  in  p  heresy  Queen  Mary  v  ii  96 

fled  from  his  own  church  by  night.  No  man  p.  Becket  ii  ii  158 

Purtiest  (prettiest)    they  be  two  o'  the  p  gels  ye  can  see 

of  a  summer  murnin'.  Prom,  of  May  i  30 

Purveyor     not  my  p  Of  pleasures,  but  to  save  a  life—  Becket,  Pro.  149 

My  princess  of  the  cloud,  my  plumed  p,  The  Falcon  8 

Push     To  shake  my  throne,  to  p  into  my  chamber —  Becket  v  i  249 

Posh'd     P  by  the  crowd  beside—  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  397 

Pope  has  p  his  horns  beyond  his  mitre —  „  v  i  152 

like  a  thief,  p  in  his  royal  hand  ;  ,.  v  ii  466 

And  p  our  lances  into  Saracen  hearts.  Becket  n  ii  94 

His  Holiness,  p  one  way  by  the  Empire  and  another 

by  England,  ,.     n  ii  327 

Are  p  from  out  communion  of  the  Church.  „        v  i  58 

P  from  all  doors  as  if  we  bore  the  plague,  Protn.  of  May  in  804 

Put     Not  prettily  p  ?     I  mean.  Queen  Mar>/ i  v  611 

that  these  statutes  may  be  p  in  force,  „        ni  iv  367 

p  oS  the  rags  They  had  mock'd  his  misery  with,  „         iv  iii  589 

Ay,  Renard,  if  you  care  to  p  it  so.  ,>  v  i  309 

Had  p  off  levity  and  p  graveness  on.  „  v  ii  510 

And  p  it  in  my  bosom,  and  all  at  once  ,.  v  v  98 

P  thou  the  comet  and  this  blast  together —     Harold. 

P  thou  thyself  and  mother-wit  together.  Harold  ii  i  15 

P  her  away,  p  her  away,  my  liege  !     P  her  away  into  a 

*  nunnery !  •  Becket,  Pro.  63 


Becket  i  iii  479 
„  u  ii  234 
„     u  ii  434 

ra  i  3 
„     m  i  113 


Put  (continued)     As  one  that  p's  himself  in  sanctuary. 
Our  brother's  anger  p's  him.  Poor  man, 
evilly  used  And  p  to  pain. 

when  I  shall  p  away Rosamund.     What  will 

you  p  away  ? 
she  was  hard  p  to  it,  and  to  speak  truth, 
you  have  p  so  many  of  the  King's  household  out  of 

communion,  „   ni  iii  310 

Geoffrey,  the  pain  thou  hast  p  me  to  !  „      iv  ii  10 

wholesome  medicine  here  P's  that  belief  asleep.  „      iv  ii  52 

To  p  her  into  Godstow  nunnery,  (repeat)  Becket,  Pro.  v  i  208,  209 

He  bad  me  p  her  into  a  nunnery —  Becket  v  i  214 

I  p  the  bitters  on  my  breast  to  wean  him.  The  Falcon  189 

Was  it  there  to  take  ?     P  it  there,  my  lord.  „  599 

I  have  p  him  off  as  often  ;  but  to-day  „  831 

I  could  p  all  that  o'  one  side  easy  anew.  Prom,  of  May  ii  111 

What  is  it  Has  p  you  out  of  heart  ?     Bora.     It  p's 

me  in  heart  Again  to  see  you ;  but  indeed  the 

state  Of  my  poor  father  p's  me  out  of  heart.  „  in  501 

they  p  it  upon  me  because  I  have  a  bad  wife.  Foresters  ni  437 

Putrid    And  p  water,  every  drop  a  worm,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  444 

And  I  ha'  nine  darters  i'  the  spital  that  be  dead 

ten  times  o'er  i'  one  day  wi'  the  p  fever  ; 

Putting    p  by  his  father's  will. 

Putting  on    marriage-garland  withers  even  with  the 

P  o, 
Pwoap  (Pope)     P's  be  pretty  things,  Joan, 

but  I  do  know  ez  P's  and  vires  be  bad  things  ; 
'11  burn  the  P  out  o'  this  'ere  land  vor  iver  and 


Becket  i  iv  251 
Qu^en  Mary  i  ii  28 

Becket,  Pro.  360 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  468 

IV  iii  500 


Pyx    and  the  Lady  Anne  Bow'd  to  the  P : 


Q 


Quack    Quash'd  my  frog  that  used  to  q 
Quadruple    would  treble  and  q  it  With  revenues. 
Quail    some  may  q,  Yet  others  are  that  dare 
Quarrel  (s)     this  marriage  is  the  least  Of  all  their  q. 

and  there  bide  The  upshot  of  my  q, 

one  to  rule  All  England  beyond  question,  beyond  q 

Q  of  Crown  and  Church — to  rend  again. 

thro'  all  this  q  I  still  have  cleaved  to  the  crown, 

Their  q's  with  themselves,  their  spites 
Quarrel  (verb)     we  will  not  q  about  the  stag. 
Quarry    and  howsoe'er  Thy  q  wind  and  wheel. 

Why  didst  thou  miss  thy  q  yester-even  ? 
Quart    To  reign  is  restless  fence".  Tierce,  q,  and 
trickery. 

and  can  make  Five  q's  pass  into  a  thimble. 
Quarter    Thou  hast  not  learnt  thy  q's  here. 

after  much  smouldering  and  smoking,  be  kindled 
again  upon  your  q. 
Quarterstaff    I  will  break  thy  sconce  with  my  q. 

I  am  too  late  then  with  my  q  ! 

thou  light  at  q  for  thy  dinner  with  our  Robin, 

Great  woodland  king,  I  know  not  q. 

Shall  I  undertake  The  knight  at  q. 

Give  him  the  g'. 

I  know  no  q. 

I  am  overbreathed.  Friar,  by  my  two  bouts  at  q. 

That  thou  mightst  beat  him  down  at  q  ! 
Quash    so  you  q  rebellion  too, 
Quash'd     Q  my  frog  that  used  to  quack 
Queen  (s)     (See  also  Wolf-queen)    if  Parliament  can 
make  the  Q  a  bastard, 

cackling  of  bastardy  under  the  Q's  own  nose  ? 

met  the  Q  at  Wanstead  with  five  hundred  horse, 
and  the  Q 

setting  up  a  mass  at  Canterbury  To  please  the  Q. 

Q's  Officers  Are  here  in  force  to  take  you  to  the  Tower. 

'  Long  live  Elizabeth  the  Q  ! ' 


IV  iii  536 

iv42 


Foresters  n  ii  149 

Becket  v  ii  345 

Queen  Mary  lu  iv  166 

„  II  ii  155 

II  iv  86 

Harold  iv  i  146 

Becket  ii  ii  56 

,.       V  i  47 

The  Cup  I  i  90 

I  ii  39 

The  Falcon  12 

151 

Queen  Mary  v  v  267 
Foresters  iv  283 
Harold  n  ii  154 

Becket  ii  ii  314 

Foresters  i  ii  76 

11 1428 

IV  207 

IV  216 

rv248 

IV250 

IV  257 

IV  267 

IV  518 

Queen  Mary  iii  iv  37 

Foresters  ii  ii  149 

Queen  Mary  i  i  49 
I  i  59 


1 177 

1 1189 

I  ii  107 

I  iii  8 


Queen 


1046 


Queen 


Queen  (s)  (continued)    our  gracious  Virgin  Q  hath 

Crowd.    No  pope  !  no  pope  ! 

our  Gracious  Q,  let  me  call  her  ovu:  second  Virgin 
Mary, 

Prince  of  Spain  coming  to  wed  our  Q  ! 

Arise  against  her  and  dethrone  the  Q — 

does  your  gracious  Q  entreat  you  kinglike  ? 

with  her  own  pawns  plays  against  a  Q, 

The  Q  is  ill  advised  : 

my  Lady  Q,  tho'  by  your  age, 

Has  not  the  Q —     Elizabeth.     Done  what,  Sir  ? 

I  am  utterly  submissive  to  the  Q. 

the  Q  Is  both  my  foe  and  yours  : 

you  have  solicited  The  Q,  and  been  rejected. 

So  royal  that  the  Q  forbad  you  wearing  it. 

Your  ear ;  You  shall  be  Q. 

He  hath  fallen  out  of  favour  with  the  Q. 

Q  would  see  your  Grace  upon  the  moment. 

the  Q  is  yours.     I  left  her  with  rich  jewels 

Come,  come,  I  will  go  with  you  to  the  Q. 

I  am  English  Q,  not  Roman  Emperor. 

Tho'  Q,  I  am  not  Q  Of  mine  own  heart, 

when  I,  their  Q,  Cast  myseK  down  upon  my  knees 

for  the  Q's  down,  and  the  world's  up, 

but,  for  appearance  sake,  stay  with  the  Q. 

and  the  Q  hath  no  force  for  resistance. 

If  this  man  marry  our  Q, 

the  Q,  and  the  laws,  and  the  people,  his  slaves. 

must  we  levy  war  against  the  Q's  Grace  ? 

war  for  the  Q's  Grace — to  save  her 

I  trust  the  Q  comes  hither  with  her  guards. 

Q  in  that  distress  Sent  ComwaUis  and  Hastings 

Nay  the  Q's  right  to  reign — 

now  the  Q  In  this  low  pulse  and  palsy 

Q  had  written  her  word  to  come  to  court : 
your  Q  ;  To  whom,  when  I  was  wedded  to  the  realm 
and  be  sure  your  Q  So  loves  you. 
Long  live  Queen  Mary  !     Down  with  Wyatt !     The  Q 
The  Q  of  England — or  the  Kentish  Squire  ? 
The  Q  of  England  or  the  rabble  of  Kent  ? 
No  !     No  !     The  Q\  the  Q\ 

Gardiner,  coming  with  the  Q,  And  meeting  Pembroke, 
no  man  need  ;  but  did  you  mark  our  Q  ? 
Q  stands  up,  and  speaks  for  her  own  self  ; 
That  knows  the  Q,  the  Spaniard,  and  the  Pope, 
Whether  I  be  for  Wyatt,  or  the  Q  ? 
we  know  that  ye  be  come  to  kill  the  Q, 
don't  ye  kill  the  Q  here.  Sir  Thomas  ; 
we  pray  you  to  kill  the  Q  further  off,  Sir  Thomas. 
Wyatt.     My  friends,  I  have  not  come  to  kill  the  Q 
The  Q  must  to  the  Tower. 
My  foes  are  at  my  feet  and  I  am  Q. 
that  the  son  Being  a  King,  might  wed  a  Q — 
How  look'd  the  Q  ? 

before  the  Q's  face  Gardiner  buys  them 
Long  live  the  King  and  Q,  Philip  and  Mary  ! 
wilt  thou  wear  thy  cap  before  the  Q  ? 
There  be  both  Kmg  and  Q,  Philip  and  Mary.    Shout ! 
The  Q  comes  first,  Mary  and  Philip. 
The  Q  hath  felt  the  motion  of  her  babe  ! 
'  The  Q  of  England  is  deUvered  of  a  dead  dog  ! ' 
The  Q  would  have  him  ! 
The  Q  would  have  it ! 
Philip's  no  sudden  aUen — the  Q's  husband, 
if  the  Q  should  die  without  a  child, 
Peace — the  Q,  Philip,  and  Pole. 
Her  Grace  the  Q  commands  you  to  the  Tower, 
rmder  our  Q's  regimen  We  might  go  softlier 
I  would  not,  were  I  Q,  tolerate  the  heretic, 
And  done  your  best  to  bastardise  our  Q, 
Our  good  Q's  cousin — dallying  over  seas 

Q,  most  wroth  at  first  with  you, 
colours  of  our  Q  are  green  and  white, 
to  cast  myself  Upon  the  good  Q's  mercy ;  ay,  when, 
my  Lord  ?    God  save  the  Q  ! 


Queen  Mary  i  iii  23 

„         I  iii  57 

I  iii  84 

I  iii  91 

I  iii  110 

I  iii  163 

„  I  iv  5 

I  iv  11 

I  iv  28 

I  iv  39 

„         I  iv  41 

I  iv  59 

I  iv  76 

I  iv  122 

„       I iv  157 

I  iv  221 

1  iv  240 

I  iv  298 
I  V  503 
I  V  521 
I  V  561 

ni65 

n  i  138 

n  i  140 

n  i  170 

n  i  174 

n  i  187 

n  i  189 

„  n  ii  1 

n  ii  29 

n  ii  96 

n  ii  102 

„       n  ii  117 

„       n  ii  163 

n  ii  194 

n  ii  252 

n  ii  269 

n  ii  273 

II  ii  282 
II  ii  309 
II  ii  320 
n  ii  341 
n  ii  413 
n  ii  415 

n  iii  108 
u  iii  111 

n  iii  115 

niv73 

n  iv  119 

m  i  75 

mi  91 

m  i  143 

ni  i  208 

m  i  237 

mi  296 

mi  299 

m  ii  213 

m  ii  219 

ni  iii  27 

in  iii  31 

ni  iii  42 

m  iii  74 

ra  iii  83 

m  iii  270 

m  iv  181 

m  iv  209 

m  iv  239 

m  iv  292 

m  iv  387 

m  V  5 

m  V  168 


Queen  (s)  (continued)     When  next  there  comes  a 

missive  from  the  Q 
A  missive  from  the  Q  : 

and  think  of  this  in  your  coming.     '  Mabt  the  Q.' 
I  think  the  Q  may  never  bear  a  child  ;  I  think  that 

I  may  be  some  time  the  Q,  Then,  Q  indeed  : 
You  cannot  see  the  Q.     Renard  denied  her, 
Q  hath  been  three  days  in  tears  For  Philip's  going — 
bring  it  Home  to  the  leisure  wisdom  of  his  Q, 
Against  the  King,  the  Q,  the  Holy  Father, 
Would  she  had  been  the  Q  ! 
The  Q  of  Philip  should  be  chaste. 
Be  somewhat  less — majestic  to  your  Q. 
King  and  Q,  To  whom  he  owes  his  loyalty  after  God, 
Declare  the  Q's  right  to  the  throne  ; 
I  must  obey  the  Q  and  Council,  man. 
causes  Wherefore  our  Q  and  Comicil  at  this  time 
which  our  Q  And  Council  at  this  present 
For  if  our  Holy  Q  not  pardon  him. 
Obey  your  King  and  Q,  and  not  for  dread 
Hard-natured  Q,  half-Spanish  in  herself. 
Done  right  against  the  promise  of  this  Q  Twice  given. 
I  but  a  little  Q  ;  and,  so  indeed, 
A  little  Q  !  but  when  I  came  to  Med  your  majesty, 
Being  Q  of  England,  I  have  none  other. 
She  stands  between  you  and  the  Q  of  Scots.    Mary. 

The  Q  of  Scots  at  least  is  Catholic. 
The  Q  in  tears  ! 

How  doubly  aged  this  Q  of  ours  hath  grown 
Elizabeth,  JSow  fair  and  royal — like  a  Q,  indeed  ? 
methinks  my  Q  is  like  enough  To  leave  me 
so  my  Q  Would  leave  me— as — my  wife, 
and  I  shall  urge  his  suit  Upon  the  Q, 
affirms  The  Q  has  forfeited  her  right  to  reign 
Might  I  not  say — to  please  your  wife,  the  Q  ? 
for  the  death  Of  our  accursed  Q  and  Cardinal  Pole.' 
Unhappiest  Of  Q's  and  wives  and  women  ! 
Sees  ever  such  an  aureole  round  the  Q, 
1  used  to  love  the  Q  with  all  my  heart — 
Our  drooping  Q  should  know  ! 
Most  loyal  and  most  grateful  to  the  Q. 
You  will  be  Q,  And,  were  I  Philip — 
gather'd  from  the  Q  That  she  would  see  your  Grace 
Is  not  yon  light  in  the  Q's  chamber  ? 
There's  the  Q's  light.     I  hear  she  cannot  live, 
not  courtly  to  stand  hehneted  Before  the  Q. 
The  Q  of  Scots  is  married  to  the  Dauphin, 
How  is  the  good  Q  now  ? 
The  Q  is  dying,  or  you  dare  not  say  it.     Elizabeth. 

The  Q  is  dead. 
I  swear  I  have  no  heart  To  be  your  Q. 
God  save  Elizabeth,  the  Q  of  England  ! 
God  save  the  Q  ! 

Thou  art  the  Q ;  ye  are  boy  and  girl  no  more  : 
Not  yet,  but  then — my  q. 
If  he  were  King  of  England,  I  his  q, 
And  bless  the  Q  of  England. 
Sign  it,  my  q  ! 

They  shout  as  they  would  have  her  for  a  q. 
The  Q  of  Wales  !     Why,  Morcar, 
Not  true,  my  girl,  here  is  the  Q  ! 
Wast  thou  his  Q  ?     Aldwyth.     I  was  the  Q  of  Wales. 


Q«ee«  Mary  iii  v  183 
m  V  187 
III  V  225 

m  V  231 

lu  vi  1 

in  vi  12 

III  vi  23 
ra  vi  33 
m  vi  47 

m  vi  131 

ni  vi  150 

IV  i  22 

IV  ii  78 

IV  ii  164 

IV  iii  36 
„  IV  iii  55 
„           IV  iii  61 

IV  iii  177 
„  IV  iii  424 
„         IV  iii  456 

V  i  53 

V  i  55 

V  i  69 

V  i  192 

V  i  223 

V  i  227 

V  i  235 

V  i  242 

V  i  251 

V  i  267 

V  i  290 

V  i  308 

V  ii  181 

V  ii  408 
„            V  ii  414 

V  ii  418 
„            V  ii  457 

V  iii  26 

V  iii  37 

V  iii  103 
„  V  iv  1 

V  iv  10 

V  V  37 

V  V  52 

V  V  229 

V  V  250 

V  V  265 

V  V  283 

V  V  288 
Harold  i  i  455 

„  I  ii  138 
„  I  ii  154 
„  I  ii  207 
„  m  i  201 
„  IV  i  27 
„     IV  i  152 

V  ii  92 
vii94 

that  I  fear  the  Q  would  have  her  life.  Becket,  Pro.  61 

The  Q  should  play  his  kingship  against  thine  !  „    Pro.  236 

Dead  is  he,  my  Q  ?  „    Pro.  368 

However  kings  and  q's  may  frown  on  thee.  „        i  ii  18 

Ay,  Madam,  and  q's  also.     Eleanor.     And  q's  also  !  „        i  ii  80  , 

Remember  the  Ql  „     i  iv  201  , 

Vouchsafe  a  gracious  answer  to  your  Q?  „    iv  ii  360 

shall  not  I,  the  Q,  Tear  out  her  heart —  „    iv  ii  408  . 

My  liege,  the  Q  of  England.     Henry.    God's  eyes  !  „        v  i  9ft 
Of  England  ?    Say  of  Aquitaine.     I  am  no  Q  of  England.   „      v  i  101 

I  had  dream'd  I  was  the  bride  of  England,  and  a  g.  „      v  i  lOS 

He  sends  you  This  diadem  of  the  first  Galatian  Q,  The  Cup  n  132 . 

I  wait  him  his  crown'd  q,  „    n  161 


Queen 


1047 


BaU'd 


Queen  (s)  (continued)     Hail,  King  !     Synorix.     Hail,  Q  !       The  Cup  n  220 

Much  graced  are  we  that  our  Q  Rome  in  you  „      ii  335 

The  sovereign  of  Galatia  weds  his  Q.  „      n  432 

Synorix,  first  King,  Gamma,  first  Q  o'  the  Realm,  „      n  440 

This  all  too  happy  day,  crown — q  at  once.  „      n  451 

She  too — she  too — the  bride  !  the  Q  !  and  I —  „      n  468 

My  far-eyed  q  of  the  winds —  The  Falcon  9 

I  whisper'd.  Let  me  crown  you  Q  of  Beauty,  „      360 

with  the  same  crown  my  Q  of  Beauty.  „  915 
he's  no  respect  for  the  Q,  or  the  parson,  or  the 

justice  o  peace,  or  owt.  Prom,  of  May  1 132 

and  the  blessed  Q  of  Heaven,  Foresters  n  i  38 

0  would  she  stood  before  me  as  my  q,  ,,  n  i  167 
She  is  my  q  and  thine,  The  mistress  of  the  band.  „  n  ii  41 
catch  A  glimpse  of  them  and  of  their  fairy  Q — ■  „  n  ii  104 
Tit,  my  q,  must  it  be  so  ?  „  n  ii  124 
And  this  new  q  of  the  wood.  „  n  ii  139 
Foimd  him  dead  and  drench'd  in 

dew,  Q.  (repeat)                                  Foresters  n  ii  148,  151, 153, 155, 

157, 159, 161,  163, 171 
present  her  with  this  oaken  chaplet  as  Q  of  the 

wood,  Foresters  in  59 

1  were  like  a  q  indeed.  „  m  77 
Sit  here,  my  q,  and  judge  the  world  with  me.  „  m  151 
Shall  drink  the  health  of  oiu:  new  woodland  Q.  „  m  315 
The  Q  o'  the  woods,  „  m  353 
Maid  Marian,  Q  o'  the  woods  ! 

(repeat)                                            Foresters  m.  357,  375,  377,  398,  400 


Drink  to  the  health  of  our  new  Q  o'  the  woods, 
We  drink  the  health  of  thy  new  Q  o'  the  woods. 
Drink  to  the  Q  o'  the  woods, 
— to  this  maid,  this  Q  o'  the  woods. 
We  care  not  much  for  a  Q — 
For  a  Q,  for  a  Q  o'  the  woods,  (repeat) 
That  we  would  die  for  a  Q — 
You  hear  your  Q,  obey  ! 
And  thou  their  Q. 
Queen  (verb)     Tho'  you  should  q  me  all  over  the  realms 


Foresters  m  368 

ni372 

ra388 

in  394 

in  430 

m  431,  445 

in444 

m464 

IV  932 

IV  707 

Mary  v  ii  543 

n  ii  327 

nii343 


Queenlike    So — am  I  somewhat  Q, 

Queenly    I  have  never  seen  her  So  q  or  so  goodly. 

all  men  cry.  She  is  q,  she  is  goodly. 
Queen's    'Listed  for  a  soadger.  Miss,  i'  the  Q  Real 

Hard  Tillery. 
Quemship    to  break  down  all  kingship  and  q, 
Quell'd    Not  to  be  g  ;  and  I  have  felt  within  me 
Quench    hiss  Against  the  blaze  they  cannot  q — 

Which  it  will  q  in  blood  ! 
Quenched    q  the  warmth  of  France  toward  you. 

And  q  it  there  for  ever. 
Query     had  she  but  given  Plain  answer  to  plain  q  ? 
Question  (s)     That  is  Your  q,  and  I  front  it  with 
another : 

That's  not  a  pretty  q. 

While  this  same  marriage  q  was  being  argued, 

And  by  their  answers  to  the  q  ask'd, 

You  brawl  beyond  the  q  ;  speak.  Lord  Legate  ! 

one  to  rule  All  England  beyond  q,  beyond  quarrel. 

I  but  ask'd  her  One  q,  and  she  primm'd 

But  one  q — How  fares  thy  pretty  boy, 

I  have  been  unwilling  to  trouble  you  with  q's, 

My  Lady,  will  you  answer  me  a  5  ? 

A  q  that  every  true  man  asks  of  a  woman  once  in 
his  life. 
Question  (verb)     hath  no  fence  when  Gardiner  q's 

him  ;  Queen  Mary  i  iv  203 

Nor  yet  to  q  things  already  done  ;  „        m  iii  189 

Cranmer,  I  come  to  q  you  again  ;  „  iv  ii  15 

charged  me  not  to  q  any  of  those  About  me.  Becket  ill  i  210 

May  she  not  tempt  me,  being  at  my  side.  To  q  her  ? 
Qnestion'd    she  q  me.     Did  she  not  slander  him  ? 
Questioning    he's  past  your  q. 
Quibble    You  crost  him  with  a  g  of  your  law. 
Quick    Were  momentary  sparkles  out  as  q  Almost  as 
kindled ; 

That  now  we  be  and  ever  shall  be  q, 


Prom,  of  May  ill  109 
Queen  Mary  v  iv  48 

I  iv  259 
Harold  m  i  396 
Becket  iv  ii  192 

„     n  ii  311 

The  Cup  n  88 

Becket  iv  ii  386 

Queen  Mary  i  v  141 
I  V  610 
n  ii  37 

II  ii  153 

III  iv  97 
Harold  iv  i  145 

Becket  in  i  74 

„     V  ii  166 

Prom,  of  May  m  321 

Foresters  i  ii  136 

„      I  ii  138 


mi  218 

„      ra  i  212 

Queen  Mary  i  i  39 

Foresters  iv  850 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  73 
„      m  iii  137 


Q^aifiis.  {continued)     Away  now — Q\  Queen  Mary  y  ii  295 

The  King  is  g  to  anger ;  if  thou  anger  him,  Becket  1  iii  164 

his  monarch  mane  Bristled  about  his  q  ears —  The  Cup  i  ii  121 

Then  with  one  q  short  stab — eternal  peace.  „       i  iii  124 

whose  q  flash  splits  The  mid-sea  mast,  „          n  291 

Q,  good  mother,  q  !  Foresters  11  i  193 

Quicken     Employ  us,  heat  us,  q  us,  help  us.  The  Cup  i  iii  131 

Quicker     How  few  Junes  Will  heat  our  pulses  q  !  Foresters  iv  1062 

Quiet     Q  a  moment,  my  masters  ;  Qv^en  Mary  i  iii  16 

You  know  your  Latin — q  as  a  dead  body.  „         i  iv  181 

Q  as  a  dead  body.  „         1  iv  187 

In  q — home  your  banish'd  countryman.  „         in  ii  31 

Is  the  North  q,  Gamel  ?  Harold  i  i  107 

q,  aj,  as  yet — Nothing  as  yet.  „       1  i  110 

Q\  ql     Harold.     Count !  „     n  ii  531 

My  lord,  the  town  is  q,  and  the  moon  Divides  Becket  i  i  364 
he  asked  our  mother  if  I  could  keep  a  q  tongue  i' 

my  head,  ,,     m  i  119 
Your  Grace  will  never  have  one  q  hour,  „        v  i  78 
Follow  my  art  among  these  q  fields.  Prom,  of  May  i  743 
Q\  ql     What  is  it  ?  „         m  476 
Q,  good  Robin,  q  !  Foresters  iv  9 
Q,ql  or  I  will  to  my  father.  „     iv  77 
Quiet^    new  Lords  Are  q  with  their  sop  of  Abbey- 
lands,  Qu£en  Mary  m  i  142 
Quieter    it  was  in  him  to  go  up  straight  if  the  time 

had  been  q.  Becket  n  ii  325 

Quietest     Thou  art  the  q  man  in  all  the  world —  Harold  i  i  312 

Quietist    made  me  A  Q  taking  all  things  easily.  Prom,  of  May  1  232 

A  Q  taking  all  things  easily —  „            1 290 

Quietness    sleeping  after  all  she  has  done,  in  peace 

and  q,  Queen  Mary  v  iv  35 

Qoimper    a  Coimt  in  Brittany — he  lives  near  Q.  Foresters  i  i  272 

Quip     Did  you  hear  the  young  King's  q  ?  Becket  ni  iii  147 

Quiring    Are  those  the  blessed  angels  q,  father  ?  Harold  v  i  473 

Quiver    for  God  Has  fill'd  the  q,  „     in  i  400 

Quiver'd    the  tongue  yet  q  with  the  jest  Queen  Mary  i  v  475 


Babbit    skulk  into  corners  Like  r's  to  their  holes.  Qu^en  Mary  11  iv  56 

stick  to  tha  like  a  weasel  to  a  r,  I  wiU.    Ay  !  and 


I'd  like  to  shoot  tha  like  a  r  an'  all 
Rabble    The  Queen  of  England  or  the  r  of  Kent  ? 
Rabidest    Not  dream'd  of  by  the  r  gospeller. 
Race     And  I  the  r  of  murder'd  Buckingham — 

advise  the  king  Against  the  r  of  God\vin. 

Till  famine  dwarf t  the  r — 

Wretched  r  !     And  once  I  wish'd  to  scourge 

Solders  a  r  together — yea — tho'  they  fail. 

And  cursed  me,  as  the  last  heir  of  my  r : 
Racing     in  the  r  toward  this  golden  goal 
Rack     the  rope,  the  r,  the  thumbscrew, 

Expectant  of  the  r  from  day  to  day, 

wrung  his  ransom  from  him  by  the  r. 
Raft     as  men  Have  done  on  r's  of  wreck — it  drives 

you  mad. 
Rag    (See  also  Half-rag)     this  r  fro'  the  gangrene  i' 

my  leg. 
Rage  (s)     With  all  the  r  of  one  who  hates  a  truth 

'  Adulterous  dog  !  '  that  red-faced  r  at  me  ! 
Rage  (verb)     But  the  King  r's — most  are  with  the  King ; 

Why  do  the  heathen  r  ? 
Ragged    A  r  cloak  for  saddle — he,  he,  he. 
Raging    A  bold  heart  yours  to  beard  that  r  mob  ! 
Rags    And  here  a  knot  of  rufiSans  all  in  r, 

R,  nothing  but  our  r. 
Rahab    scarlet  thread  of  R  saved  her  life  ; 
Raid    The  Norseman's  r  Hath  helpt  the  Norman, 
Rail    and  r's  against  the  rose. 

He  shall  not  r  again. 
RaU'd    We  have  the  man  that  r  against  thy  birth, 


Prom,  of  May  11  740 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  273 

„        m  vi  138 

„  mi  454 

Harold  v  i  282 

Becket  i  iii  356 

The  Cup  I  i  26 

„    Iii  162 

Foresters  n  ii  110 

Harold  n  ii  377 

Queen  Mary  n  i  200 

„         IV  iii  437 

Harold  n  ii  39 

The  Cup  I  iii  142 

Becket  i  iv  237 

Queen  Mary  iii  vi  143 

The  Cup  I  iii  122 

Becket  i  iii  591 

„     V  ii  628 

„       V  i  248 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  96 

n  ii  66 

Foresters  iii  191 

Queen  Mary  m  ii  38 

Harold  v  i  291 

„       I  i  423 

„     II  ii  488 

„     II  ii  485 


Bailer 


1048 


Read 


Becket  i  i  306 

QiLcen  Mary  v  iv  33 

Becket  v  ii  369 

Queen  Mary  in  v  57 

IV  ii  229 

Becket  in  i  273 

The  Cup  I  i  110 

Prom,  of  May  in  367 

Becket  iii  i  276,  279 

III  i  283 

Foresters  i  ii  279 

Becket  in  i  93 

Qween  Mary  ii  ii  17 

II  ii  290 

V  i  179 

Harold  III  i  157 

HI  i  163 

Becket,  Pro.  208 


Railer    That  Map,  and  these  new  r's  at  the  Church 
Raiment    and  soft  r  about  your  body  ; 

they  spread  their  r  down  Before  me — 
Bain     Never  peacock  against  r  Scream'd  as  you  did 

It  is  a  day  of  r. 

Ay,  but  he's  taken  the  r  with  him. 

after  r  o'erleaps  a  jutting  rock  And  shoots 

the  r  beating  in  my  face  all  the  way, 
Rainbow     R,  stay,  (repeat) 

0  r  stay, 
are  only  like  The  r  of  a  momentary  sim. 

Raining    It  is  r,  Put  on  your  hood 

Raise     I  have  striven  in  vain  to  r  a  man  for  her. 

make  oath  To  r  your  Highness  thirty  thousand  men, 

we  will  r  us  loans  and  subsidies 

Tostig,  r  my  head  ! 

r  his  head,  for  thou  hast  laid  it  low  ! 

To  r  that  tempest  which  will  set  it  trembling 

tho'  I  am  none  of  those  that  would  r  a  storm 
between  you. 
Raised    r  the  rood  again.  And  brought  us  back  the 
mass. 

But  you  were  never  r  to  plead  for  Frith, 

Poitou,  all  Christendom  is  r  against  thee  ; 

1  r  him  from  the  puddle  of  the  gutter, 
I  cannot  brook  the  turmoil  thou  hast  r. 
better  Than  r  to  take  a  life  which  Henry 
thou  hast  r  the  world  against  thee. 

Rake    do  much  To  r  out  all  old  dying  heats, 
Ralph  (Sir  Ralph  Bi^enhall)    (See  also  Bagenhall, 
Ralph    Bagenhall)     Be  merry !  yet,  Sir  R, 
you  look  but  sad. 

Fare  you  well.  Sir  R. 

It  is  Sir  R,  And  muttering  to  himself 

I  swear  you  do  your  country  wrong.  Sir  R. 

You  are  of  the  house  ?  what  will  you  do.  Sir  R  ? 
Ralph  Bagenhall    Sh  R  B  \     Bagenhall.     What  of  that  ? 
Rampant     Such  r  weeds  Strangle  each  other,  die,  Prom,  of  May  in  590 

Ran    (See  also  Runned)     R  simless  down,  and  moan'd 

against  the  piers.  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  26 

And  then  I  rose  and  r.  Harold  ii  i  12 

How  r  that  answer  which  King  Harold  gave  „  iv  iii  108 

r  in  upon  us  And  died  so,  „      v  i  409 

When  they  r  down  the  game  and  worried  it.  Becket,  Pro.  123 

r  a  twitch  across  his  face  as  who  should  say  what's 
to  follow  ? 

vast  vine-bowers  R  to  the  summit  of  the  trees, 

wine  R  down  the  marble  and  lookt  like  blood. 

there  r  a  rumour  then  That  you  were  kiU'd 

a  fox  from  the  glen  r  away  with  the  hen, 

waded  in  the  brook,  r  after  the  butterflies. 

And  ever  a  tear  down  r. 

For  whom  I  r  into  my  debt  to  the  Abbot, 
Random    I  sorrow'd  for  my  r  promise  given  To  yon 
fox-lion. 

Laics  and  barons,  thro'  The  r  gifts  of  careless  kings, 

And  run  my  mind  out  to  a  r  guest 

he  begs  you  to  forget  it  As  scarce  his  act : — a  r 
stroke : 

I  that  once  The  wildest  of  the  r  youth  of  Florence 

this  Richard  sacks  and  wastes  a  town  With  r  pillage, 
Bandnlf    Robert,  The  apostate  monk  that  was  with  R 
Bang     (See  also  Ringed)     Heard  how  the  shield-wall  r, 

That  r  Within  my  head  last  night, 

— the  bells  r  out  even  to  deafening. 


„    in  iii  296 

Queen  Mary  i  v  182 

IV  ii  210 

Harold  in  ii  150 

Becket  i  iii  436 

„     I  iii  576 

„    ivii268 

v  ii  16 

„     n  ii  114 


Queen  Mary  ii  ii  358 

n  ii  410 

III  i  15 

III  i  154 

III  i  436 

in  iii  250 


m  iii  93 

The  Cup  I  ii  403 

n  204 

The  Falcon  381 

Prom,  of  May  I  51 

III  275 

Foresters  i  i  19 

„      II  i  462 

Harold  in  i  269 

Becket  i  i  159 

The  Cup  I  ii  107 

n  53 
The  Falcon  808 
Foresters  iv  378 
Becket  v  ii  574 
Harold  iv  iii  159 
Becket  i  i  70 
„   vii363 
her  cry  r  to  me  across  the  years,  Prom,  of  May  n  655 

Range  (s)     daily  r  Among  the  pleasant  fields  of  Holy 

Writ  Qv^en  Mary  ni  v  79 

The  r  of  knights  Sit,  each  a  statue  on  his  horse,  Harold  v  i  523 

Range  (verb)    r  with  jetsam  and  with  ofial  thrown     Qu£en  Mary  in  iii  191 
Ranged    that  had  found  a  King  Who  r  confusions,  Becket  i  iii  371 

Since  I  left  her  Here  weeping,  I  have  r  the  world.  Prom,  of  May  ii  252 
Ranger    Thou  Robin  shalt  be  r  of  this  forest,  Foresters  iv  954 

Bank  (adj.)    Fed  with  r  bread  that  crawl'd  upon  the 

tongue,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  442 


Pr 


Rank  (line)     many  English  in  your  r's  To  help  your 

battle.  Queen  Mary  v  i  111 

Would  set  him  in  the  front  r  of  the  fight  The  Cup  i  ii  153 

Rank  (social  station)     Thrones,  churches,  r's,  traditions, 

customs.  Prom,  of  May  i  519 

Rankle     Normans  out  From  England,  and  this  r's  in 

us  yet.  Harold  n  ii  526 

Ransom  (s)    wrench  this  outlander's  r  out  of  him —  „  ii  i  58 

Ransom  (verb)     in  our  oubliettes  Thou  shalt  or  rot  or  r.  „        n  i  108 

wrung  his  r  from  him  by  the  rack,  „         n  ii  38 

he  paid  his  r  back.  „        ii  ii  50 

What  conditions  ?  pay  him  back  His  r?  ,>       n  ii  214 

for  the  r  of  my  son  Walter —  Foresters  i  i  265 

Whose  r  was  our  ruin,  „      iv  1007 

Ransom'd    where  he  sits  My  r  prisoner.  Harold  n  ii  45 

Coimt  of  the  Normans,  thou  hast  r  us,  „     n  ii  158 

Sir  Richard  was  told  he  might  be  r  Foresters  i  i  64 

Rare     0  r,  a  whole  long  day  of  open  field.  Becket  i  i  296 

0  r  again  !     We'll  baffle  them,  „       i  i  298 
So  r  the  household  honeymaking  bee,  „     v  ii  217 

Rascal  (adj.)     and  yield  Full  scope  to  persons  r  and 

forlorn,  Qv^en  Mary  ii  ii  185 

Or  lash'd  his  r  back,  and  let  him  go.  Harold  n  ii  507 

1  blow  the  horn  against  this  r  rout !  Foresters  iv  794 
Rascal  (s)     Ay,  r,  if  I  leave  thee  ears  to  hear.                 Queen  Mary  ni  i  251 

R  ! — this  land  is  like  a  hill  of  fire,  „  in  i  321 

Rat    scurrying  of  a  r  Affrighted  me,  „  in  v  143 

tongue  on  un  cum  a-lolluping  out  o'  'is  mouth  as 

black  as  a  r. 
while  famish'd  r's  Eat  them  alive. 
No  bread  ?     Filippo.     Half  a  breakfast  for  a  r  ! 
And  a  cat  to  the  cream,  and  a  »•  to  the  cheese  ; 
The  r's  have  gnawed  'em  already. 

Rate     What  do  you  r  her  at  ?     Count.     My  bird  ? 

Rated     Hath  r  for  some  backwardness 

Rave     r  thy  worst,  but  in  our  oubliettes 

Raven     Night,  as  black  as  a  r's  feather  ; 

and  our  battle-axes  broken  The  R's  wing, 
I  grieve  I  am  the  R  who  croaks  it. 

Raven-croak     With  r-c's  of  death  and  after  death  ? 

Raw    To  gorge  a  heretic  whole,  roasted  or  r. 

tho  town  Hung  out  r  hides  along  their  walls, 

Ray    light  of  the  seas  by  the  moon's  long-silvering  r  ! 

Raymond  of  Poitou    Have  we  not  heard  R  o  P,  thine 
own  uncle — 

Re    Suaviter  in  modo,  fortiter  in  r, 

Reach    (See  also  Win)     To  r  the  hand  of  mercy  to  my 
friend, 
shout  of  Synorix  and  Gamma  sitting  Upon  one 
throne,  should  r  it, 

Reach'd    your  Grace,  it  hath  not  r  me. 

If  Ludgate  can  be  r  by  dawn  to-morrow. 

They  had  not  r  right  reason  ;  little  children  ! 

Whose  dogmas  I  have  r : 

before  The  flame  had  r  his  body  ; 

that  r  a  hand  Down  to  the  field  beneath  it, 

so  still  I  r  my  hand  and  touch'd  ; 

Re-act    this  re-action  not  r-a  Yet  fiercelier  imder 
Queen  Elizabeth, 

Re-action     Action  and  r-a.  The  miserable  see-saw 

this  r-a  not  re-act  Yet  fiercelier  under  Queen  Elizabeth,  „        iv  iii  388 
R  needs  must  follow  revel — yet —  Prom,  of  May  ii  264 

Read     To  r  and  rhyme  in  solitary  fields.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  51 

show'd  his  back  Before  I  r  Ms  face.  „  ii  i  133 

thro'  that  dim  dilated  world  of  hers,  To  r  our  faces  ;  ,,         n  ii  326 

I've  found  this  paper ;  pray  your  worship  r  it ;  ,.         n  iii  56 

Ay,  ay,  my  friend ;  not  r  it  ?  „         n  iii  64 

There,  any  man  can  r  that.  „         ii  iii  68 

clowns  and  grooms  May  r  it !  „        in  iv  37 

And  may  not  r  your  Bible,  ..        m  iv  83 

I  r  his  honest  horror  in  his  eyes.  „         m  v  61 

She  came  upon  it,  r  it,  and  then  rent  it,  ,.      m  vi  142 

Hath  not  your  Highness  ever  r  his  book,  ,.  iv  i  90 

Then  never  r  it.    The  truth  is  here.  „  rv  i  99 

r  your  recantation  Before  the  people  in  St  Mary's  Church.    ,.  rv  ii  27 


IV  iii  520 

V  ii  197 
The  Falcon  123 
om.  of  May  i  53 

Foresters  I  i  88 

The  Falcon  322 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  307 

Harold  n  i  106 

„        m  ii  6 

„     IV  iii  65 

Foresters  ni  448 

„      n  i  624 

Queen  Mary  m  iv  344 

Harold  n  ii  383 

Foresters  ii  ii  179 

Becket  iv  ii  247 

V  ii  539 

Queen  Mary  iv  i  65 

The  Cup  II 148 

Queen  Mary  i  v  352 

II  iii  53 

ni  iv  72 

IV  ii  212 

IV  iii  616 

Harold  IV  i  44 

Becket  v  ii  235 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  388 
IV  iii  384 


Read 


1049 


Receive 


Read  (contintted)     I  sign  it  with  my  presence,  if  I  r  it.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  73 

That  Cranmer  r  all  papers  that  he  sign'd  ?  „       iv  iii  318 

This  last — I  dare  not  r  it  her-^  „          v  ii  183 

I  never  r,  I  tear  them  ;  „         v  ii  187 

I  may  die  Before  I  r  it.    Let  me  see  him  at  once.  „         v  ii  550 

to  r  the  letter  which  you  bring.  „         v  ii  555 

what  hath  she  written  ?  r.  „              v  v  2 

I  cannot  r  the  face  of  heaven  ;  Harold  i  i  66 

He  can  but  r  the  king's  face  on  his  coins.  „       i  i  70 

They  scarce  can  r  their  Psalter ;  „     i  i  163 

on  those  Who  r  their  doom  and  die.  „   iv  i  252 

President  of  this  Council,  r  them.     Becket.     R  !  Becket  i  iii  76 

For  John  of  Oxford  here  to  r  to  you.  „     i  iii  417 

I  could  but  r  a  part  to-day,  because —  „     i  iii  422 

and  to  r  the  faces  of  men  at  a  great  show.  „     rn  iii  83 

paper  sign'd  Antonius — will  you  take  it,  r  it  ?  The  Cup  i  ii  226 

Might  I  r  ?     Count.     Ay,  if  you  will.  The  Falcon  433 

Shall  I  Sit  by  him,  r  to  him,  tell  him  my  tales,  „          795 

Well,  my  man,  it  seems  that  you  can  r.  Prom,  of  May  n  710 

tho'  you  can't  r,  you  could  whitewash  that  cottage  „            ni  42 

That  nursery-tale  Still  r,  then  ?  „           ni  526 

Child,  r  a  little  history,  you  will  find  „          ni  542 

Beadier    I  am  r  to  be  slain,  than  thou  to  slay.  Becket  v  iii  128 

Readiness    Have  him  away  !     I  sicken  of  his  r.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  611 

Reading    (See  also  A-readin')     Been  r  some  old  book,  „           in  i  44 
Ready    make  r  for  the  journey.     Pray  God,  we  'scape 

the  sunstroke.     R  at  once.  „        in  v  277 

Simon,  is  supper  r  ?  ,,        in  vi  256 

We  are  r  To  take  you  to  St.  Mary's,  Master  Cranmer.      „  iv  ii  237 
I  be  r  to  taake  the  pledge.     Dora.     And  as  r  to 

break  it  again.  Prom,  of  May  in  84 
but  very  r  To  make  allowances,  and  mighty  slow 

To  feel  offences.  „         in  628 
Real     And  you,  that  would  not  own  the  R  Presence, 

Have  found  a  r  presence  in  the  stake.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  140 
there  was  a  great  motion  of  laughter  among  us,  part  r. 


part  childlike,  to  be  freed  from  the  dulness — 
Real  Hard  Tillery  (Royal  Artillery)    'Listed  for  a 

soadger.  Miss,  i'  the  Queen's  R  H  T. 
Realised     to  be  r  all  at  once,  or  altogether,  or  any- 
where but  in  Heaven  ? 
Realm     the  r  is  poor.  The  exchequer  at  neap-tide  : 

when  I  was  wedded  to  the  r  And  the  r's  laws 

But  for  the  wealth  and  glory  of  our  r. 

To  be  of  rich  advantage  to  our  r. 

Looms  the  least  chance  of  peril  to  our  r. 

From  stirring  hand  or  foot  to  wrong  the  r. 

Presenting  the  whole  body  of  this  r  Of  England, 

As  well  for  our  own  selves  as  all  the  r, 

this  noble  r  thro'  after  years  May  in  this  imity 

God  to  this  r  hath  given  A  token 

all  the  r  And  its  dominions  from  all  heresy, 

I  think  they  fain  would  have  me  from  the  r ; 

a  day  may  sink  or  save  a  r. 

and  degrade  the  r  By  seeking  justice 

I  cannot  be  True  to  this  r  of  England  and  the  Pope 

Or  into  private  life  within  the  r. 

A  shaker  and  conf  ounder  of  the  r  ; 

first  In  Council,  second  person  in  the  r, 

God's  revenge  upon  this  r  For  narrowness 

A  conscience  for  his  own  soul,  not  his  r  ; 

And  given  thy  r  of  England  to  the  bastard. 

To  help  the  r  from  scattering. 

Holy  Father  Hath  given  this  r  of  England  to  the 
Norman. 

The  r  for  which  thou  art  forsworn  is  cursed, 

But  by  the  royal  customs  of  our  r 

For  my  r's  sake,  myself  must  be  the  wizard 

sign'd  These  ancient  laws  and  customs  of  the  r. 

to  obey  These  ancient  laws  and  customs  of  the  r  ? 

Ringing  their  own  death-knell  thro'  all  the  r. 

Barons  and  bishops  of  our  r  of  England, 

Much  com,  repeopled  towns,  a  r  again. 

Then,  glancing  thro'  the  story  of  this  r, 

To  blast  mv  r's  with  excommunication  And  interdict, 


Becket  m  iii  155 

Prom,  of  May  in  109 

m  186 

Queen  Mary  i  v  119 

n  ii  164 

n  ii  210 

n  ii  235 

n  ii  239 

in  iii  61 

in  iii  116 

in  iii  136 

in  iii  156 

in  iii  168 

in  iii  215 

in  V  230 

HI  vi  239 

IV  i  19 

IV  i  27 

IV  i  47 
IV  iii  40 
IV  iii  72 

Harold  i  i  173 
„  m  i  64 
„  m  ii  154 
„     IV  i 106 

V  i  13 

V  i  63 
Becket,  Pro.  23 

„  Pro.  206 
I  iii  8 

I  iii  19 
„  I  iii  173 
„  I  iii  336 
„  I  iii  377 
„     I  iii  411 

n  ii  52 


Realm  (continued)    since  he  flouts  the  will  of  either  r,  Becket  ii  ii  256 

Louis  Returning,  ah  !  to  drive  thee  from  his  r.  „     ii  ii  419 

Rest  in  our  r,  and  be  at  peace  with  all.  „     n  li  448 

it  is  the  law,  not  he  ;  The  customs  of  the  r.  „      v  ii  127 

With  revenues,  r's,  and  golden  provinces  ,,     v  ii  346 

On  those  that  crown'd  young  Henry  in  this  r,  „     v  ii  393 

Whose  winter-cataracts"  find  a  r  and  leave  it  The  Cup  n  305 

Synorix,  first  Khig,  Camma,  first  Queen  o'  the  R,  „        n  441 

Fairy  r  is  breaking  down  Foresters  II  ii  134 

Richard,  again,  is  king  over  a  »•  He  hardly  knows,  „           rv  387 

What  was  this  r  of  England,  all  the  crowns  ,,           iv  403 
Tho'  vou  should  queen  me  over  all  the  r's  Held  by 

King  Richard,  „           iv  708 

thou  and  others  in  our  kingless  r's  Were  fighting  „           iv  820 

Reap     which  we  Inheriting  r  an  easier  harvest.  Becket  n  ii  194 

I  may  r  something  from  him- — <:ome  upon  her  The  Cup  i  i  179 

Rear     lest  they  r  and  run  And  break  both  Harold  i  i  372 

and  r's  his  root  Beyond  his  head.  The  Cup  n  283 

Reason     mastiff  dog  May  love  a  puppy  cur  for  no 

more  r  Queen  Mary  i  iv  195 

Your  Grace  will  hear  her  r's  from  herself.  „           i  iv  230 

with  right  r,  flies  that  prick  the  flesh.  „           ni  iv  70 

They  had  not  reach'd  right  r ;  little  children !  „          in  iv  73 

What  human  r  is  there  why  my  friend  „             iv  i  68 

Other  r's  There  be  for  this  man's  ending,  „           iv  iii  53 

Is  there  no  r  for  the  wrath  of  Heaven  ?  Harold  i  i  59 

Thy  fears  infect  me  beyond  r.     Peace!  „  iiii451 

Why,  that  is  r  !     Warrior  thou  art,  „  n  ii  542 

And  with  good  r  too,  Becket  i  iii  58 

ay,  or  himself  In  any  r,  „    n  ii  170 

For  this  r.  That,  being  ever  duteous  to  the  King,  „    n  ii  463 

I  hate  him  for  I  hate  him  is  my  r,  „     v  i  231 

Reave     We  fear  that  he  may  r  thee  of  thine  own.  „    i  iii  61 1 

Rebel  (adj.)     that  she  breathes  in  England  Is  life 

and  lungs  to  every  r  birth  Queen  Mary  ni  vi  51 

Your  Grace  hath  been  More  merciful  to  many  a  r 

head  „                v  ii  5 

Our  r  Abbot  then  shall  join  your  hands.  Foresters  iv  933 

Rebel  (s)     (See  also  Co-rebels)     How  traitorously  these 

r's  out  of  Kent  Queen  Mary  n  ii  145 

spoil  and  sackage  aim'd  at  by  these  r's,  „          n  ii  249 

Charing  Cross ;  the  r's  broke  us  there,  „           ii  iv  76 

Heretic  and  r  Point  at  me  and  make  merry.  ..           v  ii  317 

Rebel  (verb)     Will  not  thy  body  r,  man,  if  thou  flatter 

it?  Becket,  Pro.  102 

Rebellion    when  there  rose  a  talk  of  the  late  r.  Queen  Mary  i  i  92 

and  all  r's  lie  Dead  bodies  without  voice.  „          n  i  79 

let  R  Roar  till  throne  rock,  and  crown  fall.  „        li  i  144 

fly  out  and  flare  Into  r's.  „       m  i  284 

so  you  quash  r  too,  „       in  iv  37 

Reborn     In  the  r  salvation  of  a  land  So  noble.  „    m  iii  182 

Rebuilt    Saints,  I  have  r  Your  shrines,  „        v  ii  299 

Rebuked     And  Herbert  hath  r  me  even  now.  Becket  i  i  385 

Recall     Who  now  r's  her  to  His  ancient  fold.  Queen  Mary  in  iii  167 

Recant     It  is  against  all  precedent  to  bum  One  who  r's ;  „              iv  ii  50 

Recantation    read  your  r  Before  the  people  in  St. 

Mary's  Church.  „              ly  ii  27 

Repeat  your  r  in  the  ears  Of  all  men,  „            iv  ii  193 

Well,  they  shall  hear  my  r  there.  ,,            rv  ii  199 

another  r  Of  Cranmer  at  the  stake.  „            iv  iii  299 

after  all  those  papers  Of  r  yield  again,  ,,            iv  iii  315 

Papers  of  r !    Think  you  then  That  Cranmer  read  „            iv  iii  316 

Recanted    on  the  scaffold  R,  and  resold  himself  to  Rome.  „             in  i  152 

He  hath  r  all  his  heresies.  ,.                iv  i  49 

He  hath  r.  Madam.  „                rv  i  54 

I  have  err'd  with  him ;  with  him  I  have  r.  „                iv  i  67 

And  so  you  have  r  to  the  Pope.  „            iv  ii  145 

you  r  all  you  said  Touching  the  sacrament  ,.            iv  iii  261 

Recanting    any  one  r  thus  at  tuU,  As  Cranmer  hath,  ,,               iv  i  59 

but  saved  in  heaven  By  your  r.  „             rv  ii  180 

Receive     Thou  shalt  r  the  penitent  thief's  award,  „              iv  iii  86 
the  King,  till  another  be  appointed,  shall  r  the  revenues 

thereof.'  Becket  i  iii  101 

R  it  from  one  who  cannot  at  present  write  The  Cup  i  i  44 

Dare  beg  him  to  r  his  diamonds  back —  The  Falcon  262 


Received 


1050 


Relic 


Received    His  friends — as  AngeLs  I  r  'em,  Queen  Mary  i  v  625 

again  r  into  the  bosom  And  unity  of  Universal 
Church ; 
Reck    We  r  not  tho'  we  lost  this  crown  of  England — 

You  r  but  little  of  the  Roman  here, 
Reckon     I  r's  they'll  hev'  a  fine  cider-crop  to-year  if 

the  blossom  'owds.  Prom,  of  May  i  315 

Reckoning    people  do  say  that  his  is  bad  beyond  all  r, 

and Rosamund.     The  people  lie. 

Reclaimed     thou  art  r ;  He  brings  thee  home : 
Recognise    Now  you,  that  would  not  r  the  Pope, 
Recommend     I  can  r  ova  Voltigeur.' 
Reconcile    We  come  not  to  condemn,  but  r ; 
Reconciled     Is  r  the  word  ?  the  Pope  again  ? 

the  world  may  know  You  twain  are  r. 
Record     that  thou  keepest  a  r  of  his  birthdays  ? 
Recover    Stay  with  us  in  this  wood,  till  he  r. 
Recover'd    Methought  I  had  r  of  the  Becket, 

I  see  you  quite  r  of  your  wound. 

if  you  be  Not  quite  r  of  your  wound, 

'  I  hope  your  Lordship  is  quite  r  of  your  gout  ?  '    Prom,  of  May  iii  309 
Recoverer     but  our  r  and  upholder  of  customs  hath  Becket  iii  iii  69 

Re-create    And  bid  him  r-c  me,  Gilbert  Foliot.  „      i  iii  126 

Recrost    Crost  and  r,  a  venomous  spider's  web —  „       ii  i  199 

Recurring    And  thousand-times  r  argument  Of  those 

Queen  Mary  rv  ii  93 


„       in  iii  154 

in  iv  55 

The  Cup  I  i  189 


Becket  iii  i  175 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  83 

IV  ii  138 

Prom,  of  May  ni  311 

Queen  Mary  in  iii  186 

„  III  iii  3 

The  Cup  n  69 

Foresters  i  i  221 

n  ii  10 

Becket  v  i  136 

The  Falcon  391 

590 


two  friars 
Red    (See  also  Blood-red,  Human-red,  Stormy-red)    All 

r  and  white,  the  fashion  of  our  land, 
but  took  To  the  Enghsh  r  and  white. 
Her  face  on  flame,  her  r  hair  all  blown  back, 
as  r  as  she  In  hair  and  cheek ; 
She  wore  r  shoes  !    Stafford.    R  shoes  ! 
Not  r  like  Iscariot's. 

Laughs  at  the  last  r  leaf,  and  Andrew's  Day. 
R  gold — a  hundred  purses — ^yea,  and  more ! 
The  nimble,  wild,  r,  wiry,  savage  king — 
He  hath  blown  himself  as  r  as  fire  with  curses, 
and  most  amorous  Of  good  old  r  sound  Uberal  Gascon 

wine :  Becket,  Pro.  100 

This  chart  with  the  r  line !  her  bower !  whose  bower  ?       „       Pro.  308 
Fitzurse,  that  chart  with  the  r  line— thou  sawest  it — 

her  bower. 
A  sight  of  that  same  chart  which  Henry  gave  you 

With  the  r  line — '  her  bower.'  ,.  i  ii  62 

Dash'd  r  with  that  unhallow'd  passover ;  „        i  iii  348 

coming  up  with  a  song  in  the  flush  of  the  glimmer- 


i  V  10 

I  V  18 

II  ii  70 

n  ii  74 

m  i  59 

in  ii  217 

in  iii  87 

Harold  iii  i  18 

„     rv  i 197 

V  i  87 


Pro.  428 


ing  Tf 
What !  have  I  scared  the  r  rose  from  your  face  Into 

your  heart  ? 
hand  R  with  the  sacred  blood  of  Sinnatus  ? 
He  !  .  .  .    He,  with  that  r  star  between  the  ribs, 
that  the  r  wine  Ran  down  the  marble  and  lookt  like  blood, 


II  i  8 

IV  ii  73 

The  Cup  II  84 

„      n  150 

„      n  202 


and  seen  the  r  of  the  battle-field. 

But  a  r  fire  woke  in  the  heart  of  the  town. 

Why,  lass,  what  maakes  tha  sa  r  ? 

R  with  his  own  and  enemy's  blood— 

We  had  it  i'  the  R  King's  time. 
Red-blooded    And,  when  again  r-h,  speak  again ; 
Red-cheek'd     Right  honest  and  r-c ; 
Redden     God  r  your  pale  blood !     But  mine  is  human-red; 

How  the  good  Archbishop  r's  ! 

ambition,  pride  So  bloat  and  r  his  face— 
Redden'd    shown  And  r  with  his  people's  blood 
Redder    Theer  be  r  blossoms  nor  them.  Miss  Dora. 
Redeem    old  Sir  Richard  might  r  his  land. 

Out  of  our  treasury  to  r  the  land. 

And  Sir  Richard  cannot  r  his  land. 
Redeemed    who  hath  r  us  With  His  own  blood. 
Redeemer    O  Son  of  God,  R  of  the  world ! 
Red-faced     '  Adulterous  dog ! '  that  r-f  rage  at  me ! 

Redhats     But  the  King  hath  bought  half  the  College  of  R.    Becket  ii  ii  374 
Redress    He  shall  absolve  you  .  .  .  you  shall  have  r.  „  v  i  87 

Beed    some  are  r's,  that  one  time  sway  to  the  current,  „      i  iii  593 

R  I  rock'd  upon  broken-back'd.  Foresters  n  ii  162 

Re-edify    hath  begun  to  r-e  the  true  temple —  Queen  Mary  i  iii  58 


The  Falcon  549 

Prom,  of  May  i  50 

I  399 

Foresters  ii  i  32 

IV  303 

Harold  iv  iii  208 

Queen  Mary  iii  v  106 

Becket  i  iv  35 

„    v  ii  298 

The  Cv/p  II 170 

HaroU  i  ii  243 

Prom,  of  May  i  85 

Foresters  n  487 

IV  493 

IV  565 

Queen  Mary  in  iii  202 

IV  iii  118 

The  Cup  I  iii  122 


Reeking    The  r  dungf ork  master  of  the  mace  !  Queen  Mary  n  ii  275 

Reel    r's  Now  to  the  right,  then  as  far  to  the  left,  „      rv  iii  395 

Let  all  the  air  r  into  a  mist  of  odour.  The  Cup  n  185 

I  r  beneath  the  weight  of  utter  joy — •  „        ii  450 

Refer    R  my  cause,  my  crown  to  Rome  !  .  .  .  Harold  v  i  1 

r  myself.  The  King,  these  customs,  Becket  i  iii  725 

Re-flame    Stamp  out  tJtie  fire,  or  this  Will  smoulder 

and  r-f.  Queen  Mary  i  v  509' 

Reflected    will  be  r  in  the  spiritual  body  among  the  angels.   Becket,  Pro.  397 

0  my  good  lord,  I  am  but  an  angel  by  r  light.  Foresters  ii  i  108 

Reflection     I  shone  from  him,  for  him,  his  glory,  his  R  :         Becket  i  iii  665 
Reformation     Northiunberland,  The  leader  of  our  R,    Queen  Mary  in  i  149 


Reformer    disaffected,  heretics,  r's,  Look  to  you 
Refractory    be  we  not  in  my  lord's  own  r  ? 
Refrain     We  will  r,  and  not  alone  from  this. 
Refreshment    To  fijid  the  sweet  r  of  the  Saints. 
Reft     Not  only  r  me  of  that  legateship 
Refuge     And  I  can  find  no  r  upon  earth. 

Take  r  in  your  own  cathedral,  (repeat) 
Refuse    and  r.  Reject  him,  and  abhor  him. 

I  r  to  stand  By  the  King's  censure, 
Refused     More  than  once  You  have  r  his  hand. 
Refusing    r  none  That  come  to  Thee  for  succour. 
Regal    were  as  glowing-gay  As  r  gardens  ; 

face  me  out  of  all  My  r  rights. 
Regard    even  drown  you  In  the  good  r  of  Rome. 
Regarding     and  all  men  R  her  ? 
Regather'd     And  be  r  to  the  Papal  fold  ? 
Regent    O  yes  !     In  the  name  of  the  R. 
Regimen    Sir,  no  woman's  r  Can  save  us. 

under  our  Queen's  r  We  might  go  softlier 
Reginald  (Fitzurse,  knight)    {See  also  Fitzurse,  Reginald 
Fitzurse)     Ay  !  what  wouldst  thou,  R  ? 

R,  all  men  know  I  loved  the  Prince. 

I  spake  no  word  of  treachery,  R. 

No,  R,  he  is  dead. 
Reginald  Fitzurse    My  lord,  I  follow'd  R  F. 

R  F !     Fitzurse.     Here,  Madam,  at  your  pleasure. 
Reginald  Pole    (Cardinal  and  Papal  Legate)    (See  also 
Pole)     again  to  her  cousin  R  P,  now  Cardinal ; 

R  P,  what  news  hath  plagued  thy  heart  ? 
Reg'Iar    and  see  that  all  be  right  and  r  fur  'em  afoor 

he  coom. 
Reign  (s)     Suffer  not  That  my  brief  r  in  England 

The  r  of  the  roses  is  done —  (repeat) 

A  r  which  was  no  r, 

looking  thro'  my  r,  I  found  a  hundred  ghastly  murders        „  i  iii  406' 

Reign  (verb)     Madam,  when  the  Roman  wish'd  to  r.       Queen  Mary  i  v  498 

Ay,  for  the  Saints  are  come  to  r  again.  „  n  i  22 

we  will  teach  Queen  Mary  how  to  r.  „  ii  i  148- 

Nay  the  Queen's  right  to  r — ■  „  ii  ii  96 

forfeited  her  right  to  r  By  marriage  with  an  alien —  „  v  i  290 

To  r  is  restless  fence.  Tierce,  quart,  and  trickery.  „         v  v  265 

The  Christian  manhood  of  the  man  who  r's  !  Harold  ii  i  105 

than  to  r  King  of  the  world  without  it.  „     in  ii  44 

let  him  make  it  his  own,  let  him  r  in  it —  Becket  n  i  18 

Reign'd     when  that  which  r  Call'd  itseK  God. —  Harold  m  ii  166 

I  have  r  one  year  in  the  wild  wood.  Foresters  n  i  36 

Reigning     Unto  the  holy  see  and  r  Pope  Serve  God     Queen  Mary  in  iii  158 
Rein  (s)     no  more  r  upon  thine  anger  Than  any  child  !        „  in  iv  302 

Rein  (verb)     If  they  prance,  R  in,  not  lash  them,  Harold  i  i  372 

Reject    and  refuse,  R  him,  and  abhor  him.  Qtieen  Mary  rv  iii  279 

Rejected    you  have  solicited  The  Queen,  and  been  r.  „  i  iv  59 

Rejoice    To  be  your  king,  ye  would  r  thereat, 

blessed  angels  who  r  Over  one  saved 

I  shall  r  To  find  my  stray  sheep  back 
Rejoicing    Might  it  not  be  the  other  side  r  In  his 

brave  end  ? 
Relate    some  r  that  it  was  lost  When  Wyatt  sack'd 
Related    for  I  am  closely  r  to  the  dead  man's  family.    Prom,  of  May  n  715 
Release    full  r  from  danger  of  all  censures  Queen  Mary  m  iii  150 

Relent    0  yet  r.    O,  Madam,  if  you  knew  him  „  iv  i  154 

Relic    '  0  blessed  r's  ! '     '0  Holy  Peter  ! '  Harold  i  ii  170 

Swear  to  me  by  that  r  on  thy  neck.     Prince  John. 

I  sweM  then  by  this  r  on  my  neck —  Foresters  i  ii  16^ 


I  iv  170 

Becket  i  iv  180 

Queen  Mary  Ii  ii  236 

Harold  I  i  177 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  34 

IV  iii  128 

Becket  v  ii  583,  590 

Qv^en  Mary  iv  iii  278 

Becket  i  iii  722 

The  Cup  n  43 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  131 

„  m  ii  14 

Becket  n  ii  166 

The  Cup  I  i  151 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  379 

in  ii  117 

Foresters  i  iii  56 

Queen  Mary  ni  i  122 

in  iv  181 


Becket  i  i  186 

V  ii  333 
v  ii  402 

V  iii  204 
1 1236 

rv  ii  426 

Queen  Mary  i  i  123 
V  ii  17 

Prom,  of  May  1 169 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  302 

Becket,  Pro.  303,  325 

I  iii  340 


n  ii  224 

III  iii  180 

Becket  in  iii  354 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  357  i 
V  ii  503  ; 


Religion 


1051 


Resolved 


Religion    accuse  you  of  indifference  To  all  faiths, 
allr; 

A  soul  with  no  r — ^My  mother  used  to  say 

Yet  if  thro'  any  want —     Harold.     Of  this  r  ? 

Wrong'd  by  the  cruelties  of  his  r's 
Religions    Things  that  seem  jerk'd  out  of  the  common  rut 
Of  Nature  is  the  hot  r  fool, 

One  half  besotted  in  r  rites. 
Relish    a  kind  of  unction  in  it,  a  smack  of  r  about  it. 

Bitters  before  dinner,  my  lady,  to  give  you  a  r. 
Remain    It  then  r's  for  your  poor  Gardiner, 

r  After  the  vanish'd  voice,  and  speak  to  men. 

R  within  the  chamber,  but  apart. 

bishops  down  from  all  Their  thrones  in  England  ? 
I  alone  r. 

R  a  hostage  for  the  loyalty  Of  Godwin's  house.' 

Then  on  thee  r's  the  curse, 

R's  beyond  all  chances  and  all  churches, 

I  r  !     Stigand.     Yea,  so  will  I,  daughter, 

the  Past  R's  the  Past. 

but  he  sent  me  an  alphabetical  list  of  those  that  r, 


Queen  Mary  m  iv  224 

From,  of  May  m  532 

in  541 

m  545 


three  yards  about  the  waist  is  like  to  r  a  virgin, 

I  r  Beside  my  Father's  litter. 

I  r  Mistress  of  mine  own  self  and  mine  own  soul. 
Remain'd    Have  you  r  in  the  true  Catholic  faith 

had  they  r  true  to  me  whose  bread  they  have 
partaken. 
Remainest    thou  r  Gilbert  Foliot,  A  worldly  follower 
Remember    thou  could'st  drink  in  Spain  if  I  r. 

R  how  God  made  the  fierce  fire 

R,  too.  The  triumph  of  St.  Andrew  on  his  cross, 

R  that  sore  saying  spoken  once  By  Him 

Let  all  rich  men  r  that  hard  word. 

I  r  How  I  would  dandle  you  upon  my  knee 

do  you  r  what  you  said  When  last  you  came 

burnt  for  heresy^not  for  treason,  R  that ! 

I  shall  r  this. 

I  shall  r  tliis  Discourtesy. 

R  the  Queen  ! 

I  r  it  well.     There  on  the  moors. 

R  also  one  who  lives  for  thee  Out  there  in  France  ; 

I  shall  R  this.     Becket.     I  do  r  thee  ;  Lest  I  r  thee 
to  the  lion,  go. 

He  dared  not — liar  !  yet,  yet  I  r — I  do  r. 

Doth  he  r  me  ?     Rosamund.     I  warrant  him. 

drowning  man,  they  say,  r's  all  The  chances  of  his  life, 

I  told  thee  that  I  should  r  thee  ! 

Sinnatus,  you  r — yea,  you  must. 

Do  you  r  what  I  told  you  ? 

R  !     Away — ^farewell ! 

Dost  thou  r  when  I  wedded  Sinnatus  ? 

I  do  r  your  first-marriage  fears. 

I  r  Her  bright  face  beaming  starlike 

I  r,  Scarlet  hacking  down  A  hollow  ash, 
Rememberest    Ha,  Becket !  thou  r  our  talk  ! 
Remembering    r  how  yourself  have  changed, 

r  One  who  died  for  thee. 
Remission    r  Of  half  that  subsidy  levied 
Remnant    To  yield  the  r  of  his  years  to  heaven. 
Remorse    doubt  The  man's  conversion  and  r  of  heart, 


Harold  i  i  139 

The  Cup  I  i  74 

Foresters  i  i  87 

m  435 

Queen  Mary  i  v  220 

IV  iii  163 

V  iii  12 

Harold  i  i  52 

„     in  i  90 

„  in  1314 

„  ni  ii  182 

„     V  i  458 

Prom,  of  May  ii  506 

m  29 

Foresters  i  ii  70 

IV  604 

IV  728 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  17 


Becket  i  iv  149 

„     I  iii  541 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  39 

IV  iii  89 

IV  iii  93 
IV  iii  202 
IV  iii  206 

V  ii  140 

V  ii  567 
vvl41 

Becket  i  i  232 

1 1238 

I  iv  201 

ni51 

n  i  309 

IV  ii  290 
vi211 

V  ii  177 

V  ii  273 

V  iii  158 
The  Cv/p  I  ii  400 

I  iii  3 

I  iii  114 

nl93 

n206 

Prom,  of  May  n  247 

Foresters  n  ii  95 

Becket,  Pro.  404 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  155 

Becket  ii  i  307 

Queen  Mary  i  v  114 

III  vi  210 

IV  iii  108 
yet — Why  feel  r,  he,  knowing  that  he  must  Prom,  of  May  ii  265 
R  then  is  a  part  of  Destiny,                                                    >,  n  268 

Remorseless     Felt  the  r  outdraught  of  the  deep  Haul  like 

a  great  strong  fellow  Harold  n  i  9 

Remove    Your  Lordship  may  not  have  so  long  to 

wait.     R  him  !  Queen  Mary  n  iv  108 

Removed    had  to  be  r  lest  living  Spain  „  m  i  27 
Renard    (Simon,  Spanish  Amba^ador)    (See  also  Simon, 

Simon  Benard)    O  i?,  I  am  much  beset,  „  i  v  384 

talk  so  foully  of  your  Prince,  R?  „  i  v  427 

No,  R  ;  it  must  never  come  to  this.  „  i  v  481 

O,  Master  R,  Master  R,  If  you  have  falsely  painted  „  i  v  596 

No  woman  ever  love  you,  Master  R.  „  i  v  602 

Methought  I  smelt  out  R  in  the  letter,  „  n  ii  119 

Bear  witness,  R,  that  I  live  and  die  „  n  iv  41 


Renard  (Simon,  Spanish  Ambassador)  {continued) 
the  Chancellor  sharpen'd  them. 

there's  no  R  here  to  '  catch  her  tripping.' 

R  denied  her,  Ev'n  now  to  me. 

But,  R,  I  am  sicker  staying  here 

With  R.     Still  Parleying  with  R,  all  the  day  with  R, 

Good  !     R,  I  will  stay  then. 

Ay,  R,  if  you  caie  to  put  it  so. 
Rend    — ay,  and  r  The  renders  too. 

The  King  may  r  the  bearer  limb  from  limb. 

Quarrel  of  Crown  and  Church — to  r  again. 

Take  heed  he  do  not  turn  and  r  you  too  : 

would  r  away  Eyesight  and  manhood. 

They  howl  for  thee,  to  r  thee  head  from  limb. 
Render  (s)     ay,  and  rend  The  r's  too. 
Render  (verb)    Pope  would  have  you  make  them  r  these ; 


R  and 

Qu£en  Mary  lu  i  5 

m  vl59- 

III  vi  2 

in  vi  8& 

ni  vi  115 

vi305 

vi309 

V  ii  269 

Becket  i  i  378 

II  ii  56- 

„     n  ii  160 

„    ivii284 

The  Cup  I  ii  321 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  270 

I  V  404 


kindly  rendering  Of  '  R  unto  Caesar.'  .  .  .    The 

Good  Shepherd  !     Take  this,  and  r  that.  Harold  in  ii  168 

Rendering    kindly  r  Of  '  Render  unto  Caesar.'  ...  „      ni  ii  167 

Rending    The  prey  they  are  r  from  her —  Queen  Mary  v  ii  268 

Renounce    — I  here  r  them  all ;  „         iv  iii  245 

Rent  (s)     would  fight  for  his  r's,  his  leases,  his  houses,  Foresters  i  i  233 

Rent  (verb)  She  came  upon  it,  read  it,  and  then  r  it,  Queen  Mary  in  vi  142 
tore  away  My  marriage  ring,  and  r  my  bridal  veil ;  Harold  i  ii  80- 

Repaid    if  they  were  not  r  within  a  limited  time  your 

land  should  be  forfeit.  Foresters  iv  467 

Repay     Do  here  and  now  r  you  sixty-fold,  Qu^en  Mary  in  iii  199 

Repeal    Towards  the  abrogation  and  r  Of  all  such  laws.      „  ni  iii  141 


Repeat     I'll  r  it.     Elizabeth.     No  ! 

See  that  you  neither  hear  them  nor  r  ! 

An  overmuch  severeness,  I  r, 

R  your  recantation  in  the  ears  Of  all  men, 

R  them  to  their  music. 
Repeated     Ay,  and  r  them  as  often — mum  ! 
Repeating    I  will  not  vex  you  by  r  them — 
Repent    Grace  to  r  and  sorrow  for  their  schism  ; 

pardon  due  To  him  that  so  r's, 

as  the  libertine  r's  who  cannot  Make  done  undone, 

if  thou  didst  r  thy  courtesy  even  in  the  doing  it. 
Repentant     R  of  his  errors  ? 
Repented    As  for  what  I  did  I  sufier'd  and  r. 

He  hath  clean  r  of  his  Nomianism. 
Repeopled    Much  corn,  r  towns,  a  realm  again. 
Replace    cut  the  canvas  out ;  We  can  r  it. 
Report  (s)     I  have  to  make  r  of  my  good  earldom 

Save  for  some  slight  r  in  her  own  Senate 

and  if  her  beauties  answer  their  r. 
Report  (verb)     and  hundreds  more  ;  So  they  r : 

foreign  courts  r  him  in  his  mamier 
Reported    (I  have  a  daughter  in  her  service  who  r  it) 

Lord  Fitzurse  r  this  In  passing  to  the  Castle 
Reproach    Still  plied  him  with  entreaty  and  r : 

We  have  parted  from  our  wife  without  r, 

smiles,  not  tears  ;  Good  wishes,  not  r's  ; 
Re-pulpited    r-p  The  Shepherd  of  St.  Peter, 
Repulse    the  fine  attractions  and  r's, 
Request    I  never  heard  of  this  r  of  thine. 
Requesting    if  you,  At  my  r,  will  but  look  into 
Requicken'd    be  No  longer  a  dead  letter,  but  r. 

Before  these  bitter  statutes  be  r. 
Require    can  deny  Nothing  to  you  that  you  r  of  him. 
Lady  Giovanna.     Then  I  r  you  to  take  back 
your  diamonds — 
Requite     With  a  wanton  in  thy  lodging — Hell  r  'em  ! 
Rescue    Or  seek  to  r  me.    I  thank  the  Council. 
Rescued    sends  you  this  cup  r  from  the  burning 

Is  that  the  cup  you  r  from  the  fire  ? 
Reseat     R  him  on  h^  throne  of  Canterbury, 
Resistance    and  the  Queen  hath  no  force  for  r. 

I  had  counsell'd  him  To  rest  from  vain  r. 

we  must  Move  in  the  line  of  least  r 
Resold    on  the  scafiold  Recanted,  and  r  himself  to 

Rome. 
Resolve    fierce  r  and  fixt  heart-hate  in  men 
Resolved    Do  ye  stand  fast  by  that  which  ye  r  ? 


I  iv  126 

IV  577 

in  iv  156 

IV  ii  193 

The  Falcon  454 

Queen  Mary  i  v  580- 

Prom,,  of  May  n  403 

Queen  Mary  in  iii  177 

„  rv  iii  34 

Harold  in  i  31 

Foresters  i  ii  243 

Qv^een  Mary  iv  iii  22 

m  iv  259 

Harold  in  i  30' 

Becket  i  iii  377 

Queen  Mary  v  v  184 

Harold  I  i  406 

The  Cup  I  ii  133 

Foresters  I  ii  28 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  13 

„        V  ii  511 

I  i  76 

Becket  i  ii  12 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  577 

Harold  v  i  155 

Prom,  of  May  i  526 

Queen  Mary  i  v  180 

Becket,  Pro.  500 

The  Cup  n  394 

Becket  n  ii  115 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  10- 

„        m  iv  197 


The  Falcon  718 

Becket  i  ii  10 

Qv£en  Mary  iv  ii  38 

The  Cup  li^ 

I  i  71 

Becket  ii  ii  118 

Queen  Mary  n  i  140 

The  Cup  n  414 

Prom,  of  May  II  610 

Queen  Mary  m  i  152 

m  vi  32 

m  iii  103- 


Respect 


1052 


Revolt 


Respect    We  have  r  for  man's  immortal  soul, 
he's  no  r  for  the  Queen,  or  the  parson,  or  the 
justice  o'  peace,  or  O'VFt. 
Respite    a  boon,  my  king,  R,  a  holiday  : 
Rest  (remainder)     the  r  of  England  bow'd  theirs  to 
the  Norman, 
Should  look  more  goodly  than  the  r  of  us. 
why  should  I  be  bolder  than  the  r, 
Bless  thou  too  That  brother  whom  I  love  beyond 

the  r, 
The  r  you  see  is  colour'd  green — 
Cursed  Fitzurse,  and  all  the  r  of  them 
Coom  along  then,  all  the  r  o'  ye  ! 
I'll  git  the  book  agean,  and  larn  mysen  the  r, 
he,  young  Scarlet,  and  he,  old  Much,  and  all  the  r 
of  us. 
Rest  (repose)    says  That  r  is  all — tells  me  I  must  not 
think — • 
All  is  well  then ;  r — I  will  to  r ;  he  said,  I  must 

have  r. 
Shall  I  not  help  your  Lordship  to  your  r  ? 
He  hath  retired  to  r,  and  being  in  great  jeopardy 
And  how  I  long  for  r.' 
Rest  (verb)     my  good  mother  came  (God  r  her  soul) 
the  happy  haven  Where  he  shall  r  at  night, 
That  you  might  r  among  us,  till  the  Pope, 
Let  dead  things  r. 

That  I  must  r — I  shall  r  by  and  by. 
maims  himself  against  the  bars,  say  '  r  ' :  Why,  you 

must  kill  him  if  you  would  have  him  r — 
Nay,  r  a  week  or  two, 
That  I  might  r  as  calmly  ! 
I  needs  must  r. 

To  r  upon  thy  bosom  and  forget  him — 
B  in  our  realm,  and  be  at  peace  with  all. 
Let  me  r.     I'll  call  you  by  and  by. 
R  you  easy,  For  I  am  easy  to  keep. 
I  had  counsell'd  him  To  r  from  vain  resistance. 
God  r  his  honest  soul,  he  bought  'em  for  me. 
Show  me  some  cave  or  cabin  where  I  may  r. 
Rested    some  waxen  doll  Thy  baby  eyes  have  r  on. 
Restless     To  reign  is  r  fence. 

Restore    we  r  you  to  the  bosom  And  unity  of  Universal 
Church, 
and  r  his  kin,  Reseat  him  on  his  throne 
Have  I  not  promised  to  r  her,  Thomas, 
Restored    I  shall  have  my  tetrachy  r  By  Rome, 
Restriction    may  fence  round  his  power  with  r, 
Resurrection    to  be  wakened  again  together  by  the 

light  of  the  r. 
Retinue    with  the  r  of  three  kings  behind  him,  out- 

royalling  royalty  ? 
Retire     Permission  of  her  Highness  to  r  To  Ashridge, 
You  are  fresh  from  brighter  lands.     R  with  me, 
Her  Highness  is  unwell.     I  will  r. 
There  was  no  room  to  advance  or  to  r. 
Retired    He  hath  r  to  r&st,  and  being  in  great  jeopardy 
Retiring  (part.)     R  into  cloistral  solitude  To  yield 
Retiring  (s)    or  is  it  but  the  past  That  brightens 

in  r  ? 
Retract    and  r  That  Eucharistic  doctrine  in  your 

book. 
Return  (s)    {See  also  Home-return)    Who  loathe  you 
for  your  late  r  to  Rome, 
Takes  nothing  in  r  from  you  except  R  of  his 

affection — 
Many  happy  r's  of  the  day,  father. 
I  tnist  that  your  r — for  you  know,  my  dear, 
This  is  the  gala-day  of  thy  r. 
whose  r  Builds  up  our  house  again  ? 
Return  (verb)     will  r  mto  the  one  true  fold, 
and  I  r  As  Peter,  but  to  bless  thee : 
Yet  will  I  be  your  swallow  and  r — 
R,  And  tell  him  that  I  know  he  comes  no  more. 
R  to  Sens,  where  we  will  care  for  you. 


Harold  ii  ii  500 

Prom,  of  May  1 132 
Harold  I  i  227 

Queen  Mary  u  i  159 

II  ii  349 

III  i  438 

Harold  m  i  295 

Becket,  Pro.  171 

„       II  ii  271 

Prom,  of  May  i  442 

m  13 

Foresters  in  61 

Queen  Mary  v  v  62 

vv  186 

Becket  i  i  2 

„  I  iv  262 

Prom,  of  May  iii  206 

Queen  Mary  i  v  11 

„     IV  iii  580 

V  ii  47 

V  ii  506 

V  V  64 

V  V  68 
Harold  II  ii  179 

„         in  i  44 

V  i  229 
Becket  ii  i  31 

„  iiii448 

„       V  i  89 

„    vii512 

The  Cup  II  414 

The  Falcon  49 

Foresters  ii  i  131 

Quee^i  Mary  i  v  9 

V  V  265 

„     ni  iii  220 

Becket  ii  ii  116 

„    III  iii  183 

The  Cup  I  i  20 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  172 

Prom,  of  May  in  197 

Becket,  Pro.  444 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  236 

„       III  iv  322 

„         V  ii  247 

Foresters  IV  534 

Becket  I  iv  262 

Qiceen  Mary  in  vi  209 

Prom,  of  May  ii  645 

Q.ueen  Mary  iv  ii  80 

IV  ii  32 

The  Falcon  716 

Provi.  of  May  I  350 

m  421 

Foresters  iv  960 

„      IV 1008 

Qv^en  Mary  i  iii  22 

„  m  ii  55 

V  i  91 

V  ii  588 
Becket  II  ii  444 


Becket  in  i  249 
„  V  ii  194 
The  Cup  I  i  142 
I  ii  179 
I  ii  206 
I  ii  310 
I  ii  334 
I  iii  54 
I  iii  61 
The  Falcon  69 
247 
540 
711 
727 
729 
793 
861 

Prom,  of  May  i  627 

I  759 

Foresters  ii  ii  170 

ra  115 


Return  (verb)  (continued)     And,  being  scratch'd,  r's  to  his 
true  rose. 

His  child  and  mine  own  soul,  and  so  r. 

I  here  r  like  Tarquin — for  a  crown. 

R's  with  this  Antonius. 

You,  Strato,  make  good  cheer  till  I  r. 

Or  tell  him,  if  you  will,  when  you  r, 

R  and  tell  him  Synorix  is  not  here. 

Within  the  holy  shrine  of  Artemis,  And  so  r. 

I  tinst  she  will  r. 

She  should  r  thy  necklace  then. 

Will  he  not  pray  me  to  r  his  love — 

Was  yet  too  bashful  to  r  for  it  ? 

My  lord,  I  have  a  present  to  r  you, 

I  came  In  person  to  r  them. 

If  the  phrase  '  R  '  displease  you,  we  will  say — 

Shall  I  r  to  the  castle  with  you  ? 

And  so  r — Heaven  help  him  ! — to  our  son. 

And  when  will  you  r  ?     Edgar.     I  cannot  tell 
precisely ; 

but  call  for  PhiUp  when  you  will.  And  he  r's. 

Never  to  r  again, 

thou  feel'st  with  me  The  ghost  r's  to  Marian, 

When  wilt  thou  r  ?     Richard.     R,I?  when  ?  when 

Richard  mil  r.  „  iv  417 

I  trust  We  shall  r  to  the  wood.  „        iv  1052 

Return'd    deem  This  love  by  you  r  as  heartily  ;  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  197 

glance  of  some  distaste.  Or  so  methought,  r.  „  m  i  101 

that  hath  r  To  the  one.  Catholic  Universal  Church,  „  iv  iii  20 

Thomas,  I  would  thou  hadst  r  to  England,  Becket  v  ii  12 

On  a  Tuesday  from  mine  exile  I  r,  „   v  ii  293 

But  hath  she  yet  r  thy  love  ?  The  Falcon  66 

happy  was  the  prodigal  son,  For  he  r  to  the  rich  father  ;  „        142 

Hath  she  r  thy  love  ?     Count.     Not  yet  !  „         513 

They  say  your  sister,  Dora,  has  r.  Prom,  of  May  i  546 

almost  think  she  half  r  the  pressure  Of  mine.        .  „  n  627 

That  John  last  week  r  to  Nottingham,  Foresters  in  147 

Returning    Louis  R,  ah  I  to  drive  thee  from  his  realm.  Becket  n  ii  41 8 

Revel  (s)     loom  Across  their  lamps  of  r,  Harold  ii  ii  407 

Reaction  needs  must  follow  r — yet —  Prom,  of  May  n  264 

Revel  (verb)     It  is  our  forest  custom  they  should  r  Along 

with  Robin.  Foresters  in  174 

Reveller    See  Co-reveller 

Revelling    You  see  they  have  been  r,  and  I  fear 
Revelry    So  the  wine  run,  and  there  be  r. 

Thou  and  I  will  still  their  revelries  presently. 
Revenge     But  dreading  God's  r  upon  this  realm 

Of  this  dead  King,  who  never  bore  r. 

I  heard  him  swear  r. 

I  follow  out  my  hate  and  my  r. 

You  bad  me  take  r  another  way — • 
Revenged    Thus  then  thou  art  r — 
Revenue    Meanwhile  the  r's  are  mine. 

King,  till  another  be  appointed,  shall  receive  the  r's 
thereof.' 

King  Demands  a  strict  account  of  all  those  r's 

With  r's,  realms,  and  golden  provinces 

wasted  his  r's  in  the  service  of  our  good  king  Richard 
Reverence  (s)     Our  silence  is  our  r  for  the  king  ! 

Who  have  that  r  for  him  that  I  scarce 

honey  from  an  old  oak,  saving  your  sweet  r's. 
Reverence  (verb)     Knowing  how  much  you  r  Holy 
Church, 

I  r  all  women,  bad  me,  dying. 
Reverend    Thro'  this  most  r  Father,  absolution.  Queen  Mary  m  iii  148  | 

For  how  should  r  prelate  or  throned  prince  Brook  ? 

for  an  hour  „  iv  iii  542 

Reverential    whether  from  maiden  fears  Or  r  love  for 

him  I  loved.  The  Cup  ii  197 

Reversed    Ye  have  r  the  attainder  laid  on  us  Queen  Mary  in  iii  194 

2?  his  doom,  and  that  you  might  not  seem  „  v  ii  51 

Revived    And  others  of  our  Parliament,  r,  „  mi  326 

Revoked     Ay  ...  if  the  king  have  not  r  his  promise.  Harold  ii  ii  610 

Revolt  (s)    all  of  us  abhor  The  venomous,  bestial, 

devilish  r  Of  Thomas  Wyatt.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  287 


Becket  v  ii  421 

Queen  Mary  m  ii  236 

Foresters  i  ii  24 

Harold  i  i  172 

V  ii  85 

Becket  i  i  280 

„    IV  ii  151 

„    iviil52 

Harold  v  i  288 

Becket,  Pro.  413 


„       I  iii  101 

I  iii  651 

v  ii  346 

Foresters  i  i  193 

Harold  iv  i  13 

The  Falcon  260 

Foresters  ii  i  297 

Becket  i  ii  48 
Foresters  n  i  40 


Revolt 


1053 


Ride 


Revolt  (s)  {continued)     A  cry  !     What's  that  ? 

Elizabeth  ?  r  ? 
Revolt  (verb)     Good,  then,  they  will  r : 

would  hold  out,  yea,  tho'  they  should  r — 
Reward    shall  have  a  hundred  pountls  for  r.' 

Have  courage,  your  r  is  Heaven  itself. 
Rheumatics    See  Roomatics 
Rheumatizy  (Rheumatism)    Eh,  my  r  be  that  bad 

howiver 
Rhyme  (s)     And  head  them  with  a  lamer  r  of  mine, 
A  true  r.     Lady.     Cut  with  a  diamond  ; 

I  could  so  play  about  it  with  the  r ■     Henry. 

the  heart  were  lost  in  the  r 
May  plaister  his  clean  name  with  scurrilous  r's  ! 
for  my  verses  if  the  Latin  r's  be  rolled  out  from  a  full 

mouth  ? 
shall  we  say  this  wreath  and  your  sweet  r's  ? 
Your  worship  may  find  another  r  if  you  care 
Rhyme  (verb)     To  read  and  r  in  solitary  fields, 
Rhyming    written  scroll  That  seems  to  run  in  r's. 
Rib     plunge  Our  boat  hath  burst  her  r's  ; 

thou  wouldst  hug  thy  Cupid  till  his  r's  cracked — 
with  that  red  star  between  the  r's, 
how  bare  and  spare  I  be  on  the  r : 
Spare  me  thy  spare  r's,  I  pray  thee  ; 
Back  and  side  and  hip  and  r. 
Ribald     No  r  John  is  Love,  no  wanton  Prince, 
Ribaldry    O  dnmken  r  !     Out,  beast !  out,  bear  ! 
Ribbon     I  ask'd  A  r  from  her  hair  to  bind  it  with  ; 

this  faded  r  was  the  mode  In  Florence 
Rich     I  left  her  with  r  jf wels  in  her  hand. 
To  be  of  r  advantage  to  our  realm, 
for  his  heart  was  r,  Of  such  fine  mould, 
'  How  hard  it  is  For  the  r  man  to  enter  into  Heaven ; ' 

Let  all  r  men  remember  that  hard  word. 
Till  all  men  have  their  Bible,  r  and  poor. 
She  r  enough  to  have  bought  it  for  herself  ! 
happy  was  the  prodigal  son.  For  he  retum'd  to  the  r 

father ; 
And  yet  I  never  saw  The  land  so  r  in  blossom  as  this 

year. 
They  seem'd  too  r  a  prize  To  trust  with  any  messenger. 
I  remember  Her  bright  face  beaming  starlike  down 

upon  me  Thro'  that  r  cloud  of  blossom.  Prom,  of  May  ii  250 

I'll  cleave  to  you  r  or  poor.  Foresters  i  i  155 

green  earth  drink  Her  health  along  with  us  in  this  r 

draught,  „       ni  351 

And  this  r  Sheriff  too  has  come  between  us ;  „  iv  57 

While  Richard  hath  outlaw'd  himself,  and  helps  Nor  r, 

nor  poor.  „        iv  362 

Richard  (de  Brito,  knight  of  the  hoiisehold  of  King 
Henry  n.)    {See  also  Brito,  De  Brito)     R, 

if  he  be  mine — I  hope  him  mine.  Becket  v  i  130 

Richard  (Lea)    {See  also  Richard  Lea,  Richard  of  the  Lea) 
these  lilies  to  lighten  Sir  R's  black  room, 
Sir  R  and  my  Lady  Marian  fare  wellnigh  as  sparely 

as  their  people. 
Sir  R  was  told  he  might  be  ransomed 
Sir  R  must  scrape  and  scrape  till  he  get  to  the  land 

again. 
My  guests  and  friends.  Sir  R, 
the  Earl  and  Sir  R  come  this  way. 
You  shall  wait  for  mine  till  Sir  R  has  paid  the  Abbot. 

0  good  Sir  R,  I  am  sorry  my  exchequer 
Farewell,  Sir  R  ;  farewell,  sweet  Marian. 
She  and  Sir  R  Have  past  away, 
but  see  fair  play  Betwixt  them  and  Sir  R — 
Sir  R,  it  was  agreed  when  you  borrowed 
and  thus  This  old  Sir  R  might  redeem  his  land. 
And  Sir  R  cannot  redeem  his  land. 
Sir  R  paid  his  monies  to  the  Abbot.     . 

1  thank  thee,  good  Sir  R. 

O  good  Sir  R,  I  am  like  the  man  In  Holy  Writ, 
Sir  R,  let  that  wait  till  we  have  dined. 
Kiss  him,  Sir  R — kiss  him,  my  sweet  Marian. 


Queen  Mary  v  v  187 

I  V  174 

Harold  ii  ii  554 

Queen  Mary  n  iii  61 

y  ii  108 


Queen  Mary  iv  iii  475 
u  i  29 
„  ni  V  24 

That 

Becket,  Pro.  382 
I  i  309 


„       II  ii  337 

The  Falcon  735 

Foresters  ii  i  322 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  51 

The  Falcon  432 

Harold  ii  i  3 

Becket,  Pro.  504 

The  Cup  n  151 

Foresters  i  i  50 

I  i  53 

„     n  ii  120 

IV  46 

Becket  i  i  230 

The  Falcon  359 

422 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  242 

u  ii  235 

IV  i  169 

IV  iii  205 

V  V  248 
The  Falcon  62 

142 


342 
725 


Foresters  i  i  3 

I  i  30 
„       I  i  63 

I  i  78 

„  I  ii  78 

„  1  ii  148 

„  I  ii  232 

„  Iii  271 

.,  I  ii  284 

„  TI  i  119 

IV  99 

„  rv  465 

„  IV  487 

„  IV  564 

„  IV  849 

„  IV  858 

„  IV  980 

„  IV  991 

„  IV  1003 


Richard  (the  First,  Coeur  de  Lion)  wasted  his  revenues 
in  the  service  of  our  good  king  R  against  the  party 
of   John,   as  I  have  done,  as  I  have  done :  and 

where  if  R?  Foresters  i  i  194 

I  beheved  this  Abbot  of  the  party  of  King  R,  „       i  i  267 

This  Robin,  this  Earl  of  Huntingdon — he  is  a  friend 

°^  -^^  „        I  i  282 

Long  live  R,  Robin  and  R  !     Long  live  R\  „          i  ii  l 

Love  live  Robin,  Robin  and  R  I  "        i  ii  14 

'  Long  live  King  Rl'  "        i  ii  25 

0  Lord,  I  will  live  and  die  for  King  R —  i  ii  35 
there  is  a  lot  of  wild  fellows  in  Sherwood  Forest  who 

hold  by  King  R.  j  ii  ^4 

but  we  have  no  news  of  R  yet,  "        i  ii  95 

not  answer  it,  my  lord,  till  King  R  come  home  again.  ,','      i  ii  141 

you  be  of  those  who  hold  more  by  John  than  R.  „      i  ii  199 

1  am  John's  till  R  come  back  again,  and  then  I 

am  R's.  „      I  ii  202 

I  cannot  answer  thee  till  R  come.  i  ii  221 
till  he  join  King  R  in  the  Holy  Land.     Robin. 

Going  to  the  Holy  Land  to  R  I  „       i  ii  238 

by  this  Holy  Cross  Which  good  King  R  gave  me  "      x  ii  310 

good  fellows  there  in  merry  Sherwood  That  hold  by  R,  „     i  iii  100 

They  hold  by  R — the  wild  wood  !  „     i  iii  110 

I  held  for  R,  and  I  hated  John.  "        n  i  52 

she  will  not  marry  till  R  come,  "       n  jj  34 

Art  thou  for  R,  or  allied  to  John  ?  "        ly  135 

But  I  am  more  for  R  than  for  John.  ,"       rv  I6O 

Still  I  am  more  for  R  than  for  John.  "       rv  329 

and  serve  King  R  save  thou  be  A  traitor  or  a  goose  ?  ",        iv  351 
For  Robin  is  no  scatterbrains  like  R,  Robin's  a  wise 

man,  R  a  wiseacre,  jy  355 

While  R  hath  outlaw'd  himself,  \\        ly  360 

R's  the  king  of  courtesy,  "^       jy  352 

R  sacks  and  wastes  a  town  With  random  pillage,  ,'       iv  376 

R  risks  his  life  for  a  straw.  So  lies  in  prison —  „       rv  382 

R,  again,  is  king  over  a  realm  He  hardly  knows,  „        rv  387 

Again  this  R  is  the  lion  of  Cyprus,  „        ly  391 

to  R  when  he  flung  His  life,  heart,  .,        rv  405 

Return,  I  ?  when  ?  when  R  will  return.  „'        iv  419 

Father,  I  cannot  marry  till  R  comes.  „        jy  648 

save  King  R,  when  he  comes,  forbid  me.  „        ly  664 
Tho'  you  should  queen  me  over  all  the  realms  Held 

by  King  R,  „        jy  709 

When  R  comes  he  is  soft  enough  to  pardon  „       rv  746 

and  she  will  not  marry  till  R  come.  „        rv  773 

a  traitor  coming  In  R's  name —  „        ly  781 
Maid  Marian.     Marian.     Yes,  King  R.    King 
Richard.     Thou  wouldst  marry  This  Sheriff 

when  King  R  came  „        ly  860 

Give  me  that  hand  which  fought  for  R  there.  „      ly  1030 
Richard  (the  Third)    Who's  a-passing  ?    King  Edward 

or  King  R  ?  Queen  Mary  i  i  32 

Had  holpen  R's  tottering  throne  to  stand,  „       ni  i  114 
Richard  Lea    {See  also  Richard,  Richard  of  the  Lea)    We 

heard  Sir  R  L  was  here  with  Robin.  Foresters  iv  978 
Richard  of  the  Lea    {See  also  Richard,  Richard  Lea)    I  come 

here  to  see  this  daughter  of  Sir  ^  o  <  i  „      i  ii  27 

Robin,  I  am  Sir  R  0  t  L.  „    n  i  441 

Where  is  this  old  Siv  R  ot  L?  „      iv  438 

Where  is  this  laggard  R  0  t  L?  „      iv  449 

Richer    Was  not  the  year  when  this  was  gather'd  r  ?  The  Falcon  345 

R  than  all  the  wide  world-wealth  of  May,  „          466 
Our  Lady's  blessed  shrines  throughout  the  land  Be 

all  the  r  for  us.  Foresters  iv  1081 

Riches     '  Better  a  man  without  r,  than  r  without  a  man.'  The  Falcon  751 
Richest    Drew  here  the  r  lot  from  Fate,  to  live  And  die 

together.  The  Cup  11  442 

For  he  would  marry  me  to  the  r  man  In  Florence ;  The  Falcon  747 

Rid     This  last  to  r  thee  of  a  world  of  brawls  !  Becket  v  iii  198 
Ridden    {See  also  Fancy-ridd'n)     1  have  r  night  and  day 

from  Pevensey—  Harold  iv  iii  192 

tho'  we  have  been  a  soldier,  and  r  by  his  lordship's 

side,  The  Falcon  548 

Ride    To-morrow  we  will  r  with  thee  to  Harfleur,  Harold  11  ii  195 


Bide 


1054 


Risen 


Bide  {continued)    To-morrow  will  we  r  with  thee  to 

Harfleur.  Harold  u  ii  647 

To-morrow  will  I  r  with  thee  to  Harfleur.  „      ii  ii  769 

He  r's  abroad  with  armed  followers,  Becket  v  i  2 
'  Will  your  Ladyship  r  to  cover  to-day  ?                  Prom,  of  May  ni  310 

mayhap  r  a-hawking  with  the  help  of  the  men.  Foresters  i  i  213 

Bidley  (Bishop  of  London)    Hooper,  R,  Latimer  will 

not  fly.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  14 

Cranmer  and  Hooper,  R  and  Latimer,  „     iii  iv  424 

Latimer  Had  a  brief  end — not  R.  „      iv  ii  225 

I  saw  the  deaths  of  Latimer  and  R.  „     iv  iii  295 

And  you  saw  Latimer  and  R  die  ?  „     iv  iii  328 

R  was  longer  burning ;  but  he  died  As  manfully  „     iv  iii  342 

'  not  tiU  I  hears  ez  Latimer  and  R  be  a-vire ; '  „     iv  iii  509 

\Mien  we  had  come  where  R  burnt  with  Latimer,  „     iv  iii  585 

Bidley-soldier    Our  R-s's  and  our  Latimer-sailors  „     iv  iii  348 

Rift  (s)     The  r  that  nms  between  me  and  the  King.  Becket  i  i  140 

that  the  r  he  made  May  close  between  us,  „   n  ii  131 

Rift  (verb)    and  r's  the  tower  to  the  rock,  The  Cup  ii  293 

Rifted    Taken  the  r  pillars  of  the  wood  For  smooth  stone 
columns  of  the  sanctuary. 

Right  (adj.  and  adv.)     By  God's  light  a  noble  creature,  r 


royal ! 


Harold  i  ii  100 

Queen  Mary  i  i  69 
I  iii  50 


He  says  r ;  by  the  mass  we'll  have  no  mass  here. 
This  dress  was  made  me  as  the  Earl  of  Devon  To 

take  my  seat  in ;  looks  it  not  r  royal  ?  „  i  iv  74 

You  do  r  well — I  do  not  care  to  know ;  „  i  iv  188 

Now  what  I  am  ye  know  r  well — ^your  Queen ;  „  ii  ii  162 
R,  your  Grace.     Paget,  you  are  all  for  this  poor  life 

of  ours,  „  m  iv  58 

They,  with  r  reason,  flies  that  prick  the  flesh.  „  in  iv  70 

They  had  not  reach'd  r  reason ;  little  children !  „  in  iv  73 
for  you  know  R  well  that  you  yourself  have  been 

supposed  ,.  Ill  iv  225 

R  honest  and  red  cheek'd ;  Robin  was  violent,  „  in  v  106 

A  r  rough  life  and  healthful.  „  ui  v  260 

I  know  them  heretics,  but  r  English  ones.  „  rv  iii  344 
Said  I  not  r  ?     For  how  should  reverend  prelate  or 

throned  prince  „  rv  iii  541 

there  is  the  r  hand  stiU  Beckons  me  hence.  „  v  v  136 
Knowing  r  well  with  what  a  tenderness  He  loved  my  son.    Becket  v  i  20 

At  the  r  hand  of  Power — Power  and  great  gloiy —  „  v  iii  193 
R.  Back  again.  How  many  of  you  are  there  ?  The  Cup  i  iii  11 
having  his  r  hand  Lamed  in  the  battle,  wrote  it  with 


his  left 
Ay,  but  you  turn  r  ugly  when  you're  in  an  ill 

temper ; 
and  see  that  aU  be  r  and  reg'lar  fur  'em  afoor  he 

coom. 
and  I'd  drive  the  plow  straait  as  a  line  r  i'  the 

faace  o'  the  sun. 
But  now  you  will  set  all  r  again. 
Come,  you  will  set  aU  r  again,  and  father  Will 

not  die  miserable.' 
Count  the  money  and  see  if  it's  all  r. 
Sister  Agatha  is  r. 
i2  as  an  Oxford  scholar,  but  the  boy  was  taken  prisoner 

by  the  Moors. 
There,  there !     You  see  I  was  r. 
Had  I  a  bulrush  now  in  this  r  hand  For  sceptre, 
Rogue,  I  have  a  swoUen  vein  in  my  r  1^, 
Bi^t  (s)     Nay  the  Queen's  r  to  reign — 

on  vou.  In  your  own  city,  as  her  r,  my  Lord, 

and  his  r  came  down  to  me, 

Your  r's  and  charters  hobnail'd  into  slush — 

And  let  the  Pope  trample  our  r's, 

Declare  the  Queen's  r  to  the  throne ; 

I  do  hold  The  Catholic,  if  he  have  the  greater  r, 

reels  Now  to  the  r,  then  as  far  to  the  left, 

And  thrust  his  r  into  the  bitter  flame ; 

Who  know  my  r,  and  love  me, 

what  r  had  he  to  get  himself  wrecked 

Can  have  no  r  to  the  crown,'  and  Odo  said, '  Thine  is 

the  r,  for  thine  the  might ; 
William  laugb'd  and  swore  that  might  was  r, 


The  Falcon  443 

Prom,  of  May  i  159 

1 169 

I  370 

I  718 

n  658 

in65 

m403 


Foresters  i  i  59 

„      I  i  115 

in  76 

IV  569 

Qv^en  Mary  ii  ii  96 

n  ii  106 

n  ii  171 

nii278 

in  iv  362 

ivii78 

IV  iii  382 

IV  iii  396 

IV  iii  610 

V  iii  34 

Harold  n  i  59 

„  nii355 
„  nii362 


Bight  (s)  (continued)    bad  me  seal  against  the  r's  of  the 

Church,  Becket  i  iii  312 

whene'er  your  royal  r's  Are  mooted  in  our  councils —  „      i  iii  430 

face  me  out  of  all  My  regal  r's.  „     u  ii  166 

And  trampled  on  the  r's  of  Canterbury.  „      v  ii  394 

when  they  seek  to  overturn  our  r's,  „      v  ii  457 

Thou  art  in  the  r.     This  blessing  is  for  Synorix  The  Cup  n  375 

I  am  easily  led  by  words,  but  I  think  the  Earl  hath  r. 

Scarlet,  hath  not  the  Earl  r  ?  Foresters  i  ii  41 

Thou  Much,  miller's  son,  hath  not  the  Earl  r  ?  „        i  ii  47 

more  goes  to  make  r  than  I  know  of,  but  for  all  that  I 

will  swear  the  Earl  hath  r.  „        i  ii  50 

Righteous    For  which  God's  r  judgment  fell  upon  you  Qv^en  Mary  m  iv  240 

Rightful    Ye  know  my  father  was  the  r  heir  Of  England,         „  n  ii  170 

What  r  cause  could  grow  to  such  a  heat  Foresters  n  i  698 

Bill    the  sea-creek — the  petty  r  That  falls  into  it —  Becket  n  ii  294 

Bind    Most  fruitful,  yet,  indeed,  an  empty  r,  Queen  Mary  ni  ii  202 

Bing  (s)    (See  also  Fairy-ring)    spousal  r  whereof,  Not 

even  to  be  laid  aside,  „  ii  ii  165 

You  have  a  gold  r  on  your  finger,  „  v  iv  32 

Take  thou  this  r ;  Harold  i  ii  58 

tore  away  My  marriage  r,  and  rent  my  bridal  veil ;  „      i  ii  80 

but  take  back  thy  r.     It  burns  my  hand —  „  in  ii  185 

The  r  thou  darest  not  wear,  „     v  i  421 

And  thou  art  come  to  rob  them  of  their  r's  !  „     v  ii  37 

For  look,  our  marriage  r !  i,    v  ii  108 

and  ower  a  hoonderd  pounds  worth  o'  r's  stolen.      Prom,  of  May  1 394 
R,  trinket  of  the  Church,  „  1 598 

This  r  my  mother  gave  me :  it  was  her  own  Betrothal  r.  Foresters  i  ii  293 
All  gone  ! — my  r — I  am  happy — should  be  happy.    She 

took  my  r.     I  trust  she  loves  me — yet  „  i  iii  1 

Thou  hast  robb'd  my  girl  of  her  betrothal  r.  „      n  i  587 

What!  do  I  not  know  mine  own  r  ?  „      n  i  590 

the  precious  r  I  promised  Never  to  part  with —  „      n  i  660 

What's  here  ?  a  dead  bat  in  the  fairy  r — -  „        ii  ii  94 

All  our  r's  be  trampled  out,  „      n  ii  167 

The  Sheriff !  This  r  cries  out  against  thee.  Say  it  again. 
And  by  this  r  the  lips  that  never  breathed  Love's 
falsehood  „         iv  69 

Eing  (verb)    The  bells  must  r ;  Te  Deums  must  be 

sung ;  Queen  Mary  in  ii  211 

like  the  gravedigger's  child  I  have  heard  of,  trying  to 

r  the  bell,  Becket  in  iii  74 

Did  not  a  man's  voice  r  along  the  aisle,  „       v  ii  150 

When  horn  and  echo  r.  Foresters  m  428 

What  shouts  are  these  that  r  along  the  wood  ?  „         iv  763 

Bingdove    R's  coo  again.  All  things  woo  again.  Queen  Mary  m  v  103 

Bing'd    I  was  born  of  a  true  man  and  a  r  wife,  „  i  i  55 

Binged  (rang)     ye  r  fur  that,  Miss,  didn't  ye  ?  Prom,  of  May  ni  14 

Binging    The  bells  are  r  at  Maidstone.  Queen  Mary  n  i  19 

with  all  his  rooftree  r  '  Harold,'  Harold  v  ii  129 

R  their  own  death-knell  thro'  all  the  realm.  Becket  i  iii  172 

Biot     After  a  r,  We  hang  the  leaders.  Queen  Mary  rv  i  73 

As  at  this  loveless  knife  that  stirs  the  r,  Becket  rv  ii  191 

Bipen'd     Who,  waiting  till  the  time  had  r,  Qu^en  Mary  m  ii  78 

Bipening  (part)     this  dead  fruit  was  r  overmuch,  „  in  i  26 

Bipening  (s)     harvest  moon  is  the  r  of  the  harvest,  Becket,  Pro.  363 

Bipple    The  r's  twinkled  at  their  diamond-dance,  Queen  Mary  ni  ii  10 

and  hover  Above  the  windy  r,  Harold  ii  ii  336 

Bise    At  his  coming  Your  star  will  r.  Queen  Mary  i  v  411 

We  are  fallen,  and  as  I  think.  Never  to  r  again.  „         mi  125 

He  comes,  and  my  star  r's.  „         in  ii  167 

R  to  the  heavens  in  grateful  praise  „        ni  iii  165 

That  should  have  fallen,  and  may  r  again.  ,,  v  ii  6 

let  England  as  of  old  jR  lionlike,  „  v  ii  267 

if  his  Northumbrians  r  And  hurl  him  from  them, —        Harold  n  ii  456 

thence  a  king  may  r  Half-Godwin  and  half -Alf gar,  „       rv  i  143 

wait  Till  his  nose  r's ;  he  will  be  very  king.  Becket  v  ii  184 

I  r  to-morrow  In  the  gray  dawn.  The  Cup  i  ii  433 

it  would  r  He  !  .  .  .     He  with  that  red  star  „  n  149 

R — I  could  almost  think  that  the  dead  garland  The  Falcon  917 

Nay,  nay,  I  pray  jrou  r.  „  921 

from  that  flood  will  r  the  New,  Prom,  of  May  i  594 

And  darkness  r's  from  the  fallen  sun.  Foresters  i  iii  42 

Bisen    And  Mary  would  have  r  and  let  him  in,  Queen  Mary  in  ii  64 


Risen 


1055 


Robin 


^isen  (continued)     There  is  a  faction  r  figain  for  Tostig,         Harold  iv  i  172 

No,  no,  he  hath  r  again — he  bares  his  face —  „        v  i  556 

Rising  (adj.)    (See  also  Ever-rising)    No  Sinnatus  yet — and 

there  the  r  moon.  The  Cup  i  ii  2 

Bising  (s)     There  were  not  many  hang'd  for  Wyatt's  r.     Queen  Mary  v  ii  9 

And  mixt  with  Wyatt's  r —  „       v  ii  479 

Bisk  (s)     the  general  sees,  A  r  of  utter  ruin.  „        v  ii  449 

Bisk  (verb)    Shall  I  r  it  ?  I  am  a  Roman  now,  The  Cup  i  i  184 

Richard  r's  his  life  for  a  straw.  So  lias  in  prison —  Foresters  iv  382 

B  not  the  love  1  bear  thee  for  a  girl.  „       iv  742 

Bisk'd    Thou  hast  r  thy  life  for  mine  :  bind  these  two  men.        „       iv  893 
Bite    One  half  besotted  in  religious  r's.  The  Cup  i  i  74 

Pray  you.  Go  on  with  the  marriage  r's.  „        n  399 

Bival  (s)     was  Rosamund— his  paramour — thy  r.  Becket,  Pro.  471 

Thou  feel  for  me  ! — ^paramour — r  !  „      Pro.  474 

R  ! — ay,  and  when  the  King  passes,  „      Pro.  483 

Bival  (verb)     Girl  never  breathed  to  r  such  a  rose  ;        Queen  Mary  ni  i  372 

To  r  him  in  Christian  charity.  Becket  in  iii  233 

Bive    would  make  the  hard  earth  r  To  the  very  Devil's 

horns,  Harold  n  ii  740 

let  earth  r,  gulf  in  These  cursed  Normans — •  „      ii  ii  782 

Biver    guns  From  out  the  vessels  lying  in  the  r.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  222 

They  had  hewn  the  drawbridge  down  into  the  r.  „  ii  iii  19 

II  iv  25 
III  ii  5 

III  ii  26 
III  iii  281 

Harold  i  i  34 

„  nii465 

„    iniilO 

„    in  ii  17 

Becket  i  iii  445 

The  Cup  I  ii  79 

Prom,  of  May  n  88 


The  r  still  is  free. 

Had  you  a  pleasant  voyage  up  the  r  ? 

And  here  the  r  flowing  from  the  sea, 

By  the  r  to  the  Tower. 

Look  to  the  skies,  then  to  the  r, 

like  a  r  in  flood  thro'  a  burst  dam 

in  the  cruel  r  Swale  A  hundred  years  ago  ; 

Whither,  O  whither  ?  into  the  r, 

Two  r's  gently  flowing  side  by  side — 

Were  there  no  boughs  to  hang  on,  R's  to  drown  in  ? 


or  you  may  find  me  at  the  bottom  of  the  r. — 
that  we  Should  find  her  in  the  r ;  and  we  dragg'd 

The  Littlechester  r  all  in  vain  :  „  ii  412 

and  the  black  r  Flow'd  thro'  my  dreams —  „  n  650 

why  did  you  write  '  Seek  me  at  the  bottom  of  the  r '  ?  „  iii  364 
the  r,  black,  slimy,  swirling  imder  me  in  the  lamplight,  „  ni  369 
Hoam  ?  fro'  the  bottom  o'  the  r  ?  „         in  444 

an'  one  on  'em  went  an'  lost  hersen  i'  the  r.  „         m  456 

They  drag  the  r  for  her  !  no,  not  they  !  „         in  694 

Bivulet     Not  while  the  r  babbles  by  the  door.  Foresters  i  ii  321 

Boad    (See  also  Road)     I  had  horses  On  all  the  r 
from  Dover,  day  and  night ;  On  all  the  r 

from  Harwich,  night  an  day  ;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  577 

rough  r  That  breaks  off  short  into  the  abysses —  Prom,  of  May  i  229 
dosta  knaw  this  paaper  ?     Ye  dropt  it  upo'  the  r.  „  ii  688 

BoSd    Thruf  slash  an'  squad  When  r's  was  bad,  „  n  310 

Boam    never  I  trust  to  r  So  far  again.  Foresters  iv  1099 

Now  the  King  is  home  again,  and  nevermore  to  r  again,       „     iv  1104 

Boar  (s)     whispers  to  the  r  Of  a  spring-tide.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  187 

Boar  (verb)    They  r  for  you  On  Penenden  Heath,  „  n  i  105 

let  Rebellion  R  till  throne  rock,  and  crown  fall.  „  n  i  145 

The  lion  needs  but  r  to  guard  his  yoimg ;  „        ni  v  123 

beast  might  r  his  claim  To  being  in  God's  image,  „         iv  iii  367 

Bearing     Neighing  and  r  as  they  leapt  to  land —  Harold  iv  iii  197 

Boast  (s)    so  that  the  smell  of  their  own  r  had  not  come 
across  it — 

Boast  (verb)    Then  I  r  'em,  for  I  have  nought  else  to  live 
on. 
monkey  that  should  r  his  chestnuts  for  him  ! 

Boasted    To  gorge  a  heretic  whole,  r  or  raw. 

Bob     And  thou  art  come  to  r  them  of  their  rings  ! 
comes  To  r  you  of  your  one  delight  on  earth. 
When  I  and  thou  will  r  the  nest  of  her. 
So  that  myself  alone  may  r  the  nest.     Prince  John. 

Well,  well  then,  thou  shalt  r  the  nest  alone.  „      i  ii  166 

but  we  r  the  robber,  wrong  the  wronger,  „        n  i  54 

Bobb'd    She  would  have  r  me  then  of  a  great  pleasure.  The  Falcon  64 

you  have  r  poor  father  Of  ten  good  apples.  Prom,  of  May  i  615 

Thou  hast  r  my  girl  of  her  betrothal  ring.  Foresters  n  i  586 

We  never  r  one  friend  of  the  true  King.  „         m  157 

We  r  the  traitors  that  are  leagued  with  John ;  We  r 

the  lawyer  who  went  against  the  law ;  „         ni  159 


Becket  m  iii  119 


Foresters  n  i  387 

IT  806 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  344 

Harold  v  ii  36 

The  Falcon  828 

Foresters  i  ii  161 


Robber    I  met  a  r  once,  I  told  him  I  was  bound  Becket  v  ii  98 

but  we  rob  the  r,  wrong  the  wronger,  Foresters  ii  i  54 

Robe  (s)    Thou  art  the  man  to  fill  out  the  Church  r ;  Becket,  Pro.  263 

Is  it  so  much  heavier  than  thy  Chancellor's  r?  „  i  i  21 

mother  Canterbury,  who  sits  With  tatter'd  r's.  „  i  i  157 

For  he,  when  having  dofit  the  Chancellor's  r —  „  i  iii  455 

rather  than  so  clip  The  flowery  r  of  Hymen,  The  Cup  ii  436 

Robe  (verb)     Is  balmy  wind  to  r  our  hilLs  with  grass,  „  ii  265 

a  thousand  summers  R  you  life-green  again.  Foresters  iv  1058 

Robert  (a  monk)     R,  The  apostate  monk  that  was  with 

Randulf  Becket  v  ii  573 
Robert  (of  Jumieges,  Archbishop)    Did  ye  not  outlaw  your 

archbishop  R,  R  of  Jumieges — ■  Harold  1  i  56 
Archbishop  R  hardly  scaped  with  life.     Harold.     Arch- 
bishop R  !     R  the  Archbishop  !     R  of  Jumieges,  „  n  ii  527 
Robin  (Christian  name)    here's  little  Dickon,  and 

little  R,  and  little  Jenny —                                   Queen  Mary  n  iii  112 

Shame  upon  you  R,  Shame  upon  you  now  !  „  ni  v  85 

R  came  behind  me,  „  in  v  92 

Come,  R,  R,  Come  and  kiss  me  now ;  „  in  v  99 

R  was  violent,  And  she  was  crafty —  „  m  v  107 

She  has  gone,  Maid  Marian  to  her  R —  „  m  v  156 

For  the  wrong  R  took  her  at  her  word.  „  m  v  264 

1  had  kept  My  R's  and  my  cows  „  in  v  270 

And  had  your  Grace  a,  R?  „  in  v  274 
Robin  (Hood,  Earl  of  Huntingdon)    (See  also  Huntingdon, 

Robin  Hood,  Robin  of  Huntingdon,  Man -Robin) 

My  master,  R  the  Earl,  is  always  a-telling  us  Foresters  i  i  94 

me  who  worship  R  the  great  Earl  of  Huntingdon  ?  „  i  i  225 

your  R,  all  England's  R,  fights  not  for  himself  „  i  i  235 

but  our  great  man,  our  R,  against  it.  „  i  i  241 

God  bless  our  well-beloved  R,  Earl  of  Huntingdon.  „  i  i  248 
This  R,  this  Earl  of  Huntingdon — he  is  a  friend  of 

Richard—  „  i  i  281 

Long  live  Richard,  R  and  Richard  !  „  i  ii  2 

Long  live  R,  R  and  Richard  !     Long  live  R,  „  I  ii  13 

R,  Earl —     Robin.     Let  be  the  Earl.  „  i  iii  93 

Ah  dear  R  !  ah  noble  captain,  friend  of  the  poor  !  „  n  i  182 

I  will,  I  will,  good  R.  „  n  i  218 

R  may  be  hard  by  wi'  three-score  of  his  men.  „  ii  i  335 
He  often  looks  in  here  by  the  moonshine.     Beware 

of  R.  „  n  i  338 

Clashing  of  swords — three  upon  one,  and  that  one  our  Rl    „  ii  i  420 

R,  like  a  deer  from  a  dog,  „  n  i  433 

R,  I  am  Sir  Richard  of  the  Lea.  „  ii  i  441 

For,  R,  he  must  be  my  son-in-law.  „  n  i  451 

0  R,  R\  Robin.  O  my  dear  Marian,  „  n  i  596 
R,  tho'  I  love  thee.  We  cannot  come  together  „  n  i  616 
R,  I  ever  held  that  saying  false  „  n  i  642 
Our  R  beaten,  pleading  for  his  life  !  „  n  i  674 
R — I  know  not,  can  I  trust  myself  _  „  n  i  703 
What  makes  you  seem  so  cold  to  R,  lady  ?     Marian. 

What  makes  thee  think  I  seem  so  cold  to  i?  ?  „  ni  2 

Why,  my  good  R  fancied  me  a  man,  „  m  19 

R — I  crave  pardon — you  always  seem  to  me  „  in  52 

R,  I  do,  but  I  have  a  bad  wife.  „  ni  69 

So  I  would,  R,  if  any  man  would  accept  her.  „  m  73 

R,  I  will  not  kiss  thee.  For  that  belongs  to  marriage  ;  „  m  137 
It  is  our  forest  custom  they  should  revel  Along 

with  R.  „  in  175 

We  never  wrong'd  a  woman.    Marian.    Noble  R.  „  ni  185 

These  two  have  forty  gold  marks  between  them,  B.  „  m  203 

he  hath  called  plain  R  a  lord.  „  in  215 

Art  thou  not  hard  upon  them,  my  good  B?  „  la  222 

They  pledge  me,  R?  „  m  320 

1  would  tap  myself  in  thy  service,  B.  „  in  336 
And  both  at  thy  service,  B.  „  m  340 
Our  B,  King  o'  the  woods,  „  m  344 
ii!,  the  people's  friend,  the  King  o'  the  woods  !  „  m  347 
B,  will  you  not  hear  one  of  these  beggars'  catches  ?  „  m  404 
B — I  crave  pardon,  I  always  think  of  you  as  my  lord,  „  ni  409 
O  B,  Bl  See  that  men  be  set  Along  the  glades  „  m  455 
B,  the  sweet  light  of  a  mother's  eye,  „  iv  1 
Quiet,  good  B,  quiet !  „  iv  9 
Being  so  sick  How  should  he,  R?  „  rv  83 


Robin 


1056 


Roman 


Robin  (Hood,  Earl  of  Huntingdon)  {continued)    Fine  hun  ! 

faiehiin  !   he  hath  called  plain  R  an  earl.    How 

much  is  it,  R,  for  a  knight  ? 
R  he  hath  no  more.     He  hath  spoken  truth. 
NaT   R,  I  am  like  thyself  in  that 
Av  av   R,  but  let  him  know  our  forest  laws  : 
thou  fi^ht  at  quarterstaff  for  thy  dinner  with  our  R, 
A  fine  \  a  fine  !     He  hath  called  plain  R  a  king. 
No  figure,  no  fiction,  R. 
Try,  thyself,  valorous  R  ! 
I  cannot  break  it,  R,  if  I  wish  d. 
Look,  R,  at  the  far  end  of  the  glade 
but  stay  with  iJ ;  For  7?  is  no  scatterbrains  like  Richard, 

R's  a  wise  man,  Richard  a  wiseacre,  Rs&n  outlaw, 
But  i?  is  a  thief  of  courtesy 
R  takes  From  whom  he  knows  are  hypocrites 
while  our  R's  life  Hangs  by  a  thread, 
R  king  of  Sherwood,  And  loves  and  dotes 
R,  the  lion  of  Sherwood—  . ,,.    ,      • 

if  our  true  R  Be  not  the  nobler  lion  of  the  twam. 
\nd  all  I  love,  R,  and  all  his  men, 
R  !     Rohin.    I  am  here,  my  arrow  on  the  cord. 
R,  shall  we  not  move  ?  , 

My  good  friend  R,  Earl  of  Huntingdon, 
if  the  King  forbid  thy  marrying  With  R,  our  good 

Earl  of  Huntingdon. 
I  have  had  a  year  of  prison-silence,  R, 
On  those  two  here,  R  and  Marian. 
Thou  R  Shalt  be  ranger  of  this  forest, 
We  heard  Sir  Richard  Lea  was  here  with  K. 
For  our  brave  S  is  a  man  indeed. 

these  old  oaks  will  mumur  thee  Marian  along  with  K.  .         _. 

Robing     -Vnd  I  was  r  ;— this  poor  throat  of  mine.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  460 

Robin  Hood  (Earl  of  Huntingdon)    {See  also  Huntmgdon, 

Robing  Robin  of  Huntingdon)    Thou,  iJ  fl  Earl  of 

flSigdon,  art  attainted  Foresters  i  ni  56 


that  these  Three  r's  of  blood-red  fire  up 


Foresters  iv  151 
IV  180 
IV  195 
IV  198 
IV  208 
IV  218 
IV  223 
IV  315 
IV  328 
IV  331 

IV  354 
IV  370 
IV  378 
IV  384 
IV  388 
IV  392 
IV  395 
IV  722 
IV  731 
IV  782 
IV  829 

IV  876 
IV  924 
IV  929 
IV  954 
IV  979 
IV  1037 
IV  1095 


by  virtue  of  this  writ,  whereas  R  E  Earl  of  Huntmgdon 
R  H  Earl  of  Huntingdon  is  outlawed  and  banished. 
as  you  would  hack  at  R  Hit  you  could  light  upon  him 
R  H  was  it  ?     I  thought  as  much. 
We  must  fly  from  R  H 
And  over  this  R  H's  bay  !       ^,  „  „  , 
we  have  fallen  into  the  hands  Of  R  E.  (repeat) 
And  R  E  hath  sworn— 
R  E  These  be  the  lies  the  people  tell  of  us, 
all  these  walks  are  R  E's  And  sometimes  perilous. 
That  all  was  peace — not  even  a  R  E — 
I  am  the  yeoman,  plain  R  E, 
Here  Abbot,  Sheriff— no— no,  RE. 
Will  chill  the  hearts  that  beat  for  2?  it  ! 
Will  whisper  evermore  of  RE. 
Robin  of  Huntingdon  (Robin  Hood)    so  true  a  friend 

of  the  people  as  Lord  R  o  E. 
Rochester    first  to  R,  to  take  the  guns  From  out 
Rock  (s)     I  spy  the  r  beneath  the  smilmg  sea. 
The  Church  on  Peter's  r  ?  never  ! 
You  beat  upon  the  r. 

therein  Sunk  r's— they  need  fine  steering- 
sunk  r's  ;  no  passionate  faith — 
not  the  living  r  Which  guards  the  land. 
Thou  hast  betray'd  us  on  these  r's  of  thine  ! 
Help  the  good  ship,  showing  the  sunken  r, 
customs  of  the  Church  are  Peter's  r. 
but  suddenly  Jarr'd  on  this  r. 
after  rain  o'erleaps  a  jutting  r  And  shoots 
and  rifts  the  tower  to  the  r, 
and  leave  it  A  waste  of  r  and  ruin,  hear, 
with  every  gust  and  wreck  On  any  r ; 
Rock  (verb)    let  Rebellion  Roar  till  throne  r,  and 
crown  fall. 
Holy  Church  May  r,  but  will  not  wreck, 
Bock'd    New  buds  to  heaven,  whereon  the  throstle  r 

Reed  I  r  upon  broken-back'd. 
Socking 
Bod    ~ 


I  iii  61 

I  iii  67 

ni287 

ni326 

II  ii  138 

n  ii  177 

11x234,298 

111235 

III  391 

IV  119 
IV  131 
IV  143 
IV  989 

TV  1064 
IV  1069 


I  i  189 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  220 

I  iv  278 

ni  iv  134 

vi210 

V  v214 

V  v221 
"Earold  i  ii  120 

II  i  23 

„     n  ii  101 

Becket  i  iii  25 

„     I  iii  382 

The  Cwp  I  i  110 

n  294 

II  307 

Prom,  of  May  in  538 

Queen  Mary  n  i  145 

Becket  ii  ii  104 

Foresters  i  iii  27 

n  ii  162 


Qg    Crying, '  Forward  !  '—set  our  old  church  r.  Queen  Mary  iv  in  404 
To  say  '  I  did  not  ?  '  and  my  r's  the  block.  „         in  v  130 


Rod  {continued) 
yonder 

had  I  fathered  him  I  had  given  him  more  of  the  r 
than  the  sceptre. 
Rode     I  would  not ;  but  a  hundred  miles  I  r, 

when  I  r  with  William  down  to  Harfleur, 
Roger  (Archbishop  of  York)    {See  also  Roger  of  York) 

Roger  of  York.     Eenry.     R  is  Roger  of  York. 

He  thought  less  of  two  kings  than  of  one  R 
R<«er  (a  servant)     Friend  R,  steal  thou  in  among  the 
crowd, 

R  thinkest  thou  that  anyone  Suspected  thee 
Roger  of  York     Ro  Y.     Eenry.     Roger  is  R  o  Y. 

To  set  that  precious  jewel,  R  o  Y. 

Ro  Y,  When  I  and  thou  were  youths  m  Theobald s 

I1OUS6 

Cursed  be  .John  of  Oxford,  R  0  Y,  And  Gilbert  Foliot ! 
And  how  did  JJ  0  Y  confort  himself  ? 
R  o  Y,  you  always  hated  him, 
Rogers  (John,  martyr)     R  and  Ferrar,  for  their  time 

is  come, 
Rogue    —'fore  God,  the  r's — 

Stand  staring  at  me  !  shout,  you  gapmg  r  ! 
gray  r,  Gardiner,  Went  on  his  knees, 
beggars,  poor  r's  (Heaven  bless  'em) 
R's,  have  you  no  manhood  ? 
you  are  sturdy  r's  that  should  be  set  to  work, 
yells  of  thief  And  r  and  liar  echo  down  in  Hell, 
Here,  you  three  r's,  ,     ,      ^u       u 

R   we  have  thy  captain's  safe  -  conduct ;   though 
he  be  the  chief  of  r's,  he  hath  never  broken  his 
word. 
R,  I  am  full  of  gout.     I  cannot  dance. 
r]  I  have  a  swollen  vein  in  my  right  leg, 
i?,  we  come  not  alone. 
Rolf  (a  Ponthieu  fisherman)     R,  what  fish  did  swallow 
Jonah?     Rolf.     A  whale ! 
Look  thee,  R,  when  I  was  down  in  the  fever, 
I  thank  thee,  R.  .  ,^,-,17. 

Roll  (s)     If  this  war-storm  in  one  of  its  rough  r  s  Wash  up 

bravest  in  our  r  of  Primates  down  From  Austm- 
Roll  (verb)     And  r's  himself  in  carrion  like  a  dog. 
in  full  force  R  upon  London, 
sea  shall  r  me  back  To  tumble  at  thy  feet. 
The  sea  may  r  Sand,  shingle,  shore-weed, 
Make  thou  one  man  as  three  to  r  theni  down  ! 
The  horse  and  horseman  r  along  the  hill. 
And  r  the  golden  oceans  of  our  grain, 
Good  !  i?  it  in  here. 
Roll'd     It  r  black  as  death  ; 

for  my  verses  if  the  Latin  rhymes  be  r  out 
The  wheel  of  Fate  has  r  me  to  the  top. 
And  the  white  cloud  is  r  along  the  sky  ! 
Thou  hast  r  over  the  Church  militant 
Rolling    parch'd  banks  r  incense,  as  of  old. 

Albeit  no  r  stone,  my  good  friend  Gamel, 
Roman  (adj.)    {See  also  Anti-Roman)    I  am  English 
Queen,  not  R  Emperor. 
For  thou  and  thine  are  R  to  the  core. 
Hark,  how  those  R  wolfdogs  howl  and  bay  him  ! 
his  politic  Holiness  Hath  all  but  climb'd  the  R 
perch  again,  ,     ,        •        t 

sends  you  this  cup  rescued  from  the  burning  of  one 
of  her  shrines  in  a  city  thro'  which  he  past  with 
the  R  army :  _  ^  , 

'  A  Galatian  seeving  by  force  in  the  R  legion. 
There  '  Antonius  leader  of  the  R  Legion.' 
Strato,  my  name.    Sinnaius.    No  R  name  ?  ^ 

'  A  Galatian  seeving  by  force  in  the  R  Legion. 
In  the  full  face  of  all  the  R  camp  ? 
The  R  Senate,  For  I  have  always  play  d  mto  their 

hands. 
Most  like  it  was  the  R  soldier  shouted. 
But  that  might  bring  a  R  blessing  on  us. 
0  women,  Ye  will  have  R  masters. 


Earold  i  i  44 


Becket  in  iii  111 

Queen  Mary  i  v  551 

Earold  m  i  82 

Becket,  Pro.  266 
„      ni  iii  91 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  37 

I  iii  174 

Becket  Pro.  266 

„      Pro.  270 


I  iii  39 

n  ii  266 

III  iii  84 

vie 


Queen  Mary  in  iv  425 

„  n  ii  97 

ni  i  289 

m  V  164 

Becket  i  iv  82 

Foresters  n  i  421 

m  197 

in  324 

m  358 


IV  431 
IV  562 
IV  568 
IV  573 

Earold  n  i  41 
„      II  i  46 

„       II  i  54 

„     V  i  166 

Becket  v  ii  58 

Queen  Mary  i  v  169 

n  i  236 

Earold  i  ii  114 

„      I  ii  118 

„      V  i  577 

„      V  i  595 

The  Cup  n  269 

Foresters  in  312 

Queen  Mary  n  iii  20 

Becket  n  ii  338 

The  Cwp  11  221 

Foresters  i  ii  319 

IV  272 

Queen  Mary  i  v  91 

Earold  I  i  93 

Queen  Mary  i  v  504 

m  ii  230 

„        IV  iii  354 

Becket  n  ii  46 


The  Cup  I  i  43 


iil67 

ii200 

iii  76 

I  ii  269 

I  iii  148 
nll9 
n372 
n511 


Roman  1057 

Roman  (s)     Madam,  when  the  R  wish'd  to  reign,  Queen  Mary  i  v  498 

who  shall  be  true  To  the  R :  xhe  Cup  i  i  95 

and  be  to  Rome  More  faithful  than  a  iZ.  „       i  i  103 

I  am  a  K  now,  they  dare  not  touch  me.  ,',       i  i  185 

You  reck  but  little  of  the  R  here,  ,'       j  i  189 

The  R  is  encamp  t  without  your  city —  "        i  ii  83 

The  R's  sent  me  here  a  spy  upon  you,  ,'      i  ii  220 

Will  he  let  you  plead  for  him  To  a  JJ  ?  !'      i  ii  307 

These  R's  dare  not  violate  the  Temple.  ,.       j  iii  62 

This  very  day  the  R's  crown  him  king  ']          n  63 

He  is  gentle,  tho'  a  R.  \^        n  502 

and  though  a  i?  I  Forgive  thee,  Gamma-  !'        n  505 

Bomance    may  not  a  girl's  love-dream  have  too  much 

»■  in  it  Prom,  of  May  m  185 

Rome  on  the  scaffold  Recanted,  and  resold  himself  to  R.  Queen  Mary  ni  i  152 

*_j  r        .u_  A_--._i-            ,  T>  ^^          iniiil27 

in  iv  126 
III  iv  130 
m  iv  142 

IV  ii  33 
„            IV  iii  42 

V  ii  29 

V  ii  42 

V  ii  46 
V  ii  50 

V  iii  93 

Harold  ni  ii  141 

„     m  ii  164 

vi2 

Beckel,  Pro.  222 

I  i  147 

I  iii  62 

I  iii  240 

I  iii  296 

I  iii  505 


Rosamund 

Rome  {continued)    He  steep'd  himself  In  all  the  lust  of  R.   The  Cup  i  ii  369 


And  from  the  Apostolic  see  of  R ; 

Old  R.  that  first  made  martyrs  in  the  Church, 

But  when  did  our  R  tremble  ? 

the  pine  was  R. 

Who  loathe  you  for  your  late  return  to  R, 

when  the  King's  divorce  was  sued  at  R, 

sharper  harm  to  England  and  to  R,  Than  Calais  taken. 

He  has  cited  me  to  R,  for  heresy. 

But  held  from  you  all  papers  sent  by  R^ 

To  compass  which  I  wrote  myself  to  R, 

But — he  would  have  me  Catholic  of  R, 

but  worse  news :  this  William  sent  to  R, 

human  laughter  in  old  R  Before  a  Pope  was  bom. 

Refer  my  cause,  my  crown  to  R  I  ... 

flashes  And  fulrainations  from  the  side  of  R, 

This  Canterbury  is  only  less  than  R, 

The  pagan  temple  of  a  pagan  R  ! 

If  iJ  be  feeble,  then  should  I  be  firm. 

And  R  is  venal  ev"n  to  rottenness. 

Against  the  solemn  ordinance  from  R, 

Map  scoffs  at  R.    I  all  but  hold  with  Map.    Save  for 

myself  no  R  were  left  in  England, 
Why  should  this  R,  this  R,  Still  choose  Barabbas 
I  would  have  done  my  most  to  keep  R  holy,  I  would 

have  made  R  know  she  still  is  R — 
Has  left  his  bones  upon  the  way  to  R 
The  King  had  had  no  power  except  for  R.    "lis  not 

the  King  who  is  guilty  of  mine  exile.  But  R,  R,  R  [ 
Thou  hast  served  me  heretofore  with  R — 
To  R  again  !  the  storm  begins  again, 
stand  Clothed  with  the  full  authority  of  R, 
when  I  was  flying  from  My  Tetrarchy  to  R. 
if  he  be  conspirator,  R  will  chain,  Or  slay  him. 
I  shall  have  my  tetrarchy  restored  By  R, 
quarrels  with  themselves,  their  spites  at  R, 
I  heard  in  R,  This  tributary  crown  may  fall  to  you. 
The  king,  the  crown  !  their  talk  in  R? 
and  be  to  R  More  faithful  than  a  Roman. 
I  have  heard  them  say  in  R, 
violence  to  a  woman.  As  R  did  Tarquin. 
the  dry  light  of  R's  straight-going  policy, 
even  drown  you  In  the  good  regard  of  R. 
I  am  most  true  to  R. 
They  say  that  R  Sprang  from  a  wolf. 
This  mountain  shepherd  never  dream'd  of  R. 
R  Made  war  upon  the  peoples  not  the  Gods. 
The  force  of  jR  a  thousand-fold  our  own. 
they  call  it  so  in  R.     Sinnatus.     Province  ! 
R  Will  crush  you  if  you  wrestle  with  her  ; 
If  Synorix,  who  has  dwelt  three  years  in  R 
Then  that  I  serve  with  R  to  serve  Galatia. 
Camma,  R  has  a  glimpse  of  this  conspiracy ;  R  never 

yet  hath  spar'd  conspirator. 
— all  seen, — all  calculated,  AU  known  by  R. 
with  this  black  thunderbolt  of  R  Above  him, 
my  serving  R  To  serve  Galatia  : 
I  say  it  to  you — you  are  wiser — R  knows  all, 
But  you  know  not  the  savagery  of  R.     Camma.     0 — 

have  you  power  with  R  ?  use  it  for  him  !     Synorix, 

Alas  !  I  have  no  such  power  with  R. 


„      n  ii  384 
„       II  ii  389 

n  ii  401 
11  ii  409 

„  u  ii  413 
II  ii  461 
II  ii  468 
V  ii  493 
The  Cup  I  i  7 
.,  I  i  18 
„  I  i  21 
„  I  i  91 
„  I  i  96 
„  I  i  99 
„  iil02 
„  11136 
„  iil40 
„  til45 
„  iil51 
„  iil54 
„  iii  13 
„  Iii  18 
„  I  ii  59 
„  I  ii  85 
„  1  ii  93 
„  I  ii  130 
„  Iii  176 
„  I  ii  213 

„  I  ii  233 
„  I  ii  257 
„  I  ii  266 
„  iii  278 
„  I  ii  285 


I  ii  288 


loathed  the  cruelties  that  R  Wrought  on  her  vassals, 

When  you  cry  '  R,  R,'  to  seize  On  whomsoever 

Or  man,  or  woman,  as  traitors  unto  R. 

R  I  R  I     Sinnatus.     Adulterous  dog  ! 

There  then  I  rest,  R's  tributary  king. 

I  surely  should  have  left  That  stroke  to  R. 

R\  Rl    Twice  I  cried  R. 

For  all  his  faithful  services  to  R. 

no  more  feuds  Disturb  our  peaceful  vassalage  to  R. 

We  cannot  fight  imperial  R, 

he  and  I  Might  teach  this  R — 

Our  Antonius,  Our  faithful  friend  of  R,  tho'  R 

R  in  you  Deigns  to  look  in  upon  our  barbarisms. 

If  you  had  found  him  plotting  against  R, 

R  is  fated  To  rule  the  world. 

I  might  have  sent  him  prisoner  to  R. 

I  had  a  touch  of  this  last  year — in — R. 

Dost  thou  cry  out  upon  the  Gods  ot  R? 

by  the  Gods  of  R  and  all  the  world, 

tell  the  Senate  I  have  been  most  true  to  R — 

if  my  people  must  be  thralls  of  R, 
Rood    by  the  R  I  will.  Qv^en 

He  swears  by  the  R.    Whew  ! 

raised  the  r  again.  And  brought  us  back  the  mass. 

They  told  me  that  the  Holy  R  had  lean'd  And  bow'd 

above  me  ;  Harold  v  i  102 

and  the  R  itself  were  bovmd  To  that  necessity  „       v  i  106 

the  Holy  R  That  bow'd  To  me  at  Waltham —  „      v  i  382 

we  will  make  her  whole  ;  Not  one  r  lost.  Becket  i  i  165 

nay,  by  the  r  They  have  done  far  worse —  Foresters  xv  908 

Roof    your  loving  natural  brother  Of  the  same  r, 

same  breast.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  191 

found  thy  name  a  charm  to  get  me  Food,  r,  and  rest.         Becket  v  ii  98 


I  ii  374 

I  iii  5 

I  iii  10 
I  iii  107 
I  iii  156 
I  iii  160 
I  iii  174 

ii65 
n71 
n93 

II  96 
n244 
n336 
n407 
n414 
n418 

II  447 
n455 
u465 
n483 
n501 

Mary  i  i  61 

ii63 

I  V  183 


To  the  chapel  of  St.  Blaise  beneath  the  r  I  „    v  iii  83 

The  shelter  of  your  r — not  for  one  moment —  Prom,  of  May  in  800 

while  the  smoke  floats  from  the  cottage  r.  Foresters  i  ii  318 

larger  life  hereafter,  more  Tenfold  than  imder  r.  „        n  i  70 

Rooftree    with  all  his  r  ringing  '  Harold,'  Harold  v  ii  129 

Room  (apartment)    in  a  closed  r,  with  light,  fire, 

physic,  tendance  ;  Queen  Mary  v  iv  36 

The  r  she  sleeps  in — is  not  this  the  way  ?  „         v  v  205 

How  dark  your  r  is  !  Prom,  of  May  m  217 

these  lilies  to  lighten  Sir  Richard's  black  r.  Foresters  1  i  3 

Room  (space)     there  is  barely  r  to  shift  thy  side,  Harold  n  ii  441 

crying  To  a  mountain  '  Stand  aside  and  r  for  me  ! '  „     iv  iii  130 

and  theer'll  be  r  anew  for  all  0'  ye.  Prom,  of  May  i  454 

There  was  no  r  to  advance  or  to  retire.  Foresters  vr  534 

Roomatics  (rheumatics)    I  seed  tha  a-limping'  up  just 

now  wi'  the  r  i'  the  knee.  Prom,  of  May  i  385 

Root  (s)    heat  enough  To  scorch  and  wither  heresy 

to  the  r.  Queen  Mary  m  iv  28 

bum  and  blast  them  r  and  branch  ?  „        in  iv  283 
this  one  fancy  hath  taken  r,  and  borne  blossom  too,      Becket,  Pro.  481 

Would  God  they  had  torn  up  all  By  the  hard  r,  „       n  ii  209 


And  dig  it  from  the  r  for  ever, 

and  rears  his  r  Beyond  his  head. 
Root  (verb)    and  Najjoleons  To  r  their  power  in. 
Rooted    and  r  in  far  isles  Beyond  my  seeing  : 
Rope    the  r,  the  rack,  the  thumbscrew,  the  stake, 

he  hath  half-hanged  himself  in  the  r  of  the  Church, 

In  the  church  r  ? — ^no. 

I  will  take  the  r  from  off  thy  waist 
Rosamund  (de  Clifford)    (See  also  Clifford,  Rosamund  de 
Clifford)     With  Phryne,  Or  Lais,  or  thy  R,  or 
another  ?     Henry.    My  R  is  no  Lais,  Thomas 
Becket ; 

And  so  this  R,  my  true-heart  wife,  Not  Eleanor — 

and  in  the  midst  A  garden  and  my  R. 

her  bower.     Fitzurse.     R's  ? 

was  R — ^his  paramour — thy  rival. 

Follow  me  this  R  day  and  night, 

taking  charge  Of  this  wild  R  to  please  the  King, 

Well — you  know — the  minion,  R. 

0  R,l  would  be  true — would  tell  thee  all — 


„        IV  ii  77 

The  Cup  n  284 

Prom,  of  May  m  594 

Harold  in  i  152 

Queen  Mary  11  i  200 

Becket  ni  iii  75 

„    m  iii  80 

Foresters  vr  687 


Becket,  Pro.  56 
Pro.  130 
Pro.  169 
Pro.  429 
Pro.  471 
Pro.  506 
ii392 
iii  37 
Hi  204 


3  X 


Rosamund 


1058 


Royal 


Becket  iv  ii  361 
V  ii  261 

Pro.  70 

I  i  180 

I  i  244 

The  Falcon  632 


Queen  Mary  i  v  20 
I  V  25 


Bosamaod  (de  Clifford)  {coTUinued)     R  hath  not  answer'd 

you  one  word ; 
if  jR  is  The  world's  rose,  as  her  name  imports 
Rosamund  de  Clifford    wherefore  should  she  seek  The  life  of 

Rd  C 
R  d  C  \     Rosamund.     Save  me,  father, 
R  d  C.     Rosamund.     Here  am  I. 
Rosary    It  served  me  for  a  blessed  r. 
Rose  (s)    (See  also  Hedge-rose,  White  Rose)    was  all 

pure  lily  and  r  In  his  youth, 
To  sicken  of  his  lilies  and  his  r's. 
Seventeen — a  r  of  grace  !     Girl  never  breathed  to 

rival  such  a  r ;  i?  never  blew  that  equall'd  such 

a  bud. 
I  have  play'd  with  this  poor  r  so  long 
He  cannot  smell  a  r  but  pricks  his  nose  Against  the 

thorn,  and  rails  against  the  r.     Queen.     I  am  the 

only  r  of  all  the  stock  That  never  thom'd  him  ; 
They  love  the  white  r  of  virginity, 
The  reign  of  the  r^s  is  done—  (repeat) 
Over  and  gone  with  the  r's,  (repeat) 
Not  over  and  gone  with  the  r.     True,  one  r  will 

outblossom  the  rest,  one  r  in  a  bower. 
r  or  no  r,  has  killed  the  golden  violet. 
The  rosebud  of  my  r  ! — 
But,  my  liege,  I  am  sure,  of  all  the  r's — 
Thou  r  of  the  world  !     Thou  r  of  all  the  r's  ! 
My  brave-hearted  R  !     Hath  he  ever  been  to  see  thee  ? 
Babble  in  bower  Under  the  r  ! 
And,  being  scratch'd,  returns  to  his  true  r, 
seared  the  red  r  from  your  face  Into  your  heart  ? 
if  Rosamund  is  The  world's  r,  as  her  name  imports 
I  ha'  browt  these  r's  to  ye — I  forgits  what  they 

calls  'em, 
soom  of  her  oan  r's,  an'  she  wur  as  sweet  as  ony 

on  'em — 
but  I  thowt  I'd  bring  tha  them  r's  fust. 
Wi'  the  wild  white  r,  an'  the  woodbine  sa  gaay, 
matched  with  my  Harold  is  like  a  hedge  thistle  by 

a  garden  r. 
to  saay  he's  browt  some  of  Miss  Eva's  r's  for  the 

sick  laady  to  smeU  on. 
Might  wish  its  r  a  lily. 
These  r's  for  my  Lady  Marian  ; 
The  lady  gave  a  r  to  the  Earl,  The  maid  a  r  to 

the  man.  (repeat) 
You  do  well.  Mistress  Kate,  to  sing  and  to 

gather  r's. 
A  r  to  the  man  !     Ay,  the  man  had  given  her 

a  r  and  she  gave  him  another.     Kate.    Shall 

I  keep  one  little  r  for  Little  John  ? 
Wilt  thou  not  give  me  rather  the  little  r  for  Little 

John  ?  „  I  i  148 

Rose  (verb)    To  r  and  lavender  my  horsiness,  Queen  Mary  m  v  185 

Rose  (past  tense)    when  there  r  a  talk  of  the  late  rebellion,      „  i  i  91 

r  again.  And,  when  the  headsman  pray'd  „  m  i  392 

R  hand  in  hand,  and  whisper'd  '  come  away  !  „  ni  v  148 

a  dead  man  R  from  behind  the  altar,  Harold  i  ii  79 

And  then  I  r  and  ran.  „      n  i  12 

great  Angel  r  And  past  again  along  the  highest  „  ni  i  155 

when  I  r.  They  told  me  that  the  Holy  Rood  „     v  i  101 

So  dwelt  on  that  they  r  and  darken'd  Heaven,  Becket  ii  ii  205 

Most  like  the  city  r  against  Antonius,  The  Cup  i  ii  62 

And  presently  all  r,  and  so  departed.  The  Falcon  367 

Fell  with  her  motion  as  she  r,  and  she,  „  536 

She  r  From  the  foul  flood  and  pointed  Prom,  of  May  n  652 

Rosebud    The  r  of  my  rose  ! —  Becket  n  i  68 

Rosefaced    I  and  all  would  be  glad  to  wreak  our  spite  on  the 

r  minion  of  the  King,  „  Pro.  529 

Rosy    The  r  face,  and  long  down-silvering  beard,  Harold  in  i  46 

The  r  face  and  long  down-silvering  beard —  „     iv  i  261 

Thank  you.    Look  how  full  of  r  blossom  it  is.  Prom,  of  May  i  84 

Bot    in  our  oubliettes  Thou  shalt  or  r  or  ransom.  Harold  n  i  108 

Rotted    Until  they  died  of  r  limbs  ;  and  then  Cast  on 

the  dunghill  naked,  Qtieen  Mary  iv  iii  445 


m  i  371 
vii2 


Harold  i  i  422 
„     III  i  273 
Becket,  Pro.  303,  325 
„  Pro.  326,  333,343 

Becket,  Pro.  344 

Pro.  351 

ni68 

nil40 

nil46 

IX  i  287 

in  197 

mi  250 

IV  ii  73 

V  ii  263 

Prom,  of  May  n  14 

n38 

u50 

nl74 

ml76 

m347 
m490 
Foresters  i  i  2 

Foresters  i  i  12,  105 

I  i  23 


iil09 


Rotten  (adj.)     Wake,  or  the  stout  old  island  mil 
become  A  r  limb  of  Spain, 
swirling  imder  me  in  the  lamplight,  by  the  r 

wharfs —  Prom,  of  May  in  371 

Rotten  (s)     cut  out  the  r  from  your  apple,  Queen  Mary  u  ii  5 

Rou    lU  Rl    Ha  J?  !  (repeat)  HaroU  v  i  437,  528,  631,  650,  661,  664 

Rough     Might  it  not  Be  the  r  preface  of  some  closer 

bond  ? 

Behold  oiu"  r  forefathers  break  their  Gods, 

A  right  r  life  and  healthful. 

Ever  a  r,  blunt,  and  imcourtly  fellow — 

Like  the  r  bear  beneath  the  tree,  good  brother. 

If  this  war-storm  in  one  of  its  r  rolls 

He  comes,  a  r,  bluff,  simple-looking  fellow. 

nor  our  Archbishop  Stagger  on  the  slope  decks  for  any 

r  sea  Becket  ii  ii  106 

Against  the  unpleasant  jolts  of  this  r  road  Prom,  of  May  i  228 

Yeas,  Miss ;  but  he  wur  so  r  wi'  ma,  I  couldn't  abide 


Queen  Mary  ii  i  105 


Queen  Mary  i  iv  48 

m  ii  120 

in  v  260 

v  V  120 

Harold  i  i  327 

„      V  i  165 

The  Cup  I  i  172 


'im.     Dora.     Why  should  he  be  r  with  you  ? 

And  these  r  oaks  the  palms  of  Paradise  ! 
Rougher    To  make  allowance  for  their  r  fashions. 
Roughness    Your  violence  and  much  r  to   the 

Legate, 
Round    A  r  fine  likelier.     Your  pardon. 

and  a  plum-pudding  as  big  as  the  r  haystack. 
Round-about    as  sleek  and  as  r-a  as  a  mellow  codlin. 
Rounded    Thou  hast  r  since  we  met. 
Rouse     Not  so  dead,  But  that  a  shock  may  r  her. 


ni  104 
Foresters  n  i  169 
Harold  ii  ii  8 

Queen  Mary  m  iv  318 

in  iii  279 

Prom,  of  May  i  794 

Foresters  i  i  43 

Harold  I  i  95 

Queen  Mary  in  i  30 


HaroU  n  ii  334 

The  Cup  n  182 

„      I  ii  117 

Foresters  u  ii  166 

IV  794 

The  Cup  n  245 


1 173 


sea-bird  r  himself  and  hover  Above  the  windy  ripple, 
R  the  dead  altar-flame,  fling  in  the  spices. 
Roused     R  by  the  clamour  of  the  chase  he  woke. 
Rout  (s)     All  our  games  be  put  to  r. 

I  blow  the  horn  against  this  rascal  r  ! 
Row    but  light  enough  to  r.     R  to  the  blessed  Isles  ! 
Row'd    more  than  one  R  in  that  galley — Gardiner  to 

wit,  Qu£en  Mary  iv  i  87 

Rowel    softlier  than  with  crimson  r  And  streaming  lash.  „      in  iv  183 

Roy    Hurrah  !     Vive  le  R  !  Becket  i  iv  274 

Royal    {See  also  All-royal,  Real  Hard  Tillery)    By  God's 

light  a  noble  creature,  right  r  !  Qu^en  Mary  i  i  69 

but  to  my  mind  the  Lady  Elizabeth  is  the  more 

noble  and  r. 
and  among  them  Courtenay,  to  be  made  Earl  of 

Devon,  of  r  blood. 
That  gave  her  r  crown  to  Lady  Jane. 
This  dress  was  made  me  as  the  Earl  of  Devon  To 
take  my  seat  in  ;  looks  it  not  right  r  ?     Elizabeth. 
So  r  that  the  Queen  forbad  you  wearing  it. 
By  your  Grace's  leave  Your  r  mother  came  of  Spain, 
Your  r  father  (For  so  they  say)  was  all  pure  lily  and 

rose  In  his  youth. 
Our  r  word  for  that !  and  your  good  master, 
after  me  Is  heir  of  England  ;  and  my  r  father, 
God  send  her  well ;  Here  comes  her  R  Grace. 
From  your  own  r  lips,  at  once  may  know  The  wherefore 
of  this  coming,  and  so  learn  Your  r  will,  and  do  it. — 
or  impair  in  any  way  This  r  state  of  England, 
And  I  sped  hither  with  what  haste  I  might  To  save 

my  r  cousin. 
Elizabeth,  Your  jffi  sister. 
That  r  commonplace  too,  cloth  of  gold.  Could  make 

it  so. 
Loyal  and  r  cousin,  humblest  thanks. 
We  had  your  r  barge,  and  that  same  chair, 
now  that  all  traitors  Against  our  r  state  have  lost 

the  heads 
He  owes  himself,  and  with  such  r  smiles — 
of  her  most  R,  Infallible,  Papal  Legate-cousin. 
But  I  am  r,  tho'  your  prisoner. 
How  fair  and  r — like  a  Queen,  indeed  ? 
And,  like  a  thief,  push'd  in  his  r  hand  ; 
Your  r  sister  cannot  last ;  your  hand  Will  be  much 

coveted  ! 
Madam,  your  r  sister  comes  to  see  you. 
'  This  Harold  is  not  of  the  r  blood. 


lilll 
Iii  19 


I  iv  75 
IV  16 

IV  19 

IV  267 

IV  286 
n  ii  126 

n  ii  136 
n  ii  230 

niv  78 
n  iv  117 

m  i  54 
in  ii3 
in  ii  6 

in  iv  3 

in  iv  402 

in  iv  433 

HI  V  177 

vi235 

V  ii  466 

V  iii  43 

V  vl9J 
Harold  n  ii  354 


Royal 


1059 


Ruthless 


Becket,  Pro.  23 
„      Pro.  274 

I  i  165 
„       I  iii  111 

„       I  iii  415 

I  iii  429 

n  i  81 

II  i  95 
II  i  98 

n  i  106 

II  i  110 
II  i  128 

„       II  ii  137 

„    III  iii  157 


„     III  iii  275 

V  i  28 

V  i  35 
Foresters  i  iii  52 

I  iii  83 


Soyal  {continued)     But  by  the  r  customs  of  our  realm  The 
Church  should  hold 
No  ;  too  r  for  me.     And  I'll  have  no  more  Anselms. 
And  for  these  R  customs,  These  ancient  R  customs — 

they  are  R,  Not  of  the  Church — 
and  the  election  shall  be  made  in  the  Chapel  R, 
Good  r  customs — ^had  them  written  fair  For  John  of 

Oxford  here  to  read  to  you. 
As  is  his  wont  Too  much  of  late  whene'er  your  r  rights 
Babes,  orphans,  mothers  !  is  that  r,  Sire  ?     Henry. 

And  I  have  been  as  r  with  the  Chiu-ch. 
And  is  that  altogether  r  ? 
A  faithful  traitress  to  thy  r  fame. 
What  matters  ?     R— 

Still — thy  fame  too  :  I  say  that  should  be  r. 
I  bad  them  clear  A  r  pleasaunce  for  thee,  in  the  wood, 
I  here  deliver  all  this  controversy  Into  your  r  hands, 
part  r,  for  King  and  kingling  both  laughed,  and  so 

we  could  not  but  laugh,  as  by  a  r  necessity — 

when  the  full  fruit  of  the  r  promise  might  have  dropt 

into  thy  mouth  hadst  thou  but  opened  it  to  thank 

him.     Becket.     He  fenced  his  r  promise  with  an  if. 

We  trust  your  R  Grace,  lord  of  more  land  Than  any 

crown  in  Europe, 
My  r  liege,  in  aiming  at  your  love. 
It  is  a  r  messenger,  my  lord  : 
and  he  hath  seized  On  half  the  r  castles. 
Boyal-cousin    their  two  Graces  Do  so  dear-cousin 

and  r-c  him,  Queen  Mary  ni  iv  400 

Royalty    retinue  of  three  kings  behind  him,  outroyalling  r  ?  Becket,  Pro.  446 

leave  the  r  of  my  crown  Unlessen'd  to  mine  heirs.  „        n  i  107 

Rub     That  irritable  forelock  which  he  r^s.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  265 

Who  r  their  fawning  noses  in  the  dust,  „         m  iii  242 

what  hath  fiuster'd  Gardiner  ?  how  he  r's  His 

forelock !  „  m  iv  12 

Rnbb'd     Mary  rout  pale —  „  iii  i  422 

Ruby    emeralds,  Rubies,  I  know  not  what.  „  m  i  86 

eyes — and  these  two  sapphires — these  Twin  rubies —        Harold  i  ii  112 

Rudder    such  a  one  Was  without  r,  anchor,  compass —    Prom,  of  May  m  534 

Ruddiest    You  are  pale,  my  Dora !  but  the  r  cheek 

Rude    Bandy  their  own  r  jests  with  them, 

and  then  he  call'd  me  a  r  naame,  and  I  can't 

abide  'im. 
he  wur  r  to  me  i'  tha  hayfield,  and  he'll  be  r  to 
me  ageSn  to-night. 
Rofflan    And  here  a  knot  of  r's  all  in  rags, 

some  Papist  r's  hereabout  Would  murder  you. 
your  friends,  those  r's,  the  De  Brocs, 
Unfflfl     Ay,  r  thyself — be  jealous  ! 
Ruffled    but  thou  hast  r  my  woman.  Little  John. 
Ruffler    too  solemn  and  formal  to  be  a  r.     Out  upon 

thee  !     Little  John.     I  am  no  r,  my  lady  ; 
Ruffling    that  I  bear  it  Without  more  r. 
Ruin  (s)     the  general  sees,.  A  risk  of  utter  r. 
Delay  is  death  to  thee,  r  to  England, 
whether  it  symbol'd  r  Or  glory,  who  shall  tell  ? 
and  leave  it  A  waste  of  rock  and  r,  hear. 
But  for  the  slender  help  that  I  can  give,  Fall  into  r. 
Whose  ransom  was  our  r. 
Ruin  (verb)     Too  like  to  r  himself,  and  you,  and  me ! 
Ruin'd    {See  also  Half-ruin'd)     and  the  race  of  Godwin 

Hath  r  Godwin.  Harold  v  i  294 

Rule  (S)     my  Lord  Mayor  here.  By  his  own  r.  Queen  Mary  ii  u  347 

by  this  r,  Foliot  may  claim  the  pall  For  London  Becket  i  iii  55 

not  to  speak  one  word,  for  that's  the  r  o'  the  garden,  „    ni  i  138 

and  so  cannot  suffer  by  the  r  of  frequency.  „  m  iii  319 

Bale  (verb)     Spain  and  we.  One  crown,  might  r  the 

^orlij.  Queen  Mary  i  v  303 

provinces  Are  hard  to  r  and  must  be  hardly  ruled ;  „        m  ii  201 

hatred  of  the  doctrines  Of  those  who  r,  „       m  iv  160 

So  that  she  come  to  r  us.  ,.        iv  iii  390 

and  the  French  fleet  R  in  the  narrow  seas.  „  v  i  7 


m487 
The  Cup  I  ii  360 

Prom,  of  May  ii  159 

II  219 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  66 

III  V  174 

Becket  v  ii  434 

The  Falcon  21 

Foresters  i  i  165 

iil69 

Queen  Mary  v  iii  4 

V  ii  449 

Harold  II  ii  718 

V  i  no 

The  Cup  II  307 

Prom,  of  May  ii  422 

Foresters  rv  1007 

The  Cup  I  ii  263 


Rule  (verb)  (continued)     Thou  art  the  man  to  r  her  !  Harold  i  i  223 

For  I  shall  r  according  to  your  laws,  „     ii  ii  759 

he  hath  served  me :  none  but  he  Can  r  all  England.  „     iii  i  244 

one  to  r  All  England  beyond  question,  beyond  quarrel.  „     rv  i  144 

I  will  r  according  to  their  laws.  „     v  ii  198 

Rome  is  fated  To  r  the  world.  The  Cup  ii  416 

when  The  stronger  motive  r's.  Prom,  of  May  ii  671 

No  man  who  truly  loves  and  truly  r's  Foresters  n  i  76 

Buleable    if  the  land  Were  r  by  tongue,  „        iv  399 

Ruled     wherever  Spain  hath  r  she  hath  wither'd  Queen  Mary  ii  i  206 

provinces  Are  hard  to  rule  and  must  be  hardly  r;  „         iii  ii  201 

Ruler     which  hatred  by  and  by  Involves  the  r  „        in  iv  161 

The  r  of  a  land  Is  bounden  by  his  power  „       in  iv  211 

When  I  was  r  in  the  patrimony,  „  v  ii  72 

sat  within  the  Norman  chair  A  r  all  for  England—         Harold  ii  ii  534 
The  r  of  an  hour,  but  lawful  King,  Foresters  iv  47 

Ruling     And  r  men  are  fatal  twins  that  cannot  Move  Harold  in  i  127 

Rumour     r  that  Charles,  the  master  of  the  world.  Queen  Mary  i  i  104 

I  trust  it  is  but  a  r.  „        '   i  i  107 

I  hear  unhappy  r's — nay,  I  say  not,  I  believe.  „  v  i  35 

a  r  then  That  you  were  kill'd  in  battle.  The  Falcon  381 

I  may  be  outlaw'd,  I  have  heard  a  r.  Foresters  i  ii  92 

Run    (See  also  Bunned)     So  the  wine  r,  and  there  be 

revelry,  Queen  Mary  in  ii  236 

See  how  the  tears  r  down  his  fatherly  face.  „  rv  iii  4 

There  r's  a  shallow  brook  across  our  field  „  v  v  83 

lest  they  rear  and  r  And  break  both  neck  and  axle.  Harold  i  i  373 

play  the  note  Whereat  the  dog  shall  howl  and  r,  „      i  ii  192 

R  thou  to  Count  Guy ;  he  is  hard  at  hand.  „        ii  i  54 

That  r's  thro'  all  the  faiths  of  all  the  world.  „     ni  i  352 

r  in  upon  her  and  devour  her,  one  and  all  Becket,  Pro.  525 

The  rift  that  r's  between  me  and  the  King.  „  i  i  140 

Among  these  happy  dales,  r  clearer,  „  ii  i  157 

this  love,  this  mother,  r's  thro'  all  The  world  „         v  ii  241 

Why,  whither  r's  the  boy  ?  The  Cup  i  i  70 

break  of  precipice  that  r's  Thro'  all  the  wood,  „        i  ii  21 

r  my  mind  out  to  a  random  guest  Who  join'd  me  „      i  ii  107 

my  friends  may  spy  him  And  slay  him  as  he  r's.  „      i  ii  392 

r's  to  sea  and  makes  it  Foam  over  all  the  fleeted  wealth       „        n  287 
a  written  scroll  That  seems  to  r  in  rhymings.  The  Falcon  432 

tho'  the  fire  should  r  along  the  ground.  Prom,  of  May  i  703 

0  law — yeas.  Sir !     I'll  r  fur  'im  mysen.  „  m  714 

1  am  sorry  my  exchequer  r's  so  low  Foresters  i  ii  272 
if  I  hadn't  a  sprig  o'  wickentree  sewn  into  my  dress, 

I  should  r.  „         n  i  251 

my  heart  so  down  in  my  heels  that  if  I  stay,  I  can't  r.       „         ii  i  348 
most  beaten  track  R's  thro'  the  forest,  „  m  90 

And  thou  wouldst  r  more  wine  than  blood.  „         in  337 

Whose  writ  will  r  thro'  all  the  range  of  Ufe.  „  iv  48 

You  r  down  your  game.  We  ours.  „  rv  520 

Runned  (ran)     I  r  arter  thief  i'  the  dark.  Prom,  of  May  1 402 

Runned  (run)     Dan  Smith's  cart  hes  r  ower  a  laady  i' 

the  holler  laane,  „  ii  568 

Running    In  the  full  vessel  r  out  at  top  Harold  i  i  378 

A  hundred  pathways  r  everyway,  Becket,  Pro.  163 

and  leprosies,  and  ulcers,  and  gangrenes,  and  r  sores,         „         i  iv  256 

r  down  the  chase  is  kindlier  sport  Ev'n  than  the  death.     „        iv  ii  213 

I  laiime't  my  knee  last  night  r  arter  a  thief.  Prom,  of  May  i  387 

Rush    Carry  fresh  r'es  into  the  dining-hall,  Foresters  i  i  81 

I  pray  Heaven  we  may  not  have  to  take  to  the  r'es.  „        i  i  90 

Rushing    No  r  on  the  game — the  net, — the  net.  The  Cup  i  i  170 

Rust    fink  r's  with  the  breath  of  the  first  after-marriage 

kiss. 
Rustic     Is  not  this  wood-witch  of  the  r's  fear 

A  lady  that  was  beautiful  as  day  Sat  by  me  at  a  r 

festival 
he,  your  r  amourist.  The  pohsh'd  Damon  of  your 
pastoral  here.  Prom,  of  May  in  561 

Rusting    plow  Lay  r  in  the  furrow's  yellow  weeds,  Becket  i  iii  355 

Rut    Things  that  seem  jerk'd  out  of  the  common  r  Of  Nature    Harold  i  i  138 
Ruthless    And  Uke  a  river  in  flood  thro'  a  burst  dam 

Descends  the  r  Norman —  „    n  ii  467 


Becket,  Pro.  361 
ra  ii  31 

The  Falcon  350 


Saake 


1060 


8 


Sa&ke  (sake)    fur  'er  s  an'  fur  my  s  an'  aU  ?  Prom,  of  May  ii  41 

Sa&me  (same)     a-plaayin'  the  s  gaame  wi'  my  Dora— 

I'll  Soomerset  tha.  «  "  ^^^ 

Sa&ve  (save)    if  she  weant  listen  to  me  when  I  be 

a-tryin'  to  s  'er —  "  ?.  ^^* 

SafiT  (say)     I  should  s  'twur  ower  by  now.  Queen  Maryvf  m  475 

Nowt-what  could  he  s  ?  Prom,  of  May  1 152 

and  I  will  s  niver  master  'ed  better  men :  ,.  i  ^^^ 

But  I  bed  a  word  to  s  to  ye.  ..  °  ^D 

What  did  ye  do,  and  what  did  ye  s,  ..      ,  °j'« 

What  did  ye  s,  and  what  did  ye  do,  (repeat)  „  n  i  /»,  lyo 

What  did  we  do,  and  what  did  we  s,  .,  ^  j"^ 

What  we  mowt  s,  and  what  we  mowt  do,  „  "  ^yi 

But  what  'ud  she  s  to  that  ?  „  n  «>»» 

and  s  it  to  ye  afoor  dark ;  „  mJ^-^ 

to  s  he's  browt  some  of  Miss  Eva's  roses  for  the 

sick  laady  to  smell  on.  "         "^  ^^ 

she  moant  coom  here.     What  would  her  mother  s?  „         m  4oy 

Saayin'  (saying)     What  hasta  been  s  to  my  Dora  ?  ,,  n  7U4 

He  be  s  a  word  to  the  owd  man,  ,.         ™  4«U 

Sack  (a  wine)     I  marvel  is  it  s  or  Malvoisie  ?  Foresters  in  cidl 

Sack  (bag)    so  dusted  his  back  with  the  meal  in  his  s,  Becketi  iv  17& 

and  the  s's,  and  the  taaters,  and  the  mangles.  Prom,  of  May  i  46^ 

Sack  (verb)     Richard  s's  and  wastes  a  town  With  random 

pillage  Foresters  rv  376 

Sackage    safe  from  all  The  spoU  and  s  aim'd  Qween  Mar^/  n  ii  248 

Sack'd    By  him  who  s  the  house  of  God ;  ,,        i"  ^i  l^^ 

When  Wyatt  s  the  Chancellor's  house  in  Southwark.       „  v  u  &U4 

Sacrament    Touching  the  s  in  that  same  book  ,,       jv  m  jM 

Yea,  take  the  S  upon  it,  King.  Harold  iv  i  lb6 

Sacred    thy  kiss— -S!     I'll  kiss  it  too.  Becketnil85 

More  s  than  his  forests  for  the  chase  ?  .,      ^.."-.qT 

To  bathe  this  s  pavement  with  my  blood.  »     v  m  Idi 

A  5  cup  saved  from  a  blazing  shrine  Of  our  great  . 

Goddess,  T/ie  Cwp  i  n  54 

and  the  s  s'hrine  By  chance  was  burnt  along  with  it.  „        i  ii  64 

that  you  should  clasp  a  hand  Red  with  the  s  blood  of 

Sinnatus  ?  "  °„°* 

Antonius.    Here  is  another  s  to  the  Goddess,  „         n  ^o 

O  the  s  Uttle  thing.     What  a  shape !  Foresters  1 1 107 

And  coil'd  himself  about  her  s  waist.  ..        Ii  i  IdS 

or  shall  I  call  it  by  that  new  term  Brought  from  the  s 

East,  his  harem?  "         iv  7U& 

No  friendship  s,  values  neither  man  Nor  woman  save 

as  tools—  ^         '•         ^.J]i 

Sacrifice    Their  wafer  and  perpetual  s :  Queen  Maryiu^ 

A  holy  supper,  not  a  s ;  "        ^-"i  ^  9 

No  5,  but  a  Ufe-giving  feast !  ,.    jv  H  ^\^ 

A  s  to  Harold,  a  peace-offering,  Harold  i  u  ^U6 

The  more  the  love,  the  more  acceptable  The  s  of  both 
your  loves  to  heaven.  No  s  to  heaven,  no  help 
from  heaven;  "     ™^^X 

And  s  there  must  be,  for  the  king  Is  holy,  «     ™.i  ^0* 

it  was  but  the  s  of  a  kingdom  to  his  son,  Becket  in  m  lUo 

nobler  The  victim  was,  the  more  acceptable  Might  be        ,    „  , 

jjjg  j_  Tfte  Falcon  nol 

Sacrificed    like  the  Greek  king  when  his  daughter  was  s,     Becket  in  iii  105 

Sacrilege    Take  fees  of  tyranny,  wink  at  s,  >.        n.ii  ^9* 

0  God,  O  noble  knights,  O  s  !  ..        '^  H?  H^ 

Sad    Be  merry  !  yet,  Sir  Ralph,  you  look  but  s.  Queen  Mary  n  u  ii59 

Stafford,  I  am  a  «  man  and  a  serious.  „  ™  1  41 

Peace,  cousin,  peace  !     I  am  s  at  heart  myself.  „  v  u  159 

poor  lad  !  how  sick  and  s  for  home  !  Harold  11  u  p^5 

Why  art  thou  s?  "       ^^.'^^9 

but  they  were  s,  And  somewhat  sadden'd  me.  ,.        ^  •    Jo 

Sadden'd    but  they  were  sad,  And  somewhat  s  me.  „         v  1 113 

Sadder    Of  a  nature  Stronger,  s  than  my  own.  Foresters  n  11 189 

Saddle    A  ragged  cloak  for  s — he,  he,  he,  Becket  v  1  248 

Saddle-bow    bent  to  his  s-b,  As  if  to  win  the  man         Queen  Mary  n  11  311 

Sadness    There  is  a  touch  of  s  in  it,  my  lord,  Foresters  i  in  35 

I  have  a  touch  of  »  in  myself.  »        i  lii  ^8 


Safe    They  have  given  me  a  s  conduct : 

and  keep  you  whole  and  s  from  all  The  spoil 

Is  he  so  s  to  fight  upon  her  side  ? 

If  not,  there's  no  man  s. 

Yes,  Thomas  White.     I  am  s  enough ; 

Friend,  tho'  so  late,  it  is  not  s  to  preach. 

See  him  out  s !  (repeat) 

into  thy  cloister  as  the  king  Will'd  it :  be  s : 

Stigand  will  see  thee  s,  And  so— Farewell. 

And  see  thee  s  from  Senlac. 

Look  out  upon  the  battle— is  he  s?  (repeat) 

S  enough  there  from  her  to  whom  thou  art  bound 

that  is  s  with  me  as  with  thyself : 

It  is  not  s  for  me  to  look  upon  him. 

S  from  the  dark  and  the  cold. 

Home  with  the  flock  to  the  fold— 6'  from  the  wolf- 

S  from  the  wolf  to  the  fold — 

charm'd  our  general  into  mercy,  And  all  is  s  agam. 

Who  causest  the  s  earth  to  shudder  and  gape, 
Safe-conduct    Rogue,  we  have  thy  captain's  s-c ; 


Said 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  101 

„         n  ii  246 

„         n  ii  313 

„         n  ii  315 

n  ii  317 

„  V  iv  42 

HaroU  v  i  85,  93 

vi310 

V  i  41» 

V  i  457 
„  V  i  485,  655 
Becket,  Pro.  6ft 

„     Pro.  489 

„      I  iii  486 

The  Cup  I  ii  6 

I  ii  9 

„      I  ii  19 

„    I  ii  313 

„      n29& 

Foresters  rv  432 


Safeguard    Under  the  shield  and  s  of  the  Pope,  Becket  imOm 

SafeUer    you  had  5  have  slain  an  archbishop  than  a  she-goat :      „      in  m  b» 

Safer    I  fear  you  come  to  carry  it  off  my  shoulders.  And 

sonnet-making's  s.  Queen  Mary  Jii9S 

Said    my  daughter  s  that  when  there  rose  >.           1 1  »^ 

she  s  that  no  one  in  her  time  should  be  burnt  for  . 

heresy.  "         ^-j  05 

Know  too  what  Wyatt  s.  "      „^J\^ 

What  Wyatt  s,  or  what  they  s  he  s,  ..11  ]^  :J^ 

He  s  it.    Gardiner.    Your  courts  of  justice  ,.      n  ly  ±^ 

s  she  was  condemn'd  to  die  for  treason ;  "      ™  •  qAA 

Then  knelt  and  s  the  Miserere  Mei—  „       nil  ovu 

Well  s.  Lord  Legate.     Mary.     Nay,  not  weU  s ;  1  . 

thought  of  you,  my  liege,  "     JYi/wQ 

Or  s  or  done  in  all  my  hfe  by  me;  -     ^  ^^^^ 

you  recanted  all  you  s  Touching  the  sacrament  „     iv  lu  ^o^ 

I  haves.     Cries.     'PuU  him  down!  ,.     ^  ••!?{? 

.SI  not  right?     For  how  should  reverend  prelate  „     iv"}^fi 

Have  I  not  s  ?    Madam,  I  came  to  sue  Your  Council  „        v  1  lUb 

Why,  who  s  that?     I  know  not— true  enough !  „       I"^ 

What  s  you,  my  good  Lord,  that  our  brave  English  „       v  11  ^54 

,S  you  not  Many  of  these  were  loyal  ?     ,      ,  „  "       I  ••  kr? 

what  you  s  When  last  you  came  to  England  ?  "       I "  =7  i 

you  s  more ;  You  s  he  would  come  qmckly.  „       v  110  (4 

Is  it  so  fine  ?     Troth,  some  have  5  so.  v        ▼  "i  ^^ 

He  s  it  was  not  courtly  to  stand  helmeted  „         v  v  00 

He  s  (thou  heardst  him)  that  I  must  not  hence  Save  on  , 

conditions.     Malet.     So  in  truth  he  s.  Harold  nn  2m 

He  s  that  he  should  see  confusion  fall  ..      n  u  40^ 

Some  5  it  was  thy  father's  deed.    HaroU.    They  bed.  „      ^H^l^ 

aS  '  ay '  when  I  meant '  no,'  lied  like  a  lad  «      n  11  ooo 

The  Devilis  so  modest.    GuHh.    He  never  sit!  „      ^]  ^^^ 
Since  Griffyth's  head  was  sent  To  Edward,  she  hath  sit.      „      rv  1  ^^^ 

Monk,  Thou  hast  s  thy  say,  "      p,„  Vor 

The  manner  of  his  death,  and  all  he  s.  Becket,  Pro.  426 

Andlhavesno  wordof  thistohim:  ..            11?' 

They  s— her  Grace's  people— thou  wast  found—  „          .  1 11  * 

And  what  s  the  black  sheep,  my  masters  ?            ^    ,  ,     "       ^  '^  ^% 

from  that  height  something  was  s  to  me  I  knew  not  what.     „  °^^^ 

He  s  as  much  before.                                        „        ^.  "       °.|.  ?r: 
from  those,  as  I  s  before,  there  may  come  a  conflagration—    „    m  111 104 

Hesso?     Louis,  did  he?               ^^^      .    a  "     ^lilsS 

You  wrong  the  King :  he  meant  what  he  s  to-day.  „     m  111  zyy 

You  s  you  couldn't  tnist  Margery,  .-      J\."„;iQ 

ready  To  tear  himself  for  having  s  as  much.  „      iv  1  ziv 

I  s  it  was  the  King's  courts,  not  the  Kmg ;  ThJr-.Jf  W  2^^ 

Why  s  you  not  as  much  to  my  brave  Smnatus  ?  The  Cv/p  i  n  ^09 

Not  say  as  much?     I  all  but  s  as  much.  ,.       J||^°^ 

And  s  he  loathed  the  cruelties  that  Rome  ,.       H.-sn 

As  I  s  before,  you  are  stiU  too  early.  ..     J}''^^ 
Do  what  I  s ;  (repeat)                           ^^                   The  Falcon  265,  269 

you  have  s  so  much  Of  this  poor  wreath  „                  ^o 

That  is  musically  s.  "                   ^45 

I  s  you  might  imagine  it  was  so.                                 i,  "  „/  m^,.  t  179 
Master  Dobson,  did  you  hear  what  I  s  ?                    Prom,  of  May  1 172 


Said 


1061 


Salisbury 


Said  (continued)    Well  but,  as  I  s  afoor,  it  be  the  last 

load  hoam ;  Prom,  of  May  n  168 

She  s  herself  She  would  forgive  him,  „          u  679 

He  s  we  had  been  most  happy  together,  „         m  327 

0  forgive  me !  forgive  me !    Steer.    Who  s  that  ?  „         in  464 

1  never  s  As  much  before  to  any  woman  living.  „  in  644 
he  s  that  whenever  I  married  he  would  give  me  away,  Foresters  i  i  287 
I  care  not  what  he  5.  „  i  ii  259 
therefore  by  the  judgment  of  the  officers  of  the  s  lord  king,  „  i  iii  65 
So  he  s  who  lieth  here.  „  n  ii  117 
He  hath,  as  he  s,  but  one  penny.  „  m  208 
S  I  not,  I  loved  thee,  man  ?  „        iv  740 

Saidest    So  thou  s.  Harold  v  ii  26 

Sail    Stand  on  the  deck  and  spread  his  wings  for  s  !       Queen  Mary  i  v  379 

Draw  with  your  s's  from  our  poor  land,  „       ni  vi  226 

every  craft  that  carries  s  and  gun  Steer  toward  Calais.  „           v  ii  275 

her  six  and  thirty  s  Of  Provence  blew  you  Becket  v  i  122 

f^t'lfag    S  from  France,  with  thirty  Englishmen,  Queen  Mary  v  i  285 

Sailor    See  Latimer-sailor 

Saint    (See  also  Mummy-saints,  Saint's-day)    Ay,  for 

the  S's  are  come  to  reign  again.  „            n  i  21 

if  thou  call  on  God  and  all  the  s's,  „         iv  iii  97 

S's,  I  have  rebuilt  Your  shrines,  „          v  ii  299 

0  S  ol  Aragon,  with  that  sweet  worn  smile  „          v  v  198 

To  find  the  sweet  refreshment  of  the  S's.  Harold  i  i  177 

the  S's  Pilot  and  prosper  all  thy  wandering  „      i  i  264 

Thank  the  S's,  no  !  „      i  i  318 

An  honest  gift,  by  all  the  S's,  „      i  j  345 

'  O  thou  more  5  than  king ! '  „     i  ii  167 

by  the  patient  S's,  she's  as  crabb'd  as  ever.  „       n  i  51 

'  Marry,  the  S's  must  go  along  with  us,  „  n  ii  365 
Holy  S's  of  Normandy  When  thou  art  home  in  England,      „    ii  ii  727 

S's  to  scatter  sparks  of  plague  Thro'  all  your  cities,  „    ii  ii  745 

send  thy  s's  that  I  may  say  Ev'n  to  their  faces,  „    n  ii  785 
To  save  thee  from  the  wrath  of  Norman  S's.    Stigand. 
Norman  enough !     Be  there  no  S's  of  England  To 

help  us  „    m  i  218 

The  S's  are  one,  but  those  of  Normanland  Are  mightier  „    mi  223 

but  their  S's  Have  heard  thee,  Harold.  „    ni  i  253 

My  son,  the  S's  are  virgins ;  „    ni  i  271 

All  the  sweet  S's  bless  him  !  „    m  i  297 

Eternal  war,  than  that  the  S's  at  peace  „     ni  ii  75 

Swearing  thou  swearest  falsely  by  his  S's  :  „    m  ii  143 

Our  S's  have  moved  the  Church  that  moves  the  world,  „        v  i  41 

Tell  him  the  S's  are  nobler  than  he  dreams,  „        v  i  55 

Tell  him  that  God  is  nobler  than  the  «S"s,  „        v  i  58 

lest  the  strange  S's  By  whom  thou  swarest,  „      t  i  116 

But  by  all  S's—    Leofwin.     Barring  the  Norman  !  „      v  i  224 

My  fatal  oath — the  dead  <S"s— the  dark  dreams —  „      v  i  380 

His  oath  was  broken— 0  holy  Norman  S's,  >,  v  i  617 
And  so  the  s's  were  ^\Toth.    I  cannot  love  them.  For  they 

are  Norman  s's—  »         v  ii  7 

Uars  all  of  you,  Your  S's  and  all !  »     ^  ]}  106 

arrow  which  the  S's  Sharpen'd  and  sent  against  him —  „     v  ii  168 

Praise  the  S's.     It  is  over.     No  more  blood !  „     v  ii  194 

Why  thou,  the  King,  the  Pope,  the  S's,  the  world,  Becket  i  iii  706 

And  wake  with  it,  and  show  it  to  all  the  S's.  „       n  i  304 

My  lord,  you  will  be  greater  than  the  iS"s,  „      ii  ii  197 

all  on  us  ha'  had  to  go,  bless  the  S's,  „      in  i  146 

And  shriek  to  all  the  s's  among  the  stars :  „     iv  ii  239 

O  blessed  s,  0  glorious  Benedict, —  „         v  iii  1 

And  all  the  tutelar  S's  of  Canterbury.  „     v  lu  167 

Why,  bless  the  s's  !  ^/i«  Falcon  171 

in  hope  that  the  s's  would  send  us  this  blessed  morning ;  „          186 

—they  are  made  by  the  blessed  s's— these  marriages.  „          203 

Oh  sweet  s's  !  one  plate  of  prunes  !  „          215 

and  by  all  the  s's  I  can  shoot  almost  as  closely  Foresters  i  i  215 

For  holy  vows  made  to  the  blessed  S's  „       i  ii  175 

sweet  s's  bless  your  worship  for  your  alms  „       n  i  363 

s's  were  so  kind  to  both  on  us  that  he  was  dead  „       n  i  372 

by  all  the  s's  and  all  the  devils  ye  shall  dance.  „         iv  552 

St  Alphege    See  Alphege 

jt  Andrew  (See  also  Andrew's)  Might  not  ^  ^'s  be 
her  happiest  day?  Mary.  Then  these  shall 
meet  upon  S  A's  day.  Queen  Mary  ni  ii  123 


St.  Aaitevi  (continued)    iS  .4 's  day;  sit  close,  sit  close, 

we  are  friends.  Queen  Mary  ixi  iii  1 

The  triumph  oi  S  A  on  his  cross,  „         rv  iii  94 

St.  Blaise    See  Blaise 

St.  Calixtus    See  Calixtus 

St.  Cupid    See  Cupid 

St.  Denis    See  Denis 

St.  Dunstan    See    Dimstan 

Sainted    yea,  may  God  Forget  me  at  most  need  when  I 

forget  Her  foul  divorce — my  s  mother —  Queen  Mary  iv  i  81 

St.  Edmimd    See  Edmund 

St.  George    See  George 

St.  James    Till,  by  <S  J,  I  find  myself  the  fool.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  101 

By  S  J  I  do  protest,  „            iii  vi  253 

St.  John     What  saith  S  J : — '  Love  of  this  world  is 

hatred  against  God.'  „           rv  iii  172 

St.  Lawrence    See  Lawrence 

Saintly    Or  give  thee  s  strength  to  imdergo.  Queen  Mary  rv  iii  99 

A  gentle,  gracious,  pure  and  s  man  !  Harold  n  ii  585 

The  sickness  of  our  s  king,  „       m  i  164 

Save  him  till  all  as  s  as  thyself  Becket  v  iii  12 

Thou  seem'st  a  s  splendour  out  from  heaven,  Foresters  ii  i  606 

St.  Mary's    read  your  recantation  Before  the  people  in 

S  M  Church.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  29 

farewell ;  Until  I  see  you  \n  S  M  Church.  „           iv  ii  47 

We  are  ready  To  take  you  to  S  M,  Master  Cranmer.  „         rv  ii  238 

St.  Olaf    SeeOM 

St.  Pancratius    See  Pancratius 

St.  Paul    (See  also  Paul)    loons  That  cannot  spell 

Esaias  from  S  P,  Queen  Mary  m  i  281 

St.  Peter    (See  also  Peter)     re-pulpited  The  shepherd 

oiS  P,  „            I V 182 

ev'n  S  P  in  his  time  of  fear  Denied  his  Master,  „         in  iv  263 

They  crucified  S  P  downward.  Becket  i  iii  619 

greater  than  the  Saints,  More  than  S  P?  „      n  ii  198 

if  they  were  defective  as  S  P  Denying  Christ,  „      n  ii  215 

Saint's-day    Most  like  it  is  a  S-d.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  23 

St.  Valery    Against  S  V  And  William.  Harold  in  ii  136 

St.  Vitus    See  Vitus 

Sake    (See  also  Saake)     I  have  a  head  to  lose  for  your 

sweet  s.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  131 

O,  my  lord  to  be.  My  love,  for  thy  s  only.  .,            i  v  67 

for  appearance  s,  stay  with  the  Queen.  „          n  i  137 

We  have  made  war  upon  the  Holy  Father  All  for  your  s :      „  v  ii  309 

for  the  s  Of  England's  wholeness —  Harold  i  ii  197 

for  my  mother's  s  I  love  your  England.  „     n  ii  268 

Speak  for  thy  mother's  s,  and  tell  me  true.    Malet.  Then 

for  my  mother's  s  and  England's  s  „     11  ii  27] 

0  speak  him  fair,  Harold,  for  thine  own  s.  „     n  ii  396 

But  for  my  s,  oh  brother  !  oh  !  for  my  s  !  „     n  ii  401 

Not  ev'n  for  thy  s,  brother,  would  I  lie.  „     n  ii  420 

Harold,  for  my  s  and  for  thine  own  !  .,     n  ii  607 

Ay,  brother — ^for  the  s  of  England — ay.  „     11  ii  638 

for  mine  own  s,  for  thine.  For  England,  .,     rv  i  229 

for  their  s  who  stagger  betwixt  thine  Appeal,  Becket  i  iii  621 

for  the  s  of  the  Church  itself,  if  not  for  my  own,  „       i  iv  I52 
Agree  with  him  quickly  again,  even  for  the  s  of  the 

Church.                      "  ..      nii377 
Then  for  your  own  s.  Lady,  I  say  it  with  all  gentle- 
ness, And  for  the  s  The  Cup  i  iii  98 
For  my  s — or  they  seize  on  thee.  .,      i  iii  I13 
For  her  own  s  then,  if  not  for  mine —  Prom,  of  May  n  683 

Salad    There  sprouts  a  s  in  the  garden  still.  The  Falcon  149 

one  piece  of  earthenware  to  serve  the  s  in  „          452 

Here's  a  fine  s  for  my  lady,  „          545 

You  have  but  trifled  with  our  homely  s,  „          672 

Saladdeen     Nay,  ev'n  the  accursed  heathen  S —  Becket  TV  ii  251 

Salisbury  (Jocelyn,  Bishop  of)    (See  also  Jocelyn)    No 

saying  of  mine — Jocelyn  of  S.  „       n  ii  373 

but  S  was  a  calf  cowed  by  Mother  Church,  „      tn  iii  95 
crowning  thy  young  son" By  York,  London  and  S — 

not  Canterbury.  ,,     m  m  jgg 

York  and  myself,  and  our  good  S  here,  ]]          v  i  56 

Salisbury  (John  of)    (See  also  John,  John  of  Salisbury)  We 

gave  thee  to  the  charge  of  John  of  S,  „         i  i  247 


Salisbury 


1062 


Save 


Salisbury  (John  of)  (contimud)    John  of  S  Halh  often  laid  a 

cold  hand  on  my  heats,  Becket  i  i  383 

He  watch'd  her  pass  with  John  oi  S  „       i  ii  40 

priest  whom  John  of  S  trusted  Hath  sent  another.  „     in  i  69 

John  of  iS  committed  The  secret  of  the  bower,  „     rn  iii  4 

I  know  him ;  our  good  John  of  S.  „      v  ii  77 

make  me  not  a  woman,  John  of  S,  „    v  ii  148 

Sallied     that  our  brave  English  Had  s  out  from  Calais   Queen  Mary  v  ii  256 

Sally  (Allen,  servant  to  Farmer  Dobson)     (See  also 

Sally  Allen)     wheniver  'e  sees  two  sweet'arts 

togither  like  thou  and  me,  S,  Prom,  of  May  ii  164 

And  you  an'  your  S  was  f  orkin'  the  haay,  „  n  181 

When  me  an'  my  S  was  forkin'  the  haay,  „  ii  192 

For  me  an'  my  S  we  swear'd  to  be  true,  „  ii  204 

I  can't  let  tha  aloan  if  I  would,  S.  „  u  234 

but  us  three,  arter  S'd  telled  us  on  'im,  „  m  133 

I  beant  sa  sewer  o'  that,  fur  S  knaw'd  'im ;  „  ni  147 

Some  foolish  mistake  of  S's ;  „  iii  154 

as  the  good  iS  says,  '  I  can't  abide  him' — •  „  iii  174 

Sally  Allen    S  A ,  you  worked  for  Mr.  Dobson,  didn't  you  ?      „  in  101 

' Becket  m  ii  1 

The  Gup  n  232 

Prom,  of  May  i  57 

Becket  in  iii  320 

I  iii  160 

II  ii  269 
V  ii  249 
I  iii  182 


Salt  (adj.)     Up  from  the  s  lips  of  the  land  we  two 
like  a  barren  shore  That  grew  s  weeds, 
And  a  s  wind  burnt  the  blossoming  trees  ; 

Salt  (s)     Have  I  so^^ti  it  in  s  ?     I  trust  not, 

Saltwood  (adj.)     thou,  De  Broc,  that  boldest  S  Castlt 
cursed  those  De  Brocs  That  hold  our  S  Castle 
Perchance  the  fierce  De  Brocs  from  S  Castle, 

Saltwood  (s)    but  an  he  come  to  S,  By  God's  death, 

Salva    S  patriam  Sancte  Pater,  S  Fili,  S  Spiritus,  S 
patriam. 

Salvation    In  the  reborn  s  of  a  land  So  noble. 
I  promise  thee  on  my  s  That  thou  wilt  hear 

Same     (See  also  Saame)     While  this  s  marriage 
question  was  being  argued, 
and  that  s  tide  Which,  coming  with  our  coming. 
We  had  your  royal  barge,  and  that  s  chair, 
the  clauses  added  To  that  s  treaty  which  the 

emperor  sent  us 
Crave,  in  the  s  cause,  hearing  of  your  Grace. 
This  s  petition  of  the  foreign  exiles  For  Cranmer's  life. 
Hurt  no  man  more  Than  you  would  harm  your 
loving  natural  brother  Of  the  s  roof,  s  breast. 
Touching  the  sacrament  in  that  s  book 
But  heaven  and  earth  are  threads  of  the  s  loom, 
A  sight  of  that  s  chart  which  Henry  gave  you 
The  bird  that  moults  sings  the  s  song  again. 
The  s  smile  still. 

And  that  s  head  they  would  have  play'd  at  ball  with 
Have  I  not  drunk  of  the  s  cup  with  thee  ? 
If  I  might  send  you  down  a  flask  or  two  Of  that  s 

vintage  ? 
Giovanna,  my  dear  lady,  in  this  s  battle  We  had  been 
beaten — 


Harold  V  i  466 

Queen  Mary  iii  iii  182 

Becket  I  iii  254 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  37 

n  iii  20 

mil  7 

m  iii  69 

IV  i  8 

IV  i  193 

IV  iii  191 

IV  iii  263 

Harold  i  i  210 

Becket  i  ii  60 

„   I  iii  447 

„  in  iii  44 

The  Cup  n  126 

n  463 

The  Falcon  586 


crown  you  Again  with  the  s  crown  my  Queen  of  Beauty, 


602 
915 

Prom,  of  May  i  70 


But  he'll  never  be  the  s  man  again. 
Can  I  fancy  him  kneeling  with  me,  and  uttering 
the  s  prayer ;  standing  up  side  by  side  with  me, 

and  smgmg  the  s  hymn  ?  „       m  181 
I  believe  thou  f ell'st  into  the  hands  Of  these  s  Moors    Foresters  ii  i  564 

Prettier  than  that  s  widow  which  you  wot  of.  „         m  268 
or  by  that  s  love  of  God  we  will  hang  thee,  prince  or 

no  prince,  „         iv  582 

Sanction    s  your  decree  Of  Tostig's  banishment,  Harold  iv  i  103 

He  s  thee  to  exconmiimicate  The  prelates  Becket  v  ii  398 

Saoctnary    For  smooth  stone  columns  of  the  s,  Harold  i  ii  101 

As  one  that  puts  himself  in  s.  Becket  i  iii  479 

Antonius  would  not  suffer  me  to  break  Into  the  s.       The  Cup  i  iii  121 

Sand    sea  may  roll  S,  shingle,  shore-weed,  Harold  i  ii  119 

from  the  liquid  s's  of  Coesnon  Haled  „       n  ii  56 

Sudden  change  is  a  house  on  s  ;  Becket  m  iii  60 

Sand-castle    A  child's  s-c  on  the  beach  The  Cup  i  ii  253 

Sanders    What  is  thy  name  ?    Man.    S.  Queen  Mary  m  i  313 

Sane     Brave,  wary,  s  to  the  heart  of  her —  „           v  v  224 

A  s  and  natural  loathing  for  a  soul  Purer,  Becket  ii  i  170 

Will  hardly  help  to  make  him  s  again.  The  Falcon  83 


Sang    S  out  their  loves  so  loud. 

Heard  how  the  war-horn  s, 
Sanguelac    Senlac  !    S,  The  Lake  of  Blood  ! 

S  \  S  \  the  arrow  !  the  arrow  ! 

the  dead  man  call  itr— ^S,  The  lake  of  blood  ? 

thou  shalt  die  on  Senlac  hill — S  ! 

dear  brother,  nevermore — S  ! 

my  voice  against  thee  from  the  grave — S  ! 

S  \  S  \     The  arrow  !  the  arrow  ! 

iS — -iS— the  arrow—  the  arrow  ! — away  ! 
Sank  I  s  so  low  that  I  went  into  service — 
Sap     Like  April  s  to  the  topmost  tree. 


Harold  I  ii  20 
„  IV  iii  157 
„  in  i  385 
„  ni  i  402 
„  V  i  184 
„  V  i  243 
„  V  i  249- 
„  V  i  256 
„  V  i  262 
„  V  i  671 
Prom,  of  May  in  391 
Foresters  i  iii  24 


Sapphire    eyes — and  these  "two  s's — these  Twin  rubies,  Harold  i  ii  110 

Saracen  (adj.)     And  push'd  our  lances  into  iS  hearts.  Becket  \ind\ 

Saracen  (s)     He  calls  us  worse  than  Jews,  Moors,  S's.  Queen  Mary  v  i  151 
Sarve  (serve)    if  ye  be  goin'  to  s  our  Dora  as  ye  sarved 

our  Eva —  Prom,  of  May  n  691 
Sarved  (served)    fur  I  ha'  s  for  ye  well  nigh  as  long  as 

the  man  s  for  'is  sweet'art  i'  Scriptur'.  „              n  61 

if  ye  be  goin'  to  sarve  our  Dora  as  ye  s  our  Eva —  „            n  692 
Sat    As  if  he  had  been  the  Holy  Father,  s  And 

judged  it.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  44 

if  there  s  within  the  Norman  chair  A  ruler  Harold  n  ii  532 

He  s  down  there  And  dropt  it  in  his  hands,  Becket  i  iii  323 

s  in  mine  own  courts  Judging  my  judges,  „      i  iii  367 

Ay,  the  princes  s  in  judgment  against  me,  „      i  iv  129 

a  son  stone-blind  S  by  his  mother's  hearth  :  „      v  ii  106 

s  Stone-dead  upon  a  heap  of  ice-cold  eggs.  „      v  ii  238 

S  by  me  at  a  rustic  festival  The  Falcon  350 


Foresters  n  i  60 
„     II  ii  152 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  95 
in  iv  77 


and  s  Thro'  every  sensual  course  of  that  full  feast  Prom^of  May  ii  25S 

while  I  s  Among  my  thralls  in  my  baronial  hall  --       ■ 
,  Kill'd  the  sward  where'er  they  s, 

Satan     terms  Of  S,  liars,  blasphemy.  Antichrist, 
A  spice  of  S,  ha  ! 
betwixt  thine  Appeal,  and  Henry's  anger,  yield. 

Becket.     Hence,  S  !  Becket  i  iii  624 

Satin     white  s  his  trunk-hose.  Inwrought  with  silver, —  Queen  Mary  in  i  76 

Satisfaction    we  cannot  yield  thee  an  answer  altogether  to 

thy  s.  Becket  i  iv  22 

Satisfy     Have  I  not  writ  enough  to  s  you  ?  Qu^en  Mary  iv  ii  63 

Saturday    and  he  pays  me  regular  every  S.  Prom,  of  May  i  311 

spent  all  your  last  S's  wages  at  the  ale-house  ;  „           m  78 

Sauce-deviser     A  s-d  for  thy  days  of  fish,  Becket,  Pro.  98 

Saul  (first  Hebrew  King)    gloom  of  S  Was  lighten'd  by 

young  David's  harp.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  358 

Savage     The  nimble,  wild,  red,  wiry,  s  king —  Harold  iv  i  197 

I  heard  your  s  cry.  Becket  iv  ii  320 

You  have  spoilt  the  farce.    My  s  cry  ?  „      iv  ii  338 

Our  s  mastiff,  That  all  but  kill'd  the  beggar.  Prom,  of  May  i  557 

S,  is  he  ?     What  matters  ?  „            1 562 

'  I  go  to  fight  in  Scotland  With  many  a  s  clan  ; '  Foresters  i  i  15 

Savagery    hast  thou  never  heard  His  s  at  Alen^on, —  Harold  n  ii  382 

But  you  know  not  the  ;>■  of  Rome.  The  Cup  i  ii  287 

Save  (verb)    (See  also  Saave)    up,  son,  and  s  him  ! 

They  love  thee,  Queen  Mary  i  iii  6& 

To  s  your  crown  that  it  must  come  to  this.  „          i  v  479 

no  glory  Like  his  who  s's  his  country  :  „          n  i  110  ; 

to  s  her  from  herself  and  Philip —  „          ii  i  189  ' 

I  come  to  s  you  all.  And  I'll  go  further  oS.  „        n  iii  118 

but  we  can  s  your  Grace.    The  river  still  is  free.  „         n  iv  23 

with  what  haste  I  might  To  s  my  royal  cousin.  „         n  iv  78 

and  s  the  life  Of  Devon  :  if  I  5  him,  „        n  iv  123 

Sir,  no  woman's  regimen  Can  s  us.  „  m  i  123 
God  s  their  Graces  !  (repeat)  Queen  Mary  ni  i  177, 187,  342,  412 
trusted  God  would  s  her  thro'  the  blood  Of  Jesus 

Christ  Queen  Mary  in  i  386 

God  s  the  Queen  !  „  in  v  170 
a  day  may  sink  or  5  a  realm.    Mary.    A  day  may 

s  a  heart  from  breaking  too.  „        m  vi  239 

Yet  to  s  Cranmer  were  to  serve  the  Church,  „           iv  i  135 

Written  for  fear  of  death,  to  5  my  life,  „         iv  iii  242 

Tell,  tell  me  ;  s  my  credit  with  myself.  .  „           v  ii  452 

God  s  Elizabeth,  the  Queen  of  England  !  „           v  v  283 

God  s  the  Queen  !  „           v  v  288 

Their  saver,  save  thou  s  him  from  himself.  Harold  n  ii  61 


Save 


1063 


Say 


Save  (verb)  (continued)    I  have  commission'd  thee  to  s  the  man :  Harold  ii  ii  98 


For  having  lost  myself  to  s  myself, 
To  s  thee  from  the  wrath  of  Norman  Saints. 
lamb  to  Holy  Church  To  s  thee  from  the  curse, 
when  our  good  hive  Needs  every  sting  to  s  it. 
This  brother  comes  to  s  Your  land  from  waste  ; 
not  my  purveyor  Of  pleasures,  but  to  s  a  life — 
S  me,  father,  hide  me — they  follow  me — 
Make  it  so  hard  to  s  a  moth  from  the  fire  ? 
iS  the  King's  honour  here  before  his  barons. 
God  s  him  from  all  sickness  of  the  soul ! 
thy  soUtude  among  thy  nuns.  May  that  5  thee  ! 
Is  it  too  late  for  me  to  s  your  soul  ? 
S  that  dear  head  which  now  is  Canterbury,  iS  him, 
he  saved  my  life,  he  saved  my  child,  *S  him,  his 
blood  would  darken  Henry's  name ;   iS  him  till 
all  as  saintly  as  thyself 
He  is  not  here — Not  yet,  thank  heaven.     0  s  him  ! 
That  way,  or  this  !  S  thyself  either  way. 
And  s  her  from  herself,  and  be  to  Rome 
She  may,  perchance,  to  s  this  husband, 
but  he  may  s  the  land,  (repeat) 
pay  My  brother  all  his  debt  and  s  the  land, 
pay  this  mortgage  to  his  brother,  And  s  the  land. 
God  s  the  King  ! 
Save  (quasi-prep,  and  conj.)    S  for  my  daUy  range 
Among  the  pleasant  fields 
s  for  the  fate  Which  hunted  him 
Their  saver,  s  thou  save  him  from  himself. 
8  for  the  prattling  of  thy  little  ones. 
I  must  not  hence  S  on  conditions. 
iS  for  thy  wild  and  violent  will  that  wrench'd 
iS  for  some  once  or  twice, 
S  from  the  throne  of  thine  archbishoprick  ? 
Saved     I  trust  this  day,  thro'  God,  I  have  s  the 
crown, 
scarlet  thread  of  Rahab  s  her  life  ; 
blessed  angels  who  rejoice  Over  one  s 
once  he  s  your  Majesty's  own  life  ; 
Who  s  it  or  not  s. 
but  s  in  heaven  By  your  recanting. 
I  thank  thee  for  having  s  thyself. 
save  Your  land  from  waste  ;  I  s  it  once  before, 
I  have  s  many  of  'em. 
for  to-night  ye  have  s  our  Archbishop  ! 
life  iS  as  by  miracle  alone  with  Him  Who  gave  it. 
but  s  From  all  that  by  our  solitude. 
all  the  souls  we  s  and  father'd  here 
Save  him,  he  s  my  life,  he  s  my  child, 
sacred  cup  s  from  a  blazing  shrine 
However  I  thank  thee  ;  thou  hast  s  my  life. 
He  s  my  life  too.     Did  he  ? 
I  s  his  life  once  in  battle.     He  has  monies.    I  will 

go  to  him.     I  s  him.     I  will  try  him. 
Thou  hast  s  my  head  at  the  peril  of  thine  own. 
Saver    *  Hail,  Daughter  of  God,  and  s  of  the  faith. 

Their  s,  save  thou  save  him  from  himself. 
Saving    to  the  s  of  their  souls.  Before  your  execution. 
S  my  confessor  and  my  cousin  Pole. 
S  thxo'  Norman  bishopricks — 
And  even  as  I  should  bless  thee  s  mine, 
8  the  honour  of  my  order — ay. 
8  thine  order  !     But  King  Henry  sware  That,  s  his 

King's  kingship, 
8  thine  order,  Thomas,  Is  black  and  white  at  once, 
Savooi     Burn  ! — Fie,  what  a  s  ! 

It  bears  an  evil  s  among  women. 
Savoury    geese,  beside  Hedge-pigs,  a  s  viand, 
Savoy    '  It  is  the  King's  wish,  that  you  should  wed 
Prince  PhUibert  of  jS. 
Specially  not  this  landless  Philibert  Of  S  ; 
She  wiU  not  have  Prince  Philibert  of  S, 
Elizabeth — To  Phihbert  of  S,  as  you  know. 
She  will  not  have  Prince  Philibert  of  S. 
Saw  (maxim)     For  I  was  musing  on  an  ancient  s, 


II  ii  654 
„  mi  217 
„  in  1336 
„  IV  i  18 
„  IV  i  94 
Becket,  Pro.  150 
iil81 
ii283 
I  iii  187 

V  ii  174 

V  ii  177 

V  ii  524 


V  iii  6 

!  „         V  iii  17 

V  iii  85 

The  Cup  I  i  101 

I  iii  33 

Foresters  i  i  283 

„      I  ii  218 

„      I  ii  265 

IV  857 

Queen  Mary  in  v  78 

Harold  n  ii  28 

„      II  ii  61 

„     II  ii  122 

„     n  ii  262 

„      V  i  277 

Becket,  Pro.  122 

I  i  119 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  303 

m  ii  39 

III  iii  181 

IV  i  124 

IV  i  133 

IV  ii  178 
Harold  ii  ii  653 

IV  i  95 

Becket  i  i  285 

„    iiv257 

„  ivii368 

„    V  ii  170 

„    vii223 

„       V  iii  8 

The  Cup  I  ii  54 

„       I  ii  333 

„     I  iii  160 

Foresters  i  i  272 

IV  795 

Queen  Mary  m  ii  82 

Harold  ii  ii  61 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  194 

V  ii  527 
Harold  ii  ii  538 

„       II  ii  651 
Becket  i  iii  20 


I  iii  26 

I  iii  30 

Queen  Mary  v  v  116 

The  Cup  I  iii  86 

Foresters  iv  193 

Queen  Mary  iii  v  222 

III  V  240 

„  in  vi  43 

V  i  247 

V  i  254 
Becket  v  ii  538 


Saw  (verb)    (See  also  Seed)    and  s  They  had  hewn 

the  drawbridge  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  17 

I  s  Lord  William  Howard  By  torchlight,  „           n  iii  28 

than  have  seen  it :  yet  I  s  it.  „            in  i  48 

changed  not  colour  when  she  s  the  block,  „          in  i  399 

I  never  s  your  Highness  moved  till  now.  „        in  vi  103 

Ay,  my  liege,  I  s  the  covers  laying.  „         in  vi  258 

I  s  the  deaths  of  Latimer  and  Ridley.  „        iv  iii  295 

And  you  s  Latimer  and  Ridley  die  ?  „         iv  iii  328 

You  s  him  how  he  past  among  the  crowd  ;  „         iv  iii  574 

s  the  church  all  fill'd  With  dead  men  Harold  i  ii  81 

Griffyth  when  I  s  him  flee.  Chased  deer-like  „    i  ii  146 

I  s  him  over  there.  „      n  i  46 

I  s  him  coming  with  his  brother  Odo  „  n  ii  347 

whose  baby  eye  S  them  sufficient.  „    m  ii  67 

and  yet  I  s  thee  drive  him  up  his  hills —  „  iv  i  211 

I  8  the  hand  of  Tostig  cover  it.  „   iv  iii  81 

someone  s  thy  willy-nilly  nun  Vying  a  tress  „    v  i  148 

I  s  her  even  now :  She  hath  not  left  us.  ,,    v  i  158 

I  «  it  in  her  eyes  !  ,,    v  i  368 

I  s  that  door  Close  even  now  upon  the  woman.  Becket  i  i  201 

who  never  s  nor  dreamed  of  such  a  banquet.  „      i  iv  83 
Then  I  s  Thy  high  black  steed  among  the  flaming  furze,        „      n  i  54 

bad  me  whatever  I  s  not  to  speak  one  word,  „   ni  i  133 

s  your  ladyship  a-parting  wi'  him  even  now  „    ni  i  159 

Thou  art  the  prettiest  child  I  ever  s.  ,,       iv  i  7 

I  s  the  ball  you  lost  in  the  fork  of  the  great  willow  „     iv  ii  56 

I  never  s  any  such.  Never  knew  any  such,  „  iv  ii  125 

I  s  you  there.     Fitzurse.     I  was  not.  „    v  ii  411 

You  s  my  hounds  True  to  the  scent ;  The  Cup  i  ii  109 

When  last  I  s  you,  You  all  but  yielded.  „            n  44 

that  ye  s  me  crown  myself  withal.  „          n  159 

She  s  it  at  a  dance,  upon  a  neck  Less  lovely  The  Falcon  54 

I  never  s  The  land  so  rich  in  blossom  as  this  year.  „         341 

Before  I  s  you — all  my  nobleness  Of  nature,  „         810 

I  s  a  man  go  in,  my  lord.  Foresters  n  i  207 

Captain,  we  s  thee  cowering  to  a  knight  „        n  i  682 

I  thought  I  s  thee  clasp  and  kiss  a  man  „         n  ii  71 

I  never  s  them  :  yet  I  could  believe  „       n  ii  107 

Saw    See  also  See-saw 

Saw'st    Our  bashful  Legate,  s  not  how  he  flush'd  ?      Queen  Mary  m  iv  350 

that  chart  with  the  red  line — -thou  s  it —  Becket,  Pro.  428 

Saxon    (See  also  Un-Saxon,  West  Saxon)    We  hold  our  S 

woodcock  in  the  springe,  Harold  ii  ii  1 

Breathe  the  free  wind  from  off  our  S  downs,  „  n  ii  186 

Angle,  Jute,  Dane,  S,  Norman,  „  n  ii  763 

little  help  without  our  S  carles  Against  Hardrada.  „     iv  i  35 

yet  he  held  that  Dane,  Jute,  Angle,  S,  „     iv  i  77 

And  Loathing  wield  a  S  battle-axe—  „     v  i  414 

Ay,  there  springs  a  S  on  him,  „     v  i  498 
I  have  heard  the  Steers  Had  land  in  S  times  ;        Prom,  of  May  in  608 

have  loved  Harold  the  S,  or  Hereward  the  Wake.  Foresters  i  i  228 

True  soul  of  the  S  churl  for  whom  song  has  no  charm.  „      n  i  385 

Say  (s)    Monk,  Thou  hast  said  thy  s,  Harold  v  i  5 
Say  all  thy  s,  But  blaze  not  out  before  the  Frenchmen  Becket  ni  iii  220 

Say  (verb)     (See  also  Saay)    from  their  sees  Or  fled,  they 

"  s'ing —  Queen  Mary  i  ii  5 


hear  what  the  shaveling  has  to  s  for  himself. 
He  s's  right ;  by  the  mass  we'll  have  no  mass 
Perinde  ac  cadaver — as  the  priest  s's, 
some  s,  That  you  shall  marry  him,  make  him  King 

belike.     Elizabeth.     Do  they  s  so,  good  imcle  ? 
But  why  s  that  ?  what  have  you  done  to  lose  her  ? 
Your  royal  father  (For  so  they  s) 
I  s  your  Grace  is  loved. 
What  s's  the  King  your  master  ? 
No,  s  I  come.     I  won  by  boldness  once. 
S  for  ten  thousand  ten — and  pothouse  knaves, 
I  s  no  more — only  this,  their  lot  is  yours. 
What  do  and  s  Your  Council  at  tliis  hour  ? 
So  I  s  Your  city  is  divided, 
I  s,  I,  that  was  never  mother,  cannot  tell 
he  s's  he's  a  poor  gentleman. 
Hang  him.  Is. 
whom — whom  did  you  s  ?    Messenger.    Elizabeth, 


I  iii  17 

I  iii  60 

I  iv  180 

I  iv  211 
I  iv  295 
IV  20 
IV  131 
IV  247 

I  V  547 
ni69 

ni213 

II  ii  45 
nii98 

n  ii  188 
n  iii  74 
n  iii  80 

n  iv  115 


Say 


1064 


Scalfe 


Say  (verb)  {contimied)    What  such  a  one  as  Wyatt 
s's  is  nothing : 
He  keeps,  they  s,  some  secret  that  may  cost 
I  s  There  is  no  man — there  was  one  woman  with  us — 
oversea  they  s  this  state  of  yours  Hath  no  more  mortice 
What  5  you  ?     Bagenhall.    We  talk  and  talk. 
But  stretch  it  wider ;  s  when  England  fell. 
I  5  you  were  the  one  sole  man  who  stood, 
yet  I  would  not  s  Bum  ! 
there  are  many,  As  my  Lord  Paget  s's. 
beware,  I  s.  Lest  men  accuse  you  of  indifference 
But  truth,  they  s,  will  out. 
To  s  '  I  did  not  ?  '  and  my  rod's  the  block, 
she  would  s  These  are  the  means  God  works  with, 
What  should  I  s,  I  cannot  pick  my  words — 
You  s  true,  Madam. 

I  s.  Your  father  had  a  will  that  beat  men  down ; 
So,  so  ;  this  will  I  s — thus  will  I  pray. 
I'll  5  something  for  you — so — good-bye. 
And  first  I  s  it  is  a  grievous  case, 
I  s,  I  hold  by  all  I  wrote  within  that  book. 
I  s  they  have  drawn  the  fire  On  their  own  heads  : 
'  Now,'  s's  the  Bishop,  s's  he, '  we'll  gwo  to  dinner ; ' 
I  hear  vinhappy  rumours — nay,  I  s  not,  I  believe. 
They  s  your  wars  are  not  the  wars  of  England. 
S  go  ;  but  only  s  it  lovingly. 
Might  I  not  s — to  please  your  wife,  the  Queen  ? 
They  s  the  gloom  of  Saul  Was  lighten'd 
but  s  the  world  is  nothing — 
How  dare  you  s  it  ? 
And  s's,  he  will  come  quickly. 
Then  I  may  s  your  Grace  will  see  your  sister  ? 


-tells  me  I  must  not  think — 
Alice.    It  is  a  saying  among 


s's  That  rest  is  all- 
And  who  s's  that  ? 

the  Catholics. 
The  Queen  is  dying,  or  you  dare  not  s  it. 
I  needs  must  s — That  never  English  monarch 
I  s  not  this,  as  being  Half  Norman-blooded, 
and  I  s  it  For  the  last  time  perchance. 
So  s's  old  Gurth,  not  I : 
I  s,  thou  hast  a  tongue, 
What  do  they  s  ?  did  Edward  know  of  this  ?    Malet. 

They  s,  his  wife  was  knowing  and  abetting.    Harold. 

They  s,  his  wife  ! — 
I  s  Ye  would  applaud  that  Norman  who  should  drive 
send  thy  saints  that  I  may  s  Ev'n  to  their  faces, 
forbidden  By  Holy  Church :  but  who  shall  s  ? 
They  s  thou  art  to  wed  the  Lady  Aldwyth.     Harold. 

They  s,  they  s. 
Never  shall  any  man  s  that  I,  that  Tostig 
He  means  the  thing  he  s's.    See  him  out  safe  ! 
I  s  it  now,  forgive  me  ! 
iS,  The  Queen  should  play  his  kingship 
They  s  that  you  are  wise  in  winged  things. 
We  are  friends  no  more  :  he  will  s  that,  not  I. 
I  have  heard  him  s  He  means  no  more  ; 
S  that  a  cleric  murder'd  an  archbishop, 
What  did  the  traitor  s  ? 
Tell  what  I  s  to  the  King. 
What  s  the  bishops  ? 

8  that  he  blind  thee  and  tear  out  thy  tongue. 
Wilt  thou  not  s,  '  God  bless  you,'  ere  we  go  ? 
Call  them  in,  I  s. 

and  they  do  s  the  very  breath  catches. 
And  I  »,  I  care  not  for  thy  saying,  (repeat) 
I  almost  fear  to  s  That  my  poor  heretic  heart 
I  s  that  those  Who  went  before  us 
All  that  you  s  is  just.     I  cannot  answer  it 
and  80  brought  me  no-hows  as  I  may  s, 
people  do  s  that  his  is  bad  beyond  ail  reckoning, 

and Rosamund.     The  people  lie. 

that  is  to  s  in  her  time  when  she  had  the  '  Crown.' 
S  all  thy  say.  But  blaze  not  out  before  the  Frenchmen 
but  I  «  no  more  .  .  .  farewell,  my  lord. 


Qiieen  Mary  m  i  139 

in  i  200 

mi  336 

in  i  441 

in  iii  37 

ra  iii  261 

m  iii  263 

m  iv  174 

in  iv  177 

in  iv  222 

in  V  28 

m  V  130 

m  vi  67 

in  vi  147 

m  vi  198 

IV  i  107 
IV  ii  113 
IV  ii  167 

IV  iii  167 

rv  iii  274 

IV  iii  379 

IV  iii  512 

vi36 

vil65 

vi216 

vi307 

v  ii  358 

V  ii  367 

V  ii  379 
vii565 

V  ii  603 
v  iv  4 
vv61 


v  v  243 

V  V  251 

V  V  276 
Harold  i  i  168 

„  I  i  174 
„  I  i  302 
„      1 1400 


„  nii304 

„  nii538 

„  n  ii  786 

„  in  ii  24 

„  in  ii  107 

„     IV  ii  66 

V  i  84 

„      V  ii  27 

Becket,  Pro.  235 

1 1255 

1 1345 

I  iii  192 

I  iii  399 

I  iii  471 

I  iii  564 

I  iii  589 

I  iii  615 

iiv33 

Iiv85 

I  iv  222 

nilll 

ni282 

n  ii  201 

m  i  1 

niilSO 

in  i  174 

ni  i  197 

ni  iii  219 

m  iii  271 


Becket  in  iii  308 

„      m  iii  347 

IV  ii  19 

„  IV  ii  79 

„  IV  ii  97 


IV  ii  107 

V  i  182 
„             V  ii  5 

V  ii  56 
The  Cup  I  ii  12 

„  I  ii  190 
„  I  ii  207 
„  I  ii  281 
„  I  ii  285 
„      I  ii  336 

„      I  ii  345 

„      I  ii  349 

„      I  ii  365 

I  iii  99 

n  177 

n  515 

The  Falcon  212 

238 

372 

508 

544 

734 


Say  (verb)  (continued)     base  as — who  shall  I  s — Fitzurse 
and  his  following — 
False  figure.  Map  would  s. 
she  s's  she  can  make  you  sleep  o'  nights. 
They  s  that  walls  have  ears  ; 
there  are  those  Who  s  you  do  not  love  him — 
See,  I  can  s  no  more.     Eleanor.    Will  you  not  s  you 
are  not  married  to  him  ?     Rosamund.     Ay,  Madam, 
I  can  s  it,  if  you  will. 
And  what  would  my  own  Aquitaine  s  to  that  ? 
York  will  s  anything.     What  is  he  saying  now  ? 
What  s  ye  there  of  Becket  ? 
They  5  that  Rome  Sprang  from  a  wolf. 
Do  not  s  so.     I  know  of  no  such  wives 
I  have  much  to  s,  no  time  to  s  it  in. 
Not  5  as  much  ?     I  all  but  said  as  much. 
I  s  it  to  you — ^you  are  wiser — Rome  knows  all. 
What  did  that  villain  Synorix  s  to  you  ? 
What  did  he  s  ?     Camma.     What  should  he  s  ? 

Sinnatus.     What  should  he  s, 
He  should  s  this,  that  being  Tetrarch  once 
What  should  he  s  ?     He  should  s  nothing 
Lady,  I  s  it  with  all  gentleness. 
How  dare  she  s  it  ?     I  could  hate  her  for  it 
some  old  Greek  S  death  was  the  chief  good  ? 
Call  him  back  and  s  I  come  to  breakfast  with  him. 
for  when  I  s  What  can  I  do — 
How  long  since  do  you  s  ? 
How  can  your  lordship  s  so  ? 
I  did  not  s,  my  lord,  that  it  was  so  ; 
shall  we  s  this  wreath  and  your  sweet  rhymes  ? 
.  And  what  did  you  s  to  that  ?  Prom,  of  May  1 142 

And  what  did  he  s  to  that  ?  „  1 151 

thaw  I  s's  it  mysen,  niver  men  'ed  a  better  master —  „  i  326 

Shall  I  s  it  ?— fly  with  me  to-day.  „  i  678 

Didn't  I  s  that  we  had  forgiven  you  ?  „  m  75 

S  that  the  sick  lady  thanks  him  !  „         m  348 

but  he  s's  he  wants  to  tell  ye  summut  „         in  354 

some  will  s  because  I  have  inherited  my  Uncle.  „         in  596 

I  s  to  it,  Thou  art  mine,  and  it  answers.  Foresters  i  i  335 

What  did  he  s  to  thee  ?  „        i  ii  254 

Do  you  doubt  me  when  I  s  she  loves  me,  man  ?  „        ii  i  520 

Speak  to  me,  Kate,  and  s  you  pardon  me  !  „         n  ii  53 

Leave  them  each  what  they  s  is  theirs,  „         in  294 

Out  on  it,  I  s,  as  out  of  time  and  time  !  „  iv  34 

S  it  again.  And  by  this  ring  the  lips  „  iv  69 

What  did  I  s  ?     Nay,  my  tongue  tript —  „         iv  498 

Saying  (part.)     {See  also  Saayin)     I  cannot  catch  what 

Father  Bourne  is  s.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  15 

What  wast  thou  s  of  this  Lady  Jane,  „  i  v  37 

This  Howard,  whom  they  fear,  what  was  he  s  ?  ,,        ui  vi  55 

hear  that  you  are  s  behind  his  back  what  you  see  you 

are  s  afore  his  face  ?  The  Falcon  106 

Sajrii^  (s)     It  is  a  s  among  the  Catholics.  Queen  Mary  v  v  244 

I  have  heard  a  s  of  thy  father  Godwin,  Harold  ni  i  111 

And  I  say,  I  care  not  for  thy  s.  (repeat)  Becket  n  i  112 

No  s  of  mine — Jocelyn  of  Salisbury.  „     n  ii  372 

slopes  Of  Solomon-shaming  flowers — that  was  your  s,  „      m  i  49 

I  heard  a  s  in  Egypt,  that  ambition  Is  like  the  sea 

wave, 
you  know  the  s — '  Better  a  man  without  riches, 
A  noble  s — and  acted  on  would  yield  A  nobler  breed 

Sayst    Why  (smiling),  no,  indeed.    Mary.    S  thou  ?      Queen  Mary  I  v  335 

Scaared  (scared)    I  be  a  bit  deaf,  and  I  wur  hallus  s  by 

a  big  word  ;  Prom,  of  May  in  33 

Scabbard    Down  s,  and  out  sword  !  Queen  Mary  n  i  143 

Scaffold    on  the  s  Recanted,  and  resold  himself  to 
Rome. 
She  came  upon  the  s, 
You'll  hear  of  me  again.     Bagenhall.     Upon  the  s. 

Scald    And  felt  the  sim  of  Antioch  s  our  naail. 

Scale  (for  weighing)     always  in  suspense,  like  the  s. 
But  lest  we  turn  the  s  of  courtesy  _ 

Scale  (of  a  fish)     my  fellows  know  tha£  I  am  all  one  s  like 

a  fish.  Becket  I  iv  213 


The  Cup  I  iii  137 
The  Falcon  750 
753 


in  i  151 
m  i  376 

m  i  475 

Becket  n  ii  93 

Becket  n  ii  363 

Harold  n  ii  164 


Scandal 


1065 


Scourge 


Scandal    My  flight  were  such  a  s  to  the  faith,  Queen  Mary  i  ii  53 

I'll  have  the  s  sounded  to  the  mud.     I  know  it  a  s. 

Gardiner.     All  my  hope  is  now  It  may  be  found  as.  „        i  v  227 

Scandalous    but  I  am  small  and  s,  „       v  ii  428 

Scant     I  had  s  time  to  do  him  in.  The  Falcon  556 

Scape  (escape)    flies  To  right  and  left,  and  cannot  s  the 

flame.  Harold  i  i  12 

Knave,  hast  thou  let  thy  prisoner  s  ?  „  n  ii  673 

Pray  God,  we  's  the  sunstroke.  Queen  Mary  m  v  279 

let  him  bury  her  Even  in  the  bowels  of  the  earth  to  's 
The  glance  of  John — 
Scaped  (escaped)     Archbishop  Robert  hardly  s  with  life. 
Scape-goat    A  sacriflce  to  Harold,  a  peace-offering,  A  s-g 

marriage — 
Scar    To  hide  the  s  left  by  thy  Parthian  dart. 

mine  own,  a  grief  To  show  the  s  for  ever — 
Scarboro'  Castle    Hath  taken  S  C,  north  of  York  ; 
Scare    old  enough  To  s  me  into  dreaming. 

We  thought  to  s  this  minion  of  the  King 

Ye  think  to  s  me  from  my  loyalty 

and  speak  small  to  'em,  and  not  s  'em, 

make  a  ghostly  wail  ever  and  anon  to  s  'em. 

that  s's  The  Baron  at  the  torture  of  his  churls, 
Scarecrow    no  such  s  in  your  father's  time. 

We  be  more  like  s's  in  a  field  than  decent  serving 
men ; 
Scared    (8ee  also  Scaared)     Mumbling  and  mixing  up 
in  his  s  prayers  Heaven  and  earth's  Maries  ; 

And  s  the  gray  old  porter  and  his  wife. 

S  by  the  Church — 

That  s  the  dying  conscience  of  the  king. 

Too  s— so  young  ! 

King  at  last  is  fairly  s  by  this  cloud — this  interdict 


have  I  s  the  red  rose  from  your  face  Into  your  heart  ? 


Foresters  ni  463 
Harold,  u  ii  527 

I  ii  204 
Becket,  Pro.  377 

I  i  178 

Queen  Mary  v  i  287 

IV  ii  103 

Becket  iv  ii  330 

V  ii  481 

Foresters  i  i  101 

„      II  i  216 

„       m  105 

Queen  Mary  i  v  473 

Foresters  i  i  34 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  86 

II  iii  16 
Harold  ni  ii  87 

V  i  211 

Becket  n  i  67 

„  III  iii  63 

„    ivii73 

Foresters  ii  ii  99 

„     11  ii  164 


And  he  was  s  and  slew  it 
We  be  s  with  song  and  shout. 
Scarlet  (a  companion  of  Robin  Hood)    >S^,  hath  not  the 

Earl  right  ?  Foresters  i  ii  41 

You,  S,  you  are  always  moody  here.  „     i  iii  128 

Then,  S,  thou  at  least  wilt  go  with  me.  „     i  iii  144 

I  remember,  S  hacking  down  A  hollow  ash,  „       ii  ii  95 

I  Little  John,  he  Much  the  miller's  son,  and  he  S,  „         tii  55 

he,  young  S,  and  he,  old  Much,  and  all  the  rest  of  us.  „         in  60 

Friend  S,  art  thou  less  a  man  than  Much  ?  „         in  65 

Then  let  her  pass  as  an  exception,  S.  „         in  72 

S  told  me — is  it  true  ? —  „       m  145 

S,  begin.  „       m  423 

Give  me  thy  hand.  Much  ;  I  love  thee.     At  him,  SI  ,,        iv  311 
You,  good  friar.  You  Much,  you  S,  you  dear  Little  John,      „      iv  1083 
Scarlet  (adj.)     S,  as  if  her  feet  were  wash'd  in  blood,       Queen  Mary  ni  i  61 

The  s  thread  of  Rahab  saved  her  life  ;  „           m  ii  38 

Scatter    Saints  to  s  sparks  of  plague  Thro'  all  your  cities,  Harold  ii  ii  745 

S  thy  people  home,  descend  the  hill,  -,          v  i  10 

Winnow  and  s  all  scruples  to  the  wind,  Becket  i  i  150 

I  s  all  their  cowls  to  all  the  hells.  „       n  i  93 

To  break  our  band  and  s  us  to  the  winds.  Foresters  in  453 

Scatterbrains    For  Robin  is  no  s  like  Richard,  „       iv  355 
Scatter'd    {See  also  Loosely-scatter'd)    Were  s  to  the 

harvest  .  .  .  Harold  iv  iii  211 

Smite  the  shepherd  and  the  sheep  are  s.  Becket  i  iv  227 

Who  dragg'd  the  s  limbs  into  their  den.  Queen  Mary  i  v  401 

My  people  are  all  s  I  know  not  where.  Foresters  n  i  176 

Scattering     To  help  the  realm  from  s.  Harold  ly  i  106 

The  crowd  are  s,  let  us  move  away  !  Becket  in  iii  357 

Scelera     Illomm  s  Poena  sequatur  !  (repeat)  Harold  v  i  517,  604 

Scene    — not  dead  now — a  swoon^a  s —  Prom,  of  May  in  697 

Scent  (s)     You  saw  my  hounds  True  to  the  s  ;  The  Cup  i  ii  111 

Scent  (verb)     I  s  it  in  the  green  leaves  of  the  wood.  Foresters  iv  944 

Sceptre     His  s  shall  go  forth  from  Ind  to  Ind  !  Queen  Mary  m  ii  177 

unsubject  to  One  earthly  s.  Becket  i  iii  681 

S  and  crozier  clashing,  and  the  mitre  „        n  i  25 

had  I  fathered  him  I  had  given  him  more  of  the  rod 

thjin  the  s.  .,  m  iii  111 

bulrush  now  in  this  right  hand  For  s.  Foresters  in  77 

Scheme    You  s  against  her  father's  weal  and  hers,  „      rv  481 


Schism    and  grief  For  our  long  s  and  disobedience, 
Grace  to  repent  and  sorrow  for  their  s  ; 
All  s,  and  from  all  and  every  censure, 
so  the  plague  Of  s  spreads  ; 
make  Our  island-Church  a  s  from  Christendom, 
Scholar    {See  also  Scholard)     Right  as  an  Oxford  s, 
Scholard  (scholar)     how  can  tha  keep  all  thy  s's  i' 
border  ? 
thaw  I  beant  naw  s,  fur  I  'ednt  naw  time  to 
maake  mysen  a  s 
School     I  was  just  out  of  s,  I  had  no  mother — 
afoor  she  went  to  s  at  Littlechester — 
Them  be  what  they  lams  the  childer'  at  s, 
School-boy    More  like  a  s-b  that  hath  broken  bounds, 
School'd    a  Tudor  S  by  the  shadow  of  death— 
Schoolin-time    but  I  were  bum  afoor  s-t. 
Schoolmaster    S  !     Why  if  Steer  han't  haxed  s  to 
dinner,  thaw  'e  knaws  I  was  hallus  agean 
heving  s  i'  the  parish  ! 
An'  thou  doant  understan'  it  neither — and  thou  s 

an'  all. 
Noa,  fur  thou  be  nobbut  s  ; 
but  the  s  looked  to  the  paying  you  your  wages 
when  I  was  away. 
Schoolmen    The  Canonists  and  S  were  with  me. 
Schoolmistress    Wasn't  Miss  Vavasour,  our  s  at 

Littlechester,  Prom,  of  May  in  298 

Science    I  had  some  smattering  of  s  then,  „  n  301 

and  s  uo«-  could  drug  and  balm  us  Back  into  nescience      „  n  339 

Scindatur    Illorum,  Domine,  Scutum  s  !  Harold  v  i  509 

Scion     whether  her  Grace  incline  to  this  splendid  s  of 


Queen  Mary  m  iii  129 

raiii]78 

„  HI  iii  217 

„  in  iv  172 

Becket  i  iii  116 
Foresters  i  i  59 

Prom,  of  May  i  198 

I  332 
I  706 
n  19 
ni40 

Qu£en  Mary  i  v  170 
V  V  226 

Prom,  of  May  in  40 


1 184 

I  239 
I  308 

ni23 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  61 


Plantagenet 
Scizzars  (Caesar,  name  of  horse)    S  an'  Pumpy 

was  good  uns  to  goa  (repeat) 
Sconce     I  will  break  thy  s  with  my  quarterstaff. 
Scope     yield  Full  s  to  persons  rascal  and  forlorn. 
Scorch     heat  enough  To  s  and  wither  heresy  to  the  root 
Score    {See  also  Three-score)     There  goes  a  musical  s 
along  with  them. 

How  many  of  you  are  there  ?     Publius.     Some 
half  a  s. 

Half  a  s  of  them,  all  directed  to  me — 
Scorn  (s)     He  never  yet  could  brook  the  note  of  s. 

*S  !     I  hate  s.     A  soul  with  no  religion — 
Scorn  (verb)    dost  thou  s  me,  Because  I  had  my 
Canterbury  pallium. 

Fool  and  wise,  I  fear  This  curse,  and  s  it. 

Madam,  you  do  ill  to  s  wedded  love. 

Church  must  s  herself  whose  fearful  Priest 

Not  s  him  for  the  foibles  of  his  youth. 

s's  The  noblest-natured  man  alive, 
Scom'd     His  foes  would  blame  him,  and  I  s  'em, 

tho'  some  of  you  Have  s  me — 

have  s  the  man.  Or  lash'd  his  rascal  back, 

s  her  too  much  To  hann  her. 
Scorning    divorced  King  Louis,  S  his  monkery, — 
Scory  (Bishop)     Poinet,  Barlow,  Bale,  S,  Coverdale  ; 
Scotland    Mary  of  S, — ^for  I  have  not  own'd  My  sister. 

To  make  the  crown  of  S  one  with  ours, 

but  your  king  stole  her  a  babe  from  S 

Mary  of  S,  married  to  your  Dauphin, 

he  would  weld  France,  England,  S, 

— S,  Ireland,  Iceland,  Orkney, 

'  I  go  to  fight  in  S  With  many  a  savage  clan  ; ' 
Scots  (Mary,  Queen  of)    (See  also  Mary  of  Scotland) 
She  stands  between  you  and  the  Queen  of  S. 
Mary.     The  Queen  of  S  at  least  is  Catholic. 

The  Queen  of  iiS  is  married  to  the  Dauphin, 
Scottish    your  jS  namesake  marrying  The  Dauphin, 
Scoundrel    Trusted  than  trust — the  s — 

Who  shook  the  Norman  s's  off  the  throne, 
Scomrge  (s)    they  call  me  now.  The  s  and  butcher 

Yon  grimly-glaring,  treble-brandish'd  s  Of  England  ! 

lied  like  a  lad  That  dreads  the  pendent  s, 

If  fast  and  prayer,  the  lacerating  s — 


Queen  Mary  I  i  135 

Prom,  of  May  ii  308,  318 

Foresters  i  ii  75 

Queen  Mary  n  ii  185 

in  iv  28 

The  Falcon  452 

The  Cup  1  iu  13 

Prom,  of  May  n  721 

Becket  v  ii  300 

Prom,  of  May  in  531 

Harold  ni  i  105 

in  ii  68 

Becket,  Pro.  353 

I  ii  64 

V  ii  328 

The  Falcon  258 

Queen  Mary  i  v  624 

Harold  I  i  188 

„     n  ii  506 

Becket  rv  ii  392 

„     IV  ii  419 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  7 

IV  284 

IV  287 

IV  292 

IV  295 

vil37 

Harold  ni  ii  124 

Foresters  i  i  14 


QvLeen  Mary  v  i  193 

V  v  52 

V  i  134 
n  ii  39 

Harold  rv  i  81 

Qv^een  Mary  v  ii  106 

Harold  I  i  4 

„  II  ii  658 

Becket  I  ui2M: 


Scourge 


1066 


Secret 


Scourge  (verb)    Threaten  the  child  ;  '  I'll  s  you  if  you 

did  it :  '  Queen  Mary  iii  v  126 

Fast,  «  thyself,  and  mortify  thy  flesh,  Becket  i  iii  539 

once  I  wish'd  to  s  them  to  the  bones.  The  Cup  i  i  27 

Scourging    In  s's,  macerations,  mortifyings,  Fasts,  Becket  v  i  41 

Horrible  !  flaying,  s,  crucifying—  The  Cup  i  ii  235 

Scout    Our  s's  have  heard  the  tinkle  of  their  bells.  Harold  v  i  220 

Scouted    I  am  glad  that  France  hath  s  him  at  last :  Becket  n  ii  252 

Scowl    A  smile  abroad  is  oft  a  5  at  home.  Queen  Mary  iii  i  213 

ScowI'd    S  that  world-hated  and  world-hating  beast,  „  u  ii  90 

Scrape  (s)    less  loyalty  in  it  than  the  backward  s  of  the 

clown's  heel —  Becket  iii  iii  143 

Scrape  (verb)    Sir  Richard  must  s  and  s  till  he  get  to  the 

land  again.  Foresters  I  i  78 

Scraped  I  S  from  your  finger-points  the  holy  oil ;  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  132 
Scraps  make  Thy  slender  meal  out  of  those  s  and  shreds  The  Falcon  146 
Scratch'd    And,  being  s,  returns  to  his  true  rose,  Becket  lu  i  249 

Scratching    See  A-scrattin 

Scream    the  s  of  some  wild  woodland  thing.  Foresters  ii  i  252 

Scream 'd    S  as  you  did  for  water.  Queen  Mary  ni  v  58 

Scrimp     Do  not  s  your  phrase,  „      in  iii  259 

Scriptur'    as  long  as  the  man  sarved  for  'is  sweet'art 

i"  S.  Prom,  of  May  ii  63 

Scripture  (adj.)     It's  the  old  S  text, '  Let  us  eat  and 

drink,  „  1 258 

Scripture  (s)    (See  also  Scriptur')    wholesome  s, '  Little 

children  Love  one  another.'  Qv^en  Mary  m  iv  84 

Did  you  find  a  s,  '  I  come  not  to  bring  peace  „  m  iv  87 

Scritch-owl     Anger  the  s-o.     Mercenary.     But,  my  lord, 

the  s-o  bodes  death,  my  lord.  Foresters  ii  i  331 

Scroll     But  then  what's  here  ?     King  Harry  with  a  s.  Queen  Mary  ill  i  261 

What's  here  Pas  Pinned  to  the  wreath.  The  Falcon  424 

a  written  s  That  seems  to  run  in  rhymings.  „  431 

Scruple    and  I  fear  One  s,  this  or  that  way,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  100 

Winnow  and  scatter  all  s's  to  the  wind,  Becket  i  i  150 

Scniplest    And  s  not  to  flaunt  it  to  our  face  Foresters  iv  881 

Sculptor    as  a  s  clay.  To  their  own  model.  Queen  Mary  iii  iii  33 

Scum    the  psalm-singing  weavers,  cobblers,  5 —  „  iii  iv  290 

s  And  offal  of  the  city  would  not  change  Estates  „  iv  iii  76 

men,  the  s  and  offal  of  the  Church  ;  Becket  i  iii  408 

Scurrilous    May  plaister  his  clean  name  with  s  rhymes  !  „       i  i  309 

Scurrying    the  5  of  a  rat  Affrighted  me,  Queen  Mary  in  v  143 

Scutage     Church  should  pay  her  5  like  the  lords.  Becket  i  i  34 

Scuttle    S  his  cockle-shell  ?  Harold  iv  iii  142 

Scutum    Illorum,  Domine,  S  scindatur  !  „        v  i  509 

Scythe    Your  havings  wasted  by  the  s  and  spade —       Queen  Mary  n  ii  276 

Sea    (See  also  Mid-sea,)     I  spy  the  rock  beneath  the 

smiling  s.  „  i  iv  279 

Mine  is  the  fleet  and  all  the  power  at  s —  „  i  iv  288 

God  lay  the  waves  and  strow  the  storms  at  s,  „  i  v  382 

When  they  will  sweep  her  from  the  s's.  „  mi  162 

Our  voyage  by  s  was  all  but  miracle  ;  „  in  ii  25 

And  here  the  river  flowing  from  the  s,  „  m  ii  26 

offal  thrown  Into  the  blind  s  of  forgetfulness.  „        in  iii  193 

dallying  over  s's  Even  when  his  brother's,  „        m  iv  293 

So  they  have  sent  poor  Courtenay  over  s.  „  ni  v  2 

I  am  sicker  staying  here  Than  any  s  could  make  me 

passing  hence,  Tho'  I  be  ever  deadly  sick  at  s.  „  in  vi  87 

and  the  French  fleet  Rule  in  the  narrow  s's.  „  v  i  7 

Sending  an  insolent  shot  that  dash'd  the  s's  Upon  us,      „  v  i  58 

must  lower  his  flag  To  that  of  England  in  the  s's  „  v  i  66 

A  voice  of  shipwreck  on  a  shoreless  s  !  „  v  ii  384 

Spain  would  be  England  on  her  s's,  and  England 

Mistress  of  the  Indies.  „  v  iii  72 

I  had  heard  of  him  in  battle  over  s's,  „  v  v  33 

Beyond  the  s's — a  change  !  Harold  i  i  104 

and  bunt  and  hawk  beyond  the  s's  !  „       i  i  230 

s  shall  roll  me  back  To  tumble  at  thy  feet.  „      i  ii  114 

The  s  may  roll  Sand,  shingle,  shore-weed,  „      i  ii  117 

there  is  a  post  from  over  s's  With  news  for  thee.  „     n  ii  209 

I'll  hack  my  way  to  the  s.  „     ii  ii  312 

Our  Duke  is  all  between  thee  and  the  s,  „     n  ii  315 

God  and  the  s  have  given  thee  to  our  hands —  „     n  ii  548 

a  lake,  A  s  of  blood — we  are  drown'd  in  blood —  „     in  i  398 

dumb'd  bis  carrion  croak  From  the  gray  s  for  ever.  „     iv  iii  67 


Sea  (continued)     send  the  shatter'd  North  again  to  5,  Harold  iv  iii  141 

I  send  my  voice  across  the  narrow  s's —  „         v  i  246 

Till  the  s  wash  her  level  with  her  shores,  „         v  i  331 

The  sign  in  heaven — the  sudden  blast  at  s—  „         v  i  379 

Follow  them,  follow  them,  drive  them  to  the  s  !  „         v  i  G03- 

No  man  without  my  leave  shall  cross  the  s's  Becket,  Fro.  35 

I  mean  to  cross  the  s  to  France,  „       i  iii  124 

Wilt  not  be  suffer'd  so  to  cross  the  s's  „       i  iii  129 

Love  that  is  born  of  the  deep  coming  up  with  the 

sun  from  the  s.  (repeat)  „    n  i  10,  20 

for  any  rough  s  Blown  by  the  breath  of  kings.  „       ii  ii  107 

Shall  the  waste  voice  of  the  bond-breaking  s  „       v  ii  359 

bays  And  havens  filling  with  a  blissful  s.  The  Cup  ii  236 

runs  to  s  and  makes  it  Foam  over  all  the  fleeted  wealth  „  ii  287 
The  sky  ?  or  the  s  on  a  blue  day  ?  Prom,  of  May  1 101 

myself  Would  guide  you  thro'  the  forest  to  the  s.  Foresters  ii  i  639 

light  of  the  s's  by  the  moon's  long-silvering  ray  !  „       n  ii  178 

Were  plunged  beneath  the  waters  of  the  s,  „         iv  669 

Sea-bird     Nor  mark  the  s-b  rouse  himself  and  hover 

Above  the  windy  ripple,  Harold  n  ii  334 

Sea-creek    the  s-c — the  petty  rill  That  falls  into  it —  Becket  n  ii  293 

Seal  (s)     Let  the  Great  S  be  sent  Back  to  the  King  to-morrow.  „       i  i  374 

0  thou  Great  S  of  England,  Given  me  by  my  dear  friend  „  i  i  336 
Send  the  Great  S  by  daybreak.  „  i  i  405 
Thy  sending  back  the  Great  S  madden'd  him,  „  i  iii  9 
Flung  the  Great  S  of  England  in  my  face —                             „     i  iii  456 

Seal  (verb)     except  he  s  his  faith  In  sight  of  all  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  28 

My  lord  Archbishop,  thou  hast  yet  to  s.  Becket  i  iii  306 

S?    If  a  seraph  shouted  from  the  sun,  And  bad  me  s  „      i  iii  311 

1  will  not  s.  „  I  iii  315 
He  would  not  s.  „  i  iii  319 
the  man  shall  s.  Or  I  will  s  his  doom.  „  i  iii  330 
And  thou  art  perjured,  and  thou  wilt  not  s.  „  i  iii  527 
Sign  ?  s  ?  I  promised  The  King  to  obey  these  customs,  „  i  iii  555 
will  s  Love's  truth  On  those  sweet  lips                                Foresters  iv  73 

Sea-laughter     and  fill  the  sky  With  free  s-l —  Harold  n  ii  337 

Seal'd    Sign'd  and  not  s  !     How's  that  ?  Becket  i  iii  318 

Seaman     Perhaps  ;  but  we  have  seamen.  Queen  Mary  v  iii  84 

Sea-marks    they  should  hang  Cliff -gibbeted  for  s-m ;  Harold  ii  i  97 

Sea-mew    our  s-m  Winguig  their  only  wail !  „       n  i  97 

Sear    Thine  '  if s  '  will  s  thine  eyes  out — ay.  „    n  ii  62S 

Search    S  them.  Little  John.  Foresters  in  201 

S  this  other.  „       in  207 

S  them,  Kate,  and  see  if  they  have  spoken  truth.  „       in  288 

s  him  then.    How  much  hast  thou  about  thee  ?  „       iv  163 

S  me  then.    I  should  be  hard  beset  with  thy  fourscore.        „       iv  178 

Search'd     But  how  then  if  I  will  not  bide  to  be  s  ?  „        iv  169 

Searching    He  miss  the  s  flame  of  purgatory,  Becket  v  iii  13- 

Sea-saw     The  miserable  s-s  of  our  child-world,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  385 

Sea-shore    lay  them  both  upon  the  waste  s-s  At  Hastings,    Harold  v  ii  159 

Sea-sick    so  should  all  the  love-sick  be  s-s.  Foresters  iv  673' 

Season    not  in  tune,  a  nightingale  out  of  s  ;  Becket,  Pro.  350 

Seat    (See  also  Jugdment-seat)      This  dress  was  made 

me  as  the  Earl  of  Devon  To  take  my  s  in  ;  Queen  Mary  i  iv  74 

Throw  cushions  on  that  s,  and  make  it  throne-like.  „         v  ii  536 

Seated    Were  s  sadly  at  a  fountain  side,  The  Falcon  610 

Sea-will-o'-the-wisp     Wicked  s-w-o'-t-w  !  Harold  ii  i  20 

Second    let  me  call  her  our  s  Virgin  Mary,  Queen  Mary  i  iii  57 

The  s  Prince  of  Peace —  „      in  ii  164 

Should  play  the  s  actor  in  this  pageant  That  brings 

him  in  ;  „       in  iii  13 

Or  a  s  tire,  Like  that  which  lately  crackled  imderfoot  „        m  v  52 

first  In  Council,  s  person  in  the  realm,  „       iv  iii  72 

and  the  s  curse  Descend  upon  thine  head,  Harold  in  ii  47 

Who  made  the  s  mitre  play  the  first,  And  acted  me  ?     Becket  ni  iii  212 

This  is  the  s  grain  of  good  counsel  I  ever  proffered  thee,    „      ui  iii  317 

and  I  Became  his  s  father :  „         v  ii  33& 

I  have  no  fears  at  this  my  s  marriage.  The  Cup  n  209 

It  seem'd  so  ;  only  there  was  left  A  s  daughter.     Prom,  of  May  in  772 

Second-sight    Or  some  strange  s-s,  the  marriage  cup  The  Cup  n  198 

Second-sighted    Your  s-s  man  That  scared  the  dying  Harold  v  i  210 

Secrecy    boimd  me  by  his  love  to  s  Till  his  own  time.  Becket  mi  228 

Secret  (adj.)     And  fearing  for  her,  sent  a  s  missive.        Queen  Mary  n  ii  121 

And  if  you  be  not  s  in  this  matter,  „  v  i  271 

I  have  built  a  <  bower  in  England,  Thomas,  Becket,  Pro.  15S 


\ 


Secret 


1067 


See 


Secret  (adj.)  (continued)    We  take  her  from  her  s  bower  in 

Anjou  And  pass  her  to  her  s  bower  in  England, 
that  s  matter  which  would  heat  the  King  against  thee 
To  pass  thee  to  thy  s  bower  to-morrow. 
The  s  whisper  of  the  Holy  Father. 
And  that  old  priest  whom  John  of  Salisbury  trusted 

Hath  sent  another.     Henry.     S  ? 
Henri/.    S,  then  ? 
Know  you  not  this  bower  is  s. 
Found  out  her  «  bower  and  murder'd  her. 
Secret  (s)     (See  also  State-secret)    some  s  that  may 

cost  Philip  his  life.  Queen  Mary  iii  i  201 

That  is  my  s,  Thomas.     Becket.     State  s's  should  be 

patent  to  the  statesman 
— there  lies  the  s  of  her  whereabouts, 
I  do  not  then  charm  this  s  out  of  our  loyal  Thomas, 
Thine  enemy  knows  the  s  of  my  bower. 
Is  our  s  ours  ?     Have  you  had  any  alarm  ? 
John  of  Salisbury  committed  The  s  of  the  bower, 
This  is  no  s,  but  a  public  matter. 
That  is  my  5  :  keep  it,  or  you  sell  me 
We  never  kept  a  5  from  each  other  ; 
I  have  done  wrong  in  keeping  your  s  ; 
Sect     Their  '  dies  Ilia,'  which  will  test  their  s. 

worthy  Bonner, — To  test  their  s. 
Sectaries     dishonour'd  even  in  the  sight  Of  thine 

own  s — 
Secular     A  s  kingdom  is  but  as  the  body  Lacking  a 

soul ;  and  in  itself  a  beast.     The  Holy  Father 

in  a  s  kingdom  Is  as  the  soul  descending  out  of 

heaven  Into  a  body  generate, 
he  was  deliver'd  To  the  s  arm  to  bum  ; 
I  have  been  a  lover  of  wines,  and  delicate  meats, 

And  s  splendours. 
You  have  had  the  better  of  us  In  s  matters. 
Seemed    if  our  person  be  s  From  traitor  stabs — 
Security     Ay,  ay,  but  what  s. 
Sederunt     S  prineipes,  ederunt  pauperes. 
See  (a  bishoprick)     And  from  the  Apostolic  s  of 

Rome  ;  Queen  Mary  iii  iii  127 

by  your  intercession  May  from  the  Apostolic  s  obtain,   „  iii  iii  147 

obedience  Unto  the  holy  s  and  reigning  Pope  „  iii  iii  158 

our  Bishops  from  their  s's  Or  fled,  „  i  ii  4 

From  all  the  vacant  s's  and  abbacies,  Becket  i  iii  652 

That  hold  our  Saltwood  Castle  from  our  s\  „     n  ii  270 

(verb)     fear,  I .«  you.  Dear  frientl,  for  the  last  time ;  Queen  Mary  i  ii  102 


Becket  Pro.  181 

„      Pro.  487 

I  i  249 

I  iii  236 

m  i  72 
in  i  82 

IV  ii  22 

V  i  175 


Becket,  Pro.  75 

Pro.  430 

Pro.  466 

ni265 

nii27 

rn  iii  6 

V  ii  319 
The  Cup  I  ii  214 

Prom,  of  May  i  552 

HI  899 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  428 

III  iv  431 

V  V  134 


IV  i  32 
IV  ii  214 

Becket  i  i  78 

„  iiii81 

Queen  Mary  v  v  280 

„  III  iii  81 

Becket  i  iv  131 


my  Lord ;  I  s  you  in  the  Tower  again. 

S  that  you  neither  hear  them  nor  repeat ! 

To  tell  you  what  indeed  ye  s  and  know, 

And  s  the  citizens  arm'd.     Good  day ; 

if  he  s  the  man  and  still  will  jeer, 

I  could  s  that  as  the  new-macie  couple 

Bagenhall,  I  s  The  Tudor  green  and  white. 

S  there  be  others  that  can  use  their  hands. 

Did  you  s  her  die  ? 

No,  cousin,  happy — Happy  to  s  you ; 

Ay;  but  s  here  !     First  Page.     jSwhat? 

pray  Heaven  That  you  may  s  according  to  our  sight. 

You  cannot  s  the  Queen.     Renard  denied  her. 

My  Lords,  you  cannot  s  her  Majesty. 

Can  I  not  s  him  ?     Renard.     Not  now. 

farewell ;  Until  I  s  you  in  St.  Maiy's  Church. 

You  have  not  gone  to  s  the  burning  ? 

I  could  s  that  many  silent  hands  Came  from  the  crowd 

Not  to  s  me  ?     Philip.     Ay,  Madam,  to  s  you. 

Coxmt  de  Feria  waits  without,  In  hopes  to  s  your 

Highness. 
She  neither  s's  nor  hears, 
Our  Clarence  there  S's  ever  such  an  aureole 
Sin  is  too  dull  to  s  beyond  himself. 
they  s  not  what  the  general  s's,  A  risk  of  utter  ruin, 
throat  of  mine,  Barer  than  I  should  wish  a  man  to 

5  it, — 
I  wiU  5  no  man  hence  for  evermore, 
I  may  die  Before  I  read  it.    Let  me  s  him  at  once. 


I IV  80 
IV  576 
II  ii  144 

II  ii  378 
n  ii  402 

mi  93 
in  i  179 

III  i  243 
in  i  344 
ni  ii  87 

m  ii  215 

m  iv  331 

in  vi  1 

in  vi  19 

ni  vi  35 

IV  ii  47 
IV  iii  290 
IV  iii  582 

villS 

vii401 
vii404 

V  ii  413 
v  ii  441 

V  ii  447 

V  ii  462 

V  ii  525 

V  ii  550 


See  (verb)  (continued)     Then  I  may  say  your  Grace 

will  s  your  sister  ?  Queen  Mary  v  ii  604 

You  s  the  lodging,  sir,  „  v  iii  2S 

That  she  would  s  your  Grace  before  she — died.  „         v  iii  104 

Nay,  dearest  Lady,  s  your  good  physician.  „  v  v  59 

your  royal  sister  comes  to  s  you.     Mary.     1  will 

not  s  her. 
I  will  s  none  except  the  priest.     Your  arm. 
For  all  the  world  s's  it  as  well  as  England. 
I  s  the  flashing  of  the  gates  of  pearl — 
5  Deeper  into  the  mysteries  of  heaven 
S's  he  into  thine,  That  thou  wouldst  have 
<5?  here — an  interwoven  H  and  E  ! 
thou  shalt  s  My  grayhounds  fleeting 
I  s  the  goal  and  half  the  way  to  it.— 
We  be  fishermen ;  I  came  to  s  after  my  nets. 
He  came  not  to  s  me,  had  past  me  by  To  hunt 
He  s's  me  not — and  yet  he  dreams  of  me. 
And  s  thee  shipt,  and  pray  in  thy  behalf 
I  Shall  s  the  dewy  kiss  of  dawn  no  more 
I  s  the  blackness  of  my  dungeon  loom 
s  confusion  fall  On  thee  and  on  thine  house. 
S  here  this  little  key  about  my  neck  ! 
to  s  my  solemn  vow  Accomplish'd. 
join  our  hands  before  the  hosts,  That  all  may  s. 
cannot  s  the  world  but  thro'  their  wines ! 
S  him  out  safe  !  (repeat) 
8  all  be  sound  and  whole. 
I  s  it  in  thine.     And  not  on  thee — 
Stigand  will  s  thee  safe.  And  so — FareweU. 
And  s  thee  safe  from  Senlac. 
I  can  s  it  From  where  we  stand : 
I  s  the  gonf  anon  of  Holy  Peter 
and  s  beyond  Your  Norman  shrines, 
Our  Harold — we  shall  never  s  him  more. 
Take  them  away,  I  do  not  love  to  s  them. 
5  my  bishop  Hath  brought  your  king  to  a  standstill. 
Ay  !  blood,  perchance,  except  thou  s  to  her. 
Ay,  ay,  but  swear  to  s  to  her  in  England, 
longed  much  to  s  your  Grace  and  the  Chancellor  ere  he 

past, 
you  could  not  s  the  King  for  the  kinglings. 
I  can  s  further  into  a  man  than  our  hot-headed  Henry, 
I  stand  and  s  The  rift  that  runs  between  me 
herself  should  s  That  kings  are  faithful 
He  will  not  s  thy  face  tiU  thou  hast  sign'd 
I  s  it,  I  s  it. 

Foliot,  let  me  s  what  I  have  sign'd. 
To  s  the  proud  Archbishop  mutilated, 
and  s  it  mounting  to  Heaven,  my  God  bless  you, 
s  here,  my  lord,  this  rag  fro'  the  gangrene  i'  my  leg. 
My  brave-hearted  Rose  !    Hath  he  ever  been  to  s  thee  ? 
S  if  our  pious — what  shall  I  call  him,  John  ? — 
How  should  you  s  this  rightly  ? 
now  I  s  That  I  was  blind — suffer  the  phrase- 
Bird  mustn't  tell.  Whoop— he  can  s.  (repeat) 
I  s  it — some  confusion,  Some  strange  mistake. 
S  here  !     Herbert.     What's  here  ? 
Do  you  s,  my  lord.  There  is  the  King 
Do  you  s  that  great  black  cloud 

And  s  you  yon  side-beam  that  is  forced  from  under  it. 
Ay,  but  some  one  comes  to  s  her  now  and  then. 
we  shall  s  the  silk  here  and  there,  and  I  want  my  supper. 
S,  I  can  say  no  more, 
what  uncomely  faces,  could  he  s  you  ! 
I  told  him  I  was  boimd  to  s  the  Archbishop ; 
You  s  they  have  been  revelling,  and  I  fear 


Who  are  with  him  ?     I  s  no  face  that  knows  me. 
Had  you  then  No  Message  with  the  cup  ?     Gamma. 

Why,  yes,  s  here, 
a  brave  one  Which  you  shall  s  to-morrow. 
S,  s,  my  white  bird  stepping  toward  the  snare, 
who  has  been  So  oft  to  s  the  Priestess, 
Are  you  so  sure  ?     I  pray  you  wait  and  s. 
S  here — I  stretch  my  hand  out — hold  it  there. 


vvl92 

V  V  196 
Harold  i  i  129 

Iil86 

Iil99 

1 1202 

iii  57 

I  ii  128 

Iii  196 

ni27 

n  ii  27 

n  ii  144 

n  ii  197 

n  ii  331 

nii405 

n  ii  489 

mi  10 

ni  i  306 

IV  i  243 

IV  iii  225 

V  i  84,  93 
vil94 
vi369 
vi418 
vi457 
vi462 
vi549 

V  i  618 
vii3 

V  ii  142 
Becket,  Pro.  42 

Pro.  176 
Pro.  190 

Pro.  399 

Pro.  452 

Pro.  462 

iil39 

iii  77 

I  iii  5 

I  iii  297 

I  iii  307 

I  iii  614 

iiv37 

iiv236 

ni288 

nii38 

nii98 

n  ii  437 

rail07,256 

mi  233 

in  iii  1 

m  iii  21 

m  iii  45 

m  iii  49 

IV  i  16 

rvi56 

IV  ii  107 
vi201 

viilOO' 

V  ii  421 
The  Cup  I  i  183 

I  ii  69 
I  ii  432 
I  iii  35 
nil 
nl07 
n  210 


See 


1068 


Seize 


See  (verb)  {continued)    I  am  glad  I  shall  not  s  it.  The  Cup  n  513 

Beneath  an  ever-rising  sun — I  s  him —  ,,        n  535 

s,  why  she  turns  down  the  path  through  our  little 

vineyard, 
I  s  you  quite  recover'd  of  your  wound. 
I  s  There  goes  a  musical  score  along  with  them, 
S,  my  lady  !     Giovanna.     I  s,  FiUppo  ! 
and  s  that  all  be  right  and  reg'lar  fur  'em  afoor  he 

coom. 
S  that  you  do  not  do  so  again  ! 
And  wheniver  'e  s's  two  sweet'arts  togither  like 

thou  and  me,  Sally, 
Which  told  us  we  should  never  s  her  more — 
Letters  !     Yeas,  I  s's  now. 
Ye  s's  the  holler  laane  be  hallus  so  dark  i'  the 

artemoon, 
I  cannot  and  I  will  not  s  anybody. 
may  drop  off  any  day,  any  hour.     You  must  s  him 

at  once. 
Tell  him  that  I  and  the  lady  here  wish  to  s  him. 

You  s  she  is  lamed, 
It  puts  me  in  heart  Again  to  s  you ; 
I  s  it  all  now.     O  she  has  fainted. 
you  s  her  there !     Only  fifteen  when  first  you  came 

on  her. 
There,  there  !     You  s  I  was  right. 
She  doesn't  s  me.     Shall  I  be  bold  ? 
I  could  s  her  for  a  moment  Glide  like  a  light 
You  s,  they  are  so  fond  o'  their  own  voices 
I  will  not  brook  to  s  Three  upon  two. 
S  whether  there  be  more  of  'em  in  the  wood. 
Thou  \n\i  not  s  My  Marian  more. 
S,  thou  hast  wrong'd  my  brother  and  myself. 
8  then,  I  kneel  once  more  to  be  forgiven. 
Thou  s  me  clasp  and  kiss  a  man  indeed, 
that  he  may  s  The  fashion  of  it. 
left  mine  horse  and  armour  with  a  Squire,  And  I 

must  s  to  'em. 

You  s  he  is  past  himself.     What  would  you  more  ? 

S  you  not  They  are  jesting  at  us  yonder, 

S  thou  thwart  me  not,  thou  fool ! 

Seeams  (seems)    S I  ommost  knaws  the  back  on  'im —  Prom,  of  May  n  577 

SeedJ(s)     'Martyr's  blood— s  of  the  Church.'  Qweew  Mary  iv  i  146 

sow'd  therein  The  s  of  Hate,  it  blossom'd  Charity.  „  rv  i  172 

The  s  thou  sowest  in  thy  field  is  cursed,  Harold  v  i  70 

Seed  (saw)     I  s  that  one  cow 'o  thine  i' the  pinfold         Prom,  of  May  i  IQQ 

I  s  tha  a-limpin'  up  just  now  wi'  the  roomatics  i' 

the  knee. 
I  s  how  the  owd  man  wur  vext. 
I  knaw'd  'im  when  I  s  'im  agean 
Seed  (seen)     Noa,  Miss.     I  ha'n't  s  'er  neither. 
Seeing  (part.)    s  that  our  gracious  Virgin  Queen  hath- 
if  he  jeer  not  s  the  true  man  Behind  his  folly, 
S  there  lie  two  ways  to  every  end, 
s  now  The  poor  so  many,  and  all  food  so  dear. 
And,  5  in  a  moment,  I  shall  find  Heaven 
religious  fool.  Who,  s  war  in  heaven, 
and  s  the  hospitable  lights  in  your  castle, 
Seeing  (s)     Grew  ever  high  and  higher,  beyond  my  s, 
and  rooted  in  far  isles  Beyond  my  s : 
keep  us  From  s  all  too  near  that  um, 
Seek    s  In  that  lone  house,  to  practise  on  my  life, 
You  play  at  hide  and  s. 
We  but  s  Some  settled  ground  for  peace 
8  to  possess  our  person,  hold  our  Tower, 
«*«  To  bend  the  laws  to  his  own  will, 
Or  4  to  rescue  me.     I  thank  the  Council. 
I  am  not  vext, — Altho'  ye  s  to  vex  me, 
wherefore  should  she  s  The  life  of  Rosamund  de  Clifford    Becket,  Pro.  69 
where  to  s  ?     I  have  been  about  the  city.  „        i  i  397 

when  they  s  to  overturn  our  rights,  „      v  ii  456 

They  s — you  make — occasion  for  your  death.  „      v  ii  558 

I  am  he  ye  s.    What  would  ye  have  of  me  ?  ,.     v  iii  115 

8  not  for  me,  or  you  may  find  me  at  the  bottom  of 

the  river.—  Prom,  of  May  n  87 


The  Falcon  167 
391 
451 
654 

Prom,  of  May  1 168 
n24 

n  163 

II 477 
in  38 

ni92 
m  340 

m  408 

III  415 
m  503 

III  670 

m  749 

Foresters  i  i  114 

I  i  124 

n  i  157 

n  i  382 

n  i  423 

u  i  430 

„        n  i  455 

n  i  665 

n  i  667 

n  ii  76 

rv  253 

IV  416 
IV  471 
IV  675 
IV  744 


I  384 

II  27 
ml21 

I  48 

Mary  i  iii  23 

Iiii400 

m  iv  113 

rv  iii  208 

IV  iii  223 

Harold  i  i  140 

Foresters  i  ii  194 

Harold  ni  i  149 

„       m  i  154 

The  Cup  I  iii  133 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  283 

IV  305 

IV  314 

II  ii  158 

n  ii  183 

ivii38 

Harold  i  i  405 


Seek  {continued)    why  did  you  write  '  /S  me  at  the 
bottom  of  the  river '  ? 

Because  we  s  to  curb  their  viciousness. 
Seeking    By  s  justice  at  a  stranger's  hand 

I  am  s  one  who  wedded  me  in  secret. 

I  tell  thee,  girl,  I  am  s  my  dead  Harold. 

pale  beggar-woman  s  alnxs  For  her  sick  son, 


Prom,  of  May  in  363 

Foresters  ta  393 

Queen  Mary  iv  i  20 

Harold  v  ii  29 

„       v  ii  43 

The  Falcon  852 


Queen 


Seem    {See  also  Seeams)     it  s's  that  we  shall  fly  These 

bald,  blank  fields,  Queen  Mary  ui  v  250 

even  now  You  5  the  least  assassin  of  the  four.  Becket  v  ii  522 

Seem'd    S  thro'  that  dim  dilated  world  of  hers,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  324 

s  to  smile  And  sparkle  Uke  our  fortxme  „  n  iii  22 

nS  as  a  happy  miracle  to  make  glide —  „  in  ii  29 

it  s  to  me  but  just  The  Church  should  pay  Becket  i  i  33 

It  s  to  me  that  we  were  parted  for  ever.  Prom,  of  May  i  769 

It  s  so ;  only  there  was  left  A  second  daughter,  „  ni  770 

Seeming    s  not  as  brethren.  But  mortal  foes  !  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  184 

As  s  his,  not  mine,  and  fall  abroad.  Becket,  Pro.  228 

Seen     {See  also  Seed)     I  have  s  enough  for  this  day.        Queen  Mary  i  i  130 
should  already  have  5  your  steps  a  mile  „  i  ii  80 

do  not  you  Be  s  in  corners  with  my  Lord  of  Devon.  „        i  iv  154 

and  yet,  methinks,  I  have  s  goodlier.  „  i  y  7 

Have  you  s  Philip  ever  ?     Noailles.     Only  once.  „         i  v  319 

I  have  s  them  in  their  own  land ;  .,         n  i  167 

I  have  never  s  her  So  queenly  or  so  goodly.  „        n  ii  326 

flask  of  wine  Beside  me,  than  have  s  it :  yet  I  saw  it.        „         m  i  48 
track  of  the  true  faith  Your  lapses  are  far  s.  „       m  iv  95 

I  have  s  A  pine  in  Italy  that  cast  its  shadow  „     m  iv  135 

when  she  once  more  is  s  White  as  the  Ught,  „     in  iv  198 

Brief-sighted  tho'  they  be,  I  have  s  them,  „     m  vi  158 

never  s  That  any  one  recanting  thus  at  full,  „  iv  i  58 

It  will  be  s  now,  then.  „  iv  i  62 

Have  I  not  s  the  gamekeeper,  the  groom,  „      rv  iii  371 

I  have  s  heretics  of  the  poorer  sort,  „      rv  iii  436 

old  age  that  never  will  be  mine  Is  all  the  clearer  s.  „        v  ii  236 

s  the  true  men  of  Christ  lying  famine-dead  by  scores,         „         v  iv  37 
Thou  hast  but  s  how  Norman  hands  can  strike,  Harold  n  ii  171 

I  dare  not  well  be  s  in  talk  with  thee.  „      n  ii  481 

Edward  wakes  ! — Dazed — he  hath  s  a  vision.  „      mi  131 

hath  talk'd  with  God,  and  s  A  shadowing  horror ;  „      in  i  356 

Nor  s,  nor  heard ;  thine,  „        v  i  161 

I  have  s  The  trenches  dug,  the  palisades  uprear'd  „        v  i  188 

No  footfall — ^no  Fitzurse.     We  have  s  her  home.  Becket  i  i  367 

The  world  had  never  s  the  like  before.  „    n  ii  125 

and  I  ha'  s  what  I  ha'  s,  (repeat)  Becket  in  i  109, 143, 151 

and  to  be  sure  I  ha'  s  great  ones  to-day —  Becket  in  i  136 

and  I  ha'  s  the  King  once  at  Oxford,  „      mi  163 

she  had  s  the  Archbishop  once.  So  mild,  so  kind.  „      v  ii  118 

S  by  the  Church  in  Heaven,  the  Church  on  earth —  „       v  iii  98 

S  in  the  thicket  at  the  bottom  there  The  Cv/p  i  i  113 

— all  s, — all  calculated.  All  known  by  Rome.  „        i  ii  255 

It  may  be  I  had  never  s  the  wars.  The  Falcon  379 

I  have  s  it  hke  the  snow  on  the  moraine.  „  505 

and  s  the  red  of  the  battle-field,  „  548 

I  haven't  s  Eva  yet.     Is  she  anywhere  in  the 

garden  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  46 

I  can't  tell,  for  I  have  never  s  him.  „  1 115 

She  would  have  s  at  once  into  my  trouble,  „  1 553 

if  you  Had  s  us  that  wild  morning  when  we  found  „  n  469 

— had  you  been  one  of  us  And  s  all  this,  „         n  484 

I  have  s  the  world— And  cheer  his  blindness  „  n  513 

since  then,  no  one  has  5  you  but  myself.  „        m  228 

I  have  s  thee  clasp  and  kiss  a  man  indeed,  Foresters  iv  1035 

See-saw    The  miserable  s-s  of  our  child-world.  Queen  Mary  rv  iii  385 

Seest     when  thou  s  him  next,  Commend  me  to  thy 

friend.  Becket  1 1  323 

Thou  s,  Sir  Knight,  our  friar  is  so  holy  Foresters  iv  279 

Seethed    She  s  with  such  adulteries,  Queen  Mary  in  iv  189 

Seize    that  anyone  Should  s  our  person,  „  n  ii  178 

To  s  upon  the  forts  and  fleet,  „  mi  464 

S  him  and  burn  him  for  a  Lutheran.  „  v  ii  245 

Stumble  not  in  the  darkness.  Lest  they  should  s  thee.       Becket  v  iii  80 
We  shall  be  overwhelm'd.    iS  him  and  carry  him  !  „    v  iii  141 

I  give  you  here  an  order  To  s  upon  him.  2'he  Cup  i  i  165 

'  You  are  to  5  on  Sinnatus, — if '  „       i  ii  228 


Seize 

Seize  {continued)    to  s  On  whomsover  may  be  talking  with 


1069 


Sent 


you,  The  Cup  I  iii  6 

For  wy  sake — or  they  s  on  thee.  „      i  iii  113 

Why  come  we  now  ?    Whom  shall  we  s  upon  ?  „      i  iii  178 

S  on  the  knight  ?  wrench  his  sword  from  him  !  Foresters  n  i  676 

S  him  and  truss  him  up,  and  carry  her  off.  „          iv  690 

S  her  and  carry  her  off  into  my  castle.  „          rv  738 
3d    may  not  be  s  With  some  fierce  passion,             Prom,  of  May  n  335 

he  hath  s  On  half  the  royal  castles.  Foresters  i  iii  82 
Self    The  Queen  stands  up,  and  speaks  for  her  own  s ;     Queen  Mary  n  ii  342 

his  fault  So  thoroughly  to  believe  in  his  own  s.  „           n  ii  386 
Yet  thoroughly  to  believe  in  one's  own  s.  So  one's 

own  s  be  thorough,  „           n  ii  388 

the  Pope's  Holiness  By  mine  own  s.  „         m  ii  112 

As  well  for  our  own  selves  as  all  the  realm,  „         in  iii  136 
and  not  sure  Of  their  own  selves,  they  are  wroth 

with  their  own  selves,  „        m  iy  120 

Bonner  cannot  out- Bonner  his  own  s —  „          m  vi  27 

By  mine  o\vn  s — by  mine  own  hand  !  „          it  ii  202 

and  mine  own  s  and  all  the  world.  „              v  ii  12 

but  I  speak  from  mine  own  s,  not  him ;  „             v  iii  42 

— yea  and  mine  own  s.  Harold  n  ii  784 

Tho'  somewhat  less  a  king  to  my  true  s  „        m  ii  53 

where  mine  own  s  Takes  part  against  myself  !  „         v  i  299 

what  shall  I  call  it,  affect  her  thine  own  s.  Becket,  Pro.  513 

Look  to  it,  your  owti  selves  !  „         i  iii  398 

Strong — not  in  mine  own  s,  but  Heaven ;  „         i  iii  537 

Who  stands  aghast  at  her  eternal  s  „        ii  ii  404 

on  mine  own  s  The  King  had  had  no  power  „         ii  ii  411 

kingly  promise  given  To  our  own  s  of  pardon,  „        n  ii  433 
'  great  honom-,'  says  he,  '  from  the  King's  s  to  the 

King's  son.'  „      m  iii  145 

I  am  mine  own  «  Of  and  belonging  to  the  King.  „          iv  ii  29 

I'll  swear  to  mine  own  s  it  was  a  feint.  ,,        iv  ii  401 
The  soldier,  when  he  lets  bis  whole  s  go  Lost  in  the 
common  good,  the  common  wrong,  Strikes  truest 

ev'n  for  his  own  s.  „          v  ii  39 

Then  speak ;  this  is  my  other  s,  „          v  ii  74 
as  beautiful  this  morning  as  the  very  Madonna  her 

own  s —  The  Falcon  199 

And  this  last  costly  gift  to  mine  own  s,  „          228 

Vice  and  Virtue  Are  but  two  masks  of  s ;  Prom,  of  May  i  538 

I  have  found  it  once  again  In  your  own  s.  „           n  377 

—so  be  more  at  peace  With  mine  own  s.  „           ii  663 

till  we  be  only  bones  our  own  selves.  Foresters  i  i  26 

I  remain  Mistress  of  mine  own  s  and  mine  own  soul.  „      iv  729 

Self-assertion    than  to  stand  On  naked  s-a.  Queen  Mary  rv  i  120 

Self-blotted    he  is  effaced,  S-h  out ;  „           iv  i  138 

Self-disdain    for  a  spark  Of  s-d  bom  in  me  when  I  sware  Harold  v  i  302 

Self-exposure    Why  will  you  court  it  By  s-e  ?  Beclzet  i  i  282 

Self-lauding    Without  too  large  s-l  I  must  hold  Harold  iv  iii  87 

Selfless    The  simple,  silent,  s  man  Is  worth  a  world  of 

tonguesters.  „         v  i  81 

Self-murder    lying  were  s-m  by  that  state  „       in  i  70 
Self-passiOD     drown  all  poor  s-f  in  the  sense  Of  public 

good  ?  The  Cup  n  101 

Self-stock     Of  one  s-s  at  first.  Make  them  again  Harold  v  ii  186 

Self-uncertain     and  yet  We  are  s-u  creatures,  Becket  v  ii  48 

Sell    s  not  thou  Our  living  passion  for  a  dead  man's  dream ;    Harold  iii  ii  58 

keep  it,  or  you  s  me  To  torment  and  to  death.  The  Cup  i  ii  214 

We  shall  have  to  s  all  the  land,  Prom,  of  May  in  164 

And  so  wouldst  s  thy  sister  to  the  Sheriff,  Foresters  n  i  536 

'  jS  all  thou  hast  and  give  it  to  the  poor ; '  „           in  169 

S  me  again  perchance  for  twice  as  much.  „           iv  654 

Seller     but  I  bovmd  the  s  To  silence.  The  Falcon  73 

Semi-barbarous    altho'  the  inhabitants  Seem  s-b.  Prom,  of  May  n  542 

Semi-madman     known  a  s-m  in  my  time  So  fancy-ridd'n)  Queen  Mary  ii  i  9 

Senate     Our  S,  wearied  of  their  tetrarchies.  The  Cup  i  i  89 

What  filthy  tools  our  S  works  with  !  „       i  i  156 

Save  for  some  slight  report  in  her  own  S  „     i  ii  ]  34 

Roman  S,  For  I  have  always  play'd  into  their  hands,  „     i  iii  149 

tell  the  S  I  have  been  most  true  to  Rome —  „        n  482 

Send     God  s  her  well;  Here  comes  her  Royal  Grace.    Queen  Mary  ii  ii  125 

s's  His  careful  dog  to  bring  them  to  the  fold.  „         in  iv  104 

S  out :  let  England  as  of  old  Rise  lionlike,  „           v  ii  265 


Send  (continued)     S  out,  s  out,  and  make  Musters  in 

all  the  counties ;  Qv^en  Mary  v  ii  270 

S  out ;  I  am  too  weak  to  stir  abroad :  „           v  ii  286 

he  s's  his  veriest  love.  And  says,  he  will  come  quickly.  „           v  ii  563 

and  to  5  us  again,  according  to  His  promise,  „            v  iv  52 

s  thee  back  among  thine  island  mists  With  laughter.  Harold  n  ii  181 

s  her  hosts  Of  injured  Saints  to  scatter  sparks  „      ii  ii  743 

and  s  thy  saints  that  I  may  say  Ev'n  to  their  faces,  „      ii  ii  785 

And  s  the  shatter'd  North  again  to  sea,  „     iv  iii  140 

I  s  my  voice  across  the  narrow  seas —  „        v  i  246 

The  Norman  s's  his  arrows  up  to  Heaven,  „        v  i  666 

I  s  thee  as  a  common  friend  To  tell  the  King,  Becket  i  i  341 

S  the  Great  Seal  by  daybreak.  „      i  i  405 

S  for  him  back.  „    i  iii  334 

he  s's  me  to  bid  you  this  night  pray  for  him  „    i  iv  265 

can  I  s  her  hence  Without  his  kingly  leave  ?  „   iii  i  218 

And  s  thee  back  again  to  Canterbury?  „  miii  184 

S  back  again  those  exiles  of  my  kin  „  m  iii  186 

Have  I  not  promised,  man,  to  s  them  back  ?  „  in  iii  191 

She  s's  it  back,  as  being  dead  to  earth,  „     v  i  170 

and  s  Her  whole  heart's  heat  into  it,  „    v  ii  254 

s's  you  this  cup  rescued  from  the  burning  The  Cup  i  i  41 

I  s  it  to  the  wife  of  Sinnatus,  „       i  i  72 

— s's  you  this  cup — the  cup  we  use  in  our  marriages —  „      i  ii  72 

He  s's  you  This  diadem  of  the  first  Galatian  Queen,  „      n  131 

and  s  him  forth  The  glory  of  his  father —  „      n  261 

in  hope  that  the  saints  would  s  us  this  blessed  morning ;  The  Falcon  186 

I  might  s  you  down  a  flask  or  two  „         584 
if  the  farming-men  be  come  for  their  wages,  to  s 

them  up  to  me.  Prom,  of  May  in  16 

Sending    Lord  Howard,  S  an  insolent  shot  that  dash'd    Queen  Mary  v  i  57 

Thy  s  back  the  Great  Seal  madden'd  him,  Becket  I  iii  9 

Seneschal    and  confer  with  her  ladyship's  s.  The  Falcon  416 

Senlac  (adj.)    signs  on  earth !     Knowest  thou  S  hill  ?  Harold  ni  i  361 

tell  him  we  stand  arm'd  on  S  Hill,  „          v  i  59 

To  tell  thee  thou  shalt  die  on  S  hill —  „        v  i  241 

Senlac  (s)     over  nameless  graves —    Harold.     At  S? 

Aldred.    S.  „      in  i  383 

S  !  Sanguelac,  The  Lake  of  Blood  !  „      m  i  386 

And  see  thee  safe  from  S.  „        v  i  457 
Sens  (a  French  town)    Return  to  S,  where  we  will  care  for 

you.  Becket  n  ii  444 
Sensation    all  but  proving  man  An  automatic  series 

of  s's.  Prom,  of  May  1  226 

What  can  a  man,  then,  live  for  but  s's,  „            i  242 

if  man  be  only  A.  willy-nilly  current  of  s's —  „           n  263 

Sense    thro'  his  dying  s  Shrills  '  lost  thro'  thee.'  Harold  ni  i  34 

Which  in  your  s  is  treason.  The  Cup  i  i  79 
for  the  s's,  love,  are  for  the  world ;  That  for  the  s's.  Prom,  of  May  1 580 

Sensual    and  sat  Thro'  every  s  course  of  that  full  feast  „          n  254 
Sent    I  stood  out,  till  Edward  s  for  me.                            Qv^en  Mary  i  ii  29 

hath  s  for  the  holy  legate  of  the  holy  father  „         i  iii  26 

God  hath  s  me  here  To  take  such  order  „           i  v  33 

You  have  s  her  from  the  court,  „         i  v  462 

S  out  my  letters,  call'd  my  friends  together,  „         i  v  552 

S  Comwallis  and  Hastings  to  the  traitor,  „          n  ii  31 

And  fearing  for  her,  s  a  secret  missive,  „        u  ii  121 

But  we  s  divers  of  our  Council  to  them,  „        n  ii  152 

s  his  myriads  hither  To  seize  upon  the  forts  „        mi  463 

which  the  emperor  s  us  Were  mainly  Gardiner's :  „        ni  iii  70 

s  here  as  Legate  From  our  most  Holy  Father  „     ni  iii  124 

You  were  s  for,  You  were  appeal'd  to,  „     ni  iv  255 

I  am  s  to  fetch  you.  „     ni  iv  393 

So  they  have  s  poor  Coiu-tenay  over  sea.  „          m  v  1 

But  held  from  you  all  papers  s  by  Rome,  „          v  ii  45 

And  how  should  he  have  s  me  Legatic  hither,  „          v  ii  87 

this  yovmg  Earl  was  s  on  foreign  travel,  „         v  ii  489 
and  have  s  him  back  A  holy  gonfanon,                           Harold  m  ii  146 

And  Edward  would  have  s  a  host  against  you,  „         iv  i  99 

Since  Griffyth's  head  was  s  To  Edward,  „       rv  i  221 

Have  thy  two  brethren  s  their  forces  in  ?  „         v  i  342 

arrow  which  the  Saints  Sharpen'd  and  s  against  him —  „        y  ii  169 

Let  the  Great  Seal  be  s  Back  to  the  King  to-morrow.  Becket  1  i  375 

*  his  folk.  His  kin,  all  his  belongings,  „       n  i  69 

priest  whom  John  of  Salisbury  trusted  Hath  s  another.  „     in  i  71 


Sent 


1070 


Set 


Sent  (continued)    I  s  this  Margery,  and  she  comes  not  back ; 

I  5  another,  and  she  comes  not  back.  ^,^'5,^''  ^^-  "J 

A  strange  gift  s  to  me  to-day.  -f "-«  t.Mp  i  u  £>^ 

know  myself  am  that  Galatian  Who  s  the  cup.  „     i  n  ^i^ 

The  Romans  s  me  here  a  spy  upon  you,  „     i  "  j^^ 

I  might  have  s  him  prisoner  to  Rome.        .      ,   ,         „         ".  ,^  °    lo 

and  he  s  me  wi'  the  gig  to  Littlechester  to  fetch  'er ;    Prom,  of  May  1 19 

cotched  'im  once  a-steahn'  coals  an'  I  s  fur  'im,  „  i  41^ 

and  he  s  'im  awaav  to  t'other  end  o'  the  field ;  „  n  io^ 

but  he  s  me  an  alphabetical  list  of  those  that  remam,  „         mZb 

What  hasta  s  fur  me,  then,  fur?  -        m  4^ 

I  have  s  to  the  Abbot  and  justiciary  Foresters  iv  87 

I  had  despair'd  of  thee— that  s  me  crazed,  „    iv  lU^^ 

Sentence    The  s  having  past  upon  them  all,  Queen  Mary  i  v  487 

Hear  first  thy  s  !  Becket  i  in  b7U 

Seqnatur    lUorum  scelera  Poena  s !  (repeat)  Harold  v  i  518, 605 

Sequel    The 5  had  been  other  than  his  league  With  Norway,  ,,  ^^}}l°^ 

Seraph    If  a  5  shouted  from  the  sun,  Becket  i  in  ill 

Serf    All  those  poor  s's  whom  we  have  served  will  bless  us.  Foresters  iv  1U74 

Series    all  but  proving  man  An  automatic  s  of  sensa- 

tions.  Prom,  of  May  I  226 

Serious    Stafford,  I  am  a  sad  man  and  a  s.  Queen  Mary  iii  1  4/ 

Serjeant    (See  Drill-serjeant  .. 

Serpent    s  that  hath  slough'd  will  slough  agam.  Queen  Mary  m  111 1» 

Tut,  then  we  all  are  s's.  t^'  ,  .    S^  "kqq 

Let  her  eat  it  like  the  s,  ,      .       „       Becket,  Pro.  566 

s  that  had  crept  into  the  garden  And  coil'd  himself       Foresters  n  1 16b 

Servant    these  old-world  s's  Are  all  but  flesh  and  blood        The  Falcon  708 

Serve     (See  also  Sarve)     it  s's  to  fan  A  kindled  fire.        Queen  Mary  1  vbA) 

make  Those  that  we  come  to  s  our  sharpest  foes  ?  „  ".."' H 

S  God  and  both  your  Majesties.  ,.       "i  11?  159 

Yet  to  save  Cranmer  were  to  s  the  Church,  „  TV  1  lob 

but  I  am  not  sure  She  will  not  s  me  better—  „  v  1  ^U 

May  s  to  charm  the  tiger  out  of  him.  Harold  1 1  IM 

thunder  moulded  in  high  heaven  To  s  the  Norman  purpose,     .,      n  11  d4 

Let  Harold  s  for  Tostig !     Queen.    Harold  served  Tostig  . 

so  ill,  he  cannot  s  for  Tostig !  "    ™-^-no 

sight  of  Danish  blood  Might  s  an  end  not  Enghsh—  „    iv  111  98 

my  foundation  For  men  who  s  the  neighbour,  „       v  1  98 

to  the  statesman  Who  s's  and  loves  his  king,  Becket,  Prp.T» 

I  am  his  no  more,  and  I  must  s  the  Church.  „        11 145 

S  my  best  friend  and  make  him  my  worst  foe ;  „      i  lu  ob7 

Then  there  isn't  a  goodly  wench  to  s  him  with  it :  „      i  iv  159 

tongue  lick  him  whole  again  To  s  your  will  ?  „        n  11  ^0 

wriggle  out  of  them  like  an  eel  When  the  time  s  s.  „      n  n  188 

we  make  the  time,  we  keep  the  time,  ay,  and  we  s  the 

time-  "      "11 368 

WeU— i  shall  s  Galatia  taking  it,  ^he  Cup  i  i  100 

S  by  force  ?     No  force  Could  make  me  s  by  force.  „        i  u  79 

Then  that  I  s  with  Rome  to  s  Galatia.  -^      i  }i  ^1^ 

my  serving  Rome  To  s  Galatia :  „      i  "  ^79 

I  am  much  malign'd.    I  thought  to  s  Galatia.    Sinnatus. 

S  thyself  first,  villain  !     They  shall  not  harm  „       i  u  6Z^ 

Well  used  thev  s  us  well.  "      ^  ^'i     " 

one  piece  of  earthenware"to  s  the  salad  ia  to  my  lady,    The  Falcon  481 
servants  Are  all  but  flesh  and  blood  with  those  they  s.  „  710 

I  ha'  sers-ed  the  King  living,  says  she,  and  let  me  s 

him  dead  Foresters  11 1  611 

and  s  King  Richard  save  thou  be  A  traitor  or  a  goose  ?        „         iv  351 
Served    (See  also  Sarved,  WeU-served)    I  hoped  I  bad 

s  God  with  all  my  might !  Queen  Mary  v  11  296 

if  you  be  fairly  s.  And  lodged,  and  treated.  „  v  in  Jl 

For  I  have  s  thee  long  and  honestly.  Harold  1 1  ^14 

Harold  s  Tostig  so  ill,  he  cannot  serve  for  Tostig !  „    ni  1  Ibl 

No,  no,  but  Harold.     I  love  him :  he  hath  s  me :  ^" ,  ™  •  ff o 

I  s  our  Theobald  well  when  I  was  with  him ;  Becket  1 1  14^ 

I  s  King  Henry  well  as  Chancellor ;  ..      1 1.144 

in  your  chancellorship  you  s  The  follies  of  the  King.  „       ^.."^^ 

Thou  hast  s  me  heretofore  with  Rome —  ..    "  "..  ^^ 

Heaven  be  s  Tho'  earth's  last  earthquake  ,,     v  111 40 

It  s  me  for  a  blessed  rosary.  T'ne  Falcon  Q6Z 

Hath  s  me  better  than  her  living —  ..  901 

I  ha'  «  the  King  living,  says  she,  and  let  me  serve 

him  dead,  Foresters  u  1  310 

those  poor  serfs  whom  we  have  s  will  bless  us,  „        iv  1075 


Service    (I  have  a  daughter  in  her  s  who  reported  it) 

This  chains  me  to  your  s. 
Twelve  years  of  s  ! 

My  lord,  permit  us  then  to  leave  thy  s. 
told  me  he  would  advance  me  to  the  s  of  a  great  lady, 
which  our  loyal  s,  And  since  we  likewise 
For  all  his  faithful  s's  to  Rome. 

then  there  is  anything  in  your  lordship's  larder  at  _,     _  ,        ,00 

your  lordship's  s.  The  Falcon  138 

cold-manner'd  friend  may  strangely  do  us  The  truest  s,  „  b44 

I  sank  so  low  that  I  went  into  s—  .   From,  of  May  in  39^ 

wasted  his  revenues  in  the  s  of  our  good  king  Richard  Foresters  11 193 


Queen  Mary  i  i  76 

I  V  537 

Harold  I  i  221 

Becket  i  iv  10 

„    m  i  123 

v  i  53 

The  Cup  II  65 


All  thanks  for  all  your  s ; 
Do  me  the  s  to  tap  it,  and  thou  wilt  know. 
I  would  tap  myself  in  thy  s,  Robin. 
And  both  at  thy  s,  Robin. 
Serviceable    so  she  be  s  In  all  obedience. 
Serving  (adj.  and  part.)     We  be  more  like  scarecrows  in  a 
field  than  decent  s  men ;  ^ 

'  A  Galatian  s  by  force  in  the  Roman  Legion.  ^ 
'  A  Galatian  s  by  foece  in  the  Roman  Legion.' 
jS  by  force ! 
Serving  (s)     my  s  Rome  To  serve  Galatia : 
Servitor     King  would  act  s  and  hand  a  dish  to  his  son ; 
Session    Your  Council  is  in  S,  please  your  Majesty. 
Set  (S)     I  know  a  s  of  exiles  over  there. 
Set  (sit)     they  wunt  s  i'  the  Lord's  cheer  0    that 

daay. 
Set  (verb)     was  a  wheedling  monk  S  up  the  mass, 
s  yourselves  by  hundreds  against  one  ? 
Yearns  to  s  foot  upon  your  island  shore, 
s  it  round  with  gold,  with  pearl,  with  diamond. 
I'll  have  my  head  s  higher  in  the  state ; 
Few  things  have  fail'd  to  which  I  s  my  will, 
s  no  foot  theretoward  imadvised  Of  all  our  Privy 

Council ; 
I  am  not  so  s  on  wedlock  as  to  choose 
I  must  s  The  guard  at  Ludgate. 
you'll  s  the  Divil's  Tower  a-spitting, 
cry  To  have  the  gates  s  wide  again. 
They  are  the  flower  of  England ;  s  the  gates  wide. 
^  up  a  viceroy,  sent  his  myriads  hither  To  seize 
So  to  s  forth  this  humble  suit  of  ours 
Like  dogs  that  s  to  watch  their  master's  gate. 
Would  fain  s  forth  some  saying  that  may  live 
For  there  be  writings  I  have  s  abroad 
Crying,  '  Forward  ! ' — s  our  old  church  rockmg, 
s  up  your  broken  images ;  Be  comfortable  to  me. 
and  s  up  The  Holy  oflice  here — 
thy  leave  to  s  my  feet  On  board, 
a  sun  s  But  leaving  light  enough  for  Alf gar  s  house 
and  s  her  up  again,  till  now. 
And  over  thee  the  suns  arise  and  s, 
sunder'd  tree  again,  and  s  it  Straight  on  the  trunk, 
iS  forth  our  golden  Dragon, 
shall  cross  the  seas  To  s  the  Pope  against  me— 
will  s  it  trembling  Only  to  base  it  deeper. 
To  s  that  precious  jewel,  Roger  of  York. 
True  enough,  my  mind  was  s  upon  other  matters. 
Has  my  simple  song  s  you  jingling? 
He  took  his  mitre  off,  and  s  it  on  me, 
aS  all  on  fire  against  him ! 
Strike,  and  ye  s  these  customs  by  my  death 
Fight  for  the  Church,  and  s  the  Church  against  me  ! 
Herbert.    To  be  honest  is  to  s  all  knaves  against 

s  the  Church  This  day  between  the  hammer  and  the 

anvil — 
Poor  beast !  poor  beast !  s  him  down. 
Lord  hath  s  his  mark  upon  him  that  no  man  should 

murder  him.  ,     ,,        u 

I  brought  them  In  from  the  wood,  and  s  theni  here, 
and  s's  the  church-tower  over  there  all  a-hell-fire  as 

it  were? 
Give  me  the  poison ;  s  me  free  of  him ! 


I  iii  165 

;;        m  333 

ni  336 

III  339 

Harold  in  i  291 

Foresters  i  i  35 
The  Cup  I  i  47 

„        I  ii  75 

„      I  ii  277 

Becket  in  iii  139 

Queen  Mary  i  v  543 

III  i  155 


IV  iii  470 

iii  91 

I  iii  72 

I  V  367 

I  V  375 

II  i  250 
n  ii  22 

II  ii  204 
II  ii  214 
II  ii  408 
II  iii  102 
II  iv  65 
n  iv  70 
in  i  463 

III  iii  145 
in  iv  309 

IV  iii  158 
IV  iii  240 
IV  iii  403 

vii300 

V  vll2 

Harold  i  i  228 

„      I  i  306 

„       n  i  50 

„    nii433 

„    m  i  145 

„    IV  i  245 

Becket,  Pro.  36 

„      Pro.  208 

„      Pro.  270 

„      Pro.  318 

„      Pro.  378 

I  i  63 

I  ii  89 

„       I  iii  170 


I  iii  569 

I  iii  584 
livlOe 

I  iv  192 
nil31 

m  iii  51 
iviil64 


Set 


1071 


Shamed 


■■^^ 


'■i 


Set  (verb)  (continued)    To  s  them  straight  again.  Becket  v  ii  459 

Not  s  myself  abroach  And  run  my  mind  The  Cup  i  ii  106 

Would  s  him  in  the  front  rank  of  the  fight  .,         i  ii  153 

And  that  s's  her  against  me— for  the  moment.  „        i  iii  163 

tho'  Rome  may  s  A  free  foot  where  she  will,  „  n  245 

it  is  thou  Hath  s  me  this  hard  task,  The  Falcon  237 

S,  as  you  say,  so  lightly  on  her  head,  „  535 

I  had  but  emptiness  to  s  before  you,  „  870 

But  now  you  will  s  all  right  again.  Prom,  of  May  i  718 

she  s  the  bush  by  my  dairy  winder  afoor  „  ii  18 

Come,  you  will  s  all  right  again,  „  ii  658 

I  be  afeard  I  shall  s  him  a-swearing  like  onythink.  „         in  359 

I  would  5  my  men-at-arms  to  oppose  thee,  like  the 

Lord  of  the  Castle.  Foresters  i  i  322 

whenever  I  s  my  own  foot  on  it  I  say  to  it,  „        i  i  334 

mantle  of  the  cloud,  And  s's,  a  naked  fire.  „  n  i  29 

a  price  is  s  On  this  poor  head ;  „  ii  i  73 

Well,  s  them  forth.     I  could  eat  anything.  „        ii  i  273 

you  are  sturdy  rogues  that  should  be  s  to  work.  „        ni  197 

See  that  men  be  s  Along  the  glades  „         in  456 

Set    >$««  High-set 

Setting    slander'd  you  For  s  up  a  mass  at  Canterbury  „  i  ii  88 

gave  me  this  morning  on  my  s  forth.  Foresters  ui  282 

Settle     now  would  s  Upon  this  flower.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  55 

in  the  eternal  distance  To  s  on  the  Truth.  Harold  m  ii  103 

Settled     We  but  seek  Some  s  ground  for  peace  to  stand 

upon.  Queen  Mary  i  v  315 

pass  Into  more  s  hatred  of  the  doctrines  Of  those 

who  iTile,  „       in  iv  159 

but  you  will  stay  your  going  Somewhat  beyond 

your  s  pm-pose  ?  „  v  i  207 

Seven    [See  also  Twenty-seven)  ■  Some  six  or  s  Bishops, 

diamonds,  pearls,  „  m  i  52 

Not  for  the  s  devils  to  enter  in  ?  „         ni  ii  140 

The  s  sleepers  in  the  cave  at  Ephesus  Have  tum'd 

from  right  to  left.  Harold  i  i  192 

S  feet  of  English  land,  or  something  more.  Seeing  he  is 

a  giant.  „      iv  ii  54 

'  S  feet  of  English  earth,  or  something  more.  Seeing  he 

is  a  giant ! '  „  iv  iii  112 

My  lord,  the  King  demands  s  hundred  marks,  Becket  i  iii  634 

I  led  s  hundred  knights  and  fought  his  wars.  „       i  iii  638 

Forgive  him  seventy  times  and  s ;  Prom,  of  May  m  9 

Seven-fold    weak  and  meek  old  man,  S-f  dishonour'd    Queen  Mary  v  v  133 

Seventeen    S — and  knew  eight  languages —  „         in  i  358 

S — a  rose  of  grace  !  ,,         ni  i  371 

Seventh    Lo  !  there  once  more — this  is  the  s  night !  Harold  i  i  2 

only  she  kept  the  s  commandment  better  than  some  I 

know  on,  Becket  in  i  194 

Seventy    Forgive  him  s  times  and  seven ;  Prom,  of  May  in  9 

Seven-years'     My  s-y  friend  was  with  me,  my  young 

boy ;  Queen  Mary  m  iii  47 

Several     In  s  bills  and  declarations.  Madam,  „  iv  i  48 

Sever'd    long  divided  in  itself,  and  s  from  the  faith,  ,.  i  iii  21 

My  arm  is  s.     I  can  no  more —  Becket  v  iii  188 

Severeness    An  overmuch  s,  I  repeat.  Queen  Mary  m  iv  156 

Sew    these  poor  hands  but  $,  Spin,  broider — •  Harold  iv  iii  10 

Sewer  (sure)     Ay,  to  be  s  !     Be  thou  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  3 

but  s  I  be,  they  be  two  o'  the  purtiest  gels  ye  can 

see  of  a  summer  mumin'.  „  1 29 

and  I  feel  s,  Miss  Dora,  that  I  ha'  been  noan  too 

sudden  wi'  you,  „  n  59 

I  be  Farmer  Dobson,  s  anew ;  „        ii  136 

I  beant  sa  s  o'  that,  fur  Sally  knaw'd  im ;  Now  then  ?  „       in  146 

Sewer     In  breathless  dungeons  over  steaming  s's,        Queen  Mary  iv  iii  441 

Sewn    if  I  hadn't  a  sprig  o'  wickentree  s  into  my  dress,      Foresters  n  i  250 

Sha&ky  (shaky)     The  weather's  well  anew,  but  the 

glass  be  a  bit  s.  Prom,  of  May  n  52 

Sha&med  (ashamed)    Then  the  owd  man  i'  Lear  should 

be  5  of  hissen,  „  1 267 

Shackle     The  s's  that  will  bind  me  to  the  wall.  Harold  n  ii  410 

Shadder  (shadow)     then  back  agean,  a-follering  my 

oan  s —  Prom,  of  May  i  372 

Shade     moon  Divides  the  whole  long  street  with  light 

and  s.  Becket  i  i  366 


Shadow  {See  also  Shadder)  Is  to  be  love-sick  for  a  s.  Queen  Mary  i  v  535 
pine  in  Italy  that  cast  its  s  Athwart  a  cataract ; 

firm  stood  the  pine — The  cataract  shook  the  s.  „       in  iv  136 

It  was  the  s  of  the  Church  that  trembled ;  Your 

church  was  but  the  s  of  a  church,  „       in  iv  144 

And  how  her  s  crosses  one  by  one  „  v  v  7 

a  Tudor  Schoni'd  by  the  s  of  death —  ..  v  v  226 

s's  of  a  hundred  fat  dead  deer  For  dead  men's  ghosts.  Harold  i  ii  103 
dog  that  snapt  the  s,  dropt  the  bone. —  „       i  ii  188 

be  as  the  s  of  a  cloud  Crossing  your  light.  „     n  ii  177 

That  lies  within  the  s  of  the  chance.  „      n  ii  463 

And  dreadful  s's  strove  upon  the  hill,  „     in  i  377 

And  on  it  falls  the  s  of  the  priest ;  „      in  ii  70 

Yet  if  a  fear,  Or  s  of  a  fear,  „       v  i  115 

Surely  too  young  Even  for  this  s  of  a  crown ;  Becket,  Pro.  231 

That  were  but  as  the  s  of  an  assent.  „         i  iii  195 

cloud  that  hath  come  over  the  sun  and  cast  us  all  into  s  ?  „  in  iii  47 
Your  s.     Synorix —  The  Cup  i  ii  450 

and  enrich  Earth  with  her  s  !  „  i  iii  60 

Tell  him  there  is  one  s  among  the  s's,  „  n  139 

Beneath  the  s  of  our  pines  and  planes ! '  .,  n  227 

We  lie  too  deep  down  in  the  s  here.  The  Falcon  581 

but  they,  the  s's  of  ourselves,  Have  past  for  ever.  Prom,  of  May  i  271 
would  she  moved  beside  me  like  my  s  !  Foresters  n  i  165 

0  look  !  before  the  s  of  these  dark  oaks  „  n  i  604 
A  s,  a  poetical  fiction — •  „  iv  219 

Shadowing  hath  talk'd  with  God,  and  seen  A  s  horror ;  Harold  in  i  357 
And  s  of  this  double  thunder-cloud  „       ni  ii  159 

Shaft     He  drew  this  s  against  me  to  the  head.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  80 

Parthian  s  of  a  forlorn  Cupid  at  the  King's  left  breast,    Becket,  Pro.  339 

Shake     Our  friends,  the  Normans,  holp  to  s  his  chair.  Harold  i  i  85 

to  s  the  North  With  earthquake  and  disruption —  „    i  ii  198 

Come,  Harold,  s  the  cloud  off !  „    in  i  73 

that  would  s  the  Papacy  as  it  stands.  Becket  i  iii  213 

When  what  ye  s  at  doth  but  seem  to  fly,  „       i  iii  743 

s's  at  mortal  kings — her  vacillation.  Avarice,  craft —  „      n  ii  405 

To  s  my  throne,  to  push  into  my  chamber —  „        v  i  249 

That  this  brave  heart  of  mine  should  s  me  so,  The  Cup  i  iii  39 

the  very  letters  seem  to  s  With  cold.  The  Falcon  448 

1  do  not  dare  it,  like  an  old  friend,  to  s  it.  Prom,  of  May  n  527 
Shaken    When  he  hath  s  ofi  the  Emperor,  Becket  i  iii  244 

dead  Are  s  from  their  stillness  in  the  grave  Foresters  n  i  46 

Shaker     A  s  and  confounder  of  the  realm ;  Queen  Mary  tv  iii  40 

Shakest    thou  s  !     Here,  here — a  cup  of  wine —  Foresters  x  iii  88 

Shaking    (See  also  A-shaakin',  Head-shaking)    by  thy 

wisdom  Hast  kept  it  firm  from  s ;  Becket,  Pro.  204 

Shaky    See  Shaaky 
Shallow    There  runs  a  s  brook  across  our  field  For 

twenty  miles.  Queen  Mary  v  v  83 

But  thou  hast  drain'd  them  s  by  thy  tolls,  Harold  i  i  319 

Shambles-oak    or  the  s-o,  or  a  weasel-sucked  egg,  Foresters  iv  211 

Shame  (s)     Nay,  for  bare  s  of  inconsistency.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  39 

8,  s,  my  masters  !  are  you  English-born,  „  i  iii  69 

A  gracious  guard  Truly ;  s  on  them  !  „        n  iv  58 

S  upon  you,  Robin,  S  upon  you  now !  „        m  v  85 

And  bring  us  all  to  s  ?  Becket  i  iii  38 

S,  wrath,  I  know  not  what.  „    i  iii  322 

and  the  more  s  to  him  after  his  promise,  „    m  i  130 

Will  feel  no  s  to  give  themselves  the  lie.  The  Cup  n  117 

S  on  her  that  she  took  it  at  thy  hands,  The  Falcon  60 

it's  all  you  have  left  us.    iS  on  you !  „        163 

S  on  her  then  !  „        206 

I  scarce  believe  it !     Elisabetta.    S  upon  her  then  !  .,518 

I  shall  go  mad  for  utter  s  and  die.  Prom,  of  May  i  682 

Will  he  not  fly  from  you  if  he  learn  the  story  of  ray  s  „  ni  257 
Five  years  of  s  and  suffering  broke  the  heart  „         m  761 

John — S  on  him  ! — Stole  on  her.  Foresters  n  i  111 

S  on  thee.  Little  John,  thou  hast  forgotten —  „         ni  237 

Shame  (verb)     Nor  s  to  call  it  nature.  Queen  Mary  m  v  77 

no  need  For  Philip  so  to  s  himself  again.  „  v  ii  587 

That  would  but  s  me,  Rather  than  make  me  vain.  Harold  i  ii  116 

thought  that  naked  Truth  would  s  the  Devil  „      mi  118 

I  s  to  quote  'em — caught,  my  lord,  Becket  i  ii  7 

Shamed    (See  also  Half-shamed)    make  me  s  and 

tongue-tied  in  my  love.  Queen  Mary  m  ii  162 


Shamed 


1072 


Shield 


Shamed  (continued)    only  s  to  the  quick  Before  the  king —       Harold  iv  i  7 
5  of  his  poor  farmer  s  daughter  among  the  ladies 

in  his  d^a^ving-room  ?  From,  of  May  in  294 

jS  of  me  in  a  drawing-room  !  (repeat)  „     m  296,  306 

Sooner  or  later  s  of  her  among  The  ladies,  „  m  58] 

But — s  of  you,  my  Empress  !  „  ni  599 

<S'  a  too  trustful  widow  whom  you  heard  In  her 

confession ;  Foresters  in  385 

Shaming    See  Solemn-shaming 

Shape  (s)    struck  a  s  from  out  the  vague,  Becket  i  iii  373 

my  sleeping-draught  May  bloat  thy  beauty  out  of  s,  „     iv  ii  170 

What  a  s  !  what  lovely  arms  !  Foresters  i  i  108 

Shape  (verb)    Statesmen  that  are  wise  S  a  necessity,   Queen  Mary  in  iii  33 
stay  Yet  for  awhile,  to  s  and  giiide  the  event.  „  v  i  303 

Love  that  can  5  or  can  shatter  a  life  Becket  ii  i  11 

Shaped    See  Well-shaped 

Share    Come,  come  !  thou  hadst  thy  s  on  her.  „    i  iv  124 

S  and  s  alike  !  Harold  n  i  64 

Shared    and  s  His  fruits  and  milk.    Liar !  The  Cup  i  ii  427 

Sharp    stake  and  fire — S  work  and  short.  Qv£en  Mary  in  i  329 

Here — give  me  one  s  pinch  upon  the  cheek  Foresters  iv  1011 

Sharp-dividkig     battle-axe  keen  As  thine  own  s-d  justice,       Harold  y  i  564 

Sharpen'd    Renard  and  the  Chancellor  s  them.  Queen  Mary  m  i  5 

arrow  which  the  Saints  S  and  sent  against  him —  Harold  v  ii  169 

Sharper    A  s  harm  to  England  and  to  Rome,  Than 

Calais  taken.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  29 

Sharpest    Shall  we  make  Those  that  we  come  to  serve 

our  s  foes  ?  „         n  iii  77 

Shatter    Will  front  their  cry  and  s  them  into  dust.  „  u  iv  5 

No  Norman  horse  Can  s  England,  Harold  v  i  196 

Love  that  can  shape  or  can  s  a  life  Becket  n  i  11 

God's  full  curse  S  you  all  to  pieces  „  v  iii  135 

Shatter'd    or  whether  England  Be  s  into  fragments.  Harold  n  ii  286 

have  we  s  back  The  hugest  wave  from  Norseland  „       rv  iii  60 

And  send  the  s  North  again  to  sea,  „     iv  iii  140 

Shaveling    hear  what  the  s  has  to  say  for  himself.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  17 

— and  that,  turncoat  s  !  Becket  i  iii  737 

Shaven    beard,  which  he  had  never  s  Since  Henry's 

death,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  593 

Shawl    Indian  s  That  Philip  brought  me  in  our 

happy  days ! —  „  v  ii  539 

Sheath    Take  up  your  dagger ;  put  it  in  the  s.  Becket  rv  ii  294 

whose  whole  fife  hath  been  folded  like  a  blossom  in 

the  s,  Foresters  i  i  206 

Sheathe    s  your  swords,  ye  will  displease  the  King.  Becket  i  iii  178 

Shed    True  tears  that  year  were  s  for  you  in  Florence.         The  Falcon  384 

Sheep    S  at  the  gap  which  Gardiner  takes,  Queen  Mary  m  iii  236 

doth  not  kill  The  s  that  wander  from  his  flock,  „         m  iv  103 

inherited  loathing  of  these  black  s  of  the  Papacy.  Becket,  Pro.  461 

But  thou  the  shepherd  hast  betray'd  the  s,  „        i  iii  525 

Swine,  s,  ox — here's  a  French  supper.  „        i  iv  112 

black  s  baaed  to  the  miller's  ewe-lamb,  „        i  iv  162 

Black  s,  quoth  she,  too  black  a  sin  for  me.     And  what 

said  the  black  s,  my  masters  ?  „        i  iv  165 

That  he  made  the  black  s  white.  „        i  iv  176 

Out  from  among  us ;  thou  art  our  black  s.  „        i  iv  181 

S,  said  he  ?    And  s  without  the  shepherd,  too.  „        i  iv  182 

Smite  the  shepherd  and  the  s  are  scattered.     Smite  the 

s  and  the  shepherd  will  excommimicate  thee.  „        i  iv  227 

that  the  s  May  feed  in  peace.  „     ni  iii  345 

To  find  my  stray  s  back  within  the  fold.  „     ni  iii  355 

Sheet    And  as  for  the  flesh  at  table,  a  whole  Peter's  s,  „     in  iii  129 

Sheeted    when  all  the  s  dead  Are  shaken  from  their  still- 
ness in  the  grave  Foresters  n  i  45 

She-goat    you  had  safelier  have  slain  an  archbishop  than 

a  s-g :  Becket  in  iii  69 

Shelf    Shelves  and  hooks,  shelves  and  hooks,  and  when  I 

see  the  shelves  The  Falcon  119 

Shell    (See  also  Cockle-shell)    she  that  has  eaten  the  yolk 

is  scarce  like  to  swallow  the  s.  „  705 

woodland  squirrel  sees  the  nut  Behind  the  s,  Foresters  ii  i  648 

I  crawl'd  like  a  sick  crab  from  my  old  s,  „         iv  127 

Shelter  (s)     The  s  of  your  roof — ^not  for  one  moment —    Prom,  of  May  in  800 

Shelter  (verb)    We  <  you  no  more.  Becket  ii  ii  249 

I  will  I  here.  Foresters  ii  i  180 


Shelter'd     Ah  !  much  heresy  S  in  Calais. 

He  s  in  the  Abbey  of  Pontigny. 

I  have  s  some  that  broke  the  forest  laws. 
Shepherd    re-pulpited  The  s  of  St.  Peter, 

the  s  doth  not  kill  The  sheep  that  wander 

The  Good  S  !     Take  this,  and  render  that. 

But  thou  the  s  hast  betray'd  the  sheep, 

And  sheep  without  the  s,  too. 


Qu^en  Mary  v  ii  299 

Becket  ii  i  84 

Foresters  i  iii  69 

Queen  Mary  i  v  182 

in  iv  101 

Harold  in  ii  169 

Becket  i  iii  524 

„      1  iv  183 


Smite  the  s  and  the  sheep  are  scattered.     Smite  the 

sheep  and  the  s  will  excommimicate  thee.  „  i  iv  226 

the  wolves  of  England  Must  murder  her  one  s,  „  in  iii  344 

This  mountain  s  never  dream'd  of  Rome.  The  Cup  i  ii  17 
our  carters  and  our  s's  Still  find  a  comfort  there. 

Harold.     Carters  and  s's  !  Prom,  of  May  m  527 

Sheriff    Thou  knowest  that  the  S  of  Nottingham  loves 

thee.     Marian.     The  S  dare  to  love  me  ?  Foresters  i  i  223 

But  then  your  S,  your  little  man,  „  i  i  231 

our  little  S  will  ever  swim  with  the  stream  !  „  i  i  240 

The  S  of  Nottingham  was  there — not  John.  „  i  i  252 

Beware  of  John  and  the  S  of  Nottingham.  „  i  i  255 

What  art  thou,  man  ?    <S  of  Nottingham  ?  „  i  ii  190 

S,  thy  friend,  this  monk,  is  but  a  statue.  „  i  ii  233 

How  close  the  S  peered  into  thine  eyes  !  „  i  ii  253 

Did  he  say  so,  the  S?  „  i  ii  267 

I  heard  this  S  tell  her  he  would  pay  „  i  iii  5 

after  some  slight  speech  about  the  S  „  n  i  115 

the  S  Would  pay  this  cursed  mortgage  to  his  brother  „  n  i  143 

Most  honourable  S\  „  n  i  154 

the  S,  and  by  heaven,  Prince  Jolm  himself  „  n  i  173 

the  S  had  taken  all  our  goods  for  the  King  without  paying,  „  n  i  190 

since  the  S  left  me  naught  but  an  empty  belly,  „  n  i  278 
when  the  S  took  my  little  horse  for  the  King  without 

paying  for  it —  „  n  i  300 

Missed !     There  goes  another.     Shoot,  <S !  „  n  i  397 

Strike  S  !     Strike,  mercenary !  „  n  i  416 

Prince  John,  the  S,  and  a  mercenary.  „  ii  i  445 

The  S — I  am  grieved  it  was  the  S;  „  ii  i  449 

Rather  than  that  would  wed  her  with  the  S.  „  ii  i  525 

And  so  wouldst  sell  thy  sister  to  the  S,  „  n  i  537 

That  such  a  brother — she  marry  the  «S !  „  ii  i  551 

In  that  great  heat  to  wed  her  to  the  S  „  n  i  585 

Thou  shalt  not  marry  The  S,  but  abide  with  me  „  n  i  602 

Then  you  will  wed  the  S?  „  in  11 

And  this  rich  S  too  has  come  between  us ;  „  iv  57 

The  S !     This  ring  cries  out  against  thee.  „  rv  68 

What  wilt  thou  do  with  the  S?  „  iv  107 

We  told  the  Prince  and  the  S  of  our  coming.  „  rv  576 

we  will  hang  thee,  prince  or  no  prince,  s  or  no  s.  „  iv  584 

The  S  !  the  S,  follow'd  by  Prince  John  „  iv  587 
But,  Sir,  the  S—    Sir  Richard.    Let  me  be,  I  say !    The 

S  will  be  welcome !  „  iv  600 

And  then  the  S !     Marian.     Ay,  the  S,  father,  „  iv  650 

I  cannot  love  the  S.  .,  iv  662 

S,  Who  thought  to  buy  your  marrying  me  „  iv  717 

S,  thou  wilt  find  me  at  Nottingham.  „  iv  801 

No,  let  him  be.    S  of  Nottingham,  „  rv  815 

Thou  wouldst  marry  This  S  when  King  Richard  came  „  iv  862 
If  you  would  marry  me  with  a  traitor  s,  I  fear  I  might 

prove  traitor  with  the  s.  „  iv  871 

Here  Abbot,  S — ^no — no,  Robin  Hood.  „  iv  989 

Sheriffship    True,  for  through  John  I  had  my  s.  „  i  ii  201 

Sherwood  (adj.)     there  is  a  lot  of  wild  fellows  in  S  Forest 

who  hold  by  King  Richard.  „  i  ii  73 

In  S  Forest.     I  have  heard  of  them.  „  i  iii  102 

Sherwood  (s)    good  fellows  there  in  merry  S  That  hold  by 

Richard,  „  i  iii  99 

To  make  this  S  Eden  o'er  again,  „  n  i  168 

Tut !  be  there  wolves  in  S?  „  n  i  512 

Robin  king  of  S,  And  loves  and  dotes  „  iv  389  i 

Robin,  the  lion  of  S —  „  iv  392 

All  the  birds  in  merry  tS  sing  and  sing  him  home  again.  „  iv  1109 

Shield  (adj.)    our  s  wall — Wall — break  it  not — break  not — 

break—  Harold  v  i  232 

Shield  (s)     Noble  as  his  young  person  and  old  s.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  513 

No  Norman  horse  Can  shatter  England,  standing  shjs;  Harold  v  i  196  I 


Shield 


1073 


Shield  (s)  (continued)     bit  his  s,  and  dash'd  it  on  the  ground,  Harold  v  i  405 

make  their  wall  of  s's  Firm  as  thy  cliffs,  v  i  470 

The  horse  and  horseman  cannot  meet  the  s,  "       v  i  'iQ? 

Hot-headed  fools— to  burst  the  wall  of  s's  '  "      v  i  fil  ^ 

Under  the  *  and  safeguard  of  the  Pope,  Becket  i  iii  600 

T^i^^m  bVeathe  for  a  moment  free  of  .  ''"^IS  ?^  I's^ 

Sifwl^'^            A  ^-iP'>t/i°t  of  t^e  morning  star  The  Cur,  11 121 

Huelded    You  are  doubly  fenced  and  s  sitting  here  Queen  Mary  in  ii  104 

And  grateful  to  the  hand  that  s  him,  ^      VarX  r  Usfi 

Shield-waU    Let  kith  and  kin  stand  close  a.s  our  s-w  ,    III 

Heard  how  the  s-w  rang,                                         '  "   -^  j-J  ?^o 

aift  (s)     a  s,  a  trick  Whereby  to  challenge,  Becket  n^  \m 

Shift  (verb)    Will  5  the  yoke  and  weight  of  all  the  world  Queen  Mary  111  vi  212 

the  currents  So  s  and  change,  ^ .„  iii  Am 

Sf  o  ^''wH  ^  '^T  *°  f  •  *^^  1^^'  '^^'•^^'^  n  ii  4^ 

mufhl^    f n   .!^    i  *■  ^f  ^"^'""^  ^"^^^^  something,  TAe  Cuv  11 113 

Shifting    for  how  their  lances  snap  and  shiver  Against  the  s 

blaze  of  Harold's  axe  !  Harold  v  i  587 

dance  into  the  sun  That  s's  on  princes.  nr  v  2^4 

you  want  the  sun  That  s's  at  court ;  "  tit  I  977 

ls\    What  else,  Sir  Count?  "  yliiie 

Our  day  beside  the  Derwent  will  not  s  Less  than  a  star  ^ Harold lYinbO 

What  are  you  crying  for,  when  the  sun  s's  ?  m  i  970 

Who  never  deign'd  to  5  into  my  palace.  The  Falcon  285 

f^mgle    sea  may  roll  Sand,  s,  shore-weed,  Harold  1  ii  UC) 

Shining    6'g«  Ever-shining  ^^ 

^^^H?ir!l!  ''^  """i  ''*'u'"  °"''  ^^L'*''     ,  ««««»^  M<^rv  II  i  179 

Help  the  good  5,  showmg  the  sunken  rock,  Harold  11  ii  100 

A  thousand  s'5— a  hundred  thousand  men—  iv  iii  194 

cj, -J^^^J^A  ^^'^'^u  ^^^"^  together  like  two  s's  in  a  calm.       Becket  iii  iii  298 

^h  nLit    T  *^^  %  "^^  P'^l  ^"  ,*^y  ^^^'^^  ^«'-«^<^  H  ii  197 

ihipwreck    A  voice  of  s  on  a  shoreless  sea  !  Queen  Marv  v  ii  384 

stormlesss  in  the  pools  Of  sullen  slumber,  Harold  Yi^t 

Shipwreckt    that  the  s  are  accursed  of  God ;—  11  \  100 

shirt    I  wear  beneath  my  dress  A  s  of  mail :  i  v  146 

SoT  /«??'1  '"i^P  ^"^  5  Against  the  shifting  iy«^oZei  v  i  586 
Jhoal    {b>ee  also  Hemng-shoal)    No,  but  a  s  of  wives  upon 

the  heath,                                                                ^  v  i  146 

His  Holiness  cannot  steer  straight  thro'  s's,  B"ecket  11  ii  59 
.hock    Not  so  dead,  But  that  a  s  may  rouse  her.            Queen  Mary  iii  i  30 

1 0  find  one  s  upon  the  field  when  all  The  harvest  has 

hc^VA^^^'^l'^^-   ^,     ,   ■         ...  TheFalcon^Ol 

t^J^i  \    if*    *  "^®  ^^\  *^*''  ^'^^  daylight  truth        Queen  Mary  m  v  135 
'hoe(s)    She  wore  red  s's  !    Stafford.     Red  s's  !  m  i  59 

hoe  (verb)     Blacksmith,  thaw  he  niver  s's  a  herse  to 

hnn»  "7  H"""^!'-      ,     u-      ..     ,  Prom.  0/ May  1 448 
h^?t    ^K     °?  ^^^i'  ^°[  ^'  ^  Slory,  his  Reflection :          Becket  i  iii  664 

hook    The  cataract  s  the  shadow.  Qwem  Jf a«/  in  iv  138 

but  Cranmer  only  s  his  head,  „         iv  jji  601 

He  s  so  that  he  scarce  could  out  with  i<^  Harold  in  i  368 

Who  s  the  Norman  scoundrels  off  the  throne,  ,         iv  i  81 

He  sued  my  hand.     I  s  at  him.  Becket  i  i  273 

t.~.*    *T,^x^"u'"y,  ^^"^'  *^**  *^^  ^^  ^i"e  The  Cup  II  202 

aoot^    By  the  hard  root,  which  s's  again ;  Becket  11  ii  209 

0  erleaps  a  jutting  rock  And  s's  three  hundred  feet.  The  Cup  1  i  111 
and  I  d  like  to  s  tha  like  a  rabbit  an'  all.                  Prom,  of  May  11  740 

1  can  s  almost  as  closely  with  the  bow  Foresters  1  i  216 
that  s's  New  buds  to  heaven,  ^,  i  jij  25 
there  goes  one  in  the  moonlight.     8  \     Prince  John. 

Missed  !  There  goes  another.  S,  Sheriff !  „  11  i  395 
an  old  woman  can  s  closer  than  you  two.    Prince 

John.    S  then,  and  if  thou  miss  I  vtdll  fasten  thee  „       11  i  400 

Did  I  not  tell  you  an  old  woman  could  s  better  ?  n  i  407 
uoe    {See  also  Sea-shore)    Yearns  to  set  foot  upon 

your  island  s.  q^een  Mary  i  v  367 

your  s  s  Wore  m  mine  eyes  the  green  of  Paradise.  „           ni  ii  17 

I  dug  mine  into  My  old  fast  friend  the  s,  Harold  n  i  7 

Wolf  of  the  s  !  dog,  with  thy  lying  lights  n  j  21 

To  shove  that  stranded  iceberg  off  our  s's,  "  iv  iii  139 

Till  the  sea  wash  her  level  with  her  s's^  "    y  i  331 


Show 


'^''^^'jeZJ^^^^^^^^^  T^eCupu2^ 

fSSau^js'Ts!  s='?NTi^Lrup  TO  fight  ""--fv "  i 

Shorn    /-See  aZso  Smooth-shorn)    lest  the  crown  should  be  " 


S  of  ancestral  splendour. 

Gave  his  s  smile  the  lie. 
Short    stake  and  fire— Sharp  work  and  s 

Hast  not  thou  drawn  the  s  straw  ? 

Daughter  my  time  is  s,  I  shall  not  do  it. 
«i,«nfr  V*^  one  quick  s  stab— eternal  peace. 
Iw  7  ^  ^."''  *"^  ^""'  ^^fo'"^  liis  winter  plunge, 

Shot.(s)     practise  on  my  life.  By  poison,  fire,  s,  stab— 

insolent  s  that  dash'd  the  seai  UpoA  us 
Shot  (verb)    clash'd  their  bells,  ^  off  their  lying  cannon 

s  out  sidelong  boughs  across  the  deep  ' 

not  life  s  up  in  blood.  But  death  drawn  in  •— 

I  have  s  her  thro'  the  heart.    Kate.    He  lies,  my  lord 

I  have  s  Mm  thro'  the  heart  7?       . 

That  I  had  s  him  thro'  the  heart.  Foresters  u  1  97 

ShmJrwfl,,^!^  f^^  was  helping  to  build  the  mound  ;,'        i    305 

Shou  der  (shoulder)    and  doant  laay  my  cartwhip  athurt 


Becket  i  iii  157 

Harold  11  ii  226 

Qwem  Jf  ary  iii  i  329 

Becket  i  iv  3 

»  v  ii  157 

The  Cup  I  iii  124 

Queen  Mary  iii  iii  85 

I  iv  285 

V  i  57 

„  in  vi  97 

Harold  in  i  150 

Becket  iv  ii  380 


'is  s's, 
Shoulder     (See  also  Shou'der)     If  you  can  carry  your 

head  upon  your  s's      Wyatt.     I  fear  you  come 

to  carry  it  off  my  s's, 
over  his  bow'd  s  Scowl'd  that  world-hated 
and  brush  This  Wyatt  from  our  s's. 

That  hovers  round  your  s 

and  the  weight  of  the  church  to  boot  on  my  s's, 


Shout 


Prom,  of  May  n  138 


Queen  Mary  11  i  90 

n  ii  89 

n  ii  294 

,.  V  iii  52 

Foresters  1  ii  58 


vSSl5r°r±°Sl»t,°L'.»Aft»».  ««-^^^^^ 


»  Af  a         .■■-"■- """""^"''i"ciiuuur,  s,  ana  snow, 
s  of  bynorix  and  Gamma  sitting  Upon  one  throne 
But  s  and  echo  play'd  into  each  other 
We  be  scared  with  song  and  s. 
eu^  '^hat  s's  are  these  that  ring  along  the  wood  ? 
Shout  (verb)    S,  knaves  ! 

And  get  the  swine  to  s  Elizabeth. 
Who  are  those  that  s  below  there  ? 
Stand  staring  at  me  !  s,  you  gaping  rogue  ! 
There  be  both  King  and  Queen,  Philip  and  Mary. 
S,  then,  Mary  and  Philip  !  ^ 

Thou  hast  shouted  for  thy  pleasure,  s  for  mine  ' 
Ihey  s  as  they  would  have  her  for  a  queen 
<5>  s  something— he  points  onward- 
Shouted     (See  also  Holla'd)     I  have,  my  Lord  s  till  I 
am  hoarse.      Gardiner.     What  hast  thou  s, 
knave  ?  ' 

Thou  hast  s  for  thy  pleasure,  shout  for  mine  ' 
iiut  s  in  Queen  Mary. 
If  a  seraph  s  from  the  sun. 
Most  like  it  was  the  Roman  soldier  s 
We  s,  and  they  s,  as  I  thought, 
the  '^^^^  fo"o'«'ed  the  thunder  of  the  captains  and 
Shove    To  s  that  stranded  iceberg  off  our  shores  ««r«//»  nr ..,  1  vh 

Show(s      Came  with  a  sudden  spfendour,shoutrands,  QueTjZr^Z'^l 
To  stand  at  ease,  and  stare  as  at  a  s,  >  h;      ^  ^'^"ryuii  4ou 

and  to  read  the  faces  of  men  at  a  great  s.  Becket  in  iif^i 

Philip  ,■.  Some^f  the  Ci.g  .(  y„„P  blue  blood-  «•'»««'»  ',  I  fg 

ho  doubtless  will  ye  s  yourselves  to  me  «  iv  to.^ 

a  jest  In  time  of  danger  s's  the  pulses  even 

1  will  s  fire  on  my  side — 

They  s  their  teeth  upon  it ; 

Too  small !  a  comet  would  not  s  for  that ' 

6  him  by  whom  he  hath  sworn. 

mme  own,  a  grief  To  s  the  scar  for  ever— 

hath  he  sign'd  ?  s  me  the  papers  ' 

And  wake  with  it,  and  s  it  to  all  the  Saints. 

^  me  where  thou  camest  out  of  the  wood 

May  they  not  say  you  dared  not  s  yourself 

If  he  should  ever  s  his  face  among  us 

I  would  like  to  s  you,  Mistress  Kate  ' 


The  Cup  n  146 

Foresters  n  i  258 

n  ii  164 

IV  762 

Queen  Mary  i  i  9 

„       I  iii  39 

„      n  i  149 

„     III  i  288 

SI         „    in  i  297 

„    in  i  30O 

„    in  i  304 

Harold  iv  i  26 

„       v  i  558 


Queen  Mary  ni  i  290 

in  i  304 

„  m  iv  46 

Becket  i  iii  311 

The  Cup  n  120 

Foresters  n  i  256 


Becket  ni  iii  113 
Harold  rv  iii  138 


n  ii  175 

n  ii  357 

III  i  327 

V  i  299 

Harold  i  i  475 

.,    n  ii  732 

Becket  i  i  178 

„    I  iii  317 

,.     n  i  303 

,,      rv  i  45 

„    V  ii  595 

Prom,  of  May  n  423 

Foresters  i  i  49 


3  y 


Show 


1074 


Side-current 


Show  (verb)  (continued) 
too  shy  to  s  it. 

bounden  by  a  vow  not  to  s  his  face, 

S  me  some  cave  or  cabin  where  I  may  rest. 

if  thou  wilt  s  us  the  way  back  to  Nottingham, 

But  to  s  thou  art  mortal. 

And  s  thyself  more  of  a  man  than  me. 
Show'd    s  his  back  Before  I  read  his  face. 

s  her  The  weakness  and  the  dissonance 


a  tenderness  toward  me,  but  is 

Foresters  i  i  116 

I  ii  237 

II  i  130 
II  i  360 
II  i  612 

IV  285 
Queen  Mary  ii  i  131 


The  Cup  I  i  22 


Shower     s's  of  blood  are  blown  Before  a  never  ending  blast,   Harold  ill  i  393 


Prom,  of  May  ii  471 

Harold  ii  ii  100 

Queen  Mary  iii  iv  415 

ni  vi  113 

IV  i  190 

Harold  i  ii  242 

Becket  i  iii  282 


storm  and  s  lashing  Her  cjisement, 
Showing     Help  the  good  ship,  s  the  sunken  rock, 
Shown    and  brief  patience,  As  I  have  s  to-day. 
I  have  but  s  a  loathing  face  to  you, 
Than  you  have  s  to  Cranmer. 
have  5  And  redden'd  veith  his  people's  blood 
Thou  still  hast  s  thy  primate,  Gilbert  Foliot. 
You  have  s  me  that,  though  fortune  had  bom 

you  Prom,  of  May  ii  119 

gh'^"^'•    you  perforce  again  S  into  France.  Becket  ii  ii  88 

Shreds     make  Thy  slender  meal  out  of  those  scraps  and  s     The  Falcon  147 

Shrew    Is  broken  ere  it  joins — a  s  to  boot,  Becket  v  ii  207 

Shrewd     I  find  you  a  s  bargainer.  The  Falcon  757 

But  you  will  find  me  a  s  bargainer  still.  „           774 

And  apt  at  arms  and  s  in  policy.  Foresters  i  ii  104 

Shriek     And  s  to  all  the  saints  among  the  stars :  Becket  iv  ii  239 

Who  s's  by  day  at  what  she  does  by  night,  Prom,  of  May  i  532 

Shrill     thro'  his  dying  sense  S's  '  lost  thro'  thee.'  Harold  iii  i  35 

Shrilling     She  s  '  Wyatt,'  while  the  boy  she  held  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  72 

Shrine    Saints,  I  have  rebuilt  Your  s's,  „          v  ii  300 

as  He  dwells  In  statelier  s's.  Harold  i  i  168 

From  all  the  holiest  s's  in  Normandy !  „    ii  ii  735 

and  see  beyond  Your  Norman  s's,  „      v  i  620 

rescued  from  the  burning  of  one  of  her  s's  The  Cup  i  i  42 

cup  saved  from  a  blazing  s  Of  our  great  Goddess,  „       i  ii  55 

sacred  s  By  chance  was  burnt  along  with  it.  „       i  ii  65 

take  this  holy  cup  To  lodge  it  in  the  s  of  Artemis.  „     i  ii  435 

To  lodge  this  cup  Within  the  holy  s  of  Artemis  „      i  iii  53 

part  to  the  s  of  our  Lady.  Foresters  iii  207 

Our  Lady's  blessed  s's  throughout  the  land  „      iv  1079 

Shrink     And  when  he  flash'd  it  S  from  me,  Becket  ii  i  277 

Shrivell'd     I,  old  s  Stigand,  I,  Dry  as  an  old  wood-fungus  on 

a  dead  tree,  Harold  iii  i  7 

Shroud     But  after  they  had  stript  him  to  his  s.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  334 

I'll  have  it  with  me  in  my  s,  Becket  ii  i  302 

Shudder    causest  the  safe  earth  to  s  and  gape.  The  Cup  ii  298 

I  mounted  upon  the  parapet Bora.     You 


make  me  s ! 
Shun    Who  is  he  ?  let  me  s  him. 

and  now  but  s's  The  semblance  of  defeat ; 
s  To  meet  her  face  to  face  at  once  ! 
Shut    shame  on  them !  they  have  s  the  gates ! 
hath  s  the  gates  On  friend  and  foe. 
One  crater  opens  when  another  s's. 
Have  s  you  from  our  counsels, 
hath  the  door  S  on  him  by  the  father  whom  he 

loved, 
She  to  s  up  my  blossom  in  the  dark ! 
to  s  in  A  happier  dream. 
S  the  hall-doors. 

S  the  doors !     We  will  not  have  him  slain 
Was  not  the  great  gate  s  ? 
Shut-up    There  were  citizens  Stood  each  before  his 

s-u  booth. 
Shy    You  are  s  and  proud  like  Englishmen, 

a  tenderness  toward  me,  but  is  too  s  to  show  it. 
Sicily    the  Netherlands,  S,  Naples,  Lombardy. 

Granada,  Naples,  S,  and  Milan, — 
Sick    (See  also  Fancy-sick,  Heart-sick,  Love-sick,  Sea- 
sick)    sent  a  secret  missive.  Which  told  her  to 
be  s.     Happily  or  not,  It  found  her  s  indeed. 
We  heard  that  you  were  s  in  Flanders,  cousin. 
Tho'  I  be  ever  deadly  s  at  sea.    So  «  am  I 
didst  thou  ever  see  a  carrion  crow  Stand  watching 
a  s  beast  before  be  dies  ? 


Prom,  of  May  in  373 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  405 

Becket  i  iii  190 

The  Cup  I  i  58 

Queen  Mary  ii  iv  58 

II  iv  61 

III  i  322 

„      III  iv  320 

V  ii  122 

Harold  i  ii  62 

„    I  ii  126 

Becket  v  ii  532 

„       V  iii  53 

„     V  iii  138 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  63 

n  ii  257 

Foresters  i  i  116 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  212 

»  V  i  44 


II  ii  122 
mii33 

III  vi  88 


IV  iii  7 


Sick  (continued)  Art  thou  s,  good  Earl  ?  Harold.  S  as 
an  autumn  swallow  for  a  voyage,  S  for  an  idle 
week  of  hawk  and  hound 

poor  lad  !  how  s  and  sad  for  home  ! 

'  Wulfnoth  is  5,'  he  said ;  '  he  cannot  foUoAV ; ' 

so  if  the  city  be  s,  and  I  cannot  call  the  kennel  sweet, 

'  The  King  is  s  and  almost  unto  death.' 

I  am  not  mad,  not  s,  not  old  enough 

0  my  s  boy  !     My  daily  fading  Florio, 
SI  is  it  so  ?  why,  when  he  came  last  year 

1  give  it  my  s  son,  and  if  you  be  Not  quite  recover'd  of 
your  wound. 

My  one  child  Florio  lying  stiU  so  s. 

You  know  s  people.  More  specially  s  children,  have 
strange  fancies. 

How  often  has  my  s  boy  yeam'd  for  this ! 

more  blessed  were  the  rags  Of  some  pale  beggar-woman 
seeking  alms  For  her  s  son,  ,,  854 

The  s  lady  here  might  have  been  asleep.  Provi.  of  May  iii  343 

Mr.  Dobson  telled  me  to  saay  he's  browt  some  of 
Miss  Eva's  roses  for  the  s  laady  to  smell  on. 
Dora.  Take  them,  dear.  Say  that  the  s  lady 
thanks  him  ! 

Tell  him  I  cannot  leave  the  s  lady  just  yet. 

And  my  s  father  here  has  come  between  us 

Being  so  s  How  should  he,  Robin  ? 

at  last  I  crawl'd  like  a  s  crab  from  my  old  shell, 

Move  me  no  more  !     I  am  s  and  faint  with  pain  ! 
Sicken     To  s  of  his  lilies  and  his  roses. 

lest  living  Spain  Should  s  at  dead  England. 

Nay,  you  s  me.  To  hear  you. 

Have  him  away  !     I  s  of  his  readiness. 

they  cried  Sinnatus  Not  so  long  ago^ — they  s  me. 

And  wake  the  Devil,  and  I  may  s  by  'em. 
Sickening    S  himself  with  sweets. 

Sicker     I  am  s  staying  here  Than  any  sea  could  make  nie 
Sickly     But  s,  slight,  half-witted  and  a  child. 
Sickness    The  s  of  our  saintly  king,  for  whom 

1  ha'  three  sisters  a-dying  at  home  o'  the  sweating  s. 

No  fever,  cough,  croup,  s  ? 

God  save  him  from  all  s  of  the  soul ! 

he  hath  fallen  Into  a  s,  and  it  troubles  me. 
Side  (adj.)     Dark  even  from  a  s  glance  of  the  moon, 
Side  (s)     The  Council,  the  Court  itself,  is  on  our  s. 
The  Lord  Chancellor  himself  is  on  our  s. 

Is  ho  so  safe  to  fight  upon  her  s  ? 

moving  s  by  s  Beneath  one  canopy, 

I  will  show  fire  on  my  s — ^stake  and  fire — • 

are  profitless  to  the  burners,  And  help  the  other  s. 

Those  of  the  wrong  s  will  despise  the  man. 

Might  it  not  be  the  other  s  rejoicing  In  his  brave  end  ? 

Here  by  the  s  of  her  who  loves  you  most  ? 

there  is  barely  room  to  shift  thy  s, 

when  at  thy  s  He  conquer'd  with  thee. 

we  might  take  your  s  against  the  customs — • 

Two  rivers  gently  flowing  s  by  s — 

I  evermore  have  sworn  upon  his  s, 

he  hath  pass'd  out  again.  And  on  the  other  s. 

That  in  the  summer  keeps  the  mountain  s. 

You  on  this  s  the  altar.     You  on  that. 

tho'  we  have  been  a  soldier,  and  ridden  by  his  lord- 
ship's s, 

Were  seated  sadly  at  a  fountain  s, 

I  could  put  all  that  o'  one  s  easy  anew.  Prom,  of  May  ii  11] 

mea  and  my  sweet'art  was  a  workin'  along  o'  one 
s  wi'  one  another, 

standing  up  s  by  s  with  me,  and  singing  the  same 
hymn? 

But  being  o'  John's  s  we  must  have  thy  gold. 

And  cleft  the  Moslem  turban  at  my  s. 
Side  (verb)     '  If  ye  s  with  William  Ye  are  not  noble.' 

It  is,  my  boy,  to  s  with  the  King  when  Chancellor, 
Side-beam    see  you  yon  s-b  that  is  forced  from  under  it. 
Side-cousin    — though  she's  but  a  s-c —  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  11 

Side-current    swoU'n  and  fed  With  indraughts  and  s-c's,      „  n  i  23 


Harold  i  i  100 

„     II  ii  325 

„      III  i  84 

Becket  ii  ii  348 

„      V  ii  152 

The  Cup  I  iii  69 

The  Falcon  235 

311 

589 

678 

816 
829 


m  347 

III  353 

Foresters  iv  55 

IV  82 

„      IV 126 

„      IV  599 

Queen  Mary  i  v  25 

in  i  28 

,,      IV  iii  451 

V  ii  611 

The  Cup  II  111 

Foresters  in  325 

Queen  Mary  i  v  172 

in  vi  86 

Harold  II  ii  571 

„      m  i  164 

Becket  i  iv  247 

„       V  ii  169 

„      V  ii  174 

The  Falcon  310 

Becket  iv  ii  148 

Queen  Mary  n  i  193 
H  ii  313 
ni  i  95 
in  i  327 
IV  ii  220 
IV  iii  24 
IV  iii  357 
vi75 
Harold  ii  ii  442 
„      IV  iii  28! 
Becket  i  ii  56  : 
„   I  iii  44') 
„  n  ii  465  , 
„    in  ii  13  ' 
The  Cup  I  i  109 
n  254 

The  Falcon  54^ 
610 


n  15;: 

in  181 

Foresters  iv  157 

„      IV  1003 

Harold  ii  ii  787 

Becket  ii  i  23;" 

„     III  iii  4!i 


•mm 


Side-gorge 


1075 


Simple 


Side-gorge    with  sudden  wreckful  gusts  From  a  s-g.  Harold  lu  i  52 

fidelong     And  shot  out  s  boughs  across  the  deep  „     iii  i  150 

fide-smile     that  hath  squeezed  out  this  s-s  upon  Canterbury,  Becket  m  iii  56 
Sideway    Lest  thou  be  s's  guilty  of  the  violence.  Harold  i  i'458 

JSiding    S  with  our  great  Council  against  Tostig,  „      in  i  59 

Si^e     Lent  at  the  s  of  Thoulouse  by  the  King.  Becket  i  iii  636 

Sigh  (s)     a  s  With  these  low-moaning  heavens.  Harold  v  i  151 

Sigh  (verb)     tell  me,  did  you  ever  S  for  a  beard  ?  Queen  Mary  i  v  609 

Wherefore  do  you  s  ?  Count.  I  have  lost  a  friend 
of  late.  Lady  Giovanna.  I  could  s  with  you  For 
fear  of  losing  more  than  friend,  The  Falcon  328 

Sight    (See  also  Seoond-sight)     the  half  s  which  makes 

her  look  so  stem,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  322 


Gamble  thyself  at  once  out  of  my  s, 

pray  Heaven  That  you  may  see  according  to  our  s. 

Behold  him People.     Oh,  unhappy  s  ! 

dishonour'd  even  in  the  s  Of  thine  own  sectaries — 
s  of  Danish  blood  Might  serve  an  end  not  English — 
My  s  is  eagle,  but  the  strife  so  thick — 
let  not  my  strong  prayer  Be  weaken'd  in  thy  s, 
Wast  thou  not  tola  to  keep  thyself  from  s  ? 
A  s  of  that  same  chart  which  Henry  gave  you 
I  would  move  this  wanton  from  his  s 
throned  together  in  the  s  Of  all  the  people, 
to  the  fullest  in  the  s  Of  all  the  Gods. 
My  last  s  ere  I  swoon'd  was  one  sweet  face 
and  I  haiites  the  very  s  on  him. 
were  I  taken  They  would  prick  out  my  s. 
(See  also  Brief-sighted,  Second-sighted) 
Only  this  moment. 
Sign  (s)    if  yon  weird  s  Not  blast  us  in  our  dreams. — 
In  heaven  s's  !    S's  upon  earth  !  s's  everywhere ! 
there  are  s's  in  heaven 


II  iii  95 

III  iv  331 

„  IV  iii  2 

v  v  133 

Harold  iv  iii  96 

v  i  627 

V  I  648 

Becket  i  i  252 

„       Iii  60 

„      I  ii  71 

The  Cup  II  67 

„      II 433 

The  Falcon  647 

Prom,  of  May  I  154 

Foresters  ii  i  72 

We  s  'em 

„       IV  589 

Harold  i  i  121 

„       I  i  159 

„    III  1357 


And  s's  on  earth  !     Knowest  thou  Senlac  hiU  ?  „    in  i  360 

The  s  in  heaven — the  sudden  blast  at  sea —  „      v  i  378 

Where,  knave,  where  ?    Man.    S  of  the  Talbot.    Queen  Mary  in  i  319 
(verb)     Now  s.     Cranmer.     I  have  sign'd  enough, 

and  I  will  s  no  more. 
I  s  it  with  my  presence,  if  I  read  it. 
Will  you  not  s  it  now  ?     Cranmer.     No,  Villa 

Garcia,  I  s  no  more. 
8,  s  at  once — take,  s  it,  Stigand,  Aldred  !     S  it,  my 

good  son  Harold,  Gurth,  and  Leofwin,  S  it. 
Then  shalt  thou  step  into  my  place  and  s. 
that  I  cannot  s :  for  that  would  drag  The  cleric 
And  that  I  camiot  s.  (repeat) 
That,  too,  I  cannot  s.    S  and  obey  ! 


IV  ii  66 
IV  ii  73 

IV  ii  82 

Harold  in  i  197 
Becket  i  iii  15 
„      I  iii  82 
Becket  i  iii  91,  103, 114 
Becket  i  iii  131 
S,  and  obey  the  crown  !  „      i  iii  144 

O  my  good  lord,  I  do  entreat  thee — s.  „      i  iii  186 

He  hath  sworn  that  thou  shouldst  s,  .,      i  iii  189 

so  if  thou  s,  my  lord,  That  were  but  as  the  shadow  „      i  iii  193 

Cannot  the  Pope  absolve  thee  if  thou  s  ?  „      i  iii  231 

Why— there  then— there— I  s,  .,      i  iii  269 

that  we  too  should  s  ?  ..      i  iii  273 

S  ?  seal  ?     I  promised  The  King  to  obey  these  customs,       „      i  iii  555 
order  To  seize  upon  him.    Let  me  s  it.  The  Cup  i  i  165 


Sgn'd    first  of  those  who  s  the  Letters  Patent 

Those  that  are  now  her  Privy  Council,  s  Before  me : 

then  I  could  no  more — 1  s. 

'Thou  shalt!'     And  s  it— Mary  !     Stafford.     Philip 

and  the  Pope  Must  have  s  too. 
I  have  s  enough,  and  I  will  sign  no  more.     Villa 

Garcia.     It  is  no  more  than  what  you  have  s 

already, 
'twas  you  That  s  the  burning  of  poor  Joan  of  Kent ; 
papers  by  my  hand  S  since  my  degradation — by 

this  hand  Written  and  s — 
That  Cranmer  read  all  papers  that  he  s  ?    Or  s  all 

those  they  tell  us  that  he  s  ? 
We  have  s  it. 

s  These  ancient  laws  and  customs  of  the  reahn. 
'Twould  seem  too  like  the  substance,  if  I  s. 
Fohot,  let  me  see  what  I  have  s. 
hath  he  s  !  show  me  the  papers  !    S  and  not  seal'd  ! 
when  he  s,  his  face  was  stoimy-red — 


Queen  Mary  i  ii  17 
I  ii  23 
I  ii  38 

III  i  428 


„       IV  ii  67 
„      IV  ii  206 

„    IV  iii  244 

„  IV  iii  319 
Harold  in  i  202 

Becket  i  iii  6 
„  I  iii  197 
„  I  iii  308 
„  I  iii  317 
„   I  iii  320 


Sign'd  (continued)    Hadst  thou  not  s,  I  had  gone  along  with 

thee;  Becket  im522 

true  too,  that  when  written  I  s  them —  „       i  iii  561 

This  paper  s  Antonius — will  you  take  it,  The  Cup  i  ii  225 

0  Dora,  he  s  himself '  Yours  gratefully ' !  Prom,  of  May  in  334 
Signing    Smooth  thou  his  pride — thy  s  is  but  form ;  Becket  i  iii  218 

Too  late,  my  lord :  you  see  they  are  s  there.  „      i  iii  289 

1  hold  not  by  my  s.  „      i  iii  563 
Sign  of  the  Talbot    Where,  knave,  where  ?     Man. 

S  o  t  T.  Queen  Mary  iii  i  319 

Silence  (s)    (See  also  Prison-silence)    Ay,  sir ;  Inherit 

the  great  S.  „         m  ii  199 

They  can  but  weep  in  s.  ,  „         iv  iii  361 

Our  s  is  our  reverence  for  the  king  !  Harold  iv  i  13 

thou  shalt  have  our  love,  our  s,  and  our  gold —  Becket,  Pro.  492 

ever  spread  into  the  man  Here  in  our  s?  „  m  i  23 

God  help  her.  That  she  was  sworn  to  s.  „         iii  i  78 

This  violence  ill  becomes  The  s  of  our  Temple.  The  Cup  n  216 

whose  cheerless  Houris  after  death  Are  Night 

and  S,  Prom,  of  May  i  251 

Thou  art  alone  in  the  s  of  the  forest  Foresters  iv  630 

Silence  (verb)     may  give  that  egg-bald  head  The  tap  that  s's.    Harold  v  i  92 

Silenced     Little  doubt  This  buzz  will  soon  be  s ;  Queen  Mary  v  i  293 

Silencing    See  Bell-silencing 

Silent    four  guns  gaped  at  me,  Black,  s  mouths :  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  32 

William  of  Orange,  William  the  S.  „  in  i  198 

And  I  could  see  that  many  s  hands  Came  from  the  crowd    „        iv  iii  582 
even  while  I  speak  There  lurks  a  s  dagger,  „  v  ii  216 

And  both  were  s,  letting  the  wild  brook  Speak  for  us —      „  v  v  90 

The  s,  cloister'd,  solitaiy  life,  Harold  ill  i  277 

The  simple,  s,  selfless  man  Is  worth  a  world  of 

tonguesters.  „  v  i  81 

Why  do  you  stand  so  s,  brother  John  ?  Becket  \  ii  535 

All  s  there.  Yes,  deathlike  !     Dead  ?  Prom,  of  May  ill  715 

I  am  a  s  man  myself,  and  all  the  more  wonder  at  our 

Earl.  Foresters  i  ii  34 

but  make  haste  then,  and  be  s  in  the  wood.    Follow  me.      „      n  i  365 
The  s  blessing  of  one  honest  man  Is  heard  in  heaven —         „        m  321 

Silk     There  was  a  bit  of  yellow  s  here  and  there,  Becket  iv  i  22 

shall  see  the  s  here  and  there,  and  I  want  my  supper.  „      iv  i  56 

Silken     Breaks  into  feather'd  merriments,  and  flowers 

In  s  pageants.  Queen  Mary  in  v  15 

Silking    See  A-silking 

Silver  (adj.)     Our  s  cross  sparkled  before  the  prow,  Qu^en  Mary  in  ii  9 

Some  thirty — forty  thousand  s  marks.  Becket  i  iii  658 

and  we  haven't  never  so  much  as  a  s  one  for  the  golden 
lips  of  her  ladyship.  Count.  Have  we  not  half  a 
score  of  s  spoons  ?  The  Falcon  403 

I  will  give  thee  a  s  penny  if  thou  wilt  show  us  the 
way  back  to  Nottingham.  Foresters  n  i  359 

SUver  (s)    white  satin  his  trunkhose.  Inwrought  with 

s, —  Queen  Mary  ill  i  78 

Clothed  with  the  mystic  s  of  her  moon.  Foresters  n  i  608 

if  his  backward-working  alchemy  Should  change  this  ' 

gold  to  s,  why,  the  s  Were  dear  as  gold,  „  iv  40 

Silvering    See  Down-silvering,  Long-silvering 

Simon  (Renard,   Spanish  Ambassador)     (See  also 

Renard,  Simon  Renard)    S,  is  supper  ready  ?    Qv^en  Mary  in  vi  256 

Simoniacal    your  Priests  Gross,  Worldly,  s,  unleam'd  !  Harold  i  i  162 

Simon  Renard    so  that  Gardiner  And  S  R  spy  not  out    Queen  Mary  i  iii  173 
Ay,  S  R  knows  it.  „  i  v  218 

trust  him  somewhat  less  Than  S  R,  „  i  v  223 

Thou  art  ever  welcome,  S  R.  „  i  v  345 

S  R  ! — This  Howard,  whom  they  fear,  „  m  vi  53 

May  S  R  speak  a  single  word  ?  „        in  vi  121 

S  R  Knows  me  too  well  to  speak  a  single  word  „        in  vi  125 

Am  I  to  change  my  manners,  S  R,  „        m  vi  152 

Well,  S  R,  shall  we  stop  a  day  ?  '  „        m  vi  242 

Simple    The  downfall  of  so  many  s  souls,  „  i  ii  54 

Then  have  my  s  headstone  by  the  church,  „  ni  v  113 

And  make  you  s  Cranmer  once  again.  „  iv  ii  129 

S  !  let  fly  the  bird  within  the  hand,  Harold  ii  ii  65 

The  s,  silent,  selfless  man  Is  worth  a  world  of  tonguesters.     „        v  i  81 
Has  my  s  song  set  you  jingling  ?  Becket,  Pro.  378 

The  s  lobster-basket,  and  the  mesh —  .  „        n  ii  297 


Simple 


1076 


Sister 


Simple  (continued)    This  author,  with  his  charm  of  s 

style  And  close  dialectic,  Prom,  of  May  i  224 

And  out  upon  all  s  batchelors  !  Foresters  iv  52 

Simple-lookiiig    He  comes,  a  rough,  bluff,  s-l  fellow.  The  Cup  i  i  173 

Sin     It  was  a  s  to  love  her  married.  Queen  Mary  m  i  339 

With  His  own  blood,  and  wash'd  us  from  ouj  s's,  „        in  iii  204 

0  Lord  God,  although  my  s's  be  great,  „         iv  iii  135 
not  for  Uttle  s's  Didst  thou  yield  up  thy  Son  to 

human  death ;  But  for  the  greatest  s  that  can 
be  sinn'd,  „         iv  iii  143 

Unpardonable, — s  against  the  light,  „         iv  iii  148 

Thy  mercy  must  be  greater  than  all  s.  „         rv  iii  151 

what  s  Beyond  all  greice,  all  pardon  ?  „  v  ii  339 

S  is  too  dull  to  see  beyond  himself.     Alice.     Ah, 

Magdalen,  s  is  bold  as  well  as  dull.  „  v  ii  441 

That  marriage  was  half  s.  Harold  i  ii  53 

s's  of  both  The  houses  on  mine  head —  „     i  ii  204 

Or  is  it  the  same  s  to  break  my  word  „    n  ii  664 

— a  s  against  The  truth  of  love.  ,,      v  i  170 

Black  sheep,  quoth  she,  too  black  a  s  for  me.  BecJcet  i  iv  165 

We  can  make  a  black  s  white.  „      i  iv  169 

Thou  shalt  confess  all  thy  sweet  s's  to  me.  „      ii  i  292 

Well,  it's  no  s  in  a  gentleman  not  to  fish.  Prom,  of  May  i  215 

Bow'd  to  the  dust  beneath  the  bm'then  of  s.    Harold. 

S]    Whats?  „        in  522 

Veiling  one  s  to  act  another.  „        in  773 

Sin'  (since)     It  be  five  year  s  ye  went  afoor  to  him,  Prom,  of  May  ii  5 

Him  as  did  the  mischief  here,  five  year'  s.  „       in  140 

ESng    To  s,  love,  marry,  chum,  brew,  bake,  and  die,   Queen  Mary  in  v  111 
but,  my  Lord,  you  know  what  Virgil  s's,  „  ni  vi  134 

Shall  Alice  s  you  One  of  her  pleasant  songs  ?  „  v  ii  354 

the  lark  s's,  the  sweet  stars  come  and  go,  Harold  n  ii  434 

s,  Asaph  !  clash  The  cymbal,  Heman  !  „       ni  i  186 

bird  that  moults  s's  the  same  song  again,  Becket  i  iii  447 

our  mother  'ill  s  me  old  songs  by  the  hour,  „      in  i  184 

tell  him  my  tales,  S  him  my  songs  ?  The  Falcon  797 

I  don't  know  why  I  s  that  song ;  I  don't  love  it.        Prom,  of  May  i  61 
and  the  larks  'ud  s  i'  them  daays,  „  i  374 

do  thou  and  thy  sweet'art  s  us  hoam  to  supper —  „        ii  170 

Ye  shall  s  that  agean  to-night,  „        n  215 

You  do  weU,  Mistress  Kate,  to  s  and  to  gather  roses.       Foresters  i  i  23 
S's  a  new  song  to  the  new  year —  „      i  iii  28 

I  have  a  touch  of  sadness  in  myself.    S.  „      i  iii  40 

I  can  s  it.     Robin.     Not  now,  good  Much  !  „     i  iii  157 

To  s  the  songs  of  England  Beneath  the  greenwood  tree.         „        n  i  23 
S,  and  by  St.  Mary  these  beggars  and  these  friars  „       in  416 

And  all  the  birds  that  s  .,       m  440 

Did  I  not  s  it  in  tune  ?  „         iv  29 

Till  thou  thyself  shall  come  to  s  it — in  time.  „         rv  37 

Let  the  birds  s,  and  do  you  dance  to  their  song.  „       rv  557 

All  the  birds  in  merry  Sherwood  s  and  s  him  home  again.       „     iv  1109 
Singing    (See  also  Psalm-singing)     I  wish'd  myself 

the  milkmaid  s  here.  Queen  Mary  in  v  256 

standing  up  side  by  side  with  me,  and  s  the  same 

hynan  ?  Prom,  of  May  in  182 

Single    May  Simon  Renard  speak  a  s  word  ?  Queen  Mary  in  vi  121 

Simon  Renard  Knows  me  too  well  to  speak  a  s 

word  That  could  not  be  forgiven.  „  m  vi  126 

Our  axes  lighten  with  a  s  flash  About  the  summit  of  the 

hill,  HaroU  v  i  538 

But  dallied  with  a  s  lettuce-leaf ;  The  Falcon  673 

He  loves  the  chivalry  of  his  s  arm.  Foresters  rv  786 

Sing-songing    and  you  sit  S-s  here ;  Queen  Mary  ii  i  1 12 

Sink    a  day  may  s  or  save  a  realm.  „        m  vi  238 

Here's  to  him,  s  or  swim !     Thane.    God  s  him !  Harold  iv  iii  133 

and  all  her  loves  and  hates  S  again  into  chaos.  Foresters  i  ii  330 

Perchance  this  day  may  s  as  gloriously,  „  ii  i  31 

Sinking    I  am  s — hold  me — Let  me  alone.  The  Cup  n  478 

Sinnatus  (a  Tetrarch)  married  Since — married /S,  the  Tetrarch        „        i  i  16 

'  To  the  admired  Gamma,  wife  of  S,  the  Tetrarch,  „         i  i  37 

Boy,  dost  thou  know  the  house  ot  S?    Boy.    These 

grapes  are  from  the  house  of  S —  „        I  i  50 

and  this  cup  to  Gamma,  The  wife  of  S.    Boy.    Going 
or  gone  to-day  To  hunt  with  S.  „        i  i  63 

1  send  it  to  the  wife  of  S,  „        i  i  73 


Sinnatus  (a  Tetrarch)  (continued) 
playing  patriotism, 
I  envied  S  when  he  married  her. 
Nor  S  either  ?     Synorix.     No,  nor  S. 
If  you  track  this  S  In  any  treason. 
No  S  yet — and  there  the  rising  moon. 
Lord  S,  I  once  was  at  the  hunting  of  a  lion, 
were  he  living  And  grown  to  man  and  «S  will'd  it, 

'  You  are  to  seize  on  S, — if ' 

Hath  S  never  told  you  of  this  plot  ? 

No  chance  for  S. 

Why  said  you  not  as  much  to  my  brave  S  ? 

S,  you  remember — yea,  you  must, 

S,  kiss  me  now. 

Not  if  S  Has  told  her  all  the  truth  about  me. 

And  for  the  sake  of  S  your  husband, 

body  of  that  dead  traitor  S.     Bear  him  away. 

To  marry  him  who  stabb'd  her  S. 

When  he  struck  at  S — 

hand  Red  with  the  sacred  blood  ot  S? 

found  All  good  in  the  true  heart  of  S, 

So  they  cried  S  Not  so  long  since — 

0  how  unlike  our  goodly  S. 
A  goodlier-looking  man  than  S. 
Dost  thou  remember  when  I  wedded  *S^  ? 
came  To  plead  to  thee  for  S's  life, 
Would  you  have  tortured  S  to  death  ? 
S  !     Why  comes  he  not  to  meet  me  ? 
'  Gamma,  Gamma ! '    S,  S\ 

Sinn'd     But  for  the  greatest  sin  that  can  be  s, 

Have  s  against  it — all  in  vain. 
Siimer    Most  miserable  s,  wretched  man. 

We  are  s's  all.  The  best  of  all  not  all-prepared 
Sire    The  s  begets  Not  half  his  likeness 

•     hke  his  kingly  s's,  The  Normans, 
Sister     took  her  hand,  call'd  her  sweet  s. 

To  the  Pleiads,  imcle ;  they  have  lost  a  s. 

bastard  sprout.  My  s,  is  far  fairer  than  myself. 

My  s  cowers  and  hates  me. 

— for  1  have  not  own'd  My  s,  and  I  will  not. — 

So  that  your  s  were  but  look'd  to  closer. 

whom  did  you  say  ?     Messenger.     Elizabeth,  Your 
Royal  s. 

And  your  so  loving  s  ?     Mary.    She  shall  die. 

Our  little  s  of  the  Song  of  Songs ! 

Then  I  may  say  your  Grace  will  see  your  s  ? 

Your  royal  s  cannot  last ;  your  hand  Will  be  much 
coveted ! 

My  s's  marriage,  and  my  father's  marriages. 

Madam,  your  royal  s  comes  to  see  you. 

Who  knows  if  Boleyn's  daughter  be  my  s  ? 

Why  would  you  vex  yourself.  Poor  s  ? 

Tostig,  s,  galls  himself ; 

Nay,  my  good  s — 

Our  s  hates  us  for  his  banishment ; 

thou  art  not  A  holy  s  yet,  my  girl. 

And  more  than  s  in  thine  own. 

Why  cry  thy  people  on  thy  s's  name  ? 

Where  is  thy  s  ? 

For  there  was  more  than  s  in  my  kiss, 

wicked  s  clapt  her  hands  and  laugh'd ; 

Two  s's  ghding  in  an  equal  dance, 

1  ha'  three  s's  a-dying  at  home  o'  the  sweating  sickness, 


you  suspect  This  S  of 

The  Cup  I  i  7& 

iil29 

iil33 

iil62 

liil 

I  ii  115 

I  ii  151 

iii  229 

iii  250 

I  ii  258 

I  ii  260 

Iii  400 

1  ii  419 

I  iii  22 

I  iii  100 

I  iii  180 

n24 

n47 

n84 

n87 

nllO 

nl73 

nl76 

nl94 

n392 

n408 

n527 

n536 

Queen  Mary  rv  iii  146 

Harold  m  i  95 

Queen  Mary  rv  iii  123 

Becket  v  ii  563 


Queen  Mary  n  i  53 

Becket  iv  ii  441 

Queen  Mary  i  i  80 

1  iv  294 

I  V  72 

1  V  83 

I  T  285 

I  V  460 


„  II  iv  117 
„  n  iv  141 
„      in  ii  103 

V  ii  604 

v  iii  43 

V  iii  96 
vv  192 

V  V  195 

V  V  264 
Harold  i  i  421 

„      1  i  462 
„      m  i  78 
„     m  ii  82 
„     m  ii  85 
„      rv  i  21 
„    rv  i  184 
„        V  ii  5 
V  ii  48 
Becket  i  iii  444 
_  „      tiv246 

twin  s  of  the  morning  star,  Forelead  the  sim.  The  Cv/p  i  iii  45 

my  s  wrote  that  he  was  mighty  pleasant,  and  had 

no  pride  in  him.  Prom,  of  May  1 116 

nor  father,  8,  nor  you,  shall  ever  see  me  more.  „  i  676 

My  s  far  away — and  you,  a  gentleman,  „  i  708 

Speak  not  so  loudly ;  that  must  be  your  s.  „  i  727 

not  only  on  my  s's  account,  but  the  ill  success  of  the  farm,  „  n  67 

It  .seems  to  me  that  I  hate  men,  ever  since  my  s  left  us.    „  n  80 

Poor  s,  I  had  it  five  years  ago.  „  n  82 

knaw'd  better  nor  to  cast  her  s's  misfortin  inter  'er  teeth  „  n  127 

Are  you — you  are — that  Dora,  The  s.  „  ii  364 

you  are  young,  and — pardon  me — As  lovely  as  your  s.       „  n  50^- 


Sister 


1077 


Sleep 


Sister  (continued)    niver  'a  been  talkin'  haafe  an  hour 

wi'  the  divil  'at  killed  her  oan  s,  Prom,  of  May  ii  604 

But  the  love  of  s  for  s  can  never  be  old-fashioned.  „         iii  319 

a  (S  of  Mercy,  come  from  the  death-bed  of  a  pauper,  „         iii  376 

jS  took  me  to  her  house,  and  bit  by  bit —  „         ni  379 

I  appealed  to  the  iS  again,  her  answer—  „         lu  394 

O  she  has  fainted.    S,  Eva,  s !  „         m  672 

She  hid  this  5,  told  me  she  was  dead — ■  „         ni  689 

And  so  wouldst  sell  thy  s  to  the  Sherifi,  Foresters  ii  i  536 

But  thou  art  fair  as  ever,  my  sweet  s.  „        iv  1018 

Sit     {See  also  Set)     To  s  high  Is  to  be  lied  about.  Queen  Mary  i  v  428 

bum  the  throne  Where  you  should  s  with  Philip :  „  i  v  511 

Sir,  let  them  s.     I  must  have  time  to  breathe.  „  i  v  545 

An  instant  Ay  or  No  !  the  Council  s's.  „  i  v  591 

and  you  s  Sing-songing  here ;  „  u  i  111 

S  down  here,  all ;  „  m  ii  99 

St.  Andrew's  day ;  s  close,  s  close,  we  are  friends.  „  m  iii  1 

■         You  s  upon  this  fallen  Cranmer's  throne ;  „         iv  i  114 

8  down  here :  Tell  me  thine  happiest  hour.  „  v  v  78 

sons  of  Godwin  S  topmost  in  the  field  of  England,  Harold  i  i  326 

where  he  s's  My  ransom'd  prisoner.  „      ii  ii  44 

«S  down,  s  down,  and  eat,  „  iv  iii  206 

range  of  knights  S,  each  a  statue  on  bis  horse,  „      v  i  525 

K  I  s,  I  grow  fat.  Becket,  Pro.  414 

mother  Canterbury,  who  s's  With  tatter'd  robes.  „  i  i  156 

Priest  S's  winking  at  the  license  of  a  king,  „  i  ii  66 

none  could  s  By  his  own  hearth  in  peace ;  „        i  iii  341 

And  our  great  lords  will  s  in  judgment  on  him.  „        i  iii  549 

Sons  s  in  judgment  on  their  father  ! —  „        i  iii  551 

There  is  a  bench.     Come,  wilt  thou  s  ?  „         ii  i  124 

she  s's  naked  by  a  great  heap  of  gold  in  the  middle  of 

the  wood, 
even  among  those  Who  s  on  thrones — 
crowns  must  bow  when  mitres  s  so  high. 
S  and  eat,  And  take  a  himter's  vengeance 
Shall  I  S  hj  him,  read  to  him,  tell  him  my  tales, 
and  you  should  s  i'  your  oan  parlour  quite  like  a 

laady.  Prom,  of  May  n  97 

s's  and  eats  his  heart  for  want  of  money  to  pay  the 

Abbot. 

8  here  by  me,  where  the  most  beaten  track 

8  here,  my  queen,  and  judge  the  world  with  me. 

8  there,  knaves,  till  the  captain  call  for  you. 

<S  there  till  you  be  called  for. 

Sittmg    (See  also  A-sitting)    s  here  Between  the  two 

most  high-set  thrones 

and  the  dead  were  found  S,  and  in  this  fashion ; 

Who  stole  the  widow's  one  s  hen  o'  Sunday, 

S  hen !     Our  Lord  Becket's  our  great  sitting-hen 

cock,  we  shouldn't  ha'  been  s  here  if  the  barons 

and  bishops  hadn't  been   a-sitting    on    the 

Archbishop.  .,       i  iv  124 

shout  of  Synorix  and  Camma  s  Upon  one  throne,  The  Cup  ii  146 

nurse,  I  had  forgotten  thou  wast  s  there.  The  Falcon  35 

tBtting-hen    {See  also  Sitting)     Our  Lord  Becket's  our 

great  s-h  cock,  Becket  i  iv  124 

S'iver  (Howsoever)     S  we've  led  moast  on  it.  Prom,  of  May  n  52 

8  I  mun  git  along  back  to  the  farm,  „  n  321 

Six    It  lies  there  in  s  pieces  at  your  feet ;  Queen  Mary  u  i  87 

Some  s  or  seven  Bishops,  diamonds,  pearls,  „         in  i  52 

Then  for  the  bastard  S  feet  and  nothing  more  !  Harold  iv  iii  116 

Yet  this  no  wife — her  s  and  thirty  sail  Of  Provence  Becket  v  i  122 

Prom,  of  May  ii  399 


lu  ii  21 
IV  ii  125 
IV  ii  297 
The  Cup  I  ii  41 
The  Falcon  795 


Foresters  i  i  4 
„  HI  88 
„  in  151 
„  in219 
„    m295 


Queen  Mary  in  ii  104 

V  ii  397 

Becket  i  iv  121 


She  was  there  s  years  ago. 

Dan  Smith,  they  tell  me  that  you — and  you  have 

s  children — spent  all  your  last  Saturday's  wages 

at  the  ale-house ;  „             in  77 

Sixteen    gather  all  From  s  years  to  sixty ;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  273 

Sixty    And  Counts,  and  s  Spanish  cavaliers,  „            ni  i  51 

gather  all  From  sixteen  years  to  s  ;  „          v  ii  273 

fSixty-fold     Do  here  and  now  repay  you  s-f,  „       iii  iii  199 

'Size  (assize)     thaw  they  hanged  ma  at 'S  fur  it.  Prom,  of  May  n  698 

Sketching    but  I  Take  some  delight  in  s,  „            ii  539 

Skilful    The  King  is  s  at  it  ?  Queen  Mary  i  iii  144 

For  all  that.  Most  honest,  brave,  and  s ;  „           ii  ii  383 

SHll     Upon  the  s  and  swiftness  of  the  players.  „           i  iii  143 


Skill  {continued)    with  this  s  of  fence  !  let  go  mine  arm.       Foresters  ii  ii  38 

Skim     Not  while  the  swallow  s's  along  the  ground,  „        i  ii  313 

Skin    If  ye  love  your  liberties  or  your  s's.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  216 
doth  not  the  Uving  s  thicken  against  perpetual 

whippings  ?  Becket  in  iii  316 
Skinn  d    See  Thin-skinn'd 

Skip    "S"*  every  way,  from  levity  or  from  fear.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  170 

who  s's  and  flies  To  right  and  left,  Harold  i  i  11 

Skipping     And  now  be  s  in  their  fairy-rings.  Foresters  ii  i  497 
SMpworth  (a  farm  labourer)    Luscombe,  Nokes, 

Oldham,  S  !  Prom.  of  May  in  54 

Skulk     s  into  corners  Like  rabbits  to  their  holes.  Queen  Mary  ii  iv  54 

Skull     And  smite  thee  with  my  crozier  on  the  s  ?  Becket  i  i  222 
Sky    {See  also  Leaf-sky)    So  from  a  clear  s  falls  the 

thunderbolt ! 


Queen  Mary  v  iii  115 

Harold  i  i  34 

„  n  ii  336 

„  II  ii  741 

The  Falcon  154 

Prom,  of  May  i  101 


Look  to  the  skies,  then  to  the  river, 
and  fill  the  *  With  free  sea-laughter — 
the  bright  s  cleave  To  the  very  feet  of  God, 
dash  us  down  Our  dinner  from  the  skies. 
The  s  ?  or  the  sea  on  a  blue  day  ? 
An'  the  midders  all  mow'd,  an'  the  s  sa 
blue— (repeat)  Prom,  of  May  ii  176,  188,  200 

0  tower  spirmg  to  the  s.                                           Prom,  of  May  in  203 
And  the  white  cloud  is  roU'd  along  the  s  !  Foresters  i  ii  320 

Slack  O  God  !  I  have  been  too  s,  too  s ;  Queen  Mary  v  v  100 
Slain  and  there  be  more  As  villainously  s.  Harold  n  ii  300 
Better  methinks  have  s  the  man  at  once  !  „  ii  ii  498 
s.  Whose  life  was  all  one  battle,  „  y  i  396 
Gm'th  hath  leapt  upon  him  And  s  him :  „  v  i  634 
The  king  is  s,  the  kingdom  overthrown  !  „  v  ii  15 
Three  horses  had  I  s  beneath  me :  „  v  ii  I71 
you  had  safelier  have  s  an  archbishop  than  a  she- 
goat  :  Becket  ni  iii  68 
They  fear  you  s ;  they  dread  they  know  not  what.  „  v  ii  6OO 
We  will  not  have  him  s  before  our  face.  „  v  iii  54 
And  will  you  bolt  them  out,  and  have  them  s?  „         v  iii  61 

1  am  readier  to  be  s,  than  thou  to  slay.  „       v  iii  128 
Slander  (s)    heard  S's  against  Prince  Philip  in  our 

Court  ?    Alice.     What  s's  ?  Queen  Mary  i  v  570 

Slander  (verb)     And  let  him  go  ?    To  s  thee  again  ?  Harold  n  ii  508 

she  question'd  ?re«.     Did  she  not  s  him  ?  Becket  in  i  214 
Slander'd     when  they  s  you  For  setting  up  a  mass           Qu^en  Mary  i  ii  86 

Slandering    Or  am  I  s  my  most  inward  friend,  „      iv  ii  105 
Slanderous    kill,  kill  with  knife  or  venom  One  of  his  s 

harlots  ?  Becket  iv  ii  411 
Slaughter    peril  mine  own  soul  By  s  of  the  body  ?         Queen  Mary  v  v  169 

Slaughter-field    Would  perish  on  the  civil  s-/,  „          in  i  118 
Slave    {See  also  Galley-slave)    the  Queen,  and  the  laws, 

and  the  people,  his  s's.  „            n  i  175 

Crown'd  s  of  s's,  and  mitred  king  of  kings,  „        m  iv  381 

S,  if  he  love  thee.  Thy  Ufe  is  worth  the  wrestle  Becket  iv  ii  192 

The  s  that  eat  my  bread  has  kick'd  his  King  !  „        v  i  242 

My  bed,  where  ev'n  the  s  is  private —  „        v  i  251 

Slay     I  could  take  and  s  thee.  Harold  iv  ii  7 

Take  and  s  me.  For  Edward  loved  me.  „      rv  ii  9 

Take  and  s  me,  I  say.  Or  I  shall  count  thee  fool.  „    rv  ii  14 

Free  thee  or  s  thee,  Norway  will  have  war ;  „    iv  ii  18 

dash  thyself  against  me  that  I  may  s  thee  !  Becket  iv  ii  196 

I  am  readier  to  be  slain,  than  thou  to  s.  „      v  iii  128 

if  he  be  conspirator,  Rome  will  chain,  Or  s  him.  The  Cup  i  i  19 

my  friends  may  spy  him  And  s  him  as  he  runs.  „     r  ii  392 
true  woodman's  bow  of  the  best  yew-wood  to  s  the 

deer.  Foresters  n  i  393 

What !  go  to  s  his  brother,  and  make  me  „         iv  804 

O  Thou  that  s  the  babe  within  the  womb  The  Cup  n  278 

Slayest    or  after  s  him  As  boy  or  man,  „        n  280 

Sleek    To  s  and  supple  himself  to  the  king's  hand.  Harold  i  i  I49 

She  beautiful :  s  as  a  miller's  mouse  !  The  Falcon  164 

as  s  and  as  round-about  as  a  mellow  codlin.  Foresters  i  i  42 

Sleep  (s)     kiss  that  charms  thine  eyelids  into  s,  Harold  i  ii  140 

Sound  s  to  the  man  Here  by  dead  Norway  „  iv  iii  120 

A  snatch  of  s  were  like  the  peace  of  God.  „       v  i  180 

The  Virgin,  in  a  vision  of  my  s,  Becket  1  i  53 

All  my  bram  is  full  of  s.  The  Cup  r  ii  446 

He's  been  a-moanin'  and  a-groauin'  in  'is  s,  Prom,  of  May  in  412 


Sleep 


1078 


Smile 


(S)  (continued)  She  must  be  crying  out '  Edgar ' 
in  her  s.  Harold.  Who  must  be  crying  out 
'  Edgar '  in  her  s  ?  Prom,  of  May  iii  654 

'  To  s  !  to  s  ! '  (repeat)  Foresters  i  iii  34,  41,  43, 46, 49 

Whate'er  thy  griefs,  in  s  they  fade  away.  Foresters  i  iii  45 

Why  so  I  said,  my  arrow.     Well,  to  s.  The  Cup  i  ii  386 

_  (verb)     when  I  s,  a  hundred  men-at-arms  Queen  Mary  i  v  152 

I  couldn't  s  in  Spain.  „  n  i  36 

son  tuni'd  out  into  the  street  To  s,  to  die —  „  v  ii  127 

The  room  she  s's  in — is  not  this  the  way  ?  „  v  v  205 

let  them  turn  from  left  to  right  And  s  again.  Harold  i  i  197 

S,  s,  and  thou  shalt  see  My  grayhounds  „      i  ii  127 

the  people  stupid-sure  S  like  their  swine  ...  „  iv  iii  217 

Go  home,  and  s  thy  wine  off,  for  thine  eyes  Becket  i  i  212 

I  sometimes  think  he  s's  When  he  would  watch ;  „      iii  i  33 

can't  s  sound  o'  nights  because  of  the  bad  fairies.  .,      iv  i  30 

she  shall  s  sound  enough  if  thou  wilt  take  me  to  her.  „      iv  i  33 

she  says  she  can  make  you  s  o'  nights.  „     iv  ii  20 

I  could  not  eat,  s,  pray :  „      v  ii  92 

S,  mournful  heart,  and  let  the  past  be  past !     S, 

happy  soul !  all  life  will  s  at  last.  Foresters  i  iii  47 

I  cannot  s  o'  nights  by  cause  on  'em.  „       ii  i  383 

Sleeper    seven  s's  in  the  cave  at  Ephesus  Have  tum'd  Harold  i  i  192 

like  a  careless  s  in  the  do^^Ti ;  Foresters  i  i  207 

Sleeping    s  after  all  she  has  done,  in  peace  and 

quietness.  Queen  Mary  v  iv  34 

S  or  dying  there  ?     If  this  be  death,  Harold  iii  i  1 

Sleeping-draught    I  pray  you  then  to  take  my  s-d ;  Becket  iv  ii  69 

my  s-d  May  bloat  thy  beauty  out  of  shape,  „    iv  ii  168 

Sleepy    I  am  faint  and  s.    Leave  me.  „     rn  i  208 

and  my  hands  are  too  s  To  lift  it  off.  The  Cuv  ii  530 

Sleeve    look — is  this  a  s  For  an  archbishop  ?  Becket,  Pro.  250 

Slender     Pray  thee  make  Thy  s  meal  out  of  those  scraps 

and  shreds  The  Falcon  146 

But  for  the  s  help  that  I  can  give.  Prom,  of  May  ii  421 

Slept     Our  guardsmen  have  s  well,  since  we  came  in  ? 

Leofwin.     Ay,  s  and  snored.  Harold  v  i  207 

when  I  s  Methought  I  stood  in  Canterbury  Minster,  Becket  i  i  72 

Slew     s  not  him  alone  who  wore  the  purple.  Queen  Mary  i  v  499 

And  s  two  hundred  of  his  following,  Harold  rv  i  116 

They  s  my  stags  in  mine  own  manor  here,  Becket  v  ii  438 

And  he  was  scared  and  s  it.  Foresters  ii  ii  99 

Sliced     He  tore  their  eyes  out,  s  their  hands  away,  Harold  ii  ii  389 

Slight  (adj.)    Not  for  s  faults  alone,  when  thou  becamest 

Man  in  the  Flesh,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  139 

But  sickly,  s,  half-witted  and  a  child,  Harold  ii  ii  571 

So  that  you  grant  me  one  s  favour.  Becket  i  ii  58 

then  Save  for  some  s  report  in  her  own  Senate  The  Cup  i  ii  133 

And  after  some  s  speech  about  the  Sheriff  He  caught 

her  round  the  waist.  Foresters  ii  i  114 

He  is  stricken  with  a  s  paralysis.  „  iv  456 

Slight  (verb)     When  the  fairy  s's  "the  crown.  „        ii  ii  135 

Slighted  like  a  friend  s  by  one  That  hath  climb'd  up  to 
nobler  company.  Not  s  —  all  but  moan'd  for: 
thou  must  go.  Becket  i  i  350 

Slimy    the  river,  black,  s,  swirling  under  me  in  the 

lamplight,  Prom,  of  May  ni  369 

Slink     Why  did  you  s  away  so  like  a  cur?  Becket  ivii  431 

Sliver'd    are  s  off  and  splinter'd  by  Their  lightning —  Harold  v  i  540 

Slope  (adj.)    nor  our  Archbishop  Stagger  on  the  s  decks  for 

any  rough  sea  Becket  ii  ii  1 06 

Slope  (s)     I  am  half-way  down  the  s — will  no  man  stay  me  ?      „      u  ii  148 
golden  s's  Of  Solomon-shaming  flowers—  „        iii  i  47 

Slouch     Dares  the  bear  s  into  the  lion's  den  ?  „     iv  ii  282 

Slough    serpent  that  hath  slough'd  will  s  again.  Queen  Mary  iii  iii  19 

snake  that  s's  comes  out  a  snake  again.  Becket  i  iii  449 

Slough'd    serpent  that  hath  s  will  slough  again.  Queen  Mary  iii  iii  18 

Slow    The  s,  fat  fool !     He  drawl'd  and  prated  so,  I  smote 

him  suddenly,  Harold  rv  ii  40 

One  s,  fat,  white,  a  burthen  of  the  hearth;  Becket  v  ii  211 

but  very  ready  To  make  allowances,  and  mighty  s 

To  feel  offences.  Prom,  of  May  iii  629 

Sluggard    honour  me,  obey  me !    S's  and  fools !  Becket  v  i  241 

S's  and  fools,  why  do  you  stand  and  stare  ?  «      v  i  256 

Slum    even  if  I  found  it  Dark  with  the  soot  of  s's.      Prom,  of  May  in  602 


Slumber    stormless  shipwreck  in  the  pools  Of  sullen  s,  Harold  v  i  29T 

Slur     But  wherefore  s  the  perfect  ceremony  ?  The  Cup  ii  431 

Slush     Your  rights  and  charters  hobnail'd  into  s —       Queen  Mary  ii  ii  279^ 
Thmf  s  an'  squad  When  roads  was  bad.  Prom,  of  May  n  309" 

Slut     a  s  whose  fairest  linen  seems  Foul  as  her  dust-cloth,      Becket  v  ii  202 
Smack     kind  of  unction  in  it,  a  s  of  relish  about  it.  Foresters  i  i  87 

Small     Are  you  so  s  a  man  ?  Queen  Mary  in  v  192 

matter  Of  s  importance  now  and  then  to  cede  A 

point  to  her  demand  ?  „  in  vi  168- 

Beyond  his  aim — but  I  am  s  and  scandalous,  „  v  ii  427 

That  were  too  s  a  matter  for  a  comet !  Harold  i  i  470 

Too  s  !  a  comet  would  not  show  for  that !    Aldwyth. 

Not  s  for  thee,  if  thou  canst  compass  it.  „       i  i  474 

Bigger  in  our  s  world  than  thou  art.  Becket  v  i  128- 

S  peace  was  mine  in  my  noviciate,  father.  „       v  ii  86 

And  the  s  state  more  cruelly  trampled  on  The  Cup  i  ii  145 

And  1  have  s  hope  of  the  gentleman  gout  in  my  great 

toe.  The  Falcon  656- 

Dance  !  s  heart  have  I  to  dance.  Prom,  of  May  i  429" 

Till  Nature,  high  and  low,  and  great  and  s  Forgets 

herself,  Foresters  i  ii  32T 

I  fear  I  had  s  pity  for  that  man. —  „  iv  547 

Smaller    it  was  but  the  sacrifice  of  a  kingdom  to  his  son, 

a  s  matter ;  Becket  m  iii  lOT 

Smash     (See  also  Mash)     he'll  s  all  our  bits  o'  things 

worse  than  Philip  o'  Spain.  Queen  Mary  n  iii  103 

Smattering    I  had  some  s  of  science  then.  Prom  of  May  n  301 

Smell  (s)     Wilt  thou  smell  it,  my  lord  ?  for  the  Archbishop 

likes  the  s  on  it,  my  lord ;  Becket  i  iv  240 

so  that  the  s  of  their  own  roast  had  not  come  across  it —      „    in  iii  119 
and  the  s  o'  the  mou'd  an'  all.  Prom,  of  May  i  i  375 

the  s  o'  the  mou'd  'ud  ha'  maade  ma  live  as  long 

as  Jerusalem.  „  i  i  377 

Smell  (verb)     He  cannot  s  a  rose  but  pricks  his  nose  Harold  i  i  422 

It's  humbling — it  s's  of  human  natur'.     Wilt  thou  s  it, 

my  lord  ?  for  the  Archbishop  likes  the  smell  on  it,        Becket  i  iv  238 
Do  but  s  !  ,.       II  i  145 

when  I  was  a-getting  o'  bluebells  for  your  ladyship's 

nose  to  s  on —  „      ni  i  163 

two-legg'd  dogs  Among  us  who  can  s  a  true  occasion.   The  Cup  i  ii  113 
Yes ;  how  sweet  they  s  !  Prom,  of  May  i  608 

to  saay  he's  browt  some  of  Miss  Eva's  roses  for  the 

sick  laady  to  s  on.  „         in  347 

so  greasy,  and  s  so  vilely  that  my  Lady  Marian  Foresters  i  i  82 

Smelt     Methought  I  s  out  Renard  in  the  letter,  Queen  Mary  n  ii  119 

Smile  (s)     (See  also  Side-smile)     She  cast  on  him  a 

vassal  s  of  love,  „  in  i  96 

A  s  abroad  is  oft  a  scowl  at  home.  „  in  i  211 

and  with  such  royal  s's —    Gardiner.    S's  that 

bum  men.  „         in  iv  401; 

with  a  cheerful  s,  as  one  whose  mind  Is  all  made  up,  „  iv  iii  58'i 

sweet  worn  s  Among  thy  patient  wrinkles —  „  v  v  19!^ 

Love  is  come  with  a  song  and  a  s.  Welcome  Love  with 

a  s  and  a  song:  Harold  i  ii  1' 

Gave  his  shorn  s  the  lie.  „   n  ii  22t 

Then  with  that  friendly-fiendly  s  of  his,  „      ni  i  8( 

that  sweet  other-world  s,  which  will  be  reflected  Becket,  Pro.  39f 

Still  with  a  s.  „        in  iii  3( 

The  same  s  still.  „        in  iii  4- 

Bid  their  old  bond  farewell  with  s's,  not  tears ;        Prom,  of  May  i  52 
Smile  (verb)     love  that  men  should  s  upon  you,  niece. 

They'd  s  you  into  treason —  Queen  Mary  i  iv  27 

seem'd  to  s  And  sparkle  like  our  fortune  „  n  iii  2  ' 

They  s  as  if  content  with  one  another.  „  in  i  21' : 

How  he  s's  As  if  he  loved  me  yet !  ,,  \  v  4 

and  see,  he  s's  and  goes.  Gentle  as  in  life.  „  v  v  14 

but  s  As  kindness,  watching  all,  Harold  i  i  36 

Why  dost  thou  s  So  dolorously  ?  Becket,  Pro.  If. 

not  to  s  Is  all  but  death  to  me.  „  n  i  4 

Or  scarce  would  s  that  fashion.  „       in  iii  L' 

that  they  began  to  s  at  it.  „      in  iii  31 

and  s  At  bygone  things  till  that  eternal  peace.  The  Cup  i  iii  17 

She  s's  at  him — how  hard  the  woman  is  !  The  Falcon  6(i 

Nay,  you  must  s  upon  me  !  Prom,  of  May  i  57 

I  am  glad  my  nonsense  has  made  you  s  !  „  in  31 


Smile 


1079 


Solomon-shaming 


Prom,  of  May  in  677 

Foresters  i  iii  16 

IV  366 

IV  727 

Queen  Mary  in  iii  162 

I  iv  279 

IV  iii  302 

IV  iii  603 

HaroU  Ii  ii  430 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  90 

Becketii  109 

„      I  i  221 

„    iiv224 


Sbnile  (verb)  {continued)     One  word,  or  do  but  s  ! 

but  Hope  S's  from  the  tlu'eshokl  of  the  year 

I  could  but  sneak  and  s  and  call  it  courtesy, 

And  s's  at  my  best  meanings, 
Smiled    loveliest  day  that  ever  s  On  England. 
ffmiling     I  spy  the  rock  beneath  the  s  sea. 

He  passed  out  s,  and  he  walk'd  upright ; 

Or  answer'd  them  in  s  negatives ; 

Down  thirty  feet  below  the  s  day — 
Smite    The  sword  Is  in  her  Grace's  hand  to  s  with 

I  fell.     Why  fall  ?     Why  did  He  s  me  ? 

And  s  thee  with  my  crozier  on  the  skull  ? 

Shall  I  s  him  with  the  edge  of  the  sword? 

S  the  shepherd  and  the  sheep  are  scattered.    S  the 
sheep  and  the  shepherd  will  excommunicate  thee. 

plagues  That  s  the  city  spare  the  solitudes. 

Shall  I  not  s  him  with  his  own  cross-staS  ? 
Smith  (Dan)    See  Dan  Smith 
Smitten    our  good  Gurth  hath  s  him  to  the  death. 

iS  with  fever  in  the  open  field, 
Smoke    you  bring  the  s  Of  Cranmer's  burning  with 
you. 

s  of  Cranmer's  burning  wrapt  me  round. 

a  candle  in  the  sun  Is  all  but  s — 

Ay,  if  he  do  not  end  in  s  again.  ^ 

said  to  the  s,  '  Go  up,  my  son,  straight  to  Heaven.  . 

And  the  s  said,  '  I  go ; '  ^     '■      "  H  ^^° 

while  the  s  floats  from  the  cottage  roof,  .   Foresters  i  n  dl7 

Smoking    after  much  smouldering  and  s,  be  kmdled  again 

upon  your  quarter. 
Smooth  (adj.)    Taken  the  rifted  pillars  of  the  wood  For  s 
stone  columns  of  the  sanctuaiy, 

Cannot  a  s  tongue  lick  him  whole  again  To  serve  your 
will  ? 

That  all  was  planed  and  bevell'd  s  agam, 
Smooth-Smoothe  (verb)    Smooth  thou  my  way,  before  he 
clash  with  me ; 

Smoothe  thou  his  pride— thy  signing  is  but  fonn ; 
Smooth-shorn    Husband-in-law,  our  s-s  suzeram. 
Smote    Methought  some  traitor  s  me  on  the  head 

I  s  him  suddenly,  I  knew  not  what  I  did. 

And  s  me  down  upon  the  Minster  floor. 
Smoulder    or  tliis  Will  s  and  re-flame. 


Smooldering    after  much  s  and  smokmg,  be  kindled  again 


„  I  iv  226 
„  viil73 
„    vii313 

Harold  V  i  503 
Prom,  of  May  ill  806 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  561 

„  IV  iii  564 

V  i  79 

Becket  ii  ii  316 


Becket  n  ii  313 

Harold  I  ii  101 

Becket  ii  ii  24 
„       V  i  138 


Harold  II  ii  69 

Becket  i  iii  218 

II  ii  40 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  252 

Harold  iv  ii  41 

Becket  i  i  104 

Queen  Mary  i  v  509 


^1 


upon  your  quarter.  ^ 

SnaflSe    Then  I  and  he  mil  s  your  '  God's  death, 
gm^e     A  s— and  if  I  touch  it,  it  may  sting. 

s  that  sloughs  comes  out  a  s  again.     S — ay, 
Snake-like    creeps  s-l  about  our  legs 
Snap     bind  a  score  All  in  one  faggot,  s  it  over  knee, 

S  not  the  faggot-band  then. 

lances  s  and  shiver  Against  the  shifting  blaze 
Soapt  dog  that  s  the  shadow,  dropt  the  bone.— 
Snwe     Before  he  fell  into  the  s  of  Guy ; 

my  white  bird  stepping  toward  the  s. 
Snatch     A  s  of  sleep  were  like  the  peace  of  God. 
Sneak     I  could  but  s  and  smile  and  call  it  courtesy. 
Sneezed     and  I  s  three  times  this  morning.         .  . 

Sniffed     that  Lucullus  or  Apicius  might  have  s  it  m  their 

Hades  of  heathenism. 
Snore  (s)    Misheard  their  s's  for  groans. 
Snore  (verb)    to  s  away  his  drunkenness  Into  the  sober 
headache, — 

Nip  him  not,  but  let  him  s. 
Snored     Ay,  slept  and  s. 
Snow     And  winter  again  and  the  s's. 

I  am  s  to  mud. 

s  had  frozen  round  her,  and  she  sat  Stone-dead 

In  the  sweet  moon  as  with  a  lovelier  s  ! 

see  your  cloth  be  white  as  s  ! 

as  the  s  yonder  on  the  very  tip-top  o'  the  mountam. 

I  have  seen  it  like  the  s  on  the  moraine. 
8o&  (so)     An'  s  they  be.     Man.    S  they  be !   s  they 

be !  ..,.•• 

an'  s  I  know'd  'im  when  I  seed  'im  agean 


Becket  ii  ii  313 

Queen  Mary  v  iii  119 

III  V  218 

Becket  i  iii  449 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  203 

Harold  iv  i  58 

IV  i  66 

„      V  i  586 

„       I  ii  188 

„     V  ii  131 

The  Cup  I  iii  36 

Harold  v  i  180 

Foresters  iv  366 

The  Falcon  168 


Becket  in  iii  118 
Harold  v  i  213 

Becket  i  i  371 

Foresters  ii  ii  122 

Harold  v  i  209 

Becket,  Pro.  334 

„       IV  ii  130 

V  ii  237 

The  Cup  I  ii  397 

The  Falcon  499 

501 

505 

Prom,  of  May  i  338 
in  121 


Soadger  (soldier)     'Listed  for  a  s.  Miss,  i'  the  Queen  s 

Real  Hard  Tillery.  Prom,  of  May  in  108 

Soak'd    he  s  the  trunk  with  human  blood,  Harold,  in  i  i.4^ 

Soar     thou" that  canst  s  Beyond  the  morning  lark,  The  I'alconiO 

Sob     trumpets  in  the  halls,  S's,  laughter,  cries :  Becket  v  ii  <ib» 

Sober    to  snore  away  his  drunkenness  Into  the  s  . 

headache „        i  > «''«' 

Socialist    I  that  have  been  call'd  a,S,  A  Communist,  Prom,  of  May  ni  584 
Soft    You  lived  among  your  vines  and  oranges,  In 
your  s  Italy  yonder ! 
What  weapon  hath  the  child,  save  his  s  tongue, 
like  the  wild  hedge-rose  Of  a  s  winter,  possible, 
The  s  and  tremulous  coward  in  the  flesh  ? 
You  have  a  gold  ring  on  your  finger,  and  s 

raiment  about  your  body ; 
on  a  s  bed,  in  a  closed  room,  with  light,  fire, 

physic,  tendance ; 
Except  it  be  a  s  one.  And  undereaten  to  the  fall. 
Nor  dwelt  alone,  like  a  s  lord  of  the  East, 
When  Richard  comes  he  is  s  enough  to  pardon  His 
brother ; 
Softlier    We  might  go  s  than  with  crimson  rowel 

And  streaming  lash. 
Soil  (s)    make  the  s  For  Csesars,  Cromwells,  and 

Napoleons 
Soil  (verb)    You  heed  not  how  you  s  her  maiden  fame, 
Soil'd    and  the  man  Hurls  his  s  life  against  the  pikes 


Queen  Mary  in  iv  254 

in  V  129 

„  in  vi  16 

IV  ii  107 

V  iv  32 

V  iv  36 
Harold  I  ii  122 
Becket  i  iii  358 


Foresters  iv  746 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  182 

Prom,  of  May  ill  592 
Foresters  iv  479 


and  dies. 

Sojourn    For  I  shall  most  s  in  Normandy ; 
Solace     Pride  of  his  heart— the  s  of  his  hours- 
Sold     Thou  hast  s  me  for  a  cry.— 

And  s  thine  own  To  buy  it  for  her. 

And  the  other  nine  ?     Filippo.     S  ! 

and  he  hath  s  himself  to  that  beast  John— 
Soldan    I  had  it  from  an  Arab  s,  who, 
Solder    S's  a  race  together— yea— tho'  they  fail. 
Soldier    (See  also  Soadger)    you  are  as  poor  a  poet, 
Wyatt,  As  a  good  s. 

Wyatt  was  a  good  s,  yet  he  fail'd, 

The  Duke  Of  Alva,  an  iron  s. 

His  eye  was  like  a  s's, 

Stupid  s's  oft  are  bold 


Queen  Mary  iv  iii  311 

Harold  u  ii  634 

The  Falcon  223 

Harold  iv  ii  76 

The  Falcon  76 

412 

Foresters  i  i  267 

Becket  rv  ii  300 

The  Cup  I  ii  162 

Queen  Mary  n  i  114 

III  i  132 

ni  i  194 

IV  iii  304 

V  ii  445 


Becket,  Pro.  255 

„       Pro.  437 

1 141 

I  i  387 

I  iii  298 

V  i  194 

V  ii  39 

The  Cup  I  i  75 

II 120 

The  Falcon  547 


A /s,  not  a  spiritual  arm.    Henry.     I  lack  a  spiritual 

s,  Thomas — ■ 
as  brave  a  s  as  Henry  and  a  goodlier  man : 
Make  an  Archbishop  of  a  s  ? 
not  the  s  As  Foliot  swears  it. — 
I  am  no  s,  as  he  said— at  least  No  leader, 
the  lady  holds  the  cleric  Lovelier  than  any  s, 
The  s,  when  he  lets  his  whole  self  go 
You  come  here  with  your  s's  to  enforce 
Most  like  it  was  the  Roman  s  shouted.  ,  ,  .   , 

tho'  we  have  been  a  s,  and  ridden  by  his  lordship  s 

Sole    I  say  you  were  the  one  s  man  who  stood. 

Bagenhall.     I  am  the  one  s  man  in  either  •••  oc» 

house,  Queen  Mary  m  in  263 

I  will  be  S  master  of  my  house.  Becket  v  1 151 

Solemn    Should  not  this  day  be  held  in  after  years  .. 

More  s  than  of  old  ?  ««««»»  Mary  in  iii  91 

swear  When  thou  art  king,  to  see  my  s  vow 

Accomplish'd. 
Against  the  s  ordinance  from  Rome, 
I  bound  myself,  and  by  a  s  vow, 
I  believed  thee  to  be  too  s  and  formal  to  be  a  rufller, 
Solemnity    Low  words  best  chime  with  this  s. 
Solicited    you  have  s  The  Queen,  and  been  rejected. 
Solid    Far  from  s  foot  of  men.  Never  to  return  again, 


Harold  III  i  306 

Becket  i  iii  505 

The  Falcon  679 

Foresters  i  i  168 

The  Cup  II  217 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  58 

Foresters  n  ii  169 

SoUtary    To  read  and  rhyme  in  s  fields,  "  Que^  Mary  ni  51 

The  silent,  cloister'd,  s  life,  ?/'"'''''""  oJI 

SoUtude    Retiring  into  cloistral  s  To  yield  ^een  Mary  n\  vi  209 

but  saved  From  all  that  by  our  s.    The  plagues  That  . 

smite  the  city  spare  the  s's.  Becket  v  ii  171 

thy  s  among  thy  nuns.  May  that  save  thee !  „      v  ii  i^b 

Solomon-shaming    golden  slopes  Of -S-s  flowers—  „      ini4» 


Some 


1080 


Song 


Queen  Mary  i  iv  48 
I iv  226 


I  iv  261 


Prom,  of  May  I  206 
II  439 
11445 

II  707 
III  148 


Some     (See  also  Soom)    Might  it  not  Be  the  rough 
preface  of  s  closer  bond  ? 
counsel  your  withdrawing  To  Ashridge,  or  s  other 

country  house. 
I  have  felt  within  me  Stirrings  of  5  great  doom 
when  God's  just  hour  Peals — 
Some  one    See  Summun 

Somerset-Somersetshire    (See  also  Soomerset)    He's  a 
Somersetshire    man,   and   a    very  civil-spoken 
gentleman. 
Philip  Edgar  of  Toft  Hall  In  Somerset. 
One  Philip  Edgar  of  Toft  Hall  in  Somerset  Is  lately  dead. 
I  have  been  telling  her  of  the  death  of  one  Philip 

Edgar  of  Toft  Hall,  Somerset. 
Yes ;  it  was  in  the  Somersetshire  papers. 
Something    (See  also  Summat,  Summut)    I  miss  s. 

The  tree  that  only  bears  dead  fruit  is  gone.  Queen  Mary  iii  i  18 

I'U  say  s  for  you — -so — good-bye.  „         iv  ii  167 

and  our  Latimer-sailors  Will  teach  her  s.  „       iv  iii  350 

There  should  be  s  fierier  than  fire  „  v  iv  26 

Make  not  thou  The  nothing  s.  Harold  i  i  363 

On  a  sudden — at  a  s — for  a  nothing —  „       i  i  442 

and  s  I  had  to  say — I  love  thee  none  the  less — Which 

will  so  vex  thee.     Rosamund.     S  against  me  ?  Becket  ii  i  206 

We  that  are  kings  are  s  in  this  world,  „     ii  ii  245 

8  that  would  displease  me.  „     m  i  245 

may  there  not  be  s  Of  this  world's  leaven  in  thee  too,  „       v  ii  28 

Someth^g-nothing    Some  daily  s-n.  „      iii  i  80 

Sometime    (See  also  Soomtimes)     It  may  be  s's  I  have  over- 
shot My  duties  „         v  i  37 
s's  been  moved  to  tears  by  a  chapter  of  fine 

writing  in  a  novel ;  Prom,  of  May  ni  208 

Somewhat    (See  also  Summat,  Summut)    trust  him 

s  less  Than  Simon  Renard,  Queen  Mary  i  v  221 


vi207 
iil06 


I  iii  63 

I  v3 

IV  85 

IV  206 

IV  417 
iii55 

m  i  74 

III  ii  184 
m  iii  267 

IV  iii  118 
IV  iii  138 
IV  iii  144 
IV  iii  154 

vil59 

V  ii  117 
V  ii  125 


S  beyond  your  settled  purpose  ? 
Son    has  offer'd  her  his  s  Philip,  the  Pope  and  the  Devil. 
S  Courtenay,  wilt  thou  see  the  holy  father  Murdered 

before  thy  face  ?  up,  s,  and  save  him  !     They  love 

thee. 
Most  goodly.  Kinglike  and  an  Emperor's  s, — 
Holy  Virgin,  Plead  with  thy  blessed  S ; 
And  be  stepmother  of  a  score  of  s^s  ! 
princely  s,  Heir  of  this  England  and  the  Netherlands ! 
sire  begets  Not  half  his  likeness  in  the  s. 
that  the  s  Being  a  King,  might  wed  a  Queen — 
The  King  is  here  ! — My  star,  my  s  ! 
Perchance  in  England,  loves  her  like  a  s. 
O  S  oi  God,  Redeemer  of  the  world  ! 

0  God  the  S,  Not  for  slight  faults  alone. 
Didst  thou  yield  up  thy  S  to  human  death ; 
And  Thy  most  blessed  S's,  who  died  for  man. 
For  Alva  is  true  s  of  the  true  church — 
Have  done  my  best,  and  as  a  faithful  s. 
And  the  poor  s  turn'd  out  into  the  street 
Gamel,  s  of  Orm,  What  thinkest  thou  this  means  ? 

(repeat)  Harold  i  i  20,  463 

1  have  a  Norman  fever  on  me,  s,  „  i  i  87 
Hail,  Gamel,  s  of  Orm !  „  i  i  92 
War  there,  my  s  ?  is  that  the  doom  of  England  ?  „  x  i  125 
Tostig  says  true ;  my  s,  thou  art  too  hard,  „  i  i  205 
I  know  it,  s ;  I  am  not  thankless ;  „  i  i  215 
Not  thee,  my  s :  some  other  messenger.  „  i  i  243 
now  the  s's  of  Godwin  Sit  topmost  in  the  field  „  i  i  324 
feuds  that  part  The  s's  of  Godwin  from  the  s's  of  Alfgar  „  i  ii  180 
that  was  his  guest,  Gamel,  the  s  of  Orm :  „  n  ii  299 
0  s,  when  thou  didst  tell  me  of  thine  oath,  „  ni  i  267 
My  s,  the  Saints  are  virgins ;  „  in  i  271 
O  my  8  !  Are  all  oaths  to  be  broken  then,  „  mi  285 
iS',  there  is  one  who  loves  thee :  „  ni  i  289 
and  dear  s,  swear  When  thou  art  king,  „  m  i  304 
O  good  s  !  That  knowledge  made  him  all  the  carefuller  „  m  i  339 
Ck)me  thou  back,  and  be  Once  more  a  s  of  Godwin.  „  iv  ii  60 
Of  Alfred,  or  of  Edward  his  great  s,  „  iv  iii  52 
mark'd  the  s's  of  those  Who  made  this  Britain  England,  „  iv  iii  152 
Noble  Gurth !     Best  s  of  Godwin !                                      „           v  i  135 


Son  (continued)    They  are  so  much  holier  than  their 

harlot's  s 
I,  true  s  Of  Holy  Church — ^no  croucher 
To  this  s  of  a  London  merchant — 
Look  on  me  as  I  were  thy  bodily  s,  For,  like  a  s, 
My  burgher's  s — Nay,  if  I  cannot  break  him 
S's  sit  in  judgment  on  their  father ! — 
S,  first  hear  me  ! 

Hear  me,  s.     As  gold  Outvalues  dross, 
I  thank  you,  s's ;  when  kings  but  hold  by  crowns. 
Thou  art  no  prophet.  Nor  yet  a  prophet's  s. 
S,  I  absolve  thee  in  the  name  of  God. 
it  was  but  the  sacrifice  of  a  kingdom  to  his  s,  a  smaller 

matter ; 
King  would  act  servitor  and  hand  a  dish  to  his  s ; 
'  great  honour,'  says  he,  '  from  the  King's  self  to  the 

King's  s.' 
'  Should  not  an  earl's  s  wait  on  a  king's  s  ? ' 
crowning  thy  young  s  by  York,  London  and  Salisbury 

— ^not  Canterbury, 
fawn  upon  him  For  thy  life  and  thy  s's.    Rosamund. 

I  am  a  Clifford,  My  s  a  CUfford  and  Plantagenet. 
King  himself,  for  love  of  his  own  s's, 
link'd  me  with  him  To  bear  him  kingly  s's. 
Stirr'd  up  a  party  there  against  your  s — 
I  cannot  think  he  moves  against  my  s,  Knowing  right 

well  with  what  a  tenderness  He  loved  my  s. 
that  but  obey'd  the  crown.  Crowning  your  s ; 
this  no  wife  has  born  you  four  brave  s's, 
In  one  a  s  stone-blind  Sat  by  his  mother's  hearth : 
The  prelates  whom  he  chose  to  crown  his  s  ! 
S,  husband,  brother  gash'd  to  death  in  vain, 
came  back  last  night  with  her  s  to  the  castle. 
How  couldst  thou  do  it,  my  s  ? 

happy  was  the  prodigal  s,  For  he  return'd  to  the  rich  father ; 
For  fear  of  losing  more  than  friend,  a  s ; 
White  ?     I  warrant  thee,  my  s,  as  the  snow 

0  my  dear  s,  be  not  unkind  to  me. 
give  my  time  To  him  that  is  a  part  of  you,  your  s. 

1  would  you  had  a  s  ! 

beggar-woman  seeking  alms  For  her  sick  s, 
We  two  together  Will  help  to  heal  your  s — your  s 
After  my  frolic  with  his  tenant's  girl.  Made 

younger  elder  s,  Pro7n.  of  May  i  494 

I  have  lost  my  gold,  I  have  tost  my  s.  Foresters  i  i  338 

Thou  Much,  miller's  s,  hath  not  the  Earl  right  ?  „         i  ii  46 

Much,  the  miller's  s,  I  knew  thy  father :  „     i  iii  146 

And  all  their  s's  be  free,  „        n  i  22 

and  the  s  Is  most  like  dead —  „      ii  i  146 

This  is  my  s  but  late  escaped  from  prison,  ,.      ii  i  460 

I  Little  John,  he  Much  the  miller's  s,  and  he  Scarlet,  „         in  55 

which  a  pious  s  of  the  Church  gave  me  this  morning  „       in  281 

Blown  like  a  true  s  of  the  woods.  „        iv  427 

I  grieve  to  say  it  was  thy  father's  s.  „        iv  811 

We  ever  fail'd  to  light  upon  thy  s.  „        iv  984 

The  gold— my  s- — ^my  gold,  my  s,  the  land —  „        iv  987 

Art  thou  my  s  ?     Walter  Lea.     I  am,  good  father,  „      iv  1019 

Song     According  to  the  s.  Queen  Mary  i  v  622 

And  answer  them  in  s.  „  ii  i  53 

S  flies  you  know  For  ages.  „  ii  i  80 

Our  little  sister  of  the  S  of  S's  !  „        m  ii  103 

mock  the  blessed  Host  In  s's  so  lewd,  „        iv  iii  367 

Shall  Alice  sing  you  One  of  her  pleasant  s's  ?  „  v  ii  355 

Love  is  come  with  a  s  and  a  smile.  Welcome  Love  with 

a  smile  and  a  s : 
And  chanting  that  old  s  of  Brunanburg 
our  old  s's  are  prayers  for  England  too  ! 
— like  a  s  of  the  people. 
Has  my  simple  s  set  you  jingling  ? 
bird  that  moults  sings  the  same  s  again, 
coming  up  with  a  s  in  the  flush  of  the  glimmering  red  ? 
they  say,  she  makes  s's,  and  that's  against  her,  for  I 

never  knew  an  honest  woman  that  could  make  s's, 

tho'  to  be  sure  our  mother  'ill  sing  me  old  s's  by 

the  hour, 


Harold  v  ii  12 

Becket,  Pro.  210 

„       Pro.  433 

I  iii  263 

I  iii  332 

„       I  iii  551 

„       I  iii  672 

I  iii  713 

II  ii  280 
„       II  ii  422 

II  ii  442 

III  iii  107 
in  iii  140 

in  iii  146 
III  iii  151 

ni  iii  194 

IV  ii  225 

ivii345 

IV  ii  449 

V  i  7 

vil9 

V  i  52 

V  i  126 

V  ii  104 

V  ii  400 
The  Cup  I  ii  143 

The  Falcon  3 
52 
141 
333 
500 
509 
792 
824 
854 
923 


Harold  i  ii  10 

„     V  i  216 

„     V  i  222 

Becket,  Pro.  33f 

„       Pro.  37S 

„        I  iii  447 

„  II  i  7 


ra  i  181 


Song 


1081 


Southwark 


Song  (continued)    none  on  'em  ever  made  s's,  and  they  were 

aU  honest.  Becket  in  i  189 

Whose  evil  s  far  on  into  the  night  „       v  ii  208 

tell  him  my  tales,  Sing  him  my  s's  ?  The  Falcon  797 

I  don't  know  why  I  sing  that  s ;  I  don't  love  it.  Prom,  of  May  i  61 
Fanny  be  the  naame  i'  the  s,  but  I  swopt  it  fur  she.  „        ii  212 

Sings  a  new  s  to  the  new  year — and  you  Strike  up  a  s,  Foresters  i  iii  28 
There  was  a  s  he  made  to  the  turning  wheel —  „     i  iii  153 

To  sing  the  s's  of  England  Beneath  the  greenwood  tree.  „  n  i  23 
True  soul  of  the  Saxon  churl  for  whom  s  has  no  charm.  „  ii  i  386 
We  be  scared  with  s  and  shout.  „    n  ii  164 

we  have  made  a  s  in  your  honour,  so  your  ladyship  care 

to  listen.  ,,      m  414 

Out  on  thy  s !  „         iv  28 

did  ye  not  call  me  king  in  your  s?  „       iv  220 

Let  the  birds  sing,  and  do  you  dance  to  their  s.  ,'       iv  557 

Songing    See  Sing-songing 

Son-in-law     For,  Robin,  he  must  be  my  s-i-l.  Foresters  ii  i  451 

Sonnet    (See  also  Sonnet-making)     were  a  pious  work 

To  string  my  father's  s's,  Queen  Mary  n  i  27 

Hand  me  the  casket  with  my  father's  s's.     WiUiam. 

Ay— s's—  „  n  i  44 

Tut,  your  s's  a  flying  ant,  „  n  i  83 

Write  you  as  many  s's  as  you  will.  „  n  i  95 

Sonneteer    Or  would  you  have  me  turn  a  s,  „     ni  vi  154 

Sonnet-making    and  no  call  for  sonnet-sorting  now,  nor 

for  s-m  either,  „  xi  i  60 

And  s-m's  safer.  ,,  n  i  93 

Sonnet-sorting    and  no  call  for  s-s  now,  nor  for  sonnet- 
making  either,  „  n  i  59 
Sonnetting    Come,  now,  you're  s  again.                                      „         n  i  247 
Soom  (some)     and  I  taaked  'im  fur  s  sort  of  a  land- 
surveyor—                                                                  Prom,  of  May  i  204 
but  I  hallus  gi'ed  s  on  'em  to  Miss  Eva  at  this  time 

o'  year.  „  n  15 

so  I  alius  browt  soom  on  'em  to  her ;  „  u  20 

an'  them  theer  be  s  of  her  oan  roses,  „  n  38 

Soomerset  (Somerset)    Philip  Hedgar  0'  S !  (repeat)  „         11 587 

— I'U  S  tha.  „  II 592 

'  0'  the  17th,  Philip  Edgar,  o'  Toft  HaU,  S.'  „         11  712 

Soomtimes  (sometimes)     And  p'raps  ye  hears  'at  I  s 

taakes  a  drop  too  much ;  „  n  108 

Sooner    He'd  s  be,  While  this  same  marriage  question  Queen  Mary  11  ii  36 
At  thy  most  need — not  s.     Harold.     So  I  wUl.  Harold  iii  i  16 

S  or  later  shamed  of  her  among  The  ladies.  Prom,  of  May  iii  581 

No  s  ?  when  will  that  be  ?  ~ 

8oot    even  if  I  foimd  it  Dark  with  the  s  of  slums. 
Sop    new  Lords  Are  quieted  with  their  s  of  Abbey- 
lands, 
Sore  (adj.)     (See  also  Half-sore)     Remember  that  s 

saying  spoken  once  By  Him  „  iv  iii  202 

Sore_  (s)    gangrenes,  and  running  s's,  praise  ye  the  Lord,        Becket  i  iv  256 

"'    '        "  '  Foresters  I  ii  2S2 

Queen  Mary  iir  iii  177 

v  V  11 

Harold  ill  i  269 

Prom,  of  May  11  415 


Foresters  iv  420 
Prom,  of  May  in  602 

Queen  Mary  in  i  142 


Sorrier    thou  canst  not  be  s  than  I  am. 

Sorrow    Grace  to  repent  and  s  for  their  schism ; 
Following  her  like  her  s. 

Sorrow'd    I  s  for  my  random  promise  given 
Have  s  for  her  all  these  years  in  vain. 

Sorry    Good  faith,  1  was  too  s  for  the  woman  To  mark 

the  dress.  Queen  Mary  in  i  57 

I  am  s  for  it  If  Pole  be  like  to  turn.  „       in  iv  415 

I'm  s  for  it,  for,  tho'  he  never  comes  to  church.       Prom,  of  May  1  260 

,;        I  am  s  Mr.  Steer  still  continues  too  unwell  to  attend  to  you,    „  in  21 

though  I  can  be  s  for  him — as  the  good  Sally  says,  „         in  173 

'  I  am  s  that  we  could  not  attend  your  Grace's  party 

on  the  10th  ! '  „         ni  312 

I  am  s  my  exchequer  runs  so  low  Foresters  i  ii  272 

Here  is  thy  gold  again.     I  am  s  for  it.  „         iv  985 

Sort     What  s  of  brothers  then  be  those  that  lust         Queen  Mary  iv  iii  196 
I  have  seen  heretics  of  the  poorer  s,  „  rv  iii  436 

I  think  that  in  some  s  we  may.  ,,  iv  iii  551 

Were  but  a  s  of  winter ;  „  v  iv  16 

As  ...  in  some  s  .  .  .  I  have  been  false  to  thee.  Harold  v  i  351 

Yes,  in  some  s  I  do.  Foresters  n  i  527 

I  tell  thee,  in  some  s.    Robin.    SI  si  what  s ?  what 
: ,  s  of  man  art  thou  For  land,  „        n  i  531 


Sorting    See  Sonnet-sorting 

Sought    I  s  him  and  I  could  not  find  him. 

That  s  to  free  the  tomb-place  of  the  King 
Soul     The  downfall  of  so  many  simple  s's, 

my  good  mother  came  (God  rest  her  s) 

Or  Lady  Jane  ?     Wyatt.     No,  poor  s ;  no. 

We  kill  the  heretics  that  sting  the  s— 

And  every  s  of  man  that  breathes  therein. 

A  secular  kingdom  is  but  as  the  body  Lacking  a  s ; 

Is  as  the  s  descending  out  of  heaven 

to  the  saving  of  their  s's,  Before  your  execution. 

for  thy  s  shall  masses  here  be  sung 

Pray  with  one  breath,  one  heart,  one  s  for  me. 

peril  mine  own  s  By  slaughter  of  the  body  ? 

Let  the  great  Devil  fish  for  your  own  s's. 

We  have  respect  for  man's  immortal  s, 

A  conscience  for  his  own  s,  not  his  realm ; 

But  wing'd  s's  flying  Beyond  all  change 

one  for  all,  and  all  for  one.  One  s  ! 

The  s  who  fighteth  on  thy  side  is  cursed, 

Praying  perchance  for  this  poor  s  of  mine 

and  the  s  of  Eleanor  from  hell-fire. 

Peace  to  his  s  ! 

Poor  s  !  poor  s  !     My  friend,  the  King  !  .  .  . 

The  s  the  body,  and  the  Church  the  Throne, 

loathing  for  a  s  Purer,  and  truer  and  nobler 

Fling  not  thy  s  into  the  flames  of  hell : 

And  break  the  s  from  earth. 

God  save  him  from  all  sickness  of  the  s  ! 

His  child  and  mine  own  s,  and  so  return. 

all  the  s's  we  saved  and  father'd  here  Will  greet  us 

Is  it  too  late  for  me  to  save  your  s  ? 

ere  two  s's  be  knit  for  life  and  death, 

God  rest  his  honest  s,  he  bought  'em  for  me, 

For  all  the  s's  on  earth  that  live 

For  all  the  blessed  s's  in  Heaven 

A  s  with  no  religion — My  mother  used  to  say 

Sleep,  happy  s  !  all  life  will  sleep  at  last. 

The  s  of  the  woods  hath  stricken  thro'  my  blood. 

True  s  of  the  Saxon  churl  for  whom  song  has  no  charm. 

And  that  would  quite  wwman  him,  heart  and  s. 

I  Embrace  thee  with  the  kisses  of  the  s. 

flung  His  life,  heart,  s  into  those  holy  wars 

Who  hunger  for  the  body,  not  the  s — 

Marriage  is  of  the  s,  not  of  the  body. 

I  remain  Mistress  of  mine  own  self  and  mine  own  s. 
Sound  (adj.)    S  sleep  to  the  man  Here  by  dead  Norway 
without  dream  or  dawn  ! 

Go  round  once  more ;  See  all  be  s  and  whole. 

and  most  amorous  Of  good  old  red  s  liberal  Gascon 

wine :  Becket,  Pro.  100 

A  great  and  s  policy  that :  I  could  embrace  him  for  it :      „       Pro.  451 

And  were  my  kindly  father  s  again,  Foresters  in  81 

S  at  the  core  as  we  are.  „      ni  102 

Sound  (s)     What  is  that  whirring  s  ?  (repeat)  Harold  v  i  482,  665 

Sound  (verb)     To  s  the  Princess  carelessly  on  this ;         Queen  Mary  v  i  259 
That  is  noble  !     That  s's  of  Godwin.  Harold  iv  ii  58 

How  ghostly  s's  that  horn  in  the  black  wood !  Becket  ni  ii  16 

when  the  horn  s's  she  comes  out  as  a  wolf.  „      in  ii  23 


The  Cup  n  396 

Foresters  iv  408 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  54 

IV  12 

Hi  242 

in  iv  69 

m  vi  107 

IV  133 

IV  135 

IV  ii  194 
IV  iii  100 
IV  iii  104 

vvl68 

Harold  n  i  32 

„    n  ii  501 

,,      m  i  63 

„   niiilOO 

„    IV  iii  60 

vi69 

„      V  i  323 

Becket,  Pro.  151 

Pro.  394 

1 1334 

I  iii  717 

n  i  171 

ni316 

V  144 

V  ii  175 

V  ii  193 

V  ii  223 

V  ii  524 
The  Cup  u  359 

The  Falcon  49 

Prom,  of  May  in  7 

in  10 

ni  532 

Foresters  1  iii  48 

n  i  66 

n  i  385 

in  30 

III  143 
rv407 

IV  700 
IV  720 
IV  730 

Harold  iv  iii  120 

V  i  194 


when  that  horn  s's,  a  score  of  wolf-dogs  are  let  loose 


m  1138 


all  that  s's  so  wicked  and  so  strange  ;  Prom,  of  May  1  656 

name  Of  Harold  s's  so  English  and  so  old  „         m  610 

Wherever  the  horn  s,  and  the  buck  bound,  Foresters  in  345 

Wherever  the  buck  bound,  and  the  horn  s,  .,        ni  356 

Sounded    I'll  have  the  scandal  s  to  the  mud.  Queen  Mary  i  v  227 

Sour    Yon  gray  old  Gospeller,  s  as  midwinter,  „           i  iii  40 

S  milk  and  black  bread.  Foresters  u  i  272 

And  jealousy  is  wither'd,  s  and  ugly :  „          n  ij  65 

South    North  and  S  Thunder  together,  Harold  m  i  392 

The  men  that  guarded  England  to  the  S  „     iv  iii  210 

in  S  and  North  at  once  I  could  not  be.  „     iv  iii  217 

I  left  our  England  naked  to  the  S  „        v  i  289 

Southern    The  tan  of  s  summers  and  the  beard  ?  Prom,  of  May  11  617 

Southwark     Wyatt  comes  to  S ;  Queen  Mary  n  ii  375 

And  pointed  full  at  jS  ;  „           n  iii  46 


Southwark 


1082 


Speak 


Soathwark  (continued)    When  Wyatt  sack'd  the 

Chancellor's  house  in  S.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  505 

South-west     North-east  took  and  turned  him  S-w,  then  the 

S-w  turned  him  North-east,  Becket  ii  ii  321 

Sovereign  (adj.)     I  am  of  s  nature,  but  I  know,  Not  to 

be  quell'd ;  Queen  Mary  i  iv  258 

Our  s  Lady  by  King  Hand's  will ;  „          ii  ii  268 
Why  should  I  swear,  Eleanor,  who  am,  or  was,  A  s 

power  ?  Becket  iv  ii  405 
And  when  you  came  and  dipt  your  s  head  Thro'  these 

low  doors,  The  Falcon  867 

Sovereign  (s)     Bride  of  the  mightiest  s  upon  earth  ?       Queen  Mary  v  ii  544 

he  and  I  are  both  Galatian-bom,  And  tributary  s's,  The  Cup  ii  95 

The  s  of  Galatia  weds  his  Queen.  „     ii  432 

Sow    Who  knows  what  s's  itself  among  the  people  ?  Harold  iv  i  149 

That  s  this  hate  between  my  lord  and  me  !  Becket  ii  ii  272 

Sow'd     if  you  s  therein  The  seed  of  Hate,  Queen  Mary  iv  i  170 

Who  s  this  fancy  here  among  the  people  ?  Harold  iv  i  147 

Sowest     The  seed  thou  s  in  thy  field  is  cursed,  „          v  i  70 

Sown     Can  render  thanks  in  fruit  for  being  s.  Queen  Mary  ill  iii  198 

Have  I  s  it  in  salt  ?     I  trust  not,  Becket  iii  iii  320 

Space     For  a  little  s,  farewell ;  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  46 

SIpade     Your  havings  wasted  by  the  scythe  and  s — ■  „           ii  ii  277 

Spain     Prince  of  S  coming  to  wed  our  Queen  !  „             i  iii  83 

my  good  mother  came  (God  rest  her  soul)  Of  S,  „             i  v  13 

Your  royal  mother  came  of  S,  „              i  v  16 

for  to  wed  with  S  Would  treble  England —  „              i  v  75 

Stab  me  in  fancy,  hissing  S  and  PhiUp ;  „            i  v  150 

prince  is  known  in  S,  in  Flanders,  „            i  v  207 

That  you  may  marry  Philip,  Prince  of  S —  „            i  v  252 

Mary  of  England,  joining  hands  with  S,  „            i  v  299 

S  and  we.  One  crown,  might  rule  the  world.  „            i  v  301 

Who  waits  ?     Usher.     The  Ambassador  of  iS,  „            i  v  342 

would  not  graze  The  Prince  of  S.  „            i  v  454 
I  was  in  S  with  him.    I  couldn't  eat  in  S,  I  couldn't 
sleep  in  S.    1  hate  S,  Sir  Thomas.    Wyatt.    But 

thou  could'st  drink  in  iS  if  I  remember.  „              u  i  35 

Philip  and  the  black-faced  swarms  of  S,  „              ii  i  99 

island  will  become  A  rotten  limb  of  S.  „            n  i  105 

I  know  S.     I  have  been  there  with  my  father ;  „            ii  i  166 
shall  we  have  S  on  the  throne  and  in  the  parliament ; 
S  in  the  pulpit  and  on  the  law-bench ;  S  in  all 

the  great  offices  of  state ;  S  in  our  ships,  „           ii  i  176 

No  !  no  !  no  SI     William.     No  iS  in  our  beds —  „            ii  i  181 

and  the  beds  I  know.     I  hate  S.  „           ii  i  185 

— war  against  S.  „            ii  i  190 

the  world  is  with  us — war  against  S\  „            ii  i  197 

If  we  move  not  now,  S  moves,  „            ii  i  202 

wherever  S  hath  ruled  she  hath  wither'd  all  „           ii  i  206 

They  would  not  have  me  wed  the  Prince  of  *S ;  „           ii  ii  149 

Who  mouth  and  foam  against  the  Prince  of  S.  „           ii  ii  251 
smash  all  our  bits  o'  things  worse  than  Philip  o'  S. 
Second  Woman.     Don't  ye  now  go  to  think  that 

we  be  for  Philip  o'  S.  „          ii  iii  104 

lest  living  S  Should  sicken  at  dead  England.  „             iii  i  27 
and  hurl'd  our  battles  Into  the  heart  of  S ;  but  England 

now  Is  but  a  ball  chuck'd  between  France  and  S,  „          in  i  109 

they  pillage  S  already.  „          in  i  158 

Looks  very  S  of  very  S?  „           in  i  192 

Philip  had  been  one  of  those  black  devils  of  S,  „          in  i  216 

How  should  he  bear  a  bridegroom  out  ot  S?  „         in  iii  26 

married  my  good  mother, — For  fear  of  S.  „         in  v  247 

Than  yours  in  happier  S.  „          ill  vi  64 
In  hope  to  chsinn  them  from  their  hate  of  S.    Philip. 

In  hope  to  crush  all  heresy  under  S.  „          in  vi  83 

If  ever,  as  heaven  grant,  we  clash  with  S,  „        iv  iii  347 

And  grafted  on  the  hard-grain'd  stock  of  S — •  „        iv  iii  427 

Into  one  sword  to  hack  at  S  and  me.  „            v  i  138 

I  would  we  had  you.  Madam,  in  our  warm  S.  „          \  ii  608 

Count  de  Feria,  from  the  King  of  S.  „              v  iii  9 

Were  you  in  S,  this  fine  fair  gossamer  gold —  „            v  iii  48 
If  such  a  one  as  you  should  match  with  S,  What 

hinders  but  that  S  and  England  join'd,  „           v  iii  67 
S  would  be  England  on  her  seas,  and  England 

Mistress  of  the  Indies.  „           v  iii  72 


Spain  (continued)    Without  the  help  of  S.    Feria. 

Impossible ;  Except  you  put  S  down. 
Spake    (See  also  Spoke)     That  was  their  pretext — so 
they  s  at  first — 

and  wherefore  s  you  not  before  ? 

Make  thou  not  mention  that  I  s  with  thee. 

There  s  Godwin,  Who  hated  all  the  Normans ; 

Stigand  believed  he  knew  not  what  he  s. 

And  s  to  the  Lord  God,  and  said, 

I  s  no  word  of  treachery,  Reginald. 

Antonius — '  Camma  ! '  who  s  ? 

I  am  all  but  sure  that  some  one  s. 
Spaniard    (See  also  Spaniel-Spaniard)    Stave  off  the 
crowd  upon  the  S  there. 

Will  brook  nor  Pope  nor  S  here 

That  knows  the  Queen,  the  S,  and  the  Pope, 

that  every  S  carries  a  tail  like  a  devil 

Would  I  had  been  Bom  S  ! 

Upon  the  faith  and  honour  of  a  S, 

Here  swings  a  S — there  an  Englishman ; 

The  Pope  would  cast  the  S  out  of  Naples : 

He  is  all  Italian,  and  he  hates  the  S ; 

And  more  than  all — no  S. 
Spaniel    her  poor  s  wailing  for  her. 
Spaniel- Spaniard    These  s-S  English  of  the  time, 
Spanish    (See  also  Half-Spanish)     sworn  this  S 
marriage  shall  not  be. 

and  I  am  S  in  myself. 

We'll  dust  him  from  a  bag  of  S  gold. 

And  Counts,  and  sixty  S  cavaliers, 

and  English  carrot's  better  than  S  licorice ; 

every  S  priest  will  tell  you  that 

and  make  us  A  S  province ; 

as  he  walk'd  the  iS  friars  Still  plied 

Our  S  ladies  have  none  such — 
Spare  (adj.)     how  bare  and  s  I  be  on  the  rib : 

Spare  me  thy  s  ribs,  I  pray  thee ; 
Spare  (verb)     To  s  the  life  of  Cranmer. 

That  I  should  s  to  take  a  heretic  priest's, 

S  and  forbear  him,  Harold,  if  he  comes  ! 

Edward  bad  me  s  thee. 

Is  thy  wrath  Hell,  that  I  should  s  to  ci-y, 

to  s  us  the  hardness  of  your  facility  ? 

S  not  thy  tongue !  be  lavish  with  our  coins, 

plead  so  pitifully,  that  I  may  s  thee  ? 

S  this  defence,  dear  brother. 

Let  him — -he  never  s's  me  to  my  face  ! 

I  never  s  your  lordship  to  your  lordship's  face, 

to  s  myself.  And  her  too,  pain,  pain,  pain  ? 

S  me  thy  spare  ribs,  I  pray  thee ; 
Spared    S  you  the  Duke  of  Suffolk,  Guildford  Dudley, 

Rome  never  yet  hath  s  conspirator. 

We  s  the  craftsman,  chapman. 


Queen  Alary  v  iii  78 

n  ii  150 

v  iii  107 

Harold  n  ii  483 

„      in  i  251 

in  ii  62 

Becket  i  i  74 

„  vii401 

The  Cup  11  401 

n  405 

Qu^en  Mary  i  iii  77 

IV  189 
n  ii  413 
ni  i  223 

in  iii  246 

in  vi  254 

vi  87 

vil48 

V  ii  56 
V  ii  483 

Prom,  of  May  n  473 
Qu^en  Mary  in  iii  240 

I  iv  115 
I  V  13 

I  V  421 

„  111  i  51 

in  i  220 

in  i  228 

III  i  466 
IV  iii  576 

„  v  iii  46 

Foresters  i  i  50 

I  i  53 

Queen  Mary  iv  i  4 

„       IV  i 131 

Harold  ni  i  299' 

„        IV  ii  11 

V  i  37 

Becket,  Pro.  385 

II  ii  46» 

IV  ii  217 
v  iii  168- 

The  Falcon  lOd' 

111 

Prom,  of  May  in  71& 

Foresters  i  i  53-; 

Queen  Mary  i  v  48^ 

The  Cup  I  ii  234 

Foresters  ill  163' 


Saints  to  scatter  s's  of  plague  Thro'  all  your  cities,    Harold  n  ii  745 


for  a  s  Of  self -disdain  born  in  me  when  I  sware 
Sparkle    s's  out  as  quick  Almost  as  kindled ; 

seem'd  to  smile  And  s  like  our  fortune 

What  s's  in  the  moonlight  on  thy  hand  ? 
Sparkled     Our  silver  cross  s  before  the  prow. 
Spatter     my  battle-axe  and  him  To  s  his  brains  ! 
Spavin'd     And  broken  bridge,  or  s  horse,  or  wave  And 

wind  at  their  old  battle  : 
Spawn     Knights,  bishops,  earls,  this  London  s — 
Speak     You  s  too  low,  my  Lord ;  I  cannot  hear  you. 

S  not  thereof — no,  not  to  your  best  friend, 

ever  faithful  counsellor,  might  Is? 

that  will  s  When  I  and  thou  and  all  rebellious  lie 

fifty  That  followed  me  from  Penenden  Heath  in 
hope  To  hear  you  s. 

The  mine  is  fired,  and  I  will  s  to  them. 

S  at  once — and  all !     For  whom  ? 

S !  in  the  name  of  God ! 

The  Queen  stands  up,  and  s's  for  her  own  self ; 

had  Howard  spied  me  there  And  made  them  s, 

S  for  yourself. 


V  i  301 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  73- 

„  n  iii  24 

Foresters  n  i  582;' 

Queen  Mary  in  ii  9 

Harold  ii  ii  781 

Queen  Mary  i  v  355 

Becket  ii  ii  144 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  123- 

I  iv  176. 

I  V  136 
u  i  78 

II  i  153 
II  i  155 

n  ii  265 
n  ii  271, 
11  ii  341 
„  n  iii  34( 

HI  iii  22 


i 


Speak 


1083 


Spiritual 


Speak  (continued)    You  brawl  beyond  the  question 
s,  Lord  Legate ! 

S,  friend  Bonner,  And  tell  this  learned  Legate 

Nay,  God's  passion,  before  me  !  5  ! 

till  it  spells  and  s's  Quite  other  than  at  first. 

May  Simon  Renard  s  a  single  word  ? 
■         to  s  a  single  word  That  could  not  be  forgiven. 

Yourselves  shall  hear  him  s.    S,  Master  Cranmer, 

After  the  vanish'd  voice,  and  s  to  men. 

see,  see,  I  s  of  him  in  the  past. 
,         even  while  I  s  There  lurks  a  silent  dagger. 

Low,  my  lute ;  s  low,  my  lute. 

And  may  not  s  for  hours. 

When  he  we  s  of  drove  the  window  back, 

but  I  s  from  mine  own  self,  not  him ; 

letting  the  wild  brook  S  for  us — 

— they  camiot  s — for  awe ; 

s  him  sweetly,  he  will  hear  thee. 

in  NoiTnanland  God  s's  thro'  abler  voices. 

Did  not  Heaven  s  to  men  in  dreams  of  old  ? 

He'll  s  for  himself  !     Hold  thine  own,  if  thou  canst ! 

S  for  thy  mother's  sake,  and  tell  me  tioie. 

Obey  him,  s  him  fair, 

Is  it  not  better  still  to  s  the  truth  ? 

0  s  him  fair,  Harold,  for  thine  own  sake. 
Oh  no,  no— s  him  fair  ! 
thou  be  my  vice-king  in  England.     S. 
When  all  the  world  hath  learnt  to  s  the  tiiith, 
If  one  may  dare  to  s  the  truth. 
We  never — oh  !  good  Morcar,  s  for  us, 
And,  when  again  red-blooded,  s  again ; 

1  s  alter  my  fancies,  for  I  am  a  Troubadour, 
he  s's  to  a  noble  as  tho'  he  were  a  churl. 
And  all  that  s  for  them  anathema. 
Do  thou  s  first. 

To  s  without  stammering  and  like  a  free  man  ? 
Who  misuses  a  dog  would  misuse  a  child — they 

cannot  s  for  themselves — 
S  only  of  thy  love. 

He  s's  As  if  it  were  a  cake  of  gingerbread, 
and  to  s  truth,  night  at  the  end  of  our  last  cioist, 
and  not  s  till  I  was  spoke  to, 
bad  me  whatever  I  saw  not  to  s  one  word, 
not  to  s  one  worti,  for  that's  the  rule  o'  the  garden, 
tho'  I  shouldn't  s  one  word, 
tho'  I  be  sworn  not  to  s  a  word,  I  can  tell  you  all 

about  her. 
That  I  would  s  with  you  once  more  alone. 
Did  the  King  S  of  the  customs  ? 
You  have  wrong'd  Fitzurse.     I  s  not  of  myself. 
— I  have  still  thy  leave  to  s. 
Can  I  s  with  you  Alone,  my  father? 
Then  s ;  this  is  my  other  self. 
Better  perhaps  to  s  with  them  apart. 
S  with  them  privately  on  this  hereafter. 
As  I  shall  s  again. 

I  pray  you  for  one  moment  stay  and  s. 
Some  friends  of  mine  would  s  with  me  without, 
no  more  power  than  other  oracles  To  s  directly. 

Phoebe.     Will  you  s  to  him,  The  messenger 

from  Synorix 
Did  not  this  man  S  well  ? 

Nor  s  I  now  too  mightily,  being  King  And  happy  ! 
These  are  strange  words  to  s  to  Artemis. 
S  freely,  tho'  to  call  a  madman  mad 
Can  I  s  with  the  Count  ? 
won't  you  s  with  the  old  woman  first, 
yet  to  s  white  truth,  my  good  old  mother, 
Can  I  not  s  with  you  once  more  alone  ? 
You  s  like  love,  and  yet  you  love  me  not. 
No  more,  but  s.     Giovanna.     I  will. 
And  s  for  him  after — you  that  are  so  clever ! 
(S  not  so  loudly ;  that  must  be  your  sister. 
Did  you  s,  Philip  ? 
^        Is  not  this  To  s  too  pitilessly  of  the  dead  ? 


Queen  Mary  ill  iv  98 

III  iv  270 

HI iv  286 

III  V  36 

III  vi  121 

III  vi  126 

IV  iii  110 
IV  iii  164 
IV  iii  422 

V  ii  215 

V  ii  367 
vii406 

V  ii  464 
V  iii  41 

V  v92 

Harold  i  i  32 

„      I  i 116 

„      I i 167 

I  ii  94 

„       II  i  79 

„   nii271 

„  iiii317 

„  iiii373 

„  iiii395 

„  Iiii413 

„  iiii636 

„     III  i  68 

„    IV  i 108 

„    IV  i  216 

„  IV  iii  208 

Becket,  Pro.  346 

„       Pro.  454 

I  i  171 

„  I  iv  1 

»  I  iv  7 


I  iv  110 

II  i  179 
n  i  229 

III  i  113 
III  i  120 
III  i  133 
III  i  137 
111  i  154 

III  i  205 
„  III  iii  40 
„       III  iii  333 

IV  ii  328 
„           V  ii  45 

V  ii  69 
„  V  ii  73 

V  ii  310 

V  ii  419 

V  ii  517 

V  ii  525 
The  Cup  I  ii  203 


u35 

II  92 

II  237 

II  326 

The  Falcon  81 

179 

182 

503 

688 

782 

814 

Prom,  of  May  i  619 

I  726 

I  748 

II  461 


Speak  {continued)     will  you  not  s  with  Father  to-day  ?   Prom,  of  May  iii  23T 
Can't  I  s  like  a  lady ;  pen  a  letter  like  a  lady ;  ,;  in  301 

and  he  wants  to  s  to  ye  partic'lar.  „  iii  351 

What  ails  you?     Harold.     S.  „  iii  662 

and  s  small  to  'em,  and  not  scare  'em  Foresters  i  i  100 

1  will  s  with  her.  „         i  i  306 

so  that  you  keep  the  cowl  down  and  s  not  ?  „  i  ii  22 

nor  to  s  word  to  anyone,  „        i  ii  237 

We  old  hags  should  be  bribed  to  s  truth,  ,,       11  i  237 

S  straight  out,  crookback.  „       11  i  270 

I  beseech  you  all  to  s  lower.  „       11  i  334 

S  but  one  word  not  only  of  forgiveness,  „       11  i  610 

S  to  me,  1  am  like  a  boy  now  going  to  be  whipt ;  „        11  ii  49 

S  to  me,  Kate,  and  say  you  pardon  me  !    Kate.    I 

never  will  s  word  to  thee  again.  „        11  ii  53 

How  much  ?  how  much  ?     S,  or  the  arrow  flies.  „         iii  278 

<S  not.     I  wait  upon  a  dying  father.  „         iv  610 

If  a  cat  may  look  at  a  king,  may  not  a  friar  s  to  one  ?        „         iv  922 

Speaker     It  would  have  burnt  both  s's.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  164 

for  thou  Art  known  a  s  of  the  truth,  Harold  11  ii  517 

Speakest     Thou  s  of  the  enemy  of  thy  king.  Queen  Mary  i  v  327 

Thou  s  like  a  fool  or  a  woman.  Foresters  i  i  203 

Thou  standest  straight.     Thou  s  manlike.  „       11  i  409 

Speaking     I  can  forespeak  your  s.  Queen  Mary  1  v  137 

or  by  s  aught  Which  might  impugn  or  prejudice  „       in  iii  132 

not  half  s  The  language  of  the  land.  Becket  n  i  136 

I  was  s  with  Your  father,  asking  Prom,  of  May  in  491 

Spear     not  S  into  pruning-hook- —  Harold  v  i  442 

Spear-head    Mark'd  how  the  s-h  sprang,  „  iv  iii  158 

Sped     And  1  s  hither  with  what  haste  Queen  Mary  11  iv  77 

Speech     after  some  slight  s  about  the  Sheriff  Foresters  n  i  114 

Speechify     and  we'll  git  'im  to  s  for  us  arter  dinner.       Prom,  of  May  i  440 

Speed     That  sun  may  God  s  !  Harold  in  i  72 

Must  s  you  to  your  bower  at  once.  Becket  i  i  291 

Speedwell     Bluebell,  harebell,  s,  bluebottle,  Prom,  of  May  i  97 

Spell  (s)     Eva's  eyes  thro'  hers — A  s  upon  me  !  „  n  643 

Weary — weary  As  tho'  a  s  were  on  me.  Foresters  11  ii  115 

Spell  (verb)    loons  That  cannot  s  Esaias  from  St.  Paul,  Queen  Mary  in  i  281 

till  it  s's  and  speaks  Quite  other  than  at  first.  „  in  v  36 

old  hag  tho'  I  be,  I  can  s  the  hand.  Foresters  n  i  -351 

Spend     For  she  shall  s  her  honeymoon  with  me.  „         iv  757 

Spent     like  a  butterfly  in  a  chrysalis,  You  s  your  life ;    Queen  Alary  i  iv  52 

1  s  thrice  that  in  fortifying  his  castles.  Becket  1  iii  632 

s  all  your  last  Saturday's  wages  at  the  ale-house ;   Prom,  of  May  in  78 

Spice     Some  s  of  wisdom  in  my  telling  you.  Queen  Mary  n  iv  134 

A  s  of  Satan,  ha !  „  in  iv  77 

fling  in  the  s's,  Nard,  Cinnamon,  The  Cup  n  183 

Spiced     I  know  your  Norman  cookery  is  so  s,  Harold  11  ii  811 

Spice-islands     And  all  the  fair  s-i's  of  the  East.  Queen  Mary  v  i  49 

Spider     Crost  and  recrost,  a  venomous  s's  web —  Becket  11  i  199 

Then  I  would  drop  from  the  casement,  Uke  a  s.  Foresters  1  i  317 

Spied     had  Howard  s  me  there  And  made  them  speak.  Queen  Mary  11  iii  32 

s  my  people's  ways ;  Becket  i  iii  363 

1  never  s  in  thee  one  gleam  of  grace.  „      v  ii  474 

Spilt     the  cow  kick'd,  ana  all  her  milk  was  s.  Queen  Mary  in  v  267 

Spin     these  poor  hands  but  sew,  S,  broider —  Harold  iv  iii  11 

Spine    My  old  crook'd  s  would  bud  out  „        in  i  24 

Spire     parson  from  his  own  s  swung  out  dead.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  375 

s  of  Holy  Church  may  prick  the  graves —  Becket  i  iii  553 

Spiring     0  tower  s  to  the  sky.  Prom,  of  May  m  203 

Spirit     If  Cranmer's  s  were  a  mockiiig  one,  Queen  Alary  v  ii  210 

like  a  s  in  Hell  who  skips  and  flies  Harold  i  i  10 

some  familiar  s  must  have  help'd  him.  „  n  ii  677 

s  of  the  twelve  Apostles  enter'd  Into  thy  making.  Becket  i  i  50 

and  mortify  thy  flesh.  Not  s —  „  i  iii  541 

talk  not  of  cows.     You  anger  the  s.  Foresters  ii  i  330 

Spiritual     We,  the  Lords  S  and  Temporal,  Queen  Mary  ni  iii  113 

A  soldier's,  not  a  s  arm.    Henry.    1  lack  a  soldier, 

Thomas—  .  Becket,  Pro.  255 

that  sweet  other-world  smile  which  will  be  reflected 

in  the  s  body  among  the  angels.  „       Pro.  397 

And  on  a  matter  wholly  s.  „  i  iii  85 

striving  still  to  break  or  bind  The  s  giant  with  our 

island  laws  And  customs,  „      iv  ii  444 

Fasts,  disciplines  that  clear  the  s  eye,  „  v  i  42- 


Spiritos 


1084 


Squire 


Spiritos    Salva  FUi,  Salva  S,  Harold  v  i  469 

Spit    S  them  like  larks  for  aught  I  care.  Qtieen  Mary  i  v  395 

Dare-devils,  that  would  eat  fire  and  s  it  out  „          iii  i  156 

Spital  (hospital)     I  ha'  nine  darters  i'  the  s  that  be  dead        Becket  i  iv  250 

Spite  (s)    »S  of  her  tears  her  father  forced  it  on  her.  Queen  Mary  i  v  495 

iS  of  Lord  Paget  and  Lord  William  Howard,  „         iii  i  324 

Sir  Henry  Bedingfield  May  spUt  it  for  a  5.  „          m  v  48 

S  of  your  melancholy  Sir  Nicholas,  „         v  ii  327 

I  never  found  he  bore  me  any  s.  „         v  ii  474 

S  of  this  grisly  star  ye  three  must  gall  Harold  i  i  418 

glad  to  wreak  our  s  on  the  rosefaced  minion  Becket,  Pro.  529 

And  mean  to  keep  them,  In  s  of  thee  !  „        i  iii  143 

S,  ignorance,  envy.  Yea,  honesty  too,  „         ii  i  100 

mix  our  s's  And  private  hates  with  our  defence  „          v  ii  51 

quarrels  with  themselves,  their  s's  at  Home,  The  Cup  i  i  91 

S  of  ten  thousand  brothers,  Federigo.  The  Fakon  898 

he  be  fit  to  bust  hissen  wi'  s's  and  jalousies.  Prom,  of  May  ii  165 

Spite  (verb)     I  wear  it  then  to  s  her.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  78 

Spiteful     Elf,  with  s  heart  and  eye.  Talk  of  jealousy  ?        Foresters  u  ii  172 

Spiteful-like    '  Coomly  to  look  at,'  says  she — but  she 

said  it  s-l.  Prom,  of  May  1 180 
Spitting    See  A-spitting 
Splendid    and  among  them  Courtenay,  to  be  made  Earl 

of  Devon,  of  royal  blood,  of  s  feature.  Queen  Mary  i  i  111 
I  shall  judge  with  my  own  eyes  whether  her  Grace 

incline  to  this  s  scion  of  Plantagenet.  „          i  i  135 

Good,  was  it  s  ?  „         in  i  49 

you  couldn't  have  more  s  weather.  Prom,  of  May  n  48 

Splendour    Came  with  a  sudden  s,  shout,  and  show,  Queen  Mary  in  i  449 

by  the  s  of  God,  no  guest  of  mine.  Harold  ii  ii  25 

scarce  touch'd  or  tasted  The  s's  of  our  Court.  „    ii  ii  175 

by  the  s  of  God — have  I  fought  men  Like  Harold  „     v  ii  177 

secular  s's,  and  a  favourer  Of  players,  Becket  i  i  78 

lest  the  crown  should  be  Shorn  of  ancestral  s.  „  i  iii  157 

Rather  than  dim  the  s  of  liis  crown  „  v  ii  343 

Thou  seem'st  a  saintly  s  out  from  heaven,  Foresters  ii  i  606 

Splinter'd    are  sliver'd  ofE  and  s  by  Their  lightning —  Harold  v  i  540 

Split  (s)     I  hate  a  s  between  old  friendships  Becket  n  ii  380 

ft)lit  (verb)    Sir  Heniy  Bedingfield  May  s  it  for  a  spite.  Queen  Mary  in  v  48 

whose  quick  flash  s's  The  mid-sea  mast.  The  Cup  ii  292 

Spoil  (s)     To  make  free  s  and  havock  of  your  goods.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  186 

safe  from  all  The  s  and  sackage  aim'd  „           ii  ii  248 

Spoil  (verb)     thou  hast  taught  the  king  to  s  him  too ;  Harold  i  i  451 

We  never  hounded  on  the  State  at  home  To  s  the  Church.    Becket  ii  ii  97 

Yea,  let  a  stranger  s  his  heritage,  „    ii  ii  258 

No — no  gold.    Mother  says  gold  s's  all.  „      iv  i  43 

To  foil  and  s  the  tyrant  Foresters  n  i  11 

Spoil'd-Spoilt    Now  the  spoilt  child  sways  both.  Harold  i  i  453 

Had  I  been  by,  I  would  have  spoil'd  his  horn.  „       i  ii  73 

You  have  spoilt  the  farce.  Becket  iv  ii  337 

We  spoil'd  the  prior,  friar,  abbot,  monk.  Foresters  in  167 

Spoke    (See  also  Spake)    she  s  even  of  Northumberland 

pitifully,  Queen  Mary  i  i  92 

I  thought  of  you,  my  liege,  Ev'n  as  I  s.  „         in  ii  96 

What  traitor  s  ?     Here,  let  my  cousin  Pole  „         v  ii  243 

He  s  of  this ;  and  unto  liim  you  owe  „          v  iii  29 

And  he  5 !     I  heard  him —  Harold  ii  ii  352 

Who  s  ?     Beggar.     Nobody,  my  lord.  Becket  I  iv  134 

I  s  of  late  to  the  boy,  he  answer'd  me,  „         n  ii  5 
and  not  speak  till  I  was  s  to,  and  I  answered  for  myself 

that  I  never  s  more  than  was  needed,  „     m  i  120 

out  of  those  scraps  and  shreds  Filippo  s  of.  The  Falcon  148 

brooding  Upon  a  great  unhappiness  when  you  s.  Prom,  of  May  ii  384 

I  s  of  your  names,  Allen,  „             m  35 

Spokem    {See  also  Civil-spoken)    wish  fulfill'd  before 

the  word  Was  *,  Queen  Mary  i  iv  234 

I  scarce  have  s  with  you  Since  when  ? —  „          iv  ii  118 

saying  s  once  By  Him  that  was  the  truth,  „         iv  iii  202 

I  take  it  that  the  King  hath  s  to  you ;  „            v  iii  85 

I  have  not  s  to  the  king  One  word ;  Harold  v  i  334 

There  have  I  s  true  ?  Becket  ii  i  119 

You  have  s  to  the  peril  of  your  life  ?  „      v  ii  516 

WeU  s,  wife.    Synorix.    Madam,  so  well  I  yield.  The  Cup  i  ii  171 

He  hath  s  truth  in  a  world  of  lies.  Foresters  ni  211 

Search  them,  Kate,  and  see  if  they  have  s  truth.  „        in  289 


Spoken  {continued) 

s  truth. 
Spoon     What  is  it,  Filippo. 

Count.    S's ! 


Robin,  he  hath  no  more.    He  hath 
Filippo.     S's  your  lordship. 


wasn't  ray  lady  bom  with  a  golden  s  in  her  ladyship's 

mouth. 
Have  we  not  half  a  score  of  silver  s's  ? 

Sport    And  heard  these  two,  there  might  be  s  for  him. 
Co-mates  we  were,  and  had  our  s  together, 
'  As  flies  to  the  Gods  ;  they  kill  us  for  their  s.' 
It  is  Nature  kiUs,  And  not  for  her  s  either, 
your  free  s's  have  swallow'd  my  free  hour. 

Spotless    White  as  the  light,  the  s  bride  of  Christ, 


Foresters  iv  181 
The  Falcon  398 


401 

406 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  213 

Becket  n  ii  121 

Prom,  of  May  i  265 

I  273 

Foresters  iv  339 

Queen  Mary  iii  iv  199 


Spousal    (the  s  ring  whereof,  Not  ever  to  be  laid  aside, 

I  wear  Upon  this  finger),  „  ii  ii  165 

Spouse    The  s  of  the  Great  King,  thy  King,  hath  fallen —   Becket  in  iii  175 

Sprang    Mark'd  how  the  spear-head  s,  Harold  iv  iii  158 

They  say  that  Rome  S  from  a  wolf.  The  Cup  i  ii  14 

Spread    {See  also  Wide-spread)    Stand  on  the  deck 

and  s  his  wings  for  sail !  Queen  Mary  i  v  379 

so  the  plague  Of  schism  s's  ;  „      in  iv  172 

ever  s  into  the  man  Here  in  our  silence  ?  Becket  in  i  22 

they  s  their  raiment  down  Before  me — ■  „     v  ii  368 

if  the  fever  s,  the  parish  will  have  to  thank  you 

for  it.  Prom,  of  May  ni  46 

Our  feast  is  yonder,  s  beneath  an  oak.  Foresters  iv  189 

Spreading    See  A-spreading 

Sprig    if  I  hadn't  a  s  o'  wickentree  sewn  into  my  dress,       Foresters  n  i  249 
Spring  (fountain)     the  s  Of  all  those  evils  that  have 

flow'd  Queen  Mary  in  iv  233 

midriff-shaken  even  to  tears,  as  s's  gush  out  after 
earthquakes — 
Spring  (season)     Her  life  was  winter,  for  her  s  was 
nipt : 
They  are  but  of  s,  They  fly  the  winter  change — 
By  all  the  leaves  of  s, 
For  now  is  the  s  of  the  year. 
Spring  (verb)     there  s's  to  light  That  Centaur 
char  us  back  again  into  the  dust  We  s  from, 
when  he  s's  And  maims  himself  against  the  bars, 
Tostig,  thou  look'st  as  thou  wouldst  s  upon  him, 
be  those  I  fear  who  prick'd  the  lion  To  make  him  s 
Ay,  there  s's  a  Saxon  on  him, 
S's  from  the  loneliness  of  my  poor  bower. 
By  all  the  deer  that  s  Thro'  wood  and  lawn 
Spring-and-winter    Must  come  to  in  our  s-a-w  world 
Springe     We  hold  our  Saxon  woodcock  in  the  5, 


Becket  iii  iii  162 

Queen  Mary  v  v  269 
Harold  in  ii  96 
Foresters  ill  439 
IV  17 
Queen  Mary  in  iv  161 
„  in  V  56 

V  V  66 
Harold  i  i  394 
„     IV  iii  96 
„      V  i  498 
Becket  in  i  40 
Foresters  ill  424 
Prom,  of  May  in  510 
Harold  ii  ii  2 
Spring-tide    whisper  to  the  roar  Of  a  s-t.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  188 

Sprout  (s)     bastard  s,  My  sister,  is  far  fairer  than  myself.     „  i  v  71 

~  "  The  Falcon  149 


Sprout  (verb)     There  s's  a  salad  in  the  garden  still. 
Sprung    They  must  have  s  like  Ghosts  from 

underground, 
Spurn'd     If  hearing,  would  have  s  her  ; 
Spy  (s)     We  have  our  spies  abroad  to  catch 

From  spies  of  thine  to  spy  my  nakedness 

The  Romans  sent  me  here  a  s  upon  you. 
Spy  (verb)     s  not  out  our  game  Too  early. 

I  s  the  rock  beneath  the  smiling  sea. 

to  s  my  nakedness  In  my  poor  North  ! 

Lest  thy  fierce  Tostig  s  me  out  alone, 

I  can  s  already  A  strain  of  hard  and  headstrong 

my  friends  may  s  him  And  slay  him  as  he  runs. 

Didn't  I  s  'em  a-sitting  i'  the  woodbine  harbour 
togither  ? 

Dobbins,  or  some  other,  s  Edgar  in  Harold  ? 

but  softly,  lest  they  s  thee,  friar  ! 
Squad  (mud)     Thruf  slush  an'  s  When  roads  was  bad. 
Squeamish    so  thou  be  S  at  eating  the  King's  venison. 
Squeezed    I  stand  so  s  among  the  crowd 

that  hath  s  out  this  side-smile  upon  Canterbury, 
whereof  may  come  conflagration. 
Squint    from  the  s  Of  lust  and  glare  of  malice. 
Squire    The  Queen  of  England — or  the  Kentish  S  ? 

S  ! — if  so  be  you  be  a  s. 

you  be  a  pretty  s.    I  ha'  fun'  ye  out,  I  hev. 


Foresters  iv  592 

Becket  iv  ii  346 

Queen  Mary  i  v  467 

Harold  i  i  351 

The  Cup  I  ii  220 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  173 

I  iv  278 

Harold  i  i  351 

„     IV  i 190 

Becket,  Pro.  233 

The  Cup  I  ii  391 

Prom,  of  May  1 124 

n  674 

Foresters  n  i  438 

Prom,  of  May  ii  309 

Foresters  iv  194  , 

Queen  Mary  in  i  238 

Becket  in  iii  56 
r  i  312 
Queen  Mary  n  ii  270  | 
Prom,  of  May  i  457  * 
n689 


Squire 


1085 


Star 


Squire  (continued)    I  left  mine  horse  and  armour  with  a  S,     Foresters  iv  415 

Squirrel    The  tawny  s  vaulting  thro'  the  boughs,  „     i  iii  117 

your  woodland  s  sees  the  nut  Behind  the  shell,  „      ii  i  646 

Stab  (s)     practise  on  my  life.  By  poison,  fire,  shot,  s —  Queen  Mary  i  iv  285 
if  our  person  be  secured  From  traitor  s's — •  „         v  v  281 

Then  with  one  quick  short  s — eternal  peace.  The  Cup  i  iii  124 

Stab  (verb)     S  me  in  fancy,  hissing  Spain  and  Philip  ;     Queen  Mary  i  v  150 
That  I  could  s  her  standing  -there  !  Harold  v  i  365 

Steady  enough  to  s  him  !  The  Cup  u  213 

Stabb'd     To  marry  him  who  s  her  Sinnatus.  „  ii  23 

and  my  grandsire  s  him  there.  The  Falcon  252 

Stack     when  you  put  it  in  green,  and  your  s  caught  fire.    Prom,  of  May  u  56 

Staff    (See  also  Cross-staS)     by  God's  providence  a 

good  stout  s  Lay  near  me  ;  Qite«n  Mary  v  ii  468 

Stafford  (Sir  Thomas)    (See  also  Thomas  Stafford)    S,  I 

am  a  sad  man  and  a  serious.  „  iii  i  41 

Stag    They  slew  my  s's  in  mine  own  manor  here,  Becket  v  ii  438 

The  s  is  there  ?     Maid.    Seen  in  the  thicket  The  Cup  i  i  112 

Hillo,  the  s  !     What,  you  are  all  unfumish'd  ?  „       i  i  205 

my  good  fellow,  My  arrow  struck  the  s.  „        i  ii  28 

we  will  not  quarrel  about  the  s.  „        i  ii  39 

would  have  chased  the  s  to-day  In  the  full  face  „      i  ii  267 

Have  let  him  hunt  the  s  with  you  to-day.     Sinnatus. 
I  warrant  you  now,  he  said  he  struck  the  s.     Camma. 


Why  no,  he  never  touched  upon  the  s 

You  will  believe  Now  that  he  never  struck  the  s — 

if  we  kill  a  s,  our  dogs  have  their  paws  cut  off. 

He  met  a  s  there  on  so  narrow  a  ledge — 

for  their  sake  who  s  betwixt  thine  Appeal, 

nor  our  Archbishop  S  on  the  slope  decks 

if  you  boxed  the  Pope's  ears  with  a  purse,  you 
might  s  him, 
Stagger'd     Not  s  by  this  ominous  earth  and  heaven : 
Staggering    who  could  trace  a  hand  So  wild  and  s  ? 
Stain'd    from  the  street  jS  with  the  mire  thereof. 

you  Would  find  it  s —     Count.     Silence,  Elisabetta  ! 
Elisabetta.     S  with  the  blood  of  the  best  heart 
Stainless    To  purchase  for  Himself  a  s  bride  ; 
Stake  (a  post)     the  thimibscrew,  the  s,  the  fire. 

Or — if  the  Lord  God  will  it — on  the  s. 

I  will  show  fire  on  my  side — s  and  fire — 

To  bring  the  heretic  to  the  s, 

Yet  others  are  that  dare  the  s  and  fire, 

And  that  myself  was  fasten'd  to  the  s. 

Have  found  a  real  presence  in  the  s, 

another  recantation  Of  Crarmier  at  the  s. 

chain.  Wherewith  they  bound  him  to  the  s, 

blood  and  sweat  of  heretics  at  the  s 
Stake  (a  wager)    And  the  s's  high  ? 

no  such  gamester  As,  having  won  the  s, 
State    And  customs,  made  me  for  the  moment  proud 

Ev'n  of  that  s  Church-bond 
Stalk     From  off  the  s  and  trample  it  in  the  mire, 
Stamford-bridge    on  the  Derwent  ?  ay  At  S-b. 

On  to  S-b  ! 

I  fought  another  fight  than  this  Of  S-b. 

What's  Brunanburg  To  S-b  ? 

middle  of  that  fierce  fight  At  S-b. 

Many  are  fallen  At  S-b.  .  .  . 

To  tell  thee  thou  shouldst  win  at  S-b, 
Stammer'd    when  she  touch'd  on  thee.  She  s  in  her  hate  ; 
Stammering    To  speak  without  s  and  like  a  free  man  ? 
Stamp    *S'  out  the  fire,  or  this  Will  smoulder 

and  a  foot  to  s  it  .  .  .  Flat 


„      I  ii  379 

„      I  ii  430 

Foresters  iv  225 

IV  531 

Becket  i  iii  621 

„     II  ii  106 

„     iiii371 

Harold  I  i  207 

The  Falcon  439 

Becket  i  iii  691 


The  Falcon  664 

Queen  Mary  iii  iii  205 

II  i  201 

II  i  251 
HI  i  327 

III  iv  9 

III  iv  167 
iviiS 

IV  ii  142 
rv  iii  300 

IV  iii  596 
vilOl 

I  iii  146 
The  Cup  I  iii  146 


Becket  iv  ii  447 

Foresters  i  ii  110 

Harold  iv  i  255 

IV  ii  82 

IV  iii  25 

IV  iii  144 

IV  iii  185 

IV  iii  215 

vi236 

Iii  37 

Becket  i  iv  7 

Queen  Mary  i  v  507 

Harold  v  ii  193 


I  ha'  heard  'im  a-gawin'  on  'ud  make  your  'air — 


God  bless  it ! — s  on  end. 
Stand     (See  also  Stan')     S  back,  keep  a  clear  lane  ! 
your  name  S's  first  of  those  who  sign'd 
S  first  it  may,  but  it  was  written  last : 
s  within  the  porch,  and  Christ  with  me  : 
S  from  me.     If  Elizabeth  lose  her  head — 
S  further  off,  or  you  may  lose  your  head. 
Some  settled  ground  for  peace  to  s  upon. 
8  on  the  deck  and  spread  his  wings  for  sail ! 
with  your  lawful  Prince  S  fast  against 


Prom,  of  May  1 135 
Queen  Mary  i  i  1 
Iii  17 
iii  20 
Iii  51 
I  iii  87 

I  iv  128 
IV  315 
IV  379 

II  ii  242 


Stand  (continued)     The  Queen  s's  up,  and  speaks  for 

her  own  self  ;  Queen  Mary  n  ii  341 

I  dare  avouch  you'd  s  up  for  yourself,  „           n  ii  360 

they  will  s  by  us  If  Ludgate  can  be  reach'd  „            n  iii  52 

Had  holpen  Richard's  tottering  throne  to  s,  „           in  i  115 

I  5  so  squeezed  among  the  crowd  I  cannot  lift  „           in  i  238 

S  staring  at  me  !  shout,  you  gaping  rogue  !  „          m  i  288 

Do  ye  s  fast  by  that  which  ye  resolved  ?  „        m  iii  103 

Paget,  You  s  up  here  to  fight  for  heresy,  „          in  iv  92 

He  knows  not  where  he  s's,  „        m  iv  420 

than  to  s  On  naked  self-assertion.  „           iv  i  119 

ever  see  a  carrion  crow  S  watching  a  sick  beast  „            iv  iii  7 

There  s's  a  man,  once  of  so  high  degree,  „           iv  iii  68 

To  s  at  ease,  and  stare  as  at  a  show,  „         iv  iii  292 

s  behind  the  pillar  here  ;  „         iv  iii  462 

She  s's  between  you  and  the  Queen  of  Scots.  „  v  i  192 
there  is  one  Death  s's  behind  the  Groom,  And  there 

is  one  Death  s's  behind  the  Bride —  „           v  ii  165 

Who  s's  the  nearest  to  her.  „           v  ii  416 

not  courtly  to  s  helmeted  Before  the  Queen.  „             v  v  35 

Then  here  she  s's  !  my  homage.  „           v  v  253 

S  by  me  then,  and  look  upon  my  face,  Harold  i  i  25 

S  by  him,  mine  old  friend,  „      i  i  112 

S  thou  by  him  !  „      i  i  118 

thou  didst  s  by  her  and  give  her  thy  crabs,  „       n  i  49 

S  out  of  earshot  then,  „    ii  ii  240 

S  there  and  wait  my  will.  „    n  ii  682 

crying  To  a  moimtain  '  S  aside  and  room  for  me  ! '  „  iv  iii  130 

tell  him  we  s  arm'd  on  Senlac  Hill,  „       v  i  59 

I  can  see  it  From  where  we  s  :  „     v  i  463 

He  s's  between  the  banners  with  the  dead  „     v  i  656 

high  altar  S  where  their  standard  fell  ...  „    v  ii  140 

I  s  and  see  The  rift  that  runs  between  me  Becket  i  i  139 

And  that  would  shake  the  Papacy  as  it  s's.  „      i  iii  214 

I  refuse  to  s  By  the  King's  censure,  „     i  iii  722 

Who  s's  aghast  at  her  eternal  self  „     n  ii  404 

nor  any  ground  but  English,  Where  his  cathedral  s's.  „  m  iii  262 

Come  hither,  man  ;  s  there.  „    rv  ii  219 

s  beside  thee  One  who  might  grapple  with  thy  dagger,  „    iv  ii  228 

Sluggards  and  fools,  why  do  you  s  and  stare  ?  „       v  i  256 

s  Clothed  with  the  full  authority  of  Rome,  „     v  ii  492 

Why  do  you  s  so  silent,  brother  John  ?  „      v  ii  535 

Some  would  s  by  you  to  the  death.  „     v  ii  605 

S  by,  make  way  !  „      v  iii  67 

S  aside,  S  aside  ;  here  she  comes  !  The  Cv/p  i  i  104 

S  apart.  „  i  ii  317 
How  gracefully  there  she  s's  Weeping—                     Prom,  of  May  i  735 

to  s  between  me  and  your  woman,  Kate.  Foresters  i  i  304 

where  twelve  Can  s  upright,  nor  touch  each  other.  „       m  310 

I  5  up  here,  thou  there.  „       iv  261 

The  Holy  Virgin  S  by  the  strongest.  „       iv  265 

Standard    Advance  our  S  of  the  Warrior,  Harold  rv  i  248 

He  lies  not  here  :  not  close  beside  the  s.  „       v  ii  57 

high  altar  Stand  where  their  s  fell  ...  „  v  ii  140 
As  once  he  bore  the  s  of  the  Angles,  So  now  he  bears 

the  s  of  the  angels.  Becket  i  iii  494 

Standest    Thou  s  straight.    Thou  speakest  manlike.  Foresters  ii  i  408 

Standing    dash  The  torch  of  war  among  your  s  com,  Harold  ii  ii  749 
No  Norman  horse  Can  shatter  England,  s  shield  by 

shield ;  ,,       v  i  196 

That  I  could  stab  her  s  there  !  „  v  i  365 
I  cannot  tell,  tho'  s  in  her  presence.  Prom,  of  May  ii  557 
s  up  side  by  side  with  me,  and  singing  the  same  hymn  ?      „         ni  181 

StandstUI    my  bishop  Hath  brought  your  king  to  a  s.  Becket,  Pro.  44 
Star     At  his  coming  Your  s  will  rise.     Mary.    My  s  !     Queen  Mary  i  v  411 

What  s  ?     Eenard.     Your  s  will  be  your  princely  son,     „  i  v  415 


He  comes,  and  my  s  rises. 

fieriest  partisans — are  pale  Before  my  s  ! 

which  is  their  doom  Before  my  s  ! 

The  King  is  here  ! — My  s,  my  son  ! 

a  s  beside  the  moon  Is  all  but  lost ; 

Would  nor  for  all  the  s's  and  maiden  moon 

Fair  island  s  !     Elizabeth.     I  shine  ! 

s  That  dances  in  it  as  mad  with  agony  ! 

Spite  of  this  grisly  s  ye  three  must  gall 


in  n  167 
III  ii  171 
m  ii  176 
in  ii  184 
vi79 

V  ii  455 

V  iii  15 
Harold  i  i  8 

„  1 1418 


I 


star 


1086 


Staying 


Star  (coiUinued)     the  lark  sings,  the  sweet  s's  come  and  go,   Harold  ii  ii  434 
banner.  Blaze  like  a  night  of  fatal  s's  „       iv  i  251 

shine  Less  than  a  s  among  the  goldenest  hours  „       iv  iii  51 

Dream'd  that  twelve  s's  fell  glittering  out  of  heaven  Becket  i  i  46 

cowling  and  clouding  up  That  fatal  s,  thy  Beauty,  „     i  i  312 

Her  crypt  among  the  s's.  „   i  iii  555 

And  shriek  to  all  the  saints  among  the  s's  :  „  iv  ii  240 

I  fling  all  that  upon  my  fate,  my  s.  The  Cup  i  iii  27 

twin  sister  of  the  morning  s,  Forelead  the  sun.  „       i  iii  45 

This  shield-home  patriot  of  the  morning  s  „         ii  122 

with  that  red  s  between  the  ribs,  „         n  150 

A  houseless  head  beneath  the  sun  and  s's,  Foresters  ii  i  65 

Starched    That  strange  s  stiff  creature,  Little  John,  the 

Earl's  man.  „        i  j  183 

Stare    Sluggards  and  fools,  why  do  you  stand  and  s  ?  Becket  y  i  257 

To  stand  at  ease,  and  s  as  at  a  show.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  292 

Philip  shall  not  S  in  upon  me  in  my  haggardness  ;  „  v  v  177 

Stops  and  s's  at  our  cottage.     Ay,  ay  !  s  at  it :  The  Falcon  162 

Stariiu;    Stand  s  at  me  !     shout,  you  gaping  rogue  !      Queen  Mary  iii  i  288 
he  stood  there  S  upon  the  himter.  The  Cup  i  ii  123 

Stark     but  s  as  death  To  those  that  cross  him. — ■  Harold  ii  ii  320 

Starting     And  gather'd  with  his  hands  the  s  flame.      Queen  Mary  iv  iii  336 

Starve    — there  to  beg,  s,  die —  Becket  ii  i  74 

but  if  you  s  me  I  be  Gaffer  Death  himself.  Foresters  i  i  48 

Starved    s,  maim'd,  flogg'd,  flay'd,  burn'd.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  209 

Famine  is  fear,  were  it  but  Of  being  s.  Harold  iv  iii  206 

State  (adj.)     {See  also  state-secret)    S  secrets  should  be 

patent  to  the  statesman  Becket,  Pro.  76 

What  matters  ?  S  matters  ?  love  matters  ?  „    Pro.  319 

State  (body  politic)     I  should  be  still  A  party  in  the  s  ;    Queen  Mary  i  iv  24 
great  party  in  the  s  Wills  me  to  wed  her.  „  i  iv  92 

as  great  a  party  in  the  s  Will  you  to  wed  me  ?  „  i  iv  95 

My  heart,  my  Loi-d,  Is  no  great  party  in  the  s  „         i  iv  102 

Spain  in  all  the  great  offices  of  s  ;  ,,  ii  i  179 

I'll  have  my  head  set  higher  in  the  s  ;  „  ii  i  250 

In  this  low  pulse  and  palsy  of  the  s,  „         ii  ii  103 

or  impair  in  any  way  This  royal  s  of  England,  „         ii  ii  230 

He  is  child  and  fool,  and  traitor  to  the  S.  „         ii  ii  404 

they  say  this  s  of  yours  Hath  no  more  mortice  „         iii  i  441 

In  our  own  name  and  that  of  all  the  s,  „       iii  iii  120 

wherefore  not  Helm  the  huge  vessel  of  your  s,  „  v  i  73 

In  all  that  handles  matter  of  the  s  I  am  the  king.  Harold  i  i  412 

We  fought  like  great  s's  for  grave  cause  ;  „        i  i  440 

lying  were  self-murder  by  that  s  Which  was  the  exception.  „       iii  i  70 
That,  were  a  man  of  s  nakedly  true,  „     iii  i  113 

King,  Church,  and  S  to  him  but  foils  wherein  Becket,  Pro.  268 

she,  whom  the  King  loves  indeed,  is  a  power  in  the  S.         „      Pro.  483 
for  he  would  murder  his  brother  the  S.  „       i  iv  190 

We  never  hounded  on  the  S  at  home  To  spoil  the  Church.  „         ii  ii  96 
puffed  out  such  an  incense  of  unctuosity  into  the 

nostrils  of  our  Gods  of  Church  and  S,  „    in  iii  116 

The  S  will  die,  the  Church  can  never  die.  „    in  iii  336 

And  the  small  s  more  cruelly  trampled  on  The  Cup  i  ii  145 

if  a  s  submit  At  once,  she  may  be  blotted  out  „      i  ii  156 

State  (condition)    But  your  own  s  is  full  of  danger  here.    Queen  Mary  i  iv  168 
in  happy  s  To  give  him  an  heir  male.  „  v  ii  572 

that  I  am  in  s  to  bring  forth  death —  „  v  ii  592 

the  s  Of  my  poor  father  puts  me  out  of  heart.        Prom,  of  May  iii  503 
s  we  all  Must  come  to  in  our  spring-and-winter  world  „         ni  509 

State  (chair  of  state)    that  anyone  Should  seize  our 

person,  occupy  our  s.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  178 

State  (verb)    Swear  and  unswear,  s  and  misstate  thy  best !     Becket  ii  ii  476 

Stated     It  is  s  there  that  these  monies  should  be  paid  Foresters  iv  506 

Statelier    while  in  Normanland  God  speaks  thro'  abler 

voices,  as  He  dwells  In  s  shrines.  Harold  i  i  168 

The  trees  are  all  the  s,  and  the  flowers  Are  all  the 
fairer.  Becket,  Pro.  115 

Stateliest    You  are  the  s  deer  in  all  the  herd —  Queen  Mary  v  ii  425 

Stateliness    Why  do  you  move  with  such  as?  Becket  v  ii  623 

Lilylike  in  her  s  and  sweetness  !  Prom,  of  May  ii  621 

Stately    '  My  young  Archbishop — thou  wouldst  make  A  s 

Archbishop  ! '  Becket  i  i  67 

Camma  the  s.  Gamma  the  great-hearted,  The  Cup  i  iii  72 

The  I  widow  has  no  heart  for  me.  The  Falcon  30 

State-policy    S-p  and  church-policy  are  conjoint,  Queen  Mary  iii  ii  73 


State-secret   (See  also  State  (adj.))  Probing  an  old  s-s —  Queen  Mary  v  ii  487 

Statesman    The  s  that  shall  jeer  and  fleer  at  men,  „          ii  ii  397 

Statesmen  that  are  wise  Shape  a  necessity,  „          in  iii  31 

Statesmen  that  are  wise  Take  truth  herself  „          in  iii  35 

State  secrets  should  be  patent  to  the  s  Becket,  Pro.  77 

and  whom  the  king  Loves  not  as  s,  „      Pro.  80 

S  not  Churchman  he.  „    Pro.  450 

that  hast  been  a  s,  couldst  thou  always  „     i  iii  237 
Statesmanship    but  in  s  To  strike  too  soon  is  oft  to 

miss  the  blow.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  71 

Statue     And  finds  you  s's.  „            ii  ii  265 

like  a  s,  Unmoving  in  the  greatness  of  the  flame,  „           iv  iii  621 

range  of  knights  Sit,  each  a  s  on  his  horse,  Harold  v  i  525 

we  prize  The  s  or  the  picture  all  the  more  Prom,  of  May  i  738 

Sheriff,  thy  friend,  this  monk,  is  but  a  s.  Foresters  i  ii  234 

Stature     Does  he  think  Low  s  is  low  nature.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  434 

lost  Somewhat  of  upright  s  tho'  mine  oath,  Harold  in  ii  56 

Statured    See  Low-statnred 

Statute     That  those  old  s's  touching  LoUardism  Queen  Mary  in  iv  7 

Before  these  bitter  s's  be  requicken'd.  „       in  iv  197 

Why  ?  that  these  s's  may  be  put  in  force,  „       in  iv  367 

that  since  these  s's  past,  „         in  vi  24 

Stave  (s)     vStrike  up  a  s,  my  mjisters,  all  is  well.  Foresters  iv  1101 

Stave  (verb)     S  off  the  crowd  upon  the  Spaniard  there.    Queen  Mary  i  iii  77 

Staved    like  enough  s  us  from  her.  Becket,  Pro.  518 

Stay    for  all  that  I  dare  not  s.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  102 


yet  s,  this  golden  chain — My  father  on  a  birthday 

for  appearance  sake,  s  with  the  Queen. 

On  over  London  Bridge  We  cannot :  s  we  cannot ; 

S's  longer  here  in  our  poor  north  than  you  : — 

I  will,  I  will ;  and  you  will  s  ? 

And  you  will  s  your  going  ? 

Then  it  is  done  ;  but  you  will  s  your  going 

should  s  Yet  for  awhile. 

Good  !     Renard,  I  will  s  then. 

but  s  a  moment ;   He  can  but  s  a  moment : 

Love  can  s  but  a  little  while.     Why  cannot  he  s  ? 

Love  will  s  for  a  whole  life  long. 

if  she  s  the  feuds  that  part  The  sons  of  Godwin 

S — as  yet  Thou  hast  but  seen  how  Norman  hands 

I  s  with  these.  Lest  thy  fierce  Tostig 

Farewell !     Harold.     Not  yet.     S. 

Tears  ?     Why  not  s  with  me  then  ? 

s  it  But  for  a  breath. 

to  s  his  hand  Before  he  flash'd  the  bolt. 

I  am  half-way  down  the  slope — will  no  man  s  me  ? 

I  s  myseK — -Puff — it  is  gone. 

if  he  move  at  all,  Heaven  s  him,  is  fain  to  diagonalise 

Should  she  s  here  ? 

Rainbow,  s,  (repeat) 

0  rainbow  s. 

1  daren't  s — I  daren't  s  ! 
Again  !  s,  fool,  and  tell  me  why  thou  fliest. 
when  we  felt  we  had  laughed  too  long  and  could  not  s 

ourselves —  „    in  iii  161 

Come,  s  with  us,  then.  Before  you  part  for  England.  „    in  iii  244 

boimd  For  that  one  hour  to  s  with  good  King  Louis,  „    ni  iii  247 

I  pray  you  for  one  moment  s  and  speak.  „       v  ii  525 

8  ! — too  near  is  death.  The  Cup  i  iii  103 

S,  s,  I  am  most  unlucky,  most  unhappy.  The  Falcon  863 

To  s — Follow  my  art  among  these  quiet  fields,  Prom,  of  May  i  742 

But  I  shall  have  to  thwack  her  if  I  s.  Foresters  i  iii  139 

my  heart  so  down  in  my  heels  that  if  I  s,  I  can't  run.  „        ii  i  347 

Young  Walter,  nay,  I  pray  thee,  s  a  moment.  „        ii  i  472 

But  go  not  yet,  s  with  us,  and  when  thy  brother —  „        ii  i  640 

S  with  us  in  this  wood,  till  he  recover.  „  n  ii  9 

S  with  us  here,  sweet  love.  Maid  Marian,  „         n  ii  13 

Shall  I  be  happy  ?     Happy  vision,  s.  „       n  ii  199 

S,  Dine  with  my  brethren  here,  „  iv  345 

but  s  with  Robin  ;  For  Robin  is  no  scatterbrains  „         iv  353 

Stay'd    should  be  s  From  passing  onward.  „         in  24J 

Staying     I  am  sicker  s  here  Than  any  sea  Queen  Mary  in  vi  86 

However,  s  not  to  count  how  many,  The  Falcon  62j  i 

You  are  s  here  ?  Prom,  of  May  ii  538!| 

Not  to-day.     What  are  you  s  for  ?  „  m  357 


I  V  525 

II  i  138 
II  iii  42 

vi24 

vil05 

v  i  185 

vi206 

vi302 

vi305 

Harold  i  ii  3 

„      I  ii  13 

„       I  ii  17 

„     I  ii  178 

„  n  ii  170 

„   IV  i 189 

„     V  i  338 

Becket  i  iv  18 

„      n  i  177 

„      n  i  273 

„     n  ii  149 

„     n  ii  150 

„     n  ii  329 

„     in  i  215 

Becket  in  i  276,  279 

Becket  in  i  283 

in  ii  27 

HI  ii  34 


I 

I 


steady 


1087 


Stolen 


How  s  it  is  !     Phoebe.     S  enough  to  stab  him  !  The  Cup  ii  212 

Steadying    S  the  tremulous  pillars  of  the  Church —        Queen  Mary  i  v  517 
Steal     Friend  Roger,  s  thou  in  among  the  crowd,  „  i  iii  37 

fear  creeps  m  at  the  front,  honesty  s's  out  at  the 

back,  Becket  iii  iii  62 

Were  it  best  to  s  away,  to  spare  myself.  Prom,  of  May  ui  718 

{See  also  A-stealin')     my  father  and  I  forgave 

you  s  our  coals.  „  m  69 

look  how  the  table  s's,  like  a  heathen  altar ;  Becket  i  iv  69 

Steam'd    S  upward  from  the  undescendible  Abysm.  Harold  i  i  14 

Steaming     In  breathless  dungeons  over  s  sewers.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  440 

Steed    Thy  high  black  s  among  the  flaming  furze, 

Steel    To  s  myself  against  the  leaving  her  ? 

Steepd    He  s  himself  In  all  the  lust  of  Rome. 

Steeple    Let  all  the  s's  clash. 

Steep-up     And  on  the  s-u  track  of  the  true  faith 

Steer  (Dora)    See  Dora,  Dora  Steer 

Steer  (Farmer)     Owd  S  wur  afeard  she  wouldn't  be 

back  i'  time 

Why  if  S  han't  haxed  schoolmaster  to  dinner, 

Hev'  ony  o'  ye  seen  Eva  ?     Dohson.     Noa,  Mr.  S. 

An'  the  saame  to  you,  Master  S,  likewise. 

But,  S,  thaw  thou  be  haale  anew 

Yeas,  yeas  !     Three  cheers  for  Mr.  S  ! 

an'  ony  o'  S's  men,  an'  ony  o'  my  men 

Owd  S's  gotten  all  his  grass  down  and  wants  a  hand, 

Owd  S  gi'es  nubbut  cowd  tea  to  'is  men. 

But  I'd  like  owd  S's  cowd  tea  better 

I  am  Sony  Mr.  S  still  continues  too  unwell  to  attend 

Milly,  my  dear,  how  did  you  leave  Mr.  S  ? 

poor  S  looks  The  very  type  of  Age  in  a  picture, 

(verb)     Cranmer,  as  the  helmsman  at  the 

helm  S's, 

Let  every  craft  that  carries  sail  and  gun  S 

toward  Calais. 
His  Holiness  cannot  «  straight  thro'  shoals. 
Steer  (youi^  ox)     The  s  wherewith  thou  plowest  thy 

field  is  cursed, 
Steering     therein  Sunk  rocks — they  need  fine  s — 
Steers  (family  of)     because  one  of  the  S's  had  planted 

it  there  in  former  times.  Prom,  of  May  iii  247 

If  it  had  killed  one  of  the  S's  there  the  other  day,  „  m  250 

The  S's  was  all  gentlefoalks  i'  the  owd  times,  „  iii  447 

The  land  belonged  to  the  S's  i'  the  owd  times,  an' 

it  belongs  to  the  S's  agean  :  „  iii  450 

We  S's  are  of  old  blood,  tho'  we  be  fallen.  „  iii  604 

I  have  heard  the  S's  Had  land  in  Saxon  times  ;  „  iii  607 

Step  (s)     S  after  s.  Thro'  many  voices  crying  Queen  Mary  i  ii  47 

seen  your  s's  a  mile  From  me  and  Lambeth  ?  „  i  ii  80 

myself  upon  the  s's.  „       iii  v  238 

No,  to  the  crypt !     Twenty  s's  down.  Becket  v  iii  78 

Not  twenty  s's,  but  one.  „      v  iii  90 

one  s  in  the  dark  beyond  Our  expectation.  The  Cup  i  i  212 

'tis  but  a  s  from  here  To  the  Temple.  „      i  ii  442 

No.  not  one  s  with  thee.     Where  is  Antonius  ?  >,       i  iii  96 

Step  (verb)     Then  shalt  thou  s  into  my  place  and  sign.  Becket  i  iii  14 

the  master  'ud  be  straange  an'  pleased  if  you'd  s 

in  fust,  Prom,  of  May  i  168 


Becket  ii  i  55 

Prom,  of  May  1  293 

The  Cup  I  ii  367 

Queen  Mary  iii  ii  237 

„  III  iv  94 


Prom,  of  May  1 16 
I  184 
I  314 
I  347 
I  383 

I  456 

II  34 
II  221 
II  223 

II  226 

III  21 
III  410 

„       III  512 


Queen  Alary  iv  iii  579 

V  ii  276 
Becket  ii  ii  58 

Harold  v  i  71 
Queen  Mary  v  v  214 


Better  s  out  of  his  road,  then,  for  he's  walking  to  us. 
Lady  Marian  holds  her  nose  when  she  s's  across  it. 
Stephen  (King  of  England)    Church  in  the  pell-mell  of  S's 
time 
Him  who  crown'd  S — King  S's  brother  ! 
may  come  a  crash  and  embroilment  as  in  S's  time ; 
That  havock'd  all  the  land  in  S's  day. 
King  S  gave  Many  of  the  crown  lands 
Then  he  took  back  not  only  S's  gifts. 
After  the  nineteen  winters  of  King  S — 
Steiihen  Gardiner  (Bishop  of  Winchester  and  Lord 
ChanceUor)     {See  also  Gardiner)      is  every 
morning's  prayer  Of  your  most  loyal  subject, 
S  G. 
Stepmother    And  be  s  of  a  score  of  sons  ! 
Stepping     my  white  bird  s  toward  the  snare, 
delicate-footed  creature  Came  s  o'er  him, 


I  218 
Foresters  i  i  84 

Becket,  Pro.  19 
Pro.  273 
Pro.  485 
1 1242 
I  iii  149 
I  iii  154 
I  iii  339 


Qu^en  Mary  i  v  104 

I  V  206 

The  Cup  I  iii  35 

Foresters  iv  537 


Stept     I  s  between  and  purchased  him,  Harold  ii  ii  40 

king  of  day  hath  s  from  off  his  throne.  Foresters  ii  i  26 

Stem     half  sight  which  makes  her  look  so  s,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  323 

Stematur     Acies,  Acies  Prona  s  !  Harold  v  i  582 

Stick  (s)     Ye  take  a  s,  and  break  it ;  „      iv  1  57 

as  when  we  threaten  A  yelper  with  a  s.  Becket  iv  ii  350 

Stick  (verb)     old  leaven  s's  to  my  tongue  yet.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  48 

so  'z  we  was  forced  to  5  her,  „       iv  iii  495 

By  God's  death,  thou  shalt  s  him  like  a  calf  !  Becket  i  iii  183 

and  Baaker,  thaw  I  s's  to  hoam-maade —  Prom,  of  May  i  449 

if  thou  s  to  she  I'll  s  to  thee — s  to  tha  like  a  weasel  „          ii  738 


Stiff    S  as  the  very  backbone  of  heresy, 

That  strange  starched  s  creature.  Little  John,  the 
Earl's  man. 
Stigand  (Archbishop  of  Canterbury)    S  should  know  the 
purposes  of  Heaven. 

Old  uncanonical  S — ask  of  me  Who  had  my  pallium 

Well,  father  S — War  there,  my  son  ? 

S  shall  give  me  absolution  for  it — 

I,  old  shrivell'd  S,  I, 

one  whom  they  dispoped  ?     Harold.     No,  S,  no  ! 

Ay — S,  unriddle  This  vision,  canst  thou  ? 

take,  sign  it,  S,  Alfred  !     Sign  it, 

S  hath  given  me  absolution  for  it.     Edward.    S  is 
not  canonical  enough  To  save  thee 

S  believed  he  knew  not  what  he  spake. 

S  will  see  thee  safe,  And  so — Farewell. 

old  S,  With  hands  too  limp  to  brandish  iron — 

S,  O  father,  have  we  won  the  day  ? 
Stile     is  the  King's  if  too  high  a  s  for  your  loi-dship 

to  overstep 
Still    To  s  the  petty  treason  therewithin, 

I  left  her  lying  s  and  beautiful, 
Still'd     Nay,  have  we  s  him  ? 
Stillness     Who  breaks  the  s  of  the  morning  thus  ? 

dead  Are  shaken  from  their  s  in  the  grave 
Stilt     And  that  would  s  up  York  to  twice  himself. 
Sting  (s)     an  amphisbaena,  Each  end  a  s  : 

when  our  good  hive  Needs  every  s  to  save  it. 
Sting  (verb)     We  kill  the  heretics  that  s  the  soul — 

A  snake — and  if  I  touch  it,  it  may  s. 
Stinging    All  hollow'd  out  with  s  heresies  ; 
Stir     s  not  yet  This  matter  of  the  Church  lands. 

Carew  s's  In  Devon  : 

Will  s  the  living  tongue  and  make  the  cry. 

He  s's  within  the  darkness  ! 

this  Henry  S's  up  your  land  against  you 

Send  out ;  I  am  too  weak  to  s  abroad  : 

S  up  thy  people  :  oust  him  ! 

S  up  the  King,  the  Lords  ! 

As  at  this  loveless  knife  that  s's  the  riot, 

she  did  not  s  ;  The  snow  had  frozen  round  her, 
Stirr'd     never  s  or  writhed,  but,  like  a  statue, 

Morcar  and  Edwin  have  s  up  the  Thanes 

That  in  thy  cause  were  s  against  King  Henry, 

<S  up  a  party  there  against  your  son — 
Stirrest    Thou  s  up  a  grief  thou  canst  not  fathom. 
Stirring    S's  of  some  great  doom  when  God's 

I  hear  them  «  in  the  Council  Chamber. 

From  s  hand  or  foot  to  wrong  the  realm. 

S  her  baby-king  against  me  ?  ha  ! 

What  is  this  ?  some  one  been  s  Against  me  ? 
Stitch'd     they  be  fine  ;  I  never  s  none  such. 
Stock     {See  also  Self-stock)     And  grafted  on  the 

hard-grain'd  s  of  Spain —  „  iv  iii  426 

only  rose  of  all  the  s  That  never  thom'd  him ;  Harold  i  i  426 

I  am  but  a  stone  and  a  dead  s  to  thee.  Foresters  n  ii  69 

Stock-dove     The  s-d  coo'd  at  the  fall  of  night,  Prom,  of  May  i  41 

And  the  s-d  coo'd,  till  a  kite  dropt  down,  „  i  55 

Stole    but  your  king  s  her  a  babe  from  Scotland  Queen  Mary  i  v  291 

there  s  into  the  city  a  breath  Full  of  the  meadows,  Becket  i  i  261 

Who  s  the  widow's  one  sitting  hen  o'  Sunday,  „     i  iv  120 

S  on  her,  she  was  walking  in  the  garden,  Foresters  n  i  112 

Stolen     The  golden  ornaments  are  s  from  her —  Becket  ni  iii  180 

and  ower  a  hoonderd  pounds  worth  o'  rings  s.  Prom,  of  May.i  394 


Queen  Mary  i  v  44 

Foresters  i  i  183 

Harold  i  i  64 
I  i  81 
„  I  i  123 
„  II  ii  798 
HI  i  7 
,.  Ill  i  108 
„  III  i  173 
„  III  i  198 

„  III  1213 

„  mil  61 

„  v  i  418 

„  V  i  448 

„  V  i  543 


Becket  lu  iii  281 
Queen  Mary  in  i  13 

V  V  261 
Becket  v  iii  201 

Foresters  i  iii  50 

II  i  46 

Becket  ii  ii  34 

Queen  Mary  iii  iv  40 

Harold  iv  i  18 

Queen  Mary  iii  iv  69 

m  V  218 

HI  ii  203 

I  V  407 

II  i  5 

III  i  354 

in  ii  158 

V  i  131 
V  ii  287 

Harold  i  i  4S2 

Becket  i  ii  88 

„  IV  ii  191 

„    V  11236 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  620 

Harold  ii  ii  288 

Becket  ii  ii  429 

vie 

Qu^en  Mary  m  iv  298 

I  iv  261 

I  V  628 

in  iii  60 

Becket  v  i  106 

Prom,  of  May  in  560 

Qiieen  Mary  in  i  226 


stolen 


1088 


Stream 


stolen  (rontinued)     For  thou  hast  s  my  will,  and  made  it 

thine.  "  Foresters  iii  329 

Stone  (adj.)     For  smooth  s  columns  of  the  sanctuary,  Harold  i  ii  101 

Stone  (s)    into  some  more  costly  s  Than  ever  blinded  eye.   Queen  Mary  i  v  370 

wh\-  fling  back  the  5  he  strikes  me  with  ?  „       iv  ii  150 

Albeit  no  rolling  s,  my  good  friend  Gamel,  Harold  i  i  93 

tho'  the  drop  may  hollow  out  the  dead  s,  Becket  iii  iii  315 

a  cheek  like  a  peach  and  a  heart  like  the  s  in  it —  The  Falcon  94 

Hard  as  the  s's  of  his  abbey.  Foresters  i  ii  270 

I  am  but  a  s  and  a  dead  stock  to  thee.  „         ii  ii  69 

Stone  (verb)     Our  men  and  boys  would  hoot  him,  s 

him,  Prom,  of  May  ii  425 

Stone-blind    a  son  s-b  Sat  by  his  mother's  hearth  :  Becket  v  ii  105 

Stone-cut     And,  like  the  s-c  epitaph,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  163 

Stone-dead    sat  S-d  upon  a  heap  of  ice-cold  eggs.  Becket  v  ii  239 

Stone-hud    S-h,  ice-cold — no  dash  of  daring  in  him.      Queen  Mary  i  v  331 

Stood     I  s  out,  till  Edward  sent  for  me.  „  i  ii  29 

Lady  Jane  s  up  Stiff  as  the  very  backbone  „  i  v  42 

citizens  S  each  before  his  shut -up  booth,  „  ii  ii  63 

and  almost  elbowing  her.  So  close  they  s,  „  n  ii  78 

In  every  London  street  a  gibbet  s.  „  m  i  7 

Who  s  upright  when  both  the  houses  fell.  „       in  iii  254 

Well,  you  one  man,  because  you  s  upright,  „      ni  iii  269 

firm  s  the  pine — The  cataract  shook  „       m  iv  137 

jS  out  against  the  King  in  your  behalf,  „         iv  1 126 

At  your  trial  Never  s  up  a  bolder  man  than  you  ;  „        iv  ii  122 

He  s  upright,  a  lad  of  twenty-one,  „       rv  iii  335 

s  More  like  an  ancient  father  of  the  Church,  „       iv  iii  597 

I  s  near — Mark'd  him —  „       iv  iii  616 

while  we  s  together,  a  dead  man  Rose  Harold  i  ii  78 

and  at  once  He  s  beside  me,  "  „    ni  i  136 

Every  man  about  his  king  Fell  where  he  s.  „    v  ii  182 

Methought  I  s  in  Canterbury  Minster,  Becket  i  i  73 

as  the  case  s,  you  had  safelier  have  slain  an  archbishop 

than  a  she-goat :  „  in  iii  67 

They  s  on  Dover  beach  to  murder  me,  „    v  ii  436 

he  s  there  Staring  upon  the  hunter.  The  Cup  i  ii  121 

How  often  have  I  s  With  Eva  here  !  Prom,  of  May  ii  296 

0  would  she  s  before  me  as  my  queen.  Foresters  ii  i  166 
Stoop     Might  not  your  courtesy  s  to  hand  it  me  ?  Becket  iv  ii  296 

could  I  s  so  low  As  mate  with  one  that  holds  Foresters  iv  709 

Stoop'd    he  s  and  gather'd  one  From  out  a  bed  Queen  Mary  v  v  92 

Stop     Well,  Simon  Renard,  shall  we  s  a  day  ?  „      in  vi  243 

s  the  heretic's  mouth  !     Hale  him  away  !  „       iv  iii  282 

S's  and  stares  at  our  cottage.  The  Falcon  161 

But  hallus  ud  s  at  the  Vine-an'-the-Hop,  Prom,  of  May  ii  311 

Stonn    (See  also  War-storm)    and  strow  the  s's  at 

sea,  Queen  Mary  i  v  381 

Wet,  famine,  ague,  fever,  s,  wreck,  wrath, —  „         v  v  108 

all  the  North  of  Humber  is  one  s.  Harold  ii  ii  292 

To  Rome  again  !  the  s  begins  again.  Becket  ii  ii  468 

tho'  I  am  none  of  those  that  would  raise  a  s  between  you,  in  iii  296 
Can  you  not  hear  them  yonder  like  as,  „      v  ii  625 

the  s  was  drawing  hither  Across  the  hills  The  Cup  n  319 

The  s  is  hard  at  hand  will  sweep  away  Thrones,       Prom,  of  May  i  517 

1  will  fly  to  you  thro'  the  night,  the  s —  „  i  702 
s  and  shower  lashing  Her  casement,  „  ii  471 
Out  in  the  fiercest  s  That  ever  made  earth  tremble — •          „         in  797 

Storming    All  the  Norman  foot  Are  s  up  the  hill.  Harold  v  i  523 

Stormless     No — our  waking  thoughts  Suffer  a  s  shipwreck 

in  the  pools  „       v  i  296 

Stonn-Toice    whose  s-v  Unsockets  the  strong  oak,  The  Cup  ii  282 

Stormy    The  s  Wyatts  and  Northumberlan(&,  Queen  Mary  in  ii  168 

Stormy-red     when  he  sign'd,  his  face  was  s-r —  Becket  i  iii  320 

Story     But  truth  of  s,  which  I  glanced  at,  Qu£en  Mary  ni  v  33 

Then,  glancing  thro'  the  s  of  this  realm,  Becket  i  iii  410 

The  s  of  your  battle  and  your  wound.  The  Falcon  594 

Will  he  not  fly  from  you  if  he  learn  the  s  of  my 

shame  Prom,  of  May  ni  257 

Stent    Wake,  or  the  s  old  island  will  become  A  rotten 

limb  of  Spain.  Queen  Mary  H  i  104 

But  by  God's  providence  a  good  s  staff  Lay  near  me  ;     „  v  ii  468 

And  Toetig  is  not  s  enough  to  bear  it.  Harold  i  i  402 

I  have  a  «  crabstick  here,  which  longs  to  break  itself 

across  their  backs.  Foresters  iv  917 


Stoutness    Your  learning,  and  your  s,  and  your 

heresy.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  125 

Straait  (straight)    hallus  hup  at  sunrise,  and  I'd  drive 

the  plow  s  as  a  line  right  i'  the  faace  o'  the  sun,    Proin.  of  May  i  370 
Straange  (strange)     and  the  master  'ud  be  s  an'  pleased 

if  you'd  step  in  fust,  „            1 167 

Straight    (See  also  Straait)     and  set  it  S  on  the  tnmk,  Harold  ni  i  14ft 

Speak  s  out,  crookback.  Foresters  n  i  271 

Straight-going    the  dry  light  of  Rome's  s-g  policy,  The  Cup  i  i  145 

Strain  (s)     A  s  of  hard  and  headstrong  in  him.  Becket,  Pro.  234 
Strain  (verb)    if  we  did  not  s  to  make  ourselves  Better    Prom,  of  May  i  602 

Strain'd    I  cannot  cope  with  him  :  my  wrist  is  s.  Foresters  iv  31^ 
Strand    voice  coming  up  with  the  voice  of  the  deep 

from  the  s,  Becket  n  i  6 

Stranded    To  shove  that  s  iceberg  off  our  shores,  Harold  iv  iii  138 
Strange    (See  also  Straange)    S  game  of  chess :  a 
King  That  with  her  own  pawns  plays  against 

a  Queen,  Queen  Mary  i  iii  160 

S  in  a,  wooer !  „            i  v  363 

A  s  youth  Suddenly  thrust  in  on  me,  whisper'd,  „           n  i  128 

That  may  seem  s  beyond  his  nursery.  „          n  ii  396 
how  s.  That  Gardiner,  once  so  one  with  all  of  us 
Against  this  foreign  marriage,  should  have  yielded 

So  utterly  !— s  !  „            ni  iii  5 

when  men  are  tost  On  tides  of  s  opinion,  „        ni  iv  119 
however,  in  s  hours,  After  the  long  brain-dazing 

colloquies,  „            iv  ii  90 

His  Highness  is  so  vex'd  with  s  affairs —  „           v  ii  560 

What  is  the  s  thing  happiness  ?    Sit  down  here  :  „             v  v  77 
S  and  ghastly  in  the  gloom  And  shadowing  of  this 

double  thunder-cloud  Harold  in  ii  157 

No,  not  s  This  was  old  human  laughter  in  old  Rome  „     in  ii  162 

lest  the  s  Saints  By  whom  thou  swarest,  „        v  i  115 

I  see  it — -some  confusion.  Some  s  mistake.  Becket  ni  i  235 

A  s  gift  sent  to  me  to-day.  The  Cup  i  ii  52 
So  mad,  I  fear  some  s  and  evil  chance  Coming  upon 

me,  for  by  the  Gods  I  seem  S  to  myself.  „       i  iii  74' 

So  s  among  them — -such  an  aUen  there,  „        n  143 

Or  some  s  second-sight,  the  marriage  cup  Wherefrom  „        ii  198 

Surely — yet  These  are  s  words  to  speak  to  Artemis.  „        n  326 

S  that  the  words  at  home  with  me  so  long  Should  fly  The  Falcon  525 
sick  people.  More  specially  sick  children,  have  s 

fancies,  S  longings ;  „          817 
But  all  that  sounds  so  wicked  and  so  s  ;                    Prom,  of  May  i  657 

Come,  come,  my  girl,  enough  Of  this  s  talk.  „         ni  620 
That  s  starched  stiff  creature.  Little  John,  the  Earl's 

man.  Foresters  i  i  183 

Stranger  (adj.)     A  s  monk  desires  access  to  you  Becket  v  ii  65 
Stranger  (compar.)    strange  !  but  s  still  that  he.  So 

fierce  against  the  Headship  of  the  Pope,  Qu^en  Mary  m  iii  9 

Stranger  (s)     By  seeking  justice  at  a  s's  hand  „          ly  i  20 

The  s  at  his  hearth,  and  all  his  house —  „         iv  i  163 

Norman  who  should  drive  The  s  to  the  fiends  !  Harold  n  ii  541 

Yea,  let  a  s  spoil  his  heritage,  Becket  n  ii  258 

Have  you  had  any  alarm  ?  no  s  ?  „        m  i  28 

tho'  a  s  fain  would  be  allow'd  To  join  the  himt.  The  Cup  i  i  196 

And  you,  that  seldom  brook  the  s  here,  ,.      i  ii  378 

Strangle    for  he  Who  vows  a  vow  to  s  his  own  mother  Harold  in  i  229 

Such  rampant  weeds  S  each  other,  Prom,  of  May  in  591 

Strangled    Holy  Father  s  him  with  a  hair  Of  Peter,  Harold  v  ii  45 

Strasburg    To  S,  Antwerp,  Frankfort,  Zurich,  Queen  Mary  i  ii  1 

Strato    Yom:  name  ?    Synorix.    S,  my  name.  The  Cup  i  i  199 

Who  is  our  guest  ?     Sinnatus.    S  he  calls  himself. 

Sinnatus.     I  pledge  you,  iS.     Synorix.     And   I 

you,  my  lord.  ,.        iii  48 

You,  S,  make  good  cheer  till  I  return.  „      i  ii  205 

Straw    Hast  not  thou  drawn  the  short  s  ?  Becket  i  iv  4 

Take  thy  one  chance  ;  Catch  at  the  last  s.  „  iv  ii  221 

Richard  risks  his  life  for  a  s.  So  lies  in  prison —  Foresters  iv  383 

Stray    not  here  I  shall  rejoice  To  find  my  s  sheep  back 

within  the  fold.  Becket  ni  iii  355 
Stray'd    Hath  he  s  From  love's  clear  path  into  the 

common  bush,  „        ni  i  246 

Stream    foul  s  Thro'  fever-breeding  levels, — at  her  side,  „          n  i  155 

— the  s  is  bearing  us  all  down,  Foresters  i  i  238 


stream 


1089 


Struck 


Foresters  i  i  240 

I  i  243 

The  Cup  I  ii  405 

Queen  Mary  iii  iv  184 

Harold  n  ii  391 

Queen  Mary  n  iv  128 

III  i  7 

IV  ii  35 
„         IV  iii  377 

V  ii  126 


Becket  i  i  228 

„     I  i  365 

„      I  ii  39 

„  I  iii  690 

„     I  iv  72 

„  I iv  160 

„   v  ii  372 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  235 

IV  iii  99 

Harold  iv  iii  137 

V  i  126 
Becket  i   il6 

„    vii540 

Prom,  of  May  iii  732 

Foresters  ii  i  458 

HI  94 

Harold  ii  ii  730 

V  i  480 
Queen  Mary  ill  i  133 

III  iii  261 
The  Cuf  II  210 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  173 


Stream  {continued)    o\ii  little  Sheriff  will  ever  swim  with 
the  s  ! 

have  the  great  men  striven  against  the  s, 
Streamer    and  dropt  Their  s's  earthward, 
Streaming    We  might  go  softlier  tlian  with  crimson 
rowel  And  s  lash. 

And  flmig  them  s  o'er  the  battlements 
Street    Cries  of  the  moment  and  the  s — 

In  every  London  s  a  gibbet  stood. 

And  might  assail  you  passing  through  the  s, 

And  Ignorance  crying  in  the  s's, 

son  tum'd  out  into  the  s  To  sleep,  to  die — 

To  take  the  vagabond  woman  of  the  s  Into  thine 
arms  ! 

moon  Divides  the  whole  long  s  with  light  and  shade 

Then  hidden  in  the  s  He  wateh'd  her 

from  the  s  Stain'd  with  the  mire  thereof. 

Call  in  the  poor  from  the  s's,  and  let  them  feast. 

they  were  fighting  for  her  to-day  in  the  s. 

Save  that  it  was  mid-winter  in  the  s, 
Strei^th     I  not  doubt  that  God  wiU  give  me  s. 

Or  give  thee  saintly  s  to  imdergo. 

s  To  shove  that  stranded  iceberg  oS  our  shores, 

there  make  s  to  breast  Whatever  chance, 

The  people  know  their  Church  a  tower  of  s. 

Is  s  less  strong  when  hand-in-hand  with  grace  ? 

Curse  on  your  brutal  s  !    I  cannot  pass  that  way. 

So — so — I  have  presumed  Beyond  my  s. 

What  breadth,  height,  s — torrents  of  eddying  bark  ! 
Strengthen    Might  s  thee  in  keeping  of  thy  word, 

5  their  palisades  ! 
Strengihen'd    yet  he  fail'd.  And  s  Philip. 
Stretch     Do  not  scrimp  your  phrase.  But  s  it  wider  ; 

See  here — -I  s  my  hand  out — hold  it  there. 
Strew    See  Strow 

Strewn    which  I  found  S  in  your  palace. 
Strii^en    (See  also  Famine-stricken)    My  father  s  with 

his  first  paralysis.  Prom,  of  May  ii  481 

soul  of  the  woods  hath  s  thro'  my  blood,  Foresters  n  i  66 

I  think  I  should  have  s  him  to  the  death.  „      ii  i  140 

He  is  s  with  a  slight  paralysis.  „       iv  456 

Strict    The  King  Demands  a  s  account  of  all  those 

revenues  Becket  i  iii  650 

Strife    My  sight  is  eagle,  but  the  s  so  thick —  Harold  v  i  627 

Strike    Aiid  arm  and  s  as  with  one  hand,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  292 

Can  I  s  Elizabeth  ? — not  now  and  save  the  life  Of 
Devon : 

he  and  his  Are  bound  to  me — may  s  hereafter. 

you  may  s  fire  from  her.  Not  hope  to  melt  her. 

To  s  too  soon  is  oft  to  miss  the  blow. 

why  fling  back  the  stone  he  s's  me  with  ? 

He  s's  thro'  me  at  Philip  and  yourself. 

s  hard  and  deep  into  The  prey  they  are  rending 

There  you  s  in  the  nail. 

s  Their  hearts,  and  hold  their  babies  up  to  it. 

light  enough  for  AUgar's  house  To  s  thee  down 

the  true  must  Shall  make  her  s  as  Power  :  but  when  to  s — 

And  s  among  them  with  thy  battle-axe — 

Thou  hast  but  seen  how  Norman  hands  can  s. 

No  man  would  s  with  Tostig,  save  for  Norway. 

the  childish  fist  That  cannot  s  again. 

all  the  monks  of  Peterboro'  S  for  the  king ; 

We  wait  but  the  King's  word  to  s  thee  dead.  Becket. 
S,  and  I  die  the  death  of  martyrdom ;  S,  and  ye  set 
these  customs  by  my  death  Ringing 

The  man  shall  feel  that  I  can  s  him  yet. 

Why  then  I  s  into  my  former  path  For  England, 

S !     I  challenge  thee  to  meet  me  before  God. 

S.  then,  at  once,  the  King  would  have  him — 

8  s  truest  ev'n  for  his  own  self. 

Do  you  hear  that  ?  s,  s. 

S  him,  Tracy !    Bosamund.    No,  No,  No,  No  ! 

iSf,  I  say. 

8  OMi  Archbishop  in  his  own  cathedral ! 

Answer  not,  but  s. 


Strike  {continued) 
gone. 
Why  did  I  s  him  ? — having  proof  enough 
s,  make  his  feathers  Glance  in  mid  heaven, 
Nor  ever  s  him  blow  for  blow : 


And  I  may  s  your  game  when  you  are 

The  Cup  I  ii  36 

„    I  iii  157 

The  Falcon  14 

Prom,  of  May  iii  6 


II  iv  122 
II  iv  125 
m  vi38 
ni  vi  72 
IV  ii  150 
vii58 
vii2fe7 

V  ii  436 
Harold  i  i  34 

„     I  i  308 

1 1369 

iii  89 

II  ii  172 

IV  ii  20 

IV  iii  31 

V  i  447 


Becket  i  iii  166 
n  i  78 
„  II  ii  455 
„  IV  ii  253 
„  V  i  237 
V  ii  42 
„  V  iii  162 
„  V  iii  169 
„  V  iii  177 
„  V  iii  180 
„     V  iii  186 


you  S  up  a  song,  my  friends,  and  then  to  bed. 

these  will  s  lor  England  And  man  and  maid  be  free 

S,  Sheriff !    S,  mercenary ! 

They  s  the  deer  at  once  to  death — 

S  up  our  music.  Little  John. 

s  the  bonds  From  these  three  men, 

iS  up  a  stave,  my  masters,  all  is  well. 
Striking    And  s  at  Hardrada  and  his  madmen 

I  have  heard  of  you.     The  likeness  Is  very  s. 
String     were  a  pious  work  To  s  my  father's  sonnets, 
Strip    A  thousand  winters  Will  s  you  bare  as  death, 
Stripe     callous  with  a  constant  s,  Unwoundable. 
Stripping    They  are  s  the  dead  bodies  naked  yonder, 
Stript     But  after  they  had  s  him  to  his  shroud. 
Strive     And  in  thy  cause  I  s  -against  him  now. 


Foresters  i  iii  30 

II 19 

ni415 

IV  525 

IV  558 

IV  961 

IV  1101 

Harold  iv  iii  17 

Prom,  of  May  ii  366 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  27 

Foresters  iv  1056 

Queen  Mary  v  v  172 

Harold  V  ii  34 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  334 

Becket  v  i  16 


Foresters  i  i  245 

Queen  Mary  u  ii  17 

Foresters  i  i  243 

Becket  in  iii  232 

„        IV  ii  442 

Queen  Mary  ni  v  143 

Harold  II  ii  47 

Becket  IV  i  54 

„   IV  11270 

The  Cup  I  iii  160 

n53 


great  man  s  against  it  again  to  save  his  country, 
Striven     I  have  s  in  vain  to  raise  a  man  for  her. 

have  the  great  men  s  against  the  stream. 
Striving    Not  s  still,  however  much  in  vain, 

s  still  to  break  or  bind  The  spiritual  giant 
Stroke  (s)     Toll  of  a  bell,  S  oi  a,  clock, 

and  iron  s's  that  brought  Thy  war  with  Brittany 
But  I  heard  say  he  had  had  a  s, 
Guard  from  the  s  that  dooms  thee  after  death 
I  surely  should  have  left  That  s  to  Rome. 
As  scare  his  act : — a  random  s : 
Stroke  (verb)    you  s  me  on  one  cheek.  Buffet  the  other.  Queen  Mary  n  i  116 

"■    ■  ■         ~  „     in  iv  274 

I  V  300 

n  ii  146 

II  ii  353 

mi  186 

„     m  iv  168 

V  ii  93 

v  ii  422 

V  ii  469 

Harold  n  i  11 

„    nil  662 

„      V  i  647 

Becket  i  iii  536 

„      IV  ii  458 

„       V  ii  540 


Stroking    Cannot  be  heal'd  by  s, 
Strong     Would  be  too  s  for  France. 

Have  made  s  head  against  ourselves  and  you. 

And  s  to  throw  ten  Wyatts  and  all  Kent. 

or  we  are  torn  Down  the  s  wave  of  brawlers. 

And  their  s  torment  bravely  borne, 

A  drinker  of  black,  s,  volcanic  wines, 

I  would  I  were  as  tall  and  s  as  you. 

and  you  know  me  s  of  arm ; 

Haul  like  a  great  s  fellow  at  my  legs. 

Is  '  ay '  an  oath  ?  is  '  ay '  s  as  an  oath  ? 

let  not  my  s  prayer  Be  weaken'd  in  thy  sight, 

S — not  in  mine  own  self,  but  Heaven ; 

A  s  hate-philtre  as  may  madden  him — 

Is  strength  less  s  when  hand-in-hand  .with  grace  ? 

whose  storm-voice  Unsockets  the  s  oak,  and  rears  his 

root  Beyond  his  head,  The  Cup  n  283 

Were  some  s  fellow  here  in  the  wild  wood.  Foresters  iv  515 

Stronger    Ay,  ay,  but  art  thou  s  than  the  King  ?  Becket  i  iii  534 

and  now  the  s  motive.  Misnamed  free-will —  Prom,  of  May  u  635 

Anyhow  we  must  Move  in  the  line  of  least  resist- 
ance when  The  s  motive  rules, 
only  differing  as  the  s  and  the  weaker, 
Of  a  nature  S,  sadder  than  my  own. 
Strongest    Well,  well,  he  it  so,  thou  s  thief  of  all, 

The  Holy  Virgin  Stand  by  the  s. 
Strong-wing'd    the  best,  s-w  against  the  wind. 
Strove    We  s  against  the  papacy  from  the  first, 
And  dreadful  shadows  s  upon  the  hill, 
and  once  he  s  to  hide  his  face, 
s  To  work  against  her  license  for  her  good, 
In  mine  own  cause  I  s  against  him  there, 
I  cannot  tell  how  long  we  s  before 
Strow    and  s  the  storms  at  sea, 

s's  our  fruits,  and  lays  Our  golden  grain. 
Struck    S  home  and  won. 

Gardiner  wur  s  down  like  by  the  hand  o'  God 

And  s  a  shape  from  out  the  vague. 

Very  bad.    Somebody  s  him. 

I  tell  thee,  my  good  fellow.  My  arrow  s  the  stag. 

I  am  sure  /  s  him.    Synorix.    And  I  am  just  as  sure, 

my  lord,  /  s  him. 
I  warrant  you  now,  he  said,  he  s  the  stag. 


n671 

in  190 

Foresters  n  ii  189 

m  327 

iv265 

Harold  ii  ii  148 

Queen  Mary  in  iii  224 

Harold  in  i  377 

Becket  in  iii  103 

IV  ii  339 

V  i  14 

The  Falcon  638 

Quxen  Mary  i  v  381 

The  Cup  n  285 

Queen  Mary  i  v  554 

„        IV  iii  516 

Becket  i  iii  373 

rv  i  50 

The  Cup  I  ii  28 


Iii  33 
I  ii  382 


3z 


Stnick 


1090 


Suffolk 


You  will  believe  Now  that  he  never 


Struck  (continued) 
s  the  stag — 

When  he  s  at  Sinnatus — 

His  grandsire  s  my  grandsire  in  a  brawl 

whereon  she  s  him,  And  fled  into  the  castle. 

She  s  him,  my  brave  Marian,  s  the  Prince, 
Stabbonmess  0  bolster'd  up  with  s  and  pride. 
Stack    Come,  come,  the  morsel  s — this  Cardinal's 

fault— 
Stodded    English  Garter,  s  with  great  emeralds. 
Study    retire  To  Ashridge,  and  pursue  my  studies  there. 

It  shall  be  all  my  s  for  one  hour 
Studying    There  wore  his  time  s  the  canon  law 
Stuff    See  Garden-stuff,  Gipsy-stuff 
Stuff'd    s  the  boy  with  fears  that  these  may  act 
Stumble   S  not  in  the  darkness,  Lest  they  should  seize  thee, 

fear  not  I  should  s  in  the  darkness, 
Stumbled    Hath  s  on  our  cups  ? 
Stump-tailed    or  a  s-t  ox  in  May-time, 


The  Cup  I  ii  430 

n46 

The  Falcon  250 

Foresters  n  i  117 

nil34 

Becket  i  iii  34 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  375 

m  i  84 

I  iv  237 

in  v  184 

Becket  n  i  85 

Harold  a  ii  90 

Becket  v  iii  78 

„      V  iii  91 

Harold  IV  iii  179 

Foresters  n  i  434 


Stung    your  wise  bees  had  s  him  first  to  death.  Queen  Mary  iii  iii  64 

Stunn'd    Sir  Nicholas !     I  am  s —  „  v  ii  250 

Stupid    S  soldiers  oft  are  bold.  „  v  ii  445 

that  you  were  s  drunk  all  Sunday,  and  so  ill  in 

consequence  all  Monday,  Prom,  of  May  m  79 

Stupid-honest    Be  thou  not  s-h,  brother  Gurth !  Harold  ni  i  122 

Stupid-sure    the  people  s-s  Sleep  like  their  swine  ...  „    iv  iii  216 

Stupid-wild     thine  eyes  Glare  s-w  with  wine.  Becket  i  i  214 

Sturdy   Beggars,  you  are  s  rogues  that  should  be  set  to  work.  Foresters  iii  196 

Style     with  his  charm  of  simple  s  And  close  dialectic,     Prom,  of  May  i  224: 

Suaviter    S  in  modo,  fortiter  in  re,  Becket  v  ii  539 

Subject    is  every  morning's  prayer  Of  your  most  loyal  s,   Queen  Mary  i  v  104 

marriage  should  bring  loss  or  danger  to  you.  My  s's,         „        n  ii  229 

And  all  our  loving  s's,  most  expedient.  „        n  ii  211 

Against  my  natural  s.  „  iv  i  21 

I  am  your  s,  not  your Henry.     Pander.  Becket,  Pro.  145 

I'll  crush  him  as  the  s.  „        i  iii  334 

Submission    Except  they  make  s  to  the  Church.  „      v  iii  122 

Submissive    I  am  utterly  s  to  the  Queen.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  39 

Submit    <S ;  I  promise  thee  on  my  salvation  Becket  i  iii  254 

They  have  but  to  s.  „       v  ii  382 

to  5  at  once  Is  better  than  a  wholly-hopeless  war,         The  Cup  i  ii  140 

if  a  state  s  At  once,  she  may  be  blotted  out  „        i  ii  156 

Subom'd    His  foes — the  Devil  had  s  'em.  Queen  Mary  i  v  626 

Subscribe    Will  you  s  the  customs  ?  Becket  i  ii  46 

Subsidy    remission  Of  half  that  s  levied  Qiieen  Mary  i  v  115 

raise  us  loans  and  subsidies  Among  the  merchants ;  „  v  i  179 

Substance    'Twould  seem  too  like  the  s,  if  I  sign'd.  Becket  i  iii  197 

Subtlety    repulses,  the  delicacies,  the  subtleties.  „     Pro.  500 

Sub-writing    as  you  suspended  yourseU  after  s-w  to  the 

customs.  „      II  ii  351 

Success    this  or  that  way,  of  s  Would  turn  it  thither.  Queen  Mary  u  ii  100 

but  the  ill  s  of  the  farm,  and  the  debts.  Prom,  of  May  n  68 

Successor    give  his  kingly  voice  To  me  as  his  s.  Harold  ii  ii  589 

we  must  have  a  mightier  man  than  he  For  his  s.  Becket,  Pro.  8 

as  his  s  in  the  archbishoprick. 

Succory    speedwell,  bluebottle,  s,  forget-me-not  ? 

Succour    refasing  none  That  come  to  Thee  for  s, 

Such    Answer  thou  for  him,  then !  thou'rt  no  s 

cockerel  thyself. 

My  flight  were  s  a  scandal  to  the  faith. 

These  beastly  swine  make  s  a  grunting  here, 

Why,  5  a  game,  sir,  were  whole  years  a  playing. 

to  be  «  a  one  As  Harry  Bolingbroke  hath  a  lure  in  it. 

but  God  hath  sent  me  here  To  take  s  order  with  all 

heretics 
to  compose  the  event  In  some  s  form  as  least  may 

harm  your  Grace, 
the  thing  Was  no  s  scarecrow  in  your  father's  time. 
A  pretty  man  for  s  a  pretty  maiden. 
Many  s  groups. 
Should  play  the  second  actor  in  this  pageant  That 

brings  him  in ;  »  a  cameleon  he ! 
Towards  the  abrogation  and  repeal  Of  all  s  laws  and 

ordinances  made ; 
wherein  have  been  S  holocausts  of  heresy !  to  what  end  ? 


Pro.  402 
Prom,  of  May  i  98 
Queen  Mary  iv  iii  132 


1 141 
Iii  53 

I  iii  12 
I  iii  139 

iiv9 

IV  34 

IV  225 
IV  473 
IV  613 

II  ii  92 

ni  ill  15 

m  iii  142 
mivlOS 


Queen  Mary  iii  iv  189 

III  vi  178 

in  vi  203 

IV  i  101 

rv  ii  174 


Such  (continued)    She  seethed  with  s  adulteries, 
and  the  lives 
And  1  have  known  s  women  more  than  one — 
If  s  a  prince  were  born  and  you  not  here  ! 
Your  father  was  a  man  Of  s  colossal  kinghood, 
My  heart  is  no  s  block  as  Bonner's  is : 
but  methinks  I  love  her  less  For  s  a  dotage  upon  s  a 

man.  v  ii  421 

Come,  thou  shalt  dream  no  more  s  dreams ;  I  swear  it,  Harold  i  ii  108 
Like  Jonah,  than  have  known  there  were  s  devils.  „        u  i  38 

Hast  thou  s  trustless  jailors  in  thy  North?  „      il  ii  684 

She  hath  wean'd  me  from  it  with  s  bitterness.  .,       iv  ii  28 

Wakening  s  brawls  and  loud  disturbances  In  England,  Becket  v  ii  352 
I  never  felt  s  passion  for  a  woman.  The  Cup  i  i  34 

I  know  of  no  s  wives  in  all  Galatia.  „     i  ii  191 

Alas  !     I  have  no  s  power  with  Rome.  ,,     i  ii  291 

I  will  be  no  s  wreck,  i  iii  144 

We  have  been  in  s  grief  these  five  years,  Prom,  of  May  n  66 

I  have  freed  myself  From  all  s  dreams,  „         in  596 

Suck  one  of  those  mercenaries  that  s  the  blood  of  England.  Foresters  ii  i  175 
may  this  mouth  Never  s  grape  again,  „         iv  394 

Suck'd    (See  also  Weasle-sucked)     And  kingdom  will 

be  s  into  the  war.  Queen  Mary  i  v  257 

Sucking    s  thro'  fools'  ears  The  flatteries  of  corruption —      Becket  i  iii  360 

Suckling    Out  of  the  mouths  of  babes  and  s's,  praise !  „      n  ii  279 

Sudden    Came  with  a  s  splendour,  shout,  and  show,     Queen  Mary  in  i  449 
Philip's  no  s  alien — the  Queen's  husband,  „  m  iii  42 

Whereat  Lord  Williams  gave  a  s  cry : —  „  iv  iii  604 

Methinks  that  would  you  tarry  one  day  more  (The 

news  was  s)  „         in  vi  234 

s  touches  For  him,  or  him — sunk  rocks ;  „  v  v  219 

but  Tostig  On  a  s — at  a  something — for  a  nothing —  Harold  i  i  442 
A  summer  mere  with  s  wreckful  gusts  From  a  side-gorge.  „  m  i  50 
Edith,  The  sign  in  heaven — the  s  blast  at  sea —  „      v  i  378 

Like  s  night  in  the  main  glare  of  day.  Becket  ii  i  57 

S  change  is  a  house  on  sand ;  „  m  iii  59 

that  our  good  Henry  Says  many  a  thing  in  s  heats,  „  iv  ii  276 

If  God  would  take  him  in  some  s  way —  „      v  i  93 

Did  he  ?  It  seem'd  so.  I  have  play'd  the  s  fool.  The  Cup  i  iii  162 
To-day  ?    Too  s.     I  will  brood  upon  it.  „  n  72 

Ay  !  but  you  must  not  be  too  s  with  it  either,  Prom,  of  May  n  54 
But  I  weant  be  too  s  wi'  it ;  and  I  feel  sewer,  Miss 

Dora,  that  I  ha'  been  noan  too  s  wi'  you,  „  n  59 

By  St.  Nicholas  I  have  a  s  passion  for  the  wild  wood —  Foresters  i  iii  122 
but  look,  there  is  a  cross  line  o'  s  death. 
But  I  have  ta'en  a  s  fancy  to  thee. 

Sue    — infatuated — To  s  you  for  his  life  ? 

I  came  to  s  Your  Council  and  yourself  (repeat) 

Sued    Not  s  for  that — he  knows  it  were  in  vain, 
when  the  King's  divorce  was  s  at  Rome, 
He  s  my  hand.     I  shook  at  him. 

Suffer    So  your  king-parliament  s  him  to  land, 
Your  Grace's  business  will  not  s,  sire, 
We  talk  and  Cranmer  s's. 
S  not  That  my  brief  reign  in  England 
That  s's  in  the  daily  want  of  thee, 
S  a  stormless  shipwreck  in  the  pools 
Perish  she,  I,  all,  before  The  Church  should  s  wrong 
and  so  cannot  s  by  the  rule  of  frequency. 
The  One  Who  shifts  his  policy  s's  something. 

Do  you  still  s  from  your  fall  in  the  hollow  lane  ?  Prom,  of  May  m  240 
they  that  s  by  him  call  the  blossom  Of  bandits.  Foresters  iv  371 

Suffer'd    As  for  what  I  did  I  s  and  repented.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  259 

She  hath  followed  with  our  host,  and  s  all.  Harold  ly  i  29 

Wilt  not  be  s  so  to  cross  the  seas  Becket  i  iii  129 

has  s  More  than  we  know.  Prom,  of  May  ii  501 

Suffering    Five  years  of  shame  and  s  broke  the  heart  „  ni  761 

Sufficient    whose  baby  eye  Saw  them  s.  Harold  ni  ii  67 

S  for  the  day,  dear  father !  Foresters  i  i  343 

Suffolk  (Duke  of)    Duke  of  S  lately  freed  from  prison,    Queen  Mary  i  iii  121 
Duke  of  S  and  Sir  Peter  Carew,  „  i  iv  112 

Spared  you  the  Duke  of  S,  Guildford  Dudley,  „  i  v  489 

I  do  not  hear  from  Carew  or  the  Duke  Of  «S,  »  n  i  3 

Till  Guildford  Dudley  and  the  Duke  of  S,  „  n  iv  138 

Did  not  Lord  S  die  like  a  true  man  ?  „  m  i  164 


ni354 

IV  422 

Queen  Mary  iv  i  11 

„  v  i  107,  114 

IV  i  13 
„          IV  iii  41 

Becket  i  i  272 

Queen  Mary  i  v  365 

„       m  vi  245 

IV  iii  420 

V  ii  301 

Harold  n  ii  275 

V  i  296 
Becket  in  iii  20 

„    in  iii  319 
The  Cup  n  113 


Suffolk 


1091 


Sure 


Suffolk  (Lady)     The  Lady  S  and  the  Lady  Lennox  ?       Queen  Mary  i  iv  31 
Suit  (courtship)     and  I  shall  urge  his  s  Upon  the  Queen,  „         v  i  266 

Suit  (of  clothes)     And  look  at  our  s's,  out  at  knee,  out  at 

elbow.  Foresters  i  i  33 

Suit  (petition)     Do  make  most  himible  s  unto  your 

Majesties,  Queen  Mary  m  iii  118 

So  to  set  forth  this  humble  s  of  ours  „  m  iii  145 

Suit  (verb)    if  it  s  their  purpose  to  howl  for  the  King,         Becket  in  iii  323 

Sollen    What !  are  thy  people  s  from  defeat  ?  Harold  rv  i  1 

Let  not  our  great  king  BeUeve  us  s —  „       iv  i  7 

Make  not  our  Morcar  s:  it  is  not  wise.  „  iv  iii  103 

our  waking  thoughts  Sufier  a  stormless  shipwreck  in  the 

pools  Of  5  slumber,  „    v  i  297 

Sully    pray'd  me  not  to  s  Mine  own  prerogative,  Queen  Mary  rv  i  17 

Sulphur    I  was  bom  with  it,  and  s  won't  bring  it  out  o'  me.     Becket  i  iv  232 

Snltana     That  I  am  his  main  paramour,  his  s.  „       iv  ii  39 

Snmmat  (something)     I  heerd  s  as  summun  towld 

summun  o'  owld  Bishop  Gardiner's  end ;  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  502 

Stunmer  (adj.)     The  brows  unwrinkled  as  a  s  mere. — 

Stigand.     A  s  mere  with  sudden  wreckful  gusts  Harold  ni  i  48 

they  be  two  o'  the  purtiest  gels  ye  can  see  of  a  s 

muniin'.  Prom,  of  May  i  31 

Sommer  (s)     {See  also  Mid-sununer)     — That  was  many  a  s 

gone —  Harold  i  i  253 

Over  !  the  sweet  s  closes,  (repeat)  Becket,  Pro.  302,  323,  331 

Bar  the  bird  From  following  the  fled  s —  Becket  i  i  259 

Cold  after  warm,  \vinter  after  s,  „      i  iv  65 

belike  it  'ud  ha'  been  always  s,  „    ni  i  149 

That  in  the  s  keeps  the  mountain  side.  The  Ctip  i  i  108 

How  long  ago  was  that  ?     Count.     Alas,  ten  s's  !  The  Falcon  348 

The  tan  of  southern  s's  and  the  beard  ?  Prom,  of  May  n  617 

Thy  thirtieth  s  may  be  thirty-fold  Foresters  i  ii  128 

a  thousand  s's  Robe  you  life-green  again.  „        iv  1057 

Summer-flies    flash  out  at  times  Of  festival  like 

bumish'd  s-f,  „         i  ii  276 

You  lovers  are  such  clumsy  s-f  „  iv  10 

Summit     flash  About  the  s  of  the  hill,  Harold  v  i  539 

vast  vine-bowers  Ran  to  the  s  of  the  trees.  The  Cup  i  ii  403 

Smnmon     When  will  you  that  we  s  both  our  houses   Queen  Mary  in  ii  114 

the  King  shall  s  the  chapter  of  that  church  to  court,       Becket  i  iii  109 

S  your  barons ;  take  their  counsel :  „         v  i  74 

Sommon'd    seems  then  I  was  s  hither  But  to  be 

mock'd  Queen  Mary  in  iv  269 

I  doubt  not  but  thou  knowest  Why  thou  art  s.  Harold  iv  i  188 

Summons    he  shall  answer  to  the  s  of  the  King's  court 

to  be  tried  therein.'  Becket  i  iii  89 

Summun  (some  one)     I  heerd  summat  as  s  towld  s  o' 

owld  Bishop  Gardiner's  end ;  Queen  Mary  rv  iii  502 

why  then  I  beant  Farmer  Dobson,  but  s  else —       Prom,  of  May  ii  140 

Minds  ma  o'  s.  „  n  583 

Snmmnt  (something)    There  mun  be  s  wrong  theer, 

Wilson, 

but  he  says  he  wants  to  tell  ye  s  very  partic'lar. 

Snmpter-mule    Mutilated,  poor  brute,  my  s-m, 

Sun    the  most  princeUke  Prince  beneath  the  s. 

amazed  To  find  as  fair  a  s  as  might  have  flash'd 
Till  the  s  dance,  as  upon  Easter  Day. 
Our  short-lived  s,  before  his  winter  plunge, 
your  Highness  is  our  5,  the  King  And  you  together 

our  two  s's  in  one ; 
What  power  this  cooler  s  of  England  hath 
dance  into  the  s  That  shines  on  princes, 
you  want  the  s  That  shines  at  court ; 
That  might  live  always  in  the  s's  warm  heart, 
a  candle  in  the  s  Is  all  but  smoke — 
a  s  set  But  leaving  light  enough 
And  we  will  fill  thee  full  of  Norman  s, 
And  over  thee  the  s's  arise  and  set. 
Thine  by  the  s ;  nay,  by  some  s  to  be, 
That  s  may  God  speed ! 
And  over  and  gone  with  the  s.    Here ;  but  our  s  in 

Aquitaine  lasts  longer.  Becket,  Pro.  327 

If  a  seraph  shouted  from  the  s,  „        i  iii  311 

Love  that  is  born  of  the  deep  coming  up  with  the  s 
from  the  sea.  (repeat)  ..     "  i  10,  20 


I  234 

m  355 

Becket  v  ii  440 

Queen  Mary  i  v  446 

ui  ii  22 

m  ii  238 

„         m  iii  85 

„         in  iv  18 

III  iv  327 

in  V  253 

in  V  276 

vi22 

vi78 

Harold  i  i  306 

„    n  ii  180 

„    n  ii  433 

„      ni  i  67 

„      in  i  72 


Sun  (continued)    My  *,  no  cloud !    Let  there  not  be  one  frown    Becket  n  i  41 
Out  of  the  cloud,  my  S — out  of  the  eclipse  „    ii  i  202 

And  felt  the  s  of  Antioch  scald  our  mail,  „     n  ii  93 

The  s  himself,  should  he  be  changed  to  one,  „     m  i  57 

What  are  you  crying  for,  when  the  s  shines  ?  „    ni  i  270 

cloud  that  hath  come  over  the  s  and  cast  us  all  into 

shadow  ?  „    m  iii  46 

And  hiss'd  against  the  s  ?  „     v  iii  45 

twin  sister  of  the  morning  star,  Forelead  the  s.  The  Cwp  i  iii  47 

Beneath  an  ever-rising  s — I  see  him —  „  n  535 

Your  ladyship  hv&s  higher  in  the  s.  The  Falcon  583 

Help  me  to  move  this  bench  for  him  into  the  s.         Prom,  of  May  i  81 
plow  straait  as  a  line  right  i'  the  faace  o'  the  s,  „  i  371 

— then  hup  agean  i'  the  faace  o'  the  s.    Eh !  how 

the  s  'ud  shine,  „  1 373 

like  The  rainbow  of  a  momentary  s.  Foresters  i  ii  279 

And  darkness  rises  from  the  fallen  s.  „  i  iii  42 

A  houseless  head  beneath  the  s  and  stars,  „  11  i  64 

Sunday    Who  stole  the  widow's  one  sitting  hen  0'  S,  Becket  i  iv  121 

you  were  stupid  drunk  all  S,  Prom,  of  May  m  80 

Sunder     plenty  to  s  and  unsister  them  again  :  Queen  Mary  i  i  85 

Sunder'd    And  brought  the  s  tree  again,  and  set  it  Straight 

on  the  trunk,  Harold  m  i  144 

Sung    The  bells  must  ring ;  Te  Deums  must  be  s ;       Queen  Mary  in  ii  212 
shall  masses  here  be  s  By  every  priest  in  Oxford.  „  iv  iii  100 

'  Love  for  a  whole  life  long '  When  was  that  s  ?  Harold  m  ii  89 

Well  s  !    James.    Fanny  be  the  naame  i'  the  song.    Prom,  of  May  n  210 
your  Ladyship  hath  s  the  old  proverb  out  of  fashion.     Foresters  I  i  163 
Sun-gilt     Like  s-g  breathings  on  a  frosty  dawn —  Queen  Mary  v  iii  50 

Sunk    and  might  have  s  a  navy —  Becket  m  iii  125 

past  is  like  a  travell'd  land  now  s  Below  the  horizon —  The  Cwp  n  230 
S  in  the  deepest  pit  of  pauperism.  Prom,  of  May  m  803 

sudden  touches  For  him,  or  him — -s  rocks ;  Queen  Mary  v  v  221 

Sunken     Help  the  good  ship,  showing  the  s  rock,  Harold  11  ii  100 

Sunless     Ran  s  down,  and  moan'd  against  the  piers.      Queen  Mary  n  iii  26 
Sunlight     I  am  sure  Her  morning  wanted  s,  Harold  i  ii  45 

lark  first  takes  the  s  on  his  wing.  The  Cup  i  iii  43 

The  town  lay  still  in  the  long  s-l.  Prom,  of  May  i  37 

Sunrise    hallus  up  at  s,  and  I'd  drive  the  plow  „  i  369 

Sunrising    which  he  Gainsays  by  next  s —  Becket  iv  ii  278 

Sunset    a  paleness.  Like  the  wan  twilight  after  s,  „       i  iii  326 

Sunshine     Like  universal  air  and  s  !  Queen  Mary  m  ii  182 

The  s  sweeps  across  my  life  again.  „  m  vi  249 

Air  and  s.     I  would  we  had  you,  „  v  ii  606 

Winter  s  !     Beware  of  opening  out  thy  bosom  Becket  in  iii  29 

Sunstroke     Pray  God,  we  'scape  the  s.  Queen  Mary  ni  v  279 

Superstition    letter  you  wrote  against  Their  s  „  i  ii  86 

if  you  cared  To  fee  an  over-opulent  s,  Prom,  of  May  i  693 

Superstitious    S  fool.  What  brought  me  here  ?  „  n  350 

Supper    Simon,  is  $  ready  ?  Queen  Mary  ni  vi  256 

A  holy  s,  not  a  sacrifice ;  „  rv  ii  57 

Was  not  my  lord  of  Leicester  bidden  to  our  s  ?  Becket  i  iv  57 

Swine,  sheep,  ox — here's  a  French  s.  „    i  iv  113 

Is  the  Archbishop  a  thief  who  gives  thee  thy  s?  „     i  iv  116 

We  be  a-going  home  after  our  s  in  all  humbleness,  ,,     i  iv  207 

shall  see  the  silk  here  and  there,  and  I  want  my  s.  „       iv  i  57 

Cheese  ?     Filippo.     A  s  for  twelve  mites.  The  Falcon  127 

do  thou  and  thy  sweet'art  sing  us  hoam  to  s —       Prom,  of  May  n  170 
fur  owd  Dobson  '11  gi'e  us  a  bit  0'  s.  „  n  217 

Supping    See  A-supping 
Supple  (adj.)     You  must  be  sweet  and  s,  like  a 

Frenchman.  Queen  Mary  v  i  275 

Supple  (verb)     To  sleek  and  s  himself  to  the  king's  hand.        Harold  i  i  149 
Supplicate    all  one  mind  to  s  The  Legate  here  for 

pardon.  Queen  Mary  ni  iii  106 

Supplication    Our  s  be  exhibited  To  the  Lord 

Cardinal  Pole,  „  m  iii  123 

By  this  our  s  promising,  „  in  iii  135 

Supplied    daily  want  5 — The  daily  pleasure  to  supply  it.        Becket  11  ii  301 
Supply    daily  want  supplied — The  daily  pleasure  to  s  it.  „      n  ii  303 

Supposed    have  been  s  Tainted  with  Lutheranism      Queen  Mary  in  iv  226 
Supposition     But  you,  my  Lord,  beyond  all  s,  „  m  iv  229 

Suppress    to  s  God's  honour  for  the  sake  Of  any  king  Becket  n  ii  220 

Sure    {See  also  Sewer,  Stupid-sure)    Lord  Paget's 

'  Ay '  is  s — who  else  ?  Queen  Mary  i  v  630 


Sure 


10921 


Swear 


Sore  (coidinued)    I  am  5  (Knowing  the  man)  he 
wrought  it 

I  should  fight  then.    Stafford.     I  am  s  of  it. 

and  not  s  Of  their  own  seh^es,  , 

Of  this  be  s,  he  is  whole  worlds  away.  , 

but  I  am  not  s  She  will  not  serve  me  better — 

Papacy  is  no  more.    Paget.    Are  we  so  s  of  that  ? 

I  am  s  she  hates  thee,  Pants  for  thy  blood. 

I  his  queen,  I  might  be  s  of  it. 

I  am  s  this  body  Is  Alfwig,  the  king's  uncle. 

Art  thou  so  s  thou  followedst  anything  ? 

But,  my  liege,  I  am  s,  of  all  the  roses— 

for  to  be  5  it's  no  more  than  a  week  since  our  old  Father 
Philip 

be  5  they  be,  but  he  blinded  'em  for  all  that, 

and  to  be  s  I  ha'  seen  great  ones  to-day — 

tho'  to  be  s  if  I  had  been  Eve  i'  the  garden  I  shouldn't 
ha'  minded  the  apple, 

to  be  s  if  I  hadn't  minded  it  we  should  all 

tho'  to  be  s  our  mother  'ill  sing  me  old  songs  by  the  hour, 

You  held  never  used  so  many.  Not  if  you  meant  it,  I 
am  s. 

And  yet  I  am  all  but  s  my  dagger  was  a  feint  Till  the 
worm  tum'd — 

I  am  not  so  s  But  that  I  love  him  still. 

I  am  s  I  struck  him.     Synorix.     And  I  am  just  as  s, 
my  lord,  /  struck  him. 

Wise  I  am  s  as  she  is  beautiful, 

I  am  s  of  being  every  way  malign'd. 

I  am  s  I  told  him  that  his  plot  was  folly. 

Plead  to  him,  I  am  s  you  will  prevail. 

I  am  s  you  will  not  marry  him.    Camma.    Are  you  so  s  ? 

I  am  all  but  s  that  some  one  spake. 

I  am  most  s  that  some  one  call'd. 

I  am  s  that  more  than  one  brave  fellow 

but  be  s  That  1  shall  never  marry  again,  my  lord  ! 

Count.     S?  „  741 

I  am  s  I  wish  her  happy.  Prom,  of  May  i  478 

But  s  am  I  that  of  your  gentleness  You  wiU 
forgive  him. 

and  that,  I  am  s,  would  be  the  death  of  him. 

and  he  loves  me  too,  I  am  quite  s  of  that. 

I  am  s  that  when  we  are  married  he  will  be  willing 

are  you  quite  s  that  after  marriage  this  gentleman 

He  will  be  s  to  know  you  to-morrow. 

But  there  I  am  s  the  ballad  is  at  fault. 

I  am  all  but  s  of  him.     I  will  go  to  him. 

Nay — that,  my  friend,  I  am  s  I  did  not  say. 
Snrgas    S  e  tenebris.  Sis  vindicator  ! 
Surged    hugest  wave  from  Norseland  ever  yet  S  on  us, 
Surname    He  must  deserve  his  s  better. 
Surprise    Well,  Father,  I  have  a  s  for  you. 


Queen  Mary  in  i  275 
in  i  469 
ra  iv  119 
IV  iii  194 
vi249 
vv287 
Harold  i  ii  37 
„    iiil55 
„     V  ii  67 
Becket  i  i  210 
„    n  i  139 


III  i  109 
„  ra  i  128 
„   III  i  136 

„  mi  139 
„  m  i  144 
„   III  i  184 

„  IV  ii  184 

„  IV  ii  379 
„  IV  ii  450 

The  Cup  1  ii  34 
I  ii  139 
I  ii  241 
I  ii  283 
I  ii  302 
II  104 
n404 
II  509 
The  Falcon  633 


Surprised    niver  been  s  but  once  i'  my  life,  and  I  went 

blind  upon  it. 
Surrendering    s  God's  honour  to  the  pleasiure  of  a  man. 
Surrey    Not  an  eye  to  s, 
Surveyor    See  Land-surveyor 
Suspect    Why  still  s  your  Grace  ? 

you  s  This  Sinnatus  of  playing  patriotism, 
Suspected    anyone  S  thee  to  be  my  man  ? 

Much  s,  of  me  Nothing  proven  can  be. 
Suspend    I  will  s  myself  from  all  my  functions. 

your  lordship  would  s  me  from  verse-writing, 

and  tho'  you  s  Foliot  or  another, 
Suspended    as  you  s  yourself  after  sub-writing  to  the 
customs. 

tho'  you  s  yourself.  The  Pope  let  you  down  again ; 
Suspense    the  Pope  will  not  leave  them  in  s,  for  the  Pope 
himself  Is  always  in  s, 

— always  in  s,  like  the  scales, 

always  in  s,  like  the  tail  of  the  horologe — 
Sussex    I  know  all  S ;  A  good  entrenclunent 
Suzerain    Husband-in-law,  our  smooth-shorn  a, 
Swaddling-band    flings  aside  His  s-b's. 
Swale    in  the  cruel  river  S  A  hundred  years  ago ; 


II  487 
in  167 
in  214 
ra  259 
ni  292 
in  470 
Foresters  i  i  122 
I  i  275 
n  i  489 
Harold  v  i  571 
„      IV  iii  64 
Queen  Mary  m  ii  197 
Prom,  of  May  iii  438 


in  439 

Becket  n  ii  439 

Foresters  n  ii  181 

Queen  Mary  in  v  17 

The  Cup  I  i  77 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  176 

„  III  V  19 

Becket  i  iii  301 

n  ii  349 

n  ii  358 

n  ii  350 
n  ii  356 


n  ii  359 

II  ii  362 

n  ii  365 

Harold  in  i  362 

Becket  n  ii  40 

Prom,  of  May  I  586 

Harold  ni  ii  10 


Swalier  (swallow)    Wi'  the  butterflies  out,  and  the  s^s 

at  plaay,  Prom,  of  May  n  198 

Swallow  (s)     (See  also  Swaller)    S's  fly  again,  Cuckoos 

cry  again,  Queen  Mary  in  v  96 

Why,  nature's  licensed  vagabond,  the  s,  „  v  i  21 

Yet  will  I  be  your  s  and  return —  „  v  i  91 

Sick  as  an  autumn  s  for  a  voyage,  Harold  i  i  101 

Farewell,  friends  !  farewell,  s's  !  Becket  i  iv  45 

Not  while  the  s  skims  along  the  ground,  Foresters  i  ii  313 

Swallow  (verb)     find  Heaven  or  else  hell  ready  to  s  me,    Queen  Mary  iv  iii  224 


A  whale ! 


Harold  II  i  41 

„     V  i  560 

Becket  11  ii  379 

„     n  ii  382 

„     V  iii  206 


Rolf,  what  fish  did  s  Jonah  ?     Bolf. 

all  their  horse  S  the  hill  locust-like. 

My  one  grain  of  good  counsel  which  you  will  not  s. 

that  will  s  anything.     Farewell. 

WiU  the  earth  gape  and  s  us  ? 

she  that  has  eaten  the  yolk  is  scarce  like  to  s  the  shell.  The  Falcon  705 
Swallowed    (See  also  Shore-swallow'd)     I  had  liefer  that  the 

fish  had  s  me,  Harold  n  i  37 

whale  to  a  whelk  we  have  s  the  King  of  England.  „      n  i  45 

glory  of  the  Church  Hath  s  up  the  glory  of  the  King ;      Becket  I  iii  666 

And  s  in  the  conqueror's  chronicle. 

your  free  sports  have  s  my  free  hour. 
Swam    or  else  s  heavily  Against  the  huge  corruptions   Queen  Mary  iv  ii  98 
Swamp    running  out  at  top  To  s  the  house.  Harold  i  i  379 

Swan     flocks  of  s's,  As  fair  and  white  as  angels ;  Queeii  Mary  iii  ii  15 

Swang    Mark'd  how  the  war-axe  s,  Harold  iv  iii  156 

Swapped    See  Swopt 
Sward     Kill'd  the  s  where'er  they  sat, 
Sware     (See  also  Swore)     He  knew  not  whom  he  s  by, 

and  I  5  To  consecrate  my  virgin  here 

born  in  me  when  I  s  Falsely  to  him, 

by  whom  I  knew  not  that  I  s, — 

King  Henry  s  That,  saving  his  King's  kingship, 

I  s  I  would  not  give  the  kiss  of  peace, 
Swarest     Swearing  thou  s  falsely  by  his  Saints : 

lest  the  strange  Saints  By  whom  thou  s, 

Thou  s  falsely  by  our  blessed  bones. 
Swarm  (s)     Philip  and  the  black-faced  s's  of  Spain, 

Out  crept  a  wasp,  with  half  the  s  behind. 

Is  coming  with  a  s  of  mercenaries  To  break 
Swarm  (verb)     they  s  into  the  fire  Like  flies — for  what  ? 

no  dogma.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  110 

S  to  thy  voice  like  bees  to  the  brass  pan.  Foresters  1  iii  108 

Swarming    Swallow  the  hill  locust-like,  s  up.  Harold  v  i  560 

Sway    Now  the  spoilt  child  s's  both.  „       i  i  453 

that  one  time  s  to  the  current.  And  to  the  wind 
another. 

And  s  the  long  grape-bunches  of  our  vines, 
Sway'd    might  well  have  s  All  England  under  Henry, 
Swaying    And  s  his  two-handed  sword  about  him, 

and  like  the  s  vines — Yea, — with  our  eyes,— ■ 
Swear    (See  also  Swear)     He  s's  by  the  Rood 

Peter,  I'll  s  for  him  He  did  believe 


The  Cup  I  ii  158 
Foresters  iv  339 


Foresters  n  ii  152 

Harold  m  i  256 

„      ra  i  275 

V  i  302 

V  i  305 
Becket  i  iii  27 

„  in  iii  259 
Harold  ni  ii  142 

V  i  117 

V  i  259 
Queen  Mary  n  i  98 

„        III  iii  49 
Foresters  m  452 


Becket  1  iii  593 

The  Cup  n  270 

Becket  i  iii  467 

Harold  \  i  407 

The  Cup  I  ii  410 

Whew  !  Queen  Mary  i  i  62 

I  ii  76 

„       u  ii  296 


S  with  me,  noble  fellow-citizens,  all, 

We  s  !     Mary.    We  thank  yo\ir  Lordship  and  your 

loyal  city. 
I  s  you  do  your  country  wrong,  Sir  Ralph, 
but  of  this  fire  he  says,  Nay  s's, 
I  s  I  have  no  heart  To  be  your  Queen. 
I  s  it,  By  mine  own  eyes — 
to  s  Vows  that  he  dare  not  break. 
S  thou  on  this  !     Harold.     What  should  Is?     Why 

should  I  s  on  this  ?     William.     S  thou  to  help  me 

to  the  crown  of  England. 
S  thou  to-day,  to-morrow  is  thine  own. 
I  5  to  help  thee  to  the  crown  of  England  .  .  • 

(repeat)  Harold  u  ii  712,  721 

Thou  must  s  absolutely,  noble  Earl.  „  11  ii  715 

S,  dearest  brother,  I  beseech  thee,  s !  „  n  ii  719 

I  made  thee  s. — Show  him  by  whom  he  hath  sworn.    „  11  ii  732 

and  dear  son,  s  When  thou  art  king,  ,,  ni  i  305 

for  I  have  sworn  Not  to  s  falsely  twice.     Edward. 

Thou  wilt  not  s  ?     Harold.     I  cannot.  „  ni  i  311 

For  I  can  s  to  that,  but  cannot  s  That  these  will 

follow  thee  „  it  i  156 


n  ii  299 
„       ra  i  153 

ra  V  72 

V  V  264 

Harold  i  ii  109 

„      n  ii  76 


n  ii  701 
n  ii  709 


Swear 


1093 


Swindler 


Swear  (continued)    who  made  And  heard  thee  s —  Harold  v  i  121 

There  is  no  man  can  s  to  him.  „        v  ii  78 
Ay,  ay,  but  s  to  see  to  her  in  England.     Becket.     Well, 

well,  I  s,  but  not  to  please  myself.  Becket,  Pro.  190 

5  nay  to  that  by  this  cross  on  thy  neck.  „       Pro.  369 

I  heard  him  s  revenge.  „          i  i  280 

not  the  soldier  As  Foliot  s's  it. —  „         i  i  388 

And  5  to  obey  the  customs.  „       i  iii  270 

I,  my  liege,  could  s,  To  death  for  death.  „        i  iii  404 

I  can  easily  s  to  these  as  being  The  King's  will  „       i  iii  419 

Cross  swords  all  of  you  !  s  to  follow  him  !  „       i  iv  200 

S  and  unswear,  state  and  misstate  thy  best !  „       ii  ii  476 

But  can  I  s  to  that,  had  she  but  given  „     iv  ii  384 

I'll  s  to  mine  own  self  it  was  a  feint.     Why  should  I  s, 

Eleanore,  who  am,  or  was,  „     iv  ii  401 

I  know — could  s — as  long  as  Becket  breathes,  „          v  i  76 

I  will  s  by  the  head  of  the  Earl.  Foresters  i  ii  45 

but  for  ail  that  I  will  s  the  Earl  hath  right.  „         i  ii  51 

*Sf  to  me  by  that  relic  on  thy  neck.  „      i  ii  169 
I  s  then  by  this  relic  on  my  neck — No,  no,  I  wiU  not 

s  by  this ;  „      i  ii  171 

I  have  heard  him  s  he  will  be  even  wi'  thee.  „      ii  i  344 

Not  any  of  these,  I  s.    Men.     No,  no,  we  «.  „      ii  i  710 
Swe&r    Minds  ma  o' summun.     I  could  s  to  that ;         Prom,  of  May  ii  583 

Snear'd  (swore)     For  me  an'  my  Sally  we  s  to  be  true,  „            ii  204 

Swearer  They  call  thee  John  the  8.  Becket  ii  ii  462 
Swearest  that  s  by  the  mass  ?  Queen  Mary  i  iii  46 
Swearing    (See  also  A-swearing)     For  5  falsely  by  those 

blessed  bones  ;  Harold  m  i  246 

S  thou  swarest  falsely  by  his  Saints :  „     iii  ii  142 

Sweat  (s)     hand,  Damp  with  the  s  of  death.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  33 

blood  and  s  of  heretics  at  the  stake  „         v  i  100 

cries  continually  with  s  and  tears  to  the  Lord  God  „        v  iv  45 

In  the  s  of  thy  brow,  says  Holy  Writ,  shalt  thou  eat 

bread,  but  in  the  s  of  thy  brow  Foresters  iv  201 

Sweat  (verb)     he'll  s  it  out  of  thee,  (repeat)  Harold  11  i  77 

8  out  your  gout,  friend,  for  by  my  life,  Foresters  iv  565 

Sweating     My  lord,  I  ha'  three  sisters  a-dying  at  home  o' 

the  s  sickness.  Becket  i  iv  246 

Sweep  (s)     How  many  names  in  the  long  s  of  time         Queen  Mary  iii  v  40 

in  the  long  s  of  years  to  come  must  the  great  man  Foresters  1  i  244 

Sweep  (verb)     When  they  wiU  s  her  from  the  seas.        Queen  Alary  iir  i  162 

The  sunshine  s's  across  my  life  again.  „         in  vi  249 

storm  is  hard  at  hand  will  s  away  Thrones,  Prom,  of  May  i  517 

Sweeping    See  Down-sweeping 

Sweet     took  her  hand,  call'd  her  s  sister,  and  kiss'd  not 

her  alone.  Queen  Mary  i  i  80 

but  you,  cousin,  are  fresh  and  s  As  the  first  flower  „          i  iv  62 

I  have  a  head  to  lose  for  your  s  sake.  „        i  iv  131 

8  mother,  you  had  time  and  cause  enoxigh  To  sicken  „  i  v  23 
More  like  a  school-boy  that  hath  broken  bounds, 

Sickening  himself  with  s's.  „         i  v  172 

The  bitter  in  the  s.  .,         i  v  235 
S  cousin,  you  forget  That  long  low  minster  where 
you  gave  your  hand  To   this  great  Catholic 

king.  ,.        in  ii  89 

I  know  that  she  was  ever  s  to  me.  „      ni  ii  228 

■     And  she  was  crafty — a  s  violence.  And  a  s  craft.  „      in  v  108 
They  are  not  s,  The  violence  and  the  craft  that  do 

divide  The  world  of  nature ;  „      m  v  119 

And,  whether  it  bring  you  bitter  news  or  s,  „      m  v  202 

Lose  the  s  hope  that  I  may  bear  a  prince.  „     m  vi  201 

You  must  be  s  and  supple,  like  a  Frenchman.  „         v  i  275 

Your  pardon,  S  cousin,  and  farewell !  „        v  ii  204 

Look'd  hard  and  s  at  me,  and  gave  it  me.  „          v  v  95 

0  Saint  of  Aragon,  with  that  s  worn  smile  „  v  v  198 
before  I  go  To  find  the  s  refreshment  of  the  Saints.  Harold  i  i  177 
And  the  lark  sings,  the  s  stars  come  and  go,  „  n  ii  434 
All  the  s  Saints  bless  him  !  „  ni  i  297 
Their  anthems  of  no  church,  how  s  they  are  !  „  in  ii  92 
Over !  the  s  summer  closes,  (repeat)                Becket,  Pro.  301,  323,  331 

1  left  him  with  peace  on  his  face — that  s  other-world 

smile,  Becket,  Pro.  396 

and  it  minded  me  Of  the  s  woods  of  Clifford,  „          i  i  264 

Be  s  to  her,  she  has  many  enemies.  „          1  i  404 


Sweet  (continued)    that  seems  s  to  you  now,  will  blast  and 

blind  you  like  a  curse.  Becket  i  iv  39 

that  seem  at  most  S  guests,  or  foreign  cousins,  „     n  i  135 

Thou  shalt  confess  all  thy  s  sins  to  me.  „     n  i  292 

so  if  the  city  be  sick,  and  I  cannot  call  the  kennel  s,  „    11  ii  349 

All  praise  to  Heaven,  and  s  St.  Magdalen  !  „  m  iii  235 

And  I  will  fly  with  my  s  boy  to  heaven,  „  iv  ii  237 

Home,  s  moon,  bring  him  home,  The  Cup  i  ii  7 

white  In  the  s  moon  as  with  a  lovelier  snow  !  „     i  ii  396 

and  bless  your  s  face,  you  look  as  beautiful  this 

morning  as  the  very  Madonna  her  own  self—  The  Falcon  197 

Oh  s  saints  !  one  plate  of  prunes  !  „  215 

My  last  sight  ere  I  swoon'd  was  one  s  face  Crown'd 

with  the  wreath.  „  648 

Well,  shall  we  say  this  wreath  and  your  s  rhymes  ?  „  735 

My  s  Eva,  Where  have  you  lain  in  ambush  all  the 

morning  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  543 

we  might  be  As  happy  as  the  bees  there  at  their 
honey  In  these  s  blossoms.  Eva.  Yes ;  how 
s  they  smell !  '  „  1 607 

an'  them  theer  be  soom  of  her  oan  roses,  an'  she 

wur  as  s  as  ony  on  'em —  „  n  39 

Why,  lass,  doant  tha  knaw  he  be  s  upo'  Dora  Steer,         „  n  161 

Can  tell  me  anything  of  our  s  Eva  When  in  her 

brighter  girlhood,  „  n  520 

Be  not  so  cast  down,  my  s  Eva.  „  in  468 

O  s  Kate,  my  first  love,  the  first  kiss,  the  first  kiss  !      Foresters  i  i  126 
But  he  flutter'd  his  wings  with  a  s  little  cry,  „         i  i  154 

Farewell,  Sir  Richard ;  farewell,  s  Marian.  „       i  ii  285 

Here's  a  pot  o'  wild  honey  from  an  old  oak,  saving 

your  s  reverences.  „       n  i  296 

O  s  sir,  talk  not  of  cows.    You  anger  the  spirit.  „       n  i  329 

All  the  s  saints  bless  your  worship  for  your  alms  to 

the  old  woman  !  „       n  i  363 

and  if  thou  be  as  gentle  Give  me  some  news  of  my  s 

Marian.     Where  is  she  ?     Marian.     Thy  s  Marian  ?         „       n  i  481 
Stay  with  us  here,  s  love,  „        n  ii  14 

Those  s  tree-Cupids  half-way  up  in  heaven,  „  ni  35 

Robin,  the  s  light  of  a  mother's  eye,  „  iv  2 

On  those  s  lips  that  dare  to  dally  with  it.  „  iv  75 

S  Marian,  by  the  letter  of  the  law  It  seems  thy 

father's  land  is  forfeited.  „         iv  638 

S  heavens,  I  could  wish  that  all  the  land  Were  plunged       „         iv  666 

Kiss  him.  Sir  Richard — kiss  him,  my  s  Marian.  „       rv  1004 

But  thou  art  fair  as  ever,  my  s  sister.  „       iv  1018 

Sweet'art  (sweetheart)     kissin'  o'  one  another  like  two  s's 

i'  the  poorch  Prom,  of  May  1  22 

as  long  as  the  man  sarved  for  'is  s  i'  Scriptur'.  „  n  62 

mea  and  my  5  was  a  workin'  along  o'  one  side  wi' 

one  another,  „         n  152 

telled  me  'at  s's  niver  worked  well  togither ;  and  I 

telled  'im  'at  s's  alius  worked  best  togither ;  „         n  156 

wheniver  'e  sees  two  s's  togither  like  thou  and  me,  „         n  163 

do  thou  and  thy  s  sing  us  hoam  to  supper —  „         u  170 

an'  axed  ma  to  be  'is  little  s,  „        m  120 

Sweeten    Hast  thou  anything  to  s  this  ?  Foresters  11  i  294 

Sweeter    I  had  kept  My  Robins  and  my  cows  in  s 

order  Had  I  been  such.  Queen  Mary  m  v  270 

S  than  any  violet  of  to-day.  The  Falcon  465 

Sweetest    This  wild  one — ^nay,  I  shall  not  prick  myself — Is  s.  Becket  n  i  145 

And  then  the  s  flower  of  all  the  wolds.  Prom,  of  May  m  751 

Sweetheart    (See  also  Sweet'art)    How  sayst  thou,  s  ?  Becket  rv  ii  161 

And  your  s — when  are  you  and  he  to  be  married  ?  Prom,  of  May  in  110 

Wilt  thou  embrace  thy  s  'fore  my  face  ?  Foresters  n  ii  28 

No,  s  !  out  of  tune  with  Love  and  me.  „         iv  30 

Sweetness     Lilyhke  in  her  stateliness  and  s  !  Prom,  of  May  n  621 

Swept    We  have  had  it  s  and  gamish'd  after  him.        Qu^een  Mary  m  ii  138 

Swiftness     Upon  the  skill  and  s  of  the  players.  „  i  iii  143 

Swim    Here's  to  him,  sink  or  s  !     Thane.    God  sink 

him  !  Harold  iv  iii  134 

our  little  Sheriff  will  ever  s  with  the  stream  !  Foresters  i  i  240 

And  I  would  «  the  moat,  like  an  otter.  „       i  i  320 

Swimming    hardly,  save  by  boat,  s,  or  wings.  Queen  Mary  n  iii  13 

Swindler    but  I  taakes  'im  for  a  Lunnun  s,  and  a 

burn  fool.  Prom,  of  May  i  309 


Swine 


1094 


Tail 


Swine    These  beastly  s  make  such  a  grunting  here,         Queen  Mary  i  m  12 

And  get  the  s  to  shout  Elizabeth.  „           i  m  39 

was  not  meet  the  heretic  s  should  live  In  Lambeth.  „       in  u  134 

No,  for  we  trust  they  parted  in  the  s.  „       ni  ii  143 

the  people  stupid-siu:e  Sleep  Uke  their  s  .  .  .  Harold  iv  iii  217 

S,  sheep,  ox— here's  a  French  supper.  Becket  i  iv  112 

Swing  (s)    Two  deaths  at  eveiy  s,  ran  in  upon  us  Harold  \  i  409 
Swing  (verb)    Here  s's  a  Spaniard — there  an 

EngUshman ;  Queen  Mary  y  i  87 

Which  way  soever  the  vane-arrow  s,  Harold  n  ii  257 
Swirling    river,  black,  slimy,  s  under  me  in  the 

lampUght,  Prom,  of  May  iii  370 

Swoll'n    s  and  fed  With  indraughts  and  side- 
currents.  Queen  Mary  u  i  232 

Rogue,  I  have  a  s  vein  in  my  right  leg.  Foresters  rv  568 
Swoon  (s)    — ^not  dead  now — a  s — a  scene —                 Prom,  of  May  m  696 

Swoon  (verb)     being  thwarted  ever  s's  And  weeps  herself  Becket  v  ii  213 

Swoon'd    He  hath  s  !     Death  ?  .  .  .  no,  as  yet  a  breath.  Harold  ni  i  318 

My  last  sight  ere  I  s  was  one  sweet  face  The  Falcon  647 

had  his  draught  of  wine  And  then  he  s  away.  Foresters  ii  ii  3 

Swoop    «  down  upon  him  Eagle-like,  lightning-Uke —  The  Falcon  12 
Swopt    Fanny  be  the  naame  i'  the  song,  but  I  s  it 

fur  she.  Prom,  of  May  n  212 

Sword    Down  scabbard,  and  out  s  !  Queen  Mary  ii  i  143 

His  s  shall  hew  the  heretic  peoples  down  !  „       m  ii  178 
'  I  come  not  to  bring  peace  but  as'?     The  s  Is  in 

her  Grace's  hand  to  smite  with.  „        ni  iv  88 

Into  one  s  to  hack  at  Spain  and  me.  „           v  i  138 

they  clapt  their  hands  Upon  their  s's  when  ask'd  ;  „          v  i  174 
voice  of  any  people  is  the  s  That  guards  them,  or 

the  s  that  beats  them  down.  Harold  ii  ii  135 

8  Of  lightnings,  wherewithal  he  cleft  the  tree  „      m  i  136 

swaying  his  two-handed  s  about  him,  „        y  i  407 

sheathe  your  s's,  ye  will  displease  the  King,  Becket  i  iii  179 

Did  not  your  barons  draw  their  s's  against  me  ?  >,       i  iii  502 

than  the  s's  of  the  craven  sycophants  „       i  iv  147 

Cross  s's  all  of  you  !  swear  to  follow  him  !  „       i  iv  199 

Shall  I  smite  him  with  the  edge  of  the  s  ?  „       i  iy  224 

Tho'  all  the  s's  in  England  flash'd  above  me  „       v  ii  484 

score  of  knights  all  arm'd  with  s's  and  axes —  „        v  iii  71 
Clashing  of  s's — three  upon  one,  and  that  one  our 

Robin  !  Foresters  ii  i  419 

And  never  drewest  s  to  help  the  old  man  „        n  i  541 

Seize  on  the  knight !  wrench  his  s  from  him  !  „        n  i__676 

Quick  with  thy  s  !  the  yeoman  braves  the  knight.  „         n  ii  30 

Down  with  thy  s  !     She  is  my  queen  and  thine,  „        n  ii  40 

Robin  fancied  me  a  man.  And  drew  his  s  upon  me,  „          in  21 
Swore    (See  also  Sware,  Swear 'd)    WiUiam  laugh'd  and 

s  that  might  was  right,  Harold  n  ii  362 

King  s  to  our  cardinals  He  meant  no  harm  Becket  i  iii  215 

arms  of  her  first  love,  Fitzurse,  Who  s  to  marry  her.  ,.     iv  ii  336 

since  we  likewise  s  to  obey  the  customs,  „         v  i  54 

Nay,  she  s  it  never  Should  leave  her  finger.  Foresters  ii  i  592 
Sworn    s  this  Spanish  marriage  shall  not  be.                  Queen  Mary  i  iv  115 

I  have  s  upon  the  body  and  blood  of  Christ  „            i  v  214 

Hath  your  Grace  so  s  ?  „            i  v  217 

Show  him  by  whom  he  hath  s.  Harold  u  ii  733 

thou  hast  s  an  oath  Which,  if  not  kept,  „       n  ii  737 

for  I  have  s  Not  to  swear  falsely  twice.  „      mi  310 

noble  Harold,  I  would  thou  couldst  have  s.  „      ni  i  326 

/  would  thou  couldst  have  s.  „      m  i  333 

— ^brother — /  have  not  s —  „        v  i  122 

thou  hast  5  a  voluntary  allegiance  to  him  ?  Becket,  Pro.  439 

He  hath  s  that  thou  sbouldst  sign,  „        i  iii  189 

I  evermore  have  s  upon  his  side,  „       ii  ii  465 

God  help  her,  That  she  was  *  to  silence.  „         m  i  78 
tho'  I  be  s  not  to  speak  a  word,  I  can  tell  you  all 

about  her,  „       mi  204 
<  on  this  my  cross  a  hundred  times  Never  to  leave 

him —  „       IV  ii  205 
Ye  have  »  Yourselves  my  men  when  I  was  Chancellor —    „        v  ii  501 

on  this  cross  I  have  s  that  till  I  myself  pass  away,  Foresters  i  i  289 

And  Robin  Hood  hath  s —  „       m  236 

I  have  s  by  our  Lady  if  they  come  „         iv  96 
Swnng    paison  from  his  own  spire  s  out  dead,             Queen  Mary  iv  iii  375 


Sycamore    the  knights  are  arming  in  the  garden 

Beneath  the  s. 
Sycophant    than  the  swords  of  the  craven  s's 
Syllable    And  every  s  taught  us  by  our  Lord, 
Symbol    In  s  of  their  married  unity, 
take  and  wear  this  5  of  your  love ; 
or  any  other  s  of  vacuity. 
Symbol'd-symboll'd    happUy  symboll'd  by  The  King 
your  husband. 


whether  it  symhol'd  ruin  Or  gloiy,  who  shall  tell  ? 
Synorix  (an  ex-tetrarch)    If  6',  who  has  dwelt  three  years 

in  Rome 
What  is,  S?     Sinnatus.     Galatian,  and  not  know  ? 

This  S  Was  Tetrarch  here,  and  tyrant  also — 
Thou  art  that  S  !     One  whom  thou  hast  wrong'd 
Return  and  tell  them  S  is  not  here.     What  did  that 

villain  S  say  to  you  ?     Camma.     Is  he — tliat — S  ? 
S — His  face  was  not  malignant, 
WiU  she  come  to  me  Now  that  she  knows  me  <S  ? 
that  man  from  S,  who  has  been  So  oft  to  see  the 

Priestess, 
Since  Camma  fled  from  S  to  our  Temple, 
You  will  not  marry  8  ? 

and  only  Marry  the  dead.     Priestess.    Not  s  then  ? 
messenger  from  S  who  waits  Before  the  Temple  ? 
Greeting  and  health  from  S  !  (repeat) 
mine  own  dagger  driven  by  S  found  AU  good 
'  ^  !  iS  !  '     Camma.     S,  S  ! 
shout  of  S  and  Camma  sitting  Upon  one  throne. 
Call  first  upon  the  Goddess,  S. 

Here  is  another  sacred  to  the  Goddess,  The  gift  of  S  ; 
That  S  should  drink  from  his  own  cup. 
This  blessing  is  for  S  and  for  me. 
S,  first  King,  Camma,  first  Queen  o'  the  Realm, 


Becket  v  ii  570> 

„     I  iv  148 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  231 

The  Cup  u  363 

Foresters  m  7^ 

„       IV  214 

Queen  Mary  m  ii  108 


Harold  v  i  110 

The  Cup  I  ii  175 

„      I  ii  180 
„      I  ii  318 


iii  335 
iii  450 
I  iii  21 

nlO 
II 14 
n27 
n31 
n37 
1x41,131 
n8S 
II 108- 
II 146 
n256. 
n347 
n353. 
II  376 
11440. 


Taaen  (taken)    but  I  ha  t  good  care  to  turn  out  boath 

my  darters  right  down  fine  laadies.                          Prom,  of  May  i  33& 

Taake  (take)     But  I  t's  'im  fur  a  bad  lot  and  a  bum  fool,  „           1 153.' 

but  if  she'd  t  to  ma  i'  that  waay,  or  ony  waay,  „            1 177. 

but  I  t's  'im  fiu"  a  Lunnon  swindler,  and  a  bum  fool.  „           i  30& 

I  t's  it  kindly  of  all  o'  you  that  you  be  coomed —  „           i  318- 

an'  I  can  t  my  glass  wi'  the  yoimgest,  ,,            i  360 

I  thinks  I'd  like  to  t  the  measure  o'  your  foot.  „            i  463 

Will  ya  t  'em  ?  fur  Miss  Eva,  „            n  17 

and  now  she  be  gone,  will  ye  t  'em,  Miss  Dora  ?           '  „            n  21 

an'  weant  ye  t  'em  now,  Miss  Dora,  „            n  41 

I  would  t  the  owd  blind  man  to  my  oan  fireside.  „            n  74 

p'raps  ye  hears  'at  I  soomtimes  t's  a  drop  too  much  ;  „           ii  lOS- 

fur  she  tell'd  ma  to  t  the  cart  to  Littlechester.  „          n  322 

T  one  o'  the  young  'ims  fust.  Miss,  „           m  31 

I  be  ready  to  t  the  pledge.  „           m  84 

T  me  awaay,  little  gell.     It  be  one  o'  my  bad  daays.  „         m  464 

Taaked  (took)     and  1 1  'im  f xu*  soom  sort  of  a  land- 
surveyor —  ).           1 204 

Taakin'  (taking)     theer  be  a  thousand  i'  the  parish,  t  in 

the  women  and  childer ;  „            i  146 

I  likes  'er  aU  the  better  fur  t  me  down,  „          ii  133 

Taater  (potato)     and  the  sacks,  and  the  t's,  and  the  mangles,  „           i  453 

Table    look  how  the  t  steams,  like  a  heathen  altar ;  Becket  i  iv  68' 

and  the  Lord  hath  prepared  yoiu:  t —  ,,     i  iv  131 

And  as  for  the  flesh  at  t,  a  whole  Peter's  sheet,  „  m  iii  12» 

Taboo'd     No  pleasme  then  t :  for  when  the  tide  Prom,  of  May  i  591 

Tabor    Like  Christ  himself  on  T,  Queen  Mary  m  iv  201 

Tabula  rasa    a  blank  page,  a  t  r.                                     Prom,  of  May  n  282 

Ta'en  (taken)     and  they  ha' t  the  body  up  inter  your 

chaumber,  »           n  569 

Tail  (adj.)    for  thou  was  born  i'  the  t  end  of  old  Harry 

the  Seventh.  Queen  Mary  i  i  42 

Tail  (s)    I  was  bom  true  man  at  five  in  the  forenoon 

i'  the  t  of  old  Harry,  „           i  i  46 


Tail 


1095 


Taken 


Tail  (s)  (continued)     that  every  Spaniard  carries  a  t 
like  a  devil 
They  make  amends  for  the  t's. 
tell  you  that  all  English  heretics  have  t's. 
wrath  of  Heaven  hath  three  t's,  The  devil  only  one 
always  in  suspense,  like  the  t  of  the  horologe — 

hasn't  an  eye  left  in  his  own  t  to  flourish 
TaOed    >S'ee  Stump-tailed 
Taint    I  bring  the  t  on  it  along  wi'  me,  for  the 

Archbishop  likes  it, 
Tainted     T  with  Lutheranism  in  Italy. 
Take    {See  also  Taake,  Take  care.  Take  heed,  Tek) 

OlBcers  Are  here  in  force  to  t  you  to  the  Tower. 

as  the  Earl  of  Devon  To  t  my  seat  in  ; 

To  t  such  order  with  all  heretics 

Madam,  t  it  bluntly  ;  marry  Philip, 

t  And  wear  it  as  memorial  of  a  morning 

to  t  the  guns  From  out  the  vessels  lying  in  the  river. 

T  thy  poor  gentleman  ! 

There  yet  is  time,  t  boat  and  pass  to  Windsor. 

heard  She  would  not  t  a  last  farewell  of  him, 

'  Will  you  t  it  off  Before  I  lay  me  down  ?  ' 

To  t  this  absolution  from  yovu*  lips. 

Statesmen  that  are  wise  T  truth  herself  for  model. 

Sheep  at  the  gap  which  Gardiner  t's, 

To  t  the  lives  of  others  that  are  loyal, 

it  t's  my  breath  : 

I  will  t  Such  order  with  all  bad. 

That  I  should  spare  to  <  a  heretic  priest's, 

My  fancy  t's  the  burner's  part. 

We  are  ready  To  t  you  to  St.  Mary's,  Master  Cranmer. 

T  therefore,  all,  example  by  this  man, 
there  be  two  old  gossips — ^gospellers,  I  tit; 
And  tell  me  how  she  t's  it. 
and  your  Grace,  So  you  will  t  advice  of  mine, 

T  it  away  !  not  low  enough  for  me  ! 

But  shall  1 1  some  message  from  your  Grace  ? 

1  tit  that  the  King  hath  spoken  to  you  ; 

T  thou  this  ring  ; 

For  if  the  North  t  fire,  I  should  be  back  ; 

So  thou,  fair  friend,  will  t  them  easily, 

We  seldom  t  man's  life,  except  in  war ; 

Men  would  but  t  him  for  the  craftier  liar. 

t,  sign  it,  Stigand,  Aldred  !     Sign  it. 

The  Good  Shepherd  !     T  this,  and  render  that. 

but  t  back  thy  ring.     It  bums  my  hand — 

Ye  /  a  stick,  and  break  it ; 

This  old  Wulfnoth  Would  t  me  on  his  knees 

Yea,  t  the  Sacrament  upon  it,  king. 

I  could  t  and  slay  thee. 

T  and  slay  me.  For  Edward  loved  me. 

T  and  slay  me,  I  say.  Or  I  shall  count  thee  fool. 

T  thee,  or  free  thee,  Free  thee  or  slay  thee, 
where  mine  own  self  i"s  part  against  myself  ! 
Thou  art  half  English.     T  them  away  ! 
T  them  away,  I  do  not  love  to  see  them. 
Hell  t  thy  bishop  then,  and  my  kingship  too  ! 
Nay,  then,  1 1  thee  at  thy  word — 
chart  here  mark'd  '  Her  Bower,'  T,  keep  it,  friend. 
We  t  her  from  her  secret  bower  in  Anjou 
T  thou  mine  answer  in  bare  commonplace — 
chart  is  not  mine,  but  Becket's  :  t  it,  Thomas. 
T  it  and  wear  it  on  that  hard  heart  of  yomrs — 
To  t  the  vagabond  woman  of  the  street  Into  thine  arms 
Herbert,  t  out  a  score  of  armed  men 
we  might  t  your  side  against  the  customs — 
And  t  the  Church's  danger  on  myself. 
T  it  not  that  way — balk  not  the  Pope's  will, 
since  your  canon  will  not  let  you  t  Life  for  a  life, 
In  peace  now — but  after.     T  that  for  earnest. 
I  brought  not  ev'n  my  crucifix.     Henry.     T  this. 
And  let  another  t  his  bishoprick  ! 
I  pray  you  come  and  t  it. 
Nay,  my  lord,  t  heart ; 
a  good  fairy  to  thy  mother,     T  me  to  her. 


Queen  Mary  m  i  223 

m  i  227 

m  i  230 

Harold  i  i  61 

Bechet  n  ii  366 

The  Falcon  102 


Becket  i  iv  252 
Queen  Mary  in  iv  227 


I  ii  109 

liv  74 

IV  34 

IV  204 

IV  528 

ni220 

n  iii  93 

niv27 

HI  1367 

nii401 

in  ii  116 

ni  iii  37 

m  iii  236 

m  iv  48 

in  V  189 

IV  194 

IV  i  131 

IV  ii  231 

IV  ii  238 

IV  iii  59 
IV  iii  462 

vi261 
vi301 

V  ii  377 

V  ii  597 

V  iii  85 
Harold  i  ii  58 

I  ii  67 
„  II  ii  207 
„  n  ii  502 
„  III  i  114 
„  ra  i  197 
„  miil70 
„  mil  185 
„  IV  i  57 
IV  i  72 
„  IV  i 183 
„  IV  ii  7 
„       rv  ii  9 


Harold. 


„  IV  ii  14 
„  V  i  300 
„  V  ii  136 
„     V  ii  142 

Becket,  Pro.  93 
„  Pro.  127 
„  Pro.  161 
„  Pro.  181 
„  Pro.  282 
„  Pro.  311 
„    Pro.  312 

!      „       I i  227 

1  i  327 

I  ii  56 

I  ii  72 

„      I  iii  242 

„     I  iii  390 

„     I  iii  733 

„      n  i  296 

„     II  ii  260 

„     n  ii  263 

„     n  ii  355 

IV  i  26 


Take  (continued)    shall  sleep  sound  enough  if  thou  wilt  t  me 
to  her. 
I  pray  you  then  to  t  my  sleeping-draught ; 
But  if  you  should  not  care  to  t  it — 
You  bad  me  t  revenge  another  way — 
T  thy  one  chance  ;  Catch  at  the  last  straw, 
to  t  a  hfe  which  Henry  bad  me  Guard 
T  up  your  dagger ;  put  it  in  the  sheath. 
To  t  my  hfe  might  lose  him  Aquitaine. 
T  care  o'  thyself,  0  King. 
Simimon  your  barons  ;  t  their  counsel : 
If  God  would  t  him  in  some  sudden  way — 
a  man  may  t  good  counsel  Ev'n  from  his  foe, 
T  refuge  in  yoxu-  own  cathedral,  (repeat) 
T  thou  this  letter  and  this  cup  to  Camma, 
T  thou  this  cup  and  leave  it  at  her  doors. 
While  you  can  t  your  pastime  in  the  woods. 
And  t  a  hunter's  vengeance  on  the  meats, 
paper  sign'd  Antonius — will  you  t  it,  read  it  ? 
t  this  holy  cup  To  lodge  it  in  the  shrine  of  Artemis, 
lark  first  t's  the  sunlight  on  his  wing, 
that  I  was  bold  enough  To  t  it  down, 
You  can  t  it,  nurse  !     Elisabetta.     I  did  t  it, 
will  you  t  the  word  out  of  your  master's  own  mouth  ? 
Filippo.   Was  it  there  to  t  ?    Put  it  there,  my  lord. 
T's  nothing  in  return  from  you  except 
Then  I  require  you  to  t  back  your  diamonds — 
Cannot  he  t  his  pastime  like  the  flies  ? 
Altho'  at  first  he  t  his  bonds  for  flowers, 
1 1  them,  then,  for  Eva's  sake. 
t  to  the  milking  of  your  cows,  the  fatting  of  your 

calves, 
but  I  T  some  delight  in  sketching, 
you,  I  doubt  not.  Would  t  to  them  as  kindly, 
T  them,  dear.     Say  that  the  sick  lady  thanks  him ! 
T  it  again,  dear  father,  be  not  wroth 
Not  in  this  hut  1 1  it. 

T  thou  mine  arm.     Who  art  thou,  gallant  knight  ? 
T  him,  good  Little  John,  and  give  him  wine. 
— t  and  use  your  moment,  while  you  may. 
And  t  and  wear  this  symbol  of  your  love ; 
T  thou  this  Ught  kiss  for  thy  clumsy  word. 
T  all  they  have  and  give  it  to  thyself  ! 
T  his  penny  and  leave  him  his  gold  mark. 
T  tbou  my  bow  and  arrow  and  compel  them  to  pay  toll 
t  the  twenty-seven  marks  to  the  captain's  treasury. 
Maid  ?     Friar.     Paramour !     Friar.     HeU  t  her ! 
The  flower  said  '  T  it,  my  dear, 
T  him  and  try  him,  friar. 
Robin  t's  From  whom  he  knows  are  hypocrites 
T  the  left  leg  for  the  love  of  God. 
T  up  the  litter  ! 

I  wiU  t  the  rope  from  off  thy  waist 
Take  care    T  c,tc\     I  dance — I  will  dance — 
Take  heed    And  so  <  ^  I  pray  you — 
So  thou  and  thine  must  be.     T  h\ 
T  h,  t  h  !     The  blade  is  keen  as  death. 
T  h,t  h;  Thou  art  the  Queen  ; 
My  lord —    Malet.     T  h  now. 
T  h,  lest  he  destroy  thee  utterly. 
T  A  he  do  not  turn  and  rend  you  too : 
T  h,th\  in  Nottingham  they  say  There  bides 
Taken    (See  also  Taaen,  Ta'en,  Tok)    Hath  t  to  this 
Courtenay. 
it  is  thought  the  Duke  will  be  t. 
Is  Peter  Carew  fled  ?    Is  the  Duke  t  ? 
there  by  Sir  Maurice  Berkeley  Was  t  prisoner. 
Hath  t  Scarboro'  Castle,  north  of  York ; 
Is  Calais  t  ? 

sharper  harm  to  England  and  to  Rome,  Than  Calais  t. 
Madam,  Calais  is  t. 
Guisnes  is  not  t  yet  ?  (repeat) 
T  the  rifted  pillars  of  the  wood 
They  have  t  away  the  toy  thou  gavest  me, 
They  have  t  York. 


Becket  iv  i  33 
IV  ii  69 
IV  ii  71 
IT  ii  152 
rv  ii  220 
IV  ii  268 
IV  ii  293 
rv  ii  396 
vi66 
vi75 
vi93 
vii3 
Becket  v  ii  583,  590 
The  Cup  I  i  61 
„       I  i  67 
„     I  i  190 
„      I  ii  43 
„    Iii  226 
„    Iii  434 
„    I  iii  43 
The  Falcon  429 
489 


597 

716 

720 

Prom,  of  May  i  277 

I  645 

II  29 


II  91 

n  539 

II  548 

III  348 

Foresters  i  i  341 

n  i  205 

n  i  439 

II  i  469 

II  i  476 
ni  79 

III  134 
III  171 
m  217 
III  262 

III  294 
ni  403 

rvie 
rv  268 

IV  379 
IV  577 
rv  597 
rv686 
rv  585 


Queen  Mary  i  iv  273 
m  ii  232 

V  V  174 
Harold  i  i  453 

„   n  ii  641 

Becket  i  iii  13 

„    n  ii  160 

Foresters  n  i  201 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  201 

„  II  i  136 

II  i  142 

n  iv  96 

V  i  287 

V  ii  27 

V  ii  30 
„           V  ii  242 

V  ii  277 

Harold  i  ii  100 

„     n  ii  105 

„    III  ii  171 


Taken 


1096 


Tear 


Taken  (continued)    York  t  ?    Gurth.    Yea,  Tostig  hath 

t  York  !  Harold  in  ii  174 

Brother  of  France,  you  have  t,  cherish'd  him  Becket  u  ii  154 

Ay,  but  he's  t  the  rain  with  him.  „      in  i  273 

gone  to  the  King  And  t  our  anathema  with  him.  „  ■       v  ii  8 

You  should  have  t  counsel  with  your  friends  „      v  ii  555 

My  counsel  is  already  t,  John.  „  v  ii  560 
and  was  much  t  with  you,  my  dear.    Eva.    T 

with  me ;  Prom,  of  May  in  263 

the  boy  was  t  prisoner  by  the  Moors.  Foresters  i  i  60 

were  It  They  would  prick  out  my  sight.  „  n  i  71 
Sheriff  had  t  all  our  goods  for  the  King  without  paying,       „      ii  i  190 

Taker    if  giver  And  t  be  but  honest !  Harold  i  i  346 

Taking    (§ee  also  Taakin')     thou  wast  not  happy  t  charge 

Of  this  mid  Rosamund  Becket  i  i  391 

that  t  The  Fiend's  advantage  of  a  throne,  „     ii  i  151 

Well— I  shall  serve  Galatia  t  it,  The  Cup  i  i  100 

made  me  A  Quietist  t  all  things  easily.  Prom,  of  May  i  232 

A  Quietist  t  all  things  easily —  „             i  290 

Talbot    Where,  knave,  where  ?    Man.    Sign  of  the  T.  Queen  Mary  in  i  319 

Tale    (See  also  Nursery-tale)     And  love  to  hear  bad  t's 

of  Philip.  „            V  ii  429 

tell  me  t's  Of  Alfred  and  of  Athelstan  the  Great  Harold  iv  i  73 

This  is  the  UkeUer  i.    We  have  hit  the  place.  Becket  in  ii  42 

tell  him  my  t's,  Sing  him  my  songs  ?  The  Falcon  796 

And  cheer  his  blindness  with  a  traveller's  t's  ?  Prom,  of  May  n  516 

Talent    like  the  man  In  Holy  Writ,  who  brought  his  t 

back ;  Foresters  iv  981 

Talk  (s)     when  there  rose  a  <  of  the  late  rebellion,  Queen  Mary  i  i  92 

I  am  somewhat  faint  With  our  long  t.  „        i  v  521 

— he  is  free  enough  in  t,  But  tells  me  nothing.  „      in  ii  193 

Touch  him  upon  his  old  heretical  t,  „     in  iv  352 

Nor  let  Priests'  t,  or  dream  of  worlds  to  be,  „       v  v  217 

More  t  of  this  to-morrow,  if  yon  weird  sign  Harold  i  i  120 

Unwholesome  I  For  Godwin's  house  !  „      i  i  390 

I  leave  thee  to  thy  t  with  him  alone ;  „    n  ii  324 

I  dare  not  well  be  seen  in  t  with  thee.  „    n  ii  482 

Ha,  Becket !  thou  rememberest  oik  t !  Becket,  Pro.  405 

The  king,  the  crown  !  their  f  in  Rome  ?  The  Cup  i  i  99 

That  must  be  t,  not  truth,  but  truth  or  t,  The  Falcon  232 

Come,  come,  my  girl,  enough  Of  this  strange  t.  Prom,  of  May  in  620 

Talk  (verb)     when  your  Highness  t's  of  Courtenay —  Queen  Mary  i  v  198 

Why  do  they  t  so  foully  of  your  Prince,  „           i  v  425 

We  t  and  t.    Member.    Ay,  and  what  use  to  <  ?  „        m  iii  39 

We  t  and  Cranmer  suffers.  „       iv  iii  420 

I  warrant  you  they  t  about  the  burning.  „  iv  iii  463 
You  t  almost  as  if  it  Might  be  the  last.  The  Cup  i  ii  422 
Tut !  you  t  Old  feudalism.  Prom,  of  May  i  669 
we'd  as  lief  t  o'  the  Divil  afoor  ye  as  'im,  „  in  130 
t  a  little  French  hke  a  lady  ;  „  in  302 
then  what  is  it  That  makes  you  t  so  dolefully  ?  „  ni  572 
Go  with  him.     I  will  t  with  thee  anon.  Foresters  n  i  132 

0  sweet  sir,  t  not  of  cows.  „  n  i  329 
Elf,  with  spiteful  heart  and  eye,  T  of  jealousy  ?  „       n  ii  173 

Talked    They've  almost  t  me  into  it :  Queen  Mary  i  iv  7 

When  last  we  t,  that  Philip  would  not  come  „      n  iv  135 

Have  t  together,  and  are  well  agreed  „         in  iv  6 

I I  with  her  in  vain — ^says  she  wUl  live  „  in  vi  44 
Council  (I  have  t  with  some  already)  are  for  war.  „        v  i  295 

1  have  often  t  with  Wulfnoth,  Harold  ii  ii  88 
for  the  king  Is  holy,  and  hath  t  with  God,  „  ni  i  355 
Hath  Henry  told  thee  ?  hast  thou  t  with  him  ?  Becket  i  iii  258 
I  could  have  t  him  out  of  His  ten  wives  into  one.  „    iv  ii  311 

Talkin'    she'd  niver  'a  been  t  haafe  an  hour  wi'  the 

divil  'at  killed  her  oan  sister,  Prom,  of  May  n  603 
Talking    {See  also  A-talkin',  Talkin')    what's  the  good  of 

my  t  to  myself,  Becket  ni  i  152 

There  is  the  King  t  with  Walter  Map  ?  „      ni  iii  22 

to  seize  On  whomsoever  may  be  t  with  you,  The  Cup  i  iii  7 
Tall    I  would  I  were  as  t  and  strong  as  you.    Lady 
Magdalen.    I  seem  half -shamed  at  times  to 

be  so  t.  Quern  Mary  v  ii  422 

Make  blush  the  maiden-white  of  our  t  cliffs,  Harold  n  ii  332 

So  t  and  bold  as  they  be.  Foresters  n  i  8 

I  can  bring  down  Fourscore  t  fellows  on  thee.  „      iv  177 


Tall  {continued)    Good,  now  I  love  thee  mightily,  thou 

t  feUow.  Foresters  iv  322 

Tame  (adj.)     And  break  your  paces  in,  and  make 

you  t ;  Queen  Mary  v  iii  122 

Tame  (verb)     King  hath  many  more  wolves  than  he  can  t  Becket  m  iii  322 

Tamer    but  the  plots  against  him  Had  madden'd  t  men.       Harold  iv  i  112 

Tamper'd    Wyatt,  who  hath  t  with  A  public  ignorance,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  180 

Tamperer    Or  t's  with  that  treason  out  of  Kent.  „  n  ii  11 

Tan    The  t  of  southern  summers  and  the  beard  ?  Prom,  of  May  n  617 

Tann'd    Thou  art  t  almost  beyond  my  knowing,  brother.  Foresters  iv  1015 

Tanner    and  cried  '  Work  for  the  t.'  Harold  ii  ii  385 

William  the  t's  bastard  !  „       n  ii  775 

The  t's  bastard  !  „     iv  iii  173 

Tap  (s)    may  give  that  egg-bald  head  The  t  that  silences.         „  v  i  92 

Tap  (verb)     Do  me  the  service  to  t  it,  and  thou  wilt  know. 

Friar    Tuck.     I  would    (    myself    in  thy  service, 

Robin.  Foresters  m  333 

Tare    bum  the  t's  with  vmquenchable  fire  !  Queen  Mary  v  v  114 

Target    and  make  thine  old  carcase  a  t  for  us  three.  Foresters  n  i  404 

Tarquin  (II.,  the  seventh  and  last  King  of  Rome)    violence 

to  a  woman.  As  Rome  did  T.  The  Cup  i  i  140 

I  here  return  Hke  T — for  a  crown.    Antonius.    And 

may  be  foil'd  like  T,  if  you  follow  „        i  i  142 

Tarry    Methinks  that  would  you  t  one  day  more        Queen  Mary  in  vi  232 

Task    it  is  thou  Hath  set  me  this  hard  t.  The  Falcon  237 

Taste    by  the  hand  o'   God  avore  a  could   t  a 

mossel,  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  517 

Not  t  his  venison  first  ?  Foresters  iv  343 

Tasted    scarce  touch'd  or  t  The  splendours  of  our  Court.      Harold  n  ii  174 

This  Almoner  hath  t  Henry's  gold.  Becket  i  iii  294 

Tatter'd    Our  holy  mother  Canterbury,  who  sits  With  t  robes.    „       i  i  157 

Taught    {See  also  Lamed)     the  old  priests  t  me 

nothing.  Queen  Mary  n  iii  58 

And  every  syllable  t  us  by  our  Lord,  „        iv  iii  231 

thou  hast  t  the  king  to  spoil  him  too  ;  Harold  i  i  451 

then  1 1  him  all  our  hawking-phrases.  The  Falcon  314 

T  her  the  learned  names,  anatomized  Prom,  of  May  ii  302 

for  you  have  t  me  To  love  you.  „  in  557 

Tawny     The  t  squirrel  vaulting  thro'  the  boughs,  Foresters  i  iii  117 

Tax    They  will  not  lay  more  t'es  on  a  land  Queen  Mary  v  i  167 

Taxing    See  Over-taxiiig 

Tea    Owd  Steer  gi'es  nubbut  cowd  i  to 'w  men.  Prom,  of  May  n  22i 

But  I'd  like  owd  Steer's  cowd  t  better  nor 

Dobson's  beer.  „  ii  227 

worked  at  all  the  worse  upon  the  cold  t  than  you 

would  have  done  upon  the  beer  ?  „  in  56 

we  worked  naw  wuss  upo'  the  cowd  t;  „  in  59 

Teach     {See  also  Lam)     we  will  t  Queen  Mary  how  to 

reign.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  147 

if  this  pass.  We  two  shaU  have  to  t  him ;  „        in  iv  422 

and  our  Latimer-sailors  Will  t  her  something.  ,,         iv  iii  350 

he  and  I  Might  t  this  Rome—  The  Cup  n  96 

Tear  (s)    {See  also  Woman-tears)    Spite  of  her  t's  her 

father  forced  it  on  her.  Queen  Mai~y  i  v  495 

those  hard  men  brake  into  woman  t's,  Ev'n  Gardiner,         „  i  v  565 

Queen  hath  been  three  days  in  t's  „         ni  vi  13 

See  how  the  t's  run  down  his  fatherly  face.  „  iv  iii  3 

The  Queen  in  t's !  „  v  j  223 

cries  continually  with  sweat  and  t's  to  the  Lord  God        „  v  iv  45 

And  blotted  by  her  i's.    This  cannot  last.  ,,  v  v  17 

My  prayers  go  up  as  fast  as  my  t's  fall,  Harold  in  i  166 

Vying  a  t  with  our  cold  dews,  „         v  i  150 

My  heart  is  fuU  of  t's—1  have  no  answer.  Becket,  Pro.  406 

My  lord,  we  leave  thee  not  without  t's.     Becket.     T's  ? 

Why  not  stay  with  me  then  ?  „  i  iv  17 

many  midriff-shaken  even  to  t's,  as  springs  gush  out 

after  earthquakes —  „      m  iii  162 

old  affection  master'd  you,  You  falter'd  into  t's.  „         v  ii  145 

True  t's  that  year  were  shed  for  you  in  Florence.  The  Falcon  384 

I  hate  t's.    Marriage  is  but  an  old  tradition.  Prom,  of  May  i  490 

Bid  their  old  bond  farewell  with  smiles,  not  t's ;  „  i  525 

That  desolate  letter,  blotted  with  her  t's,  „  n  476 

should  walk  hand  in  hand  together  down  this  valley 

of  t's,  „         in  192 

T's !    I  have  sometimes  been  moved  to  t's  „         in  207 


Tear 


1097 


TeU 


Tear  (s)  {continued)    but  what  have  I  to  do  with  i's 

now  ?  Prom,  of  May  ill  210 

And  ever  a  t  down  ran.  Foresters  i  i  19 

Tear  (verb)     From  thine  own  mouth  I  judge  thee — t 

him  down  !  Queen  Mary  i  iii  54 

T  up  that  woman's  work  there.  „  n  i  75 

And  t  you  piecemeal :  so  you  have  a  guard.  „         iv  ii  36 

I  never  read,  1 1  them ;  „         v  ii  188 

T  out  his  tongue.  Officer.  He  shall  not  rail  again.  Harold  n  ii  487 
T  out  his  eyes,  And  plunge  him  into  prison.  „      n  ii  491 

Say  that  he  blind  thee  and  t  out  thy  tongue.  Becket  r  iii  615 

I  could  t  him  asunder  with  wild  horses  „  ii  i  266 
score  of  wolf-dogs  are  let  loose  that  wiU  t  thee  piecemeal.  „  in  ii  39 
ready  To  t  himself  for  having  said  as  much.  „  iv  ii  279 
shall  not  I,  the  Queen,  T  out  her  hearts  „     iv  ii  409 

I I  it  all  to  pieces,  never  dream'd  Of  acting  on  it.  The  Cup  i  ii  247 
1 1  away  The  leaves  were  darken'd  by  the  battle —         The  Falcon  912 


Towser  U  t  him  all  to  pieces. 

Down  with  him,  t  his  coat  from  his  back. 

if  they  come  I  will  not  t  the  bond, 
Te  Deum    See  Deam 

Tek  (take)    but  t  thou  my  word  vor't,  Joan, — 
Tekel    Mene,  Mene,  T !     Is  thy  wrath  Hell, 
Tell    might  be  foi^iven.     1 1  you,  fly,  my  Lord, 

I  charge  you,  T  Courtenay  nothing. 

t  your  Grace  What  Lady  Jane  replied. 

Come  you  to  t  me  this,  my  Lord  ? 

t  me,  did  you  ever  Sigh  for  a  beard  ? 

Bad  me  to  t  you  that  she  counts  on  you 

To  t  you  what  indeed  ye  see  and  know, 

cannot  t  How  mothers  love  their  children ; 

Their  voice  had  left  me  none  to  t  you  this. 

I  cannot  t  you  why  they  call  him  so. 

will  t  you  that  all  English  heretics  have  tails. 

T  him  to  paint  it  out, 

doubtless  you  can  t  me  how  she  died  ? 

Good  news  have  I  to  t  you,  news  to  make 

he  is  free  enough  in  talk,  But  t's  me  nothing. 

And  t  this  learned  Legate  he  lacks  zeal. 

mad  bite  Must  have  the  cautery — t  him — 

I  cannot  t  you,  His  bearing  is  so  courtly-deUcate ; 

For  one  day  more,  so  far  as  I  can  t. 

Ay,  t  us  that. 

More  grievously  than  any  tongue  can  t. 

Or  sign'd  all  those  they  t  us  that  he  sign'd  ? 

Pole  Will  t  you  that  the  devil  helpt  them  thro'  it. 

and  t's  un  ez  the  vire  has  tuk  holt. 

T  me  that,  or  leave  All  else  untold. 

Then  t  me  all.     Paget.     Ay  Master  Peters,  t  us. 

Sir  Nicholas  t's  you  true, 

And  t  me  how  she  takes  it. 

T  my  mind  to  the  Council — to  the  Parliament : 

T,tme;  save  my  credit  with  myself. 

I  might  dare  to  i  her  that  the  Count — 

And  t  him  that  I  know  he  comes  no  more.    T  him  at 
last  I  know  his  love  is  dead, 

T  her  to  come  and  close  my  dying  eyes, 

t  the  King  that  I  will  muse  upon  it ; 

Have  you  aught  else  to  t  me  ? 

t's  me  I  must  not  think — That  I  must  rest — ■ 

Sit  down  here :  T  me  thine  liappiest  hour. 

t  the  cooks  to  close  The  doors  of  all  the  offices  below. 

But  t  us,  is  this  pendent  hell  in  heaven 

he  may  t  thee,  I  am  a  harm  to  England. 

I  may  t  thee,  Tostig,  I  heard  from  thy  Northumberland 
and  t  him  That  where  he  was  but  worsted, 

I I  thee  what,  my  child ;  Thou  hast  misread 
T  him  what  hath  crept  into  our  creel. 
Fly  thou  to  William ;  t  him  we  have  Harold. 
I'll  t  them  I  have  had  niy  way  with  thee. 
I  cannot  t.     I  have  the  Count's  commands. 
Speak  for  thy  mother's  sake,  and  t  me  true. 
O  son,  when  thou  didst  t  me  of  thine  oath, 
and  t  me  tales  Of  Alfred  and  of  Athelstan 
Is  there  so  great  a  need  to  t  thee  why  ? 


Prom,  of  May  i  423 

Foresters  i  iii  73 

IV  98 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  533 

Harold  v  i  36 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  43 

I  iv  191 
IV  49 

IV  106 
IV  607 
n  ii  104 

II  ii  144 

II  ii  189 
II  iii  36 

III  i  204 
III  i  229 

III  i  267 
nii356 

m  ii  186 
m  ii  194 
III  iv  272 
III  iv  276 
III  iv  396 

III  vi  246 

IV  iii  23 

IV  iii  125 
IV  iii  320 
rv  iii  352 
IV  iii  511 
IV  iii  568 
IV  iii  572 

vil6 
vi261 

V  ii  288 
vii452 
V  ii  523 


V  ii  589 

V  ii  599 

V  iii  89 
V  iii  100 

V  v62 

V  v79 
vv  116 

Harold  i  i  76 
1 179 
1 1349 
ii448 
Iii  96 
11156 
II  i  110 
II  ii  118 
n  ii  238 

II  ii  272 

III  i  267 
IV  i  72 

IV  iii  40 


Tell  (continued)  My  nurse  would  <  me  of  a  molehill  Harold  iv  iii  128 
T  him  the  Saints  are  nobler  than  he  dreams,  T  him 

that  God  is  nobler  than  the  Saints,  And  t  him  we 

stand  arm'd  on  Senlac  Hill,  „  v  i  55 

whether  it  symbol'd  ruin  Or  glory,  who  shall  t?  „  v  i  111 

T  that  again  to  all.     Gurth.     I  will,  good  brother.  „  v  i  198 

To  t  thee  thou  shouldst  win  at  Stamford-bridge,  „  v  i  236 

To  t  thee  thou  shalt  die  on  Senlac  hill —  „  v  i  241 

1 1  thee,  girl,  I  am  seeking  my  dead  Harold.  „  v  ii  42 

and  sent  against  him — who  can  t  ? —  „  v  ii  170 

which  cannot  t  A  good  dish  from  a  bad,  Becket,  Pro.  105 

Then  t  me  who  and  what  she  is.  „  i  i  208 

Back,  man,  1 1  thee  !  „  i  i  218 

He  found  me  once  alone.     Nay — nay — I  cannot  T  you :    ,.  i  i  276 

To  t  the  King,  my  friend,  I  am  against  him.  „  i  i  343 

And  I  can  t  you,  lords,  ye  are  all  as  like  „  i  iii  174 

T  what  I  say  to  the  King.  „  r  iii  564 

T  the  King  I  spent  thrice  that  in  fortifying  „  i  iii  631 

I  would  be  true — would  t  thee  all —  „  u  i  205 

Bird  mustn't  t,  Whoop — he  can  see.  (repeat)  „  iii  i  106, 255 
you  shall  t  me  of  her  some  other  time.      Margery. 

There's  none  so  much  to  t  on  her,  my  lady,  „  ni  i  190 
tho'  I  be  sworn  not  to  speak  a  word,  I  can  t  you  all 

about  her,  „  m  i  205 

stay,  fool,  and  t  me  why  thou  fliest.  „  in  ii  34 

Who  is  he  ?     Geoffrey.     Can't  t.  „  rv  i  17 

Can't  t.     But  I  heard  say  he  had  had  a  stroke,  „  iv  i  53 

Henry — Becket  t's  him  this— To  take  my  life  „  iv  ii  394 

Did  she  not  t  me  I  was  playing  on  her  ?  „  iv  ii  399 

I  cannot  t  why  monks  should  all  be  cowards.  „  v  ii  581 
No,  1 1  you  !     I  cannot  bear  a  hand  „  v  iii  19 

I I  thee,  my  good  fellow,  My  arrow  struck  the  stag.  The  Cup  i  ii  26 
as  you  t  me  Tetrarch,  there  might  be  willing  wives  „  i  ii  186 
I  dare  not  t  him  how  I  came  to  know  it;  .,  i  ii  275 
Still — I  should  t  My  husband.  „  j  ii  303 
Then  do  not  t  him.  Or  t  him,  if  you  will,  ,,  i  ii  309 
Return  and  t  them  Synorix  is  not  here.  „  i  ii  335 
T  him  there  is  one  shadow  among  the  shadows,  „  n  139 
t  him  That  I  accept  the  diadem  of  Galatia —  „  ii  157 
I  wait  him  his  crown'd  queen.  Noble.  So  wiU  1 1  him.  „  ii  162 
t  the  Senate  I  have  been  most  true  to  Rome —  „  ii  481 
and  t  her  all  about  it  and  make  her  happy  ?  The  Falcon  183 
I  can  t  you  True  tears  that  year  were  shed  „  383 
Well,  T  me  the  words — or  better —  „  451 
I  can  t  you,  my  lady,  I  can  t  you.  „  595 
I  cannot  t  how  long  we  strove  before  „  637 
t  him  my  tales.  Sing  him  my  songs  ?  „  795 
How  shall  I  break  it  to  him  ?  how  shall  1 1  him  ?  „  849 
I  can't  t,  for  I  have  never  seen  him.  Prom,  of  May  1 115 
Will  he  ?  How  can  I  <  ?  „  i  120 
And  I  t's  ye  what,  Miss  Dora :  he's  no  respect  for 

the  Queen,  „  1 131 

I  forgot  to  t  you  He  wishes  you  to  dine  along  with  us,  „  i  616 
And  when  will  you  return  ?    Edgar.    I  cannot  t 

precisely ;  „  1 628 

But  you  shall  t  me  all  about  it.  „  i  785 

They  t  me  that  yesterday  you  mentioned  „  u  22 

I I  you,  it  cannot  be.  „  u  113 
Do  ye  think  I  be  gawin'  to  t  it  to  you,  „  n  190 
Why,  coom  then,  owd  feller,  I'll  t  it  to  you ;  „  11  202 
Who  can  t  What  golden  hours,  „  n  508 
but  if  you  Can  t  me  anything  of  our  sweet  Eva  „  11  520 
I  cannot  t,  tho'  standing  in  her  presence.  „  n  557 
they  t  me  that  you — and  you  have  six  children —  „  m  76 
You  t  me  you  have  a  lover.  „  ni  255 
he  t's  me  that  he  met  you  once  in  the  old  times,  „  in  262 
I  dare  not  t  him  how  much  I  love  him.  „  m  287 
Shall  1 1  her  he  is  dead  ?  No ;  She  is  still  too  feeble.  „  m  337 
T  him  I  cannot  leave  the  sick  lady  just  yet.  „  ni  352 
says  he  wants  to  t  ye  summut  very  partic'lar.  „  ni  355 
T  him  that  I  and  the  lady  here  wish  to  see  him.  „  in  414 
T  him,  then,  that  I'm  waiting  for  him.  „  ni  483 
Did  you  not  t  me  he  was  crazed  with  jealousy,  „  ni  565 
I  can  t  you.  We  Steers  are  of  old  blood,  „  ni  603 
T  them  to  fly  for  a  doctor.  „  m  712 


TeU 


1098 


Thank 


I  447 


nl55 
n229 
II  322 
II  581 
II  599 
III  122 
III  134 
III  346 
HI  432 


TeU  (continued)    I  cannot  i ;  but  I  came  to  give  thee  Foresters  i  i  131 

I  cannot  t,  but  I  had  sooner  have  given  „        i  i  137 

I  cannot  t.    Manners  be  so  corrupt,  „        i  i  176 

Give  me  thy  hand  and  t  him —  „        i  ii  241 

I  heard  this  Sheriff  t  her  he  would  pay  „  i  iii  5 
T  me,  t  me  of  her,  „  ii  i  103 
Did  I  not  t  you  an  old  woman  could  shoot  better  ?               „       ii  i  406 

I I  thee,  in  some  sort.  „  n  i  531 
These  be  the  lies  the  people  t  of  us,  „  ni  392 
when  will  that  be  ?  canst  thou  t?                                            „         iv  421 

Telled  (told)     and  'e  t  all  on  us  to  be  i'  the  long  bam  by 

one  o'clock,  Prom,  of  May  i  7 

he  niver  mended  that  gap  i'  the  glebe  fence  as  1 1  'im ; 
he  t  me  'at  sweet'arts  niver  worked  well  togither ; 
and  I  t  'im  'at  sweet'arts  alius  worked  best 
togither ; 
1 1  tha  to  let  ma  aloan  ! 

fur  she  t  ma  to  taake  the  cart  to  Littlechester. 
as  I  <  'er  to-daay  when  she  fell  foul  upo'  me. 
She  t  me  once  not  to  meddle  wi'  'im, 
I  knaw'd  'im  when  I  seed  'im  agean  an  1 1  feyther  on  'im. 
but  us  three,  arter  Sally'd  t  us  on  'im, 
Mr.  Dobson  t  me  to  saay  he's  browt 
'at  1 1  'em  to  gallop  'im. 

Telling  (part.)     (See  also  A-telling)    What  was  my 

Lord  of  Devon  t  you  ?  Queen  Mary  i  iv  183 

I  have  been  t  her  of  the  death  of  one  Philip  Edgar  Prom,  of  May  ii  705 

Telling  (s)    Some  spice  of  wisdom  in  my  t  you.  Queen  Mary  n  iv  134 

Ay,  since  you  hate  the  t  it.  „  iii  i  89 

Temper    Thou  hast  lost  thine  even  t,  brother  Harold  !  Harold  v  i  95 

but  you  turn  right  ugly  when  you're  in  an  ill  t;       Prom,  of  May  1 160 

Tempest    To  raise  that  t  which  will  set  it  trembling  Becket,  Pro.  208 

Templars     Becket,  I  am  the  oldest  of  the  T;  ,,1  iii  248 

I  am  the  yovmgest  of  the  T,  „        i  iii  261 

Temple  (adj.)     In  the  gray  dawn  before  the  T  doors.  The  Cup  i  ii  295 

She — close  the  T  door.    Let  her  not  fly.  „         ii  460 

Temple  (s)    hath  begun  to  re-edify  the  true  t —  Queen  Mary  i  iii  59 

For  London  had  a  /  and  a  priest  When  Canterbury  Becket  i  iii  59 

The  pagan  i  of  a  pagan  Rome  !  „      i  iii  61 

Among  her  maidens  to  this  T —  The  Cup  i  i  10 

beheld  you  afar  off  worshipping  in  her  T,  „        i  i  40 

house  of  Sinnatus — Close  to  the  T.  „        i  i  53 

'tis  but  a  step  from  here  To  the  T.  „     i  ii  444 

These  Romans  dare  not  violate  the  T.  „      i  iii  63 

I  have  it  in  my  heart — to  the  T — fly —  „    i  iii  111 

The  women  of  the  T  drag  her  in.  „    i  iii  118 

waits  once  more  Before  the  T.  „         ii  12 

Since  Camma  fled  from  Synorix  to  our  T,  „         u  15 

messenger  from  Synorix  who  waits  Before  the  T?  „         n  38 

And  where  ?    Messenger.    Here  by  your  t.  „         ii  77 

This  violence  ill  becomes  The  silence  of  our  T.  „       ii  216 

Welcome,  my  lord  Antonias,  to  our  T.  „       ii  253 

I  call  on  our  own  Goddess  in  our  own  T.  „       ii  315 

It  is  the  cup  belonging  our  own  T.  „       ii  345 

Beside  this  t  half  a  year  ago  ?  „       ii  393 

Temple  Bar    and  the  traitor  flying  To  T  B,  Queen  Mary  ii  iv  94 

Temporal    We,  the  Lords  Spiritual  and  T,  „        m  iii  113 

Temporize    Call  it  to  t :  and  not  to  he ;  Harold  u  ii  415 

Tempt    May  she  not  /  me,  being  at  my  side.  To  question 

her?  Becket  111  i  216 

Tempted    ever  Be  t  into  doing  what  might  seem  Prom,  of  May  in  554 

Ten    but  t  thousand  men  on  Penenden  Heath  all  calling 

_  after  your  worship,  Queen  Mary  n  i  60 

Say  for  t  thousand  t — and  pothouse  knaves,  „  n  i  69 

And  strong  to  throw  t  Wyatts  and  all  Kent.  „        n  ii  353 

T  miles  about.     Wyatt.     Ev'n  so.  „  ii  iii  49 

Ay  !  tho'  it  were  t  Englands  !  „        m  iv  57 

and  I  bean't  wrong  not  twice  i'  t  year —  „      iv  iii  534 

There  is  no  king,  not  were  he  t  times  king,  T  times 

our  husband,  „  v  i  62 

And  I  ha'  nine  darters  i'  the  spital  that  be  dead  t  times 

o'er  i'  one  day  Becket  i  iv  250 

I  could  have  talk'd  him  out  of  His  t  wives  into  one.  „    iv  ii  313 

Alas,  t  summers !  The  Falcon  348 

this  faded  ribbon  was  the  mode  In  Florence  <  years  back.         „  423 


Ten  (continued)     Spite  of  t  thousand  brothers,  Federigo.        The  Falcon' Sd^ 
What  be  he  a-doing  here  t  mile  an'  moor  fro'  a  ^J^ 

raail  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  209 

you  have  robb'd  poor  father  Of  t  good  apples.  „  i  616 

they  have  each  t  marks  in  gold.  Foresters  in  292. 

Ten-aacre  (acre)  I  ha'  plowed  the  t-a — it  be  mine  now 
— afoor  ony  o'  ye  wur  bum  —  ye  all  knaws 
the  t-a —  Prom,  of  May  i  365 

Tenant    shall  excommunicate  My  i's  or  my  household.  Becket,  Pro.  32 

Wasted  our  diocese,  outraged  our  t's,  „       v  ii  431 

After  my  frolic  with  his  t's  girl,  Prom,  of  May  i  493 

Tendance    in  a  closed  room,  with  light,  fire,  physic,  t ;     Queen  Mary  v  iv  37 

Tender     Father,  I  am  so  t  to  all  hardness  !  Becket  i  i  315 

The  father's  eye  was  so  t  it  would  have  called  a  goose  off 

the  green,  „  in  iii  102 

I  am  t  enough.     Why  do  you  practise  on  me  ?  The  Cup  i  ii  237 

Tenderness    with  what  a  t  He  loved  my  son.  Becket  v  i  20 

She  had  a  t  toward  me,  Foresters  i  i  115 

Tenebris    Surgas  e  t,  Sis  vindicator !  Harold  v  i  571 

Tenfold    t,  than  this  fearful  child  can  do  ;  ,.       i  ii  143 

False  to  himself,  but  t-f  false  to  me  !  Becket  i  iii  472 

Sir,  you  are  t  more  a  gentleman,  Prom,  of  May  ni  742 

larger  life  hereafter,  more  T  than  under  roof.  Foresters  n  i  70 

Term     with  hot  t's  Of  Satan,  liars,  Queen  Mary  i  ii  94 

call  it  by  that  new  t  Brought  from  the  sacred  East,       Foresters  rv  704 

Territory    Large  lordship  there  of  lands  and  t.  Harold  n  ii  8X 

Test  (s)     True  t  of  coward,  ye  follow  with  a  yell.  Becket  i  iii  745 


Test  (verb)     Their  '  dies  Ilia,'  which  will  t  their  sect.    Queen  Mary  in  iv  428' 

worthy  Bonner, — To  t  their  sect. 

yet  it  is  a  day  to  t  your  health 
Testament    in  the  T's,  Both  Old  and  New. 
Testy    It  is  the  heat  and  narrowTiess  of  the  cage  That 

makes  the  captive  t ; 
Tetrarch    married  Since — married  Sinnatus,  the  T 

'  To  the  admired  Camma,  wife  of  Sinnatus,  the  T, 

And  you  a  Prince  and  T  in  this  province — 

This  Synorix  Was  T  here,  and  tyrant  also — 

being  as  you  tell  me  T,  there  might  be  willing  wives 

being  T  once  His  own  true  people  cast  him 
Tetrarchy    when  I  was  flying  from  My  T  to  Rome. 

I  shall  have  my  t  restored  By  Rome, 

Our  Senate,  wearied  of  their  tetrarchies. 
Tew  (worry)     and  he  wur  in  a  t  about  it  all  the 

mumin' ; 
Text    by  Heaven,  The  t — ^Your  Highness  knows  it. 

Traced  in  the  blackest  t  of  Hell — '  Thou  shalt ! ' 

It's  the  old  Scripture  t,  '  Let  us  eat  and  drink, 
Thames    I'll  have  the  drawbridge  hewn  into  the  T, 

Upon  their  lake  of  Garda,  fire  the  T ; 

It  glares  in  heaven,  it  flares  upon  the  T, 
Thane    Morcar  and  Edwin  have  stirr'd  up  the  T's 

Hath  massacred  the  T  that  was  his  guest. 

Earls  and  T's  !     Full  thanks  for  your  fair  greeting 

Earls,  T's,  and  all  our  countrymen ! 


in  IV  431 
IV  ii  117 
IV  iii  232. 

in  V  208 
The  Cup  I  i  16. 
1 137 
Iii  89 
I  ii  183 
I  ii  187 
I  ii  349 
Ii7 
1 120. 
1 189 


Thank    1 1  my  God  it  is  too  late  to  fly, 
1 1  God,  I  have  lived  a  virgin, 
We  t  your  Lordship  and  your  loyal  city. 
1 1  you  heartily,  sir, 
I  came  to  t  her  Majesty  For  freeing 
Or  seek  to  rescue  me.     1 1  the  Council. 
Hand  it  me,  then  !     1 1  you 


Prom,  of  May  1 18- 
Queen  Mary  i  v  451 
in  i  426. 
Prom,  of  May  i  258 
Queen  Mary  ii  ii  377 
„  III  ii  24 

Harold  I  i  30 
„  nii289 
„  iiii297 
„   rv  iii  4S 
„   IV  iii  4^ 
Queen  Mary  i  ii  112 
n  ii  216 
II  ii  30O 
in  V  176 
„  III  vi  5 

IV  ii  3» 
IV  ii  45 


Queen  Mary  iv  iii  496,  520,  529» 
Harold  i  i  318 


T  the  Lord  therevore.  (repeat) 
T  the  Saints,  no  ! 

1 1  thee,  Rolf.  „       n  i  54 

1 1  thee,  but  had  rather  Breathe  the  free  wind  „    n  ii  184 

1 1  thee  now  for  having  saved  thyself.  „    n  ii  653> 

T  thee,  father !     Thou  art  English,  „      ni  i  27 

1 1  you,  sons ;  when  kings  but  hold  by  crowns,  Becket  n  ii  280 

into  thy  mouth  hadst  thou  but  opened  it  to  t  him.  „    in  iii  277 

He  is  not  here — Not  yet,  t  heaven.     O  save  him !  „       v  iii  ITi^ 

1 1  you  from  my  heart.  The  Cup  i  ii  211;' 

However  1 1  thee ;  thou  hast  saved  my  life.  „        i  ii  33^ 

1 1  thee,  Camma, — 1 1  thee,  (repeat)  „  n  331, 35*  ' 

Who  touch'd  me  then  ?    1 1  you.  „          n  53i' 

1 1  thee,  good  Filippo.  The  Falcon  553 


Tye. 


Thank 

Thank  (continued)    1 1  you,  my  good  nurse. 

I  t  you  heartily  for  that — and  you, 
My  lord,  we  t  you  for  your  entertainment, 
scarce  Will  t  me  for  your  entertainment  now, 
T  you.     Look  how  full  of  rosy  blossom  it  is. 

I I  you  for  that.  Miss  Dora,  onyhow. 
saame  to  you,  Master  Steer,  likewise.    Steer. 
1 1  you.    They  tell  me  that  yesterday 
if  the  fever  spread,  the  parish  will  have  to  t  you  for  it 
But  I  t's  ye  all  the  saame,  Miss. 

All  right.  Miss ;  and  t  ye  kindly. 
An'  I  t's  ye  fur  that.  Miss,  moor  nor  fur  the  waage. 
Say  that  the  sick  lady  t's  him  ! 
1 1  you,  my  lady,  and  I  wish  you 
We  t  you,  and  farewell. 
Comrades,  I  t  you  for  your  loyalty, 
1 1  thee.     Marian.     Scarlet  told  me — 
1 1  you,  my  lord. 

1 1  you,  noble  sir,  the  very  blossom  Of  bandits.   Curtsey 
to  him,  wife,  and  t  him.     Wife.     I  t  you,  noble  sir, 
and  will  pray  for  you 
There  is  our  bond.     Bobin.     1 1  thee. 
Here  is  my  father's  bond.    Bohin.    1 1  thee,  dear. 
1 1  thee,  good  Sir  Richard. 
Thank'd    She  t  her  father  sweetly  for  his  book 
Thankful     And  shalt  be  <  if  I  leave  thee  that. 
^Diankless     Were  but  a  t  policy  in  the  crown, 

I  know  it,  son;  I  am  not  t: 
Thanks     I  am  all  t  To  God  and  to  your  Grace : 
beseech  Your  Highness  to  accept  our  lowliest  t 
T,  Sir  Thomas,  we  be  beholden  to  you. 
Loyal  and  royal  cousin,  humblest  t. 
Can  render  t  in  fr\ut  for  being  sown, 
Madam,  my  t. 

T,  truthful  Earl;  I  did  not  doubt  thy  word, 
Full  t  for  your  fair  greeting  of  my  bride  ! 
T,  Gurth !     The  simple,  silent,  selfless  man 
Our  humblest  t  for  your  blessing. 
t  of  Holy  Church  are  due  to  those  That  went 
T  to  the  blessed  Magdalen,  whose  day  it  is. 
T  in  this  life,  and  in  the  life  to  come. 
I  owe  you  t  for  ever. 

My  t.     But,  look,  how  wasteful  of  the  blossom 
Yeas ;  and  t  to  ye. 

T,  my  lady — inasmuch  as  I  am  a  true  believer 
All  t  for  all  your  service ; 
Thaw    and  those  bleak  manners  t, 

cold  comers  of  the  King's  mouth  began  to  t, 
Tbaw  (though)    t  'e  knaws  I  was  hallus  agean  he 
schoolmaster  i'  the  parish  ! 


1099 


The  Falcon  ^59 
1 

159 

J82 

Prom,  of  May  I  83 


Thing 


Queen  Mary  rv  iii  496,  520,  529- 


Forest 


III  246 

IV  436 
IV  464 
IV  858 

Quee7fary  v  v  236 

III  i  257 
ni  iv  51 

'arold  I  i  216 

IV  185 
n  ii  132 

II  iii  120 

III  ii  4 

HI  iii  198 

V  i  184 
Harold  n  ii  723 

IV  iii  46 
V  i  80 

Becket  i  iv  42 
„  n  ii  190 
„  III  iii  171 

V  ii  161 


t  forget-me-nots, 
AnH  ^^?/,^  f  ^  ^  ^  ^  bees  below, 

160U  Shalt  receive  the  penitent  I'j  award 
m,  •  '',5"!  "  '•  P"*''''' '"  I'is  roval  hand  ■  ' 
TT  'f'^" '^U  0"t,  honest  men-     ' 

f£,»StSfa!,:S?.S!:!""^™™«" 
hS?i':'?;-'j"?i«^^-».te,i,htP 


Mary 


^   -.  in26 

Foresters  i  i  161 

„      I  iii  164 

wen  Mary  in  ii  161 

Becket  in  iii  154 


ipm' 


fur  1 1  may  ha'  fallen  out  wi'  ye  sometimes, 
and,  t  I  says  it  mysen,  niver  men  'ed  a  bfl 

master — 
I  be  a  gentleman,  1 1  beant  naw  scholard 
fur  t  I  be  heighty  this  very  daay, 
But,  Steer,  t  thou  be  haale  anew  I  seed  tha 

up  just  now 
Churchwarden  be  a  coomin',  t  me  and  ' 
'grees  about  the  tithe;  and  Parson 
niver  mended  that  gap  i'  the  glebe 
telled  'im;  and  Blacksmith,  t  he  ni 
herse  to  my  likings;  and  Baaker,  t 
hoam-maade —  j 

Noa — yeas — t  the  feller's  gone  and  m/such 

litter  of  his  faace. 
noa — t  they  hanged  ma  at  'Size  fur  it 
Themselves    <SeeThessens  i 

Theobald  (Archbishop  of  Canterbury)    So  f^^  Sood 
Archbishop  T  Lies  dying. 
thou  didst  help  me  to  my  throne  In 
when  I  was  of  T's  household,  once- 
I  served  our  T  well  when  I  was  wit 
I  and  thou  were  youths  in  T's  ho 
Exile  me  from  the  face  of  T. 
Even  when  you  both  were  boys  at 


Prom,  of  May  1 185 
I  324 

I  326 
1 332 
I  358 


tie, 


I  383 


1443 

11588 
II  697 


Becket,  Pro.  2 
Pro.  202 
Ii59 
Iil42 
I  iii  40 
I  iii  43 
vill 


"^"TeVe^r^^^     Thank  the  Lord. 

"''  Sonds;'^  ""'  -oIlarGoL'f  t^fth""'"  ''       "'^^^  ''^^"^  ^  29- 
And  here's  a  crowd  as  t  as  herring-shoals  ^"*^'*  ^'"'^  ^°  '  ^O- 

tm  he  stoop'd  and  gather'd  one  Ir^rout  a  bed  of  "         ^°  '  ''^ 

V  V  94 

Harold  I  i  31 

„     V  i  19(> 

„     V  i  627 

Becket  i  iii  61 0> 

Queen  Mary  n  iv  81 

Becket  in  iii  316. 
The  Cup  I  i  113 
Queen  Mary  n  iii  75. 
m  iv  311 

IV  iii  66- 

V  ii  466- 
Becket  1  iv  113 

„       I  iv  116- 
„       I iv  119 
„      II  ii  392 
,.      m  iii  97 
Prom,  of  May  I  387 
1 402. 
Foresters  11  i  53 
,-      u  i  317 
„      ni368 
,.      n  i  411 
„      u  i  413 
III  312 
m  323 

III  327 

IV  370- 
IV  373 
IV  906- 

Becket  11  ii  166 

Foresters  iv  283 

„     ..        rv  278 

Becket,  Pro.  261 

Prom,  of  May  I  781 

™  72 

The  Falcon  578 

Queen  Mary  i  i  101 

1  iv  56 

I  V  309 
IV  472 

II  ii  22 
u  ii  390  ■ 

II  iii  104 

ixi  ii  221 

m  iii  63 

..      ui  iii  189 

in  V  104 

m  V  115 

rv  iii  453 

..       IV  iii  469 

..       rv  iii  501 

V  i  291 
>.  V  ii  506 
..          V  iv  54 

V  V  74 

V  V  77 
V  V  219 

Harold  i  i  137 
..  I  i  380 
,,  ni  ii  28 
..      IV  ii  45 

V  i  84 
Becket  I  i25Q 

»    I  iii  346  - 
„   mi231_ 


like  a  t  at  night  when  L TeaTsTd  or  S 
1  laame't  mv  knee  la«t  ninht-  ™  •  ^  " 
I  runned  a/er ,  ?,hf  da?k     ™°°"^  "■•'  ^  '' 

fStlJSiitrEL^tVne'Sa^-- 
Thi^i  /•'^''''^  f  ^JP^^'"  of  tl^e  thieves  I  *' 

veils  of  fin' Z^*''''''  ^"f  ^^^^«'  Sball  drink 
WpiI       ,^u''  ^"^^  '^id  liar  echo  down  in  Hell 

But  Robm  IS  a  <  of  courtesy  ' 

1  here— to  be  a  i  of  courtesy— 

Thief^Ufp''^Whn?7  2''^/'"^  °"*^^^-«'  ^^»>^^«. 
^,     .     viil61       Sw?   an^  cants  F°'"^^'°^"^'^"^^^  by  nig^ 
The  Cup  I  ii  249       TWmb leful    j  am  ^t^      '^^  ^"^'*"  P^«  ^^o  it.        ' 
'rom.  of  May  1  611       Thi?   hT-  tooTtooT  "^  '  °'  '^'"• 

Ay,  child ;  and  you  look  t  and  pale, 
that  wur  sa  long  back,  and  the  walls  sa  t 
Thin?  'T^er  '-"f  f°^^'  ^°*  ">^«  the  vlitSe' 
but  all  t  s  here  At  court  are  known  • 
th^fw^f '^^  ""'f  ^"  Sood  t's  for  France. 

a;^?KfSrsTi^r,^^:s^^^^^ 

were  to  do  Great  t's,  my  Lord  ^  ''^"- 

smash  all  our  bits  o'  t's  wnr«f>  fho,^  t>uv      ,  r,     ■ 

By  bonds  of  beeswax,  like  your  creeping"? 

Nor  yet  to  question  t's  already  done-    ^    ' 

Ringdoves  coo  again.  All  t's  woo  again 

all  t's  lived  and  ended  honestly 

^ancy-sick ;  these  t's  are  done 

Pwoaps  be  pretty  t's,  Joan,      ' 

1  do  know  ez  Pwoaps  and  vires  be  bad  /'« • 

other  t's  As  idle ;  a  weak  Wy^t '  ' ' 

Let  dead  <'s  rest. 

f^^T  ^^g't^e  Christ,  and  all  t's  in  common 

fatt"EXt?,l^^J««f '='"™     • 

J=t£it"«?tKriir'''»- 

thou  be  a  wild  t  Out  of  the  waste 

where  they  were  lost.  Where  all  good  t's  are  lost 

I  hate  myself  for  all  t's  that  I  do  '  ^^  ^''«*' 

TLTZ\'t,  i^'  '^^'-  ■  ^.«  him  out  safe  ! 
iney  say  that  you  are  wise  in  winged  i'« 
like  E^t's  plague  had  fill'd  IllXt  th  blood- 
^ot  heard  ill  t's  of  her  in  France?  ' 


have  I 


Thing 


1100 


Thomas 


!l 


Tbing  ^eontinxud) 


Becket  iii  i  267 

„     III  iii  130 

„    ni  iii  133 

in  iii  192 

„    III  iu  270 

„     in  iii  282 

IV  i  2 

„     IV  ii  276 

V  ii  133 

„      V  ii  270 

The  Cuf  I  iii  172 

The  Falcon  47 

inia  uiu  t  uci*^  v»^-,i  — -  ,  J  ,  „  4yo 


that's  a  finer  t  there.     How  it  glitters  . 
Henry  Says  many  a  t  in  sudden  heats, 
Ileal  not  mth  Vs  you  know  not. 
I  know  not  why  You  call  these  old  Vs  back 
Ld  Sit  begone  t's  till  that  ete-^l_P--- 
This  old  t  here  they  are  but  blue  beads 


Becket  v  ii  185 

The  Cup  I  ii  314 

Prom,  of  May  i  109 

I  111 


mine. 
,  nor  a  carrion 


and  Brofess  to  be  great  in  o--- -,         ., 
made  me  A  Quietist  taking  aU  Vs  easily, 
\  Quietist  taking  all  t's  easily— 
O  the  sacred  little  t !    What  a  shape ! 
to  whom  aU  fs,  up  to  this  present 
if  this  life  of  ours  Be  a  good  glad  t, 
Became  thou  sayest  such  fine  ^  of  women, 
the  scream  of  some  wild  woodland  t. 
crfedsr'  I  yield '  almost  before  the  t  was  ask  d, 
Trae,  she  is  a  goodly  <. 
A  woman's  heart  is  but  a  little  t 
•Think    1 1  she  entreats  me  like  a  child. 

\  \  she  iSs  to  counsel  your  withdrawing 


T  t  mv  time  will  come.  . 

bSc  they  t  me  favourer  of  this  marriage.  ■. 

I  doTTo  save  your  crown  that  it  must  come  to  this.       . 
\nd  t  not  we  shall  be  alone— 

Z'tTe^now  goC^that  we  be  for  Philip  o'  Spain.       , 

?ie  you  not  hi  peril  here?     Stafford.     It  so 

iTS  you.     The  King  of  France  will  help 

We^re  fallen,  and  as  1 1,  Never  to  rise  again. 

1 1 1  should  fight  then.  , 

that  1 1, '  Wilt  thou  lie  there  to-morrow  ? 

Selpm'e:  what  t  you.  Is  it  life  or  deathj^ 

and  <  of  this  in  vour  coming.      Mary  the  ^^»'>^ 

r  1     I  have  many  thoughts;  1 1  there  may  be 

birdUmrherefor  me;  I  t  they  fam  would 

Cave  me  from  the  realm ;  1 1  the  Queen  may 

ueverTear  a  child ;  1 1  that  I  may  be  some 

time  the  Queen, 

1 1 1  will  not  marry  anyone, 

I  t  that  I  wiU  play  with  Phihbertj^ 
Albeit  he  t  himself  at  home  with  God 

T  you  then  That  Cranmer  read  all  papers 

I I  that  in  some  sort  we  may.     But  see. 
Does  he  t  Low  stature  is  low  nature, 

Tf  w  tVip  low  man  t's  the  woman  low ;  ,     ,-,       . 

T  you  tSi  mlht  dare  to  tell  her  that  the  Count- 
tells  me  I  must  not  t— That  I  must  rest— 
1 1  that  they  would  Molochize  them  too. 
Ask  thou  Lord  Leof  win  what  he  (  s  of  this  . 

I  love  him  or  1 1  love  him. 

As  I «  He  was  thine  host  m  England 

It  it  so!  I  *  I  am  a  fool  To  t  it  can  be  otherwise 

Some  t  they  loved  within  the  pale  forbidden 

I I  that  this  is  ThurkiU. 

I  wiU  not «  so,  Thomas.  .        ,„„.;„„?     TTerhert 

dost  thou  t  the  king  Forced  'V^''^f  ^''.winn 
I  do  t  the  King  Was  potent  in  the  election, 

T  on  it  again. 

i  of  me  as  thy  father !  ,     t  *  .^ 

T  ask'd  the  way.     Rosamund,     i  t  so. 

I  ^metSTes  t  L  sleeps  When  he  should  watch ; 

when  he  hears  a  door  open  m  the  house  and  t  s   the 

master.'  -  n  m 

1 1,  time  given,  I  could  have  talk  d 

I  cannot  t  he  moves  against  my  son, 

I I  ye  four  have  cause  to  love  this  BecKet. 
lightnings  that  we  t  are  only  Heavens  Hash 
1 1  our  Abbess  knew  it  and  allow  d  it. 


Prom-  of  May  I  232 

I  290 

Foresters  i  i  108 

I  i  209 

I  iii  13 
„  I  iii  137 
„       II  i  253 

II  i  566 
'       II  ii  140 

IV  656 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  HI 
I  iii  153 

I  iv  224 
I  iv  256 

I  V  156 
IV  478 

II  i  191 
II 1240 

II  iii  106 

III  i  36 
III  i  104 
III  i  124 
III  i  468 

III  V  132 
in  V  193 
in  V  224 


Tkink  (continued)    but  t  not  of  the  King :  farewell ! 
T, — torture, — death, — and  come. 
I  warrants  ye'll  t  moor  o'  this  young  Squire  Edgar 
ye'U  t  more  on  'is  little  finger  than  hall  my  hand 
Dobbins,  1 1.    Bobson.     Dobbins,  you  t's ;  and  I 

t'sje  wears 
I  t's  I'd  like  to  taake  the  measure  o'  your  foot. 

'  can't  abear  to  t  on  'er  now, 

low  could  Itoi  leaving  him  ? 

lo  ye  1 1  be  gawin'  to  tell  it  to  you, 

anost  t  she  half  retum'd  the  pressure  Of 

I'>  t  na  moor  o'  maakin'  an  end  o'  tha  nc 
raw — 

d'y  t  I'd  gi'e  'em  the  fever  ? 

Do'ou  t  that  I  may  ?     No,  not  yet. 

her.nswer — 1 1 1  have  it  about  me — yes,  there  it  is  ! 

I  *  'lat  I  should  break  my  heart, 

I  aneasily  led  by  words,  but  1 1  the  Earl  hath  right. 

I I  t;y  will  be  mightier  than  the  king. 
Whamakes  thee  t  I  seem  so  cold  to  Robin  ? 
That'hen  1 1  of  it  hotly.  Love  himself  Seems 
Robii-I  crave  pardon,  I  always  t  of  you  as  my  lord,  „        

Thinkest  'oger,  t  thou  that  anyone  Suspected  thee     Queen  Mary  i  iii  174 
Gamcjon  of  Orm,  What  t  thou  this  means  ?  (repeat)    Harold  i  i  21,  464 
Thinking   -I  was  t  of  her  when — 0  yes,  Protn.  of  May  ii  368 

Thin-skinn    O  t-s  hand  and  jutting  veins.  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  204 

Third    Linj-  not  till  the  t  horn.     Fly  !  Becket  ni  ii  40 

0  woult  were  His  i  last  apoplexy  !  The  Cup  ii  172 

Thirlby  (BiSo  of  Ely)     (See  also  Ely)     Bishop  T,  And 
my  Lj  Paget 
Weep  nigood  T. 
Will  the.urn  me,  T  ? 
And  majod  bless  you,  T  ! 
these  bui^gg^  ^g  j<  gays,  are  profitless 
Thirst    whichg  niore  you  drink.  The  more  you  t — 
Thirtieth    To^  i^e  hath  accomplished  his  t  birthday, 
all  of  you  10  deign  to  honour  this  my  t  year, 
pray  Thy  .fnmer  may  be  thirty-fold  As  happy 
Thirty    To  raisour  Highness  t  thousand  men, 
SaiUng  froifance,  with  t  Englishmen, 
Down  t  feeliow  the  smiling  day- 
Some  t — foi,housand  silver  marks 


I  459 
I  463 
n32 
n71 
n  190 
n  627 

II  695 

„  m  49 

ni  238 

III  395 

in  555 

Foresters  i  ii  40 

I  ii  119 

III  3 

m  111 

ni  410 


>jv/iii>j  "      -"uuusauu  silver  luaii^a. 

her  six  and  q  of  Provence  blew  you  to  your  English 
throne ; 


Queen  Mary  rv  i  5 

„      IV  ii  172 

„      IV  ii  182 

„      IV  ii  198 

„      IV  ii  218 

The  Cup  I  iii  140 

Foresters  i  i  298 

I  ii  79 

I  ii  128 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  290 

V  i  285 

Harold  ii  ii  430 

Becket  i  iii  657 


in  V  226 
in  V  239 
in  V  242 
IV  iii  192 
IV  iii  316 
IV  iii  551 

V  ii  433 

V  ii  439 

V  ii  522 
V  V  63 

Harold  i  i  36 
ii40 
„  iii  152 
„  n  ii  3 
„  mi  102 
„  in  ii  22 
„  V  ii  65 
Becket,  Pro.  238 

I  i  126 

I  i  380 
I  iii  250 

II  i  63 
in  i  32 

ni  iii  99 

IV  ii  311 

vil8 

V  i  224 

„  V  ii  35 

V  ii  95 


Tliirty-Sold    Thy  .^ieth  summer  may  be  «-/ 
This    t  Gardiner  .-,^6,  who  is  to  be  made  Lord 
Chancellor, 


V  i  122 

Foresters  i  ii  128 

Queen  Mary  i  i  86 


My  masters,  Jer'g  fatter  game  for  you  Than  t  old 

gaping  gurg . 
but  t  fine  blue,(jg(j^  Courtenay  seems  Too  princely 

for  a  pawn, 
now  would  settpon  ^  flower,  now  that ; 
T  dress  was  me'^g  ^g  the  Earl  of  Devon  To  take 

my  seat  in ; 
Have  sworn  t  S^^  marriage  shall  not  be. 
And  if  t  Prmce  ig  ^nd  feather  come  To  woo 

you,  niece. 
He  commends  m^  From  out  his  grave  to  t 

archbishoprick 
and  I  do  not  thei^jjj  ^  secret  out  of  our  loyal 

Thomas, 
Follow  me  t  Rosaj  ^^g^j  g^j^^^  night,  whithersoever 

she  goes ; 
and  t  Becket,  her  l,>g  friend,  like  enough  staved 

lis  from  her. 
And  mine  upUfter  .^^j^j^  ^^^^  chosen  me  For  t 

thy  great  archbis^j^ 
and  I  sneezed  three,^  f' morning. 
To  make  amends  1  c^^^y  (.^  break  my  fast  with  you 
Thistle    matched  with  n^.^j^j  jg  jjj.^  ^  jjg^jgg  ^  ^y 

a  garden  rose.  Prom,  of  May  in  17* 

Thomas  (Becket,  ChanceLgngiand,  afterwards  Arch- 
bishop of  Canterbv^gg  ^^^^  Becket,  Thomas 
Becket,  Thomas  tQterbury)  That  is  my 
secret,  T.  Becket,  Pro.  Ii 


I  iii  81 

„      I  iii  165 
„        I  iv  5(i 

„        I  iv  7ii  i 
„      I  iv  11? 

„      I  iv  16!: 

Becket,  Pro.  42( 

„    Pro.  m 

Pro.  50t 

Pro.  sn 

I  i  8! 

The  Falcon  !& 

27^ 


Thomas 


1101 


Thousand 


Ehomas  (Becket,  Chancellor  of  England,  afterwards  Arch- 
bishop of  Canterbury)  (continued)  I  have  built  a 
secret  bower  in  England,  T, 

Nay — I  know  not,  T. 

I  will  not  think  so,  T. 

And  who  shall  he  be,  my  friend  T  ? 

I  lack  a  spiritual  soldier,  T — 

chart  is  not  mine,  but  Becket's :  take  it,  T. 

I  do  not  then  charm  this  secret  out  of  our  loyal  T, 

Jest  or  prophecy  there  ?     Herbert.     Both,  T,  both. 

T,  thou  art  moved  too  much. 

T,  thou  wast  not  happy  taking  charge 

Saving  thine  order,  r,Is  black  and  white 

Where's  T  ?  hath  he  sign'd  ? 

Ah  !  T,  excommimicate  them  all ! 

Thou  wert  plain  T  and  not  Canterbury, 

The  holy  T  ?    Brother,  you  have  traffick'd 

Ah,  T,  T,  Thou  art  thyself  again,  T  again. 

me,  T,  son  Of  Gilbert  Becket,  London  merchant. 

Ah,  T,  You  had  not  borne  it,  no,  not  for  a  day. 

Our  T  never  will  diagonalise. 

condemn  The  blameless  exile  ? —    Herbert.     Thee,  thou 
holy  T ! 

We  have  had  so  many  hours  together,  T, 

Were  I  T,  I  wouldn't  trust  it. 

As  magnificently  and  archiepiscopally  as  our  T  would 
have  done : 

but  look  if  T  have  not  flung  himself  at  the  King's  feet. 

Have  I  not  promised  to  restore  her,  T, 

What  more,  my  lord  Archbishop  ?     What  more,  T  ? 

T,  I  would  there  were  that  perfect  trust  between  us. 

Oh,  T,  I  could  fall  down  and  worship  thee,  my  T, 

T,  lord  Not  only  of  your  vassals  but  amours, 

T,  I  would  thou  hadst  retum'd  to  England, 

T,  The  lightnings  that  we  think  are  only  Heaven's 

T  You  could  not — old  affection  master'd  you, 

T,  Why  should  you  heat  yourself  for  such  as  these  ?    • 

Take  refuge  in  your  own  cathedral,  T. 
Ehomas  (Wyatt,  insurrectionary  leader)    {See  also 
Thomas  Wyatt,  Wyatt)    None  so  new.  Sir  T, 
and  none  so  old,  Sir  T.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  14 

Ay,  why  not.  Sir  T?  „  ii  i  32 

I  hate  Spain,  Sir  T.  „  n  i  37 

Sir  T,  we  may  grant  the  wine.  „  n  i  40 

But,  Sir  T,  must  we  levy  war  against  the  Queen's  Grace  ?   „         ii  i  186 

I  fear  we  be  too  few,  Sir  T.  „         ii  i  225 

Sir  T,  I've  found  this  paper ;  „         u  iii  55 

Sir  T —     Wyatt.     Hang  him.  I  say.  „         ii  iii  79 

0  Sir  T,  Sir  T,  pray  you  go  away,  Sir  T,  „  n  iii  98 
don't  ye  kill  the  Queen  here,  Sir  T ;  „  ii  iii  111 
we  pray  you  to  kill  the  Queen  further  off,  Sir  T.  „  ii  iii  115 
Thanks,  Sir  T,  we  be  beholden  to  you,  „      ii  iii  120 

iliomas  (Wyatt,  the  elder)    Old  Sir  T  would  have  hated  it.  „  nil8 

Old  Sir  T  always  granted  the  wine.  „  ii  i  41 

a  fine  courtier  of  the  old  Court,  old  Sir  T.-  „  ii  i  46 

1  have  been  there  with  old  Sir  T,  and  the  beds  I  know.     „         ii  i  184 
s  Becket  (Chancellor  of  England,  afterwards  Arch- 
bishop of  Canterbury)    (See  also  Becket,  Thomas, 
Thomas  of    Canterbury)      My   Rosamund  is  no 
Lais,  T  B ;  Becket,  Pro.  58 

last  words  were  a  commendation  of  T  jB  to  your  Grace  „  Pro.  401 
ye  are  all  as  like  To  lodge  a  fear  in  T  B's  heart  „       i  iii  176 

Wilt  thou  hold  out  for  ever,  T  B?  „       i  iii  266 

Where  is  the  Archbishop,  T  B?  „      v  iii  110 

fhomas  Gresham    and  Sir  T  G  Will  aid  us.  Q:ueen  Mary  v  i  180 

bomas  of  Canterbury  (Becket)    I  would,  my  lord  T  oC, 

Thou  wert  plain  Thomas  and  not  Canterbury,  Becket  i  iii  577 

liomas  Stafford  (insurrectionary  leader)    (See  also 

Stafford)     Sir  T  S,  and  some  more —  Queen  Mary  i  iii  124 

I  believe  Sir  T  -S  ?  „  ni  i  32 

You  would  but  make  us  weaker,  T  S.  „  iii  i  131 

Carew  is  there,  and  T  S  there.  „  v  i  125 

Sir  T  S,a.  bull-headed  ass,  „  v  i  284 

liomas  White  (Lord  Mayor  of  London)    1  B.m  T  W. 

Few  things  have  fail'd  to  which  I  set  my  will.  „  n  ii  21 


Becket  Pro.  154 
Pro.  197 
Pro.  238 
Pro.  243 
Pro.  258 
Pro.  311 
Pro.  467 
I  169 
Iil72 
11390 

I  iii  31 
I  iii  316 
I  iii  573 

I  iii  578 

II  ii  66 

II  ii  138 
II  ii  229 
II  ii  304 
II  ii  333 

II  ii  397 

III  iii  38 
in  iii  58 

ni  iii  87 

m  iii  168 

m  iii  183 

ra  iii  218 

III  iii  263 

in  iii  287 

vi204 

viill 

vii34 

V  ii  142 

V  ii  543 
vii584 


Thomas  White  (Lord  Mayor  of  London)  (continued) 

Am  1  T  W?     One  word  before  she  comes.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  108 

Yes,  T  W.     I  am  safe  enough ;  „          ix  ii  316 

And  T  W  will  prove  this  Thomas  Wyatt,  ,'          n  ii  367 
Thomas    Wyatt   (insurrectionary   leader)       (See   also 

Thomas,  Wyatt)    Sir  Peter  Carew  and  Sir  T  W,  „          i  iii  123 

Sir  T  W,I  myself,  some  others,  „  i  jy  113 
all  of  us  abhor  The  venomous,  bestial,  devilish 

revolt  Of  T  W.  „          „  ii  288 

And  Thomas  White  will  prove  this  T  W,  „           n  ii  368 

'  Whosoever  will  apprehend  the  traitor  T  W  „           n  iii  60 
Thor     by  St.  Dunstan,  old  St.  T— By  God,  we  thought 
him  dead — but  oiu-  old  T  Heard  his  own  thunder 

again,  flaroM  iv  iii  147 

Thorn    rose  but  pricks  his  nose  Against  the  t,  „          i  i  423 
not  t  enough  to  prick  him  for  it,  Ev'n  with  a  word  ?        Becket  in  i  251 

Thom'd     only  rose  of  all  the  stock  That  never  t  him ;  Harold  i  i  427 
Thorough     Yet  thoroughly  to  believe  in  one's  own 

self,  So  one's  own  self  be  t,  Queen  Mary  n  ii  389 
Though    See  Thaw 

Thought  (s)     You  fly  your  t's  like  kites.  Queen  Mary  i  v  390 

Think  !     1  have  many  t's ;  „         ni  v  226 

Had  in  him  kingly  t's — a  king  of  men,  Harold  iv  i  83 

our  waking  t's  Suffer  a  stormless  shipwreck  „         v  i  295 

And  thy  t's,  thy  fancies  ?  Becket,  Pro.  118 

every  thread  of  t  Is  broken  ere  it  joins —  „         v  ii  206 

I  have  no  t  of  marriage,  my  friend.  Prom,  of  May  n  65 
No  t  was  mine  of  torture  or  of  death.  The  Cup  n  410 
when  T  Comes  down  among  the  crowd.  Prom,  of  May  1  500 

Thought  (verb)     (See  also  Thowt)     t  To  bind  me  first 

by  oaths  I  could  not  keep.  Queen  Mary  i  v  556 

it  is  t  the  Duke  will  be  taken.  „          u  i  135 

if  I  either  t  or  knew  This  marriage  should  bring  loss  „         u  ii  226 

I I  this  Philip  had  been  one  of  those  black  devils 

of  Spain,  „         m  i  214 

but  I  the  was  a  beast.  „         m  i  220 

she  t  they  knew  the  laws.  „         mi  330 

(for  they  t  not  of  our  tides),  „          m  ii  27 

It  oi  you,  my  liege,  Ev'n  as  I  spoke.  „          in  ii  94 

1 1  not  on  my  boots  ;  „        in  t  195 

when  it  was  1 1  might  be  chosen  Pope,  „            v  ii  82 

and  it  was  t  we  two  Might  make  one  flesh,  „          v  ii  135 

1 1  you  knew  me  better.  „         v  ii  186 

but  1 1 1  was  not  loved.  „           v  v  89 

1 1  that  naked  Truth  would  shame  the  Devil  Harold  iii  i  118 

By  God,  we  t  him  dead —  „     iv  iii  148 

twice  1 1  that  all  was  lost.  „       v  ii  173 

Have  you  t  of  one  ?  Becket,  Pro.  9 

and  I  <  Lo  !     I  must  out  or  die.  „      i  i  267 

T  that  I  knew  him,  err'd  thro'  love  of  him,  „    i  iii  440 

I  f  it  was  a  gift ;  (repeat)  „    i  iii  646 

and  It  at  first  it  was  the  King,  „  m  i  165 
I  <  if  it  were  the  King's  brother  he  had  a  better  bride 

than  the  King,  „  ni  i  172 
He  t  less  of  two  kings  than  of  one  Roger  the  king  of 

the  occasion.  „  ni  iii  90 

It  iii  followed  it  I  should  find  the  fairies.  „     iv  i  23 

We  t  to  scare  this  minion  of  the  King  „  rv  ii  330 

I  <  that  I  had  made  a  peace  for  thee.  „     v  ii  84 

He  t  to  excommunicate  him —  „   v  ii  141 

De  Morville,  1  had  t  so  well  of  you  ;  „  v  ii  520 

I  am  much  malign'd.  1 1  to  serve  Galatia.  The  Cup  i  ii  324 
Too  late — t  myself  wise — A  woman's  dupe.  „  n  480 
Perhaps  1 1  with  those  of  old.  The  Falcon  878 
We  shouted,  and  they  shouted,  ssit,  Foresters  11  i  257 
Robin  Hood  was  it  ?  1 1  as  much.  „  n  i  327 
And  t  thou  wert  bewitch'd.  „        n  i  684 

I I  I  saw  thee  clasp  and  kiss  a  man  „  n  ii  71 
Who  t  to  buy  your  marrying  me  with  gold.  „         iv  718 

Thoulouse  (Toulouse)     Not  heavier  than  thine  armour  &tT?    Becket  i  i  26 

Lent  at  the  siege  of  T  by  the  King.  „  i  iii  636 

Thousand    Good  Lord  !  but  I  have  heard  a  t  such.  Queen  Mary  i  v  579 
but  ten  t  men  on  Penenden  Heath  all  calling  after 

your  worship,  „            n  i  60 

Say  for  ten  t  ten — and  pothouse  knaves,  „           n  i  69 


Thousand 


1102 


Throne 


Thousand  {continued)    And  think  not  we  shall  be  alone — f's 

will  flock  to  us.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  191 

To  raise  your  Highness  thirty  t  men,  „         ii  ii  290 

A  hundred,  yea,  a  t  thousand-fold,  „      in  iii  300 

A  t  ships — a  hundred  t  men — T's  of  horses,  Harold  iv  iii  194 

I  know  Some  three  or  four  poor  priests  a  t  times  Fitter 

for  this  grand  function.  Becket,  Pro.  291 

Some  thirty^^forty  t  silver  marks.  „        i  iii  657 

What !  forty  t  marks !  „        i  iii  704 

Forty  t  marks  !  forty  t  devils— and  these  craven 

bishops !  „  I  iv  90 

Spite  of  ten  t  brothers,  Federigo.  The  Falcon  898 

I  took  it  For  some  three  t  acres.  Prom,  of  May  iii  614 

And  Sir  Richard  was  told  he  might  be  ransomed  for  two 

t  marks  in  gold.  Foresters  i  i  64 

Those  two  t  marks  lent  me  by  the  Abbot  „     i  i  264 

they  have  trodden  it  for  half  a  t  years,  „     i  i  334 

Two  t  marks  in  gold.     I  have  paid  him  half.     That 

other  t —  „    II  i  464 

for  Oberon  fled  away  Twenty  t  leagues  to-day.  „  ii  ii  143 

Where  he  would  pay  us  down  his  t  marks.  „     iv  441 

Lest  he  should  fail  to  pay  these  t  marks  „     iv  454 

What  more  ?  one  t  marks.  Or  else  the  land.  „     iv  473 

Here  be  one  t  marks  Out  of  our  treasury  to  redeem  the 

land.  „     IV  492 

Would  buy  me  for  a  t  marks  in  gold —  „     iv  652 

Is  weightier  than  a  t  marks  in  gold,  „     iv  660 

A  t  winters  Will  strip  you  bare  as  death,  a  t  summers 

Robe  you  life-green  again.  „   iv  1055 

Thousand-fold    A  hundred,  yea,  a  thousand  <-/,  Queen  Mary  in  iii  200 

The  force  of  Rome  a  t-f  our  own.  The  Cup  i  ii  85 

Thousand-times     And  t-t  recurring  argument  Of  those 

two  friars  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  93 

Thowt  (thought)     Coomly,  says  she.     I  niver  t  o' 

mysen  i'  that  waay ;  Prom,  of  May  1 176 

So  1 1,  and  I  heard  the  winder —  „  i  395 

but  1 1  I'd  bring  tha  them  roses  fust.  „  ii  50 

When  ye  t  there  were  nawbody  watchin'  o'  you,  „  ii  179 

I  should  ha'  t  they'd  hed  anew  o'  gentlefoalk,  .,  ii  580 

Thiall    if  my  people  must  be  t's  of  Rome,  The  Cup  n  500 

sat  Among  my  t's  in  my  baronial  hall  Foresters  n  i  61 

The  scarlet  t  of  Rahab  saved  her  life ;  Queen  Mary  iii  ii  38 

Thread    heaven  and  earth  are  t's  of  the  same  loom,  Harold  i  i  209 

that  every  t  of  thought  Is  broken  ere  it  joins —  Becket  v  ii  205 

The  child,  a  t  within  the  house  of  birth.  The  Cup  ii  259 

my  nurse  has  broken  The  t  of  my  dead  flowers,  The  Falcon  522 

while  our  Robin's  life  Hangs  by  a  t,  Foresters  iv  385 

Threadbare    to  cost  All  t  household  habit,  „     i  iii  112 

Threadbare-worn    long-tugged  at,  t-w  Quarrel  of  Crown  and 

Church —  Becket  ii  ii  54 

Threat    T's  !  t's !  ye  hear  him.  „    v  ii  464 

Threaten    T  the  child ;  '  I'll  scourge  you  if  you  did 

it : '  Queen  Mary  in  v  126 

it  t's  us  no  more  Than  French  or  Norman.  Harold  i  i  133 

and  t  us  thence  Unschool'd  of  Death  ?  „      v  i  285 

Not  in  my  chin,  I  hope  !     That  t's  double.  Becket  ii  i  251 

T  our  junction  with  the  Emperor —  „     ii  ii  471 

they  t  The  immediate  thimder-blast  of  interdict :  „    in  iii  25 

as  when  we  t  A  yelper  with  a  stick.  „    iv  ii  349 

yet  t  your  Archbishop  In  his  own  house.  „     v  ii  504 

Threaten'd    Had  t  ev'n  your  life,  and  would  say  any- 
thing ?  Prom,  of  May  m  567 
Three    {See  also  Dree)    for  thou  art  as  white  as  t 

Christmasses.  Queen  Mary  i  i  30 

T  voices  from  our  guilds  and  companies  !  „        n  ii  255 

Because  the  Queen  hath  been  t  days  in  tears  „        in  vi  12 

God  made  the  fierce  fire  seem  To  those  t  children 

like  a  pleasant  dew.  „         iv  iii  91 

T  persons  and  one  God,  have  mercy  on  me,  „       iv  iii  121 

that  these  T  rods  of  blood-red  fire  up  yonder  mean  Harold  i  i  44 

Why  then  the  wrath  of  Heaven  hath  t  tails,  The  devil 

only  one.  „      i  i  61 

and  hurl'd  it  from  him  T  fields  away,  ..mi  140 

There  is  one  Who  passing  by  that  hill  t  nights  ago —  „  ni  i  366 

T  horses  had  I  slain  beneath  me :  „  y  ii  171 


Three  {continued)    1  know  Some  t  or  four  poor  priests  a 

thousand  times 
with  the  retinue  of  t  kings  behind  him,  outroyalling 

royalty  ? 
My  lord,  the  King  demands  t  himdred  marks, 
My  lord,  I  ha' t  sisters  a-dying  at  home 
She  past  me  here  T  years  ago  when  I  was  flying  from  My 

Tetrarchy  to  Rome. 
But  after  rain  o'erleaps  a  jutting  rock  And  shoots  t 

hundred  feet, 
who  has  dwelt  t  years  in  Rome  And  wrought  his  worst 

against  his  native  land. 
That  there  t  years  ago — the  vast  vine-bowers 
cloudless  heaven  which  we  have  found  together  In  our  t 

married  years  !  „    i  ii  417 

T  laps  for  a  cat !  The  Falcon  125 

and  I  sneezed  t  times  this  morning.  „  169 

Yeas,  yeas  !     T  cheers  for  Mr.  Steer !  Prom,  of  May  i  455 

Why,  Miss  Dora,  mea  and  my  maates,  us  t,  we 

wants  to  hev  t  words  wi'  ye.  „         in  126 

Milly,  who  came  to  us  t  years  after  you  were  gone,  „         in  232 

They  did  not  last  t  Junes.  .,         in  589 

I  took  it  For  some  t  thousand  acres.  „  in  614 

t  yards  about  the  waist  is  like  to  remain  a  virgin.  Foresters  i  ii  69 


Becket,  Pro.  291 

„  Pro.  445 
I  iii  626 
I  iv  245 


The  Cup  I  i  6 

lilll 

I  ii  175 
I  ii  401 


Here  come  t  beggars. 

Here  come  t  friars. 

Thou  and  thy  woman  are  a  match  for  t  friars. 

Here,  you  t  rogues, 

blow  upon  it  T  mots,  this  fashion — listen  ! 

for  the  moment  strike  the  bonds  From  these  t  men, 
Three-score    the  doctors  tell  you.  At  t-s  years ; 
Threshold    I'll  fight  it  on  the  t  of  the  grave. 

Hope  Smiles  from  the  t  of  the  year  to  come 
Threw     Northumbria  t  thee  off,  she  will  not  have  thee. 

But  I  that  t  the  mightiest  knight  of  France, 
Thrill    T's  to  the  topmost  tile — no  hope  but  death ; 
Thrive     And  may  your  business  t  in  Nottingham  ! 

That  you  may  i,  but  in  some  kindlier  trade. 
Throat    heretic  t's  Cried  no  God-bless-her 

this  poor  t  of  mine,  Barer  than  I  should  wish  a 
man  to  see  it, — 

I  have  my  dagger  here  to  still  their  t's. 

Madam,  I  saw  your  dagger  at  her  t ; 

not  at  the  moment  who  had  fasten'd  About  his  t — 

t  might  gape  before  the  tongue  could  cry  who  ? 
Throated    See  Pull-throated 
Throne  (s)     Until  your  t  had  ceased  to  tremble 

But  his  assessor  in  the  t, 

bum  the  t  Where  you  should  sit  with  Philip : 

let  Rebellion  Roar  till  (  rock,  and  crown  fall. 

shall  we  have  Spain  on  the  t  and  in  the  parliament ; 

Had  holpen  Richard's  tottering  t  to  stand, 

same  chair.  Or  rather  t  of  purple,  on  the  deck. 

Between  the  two  most  high-set  t's  on  earth, 

no  foreign  prince  or  priest  Should  fill  my  t, 

You  sit  upon  this  fallen  Cranmer's  t ; 

Declare  the  Queen's  right  to  the  t ; 

floated  downward  from  the  t  Of  God  Almighty. 

bishops  down  from  all  Their  t's  in  England  ? 

The  Atheling  is  nearest  to  the  t. 

help  to  build  a  t  Out-towering  hers  of  France  .  .  . 

Why  then  the  t  is  empty.     Who  inherits  ? 

Who  shook  the  Norman  scoundrels  off  the  t. 

To  thrust  our  Harold's  t  from  under  him  ? 

Hath  climb'd  the  t  and  almost  clutch'd  the  crown ; 

thou  didst  help  me  to  my  t  In  Theobald's  time, 

A  bulwark  against  T  and  Baronage. 

weight  down  all  free  choice  beneath  the  t. 

The  soul  the  body,  and  the  Church  the  T, 

I,  that  taking  The  Fiend's  advantage  of  a  t, 

Reseat  him  on  his  t  of  Canterbury, 

yea,  even  among  those  Who  sit  on  t's — 

Of  Provence  blew  you  to  your  English  t ; 

Lest  Becket  thrust  you  even  from  your  t. 

To  shake  my  t,  to  push  into  my  chamber — 


ni  187 
m  256 
in  262 
in  358 
IV  425 
IV  963 
Queen  Mary  m  iv  410 

V  V  189 
Foresters  i  iii  16 

Harold  iv  ii  33 

Becket  i  iii  746 

„      V  ii  209 

Foresters  in  244 

m  252 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  44 

V  ii  460 
Becket  ni  ii  50 

„     IV  ii  319 

The  Cup  u  51 

Foresters  in  225 

Queen  Mary  i  v  393 

IV  501 

IV  510 

nil45 

nil76 

in  i  114 

ui  ii  8 

in  ii  106 . 

in  V  237 

IV  i  114 

IV  ii  78 

Harold  i  i  18 

„      I  i  51 

„  n  ii  570 

„  n  ii  764 

„  in  i  234 

„     IV  i  82 

„  IV  iii  126 

Becket,  Pro.  21 

„    Pro.  201 

I  i  17 

„     I  iii  119 

„     I  iii  718 

„      n  i  152 

„     n  ii  118 

„    iviil25 

„      v  i 124  I 

„      V  i  160 

„      V  i  249 


Throne 


1103 


Time 


TThrone  (s)  (continued)     Blared  from  the  heights  of  all  the 

t's  of  her  kings,  Becket  v  ii  489 

die  upon  the  Patriarchal  t  Of  all  my  predecessors  ?  „      v  iii  75 

and  wear  it  Beside  him  on  his  t.  The  Cup  ii  137 

shout  of  Synorix  and  Gamma  sitting  Upon  one  t,  „        ii  148 

He  climbs  the  t.    Hot  blood,  „        ii  168 

So  falls  the  t  of  an  hour.     Synorix.     T?  is  it  thou  ?  „        ii  486 

T's,  churches,  ranks,  traditions,  customs,  Prom,  of  May  i  519 

king  of  day  hath  stept  from  off  his  t.  Foresters  ii  i  27 

oaks,  Gnarl'd — older  than  the  t's  of  Europe —  „         iii  92 

Throne  (verb)    King  Would  t  me  in  the  great  Archbishoprick :  Becket  i  iii  694 
and  t  One  king  above  them  all,  The  Cup  i  i  92 

T  him — and  then  the  marriage — ay  and  tell  him  „       ii  156 

Throned    For  how  should  reverend  prelate  or  t  prince  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  543 
And  so  be  t  together  in  the  sight  The  Cup  ii  67 

is  it  thou  ?  the  Fates  are  t,  not  we —  „      ii  488 

Throne-like    Throw  cushions  on  that  seat,  and  make 

it  t-l.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  537 

Throngii^    Their  horse  are  t  to  the  barricadas ;  Harold  v  i  547 

They  are  t  in  to  vespers — half  the  town.  Becket  v  iii  139 

Throning     Not  to  a  Gregory  of  my  i !     No.  „  v  i  34 

Throstle     New  buds  to  heaven,  whereon  the  t  rock'd  Foresters  i  iii  27 

Throttle    say  nothing  to  my  wife  if  I  Were  by  to  t  him !     The  Cup  i  ii  367 

Throw    strong  to  t  ten  Wyatts  and  all  Kent.  Queen  Mary  n  ii  353 

T  cushions  on  that  seat,  and  make  it  throne-like.  „  v  ii  536 

Why,  I  could  t  four  o'  ye ;  Prom,  of  May  i  468 

Thrown     offal  t  Into  the  blind  sea  of  forgetfubiess.     Queen  Mary  m  iii  192 


There  was  a  paper  t  into  the  palace, 

dogs'  food  t  upon  thy  head. 

she  had  t  my  chaplet  on  the  grass. 

Had  she  not  t  my  chaplet  on  the  grass, 
Thrush    See  Mavis 
Thrust     A  strange  youth  Suddenly  t  it  on  me, 

brave  liOrd  William  T  him  from  Ludgate, 

invade  their  hive  Too  gross  to  be  t  out. 

And  t  his  right  into  the  bitter  flame ; 

To  t  our  Harold's  throne  from  under  him  ? 

Why  do  you  t  this  Becket  on  me  again  ? 
Thnmb     A  lesson  worth  Finger  and  t — -thus 
Thumbscrew     the  t,  the  stake,  the  fire. 
Thunder  (s)     the  poor  t  Never  harm'd  head. 

But  t  may  bring  down  That  which  the  flash 

And  bolts  of  t  moulded  in  high  heaven 

Wilt  thou  play  with  the  t  ? 

but  our  old  Thor  Heard  his  own  t  again, 

T  !     Ay,  ay,  the  storm  was  drawing  hither 
Thunder  (verb)     I  will  both  flash  And  t  for  thee. 

North  and  South  T  together. 

They  t  again  upon  the  barricades. 

crying  On  Holy  Church  to  t  out  her  rights 
Thunder-blast    The  immediate  t-b  of  interdict : 
Thunderbolt    I  wish  some  t  Would  make  this  Cole  a 
cinder. 

So  from  a  clear  sky  falls  the  t ! 

with  this  black  t  of  Rome  Above  him, 
Thunder-cloud    shadowing  of  this  double  t-c  That  lours 
Ihurkill    I  think  that  this  is  T. 
rhwack     But  I  shall  have  to  t  her  if  I  stay. 
Thwack'd    I  would  have  t  the  woman,  but  I  did  not, 
rhwart    That  shalt  thou  never  be  If  I  can  t  thee. 

but  tramples  flat  Whatever  t's  him ; 
rhysen  (thyself)     Why,  Wilson,  tha  'card  'im  t — 

Maake  t  easy. 

if  she  weant-^look  to  t, 

an'  whether  thou  calls  t  Hedgar  or  Harold, 
rib  (country  wife)    Why,  it  be  T  ! 

I  must  set  down  myself,  T ; 

Eh,  then  ha'  thy  waay  wi'  me,  T ; 

Thou's  thy  way  wi'  man  and  beast,  T. 
Vkk-iaek    like  the  tail  of  the  horologe — to  and  fro- 
nde    same  t  Which,  coming  with  our  coming, 

(for  they  thought  not  of  our  t's),  '; 

when  men  are  tost  On  t's  of  strange  opinion, 

William's  or  his  own  As  wind  blows,  or  t  flows : 

all  drown'd  in  love  And  glittering  at  full  t — 


HI  vi  139 

Harold  ii  ii  431 

The  Falcon  368 

377 

Queen  Mary  n  i  129 

II  iv  92 

„         III  iii  55 

IV  iii  610 

Harold  iv  iii  126 

Becket  v  i  155 

Harold  I  ii  55 

Queen  Mary  ii  i  200 

Harold  i  ii  232 

„      I  ii  234 

n  ii  32 

„     in  i  391 

„  IV  iii  150 

The  Cup  n  318 

Harold  i  ii  229 

„    in  i  393 

„      V  i  625 

Becket  v  ii  31 

„  in  iii  26 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  10 

V  iii  116 

The  Cup  I  ii  265 

Harold  ni  ii  159 

v  ii  65 

Foresters  i  iii  139 

I  iii  135 

Harold  i  i  415 

„    n  ii  380 

Prom,  of  May  i  302 

I  419 

II  695 

n  737 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  464 

„  IV  iii  471 

„  IV  iii  487 

IV  iii  499 

t-t~     Becket  n  ii  367 

Queen  Mary  n  iii  21 

m  ii  28 

ni iv  119 

Harold  v  i  163 

The  Cup  ii  234 


Tide  (continued)    for  when  the  t  Of  full  democracy         Prom,  of  May  i  592 
In  this  full  t  of  love.  Wave  heralds  wave :  Foresters  iv  1043 

Tidings    My  liege,  I  bring  you  goodly  t.  Queen  Mary  v  i  280 

Tied    (See  also  Tongue-tied)     that  the  twain  have  been 

t  up  together,  „         i  iv  196 

Tierce    To  reign  is  restless  fence,  T,  quart,  and  trickery.        „  v  v  267 

Tiger     And  he  hath  learnt,  despite  the  t  in  him,  Harold  i  i  148 
May  serve  to  charm  the  t  out  of  him.     Leofwin.     He 

hath  as  much  of  cat  as  t  in  him.  „       i  i  153 
Tigress    t  had  unsheath'd  her  nails  at  last.                        Queen  Mary  in  i  3 

Tile    Thrills  to  the  topmost  t — no  hope  but  death ;  Becket  v  ii  209 

Till'd    — our  fallows  t,  Much  com,  „      i  iii  376 
Time    (See  also  Breathing-time,  Thousand-times)    no 

one  in  her  t  should  be  burnt  for  heresy.  Queen  Mary  I  i  97 

Well,  sir,  I  look  for  happy  t's.  „           i  i  99 

am  I  trenching  on  the  t  That  should  already  „         i  ii  79 

fear,  I  see  you.  Dear  friend,  for  the  last  t;  „        i  ii  103 

These  birds  of  passage  come  before  their  t:  „        i  iii  76 

Have  we  not  heard  of  her  in  Edward's  t,  „         i  iy  19 
Your  t  will  come.     Elizabeth.     I  think  my  t  will  come.        „       r  iv  255 

you  had  t  and  cause  enough  To  sicken  „          i  v  23 

I  should  some  t  have  a  happy  morning ;  „       i  v  245 

no  such  scarecrow  in  your  father's  t.  „       i  v  474 

let  them  sit.     I  must  have  t  to  breathe.  „       i  v  546 

known  a  semi-madman  in  my  t  So  fancy-ridd'n)  „         n  i  10 

I  fear  the  mine  is  fired  before  the  t.  „       n  i  123 

a  jest  In  t  of  danger  shows  the  pulses  even.  „      n  ii  357 

There  yet  is  t,  take  boat  and  pass  to  Windsor.  „      n  iv  27 

Who,  waiting  till  the  t  had  ripen'd,  „      ni  ii  78 

This  Gardiner  turn'd  his  coat  in  Henry's  t;  „     in  iii  17 
In  William's  t,  in  our  first  Edward's  t,  And  in  my 

master  Henry's  t ;  „    in  iii  226 

These  spaniel-Spaniard  English  of  the  t,  „    in  iii  241 

I  have  some  t,  for  curiousness,  my  Lord,  „      m  iv  61 

Such  is  our  t — all  t's  for  aught  I  know.  „      m  iv  66 

Did  she  not  In  Henry's  t  and  Edward's  ?  „    in  iv  132 

St.  Peter  in  his  t  of  fear  Denied  his  Master,  „    in  iv  263 

In  those  t's,  Thou  knowest  we  had  to  dodge,  „    in  iv  356 

For  a  t,  for  a  t.  „    in  iv  366 

Rogers  and  Ferrar,  for  their  t  is  come,                       '  „    in  iv  425 

How  many  names  in  the  long  sweep  ot  t  „       m  v  40 

last  t  she  wrote,  I  had  like  to  have  lost  my  life :  „     in  v  188 

I  think  that  I  may  be  some  t  the  Queen,  „     in  v  233 

Wherefore  our  Queen  and  Council  at  this  t  .,      iv  iii  37 

Friend  for  so  long  t  oi  a,  mighty  King ;  „      iv  iii  73 

every  man  at  t  of  death  Would  fain  set  forth  „    iv  iii  156 

I  have  not  t  for  more :  „    iv  iii  207 

Than  heretic  of  these  t's ;  „    iv  iii  599 

not  were  he  ten  t's  king.  Ten  t's  our  husband,  „          v  i  62 

I  have  to  pray  you,  some  odd  t,  „        v  i  258 

even  now,  when  bow'd  before  my  t,  „        v  ii  65 

T  that  I  were  gone  too  !  „       v  ii  320 

I  seem  half -shamed  at  t's  to  be  so  tall.  „       v  ii  424 

and  I  say  it  For  the  last  t  perchance,  Harold  i  i  176 

left  me  t  And  peace  for  prayer  to  gain  a  better  one.  „       i  i  219 

but  at  t's  They  seem  to  me  too  narrow,  „     m  ii  63 

A  goodly  flower  at  t's.  „    iv  i  151 

Hear  me  again — for  the  last  t.  „          v  i  9 

Then  for  the  last  t,  monk,  I  ask  again  „        v  i  15 

Good  for  good  hath  borne  at  t's  „      v  i  175 

Church  in  the  pell-mell  of  Stephen's  t  Becket,  Pro.  20 

— be  facile  to  my  hands.     Now  is  my  (.  „     Pro.  220 

thousand  t's  Fitter  for  this  grand  function.  „     Pro.  292 

Madam,  I  have  loved  her  in  my  t.  „     Pro.  496 

And  Earth  should  get  the  better — for  the  t.  „      i  iii  229 
that  be  dead  ten  t's  o'er  i'  one  day  wi'  the  putrid  fever ;     „      i  iv  250 

wriggle  out  of  them  like  an  eel  When  the  t  serves.  „      n  ii  188 

we  make  the  t,  we  keep  the  t,  ay,  and  we  serve  the  t;  „      n  ii  367 

I  cannot  answer  it  Till  better  t's,  „         m  i  3 

That  which  you  ask  me  Till  better  t's.  „         in  i  7 

you  shall  tell  me  of  her  some  other  t.  „     in  i  191 

that  is  to  say  in  her  t  when  she  had  the  '  Crown.'  „     in  i  198 

bound  me  by  his  love  to  secrecy  Till  his  own  t.  „     in  i  229 
sworn  on  this  my  cross  a  hundred  t's  Never  to  leave  him —  „     iv  ii  206 

Daughter,  my  t  is  short,  I  shall  not  do  it.  „      v  ii  157 


Time 


1104 


Told 


Time  (continued)    I  have  much  to  say,  no  t  to  say  it  in.      The  Cup  i  ii  208 
As  I  have  many  a  t  declared  to  you —  „  n  48 

and  I  sneezed  three  t's  this  morning.     Coming  to  visit 

my  lord,  for  the  first  t  in  her  hfe  too  !  The  Falcon  169 

fine  fowl  for  my  lady ;  I  had  scant  t  to  do  him  in.  „  556 

What?  my  <?     Is  it  my  <?     Well,  I  can  give  my  <  „  789 

and  they  was  all  a-crying  out  at  the  bad  t's,  Prom,  of  May  i  139 


To-day  (continued)     Fame  of  t-d  is  infamy  to-morrow  ; 
Infamy  of  t-d  is  fame  to-morrow 


fur  I  'ednt  naw  i  to  maake  mysen  a  scholard 
I  mun  ha'  plowed  it  moor  nor  a  hoonderd  t's ; 
Forgive  him  seventy  t's  and  seven ; 
next  t  you  waste  them  at  a  pot-house  you  get  no 

more  from  me. 
because  one  of  the  Steers  had  planted  it  there  in 

former  t's. 
he  tells  me  that  he  met  you  once  in  the  old  t's, 
all  in  all  to  one  another  from  the  t  when  we  first 

peeped 
and  he  trusted  that  some  t  we  should  meet  again, 
The  Steers  was  all  gentlefoalks  i'  the  owd  t's, 
The  land  belonged  to  the  Steers  i'  the  owd  t's, 
A  hundred  t's  more  worth  a  woman's  love, 
weight  of  the  flesh  at  odd  t's  overbalance  the  weight  of 

the  church, 
last  t  When  I  shall  hold  my  birthday  in  his  hall : 
Till  better  t's.     Robin.     But  if  the  better  t's 
And  if  the  worst  t  come  ? 
Why  then  I  will  be  better  than  the  t. 
we  must  at  t's  have  wrought  Some  great  injustice. 
Out  on  it,  I  say,  out  of  time  and  t  !     Marian.     Till 
thou  thyself  shall  come  to  sing  it — in  t.     Robin. 
T  !  if  his  backward-working  alchemy 
We  had  it  i'  the  Red  King's  t, 

if  they  were  not  repaid  within  a  limited  t  your  land 
should  be  forfeit. 
Timorous    Why  creep'st  thou  like  a  t  beast  of  prey 
Tinkle    Our  scouts  have  heard  the  t  of  their  bells. 
Tipsy    — and  I  fear  you  were  t  then,  too — 
Tip-top    snow  yonder  on  the  very  t-t  o'  the  mountain 
Tire    would  she  were  but  his  paramour,  for  men  t  of 

their  fancies ; 
Tired    last  night,  T,  pacing  my  new  lands 
Tit    Kiss  in  the  bower,  T  on  the  tree  ! 

No  bird  ?     Filippo.    Half  a  t  and  a  hem's  bill. 
T,  my  queen,  must  it  be  so  ? 


I  333 
I  368 


ni99 

III  248 
in  263 

III  273 
HI  328 
III  448 
in  451 
III  743 


Foresters  i  ii  61 
I  ii  88 
„  I  ii  286 
„  I  ii  290 
„  I  ii  292 
„       m  154 


IV  35 
IV  303 

IV  468 

Harold  i  ii  212 

„       V  i  220 

Prom,  of  May  in  88 

The  Falcon  501 

Beclcet,  Pro.  479 

Prom,  of  May  n  647 

Becket  in  i  105 

The  Falcon  131 

Foresters  n  ii  124 


T,  for  love  and  brevity, 


n  ii  127 

II  ii  126 

I  i  24 

I  i  27 

Prom,  of  May  I  445 

Queen  Mary  in  i  383 

I  V  254 

The  Falcon  91 

Foresters  iv  274 


And  you  dare  to  call  me  T, 

Titania    I  T  bid  you  flit, 

Tit-bit    You  be  fed  with  t-b's,  you, 

I  am  fed  with  t-b's  no  more  than  you  are, 

Tithe    thaw  me  and  'im  we  niver  'grees  about  the  t ; 

Title     And  nothing  of  the  t's  to  the  crown  ; 

Titular    That  if  this  Philip  be  the  t  king  Of  England, 

Toad    you  that  have  not  the  head  of  a  t. 

Tod     Like  a  t  of  wool  from  wagon  into  warehouse. 

To-daay  (to-day)     The  owd  man  be  heighty  t-d, 

beant  he  ?  Prom,  of  May  i  77 

as  I  telled  'er  t-d  when  she  fell  foul  upo'  me.  „        n  581 

To-day    (See  also  To-daay)    She  looks  comelier  than 

ordinary  t-d  ;  Queen  Mary  i  i  71 

I  trust  that  he  will  carry  you  well  t-d,  „       i  iv  145 

he  hath  been  so  bold  t-d,  „       ii  ii  348 

They  are  down  t-d.  „  in  i  8 

for  t-d  My  heart  beats  twenty,  „       in  ii  57 

and  brief  patience.  As  I  have  shown  t-d.  „    in  iv  415 

into  the  daylight  truth  That  it  may  fall  t-d  !  „     m  v  137 

That  you  t-d  should  read  your  recantation  „        rv  ii  27 

t-d  Thou  shalt  receive  the  penitent  thief's  award,  „       iv  iii  85 

When  earnest  thou  hither  ?     Gamel.     T-d,  good  Earl.       Harold  i  i  106 
I  heard  from  thy  Northumberland  t-d.  „       i  i  350 

Lady  Aldwyth  Was  here  t-d,  „        i  ii  35 

Swear  thou  t-d,  to-morrow  is  thine  own.  „     n  ii  710 

we  must  use  our  battle-axe  t-d.  „      v  i  205 

Thy  death  \—t-d  !     Is  it  not  thy  birthday  ?  „      v  i  428 

that  blighted  vow  Which  God  avenged  t-d.  „     v  ii  157 

I  could  but  read  a  part  t-d,  because —  Becket  i  iii  422 

they  were  fighting  for  her  t-d  in  the  street.  „     i  iv  160 


He  warmed  to  you  t-d,  and  you  have  chilled  him  again. 

T-d  I  almost  f ear'd  your  kiss  was  colder — 

and  to  be  sure  I  ha'  seen  great  ones  t-d — ; 

a  man  passed  in  there  t-d  :  I  hoUa'd  to  him, 

You  wrong  the  King  :  he  meant  what  he  said  t-d. 

for  thou  must  leave  him  T-d,  but  not  quite  yet. 

Going  or  gone  t-d  To  hunt  with  Sinnatus. 

come  upon  her  Again,  perhaps,  t-d- — her. 

A  strange  gift  sent  to  me  t-d. 

Have  let  him  hunt  the  stag  with  you  t-d. 

T-d  they  are  fixt  and  bright — they  look  straight  out. 

T-d  ?     Too  sudden.     I  will  brood  upon  it. 

I  would  that  every  man  made  feast  t-d 

For  all  my  truer  life  begins  t-d. 

T-d,  my  beauty,  thou  must  dash  us  down 

Sweeter  than  any  violet  of  t-d, 

but  t-d  I  dared  not — so  much  weaker, 

I  must  leave  you,  love,  t-d.    Eva.    Leave  me,  t-d  ! 

Shall  I  say  it  ? — fly  with  me  t-d. 

will  you  not  speak  with  Father  t-d  ? 

'  Will  your  Ladyship  ride  to  cover  t-d  ? 

but  you  seem  somewhat  better  t-d. 

Not  t-d.     What  are  you  staying  for  ? 

but  is  not  t-d  his  birthday  ? 

T-d  he  hath  accomplished  his  thirtieth  birthday, 

No,  Sir  Earl,  I  will  not  fight  t-d. 

for  Oberon  fled  away  Twenty  thousand  leagues  t-d. 

thy  father  will  not  grace  our  feast  With  his  white 

beard  t-d.  „  iv  81 

No,  not  an  hour  :  the  debt  is  due  t-d.  „       iv  448 

Toe     bursten  at  the  t's,  and  down  at  heels.  Queen  Mary  i  i  53 

small  hope  of  the  gentleman  gout  in  my  great  t.  The  Falcon  657, 

Toft  Hall    Philip  Edgar  of  T  H  In  Somerset.  Prom,  of  May  n  438 


Becket  ii  i  103. 

H  ii  375 

III  i  18 

ni  i  138 

III  ii  2^ 

in  iii  299 

IV  ii  211 

The  Cup  I  i  64 

lil&I 

iii  53 

I  ii  379 

'n20 

n7a 

„      n  2281 

II  229 

The  Falcon  152 

46^ 

831 

Prom,  of  May  i  625 

I  678 

ni  23T 

in  310 

in  322 

ni  358 

Foresters  i  i  219 

I  i  291 

„      n  i  575 

„     n  ii  1431 


One  Philip  Edgar  ot  T  H  in  Somerset  Is  lately  dead. 

I  have  been  telling  her  of  the  death  of  one  Philip 

Edgar  of  T  H,  Somerset. 
'  0'  the  17th,  Philip  Edgar,  o'  T  H,  Soomerset.' 
Togither  (together)     Didn't  I  spy  'em  a-sitting  i'  the 
woodbine  harbour  t  ? 
he  tell'd  me  'at  sweet'arts  niver  worked  well  t ;  and 

I  telled  'im  'at  sweet'arts  alius  worked  best  t ; 
And  wheniver  'e  sees  two  sweet'arts  t  like  thou  and 
me,  Sally, 
Toil    we  have  him  in  the  t's. 

Toil'd     Our  guardsman  hath  but  t  his  hand  and  foot, 
Token     given  A  t  of  His  more  especial  Grace  ; 

an'  I  be  half  dog  already  by  this  t. 
Told     (See  also  Telled,  Towld)     Whether  he  t  me 
anything  or  not, 
secret  missive.  Which  t  her  to  be  sick. 
'Tis  said  he  t  Sir  Maiu-ice  there  was  one  Cognisant 

I I  my  Lord  He  should  not  vex  her  Highness  ; 
He  t  me  I  should  conquer : — 
And  t  me  we  should  conquer. 
They  t  me  that  the  Holy  Rood  had  lean'd 
how  been  made  Archbishop  hadst  thou  t  him. 
Wast  thou  not  t  to  keep  thyself  from  sight  ? 
He  t  me  thou  shouldst  pacify  the  King, 
Hath  Henry  t  thee  ?  hast  thou  talk'd  with  him  ? 
'Tis  true  what  Becket  t  me,  that  the  mother 
1 1  the  Pope  what  manner  of  man  he  was. 
t  me  he  would  advance  me  to  the  service  of  a  great  lady, 
you  t  me  a  great  fib  :  it  wasn't  in  the  willow. 
1 1  him  I  was  bound  to  see  the  Archbishop  ; 
she  <  us  of  arm'd  men  Here  in  the  city, 
but  1 1  them  I  would  wait  them  here. 
1 1  thee  that  I  should  remember  thee  ! 
Hath  Sinnatus  never  t  you  of  this  plot  ? 
I  am  sure  I  t  him  that  his  plot  was  folly, 
there  You  t  your  love  ;  and  like  the  swaying  vines — 
Do  you  remember  what  1 1  you  ? 
Not  if  Sinnatus  Has  t  her  all  the  truth  about  me. 
She  t  thee  as  much  ? 


n445 

n70( 
n71S 

il2S 

nl5l 


n  168 

Harold  ii  ii  14 

„      V  i  201 

Queen  Mary  ni  iii  170- 

Becket  i  iv  219 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  184 

n  ii  122 

II  iv  98 

„  III  vi  64 

Harold  iv  i  263 

„     IV  i  267 

„      V  i  102 

Becket  i  i  122 

„       I  i  251 

„     I  iii  224 

„     I  iii  258 

n  ii  S 

„     n  ii  253 

ni  i  122 

IV  ii  37C 

„     V  ii  IOC 

„     V  ii  226 

„     V  ii  592 

„    V  iii  158 

The  Cwp  I  ii  250 

„      I  ii  283 

„      I  ii  41Q 

„         r  ii 

I  iii  2; 

The  Falcon  58 


Told 


1105 


Tooth 


Md  (continued)    Do  what  1 1  thee.    Must  I  do  it  myself  ? 
None  has  ever  t  me  yet  The  story  of  your  battle 

You  know,  my  lord,  1 1  you  I  was  troubled. 

Eva  t  me  that  he  was  taking  her  likeness.    He's  an 
artist. 

and  you,  a  gentleman,  T  me  to  trust  you  : 

You  never  t  her,  then,  of  what  has  past 

1 1  her  I  should  hear  her  from  the  grave. 

She  has  disappear'd,  They  t  me,  from  the  farm — 

Which  t  us  we  should  never  see  her  more — 

always  t  Father  that  the  huge  old  ashtree  there  would 
cause  an  accident  some  day  ; 

Have  you  t  him  I  am  here  ?     Dora.     No  ;  do  you 
wish  it ; 

bit  by  bit — for  she  promised  secrecy — 1 1  her  all. 

Is  yours  yet  living  ?     Harold.     No — 1 1  you. 

1 1  you — My  father. 

Can  it  be  ?     They  t  me  so.     Yes,  yes  ! 

She  hid  this  sister,  t  me  she  was  dead — 

Sir  Richard  was  t  he  might  be  ransomed 

It  should  have  t  us  how  the  man  first  kissed  the  maid. 

Scarlet  t  me — ^is  it  true  ? — 

They  have  t  but  a  tenth  of  the  truth : 

We  t  the  Prince  and  the  Sheriff  of  our  coming. 
Told'st     Thou  t  us  we  should  meet  him  in  the  forest 
Tolerance    Till  when,  my  Lords,  I  counsel  t. 
Tolerate    I  would  not,  were  I  Queen,  t  the  heretic, 

T  them  !     Why  ?  do  they  t  you  ? 
Toll     T  of  a  bell.  Stroke  of  a  clock, 

thou  hast  drain'd  them  shallow  by  thy  Vs, 

T  !     Beggar.     Eh  !  we  be  beggars. 

Take  thou  my  bow  and  arrow  and  compel  them  to 
pay  t.     Marian.     T ! 

Ha,  brother.     T,  my  dear  ?  the  t  of  love. 

Church  and  Law,  halt  and  pay  t ! 
Toll'd     A  passing  bell  t  in  a  dying  ear — 
Tomb     There  was  an  old-world  t  beside  my  father's. 
Tomb-place    free  the  t-p  of  the  King  Of  all  the  world  ? 
To-morrow    If  Ludgate  can  be  reach'd  by  dawn  t-m. 

Come  to  me  t-m. — 

that  I  think,  '  Wilt  thou  he  there  t-m  ?  ' 

And  goes  t-m. 

More  talk  of  this  t-m,  if  yon  weird  sign 

Xo  more  now  :  t-m. 

T-m — first  to  Bosham,  then  to  Flanders. 

T-m  we  will  ride  with  thee  to  Harfleur, 

I  will  go  with  thee  t-m — 

T-m  will  we  ride  with  thee  to  Harfleur. 

Swear  thou  to-day,  t-m  is  thine  own. 

T-m  will  I  ride  with  thee  to  Harfleur. 

To-night  we  will  be  merry — and  t-m — 

Come  to  me  t-m. 

To  pass  thee  to  thy  secret  bower  t-m. 

Let  the  Great  Seal  be  sent  Back  to  the  King  t-m. 

Fame  of  to-day  is  infamy  t-m  ;  Infamy  of  to-day  is 
fame  t-m  ; 

and  crown  Young  Henry  there  t-m. 

Who  shall  vouch  for  his  t-m's  ?     One  word  fiu?ther. 

Antonius  T-m  will  demand  your  tribute — 

He  will  pass  t-m  In  the  gray  dawn 

— a  brave  one  Which  you  shall  see  t-m.     Camma. 
I  rise  t-m  In  the  gray  dawn, 

'  Let  us  eat  and  drink,  for  t-m  we  die.' 

He  will  be  sure  to  know  you  t-m. 

T-m  then  ?     Marian.     Well,  I  will  fight  t-m. 
Tongue    (See-also  Evil-tongue)     make  what  noise  you 
will  with  your  t's, 

old  leaven  sticks  to  my  t  yet. 

Make  all  t's  praise  and  all  hearts  beat  for  you. 

t  yet  quiver'd  with  the  jest  When  the  head  leapt — 

thou  shailt  lose  thine  ears  and  find  thy  t, 

Will  stir  the  living  t  and  make  the  cry. 

every  t  Alters  it  passing,  till  it  spells 

What  weapon  hath  the  child,  save  his  soft  t, 

More  grievously  than  any  t  can  tell. 


The  Falcon  279 
592 
676 

Prom,  of  May  i  126 
I  710 
I  728 
11  244 
II  407 
II  477 

III  243 

III  266 

III  380 

III  506 

III  573 

m  670 

m  689 

Foresters  i  i  63 

„     I  i  123 

„     III  145 

„     ni  291 

„      IV  575 

„     IV  439 

Queen  Mary  ui  iv  203 

III  iv  209 
m  iv  213 

„  in  V  141 

Harold  I  i  320 

Foresters  in  188 

III  264 
„       in  270 

IV  430 
Queen  Mary  v  ii  41 

V  ii  393 

Foresters  iv  408 

Queen  Mary  n  iii  53 

in  i  320 

in  V  132 

in  vi  119 

Harold  i  i  120 

1 1487 

I  ii  239 

n  ii  195 

n  ii  204 

u  ii  647 

n  ii  710 

II  ii  769 
n  ii  772 

Becket,  Pro.  411 
I  i  249 
I  i  376 

n  i  103 

III  ii  10 
ni  iii  300 

The  Cup  I  ii  97 
„      I  ii  294 

„      I  ii  432 

Prom,  of  May  i  259 

„         ni  470 

Foresters  ii  i  576 

Queen  Mary  i  i  6 
I  iii  48 

IV  117 
IV  475 

ni  i  256 

ni  i  354 

m  V  35 

in  V  129 

IV  iii  125 


Tongue  (continued)     Fed  with  rank  bread  that 
crawl'd  upon  the  t, 

the  t  on  un  cum  a-loUuping  out  o'  'is  mouth  as 
black  as  a  rat. 

Leofwin,  thou  hast  a  t ! 

I  say,  thou  hast  a  t, 

Tear  out  his  t.     Officer.     He  shall  not  rail  again. 

Treble  denial  of  the  t  of  flesh, 

play  The  William  with  thine  eyesight  and  thy  t. 

Say  that  he  blind  thee  and  tear  out  thy  t. 

Cannot  a  smooth  t  lick  him  whole  again 

Spare  not  thy  t  !  be  lavish  with  our  coins, 

asked  our  mother  if  I  could  keep  a  quiet  t  i'  my  head 

So  charged  with  t,  that  every  thread 

Well,  well,  well !     I  bite  my  t. 

throat  might  gape  before  the  t  could  cry  who  ? 

if  the  land  Were  ruleable  by  t, 

Nay,  my  t  tript- — five  himdred  marks  for  use. 
Tongue-free    Crow  over  Barbarossa — at  last  t-f 
Tongueless    — t  and  eyeless,  prison'd — 
Tonguester    selfless  man  Is  worth  a  world  of  Vs. 
Tongue-tied    make  me  shamed  and  t-t  in  my  love 


Queen  Mary  iv  iii  443 


Tongue-torn    fiends  that  utter  them  T-t  with  pincers, 
To-night     you  would  honour  my  poor  house  t-n, 

When  do  you  meet  ?     NoaUles.     T-n. 

Make  out  the  writ  t-n. 

T-n  we  will  be  merry. 

T-n  we  will  be  merry — and  to-morrow — 

Go  with  her — at  once — T-n — 

T-n.     Retainer.     T-n,  my  lord. 

Am  I  to  be  murdered  t-n  ? 

I  must  fly  to  France  t-n. 
The  miller's  away  for  t-n. 
for  t-n  ye  have  saved  our  Archbishop  ! 
not  t-n — the  night  is  falling.     What  can  be  done  t-n  ? 
Ye  shall  sing  that  agean  t-n, 
and  he'll  be  rude  to  me  agean  t-n, 
prays  your  ladyship  and  your  ladyship's  father  to 

be  present  at  his  banquet  t-n. 

let  us  be  merry  t-n  at  the  banquet. 
Tonitrua    Jacta  t  Deus  bellator  ! 
Tonsure    crept  Up  even  to  the  t,  and  he  groan'd, 

his  poor  t  A  crown  of  Empire. 
Tonsured    Ye  haled  this  t  devil  into  your  courts  ; 
Took     (See  also  Taaked)     t  her  hand,  caU'd  her  sweet 
sister, 

but  t  To  the  English  red  and  white. 

For  the  wrong  Robin  t  her  at  her  word. 

I I  it,  tho'  I  did  not  know  1 1  it, 
another  hill  Or  fort,  or  city,  t  it. 
Hit  and  translated  that  hard  heart 
He  t  his  mitre  off,  and  set  it  on  me. 
Then  he  t  back  not  only  Stephen's  gifts, 
rather  than  God's  cause  T  it  upon  me — 
North-east  t  and  turned  him  South-west, 
t  me  ever  so  far  away,  and  gave  me  a  great  pat 
which  a  breeze  of  May  T  ever  and  anon. 
Shame  on  her  that  she  t  it  at  thy  hands, 
he  always  t  you  so  kindly,  he  always  t  the  world  so  kindly, 
he  made  a  wry  mouth  at  it,  but  he  t  it  so  kindly, 
he  always  t  you  so  kindly — 
the  Sister  t  me  to  her  house,  and  bit  by  bit — 
1  tit  For  some  three  thousand  acres. 
She  t  my  ring.     I  trust  she  loves  me — yet 
when  the  Sheriff  t  my  little  horse  for  the  King 
and  <  His  monies. 
0  no,  we  t  Advantage  of  the  letter — 

Tool    What  filthy  t's  our  Senate  works  with  ! 

values  neither  man  Nor  woman  save  as  t's — 
Tooth     They  show  their  teeth  upon  it ; 

His  early  follies  cast  into  his  teeth, 

the  teeth  That  shall  be  broken  by  us — 

knaw'd  better  nor  to  cast  her  sister's  misfortin 
inter  'er  teeth 

how  should  thy  one  t  drill  thro'  this  ? 


„  IV  iii  518 

Harold  I  i  392 

„       I  i  401 

„     II  ii  487 

„     in  i  281 

V  i  2& 
Becket  i  iii  616 

II  ii  25 

„     II  ii  469 

„     m  i  119 

„      V  ii  205 

The  Falcon  624 

Foresters  in  225 

IV  sgO' 

IV  499 

Becket  n  ii  50 

Harold  n  ii  496 

V  i  82 
Queen  Mary  in  ii  162 


V  ii  194 
I  iii  118 

„  I  iii  155 

IV  i  195 

Harold  ii  ii  767 

„       II  ii  771 

Becket  i  i  402. 

livlB 

iiv4& 

I  iv  154 

I  iv  164 

I  iv  25T 

in  ii  51 

Prom,  of  May  n  216 

II  22a 

Foresters  i  i  301 

I  i  344 

Harold  v  i  569 

Becket  i  iii  327 

V  i  195 
„      I  iii  38T 

Queen  Mary  i  i  79 

I  V  IT 

„  III  V  264 

V  V  97 
Harold  IV  i  50 

Becket,  Pro.  379 

1 163 

„         I  iii  154 

I  iii  699 

n  ii  321 

III  i  124 

The  Cup  I  ii  407 

The  Falcon  61 

187 

191 

194 

Prom,  of  May  ni  379 

in  613 

Foresters  i  iii  3 

„    ni300 

„     in  362 

„     IV  620 

The  Cup  I  i  156 

Foresters  iv  714 

Queen  Mary  v  i  299 

V  ii  124 

Harold  i  ii  244 

Prom,  of  May  n  128 
Foresters  n  i  276 


4  A 


Top 


1106 


Tower 


TOP    iSee  also  K-tov)    wheel  of  Fate  has  roll'd  me  to  the  t.    The^C-vn2^ 

Torch    T&liSt  at  that  never  wiU  go  out !  Queen  Mary  v  v  122 

dash  The  t  of  war  among  your  standing  com,  "^^    ,  tt  Hi  HO 

TorchSht    I   aw  Lord  WiUiam  Howard  By  t  Queen  ^«^  «/    ?9 

KS    t  away  My  marriage  ring,  and  rent  my  bridal  veil ;         ^"'"^^^^^^Vl 
He  t  their  eyes  out,  sliced  their  hands  away,  "    "vifi8 

Torment    S  their  strong  ^bravely  borne  «^%f,7  "Vu  21? 

keep  it,  or  you  sell  me  To  t  and  to  death.  T/ie  Cm^  i  u  ^io 

Tom    (LaZ..  Tongue-torn)    Die  like  the  *  fox  dumb,  ^^  ..  ^^^ 

but  never  whine  "«"*■"  »       :  i  §5 

nr  wp  are  <  Down  the  strong  wave  of  brawlers.  ,,  i".^  ^°^ 

Wo^M  God  tC^had  t  up  all  By  the  hard  root,  ^f  ^^  m  11 

We  found  a  letter  in  your  bedroom  t  into  bits     .  Prom,  of  May  m  323 
Torrent    (5««  aZso  Lava-torrents)    What  breadth,  height,  ^  94 

strength-('5  of  eddying  bark  !  T^rS  i ii314 

Torture  (s)    Think,-<,-death,-and  come.  The  Cttp  i     ^i* 

Shall  I  go?    Shall  I  go?     Death,  t-  »       i^*^* 

No  thought  was  mine  of  t  or  of  death.  Foresters  iii  106 

scares  The  Baron  at  the  (  of  his  churls,  ^^^    /^„!, %  ;i  97^ 

Tort^  (verb)     I  know  they  mean  to  t  him  to  death.  The  Cup  i     273 

Tortured    Would  you  have  t  Sinnatus  to  death  ?  >.         "  ?Y° 

T^t    when  men  a^re  t  On  tides  of  strange  opmron,       Q^m  Maryuiv.  118 
Geoffrey  have  not  t  His  ball  into  the  brook  !  ^ectet  11 1  ^^u 

Tostig  (Earl  of  Northumbria)    A  f amt  foot  hither,  leanmg 
"^""'^  Won  T.    He  hath  learnt  to  love  our  T  much  of        ^^^^^  ^  .  ^^ 
late.  ,  T  i  156 

Our  T  loves  the  hand  and  not  the  man.  «       ^  J  ^^ 

T  says  true  ;  my  son,  thou  art  too  hard,  «       ^.904 

Thou  art  the  man  to  rule  her  !     ^W«)2/</i.    So,  not  T  !        „       11  224 
T,  I  am  faint  again.  "  j  074 

And  T  knows  it ;  T  loves  the  king.  "       ^  .    ' 

Then  T  too  were  wiser  than  he  seems.  »  ' 

No,  r— lest  I  make  myself  a  fool  »  . 

thine  earldom,  T,  hath  been  a  kingdom. 

I  may  teU  thee,  T,  I  heard  from  thy  Northumberland  ^       ^  .  ^^^ 

to-day.  "        T ;  Q71 

O  T,  0  dear  brother— If  they  prance,  "       1 1  SQ^ 

r,  tiiou  look'st  as  thou  wouldst  spring  upon  him.  „       1 1  ^ 

And  r  is  not  stout  enough  to  bear  it. 

ye  three  must  gaU  Poor  T.     Leofwtn.     T,  sister,  ^  .  ^^ 

galls  himself ;  "        71441 

but  r— On  a  sudden— at  a  something—  "       ^  '  |? 

Side  not  with  T  in  any  violence,  "       i  i  468 

It  means  the  fall  of  T  from  his  earldom.  "       ^  !  *"° 

This  r  is,  or  like  to  be,  a  tyrant ;  "        j  ii  65 

men  hS  g^^Tand  T,  shaU  I  play  The  craftier  T  W      i  ii  163 

Our  wild  T,  Edward  hath  made  him  Earl :  "      t  il  9^6 

Down  with  T!    That  first  of  all.-  "      ]ff^ 

Not  to  come  back  till  T  shall  have  shown  ..      i  "  ^ 

Against  thy  brother  T's  governance  ;  »     ^^  "  ^ 

T  in  his  own  hall  on  suspicion  Hath  massacred  ,.     n     ^»'^ 

our  fiery  T,  while  thy  hands  Are  palsied  here,  ,.     "  "  4?^ 

flamed  When  T's  anger'd  earldom  flung  him,  ..      m  j  ^ 

Siding  with  our  great  Council  against  I ,  >•      "±  |  )^ 

Our  T  parted  cursing  me  and  England ;  »      i"  '  ' " 

r  raise  my  head  !     ffaroM.    Let  Harold  serve  for 

't  !     Qweew.     Harold  served  T  so  ill,  he  cannot 

serve  for  i  1  ,    ,     .  m  ttt  i  1 68 

hath  mainly  drawn  itself  From  lack  of  r—  «     ^  |  i"2 

I  love  beyond  the  rest.  My  bamsh'd  T.  "  ^"/..  |q 

where  T  lost  The  good  hearts  of  his  people.  ..  ^^}\il 

Our  hapless  brother,  T— He,  "  ..  , „g 

Yea,  /hath  taken  York !          ,     ,^    ,     ,  "  iv  i  92 

Thou  art  T's  brother.  Who  wastes  the  land.  ..  ^^  1  »^ 

For  when  your  people  banish'd  T  hence,  »  1*    "' 

sanction  your  decree  Of  T's  banishment,  «  ^  J  :["J 

Who  brake  into  Lord  T's  treasure-house  ..  ^v  1  xx* 

when  T  hath  come  back  with  power.  Are  frighted  ^^r ;  1 1 7 

back  to  T.                                                 ^  "  i^^^^' 

There  U  a  faction  risen  again  for  T,  Since  2  came  . 

with  Norway—  "  tv  i  190 

Lest  thy  fierce  T  spy  me  out  alone,  ••  ^^ 


Who  is  it  comes 


Tostig  (Earl  of  Northumbria)  (continued) 

this  way  ?     T?  ^     -k. 

No  man  would  strike  with  T,  save  for  Norway, 
that  T  Conjured  the  mightier  Harold  from  his  North 
All  traitors  fail  Uke  T  !       _  .„„,-f„^ 

I  saw  the  hand  of  T  cover  it.    Our  dear,  dead,  traitor 

brother  T,  him  Reverently  we  buried. 
T,  poor  brother.  Art  thou  so  anger'd  ? 
and  his  brother  T  helpt ;  .        , , 

T'other  (other)     When  theer  wur  a  meetmg  0  farmers 

at  Littlechester  t  daay, 
I  coom'd  upon  'im  t  daiiy  lookin'  at  the  coontry, 
It  be  five  year  sin'  ye  went  afoor  to  him,  and  it 

seems  to  me  nobbut  t  day.        ,   ,     „  , , 
and  he  sent  'im  awaay  to  t  end  o  the  held ; 
wasn't  thou  and  me  a-bussin'  0'  one  another  t  side 

o'  the  haaycock. 
Tottering    Harry  of  Bolingbroke  Had  holpen  Richard  s 


Harold  IV  ii  2 
„  IV  ii  20 
„  IV  ii  67 
„     IV  iii  79 

,.     IV  iii  81 

„      V  i  272 
V  ii  47 


Prom,  of  May  1 137 
..  1 201 


n7 
II 154 

II  231 


t  throne  to  stand. 
Touch  (s)    sudden  t'es  For  him,  or  him— 
I  trust  the  kingly  t  that  cures  the  evil 
I  had  a  t  of  this  last  year— in— Rome. 
There  is  a  <  of  sadness  in  it,  my  lord, 

I  have  a  t  of  sadness  in  myself. 
Touch  (verb)     you  t  upon  the  rumour  that  Charles, 

cannot  t  you  save  that  you  turn  traitor  ; 

as  the  heathen  giant  Had  but  to  t  the  ground, 

T  him  upon  his  old  heretical  talk, 

A  snake— and  if  I « it,  it  may  sting. 

Alva  will  but  t  him  on  the  horns.  And  he  withdraws  ; 

Nobles  we  dared  not  t. 

I I  mine  arms.  My  Umbs — 
As  far  as  t'es  Wulfnoth  I  that  so  prized 
And  t'es  Him  that  made  it.  ,      ■    ^      j 
T  me  not !     De  Brito.    How  the  good  priest  gods 

himself  ! 
I  will  not  only  t,  but  drag  thee  hence. 
I  am  a  Roman  now,  they  dare  not  t  me. 
You  can  t  No  chord  in  me  that  would  not 
That  I  would  t  no  flesh  till  he  were  well 
know  that  I  can  t  The  ghittern  to  some  purpose. 
Shall  I  be  bold  ?  shall  1 1  her  ? 
while  the  lark  flies  up  and  t'es  heaven  ! 
where  twelve  Can  stand  upright,  nor  t  each  other. 
He  dies  who  dares  to  t  thee. 
Touch'd    if  I  And  others  made  that  move  1 1  upon, 
when  she  t  on  thee.  She  stammer'd  in  her  hate ; 
scarce  t  or  tasted  The  splendours  of  our  Court, 
so  still  I  reach'd  my  hand  and  t ; 

I  abnost  t  her— A  maiden  slowly 

Why  no,  he  never  t  upon  the  stag. 

Who  t  me  then  ?     I  thank  you.  . 

niver  t  a  drop  of  owt  till  my  oiin  weddmg-daay. 

For  tho'  we  t  at  many  pirate  ports. 
Touching    That  those  old  statutes  t  LoUardism 

T  the  sacrament  in  that  same  book 

Yet  he  can  scarce  be  t  upon  those, 

would  not  blur  A  moth's  wing  by  the  t ; 


Queen  Mary  m  i  114 

„  v  V  220 

Harold  I  i  151 

The  Cup  II  44ft 

Foresters  1  iii  35, 

I  iii  38: 

Queen  Mary  i  i  104 

„         I iv  271 

„         III  ii  44 

„      III  iv  352 

III  V  218 

V  i  153 

V  V  104 

Harold  11  ii  793 

III  i  9 

..     HI  ii  191 


Becket  v  iii  14' 
„     V  iii  15] 
The  Cup  I  i  185 
The  Falcon  455 
680 
798 
Foresters  1  i  125 
„      I  ii  315 
„       III  310 
„       IV  734 
Queen  Mary  m  i  445 
Harold  i  ii  35 
„    iiiil74 
Becket  v  ii  235 
The  Cup  I  i  7 
„  I  ii  383 
„    II 532 
Prom,  of  May  i  362 
Foresters  iv  983 
Qv^en  Mary  in  iv  7 
„         IV  iii  263 
Becket  in  iii  27 
Prom,  of  May  n  492 


would  not  blur  A  motns  wmg  oy  sue  t ,  r  "  Hocket  Pro  348 

Toulouse    (See  also  ThovloMse)    ^^^Y'"''}^^'''''^^^^^  ^  '  fi^i/Jii250 


Tourney    He  wore  thy  colours  once  at  a  «. 

Tower    (See  also  Church-tower,  Tree-tower)    gomg 
now  to  the  T  to  loose  the  prisoners 
Officers  Are  here  in  force  to  take  you  to  the  1 . 
you  late  were  loosed  from  out  the  T, 
my  Lord ;  I  see  you  in  the  T  again. 
So  many  years  in  yon  accursed  T — 
saying  of  this  Lady  Jane,  Now  in  the  T  ? 
Earl  of  Devon  ?     I  freed  him  from  the  T, 
then  if  caught,  to  the  T.     Benard.    The  T  \ 
but  your  old  Traitors  of  the  T — 
he  loved  the  more  His  own  gray  t's, 
every  parish  t  Shall  clang  and  clash  alarum 
demanded  Possession  of  her  person  and  the  T. 
Seek  to  possess  our  person,  hold  our  T, 
ordnance  On  the  White  T  and  on  the  Devil  s  I , 


Foresters  1  i  250 

Queen  Mary  1  i  109 
I  ii  109 
I  iv  50 
I  iv  80 
^  I  iv  200 
I  V  38 
I  V  163 
I  V  469 

I  V  484 
"           II  i  49 

II  i  228 
II  ii  41 

II  ii  159 
n  iii  44 


I 


Tower 

Tower  (continued)    you'll  make  the  White  T  a  black 
'un 

you'll  set  the  Divil's  T  a-spitting, 

Pass,  then,  I  pray  your  Highness,  to  the  T. 

I  shall  but  be  their  prisoner  in  the  T. 

The  Queen  must  to  the  T. 

To  the  T  with  him  !  (repeat) 

the  T,  the  T,  always  the  T,  I  shall  grow  into  it — 
I  shall  be  the  T. 

To  the  T  with  her  ! 

Hath  no  more  mortice  than  a  t  of  cards  ; 

Her  Grace  the  Queen  contunands  you  to  the  T. 

By  the  river  to  the  T. 

damp,  black,  dead  Nights  in  the  T ; 

For  freeing  my  friend  Bagenhall  from  the  T  ; 

winds  so  cross  and  jostle  among  these  t's. 

The  people  know  their  Church  a  t  of  strength, 

Danae  has  escaped  again  Her  t,  and  her  Acrisius — 

and  rifts  the  t  to  the  rock, 

O  t  spiring  to  the  sky, 

or  closed  For  ever  in  a  Moorish  t. 
Towering    See  Out-towering 
Towld  (told)    summun  t  sxmimun  o'  owld  Bishop 


1107 


Translating 


Qtteen  Mary  ii  iii  100 

n  iii  102 

niv32 

II  iv  34 

II  iv  73 

II  iv  97, 102 

u  iv  103 

II  iv  118 
III  1442 

III  iii  271 
III  iii  281 

III  V  139 
ni  vi  8 

Harold  ii  ii  156 

Becket  i  i  16 

„      I  i  396 

The  Cup  u  293 

Prom,  of  May  iii  203 

Foresters  ii  i  656 


Gardiner's  end  : 


Queen  Mary  iv  iii  502 


Town    and  we  cannot  bum  whole  t's  ;  they  are  many,         „  in  iv  175 

And  there  be  many  heretics  in  the  t,  „  iv  ii  31 

the  t  Hung  out  raw  hides  along  their  waUs,  Harold  ii  ii  382 

My  lord,  the  t  is  quiet,  and  the  moon  Divides  Becket  i  i  364 

Much  com,  repeopled  t's,  a  realm  again.  „     i  iii  377 

Close  the  great  gate — ^ho,  there — upon  the  t.  „     v  ii  531 

They  are  thronging  in  to  vespers — halt  the  t.  „    v  iii  140 

The  t  lay  stiU  in  the  low  sim-light,  Prom,  of  May  i  37 

a  red  fire  woke  in  the  heart  of  the  t,  „  i  50 

Richard  sacks  and  wastes  a  t  With  random  pillage,         Foresters  iv  377 

Towser  (a  dog's  name)     I'll  hev  the  winder  naailed  up, 

and  put  T  under  it.  Prom,  of  May  i  420 

T'U  tear  him  all  to  pieces.  „  1 423 

Toy     They  have  taken  away  the  t  thou  gavest  me,  Harold  ii  ii  106 

I  like  to  have  my  t's,  and  break  them  too.  „       ii  ii  112 

To-year  (this  year)    they'll  hev'  a  fine  cider-crop  t-y  if 

the  blossom  'owds.  Prom,  of  May  i  316 

Trace    Let  the  dead  letter  live  !     T  it  in  fire,  Queen  Mary  in  iv  34 

who  could  t  a  hand  So  wild  and  staggering  ?  The  Falcon  438 

but  can  he  t  me  Thro'  five  years'  absence,  Prom,  of  May  n  614 

Traced     T  in  the  blackest  text  of  Hell — '  Thou  shalt !  '    Qv^en  Mary  m  i  426 

Track  (s)    most  beaten  t  Runs  thro'  the  forest.  Foresters  m  89 

Track  (verb)     t  her,  if  thou  canst,  even  into  the  King's 

lodging,  Becket,  Pro.  507 

If  you  t  this  Sinnatus  In  any  treason,  The  Cup  i  i  162 

Track'd    Have  t  the  King  to  this  dark  inland  wood  ;  Becket  in  ii  3 

Judas-lover  of  our  passion-play  Hath  t  us  hither.  „  iv  ii  138 

Tractate     His  t  upon  True  Obedience,  Queen  Mary  iv  i  92 

Tracy  (Sir  William  de,  knight  of  the  household  o!  King 
Henry  XL)     (See  also  De  Tracy)     T,  what  dost 
thou  here  ? 
France  !     Ha  !     De  Morville,  T,  Brito— fled  is  he  ? 
— on  a  Tuesday — T  !     God  help  thee  ! 
Strike  him,  T  !     Rosamund.     No,  No,  No,  No  ! 
Nay,  nay,  good  T.     Fitzurse.     Answer  not. 

Trade    With  all  your  t's,  and  guilds,  and  companies 
That  you  may  thrive,  but  in  some  kindlier  t. 
There  is  a  i  of  genius,  there's  glory  ! 

Tradition    Customs,  t's, — clouds  that  come  and  go  ; 
Marriage  is  but  an  old  t.     I  hate  T's, 
violated  the  whole  T  of  our  land. 
Thrones,  churches,  ranks,  t's,  customs, 

Traffick'd    you  have  t  Between  the  Emperor  and  the  Pope, 

Tragedy    A  comedy  meant  to  seem  a  t — 

Tragic    You  are  too  t :  both  of  us  are  players 


Becket  i  i  234 

„     I iv  199 

„      V  ii  295 

„    V  iii  169 

„    V  iii  185 

Queen  Mary  ii  ii  297 

Foresters  in  253 

IV  375 

Becket  i  iii  22 

Prom,  of  May  i  491 

I  496 

I  519 

Becket  n  ii  67 

„  ivii322 

„     vil87 

Train    Captain  Brett,  who  went  with  your  t  bands  To 

fight  with  Wyatt,  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  27 

Train'd    (See  also  Full-train'd)    Good  dogs,  my  liege,  well  t,  Becket,  Pro.  120 
Traitor  (adj.)    She  cannot  pass  her  t  council  by.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  40 

The  t  husband  dangled  at  the  door,  And  when  the  t 

wife  came  out  for  bread  »        m  i  10 


Traitor  (adj.)  (continued)     But  with  Cecil's  aid  And 

others,  if  our  person  be  secured  From  t  stabs —   Queen  Mary  v  v  281 

Traitors  are  rarely  bred  Save  under  t  kings.  Foresters  n  i  81 

If  you  would  marry  me  with  a  t  sheriff,  „        iv  870 

Traitor  (s)     down  with  all  t's  !  Queen  Mary  i  i  66 

shall  I  turn  t?  „           i  iv  6 

He  cannot  touch  you  save  that  you  turn  t;  „       i  iv  272 

the  King — that  t  past  forgiveness,  „          i  v  28 

being  t  Her  head  will  fall :  „          i  v  59 

but  your  old  T's  of  the  Tower —  „        i  y  484 

Sent  Cornwallis  and  Hastings  to  the  t,  „        n  ii  32 

Her  name  is  much  abused  among  these  t's.  „      a  ii  111 

a  t  so  presumptuous  As  this  same  Wyatt,  „       n  ii  179 

He  is  child  and  fool,  and  t  to  the  State.  „       n  ii  403 

'  Whosoever  will  apprehend  the  t  Thomas  Wyatt  „        n  iii  60 

The  t !  treason  !  Pembroke  !  „        n  iv  35 

will  do  you  right  Against  all  t's.  „        n  iv  68 

and  the  t  flying  To  Temple  Bar,  „        n  iv  92 

As  «,  or  as  heretic,  or  for  what  ?  „     in  iii  272 

all  t's  Against  our  royal  state  have  lost  the  heads  „        in  iv  2 

For  heretic  and  t  are  all  one  :  „       in  iy  38 

He  hath  been  a  t,  „       iv  iii  39 

Liar  !  dissembler  \  tl  to  the  fire  !  „      iv  iii  259 

King  Henry  warms  your  t's  at  his  hearth.  „        v  1 123 

What  t  spoke  ?    Here,  let  my  cousin  Pole  „       v  ii  243 

Methought  some  t  smote  me  on  the  head.  „       v  ii  252 

Noailles  wrote  To  that  dead  t,  Wyatt,  „       v  ii  498 

It  frights  the  t  more  to  maim  and  blind.  Harold  n  ii  503 

All  t's  fail  like  Tostig  !  „     iv  iii  79 

Not  fight — tho'  somehow  t  to  the  King —  Becket  1  i  112 

Let  t  be  ;  For  how  have  fought  thine  utmost  „       i  i  llg 

What  did  the  t  say  ?  „     i  iii  479 

it  is  the  t  that  imputes  Treachery  to  his  King  '  „     i  iii  433 

There,  there,  there  \  t,t,t\  „     i  iii  737 

How,  do  you  make  me  at?  „  in  iii  241 

Nor  make  me  t  to  my  holy  office.  „      v  ii  I49 

He  makes  the  King  a  t,  me  a  liar.  „     v  ii  416 

charge  you  that  ye  keep  This  t  from  escaping.  „     v  ii  51i 

Where  is  the  t  Becket  ?  Becket  v  iii  103 

Where  is  this  treble  t  to  the  King  ?  „    v  iii  108 

No  t  to  the  King,  but  Priest  of  God,  „    v  iii  112 

The  t  's  dead,  and  will  arise  no  more.  „     v  iii  200 

Or  man,  or  woman,  as  t's  unto  Rome.  The  Cup  i  iii  9 

Hang'd  at  mid-day,  their  t  of  the  dawn  „       n  123 

T's  are  rarely  bred  Save  imder  traitor  kings.  Foresters  u  i  79 

We  robb'd  the  t's  that  are  leagued  with  John  ;  „       ni  I59 

serve  King  Richard  save  thou  be  A  <  or  a  goose  ?  „       rv  853 

a  t  coming  In  Richard's  name —  „       iv  780 

I  never  found  one  t  in  my  band.  „        iv  836 

You  both  are  utter  t's  to  your  king.  „        iv  844 
If  you  would  marry  me  with  a  traitor  sheriff,  I  fear 

I  might  prove  t  with  the  sheriff.  „        iv  872 

I  can  defend  my  cause  against  the  t's  Who  fain  would 

make  me  t.  „       iv  899 

Traitor-brother    Our  dear,  dead,  t-b,  Tostig,  Harold  iv  iii  83 

Traitor-heretic    So  there  be  Some  t-h,  Queen  Mary  in  iv  47 

Centaur  of  a  monstrous  Commonweal,  The  t-h)  „        ni  iv  165 

Traitorous    Make  not  thy  King  a  t  murderer.  Becket  1  iii  500 

Traitress     T  !     Rosamund.    A  faithful  t  to  thy  royal 

fame.  „         n  i  96 

Tramp     You  are  those  that  t  the  country,  Foresters  in  198 

Trample    And  let  the  Pope  t  our  rights,  Queen  Mary  m  iv  362 

but  t's  flat  Whatever  thwarts  him  ;  Harold  11  ii  378 

And  I  shall  live  to  t  on  thy  grave.  Becket  1  ii  95 

From  off  the  stalk  and  t  it  in  the  mire,  Foresters  i  ii  110 

Trampled    And  t  on  the  rights  of  Canterbury.  Becket  v  ii  394 

state  more  cruelly  t  on  Than  had  she  never  moved.       The  Cup  1  ii  I45 

Crush'd,  hack'd  at,  t  imderfoot.  The  Falcon  640 

And  boast  that  he  hath  t  it.  Foresters  i  ii  112 

All  our  rings  be  t  out.  „     n  ii  167 

Trampling     T  thy  mother's  bosom  into  blood  ?  Harold  iv  ii  26 

Trance    Wait  he  must — Her  t  again.  Q^een  Mary  v  ii  404 

Transact    as  I  used  to  <  all  his  business  for  him,  Prom.  »/  May  11  719 

Translated    if  I  took  and  t  that  hard  heart  Becket,  Pro.  379 

Translating     T  his  captivity  from  Guy  Harold  n  ii  42 


Transparent 


1108 


Trouble 


Transparent    his  frail  i  hand,  Damp  with  the  sweat  of 

death,  Queen  Mary  i  ii  31 

Trap     Would  help  thee  from  the  t.  Harold  i  i  383 

Travel    this  young  Earl  was  sent  on  foreign  t,  Queen  Mary  v  ii  490 

Travell'd    The  past  is  like  a  t  land  now  sunk  Below  the- 

horizon—  The  Cup  n  230 

Traveller     And  cheer  his  blindness  with  a  t's  tales  ?     Prom,  of  May  ii  515 

Treachery    it  is  the  traitor  that  imputes  T  to  his  King  !      Becket  i  iii  485 
What !  dare  you  charge  the  King  with  t?  „      v  ii  397 

Tread     Ay,  sir  ;  she  needs  must  t  upon  them.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  9 

That  t  the  kings  their  children  under-heel —  Becket,  Pro.  213 

The  priests  of  Baal  t  her  underfoot —  „     iii  iii  179 

If  you  will  deign  to  <  a  measure  with  me.  Foresters  i  ii  132 

Treason    so  it  be  not  t.  Queen  Mary  i  i  7 

They'd  smile  you  into  t — ^some  of  them.  „     i  iv  276 

But  hatch  you  some  new  t  in  the  woods.  „      i  v  465 

Or  tamperers  with  that  t  out  of  Kent.  „       n  ii  11 

They  have  betrayed  the  t  of  their  hearts  :  „     n  ii  156 

The  traitor  !  t !  Pembroke  !     Ladies.     Tl  t\  „      ii  iv  35 

To  still  the  petty  t  therewithin,  „       m  i  13 

said  she  was  condemn'd  to  die  for  t ;  „     iii  i  378 

I  had  to  cufl  the  rogue  For  infant  t.  „    iii  iii  52 

with  full  proof  Of  Courtenay's  t?  „     v  ii  499 

you  were  burnt  for  heresy,  not  for  t,  „     v  v  140 

Which  in  your  sense  is  t.  The  Cup  i  i  79 

If  you  track  this  Sinnatus  In  any  t,  „       i  i  163 

Treasonous     Wherewith  they  plotted  in  their  t  malice,    Queen  Mary  iii  iv  4 

Treasure     There  lies  a  t  buried  down  in  Ely  :  Harold  mill 

Treasure-house    Who  brake  into  Lord  Tostig's  t-h  „      iv  i  114 

Treasury     Is  the  King's  t  A  fit  place  for  the  monies  Becket  i  iii  104 

Cast  them  into  our  t,  the  beggars'  mites.  Foresters  in  204 

take  the  twenty-seven  marks  to  the  captain's  t.  „       in  295 

One  half  shall  pass  into  our  t.  „       in  305 

Out  of  our  t  to  redeem  the  land.  „       iv  493 

Treat     Feigning  to  t  with  him  about  her  marriage —        Queen  Mary  ii  ii  33 

treated    if  you  be  fairly  served,  And  lodged,  and  t.  „  v  iii  22 

Treaty     fain  have  some  fresh  t  drawn  between  you.  „  i  v  261 

Why  some  fresh  t  ?  wherefore  should  I  do  it  ?  „  i  v  263 

maintain  All  former  treaties  with  his  Majesty.  „  i  v  266 

imderstand  We  made  thereto  no  t  of  ourselves,  „         n  ii  203 

clauses  added  To  that  same  t  which  the  emperor  „         in  iii  69 

broken  Your  bond  of  peace,  your  t  with  the  King —  Becket  v  ii  350 

Treble    —for  to  wed  with  Spain  Would  t  England —        Queen  Mary  i  v  76 
would  t  and  quadruple  it  With  revenues,  Becket  v  ii  345 

Where  is  this  t  traitor  to  the  King  ?  „    v  iii  108 

T  denial  of  the  tongue  of  flesh,  Harold  in  i  281 

Treble-brandish'd    Yon  grimly-glaring,  t-b  scourge  Of 
England ! 

Tree     t  that  only  bears  dead  fruit  is  gone.      Stafford. 
What  t,  sir  ?     Bagenhall.     Well,  the  t  in  Virgil, 
Like  the  rough  bear  beneath  the  t,    ■ 
Dry  as  an  old  wood-fungus  on  a  dead  t. 
The  green  t  !     Then  a  great  Angel  past 
cleft  the  t  From  off  the  bearing  trunk, 
sunder'd  t  again,  and  set  it  Straight  on  the  trunk. 
Men  are  God's  t's,  and  women  are  God's  flowers  ; 
The  t's  are  all  the  statelier,  and  the  flowers 
Kiss  in  the  bower.  Tit  on  the  t ! 
By  this  t ;  but  I  don't  know  if  I  can  find 
vast  vine-bowers  Ran  to  the  summit  of  the  t's, 
t  that  my  lord  himself  planted  here 
pnmes,  my  lady,  from  the  t  that  his  lordship — 
And  a  salt  wind  burnt  the  blossoming  t's  ; 
No,  not  that  way — here,  under  the  apple  t. 
Like  April  sap  to  the  topmost  t, 
Beneath  the  greenwood  t.  (repeat) 
I'll  watch  him  from  behind  the  t's, 

Tree-Cupid    Those  sweet  t-C's  half-way  up  in  heaven, 

Tree-tower    Yet  these  t-t's.  Their  long  bird-echoing 

ftemble     Until  your  throne  had  ceased  to  t. 
But  when  did  our  Rome  t  ? 
I  have  made  her  t. 
fiercest  storm  That  ever  made  earth  t — 

Trembled     T  for  her  own  gods,  for  these  were 


ii3 

Queen  Mary  in  i  19 

Harold  I  i  327 

„         ni  i  8 

„     ni  i  132 

„     m  i  137 

„     in  i  144 

Becket,  Pro.  Ill 

„      Pro.  115 

in  i  105 

„         IV  i  47 

The  Cup  I  ii  403 

The  Falcon  562 

685 

Prom,  of  May  i  58 

I  83 

Foresters  i  iii  24 

„  n  i  12,  24 

„         III  48 

III  35 

Becket  in  i  43 

Queen  Mary  i  v  393 

III  iv  130 

The  Cup  I  ii  272 

Prom,  of  May  ui  798 


trembling — 


Queen  Mary  iii  iv  128 


Trembled  (continued)    It  was  the  shadow  of  the 

Church  that  t ;  Queen  Mary  in  iv  145 

Trembling     Your  Highness  is  all  t.     Mary.    Make  way.       „  i  v  594 

Trembled  for  her  own  gods,  for  these  were  t —  „  ni  iv  129 

will  set  it  t  Only  to  base  it  deeper.  Becket,  Pro.  209 

thy  flock  should  catch  An  after  ague-fit  of  t.  „         in  iii  33 

But  you  are  t.  Prom,  of  May  n  573 

Tremulous    and  one  Steadying  the  t  piUars  of  the 

Church —  Queen  Mary  i  v  517 

The  soft  and  t  coward  in  the  flesh  ?  „        iv  ii  107 

Trench     and  driven  back  The  Frenchmen  from  their  t'es  ?        „         v  ii  258 
The  t'es  dug,  the  palisades  uprear'd  Harold  v  i  189 

Trenching     am  1  <  on  the  time  That  should  already  Queen  Mary  i  ii  78 

Trespass    Let  this  be  thy  last  t.  Becket  v  ii  165 

Trespassed      by  force  and  arms  hath  t  against  the  king 

in  divers  manners.  Foresters  i  iii  63 

Tress     nun  Vying  a  t  against  our  golden  fern.  Harold  v  i  149 

Trial    At  your  t  Never  stood  up  a  bolder  man  than 

you  ;  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  121 

If  the  King  Condenan  us  without  t.  Foresters  iv  902 

Tribe     His  swaddling-bands,  the  morals  of  the  t.  Prom,  of  May  i  587 

Tributary    This  t  crown  may  fall  to  you.  The  Cup  i  i  97 

There  then  I  rest,  Rome's  t  king.  „   i  iii  156 

And  t  sovereigns,  he  and  I  Might  teach  this  Rome —  „        n  95 

Tribute     to  enforce  The  long-withholden  t:  „        i  i  77 

Antonius  To-morrow  wiU  demand  your  t —  „      i  ii  97 

Where  to  lay  on  her  t — heavily  here  And  lightly  there.  „        n  98 

Trick    I  will  be  there  ;  the  fellow's  at  his  t's —  Queen  Mary  i  iii  157 

You  have  an  old  t  of  offending  us  ;  „        in  iv  315 

Ay,  my  girl,  no  t's  in  him —  Harold  v  i  401 

Truth  !  no  ;  a  he  ;  a  <,  a  Norman  t\  „       v  i  606 

a  shift,  a  t  Whereby  to  challenge,  Becket  n  ii  164 

It  is  the  t  of  the  family,  my  lord.  Foresters  i  iii  151 

Trick'd     Daughter,  the  world  hath  t  thee.  Becket  iv  ii  364 

The  world  hath  t  her — -that's  the  King  ;  „      iv  ii  375- 

Trickery    To  reign  is  restless  fence.  Tierce,  quart,  and  t.  Queen  Mary  v  v  267 

Trickster    See  Fellow-trickster 

Trie  (Sir  Engelram  de)    See  Engekam  de  Trie 

Tried     If  I  t  her  and  la — she's  amorous.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  17 

As  the  first  flower  no  bee  has  ever  t.  „  i  iv  63 

whether  between  laymen  or  clerics,  shall  be  <  in  the 

King's  court.'  Becket  i  iii  80 

he  shall  answer  to  the  summons  of  the  King's  court 

to  be  t  therein.'  „     i  iii  89 

Trifled    You  have  but  t  with  our  homely  salad.  The  Falcon  671 

Trifling    perchance  were  t  royally  With  some  fair  dame  Queen  Mary  in  vi  159 

Trinket     Ring,  t  of  the  Church,  Prom,  of  May  i  598 

Tripping     We  have  our  spies  abroad  to  catch  her  t,         Queen  Mary  i  v  468 
there's  no  Renard  here  to  '  catch  her  t.'  „       in  v  160 

Tript     my  tongue  t — five  hundred  marks  for  use.  Foresters  iv  499. 

Triumph  (s)     The  t  of  St.  Andrew  on  his  cross.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  94 

Triumph  (verb)     do  t  at  this  hour  In  the  reborn  salvation      „        m  iii  181 

Trivial    So  wife-like  humble  to  the  t  boy  „  in  i  364 

Trod     1 1  upon  him  even  now,  my  lord,  in  my  hurry,  The  Falcon  409 

Trodden    P'or  thou  hast  t  tliis  wine-press  alone.  Becket  iii  iii  290 

Becket  hath  i  on  us  like  worms,  my  hege  ;   T  one 

half  dead ;  „  v  i  61 

they  have  t  it  for  half  a  thousand  years.  Foresters  i  i  333 

Troop     when  a  t.  Laden  with  booty  and  with  a  flag  The  Falcon  611 

A  t  of  horse Filippo.     Five  hundred !  „  617 

Troops     Your  t  were  never  down  in  Italy.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  315 

Trope     Here  be  t's.     Pole.     And  t's  are  good  to  clothe  „        m  iv  149 

T's  again  !     Pole.     You  are  hard  to  please.     Then 
without  t's,  my  Lord,  „        m  iv  153 

Troth     T,  they  be  both  bastards  by  Act  of  Parliament  „  i  i  23 

Is  it  so  fine  ?     T,  some  have  said  so.  „  v  iii  54 

Troubadour    for  I  am  a  T,  you  know,  Becket,  Pro.  347 

— a  t.  You  play  with  words.  „      iv  ii  180 

Trouble  (s)     all  Your  t  to  the  dogstar  and  the  devil.      Queen  Mary  i  iv  292 
But  the  wench  Hath  her  own  t's ;  „  in  v  2' 

She  would  have  seen  at  once  into  my  t,  Prom,  of  May  i  554 

I  have  been  in  t,  but  I  am  happy —  „  i  788 

Indeed,  you  seem'd  in  t,  sir.  „  n  385 

Trouble  (verb)    '  I  would  they  were  cut  ofiE  That  t  you.'    Queen  Mary  in  iv  33 
yet  she  must  have  him ;  She  t's  England :  „         in  vi  49  • 


Trouble 


1109 


True 


Trouble  (verb)  (continued)     I  had  forgotten  How  these 

poor  libels  t  you.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  202 

he  hath  fallen  Into  a  sickness,  and  it  t's  me.  The  Falcon  310 
I  have  been  unwilling  to  t  you  with  questions,       Prom,  of  May  iii  321 

Troubled    The  King  looks  t.  Becket  ii  ii  425 
The  Parliament  as  well,  are  t  waters  ;                         Queen  Mary  ii  ii  50 

You  know,  my  lord,  I  told  you  I  was  t.  The  Falcon  677 
But  you  look  t.                                                              Prom,  of  May  i  549 
Trout    leastwaays  they  niver  cooms  'ere  but  fur  the  { 

i'  our  beck,  „             1 212 

Trow    Xay,  1 1  not :  and  you  shall  see.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  322 

Tnicida     illos  t,  Domine.  Harold  v  i  515 

Tnicidatur    Pastor  fugatur  Grex  t —  „       v  i  514 

Truckled     For  you  yourself  have  t  to  the  tyrant,        Queen  Mary  ill  iv  236 

Truckler    And  let  him  call  me  t.                                           „  m  iv  355 

What,  what,  a  t !  a  word-eating  coward !  Foresters  iv  161 

True     I  was  born  t  man  at  five  in  the  forenoon  Queen  Mary  i  i  45 

I  was  bom  of  a  Z  man  and  a  ring'd  wife,  „          i  i  54 

T,  Mary  was  born,  „         i  ii  65 

and  sever'd  from  the  faith,  will  return  into  the  one 

t  fold,  „        I  iii  22 

Art  thou  of  the  t  faith,  fellow,  „        i  iii  45 

hath  begun  to  re-edify  the  t  temple —  „         i  iii  58 

the  hatred  of  anotherto  as  Is  no  t  bond  of  friendship.  „         i  iv  46 

Nay,  I  meant  T  matters  of  the  heart.  „      i  iv  100 

No,  being  of  the  t  faith  with  myself.  „         i  v  74 
And  when  your  Highness  talks  of  Courtenay — Ay, 

t — ^a  goodly  one.  „        i  v  200 
Indeed,  if  that  were  t — For  Phihp  comes,  one  hand 

in  mine,  „        i  v  514 

and  we  pray  That  we,  your  t  and  loyal  citizens,  „      11  ii  135 

And  if  he  jeer  not  seeing  the  t  man  Behind  his  folly,  „      11  ii  400 

that  I  live  and  die  The  t  and  faithful  bride  of  Philip —  „       11  iv  43 

tho'  a  t  one,  Blazed  false  upon  her  heart.  „        iii  i  68 
Did  not  Lord  Suffolk  die  like  a  t  man  ?     Is  not  Lord 

William  Howard  a  t  man  ?  „      iii  i  164 
/  enough  Her  dark  dead  blood  is  in  my  heart  with  mine.     „      iii  i  347 

Said  '  You  wll  give  me  my  t  crown  at  last,  „      iii  i  395 

T,  good  cousin  Pole  ;  „       iii  ii  68 

T,  cousin,  I  am  happy.  „     m  ii  113 

T,  and  I  am  the  Angel  of  the  Pope.  „     m  ii  144 
T ;  the  provinces  Are  hard  to  rule  and  must  be  hardly 

ruled  ;  „     m  ii  200 

And  whether  this  flash  of  news  be  false  or  t,  „     iii  ii  235 
And  on  the  steep-up  track  of  the  t  faith  Your  lapses 

are  far  seen.  „     m  iv  94 

call  they  not  The  one  t  faith,  a  loathsome  idol-worship  ?  „    iii  iv  219 
What  hath  your  Highness  written  ?     Elizabeth.     A  t 

rhyme.  ,.      m  v  24 
I  woke  Sir  Henry — and  he's  t  to  you — I  read  his 
honest  horror  in  his  eyes.     Elizabeth.     Or  t  to 
vou  ?     Lady.     Sir  Henry  Bedingfield  !     I  will 

have  no  man  t  to  me,  your  Grace,  „      in  v  60 

says  she  will  Uve  And  die  t  maid— a  goodly  creature  too.  „     in  vi  46 

You  say  t.  Madam.  .,   m  vi  198 

I  cannot  be  T  to  this  realm  of  England  „        iv  i  27 
His  tractate  upon  T  Obedience,  Writ  by  himself  and 

Bonner  ?  „        iv  i  92 

Of  the  t  Church ;  but  his  is  none,  nor  will  be.  „      iv  i  148 

Have  you  remain'd  in  the  t  Catholic  faith  I  left  you  in  ?  „       iv  ii  17 
In  the  t  Catholic  faith.  By  Heaven's  grace,  I  am  more 

and  more  confirm'd.  »      iv  ii  20 
and  proclaim  Your  t  undoubted  faith,  that  all  may 

hear.  ,.    iv  iii  114 
Sir  Nicholas  tells  you  t.  And  you  must  look  to  Calais 

when  I  go.  "         v  i  16 

For  Alva  is  t  son  of  the  t  church —  ..       v  i  159 

Why,  who  said  that  ?     I  know  not — t  enough  !  „      v  ii  209 

Died  in  the  t  faith  ?                                             .  »      v  ii  518 
and  I  have  seen  the  t  men  of  Christ  lying  famine-dead 

by  scores  »       v  iv  38 

Ay,  worse  than  that — not  one  hour  t  to  me  !  „      v  v  159 
Tostig  says  t ;  my  son,  thou  art  too  hard,                          Harold  i  i  205 

till  the  t  must  Shall  make  her  strike  as  Power:         .  „      i  i  367 

T,  that  the  battle-axe  Was  out  of  place ;  „     i  ii  104 


True  (continued)    And  that  were  t  enough.  Harold  i  ii  169 

Speak  for  thy  mother's  sake,  and  tell  me  t.  „    11  ii  272 

Is  naked  truth  actable  in  t  life  ?  „    iii  i  109 

That,  were  a  man  of  state  nakedly  t,  „    in  i  113 

Tho'  somewhat  less  a  king  to  my  t  self  „    ni  ii  53 

They  are  not  so  t,  They  change  their  mates.  „  m  ii  104 

Hear  King  Harold  !  he  says  t\  „      iv  i  61 

That  is  t !  (repeat)  „  iv  i  67, 88 

I  yield  it  freely,  being  the  t  wife  Of  this  dead  King,  „      v  ii  84 

Not  t,  my  girl,  here  is  the  Queen  !  ,,      v  ii  91 

Will  none  among  you  all  Bear  me  t  witness — only  for 

this  once —  „    v  ii  115 

pray  God  My  Normans  may  but  move  as  t  with  me  To 

the  door  of  death.  „    v  ii  184 

whom  the  king  Loves  not  as  statesman,  but  t  lover  and 

friend.  Becket,  Pro.  80 

And  so  this  Rosamund,  my  t  heart-wife,  „    Pro.  130 

I,  t  son  Of  Holy  Church — no  croucher  to  the  Gregories  „    Pro.  210 

T  enough,  mjr  mind  was  set  upon  other  matters.  „    Pro.  317 

T,  one  rose  will  outblossom  the  rest,  one  rose  in  a  bower.  „    Pro.  345 
T,  and  I  have  an  inherited  loathing  of  these  black  sheep 

of  the  Papacy.  „    Pro.  460 
May  the  hand  that  next  Inherits  thee  be  but  as  <  to  thee 

As  mine  hath  been  !  ..       i  i  358 

T !     Tho'  she  that  binds  the  bond,  „        i  ii  75 

t  To  either  function,  holding  it ;  „     1  iii  537 

t  too,  that  when  written  I  sign'd  them — beuig  a  fool,  „     i  iii  559 

I  had  been  so  t  To  Henry  and  mine  office  „     i  iii  692 

T  test  of  coward,  ye  follow  with  a  yell.  „     i  iii  745 
had  they  remained  t  to  me  whose  bread  they  have 

partaken.  „     i  iv  149 

0  Rosamund,  I  would  be  t — would  tell  thee  all —  „      11  i  205 
'Tis  t  what  Becket  told  me,  that  the  mother  Would  make 

him  play  „         n  ii  9 

and  pray  God  she  prove  T  wife  to  you.  „       11  ii  79 
The  crowd  that  hungers  for  a  crown  in  Heaven  Is  ray  t 
king.     Herbert.     Thy  t  King  bad  thee  be  A  fisher 

of  men ;  „     11  ii  284 

And,  being  scratch'd,  returns  to  his  t  rose,  „    in  i  249 

Almost  as  many  as  your  t  Mussulman —  „      iv  ii  34 
The  more  the  pity  then  That  thy  t  home — the  heavens — 

cry  out  for  thee  „    iv  ii  132 
Play  !  .  .  .  that  bosom  never  Heaved  under  the  King's 

hand  with  such  t  passion  „    iv  ii  190 
Why  ?  for  I  am  t  wife,  and  have  my  fears  Lest  Becket 

thrust  you  „      v  i  157 
who  shall  be  t  To  the  Roman :                                           The  Cup  i  i  94 

I  am  most  t  to  Rome.  „      i  i  154 
You  saw  my  hounds  T  to  the  scent ;  and  we  have  two- 

legg'd  dogs  Among  us  who  can  smell  a  t  occasion,  „     i  ii  111 
that  being  Tetrarch  once  His  own  t  people  cast  him  from 

their  doors  „     i  ii  351 

T ;  and  my  friends  may  spy  him  And  slay  him  as  he  runs.  „     i  ii  390 

Yet  if  she  be  a  t  and  loving  wife  She  may,  „      i  iii  32 
mine  own  dagger  driven  by  Synorix  found  AU  good  in 

the  t  heart  of  Sinnatus,  „        n  87 
Antonius,  tell  the  Senate  I  have  been  most  t  to  Rome — 

would  have  been  t  To  her — if — ^if —  „       n  483 
I  can  tell  you  T  tears  that  year  were  shed  for  you  in 

Florence.  T/ws  Falcon  384 

T ;  for  the  senses,  love,  are  for  the  world ;  Prom,  of  May  i  580 

The  t  ones — nay,  and  those  not  t  enough,  „  i  660 

That  was  the  only  t  love ;  and  I  trusted —  „  i  712 

For  me  an'  my  Sally  we  swear'd  to  be  t,  „  n  205 

'  To  be  i  to  each  other,  let  'appen  what 

maay,  (repeat)  Prom,  of  May  n  206,  236,  257 

It  mun  be  t,  fur  it  wur  i'  print  as  black  as  owt.       Prom,  of  May  n  730 
and  a  t  and  lasting  love  for  me :  „  m  172 

which  is  my  dream  of  a  <  marriage.  „         m  179 

If  thro'  the  want  of  any — I  mean  the  t  one —  „  m  550 

T,  I  have  held  opinions,  hold  some  still,  „         ni  622 

No !  by  this  t  kiss,  yoit  are  the  first  I  ever  have  loved  truly.  „         ni  647 
inasmuch  as  I  am  a  t  beUever  in  t  love  myself,  Foresters  i  i  162 

There  never  was  an  Earl  so  t  a  friend  of  the  people  „        i  i  188 

We  will  be  beggar'd  then  and  be  t  to  the  King.  „        i  i  202 


True 


1110 


Truth 


Tma  {continued)     A  question  that  every  t  man  asks  of 

a  woman  once  in  his  life.  Foresters  i  ii  138 

T,  for  through  John  I  had  my  sheriffship.  „        i  ii  200 

That  is  no  /  man's  hand.     I  hate  hidden  faces.  „       i  ii  244 

T,  were  I  taken  They  would  prick  out  my  sight.  „         ii  i  71 
there  lives  No  man  who  truly  loves  and  truly  rules  His 

following,  but  can  keep  his  followers  t.  „         n  i  78 

T  king  of  vice — t  play  on  words —  „         n  i  83 
T  soul  of  the  Saxon  churl  for  whom  song  has  no  charm.      „       n  i  385 

this  is  a  t  woodman's  bow  of  the  best  yew-wood  „       n  i  392 

Lovers  hold  T  love  immortal.  „       ii  i  616 
I  ever  held  that  saying  false  That  Love  is  blind,  but 

thou  hast  proven  it  t.  „       n  i  645 

O  Kate,  t  love  and  jealousy  are  twins,  „        n  ii  62 

T,  she  is  a  goodly  thing.  „      u  ii  140 

She  is  t,  and  you  are  t,  „      ii  ii  194 

Scarlet  told  me — is  it  <  ?  „        m  146 

We  never  robb'd  one  friend  of  the  t  King.  „        iii  157 

so  His  own  t  wife  came  with  him,  „        lu  240 

,     Join  them  and  they  are  a  t  marriage ;  „        m  421 

Love's  falsehood  to  t  maid  will  seal  Love's  truth  „  iv  73 
is  not  he  that  goes  against  the  king  and  the  law  the  t 

king  in  the  sight  of  the  King  of  kings  ?  „         iv  230 

if  our  t  Robin  Be  not  the  nobler  lion  of  the  twain.  „         iv  394 

Blown  like  a  t  son  of  the  woods.  Farewell !  „  iv  427 
Our  bowmen  are  so  t  They  strike  the  deer  at  once  to  death —  „        iv  524 

Mine  eye  most  t  to  one  hair's-breadth  of  aim.  „        iv  694 

The  King  forbad  it.     T,  my  liege.  „         iv  865 

Trne-bom     Nay,  it  means  t-b.  Queen  Mary  i  i  14 

Parliament  can  make  every  t-b  man  of  us  a  bastard.  „          i  i  27 

Trnet     That's  a  t  fear  !  Harold  i  ii  66 

Purer,  and  t  and  nobler  than  herself ;  Becket  ii  i  172 

For  all  my  t  life  begins  to-day.  The  Cuf  ii  229 

Truest    Here  fell  the  t,  manhest  hearts  of  England.  Harold  v  ii  58 
As  some  cold-manner'd  friend  may  strangely  do  us  The 

t  service,  The  Falcon  644 

Tmmpet     Hark  !  the  t's.  Queen  Mary  i  i  64 

And  after  that,  the  t  of  the  dead.    Why,  there  are 

t's  blowing  now :  what  is  it  ?  „        iv  ii  12 

Why  are  the  t's  blowing.  Father  Cole  ?  „        iv  ii  23 

blow  the  t,  priest !  Harold  m  i  188 

Were  the  great  t  blowing  doomsday  dawn,  „        v  i  227 

t's  in  the  halls.  Sobs,  laughter,  cries :  Becket  v  ii  367 

Tho'  all  the  loud-lung'd  t's  upon  earth  „      v  ii  487 

The  t's  of  the  fight  had  echo'd  down.  The  Falcon  605 

stillness  in  the  grave  By  the  last  t.  Foresters  n  i  48 

Trunk    cleft  the  tree  From  oS  the  bearing  t,  Harold  m  i  138 

he  soak'd  the  t  with  human  blood,  „      in  i  142 

sunder'd  tree  again,  and  set  it  Straight  on  the  t,  „      ni  i  146 

Truok-hose    white  satin  his  t-h,  Inwrought  with  silver, —  Queen  Mary  in  i  76 
tail  like  a  devil  under  his  t-h.    TaUor.    Ay,  but  see 

what  t-h's !  „        m  i  224 

Truss     Seize  him  and  t  him  up,  and  carry  her  off.  Foresters  iv  690 

Trust  (s)     to  whom  The  king,  my  father,  did  commit 

his  t ;  Queen  Mary  n  ii  208 

I  have  lost  aU  t  in  him.  Becket  n  ii  434 
Thomas,  1  would  there  were  that  perfect  t  between  us,  „  ni  iii  264 
That  perfect  t  may  come  again  between  us,  „   ni  iii  351 

Trust  (verb)     I  <  it  is  but  a  rumour.  Queen  Mary  i  i  107 

Nay ;  not  so  long  It.  „        i  iii  141 

I I  that  he  will  carry  you  well  to-day,  „  i  iv  145 
So  you  still  care  to  t  him  somewhat  less  „  i  v  221 
Farewell,  and  t  me,  Philip  is  yours.  „  i  v  540 
1 1  the  Queen  comes  hither  with  her  guards.  „  n  ii  1 
Trusted  than  t — the  scoxmdrel —  „  n  ii  39 
I  will  t  you.  We  fling  ourselves  on  you,  „  n  ii  47 
And  it  would  be  your  comfort,  as  1 1 ;  „  n  ii  225 
And  will  not  t  your  voices.  „  n  ii  259 
I  ( this  day,  thro'  God,  I  have  saved  the  crown.  „        ii  ii  302 

I  <  by  this  your  Highness  will  allow  „       n  iv  132 

I I  that  you  would  fight  along  with  us.  „  in  i  457 
No,  for  we  t  they  parted  in  the  swine.  „  ni  ii  142 
You  wiU  be,  we  t,  Sometime  the  viceroy  „  m  ii  195 
1 1  your  Grace  is  well.  „  v  ii  551 
1 1  that  God  will  make  you  happy  yet,  „          v  v  76 


Trust  (verb)  (continued)    1 1  the  kingly  touch  that  cures 

the  evil  Harold  i  i  151 

Nay,  1 1  not,  For  I  have  served  thee  long  „      i  i  213 

It  he  may  do  well,  this  Gamel,  „     i  ii  190 

Were  1  Thomas,  I  wouldn't  t  it.  Becket  in  iii  59" 

Have  1  sown  it  in  salt  ?     1 1  not,  „    in  iii  320 

You  said  you  couldn't  t  Margery,  „        iv  ii  15 

We  t  your  Royal  Grace,  lord  of  more  land  „          v  i  28 

I  durst  not  t  him  with — my  serving  Rome  The  Cup  i  ii  277 
1 1,  my  dear,  we  shall  be  always  friends.  Prom,  of  May  i  631 
and  you,  a  gentleman,  Told  me  to  t  you :  „  i  710 
Itl  shall  forgive  him — by-and-by —  „  ii  465 
1 1 1  may  be  able  by-and-by  to  help  you  in  the 

business  of  the  farm ;  „          ni  222 

I I  he  will,  but  if  he  do  not  I  and  thou  Foresters  ii  199 
can  1 1  myself  With  your  brave  band  ?  „  n  i  703 
1 1  We  shall  return  to  the  wood.  „  iv  1051 
never  1 1  to  roam  So  far  again,  „    iv  1099 

Trusted    T  than  trust — the  scoundrel —  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  39 

And  t  God  would  save  her  thro'  the  blood  „         iii  i  386 

priest  whom  John  of  SaUsbury  t  Hath  sent  another.  Becket  in  i  70 

That  was  the  only  true  love;  and  1 1 — •  From,  of  May  i  713 

and  he  t  that  some  time  we  should  meet  again,  „         m  328 

Trustful    A  child,  and  all  as  <  as  a  child !  „         in  159 

one  of  you  Shamed  a  too  t  widow  whom  you  heard        Foresters  in  385 

Trustless    Hast  thou  such  t  jailors  in  thy  North  ?  Harold  n  ii  685 

Trusty    Your  faithful  friend  and  t  councillor.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  89 

Truth     in  t  I  had  meant  to  crave  Permission  „         i  iv  234 

Make  no  allowance  for  the  naked  t.  „           i  v  329 

Statesmen  that  are  wise  Take  t  herself  for  model.  „        in  iii  37 

tropes  are  good  to  clothe  a  naked  t,  „       in  iv  151 

Cut  with  a  diamond ;  so  to  last  like  t.     Elizabeth. 

Ay,  if  t  last.     Lady.     But  t,  they  say,  „          ni  v  26 

T,  a  word  !     The  very  T  and  very  Word  are  one.  „         ni  v  31 

But  t  of  story,  which  I  glanced  at,  girl,  „          ni  v  33 

into  the  daylight  t  That  it  may  fall  to-day  !  „        in  v  136' 

rage  of  one  who  hates  a  t  He  cannot  but  allow.  „       m  vi  144 

Then  never  read  it.     The  t  is  here.  „         iv  i  lOO 

The  t  of  God,  which  I  had  proven  and  known.  „       iv  iii  149 

saying  spoken  once  By  Him  that  was  the  t,  „       iv  iii  203 

Against  the  t  I  knew  within  my  heart,  „       iv  iii  241 

hour  has  come  For  utter  t  and  plainness ;  „       iv  iii  273 

So  in  t  he  said.  Harold  n  ii  263 

Is  it  not  better  still  to  speak  the  t?  „       "  ii  374 
Welshman  says,  '  The  T  against  the  World,'  Much  more 

the  t  against  myself.  „       n  ii  398- 

for  thou  Art  known  a  speaker  of  the  t,  „       ii  ii  517 

When  all  the  world  hath  learnt  to  speak  the  t,  „         ni  i  69 

I  that  so  prized  plain  word  and  naked  t  „         in  i  94 

By  all  the  t's  that  ever  priest  hath  preach'd,  „         lu  i  97 

Is  naked  t  actable  in  true  life  ?  „       in  i  109 

thought  that  naked  T  would  shame  the  Devil  „       ni  i  118 

the  t  Was  lost  in  that  fierce  North,  „        m  ii  25- 

in  the  eternal  distance  To  settle  on  the  T.  „      in  ii  103 

if  the  t  be  gall.  Cram  me  not  thou  with  honey,  „         iv  i  15- 

If  one  may  dare  to  speak  the  t,  „       iv  i  10& 

— a  sin  against  The  t  of  love.  „        v  i  171 

the  God  of  t  hath  heard  my  cry.  „        v  i  600 

T !  no ;  a  lie ;  a  trick,  a  Norman  trick  !  „         v  i  606- 
or  any  harm  done  to  the  people  if  my  jest  be  in  defence 

of  the  T?  Becket  nii  340' 

Till  T  herself  be  shamed  of  her  defender.  „      n  ii  344 

some  dreadful  t  is  breaking  on  me —  ,,      in  i  266 

Earth's  falses  are  heaven's  t's.  „   m  iii  348 

But  for  the  <  of  this  I  make  appeal  „       v  ii  403 

Not  if  Sinnatus  Has  told  her  all  the  t  about  me.  The  Cup  i  iii  23 

That  must  be  talk,  not  t,  but  t  or  talk,  The  Falcon  232- 

yet  to  speak  white  t,  my  good  old  mother,  „          503 

and  t  to  say.  Sir  Richard  and  my  Lady  Marian  Foresters  i  i  29 

We  old  hags  should  be  bribed  to  speak  t,  „      n  i  237 

They  have  told  but  a  tenth  of  the  <:  „       iii  291 

will  seal  Love's  t  On  those  sweet  lips  >,         iv  74 

Boldness  is  in  the  blood,  T  in  the  bottle.  „       iv  240 

Damsel,  is  this  the  t  ?     Marian.     Ay,  noble  knight.  „       iv  770- 

Even  this  brawler  of  harsh  t's— I  trust  Half  t's,  „       iv  948- 


TrutMol 


1111 


Two 


Truthful    being  t  wrought  upon  to  swear  Vows 
For  thou  art  t,  and  thy  word  thy  bond. 
Thanks,  t  Earl;  I  did  not  doubt  thy  word, 
And  wise,  yea  t,  till  that  blighted  vow 
Try    Are  you  the  bee  to  t  me  ? 

Shall  I  <  If  this  be  one  of  such  ? 
Go  t  it,  play. 

Why  do  you  jest  with  me,  and  t  To  fright  me  ? 
I  saved  him.     I  will  t  him. 
Well,  then,  let  me  t. 
Take  him  and  t  him,  friar. 
T  me  an  hour  hence. 
T,  thyself,  valorous  Robin  ! 
Trying    (fSee  also  A-tryin')     hke  the  gravedigger's  child  I 

have  heard  of,  t  to  ring  the  bell. 
Tuck  (Friar)    See  Friar  Tuck 
Tudor    but  I  am  T,  And  shall  control  them. 
I  am  Harry's  daughter,  T,  and  not  Fear. 
Bagenhall,  I  see  The  T  green  and  white. 
Thou  last  of  all  the  T's,  come  away  ! 
a  T  School'd  by  the  shadow  of  death — 
a  Boleyn,  too.  Glancing  across  the  T — 
Tuesday    the  Archbishop  washed  my  feet  o'  T. 

What  day  of  the  week  ?    T?    Salisbury.    T,  my  lord. 
Becket.    On  a  T  was  I  born,  and  on  a  T  Baptized ; 
and  on  a  T  did  I  fly  Forth  from  Northampton ;  on 
a  T  pass'd  From  England  into  bitter  banishment; 
On  a  T  at  Pontigny  came  to  me  The  ghostly  warn- 
ing of  my  martyrdom ;  On  a  T  from  mine  exile  I 
retum'd,  And  on  a  T — on  a  T — 
nine  o'clock,  upo'  T  mumin'. 
She  broke  my  head  on  T  with  a  dish. 
Tuk  (taken)     and  tells  un  ez  the  fire  has  t  holt. 
Tiunble    first  put  up  your  hair ;  It  t's  all  abroad. 

sea  shall  roll  me  back  To  t  at  thy  feet. 
Tumbled    The  hog  hath  t  himself  into  some  comer. 
Tune    Thou  playest  in  t. 

my  voice  is  harsh  here,  not  in  t, 
Did  I  not  sing  it  in  t  ?    Robin.     No,  sweetheart !  out  of 
t  with  Love  and  me.     Marian.     And  yet  in  t  with 
Nature  and  the  bees.    Robin.    Out  on  it,  I  say,  as 
out  of  t  and  time  !  Foresters  iv  29 

Timis     T,  and  Oran,  and  the  Philippines,  Queen  Mary  v  i  48 

Turban    And  cleft  the  Moslem  t  at  my  side.  Foresters  iv  1001 

Turbulent    for  I  must  hence  to  brave  The  Pope,  King  Louis, 

and  this  t  priest.  Becket  ii  i  312 

Tiu'k    T  shot  her  as  she  was  helping  to  build  Foresters  ii  i  308 

Turmoil    I  cannot  brook  the  t  thou  hast  raised.  Becket  i  iii  575 

Turn  (s)     Thy  t,  Galatian  King.  The  Cup  u  379 

wheere  the  big  eshtree  cuts  athurt  it,  it  gi'es  a  t  like.  From,  of  May  iii  95 
Turn  (verb)    shall  1 1  traitor  ?  Queen  Mary  i  iv  5 

cannot  touch  you  save  that  you  t  traitor ;  „      i  iv  271 

this  or  that  way,  of  success  Would  t  it  thither.  „      ii  ii  101 

I  am  sorry  for  it  If  Pole  be  like  to  t.  „    ni  iv  416 

Or  would  you  have  me  t  a  sonneteer,  „   ni  vi  154 

She  t's  again.  »        v  v  12 

let  them  t  from  left  to  right  And  sleep  again.  Harold  i  i  195 

to  t  and  bite  the  hand  Would  help  thee  from  the  trap.  „      i  i  381 

But  lest  we  t  the  scale  of  courtesy  „    n  ii  164 

He  t's  not  right  or  left,  but  tramples  flat  „    ii  ii  378 

t  not  thou  Thy  face  away,  ..     mii  38 

They  t  on  the  pursuer,  horse  against  foot,  „      v  i  608 

and  t  the  world  upside  down.  ,  Becket  ii  i  238 

I  promise  thee  not  to  t  the  world  upside  down.  „      ii  i  242 

to  t  anyway  and  play  with  as  thou  wilt —  „       ii  i  244 

Take  heed  he  do  not  t  and  rend  you  too :  „      ii  ii  160 

and  t  me  Mussulman  !  „      n  ii  223 

she  t's  down  the  path  through  our  little  vineyard,  The  Falcon  167 

And  welcome  t's  a  cottage  to  a  palace.  »  272 

but  you  t  right  ugly  when  you're  in  an  ill  temper ;   Prom,  of  May  1 159 
to  t  out  boath  my  darters  right  down  fine  laadies.  „  i  336 

Theer !  he  t's  roxmd.  ..  n  586 

t  back  at  times,  and  make  Courtesy  to  custom  ?  „  n  633 

'  T !  t\'  but  I  forget  it.  Foresters  i  iii  155 

Turncoat    —and  that,  t  shaveling  !  Becket  i  iii  736 


Harold  ii  ii  76 

„     II  ii  645 

„    II  ii  723 

„     V  ii  155 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  64 

V  ii  331 
Becket  a  i  246 

Prom,  of  May  i  665 
Foresters  i  i  274 
IV  256 
IV  268 
IV  276 
IV  314 

Becket  m  iii  74 

Queen  Mary  i  v  175 

niv  52 

ni  i  180 

ni  V  151 

vv225 

V  v228 
Becket  i  iv  234 


,      V  ii  282 

Prom,  of  May  iii  136 

Foresters  i  iii  133 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  512 

V  ii  233 

Harold  I  ii  115 

Becket  i  i  369 

Harold  i  i  384 

Becket,  Pro.  349 


Tum'd     The  word  has  t  your  Highness  pale ;  Queen  Mary  i  v  471 

This  Gardiner  t  his  coat  in  Henry's  time ;  „         iii  iii  16 

hath  t  so  often,  He  knows  not  where  he  stands,  „       iii  iv  418 

And  the  poor  son  t  out  into  the  street  „  v  ii  125 

Have  t  from  right  to  left.  Harold  i  i  193 

then  1 1,  and  saw  the  church  all  fiU'd  „       i  ii  81 

The  millwheel  t  in  blood  ;  Becket  i  iii  353 

North-east  took  and  t  him  South-west,  then  the  South- 
west t  him  North-east,  „  u  ii  321 
there  they  go — both  backs  are  t  to  me —  „  ii  ii  454 
sure  my  dagger  was  a  feint  Till  the  worm  t —  „  iv  ii  380 
an'  then  I  wur  t  huppads  o'  sixty.  Prom,  of  May  i  363 
lanker  than  an  old  horse  t  out  to  die  on  the  common.  Foresters  i  i  51 
I  that  have  t  their  Moslem  crescent  pale —  „  rv  792 
Turning  (adj.)  There  was  a  song  he  made  to  the  t  wheel —  „  i  iii  153 
Turning  (s)    He  knows  the  twists  and  t's  of  the  place.            Becket  v  ii  576 

"'      "  „         III  ii  7 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  252 

Harold  in  i  104 

Becket  ii  ii  88 

„    ivii413 

„    V  iii  167 

Prom,  of  May  ii  733 

Queen  Mary  ni  vi  90 

V  iii  87 

Harold  i  i  221 

„       I  i  225 

Becket  i  i  46 

„       I  i  50 

The  Falcon  127 


Turtle    Here  His  t  builds ;  his  exit  is  our  adit 
Tussle    flying  from  the  heat  and  t, 
Tut    T,  t,  I  have  absolved  thee : 

T,  t !  did  we  convene  This  conference 
T,  the  chance  gone.  She  lives- 
Tutelar     And  all  the  t  Saints  of  Canterbury. 
Twang     Why,  that  wur  the  very  t  on  'im. 
Twelve     To  go  t  months  in  bearing  of  a  child  ? 
Don  Carlos,  Madam,  is  but  t  years  old. 
T  years  of  service !     England  loves  thee  for  it. 
And  after  those  t  years  a  boon,  my  king, 
Dream'd  that  t  stars  fell  glittering  out  of  heaven 
The  spirit  of  the  t  Apostles  enter'd  Into  thy  making 
A  supper  for  t  mites. 
Twenty    (See  also  Four-and-twenty)    Thus,  after  t 

years  of  banishment,  Queen  Mary  m  ii  46 

After  my  t  years  of  banishment,  „  v  ii  69 

There  runs  a  shallow  brook  across  our  field  For  t  miles,      „  v  v  84 

Father  PhiUp  that  has  confessed  our  mother  for  t  years,    Becket  in  i  112 

No,  to  the  crypt !     T  steps  down.  „        v  iii  78 

Not  t  steps,  but  one.  „        v  iii  90 

where  t  years  ago  Huntsman,  and  hound,  and  deer         The  Cup  i  ii  22 

for  Oberon  fled  away  T  thousand  leagues  to-day.         Foresters  ii  ii  143 

but  having  lived  For  t  days  and  nights  in  mail,  „  iv  124 

Twenty-cubit    cherubim  With  t-c  wings  from  wall  to  wall —    Harold  iii  i  184 

Twenty-fold    outvalues  t-f  The  diamonds  that  you  The  Falcon  759 

Twenty-seven    and  take  the  t-s  marks  to  the  captain's 

treasury.  Foresters  in  294 

Twilight  (adj.)     A  t  conscience  lighted  thro'  a  chink ;  Harold  in  i  65 

Twilight  (s)     a  paleness.  Like  the  wan  t  after  sunset,  Becket  i  iii  326 


made  the  t  day.  And  struck  a  shape  from  out  the  vague. 


In  the  perpetual  i  of  a  prison, 

t  of  the  coming  day  already  glimmers  in  the  east. 
Twin  (adj.)     these  T  rubies,  that  are  amulets  against  all 
The  kisses 

But  you,  t  sister  of  the  morning  star, 
Twin  (s)     that  lying  And  ruUng  men  are  fatal  t's 

0  Kate,  true  love  and  jealousy  are  t's. 

Yet  are  they  t's  and  always  go  together. 
Twinkled    The  ripples  t  at  their  diamond-dance. 
Twist  (s)    He  knows  the  t's  and  turnings  of  the  place. 


I  iii  371 


The  Falcon  442 
Foresters  i  ii  247 

Harold  I  ii  112 
The  Cup  I  iii  45 
Harold  in  i  127 
Foresters  n  ii  63 
„        II  ii  66 
Queen  Mary  in  ii  10 
Becket  V  ii  51 Q 
Twist  (verb)    And  t  it  round  thy  neck  and  hang  tHee  by  it.    Foresters  iv  688 
Twitch    ran  a  t  across  his  face  as  who  should  say  what's  to 

follow  ?  Becket  in  iii  93 

Two     Bad  me  to  tell  you  that  she  counts  on  you  And 

on  myself  as  her  t  hands ;  Qiuen  Mary  n  ii  105 

sitting  here  Between  the  t  most  high-set  thrones 

on  earth,  „  in  ii  106 

the  King  And  you  together  our  t  suns  in  one ;  „  in  iv  19 

T  vipers  of  one  breed — an  amphisbaena.  Each  end  a 

stmg :  „  in  iv  39 

Seeing  there  lie  t  ways  to  every  end,  „        in  iv  113 

their  t  Graces  Do  so  dear-cousin  and  royal-cousin  him,      „        in  iv  398 
Of  those  t  friars  ever  in  my  prison,  „  iv  ii  94 

Hist !  there  be  t  old  gossips — gospellers,  I  take  it ;  „         iv  iii  460 

in  Guisnes  Are  scarce  t  hundred  men,  „  v  i  5 

Nay,  not  t  hundred.  „  v  ii  10 

mainland  over  which  Our  flag  hath  floated  for  t 

hundred  years  Is  France  again.  „  v  ii  261 


Two 


1112 


Unheard 


Two  (conlinued)    and  there  you  will  find  written  T 

names,  Philip  and  Calais ;  Q^een  Mary  v  v  155 

By  mine  own  eyes — and  these  t  sapphires — these  Twin 

rubies, 
I  do  beUeve  My  old  crook'd  spine  would  bud  out  t 

young  wings 
lo  !  my  t  pillars,  Jachin  and  Boaz  !— 
T  yoimg  lovers  in  winter  weather, 
And  slew  t  hundred  of  his  following, 
if  our  t  houses  Be  less  than  brothers. 
Have  thy  t  brethren  sent  their  forces  in  ? 
T  deaths  at  every  swing,  ran  in  upon  us  And  died  so, 
Gregory  bid  St.  Austin  here  Found  t  archbishoprieks, 

London  and  York  ? 
T  sisters  gliding  in  an  equal  dance,  T  rivers  gently  flowing 

side  by  side — 
who  hath  withstood  t  Kings  to  their  faces  for  the  honour 

of  God. 
He  thought  less  of  t  kings  than  of  one  Eoger  the  king  of 

the  occasion, 
lest  ye  should  draw  together  like  t  ships  in  a  calm. 
My  t  good  friends.  What  matters  murder'd  here,  or 

murder'd  there  ? 
That  ere  t  souls  be  knit  for  life  and  death, 
Ay,  and  I  left  /  fingers  there  for  dead. 
they  fell  a  kissin'  o'  one  another  like  t  sweet'arts  i' 

the  poorch 
and  Vice  and  Virtue  Are  but  t  masks  of  self ; 
And  wheniver  'e  sees  t  sweet'arts  togither  like  thou 

and  me,  Sally, 
And  Sir  Richard  was  told  he  might  be  ransomed  for 

t  thousand  marks  in  gold.  Foresters  i  i  64 

Those  t  thousand  marks  lent  me  by  the  Abbot  for  the 

ransom  of  my  son  Walter — 
Did  t  knights  pass  ? 
For  whom  I  ran  into  my  debt  to  the  Abbot,  T  thousand 

marks  in  gold. 
And  mark'd  if  those  t  knaves  from  York  be  coming  ? 
Friar,  by  my  t  bouts  at  quarterstaff. 
at  the  far  end  of  the  glade  I  see  t  figures  crawling  up 

the  hill. 
Thou  hast  risk'd  thy  life  for  mine :  bind  these  t  men. 
Two-handed    And  swaying  his  t-h  sword  about  him, 
Two-legg'd    t-l  dogs  Among  us  who  can  smell 

'Twur  (it  were,  it  was)    I  should  saay  't  ower  by  now.   Queen  Mary  iv  iii  475 

Tyne  (river)     thro'  all  the  forest  land  North  to  the  T :  Foresters  ii  i  89 

Tjrpe    poor  Steer  looks  The  very  t  of  Age  in  a  picture,    Prom,  of  May  iii  514 

Typed     cataract  t  the  headlong  plunge  and  fall  Queen  Mary  iii  iv  140 

Tyranny    Take  fees  of  t,  wink  at  sacrilege,  Becket  u  ii  394 

both  fought  against  the  t  of  the  kings,  the  Normans.     Foresters  i  i  230 

This  John — this  Norman  t —  „         i  i  238 

Tyrant    brook  nor  Pope  nor  Spaniard  here  to  play  The  t,   Queen  Mary  i  v  191 

Is  this  the  face  of  one  who  plays  the  t?  „         i  v  194 

you  yourself  have  truckled  to  the  t,  „     ni  iv  237 

This  Tostig  is,  or  like  to  he,  at;  Harold  i  i  481 

This  Synorix  Was  Tetrarch  here,  and  t  also —  The  Cup  i  ii  183 

To  foil  and  spoil  the  t  Beneath  the  greenwood  tree.         Foresters  ii  i  11 

maiden  freedom  which  Would  never  brook  the  t.  „       iii  121 

men  will  call  him  An  Eastern  t,  not  an  English  king.  „        iv  904 


Ugly    Ay,  but  you  turn  right  u  when  you're  in  an  ill 

temper ;  Prom,  of  May  i  159 

And  jealousy  is  wither'd,  sour  and  u :  Foresters  ii  ii  65 

Ulcer     Crutches,  and  itches,  and  leprosies,  and  u's,  Becket  i  iv  255 

Unadvised    theretoward  u  Of  all  our  Privy  Council ;  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  204 

Unalterably     U  and  pesteringly  fond !  „            v  i  120 

Unarmonr'd    And  walkest  here  U  ?  Foresters  iv  119 

Unask'd    She  gave  her  hand,  u,  at  the  farm-gate ;  Prom,  of  May  n  625 

Unaware    That  might  have  leapt  upon  us  u's.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  295 

Unbearded    As  helplessly  as  some  u  boy's  The  Cup  i  iii  40 


Harold  i  ii  110 


HI  i  24 

III  i  191 
III  ii  3 

IV  i  116 
IV  i  129 

vi342 
vi409 


Becket  i  iii  50 
I  iii  444 


II  ii  276 


ni  iii  90 
„  III  iii  298 

„  v  ii  629 
The  Cup  II  359 
The  Falcon  653 

Prom,  of  May  i  22 
I  538 

II  163 


ii263 
II  i  230 

II  i  464 
IV  112 

IV  267 

IV  333 
IV  894 
Harold  v  i  407 
The  Cup  I  ii  111 


Unborn     The  great  u  defender  of  the  Faith,  Queen  Mary  in  ii  165 

Unbrotherlike    0  brother,  most  u  to  me,  Harold  v  i  251 

Uncanonical    Old  u  Stigand — ask  of  me  Who  had  my 
pallium  from  an  Antipope  ! 

Thou  u  fool,  Wilt  thou  play  with  the  thunder  ? 
Uncared    upon  the  way  to  Rome  Unwept,  u  for. 
Uncertain    See  Self-uncertain 
Uncle     Not  very  dangerous  that  way,  my  good  u. 

I  follow  your  good  counsel,  gracious  u. 

Do  they  say  so,  good  u  ? 

You  should  not  play  upon  me.   Elizabeth.    No,  good  u 

U,  I  am  of  sovereign  nature, 

To  the  Pleiads,  u ;  they  have  lost  a  sister. 

I  am  sure  this  body  Is  Alfwig,  the  king's  u. 

Have  we  not  heard  Raymond  of  Poitou,  thine  own  u — 

An'  how  did  ye  leave  the  owd  u  i'  Coomberland  ? 

That  fine,  fat,  hook-nosed  u  of  mine,  old  Harold, 


I  i  81 

„     ni  i  390 

Becket  u  ii  410 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  167 
I  iv  186 
I  iv  215 
I  iv  220 
I  iv  257 
I  iv  293 
Harold  v  ii  68 
Becket  iv  ii  247 
Prom,  of  May  i  68 
I  509 
So  the  owd  u  i'  Coomberland  be  dead.  Miss  Dora,  „  ii  1 

I  met  her  first  at  a  farm  in  Cumberland — ^Her  u's.  „         ii  398 

some  will  say  because  I  have  inherited  my  U.  „        in  598 

Uncomely     Nay,  what  u  faces,  could  he  see  you !  Becket  v  i  201 

Uncourtly    Ever  a  rough,  blunt,  and  u  fellow — ■  Queen  Mary  v  v  120 

Uncouth     and  your  churches,  U,  unhandsome,  Harold  i  i  165 

Unction     that  very  word  '  greasy  '  hath  a  kind  of  u  in  it,       Foresters  i  i  87 
Unctuosity    pufied  out  such  an  incense  of  u  into  the  nostrils 

of  our  Gods  of  Church  and  State,  Becket  m  iii  115 

Undefiled     As  persons  u  with  our  ofience.  Queen  Mary  iii  iii  144 

Underdid    must  we  follow  All  that  they  overdid  or  u?  Becket  ii  ii  214 

Underdone     I  hope  he  be  not  u,  for  we  be  undone  in  the 

doing  of  him. 
Undereaten     Except  it  be  a  soft  one,  And  u  to  the  fall. 
Underfoot     the  wild  hawk  passing  overhead.  The 
mouldwarp  u. 
crackled  u  Ajid  in  this  very  chamber, 
and  u  An  earthquake  ; 
The  priests  of  Baal  tread  her  u — 
Crush'd,  hack'd  at,  trampled  u. 
Undergo    Or  give  thee  saintly  strength  to  u. 

men  of  old  would  u  Unpleasant  for  the  sake  of 
pleasant  ones  Hereafter, 
Underground    They  must  have  sprung  like  Ghosts  from  u,  Foresters  iv  593 
Underhand     Were  fighting  u  unholy  wars  Against  your 

lawful  king. 
Under-handedness    and  all  left-handedness  and  u-h. 
Under-heel    That  tread  the  kings  their  children  u-h — 
Understan'     summat  wrong  theer,  Wilson,  fur  I  doant 
u  it. 
An'  thou  doant  u  it  neither — and  thou  school- 
master an'  all. 
Cannot  you  u  plain  words,  Mr.  Dobson  ? 
Understand    {See  also  Understan')    u  We  made  thereto 
no  treaty  of  ourselves, 


The  Falcon  557 
Harold  i  ii  123 

Foresters  in  319 

Queen  Mary  in  v  53 

IV  iii  397 

Becket  in  iii  179 

The  Falcon  640 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  99 

Prom,  of  May  i  243 


IV  821 
Becket,  Pro.  341 
Pro.  213 

Prom,  of  May  i  235 

I  239 
II  112 


Queen  Mary  n  ii  202 


n  ii  259 

v  i  269 

V  i  273 

Foresters  iv  247 

„      I  iii  114 

Harold  i  i  15 

The  Falcon  558 


U :  Your  lawful  Prince  hath  come 
because  I  am  not  certain  :  You  u,  Feria. 
You  u  me  there,  too  ? 
Undertake    Shall  1  u  The  knight  at  quarterstaff. 
Underwood    mix  with  all  The  lusty  life  of  wood  and  u, 
Undescendible    Steam'd  upward  from  the  u  Abysm. 
Undone     I  hope  he  be  not  underdone,  for  we  be  u  in  the 

doing  of  him. 
Undoubted    and  proclaim  Your  tme  u  faith,  that  all 

may  hear.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  114 

Unfamiliar     marvell'd  at  Our  u  beauties  of  the  west ;  Becket  iv  ii  303 

Unfurnish'd    you  are  all  u?    Give  him  a  bow  and  arrows —    The  Cup  i  i  207 

Unhallow'd     Dash'd  red  with  that  u  passover ;  Becket  i  iii  348 

Unhandsome     and  your  churches  Uncouth,  u,  Harold  i  i  165 

Unhappiest     V  Of  Queens  and  wives  and  women  !         Queen  Mary  v  ii  407 

Unhappiness    brooding  Upon  a  great  m  when  you  spoke.  Prom,  of  May  n  383 

Unhappy    and  so  this  u  land,  long  divided  in  itself,         Queen  Mary  i  iii  20 

Behold  him —    People.     Oh,  u  sight !  „  iv  iii  2 

U  land !     Hard-natured  Queen,  half -Spanish  in  herself,    „      iv  iii  422 

Voices — I  hear  u  rumours — nay,  I  say  not,  I  beUeve.        „  v  i  34 

0  this  u  world !     How  shall  I  break  it  to  him  ?  The  Falcon  846 

1  am  most  unlucky,  most «.  „  864 
Unheard     But  will  the  King,  then,  judge  us  all  m  ?               Foresters  iv  897 


Unholy 


1113 


Uttered 


Foresters  iv  821 
„       I  ii  196 


Unholy    Were  fighting  underhand  u  wars  Against  your 

lawful  king. 
Uninvited    knowing  the  fame  of  your  hospitality,  we 

ventured  in  u. 
Unity    again  received  into  the  bosom  And  w  of 

Universal  Church ;  Queen  Mary  in  iii  155 

in  this  u  and  obedience  Unto  the  holy  see  „  iii  iii  157 

to  the  bosom  And  ii  of  Universal  Church.  „  in  iii  221 

but  now,  The  u  of  Universal  Church,  „  in  iii  229 

The  u  of  Universal  Hell,  „  in  iii  232 

Join  hands,  let  brethren  dwell  in  m;  Harold  i  i  397 

In  symbol  of  their  married  u.  The  Cup  n  363 

Universal    Like  u  air  and  sunshine !    Open,  Queen  Mary  in  ii  182 

Be  once  again  received  into  the  bosom  And  unity 

of  U  Church ;  „  iii  iii  155 

And  also  we  restore  you  to  the  bosom  And  unity 

of  U  Church.  „  in  iii  221 

but  now,  The  unity  of  U  Church,  Mary  would 
have   it;   and  this   Gardiner  follows;    The 

unity  of  U  HeU,  „  ni  iii  229 

Yet  wherefore  should  he  die  that  hath  return'd 

To  the  one  Cathohc  U  Church,  „  iv  iii  21 

Unkind    0  my  dear  son,  be  not  u  to  me.  The  Falcon  509 

Unkingly     U  should  I  be,  and  most  unknightly,  Becket  in  iii  230 

Unknightly     Unkingly  should  I  be,  and  most  u,  „      in  iii  230 

Unleam'd     your  Priests  Gross,  wordly,  simoniacal,  u !  Harold  i  i  162 

Unlike     The  peoples  are  w  as  their  complexion ;  Queen  Mary  v  i  89 

0  how  w  om-  goodly  Sinnatus.  The  Cup  n  173 
Weak  natures  that  impute  Themselves  to  their  u's,      Foresters  ii  i  692 

Unlord     after  that,  We  had  to  dis-arehbishop  and  u,   Queen  Mary  iv  ii  128 
Unlucky     I  am  most  u,  most  unhappy.  The  Falcon  864 

Unman     She  fear'd  it  might  u  him  for  his  end.  Queen  Mary  in  i  368 

And  that  would  quite  u  him,  heart  and  soul.  Foresters  in  29 

Unmann'd    She  could  not  be  u — no,  nor  outwoman'd —  Queen  Alary  in  i  369 
Unmatchable    face  and  form  u  !  The  Cup  i  i  122 

Unmoving     U  in  the  greatness  of  the  flame.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  622 

Unpardonable     Yea,  even  such  as  mine,  incalculable, 

U, —  „  IV  iii  148 

Unpleasant     Against  the  u  jolts  of  this  rough  road         Prom,  of  May  i  228 

men  of  old  would  imdergo  U  for  the  sake  of  pleasant 

ones  Hereafter,  „  1 245 

Unprincely    For  some  u  violence  to  a  woman.  The  Cup  i  i  139 

God  help  the  mark — To  his  own  u  ends.  Foresters  iv  716 

Unqueen    Who  did  discrown  thine  husband,  u  thee  ?  Harold  iv  i  193 

Unquenchable     And  burn  the  tares  with  u  fire  !  Queen  Mary  v  v  114 

Unquiet    and  the  people  so  u — •  „  m  i  453 

Unriddle    Stigand,  u  This  vision,  canst  thou  ?    Stigand. 

Dotage  !  Harold  in  i  174 

Unsafe     Their  Uves  u  in  any  of  these  our  woods,  Foresters  iv  93 

Un-Saxon     Which  hunted  Aim  when  that  m-<S  blast,  Harold  nii  30 

Unscathed    And  let  him  pass  u ;  he  loves  me,  Harold !  „    in  i  301 

Unschool'd     and  threaten  us  thence  U  of  Death  ?  „      v  i  287 

Unsheath'd    tigress  had  m  her  nails  at  last.  Queen  Mary  mi  3 

Unsister     plenty  to  sunder  and  u  them  again :  „  i  i  85 

Unslept    seen  us  that  wild  morning  when  we  found 

Her  bed  u  in.  Prom,  of  May  n  471 

Unsocket    whose  storm-voice  U's  the  strong  oak,  The  Cup  n  283 

Unsubject    u  to  One  earthly  sceptre.  Becket  i  iii  680 

Unswear    Swear  and  u,  state  and  misstate  thy  best !  „      n  ii  476 

Unsymmetrically    but  w,  preposterously,  illogically,  „     Pro.  336 

Untold    Tell  me  that,  or  leave  All  else  u.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  569 

Unwavering     Your  lordship  affects  the  m  perpendicular ;        Becket  ii  ii  326 
Unwell    Ah,  heaven!     Pole,     t/,  your  Grace  ?  Queen  Mary  in  ii  85 

Her  Highness  is  u.     I  will  retire.  ..  v  ii  246 

1  am  sorrv  Mr.  Steer  still  continues  too  u  to 

attend  to  you,  Prom,  of  May  iii  22 

Unwept    upon  the  way  to  Rome  U,  uncared  for.  Becket  n  ii  410 

Unwholesome     U  talk  For  Godwin's  house !  Harold  1 1  390 

Unwilling     I  have  been  u  to  trouble  you  with 

questions,  From,  of  May  in  321 

Unwillingness     Foreseeing,  with  whate'er  u.  Queen  Mary  i  y  253 

Unworthy     '  This  hath  offended— this  m  hand  ! '  „        iv  lu  613 

O  thou  M  brother  of  my  dear  Marian  !  Foresters  n  i  538 

Unwoundable    callous  with  a  constant  stripe,  U.  Queen  Mary  v  v  173 

Unwoonded    having  passed  u  from  the  field,  The  Falcon  608 


Unwrinkled     The  brows  u  as  a  summer  mere. —  Harold  in  i  48 

Up    See  Hup,  Cop,  Shut-up,  Steep-up 

Uphold     all  my  lifelong  labour  to  u  The  primacy — a 

heretic.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  70 

Wilt  thou  u  my  claim  ?  Harold  ii  ii  602 

Upholder    our  recoverer  and  u  of  customs  hath  in  this 

crowning  Becket  in  iii  70 

Uplifter     And  mine  u  in  this  world,  „          i  i  89 

Upper    My  lords  of  the  u  house,  Qu^en  Mary  in  iii  101 

Uprear'd     The  trenches  dug,  the  palisades  u  Harold  v  i  189 

Upright     you  that  have  kept  your  old  customs  u,  Queen  Mary  n  i  159 

Well,  you  one  man,  because  you  stood  u,  „        in  iii  269 

He  pass'd  out  smiUng,  and  he  walk'd  u;  „         iv  iii  303 

He  stood  u,  a  lad  of  twenty-one,  „        iv  iii  335 
and  saw  the  church  all  fiU'd  With  dead  men  u  from  their 

graves,  Harold  i  ii  83 

And  thou  art  u  in  thy  living  grave,  ,,   ii  ii  440 

for  I  have  lost  Somewhat  of  u  stature  thro'  mine  oath,  „    in  ii  56 

Uproar    — made  an  u.    Henry.     And  Becket  had  my 

bosom  Becket  i  iii  432 

Upshot     and  there  bide  The  u  of  my  quarrel,  Queen  Mary  n  iv  86 

Upwards    See  Huppads 

Urge     not  be  wanting  Those  that  will  u  her  injury —  Queen  Mary  in  vi  176 

and  I  shall  u  his  suit  Upon  the  Queen,  „             v  i  265 

She  will  u  marriage  on  me.  Prom,  of  May  i  489 

Urn     keep  us  From  seeing  all  too  near  that  u.  The  Cup  i  iii  133 

Usage     I  came  on  certain  wholesome  u's,  Becket  i  iii  412 

so  violated  the  immemorial  u  of  the  Church,  „      iii  iii  72 

Use  (s)     Ay,  and  ^vhat  u  to  talk  ?  Queen  Mary  in  iii  40 

I  kept  my  head  for  u  of  Holy  Church  ;  „          in  iv  359 
wholesome  u  of  these  To  chink  against  the  Norman,        Harold  ni  i  20 

made  too  good  an  u  of  Holy  Church  To  break  „       v  i  312 

Not  yet.     Stay.     Edith.     To  what  m?  „       v  i  339 

fringe  of  gorgeousness  beyond  Old  u,  The  Cup  n  439 

had  you  left  him  free  u  of  his  wings.  Prom,  of  May  i  652 

but  there  is  u,  four  hundred  marks.  Foresters  iv  495 

my  tongue  tript — five  hundred  marks  for  u.  „        iv  500 

You  have  the  monies  and  the  u  of  them.  „         iv  548 

Use  (verb)     Well,  we  shall  u  him  somehow.  Queen  Mary  r  iii  171 

and  u  Both  us  and  them  according  as  they  will.  „            ii  ii  160 

Ay,  but  they  u  his  name.  „             v  i  129 

we  must  u  our  battle-axe  to-day.  Harold  v  i  205 

King's  courts  would  u  thee  worse  than  thy  dog —  Becket  i  iv  102 

it  is  the  cup  we  u  in  our  marriages.  The  Cup  r  i  44 

sends  you  this  cup — the  cup  we  u  in  our  marriages —  „        i  ii  72 

have  you  power  with  Rome  ?  m  it  for  him !  „       r  ii  290 

we  never  u  it  For  fear  of  breakage —  The  Falcon  486 

— take  and  u  your  moment,  while  you  may.  Foresters  n  i  476 

Used     evilly  u  And  put  to  pain.  Becket  ii  ii  433 

You  had  never  u  so  many,  „      iv  ii  183 

Hath  u  the  full  authority  of  his  Church  „        v  i  207 

Foul  as  her  dust-cloth,  if  she  u  it —  „       v  ii  203 

Well  u,  they  serve  us  well.  The  Cup  i  iii  135 

Used  (was  accustomed)     I  w  to  love  the  Queen  with 

all  my  heart —  Queen  Mary  v  ii  418 

that  Dobbins,  is  it.  With  whom  I  w  to  jar?  Prom,  of  May  n  613 

as  I  u  to  transact  all  his  business  for  him,  „             ii  719 

Useless     But  your  moan  is  u  now :  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  638 

Using    fears  he  might  be  crack'd  in «,  „                  n  i  8 

Usurper     And  thou,  u,  liar —    Harold.     Out,  beast  monk  !      Harold  v  i  74 

Utmost     I  will  help  you,  Madam,  Even  to  the  «.  Queen  Mary  i  v  178 

To  do  to  the  u  all  that  in  us  lies  „       m  iii  140 

Utopian     What  are  all  these  ?    Harold.     U  idiotcies.  Prom,  of  May  ni  588 

Utter  (adj.)     but  the  hour  has  come  For  u  truth  and 

plainness ;  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  273 
Poor  lads,  they  see  not  what  the  general  sees,  A 

risk  of  u  ruin.  „              v  ii  449 

I  have  lived  a  life  of  u  purity :  Harold  i  i  178 

I  reel  beneath  the  weight  of  u  ioy —  The  Cup  n  450 

I  shall  go  mad  for  u  shame  and  die.  Pram,  of  May  i  682 

You  both  are  u  traitors  to  your  king.  Foresters  iv  844 

Utter  (verb)    fiends  that  u  them  Tongue-torn  with 

pincers,  Qrnen  Mary  v  ii  192 

I  never  heard  him  «  worse  of  you  Than  that  „           v  ii  431 

Uttered    he  never  u  moan  of  pain :  „        iv  iii  618 


uttering 


11'14 


Very 


uttering    not  like  a  word,  That  comes  and  goes  in  u.    Queen  Mary  iii  v  30 

Can  I  fancy  him  kneeling  with  me,  and  u  the 

same  prayer ;  Prom,  of  May  lu  180 

Utterly     I  am  u  submissive  to  the  Queen.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  39 

Uxor    And  one  an  u  fawperis  Ibyci.  Becket  v  ii  216 


Vacancy     '  And  when  the  ij  is  to  be  filled  up,  Becket  i  iii  108 

Vacant    '  When  a  bishoprick  falls  v,  the  King,  till  another 

be  appointed,  shall  receive  the  revenues  thereof.'  „     i  iii  100 

King  Demands  a  strict  account  of  all  those  revenues 

From  all  the  v  sees  and  abbacies,  „     i  iii  652 

Your  heaven  is  v  of  your  angel.  Foresters  ii  i  109 

Vacillation    shakes  at  mortal  kings — her  v.  Avarice,  craft —  Becket  ii  ii  405 

Vacuity    or  any  other  symbol  of  v.  Foresters  iv  214 

Vagabond  (adj.)     To  take  the  v  woman  of  the  street  Into 

thine  arms  !  Becket  i  i  227 

Vagabond  (s)     Why,  nature's  licensed  v,  the  swallow,        Queen  Mary  v  i  20 

1  should  have  beaten  thee,  But  that  was  v.  Becket,  Pro.  53 

Vague    struck  a  shape  from  out  the  v,  „      i  iii  373 

Vain    Surely,  not  all  in  v.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  158 

— And  all  in  «; !     The  Queen  of  Scots  is  married  „  v  v  51 

I  had  counsell'd  him  To  rest  from  v  resistance.  The  Cup  ii  414 

Vale     And  kindle  all  our  v's  with  myrtle-blossom,  „         ii  267 

Valery     Against  St.  V  And  William.  Harold  iii  ii  136 

Valhalla    AVeWalhalla 

Valley    should  walk  hand  in  hand  together  down  this 

V  of  tears,  Prom,  of  May  iii  192 

Valorous     Try,  thyself,  v  Robin  !  Foresters  iv  314 

Valour     came  to  know  Thy  v  and  thy  value,  Harold  ii  ii  202 

V  and  holy  life  should  go  together.  Becket  v  ii  587 

But  seeing  v  is  one  against  all  odds.  Foresters  iv  318 

Value     came  to  know  Thy  valour  and  thy  v,  Harold  ii  ii  202 

My  one  thing  left  of  v  in  the  world  !  The  Falcon  496 

have  won  Their  v  again — beyond  all  markets —  „  905 

v's  neither  man  Nor  woman  save  as  tools —  Foresters  iv  713 

Vane-arrow    Which  way  soever  the  v-a  swing,  Harold  ii  ii  257 

Vanish    Whate'er  thy  joys,  they  v  with  the  day ;  Foresters  i  iii  44 

Vanish'd  (adj.)     remain  After  the  v  voice,  and  speak 

to  men.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  164 

Vanish'd  (verb)     And  somewhere  hereabouts  he  v.  Becket  iii  ii  5 

Vanity     As  he  hath  ever  err'd  thro'  v.  Queen  Mary  iv  i  31 

VanQuish'd    Our  Artemis  Has  t;  their  Diana.  The  Cup  ii  457 

Var  (far)    it  be  a  r  waay  vor  my  owld  legs  up  vro' 

Islip.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  472 

Variance    The  Church  is  ever  at  v  with  the  kings,  Becket  i  iv  79 

Various    Woman  is  v  and  most  mutable.  Queen  Mary  in  vi  135 

Vassal  (adj.)     She  cast  on  him  a  v  smile  of  love,  „  in  i  98 

Vassal  (s)     Then  must  I  play  the  v  to  this  Pole.  „  in  iii  111 

Thomas,  lord  Not  only  of  your  v's  but  amours,  Becket  v  i  205 

sworn  Yourselves  my  men  when  I  was  Chancellor — My 

v's —  „      V  ii  504 

Thou  art  my  man,  tb(fu  art  my  v.  „    v  iii  154 

loathed  the  cruelties  that  Rome  Wrought  on  her  v's.    The  Cup  i  ii  375 

The  pillage  of  his  v's.  Foresters  iii  107 

Vassalage    no  more  feuds  Disturb  our  peaceful  v  to  Rome.     The  Cup  ii  71 

Vast    the  v  vine-bowers  Ran  to  the  summit  of  the  trees,  „    i  ii  401 

Vastly     I  am  D  grieved  to  leave  your  Majesty.  Queen  Mary  lu  vi  255 

Vatican    leave  Lateran  and  V  in  one  dust  of  gold —  Becket  ii  ii  475 

Vaulted    When  1  ?)  on  his  back.  Foresters  ii  ii  150 

Vaulting    The  tawny  squirrel  v  thro'  the  boughs,  „        i  iii  117 

Vavasour    Wasn't  Miss  V,  our  schoolmistress  at 

Littlechester,  a  lady  bom  ?  Prom,  of  May  in  297 

Veer     V  to  the  coimterpoint,  and  jealousy  Queen  Mary  in  vi  180 

Veil  (s)     tore  away  My  marriage  ring,  and  rent  my  bridal  v ;     Harold  i  ii  80 

Like  the  Love-goddess,  with  no  bridal  v,  Prom,  of  May  i  597 

you  kept  your  v  too  close  for  that  when  they  carried 

you  m ;  "  „  m  226 

Veil  (verb)    To  v  the  fault  of  my  most  outward  foe —  Queen  Mary  iv  ii  106 

Veiled    Her  face  was  v,  but  the  back  methought  Becket,  Pro.  470 

Veiling    and  no  need  Of  v  their  desires.  Prom,  of  May  i  530 


Veiling  {continued)     V  one  sin  to  act  another. 
Vein     O  thin-skinn'd  hand  and  jutting  v's, 


This  dress 


love  I  bear  to  thee  Glow  thro'  thy  v's  ?    Synorix. 
The  love  I  bear  to  thee  Glows  thro'  my  v's 

I  have  a  swollen  v  in  my  right  leg, 

O  Lord,  the  v  !     Not  paid  at  York — 

They  have  missed  the  v. 
Velvet  {tSee  also  A-velveting)    V  and  gold. 

was  made  me 
Venal     And  Rome  is  v  ev'n  to  rottenness. 

V  imp !     What  say'st  thou  to  the  Chancellorship  of 
England  ? 
Vengeance    Is  v  for  its  own  sake  worth  the  while. 

And  take  a  hunter's  v  on  the  meats. 

Beware,  O  King,  the  v  of  the  Church. 

let  me  execute  the  v  of  the  Church  upon  them. 

the  V  of  the  Church  !     Thou  shalt  pronounce  the 
blessing  of  the  Church 
Venice    He  caught  a  chill  in  the  Isigoons  of  V, 
Venison    What's  that,  my  lord  ?    Becket.    V.   Beggar. 

and  the  world  shall  live  by  the  King's  v 

V,  and  wild  boar,  hare,  geese, 

so  thou  be  Squeamish  at  eating  the  King's  v. 

I  look  on  the  King's  v  as  my  own. 

in  the  fear  of  thy  life  shalt  thou  eat  the  King's  v — 

Not  taste  his  v  first  ? 

if  you  hold  us  here  Longer  from  our  own  v. 


Prom,  of  May  in  773 
Queen  Mary  iv  ii  204 


The  Cup  II  427 

Foresters  iv  569 

IV  622 

IV  636 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  71 
Becket  i  iii  296 

„       n  i  224 

The  Cup  I  i  30 

I  ii  43 

Foresters  iv  913 

IV  916 

IV  925 
Queen  Mary  v  ii  515 
V  ?     Becket  i  iv  137 
„      I  iv  272 
Foresters  iv  191 
IV  194 
IV  197 
IV  206 
IV  343 
IV  942 
Venom     It  lies  there  folded  :  is  there  d  in  it  ?  Qv^en  Mary  in  v  217 

Venomous    all  of  us  abhor  The  v,  bestial,  devilish 

revolt  Of  Thomas  Wyatt.  „  n  ii  287 

but  he  that  lookt  a  fangless  one,  Issues  a  v  adder.  Becket  i  iii  453 

and  hers  Crost  and  recrost,  a  v  spider's  web —  „       ii  i  199 

Ventris     Sit  benedictus  fructus  t;  tui ! '  Queen  Mary  in  ii  83 

Venture     and  deafen'd  by  some  bright  liOud  v,  „      in  i  453 

Ventured    knowing  the  fame  of  your  hospitality,  we  v  in 

uninvited.  Foresters  i  ii  196 

Venus     bust  of  Juno  and  the  brows  and  eyes  Of  V ;  The  Cup  i  i  122 

Verbum    Ha- — V  Dei — v — word  of  God  !  Queen  Mary  in  i  262 

Verdurer     King's  v  caught  him  a-hunting  in  the  forest,  Becket  i  iv  95 

Veriest     Nay,  Madam,  nay  !  he  sends  his  v  love.  Queen  Mary  v  ii  564 

believe  thee  The  v  Galahad  of  old  Arthur's  hall.  Becket,  Pro.  129 

Verily    Thou  shalt  be  v  king — all  but  the  name —  Harold  n  ii  632 

Veritas     In  vino  v.  Foresters  iv  247 

Vermin     In  breeding  godless  v.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  329 

Verse    for  my  v's  if  the  Latin  rhymes  be  rolled  out  from  a 

full  mouth  ?  Becket  u  ii  337 

Verse-maker    Thou  art  a  jester  and  a  v-m.  „     ii  ii  334 

Verse-writing    your  lordship  would  suspend  me  from  v-w,  „      n  ii  350 

Very    but  Lady  Jane  stood  up  Stiff  as  the  v  backbone 

of  heresy.  Queen  Mary  i  v  44 

A  V  wanton  life  indeed.  „         i  v  336 

A  fine  beard,  Bonner,  a  v  full  fine  beard.  „     in  iv  338 

The  V  Truth  and  v  Word  was  one.  „        in  v  32 

And  in  this  v  chamber,  fuse  the  glass,  „        in  v  54 

would  make  the  hard  earth  rive  To  the  v  Devil's  horns, 

the  bright  sky  cleave  To  the  v  feet  of  God,  Harold  n  ii  741 

And  all  the  Heavens  and  v  God :  they  heard —  „  v  i  4^ 

I  want  to  bite,  and  they  do  say  the  v  breath  catches.  Becket  i  iv  222 
But  ha  !  what's  here  ?     By  v  God,  the  cross  I  gave  the 

King  !  „     IV  ii  199 , 

Ay,  but  wait  Till  his  nose  rises ;  he  will  be  v  king.  „      v  ii  184; 

This  V  day  the  Romans  crown  him  king  The  Cup  n  63-' 

you  look  as  beautiful  this  morning  as  the  v  Madonna 

her  own  self —  The  Falcon  199 

That  was  the  v  year  before  you  married.  „  373 

0  heavens !  the  v  letters  seem  to  shake  With  cold,  „  448 
as  the  snow  yonder  on  the  v  tip- top  o'  the  mountain.  „  501. 
He  be  heighty  this  v  daay.  Prom,  of  May  i  Tj 
But  I  taiikes  'im  fur  a  bad  lot  and  a  bum  fool,  and  I  i 

haiites  the  v  sight  on  him.  „  1 154 

He's  a  Somersetshire  man,  and  a  v  civil-spoken  gentleman.  „  i  207 

fur  thaw  I  be  heighty  this  v  daay,  „  i  358 

1  have  heard  of  you.  The  likeness  Is  v  striking.  „  ii  366 
Why,  that  wur  the  v  twang  on  'im.  „  ii  733. 
and  poor  Steer  looks  The  v  type  of  Age  in  a  picture,  „  m  514 


Very 


1115 


Visionary 


Vex 


Very  (continued)    Why  there,  now  !  that  v  word  '  greasy ' 
hath  a  kind  of  unction  in  it, 
I  am  thine  to  the  v  heart  of  the  earth — 
My  God,  thou  art  the  v  woman  who  waits  On  my  dear 

Marian. 
Thou  comest  a  v  angel  out  of  heaven, 
and  what  doe-st  thou  with  that  who  art  more  bow-bent 

than  the  v  bow  thou  carriest  ? 
It  is  the  V  captain  of  the  thieves  ! 
I  thank  you,  noble  sir,  the  v  blossom  Of  bandits. 
It  is  not  he — his  face — tho'  v  like — No,  no  ! 
Yea,  and  the  weight  of  the  v  land  itself, 
I   Veselay     But  since  he  cursed  My  friends  at  V, 
'   Vesper     I  wiU  but  pass  to  v's,  And  breathe  one  prayer 
In  your  old  place  ?  and  v's  are  beginning. 
Come,  then,  with  us  to  v's. 
They  are  thronging  in  to  v's — half  the  town, 
gims  From  out  the  v's  lying  in  the  river, 
wherefore  not  Helm  the  huge  v  of  your  state, 
In  the  full  V  running  out  at  top 
Plunder'd  the  v  full  of  Gascon  wine, 
V  him  not,  Leofwin.    Tostig.     I  am  not  vext,- 
ye  seek  to  v  me, 
I  told  my  Lord  He  should  not  v  her  Highness ; 
Why  do  you  v  me  ? 

Why  would  you  v  yourself,  Poor  sister  ? 
Which  will  so  v  thee. 
I  will  not  V  you  by  repeating  them — 
Why  do  you  v  me  With  raven-croaks 
Vex'd-Vext    His  Highness  is  so  vex'd  with  strange 
affairs — 
No,  I  am  not  vext, — Altho'  ye  seek  to  vex  me, 
— I  am  not  vext  at  all. 
A  gnat  that  vext  thy  pUlow  ! 
I  seed  how  the  owd  man  wur  vext. 
Viand     besides  Hedge-pigs,  a  savoury  v, 
Vicar    JuUus,  God's  V  and  Vicegerent  upon  earth, 

and  adore  This  V  of  their  V. 
Vice    Foul  maggots  crawling  in  a  fester'd  v  ! 

Would  call  this  v  ;  but  one  time's  v  may  be  The 
virtue  of  another ;  and  V  and  Virtue  Are  but 
two  masks  of  self ;  and  what  hereafter  Shall 
mark  out  V  from  Virtue 
Our  vice-king  John, — True  king  of  v — 
Vicegerent    Julius,  God's  Vicar  and  V  upon  earth, 
Vice-king    And  thou  be  my  v-k  in  England. 

Our  v-k  John,  True  king  of  vice — 
Viceroy    Set  up  a  v,  sent  his  myriads 

Sometime  the  v  of  those  provinces — 
Viciousness    Because  we  seek  to  curb  their  v. 
Victim    nobler  The  v  was,  the  more  acceptable  Might  be 
the  sacrifice. 
Or  happy  fallen  a  t)  to  the  wolf. 
Victor     will  you  crown  my  foe  My  v  in  mid-battle  ? 

crown'd  v  of  my  will — 
Victory    wines  Of  wedding  had  been  dash'd  into  the  cups 
01 V, 
thy  victories  Over  our  own  poor  Wales, 
I  ever  had  my  victories  among  women, 
at  last  May  lead  them  on  to  v — 
Vile    With  that  v  Cranmer  in  the  accursed  lie  Of 

good  Queen  Catharine's  divorce — 
Villa  Garcia    No  man  can  make  his  Maker — V  G. 

No,  V  G,l  sign  no  more. 
Village  (adj.)    His  v  darling  in  some  lewd  caress 

So  loved  by  all  the  v  people  here. 
Village  (s)     I  Shall  not  be  made  the  laughter  of  the  v, 
Villain    v's  with  their  lying  lights  have  wreck'd  us  ! 
Serve  thyself  first,  v  !     They  shall  not  harm 
that  V,  Edgar,  If  he  should  ever  show 
Vindicator    Surgas  e  tenebris.  Sis  v  ! 
Vine     You  lived  among  your  v's  and  oranges, 
Perhaps  our  v's  will  grow  the  better  for  it. 
apricot,  V,  cypress,  poplar,  myrtle, 
and  like  the  swaying  v's — Yea, — 


Foresters  i  i  86 
„      I  i  337 


nilOl 
II  i  ia5 


„     n  i  378 

.,     u  i  412 

„      ni  247 

IV  777 

„    IV  1025 

Becket  ii  i  89 

„    viil90 

„    vii596 

„     V  iii  35 

„  V  iii  139 

Queen  Mary  u  i  222 

V  i  73 

Harold  i  i  378 

Becket  v  ii  441 

-Altho' 

Harold  I  i  403 
Queen  Mary  Iii  vi  66 

IV  i  134 

V  V  263 
Becket  ii  i  208 

Prom,  of  May  ii  403 
Foresters  ii  i  623 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  559 

Harold  I  i  404 

„       I  i  409 

I  ii  71 

Prom,  of  May  ii  28 

Foresters  iv  193 

Queen  Mary  ni  iii  213 

„  III  iii  244 

v  V  162 


Prom,  of  May  i  534 

Foresters  ii  i  83 

Queen  Mary  iii  iii  213 

Harold  ii  ii  635 

Foresters  ii  i  81 

Qmen  Mary  iii  i  463 

III  ii  196 

Foresters  iii  393 


The  Falcon  880 

Foresters  ii  i  509 

Becket  v  i  150 

The  Cup  II  519 

Harold  iv  iii  8 

„     IV  iii  26 

The  Cup  I  i  153 

I  ii  168 


Queen  Mary  ni  iv  231 

„  IV  ii  58 

IV  ii  83 

Becket  iv  ii  200 

Prom,  of  May  ni  755 

I  721 

Harold  u  i  83 

The  Cup  I  ii  325 

Prom,  of  May  ii  422 

Harold  v  i  572 

Queen  Mary  iii  iv  253 

Harold  I  i  68 

The  Cup  I  i  3 

„     I  ii  411 


The  Cup  I  iii  170 
II  271 


The  Falcon  168- 

Foresters  iv  247 

The  Falcon  579 

586 

The  Cup  I  iii  62 

Becket  i  iii  382 

„    m  iii  72 

Prom,  of  May  i  494 


Vine  (continued)     we  will  chirp  among  our  v's,  and  smile 

sway  the  long  grape-buncnes  of  our  v's, 
Vine-an'-the-Hop  (inn  sign)     But  hallus  ud  stop  at 

the  V-a-t-H,  Prom,  of  May  n  311 

Vine-bower    vast  v-b's  Ran  to  the  summit  of  the  trees,        The  Cup  i  ii  402 
Vineyard    she  turns  down  the  path  through  our  httle  v,  •    -  -       - '— 

Vino     In  v  Veritas. 
Vintage     Not  like  the  v  blowing  round  your  castle. 

send  you  down  a  flask  or  two  Of  that  same  v  ? 
Violate    These  Romans  dare  not  v  the  Temple. 
Violated    A  cleric  v  The  daughter  of  his  host, 

so  V  the  immemorial  usage  of  the  Church, 

V  the  whole  Tradition  of  our  land. 
Violence     (See  also  Over- violence)     Your  v  and  much 

roughness  to  the  Legate,  Queen  Mary  in  iv  318 

— a  sweet  v,  And  a  sweet  craft.  „  in  v  108- 

V  and  the  craft  that  do  divide  The  ^^  orld  „  in  v  120 
cast  with  bestial  v  Our  holy  Norman  bishops  Harold  i  i  49 
Side  not  with  Tostig  in  any  v,  „  i  i  457 
For  some  unprincely  ij  to  a  woman.  The  Cup  i  i  139 
This  V  ill  becomes  The  silence  of  our  Temple.                        „         n  215- 

Violent     Robin  was  v.  And  she  was  crafty —  Queen  Mary  ni  v  107 

Save  for  thy  wild  and  v  will  that  wrench'd  All  hearts  of 

freemen  from  thee.  Harold  v  i  277 

Violet     and  won  the  v  at  Toulouse ;  Becket,  Pro.  348 

rose  or  no  rose,  has  killed  the  golden  v.  „       Pro.  352 

Sweeter  than  any  v  of  to-day.  The  Falcon  465 

I  mean'd  they  be  as  blue  as  v's.  Prom,  of  May  i  104 

Viper     Two  v's  of  one  breed- — an  amphisbsena.  Queen  Mary  ui  iv  39- 

Vire  (fire)     I  do  know  ez  Pwoaps  and  v's  be  bad  things ;  „         iv  iii  501 

and  tells  un  ez  the  v  has  tuk  holt.  „         iv  iii  512 

There's  nought  but  the  v  of  God's  hell  ez  can  burn 
out  that.  „        IV  iii  527 

Virgil     Well,  the  tree  in  V,  sir,  „  m  i  22. 

but,  my  Lord,  you  know  what  V  sings,  „        in  vi  134 

Virgin  (adj.)     seeing  that  our  gracious  V  Queen  hath — ■  „  i  iii  23 

Virgin  (s)  (See  also  '^isity)  let  me  call  her  our  second  V  Mary,     „  i  iii  57 

V  Mary  !  we'll  have  no  virgins  here —  „  i  iii  60- 
we'll  have  no  v's  here — we'll  have  the  Lady 

Ehzabeth !  „  i  iii  61 

by  the  holy  V,  being  noble,  But  love  me  only :  „  i  v  70 

Holy  V,  Plead  with  thy  blessed  Son ;  „  i  v  84 

I  thank  God,  I  have  Uved  at),  „         n  ii  218 

Holy  V  will  not  have  me  yet  Lose  the  sweet  hope  „       m  vi  199- 

My  son  the  Saints  are  v's ;  Harold  ni  i  272 

I  have  been  myself  a  v ;  and  I  sware  To  consecrate  my 

V  here  „     ni  i  275 

Yea,  by  the  Blessed  V  !  Becket,  Pro.  520 


The  V,  in  a  vision  of  my  sleep, 

we  have  the  Blessed  V  For  worship, 

I  do  commend  my  cause  to  God,  the  V, 

I  am  a  v,  my  masters,  I  am  a  v.  Much.  And  a  v,  my 
masters,  three  yards  about  the  waist  is  like  to 
remain  a  v. 

And  you  three  holy  men,  You  worshippers  of  the  V, 

The  Holy  V  Stand  by  the  strongest. 

Our  holy  king  Hath  given  his  v  lamb  to  Holy  Church 
Virginity    They  love  the  white  rose  of  v, 
Virgo    Homo  simi,  sed  v  sum, 
Virtue    (I  count  it  as  a  kind  of  v  in  him. 

Is  not  V  prized  mainly  for  its  rarity 


one  time  s  vice  may  be  The  v  of  another ;  and  Vice 
and  V  Are  but  two  masks  of  self ;  and  what  here- 


ii53 
vii220- 
v  iii  164 


Foresters  I  ii  67 

m383 

IV  264 

Harold  in  i  334 

m  i  273 

Foresters  i  ii  66 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  193 

Becket  ni  iii  303 


after  Shall  mark  out  Vice  from  V 

Virtuous     Exhort  them  to  a  pure  and  v  hfe ; 

Virtus     Gratior  in  pulchro  corpore  v. 

Visible    Is  not  the  Church  the  v  Lord  on  earth  ? 

Vision    I  have  had  a  v ; 

Edward  wakes  ! — Dazed — he  hath  seen  a  v. 

Stigand,  unriddle  This  v,  canst  thou  ?    Stigand. 

The  Virgin,  in  a  i>  of  my  sleep. 

It  will  be  so — my  v's  in  the  Lord : 

I  had  once  a  «  of  a  pure  and  perfect  marriage, 

Shall  I  be  happy  ?     Happy  v,  stay. 

Visionary    And  foimd  it  all  a  v  flame, 


Prom,  of  May  i  536 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  77 

Becket  v  ii  542 

I  iii  92 

Harold  I  i  191 

„     UI  i  131 

Dotage!      „    ni  i  175 

Becket  i  i  53 

„  UI  iii  341 

Prom,  of  May  iii  188 

Foresters  n  ii  199  < 

Queen  Mary  iv  ii  4 


Visit 


1I16 


Wail 


Visit    thine  host  in  England  when  I  went  To  v  Edward.  Harold  11  ii  6 

Comin?  to  v  my  lord,  for  the  first  time  in  her  life  too  !    The  Falcon  110 

Visited     When  I  v  England,  Some  held  she  was  his  wife  Harold  v  ii  99 

Vitus  (Saint)     By  old  St.  V  Have  you  gone  mad?  Foresters  iv  614 

Vive  le  Roy     Hurrah !     VI  Rl  Becket  i  iv  274 
Voice     {See  also  Storm-voice)     Thro'  many  v's  crying 

right  and  left,  Queen  Mary  i  ii  48 

and  all  rebellions  lie  Dead  bodies  without  v.  „          n  i  80 

Three  v's  from  our  guilds  and  companies  !  „       n  jj  255 

And  will  not  trust  your  v's.  „       n  ii.259 

Their  v  had  left  me  none  to  tell  you  this.  „        H  iii  36 

A  sound  Of  feet  and  v's  thickening  hither —  „        n  iv  45 

Thine  is  a  half  v  and  a  lean  assent.  „       m  j  311 

To  join  a  v,  so  potent  with  her  Highness,  „       iv  i  117 

All  your  v's  Are  waves  on  flint.  „       iv  i  121 

my  "poor  1;  Against  them  is  a  whisper  to  the  roar  „      iv  ii  186 

remain  After  the  vanish'd  v,  „     iv  iii  164 

crying,  in  his  deep  v,  more  than  once,  „     iv  iii  611 
Ay,  ay ;  but  many  v's  call  me  hence.     Mary.     V's 

— I  hear  unhappy  rumours — nay,  „           v  i  32 

What  v's  call  you  Dearer  than  mine  ,,           v  i  36 
Alas,  my  Lord !  what  v's  and  how  many  ?     Philip. 

The  v's  of  Castille  and  Aragon,  „           v  i  40 
v's  of  Franche-Comte,  and  the  Netherlands,  The  v's 

of  Peru  and  Mexico,  „          v  i  45 

if  the  fetid  gutter  had  a  v  And  cried  „       v  ii  323 

Your  Grace  hath  a  low  v.  »       v  ii  378 
A  low  V  Lost  in  a  wilderness  where  none  can  hear ! 

Avof  shipwreck  on  a  shoreless  sea!     A  low  v 

from  the  dust  and  from  the  grave  „        v  ii  381 

No,  that  way  there  are  v's.     Am  I  too  late  ?  „       v  v  207 

Thou  art  a  great  v  in  Northumberland  !  Harold  i  i  114 

in  Normanland  God  speaks  thro'  abler  v's,  _         „       i  i  167 

I  want  his  v  in  England  for  the  crown,  I  want  thy  v  with 

him  to  bring  him  round ;  »       11  ii  71 

The  choice  of  England  is  the  v  of  England.     William.  I 

will  be  king  of  England  by  the  laws,  The  choice,  and 

V  of  England.  „     n  ii  128 

1'  of  any  people  is  the  sword  That  guards  them,  „     n  ii  134 

would  give  his  kingly  w  To  me  as  his  successor.  ,,     ri  ii  588 
Thou  art  the  mightiest  v  in  England,  man.  Thy  v  will 

lead  ,.     iiii617 
we  be  not  bound  by  the  king's  v  In  making  of  a  king, 

yet  the  king's  v  „     ni  i  236 

The  V  of  Gurth  !     Good  even,  my  good  brother  !  „    iii  ii  115 

Wessex  dragon  flies  beyond  the  Humber,  No  v  to  greet  it.       „         ly  i  5 

Thou  gavest  thy  v  against  me  in  the  Council —  „      iv  ii  77 

till  her  v  Die  with  the  world.  „     iv  iii  75 

I  am  but  a  v  Among  you :  murder,  martyr  me  „        y  i  77 

I  send  my  v  across  the  narrow  seas —  „      v  i  246 
Thou  gavest  thy  v  against  me  in  my  life,  I  give  my  v 

against  thee  from  the  grave —  „      v  i  252 

We  give  our  v  against  thee  out  of  heaven  !  „      v  i  260 

My  battle-axe  against  your  v's.  ,.      v  i  265 

my  V  Ls  harsh  here,  not  in  tune,  Becket,  Pro.  349 

v  of  the  deep  as  it  hollows  the  cliffs  of  the  land.  „             11  i  3 

a  V  coming  up  with  the  v  of  the  deep  from  the  strand,  „             n  i  5 

hand  of  one  To  whom  thy  v  is  all  her  music,  „         n  i  177 

the  v  Of  the  perpetual  brook,  „          ni  i  45 

The  brook's  v  is  not  yours,  and  no  flower,  „          m  i  55 
when  my  v  Is  martyr'd  mute,  and  this  man  disappears,     „      in  iii  349 

Did  not  a  man's  v  ring  along  the  aisle,  „         v  ii  150 

The  King  beyond  the  water,  thro'  our  v's,  „        v  ii  324 

Shall  the  waste  v  of  the  bond-breaking  sea  „         v  ii  358 

Blessings  on  your  pretty  v.  Miss  Dora.  Prom,  of  May  1  64 
arter  she'd  been  a-readin'  me  the  letter  wi'  'er  v 

a-shaakin',  „         n  129 

And  her  charm  Of  f  is  also  yours ;  „         n  381 

I  heard  a  v,  '  Girl,  what  are  you  doing  there  ? '  „        m  375 

Swarm  to  thy  v  like  bees  to^he  brass  pan.  Foresters  i  iii  108 

they  are  so  fond  o'  their  own  v's  „         n  i  383 

Thou  art  her  brother,  and  her  v  is  thine,  „         n  i  479 

In  the  cold  water  that  she  lost  her  v,  „          iv  243 
Void    you  would  make  his  coronation  v  By  cursing  those 

who  crown'd  him.  Becket  v  ii  330 


Volcanic     A  drinker  of  black,  strong,  v  wines,  Qiieen  Mary  v  ii  93 

Volk  (folk)     and  a-makin'  0'  v  madder  and  madder  ;  „      iv  iii  532 

Voltigeur     I  can  recommend  our  V.'  Prom,  of  May  in  311 

Voluntary     that  thou  hast  sworn  a  v  allegiance  to  him  ?       Becket,  Pro.  439 
Vomit    Made  even  the  carrion-nosing  mongrel  v  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  449 

Vor  (for)    it  be  a  var  waay  v  my  owld  legs  up  vro'  Islip.  „  iv  iii  472 

the  burnin'  o'  the  owld  archbishop  '11  burn  the 

Pwoap  out  0'  this  'ere  land  v  iver  and  iver.  „  iv  iii  536 

Vor't  (for  it)     but  tek  thou  my  word  v,  Joan, —  „  iv  iii  533' 

Vouch    Who  shall  v  for  his  to-morrows  ?    One  word  further.  Becket  in  iii  300 
Vouchsafe     V  a  gracious  answer  to  your  Queen  ?  „       iv  ii  359 

Vour  (four)     and  so  they  bided  on  and  on  till  v  0'  the 

clock,  "  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  510 

Vow  (s)     to  swear  V's  that  he  dare  not  break.  Harold  a  ii  77 

for  he  Who  vows  a  «  to  strangle  his  own  mother  „     in  i  229 

He  did  not  mean  to  keep  his  v.  .,     in  i  248, 

to  see  my  solemn  v  Accomplish'd.  „     m  i  307 

that  blighted  v  Which  God  avenged  to-day.  „      v  ii  156 

That  kings  are  faithful  to  their  marriage  v.  Becket  i  ii  78  1 

I  bound  myself,  and  by  a  solemn  v.  The  Falcon  679  i 

but  what  a  v  !  what  a  v  !  Foresters  i  i  294 

For  holy  v's  made  to  the  blessed  Saints  „       i  ii  175 

bounden  by  a  «  not  to  show  his  face,  „       i  ii  236 

Vow  (verb)     Kiss'd  me  well  I  v ;  Queen  Mary  in  v  93 

for  he  Who  v's  a  vow  to  strangle  his  own  mother  Harold  in  i  229 

1 1)  to  build  a  church  to  God  Here  on  the  hill  of  battle ;      „       v  ii  137 

Voyage     Had  you  a  pleasant  v  up  the  river  ?  Queen  Mary  in  ii  5 

Our  v  by  sea  was  all  but  miracle  ;  „  in  ii  25 

Sick  as  an  autumn  swallow  for  a  v,  Harold  i  i  102 

On  my  last  v — but  the  wind  has  fail'd —  The  Cup  11 521 

Vro'  (from)     and  it  be  a  var  waay  vor  my  owld  legs 

up  V  Islip.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  473 

till  his  man  cum  in  post  v  here,  „  iv  iii  511 

Vying    saw  thy  willy-nilly  nun  V  a  tress  against  our  golden 

fern.     Harold.     V  a  tear  with  our  cold  dews,  Harold  \  i  149 


W 


Waage  (wage)     An'  I  thanks  ye  fur  that,  Miss,  moor 

nor  fur  the  w.  Prom,  of  May  in  117 

Waaist  (waist)     'A  cotched  ma  about  the  w,  Miss,  „  in  119 

Waay  (way)     it  be  a  var  w  vor  my  owld  legs  up  vro' 

Islip.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  472 

Eh,  then  ha'  thy  w  wi'  me,  Tib ;  „  iv  iii  486 

I  niver  thowt  0'  mysen  i'  that  w  ;  but  if  she'd 

taake  to  ma  i'  that  w,  or  ony  w.  Prom,  of  May  1 176 

We  laays  out  o'  the  w  fur  gentlefoalk  altogither —  „  i  210 

An'  I  haates  boociks  an'  all,  fur  they  puts  foalk  off  j 

the  owdw'^.  „  1 222    [ 

fell  agean  coalscuttle  and  my  kneea  gev  w  „  i  404 

I  mun  git  out  on  'is  w  now,  or  I  shall  be  the  death 
on  'im.  „  II 609 

Waded     As  if  she  had  w  in  it.  Queen  Mary  in  i  63 

w  in  the  brook,  ran  after  the  butterflies.  Prom,  of  May  in  275 

Wafer     Their  m  and  perpetual  sacrifice :  Queen  Mary  i  ii  45 

Waged     Thou  hast  w  God's  war  against  the  King ;  Becket  v  ii  46 

Wages     (See  also  Waage)    if  the  farming-men  be  come 

for  their  w,  to  send  them  up  to  me.  Prom,  of  May  in  16 

but  the  schoolmaster  looked  to  the  paying  you 

your  w  when  I  was  away,  „  in  24 

spent  all  your  last  Saturday's  w  at  the  ale-house ;  „  in  78 

Why  should  I  pay  you  your  full  w?  „  in  83 

there  are  your  w ;  the  next  time  you  waste  „  ni  98 

Wagon     Like  a  tod  of  wool  from  w  into  warehouse.  Foresters  iv  274 

Wail  (s)     our  sea-mew  Winging  their  only  w  !  Harold  n  i  98 

better  death  With  our  first  w  than  life —  Prom,  of  May  11  291 

— ^how  she  made  her  w  as  for  the  dead  !  „  in  698 

and  make  a  ghostly  w  ever  and  anon  to  scare  'em.        Foresters  11  i  216 

Wall  (verb)     Is  this  a  place  To  w  in.  Madam  ?  Queen  Mary  v  i  213 

thou  wilt  have  To  w  for  it  like  Peter.  Harold  m  i  285 

dooms  thee  after  death  To  w  in  deathless  flame.  Becket  rv  ii  272 


Wailing 


111? 


Wane 


Wailing    helpless  folk  Are  wash'd  away,  w,  in  their  own 

blood —  Harold  ii  ii  471 

W  !  not  warring  ?     Boy,  thou  hast  forgotten  „       ii  ii  473 
her  poor  spaniel  w  for  her.                                           Prom,  of  May  ii  473 

Waist    (See  also  Waaist)     three  yards  about  the  w  is  like 

to  remain  a  virgin,  Foresters  i  ii  69 

He  caught  her  round  the  w,  „       ii  i  116 

And  coil'd  himself  about  her  sacred  w.  „       ii  i  139 

I  will  take  the  rope  from  off  thy  w  „        iv  687 

Waistcoat    I  doant  believe  he's  iver  a  'eart  under  his  w.  Prom,  of  May  1 130 

Wait    Who  w's,  sir  ?     Usher.    Madam,  the  Lord 

Chancellor.  Queen  Mary  i  v  95 

Who  w's  ?     Usher.    The  Ambassador  from  France,  „        i  v  238 

Who  w's  ?     Usher.     The  Ambassador  of  Spain,  „         i  v  341 
Your  Lordship  may  not  have  so  long  to  w.    Remove  him  !   „      ii  iv  107 

Lord  Paget  W's  to  present  our  Council  to  the  Legate.  „       iii  ii  98 

And  w  my  coming  back.  „     iii  vi  219 

Madam,  the  Count  de  Feria  w's  without,  „       v  ii  400 

W  he  must — Her  trance  again.  „       v  ii  402 

W's  till  the  man  let  go.  Harold  i  i  329 

Stand  there  and  w  my  will.  „     ii  ii  683 

Then  our  great  Council  w  to  crown  thee  King —  „        in  i  3 

And  our  great  Council  w  to  crown  thee  King.  „    iii  i  406 

knights  Sit,  each  a  statue  on  his  horse,  and  w.  „      v  i  525 

the  business  Of  thy  whole  kingdom  w's  me :  Becket,  Pro.  278 

We  w  but  the  King's  word  to  strike  thee  dead.  „        i  iii  166 

'  Should  not  an  earl's  son  w  on  a  king's  son  ? '  „      m  iii  152 

w  Till  his  nose  rises;  he  will  be  very  king.  „        v  ii  183 

I  told  them  I  would  w  them  here.  „         v  ii  593 

w's  once  more  Before  the  Temple.  The  Cup  ii  11 

messenger  from  Synorix  who  w's  Before  the  Temple  ?  „        ii  37 

Are  you  so  sure  ?     I  pray  you  w  and  see.  „      ii  107 

He  w'6-  your  answer.  „      ii  137 

I  w  him  his  crown'd  queen.  „      ii  161 


Well,  you  must  w  till  then. 


Foresters  i  ii  223 


I  ii  231 

II  i  102 
11x17 

„  IV 106, 108 

IV  610 

IV  787 

IV  991 

Queen  Mary  i  v  586 

Becket  in  i  14 

Queen  Mary  u  i  108 

III  ii  78 
Prom,  of  May  I  247 

II  511 

ni  483 

Queen  Mary  v  v  203 


Foresters  i  i  228 


You  shall  w  for  mine  till  Sir  Richard  has  paid  the  Abbot, 

thou  art  the  very  woman  who  w's  On  my  dear  Marian. 

I  w  till  Little  John  makes  up  to  me. 

W  and  see.  (repeat) 

Speak  not.     I  w  upon  a  dying  father. 

W  till  he  blow  the  horn. 

Sir  Richard,  let  that  w  till  we  have  dined. 
Waited    Who  brings  that  letter  which  we  w  for — ■ 

child  We  w  for  so  long — heaven's  gift  at  last — 
Waiting  (part.)     All  arm'd,  w  a  leader; 

Who,  w  till  the  time  had  ripen'd, 

like  the  Moslem  beauties  w  To  clasp 

what  full  hands,  may  be  W  you  in  the  distance  ? 

Tell  him,  then,  that  I'm  w  for  him. 
Waiting  (s)     Good  counsel  yours — No  one  in  w  ? 
Wake  (s)     have  loved  Harold  the  Saxon,  or  Hereward 
the  W. 

our  great  Earl,  bravest  English  heart  Since  Hereward 

the  W,  „       II  i  688 

Wake  (verb)     W,  or  the  stout  old  island  will  become      Queen  Mary  ii  i  104 

Edward  w's  ! — Dazed — ^he  hath  seen  a  vision.  Harold  in  i  130 

And  w  with  it,  and  show  it  to  all  the  Saints.    _  Becket  ii  i  303 

on  a  great  occasion  sure  to  w  As  great  a  wrath  in  Becket —  „      iii  i  87 

W  me  before  you  go,  I'll  after  you —  The  Cup  i  ii  447 

And  w  the  Devil,  and  I  may  sicken  by  'em.  Foresters  in  325 

Waked    She  must  be  w.    Harold.     Who  must  be  w  ?     Prom,  of  May  in  658 
Wakened     to  be  w  again  together  by  the  light  of  the 

resurrection. 
Wakening   {See  also  New-wakening,  Wakkenin')    W  such 

brawls  and  loud  disturbances 
Waking     thine  eyelids  into  sleep,  Will  hold  mine  w. 

our  w  thoughts  Suffer  a  stormless  shipwreck  in  the 
pools  Of  sullen  slumber, 
Wakkenin'  (wakening)    but  I  thinks  he  be  w  oop. 
Wales     The  Queen  of  IF  ?     Why,  Morcar, 

had  in  it  W,  Her  floods,  her  woods,  her  hiUs  : 

let  him  flap  The  wings  that  beat  down  W  ! 

thy  victories  Over  our  own  poor  W, 

Have  we  not  broken  W  and  Norseland  ? 

I  was  the  Queen  of  W. 


ni  196 

Becket  v  ii  352 
Harold  i  ii  141 


vi294 

Prom,  of  May  in  413 

Harold  rv  i  152 

IV  i  206 

IV  1247 

IV  iii  27 

vi395 

vii95 


Walhalla    for  better,  Woden,  all  Our  cancell'd  warrior- 
gods,  our  grim  W,  Eternal  war,  Harold  in  ii  74 

Walk  (s)     and  the  w's  Where  I  could  move  at  pleasure,  Becket  i  i  265 

that  dreadful  night !  that  lonely  w  to  Little- 

chester.  Prom,  of  May  m  36& 

He  was  the  cock  o'  the  w ;  Foresters  ii  i  320 

all  these  w's  are  Robin  Hood's  And  sometimes  perilous.      „         iv  119 

Walk  (verb)     And  when  I  w  abroad,  the  populace.  Queen  Mary  i  v  148 

And  if  I  w  within  the  lonely  wood,  Harold  n  ii  246 

we  are  Danes,  Who  conquer'd  what  we  w  on,  „         iv  i  38 

If  you  will  w  with  me  we  needs  must  meet  The  Cup  i  iii  91 

I  pray  you  lift  me  And  make  me  w  awhile.  „  n  473 

should  w  hand  in  hand  together  down  this  valley 

of  tears.  Prom,  of  May  in  191 

Walk'd     He  pass'd  out  smiling,  and  he  w  upright ;      Queen  Mary  iv  iii  302 
as  he  w  the  Spanish  friars  Still  plied  him  „  iv  iii  576 

But  w  our  Norman  field,  Harold  n  ii  173 

Upon  the  heads  of  those  who  w  within — -  „       n  ii  393 

W  at  night  on  the  misty  heather ;  „         m  ii  5 

I  have  heard  these  poisons  May  be  w  down.  The  Cup  n  475 

As  Wealth  w  in  at  the  door.  Foresters  i  i  151 

Walkest     And  w  here  Unarmour'd  ?  „         iv  118 

Walking    {See  also  A-walkin')     I  was  w  with  the  man 

I  loved.  Q^een  Mary  v  v  88 

he's  w  to  us,  and  with  a  book  in  his  hand.  Prom,  of  May  i  219 

Stole  on  her,  she  was  w  in  the  garden.  Foresters  n  i  112 

Wall    {See  also  S^eld-wall)    And  carve  my  coat  upon 

the  w's  again  !  Queen  Mary  11  iv  110 

when  the  thief  is  ev'n  within  the  w's,  „         m  iv  312 

moonlight  casements  pattern'd  on  the  w,  »  v  v  10 

The  w's  oppress  me.  And  yon  huge  keep  Harold  11  ii  226 

town  Hung  out  raw  hides  along  their  w's,  „       n  ii  383 

shackles  that  will  bind  nie  to  the  w.  „       11  ii  411 

cherubim  With  twenty-cubit  wings  from  w  to  w —  „       in  i  184 

our  shield  w — W — break  it  not — break  not —  „        v  i  232 

make  their  w  of  shields  Firm  as  thy  cliffs,  „        v  i  479 

Hot-headed  fools — -to  burst  the  w  of  shields  !  „        v  i  613 

They  say  that  w's  have  ears ;  Becket  iv  ii  79 

Battering  the  doors,  and  breaking  thro'  the  w's  ?  „      v  ii  627 

and  the  w's  sa  thin,  and  the  winders  brokken,         Prom,  of  May  in  72 

Wallow     Dehght  to  w  in  the  grossness  of  it,  Becket  11  ii  343 

Walnut     w,  apricot.  Vine,  cypress,  poplar,  myrtle,  The  Cup  i  i  2 

Walter  (Lea,  son  of  Sir  Richard  Lea)    {See  also  Walter  Lea) 

No  news  of  young  W  ?  Foresters  i  i  73 

for  the  ransom  of  my  son  W —  „      i  i  265 

Young  W,  nay,  I  pray  thee,  stay  a  moment.  „    n  i  472 

to  dream  that  he  My  brother,  my  dear  W —  „    n  i  652 

O  W,  W,  is  it  thou  indeed  Whose  ransom  was  our  ruin,  „    iv  1005 

Walter  Lea    I  ask  you  all,  did  none  of  you  love  young  W  L?      „       i  i  55 
My  masters,  welcome  gallant  W  L.  „    iv  1002 

W  L,  Give  me  that  hand  which  fought  for  Richard  „    iv  1028 

Walter  Map     {See  also  Map)     But  bear  with  W  M,  Becket  11  ii  307 

Non  defensoribus  istis,  W  M.  „      n  ii  346 

There  is  the  King  talking  with  W  M?  „     in  iii  22 

That's  a  delicate  Latin  lay  Of  W  M:  „        v  i  193 

Waltham     W,  my  foundation  For  men  who  serve  the 

neighbour,  Harold  v  i  97 

the  Holy  Rood  That  bow'd  to  me  at  W —  „     v  i  383 

No,  daughter,  but  the  canons  out  of  W,  „     v  i  475 

Walworth     And  he  will  play  the  W  to  this  Wat ;  Queen  Mary  11  ii  370 

Wan    The  w  boy-king,  with  his  fast-fading  eyes  Fixt 

hard  on  mine,  „  i  ii  30 

How  w,  poor  lad  !  how  sick  and  sad  for  home  !  Harold  11  ii  325 

thou  art  Harold,  I  am  Edith  !     Look  not  thus  w  !  „        v  i  393 

Like  the  w  twilight  after  sunset,  crept  Up  even  to  the 

tonsure,  Becket  i  iii  326 

Wander    doth  not  kill  The  sheep  that  w  from  his 

flock.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  103 

Who  w  famine-wasted  thro'  the  world.  Becket  ni  iii  188 

Wander'd    so  long  Have  w  among  women, —  „         n  i  154 

Wandering  (adj.  and  part.)    1  found  this  white  doe  w 

through  the  wood,  Foresters  n  i  96 

As  Canterbury  calls  them,  w  clouds,  Becket  1  iii  70 

Wandering  (s)    prosper  all  thy  w  out  And  homeward.  Harold  i  i  265 

Wane    light  of  this  new  learning  w.'s  and  dies :  Queen  Mary  m  ii  172 


Waning 

Waning    and  make  Our  w  Eleanor  all  but  love  me ! 

Wanstead    she  met  the  Queen  at  W 

Want  (s)    Yet  too  much  mercy  is  a  w  of  mercy, 

This  coarseness  is  a  w  of  phantasy. 

Thine  absence  well  may  seem  a  to  of  care. 

That  suffers  in  the  daily  w  of  thee, 

daQv  w  supplied— The  daily  pleasure  to  supply  it. 


1118 


Warrior 


Becket  ii  ii  458 

Queen  Mary  i  i  77 

I  V  506 

V  ii  438 

Harold  i  i  322 

„    II  ii  275 

Becket  ii  ii  301 


War  (continued)    Eternal  w,  than  that  the  Saints  at  peace    Harold  m  ii  75 


Yet^fthro^anyi^    HaroU.     Of  this  rehgion  ?  Pro;«.  o/ ilfay  1 1  540 

ever  have  happen'd  thro'  the  w  Of  any  or  aU  of  them.  „             in  &47 

n  thro'  the  w  of  any— I  mean  the  true  one—  ,.             "i  9^ 

who  never  hast  felt  a  w,  to  whom  all  things.  Foresters!    208 

and  their  own  w  Of  manhood  to  their  leader !  ,,       "  i  owo 

Want  (verb)    his  manners  w  the  nap  And  gloss  of  ^^  ^  ^^ 

court ;                                                                      ^  ^  .     97a 

vou  w  the  sun  That  shines  at  court;  .  ..  lu  v  -s lo 
I  w  his  voice  in  England  for  the  crown,  I  w  thy  voice 

with  him  to  bring  him  round ;  £X,  x  L  221 

and  I  w  to  bite,  I  w  to  bite,  -S^cfe*  i  iv  221 

shall  see  the  silk  here  and  there,  and  I  w  my  supper.  „  iv  1  &  / 
Do  you  «,  them  back  again?                           ,            ^'■'"^- "^ ^''^,t  922 

Owd  Steer's  gotten  all  his  grass  down  and  w's  a  hand,         „  "  ^^^^ 

Miss  Dora,  mea  and  my  maates,  us  three,  we  w  s  to  r  t  12'S 

hev  three  words  wi' ye.                 ,    ,x_     ,•  "        tIt1^7 

all  on  us,  wi'  your  leave,  we  w's  to  leather  im.  „        m  ^^ ' 

and  he  w's  to  speak  to  ye  partic'lar.  "        ™  ^^^ 

says  he  w's  to  tell  ye  summut  very  partic  lar.  „        m  ^^o 

an  w's  To  hev  a  word  wi'  ye  about  the  marriage.  ,,      /"  /^^ 

Wanted    I  am  sure  Her  morning  w  sunlight,  ,r     ^xfiVils 

Wanting     F  the  Papal  mitre.  ..  Q«ee«  Mary  m  iv  148 

not  be  w  Those  that  will  urge  her  injury-  ,,          mji  110 

My  palace  w  you  was  but  a  cottage ;  ^  m       t^  ^^fi 

Wanton  (adi.)     A W  -  Ufe  indeed..  ^"'-^^SrJvS 

No  ribald  John  is  Love,  no  «  Prince,  r!X/t  ii  Q 

Wanton  (s)    With  a  «  in  thy  lodging-Hell  requite  'em !  Becket  lu^ 

I  would  move  this  w  from  his  sight  "      ••  ■, {^ 

And  thou  thyself  a  proven  w  ?                .  » ^J "  ^|" 

Lest  thou  shouldst  play  the  w  there  again.  v  J  1  ^^^ 

This  to  here.     De  Morville,  Hold  her  away.  "  vm  la 

Wantonness    high  Heaven  guard  thee  from  his  w,  Foresters  i  u  HI 

War    and  at  w  with  him,  your  Grace  And  kmgdom 

will  be  suck'd  into  the  w,  Qv^^  -^«n/ 1  ^  255 

must  we  levy  w  against  the  Queen's  Grace ^? 
WyoLt.    No,  my  friend ;  wfor  the  Queen  s 

Grace— to  save  her  from  herself  and  Phihp           -  ^  .  ^^^ 

— w  against  Spain.             .     ^  ^     •    i  "           it  i  196 

the  world  is  with  us— w  against  Spam !  -           "  »  J-^o 

not  mix  us  any  way  With  his  French  w  s—  »         ""Un 

The  civil  w's  are  gone  for  evermore :  .-        "^ J^  xou 

Not  so  well  holpen  in  our  w's  with  France,  »       ni  vi  lee 

If  w  should  fall  between  yourself  and  France ;  ,.               via 

came  to  sue  Your  Council  and  yourself  to  declare  ^  .  _^^  ^^^ 

w.  (repeat)                                .  ,   ,-,  "          -o- 1  1 91 

soon  or  late  you  must  have  w  with  France ;  >.          v  1  ±^x 

You  make  your  w's  upon  him  down  m  Italy: —  ..          *  |  :^*^ 

Who  deems  it  a  most  just  and  holy  w.  ..  v  1  j.4( 
Alas !  the  Council  will  not  hear  of  w.    They  say 

your  w's  are  not  the  w's  of  England.  »          1 !  9ft9 

There  wOl  be  w  with  France,  at  last,  my  liege ;  „          v  1  ^o^ 

the  Council  (I  have  talk'd  with  some  already)  are  ^  .  ^^^ 

for  W.  "            V  ii  "lY 

He  cannot  dream  that  I  advised  the  w ; 

We  have  made  w  upon  the  Holy  Father  All  for  ^  ..  ^^ 

your  sake:                            .          .,   „  "         ,ri,qiq 

You  did  but  help  King  Philip's  w  with  France,  ,.         ^^^^i% 

Dear  Madam,  Philip  is  but  at  the  w  s  ;  »           v  v  ^fi 

And  all  his  w's  and  wisdoms  past  away ;  ..        ^\  ^ 

JF,  my  dear  lady!                ^    ^           ,^     ,     ^0  '^''"'' i  i  li 

W  there,  my  son  ?  is  that  the  doom  of  England  ?  „     1 1 1^4 

W  ?  the  worst  that  follows  Things  that  seem  ..       •  i  lo 

religious  fool.  Who,  seeing  w  in  heaven,  >•    J  J  ifg 

Ay,  ay  and  wise  in  peace  and  great  in  10 —  ••    J  >  '^t^ 

W,  my  dear  lady,  W,  waste,  plague,  "    ]\^^ 

brought  Thy  w  with  Brittany  to  a  goodher  close  ..    M."  *^ 

We  seldom  take  man's  life,  except  in  w ;  »  "  H  °"q 

dash  The  torch  of  w  among  your  standing  com,  ..  n  11  /4» 


Free  thee  or  slay  thee,  Norway  will  have  w ; 

save  for  Norway,  Who  loves  not  thee  but  w. 

My  legacy  of  w  against  the  Pope 

Whose  life  was  all  one  battle,  incarnate  w, 

I  led  seven  hundred  knights  and  fought  his  w's. 

You  will  have  w ;  and  tho'  we  grant 

Like  some  wise  prince  of  this  world  froni  his  w  s, 

Thou  hast  waged  God's  w  against  the  King ; 

Rome  Made  w  upon  the  peoples  not  the  Gods. 

you.  Can  you  make  w  ?     Have  you  alliances  ? 

submit  at  once  Is  better  than  a  wholly-hopeless  w, 

Whereas  in  w's  of  freedom  and  defence 

When  I  was  married  you  were  at  the  w's. 

It  may  be  I  had  never  seen  the  w's. 

flung  His  life,  heart,  soul  into  those  holy  w  s 

Heading  the  holy  w  against  the  Moslem, 


IV  ii  19 

IV  ii  24 

V  i  328 
V  i  398 

Becket  i  iii  639 

„      n  ii  241 

„         V  ii  14 

„        V  ii  46 

The  Cup  I  ii  60 

I  ii  99 

I  ii  141 

I  ii  160 

The  Falcon  376 

379 

Foresters  iv  407 

IV  818 


fighting  underhand  unholy  w's  Against  your  lawful  king.     ,,        iv  821 


War-axe    Mark'd  how  the  w-a  swang. 

Warble     And  w  those  brief -sighted  eyes  of  hers  ? 

Warblest    '  0  happy  lark,  that  w  high 

War-club     wields  His  w-c,  dashes  it  on  Gurth, 

War-crash    a  w-c,  and  so  hard.  So  loud,  that, 

War-cry    I  do  not  hear  our  English  w-c. 

Ward    lest  the  king  Should  yield  his  w  to  Harold  s  will 

Warden    When  thou  thereof  wast  w. 

Warder    The  w  of  the  bower  hath  given  hunself 

Where's  the  w  ?     Geoffrey.     Very  bad. 
Warehouse    Like  a  tod  of  wool  from  wagon  into  w. 
War-hom    Heard  how  the  w-h  sang. 


Harold  iv  iii  156 

Qv^en  Mary  in  vi  155 

Prom,  of  May  ni  199 

Harold  v  i  640 

„  IV  iii  144 

„      V  i  652 

„      I  ii  159 

Becket  i  iii  630 

in  130 

IV  i  49 

Foresters  rv  275 

Harold  iv  iii  157 


Warm  (adj.)     know  that  whether  A  wind  be  w  or  cold,  Queen  Mary  i  v  620 


vi22 

V  ii  24 

V  ii  607 

Becket  i  iv  64 


That  might  live  always  in  the  sun's  w  heart, 

Philip  is  as  w  in  life  As  ever.  _ 

I  would  we  had  you.  Madam,  in  our  w  Spam. 

Cold  after  w,  winter  after  summer, 

old  faces  Press  round  us,  and  w  hands  close  with  w 

bands,  ^,   ,     ,    .,.     ,, 

so  she  glided  up  into  the  heart  0'  the  bottle,  the  w 

wine,  .  . 

Warm  (verb)    King  Henry  w's  your  traitors  at  his 
hearth. 
To  w  the  cold  bounds  of  our  dying  life 
And  let  them  w  thy  heart  to  Little  John. 
Warmed    He  w  to  you  to-day,  and  you  have  chilled  him 

again. 
Warmth    quenched  the  w  of  France  toward  you^ 
Warn    To  w  us  of  his  coming  ! 
Warning  (part.)    Was  w  me  that  if  a  gentlenian 
Warning  (s)    he  must  die.  For  w  and  example. 
Kind  of  the  witch  to  give  thee  w  thro'. 
The  ghostly  w  of  my  martyrdom ; 
Warpmg    You  see  thro'  w  glasses. 
Warrant    but  then  she  goes,  I  w, 
and  I  w  this  fine  fellow's  life. 
I  w  you.     Cole.    Take,  therefore, 
I  w  you  they  talk  about  the  burning. 
I  w  thee  !  thou  wouldst  hug  thy  Cupid 
We'll  baflle  them,  I  w. 
I  w  you,  or  your  own  either.        , 
So  we  will — so  we  will,  I  w  thee. 
Ay,  and  I  w  the  customs. 
Doth  he  remember  me  ?    Rosamund.     I  w  him 
there  I  w  I  worm  thro'  all  their  windings. 
I  w  you  now,  he  said  he  struck  the  stag. 

White?     I  w  thee,  my  son,  as  the  snow  "     r'^y  '  .  ino 

I  w's  ye'll  think  moor  0'  this  young  Sqmre  Edgar   Prom,  of  May  1 109 
I  w's  that  ye  goas  By  haafe  a  scoor  o'  naames—  ,,         m  ^^» 

I  w  thee— thou  canst  not  be  sorrier  Foresters  i  u  ^81 

Warring    Wailing!  not  w?     Boy,  thou  hast  forgotten         Harold  uu4:li 
Warrior  (adj.)    The  w  Earl  of  Allendale,  He  loved  the  Lady 

Anne  •  oresters  110 

'  Farewe'll,  farewell,  my  w  Earl ! '  i,,  "      ^  ^  qa 

Warrior  (s)     And  I  would  have  my  w  all  in  arms.  Queen  Mary  v  v  d4 

W  thou  art,  and  mighty  wise  withal !  Harold  n  11 543 

Advance  our  Standard  of  the  W,  ..      i'^  ^  '^^^ 


Foresters  i  iii  20 

IV  245 

Queen  Mary  v  i  123 
The  Cup  I  iii  128 
Foresters  in  44 


Becket  11  ii  374 

„       II  ii  311 

Foresters  in  458 

Prom,  of  May  m  578 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  52 

Becket  in  ii  30 

„      V  ii  293 

Queen  Mary  i  v  212 

I  V  464 

n  iii  83 

„  IV  iii  58 

IT  iii  463 

Becket,  Pro.  503 

I  i  29J 

I  iv  2S 

I  iv  26J 

„     III  iii  331 

V  ii  179 

The  Cup  I  i  m 

„      I  ii  381 

The  Falcon  500 


Warrior 


1119 


Way 


Warrior  (s)  {continued)    yet  he  was  a  w,  And  wise,  yea 

truthful,  Harold  v  ii  154 

— a  w — ay,  And  but  that  Holy  Peter  fought  for  us,  „      v  ii  163 

And  all  the  puissance  of  the  w,  Becket  i  i  152 

This  young  w  broke  his  prison  Foresters  iv  998 

Warrior-god    aU  Our  cancelPd  w-g's,  our  grim  WalhaUa,       Harold  in  ii  73 

Warsong    He  is  chanting  some  old  w.  „       v  i  495 

War-storm    If  this  w-s  in  one  of  its  rough  rolls  Wash  up  „       v  i  165 

War-woodman     W-w  of  old  Woden,  how  he  fells  „       v  i  588 

Wary    I  will  be  wise  and  w,  not  the  soldier  As  Foliot  swears 

it.—  Becket  i  i  387 

Brave,  w,  sane  to  the  heart  of  her — a  Tudor  Queen  Mary  v  v  225 

Was     W  it  so  indeed  ?  w  it  so  ?  w  it  so  ?  The  Falcon  541 

Wash     W  up  that  old  crown  of  Northumberland.  Harold  v  i  167 

Till  the  sea  w  her  level  with  her  shores,  „      v  i  331 

Wash'd    as  if  her  feet  were  w  in  blood,  Queen  Mary  iii  i  62 

With  His  own  blood,  and  w  us  from  our  sins,  „       in  iii  203 

w  his  hands  and  all  his  face  therein,  „       iv  iii  338 

our  helpless  folk  Are  w  away,  waiUng,  Harold  ii  ii  471 

the  Archbishop  w  my  feet  o'  Tuesday.  Becket  i  iv  234 

Washerwoman    The  w's  brat !  Harold  iv  iii  171 

Wasp    Out  crept  a  to,  with  half  the  swarm  behind.      Queen  Mary  in  iii  49 

Wassail    The  curse  of  England  !  these  are  drown'd  in  w,    Harold  iv  iii  224 

the  w  yells  of  thief  And  rogue  and  liar  echo  down  in 

HeU,  Foresters  in  322 

Waste  (adj.)     w  field  With  nothing  but  my  battle-axe  and 

him  To  spatter  his  brains !  Harold  n  ii  777 

And  lay  them  both  upon  the  w  sea-shore  At  Hastings,        „      v  ii  159 
never  again  Shall  the  w  voice  of  the  bond-breaking  sea    Becket  v  ii  358 
Waste  (s)     thou  be  a  wild  thing  Out  of  the  w,  Harold  i  i  381 

War,  w,  plague,  famine,  all  malignities.  „       i  i  466 

This  brother  comes  to  save  Your  land  from  w;  „      iv  i  95 

Moon  on  the  w  and  the  wold.  The  Cup  i  ii  4 

and  leave  it  A  w  of  rock  and  ruin,  hear.  „      ii  307 

Waste  (verb)     And  w's  more  life.  Queen  Mary  i  v  507 

Thou  art  Tostig's  brother,  Who  w's  the  land.  Harold  iv  i  93 

And  w  the  land  about  thee  as  thou  goest,  „      v  i  130 

should  the  King  of  England  w  the  fields  Of  England,  „      v  i  140 

W  not  thy  might  before  the  battle  !  „      v  i  415 

if  a  man  W's  himself  among  women,  Becket,  Pro.  137 

But  wherefore  w  your  heart  In  looking  Prom,  of  May  u  503 

next  time  you  w  them  at  a  pot-house  you  get  no 

more  from  me.  „  m  99 

Than  this,  this — but  I  to  no  words  upon  him :  „  in  745 

how  to  charm  and  w  the  hearts  of  men.  Foresters  n  i  502 

Richard  sacks  and  w's  a  town  With  random  pillage,  „  iv  376 

Wasted    {See  also  Famine-wasted)    Your  havings  w  by 

the  scythe  and  spade —  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  276 

Hath  w  all  the  land  at  Pevensey —  Harold  iv  iii  189 

wells  of  Castaly  are  not  w  upon  the  desert.  Becket,  Pro.  388 

Shall  God's  good  gifts  be  w  ?  „         i.ij  71 

W  our  diocese,  outraged  our  tenants,  „       v  ii  431 

I  have  w  pity  on  her — not  dead  now —       _  Prom,  of  May  m  691 

w  his  revenues  in  the  service  of  our  good  king 

Richard  Foresters  i  i  193 

Wasteful    look,  how  w  of  the  blossom  you  are  !  Prom,  of  May  i  612 

Wat    And  he  will  play  the  Walworth  to  this  W ;  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  371 

Watch  (verb)    and  w  The  parch'd  banks  rolling  incense,    QMen  Mary  i  v  90 

Like  dogs  that  set  to  w  their  master's  gate,  „      ni  iv  309 

I  must  not  dream,  not  wink,  but  w.  „      m  v  154 

w  All  that  is  gracious  in  the  breath  of  heaven  „      in  vi  223 

And  w  a  good  man  burn.  „     iv  iii  293 

belike  he  w'es,  If  this  war-storm  in  one  of  its  rough  rolls  Harold  v  i  164 

And  w  Fitzurse,  and  if  he  follow  thee,  Becket  i  i  330 

I  sometimes  think  he  sleeps  When  he  should  w;  »      in  i  34 

W  !  he  will  out  again,  and  presently,  „      ni  ii  8 

climb  The  mountain  opposite  and  w  the  chase.  The  Cup  i  i  117 

I'll  w  him  from  behind  the  trees.  Foresters  in  48 

Watch  (vigil)    {See  also  Death-watch)    arm'd  men  Ever 

keep  w  beside  my  chamber  door,  Harold  n  ii  245 

We  all  keep  w.  .  Foresters  iv  608 

Watch  (watcbman)    you  curse  so  loud,  The  w  will  hear 

you.  Queen  Mary  v  iv  63 

Watch'd    So  hated  here !     I  w  a  hive  of  late ;  Queen  Mary  in  iii  46 

W  children  playing  at  their  life  to  be,  ,,  in  iv  63 


Watch'd  {continued)     I  w  you  dancing  once  With  your 

huge  father;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  143 

in  Guernsey,  I  w  a  woman  burn ;  „            v  iv  18 

Why  am  I  follow'd,  hauated,  harass'd,  w  ?  Harold  ii  ii  249 

He  w  her  pass  with  John  of  Salisbury  Becket  i  ii  40 

We  have  w  So  long  in  vain,  he  hath  pass'd  out  again,  „    in  ii  11 

and  I  w  her  and  followed  her  into  the  woods,  „     iv  ii  16 
Watchin'    When  ye  thowt  there  were  nawbody  w  o' 

you,  Prom,  of  May  n  180 
Watchmg    {See  also  Watchin')    ever  see  a  carrion 

crow  Stand  w  a  sick  beast  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  7 

but  smile  As  kindness,  w  all,  Harold  i  i  367 

I  have  had  a  weary  day  in  w  you.  The  Cup  i  ii  40 

He  dozes.     I  have  left  her  w  him.  Foresters  ii  ii  81 

Water    lead  The  living  w's  of  the  Faith  again  Queen  Mary  i  v  88 
Council,  The  Parliament  as  well,  are  troubled  w's ; 

And  yet  like  w's  „         u  ii  51 

Scream'd  as  you  did  for  w.  „        ni  v  58 

And  putrid  w,  every  drop  a  worm,  „      iv  iii  444 

Pour  not  w  In  the  full  vessel  Harold  i  i  377 

tho'  I  can  drink  wine  I  cannot  bide  w,  Becket  i  iv  220 

keep  the  figure  moist  and  make  it  hold  w,  „    in  iii  166 

we  bring  a  message  from  the  King  Beyond  the  w;  „      v  ii  303 

The  King  beyond  the  w,  thro'  our  voices,  „       v  ii  323 

To  your  young  King  on  this  side  of  the  w,  „       v  ii  327 

has  promised  to  keep  our  heads  above  w ;  Prom,  of  May  m  170 

More  M  goes  by  the  mill  than  the  miller  wots  of,  Foresters  i  ii  48 

In  the  cold  w  that  she  lost  her  voice,  „        iv  243 

Were  plunged  beneath  the  w's  of  the  sea,  „        iv  668 

Waterfall    You  know  the  w  That  in  the  summer  The  Cup  i  i  107 

Waterside    I  will  go  with  you  to  the  w.  Queen  Mary  in  ii  148 

Wattled    And  w  thick  with  ash  and  willow-wands ;  Harold  v  i  190 

Wave    or  w  And  wind  at  their  old  battle :  Queen  Mary  i  v  356 

God  lay  the  w's  and  strow  the  storms  „           i  v  381 

torn  Down  the  strong  w  of  brawlers.  „         mi  186 

AU  your  voices  Are  w's  on  flint.  „          rv  i  122 

shatter'd  back  The  hugest  w  from  Norseland  Harold  iv  iii  62 

child's  sand-castle  on  the  beach  For  the  next  w —  The  Cup  i  ii  255 

heard  a  saying  in  Egypt,  that  ambition  Is  like  the  sea  w,      „       i  iii  138 

to  the  w,  to  the  glebe,  to  the  fire !  „              n  4 

In  this  full  tide  of  love,  W  heralds  w :  Foresters  iv  1044 

Waver'd    The  Pope  himself  w ;  Queen  Mary  iv  i  85 

Waverer    makes  the  w  pass  Into  more  settled  hatred  „      in  iv  157 

Wavering    When  faith  is  w  makes  the  waverer  pass  ,,       m  iv  157 

Waxen    some  w  doll  Thy  baby  eyes  have  rested  on, 

belike ;  „               i  v  8 

Who  melts  a  w  image  by  the  fire,  Foresters  u  i  671 
Way    {See  also  Half-way,  Waay)    Skips  every  w,  from 

levity  or  from  fear.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  170 

He  is  every  w  a  lesser  man  than  Charles ;  „            i  v  330 

Your  Highness  is  all  trembling.     Mary.    Make  w.  „            i  v  595 

and  I  fear  One  scruple,  this  or  that  w,  „           n  ii  100 

But  Janus-faces  looking  diverse  w's.  „           m  ii  75 

If  any  man  in  any  w  would  be  The  one  man,  „        in  iii  274 

No — nor  this  w  will  come.  Seeing  their  lie  two  w's  „        ni  iv  111 

Thou's  thy  w  wi'  man  and  beast,  Tib.  „        iv  iii  498 

bound  and  babble  all  the  w  As  if  itself  were  happy.         „  v  v  86 

is  not  this  the  w  ?    No,  that  w  there  are  voices.  „           v  v  206 

God  guide  me  lest  I  lose  the  w.  „           v  v  210 

That  he  should  harp  this  w  on  Normandy  ?  Harold  i  i  270 

I  see  the  goal  and  half  the  w  to  it. —  „     i  ii  196 

Smooth  thou  my  w,  before  he  clash  with  me ;  „      n  ii  69 

I'll  tell  them  I  have  had  my  w  with  thee.  „    n  ii  119 

Which  w  soever  the  vane-arrow  swing,  „    n  ii  257 

I'll  hack  my  w  to  the  sea.  „    ii  ii  312 

And,  brother,  we  will  find  a  w,'  said  he —  „    n  ii  367 

but  thou  must  not  this  w  answer  him.  „    n  ii  371 

Lost,  lost,  we  have  lost  the  w.  „    m  ii  15 

Who  is  it  comes  this  w  ?    Tostig  ?  „       iv  ii  1 

the  counter  w — Cowl,  helm ;  and  crozier,  „     v  i  443 

until  I  find  Which  w  the  battle  balance.  „     v  i  461 

That  was  not  the  w  I  ended  it  first —  Becket,  Pro.  335 

Thou  canst  not  fall  that  w.  „          i  i  115 

Take  it  not  that  w — balk  not  the  Pope's  wilL  „        i  iii  242 

spied  my  people's  w's ;  „        i  iii  364 


Way 


1120 


Wed 


Way  (continued)    like  a  fool,  thou  knowest  no  middle  w. 
I  ask'd  the  w.    Rosamund.    I  think  so. 
the  goodly  w  of  women  Who  love, 
daughter  of  Zion  lies  beside  the  w — 
Well,  well,  then — have  thy  w  ! 
If  Gotl  would  take  him  in  some  sudden  w — 
That  w,  or  this  !     Save  thyself  either  w.     Becket.    Oh, 

no,  not  either  w,  nor  any  w  Save  by  that  w 
Slowly  but  surely — till  I  see  my  w. 
Thou — coming  my  w  too— Camma  —  good-night. 

Comma.     Thy  w  ?  poor  worm,  crawl  down  thine 

own  black  hole 
No,  not  that  w — here,  under  the  apple  tree 
yet  that  might  be  The  best  w  out  of  it, 
Is  there  no  other  w  ? 
the  rain  beating  in  my  face  all  the  w, 
I  was  dreaming  of  it  all  the  w  hither. 
Dream  of  it,  then,  all  the  w  back, 
Glide  like  a  light  across  these  woodland  w's  ! 
Did  we  not  hear  the  two  would  pass  this  w  ? 
only  they  that  be  bred  in  it  can  find  their  w  a-nights  in  it 
forest  lawns  are  all  as  bright  As  w's  to  heaven, 
Have  ye  glanced  down  thro'  all  the  forest  w's 
So  now  which  w  to  the  dinner  ? 
Wayside    Yes,  at  the  w  inn  Close  by  that  alder-island 


Becket  i  iii  533 
II 162 
II  i  256 
m  iii  178 
III  iii  215 
vi94 

„  V  iii  84 

The  Cup  I  i  211 


II  492 

From,  of  May  i  82 

I  476 

I  691 

III  368 
Foresters  i  i  139 

I  i  140 
II  i  160 
II  i  198 
II  i  265 
II  i  632 

IV  111 
IV  972 


From,  of  May  n  534 


Queen  Mary  in  iv  340 

m  V  121 

v  i  292 

V  ii  286 

V  V  131 
Foresters  ii  i  690 

Harold  v  i  106 

„       V  i  648 

Queen  Mary  iii  i  130 

The  Falcon  832 


in  your  brook. 

Weak     But  a  w  mouth,  an  indeterminate — ha  ? 
Bonner.     Well,  a  w  mouth,  perchance, 
what  is  w  must  lie ; 
other  things  As  idle ;  a  w  Wyatt ! 
Send  out ;  1  am  too  w  to  stir  abroad : 
Ah,  w  and  meek  old  man, 
W  natures  that  impute  Themselves  to  their  unlikes, 

Weaken'd    whether  that  which  held  it  Had  w, 
let  not  my  strong  prayer  Be  w  in  thy  sight, 

Weaker  You  would  but  make  us  w,  Thomas  Stafford, 
so  much  w,  so  much  worse  For  last  day's  journey, 
where  the  man  and  the  woman,  only  differing  as 

the  stronger  and  the  w.  From,  of  May  iii  191 

Weakness     was  it  boldness  Or  w  that  won  there  ?  Queen  Mary  i  v  560 

The  w  and  the  dissonance  of  our  clans.  The  Cup  i  i  23 

Weal     foes  in  Edward's  hall  To  league  against  thy  w.  Harold  i  ii  33 

You  scheme  against  her  father's  w  and  hers,  Foresters  iv  481 

Wealth    {See  also  World-wealth)     He  wrecks  his  health 

and  w  on  courtesans,  Q^een  Mary  i  v  167 

Which  in  his  absence  had  been  all  my  w.  „  i  v  362 

But  for  the  w  and  glory  of  our  realm,  „  ii  ii  210 

his  w  A  foimtain  of  perennial  alms —  „  ii  ii  384 

to  those  that  own  exceeding  w,  „         iv  iii  201 

The  wine  and  w  of  all  our  France  are  yours ;  Becket  ii  ii  446 

Foam  over  all  the  fleeted  w  of  kings  The  Cup  n  289 

Than  all  my  childless  w,  if  mine  must  die.  The  Falcon  855 

I  have  land  now  And  w,  and  lay  both  at  your  feet.    Prom,  of  May  iii  616 
not  with  all  your  w,  Your  land,  your  life !  „  in  795 

As  W  walk'd  in  at  the  door.    '  You  have  come  for  you 

saw  W  coming,'  Foresters  i  i  151 

W  dropt  out  of  the  window,  „        i  i  156 

'  Well  now  you  would  fain  follow  W,'  „        i  i  158 

What  a  w  of  words— O  Lord,  I  wUl  live  „         i  ii  36 

Wealthy    all  the  magistracy,  all  the  nobles,  and  all 

the  w  ;  Qu^en  Mary  v  iv  51 

Wean     I  put  the  bitters  on  my  breast  to  w  him,  The  Falcon  190 

Wean'd    She  hath  w  me  from  it  with  such  bitterness.  Harold  iv  ii  27 

We&nt  (will  not)     Well,  it  be  i'  my  natur  to  knock  'im 

o'  the  'ead  now ;  but  I  w.  From,  of  May  i  289 

but  I  promised  one  of  the  Misses  I  wouldn't  meddle 

wi'  ye,  and  I  w. 
an'  w  ye  taake  'em  now.  Miss  Dora, 
But  I  w  be  too  sudden  wi'  it ; 
W  ye  gi'e  me  a  kind  answer  at  last  ? 
but  that  be  all  along  o'  you,  Miss,  because  ye  w  hev  me ; 
and  she  w  sa  much  as  look  at  'im  ? 
I  w  goa  to  owd  Dobson ; 

tlien,  by-and-by,  if  she  w  listen  to  me  when  I  be 
a-tryin'  to  saave  'er — if  she  w — 


I  470 
n40 

II  58 
n63 

II 110 
II 161 
n218 

11693 


Weant  (will  not)  (continued)    An'  we  w  mention 

naw  naames.  Prom,  of  May  m  129 

Weapon    What  w  hath  the  child,  save  his  soft  tongue,  Queen  Mary  in  v  128 

I  had  wish'd  for  any  w.  Harold  iv  iii  19 

Wear     (See  also  Wear)     I  w  it  then  to  spite  her.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  78 

I  w  beneath  my  dress  A  shirt  of  mail :  „           i  v  144 

Ev'n  that  young  girl  who  dared  to  w  your  crown  ?  ,,           i  v  491 

M  it  as  memorial  of  a  morning  Which  foimd  me  „          i  v  529 

I  w  Upon  this  finger),  ye  did  promise  full  Allegiance  „         ii  ii  167 

wilt  thou  w  thy  cap  before  the  Queen  ?  ,,         iii  i  236 

And  w  my  crown,  and  dance  upon  my  grave.  „          v  ii  601 

I  dare  not  w  it.  Harold  in  ii  187 

The  ring  thou  darest  not  w,  „          v  i  421 

Take  it  and  w  it  on  that  hard  heart  of  yours  Becket,  Pro.  373 

The  Mitre  !     Salisbury.     Will  you  w  it  ? —  „         v  ii  617 

She  will  be  glad  at  last  to  w  my  crown.  The  Cup  i  iii  168 

and  w  it  Beside  him  on  his  throne.  „           ii  136 

The  diamonds  that  you  never  deign'd  to  w.  The  Falcon  762 

I  w  it  next  my  heart.  Prom,  of  May  n  81 

Will  you  have  it  ?     Will  you  w  it  ?  Foresters  i  ii  302 

And  take  and  w  this  symbol  of  your  love ;  „            in  79 

Wear     and  I  thinks  ye  w's  a  Lunnon  boot.  Prom,  of  May  i  461 

Wearest     Why  w  thou  thy  cowl  to  hide  thy  face  ?  Foresters  i  ii  20() 

Wearied     I  am  an  old  man  w  with  my  journey.  Queen  Mary  in  ii  127 

King  hath  w  of  his  barren  bride.'  „          in  vi  1-40 

Thou  art  w  out  With  this  day's  work,  Becket  i  i  t> 

Our  Senate,  w  of  their  tetrarchies.  The  Cup  i  i  89 

Wearier    Yours  must  have  been  aw.  „      i  ii  41 

Wearing    So  royal  that  the  Queen  forbad  you  w  it.  Queen  Mary  i  iv  77 

Weary    So  w  am  I  of  this  wet  land  of  theirs,  „      in  vi  105 

1  am  w- — -go  ;  make  me  not  wroth  with  thee  !  Harold  v  i  31 

I  have  had  a  w  day  in  watching  you.  The  Cup  i  ii  40 

0  Love  and  Life,  how  w  am  I,  Prom,  of  May  in  205 
but,  my  flower,  You  look  so  w  and  worn !  „  in  499 
But  I  am  w  pacing  thro'  the  wood.  Foresters  ii  i  129 

1  am  w.  What's  here  ?  „  n  ii  92 
W — w  As  tho'  a  spell  were  on  me.  „        n  ii  114 

Weasel    stick  to  tha  like  a  w  to  a  rabbit,  I  will.  Prom,  of  May  ii  739 

Weasel-sucked    or  the  shambles-oak,  or  a  w-s  egg,  Foresters  iv  212 

Weather    Two  young  lovers  in  winter  w,  Harold  m  ii  3 

you  couldn't  have  more  splendid  w.  Prom,  of  May  ii  48 

The  w's  well  anew,  but  the  glass  be  a  bit  shaaky.  „            ii  51 

the  winders  brokken,  and  the  w  sa  cowd,  „           in  73 

Weather'd    Many  points  w,  many  perilous  ones,  Queen  Mary  v  v  211 

Weave    w  the  web  That  may  confound  thee  yet.  Harold  i  i  211 

Weaver     the  psalm-singing  w's,  cobblers,  scum —        Qtieen  Mary  in  iv  290 

Web     weave  the  w  That  may  confound  thee  yet.  Harold  i  i  211 

Crost  and  recrost,  a  venomous  spider's  w—  Becket  n  i  200 

Wed     '  Thou  shalt  not  w  thy  brother's  wife.'  Queen  Mary  i  ii  63 

Prince  of  Spain  coming  to  w  our  Queen !  „          i  iii  83 

that  after  ail  She  means  to  w  you.  „          i  iv  89 

great  party  in  the  state  Wills  me  to  w  her.  „          i  iv  93 

as  great  a  party  in  the  state  Will  you  to  w  me  ?  „          i  iv  96 

— for  to  w  with  Spain  Would  treble  England —  „           i  v  75 

No  new  news  that  Philip  comes  to  w  Mary,  „           ii  i  16 

Philip  shall  not  w  Mary ;  „         ii  i  164 

They  would  not  have  me  w  the  Prince  of  Spain  ;  „        n  ii  148 

that  the  son  Being  a  King,  might  w  a  Queen —  „         in  i  75 

'  It  is  the  King's  wish,  that  you  should  w  Prince 

Philibert  of  Savoy.  „       m  v  222 

when  I  came  to  w  your  majesty,  Lord  Howard,  „           v  i  56 

as  you  know,  We  meant  to  w  her ;  „         v  i  248 

Why  then,  thou  must  not  w  him.  Harold  in  i  265 

They  say  thou  art  to  w  the  Lady  Aldwyth.  „      in  ii  107 

The  sovereign  of  Galatia  w's  his  Queen.  The  Cup  n  432 

if  a  gentleman  Should  w  a  farmer's  daughter.  Prom,  of  May  in  579 

And  these  shall  w  with  freemen.  Foresters  ii  i  21 

Rather  than  that  would  w  her  with  the  Sheriff.  „       n  i  524 

In  that  great  heat  to  w  her  to  the  Sheriff  „       n  i_584 

till  thou  TO  what  man  thou  wilt.  „    •    n  ii  15 

'  This  boy  will  never  w  the  maid  he  loves,  „  n  ii  111 
You  shall  w  your  Marian.     She  is  true,  and  you  are 

true,  „      II  ii  193 

Then  you  will  w  the  Sheriff  ?  „          m  11, 

For  so  this  maid  would  w  our  brother,  „        iv  483 


Wed 


1121 


Wed  (continued)    He  shall  w  thee  :  The  land  shall  still  be 
mine.    Child,  thou  shalt  w  him,  Or  thine  old  father 

will  go  mad —  Foresters  iv  642 

But  thou  wilt  w  him  ?  „         iv  663 

Wedded    Were  I  in  Devon  with  my  w  bride,  Queen  Mary  i  iv  119 

when  I  was  w  to  the  realm  And  the  realm's  laws  „          n  ii  164 

I  would  she  could  have  w  that  poor  youth,  .,           v  ii  475 

God  bless  thee,  w  daughter.  Harold  m  i  293 

I  am  seeking  one  who  w  me  in  secret.  „         v  ii  29 

How  dost  thou  know  I  am  not  w  to  her  ?    '  Becket,  Pro.  73 

Madam,  you  do  ill  to  scorn  w  love.  „     Pro.  354 

W  ?     Rosamund.     Father !  „         i  i  318 

I  that  w  Henry,  Honouring  his  manhood —  „     iv  ii  419 

I  be  wife  to  one  That  only  w  me  for  Aquitaine  ?  „        v  i  121 

Dost  thou  remember  when  1  w  Sinnatus  ?  The  Cup  n  194 

Wedding    wines  Of  w  had  been  dash'd  into  the  cups  Of 

victory,  Harold  iv  iii  7 
You  are  an  honest  pair.     I  will  come  to  your  w.    Prom,  of  May  ni  115 

Wedding-daay  (day)    niver  touched  a  drop  of  owt  till 


my  oan  w-d, 
Wedlock     I  am  not  so  set  on  w  as  to  choose 
Weed    (See  also  £3iore-weed)    But  on  the  heretic 
dunghill  only  w's. 

Such  w's  make  dunghills  gracious. 

plow  Lay  rusting  in  the  furrow's  yellow  w's, 

like  a  barren  shore  That  grew  salt  w's. 

Such  rampant  w's  Strangle  each  other, 
Week    Sick  for  an  idle  w  of  hawk  and  hound 

Nay,  rest  a  w  or  two, 

I  ha'  been  but  a  w  here  and  I  ha'  seen 

What  day  of  the  w  ?    Tuesday  ? 

Only  last  w  at  Littlechester,  drove  me 

That  John  last  w  retum'd  to  Nottingham, 

Why  then  a  w.     Justiciary.     No,  not  an  hour: 
Weep     W  not,  good  Thirlby. 

Who  would  not  w  ? 

Behold  him,  brethren :  he  hath  cause  to  w  ! — So 
have  we  all :  w  with  him  if  ye  will.  Yet 

They  can  but  w  in  silence. 

I  could  w  for  them  And  her,  and  mine  own  self 

And  w's  herself  into  the  place  of  power  ; 
Weeping    she  is  w  now ;  For  the  wrong  Kobin  took  her 

My  girl,  thou  hast  been  w : 

I  was  w  for  him  ;  He  gave  me  his  hand : 

I         How  gracefully  there  she  stands  W — 
Since  I  left  her  Here  w,  I  have  ranged  the  world, 
She  gave  a  w  kiss  to  the  Earl,  (repeat) 
'Weigh    the  cause  that  w's  Upon  my  conscience 
Which  w's  even  on  me. 


I  362 
Queen  Mary  ii  ii  214 

„    ■      rv  i  180 

IV  i  181 
Becket  i  iii  355 
The  Cup  II  232 

Prom,  of  May  iii  590 

Harold  I  i  103 

„     II  ii  179 

Becket  iii  i  108 

V  ii  281 
Prom,  of  May  ii  404 

Foresters  in  147 

IV  446 
Queen  Mary  iv  ii  172 

IV  ii  175 

„  IV  iii  14 

TV  iii  361 

V  ii  11 
Becket  v  ii  214 

Queen  Mary  ni  v  262 

Harold  III  ii  38 

The  Falcon  834 

Prom,  of  May  i  736 

II  252 

Foresters  I  i  20,  119 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  237 

Becket  ni  i  42 


Weight  (s)    Will  shift  the  yoke  and  w  of  all  the  world  Queen  Mary  in  yi  212 


lighten'd  for  me  The  w  of  this  poor  crown, 
Charged  with  the  w  of  heaven  wherefrom  they  fall ! 
dead  man's  dying  wish  should  be  of  w. 
till  the  w  of  Germany  or  the  gold  of  England  brings 

one  of  them  down  to  the  dust — 
I  reel  beneath  the  w  of  utter  joy — 
but  that  I  am  a  man  of  w,  and  the  w  of  the  church 

to  boot 
doth  not  the  w  of  the  flesh  at  odd  times  overbalance 

the  w  of  the  church. 
Thou  art  worth  thy  w  in  all  those  marks  of  gold,  Yea, 
and  the  w  of  the  very  land 
^Weight  (verb)    And  w  down  all  free  choice  beneath  the 

throne. 
Weightier    Is  w  than  a  thousand  marks  in  gold. 
Weird    if  yon  w  sign  Not  blast  us  in  our  dreams. — 
Welcome  (adj.)     Thou  art  ever  w,  Simon  Eenard. 

!»        To  whom  the  fire  were  w, 
but  all  on  'em  w,  all  on  'em  w ; 
You  are  w,  though  I  fear  you  be  of  those 
■*        Let  me  be,  I  say  !     The  Sheriff  will  be  w  ! 
Welcome  (inter.)     W  to  England  ! 

W  to  this  poor  cottage,  my  dear  lady. 
Velcome  (s)     And  w  turns  a  cottage  to  a  palace. 
Will  bid  you  w,  and  will  listen  to  you. 


Harold  i  i  218 
„       T  i  567 
Becket,  Pro.  423 

II  ii  363 

The  Cup  II  450 

Foresters  i  ii  57 
I  ii  60 


„      IV  1023 

Becket  i  iii  118 

Foresters  iv  660 

Harold  i  i  120 

Queen  Mary  i  v  345 

IV  iii  438 

Prom  of  May  I  450 

Foresters  i  ii  197 

IV  602 

Queen  Mary  v  iii  13 

The  Falcon  270 

The  Falcon  272 

Prom,  of  May  ii  522 


Went 

and  there's  for  you — and  the  old 

Foresters  u  i  290 

Becket  n  i  13 

Foresters  iv  1002 

Queen  Mary  v  i  136 


Welcome  (s)  (continued) 

woman's  w. 
Welcome  (verb)    let  us  w  him.  Love  that  can  lift  up 

My  masters,  w  gallant  Walter  Lea. 
Weld    he  would  w  France,  England,  Scotland, 

Welfare    Believe  it  will  be  better  for  your  w.  „         i  iv  254 

be  curious  About  the  w  of  their  babes.  The  Cup  i  ii  362 

Well  (adj.  and  adv.)    God  send  her  w ;  Here  comes 

her  Royal  Grace.  Q^een  Mary  ii  ii  125 

Now  what  I  am  ye  know  right  w — ^your  Queen ;  „  ii  ii  162 

But  all  is  w ;  'twas  ev'n  the  will  of  God,  „  m  ii  77 

Can  we  not  have  the  Catholic  church  as  w  Without 

as  with  the  Italian  ?  „  ni  iii  98 

Philip,  can  that  be  w  ?  „  v  i  143 

Thou  knowest  never  woman  meant  so  w,  „  y  ii  343 

I  trust  your  Grace  is  w.  „  v  ii  551 

I  am  not  w,  but  it  will  better  me,  „  v  ii  553 

All  is  w  then ;  rest — I  will  to  rest ;  he  said,  I  must 

have  rest.  ,.  y  v  185 

a  Boleyn,  too.  Glancing  across  the  Tudor — not  so  w.       „  v  v  228 

And  it  is  w  with  me,  tho'  some  of  you  Have  scom'd 

me—  Harold  i  i  187 

w,  w — a  dream — no  more !  „        i  ii  92 

Ay— w — of  old.     I  tell  thee  what,  mj  child ;  „        i  ii  96 

And  it  were  w,  if  thou  shouldst  let  him  feel,  „      n  ii  15 

And  w  for  thee  and  England — and  for  her^  „  m  ii  111 

Tho'  we  have  pierced  thro'  all  her  practices ;  And  that  is  w.     „      v  i  157 
That  is  w.    The  Norman,  What  is  he  doing  ?  „      v  i  217 

W  ?    Fitzurse.    Nay,  let  me  pass,  my  lord,  for  I  must 

know.  Becket  i  i  204 

an'  it  'ud  be  w  for  me  in  the  end,  „   in  i  134 

^-^w— away.  „    m  ii  54 

I  mean  to  marry  him — if  that  be  w.  The  Cup  n  62 

Great  Artemis !     0  Camma,  can  it  be  w,  „        u  81 

'  Get  the  Count  to  give  me  his  falcon.  And  that  will 

make  me  w.'  The  Falcon  243 

when  he  came  last  year  To  see  me  hawking,  he  was  w 

enough :  „  313 

It  might  have  been  as  w  for  me.  „  386 

Here,  or  else  w  in  Heaven,  where  all  is  w.  „  682 

He  gave  me  his  hand :  '  I  should  be  w  again  If  the 

good  Count  would  give  me '  „  836 

As  w  as  ever.     I  came  back  to  keep  his  birthday.       Prom,  of  May  1  73 

The  weather's  w  anew,  but  the  glass  be  a  bit  shaaky. 

Eh,  but  I  be  w  to  do ; 

Courage,  courage !  and  all  will  go  w. 

Crown  thee  with  flowers ;  and  he  will  soon  be  w :  All 

will  be  w. 
Then  all  is  w.    In  this  full  tide  of  love,  Wave  heralds 

wave : 

Strike  up  a  stave,  my  masters,  all  is  w.  „       *»  ^jlu* 

Well  (s)    The  w's  of  Castaly  are  not  wasted  upon  the  desert.  Becket,  Pro.  387 

this  bitter  world  again — These  w's  of  Marah.  „  v  ii  82 

We  are  almost  at  the  bottom  of  the  w  :  Prom,  of  May  m  161 

She  lay  so  long  at  the  bottom  of  her  w  Foresters  iv  242 

Well-beloved    God  bless  our  w-h  Robin,  Earl  of  Huntingdon.        „        i  i  248 

Wells    Deans  Of  Christchurch,  Durham,  Exeter, 

and  W— 
Well-served    I  am  w-s,  and  am  in  everything 
Well-shaped    I  am  as  w-s  as  my  lady  here, 
Well  to  do    but  Ihew  t  d;  and  if  ye  would  nobbut 

hev  me, 
Welsh    had  I  been  his,  I  had  been  all  W.    Aldwyth. 

ajr — all  W — and  yet  I  saw  thee  drive  him  up  his 

bills—  Harold  iv  i  209 

Welshman    Your  W  says,  '  The  Truth  against  the  World,'         „      11  ii  397 

Wench    But  the  w  Hath  her  own  troubles ;  Queen  Mary  in  v  261 

Then  there  isn't  a  goodly  w  to  serve  him  with  it :  Becket  1  iv  159 

gave  me  a  great  pat  o'  the  cheek  for  a  pretty  w,  „      in  i  126 

Went    My  mother  said.  Go  up  ;  and  up  I  w.  Qu^en  Mary  i  iii  99 

who  w  with  your  train  bands  To  fight  with  Wyatt,  „  n  ii  26 

gray  rogue,  Gardiner,  W  on  his  knees,  „       in  y  166 

all  boots  were  ever  made  Since  man  w  barefoot.  „       in  v  198 

These  meteors  came  and  w  before  our  day,  Harold  i  i  131 

wouldst  thou  that  it  w  aught  else  than  well  ?  „      i  i  334 

4   B 


n51 
n72 
ni  215 

Foresters  11  ii  20 

IV  1042 
IV  1102 


Queen  Mary  i  ii  10 

V  iii  24 

Becket  ni  i  150 

Prom,  of  May  n  72 
Oh, 


Went 


1122 


Whoa 


Went  {continued)    I  would  it  w  as  well  as  with  mine  earldom,  Harold  i  i  336 
An  evil  dream  that  ever  came  and  w—  .,       i  ".7^ 

thine  host  in  England  when  I  w  To  visit  Edward.  ii  ii  5 

Your  comet  came  and  w.  „    mi  359 

w  abroad  Thro'  all  my  counties,  Becket  i  iii  362 

due  to  those  That  w  before  us  for  their  work,  „      ii  ii  192 

those  Who  w  before  us  did  not  wholly  clear  „      ii  ii  202 

lost  her  and  w  on  and  on  till  I  found  the  light  and  the 

lady,  „       IV  ii  18 

besides  the  wind  W  with  my  arrow.  The  Cuf  i  ii  32 

It  be  five  year  sin'  ye  w  afoor  to  him.  Prom,  of  May  ii  5 

I  sank  so  low  that  I  w  into  service —  .,        ni  391 

an'  one  on  'em  w  an'  lost  hersen  i'  the  river.  „        in  456 

As  happy  as  any  of  those  that  w  before.  Foresters  i  ii  129 

Wept    then  all  w  but  she.  Who  changed  not  colour       Queen  Mary  in  i  397 

That  heaven  w  and  earth  blush'd.  „        in  iv  193 

imder  no  ceiling  but  the  cloud  that  w  on  them,  „  v  iv  40 

Wessez  (adj.)     Our  W  dragon  flies  beyond  the  Humber,  Harold  iv  i  3 

Wessex  (s)  (kingdom  of  the  West  Saxons)    Harold,  Earl  oiW  I      „     n  i  82 

Art  thou  not  Earl  of  W?  „      ii  i  85 

Were  such  murderous  liars  In  W—  „      n  i  95 

West  (adj.)    we  fun'  'im  out  a-walkin'  i'  W  Field  wi' 

a  white  'at,  Prom,  of  May  in  135 

Yet  Thou  art  but  a  W  Saxon :  we  are  Danes  !  Harold  iv  i  53 

West  (s)     {See  also  Soath-west)     Tho'  charged  with  all  the 

wet  of  all  the  w.  „    n  ii  189 

who  know  His  prowess  in  the  mountains  of  the  W,  „     iv  i  165 

To  leave  the  Pope  dominion  in  the  W.    He  gave  him 

aU  the  kingdoms  of  the  W.  „        v  i  23 

Whose  doings  are  a  horror  to  the  east,  A  hissing  in 

the  w  ! '  Becket  iv  ii  245 

marvell'd  at  Our  unfamiliar  beauties  of  the  w ;  „      iv  ii  303 

In  our  poor  w  We  cannot  do  it  so  well.  „      iv  ii  316 

Westminster  (abbey  and  city)    Where  is  the  charter  of  our 

W  ?  Harold  in  i  194 

Seeing  he  must  to  W  and  crown  Young  Henry  Becket  ni  ii  9 

Westminster  (Bi^op)     Bishops — York,  London,  Chichester, 

W—  „       I  iii  386 

West  Saxon    Thou  art  but  &W  S  :  we  are  Danes  !  Harold  rv  i  53 

Wet  (adj.)    it  would  seem  this  people  Care  more  for 

our  brief  life  in  their  w  land,  Queen  Mary  ni  vi  62 

So  weary  am  I  of  this  w  land  of  theirs,  ..         m  vi  105 

Will  my  faggots  Be  w  as  his  were  ?  ..  rv  ii  229 

Wet  (s)     Eh,  the  wind  and  the  ic  !  ..         iv  iii  467 

barrin'  the  w,  Hodge  'ud  ha'  been  a-harrowin'  iv  iii  491 

W,  famine,  ague,  fever,  storm,  wreck,  wrath, —  „  v  v  108 

Tho'  charged  with  all  the  w  of  all  the  west.  Harold  n  ii  188 

Whale  Eolf ,  what  fish  did  swallow  Jonah  ?  Rolf.  A  w  ! 
Fisherman.  Then  a  w  to  a  whelk  we  have  swallowed 
the  King  of  England.  „         ii  i  43 

Wharf    swirling  under  me  in  the  lamplight,  by  the 

rotten  w's —  Prom,  of  May  ni  371 

Wharton  (Lady  Anne)    iSee  Anne,  Anne  Wharton 

Wheat    gamer  the  w,  And  bum  the  tares  Qv,een  Mary  v  v  113 

Wheedle     I  could  not  force  or  w  to  my  will.  The  Cup  i  iii  167 

Wheedled    Has  w  it  ofi  the  King's  neck  to  her  own.  Becket  iv  ii  201 

Wheedling     It  was  a  w  monk  Set  up  the  mass.  Queen  Mary  i  ii  90 

Wheel(s)     The  w  of  Fate  has  roU'd  me  to  the  top.  The  Cup  ii  221 

There  was  a  song  he  made  to  the  turning  w —  Foresters  i  iii  154 

Wheel  (verb)     and  howsoe'er  Thy  quarry  wind  and  w,  The  Falcon  12 

Whelk    whale  to  a  w  we  have  swallowed  the  King  of  • 

England.  Harold  n  i  44 

Whelmest    corpse  thou  w  with  thine  earth  is  cursed,  „      v  i  67 

When    When  did  I  hear  aught  but  this  *  W '  from  thee  ?  ,.     i  i  284 

Whew    He  swears  by  the  Rood.     W !  Queen  Mary  i  i  63 

Whine    never  w  Like  that  poor  heart,  Northumberland,  „      n  ii  332 

Whined    The  man  had  children,  and  he  w  for  those.  „      n  ii  336 

Whinnied    colt  winced  and  w  and  flung  up  her  heels  ;  Becket,  Pro.  515 

Whipping    doth  not  the  living  skin  thicken  against  per- 
petual w's  ?  „      ni  iii  317 
Whipt    for  doing  that  His  father  w  him  into  doing —      Queen  Mary  i  v  63 
I  hope  they  w  him.     I  would  have  hang'd  him.                Becket,  Pro.  15 
I  am  like  a  boy  now  going  to  be  w ;                                Foresters  n  ii  50 
Whirl     in  the  w  of  change  may  come  to  be  one.            Queen  Mary  i  iii  106 
Whirring    What  ia  that  w  soimd  ?  (repeat)                     Harold  v  i  482,  665 


Whisking     And  w  round  a  comer,  show'd  his  back 
Whisper  (s)    voice  Against  them  is  a  w  to  the  roar 

The  secret  w  of  the  Holy  Father. 

Indungeon'd  from  one  w  of  the  wind, 

Thro'  all  closed  doors  a  dreadful  w  crept 
Whisper  (verb)     W  !  God's  angels  only  know  it.    Ha  ! 

You  never  w  close  as  lovers  do. 

Will  TO  evermore  of  Robin  Hood. 
Whisper'd     W  me,  if  I  loved  him,  not  to  yield 

w,  '  Wyatt,'  And  whisking  round  a  corner, 

Rose  hand  in  hand,  and  w,  '  come  away  ! 

I  TO,  Let  me  crown  you  Queen  of  Beauty, 
Whispering     W — leagued  together  To  bar  me 

Lord  Devon,  girls !  what  are  you  w  here  ? 

year  to  come  W  '  it  will  be  happier,' 
Whistle    La,  to  w  out  my  life. 


Queen  Mary  n  i  131 

IV  ii  187 

Becket  i  iii  236 

„     IV  ii  146 

V  ii  88 

Harold  v  ii  31 

Foresters  in  5 

„  IV  1069 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  35 

„       n  i  129 

„      in  V  148 

The  Falcon  360 

Queen  Mary  I  iv  139 

V  ii  485 

Foresters  i  iii  18 

Queen  Mary  n  iv  109 


I  TO  to  the  bird  has  broken  cage.  And  all  in  vain.  „              v  v  19 

Arrows  w  all  about.  Foresters  n  ii  165 
White    {See  also  Maiden-white)    for  thou  art  as  w  as 

three  Christmasses.  Queen  Mary  i  i  30 
because  they  know  him  The  last  W  Rose,  the  last 

Plantagenet  „       i  iv  207 

All  red  and  w,  the  fashion  of  our  land.  .,          i  v  10 

but  took  To  the  English  red  and  to.  .,          i  v  18 

another,  mute  as  death,  And  to  as  her  own  milk ;  „         n  ii  80 
there  is  ordnance  On  the  W  Tower  and  on  the 

Devil's  Tower,  „        n  iii  44 
or  you'll  make  the  W  Tower  a  black  'un  for  us  this 

blessed  day.  „      n  iii  100 

w  satin  his  trunkhose,  Inwrought  with  silver, —  „         in  i  76 

Bagenhall,  I  see  The  Tudor  green  and  w.  .,       mi  180 

Mary  rubb'd  out  pale — She  could  not  make  it  w —  „       ni  i  424 

and  your  flocks  of  swans.  As  fair  and  w  as  angels ;  ..       in  ii  16 
So  after  that  when  she  once  more  is  seen  W  as  the  light,        „     in  iv  199 

The  colours  of  our  Queen  are  green  and  w,  .,         in  v  6 
Hodge  'ud  ha'  been  a-harrowin'  o'  w  peasen  i'  the 

outfield  ..    IV  iii  492 

Charged  him  to  do  it — ^he  is  to  as  death.  ..     iv  iii  558 
and  all  in  to.  His  long  to  beard,  which  he  had  never 

shaven  „     iv  iii  591 
Choose  therefore  whether  thou  wilt  have  thy  con- 
science JF  as  a  maiden's  hand,  Harold  ii  ii  284 
My  lord !  thou  art  w  as  death.  „      n  ii  813 
Am  I  so  TO  ?    Thy  Duke  will  seem  the  darker.     Hence, 

I  follow.  „      n  ii  816 
They  love  the  to  rose  of  virginity,  The  cold,  to  lily  blow- 
ing in  her  cell:  „      m  i  273 
For  England,  for  thy  poor  to  dove,  who  flutters 

Between  thee  and  the  porch,  „      iv  i  23( 

In  cold,  TO  cells  beneath  an  icy  moon —  „       v  i  '3'2' 

A  doter  on  to  pheasant-flesh  at  feasts,  Becket,  Pro.  '■ 

Is  black  and  w  at  once,  and  comes  to  nought.  „        i  iii  ■ 

We  can  make  a  black  sin  to.  „      i  iv  lo: 

That  he  made  the  black  sheep  to.  „      i  iv  17* 

TO  In  the  sweet  moon  as  with  a  lovelier  snow  !  The  Cup  i  ii  39-' 

See,  see,  my  to  bird  stepping  toward  the  snare.  „         i  iii  3(' 

No  matter  !  see  your  cloth  be  to  as  snow  !  The  Falcon  40. 
W  ?    I  warrant  thee,  my  son,  as  the  snow  yonder  on 

the  very  tip-top  o'  the  mountain.  „          5^ 

And  yet  to  speak  w  truth,  my  good  old  mother,  „          5U.  „ 

The  hen  cluckt  late  by  the  to  farm  gate,  Prom,  of  May  i  3)! 

Why,  now,  what  maakes  tha  sa  to  ?  „          i  417 

Wi'  the  wild  w  rose,  an'  the  woodbine  sa  gaay,  „         ii  17- 

And  the  to  cloud  is  roU'd  along  the  sky  !  Foresters  i  ii  31- 

I  found  this  to  doe  wandering  thro'  the  wood,  „          ii  i  9-' 

Ghost !  did  one  in  w  pass  ?  „        ii  i  22' 
thy  father  will  not  grace  our  feast  With  his  to  beard 

to-day.  „           rv  8 
White  (Sir  Thomas)    See  Thomas  White 
White  Rose    The  last  W  R,  the  last  Plantagenet           Queen  Mary  i  iv  20 

Whitethorn    There's  w,  girl.  „            ni  v 

Whitewash    you  could  w  that  cottage  of  yours  Prom,  of  May  in  4 

Whizzing     Will  hear  our  arrows  to  overhead.  Foresters  iv  lOJ) 
Whoa  (stop)    Gee  oop  !  to  !    Gee  oop  !  w ! 

(repeat)  Prom,  of  May  n  307,  31 


Whole 


1123 


Wife 


Whole  ^^  hy,  such  a  game,  sir,  were  w  years  a  playing.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  140 
To  guard  and  keep  you  w  and  safe  from  all  The 

spoil  „  II  ii  246 

Presenting  the  w  body  of  this  realm  Of  England,  „        iii  iii  116 

and  we  cannot  bum  w  towns ;  they  are  many,  „        m  iv  175 

Lest  your  w  body  should  madden  with  the  poison  ?  „  iii  iv  207 
And  not  like  thine  To  gorge  a  heretic  w,  roasted 

or  raw.  „        m  iv  344 

'  what  am  I,  Cranmer,  against  w  ages  ?  '  „         iv  ii  104 

Of  this  be  sure,  he  is  w  worlds  away.  „        iv  iii  .194 

I  were  w  devil  if  I  wrong'd  you.  Madam.  „  v  iii  6 

Love  will  stay  for  a  w  life  long.  Harold  i  ii  17 

but  ours  are  w  ;  I  have  but  bark'd  my  hands.  „        ii  i  4 

^  Love  for  a  w  life  long '  When  was  that  sung  ?  .,    m  ii  88 

Go  round  once  more ;  See  all  be  soimd  and  w.  „    v  i  194 

Sire,  the  business  Of  thy  w  kingdom  waits  me :  Becket,  Pro.  278 

And  goodly  acres — we  will  make  her  w ;  „  i  i  164 

0  rare,  a  w  long  day  of  open  field.  „  i  i  296 
and  the  moon  Divides  the  w  long  street  with  light  and 

shade.  ,,  i  i  365 

Cannot  a  smooth  tongue  lick  him  w  again  To  serve 

your  will?  „         n  ii  25 

And  as  for  the  flesh  at  table,  a  w  Peter's  sheet,  „     ni  iii  129 

The  soldier,  when  he  lets  his  w  self  go  Lost  in  the 

common  good,  „  v  ii  39 

and  send  Her  w  heart's  heat  into  it,  „        v  ii  255 

The  Pope,  the  King,  will  curse  you — the  w  world 

Abhor  you ;  „       v  iii  183 

violated  the  w  Tradition  of  our  land.  Prom,  of  May  i  495 

We  shall  have  to  sell  all  the  land,  which  Father, 

for  a  w  life,  has  been  getting  together,  „         iii  165 

Canst  thou  endure  to  be  a  beggar  whose  w  life  hath 

been  folded  like  a  blossom  in  the  sheath.  Foresters  i  i  205 

1  would  ha'  given  my  w  body  to  the  King  had  he 

asked  for  it,  „      ii  i  306 

"Wliolesome    yet  I  found  One  day,  a  w  scripture,  Qtieen  Mary  in  iv  84 

If  thou  canst  make  a  w  use  of  these  Harold  ni  i  20 

the  w  plow  Lay  rusting  in  the  furrow's  yellow  weeds,      Becket  i  iii  354 

I  came  on  certain  w  usages,  „      i  iii  412 

Because  I  have  a  w  medicine  here  Puts  that  belief 

asleep.  „       iv  ii  50 

Wholly    not  for  myself — For  England — yet  not  w —  Harold  v  i  307 

Only  that  the  rift  he  made  May  close  between  us,  here 

I  am  w  king,  Becket  ii  ii  132 

those  Who  went  before  us  did  not  w  clear  The  deadly 
growths  of  earth,  „      ii  ii  202 

Wholly-hopeless    submit  at  once  Is  better  than  a  w-h 

war,  The  Cup  i  ii  141 

Whoop  Bee  musn't  buzz,  W — but  he  knows,  (repeat)  Becket  in  i  99,  241 
Grasshopper,  grasshopper,  W — you  can  hear.  „  mi  103 

Bird  mustn't  tell,  W—he  can  see.  (repeat)  „'  in  i  107,  256 

W — 'but  he  knows,  W — but  he  knows.  „  in  i  262 

Whose     W  play  is  all  to  find  herself  a  King.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  164 

but  of  this  England,  in  w  crown  our  Kent  is  the 

fairest  jewel.  „  n  i  163 

One,  w  bolts,  That  jail  you  from  free  life,  „         ni  v  171 

Deserts  ?    Amen  to  what  ?     W  deserts  ?    Yours  ?  „  v  iv  31 

Whoy  (why)     W,  O  lor.  Miss  !  that  wur  sa  long  back,    Prom,  of  May  in  70 

Wicked     Nay  swears,  it  was  no  w  wilfulness.  Only  a 

natural  chance.  Queen  Mary  in  v  12 

A  chance — ^perchance  One  of  those  w  wilfuls  that 

men  make,  „  in  v  75 

W  sea- will-o'-the-wisp  !     Wolf  of  the  shore  !  Harold  ii  i  20 

The  w  sister  clapt  her  hands  and  laugh'd  ;  „      v  ii  48 

But  all  that  sounds  so  w  and  so  strange ;  Prom,  of  May  i  656 

Wickedness    His  to  is  like  my  wretchedness —  „         in  747 

Wickentree    if  I  hadn't  a  sprig  o'  w  sewn  into  my  dress.     Foresters  n  i  250 

Wide    cry  To  have  the  gates  set  w  again.  Queen  Mary  n  iv  65 

They  are  the  flower  of  England ;  set  the  gates  w.  „  n  iv  70 

W  of  the  mark  ev'n  for  a  madman's  dream.  „  v  iii  81 

0  God,  that  I  were  in  some  w,  waste  field  Harold  n  ii  777 

Fling  w  the  doors  and  let  the  new-made  children  The  Cup  ii  163 

Kicher  than  all  the  w  world-wealth  of  May,  The  Falcon  466 

Wider     But  stretch  it  w ;  say  when  England  fell.        Queen  Mary  m  iii  261 

Wide-spread    Into  the  w-s  arms  of  fealty,  »  u  ii  264 


Becket,  Pro.  187 

I  iv  120 

The  Falcon  30 

Foresters  ni  268 

ni  385 

„      IV  1078 

Queen  Mary  i  v  89 

Harold  v  i  414 

„      V  i  639 


m  vi  195 
vi252 
vi307 

V  ii  139 
vii408 

V  ii  561 


Widow    (See  also  Wife-widow)     a  w  And  orphan  child, 

whom  one  of  thy  wild  barons — 
Who  stole  the  w's  one  sitting  hen  o'  Sunday, 
The  stately  w  has  no  heart  for  me. 
Prettier  than  that  same  w  which  you  wot  of. 
Shamed  a  too  trustful  w  whom  you  heard  In  her 

confession ; 
All  w's  we  have  holpen  pray  for  us, 
Widow'd     Back  thro'  their  w  channel  here, 
Wield    And  Loathing  w  a  Saxon  battle-axe- 
Mi's  His  war-club,  dashes  it  on  Gurtb, 
Wife    {See  also  Country-wives,  Heart-wife,  Maiden-wife) 

was  born  of  a  true  man  and  a  ring'd  w,  Queen  Mary  i  i  55 

'  Thou  Shalt  not  wed  thy  brother's  w.'  ,,          i  ii  63 

And  scared  the  gray  old  porter  and  his  w.  „        ii  iii  16 

Your  Grace  hath  a  most  chaste  and  loving  w.  „  in  vi  130 
parting  of  a  husband  and  a  to  Is  like  the  cleaving  of  a 

heart ; 
so  my  Queen  Would  leave  me — as — my  w. 
Might  I  not  say — to  please  your  w,  the  Queen  ? 
.    and  cleave  unto  each  other  As  man  and  to  ? 
Unhappiest  Of  Queens  and  wives  and  women ! 
That  his  own  to  is  no  affair  of  his. 
They  say,  his  w  was  knowing  and  abetting.     Harold. 

They  say,  his  w  ! — To  marry  and  have  no  husband 

Makes  the  to  fool.  Harold  ii  ii  306 

And  that  my  to  descends  from  Alfred  ?  „      n  ii  594 

a  w,  What  matters  who,  so  she  be  serviceable  „      ni  i  290 

Yea,  am  I  not  thy  w?  „      iv  iii  41 

No,  but  a  shoal  of  wives  upon  the  heath,  „        v  i  146 

We  have  parted  from  our  to  without  reproach,  „        v  i  154 

devil  Hath  haunted  me — mine  oath — my  w —  „        v  i  318 

being  the  true  to  Of  this  dead  King,  „         v  ii  84 

Ay,  and  what  art  thou  ?    Edith.    His  to  !  „        v  ii  90 

Some  held  she  was  his  w  in  secret —  „      v  ii  100 

/  am  his  to  !  and  she — For  look,  „      v  ii  106 

Thy  TO  am  I  for  ever  and  evermore.  „      v  ii  118 

it  seems  Was  false  to  his  own  w.  „      v  ii  152 

Who  calls  me  ?  she  That  was  my  w,  Becket  n  ii  75 

and  pray  God  she  prove  True  w  to  you.  „      n  ii  79 

convene  This  conference  but  to  babble  of  our  wives  ?  „      n  ii  90 

whom  you  call — ^fancy — my  husband's  brother's  to.  „    in  i  202 

whom  it  pleases  him  To  call  his  wives ;  „      iv  ii  37 

talk'd  him  out  of  His  ten  wives  into  one.  „  iv  ii  313 
You  were  but  Aquitaine  to  Louis — no  w ;  You  are  only 

Aquitaine  to  me — no  w.  „      v  i  117 
I  be  TO  to  one  That  only  wedded  me  for  Aquitaine  ?    Yet 

this  no  TO —  „      V  i  120 

this  no  TO  has  born  you  four  brave  sons,  „      v  i  125 

I  am  true  to,  and  have  my  fears  Lest  Becket  „      v  i  157 

for  of  your  wives  you  shall  Find  one  a  slut  „     v  ii  201 

'  To  the  admired  Gamma,  to  of  Sinnatus,  the  Tetrarch,  The  Cup  i  i  36 

and  this  cup  to  Gamma,  The  w  of  Sinnatus.  „        i  i  63 

I  send  it  to  the  to  of  Sinnatus,  „        i  i  72 

Well  spoken,  to.    Synorix.    Madam,  so  well  I  yield.  „     i  ii  171 

— did  Dishonour  to  our  wives.  „     i  ii  184 

be  willing  wives  enough  To  feel  dishonour,  honour.  „     i  ii  187 

I  know  of  no  such  wives  in  all  Galatia.  „     i  ii  191 

What  follows  is  for  no  w's  eyes.  „     i  ii  231 

What  should  he  say,  my  to  !  „  i  ii  348 
welfare  of  their  babes,  their  wives,  0  ay — their  wives — 

their  wives.  „     i  ii  363 

He  should  say  nothing  to  my  w  if  I  Were  by  „     i  ii  366 

if  she  be  a  true  and  loving  w  She  may,  „  i  iii  32 
will  he  ever  be  of  one  faith  with  his  w  ?  Prom,  of  May  in  178 
But  lack  of  happiness  in  a  blatant  w.                            Foresters  i  iii  132 

There  are  no  wives  like  English  wives  „          n  i  15 

An  outlaw's  bride  may  not  be  w  in  law.  ,,          n  ii  90 

Robin,  I  do,  but  I  have  a  bad  w.  „           in  70 

Thou  art  more  my  w  so  feeling,  than  if  my  w  „          ni  123 

Here  comes  a  citizen,  and  I  think  his  w.  „          in  228 

dear  w,  we  have  fallen  into  the  hands  Of  Robin  Hood.  „         ni  232 

no  man,  so  His  own  true  w  came  with  him,  „          ni  240 

Curtsey  to  him,  w,  and  thank  him.  „          in  248 

Away,  away,  w,  wilt  thou  anger  him  ?  „         in  254 


Wife 


1124 


Willing 


they  put  it  upon  me  because  I  have  a 


Queen  Mary  ni  i  364 
m  i  462 


Wife  {continued)     ^  ^ ^ 

bad  w.  Foresters  ni  438 

then  each  man  That  owns  a  w  or  daughter,  „  iii  460 

dishonour  The  daughters  and  the  wives  of  your  own 
faction—  „  iv  698 

Wife-like    So  w-l  humble  to  the  trivial  boy  Mismatch'd 

with  her  for  policy  ! 
Wiffr-widow    Left  Mary  a  w-w  here  alone, 
Wild    and  will  pounce  like  a  w  beast  out  of  his  cage  to 
worry  Cranmer. 
You  are  w ;  what  headache  ? 
like  the  w  hedge-rose  Of  a  soft  winter,  possible, 
Catch  the  w  cat,  cage  him,  and  when  he  springs 
letting  the  w  brook  Speak  for  us — 
Thou  knowest  I  soon  go  w. 
Come,  come !  as  yet  thou  art  not  gone  so  w 
Nor  thou  be  a  w  thing  Out  of  the  waste. 
Our  w  Tostig,  Edward  hath  made  him  Earl :  he  would 

be  king : — 
W  as  he,  bom  so : 

The  nimble,  w,  red,  wiry,  savage  king — 
Save  for  thy  w  and  violent  will  that  wrench'd  All  hearts 
I  lost  it,  playing  with  it  when  I  was  w. 
a  widow  And  orphan  child,  whom  one  of  thy  w 

barons —  Becket,  Pro 

Thomas,  thou  wast  not  happy  taking  charge  Of  this  w 

Rosamund  to  please  the  King, 
This  w  one — nay,  I  shall  not  prick  myself — 
And  I  could  tear  him  asunder  with  w  horses  Before  he 

would  betray  it.  •  „         n  i  267 

Like  the  w  beast — if  you  can  call  it  love.  „       iv  ii  121 

Nay,  for  who  could  trace  a  hand  So  w  and  staggering  ?  The  Falcon  439 
Wi'  the  w  white  rose,  an'  the  woodbine  sa  gaay.  Prom,  of  May  ii  174 
if  you  Had  seen  us  that  w  morning  when  we  found 

Her  bed  unslept  in. 
That  were  a  w  justice  indeed. 

Knave,  there  is  a  lot  of  w  fellows  in  Sherwood  Forest 
They  hold  by  Richard— the  w  wood  ! 
the  highback'd  polecat,  the  w  boar,  The  burrowing 
badger — By  St.  Nicholas  I  have  a  sudden  passion 
for  the  w  wood — ^AVe  shall  be  free  as  air  in  the  w 
wood — 
I  have  reign'd  one  year  in  the  w  wood. 
Tut !  tut !  the  scream  of  some  w  woodland  thing. 
Here's  a  pot  o'  w  honey  from  an  old  oak, 
might  Betray  me  to  the  w  Prince, 
loud  enough  To  fright  the  w  hawk  passing  overhead, 
Venison,  and  w  boar,  hare,  geese,  besides  Hedge-pigs, 
and  they  are  delivered  here  in  the  w  wood  an  hour 

after  noon. 
Were  some  strong  fellow  here  in  the  w  wood, 
When  the  Church  and  the  law  have  forgotten  God's 
music,  they  shall  dance  to  the  music  of  the  w  wood. 
Then  will  I  Uve  for  ever  in  the  w  wood. 
We  dealt  in  the  w  justice  of  the  woods. 
Wild-beast    The  mere  w-h  !    Dohson.     Out  o'  the 

chaumber,  Prom,  of  May  in  736 

Wilderness    Lost  in  a  w  where  none  can  hear !  Queen  Mary  v  ii  382 

pray  for  him  who  hath  fed  you  in  the  w.  Becket  i  iv  267 

Wildest    The  w  of  the  random  youth  of  Florence  The  Falcon  808 

Wild-flower    My  bank  Of  w-fs.    At  thy  feet !  Becket  u  i  126 

Wild-fowl    we  came  upon  A  w-f  sitting  on  her  nest,  „      v  ii  234 

Wilful    One  of  those  wicked  w's  that  men  make,  Queen  Mary  in  v  75 

W,  w.    Go— the  Saints  Pilot  Harold  i  i  263 

Wilfolness    was  no  wicked  w,  Only  a  natural  chance.    Queen  Mary  in  v  72 

Will  (s)     (See  also  Free-will)    putting  by  his  father's  w.  „  i  ii  28 

Few  things  have  f ail'd  to  which  I  set  my  w.  „  n  ii  23 

and  so  learn  Your  royal  w,  and  do  it. —  „  n  ii  139 

seeks  To  bend  the  laws  to  his  own  w,  „  ii  ii  184 

Our  sovereign  Lady  by  King  Harry's  w ;  „  ii  ii  268 

But  all  is  well ;  'twas  ev'n  the  w  of  God,  „  in  ii  77 

Your  father  had  a  w  that  beat  men  down ;  „  iv  i  108 

It  is  God's  w,  the  Holy  Father's  w.  And  Philip's  w,  „  iv  i  184 

Stand  there  and  wait  my  w.  Harold  n  ii  683 

Help  us  against  the  Norman  ?    Morcar.    With  good  w ;      „      iv  i  182 


Take  it  not  that  way — balk  not  the 


I 


I  iv  147 

m  vi  14 

V  v65 

TV  90 

Harold  i  i  297 

„      I  i  299 

„      I  i  380 

„  I  ii  185 

„  IV  i  110 

„  IV  i 197 

„  V  i  277 

„  V  ii  110 

188 


1 1392 
n  i  143 


II  469 

in  156 

Foresters  i  ii  72 

„      I  iii  111 


I  iii  120 
ni36 
n  i  253 
ni295 
ni708 
in  318 
IV  191 

IV  509 
IV  515 

IV  556 

IV  879 

IV  1072 


Will  (s)  (continued) 

Pope's  w.  '  Becket  i  iii  243 

Is  it  thy  w,  My  lord  Archbishop,  „        i  iii  271 

it  is  the  w  of  God  To  break  me,  .,        i  iii  290 

'  False  to  myself  !     It  is  the  w  of  God  ! '    Henry.    God's 
w  be  what  it  will,  :,        i  iii  328 

The  King's  w  and  God's  w  and  justice ;  „       i  iii  420 

The  w  of  God — why,  then  it  is  my  w —  „       i  iii  473 

tongue  lick  him  whole  again  To  serve  your  w  ?    Henry. 
He  hates  my  w,  not  me. 

since  he  flouts  the  w  of  either  realm, 

My  liege,  your  w  and  happiness  are  mine. 

God's  w  be  done !  (repeat) 

It  is  God's  w.    Go  on. 

Why  do  you  force  me  thus  against  my  w  ? 

I  could  not  force  or  wheedle  to  my  w. 

would  oust  me  from  his  w,  if  I  Made  such  a 
marriage. 

There  is  a  fence  I  cannot  overleap,  My  father's  w 

For  thou  hast  stolen  my  w,  and  made  it  thine. 
Will  (verb)     Or — if  the  Lord  God  w  it — on  the  stake. 

and  use  Both  us  and  them  according  as  they  w 

As  you  w.    Fitzurse.    Nay,  as  you  w.    Becket. 
you  w. 

I  w,  I  w.     And  I  w  not  betray  you. 

Iw,lw.     Poor  fellow ! 
Will'd    Get  thou  into  thy  cloister  as  the  king  W  it : 

were  he  living  And  grown  to  man  and  Sinnatus 
w  it, 
Wilier  (willow)     Wi'  the  briar  sa  green,  an'  the  w  sa 

graay,  Prom,  of  May  n  186 

William  (Lord  William  Howard)    (See  also  Howard, 

William  Howard)     News  abroad,  W  ?  Queen  Mary  ii  i  13 

brave  Lord  W  Thrust  him  from  Ludgate,  „        ii  iv  91 

William  (the  Conqueror)    (See  also  William  the  First)    Fly 

thou  to  W ;  tell  him  we  have  Harold.  Harold  ii  i  110 

W  laugh'd  and  swore  that  might  was  right. 

That  had  anger'd  me  Had  I  been  W. 

may  he  not  make  A  league  with  W, 

I  will  not  hear  thee — W  comes. 

W  the  tanner's  bastard ! 

'  If  ye  side  with  W  Ye  are  not  noble.' 

when  I  rode  with  W  down  to  Harfleur, 

one  should  be  This  TV's  fellow-tricksters ; — 

Against  St.  Valery  And  W. 

but  worse  news :  this  W  sent  to  Rome, 

Keep  that  for  Norman  W !     Thane.    Down  with  W ! 

W  the  Norman,  for  the  wind  had  changed — 

W  hath  landed,  ha  ? 

play  The  W  with  thine  eyesight  and  thy  tongue. 

— thou  art  but  a  messenger  of  W. 

W's  or  his  own  As  wind  blows,  or  tide  flows : 

hath  borne  at  times  A  bastard  false  as  W. 

A  lake  that  dips  in  W  As  well  as  Harold. 

a  mightier  man-in-arms  Than  W. 

Save  W's  death  or  mine. 
William  (the  First)    (See  also  William  the  Ctonqueror) 

In  W's  time,  in  our  first  Edward's  time,  Queen  Mary  ni  iii  22': 


II  ii  26 

II  ii  256 

m  iii  42 

vii565,567 

V  ii  634 

V  iii  22 

The  Cup  I  iii  167 

Prom,  of  May  i  513 

Foresters  in  10 

„       ni  329 

Queen  Mary  n  i  251 

n  ii  161 

Nay,  as 

Becket  v  ii  306 

The  Cup  I  ii  315 

The  Falcon  281 

Harold  v  i  310 


The  Cup  I  ii  151 


There  was  no  Canterbury  in  W's  time, 
William  Howard  (Lord,  Lord  H^h  Admiral)    (See  also 
Howard,  William)     I  leave  Lord  W  H  in  your 
city, 
I  saw  Lord  IF  H  By  torchlight, 
Is  not  Lord  W  H  a,  true  man  ? 
Spite  of  Lord  Paget  and  Lord  W  H, 
my  Lord  Paget  and  Lord  W  H,  Crave, 
No,  here's  Lord  W  H. 
William  of  Orange     W  oO,  WiUiam  the  Silent. 
WilUams  (Lord,  of  Thame)    Whereat  Lord  W  gave  a 

sudden  cry : — 
William  the  Silent  (William  of  Orange)    William  of 
Orange,  W  t  S. 
W  1 8  They  call  him— 
Willing    he  will  be  w  that  you  and  Father  should  live 
with  us ; 


Becket  in  iii  20i; 


Qv^en  Mary  ii  ii  24' 
„  n  iii  2' 

„  ni  i  16- 

ni  i  32 
„  IV  i  f 

„        IV  iii  28! 

m  i  19 

„         IV  iii  60 

„  III  i  19; 

„         III  ii  19 

Prom,  of  May  iii  26i 


Willing 


1125 


Wing 


The  Cup  I  ii  187 
Foresters  i  ii  134 
Queen  Mary  iii  v  214 

hold, 

Harold  v  i  629 

Becket  iv  ii  58 

„    IV  ii  371 

Prom,  of  May  ii  299 

Harold  v  i  190 

Foresters  ii  i  264 

Prom,  of  May  n  263 

Harold  v  i.  148 

Foresters  iv  768 

Prom,  of  May  1 190 

'  I  234 

I  301 

I  320 

Queen  Mary  i  iii  149 

n  ii  312 

IV  ii  165 

Harold  v  i  125 

„       V  i  236 

Becket  in  i  117 

V  ii  24 

The  Cup  I  iii  153 

The  Falcon  231 

Foresters  iv  721 


Willing  {continued)    there  might  be  w  wives  enough  To 
feel  dishonour,  honour. 

Willingly    Full  w,  my  lord. 

Willingness    With  most  exceeding  lo,  I  will ; 

Will  not    See  Weant,  Wunt 

Willow    (>5iee  aZso  Wilier)     This  is  the  hottest  of  it: 
ash  !  hold,  w  ! 
saw  the  ball  you  lost  in  the  fork  of  the  great  w 
you  told  me  a  great  fib :  it  wasn't  in  the  lo. 

Willow-herb    Forget-me-not,  meadowsweet,  w-h. 

Willow-wands     And  wattled  thick  with  ash  and  w-w ; 

Wills-o'-the-wisp    {See  also  Wisp)     oafs,  ghosts  o'  the 
mist,  w-o'-t-w; 

Willy-nilly  if  man  be  only  A  w-n  current  of  sensations— 
And  someone  saw  thy  w-n  nun  Vying  a  tress 
This  other,  w-n,  for  his  bride. 

Wilson  (a  schoolmaster)    Well,  W.    I  seed  that  one 
cow  o'  thine 
summat  wrong  theer,  W,  fur  I  doant  understan'  it 
Why,  W,  tha  'eard  "im  thysen — 
— what's  the  newspaaper  word,  W  ? — celebrate — 

Win    I'm  the  first  of  players.     I  shall  w. 
As  if  to  w  the  man  by  flattering  him. 
W  thro'  this  day  with  honour  to  yourself. 
And,  if  I  w,  I  w,  and  thou  art  king  ; 
To  tell  thee  thou  shouldst  w  at  Stamford-bridge, 
and  to  w  my  own  bread, 

A  policy  of  wise  pardon  W's  here  as  well  as  there 
— if  I  w  her  love,  They  too  will  cleave  to  me, 
his  falcon  Ev'n  w's  his  dinner  for  him  in  the  field, 
W  me  you  cannot,  murder  me  you  may, 

■^n  (reach)     Eh,  my  rheumatizy  be  that  bad  how- 

iver  be  I  to  w  to  the  bumin'.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  474 

Winced     colt  w  and  whinnied  and  flung  up  her  heels ;  Becket,  Pro.  515 

Winchester    a  plundering  o'  Bishop  W's  house ;  Queen  Mary  ii  iii  73 

same  book  You  wrote  against  my  Lord  oi  W;  „        iv  iii  265 

Henry  ot  W?     Henry.     Him  who  crown'd  Stephen —  Becket,  Pro.  272 

Wind  (s)     or  wave  And  w  at  their  old  battle :  Qu^en  Mary  i  v  357 

know  that  whether  A  w  be  warm  or  cold,  „  i  v  620 

Eh,  the  w  and  the  wet !  „       iv  iii  466 

but  Dumble  wur  blow'd  wi'  the  w,  „       iv  iii  477 

barrin'  the  w,  Dumble  wur  blow'd  wi'  the  w,  ,.       iv  iii  493 

Proclaim  it  to  the  w's.  „         v  ii  290 

As  few  as  I  may  in  a  w,  Harold  ii  i  68 

the  best,  strong-wing'd  against  the  w.  „    n  ii  149 

The  w's  so  cross  and  jostle  among  these  towers.  „    ii  ii  155 

Breathe  the  free  w  from  off  our  Saxon  downs,  ,,    ii  ii  186 

For  happier  homeward  w's  than  that  which  crack'd  „    n  ii  198 

But  wherefore  is  the  w,  „    n  ii  256 

The  «  is  fair  For  England  now  ...  „    ii  ii  766 

ideard,  heard —    Harold.    The  w  in  his  hair  ?  „   mi  371 

we  must  fight.    How  blows  the  w?  „  ni  ii  135 

William  the  Norman,  for  the  w  had  changed —  „  iv  iii  181 

William's  or  his  own  As  w  blows,  or  tide  flows :  t.     v  i  163 

Winnow  and  scatter  all  scruples  to  the  w,  Becket  i  i  151 

that  one  time  sway  to  the  current.  And  to  the  w  another.    „     i  iii  595 
Is  it  the  w  of  the  dawn  that  I  hear  „         ii  i  1 

and  so  of  the  other  w's ;  „    ii  ii  323 

God  and  his  free  w  grant  your  lordship  a  happy  home- 
return  ,,  III  iii  327 
Indungeon'd  from  one  whisper  of  the  w,  „  iv  ii  147 
besides  the  w  Went  with  my  arrow.  The  Cup  i  ii  31 
thou  that  art  life  to  the  w,  to  the  wave,  „  n  3 
Thou  whose  breath  Is  balmy  w  to  robe  „  u  265 
On  my  last  voyage — but  the  w  has  fail'd —  „  n  521 
My  far-eyed  queen  of  the  w's —  The  Falcon  9 
And  a  salt  w  burnt  the  blossoming  trees ;  Prom,  of  May  i  57 
day's  bright  like  a  friend,  but  the  w  east  like  an  enemy.  „  i  79 
He  wur  sa  bellows'd  out  wi'  the  w  this  mumin',  „  in  432 
To  break  our  band  and  scatter  us  to  the  w's.                  Foresters  iii  454 

Wind  (verb)     and  howsoe'er  Thy  quarry  w  and  wheel.  The  Falcon  12 

if  I  w  This  forest-horn  of  mine  Foresters  iv  174 

Winder  (window)    and  I  heard  the  w — that's  the  w  at 

the  end  o'  the  passage.  Prom,  of  May  i  396 

afoor  I  coomed  up  he  got  thruS  the  «  agean.  „  i  406 


Prom,  of  May  r  429 

nl8 

HI  72 

The  Cup  I  i  87 

Foresters  ii  i  634 

IV  1091 
Queen  Mary  ii  i  154 

„  V  ii  459 

V  ii  464 
Prom,  of  May  i  407 

I  561 

Foresters  i  i  150 

I  i  156 

Queen  Mary  ii  iv  28 
Harold  i  i  83 


n  ii  336 


Winder  (window)  {continued)    I'll  hev  the  w  naailed  up, 
and  put  Towser  under  it. 
she  set  the  bush  by  my  dairy  w 
the  walls  sa  thin,  and  the  w's  brokken. 

Winding    I  warrant  I  worm  thro'  all  their  w's. 
To  lead  us  thro'  the  w's  of  the  wood. 
And  catch  the  w  of  a  phantom  horn. 

Window    {See  also  Winder)    Open  the  w,  Knyvett ; 
My  w  look'd  upon  the  corridor ; 
When  he  we  speak  of  drove  the  w  back. 
Got  thro'  the  w  again  ? 
will  be  placed  Beneath  the  w,  Philip. 
Love  flew  in  at  the  w 
Wealth  dropt  out  of  the  w, 

Windsor    There  yet  is  time,  take  boat  and  pass  to  W. 
Mary.     I  pass  to  W  and  I  lose  my  crown. 

Windy    for  in  our  w  world  What's  up  is  faith. 

Nor  mark  the  sea-bird  rouse  himself  and  hover  Above 
the  w  ripple, 

Wine    we  may  grant  the  w.     Old  Sir  Thomas  always 

granted  the  w.  Queen  Mary  ii  i  41 

and  mine  old  flask  of  w  Beside  me,  „        m  i  47 

So  the  w  ran,  and  there  be  revelry,  „     m  ii  236 

what  an  acrid  w  has  Luther  brew'd,  „    iv  iii  545 

A  drinker  of  black,  strong,  volcanic  w's,  „         v  ii  94 

Would  the  w's  Of  wedding  had  been  dash'd  Harold  iv  iii  6 

cannot  see  the  world  but  thro'  their  w's  !  „  iv  iii  226 

Some  w  !     Too  much !  „      v  i  203 

amorous  Of  good  old  red  sound  liberal  Gascon  iv :  Becket,  Pro.  101 

A  good  dish  from  a  bad,  new  w  from  old.     Henry. 

Well,  who  loves  w  loves  woman.  „       Pro.  106 

when  the  Gascon  w  mounts  to  my  head,  „       Pro.  113 

I  have  been  a  lover  of  w's,  and  delicate  meats,  „  i  i  76 

Go  home,  and  sleep  thy  w  off,  for  thine  eyes  Glare 

stupid-wild  with  w.  „  i  i  212 

Well — if  that  isn't  goodly  w —  „        i  iv  157 

that  tho'  I  can  drink  w  I  cannot  bide  water,  „        i  iv  220 

The  w  and  wealth  of  all  our  France  are  yours ;  „        n  ii  446 

warder  of  the  bower  hath  given  himself  Of  late  to  w.         .,         iii  i  32 
his  fond  excess  of  w  Springs  from  the  loneliness  „         in  i  39 

Are  braced  and  brazen'd  up  with  Christmas  w's  ..        v  ii  424 

Plunder'd  the  vessel  full  of  Gascon  w,  „        v  ii  441 

— we  have  eaten — we  are  heated.     W !  The  Cup  i  ii  46 

red  w  Ean  down  the  marble  and  lookt  like  blood,  „         n  203 

Bring  me  The  costly  w's  we  use  in  marriages.  „        11  365 

W  !     Filippo,  w  !     Count.     It  is  but  thin  and  cold.         The  Falcon  576 
Not  quite  recover'd  of  your  wound,  the  w  Might  help 

you. 
thro'  the  blood  the  w  leaps  to  the  brain 
Here,  here — a  cup  of  w— -drink  and  begone  ! 
Give  me  a  draught  of  w. 

A  draught  of  w.    Robin.    Our  cellar  is  hard  by. 
Take  him,  good  little  John,  and  give  him  w. 
your  good  father  had  his  draught  of  w 
Where  lies  that  cask  of  w  whereof 
And  thou  wouldst  run  more  w  than  blood, 
the  warm  w,  and  found  it  again. 

Wine-press    For  thou  hast  trodden  this  w-p  alone. 

Wing    on  the  deck  and  spread  his  w's  for  sail ! 
hardly,  save  by  boat,  swimming,  or  w's. 
free  w  The  world  were  all  one  Araby. 
May  the  great  angels  join  their  w's, 
Would  their  w's  were  mine  To  follow  thee 
two  young  w's  Tp  fly  to  heaven  straight  with, 
cherubim  With  twenty-cubit  w's  from  wall  to  wall — 
not  so  with  us — No  w  s  to  come  and  go. 
let  him  flap  The  w's  that  beat  down  Wales ! 
and  our  battle-axes  broken  The  Raven's  w. 


591 
Foresters  i  iii  22 
I  iii  89 
n  i  459 
n  i  467 
II  i  470 
n  ii  2 
m  306 
in  338 
IV  245 
Becket  in  iii  290 
Queen  Mary  i  v  379 
n  iii  13 
„         ni  v  209 
„  V  iv  6 

Harold  1  ii  26 
„  ni  i  25 
„  m  i  184 
„  ni  ii  99 
„  IV  i  247 
,.  IV  iii  65 
hear  him  presently  with  clapt  w  Crow  over  Barbarossa —  Becketni\A9 
we  pray  you,  draw  yourself  from  under  The  w's  of  France.  „  n  ii  249 
lark  first  takes  the  sunlight  on  his  w.  The  Cup  1  Iii  44 

had  you  left  him  the  free  use  of  his  w's.  Prom,  of  May  i  653 

would  not  blur  A  moth's  w  by  the  touching ;  „  n  492 

he  flutter'd  his  lo's  with  a  sweet  little  cry,  Foresters  i  i  154 

he  flutter'd  his  w's  as  he  gave  me  the  lie,  „       i  i  159 


Wing'd 


1126 


Withdrew 


Wing'd    (See  also  Strong-wing'd)    sonnet's  a  flying  ant, 

W  for  a  moment.  '  Queen  Mary  ii  i  85 

But  w  souls  flying  Beyond  all  change  Harold  iii  ii  100 

They  say  that  you  are  wise  in  w  things,  Becket  i  i  255 

Winging    our  sea-mew  W  their  only  wail !  Harold  ii  i  98 

Wingless    and  thus  I  dimib  thee  too,  my  w  nightingale  !  „       i  ii  24 

Wink    The  French  King  w's  at  it.  Queen  Alary  m  i  160 

I  must  not  dream,  not  w,  but  watch.  „         iii  v  154 

Take  fees  of  tyranny,  w  at  sacrilege,  Becket  ii  ii  394 

Winking     Priest  Sits  w  at  the  license  of  a  king,  „        i  ii  66 

Winnow     W  and  scatter  all  scruples  to  the  wind,  „        i  i  150 

Winsome    So  w  in  her  grace  and  gaiety.  Prom,  of  May  iii  754 

Winter  (adj.)    (See  also  Spring-and-winter)    Tho'  all 

the  world  should  bay  like  w  wolves.  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  361 

Our  short-lived  sun,  before  his  w  plunge,  „  in  iii  86 

Two  young  lovers  in  w  weather,  Harold  iii  ii  3 

They  are  but  of  spring.  They  fly  the  w  change—  „    in  ii  97 

W  sunshine !     Beware  of  opening  out  thy  bosom  to  it,   Becket  in  iii  29 
Close  to  the  grating  on  a  w  mom  The  Falcon  441 

Winter  (s)     {See  also  Midwinter)    like  the  wild  bedge- 


Queen  Mary  ni  vi  16 
IV  iii  430 

V  iv  16 

V  V  269 
Harold  V  i  132 

Becket,  Pro.  334 

I  iii  338 

I  iv  64 

Foresters  iv  95 

„    IV  1055 

The  Cup  II  305 

Harold  iv  i  197 

Queen  Mary  ii  iv  134 

ni  V  220 

in  vi  23 

„  V  V  56 

Harold  i  i  359 

„       I  i  363 

„      V  i  177 

Becket,  Pro.  203 

I  i  153 

The  Cuf  n  89 


rose  Of  a  soft  w. 
Hath,  like  a  brief  and  bitter  w's  day, 
Were  but  a  sort  oiw; 
Her  life  was  w,  for  her  spring  was  nipt : 
And  be  thy  hand  as  ■«;  on  the  field, 
And  w  again  and  the  snows. 
After  the  nineteen  w's  of  King  Stephen — 
Cold  after  warm,  w  after  summer. 
And  in  the  w  I  will  fire  their  farms. 
A  thousand  w's  Will  strip  you  bare  as  death. 

Winter-cataracts    Whose  w-c  find  a  realm  and  leave  it 

Wiry    The  nimble,  wild,  red,  w,  savage  king — 

Wisdom    Some  spice  of  w  in  my  telling  you. 
Best  w  is  to  know  the  worst  at  once, 
bring  it  Home  to  the  leisure  w  of  his  Queen, 
And  all  his  wars  and  w's  past  away  ; 
Fool  still  ?  or  w  there, 
W  when  in  power  And  wisest,  should  not 
Ay,  if  W  Pair'd  not  with  Good, 
by  thy  w  Hast  kept  it  firm^f  rom  shaking  ; 
And  all  the  w  of  the  Chancellor, 
Life  yields  to  death  and  w  bows  to  Fate, 

Wise     (See  also  Stupid-wise)     Statesmen  that  are  w 

Shape  a  necessity,  Queen  Mary  in  iii  32 

Statesmen  that  are  w  Take  truth  herself  for  model.  „  in  iii  36 

But  your  w  bees  that  stung  him  first  to  death.  „  in  iii  64 

And  love  should  know  ;  and — be  the  king  so  w, —  Harold  i  i  277 

Ay,  ay  and  w  in  peace  and  great  in  war —  „       i  i  313 

Fool  still  ?  or  wisdom  there,  My  w  head-shaking  Harold  ?    „       i  i  361 
Warrior  thou  art,  and  mighty  w  withal !  ,.     ii  ii  543 

And  all  our  just  and  w  and  holy  men  „     in  i  209 

Fool  and  w,  I  fear  This  curse,  and  scorn  it.  ,,      in  ii  67 

Make  not  our  Morcar  sullen  :  it  is  not  w.  „  iv  iii  104 

but  I  am  wiser  now  ...  I  am  too  w  .  .  .  „     v  ii  113 

And  w,  yea  truthful,  till  that  blighted  vow  .,     v  ii  155 

They  say  that  you  are  w  in  winged  things,  Becket  i  i  255 

I  will  be  w  and  wary,  not  the  soldier  „       i  i  387 

Poor  man,  beside  himself — not  w.  „     n  ii  235 

Like  some  w  prince  of  this  world  from  his  wars,  „       v  ii  13 

A  policy  of  w  pardon  Wins  here  as  well  as  there.  „       v  ii  22 

Camma,  W  I  am  sure  as  she  is  beautiful.  The  Cup  i  ii  139 

Or  good,  or  w,  that  you  should  clasp  a  hand  „  n  82 

W  !     Life  yields  to  death  and  wisdom  ,.  n  88 

Too  late — thought  myself  w — A  woman's  dupe.    .  ,.        ii  480 

However  w,  we  must  at  times  have  wrought  Some 

great  injustice,  Foresters  in  154 

Robin's  a  w  man,  Richard  a  wiseacre,  „       iv  357 

Wiseacre    Robin's  a  wise  man,  Richard  a  w,  „       iv  357 

Wisely    Have  I  done  w,  then,  in  accepting  him  ?  Prom,  of  May  in  183 

Wiser     Brother,  the  king  is  w  than  he  seems  ;  Harold  i  i  272 

Then  Tostig  too  were  w  than  he  seems.  „      i  i  278 

but  I  am  w  now  ...  I  am  too  wise  ...  „    v  ii  111 

The  w  choice,  because  my  sleeping-draught  Becket  iv  ii  168 

Woman  again  ! — but  I  am  w  now.  The  Cup  i  i  169 

I  say  it  to  you — you  are  w — Rome  knows  all,  „      i  ii  285 


Wisest     But  thou  canst  hear  the  best  and  w  of  us. 

Wisdom  when  in  power  And  w, 

choose  A  himdred  of  the  w  heads  from  England, 

wisdom  bows  to  Fate,  Is  w,  doing  so. 
Wish  (s)     mine  own  w  fulfiU'd  before  the  word 

to  laave  the  w  before  the  word  Is  man's 

Your  pious  w  to  pay  King  Edward's  debts, 

my  w  Echoes  your  Majesty's.     Pole.     It  shall  be  so 

'  It  is  the  King's  w,  that  you  should  wed  Prince 
Philibert  of  Savoy. 

Mere  compliments  and  w'es. 

Amen  to  all  Your  w,  and  further. 

dead  man's  dying  w  should  be  of  weight. 

To  make  my  marriage  prosper  to  my  w  ! 

smiles,  not  tears  ;  Good  w'es,  not  reproaches  ; 
Wish  (verb)     council  and  all  her  people  w  her  to 
marry. 

I  must  needs  w  all  good  things  for  France. 

I  w  some  thimderbolt  Would  make  this  Cole  a 
cinder, 

I  w  you  a  good  morning,  good  Sir  Nicholas  : 

I  w  her  Highness  better. 

I  w  you  joy  o'  the  King's  brother. 

I  am  sure  I  w  her  happy. 

He  w'es  you  to  dine  along  with  us. 

Then  you  should  w  us  both  to  love  for  ever. 

Do  you  w  it  ?     Eva.     Bo  I  w  it? 

I  only  w  This  pool  were  deep  enough. 

Have  you  told  him  I  am  here  ?     Bora.     No  ;  do 
you  w  it  ? 

make  herself  anything  he  w'es  her  to  be  ? 

Tell  him  that  I  and  the  lady  here  w  to  see  him. 
.    Might  w  its  rose  a  lily, 

I  w  you  and  your  ladyship's  father  a  most 
exceedingly  good  morning. 

I  could  w  that  all  the  land  Were  plimged 
Wish'd    Madam,  when  the  Roman  w  to  reign, 

sometime  I  have  w  That  I  were  caught, 

I  w  myself  the  milkmaid  singing  here, 

I  had  w  for  any  weapon. 

and  she  w  The  Church  were  king  : 

once  I  w  to  scourge  them  to  the  bones. 

Oh,  how  often  I  have  w  for  you  ! 

asking  his  consent — you  w  me— 

I  w,  if  you Bora.     If  I 

I  w,  I  hoped  To  make,  to  make- 


Harold  I  i  30 

„    I  i  36 

Becket  ii  ii  171 

The  Cup  n  91 

Queen  Mary  I  iv  23a 

I  iv  23'' 

I  V  111 


in  V  221 

V  ii  59 

V  iv  1 
Becket,  Pro. 

The  Cup  II  30 
Prom,  of  May  I  52^ 

Queen  Mary  i  i  11 

I  v  r 

IV  iii  Ifl 
V  i  13 

V  ii  61^ 
Becket  in  i  15 

Prom,  of  May  i  47| 


nt; 
ni' 
III  ■ 


Foresters  i  i  30 
IV  66 
Queen  Alary  i  v 
„  III  v  16 

„  III  V  256 

Harold  iv  iii  19 
Becket  v  ii  117 
The  Cup  I  i  27 
Prom,  of  May  i  76" 
III  ' 
m  77| 
III  78 
Foresters  iv  32 
II  ii  13 


I  cannot  break  it,  Robin,  if  I  w. 

Wisp  (jSee  aZso  Wills-o'-the-wisp)  No,  by  w  and  glowworm,  no. 

Wit     (See  also  Mother-wit)     The  man  is  able  enough — no 

lack  of  w,  „      I  ii  10 

Witan     Ay  ...  if  the  W  will  consent  to  this.  Harold  n  ii  613 

Thy  voice  will  lead  the  W —  „       ii  ii  619 

Witch     (See  also  Wood-witch)     But  then  she  was  a  w.  Queen  Alary  iv  ii  20S, 
what  are  you  flying  from  ?     Countryman.     The  w  !  "" 

the  w  !  Becket  in  ii  1 

he'll  never  out  again,  the  w  has  got  him.  „       in  ii  1 

Kind  of  the  w  to  give  thee  warning  tho'.  „      in  ii  1 

Here  is  the  w's  hut.    The  fool-people  call  her  a  w — a 


good  w  to  me  ! 

in  Nottingham  they  say  There  bides  a  foul  w 

Half-witted  and  a  w  to  boot ! 

Or  learning  witchcraft  of  your  woodland  w, 

he  kneels  !  he  has  anger'd  the  foul  w. 
Witchcraft     Or  learning  w  of  yoirr  woodland  witch, 
Witch'd    Our  woodland  Circe  that  hath  w  the  King  ? 
Withdraw    we  might  w  Part  of  our  garrison  at  Calais. 

Permit  me  to  w.    To  Lambeth  ? 

That  Cranmer  may  w  to  foreign  parts, 

Alva  will  but  touch  him  on  the  horns.  And  he  w's 

God  from  me  w's  Himself,  And  the  King  too. 

Will  you  not  w  ? 

speak  with  them  apart.    Let  us  w. 
Withdrawing    means  to  counsel  your  w  To  Ashridge, 
Withdrew    thought  I  might  be  chosen  Pope,  But  then 
w  it. 


Foresters  ii  i  17| 

nil 

n  i  373 

11  i  501 

n  i  670 

n  i  500 

Becket  in  ii  32 

Queen  Alary  i  v  122 

III  ii  129 

IV  i  45 

;  „         V  i  157 

Becket  i  iii  701 

„     V  ii  228 

„     V  ii  311 

Queen  Mary  i  iv  225 


I 


Wither 


1127 


Woman 


Wither    heat  enough  To  scorch  and  w  heresy  to  the 

root.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  28 

marriage-garland  w's  even  with  the  putting  on,  Becket,  Pro.  360 

Wither'd    wherever  Spain  hath  ruled  she  hath  w  Queen  Mary  ii  i  206 

That  w  wreath  were  of  more  worth  to  me.  The  Falcon  335 

That  w  wreath  is  of  more  worth  to  me.  „          337 

And  jealousy  is  w,  sour  and  ugly  :  Foresters  ii  ii  65 

When  the  flower  was  w  and  old.  „         iv  22 

Withholden    See  Long-witbholden 

Within-door    They  bum  themselves  w-d.  Becket  i  i  289 

Withstood    who  hath  w  two  Kings  to  their  faces  for  the 

honour  of  God.  „     n  ii  275 

Witness  (s)     Bear  w,  Kenard,  that  I  live  and  die  Queen  Alary  ii  iv  41 
No  perfect  to  of  a  perfect  faith  In  him  who  persecutes  :   „        in  iv  117 

Let  all  men  here  bear  to  of  our  bond  !  Harold  ii  ii  698 

Ye  heard  one  w  even  now.  „       iv  i  170 

Bear  me  true  w — only  for  this  once —  „       v  ii  115 

Witness  (verb)     And  w  to  your  Grace's  innocence,  Queen  Mary  m  v  50 

you  are  gone,  my  liege,  W  these  papers,  „        in  vi  174 

w  the  brawls,  the  gibbets.  „              v  i  85 

Witted    See  Half-witted 

Wizard    myself  must  be  the  w  To  raise  that  tempest  Becket,  Pro.  207 

Woden     W,  aU  Our  cancell'd  warrior-gods,  Harold  in  ii  72 

War-woodman  of  old  W,  how  he  fells  „        v  i  588 

Woe     W  knave  to  thy  familiar  and  to  thee  !  „       n  ii  679 

Woke    I  w  Sir  Henry — and  he's  true  to  you —  Queen  Mary  m  v  60 

and  w  and  came  Among  us  again,  Harold  iv  iii  150 

Roused  by  the  clamour  of  the  chase  he  w,  The  Cup  i  ii  118 

a  red  fire  w  in  the  heart  of  the  town,  Prom,  of  May  i  50 

Wold    Moon  on  the  waste  and  the  w,  The  Cup  i  ii  4 

That  ever  charm'd  the  plowman  of  your  w's  Prom,  of  May  in  489 

then  the  sweetest  flower  of  all  the  w's,  „          ui  752 

Wolf    not  to  yield  His  Church  of  England  to  the 

Papal  w  And  Mary  ;  Queen  Mary  i  ii  36 

there  were  many  wolves  among  you  Who  dragg'd  ,.          i  v  399 

black  night,  and  hear  the  w.  „          i  v  414 

if  yoiu:  w  the  while  should  howl  for  more,  ,.          i  v  419 

Tho'  all  the  world  should  bay  like  winter  wolves.  ,.         n  ii  362 

W  of  the  shore  !  dog,  with  thy  lying  lights  Harold  n  i  21 

The  to  !  the  beast !  „    n  ii  301 

God  gave  us  to  divide  us  from  the  to  !  „  iv  iii  101 

The  to  Mudded  the  brook  and  predetermined  all.  „      ..  J  i  2 

Mannerless  wolves  !  Becket  i  iii  739 

when  the  horn  sounds  she  comes  out  as  a  to.  ,.       iii  ii  23 

King  hath  many  more  wolves  than  he  can  tame  ,.    in  iii  322 

wolves  of  England  Must  murder  her  one  shepherd,  „     in  iii  342 

with  the  flock  to  the  fold — Safe  from  the  w —  The  Cup  i  ii  9 

They  say  that  Rome  Sprang  from  a  to.  „      i  ii  14 

With  some  conspiracy  against  the  to.  „      i  ii  16 

Safe  from  the  w  to  the  fold —  „      i  ii  19 

Or  haply  fallen  a  victim  to  the  to.  Foresters  n  i  510 
be  there  wolves  in  Sherwood  ?     Marian.     The  w,  John  !      „        n  i  511 

Wolfdog     how  those  Roman  w's  howl  and  bay  him  !    Queen  Mary  iv  iii  354 
a  score  of  w-d's  are  let  loose  that  will  tear  thee 

piecemeal.  Becket  in  ii  39 

Wolf-queen    that  our  to-  Q  Is  prowling  round  the  fold.  „      in  iii  6 

Woman    (See  also  B^gar-woman,  Mad-woman,  Yeo- 

woman)     I  and  my  old  to  'ud  bum  upon  it.  Queen  Mary  i  i  56 

'  Whosoever  Looketh  after  a  to,'  „        i  v  453 

1  pray  God  No  to  ever  love  you,  ,.        i  v  602 

All  the  women  loved  him.  „          n  i  34 

Tear  up  that  w's  work  there.  „          n  i  75 

That  makes  or  man  or  to  look  their  goodliest.  „       n  ii  329 

Away  !     Women  and  children  !  „        n  iii  97 

I  was  too  sorry  for  the  to  To  mark  the  dress.  „        in  i  58 

Sir,  no  to's  regimen  Can  save  us.  ,.      in  i  122 

I  say  There  is  no  man — there  was  one  to  with  us —  „      in  i  337 

for  women  To  go  twelve  months  in  bearing  „      ni  yi  90 

W  is  various  and  most  mutable.  „    ni  vi  135 

— And  I  have  known  such  women  more  than  one —  „    iii  yi  178 

To  the  poor  flock — to  women  and  to  children —  „      iv  ii  158 

Thou  knowest  never  to  meant  so  well,  „       v  ii  342 

Hapless  doom  of  w  happy  in  betrothing  !  „       v  ii  364 

Unhappiest  Of  Queens  and  wives  and  women  !  „       v  ii  408 

or  all  women's  Low  as  his  own  ?  „       v  ii  434 


Woman  {continued)    It  is  the  low  man  thinks  the  to 

low  ;  Queen  Mary  v  ii  439 

in  Guernsey,  I  watch'd  a  to  bum  ;  „           v  iv  18 

the  to  up  yonder  sleeping  after  all  she  has  done,  „            v  iv  34 
burnt  The  heretic  priest,  workmen,  and  women  and 

children,  „           v  v  106 

we  are  private  with  our  women  here —  „           v  v  119 

Women,  the  Holy  Father  Has  ta'en  the  legateship  „           v  v  124 

I  am  but  a  to,  I  have  no  power. —  „           v  v  130 

Women,  when  I  am  dead,  Open  my  heart,  „           v  v  152 

I  have  given  her  cause — I  fear  no  to.  Harold  i  ii  42 

Then  our  modest  women —  „     n  ii  476 

and  women  Cling  to  the  conquer'd,  „     rv  i  212 

I  am  no  to  to  put  faith  in  dreams.  „     iv  i  264 

The  king  commands  thee,  to  !  „      v  i  341 

To  part  me  from  the  to  that  I  loved  !  „      v  i  346 

no  man  can  swear  to  him.     Edith.     But  one  wl  „       v  ii  79 

Who  be  these  to  ?    And  what  body  is  this  ?  „       v  ii  86 

Pluck  the  dead  to  oS  the  dead  man,  Malet !  „     v  ii  144 

Well,  who  loves  wine  loves  to.  Becket,  Pro.  109 

Men  are  God's  trees,  and  women  are  God's  flowers  ;  „       Pro.  Ill 

whom  I  love  indeed  As  a  to  shovdd  be  loved —  „       Pro.  133 
if  a  man  Wastes  himself  among  women,  how  should 

he  love  A  to,  as  a  to  should  be  loved  ?  „       Pro.  137 

Last  night  I  followed  a  to  in  the  city  here.  „       Pro.  469 

The  to  that  I  f ollow'd  hither.  „           i  i  195 

I  saw  that  door  Close  even  now  upon  the  w.  ,.           i  i  203 

To  take  the  vagabond  to  of  the  street  Into  thine  arms  !     „  i  i  227 

'Tis  known  you  are  midwinter  to  all  women,  v            i  ii  28 

so  long  Have  wander'd  among  women —  „          n  i  154 

the  goodly  way  of  women  Who  love,  ,,          n  i  257 
There  is  no  to  that  I  love  so  well.     Rosamund.    No 

to  but  should  be  content  with  that —  ..            in  i  9 

and  to  make  me  a  to  of  the  world,  ,.        in  i  117 

more  a  to  o'  the  world  than  my  lady  here,  „        in  i  142 
most  on  'em  know  an  honest  to  and  a  lady  when 

they  see  her,  ,.        mi  179 

I  never  knew  an  honest  to  that  could  make  songs,  ,.        mi  183 
there  were  Abbots — but  they  did  not  bring  their  women  ;  „      in  iii  136 

if  he  Had  aught  of  man,  or  thou  of  to  ;  „        iv  ii  232 

Are  ye  king's  men  ?     I  am  king's  to,  I.  „          v  i  265 

make  me  not  a  to,  John  of  Sahsbury,  „         v  ii  147 

Lacking  the  love  of  w  and  of  child.  „         v  ii  199 

I  never  felt  such  passion  for  a  to.  The  Gup  i  i  34 

With  all  my  range  of  women  should  yet  shun  „       i  i  57 

For  some  imprincely  violence  to  a  to,  „     i  i  139 

I  ever  had  my  victories  among  women.  „     i  i  153 

W  again  ! — but  I  am  wiser  now.  ,,     i  i  168 

Not  one  to  keep  a  to's  fealty  when  Assailed  „     i  i  176 
Antonius,  So  gracious  toward  women,  never  yet  Flung 

back  a  to's  prayer.  „    i  ii  299 

'  He  never  yet  flung  back  a  to's  prayer  ' —  ,,    i  ii  455 

Or  man,  or  to,  as  traitors  unto  Rome.  „       i  iii  9 
A  to  I  could  live  and  die  for.    What !     Die  for  a  w, 

what  new  faith  is  this  ?  „     i  iii  65 

It  bears  an  evil  savour  among  women.                  .  „     i  iii  86 

It  is  not  easy  to  disarm  a  to  ?  "  ^  H!  ^^ 

The  women  of  the  Temple  drag  her  in.  ,,  i  iii  118 

I  never  found  the  to  I  could  not  force  „  i  iii  166 

thought  myself  wise — A  to's  dupe.  „      n  481 

O  women.  Ye  wiU  have  Roman  masters.  „       n  510 

Ah,  the  women,  the  women  !  The  Falcon  84 

won't  you  speak  with  the  old  to  first,  „          182 

She  smiles  at  him — how  hard  the  to  is  !  „          661 

best  heart  that  ever  Beat  for  one  w.  „          668 

Well,  well !  the  women !  „          699 

A  nobler  breed  of  men  and  women.  „          755 
theer  be  a  thousand  i'  the  parish,  taakin'  in  the 

women  and  childer ;  Prom,  of  May  1 146 

Then  the  man,  the  to.  Following  their  best  afiinities,  ,.           1 522 

but  I  hev  an  owd  to  as  'ud  see  to  all  that ;  „            n  96 

My  grandfather — of  him  They  say,  that  women —  „          n  272 
where  the  man  and  the  to,  only  differing  as  the 

stronger  and  the  weaker,  „         in  189 

If  marriage  ever  brought  a  to  happiness  „         in  639 


Woman 


1128 


Woodland 


Woman  {continued)    I  never  said  As  much  before  to 

any  w  living.  Prom,  of  May  iii  645 

A  hundred  times  more  worth  a  w's  love,  „         iii  743 

in  the  w,  and  the  man  must  bring  it  out  of  her.  Foresters  i  i  117 

thou  hast  ruffled  my  w,  Little  John.  „       i  i  166 

Thou  speakest  like  a  fool  or  a  w.  „       i  i  204 

your  w  so  flustered  me  that  I  forgot  my  message  ,,       i  i  296 

to  stand  between  me  and  your  w,  Kate.  „       i  i  305 
A  question  that  every  true  man  asks  of  a  w  once 

in  his  life.  „      i  ii  139 

Not  pleasures,  women's  matters.  „      i  ii  176 

Because  thou  sayest  such  fine  things  of  women,  „     i  iii  138 

1  reverence  all  women,  bad  me,  dying,  „        n  i  40 

thou  art  the  very  w  who  waits  On  my  dear  Marian.  „      ii  i  102 

and  the  old  w's  blessing  with  them  to  the  last  fringe.  „      ii  i  195 

There  is  but  one  old  w  in  the  hut.  „      ii  i  241 

There  is  yet  another  old  w.  „      ii  i  244 

there's  for  you — and  the  old  w's  welcome.  „      ii  i  290 

like  the  w  at  Acre  when  the  Turk  shot  her  „      ii  i  307 

biuy  me  in  the  mound,  says  the  w.  „      ii  i  313 

By  a  thief.    Sheriff.    Who,  w,  who  ?  „      ii  i  318 
sweet  saints  bless  your  worship  for  your  alms  to  the 

old  w\  „      II  i  364 

an  old  w  can  shoot  closer  than  you  two.  „      ii  i  400 

Did  I  not  tell  you  an  old  w  could  shoot  better  ?  „      n  i  407 

Thou  art  no  old  w — thou  art  disguised —  „      ii  i  410 

kiss  a  man  And  it  was  but  a  w.  „      i^.."  73 

I  could  love  you  like  aw.  „     ii  ii  191 

being  every  inch  a  man  I  honour  evei-y  inch  of  a  w.  „         iii  64 

Why  art  thou  mute  ?     Dost  thou  not  honoiu"  w  ?  „         iii  68 

And  if  a  w  pass —  „       iii  176 

We  never  wrong'd  a  w.  „       iii  184 

Marian,  thou  and  thy  w.  Why,  where  is  Kate  ?  „       iii  257 

Thou  and  thy  w  are  a  match  for  three  friars.  „       in  261 

A  w's  heart  is  but  a  little  thing,  „       iv  656 

values  neither  man  Nor  w  save  as  tools —  „       iv  714 

Womankind    kisses  of  all  kind  of  w  In  Flanders,  Harold  i  ii  113 

handle  all  w  gently,  and  hold  them  in  all  honour,  Foresters  i  i  99 
honouring  all  w,  and  more  especially  my  lady 

Marian,  »        m  56 

Woman-tears    And  those  hard  men  brake  into  w-t,  Queen  Mary  i  v  564 

Womb    O  Thou  that  slayest  the  babe  within  the  w  The  Cup  ii  279 
Won    I  w  by  boldness  once.    The  Emperor  counsell'd  Queen  Mary  i  v  547 

Struck  home  and  w.  „          i  v  554 

was  it  boldness  Or  weakness  that  w  there  ?  „          i  v  560 

possibly  The  Lutheran  may  be  w  to  her  again  ;  „      in  iv  202 

She  hath  w  upon  our  people  thro'  her  beauty,  Harold  iv  i  22 

The  day  is  w  !  „    iv  i  270 

Stigand,  O  father,  have  we  w  the  day  ?  ,.     v  i  544 

and  w  the  violet  at  Toulouse  ;  Becket,  Pro.  348 

boldness  of  this  hand  hath  w  it  Love's  alms,  „         ii  i  183 

The  glory  and  grief  of  battle  w  or  lost  The  Cup  i  ii  161 

no  such  gamester  As,  having  w  the  stake,  „     i  iii  146 

have  w  Their  value  again — beyond  all  markets —  The  Falcon  904 

—  onder    I  w  at  tha',  it  beats  me  !  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  499 

shall  not  w  If  Sjmorix,  who  has  dwelt  three  years  The  Cup  i  ii  174 

I  M  if  I  look  as  pale  as  she  ?  „        ii  322 

Sometimes  I  w,  When  man  has  surely  learnt  Prom,  of  May  ii  329 

How  worn  he  looks,  poor  man  !  who  is  it,  I  w.  „            ii  391 
you  yourself  are  ashamed  of  me,  and  I  do  not  w  at  it. 

Dora.    But  I  should  w  at  myself  if  it  were  so.  „           in  270 

I  am  a  silent  man  myself,  and  all  the  more  w  at 

our  Earl.  Foresters  i  ii  35 

Wonder'd     But  w  more  at  my  much  constancy  Becket  iv  ii  304 

Woo    Prince  of  fluff  and  feather  come  To  w  you,  Queen  Mary  i  iv  164 

Ringdoves  coo  again,  All  things  w  again.  „         in  v  104 

And  w  their  loves  and  have  forgotten  thee  ;  Harold  n  ii  438 

Wood    But  hatch  you  some  new  treason  in  the  w's.  Queen  Mary  i  v  466 

Cool  as  the  light  in  old  decaying  w  ;  „           iv  ii  5 

*  Make  short!    make  short ! '   and  so  they  lit 

the  w.  „      IV  iii  607 

Be  there  not  fair  w's  and  fields  In  England  ?  Harold  i  i  261 

Taken  the  rifted  pillars  of  the  w  „      i  ii  100 

And  if  I  walk  within  the  lonely  w,  „     n  ii  246 

bad  in  it  Wales,  Her  floods,  her  w's,  her  hills :  ,.     rv  i  207 


See,  first,  a  circling  w,  A  hundred 


Wood  {continued) 
pathways 
And  then  another  w,  and  in  the  midst 
it  minded  me  Of  the  sweet  w's  of  Clifford, 
A  royal  pleasaunce  for  thee,  in  the  w, 
I  brought  them  In  from  the  w,  and  set  them  here, 
the  people  Believe  the  w  enchanted. 
Have  track'd  the  King  to  this  dark  inland  w  ; 
How  ghostly  soimds  that  horn  in  the  black  w  ! 
she  sits  naked  by  a  great  heap  of  gold  in  the  middle  of 

the  w, 
in  the  dark  heart  of  the  w  I  hear  the  yelping 
more  wolves  than  he  can  tame  in  his  w's  of  England, 
Show  me  where  thou  earnest  out  of  the  w. 
I  watched  her  and  followed  her  into  the  w's, 
he  had  gone  too  far  Into  the  King's  own  w's  ; 
While  you  can  take  your  pastime  in  the  w's. 
break  of  precipice  that  runs  Thro'  all  the  w. 
Came  to  the  front  of  the  w — 
not  fear  the  crowd  that  hunted  me  Across  the  w's. 
They  hold  by  Richard — the  wild  w  ! 
mix  with  all  The  lusty  life  of  w  and  underwood, 
I  have  a  sudden  passion  for  the  wild  w — 
We  should  be  free  as  air  in  the  wild  w — 
Would  it  be  better  for  thee  in  the  w  ?    Scarlet.    Ay, 

so  she  did  not  foUow  me  to  the  w. 
I  have  reign'd  one  year  in  the  wild  w. 
soul  of  the  w's  hath  stricken  thro'  my  blood, 
I  found  this  white  doe  wajidering  thro'  the  w, 
But  I  am  weary  pacing  thro'  the  w. 
The  w  is  full  of  echoes,  owls,  elfs. 
He  was  the  king  o'  the  w. 
but  make  haste  then,  and  be  silent  in  the  w. 
See  whether  there  be  more  of  'em  in  the  w. 
To  lead  us  thro'  the  windings  of  the  w. 
Stay  with  us  in  this  w,  till  he  recover. 
We  be  fairies  of  the  w, 
And  this  new  queen  of  the  w. 
You  see  why  We  must  leave  the  w  and  fly. 
with  you,  out  of  it,  over  the  w  and  away  ! 
present  her  with  this  oaken  chaplet  as  Queen  of  the  w. 
In  this  dark  w  when  all  was  in  our  power 
Behold  a  pretty  Dian  of  the  w, 
Our  Robin,  King  o'  the  w's, 
Robin,  the  people's  friend,  the  King  o'  the  w's  ! 
The  Queen  o'  the  w's, 
Maid  Marian,  Queen  o'  the  w's  ! 

(repeat)  Foresters  ill  357,  375,  377,  398,  400 

Drink  to  the  health  of  our  new  Queen  o'  the  w's.  Foresters  in  369' 

We  drink  the  health  of  thy  new  Queen  o'  the  w's.  .,         in  373 

Drink  to  the  Queen  o'  the  w's,  „         in  389 

— -to  this  maid,  this  Queen  o'  the  w's.  ,,         in  395 

Thro'  w  and  lawn  and  ling,  .,         in  425 

For  a  Queen,  for  a  Queen  o'  the  w's,  (repeat)  „  in  431, 445 

Along  the  glades  and  passes  of  the  w  „         in  457 

Their  lives  imsafe  in  any  of  these  our  w's,  „  iv  94 

And  live  with  us  and  the  birds  in  the  green  w.  „         rv  326 

Blown  like  a  true  son  of  the  w's.  „  iv427 

are  delivered  here  in  the  wild  w  an  hour  after  noon.  „         iv  509 

Were  some  strong  fellow  here  in  the  wild  w,  „         iv  516 

they  shall  dance  to  the  music  of  the  wild  w.  „         iv  556 

Not  paid  at  York — the  w — ^prick  me  no  more  !  „         iv  623 

What  shouts  are  these  that  ring  along  the  w  ?  „         iv  763 

Then  will  I  live  for  ever  in  the  wild  w.  „         iv  879 

I  scent  it  in  the  green  leaves  of  the  w.  „         iv  944 

I  trust  We  shall  return  to  the  w.  „       iv  1052 

We  dealt  in  the  wild  justice  of  the  w's.  „       iv  1073 

Your  names  will  cling  like  ivy  to  the  w.  „       iv  1086 

Woodbine  (adj.)     Didn't  I  spy  'em  a-sitting  i'  the  w 

harbour  togither  ?  Prom,  of  May  1 125  J 

Woodbine  (s)     Wi'  the  wild  white  rose,  an'  the  w  sa 

gaay,  „  n  174] 

Woodcock    We  hold  our  Saxon  w  in  the  springe,  Harold  ii  ii  1 

Wood-fungus    Dry  as  an  old  w-/  on  a  dead  tree,  „       m  i  8 

Woodland  (adj.)     Glide  like  a  light  across  these  w  ways  !     Foresters  ii  i  159 


Becket,  Pro.  162 

..      Pro.  168 

I  i  264 

n  i  128 

II  i  131 
ni  i  3d 
m  ii  4 

HI  ii  IT 

ni  ii  22 

III  ii  47 
,.     in  iii  323 

IV  i  48 

IV  ii  IT 

V  ii  108' 
The  Cup  I  i  191 

I  ii  2a 

I  ii  119 

„         I  iii  17 

Foresters  i  iii  111 

„       I  iii  114 

I  iii  123 

I  iii  125 

„       I  iii  141 

n  i  36 

n  i  66 

n  i  96 

n  i  129 

n  i  262 

n  i  321 

II  i  365 
II  i  431 
n  i  635 

n  ii  9 

„       u  ii  118 

„       II  ii  139 

„       II  ii  174 

II  ii  201 

m  59 

in  182 

in  267 

in  344 

in  348 

in  354 


Woodland 


1129 


Work 


Woodland  (adj.)  (continued)    Tut !  tut !  the  scream  of 
some  wild  w  thing. 

Or  learning  mtchcraf  t  of  your  w  witch, 

Why — even  your  w  squirrel  sees  the  nut  Behind  the 
shell, 

Shall  drink  the  health  of  our  new  w  Queen. 

Great  w  king,  I  know  not  quarterstaff. 

Then,  if  ye  cannot  breathe  but  w  air. 
Woodland  (s)    Fifty  leagues  Of  w  hear  and  know  my  horn, 
Woodman    (See  also  War-woodman)    They  must  have 
past.    Here  is  a  w's  hut. 

true  w's  bow  of  the  best  yew-wood  to  slay  the  deer. 

in  the  name  of  all  our  woodmen,  present  her  with 

You  caught  a  lonely  w  of  our  band, 
Woodstock    banish'd  us  to  W  and  the  fields. 
Wood-witch    Is  not  this  w-w  of  the  rustic's  fear 
Wooer    Strange  in  a  w  ! 

Wool    Like  a  tod  of  w  from  wagon  into  warehouse. 
Word    That's  a  hard  w,  legitimate  ;  what  does  it 
mean  ? 

let  his  own  w's  damn  the  Papist. 


Foresters  ii  i  253 
II  i  501 

II  i  646 

III  314 

IV  215 
IV  952 
HI  104 

II  i  199 

II  i  392 
III  58 

III  359 
Queen  Mary  in  v  3 

Becket  ni  ii  31 

Queen  Mary  i  v  363 

Foresters  iv  274 

Queen  Mary  i  i  11 
I  iii  53 

yet  the  w  Affrights  me  somewhat :  „  i  iv  8 

Tis  mine  own  wish  fulfill'd  before  the  w  Was  spoken,  „  i  iv  233 

wish  before  the  w  Is  man's  good  Fairy —  „  i  iv  239 

Our  royal  w  for  that !  „  i  v  267 

Philip  never  writes  me  one  poor  w,  „  i  v  360 

The  w  has  tum'd  your  Highness  pale  ;  „  i  v  471 

One  w  before  she  comes.  „  n  ii  109 

Queen  had  written  her  w  to  come  to  court :  „  ii  ii  117 

No,  no,  my  w's  my  w.  „  ii  iii  93 

Ha — Verbum  Dei — verbum — w  of  Grod  !  „  in  i  262 

W  of  God  In  English  !  „  in  i  279 

Is  reconciled  the  w  ?  the  Pope  again  ?  „  in  iii  3 
I  have  changed  a  w  with  him  In  coming,  and  may 

change  a  w  again.  „  in  iv  14 

not  like  a  w.  That  comes  and  goes  in  uttering.  „  ni  v  29 

Truth,  a  w  !    The  very  Truth  and  very  W  are  one.  „  ni  v  31 

Is  like  a  w  that  comes  from  olden  days,  „  m  v  34 

For  the  wrong  Robin  took  her  at  her  w.  „  in  v  265 

May  Simon  Renard  speak  a  single  w?  „  in  vi  122 

to  speak  a  single  w  That  could  not  be  forgiven.  „  in  vi  126 

What  should  I  say,  I  cannot  pick  my  w's —  „  in  vi  148 

For  death  gives  hfe's  last  w  a  power  to  live,  „  iv  iii  161 

Let  all  rich  men  remember  that  hard  w.  „  iv  iii  206 

but  tek  thou  my  w  vor't,  Joan, —  „  iv  iii  533 

ever  give  yourselves  your  own  good  w.  Harold  i  i  343 

May,  surely,  play  with  w's.     Harold.     W's  are  the  man.      „  n  ii  418 

at  thy  w,  for  thou  Art  known  a  speaker  „  n  ii  516 

For  thou  art  truthful,  and  thy  w  thy  bond.  n  n  "  645 
Or  is  it  the  same  sin  to  break  my  w  As  break  mine 

oath  ?     He  call'd  my  w  my  bond  !  „  n  ii  664 

And  makes  believe  that  he  believes  my  w —  ,,  ii  ii  669 

Thy  naked  w  thy  bond  !  „  n  ii  693 
Thanks,  truthful  Earl ;  I  did  not  doubt  thy  w,  But 

that  my  barons  might  believe  thy  w,  „  n  ii  724 

Might  strengthen  thee  in  keeping  of  thy  w,  „  n  ii  731 

I  that  so  prized  plain  w  and  naked  truth  „  m  i  93 

This  lightning  before  death  Plays  on  the  w, —  „  m  i  388 

The  king's  last  w — '  the  arrow  ! '  "  ^  !  ^^^ 

I  have  not  spoken  to  the  king  One  w  ;  „  v  i  336 
Nay,  then,  I  take  thee  at  thy  w—                                    Becket,  Pro.  128 

his  last  w's  were  a  commendation  of  Thomas  Becket  „  Pro.  400 

And  I  have  said  no  w  of  this  to  him  :  „  Jt  i  97 

We  wait  but  the  King's  w  to  strike  thee  dead.  „  i  iii  166 

who  cares  not  for  the  w.  Makes  '  care  not ' —  .,  n  i  117 

The  w  should  come  from  him.  »  h  \\  134 

W's  !  he  will  wriggle  out  of  them  »  n  ii  186 

bad  me  whatever  I  saw  not  to  speak  one  w,  »  m  i  133 

not  to  speak  one  w,  for  that's  the  rule  o'  the  garden,  „  in  i  137 

tho'  I  shouldn't  speak  one  w,  »  m  i  155 
tho'  I  be  sworn  not  to  speak  a  w,  I  can  tell  you  all 

about  her,  if Rosamund.    No  w  now.  >,  ni  i  205 

not  thorn  enough  to  prick  him  for  it,  Ev'n  with  aw?  „  in  i  253 

One  w  further.     Doth  not  the  fewness  of  anything  „  in  iii  301 

•we  had  w's  of  late,  And  thereupon  he  call'd  „  iv  ii  42 


Word  (continued)  — a  troubadour  You  play  with  w's.  Becket  iv  ii  182 
Rosamimd  hath  not  answer'd  you  one  w  ;  Madam,  I 

will  not  answer  you  one  w.  „      iv  ii  362 

I  spake  no  w  of  treachery,  Reginald.  „        v  ii  401 

Ready  to  fall  at  Henry's  w  or  yours —  „       v  ii  486 

Low  w's  best  chime  with  this  solenmity.  The  Cup  ii  217 

These  are  strange  w's  to  speak  to  Artemis.  „        u  326 

W's  are  not  always  what  they  seem,  my  King.  „        n  328 

My  lord,  a  w  with  you.  The  Falcon  394 

Well,  Tell  me  the  w's — or  better —  „          451 

A  w  with  you,  my  lord  !  ,,  472 
A  w,  my  lord  !     Count.    '  Dead  flowers  ! '     Elisdbetta. 

A  w,  my  lord  !  ,,          475 

one  w  more.     Count.    Good  !  let  it  be  but  one.  ",          510 

Strange  that  the  w's  at  home  with  me  so  long  „          525 

will  you  take  the  w  out  of  your  master's  own  mouth  ?  '„  598 
I  will  never  change  w  with  you  again.                         Prom,  of  May  1 163 


— ^what's  the  newspaaper  w,  Wilson  ? — celebrate — 

thou'll  put  one  w  fur  another  as  I  does. 

'  Till  death  us  part ' — those  are  the  only  w's. 

But  I  hed  a  w  to  saay  to  ye. 

Cannot  you  understand  plain  w's,  Mr  Dobson  ? 

I  be  a  bit  deaf,  and  I  wur  hallus  scaared  by  a  big  w  ; 

Miss  Dora,  mea  and  my  maates,  us  three,  we  wants 

to  hev  three  w's  wi'  ye. 
he  gave  me  no  address,  and  there  was  no  w  of  marriage  ; 
He  be  saayin'  a  w  to  the  owd  man. 
One  w,  or  do  but  smile  ! 

and  wants  To  hev  a  w  wi'  ye  aJ)out  the  marriage. 
Than  this,  this — but  I  waste  no  w's  upon  him  : 
I  cannot  find  the  w — forgive  it — Amends. 
— her  last  w  Forgave — and  I  forgive  you — 
that  very  w  '  greasy  '  hath  a  kind  of  unction  in  it. 
What  a  wealth  of  w's — 0  Lord,  I  will  live 

0  Lord,  I  am  easily  led  by  w's, 
nor  to  speak  w  to  anyone. 
True  king  of  vice — true  play  on  w's — 
Speak  but  one  w  not  only  of  forgiveness, 

1  never  will  speak  w  to  thee  again. 
Then  /  am  yeo-woman.     0  the  clumsy  w  !     Robin. 

Take  thou  this  light  kiss  for  thy  clumsy  w. 

Air  and  w,  my  lady,  are  maid  and  man. 

though  he  be  the  chief  of  rogues,  he  hath  never 
broken  his  w. 

Say  thou  no  w  against  my  brother  John. 

Why  then,  my  liege,  I  have  no  w  to  say. 
Word-eating    what,  a  truckler  !  a  w-e  coward  ! 
Word-monger    Diagonalise  !  thou  art  a  w-m. 
Wore    slew  not  him  alone  who  w  the  purple, 

She  w  red  shoes  !     Stafford.     Red  shoes  ! 

your  shores  W  in  mine  eyes  the  green 

There  w  his  time  studying  the  canon  law 

he  answer'd  me.  As  if  he  w  the  crown  already— 

I  w  the  lady's  chaplet  roimd  my  neck  ; 

wreath  That  once  you  w  outvalues  twenty-fold 

He  w  thy  colours  once  at  a  tourney. 
Work  (s)     were  a  pious  w  To  string  my  father's 
sonnets. 

Tear  up  that  woman's  w  there. 

Well,  for  mine  own  w, 

Sharp  w  and  short. 

Cranmer,  be  thou  glad.    This  is  the  w  of  God. 

That  all  day  long  hath  wrought  his  father's  w, 

and  cried  '  W  for  the  tanner.' 

Thou  art  wearied  out  With  this  day's  w, 

due  to  those  That  went  before  us  for  their  w. 

The  w  of  the  farm  will  go  on  still,  but  for  how 

long  ?  Prom,  of  May  iii  159 

Work  (verb)    Your  master  w's  against  me  in  the  dark.  Q^^en  Mary  i  v  277 

These  are  the  means  God  w's  with,  „        m  vi  68 

so  much  of  the  anti-papal  leaven  W's  in  him  yet,  „  iv  i  16 

For  Henry  could  not  w  a  miracle —  Becket  i  i  40 

studying  the  canon  law  To  w  it  against  me.  „      n  i  87 

strove  To  w  against  her  license  for  her  good,  „  it  ii  340 

but  pray  you  do  not  w  upon  me.  „      v  i  81 


I  320 
I  381 
I  659 
n45 
nll3 
in  33 

ml26 
ni333 
m481 
in  677 
m704 
ni  745 
in  790 
m  810 
Foresters  i  i  86 
Iii  36 
iii  40 
I  ii  237 
ni83 
ni610 
nii  55 

in  133 
ni419 


IV  434 

IV  824 

IV  827 

IV  162 

Becket  n  ii  332 

Queen  Mary  i  v  499 

m  i  59 

„         m  ii  18 

Becket  n  i  85 

„       n  ii  7 

The  Falcon  631 

759 

Foresters  i  i  249 

Queen  Mary  u  i  26 
ni  75 
n  i  86 
mi  329 

IV  iii  82 

V  ii  119 
Harold  11  ii  385 

Becket  I  i  7 
„  n  ii  192 


Work 


1130 


World-hating 


What  filthy  tools  our  Senate  w's 


The  Cup  1  i  156 

The  Falcon  821 

Foresters  i  iii  87 

IV  228 


III  55 


Work  (verb)  (continued) 

with! 

May  10  them  grievous  harm  at  times, 

Shall  we  too  w  injustice  ? 

If  the  king  and  the  law  w  injustice, 

Worked    telled  me  'at  sweet'arts  niver  w  well 

togither ;  and  I  telled  'im  'at  sweet'arts 

alius  w  best  togither ;  Prom,  of  May  n  156 

Did  you  find  that  you  w  at  all  the  worse  upon  the 

cold  tea 
we  w  naw  wuss  upo'  the  cowd  tea  ;  but  we'd  ha'  w 

better  upo'  the  beer, 
you  w  well  enough,  and  I  am  much  obliged  to  all 

of  you. 
Sally  Allen,  you  w  for  Mr.  Dobson,  didn't  you  ? 
an'  I  w  early  an'  laate  to  maake  'em  all  gentlefoalks 
agean. 
Workin'    mea  and  my  sweet'art  was  a  w  along  o'  one 

side  wi'  one  another, 
Working    See  Backward-working,  Workin' 
Workman    burnt  The  heretic  priest,  workmen,  and 
women  and  children. 
Some  of  our  workmen  have  left  us. 
Workmanship    Look  at  the  hilt.    What  excellent  w. 
Work-wan    Look  !  am  I  not  W-w,  flesh-fallen  ? 
World    (See  also  Child-world,  Old-world,  Other-world) 

rumour  that  Charles,  the  master  of  the  w,  Queen  Mary  i  i  105 

broken,  out  you  flutter  Thro'  the  new  w,  ,,  i  iv  54 

Spain  and  we.  One  crown,  might  rule  the  w. 

for  the  Queen's  down,  and  the  w's  up, 

hardest,  cruellest  people  in  the  w, 

the  w  is  with  us — war  against  Spain  ! 

Look  at  the  New  W — a  paradise  made  hell ; 

The  w  as  yet,  my  friend.  Is  not  half-waked  ; 

thro'  that  dim  dilated  w  of  hers,  To  read  our  faces  ; 

Tho'  all  the  w  should  bay  like  winter  wolves. 

unto  no  dead  w  ;  but  Lambeth  palace. 

His  faith  shall  clothe  the  w  that  will  be  his, 

craft  that  do  divide  The  w  of  nature  ; 

free  wing  The  w  were  all  one  Araby. 

and  weight  of  all  the  w  From  off  his  neck  to  mine. 

0  Son  of  God,  Eedeemer  of  the  w  ! 
Many  so  dote  upon  this  bubble  w, 
'  Love  of  this  w  is  hatred  against  God.' 
Of  this  be  sure,  he  is  whole  w's  away. 
The  w's  mad.     Paget.    My  Lord,  the  w  is  like 
— the  w  A  most  obedient  beast  and  fool — 
Come  out,  my  Lord,  it  is  a  w  of  fools, 
and  mine  own  self  and  all  the  w. 
'  O  bubble  w.  Whose  coloxu'S  in  a  moment  break  and  fly  ! ' 
And  fared  so  ill  in  this  disastrous  w. 
but  say  the  w  is  nothing — 
Charles,  the  lord  of  this  low  w,  is  gone  ; 
Priests'  talk,  or  dream  of  w's  to  be, 
never  merry  w  In  England,  since  the  Bible  came 

among  us. 
It  never  wiU  be  merry  w  in  England, 
for  in  our  windy  w  What's  up  is  faith. 
Why  not  the  doom  of  all  the  w  as  well  ?     For  all  the 

w  sees  it  „     i  i  128 

Thou  art  the  quietest  man  in  all  the  w —  „     i  i  312 

an  honest  w  Will  not  believe  them.  „     i  i  347 

Far  as  he  knew  in  this  poor  w  of  ours —  „  ii  ii  363 

Welshman  says,  '  The  Truth  against  the  W,'  „   ii  ii  398 

When  all  the  w  hath  learnt  to  speak  the  truth,  „     iii  i  68 

That  runs  thro'  all  the  faiths  of  all  the  w.  „  iii  i  353 

than  to  reign  King  of  the  w  without  it.  „    iii  ii  45 

all  the  faiths  Of  this  grown  w  of  ours,  „    ni  ii  65 

A  breath  that  fleets  beyond  this  iron  w,  „  in  ii  197 

kingdoms  of  this  w  began  with  httle,  „     iv  i  42 

till  her  voice  Die  with  the  w.  „   iv  iii  76 

cannot  see  the  w  but  thro'  their  wines  !  „  iv  iii  225 

Our  Saints  have  moved  the  Church  that  moves  tlie  w,  „      v  i  42 

selfless  man  Is  worth  a  w  of  tonguesters.  „      v  i  82 

1  cannot  fall  into  a  falser  w —  „    v  i  271 


World  (continued)  bear  their  earthly  heats  Into  yon  bloodless  w,  Harold  v  i  28i 


III  58 


in  61 
III  101 


III  448 
II 152 


Queen  Mary  v  v  106 

Prom,  of  May  III  27 

Becket  iv  ii  315 

Harold  i  i  99 


IV  303 
II 166 

II  i  100 

II  i  196 

II  i  207 

II  i  226 

II  ii  324 

II  ii  361 

in  ii  153 

in  ii  180 

ni  V  121 

in  V  210 

in  vi  213 

IV  iii  118 

IV  iii  168 

IV  iii  173 

IV  iii  194 

IV  iii  391 

IV  iii  413 

IV  iii  639 

viil3 

V  ii  205 
vii344 

V  ii  368 

V  V  54 
vv217 

V  v240 
vv246 

Harold  i  i  83 


should  have  a  hand  To  grasp  the  w  with 

A  man  of  this  w  and  the  next  to  boot. 

I  could  pity  this  poor  w  myself  that  it  is  no  better 

ordered, 
old  men  must  die,  or  the  w  would  grow  mouldy, 
And  mine  uplif  ter  in  this  w, 
Why  thou,  the  King,  the  Pope,  the  Saints,  the  w, 
and  the  w  shall  live  by  the  King's  venison 
Thou  rose  of  the  w  ! 
and  turn  the  w  upside  down, 
promise  thee  not  to  turn  the  w  upside  down. 
Here  is  a  ball,  my  boy,  thy  w, 
The  w  had  never  seen  the  like  before, 
we  grant  the  Church  King  over  this  w's  kings,  yet, 

my  good  lord,  We  that  are  kings  are  something 

in  this  w, 
Is  the  w  any  the  worse  for  my  verses 
cried  out  on  him  to  put  me  forth  in  the  w  and  to 

make  me  a  woman  of  the  w, 
into  a  garden  and  not  into  the  w, 
more  a  woman  o'  the  w  than  my  lady  here. 
From  all  the  hidden  by-ways  of  the  w 
Who  wander  famine-wasted  thro'  the  w. 
beg  my  bread  along  the  w  With  my  young  boy. 
Daughter,  the  w  hath  trick'd  thee. 
The  w  hath  trick'd  her — that's  the  King  ; 
all  the  w  allows  I  fall  no  inch  Behind  this  Becket, 
to  prove  Bigger  in  our  small  w  than  thou  art. 
Like  some  wise  prince  of  this  w  from  his  wars. 
Why,  John,  my  kingdom  is  not  of  this  w.     John  of 

Salisbury.    If  it  were  more  of  this  w  it  might  be 

More  of  the  next, 
be  something  Of  this  w's  leaven  in  thee  too, 
To  plunge  into  this  bitter  w  again — 
this  mother,  runs  thro'  all  The  w  God  made — 
brood  Too  long  o'er  this  hard  egg,  the  w, 
If  Rosamund  is  The  w's  rose,  as  her  name  imports 

her — she  Was  the  w's  lily. 
What !  will  he  excommunicate  all  the  w  ? 
Blowing  the  w  against  me, 
— ^the  whole  w  Abhor  you  ; 
This  last  to  rid  thee  of  a  w  of  brawls  ! 

0  the  most  kindly  Prince  in  all  the  w  ! 
the  w  may  know  You  twain  are  reconciled, 
Rome  is  fated  To  rule  the  w. 
by  the  Gods  of  Rome  and  all  the  w, 

he  always  took  the  w  so  kindly. 

and  your  ladyship  has  given  him  bitters  enough  in  this  w, 

My  one  thii^  left  of  value  in  the  w  ! 

1  have  nothing  in  this  w  but  love  for  you. 

0  this  unhappy  w  !     How  shall  I  break  it  to  him  ? 


V  ii  191 
Becket,  Pro.  258 


Pro.  36fi 

Pro.  409 

1 189 

I  iii  706 

I  iv  271 
nil46 

II  i  238 
II 1242 
ni244 
n  ii  125 


II  ii  243 
n  ii  336 

III  i  lift 
in  i  132 
ni  i  143 
m  iii  16 

III  iii  189 

IV  ii  103 
IV  ii  364 
IV  ii  375 

vi39 
V  i  128, 
viil3 


V  ii  19 
vii29 
vii81 

V  ii  243 

V  ii  253 

V  ii  263 

V  ii  46T 

V  ii  491 
,  V  iii  183 
,  V  iii  199 
Cup  I  ii  357 

n68 

n416j 

n466 

The  Falcon  188 

193 

497 

784| 

847 


The 


no  fear  Of  the  w's  gossiping  clamour.  Prom,  of  May  i  528 

all  the  w  is  beautiful  If  we  were  happy,  „  i  576 

for  the  senses,  love,  are  for  the  w  ; 

for  when  the  tide  Of  full  democracy  has  overwhelm'd 
This  Old  w, 

When  the  great  Democracy  Makes  a  new  w — 

Neither  the  old  w,  nor  the  new. 

Since  I  left  her  Here  weeping,  I  have  ranged  the  w, 

She  has  disappear'd,  poor  darling,  from  the  w — 

this  w  Is  brighter  for  his  absence  as  that  other  Is 
darker  for  his  presence. 

I  have  seen  the  w — And  cheer  his  blindness 

Must  come  to  in  our  spring-and-winter  w 

My  curse  on  all  This  w  of  mud. 

We  cannot  come  together  in  this  w. 

And  all  the  foolish  w  is  pressing  thither. 

Sit  here,  my  queen,  and  judge  the  w  with  me. 

He  hath  spoken  truth  in  a  w  of  lies. 

all  the  crowns  Of  all  this  w, 

free  the  tomb-place  of  the  King  Of  all  the  w  ? 

Tho'  all  the  w  should  go  about  in  boats. 
World-hated    Scowl'd  that  w-h  and  world-hating  beast,   Queen  Mary  n  ii  90 
World-hating   Scowl'd  that  world-hated  and  w-h  beast,  „  n  ii  90 


I  581 

I  594 
I  672 
I  674 
n  252 
II  410 

n  45T 
n  514 

m  511. 

Ill  722^ 
Foresters  n  i  618 

in  149 

III  152 
HI  212 

«        IV  405 

IV  410 
IV  670 


ms 


Worldly 


1131 


Wretch 


Worldly    your  Priests  Gross,  w,  simoniacal,  unleam'd  !  Harold  i  i  162 
The  w  bond  between  ns  is  dissolved,  Becket  i  i  347 
Gilbert  Foliot,  A  w  follower  of  the  w  strong.  „    i  iii  543 
World-wealth    Richer  than  all  the  wide  w-w  of  May,  The  Falcon  466 
Worm  (s)     And  putrid  water,  every  drop  a  w.              Queen  Mary  i\  iii  AA^ 
The  w  !  shall  I  let  her  go  ?  Becket  iv  ii  197 
sure  my  dagger  was  a  feint  Till  the  w  turn'd —  „      iv  ii  380 
Becket  hath  trodden  on  us  like  w's,  „          v  i  61 
poor  w,  crawl  down  thine  own  black  hole  The  Cwp  ii  494 
Worm  (verb)     I  warrant  I  w  thro'  all  their  windings.  „         i  i  87 
Worms    Zurich,  W,  Geneva,  Basle —  Queen  Mary  i  ii  2 
Worn    (See  also  Threadbare-worn)    what,  you  look  some- 
what w ;  „    IV  ii  116 

0  Saint  of  Aragon,  with  that  sweet  w  smile  „      v  v  198 

1  am  somewhat  w,  A  snatch  of  sleep  Harold  v  i  179 
But  have  you  ever  w  my  diamonds  ?  The  Falcon  736 
tho'  I  grudge  the  pretty  jewel,  that  I  Have  tc.  Prom .  of  May  i  474 
How  «!  he  looks,  poor  man  ?  who  is  it,  I  wonder.  „  ii  390 
but,  my  flower,  You  look  so  weary  and  so  w  !  „  iii  499 
I  have ;  but  these  were  never  w  as  yet.  Foresters  iv  835 

Worried     boil'd,  buried  alive,  w  by  dogs ;  Queen  Mary  ii  i  211 

When  they  ran  down  the  game  and  w  it.  Becket,  Pro.  124 

dog  I  cramm'd  with  dainties  w  me  !  „          v  i  244 

Worry    (See  also  Tew)     out  of  his  cage  to  w  Cranmer.  Queen  Mary  i  i  88 

Worrying    To  w  one  another.  „    iii  iv  313 

Worse    ((See  a?so  Wuss)    They  callhim  cold.  Haughty,  ay,  w.       „        i  v  432 

— that  were  w  than  all.  „  ii  i  183 
and  he'll  smash  all  our  bits  o'  things  w  than  Philip  o' 

Spain.  „      II  iii  104 

A  better  and  a  w — the  w  is  here  ,.    iii  iv  114 

And  w  than  all,  you  had  to  kneel  to  me;  „      iv  ii  134 

No  place  for  w.  .,       iv  iii  80 

He  calls  us  w  than  Jews,  Moors,  Saracens.  „         v  i  150 

but  w — And  yet  I  must  obey  the  Holy  Father,  „         v  ii  37 

w  than  all,  A  passing  bell  toll'd  in  a  dying  ear —  „         v  ii  39 

w  than  that — not  one  hour  true  to  me  !  „        v  y  159 

Ay,  but  w  news :  this  William  sent  to  Rome,  Harold  iii  ii  140 

The  King's  courts  will  use  thee  w  than  thy  dog —  Becket  i  iv  102 

get  you  hence  in  haste  Lest  w  befall  you.  ..       iv  ii  28 

We  can  do  w.     Madam,  I  saw  your  dagger  „     iv  ii  318 

so  much  w  For  last  day's  journey.  The  Falcon  833 
I  be  w  oS  than  any  of  you,  for  I  be  lean  by  nature.         Foresters  i  i  44 

Then  I  shall  be  no  w.  „     i  ii  289 

Am  I  w  or  better  ?     I  am  outlaw'd.  „       ii  i  49 

I  am  none  the  ic  for  that,  (repeat)  „  n  i  50,  58 

and  another — w  ! — An  innocent  maid.  •.       m  387 

I  am  allied  to  John.     Robin.     The  w  for  thee.  „       iv  138 

and  the  hunters,  if  caught,  are  blinded,  or  w  than  blinded.    .,       iv  227 

nay,  by  the  rood  They  have  done  far  to —  „       iv  909 

Worship  (s)    (See  also  Idol-worship)    we  have  the  Blessed 

Virgin  For  w,  Becket  v  ii  221 

Who  hast  that  w  for  me  which  Heaven  knows  Foresters  i  iii  160 

Worship  (verb)     The  people  there  so  w  me —  Queen  Mary  i  iv  120 

Devil's  '  if  Thou  wilt  fall  down  and  w  me.'  Becket  in  iii  286 

me  who  w  Robin  the  great  Earl  of  Huntingdon  ?  Foresters  i  i  225 

All  here  will  prize  thee,  honour,  w  thee,  „        h  ii  17 

Worshipper    With  a  crowd  of  w's,  Becket  i  iii  476 

And  you  three  holy  men.  You  w's  of  the  Virgin,  Foresters  in  383 

Worshipping    beheld  you  afar  off  w  in  her  Temple,  The  Cup  i  i  39 

Worshipt    (See  also  Long-worshipt)    So  w  of  all  those 

that  came  across  him ;  Queen  Mary  iv  1 161 

w  whom  she  loathed,  I  should  have  let  her  be,  Becket  iv  n  390 

Worst  (adj.)     Serve  my  best  friend  and  make  him  my  w 

foe  •  "      I  "1  568 

And  if  the  w  time  come  ?  Foresters  i  ii  290 

Worst  (s)     Come,  come,  the  w  !     Best  wisdom  is  to 

know  the  w  at  once.  Queen  Mary  iii  v  219 

He  was  not  of  the  w.  Haroldi\ih91 

And  wrought  his  w  against  his  native  land,  The  Cup  i  ii  177 

Worsted    That  where  he  was  but  w,  he  was  wrong'd.  Harold  1 1  449 

Worth  (adj.)    by  your  looks  you  are  not  w  the  having.   Queen  Mary  i  iv  13 

A  lesson  w  Finger  and  thumb— thus  Harold  i  ii  54 

selfless  man  Is  w  a  world  of  tonguesters.  »       y.  >  82 

Thy  life  is  w  the  wrestle  for  it :  arise,  Becket  iv  u  194 
central  diamond,  w,  1  think,  Half  of  the  Antiocb 


vil65 


Worth  (adj.)  (continued)    Is  vengeance  for  its  own  sake  w 

the  while.  The  Cup  i  i  30 

A  hundred  times  more  w  a  woman's  love,  Prom,  of  May  iii  743 

Thou  art  w  thy  weight  in  all  those  marks  of  gold,         Foresters  iv  1023 

Worth  (s)  Your  people  have  begun  to  learn  your  w.  Queen  Mary  i  v  110 
That  wither'd  wreath  were  of  more  w  to  me.  The  Falcon  335 

wither'd  wreath  is  of  more  w  to  me  Than  all  the  blossom,         „  338 

rate  the  land  fivefold  The  w  of  the  mortgage,  Foresters  ii  i  151 

Worthies     The  conduit  painted — the  nine  w — ay  !         Queen  Mary  in  i  258 

Worthy    you  will  find  in  it  Pleasure  as  well  as  duty, 

w  Bonner, —  „        m  iv  430 

My  most  w  brother,  Thou  art  the  quietest  man  in  all 

the  world—  Harold  i  i  311 

I  am  not  w  of  her — this  beast-body  That  God  has  plunged 

my  soul  in—  Becket  ii  i  148 

or  I  Would  bow  to  such  a  baseness  as  would  make  me 

Most  w  of  it :  „    IV  ii  236 

for  all  of  them  Loved  her,  and  she  was  w  of  all  love.  Prom,  of  May  n  429 
you  should  ever  Be  tempted  into  doing  what  might 

seem  Not  altogether  w  of  you,  „  m  555 

A  w  messenger !  how  should  he  help  it  ?  Foresters  i  iii  85 

Wound    Tho'  leaving  each,  a  w ;  Becket  i  i  176 

I  will  bind  up  his  w's  with  my  napkin.  „    i  iv  107 

I  see  you  quite  recover'd  of  your  w.  The  Falcon  391 

if  you  be  Not  quite  recover'd  of  your  w,  „  590' 

The  story  of  your  battle  and  your  w.  „  594 

balms  and  simples  of  the  field  To  help  a  w.  Foresters  n  ii  IS 

Wounded    so  w  in  his  honour.  He  can  but  creep  Queen  Mary  iv  i  138 

This  Canterbury,  like  a  w  deer,  Becket  n  ii  21 

I  was  but  w  by  the  enemy  there  And  then  imprison'd.   The  Falcon  388- 

Woven    jewel  of  St.  Pancratius  W  into  the  gold.  Harold  ii  ii  701 

Wrap     W  them  together  in  a  purple  cloak  „       v  ii  15& 

Wrapt    smoke  of  Cranmer's  burning  w  me  round.        Queen  Mary  iv  iii  564 

Wrath    Wet,  famine,  ague,  fever,  storm,  wreck,  w, —  „  v  v  109 

mean  The  doom  of  England  and  the  w  of  Heaven  ?  -Harold  i  i  46 

Is  there  no  reason  for  the  w  of  Heaven  ?    Leofwin.    Why 

then  the  w  of  Heaven  hath  three  tails.  The  devil  only  one.       „      i  i  59' 
To  save  thee  from  the  w  of  Norman  Saints.  „  ni  i  217 

Is  thy  w  Hell,  that  I  should  spare  to  cry,  „      v  i  37 

Shame,  w,  I  know  not  what.  Becket  i  iii  322^ 

My  lord  John,  In  w  because  you  drove  him  from  the 

forest,  Foresters  in  450 

Wreak    glad  to  w  our  spite  on  the  rosefaced  minion  Becket,  Pro.  529 

crowd  May  w  my  wrongs  upon  my  wrongers.  Prom,  of  May  i  507 

Wreath    That  wither'd  w  were  of  more  worth  to  me.  The  Falcon  33& 

wither'd  w  is  of  more  worth  to  me  Than  all  the  blossom,  ,.  337 

I  made  a  w  with  some  of  these ;  ,,  357 

What's  here  ?  a  scroll  Pinned  to  the  w.    My  lord,  you 

have  said  so  much  Of  this  poor  w  „  425 

And  can  you  not  imagine  that  the  w,  „  534 

one  sweet  face  Crown^  with  the  w.  „  64^ 

shall  we  say  this  w  and  your  sweet  rhymes  ?  „  736 

The  w  That  once  you  wore  outvalues  twenty-fold  ,.  758 

Then  keep  your  w,  But  you  will  find  me  .,  773 

Wreck  (s)  Wet,  famine,  ague,  fever,  storm,  w,  wrath, —  Queen  Mary  v  v  108 
as  men  Have  done  on  rafts  of  w — it  drives  you  mad.  The  Cup  i  iii  142 
I  will  be  no  such  w,  am  no  such  gamester  „        i  iii  144 

Wreck  (verb)  He  w's  his  health  and  wealth  on  courtesans.  Queen  Mary  i  v  167 
Holy  Church  May  rock,  but  will  not  w,  Becket  ii  ii  104 

Blown  everyway  with  every  gust  and  w  On  any 
rock ;  Prom,  of  May  in  537 

Wrecked-Wreckt  get  himself  wrecked  on  another  man's  land  ?  Harold  ii  i  60 
villains  with  their  lying  lights  have  wreck'd  us !  „     ii  i  84 

Or  he  is  wreckt  for  ever.  „  ii  ii  102 

or  wreckt  And  dead  beneath  the  midland  ocean.  Foresters  n  i  656 

Wreckful    A  summer  mere  with  sudden  w  gusts  From  a  side- 
gorge.  Harold  in  i  51 

Wrench    w  this  outlander's  ransom  out  of  him —  „       n  i  58 

Seize  on  the  knight !  w  his  sword  from  him  !  Foresters  n  i  676 

Wrench'd    violent  will  that  w  All  hearts  of  freemen  from  thee.  Harold  v  i  278 

Wrest    Would  w  from  me  the  precious  ring  Foresters  n  i  660 

Wrestle  (s)    Thy  life  is  worth  the  w  for  it :  Becket  iv  ii  194 

Wrestle  (verb)     Rome  Will  crush  you  if  you  w  with  her ;     The  Cup  i  ii  131 

Wretch  but  I,  old  w,  old  Stigand,  With  hands  too  limp  Harold  v  i  447 
if  the  w  were  dead  I  might  forgive  him ;  Prom,  of  May  ii  433 


Wretch 


1132 


Wrought 


Wretch  (continued)    Infamous  w  !    Shall  I  tell  her  he 

is  dead  ?  Prom,  of  May  iii  336 

The  old  w  is  mad,  and  her  bread  is  beyond  me :  Foresters  ii  i  291 

Wretched    Most  miserable  sinner,  w  man.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  123 

on  a  land  So  hunger-nipt  and  w;  „  v  i  168 

W  race !    And  once  I  wish'd  to  scourge  them  to  the  bones.  The  Cup  i  i  25 

Wretchedness    yet  have  heard  Of  all  their  w.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  212 

His  wickedness  is  like  my  w —  Prom,  of  May  iii  747 

Wriggle    he  will  w  out  of  them  like  an  eel  Becket  ii  ii  187 

Wring    what  we  w  from  them  we  give  the  poor.  Foresters  ii  i  56 

Wrinkle    sweet  worn  smile  Among  thy  patient  w's—    Queen  Mary  v  v  200 
silver  Were  dear  as  gold,  the  w  as  the  dimple.  Foresters  iv  42 

Wrist    I  cannot  cope  with  him  :  my  w  is  strain'd.  „       iv  313 

Writ  (s)    range  Among  the  pleasant  fields  of  Holy  W    Queen  Mary  iii  v  80 
Make  out  the  w  to-night.  „  iv  i  195 

by  virtue  of  this  w,  whereas  Robin  Hood  Earl  of 

Huntingdon  Foresters  i  iii  61 

For  playing  upside  down  with  Holy  W.  „        iii  168 

Whose  w  will  run  thro'  all  the  range  of  life.  „  iv  48 

In  the  sweat  of  thy  brow,  says  Holy  IV,  shalt  thou  eat 

bread,  „         iv  201 

like  the  man  In  Holy  W,  who  brought  his  talent  back  ;       ,,        iv  981 

Writ  (verb)    (See  also  Written)     W  by  himself  and 

Bonner  ?  Queen  Mary  iv  i  93 

Have  I  not  w  enough  to  satisfy  you  ?  „         iv  ii  62 

Write     Philip  never  w's  me  one  poor  word,  „  i  v  359 

yet — to  w  it  down.  „  ii  i  56 

W  you  as  many  sonnets  as  you  will.  „  ii  i  95 

W  to  him,  then.    Pole.    I  will.  „  iv  i  37 

Pray  you  w  out  this  paper  for  me,  Cranmer.  „         iv  ii  60 

hands  that  w  them  should  be  burnt  clean  off  „         v  ii  190 

Cornwall's  hand  or  Leicester's :  they  w  marvellously  alike.  Becket  i  iv  52 
cannot  at  present  w  himself  other  than  The  Cup  i  i  45 

cannot  at  present  w  himself  other  than  „       i  ii  73 

You  will  w  to  me?    Edgar.     I  will.  Prom,  of  May  i  699 

Eva,  why  did  you  w  '  Seek  me  at  the  bottom  of  the 
river '  ?  „  in  363 

Writhed    never  stirr'd  or  w,  but,  like  a  statue.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  620 

Writing  (part.)    That  any  man  so  w,  preaching  so,  „  iv  iii  47 

Writing  (s)    (See  also  Sub-writing,  Verse-writing) 

For  these  be  w's  I  have  set  abroad  „  iv  iii  240 

by  your  leave  if  you  would  hear  the  rest.  The  w.  The  Falcon  531 

sometimes  been  moved  to  tears  by  a  chapter  of 

fine  to  in  a  novel ;  Prom,  of  May  iii  209 

Written    (See  also  Writ)    Stand  first  it  may,  but  it  was 

w  last :  Queen  Mary  i  ii  21 

'Tis  w, '  They  shall  be  childless.'  „  i  ii  64 

he  must  have  w.  ..        i  v  358 

Queen  had  M  her  word  to  come  to  court :  .,       ii  ii  117 

'tis  not  w  Half  plain  enough.  ..        ii  iii  65 

What  hath  your  Highness  w?  „        in  v  23 

Hath  he  not  w  himself — infatuated —  „         iv  i  10 

You  have  w  much,  But  you  were  never  raised  ..      iv  ii  209 

W  for  fear  of  death,  to  save  my  life,  ..     iv  iii  242 

by  this  hand  W  and  sign'd —  ..     iv  iii  245 

since  my  hand  offended,  having  w  Against  my  heart,  ..     iv  iii  248 

what  hath  she  w  ?  read.  .,  v  v  2 

What  hath  she  w  now  ?  ..         v  v  13 

you  will  find  w  Two  names,  Philip  and  Calais ;  „       v  v  154 

I'll  have  them  w  down  and  made  the  law.  Becket,  Pro.  26 

But  by  the  King's  command  are  to  down,  „       i  iii  72 

Good  royal  customs — had  them  w  fair  „     i  iii  416 

not  yet  w.  Saving  mine  order ;  true  too,  that  when  w  I 

sign'd  them —  „     i  iii  558 

What  have  I  w  to  her  ?  Ths  Cup  i  i  35 

and  I  find  a  to  scroll  That  seems  to  run  in  rhymings.      The  Falcon  431 
is  w  in  invisible  inks  '  Lust,  Prodigality,  Prom,  of  May  ii  283 

Wrong  (adj.)    I  may  be  w,  sir.    This  marriage  will 

not  hold.  Queen  Mary  in  i  102 

For  the  w  Robin  took  her  at  her  word.  „         ni  v  264 

Those  of  the  w  side  will  despite  the  man,  „  iv  iii  24 

— and  I  bean't  w  not  twice  i'  ten  year —  „        iv  iii  534 

simimut  to  theer,  Wilson,  fur  I  doant  understan'  it.    Prom,  of  May  1 234 

Wrong  (i)    I  knew  they  would  not  do  me  any  to,  Queen  Mary  i  "iii  100 

You  did  me  w,  I  love  not  to  be  called  „  i  iv  67 


Queen  Mary  in  vi  183 

IV  i  167 

Harold  i  ii  16 

„   II  ii  349 

„     v  i  272 

Becket  i  iv  32 

„    n  ii  116 

..    ni  iii  20 

„    rv  ii  94 

vii33 

V  ii  41 

Provi.  of  May  i  507 

m  399 

Foresters  i  ii  96 

„     n  i  700 


Wrong  (s)  (continued)    And  she  impress  her  w's  upon 
her  Council, 
To  do  him  any  w  was  to  beget  A  kindness 
Ye  do  him  to,  ye  do  him  to ; 
They  did  thee  w  who  made  thee  hostage ; 
I  have  done  no  man  to. 
We  mean  thee  no  to. 
wilt  but  look  into  The  to's  you  did  him, 
before  The  Church  should  suffer  w  ! 
if  you  love  him,  there  is  great  to  done  Somehow ; 
Holy  Church  to  thunder  out  her  rights  And  thine  own  w 
Lost  in  the  common  good,  the  common  to, 
crowd  May  wreak  my  to's  upon  my  wrongers. 
I  have  done  to  in  keeping  your  secret ; 
ye  did  to  in  crying  '  Down  with  John ; ' 
"to  such  a  heat  As  bums  a  to  to  ashes. 

Wrong  (verb)     From  stirring  hand  or  foot  to  to  the 

realm.  Queen  Mary  in  iii  60 

Hush,  hush !     You  w  the  Chancellor :  „  in  iii  67 

Out,  girl !  you  w  a  noble  gentleman.  „  in  v  67 

Perchance  that  Harold  to's  me ;  Harold  i  ii  225 

That  none  should  to  or  injure  your  Archbishop.  Becket  i  iii  754 

I  to  the  bird ;  she  leaves  only  the  nest  she  built,  „        i  iv  45 

You  to  the  King :  he  meant  what  he  said  to-day.  „    in  iii  298 

Perhaps,  my  lord,  you  to  us.  „       v  ii  604 

Why  should  I  practise  on  you  ?     How  you  to  me  !         The  Cup  i  ii  240 
You  to  him  surely ;  far  as  the  face  goes  „  ii  174 

You  to  me  there  !  hear,  hear  me  !  Prom,  of  May  m  775 

but  we  rob  the  robber,  to  the  wronger.  Foresters  n  i  54 

Wrong'd     There's  half  an  angel  to  in  your  account ;  Queen  Mary  v  iii  2 

I  were  whole  devil  if  I  to  you,  Madam.  „  v  iii  7 

That  where  he  was  but  worsted,  he  was  w.  Harold  i  i  450 

If  one  may  dare  to  speak  the  truth,  was  to.  „    iv  i  109 

believing  that  our  brother  Had  to  you ;  Becket  n  ii  239 

The  by-things  of  the  Lord  Are  the  to  innocences  that 

will  cry  „     in  iii  14 

You  have  to  Fitzurse.     I  speak  not  of  myself.  „     iv  ii  328 

One  whom  thou  hast  to  Without  there.  The  Cup  i  ii  319 

W  by  the  cruelties  of  his  religions  Prom,  of  May  in  545 

One  that  has  been  much  to,  whose  griefs  are  mine,  „  in  576 


thou  hast  to  my  brother  and  myself. 

We  never  to  a  woman. 

One  half  of  this  shall  go  to  those  they  have  w. 
Wronger    It  gilds  the  greatest  to  of  her  peace. 

In  the  great  day  against  the  to. 

crowd  May  wreak  my  wrongs  upon  my  to's. 

but  we  rob  the  robber,  wrong  the  to. 
Wrote    letter  you  to  against  Their  superstition 

I  to  it,  and  God  grant  me  power  to  burn  ! 

And  what  a  letter  he  to  against  the  Pope  ! 

which  God's  hand  W  on  her  conscience, 

last  time  she  to,  I  had  like  to  have  lost  my  life : 

when  last  he  to,  declared  His  comfort 

same  book  You  to  against  my  Lord  of  Winchester ; 

I  hold  by  all  I  to  within  that  book. 

To  compass  which  I  to  myself  to  Rome, 

letter  wnich  the  Count  de  Noailles  to 

right  hand  Lamed  in  the  battle,  to  it  with  his  left. 

my  sister  w  he  was  mighty  pleasant,  and  had  no 
pride  in  him. 
Wroth    they  are  to  with  their  own  selves, 

That  I  was  for  a  moment  to  at  thee. 

The  Queen,  most  to  at  first  with  you. 

Except  when  to,  you  scarce  could  meet  his  eye 
And  hold  your  own ;  and  were  he  to  indeed. 
You  held  it  l&ss,  or  not  at  all. 

Why  should  not  Heaven  be  to  ? 

I  am  weary — go :  make  me  not  to  with  thee ! 

Yon  heaven  is  to  with  thee  ? 

And  so  the  saints  were  to. 

be  not  to  at  the  dumb  parchment. 
Wrought    and  this  to  Upon  the  king ; 

he  to  it  ignorantly.  And  not  from  any  malice. 

was  the  great  mystery  to ; 

That  all  day  long  hath  to  his  father's  work, 


Foresters  n  i  665 

ui  184 

m  304 

Queen  Mary  v  ii  415 

Becket  in  iii  17 

Prom,  of  May  i  507 

Foresters  ii  i  55 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  85 

iii  98 

m  i  173 

ni  i  422 

III  V  188 
III  vi  77 

IV  iii  265 
IV  iii  275 

vii49 

V  ii  497 

The  Falcon  445 

Prom,  of  May  1 116 

Queen  Mary  in  iv  120 

ni  iv  306 

in  iv  387 


IV  i  103 

Harold  i  i  53 

„      V  i  31 

„      V  i  39 

„      V  ii  7 

Foresters  i  i  342 

Queen  Mary  i  ii  70 

„      ni  i  276 

„     IV  iii  142 

„       V  ii  118 


Wrought 


1133 


Year 


Wrought  (continued)    I  have  w  miracles — to  God  the  glory — 

And  miracles  will  in  my  name  be  w  Hereafter. —  Harold  i  i  181 

w  upon  to  swear  Vows  that  he  dare  not  break.  „      ii  ii  76 

,Yea,  w  at  them  myself.  „      v  i  192 

0  Edith,  if  I  ever  w  against  thee,  „  v  ii  21 
We  long  have  w  together,  thou  and  I —  Becket  i  i  339 
forgive  you  For  aught  you  w  sigainst  us.  „  ii  ii  110 
And  w  his  worst  against  his  native  land,  The  Cup  i  ii  177 
we  must  at  times  have  w  Some  great  injustice,  Foresters  iii  155 

Wrong    She  had  no  desire  for  that,  and  w  her  hands.   Queen  Mary  iii  i  384 

w  his  ransom  from  him  by  the  rack,  Harold  ii  ii  38 

Wry    he  made  a  w  mouth  at  it,  but  he  took  it  so  kindly,      The  Falcon  191 
and  he  never  made  a  w  mouth  at  you,  he  always  took 

you  so  kindly —  ,,          194 

Wulfnoth    Is  not  my  brother  W  hostage  there  Harold  i  i  239 

he  and  W  never  Have  met,  except  in  public ;  „      n  ii  85 

1  have  often  talk'd  with  W,  „  ii  ii  89 
Since  thou  hast  promised  W  home  with  us.  Be  home 

again  with  W.  „    ii  ii  167 

Look  thou,  here  is  W  \  „    ii  ii  323 

No,  W,  no.     Wulfnoth.    And  William  laugh'd  „    ii  ii  360 

Poor  W  !  do  they  not  entreat  thee  well?  „    ii  ii  403 

let  me  hence  With  W  to  King  Edward.  „    ii  ii  563 

O  W,  W,  brother,  thou  hast  betray'd  me  !          •  „    ii  ii  801 

And  W  is  alone  in  Normandy.  „      iii  i  81 

'  W  is  sick,'  he  said ;  '  he  cannot  follow ; '  „      ni  i  84 

As  far  as  touches  W  I  that  so  prized  „  iii  i  92 
only  grandson  To  W,  a  poor  cow-herd.    Harold.    This 

old  W  Would  take  me  on  his  knees  „  iv  i  70 
Wont  (will  not)    but  they  w  set  i'  the  Lord's  cheer  o' 

that  daay.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  469 

Wnss  (worse)     And  w  nor  that.  Prom,  of  May  1 136 

Glum  !  he  be  w  nor  glum.  „          ir  149 

Noa,  Miss ;  we  worked  naw  w  upo'  the  cowd  tea ;  „            ni  59 

Wyatt  ( Sir  Thomas,  insurrectionary  leader)    (See  also 

Thomas,  Thomas  Wyatt)     Look  you.  Master 

W,  Tear  up  that  woman's  work  Queen  Mary  ii  i  74 

W,  W,  Wake,  or  the  stout  old  island  „        n  i  102 

you  are  as  poor  a  poet,  W,  As  a  good  soldier.  ,,        ii  i  113 

whisper'd,  '  W,'  And  whisking  round  a  comer,  „        n  i  130 

AW\  &W\     Wyatt.     But  first  to  Rochester,  „        n  i  219 

AWl  aW\     Forward !     Knyvett.     W,  „        n  i  237 

who  went  with  your  train  bands  To  fight  with  W,  „         n  ii  28 

Know  too  what  W  said.  „  n  ii  35 
She  shrilling  '  W,'  while  the  boy  she  held  Mimick'd 

and  piped  her  '  W,'  „         H  ii  72 

names  of  W,  Elizabeth,  Courtenay,  „         n  ii  94 

W,  who  hath  tamper'd  with  A  public  ignorance,  „  n  ii  180 
Long  live  Queen  Mary  !     Down  with  W  !     The  Queen  !      „       ii  ii  253 

and  brush  This  W  from  our  shoulders,  ,,      n  ii  294 

strong  to  throw  ten  W's  and  all  Kent.  „       n  ii  353 

W  comes  to  Southwark ;  „       u  ii  374 

Whether  I  be  for  W,  or  the  Queen  ?  „       n  ii  415 

Thou  cried'st '  A  W\'  and  flying  to  our  side  „         ii  iii  3 

W,  but  now  you  promised  me  a  boon.  „        n  iii  81 

W,  your  Grace,  hath  broken  thro'  the  guards  „        n  iv  19 

Also  this  W  did  confess  the  Princess  „      u  iv  111 

What  W  said,  or  what  they  said  he  said,  ,.      n  iv  127 

W  was  a  good  soldier,  yet  he  f  ail'd,  .,       ni  i  132 

What  such  a  one  as  W  says  is  nothing :  .,  m  i  139 
Thou  art  one  of  W's  men  ?    Man.    No,  my  Lord,  no.        „      in  i  244 

The  stormy  W's  and  Northumberlands,  „     m  ii  168 

pray'd  me  to  confess  In  W's  business,  »      ni  v  167 

other  things  As  idle ;  a  weak  W  I  „        v  1 292 

There  were  not  many  hang'd  for  W's  rising.  „          _v  u  9 

Noailles  wrote  To  that  dead  traitor  W,  ,,       v  ii  498 

lost  When  W  sack'd  the  Chancellor's  house  „       v  u  504 

A  new  Northumberland,  another  W?  „       v  v  188 


Yard    And  make  a  morning  outcry  in  the  y  ;  Queen  Mary  m  v  1^ 

three  y's  about  the  waist  is  like  to  remain  a  virgin.  Foresters  i  ii  69 
Yawn  (s)     A  life  of  nods  and  y's.                                    Queen  Mary  i  iii  116 

Yawn  (verb)     Dug  from  the  grave  that  y's  for  us  beyond ;  ,.           v  ii  163 

Yawn'd  The  nurses  y,  the  cradle  gaped,  „  m  vi  93 
Year    (See  also  Five-years',  New  Year,  Seven-years', 

To-year)    such  a  game,  sir,  were  whole  y's  a 

playing.  „          i  iii  140 

So  many  y's  in  yon  accursed  Tower —  „          i  iv  200 

I  am  eleven  y's  older  than  he  is.  ,.             i  v  68 

Thus,  after  twenty  y's  of  banishment,  „          ni  ii  46 

this  day  be  held  in  after  y's  More  solemn  „         lu  iii  90 

this  noble  reabn  thro'  after  y's  May  in  this  unity  „       m  iii  156 

In  your  five  y's  of  imprisonment,  „       m  iv  242 

But  not  for  five-and-twenty  y's,  my  Lord.  „       rn  iv  267 

the  doctors  tell  you,  At  three-score  y's  ;  „       ni  iv  410 

To  yield  the  remnant  of  his  y's  to  heaven,  „       nr  vi  210 

His  eighty  y's  Look'd  somewhat  crooked  „       iv  iii  331 

— and  I  bean't  wrong  not  twice  i'  ten  y —  „       iv  iii  534 

After  my  twenty  y's  of  banishment,  „  v  ii  69 
Our  flag  hath  floated  for  two  hundred  y's  Is 

France  again.  „         v  ii  262 

gather  all  From  sixteen  y's  to  sixty  ;  „         v  ii  273 

Don  Carlos,  Madam,  is  but  twelve  y's  old.  „           v  iii  88 

I  am  eleven  y's  older  than  he.  Poor  boy  !  „           v  v  46 

Twelve  y's  of  service  !  Harold  i  i  221 

after  those  twelve  y's  a  boon,  my  king,  „  i  i  225 
And  leave  them  for  a  y,  and  coming  back  Find  them 

again.  „       ii  i  89 

in  the  cruel  river  Swale  A  hundred  y's  ago  ;  „    m  ii  11 

thou  in  after  y's  Praying  perchance  for  this  poor  soul  „     v  i  322 

And  York  lay  barren  for  a  hundred  y's.  Becket  i  iii  54 

Ye  have  eaten  of  my  dish  and  drunken  of  my  cup  for  a 

dozen  y's.  „  i  iv  30 
Father  Philip  that  has  confessed  our  mother  for  twenty  y's,   „  in  i  112 

Y's  and  y's,  my  lady,  for  her  husband,  King  Louis —  „  ni  i  169 

She  past  me  here  Three  y's  ago  The  Cup  i  i  6 
one  who  y's  ago,  himself  an  adorer  of  our  great  goddess,        „       i  i  37 

To  see  if  y's  have  changed  her.  „     i  i  125 

where  twenty  y's  ago  Hxmtsman,  and  hound,  „      i  ii  22 

If  Synorix,  who  has  dwelt  three  y's  in  Rome  „    i  ii  17& 

three  y's  ago — the  vast  vine-bowers  „    i  ii  401 

found  together  In  our  three  married  y's  !  „    i  ii  417 

It  is  old,  I  know  not  How  many  himdred  y's.  „      n  343 

Beside  this  temple  half  a  y  ago  ?  „      n  393 

I  had  a  touch  of  this  last  y — in — Rome.  .,      n  446 

a-spreading  to  catch  her  eye  for  a  dozen  y.  The  Falcon  101 

been  on  my  knees  every  day  for  these  half-dozen  y's  „          185 

when  he  came  last  y  To  see  me  hawking,  „          312 

all  the  leaf  of  this  New-wakening  y.  „  340 
I  never  saw  The  land  so  rich  in  blossom  as  this  y. 

Count.    Was  not  the  y  when  this  was  gather 'd 

richer  ?  „          343 

That  was  the  very  y  before  you  married.  „          373 

True  tears  that  y  were  shed  for  you  in  Florence.  „          384 

faded  ribbon  was  the  mode  In  Florence  ten  y's  back.  „  423 
most  beautiful  May  we  have  had  for  many  y's  !       From,  of  May  1 567 

As  y's  go  on,  he  feels  them  press  upon  him,  „           i  647 

It  be  five  y  sin'  ye  went  afoor  to  him,  „              n  5 

hallus  gi'ed  soom  on  'em  to  Miss  Eva  at  this  time  o'  y.  „  n  16 
you  must  not  be  too  sudden  with  it  either,  as  you 

were  last  y,  '  h            n  55 

We  have  been  in  such  grief  these  five  y's,  „            n  67 

Poor  sister,  I  had  it  five  y's  ago.  „            n  82 

Many  y's  back,  and  never  since  have  met  „           n  370 

She  was  there  six  y's  ago.  „           n  399 

Have  sorrow'd  for  her  all  these  y's  in  vain.  „          n  415 

can  be  trace  me  Thro'  five  y's  absence,  „           n  615 

her  cry  rang  to  me  acrosa  the  y's,  „          n  656 


Prom,  of  May  m  140 
ni  232 


in  420 
m  517 
ra  761 

Foresters  i  i  70 
ii244 
1 1269 
11334 
11180 

1 11 150 


I  Hi  15 
1  Hi  28 
iii36 
nll63 
II 1245 
IV  17 
IV  24 
IV  817 
IV  923 
IV  1087 
Queen  Mary  1  v  367 
The  Falcon  829 


Year 

Year  (amtinued)    Him  as  did  the  mischief  here,  five  y' 
sin', 
who  came  to  us  three  «/'s  after  you  were  gone, 
You  must  not  expect  to  find  our  Father  as  he 

was  five  y's  ago. 
grave  he  goes  to,  Beneath  the  burthen  of  j/'s. 
Five  y's  of  shame  and  suffering  broke  the  heart 
If  they  be  not  paid  back  at  the  end  of  the  y,  the  land 

goes  to  the  Abbot, 
in  the  long  sweep  of  y's  to  come  must  the  great  man 
must  be  paid  In  a  y  and  a  month,  or  I  lose  the  land, 
they  have  trodden  It  for  half  a  thousand  y's, 
Who  deign  to  honour  this  my  thirtieth  y. 
Must  you  have  these  monies  before  the  y  and  the  month 

end  ? 
make  us  merry  Because  a  y  of  It  Is  gone  ?  but  Hope 

Smiles  from  the  threshold  of  the  y  to  come 
Sings  a  new  song  to  the  new  y — 
I  have  relgn'd  one  y  in  the  wild  wood. 
I  should  be  happier  for  it  all  the  y. 
She  was  murdered  here  a  hundred  y  ago, 
For  now  is  the  spring  of  the  y. 
She  said  '  It's  the  fall  of  the  y, 
I  have  been  away  from  England  all  these  y's^ 
I  have  had  a,y  ot  prison-silence,  Kobin, 
And  here  perhaps  a  hundred  y's  away 
Yearn     Y's  to  set  foot  upon  your  Island  shore. 
Yeam'd    How  often  has  my  sick  boy  y  for  this  ! 
Yeas  (yes)     Y,  y  !     I'll  not  meddle  wi'  'Im  if  he  doant 

meddle  wl'  mea.  Prom,  of  May  1 173 

To  look  to — y,  '  coomly  ' ;  „  1 180 

Y ;  but  I  haates  'im,  „  1 312 

y,  y !     Three  cheers  for  Mr.  Steer !  „  i  455 

Eva's  saake.     Y.  „  ii  31 

The  last  on  it,  eh  ?     Haymaker.     Y.  „  ii  142 

Y,  an'  owd  Dobson  should  be  glad  on  it.  „  ii  146 

,    Noa — y — thaw  the  feller's  gone  and  maade  such  a 

litter  of  his  f  aace.  „  ii  588 

Y  !    Fur  she  niver  knawed  'is  faace  when  'e  wur 

'ere  af  oor ;  .,  ii  606 

The  little 'ymn?     T,  Miss;  „  nil 

Y,  Miss,  (repeat)  Prom,  of  May  m  18,  480,  485 

Y ;  and  thanks  to  ye.  Prom,  of  May  in  26 

Letters !     Y,  I  sees  now.  „  in  38 

Y,  Miss ;  but  he  wur  so  rough  wl'  ma,  „  ni  103 

Y,  Miss ;  and  he  wants  to  speak  to  ye  partic'lar.  „  m  350 

Y,  Miss ;  but  he  says  he  wants  to  tell  ye  summut 

very  partic'lar.  „  in  354 

Y,  Miss,  I  will.  „  in  417 

Y,  the  marriage.  „  m  708 

O  law — y,  Sir !     I'll  run  fur  'im  mysen.  „  iii  713 

Yell  (s)    True  test  of  coward,  ye  follow  with  a  y.  Becket  i  ill  745 

wassail  y's  of  thief  And  rogue  and  liar  Foresters  in  322 

Yell  (verb)     whenever  a  murder  is  to  be  done  again  she  y's 

out  i'  this  way —  „       ii  1  247 

Yell'd     when  all  was  lost,  he  y,  Harold  v  1  404 

Yellow     I  thought  this  Philip  had  been  one  of  those 

black  devils  of  Spain,  but  he  hath  a  y  beard.      Queen  Mary  m  i  216 
the  wholesome  plow  Lay  rusting  in  the  furrow's  y 

weeds,  Becket  i  iii  355 

There  was  a  bit  of  y  silk  here  and  there,  „        iv  i  21 

Yelper    as  when  we  threaten  A  y  with  a  stick.  „     iv  11  350 

Yelping    I  hear  the  y  of  the  hounds  of  hell.  „      in  ii  48 

Yeoman    Quick  with  thy  sword !  the  y  braves  the  knight.  Foresters  ir  ii  30 


1134 


York 


Nay,  no  Earl  am  I.     I  am  English  y. 

I  am  the  y,  plain  Robin  Hood, 
Yeo-woman    Then  /  am  y-w.    O  the  clumsy  word ! 
Yes    See  Yeas 

Yesterday    (See  also  Yisterdaay)    I  heard  from  my 
Northumbria  y. 

y  you  mentioned  her  name  too  suddenly  before  my 

father.  Prom,  of  May  n  23 

Yestereven    It  seems  but  y  I  held  it  with  him  Harold  v  11 126 

Seen  in  the  thicket  at  the  bottom  there  But  y-e.  The  Cup  1 1 115 

Why  didst  thou  miss  thy  quarry  y-e  ?  The  Falcon  151 


ml31 
IV  143 
in  132 


Harold  i  i  331 


Yew    I  that  held  the  orange  blossom  Dark  as  the  y'i    Prom,  of  May  ii  631 
Past  the  bank  Of  foxglove,  then  to  left  by  that  one  y.  Foresters  iv  974 

Yew-wood    true  woodman's  bow  of  the  best  y-w  to  slay 

the  deer.  „      ii  j  393 

Yield    not  to  y  His  Church  of  England  Queen  Mary  i  ii  35 

I  do  believe  she'd  y.  „         i  iv  22 

y  Full  scope  to  persons  rascal  and  forlorn,  „       n  11 184 

Doth  Pole  y,  sir,  ha !  „     in  iv  394 

To  y  the  remnant  of  his  years  to  heaven,  „     ni  vi  210 

Didst  thou  y  up  thy  Son  to  human  death  ;  „     iv  iii  144 

after  all  those  papers  Of  recantation  y  again.  „      iv  iii  315 

fierier  than  fire  To  y  them  their  deserts.  „         v  iv  27 

Harold,  I  will  not  y  thee  leave  to  go.  Harold  1 1  256 

Thou  canst  make  y  this  Iron-mooded  Duke  „    n  il  339 

Ask  me  not.  Lest  I  should  y  it,  „     in  ii  47 

Heaven  y  us  more  !  for  better,  „     m  ii  71 

will  ye,  if  I  y,  Follow  against  the  Norseman  ?  „    iv  i  178 

ly  it  freely,  being  the  true  wife  „      v  ii  84 

betwixt  thane  Appeal,  and  Henry's  anger,  y.  Becket  i  iii  623 

My  lord,  we  cannot  y  thee  an  answer  „       i  iv  21 

not  y  To  lay  your  neck  beneath  your  citizen's  heel.  „        v  1  30 

Well  spoken,  wife.    Synorix.    Madam,  so  well  I  y.       The  Cup  i  il  173 

0  y  them  all  their,  desire !  „  ii  8 
Life  y's  to  death  and  wisdom  bows  to  Fate,  „  ii  89 
Will  y  herself  as  easily  to  another.  Prom,  of  May  i  747 
y  A  nobler  breed  of  men  and  women.  The  Falcon  754 
let  them  be,  man,  let  them  be.  We  y.  Foresters  i  ill  78 
criedst '  1 2/ '  almost  before  the  thing  was  ask'd,  „  n  1  566 
She  will  not  marry  till  her  father  y.                                      „        11 11  82 

1  y,l  y.     I  know  no  quarterstaff.  „         rv  257 
Yielded    should  have  y  So  utterly  ! — strange  !                 Queen  Mary  m  Hi  8 

When  last  I  saw  you,  You  all  but  y.  The  Cup  n  45 

Yisterdaay  (yesterday)    He  coom'd  up  to  me  y  1'  the 

haayfield.  Prom,  of  May  11 150 

'Ymn  (hymn)    The  little  'y  ?    Yeas,  Miss ;  „  ni  1 

Yoke    Will  shift  the  y  and  weight  of  all  the  world      Queen  Mary  in  vi  212 
Yolk    she  that  has  eaten  the  y  is  scarce  like  to  swallow  the 

shell.  The  Falcon  704 

Yon     Y  gray  old  Gospeller,  sour  as  midwinter.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  40 

for  the  two  were  fellow-prisoners  So  many  years  in 

y  accursed  Tower — 
Is  not  y  light  in  the  Queen's  chamber  ? 

Y  grimly-glaring,  treble-brandlsh'd  scourge  Of  England  ! 
More  talk  of  this  to-morrow,  if  y  weird  sign  Not  blast  us 

in  our  dreams. — 
And  y  huge  keep  that  hinders  half  the  heaven. 
I  sorrow'd  for  my  random  promise  given  To  y  fox-lion. 

Y  heaven  is  wroth  with  thee  ? 
drop  The  mud  I  carried,  like  y  brook. 
And  see  you  y  side-beam  that  is  forced  from  imder  it. 

Yore    There  is  one  Come  as  Goliath  came  of  y — 
York    Hath  taken  Scarboro'  Castle,  north  of  Y ; 
They  have  taken  Y. 

Y  taken  ?    GuHh.    Yea,  Tostlg  hath  taken  Y  ! 
To  Y  then.     Edith,  Hadst  thou  been  braver, 
Roger  of  Y.    Henry.     Roger  is  Roger  of  Y. 
To  set  that  precious  jewel,  Roger  of  Y. 
Roger  of  Y,  When  I  and  thou  were  youths  in  Theobald's 

house. 
Now  I  am  Canterbury  and  thou  art  Y.    Roger  of  York. 

And  is  not  Y  the  peer  of  Canterbury  ? 
Foimd  two  archbishopricks,  London  and  Y  ? 
And  Y  lay  barren  for  a  hundred  years. 
Bishops — Y,  London,  Chichester,  Westminster — 
Let  Y  bear  his  to  mate  with  Canterbury. 
My  Lord  of  Y,  Let  us  go  in  to  the  Council, 
There's  Y,  my  liege, 
hold  Young  Henry  king,  if  only  crown'd  by  T,  And  that 

would  stilt  up  Y 
Cursed  be  John  of  Oxford,  Roger  of  Y,  And  Gilbert 

Follot ! 
I  go  to  have  young  Henry  crown'd  by  Y. 
hath  in  this  crowning  of  young  Henry  by  Y  and  London 
And  how  did  Roger  of  Y  comport  himself  ? 
my  Lord  of  Y — his  fine-cut  face  bowing 


iiv200 

V  iv  1 

Harold  i  i  3 

„     1 1 120 

„  nH228 

.,  Ill  1  270 

„      V  1 39 

Becket  n  1 159 

„    HI  ill  49 

Harold  v  i  493 

Queen  Mary  v  1  288 

Harold  in  ii  171 

„      m  H  174 

„      in  11 177 

Becket,  Pro.  267 

Pro.  270 

I  Hi  39 

I  ill  45 

I  iii  51 

I  Hi  54 

I  ill  385 

I  Hi  512 

I  iH  546 

nn28 

nH33 

n  ii  266 
n  H  479 
ni  iu  71 
m  Hi  84 
III  Hi  140 


York 


1136 


Zurich 


York  (continued)    crowning  thy  young  son  by  T,  London 
and  Salisbury — ^not  Canterbury. 

Y  crown'd  the  Conqueror — not  Canterbury. 
Roger  of  Y,  you  always  hated  him, 

Y  and  myself,  and  our  good  Salisbury  here, 

Y  said  so  ?    Salisbury.     Yes :    a  man  may  take  good 
counsel 

Y  will  say  anything.    What  is  he  saying  now  ? 

Y  !     Can  the  King  de-anathematise  this  Y  ? 
Who  hold  With  Y,  with  Y  against  me. 

Y  against  Canterbury,  Y  against  God ! 
he  borrowed  the  monies  from  the  Abbot  of  Y,  the 

Sheriff's  brother, 
mark'd  if  those  two  knaves  from  Y  be  coming  ? 
The  Abbot  of  Y  and  his  justiciary. 
Not  paid  at  Y — the  wood — prick  me  no  more ! 
Young  (adj.)     Judges  had  pronoimced  That  our  y  Edward 

might  bequeath  the  crown  Of  England,  Queen  Mary  i  ii  26 


Becket  ni  iii  195 
„    m  iii  197 

V  i8 
V  i  56 

V  ii  1 

V  ii  5 

V  ii  9 

V  ii  63 

V  ii  66 

Foresters  i  i  68 
„  IV  113 
.,  IV  334 
„      IV  623 


But  our  y  Earl  of  Devon —    Mary.    Earl  of  Devon  ? 

Ev'n  that  y  girl  who  dared  to  wear  your  crown  ? 

Here  was  a  y  mother.  Her  face  on  flame, 

My  seven-years'  friend  was  with  me,  my  y  boy ; 

my  Lord,  Under  y  Edward. 

Which  a  y  lust  had  clapt  upon  the  back. 

They  say  the  gloom  of  Saul  Was  lighten'd  by  y 

David's  harp.     Mary.    Too  y !     And  never  knew 

a  Philip, 
how  it  chanced  That  this  y  Earl  was  sent  on  foreign 

travel, 
Noble  as  his  y  person  and  old  shield. 
Ay,  ay,  y  lord,  there  the  king's  face  is  power. 
Yet  in  thine  own  land  in  thy  father's  day  They  blinded 

my  y  kinsman,  Alfred — 
I  do  believe  My  old  crook'd  spine  would  bud  out  two  y 

wings 
Two  y  lovers  in  winter  weather, 
I  will  have  My  y  son  Henry  crown'd  the  King  of 

England, 
Surely  too  y  Even  for  this  shadow  of  a  crown ; 
Ay,  but  the  y  colt  winced  and  whinnied  and  flung  up 

her  heels ; 
And  said  '  My  y  Archbishop — thou  wouldst  make  A 

stately  Archbishop ! ' 
he  might  well  have  sway'd  All  England  under  Henry, 

the  y  King, 
Deal  gently  with  the  y  man  Absalom. 
Too  scared — so  y ! 

You  have  not  crown'd  y  Henry  yet,  my  liege  ? 
But  England  scarce  would  hold  Y  Henry  king,  if  only 

crown'd  by  York, 
crown  y  Henry  there,  and  make  Our  waning  Eleanor 

all  but  love  me ! 
I  go  to  have  y  Henry  crown'd  by  York. 
Seeing  he  must  to  Westminster  and  crown  Y  Henry 

there  to-morrow, 
hath  in  this  crowning  of  y  Henry  by  York  and  London 

so  violated  the  immemorial  usage  of  the  Church, 


IV  160 

IV  491 

nii68 

in  iii  48 

m  iv  244 

IV  iii  401 


V  ii  359 

V  ii  489 

V  ii  513 
Harold  i  i  72 

■„  II  ii  511 

„    III  i  25 
„     ni  ii  3 

Becket,  Pro.  224 
Pro.  230 


Pro.  514 
ii65 

I  iii  468 

I  iii  756 
II 167 

iiii3 

nii32 

II  ii  456 
n  ii  478 

miilO 

in  iii  71 


Young  (adj.)  (continued)  but  as  to  the  y  crownling  him- 
self, he  looked  so  malapert  in  the  eyes,  Becket  iii  iii  108 
Did  you  hear  the  y  King's  quip  ?  „  in  iii  146 
Thou  hast  broken  thro'  the  pales  Of  privilege,  crown- 
ing thy  y  son  by  York,  ,.  in  iii  194 
I  do  beseech  you — my  child  is  so  y,  „  iv  ii  84 
But  the  child  is  so  y.  „  iv  ii  89 
let  me  go  With  my  y  boy,  and  I  will  hide  my  face,  „  iv  ii  98 
But  I  will  beg  my  bread  along  the  world  With  my 

y  boy,  „       IV  ii  104 

till  it  break  Into  y  angels.  „        v  ii  257 

Commands  you  to  be  dutiful  and  leal  To  your  y  King 

on  this  side  of  the  water,  „        v  ii  326 

On  those  that  crown'd  y  Henry  in  this  realm,  „        v  ii  392 

If  this  be  so,  complain  to  your  y  King,  „        v  ii  448 

I  warrants  ye'll  think  moor  o'  this  y  Squire  Edgar 

as  ha'  coomed  among  us —  Prom,  of  May  1 109 

But  you  are  y,  and — pardon  me — As  lovely  as  your 

sister.  „  n  506 

Taake  one  o'  the  y  'uns  fust.  Miss,  fur  I  be  a  bit  deaf,  „  m  31 

the  poor  y  heart  Broken  at  last — all  still —  „         ni  680 

but  now  I  ask  you  all,  did  none  of  you  love  y  Walter 

Lea  ?  Foresters  i  i  55 

No  news  of  y  Walter  ?  „     ^  i  i  72 

Y  Walter,  nay,  I  pray  thee,  stay  a  moment.  „     n  i  472 

I  Little  John,  he,  y  Scarlet,  and  he,  old  Much,  and  all 

the  rest  of  us.  „       m  60 

This  y  warrior  broke  his  prison  And  join'd  my  banner 

in  the  Holy  Land,  „      rv  998 

Young  (s)    The  lion  needs  but  roar  to  guard  hLs  y ;      Queen  Mary  in  v  123 

Youngest    I  am  the  y  of  the  Templars,  Becket  i  iii  261 

an'  I  can  taake  my  glass  along  wi'  the  y,  Prom,  of  May  i  361 

Youngster    thou  and  thy  y's  are  always  muching  and 

moreing  me.  Foresters  iv  295 

always  so  much  more  of  a  man  than  my  y's  old  Much.         „        rv  298 
Youth  (adolescence)    was  all  pure  lily  and  rose  In  his  y,    Queen  Mary  i  v  21 
Not  scorn  him  for  the  foibles  of  his  y.  Becket  v  ii  328 

blossom  of  his  y,  Has  faded,  falling  fruitless —        Prom,  of  May  u  333 
Youth  (young  man)    strange  y  Suddenly  thrust  it  on  me.  Queen  Mary  n  i  128 
I  would  she  could  have  wedded  that  poor  y,  My 

Lord  of  Devon —  „         v  ii  476 

When  I  and  thou  were  y's  in  Theobald's  house,  Becket  i  iii  40 

The  wildest  of  the  random  y  of  Florence  The  Fdkon  808 


Z 


Zeal    tell  this  learned  Legate  he  lacks  z.  Queen  Mary  in  iv  272 

Zerabbabel    What  else?    Man.    Z.  „           in  1315 

Zest    that  will  give  thee  a  new  z  for  it,  Foresters  rv  209 

Zion    The  daughter  of  Z  lies  beside  the  way —  Becket  m  iii  177 

Zone    open'd  out  The  purple  z  of  hill  and  heaven ;  The  Cup  i  ii  408 
Zuinglius  (Zwingli,  the  Swiss  reformer)    The  ghosts  of 

Luther  and  Z  fade  Queen  Mary  in  ii  174 

Zurich    To  Strasburg,  Antwerp,  Frankfort,  Z,  „               i  ii  2 


A   CONCORDANCE   to   the   POEMS 


CONTAINED   IN  THE   LIFE  OF 


ALFRED,    LORD    TENNYSON. 


Abyss    The  starr'd  a'es  of  the  sky,  'Tis  not  alone  2 
Accept    A's  the  song  you  gave,  and  he  sends  Little  Aubrey  2 
A  on  this  your  golden  bridal  day  Remembering  him  3 
Ache     Till  heart  and  sight  and  hearing  a  How  strange  it  is  3 
Act  (s)    Steersman,  be  not  precipitate  in  thine  a  Of  steering      Steersman  1 
Act  (verb)     a  on  Eternity  To  keep  thee  here  That  is  his  portrait  39 
Admire    A  that  stalwart  shape,  those  ample  brows,  „                  4 
^jon    In  the  vast  Of  the  rolling  of  the  a's,  Little  Aubrey  6 
Aerial    Whose  trumpet-tongued,  a  melody  0  God,  make  this  age  3 
ASectation    Let  it  cry  an  a.                                       Immeasurable  sadness  !  6 
Affection     To  thee  with  whom  my  true  a's  dwell,  To  thee  with  whom  1 
Afraid     Truth-seeking  he  and  not  a.  He  was  too  good  5 
Age     when  your  a  had  somewhat  riper  grown.  Hear  you  the  sound  54 
0  God,  make  this  a  great  that  we  may  be  0  God,  make  this  age  1 
O'er  the  bow'd  shoulder  of  a  bland  old  A,  That  is  his  portrait  36 
To  hold  the  Spirit  of  the  A  Against  the  Spirit  They  wrought,  etc.  47 
Agony     An  energy,  an  a,  A  labour  working  to  an  end.      Youth,  lapsing  ii  3 
Aileth     What  a  thee,  0  bird  divine.  Full  light  aloft  5 
Aim     So  lived  I  without  a  or  choice,  Youth,  lapsing  i  37 
Air    {See  also  Under-air)    gaily  spring  In  that  un- 
wholesome a.  Far  off  in  the  dun  10 
glooms  were  spread  Around  in  the  chilling  a,  „              102 
With  pleasant  hymns  they  soothe  the  a  Of  death,  „              109 
there  Hovering,  thoughtful,  poised  in  a.  Not  to  Silence  12 
Airy     On  her  forehead  undefiled  I  will  print  an  a  kiss :        Not  a  whisper  12 
Ait     Streaming  thro'  his  osier'd  a's  !  Vicar  of  this  20 
Akin    Great  spirits  grow  a  to  base.  They  wrought,  etc.  16 
Alarum     May  blow  a  loud  to  every  wind,  0  God,  make  this  age  4 
Ale     lifts  The  creaming  horn  of  corny  a  !  Yon  huddled  cloud  4 
Gives  stouter  a  and  riper  port  ..                 7 
Alfred    little  A  in  the  East  Little  Aubrey  1 
All    A  things  please  you,  nothing  vex  you.  Vicar  of  this  9 
that  give  The  difference  of  a  things  to  the  sense.  Why  suffers  10 
An  orb  repulsive  of  a  hate,  A  will  concentric  with 

a  fate,  A  life  four-square  to  a  the  winds.  Young  is  the  grief  14 

And  how  a  things  become  the  past.  Youth,  lapsing  i  28 

And  the  guard  gasp'd  out  '  A's  right.'  Far  off  in  the  dun  88 

A  freedom  vanish'd —  Rise,  Britons,  rise  3 

All-perfect    but  rather  bless  The  A-p  Framer,  That  is  his  portrait  48 

Alma     At  the  battle  of  A  River.  Frenchman,  etc.  4 

That  rests  by  the  A  River.  ..              12 

Aloft     Full  light  a  doth  the  laverock  spring  Full  light  aloft  1 

Alone     'Tis  not  a  the  warbling  woods,  'Tis  not  alone  1 

Along    voice  Cried  in  the  future  '  Come  a.'  Youth,  lapsing  %  40 

Altar    bind  Falsehood  beneath  the  a  of  great  Truth :  0  God,  make  this  age  8 

Alternation    With  click-clack  a  to  and  fro,  Half  after  midnight.' 8 

Ambrosial    and  make  beneath  A  gloom.  Hear  you  the  sound  30 

Amethyst     Of  beryl,  and  of  a  Was  the  spiritual 

frame.  Far  off  in  the  dun  123 

Ample    Admire  that  stalwart  shape,  those  a  brows,  That  is  his  portrait  4 

Anacaona    happy  as  J,  The  beauty  of  Espagnola,  _ 

repeat)  A  dark  Indian  maiden  10,  22 


Anacaona  (continued)    Indian  queen,  A,  Dancing 

on  the  blossomy  plain  A  dark  Indian  maiden  28 

Happy  happy  was  A ,  The  beauty  of  Espagnola,  „  34 

Happy,  happy  J,  The  beauty  of  Espagnola,  „  46 

they  smiled  on  A,  The  beauty  of  Espagnola,  „  58 

No  more  in  Xaraguay  Wander'd  happy  .4,  „  70 

Anadyomen^    more  fair  to  me  Than  aught  of  A  !  Not  to  Silence  16 

Anana     By  the  crimson-eyed  a,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  4 

Ancestor    battlemented  towers  Of  my  old  a's !  Hear  you  the  sound  13 

Ancient    {See  also  Antient)    He  cares,  if  a  usage  fade,     They  wrought,  etc.  33 

Anger    victim.  Broken  in  this  a  of  Aphrodite,  Faded  ev'ry  violet  3 

Ankle    floating  snake  Roll'd  round  her  a's,  One  was  the  Tishbite  10 

Anon    'Tis  a  clear  night,  they  will  be  here  a.  Hear  you  the  sound  6 

Another    Into  a  shape,  bom  of  the  first,  As  beautiful, 

but  yet  o  world.  That  is  his  portrait  29 

and  I  will  show  to  you  A  countenance,  one  yet 
more  dear,  „  45 

Antient    {See  also  Ancient)    And  somewhat  loftier  a 

heights  Touch'd  with  Heaven's  latest  lights.  Thy  soul  is  like  11 

Apart  Not  with  this  age  wherefrom  ye  stand  a.  Therefore  your  HaMs  11 
Ape  (s)  We  come  from  a's — and  are  far  removed —  How  is  it  that  men  4 
Ape  (verb)  And  the  voice  that  a's  a  nation —  Immeasurable  sadness/  5 
Aphrodite     victim.  Broken  in  this  anger  of  A,  Faded  ev'ry  violet  3 

Apparel     For  they  were  kingly  in  a,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  63 

Approach     what  lights  a  With  heavenly  melodies  ?      Far  off  in  the  dun  105 
Arch  (s)     look  you  what  an  a  the  brain  has  built         Thai  is  his  portrait  10 
Beneath  those  double  a'es  lie  Fair  with  green 
fields  Youth,  lapsing  ii  35 

Arch  (verb)     thick  dark  oaks,  that  a  their  arms 

above,  Hear  you  the  sound  11 

Archangel    And  a  bright  a  drove.  Far  off  in  the  dun  116 

Areyto    moving  To  her  A's  mellow  ditty,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  50 

Aristocrat    proud  a's  whose  lordly  shadows.  Hear  you  the  sound  21 

Arm    thick  dark  oaks,  that  arch  their  a's  above,  „  11 

With  one  a  stretch'd  out  bare,  One  was  the  Tishbite  3 

this  one  smiled,  that  other  waved  his  a's,  That  is  his  portrait  22 

Armed    A  sound  of  blows  on  a  breasts  !    And  individual 

interests  Becoming  bands  of  a  foes  !  They  wrought,  etc.  18 

Array    And  though  girt  m  glad  a.  The  lamps  were  bright  23 

Art    ^  fork's  sake!     Hail,  Art  for  Art's  sake!  1 

I  hate  the  trim-set  plots  of  a  ! '  /  keep  no  more  14 

A ,  Science,  Nature,  everything  is  full,  Why  suffers  7 

Artist    Like  some  wise  a.  Nature  gives,  'Tis  not  cUone  6 

Ash    by  fits  the  lady  a  With  twinkling  finger  Townsmen,  etc.  9 

Ask    a  you  whether  you  would  be  A  great  man  in 

your  time.  Hear  you  the  sound  56 

Asleep    sound  of  the  deep  when  the  winds  are  a ;  That  the  voice  3 

Asphaltus    slime  Which  from  A  flows.  Far  off  in  the  dun  40 

Athwart    as  'twere  a  a  colour'd  cloud.  That  is  his  -portrait  35 

A  the  bloomy  mom.  Full  light  aloft  4 

Atrophy    And  his  name  was  A  !  Far  off  in  the  dun  56 

Attire    And  rich  was  their  a :  „  126 

Attitude    Down  to  his  slightest  turns  and  a's —  That  is  his  portrait  24 

Aubrey    Little  A  in  the  West !  little  Alfred  in  the  East         Little  Aubrey  1 
Austral     Your  flag  thro' A  ice  is  borne,  The  noblest  men  Q 


1137 


4  0 


Avenue 


1138 


Bone 


Avenue    through  The  knotted  boughs  of  this  long  a  Hear  you  the  sound  10 

Awe     And  looks  to  a  the  standers  by,  Because  she  bore  4 

Awful    Our  a  inner  ghostly  sense  Unroused,  How  strange  it  is  5 

Awry    mould  you  all  a  and  mar  your  worth ;  Old  ghosts  11 


B 

Babble    cuckoo-voice  that  loves  To  b  its  own  name.        /,  loving  Freedom  8 
we,  Poor  devils,  b  '  we  shall  last.'  Well,  as  to  Fame  8 

Babe    Father  will  come  to  his  6  in  the  nest,  Bright  is  the  moon  11 

Baby  and  knit  your  b  brows  Into  your  father's  frown,  Hear  you  the  sound  48 
Back  voices  moum'd  In  distant  fields, '  Come  b,  come  b.'  Youth,  lapsing  i  44 
Bad  When  a  great  man's  found  to  be  6  and  base.  How  is  it  that  men  2 
Balmy    And  softly  blow  the  b  skies ;  Life  of  the  Life  4 

Band  (a  company)     Becoming  b's  of  armed  foes  !  They  wrought,  etc.  20 

Band  (strip)  We  drest  her  in  the  Proctor's  b's,  Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  3 
Bang    B  thy  stithy  stronger  and  stronger.  Wherever  evil  8 

Banish'd     The  true  men  b —  Else,  Britons,  rise  4 

Bank     Whate'er  the  crowd  on  either  b  may  say,  Steersman  7 

child  was  sitting  on  the  b  Upon  a  stormy  day,      The  child  was  sitting  1 
Bar     rivulet.  Rippling  by  cressy  isles  or  b's  of  sand,  Townsmen,  etc.  6 

Bare    With  one  arm  stretch'd  out  b.  One  was  the  Tishbite  3 

Barkless    And  above  the  b  trees  They  saw  the  green 

verge  of  the  pleasant  earth.  Far  off  in  the  dun  62 

Barley     Full  fields  of  b  shifting  tearful  lights  Townsmen,  etc.  8 

Barren     If  night,  what  b  toil  to  be !  Gone  into  darkness  6 

Base    When  a  great  man's  found  to  be  bad  and  b,         How  is  it  that  men  2 
Great  spirits  grow  akin  to  b.  They  wrought,  etc.  16 

Bathe    B  with  me  in  the  fiery  flood,  Life  of  the  life  5 

Bathing    B  in  the  slumbrous  coves,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  7 

Battle     Every  mile  a  b,  Every  b  a  victory.  Bold  Havelock  3 

At  the  b  of  Alma  River.  Frenchman,  etc.  4 

Battlemented    Coeval  with  the  b  towers  Of  my  old 

ancestors  !  Hear  you  the  sound  12 

Bay     Dancing  by  a  palmy  b,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  18 

With  her  maidens  to  the  b;  „  42 

With  her  damsels  by  the  b;  „  54 

wreath'd  with  green  b's  were  the  gorgeous  lamps,    Far  off  in  the  dun  115 

Beaker    He  brims  his  6  to  the  top.  Yon  huddled  cloud  13 

Beam     Bright  are  the  cliffs  in  her  b,  Bright  is  the  moon  2 

Warm  b's  across  the  meadows  stole ;  The  night,  etc.  3 

Ray'd  round  with  b's  of  living  light.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  52 

Bear     Although  the  merry  bridegroom  B's  the 

bride  away,  The  lamps  were  bright  12 

Beard    He  strokes  his  b  before  he  speaks ;  Yon  huddled  cloud  10 

Bearest    Thou  b  from  the  threshold  of  thy  friends  Woman  of  noble  3 

Beat    And  the  b  of  the  homy  heels  ?  Far  off  in  the  dun  96 

Long  as  the  heart  b's  life  within  her  breast,  Long  as  the  heart  1 

sorrows  of  as  pure  a  heart  As  e'er  b  time  to  Nature,    Woman  of  noble  5 

Warm  b's  my  blood,  my  spirit  thirsts  ;  Youth,  lapsing  ii  45 

Beauteous     Nor  Sorrow  b  in  her  youth.  Are  those  the  far-famed  7 

Beautiful    Into  another  shape,  bom  of  the  first,  As  b,  That  is  his  portrait  30 

E'en  scorn  looks  b  on  himian  lips  !  Why  suffers  4 

Beauty    happy  as  Anacaona,  The  b  of  Espagnola, 

(repeat)  A  dark  Indian  maiden  11,  23 

Happy,  happy  was  Anacaona,  The  b  of  Espagnola,        „  35 

happy  Anacaona,  The  b  of  Espagnola,  (repeat)  „  47,  71 

they  smiled  on  Anacaona,  The  b  of  Espagnola,  „  59 

B,  Good  and  Knowledge  are  three  sisters  .  .  .  Beauty,  Good,  etc.  1 

Strange  beauties  from  the  sky.  Far  off  in  the  dun  32 

Beckon    father's  frown,  and  b  me  Away.  Hear  you  the  sound  49 

Bed     damn'd  that  writhe  Upon  their  b's  of  flame.      Half  after  midnight.'  11 

Clusters  and  b's  of  worlds.  Hither,  when  all  7 

Bedimm'd    The  tears  b  their  sight :  Far  off  in  the  dun  86 

Bee-like    b-l  swarms  Of  sims,  and  starry  streams.  Hither,  when  all  7 

Old  ghosts  whose  day  was  done  ere  mine  b,  Old  gfiosts  1 

The  months,  ere  they  b  to  rise,  Youth,  lapsing  i  9 

they  b  at  last  To  speak  of  what  had  gone  before,  „  26 

The  May  b's  to  breathe  and  bud.  Life  of  the  Life  3 

Beginning    In  thy  b's  in  the  past.  Young  is  the  grief  11 

Behind    B  the  burning  Sun :  Far  off  in  the  dun  2 

Behold    B,  ye  cannot  bring  but  good,  Are  those  tlie  far-famed  5 

Belie    To  make  me  thus  b  my  constant  heart  To  thee  with  whom  11 


Bend    That  streams  about  the  6 ;  Steersman  5 

Take  thou  the  '  b,'  'twill  save  thee  many  a  day.  „         8 

showing  every  b  Of  each  dark  hill  Thy  soul  Is  like  5 

Beryl     Of  b,  and  of  amethyst  Was  the  spiritual  frame.  Far  off  in  the  dun  123 

Best    And  God's  b  blessing  on  each  dear  head  That 

rests  by  the  Ahna  River.  Frenchman,  etc.  11 

Bigger     But  rejoice  when  a  b  brother  has  proved  Hotv  is  it  that  men  5 

Bind    when  Poesy  shall  b  Falsehood  beneath  the  altar  0  God,  make  this  age  7 


Full  light  aloft  5 

Woman  of  noble  8 

Far  off  in  the  dun  37 

Hear  you  the  sound  60 

63 

Not  a  whisper  10 


Bird    What  aileth  thee,  O  b  divine, 

Like  b's  of  passage,  to  return  with  thee 
Birth     That  Inn  was  built  at  the  b  of  Time : 

and  tell  me  you  were  great  Already  in  your  b. 

high  b  Had  writ  nobility  upon  my  brow. 

She  whose  b  brought  on  my  bliss : 
Bitter    Whoever  walks  that  b  ground  His  limbs 

beneath  him  fail ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  25 

On  the  h,  b  bridal.  The  b  bridal-day.  The  lamps  were  bright  53 

a  stranger  tale  to  tell  Than  if  the  vine  had  home 

the  b  sloe.  To  thee  with  wlwm  4 

Black     They  mounted  slow  in  their  lor^  b  cloaks.  Far  off  in  the  dun  85 

And  why  her  b  eyes  bum  With  a  light  so  wild 

and  stem  ?  '  The  lamps  were  bright  15 

What  is  that  I  hear  ?    The  night  is  b  and  still ;  What  rustles  3 

Bland     O'er  the  bow'd  shoulder  of  a  J  old  Age,  That  is  his  portrait  36 

Blast     the  ricketty  b  runs  shrilly  and  fast  ~        

Blatant    We  help  the  b  voice  abroad  To  preach  the 

freedom  of  despair. 
Bleat    deer  B  as  with  human  voices  in  the  park. 
Blend    A  noise  of  winds  that  meet  and  b. 
Bless    child  will  b  thee,  guardian  mother  mild, 

but  rather  b  The  All-perfect  Framer, 

God  b  the  little  isle  where  a  man  may  still  be  true 
God  b  the  noble  isle  that  is  Mistress  of  the  Seas  !       They  say,  etc.  17 
Bless'd-Blest     thy  memory  will  be  bless'd  By  children       Long  as  the  heart  3 


Far  off  in  the  dun  11 

He  was  too  good  9 
Wliat  rustles  4 
Youth,  lapsing  ii  2 
Long  as  tJie  heart  2 
That  is  his  portrait  47 


Far  off  in  the  dun  65 
Not  a  whisper  7 
Frenchman,  etc.  11 

Are  those  the  far-famed  4 

Not  a  whisper  10 

'Tis  not  alone  11 

Youth,  lapsing  i  4 

One  was  the  Tishbite  13 

Bold  Havelock  16 

Far  off  in  the  dun  78 

93 

Hear  you  the  sound  45 

Life  of  the  Life  1,  7 


They  see  the  light  of  their  blest  firesides. 

Were  I  not  a  spirit  blest. 

And  God's  best  b  on  each  dear  head 
Blest    See  Bless'd 

Blind     then  Is  this  b  flight  the  winged  Powers, 
Bliss    She  whose  birth  brought  on  my  b  : 

Something  of  pain — of  b — of  Love, 
Blissful    That  wash'd  her  shores  with  b  sounds : 
Blithe    she  seeming  b  Declined  her  head : 
Blood     '  I  am  of  Havelock's  b  ! ' 

The  tingling  b  grew  chill, 

Whose  b  in  its  liveliest  course  would  not  pause 

My  Spanish  b  ran  proudly  in  my  veins. 

Life  of  the  Life  within  my  b,  (repeat) 

what  madness  moved  my  b  To  make  me  thus  belie  To  thee' with  whom  10 

Sent  thro'  my  6  a  prophet  voice  Youth,  lapsing  i  10 

Warm  beats  my  b,  my  spirit  thirsts ;  „  H  45 

Bloom'd     Indian  maiden.  Warbling  in  the  b  liana,   A  dark  Indian  maiden  2 
Bloomy    And  chants  in  the  golden  wakening  Athwart 

the  b  morn.  Full  light  aloft  4 

Blossomy    Dancing  on  the  b  plain  To  a  woodland 

melody :  A  dark  Indian  maiden  29 

Blow  (s)     A  sound  of  words  that  change  to  b's !     A 

sound  of  b's  on  armed  breasts  ! 
Blow  (verb)     And  softly  b  the  balmy  skies ; 

May  b  alarum  loud  to  every  wind. 

With  that  long  horn  she  loves  to  b. 

Behind  yon  hill  the  trumpets  b. 
Blowing    Watch  your  standard  roses  b, 
Blown     Your  name  is  b  on  every  wind. 
Blue  (adj.)     With  fair  b  eyes  and  winning  sweet, 

From  dawn  till  simset  looking  far  away  On  the  b 

mountains.  Hear  you  the  sound  4k 

Blue  (s)     pall  of  the  sky  Leave  never  an  inch  of  b ;        Far  off  in  the  dun  %. 
Body    heads  without  bodies  and  shapes  without  heads  „  1 J 

Bold     B  Havelock  march'd,  (repeat)  Bold  Havelock  1,  5,  9,  Ic 

Bone    (See  also  Skull  and  Cross-bones)    eyes  glared 
fiercely  thro'  The  windows  of  shaven  b. 

There  was  not  a  tinge  on  each  high  cheek  b. 

His  b's  crack'd  loud,  as  he  stept  thro'  the  crowd 

threw  up  the  dust  Of  dead  men's  pulverised  b's. 


They  wrought,  etc.  17 

Life  of  the  Life  4 

0  God,  make  this  age  4  i 

Well,  as  to  Fame  T 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  1 

Vicar  of  this  S 

The  noblest  men  \ 

Because  slie  borei 


Far  off  in  the  dun  4; 
5 


Bony 


1139 


CaU 


Bony     But  the  ricketty  blast  runs  shrilly  and  fast 

Thro'  the  b  branches  there.  Far  off  in  the  dun  12 

Book    your  golden  bridal  day  The  B  of  Prayer.  Remembering  him  4 

full  God-bless-you  with  this  h  of  song,  Take,  Lady,  2 

I  give  this  faulty  h  to  you,  The  noblest  men  9 

Boot     And  his  b's  creak'd  heavily.  Far  off  in  the  dun  76 

Booth     The  hubbub  of  the  market  and  the  b's :  That  is  his  portrait  21 

Bore     Because  she  b  the  iron  name  Of  him  Because  she  bore  1 

And  b  the  child  away.  The  child  was  sitting  7 

the  merry  bridegroom  B  the  bride  away  !  The  lamps  were  bright  4 

Bom    This  chamber  she  was  5  in  !  Along  this  glimmering  3 

All  Nature  is  the  womb  whence  Man  is  b.  Hold  thou,  my  friend  2 

Into  another  shape,  b  of  the  first,  That  is  his  portrait  29 

Borne    (See  also  Wind-bome)    merry  bridegroom  Hath 

b  the  bride  away —  (repeat)  The  lamps  were  bright  20,  26, 38, 44 

a  merry  bridegroom  Had  b  the  bride  away,  „  50 

Your  flag  thro'  Austral  ice  is  b,  The  noblest  men  6 

Than  if  the  vine  had  b  the  bitter  sloe.  To  thee  with  whom  4 

Bough    through  The  knotted  b's  of  this  long  avenue    Hear  you  tiie  sound  10 

Bound  (limit)    transgressing  the  low  b  Of  mortal  hope,   That  is  his  portrait  38 

The  river  rose  and  burst  his  b.  The  child  was  sitting  4 

Bound  (verb)     When  corny  Lammas  b  the  sheaves :  Youth,  lapsing  i  16 

Bounded    leaders  b,  the  guard's  horn  sounded :  Far  off  in  the  dun  89 

Boundless    And  riishes  o'er  a  b  field.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  32 

Through  jill  that  b  depth  of  fires  is  heard  Half  after  midnight/  13 

Bow     With  all  his  groves  he  b's,  he  nods.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  49 

Bow'd    O'er  the  b  shoulder  of  a  bland  old  Age,  The 

face  of  placid  Death.'  That  is  his  portrait  36 

Bower     Now  idly  in  my  natal  b's,  Youth,  lapsing  i  49 

Box  (driver's  seat)    grim  old  coachee  strode  to  the  b,    Far  off  in  the  dun  87 

Box  (house)     snug  brick  b  Of  some  sleek  citizen.  Hear  you  the  sound  19 

Boy     And  the  laugh  of  their  rose-lipp'd  b's.  Far  off  in  the  dun  68 

Thou  dost  remember,  Michael,  How,  when  a  b.     Hear  you  the  sound  31 

we  jar  like  b's  :  And  in  the  hurry  and  the  noise      They  wrought,  etc.  14 

Brain    His  heart  throbs  thick,  his  b  reels  sick :  Far  off  in  the  dun  27 

The  b  is  moulded,'  she  began.  From  shape  to  shape  2 

.    Is  thy  mad  b  drunk  with  the  merry,  red  wine.  Full  light  aloft  7 

what  an  arch  the  b  has  built  Above  the  ear  !         That  is  his  portrait  10 

dark  form  glances  quick  Thro'  her  worn  b,        The  lamps  were  bright  28 

With  reason  cloister'd  in  the  b :  Young  is  the  grief  4 

Brake    How  every  b  and  flower  spread  and  rose.         That  is  his  portrait  26 

Branch     Waving  a  palm  b,  wondering,  loving,        A  dark  Indian  maiden  51 

Thro'  the  bony  b'es  there.  Far  off  in  the  dun  12 

singing  lustily  Among  the  moss-grown  b'es,  Hear  you  the  sound  42 

Brave    whole  world  shall  not  b  us  !  (repeat)  They  say,  etc.  6,  13,  20 

Break  (s)     Dancing  at  the  b  of  day,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  66 

At  the  very  b  of  light  ?  Full  light  aloft  8 

Break  (verb)     would  have  call'd  you  down  to  b  your 

fast,  Hear  you  the  sound  47 

Lightly  lisping,  b's  away ;  Not  to  Silence  32 

To  b  the  pride  of  Britain,  They  say,  etc.  2 

To  b  the  noble  pride  of  the  Mistress  of  the  Seas.  „  4 

Not  he  that  b's  the  dams,  but  he  They  wrought,  etc.  29 

B  thro'  with  the  hammer  of  iron  rhyme.  Wherever  evil  2 

Breast    Long  as  the  heart  beats  life  within  her  b,  Long  as  the  heart  1 

And  veik  a  b  more  fair  to  me  Not  to  Silence  15 

And  that  large  table  of  the  b  dispread,  That  is  his  portrait  5 

A  sound  of  blows  on  armed  b's  !  They  wrought,  etc.  18 

These  only  do  not  move  the  b  ;  'Tis  not  alone  5 

An  idle  hope  was  in  my  b.  What  rustles  11 

Breathe    The  May  begins  to  b  and  bud.  Life  of  the  Life  3 

Bred    The  noblest  men  methinks  are  b  The  noblest  men  1 

Breeze    B's  from  the  palm  and  canna  ^  dark  Indian  maiden  14 

Brick     or  the  snug  b  box  Of  some  sleek  citizen.  Hear  you  the  sound  19 

Brickwork    Inextricable  b  maze  in  maze  ?  What  rustles  8 

Bridal  (adj.)     Accept  on  this  your  golden  b  day  Remembering  him  3 

Bridal  (s)     bitter,  bitter  b.  The  bitter  bridal-day.     The  lamps  were  bright  53 

A  merry,  merry  b,  a  merry  bridal-day !  (repeat)  „  5, 13 

Bridal-day     lamps  were  bright  and  gay  On  the 

merry  b-d,  »  2 

A  merry,  merry  bridal,  A  merry  b-d !  (repeat)  „  6, 14 

the  bitter,  bitter  bridal.  The  bitter  b-d.  „  54 

Bride    the  merry  bridegroom  Bore  the  b  away !  ..  4 

Why  the  b  is  white  as  clay,  Although  the 

merry  bridegroom  Bears  the  b  away,  ..  10 


Bride  (continued)    the  merry  bridegroom 

Hath  borne  the  b  away — (repeat)     The  lamps  were  bright  20, 26, 38, 44 
tho'  the  merry  bridegroom  Might  lead  the  b 

away.  The  lamps  were  bright  32 

he  a  merry  bridegroom  Had  borne  the  b  away,  „  50 

Bridegroom    the  merry  b  Bore  the  bride  away  !  „  3 

Although  the  merry  b  Bears  the  bride  away,  „  11 

the  merry  b  Hath  borne  the  bride  away —  (repeat)  „  19,  25  37, 43 

tho'  the  merry  b  Might  lead  the  bride  away,  „  31 

he  a  merry  b  Had  borne  the  bride  away,  „  49 

Bridge     I  stepp'd  upon  the  old  mill  b  ?  Remember  you  4 

Brief    Or  sleep  thro  one  b  dream  upon  the  grass, —  Townsmen,  etc.  4 

Bright    B  is  the  moon  on  the  deep,  B  are  the  cliffs  in 

her  beam.  Bright  is  the  moon  1 

And  a  b  archansel  drove.  Far  off  in  the  dun  116 

his  forehead  heavenly  b  From  the  clear  marble  One  was  the  Tishbite  6 
lamps  were  b  and  gay  On  the  merry  bridal-day.  The  lamps  were  bright  1 
And  Heaven  is  dark  and  b  by  turns.  Youih,  lapsing  ii  16 

A  moimtain  b  with  triple  peaks :  „  48 

Brim    He  b's  his  beaker  to  the  top,  Yon  huddled  cloud  13 

Bring     Behold,  ye  cannot  b  but  good.  Are  those  the  far-famed  5 

break  the  pride  of  Britain,  and  b  her  on  her 

knees.  They  say,  etc.  2 

Bringing     b  To  happy  Hayti  the  new-comer,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  37 

Brink    but  ever  drawn  Under  either  grassy  b  Not  to  Silence  25 

Upon  the  b  A  solitary  fortress  bums.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  13 

Britain     every  man  in  B  Says  '  I  am  of  Havelock's 

blood  ! '  Bold  Havelock  15 

To  break  the  pride  of  B,  They  say,  etc.  2 

you  gleam  reset  In  B's  lyric  coronet.  We  lost  you  4 

Briton    let  an  honest  B  sit  at  home  at  ease :  They  say,  etc.  9 

Broad     below  The  highway,  b  and  flat.  Far  off  in  the  dun  98 

Broke     They  b  the  ground  with  hoofs  of  fire  „  128 

Broken    victim,  B  in  this  anger  of  Aphrodite,  Faded  ev'ry  violet  3 

Brook     Partly  river,  partly  b.  Not  to  Silence  29 

Brother     But  rejoice  when  a  bigger  b  has  proved  How  is  it  that  men  5 

Brought     Then  she  b  the  guava  fruit,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  41 

She  whose  birth  b  on  my  bliss  :  Not  a  whisper  10 

Brow    His  b  is  clammy  and  pale.  Far  off  in  the  aun  28 

the  white  fly  leapt  About  his  hairless  b.  „  84 

knit  your  baby  b's  Into  your  father's  frown,         Hear  you  the  sound  48 

high  birth  Had  writ  nobility  upon  my  b.  „  64 

Admire  that  stalwart  shape,  those  ample  b's.  That  is  his  portrait  4 

These  careful  and  those  candid  b's,  „  23 

Brush    B'es  of  fire,  hazy  gleams,  Hither,  when  all  6 

Brush'd    As  the  quick  wheels  b,  Far  off  in  the  dun  91 

Bud    May  begins  to  breathe  and  b.  Life  of  the  Life  3 

Build     Not  to  Silence  would  I  6  A  temple  Not  to  Silence  1 

Built     (See  also  Slfeht-built)     That  Inn  was  b  at  the 

birth  of  Time :  Far  off  in  the  dun  37 

what  an  arch  the  brain  has  6  Above  the  ear !        T}iat  is  his  portrait  10 

Bum     hearts  that  in  them  b  With  power  Far  off  in  the  dun  29 

her  black  eyes  b  With  a  light  so  wild  and  stem  ? '  The  lamps  were  bright  15 

Upon  the  brink  A  solitary  fortress  b's,  Youth,  lapsing  ii  14 

Burning    (See  also  Ever-burning)    Far  off  in  the  dun, 

dark  Occident,  Behind  the  b  Sua :  Far  off  in  the  dun  2 

Cemented  with  the  b  slime  Which  from  Asphaltus  flows.       „  39 

With  a  silver  sound  the  wheels  went  round,  The 

wheels  of  b  flame,  „  122 

Hard  by  the  b  throne  of  my  great  grandsire.        Half  after  midnight !  6 

Burst  (s)     With  a  solemn  b  of  thnlling  light,  Far  off  in  the  dun  119 

Burst  (verb)     The  river  rose  and  b  his  boimd,  The  child  was  sitting  4 

I  could  b  into  a  psalm  of  praise,  Why  suffers  2 

Out  b's  a  rainbow  in  the  sky —  Youth,  lapsing  ii  33 

from  the  golden  vapour  b's  A  moimtain  bright  „  47 

Butterfly    Before  the  first  white  butterflies,  „  1 11 


Caesar    A  C  of  a  pimier  dynasty 

Call    You  were  wont  to  c  it  Your  throne. 

C  to  the  freshly-flower'd  hill. 

C  to  its  mate  when  nothing  stirr'd 


Here,  I  that  stood  5 

Hear  you  the  sound  35 

Remember  you  12 

15 


CaU'd 


1140 


Come 


Call'd    would  have  c  you  down  to  break  your  fast,     Hear  you  the  sound  47 
Calm     Before  his  eyes  so  grim  and  c  Far  ojf  in  the  dun  77 

Came    And  the  host  c  forth,  and  stood  alone  „  49 

There  c  a  gaunt  man  from  the  dark  Inn  door,  „  73 

wind  c  singing  lustily  Among  the  moss-grown 
branches.  Hear  you  the  sound  41 

I  c  And  would  have  call'd  you  down  „  46 

Candid   These  careful  and  those  c  brows,  how  each — ■  That  is  his  portrait  23 
Camia     Breezes  from  the  palm  and  c  A  dark  Indian  maiden  14 

Cap     Jauntily  sat  the  Proctor's  c  Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  11 

Capacious    C  both  of  Friendship  and  of  Love.  That  is  his  portrait  51 

Care    He  c's,  if  ancient  usage  fade,  They  wrought,  etc.  33 

Careful    These  c  and  those  candid  brows,  how  each —  That  is  his  portrait  23 
Carmel-steeps    As  when  he  stood  on  C-s  One  was  the  Tishhite  2 

Carol     Following  her  wild  c  She  led  them  A  dark  Indian  maiden  61 

Carolling    C  '  Happy,  happy  Hayti ! '  „  52 

Carouse    no  revelling  tones  Of  c  were  heard  within :     Far  off  in  the  dun  42 
Carved    forms  Of  the  unfading  marble  c  upon  them,  Hear  you  the  sound  26 

First  shaped,  and  c,  and  set  me  in  my  place.  Here,  I  that  stood  4 

Casement    The  c's  sparkle  on  the  plain.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  39 

Cast     every  line  Wore  the  pale  c  of  thought,  Methought  I  saw  2 

Castle    Up  the  street  we  took  her  As  far  as  to 

the  C,  Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  10 

Cataract     This  goes  straight  forward  to  the  c :  Steersman  4 

But  tho'  the  c  seem  the  nearer  way,  „  6 

Caterwaul     If  the  world  c,  lay  harder  upon  her  Wherever  evil  6 

Cause     great  c  of  Freedom  round  and  roimd.  First  drink  a  health  60 

Carven     Wax-lighted  chapels,  and  rich  c  screens  Therefore  your  Halls  4 

Cease     These  voices  did  not  c  to  cry  Youth,  lapsing  i  22 

Ceasing    Confused,  and  c  from  my  quest,  „  45 

Cedar-wooded    c-w  paradise  Of  still  Xaraguay :     A  dark  Indian  maiden  20 
Cellar    For  he,  whose  c  is  his  pride.  Yon  huddled  cloud  6 

Cemented     C  with  the  biuning  slime  Far  off  in  the  dun  39 

Century     Which  speak  of  us  to  other  centuries,  Hear  you  the  sound  27 

Cessation     There  may  be  short  c  of  their  wails.  Half  after  midnight !  12 

Chamber     This  c  she  was  bom  in  !  Along  this  glimmering  3 

tho'  the  faults  he  thick  as  dust  In  vacant  c's.  The  noblest  men  11 

Chance     lest  it  by  c  should  mark  The  life  that  haunts      How  strange  it  is  6 

pleasant  spot  Where  it  was  my  c  to  marry.  Vicar  of  this  2 

Change  (s)     of  the  c's  of  the  suns  ?  Little  Aubrey  6 

Mature,  harbour'd  from  c,  contemplative,  That  is  his  portrait  12 

overhaste  Should  fire  the  many  wheels  of  c  !  They  wrought,  etc.  24 

to  repair  With  seasonable  c's  fair  „  35 

When  from  c  to  c.  Led  silently  by  power 

divine.  Thou  may'st  remember  8 

Thro'  every  c  that  made  thee  what  thou  art  ?  To  thee  with  whom  14 
Change  (verb)  A  sound  of  words  that  c  to  blows  !  They  wrought,  etc.  17 
Changed    when  the  winds  Are  fallen  or  c ;  Woman  of  noble  10 

Channel    river  here,  my  friend.  Parts  in  two  c's.  Steersman  3 

thro'  the  c's  of  the  state  Convoys  They  wrought,  etc.  30 

Chant     And  c's  in  the  golden  wakening  Full  light  aloft  3 

Chanted    He  c  some  old  doleful  rhyme.  Youth,  lapsing  i  36 

Chapel    c's  vaulted  gloom  Was  misted  with  perfume.  The  lamps  were  bright  7 
Charged    C  with  his  gallant  few,  Bold  Havelock  6 

Chamel-place     tomb  And  c-p  of  pm^ose  dead.  Thou  may'st  remember  4 

Chase     Uncertain  of  ourselves  we  c  The  clap  of  hands ;  They  wrought,  etc.  13 
Chatter    That  they  chuckle  and  c  and  mocK  ?  How  is  it  that  men  3 

Chattering    The  c  of  the  fieshless  jaws.  Far  off  in  the  dun  95 

Cheek    There  was  not  a  tinge  on  each  high  c  bone,  „  51 

Those  thoughtful  furrows  in  the  swarthy  c ;  That  is  his  portrait  3 

eyes  Are  swallow'd  in  his  pamper'd  c's.  Yon  huddled  cloud  12 

Cbequer'd     C  with  moonlight's  variation.  Hear  you  the  sound  22 

Chief    This  tavern  is  their  c  resort,  Yon  huddled  cloud  5 

Child     A  c  she  loved  to  play ;  Along  this  glimmering  2 

Thy  c  will  bless  thee,  guardian  mother  mild,  Long  as  the  heart  2 

bless'd  By  children  of  the  children  of  thy  c.  „  4 

In  that  cradle  sleeps  my  c.  Not  a  whisper  9 

c  was  sitting  on  the  bank  Upon  a  stormy  day.     The  child  was  sitting  1 

Took  the  c  from  off  the  ground,  And  bore  the  c 
away.  „  6 

O  the  c  so  meek  and  wise,  „  8 

Childhood    All  her  loving  c  Breezes  from  the 

palm  A  dark  Indian  maiden  13 

Children    memory  will  be  bless'd  By  c  of  the  c  Long  as  the  heart  4 

Chill    The  tingling  blood  grew  c,  Far  off  in  the  dun  78 


Chilling    There  lies  a  land  of  c  storms,  Far  off  in  the  dun  5 

Vast  wastes  of  starless  glooms  were  spread  Around 
in  the  c  air. 
Chimney    Moan'd  in  her  c's  and  her  eaves ; 
Choice    So  lived  I  without  aim  or  c, 
Chuckle    That  they  c  and  chatter  and  mock  ? 
Cinchona    Crown'd  with  garlands  of  c, 
Citizen    snug  brick  box  Of  some  sleek  c. 

Whence  your  own  c's,  for  their  own  renown, 

he,  the  c.  Deep-hearted,  moderate,  firm, 
Claim    those  whom  Freedom  c's  As  patriot-martyrs 
Clanmiy     His  brow  is  c  and  pale. 

Clap     Uncertain  of  ourselves  we  chase  The  c  of  hands ;   They  wrought,  etc.  14 
Clapperclaw     Till  she  c  no  longer.  Wherever  evil  7 

Clasp     I  c  her  slender  waist.  We  kiss.  How  glad  am  I  5 

Clay     Why  the  bride  is  white  as  c.  The  lamps  were  bright  10 

Clear     'Tis  a  c  night,  they  will  be  here  anon.  Hear  you  the  sound  6 

oak  Which  towers  above  the  lake  that  ripples  out 


102 

Youth,  lapsing  i  30 

37 

How  is  it  that  men  3 

A  dark  Indian  maiden  26 

Hear  you  the  sound  20 

Here,  I  that  stood  7 

They  wrought,  etc.  9 

Not  such  were  those  1 

Far  off  in  the  dun  28 


In  the  c  moonshine 

From  the  c  marble  pouring  glorious  scorn, 

Remember  you  the  c  moonlight 

Rang  like  a  trumpet  c  and  dry, 
Clear-edged    C-e,  and  showing  every  bend 
Clearer     A  c  day  Than  our  poor  twilight  dawn  on 

earth — 
Cleave    land  of  many  days  that  c's  In  two  great 

halves, 
Clever    Shadows  of  statesmen,  c  men  ! 
Click-clack    With  c-c  alternation  to  and  fro, 
Cliff     Bright  are  the  c's  in  her  beam. 
Cloak    They  moimted  slow  in  their  long  black  c's, 

his  c  wind-borne  Behind, 
Clock    There  is  a  c  in  Pandemonium, 

What's  the  c  ?    Mich.    Half  way  toward  midnight, 
Cloister'd    With  reason  c  in  the  brain : 
Clomb    Shudder'd  with  silent  stars,  she  c, 
Close     I  met  in  all  the  c  green  ways. 


34 

One  was  the  Tishhite  7 

Remember  you  1 

Youth,  lapsing  i  19 

Thy  soul  is  like  5 

Gone  into  darkness  4 

They  wrought,  etc.  26 

"   .     .       12 

Half  after  tnidnight !  8 

Bright  is  the  moon  2 

Far  off  in  the  dun  85 

One  was  the  Tishhite  5 

Half  after  midnight !  5 

Hear  you  the  sound  3 

Young  is  the  grief  4 

Hither,  when  all  2 

/  met  in  all  1 


Cloud    c's  are  simder'd  toward  the  morning-rise ;       0  God,  make  this  age  9 

a  colour'd  c.  O'er  the  bow'd  shoulder  of  a  bland 
old  Age, 

A  momentary  c  upon  me  fell : 

Yon  huddled  c  his  motion  shifts. 

The  c's  unswathe  them  from  the  height. 
Cloudless    With  him  you  love,  be  c  and  be  long  ! 
Cloudy     things  of  past  days  with  their  horrible  eyes 
Look  out  from  the  c  vast. 

And  the  moaning  wind  before  it  drives  Thick 
wreaths  of  c  dew. 

Fast  by  me  flash  the  c  streaks. 
Clue    think  a  cunning  hand  has  foimd  the  c — 
Cluster    C's  and  beds  of  worlds. 
Coach    there  stood  a  dark  c  at  an  old  Inn  door 

As  the  c  ran  on,  and  the  sallow  lights  shone 

those  are  the  lights  of  the  Paradise  c, 
Coachee  (coachman)    grim  old  c  strode  to  the  box, 

O  C,  C,  what  lights  approach  With  heavenly  melodies  ? 
Coat     A  dreadnought  c  had  he : 


That  is  his  portrait  35 

To  thee  with  whom  6 

Yon  huddled  cloud  1 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  50 

Take,  Lady  4 

Far  off  in  the  dun  20 

24 
Youth,  lapsing  ii  46 
What  rustles  14 
Hither,  when  all  7 
Far  off  in  the  dun  35 
99 
107 
87 
105 
74 
Cockroach    As  the  c  crept,  and  the  white  fly  leapt  „  83 

Cocoa-shadow'd     In  the  c-s  coves,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  8 

Coeval    C  with  the  battlemented  towers  Hear  you  the  sound  12 

Cold    C  words  I  spoke,  yet  loved  thee  warm  and  well.    To  thee  with  whom  8 


Seem'd  I  so  c  ?  what  madness  moved  my  blood 
Coldness    My  c  was  mistimed  like  summer-snow, 
Colour'd    At  the  end,  as  'twere  athwart  a  c  cloud. 
Come    Father  will  c  to  thee  soon, 

Father  will  c  to  his  babe  in  the  nest, 

'  And  thro'  all  phases  of  all  thought  I  c 

We  c  from  apes — and  are  far  removed — 

The  crowd  have  c  to  see  thy  grave. 

The  year,  that  c's,  may  c  with  shame, 

mock'd  and  said,  '  C,  cry  aloud,  he  sleeps.' 

That  would  have  c  to  woo  her. 

Thro'  spiritual  dark  we  c  Into  the  light 

far  off  from  England's  shore.  He  c's  no  more, 

voice  Cried  in  the  future  '  C  along.' 


10 

.      ."  .7 

That  is  his  portrait  35 

Bright  is  the  moon  9 

11 

From  shape  to  shape  3 

How  is  it  that  men  4 

I  keep  no  more  2 

I,  loving  Freedom  6 

One  was  the  Tishhite  4 ; 

Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  8  j 

Thou  may'st  remember  5  ' 

What  rustles  10 

Youth,  lapsing  i  40 


Come 


1141 


Dawning 


Come  {continued)    voices  moum'd  In  distant  fields, 

'  C  back,  c  back.'  Youth,  lapsing  i  44 

C's  hither  throbbing  thro'  the  dark ;  ,,            m  8 

The  voice  cries '  C  „              13 

'  C '  and  I  c,  the  wind  is  strong :  ,.              17 

'  C '  and  I  c,  no  more  I  sleep :  „              25 


'  C '  and  I  c,  the  vale  is  deep,  My  heart  is  dark,  but 
yet  I  c. 

'  C  '  and  I  c,  and  all  c's  back 
Come  along    voice  Cried  in  the  future  '  C  a.' 
Come  back    voices  moum'd  In  distant  fields,  ^  C  b,  c  b.' 
Comer    See  New-comer 
Comfort    To  draw  strange  c  from  the  earth. 
Coming    Hark  !  they  arec. 

is  it  my  love  C  along  the  secret  ways  ? 

Further  and  further  reaching  hands  For  ever  into  c 
years ;  They  tvrought,  etc.  4 

Mix'd  with  the  phantom  of  his  c  fame.  That  is  his  portrait  32 

Common     For  c  objects  that  would  keep  Our  awful 

inner  ghostly  sense  Unroused,  How  strange  it  is  4 

But  rejoice  when  a  bigger  brother  has  proved  That 


27 

41 

iiO 

44 


Far  off  in  the  dun  31 

Hear  you  the  sownd  65 

What  rustles  6 


he  springs  from  the  c  stock. 
Compell'd    he  c  once  more  Thro'  his  own  nature. 
Complex    More  c  is  more  perfect. 
Concentric    A  will  c  with  all  fate, 
Condense     Dissolve  a  world,  c  a  star. 
Confused    c  The  shadows  from  the  icy  heights. 

C,  and  ceasing  from  my  quest. 
Conjectured    If  earth  be  seen  from  your  c  heaven. 
Conquer    And  get  thee  forth  to  c. 
Consciousness    See  Half-consciousness 
Considering    C  what  mine  eyes  have  seen, 
Constant     Nor  Love  that  holds  a  c  mood. 

To  make  me  thus  belie  my  c  heart 
Contemplate     That  c  a  mighty  plan, 
Contemplative    harbour'd  from  change,  c. 
Contend    C's,  despising  party-rage. 
Control    See  Self-control 
Convoy    C's  the  people's  wish,  is  great ; 
Com     From  under  the  deep,  sweet  c, 
Corny    The  thirsty  horseman,  nodding,  lifts  The 
creaming  horn  of  c  ale  ! 

a  voice  ran  round  the  hills  When  c  Lammas  bound 

the  sheaves :  Youth,  lapsing  i  16 

Coronet    gleam  reset  In  Britain's  lyric  c.  We  lost  you  4 

Cottage     mockery  to  hang  it  O'er  the  thatch'd  c,         Hear  you  the  sound  19 


How  is  it  that  men  6 

That  is  his  portrait  27 

From  shape  to  shape  7 

Young  is  the  grief  15 

Are  those  the  far-famed  14 

Deep  glens  I  found  7 

Youth,  lapsing  i  45 

Old  ghosts  2 

0  God,  make  this  age  11 

Young  is  the  grief  9 

Are  those  the  far-famed  8 

To  thee  with  whom  11 

They  wrought,  etc.  42 

That  is  his  portrait  12 

They  wrought,  etc.  46 

31 

Full  light  aloft  2 

Yon  huddled  cloud  4 


Countenance     who  did  scan  His  c  so  grand  and  mild, 
I  will  show  to  you  Another  c,  one  yet  more 
dear; 

Country-side    Than  any  in  the  c-s. 

Course    blood  in  its  liveliest  c  would  not  pause 

Court    Sound  '  Ever,  Never '  thro'  the  c's  of  Hell, 

Cove     Bathing  in  the  slumbrous  c's.  In  the  cocoa- 
shadow'd  c's, 

Crack'd    His  bones  c  loud,  as  he  stept 

Cradle    See,  The  c  where  she  lay  ! 
In  that  c  sleeps  my  child. 

Craft    See  King-craft,  Priest-craft 

Craggy    And  monstrous  rocks  from  c  snouts 
A  tempest  strikes  the  c  walls. 

Crane     Playing  with  the  scarlet  c.  The  dragon-fly 
and  scarlet  c, 

Crazed    And  they  saw  her  standing  by.  With  a 


Methought  I  saw  5 

That  is  his  portrait  45 

Yon  huddled  cloud  8 

Far  off  in  the  dun  93 

Half  after  midnight !  9 

A  dark  Indian  maiden  7 

Far  off  in  the  dun  75 

Along  this  glimmering  4 

Not  a  whisper  9 

Deep  glens  I  found  3 
Youth,  lapsing  ii  21 


A  dark  Indian  maiden  31 


laughing  c  eye, 
Creak'd    And  his  boots  c  heavily. 
Creaking    Swung  c  before  the  Inn. 
Creaming    The  c  horn  of  corny  ale ! 
Credit    Small  thanks  or  c  shall  I  have. 
Creed    Freedom  claims  As  patriot-martyrs  of  her  c : 
Crept     As  the  cockroach  c,  and  the  white  fly  leapt 

A  voice,  when  night  had  c  on  high. 
Crescent    Spurge  with  fairy  c  set, 
Cressy     Rippling  by  c  isles  or  bars  of  sand, 
€ried    Then  they  c  at  the  turn  of  the  tide — 

voice  C  in  the  future  '  Come  along.' 


The  lamps  were  bright  52 

Far  off  in  the  dun  76 

44 

Yon  huddled  cloud  4 

I  keep  no  more  3 

Not  su^h  were  those  2 

Far  off  in  the  dun  83 

Youth,  lapsing  i  17 

Spurge  with  fairy  1 

Townsmen,  etc.  6 

Popular,  popular  4 

Youth,  lapsing  i  40 


Crimson-eyed    By  the  c-e  anana, 

Critic     '  You're  no  Poet  '—the  c's  cried ! 

Croft    To  snowy  c's  and  winding  scars, 

Cross    See  Skull  and  Cross-bones 

Crowd    bones  crack'd  loud,  as  he  stept  thro'  the  . 

The  c  have  come  to  see  thy  grave, 

Whate'er  the  c  on  either  bank  may  say, 
Crown'd    C  with  garlands  of  cinchona, 

C  with  soft  shade  her  deepening  floods 
Crumble    Go  forward !  c  down  a  thjone, 
Cry    Let  it  c  an  affectation, 

mock'd  and  said,  '  Come,  c  aloud,  he  sleeps.' 

These  voices  did  not  cease  to  c 

A  voice  like  many  voices  cries. 
Cuckoo-voice    Lured  by  the  c-v  that  loves 
Cultivate    Like  one  that  c's  his  own. 
Cunning    And  think  a  c  hand  has  found  the  clue- 
Curl    Look  on  those  manly  c's  so  glossy  dark, 
Curves    on  every  side  The  dragon's  c  melted, 
Custom    Wherever  evil  c's  thicken, 


A  dark  Indian  maiden  4 
Popular,  popular  2 
Youth,  lapsing  i  18 

r.        Far  off  in  the  dun  75 

/  keep  no  more  2 

Steersman  7 

A  dark  Indian  maiden  26 

Youth,  lapsing  i  3 

Are  those  the  far-famed  13 

Immeasurable  sadness/  6 

One  was  the  Tishbite  4 

Youth,  lapsing  i  22 

»  ii  7 

/,  loving  Freedom  7 

They  wrought,  etc.  44 

What  rustles  14 

That  is  his  portrait  2 

One  was  the  Tishbite  15 

Wherever  evil  1 


I  keep  no  more  13 

Yon  huddled  cloud  2 

They  wrought,  etc.  29 

Half  after  midnight !  10 

Far  off  in  the  dun  113 

A  dark  Indian  maiden  54 

The  lamps  were  bright  39 

46 

•:  36 

A  dark  Indian  maiden  18 

29 

66 

Remember  you  3 

Hear  you  the  sound  55 

Little  Aubrey  4 

Are  those  the  far-famed  6 

A  dark  Indian  maiden  1 
39 
Far  off  in  the  dun  1 


Daisy    '  I  love  the  d  weeping  dew. 

Dale    by  the  tavern  in  the  d.  The  thirsty  horseman. 

Dam     Not  he  that  breaks  the  d's, 

Damn'd    Piercing  the  wrung  ears  of  the  d 

Damp    d's  That  through  that  region  rove. 

Damsel    With  her  d's  by  the  bay ; 

Dance  (s)     He  from  the  d  hath  gone 

They  were  shaken  from  the  d. — 
Dance  (verb)     Did  the  people  d  and  play, 
Dancing    1>  by  a  palmy  bay, 

Anacaona,  D  on  the  blossomy  plain 

upon  the  shore  D  at  the  break  of  day. 

When  o'er  the  water  d  white  I  stepp'd 
Dandle     was  wont  to  d  you  upon  My  knee, 
Dante    Little  Homer,  little  D,  little  Shakespeare, 
Dare    And  see,  ye  d  not  touch  the  truth. 
Dark  (adj.)    A  d  Indian  maiden.  Warbling  in  the 
bloom'd  liana. 

Over  the  d  sea-marge  springing, 

Far  off  in  the  dun,  d  Occident, 

D  was  the  night,  and  loud  the  roar  Of  wind  and 
mingled  shower.  When  there  stood  a  d  coach 
at  an  old  Inn  door  „  33 

and  stood  alone  And  still  in  the  d  doorway :  „  50 

The  d  vine  leaves  round  the  rustling  eaves,  „  71 

There  came  a  gaunt  man  from  the  3  Inn  door,  „  73 

The  knotted  boughs  of  this  long  avenue  Of  thick 

d  oaks,  Hear  you  the  sound  11 

Look  on  those  manly  curls  so  glossy  d,  That  is  his  portrait  2 

A  d  form  glances  quick  Thro'  her  worn  brain,  The  lamps  were  bright  27 

and  showing  every  bend  Of  each  d  hill  against  the 
Heaven,  Thy  soul  is  like  6 

And  Heaven  is  d  and  bright  by  turns.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  16 

My  heart  is  d,  but  yet  I  come.  „  28 

Dark  (s)     the  emptiness  And  horrors  of  the  formless  d.     How  strange  it  is  8 

Thro'  spiritual  d  we  come  Into  the  light  Thou  may'st  remember  5 

What  rustles  hither  in  the  3  ?    A  step  ?  What  rustles  1 

Comes  hither  throbbing  thro'  the  d ;  Youth,  lapsing  ii  8 

Darkest    Ev'n  when  I  knew  him  in  his  hour  Of  d 

doubt.  Be  was  too  good  3 

Dark-limb'd     orange  groves  Naked,  and  d-l,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  6 

Darkness    Howling  in  outer  d.'  Beauty,  Good,  etc.  5 

Gone  into  d,  that  full  light  Of  friendship  !  Gone  into  darkness  1 

Daughter    Kitty  Sandilands,  The  d  of  the  doctor,  Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  2 

And  dreamt  not  of  the  miller's  d.  I  met  in  all  8 

Dawn    You'd  sit  there  From  d  till  sunset  Hear  you  the  sound  39 

I  see  the  world's  renewed  youth  A  long  day's  d,     O  God,  make  this  age  7 

Than  our  poor  twilight  d  on  earth —  Gone  into  darkness  5 

Dawning    It  will  be  the  d  soon,  Not  a  whisper  2 


Day 


1142 


Drop 


Day    (-Se*  a/so  Bridal-day)    All  <i  long  with  laugh-  .,     ,„ 

iiig  eyes,  -^  dark  Indian  maiden  17 

upon  the  shore  Dancing  at  the  break  of  d,  „                   66 

things  of  past  d's  with  their  horrible  eyes  Far  off  in  the  dun  19 

Ere  the  d  be  well-nigh  done ;  FvM  light  aloft  10 
clearer  d  Than  oiir  poor  twilight  dawn  on  earth —  Gone  into  darkness  4 
I  see  the  world's  renewed  youth  A  long  d's 

dawn  0  God,  make  this  age  7 

Old  ghosts  whose  d  was  done  ere  mine  began,  Old  ghosts  1 

That  none  can  truly  write  his  single  d,  „        13 

Take  thou  the  '  bend,'  'twill  save  thee  many  a  d.  Steersman  8 

child  was  sitting  on  the  bank  Upon  a  stormy  d,    The  child  was  sitting  2 

In  the  hall,  at  close  of  d.  The  lamps  were  bright  35 
A  land  of  many  d's  that  cleaves  In  two  great 

halves,  They  wrought,  etc.  26 

Dhj  d  Watch  yoiu:  standard  roses  blowing.  Vicar  of  this  11 

The  image  of  the  sun  by  d,  Youth,  lapsing  i  7 

Do^vn  from  the  summit  sweeps  the  d  „          ii  31 

Dead  (adj.)     March'd  and  fought  himself  d.  Bold  Havelock  12 

They  lifted  their  eyes  to  the  d,  pale  skies,  Far  off  in  the  dun  61 

and  threw  up  the  dust  Of  d  men's  pulverised  bones.            „               92 

'  The  dead  are  d  and  let  them  be.'  /  keep  no  more  8 

'  From  the  tomb  And  chamel-place  of 

purpose  d.  Thou  may'st  remember  4 

Dead  (s)     Then  pledge  we  our  glorious  d.  Frenchman,  etc.  9 

and  so  many  d.  And  him  the  last.  Gone  into  darkness  10 

'  The  d  are  dead  and  let  them  be.'  /  keep  no  more  8 

Deal    Not  d's  in  threats,  but  works  with  hope.  They  wrought,  etc.  39 

Dear    And  God's  best  blessing  on  each  d  head  Frenchman,  etc.  11 

one  yet  more  d.  More  d,  for  what  is  lost  is  made 

more  d ;  '  More  d '  That  is  his  portrait  45 

Was  I  so  harsh  ?     Ah  d,  it  could  not  be.  To  thee  with  whom  9 

Dearest    Speak  to  me,  d,  lest  I  die.  Speak  to  me  4 

Death    That  ride  to  d  the  griefs  of  men  ?  Are  those  the  far-famed  2 

The  D  for  which  you  mourn  is  Life.'  Early-wise  8 

pleasant  hymns  they  soothe  the  air  Of  d,  Far  off  in  the  dun  110 

The  face  of  a  placid  D.',  That  is  his  portrait  37 

silent  Guardians  But  true  till  D ;  Woman  of  noble  7 

Declined    she  seeming  blithe  I)  her  head :  One  was  the  Tishbite  14 

Deemed     I  d  her  one  of  stately  frame  Because  she  bore  3 

Deep  (adj.)    In  the  d  wood  no  more, — By  the  d 

sea  no  more, —  A  dark  Indian  maiden  67 

D  glens  I  found,  and  sunless  gulfs.  Deep  glens  I  found  1 
B  dells  of  snow  sunk  on  each  side  below  The 

highway.  Far  off  in  the  dun  97 
Full  light  aloft  doth  the  laverock  spring  From  under 

the  d,  sweet  com.  Full  light  aloft  2 

Hither,  when  all  the  d  unsounded  skies  Hither,  when  all  1 

Often  d  beyond  the  sight.  Not  to  Silence  22 

Yet  her  own  d  soul  says  nay :  The  lamps  were  bright  24 
Then  a  scream  of  wild  dismay  Thro'  the  d  hall 

forced  its  way,  „                   42 

'  (Dome '  and  I  come,  the  vale  is  d,  Youth,  lapsing  ii  27 

Deep  (s)     Bright  is  the  moon  on  the  d,  Bright  is  the  moon  1 

Father  is  over  the  d,  ,,8 

sound  in  her  ears  like  the  sound  of  the  d.  Like  the 

sound  of  the  d  That  the  voice  2 

Deepening    Crown'd  with  soft  shade  her  d  floods  Youth,  lapsing  i  3 
Deeper    past,  in  sleep,  away  By  night,  into  the  d 

night !     The  a  night  ?  Gone  into  darkness  3 

But  his  was  minted  in  a,  d  mould,  That  is  his  portrait  17 

Lower  and  d  evermore  They  grew.  Youth,  lapsing  i  25 

Deep-hearted    citizen,  D-h,  moderate,  firm,  They  wrought,  etc.  10 

Deep-mouth'd    mutter  of  d-m  thunderings  Far  off  in  the  dun  15 

Deer    d  Bleat  as  with  human  voices  in  the  park.  What  rustles  3 

Delicious    Which  in  one  d  nook,  Not  to  Silence  30 

Delight     Nor  proved  I  such  d  as  he,  That  is  his  portrait  19 

Dell    Deep  d's  of  snow  sunk  on  each  side  Far  off  in  the  dun  97 
Demure    how  d  a  smile.  How  full  of  wisest  humour      That  is  his  portrait  6 

Depth    Through  all  that  boundless  d  of  fires  Half  after  mimight  /  13 

Deserve    Yet  grief  d's  a  nobler  name :  Young  is  the  grief  5 

Desire    And  lights  at  length  on  his  d :  They  wrought,  etc.  40 

The  sharp  d  of  knowledge  still  with  knowing !  Why  suffers  6 

Despair    To  preach  the  freedom  of  d.  He  was  too  good  10 

Deqiiiing    Contends,  d  party-rage,  They  wrought,  etc.  46 


Despot    The  d's  over  yonder,  let  'em  do  whate'er 
Devil    and  we,  Poor  d's,  babble  '  we  shall  last.' 

and  the  d 1  take  the  parties  ! 

Dew    wind  before  it  drives  Thick  wreaths  of  cloudy  d. 

'  I  love  the  daisy  weeping  d. 
Die    Of  him  who  doomed  the  king  to  d, 

Speak  to  me,  dearest,  lest  I  d. 

When  I  d,  the  ghouls  !  !  ! 
Died     Bold  Havelock  d,  Tender  and  great 
Difference    The  d  of  all  things  to  the  sense.  And  all  the 

likeness  in  the  d. 
Dignity    It  show'd  the  seeds  of  innate  d 
Dim    Wherefore  should  your  eyes  he  d? 

D  grief  did  wait  upon  her. 
Dimly    sallow  lights  shone  D  and  blurly 
Disappear     I  have  seen  the  four  great  empires  d  ! 
Disarrange    hands  that  d  The  social  engine ! 
Discourse    owning  more  D,  more  widely  wise.' 

Dishonest    There's  a  treaty,  so  they  tell  us,  of  some  d  fellows    They  say,  etc.  3 
Dismay     Then  a  scream  of  wild  d  The  lamps  were  bright  41 

Disploding    D  globes  of  roaring  fire.  Deep  glens  I  found  4 

Dispread     that  large  table  of  the  breast  d.  That  is  his  portrait  5 

Dissipation     Unto  the  d  of  this  Earth.  Half  after  midnight !  4 

Dissolve     i^  a  world,  condense  a  star,  Are  those  the  far-famed  \i 

Distant     He  sees  his  father  in  d  lands,  Bright  is  the  moon  5 

low  sweet  voices  moum'd  In  d  fields,  '  Come  back, 

come  back.'  Youth,  lapsing  i  44 

Distress     I  keep  no  more  a  lone  d,  I  keep  no  more  1 

Ditty     moving  To  her  Areyto's  mellow  d,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  50 

Divine    What  ailcth  thee,  O  bird  d.  Full  light  aloft  5 

Most  eloquent,  who  spake  of  things  d.  Methought  I  saw  3 

.  When  from  change  to  change.  Led  silently  by 


They  say,  etc.  16 

Well,  as  to  Fame  8 

TJiey  say,  etc.  10 

Far  off  in  the  dun  24 

/  keep  no  more  13 

Because  she  bore  2 

Speak  to  me  4 

While  I  live  2 

Bold  Havelock  13 


Why  suffers  10 

Hear  you  the  sound  52 

Early-wise  5 

The  lamps  were  bright  33 

Far  off  in  the  dun  100 

Here,  I  that  stood  9 

They  ivrought,  etc.  21 

From  shape  to  shape  8 


power  d, 
Dizzy    Yet  am  I  d  in  the  track. 
Doctor    Kitty  Sandilands,  The  daughter  of  the  d 
Doleful    He  chanted  some  old  d  rhyme. 
Dome    her  keen  eyes  Pierced  thro'  the  mystic  d. 
Done     Ere  the  day  be  well-nigh  d ; 

And  there  is  something  greatly  d : 
Doomed    Of  him  who  d  the  king  to  die. 
Door    there  stood  a  dark  coach  at  an  old  Inn  d 

There  came  a  gaunt  man  from  the  dark  Inn  d. 

Step  thro'  these  d's,  and  I  will  show  to  you 

Beside  my  d  at  morning  stood  The  tearful  spirit 
Doorway    stood  alone  And  still  in  the  dark  d : 
Double    Beneath  those  d  arches  lie  Fair  with  green 

fields  the  realms  of  Love. 
Doubt    I  knew  him  in  his  hour  Of  darkest  d,  and  in  his 
power.  To  fling  his  d's  into  the  street. 

Unvext  by  d's  I  cannot  solve, 
Doubtful    Where  the  d  shadows  play, 
Dragon    on  every  side  The  d's  curves  melted. 
Dragon-fly    The  d-f  and  scarlet  crane. 
Drank    and  d  The  sweet  sad  tears  of  wisdom. 
Draw    To  d  strange  comfort  from  the  earth. 
Drawn    but  ever  d  Under  either  grassy  brink 
Dreadnought    A  d  coat  had  he : 
Dream    (See  also  Half-dream)    And  kisses  him  there 
in  a  d, 

See,  she  dreameth  happy  d's, 

sleep  thro'  one  brief  a  upon  the  grass, — 
Dreameth    See,  she  d  happy  dreams. 
Dreaming    In  the  d  of  past  things : 
Dreamt    And  d  not  of  the  miller's  daughter. 
Drest    We  d  her  in  the  Proctor's  bands, 
Drew    sun  D  down  the  West  his  feeble  lights ; 

Thro'  strange  seas  d  me  to  your  monster  town. 
Drifted  That  mystic  field  of  d  light  In  mid  Orion, 
Drink    Let  us  d  to  the  health  of  thine  and  mine 

It  is  not  good  to  d  strong  wine 

Shall  d  the  fulness  of  thy  victory. 
Dripping    I  grieved  as  woods  in  d  rains 
Drive    moaning  wind  before  it  d's  Thick  wreaths 

To  d  them  where  he  will. 
Drop    And  sometimes  with  a  twinkling  d,  Yon  huddled  cloud  1^ 


Thou  may'st  remember  9 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  43 

Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  2 

Youth,  lapsing  i  36 

Hither,  when  all  4 

Full  light  aloft  10 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  12 

Because  she  bore  2 

Far  off  in  the  dun  35 

„  73 

That  is  his  portrait  44 

Youth,  lapsing  i  33 

Far  off  in  the  dun  50 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  35 1 


He  was  too  good  3] 

Youth,  lapsing  i  ■ 

Not  to  Silence  3l| 

One  was  the  Tishbite  I5l 

A  dark  Indian  7naiden  32^* 

Methought  I  saw  5* 

Far  off  in  the  dun  31  ' 

Not  to  Silence  24 

Far  off  in  the  dun  74 


Bright  is  the  moon  6 

Not  a  whisper  13 

Townsmen,  etc.  4 

Not  a  whisper  13 

The  lamps  were  bright  22 

/  met  in  all  8 

Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  3 

Deep  glens  I  found  6 

Here,  I  that  stood  8 

Hither,  when  all  10 

Frenchman,  etc.  3 

Full  light  aloft  9. 

0  God,  make  this  age  la 

Youth,  lapsing  i  31 

Far  off  in  the  dun  '7~ 


Drove 


1143 


Face 


Drove    And  a  bright  archangel  d.  Far  off  in  the  dun  116 

D  into  lines  and  studs  of  light  The  image  Youth,  lapsing  i  6 

Drown  shriek  and  shout  to  d  the  thrilling  noise.  Half  after  midnight !  \Q 
Drunk    Is  thy  mad  brain  d  with  the  merry,  red  wine,  Fvll  light  aloft  7 

But  thou  hast  d  of  the  merry,  sweet  wine,  „  11 

Dry    earth  is  d,  tho'  the  pall  of  the  sky  Far  off  in  the  dun  21 

Rang  like  a  trumpet  clear  and  d.  Youth,  lapsing  i  19 

Dulcimer    With  sackbut,  and  with  d,  Far  off  in  the  dun  111 

Dull    and  d  The  sharp  desire  of  knowledge  still  with  knowing  !    Why  suffers  5 

xVnd  startle  the  d  ears  of  human  kind  !  0  God,  make  this  age  5 

Dumb     The  thunder  cannot  make  thee  d ;  Youth,  lapsing  ii  26 

Dun    Far  off  in  the  d,  dark  Occident,  Far  off  in  the  dun  1 

Dust    threw  up  the  d  Of  dead  men's  pulverised  bones.  „  91 

tho'  the  faults  be  thick  as  d  In  vacant  chambers.  The  noblest  men  10 

Dwell    To  thee  with  whom  my  true  affections  d.  To  thee  with  whom  1 

ever  young  the  face  that  its  With  reason  Young  is  the  grief  3 

Dwelling    near  the  d  of  some  noble  race ;  Hear  you  the  sound  17 

Dynasty    A  Caesar  of  a  punier  d  Here,  I  that  stood  5 


E 


Each    There  was  not  a  tinge  on  e  high  cheek  bone.       Far  off  in  the  dun  51 
They  hear  e  household  voice :  „  66 

Deep  dells  of  snow  sunk  on  e  side  below  The  highway,       „  97 

And  God's  best  blessing  on  e  dear  head  That  rests 

by  the  Alma  River.  Frenchman,  etc.  11 

when  e  one  leaves  The  middle  road  of  sober 

thought !  They  wrought,  etc.  27 

and  showing  every  bend  Of  e  dark  hill  against  the 

Heaven,  Thy  soul  is  like  6 

Eager    Tall,  e,  lean  and  strong,  his  cloak  One  was  the  Tishbite  5 

Ear     Piercing  the  wrung  e's  of  the  danm'd  Half  after  midnight!  10 

startle  the  dull  e's  of  human  kind  !  0  God,  make  this  age  5 

what  an  arch  the  brain  has  built  Above  the  e  !     That  is  his  portrait  11 

sound  in  her  e's  like  the  sound  of  the  deep,  That  the  voice  2 

We  faint  unless  the  wanton  e  Be  tickled  They  wrought,  etc.  6 

Earliest    That  watch't  with  love  thine  e  infancy,         To  thee  with  whom  12 

Early     Are  pleasant  from  the  e  Spring  to  when,  Townsmen,  etc.  7 

It  is  the  e  morning.  Hark  !  Youth,  lapsing  ii  6 

and  all  comes  back  Which  in  that  e  voice  was  sweet,  „  ii  42 

Early-wise     E-w,  and  pure,  and  true.  Early-wise  1 

Earth     the  e  is  dry,  tho'  the  pall  of  the  sky  Far  off  in  the  dun  21 

To  draw  strange  comfort  from  the  e,  „  31 

They  saw  the  green  verge  of  the  pleasant  e,  „  63 

Than  our  poor  twilight  dawn  on  e—  Gone  into  darkness  5 

Unto  the  dissipation  of  this  E.  Half  after  midnight!  4 

But  as  E  her  orbit  nms,  Little  Aubrey  3 

If  e  be  seen  from  your  conjectured  heaven.  Old  ghosts  2 

And  none  can  write  it  for  him  upon  e.  „       14 

Well,  as  to  Fame,  who  strides^the  e  Well,  as  to  Fame  1 

Ease    will  not  let  an  honest  Briton  sit  at  home  at  e :  They  say,  etc.  9 

East    little  Alfred  in  the  E  Little  Aubrey  1 

So  pausing  'twixt  the  E  and  West,  Youth,  lapsing  i  47 

Eastern    Remember  you  the  clear  moonlight  That 

whiten'd  all  the  e  ridge.  Remember  you  2 

Eaves     dark  vine  leaves  round  the  rustling  e,  Far  off  in  the  dun  71 

Moan'd  in  her  chimneys  and  her  e ;  Youth,  lapsing  i  30 

Eclipse     Why  suffers  human  life  so  soon  e  ?  Why  suffers  1 

Eddy     Her  silver  eddies  in  their  play  Drove  into  lines        Youth,  lapsing  i  5 

Edged    See  Clear-edged  ,,        ^ .,       „. 

Either    but  ever  drawn  Under  e  grassy  brink  Not  to  Silence  Zb 

Whate'er  the  crowd  on  e  bank  may  say,  Steersman  7 

And  floats  in  e  golden  Ind.  .  ^^«  noblest  men  8 

Eloquent    Become  a  tacit  e  reproach  Unt9  the  dis-  .•,.,,  o 

sipation  of  this  Earth.  Salf  after  midnight !  3 

Most  e,  who  spake  of  things  divine.  Methought  I  saw  A 

Embraced    When  she  and  I  are  thus  e,  How  glad  am  1  t 

Empire    I  have  seen  the  four  great  e's  disappear !  Here,  I  that  stood  9 

Emptiness     the  e  And  horrors  of  the  formless  dark.  How  strange  it  is  7 

End     I  see  At  the  e,  as  'twere  athwart  a  colour'd  cloud.  That  is  his  portrait  35 

He,  seeing  far  an  e  sublime.  They  wrought,  etc.  45 

A  labour  working  to  an  e.  Youth,  lapsing  t»  4 


End  {continued)  Parts  in  two  channels,  moving  to  one  e—  Steersman  3 
Energy    An  e,  an  agony.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  3 

Engme    hands  that  disarrange  The  social  «  !  They  wrought,  etc.  22 

England    far  off  from  E's  shore,  He  comes  no  more.  What  rustles  9 

Engrav'n     I  hold  Mother's  love  e  in  gold.  Helen's  Tower  4 

Entertain    Young  is  the  grief  I  e.  Young  is  the  grief  1 

Enthusiastic  but  I  glow  With  an  e  love  of  them.  Hear  you  the  sound  15 
Envelope  night's  eternal  wings  E's  the  gloomy  whole,  Far  off  in  the  dun  14 
Epigram    Little  poet,  hear  the  little  poet's  e  !  Little  Aubrey  7 

Equal    His  fame  is  e  to  his  years :  That  is  his  portrait  42 

Espagnola    happy  as  Anacaona,  The  beauty 

of  E,  (repeat)  A  dark  Indian  maiden  11,  23 

happy  was  Anacaona,  The  beauty  of  E,  „  35 

happy  Anacaona,  The  beauty  of  E,  (repeat)  „  47  71 

they  smiled  on  Anacaona,  The  beauty  of  E,  „  '  59 

Essence     Evermore  The  simpler  e  lower  Ues,  From  shape  to  shape  6 

Eternal    When  the  shadow  of  night's  e  wings  Envelopes  Far  off  in  the  dun  13 

Eternity    act  on  E  To  keep  thee  here  amongst  us  !      That  is  his  portrait  39 

Eustace    Long,  E,  long  May  my  strong  wish,  „  37 

Eve    blow  Melodious  thunders  thro'  your  vacant 

courts  At  noon  and  e.  Therefore  your  Halls  10 

Even    With  the  first  twilight  of  the  e.  Thy  soul  is  like  4 

Ever-burning    (an  inner  spirit  fed  Their  e-b  fires,)      Far  off  in  the  dun  118 

Every    Faded  e  violet,  all  the  roses ;  Faded  ev'ry  violet,  1 

E  mile  a  battle,  E  battle  a  victory.  Bold  Havelock  3 

And  e  man  in  Britain  Says  '  I  am  of  Havelock's 

blood ! '  „         15 

aerial  melody  May  blow  alarm  loud  to  e  wind,     0  God,  make  Oiis  age  4 
'  Methought  I  saw  a  face  whose  e  line  Methought  I  saw  1 

E  heart  is  lain  to  rest,  Not  a  whisper  5 

on  e  side  The  dragon's  curves  melted.  One  was  the  TishbUe  14 

How  e  brake  and  flower  spread  and  rose.  That  is  his  portrait  26 

Your  name  is  blown  on  e  wind,  The  noblest  men  5 

Clear-edged,  and  showing  e  bend  Of  each  dark  hill 

against  the  Heaven,  Thy  soul  is  like  5 

Thro'  e  change  that  made  thee  what  thou  art  ?     To  thee  with  whom  14 

Evil     Glancing  off  from  all  things  e.  Vicar  of  this  17 

Wherever  e  customs  thicken,  Wherever  evil  1 

Example     A  pure  e  to  the  lands,  They  wrought,  etc.  2 

Expectant    Am  large  in  hope  that  these  e  eyes 

Shall  drink  0  God,  make  this  age  12 

Eye     AH  day  long  with  laughing  e's,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  17 

With  fair  blue  e's  and  winning  sweet,  Because  she  bore  6 

Large  as  a  human  e  the  sun  Drew  down  the  West    Deep  glens  I  found  5 
Wherefore  should  your  e's  be  dim  ?  Early^wise  5 

things  of  past  days  with  their  horrible  e's  Far  off  in  the  dun  19 

fiery  e's  glared  fiercely  thro'  The  windows  „  47 

They  lifted  their  e's  to  the  dead,  pale  skies,  ,.  •     61 

Before  his  e's  so  grim  and  calm  „  77 

That  so  gaily  meet  their  e's !  „  108 

her  keen  e's  Pierced  thro'  the  mystic  dome.  Hither,  when  all  3 

Light  of  the  Light  within  mine  e's,  (repeat)  Life  of  the  Life  2,  8 

large  in  hope  that  these  expectant  e's  0  God,  make  this  age  12 

light  of  hazel  e's.  Observing  all  things.  That  is  his  portrait  13 

once  he  spake :  '  I  lift  the  e's  of  thought,  „  33 

why  her  black  e's  bum  With  a  light  so  wild     The  lamps  were  bright  15 
With  a  laughing  crazed  e,  „  52 

The  green  that  fills  the  e — •  'Tis  not  alone  4 

his  little  e's  Are  swallow'd  in  his  pamper'd  cheeks.   Yon  huddled  cloud  11 
Considering  what  mine  e's  have  seen.  Young  is  the  grief  9 

Eyed    See  Crinmn-eyed 
Eyeless    His  sockets  were  e,  but  in  them  slept  Far  off  in  the  dun  81 


Face    Loftily  stepping  with  fair/ 's. 

A  land  of  thin  f's  and  shadowy  forms, 

But  his/  was  a  yellow  gray. 

The  miller  with  his  mesJy  /, 

Methought  I  saw  a  /  whose  every  line  Wore 

The  /  of  placid  Death.' 


A  dark  Indian  maiden  64 

Far  off  in  the  dun  7 

52 

/  met  in  all  3 

Methought  I  saw  1 

That  is  his  portrait  37 


ever  young  the  /  that  dwells  With  reason  eloister'd  Young  is  the  grief  3 


Face 


1144 


Flush 


Face  (contintied)    When  to  this  sound  my  / 1  tum'd,       Youth,  lapsing  i  41 
Faced    See    Fair-faced 

Faction     Wed  to  no  /  in  the  state,  /,  loving  Freedom  3 

Fade    He  cares,  if  ancient  usage  /,  They  wrought,  etc.  33 

Faded    F  ey'ry  violet,  all  the  roses ;  Faded  ev'ry  violet  1 

Fail     His  limbs  beneath  him/;  Far  off  in  the  dun  26 

'Tis  shame  to  /  so  far,  and  still  My  failing  Young  is  the  grief  7 

Failing    still  My  /  shall  be  less  my  shame :  "     .      . .  ^ 

Faint  (adj.)     Now  one /line  of  light  doth  glow,  Youth,  lapsing  ii  9 

F  shouts  are  heard  across  the  glen,  „  ii  22 

Faint  (verb)     We  /  unless  the  wanton  ear  Be  tickled 

with  the  loud  '  hear,  hear,'  They  wrought,  etc.  6 

Fair     Loftily  stepping  with  /  faces.  A  dark  Indian  maiden  64 

With  /  blue  eyes  and  winning  sweet.  Because  she  bore  6 

And  the  forests,  /  and  free.  Far  off  in  the  dun  72 

The  whisper'd  love  of  the  /  young  wives ;  „  67 

And  from  the  heart  of  all  things/  He  was  too  good  11 

And  veils  a  breast  more  /  to  me  Than  aught  of 

Anadyomen^  !  Not  to  Silence  15 

With  seasonable  changes  /  And  innovation  grade 

by  grade :  They  wrought,  etc.  35 

The  two  /  lilies  growing  at  thy  side  Have  slowly 

prosper'd  Woman  of  noble  11 

Youth,  lapsing  thro'  /  solitudes.  Youth,  lapsing  i  1 

F  with  green  fields  the  realms  of  Love.  „         ii  36 

I  took  delight  in  this  /  strand  and  free.  Here  often  when  a  child  2 

Fair-faced    For  they  were  /-/  and  tall,  They  were 

more  /-/  and  tall,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  55 

Fairy    Spui^e  with  /  crescent  set,  Spurge  with  fairy  1 

Faith    No,  /,  not  I.  Hear  you  the  sound  2 

Fall    These  whispers  rise,  and  /  away,  'Tis  not  alone  10 

Fallen    when  the  winds  Are  /  or  changed ;  Woman  of  noble  10 

I  grieved  as  woods  in  dripping  rains  Sigh  over  all 

their  /  leaves ;  Youth,  lapsing  i  32 

Falling    when  nothing  stirr'd  To  left  or  right  but  / 

floods.  Bemember  you  16 

False    My  hope  is  /,  my  terror's  true  !  What  rustles  12 

Falsehood     when  Poesy  shall  bind  F  beneath  0  God,  make  this  age  8 

Fame     Mix'd  with  the  phantom  of  his  coming  /,  That  is  his  portrait  32 

His  /  is  equal  to  his  years :  „  42 

His  name  is  pure,  his  /  is  free :  They  wrought,  etc.  32 

Well,  as  to  F,  who  strides  the  earth  Well,  as  to  Fame  1 

Famed    See  Far-famed 

Fancy     Or  a  /  or  a  madness, —  Immeasurable  sadness  !  7 

My  /  was  the  more  luxuriant,  That  is  his  portrait  16 

Fann'd    F  this  queen  of  the  green  wildwood,         A  dark  Indian  muiden  15 
Far    Variously  from  its  /  spring.  Not  to  Silence  27 

Fare     III /'s  a  people  passion- wrought,  They  wrought,  etc.  25 

Far-famed    Are  those  the  /-/  Victor  Hours  Are  those  the  far-famed  1 

Farthing     As  each  put  a  /  into  his  palm,  Far  off  in  the  dun  79 

Fast    would  have  call'd  you  down  to  break  your  /,     Hear  you  the  sound  47 
All  the  house  is  /  in  sleep.  Not  a  whisper  6 

Fat  (adj.)     Mine  host  is  /,  and  gray,  and  wise.  Yon  huddled  cloud  9 

Fat  (s)    lights  shone  Dimly  and  blurly  with  simmer- 
ing /.  Far  off  in  the  dun  100 
Fate     A  will  concentric  with  all/,  Young  is  the  grief  15 
Father    He  sees  his  /  in  distant  lands,  Bright  is  the  moon  5 
F  is  over  the  deej),  F  will  come  to  thee  soon,  „  8 
F  will  come  to  his  babe  in  the  nest,                                       „               11 
Prince,  whose  F  lived  in  you,                                                 Early-wise  2 
knit  your  baby  brows  Into  your  /'s  frown.            Hear  you  the  sound  49 
Faolt    Seest  thou  my  /'s  and  wilt  not  speak  ?                           Speak  to  me  7 
the'  the  f 's  be  thick  as  dust  In  vacant  chambers,             The  noblest  men  10 
Faolty    /  give  this  f  book  to  you,                                                     „               9 
Fear  (s)    Naked,  without/,  moving  To  her 

Areyto's  A  dark  Indian  maiden  49 

f's  that  waste  The  strength  of  men,  They  wrought,  etc.  22 

Fear  (verb)     I  /  not ;  if  I  fear'd  them,  Are  those  the  far-famed  3 

These  /  not  the  mists  of  unwholesome  damps        Far  off  in  the  dun  113 

Fear'd     I  fear  not ;  if  I  /  them.  Are  those  the  far-famed  3 

Fed    (an  inner  spirit  /  Their  ever-burning  fires,)  Far  off  in  the  dun  117 

One  was  the  Tishbite  whom  the  raven  /,  One  was  the  Tishbite  1 

Feeble    the  sun  Drew  down  the  West  his  /  lights ;        Deep  glens  I  found  6 

Fell    A  momentary  cloud  upon  me  /:  To  thee  with  whom  6 

FeUow    a  treaty,  so  they  tell  us,  of  some  dishonest  f's         They  say,  etc.  3 


Feud     Parish  /,  or  party  strife,  Vicar  of  this  8 

Few     Charged  with  his  gallant  /,  Bold  Havelock  6 

Field     That  mystic  /  of  drifted  light  In  mid  Orion,  Hither,  when  all  10 

would  I  build  A  temple  in  her  naked  / ;  Not  to  Silence  2 

For  Love  flew  over  grove  and  /,  The  night,  etc.  4 

Full  f's  of  barley  shifting  tearful  lights  Townsmen,  etc.  8 

In  distant /'s,  '  Come  back,  come  back.'  Youth,  lapsing  i  44 

And  rushes  o'er  a  boimdless  /.  „           ii  32 

Fair  with  green  f's  the  realms  of  Love.  „               36 

Fiery    Strange  /  eyes  glared  fiercely  thro'  The 

windows  of  shaven  bone.  Far  off  in  the  dun  47 

Before  them  flow'd  a  /  stream ;  „            127 

Bathe  with  me  in  the  /  flood,  Life  of  the  Life  5 

Fifty     Flooded  /  leagues  aroimd,  The  child  was  sitting  5 

Fight     gird  up  thy  loins  for  /,  0  God,  make  this  age  10 

Figure     And  there  sit  /'s  as  of  Gods  Youth,  lapsing  ii  51 

Fill    The  green  that/ 's  the  eye —  'Tis  not  alone  4 

Filthiest    /  of  all  paintings  painted  well  Art  for  Art's  sake.'  3 

Finer     But  to  one  of  /  sense.  Not  to  Silence  5 

Finger    weave  joui  waxen  /'s  in  these  locks  Hear  you  the  sound  58 

With  twinkling  /  sweeps  her  yellow  keys.  Townsvfien,  etc.  10 

Finger-lipt    F-l,  but  with  right  hand  Moving  Not  to  Silence  10 

Fire  (s)     Disploding  globes  of  roaring  /.  Deep  glens  I  found  4 

(an  inner  spirit  fed  Their  ever-burning /'s,)  Far  off  in  the  dun  118 

They  broke  the  ground  with  hoofs  of  /  „              128 

Through  all  that  boundless  depth  of  f  s  is  heard  Half  after  midnight!  13 

Brushes  of  /,  hazy  gleams,  Hither,  when  all  6 

Fire  (verb)     Should  /  the  many  wheels  of  change !  They  wrought,  etc.  24 

Fireside     They  see  the  light  of  their  blest  /  's.  Far  off  in  the  dun  65 

Firm    citizen.  Deep-hearted,  moderate,  /,  They  wrought,  etc.  10 

First    Into  another  shape,  born  of  the  /,  That  is  his  portrait  29 

Most  delicately  overdrawn  With  the/  twilight  of  the 

even.  Thy  soul  is  like  4 
Sent  thro'  my  blood  a  prophet  voice  Before  the  / 

white  butterflies.  Youth,  lapsing  i  11 

Fishing     While  /  in  the  milldam- water,  /  7net  in  all  6 

Fit    hy f's  the  lady  ash  With  twinkling  finger  Townsmen,  etc.  9 

Flag     Our  f's  have  waved  together  !  Frenchman,  etc.  2 

Our  /  's  together  f url'd,  „              5 

Your  f  thro'  Austral  ice  is  borne.  The  noblest  men  6 

Flame    The  wheels  of  biu^ning/;  Far  off  in  the  dun  122 

damn'd  that  writhe  Upon  their  beds  of  /,  Half  after  midnight !  11 

Flash     Fast  by  me/  the  cloudy  streaks,  Youth,  lapsing  ii  46 

Flat    below  The  highway,  broad  and  /,  Far  off  in  the  dun  98 

Fleshless     The  chattering  of  the  /  jaws,  „              95 

Flew    For  love  /  over  grove  and  field,  The  night,  etc.  4 

Flight    Is  this  blind/  the  winged  Powers.  Are  those  the  far-famed  4 

Were  idler  than  a  /  of  rooks.  „                  12 

Fling    To  /  his  doubts  into  the  street.  He  was  too  good  4 

Float     And  f's  in  either  golden  Ind.  The  noblest  men  8 

there  f's  upward  from  the  gulf  A  murmur  Youth,  lapsing  ii  18 

Floated    F  in  the  silent  summer :  A  dark  Indian  mavlen  40 

Floating    and  threw  back  Your  /  hair.  Hear  you  the  sound  43 

the  /  snake  RoU'd  round  her  ankles.  One  was  the  Tishbite  9 

Flock     With  the  /  of  the  thunder-stricken.  Wherever  evil  5 

Flood     Bathe  with  me  in  the  fiery  /,  Life  of  the  Life  5 

To  left  or  right  but  falling /'s.  Bemember  you  16 

The  silent  hills,  the  stormy  /  's,  'Tis  not  alone  3 

Crown'd  with  soft  shade  her  deepening  /'s  Youth,  lapsing  i  3 

Flooded     F  fifty  leagues  around,  The  child  was  sitting  5 

Flourish    ye  still  shall  /  In  your  high  pomp  of  shade.  Hear  you  the  sound  28 

Flow  (s)     beside  the  /  Of  sacred  Nile,  Here,  I  that  stood  1 

Flow  (verb)     slime  Which  from  Asphaltus  /'s.  Far  off  in  the  dun  40 

Sweetly,  smoothly  /  your  life.  Vicar  of  this  6 

Sweetly  /  your  life  with  Kate's,  „        16 

Flow'd     Before  them  /  a  fiery  stream ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  127 

Flower     Espagnola,  The  golden 

/  of  Hayti  ?  (repeat)         A  dark  Indian  maiden  12,  24,  36,  48,  60,  72 

Like  the  /  of  Mahomet.  Spurge  with  fairy  2 

How  every  brake  and  /  spread  and  rose,  That  is  his  portrait  26 

Have  slowly  prosper'd  into  stately  /'s.  Woman  of  noble  12 1 

I  sit  among  the  scentless  f's  Youth,  lapsing  i  51 
Flower'd    See  Freshly-flower'd 

Flower-laden    Stepping  lightly  f-l,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  3 

Flush    never  overflows  With  /  of  rain,  Not  to  Silence  20 


Fly 


1145 


Glared 


Fly     white  /  leapt  About  his  hairless  brow.  Far  off  in  the  dun  83 

Foe     Becoming  bands  of  armed  f's  !  They  wrought,  etc.  20 

Fold    left  hand  holds  Her  up-gather'd  garment /'s,  Not  to  Silence  14 

Folded    Her  hands  are/  quietly,  Not  a  whisper  14 

round  her  waist  Knotted,  and  /  once  about  her 

neck,  One  was  the  Tishbite  11 

Follow     Intent  to  /  on  the  track,  Youth,  lapsing  i  42 

I  /  to  the  morning  sun,  „           H  10 

Following    F  her  wild  carol  She  led  them  A  dark  Indian  maiden  61 

Fond    We  kiss,  we  are  so  /,  How  glad  am  I  6 

Foot    and  lie  A  thousand  summers  at  her  /.  Because  she  bore  8 

A  light  wind  wafts  me  from  my  feet.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  44 

Footfall    A  step  ?  a  /?    What  is  that  I  hear  ?  What  rustles  2 

Force     Ev'n  then  the  /  of  nature  and  high  birth  Hear  you  the  sound  63 

Forced     Thro'  the  deep  hall  /  its  way.  The  lamps  were  bright  42 

Forehead    On  her  /  undefiled  I  will  print  Not  a  whisper  11 

his  /  heavenly  bright  From  the  clear  marble  One  was  the  Tishbite  6 

Foreign     They  say  some  /  powers  have  laid  They  say,  etc.  1 

Forest  (adj.)    Steeple,  and  stream,  and/  lawn,  Thy  soul  is  like  2 

Forest  (S)     And  the  /'s,  fair  and  free.  Far  off  in  the  dun  72 

Forethinking    F  its  twinfold  necessity.  That  is  his  portrait  49 

Forlorn     O  leave  not  thou  thy  son/;  0  leave  not  thou  1 

Form     A  land  of  thin  faces  and  shadowy  /  's,  Far  off  in  the  dun  7 

As  the  shrivell'd  f's  of  the  shadowy  grooms  „              59 

monuments,  with/'s  Of  the  unfading  marble  Hear  you  the  sound  25 

Regions  of  lucid  matter  taking /'s,  Hither,  when  all  5 

And  much  of  that  which  is  her  /,  /,  loving  Freedom  2 

A  dark  /  glances  quick  Thro'  her  worn  brain,  The  lamps  were  bright  27 

Millions  of  f's,  and  hues,  and  shades,  Why  suffers  9 

Woman  of  noble  /  and  noble  mind  !  Woman  of  noble  1 

Formless    The  life  that  haunts  the  emptiness  And  horrors 

of  the  /  dark.  How  strange  it  is  8 

Fortress     Upon  the  brink  A  solitary  /  bums.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  14 

Forward    This  goes  straight  /  to  the  cataract :  Steersman  4 

Go  / !  crumble  down  a  throne,  Are  those  the  far-famed  13 

Fought    Ten  men  /  a  thousand.  Slew  them  and  overthrew.  Bold  Havelock  7 

March'd  and  thought  and  /,  March'd  and  /  himself  dead.  „          11 

Found    till  the  very  wrong  itself  Had  /  him  out.  A  surface  man  8 

But  /  a  maiden  tender,  shy,  Because  she  bore  5 

Deep  glens  I  /,  and  sunless  gulfs.  Beep  glens  I  found  1 

When  a  great  man's  /  to  be  bad  and  base,  How  is  it  that  men  2 

Her  thoughts  have  /  their  wings  The  lamps  were  bright  21 

Then  they  /  him  where  he  lay  „                 47 

We  /  you,  and  you  gleam  reset  In  Britain's  We  lost  you  3 

And  think  a  cunning  hand  has  /  the  clue —  What  rustles  14 

I  /  the  Present  where  I  stay :  YotUh,  lapsing  i  48 

Up  hither  have  I  /  my  way,  „          H  29 

Four     I  have  seen  the  /  great  empires  disappear  !  Here,  I  that  stood  9 

Four-square     A  life  f-s  to  all  the  winds.  Young  is  the  grief  16 

Fragrant    Said, '  Open,  Rosebud,  open,  yield  Thy  /  soul.'    The  night,  etc.  6 

Frail     Alas,  my  life  is  /  and  weak  :  Speak  to  me  6 

Frame     I  deemed  her  one  of  stately  /  Because  she  bore  3 

Of  beryl,  and  of  amethyst  Was  the  spiritual  /.      Far  off  in  the  dxm  124 

The  /,  the  mind,  the  soul  of  man,  They  wrought,  etc.  43 

Framer     but  rather  bless  The  All-perfect  F,  That  is  his  portrait  48 

Free     And  the  forests,  fair  and  /.  Far  off  in  the  dun  72 

And  /  from  taint  of  sin.  »            1^2 

The  happy  maiden's  tears  are  /  I  keep  no  more  5 

His  name  is  pme,  his  fame  is  / :  They  wrought,  etc- 32 

I  took  delight  in  this  fair  strand  and/;  Here  often  when  a  child  2 

Freedom    To  preach  the  /  of  despair,  He  was  too  good  10 

1,  loving  F  for  herself,  •^.  Moving  Freedom  1 

those  whom  F  claims  As  patriot-martyrs  Not  such  were  those  1 

They  worshipt  F  for  her  sake ;  They  wrought,  etc.  5 

great  cause  of  F  roimd  and  round.  First  drink  a  health  60 

All  /  vanish'd Rise,  Britons,  rise  3 

Frenchman    F,  a  hand  in  thine  !  Frenchman,  etc.  1 

Fresh    Would  I  could  pile  /  life  on  life.  Why  suffers  5 

Freshly-flower'd     Call  to  the  /-/  hill.  ,  Remember  you  12 

Friend    Hold  thou,  my  /,  no  lesser  life  in  scorn.  Hold  thou  my  friend  1 

My  /,  thou  speakest  from  the  heart,  /  keep  no  more  15 

the  river  here,  my  /,  Parts  in  two  channels,  Steersman  2 

Thy  soul  is  like  a  landskip,  /,  Thy  soul  is  like  1 

bearest  from  the  threshold  of  thy  f's  Woman  of  noble  6 

Friendship    Gone  into  darkness,  that  full  light  Of  / !     Gotie  into  darkness  2 


Friendship  (continued)     His  and  my  /  have  not 

suller'd  loss.  That  is  his  portrait  41 

Capacious  both  of  F  and  of  Love.  „  51 

Frosty     And  shook  the  /  winter  stars.  Youth,  lapsing  i  20 

Frown  (s)     knit  your  baby  brows  Into  your  father's  /,    Hear  you  the  sound  49 

Frown  (verb)    And  on  me  F  not,  old  ghosts,  Old  ghosts  9 

Fruit     Then  she  brought  the  guava  /,  A  dark  Indian  Maiden  41 

Full    F  light  aloft  doth  the  laverock  spring  Full  light  aloft  1 

Gone  into  darkness,  that  /  light  Of  friendship  !         Gone  into  darkness  1 

Their  /  God-bless-you  with  this  book  of  song.  Take,  Lady  2 

and  all  between  Valleys  /  of  solemn  sound,  Thy  soul  is  like  9 

F  fields  of  barley  shifting  tearful  lights  On  growing 

spears.  Townsmen,  etc.  8 

Art,  Science,  Nature,  everything  is  /,  As  my  own 
soul  is  /,  to  overflowing —  Whey  suffers  7 

Fulness    Shall  drink  the  /  of  thy  victoiy,  0  God,  make  this  age  13 

Furl'd     Our  flags  together  /,  Frenchman,  etc.  5 

Furrow     Those  thoughtful /'s  in  the  swarthy  cheek  ;      That  is  his  portrait  3 
Fuse     And  /  the  peoples  into  one.  Are  those  the  far-fahed  16 

Future    voice  Cried  in  the  / '  Come  along.'  Youth,  lapsing  i  40 


G 


Gale    The  night  g  in  those  trees.  Hear  you  the  sound  8 

Gallant     Bold  Havelock  march'd.  Charged  with  his  g  few,     Bold  Havelock  6 
Gallery     Along  this  glimmering  g  A  child  Along  this  glimmering  1 

Garden    That  little  g  was  her  pride,  „  5 

Yoiu-  g's,  myriad-volumed  libraries,  Therefore  your  Halls  3 

Garland    Crown'd  with  g's  of  cinchona,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  26 

Garment    Her  g  slips,  the  left  hand  holds  Her  up-gather'd 

g  folds.  Not  to  Silence  13 

Gasp'd    the  guard  g  out '  All's  right.'  Far  off  in  the  dun  88 

Gate    Smooth  as  Thames  below  your  g's.  Vicar  of  this  18 

Gather'd    {See  also  Up-gather'd)     Around  him  youths 

were  g,  Methought  I  saw  4 

Gaunt    There  came  a  g  man  from  the  dark  Inn  door.    Far  off  in  the  dun  73 

Gave    She  g  them  the  yuccaroot,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  43 

She  g  the  white  men  welcome  all,  „  53 

Accepts  the  songs  you  g,  and  he  sends  Little  Aubrey  2 

Gay    orange  groves  Naked,  and  dark-Umb'd, 

and  g,  _         A  dark  Indian  maiden  6 

lamps  were  bright  and  g  On  the  merry  bridal- 
day.  The  lamps  were  bright  1 
Gaze  Worn  and  wan  was  their  g,  I  trow.  Far  off  in  the  dun  58 
Genius  Hail  G,  Master  of  the  Moral  Will !  Art  for  Art's  sake  !  2 
Get  And  g  thee  forth  to  conquer.  0  God,  make  this  age  11 
Ghost  Old  g's  whose  day  was  done  ere  mine  began,  Old  ghosts  1 
And  on  me  Fro^vn  not,  old  g's,  „  9 
Ghostly    common  objects  that  would  keep  Our  awful 

inner  g  sense  Unroused,  How  strange  it  is  5 

Ghoul    When  I  die,  the  G'aS  !  !  !  While  I  live  2 

Giant    that  we  may  be  As  g's  in  Thy  praise  !  0  God,  make  this  age  2 

Gilding    Where  his  g  ray  is  never  sent,  Far  off  in  the  dun  3 

Gird    g  up  thy  loins  for  fight,  And  get  thee  forth      0  God,  make  this  age  10 

Girdle     Richly  and  darkly  g  these  gray  walls, —  Hear  you  the  souund  23 

Girt     And  though  g  in  glad  array,  The  lamps  were  bright  23 

Give     And  she  will  weep  and  g  them  way  ;  /  keep  no  more  6 

Take,  Lady,  what  your  loyal  nurses  g.  Take,  Lady  1 

/  g  this  faulty  book  to  you,  The  noblest  men  9 

Like  some  wise  artist.  Nature  g's,  'Tis  not  alone  6 

G's  stouter  ale  and  riper  port  Yon  huddled  cloud  7 

g  The  difference  of  all  things  to  the  sense,  Why  suffers  9 

Given     You  have  g  me  such  a  wife  !  Vicar  of  this  10 

Glad    How  9  am  I  to  walk  With  Susan  on  the  shore  ! 

How  9  am  I  to  talk  !     I  kiss  her  o'er  and  o'er.  How  glad  am  1 1 

The  low  voice  of  the  g  New  Year  Call  to  the  freshly- 
flower'd  hiU.  Remember  you  11 
And  though  girt  in  g  array,  The  lamvs  were  bright  23 
Glade  Pour'd  by  long  g's  and  meadowy  mounds,  Youth,  lapsing  i  2 
Glance  form  g's  quick  Thro'  her  worn  brain,  The  lamps  were  bright  27 
Glancing  G  off  from  all  things  evil.  Vicar  of  Oiis  17 
Glared    eyes  g  fiercely  thro'  The  windows                     Far  off  in  the  dun  47 


Glasses 


1146 


Gun 


as  ^dth  optic  g  her  keen  eyes 
Gleam  (s)     Brushes  of  fire,  hazy  g's, 
Gleam  (verb)     and  you  g  reset  In  Britain's  lyric  coronet 

The  towers  g  among  the  vines  ; 
Glen     Deep  g's  I  found,  and  sunless  gulfs, 

Faint  shouts  are  heard  across  the  g, 
Glide    We  may  g  from  room  to  room, 
Glimmer  (s)     In  the  g  of  the  moon  : 
Glimmer  (verb)      And  g's  to  the  northern  mom, 
Glimmering    Along  this  g  gallery 

'  I  lift  the  eyes  of  thought,  I  look  thro'  all  my 
g  life, 
Glitter    The  whole  land  g's  after  rain, 
Glitter'd    They  g  with  a  stedf ast  light, 
Globe     Disploding  g's  of  roaring  fire. 
Gloom    Dimly  the  travellers  look'd  thro'  the  g's, 

Vast  wastes  of  starless  g's  were  spread 

and  make  beneath  Ambrosial  g. 

Not  a  whisper  stirs  the  g, 

chapel's  vaulted  g  Was  misted  with  perfume. 
Gloomy    When  the  shadow  of  night's  eternal  wings 

Envelopes  the  g  whole. 
Glorious    Gone  the  g  promise ;  and  the  victim. 

Then  pledge  we  our  g  dead, 

From  the  clear  marble  pouring  g  scorn, 
Glory    In  g  and  in  honour. 
Glossy    Look  on  those  manly  curls  so  g  dark, 
Glow  (s)     in  them  slept  A  red  infernal  g  ; 
Glow  (verb)     I  g  With  an  enthusiastic  love  of  them. 

Now  one  faint  line  of  light  doth  g, 

G  forward  !  crumble  down  a  throne, 

Sender  and  sent-to  g  to  make  up  this, 

This  goes  straight  forward  to  the  cataract : 

But  the  revel  stiU  goes  on. 

and  let  them  g  in  hope,  Like  birds  of  passage, 
God     G's  best  blessing  on  each  dear  head 

To  pluck  the  sanction  of  a  G. 

How  strange  it  is,  0  G,  to  wake, 

O  G,  make  this  age  great  that  we  may 


Go 


Hither,  when  all  3 

6 

We  lost  you  3 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  40 

Deep  glens  I  found  1 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  22 

Not  a  whisper  3 

»  4 

The  noblest  men  7 

Along  this  glimmering  1 

That  is  his  portrait  34 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  37 

Far  off  in  the  dun  129 

Beep  glens  I  found  4 

Far  off  in  the  dun  57 

101 

Hear  you  the  sound  30 

Not  a  whisper  1 

The  lamps  were  bright  7 

Far  off  in  the  dun  14 

Faded  ev'ry  violet  2 

Frenchman,  etc.  9 

One  was  the  Tishbite  7 

The  lamps  were  bright  34 

That  is  his  portrait  2 

Far  off  in  the  dun  82 

Hear  you  the  sound  14 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  9 

Are  those  the  far-famed  13 

Old  ghosts  7 

Steersman  4 

The  lamps  were  bright  40 

Woman  of  noble  7 

Frenchman,  etc.  11 

He  was  too  good  12 

How  strange  it  is  1 

O  God,  make  this  age  1 


G  bless  the  little  isle  where  a  man  may  still  be  true 

G  bless  the  noble  isle  that  is  Mistress  of  the  Seas  !     They  say,  etc.  17 

G  walk'd  the  waters  of  thy  soul,  Thou  viay'st  remember  7 

G  be  gracious  to  my  soul !  What  rustles  15 

I  thank  thee,  G,  that  thou  hast  made  me  live  :  Why  suffers  12 

And  there  sit  figures  as  of  G's  Youth,  lapsing  ii  51 

God-bless-yon    full  G-b-y  with  this  book  of  song,  Take,  Lady  2 

Goddess     She  no  g  is  of  mine  ;  Not  to  Silence  4 

Golden     The  beauty  of  Espagnola,  The 

g  flower  of  Hayti  ?  A  dark  Indian  maiden  12,  24,  36,  48,  60,  72 

And  chants  in  the  g  wakening  Athwart  the  bloomy 

mom.  Full  light  aloft  3 

Remembering  all  the  g  hours  Now  silent,  Gone  into  darkness  9 

Accept  on  this  your  g  bridal  day  The  Book  of  Prayer.  Remembering  him  3 
And  floats  in  either  g  Ind.  The  noblest  men  8 

And  from  the  g  vapours  bursts  A  mountain  bright 


with  triple  peaks : 
Gone     G  the  glorious  promise  ; 

G  into  darkness,  that  full  light  Of  friendship 

He  from  the  dance  hath  g 

To  speak  of  what  had  g  before. 
Good     Behold,  ye  cannot  bring  but  g. 

Beauty,  G  and  Knowledge  are  three  sisters  . 

Havelock  died.  Tender  and  great  and  g. 

It  is  not  g  to  drink  strong  wine 

He  was  too  g  and  kind  and  sweet. 

That  were  within  me ;  did  it  not,  g  Michael  ? 

He  look'd  so  jolly  and  so  g — 

Wore  the  pale  cast  of  thought,  a  g  old  man, 

He  moan'd, '  I  wander  from  my  g ! ' 
Gorgeous    For  all  wreath'd  with  green  bays  were  the 

g  lamps, 
Grace    How  is  it  that  men  have  so  little  g. 

Slow-ripening  to  the  g  of  womanhood, 
(Gracious    God  be  g  to  my  soul ! 
Grade    And  innovation  ghy  g: 


Youth,  lapsing  ii  47 

Faded  ev'ry  violet  2 

Gone  into  darkness  1 

The  lamps  were  bright  39 

Youth,  lapsing  i  27 

Are  those  the  far-famed  5 

Beauty,  Good,  etc.  1 

Bold  Havelock  14 

Full  light  aloft  9 

He  was  too  good  1 

Hear  you  the  sound  53 

/  Tnet  in  all  5 

Methought  I  saw  2 

Youth,  lapsing  i  35 

Far  off  in  the  dun  115 

How  is  it  that  men  1 

To  thee  with  whom  13 

What  rustles  15 

They  wrought,  etc.  36 


Methought  I  saw  5 

Half  after  midnight !  6 

Townsmen,  etc.  4 

Not  to  Silence  25 

A  long  this  glimmering  8 

/  keep  no  more  2 

-    Hear  you  the  sound  23 

59 

Yon  huddled  cloud  9 

Far  off  in  the  dun  52 

Bold  Havelock  14 

Half  after  Ttiidnight !  6 

Hear  you  the  sound  57 

59 

Here  I  that  stood  9 

How  is  it  that  men  2 

0  God,  make  this  age  1 

8 

O  leave  not  thou  2 


Grand    did  scan  His  countenance  so  g  and  mild, 
Grandsire    Hard  by  the  burning  throne  of  my  great  g, 
Grass    sleep  thro'  one  brief  dream  upon  the  g, — 
Grassy     but  ever  drawn  Under  either  g  brink 
Grave     Those  holly-thickets  only  hide  Her  g — 

The  crowd  have  come  to  see  thy  g. 
Gray  (adj.)    Richly  and  darkly  girdle  these  g  walls, — 

You'd  weave  your  waxen  fingers  in  these  locks 
(They  are  g  now) 

Mine  host  is  fat,  and  g,  and  wise. 
Gray  (s)  But  his  face  was  a  yellow  g. 
Great     Bold  Havelock  died,  Tender  and  g  and  good, 

Hard  by  the  burning  throne  of  my  g  grandsire, 

and  ask  you  whether  you  would  be  A  ^  man  in 
your  time, 

and  tell  me  you  were  g  Already  in  your  birth. 

I  have  seen  the  four  g  empires  disappear  ! 

When  a  g  man's  found  to  be  bad  and  base, 

0  God,  make  this  age  g  that  we  may  be 
Falsehood  beneath  the  altar  of  g  Truth  : 
Teach  me,  g  Nature  :  make  me  live. 
And  in  the  hurry  and  the  noise  G  spirits  grow  akin 

to  base.  They  wrought,  etc.  16 

A  land  of  many  days  that  cleaves  In  two  g  halves,  „  27 

but  he  That  thro'  the  channels  of  the  state  Convoys 

the  people's  wish,  is  g\  „  31 

g  cause  of  Freedom  round  and  round,  First  drink  a  health  60 

Green  (adj.)     Fann'd  this  queen  of  the  g  wildwood, 

Lady  of  the  g  Savannah :  A  dark  Indian  maiden  15 

There  never  g  thing  will  gaily  spring  Far  off  in  the  dun  9 

They  saw  the  g  verge  of  the  pleasant  earth,  „  63 

For  all  wreath'd  with  g  bays  were  the  gorgeous  lamps,  „  115 

1  met  in  all  the  close  g  ways,  /  met  in  all  1 
And  hoary  holts  on  uplands  g.  Thy  soul  is  like  10 
And  your  triple  terrace  growing  G  and  greener  every 

May  !  Vicar  of  this  15 

Fair  with  g  fields  the  realms  of  Love.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  36 

Green  (s)     The  g  that  fills  the  eye —  'Tis  not  alone  4 

Greener    terrace  growing  Green  and  g  every  May  !  Vicar  of  this  15 

Greet     And  I  g  it,  and  I  meet  it. 

And  I  meet  it,  and  I  g  it, 
Grew    The  tingling  blood  g  chill, 

Lower  and  deeper  evermore  They  g, 
Grief    That  ride  to  death  the  g's  of  men  ? 

Dim  g  did  wait  upon  her, 

Yoimg  is  the  g  I  entertain, 

Yet  g  deserves  a  nobler  name : 
Grieved    I  y  as  woods  in  dripping  rains 
Grim     Before  his  eyes  so  g  and  calm 

The  g  old  coachee  strode  to  the  box, 
Groan     And  in  the  pauses  g's  of  men. 
Groom    forms  of  the  shadowy  g's  Yoked 
Ground    Whoever  walks  that  bitter  g 

They  broke  the  g  with  hoofs  of  fire 

Took  the  child  from  off  the  g. 
Groundsel  With  yellow  g  grown  ! 
Grove    Wantoning  in  orange  g's  Naked, 

For  Love  flew  over  g  and  field. 

With  all  his  g's  he  bows,  he  nods. 
Grow    Great  spirits  g  akin  to  base. 
Growing    your  triple  terrace  g  Green  and  greener 

The  two  fair  lilies  g  at  thy  side 

Full  fields  of  barley  shifting  tearful  lights  On  g  spears, 
Grown    {See  also  Moss-grown)    With  yellow 
groundsel  g ! 

And  when  your  age  had  somewhat  riper  g, 

When  I  was  somewhat  older  g  These  voices 
Guard    the  g  gasp'd  out '  All's  right.' 

leaders  bounded,  the  g's  horn  sounded  : 
Guardian  (adj.)    Thy  child  will  bless  thee,  g  mother  mild.  Long  as  the  heart  2 
Guardian  (s)     silent  G's  But  true  till  Death ;  Woman  of  noble  6 

Guava     Then  she  brought  the  g  fruit,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  41 

Gulf     Deep  glens  I  found,  and  sunless  g's.  Deep  glens  I  found  1 

floats  upward  from  the  g  A  murmur  of  heroic  song,     Youth,  lapsing  ii  18 
Gun     See  Pop-gun 


1 


Immeasurable  sadness  !  3 

9 

Far  off  in  the  dun  78 

Youth,  lapsing  i  26 

Are  those  the  far-famed  2 

The  lamps  were  bright  33 

Young  is  the  grief  1 

„  5 

Youth,  lapsing  i  31 

Far  off  in  the  dun  77 

"      .      ..^"^ 
Youth,  lapsing  ii  24 

Far  off  in  the  du/n,  59 

25 

128 

The  child  was  sitting  6 

Along  this  glimmering  6 

A  dark  Indian  maiden  5 

The  night,  etc.  4 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  49 

They  wrought,  etc.  16 

Vicar  of  this  14 

Woman  of  noble  11 

Townsmen,  etc.  9 

Along  this  glimmering  6 

Hear  you  the  sound  54 

Youth,  lapsing  i  21 

Far  off  in  the  dvm.  88 

89 


Hail 


1147 


High 


Hail    H,  truest  Lord  of  Hell !    H  Genius,  Master  of 

the  Moral  Will !  Art  for  Art's  sake  !  1 

Hair     and  threw  back  Your  floating  A.  Bear  you  the  sownd  43 

Hairless     and  the  white  fly  leapt  About  his  h  brow.       Far  off  in  the  dun  84 
Haled    h  me  toward  the  Mediterranean  sea.  Here,  I  that  stood  6 

Half  (adj.)    What's  the  clock  ?    Mich.    H  way  toward 

midnight.  Jiear  you  the  sound  4 

But  to  one  of  finer  sense.  Her  h  sister,  Reticence.  Not  to  Silence  6 

Half  (s)     that  cleaves  In  two  great  halves,  They  wrought,  etc.  27 

Half-consciousness    With  some  h-c  of  inward  power,      That  is  his  portrait  8 
Half-dream    Ye  know  that  History  is  h-d —  Old  ghosts  3 

Hall     In  the  h,  at  close  of  day.  The  lamps  were  bright  35 

Thro'  the  deep  h  forced  its  way,  „  42 

Hamlet     Townsmen,  or  of  the  h,  young  or  old,  Townsmen,  etc.  1 

Hammer    (See  also  Rhyme-hammer)     Break  thro'  with  the 

h  of  iron  rhyme,  Wherever  evil  2 

Hand    (See  also  Left)    And  longed  to  kiss  her  h  and  lie     Because  she  bore  7 
Wrought  with  his  h  and  his  head,  Bold  Haveloch  10 

Look  he  smiles,  and  opens  his  h's,  Bright  is  the  moon  4 

The  skin  hung  lax  on  his  long  thin  h's ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  53 

Frenchman,  a  A  in  thine  !  Frenchman,  etc.  1 

And  long'd  to  take  his  h  in  mine.  /  met  in  all  4 

Her  h's  are  folded  quietly,  Not  a  whisper  14 

but  with  right  h  Moving  toward  her  lip.  Not  to  Silence  10 

left  h  holds  Her  up-gather'd  garment  folds,  „  13 

Further  and  further  reaching  h's  They  wrought,  etc.  8 

Uncertain  of  ourselves  we  chase  The  clap  of  h's ;  „  14 

h's  that  disarrange  The  social  engine !  „  21 

And  think  a  cunning  h  has  found  the  clue —  What  rustles  14 

Hang    mockery  to  h  it  O'er  the  thatch'd  cottage.         Hear  you  the  sound  18 
Happy    Who  was  so  A  as  Anacaona,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  10 

None  were  so  A  as  Anacaona,  ,.  22 

H,  h  was  Anacaona,  The  beauty  of  Espagnola,  „  34 

bringing  To  h  Hayti  the  new-comer,  ,.  38 

H,  h  Anacaona,  The  beauty  of  Espagnola,  ..  46 

Carolling  '  H,  h  Hayti ! '  ..52 

No  more  in  Xaraguay  Wander'd  h  Anacaona,  ..  70 

H,  h  be  your  lot  In  the  Vicarage  Vicar  of  this  3 

They  glitter'd  with  a  stedfast  Gght,  The  h  spirits 

within ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  130 

The  h  maiden's  tears  are  free  /  keep  no  more  5 

See,  she  dreameth  h  dreams.  Not  a  whisper  13 

Like  birds  of  passage,  to  return  with  thee  Some  h 

Summer  morning.  Woman  of  noble  9 

Harbour'd     Mature,  h  from  change,  contemplative,       That  is  his  portrait  12 

Hard     that  heart  of  his  H,  and  the  slave  of  vice ;  A  surface  man  4 

H  by  the  burning  throne  of  my  great  grandsire,    Half  after  midnight !  6 

But  what,  were  h  to  say.  'Tis  not  alone  12 

Hark    H  !  they  are  coming.  Hear  you  the  sound  65 

It  is  the  early  morning,  H  !  Youth,  lapsing  ii  6 

Harsh    That  I  was  h  to  thee,  let  no  one  know ;  To  thee  with  whom  2 

Tho'  I  was  h,  my  nature  is  not  so :  „  5 

Was  I  so  A  ?     Ah  dear,  it  could  not  be.  „  9 

Hasten'd     That  would  have  h  to  her,  Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  6 

Hate  (s)     An  orb  repulsive  of  all  h,  Young  is  the  grief  14 

Hate  (verb)     I  h  the  trim-set  plots  of  art ! '  /  keep  no  more  14 

Haunt    life  that  h's  the  emptiness  And  horrors  How  strange  it  is  7 

Havelock  ((Jeneral  Sir  Henry)     Bold  H  march'd, 

(repeat)  Bold  Havelock  1,  5,  9 

Bold  H  died.  Tender  and  great  and  good,  „  13 

'  I  am  of  H's  blood ! '  „  16 

Hayti    Espagnola,  The  golden  flower 

olH?  (repeat)  A  dark  Indian  maiden  12,  24,  36,  48,  60,  72 

bringing  To  happy  H  the  new-comer,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  38 

Carolling '  Happy,  happy  H\'  „  52 

Hazel     Tempers  the  peaceful  light  of  h  eyes,  That  is  his  portait  13 

Hazy     Brushes  of  fire,  h  gleams,  Hither,  when  all  6 

Head     Else  this  wild  whisper  round  my  h  Are  those  the  far-famed  11 

Wrought  with  his  hand  and  his  h,  Bold  Havelock  10 


Head  (continued)    h's  without  bodies  and  shapes 

without  h's  Far  off  in  the  dun  103 

God's  best  blessing  on  each  dear  h  Frenchman,  etc.  11 

she  seeming  bhthe  DecUned  her  h :  One  was  the  Tishbite  14 

noblest  place.  Madam,  is  yours,  our  Queen  and  H.  The  noblest  men  4 

some  foreign  powers  have  laid  their  h's  together  They  say,  etc.  1 

Health     Let  us  drink  to  the  h  of  thine  and  mine  Frenchman,  etc.  3 

Here's  a  A  to  the  Queen  of  the  Isles.  That  the  voice  4 

Hear     They  h  each  household  voice  :  Far  off  in  the  dun  66 

H  you  the  sound  of  wheels  ?  Hear  you  the  sound  1 

Little  poet,  h  the  Uttle  poet's  epigram  !  Little  Aubrey  7 

The  stream  is  loud :  I  cannot  h  ! '  Remember  you  8 

I  heard,  as  I  have  seem'd  to  A,  „              9 

Speak  to  me,  let  me  h  or  see  !  Speak  to  me  5 

A  step  ?  a  footfall ?    What  is  that  Ih?  What  rustles  2 

And  see  and  h  the  world  revolve :  Youth,  lapsing  i  52 

ear  Be  tickled  with  the  loud  ' h,  h'  They  wrought,  etc.  7 
Heard     no  revelling  tones  Of  carouse  were  h  within :      Far  off  in  the  dun  42 

And  h  the  roar  of  her  seas.  „                64 
is  h  The  shrill  and  solemn  warning  '  Ever, 

Never ' :  Half  after  midnight !  13 

I  h  you  whisper  from  above,  Remember  you  5 

I  A,  as  I  have  seem'd  to  hear,  „            9 

I  A,  as  I  have  often  h,  „           13 

This  is  the  man  of  whom  you  h  me  speak.  That  is  his  portrait  15 

With  jokes  you  never  h  before.  Yon  huddled  cloud  14 

I  h  Spring  laugh  in  hidden  riUs,  Youth,  lapsing  i  13 

Faint  shouts  are  h  across  the  glen,  „           H  22 

Hearing     Till  heart  and  sight  and  h  ache  How  strange  it  is  3 

Heart     that  h  of  his  Hard,  and  the  slave  of  vice  ;  A  surface  man  3 

His  h  throbs  thick,  his  brain  reels  sick :  Far  off  in  the  dun  27 

some  have  h's  that  in  them  burn  With  power  „               29 

And  from  the  h  of  all  things  fair  To  pluck  He  was  too  good  11 

Till  h  and  sight  and  hearing  ache  Hoio  strange  it  is  3 

My  friend,  thou  speakest  from  the  h,  I  keep  no  more  15 

Long  as  the  h  beats  life  within  her  breast.  Long  as  tlie  heart  1 

Every  h  is  lain  to  rest.  Not  a  whisper  5 

may  the  life,  which,  h  in  h,  you  live  Take,  Lady  3 

All-perfect  Framer,  Him,  who  made  the  h.  That  is  his  portrait  48 

And  teach  us  nothing,  feeding  not  the  h.  Therefore  your  Halls  14 

To  make  me  thus  belie  my  constant  h  To  tlue  with  whom  11 

Seeing  the  h  so  wondrous  in  her  ways,  Why  suffers  3 

as  pure  a  A  As  e'er  beat  time  to  Nature,  Woman  of  noble  4 

My  h  is  dark,  but  yet  I  come.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  28 
Hearted    See  Deep-hearted 

Hearties     Up,  Jack  Tars,  my  h  !  They  say,  etc.  10 

Heaven    If  earth  be  seen  from  your  conjectured  h,  Old  ghosts  2 

It  were,  0  H,  a,  stranger  tale  to  tell  To  thee  icith  whom  3 

Of  each  dark  hill  against  the  H,  Thy  soul  is  like  6 

Touch'd  with  H's  latest  lights.  „          12 

And  H  is  dark  and  bright  by  turns.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  16 
Heavenly    0  Coachee,  Coachee,  what  lights  approach 

With  h  melodies  ?  Far  off  in  the  dun  106 

his  forehead  h  bright  From  the  clear  marble  One  was  the  Tishbite  6 

Heel     And  the  beat  of  the  homy  h's  ?  Far  off  in  the  dun  96 

Height    confused  The  shadows  from  the  icy  h's.  -^^iP  glens  I  found  8 

And  somewhat  loftier  antient  h's  Thy  soul  is  like  11 

The  clouds  unswathe  them  from  the  h.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  50 

Hell     Hail,  truest  Lord  of  H  !  Art  for  Art's  sake!  1 

So  prone  are  we  toward  the  broad  way  to  H.  „              6 

Sound  '  Ever,  Never  '  thro'  the  courts  of  H,  Half  after  midnight!  9 

Help    Than  which  of  us  most  shall  h  the  world,  Frenchman,  etc.  7 

We  h  the  blatant  voice  abroad  To  preach  He  was  too  good  9 

Here     I  am  h  again  with  him.  Early-wise  6 

H,  I  that  stood  in  On  beside  the  flow  Here,  I  that  stood  1 

I  was  when  London  was  not !     I  am  A !         _  „            10 

Why,  they  should  be  h.    Mich.    'Tis  a  clear  night.    Hear  you  tJie  sound  5 

A  lute-toned  whisper,  '  I  am  h  ! '  Remember  you  6 

Heroic    Hush  !  there  floats  upward  from  the  gulf  A 

murmur  of  h  song.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  19 

Hidden  I  heard  Spring  laugh  in  h  riUs,  „  1 13 
Hide  Those  holly-thickets  only  h  Her  grave —  Along  this  glimmering  7 
High    But  some  have  hearts  that  in  them  bum  With 

power  and  promise  h.  Far  off  in  the  dun  30 

There  was  not  a  tinge  on  each  h  cheek  bone,  „               51 


High 


1148 


High  ieoniiniud)    but  ye  still  shall  flourish  In  your  h 

pomp  of  shade,  Hear  you  the  sound  29 
Ev^n  then  the  force  of  nature  and  h  birth  Had  writ 

nobility  upon  my  brow.  »       .      .  ^^ 

A  voice,  when  night  had  crept  on  h,  Youth,  lapsing  1 17 

Highland    Lady  over  wood  and  n,  A  dark  Indian  Maiden  27 

Highway    sunk  on  each  side  below  The  h,  Far  off  in  the  dun  98 

Hill    The  simimer  h's  they  see ;  „                70 

Call  to  the  freshly-flower'd  h.  Remember  you  12 

The  wind  is  loud  in  holt  and  h.  Speak  to  me  2 

Of  each  dark  h  against  the  Heaven,  Thy  soul  is  like  6 

The  silent  h's,  the  stormy  floods,  'Tis  not  alone  3 

These  h's  were  plains  within  the  past.  Well,  as  to  Fame  6 

a  voice  ran  round  the  h's  ^Vhen  corny  Lammas  Youth,  lapsing  i  15 

Behind  yon  h  the  trumpets  blow,  „          H  11 

Hist    H  !  what  was  that !     Mich.     The  night  gale        Hear  you  the  sound  7 

History    Ye  know  that  H  is  half-dream —  Old  ghosts  3 

Hoary    And  h  holts  on  uplands  green.  Thy  soul  is  like  10 

Hold     Nor  Love  that  h's  a  constant  mood.  Are  those  the  far-famed  8 

H  thou,  my  friend,  no  lesser  life  in  scorn,  Hold  thou,  my  friend  1 

left  hand  h's  Her  up-gather'd  garment  folds.  Not  to  Silence  13 

To  h  the  Spirit  of  the  Age  Against  the  Spirit  They  wrought,  etc.  47 

Hollow-stemm'd    h-s  and  well-nigh  leafless  oak  Hear  you  the  sound  32 

HoUy-thickets     Those  h-t  only  hide  Her  grave —  Along  this  glimmering  7 

Holt    The  wind  is  loud  in  h  and  hill,  Speak  to  me  2 

And  hoary  h's  on  uplands  green,  Thy  soul  is  like  10 

Home     We  quarrel  here  at  h.  They  say,  etc.  8 

will  not  let  an  honest  Briton  sit  at  h  at  ease :  „            9 

Homer    Little  H,  little  Dante,  little  Shakespeare,  Little  Aubrey  4 

Honest     They  will  not  let  an  h  Briton  sit  at  home  at  ease :    They  say,  etc.  9 

Honour     In  glory  and  in  h.  The  lamps  were  bright  34 

Thy  rhyme-hammer  shall  have  h.  Wherever  evil  9 

Hoof     They  broke  the  groimd  with  h's  of  fire  Far  off  in  the  dun  128 

Hope     Am  large  in  h  that  these  expectant  eyes  0  God,  make  this  age  12 

transgressing  the  low  bound  Of  mortal  h.  That  is  his  portrait  39 

Not  deals  in  threats,  but  works  with  h.  They  wrought,  etc.  39 

An  idle  h  was  in  my  breast.  My  h  is  false,  my 

terror's  true  !  What  rustles  11 

but  let  them  go  in  h.  Like  birds  of  passage.  Woman  of  noble  7 

Horn     leaders  bounded,  the  guard's  h  sounded :  Far  off  in  the  dun  89 

With  that  lona;  h  she  loves  to  blow.  Well,  as  to  Fame  2 

Ufts  The  creaming  h  of  corny  ale  !  Yon  huddled  cloud  4 

Homy     And  the  beat  of  the  h  heels  ?  Far  off  in  the  dun  96 

Horrible    And  the  things  of  past  days  with  their  h  eyes               „              19 

Horror    emptiness  And  h's  of  the  formless  dark.  How  strange  it  is  8 

Horse    Yoked  the  skeleton  h's  to.  Far  off  in  the  dun  60 

Horseman    The  thirsty  h,  nodding,  lifts  Yon  huddled  cloud  3 

Host    the  h  came  forth,  and  stood  alone  Far  off  in  the  dun  49 

No  jolly  h  was  he ;  „               54 

Mine  h  is  fat,  and  gray,  and  wise  Yon  huddled  cloud  9 

Hot    Thro'  her  worn  brain,  h  and  sick.'  The  lamps  were  bright  28 

And  his  h  steeds  never  run :  Far  off  in  the  dun  4 

Honr     Are  those  the  far-famed  Victor  H's  Are  those  the  far-famed  1 

At  the  solemn  midnight  h.  Far  off  in  the  dun  36 

Remembering  all  the  golden  h's  Now  silent,  Gone  into  darkness  9 

Pointing  to  the  unheeded  lapse  of  h's.  Half  after  midnight !  2 

Methinks  my  tongue  runs  twenty  knots  an  A  :  „                19 

I  knew  him  in  his  h  Of  darkest  doubt,  He  was  too  good  2 

All  this  so  stirr'd  him  in  his  h  of  joy,  That  is  his  portrait  31 

would  you  waste  an  h.  Townsmen,  etc.  3 

House     All  the  h  is  fast  in  sleep.  Not  a  whisper  6 

Hoosehold     They  hear  each  h  voice :  Far  off  in  the  dun  66 

Hovering    there  H,  thoughtful,  poised  in  air.  Not  to  Silence  12 

Howling    H  in  outer  darkness.'  Beauty,  Good,  etc.  5 

A  h  of  the  mountain  wolf ;  Youth,  lapsing  ii  20 

Habbob    The  h  of  the  market  and  the  booths :  That  is  his  portrait  21 

Huddled    Yon  h  cloud  his  motion  shifts,  Yon  huddled  cloud  1 

Hoe    Thro'  hLs  own  nature,  well  mingled  h's,  That  is  his  portrait  28 

Millions  of  forms,  and  h's,  and  shades.  Why  suffers  9 

Human    Large  as  a  A  eye  the  sun  Drew  down  the 

West  his  feeble  lights ;  Deep  glens  I  found  5 

And  startle  the  dull  ears  of  h  kind  !  0  God,  make  this  age  5 

the  deer  Bleat  as  with  h  voices  in  the  park.  What  rustles  4 

Why  suffers  h  life  so  soon  eclipse  ?  Why  suffers  1 

E'en  scorn  looks  beautiful  on  h  lips !  „         4 


Humming    Still  h  snatches  of  old  song, 
Humour    How  f uU  of  wisest  h  and  of  love, 

The  h's  of  the  polling  and  the  wake. 
Hung    skin  h  lax  on  his  long  thin  hands ; 

And  from  it  h  the  tassel. 
Hurl'd    Thence,  across  the  summit  h, 
Hurry    in  the  h  and  the  noise  Great  spirits 
Hush    H  !  there  floats  upward  from  the  gulf 
Hustings    To  which  the  slight-built  h  shake ; 
Hymn    With  pleasant  h's  they  soothe  the  air 


James 

Youth,  lapsing  i  38 

That  is  his  portrait  7 

20 

Far  off  in  the  dun  53 

Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  12 

Not  to  Silence  33 

They  wrought,  etc.  15 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  18 

They  wrought,  etc.  8 

Far  off  in  the  dun  109 


Ice     Your  flag  thro' Austral  i  is  borne,  The  noblest  men  ^ 

Icy    night,  aU  moons,  confused  The  shadows  from 

the  i  heights.  Deep  glens  I  found  8 

Idler    An  i  hope  was  in  my  breast.  What  rustles  11 

Were  i  than  a  flight  of  rooks.  Are  those  the  far-famed  12 

Idly    Now  i  in  my  natal  bowers.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  49 

111  (adv.)     '  The  filthiest  of  all  paintings  painted  well 

Is  mightier  than  the  purest  painted  i\'  Art  for  Art's  sake!  4 

111  (s)     he  would  weep  For  i's  himself  had  practised  A  surface  man  5 

Image    The  i  of  the  sun  by  day,  The  i  of  the  moon  by 

night  Youth,  lapsing  i  7 

Imitative    She  spurs  an  i  will ;  Young  is  the  grief  6 

Immeasurable    /sadness!  (repeat)  Immeasurable  sadness/  1,4,11 

Inch    pall  of  the  sky  Leave  never  an  i  of  blue ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  22 

Ind     And  floats  in  either  golden  1.  The  noblest  men  ^ 

Indian    A  dark  /  maiden.  Warbling  in  the  bloom'd 

liana,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  1 

/  queen,  Anacaona,  Dancing  on  the  blossomy  plain  „  28 

Individual    And  i  interests  Becoming  bands  of  armed 

foes  !  They  wrought,  etc.  19 

Inextricable    The  man  that  round  me  wove  /  brickwork 

maze  in  maze  ?  Why  rustles,  etc.  8 

Infancy    Mine  was  no  vulgar  mind  in  i,  Hear  you  the  sound  62 

heart  That  watch't  with  love  thine  earliest  i,  To  thee  with  whom  12 

Infernal    but  in  them  slept  A  red  i  glow ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  82 

Inn  (adj.)     there  stood  a  dark  coach  at  an  old  I  door  .,  35 

There  came  a  gaunt  man  from  the  dark  /  door,  ..  73 

Inn  (s)     That  I  was  built  at  the  birth  of  Time  :  37 

Swung  creaking  before  the  /.  ..44 

Innate    It  show'd  the  seeds  of  i  dignity  That  were 

within  me ;  Hear  you  the  sound  52 

Inner    They  pass'd  (an  i  spirit  fed  Their  ever- 
burning fires,)  Far  off  in  the  dun  117 

common  objects  that  moved  keep  Our  awful  i 
ghostly  sense  Unroused,  How  strange  it  is  5 

Lit  as  with  i  light.  One  was  the  Tishbite  8 

Innovation    And  i  grade  by  grade :  They  wrought,  etc.  3<: 

Intent    /  to  follow  on  the  track,  Youth,  lapsing  i  42 

Interest     individual  i's  Becoming  bands  of  armed  foes  !   They  wrought,  etc.  I'./f 
Inward     With  some  half -consciousness  of  i  power.  That  is  his  portrait  H ,; 

Iron     Because  she  bore  the  i  name  Because  she  bore  1  ! 

Break  thro'  with  the  hammer  of  i  rhyme.  Wherever  evil  '■ 

Iron'd     From  i  limbs  and  tortured  nails  !  First  drink  a  health  h , 

Island     In  the  purple  i,  Crown'd  with  garlands       A  dark  Indian  maiden  2i 
Isle    God  bless  the  little  i  where  a  man  may  still  be  true !   They  say,  etc.  T 

God  bless  the  noble  i  that  is  Mistress  of  the  Seas  !  „  1 

rivulet,  Rippling  by  cressy  i's  or  bars  of  sand.  Townsmen,  etc.   '. 

Thro'  wooded  i's  the  river  shines.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  Z 

Here's  a  health  to  the  Queen  of  the  I's.  That  the  voice 


Jack     Up,  J  Tars,  and  save  us  !  (repeat)  They  say,  etc.  5,  12| 

Up,  J  Tars,  my  hearties  !  „ 

The  lasses  and  the  little  ones,  J  Tars,  they  look  to  you  !    „ 

James    See  St.  James 


Jar 


1149 


Leave 


rar    we  j  like  boys  :  And  in  the  liurry  and  the  noise     They  wrought,  etc.  14 

raw    The  chattering  of  the  fleshless  fs.  Far  off  in  the  dun  95 

fesu    The  '  Mercy  J '  m  the  rain  !  /  kee'p  no  more  11 

roint     Unsocket  all  the  j's  of  war,  Are  those  the  far-famed  15 

roke    With  f$  you  never  heard  before.  Yon  huddled  cloud  14 

Folly    He  look'd  so  j  and  so  good—  /  met  in  all  5 

No  j  host  was  he  ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  54 

Toy    No  sound  of ;,  no  revelling  tones  „               41 

There's  not  a  j  beyond.  HowgUd  am  I  Q 

All  this  so  stirr'd  him  in  his  hour  of  ;,  That  is  his  portrait  31 

My  j  was  only  less  than  thine.  Thou  may'st  remember  12 

One  only  /  I  know,  the  /  of  life.  Why  suffers  14 

roy'd    I;  to  place  me  on  The  hollow-stemm'd  Hear  you  the  sound  Zl 

foyful    j  when  The  wanton  wind  came  singing  „                 40 

Toyfully     But  did  not  sound  so  j :  Youth,  lapsing  i  24 

fust    Knowing  those  laws  are  j  alone  That  contemplate 

a  mighty  plan,  They  wrought,  etc.  41 


Kate    Sweetly  flow  your  life  with  Z's,  Vicar  of  this  16 

Keen    And  as  with  optic  glasses  her  k  eyes  Pierced  thro' 

the  mystic  dome.  Hither  when  all  3 

Keep    objects  that  would  k  Our  awful  inner  How  strange  it  is  4 

I  k  no  more  a  lone  distress,  /  keep  no  more  1 

act  on  Eternity  To  k  thee  here  amongst  us  !  That  is  his  portrait  40 
voice  of  a  satisfied  people  may  k  A  sound  in  her 

ears  That  the  voice  1 

Keys    With  twinkling  finger  sweeps  her  yellow  k.  Townsmen,  etc.  10 

Kind  (adj.)     He  was  too  good  and  k  and  sweet,  He  was  too  good  1 

It  is  not  k  to  be  so  still :  Speak  to  me  3 

/  can  trust  Your  woman's  nature  k  and  true.  The  noblest  men  12 

Kind  (s)     And  startle  the  dull  ears  of  human  k  !  0  God,  make  this  age  5 

King    Of  him  who  doomed  the  k  to  die,  Because  she  bore  2 

Is  it  the  k;  is  it  my  love  Coming  along  What  rustles  5 

King-craft    Till  priest-craft  and  k-c  sicken.  Wherever  evil  3 

Kingliest    A  Pharaoh,  k  of  his  kingly  race.  Here,  I  that  stood  3 

Kingly    For  they  were  k  in  apparel,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  63 

A  Pharaoh,  kingliest  of  his  k  race,  Here,  I  that  stood  3 

Kiss  (s)    And  mingle  k'es,  tears,  and  sighs,  Life  of  the  Life  6 

I  will  print  an  airy  k :  Not  a  whisper  12 

Kiss  (verb)     And  longed  to  k  her  hand  and  lie  Because  she  bore  7 

And  k'es  him  there  in  a  dream.  Bright  is  the  moon  6 

I  k  her  o'er  and  o'er.  How  glad  am  I  4: 

We  k,  we  are  so  fond,  „             6 

Kitty  Sandilands    Sweet  K  S,  The  daughter  of  the 

doctor.  Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  1 

Knee    was  wont  to  dandle  you  upon  My  k,  Hear  you  the  sound  56 
To  break  the  pride  of  Britain,  and  bring  her  on 

her  k's,  They  say,  etc.  2 

Knew     Ev'n  when  I  k  him  in  his  hoxu;  He  was  too  good  2 

Knit    k  your  baby  brows  Into  your  father's  frown,  Hear  you  the  sound  48 

You  were  he  that  k  the  knot !  Vicar  of  this  5 

Knot    my  tongue  runs  twenty  k's  an  hour :  Half  after  midnight!  19 

You  were  he  that  knit  the  k  !  Vicar  of  this  5 

Knotted    round  her  waist  K,  One  was  the  Tishbite  11 
The  k  boughs  of  this  long  avenue  Of  thick  dark 

oaks,  Hear  you  the  sotmd  10 

Know     And  I  it  it  as  a  poet.  Immeasurable  sadness  /  2 

But  I  &  it  a^  a  poet,  >.                    8 

Ye  k  that  History  is  half-dream—  Old  ghosts  3 

whatsoever  k's  us  truly,  k's  That  none  ..        12 

That  I  was  harsh  to  thee,  let  no  one  k ;  To  thee  with  whom  2 

Ik  31  little  of  her  worth,  Well,  as  to  Fame  3 

>.  And  I  will  tell  you  what  I  A; —  »               4 

■  One  only  joy  I  k,  the  joy  of  life.  Why  suffers  14 

Yet  well  I  k  that  nothing  stays,  Youth,  lapsing  i  53 

Knowing    K  those  laws  are  just  alone  They  wrought,  etc.  41 

sharp  desire  of  knowledge  still  with  k !  Why  suffers  6 

Knowledge     Beauty,  Good  and  K  are  three  sisters  .  .  .    Beauty,  Good,  etc.  1 

sharp  desire  of  k  still  with  knowing !  Why  suffers  b 


Labour    A  ^  working  to  an  end.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  4 

Laden    See  Flower-laden 

Lady  (adj.)     by  fits  the  I  ash  With  twinkling  finger  sweeps 

r   ..    ,  lier  yellow  keys.  Toimsmen,  etc.  9 

Lady  (s)    L  of  the  green  Savannah :  A  dark  Indian  maiden  16 

L  over  wood  and  highland,  „  27 

Take,  L,  what  your  loyal  nurses  give,  "  Take,  Lady  1 

Laid    foreign  powers  have  I  their  heads  together  They  say,  etc.  1 

Lain     Every  heart  is  I  to  rest,  Not  a  whisper  5 

Lake    I  that  ripples  out  In  the  clear  moonshine.  Hear  you  the  sound  33 

Lammas    When  corny  L  bound  the  sheaves :  Youth,  lapsing  i  16 

Lamp   wreath'd  with  green  bays  were  the  gorgeous  I's,  Far  off  in  the  dun  115 

I's  were  bright  and  gay  On  the  merry  bridal-day,  The  lamps  were  bright  1 

Land    He  sees  his  father  in  distant  I's,  Bright  is  the  moon  5 

There  lies  a  I  of  chilling  storms.  Far  off  in  the  dun  5 

A  Z  of  thin  faces  and  shadowy  forms,  „  7 

A  pure  example  to  the  I's,  They  wrought,  etc.  2 

A  Z  of  many  days  that  cleaves  In  two  great  halves,  „  26 

The  whole  I  glitters  after  rain.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  37 

Landskip    Thy  soul  is  like  a  I,  friend.  Thy  soul  is  like  1 

Lapse     Pointing  to  the  unheeded  I  of  hours,  Half  after  midnight!  2 

Lapsing    Youth,  I  thro'  fair  solitudes,  Youih,  lapsing  i  1 

Large    i  as  a  human  eye  the  sun  Drew  down  the 

West  his  feeble  lights  ;  .  Deep  glens  I  fmind  5 

Am  I  in  hope  that  these  expectant  eyes  0  God,  make  this  age  12 

And  that  I  table  of  the  breast  dispread.  That  is  his  portrait  5 

Larger    Or,  if  the  sense  of  most  require  A  precedent 

of  I  scope,  They  wrought,  etc.  38 

Lark    See  Laverock 

Lass    The  I'es  and  the  little  ones,  Jack  Tars,  They  say,  etc.  15 

Last  (s)    so  many  dead.  And  him  the  I.  Gone  into  darkness  11 

Last  (verb)    can  they  I  In  the  vast  Of  the  rolling  of  the  aeons.    Little  Aubrey  4 

we.  Poor  devils,  babble  '  we  shall  I.'  Well,  as  to  Fame  8 

Later    Sooner  or  /  from  the  haze  The  second  voice  Youth,  lapsing  i  55 

Latest    L  of  her  worshippers.  Not  to  Silence  7 

loftier  antient  heights  Touch'd  with  Heaven's  I  lights.  Thy  soul  is  like  12 

The  I  thunder-peal  hath  peal'd.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  30 

Laugh  (s)     And  the  I  of  their  rose-lipp'd  boys.  Far  off  inOie  dun  68 

Laugh  (verb)    when  he  I's,  his  little  eyes  Yon  huddled  cloud  11 

I  heard  Spring  I  in  hidden  rills.  Youth,  lapsing  i  13 

Laughable    'twas  I,  and  yet  It  show'd  Hear  you  the  sound  51 

Laugh'd    1 1  to  see  him  as  he  stood,  /  met  in  aUl 

Laughing    All  day  long  with  I  eyes,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  17 

And  they  saw  her  standing  by,  With  a  I  crazed 

eye,  The  lamps  were  bright  52 

Lava    The  walls  of  I  rose.  Far  off  in  the  dun  38 

Laverock    I  spring  From  under  the  deep.  Full  light  aloft  1 

Law     Knowing  those  I's  are  just  alone  They  wrought,  etc.  41 

Lawn    Here  and  there  about  the  I  Wholly  mute,  Not  to  Silence  23 

Steeple,  and  stream,  and  forest  I,  Thy  soul  is  like  2 

Lay    See,  The  cradle  where  she  I !  Along  this  glimmering  4 

Then  they  found  him  where  I  The  lamps  were  bright  47 

I  harder  upon  her  Till  she  clapperclaw  Wherever  evil  6 

Lead    Which  I  the  noblest  life.  Frenchman,  etc.  8 

tho'  the  merry  bridegroom  Might  /  the  bride 

away.  The  lamps  were  bright  32 

Leader    The  I's  bounded,  the  guard's  horn  soimded :     Far  off  in  the  dun  89 

Leaf    summer  plains  with  their  shining  leaves,  „  69 

dark  vine  leaves  round  the  rustling  eaves,  „  71 

Summer  thro'  all  her  sleepy  leaves  Youth,  lapsing  i  14 

Sigh  over  all  their  fallen  leaves ;  „  32 

Leafless    The  hollow-stemm'd  and  well-nigh  I  oak       Hear  you  the  sound  32 

Leafy    The  nightingale  in  I  woods  Call  to  its  mate  Remember  you  14 

League    Flooded  fifty  I's  around.  The  child  was  sitting  5 

Lean    Tall,  eager,  I  and  strong,  his  cloak  One  was  the  Tishbite  5 

Leaping    shapes  without  heads  Went  I  Far  off  in  the  dun  104 

Leapt    white  fly  I  About  his  hairless  brow.  „  83 

Leave    pall  of  the  sky  L  never  an  inch  of  blue ;  „  22 


Leave 


1150 


Look 


Leave  {continued)    O  /  not  thou  thy  son  forlorn ;  0  leave  not  thou  1 
eadi  one  I's  The  middle  road  of  sober  thought !      Tkeij  wrought,  etc.  27 
Led    (See  also  Wisdom-led)    She  I  them  down  the 

pleasant  places,  ^  dark  Indian  -maiden  62 

L  silently  by  power  divine.  Thou  may'st  remember  9 

Left     To  /  or' right  but  falling  floods.  Remember  you  16 

the  /  hand  holds  Her  up-gather'd  garment  folds,  Not  to  Silence  13 

Length    And  lights  at  I  on  ais  desire :  They  wrought,  etc.  40 

Lengthen'd    Far  away  thro'  the  night  ran  the  I  tones :    Far  off  in  the  dun  90 

Less     But  these  shall  see  it  none  the  I.  I  keep  no  more  4 

My  joy  was  only  I  than  thine.  Thou  may'st  remember  12 

Lesser'  Hold  thou,  my  friend,  no  I  life  in  scorn.  Hold  thou,  my  friend  1 

Letter    Their  lies  the  /,  but  it  is  not  he  Old  ghosts  5 

The  man's  life  in  the  I's  of  the  man.  „         4 

Level    Thames  along  the  silent  /,  Vicar  of  this  19 

Liana     Indian  maiden.  Warbling  in  the  bloom'd  I,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  2 

Lie    on  her  threshold  I,  Howling  Beauty,  Good  etc.  4 

I  A  thousand  summers  at  her  feet.  Because  she  bore  7 

There  Vs  a  land  of  chilling  storms,  Far  off  in  the  dun  5 

Evermore  The  simpler  essence  lower  I's,  From  shape  to  shape  6 

There  I's  the  letter,  but  it  is  not  he  Old  ghosts  5 

Beneath  those  double  arches  I  Youth,  lapsing  ii  35 

Life    The  Death  for  which  you  mourn  is  L.'  Early-wise  8 

Which  lead  the  noblest  life.  Frenchman,  etc.  8 

What  I,  so  maim'd  by  night,  were  worth  Gone  into  darkness  7 

my  friend,  no  lesser  I  in  scorn.  Hold  thou,  my  friend  1 

mark  The  I  that  haimts  the  emptiness  Haic  strange  it  is  1 

L  of  the  L  within  my  blood,  (repeat)  Life  of  the  Life  1,  7 

Long  as  the  heart  beats  I  within  her  breast,  Long  as  the  heart  1 

The  man's  I  in  the  letters  of  the  man.  Old  ghosts  4 

Alas,  my  I  is  frail  and  weak  :  Speak  to  me  6 

may  the  I,  which,  heart  in  heart,  you  live  Take,  Lady  3 

I  look  thro'  all  my  glimmering  I,  Thai  is  his  portrait  34 

Thro'  one  whole  I  an  overflowing  urn,  „                50 

come  Into  the  light  of  spiritual  I.  Thou  may'st  remember  6 

Sweetly,  smoothly  flow  your  I.  Vicar  of  this  6 

Sweetly  flow  your  I  with  Kate's,  „        16 

Why  suffers  human  I  so  soon  eclipse  ?  Wh>/  suffers  1 

Would  I  could  pile  fresh  I  on  I,  „          5 

One  only  joy  I  know,  the  joy  of  I.  „        14 

A  I  four-square  to  all  the  winds.  Young  is  the  grief  16 

L,  to  this  wind,  tum'd  all  her  vanes.  Youth,  lapsing  i  29 

Lift    he  spake :  '  I Z  the  eyes  of  thought,  That  is  his  portrait  33 

I's  The  creaming  horn  of  corny  ale  !  Yon  huddled  cloud  3 

Lifted    They  I  their  eyes  to  the  dead,  pale  skies,  Far  off  in  the  dun  61 

Light  (adj.)    A  I  wind  wafts  me  from  my  feet.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  44 

Light  (adv.)    Full  I  aloft  doth  the  laverock  spring  Full  light  aloft  1 

Light  (come  npon)    And  Vs  at  length  on  his  desire :      They  wrought,  etc.  40 

Light  (s)    sun  Drew  down  the  West  his  feeble  I's ;  Deep  glens  I  found  6 

A  region  void  of  I,  Far  off  in  the  dun  6 

No  taper's  I  look'd  out  on  the  night,  ,.              45 

They  see  the  I  of  their  blest  firesides,  „              65 

sallow  I's  shone  Dimly  and  blurly  „              99 

what  Vs  approach  With  heavenly  melodies  ?  „            105 

those  are  the  Vs  of  the  Paradise  coach,  „            107 

With  a  solemn  burst  of  thrilling  I,  „            119 

They  glitter'd  with  a  stedfast  I,  „            129 

At  the  very  break  of  I  ?  F^iU  light  aloft  8 

Gone  into  darkness,  that  full  I  Of  friendship  !  Gone  into  darkness  1 

That  mystic  field  of  drifted  I  In  mid  Orion,  Hither  when  all  10 

L  of  the  L  within  mine  ej^es,  (repeat)  Life  of  the  Life  2,  8 

Oft«n  shallow,  pierced  with  I,  Not  to  Silence  21 

Lit  as  with  inner  I.  One  was  the  Tishbite  8 

peaceful  I  of  hazel  eyes.  Observing  all  things.  That  is  his  portrait  13 

eyes  bum  With  a  Z  so  wild  and  stem  ? '  The  lamps  were  bright  16 

come  Into  the  I  of  spiritual  life.'  Thou  may'st  remember  6 

Touch'd  with  Heaven's  latest  Vs.  Thy  soul  is  like  12 

Full  fields  of  barley  shifting  tearful  Vs  Townsmen,  etc.  8 

Drove  into  lines  and  studs  of  I  Yauih,  lapsing  i  6 

Now  one  faint  line  of  I  doth  §low,  „          H  9 

Ray'd  round  with  beams  of  living  I.  „            52 

Like    (See  also  Bee-like)    L  to  one  of  us  she  seems,  Not  a  whisper  15 

Likenei     And  all  the  i!  in  the  difference.  Why  suffers  11 

Lily    The  two  fair  lilies  growing  at  thy  side  Woman  of  noble  11 

LiBlb    His  Vs  beneath  him  fail ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  26 


Limb  (continued)     woman's  youthful  pride  Of 
rounded  Vs — 

Limb'd    See  Dark-limb'd 

Line    While  walking  with  my  rod  and  I, 
a  face  whose  every  I  Wore  the  pale  cast 
Drove  into  Vs  and  studs  of  light 
Now  one  faint  I  of  light  doth  glow. 

Link     In  many  a  silver  loop  and  I 

Lip     with  right  hand  Moving  toward  her  I, 
Her  perfect  Vs  to  taste. 


One  was  the  Tishbite  17 

/  met  in  all  2 

Methought  I  saw  1 

Youth,  lapsing  i  6 

»  ii  9 

Not  to  Silence  26 

Not  to  Silence  11 

One  was  the  Tishbite  12 

Sleeps  round  those  quiet  Vs ;  not  quite  a  smile  ;      That  is  his  portrait  9 

E'en  scorn  looks  beautiful  on  human  Vs  !  Why  suffers  4 

Because  the  Vs  of  little  children  preach  Against 

you.  Therefore  your  Halls  12 

Lipp'd    See  Finger-lipt,  Bose-lipp'd 

Lisping    Lightly  I,  breaks  away ;  Not  to  Silence  32 

Lit    L  as  with  inner  light.  One  was  the  Tishbite  8 

Little     That  I  garden  was  her  pride,  Along  this  glimmering  5 

Sleep,  my  I  one,  sleep  !  Bright  is  the  moon  3 

How  is  it  that  men  have  so  I  grace,  How  is  it  that  men  1 

L  Aubrey  in  the  West !  I  Alfred  in  the  East  Little  Aubrey  1 

L  Homer,  I  Dante,  I  Shakespeare,  can  they  last  „  4 

L  poet,  hear  the  I  poet's  epigram !  .,  7 

The  lasses  and  thel  ones,  Jack  Tars,  they  look  to  you  !  They  say,  do.  15 

God  bless  the  I  isle  where  a  man  may  still  be  true  !  „  17 

when  he  laughs,  his  I  eyes  Are  swallow'd  in  his 

pamper'd  cheeks.  Yon  huddled  cloud  11 

Live     And  he  prays  that  you  may  I.  Little  Aubrey  3 

Teach  me,  great  Nature :  make  me  I.  0  leave  not  thou  2 

life,  which  heart  in  heart,  you  I  With  him  you  love.  Take,  Lady  3 

Yet  he  Vs ;  His  and  my  friendship  That  is  his  portrait  40 

to  each  that  Vs  A  hint  of  somewhat  unexprest.  'Tis  not  alone  7 

L  and  prosper  !    Day  by  day  Watch  your  standard  roses  Vicar  of  this  11 

While  1 1,  the  owls  !  While  I  live  1 

I  thank  thee,  God,  that  thou  hast  made  me  I :  JFhy  suffers  12 

Lived     Prince,  whose  Father  I  in  you,  Early-wise  2 

So  Z I  without  aim  or  choice.  Youth,  lapsing  i  37 

Liveliest    Whose  blood  in  its  I  course  would  not  pause    Far  off  in  the  dun  93 

Living     were  worth  Our  I  out  ?  Gone  into  darkness  8 

there  sit  figures  as  of  gods  Ray'd  roimd  with  beams 

of  I  light.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  52 

Lock    fingers  in  these  Vs  (They  are  gray  now)  Hear  you  the  sound  58 

Loftier    somewhat  I  antient  heights  Touch'd  with 

Heaven's  latest  lights.  Thy  soul  is  like  11 

Loins    gird  up  thy  I  for  fight,  And  get  thee  forth      0  God,  make  this  age  10 

Loiter'd    I Z  in  the  middle  way.  Youth,  lapsing  i  46 

London    I  was  when  L  was  not !  Here,  I  that  stood  10 

This  L  once  was  middle  sea,  Well,  as  to  Fame  5 

Lone    I  keep  no  more  a  I  distress,  /  keep  no  more  1 

Lonely    I  shudder  in  my  I  nest,  What  rustles,  etc.  13 

Long    The  skin  hung  lax  on  his  I  thin  hands ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  53 

They  mounted  slow  in  their  I  black  cloaks,  „  85 

The  knotted  boughs  of  this  I  avenue  Of  thick 

dark  oaks.  Hear  you  the  sound  10 

L  as  the  heart  beats  life  within  her  breast.  Long  as  the  heart  1 

With  I  tracts  of  murmuring.  Partly  river,  partly  I 

brook.  Not  to  Silence  Sbi 

Methinks  I  see  the  world's  renewed  youth  A  I 

day's  davra,  0  God,  inake  this  age  V 

you  live  With  him  you  love,  be  cloudless  and  be  I !  Take,  Lady  <t ' 

who  strides  the  earth  With  that  I  horn  she  loves  to 

blow.  Well,  as  to  Fame  L 

Pour'd  by  I  glades  and  meadowy  mounds,  Youth,  lapsing  i  I 

Longed    And  I  to  kiss  her  hand  and  lie  Because  she  bore  - 

And  I  to  take  his  hand  in  mine.  /  met  in  ail 

Longer    lay  harder  upon  her  Till  she  clapperclaw  no  I,  Wherever  evil  - 

Look  (s)     Ye  must  be  wiser  than  your  Vs,  Are  those  the  far-famed '. 

And  Vs  to  awe  the  standers  by.  Because  she  bore 

Look  (verb)    L  he  smiles,  and  opens  his  hands.  Bright  is  the  moon 

L  out  from  the  cloudy  vast.  Far  off  in  the  dwn  2( 

How  beautifully  Vs  the  moonbeam  Hear  you  the  sound  i 

I  never  I  upon  them  but  I  glow  ,,  1 

You  would  I  down  and  knit  your  baby  brows  „  A 

But  I,  for  these  are  nature  too.  /  keep  no  more  1 

L  on  those  manly  curls  so  glossy  dark,  That  is  his  portrait 


Look 


1151 


Mediterranean 


Look  (verb)  (continued)    I  you  what  an  arch  the  brain 

has  built  That  is  his  portrait  10 

1 1  thro'  all  my  glimmering  life,  „  34 

lasses  and  the  little  ones,  Jack  Tars,  they  I  to  you  !      They  say,  etc.  15 

E'en  scorn  I's  beautiful  on  human  lips  !  Why  suffers  4 

Look'd    No  taper's  light  I  out  on  the  night,  ~ 

Dimly  the  travellers  I  thro'  the  glooms, 

He  I  so  jolly  and  so  good — 
Looking    I  far  away  On  the  blue  moimtains. 
Loom    I  or  plough  To  weigh  them  as  they 
Loop    In  many  a  silver  I  and  link 
Lord    Hail,  truest  L  of  Hell ! 
Lordly    Ye  proud  aristocrats  whose  I  shadows, 
Loss     Another  whispers  sick  with  I : 

His  and  my  friendship  have  not  suffer'd  I, 
Lost    for  what  is  I  is  made  more  dear ; 

We  I  you  for  how  lonw  a  time, 
Lot    happy  be  your  /  In  the  Vicarage 
,  Loud    I  the  roar  Of  wind  and  mingled  shower, 
I         The  stream  is  / :  I  cannot  hear  ! ' 

The  wind  is  /  in  holt  and  hill, 

wanton  ear  Be  tickled  with  the  I '  hear,  hear,' 
Love  (s)     Nor  L  that  holds  a  constant  mood. 


he  that  shuts  out  L,  in  turn  shall  be  Shut  out 

from  L, 
whisper'd  I  of  the  fair  yoimg  wives ; 
I  glow  With  an  enthusiastic  I  of  them. 
I  murmur'd  '  Speak  again,  my  I, 
They  are  not  want  of  I  for  thee. 
How  full  of  wisest  humour  and  of  I, 
Capacious  both  of  Friendship  and  of  L. 
For  L  flew  over  grove  and  field. 
Something  of  pain — of  bliss — of  L, 
heart  That  watch't  with  I  thine  earliest  infancy^   To  thee  with  whom  12 


Far  off  in  the  dun  45 

„       .       57 

/  met  ill  all  5 

Hear  you  the  sound  39 

He  was  too  good  7 

Not  to  Silence  26 

Art  for  Art's  sake  !  1 

Hear  you  the  sound  21 

/  keep  no  more  9 

That  is  his  portrait  41 

46 

We  lost  you  1 

Vicar  of  this  3 

Far  off  in  the  dun  33 

Remember  you  8 

Speak  to  me  2 

They  wrought,  etc.  7 

Are  those  the  far-famed  8 

Beauty,  Good,  etc.  3 

Far  off  in  the  dun  67 

Hear  you  the  sound  15 

Remember  you  7 

Speak  to  me  8 

That  is  his  portrait  7 

51 

The  night,  etc.  4 

'Tis  not  alone  11 


is  it  my  I  Coming  along  the  secret  ways  ? 

Fair  with  green  fields  the  realms  of  L. 
Love  (verb)    '  1 1  the  daisy  weeping  dew, 

cuckoo-voice  that  I's  To  babble  its  own  name. 

heart  in  heart,  you  live  With  him  you  I, 

With  that  long  horn  she  I's  to  blow, 
Loved    A  child  she  I  to  play ; 

This  is  he  1 1,  This  is  the  man 

He  I  the  river's  roaring  sound ; 

Cold  words  I  spoke,  yet  I  thee  warm  and  well. 


What  rustles  5 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  36 

I  keep  no  more  13 

/,  loving  Freedom  7 

Take,  Lady  4 

Well,  as  to  Fame  2 

Al-ong  this  glimmering  2 

That  is  his  portrait  14 

The  child  was  sitting  3 

To  thee  with  whom  8 


Loving     All  her  I  childhood  Breezes  from  the  palm  A  dark  Indian  maiden  13 


51 


/,  loving  Freedom  1 

Remember  you  11 

That  is  his  portrait  6 


wondering,  I,  Carolling  '  Happy, 

I,  I  Freedom  for  herself, 
Low    The  I  voice  of  the  glad  New  Year  Call  to  the 
freshly-flower'd  hill. 

And  that  large  table  of  the  breast  dispread, 
Between  I  shoulders ; 

long  May  my  strong  wish,  transgressing  the  I  bound 

Of  mortal  hope,  ,    ,"     •      •  ^q 

Again  the  I  sweet  voices  moum'd  In  distant  fields.    Youth,  lapsing  i  43 

Lower    Evermore  The  simpler  essence  I  lies,  From  shape  to  shaped 

L  and  deeper  evermore  They  grew.  Youth,  lapsing  i  25 

Loyal    Take,  Lady,  what  your  I  nurses  give.  Take,  Lady,  1 

Lucid    Regions  of  I  matter  taking  forms,  Htlher,  when  all  5 

Lured    L  by  the  cuckoo-voice  that  loves  I,  loving  Freedom  7 

Lute-toned    A  l-t  whisper,  '  I  am  here  ! '  Remember  you  b 

Luxuriant    My  fancy  was  the  more  I,  That  ts  his  vortratt  lb 

Lyre    And  a  sound  of  stringed  Ts.  Far  off  m  the  dun  IM 

I^c    and  you  gleam  reset  In  Britain's  I  coronet.  W^ «  wsJ  you  4 


Mad    Is  thy  m  brain  drunk  with  the  merry,  red  wme.  Full  light  aloft  7 

Madam    the  noblest  place,  U,  is  yours,  ,  ^''rA"       ffTi9 

Made    I  thank  thee,  God,  that  thou  hast  m  me  live :  .  Why  suffers  i^ 

for  what  is  lost  is  m  more  dear ;  That  is  his  portrait  46 

All-perfect  Framer,  Him,  who  m  the  heart,      „     ^   ^,        '.' ,    „,„_  ,4 

Thro'  every  change  that  m  thee  what  thou  art  ?    To  thee  with  whom  14 


Madness    Or  a  fancy  or  a  m, —  Immeasurable  sadmss.' 1 

wliat  m  moved  my  blood  To  make  me  thus  belie  To  thee  with  whom  10 
Mahomet     Like  the  flower  of  M.  Spurge  wilh  fairy  2 

Maiden    A  dark  Indian  m.  Warbling  in  the  bloom'd 

liana,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  1 

With  her  m's  to  the  bay ;  „  42 

But  found  a  m  tender,  shy,  Because  she  bore  5 

The  happy  m's  tears  are  free  /  keep  no  more  5 

Maim'd    What  life,  sc  m  by  night,  were  worth  Gone  into  darkness  7 

Main    Tliat  thou  singest  with  to  and  with  might  ?  Full  light  aloft  6 

Maizebread    M  and  the  yuccaroot,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  44 

Make    and  m  beneath  Ambrosial  gloom.  Hear  you  the  sound  29 

Sender  and  sent-to  go  to  m  up  this.  Old  ghosts  7 

Who  m  you  utter  things  you  did  not  say,  „       10 

Teach  me  great  Nature :  m  me  live.  0  leave  not  thou  2 

To  m  me  thus  belie  my  constant  heart  To  thee  with  whom  11 

The  thunder  cannot  m  thee  dumb  ;  Youth,  lapsing  ii  26 

Man    The  white  m's  white  sail,  brininng  A  dark  Indian  maiden  37 

She  gave  the  white  men  welcome  all,  „  53 

Than  the  men  of  Xara.'juay,  „  57 

That  ride  to  death  the  grief's  of  men?  Are  those  the  far-famed  2 

A  surface  m  of  many  theories,  A  surface  man  1 

Ten  men  fought  a  thousand,  Slew  them  Bold  Havelock  7 

every  m  in  Britain  Says  '  I  am  of  Havelock's  blood ! '  ,,         15 

There  came  a  gaunt  m  from  the  dark  Inn  door,       Far  off  in  the  dun  73 
threw  up  the  dust  Of  dead  men's  pulverised  bones.  „  92 

I  come  Unto  the  perfect  m.  From  shape  to  shape  4 

ask  you  whether  you  would  be  A  great  m  Hear  you  the  sound  57 

The  true  men  banish'd —  Rise,  Britons,  rise  4 

All  Nature  is  the  womb  whence  M  is  bom.  Hold  thou,  my  friend  2 

How  is  it  that  men  have  so  little  grace.  When  a 

great  m's  found  to  be  bad  and  base,  Hoio  is  it  that  men  1 

a  good  old  m.  Most  eloquent,  who  spake  Methouaht  I  saw  2 

The  m's  life  in  the  letters  of  the  m.  Old  ghosts  4 

All  the  men  ran  from  her  (repeat)  Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  5,  7 

This  is  the  m  of  whom  you  heard  me  speak.  That  is  his  vorirait  15 

The  noblest  men  methinks  are  bred  The  noblest  men  1 

God  bless  the  Uttle  isle  where  a  m  may  still  be  true  !     They  say,  etc.  17 

Shadows  of  statesmen,  clever  men  !  They  wrought,  etc.  12 

fears  that  waste  The  strength  of  wen,  „  23 

The  frame,  the  mind,  the  soul  of  m,  „  43 

The  m  that  round  me  wove  Inextricable  brickwork  What  rustles',! 

And  in  the  pauses  groans  of  men.  Yovih,  lapsing  ii  24 

Manly    Look  on  those  m  curls  so  glossy  dark,  That  is  his  portrait  2 

Many  lest  overhaste  Should  fire  the  m  wheels  of  change !  They  wrought,  etc.  24 

A  voice  like  m  voices  cries,  Yovth,  lapsing  ii  1 

A  moan  of  m  waterfalls,  j.  '» 23 

Mar    mould  you  all  awry  and  m  your  worth ;  Old  ghosU  11 

Marble    forms  Of  the  unfading  m  carved  upon  them.  Hear  you  the  sound  26 

From  the  clear  to  pouring  glorious  scorn,  One  was  the  TishbiU  7 

March'd    Bold  Havelock  w,  (repeat)  Bold  Havelock  1,  5,  9 

M  and  thought  and  fought,  «  Jl 

M  and  fought  himself  dead.  ..  •    .   « 

Mark    by  chance  should  to  The  life  that  haunts  How  strange  U  u  6 

to  to  The  humours  of  the  polling  and  the  wake.     Thai  is  his  portrait  19 

Market    The  hubbub  of  the  to  and  the  booths :  „  21 

Married    That  mystic  field  of  drifted  light  In  mid  Onon, 

and  the  TO  stars.  BttherwhenaUU 

Marry    spot  Where  it  was  my  chance  to  m,  ■X*^''^'      „ « 

Mars    She  saw  the  snowy  poles  and  Moons  of  M,  UttJter,  when  aU  V 

Martyr    -See  Patriot-mar^m  v         ■  .l       .xii 

Master  (adj.)    A  to  mind  with  to  minds,  Young  u  thegn^  li 

Master  S   Genius,  M  of  the  Moral  Will !  Art  for  Art's  s^2 

Mate    Call  to  its  to  when  nothing  stirrd  Krmemder  V<^io 

Matter    Regions  of  lucid  to  taking  forms,  n^tillZ' Z!Z,f^9 

Dlature    and  what  a  settled  mind,  .U,  That  u  hu  vortrati  12 

May  (hawthorn-bloom)  The  M  begins  to  breathe  and  bud.  Life  of  the  Life  3 
May  month)  terrace  growing  Green  and  greener  everj -U  !  Vvar  of  thts  15 
Maze    Inextricable  brickwork  TO  in  to?  WhatrustUsS 

Meadow    Warm  beams  across  the  m  stole ;  lhenigM,elc.6 

Meadowy    Pour'd  by  long  glades  and  m  mounds,  1  ovth,  lapsing  t  2 

Mealy    The  miller  with  his  to  face. 
Meant    whose  whims  were  to  For  virtue  s  servants, 
Meat    See  Pap-meat-pamper  . ..     „  a       7  a  4  ^   ja 

Mediterranean    Thence  haled  me  toward  the  M  sea,        Here,  I  OuU  stood  6 


I  met  in  all  2 
A  surface  man  2 


Meek 


1152 


Moved 


Meek    O  the  child  so  m  and  wise,  The  chM  was  sitting  8 

Meet    That  so  gaily  m  their  eyes  !  Far  off  m  the  dun  108 

And  I  greet  it,  and  1  m  it,  Immeasurable  sadness.'  3 

And  I  m  it,  and  I  greet  it,  ,,  .      .9 

A  noise  of  winds  that  m  and  blend.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  J 

Mellow     moving  To  her  Areyto's  m  ditty,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  50 

Melody    To  a  woodland  m:  „  30 

lights  approach  With  heavenly  melodies  ?  Far  off  in  the  dun  106 

aerial  m  May  blow  alarum  loud  to  every  wind,     0  God,  make  this  age  3 
Melted    on  every  side  The  dragon's  curves  m,  One  was  the  Tishbite  15 

Memory    far  away  thy  m  will  be  bless'd  Long  as  the  heart  3 

Mercy    The  '  M  Jesu  ^  in  the  rain  !  /  keep  no  more  11 

Merry     Is  thy  mad  brain  drunk  with  the  m,  red  wine.  Full  light  aloft  7 

But  thou  hast  drunk  of  the  m,  sweet  wine,  „  11 

The  lamps  were  bright  and  gay  On  the  m  bridal- 
day.  When  the  m  bridegroom  Bore  the  bride 

away  !     km,m  bridal,  A  m  bridal-day  !  The  lamps  were  bright  2 

Although  the  m  bridegroom  Bears  the  bride  away, 

On  a  7n,  m  bridal,  A  m  bridal-day  ?  „  11 

<  For — ^now  the  m  bridegroom  Hath  borne  the  bride 

away —  ,  »  19 

For  tho'  the  m  bridegroom  Hath  borne  the  bride  away,       „  25 

That  tho'  the  m  bridegroom  Might  lead  the  bride  away,       ,,  31 

For  now  the  m  brid^room  Hath  borne  the 

bride  away.  The  lamps  were  bright  37 

Altho'  the  m  bridegroom  Hath  borne  the  bride  away ;  „  43 

Tho'  he  a  TO  bridegroom  Had  borne  the  bride  away,  „  49 

Met     I  m  in  all  the  close  green  ways,  /  met  in  all  1 

Meth'"^"'    3f  my  tongue  runs  twenty  knots  Half  after  midnight/ 19 

M  they  tar^  somewhat.     What's  the  clock  ?  Hear  you  the  sound  3 

M  an  oak-tree  never  should  be  planted  ,,  16 

M  I  see  the  world's  renewed  youth  0  God,  make  this  age  6 

The  rwblest  men  m  are  bred  The  noblest  men  1 

Methooght     '  M  I  saw  a  face  whose  every  line  Methought  I  saw  1 

Michael    Thou  dost  remember,  M,  How,  when  a 

boy.  Hear  you  the  sound  30 

I  was  so,  M.  .,  37 

did  it  not,  good  M?  „  53 

^\fl     That  mystic  field  of  drifted  light  In  m  Orion,  Hither,  when  all  11 

Middle    when  each  one  leaves  The  m  road  of  sober 

thought !  They  wrought,  etc.  28 

This  London  once  was  m  sea.  Well,  as  to  Fame  5 

I  loiter'd  in  the  m  way,  Youth,  lapsing  i  46 

Midnight  (adj.)    When  there  stood  a  dark  coach  at 

an  old  Inn  door  At  the  solemn  m  hour.  Far  off  in  the  dun  36 

Midnight  (s)     Half  after  m  !  (repeat)  Half  after  midnight/  1,  17 

What's  the  clock  ?     Mich.     Half  way  toward  m.    Hear  you  the  sound  4 

Might    That  thou  singest  with  main  and  with  m  ?  Full  light  aloft  6 

Tho'  thou  art  all  unconscious  of  thy  M.  0  God,  make  this  age  14 

Mif^tier    Is  m  than  the  purest  painted  ill ! '    Yes, 

TO  than  the  purest  painted  well,  Art  for  Art's  sake/  4 

Mighty     Knowing  those  laws  are  just  alone  That  con- 
template a  TO  plan.  They  wrought,  etc.  42 
Mild    did  scan  His  countenance  so  grand  and  to,  Methought  I  saw  5 
Thy  child  will  bless  thee,  guardian  mother  to,             Long  as  the  heart  2 
Who  made  us  wise  and  to  !                                       The  child  was  sitting  9 
Stately  and  to,  and  all  between  Valleys  Thy  soul  is  like  8 
Mile    Many  a  to  went  he,  Every  to  a  battle,  Bold  Havelock  2 
Mill     I  stepp'd  upon  the  old  m  bridge  ?                                   Remember  you  4 
Milldam-water    While  fishing  in  the  m-w,  I  met  in  all  6 
ISiller    The  to  with  his  mealy  face,  „  3 
And  dreamt  not  of  the  m's  daughter.                                           „  8 
Million    M's  of  forms,  and  hues,  and  shades.                             Why  suffers  9 
Mind    Mine  was  no  viilgar  m  in  infancy,                       Hear  you  the  sound  62 
and  raise  up  M,  Whose  trumpet- tongued,             0  God,  make  this  age  2 
and  what  a  settled  m.  Mature,                                  That  is  his  portrait  11 
The  frame,  the  to,  the  soul  of  man.                           They  wrought,  etc.  43 
Woman  of  noble  form  and  noble  m  !                               Woman  of  noble  1 
A  master  m  with  master  m's,                                    Young  is  the  grief  13 
ICngle    And  m  kisses,  tears,  and  sighs,                                  Life  of  the  Life  6 
Mingled     Of  wind  and  to  shower.                                       Far  off  in  the  dun  34 
TO  with  The  woman's  youthful  pride                      One  was  the  Tishbite  15 
Tliro'  his  own  nature,  with  well  to  hues.                 That  is  his  portrait  28 
Minted     But  his  was  to  in  a  deeper  mould,                   That  is  his  portrait  17 
Miserere    The  '  ilf '  in  the  mossl                                        /  keep  no  more  12 


Mislead    They  were  not  slaves  that  names  to,  Nor 

traitors  that  to  by  names  !  Not  such  were  those  3 

Mist     Of  vapors,  and  to,  and  night.  Far  off  in  the  dun  8 

fear  not  the  m's  of  unwholesome  damps  „            113 

Misted    chapel's  vaulted  gloom  Was  m  with  perfume.   The  lamps  were  bright  8 

Mistimed    My  coldness  was  to  like  summer-snow.  To  thee  with  whom  7 

Mistress     To  break  the  noble  pride  of  the  M  of  the  Seas.        They  say,  etc.  4 

Up  and  save  the  pride  of  the  M  of  the  Seas  !  (repeat)  „  7,  11,  14 

God  bless  the  noble  isle  that  is  M  of  the  Seas  !  „            18 

If  you  will  save  the  pride  of  the  M  of  the  Seas.  „           21 

Mix'd     M  with  the  phantom  of  his  coming  fame,  That  is  his  portrait  32 

Moan    A  m  of  many  waterfalls.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  23 

Moan'd    M  in  her  chimneys  and  her  eaves ;  „             i  30 

He  m,  '  I  wander  from  my  good  ! '  „                35 

Moaning    And  the  to  wind  before  it  drives  Thick 

wreaths  of  cloudy  dew.  Far  off  in  the  dun  23 

Mock     That  they  chuckle  and  chatter  and  m  ?  How  is  it  that  men  3 

Mock'd     TO  and  said,  '  Come,  cry  aloud,  he  sleeps.'  One  was  the  Tishbite  3 

Mockery    m  to  hang  it  O'er  the  thatch'd  cottage.  Hear  you  the  sound  16 

Moderate    citizen,  Deep-hearted,  to,  firm,  They  wrought,  etc.  10 

Molten    Such  as  never  overflows  With  flush  of  rain,  or  to 

snows,  Not  to  Silence  20 

Momentary    A  to  cloud  upon  me  fell :  To  thee  with  whom  6 

Monster    Tho'  strange  seas  drew  me  to  your  to  town.       Here,  I  that  stood  8 

Monstrous     And  to  rocks  from  craggy  snouts  Deep  glens  I  found  3 

Month    The  m's,  ere  they  began  to  rise.  Youth,  lapsing  i  9 

Monimient    their  m's,  with  forms  Of  the  unfading  Hear  you  the  sound  25 

Mood     Nor  Love  that  holds  a  constant  m.  Are  those  the  far-famed  8 

Moon     Bright  is  the  to  on  the  deep.  Bright  is  the  moon  1 

Under  the  silver  m,  „             13 

then  a  night,  all  m's,  confused  The  shadows  Deep  glens  I  found  7 

She  saw  the  snowy  poles  and  M's  of  Mars,  Hither,  when  all  9 

In  the  glimmer  of  the  m  :  Not  a  whisper  4 

The  image  of  the  m  by  night  Youth,  lapsing  i  8 

Moonbeam    How  beautifully  looks  the  to  Hear  you  the  sound  9 

Moonlight    Chequer'd  with  m's  variation,  „              22 

VI  That  whiten'd  all  the  eastern  ridge,  Remember  you  1 

Moonshine    lake  that  ripples  out  In  the  clear  to.  Hear  you  the  sound  34 

Moral     Genius,  Master  of  the  M  Will !  Art  for  Art's  sake  2 

Moralizer    Half  after  midnight !  these  mute  m's.  Half  after  midnight  /  1 

Mom     Athwart  the  bloomy  m.  Full  light  aloft  4 

And  glimmers  to  the  northern  m.  The  noblest  men  7 

Morning  (adj.)     I  follow  to  the  m  sun.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  10 

Morning  (s)    return  with  thee  Some  happy  Summer  to.       Woman  of  noble  9 

Beside  my  door  at  to  stood  The  tearful  spirit  Youth,  lapsing  i  33 

It  is  the  early  m,  Hark  !  „            ii  6 

Morning-rise     clouds  are  sunder'd  toward  the  m-r ;  0  God,  make  this  age  9 

Mortal     transgressing  the  low  bound  Of  to  hope.  That  is  his  portrait  39 

Moss     The  '  Miserere  '  in  the  m  !  /  keep  no  more  12 

Moss-grown    singing  lustily  Among  the  m-g 

branches.  Hear  you  the  sound  42 

Mother    Thy  child  will  bless  thee,  guardian  to  mild.  Long  as  the  heart  2 

And  with  thee,  M,  taught  us  first  to  pray.  Remembering  him  2 

'  Now,  tell  me,  m,  pray.  The  lamps  were  briglit  9 

Mother-Queen    O  M-Q,  and  weeping  Wife,  Early-wise  7 

Motion     Yon  huddled  cloud  his  m  shifts,  Yon  huddled  cloud  1 

Mould  (s)     But  his  was  minted  in  a  deeper  to,  That  is  his  portrait  17 

Mould  (verb)     m  you  all  awry  and  mar  your  worth ;  Old  ghosts  11 

Moulded     The  brain  is  to,'  she  began.  From  shape  to  shape  2 

Mound     Nor  wanting  many  a  sombre  to.  Thy  soul  is  like  7 

Pour'd  by  long  glades  and  meadowy  m's.  Youth,  lapsing  i  2 

Mountain  (adj.)     A  howling  of  the  m  wolf ;  „          ii  20 

Mountain  (s)     looking  far  away  On  the  blue  m's,  Hear  you  the  sound  40 

A  to  bright  with  triple  peaks :  Youth,  lapsing  ii  48 

Mounted     They  to  slow  m  their  long  black  cloaks,  Far  off  in  the  dun  85 

Mourn    The  Death  for  which  you  to  is  Life.'  Early-wise  8 

I  TO  in  spirit  when  I  think  The  year,  /,  loving  Freedom  5 

Moum'd    Again  the  low  sweet  voices  m  Youth,  lapsing  i  43 

Mouth'd    See  Deep-mouth'd 

Move    These  only  do  not  m  the  breast ;  'Tis  not  alone  5 

Whate'er  I  see,  where'er  I  to,  »       . .   ^ 

Away  with  shadows  !     On  they  to  !  Youth,  lapsing  ii  34 

Moved     Down  from  the  shoulder  m :  One  was  the  Tishbite  13 

what  madness  to  my  blood  To  make  me  thus 

belie  To  thee  with  whom  10 


Moving 


1153 


r  llbvmg    m  To  her  Areyto's  mellow  ditty, 
but  with  right  hand  M  toward  her  Up, 
Parts  in  two  channels,  m  to  one  end — 

I  Kummr    The  m's  of  the  rivulet,  Rippling 


A  dark  Indian  maiden  49 
Not  to  Silence  11 
Steersman  3 
„  ,,  ,  -      „  Townsmen,  etc.  b 

i  floats  upward  from  the  gulf  A  m  of  heroic  song.         Youth,  lapsing  ii  19 

Murmur'd     I  m  '  Speak  again,  my  love.  Remember  you  7 

Summer  thro'  all  her  sleepy  leaves  M :  Youth,  lapsing  i  15 

Murmuring    With  long  tracts  of  m.  Not  to  Silence  28 

Music     The  southern  stars  a  m  peal'd.  The  night  etc.  2 

Mute     there  about  the  lawn  Wholly  m,  Not  to  Silence  24 

Half  after  midnight !  these  m  moralizers,  Half  after  midnight.'  1 

Mutter    the  m  of  deep-mouth'd  thimderings  Far  off  in  the  dun  15 

Myriad-volumed    Your  gardens,  m-v  libraries.  Therefore  your  Halls  3 

Mystery    A  rumour  of  a  m,  Youth,  lapsing  ii  1 

Mystic    And  as  with  optic  glasses  her  keen  eyes  Pierced 

thro'  the  m  dome,  Hither,  when  all  4 

That  m  field  of  drifted  light  In  mid  Orion,  „  10 


Nobility    high  birth  Had  writ  n  upon  my  brow. 
Noble    But  near  the  dweUing  of  some  n  race ; 

To  break  the  n  pride  of  the  Mistress  of  the  Seas. 

God  bles^  the  n  isle  that  is  Mistress  of  the  Seas  ! 

Woman  of  n  form  and  n  mind ! 
Nobler    Yet  grief  deserves  a  n  name : 
Noblest    Which  lead  the  »  life. 

The  n  men  m^thinks  are  bred 
Nod    With  all  liis  groves  he  bows,  he  n's. 
Nodding    The  thirsty  horseman,  «,  lifts 
Noise    And  in  the  hurry  and  the  n  Great  spirits 

A  TO  of  hands  that  disarrange  The  social  engine  ! 

A  TO  of  winds  that  meet  and  blend, 
Nook    Which  in  one  delicious  n, 
Noon    At  TO  and  eve,  because  your  manner  sorts 
Norman    See  Sazo-Norman 
Northern    A  nd  glimmers  to  the  n  mom. 
Nurse    Take,  Lady,  what  your  loyal  n's  give. 


Overdealt 

Hear  you  the  sound  64 

17 

They  say,  etc.  4 

18 

Woman  of  noble  1 

Young  is  the  grief  5 

Frenchman,  etc.  8 

The  noblest  men  1 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  49 

Yon  huddled  cloud  3 

They  wrought,  etc.  15 

21 

Youih,  lapsing  ii  2 

Not  to  Silence  30 

Therefore  your  Halls  10 

The  noblest  men  7 
Take,  Lady  1 


N 


Raked    orange  groves  N,  and  dark-limb'd,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  6 
N,  without  fear  moving  To  her  Areyto's  mellow 

ditty,  „                 49 
Not  to  Silence  would  I  build  A  temple  in  her  to  field ;      Not  to  Silence  2 

Hame    she  bore  the  iron  to  Of  him  who  doomed  Because  she  bore  1 

And  his  to  was  Atrophy  !  Far  off  in  the  dun  56 

cuckoo-voice  that  loves  To  babble  its  own  to.  /,  loving  Freedom  8 
They  were  not  slaves  that  n's  mislead,  Nor 

traitors  that  mislead  by  n's  !  Not  such  were  those  3 

Your  n  is  blown  on  every  wind.  The  noblest  men  5 

His  TO  is  pure,  his  fame  is  free :  They  wrought,  etc.  32 

Yet  grief  deserves  a  nobler  n :  Youtig  is  the  grief  5 

fatal     Now  idly  in  my  to  bowers,  Youth,  lapsing  i  49 

Ifation    And  the  voice  that  apes  a  to —  Immeasurable  sadness !  5 

iJature     All  to  widens  upward.  From  shape  to  shape  5 

Ev'n  then  the  force  of  to  and  high  birth  Hear  you  the  sound  63 

All  iV  is  the  womb  whence  Man  is  bom.  Hold  thou,  my  friend  2 

But  look,  for  these  are  «  too.  /  keep  no  more  16 

Teach  me,  great  N :  make  me  live.  0  leave  not  thou  2 

And  took  in  more  of  N  than  mine  own :  That  is  his  portrait  18 

which  he  compell'd  once  more  Thro'  his  own  to,  ~  „  ~  ~          28 

I  can  trust  Your  woman's  n  kind  and  true.  The  noblest  men  12 

Like  some  wise  artist,  N  gives,  'Tis  not  alone  6 

(Tho'  I  was  harsh,  my  to  is  not  so  :  To  thee  with  whom  5 

Art,  Science,  N,  everything  is  full.  Why  suffers  7 

as  pure  a  heart  As  e'er  beat  time  to  iV,  Woman  of  noble  5 

!fearer     But  tho'  the  cataract  seem  the  to  way.  Steersman  6 

iJecessity     Forethinking  its  twinfold  n.  That  is  his  portrait  49 

iTeck     and  folded  once  about  her  n,  One  was  the  Tishbite  11 

Jest    Father  will  come  to  his  babe  in  the  n.  Bright  is  the  moon  11 

I  shudder  in  my  lonely  to.  What  rustles  13 

ilew    And  ever  to  the  tale  she  tells,  Young  is  the  grief  2 

The  low  voice  of  the  glad  N  Year  Remember  you  11 
Tew-comer    bringing  To  happy  Hayti  the  n-c,       A  dark  Indian  maiden  38 

few  Year    low  voice  of  the  glad  N  Y  Remember  you  11 

light  (adj.)    The  to  gale  in  those  trees.  Hear  you  the  sound  8 
fight  (s)    then  a  to,  all  moons,  confused  The  shadows    Deep  glens  I  found  7 

Of  vapors,  and  mist,  and  to.  Far  off  in  the  dun  8 

When  the  shadow  of  n's  eternal  wings  „              13 

Dark  was  the  to,  and  loud  the  roar  Of  wind  „              33 

No  taper's  light  look'd  out  on  the  to,  ..              45 

Far  away  thro'  the  to  ran  the  lengthen'd  tones  :  „              90 

away  By  to,  into  the  deeper  to  !     The  deeper  n  ?  Gone  into  darkness  3 
T*  n   roViof  ViQiTon  tjM'l  fn  Via  I    Whal,  life.  SO  maim'd 


If  TO,  what  barren  toil  to  be  !    What  life,  so  maim'd 


by  TO,  were  worth  Our  living  out  ? 
'Tis  a  clear  to,  they  will  be  here  anon. 
The  TO  with  sudden  odour  reel'd. 
The  TO  is  black  and  still ;  the  deer  Bleat 
The  image  of  the  moon  by  to 
A  voice,  when  to  had  crept  on  high, 
ightingale    The  to  in  leafy  woods  Call 
ae    beside  the  flow  Of  sacred  N, 


Hear  you  the  sound  6 

The  night,  etc.  1 

What  rustles  3 

Youth,  lapsing  i  8 

17 

Remember  you  12 

Here,  I  that  stood  4 


Oak    {See  also  Oak-tree)    this  long  avenue  Of  thick 

dark  o's.  Hear  you  the  sound  11 

leafless  o  Which  towers  above  the  lake  „               32 

Oak-tree    o-t  never  should  be  planted  „                16 

Object    ache  For  common  o's  that  would  keep  How  strange  it  is  4 

Observing    light  of  hazel  eyes,  0  all  things.  That  is  his  portrait  14 

Occident    Far  off  in  the  dim,  dark  o,  Far  off  in  the  dun  1 

Odour    The  night  with  sudden  o  reel'd.  The  night,  etc.  1 

Office     I  must  unto  mine  0.  Half  after  midnight!  20 

Offspring    I  and  my  son's  son  and  our  o.  Hear  you  the  sound  24 

Their  o  of  this  union.  Old  ghosts  8 
Old    When  there  stood  a  dark  coach  at  an  o  Inn  door  Far  off  in  the  dun  35 

The  grim  o  coachee  strode  to  the  box,  „             87 

Coeval  with  the  battlemented  towers  Of  my  o 

ancestors  !  Hear  you  the  sound  13 

Wore  the  pale  cast  of  thought,  a  good  o  man,  Methought  I  saw  2 

0  ghosts  whose  day  was  done  ere  mine  began.  Old  ghosts  1 
And  on  me  Frown  not,  o  ghosts,  „        9 

1  stepp'd  upon  the  0  mill  bridge  ?  Remember  you  4 
O'er  the  bow'd  shoulder  of  a  bland  o  Age,  The 

face  of  placid  Death.'  That  is  his  portrait  36 

Townsmen,  or  of  the  hamlet,  young  or  0,  Townsmen,  etc.  1 

He  chanted  some  0  doleful  rhyme.  Youth,  lapsing  i  36 

Still  humming  snatches  of  0  song,  „             38 

Older    When  I  was  somewhat  0  ^wn  „             21 

Olympias    One  was  0  :  the  floating  snake  One  was  the  Tishbite  9 

One  (adj.)     As  when  he  stood  on  Carmel-steeps  With 

0  arm  stretch'd  out  bare,  „                3 

Parts  in  two  channels,  moving  to  0  end —  Steersman  3 

Thro'  o  whole  life  an  overflowing  urn.  That  is  his  portrait  50 

Or  sleep  thro'  0  brief  dream  upon  the  grass, —  Townsmen,  etc.  4 

O  only  joy  I  know,  the  joy  of  life.  Why  suffers  14 

Now  0  taint  line  of  light  doth  glow,  Youth,  lapsing  ii  9 

One  (pron.  and  s)    Sleep,  my  little  0,  sleep  !  Bright  is  the  moon  3 

Sleep,  my  pretty  0,  sleep !  „             lo 

0  was  the  Tishbite  whom  the  raven  fed,  One  loas  the  Tishbite  1 

O  was  Olympias :  the  floating  snake  „               9 

The  lasses  and  the  little  o's.  Jack  Tars,  They  say,  etc.  15 

Only    One  0  joy  I  know,  the  joj[  of  life.  Why  suffers  14 

Open    Look  he  smiles,  and  o's  his  hands,  Bright  is  the  moon  4 

Sdd,  '  0,  Rosebud,  o,  yield  Thy  fragrant  soul.'  The  night,  etc.  5 

Optic    And  as  with  0  glasses  her  keen  eyes  Pierced  Hither,  whm  ail  3 
Orange    Wantoning  in  0  groves  Naked,                     A  dark  Indian  maiden  6 

Orb    An  0  repulsive  of  all  hate,  Young  is  the  grief  14 

Orbit    But  as  Earth  her  0  runs,  Little  Aubrey  3 

Orion    field  of  drifted  light  In  mid  0,  Hither,  when  all  11 

Osier'd    Streaming  thro'  his  0  aits !  Vicar  of  this  20 

Other    Henceforward  no  o  strife —  Frenchman,  etc.  6 

Which  speak  of  us  to  0  centuries,  Hear  you  the  sound  27 

Outer    Howhng  in  0  darkness.'  Beauty,  Good,  etc.  5 

Overdealt    praise  Is  neither  0  nor  idly  won.  That  is  his  portrait  43 

4d 


Overdrawn 


1154 


Fop-gun 


Orefdrawn    delicately  o  With  the  first  twilight 
Overflow    as  never  o  s  With  flush  of  rain, 
Overflowing    As  my  own  soul  is  full,  to  o — 

Thro'  one  whole  life  an  o  um, 
Overbaste    lest  o  Should  fire  the  many  wheels 
Overthrew    Slew  them  and  o. 
Owl    While  I  live,  the  o's ! 
Own    Whence  your  o  citizens,  for  their  o  renown, 


Thy  soul  is  like  3 

Not  to  Silence  19 

Why  suffers  8 

That  is  his  portrait  50 

They  wrought,  etc.  23 

Bold  Havelock  8 

While  I  live  1 

Here,  I  that  stood  7 


Lured  by  the  cuckoo-voice  that  loves  To  babble  its 

o  name.  A  loving  Freedom  8 

Yet  her  o  deep  soul  says  nay :  The  lamps  were  bright  24 

which  he  compell'd  once  more  Thro'  his  o  nature,  That  is  his  portrait  28 
When  thine  o  spirit  was  at  strife  With  thine  o 

spirit.  Thou  may'st  remember  2 

As  my  0  soul  is  full,  to  overflowing —  Why  suffers  8 

Owning    o  more  Discourse,  more  widely  wise.'  From  shape  to  shape  7 


Pain    Something  of  p — of  bliss — of  Love,  'Tis  not  alone  11 

Painted    filthiest  of  all  paintings  p  well  Is  mightier 

than  the  purest  p  ill ! '    Yes,  mightier  than 

the  purest  p  well,  Art  for  Art's  sake/ 3 

That  is  his  portrait  p  by  himself.  That  is  his  portrait  1 

Painting    filtliiest  of  all  p's  painted  well  Art  for  Art's  sake.'  3 

Pale     His  brow  is  clammy  and  p.  Far  off  in  the  dun  28 

They  lifted  their  eyes  to  the  dead,  p  skies,  „  61 

Methought  I  saw  a  face  whose  every  line  Wore  the  p 

cast  of  thought,  Methought  I  saw  2 

Pall    the  p  of  the  sky  Leave  never  an  inch  Far  off  in  the  dun  21 

Palm  (a  tree)     Breezes  from  the  p  and  canna  A  dark  Indian  maiden  14 

Waving  a  p  branch,  wondering,  „  51 

Palm  (of  the  hand)     As  each  put  a  farthing  into  his  p.  Far  off  in  the  dun  79 
Palmy    All  day  long  with  laughing  eyes.  Dancing 

by  a  p  bay,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  18 

Pamper    See  Pap-meat-pamper 

Pamper'd    his  little  eyes  Are  swallow'd  in  his  p  cheeks.  Yon  huddled  cloud  12 
Pstndemonium     There  is  a  clock  in  P,  Half  after  midnight  f  5 

Papao     Beneath  the  p  tree  !  A  dark  Indian  maiden  33 

Pap-meat-pamper     But  p-m-p  not  the  time  Wherever  evil  4 

Paradise  (adj.)     those  are  the  lights  of  the  P  coach,    Far  off  in  the  dun  107 
Paradise  (s)    In  the  wooded  p.  The  cedar-wooded  p  A  dark  Indian  maiden  19 


Parish    P  feud,  or  party  strife. 
Park    deer  Bleat  as  with  human  voices  in  the  p. 
Part    river  here,  my  friend,  P's  in  two  channels. 
Party  (adj.)     Parish  feud,  or  p  strife. 

Party  (s)    and  the  d 1  take  the  parties  ! 

Party-rage    Contends,  despising  p-r, 

Pass'd    See  Past 

Passion-wrought    111  fares  a  people  p-w. 

Past  (adj.)     things  of  p  days  with  their  horrible  eyes 

Her  thoughts  have  found  their  wings  In  the 
dreaming  of  p  things : 
Past  (s)    These  hills  were  plains  within  the  p, 

In  thy  beginnings  in  the  p. 

And  how  all  things  become  the  y. 
Past-Pass'd  (verb)    They  pass'd  (an  mner  spirit  fed 
Their  ever-burning  fires,) 

past,  in  sleep,  away  By  night, 

And  past  her  for  the  Proctor. 
Path    who  sees  His  p  before  him  ? 
Patrio^martyrs    Freedom  claims  As  p-m  of  her  creed 
Pause  (s)     And  in  the  p's  groans  of  men. 
Paoae  (verb)    not  p  At  the  strife  of  the  shadowy 
wheels, 

brief  dream  upon  the  grass, — P  here. 
Pansing    So  p  'twixt  the  East  and  West, 
Peacefol    Tempers  the  v  light  of  hazel  eyes, 
Peak     A  mountain  bright  with  triple  p's : 
Peal  (g)    See  Thunder-peal 
Peal  (vrab)    The  second  voice  will  p  again. 
Peal'd    The  southern  stars  a  music  p, 


Vicar  of  this  8 

What  rustles  4 

Steersman  3 

Vicar  of  this  8 

They  say,  etc.  10 

They  wrought,  etc.  46 

They  wrought,  etc.  25 
Far  off  in  the  dun  19 

The  lamps  were  bright  22 

Well,  as  to  Fame  6 

Young  is  the  grief  11 

Youth,  lapsing  i  28 

Far  off  in  the  dvM  117 

Gone  into  darkness  2 

Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  4 

They  wrought,  etc.  11 

Not  such  were  those  2 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  24 

Far  off  in  the  dim  93 

Townsmen,  etc.  5 

Youth,  lapsing  i  47 

That  is  his  portrait  13 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  48 

Youth,  lapsing  i  56 
The  night,  etc.  2 


Peal'd  (continued)     The  latest  thunder-peal  hath  p. 
Pearl    True  P  of  our  poetic  prime  ! 
Pendulum    The  slow  vibrations  of  whose  p, 
People    And  fuse  the  p's  into  one. 

That  the  voice  of  a  satisfied  p 

Did  the  p  dance  and  play, 

111  fares  a  p  passion-wrought. 

Convoys  the  p's  wish,  is  great ; 
Perfect    (See  also  All-perfect)     '  And  thro'  all  phases 

of  all  thought  I  come  Unto  the  p  man.  From  shape  to  shape  4 

More  complex  is  more  p,  owning  more  Discourse,  „  7 

One  was  the  Tishbite  12 


Youth,  lapsing  ii  30 

We  lost  you  2 

Half  after  midnight !  7 

Are  those  the  far-famed  16 

That  the  voice  1 

The  lamps  were  bright  36 

They  wrought,  etc.  25 

31 


Her  p  lips  to  taste. 
Perfume    chapel's  vaulted  gloom  Was  misted 

with  p. 
Perish    and  our  offspring,  all  Shall  p, 

speak  of  us  to  other  centuries,  Shall  p  also. 
Perplex     But  questions  that  p  us  now — 

Never  tithe  unpaid  p  you. 
Phantom    Mix'd  with  the  p  of  his  coming  fame, 
Pharaoh    A  P,  kingliest  of  his  kingly  race. 
Phase    thro'  all  p's  of  all  thought  I  come 
Pierced    eyes  P  thro'  the  mystic  dome, 

Often  shallow,  p  with  light, 
Piercing    P  the  wrung  ears  of  the  damn'd 
Pile    Would  I  could  p  fresh  life  on  life. 
Place  (s)    (See  also  Chamel-place)    She  led  them 

down  the  pleasant  p's,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  62 

shaped,  and  carved,  and  set  me  in  my  p.  Here,  I  that  stood  4 

And  in  the  world  the  noblest  p.  The  noblest  men  3 

Place  (verb)     joy'd  to  p  me  on  The  hollow-stemm'd    Hear  you  the  sound  31 
Placid    O'er  the  bow'd  shoulder  of  a  bland  Old  Age, 

The  face  of  p  Death.'  That  is  his  portrait  37 

Plain     Anacaona,  Dancing  on  the  blossomy  p  A  dark  Indian  maiden  29 

summer  p's  with  their  shining  leaves,  Far  off  in  the  dun  69 

These  hills  were  p's  within  the  past.  There  will  be 


The  lamps  were  bright  8 

Hear  you  the  sound  25 

28 

He  was  too  good  6 

Vicar  of  this  7 

That  is  his  portrait  32 

Here,  I  that  stood  3 

From  shape  to  shape  3 

Hither,  when  all  4 

Not  to  Silence  21 

Half  after  midnight !  10 

Why  suffers  5 


Well,  as  to  Fame  6 

Youth,  lapsing  i  54 

ii  39 

They  wrought,  etc.  42 

Hear  you  the  sound  16 

Vicar  of  this  13 

Youth,  lapsing  i  5 

Along  this  glimmering  2 

Not  to  Silence  31 

The  lamps  were  bright  36 

A  dark  Indian  maiden  31 

62 

Far  off  in  the  dun  63 

109 

Townsmen,  etc.  7 


p's  again,  and  we. 

And  I  must  traverse  yonder  p : 

The  casements  sparkle  on  the  p, 
Plan    That  contemplate  a  mighty  p. 
Planted    oak-tree  never  should  be  p  But  near 
Play  (s)     And  your  three  young  things  at  p. 

Her  silver  eddies  in  their  p  Drove  into  lines 
Play  (verb)     A  child  she  loved  to  p ; 

Where  the  doubtful  shadows  p. 

Did  the  people  dance  and  p. 
Playing    P  with  the  scarlet  crane. 
Pleasant    She  led  them  down  the  p  places. 

They  saw  the  green  verge  of  the  p  earth. 

With  p  hymns  they  soothe  the  air  Of  death, 

Are  p  from  the  early  Spring  to  when. 

Vicar  of  this  p  spot  Where  it  was  my  chance  to  marry.     Vicar  of  this  1 
Please    The  despots  over  yonder,  let  'em  do  whate'er  they  p  !  They  say,  etc.  16 

All  things  p  you,  nothing  vex  you,  Vicar  of  this  9 

Pledge     Then  p  we  our  glorious  dead,  Frenchman,  etc.  9 

Plot  (s)     I  hate  the  trim-set  p's  of  art ! '  /  keep  no  more  14 

Plot  (verb)     and  they  p  against  us  yonder.  They  say,  etc.  8 

Plough    loom  or  p  To  weigh  them  as  they  should  He  was  too  good  7 

Pluck     To  p  the  sanction  of  a  God.  „  12 

Poesy    when  P  shall  bind  Falsehood  beneath  0  God,  make  this  age  7 

Poet     I  know  it  as  a  p,  (repeat)  Immeasurable  sadness!  2,  8 

Little  p,  hear  the  little  p's  epigram !  Little  Aubrey  7 

'  You're  no  P ' — the  critics  cried  !     '  Why  ? '  said 

the  P.     '  You're  unpopular  ! '  Popular,  Popular  2 

'  You're  no  P  ! '     '  Why  ?  ' — '  You're  popular ! '  „  5 

Poetic    True  Pearl  of  our  p  prime  !  We  lost  you  2 

Pointing    P  to  the  unheeded  lapse  of  hours.  Half  after  midnight!  2 

Poised    there  Hovering,  thoughtful,  p  in  air. 
Pole     thunderings  Shakes  all  the  starless  p. 

She  saw  the  snowy  p's  and  Moons  of  Mars, 
Polling     The  humours  of  the  p  and  the  wake, 

Pomp     ye  still  shall  flourish  In  your  high  p  of  shade,   Hear  you  the  sound  29 
Poor     A  clearer  day  Than  our  p  twilight  dawn  on 

earth —  Gone  into  darkness  5 

P  devils,  babble  '  we  shall  last.'  Well,  as  to  Fame  8 

Pop-gun    P-g,  Popular  and  Unpopular !  Popular,  Popular  6 


Not  to  Silence  12 

Far  off  in  the  dun  16 

Hither,  when  all  9 

That  is  his  portrait  20 


Popular 


1155 


Reticence 


Popular    P,  P,  Unpopular  !  Popular,  Popular  1 
'  You're  no  Poet ! '     '  Why  ?  ' — '  You're  p  ! '  Pop- 
gun, P  and  Unpopular !  ,,               5 
Port     Gives  stouter  ale  and  riper  p  Yon  huddled  cloud  7 
Portrait    That  is  his  p  painted  by  himself.  That  is  his  portrait  1 
Pour'd    P  by  long  glades  and  meadowy  mounds,  Youth,  lapsing  i  2 
Pouring     From  the  clear  marble  p  glorious  scorn,  One  was  the  Tishhite  7 
}  Power     Is  this  blind  flight  the  winged  P's.  Are  those  the  far-famed  4 
bum  With  p  and  promise  high,  Far  off  in  the  dun  30 
hour  Of  darkest  doubt,  and  in  his  p,  He  was  too  good  3 
With  some  half-consciousness  of  inward  p.  That  is  his  portrait  8 
They  say  some  foreign  p's  have  laid  They  say,  etc.  1 
Led  silently  by  p  divine,  Thou  may'st  remember  9 
Practised    ills  himself  had  p  on  another,  A  surface  rnan  5 
Praise     that  we  may  be  As  giants  in  Thy  p  !  0  God,  make  this  age  2 
his  p  Is  neither  overdealt,  nor  idly  won.  That  is  his  portrait  42 
I  could  burst  into  a  psalm  of  p,  Why  suffers  2 
Pray     And  he  p's  that  you  may  live.  Little  Aubrey  3 
with  thee.  Mother,  taught  us  first  to  p,  Remembering  him  2 
'  Now,  tell  me,  mother,  p,  The  lamps  were  bright  9 
Prayer     your  golden  bridal  day  The  Book  of  P.  Remembering  him  4 
Preach    To  p  the  freedom  of  despair,  He  was  too  good  10 
Precedent    A  p  of  larger  scope,  They  wrought,  etc.  38 
Precipitate     be  not  p  in  thine  act  Of  steering.  Steersman  1 
Present     I  found  the  P  where  I  stay :  Youth,  lapsing  i  48 
Pretty    Sleep,  my  p  one,  sleep  !  Bright  is  the  moon  10 
Pride     That  little  garden  was  her  p.  Along  this  glimmering  5 
they  soothe  the  air  Of  death,  with  songs  of  p  :       Far  off  in  the  dun  110 
woman's  youthful  p  Of  rounded  limbs —  One  was  the  Tishbite  16 
To  break  the  p  of  Britain,  They  say,  etc.  2 
To  break  the  noble  p  of  the  Mistress  of  the  Seas.  „               4 
Up  and  save  the  p  of  the  Mistress  of  the  Seas  !  (repeat)        „  7,  11, 14 
If  you  will  save  the  p  of  the  Mistress  of  the  Seas.  „             21 
For  he,  whose  cellar  is  his  p.  Yon  huddled  cloud  6 
Priest-craft    Till  p-c  and  king-craft  sicken,  Wherever  evil  3 
Prime    True  Pearl  of  our  poetic  p  !  We  lost  you  2 
Prince    P,  whose  Father  lived  in  you.  Early-wise  2 
Print     I  will  p  an  airy  kiss  :  Not  a  whisper  12 
Proctor    We  drest  her  in  the  P's  bands,  And  past 

her  for  the  P.  Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  3 

Jauntily  sat  the  P's  cap  „                    11 

Promise     Gone  the  glorious  p ;  Faded  ev'ry  violet  2 

bum  With  power  and  p  high,  Far  off  in  the  dun  30 

Prone    So  p  are  we  toward  the  broad  way  to  Hell.        Art  for  Art' s  sake !  Q 

Prophet    Sent  thro'  my  blood  a  p  voice  Youth,  lapsing  i  10 

Prospect    range  Of  p  up  to  self-control.  Thou  may'st  remember  11 

Prosper    Live  and  p  !     Day  by  day  Vicar  of  this  11 

Prosper'd     Have  slowly  p  into  stately  flowers.  Woman  of  noble  12 

Proud     Ye  p  aristocrats  whose  lordly  shadows.  Hear  you  the  sound  21 

E'roved    rejoice  when  a  bigger  brother  has  p  How  is  it  that  men  5 

Nor  p  I  such  delight  as  he.  That  is  his  portrait  19 

I*rowess    Whom  martial  p  only  charms  ?  First  drink  a  health  26 

Psahn    I  could  burst  into  a  p  of  praise,  Why  suffers  2 

Psaltery     With  p  they  ride.  Far  off  in  the  dun  112 

Pulverised    and  threw  up  the  dust  Of  dead  men's  p  bones.  „               92 

Punier    A  Caesar  of  a  p  dynasty  Thence  haled  me  Here,  I  that  stood  5 

E»ure    Early-wise,  and  p,  and  tme.  Early-wise  1 

A  p  example  to  the  lands,  They  wrought,  etc.  2 

His  name  is  p,  his  fame  is  free :  »              32 

The  sacred  sorrows  of  as  p  a  heart  As  e'er  beat 

time  to  Natiu-e,  Woman  of  noble  4 
Purer  Thy  thought  did  scale  a  p  range  Of  prospect  Thou  may'st  remember  10 
Purest    Is  mightier  than  the  p  painted  ill ! '    Yes, 

mightier  than  the  p  painted  well,  Art  for  Art's  sake .'  4 
Purple    In  the  p  island,  Crown'd  with  garlands  of 

cinchona  -4  <^''^  Indian  maiden  25 


Queen  (continued)    The  Indian  q,  Anacaona, 

I^ancing                                                             .4  dark  Indian  maiden  28 

noblest  place.  Madam,  is  yours,  our  Q  and  Head.  The  noblest  men  4 

Here's  a  health  to  the  Q  of  the  Isles.  That  the  voice  4 

Quest    Confused,  and  ceasing  from  my  q,  Youth,  lapsing  i  45 

Question    But  q's  that  perplex  us  now—  He  was  too  good  6 

Quick    As  the  q  wheels  brush'd,  and  threw  up  the 

.    .  ^    dust  Far  off  in  the  dun  91 

Qmet    Sleep  round  those  3  lips ;  not  quite  a  smile ;  That  is  his  portrait  9 


B 


Race  near  the  dwelling  of  some  noble  r ; 
A  Pharaoh,  kingliest  of  his  kingly  r, 
are  bred  Of  ours  the  Saxo-Norman  r ; 

Rage    See  Party-rage 

Raiment    As  stars  they  shone,  in  r  white. 

Rain    The  '  Mercy  Jesu '  in  the  r ! 
With  flush  of  r,  or  molten  snows, 
I  grieved  as  woods  in  dripping  r's 
The  whole  land  glitters  after  r. 

Rainbow    Out  bursts  a  r  in  the  sky — 

Raise    Not  to  her  would  r  a  shrine : 

r  up  Mind,  Whose  trumpet-tongued. 

Ran    thro'  the  night  r  the  lengthened  tones : 
As  the  coach  r  on,  and  the  sallow  lights 
My  Spanish  blood  r  proudly  in  my  veins. 
All  the  men  r  from  her  (repeat) 


Hear  you  the  sound  17 

Here,  I  that  stood  3 

The  noblest  men  2 

Far  off  in  the  dun  131 

/  keep  no  more  11 

Not  to  Silence  20 

Youth,  lapsing  i  31 

tt37 

33 

Not  to  Silence  3 

O  God,  make  this  age  2 

Far  off  in  the  dun  90 

99 

Hear  you  the  sound  45 

Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  5,  7 


Quarrel    We  q  here  at  home,  and  they  plot 
Quarry    In  the  Vicarage  by  the  q. 
Queen    (See  also  Mother-Queen)    Fann'd  this  q  of 
the  green  wildwood, 


They  say,  etc.  8 
Vicar  of  this  4 

A  dark  Indian  maiden  15 


a  voice  r  round  the  hills  When  corny  Lammas  Youth,  lapsing  i  15 

Rang    R  like  a  trumpet  clear  and  dry,  „              19 
Range    purer  r  Of  prospect  up  to  self-control.         Thou  may'st  remember  10 

Rave    damps  That  through  that  region  r,  Far  off  in  the  ditn  114 

Raven    One  was  the  Tishbite  whom  the  r  fed,  One  was  the  Tishbite  1 

Ray     Where  his  gilding  r  is  never  sent.  Far  off  in  the  dun  3 

Ray'd     R  round  with  beams  of  living  light.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  52 

Reaching    Further  and  further  r  hands  They  wrought,  etc.  3 

Realm    Fair  with  green  fields  the  r's  of  Love.  Yovih,  lapsing  ii  36 

Reason    With  r  cloister'd  in  the  brain  :  Young  is  the  grief  4 

Reck    I  r  not  for  the  sorrow  or  the  strife :  Why  suffers  13 
Red    His  sockets  were  eyeless,  but  in  them  slept  A 

r  infernal  glow  ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  82 

Is  thy  mad  brain  drunk  with  the  merry,  r  wine.  Full  light  aloft  7 

Reel    His  heart  throbs  thick,  his  brain  r's  sick  :  Far  off  in  the  dun  27 

Reel'd    The  night  with  sudden  odour  r.  The  night,  etc.  1 

Region    A  r  void  of  light,  Far  off  in  the  dun  6 

unwholesome  damps  That  through  that  r  rove,  „            114 

R's  of  lucid  matter  taking  forms.  Hither,  when  all  6 

Rejoice    r  when  a  bigger  brother  has  proved  How  is  it  that  men  5 

And  where  the  secret  streams  r.  Youth,  lapsing  i  13 

Remain     '  0  let  the  simple  slab  r !  /  keep  no  more  10 
Remember    Thou  dost  r,  Michael,  How,  when  a 

boy.  Hear  you  the  sound  30 

Ii  you  the  clear  moonlight  That  whiten'd  Remember  you  1 

Thou  may'st  r  what  I  said  Thou  may'st  remember  1 

Remembering    R  all  the  golden  hours  Now  silent,  Gone  into  darkness  9 

R  him  who  waits  thee  far  away.  Remembering  him  1 

Removed    We  come  from  apes — and  are  far  r —  How  is  it  that  men  4 
Renewed    Methinks  I  see  the  world's  r  youth  A 

long  day's  dawn,  0  God,  make  this  age  6 
Renown    Whence  your  own  citizen's,  for  their 

own  r.  Here,  I  that  stood  7 

Repair    to  r  With  seasonable  changes  fair  They  wrought,  etc.  34 
Repeat     And  I  say  it,  and  r  it,                                   Immeasurable  sadness!  10 

Reproach     Become  a  tacit  eloquent  r  Half  after  midnight.'  3 

Repulsive    An  orb  r  of  all  hate.  Young  is  the  grief  14 

Require    r  A  precedent  of  larger  scope,  They  wrought,  etc  37 

Reset    and  you  gleam  r  In  Britain's  lyric  coronet.  We  lost  you  3 

Resort    This  tavern  is  their  chief  r,  Yon  huddled  chud  5 

Rest  (s)     Every  heart  is  lain  to  r,  Not  a  whisper  5 

Rest  (verb)     That  r's  by  the  Alma  River.  Frenchman,  etc.  12 

Now  shall  I  r  or  shall  I  rise  ?  Youth,  lapsing  ii  5 

Reticence    Her  half  sister,  R.  Not  to  Silence  6 


Retire 


1156 


Seasonable 


Betiie    As  he  r's  into  himself  and  is :  Old  ghosts  6 

Betom    to  r  with  thee  Some  happy  Summer  momins;,       Woman  of  noble  8 

Revel  (s)     But  the  r  still  goes  on.  The  lamps  were  bright  40 

Revel  (verb)     '  They  r  as  they  may,' 

Revelling    no  r  tones  Of  carouse  were  heard  withm 

Revere    They  wrought  a  work  which  Time  r's, 

Revolve    And  see  and  hear  the  world  r : 

Rhyme     Break  thro'  with  the  hammer  of  iron  r, 

He  chanted  some  old  doleful  r. 
Rhyme-hammer    Thy  r-h  shall  have  honour. 
Rich    And  r  was  their  attire : 
Ricketty     But  the  r  blast  runs  shrilly  and  fast 
Ride    That  r  to  death  the  griefs  of  men  ? 

With  psaltery  they  r. 
Ridge    moonlight  That  whiten'd  all  the  eastern  r, 


Right    Finger-lipt,  but  with  r  hand  Moving  toward  her 


17 

Far  off  in  the  dun  41 

They  wrought,  etc.  1 

Youth,  lapsing  i  52 

Wherever  evil  2 

Youth,  lapsing  i  36 

Wherever  evil  9 

Far  off  in  the  dun  126 

11 

Are  those  the  far-famed  2 

Far  off  in  the  dun  112 

Remember  you  2 


lip. 

To  left  or  r  but  falling  floods. 

And  the  guard  gasp'd  out '  All's  r.' 
Rill    I  heard  Spring  laugh  in  hidden  r's, 
Ripening    See  Slow-ripening 
Riper    when  your  age  had  somewhat  r  grown, 

Gives  stouter  ale  and  r  port  Than  any  in  the 
country-side. 
Ripple    lake  that  r's  out  In  the  clear  moonshine. 
Rippling    rivulet,  R  by  cressy  isles  or  bars  of  sand, 
Rise  (s)    See  Morning-rise 
Rise  (verb)    These  whispers  r,  and  fall  away. 

The  montlis,  ere  they  began  to  r. 

Now  shall  I  rest  or  shall  I  r  ? 
Rising    At  the  r  of  the  sun. 
River    I  would  have  a  r  run. 

Partly  r,  partly  brook, 

the  r  here,  my  friend,  Parts  in  two  channels, 

He  loved  the  r's  roaring  sound ; 

The  r  rose  and  burst  his  boimd, 

Thro'  wooded  isles  the  r  shines. 

At  the  battle  of  Alma  R. 

That  rests  by  the  Alma  R. 
Rivulet    r,  Kippiing  by  cressy  isles  or  bars  of  sand, 
Road     The  middle  r  of  sober  thought ! 
Roam    Where'er  you  r  from,  would  you  waste  an 

hour, 
Roar    loud  the  r  Of  wind  and  mingled  shower, 

And  heard  the  r  of  her  seas. 
Roaring    monstrous  rocks  from  craggy  snouts 
Disploding  globes  of  r  fire. 

He  loved  the  river's  r  soimd ; 
Rock    monstrous  r's  from  craggy  snouts 
Rod    While  walking  with  my  r  and  line, 
Roll'd    floating  snake  R  round  her  ankles, 
Rolling    In  the  vast  Of  the  r  of  the  aeons. 
Rook    Were  idler  than  a  flight  of  r's. 
Room    We  may  glide  from  r  to  r, 
Rose  (s)     Faded  ev'ry  violet,  all  the  r's ; 

Watch  your  standard  r's  blowing, 
Rose  (verb)    The  walls  of  lava  r. 

How  every  brake  and  flower  spread  and  r, 

The  river  r  and  burst  his  bound. 
Rosebud    R,  open,  yield  Thy  fragrant  soul.' 
Rose-Upp'd    And  the  laugh  of  their  t-1  boys. 
Rounded    mingled  with  The  woman's  youthful 

pride  Of  r  limbs — 
Roundelay    she  said  her  say — This  was  her  r — 
Rumour     A  r  of  a  mystery, 
Ron    And  his  hot  steeds  never  r : 

the  ricketty  blast  r's  shrilly  and  fast 

Methinks  my  tongue  r's  twenty  knots  an 

hour : 
But  as  Earth  her  orbit  r's, 
I  would  have  a  river  r. 
Rush     And  r'es  o'er  a  boundless  field. 
Rustle     What  r's  hither  in  the  dark  ? 
Rustling    The  dark  vine  leaves  round  the  r  eaves, 
Rusty    But  the  r  sign  of  a  skull  and  cross-bones 


Not  to  Silence  10 

Remember  you  16 

Far  off  in  the  dun  88 

Youth,  lapsing  i  13 

Hear  you  the  sound  54 

Yon  huddled  cloud  7 

Hear  you  the  sound  33 

Townsmen,  etc.  6 

'Tis  not  alone  10 

Youth,  lapsing  i  9 

„  ii  5 

Full  light  aloft  12 

Not  to  Silence  18 

29 

Steersman  2 

The  child  was  sitting  3 

"      .       ..    ■* 
Youth,  lapsing  ii  38 

Frenchman,  etc.  4 

12 

Townsmen,  etc.  5 

They  wrought,  etc.  28 

Townsmen,  etc.  3 

Far  off  in  the  dun  33 

64 


Deep  glens  I  found  4 

The  child  was  sitting  3 

Deep  glens  I  found  3 

/  met  in  all  2 

One  was  the  Tishbite  10 

Little  Aubrey  6 

Are  those  the  far-famed  12 

Not  a  whisper  3 

Faded  ev'ry  violet  1 

Vicar  of  this  12 

Far  off  in  the  dun  38 

That  is  his  portrait  26 

The  child  was  sitting  4 

The  night,  etc.  6 

Far  off  in  the  dun  68 

One  was  the  Tishbite  17 

The  lamps  were  bright  30 

Youth  lapsing  ii  1 

Far  off  in  the  dun  4 

11 

Half  after  midnight !  19 

Little  Aubrey  3 

Not  to  Silence  18 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  32 

What  rustles  1 

Far  off  in  the  dun  71 

43 


S 

Sackbut     With  s,  and  with  dulcimer,  Far  off  in  the  dun  111 

Sacred     I  that  stood  in  On  beside  the  flow  Of  s  Nile, 
three  thousand  years  ago  ! — 
The  s  sorrows  of  as  pure  a  heart  As  e'er  beat  time 
to  Nature, 

At  some  s  tale  of  wrong,  and  do  the  wrong  He 
wept  for, 
and  drank  The  sweet  s  tears  of  wisdom.' 

Immeasurable*!  (repeat)  Immeasurable,  sadness!  1,  A,  W 

Said    she  i-  her  say — This  was  her  roundelay —        The  lamps  were  bright  29 
Thou  may'st  remember  what  I  s  Thou  may'st  remember  1 


Sad 


Here,  I  that  stood  3 

Woman  of  Noble  4 

A  surface  man  6 
Methought  I  saw  6 


Sail    The  white  man's  white  s,  bringing 

Silver  s's  all  out  of  the  West, 
St.  James     Ha !  hj  S  J  Mine  was  no  vulgar  mind 
Sake     Art  for  Art  s  s  ! 

They  worshipt  Freedom  for  her  s ; 
Salaam    and  he  sends  you  his  S ; 
Sallow    and  the  s  lights  shone  Dimly  and  blurly  with 

simmering  fat. 
Sanction    To  pluck  the  s  of  a  God. 
Sand    rivulet.  Rippling  by  cressy  isles  or  bars  of  s, 
Sandilands  (Kitty)    See  BMy  Sandilands 
Sat     Jauntily  s  the  Proctor's  cap  Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  11 

Satisfied    That  the  voice  of  a  s  people  may  keep  That  the  voice  1 

Savannah     Lady  of  the  green  S :  A  dark  Indian  maiden  16 

Save    Take  thou  the  '  bend,'  'twill  s  thee  many  a  day.  Steersman  8 

Up,  Jack  Tars,  and  s  us  !  (repeat)  They  say,  etc.  5, 12, 19 

Up  and  s  the  pride  of  the  Mistress  of  the  Seas  ! 

(repeat)  „  7. 11,  14 

If  you  will  s  the  pride  of  the  Mistress  of  the  Seas.  „  21 


dark  Indian  maiden  37 
Bright  is  the  moon  !£ 
Hear  you  the  sound  61  ^ 
Art  for  Art's  sake  !  J  j 
They  wrought,  etc.  <  ' 
Litth  Aubrey 

Far  off  in  the  dun  99 
He  was  too  good  12 
■   Townsmen,  etc.  6 


Saw    s  the  green  verge  of  the  pleasant  earth, 
She  s  the  snowy  poles  and  Moons  of  Mars, 
'  Methought  I  s  a  face  whose  every  line 
And  they  5  her  standing  by, 

Saxo-Norman     are  bred  Of  ours  the  S-N  race ; 


Far  off  in  the  dun  63 
Hither,  when  all  9 
Methought  I  saw  1 
The  lamps  were  bright  51 
The  noblest  men  2 


Say  (s)    she  said  her  s — This  was  her  roundelay —  The  lamps  wer.:  bright  29 


Say  (verb)    If  you  could  speak,  would  you  not  s 

And  I  s  it,  and  repeat  it. 

Who  make  you  utter  things  you  did  not  5, 

Whate'er  the  crowd  on  either  bank  may  s, 

'  More  dear '  I  will  not  s,  but  rather  bless 

That  skinny  witch  did  s. 

They  s  some  foreign  powers  have  laid 

But  what,  were  hard  to  s. 
Scale    Thy  thought  did  s  a  purer  range 
Scan     who  did  s  His  coimtenance  so  grand 
Scar     To  snowy  crofts  and  winding  s's. 
Scarlet     Playing  with  the  s  crane,  The  dragon-fly 

and  s  crane. 
Scentless     I  sit  among  the  s  flowers 
Science     Art,  S,  Nature,  everything  is  full, 
Scope    A  precedent  of  larger  s. 
Scorn    my  friend,  no  lesser  life  in  s. 

From  the  clear  marble  pouring  glorious  s. 

E'en  s  looks  beautiful  on  human  lips  ! 
Scream    shrill  s's  arise  Along  the  sunless  waste. 

Then  a  s  of  wild  dismay  Thro'  the  deep  hall 
Sea     In  the  deep  s  no  more, — 

And  heard  the  roar  of  her  s's. 


Early-wise  3 

Immeasurable  sadness  !  10 

Old  ghosts  10 

,  Steersman  7 

That  is  his  portrait  47 

The  lamps  were  bright  18 

They  say,  etc.  1 

'Tis  not  alone  12 

Thou  may'st  remember  10 

Methought  I  saw  4 

Youth,  lapsing  t  ^  S 

A  dark  Indian  maiden 
Youth,  lapsing  t 

Why  suffers  i , 
They  wrought,  etc.  38 
Hold  thou,  my  friend  1 
One  was  the  Tishbite  7  ! 
Why  suffers  4 
Far  off  in  the  dun  17 
The  lamps  were  bright  4] 
A  dark  Indian  maiden  % 
Far  off  in  the  dun  04 
Here,  I  that  stood  t 
i 
Well,  as  to  Fame  t  i 
They  say,  etc.  4  | 


Thence  haled  me  toward  the  Mediterranean  s. 

Thro'  strange  s's  drew  me  to  your  monster  town. 

This  London  once  was  middle  s. 

To  break  the  noble  pride  of  the  Mistress  of  the  S's. 

Up  and  save  the  pride  of  the  Mistress  of  the  S's  ! 
(repeat) 

God  bless  the  noble  isle  that  is  Mistress  of  the  S's  ! 

If  you  wiU  save  the  pride  of  the  Mistress  of  the  S's. 
Sea-marge     Over  the  dark  s-m  springing,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  2' 

Seasonable    To  shape,  to  settle,  to  repair  With  s 

changes  fair  Thel^  wrought,  etc.      I 


7,11,14 

le! 

2] 


Second 


1157 


Silent 


Second    Sooner  or  later  from  the  haze  The  s  voice  will 

peal  again.  Youth,  lapsing  i  56 

Secret    is  it  my  love  Coming  aloi^  the  s  ways  ?  What  rustles  6 

And  where  the  s  streams  rejoice.  Youth,  lapsing  i  12 

See    S,  The  cradle  where  she  lay  !  Along  the  glimmering  3 

And  s,  ye  dare  not  touch  the  truth,  Are  those  the  far-famed  6 

He  s's  his  father  in  distant  lands,  Bright  is  the  moon  5 

They  s  the  light  of  their  blest  firesides  Far  off  in  the  dun  65 

The  summer  hills  they  s ;  »             70 

The  crowd  have  come  to  s  thy  grave,  /  keep  no  more  2 

But  these  shall  s  it  none  the  less.  „               4 

I  laugh'd  to  s  him  as  he  stood,  7  ^  in  all  7 

S,  she  dreameth  happy  dreams,  Not  a  whisper  13 

Methinks  I  s  the  world's  renewed  youth  0  God,  make  this  age  6 

Speak  to  me,  let  me  hear  or  s  !  Speak  to  me  5 

I  s  At  the  end,  as  'twere  athwart  That  is  his  portrait  34 

I         who  s's  His  path  before  him  ?  They  wrought,  etc.  10 

Whate'er  I  s,  where'er  I  move,  'Tis  not  alone  9 

And  5  and  hear  the  world  revolve  :  Youth,  lapsing  i  52 

Seed     It  show'd  the  s's  of  irmate  dignity  Hear  you  the  sound  52 

•Seeing    He,  s  far  an  end  sublime.  They  wrought,  etc.  45 

S  the  heart  so  wondrous  in  her  ways,  Why  suffers  3 

Seeking    See  Truth-seeking 

Seem     '  I  s,  but  am  not,  far  away  ;  Early-wise  4 

Like  to  one  of  us  she  s's,  Not  a  whisper  15 

But  tho'  the  cataract  s  the  nearer  way,  Steersman  6 

.'d     I  heard,  as  I  have  s  to  hear.  Remember  you  9 

iS  I  so  cold  ?  what  madness  moved  my  blood  To  thee  with  whom  10 

Sees    I  have  s  the  four  great  empires  disappear  !  Here,  I  that  stood  9 

(f  earth  be  s  from  your  conjectured  heaven.  Old  ghosts  2 

Considering  what  mine  eyes  have  s.  Young  is  the  grief  9 

*    Seest    S  thou  my  faults  and  wilt  not  speak  ?  Speak  to  me  7 

Self-control     range  Of  prospect  up  to  s-c,  Thou  may'st  remember  11 

Send     and  he  s's  you  his  Salaam  ;  Little  Aubrey  2 

Sender    S  and  sent-to  go  to  make  up  this.  Old  gho  'ts  7 

Sense    keep  Our  awful  inner  ghostly  s  Unroused,  How  strange  it  is  5 

But  to  one  of  finer  s.  Not  to  Silence  5 

Or,  if  the  s  of  most  require  They  wrought,  etc.  37 

The  difference  of  all  things  to  the  s,  Why  suffers  10 

Sent     Where  his  gilding  ray  is  never  s.  Far  off  in  the  dun  3 

S  thro'  my  blood  a  prophet  voice  Youth,  lapsing  i  10 

Sent-to    Sender  and  s-t  go  to  make  up  this.  Old  ghosts  7 

Servant    whose  whims  were  meant  For  virtue's  s's,  A  surface  man  3 

Set    {See  also  Trim-set)    S  round  with  many  a 

toppling  spire.  Deep  glens  I  found  2 

shaped,  and  carved,  and  s  me  in  my  place.  Here,  I  that  stood  4 

Spurge  with  fairy  crescent  s.  Spurge  with  fairy  1 

Settle    To  shape,  to  s,  to  repair  They  wrought,  etc.  34 

Settled     and  what  a  s  mind.  Mature,  That  is  his  portrait  11 

Shade    ye  still  shall  flourish  In  your  high  pomp 

t            of  s,  Hear  you  the  souAid  29 

Millions  of  forms,  and  hues,  and  s's.  Why  suffers  9 

:'        Crown'd  with  soft  s  her  deepening  floods  Youth,  lapsing  i  3 

i^ttiadow    confused  The  s's  from  the  icy  heights.  Deep  glens  I  found  8 

^  I*       When  the  s  of  night's  eternal  wings  Far  off  in  the  dun  13 

Ye  proud  aristocrats  whose  lordly  s's,  Hear  you  the  sound  21 

Where  the  doubtful  s's  play,  Not  to  Silence  31 

S's  of  statesmen,  clever  men  !  They  wrought,  etc.  12 

And  s's  strike  and  s's  sink.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  15 

Away  with  s's  !     On  they  move !  »                34 

Shadow'd    See  Cocoa-shadow'd 

Shadowy    A  land  of  thin  faces  and  s  forms.  Far  off  in  the  dun  7 
As  the  shriveU'd  forms  of  the  s  grooms  Yoked  the 

skeleton  horses  to.  >>             ^° 
Whose  blood  in  its  liveliest  course  would  not  pause 

At  the  strife  of  the  s  wheels,  >»             94 

Shake     thunderings  S's  all  the  starless  pole,  »              16 

To  which  the  slight-built  hustings  s  ;  They  wrought,  etc.  8 

Shaken     They  were  s  from  the  dance.—  The  lamps  were  bright  46 

Shakespeare    Little  Homer,  little  Dante,  little  S,  Little  Aubrey  A 

Shallow    Often  s,  pierced  with  light,  ^ot  to  Silence  21 

,  Shame    The  year,  that  comes,  may  come  with  »,  /,  loving  Freedom  0 

'Tis  s  to  fail  so  far,  and  still  My  failing  shall  be  .    ,        .  ,  _ 

e             less  my  s :  Youiujis  the  grief  7 

Jbank    his  s's  were  shnmken  to  willow  wands  Far  off  in  the  dun  55 


Far  off  in  the  dun  103 

From  shave  to  shape  1 

That  is  his  portrait  4 

29 

They  wrought,  etc.  34 

Here,  I  that  stood  4 

Why  suffers  6 

Youth,  lapsing  i  39 


Shape  (s)    heads  without  bodies  and  s's  without 
heads 
Froni  s  to  s  at  first  within  the  womb 
Admire  that  stalwart  s,  those  ample  brows, 
Into  another  s,  bom  of  the  first. 
Shape  (verb)    To  s,  to  settle,  to  repair 
Shaped    s,  and  carved,  and  set  me  in  my  place. 
Sharp    and  dull  The  s  desire  of  knowledge  still  with 

knowing  ! 
Sharper    Till  suddenly  a  s  voice  Cried  in  the  future 

'  Come  along.' 
Shaven    Strange  fiery  eyes  glared  fiercely  thro'  The 

windows  of  s  bone.  Far  off  in  the  dun  48 

Sheaf    When  corny  Lammas  bound  the  sheaves :  Youth,  lapsing  i  16 

Shift    Yon  huddled  cloud  his  motion  s's,  Yon  huddud  cloud  1 

Shifting    Full  fields  of  barley  s  tearful  lights  Townsmen,  etc.  8 

Shine    Thro'  wooded  isles  the  river  s's.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  38 

Shining    The  summer  plains  with  their  s  leaves.  Far  off  in  the  dun  69 

Shook    And  s  the  frosty  winter  stars.  Youtli,  lapsing  i  20 

Shone    sallow  lights  s  Dimly  and  blurly  Far  off  in  the  dun  99 

As  stars  they  s,  in  raiment  white,  „            131 

Shore    never  more  upon  the  s  Dancing  A  dark  Indian  maiden  65 

How  glad  am  I  to  walk  With  Susan  on  the  s  !  How  glad  ami  2 

far  off  from  England's  s.  He  comes  no  more.  What  rustles  9 

That  wash'd  her  s's  with  blissful  sounds :  Youth,  lapsing  i  4 

Short    Thick  sobs  and  s  shrill  screams  arise  Along 

the  sunless  waste.  Far  off  in  the  dun  17 

and  whensoe'er  There  may  be  s  cessation  of 

their  wails.  Half  after  midnight !  12 

Shoulder    Down  from  the  s  moved  :  One  was  the  Tishbite  13 

breast  dispread  Between  low  s's  ;  That  is  his  portrait  6 

O'er  the  bow'd  s  of  a  bland  old  Age,  „             36 

Shout  (s)     Faint  s's  are  heard  across  the  glen,  Youth,  lapsing  ii  22 

Shout  (verb)    shriek  and  s  to  drown  the  thrilling 

noise.  Half  after  midnight !  16 

Show    I  will  s  to  you  Another  coimtenance,  That  is  his  portrait  44 

Show'd     It  s  the  seeds  of  innate  dignity  Hear  you  the  sound  52 

Shower  (s)     loud  the  roar  Of  wind  and  mingled  5,  Far  off  in  the  dun  34 

Shower  (verb)    *S's  in  a  whisper  o'er  the  world.  1^  ot  to  Silenee  3A 

Showing    s  every  bend  Of  each  dark  hill  Thy  soul  is  like  5 

Shriek    .s  and  shout  to  drown  the  thrilling  noise.  Half  after  midnight  /  16 
Shrill    Thick  sobs  and  short  s  screams  arise  Along  the 

sunless  waste.  Far  off  in  the  dun  17 
is  heard  The  $  and  solemn  warning  '  Ever, 

Never  ' :  Half  after  midnight !  14 

Shrine  (s)     Not  to  her  would  raise  a  < :  Not  ta  Stlenee  3 

Near  the  s,  but  half  in  sun,  „            17 

Shrine  (verb)    I  would  s  her  in  my  verse !  „             8 

ShriveU'd    As  the  s  forms  of  the  shadowy  grooms 

Yoked  the  skeleton  horses  to.  Far  off  in  the  dmm  59 

Shrunken    his  sbanLs  were  s  to  willow  wands  „              55 

Shudder    I  s  in  my  lonely  nest.  What  rustles  IS 

Shudder'd    S  with  silent  stars,  she  clomb,  Hither,  lehen  att  2 
Shut    he  that  s's  out  Love,  in  turn  shall  be  S  out 

from  Love,  Beauty,  Good,  tte.  3 

Shy    But  found  a  maiden  tender,  s.  Because  she  bore  5 

Sick    His  heart  throbs  thick,  his  brain  reels  s  :  Far  off  in  the  dun  27 

Another  whispers  s  with  loss  :  /  keep  no  more  9 

Thro'  her  worn  brain,  hot  and  5.'  The  lamps  were  bright  28 

Sicken    Till  priest-craft  and  king-craft  s,  ^        Wherever  evil  3 

Side    Deep  dells  of  snow  sunk  on  each  s  Far  off  in  the  dun  97 

on  every  s  The  dragon's  curves  melted,  Otu  was  the  Tishbite  14 

Sigh  (s)    And  mingle  k^ses,  tears,  and  s's.  Life  of  the  Life  6 

Sigh  (verb)    S  over  all  their  fallen  leaves  ;  Youih,  lapsi$ig  i  32 

Sight    The  tears  bedimm'd  their  s  :  Far  off  in  the  dun  86 

Till  heart  and  s  and  hearing  ache  How  strange  it  is  3 

Often  deep  beyond  the  *,  Not  to  Silence  22 

Sign    rusty  «  of  a  skull  and  cross-bones  Far  off  in  Ote  dun  43 

Silence    Not  to  S  would  I  build  A  temple  Not  to  Silence  1 

Not  like  S  shall  she  stand,  „             9 

Silent    Floated  in  the  s  summer :  A  dark  Indian  maiden  40 

Kemembering  all  the  golden  hours  Now  s.  Gone  into  darkness  10 

Shudder'd  with  j  stars,  she  clomb,  Hither,  when  aU  2 

The  s  hiUs,  the  stormy  floods,  'Tu  not  alone  3 

Thames  along  the  s  level.  Vicar  of  this  19 


Silent 


1158 


Spanish 


Silent  (continued)    take  with  thee  Our  warmest  wishes,  « 

Guardians  But  true  till  death  ;  Woman  of  noble  6 
Silver    S  sails  all  out  of  the  West,  Under  the  s 

moon,  Bright  is  the  moon  12 

With  a  s  sound  the  wheels  went  round.  Far  off  in  the  dun  121 
In  many  a  s  loop  and  link  Variously  from  its  far 

spring,                                                   _  Not  to  Silence  26 
Her  s  eddies  in  their  play  Drove  into  lines  and 

studs  of  light  Youth,  lapsing  i  5 
Siminering    sallow  lights  shone  Dimly  and  blurly 

■with  s  fat.  Far  off  in  the  dun  100 
Simple    Those  holly-thickets  only  hide  Her  grave — 

a  s  stone  !  Along  this  glimmering  8 

'  O  let  the  s  slab  remain  !  /  keep  no  more  10 

Simpler    Evermore  The  «  essence  lower  lies.  From  shape  to  shape  6 

Sin     And  free  from  taint  of  s.                         _  Far  off  in  the  dun  132 

Singest    That  thou  s  with  main  and  with  might  ?  Full  light  aloft  6 

Singing    The  wanton  wind  came  s  lustily  Hear  you  the  sound  41 

Single    knows  That  none  can  truly  write  his  s  day,  Old  gliosis  13 

Sink     And  shadows  strike  and  shadows  s,  Youth,  lapsing  ii  15 

Sister     Beauty,  Good  and  Knowledge  are  three  s's  .  .  .  Beauty,  Good,  etc.  1 

S's,l  could  almost  weep  !  Not  a  whisper  8 

Her  half  s.  Reticence.  Not  to  Silence  6 

Sit    You'd  s  there  From  dawn  till  sunset  Hear  you  the  sound  38 

will  not  let  an  honest  Briton  s  at  home  at  ease  :               They  say,  etc.  9 

I  s  amon^  the  scentless  flowers  Youth,  lapsing  i  51 

And  there  s  figures  as  of  Gods  „              H  51 

Sitting    The  child  was  s  on  the  bank  The  child  was  sitting  1 

Skeleton    As  the  shrivell'd  forms  of  the  shadowy 

grooms  Yoked  the  s  horses  to.  Far  off  in  the  dun  60 

Skin    The  s  hung  lax  on  his  long  thin  hands  ;  „                 53 
Skinny    '  They  revel  as  they  may,'  That  s  witch 

did  say,  The  lamps  were  bright  18 

Skull  and  Cross-bones  (Inn  sign)    rusty  sign  of  a 

s  a  C'h  Far  off  in  the  dun  43 

Sky    the  pall  of  the  s  Leave  never  an  inch  of  blue  ;  „              21 

Strange  beauties  from  the  s.  „              32 

lifted  their  eyes  to  the  dead,  pale  skies,  „              61 

when  all  the  deep  xmsounded  skies  Hither,  when  all  1 

And  softly  blow  the  balmy  skies ;  Life  of  the  Life  4 

Speak  to  me  from  the  stormy  s  !  Speak  to  me  1 

Tne  starr'd  abysses  of  the  s,  '  Tis  not  alone  2 

Out  bursts  a  rainbow  in  the  s —  Youth,  lapsing  ii  33 

Slab     '  0  let  the  simple  s  remain  !  /  keep  no  more  10 

Slave     heart  of  his  Hard,  and  the  s  of  vice ;  A  surface  man  4 

They  were  not  s's  that  names  mislead.  Not  such  were  those  3 

Slay     Whom  the  wedded  wife  did  s,  The  lamps  were  bright  48 

Sleek    or  the  snug  brick  box  Of  some  s  citizen.  Hear  you  the  iound  20 

Sleep  (S)     past,  in  s,  away  By  night.  Gone  into  darkness  2 

All  the  house  is  fast  in  s.  Not  a  whisper  6 

Sleep  (verb)     8,  my  little  one,  s  !  Bright  is  the  moon  3 

kisses  him  there  in  a  dream,  S,  s.  „                ^ 

S,  my  pretty  one,  s !  „              10 

Under  the  silver  moon,  S,  si  „              14 

To  watch  and  wake  while  others  s.  How  strange  it  is  2 

In  that  cradle  s's  my  child,  Not  a  whisper  9 

mock'd  and  said, '  Come,  cry  aloud,  he  s's.'  One  was  the  Tishbite  4 

S's  round  those  quiet  hps  ;  not  quite  a  smile  ;  That  is  his  portrait  9 

Or  s  thro'  one  brief  dream  upon  the  grass, —  Townsmen,  etc.  4 

'  Come  '  and  I  come,  no  more  I  s :  Youth,  lapsing  ii  25 

Sleepy    Sununer  thro'  all  her  s  leaves  Murmur'd :  „           *  14 

Slender    I  clasp  her  s  waist.  We  kiss,  we  are  so  fond,  How  glad  am  I  5 

Slept    in  them  s  A  red  infernal  glow ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  81 

Slew    S  them  and  overthrew.  Bold  Havelock  8 

SUght-boilt    To  which  the  s-b  hustings  shake ;  They  wrought,  etc.  8 

Slightest    Down  to  his  s  turns  and  attitudes —  That  is  his  portrait  24 

Slime     Cemented  with  the  burning  s  Far  off  in  the  dun  39 

Slip    Her  garment  s's,  the  left  hand  holds  Not  to  Silence  13 

Sloe    Than  if  the  vine  had  borne  the  bitter  s.  To  thee  with  whom  4 

Slow     The  s  vibrations  of  whose  pendulimi.  Half  after  midnight !  7 

Slow-ripening    <S-r  to  the  grace  of  womanhood,  To-thee  with  whom  13 

Slumber    S  not  now,  gird  up  thy  loins  for  fight,  0  God,  make  this  age  10 

Slumbrous     Bathing  in  the  s  coves,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  7 

Small    S  thanks  or  credit  shall  I  have,  I  keep  no  more  3 

Smile  (8)     how  demure  a  s,  How  full  That  is  his  portrait  6 


Smile  (s)  {continued)    Sleeps  round  those  quiet  lips  ; 

not  quite  a  s  ;  That  is  his  portrait  9 

Smile  (verb)     Look  he  s's,  and  opens  his  hands.  Bright  is  the  moon  4 

Smiled     And  they  s  on  Anacaona,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  58 

this  one  s,  that  other  waved  his  arms.  That  is  his  portrait  22 

Smooth    S  as  Thames  below  your  gates.  Vicar  of  this  18 

Snake     floating  s  RoU'd  round  her  ankles.  One  was  the  Tishbite  9 

Snatch    Still  humming  s'es  of  old  song,  Youth,  lapsing  i  38 

Snout    monstrous  rocks  from  craggy  s's  Deep  glens  I  found  3 

Snow    {See  also  Summer-snow)    Deep  dells  of  s  sunk 

on  each  side 
With  flush  of  rain,  or  molten  s's, 
Snowy    She  saw  the  s  poles  and  Moons  of  Mars, 

To  s  crofts  and  winding  scars. 
Snug    or  the  s  brick  box  Of  some  sleek  citizen. 
Sob     Thick  s's  and  short  shrill  screams 
Sober    when  each  one  leaves  The  middle  road  of  s 

thought ! 
Social    A  noise  of  hands  that  disarrange  The  s 

engine  ! 
Socket    His  s's  were  eyeless,  but  in  them  slept  A 

red  infernal  glow ; 
Soft    Crown'd  with  s  shade  her  deepening  floods 
Solemn    When  there  stood  a  dark  coach  at  an  old 

Inn  door  At  the  s  midnight  hour. 
With  a  s  burst  of  thrilling  light, 
is  heard  The  shriU  and  s  warning  '  Ever, 

Never ' : 
Stately  and  mild,  and  all  between  Valleys  full  of 

s  sound. 
Solitary     Upon  the  brink  A  s  fortress  bums. 
Solitude    Youth,  lapsing  thro'  fair  s's, 
Solve     Unvext  by  doubts  I  cannot  s, 
Sombre     Nor  wanting  many  a  s  mound. 
Something    Was  s  that  another  could  not  be, 

And  there  is  s  greatly  done  : 
Son     I  and  my  s's  s's  and  our  offspring, 

0  leave  not  thou  thy  s  forlorn  ; 
Song    air  Of  death,  with  s's  of  pride  : 

Accepts  the  s's  you  gave,  and  he  sends 

full  God-bless-you  with  this  book  of  s. 

Still  humming  snatches  of  old  s, 

from  the  gulf  A  murmur  of  heroic  s. 
Sooner    S  or  later  from  the  haze 
Soothe    With  pleasant  hymns  they  s  the  air 
Sorrow     Nor  S  beauteous  in  her  youth, 

1  reck  not  for  the  s  or  the  strife  : 
The  sacred  s's  of  as  pure  a  heart 

Soul    Yet  her  own  deep  s  says  nay  : 

Rosebud,  open,  yield  Thy  fragrant  s.' 

The  frame,  the  mind,  the  s  of  man, 

God  walk'd  the  waters  of  thy  s, 

Thy  s  is  like  a  landskip,  friend, 

God  be  gracious  to  my  s  ! 

As  my  own  s  is  full,  to  overflowing — 
Siound  (s)     No  s  of  joy,  no  revelling  tones 

And  a  s  of  stringed  lyres. 

With  a  silver  s  the  wheels  went  round. 

Hear  you  the  s  of  wheels  ? 

may  keep  A  s  in  her  ears  like  the  s  of  the  deep, 
Like  the  s 

He  loved  the  river's  roaring  s  ; 

A  s  of  words  that  change  to  blows  ! 

A  s  of  blows  on  armed  breasts  ! 

between  Valleys  full  of  solemn  s, 

That  wash'd  her  shores  with  blissful  s's  : 

When  to  this  s  my  face  I  tum'd, 
Sound  (verb)    S  '  Ever,  Never  '  thro'  the  courts  of 
Hell, 

But  did  not  s  so  joyfully  : 
Sounded    leaders  bounded,  the  guard's  horn  s  : 
Southern    The  s  stars  a  music  peal'd, 
Sps^e    man,  Most  eloquent,  who  s  of  things 

he  s  :  'I  lift  the  eyes  of  thought, 
Spanish    My  S  blood  ran  proudly  in  my  veins. 


Far  off  in  the  dun  97  ' 

Not  to  Silence  20 

Hither,  when  all  9 

Youth,  lapsing  i  18 

Hear  you  the  sound  19 

Far  off  in  the  dun  17 

They  wrought,  etc.  28 

22 

Far  off  in  the  dun  81 
Youth,  lapsing  i  3 

Far  off  in  the  dun  36 
119 

Half  after  midnight  !  14 

Thy  soul  is  like  9 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  14 

i\ 

50 

Thy  soul  is  like  7 

That  is  his  portrait  25 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  12 

Hear  you  the  sound  24 

O  leave  not  thou  1 

Far  off  in  the  dun  110 

Little  Aubrey  2 

Take,  Lady  2 

Youth,  lapsing  i  38 

ii  19 

i  55 

Far  off  in  the  dun  109 

Are  those  the  far-famed  7 

Why  suffers  13 

Woman  of  noble  4 

The  lamps  were  bright  24 

The  night,  etc.  6 

They  wrought,  etc.  43 

Thou  may'st  remember  7 

Thy  soul  is  like  1 

What  rustles  15 

Why  suffers  8 

Far  off  in  the  dun  41 

120 

121 

Hear  you  the  sound  1 

That  the  voice  2 

The  child  was  sitting  3 

They  wrought,  etc.  17 

18 

Thy  soul  is  like  9 

Youth,  lapsing  i  4 

41 

Half  after  midnight !  9 

Youth,  lapsing  i  24 

Far  off  in  the  dun  89 

The  night,  etc.  2 

Methought  I  saw  3 

That  is  his  portrait  33 

Hear  you  the  sound  45 


Youth,  lapsing  ii  39 

Early-wise  3 

Hear  you  the  sound  27 

Remember  you  7 

Speak  to  me  1 

4 

5 

.      .     "  7 

That  is  his  portrait  15 

Yon  huddled  cloud  10 

Youth,  lapsing  i  27 

/  keep  no  more  15 

Townsmen,  etc.  9 

2)e«p  grZens  /  found  2 

Far  Ojg^  in  the  dun  117 

130 

/,  loving  Freedom  5 

i\'o<  a  whisper  7 

r^«?/  wrought,  etc.  16 


Sparkle 

SjKirkle    The  casements  s  on  the  plain, 
S^eak    If  you  could  s,  would  you  not  say  : 
Which  s  of  us  to  other  centuries, 
I  murmur'd  '  S  again,  my  love, 
S  to  me  from  the  stormy  sky  ! 
S  to  me,  dearest,  lest  I  die. 
S  to  me,  let  me  hear  or  see  ! 
Seest  thou  my  faults  and  wilt  not  s  ? 
This  is  the  man  of  whom  you  heard  me  s. 
He  strokes  his  beard  before  he  s's  ; 
To  s  of  what  had  gone  before, 
Speakest    My  friend,  thou  s  from  the  heart, 
Spear    On  growing  s's,  by  fits  the  lady  ash 
l^ire    Set  round  with  many  a  toppling  s, 
jS^irit    an  inner  s  fed  Their  ever-burning  fires,) 
The  happy  s's  within  ; 
I  mourn  in  s  when  I  think  The  year, 
Were  I  not  a  s  blest, 
Great  s's  grow  akin  to  base. 

To  hold  the  S  of  the  Age  Against  the  »9  of  the  Time.  „  47 

When  thine  own  s  was  at  strife  With  thine  own  s.  Thou  may'st  remember  2 

stood  The  tearful  s  of  the  time  ;  Youth,  lapsing  i  34 

Warm  beats  my  blood,  my  s  thirsts ;  „  m  45 

Spiritual     Of  beryl,  and  of  amethyst  Was  the  s  frame.  Far  off  in  the  dun  124 

Thro'  s  dark  we  come  Into  the  light  of  s  life.'     Thou  may'st  remember  5 

Spoke     Cold  words  I  s,  yet  loved  thee  warm  and  well.    To  thee  with  whom  8 

Spot    s  Where  it  was  my  chance  to  marry.  Vicar  of  this  1 

Spread    were  «  Around  in  the  chilling  air.  Far  off  in  the  dun  101 

How  every  brake  and  flower  s  and  rose.  That  is  his  portrait  26 

Spring  (fountain)     Variously  from  its  far  s.  Not  to  Silence  27 

Spring  (season)     Are  pleasant  from  the  early  S  to  when,      Townsmen,  etc.  7 

I  heard  S  laugh  in  hidden  rills,  Youth,  lapsing  i  13 

Spring  (verb)     never  green  thing  will  gaily  s  In  that         Far  off  in  the  dun  9 

the  laverock  s  From  imder  the  deep,  Full  light  aloft  1 

That  he  s's  from  the  common  stock.  How  is  it  that  men  6 

Springing     Over  the  dark  sea-marge  s,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  39 

Spnr    She  s's  an  imitative  will ; 

Spurge    S  with  fairy  crescent  set. 

Square    See  Four-square 

Stalwart     Admire  that  5  shape,  those  ample  brows, 
Stand    Wherefore  s  I  here  ? 
Not  like  Silence  shall  she  s. 
Not  with  this  age  wherefrom  ye  s  apart. 
Standard    Day  by  day  Watch  your  s  roses  blowing 
Standers  by    And  looks  to  awe  the  s  b, 
Standing    And  they  saw  her  s  by, 
Star    Dissolve  a  world,  condense  a  s. 
As  s's  they  shone,  in  raiment  white, 
Shudder'd  with  silent  s's,  she  clomb, 
light  In  mid  Orion,  and  the  married  s's. 
The  southern  s's  a  music  peal'd, 
And  shook  the  frosty  winter  s's. 
Staring    And,  s  as  in  trance, 
Starless    mutter  of  deep-mouth'd  thunderings  Shakes 

all  the  s  pole.  Far  off  m  the  dun  16 

Vast  wastes  of  5  glooms  were  spread  Around  „  101 

Starr'd    The  s  abysses  of  the  sky,  'Tis  not  alone  2 

Starry    and  bee-like  swarms  Of  suns,  and  s  streams.  Hither,  when  all  8 

Startle    s  the  duU  ears  of  human  kind  !  0  God,  make  this  age  5 

State     Wed  to  no  faction  in  the  s,  I,  loving  Freedom  3 

thro'  the  channels  of  the  5  Convoys  They  wrought,  etc.  30 

Statdy    I  deemed  her  one  of  s  frame  Because  she  bore  3 

S  and  mild,  and  all  between  Valleys  full  of  solemn 


1159 


Stud 


Young  is  the  grief  6 
Spurge  with  fairy  1 

That  is  his  portrait  4 

Half  after  midnight !  18 

Not  to  Silence  9 

Therefore  your  Halls  11 

Vi^ar  of  this  12 

Because  she  bore  4 

The  lamps  were  bright  51 

Are  those  the  far-famed  14 

Far  off  in  the  dun  131 

Hither,  when  all  2 

11 

The  night,  etc.  2 

Youth,  lapsing  i  20 

The  lamps  were  bright  45 


sound, 

two  fair  liUes  growing  at  thy  side  Have  slowly 
prosper'd  into  s  flowers. 
Statesman    Shadows  of  statesmen,  clever  men  ! 
Stay    I  found  the  Present  where  I  s  : 

Yet  well  I  know  that  nothing  s's, 
Stedfast  They  glitter'd  with  a  s  light, 
Steed    And  his  hot  s's  never  run  : 

Their  s's  were  strong  exceedingly : 
Steeple    S,  and  stream,  and  forest  lawn. 
Steering    be  not  precipitate  in  thine  act  Of  s. 
Steersman    S,  be  not  precipitate  in  thine  act 


Thy  soul  is  like  8 

Woman  of  noble  12 

They  wrought,  etc.  12 

Youth,  lapsing  i  48 

53 

Far  off  in  the  dun  129 

„  4 

125 

Thy  soul  is  like  2 

Steersman  2 

1 


Stemm'd    See  Hollow-stemm'd 
Step  (s)     A  s  ?  a  footfall  ?     What  is  that  I  hear  ? 
Step  (verb)    S  thro'  these  doors,  and  I  will  show 
Stepp'd-Stept    as  he  stept  thro'  the  crowd, 

I  stepp'd  upon  the  old  mill  bridge  ? 
Stepping    /S  lightly  flower-laden. 

Loftily  5  with  fair  faces. 
Stept    See  Stepp'd 

Stem    bum  With  a  light  so  wild  and  *  ?  ' 
Still    The  night  is  black  and  s  ;  the  deer 

The  cedar-wooded  paradise  Of  s  Xaraguay  : 
Still'd    waters  of  thy  soul,  And  ,<  them. 
Stir    Not  a  whisper  s's  the  gloom, 
Stirr'd    Call  to  its  mate  when  nothing  s 

this  so  s  him  in  his  hour  of  joy, 
Stithy    Bang  thy  s  stronger  and  stronger, 
Stock    That  he  springs  from  the  common  s. 
Stole    Warm  beams  across  the  meadows  «  ; 
Stone    Her  grave — a  simple  s  ! 
Stood    there  s  a  dark  coach  at  an  old  Inn  door 
s  alone  And  still  in  the  dark  doorway : 
I  that  5  in  On  beside  the  flow 
I  laugh'd  to  see  him  as  he  s, 
As  when  he  s  on  Carmel-steeps 
«  The  tearful  spirit  of  the  time  ; 
Storm    There  lies  a  land  of  chilling  t's, 

A  voice  before  the  s, 
Stormy    Speak  to  me  from  the  s  sky  ! 

The  child  was  sitting  on  the  bank  Upon  a  *  day,  The  child  \cas  titling  2 
The  silent  hills,  the  s  floods,  'Tit  not  alone  3 

Stouter    Gives  s  ale  and  riper  port  Than  any  in  the 

country-side.  Yon  huddled  cloud  7 

Strand     I  took  delight  in  this  fair  s  and  free  ;  Here  often  wheti  a  diHd  2 

Strange    To  draw  s  comfort  from  the  earth,  S  beauties 

from  the  sky.  Far  off  in  the  dun  31 

S  fiery  eyes  glared  fiercely  thro*  The  windows  of 

shaven  bone.  „  47 

Thro'  «  seas  drew  me  to  your  monster  town.  Here,  I  that  stood  8 

How  5  it  is,  0  God,  to  wake.  How  strange  it  it  I 

Stranger     It  were,  O  Heaven,  a  s  tale  to  tell  To  thee  vith  vhom  3 

Streak     Fast  by  me  flash  the  cloudy  s's.  Youth,  lavting  ii  46 

Stream  (s)     Before  them  flow'd  a  fiery  s ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  127 

swarms  Of  suns,  and  starry  s's.  Hither,  when  all  8 

The  s  is  loud  :  I  cannot  hear  !  '  Remember  you  8 

Steeple,  and  s,  and  forest  lawn.  Thy  toul  it  like  2 

And  where  the  secret  s's  rejoice.  YouA,  lapsing  i  12 

Stream  (verb)    That  s's  about  the  bend ;  Steertmtan  5 

Streaming    S  thro'  his  osier'd  aits  !  Viear  of  this  30 

Street    To  fling  his  doubts  into  the  s.  He  vat  too  good  4 

Up  the  5  we  took  her  As  far  as  to  the  Castle,  Sweet  Kitty  Sandilandt  9 


IV  hat  nutlet  2 

That  is  hit  portrait  44 

Far  off  in  the  dun  75 

Remember  you  4 

A  dark  Indian  matden  3 

64 

The  lamps  were  brigfU  16 

li'hat  nutlet  3 

A  dark  Indian  maiden  21 

Thou  may'tt  rtmember  8 

Not  a  fokitper  1 

Remember  you  15 

That  it  hit  portrait  31 

wVnerever  evtl  8 

How  it  it  that  men  6 

The  night,  etc.  3 

Along  this  glimmering  8 

Far  off  in  the  dun  35 

49 

Here,  I  that  stood  1 

/  met  in  all  7 

One  wot  the  TithbiU  2 

Youth,  lapting  i  33 

Far  off  in  the  dun  5 

/,  loving  Freedom  4 

Speak  to  m*l 


Strength    fears  that  waste  The  s  of  men, 

all  the  s  thou  wouldst  have  been : 
Stretch'd    With  one  ann  «  out  bare. 
Stricken    See  Thunder-stricken 
Stride    as  to  Fame,  who  s's  the  earth 
Strife    not  pause  At  the  *  of  the  shadowy  wheels, 

Henceforward  no  other  s — 

When  thine  own  spirit  was  at  t 

Parish  feud,  or  party  a, 

I  reck  not  for  the  sorrow  or  the  t : 
Strike     And  shadows  s  and  shadows  sink, 

A  tempest  s's  the  craggy  walls. 
String^    And  a  sound  of  s  lyres. 
Strode    grim  old  coachee  *  to  the  box, 
Stroke    He  s's  his  beard  before  he  speaks  ; 
Strong    Their  stee<i8  were  s  exceedingly : 

It  is  not  good  to  drink  t  wine  Ere  the  day  be 
well-nigh  done ; 

Tall,  eager,  lean  and  5,  his  cloak  wbd-bonie 
Behind, 

Long,  Eustace,  long  May  my  s  wish,  transgres*' 
ing  the  low  bound  Of  mortal  hope, 

'  Come  '  and  I  come,  the  wind  is  t : 
Stronger    Bang  thy  stithy  s  and  », 
Stud     Drove  into  hnes  and  s's  of  light 


They  wrought,  etc.  23 
Young  it  the  grief  12 
One  wu  the  TithbiU  3 

Well,  at  to  Fame  1 

Far  off  in  the  dun  94 

Frenchman,  etc.  6 

Thou  may'tt  remember  2 

f'icar  of  this  8 

Why  fuffert  13 

Youth,  lapting  ii  15 

21 

Far  off  in  the  dun  120 

87 

Yon  huddled  cloud  10 

Far  off  in  the  dun  125 

FuU  light  aloft  9 

One  wot  the  TithbiU  5 

That  it  hit  portrait  38 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  17 

Wherever  evil  8 

YovLh,  lapsing  i  6 


Snblime 


1160 


Thirst 


Soblime    He,  seeing  far  an  end  s. 

Such    Nor  proved  I  *  delight  as  he,  to  mark  The 

humours  of  the  polling  and  the  wake, 
Sndden    The  night  witn  s  odour  reel'd. 
Suffer    Why  s's  human  life  so  soon  eclipse  ? 
Suffer'd    His  and  my  friendship  have  not  s  loss. 
Summer  (adj.)     The  s  plains  with  their  shining  leaves. 


The  s  hills  they  see  ; 

to  return  with  thee  Some  happy  S  morning, 
Summer  (s)    Floated  in  the  silent  s  : 

and  lie  A  thousand  s's  at  her  feet. 

S  thro'  all  her  sleepy  leaves  Murmur'd : 
Summer-snow    My  coldness  was  mistimed  like  s-s, 
Summit    Thence,  across  the  s  hurl'd, 

Down  from  the  s  sweeps  the  day 
Sun    s  Drew  down  the  West  his  feeble  lights  ; 

Behind  the  burning  S : 

At  the  rising  of  the  s. 

bee-like  swarms  Of  ''s,  and  starry  streams. 

of  the  changes  of  the  s's  ? 

Near  the  shrine,  but  half  in  s, 

The  image  of  the  s  by  day, 

I  follow  to  the  morning  s, 
Sunbri^t    cocoa-shadow'd  coves,  Of  s  Xaraguay, 
Sunder'd    That  never  can  be  s  without  tears. 

clouds  are  s  toward  the  morning-rise  ; 
Sunk    Deep  deUs  of  snow  s  on  each  side 
Sunless    Deep  glens  I  found,  and  s  gulfs, 

Thick  sobs  and  short  slmll  screams  arise  Along 
the  s  waste. 
Sunset    You'd  sit  there  From  dawn  till  s 
Surface    A  s  man  of  many  theories.  And  yet  not  true 

to  one : 
Susan    to  walk  With  S  on  the  shore  ! 
Swallow'd    eyes  Are  s  in  his  pamper'd  cheeks. 
Swarm    bee-like  s's  Of  suns,  and  starry  streams. 
Swarthy    Those  thoughtful  furrows  in  the  s  cheek  ; 
Swear    iS  to  he  one  for  ever. 
Sweep     With  twinkling  finger  s's  her  yellow  keys. 

Down  from  the  summit  s's  the  day 
Sweet    Maizebread  and  the  yuccaroot.  Of  s 

Xaraguay  :  A  dark  Indian  maiden  45 


They  wrought,  etc.  45       Tall    For  they  were  fair-faced  and  t,  They  were 

more  fair-faced  and  t, 
That  is  hi'  portrait  19  T,  eager,  lean  and  strong,  his  cloak 

The  night,  etc.  1       Taper     No  t's  light  look'd  out  on  the  night, 
Why  suffers  1       Tar     Up,  Jack  T's,  and  save  us  !  (repeat) 
That  is  his  portrait  41  Up,  Jack  T's,  my  hearties  ! 

The  lasses  and  the  little  ones,  Jack  T's,  they 
look  to  you  ! 
Tarry     Methinks  they  t  somewhat.    What's  the 

clock  ? 
Tasse     And  from  it  hung  the  t. 
Taste    Her  perfect  lips  to  t, 

'  To  those  who  wiU  not  t  it  more  ! ' 
Taught    with  thee,  Mother,  t  us  first  to  pray, 
Tavern    by  the  t  in  the  dale.  The  thirsty  horseman 

This  t  is  their  chief  resort, 
Teach     T  me,  great  Nature  :  make  me  live. 
And  t  us  nothing,  feeding  not  the  heart. 
Tear    That  never  can  be  simder'd  without  t's. 
The  t's  bedimm'd  their  sight : 
The  happy  maiden's  t's  are  free 
And  mingle  kisses,  t's,  and  sighs, 
drank  The  sweet  sad  t's  of  wisdom.' 
water'd  by  thy  t's.  The  two  fair  lilies 
Tearful    Full  fields  of  barley  shifting  t  lights  On  growing 

spears.  Townsmen,  etc.  8 

Beside  my  door  at  morning  stood  The  t  spirit  of 


Far  off  in  the  dun  69 

Woman  of  noble  9 

A  dark  Indian  maiden  40 

Because  she  bore  8 

Youth,  lapsing  i  14 

To  thee  with  whom  7 

Not  to  Silence  33 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  31 

Deep  glens  I  found  5 

Far  off  in  the  dun  2 

Full  light  aloft  12 

Hither,  when  all  8 

Little  Aubrey  6 

Not  to  Silence  17 

Youth,  lapsing  i  7 

ii  10 

A  dark  Indian  maiden  9 

Beauty,  Good,  etc.  2 

O  God,  mxike  this  age  9 

Far  off  in  the  dun  97 

Deep  glens  I  found  1 


A  dark  Indian  maiden  55 

One  was  the  Tishbite  5 

Far  off  in  the  dun  45 

They  say,  etc.  5,  12,  19 

10 

15 

Hear  you  the  sound  3 

Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  12 

One  was  the  Tishbite  12 

Yon  huddled  cloud  16 

Remembering  him  2 

Yon  huddled  cloud  2 

5 

0  leave  not  thou  2 

Therefore  your  Halls  14 

Beauty,  Good,  etc.  2 

Far  off  in  the  dun  86 

I  keep  no  more  5 

Life  of  the  Life  6 

Methought  I  saw  6 

Woman  of  noble  10 


Far  off  the  dun  18 
Hear  you  the  sound  39 

A  surface  mxvn  1 

How  glad  am  I  2 

Yon  huddled  cloud  12 

Hither,  when  all  7 

That  is  his  portrait  3 

Frenchman,  etc.  10 

Townsmen,  etc.  10 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  31 


the  time ; 

Tell    t  me  you  were  great  Already  in  your  birth, 
'  Now,  t  me,  mother,  pray. 
There's  a  treaty,  so  they  t  us, 
a  stranger  tale  to  t  Than  if  the  vine 
And  I  will  t  you  what  I  know — 
And  ever  new  the  tale  she  t's. 
Temper     T's  the  peaceful  light  of  hazel  eyes, 
Tempest    A  t  strikes  the  craggy  walls. 
Temple    build  A  <  in  her  naked  field  ; 


Youth,  lapsing  i  34 

Hear  you  the  sound  59 

The  lamps  were  bright  9 

They  say,  etc.  3 

To  thee  with  whom  3 

Well,  as  to  Fame  4 

Young  is  the  grief  2 

That  is  his  portrait  13 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  21 

Not  to  Silence  2 


Because  she  bore  6 

Full  light  aloft  2 

11 

He  was  too  good  1 

Methought  I  saw  6 


Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  1 


With  fair  blue  eyes  and  winning  s, 

the  laverock  spring  From  imder  the  deep,  s  com 

But  thou  hast  drunk  of  the  merry,  s  wine. 

He  was  too  good  and  kind  and  s, 

and  drank  The  s  sad  tears  of  wisdom.' 

S  Kitty  Sandilands,  The  daughter  of  the 

doctor, 
These  voices  did  not  cease  to  cry  Only  they  took 

a  s  tone,  Youth,  lapsing  i  23 

Again  the  low  s  voices  murmur'd  In  distant  fields,  „  i  43 

and  all  comes  back  Which  in  that  early  voice  was  s,  „  ii  42 

the  s  which  thou  wast  In  thy  beginnings      You^  is  the  grief  10 
S  creaking  before  the  Inn.  Far  off  in  the  dum.  44 


That  is  his  portrait  5 

Half  after  midnight !  3 

Far  off  in  the  dun  132 

I  met  in  all  4 

Steersman  8 

Take,  Lady  1 

They  say,  etc.  10 

Woman  of  noble  5 

Hither,  when  all  5 

A  surface  mun  6 

To  thee  with  whom  3 

Young  is  the  grief  2 

How  glad  am  I  3 


Ten    T  men  fought  a  thousand.  Slew  them  and  overthrew.    Bold  Havelock  7 
Tender     But  found  a  maiden  t,  shy.  Because  she  bore  5 

Havelock  died,  T  and  great  and  good.  Bold  Havelock  14 

Terrace    your  triple  t  growing  Green  and  greener  Vicar  of  this  14 

Terror    My  hope  is  false,  my  t's  true  !  What  rustles  12 

Thames    Smooth  as  T  below  your  gates,  Vicar  of  this  18 

T  along  the  silent  level,  „  19 

Thank    1 1  thee,  God,  that  thou  hast  made  me  live :  Why  suffers  12 

Thanks    Small  t  or  credit  shall  I  have,  /  keep  no  more  3 

Thatch'd    For  it  were  almost  mockery  to  hang  it  O'er 

the  t  cottage.  Hear  you  the  sound  19 

Theory     A  surface  man  of  many  theories,  A  surface  man  1 

Thick     T  sobs  and  short  shrill  screams  arise  Far  off  in  the  dun  17 

And  the  moaning  wind  before  it  drives  T  wi'eaths 
of  cloudy  dew.  „  24 

His  heart  throbs  t,  his  brain  reels  sick :  „  27 

The  knotted  boughs  of  this  long  avenue  Of  t 

dark  oaks.  Hear  you  the  sound  11 

For,  tho'  the  faults  be  t  as  dust  In  vacant  chambers.      The  noblest  men  10 


Table    that  large  t  of  the  breast  dispread, 
Tacit    Become  a  t  eloquent  reproach  Unto  the 

dissipation  of  this  Earth. 
Taint    And  free  from  t  of  sin. 
Take     And  long'd  to  t  his  hand  in  mine. 

T  thou  the  '  bend,'  'twill  save  thee  many  a  day. 

T,  Lady,  what  your  loyal  nurses  give, 

and  the  d 1 1  the  parties  ! 

(  with  thee  Our  warmest  wishes, 
Taking    Regions  of  lucid  matter  t  forms, 
Tale    At  some  sad  t  of  wrong,  and  do  the  wrong 

a  stranger  t  to  tell  Than  if  the  vine 

And  ever  new  the  t  she  tells, 
Talk    How  glad  am  I  to  < !    I  kiss 


Thicken    Wherever  evil  customs  t, 

Thicket    See  Holly-thickets 

Thin    A  land  of  t  faces  and  shadowy  forms, 
The  skin  hung  lax  on  his  long  t  hands  ; 

Thing    never  green  t  will  gaily  spring 

t's  of  past  days  with  their  horrible  eyes 

And  from  the  heart  of  all  t's  fair 

man,  Most  eloquent,  who  spake  of  t's  divine. 

Who  make  you  utter  t's  you  did  not  say, 

light  of  hazel  eyes.  Observing  all  t's. 

In  the  dreaming  of  past  t's  : 

All  t's  please  you,  nothing  vex  you, 

And  your  three  young  t's  at  play. 

Glancing  off  from  all  t's  evil. 

The  difference  of  all  t's  to  the  sense, 

And  how  all  t's  become  the  past. 

Think    when  1 1  The  year,  that  comes, 
t  a  cunning  hand  has  foimd  the  clue — 

Thirst    Warm  beats  my  blood,  my  spirit  t's  ; 


Wherever  evil  1 

Far  off  in  the  dun  7 

53 

9 

19 

He  vias  too  good  11 

Methought  I  saw  3 

Old  ghosU  10 

That  is  his  portrait  14 

The  lamps  were  bright  22 

Vicar  of  this  9 

13 

17 

Why  suffers  10 

Youth,  lapsing  i  28 

I,  loving  Freedom  5 

What  rustles  14 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  45 


Thirsty 


Thirsty    The  t  horseman,  nodding,  lifts  The  creaming 

horn  of  corny  ale  !  Jom  huddled  cloud  3 

Thought  (S)     thro'  all  phases  of  all  1 1  come  From  shape  to  shape  3 

every  line  Wore  the  pale  cast  of  t,  Methought  I  saw  2 

he  spake  :  '  I  lift  the  eyes  of  t,  That  is  his  portrait  33 

Her  t's  have  found  their  wings  The  lamps  were  bright  21 

The  middle  road  of  sober  t !  They  wrought,  etc.  28 

Thy  t  did  scale  a  purer  range  Thou  may'st  remember  10 

Thought  (verb)     What  time  (he  t)  have  loom  or  plough      He  was  too  good  7 

March'd  and  t  and  fought,  Bold  Havelock  11 

Thoughtful    there  Hovering,  i,  poised  in  air.  Not  to  Silence  12 

Those  t  furrows  in  the  swarthy  cheek  ;  That  is  his  portrait  3 

Thousand    And  longed  to  kiss  her  hand  and  he  A  t 

simuners  at  her  feet.  Because  she  bore  8 
I  that  stood  in  On  beside  the  flow  Of  sacred 

Mle,  three  t  years  ago  !—  Here,  I  that  stood  2 

Threat    Not  deals  in  t's,  but  works  with  hope,  They  wrought,  etc.  39 

Three     Beauty,  Good  and  Knowledge  are  t  sisters  .  .  .    Beauty,  Good,  etc.  1 
I  that  stood  in  On  beside  the  flow  Of  sacred  Nile, 

t  thousand  years  ago  ! —  Here,  I  that  stood  2 

And  your  t  young  things  at  play,  Vicar  of  this  13 

Threshold    on  her  t  lie.  Howling  in  outer  darkness.'         Beauty,  Good,  etc.  4 

bearest  from  the  t  of  thy  friends  Woman  of  noble  3 

Threw    t  up  the  dust  Of  dead  men's  pulverised  bones.    Far  off  in  the  dun  91 

and  t  back  Your  floating  hair.  Hear  you  the  sound  42 

Thrilling    With  a  solemn  burst  of  t  light.  Far  off  in  the  dun  119 

And  shriek  and  shout  to  drown  the  t  noise.  Half  after  midnight  /  16 

Throb     His  heart  t's  thick,  his  brain  reek  sick  :  Far  off  in  the  dun  27 

Throbbing    Comes  hither  t  thro'  the  dark  ;  Youth,  lapsing  ii  8 

Throne     Go  forward  !  crumble  down  a  t.  Are  those  the  far-famed  13 

Hard  by  the  burning  t  of  my  great  grandsire,  Half  after  midnight !  6 

You  were  wont  to  call  it  Your  t.  Hear  you  the  sound  36 

Thunder     The  t  cannot  make  thee  dumb  ;  Youth,  lapsing  ii  26 

Thundering    mutter  of  deep-mouth'd  t's  Shakes  Far  off  in  the  dun  15 

Thunder-peal    The  latest  t-p  hath  peal'd.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  30 

Thunder-stricken     With  the  flock  of  the  t-s.  Wherever  evil  5 

Tickled    ear  Be  t  with  the  loud  '  hear,  hear,'  They  wrought,  etc.  7 

Tide     Then  they  cried  at  the  turn  of  the  t—  Popular,  Popular  4 

l^e     That  Inn  was  built  at  the  birth  of  T  :  Far  off  in  the  dun  37 

you  would  be  A  great  man  in  your  t.  Hear  you  the  sound  57 

What  t  (he  thought)  have  loom  or  plough  He  was  too  good  7 

They  wrought  a  work  which  T  reveres.  They  wrought,  etc.  1 

Against  the  Spirit  of  the  T.  „             48 

We  lost  you  for  how  long  a  t.  We  lost  you  1 

But  pap-meat-pamper  not  the  t  Wherever  evil  4 

pure  a  heart  As  e'er  beat  t  to  Nature,  Woman  of  noble  5 

stood  The  tearful  spirit  of  the  t ;  Youth,  lapsing  i  34 

Tinge    not  a  <  on  each  high  cheek  bone.  Far  off  in  the  dun  51 

Tingling     Before  his  eyes  so  grim  and  calm  The  t  blood 

grew  chill,  „              78 

Tishbite     One  was  the  T  whom  the  raven  fed.  One  was  the  Tishbite  1 

Tithe    Never  t  unpaid  perplex  you.  Vicar  of  this  7 

Toil    If  night,  what  barren  <  to  be  !  Gone  into  darkness  6 

Tomb    '  From  the  t  And  chamel-place  Thou  may'st  remember  3 

Tone    no  revelling  t's  Of  carouse  were  heard  Far  off  in  the  dun  41 

thro'  the  night  ran  the  lengthen'd  t's :  „              90 

Only  they  took  a  sweeter  t,  Youth,  lapsing  i  23 
Toned    iSeg  Lute-toned 

Tongue    my  t  runs  twenty  knots  an  hour  :  Half  after  midnight .'  19 
Tongued    See  Trumpet-tongued 

Took    t  her  As  far  as  to  the  Castle,  Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  9 

t  in  more  of  Nature  than  mine  own  :  That  is  his  portrait  18 

T  the  child  from  off  the  ground.  The  child  was  sitting  6 

Only  they  t  a  sweeter  tone,  Youth,  lapsing  i  23 

Top     He  brims  his  beaker  to  the  t.  Yon  huddled  cloud  13 

Toppling    Set  round  with  many  a  t  spire.  Deep  glens  I  found  2 

Toss    bitterly  I  trow  they  turn  and  t  Half  after  midnight !  15 

^UCh    see,  ye  dare  not  <  the  truth,  4.re  those  the  far-famed  & 

Ttoch'd     T  with  Heaven's  latest  lights.  Thy  soul  is  like  12 

Tower  (s)     battlemented  t's  Of  my  old  ancestors  !  Hear  you  the  sound  12 

The  t's  gleam  among  the  vines  ;  Youth,  lapsing  it  40 

Tower  (verb)     leafless  oak  Which  t's  above  the  lake     Hear  you  the  sound  33 

Town    drew  me  to  your  monster  t.  Here,  I  that  stood  8 

Townsman     Townsmen,  or  of  the  hamlet,  young  or  old,       Townsmen,  etc.  1 

Track     Intent  to  foUow  on  the  t,  Youth,  lapsing  t  42 


Track  (continued)    Yet  am  I  dizzy  in  the  t, 
Tract    With  long  t's  of  munnuring, 
Traitor    Nor  t's  that  mislead  by  names  ! 
Trance    And,  staring  as  in  <, 
Transgressing    t  the  low  bound  Of  mortal  hope. 
Traveller    Dimly  the  t's  look'd  thro'  the  glooms, 
Traverse    And  I  must  t  yonder  plain  : 
Treaty    There's  a  t,  so  they  tell  us, 


1161  Unpopular 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  43 

Not  to  Silence  28 

Not  such  voere  those  4 

The  lampi  were  bright  45 

That  is  his  portrait  38 

Far  off  in  the  dun  57 

Youth,  lapsing  i  54 

^      ,c     ,  '         '  ^f^  'oy,  «<«•  3 

Tree  (See  also  Oak-tree)  Beneath  the  papao  t !  A  dark  Indian  maiden  33 
above  the  barkless  t's  They  saw  the  green  verge  Far  off  in  the  dun  62 
The  night  gale  in  those  t's.  Hear  you  the  sound  8 

Trim-set    I  hate  the  t-s  plots  of  art ! '  /  keep  no  more  14 

Triple    And  your  t  terrace  growing  Green  and  greener 

every  May  !  Vi^ar  of  this  14 

A  mountam  bright  with  /  peaks  :  Youth,  lapsing  ii  48 

Trow    Worn  and  wan  was  their  gaze,  I  /,  Far  off  in  the  dun  58 

Then  bitterly  1 1  they  turn  and  toss  Half  after  midnight !  15 

True    man  of  many  theories.  And  yet  not  t  to  one  :  A  surface  man  2 

Early-wise,  and  pure,  and  /,  Early-wise  1 

That  man's  the  t  Conservative  First  drink  a  health  7 

The  t  men  banish'd—  Rise,  Britons,  rise  4 

/  can  trust  Your  woman's  nature  kind  and  t.  The  noblest  men  12 

God  bless  the  little  isle  where  a  man  may  still  be  t !       They  say,  etc.  17 
To  thee  with  whom  my  t  affections  dwell,  To  thee  with  'whom  1 

T  Pearl  of  oiu-  poetic  prime  !  We  lost  you  2 

My  hope  is  false,  my  terror's  t !  What  rustles  12 

take  with  thee  Our  warmest  wishes,  silent  Guardians 

But  t  till  Death  ;  Woman  of  noble  1 

Truest    Art  for  Art's  sake  !    Hail,  <  Lord  of  Hell !        Art  for  Art's  sake!  1 

Trumpet     Rang  like  a  t  clear  and  dry,  Youih,  lapsing  i  19 

Behind  yon  hill  the  t's  blow,  „  H  \\ 

Trumpet-tongued    Mind,  Whose  t-l,  aerial  melody      0  God,  make  this  age  3 

Trust      /  can  t  Your  woman's  nature  The  noblest  men  1 1 

Truth    see,  ye  dare  not  touch  the  I,  Are  tlwse  the  far-famed  Q 

bind  Falsehood  beneath  the  altar  of  great  T  :      0  God,  make  this  age  8 

Truth-seeking     T-s  he  and  not  afraid.  He  was  too  good  5 

Turn  (s)     in  t  shall  be  Shut  out  from  Love,  Beauty,  Good,  etc.  3 

Then  they  cried  at  the  t  of  the  tide —  Papular,  Popular  4 

Down  to  his  slightest  t's  and  attitudes —  That  is  his  portrait  24 

And  Heaven  is  dark  and  bright  by  t's.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  16 

Turn  (verb)    bitterly  I  trow  they  t  and  toss  Half  after  mtdnight !  15 

Tum'd    Life,  to  this  wind,  t  all  her  vanes,  Youth,  lapstng  i  29 

When  to  this  sound  my  face  \t,  „  41 

Twenty    Methinks  my  tongue  runs  t  knots  an 

hour  :  Half  after  midnight !  19 

Twilight    Than  our  poor  t  dawn  on  earth —  Gone  into  darkness  5 

With  the  first  t  of  the  even.  Thy  soul  is  like  4 

Twinfold     Forethinking  its  t  necessity.  That  is  his  porimit  48 

Twinkling — by  fits  the  lady  ask  With  (  finger  sweeps 

her  yellow  keys.  Townsmen,  etc.  10 

And  sometimes  with  a  t  drop,  Yon  huddled  cloud  15 

Two     Parts  in  t  channels,  moving  to  one  end —  Steersman  3 

A  land  of  many  days  that  cleaves  In  ( great  halves,  They  wrought,  etc.  27 
The  t  fair  lilies  growii^j  at  thy  side  Have  slowly 
prosper'd  into  stately  flowers.  Woman  of  noble  11 


Uncertain     U  of  ourselves  we  chase 
Unconscious    Tho'  thou  art  all  u  of  th^  Might. 
Undefiled    (Jn  her  forehead  u  I  will  print 
Under-air     Wlien  all  the  u-a  was  still, 
Unexprest    A  hint  of  somewhat  «. 
Unfading    with  forms  Of  the  u  marble  carved  upon 

them, 
Unheeded    Pointing  to  the  u  lapse  of  hours, 
Union    Their  offspring  of  this  u. 
Unpaid     Never  tithe  u  perplex  you. 
Unpopular    Popular,  Popular,  U  ! 

'  Why  ? '  said  the  Poet.    '  You're  u  ! ' 

Pop-gun,  Popular  and  V  ! 


They  wrought,  etc.  13 

0  God,  make  this  age  14 

Not  a  whisper  11 

Jiementber  you  10 

'Tis  not  alone  8 

Hear  you  the  sound  26 

Half  after  midnight !  2 

Old  ghosts  8 

Vicar  of  this  7 

Popular,  Popular  1 

3 

e 


Unroused 


1162 


Unroused    keep  Our  awful  inner  ghostly  sense  Z^,  How  strange  it  is  6 

Unschoord    Yet  one  u  in  want  will  say  /  keef  no  more  1 

Unsocket  t' all  the  joints  of  war,  Are  those  the  far-famed  15 
Unsounded    when  all  the  deep  u  skies  Shudder 'd  with 

silent  stars,  Hither,  when  all  1 

Unswathe    The  clouds  u  them  from  the  height,  Youth,  lapsing  ii  50 

Unvext  U  by  doubts  I  cannot  solve,  „  i  50 
Unwholesome'   There  never  green  thing  will  gaily 

spring  In  that  u  air,  Far  off  in  the  dun  10 
These  fear  not  the  mists  of  u  damps  That  through 

that  region  rove,  „             113 

Up-gather'd    left  hand  holds  Her  u-g  garment  folds,  Not  to  Silence  14 

Uplands  And  hoary  holts  on  u  green.  Thy  soul  is  like  10 
Urn     Thro'  one  whole  life  an  overflowing  u.                  That  is  his  portrait  50 

Usage    He  cares,  if  ancient  u  fade,  They  wrought,  etc.  33 


Vacant     For,  tho'  the  faults  be  thick  as  dust  In  v  chambers,    The  noblest  men  11 

Vale     '  Come  '  and  I  come,  the  v  is  deep.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  27 

VaJIey    between  V's  fuU  of  solemn  sovmd.  Thy  soul  is  like  9 

Vane    Life,  to  this  wind,  tum'd  all  her  v's,  Youth,  lapsing  i  29 

Vanish'd    All  freedom  v —  Rise,  Britons,  rise  3 

Vapor-Vapour     Of  vapors,  and  mist,  and  night.  Far  off  in  the  dun  8 

from  the  golden  vapour  bursts  Youth,  lapsing  ii  47 

Variation    Chequer'd  with  moonlight's  v,  Hear  you  the  sound  22 
Various    How  every  brake  and  flower  spread  and  rose, 

A  v  world  !  That  is  his  portrait  27 
Vast  (adj.)      V  wastes  of  starless  glooms  were  spread 

Around  in  the  chilling  air.  Far  off  in  the  dun  101 

Vast  (s)     Look  out  from  the  cloudy  v.  „             20 

can  they  last  In  the  v  Of  the  rolling  aeons,  ,            Little  Aubrey  5 
Vaulted    And  the  chapel's  v  gloom  Was  misted  with 

perfume.  The  lamps  were  bright  7 

Veil     And  v's  a  breast  more  fair  to  me  Not  to  Silence  15 

Vein     My  Spanish  blood  ran  proudly  in  my  v's.  Hear  you  the  sound  45 

Verge     saw  the  green  v  of  the  pleasant  earth.  Far  off  in  the  dun  63 

Verse     I  would  shrine  her  in  my  v  !  Not  to  Silence  8 

Very     till  the  v  wrong  itself  Had  found  him  out.  A  surface  man  7 

At  the  V  break  of  light  ?  Full  light  aloft  8 

Vex     All  things  please  you,  nothing  v  you.  Vicar  of  this  9 

Vibration     The  slow  v's  of  whose  pendulimi,  Half  after  midnight !  7 

Vicar      V  of  this  pleasant  spot  Vicar  of  this  1 

Vicarage    In  the  V  by  the  quarry.  „           4 

Vice     heart  of  his  Hard,  and  the  slave  of  ij  ;  A  surface  man  4 

Victim    and  the  v,  Broken  in  this  anger  Faded  ev'ry  violet  2 

Victor  (adj).    Are  those  the  far-famed  V  Hours  Are  those  the  far-famed  1 

Victor  (s)     Yields  to  the  v.  Faded  ev'ry  violet  4 

Victory     Every  battle  a  v.  Bold  Havelock  4 

Shall  drink  the  fulness  of  thy  v,  0  God,  make  this  age  13 
Vine  (adj.)     dark  v  leaves  round  the  rustling  eaves,        Far  off  in  the  dun  71 

Vine  (s)    Than  if  the  v  had  borne  the  bitter  sloe.  To  thee  with  whom  4 

The  towers  gleam  among  the  v's  ;  Youth,  lapsing  ii  40 

Violet      Faded  ev'ry  v,  all  the  roses  ;  Faded  ev'ry  violet  1 

Virtue    whose  whims  were  meant  For  v's  servants,  A  surface  man  3 
Voice    {See  also  Cuckoo-voice)    They  hear  each 

household  v  :  Far  off  in  the  dun  66 

We  help  the  blatant  v  abroad  He  was  too  good  9 

A  V  before  the  storm,  /,  loving  Freedom  4 
And  the  v  that  apes  a  nation —                           Immeasurable  sadness  !  5 

The  low  V  of  the  glad  New  Year  Remember  you  11 

That  the  «  of  a  satisfied  people  That  the  voice  1 

deer  Bleat  as  with  human  v's  in  the  park.  What  rustles  4 

Sent  thro'  my  blood  a  prophet  v  Youth,  lapsing  i  10 

a  V  ran  round  the  hills  When  corny  Lammas  ,.              15 

A  V,  when  night  had  crept  on  high,  ,.              17 

These  v's  did  not  cease  to  cry,  ..              22 

a  sharper  v  Cried  in  the  future  '  Come  along.'  ..              39 

Again  the  low  sweet  v's  moum'd  ,.              43 

The  second  v  will  peal  again.  ..              56 

A  V  like  many  v's  cries,  ^i^ 

The  V  cries, '  Come.'  „             13 


Voice  {continued)    Which  in  that  early  v  was  sweet, 
Void     A  region  v  of  light, 
Volumed    See  MKiad-volumed 
Vulgar    Ha  !  by  St.  James  Mine  was  no  v  mind  in 
infancy. 


Way 

Youth  lapsing  ii  42 
Far  off  in  the  dun  6 


Hear  you  the  sound  62 


Waft     A  light  wind  w's  me  from  my  feet. 

Wail     There  may  be  short  cessation  of  their  w's. 

Waist    I  clasp  her  slender  w, 

round  her  w  Knotted, 
Wait     Remembering  him  who  w's  thee  far  away. 

Dim  grief  did  w  upon  her. 


Youth,  lapsing  ii  44 

Half  after  midnight  f  12 

How  glad  am  I  5 

One  was  the  Tishbite  10 

Remembering  him  1 

The  lamps  were  bright  33 


Wake  (festival)     humoiu-s  of  the  polling  and  the  w,  That  is  his  portrait  20 
Wake  (verb)     How  strange  it  is,  O  God,  to  w.  To                                               j 

watch  and  w  while  others  sleep.  How  strange  ii  is  1   \ 

Wakening    And  chants  in  the  golden  w  Full  light  aloft  3   ' 

Walk     Whoever  w's  that  bitter  ground  Far  off  in  ths  dun  25 

How  glad  am  I  to  w  With  Susan  How  glad  am  I  1 

Walk'd     God  w  the  waters  of  thy  soul,  Thou  may'st  remember  7 

Walking     While  w  with  my  rod  and  line,  /  met  in  all  2 

Wall     The  w's  of  lava  rose.  Far  off  in  the  dun  38 

Richly  and  darkly  girdle  these  gray  w's, —  Hear  you  the  sound  23 

A  tempest  strikes  the  craggy  w's.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  21 

Wan     Worn  and  w  was  their  gaze,  I  trow.  Far  off  in  the  dun  58 

Wand    shanks  were  shrunken  to  wiUow  w's  „              55 

Wander    Whithersoever  you  may  w  now.  Townsmen,  etc.  2 

He  moan'd,  '  I  w  from  my  good  ! '  Youth,  lapsing  i  35 
Wander'd     No  more  in  Xaraguay  W  happy 

Anacaona,  _  A  dark  Indian  maiden  70 

Want     Y^et  one  unschool'd  in  w  will  say  /  keep  no  m/yre  7 

They  are  not  w  of  love  for  thee.  Speak  to  me  8 

Wanting     Nor  w  many  a  sombre  mound.  Thy  soul  is  like  7 
Wanton    The  w  wind  came  singing  lustily  Among 

the  moss-grown  branches.  Hear  you  the  sound  41 

We  faint  unless  the  w  ear  Be  tickled  with  the 

loud  '  hear,  hear,'  They  wrought,  etc.  6 

Wantoning     W  in  orange  groves  Naked,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  5 
War     Unsocket  all  the  joints  of  w.                           Are  those  the  far-famed  15 

Warbling     Indian  maiden,  W  in  the  bloom'd  liana,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  2 

'Tis  not  alone  the  w  woods,  'Tis  not  alone  1 

Warm     W  beams  across  the  meadow  stole  ;  The  night,  etc.  3 

Cold  words  I  spoke,  yet  loved  thee  w  and  well.  To  thee  with  whom  8 

W  beats  my  blood,  my  spirit  thirsts  ;  Youth,  lapsing  it  45 

Warmest     take  with  thee  Our  w  wishes.  Woman  of  noble  6 

Warning     The  shrill  and  solemn  w  '  Ever,  Never  ' :  Half  after  midnight !  14 

Warrant     Ay,  Ay,  I  w  you,  and  when  I  came  Hear  you  the  sound  46 

Wash'd     That  w  her  shores  with  bhssful  somids  :  Youth,  lapsing  i  4 

Waste  (s)     screams  arise  Along  the  sunless  w.  Far  off  in  the  dun  18 

Vast  w's  of  starless  glooms  were  spread  „            101 

Waste  (verb)    fears  that  w  The  strength  of  men.  They  wrought,  etc.  22 

would  you  w  an  hour.  Townsmen,  etc.  3 

Wateh     To  w  and  wake  while  others  sleep.  How  s  range  it  is  2 

W  your  standard  roses  blowing,  Vicar  of  this  12 
Wateh't    heart  That  w  with  love  thine  earliest 

infancy.  To  thee  with  whom  12  ' 
Water     {See  also  Milldam-water)     When  o'er  the  w 

dancing  white  Remember  you  3 

God  walk'd  the  w's  of  thy  soul.  Thou  muy'st  remember  7 

Water'd     w  by  thy  tears.  The  two  fair  lilies  Woman  of  noble  10 

Waterfall     A  moan  of  many  w's.  Youth,  lapsing  ii  23 

Waved     Our  flags  have  w  together  !  Frenchman,  etc.  2 

this  one  smiled,  that  other  w  his  arms.  That  is  his  portrait  22 
Waving     W  a  palm  branch,  wondering,                     A  dark  Indian  maiden  51  ■ 

Waxen    You'd  weave  your  w  fingers  in  these  locks  >' 

(They  are  gray  now)  Hear  you  the  sound  58  ' 

Way     So  prone  are  we  toward  the  broad  w  to  Hell.  Art  for  Art' s  sake  !  Q, 

What's  the  clock  ?     Mich.     Half  w  toward 

midnight.  Hear  you  the  sound  4 

she  will  weep  and  give  them  w;                  •  /  keep  no  more  6 

I  met  in  all  the  close  green  w's,  I  met  in  all  1 


Way 


1163 


World 


Way  (continued)    tho'  the  cataract  seem  the  nearer  w,  Steersman  6 

Thro'  the  deep  hall  forced  its  w,  The  lamps  were  bright  42 

my  love  Coming  along  the  secret  w's  ?  What  rustles  6 

Seeing  the  heart  so  wondrous  in  her  w's,  Why  suffers  3 

I  loiter'd  in  the  middle  w.  Youth,  lapsing  i  46 

Up  hither  have  I  found  my  w,  „          H  29 

Weak    Alas,  my  life  is  frail  and  w  :  Speak  to  me  6 

Weave    w  your  waxen  fingers  in  these  locks  Hear  you  the  sound  58 

Wed     W  to  no  faction  in  the  state,  /,  loving  Freedom  3 

Wedded    Then  they  found  him  where  he  lay 

Whom  the  w  wife  did  slay,  The  lamps  were  bright  48 

Weep     he  would  w  For  ills  himself  had  practised  A  surface  man  4 

And  she  will  w  and  give  them  way  ;  /  keep  no  more  6 

Sisters,  I  could  almost  w  !  Not  a  whisper  8 

Weeping     0  Mother-Queen,  and  w  Wife,  Early-wise  7 

'  I  love  the  daisy  w  dew,  /  keep  no  more  13 

Weigh    To  w  them  as  they  should  be  weighed  ?  He  was  too  good  8 

Weighed    To  weigh  them  as  they  should  be  w  ?  „               8 

Welcome     She  gave  the  white  men  w  aU,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  53 

Well    Yes,  mightier  than  the  purest  painted  w,  Art  for  Art's  sake!  5 

Thro'  his  own  nature,  with  w  mingled  hues,  That  is  his  portrait  28 

Cold  words  I  spoke,  yet  loved  thee  warm 

and  w.  To  thee  with  whom.  8 

Went    Many  a  mUe  w  he.  Bold  Havelock  2 

shapes  without  heads  W  leaping  here  and  there.   Far  off  in  the  dun  104 

With  a  silver  sound  the  wheels  w  round,  „              121 

Wept    and  do  the  wrong  He  w  for,  A  surface  man  7 

W^    Silver  sails  all  out  of  the  W,  Bright  is  the  moon  12 

sim  Drew  down  the  W  his  feeble  lights  ;  Deep  glens  I  found  6 

Little  Aubrey  in  the  IF  !  Little  Aubrey  1 

So  pausing  'twist  the  East  and  W,  Youth,  lapsing  i  47 

Wheel    As  the  quick  w's  brush'd.  Far  off  in  the  dun  91 

not  pause  At  the  strife  of  the  shadowy  w's,  „             94 

With  a  silver  sound  the  w's  went  round,  The  w's                    „            121 

Hear  you  the  sound  of  w's  ?  Hear  you  the  sound  1 

Should  fli-e  the  many  w's  of  change  !  They  wrought,  etc.  24 

Wherefrom     Not  with  this  age  w  ye  stand  apart,  Therefore  your  Halls  11 

Whim    whose  w's  were  meant  For  virtue's  servants,  A  surface  man  2 

Whisper  (s)     Else  this  wild  w  round  my  head  Are  those  the  far-famed  11 

Not  a  w  stirs  the  gloom,  Not  a  whisper  1 

Showers  in  a  w  o'er  the  world.  Not  to  Silence  34 

A  lute-toned  w,  '  I  am  here  !  '  Re^nember  you  6 

These  -w's  rise,  and  fall  away,  'Tis  not  alone  10 

Whisper  (verb)     Another  w's  sick  with  loss  :  /  keep  no  more  9 

I  heard  vou  w  from  above.  Remember  you  5 

Whisper'd    the  w  love  of  the  fair  young  wives  ;  Far  off  in  the  dun  67 

White    The  w  man's  w  sail,  bringing  To  happy 

Hayti  the  new-comer,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  61 

She  gave  the  w  men  welcome  aU,  »                  53 

and  the  w  fly  leapt  About  his  hairless  brow.  Far  off  in  the  dun  83 

As  stars  thev  shone,  in  raiment  w,  "      .   •  i   ? a 

Why  the  bride  is  w  as  clay.  The  lamps  were  bright  10 

Sent  thro'  my  blood  a  prophet  voice  Before  the  ,       .      .  , , 

first  w  butterflies.  Youth,  lapsing  1 11 

Whiten'd    moonUght  That  w  aU  the  eastern  ridge.  Remember  youZ 

Whole  (adj.)     Thro'  one  w  Ufe  an  overflowing  urn.       That  is  his  portrait  60 

The  w  world  shall  not  brave  us  !  (repeat)  They  say  etc.  6,  13,  ^0 

The  w  land  gUtters  after  rain.  Youth,  lapsing  n  37 

Whole  (s)     When  the  shadow  of  night's  wings  „  .     ,     ,      ,  ^ 

Envelopes  the  gloomy  w,  Far  off  in  the  dun  14 

Widely    owning  more  Discourse,  more  w  wise.'  From  shape  to  shape  » 

Widen    All  nature  w's  upward.  "            .     _ 

Wife    0  Mother-Queen,  and  weeping  W,  ■  Z-'T'^^^Ji 

whisper'd  love  of  the  fair  young  wives  ;  iaroffin  the  dun  67 

Whom  the  wedded  w  did  slay,  The  lamps  were  bright  48 

You  have  given  me  such  a  w  !  ^xcar  of  this  10 

Wild    Following  her  w  carol  She  led  them  down 


the  pleasant  places, 
Else  this  w  whisper  round  my  head  Were  idler 


A  dark  Indian  maiden  61 


than  a  flight  of  rooks. 
And  why  her  black  eyes  bum  With  a  light  so 
w  and  stem  ?  ' 


Are  those  the  far-famed  11 
The  lamps  were  bright  16 


Then  a  scream  of  w  dismay  Thro'  the  deep  hall  ^^ 

WUderieS^  tW  the  w  Thou  bearest  from  the  threshold  WomanofnobU2 


Wildwood    Fann'd  this  queen  of  the  green  w,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  15 

Will    Genius,  Master  of  the  Moral  W  !  Art  for  Art's  sake!  2 

She  spurs  an  imitative  w  ;  Young  is  the  grief  6 

A  w  concentric  with  all  fate,  „              15 

Willow    shanks  were  shrunken  to  w  wands  Far  off  in  the  dun  55 

Wind    moaning  w  before  it  drives  Thick  wreaths  „             23 

loud  the  roar  Of  w  and  mingled  shower,  „              34 

The  wanton  w  came  singing  lustily  Hear  you  the  sound  41 

May  blow  alan'm  loud  to  every  w,  0  God,  make  this  age  4 

The  w  is  loud  in  holt  and  bill,  Speak  to  me  2 

sound  of  the  deep  when  the  w's  are  asleep ;  That  the  voice  3 

Your  name  is  blown  on  every  w,  The  noblest  men  5 

when  the  w's  Are  fallen  or  changed  ;  Wovuin  of  noble  9 

A  life  four-square  to  all  the  w's.  Young  is  the  grief  16 

Life,  to  this  w,  tum'd  all  her  vanes,  YoiUh,  lapsing  i  29 

A  noise  of  w's  that  meet  and  blend,  „               n  2 

'  Come  '  and  I  come,  the  w  is  strong :  „                 17 

A  light  w  wafts  me  from  mj  feet.  „                 44 

Wind-borne    his  cloak  w-b  Behmd,  One  was  the  Tishlnte  5 

Winding    To  snowy  crofts  and  w  scars,  Youth,  lapsing  i  18 

Window    thro'  The  w's  of  shaven  bone.  Far  off  in  the  dun  48 

Wine    Is  thy  mad  brain  drunk  with  the  merry,  red  w,  FuU  light  aloft  7 

It  is  not  good  to  drink  strong  w  „                9 

But  thou  hast  drunk  of  the  merry,  sweet  ir,  „              11 

Wing    night's  eternal  w's  Envelopes  the  gloomy 

whole,  Far  off  in  the  dun  13 

Her  thoughts  have  found  their  w's  The  lamps  were  bright  21 

Winged    then  Is  this  blind  flight  the  w  Powers.  Are  those  the  far-famed  4 

Winning    fair  blue  eyes  and  w  sweet.  Because  she  bore  6 

Winter    And  shook  the  frosty  w  stars.  Youth,  lapsing  i  20 

Wisdom    drank  The  sweet  sad  tears  of  w.'  Methought  I  saw  6 

Wisdom-led    Or  wise  yourselves,  or  w-i,  Are  those  the  far-famed  10 
Wise    (See  also  Early-wise)    Or  w  yourselves,  or 

wisdom-led,  «                10 

owning  more  Discourse,  more  widely  tc.'  From  shape  to  shape  8 

0  the  child  so  meek  and  w,  Who  made  us  w 

and  mild  !  The  child  was  sitting  8 

Like  some  w  artist.  Nature  gives,  'Tis  not  alone  6 

Mine  host  is  fat,  and  gray,  and  w.  Yon  huddled  doud  9 

Wiser    Ye  must  be  w  than  your  looks.  Are  those  the  far-famed  9 

Wisest    How  full  of  w  humour  and  of  love,  That  is  his  portrait  7 

Wish    Eustace,  long  May  my  strong  w,  ..              38 

Convoys  the  people's  w,  is  great ;  They  wrought,  etc.  31 

take  with  thee  Our  warmest  w's,  PFoman  of  noble  6 

Witch    That  skinny  w  did  say,  Tlte  lamps  were  bright  18 

Wolf    A  howling  of  the  mountain  w  ;  roitrt,  iopsifw  it  20 

Woman    w's  youthful  pride  Of  rounded  limbs —  One  was  the  Tithoite  16 

/  can  trust  Your  w's  nature  kind  and  true.  The  noblest  men  12 

W  of  noble  form  and  noble  mind  !  Woman  of  noble  1 

Womanhood    Slow-ripening  to  the  grace  of  w,  To  thee  with  whom  13 

Womb    shape  to  shape  at  first  within  the  w  From  shape  to  shape  1 

All  Nature  is  the  w  whence  Man  is  bom.  Hold  thou,  my  friend  2 

Won    praise  Is  neither  overdealt,  nor  idly  w.  That  is  his  portrait  43 

Wondering    w,  loving,  Carolling  '  Happy,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  51 

Wondrous    Seeing  the  heart  so  w  in  her  ways,  Why  suffers  3 

Woo    That  would  have  come  to  w  her.  Sweet  Kitty  Sandilands  8 

Wood    Lady  over  w  and  highland,  A  dark  Indian  maiden  27 

In  the  deep  w  no  more, —  d     "   .            ?I 

The  nightingale  in  leafy  w's  Remember  you  14 

'Tis  not  alone  the  warbling  w's,  ^  '  Tis  not  alone  1 

1  grieved  as  w's  in  dripping  rains  Youth,  lapsing  i  31 
Wood^    (5'ee  a/so  Cedar-wooded)    Dancing  by  a     ^   ,    ,  ,   ^.  .^     ,« 

pabny  bay.  In  the  w  paradise,  A  darklndwn  maxden  19 

Thro'  w  isles  the  river  shines,  Youih,  lapsing  ii  38 

Woodland    Dancing  on  the  blossomy  plain  To  a  ^   ,    ,  ,  ^.           . ,     „^ 

w  melody  :  -^  "*""*  Indtan  maiden  30 

Word    A  sound  of  w's  that  change  to  blows  !  They  wrought,  tie.  17 

Cold  w's  I  spoke,  yet  loved  thee  warm  To  thee  wtih  whom  8 

Wore    face  whose  every  line  W  the  pale  cast  Methought  I  saw  2 

Work  (s)    They  wrought  a  w  which  Time  reveres.  They  wrought,  «te.  1 

Nature  gives.  Thro'  all  her  w's,  Tis  not  alone  7 
Work  (verb)    Not  deals  in  threats,  but  w's  with  hope,   Th^  wrought,  etc.  39 

Working    A  labour  w  to  an  end.  YouA,  lapsing  tt  4 

World     Dissolve  a  w,  condense  a  star,  Are  those  the  far-famed  14 

which  of  us  most  shall  help  the  w.  Frenchman,  etc.  7 


World 


1164 


Yuccaroot 


World  (continued)    Clusters  and  beds  of  w's, 

Showers  in  a  whisper  o'er  the  w. 

I  see  the  w's  renewed  youth  A  long  day's  dawn 

flower  spread  and  rose,  A  various  w  ! 

As  beautiful,  but  yet  another  w. 

And  in  the  w  the  noblest  place, 

The  whole  w  shall  not  brave  lis  !  (repeat) 

If  the  w  caterwaul,  lay  harder  upon  her 

And  see  and  hear  the  w  revolve  : 
Worn     W  and  wan  was  their  gaze,  I  trow, 

A  dark  form  glances  quick  Thro'  her  w  brain, 
Worshipper    Latest  of  her  w's, 
Worshipt    They  w  Freedom  for  her  sake  ; 
Worth    were  w  Our  living  out  ? 

mould  you  all  awry  and  mar  your  w ; 

I  know  a  little  of  her  w, 
Wove    w  Inextricable  brickwork  maze  in  maze  ? 
Wreath    drives  Thick  w's  of  cloudy  dew. 
Wreath'd    w  with  green  bays  were  the  gorgeous  lamps, 


Hither,  when  all  7 

Not  to  Silence  34 

O  God,  make  this  age  6 

That  is  his  portrait  27 

30 

The  noblest  men  3 

They  say,  etc.  6,  13,  20 

Wherever  evil  6 

Youth,  lapsing  i  52 

Far  off  in  the  dun  58 

The  lamps  were  bright  28 

Not  to  Silence  7 

They  wrought,  etc.  5 

Gone  into  darkness  7 

Old  ghosts  11 

Well,  as  to  Fame  3 

What  rustles  7 

Far  off  in  the  dun  24 

115 


Writ     high  birth  Had  w  nobility  upon  my  brow.  Hear  you  the  sound  64 

Write    none  can  truly  w  his  single  day,  And  none  can 

w  it  for  him  upon  earth.  Old  ghosts  13 

Writhe    the  damn'd  that  w  Upon  their  beds  of 

flame.  Half  after  midnight !  10 

Wrong    some  sad  tale  of  w,  and  do  the  w  He  wept  for, 

till  the  very  w  itself  Had  foimd  him  out.  A  surface  man  6 

Wrought    (See  also  Passion-wrought)     W  with  his 

hand  and  his  head,  Bold  Havelock  10 

They  w  a  work  which  Time  reveres.  They  wrought,  etc.  1 

Wrong    Piercing  the  w  ears  of  the  damn'd  that 

writhe  Upon  their  beds  of  flame.  Half  after  midnight !  10 


X 


Xaragnay    cocoa-shadow'd  coves  Of  sunbright  X, 
cedar-wooded  paradise  Of  still  X : 
Maizebread  and  the  yuccaroot  Of  sweet  X : 
Than  the  men  of  X, 
No  more  in  X  Wjinder'd  happy  Anacaona, 


A  dark  Indian  maiden  9 
21 
45 
57 


Year    I  think  The  y,  that  comes,  may  come  with 
shame. 
Of  sacred  Nile,  a  thousand  y's  ago  ! — 
The  low  voice  of  the  glad  New  Y 
His  fame  is  equal  to  his  y's  : 
For  ever  into  coming  y's  ; 
Yellow    With  y  groimdsel  grown  ! 
But  his  face  was  a  y  gray. 

by  fits  the  lady  ash  With  twinkling  finger  sweeps 
her  y  keys. 
Yield    Y's  to  the  victor. 

Eosebud,  open,  y  Thy  fragrant  soul.' 
Yoked     Y  the  skeleton  horses  to. 
Yon     Behind  y  hill  the  trumpets  blow, 
Yonder    We  quarrel  here  at  home,  and  they  plot  against 
usy. 
The  despots  over  y,  let  'em  do  whate'er  they 

please  ! 
And  I  must  traverse  y  plain : 
Young    The  whisper'd  love  of  the  fair  y  wives  ; 
Townsmen,  or  of  the  hamlet,  y  or  old. 
And  your  three  y  things  at  play, 
Y  is  the  grief  I  entertain. 
And  ever  y  the  face  that  dwells  With  reason 
Youth  (adolescence)    Nor  Sorrow  beauteous  in 
her  y, 
I  see  the  world's  renewed  y  A  long  day's 

dawn, 
Y,  lapsing  thro'  fair  solitudes. 
Youth  (young  man)     Around  him  y's  were  gather'd, 
Youthfiil    and  mingled  with  The  woman's  y  pride 

Of  rounded  limbs —  One  was  the  Tishbite  16 

Yuccaroot    She  gave  them  the  y,  Maizebread  and 

the  y,  A  dark  Indian  muiden  43 


/,  loving  Freedom  6 

Here,  I  that  stood  2 

Remember  you  11 

That  is  his  portrait  42 

They  wrought,  etc.  4 

Along  this  glimmering  6 

Far  off  in  the  dun  52 

Townsmen,  etc.  10 

Faded  ev'ry  violet  4 

The  night,  etc.  5 

Far  off  in  the  dun  60 

Youth,  lapsing  ii  11 


They  say,  etc.  8 

" .      .16 
Youth,  lapsing  i  54 

Far  off  in  the  dun  67 

Townsmen,  etc.  1 

Vicar  of  this  13 

Young  is  the  grief  1 

3 


Are  those  the  far-famed  7 

0  God,  make  this  age  6 
Youth,  lapsing  i  1 
Meth^ugM  I  saw  4 


A   CONCORDANCE   to  the   SUPPRESSED   POEMS 


OF 


ALFRED,    LORD   TENNYSON 
(1830- 1 868) 


Abide    So  swiftly,  that  they  nowhere  would  a, 

in  him  light  and  joy  and  strength  a's ; 

We  will  a  in  the  golden  vale  Of  the  Lotos-land, 
Absorbed    torrent  of  quick  thought  A  me 
Abstraction    The  still  serene  a ; 
Abjrss    The  blossoming  a'es  of  your  hills  ? 

showering  circular  a  Of  radiance. 
Accent    In  a^s  of  majestic  melody. 
Accident    All  on-set  of  capricious  A, 

Accurate    I  know  not  if  I  shape  These  things  with  a  similitude 
Aching    We  beat  upon  our  a  hearts  with  rage ; 
Acorn    on  an  oaken  sprout  A  goodly  a  grew ;  But  winds 

from  heaven  shook  the  a  out, 
Acropolis    retir'd  At  midnight,  in  the  lone  A. 
Act  (s)    Yours  are  the  pubhc  a's  of  public  men, 
Act  (verb)    she  did  a  the  step-dame  to  mine  eyes. 
Adage    widow'd,  like  the  cur  In  the  child's  a  ? 
Adore    all  men  a  thee ;  Heaven  crieth  after  thee ; 
Afresh    And  being  there  they  did  break  forth  a 
Afric    whose  rapid  interval  Parts  A  from  green  Europe, 

cried  '  Wide  A^  doth  thy  Sun  Lighten, 
Again    And  yet  a,  a  and  evermore. 

Should  war's  mad  blast  a  be  blown, 
Age    and  old  a  Is  but  to  know  thee : 

for  your  manner  sorts  Not  with  this  a, 
Agglomerated    A  swiftness,  I  had  lived 
Aggression    Nor  seek  to  bridle  His  vile  a's, 
Agony    Wake  on,  my  soul,  nor  crouch  to  a : 

serpent  in  his  agonies  Awestricken  Indians ; 

in  mine  a,  Did  I  make  bare  of  all 
Ailment    whom  woful  a's  Of  unavailing  tears 
Air    ev'n  as  flame  draws  a ; 

As  o  is  th'  life  of  flame : 

Blown  round  with  hajfpy  a's  of  odorous  winds  ? 

The  indistinctest  atom  in  deep  a. 

Pure  without  heat,  into  a  larger  a  Upburning, 

And  as  light  as  a ; 

globefilled  arch  that,  cleaving  a, 

Filled  with  a  finer  a : 

happy  a  shall  woo  The  wither'd  leaf 

nor  breathe  What  a's  he  pleased ! 
Airily    Keen-eyed  Sisters,  singing  a 
Airy    Vaulting  on  thine  a  feet. 
Airy-fashioned    There  be  some  hearts  so  a-f, 
Aliurm    Weariness  and  wild  a, 
Albion    New-risen  o'er  awakened  A — 
Alphftmy    And  dross  to  gold  with  glorious  a, 


Love  and  Sorrow  15 

Love  42 

Lotos-Eaters  26 

Timbuctoo  142 

The  Mystic  5 

Timhuctoo  44 

173 

192 

26 

134 

Love  18 

Lost  Hope  6 

Timbuctoo  32 

Sugg,  by  Reading  21 

Lover's  Tale  i  664 

770 

Love  25 

Lover's  Tale  i  731 

Timbuctoo  3 

58 

The  Mystic  19 

Hands  all  Round  41 

Love  15 

Cambridge  11 

Lover's  Tale  i  495 

Britons,  guard  53 

Though  night  5 

Love  30 

Lover's  Tale  ii  50 

i  818 

Timbuctoo  18 

20 

46 

100 

The  Mystic  44 

The  Grasshopper  25 

Chorus  25 

n.  of  F.  Women  8 

Lover's  Tale  i  621 

693 

Hesperides,  Song  i  25 

The' Grasshopper  10 

Lover's  Tale  i  848 

Lotos-Eaters  2 

Cambridge  7 

Though  night  7 


All    Shadows  to  which,  despite  a  shocks  of  Change,  Timhuctoo  25 

And  circled  with  the  glory  of  living  light  And  alternations 

of  a  hues,  „         76 

Man  is  the  measure  of  a  truth  Unto  himself.  ol   piovrtx  3 

A  things  are  not  told  to  a,  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  12 


and  ceasing  from  A  contemplation  of  a  forms, 

The  centre  of  a  splendours,  a  unworthy  Of  such  a 
shrine — 

And  a  the  quaint  old  scraps  of  ancient  crones, 

And  throwing  by  a  consciousness  of  self, 

Yet  hands  a  round ! 
Alley    Thro'  yonder  poplar  o  Below, 
Allied    God  keep  their  lands  a, 
Almeida    Weep  not,  A,  that  I  said  to  thee 

A,  if  my  heart  were  substanceless, 
Aloft    and  a  Winnow  the  purple,  bearing 

a  Upon  his  renown'd  Emmence  bore  globes 
Alone    why  muse  you  here  a  Upon  the  Mountain, 

A  she  is  there : 

Ever  a  She  maketh  her  moan  : 

To  fight  thy  mother  here  o. 

All  a  she  sits  and  hears  Echoes 
Altarthrone    Ofiered  to  Gods  upon  an  a ; 


Lover's  TaU  i  67 


288 

787 

Hands  ail  Sound  21 

CJieck  every  outfiaA  4 

God  hless  our  Prinee  2 

Love  and  Sorrow  3 

13 

Timbuctoo  153 

170 

77 

/'  the  glooming  light  8 

16 

Hands  aO  Boumd  4S 

Borne  they  ImnulU  kim  3 

To 7 

Sugg,  by  Reading  73 


Timbuctoo  130 

76 

The  Ringlet  19 

A  fragment  20 

Chorus* 

Timbuctoo  62 

English  War  Song  23,  45 

24 

Hesperides,  Song  ii  12 
m  5 


Altercating    Alas,  Church  writers,  a  tribes — 

Alternate    Dappled  with  hollow  and  a  rise  Of  inter 
penetrated  arc. 

Alternation    And  a's  of  all  hues,  he  stood. 

Amiss    For  my  doubts  and  fears  were  all  a, 

Anakim    Piled  by  the  strong  and  sunbom  A 

Anarchy    To  shapes  of  wildest  a, 

Ancient    A  dream  as  frail  as  those  of  o  Time  ? ' 
There  standeth  our  a  enemy ;  (repeat) 
Hark !  he  shouteth — the  a  enemy ! 
For  his  a  heart  is  drunk  with  overwatchings 

night  and  day. 
And  the  a  secret  revealt^d. 
In  the  valley  some,  and  some  On  the  a  heights  divine ;    Lotos-Eaters  17 
Theekfobe  your  halls,  your  a  colleges,  Cambridge  1 

Our  a  boast  is  this — we  reverence  law.  Sugg,  by  Reading  34 

And  trust  an  o  manhood  and  the  cause  Of  England  .,  39 

And  all  the  quaint  old  scraps  of  a  crones,  Lover's  TaU  i  288 

Anew    Evermore  it  is  bom  a ;  Hesperides,  Song  i  18 

Angel  (adj.)    a  mind  which  look'd  from  out  The  starry 

glowing  Timbuctoo  88 

Angel  (s)    A's  have  talked  with  him,  and  showed  him  thrones :    The  Mystic  1 
Over  heaven's  parapets  the  a's  lean.  To  a  Lady  Slee^.  10 

What  an  a  !    How  clothed  with  beams !  Lover's  Tale  t  361 

I  became  to'' her  A  tutelary  a  „  388 

the  a's.  The  watchers  at  heaven's  gate,  „  615 


1165 


Anger 

Anger    must  your  noble  a  blaze  out  more 

Horrible  with  the  o  and  the  heat 
Angry    Flooding  its  a  cheek  with  odorous  tears. 
Annoy     Basing  thy  throne  above  the  world's  a. 
AnoUier    He  hath  not  o  dart ; 
Antelope    Stjke  never  yet  was  A  Could  skip 
Anxious     Beat  like  a  far  wave  on  my  o  ear. 
Apart    a  In  intellect  and  power  and  will, 
Apathy    Shall  hollow-hearted  a,  The  cruellest  fonn 
Ape    and  our  mirth  A's  the  happy  vein, 
Appeal    I  honour  much,  I  say,  this  man's  a. 


1166 


Beat 


Blow  ye  the  trumpet  9 

Lover's  Tale  i  681 

i  565 

Though  night  8 

Burial  of  Love  10 

Skipping-rope  1 

Timhuctoo  114 

The  Mystic  37 

Burial  of  Love  17 

Every  day,  etc.  13 

Sugg,  by  Reading  49 


Apple     The  golden  a,  the  golden  a,  the  hallowed  fruit,  Hesperides,  Song  i  1 

Guard  the  a  night  and  day,  „  28 

and  the  golden  a  be  stol'n  away,  „  ii  11 

If  the  golden  a  be  taken  The  world  „  21 

The  golden  a  stol'n  away,  „  iii  4 

Make  the  a  holy  and  bright,  „  iv  10 

But  the  a  of  gold  hangs  over  the  sea,  „  23 

The  golden  a,  the  golden  a,  the  hallowed  fruit,  „  30 

Dear  room,  the  a  of  my  sight,  0  darling  room  2 

April     Young  fishes,  on  an  A  morn,  Rosalind  21 

Green  springtide,  A  promise,  glad  new  year  Lover's  Tale  i  277 

Arabian    from  his  mother's  eyes  Flow  over  the  A  bay,  A  Fragment  24 

Arc     alternate  rise  Of  interpenetrated  a,  Timhuctoo  131 

Arch    With  triple  a  of  everchanging  bows,  „  74 

globefilled  o  that,  cleaving  air.  Chorus  25 

in  and  out  the  woodbine's  flowery  a'es  Check  every  outflash  1 1 

Stays  on  the  flowering  a  of  the  bough,  Hesperides,  Song  iv  18 

Arch'd    wheel  in  wheel,  A  the  wan  Sapphire.  Timhuctoo  111 

ArchetjTW     To  its  A  that  waits  Clad  in  light  Germ  of '  Maud '  31 

Arching    A  blue-glosst^d  necks  beneath  Dualisms  13 

A  the  billow  in  his  sleep ;  Hesperides,  Song  iv  3 

Arch-mock     This  was  the  very  a-m  And  insolence  Lover's  Tale  i  687 

Archway     All  night  through  a's  of  the  bridged  pearl  Though  night  3 

Argent    windeth  through  The  a  streets  o'  the  City,  Timhuctoo  231 

Pleached  with  her  hair,  in  mail  of  a  light  Shot 

into  gold,  Pallid  thunder  stricken  12 

Parted  on  either  side  her  a  neck.  Lover's  Tale  i  740 

Ai^osy     broad-blown  Argosies  Drave  into  haven?  A  Fragment  7 

Aright     And  my  eyes  read,  they  read  a,  her  heart  Was 

Lionel's  :  Lover's  Tale  i  602 

Arise    A ,  brave  Poles,  the  boldest  of  the  bold ;  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  3 

Arm    I  dare  not  fold  My  a's  about  thee —  Oh,  Beauty  6 

Arms     Than  vanquish  all  the  world  in  a.  Hands  all  Round  28 

Arrested    love  too  high  to  be  express'd  A  in  its  sphere.        Lover's  Tale  i  66 
Arrogant     It  looks  too  a  a  jest —  New  Timon  42 

Arrow     Love  is  dead ;  His  last  a  sped ;  Burial  of  Love  9 

Arrowy     borne  Adown  the  sloping  of  an  a  stream,  Timhuctoo  144 

Art    We  know  him,  out  of  Shakespeare's  a.  New  Timon  1 

An  artist.  Sir,  should  rest  in  a,  „        21 

Strung  in  the  very  negligence  of  ^,  Or  in  the  a  of 

Nature,  Lover's  Tale  i  562 

Artist    An  a,  Sir,  should  rest  in  art,  New  Timon  21 

Ashes     I  lay  !     White  as  quench'd  a,  Lover's  Tale  i  620 

Ask     I  only  a  to  sit  beside  thy  feet.  Oh,  Beauty  3 

Assimilated     Perchance  a  all  our  tastes  Lover's  Tale  i  238 

Assyrian    Some  vast  A  doom  to  burst  upon  our  race.    Su^g.  hy  Reading  42 
Astonishment    full  of  strange  A  and  boundless  change. 

(repeat)  Chorus  10,  20,  30 

Atalantis     Divinest  A,  whom  the  waves  Have  buried  deep,       Timhuctoo  22 
Atlantic- Atlantick    That  ran  bloombright  into  the  Atlantic 

blue,  The  Hesperides  9 

O  rise,  our  strong  Atlantic  sons.  Hands  all  Round  49 

when  the  Sun  Had  fall'n  below  th'  Atlantick,  Timhuctoo  4 

Atmosphere    Thou  foldest,  like  a  golden  a.  Love  5 

drew  the  happy  a  Of  my  unhappy  sighs,  Lover's  Tale  i  673 

Atom     Tlie  indistinctest  a  in  deep  air,  Timhuctoo  100 

Attam    teach  him  to  a  By  shadowing  forth  the  Unattainable ;        „  196 

Austrian     The  Russian  whips  and  A  rod* —  Hands  all  Round  18 

Author     Refused  to  look  his  a  in  the  face,  Lover's  Tale  i  697 

Autocrat    We  must  not  dread  in  you  the  nameless  a.     Sugg,  by  Reading  18 

Autumn    in  red  A  when  the  winds  are  wild  Timhuctoo  202 

The  troublous  a's  sallow  gloom.  Chorus  17 

bitter  blasts  the  screaming  a  whirl,  Though  night  2 

A'/ail    Shall  not  a  you  when  the  day-beam  sports  Cambridge  6 


Awake     He  often  lying  broad  a,  The  Mystic  36 

Awakened   when  the  day-beam  sports  New-risen  o'er  a  Albion —   Cambridge  7 
Awakening    See  Earth-awakening 

Awestricken    As  on  a  serpent  in  his  agonies  A  Indians ;  Love  31 

Awful    Before  the  a  Genius  of  the  place  Kneels  the  pale 

Priestess  in  deep  faith,  Timhuctoo  33 

A  with  most  invariable  eyes.  The  Mystic  24 

Hallowed  in  a  chasms  of  wheeling  gloom.  Love  22 

And  in  his  writhings  a  hues  begin  To  wander  down  his  sable 

sheeny  sides,  „    38 

A  Memnonian  countenances  calm  Looking  athwart  the 

burning  fiats,  A  Fragment  16 

Five  and  three  (Let  it  not  be  preached  abroad) 

make  an  a  mystery.  Hesperides,  Song  i  16 

But  grow  upon  them  like  a  glorious  vision  Of 
unconceived  and  a  happiness.  Lover's  Tale  i  798 

Aye     Merry  England  !     England  for  a  ! 

(repeat)  English  War  Song  11,  22,  33,  44,  55 


B 

Balanced     and  swum  with  b  wings  To  some  tall 

mountain.                    •  Lover's  Tale  i  304 

Ball     Till  your  h's  fly  as  their  true  shafts  have  flown.  Britons,  guard  47 

Think  you  hearts  are  tennis  b's  To  play  with,  Rosalind  32 

Balloon     As  when  a  man,  that  sails  in  a  b,  D.  of  F.  Women  1 

Balm     Thy  locks  are  dripping  h ;  Hero  to  Leander  20 
Baltic    on  the  B  shore  Boleslas  drove  the  Pomeranian.  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  13 

Banbury     '  B  Cross,'  '  The  Gander '  -  Lover's  Tale  i  286 

Bandbox     to  take  his  name  You  h.  New  Timon  44 

Banded     Although  we  fought  the  b  world  alone,  Britons,  guard  59 

Banished     The  true  men  h,  „            10 
Bank     (See  also  Brookbank)     Gray  sand  b's  and  pale  sunsets 

-T-dreary  wind,  Mablethorpe  7 

Banner     On  the  ridge  of  the  hill  his  b's  rise ;  English  War  Song  25 

Barbarian    Low-built,  mud-walled,  B  settlement,  Timhuctoo  248 

Bare     Her  shoulders  are  b ;  7'  the  glooming  light  10 

The  b  word  iiss  hath  made  my  inner  soul  To  tremble      Oh,  Beauty  12 

Bark  (of  a  tree)     Creeping  under  the  fragrant  b,  Hesperides,  Song  i  23 

Bark  (vessel)     winedark  wave  our  weary  b  did  carry.  Lotos-Eaters  9 
Based    See  Broad-based 

Basing    B  thy  throne  above  the  world's  annoy.  Though  night  8 

Bathe     B's  the  cold  hand  with  tears,  Timhuctoo  38 

Come  b  me  with  thy  kisses,  Hero  to  Leander  12 

Bathed     I  have  b  thee  with  the  pleasant  myrrh ;  „            19 

Battailing    B  with  the  glooms  of  my  dark  will,  Lover's  Tale  i  782 

Battle  (s)     gather  from  afar  The  hosts  to  h :  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  2 

To  blow  the  b  from  their  oaken  sides.  Britons,  guard  38 

We  won  old  h's  with  our  strength,  the  bow.  „            44 

Battle  (verb)     Will  he  dare  to  b  with  the  free  ?  English  War  Song  46 

Battled     Or  loyally  disloyal  h  for  our  rights.  Sugg,  by  Reading  36 

Battlement     Illimitable  range  of  b  On  h,  Timhuctoo  164 

Bay     Your  flowering  Capes  and  your  gold-sanded  h's  „          45 

from  his  mother's  eyes  Flow  over  the  Arabian  h,  A  Fragment  24 

Past  Thymiaterion,  in  calmed  b's.  The  Hesperides  4 

Through  vineyards  from  an  island  h.  Rosalind  29 

Bayard    The  B  of  the  meadow.  The  Grasshopper  21 

Bayona     In  old  B,  nigh  the  Southern  Sea —  There  are  three  things  11 

Beam    {See  also  Day-beam)    What  an  angel !    How 

clothed  with  h's !                                           .  Lover's  Tale  i  352 

Bear     b  them  upward  through  the  trackless  fields  Timhuctoo  159 
There  must  no  man  go  back  to  h  the  tale :  No  man 

to  h  it — Swear  it !     We  swear  it !  Britons,  guard  56 

Bearded    Her  tears  are  mixed  with  the  h  dews,  P  the  glooming  light  11 

Bearing     b  on  both  sides  Double  display  Timhuctoo  154 

As  J  no  essential  fruits  of  excellence.  Lover's  Tale  i  385 

So  h  on  thro'  Being  limitless  The  triumph  „             514 

Beast    wondrous  tones  Of  man  and  b  Chorus  9 

Beat     B  like  a  far  wave  on  my  anxious  ear.  Timhuctoo  114 

Thy  heart  b's  through  thy  rosy  limbs  Hero  to  Leander  16 

the  brazen  h  Of  their  broad  vans.  Shall  the  hag  7 

We  b  upon  our  aching  hearts  with  rage ;  Love  18 

B  upon  his  father's  shield —  Home  they  brought  him  9 

heart  b  Twice  to  the  melody  of  hers.  Lover's  Tale  i  73 


Beaten 


1167 


Beaten    ringlets,  Drooping  and  b  with  the  plaining  wind,  Lover's  Tale  i  735 
Cnish'd  link  on  link  into  the  b  earth,  859 

Beatitude    and  bound  alone  Of  full  b.  Tunbuctoo  96 

Beauteous     And  I  paint  the  b  face  Of  the  maiden,  Germ  of '  Maud  '  2 

Beautiful     Would  marvel  from  so  i  a  sight  Pallid  thunder  stricken  9 


no  maids  like  English  maids,  So  b  as  they  be. 

that  one  so  b  Should  have  so  dull  an  ear. 

'Tis  a  b  And  pleasant  meditation. 
Beauty    All  powerful  in  6  as  thou  art. 

in  the  pride  of  b  issuing  A  sheeny  snake, 

Oh,  B,  passing  b !  sweetest  Sweet ! 
Became    I  J  to  her  A  tutelary  angel 
Bedridden     Sneering  b  in  the  down  of  Peace 
Bee     I  was  the  hive  and  Love  the  b, 

Two  b's  within  a  chrystal  flowerbell  rocked 
Began    The  boy  b  to  leap  and  prance, 
B^inning    The  end  of  day  anti  b  of  night 
B^ind    B,  In  diamond  light,  unsprung 


National  Song  26 

The  lintwhite  8 

Lover's  Tale  i  239 

Love  and  sorrow  12 

Could  I  outwear  5 

Oh,  Beauty  1 

Lover's  Tale  i  387 

Sugg,  by  Reading  46 

Love,  Pride,  etc,  3 

Dualisms  1 

Home  they  brought  him  7 

Hesperides,  Song  iv  9 

Timbuctoo  167 


Behold     b  Cathedralled  caverns  of  thick-ribbfed  gold  Pallid  thunder  stricken  6 


dimly  we  b  thee  Athwart  the  veils  of  evil 
Being     But  had  their  b  in  the  heart  of  Man 

So  bearing  on  thro'  B  limitless 
Belgium    To  take  Sardinia,  B,  or  the  Rhine  : 
Believe    Tlie  hogs  who  can  b  in  nothing  great. 

She  hardly  can  b  that  she  shall  suffer  wrong. 
Bell    Pagods  hung  with  music  of  sweet  Vs : 
Belt    The  burning  b's,  the  mighty  rings, 

Thou  didst  receive  that  b  of  pines, 
Best    That  man's  the  b  cosmopolite  Who  loves  his 
native  country  b. 

That  man's  the  b  Conservative  Who  lops  the 
mouldered  branch  away. 

We  know  thee  most,  we  love  thee  b. 
Betraying    waters  B  the  close  kisses  of  the  wind — 
Better    Far  b,  far  b  he  never  were  bom 

To  Europe's  b  health  we  drink,  my  friends, 

b  to  be  free  Than  vanquish  all  the  world 

For  b  so  you  fight  for  public  ends ; 

B  wild  Mahmoud's  war-cry  once  again  ! 
Bewept    And  still  b  my  grief. 

Bewick    where,  alack,  is  5  To  tell  the  meaning  now  ? 
Bicker    Like  them,  you  b  less  for  truth  than  forms. 
Billow    the  b  will  embrace  thee  with  a  kiss 

Driven  back  the  b  of  the  dreamful  dark. 

Arching  the  b  in  his  sleep ; 
Bingen    between  The  hills  to  B  have  I  been,  B  in 

Darmstadt, 
Bird    The  little  b  pipeth  '  why !  why ! '  The'  How 

And  the  great  b  sits  on  the  opposite  bough. 

Nor  the  rivers  flow,  nor  the  sweet  b's  sing, 

watered  vallies  where  the  young  b's  sing ; 

two  b's  of  glancing  feather  Do  woo  each  other. 

Thy  woes  are  b's  of  passage,  transitory 


Love  16 

Tiinbuctoo  19 

Lover's  Tale  i  514 

Britons,  guard  50 

Sugg,  by  Reading  45 

66 

Timbuctoo  234 

Chorus  23 

Lover's  Tale  i  11 

Hands  all  Round  3 


39 

Timbuctoo  209 

English  War  Song  16 

Hands  all  Round  23 

27 

Sugg,  by  Reading  26 

83 

Lover's  Tale  i  733 

A  gate  and  a  field  5 

Sugg,  by  Reading  76 

Hero  to  Leander  27 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  6 

Hesperides,  Song  iv  3 

0  darling  room  10 

'  and  the  '  Why '  26 

28 

Burial  of  Love  29 

Could  I  outwear  8 

Dualisms  8 

Me  my  own  fate  2 

Birth    nothing  visible,  they  sayj  had  b  In 'that  blest  ground     Timbuctoo  55 

either  gate  of  life.  Both  b  and  death ;  The  Mystic  33 

The  naked  summer's  glowing  b,  Chorus  16 

Already  with  the  pangs  of  a  new  b  Love  36 

did  break  forth  afresh  In  a  new  b,  Lover's  Tale  i  732 

Biscayan     Call  home  your  ships  across  B  tides,  Britons,  guard  37 

Bitter    for  b  grief  Doth  hold  the  other  half  in  sovranty.    Love  and  Sorrow  4 

And  b  blasts  the  screaming  autumn  whirl,  Though  Night  2 

Bitterness    Turn  cloud  to  light,  and  b  to  joy,  6 

Black    And  the  unsounded,  undescended  depth  Of  her  b 

hollows. 

B  specks  amid  a  waste  of  dreary  sand, 

And  the  b  owl  scuds  down  the  mellow 

twilight.  The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why    30 

No  western  odours  wander  On  the  b  and  moaning  sea.  Hero  to  Leander  29 

into  a  larger  air  Upbuming,  and  an  ether  of  b  hue.  The  Mystic  45 

b  eyes,  and  brown  and  blue ;  I  hold  them  all 

most  dear ;  but  oh  !  b  eyes,  Th£re  are  three  things  6 

Blackbird    '  The  Four-and-twenty  B's '  Lover's  Tale  t  286 

Black-wall'd    thro'  the  b-w  cliff  the  rapid  brook  ,,  ^71 

Blame  (s)    You  did  mingle  b  and  praise,  To  C.  North  d 

I  forgave  you  all  the  b,  »         " 


Timbuctoo  105 

247 


Blame  (verb)    Ringlet,  I  count  you  much  to  b, 

Blast  (s)     (See  also  Storm-blast)    bitter  b's  the  screaming 


Blown 

The  Ringlet  46. 


Thouah  Night  2 

Hands  all  Round  41 

30 

Sugg,  bu  Reading  8 

ShaU  the  hag  11 

Lover's  Tale  i  622 

Sugg,  by  Reading  24 

Titnlmctoo  108 

Blou}  ye  the  trumpet  9 

Lotos-Eaters  29 

Timbiietoo  5 

Sugg,  by  Reading  8 

God  bless  our  Prince  1 

6 

13 


Timbuetoo  56 


autumn  whirl, 

Should  war's  mad  b  again  be  blo^vn, 
Blast  (verb)     But  fire,  to  b  the  hopes  of  men. 

What  power  is  yours  to  6  a  cause  or  bless  ! 
Blastbome    With  points  of  b  hail  their  heated  eyne ! 
Blasted    fall'n  in  the  woods,  or  b  Upon  this  bough  ? 
Blatant    But  be  not  you  the  b  traitors  of  the  hearth. 
Blaze  (s)    B  within  b,  an  unimagin'd  depth 
Blaze  (verb)    must  your  noble  anger  b  out  mor« 
Bleat    ewes  b  On  the  solitary  steeps, 
Blench'd    silent  Heavens  were  b  with  faery  light. 
Bless    What  power  is  yours  to  blast  a  cause  or  b ! 

God  b  our  Prince  and  Bride ! 

Them  with  all  blessings  b, 

God  b  thy  marriage-day,  God  b  the  Queen. 
Bless'd-Blessed-Blest    had  birth  In  that  blest  ground  but 
it  was  play'd  about 

There  are  three  things  beneath  the  blessed  skies 

For  which  I  live^  There  are  three  things  5 

Holv  and  bright,  round  and  full,  bright  and 
blest. 

The  Pope  has  bless'd  him  ; 

As  with  one  kiss  to  touch  thy  blessed  cheek, 
shall  the  b  of  the  meek  be  on  thee ; 

Them  with  all  b's  bless, 

he  would  hold  The  hand  of  b  over  Lionel, 
Blest    See  Bless'd 

Blew    One  rainy  night,  when  every  wind  b  loud. 
Blind  (adj.)     (Shame  fall  'em  they  are  deaf  and  b) 

I  had  lain  as  still.  And  b  and  motionless 
Blind  (verb)    Till  it  dazzle  and  b  his  eyes. 
Blinding    and  beneath  Two  doors  of  b  brilliance, 
Bliss    Oh  joy  !    0  6  of  b'es  ! 

Comes  the  b  of  secret  smiles. 
Blissful    With  the  b  Lotos-eaters  pale 
Blood    Why  the  life  goes  when  the  b  is  spilt  ?  The  ' 

Though  hourly  pastured  on  the  salient  b  ? 

moved  around  me  stiU  With  the  moving  of  the  6 

For  art  thou  not  of  British  b  ? 

as  the  milky  b  Of  hateful  herbs 

b,  the  breath,  the  feeling  and  the  motion. 
Bloom    Fanlike  and  fibred,  with  intensest  b : 

Lighting  on  the  golden  b's  ? 

The  vocal  spring  of  bursting  b, 

words  were  like  a  coronal  of  wild  b's 

rare  pity  had  stolen  The  living  b 
Bloombright    That  ran  b  into  the  Atlantic  blue, 
Bloomed  (adj.)     AH  in  the  bj>l&y.  (repeat) 


Hesperides,  Song  to  11 

Britons,  guard  3 

Oh,  Beauty  8 

Though  night  12 

God  bless  our  Prince  6 

Lover's  Tale  i  792 

Lover's  Tale  i  367 

The  Grasshopper  6 

Lover's  Tale  t  619 

English  War  Song  28 

Timbuctoo  178 

Hero  to  Leander  10 

Hesperides,  Song  Hi  11 

Lotos-Eaters  25 

Hov '  and  the'  Why '  32 

Shall  the  hag  b 

Germ  of  ^ Maud' 20 

Hands  all  Round  40 

Lover's  Tale  t  820 

a  75 

Timbuctoo  156 
The  Grasshopper  AA 
Chorus  15 
Lover's  Tale  i  561 
726 
The  Hesperides  9 
The  lintvhite  3,  12,  21,  30 
Bloom'd  (verb)    from  that  Heaven  in  whose  light  I  b '       Lover's  T<de  i  624 
Bloometh    Fi-om  an  old  ganlen  where  no  flower  b.  Me  my  own  fate  7 

Blosmwhite     Both  in  6  silk  are  f rockM :  Dualisms  16 

Blosmy    They  from  the  b  brere  Call  to  the  fleeting  year,        The  lintwhite  4 
Blossom  (adj.)    starr'd  at  slender  intervals  With  b  tufU 

of  purest  white ;  Lover's  Tale  i  400 

Blossom  (s)    For  the  b  unto  three-fold  music  bloweth ;  Hesperides,  Song  i  17 

The  b  and  the  fragrance.  Lover's  Tale  i  626 

Blossoming    The  6  abysses  of  j'our  hills  ?  Timbuctoo  H 

Blot    Nor  b  with  floatmg  shades  the  solar  light.  Shall  the  hag  14 

Blow  (s)     some  you  strike  can  scarce  return  the  b ;        Sugg,  by  Reading  27 

Blow  (verb)    b  back  Their  wild  cries  down  their  caveni-throaU,  Shall  the  hag  9 

B  ye  the  trumpet,  gather  from  alar  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  1 

organ-pipes  that  b  Melodious  thunders  Cambriag*  8 

To  b  the  battle  from  their  oaken  sidea.  Britons,  guard  88 

Bloweth     the  wind  which  b  cold  or  heat  Shall  the  hag  6 

For  the  blossom  unto  three-fold  music  b ;  Hesperides,  Song  i  17 

Blowing    And  winds  were  roaring  and  b ;  186S-1S66  3 

Old  Year  roaring  and  b  And  New  Year  b  and  roaring.  „        12 

Blown    {See  also  Broad-blown)    B  round  with  happy  airs  of 

odorous  winds  ?  Tin>buetoo  46 

Changed  into  fire,  and  b  about  with  sighs.  To  -- —  9 

B  seaward  from  the  shore ;  The  Hesperides  8 

early  seasmell  b  Through  vineyards  Rosalind  28 

Should  war's  mad  blast  again  be  6,  Hands  all  Round  41 


Blue 


1168 


Bringeth 


Blue  (adj.)     The  ocean  with  the  morrow  light  Will  be 

both  b  and  calm ;  Hero  to  Leander  26 

all  the  day  heaven  gathers  back  her  tears  Into  her 

own  b  eyes  so  clear  and  deep,  Tears  of  Heaven  7 

black  eyes,  and  brown  and  h ;  I  hold  them  all 

most  dear  •  There  are  three  things  6 

That  ran  bloombright  into  the  Atlantic  6,  The  Hesperides  9 

Stream  from  beneath  him  in  the  broad  b  noon,  D.  of  F.  Women  3 

Blue  (s)    chasms  of  deep,  deep  b  Slumber'd  unfathomable,         Timbuctoo  7 

With  eyes  dropt  downward  through  the  b  serene.       To  a  Lady  Sleep.  9 

Blue-glossed     Arching  b-g  necks  beneath  Dualisms  13 

Blue-green     Through  yonder  poplar  alley  Below,  the 


b-g  river  windeth  slowly ; 
Blush'd     Ringlet,  She  b  a  rosy  red. 
Boast     Our  ancient  b  is  this — we  reverence  law. 
Boat     And  sailing  on  Pactolus  in  a  6, 
Body    and  yet  Remaining  from  the  b, 

You  cannot  let  a  6  be : 

Crept  like  the  drains  of  a  marsh  thro'  all  my  b ; 

Unto  the  growth  of  b  and  of  mind ; 


Check  every  outflash  5 

The  Ringlet  36 

Sugg,  by  Reading  34 

Pallid  thunderstricken  3 

The  Mystic  37 

New  Timon  30 

Lover's  Tale  ii  56 

74 


National  Song  8 
Oh,  Beauty  7 
Hesperides,  Song  Hi  7 
Rosalind  2 
Blow  ye  the  trumpet  3 
English  War  Song  35 
Blow  ye  the  trumpet  3 
Hesperides,  Song  iv  29 
Blow  ye  the  trumpet  14 
Timbuctoo  83 


Bold    no  men  like  Englishmen,  So  tall  and  b  as  they  be. 
nothing  seems  to  me  so  wild  and  b, 
Caucasus  is  b  and  strong. 
B,  subtle,  careless  Rosalind, 
Arise,  brave  Poles,  the  boldest  of  the  b ; 
Bolder    child  in  our  cradles  is  b  than  he ; 
Boldest    Arise,  brave  Poles,  the  b  of  the  bold ; 
Bole     gnarled  b  of  the  charmed  tree, 
Boleslas   on  the  Baltic  shore  B  drove  the  Pomeranian 
Bond     Thy  spirit  fetter'd  with  the  b  of  clay : 
Bone     they  plunge  their  doubts  among  old  rags  and  Vs.  Sugg,  by  Reading  72 

dead  skin  withering  on  the  fretted  b,  Lover's  Tale  i  678 

Boot     A  dapper  b — a  little  hand —  New  Timon  35 

Bore     b  globes  Of  wheeling  sims,  or  stars,  Timbuctoo  171 

waves,  which  b  The  reflex  of  my  City  „        238 

b  downward  with  the  wave.  Lover's  Tale  i  375 

Bom    (See  also  Sunborn)     We  laugh,  we  cry, 

we  are  b,  we  die.  The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why '  8 

Through  whose  dim  brain  the  winged  dreams  are  b.  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  2 

Far  better,  far  better  he  never  were  b  English  War  Song  16 

Evermore  it  is  b  anew ;  Hesperides,  Song  i  18 

Borne    (See  also  Blastborne)    b  Adown  the  sloping  of  an 

arrowy  stream,  Timbuctoo  143 

Through  dark  and  bright  Winged  hours  are  b ;  Every  day,  etc.  4 

b  abroad  By  the  loud  winds,  Love  8 

Bosom    My  heart  is  warmer  surely  than  the  b  of  the  main.  Hero  to  Leander  9 

each  rose  Doth  faint  upon  the  b  Lover's  Tale  i  564 

Both    So  that  with  hasty  motion  I  did  veil  My  vision  with  b 

hands,  Timbuctoo  69 

bearing  on  b  sides  Double  display  of  starlit  wings  „        154 

Yet  on  b  sides  at  once  thou  canst  not  shine :  Love  and  Sorrow  7 

Bottom    Creep  down  into  the  b  of  the  flower.  Lover's  Tale  i  560 

Bougb    great  bird  sits  on  the  opposite  b.         The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why '  28 

Stays  on  the  flowering  arch  of  the  b,  Hesperides,  Song  iv  18 

And  a  titmarsh  in  the  b. 

f  all'n  in  the  woods,  or  blasted  Upon  this  b  ? 
Bought    ruthless  host  is  b  with  plunder'd  gold, 

hosts  to  battle :  be  not  b  and  sold. 

She  that  gave  you  's  b  and  sold. 
Bound  (s)     The  herald  lightning's  starry  b, 

verge  and  b  alone  Of  full  beatitude. 
Bound  (verb)   spirit  With  supernatural  excitation  b  Within  me,         „         91 

Carol  clearly,  b  along,  (repeat)  The  Grasshopper  4,  30 

Bound  (past  of  Bind)     With  a  silken  cord  I  b  it.  Anacreontics  8 

Bound  (part.)     sisters  three,  B  about  the  golden  tree.  Hesperides,  Song  ii  25 

B  about  All  round  about  The  gnarled  bole  „  iv  27 

Half  bursten  from  the  shroud,  in  cere  cloth  b.  Lover's  Tale  i  677 

Bounding    The  fierceness  of  the  b  element  ?  Timbv/:too  148 

Boundless    Through  length  of  porch  and  lake  and  b  hall,  „         180 

Astonishment  and  b  change,  (repeat) 
Bow    With  triple  arch  of  everchanging  b's. 

His  b  unstrung  With  the  tears  he  hath  shed. 

We  won  old  battles  with  our  strength,  the  b. 
Bow'd    As  towards  the  gracious  light  I  b, 

lithe  limbs  b  as  with  a  heavy  weight 


A  gate  and  a  field  4 

Lover^s  Tale  i  623 

Britons,  guard  7 

Blow  ye  the  trumpet  2 

The  Ringlet  33 

Chorus  14 

Timbuctoo  95 


Chorus  10,  20,  30 

Timbuctoo  74 

Burial  of  Love  5 

Britons,  guard  44 

What  time  I  wasted  4 

Lover's  Tale  i  126 


Bower    the  light  of  vernal  b's, 

Bowing    B  the  seeded  siunmerflowers. 

Bowman     Now  practise,  yeomen,  Like  those  bowmen, 

Boy     Who  kifled  the  girls  and  thrill'd  the  b's 

The  b  began  to  leap  and  prance. 

Let  them  so  love  that  men  and  b's  may  say, 
Brain    hurried  through  The  riv'n  rapt  b : 

my  human  b  Stagger'd  beneath  the  vision, 

Through  whose  dim  b  the  winged  dreams  are  bom, 

b  could  keep  afloat  The  subtle  spirit. 

And  a  juggle  of  the  b. 

On  those  first-moved  fibres  of  the  b. 

They  flash  across  the  darkness  of  my  b, 

All  unawares,  into  the  poet's  b  ; 
Bramble    matted  b  and  the  shining  gloss  Of  ivy -leaves. 
Branching     And  b  silvers  of  the  central  globe.  Pallid  thunderstricken  8 

Brassy     between  whose  limbs  Of  b  vastness  broad-blown 

Argosies  Drave  into  haven  ?  A  Fragment  7 

Brave     Arise,  b  Poles,  the  boldest  of  the  bold ;  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  3 

Brazen    Woiild  shatter  and  o'erbear  the  6  heat  Of  their 


Could  I  outwear  6 

The  Grasshopper  8 

Britons,  guard  46 

New  Timon  9 

Home  they  brought  him  7 

Lover's  Tale  i  801 

Timbuctoo  121 

185 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  2 

Oh,  Beauty  10 

Germ  of '  Alaud '  8 

Lover's  Tale  i  21 

53 

557 

373 


broad  vans. 
Bread     He  shall  eat  the  b  of  common  scorn ; 
Breadth    With  moral  b  of  temperament. 
Break     spheres  Which  b  upon  each  other, 

world  will  not  change,  and  her  heart  will  not  b. 

deep  salt  wave  b's  in  above 

B  through  your  iron  shackles — ^fling  tham  far. 

summer  winds  b  their  soft  sleep  with  sighs, 

they  did  b  forth  afresh  In  a  new  birth. 
Breast    Zone  of  flashing  gold  beneath  His  b. 
Breath    lips  so  cruel  dimib  Should  have  so  sweet  a  b  ! 


Shall  the  hag  7 

English  War  Song  13 

New  Timon  28 

Timbuctoo  126 

/'  the  glooming  light  22 

Hero  to  Leander  34 

Blow  ye  the  trumpet  4 

Lover's  Tale  i  559 

731 

Timbuctoo  73 

The  lintwhite  18 


redolent  b  Of  this  warm  seawind  ripeneth,  Hesperides,  Song  iv  1 

Which  waste  with  the  b  that  made  'em.  Lover's  Tale  i  475 

blood,  the  b,  the  feeling  and  the  motion,  „         H  75 

Breath-Breathe     Before  the  face  of  God  didst  breath  and  move,  Love  3 

Breathe  on  thy  winged  throne,  and  it  shall  move  „   27 

Breathes  low  into  the  charmed  ears  of  mom  A  Fragment  25 

nor  breathe  What  airs  he  pleased  !  Lover's  Tale  i  692 

Breathed     the  new  year  warm  b  on  the  earth,  Love  33 

With  roses  musky  b,  Anacreontics  1 

Intense  delight  and  rapture  that  I  b.  Lover's  Tale  i  381 

for  which  I  lived  and  b:  „          ii  73 

Breathing     And  the  low  west  wind,  b  afar,  Hesperides,  Song  iv  8 

Brere     They  from  the  blosmy  b  Call  The  lintwhite  4 

Brethren  (iSeea^so  Brother)  Over  their  crowned  6  On  and  OPH?^i^ray«i«n<  21 

Bride     I  can  shadow  forth  my  b  Germ  of '  Maud '  9 

God  bless  our  Prince  and  B  !  God  bless  our  Prinze  1 

Bridge     Your  b's  and  your  busted  libraries,  Cambridge  3 

With  shouts  from  off  the  b.  Lover's  Tale  i  369 

Upon  the  tremulous  b,  that  from  beneath  „            406 

Bridged     All  night  through  archways  of  the  b  pearl  Though  Night  3 

Bridle     Nor  seek  to  b  His  vile  aggressions,  Britons,  guard  52 

Brief    Could  I  outwear  my  present  state  of  woe  With 

one  b  winter.  Could  I  outwear  2  \ 

Bright     {See  also  Bloombright)     The  b  descent  Of  a  young 

Seraph !  Timbuctoo  64 

Through  dark  and  b  Wingdd  hours  are  borne ;  Every  day,  etc.  3 

There  is  no  b  form  Doth  not  cast  a  shade —  „              9 
Thine  is  the  b  side  of  my  heart,  and  thine  My 

heart's  day, 
I  am  so  dark,  alas  !  and  thou  so  b, 
Make  the  apple  holy  and  b.  Holy  and  b,  round 

and  full,  b  and  blest. 
No  little  room  so  warm  and  b  Wherein  to  read. 
Not  any  room  so  warm  and  b.  Wherein  to  read, 

Brightness    hearts  of  all  on  Earth  Toward  their  b, 
it  was  wonderful  With  its  exceeding  b. 

Brilliance     beneath  Two  doors  of  bUnding  b, 

Brilliant    soon  yon  b  towers  Shall  darken  with  the  waving  of 

her  wand ;  „        244 

Brine    roaring  b  Will  rend  thy  golden  tresses ;  Hero  to  Leander  23 

melancholy  home  At  the  limit  of  the  b,  Lotos-Eaters  21 

Bring    Hoarded  wisdom  b's  delight.  Hesperides,  Song  ii  6 

And  careless  what  this  hour  may  b,  New  Timon  18 

Bringeth    Laughter  b  tears :  Every  day,  etc.  18 


Love  and  Sorrow  8 
Me  my  own  fate  13 

Hesperides,  Song  iv  10 

0  darling  room  5 

17 

Timbuctoo  18 

87 

178 


Briny 


1169 


Cere 


Briny    Crocodiles  in  b  creeks  Sleep  and  stir  not :  all  is 

mute.  Hesperides,  Song  i  8 

British     For  art  thou  not  of  B  blood  ?  Hands  all  Round  40 

shall  see  The  B  Goddess,  Sngg.  by  Reading  54 

Briton     Rise,  B's,  rise,  if  manhood  be  not  dead ;  Britons,  guard  1 

B's,  guard  your  own.  (repeat)  Britons,  guard  6,  12,  18,  24,  30,  36 

free  speech  that  makes  a  B  known.  „  29 

Broad    He  often  lying  b  awake,  and  yet  Remaining  from  the 

body.  The  Mystic  36 

Would  shatter  and  o'erbear  the  brazen  heat  Of  their  b  vans.  Shall  the  hag  8 

Stream  from  beneath  him  in  the  b  blue  noon,  D.  of  F.  Women  3 

Broad-based     Pyramids  B-b  amid  the  fleeting  sands,  A  Fragment  10 

Broad-blown     b-b  Argosies  Drave  into  haven?  „  7 

Broadsides     But  let  thy  b  roar  with  ours.  Hands  all  Round  44 

Broke    note  Hath  melted  in  the  silence  that  it  b. 

That,  strongly  loathing,  greatly  b. 
Broken    B  by  the  highland-steep, 

A  child  with  a  b  slate, 
Brood  (s)        Hateful  with  hanging  cheeks,  a  withered  6, 
Brood  (verb)     b  above  The  silence  of  all  hearts. 
Brooding    placid  Sphinxes  b  o'er  the  Nile  ? 
Brook  (s)     rapid  b  Shot  down  his  inner  thunders. 
Brook  (verb)    thou  wilt  not  b  ecUpse ; 
Brookbank     By  a  mossed  6  on  a  stone 
Brother    {See  also  Brethren)    The  bulrush 
nods  unto  his  b 

Joy  is  sorrow's  b ; 
Brought    Home  they  b  him  slain  with  spears. 

They  b  him  home  at  even-fall : 
Brow    compass'd  round  about  his  b  With 

My  eydids  and  my  b. 

beneath  Severe  and  youthful  b's, 

Smiles  on  the  earth's  worn  b  to  win  her  if  she  may. 

from  his  b's  a  crown  of  living  light 

Fair  year,  with  b's  of  royal  love 

A  perfect  Idol,  with  profulgent  b's 

Let  it  pass,  the  dreary  b, 

rather  had  some  loathly  ghastful  b, 
Brown    black  eyes,  and  b  and  blue ;  I  hold  them 

all  most  dear ; 
Brununel    pardon  little  would-be  Popes  And  B's, 
Brush    That  b  thee  with  their  silken  tresses  ? 

Did  b  my  forehead  in  their  to-and-fro  : 
Buildeth    b  up  Huge  mounds  whereby  to  stay 
Built    (See  also  Low-built)     Why  a  church  is 

with  a  steeple  b  ;  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  34 

b  above  With  matted  bramble  Lover's  Tale  i  372 

Bulrush     The  b  nods  unto  his  brother  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  10 

Buoyancy    felt  Unutterable  b  and  strength  Timbuctoo  158 

Buried    (See  also  Low-buried)     whom  the  waves  Have  b  deep,       „  23 

recalls  the  dewy  prime  Of  youth  and  b  time  ?  Who  can  say  1 

Bum     wings  which  b  Fanlike  and  fibred,  Timbuctoo  155 

B,  you  glossy  heretic,  b,  B,  b.  The  Ringlet  53 

Burning    The  b  belts,  the  mighty  rings,  _  Chorus  23 

Awful  Memnonian  countenances  calm  Looking 

athwart  the  b  flats,  ^  Fragment  17 

Bumish'd    Stood  out  a  pillar'd  front  of  b  gold  Interminably 


Oh,  Beauty  14 
IVew  Timon  4 
Hesperides,  Song  iv  5 
A  gale  and  a  field  3 
Shall  the  hag  4 
Love  13 
A  Fragment  14 
Lover's  Tale  i  371 
Love  11 
0  sad  no  more!  3 

The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why '  10 
Every  day,  etc.  24 

Home  they  brought  him  1 

Timbuctoo  73 

Hero  to  Leander  13 

The  Mystic  27 

Tears  of  Heaven  9 

Love  43 

The  lintwhite  19 

A  Fragment  3 

Germof 'Maud'  22 

Lover's  Tale  i  676 

There  are  three  things  6 

New  Timon  20 

The  Grasshopper  39 

Lover's  Tale  t  736 

Timbuctoo  14 


high. 

Burst    Some  vast  Assyrian  doom  to  b  upon  our  race. 
Bursten    See  Half-bvursten 
Bursting    The  vocal  spring  of  b  bloom. 
Burthen    needs  must  sell  the  b  of  their  wills 
Bury    B  him  in  the  cold,  cold  heart — 
Busted    Your  bridges  and  your  b  libraries. 
Busy     And  notes  of  b  Ufe  in  distant  worlds 

With  her  to  whom  all  outward  fairest  things  Were 


Buzz 


by  the  b  mind  referr'd, 
Both  alike,  they  b  together, 


CaU    C's  to  him  by  the  fountain  to  uprise. 
C  to  the  fleeting  year, 
Fair  year,  fair  year,  thy  children  c. 


Timbuctoo  175 
Sugg,  by  Reading  42 

Chorus  15 

Sugg,  by  Reading  69 

Burial  of  Love  12 

Cambridge  3 

Timbuctoo  113 

Lover's  Tale  i  384 
Dualisms  3 


Love  35 

The  lintxchite  5 

10 


Call  (continued)    Wandering  waters  unto  wandering 

waters  c ;  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  8 

springtime  c's  To  the  flooding  waters  cool,  Rosalind  19 

I  can  c  it  to  my  side,  Gertn  of '  Maud '  16 

'  They  c  this  man  as  good  as  me.'  New  Timon  32 

This  man  is  France,  the  man  they  c  her  choice.  Britons,  guard  20 

C  home  your  ships  across  Biscay  an  tides,  „  37 

I  c  on  you  To  make  opinion  warlike,  Sugg,  by  Reading  86 

Call'd    hill  of  woe  so  c  Because  the  legend  ran  that.         Lover's  Tale  i  365 
Cahn  (adj.)    light  Will  be  both  blue  and  c ;  Hero  to  Leander  26 

Where  in  a  creeping  cove  the  wave  unsbockt-d  Lay's 

itself  c  and  wide,  Dualitma  7 

Awful  Memnonian  countenances  c  Looking  athwart 

the  burning  flats,  A  Fragment  16 

Calm  (s)     level  c  1&  ridg'd  with  restless  Timbuctoo  124 

And  muse  midway  with  philosophic  c  »        146 

Golden  c  and  storm  Mingle  day  Dv  day.  Every  day,  etc.  7 

One  mighty  coimtenance  of  perfect  c.  The  Mystic  23 

There  is  no  rest,  no  c,  no  pause,  01  'ptowrtt  9 

In  a  stripe  of  grassgreen  c,  Lotos-Eaters  5 

Poor  soul !  behold  her :  what  decorous  c !  ^''%-  ^V  ^*''^*'^  ^^ 

Calmed     Past  Thymiaterion,  in  c  bays,  The  Hesperides  4 

Calpe    and  I  Was  left  alone  on  C,  Timbuctoo  252 

Came    night  C  down  upon  my  eyelids,  „         187 

Pride  c  beneath  and  held  a  light.  Love,  Pride,  etc.  6 

C  voices,  like  the  voices  in  a  dream,  The  Hesperides  12 

When  I  learnt  from  whom  it  c.  To  C.  North  5 

About  sunset  We  c  unto  the  hill  of  woe,  Lover's  TaU  i  365 

Camel    Seen  by  the  high-necked  c  on  the  verge  A  Fragment  18 

Camilla     Did  I  love  C  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  770 

he  would  make  his  wedded  wife,  C !  n  794 

And  as  for  me,  C,  as  for  me,  „  805 

Canker    I  feel  the  thousand  c's  of  our  State,  Sugg,  by  Reading  43 

Canopy    Imperial  height  Of  C  o'ercanopied.  Timbuctoo  168 

Cap-a-pie     Armed  c-a-p,  Full  fair  to  see ;  The  Grasshopper  14 

Cape    Your  flowering  C's  and  your  gold-sanded  bays  Timbuctoo  45 

Capricious    All  on-set  of  c  Accident,  _       «_        28 

Captain    who  are  to  you  As  c  is  to  subaltern.  A'«c  Timon  16 

Captive     Rome's  dearest  daughter  now  is  c  France^  Britons,  guard  81 

Careless    And  c  what  this  hour  may  bring,  A'«c  Timon  18 

Bold,  subtle,  c  Rosalind,  Rosalind  2 

Caress'd    The  Church  c  him  ;  Britons,  fuard  4 

Carol    C  clearly,  bound  along,  (repeat)  T\e  Grasshopper  4,  30 

Clap  thy  shielded  sides  and  c,  C  clearly,  chirrup  sweet      „  11 

Carolling    Do  woo  each  other,  c  together.  Dualittns  9 

Carry    To  c  through  the  world  those  waves,  Timbuetoo  238 

Go — c  him  to  his  dark  deathbed :  Burial  of  Lam  11 

winedark  wave  our  weary  bark  did  e.  Lotos-Eattr$  0 

Carved    Wax-lighted  chapels  and  rich  e  screens,  Cambrid^t  4 

Casket    such  a  costly  c  in  the  grasp  Of  memory  ?  Lover's  TaU  i  101 

Cast    There  is  no  bright  form  Doth  not  c  a  shade —  Every  da§,  «k.  10 

You  c  to  ground  the  hope  which  once  Lotl  Hopt  1 

Cathedralled    C  caverns  of  thick-ribbAd  gold  Pallid  thunderstnekm  7 

Caucasus    C  is  bold  and  strong.  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  7 

Cause    The  c  is  nowhere  found  in  rhyme.  Who  eon  sojf  8 

God  the  tyrant's  c  confound  !  (repeat)      Hands  all  Bound  22, 34, 48, 68 

What  power  is  yours  to  blast  a  c  or  bless !  Sugg,  by  Btadissg  8 

And  trust  an  ancient  manhood  and  the  e  »  89 

Cavalier    A  gallant  c  Sans  peur  et  sans  reproche.  The  Ofusakofjur  18 

Cave     But  Hatred  in  a  gold  c  sits  below,  Pallid  lhunderttr%acm  11 

Cavern    Cathedralled  c's  of  thick-ribb*d  gold  ,.  7 

Cavemthroats    blow  back  Their  wild  cries  down  their  c.       Shall  the  hag  10 

Ceasing    c  from  All  contemplation  of  all  forms,  Lmer's  Tak  i  66 

Cedam     Where  are  your  moonlight  halls,  your  c  glooms,  Timlmcioo  4S 

Cedarshade    and  zoned  below  with  c.  The  Uetperidts  11 

Cell    Sweet  Love  was  withereil  in  bis  e ;  Love,  Pride,  etc.  8 

Thronging  the  c's  of  the  diseased  mind.  Shall  the  hag  3 

Center'd     and  thou  wert  then  A  r  glory-circled  Memory,  Timbuctoo  21 

Central     And  branching  silvers  of  the  c  globe,  Pallid  ihunderstricken  8 

winds,  though  they  uprend  the  sea,  Even  from  his  e  deeps:         lave  10 

Centre    he  in  the  c  fixed.  Saw  far  on  each  side  Th*  Mystic  33 

Each  sun  which  from  the  c  tlimrs  Grand  music  Chorus  21 

The  c  of  the  splendours,  all  unworthy  Lover's  Tak  i  69 

unhappy  spirits  Imprison'd  in  her  e,  ..  614 

Cere    Half-bursten  from  the  shroud,  in  c  cloth  bound,  ..  677 

4   E 


Cerement 


1170 


Cloth 


Cerement    spiced  c's  in  old  grots  Rock-hewn  A  Fragment  30 

Chain     Five  links,  a  golden  c,  are  we,  Hesperides,  Song  ii  23 

Five  links,  a  golden  c,  are  we,  „              iv  24 

Cbance     Jesuit  laughs,  and  reckoning  on  his  c,  Britons,  guard  32 

Change  (s)    Shadows  to  which,  despite  all  shocks  of  C,  Timbuctoo  25 

All  is  c,  woe  or  weal ;  Every  day,  etc.  23 

woes  of  many  a  fiery  c  Had  purified,  The  Mystic  9 

full  of  strange  Astonishment  and  boundless  c. 

(repeat)  Chorus  10,  20,  30 

All  truth  is  <; :  ol  'piovres  4 

Glory  in  glory,  without  sense  of  c.  Lover's  Tale  i  516 

Updrawn  in  expectation  of  her  c —  „            597 

Change  (verb)     Her  light  shall  into  darkness  c ;  Burial  of  Love  27 

world  will  not  c,  and  her  heart  will  not  break.  /'  the  glooming  light  22 

by  a  spell  Did  c  them  into  gall ;  iwe,  Pride,  etc.  10 

Kingdoms  lapse,  and  climates  c,  and  races  die  ;  Hesperides,  Song  ii  4 

Why  c  the  titles  of  your  streets  ?  Hands  all  Round  31 

This  cannot  c,  nor  yet  can  I.'  The  Ringlet  12 

If  this  can  c,  why  so  can  I.'  (repeat)  „   24,  42 

as  tho'  a  red  rose  Should  c  into  a  white  one  Lover's  Tale  i  727 

Changed    How  c  from  this  fair  City ! '  Timbuctoo  249 

C  into  fire,  and  blown  about  with  sighs.  To 9 

Changeful    Yet  endure  unscathed  Of  c  cycles  the  great 

Pyramids  A  Fragment  9 
Changing    See  Everchanging 

Channel    Thro'  the  c  windeth  far  Germ  of '  Maud '  29 

Chapel    Wax-lighted  c's  and  rich  carved  screens,  Cambridge  4 

Chaplet    mine  wove  c's  of  the  self -same  flower,  Lover's  Tale  i  333 

Character'd     I  feel  Exception  to  be  c  in  fire.  Sugg,  by  Reading  52 

Charge    c  to  the  fight :  CI  c  to  the  fight !  English  War  Song  47 
Charged    I  straightly  would  commend  the  tears  to 

creep  From  my  c  lids ;  Could  I  outwear  11 

Charm    Whom  martial  progress  only  c's  ?  Hands  all  Round  26 

To  c  a  lower  sphere  of  fulminating  fools.  Sugg,  by  Reading  30 

Charmed     Breathes  low  into  the  c  ears  of  morn  A  Fragment  25 

Standing  about  the  c  root.  Hesperides,  Song  i  4 

All  round  about  The  gnarled  bole  of  the  c  tree,  „           iv  29 

Standing  about  the  c  root,  „           iv  34 

Chasm    c's  of  deep,  deep  blue  Slumber'd  unfathomable,  Timbuctoo  7 

Hallowed  in  awful  c's  of  wheeUng  gloom.  Love  22 

to  link  The  earthquake-shattered  c,  Lover's  Tale  i  408 

Chaste     EngUsh  wives,  So  fair  and  c  as  they  be.  National  Song  22 

Chastened    Had  purified,  and  c,  and  made  free.  The  Mystic  10 

Chastise    To  raise  the  people  and  c  the  times  Sugg,  by  Reading  5 

Chaont    And  c's  '  how  ?  how  ? '  the  whole  of 

the  night.  The  '  Hoiv  '  and  the  '  Why '  31 

Check    C  every  outflash,  every  ruder  sally  Check  every  outflash  1 

Cheek    Hateful  with  hanging  c's,  a  withered  brood,  Shall  the  hag  4 

As  with  one  kiss  to  touch  thy  blessed  c.  Oh,  Beauty,  8 

old  mark  of  rouge  upon  your  c's.  New  Timon  38 

Flooding  its  angry  c  with  odorous  tears.  Lover's  Tale  i  565 

Chiefest     But  this  c,  Next  to  her  j)resence  „           421 

Child    {See  also  Children)     '  0  c  rf  man,  why  muse  you  here 

alone  Timbuctoo  77 

C  of  Man,  See'st  thou  yon  river,  „       228 

The  echo,  feeble  c  of  sound,  Chorus  12 

Shall  the  hag  Evil  die  with  the  c  of  Good,  Shall  the  hag  1 

The  c  in  our  cradles  is  bolder  than  he ;  English  War  Song  35 

A  c  with  a  broken  slate,  A  gate  and  a  field  3 

How  often,  when  a  c  I  lay  reclined,  Mablcthorpe  1 

A  woful  man  had  thrust  his  wife  and  c  Lover's  Tale  i  368 

Misery,  like  a  fretful,  wayward  c,  „            696 

widow'd,  like  the  cur  In  the  c's  adage  ?  „            770 
Children    (See  also  Child)     Two  c  lovelier  than  love,  adown 

the  lea  Dualisms  14 

Fair  year,  fair  year,  thy  c  call,  The  lintwhite  10 

words  of  little  c  preach  Against  you, —  Cambridge  12 
Chilling    Then  never  c  touch  of  Time  Will  turn  it  silver-gray ;  The  Ringlet  5 

Now  never  c  touch  of  Time  Can  turn  thee  silver-gray ;  „         15 
One  very  dark  and  c  night  Pride  came  beneath  and 

held  a  light.  Love,  Pride,  etc.  5 

Chimetb    In  the  ear,  from  far  and  near,  C  musically  clear.  Rosalind  8 
Chimney-pot    And  a  house  with  a  c-j?  ?           The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why '  35 

Chink'd    brain,  Now  seam'd  and  c  with  years —  Lover's  Tale  i  131 

Chimtp    Carol  clearly,  c  sweet  The  Grasshopper  12 


Choice    This  man  is  France,  the  man  they  call  her  c.         Britons,  guard  20 
Choir     murmurous  planets'  roUing  c.  Chorus  24 

Chose     Could  he  not  walk  what  paths  he  c.  Lover's  Tale  i  692 

Christ     With  decent  dippings  at  the  name  of  C  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  64 

C  cried  :  Woe,  woe,  to  Pharisees  and  Scribes !  „  75  ; 

Christian    See  Un- Christian 

Christopher    late  review  my  lays.  Crusty  C;  To  C.  North  2 

mingle  blame  and  praise.  Rusty  C.  „  4 

forgave  you  all  the  blame,  Musty  C;  „  7 

could  not  forgive  the  praise.  Fusty  C.  „  9 

Chrysolite     Her  obeUsks  of  rangfed  C,  Timbuctoo  235 

Chrystal     I  saw  A  wilderness  of  spires,  and  c  pile  Of  rampart 

upon  rampart,  „  162 

Two  bees  within  a  c  flowerbell  rocked  Duxilisvis  1 

Church  (adj.)     Alas,  C  writers,  altercating  tribes —         Sv^g.  by  Reading  73 

Church  (s)     Why  a  c  is  with  a  steeple  built ;    The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why  '  34 

The  C  caress'd  him ;  Britons,  guard  4 

The  Court,  the  C,  the  Parliament,  the  crowd.  Sugg,  by  Reading  16 

Alas,  our  C !  alas,  her  growing  ills,  „  67 

The  vessel  and  your  C  may  sink  in  storms.  „  74 

Circle     Ye  were  yet  within  The  narrower  c ;  The  Mystic  42 

Circled    (See  also  Golden-circled)    c  with  the  glory  of  living 

hght  Timbuctoo  15 

Thy  spirit,  c  with  a  living  glory.  Me  my  own  fate  3 

Circling    c  round  their  emerald  cones  In  coronals  Timbuctoo  52 

Circular    showering  c  abyss  Of  radiance.  „      173 

Circumference    With  such  a  vast  c  of  thought,  „        93 

Circumfus'd     Fill'd  with  Divine  effulgence,  c,  „        50 

Circumstance    Of  wayward  vary  coloured  c.  The  Mystic  12 

City    some  great  C  where  the  walls  Shake,  Timbuctoo  28 

thy  hills  enfold  a  C  as  fair  As  those  „        59    ' 

Moon's  white  cities,  and  the  opal  width  ..      101 

windeth  through  The  argent  streets  o'  the  C,  .,      231 

reflex  of  my  C  in  their  depths.     Oh  C !  „      239 

How  chang'd  from  this  fair  C ! '  „      249 

Her  frantic  c's  flashing  heats  But  fire,  Hands  all  Round  29 

Civic    Severe  and  quick  to  feel  a  c  sin,  Su^g.  by  Reading  4 

To  soothe  a  c  wound  or  keep  it  raw,  „  32 

Clad     C  in  light  by  golden  gates,  C  in  light  the  Spirit 

waits  Germ  of '  Maud  '  32 

Claim     And  wave  a  little  of  his  c ;  New  Timon  22 

Clan     Than  when  from  Sobieski,  c  by  c.  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  10 

Clap    C  thy  shielded  sides  and  carol,  The  Grasshopper  11 

Let  them  c  together,  foam  and  fall.  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  9    : 

Nathless  she  ever  c's  the  marble  knees,  Timbuctoo  37   I 

Clay    Thy  spirit  fetter'd  with  the  bond  of  c :  „        83 

Clear    and  the  stars  Were  flooded  over  with  c  glory  and  pale.  „  9 

Flowing  between  the  c  and  polish'd  stems,  „        51 

The  c  Galaxy  Shorn  of  its  hoary  lustre,  wonderful,  „      105  * 

Most  pale  and  c  and  lovely  distances.  The  Mystic  35  \ 

all  the  day  heaven  gathers  back  her  tears  Into  her  ! 

own  blue  eyes  so  c  and  deep.  Tears  of  Heaven  7 

The  lintwhite  and  the  throstlecock  Have  voices  sweet 

and  c ;  The  lirUwhite  2 

C  melody  flattering  the  crisped  Nile  By  colmnned 

Thebes.  A  Fragment  26 

Clearest     Unroof  the  shrines  of  c  vision.  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  3 

Clearness     my  present  mind  With  its  past  c,  Timbuctoo  140 

Cleave     scorn  of  the  many  shall  c  To  the  man  English  War  Song  5 

Clever     Alas,  our  youth,  so  c  yet  so  small,  Su^g.  by  Reading  79 

ClifE     a  highland  leaning  down  a  weight  Of  c's.  The  Hesperides  11 

Show'd  me  vast  c's  with  crown  of  towers.  What  time  1  wasted  3 

thro'  the  black-wall'd  c  the  rapid  brook  Lover's  Tale  i  371 

Climate  Kingdoms  lapse,  and  c's  change,  and  races  die ;  Hesperides,  Song  ii  4 
Climb     And  the  waves  c  high  and  fast.  Hero  to  Leander  4 

Climbed     Night  hath  c  her  peak  of  highest  noon.  Though  night  1 

Clinging     Or  moisture  of  the  vapour,  left  in  c,  Lover's  Tale  ii  46 

Clip     a  snake  her  forehead  c's  And  skins  Pallid  thunderstricken  13 

Clipt     Ringlet,  She  c  you  from  her  head.  The  Ringlet  38 

Clique    That  spilt  his  life  about  the  c's.  New  Timon  40 

Clogg'd    sense  is  c  with  dull  mortaUty,  Timbuctoo  82 

Close     and  of  waters  Betraying  the  c  kisses  of  the  wind —  „      209 

Closed     And  never  c  again.  Lover's  Tale  i  299 

Closer     Oh  kiss  me  ere  we  part ;  Grow  c  to  my  heart.        Hero  to  Leander  8 
Cloth    from  the  shroud,  in  cere  c  bound,  Lover's  Tale  i  677 


Clothe 


1171 


Crisped 


Clothe    C  them  with  righteousness, 

Clothed    What  an  angel !     How  e  with  beams  ! 

Cloud     Uncertain  whether  faery  light  or  c, 
Unvisited  with  dew  of  vagrant  c, 
wrapt  about  with  c's  Of  glory  of  Heaven. 


God  bless  our  Prince  4 

Lover's  Tale  i  352 

Timbuctoo  6 

„     103 

199 


rocks  stand  still,  and  the  light  c's  fly  ?      The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  14 

white  c's  drizzle :  her  hair  falls  loose  ;  /'  the  glooming  light  9 

ever  hold  aloft  the  c  Which  droops  low  The  Mystic  31 

Turn  c  to  Ught,  and  bitterness  to  joy.  Though  night  6 

Hid  now  and  then  with  sliding  c.  What  time  I  wasted  6 

would  have  flung  himself  From  c  to  c,  Lover's  Tale  i  304 

Clouded     Dim  shores,  dense  rains,  and  heavy  c  sea.  Mablethorpe  8 

Clover     And  slumbers  in  the  c.  The  Grasshopper  33 

Clung    Men  c  with  yearning  Hope  which  would  not  die.  Timbuctoo  27 

Cluster    growth  of  shadowing  leaf  and  c's  rare,  „      223 

Clustereth    The  luscious  fruitage  c  mellowly,  Hesperides,  Song  iv  19 

Coast     I  gaz'd  upon  the  sheeny  c  beyond,  Timbuctoo  10 

Cobweb    Seem'd  but  a  c  firmament  to  link  The 

earthquake-shattered  chasm,  Lover's  Tale  i  407 
Cock    See  Throstlecock 

Coil    wan  dark  c  of  faded  suffering —  Could  I  outwear  4 

Coinage     Keeping  unchanged  The  purport  of  their  c.  Lover's  Tale  i  734 

Cold     Bathes  the  c  hand  with  tears,  Timbmtoo  38 

His  eyes  in  eclipse,  Pale  c  his  lips.  Burial  of  Love  2 

Bury  him  in  the  c,  c  heart — Love  is  dead.  „          12 

I'  the  glooming  light  Of  middle  night,  So  c  and 

^iiite  I'  the  glooming  light  3 

From  my  c  eyes  and  melted  it  again.  Crndd  I  outwear  14 

Oh  !  that  the  wind  which  bloweth  c  or  heat  Shall  the  hag  6 

Till  all  the  comets  in  heaven' are  c,  The  Ringlet  9 

White  as  quench'd  ashes,  c  as  were  the  hopes  Of  my 

lorn  love  !  Lover's  Tale  i  620 

College    Thebefoke  your  halls,  your  ancient  c's,  Cambridge  1 

Colossal    C,  without  form,  or  sense,  or  soimd,  The  Mystic  14 

Colour    skins  the  c  from  her  trembling  lips.  Pallid  thunder striclcen  14 

Colour'd    and  saw  before  me  Such  c  spots  as  dance  athwart 

the  eves  Timbuctoo  70 

Of  wayward  vary  c  circumstance.  The  Mystic  12 

Column     Among  the  inner  c's  far  retir'd  Timbuctoo  31 
Columned    Clear  melody  flattering  the  crisped  Nile  By  c 

Thebes.  -^  Fragment  27 

Combed    .See  Redcombed                           ^,     ,  ^t-   .    ^     iqq 

Come    memory  of  that  mental  excellence  C's  o'er  me,  1  tmuucioo  Jd» 

the  time  is  well  nigh  c  When  I  must  render  up  ,,        24J 

C  bathe  me  with  thy  kisses,  Hero  to  Leander  12 

An  honourable  eld  shaU  c  upon  thee.  -Vi°1rj.^T  io 

their  wan  limbs  no  more  might  c  between  Shall  the  hag  Li 

C,  thou  of  many  crowns,  white-robM  love,  ,.  ,  „,     o    *  o^ 

C  along  !  we  alone  of  the  earth  are  free ;  English  War  Song  34 

C  along !  we  will  dig  their  graves.  .-             .  ^ 

Lest  one  from  the  East  c  and  take  it  away.  Hesperides,  Song  t  29 

Honour  c's  with  mystery ;  "           . .  ?^^  Y 

C's  the  bliss  of  secret  smiles,  »           "*  ^^ 

So  died  the  Old :  here  c's  the  New :  NewTtmon  5 

again  I  c  and  only  find  The  drain-cut  levels  Mablethorpe5 

That  a  doubt  may  only  c  for  a  kiss,  The  Ringlet  21 

'  C,  kiss  it,  love,  and  put  it  by :          ,      „  r       >    'r  ?.  ,■  «oq 

a  lightning  stroke  had  c  Even  from  that  Heaven  Lover  s  Tale  i  623 

Must  he  c  my  way  too  ?  TheUntwhite  20 

Comest    Thou  c,  as  a  Kmg.  Chorus  27 

Comet    The  lawless  c's  as  they  glare  The  Set  9 

TiU  all  the  c's  in  heaven  are  cold,  1„  "£  91 

Cometh    Till  the  end  of  fears  C  in  the  shroud,  ■^''"'^tl'  fsSe] 

Coming    Wanderers  c  and  going  a  ma.,     rn-,,1,1  T nnfwear  \0 

Commend    c  the  tears  to  creep  From  my  charged  lids ;     ^^^ffj^f^^^  ^ 

Commercial    We  drag  so  deep  m  our  c  mire,  Sii^g- ^'J/'X"^^  ^^ 

Common    He  shall  eat  the  bread  of  c  scorn ;  English  War  Song  13 

CoZCnsense    Of  England  and  her  health  of  c-  *^Xtl  TaSS 

Compared    Were  by  the  busy  mind  referr'd,  c,  ^Timbuctoo  13 

Compass'd    and  c  round  about  his  brow  aiaZpZ  13 

Complete    warrior  in  youth  and  strength  c;  J-M  Urassiwpper  ±o 

Complicated    The  fragrance  of  its  c  glooms  And  cool  y^,„j^,„  227 

ComprSd^lS  X'Sl^e  she  rules.  "/^Srl^'p^r  I' 

Compt    Thou  hast  no  c  of  years,  l  tie  Orasstwpper  ^ , 


Conceit    they  minister'd  Unto  her  swift  c's  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  666 

Concentred    An  essence  less  c  than  a  man !  Sugg,  by  Reading  82 

Cone    round  their  emerald  c's  In  coronals  and  glories,  Timbuctoo  62 

upsprung  the  dazzling  C's  Of  Pyramids,  „        168 

That  wander  round  their  windy  c's.  Chorus  6 

Confound    in  the  solitude  Of  middle  space  c  them,  ShaU  Ou  hag  9 

God  the  tyrant's  cause  c !  (repeat)  Hands  all  Round  46,  58 

Confused    c  And  dazzled  to  the  heart  There  are  three  things  13 

Listens  the  dreadful  murmur  indistinct  Of  the  c  seas,    Lover's  Tale  i  657 


Congregated    For  him  the  silent  c  hours, 
Conscience    The  public  c  of  our  noble  isle. 
Consciousness    And  throwing  by  all  c  of  self. 
Constant    It  giveth  out  a  c  melody  That  drowns  the 

nearer  echoes. 
Contemplation    ceasing  from  All  c  of  all  forms, 
Content    You  never  look  but  half  c  : 
Continuing    this  impulse  C  and  gathering  ever. 
Control    no  c  Within  the  thrilling  brain 
Controlled     By  lying  priest's  the  peasant's  votes  c. 
Converse    The  stem  experiences  of  c  lives, 
Convulsed    Strain  the  hot  spheres  of  his  c  eyes. 
Convulsion    yawning  given  Sign  of  c ; 
Cool    But  knowing  all  your  power  to  heat  or  c. 

The  fragrance  of  its  complicated  glooms  And  e  im 
pleached  twilights. 

Till  midnoon  the  c  east  light  Is  shut  out 
Cope    Larks  in  heaven's  c  Sing : 
Cord    With  a  silken  c  I  bound  it. 
Cored    See  Goldencored 
Comer    Reacheth  to  every  c  imder  Heaven, 

presences  Fourfac(id  to  four  c's  of  the  sky ; 

In  a  c  wisdom  whispers. 
Coronal    round  their  emerald  cones  In  c's  and  glories. 

Her  words  were  like  a  c  of  wild  blooms 
Costly    could  I  perish  With  such  a  c  casket  in  the  grasp 

Of  memory  ? 
Couch    With  thy  two  <^es  soft  and  white. 

With  two  such  c'es  soft  and  whit« ; 
Couch'd    Erewhile  close  c  in  golden  happiness. 
Count    (See  also  Compt)     Ringlet,  I  c  you  much  to  blame. 
Countenance    One  mighty  c  of  perfect  calm, 

c's  calm  Looking  athwart  the  burning  flats, 
Counterfeit    Now  proved  c,  was  shaken  out. 
Countless    The  subtle  Ufe,  the  c  forms  Of  living  things. 
Country    Saw  round  her  feet  the  c  far  away. 
Course    The  c  of  Hope  is  dried, — 
Courseth    life  which  c  through  All  th'  intricate 
Court    thunders  through  your  vacant  c's  At  mom  and  even  ;     Cambridge  9 

The  C,  the  Church,  the  Parliament,  the  crowd.        Sugg,  by  Reading  16 
Cove     in  a  creeping  c  the  wave  unshocktid 
Cow    a  field  half  ploughed,  A  solitary  c. 
Cradle    child  in  our  c's  is  bolder  than  he  ; 
Craft    By  tricks  and  spying.  By  c  and  lying. 
Crag    descendant  c's,  which  lapse  Disjointed,^ 

path  was  steep  and  loosely  strewn  with  c's 
Creak    by  our  ears,  the  huge  roots  strain  and  e), 
&eative     With  such  a  heat  as  Uves  in  great  c  rhymes. 
Creed    All  thoughts,  aU  c's,  all  dreams  are  tme. 
Creek    Crocodiles  in  briny  c's  Sleep  and  stir  not : 
Creep    commend  the  tears  to  c  From  my  charged  lids; 

And  the  lithe  vine  c's, 

C  down  into  the  bottom  of  the  flower. 
Creeping    all  things  c  to  a  day  of  doom. 

Where  in  a  c  cove  the  wave  unshockW  Lays  itseU  calm 

and  wide,  DtuUunu  6 

C  under  the  fragrant  bark,  Hesperides,  Song  i  2i 

Crest    Moving  his  c  to  all  sweet  ploU  of  flowers 
Crieth    Heaven  c  after  thee ;  earth  waileth  for  thee : 
Crime    We  curse  the  c's  of  Southern  kings. 
Crimson    all  faces  tumed  to  where  Glows  mbylike  the 

far-up  c  globe, 
Crimson'd    Sliadow'd  and  r  with  the  drifting  dust. 
Crisped  Clear  melody  flattering  the  r  N  ile  B y  columned  Thebes.  A  t  ragment » 

But  in  the  middle  of  the  sombre  valley  The  c  -    .  „ 

waters  whisper  musically,  .      Chedc  evtry  ouifiash  7 


The  Mystic  25 

Sugg,  by  Reading  3 

Lover's  TaU  i  787 

634 

„     .        67 

New  TitHon  26 

Diver's  Tale  i  494 

Oh,  Beauty  9 

Britons,  guard  8 

The  Mystic  8 

Love  31 

Lover's  Tale  i  612 

Sugg,  by  Reading  31 

Timbuctoo  228 

Hesperidfs,  Song  iv  15 

Every  day,  etc.  28 

Anacreontics  8 

Timbuctoo  224 

The  Mystic  16 

Hesperides,  Song  i  15 

Timbuctoo  53 

hater's  TaU  i  561 


101 

0  darling  room  3 

16 

Lover's  Tale  ii  79 

The  Ringlet  46 

The  Mystic  23 

J  Fragment  16 

Lover's  TaU  ii  80 

Chorus  7 

Lover's  TaU  i  390 

806 

Timbuctoo  290 


Dualitmt  6 

A  gaUandajiMi 

English  War  Song  95 

Britons,  guard  S 

TimbuetotiaS 

Lover's  TaU  i  376 

63 

^M^.  by  Reading  6 

ol  piowrts  1 

Hesperides,  Song  i  8 

Could  I  outwear  10 

Lo<o«- £ater»  34 

Lover's  Tah  i  660 

The  Mystic  40 


Could  I  outwear  7 

Zow26 

Hands  aU  Round  17 

D.ofF.  Women  7 
Ijover's  Tale  i  139 


Crisping 


1172 


Dearest 


Crisping     l^pon  the  c's  of  the  dappled  waves 
Crocodile    &s  in  briny  creeks  Sleep  and  stir  not : 
Crone    all  the  quaint  old  scraps  of  ancient  c's, 
Cross    '  Banbury  C,' '  The  Gander ' 
Croach    Wake  on,  my  soul,  nor  c  to  agony : 

hollow  at  heart  shall  c  forlorn. 
Crowd    Court,  the  Church,  the  Parliament,  the  c. 
Crown  (s)     thou  of  many  c's,  white-robiid  love. 


Lover's  Tale  i  46 

Hesperides,  Song  i  8 

Lover's  Tale  i  288 

286 

Though  night  5 

English  War  Song  12 

Sugg,  by  Reading  16 

Love  24 


from  his  brows  a  c  of  living  Ught  Looks  through  „    43 

I  wove  a  c  before  her.  Anacreontics  5 

Show'd  me  vast  cliffs  with  c  of  towers,  Wliat  time  I  coasted  3 

Crown  (verb)     C  them  with  happiness,  God  bless  our  Prince  5 

Crowned  (adj.)     Over  their  c  brethren  On  and  Oph  ?  A  Fragment  21 

Crown'd  (verb)    As  I  said,  with  these  She  c  her  forehead.   Lover's  Tale  i  349 
Cruel     The  c  vapours  went  through  all,  Love,  Pride,  etc.  7 

Alas  !  that  lips  so  c  dumb  Should  have  so  sweet  a 
breath  !  The  linttchite  17 

Cruellest    The  c  form  of  perfect  scorn.  Burial  of  Love  18 

Crumbling    c  from  their  parent  slope  At  slender  interval,        Timbuctoo  123 
Crush'd     C  link  on  link  into  the  beaten  earth.  Lover's  Tale  i  859 

Crushing    c  the  thick  fragrant  reeds  he  lies.  Love  32 

Crusty    You  did  late  review  my  lays,  C  Christopher ;  To  C.  North  2 

Cry  (s)    blow  back  Their  wild  cries  down  their  cavern- 
throats,  Shall  the  hag  10 

'  God  save  the  Queen  '  is  here  a  truer  c.  Britons,  guard  26 

Cry  (verb)    We  laugh,  we  c,  we  are  born,  we  die.   The '  How  '  and  the '  Why '  8 

We  c  for  thee  :  we  deem  the  world  thy  tomb.  Love  19 

Crystalline     Thou  art  my  heart's  sun  in  love's  c  :  Love  and  Sorrow  6 

Culver     the  c's  mourn  All  the  livelong  day.  Every  day,  etc.  29 

Cup     And  filled  the  c  with  dew.  Lost  Hope  8 

Cupola    When  even  to  Moscow's  c's  were  rolled  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  7 

Cur     widow'd,  like  the  c  In  the  child's  adage  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  769 

Curled     Round  about  the  hallowed  fruit  tree  c —  Hesperides,  Song  ii  13 

Current    The  slope  into  the  c  of  my  years.  Lover's  Tale  ii  76 

Curse  (s)     And  those  fine  c's  which  he  spoke ;  New  Timon  2 

Curse  (verb)     We  c  the  crimes  of  Southern  kings,  Hands  all  Round  17 

Cursed     Who  was  c  But  I  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  626 

Curve  (s)     A  c  of  whitening,  flashing,  ebbing  light !  Timbuctoo  63 

Curve  (verb)     where  the  Rhene  C's  towards  Mentz,  0  darling  room  12 

Cushion    makes  C's  of  yeUow  sand ;  Lover's  Tale  i  537 

Cut    See  Drain-cut 

Cycle     Of  changeful  c's  the  great  Pyramids  A  Fragment  9 

Cypress    Like  a  lone  c,  through  the  twilight  hoary.  Me  my  own  fate  6 

One  c  on  an  inland  promontory.  „  8 

Czar    ere  the  C  Grew  to  this  strength  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  5 


Daffodilly    And  drooping  d,  Anacreontics  2 

Dame    See  Step-dame 

Damn'd     And  d  unto  his  loathed  tenement.  Lover's  Tale  i  683 

Dance    colour'd  spots  as  d  athwart  the  eyes  Timbuctoo  70 

Dandy     With  d  pathos  when  you  wrote.  New  Timon  10 

Dapper    A  d  boot — a  little  hand —  ,,  35 

Dappled  (adj.  and  part.)    Upon  the  crispings  of  the  d  waves 

That  blanched  upon  its  side.  Lover's  Tale  i  46 

D  with  hollow  and  alternate  rise  Timbuctoo  130 

Dappled  (verb)    smallest  grain  that  d  the  dark  Earth.  „  99 

Dare     Will  he  d  to  battle  with  the  free  ?  English  War  Song  46 

knowest  I  d  not  look  into  thine  eyes.  Oh,  Beauty  4 

I  d  not  fold  My  arms  about  thee — scarcely  d  to  speak.  „         5 

Daring    Hath  d  fancies  of  her  own,  Rosalind  26 

Dark    (See  also  Winedark)     I  saw  The  smallest  grain  that 

dappled  the  d  Earth,  Timbuctoo  99 

and  the  Moon  Had  fallen  from  the  lught,  and  all  was  d  !  „       253 

Go — carry  him  to  his  d  deathbed ;  Burial  of  Love  11 

Through  d  and  bright  Winged  hours  are  borne ;  Every  day,  etc.  3 

The  night  is  d  and  vast ;  Hero  to  Leander  2 

One  very  d  and  chilly  night  Pride  came  beneath  and 

held  a  light.  Love,  Pride,  etc.  5 

and  mightily  outgrow  The  wan  d  coil  of  faded 

suffering—  Could  I  outwear  4 

Driven  back  the  billow  of  the  dreamful  d.  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  6 

And  all  the  haunted  place  is  d  and  holy.  Check  every  outflash  8 


Dark  (continued)     I  am  so  d,  alas  !  and  thou  so  bright.     Me  my  own  fate  13 

And  the  d  pine  weeps,  Lotos-Eaters  33 

From  the  root  Drawn  in  the  d.  Up  to  the  fruit,  Hesperides,  Song  i  21 

And  you,  d  Senate  of  the  public  pen,  Su^g.  by  Reading  19 

There  hang  within  the  heavens  a  d  disgrace,  „                41 

And  onward  floating  in  a  full,  d  wave.  Lover's  Tale  i  739 

Battailing  with  the  glooms  of  my  d  will,  „             782 

Darken     towers  Shall  d  with  the  waving  of  her  wand  ;  Timbuctoo  245 

D,  and  shrink  and  shiver  into  huts,  „          246 

world's  last  tempest  d's  overhead  ;  Britons,  guard  2 

And  why  was  I  to  d  their  pure  love.  Lover's  Tale  i  765 

Darken'd     Because  my  own  was  d?  „            767 

Darkling    They  with  dim  eyes  Behold  me  d.  Timbuctoo  213 

Darkly-wreathed    And  ivy  d-w.  Anacreontics  4 

Darkness     wave.  Forth  issuing  from  d,  Timbuctoo  230 

Her  light  shall  into  d  change ;  Burial  of  Love  27 

They  iflash  across  the  d  of  my  brain,  Lover's  Tale  i  53 

Darling  (adj.)     O  D  room,  my  heart's  delight,  0  darling  room  1 

Darling  (s)     Mid  May's  d  goldenlocked,  Dualisms  21 

Darmstadt     Bingen  in  B,  where  the  Rhene  0  darling  room  11 

Dart     He  hath  not  another  d  ;  Burial  of  Love  10 

Daughter     D's  of  time,  divinely  tall.  The  Mystic  26 

and  sisters  three,  D's  thee,  Hesperides,  Song  iv  26 

Rome's  dearest  d  now  is  captive  France,  Britons,  guard  31 

Gigantic  d  of  the  West,  Hands  all  Round  37 

Dawn  (s)     So  in  thine  hour  of  d,  the  body's  youth.  Though  night  13 

Purplefringed  with  even  and  d.  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  14 

Fresh  as  the  d  before  the  day,  Rosalind  27 

Dawn  (verb)     such  a  one  As  d's  but  once  a  season.  Lover's  Tale  i  302 

Day    (See  also  Marriage-day,  To-day,  Week-day)    Upon 

some  earth-awakening  d  of  spring  Timbuctoo  152 

EvEET  d  hath  its  night :  Every  day,  etc.  1 

Golden  calm  and  storm  Mingle  d  by  d.  „            8 

the  culvers  mourn  AU  the  hvelong  d.  „          30 

there  stood  before  him,  night  and  d,  The  Mystic  11 

all  things  creeping  to  a  d  of  doom.  „         40 

The  d,  the  diamonded  light,  Chorus  11 

all  the  d  heaven  gathers  back  her  tears  Tears  of  Heaven  6 

showering  down  the  glory  of  lightsome  d,  „                8 

and  thine  My  heart's  d.  Love  and  Sorrow  9 

Making  their  d  dim,  so  we  gaze  on  thee.  Love  23 

Looks  through  the  thickstemmed  woods  by  d  and  night  „     44 

Where'er  the  light  of  d  be  ;  (repeat)  National  Song  2,  6,  20,  24 

As  round  the  rolling  earth  night  follows  d  :  Me  my  own  fate  10 

Guard  the  apple  night  and  d,  Hesperides,  Song  i  28 

heart  is  drunk  with  over-watchings  night  and  d,  ,,             ii  12 

Father  Hesper,  watch,  watch,  night  and  d,  „             Hi  1 

The  end  of  d  and  beginning  of  night  „             iv  9 

Watch  it  warily  d  and  night ;  „                 13 

Fresh  as  the  dawn  before  the  d,  Rosalind  27 

0  for  those  d's  of  Piast,  ere  the  Czar  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  5 

To  kiss  it  night  and  d,  The  Ringlet  4 

Ringlet,  I  kiss'd  you  night  and  d,  „          26 

many  pleasant  d's,  the  moonlit  nights.  Lover's  Tale  i  54 

Oh,  happy,  happy  outset  of  my  d's  !  „            276 

On  that  d  the  year  First  felt  his  youth  „            305 

May  their  d's  be  golden  d's,  „             794 

Day-beam    Shall  not  avail  you  when  the  d-b  sports  Cambridge  & 

Dazzle     Till  it  d  and  blind  his  eyes.  English  War  Song  28 

Dazzled     d  to  the  heart  with  glorious  pain.  There  are  three  things  14 

Dazzling    upsprung  the  d  Cones  Of  Pyramids,  Timbuctoo  168 

Dead     Love  is  d  ;  (repeat)  Burial  of  Love  8,  13 

And  when  thou  art  d,  Leander,  Hero  to  Leander  30 

The  d  skin  withering  on  the  fretted  bone.  Lover's  Tale  i  678 

Rise,  Britons,  rise,  if  manhood  be  not  d  ;  Britons,  guard  1 

Deaf     (Shame  fall  'em  they  are  d  and  blind)  The  Grasshopper  6 

But  thou  art  d  as  death  ;  The  lintwhite  11 

Deal    You  may  not,  like  yon  tyrant,  d  in  spies.  Sugg,  by  Reading  20 

Dean     Your  doctors  and  your  proctors  and  your  d's  Cambridge  5 

Dear    black  eyes,  and  brown  and  blue  ;  I  hold  them 

all  most  d  ;  There  are  three  things  7 

D  room,  the  apple  of  my  sight,  0  darling  room  2 

To  our  d  kinsmen  of  the  West,  my  friends,  Hands  all  Round  59 

Dearest    Sainted  Juhet !  d  name  !  To 1 

Rome's  d  daughter  now  is  captive  France,  Britons,  guard  31 


Dearest 


1173 


Doom 


Dearest  {continued)    my  Camilla,  who  was  mine  No 

longer  in  the  d  use  of  mine —  Lover's  Tale  i  599 

Death     D  standeth  by  ;  She  will  not  die  ;  /'  the  glooming  light  12 

either  gate  of  life,  Both  birth  and  d  ;  The  Mystic  33 

night  and  pain  and  ruin  and  d  reign  here.  Love  4 

But  thou  art  deaf  as  d  ;  The  lintwhite  11 

in  d  They  sleep  with  staring  eyes  A  Fragment  28 

From  which  may  rude  D  never  startle  them,  Lover's  Tale  i  796 

in  the  d  of  love,  if  e'er  they  loved,  „            849 

Deathbed     Go — carry  him  to  his  dark  d  ;  Burial  of  Love  11 

Decay  (s)     And,  trampled  on,  left  to  its  own  d.  lever's  Tale  ii  81 

Decay  (verb)     And  all  her  stars  d.'  The  Ringlet  10 

Decent    Stands  in  her  pew  and  hiuns  her  d  psahn 

With  d  dippings  at  the  name  of  Christ !  Sugg,  by  Reading  64 

Decline    little  isle  of  Ithaca,  beneath  the  day's  d.  Lotos-Eaters  22 

Decorous     Poor  soul !  behold  her  :  what  d  calm  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  61 

Decree    the  while  your  harsh  d  deplore,  Lost  Hope  2 
Deep  (adj.)    Flowing  Southward,  and  the  chasms  of 

d,  d  blue  Slumber'd  imfathomable,  Timbuctoo  7 
Before  the  awful  Genius  of  the  place  Kneels  the 

pale  Priestess  in  d  faith,  „      34 

The  indistinctest  atom  in  d  air,  „    100 

For  she  hath  half  delved  her  own  d  grave.  F  the  glooming  light  7 
The  d  salt  wave  breaks  in  above  Those  marble 

steps  below.  Hero'y    Leander  3i 
all  the  day  heaven  gathers  back  her  tears  Into  her 

own  blue  eyes  so  clear  and  d,  Tears  of  Heaven  7 
To  have  the  d  poetic  heart  Is  more  than  all  poetic  fame.     New  Timon  23 

Thin  dilletanti  d  in  nature's  plan,  Sugg,  by  Reading  80 

Eye  feeding  upon  eye  with  d  intent ;  Lover's  Tale  i  &1 
whom  woful  ailments  Of  unavailing  tears  and  heart  d 

moans  Feed  and  envenom,  .,         f?-'^^ 

But  over  the  d  graves  of  Hope  and  Fear,  „          ii  61 

Deep  (adv.)     Low-buried  fathom  d  beneath  with  thee,  0  sad  no  more  !  8 

Deep  (s)    thro'  the  sapphire  d's  In  wayward  strength.  Chorus  28 

Why  d  is  not  high,  and  high  is  not  d  ?      The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  16 

uprend  the  sea,  Even  from  his  central  d's :  Love  10 

Two  streams  upon  the  violet  d  :  Hesperides,  Song  iv  6 

Deep-furrowed    d-f  thought  with  many  a  name  D.  of  F.  Women  15 

Deep-rooted     D-r  in  the  Uving  soil  of  truth  :  Timbuctoo  225 

Definite    would  scan  L>  round.  ,    ^'  ,    •  Joo 

Deity    As  with  a  sense  of  nigher  D,  Lover  s  1  ale  i  dW 

Delicious    Most  loveliest,  most  d  union  ?  ..         *  275 

Delight     I  thus  hope  my  lost  d's  renewing,  Could  I  outwear^ 

D  is  with  thee  gone,  Oh  !  stay.  The  lintwhite  2,3 

Hoarded  wisdom  brings  d.  Hesperides,  Song  it  & 

a  flash  of  frolic  scorn  And  keen  d,  Rosalind  lb 

0  DARLING  room,  my  heart's  d,  0  darling  room  1 

1  took  d  in  this  locaUty  !  „  Mablethorpej 
Alas  for  her  and  all  her  small  d's  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  55 
yet  to  both  of  us  It  was  d,  not  hindrance  :  unto  ,    ^  7    •  q^tq 

both  D  from  hardship  to  be  overcome.  Lover  s  lalei  d7» 

Intense  d  and  rapture  that  I  breathed,  »              ^^^ 

Delighted    Else  had  the  life  of  that  d  hour  r  !,'     r-  .      i*q 

Delirious     Like  a  dreamy  Lotos-eater,  a  d  Lotos-eater  !  Lotos-haters  16 

Delved    she  hath  half  d  her  own  deep  grave.  /  the  glooming  ligM  [ 


Hands  all  Round  15 

Mablethorpe  8 

Lost  Hope  2 

1865-1866  8 

Timbuctoo  49 

„       104 

„       108 

..      239 


Den    From  wronged  Poerio's  noisome  d, 
Dense     Dim  shores,  d  rains,  and  heavy  clouded  sea. 
Deplore     the  while  your  harsh  decree  d, 
Deploring    Matter  enough  for  d  But  aught 
Depth    lowest  d's  were,  as  with  visible  love, 

midescended  d  Of  her  black  hollows.  .  ,    ,  c- 

an  vmimagin'd  d  And  harmony  of  planet-girded  buns 

The  reflex  of  my  City  in  their  d's. 
Descendant    as  when  in  some  large  lake  From  pressure  of  d  ^^^ 

crags,  '        fu 

Descent    The  bright  dOta.  young  Seraph  !  ",^^w  « 

D«^   Grew  to  this  strength  among,  his  d's  cold  ;        Blow  ye  the  <'-«'«r'  6 
Desire  (s)     Unto  their  hearts' d,  (repeat)  ^"' p*^        iw  13 

Desire  verb)     Peace-lovers  we-sweet  Peace  we  aU  d-      Bntons,  guard  13 
Despite    Shadows  to  which,  d  all  shocks  of  Change,  .      f rj^fo  28 

Devil    For  the  d  a  whit  we  heed  'em,  (repeat)  National  Song  10,  28 

And  the  merry  d  drive  'em  (repeat)  Timbuctoo  103 

Dew     Unvisited  with  d  of  vagrant  cloud,  i        iTfiohlu 

Her  tears  are  mixed  with  the  bearded  d's.  F  the  glooming  light  11 


Dew  (continued)     And  filled  the  cup  with  d. 

To  him  the  honey  d's  of  orient  hope. 

the  d,  the  sun,  the  rain.  Under  the  growth  of  body 
Dew-drop    Or  as  the  d-d's  on  the  petal  bung, 
Dewy    recalls  the  d  prime  Of  youtn  and  buried  time  ? 
Diamond    Behind,  In  d  light,  upsprung  the  dazzling  Cones 

Of  Pyramids, 
Diamonded    The  day,  the  d  light, 
Diamondeyed    Summer's  tanling  d. 
Die    Men  clung  with  yearning  Hope  which  would  not  d. 

We  laugh,  we  cry,  we  are  bom,  we  d,        The  '  How 

Whether  we  sleep  or  whether  wed? 

No  !  sooner  she  herself  shall  d. 

Death  standeth  by ;  She  will  not  d ; 

Shall  the  hag  Evil  d  with  the  child  of  Good, 

Who  fears  to  d?    Who  fears  to  d?    Is  there 
any  here  who  fears  to  d 

\one  shall  grieve  For  the  man  who  fears  to  d : 

scorn  of  the  many  shall  cleave  To  the  man  who 
fears  to  d. 

black  eyes,  I  live  and  d,  and  only  d  for  you. 

Kingdoms  lapse,  and  climates  change,  and 
races  d; 

many  a  name  Whose  glory  will  not  d. 

Or  tell  me  how  to  d. 

Till  it  fade  and  fail  and  d, 
Died    What  marvel  that  she  d  ? 

So  d  the  Old  :  here  comes  the  New : 

what  profits  it  To  tell  ye  that  her  father  d, 

when  nope  d,  part  of  her  eloquence  D 
Dig    Come  along  !  we  will  d  their  graves. 
Dilletanti    Thin  d  deep  in  nature's  plan, 
Dim    They  with  d  eyes  Behold  me  darkling. 

D  shadows  but  unwaning  presences  Fourfacdd  to 
four  comers  of  the  sky  ; 


Lost  Hope  8 

Lover's  Tale  i  675 

ii  73 

i558 

Who  can  say  6 

Timbuctoo  168 

Chorus  11 

Dualisms  22 

Timimetoo  27 

and  the  '  Why  '  8 

18 

Burial  of  Love  24 

/'  the  glooming  light  13 

Shall  the  hag  1 

English  War  Song  1 

6 
There  are  three  things  8 

Hesperides,  Song  ii  4 

D.  of  F.  Women  16 

Sicipping-rope  10 

Germ  of'  Maud  '  30 

Love,  P^nde,  etc.  14 

New  Timon  5 

Lwer't  Tale  i  291 

751 

English  War  Song  30 

Sugg,  by  Reading  80 

Timbuctoo  212 

The  Mystic  15 


Through  whose  d  brain  the  winged  dreams  are  borne.  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  2 


Making  their  day  d,  so  we  gaze  on  thee. 

D  shores,  dense  rains,  and  heavy  clouded  sea. 
Diminution    By  d  made  most  glorious. 
Dimple    D'!>,  roseUps,  and  eyes  of  any  hue. 
Din    Anon  he  rusheth  forth  with  merry  d. 
Dip    Above  her  head  the  weak  lamp  d  s  and  winks 
Dipp'd    low-himg  tresses,  d  In  the  fierce  stream. 
Dipping    With  decent  d's  at  the  name  of  Christ ! 
Dirt    If  half  the  little  soul  iad? 
Discernment    So  lethargised  d  in  the  sense. 
Discovery    render  up  this  home  To  keen  D : 
Diseased    Thronging  the  cells  of  the  d  mind, 
Disgrace    There  hang  within  the  heavens  a  dark  d. 
Dishonour    doth  the  fmit  of  her  d  reap. 
Disjointed    descendant  cra^,  which  lapse  D, 
Di^    mighty  d  of  their  majestic  sun. 
Disloyal    Or  loyally  d  battled  for  our  righta. 
Dismal    Let  the  d  face  go  by. 
Display    Double  d  of  starlit  wings 
Dissenting    Would,  unrelenting,  Kill  all  d. 
Dissolution    Which,  lapt  in  seeming  d. 
Distance    Most  pale  and  clear  and  lovely  «F#. 
Distant    And  notes  of  busy  life  in  d  worlds 
Distinct    momentary  flash  of  light  Grew  thrillingly 

d  and  keen.  »        »8 

n  and  vivid  with  sharp  points  of  Ught  ,.       107 

Distress    Misery  Forgot  herself  in  that  extreme  i,  Lover's  Tale  1 628 

Divine    lowest  depths  were,  as  with  T.Tsible  love, 

Fill'd  with  D  efifulgence, 

and  some  On  the  ancient  heights  d  ; 

With  stony  smirks  at  all  things  human  and  d  ! 
Divinely    Daughters  of  time,  d  tall,  beneath 
Divinest    D  Atalantis,  whom  the  waves  Have  buried  deep. 

If  to  love  be  life  alone,  D  Juliet, 
Doctor    Your  d's  and  your  proctors  and  your  deans 


Lor>e72 

Mablethorpe  8 

Lover's  Tale  i  71 

There  are  three  things  4 

I^M  41 

Timbuctoo  35 

Lover's  Talei  374 

Sugg,  by  Reading  64 

Nnc  Timon  36 

Lover's  Tale  i  663 

Timbuctoo  2ii 

Shall  the  hag  3 

Sugg,  by  Reading  41 

Tears  of  Heaven  5 

Timbuctoo  123 

Love  21 

Sugg,  by  Reading  36 

Germ  ^'  .Maud'  23 

Timbuctoo  155 

Britons,  guard  34 

Lover's  Tale  i  507 

The  Mystic  35 

Timbuctoo  113 


Dome    rampart  upon  rampart,  d  on  d, 
soft  inversion  of  her  tremulous  D's ; 

Doom  (s)    all  things  creeoing  to  a  day  of  d. 

Some  vast  Assyrian  a  to  burst  upon  our  race. 


Timbuctoo  50 

Lotos-Eaters  17 

Sugg,  by  Reading  48 

The  MyitK  26 

Timbuctoo  22 

To 3 

Cambridge  5 

Timbuctoo  163 

..      232 

The  Mystic  40 

Sugg,  by  Reading  42 


Doom 


Doom  (verb)     Einglet,  I  d  you  to  the  flame. 
Doometh    Me  my  own  fate  to  lasting  sorrow  d : 
Door    and  beneath  Two  d's  of  blinding  brilliance, 

hinge  on  which  the  d  of  Hope,  Once  turning. 
Double    bearing  on  both  sides  I)  display  of  starlit  wings 
Doable-sweet    And  were  in  union  more  than  d-s. 
Doubt    they  plunge  their  d's  among  old  rags  and  bones 

For  my  d's  and  fears  were  all  amiss, 

That  a  d  will  only  come  for  a  kiss, 
Down    Sneering  bedridden  in  the  d  of  Peace 
Downlooking    JD  sees  the  solid  shining  groimd 
Down-roll"d    from  the  golden  threshold  had  d-r  Their 

heaviest  thunder, 
Drag    We  d  so  deep  in  our  commercial  mire, 
Dragon    imdemeath  the  star  Named  of  the  D — 

Lest  the  redcombed  d  slumber 

Hesper,  the  d,  and  sisters  three, 

Hesper,  the  d,  and  sisters  three. 
Drain-cut    The  d-c  levels  of  the  marshy  lea, — 
Drave    broad-blown  Argosies  I)  into  haven  ? 
Draw    ev'n  as  flame  d's  air ; 
Drawn    d  the  frozen  rain  From  my  cold  eyes 

From  the  root  D  in  the  dark. 

Half  round  the  mantling  night  is  d. 
Dread    We  must  not  d  in  you  the  nameless  autocrat. 
Dream  (s)     Ad  as  frail  as  those  of  ancient  Time  ?  ' 

d's  of  old  Which  fill'd  the  Earth 

Less  vivid  than  a  half-forgotten  d, 

Through  whose  dim  brain  the  wingfed  d's  are  borne, 

All  thoughts,  all  creeds,  all  d's  are  true, 

Came  voices,  like  the  voices  in  ad. 

As  men  do  from  a  vague  and  horrid  d, 

their  long  life  &d  of  linked  love. 
Dream  (verb)     all  Have  faith  in  that  they  d : 


1174 


Eclipse 


The  Ringlet  50 

Me  my  own  fate  1 

Timbuctoo  178 

Lover's  Tale  i  297 

Timbuctoo  155 

Lover's  Tale  i  567 

Sugg,  by  Reading  72 

The  Ringlet  19 

21 

Sugg,  by  Reading  46 

B.  of  F.  Women  2 


1 


But  if  I  d  that  aU  these  are,  They  are  to  me  for  that  I  d ; 


Lover's  Tale  i  617 

Sugg,  by  Reading  50 

A  Fragment  6 

Hesverides,  Song  ii  9 

24 

iv  25 

Mablethorpe  6 

A  Fragment  8 

Timbuctoo  18 

Could  I  outwear  13 

Hesperides,  Song  i  21 

„  Hi  13 

Sugg,  by  Reading  18 

Timbuctoo  62 

„       78 

„     136 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  2 

ol ' piovres  1 

The  Hesperides  12 

Lover's  Tale  i  786 

795 

oi  'piovres  6 


13 


Dreamful    Driven  back  the  billow  of  the  d  dark. 
Dreamy    Like  a  d  Lotos-eater,  a  delirious  Lotos-eater  ! 
Dreary    Black  specks  amid  a  waste  of  d  sand, 

Let  it  pass,  the  d  brow. 

Gray  sand  banks  and  pale  sunsets — d  wind, 
Drew    who  d  the  happy  atmosphere 
Dried    The  course  of  Hope  is  d, — 
Drifting    Shadow'd  and  crimson'd  with  the  d  dust. 
Drink    FiBST  d  a  health,  this  solemn  night. 

To  Europe's  better  health  we  d. 

To  France,  the  wiser  France,  we  d, 

We  d  to  thee  across  the  flood. 

And  the  merry  devil  d  'em  (repeat) 
Driven    D  back  the  billow  of  the  dreamful  dark. 
Drizzle    white  clouds  d :  her  hair  falls  loose ; 
Droop    hold  aloft  the  cloud  Which  d's  low 
Drooping     Backward  d  his  graceful  head. 

ringlets,  D  and  beaten  with  the  plaining  wind. 

And  d  daffodilly.  And  silverleaved  lily, 
Drop    Thine  eye  in  d's  of  gladness  swims. 

Lest  his  scaled  eyelid  d. 
Dropping    D  the  eyelid  over  the  eyes. 
Dropt    eyes  d  downward  through  the  blue  serene. 
Dross    And  d  to  gold  with  glorious  alchemy. 
Drove    (See  also  Drave)    on  the  Baltic  shore  Boleslas 

d  the  Pomeranian.  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  14 

Being  wafted  on  the  wind,  d  in  my  sight.  Lover's  Tale  i  730 

Which  d  them  onward — made  them  sensible ;  „  ii  11 

Drown     D  soul  and  sense,  while  wistfully  Pallid  thunderstricken  4 

Drowned  or  how  we  found  The  d  seaman  on  the  shore  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  293 
Drank  heart  is  d  with  overwatchings  night  and  day,  Hesperides,  Song  ii  12 
Dug    with  the  shock  Half  d  their  own  graves).  Lover's  Tale  ii  50 

Dull    Thv  sense  is  clogg'd  with  d  mortality,  Timbuctoo  82 

My  thoughts  which  long  had  grovell'd  in  the  slime  Of  this 
d  world,  „        150 

The  d  wave  mourns  down  the  slope,  7'  the  glooming  light  21 

Alas !  that  one  so  beautiful  Should  have  so  d  an  ear.        The  lintwhite  9 

By  a  i  mechanic  ghost  And  a  juggle  of  the  brain.      Germ  of '  Maud '  1 
Dumb     Alas  !  that  lips  so  cruel  d  Should  have  so  sweet  a 

breath !  The  lintwhite  17 


To  a  Lady  Sleep.  6 

Lotos-Eaters  13 

Timbuctoo  247 

Germ  of '  Maud '  22 

Mablethorpe  1 

Lover's  Tale  i  673 


139 

Hands  all  Round  1 

23 

35 

38 

National  Song  13,  31 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  6 

/'  the  glooming  light  9 

The  Mystic  32 

Burial  of  Love  1 

Lover's  Tale  i  735 

Anacreontics  2 

Hero  to  Leander  18 

Hesperides,  Song  ii  15 

20 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  9 

Though  night  1 


Dusky     like  d  worms  which  house  Beneath  unshaken  waters,    Timbuctoo  150 


Dust    Shadow'd  and  crimson'd  with  the  drifting  d, 
Dwell    I  would  d  with  thee.  Merry  grasshopper, 
Dweller    As  d's  in  lone  planets  look  upon 


E 


Lover's  Tale  i  139 

The  Grasshopper  22 

Love  20 


Timbuctoo  9fl 
the  '  Why '  III 


Each     £  failing  sense  As  with  a  momentary  flash  of  light 

with  restless  and  increasing  spheres  Which  break  upon  e 
other. 

The  wheatears  whisper  to  e  other :  The  '  How 

Grief  and  sadness  steal  Symbols  of  e  other ; 

Saw  far  on  e  side  through  the  grated  gates 

E  sun  which  from  the  centre  flings  Grand  music 

Or  in  the  art  of  Nature,  where  e  rose  Doth  faint 

If,  as  I  knew,  they  two  did  love  e  other, 

Lo  !  how  they  love  e  other  ! 
Eager     Rapidly  levelling  e  eyes. 

In  e  haste  I  shook  him  by  the  hand ; 
Ear     Beat  Uke  a  far  wave  on  my  anxious  e. 

and  his  e's  With  harmonies  of  wind  and  wave 

one  so  beautiful  Should  have  so  dull  an  e. 

Breathes  low  into  the  charmed  e's  of  morn 

There  was  a  ringing  in  my  e's, 

In  the  e,  from  far  and  near. 

It's  always  ringing  in  your  e's, 

by  our  e's,  the  huge  roots  strain  and  creak), 
Earlier    Than  e,  when  on  the  Baltic  shore 
Earliest    With  e  Light  of  Spring, 

(the  innocent  light  Of  e  youth  pierced  through  and 
through 

Thy  Memnon,  when  his  peaceful  lips  are  kissed  With  e 
rays, 

(Huge  splinters,  which  the  sap  of  e  showers.  Lover's  Tale  ii  45 

Early    but  overleap  All  the  petty  shocks  and  fears  That  trouble 

life  in  e  years,  Rosalind  L 

Fresh  as  the  e  seasmell  blown  Through  vineyards  from  an 
inland  bay. 
Earth    pillars  high  Long  time  eras'd  from  E : 

whilome  won  the  hearts  of  all  on  E 

Which  fill'd  the  E  with  passing  loveliness, 

smallest  grain  that  dappled  the  dark  E, 

E's  As  Heaven  than  E  is  fairer. 

so  kin  to  e  Pleasaimce  fathers  pain — 

The  varied  e,  the  moving  heaven, 

hoarhead  winter  paving  e  With  sheeny  white, 

Heaven  weeps  above  the  e  all  night  till  morn. 

Because  the  e  hath  made  her  state  forlorn 

Smiles  on  the  e's  worn  brow  to  win  her  if  she  may. 


12( 

and  the  '  Why '  \. 

Every  day,  etc.  26 

The  Mystic  34 

Chorus  21 

Lover's  Tale  i  563 

766 

802 

Hesperides,  Song  ii  18 

Lover's  Tale  i  788 

Timbuctoo  114 

206 

The  lintwhite  9 

A  Fragment  25 

0  sad  no  more  !  5 

Rosalind  1 

New  Timon  31 

Lover's  Tale  i  63 

Blow  ye  the  trumpet  13 

Timbuctoo  200 

The  Mystic  29 

A  Fragment  23 


Timbuctoo  13 

11 
7f 

169 

Every  day,  etc.  14 

Chorus  1 

„     18 

Tears  of  Heaven  1 

3 


Heaven  crieth  after  thee ;  e  waileth  for  thee : 
the  new  year  warm  breathed  on  the  e, 
'  Come  along  !  we  alone  of  the  e  are  free ; 
As  round  the  rolling  e  night  follows  day : 
I  grant  you  one  of  the  great  Powers  on  e, 
and  my  neck  his  arm  upstay'd  From  e. 
Crush'd  link  on  link  into  the  beaten  e. 
Earth-awakening     Upon  some  e-a  day  of  spring 
Earthly    And  shook  its  e  socket,  for  we  heard. 
Earthquake-shattered    link  The  e-s  chasm, 
Ease    I  fain  would  shake  their  triple-folded  e. 
East    Lest  one  from  the  E  come  and  take  it  away. 
Look  from  west  to  e  along : 
Till  midnoon  the  cool  e  light  Is  shut  out 
Was  not  the  South,  The  E,  the  West,  all  open. 
Eat    He  shall  e  the  bread  of  common  scorn ; 

We  will  e  the  Lotos, 
Eater    See  Lotos-Eater 

Ebbing    A  curve  of  whitening,  flashing,  e  light ! 
Echo    The  e,  feeble  child  of  sound, 
Hearing  apart  the  e'es  of  his  fame. 
E'es  in  his  empty  hall, 
EcUpse     His  eyes  in  e,  Pale  cold  his  lips, 
thou  wilt  not  brook  e : 


Love  26 

„    33 

English  War  Song  34 

Me  my  oion  Fate  10 

Sugg,  by  Reading  23 

Lover's  Tale  i  721 

859 

Timbuctoo  152 

Lover's  Tale  i  61 

408 

Sugg,  by  Reading  44 

Hesperides,  Song  i  29 

.  „  Hi  6 

„  iv  15 

Lover's  Tale  i  699 

English  War  Song  13 

Lotos-Eaters  14 


Timbuctoo  63 

Chorus  12 

D.  of  F.  Women  13 

Home  they  brought  him  4 

Burial  of  Love  1 

Love  V 


i 


Edge 


1175 


Eye 


Edge     Could  link  his  shallop  to  the  fleeting  e,  Timhuctoo  145 

Edict    e's  of  his  fear  Are  mellowed  into  music,  Love  7 

Effect    each  th'  e  Of  separate  impulse,  Timhuctoo  126 

Effulgence     Fill'd  with  Divine  e,  circunifus'd,  „  50 

Egypt    Mysterious  E,  are  thine  obelisks  A  Fragment  12 

Either     Which  droops  low  hung  on  e  gate  of  life,  The  Mystic  32 

Parted  on  e  side  her  argent  neck,  Lover's  Tale  i  740 

Eld    Keen  knowledges  of  low-embowed  e)  The  Mystic  30 

An  honourable  e  shall  come  upon  thee.  Though  night  14 

Elder     which  starr'd  the  night  o'  the  E  World  ?  Timbuctoo  60 

Eldorado    Imperial  E  roof 'd  with  gold :  „         24 

Element    The  fierceness  of  the  bounding  e?  „       148 

with  the  heat  Of  their  infolding  e ;  Lover's  Tale  i  615 

Eloquence    when  hope  died,  part  of  her  e  Died  „  751 

Elysian     Seraphtrod,  Wound  thro'  your  great  E  solitudes,        Timbuctoo  48 
Embalming    E  with  sweet  tears  the  vacant  shrine,  Lost  Hope  3 

Emblem    obelisks  Graven  with  gorgeous  e's  undiscerned  ?     A  Fragment  13 
Embowed    See  Low-embowed 

Embrace     the  billow  will  e  thee  with  a  kiss  Hero  to  Leander  27 

Spirit  waits  To  e  me  in  the  sky.  Germ  of '  Maud '  34 

Embracing    thoughts  Involving  and  e  each  with  each  Timbtictoo  116 

Emerald    And  ever  circling  round  their  e  cone?  In  coronals 

and  glories,  „  52 

Shooting,  singing,  ever  springing  In  and  out  the  e 

glooms,  The  Grassfiopper  42 

Eiminence     aloft  Upon  his  renown'd  E  Timbuctoo  171 

Empereur     '  Vive  VE '  may  follow  by  and  bye ;  Britons,  guard  25 

Empery    thine  e  Is  over  all :  Love  10 

Emphatic    Who  make  the  e  One,  by  whom  is  all,  S^igg.  by  Reading  81 

Emptiness     But  lose  themselves  in  utter  e.  Love  and  Sorrow  16 

Empty    All  alone  she  sits  and  hears  Echoes  in  his 

e  hall.  Home  they  brought  him  4 

I,  screaming,  from  me  flung  The  e  phantom :  Lover's  Tale  ii  213 

Encirded    See  Moon-encircled 

End    Till  the  e  of  fears  Cometh  in  the  shroud.  Every  day,  etc.  20 

The  e  of  day  and  beginning  of  night  Hesperides,  Song  iv  9 

For  better  so  you  fight  for  public  e's ;  Sugg,  by  Beading  26 

Endue    See  Indue 

Endure    Yet  e  unscathed  Of  changeful  cycles  A  Fragment  8 

Enduring     But  men  of  long  e  hopes.  New  Timon  17 

not  e  To  carry  through  the  world  Timbuctoo  237 

Enemy    There  standeth  our  ancient  e ;  (repeat)      English  War  Song  23,  45 

Hark !  he  shouteth — the  ancient  el  „  24 

Enfold    thy  hills  e  a  City  as  fair  Timbuctoo  59 

Athwart  the  veils  of  evil  which  e  thee  Love  17 

England    Shout  for  El    Ho  !  for  E I     George 

for  E I    Merry  El    JS  for  aye !  (repeat)    English  War  Song  7, 18,  29, 

40,  51 
Than  to  shame  merrv  E  here.  .,  17 

Hold  up  the  Lion  of  "£  on  high  (repeat)  „  27,49 

There  is  no  land  like  E  (repeat)  National  Song  1,  5,  19,  -id 

A  health  to  E,  every  guest ;  Hands  all  Round  2 

And  the  great  name  of  E  round  and  round,  (repeat)  „  24, 48,  60 

The  thinking  men  of  E,  loathe  a  tyranny.  Sugg,  by  Reading  12 

Of  E  and  her  health  of  commonsense—  ..  40 

FareweU  our  E's  flower,  God  bless  our  Prince  9 

English    There  are  no  hearts  like  E  hearts.  Such  hearts  of 

oak  as  they  be.  National  Song  3 

There  are  no  wives  Uke  E  wives,  •'  ^^ 

There  are  no  maids  like  E  maids,  <•  •^^ 

Englishmen    There  are  no  men  like  E,  ..  ' 

Enough    Matter  g  for  deploring  .  ^r-  Y*  /    iq« 

Entwine    e  The  indecision  of  my  present  mmd  ^  V"''!^,- ion 

Envenom    heart  deep  moans  Feed  and  e.  Lover  s  Tale  i  820 

Enwoven    See  Inwoven  d     ■  »   /■  r^.,„  9^1 

Epitaph    An  e  that  aU  may  spy?  Burial  of  Lave  23 

Eras'd    pillars  high  Long  time  e  from  Earth :  Timbuctoo  13 

Erewhile    E'en  so  my  thoughts,  e  so  low,  .     >•       J^' 

Essence    Nor  e  nor  eternal  laws :  i°' pfjl.!!  so 

i^  e  less  concentred  than  a  man  !  Sugg,  by  Read  i^^ 

Essential    As  bearing  no  e  fruits  of  excellence.  Lover  s  Tale  i385 

Eternal    The  very  throne  of  the  e  God :  ol'o^oin^s  11 

Nor  essence  nor  e  laws :                            ,  _         ^,         -j.^   c^,„  ,•  n 

We  shaU  lose  e  pleasure,  Worth  e  want  of  rest.       Hesperide^,Songi  11 

Eternity    In  e  no  future.  In  e  no  past.  The  '  How  '  and  the    Why    6 


Eternity  (continued)    One  reflex  from  e  on  time,  Th*  Mystic  22 

lived  That  intense  moment  thro'  e.  Lover's  Tale  i  496 

Ether    and  an  e  of  black  hue,  The  Mystic  45 

Ethereal    if  gold  it  were  Or  metal  more  e,  Timbuctoo  177 

Europe    whose  rapid  interval  Parts  Af ric  from  green  E,  „  3 

A  health  to  E's  honest  men  !  Hands  all  Round  13 

To  E's  better  health  we  drink,  „  23 

O  speak  to  E  through  your  guns !  ,,  51 

Evanisheth    Our  life  e:    Oh  !  stay.  The  lintwhite  15 

Even    (See  also  Evening)    Purplef ringed  with  e  and 

dawn.  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  14 

thunders  through  your  vacant  courts  At  mom  and  « ;        Cambridge  10 

Even-fall    They  brought  him  home  at  e-f:  Home  they  brought  him  2 

Evening    Hesper  hateth  Phosphor,  e  hateth  mom.     Hesperides,  Song  Hi  15 

Everchanging    With  triple  arch  of  e  bows,  Timbitctoo  74 

Every    Expanding  momently  with  e  sight  „       118 

Reacheth  to  e  corner  under  Heaven,  „       224 

E  day  hath  its  night :  E  night  its  mom :  Every  day,  etc.  1 

Check  e  outflash,  e  mder  sally  Of  thought  and 

speech ;  Check  every  outflash  1 

Looking  warily  E  way,  Hesperides,  Song  i  27 

E  flower  and  e  fruit  the  redolent  breath  „  iv  1 

A  health  to  England,  e  guest ;  Hands  all  Bound  2 

a  land  of  Love ;  Where  Love  was  worshipp'd  upon 

e  height.  Where  Love  was  worshipp'd  under  « tree —  Lover's  Tale  i  323 

One  rainy  night,  when  e  wind  blew  loud,  „  367 

Evil  (adj.)    We  likewise  have  our  e  things ;  Hands  all  Round  19 

Like  to  the  wild  youth  of  an  e  king.  Lover's  Tale  i  344 

Evil  (s)    What  hast  thou  to  do  with  e  (repeat)  The  Grasshopper  34,  40 

self  wrought  e's  of  unnumbered  years.  Tears  of  Heaven  4 

Shall  the  hag  E  die  with  the  child  of  Good,  Shall  the  hag  1 

Athwart  the  veils  of  e  which  enfold  thee  Love  17 

Evocation    With  mighty  e,  had  updrawn  Lover's  Tale  i  668 

Ewe    e's  bleat  On  the  solitary  steeps,  Lotos-Eaters  29 

Exceeding    his  face,  for  it  was  wonderful  With  its  e  brightness,    Timbuctoo  87 

Excellence    memory  of  that  mental  e  Comes  o'er  me,  „      137 

As  bearing  no  essential  fruits  of  e.  Lover's  Talei  385 

Exception     I  feel  £  to  be  character'd  in  fire.  Sugg,  by  Reading  52 

Excess    Lest  you  go  wrong  from  power  in  e.  „  10 

Excitation    spirit  With  supernatural  e  bound  Within  me,         Timbuctoo  91 

Excite    She  loves  a  little  scandal  which  e's ;  Sugg.  6«  Reading  57 

Existence    fields  Of  undefin'd  e  far  and  free.  Timbuctoo  160 

Expanding    E  momently  with  every  sight  And  sound  „        118 

Expectation    Updrawn  m  e  of  her  change —  Lover's  Tale  i  597 

Experience    The  stern  e's  of  converse  lives,  The  Mystic  8 

Exploring    '  Science  enough  and  e  1865-1868  6 

Express'd    love  too  high  to  be  e  Arrested  in  its  sphere,        lover's  Tale  i  65 

Exquisite    There  is  no  room  so  e,  O  darling  room  4 

A  little  room  so  e,  ,  <•    ,    .  J^ 

Extreme    even  Misery  Forgot  herself  in  that  e  distress,      Lover  s  Tale  t  628 

Eye    (See  also  Eyne)    gazeth  on  Those  e's  which  wear  no  light  Timhuctoo  39 

colour'd  spots  as  dance  athwart  the  e's  „         70 

Open  thine  e  and  see.'  ••         W 

The  starry  glowing  of  his  restless  e's,  ,.         89 

my  mental  e  grew  large  With  such  a  vast  circumference  ..         92 

till  the  e's  in  vain  Amid  the  wild  unrest  „       128 

the  e  could  scan  Through  length  of  porch  „       179 

fill'd  My  e's  with  irresistable  sweet  tears,  m       191 

Visit  his  e's  with  visions,  and  his  ears  »        206 

They  with  dim  e's  Behold  me  darkling.  ..       212 

mystery  of  loveliness  Unto  all  e's,  •  ,"r  t      i 

His  e's  in  eclipse,  Pale  cold  his  lips,  Burwl  of  unel 

In  the  weathered  light  Of  the  tearless  e  „  22 

My  heart  is  lighted  at  thine  e's,  ro— —  8 

With  glazfed  e  She  looks  at  her  grave :  V  the  glooming  Itght  14 

E's  are  worn  away  Tfll  the  end  of  fears  Every  day,  Oc.  19 

Thine  e  in  drops  of  gladness  SH-ims.  Hero  to  Leander  18 

Ye  could  not  read  the  marvel  in  his  e,  The  Mystic  i 

Awful  with  most  invariable  e's.  »         24 

with  shining  e's  Smiling  a  godlike  smile  „         27 

Into  her  own  blue  e's  so  clear  and  deep,  Tears  of  Heaven  7 

e's  dropt  downward  through  the  blue  serene,  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  9 

From  my  cold  e's  and  melted  it  again.  Could  I  outwear  14 

strain  Weak  e's  upon  the  glistering  sands  Pallid  ihunderstricken  5 

Strain  the  hot  spheres  of  his  convulsed  e's,  Love  37 


Eye 


1176 


Fear 


Eye  (continued)    Till  it  dazzle  and  blind  his  e's.  English  War  Song  28 

Alas !  that  e's  so  full  of  light  The  Lintwhite  26 

from  his  mother's  e's  Flow  over  the  Arabian  bay,  A  Fragment  23 

They  sleep  with  staring  e's  and  gilded  lips,  „  29 

both  my  e's  gushed  out  with  tears.  0  sad  no  more  6 

Dimples,  roselips,  and  e's  of  any  hue.  There  are  three  things  4 

For  which  I  live — black  e's,  and  brown  and  blue ;  „ 


black  e's,  I  live  and  die,  and  only  die  for  you. 

Of  late  such  e's  looked  at  me — 

I  saw  no  more  only  those  e's — 

knowest  I  dare  not  look  into  thine  e's, 

Looking  under  silver  hair  with  a  silver  e. 

Rapidly  levelling  eager  e's. 

Dropping  the  eyelid  over  the  e's. 

In  my  inner  e's  again, 

Can  it  overlive  the  e  ? 

my  skipping-rope  Will  hit  you  in  the  e. 

The  dewy  dawnings  and  the  amber  e's, 

E  feeding  upon  e  with  deep  intent ; 

mine  image  in  her  e's, 

e's  were  moved  With  motions  of  the  soul, 

My  e's,  fix'd  upon  hers. 

And  my  e's  read,  they  read  aright, 

she  did  act  the  step-dame  to  mine  e's. 

By  the  shuddering  moonlight,  fix'd  his  e's 

e's,  I  saw,  were  full  of  tears  in  the  mom, 
Eyed    See  Diamondeyed,  Keen-eyed 
Eyelid    Came  down  upon  my  e's,  and  I  fell. 

My  e's  and  my  brow. 

Lest  his  scaled  e  drop, 

Dropping  the  e  over  the  eyes. 
Eyne    With  points  of  blastbome  hail  their  heated  e ! 


F 

Fable    labyrinthine  veins  Of  the  great  vine  of  F, 
Face    and  the  streets  with  ghastly  f's  throng'd 

look'd  into  my  /  With  his  unutterable, 

I  look'd,  but  not  Upon  his  /, 


7 

9 

13 

Oh,  Beauty  4 

Hesperides,  Song  ii  2 

18 

20 

Germ  of '  Maud '  4 

.".  27 

Skipping-rope  4 

Lover  s  Tale  i  55 

64 

70 

72 

352 

602 

664 

680 

728 

Timbuctoo  187 

Hero  to  Leander  13 

Hesperides,  Song  ii  15 

20 

Shall  the  hag  11 


Timbuctoo  222 
29 


86 
And  stares  in  his/and  shouts '  how  ?  how  ? '  The '  How '  and  the '  Why '  29 
"*        '     --"--•--        -        -  Zoije  3 

D.  of  F.  Women  6 

Germ  of '  Maud '  2 

23 

New  Timon  6 

Lover's  Tale  i  697 

804 


Before  the  /  of  God  didst  breath  and  move, 

all  f's  turned  to  where  Glows  rubylike 

paint  the  beauteous  /  Of  the  maiden, 

Let  the  dismal  /  go  by, 

a  familiar  /:  I  thought  we  knew  him : 

Refused  to  look  his  author  in  the  /, 

Known  when  their /'s  are  forgot  in  the  land 
Faced    See  Follfaced 
Fade     Seasons  flower  and/;  Every  day,  etc.  6 

Till  it  /  and  faU  and  die,  Germ  of '  Maud' 30 

Faded    and  mightily  outgrow  The  wan  dark  coil  of  / 

suffering—  Could  I  outwear  4 

Faery    The  silent  Heavens  were  blench'd  with  /  light, 

Uncertain  whether  /  light  or  cloud,  Timbuctoo  5 

Fail    Lotos-land,  till  the  Lotos  /;  Lotos-Eaters  27 

Till  it  fade  and  /  and  die.  Germ  of '  Maud '  30 

Fail'd    tried  the  Muses  too  :  You  /,  Sir  :  New  Timon  14 

Failing    Each  /sense  As  with  a  momentary  flash  of  light         Timbuctoo  96 
Fain     I  /  would  shake  their  triple-folded  ease,  Sugg,  by  Reading  44 

Faint    each  rose  Doth  /  upon  the  bosom  Lover's  Tale  i  564 

Fair    (-See  also  Starry-&ir)    Where  are  ye  Thrones  of  the 

Western  wave,  /  Islands  green  ?  Timbuctoo  42 

thy  hilLs  enfold  a  City  as  /  As  those  which  starr'd  the 
night  o'  the  Elder  Worid  ?  „  59 

How  chang'd  from  this  /  City  !  *  ,.        249 

Armed  cap-a-pie.  Full  /  to  see ;  The  Grasshopper  15 

There  are  no  wives  like  English  wives,  So  /  and 
chaste  as  they  be.  National  Song  22 

F  year,  /  year,  thy  children  call.  The  lintwhite  10 

F  year,  with  brows  of  royal  love  Thou  comest,  as  a  King.        „  19 

(when  I  view  F  maiden  forms  moving  like 

melodies).  There  are  three  things  3 

I  can  shadow  forth  my  bride  As  I  knew  her/and  kind  Germ  of '  Maud '  10 

'Tis  a  phantom  /  and  good  I  can  call  it  to  my  side,  „  15 

I  hear  a  thunder  though  the  skies  are  /,  Sugg,  by  Beading  89 


Fair  (continued)     F  fall  this  hallow'd  hour,  God  bless  our  Prince  W 

Farewell,  /  rose  of  May !  „                11 

her  cheek  was  pale,  Oh  !  very  /  and  pale  :  Lover's  Tale  i  725 

Fairer    as  far  surpassing  Earth's  As  Heaven  than  Earth  is  /.    Timbuctoo  170 

Fairest    Thou  art  the  /  of  thy  feres,  The  lintwhite  35 

her  to  whom  all  outward  /  things  Lover's  Tale  i  383 

Fairy-like     How  f-l  you  fly  !  Skip-ping-rope  6 

Faith     Kneels  the  pale  Priestess  in  deep  /,  Timbuctoo  34 

and  all  Have  /  in  that  they  dream :  01  'pjovres  6 

Has  given  all  my  /  a  turn  ?  The  Ringlet  52 

I  know  not,  /:  Lover's  Tale  i  695 

Falcon     My  happy  /,  Rosalind,  Rosalind  25 

Falconhearted    My /Rosalind  _                   „          9 

Fall     Because  no  shadow  on  you  f's,  „        31 

In  the  summerwoods  when  the  sun  f's  low.    The '  How '  and  the '  Why '  27 


I 


For  her  the  showers  shall  not  /, 

her  hair/'s  loose ; 

thick  snow  f's  on  her  flake  by  flake, 

(Shame  /  'em  they  are  deaf  and  blind) 

Let  them  clash  together,  foam  and/. 

that  never /'s  Away  from  freshness. 

Self -poised,  nor  fears  to  /. 

You  /  on  those  who  are  to  you 

Take  care  thou  dost  not  fear  to  / ! ' 

Fair  /  this  hallow'd  hour, 

Did  /  away  into  oblivion. 
Fall'n    when  the  Sun  Had  /  below  th'  Atlantick, 

Moon  Had  /  from  the  night, 

The  Northwind  /,  in  the  newstarr^d  night 

leaf  /  in  the  woods,  or  blasted  Upon  this  bough  ? 

if  he  had  /  In  love  in  twilight  ? 
Falling    In  rising  and  in  /  with  the  tide, 

/,  they  fell  too,  Crush'd  link  on  link 
False     If  ye  sing  not,  if  ye  make  /  measure. 
Falsehood     Prove  their/ and  thy  quarrel, 
Falter'd    since  that  hour.  My  voice  hath  somewhat  /- 
Fame    Hearing  apart  the  echoes  of  his  /. 

Is  more  than  all  poetic  /. 
Familiar     Regard  him :  a  /  face : 
Fancy    Rosalind,  hath  daring  fancies  of  her  own, 

assimilated  all  our  tastes  And  future  fancies. 

my  /  So  lethargised  discernment  in  the  sense, 
Fanged    See  Subtle-fanged 

Fanlike    wings  which  bum  F  and  fibred,  Timbuctoo  156 

Far     Beat  like  a  /  wave  on  my  anxious  ear.  „         114 

through  the  trackless  fields  Of  undefin'd  existence /and  free.    „  160 

Saw  round  her  feet  the  country  /  away.  Lover's  Tale  i  390 

Farewell     F  our  England's  flower,  God  bless  our  Prince  9 

F,  fair  rose  of  May  !  ,,11 

Far-up     all  faces  turned  to  where  Glows  rubylike  the  f-u 

D.of  F.  Women  7 


Burial  of  Love  25 

r  the  glooming  light  9 

20 

The  Grasshopper  6 

Hesperides,  Song  Hi  9 

Rosalind  16 

D.  of  F.  Women  12 

New  Timon  15 

What  time  I  wasted  9 

God  bless  our  Prince  8 

Lover's  Tale  i  630 

Timbuctoo  4 

„      253 

The  Hesperides  1 

Lover's  Tale  i  622 

699 

62 

858 

Hesperides,  Song  i  10 

The  Grasshopper  9 

Lover's  Tale  i  750 

D.  of  F.  Women  13 

New  Timon  24 

6 

Rosalind  26 

Lover's  Tale  i  239 

662 


Me  my  own  fate  1 
Lover's  Tale  i  688 

Hesperides,  Song  ii  1 

3 

11 

„  Hi  1 

7 


crimson  globe, 
Fashioned    See  Airy-fashioned 
Fate    Me  my  own  /  to  lasting  sorrow  doometh : 

And  insolence  of  uncontrolled  F, 
Father  (s)    F  Hesper,  F  Hesper,  watch,  watch,  ever 
and  aye, 
F,  twinkle  not  thy  stedf ast  sight ; 
Look  to  him,  /,  lest  he  wink, 
F  Hesper,  F  Hesper,  watch,  watch,  night  and  day, 
F,  old  Himla  weakens, 
Rode  upon  his  f's  lance.  Beat  upon  his  f's 

shield —  Home  they  brought  him  8 

what  profits  it  To  tell  ye  that  her  /  died,  Lover's  Tale  i  291 

Father  (verb)    so  kin  to  earth  Pleasaunce  f's  pain —  Every  day,  etc.  15 

Fathom    Low-buried  /  deep  beneath  with  thee,  0  sad  no  mare !  8 

Fear  (s)     men's  hopes  and/ 's  take  refuge  in  The  fragrance     Timbuctoo  226 

Till  the  end  of  f's  Cometh  in  the  shroud.  Every  day,  etc.  20 

Unknowing  /,  Undreading  loss,  The  Grasshopper  16 

edicts  of  his  /  Are  mellowed  into  music,  Love  7 

know  no  strife  Of  inward  woe  or  outward  / ;  Rosalind  4 

shocks  and  f's  That  trouble  life  in  early  years,  „      13 

what  with  spites  and  what  with  f's.  New  Timon  29 

For  my  doubts  and  f's  were  all  amiss.  The  Ringlet  19 

And  a  /  to  be  kissed  away.'  „  22 

lead  me  tenderly,  for  /  the  mind  Lover's  Tale  i  23 


Fear 


1177 


Flowered 


Fear  (verb)  Who/'s  to  die  ?  Who  f's  to  die?  Is 
there  any  here  who  fs  to  die  He  shall  find 
what  he  f's,  and  none  shall  grieve  For  the 

man  who  f's  to  die :  English  War  Song  1 
scorn  of  the  many  shall  cleave  To  the  man  who 

f's  to  die.  ^^                g 

Self -poised,  nov  f's  to  fall.  D.  of  F.  Women  12 

Take  care  thou  dost  not  /  to  fall ! '  What  time  I  wasted  9 

I  /  for  you,  as  for  some  youthful  king,  Sugg,  by  Reading  9 

An  honest  isolation  need  not  /  The  Court,  „            15 
Fearful    weak  lamp  dips  and  winks  Unto  the  /  summoning 

without:  TimbuctooZQ 

With  which  the  /  springtide  flecks  the  lea,  Love  and  Sorrow  2 

And  with  a  /  self -impelling  joy  Saw  round  her  feet      Lover's  Tale  i  389 

Feather     two  birds  of  glancing  /  Do  woo  each  other,  Dualisms  8 

Fed    Memory  tho'  /  by  Pride  Did  wax  Love,  Pride,  etc.  1 1 

unhappy  sighs.  /  with  my  tears.  Lover's  Tale  i  674 

Fbeble     The  echo,  /  child  of  soimd,  Chorus  12 

Feed    heart  deep  moans  F  and  envenom.  Lover's  Tale  i  820 

When  the  shrill  storm  blast  /'s  it  from  behind,  „          H  47 

Feeding    taught  nothing,  /  on  the  soul.  Cambridge  14 

Eye  /  upon  eye  with  deep  intent ;  Lover's  Tale  i  64 

Feel    and  to  /  My  fullness ;  Timbuctoo  214 

I  /  there  is  something ;  but  how  and 

what  ?  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  23 

Severe  and  quick  to  /  a  civic  sin,  Sugg,  by  Reading  4 

I  /  the  thousand  cankers  of  our  State,  „             43 

I  /  Exception  to  be  character'd  in  fire.  „             51 

She  f's  not  how  the  social  frame  is  rack'd.  „             56 

Feeling    A  little  /  is  a  want  of  tact.  „            58 

blood,  the  breath,  the  /  and  the  motion.  Lover's  Tale  ii  75 

Feign     No  Tithon  thou  as  poets  /  The  Grasshopper  5 

Fell     Came  down  upon  my  eyelids,  and  I  /.  Timbuctoo  187 

The  Moslem  myriads/,  and  fled  before —  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  11 

falling,  they  /  too,  Crush'd  link  on  link  Lover's  Tale  i  858 

had  shatter'd  from  The  mountain,  till  they  /,  „           ii  49 

Felt    I  /  my  sou]  grow  mighty,  Timbuctoo  90 

now  /  Unutterable  buoyancy  and  strength  ,,       157 

not  /  and  known  A  higher  than  they  see :  ,,211 

hath  /  The  vanities  of  after  and  before ;  The  Mystic  5 

the  year  First  /  his  youth  and  strength.  Lover's  Tale  i  306 

Fere    Thy  art  the  fairest  of  thy  f's.  The  lintwhite  35 

Fetter'd     Thy  spirit  /  with  the  bond  of  clay :  Timbuctoo  83 

FQse    On  those  first-moved  f's  of  the  brain.  Lover's  Tale  i  21 

Fibred    wings  which  bum  Fanlike  and  /,  Timbuctoo  156 

Fte    O  /,  you  golden  nothing,  /  You  golden  lie.  The  Ringlet  43 

Field    {See  also  Sandfield)    f's  Of  midefin'd  existence 

far  and  free.  Timbuctoo  159 

A  GATE  and  a  /  half  ploughed,  A  gate  and  a  field  1 

Sun  peeped  in  from  open  /,  Home  they  brought  him  6 

Fierce    The  /  old  man — to  take  his  name  You  bandbox.        New  Tiitwn  43 

whose  low-hung  tresses,  dipp'd  In  the  /  stream.  Lover's  Tale  i  375 

Fierceness     The  /  of  the  bounding  element  ?  Timbuctoo  148 

Fiery     Part  of  a  throne  of/ flame,  „         181 

The  linked  woes  of  many  a  /  change  Had  purified,  The  Mystic  9 

Fight  (s)    charge  to  the  /:  Charge  !  charge  to  the  / !  English  War  Song  47 

We  still  were  loyal  in  our  wildest  /'s,  Sugg,  by  Reading  35 

Fight  (verb)     Till  we  were  left  to  /  for  truth  alone.  Britons,  guard  35 

To  /  thv  mother  here  alone,  Hands  all  Rotmd  43 

For  better  so  you  /  for  public  ends  ;  Sugg,  by  Reading  26 

Pill    Theee  are  three  things  that/my  heart  with  sighs  There  are  three  things  1 

Fill'd     {See  also  Globefllled)     F  with  Divine  effulgence, 

circumfus'd,  Timbuctoo  50 

dreams  of  old  Which  /  the  Earth  with  passing  loveliness,  „         79 

/  My  eyes  with  irresistible  sweet  tears,  >.       190 

I  have  /  thy  lips  with  power.  >•       215 

And  /  the  cup  with  dew.  -^«'  Hope  8 

F  with  a  finer  air:  D.  of  F.  Worn  en  8 

Pilm'd    /  the  margents  of  the  recent  wound.  Lover's  Tale  t  764 

Find    He  shall  /  what  he  fears,  English  War  Song  3 

/  The  drain-cut  levels  of  the  marshy  /,—  Mablejhorpe  5 

line    And  those  /  curses  which  he  spoke ;  -^^^w  Timon  2 

Kner    Filled  with  a  /  air :  -D.  0/ 2^.  fFo7«m  8 

Jire     Kapid  as/,  inextricably  link'd,  Timbuctoo  Ul 

Changed  into  /,  and  blown  about  with  sighs.  To           9 


Fire  (continued)    By  secret  /  and  midnight  storms  That  wander      Chonu  5 
flings  Grand  Music  and  redundant  f,  22 

They  stxeam  Uke  /  in  the  skies ;  English  War  S^  26 

Through  the  water  and  the  /.  (repeat)  National  Song  iZ  32 

The  world  IS  wasted  with  /  and  sword,  Uesperides,  Song  iv  22 

But  /,  to  blast  the  hopes  of  men.  llandt  all  Round  30 

I  feel  Exception  to  be  character'd  in/.  Sugg,  by  Reading  52 

Firmament    Seemed  with  a  cobweb  /  to  link  hnier's  Talt »  407 

First    I  have  raisd  thee  higher  to  the  Spheres  of  Heaven, 

Man's  /,  last  home :  Timbuttoo  217 

0  Maiden,  fresher  than  the  /  green  leaf  Love  and  Sorrov  1 
For  the  two  /  were  not,  but  only  seemed  One  shadow       The  My*tie  20 

First-moved    begins  to  play  On  those  f-m  fibres  of  the  brain.    Lover's  Tale  1 21 

Fish    Young  f'es,  on  an  April  morn,  Rosalind  21 

Five    F^  hnks,  a  golden  chain,  are  we,  Uuperides,  Song  ii  23 

F  links,  a  golden  chain,  are  we,  „  ie  24 

Fixed    he  in  the  centre  /,  Saw  far  on  each  side  The  Mystic  33 

My  eyes,  /  upon  hers.  Lover'*  Tale  i  352 

By  the  shuddering  moonlight,  /  his  eyes  „  680 

Flag    takes  his  f's  and  waves  them  to  the  mob  D.  of  F.  Women  5 

Flake     thick  snow  falls  on  her  /  by  /,  /'  the  glooming  light  20 

Flame  (s)    ev'n  as  /  draws  air ;  But  had  their  being  in 

the  heart  of  Man  As  air  is  th'  Ufe  of  /:  Timbuetoo  18 

Part  of  a  throne  of  fiery  /,  ^      igj 

Love  unretum'd  is  like  the  fragrant  /  To 5 

a  region  of  white  /,  Pure  without  heat.  The  Mystic  43 

Ringlet,  I  doom  you  to  the  /.  The  Rinket  50 

Flame  (verb)    To  /  and  sparkle  and  stream  as  of  old,  „  8 

Flash  (s)    As  with  a  momentary  /  of  light  Timbudoo  97 

With  a/  of  frolic  scorn  And  keen  dehght,  Rosalind  15 

Flash  (verb)    They  /  across  the  darkness  of  my  brain.  Lover's  Tale  i  53 

Flaslling     A  curve  of  whitening,  /,  ebbing  light !  Timbudoo  63 

Girt  with  a  Zone  of  /  gold  beneath  His  breast,  „         72 

Her  frantic  city's  /  heats  But  fire,  Hands  all  Round  29 

Flat    Looking  athwart  the  burning /'»-,  A  Fragment  17 

Flattering    melody  /  the  crisped  Nile  By  columned  Thebes.  „  26 

Fleck    which  the  fearful  springtide  f's  the  lea,  love  and  Sorrow  2 

Flecked    See  Silverflecked 

Fled    The  Moslem  myriads  fell,  and  /  before —  Blov  ye  the  trumpet  11 

Fleet    more  /  and  strong  Than  its  precursor,  Timbuctoo  127 

Though  thou  art  /  of  wing.  Vet  stay.  The  lintwhite  24 

Fleeting    Could  link  liis  shallop  to  the  /  edge,  Timbuetoo  145 

They  from  the  blosmy  brere  Call  to  tM  /  year.  The  lintu^ite  5 

the  great  Pyramids  Broad-based  amid  the  /  sands,  A  Frogmemt  10 

Fleetness    nature  of  itself  With  its  own  /.  TimAueloo  148 

Fling    from  the  centre  / '5  Grand  music  Chorms  21 

Thy  golden  largess  /,  The  lintvkiU  28 

Break  through  your  iron  shackles — f  them  far.       Blow  ye  the  trumpH  4 

Flinging    Then  /  myself  down  upon  my  knees  Lover's  Tale  1  780 

Flit    Lets  tlie  great  world  /  from  him,  D.  of  F.  Women  10 

Float    Down  an  ideal  stream  they  ever/,  Pallid  thunderstridien  2 

Floating    Like  a  swol'n  river's  gushings  in  still  night 

Mingled  with  /  music,  Timbuetoo  194 

Nor  blot  with  /  shades  the  solar  light.  Shall  the  hag  14 

And  onward  /  in  a  full,  dark  wave.  Lover's  Tale  i  739 

Flood     We  drink  to  thee  across  the  /,  Hands  all  Round  38 

Flooded    stars  Were  /  over  with  clear  glory  Timbuetoo  9 

Flooding    f reshflushing  springtime  calls  To  the  /  waters  cool,      Rosalind  20 

F  its  angry  cheek  with  odorous  tears.  Lover's  Tale  i  565 

Flow    Nor  the  rivers/,  nor  the  sweet  birds  sing,  Burial  of  Lore  29 

How  scorn  and  ruin,  pain  and  hate  could  /:       Pallid  Ihundmtiricken  10 

And  all  tilings /Uke  a  stream,  (repeat)  oi  '  piorrtt  8,  16 

from  his  mother's  eyes  F  over  the  Arabian  bay,  A  Fragment  24 

Flower  (s)    {See  also  Summerflowers)    Moving  bis  crecA 

to  all  sweet  plots  of  /  's  Could  I  outwear  1 

1  smelt  a  wiktweed  /  alone ;  O  sad  no  more  /  4 
From  an  old  garden  where  no  /  bloometh.  Me  my  onm  fate  7 
Every  /  and  everj-  fniit  the  redolent  breath  Hesperides,  Song  iv  1 
Farewell  our  England's/,  (rod  bless  our  Prince  9 
Creep  down  into  the  bottom  of  the  /.                             Lover's  Tale  i  560 

Flower  (verb)    Seasons  /  and  fade ;  Every  day,  etc.  6 

Flowerbell    Two  bees  within  a  chrystal/rockM  Dualisms  I 

FlowerM    Pushing  the  thick  roots  aside  Of  the  singing 

/  grasses,  The  Grasshopper  38 

Through  and  through  the  /  heather.  Dualisms  5 


Flowering 


1178 


Fruit 


Flowering    Your /Capes  and  your  gold-sanded  bays  Timbuctoo  45 

^tays  on  the  /  arch  of  the  bough,  Hesperides,  Song  iv  18 

Flowery"    And  in  and  out  the  woodbine's/  arches  Check  every  outflash  1] 

Floweth    And  the  sap  to  three-fold  music  /,  Hesperides,  Song  i  19 

Flowing    faery  light  or  cloud,  F  Southward,  Timbuctoo  7 

F  between  the  clear  and  polish'd  stems,  „        51 

lordly  music  /  from  Th'  illimitable  years.  „       218 

Time  /  in  the  middle  of  the  night,  The  Mystic  39 

Seas  at  my  feet  were  /  Waves  on  the  shingle  1865-1866  10 

Flown     Till  your  balls  fly  as  their  true  shafts  have/.  Briton's,  guard  47 

Flung    /  strange  music  on  the  howling  winds,  Timbuctoo  80 

would  have  /  himself  From  cloud  to  cloud,  Lover's  Tale  i  303 

Flnsh'd     face  Was  starry-fair,  not  pale,  tenderly  /  ,,                75 

Flushing    See  FresMushing 

Flute    Sec  Lotosflute 

Fly     rocks  stand  still,  and  the  light  clouds  /?  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  14 

Then  I  lose  it :  it  will  /:  Germ  of '  Maud '  25 

How  fairy-like  you  / !  Skipping-rope  6 

Till  your  balls  /  as  their  true  shafts  have  flown.  Britons,  guard  47 

Foam  (s)     no  more  roam,  On  the  loud  hoar  /,  Lotos-Eaters  19 

Foam  (verb)     Let  them  clash  together,  /  and  fall.  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  9 

Foamfountains    narwhale  swaUoweth  His  /  in  the  sea.  Lotos-Eaters  8 

Foam-white    And  the  f-w  waters  pour ;  „        32 

Foe     Our  freedom's  foemen  are  her/'s,  Hands  all  Round  55 

For  her  there  lie  in  wait  millions  of  f's,  Sugg,  by  Reading  59 

Foeman     Our  freedom's  foemen  are  her  foes.  Hands  all  Bound  55 

Fold    See  Three-fold 

Fold  (s)     Kolled  together  in  purple  f's.  Hesperides,  Song  ii  10 

Fold  (verb)     I  dare  not  /  My  arms  about  thee —  Oh,  Beauty  5 
Folded    See  Triple-folded 

Fbldest    Thou  /,  like  a  golden  atmosphere,  Love  5 

Folding     F  the  slaughter  of  the  sacrifice  To 6 

Follow    My  soul  shaD  /  thee  !  Hero  to  Leander  31 

go  not,  go  not  yet,  Or  I  will  /  thee.  „  41 
But  yet  my  lonely  spirit  f's  thine,  As  round  the 

roUing  earth  night /'s  day  :  Me  my  own  fate  9 

'  Vive  I'Empereur '  may  /  by  and  bye ;  Britons,  guard  25 

Following    and  /,  plunged  Into  the  dizzy  chasm  Lover's  Tale  i  369 

Fool     You  f's,  you  11  want  them  all  again.  Hands  all  Round  32 

That  wish  to  keep  their  people  f's ;  „              54 

To  charm  a  lower  sphere  of  fulminating /'s.  Sugg,  by  Reading  30 

0  f's,  we  want  a  manlike  God  and  Godlike  men  !  „  84 
And  a  /  may  say  his  say ;  The  Ringlet  18 

Foot   (<See  afeo  Mfountain-foot)   Vaulting  on  thine  airy /ee/.  The  Grasshopper  10 

1  only  ask  to  sit  beside  thy  feet.  Oh,  Beauty  3 
Seas  at  my  feet  were  flowing  Waves  on  the  shingle  1865-1866  10 
Saw  round  her  feet  the  country  far  away.  Lover's  Tale  i  390 
Planting  my  feet  against  this  mound  of  time  „            492 

Forehead    imf ading  f's  of  the  Saints  in  Heaven  ?  Timbuctoo  54 

a  snake  her  /  clips  And  skins  the  colour  Pallid  thunderstricken  13 

About  her  /  wound  it.  Anacreontics  11 

As  I  said,  with  these  She  crown'd  her  /.  Lover's  Tale  i  349 

Did  brush  my  /  in  their  to-and-f ro  :  „          736 

Foreign    Why  stay  they  there  to  guard  a  /  throne  ?  Britons,  guard  41 

Foretaste     The  triumph  of  this  /,  Lover's  Tale  i  515 

Forgave    I  /  you  all  the  blame,  To  C.  North  6 

Forgive     I  could  not  f  the  praise,  „          8 

Forgot    Almost  /  even  to  move  again.  Lover's  Tale  i  353 

Misery  F  herself  in  that  extreme  distress,  „            628 

Known  when  their  faces  are  /  in  the  land,  „            804 

Forgotten    (See  also  Half -for  gotten)    Thy  pleasant  wiles  F,  Burial  of  Love  16 

Forlorn    love !  art  thou  /,  And  unrevengetl  ?  „            14 

Be  not  all  /;  Every  day,  etc.  31 

Because  the  earth  hath  made  her  state  /  Tears  of  Heaven  3 

The  hollow  at  heart  shall  crouch  /,  English  War  Song  12 

Form    The  cruellest  /  of  perfect  scorn.  Burial  of  Love  18 

Ck)lossal,  without  /,  or  sense,  or  sound.  The  Mystic  14 

the  countless  f's  Of  living  things.  Chorus  7 

There  is  no  bright  /  Doth  not  cast  a  shade —  Every  day,  etc.  9 

Fair  maiden  f's  moving  like  melodies),  There  are  three  things  3 

Like  them,  you  bicker  less  for  truth  than  /  's.  Sugg,  by  Reading  76 

ceasing  from  All  contemplation  of  all  /  's,  Lover's  Tale  i  67 

F(ffward    One  /,  one  respectant,  three  but  one ;  The  Mystic  18 

Fought     Although  we  /  the  banded  world  alone,  Britons,  guard  59 

Fonnd    The  cause  is  nowhere  /  in  rhyme.  Who  can  say  8 


19 
31 

Hands  all  Round  25 
35 

Sugg,  by  Reading  70 
Hands  all  Round  29 


Timbuctoo  160 


Fountain    (See  also  Foamfountains)    Calls  to  him  by  the/ to  uprise.    Love  35 
Fountainpregrant    /  mountains  riven  To  shapes  Chorus  3 

Four     Why  two  and  two  make  /?  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  13 

Fourfact'd  to  /  corners  of  the  sky ;  The  Mystic  16 

Four-and-twenty    '  Thef-a-t  Blackbirds' '  Banbury  Cross,'   Lover's  Tale  i  286 
Fourfaced     presences  F  to  four  corners  of  the  sky ;  The  Mystic  16 

Fragrance     in  The  /  of  its  complicated  glooms  Timbuctoo  227 

The  blossom  and  the  /.  Lover's  Tale  i  626 

Fragrant    Love  unre turned  is  like  the  /flame  To 5 

And  crushing  the  thick  /  reeds  he  lies,  Love  32 

Creeping  under  the  /  bark,  Hesperides,  Song  i  23 

Frail     A  dream  as  /  as  those  of  ancient  Time  ?  '  Timbuctoo  62 

Frailest     Hopes  did  sway  from  that  Which  hung  the  /:      Lover's  Tale  i  858 
Frame    She  feels  not  how  the  social  /  is  rack'd.  Sugg,  by  Readitig  56 

France     We  hate  not  F,  but  this  man's  heart  of  stone.       Britons,  guard  17 
We  hate  not  F,  but  F  has  lost  her  voice  This  man 

is  F,  the  man  they  call  her  choice. 
Rome's  dearest  daughter  now  is  captive  F, 
What  health  to  F,  if  F  be  she  Whom  martial 

progress 
To  F,  the  wiser  F,  we  drink,  my  friends, 
To  that  half-pagan  harlot  kept  by  F  ! 
Frantic    Her  /  city's  flashing  heats  But  fire, 
Free    through  the  trackless  fields  Of  undefin'd  existence  far 
and/, 
linked  woes  of  many  a  fiery  change  Had  purified,  and 

chastened,  and  made  /.  The  Mystic  10 

Thou  art  so  glad  and  /,  And  as  light  as  air ;  Grasshopper  24 

But  a  short  youth  sunny  and  /.  „  29 

Come  along  !  we  alone  of  the  earth  are  / ;  English  War  Song  34 

He  is  weak  !  we  are  strong ;  he  is  slave,  we  are  / ;  „  38 

Will  he  dare  to  battle  with  the  /?  „  46 

We  are  the  sons  of  freedom.  We  are  /.  (repeat)       National  Song  18,  36 

Yet  winds  the  pathway  /  to  all ! —  What  time  I  wasted  8 

better  to  be  /  Than  vanquish  all  the  world  in  arms.    Hands  all  Round  27 

And  the  /  speech  that  makes  a  Briton  known.  Britons,  guard  29 

F  subjects  of  the  kindliest  of  all  thrones,  Su^g.  by  Reading  71 

Was  not  the  wide  world  /,  Lever's  Tale  i  693 

Freedom     Our  glory  is  our  /,  (repeat)  National  Song  15,  33 

We  are  the  sons  of  /,  We  are  free,  (repeat)  „  17,  35 

All  /  vanish'd,  Britons,  guard  9 

And  murder  was  her  /  overthrown.  „  23 

When  war  against  our /springs  !  Hands  all  Round  50 

Our  f's  foemen  are  her  foes,  „  55 

Whereby  to  guard  our  F  from  offence —  Sugg,  by  Reading  38 

Freeman    A  /  is,  I  doubt  not,  freest  here ;  „  13 

Freest    A  freeman  is,  I  doubt  not,  /  here ;  „  13 

French    For  the  F  the  Pope  may  shrive  'em,  (repeat)    National  Song  9,  27 

As  for  the  F,  God  speed  'em  (repeat)  „  11, 29' 

Frequent     Her  gardens  /  with  the  stately  Palm,  Timbuctoo  233 

Fresh     and  indue  i'  the  spring  Hues  of  /  youth.  Could  I  outwear  3 

F  as  the  dawn  before  the  day,  F  as  the  early  seasmell  blown  Rosalind  27 

Fresher     0  Maiden,  /  than  the  first  green  leaf  Love  and  Sorrow  1 

Freshflushing    /  springtime  calls  To  the  flooding  waters  Rosalind  19 


Freshness    that  never  falls  Away  from  /, 

Fretful     But  Misery,  like  a  /,  wayward  child. 

Fretted    The  dead  skin  withering  on  the  /  bone. 

Friend     Europe's  better  health  we  drink,  ray  f's. 
To  France,  the  wiser  France,  we  drink,  my  f's, 
kinsmen  of  the  West,  my  f's,  (repeat) 
You  should  be  all  the  nobler,  O  my  f's. 

Frightful     Go,  /  omens. 

Fringed    (See  also  Purplefringed)     0  thou  whose  / 
Uds  I  gaze  upon, 

Frocked     Both  in  blosmwhite  silk  are/: 

Frolic    With  a  flash  of  /  scorn  And  keen  delight, 

Front    Stood  out  a  pillar'd  /  of  burnish'd  gold 

Fronting    yet  again,  three  shadows,  /  one. 

Frozen    This  to  itself  hath  drawn  the  /  rain  From  my 
cold  eyes 

Fruit     And  doth  the  /  of  her  dishonour  reap. 

The  golden  apple,  the  golden  apple,  the  hallowed  /,   Hesperides,  Song  i  1 
Up  to  the  /,  Creeping  under  the  fragrant  bark,  „  22 

Hound  about  the  hallowed  /  tree  curled —  „  ii  13 

Every  flower  and  every  /  the  redolent  breath  „  iv  1 


17 

Lover's  Tale  i  696 

678 

Hands  all  Round  23 

35 

„      47, 59 

Sugg,  by  Reading  28 

85 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  1 

Dualisms  16' 

Rosalind  15 

Timbuctoo  175 

The  Mystic  17 

Could  I  outwear  13 
Tears  of  Heaven  5 


Fruit 


1179 


Glowing 


Fruit  {continued)     The  golden  apple,  the  golden  apple,  the 

hallowed  /,  Hesperides,  Song  30 

As  bearing  no  essential /'s  of  excellence.  Lover's  Tale  i  385 

Fruitage     The  luscious  /  clustereth  mellowly,  Hesperides,  Song  iv  19 

Fruit-tree    How  many  the  mystic  f-t  holds,"  „  a  g 

Full    Upon  the  outward  verge  and  bound  alone  Of  / 

beatitude.  Timhuctoo  96 

Till  Love  have  his  /  revenge.  Burial  of  Love  30 

are  /  of  strange  Astonishment  and  boundless  change. 

(repeat)  Chorus  9,  19,  29 

Alas  !  that  eyes  so  /  of  light  Should  be  so  wandering  !    The  lintwhite  26 
Thy  locks  are  /  of  sminy  sheen  In  rings  of  gold  yronne,  „  28 

Holy  and  bright,  round  and  /,  bright  and  blest,    Hesperides,  Song  iv  11 
Her  eyes,  I  saw,  were  /  of  tears  in  the  morn,  Lover's  Tale  i  728 

And  onward  floating  in  a/,  dark  wave,  ,.  739 

laden  with  mournful  thanks.  From  my  /  heart :  „  749 

Solemn  but  splendid,  /  of  shapes  and  sounds,  „  799 

Fullfaced     But  when  the  /  simset  yellowly  Stays  on 

the  flowering  arch  of  the  bough,  Hesperides,  Song  iv  17 

Fullness     and  to  feel  My/;  Timbucioo  215 

Fullsailed     Rosalind  F  before  a  vigorous  wind,  Rosalind  10 

Full-voiced     when  f-v  Winter  roofs  The  headland  Timbuctoo  203 

Fulminating    To  charm  a  lower  sphere  of  /  fools.  Sugg,  by  Reading  30 

Furrowed    <SV('  Deep-furrowed 

Fusty     I  could  tiot  forgive  the  praise,  F  Christopher.  To  C.  North  9 

Future     In  eternity  no  /,  In  eternity  no  past.    The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  6 

Perchance  assimilated  all  our  tastes  And  /  fancies.       Lover's  Tale  i  239 


0 

Gain    pallid  thunderstricken  sigh  for  g, 
Galaxy    clear  G  Shorn  of  its  hoary  lustre, 
Gall    by  a  spell  Did  change  them  into  g ; 

Memory  tho'  fed  by  Pride  Did  wax  so  thin  on  g, 
Gallant     A  g  cavalier  Sans  peur  et  sans  reproche, 
Gambol  (s)    when  the  winds  are  wild  With  g's, 

The  summer  midges  wove  their  wanton  g. 
Gambol  (verb)     As  they  g,  lilygarlands  ever  stringing : 
Gander     '  The  G '  and  '  The  man  of  Mitylene,' 
Garden     Her  g's  frequent  with  the  stately  Palm, 

From  an  old  g  where  no  flower  bloometh. 
Garland    (See  also  Lilygarlands)     A  g  for  Lenora. 
Garment    The  sno^vy  skirting  of  a  ^  hung, 
Gate     low  hung  on  either  g  of  life, 

Saw  far  on  each  side  through  the  grated  g's 

Clad  in  light  by  golden  g's, 

A  G  and  a  field  half  ploughed, 

the  angels.  The  watchers  at  heaven's  g, 
Gather     all  the  day  heaven  g's  back  her  tears 

g  from  afar  The  hosts  to  battle : 
Gathering    from  this  impulse  Continuing  and  g  ever, 
Gave    She  that  g  you  's  bought  and  sold, 

Ringlet,  She  g  you  me,  and  said, 
Gkiy    See  Golden-gay 
Gaze  (s)    where  no  g  Might  rest,  stood  open, 

Methinks  I  could  have  sooner  met  that  g ! 
Gaze  (verb)     Of  those  that  g  upon  the  noonday  Sun. 

Thou  whose  fringed  lids  I  g  upon. 

Albeit  we  g  not  on  thy  glories  near. 

Making  their  day  dim,  so  we  g  on  thee. 

And  now — methinks  I  g  upon  thee  now, 
Gaz'd    I  g  upon  the  sheeny  coast  beyond, 

So  J  I  on  the  ruins  of  that  thought 
Gazeth    g  on  Those  eyes  which  wear  no  light 
Gazing     whose  eyes  are  dim  With  g  on  the  light 
Genius     Before  the  awful  G  of  the  place 
Gentleman     Nor  like  a.  g  at  ease  With  moral  breadth 
George     G  for  England  !  (repeat)  English  War  Song  9,  20,  31,  42,  53 

Get     Go,  g  you  gone,  you  muse  and  mope—  Skipptng-ropel 

Ghastful    Oh  !  rather  had  some  loathly  g  brow.  Lovers  Tale  t  676 

Ghastly    and  the  streets  with  g  faces  throng'd  Timhuctoo^  29 

Tho'  its  g  sister  glide  And  be  moved  around  me  still    Germ  of   Maud    18 
Ghost     Bv  a  dull  mechanic  g  ..  < 


Pallid  thunderstricken  1 

Timbuctoo  105 

Love,  Pride,  etc.  10 

12 

The  Grasshopper  18 

Timbuctoo  203 

Check  every  outflash  12 

Dualisms  15 

Lover's  Tale  i  287 

Timbuctoo  233 

Me  my  own  fate  7 

Anacreontics  7 

Timbuctoo  182 

The  Mystic  32 

34 

Germ  of '  Maud '  32 

A  gate  and  a  field  1 

Lover's  Tale  i  616 

Tears  of  Heaven  6 

Blow  ye  the  trumpet  1 

Lover's  Tale  i  494 

The  Ringlet  33 

40 

Timbuctoo  178 

Lover's  Tale  i  684 

Timbuctoo  71 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  1 

Love  2 

„  23 

„  29 

Timbucioo  10 

Lover's  Tale  ii  71 

Timbuctoo  38 

Lover's  Tale  i  486 

Timbuctoo  33 

New  Timon  27 


Giant    where  the  G  of  old  Time  infixed  Timbucioo  11 

Where  is  the  G  of  the  Sun,  A  Fragment  1 

Gigantic    G  daughter  of  the  West,  Ha7ids  all  Bound  37 
Gilded    somewhere  in  death  They  sleep  with  staring  eyes 

and  g  lips,                           '  A  Fraament  29 

Gird    such  as  g  The  unfading  foreheads  Timbuctoo  53 
Girded    See  Planet-girded 

Girding    The  heavy  thunder's  g  misbt,  Chorus  13 

Girl    Who  killed  the  g's  and  thrill'd  the  boys  Aev  Timon  9 

And  a  lad  may  wink,  and  a  g  may  hint.  The  Ringlet  17 

Girt    G  with  a  Zone  of  flashing  gold  TirrUtudoo  72 

Give    speak  low,  and  g  up  wlioUy  Thy  spirit  Check  every  outflash  2 

If  you  will  g  me  one,  but  one.  The  Rtnglet  3 

Given     I  have  g  thee  To  understand  my  presence,  Timbuetoo  213 

Has  g  all  my  faith  a  turn  ?  The  Ringlet  52 

earth  beneath  me  yawning  g  Sign  of  convulsion  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  611 

Giveth    It  g  out  a  constant  melody  That  drowiis  „           534 

Glad    Thou  art  so  g  and  free.  The  Grasshopper  24 

Green  springtide,  April  promise,  g  new  year  Of 

Being,  Lover's  TaU  i  277 

Gladness     Thine  eye  in  drops  of  g  swims.  Hero  to  Leander  18 

self-upborne  With  such  g,  as,  Rosalind  18 

Glancing    Over  a  stream  two  birds  of  g  feather  Dualisms  8 

Glare    The  lawless  comets  as  they  g.  Chorus  27 

Glazed     With  g  eye  She  looks  at  her  grave :  /'  the  glooming  light  14 

Glide     Both  alike,  they  g  together  Side  by  side :  Dualisms  10 

Tho'  its  ghastly  sister  g  Germ  of '  Maud '  18 

Glimpse     And  g  of  multitudes  of  multitudes  Timbueioo  183 
Glistering    Weak  eyes  upon  the  g  sands  that  robe 

The  uiderstream.  Pallid  thunderstricken  5 

Globe     bore  g's  Of  wheeling  suns,  or  stars,  Timbueioo  171 

And  branching  silvers  of  the  central  g,  Pallid  thunderstridcen  8 

Glows  rubylike  the  far-up  crimson  g,  D.  of  F.  Women  7 

Globefilled    The  g  arch  that,  cleaving  air.  Chorus  25 

Gloom    springing  In  and  out  the  emerald  g's.  The  Grasshopper  43 

your  moonlight  halls,  your  cedam  g's,  Timbueioo  43 

Do  pass  from  g  to  glory,  „       153 

complicated  g's  And  cool  impleached  twilights.  „       227 

The  troublous  autumn's  sallow  g.  Chorus  17 

shalt  thou  pierce  the  woven  g's  of  truth ;  Tkou^  night  11 

Haflowed  in  awful  chasms  the  wheeling  g,  Utte  22 

Gloometh    Alone  my  hopeless  melancholy  g.  Me  my  oirn  fate  5 

Glooming     I'  the  g  light  Of  middle  night,  /'  the  glooming  light  1 

Glorious    When  I  must  render  up  this  g  home  To  keen 

Discovery :  Timbueioo  243 

And  dross  to  gold  with  g  alchemy,  Thougft  night,  etc.  7 

And  dazzled  to  the  heart  with  g  pain.  There  are  three  things  14 

By  diminution  made  most  g,  Lnver's  Tale  i  71 

I  well  remember.  It  was  a  g  morning,  „          301 

But  grow  upon  them  like  a  g  vision  „          797 

Glory    stars  Were  flooded  over  with  clear  g  Timbueioo  9 

round  their  emerald  cones  In  coronals  and  fortes,  .,      53 

it  was  play'd  about  With  its  peculiar  g.  ..      57 

And  circled  with  the  g  of  living  light  ..      75 

Do  pass  from  gloom  to  g,  »    153 

But  the  g  of  the  place  Stood  out  ,.    174 

wrapt  about  with  clouds  Of  g  of  Heaven.  „    200 

showering  do\ra  the  g  of  lightsome  day,  Tears  of  Heaven  8 

Albeit  we  gaze  not  on  thy  glories  near,  low  2 

Our  g  is  our  freedom,  (repeat)  National  Song  15,  33 

In  the  midnoon  the  g  of  old  Rhodes,  J  Fragment  2 

Thy  spirit,  circled  with  a  living  g.  Me  my  own  fate  3 

The  g  unseaKd,  Hesperides,  Song  iii  8 

with  many  a  name  Whose  g  will  not  die.  D.  of  F.  Women  16 

I  had  merged  G  in  g.  Lovers  TaU  i  516 

Glory-circled    and  thou  wert  then  A  center'd  g-c  Memory,  Timbueioo  21 

Gloss    bramble  and  the  shining  g  Of  ivy-leaves,  iMver's  TaU  i  373 

Glossed    6>e  Blue-glossW              „        .  ^^    „■    ,    iro 

Glossy    Bum,  you  g  heretic,  bum.  Bum,  bum.  2n«  Rtnglet  06 

Glow  (s)     And  in  the  g  of  sallow  Summertide,  Timbueioo  201 

Glow  (verb)    G's  mbylike  the  far-up  crims<m  globe,  D.  of  F.  Women  7 

Glowing    light  Of  the  great  angel  mind  which  look'd  from 

out  The  starry  g  of  liis  restless  eyes.  Timbuctoo  80 

and  the  opal  width  Of  her  small  g  lakes,  .,       102 

The  naked  summer's  g  birth,  Chorus  16 


Gnarled 

All  round  about  The  g  bole  of  the  charmed 


1180 


Grief 


Gnarled 

tree, 
Go    The  world  is  somewhat ;  it  goes  on 

somehow ;  The 

Why  the  Ufe  goes  when  the  blood  is  spilt  ? 
Q — carry  him  to  his  dark  deathbed ; 
Oh  g  not  yet,  my  love,  (repeat) 
Leander !  g  not  yet. 
Oh !  g  not,  g  not  yet, 
Let  the  dismal  face  g  by, 
G,  get  you  gone,  you  muse  and  mope — 
There  must  no  man  g  back  to  bear  the  tale : 
Lest  you  g  MTOng  from  power  in  excess. 
G,  frightful  omens. 
God    Offered  to  G's  upon  an  altarthrone ; 

Before  the  face  of  G'  didst  breath  and  move. 

The  very  throne  of  the  eternal  G : 

Shout  for  G  and  our  right ! 

As  for  the  French,  G  speed  'em  (repeat) 

'  G  save  the  Queen '  is  here  a  truer  cry. 

Nation,  The  toleration. 
Too  much  we  make  our  Ledgers,  G's. 
G  the  tyrant's  cause  confound  !  (repeat) 

0  fools,  we  want  a  manlike  G  and  Godlike  men 
G  bless  our  Prince  and  Bride  !     G  keep  their 

lands  allied, 
G  save  the  Queen  !  (repeat) 
G  bless  thy  marriage-day,  G  bless  the  Queen. 

1  pray'd  aloud  to  G  that  he  would  hold 
Goddess    shall  see  The  British  G, 
Godlike    Who  looks  for  G  greatness  here 

O  fools,  we  want  a  manlike  God  and  G  men  ! 
with  shining  eyes  Smiling  a  g  smile 

Goest    Thou  g  and  retumest  to  His  Lips 

Going    Wanderers  coming  and  g 

Gold    Imperial  Eldorado  roof'd  with  g: 
Zone  of  flashing  g  beneath  His  breast, 
front  of  bumish'd  g  Interminably  high,  if  g  it  were 
And  dross  to  g  with  glorious  alchemy, 
Cathedralled  caverns  of  thick-ribbed  g 
But  Hatred  in  a  ^  cave  sits  below, 
in  mail  of  argent  light  Shot  into  g. 


Hesperides,  Song  iv  29 

Hoic  '  and  the  '  Why  '  21 

32 

Burial  of  Love  11 

Hero  to  Leander  1,  32 

38 

40 

Germ  of '  Maud '  23 

Skipping-rope  1 

Britons,  guard  56 

Sugg,  by  Beading  10 

u  85 

To 7 

Love  3 

,,    6 

English  War  Song  50 

National  Song  11,  29 

G  save  the 

Britons,  guard  26 

Hands  all  Round  20 

„  22,  34,  46,  58 

Sugg,  by  Reading  84 

God  bless  our  Prince  1 
„      3,  7,  10 
13 
Lover's  Tale  i  791 
Sugg,  by  Reading  54 
,,  5o 

84 
The  Mystic  28 
Love  12 
1865-1866  7 
Timbuctoo  24 
72 
„      175 
Though  night  7 
Pallid  thunderstricken  7 
11 
»  .13 

Liquid  g,  honeysweet  thro'  and  thro'.  Hesperides,  Song  i  24 

the  apple  of  g  hangs  over  the  sea,  „  iv  23 

ruthless  host  is  bought  with  plunder'd  g,  Britons,  guard  7 

Thy  locks  are  full  of  sunny  sheen  In  rings  of  g  yronne,   The  lintwhite  29 
then  shall  I  know  it  is  all  true  g  The  Ringlet  7 

I  that  took  you  for  true  g,  „        32 

Ctolden    G  calm  and  storm  Mingle  day  by  day.  Every  day,  etc.  7 

To-night  the  roaring  brine  Will  rend  thy  g  tresses ;    Hero  to  Leander  24 
Lighting  on  the  g  blooms  ?  The  Grasshopper  44 

Thou  foldest,  like  a  g  atmosphere.  Love  5 

they  roam  together  Under  a  summervault  of  g  weather ;      Dualisms  18 
Thy  g  largess  fling,  The  lintwhite  22 

The  g  apple,  the  g  apple,  the  hallowed  fruit,  Hesperides,  Song  i  1 

Look  to  him,  father,  lest  he  wink,  and  the  g  apple  be 

stol'n  away.  „  ii  11 

If  the  g  apple  be  taken  The  world  will  be  overwise.  ,,  21 

Five  links,  a  g  chain,  are  we,  Hesper,  the  dragon,  and 

sisters  three,  Bound  about  the  g  tree  „  23 
The  g  apple  stol'n  away,  „  Hi  4 
Five  links,  a  g  chain,  are  we,  „  iv  24 
The  g  apple,  the  g  apple,  the  hallowed  fruit,  „  30 
We  will  abide  in  the  g  vale  Of  the  Lotos-land,  Lotos-Eaters  26 
To  its  Archetype  that  waits  Clad  in  light  by  g  gates,  Germ  of '  Maud '  32 
The  Ringlet  ^3 


O  fie,  you  g  nothing,  fie  You  g  lie, 

And  from  the  g  threshold  had  down-roll'd  Their 
heaviest  thunder, 

May  their  days  be  g  days, 

Erewhile  close  couch'd  in  g  happiness. 
Golden-circled    A  center'd  g-c  Memory, 
Goldeooored    fruitage  clastereth  mellowly,  Golden- 

kcmaUed,  g, 
Golden-gay    ringlets,  That  look  so  g-g, 

'  My  ringlet,  my  ringlet,  That  art  so  g-g, 


Lover's  Tale  i  617 

794 

a  79 

Timbuetoo  21 

Hesperides,  Song  iv  20 

The  Ringlet  2 

14 


Golden -gay  {continued)    O  Ringlet,  You  still  are  g-g.  The  Ringlet  28 

Goldenkemelled    fruitage  clustereth  mellowly,  G, 

goldencored,  Hesperides,  Song  iv  20 

Goldenlocked    Mid  May's  darling  g,  Diialisms  21 

Gold-sanded    Your  flowering  Capes  and  your  g-s  bays  Timbuctoo  45 

Gone     Delight  is  with  thee  g,  Oh  !  stay.  The  lintwhite  33 

Old  Memphis  hath  g  down :  A  Fragment  27 

Surely  all  pleasant  things  had  g  before,  0  sad  no  more  !  7 

Go,  get  you  g,  you  muse  and  mope —  Skipping-rope  7 

Good    Shall  the  hag  Evil  die  with  the  child  of  G,  Shall  the  hag  1 

Nor  g  nor  ill,  nor  light  nor  shade,  oi  'peovres  10 

0  you,  the  Press  !  what  g  from  you  might  spring  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  7 
All  g  things  are  in  the  west,  Hesperides,  Song  iv  14 
'Tis  a  phantom  fair  and  g  I  can  call  it  to  my  side.  Germ  of '  Maud '  15 
'  They  call  this  man  as  j  as  me.'  New  Timon  32 

Goodly    So  on  an  oaken  sprout  A  g  acorn  grew ;  Lost  Hope  6 

Gorgeous    are  thine  obelisks  Graven  with  g  emblems 

imdiscerned?  A  Fragment  13 

Graceful     Backward  drooping  his  g  head.  Burial  of  Love  7 

Gracious     As  towards  the  g  light  I  bow'd,  What  time  I  wasted  4 

Grain     I  saw  The  smallest  g  that  dappled  Timbuctoo  99 

Grand     Each  sun  which  from  the  centre  flings  G  music  and 

redundant  fire.  Chorus  22 

Grant    I  g  you  one  of  the  great  Powers  on  earth,  Sugg,  by  Reading  23 

Grasp     costly  casket  in  the  g  Of  memory  ?  'Lover's  Tale  i  101 

Grass     For  her  the  green  g  shall  not  spring,  Burial  of  Love  28 

Of  the  singing  flowered  g'es.  The  Grasshopper  38 

where  the  g  was  warm  where  I  had  lain.  Lover's  Tate  i  790 

Grassgreen    tusked  seahorse  walloweth  In  a  stripe  of 

g  calm,  Lotos-Eaters  5 

Grasshopper     I  would  dwell  with  thee.  Merry  g,  The  Grasshopper  23 

Grated    Saw  far  on  each  side  through  the  g  gates  The  Mystic  34 

Grave    she  hath  half  delved  her  own  deep  g.  P  the  glooming  light  7 

With  glazed  eye  She  looks  at  her  g:  „  15 

Come  along  !  we  will  dig  their  g's.  English  War  Song  39 

Will  it  lead  me  to  the  g  ?  Germ  of '  Maud '  24 

and  with  the  shock  Half  dug  their  own  g's),  Lover's  Tale  ii  50 

Graven    obelisks  G  with  gorgeous  emblems  A  Fragment  13 

Gray    (See  also  Silver-gray)    G  sand  banks  and  pale  sunsets 

— dreary  wind,  Mablethorpe  7 

Great    As  when  in  some  g  City  where  the  walls  Shake,  Timbuctoo  28 

Wound  thro'  your  g  Elysian  solitudes,  „         48 

and  the  light  Of  the  g  angel  mind  which  look'd  .,         88 

All  th'  intricate  and  labyrinthine  veins  Of  the  g  vine  of  Fable,  „  222 
And  the  g  bird  sits  on  the  opposite  bough.  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  28 
but  only  seemed  One  shadow  in  the  midst  of  a  ^  light.  The  Mystic  21 
Of  changeful  cycles  the  g  Pyramids  A  Fragment  9 

the  poet  at  his  will  Lets  the  g  world  flit  from  him,  D.  of  F.  Women  10 
To  this  g  cause  of  Freedom  drink,  my  friends.  Hands  all  Round  11 

And  the  g  name  of  England  round  and  round. 

(repeat)  „  24,48,60 

To  our  g  kinsmen  of  the  West,  my  friends,  „  47 

With  such  a  heat  as  lives  in  g  creative  rhymes.  Sugg,  by  Reading  6 

1  grant  you  one  of  the  g  Powers  on  earth,  .,  23 
The  hogs  who  can  believe  in  nothing  g,                                   „             45 

Greatness    We  move  so  far  from  g,  that  1  feel  „  51 

Who  looks  for  Godlike  g  here  shall  see  „  53 

Grecian     And  here  the  G  ships  did  seem  to  be.  Mablethorpe  4 

Green    (See  also  Blue-green,  Grassgreen)    whose  rapid  interval 

Parts  Afric  from  g  Europe,  Timbuctoo  3 

Where  are  ye  Thrones  of  the  Western  wave,  fair  Islands  g?        „        42 

For  her  the  g  grass  shall  not  spring.  Burial  of  Love  28 

0  Maiden,  fresher  than  the  first  g  leaf  Love  and  Sorrow  1 

And  Oberwinter's  vineyards  g,  0  darling  room  8 

G  springtide,  April  promise,  glad  new  year  Lover's  Tale  i  277 

Think  not  thy  tears  will  make  my  name  grow  g, —  ..  806 

Greenness    And  taken  away  the  g  of  my  life,  „  625 

Grew     my  mental  eye  g  large  With  such  a  vast  circumference  Timbuctoo  92 

G  thrillingly  distinct  and  keen.  „        98 

So  on  an  oaken  sprout  A  goodly  acorn  g ;  Lost  Hope  6 

ere  the  Czar  G  to  this  strength  among  his  deserts 

cold ;  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  6 

Grief    G  and  sadness  steal  Symbols  of  each  other;  Every  day,  etc.  "2^ 

bitter  g  Doth  hold  the  other  half  in  sovranty.  Love  and  Sorrow  4 

O  G  and  Shame  if  while  I  preach  of  laws  Sugg,  by  Reading  37 


Grief 


1181 


Heart 


Grief  (continued)     And  still  bewept  my  g.  Locer's  Tale  i  733 
.      Grieve    none  shall  g  For  the  man  who  fears  to  die :         English  War  Song  3 

I      Groan    Why  the  heavy  oak  (;'s,                         The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  15 

i     Gross    and  few  there  be  So  (/ of  heart  Timbuctoo  2\l 

I      Grot    old  g's  Eock-hewn  and  sealed  for  ever.  A  Fragment  30 

Ground     had  birth  In  that  blest  g  Timbuctoo  56 

You  cast  to  g  the  hope  which  once  was  mine.  Lost  Hove  1 

solid  shining  g  Stream  from  beneath  him  '              D.  of  F.  Women  2 

GroveU'd    g  in  the  slime  Of  this  dull  world,  Timbuctoo  149 

Grow    I  felt  my  soul  g  mighty,  90 

G  closer  to  my  heart.  Hero  to  ^Leander  8 

But  g  upon  them  like  a  glorious  vision  Lover's  Tale  i  797 

Think  not  thy  tears  will  make  my  name  g  green, —  „             806 

Growing    The  g  murmurs  of  the  Polish  war  !  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  8 

Alas,  our  Church  !  alas,  her  g  ills,  Sugg,  by  Beading  67 

Growth    g  of  shadowing  leaf  and  clusters  rare.  Timbuctoo  223 

Unto  the  g  of  body  and  of  mind ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  74 

Guard    G  it  well,  g  it  warily,  Hesperides,  Song  i  2 

G  the  apple  night  and  day,  „              28 

G  it  well,  g  it  warily,  ^^           i^  31 

So  to  ^  my  Hfe  from  ill.  Germ,  of'  Maud '  17 
Britons,  G  your  own.  (repeat)  Britons,  guard  6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36 
Why  stay  they  there  to  ^  a  foreign  throne  ? 

Seamen,  g  your  own.  Britons,  guard  41 

Yeomen,  g  your  own.  „             48 

We  swear  to  g  our  own.  „             60 

Heaven  g  them  from  her  tyrants'  jails  !  Hands  all  Round  14 

Whereby  to  g  our  Freedom  from  offence —  Sugg,  by  Reading  38 

Guest    A  health  to  England,  every  g ;  Hands  all  Round  2 

Gulf    Have  hallowed  out  a  valley  and  a  g  Lover's  Tale  i  26 

Golph     he  passeth  by.  And  g's  himself  in  sands,  Timbuctoo  237 

Gun    O  speak  to  Europe  thro'  your  g's !  Hands  all  Round  51 

Gushed     both  my  eyes  g  out  with  tears.  0  sad  no  more  !  6 

Gushing     Like  a  swol'n  river's  g's  in  stiU  night  Timbuctoo  193 


Hag    Shall  the  h  Evil  die  with  the  child  of  Good,  Shall  the  hag  1 

Hail    With  points  of  bJastbome  h  their  heated  eyne !  „         11 

Hair     her  h  falls  loose ;  Her  shoulders  are  bare ;  /'  the  glooming  light  9 

Pleached  with  her  h,  in  mail  of  argent  light       Pallid  thunderstricken  12 

Looking  under  silver  h  with  a  silver  eye.  Hesperides,  Song  ii  2 

Half    that  I  said  to  thee  That  thou  hast  h  my  heart, 

for  bitter  grief    Doth  hold  the  other  h  in 

sovranty.  Love  and  Sorrow  4 

H  round  the  mantling  night  is  drawn,  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  13 

A  GATE  and  a  field  h  ploughed,  A  gate  and  a  field  1 

You  never  look  but  h  content :  New  Timon  26 

If  h  the  little  soul  is  dirt  ?  „  36 

Mantling  her  form  h  way.  Lover's  Tale  i  741 

Half-bur sten    brow,  H-b  from  the  shroud,  „  677 

Half-forgotten    Less  vivid  than  a  h-f  dream,  Timbuctoo  136 

Half-light    H-l,  half-shadow,  let  my  spirit  sleep  Love  and  Sorrow  17 

Half-open     From  an  h-o  lattice  looked  at  me.  There  are  three  things  12 

Half-pagan    To  that  h-p  harlot  kept  by  France  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  70 

Half-shadow    Half-light,  h-s,  let  my  spirit  sleep  Love  and  Sorrow  17 

Hall    your  moonlight  h's,  your  cedam  glooms,  Timbuctoo  43 

length  of  porch  and  lake  and  boimdless  h,  „  _  180 

Thehefoee  your  h's,  your  ancient  colleges,  Cambridge  1 

sits  and  hears  Echoes  in  his  empty  h,  Home  they  brought  him  4 

Hallowed    H  in  awful  chasms  of  wheeling  gloom.  Love  22 

The  golden  apple,  the  golden  apple,  the  h  fruit,       Hesperides,  Song  i  1 

Round  about  the  h  fruit  tree  curled —  "  •*  on 

The  golden  apple,  the  golden  apple,  the  h  fruit,  „  w  30 

Fair  fall  this  h  hour,  God  bless  our  Prince  8 

Hamlet    Tilth,  h,  mead  and  mound  :  D-  of  F.  Women  4 

Hand    Bathes  the  cold  h  with  tears,  Timbuctoo  38 

I  did  veil  My  vision  with  both  h's,  »        ^ 

With  ministering  h  he  rais'd  me  up ;  "       l^f 

Might  I  but  kiss  thy  h !  '^^^£^^y^% 

A  dapper  boot— a  Uttle  h—  ^"w  Timon  35 

Yet  h's  all  round  !  Hands  all  Round  21 

You  hide  the  h  that  writes :  Sugg,  by  Reading  ^5 


Hand  (continued)     In  eager  haste  I  shook  him  by  the  h ;     Lover's  Tale  i  788 

pray'd  aloud  to  God  that  he  would  bold  The  h  of 

blessing  over  Lionel,  „  792 

Hang    the  apple  of  gold  h's  over  the  sea,  Herperidet,  Song  iv  23 

take  my  skipping-rope  And  h  yourself  thereby.  Skipping-rope  12 

There  h  within  the  heavens  a  dark  disgrace,  Sugg,  by  Reading  41 

Hanging    Hateful  with  h  cheeks,  a  withered  brood,  Shali  the  hag  4 

Hanno    Zidonian  H,  voyaging  beyond  The  Hesperidet  2 

Happiness    Crown  them  with  h,  God  bleei  our  Prince  5 

glorious  vision  Of  unconceived  and  awful  h,  Lover's  Tale  i  798 

Erewhile  close  couch'd  in  golden  h,  „  ii  79 

Happy    Blown  round  with  h  airs  of  odorous  winds  ?  Timbuctoo  46 

When  we  laugh,  and  our  mirth  Apes  the  h  vein.  Every  day,  etc.  13 

My  h  falcon,  Rosalind,  Rosalind  25 

Oh,  h,  h  outset  of  my  days  !  Lover's  Tale  i  276 

What  h  air  shall  woo  The  wither'd  leaf  fall'n  in  the 

woods,  ^  g2i 

The  lover  Lionel,  the  h  Lionel,  All  joy ;  who  drew 

the  h  atmosj)here  „  672 

Hard    But  you.  Sir,  you  are  h  to  please ;  New  Timon  25 

Hardship    unto  both  DeUght  from  A  to  be  overcome.         Lover's  Tale  i  379 

Hark    H  how  the  wild  rain  hisses.  Hero  to  Leander  14 

H  !  he  shouteth — the  ancient  enemy  !  English  War  Song  24 

H  !  how  sweet  the  homed  ewes  bleat  Lotos-Eaters  29 

Harlot    To  that  half -pagan  h  kept  by  France  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  70 

Harmony  h  of  planet-girded  Suns  And  moon-encircled  planets,  Timbuctoo  109 

With  harmonies  of  wind  and  wave  and  wood  „         207 

Harsh    But  did  the  while  your  h  decree  deplore,  Lost  Hope  2 

Haste     In  eager  h  I  shook  him  by  the  hand ;  Lover's  Tale  i  788 

Hasty    So  that  with  h  motion  I  did  veil  My  vision  with 

both  hands,  Timbuctoo  68 

Hate  (s)    How  scorn  and  ruin,  pain  and  h  could 

flow :  PaUid  thunderstricken  10 

Hate  (verb)     I  h  that  silly  sigh.  Skipping-rope  8 

We  h  not  France,  but  this  man's  heart  of  stone.  Britons,  guari  17 

We  h  not  France,  but  France  has  lost  her  voice  „  19 

Hateful    With  languor  of  most  h  smiles,  Burial  of  Love  19 

H  with  hanging  cheeks,  a  withered  brood,  Shall  the  hag  4 

as  the  milky  blood  Of  h  herbs  a  subtle-fanged  snake.  Lover's  Tale  i  821 

Hater    Peace-lovers,  h's  Of  shameless  traitors,  Britons,  guard  15 

Hateth    Hesper  h  Phosphor,  evening  h  mom.  Hesperides,  Song  m  15 

Hatred    But  H  m&  gold  cave  sits  below.  Pallia  thunderstridcen  11 

Haunted    And  all  the  h  place  is  dark  and  holy.  Check  everyoutJUuk  8 

Haven    broad-blown  Argosies  Drave  into  h?  A  Fragment  8 

Head    (See  also  Hoarhead)    Above  her  A  the  weak  lamp 

dips  and  winks  Timbuctoo  35 

Backward  drooping  his  graceful  h.  Burial  of  Love  7 

Ringlet,  She  dipt  you  from  her  A,  The  Rutglet  38 

Headland    Winter  roofs  The  A  with  inviolate  white  snow,        Timbuctoo  204 
Headlong    H  they  plunge  their  doubts  Sugg,  by  Reading  72 

Healed    Lest  the  old  wound  of  the  world  be  A,  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  2 

Health    Fibst  drink  a  A,  this  solemn  night,  A  A  to 

England  every  guest ;  Hands  all  Bound  1 

A  A  to  Europe's  honest  men !  „  13 

To  Europe's  better  A  we  drink,  „  23 

What  A  to  France,  if  France  be  she  Whom  martial 

progress  „  25 

cause  Of  England  and  her  A  of  commonsense —        Sugg,  by  Reading  40 

my  refluent  A  made  tender  quest  Unanswer'd,  Lover's  Tale,  i  742 

Hear    If  that  he  would  them  A  And  stay.  The  lintvhite  6 

And  longer  A  us  sing ;  »         23 

I A  a  thunder  though  the  skies  are  fair,  Su«g.  by  Reading  89 

All  alone  she  sits  and  h's  Echoes  Honte  they  brou^  htm  3 

Heard    hath  A  Time  flowing  hi  the  middle  of  the  night.  The  Mystic  38 

H  neither  warbling  of  the  nightingale.  The  Hesperides  6 

And  shook  its  earthly  socket,  for  we  A,  Lover's  taU,  i  61 

I A  in  thought  Those  rhymes, '  The  Lion  and  the 

Unicom' 

Hearing    H  apart  the  echoes  of  liis  fame. 

Heart    whilonie  won  the  h's  of  all  on  Earth 

being  in  the  A  of  Man  As  air  is  th'  life  of  flame : 

Spirit  than  I  to  sway  The  A  of  Man : 

1  play  about  his  A  a  thousand  ways, 

few  there  be  So  gross  of  A  who  have  not  felt 

Bury  him  in  the  cold,  cold  A — 


284 

D.  of  F.  Women  13 

Timbuctoo  17 

19 

196 

„       205 

„       211 

Burial  of  Love  12 


Heart 


1182 


BearHctmtinufd)    My  A  is  lighted  at  thine  eyes,  r«         s 

G^'w  doser  to  mvT  Mv  A?,'  ^  "'^  "^'''"^T^^  ''  '^'  0loon,in9K^22 

Vu    r'"*"*"^  to  my  a.     My  A  is  warmer  surely  than 

the  bosom  of  the  main.                               j'  «"i 

My  A  of  A'j  art  thou.  ^^^^  '^  Leander  8 

Thy  A  beats  through  thy  rosy  limbs  "             \\ 

Albeit,  his  spirit  and  his  secret  A  tC  m    ^-   n 

Eee  yet  my  A  was  sweet  Love's  tomb  r        d  •^^^^'^  J 

My  A  the  honey-comb.                           '  ■^^'  -^'■"^'  «'^-  1 

My  A,  where  Hope  had  been  and  was  no  more  rL/  tj       ! 

I  said  to  thee  That  thou  hast  half  mv  A  t^      LostEofe  4 

Th?u  art  my  A>  sun  in  love's  crystS :  ^'  """^  ^'"'''"  \ 

Tl  \  f  !^\^*i''^^  «^  ™y  *'  and  thine  My  A's  " 
day,  but  the  shadow  of  my  A 

AlmSa°i?m?A  "  '*'''*  J!°.*  ^'h^""  ^^'"^  ^itJi  %  light.         ll  10 

Almeida,  if  my  A  were  substanceless,  ^    b  ".         „            lu 

6ome  vital  heat  as  yet  my  A  is  wooins  •  n     jj  t  "  .          H 

thou  dost  ever  broo5  abo^e  The  silenfe  of  all  A'.        ^"""^  ^  """'"fZ  f ! 

We  bea   upon  our  aching  A'.  ,vith  rage;  '                         ^' ]i 

The  hollow  at  A  shaU  crouch  forlorn  t?    ?•  j.  ir/      «"     ^5 

For  where  is  the  A  and  strength  Slaves  ?  ^"^'"*  ^'^'^  '^^'^^  ^4 

Ihere  are  no  h's  like  English  A'?  txt    ■"             ^" 

Unto  their  A'*  desire,  (repeat)  ^a<w«a;  /Sow^  3. 

O  DAHLma  room,  my  A'5  delight   P'*'^ '"*'''  _   .   Eosahnd  32 

Lest  my  A  be  overborne               '  O  darling  room  1 

The  old  Timon,  with  his  noble  A,  ^'''^/ '  ^?'«^ '  ^ 

To  have  the  deep  poetic  A  ^  ^^mow  3 

And  mv  eyes  „ad,  the,  ,„d  arfhthS  Was  JJonel's^'^'  ^°''  J-S 

5s?.,;s"„r.CettsL's."ur/''*-  ■'«»'-^!v»'2 

InthyAofsummerpride.        ""^^  ^^^^ut  A,  TAe  Tl/y.^tc  44 

Some  vital  A  as  yet  my  heart  is  wooin?  •  n    frf'^^PP^^  36 

wmd  which  bloweth  cold  or  A  Would  shatter  %l  TrT  ^^ 

Her  frantic  city's  flashine  Ks  But  fire  r.      ?^?  ^^«  ^^^9  6 

WithsuchaAaslivasin^rpttP.!  f-'     u  Hands  all  Rownd  29 

with  the  A  Of  tS  rfoHiSleS^^  ^^™''-  ^^7^-  '/^  ^'^^^^^  ^ 

Heattih?'  r,™"^^'^'  souf  atrwthin,  "^""'^  '  ^«^^  ^^  ^4 

Heaven    silent  H's  were  blench'd  wfth  faerv  Wht  Loner's  Tale  tz  199 

unfading  foreheads  of  the  Sainte  in  lr  ?^  ^    '  ^t7«i«<.too  5 

Earth's  As  H  than  Earth  is  fairer.  "     ,  ^4 

I  hfi^;&^V'  ^"^K  ^^°"t  ^'th  clouds  Of  glory  of  H  "    JZn 

iSfJw  "^  *^^®  ^^^"^  *°  the  Spheres  of  H,  "     o?2 

Reacheth  to  every  comer  under  S^                  '  "    ^16 

Larks  m  A'5  cope  Sing  •                   '  „               »     224 

The  white  moon  is  hid  in  her  A  ahovp  ^''^''^  '^•^'  ^^-  28 

The  varied  earth,  the  movil  A          '  ^''■''  ^^  ^««'^'-  3 

But  winds  from  A  shook  thelcom  out,  r    f *r?™*  i 

f  weeps  above  the  earth  all  night  till  mom  T       ^/J^^P^  7 

And  afl  the  day  A  gathers  back  her  eaT'  ^''''''  "^  ^"''"''  I 

Over  A',  parapets  the  angels  lean  r       r  j"  o,          ^ 

J  cneth  after  thee_;  earth  waile^h  for  thee  •  ^'  "  ^"^^  ^H'^'  ^2 

Till  all  the  comets  in  A  are  cold                    "  ^r      ^'^^  26 

H  guard  them  from  her  tyrants'  iaiU  i  u     ^,    ^^^glet  9 

There  hang  within  the  A' Ja  dark^dki...  ^"'^^  "^^  ^^««^  14 

had  the  ai|els,  The  wateLrs  ^  VS   '  ^T  'H  ^^f-^ /I 

from  that  7/  in  whose  light  I  bloom'd     '  ^'"'^  ^"^^  '  ^16 

Heavenward    Then  parted  ^  on  the  w^n^  'r-"           ^24 

^"?oU'd  ThS  fJaf '^  ^hreshol^^had  down-  ^'"^'^"^^  ^51 

^"^  wSo^s'sth  p""''  ^°""''  ""'^  *'"'  ^^'^'t«  ^'"'■''  "^'^^  *  ^^^ 

The  A  thunder'*s  girding  might  ^^^  '  ""^ '  "''^  '^*  '  ^^2/ '  15 

'  Chorus  13 


Hollow 


Heavy  ^(^o^'^i^^^^)    And  t'>.e  A  melon  sleeps  On  the  level  of  the 

Dim  shores,  dense  rains,  and  A  clouded  sea.  ^M^ifl'"'  ^l 


165 

Lotos-Eaters  17 

iot!e?-'5  Tafe  i  323 

ZotJg,  Prwfej  etc.  6 

Chorus  14 

Lover's  Tale  i  821 

^Ae  Ringlet  53 

Hesperides,  Song  ii  1 

24 

m  1 

15 

i'y25 


„.    ..„  ™,v.t  „  o  uiivisiueu  wiin  ae 

Imperial  A  Of  Canopy  o'ercanopied 

and  some  On  the  ancient  h's  divine  • 
Ti.i^^P^"^^°''^  ^^  worshipp'd  upon  every  A, 
5     ,^     rJ!?**^a'^*'heneathandAaUght. 
Herald    The  A  lightning's  starry  bound. 
Herb    as  the  milky  blood  Of  hateful  h's 
Heretic     Burn,  you  glossy  A,  bum. 
Hesper    Father  H,  Father  H,  watch,  watch,  ever 
and  aye,  ' 

H,  the  dragon,  and  sisters  three, 

HhZH'v^^^^^  ^'  ^^*?^'  ^^*^^^.  "'ght  and  day, 

H  hateth  Phosphor,  evening  hateth  mom.  ^' 

-«,  the  dragon,  and  sisters  three 
Hewn   ^ee  New-hewn,  Rock-hewn 
Hid    white  moon  is  A  in  her  heaven  above  h-      .    r       ,     „ 

H  now  and  then  with  slidin-  cloud  ir/.^  i"?  ^  f'"'^''  ^ 

Hide     YouAthehandthatwrTtSs  What  time  I  wasted  6 

High    pillars  A  Long  time  eras'd  from  Earth  •  "^^'  ^r  ^^'■'^9  25 

^%"ifcb^r  -^  ^  ^"'-" --  -  ---'d  '"""^ " 

fh|  S'5  A^t±jyotd^-p '  ''- '  ^t'a^^^ .^''^  7^^  v' 

And  mine,  with  love  too  A  to  be  express'd  ^^hattime  I  wasted  5 

Higher    few  there  be  So  gross  of  hearfcThThL  not  felt       ""  '  ^"^  '  ^^ 

and  known  A  A  than  they  see :  «  noi^  leit  ,     ,     ^,^ 

I  have  rais'd  thee  A  to  the  Spheres  of  Heaven,  T^,r^buctoo  2  2 

/i  thro  secret  splendours  mounting  still  n     f  t?  ,1}        ^1° 

Highest    Though  Night  hath  climhpri  i,l  r.i  .pi.  '  "4^-  ^""^^'^  H 

Highland    a  A  leaninf  domi  a  we^ht  Of  chffs  "''""'r/  ^^"^^'^  ^^'^^  ^ 

Highland-steep     Broken  b/the  A-s  '  ^  ^^''  Hesferides  10 

High-necked    far  off  Seen^by  the  h-n  camel  on  the  vergf '^'"*''  "^""^  *'"  ^ 


Journeying  southward? 
HiU     Thi  M ''  soldier-ridden  //  might  incline 
^1  he  blossoming  abysses  of  your  h's  ? 
thy  A  5  enfold  a  City  as  fair  As  those 
On  the  ridge  of  the  A  his  banners  rise  • 
between  The  h's  to  Bingen  have  I  been 
About  sunset  We  came  unto  the  A  of  woe, 

Hillhrn^    r  ufr  ^"t^^change  of  A  and  plain 

till  A?  °"*  ^^  ^''^  ™""^  °^  *^« 

HinJa    Father,  old  H  weakens, 

Sl^Jf ^°?^;k  •  *K  '''**^  ?*  "«  I*  ^^  delight,  not  A :        ' 

iSf  A^^^^'f  J^  *^^  ^  ?"  ^^'<=^  the  door  of  Hope, 

K    R^iV'^'^.T^y^'P'^'andagirlmayA,        ^' 

Hiss    Hark  how  the  wild  rain  h'es. 

Hit    my  skippin-rope  Will  A  you  in  the  eye. 

Hive    I  was  the  A  and  Love  the  bee 

Hoar    On  the  loud  A  foam, 

Hoarded    H  wisdom  brings  delight  u 

iSS'^The^c  W  rif ''  P<.T"^  r^^  "^^'^  «h««"y  whife! 
aom     ^ne  clear  Galaxy  Shorn  of  its  A  lustre. 

zS^nianH^Tr^Ai^^L^fL*^^^^ 


A  Fragment  18 

Rriions,  guard  49 

Timbuctoo  44 

59 

English  War  Song  25 

O  darling  room  10 

iowr's  Tafe  i  365 

694 


-_  „  .„„^  v-j^xc^a,  tuiougn  tne  twilight  A, 


Hesperides,  Song  iv  16 

..  m  7 

Lover's  Tale  i  378 

297 

The  Ringlet  17 

i7(^ro  to  Leander  14 

Skipping-rope  4 

Zow,  Pride,  e^c.  3 

Lotos-Eaters  19 

Hesperides,  Song  ii  6 

•'"  Chorus  18 

Timbuctoo  106 

if e  my  own  /afc  6 


of  Soloe  Past  Thymiaterion 
5nM      "^  '^'l"  ^^?  ^^^'^^^  in  nothing  great, 

„.-^rn'lu¥*u*''^  '^'''"d  Which  droops  low 
grief  Doth  A  the  other  half  in  sovranty 
/^  up  the  hon  of  England  on  high  (repeat) 
I A  them  all  most  dear;  but  oh !  black  eves 
How  many  the  mystic  fmit-tree  A'5,  ' 

ant  the  thing  I  A  in  scorn, 

£?n|te'r  Li?nd  '"'*  ''  "°"''  *  ^^^  ^^^  °^     . 
Hollow  (adj.)     In  the  A  ms'v  v^U  +,^  *o^ Lover's  Tale  i  791 

''°"4ill?  *^'  ~d?^^^^^^^^^^^         depth  Of  her  ^""^^'^^  ^^ 

Bailed  with  A  and  alternate  rise  Of  interpenetrated       ^""'"^"^  '^ 

.,130 


TAe  Hesperides  3 

'S'ws'jf.  iy  Reading  45 

^'Ae  Ifysiic  31 

Zo»e  a?id  Sorrow  5 

English  War  Song  27,  49 

TAere  are  <Aree  things  7 

Hesperides,  Song  ii  8 

6'erw  o/ '  ilf aM<i '  6 


Hollow-hearted 


1183 


Inmost 


Hollow-hearted    Shall  h-h  apathy,  The  ci-uellest  form  of 

perfect  scorn,  Burial  of  Love  17 

Holy    And  all  the  haunted  place  is  dark  and  h.  Check  every  outflash  8 

The  end  of  day  and  beginning  of  night  Make  the 
apple  h  and  bright,  H  and  bright,  round  and 

full,  Hesperides,  Song  iv  10 

Home     Heaven,  Man's  first,  last  h :  Timhuctoo  217 

render  up  this  glorious  h  To  keen  Discovery  :  „        243 

To  the  melancholy  h  At  the  limit  of  the  brine,  Lotos-Eaters  20 

Call  h  your  ships  across  Biscayan  tides,  Britons,  gvjird  37 

H  they  brought  him  slain  with  spears.     They 

brought  him  h  at  even-fall :  Home  they  brought  him  1 

Honest    A  health  to  Europe's  h  men  !  Hands  all  Round  13 

An  h  isolation  need  not  fear  The  Court,  Sugg,  by  Reading  15 

Honey  (adj.)     To  him  the  h  dews  of  orient  hope.  Lover's  Tale  i  675 

Honey  (S)     Love  laboured  h  busily.  Love,  Pride,  etc.  2 

Honey-comb    My  heart  the  h-c.  „  4 

Lotos,  sweet  As  the  yellow  h,  Lotos-Eaters  15 

Honeysweet     Liquid  gold,  h  thro'  and  thro'.  Hesperides,  Song  i  24 

Honour  (s)     In  h  of  the  silverfiecked  mom :  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  4 

//  comes  with  mystery ;  Hesperides,  Song  ii  5 

Honour  (verb)     I  h  much,  I  say,  this  man's  appeal.         Sugg,  by  Reading  49 

Honourable     An  h  eld  shall  come  upon  thee.  Tho\igh  night  14 

Honour'd     The  precious  jewel  of  my  h  life.  Lover's  Tale  ii  78 

Hope  (s)     Men  clung  with  yearning  H  which  would  not  die.      Timbuctoo  27 

men's  h's  and  fears  take  refuge  in  The  fragrance  „       226 

The  light  of  his  h's  unfed,  Burial  of  Love  3 

Let  us  weep  in  h —  Every  day,  etc.  32 

You  cast  to  ground  the  h  which  once  was  mine.  Lost  Hope  1 

My  heart,  where  H  had  been  and  was  no  more.  „        4 

But  men  of  long  enduring  h's,  New  Timon  17 

But  fire,  to  blast  the  h's  of  men.  Hands  all  Round  30 

hinge  on  which  the  door  of  H,  Once  turning,  Lover's  Tale  i  297 

cold  as  were  the  h's  Of  my  lorn  love  !  „  620 

To  him  the  honey  dews  of  orient  h.  ■,  675 

when  h  died,  part  of  her  eloquence  Died  with  her  ?  „  751 

I  To  stand  within  the  level  of  their  h's,  768 

Because  my  h  was  widow'd,  ••  769 

The  course  of  H  is  dried, —  "  808 

For  me  all  other  H's  did  sway  from  that  „  857 

Hope  (verb)     For  she  will  not  h.  1'  the  glooming  light  19 

Could  I  thus  h  my  lost  delights  renewing.  Could  I  outwear  9 

Nay,  dearest,  teach  me  how  to  h.  Skipping-rope  9 

Hopeless    Alone  my  ft  melancholy  gloometh.  Me  my  own  fate  5 

Horizon    lights  on  my  h  shine  Into  my  night  ,,  11 

Horn     Between  the  Southern  and  the  Western  H,  The  Hesperides  5 

Homed    Hark !  how  sweet  the  h  ewes  bleat  On  the  solitary 

steeps  Lotos-Eaters  29 

Horrible    H  with  the  anger  and  the  heat  Lover's  Tale  i  681 

Horrid    and  tho' ft  rifts  Sent  up  the  moaning  of  unhappy 

spirits  "  ^1^ 

As  men  do  from  a  vague  and  ft  dream,  "  '°o 

Host    gather  from  afar  The  h's  to  battle :  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  Z 

,  His  ruthless  ft  is  bought  with  plunder'd  gold,  Britons,  g^Mrdl 

t    Hot    Strain  the  ft  spheres  of  his  convulsed  eyes,  Love  61 

\    Hour    (See  also  Smnmerhours)    Wingfed  ft's  are  borne ;        Every  day,  etc.^ 

For  him  the  sUent  congregated  ft's,  ^,     The  Mystic  ^ 

In  thy  ft  of  love  and  revel,  The  Grasshopper  35 

So  in  thine  ft  of  dawn,  the  body's  youth,  Though  night  Ii 

And  careless  what  this  ft  may  bring,  -yew  /  imon  lb 

What  time  I  wasted  youthful  ft's  What  time  I  wasted  1 

Should  he  land  here,  and  for  one  ft  prevail,  Britons,  guard  5& 

Fair  fall  this  hallow'd  ft,  ^od  bless  ourFnnceS 

Move  with  me  to  that  ft,  ^      ,^  Lover  s  Tale  i  ^6 

since  that  ft.  My  voice  had  somewhat  falter  d—  ..  /*» 

House  (s)    And  a  ft  with  a  chimney-pot  ?         The   How    and  the    Why  ^ 

House  (verb)    worms  which  ft  Beneath  unshaken  waters,         IimbucU>o  1^ 

Household    But  yours  are  not  their  ft  privacies.  Sugg,  by  Reading  22 

How    Who  will  riddle  me  the  ft  and  the       ^,    ,  ^,     ,      , ,.    <  jj/j,,. .  q  on 

The  '  How '  and  the    Why    9,  M 
19 


why?  (repeat) 
H  you  are  you  ?     Why  I  am  I  ? 
I  feel  there  is  something ;  but  ft  and  what  :* 
And  stares  in  his  face  and  shouts  '  ft  ?  ft  ? 
And  chaunts  '  ft  ?  ft  ?  '  the  whole  of  the  night. 
Who  will  riddle  me  the  ft  and  the  what  ? 


23 
29 
31 
36 


Howling    Which  flung  strange  music  on  the  ft  winds,  Timbutioo  80 

Hue    And  alternations  of  all  h's,  be  stood.  „        76 

an  ether  of  black  ft,  Investeth  and  ingirds  Tht  Mystic  45 

indue  i'  the  spring  H's  of  fresh  youth.  Could  I  outvear  3 

in  his  writhings  awful  h's  begin  To  wander  Lom  38 
Dimples,  roselips,  and  eyes  of  any  ft.                     There  are  three  things  4 
Huge    even  as  the  sea  When  weary  of  wild  inroa<i  buildetb 

up  H  mounds  Txmbueioo  15 

Close  by  our  eais,  the  A  roots  strain  and  creak).  Loner's  Tale  i  63 

(//  splinters,  which  the  sap  of  earliest  shouers,  „        u  45 

Hum  (s)     the  ft  of  men.  Or  other  things  talking  Timbudoo  111 

Hum  (verb)    H  a  lovelay  to  the  westwind  at  noontide.  Dualisms  2 

Both  alike,  they  ft  together  „        4 

Stands  in  her  pew  and  ft's  her  decent  psalm  Sugg,  by  Reading  63 

Human    for  my  ft  brain  Stagger'd  beneath  the  vision,  Timbuctoo  185 

With  stony  smirks  at  all  things  ft  and  divine  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  48 

Hung    (See  also  Low-hung)    The  snowy  skirting  of  a 

garment  ft,  Timbuetoo  182 

Pagods  ft  with  music  of  sweet  bells :  „        234 

low  ft  on  either  gate  of  life.  The  Mystic  32 

eartliquake-shattered  chasm,  ft  with  shrubs,  Lover's  Tale  i  406 

Or  as  the  dew-drops  on  the  petal  ft,  »            558 

Hopes  did  sway  from  that  Which  ft  the  frailest :  „            858 

Hurried    ft  through  The  riv'n  rapt  brain :  Timbutiao  120 

Hush    '  Oh  h,  my  joy,  my  sorrow.'  Home  they  brought  him  10 

Hut    Darken,  and  shrink  and  shiver  into  ft's,  Timbuetoo  246 


I    How  you  are  you  ?    Why  /  am  /,  The  '  Hov '  and  the  '  Whu '  19 

Ideal    Down  an  i  stream  they  ever  float.  Pallid  thunderttridcm  2 

Idle    Why  waste  they  yonder  Their  I  thunder?  Britons,  guard  40 

Shall  we  stand  i.  Nor  seek  to  bridle  „  51 

Idol    A  perfect  I,  with  profulgent  brows  A  Fragmemt  3 

Thy  shadowy  I's  in  the  solitudes,  «        15 

Dion    Here  stood  the  infant  /  of  the  mind,  Mablethcrpe  3 

ni    Nor  good  nor  t,  nor  light  nor  shade,  oi  piorrtt  10 

So  to  guard  my  life  from  t,  Germ  of '  Maud '  17 

Alas,  our  Church  !  alas,  her  growing  i's,  Sugg,  hy  Reading  67 

Illimitable    /  range  of  battlement  On  battlement,  Timbuetoo  164 

Listenest  the  lordly  music  flowing  from  Th'  i  years.  „        219 

Image    did  pause  To  worship  mine  own  t,  Loner's  Tale  i  88 

mine  i  in  her  eyes,  n  70 

Imaging    i  The  soft  inversion  of  her  tremulous  Domes ;  Timbuetoo  231 

Imbue    presence  of  his  eyes  To  t  his  lustre ;  Lover's  Talt  i  419 

Immingled    In  a  new  birth,  t  with  my  own,  „  732 

Immortality    No  withered  t.  The  Grasshopper  28 

ImpelUng    See  Sell-impelling 
Imperial    and  thou  of  later  name  /  Eldorado  rooCd  with  gold :  Timbnetoo  24 

an<l  tlie  /  height  Of  Canopy  o'ercanopied.  „      166 

Imperishable    The  t  presences  serene,  The  Mystic  18 

Impleached    Tlie  fragrance  of  its  complicated  gloonu  And 

cool  i  twilights.  Ttmhurloo  228 

Imprison'd    unhappy  spirits  I  in  her  centre,  ^^^'  ^"'^  '  ®^* 

Impulse    The  issue  of  strong  t,  hurried  through  Ttmbu^loo  130 

each  th'  effect  Of  separate  i,  ,       .   ^  ,    .  *^ 

from  this  i  Continuing  and  gathering  ever,  Lover's  Tale  t  493 

Increasing    level  calm  Is  ridg'd  witJi  restless  and  i  spheres     Ttmbuctoo  126 
Indecision    entwine  The  t  of  my  present  mind  „        139 

Indian    serpent  in  his  agonies  Awestricken /*;  ^^^,?1 

Indistinctest    The  t  atom  in  deep  air,  Ttmburtoo  100 

Indue    t  i'  the  spring  Hues  of  fresh  youth,  Could  I  outwear  2 

Ineffable    Then  with  a  mournful  and  t  smile,  Ttmbuctoo  189 

Inlant    Here  stood  the  t  lUon  of  the  mind,  AlablHhorptS 

Infinite    Where  are  the  t  ways  which,  Seraphtrod,  Ttmbu<ioo  47 

Infixed    Giant  of  old  Time  t  The  limits  „         11 

Infolding    with  the  heat  Of  their  t  element ;  ^^^*.  ^^  *  ®1° 

Inform    wherewith  Her  phantasy  i's  them.  TtmbuOoo  40 

Ingird    Investeth  and  i's  all  other  lives.  "I  he  Mystte  46 

Inland    One  cypress  on  an  t  promontory.  Me  myoumJaU9 

Through  vineyards  from  an  »  bay.  Rosalind  29 

Inmost     I'he  written  secrets  of  her  » soul  Uy  bke  an  ,».,.««« 

open  scroll  ^««»^'  ^<^  »  «» 


Inner 


1184 


Inner    Among  the  t  columns  far  retir'd  At  midnight,  Timbiictoo  31 

The  bare  word  kiss  hath  made  my  i  soul  To  tremble         Oh,  Beauty  12 

In  my  1  eyes  again  Germ  of  ^  Ma^ '  4: 

Sheer  thro'  the  black-Malk'd  cliif  the  rapid  brook 

Shot  down  his  i  thunders,  Lover's  Tale  i  372 

Jjoiocmt    Thy  pleasant  wUes  Forgotten,  and  thine  i  joy?  Burial  of  Love  16 
(the  t  light  Of  earbest  youth  pierced  through  and 

-^,*h^°"fh        _                     ,     .,^  .  The  Mystic  28 

Inroad    as  the  sea  When  weary  of  wild  t  Timbuctoo  U 

Insect     But  an  1  lithe  and  strong  The  Grasshopper  7 

Insolence    And  j  of  uncontrolled  Fate,  Zot>«r'«  Tafe  f  688 

Intellect    apart  In  ^  and  power  and  wiU,  TAe  Mystic  38 

Intense    unto  me  /  debght  and  rapture  that  I  breathed,  Lover's  Tale  i  381 

1  had  lived  That  t  moment  thro'  eternity.  495 
Intensest    starlit  wings  which  burn  FanUke  and  fibred,  with 

w»«f '^^''T'^-  •,    ,  '  Timbuctoo  156 

Intent     Eye  feeding  upon  eye  with  deep  t ;  Lover's  Tale  i  64 

Interchange    With  aU  her  i  of  hill  and  plain  694 

Interpenetrated     Dappled  with  hollow  and  alternate  rise  Of  i 

Interval    whose  rapid  i  Parts  Af ric  from  green  Europe  '^  "^      2 

crumbling  from  their  parent  slope  At  slender  i,       '  "        124 

Intricate    All  th'  i  and  labyrinthine  veins  Of  that  great  vine 

of  Fable,  „„, 

Invariable    Awful  with  most  i  eyes.  The  Mystic  24 

SS?h     f "  i  •  ^  ^^^  tremulous  Domes ;  Timbit^too  232 

tovesteth    /  and  mgu-ds  all  other  lives.  The  Mvfiir  4fi 

Inviolate    The  headland  with  i  white  snow,  TimS7204 

Involving    thoughts  /  and  embracing  each  with  each  116 

Inward    Is  one  of  those  who  know  no  strife  Of  i  woe  or  outward  " 

Inwoven    So  each  with  each  i  lived  with  each.  Lover' s'^lleTLt 

Krnr,^;*^K?^Vf"'. '  shackles-fling  them  far.   Blow  ye  the  trumpet  4 

^rrJJ^■^.    l^wul^^f^"^'^^  "^'i'  •  Har^^  all  Rould  16 

Irresistible    \\  hich  but  to  look  on  for  a  moment  fill'd  My 


eyes  with  i  sweet  tears. 
Island    Thrones  of  the  Western  wave,  fair  I's  green  ? 
Islander    Oh  !  i's  of  Ithaca,  we  will  not  wander  more. 

Oh  !  i's  of  Ithaca,  we  will  return  no  more. 
Isle    little  i  of  Ithaca,  beneath  the  day's  decline. 

The  public  conscience  of  our  noble  i. 
Isolation    i  need  not  fear  The  Court,  the  Church, 
Issue    The  i  of  strong  impulse,  hurried 

/  of  its  own  substance, 
Issueth    When  thy  light  perisheth  That  from  thee  i, 
Issning    translucent  wave.  Forth  i  from  darkness 

in  the  pride  of  beauty  i  A  sheeny  snake,         ' 
Ithaca    Men  of  /,  this  is  meeter, 

little  isle  of  7,  beneath  the  day's  decline. 

Oh  !  islanders  of  /,  we  will  not  wander  more, 

Oh  !  islanders  of  I,  we  will  return  no  more. 
Ivy  (adj.)     Until  the  pleached  i  tress  had  wound  Round 

my  worn  Umbs, 
Ivy  (s)    And  i  darkly-wreathed. 
Ivy-leaves    bramble  and  the  shining  gloss  Of  i-l. 


Timbuctoo  191 

42 

Lotos-Eaters  37 

40 

22 

Sugg,  by  Reading  3 

15 

Timbuctoo  120 

Love  and  Sorrow  10 

The  lintwhite  14 

Timbuctoo  230 

Could  I  outwear  5 

Lotos-Eaters  11 

22 

37 

40 

Lover's  Tale  i  637 

Anacreontics  4 

Lover's  Tale  i  374 


V^    Heaven  guard  them  from  her  tyrants'  fs  ' 

Jest    It  looks  too  arrogant  a  / — 

Ki*    ^u^  "^  ^^Y^ha,  and  reckoning  on  his  chance, 

Jewel    The  precioas  ;  of  my  honour'd  life 

Journeying    on  the  verge  J  southward  ? 

Joy    wiles  Forgotten,  and  thme  innocent  j? 

J  is  sorrow's  brother ; 

O7!     O  bliss  of  blisses ! 

J  of  the  summerplain, 

Soon  thy  ;  is  over. 

Turn  cloud  to  light,  and  bitterness  to  1, 

in  him  light  and  ;  and  strength  abides ; 

in  summer  still  a  summer  /  resumeth. 

Un  bush,  mv  ■».  m-p  ann-^-m  > 


'  Oh  bush,  my  ;,  my  sorrow.' 


Hands  all  Round  14 

New  Timon  42 

Britons,  guard  32 

Lover's  Tale  ii  78 

A  Fragment  19 

Burial  of  Love  16 

Every  day,  etc.  24 

Hero  to  Leander  10 

The  Grasshopper  2 

31 

Though  night  6 

Love  42 

Me  my  own  fate  4 

Home  they  brought  him  10 


Joy  (continued)     And  with  a  fearful  self -impelling  j 
Juggle     And  a  /  of  the  brain. 
Juliet    Sainted  J I  dearest  name  ! 
Divinest  J,  I  love  thee,  and  live ; 


Know 

Lover's  Tale  i  389 
Germ  of '  Maud '  8 

To 1 

3 


Keen    Each  faibng  sense  As  with  a  momentary  flash  of  light 

Grew  thrillingly  distinct  and  k.  Timbuctoo  98 

When  I  must  render  up  this  glorious  home  To  k  Discovery  :         „        244 
pierced  through  and  through  with  aU  K  knowledges  of 


The  Mystic  30 

Rosalind  16 

Hesperides,  Song  i  25 

Oh,  Beauty  10 

Hands  all  Round  54 

Sugg,  by  Reading  32 

God  bless  our  Prince  2 

Lover's  Tale  i  733 

Sugg,  by  Reading  70 


low-embowed  eld) 

With  a  flash  of  frolic  scorn  And  k  delight. 

Keen-eyed    K-e  Sisters,  singing  airily. 

Keep     brain  could  k  afloat  The  subtle  spirit. 

That  wish  to  k  their  people  fools ; 

To  soothe  a  civic  wound  or  k  it  raw, 

God  k  their  lands  allied. 

Keeping    K  unchanged  The  purport  of  their  coinage 

Kept    To  that  half-pagan  harlot  k  by  France  ! 

Kemelled    See  Goldenkemelled 

Khan    Than  when  Zamoysky  smote  the  Tartar  K,     Blow  ye  the  trumpet  12 

Kill     Would,  unrelenting,  K  all  dissenting,  Britons,  guard  34 

Killed     Who  k  the  girls  and  thrill'd  the  boys  New  Timon  9 

Kin    so  k  to  earth  Pleasaunce  fathers  pain —  Every  day,  etc.  14 

Kind    Or  propagate  again  her  loathdd  k.  Shall  the  hag  2 

I  can  shadow  forth  my  bride  As  I  knew  her  fair  and  k  Germ  of '  Maud '  10 

Kmg     Thou  comest,  as  a.  K.  The  lintwhite  20 

Your  portals  statued  with  old  k's  and  queens,  Cambridge  2 

We  curse  the  crimes  of  Southern  k's,  Hands  all  Round  17 

They  can  be  understood  by  k's.  „  52 

I  fear  for  you,  as  for  some  youthful  k,  Siigg.  by  Reading  9 

Like  to  the  wild  youth  of  an  evil  k,  Lover's  Tale  i  344 

Kingdom  K's  lapse,  and  climates  change,  and  races  die ;  Hesperides,  Song  ii  4 


Kinsman    To  our  great  kinsmen  of  the  West, 

To  our  dear  kinsmen  of  the  West, 
Kiss  (s)     waters  Betraying  the  close  k'es  of  the  wind— 
Lest  thy  k  should  be  the  last. 
Come  bathe  me  with  thy  k'es, 
I'll  stay  thee  with  my  k'es. 

billow  will  embrace  thee  with  a  A:  as  soft  as  mine. 
As  with  one  k  to  touch  thy  blessed  cheek, 
word  K  hath  made  my  inner  soul  To  tremble 
That  a  doubt  will  only  come  for  a  k. 
Kiss  (verb)     Oh  !  k  me,  k  me,  once  again, 
Oh  k  me  ere  we  part ; 
Might  I  but  k  thy  hand  ! 
Methinks  if  I  should  k  thee, 
To  k  it  night  and  day, 
'  Then  k  it,  love,  and  put  it  by : 
'  Come,  k  it,  love,  ana  put  it  by : 
Kissed    peaceful  lips  are  k  With  earliest  rays, 
And  a  fear  to  be  k  away.' 
Ringlet,  I  k  you  night  and  day, 
Knee     Nathless  she  ever  clasps  the  marble  k's, 

Then  flinging  myself  down  upon  my  k's 
Kneel    K's  the  pale  Priestess  in  deep  faith, 
Knew    Ye  k  him  not :  he  was  not  one  of  ye, 
never  learnt  to  love  who  never  k  to  weep, 
my  bride  As  I  /c  her  fair  and  kind 
a  f amiUar  face  :  I  thought  we  A;  him : 
A  sharper  lesson  than  we  ever  A;, 
as  I  A;,  they  two  did  love  each  other. 
Knoll    Warbled  from  yonder  k  of  solemn  larches, 

Know    I  k  not  if  I  shape  These  tilings  ^  iiwua:wu  xoo 

I  k  there  is  somewhat ;  but  what  and  why  1  The '  How '  and  the '  Why '  24 
How  could  ye  k  him  ?  The  Mystic  41 

To  A:  thee  is  all  wisdom,  and  old  age  Is  but  to  A;  thee :  Love  15 

one  of  those  who  A;  no  strife  Of  inward  woe  Rosalind  3 

We  k  him,  out  of  Shakespeare's  art.  New  Timon  1 

We  k  thee  most,  we  love  thee  best.  Hands  all  Round  39 

yet  the  '  not  too  much  '  is  all  the  rule  she  k's.  Sugg,  by  Reading  60 

And  then  shall  I  A;  it  is  all  true  gold  The  Ringlet  7 


Hands  all  Round  47 

59 

Timbuctoo  209 

Hero  to  Leander  6 

12 

22 

27 

Oh,  Beauty  8 

12 

The  Ringlet  21 

Hero  to  Leander  5- 

7 

Oh,  Beauty  5 

9 

The  Ringlet  4 

23 

41 

A  Fragment  22 

The  Ringlet  22 

28 

Timbuctoo  37 

Lover's  Tale  i  789 

Timbuctoo  34 

The  Mystic  2 

Love  and  Sorrow  18 

Germ  of '  Maud '  10 

New  Timon  7 

Sugg,  by  Reading  88 

Lover's  Tale  i  766 

Check  every  outflash  10 

Timbuctoo  133 


\  i 


Enow 

Know  {continued)     I  k  not,  faith  : 
Knowest    k  I  dare  not  look  into  thine  eyes, 
Knoweth    k  not  Beyond  the  sound  he  lists  : 
Knowing     But  k  all  your  power  to  heat  or  cool, 

Have  ye  aught  that  is  worth  the  k  ? 

But  aught  that  is  worth  the  k  ?  ' 
Knowledge     Keen  k's  of  low-embowed  eld) 
Known    felt  and  k  A  higher  than  they  see : 

the  free  speech  that  makes  a  Briton  k. 

K  when  their  faces  are  forgot  in  the  land. 


1185 


Life 


Lover's  Tale  i  695 

Oh,  Beauty  4 

Lover's  Tale  i  657 

Sugg,  by  Reading  31 

1865-1866  5 

9 

The  Mystic  30 

Timbuctoo  211 

Britons,  guard  29 

Lover's  Tale  i  804 


Labour     He  said,  '  The  ^  is  not  small ;  What  time  I  wasted  7 

the  shore  Than  I  in  the  ocean,  Lotos-Eaters  39 

Laboured    Love  I  honey  busily.  Love,  Pride,  etc.  2 

Labyrinthine    All  th'  intricate  and  I  veins  Of  the  great  vine 

of  Fable,  Timbuctoo  221 

Lad    And  a  I  may  wink,  and  a  girl  may  hint,  The  Ringlet  17 

Laden     Strove  to  uprise,  I  with  mournful  thanks,  Lover's  Tale  i  748 

Laid     Beside  her  are  I,  Her  mattock  and  spade,  /'  the  glooming  light  5 

what  time  I  low  And  crushing  the  thicK  fragrant  reeds  Lme  31 

Lain    I  had  I  as  still.  And  blind  and  motionless  Lover's  Tale  i  618 

new-hewn  sepulchre,  Where  man  had  never  I,  „  714 

the  grass  was  warm  where  I  had  /,  „  790 

Lake     opal  width  Of  her  small  glowing  Vs,  Timbuctoo  102 

large  I  From  pressure  of  descendant  crags,  „         121 

length  of  porch  and  I  and  boundless  hall,  „         180 

Lameness    strangling  sorrow  weigh  Mine  utterances  with  I.   Lover's  Tale  i  25 
Lamp     Above  her  head  the  weak  I  dips  and  winks  Timbuctoo  35 

Lance     Rode  upon  his  father's  I,  Home  they  brought  him  8 

Land  (s)    (See  also  Lotos-land)    In  music  and  in  light  o'er  I  and  sea.    Love  28 
There  is  no  Z  like  England  (repeat)  National  Song  1,  5,  19,  23 

Mellowed  in  a  Z  of  rest ;  Hesyerides,  Song  iv  12 

God  keep  their  I's  allied,  God  bless  our  Prince  2 

Known  when  their  faces  are  forgot  in  the  I.  Lover's  Tale  i  804 

Land  (verb)     Should  he  I  here,  and  for  one  hour  prevail,     Britons,  guard  55 
Landing-place    l-f  is  wrapt  about  with  clouds  Timbuctoo  199 

Land-wind     But  the  l-w  wandereth,  Hesyerides,  Song  iv  4 

Languor     With  I  of  most  hateful  smiles,  Burial  of  Love  19 

Lapse    descendant  crags,  which  I  Disjointed,  TimbuMoo  122 

Kingdoms  /,  and  climates  change,  and  races  die ;    Hesyerides,  Song  ii  4 
Lapt     Which,  /  in  seeming  dissolution.  Lover's  Tale  i  507 

Larch     Warbled  from  yonder  knoll  of  solemn  Ves,       Check  every  outflash  10 
Large    and  my  mental  eye  grew  I  With  such  a  vast  circum- 
ference of  thought,  Timbuctoo  92 
as  when  in  some  I  lake  From  pressure  of  descendant  crags,        „      121 
Larger     Pure  without  heat,  into  a  I  air  Upbuming,                 The  Mystic  44 
La^ess     Thy  golden  I  fling.                                                       The  lintwhite  22 
Lark    L's  in  heaven's  cope  Sing :                                           Every  day,  etc.  28 
Though  long  ago  listening  the  poised  I,                       To  a  Lady  Sleey.  8 
Last  (adj.)     I  have  rais'd  thee  higher  to  the  Spheres  of 

Heaven,  Man's  first,  I  home :  Timbuctoo  217 

Love  is  dead  ;  His  Z  arrow  sped ;  Burial  of  Love  9 

The  world's  I  tempest  darkens  overhead ;  Britons,  guard  2 

Last  (s)     Lest  thy  kiss  should  be  the  I.  Eero  to  Leander  6 

he  had  well  nigh  reached  The  I,  The  Mystic  43 

Lasting    Me  my  own  fate  to  I  sorrow  doometh :  Me  my  own  fate  1 

Later    and  thou  of  I  name  Imperial  Eldorado  roof'd  with  gold :  Timbuctoo  23 

Latest    Oh  City  !     Oh  /  Throne !  where  I  was  rais'd  To  be  a 

mvstery  of  loveliness  " .     240 

Lattice     From  an  half-open  I  looked  at  me.  There  are  three  things  12 

Laugh     We  I,  we  cry,  we  are  bom,  we  die,         The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why '  8 

When  we  I,  and  our  mirth  Apes  the  happy  vein.  Every  day,  etc.  12 

<         X  not  loudly ;  watch  the  treasure  Of  the  wisdom  Hesyerides,  Song  1 13 

Jesuit  l's,  and  reckoning  on  his  chance,  Britons  guaid  32 

•Laudieth    Madness  I  loud :  Every  day,  etc.  17 

Laughing     /  clearly  A  light  and  thrilling  laughter,  Anacreontics  9 

Laughter     L  bringeth  tears :  Every  day,  etc.  18 

laughing  clearly  A  light  and  thrilling  I,  Anacreontics  10 

Laved     mine  own  image,  I  in  light,  ^^f  \Tale  t  68 

Law    wondrous  l's  which  regulate  The  fierceness  Ttmburtoo  147 


Law  {continued)    Nor  essence  nor  eternal  l's : 

Our  ancient  boast  is  this — we  reverence  /. 

O  Grief  and  Shame  if  while  I  preach  of  l's 
Lawless    The  I  comets  as  they  glare. 
Lay  (s)    {See  also  Lovelay)     Yoc  did  late  review  my  I't, 
Lay  (verb)    wave  unshocktid  L's  itself  calm  and  wide, 

How  often,  when  a  child  I  /  reclined, 

L  like  an  open  scroll  before  my  view. 

And  blind  and  motionless  as  then  I  / 


Lea 


ol  'aiovrtt  1-1 

Sugg,  by  Reading  3* 

37 

Chonu2i 

To  C.  North  i 

Dtudismt  ' 

MabUthorpel 

Lover's  TaU  i  601 

619 


which  the  fearful  springtide  flecks  the  /,  Love  and  Sorrov  2 

Two  children  lovelier  than  love,  adown  the  /  are  singing,  Dualism*  14 
At  noon-tide  beneath  the  I ;  Lotos-Eaters  6 

The  drain-cut  levels  of  the  marshy  /, —  MabUOwrpe  6 

Lead    turretstairs  are  wet  That  I  into  the  sea.  Eero  to  Leandn-Zl 

Will  it  I  me  to  the  grave  ?  Qerm  of '  Maud '  24 

Oh  !  I  me  tenderly,  for  fear  the  mind  Lover's  TaU  i  23 

Leaf    {See  also  Ivy-leaves)    growth  of  shadowing  /  and 


clusters  rare, 

O  Madden,  fresher  than  the  first  green  / 

What  happy  air  shall  woo  The  wither'd  I 
Lean    Over  heaven's  parapets  the  angels  /. 
Leander    And  when  tnou  art  dead,  L, 

L  !  go  not  yet. 
Leaneth    my  wish  I  evermore  Still  to  believe  it — 
Leaning    Beneath  a  highland  I  down  a  weight  Of  cliffs. 
Leap    L  the  little  waterfalls  That  sing 

And  the  merry  lizard  l's. 

The  boy  began  to  I  and  prance. 
Leaping    Ever  I,  ever  singing. 
Learn    lest  we  I  A  sharper  lesson  than  we  ever  knew. 

For  what  is  this  which  now  1 1, 
Leamt-Leam'd    They  never  learnt  to  love  who  never 
knew,  to  weep. 

When  I  learnt  from  whom  it  came, 

Because  she  leam'd  them  with  me. 
Leave    If  thou  dost  I  the  sun. 
Leaved    See  Silverleaved 
Led    By  such  men  /,  our  press  had  ever  been 
Ledgers    Too  much  we  make  our  L,  Gods. 
Left  (hand)     In  any  town,  to  I  or  right, 
Left  (verb)    and  I  Was  I  alone  on  (^pe, 

TiU  we  were  I  to  fight  for  truth  alone. 

Or  moisture  of  the  vapour,  I  in  clinging, 

And,  trampled  on,  I  to  its  own  decay. 
Legend    And  much  I  mus'd  on  l's  quaint  and  old 

hill  of  woe,  so  call'd  Because  the  /  ran  that. 
Length  I  of  porch  and  lake  and  boundless  ball, 
Lenora    A  garland  for  L. 

L,  laughing  clearly  A  light  and  thrilling  laughter, 
Lesson  lest  we  learn  A  sharper  /  than  we  ever  knew. 
Lethargised    So  /  discernment  in  the  sense. 


TmbueUtoTOi 

Lane  and  Sorrots  1 

Lover's  Tale  i  <KS 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  10 

Hero  to  Leander  30 

38 

Lover's  Tale  i  270 

The  Hesperides  10 

Rosalimd23 

Lotos-Eaters  81 

Home  tA<y  brouaht  him  7 

The  Grasshopper  43 

Sugg,  by  Readtmg  87 

The  Ringlet  51 

Love  and  Sorrow  18 

To  C.  North  5 

Lover's  Tale  i  290 

The  lintwhiU  32 

Sugg,  by  Reading  2 

Hands  <Ul  Round  SO 

O  darling  room  14 

Timbueloo  252 

Britons,  guard  35 

Lover's  Tale  U  46 

81 

Timbuctoo  16 

Lover's  Tale  i  366 

Timbuetoo  180 

Anaereontiet  7 

9 

Sugg,  by  Reading  88 

Lover's  TaU  i  663 


Level  (adj.)    the  I  calm  Is  ridg'd  with  restle^  and  increasing 

spheres  TiwUmeloo  124 

Level  (s)    melon  sleeps  On  the  /  of  the  shore :  Lotos-Emters  36 

The  drain-cut  l's  of  the  marshy  lea, —  Mabltthorps  6 

I  To  stand  witliin  the  /  of  their  hopes,  Lover's  Tale  i  768 

Levelling    Rapidly  /  eager  eyes.  Hesperides,  Song  ii  18 

Liar     Peace-lovers  we — but  who  can  trust  a  /? —  Briton*,  guard  14 

Libraries    Your  bridges  and  your  busted  /,  Cambridge  3 

Libyan    See  Lybian 
Lid    THOU  whose  fringi'd  l's  I  gaze  upon, 

commend  the  teai-s  to  creep  From  my  charged  Ps 
Lie  (s)    fie  You  golden  /. 
Lie  (verb)    What  the  life  is  ?  where  the  soul 
may/? 

crushmg  the  thick  fragrant  reeds  he  /'*, 

For  her  there  I  in  wait  millions  of  foes, 
Lite     The  precious  jewel  of  my  honour'd  /, 

As  air  is  th'  I  of  flame : 

notes  of  busy  /  in  distant  worlds  Beat 

The  permeating  /  which  couiseth  through 

Some  say  thus  lis  pleasant.  The  '  How 

Why  the  /  goes  when  the  blood  is  spilt  ? 

What  the  Ms  ?  where  the  soul  may  lie  ? 

If  to  love  be  I  alone, 


To  a  Lady  Sleep.  I 

Could  1  outwear  11 

TheRingUtU 

The 'How 'and  the 'Why '33 

Lo9e32 

Sugg,  by  Readina  50 

Lover's  TaU  ti  78 

Timbuctoo  30 

..      113 

220 

amdthe'  Why  '  3 

32 

33 

To 2 

4  F 


Life 

Lite  (eonliniud)     The  stem  experiences  of  converse  lives,  The  Mystic  8 

cloud  Which  droops  low  hung  on  either  gate  of  I,  „         32 

Investeth  and  ingirds  all  other  lives.  „         46 

L  of  the  sununerhours,  The  Grasshopper  3 

subtle  /,  the  countless  forms  Of  living  things,  Chorus  1 

Our  I  evanisheth  :  Oh  !  stay.  The  lintwhite  15 

To  whom  the  slope  and  stream  of  I,  Rosalind  5 

The  I  before,  the  I  behind,  „        6 

That  trouble  I  in  early  years,  „      14 

In  the  silence  of  my  I —  Germ  of '  Maud '  13 

So  to  guard  my  I  from  ill,  „              17 

That  spilt  his  I  about  the  cliques.  New  Timon  40 

And  taken  away  the  greenness  of  my  I,  Lender's  Tale  i  625 

And  their  long  I  a  dream  of  linked  love,  „            795 

Hope  is  dried, — the  I  o'  the  plant —  „            808 

The  wreck  of  ruin'd  I,  and  shatter'd  thought,  „          ii  62 

Lift    We'll  I  no  more  the  shattered  oar,  Lotos-Eaters  23 

Lifted    So,  I  high,  the  poet  at  his  will  B.  of  F.  Women  9 
Li^t  (s)    (See  also  Half-l^ht)    silent  Heavens  were  blench'd 

with  faery  I,  Timhuctoo  5 

Uncertain  whether  faery  I  or  cloud,  „        6 

no  I  but  that  wherewith  Her  phantasy  informs  them.  „      39 

A  curve  of  whitening,  flashing,  ebbing  l\  ..63 

And  circled  with  the  glory  of  living  I  ,.      75 

I  Of  the  great  angel  mind  which  look'd  „       87 

As  with  a  momentary  flash  of  I  Grew  „      97 

with  sharp  points  of  I  Blaze  within  blaze,  „     107 

Behind,  In  diamond  I,  upsprung  the  dazzling  Cones  ,.     168 

With  earliest  L  of  Spring,  „    200 

The  I  of  his  hopes  unfed,  Burial  of  Love  3 

For  ever  write  In  the  weathered  2  „          21 

Her  I  shall  into  darkness  change ;  „          27 

I'  the  glooming  I  Of  middle  night,  V  the  glooming  light  1 
ocean  with  the  morrow  I  Will  be  both  blue  and  calm ;  Hero  to  Leander  25 


1186 


Living 


I 


The  Mystic  21 

28 

Love,  Pride,  etc.  6 

Chorus  11 

Love  and  Sorrow  11 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  5 

Could  I  outwear  6 

Though  night  6 

Shall  the  hag  14 

Pallid  thunder  stricken  12 

Love  2d, 

.,    40 

„    42 


One  shadow  in  the  midst  of  a  great  I 
I  Of  earliest  youth  pierced  through  and  through 
Pride  came  beneath  and  h«ld  a  I. 
The  day,  the  diamonded  I, 
Thou  canst  not  lighten  even  with  thy  I, 
wave  of  the  virgin  I  Driven  back  the  billow 
A  sheeny  snake,  the  I  of  vernal  bowers, 
Turn  cloud  to  I,  and  bitterness  to  joy, 
Nor  blot  with  floating  shades  the  solar  I. 
in  mail  of  argent  I  Shot  into  gold. 
In  music  and  in  I  o'er  land  and  sea. 
Like  I  on  troubled  waters : 
And  in  him  I  and  joy  and  strength  abides  ; 
from  his  brows  a  crown  of  living  I  Looks  through  „    43 

Where'er  the  I  of  day  be ;  (repeat)  National  Song  2,  6,  20,  24 

Nor  good  nor  ill,  nor  I  nor  shade,  oi  'piovres  10 

When  thy  I  perisheth  That  from  thee  issueth,  The  lintwhite  13 

eyes  so  full  of  I  Should  be  so  wandering  !  „  26 

thv  Vs  on  my  horizon  shine  Into  my  night  Me  my  own  fate  11 

When  we  two  meet  there's  never  perfect  I.  „  14 

Till  midnoon  the  cool  east  I  Is  shut  out  Hesperides,  Song  iv  15 

Clad  in  2  by  golden  gates.  Clad  in  I  the  Spirit  waits     Germ  of '  Maud  '  32 
As  towards  the  gracious  1 1  bow'd,  What  time  I  wasted  4 

To  worship  mine  own  image,  laved  in  I,  Lover's  Tale  i  68 

A  I,  methought,  flash'd  even  from  her  white  robe,  „  361 

Even  from  that  Heaven  in  whose  1 1  bloom'd  „  624 

came  in  O'erhead  the  white  I  of  the  weary  moon,  „  659 

Light  (adj.)    Why  the  rocks  stand  still,  and 

the  I  cloucis  flv  ?  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  14 

Thou  art  so  glad  and  free.  And  as  I  as  air ;  The  Grasshopper  25 

Lenora,  laughing  clearly  A  I  and  thrilling  laughter,         Anacreontics  10 
and  mine  Were  dim  with  floating  tears,  that  shot  the 

sunset.  In  I  rings  round  me  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  438 

Light  (verb)    Waiting  to  I  him  with  his  purple  skies.  Love  34 

Lighted    (See  also  Wax-lighted)    My  heart  is  I  at  thine  eyes.         To 8 

Lighten    '  Wide  Afric,  doth  thy  sun  L,  Timhuctoo  59 

Thou  canst  not  I  even  with  thy  light.  Love  and  Sorrow  11 

Lighting     L  on  the  golden  blooms  ?  The  Grasshopper  44 

Tiightning    The  herald  I's  starry  bound.  Chorus  14 

goest  and  retumest  to  His  Lips  Like  I :  Love  13 

a  I  stroke  had  come  Even  from  that  Heaven  Lover's  Tale  i  623 


Lightsome    And  showering  down  the  gloi-y  of  I  day. 
Like     L,  unlike,  they  roam  together 

L,  unlike,  they  sing  together  Side  by  side  ; 
Lily    And  silverleaved  I, 

Lilygarlands    As  they  gambol,  I  ever  stringing  : 
Limb    Thy  heart  beats  through  thy  rosy  Vs 

their  wan  Vs  no  more  might  come  between 

between  whose  Vs  Of  brassy  vastness 

From  iron  Vs  and  tortured  nails  ! 

lithe  Vs  bow'd  as  with  a  heavy  weight 
Limit    infixed  The  Vs  of  his  prowess, 

melancholy  home  At  the  I  of  the  brine. 
Limitless    So  bearing  on  thro'  Being  I  The  triumph  of 

this  foretaste. 
Link  (s)     Five  Vs,  a  golden  chain,  are  we. 

Five  Vs,  a  golden  chain,  are  we, 

Crush'd  Z  on  2  into  the  beaten  earth, 
Link  (verb)    Could  I  his  shallop  to  the  fleeting  edge, 

firmament  to  I  The  earthquake-shattered  chasm, 
Link'd     Rapid  as  fire,  inextricably  I, 
Linked    The  I  woes  of  many  a  fiery  change  Had  purified, 

And  their  long  life  a  dream  of  I  love, 
Lintwhite    The  I  and  the  throstlecock  Have  voices 

sweet  and  clear ; 
Lion     Hold  up  the  L  of  England  on  high  (repeat)  English  War  Song  27,  49 

A  L,  you,  that  made  a  noise.  New  Timon  11 

heard  in  thought  Those  rhymes,  '  The  L  and  the 

Unicom  '  Lover's  Tale  i  285 

Lionel    her  heart  Was  L's :  „  i  603 

It  was  the  man  she  loved,  even  L,  The  lover  L,  the  happy  L,    „  671 

pray'd  aloud  to  God  that  he  would  hold  The  hand  of 
blessing  over  L,  „  792 

Lip    (See  also  Roselip)     I  have  fill'd  thy  Vs  with 

power.  Timhuctoo  215 

His  eyes  in  eclipse,  Pale  cold  his  Vs,  Burial  of  Love  2 

skins  the  colour  from  her  trembling  Vs.  Pallid  thunderstricken  14 


Tears  of  Heaven  8 

Dualisms  17 

19 

Anacreontics  3 

Dualisms  15 

Hero  to  Leander  16 

Shall  the  hag  12 

A  Fragment  6 

Hands  all  Round  16 

Lover's  Tale  i  126 

Timhuctoo  12 

Lotos-Eaters  21 

Lover's  Tale  i  514 

Hesperides,  Song  ii  23 

iv  24 

Lover's  Tale  i  859 

Timhuctoo  145 

Lover's  Tale  i  407 

Timhuctoo  117 

The  Mystic  9 

Lover's  Tale  i  195 

The  lintwhite  1 


goest  and  retumest  to  His  L's  Like  lightning ; 
Alas  !  that  Vs  so  cruel  dimib  Should 
peaceful  Vs  are  kissed  With  earUest  rays. 
They  sleep  with  staring  eyes  and  gUded  Vs, 
name  to  which  her  seraph  Vs  Did  lend 

Liquid     L  gold,  honeysweet  thro'  and  thro'. 

List    knoweth  not  Beyond  the  sound  he  Vs  : 

Listenest     L  the  lordly  music  flowing 

Listening    Though  long  ago  I  the  poisdd  lark. 

Lithe     But  an  insect  I  and  strong. 
And  the  I  vine  creeps. 
The  I  limbs  bow'd  as  with  a  heavy  weight 

Little    The  I  bird  pipeth  '  why  !  why  ! '  The 

Leap  the  I  waterfalls  That  sing  into  the  pebbled  pool 
The  I  isle  of  Ithaca,  beneath  the  day's  decline. 


Love  12 

The  lintwhite  17 

A  Fragment  22 

29 

Lover's  Tale  i  451 

Hesperides,  Song  i  24 

Lover's  Tale  i  658 

Timhuctoo  218 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  8 

The  Grasshopper  7 

Lotos-Eaters  34 

Lover's  Tale  i  126 

How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  26 

Rosalind  23 

Lotos-Eaters  22 


No  I  room  so  warm  and  bright  Wherein  to  read,  0  darling  room  5 

A I  room  so  exquisite,  „              15 
Because  the  words  of  I  children  preach  Against  you, —       Cambridge  12 

Can  pardon  I  would-be  Popes  And  Brummek,  New  Timon  19 

A  dapper  boot — a  I  hand — If  half  the  I  soul  is  dirt  ?  „          35 
She  loves  a  I  scandal  which  excites  ;  A  I  feeling  is 

a  want  of  tact.  Sugg,  by  Reading  51 

Lower  down  Spreads  out  a  I  lake,  that,  flooding,  Lover's  Tale  i  536 

Live    I  love  thee,  and  I ;  To 4 

For  which  I Z— black  eyes,  and  brown  and  blue  ;  There  are  three  things  6 

black  eyes,  1 1  and  die,  and  only  die  for  you.  „                   8 

such  a  heat  as  Vs  in  great  creative  rhymes.  Sugg,  by  Reading  6 

by  that  name  was  wont  to  I  in  her  speech,  Lover's  Tale  i  571 

Lived     Awhile  she  scarcely  I  at  all.  Love,  Pride,  etc.  13 

I  had  I  That  intense  moment  thro'  eternity.  Lover's  Tale  i  495 

So  each  with  each  inwoven  I  with  each,  „            566 

for  which  1 1  and  breathed  :  „          ii  73 

Livelong    the  culvers  mourn  All  the  I  day.  Every  day,  etc.  30 

Living     And  circled  with  the  glory  of  I  light  Timhuctoo  75 

Deep-rooted  in  the  I  soil  of  truth :  „        225 

The  subtle  life,  the  countless  forms  Of  I  things,  Chorus  8 

And  from  his  brows  a  crown  of  I  light  Love  43 

Thy  spirit,  circled  with  a  I  glory.  Me  my  own  fate  3 

rare  pity  had  stolen  The  I  bloom  away,  Lover's  Tale  i  726 


1187 


Lizard 

Lizard    And  the  merry  I  leaps, 

Loathe    thinking  men  of  England,  I  a  tyranny. 

Loathed    Or  propagate  again  her  I  kind, 

And  damn'd  unto  his  I  tenement. 
Loathing    That,  strongly  I,  greatly  broke. 
Loathly    Oh  !  rather  had  some  Z  ghastful  brow, 
Locality    I  took  delight  in  this  I ! 
Lock     Thy  I's  are  dripping  balm  ; 

Thy  I's  are  full  of  sunny  sheen 
Locked  6'ee  Goldenlocked 

Lone    Among  the  inner  columns  far  retir'd  At  midnight, 
in  the  I  Acropolis. 

As  dwellers  in  I  planets  look  upon  The  mighty  disk 

Like  a  I  cypress,  through  the  twilight  hoary, 
Lonely     But  yet  my  I  spirit  follows  thine, 
Long    pillars  high  L  time  eras'd  from  Earth  : 

The  nightingale,  with  I  and  low  preamble. 

But  men  of  I  enduring  hopes, 

Because  the  legend  ran  that,  I  time  since. 

Her  I  ringlets,  Drooping  and  beaten  with  the  plaining  wind. 

And  their  I  life  a  dream  of  linked  love, 
Longer  No  Z  in  the  dearest  use  of  mine — 
Look    to  I  on  for  a  moment  fill'd  My  eyes  Timbuctoo  190 

With  glazed  eye  She  Vs  at  her  grave  :  V  the  glooming  light  15 

dwellers  in  lone  planets  I  upon  The  mighty  disk  Love  20 

L's  through  the  thickstemmed  woods  by  day  and  night  „    44 


Made 


Lotos-Eaters  31 

Sugg,  by  Reading  12 

Shall  the  hag  2 

Lover's  Tale  i  683 

New  Tirrwn  4 

Lover's  Tale  i  676 

Mablethorpe  2 

Hero  to  Leander  20 

The  lintwhite  28 


Timbuctoo  32 

Love  20 

Me  my  own  fate  6 

9 

TimbuMoo  13 

Check  every  outflash  9 

New  Timon  17 

Lover's  Tale  i  366 

734 

795 

599 


knowcst  I  dare  not  I  into  thine  eyes 

L  to  him,  father,  lest  he  wink, 

L  from  west  to  east  along : 

You  never  I  but  half  content : 

It  Vs  too  arrogant  a  jest — 

No,  nor  the  Press  !  and  I  you  well  to  that — 

Who  Vs  for  Godlike  greatness  here  shall  see 

your  ringlets,  That  I  so  golden-gay. 

Refused  to  I  his  author  in  the  face, 

Look'd    I  into  my  face  With  his  unutterable, 

I Z,  but  not  Upon  his  face, 

angel  mind  which  I  from  out  The  starry  glowing  „        88 

Of  late  such  eyes  I  at  me —  There  are  three  things  9 

From  an  half-open  lattice  I  at  me.  „  12 

Looking  (>See  aZso  Downlooking)   Z  athwart  the  burning  flats,   A  Fragment  17 

L  warily  Every  way,  Hesperides,  Song  i  26 

L  under  silver  hair  with  a  silver  eye.  „  ii  2 

Lord    We  I  it  o'er  the  sea  ;  (repeat)  National  Song  16,  34 

Lordly   Listenest  the  I  music  flowing  from  Th'  illimitable  years.  Thnhuctoo  218 


Oh,  Beauty  4 

Hesperides,  Song  ii  11 

„  Hi  6 

New  Timon  26 

42 

Sugg,  by  Reading  17 

53 

The  Ringlet  2 

Lover's  Tale  i  697 

Timbuctoo  66 

85 


Lorn    cold  as  were  the  hopes  Of  my  I  love  ! 
Lose     But  I  themselves  in  utter  emptiness. 

We  shall  I  eternal  pleasure. 

Then  I  Z  it :  it  wiU  fly  : 
Loss     Unknowing  fear,  Undreading  I, 
Lost     L  in  its  effulgence  sleeps, 

beauteous  face  Of  the  maiden,  that  1 1, 

We  hate  not  France,  but  France  has  I  her  voice 

Could  I  thus  hope  my  I  delights  renewing, 
Lotos    We  will  eat  the  L, 

Lotos-land,  till  the  L  fail ; 
Lotos-eater    Like  a  dreamy  L-e,  a  delirious  L-e  ! 

With  the  blissful  L-e's  pale 
Lotos-land    We  will  abide  in  the  golden  vale  Of  the  L-l, 
Lotosflute     Nor  melody  o'  the  Lybian  I 
Load    And  the  I  sea  roars  below. 


Lover's  Tale  i  621 

Love  and  Sorrow  16 

Hesperides,  Song  i  11 

Germ  of '  Maud  '  25 

The  Grasshopper  17 

Chorus  26 

Germ  of '  Maud  '  3 

Britons,  guard  19 

Could  I  outwear  9 

Lotos-Eaters  14 

27 

13 

25 

27 

The  Hesperides  7 

Hero  to  Leander  15 


A  summer  of  I  song,  The  Grasshopper  32 

edicts  of  his  fear  Are  mellowed  into  music,  borne  abroad  By  the 


I  winds, 
On  the  I  hoar  foam. 

The  moanings  in  the  forest,  the  I  stream, 
Love  (s)    lowest  depths  were,  as  with  visible  I, 
L  is  dead  ;  (repeat) 
Oh,  truest  I !  art  thou  forlorn. 
Till  L  have  his  full  revenge. 
L  unreturned  is  like  the  fragrant  frame 
Oh  go  not  yet,  my  I,  (repeat) 
In  thine  hour  of  I  and  revel, 
Ebe  yet  my  heart  was  sweet  L's  tomb,  L  laboured 
honey  busily. 


iwe  9 

Lotos-Eaters  19 

Lover's  Tale  ii  123 

Timbuctoo  49 

Burial  of  Love  8, 13 

14 

30 

To 5 

Hero  to  Leander  1,  32 
The  Grasshopper  35 


Love,  Pride,  etc.  3 

8 

Love  and  Sorrovo  6 

Love  1 

„  14 

»  24 

Dualitmt  14 

The  LintvkiU  19 

Cheek  every  outJUuh  14 

The  Ringlet  11 

23 

41 


323 

620 

700 

766 

795 

808 

848 

-2 

4 

Love  and  Sorrov  18 

Anaereontiet  6 

Hand$  aU  Bound  39 

Sugg,  by  Reading  1 

57 

Lover'i  Tale  i  766 

770 


To 


Love  (s)  (continued)    I  was  the  liive  and  L  the  bee, 

Sweet  L  was  withered  in  hia  cell ;  Pride  took  L'$ 
sweets,  and  by  a  spell  Did  change 

Thou  art  my  heart's  sun  in  V$  crystalline : 

Thou,  from  the  first,  unborn,  undying  I, 

brood  above  The  silence  of  all  liearts,  unutterable  L. 

Come,  thou  of  many  crowns,  white-rob^  I, 

Two  children  loveUer  than  I,  adown  the  lea 

Fair  year,  with  brows  of  royal  I  Thou  comest. 

When  in  this  valley  first  I  told  my  I. 

'  Then  take  it,  I,  and  put  it  by ; 

'  Then  kiss  it,  I,  and  put  it  by : 

'  Come,  kiss  it,  I,  ana  put  it  by  :  „  _ 

with  I  too  high  to  be  express'd  Arrested  in  its  sphere,     I/mr'$  "XaU  i  65 

Where  L  was  worshipped  upon  every  height,  Where 
L  was  worshipp'd  under  every  tree — 

cold  as  were  the  hopes  Of  my  lorn  I ! 

if  he  had  fall'n  In  I  in  twilight  ? 

And  why  was  I  to  darken  their  pure  I, 

And  their  long  life  a  dream  of  linked  I, 

till  their  I  Shall  ripen  to  a  proverb  unto  all. 

That  in  the  death  of  I,  if  e'er  they  loved. 
Love  (verb)    If  to  Z  be  life  alone, 

1 1  thee,  and  live ;  and  yet  Love  unreturned 

never  learnt  to  Z  who  never  knew  to  weep. 

For  her  I Z  so  dearly. 

We  know  thee  most,  we  I  thee  best. 

How  much  I Z  this  writer's  manly  style  ! 

She  Vs  a  little  scandal  which  excites  ; 

as  I  knew,  they  two  did  Z  each  other. 

Did  1 1  Camilla  ? 

Let  them  so  Z  that  men  and  boys  may  say,  Lo  !  hoir 
they  Z  each  other  ! 
Loved    And  Z  me  ever  after. 

It  was  the  man  she  Z,  even  Lionel, 

That  in  the  death  of  Love,  if  e'er  they  Z, 
Lovelay    Hum  a  Z  to  the  westwind  at  noontide. 
Lovelier    Two  children  I  than  love,  adown  the  lea. 

This  is  Z  and  sweeter. 
Loveliest    Most  I,  most  delicious  union  ? 
Loveliness    Which  fill'd  the  Earth  with  passing  I, 

a  mystery  of  Z  Unto  all  eyes. 
Lovely    Most  pale  and  clear  and  Z  distances. 

She  is  Z  by  my  side  In  the  silence  of  my  life — 
Lover    See  Peace-lover 
Low    E'en  so  my  thoughts,  erewhile  so  Z,  now  felt 

Thy  voice  is  sweet  and  Z ; 

The  nightingale,  with  long  and  Z  preamble. 

And  the  Z  west  wind,  breathing  afar, 

Unfrequent,  Z,  as  tho'  it  told  its  pulses  ; 
Low-built    L-b,  mud-walled.  Barbarian  settlement, 
Low-boried     L-b  fathom  deep  beneath  with  thee, 
Low-embowed    Keen  knowledges  of  l-e  eld) 
Lower    To  chann  a  Z  sphere  of  fulminating  fools. 
Lowest    Whose  Z  deptlis  were,  as  with  visible  love, 
Low-hong    l-h  tresses,  dipp'd  In  the  fierce  stream. 
Loyal    Be  Z,  if  you  wish  for  wholesome  rule : 

We  still  were  Z  in  our  wildest  fights. 
Loyally    Or  Z  disloyal  battled  for  our  rights. 
Lorlei    vineyards  green,  Musical  L ; 
Lnscions    The  Z  fruitage  clustereth  mellowly, 
Lostre    clear  Galaxy  Shorn  of  its  hoary  /, 
Lutestring    inner  soul  To  tremble  like  a  /, 
Lybian    Nor  melody  o'  the  L  lotusflute 
Lying    He  often  Z  broad  awake. 

By  Z  priest's  the  peasant's  votes  controlled. 


801 

Anaereontie$  13 

Lover's  Tale  i  671 

849 

Dualisms  2 

14 

Lotos-Eaters  10 

Lover's  Tale  i  275 

Timbuctoo  79 

„      241 

The  MyHie  35 

Germ  of '  Maud '  12 

Timbuctoo  157 

Hero  lo  Leander  33 

Ckedt  every  outjla^  9 

Hesperides,  Song  iv  8 

Lover's  Tale  ii  58 

Timbuctoo  248 

0  sad  No  more/S 

The  Mystic  30 

Sugg,  by  Reading  30 

Timbuctoo  40 

Lover's  Tale  i  374 

Sugg,  by  Readimg  83 

»  86 

96 

0  darling  rwtm  9 

Hesperides,  Song  t*  19 

riM^HciDO  106 

0k,Beamt¥l3 

The  Hesperides  1 

The  Mystic  86 

Britons,  guard  8 


Love,  Pride,  etc.  1 


TiH^i^    Should  war's  m  blast  again  be  blown.  Hands  all  Round  41 

Made    Had  purified,  and  chastened,  and  m  free.  The  Mystic  10 

Because  the  earth  hath  m  her  state  foriom  Tears  of  Hearen  3 

For  nothing  is,  but  all  is  «,  ol  'piorra  12 

A  Lion,  you,  that  m  a  noise,  Nev  Timon  11 


Made 


1188 


The  Grasshopper  13 


Hero  to  Leander  9 

Timbuctoo  192 

Love  21 

The  '  How  '  and  ike  '  Why  '  13 

Hesperides,  Song  i  10 


16 

iv  10 

Britons,  guard  29 

54 

Hands  all  Bound  20 

iSwoo.  &2/  Reading  81 

87 

Lover's  Tale  i  536 

793 


Hade  (continued)     By  diminution  w  most  glorious,  Lover's  Tale  i  71 

Which  waste  with  the  breath  that  m  'em.  „          475 

The  very  spirit  of  Paleness  m  still  paler  „          679 

my  refluent  health  m  tender  quest  Unanswer'd,  „          742 

drove  them  onward — m  them  sensible  ;  „        ii  77 

Madness    M  laugheth  loud  :                                               .  Every  day,  etc.  17 

Mahmoud     Better  wild  M's  war-cry  once  again  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  83 

Maid    There  are  no  m's  like  EngUsh  m's,  National  Song  25 

Maiden  (adj.)     (when  I  view  Fair  w  forms  moving 

like  melodies),  There  are  three  things  3 

Maiden  (s)    0  M,  fresher  than  the  first  green  leaf  Love  and  Sorrow  1 

beauteous  face  Of  the  m,  that  I  lost,  Germ  of '  Maud  '  3 

Mnil    in  w  of  argent  light  Shot  into  gold.  Pallid  thunder  stricken  12 

Mailed    Thou  art  a  m  warrior  in  youth  and  strength 

complete ; 
Main    My  heart  is  warmer  surely  than  the  bosom  of 

the  m. 
Majestic    In  accents  of  m  melody, 

The  mighty  disk  of  their  m  sun, 
Make     Why  two  and  two  m  four  ? 

If  ye  sing  not,  if  ye  w  false  measure. 

Five  and  three  (Let  it  not  be  preached  abroad) 

m  an  awful  mystery. 
M  the  apple  holy  and  bright, 
the  free  speech  that  m's  a  Briton  known. 
M  their  cause  your  own. 
Too  much  we  m  our  Ledgers,  Gods. 
Who  m  the  emphatic  One,  by  whom  is  all, 
I  call  on  you  To  m  opinion  warlike, 
lake,  that,  flooding,  m's  Cushions  of  yellow  sand  ; 
her  whom  he  would  m  his  wedded  wife,  Camilla  ! 

Think  not  thy  tears  will  m  my  name  grow  green, —  „            806 

Maketh    Ever  alone  She  m  her  moan  :                         I'  the  glooming  light  17 

Mftlring    M  their  day  dim,  so  we  gaze  on  thee.  Love  23 

Man     being  in  the  heart  of  M  As  air  is  th'  life  of  flame  :            Timbuctoo  19 

Men  clung  with  yearning  Hope  which  would  not  die.  „         27 

'  O  child  of  m,  why  muse  you  here  alone  „         77 

the  hum  of  men,  Or  other  things  talking  „       111 

Spirit  than  I  to  sway  The  heart  of  m  :  „       196 

Heaven,  M's  first,  last  home  :  „      217 

men's  hopes  and  fears  take  refuge  in  The  fragrance  „      226 

Child  of  M,  See'st  thou  yon  river,  „      228 
I  am  any  m's  suitor.  If  any  will  be  my 

tutor  :  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  1 

wondrous  tones  Of  m  and  beast  are  full  of  strange 

Astonishment  Chorus  9 

all  men  adore  thee  ;  Heaven  crieth  after  thee  ;  Love  25 

none  shall  grieve  For  the  m  who  fears  to  die  :  English  War  Song  4 

scorn  of  the  many  shall  cleave  To  the  m  who  fears  to 

die.  „                6 

There  are  no  men  like  Englishmen,  National  Song  7 

M  is  the  measure  of  all  truth  Unto  himself.  ol  'piovrei  3 

All  men  do  walk  in  sleep,  „          5 

Men  of  Ithaca,  this  is  meeter,  Lotos-Eaters  11 

As  when  a  m,  that  sails  in  a  balloon,  D.  of  F.  Women  1 

The  padded  m — that  wears  the  stays —  New  Timon  8 

But  m£n  of  long  enduring  hopes,  „        17 

'  They  call  this  m  as  good  as  me.'  „         32 

fierce  old  m — to  take  his  name  You  bandbox.  „        43 

The  true  men  banished,  Britons,  guard  10 

We  hate  not  France,  but  this  m's  heart  of  stone.  „          17 

This  m  is  France,  the  m  they  call  her  choice.  „          20 
There  must  no  m  go  back  to  bear  the  tale  :  No  m 

to  bear  it — Swear  it !     We  swear  it !  „          56 

A  health  to  Europe's  honest  men  !  Hands  all  Round  13 

But  fire,  to  blast  the  hopes  of  men.  „             30 

By  such  men  led,  our  press  had  ever  been  Sv^g.  by  Reading  2 

The  thinking  men  of  England,  loathe  a  tyranny.  „              12 

Yours  are  the  public  acts  of  public  men,  „              21 

I  honour  much,  I  say,  this  ws  appeal.  „              49 

An  essence  less  concentred  than  aw!  „              82 

we  want  a  manlike  God  and  Godlike  men  !  „              84 

I  turn  To  you  that  mould  men's  thoughts ;  „              86 

♦  The  Gander  '  and  '  The  m  of  Mitylene,'  Lover's  Tale  i  287 

A  woful  m  had  thrust  his  wife  and  child  „            368 


Man  (continued)    It  was  the  m  she  loved,  even  Lionel, 
new-hewn  sepulchre  Where  ?»  had  never  lain. 
As  men  do  from  a  vague  and  horrid  dream. 
Let  them  so  love  that  men  and  boys  may  say. 

Mane    And  shook  a  w  en  papillotes. 

Manhood    Rise,  Britons,  rise,  if  m  be  not  dead  ; 


Memphis 

Lover's  Tale  i  671 

714 

786 

801 

New  Timon  12 

Britons,  guard  1 


Cambridge  10 

Hesperides,  Song  Hi  13 

Love  24 

Lover's  Tale  i  54 

Timbuctoo  37 


And  trust  an  ancient  m  and  the  cause  Sugg,  by  Reading  39 

Manlike    we  want  a  m  God  and  Godlike  men  !  „              84 
Manly    How  much  I  love  this  writer's  m  style  ! 
Manner    for  your  m  sorts  Not  with  this  age. 
Mantling    Half  round  the  m  night  is  drawn, 
Many    Come,  thou  of  m  crowns,  white-rob6d  love, 

The  m  pleasant  days,  the  moonlit  nights. 
Marble    Nathless  she  ever  clasps  the  m  knees. 
The  deep  salt  wave  breaks  in  above  Those  m 

steps  below.  Hero  to  Leander  35, 

Margent     Had  film'd  the  m's  of  the  recent  wound.  Lover's  Tale  i  764 

Mark     old  m  of  rouge  upon  your  cheeks.  New  Timon  38 

Marksman     We  were  the  best  of  marksmen  long  ago,  Britons,  guard  43 

Marriage-day    God  bless  thy  m-d,  God  bless  our  Prince  13 

Marshy    The  drain-cut  levels  of  the  m  lea, —  Mablethorpe  6 
Martial    if  France  be  she  Whom  m  progress  only 

charms  ?  Hands  all  Round  26 

Marvel  (s)     Ye  could  not  read  the  m  in  his  eye.  The  Mystic  4 

What  m,  that  she  died  ?  Love,  Pride,  etc.  14 1 

Marvel  (verb)     Would  m  from  so  beautiful  a  sight  Pallid  thunderstricken  9  I 

Matted     built  above  With  m  bramble  and  the  shining  f 

gloss  Of  ivy-leaves.  Lover's  Tale  i  373  1 

Matter    M  enough  for  deploring  1865-1866  8 

Mattock     Beside  her  are  laid  Her  m  and  spade,  7'  the  glooming  light  6 

May    Mid  M's  darling  goldenlocked,  Dualisms  21 

All  in  the  bloomed  M.  (repeat)  The  lintwhite  3,  12,  21,  30 

Farewell,  fair  rose  of  M  !  God  bless  our  Prince  11 

Maze     m  of  piercing,  trackless,  thrilling  thoughts  Timbuctoo  115 

Mead     Tilth,  hamlet,  m  and  mound  :  D.  of  F.  Women  4 

Meadow    The  Bayard  of  the  m.  The  Grasshopper  21 

Meaning    But  what  is  the  m  of  then  and  now  !     The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  22 

where,  alack,  is  Bewick  To  tell  the  m  now  ?  A  gate  and  a  field  6 

Measure    Man  is  the  m  of  all 'truth  ol  'piovres  3 

If  ye  sing  not,  if  ye  make  false  m,  Hesperides,  Song  i  10 

Meat    Over  their  scrips  and  shares,  their  m's  and  wine,    Sugg,  by  Reading  47 

Mechanic     By  a  dull  m  ghost  And  a  juggle  of  the  brain.     Germ  of '  Maud  '  7 

Meditation    'Tis  a  beautiful  And  pleasant  m,  Lover's  Tale  i  240 

Meek    shall  the  blessing  of  the  m  be  on  thee  ;  Though  night  12 

Meet    When  we  two  w  there's  never  perfect  light.  Me  my  own  fate  14 

Yet  never  did  there  m  my  sight,  O  darling  room  13 

I  said,  '  0  years  that  m  in  tears,  1865-1866  4 

Meeter    Men  of  Ithaca,  this  is  m,  Lotos-Eaters  11 

Melancholy  (adj.)    To  the  m  home  At  the  limit  of  the  brine,  „          20 

Melancholy  (s)     Thy  spirit  to  mild-minded  M  ;  Check  every  ouiflash  3 

Alone  my  hopeless  m  gloometh.  Me  my  own  fate  5 

Mellow    And  the  black  owl  scuds  down  the 

m  twlilight.                                               The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  30 

Mellowed    edicts  of  his  fear  Are  m  into  music,  Love  8 

Jf  in  a  land  of  rest ;  Hesperides,  Song  ivl2 
Melodious    M  thunders  through  your  vacant  courts  At  mom 

and  even  ;  Cambridge  9 

Melody     In  accents  of  majestic  m,  Timbuctoo  192 

Clear  m  flattering  the  crisped  Nile  A  Fragment  26 

Fair  maiden  forms  moving  like  melodies),  There  are  three  things  3 

Nor  m  o'  the  Lybian  lotusflute  The  Hesperides  7 

as  my  heart  beat  Twice  to  the  m  of  hers.  Lover's  Tale  i  74 

It  giveth  out  a  constant  m  That  drowns  „          534 

heavy  m  sleeps  On  the  level  of  the  shore  :  Lotos-Eaters  35 

Melted     From  my  cold  eyes  and  m  it  again.  Could  I  outwear  14 

note  Hath  m  in  the  silence  that  it  broke.  Oh,  Beauty  14 

Memnon    Thy  M,  when  his  peaceful  lips  are  kissed  A  Fragment  22 

Memnonian    Awful  M  coimtenances  calm  „        16 

Memory    A  center'd  golden-circled  M,  Timbuctoo  21 

m  of  that  mental  excellence  Comes  o'er  me,  „      137 

M  tho'  fed  by  Pride  Did  wax  so  thin  on  gall,  Love,  Pride,  etc.  11 

While  I  spoke  thus,  the  seedsman,  M,  D.  of  F.  Women  14 

a  costly  casket  in  the  grasp  Of  m  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  102 

m  of  that  sound  With  mighty  evocation,  <,            667 

Memphis    Old  M  hath  gone  down  :  •       A  Fragment  27 


Mental 


1189 


Moved 


Mental    and  my  m  eye  grew  large  With  such  a  vast 

circumference  of  thought,  Timbuctoo  92 

The  memory  of  that  m  excellence  Comes  o'er  me,  „      I37 

Mentz    where  the  Rhene  Curves  towards  M,  0  darling  room  12 

Mercury     M  On  such  a  morning  would  have  flimg  Lover's  Tale  i  302 

Mei«ed    I  had  m  Glory  in  glory,  „           515 

Merit    The  m's  of  a  spotless  shirt —  New  Timon  34 

Merry    M  grasshopper,  Thou  art  so  glad  and  free.  The  Grasshopper  23 

from  within  Anon  he  rusheth  forth  \vith  m  din.  Love  41 

M  England  !     England  for  aye  !  (repeat)         English  War  Song  10,  21, 

32,  43,  54 

Than  to  shame  w  England  here.  „                     17 
And  the  w  devil  drive  'em  Through  the  water 

and  the  fire,  (repeat)  National  Song  13,  31 

And  the  m  lizard  leaps,  Lotos-Eaters  31 

Met    And  New  Year  and  Old  Year  m,  1865-1866  2 

^lethinks  I  could  have  sooner  m  that  gaze  !  Lover's  Tale  i  684 

Metal    if  gold  it  were  Or  m  more  ethereal,  Timbuctoo  177 

Methinks    And  now — m  I  gaze  upon  thee  now,  Love  29 

M  if  I  should  kiss  thee.  Oh,  Beauty  9 

M  I  could  have  sooner  met  that  gaze  !  Lover's  Tale  i  684 

Middle  (adj.)     I'  the  glooming  light  Of  m  night,  /'  the  glooming  light  2 

and  in  the  solitude  Of  m  space  conf  oimd  them,  Shall  the  hag  9 

Middle  (s)     But  in  the  m  of  the  sombre  valley  Check  every  outflash  6 

Midge    summer  m's  wove  their  wanton  gambol,  „              12 

Midniglit  (adj.)     By  secret  fire  and  m  storms  Chorus  5 

Midnight  (s)    retir'd  At  m,  in  the  lone  Acropolis.  Timbv/itoo  32 

Midnoon    In  the  m  the  glory  of  old  Rhodes,  A  Fragment  2 

Till  m  the  cool  east  light  Is  shut  out  Hesperides,  Song  iv  15 

Midst     One  shadow  in  the  w  of  a  great  light.  The  Mystic  21 

Midway     And  muse  m  with  philosophic  calm  Timbuctoo  146 

Might    The  heavy  thunder's  girding  m.  Chorus  13 

Mightier    '  There  is  no  m  Spirit  than  I  to  sway  The  heart 

of  man  :  Timbuctoo  195 

Mighty    I  felt  my  soul  grow  m,  and  my  spirit  „          90 

And  step  by  step  to  scale  that  m  stair  „        198 

One  m  countenance  of  perfect  calm,  The  Mystic  23 

The  burning  belts,  the  m  rings.  Chorus  23 

The  m  disk  of  their  majestic  sun,  Love  21 
If  so  be  that  the  memory  of  that  soimd  With  m 

evocation  Lover's  Tale  i  668 

Mild-minded    Thy  spirit  to  mrm  Melancholy ;  Check  every  outflash  3 

Milky     heart  deep  moans  Feed  and  envenom,  as  the  m 

blood  Of  hateful  herbs  a  subtle-f anged  snake.  Lover's  Tale  i  820 

Million    For  her  there  he  in  wait  m's  of  foes,  Sugg,  by  Reading  59 

Minaret    ranged  Chrysolite,  M's  and  towers  ?  Timbuctoo  236 

Mind    angel  m  which  look'd  from  out  The  starry  glowing  „          88 

indecision  of  my  present  m  With  its  past  clearness,  „        139 

Thronging  the  cells  of  the  diseased  m,  ShaU  the  hag  3 

'Tis  a  phantom  of  the  m.  Germ  oj' Maud    14 

Here  stood  the  infant  lUon  of  the  m,  Mabletfurrpe  6 

The  single  voice  may  speak  his  m  aloud ;  Sugg,  by  Reading  14 

for  fear  the  m  Rain  thro'  my  sight,  Lover  s  Tale  t  23 

Were  by  the  busy  m  referr'd,  compared,  ..         ^°4 

in  other  m's  Had  fihn'd  the  margents  »        .Jo^ 

Unto  the  growth  of  body  and  of  m ;  »       "  '* 

Minded    See  Mild-minded  ~    ^     ,  „ 

Mingle     You  did  m  blame  and  praise,  J-O  (>•  -iVonw  o 

Golden  calm  and  storm  M  day  by  day.  Every  day,  etc.^ 

Mingled    M  vnih  floating  music,  thus  he  spake :  Timbuctoo  194 

Minister'd    multitudes  That  m  aroimd  it--  ,    ^'  7    •  c«t 

till  they  m  Unto  her  swift  conceits  ?  Lovers  Tale  i  bte 

Ministering    With  m  hand  he  rais'd  me  up  ;  Timbuctaol^^ 

Mire    We  drag  so  deep  in  our  commercial  m,  Sugg,  by  Reading  50 

Mirth     and  om- m  Apes  the  happy  vein,  Every  day,  etc.  12 

Miserable    Who  was  cursed  But  I  ?  who  m  but  I :" 

Misery    M  Forgot  herself  in  that  extreme  distress, 

M,  Uke  a  fretful,  wayward  child,  "            ^o^ 

Mitylene    '  The  Gander '  and  '  The  man  of  M,  y  „f%L 

Mix    You  must  not  m  our  Queen  with  those  Harf  all  Round  53 

Mixed    Her  tears  are  m  with  the  bearded  dews.  /'  the  glooming  light  U 

Mizraim    Who  sailed  from  M  underneath  the  star  A  J^ragvmuo 

Moan     Ever  alone  She  maketh  her  m  :  I'  the  glooming  light  11 

heart  deep  m's  Feed  and  envenom, 
Jioaning    Worn  Sorrow  sits  by  the  m  wave  ; 


Lover's  Tale  i  627 
627 


Lover's  Tale  i  819 
r  the  glooming  light  4 


Moaning  (continued)    No  western  odours  wander  On  the 

black  and  m  sea.  Hero  to  Leandtr  29 

Sent  up  the  m  of  unhappy  spirits  Imprison'd  in 

her  centre,  Loter't  TaU  i  613 

Mob    waves  them  to  the  m  That  shout  below,  1).  of  F.  Women  5 

Mock    See  Arch-mock 

Moisture    Or  m  of  the  vapour,  left  in  clinging,  Lover's  Tale  ii  46 

Moment    to  look  on  for  a  m  fill'd  My  eyes  Timbttetoo  190 

lived  That  intense  m  thro'  eternity.  Lover's  TaU  i  496 

Momentary    Each  failing  sense  As  with  a  m  flash  of  light         Timbuctoo  97 
Monstrous    And  the  m  narwhale  swalloweth  His  foam- 
fountains  in  the  sea.  Lolot-Eaten  7 
Monument    Where  are  thy  m's  Piled                                      A  PragmeiU  19 
Moon    The  M's  white  cities,  and  the  opal  width                      Timbuetoo  101 
and  the  M  Had  fallen  from  the  night,  „        252 
The  white  m  is  hid  in  her  heaven  above.                       Hero  to  Leander  3 
And  portals  of  pure  silver  walks  the  m.                              Though  night  4 
come  between  The  m  and  the  m's  reflex  in  the  night ;     Shall  the  hag  13 
came  in  O'erhead  the  white  light  of  the  weary  m,        Lover' i  TaU  %  659 
Moon-encircled    planet-girded  Suns  And  m-e  planets,              Timbuctoo  110 
Moonlight  (adj.)     Where  are  yoiu*  m  halls,  vour  cedam  glooms,       „  43 
Moonlight  (S)     By  the  shuddering  m,  fix'd  his  eyes             Lover's  TaU  i  680 
Moonlit    The  many  pleasant  days,  the  m  nights,                           „             64 
Mope    Go,  get  you  gone,  you  muse  and  m —                         Skipping-rope  7 
Moral    With  m  breath  of  temperament.                                New  Timon  28 
Mom    Every  night  its  m :                                                     Every  daw,  tie.  2 
Heaven  weeps  above  the  earth  all  night  till  m.          Tears  of  HmsMn  1 
In  honour  of  the  silverfleck^  m :                               To  a  LtuUf  SUtp.  4 
Breathes  low  into  the  charmed  ears  of  m                         A  Fragment  25 
Hesper  hateth  Phosphor,  evening  hateth  m.         Hesperides,  Song  Hi  15 
Young  fishes,  on  an  April  m,                                                    Bosalimd  21 
thunders  through  your  vacant  courts  At  m  and  even  ;       Cambrid^  10 
eyes,  I  saw,  were  full  of  tears  in  the  m.                       Lover's  TaU  t  728 
Morning    It  was  a  glorious  m,  such  a  one  As  dawns                     „           901 
Mercuiy  On  such  a  m  would  have  flung  himself                      „            306 
Morrow  (adj.)    The  ocean  with  the  m  Ught  Will  be 

both  blue  and  cahn  ;  Hero  to  Leandtr  25 

Morrow  (s)    Sounding  on  the  m.  Home  they  brought  him  5 

Mortality    Thy  sense  is  clogg'd  with  dull  «,  Timbudoo  82 

Moscow    even  to  M's  cupolas  were  rolled  Blow  ye  the  trumptt  7 

Moslem    The  M  myriads  fell,  and  fled  before—  „  11 

Mo!»ed    By  a  TO  brookbank  on  a  stone  0  sad  Xo  mors  !  3 

Mother    from  his  m's  eyes  Flow  over  the  Arabian  bay,  A  Fragment  23 

To  fight  thy  m  here  alone,  Hands  all  Boumd  43 

Motion    with  hasty  m  I  did  veil  My  vision  Timbu<ioo  68 

We  have  had  enough  of  m,  Lotos-Eattn  1 

Moved  with  their  m's,  as  those  eyes  were  moved  With  m's  Lover's  TaU  i  72 

blood,  the  breath,  the  feeling  and  the  m,  ,.        it  75 

Motionless    And  blind  and  m  as  then  I  lay  !  ,.       t  619 

Mould    I  turn  To  you  that  m  men's  thoughts ;  Sugg,  by  Reading  86 

Mouldered    That  man's  the  best  Conservative  Who  lops 

the  m  branch  away.  Hands  all  Round  8 

Mound    Huge  m's  whereby  to  stey  his  yeasty  waves.  Ttmbuetoo  16 

Tilth,  hamlet,  mead  and  m:  D.  of  F.  Wom«»  4 

Mountain  (adj.)    And  first  the  chiUness  of  the  m  stream  -,,.-« 

Smote  on  my  brow,  Lover  s  TaU  %  662 

Mountain  (s)    I  stood  upon  the  M  which  o'erlooks  TtmbuOoo  1 

why  muse  you  here  alone  Upon  the  M,  „        78 

The  fountampregnant  m's  riven  To  shapes  C*om»3 

swxun  with  balanced  wings  To  some  tall  m.  Lovers  TaU  %  306 

had  shatter'd  from  The  m,  tiU  they  fell,  „  n  49 

Mountain-foot    As  the  sandfield  at  the  m-f.  Hespendes,  Song  1 7 

Mountain-peak    As  the  snowfield  on  the  m-p's,  ,"  ^  ,   •  «.»? 

Mounted    We  m  slowly  :  yet  to  both  of  us  It  was  dehghi.  Lovers  TaU  1 377 

Mounting    Higher  thro'  secret  splendours  m  still,  D.of  1-.  If  omen  11 

Mourn    The  duU  wave  m's  down  the  slope,  P  the  ^mtng  Itght  21 

the  culvers  m  AU  the  livelong  day.  tvery  day,  «fc.  M 

Mournful    Then  with  a  m  and  ineffable  smile,  Ttmbueloo  189 

Strove  to  uprise,  laden  with  m  thanks,  Lover  s  Taiex  748 

Move    Before  the  face  of  God  didst  breath  and  m,  ^*lJ 

it  shall  w»  In  music  and  in  light  o'er  land  and  sea.  n    j"i; 

We  m  80  far  from  greatness,  that  I  feel  Suaq.  by  RMdvu^i^ 

Almost  forgot  even  to  m  again.  lo'oer  s  Tale  t  353 

Moved    («e«  ato  First-moved)    And  be  w  around 

me  still  ^«^ "/   ■*'«'^    ^ 


Moved 


1190 


Noon 


Hoved  (cotitinued)    That  is  m  not  of  the  will. 

she  has  m  in  that  smooth  way  so  long, 

M  with  their  motions,  as  those  eyes  were  m 

from  his  spring  M  smiling  toward  his  summer. 
Moving    M  his  crest  to  all  sweet  plots  of  flowers 

(when  I  view  Fair  maiden  forms  m  Uke 
melodies), 

The  varied  earth,  the  m  heaven, 

moved  around  me  still  With  the  m  of  the  blood 
Mod-walled    Low-buUt,  m-w,  Barbarian  settlement, 
Moltitade    m's  of  m's  That  minister'd  around  it — 
Murder    And  m  was  her  freedom  overthrown. 
Murmur    rolled  The  growing  m's  of  the  Polish  war  ! 
Murmurous    The  m  planets'  rolling  choir. 
Muse  (s)    tried  the  M's  too  :  You  fail'd.  Sir : 
Muse  (verb)    why  m  you  here  alone  Upon  the  Mountain, 

And  m  midway  with  philosophic  cabn 

Go,  get  you  gone,  you  m  and  mope — 
Mus'd    And  much  I  m  on  legends  quaint  and  old 

while  I  TO  At  sunset,  imdemeath  a  shadowy  plane 
Music    flung  strange  m  on  the  howling  winds, 

Mingled  with  floating  m,  thus  he  spake  : 

lordly  TO  flowing  from  Th'  iUimitable  years. 

Pagods  himg  with  to  of  sweet  bells  : 

flings  Grand  m  and  redundant  fire, 

edicts  of  his  fear  Are  mellowed  into  m, 

In  TO  and  in  light  o'er  land  and  sea. 

For  the  blossom  xmto  three-fold  to  bloweth  ; 

And  the  sap  to  three-fold  m  floweth, 


Germ  of  '  Maud  '  21 
Sugg,  by  Reading  65 

Lover's  Tale  i  72 
307 

CovM  I  outwear  7 


There  are  three  things  3 

Chorus  1 

Germ  of '  Maud  '  20 

Timhuctoo  248 

183 

Britons,  guard  23 

Blow  ye  the  trumpet  8 

Chorus  24 

New  Timon  13 

Timbuctoo  77 

„      146 

Skipping-rope  7 

Timbuctoo  16 

There  are  three  things  9 

Timbuctoo  80 

„       194 

„      218 

„      234 

Chorus  22 

Love  8 

,..28 

Hesperides,  Song  i  17 

19 


Musical    And  Oberwinter's  vineyards  green,  M  Lurlei ;       0  darling  room  9 


Musically    The  crisped  waters  whisper  to, 

Chimeth  to  clear. 
Musky    With  roses  to  breathed. 
Musty    I  forgave  you  all  the  blame,  M  Christopher  ; 
Mute    M  his  tongue, 

Kotmd  about  all  is  to, 

Sleep  and  stir  not :  all  is  to. 
Myriad    The  Moslem  m's  fell,  and  fled  before — 
Myrrh    I  have  bathed  thee  with  the  pleasant  to  ; 
Mysterious    but  where,  M  Egypt,  are  thine  obelisks 
Mystery    was  rais'd  To  be  a  to  of  loveliness 

make  an  awful  to. 

Honour  comes  with  to  ; 
Mystic    Number,  tell  them  over  and  number  How 
many  the  to  fruit-tree  holds. 


N 


Nail    From  iron  limbs  and  tortured  n's  ! 
Naked    The  n  summer's  glowing  birth, 
Name    thou  of  later  n  Imperial  Eldorado 

Sainted  JuUet !  dearest  n  ! 

with  many  a  n  Whose  glory  will  not  die. 

And  the  great  n  of  England  round  and 
round  (repeat)  Hand^ 

fierce  old  man — to  take  his  n  You  bandbox. 

With  decent  dippings  at  the  n  of  Christ ! 

Think  not  thy  tears  will  make  my  n  grow  green, — 
Named    underneath  the  star  N  of  the  Dragon — 
Nameless    We  must  not  dread  in  you  the  n  autocrat. 
Narrow   I  stood  upon  the  Mountain  which  o'erlooks  The 
Narrower    Ye  were  yet  within  The  n  circle  ; 
Narwh^    monstrous  n  swalloweth  His  foamf oimtains 
Nathless     N  she  ever  clasps  the  marble  knees. 
Nation    God  save  the  N,  The  toleration. 
Native    That  man's  the  best  cosmopolite  Who  loves 

his  n  country  best. 
Hatore    Absorbed  me  from  the  n  of  itself 
You  prate  of  n  !  you  are  he  That  spilt 

Thin  dilletanti  deep  in  n's  plan, 

Or  in  the  art  of  iV, 

Warping  their  n,  till  they  minister'd 


Chsck  every  outfiash  7 

Rosalind  8 

Anacreontics  1 

To  C.  North  7 

Burial  of  Love  4 

Hesperides,  Song  i  5 

Blow  ye  the  trumpet  11 

Hero  to  Leander  19 

A  Fragment  12 

Timbuctoo  241 

Hesperides,  Song  i  16 

„  a  5 

8 


Hands  all  Round  16 

Chorus  16 

Timbuctoo  23 

To 1 

D.  of  F.  Women  15 

>■  all  Round  24, 48, 60 

New  Timon  43 

Su^g.  by  Reading  64 

Lover's  Tale  i  806 

A  Fragment  6 

Sugg,  by  Reading  18 

n  seas  ;   Timbuctoo  2 

The  Mystic  42 

Lotos-Eaters  7 

Timbuctoo  37 

Britons,  guard  27 

Hands  all  Round  4 

Timbuctoo  142 

New  Timon  39 

Sugg,  by  Reading  80 

Lover's  Tale  i  563 

665 


Dualisms  12 
Lover's  Tale  i  741] 


Neck    blue-glossed  n's  beneath  the  purple  weather. 

Parted  on  either  side  her  argent  n, 
Necked    See  High-necked 
Negligence    Strung  in  the  very  n  of  Art,  „  565 

Nerve     Can  it  overlast  the  n's  ?  Germ  of '  Maud  '  2( 

New  (adj.)     When  the  n  year  warm  breathed  on  the  earth.  Love  2i 

Already  with  the  pangs  of  a  w  birth  „     3< 

And  N  Year  and  Old  Year  met,  1865-1866  i 

And  N  Year  blowing  and  roaring.  „         IJ 

Green  springtide,  April  promise,  glad  n  year  Of  Being,    Lover's  Tale  i  271 

And  being  there  they  did  break  forth  afresh  In  a  n 
birth,  „  73: 

New  (s)    So  died  the  Old  :  here  comes  the  N  :  New  Timon  ' 

New-hewn    n-h  sepulchre,  Where  man  had  never  lain.       Lover's  Tale  i  71? 
New-risen     N-r  o'er  awakened  All)ion —  Cambridge  1 

Newstarred    The  Northwind  fall'n,  in  the  n  night  Zidonian 

Hanno, 
New  Year    And  N  Y  and  Old  Year  met. 

And  N  Y  blowing  and  roaring. 
Nigh    the  time  is  well  n  come  When  I  must  render  up 
Nigher    As  with  a  sense  of  n  Deity, 
Night    those  which  starr'd  the  n  o'  the  Elder  World  ? 

the  thick  n  Came  down  upon  my  eyelids. 

Like  a  swol'n  river's  gushings  in  still  n 

Moon  Had  fallen  from  the  n,  and  all  was  dark  ! 

chaunts  '  how  ?  '  '  how  ?  '  the  whole  of 
the  n.  The 

I'  the  glooming  light  Of  middle  n, 

EvEBY  day  hath  its  n  :  Every  n  its  mom  : 

The  n  is  dark  and  vast ; 

Always  there  stood  before  him,  n  and  day, 

Time  flowing  in  the  middle  of  the  n, 

One  very  dark  and  chilly  n  Pride  came 

Heavek  weeps  above  the  earth  all  n  till  mom, 

my  heart's  n  Thou  canst  not  lighten 

Thou  all  unwittingly  prolongest  n, 

N  hath  climbed  her  peak  of  highest  noon. 

All  n  through  archways  of  the  bridged  pearl 

between  The  moon  and  the  moon's  reflex  in  the  n 

n  and  pain  and  ruin  and  death  reign  here 


1865-1866 : 

i; 

Timbuctoo  24S 

Lover's  Tale  i  383 

Timbuctoo 

„       186 

„      19S 

,,      253 

How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  31 

/'  the  glooming  night  2 

Every  day,  etc.  1 

Hero  to  Leander  2 

The  Mystic  11 

.,;        39 

Love,  Pride,  etc.  5 

Tears  of  Heaven  1 

Love  and  Sorrow  10 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  7 

Though  night  1 

Shall  the  hag  13 
Love  4 


Looks  through  the  thickstemmed  woods  by  day  and  n 

As  round  the  rolling  earth  n  follows  day  : 

horizon  shine  Into  my  n  thou  art  far  away  ; 

Northwind  fall'n,  in  the  newstarrdd  n 

Guard  the  apple  n  and  day, 

heart  is  drunk  with  overwatchings  n  and  day, 

Father  Hesper,  watch,  watch,  n  and  day, 

Half  round  the  mantling  n  is  drawn. 

The  end  of  day  and  beginning  of  n 

Watch  it  warily  day  and  n  ; 

FiBST  drink  a  health,  this  solemn  n. 

To  kiss  it  n  and  day, 

Ringlet,  I  kiss'd  you  n  and  day. 

The  many  pleasant  days,  the  moonlit  n's, 

One  rainy  n,  when  every  wind  blew  loud, 
Nightingale    The  n,  with  long  and  low  preamble. 

Heard  neither  warbling  of  the  n, 
Nile    The  placid  Sphinxes  brooding  o'er  the  N  ? 


melody  flattering  the  crisped  N  By  columned  Thebes 


„  44 

Me  my  own  fate  10 

12 

The  Hesperides  1 

,  Song  i  28 

a  12 

Hi  1 

13 

iv  9 

13 

Hands  all  Round  1 

The  Ringlet  4 

26 

Lover's  Tale  i  54 

367 

Check  every  outfiash  9 

The  Hesperides  6 

A  Fragment  14 

26 


Blow  ye  the  trumpet  9 
New  Timon  3 

Sugg,  by  Reading  3 

'29 

28 

How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  10 

New  Timon  11 

Hands  all  Round  15 

No  more    O  sad  iV  to  !    O  sweet  N  m\    O  strange  TV  to  !    0  sad  No  more  !  1 

Low-buried  fathom  deep  beneath  with  thee,  N  M  \  „  9 

Nonnenwerth    For  I  the  N  have  seen,  0  darling  room  7 

Noon    (See  also  Midnoon)     Night  hath  climbed  her  peak  of 

highest  n.  Though  night  1 

sloped  Into  the  slumberous  simimer  n  ;  A  Fragment  11 

Stream  from  beneath  him  in  the  broad  blue  n,  D.  of  F.  Women  3 


Noble    Now  must  your  n  anger  blaze  out  more 

The  old  Timon,  with  his  n  heart, 

our  press  had  ever  been  The  public  conscience 
of  our  n  isle. 

Be  n,  you  !  nor  work  with  faction's  tools 
Nobler    You  should  be  all  the  n,  O  my  friends. 
Nod    The  bulrush  n's  unto  his  brother  The  ' 

Noise    A  Lion,  you,  that  made  a  n. 
Noisome    From  wronged  Poerio's  n  den. 


Noonday 

Noonday     Of  those  that  gaze  upon  the  n  Sun. 
Noontide    Hum  a  lovelay  to  the  westwind  at  n. 

At  n-t  beneath  the  lea  ; 
Northwind     JV  fall'n,  in  the  newstarr€d  night 
Note     And  w's  of  busy  life  in  distant  worlds 

ere  the  n  Hath  melted  in  the  silence  that  it  broke. 
Nothing    For  n  is,  but  all  is  made, 

0  fie,  you  golden  n. 
Now     But  what  is  the  meaning  of  then  and  n  !  The  '  How 
Number     N,  tell  them  over  and  n 


1191 


Pain 


Timbuctoo  71 

Ditalisrns  2 

Lotos-Eaters  6 

The  Hesperides  1 

Tirnhuctoo  113 

Oh,  Beauty  13 

01  'peovres  12 

The  Ringlet  43 

'  and  the  '  Why  '  22 

The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  7 


Oak     Why  the  heavy  o  groans,  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  15 

Such  hearts  of  o  as  they  be.  National  Song  4 

Oaken    So  on  an  o  sprout  A  goodly  acorn  grew  ;  Lost  Hope  5 

To  blow  the  battle  from  their  o  sides.  Britons,  guard  38 

Oar     We'll  lift  no  more  the  shattered  o,  Lotos-Eaters  23 

and  rowing  with  the  o,  „  39 

Obelisk    Her  o's  of  ranged  Chrysohte,  Timbuctoo  235 

Egypt,  are  thine  o's  Graven  with  gorgeous  emblems        A  Fragment  12 

Oberwinter    And  O's  vineyards  green,  0  darling  room  8 

Object    From  visible  o's,  for  but  dimly  now,  TimhvAitoo  135 

Oblivion    Did  fall  away  into  0.  Lover's  Tale  i  630 

Ocean     The  0  with  the  morrow  light  Hero  to  Leander  25 

Tossing  on  the  tossing  0,  Lotos-Eaters  3 

the  shore  Than  labour  in  the  o,  „  39 

Odorons     Blown  round  with  happy  airs  of  0  winds  ?  Timbuctoo  46 

Flooding  its  angry  cheek  with  0  tears.  Lover's  Tale  i  565 

Odour    And  o's  rapt  from  remote  Paradise  ?  Timbuctoo  81 

No  western  o's  wander  On  the  black  Hero  to  Leander  28 

O'erbear     Would  shatter  and  0  the  brazen  beat  Shall  the  hag  7 

O'ercanopied     Imperial  height  Of  Canopy  0.  Timbuctoo  166 

Offence     Whereby  to  guard  our  Freedom  from  0 —         Sugg,  by  Reading  38 

Offered     0  to  Gods  upon  an  altarthrone  ;  To 7 

Old  (adj.)     There  where  the  Giant  of  o  Time  infixed  Timbuctoo  11 

And  much  I  mus'd  on  legends  quaint  and  0  „  16 

To  know  thee  is  all  wisdom,  and  0  age  Is  but  to  know  thee  :       Love  15 
which  stood  In  the  midnoon  the  glory  of  0  Rhodes,  A  Fragment  2 

0  Memphis  hath  gone  down :  „  27 

Wrapped  round  with  spiced  cerements  in  0  grots  „  30 

From  an  o  garden  where  no  flower  bloometh.  Me  my  own  fate  7 

underneath  a  shadowy  plane  In  0  Bayona,  nigh 

the  Southern  Sea —  There  are  three  things  11 

Lest  the  0  wound  of  the  world  be  healed.        The  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  2 
Father,  0  Himla  weakens,  Caucasus  is  bold  and  strong.       „  7 

Your  portals  statued  with  0  kings  and  queens,  Cambridge  2 

The  0  Timon,  with  his  noble  heart,  ^'ew  Timon  3 

why  we  see  The  0  mark  of  rouge  upon  your  cheeks.  „        38 

The  fierce  o  man — to  take  his  name  You  bandbox.  „        43 

We  won  0  battles  with  our  strength,  the  bow.  Britons,  guard  44 

Headlong  they  plunge  their  doubts  among  o  rags 

and  bones.  Sugg,  by  Reading  72 

And  New  Year  and  0  Year  met,  1865-1866  2 

0  Year  roaring  and  blowing  ^       >.        12 

And  aU  the  quaint  0  scraps  of  ancient  crones,  Lover  s  Tale  i  288 

Old  (S)     So  died  the  0  :  here  comes  the  New  :  ^'ew  Timon  5 

Older     For  he  is  0  than  the  world.  The  Hesperides,  Song  u  16 

Old  Year    And  New  Year  and  0  ¥  met,  1865-1866  2 

0  ¥  roaring  and  blowing  t>  "j  •      if 

Omen    Go,  frightful  o's.  ^^gg.  by  Reading  85 

On    Over  their  crowned  brethren  0  and  Oph  ?  ^  Fragment  21 

One    but  only  seemed   0  shadow  in   the    midst  of  a 

great  Ught,  0  reflex  from  eternity  on  time,  0  mighty  ,     „     .  „, 

countenance  of  perfect  calm,  -^"^  Mystic  Zl 

0  very  dark  and  chilly  night  Pride  came  beneath 

and  held  a  light.  .  ,  Love,  Pride,  etc.  5 

CotTLD  I  outwear  my  present  state  of  woe  With  0       „    ,,  ,     ,         „ 
brief  winter  '^"^  ^  outwear  2 

0  cypress  on  an  inland  promontory.  Me  my  own  fate  8 

As  with  0  kiss  to  touch  thy  blessed  cheek.  .  Oh,  Beauty  8 

Should  he  land  here,  and  for  o  hour  prevaU,  BrUons,guard^ 

0  rainy  night,  when  every  wind  blew  loud,  Lover  s  laiet^ioi 


One  (corUmued)    And  yet  again,  three  shadows,  frootiiig  o, 

O  forward,  0  respectant,  three  but  o ;  The  Mystic  17 

Who  make  the  emphatic  0,  by  whom  is  aU,  Sugg,  by  Reading  81 

on-set    All  o-s  of  capricious  Accident,  Timbuetoo  26 

Onward    drove  them  0— made  them  sensible  ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  77 

nSf    ."^"^v  *^o^^  ^^'■  ^^^  S'"'*'^  lakes,  Timbuctoo  101 

open  (adj.)     (See  also  Hall-open)     where  no  gaze  Might  rest. 

stood  0,  2^g 

The  Sun  peeped  in  from  0  field.  Home  they  broiuht  him  6 

Ihe  written  secrets  of  her  inmost  soul  Lay  like  an 
o  scroll  before  my  view.  Lover's  Tale  i  601 

Was  not  the  South,  The  East,  the  West,  aU  o,  „  699 

Open  (verb)     0  thine  eye  and  see.'  Timbuetoo  84 

Open'd  o  far  into  the  outward.  And  never  closed  again.  Lover's  Tale  i  298 
Oph    Over  their  crowned  brethren  O.v  and  0?  A  Fragment  21 

Opinion     I  call  on  you  To  make  0  warlike,  Sugg,  by  Reading  87 

Opposite    And  the  great  bird  sits  on  the  o 

«  V     ,.^?V^^'  ^*«  '  ^<w  'and  the'  Why  '  28 

Orb    With  his  unutterable,  shining  o's,  Timbuetoo  67 

Organ-pipe     Nor  yet  your  solemn  o-p's  that  blow  Cambridge  8 

Orient    To  him  the  honey  dews  of  0  hope.  Lover's  Tale  i  675 

Other     Or  0  things  talkinjg  in  unknown  tongues,  Timbuetoo  112 

Investeth  and  ingirds  all  0  lives.  The  Myttie  46 

for  bitter  grief  Doth  hold  the  o  half  in  sovranty.  Love  and  Sorrow  5 

Then  might  thy  rays  pass  tliro'  to  the  o  side,  „            14 

Continuous  till  he  reached  the  0  sea.  The  Hesperides  13 

such  as  in  0  minds  Had  film'd  the  margents  of 

the  recent  wound.  Lover's  Tale  i  763 
For  me  all  0  Hopes  did  sway  from  that  \Miich 

hung  the  frailest :  „           857 

Ontflash    Check  every  0,  every  ruder  sally  Cheek  every  outfask  1 

Outgrow    0  The  wan  dark  coil  of  faded  suffering —  Couid  I  outwear  3 

Outset    Oh,  happy,  happy  o  of  my  days  !  Lover's  TaU  i  276 

Outspread    o  With  growth  of  shadowing  leaf  Timbuetoo  222 

Outward  (adj.)     I  seem'd  to  stand  Upon  the  a  veige  „        95 

Is  one  of  those  who  know  no  strife  Of  inward  woe  or  0  fear ;      RosaUmi  4 

With  her  to  whom  all  0  fairest  things  Lover's  TaU  i  383 

Outward  (s)    open'd  far  into  the  0,  And  never  closed  again.        „           296 

Outwear    Could  I  o  my  present  state  of  woe  Could  I  outsotar  1 

Overborne    Lest  my  heart  be  0,  Germ  of '  Maud '  6 

Overcome    unto  both  Delight  from  hardship  to  be  o  Lover's  Tale  i  379 

Overdoing    0  of  her  part  Did  fall  away  into  oblivion.  „            629 

Overhead    world's  mt  tempest  darkens  0 ;  Britons,  guard  2 

Overlast    Can  it  0  the  nerves  ?  Gmm  of '  Mamd '  26 

Overleap    but  0  All  the  petty  shocks  and  fears  Rosalimd  12 

Overlive    Can  it  0  the  eye  ?  Germ  of '  Maud '  27 

Overthrown  And  murder  was  her  freedom  o.  Britons,  guard  23 
Overwatching    heart  is  drunk  with  o's  night 

and  day.                                                      The  Hesperides,  Song  U  12 

Overwise  The  world  will  be  0.  „  22 
Owl  black  0  scuds  down  the  mellow  twilight,  The '  Hov  '  and  the '  Why '  30 
Own    Absorbed  me  from  the  nature  of  itself  With 

its  o  fleetness.  Timbuetoo  143 

For  she  bath  half  delved  her  o  deep  grave.  /'  the  gfoowumq  lijkt  7 

Into  her  0  blue  eyes  so  clear  and  deep,  Tears  of  Uemen  7 

Issue  of  its  o  substance,  my  heart's  night  Love  and  Sorrow  10 

Shall  be  steeped  in  his  0  salt  tear :  English  War  Song  15 

Me  my  0  fate  to  lasting  sorrow  doometh :  Me  my  otcnfate  1 
did  pause  To  worship  mine  o  image,  laved  in  light,       Lover's  Tale  i  68 

and  with  the  shock  Half  dug  their  o  graves),  „         ii  60 

And,  trampled  on,  left  to  its  o  decay.  «            81 

In  a  new  birth,  immingled  with  my  o,  „        i  732 


Pactolus     And  sailing  on  P  in  a  boat.  Pallid  thitnderstridcen  3 

Padded    What,  it's  you  The  p  man — that  wear  the  stays —     New  Timon  8 
Pagan    See  H^-pagan 

Pagod     Her  P's  hung  with  music  of  sweet  bells :  Timbuetoo  234 

Pain    so  kin  to  eartli  Pleasaunce  fathers  p —  Evrrv  day,  etc.  15 

How  scorn  and  ruin,  p  and  bate  could  flow :      Pallid  thunder  stricken  10 

Though  night  and  p  and  ruin  and  death  reign  here.  Love  4 

dazzled  to  the  heart  with  glorious  p.  There  are  three  things  14 


Paint 


1192 


Point 


Paint    And  I  p  the  beauteous  face  Germ  0/ '  Maud '  2 

Painted    'Gan  rock  and  heave  upon  that  p  sea ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  199 

Palace    They  seem'd  high  «'s  and  proud,  What  time  I  wasted  5 

Pale    and  the  stars  Were  flooded  over  with  clear  glory  and  p.    Timhuctoo  9 
Before  the  awful  Genius  of  the  place  Kneels  the  p  Priestess 

in  deep  faith,  »        34 

His  eyes  in  edipse,  P  cold  his  lips,  Burial  of  Love  2 

Most  p  and  clear  and  lovely  distances.  The  Mystic  35 

With  the  blissful  Lotos-eaters  p  We  will  abide  in 

the  golden  vale  Lotos-Eaters  25 

Gray  sand  banks  and  p  sunsets — dreary  wind,  Mablethorpe  7 

her  cheek  was  p.  Oh  !   very  fair  and  p  :  Lover's  Tale  i  724 

Paleness    very  spirit  of  P  made  still  paler  „  679 

Paler    very  spirit  of  Paleness  made  still  p  „  679 

Pallid     The  p  thunders tricken  sigh  for  gain,  Pallid  thunderstricJcen  1 

Palm    gardens  frequent  with  the  stately  P,  Timhuctoo  233 

Palpitating    And  sound  which  struck  the  p  sense,  „  119 

Pang    Already  with  the  p's  of  a  new  birth  Love  36 

Papillote     And  shook  a  mane  en  p's.  New  Timon  12 

Paradise    And  odours  rapt  from  remote  P  ?  Timhuctoo  81 

Parapet    Over  heaven's  p's  the  angels  lean.  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  10 

Pardon    Can  p  little  would-be  Popes  New  Timon  19 

Parent    crumbling  from  their  p  slope  At  slender  interval,       Timhuctoo  123 

Parliament    The  Court,  the  Church,  the  P,  the  crowd.    Siigg.  hy  Reading  16 

Part  (s)    P  of  a  throne  of  fiery  flame,  Timhuctoo  181 

And  with  tiie  overdoing  of  her  p  Lover's  Tale  i  629 

when  hope  died,  p  of  her  eloquence  Died  „  751 

Part  (verb)    whose  rapid  interval  P's  Af ric  from  green  Europe,    Timhuctoo  3 

Oh  kiss  me  ere  we  p ;  Hero  to  Leander  7 

Parted     Then  p  Heavenward  on  the  wing :  Timhuctoo  251 

P  on  either  side  her  argent  neck,  Lover's  Tale  i  740 

Pass     Do  p  from  gloom  to  glory,  Timhuctoo  153 

might  thy  rays  p  thro'  to  the  other  side,  Love  and  Sorrow  14 

We  pri'  thee  p  not  on;  (repeat)  The  lintwhite  31,  36 

Let  it  p,  the  dreary  brow.  Germ  of '  Maud '  22 

Passed     We  p  with  tears  of  rapture.  Lover's  Tale  i  409 

Passeth     he  p  by.  And  gulphs  himself  in  sands,  Timhuctoo  236 

Passing    P  through  thee  the  edicts  of  his  fear  Love  7 

Which  flll'd  the  Earth  with  p  loveliness,  Timhuctoo  79 

Oh,  Beauty,  p  beauty !  sweetest  Sweet !  Oh,  Beauty  1 

Past  (adj.)     The  indecision  of  my  present  mind  With  its 

>  p  clearness,  Timhuctoo  140 

Past  (s)    In  eternity  no  future.  In  eternity  no  p.    The  '  How  and  the  '  Why  '  7 

Pastured    Though  hourly  p  on  the  salient  blood  ?  Shall  the  hag  5 

Path    p  was  steep  and  loosely  strewn  with  crags  Lover's  Tale  i  376 

Could  he  not  walk  what  p's  he  chose,  „  692 

Pathos    With  dandy  p  when  you  wrote.  New  Timon  10 

Pathway    Yet  winds  the  p  free  to  all : —  What  time  I  wasted  8 

Pause  (s)    There  is  no  rest,  no  calm,  no  p,  ot ' piovres  9 

Pause  (verb)     did  p  To  worship  mine  own  image.  Lover's  Tale  i  67 

Paving    winter  p  earth  With  sheeny  white,  Chorus  18 

Peace    unshaken  p  hath  won  thee :  Though  night  10 

Peace-lovers  we — sweet  P  we  all  desire —  Britons,  guard  13 

Sneering  bedridden  in  the  down  of  P  Sugg,  hy  Reading  46 

Peaceful    Thy  Memnon,  when  his  p  lips  are  kissed  With 

earliest  rays,  A  Fragment  22 

Peace-lover    P-ls  we — sweet  Peace  we  all  desire —  Britons,  guzird  13 

P-l's  we — but  who  can  trust  a  liar  ? —  „  14 

P-l's,  haters  Of  shameless  traitors,  „  15 

Peak    (See  also  Mountain-peak)     Night  hath  climbed  her 

p  of  highest  noon.  Though  night  1 

Pearl    All  night  through  archways  of  the  bridged  p  „  3 

Pebbled    Leap  the  little  waterfalls  That  sing  into  the  p  pool.      Rosalind  24 
Pecoliar     In  that  blest  ground  but  it  was  play'd  about  With 

its  p  glory.  Timhuctoo  57 

Peeped     Sun  p  in  from  open  field,  Home  they  hrought  him  6 

Pen     you,  dark  Senate  of  the  public  p,  Sugg,  by  Reading  19 

People     That  wish  to  keep  their  p  fools  ;  Hands  all  Round  54 

To  raise  the  p  and  chastise  the  times  Sugg,  hy  Reading  5 

Let  both  the  j)'s  say,  God  bless  our  Prince  12 

Perfeet    The  cruellest  form  of  p  scora.  Burial  of  Love  18 

One  mighty  countenance  of  p  calm,  The  Mystic  23 

A  V  Idol,  with  profulgent  brows  A  Fragment  3 

When  we  two  meet  there's  never  p  light.  Me  my  own  fate  14 

PerikniS    And  scorn  of  p  seeming :  Lover's  Tale  i  380 


Perisheth    When  thy  light  p  That  from  thee  issueth,  The  lintwhite  13 

Permeating  I  am  the  Spirit,  The  p  life  which  courseth  through  Timhuctoo  220 
Permit    P  not  thou  the  tyrant  powers  Hands  all  Round  42 

Pertness    What  unheroic  p  ?  what  un-Christian  spite  !  Sugg,  hy  Reading  78 
Petal     Or  as  the  dew-drops  on  the  p  himg,  Lover's  Tale  i  558 

Petty    but  overleap  All  the  p  shocks  and  fears  Rosalind  13 

Peur     cavalier  Sans  p  et  sans  reproche,  The  Grasshopper  19 

Pew     Stands  in  her  p  and  hums  her  decent  psalm  Sugg,  hy  Reading  63 

Phantasy    wherewith  Her  p  informs  them.  Timhuctoo  40 

Phantom    'Tis  a  p  of  the  mind.  Germ  of '  Maud, '  14 

'Tis  a  p  fair  and  good  I  can  call  it  to  my  side,  „  15 

Pharaoh    The  P's  are  no  more :  A  Fragment  28 

Pharisees    Christ  cried  :  Woe,  woe,  to  P  and  Scribes  !   Sugg,  hy  Reading  75 
PhUosophic    And  muse  midway  with  p  calm  Timhuctoo  146 

Phosphor    Hesper  hateth  P,  evening  hateth  mom.  The  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  15 
Piast    0  for  those  days  of  P,  ere  the  Czar  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  5 

Pierce    shalt  thou  p  the  woven  glooms  of  truth ;  Though  night  11 

Pierced    p  through  and  through  with  all  Keen  knowledges     The  Mystic  29 
Piercing     A  maze  of  p,  trackless,  thrilling  thoughts  Timhuctoo  115 

Pile    chrystal  p  Of  rampart  upon  rampart,  „        162 

Piled    P  by  the  strong  and  sunborn  Anakim  A  Fragment  20 

Pillar    p's  high  Long  time  eras'd  from  Earth :  Timhuctoo  12 

Pillar'd    Stood  out  a  p  front  of  bumish'd  gold  „        175 

Pine     And  the  dark  p  weeps,  Lotos-Eaters  33 

And  close  above  us,  sang  the  wind-tost  p,  Lover's  Tale  i  60 

Pinewood    all  the  white-stemmed  p  slept  above —     Check  every  outflash  13 
Pipe    See  Organ-pipe 

Pipeth    The  Uttle  bird  p  '  why !  why ! '  The'  How '  and  the  '  Why '  26 

Pity    rare  p  had  stolen  The  living  bloom  Lover's  Tale  i  725 

Plac3  {See  also  Landing-place)  Before  the  awful  Genius  of  the  p  Timhuctoo  33 

But  the  glory  of  the  p  Stood  out  „        174 

This  is  the  p.  Check  every  ouijlash  4 

all  the  haunted  p  is  dark  and  holy.  „  8 

But  she  tarries  in  her  p  Germ  of '  Maud '  1 

Placid     Thy  p  Sphinxes  brooding  o'er  the  Nile  ?  A  Fragment  14 

Plain     (See  also  Summerplain)     With  all  her  interchange 

of  hill  and  p  Lover's  Tale  i  694 

Plaining     Drooping  and  beaten  with  the  p  wind,  „  735 

Plan     Thin  dilletanti  deep  in  nature's  p,  Sugg,  hy  Reading  80 

Plane     underneath  a  shadowy  p  In  old  Bayona,       There  are  three  things  10 

Planet    planet-girded  Suns  And  moon-encircled  p's,  Timhuctoo  110 

The  murmurous  p's'  rolling  choir,  Chorus  24 

As  dwellers  in  lone  p's  look  upon  The  mighty  disk  Love  20 

Planet-girded    p-g  Sims  And  moon-encircled  planets,  Timhuctoo  109 

Plant     Hope  is  dried, — the  life  0'  the  p —  Lover's  Tale  i  808 

Planting    P  my  feet  against  this  mound  of  time  „  492 

Play     I  p  about  his  heart  a  thousand  ways,  Timhuctoo  205 

you  hearts  are  tennis  balls  To  p  with,  Rosalind  33 

Play  d     it  was  p  about  With  its  peculiar  glory.  Timhuctoo  56 

Playmate     that  thought  Which  was  the  p  of  my  youth —  Lover's  Tale  ii  72 

Pleached     P  with  her  hair,  in  mail  of  argent  light    Pallid  thunder  stricken  12 

the  p  ivy  tress  had  wound  Round  my  worn  limbs,       Lover's  Tale  i  637 

Pleasant    Some  say  this  life  is  p,  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  3 

Thy  p  wiles  Forgotten,  and  thine  innocent  joy  ?  Burial  of  Love  15 

I  have  bathed  thee  with  the  p  myrrh ;  Hero  to  Leander  19 

The  p  stars  have  set !  „  39 

Surely  all  p  things  had  gone  before,  O  sad  No  more .'  7 

The  many  p  days,  the  moonlit  nights.  Lover's  Tale  i  54 

'Tis  a  beautiful  And  p  meditation,  „         240 

Pleasaunce    so  kin  to  earth  P  fathers  pain —  Every  day,  etc.  15 

Please     But  you.  Sir,  you  are  hard  to  p ;  New  Timon  25 

Pleased     nor  breathe  What  airs  he  p  !  Lover's  Tale  i  693 

Pleasure     We  shall  lose  eternal  p.  The  Hesperides,  Song  i  11 

Plot    Moving  his  crest  to  all  sweet  p's  of  flowers  Could  I  outwear  7 

Ploughed     A  GATE  and  a  field  half  p,  A  gate  and  a  field  1 

Plunder'd    His  ruthless  host  is  bought  witli  p  gold,  Britons,  guard  7 

Plunge     they  p  their  doubts  among  old  rags  and  bones.  Sugg,  by  Reading  72 

Plunged     and  following,  p  Into  the  dizzy  chasm  Lover's  Tale  i  369 

Poerio     From  wronged  P  s  noisome  den,  Hands  all  Round  15 

Poet     No  Tithon  thou  as  p's  feign  The  Grasshopper  5 

p  at  his  will  Lets  the  great  world  flit  from  him,  D.  of  F.  Women  9 

All  unawares,  into  the  p's  brain ;  Lover's  Tale  i  557 

Poetic    To  have  the  deep  p  heart  Is  more  than  all  p  fame.     New  Tirnon  23 

Point    Distinct  and  vivid  with  sharp  p's  of  light  Timhuctoo  107 

With  p's  of  blastborne  hail  their  heated  eyne  !  Shall  the  hag  11 


Poised 


1193 


Ranged 


Poised    (See  also  Self-poised)    Though  long  ago  listening 

the  p  lark,  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  8 

Poles    Arise,  brave  P,  the  boldest  of  the  bold ;  Bloio  ye  the  trumpet  3 

Polish    rolled  The  growing  murmurs  of  the  P  war  !  „  8 

Polish'd    Flowing  between  the  clear  and  p  stems,  Timbuctoo  51 

Pomeranian    on  the  Baltic  shore  Boleslas  drove  the  P.  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  14 
Pool    waterfalls  That  sing  into  the  pebbled  p.  Eosalind  24 

Poor    P  soul !  behold  her :  what  decorous  calm  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  61 

Pope     For  the  French  the  P  may  shrive  'em,  (repeat)    National  Song  9,  27 


pardon  little  would-be  P's  And  Brummels, 

The  P  has  bless'd  him ; 
Poplar    Through  yonder  p  alley  Below, 
Poppy    So  I  wove  Even  the  diil-blooded  p, 
Pordl    length  of  p  and  lake  and  boundless  hall, 
Portal    p's  of  pure  silver  walks  the  moon. 

Your  p's  statued  with  old  kings  and  queens, 
Pour    And  the  foam- white  waters  p ; 
Pouring     Waves  on  the  shingle  p, 
Power    I  have  fill'd  thy  lips  with  p. 

and  apart  In  intellect  and  p  and  will, 

One  of  the  shining  winged  p's. 

Permit  not  thou  the  tyrant  p's 

What  p  is  yours  to  blast  a  cause  or  bless  ! 

Lest  you  go  wrong  from  p  in  excess. 

I  grant  you  one  of  the  great  P's  on  earth, 

But  knowing  all  your  p  to  heat  or  cool, 
Powerful    All  p  in  beauty  as  thou  art. 
Practise    Now  p,  yeomen,  Like  those  bowmen, 
Praise    You  did  mingle  blame  and  p, 

I  could  not  forgive  the  p. 
Prance    The  boy  began  to  leap  and  p, 
Prate     You  p  of  nature  !  you  are  he  That  spilt  his  life 
Pray    See  Pri'  ttiee  ,    _  ,   .  „„„ 

Pray'd     He  worked  for  both :  he  p  for  both :  Lover  slalei  22d 

I  p  aloud  to  God  that  he  would  hold  „  791 

Preach    words  of  little  children  p  Against  you,—  Cambridge  12 

0  Grief  and  Shame  if  while  I  p  ot  laws  Sugg,  by  Reading  37 

Preached     Five  and  three  (Let  it  not  be  p  abroad)  The  Hespendes,  Song  i^l6 


New  Timon  19 

Britons,  guard  3 

Check  every  outflash  4 

Lover's  Tale  i  342 

Timbuctoo  180 

Though  night  4 

Cambridge  2 

Lotos-Eaters  32 

1865-1866  11 

Timbuctoo  215 

The  Mystic  38 

What  tim£  I  wasted  2 

Hands  all  Round  42 

Sugg,  by  Reading  8 

10 

23 

31 

Love  and  Sorrow  12 

Britons,  guard  45 

To  C.  North  3 


Home  they  brought  him  7 
New  Tirrwn  39 


Check  every  outflash  9 

Lover's  Tale  ii  78 

Timbuctoo  128 


Preamble    nightingale,  with  long  and  low  p, 
Precious    The  p  jewel  of  my  honour'd  life, 
Precursor    more  fleet  and  strong  Than  its  p, 
Pregnant    See  Fountain  pregnant 
Prepare    loud  and  long,  the  warning-note :  P ! 
Presence    I  have  given  thee  To  understand  my  p, 

The  imperishable  p's  serene, 

p's  Fourf aced  to  four  comers  of  the  sky ; 

Present  (adj.)     The  indecision  of  my  p  mind  With  its  past      ^.    ^    ^     ,„„ 

clearness  Timbuctoo  139 

Could  I  outwear  my  p  state  of  woe  P°''fl  "^^^l^ll 

Present  (s)     In  time  there  is  no  p,  The   How    and  the    Why   5 

Press    p  had  ever  been  The  public  conscience  Sugg,  by  Reading  ^ 

O  you,  the  P!  what  good  from  you  might  spring  ! 

nor  the  P !  and  look  you  well  to  that;^ — 
Pressure    lake  From  p  of  descendant  crags, 
Prevail    Should  he  land  here,  and  for  one  hour  p, 
Pride    {See  also  Summerpride)    P  came  beneath  and 
held  a  light. 

P  took  Love's  sweets,  and  by  a  spell 

Memory  tho'  fed  by  P  Did  wax  so  thin  on  gall, 

in  the  p  of  beauty  issuing  A  sheeny  snake. 
Priest    By  lying  p's  the  peasant's  votes  controlled. 
Priestess     Kneels  the  pale  P  in  deep  faith. 
Prime    dewy  p  Of  youth  and  buried  time  ? 
Prince    God  bless  our  P  and  Bride ! 
Pri'  thee    We  p  t  pass  not,  (repeat) 
Privacy     But  yours  are  not  their  homestead  privacies 
Privilege    Take  heed  of  your  wide  p's  ! 
Proctor    Your  doctors  and  your  p's  and  your  deans 
Profess    ye  that  did  p  to  teach  And  have  taught  nothing 
Profit    What  p's  now  to  understand  rWc  7^,7^7290 

what  p's  it  To  tell  ye  that  her  father  died,  ^a  Fran'nLTd 

Profulgent    A  perfect  Idol,  with  p  brows  h„„/ J/ ffS26 

Progrefs  if  FraL  be  she  Whom  niai^tialp  only  charms?  Hand^fRoM 
Promontory    One  cypress  on  an  inland  p.  3iemyownj_    ^ 

voyaging  beyond  The  hoary  p  of  Soloe 


Sugg,  by  Reading  90 

Timbuctoo  214 

The  Mystic  13 

15 


7 
17 

Timbuctoo  122 
Britons,  guard  55 

Love,  Pride,  etc.  6 

9 

11 

Could  I  outwear  5 

Britons,  guard  8 

Timbuctoo  34 

Who  can  say  6 

God  bless  our  Prince  1 

The  lintwhite  31,  36 

Su^g.  by  Reading  22 

Cambridge  5 
13 


The  Hesperides  3 


ShaU  the  hag  2 

What  lime  I  wasted  5 

The  Grasshopper  9 

Lover's  Tale  ii  80 

tSOS 

Timbuctoo  12 

Sugg,  by  Reading  63 

3 

19 

21 

26 

The  Mystic  44 

Though  nialU,  etc.  4 

Lover's  Tale  i  765 

n  400 

The  Mystic  10 

Zom34 

Dualisms  13 

A  Fragment  4 


Propagate    Or  p  again  her  loatbM  kind. 
Proud    They  seem'd  high  palaces  and  p, 
Prove    P  their  falsehood  and  thy  quarrel, 
Proved     Now  p  counterfeit,  was  shaken  out, 
Proverb    till  their  love  Shall  ripen  to  a  p 
Prowess    infixed  The  limits  of  his  p. 
Psalm    Stands  in  her  pew  and  hums  her  decent  p 
Public    The  p  conscience  of  our  noble  isJe, 

And  you,  dark  Senate  of  the  p  pen, 

Yours  are  the  p  acts  of  p  men. 

For  better  so  you  fight  for  p  ends ; 
Pure    P  without  heat,  into  a  larger  air  Upbumiog, 

And  portals  of  p  silver  walks  the  moon. 

And  why  was  I  to  darken  their  p  love, 
Purest    starr'd  at  slender  intervals  With  blossom  tufts 

of  p  white ; 
Purified    Had  p,  and  chastened,  and  made  free. 
Purple    Waiting  to  light  him  with  his  p  skies. 

Arching  blue-glossed  necks  beneath  the  p  weather. 

Far  sheening  down  the  p  seas  to  those 

Lest  the  redcombed  dragon  slumber  Boiled 
together  in  p  folds.  The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  10 

Purplefringed    P  with  even  and  dawn.  „  Hi  14 

Purport    Keeping  unchanged  The  p  of  their  coinage.  Lover's  Tale  i  734 

Push'd    watcher's  at  heaven's  gate,  p  them  apart,  „  616 

Pushing    P  the  thick  roots  aside  The  Grasshopper  37 

Put    '  Then  take  it,  love,  and  p  it  by ;  The  Ringlet  11 

'  Then  kiss  it,  love,  and  p  it  by :  „  23 

'  Come,  kiss  it,  love,  and  p  it  by :  „  41 

Ringlet,  You  p  me  much  to  shame,  „  48 

Pyramids    upsprung  the  dazzling  Cones  Of  P,  Timbuctoo  160 

P  Broad-based  amid  the  fleeting  sands,  A  Fragment  9 

Q 

Quaint    And  much  I  mus'd  on  legends  q  and  old 

And  all  the  q  old  scraps  of  ancient  crones. 
Quarrel    Prove  their  falsehood  and  thy  q. 
Queen    Your  portals  statued  with  old  kings  and  q's, 

'  God  save  the  Q '  is  here  a  truer  crj-. 

You  must  not  mix  our  Q  with  those 

God  save  the  Q  !  (repeat)  God 

God  bless  the  Q. 
Quench'd    White  as  q  ashes,  cold  as  were  the  hopes 

my  lorn  love ! 
Quest    my  refluent  health  made  tender  q 
Quick    Severe  and  q  to  feel  a  civic  sin. 

As  even  then  the  torrent  of  q  thought  Absorbed 


Timbuctoo  16 

Lover's  TaU  i  288 

TheGrasshtypperi 

Cambndoe2 

Britons,  guari  96 

Hands  alt  Bound  Si 

bless  our  Prinee  3,  7, 10 

14 

Of 

Lover's  Tale  i  620 

742 

Sugg,  by  Reading  4 

me  Timbuctoo  141 


Race    Kin^oms  lapse,  and  climates  change,  and 

r's  die ;  The 

She  comprehends  the  r  she  rules. 

Some  vast  Assyrian  doom  to  burst  upon  our  r. 
Rack'd    She  feels  not  how  the  social  frame  is  r, 
Radiance    showering  circular  abyss  Of  r. 
Rag    they  plunge  their  doubts  among  old  r's  and  bones. 
Rage    We  beat  upon  our  aching  hearts  with  r ; 
Rain  (s)     Hark  how  the  wild  r  hisses, 

hath  drawn  the  frozen  r  From  my  cold  eves 

Dim  shores,  dense  r's,  and  heavy  clouiied  sea. 

the  dew,  the  sun,  the  r.  Under  the  growth  of  body 
Rain  (verb)     for  fear  the  mind  R  thro'  my  sight, 
Rainy    One  r  night,  when  every  wind  blew  loud. 
Raise    To  r  the  people  and  chastise  the  times 
Rais'd     I  r  My  voice  and  cried  '  Wide  Af  no. 

With  ministering  hand  he  r  me  up ; 

I  have  r  thee  higher  to  the  Spheres  o(  Heaven, 

I  was  r  To  be  a  mystery  of  loveliness 
Rampart    chrvstal  pile"  Of  r  upon  r,  dome  on  dome. 
Ran    That  r  bloombright  into  the  Atlantic  blue, 

legend  r  that,  long  time  since,  One  rainy  night. 
Range    r  of  battlement  On  battlement, 
RangM    Her  obelisks  of  r  Chrysolite, 


Hesperides,  Song  U  4 
Hands  aU  Bound  66 
Sugg,  by  Reading  4S 

Timbuctoo  174 

Su^.  by  Reading  72 

Love  18 

Hero  to  Lrander  14 

Could  I  outwear  13 

Mttblethorpe  8 

Lover's  Tide  ii  73 

•  24 

367 

Sugg,  by  Reading  5 

Timbuctoo  67 

188 

216 

.,       240 

.,       163 

The  Hesperides  9 

Lover's  Tale  i  366 

Timbuctoo  164 

-       836 


Timbuctoo  2 

117 

Chorus  2 

Rosalind  22 

Lover's  Tale  i  371 

Timbuctoo  81 

„       121 


Rapid 

Rapid    whose  r  interval  Parts  Afric  from  green  Europe, 
Involving  and  embracing  each  with  each  R  as  fire, 
The  r  waste  of  roving  sea, 
Up  and  down  a  r  river,  Leap  the  little  waterfalls 

Sheer  thio'  the  black -wall'd  cliff  the  r  brook 
Rapt    And  odours  r  from  remote  Paradise  ? 

hurried  through  The  riv'n  r  brain : 
Rapture    Intense  delight  and  r  that  I  breathed.  Lover's  Tale  i  381 

We  passed  with  tejirs  of  r.  „  409 

Rare    outspread  With  growth  of  shadowing  leaf  and 

clusters  r,  Timbuctoo  223 

r  pity  had  stolen  The  living  bloom  away,  Lover's  Tale  i  725 

Ravish'd     and  thou  with  r  sense  Listenest  the  lordly  music 

flowing  from  Th'  illimitable  years.  Timbuctoo  217 

Raw     To  soothe  a  civic  wound  or  keep  it  r,  Sugg,  by  Reading  32 

Ray     might  thy  r's  pass  thro'  to  the  other  side,  Love  and  Sorrow  14 

peaceful  lips  are  kissed  With  earliest  r's,  A  Fragment  23 

Reached    he  had  well  nigh  r  The  last,  The  Mystic  42 

Continuous  till  he  r  the  other  sea.  The  Hesperides  13 

Reacheth    R  to  every  comer  under  Heaven,  Timbuctoo  224 

Read     Ye  could  not  r  the  marvel  in  his  eye.  The  Mystic  4 

Wherein  to  r,  wherein  to  write,  (repeat)  0  darling  room  6,  18 

I  sorrow  when  I  r  the  things  you  write,  Sugg,  by  Reading  77 

And  my  eyes  r,  they  r  aright.  Lover's  Tale  i  602 

Reap    doth  the  fruit  of  her  dishonour  r.  Tears  of  Heaven  5 

Recall    r's  the  dewy  prime  Of  youth  Who  can  say  6 

Recent    Had  film'd  the  margents  of  the  r  woimd.  Lover's  Tale  i  764 

Reckoning     Jesuit  laughs,  and  r  on  his  chance,  Britons,  guard  32 

Reclined    How  often,  when  a  child  I  lay  r,  Mablethorpe  1 

Red  (adj.)    And  in  r  Autumn  when  the  winds  are  wild  With 

gambols,  Timbuctoo  202 

So  I  wove  Even  the  dull-blooded  poppy,  '  whose  r 

flower  Hued  with  the  scarlet  of  a  fierce  sunrise.        Lover's  Tale  i  342 

as  tho'  a  r  rose  Should  change  into  a  white  one  suddenly.  „  726 

Red  (s)     Ringlet,  She  blush'd  a  rosy  r,  The  Ringlet  36 

Redcombed    Lest  the  r  dragon  slumber  Rolled 

together  in  purple  folds.  The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  9 

Redolent    Every  flower  and  every  fruit  the  r  breath  „  iv  1 

Redundant    Each  sun  which  from  the  centre  flings  Grand 

music  and  r  fire.  Chorus  22 

Reed    crushing  the  thick  fragrant  r's  he  lies,  Love  32 

Referr'd    by  the  busy  mind  r,  compared,  Lover's  Tale  i  384 

Reflex    waves,  which  bore  The  r  of  my  City  in  their  depths.     Timbuctoo  239 

One  r  from  eternity  on  time.  The  Mystic  22 

between  The  moon  and  the  moon's  r  in  the  night ;  Shall  the  hag  13 

Refluent    After  my  r  health  made  tender  quest  Lover's  Tale  i  742 

Refuge    men's  hopes  and  fears  take  r  in  The  fragrance  Timbuctoo  226 

Refused     R  to  look  his  author  in  the  face.  Lover's  Tale  i  697 

Regard    comes  the  New :  R  him :  New  Timon  6 

Region     with  which  a  r  of  white  flame.  The  Mystic  43 

Regulate    wondrous  laws  which  r  The  fierceness  Timbuctoo  147 

Reign     R  thou  above  the  storms  of  sorrow  Though  night  9 

night  and  pain  and  ruin  and  death  r  here.  Li/ve  4 

Remaining    and  yet  R  from  the  body,  The  Mystic  37 

Remember    I  well  r,  It  was  a  glorious  morning,  Lover's  Tale  i  300 

Remorseful    and  the  heat  Of  the  r  soul  alive  within,  „  682 

Remote     And  odours  rapt  from  r  Paradise  ?  Timbuctoo  81 

Rend    roaring  brine  Will  r  thy  golden  tresses ;  Hero  to  Leander  24 

Oh  !  r  the  veil  in  twain :  Love  25 

Render     I  must  r  up  this  glorious  home  Timbuctoo  243 

Renewing     I  thus  hope  my  lost  delights  r.  Could  I  outwear  9 

Renown 'd    Upon  his  r  Eminence  bore  globes  Of  wheeling 

suns,  Timbuctoo  171 

Reproche     cavalier  Sans  peur  et  sans  r.  The  Grasshopper  19 

R^pectability    The  British  Goddess,  sleek  R.  Sugg,  by  Reading  54 

Re^)ectaat    One  forward,  one  r,  three  but  one ;  The  Mystic  18 

Rest  (s)    There  is  no  r,  no  calm,  no  paase,  ot  'piovm  9 

Worth  eternal  want  of  r.  The  Hesperides,  Song  i  12 

Mellowed  in  a  land  of  r ;  „  iv  12 

Rest  (verb)     where  no  gaze  Might  r,  stood  open,  Timbuctoo  179 

An  artist,  Sir,  should  r  in  art,  New  Timon  21 

Off,  and  let  him  r.  „  44 

Rested    Wherein  we  r  sleeping  or  awake,  Lover's  Tale  i  227 

Restless    The  starry  glowing  of  his  r  eyes.  Timbuctoo  89 

the  level  calm  Is  ridg'd  with  r  and  increasing  spheres  „        125 


1194 


Robed 


Resumeth     In  summer  still  a  summer  joy  r.  Me  my  own  fate  4 

Retir'd    r  At  midnight,  in  the  lone  Acropolis.  Timbuctoo  31 

Return     islanders  of  Ithaca,  we  will  r  no  more.  Lotos-Eaters  40 

some  you  strike  can  scarce  r  the  blow ;  Sugg,  by  Reading  27 

Retumest     Thou  goest  and  r  to  His  Lips  Like  hghtning :  Love  12 

Revealed     And  the  ancient  secret  r.  The  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  5 

Revel     In  thine  hour  of  love  and  r.  The  Grasshopper  35 

Revenge     Till  Love  have  his  full  r.  Burial  of  Love  30 

Reverence     Our  ancient  boast  is  this — we  r  law.  Sugg,  by  Reading  34 

Review    You  did  late  r  my  lays.  To  C.  North  1 

Rhene  (Rhine)     where  the  R  Curves  towards  Mentz,  0  darling  room  11 


Rhine    {See  also  Rhene)     To  take  Sardinia,  Belgium,  or 

the  J?: 
Rhodes     In  the  midnoon  the  glory  of  old  R, 
Rhyme     The  cause  is  nowhere  found  in  r. 

such  a  heat  as  hves  in  great  creative  r's. 

Those  r's,  '  The  Lion  and  the  Unicom ' 
Ribbed    See  Thick-ribbed 

Rich    Wax -lighted  chapels  and  r  carved  screens. 
Ridden    See  Soldier-ridden 
Riddle    Who  will  r  me  the  how  and  the 

why?  (repeat)  The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why '  9,  20 

Who  will  r  me  the  how  and  the  what  ?      Who 
will  r  me  the  what  and  the  why  ? 
Ridge    he  stood  beside  me  There  on  the  r, 

On  the  r  of  the  hill  his  banners  rise ; 
Ridg'd    r  with  restless  and  increasing  spheres 
Rift    horrid  r's  Sent  up  the  moaning 
Right    Shout  for  God  and  our  r ! 

In  any  town,  to  left  or  r, 

Or  loyally  disloyal  battled  for  oiu"  r's. 
Righteousness    Gothe  them  with  r, 
Ring     The  burning  belts,  the  mighty  r's, 

In  r's  of  gold  yronne, 

shot  the  sunset,  In  light  r's  round  me  ; 
Ringing    There  was  a  r  in  my  ears. 

It's  always  r  in  your  ears. 
Ringlet     '  Youe  r's,  your  r's, 

'  My  r,  my  r.  That  art  so  golden-gay, 

O  ^,  0  i?,  I  kiss'd  you  night  and  day. 

And  R,  O  R,  You  still  are  golden-gay, 

But  R,  O  R,  You  should  be  silver-gray : 

O  R,0  R,  She  blush'd  a  rosy  red. 

When  R,  0  R,  She  dipt  you  from  her  head, 

And  R,  O  jR,  She  gave  you  me, 

O  jR,  0  ^,  I  count  you  much  to  blame, 

For  R,  O  R,  You  put  me  much  to  shame. 

So  R,  0  R,I  doom  you  to  the  flame. 

r's.  Drooping  and  beaten  with  the  plaining  wind,  Lover's  Tale  i  734 
Ripen     till  their  love  Shall  r  to  a  proverb  „  803 

Ripened    Sunset  r,  above  on  the  tree,  The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  21 

Ripeneth    redolent  breath  Of  this  warm  seawind  r,  „  2 

Rise  (s)     alternate  r  Of  interpenetrated  arc,  Timbuctoo  130 

Rise  (verb)     On  the  ridge  of  the  hill  his  banners  r ;        English  War  Song  25 

R,  Britons,  r,  if  manhood  be  not  dead ;  Britons,  guard  1 

0  r,  our  strong  Atlantic  sons.  Hands  all  Round  49 

Risen    See  New-risen 

Rising     In  r  and  in  falling  with  the  tide,  Lover's  Tale  i  62 

Riven     mountains  r  To  shapes  of  wildest  anarchy.  Chorus  3 

hurried  through  The  r  rapt  brain :  Timbuctoo  121 

River     Like  a  swol'n  r's  gushings  in  still  night  „  193 

See'st  thou  yon  r,  whose  translucent  wave,  „         229 

Nor  the  r's  now,  nor  the  sweet  birds  sing.  Burial  of  Love  29 

the  blue-green  r  windeth  slowly ;  Check  every  ouiflash  5 

Up  and  down  a  rapid  r,  Rosalind  22 

Roam     they  r  together  Under  a  summervault  Dualisms  17 

And  no  more  r,  On  the  loud  hoar  foam,  Lotos-Eaters  18 

Roar    And  the  loud  sea  r's  below.  Hero  to  Leander  15 

storms  of  sorrow  and  ruth  That  r  beneath ;  Though  night  10 

But  let  thy  broadsides  r  with  ours.  Hands  all  Round  44 

Roaring     And  winds  were  r  and  blowing ;  1865-1866  3 

Old  Year  r  and  blowing  And  New  Year  blowing  and  r.  „       12 

To-night  the  r  brine  Will  rend  thy  golden  tresses ;  Hero  to  Leander  23 
Robe  glistering  sands  that  r  The  understream.  Pallid  thunderstricken  5 
Rob^d    See  White-robed 


Britons,  guard  50 

A  Fragment  2 

Who  can  say  8 

Sugg,  by  Reading  6 

Lover's  Tale  i  285 

Cambridge  4 


36 

Timbuctoo  66 

English  War  Song  25 

Timbuctoo  125 

Lover's  Tale  i  612 

English  War  Song  50 

0  darling  room  14 

Sugg,  by  Reading  36 

God  bless  our  Prince  4 

Chorus  23 

The  lintwhite  29 

Lover's  Tale  i  438 

O  sad  No  mm-e  !  5 

New  Timon  31 

The  Ringlet  1 

13 

25 

27 

29 

35 

37 

39 

45 

47 

49 


Rock 


1195 


Scroll 


Rock     ^^'hy  the  r's  stand  still,  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  14 

'Gan  r  and  heave  upon  that  paint«d  sea ;  Lover's  Tale  ii  199 

-       Rocked     Two  bees  within  a  chrystal  flowerbell  r  Dvalisms  1 

Rock-hewn     grots  R-h  and  sealed  for  ever.  A  Fragment  31 

Rod     The  Kussian  whips  and  Austrian  r's —  Hands  all  Round  18 

Rode     R  upon  his  father's  lance,  Home  they  brought  him  8 

Roll    nor  with  the  thoughts  that  r,  Cambridge  11 

Rolled    (See  also  Down-roU'd)     R  together  in 

purple  folds.  The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  10 

r  The  growing  murmurs  of  the  Polish  war  !  Bloiv  ye  the  trum-pet  7 

Rolling     The  murmurous  planets'  r  choir,  Chorus  24 

As  round  the  r  earth  night  follows  day  :  Me  my  own  fate  10 

Rome     R's  dearest  daughter  now  is  captive  France,  Britons,  guard  31 

Roof  (s)     the  r  and  crown  Of  all  I  hoped  and  fear'd  ?  Lover's  Tale  ii  27 

Roof  (verb)     Winter  r's  The  headland  with  inviolate  Tltnbuctoo  203 

Roof'd     Imperial  Eldorado  r  with  gold :  „  24 

Room    O  DARLING  r,  my  heart's  delight.  Dear  r,  the 

apple  of  my  sight,  0  darling  room  1 

There  is  no  r  so  exquisite,  No  little  r  so  warm  and  bright  „  4 

A  little  r  so  exquisite,  „  15 

Not  any  r  so  warm  and  bright,  „  17 

Root     Pushing  the  thick  r's  aside  The  Grasshopper  37 

Standing  about  the  charmed  r.  The  Hesperides,  Song  i  4 

From  the  r  Drawn  in  the  dark,  „  20 

Standing  about  the  charmed  r.  „  iv  34 

by  our  ears,  the  huge  r's  strain  and  creak).  Lover's  Tale  i  63 

Rooted    See  Deep-rooted 

Rosalind    My  R,  my  R,  Bold,  subtle,  careless  R,  Rosalind  1 

My  falconhearted  R  Fullsailed  ,.        9 

My  happy  falcon,  R,  »      25 

My  R,  my  R,  Because  no  shadow  on  you  falls,  „      30 

hearts  are  tennis  balls  To  play  with,  wanton  R?  „      33 

Rose  (S)     With  r's  musky  breathed,  Anacreontics  1 

Farewell,  fair  r  of  May  !  God  bless  our  Prince  11 

each  r  Doth  faint  upon  the  bosom  of  the  other,  Lover's  Tale  i  563 

a  red  r  Should  change  into  a  white  one  ..  726 

Rose  (verb)     A  tutelary  angel  as  she  r,  >.  388 

Roselip     Dimples,  r's,  and  eyes  of  any  hue.  There  are  three  things^ 

Rosy    Thy  heart  beats  through  thy  r  limbs  Hero  to  Leander  16 

In  the  hoUow  r  vale  to  tarry,  Lotos-Eaters  12 

O  Ringlet,  O  Ringlet,  She  blush'd  a  r  red,  The  Ringlet  6b 

Rouge     old  mark  of  r  upon  your  cheeks.  ^ew  Timon  38 

Romid     Nor  the  r  sun  that  shineth  to  all ;  Burial  of  Love  jb 

Yet  hands  all  r  Hands  all  Round  Zi 

And  the  great  name  of  England  r  and  r  (repeat)  ,,    24,  "48^  60 

Why  r  is  not  square?  The 'How'  and  the    Why    16 

R  about  all  is  mute.  The  Hesperides,  Song  ib 

Holy  and  bright,  r  and  full,  bright  and  blest. 

Roving     The  rapid  waste  of  r  sea. 

Rowing     Than  labour  in  the  ocean,  and  r  with  the  oar, 

Royal    Fair  year,  with  brows  of  r  love  Thou  comest,         ^     . -n   „,         n 

Rubylike    Glows  r  the  f ar-up  crimson  globe,  D-  of  1<  ■»'omml 

Rude     From  which  may  r  Death  never  startle  them,  Lover  s  1  alei  i^b 

Ruder    eveiy  r  saUy  Of  thought  and  speech  ;  CJ^ck  every  out  flash  1 

Ruin    How  scorn  and  r.  pain  and  hate  could  flow  :    FalM  thunderstncken  10 

So  gazed  I  on  the  r's  of  that  thought  Lover  s  Tale^iU 

night  and  pain  and  r  and  death  reign  here.  t       >    t  if-ii^ 

Ruin'd     The  wreck  of  r  life  and  shatte?d  thought,  Lo'^er  sTaU  n  62 

Rule  (S)     Be  loyal,  if  you  wish  for  wholesome  r :  Sugg,  by  Reading  66 

yet  the  '  not  too  much '  is  all  the  r  she  knows.  ..  ^ 

Rule  (verb)     She  comprehends  the  race  she  r's.  Hands  «f^ound  56 

Rumour    Or  is  the  r  of  thy  Timbuctoo  fZll 

Rusheth    Anon  he  r  forth  with  merry  dm,  n     j     „  ifZu"^  la 

Russian     The  ie  whips  and  Austrian  rods-  ^-'^^^LSfJ! 

Rustbng     A  r  of  white  wings  !  .       „  r^u  •  ^     v,  ,.  Tn  C  North  4 

Rusty    You  did  mingle  blame  and  praise,  K  Christopher.       ^^^{^^^^  % 

Britons,  guard  7 


iv  11 

Chorus  2 
Lotos-Eaters  39 
The  lintwhite  19 


Ruth    stomis  of  sorrow  and  r  That  roar  beneath ; 
Ruthless    His  r  host  is  bought  with  plunder  d  gold, 

S 

Sable    To  wander  down  his  s  sheeny  sides, 
Sacrifice    Folding  the  slaughter  of  the  s 
Sad     O  s  A'o  >nore.'    0  sweet  No  more! 
Sadness    Grief  and  s  steal  Symbols  of  each  other ; 


Love  39 

To 6 

0  sad  No  more  !  1 
Every  day,  etc.  25 


Said    s  to  thee  That  thou  hast  half  my  heart,  Luve  and  Sorrow  3 

As  I  s,  with  these  She  crown'd  her  forehead.  Lirver's  Tale  i  348 

Sail  (s)     No  more  unfurl  the  straining  s ;  Lotot-Eaters  24 

Sail  (verb)     As  when  a  man,  that  s's  in  a  balloon,  D.  of  F.  Women  1 

Sailed     {See  also  Fullsailed)     to  those  Who  s  from  Mizraim      A  Fragment  5 
Sailing     And  s  on  Pactolas  in  a  boat,  Pallid  Ihunderstrieken  3 


Timbiutoo  54 

To 1 

Shall  the  hag  5 

Timbucioo  201 

Chorus  17 

Cheek  every  outflash  I 

Hero  to  Leander  34 

Englith  War  Song  14 


Saint    unfading  foreheads  of  the  S's  in  Heaven  ? 

Sainted    S  Juliet !  dearest  name  ! 

Salient    Though  hourly  pastured  on  the  s  blood  ? 

Sallow    And  in  the  glow  of  s  Summertide, 
The  troublous  autumn's  s  gloom, 

Sally    every  ruder  s  Of  thought  and  speech ; 

Salt    The  deep  s  wave  breaks  in  above  Those  marble 
steps  below. 
It  shall  be  steeped  in  the  s,  s  tear,  Shall  be 
steeped  in  his  own  s  tear : 

Same    See  Self-same 

Sand  (adj.)    Gray  s  banks  and  pale  sunseta — dreary  wind,       Mablethorpe  7 

Sand  (s)    he  passeth  by.  And  gulphs  himself  in  s's,  Timbuctoo  237 

Black  specks  amid  a  waste  of  dreary  s,  „         247 

glistering  s's  that  robe  The  understream.  Pallid  thunderttrieken  5 

Pyramids  Broad-based  amid  the  fleeting  s's,  A  Fragment  10 

lake,  that,  flooding,  makes  Cushions  of  yellow  * ;         Lover's  Tale  i  537 

Sanded    See  Gold-sanded 

Sandfield     As  the  s  at  the  mountain-foot.  The  Hesperides,  Song  i  7 

Sang     close  above  us,  s  the  wind-tost  pine,  Lover's  Tale  i  60 

Sap     And  the  s  to  three-fold  music  floweth.  The  Uesperidej,  Song  i  19 

Huge  splinters,  which  the  s  of  earliest  showers,  Lover's  Tide  ii  45 

Sapphire    wheel  in  wheel,  Arch'd  the  wan  iS'.  Timbtuioo  111 

And  thunder  thro'  the  s  deeps  In  wajward  strength,  Chorus  28 

Sardinia    To  take  S,  Belgium,  or  the  Rhine :  Britons,  guard  50 

Save    '  God  s  the  Queen '  is  here  a  truer  cry.  „  26 

God  s  the  Nation,  The  toleration,  „  27 

God  s  the  Queen  !  (repeat)  God  bless  our  Prince  3,  7,  10 

Saw    s  before  me  Such  colour'd  spots  Timbuetoo  69 

I  s  The  smallest  grain  that  dappled  the  dark  Earth,  „        98 

within  the  South  methought  I  «  A  wilderness  of  spires,  „      161 

if  I  s  These  things  distinctly,  ..       184 

S  far  on  each  side  through  the  grated  gates  The  Myttie  34 

I  s  no  more  only  those  eyes —  There  ate  three  things  13 

iS  round  her  feet  the  country  far  away,  Lover's  Tale  i  390 

eyes,  I  s,  were  full  of  tears  m  the  mom,  „  728 

Say  (s)     And  a  fool  may  say  his  s ;  The  Ringlet  18 

Say  (verb)    nothing  visible,  they  s,  had  birth  Timbuetoo  55 

Some  s  this  life  is  pleasant,  The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why  '  3 

What  Ls  it  they  s  ?     What  do  they  there  ?  ,.  12 

Who  can  s  Why  To-day  To-morrow  will  be  yesterday?  Who  can  say  1 
I  honour  much,  I  s,  this  man's  appeal.  Suog.  by  Reading  49 

Let  both  the  peoples  s,  God  Ness  our  Prince  12 

And  a  fool  may  s  his  say ;  Th*  Ringlei  18 

Let  them  so  love  that  men  and  boys  may  «,  Lover's  Tale  i  801 

Scale    step  by  step  to  s  that  mighty  stair  Timbwioo  196 

Scaled    Lest  his  s  eyelid  drop,  The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  15 


Scan    would  s  Definite  round. 

eye  could  s  Through  length  of  porch  and  lake 
Scandal    She  loves  a  httle  s  which  excites ; 
Scatter    feeds  it  from  behind.  And  s's  it  before, 
Scene    Rhene  Curves  towards  Mentz,  a  woody  s. 
Science     '  S  enough  and  exploring 
Scorn     The  cruellest  form  of  perfect  *, 

Ye  scorned  him  with  an  undisceminc  s : 

How  s  and  ruin,  pain  and  Imte  c«)uld  flow : 

withering  s  of  the  many  shall  cleave 

He  shall  eat  the  bread  of  common  s ; 

With  a  flash  of  frolic  s  And  keen  deliglit. 

By  the  tiling  I  hold  in  s. 

And  s  of  perilous  seeming : 
Scorned    Ye  s  him  with  an  undisceming  » : 
Scrap    all  the  quaint  old  s's  of  ancient  crones. 
Screaming    s,  from  me  flung  The  empty  phantom 

And  bitter  blasts  the  «  autumn  whirl, 
Screen     Wax-lighteii  chapels  and  rich  carved  s's,  ..  -  .« 

Scribe    Christ  cried  :  Woe,  woe,  to  Pharisees  and  S's !  Sugg,  by  Readtstg  75 
Scrip    Over  their  s's  and  shares,  their  meats  and  wine,  „  47 

Scroll    Lay  like  an  open  s  before  my  view, 


Timbuetoo  131 

179 

Sugg,  by  Reading  57 

Lfver's  Tale  it  48 

O  darling  room  12 

J8S5-1S66  6 

Burial  of  Love  18 

The  Mvstie  3 

Pallid  ihunderstrieken  10 

English  War  Song  5 

13 

Rosalind  15 

Germ  of '  Maud  '  6 

l/tver's  Tale  i  380 

The  .Mystic  3 

Lorer's  Tale  i  288 

ft  212 

Though  night,  etc.  2 

Cambridge  A 


Lover's  TaU  i  601 


Send 


1196 


Scud    black  owl  s's  down  the  mellow 

twilight,  The'  How '  and  the  '  Why  '  30 

Sea    Mountain  which  o'erlooks  The  narrow  s's,  Timbuctoo  2 

even  as  the  s  When  weary  of  wild  inroad  „      13 

And  the  loud  s  roars  below.  Hero  to  Leader  15 

odours  wander  On  the  black  and  moaning  s,  „            29 

turretstairs  are  wet  That  lead  into  the  s.  "            37 

The  rapid  waste  of  roving  5,  "  chorus  2 

loud  winds,  though  they  uprend  the  s,  X^tie  9 

In  music  and  in  light  o'er  land  and  s.  28 

We  lord  it  o'er  the  s ;  (repeat)  National  Song  16,  34 

Far  sheening  down  the  purple  s's  to  those  A  Fragment  4 

In  old  Bayona,  nigh  the  Southern  8—  There  are  three  things  11 

Oontmuous  till  he  reached  the  other  s.  The  Hesperides  13 

But  the  apple  of  gold  hangs  over  the  s,  The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  23 

narwhale  swaUoweth  His  foamfountains  in  the  s.  Lotos-Eaters  8 

Dim  shores,  dense  rains,  and  heavy  clouded  5.  MaUethorve  8 

o  s  at  my  feet  were  flowing  Waves  1865-1866  10 

dreadful  murmur  indistinct  Of  the  confused  s's,  Lover's  Tale  i  657 

(jan  rock  and  heave  upon  that  painted  s ;  u  199 

Seahorse    Where  the  tuskc^d  s  waUoweth  LJins-Eaters  4 

Sealed    grots  Rock-hewn  and  s  for  ever.  a  Fragment  31 

Seaman     -S^amew,  guard  your  own.  Britons,  Guard  42, 

or  1)0 w  we  found  The  drowned  s  on  the  shore  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  293 

beam  a    brain.  Now  s  and  chmk'd  with  years —  131 

Sea^eU    Fresh  as  the  early  s  blown  Rosalind  28 

Season    -S  s  flower  and  fade  ;  Everii  day  etc  6 

R«o™^™'r!'  ^"''''  f  ""^^  l^"™'  ^"^^  ""'^^  ^  «•  Lov^r''  TaU  i  302 

Seaward    Blown  s  from  the  shore ;  The  Hesperides  8 

S^Wc^-^f^^ilK*  v^l^-*^  ^  .^"^  "^^^  '  ripeneth,  The  Hesperides,  Lng  iv  2 

Secret  (adj.)    Albeit  his  spirit  and  his  s  heart  '^     The  Mystic! 

By  s  fire  and  midnight  storms  Chorus  5 

SSf/r^W^^  f  ^'"'"^'  ■         .  The  Hesperides,  Song  Hill 

Seerpt  S    An^f ,f»  P^^'^'^''."^  mounting  still,  h.  of  F.  Women  11 

ttwfLn  "     .  K  *""®°*  /  revealM.  The  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  5 

iB«-    ^i      *K*  ""^    ^^  T°1*  ^"^  ^*y  ^'^^  an  open  scroU  Lover's  Talei  600 

See    Open  thme  eye  and  5.'  TimhuctooM 

who  have  not  felt  and  known  A  higher  than  they  s :  *'^°^^<"'  e| 

n!?^nnr^"P^.^""  (?r  *."?  *.5  The  Grasshopper  15 

Dowrflooking  s's  the  sohd  shming  ground  D.  of  F.  Women  2 

vve  s  The  old  mark  of  rouge  upon  your  cheeks.  New  Timon  37 

here  shall  5  The  British  Goddess,  Sngg.  byRecZ^  53 

SeedS     Bo.^;it£f  ^''P  ««  ^«f""y  ;  Zver's  Tale7Ai 

aeeaed    Bowing  the  s  summerflowers.  The  Gra't^h^'n'no'r  s 

Seedsman     While  I  spoke  thus,  the  .,  Memory,  DofFWomenll 

Seemg    Lets  the  great  world  flit  from  him,  s  aU.  ^                   Tn 

Seek     Nor  s  to  bridle  His  vile  aggressions,  Britons  auard^ 

**%/  ',wr  ^  '^''^  ^^^"  '^'  *°^^«"*  TZhZoim 

For  aU  things  are  as  they  5  to  all,  (repeat)  oi  'pdorei  7   15 

And  nothing  s's  to  me  so  wild  and  bold,  Qh  Beauty  7 

J^d  here  the  Grecian  ships  did  s  to  be.  MablfthorZ  4 

m'd    I  5  to  stand  Upon  the  outward  verge  Thnhu^ZA 

only  5  One  shadow  in  the  midst  of  a  griat  light,  TheMyZ  20 

frSm^beneth^'v^^r^Prt^  What  ti.^  fSstedl 

irom  beneath  S  with  a  cobweb  firmament  Lover's  Tale  i  407 

ming     And  scorn  of  perilous  5 :  J^^^er  s  j  afs  «  4U  ? 

Which,  lapt  in  s  dissolution,  "            ^07 

feBwrought    With  .evibot^CSS years,  r„„S'5?i.'I 

M    n»d.  mml  ,  the  burthen  ot  their  will      '  «.«  fa,  ClSTfffl 

gir?.„:-;Krhe°;„'hi,?^f"'  ..  l-lrrl 

c,acn  laiiing  5  As  with  a  momentary  flash  or 

And  souru  which  struck  the  palpitating  s,  "       1 1  q 

with  ravish'd  s  Listenest  the  lordly  miSic  '      217 

Colossal,  without  form,  or  s.  or  sound  ri..  1 Z'  .  •   \* 

^r  ^*''°''"  '"  ^  boat,  Drewn  soul  ^^'  ^^^^'^  ^^ 
'                                                                    Pallid  thunderstricken  4 


Shining 


Sense  (cow^mw^d)     As  with  a  s  of  nigher  Deity,  Lover's  Tale  i  ^89 

Glory  m  glory,  without  s  of  change.  *  =? « 

So  lethargised  discernment  in  the  s,  "  cio 

Sensible    drove  them  onward— made  them  s  ■  "  ,-,•  77 

Sent    horrid  rifts  «  up  the  moaning  of  unhappy  spirits  "         ,"  fiiq 

Separate    each  th' effect  Of  5  impulse,  "^"^"^   ^  Timbuctoo  127 

Sepulchre    new-hewn  5,  Where  man  had  never  lain.  Loier'^Taei  713 

Seraph  (adj.)     Even  that  this  name  to  which  her  s  lips  iii 

tllli&    The  bright  descent  Of  a  young  ^!  Timbuctoo  ^ 

Seraphtrod    -S,  Wound  thro'  your  great  Elysian  solitudes,  47 

Serene    The  still  s  abstraction ;  '         Th.  ij..  r   i. 

The  imperishable  presences  s,  ^'''  ^^'^'\  f 

<^rJir  ^!^^^  ^o^ward  through  the  blue  s.  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  9 

Serpent    As  on  a  s  in  his  agonies  Awestricken  Indians ;  Love  30 

Set    The  pleasant  stars  have  s !  w.^^  y„  r.^^     qo 

Settlement    Low-built,  mud-walled,  Barbarian  .,  '"rLSt  248 

Severe    ^  and  quick  to  feel  a  civic  sin,  Suaa  b^ReadinaA 

beneath  ^  and  youthful  brows,  with  shining  eyes         ^^The  Myt^27 

Shade    Amid  the  wild  unrest  of  swimming  s  Timbvrtr,nl9Q 

There  is  no  bright  form  Doth  not  cast  a  s~  EveZd^etcm 

Nor  blot  with  floating  s'.  the  solar  light.  sTaA  hag  11 

Nor  good  nor  ill,  nor  light  nor  s,  ol  6^ovTJi  m 

Shadow  (s)    (^«e  afco  Half-shadow)    *S's  to  which,  despite  all    °' ''"'^^"  "^^ 

shocks  of  Change,  ^             Timbuctoo  25 

Dim  s  s  but  unwanuig  presences  Tht-  Mi.^ti^  i? 

And  yet  again,  three%^,  fronting  one,  ^  ^^*'*''  J? 

One  s  in  the  midst  of  a  great  light,  "        oj 

In  sunlight  and  in  s.  r'u^  ri       -l  "        ^ 

Sa'r'^o'T  '"^  *.'V  °^  "^^  '''''''  '      £~tel'9 

Because  no  s  on  you  falls,  j?^^^u„/i  qi 

Shadow  (verb)     I  can  s  forth  my  bride  Germ  of^Ma^ '  q 

^adow  d    .S  and  crimson'd  with  the  drifting  dust,  Lover's  Tale  i  1^9 

Shadowing     By  s  forth  the  Unattainable ;  ^         '  Timbuctoo  197 

outspread  With  growth  of  s  leaf  and  clusters  rare  ^^ouctoo  ly  / 

they  were  the  types  and  s's  Of  hers—  '       Lover's  T ah  i^t% 

Shadowy    Thy  s  Idols  in  the  solitudes,  TA«n? 

At  sunset,  underneath  a  s  plane  In  old  ^»-«?»«««<  15 

aait     Till  your  balls  fly  as  their  true  s's  have  flown.  Britons,  guard  47 

aake    some  great  City  where  the  walls  S,  TimLrfoo  20 

aaken     Now  proved  counterfeit,  was  s  out,  Uver'   Sii  80 

aakespeare    We  know  him,  out  of  ^'s  art,  NewTiZnl 

aaUop    Could  link  his  s  to  the  fleeting  edge,  TZi:ZA 

4  r/^n        ^"?  ^^^^  ^'^  "^^^Z  ^"'^  ^^'"d)  The  Grasshopper  6 

O  Grief  and  S  if  while  I  preach  of  laws  Sugg,  by  Reading  37 

Ringlet,  You  put  me  much  to  s,  "'^  tL  Rinalet  48 

«!h  Ji«  'V  "^''7  '="^1""'^  ^«;?-  English  War  S'J:^  i? 

aameless     Peace-lovers,  haters  Of  s  traitors,  Britons  auard  Ifi 

Shap6    Solemn  but  splendid,  fuU  of  s's  and  sounds,  Lover^sTalTfim 

ci,oi     n°^  ^°u  •      *  These  things  with  accurate  similitude     Timbuctoo  133 
?Wn    Sir  f"  ^J="P^rd  f '5,  their  meats  and  wine,  Sugq.  by  Reading  47 

KSfr     '^«\7 '^a^:?  ^  ^lesson  than  we  ever  knew.    -S«</?.  6^  i2,arfm^  88      i 

Shattered    (iSee  also  Earthquake-shattered)    beneath  the 

day  s  decline,  We'U  lift  no  more  the  s  oar,  Lotos-Eaters  23 

Ihe  wreck  of  rum'd  life  and  s  thought.  fi9 

fcnJV'''''/''¥J°^'"ry*  The  lintihite  28 

tij^^j  ^y  down  the  purple  seas  to  those  A  Fragment  4 

Sheeny    I  gaz'd  upon  the  s  coast  beyond,  TimbLtoo  10      ^ 

ihe  hoarhead  winter  paving  earth  With  s  white.  Chorus  19 

Forth  in  the  pride  of  beauty  issuing  A  s  snake.  Could  I  outwear  6 

sabT  ^'^T"*'^^"g^  a^"l  ^"es  begin  To  wander  down  his  t 

l£!L  Sea/"'pon 'his  father's  s-  fl,„,,  ^;,,^  6,-o«^Af^3      ! 

S«     vi    P  t^Ju    •'■^'*'  ^"'^  "=^'1''  ^^«  GrassLpper  11       ' 

f  ),^^?  K?      "^'^  ^  u ^'- ^*  """V®  *^°"  ^^'^^t  °ot  « =  ^^«  «™<^  Sorrow  7 

t^l^    m'  ^^^  '°^u'^  '""  *^^'  *  *''  ^ ;  ^«««^  «/  -^«  26 

Shingle    Waves  on  the  s  pouring,  7^55  ^^gg  jj 

Shimng     and  look'd  into  my  face  With  his  unutterable,  s  orbs,  Timbuctoo  67 


Shining 


1197 


Shining  (continued)     with  s  eyes  Smiling  a  godlike  smile  The  Mystic  27 

Downlooking  sees  the  solid  s  ground  Z).  of  F.  Women  2 

One  of  the  s  winged  powers,  What  time  I  wasted  2 

built  above  With  matted  bramble  and  the  s  gloss  Of 


ivy-leaves, 
Ship    And  here  the  Grecian  s's  did  seem  to  be. 

Call  home  your  s's  across  Biscayan  tides, 
Shirt    The  merits  of  a  spotless  s — 
Shiver    Darken,  and  shrink  and  s  into  huts, 
Shock    Shadows  to  which,  despite  all  s's  of  Change, 

s's  and  fears  That  trouble  life  in  early  years, 

fell,  and  with  the  s  Half  dug  their  own  graves), 
Shook    winds  from  heaven  s  the  acorn  out. 

And  5  a  mane  en  papillotes. 

And  s  its  earthly  socket,  for  we  heard, 

In  eager  haste  I  s  him  by  the  hand ; 
Shoot    That  s  across  the  soul  in  prayer, 
Shooting    S,  singing,  ever  springmg 
Shore    Blown  seaward  from  the  s ; 

on  the  Baltic  s  Boleslas  drove  the  Pomeranian. 

heavy  melon  sleeps  On  the  level  of  the  s : 

the  s  Than  labour  in  the  ocean, 

Dim  s's,  dense  rains,  and  heavy  clouded  sea. 
Shorn    clear  Galaxy  S  of  its  hoary  lustre, 
Short     But  a  s  youth  sunny  and  free. 
Shot    in  mail  of  argent  light  S  into  gold, 

rapid  brook  S  down  his  inner  thunders. 
Shoulder    Her  s's  are  bare ; 
Shout  (s)    With  s's  from  off  the  bridge. 
Shout  (verb)     And  stares  in  his  face  and  s's 

'  how  ?  how  ?  '  The'  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  29 

S  for  England  !  (repeat)  English  War  Song  7,  18,  29,  40,  51 

S  for  God  and  our  right !  „  50 

and  waves  them  to  the  mob  That  s  below,  D.  of  F.  Women  6 

Shouteth     Hark  !  he  s — the  ancient  enemy  !  English  War  Song  24 

Show     in  the  dark  of  mine  S  traced  with  flame.  Lover's  Tale  i  29G 

Showed    Angels  have  talked  with  him,  and  s  him  thrones :     The_  Mystic  1 


Lover's  Tale  i  373 

Mablethorfe  4 

Britons,  guard  37 

Kew  Titnon  34 

Timhuctoo  246 

25 

Rosalind  13 

Lover's  Tale  ii  49 

Lost  Hope  7 

New  Timon  12 

Lover's  Tale  i  61 

788 

355 

The  Grasshopper  41 

The  Hesperides  8 

Blow  ye  the  trumpet  13 

Lotos-Eaters  36 

38 

Mabletliorpe  8 

Timbuctoo  106 

The  Grasshopper  29 

Pallid  thunder  stricken  13 

Lover's  Tale  i  372 

I'  the  glooming  light  10 

Lover's  Tale  i  369 


S  me  vast  clifls  with  crown  of  towers, 
Shower    For  her  the  s's  shall  not  fall, 

(Huge  splinters,  which  the  sap  of  earliest  s's, 
Showering     s  circular  abyss  Of  radiance. 

s  down  the  glory  of  lightsome  day. 
Shrill     But  s  you,  loud  and  long, 

When  the  s  storm-Blast  feeds  it  from  behind. 
Shrine     Embalming  with  sweet  tears  the  vacant  s, 

Unroof  the  s's  of  clearest  vision, 

all  unworthy  Of  such  a  s — 
Shrink    Darken,  and  s  and  shiver  into  huts. 
Shrive    For  the  French  the  Pope  may  s  'em,  (repeat) 
Shroud    Till  the  end  of  fears  Cometh  in  the  s, 

ghastful  brow,  Half-bursten  from  the  s, 
Shrub    earthquake-shattered  chasm,  hung  with  s's, 
Shuddering    The  very  spirit  of  Paleness  made  still  paler 

By  the  s  moonilight,  "  .^2 

Shut  light  Is  s  out  by  the  round  of  the  tall  hillbrow ;  The  Hespendes,  Song  tv  lb 


What  time  I  wasted  3 

Burial  of  Love  25 

Lover's  Tale  ii  45 

Timbuctoo  173 

Tears  of  Heaven  8 

Sugg,  by  Reading  90 

Lover's  Tale  ii  47 

Lost  Hope  3 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  3 

Lover's  Tale  i  70 

Timbuctoo  246 

National  Song  9,  27 

Every  day,  etc.  21 

Lover's  Tale  i  617 

408 


The  Mystic  34 

The  Grasshopper  11 

Love  and  Sorrow  7 


Side     Saw  far  on  each  s  through  the  grated  gates 

Clap  thy  shielded  s's  and  carol, 

Yet  on  both  s's  at  once  thou  canst  not  shine  : 

Thine  is  the  bright  s  of  my  heart, 

might  thy  rays  pass  thro'  to  the  other  s. 

To  wander  down  his  sable  sheeny  s's, 

Both  aUke,  they  glide  together  S  hj  s; 

Like,  vmlike,  they  sing  together  S  hj  s; 

She  is  lovely  by  my  s 

I  can  call  it  to  my  s, 

To  blow  the  battle  from  their  oaken  s's. 

Parted  on  either  s  her  argent  neck,  ^ 

Sigh  (s)    Changed  into  fire,  and  blown  about  with  s  s. 

There  are  three  things  that  fill  my  heart  with  s's  There  are  three  things  1 

How  canst  thou  let  me  waste  my  youth  in  s's ;  m,lieauty  z 

I  hate  that  siUy  5.  .,     ,  Skiping-rope^ 

When  summer  winds  break  their  soft  sleep  with  s  s.    Lover  s  l  ale  t  ooy 

who  drew  the  happy  atmosphere  Of  my  unhappy  s  s,  „  p'^ 

\x  <vAph^     anH  thA  whit,fi  willows  s  ?  The'  How    and  the    Why    15 


14 

iOT«39 

Dualisms  11 

20 

Germ  of '  Maud '  12 

16 

Britons,  guard  38 

Loi'er's  Tale  i  740 

To 


Sight    with  every  s  And  sound  which  struck 
Would  marvel  from  so  beautiful  a  s 
Father,  twinkle  not  thy  stedfast  < ; 
Dear  room,  the  apple  of  my  s. 
Yet  never  did  there  meet  my  s, 
for  fear  the  mind  Rain  thro  my  *, 
Being  wafted  on  the  wind,  drove  in  my  $, 


Sigh  (verb)     and  the  white  willows  s  ? 

The  pallid  thunderstricken  s  for  gain. 


Pallid  thunderstricken  1 


Slaughter 

Timbuctoo  118 

Pallid  thunderstricken  9 

The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  3 

O  darling  room  2 

13 

Lover't  Tale  i  24 

730 

Sign    earth  beneath  me  yawning  given  S  of  convulsion ;  "  612 

Silence    brood  above  The  s  of  all  hearts,  '  *'    jj^  14 

note  Hath  melted  in  the  *  that  it  broke.  Oh  beauty  14 

In  the  s  of  my  Uf 6-  6'mn  0/ '  A/aud '  13 

Silent  and  above  The  s  Heavens  were  blench'd  with  faery  light,    Timbuctoo  5 

For  him  the  s  congregated  hours.  The  Mystic  25 

Silk    Both  in  blosmwhite  s  are  frocked :  Dualitmt  16 

Silken    That  brush  thee  with  their  5  tresses  ?  The  Grasshopper  39 

With  a  s  cord  I  bound  it.  Anacreontics  8 

Silly     I  hate  that  s  sigh.  Skipping-rope  8 

SUver  (adj.)    her  s  heights  Unvisited  with  dew  of  vagrant 

cloud,  Timbuctoo  102 

Looking  under  s  hair  with  a  s  eye.  The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  2 

Silver  (s)    portals  of  pure  s  walks  the  moon.  Though  ntghi  4 

And  branching  s  s  of  the  central  globe,  Pallid  thunderstricken  8 

Silverflecked    In  honour  of  tlie  s  morn  :  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  4 

Silver-gray    touch  of  Time  Will  turn  it  s-g ;  The  Binglet  6 

chilling  touch  of  Time  Can  turn  thee  s-g ;  „        16 

0  Ringlet,  You  should  he  s-g:  „  30 
Silverleaved  And  s  lily.  And  ivy  darkly-wreatbcd,  AnaereotUiet  3 
Similitude  shape  These  things  with  accurate  s  Timbuctoo  134 
Sin  Severe  and  quick  to  feel  a  civic  s,  Sugg,  by  Readmg  4 
Sing     Nor  the  rivers  flow,  nor  the  sweet  birds  s,                 burial  of  Love  29 

Larks  in  heaven's  cope  iS :  Every  day,  etc.  29 

watered  vaUies  where  the  young  birds  s ;  Could  I  outwear  8 

Both  alike,  they  s  together.  Dualisms  12 

Like,  unlike,  they  s  together  Side  by  side ;  „        19 

And  longer  hear  us  5 ;  The  linivhite  23 

If  ye  s  not,  if  ye  make  false  measure.  The  Hesperides,  Song  i  10 

S  away,  s  aloud  and  evermore  in  the  wind,  „           H  14 

waterfalls  That  s  into  the  pebbled  pool.  Rosalind  24 
Singing     Pushing  the  thick  roots  aside  Of  the  s  flowered 

grasses.  The  Grasshopper  38 
Shooting,  s,  ever  springing  In  and  out  the  emerald 

glooms.  Ever  leaping,  ever  s,  «           41 

Two  children  lovelier  than  love,  adown  the  lea  are  s.  Dualisms  14 

<S^  airily.  Standing  about  the  charm^  root.  The  Hesperides,  Song  i  S 

Keen-eyed  Sisters,  s  airily,  „               2S 

S  airily.  Standing  about  the  charmed  root.  „           tv  S3 

Single    The  s  voice  may  speak  his  mind  aloud ;  Sugg,  by  Reading  14 

Sink    vessel  and  your  Church  may  s  in  storms.  „                74 

Sister     Keen-eyed  S's,  singing  airily.  The  Hesperides,  Song  i  25 

Hesper,  the  dragon,  and  s's  three,  „            it  94 

Hesper,  the  dragon,  and  s's  three,  „            w  26 

Tho  its  ghastly  s  glide  And  be  moved  Germ  of '  Maud '  18 

Sit    great  bira  s's  on  the  opposite  bough,        The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  28 

Worn  Sorrow  s's  by  the  moaning  wave ;  /'  the  glooming  Ught  4 

But  Hatred  in  a  gold  cave  s's  below.  Pallid  tkmnderstrKktn  11 

1  only  ask  to  s  beside  thy  feet.  OA,  Btamlg  8 
All  alone  she  s's  and  hears  Echoes  Home  they  brought  kism  8 

Skin  (s)    dead  s  withering  on  the  fretted  bone.  Lover's  fals  1  978 

Skin  (verb)    s's  the  colour  from  her  trembling  lips.  Pallid  Ihunderttriekem  14 

Skip    Could  s  so  lightly  by.  Skipping-rope  2 

Skipping-rope    my  s-r  Will  hit  you  in  the  eye.  3 

How  lightly  whirls  the  s-r !  „             6 

take  it,  take  my  s-r  And  hang  yourself  .,            11 

Skirting    snowy  5  of  a  garment  hung,  Timbuctoo  182 

Sky    presences  Fourfact'd  to  four  comers  of  the  * ;  The  Mystic  16 

Waiting  to  light  him  with  bis  purple  skies.  Love  34 

They  stream  like  fire  in  the  sktes ;  English  War  Song  28 

three  things  beneath  the  blessed  skies  For 

which  I  live —  There  are  three  things  5 

Spirit  wails  To  embrace  me  in  the  s.  Germ  of '  Maud    34 

I  near  a  thunder  though  the  skies  are  fair,  Suag.  by  Reading  89 

Slain    HouK  they  brought  him  5  with  spears.  Home  they  brought  htm  1 

Slake    imd  s  \A°ith  points  of  blastbome  nail  Shall  the  hag  10 

Slate     A  child  with  a  broken  s,  A  gale  and  a  field  3 

Slaughter    Folding  the  *  of  the  sacrifice  To 6 


Slave 


1198 


Speck 


Slave    For  where  is  the  heart  and  strength  of  s's  ? 

Oh  !  where  is  the  strength  of  s's  ?  English  War  Song  36 

He  is  weak  !  we  are  strong ;  be  a  «,  we  are  free ;  „  38 

Sleek    shall  see  The  British  Goddess,  5  Respectabihty.  Sugg,  by  Reading  54 

Sleep  (s)     All  men  do  walk  in  s,  oi  'p^ovres  5 

Arching  the  billow  in  his  s ;  The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  3 

summer  winds  break  their  soft  s  with  sighs,  Lover's  Tale  i  559 

Slesp  (verb)     Whether  we  wake  or  whether  we  5  ? 

Whether  we  5  or  whether  we  die  ?  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  17 

she  cannot  s ;  /'  the  glooming  light  15 

cleaving  air,  Lost  in  its  efifulgence  s's.  Chorus  26 

Half-light,  half-shadow,  let  my  spirit  s  Lme  and  Sorrow  17 

They  5  with  staring  eyes  and  gilded  lips,  A  Fragment  29 

Crocodiles  in  briny  creeks  S  and  stir  not :  The  Hesperides,  Song  i  9 

If  he  s,  we  s,  „  ii  19 

heavy  melon  s's  On  the  level  of  the  shore :  Lotos-Eaters  35 

Slender    crumbling  from  their  parent  slope  At  s  interval,       Timbiictoo  124 

starr'd  at  s  intervals  With  blossom  tufts  of  purest 

white ;  Lover's  Tale  i  399 

Slept     all  the  white-stemmed  pinewood  s  above —      Check  every  oiUflash  13 

Sliding     Hid  now  and  then  with  s  cloud.  What  tirm  I  wasted  6 

Slime    grovell'd  in  the  s  Of  this  dull  world,  Timbuctoo  149 

Slope    crumbling  from  their  parent  s  At  slender  interval,  „         123 

The  dull  wave  mourns  down  the  s,  F  the  glooming  light  21 

but  from  a  s  That  ran  bloombright  The  Hesperides  8 

To  whom  the  s  and  stream  of  life,  Rosalind  5 

The  s  into  the  current  of  my  years,  Lover's  Tale  ii  76 

Sloped     and  s  Into  the  slumberous  summer  noon  ;  A  Fragment  10 

Sloping    borne  Adown  the  s  of  an  arrowy  stream,  Timbuctoo  144 

Slumber  (s)     s  is  more  sweet  than  toil,  Lotos-Eaters  38 

Slmnber  (verb)     And  s's  in  the  clover.  The  Grasshopper  33 

redcombed  dragon  s  Rolled  together  in  purple 

folds.  The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  9 

Slumber'd     chasms  of  deep,  deep  blue  S  imfathomable,  Timbuctoo  8 

Slumberous     and  sloped  Into  the  s  summer  noon ;  A  Fragment  11 

Small    and  the  opal  width  Of  her  s  glowing  lakes,  Timbuctoo  102 

He  said, '  The  labour  is  not  s ;  What  time  I  wasted  7 

Alas  for  her  and  all  her  s  delights  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  55 

Alas,  our  youth,  so  clever  yet  so  s,  „  79 

Smallest     I  saw  The  s  grain  that  dappled  the  dark  Earth,         Timbuctoo  99 

Smell    (See  also  Seasmell)    Who  can  tell  Why  to  s  The  violet.  Who  can  say  5 

Smelt     I  s  a  wild  weed  flower  alone ;  0  sad  No  mare  /  4 

Smile  (s)    Then  with  a  mournful  and  ineffable  s,  Timbuctoo  189 

With  languor  of  most  hateful  s's.  Burial  of  Love  19 

with  shining  eyes  Smiling  a  godlike  s  The  Mystic  28 

Comes  the  bliss  of  secret  s's.  The  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  1 1 

Smile  (verb)    S's  on  the  earth's  worn  brow  to  win  her 

if  she  may.  Tears  of  Heaven  9 

Smiling    with  shining  eyes  S  a  godlike  smile  The  Mystic  28 

from  his  spring  Moved  5  toward  his  summer.  Lover's  Tale  i  307 

Smirk    stony  s's  at  all  things  human  and  divine  !  Su^g.  by  Reading  48 

Smooth    And  she  has  mov'd  in  that  s  way  so  long,  „  65 

Smote    Than  when  Zamoysky  s  the  Tartar  Khan,      Blow  ye  the  trumpet  12 

Snake    in  the  pride  of  beauty  issuing  A  sheeny  s,  Could  I  outwear  6 

a  s  her  forehead  clips  And  skins  the  colour        Pallid  thunder  stricken  13 

blood  Of  hateful  herbs  a  subtle-fanged  s.  Lover's  Tale  i  821 

Sneering    S  bedridden  in  the  down  of  Peace  Sugg,  by  Reading  46 

Snow    Winter  roofs  The  headland  with  inviolate  white  s,       Timbiictoo  204 

thick  s  falls  on  her  flake  by  flake,  /'  the  glooming  light  20 

Snowfleld    As  the  s  on  the  mountain-peaks,  The  Hesperides,  Song  i  6 

Snowy    wherefrom  The  s  skirting  of  a  garment  hung,  Timbuctoo  182 

Sobieski  (John  HI.,  King  of  Poland)    Than  when 

from  S,  clan  by  clan,  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  10 

Social    She  feels  not  how  the  s  frame  is  rack'd.  Su^g.  by  Reading  56 

Socket     And  shook  its  earthly  s,  for  we  heard.  Lover's  Tale  i  61 

Soft    imaging  The  s  inversion  of  her  tremulous  Domes ;  Timbuctoo  232 

And  the  billow  will  embrace  thee  with  a  kiss  as  s 

as  mine.  Hero  to  Leander  27 

With  thy  two  couches  s  and  white,  0  darling  room  3 

With  two  such  couches  s  and  white ;  „  16 

When  summer  winds  break  their  s  sleep  with  sighs,    Lover's  Tale  i  559 

Soil    Deep-rooted  in  the  living  s  of  truth :  Timbuctoo  225 

Solar    Nor  blot  with  floating  shades  the  s  light.  Shall  the  hag  14 

Sold    be  not  bought  and  s.  Blow  ye  the  trumpet  2 

She  that  gave  you  's  bought  and  s,  S,  s.  The  Ringlet  33 


Britons,  guard  49 

Check  every  outjlash  10 

Cambridge  8 

Hands  all  Round  1 

Lover's  Tale  i  799 

D.  of  F.  Women  2 


Soldier-ridden    His  s-r  Highness  might  incUne 
Solemn    Warbled  from  yonder  knoll  of  s  larches. 

Nor  yet  your  s  organ-pipes  that  blow 

First  drink  a  health,  this  s  night, 

S  but  splendid,  full  of  shapes  and  sounds, 
Solid  Downlooking  sees  the  s  shining  ground 
Solitary    Hark  !  how  sweet  the  horned  ewes  bleat  On 

the  s  steeps,  Lotos-Eaters  30 

A  GATE  and  a  field  half  ploughed,  A  s  cow,  A  gate  and  a  field  2 

Solitude     Seraphtrod,  Wound  thro'  your  great  Elysian  s's,        Ti^nbuctoo  48 

and  in  the  s  Of  middle  space  confound  them.  Shall  the  hag  8 

Thy  shadowy  Idols  in  the  s's,  A  Fragment  15 

Soloe     voyaging  beyond  The  hoary  promontory  of  S  The  Hesperides  3 

Sombre     But  in  the  middle  of  the  s  valley  Check  every  outfiash  6 

Some     and  swum  with  balanced  wings  To  s  tall  mountain.  Lover's  Tale  i  305 

Oh  !  rather  had  s  loathly  ghastful  brow,  „  676 

Somehow     The  world  is  somewhat  ?  it  goes 

on  s ;  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  21 

Something     I  feel  there  is  s ;  but  how  and  what  ? 
Somewhat    The  world  is  s ;  it  goes  on  somehow ; 

I  know  there  is  s ;  but  what  and  why  !     I 
cannot  tell  if  that  s  be  I. 
Son    We  are  the  s's  of  freedom.  We  are  free,  (repeat) 

O  rise,  our  strong  Atlantic  s's. 
Song     A  summer  of  loud  s. 
Soothe    To  s  a  civic  wound  or  keep  it  raw, 
Sorrow  (s)    Worn  S  sits  by  the  moaning  wave ; 

Joy  is  s's  brother ; 

Thou  hast  no  s  or  tears, 

storms  of  s  and  ruth  That  roar  beneath ; 

Me  my  own  fate  to  lasting  s  doometh : 

'  Oh  hush,  my  joy,  my  s.' 


23 

21 

24 

National  Song  17,  35 

Hands  all  Round  49 

The  Grasshopper  32 

Sugg,  by  Reading  32 

/'  the  glooming  light  4 

Every  day,  etc.  24 

The  Grasshopper  26 

Though  night  9 

Me  my  own  fate  1 

Home  they  brought  him  10 

strangling  s  weigh  Mine  utterance  with  lameness.  Lover's  Tale  i  24 

Sorrow  (verb)     I  s  when  I  read  the  things  you  write,      Su^g.  by  Reading  77 

Sort    for  your  manner  s's  Not  with  this  age,  Cambridge  10 

Soul     I  felt  my  s  grow  mighty,  Timbuctoo  90 

What  the  life  is  ?  where  the  s  may  lie  ?     The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why  '  33 

My  s  shall  follow  taee  !  Hero  to  Leander  31 

Wake  on,  my  s,  nor  crouch  to  agony  :  Though  night  5 

sailing  on  Pactolus  in  a  boat.  Drown  s  and  sense.  Pallid  thunderstricken  4 

And  steep  my  s  in  laughter  There  are  three  things  2 

my  inner  s  To  tremble  like  a  lutestring.  Oh,  Beauty  12 

teach  And  have  taught  nothing,  feeding  on  the  s.  Cambridge  14 


If  half  the  little  s  is  dirt  ? 

Poor  s  !  behold  her :  what  decorous  calm  ! 

eyes  were  moved  With  motions  of  the  s. 

The  written  secrets  of  her  inmost  s 

the  heat  Of  the  remorseful  s  alive  within, 
Sound    s  which  struck  the  palpitating  sense, 

Colossal,  without  form,  or  sense,  or  s, 

The  echo,  feeble  child  of  s, 

and  knoweth  not  Beyond  the  s  he  lists : 

the  memory  of  that  s  With  mighty  evocation. 

Solemn  but  splendid,  full  of  shapes  and  s's, 
Sounding    S  on  the  morrow. 
South     first  within  the  S  methought  I  saw 

Was  not  the  S,  The  East,  the  West,  all  open, 
Southern    imderneath  a  shadowy  plane  In  old 
Bayona,  nigh  the  S  Sea — 

Between  the  S  and  the  W  Horn, 

We  curse  the  crimes  of  S  kings. 
Southward    faery  light  or  cloud.  Flowing  S, 

camel  on  the  verge  Journeying  s  ? 
Sovranty    grief  Doth  hold  the  other  half  in  s. 
Sowed    Memory  iS  my  deep-furrowed  thought 
Space    in  the  solitude  Of  middle  s  confound  them, 
Spade     Beside  her  are  laid.  Her  mattock  and  s, 
Sparkle    To  flame  and  s  and  stream  as  of  old. 
Speak    She  cannot  s ;  she  can  only  weep ; 

s  low,  and  give  up  wholly  Thy  spirit 

— scarcely  dare  to  s. 

0  s  to  Europe  thro'  your  guns  ! 

The  single  voice  may  s  his  mind  aloud ; 
Spear    Home  they  brought  him  slain  with  s's. 
Speck     Black  s's  amid  a  waste  of  dreary  sand. 


New  Timon  36 

8v^g.  by  Reading  61 

Lover's  Tale  i  73 

600 

682 

Timbuctoo  119 

The  Mystic  14 

Chorus  12 

Lover's  Tale  i  658 

667 

799 

Home  they  brought  him  5 

Timbuctoo  161 

Lover's  Tale  i  698 

There  are  three  things  11 

The  Hesperides  5 

Hands  all  Round  17 

Timbuctoo  7 

A  Fragment  19 

Love  and  Sorrow  5 

D.  of  F.  Women  15 

Shall  the  hag  9 

7'  the  glooming  light  6 

The  Ringlet  8 

/'  the  glooming  light  18 

Check  every  ouiflash  2 

Oh,  Beauiy  6 

Hands  all  Round  51 

Su^g.  by  Reading  14 

Home  they  brought  him  1 

Timbuctoo  247 


Sped 


1199 


Stood 


Sped    Love  is  dead ;  His  last  arrow  s  ;  Burial  of  Love  9 

Speech    every  ruder  sally  Of  thought  and  s ;  Check  every  outflash  2 

And  the  free  s  that  makes  a  Briton  known.  Britons,  guard  29 

by  that  name  was  wont  to  live  in  her  s,  Lover's  Tale  i  571 

Speed     As  for  the  French,  God  s  'em  (repeat)  National  Song  11,  29 

Speedeth    Some  think  it  s  fast :  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  4 

Spell    by  a  s  Did  change  them  into  gall ;  Love,  Pride,  etc.  9 

increasing  s's  Which  break  upon  each  other,  Timbuctoo  125 

Sphere    rais'd  thee  higher  to  the  S's  of  Heaven,  „        216 

Strain  the  hot  s's  of  his  convulsed  eyes.  Love  37 

To  charm  a  lower  «  of  fulminating  fools.  Sugg,  by  Reading  30 

love  too  high  to  be  express'd  Arrested  in  its  s.  Lover's  Tale  i  66 

Sphinxes    placid  S  brooding  o'er  the  Nile  ?  A  Fragment  14 

Spiced    Wrapped  round  with  «  cerements  in  old  grots  „  30 

l^ilt    Why  the  life  goes  when  the  blood  is  s  ?  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  32 

you  are  he  That  s  his  life  about  the  cliques.  New  Tinwn  40 

Spire     methought  I  saw  A  wilderness  of  s's,  Timbuctoo  162 

Spirit    Thy  s  fetter'd  with  the  bond  of  clay :  .,  83 

my  s  With  supernatural  excitation  bound  Within  me,  90 

no  mightier  S  than  I  to  sway  The  heart  of  man :  195 

I  am  the  S,  The  permeating  life  219 

Thus  far  the  S :  Then  parted  Heavenward  on  the  wing :  250 

Albeit,  his  s  and  his  secret  heart  The  Mystic  7 

Half-light,  half  shadow,  let  my  s  sleep  Love  and  Sorrow  17 

Thy  s  to  mild-minded  Melancholy ;  Check  every  outflash  3 

Thy  s,  circled  with  a  living  glory,  Me  my  own  fate  3 

But  yet  my  lonely  s  follows  thine,  „  9 

brain  could  keep  afloat  The  subtle  s.  Oh,  Beauty  11 

S  waits  To  embrace  me  in  the  sky.  Germ  of '  Maud '  33 

Sent  up  the  moaning  of  imhappy  s's  Lover's  Tale  i  613 

The  very  s  of  Paleness  made  still  paler  „  679 

Spite     And  what  with  s's  and  what  with  fears.  New  Timpn  29 

What  unheroic  pertness  !  what  un-Christian  s  !        Sugg,  by  Reading  78 

Splendid    Solemn  but  s,  full  of  shapes  and  soimds,  Lover's  Tale  i  799 

Splendour    thro'  secret  s's  mounting  still,  D-  of  F.  Women  11 

centre  of  the  s's,  all  unworthy  Of  such  a  shrine —         Lover's  Tale  i  69 

Splinter    fragments  of  the  living  rock,  (Huge  s's,  „         H  45 

Spoke    while  I  s,  The  bare  word  kiss  hath  made  Oh,  Beauty  11 

While  I  s  thus,  the  seedsman,  Memory,  D.  of  F.  Women  14 

And  those  fine  curses  which  he  s ;  New  Tinwn  2 

room  Within  the  summer-house  of  which  I  s.  Lover's  Tale  ii  174 

Sport    Shall  not  avail  you  when  the  day-beam  s's  Cambridge  6 

j^t    colour'd  s's  as  dance  athwart  the  eyes  Timbuctoo  70 

Spotless    What  profits  now  to  understand  The  merits  of  a  s 

siiirt New  Timon  34 

Spring  (s)     Upon  some  earth-awakening  day  of  s  Timbuctoo  152 

With  earliest  Light  of  S,  "        200 

The  vocal  s  of  bursting  bloom,  •  Chorus  15 

and  indue  i'  the  s  Hues  of  fresh  youth,  Could  I  outwear  Z 

from  his  s  Moved  smiling  toward  his  summer.  Lover  s  Tale  i  dOb 

Spring  (verb)     For  her  the  green  grass  shaU  not  s,  Burial  of  Love  28 

When  war  against  our  freedom  s's  !  Hands  all  Round  50 

0  you,  the  Press  !  what  good  from  you  might  s !      Sugg,  by  Reading  1 

Springing     s  In  and  out  the  emerald  glooms.  The  Grasshopper  41 

Springtide     which  the  fearful  s  flecks  the  lea,  Love  and  Sorrow  ^ 

Green  s,  April  promise,  glad  new-year  Lover  si  ale  tZli 

Springtime    s  caUs  To  the  flooding  waters  cool,  Hosalmd  ly 

Sprout    on  an  oaken  s  A  goodly  acorn  grew ;  ^    ,■  ,  r7f    o'^^An 

Spur    S  along  !  s  amain  !  charge  to  the  fight :  English  War  Song  47 

Spy     An  epitaph  that  aU  may  s  ?  „  Burial  of  Love  23 

You  may  not,  Uke  yon  tyrant,  deal  in  spies.  Sugg,  by  Reading  20 

Spying     By  tricks  and  s,  ^^„      ,  ^l^TlTlAX 

Square    Why  round  is  not  s  ?  The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why '  13 

Stagger'd    my  human  brain  S  beneath  the  vision,  Timbu^oo  18b 

"94 


Stair    step  by  step  to  scale  that  mighty  s 

Stand    I  seem'd  to  s  Upon  the  outward  verge  -        , 

Why  the  rocks  s  still,  The  '  How '  and  the  'Why    U 

S  off,  or  else  my  skipping-rope  Will  hit  you  .     '^^!^OT  11 

He  tnumphs  ;  maybe,  we  shall  s  alone :  (repeat)      Britons,  guard  5,  11 
Shall  we  s  idle.  Nor  seek  to  bridle  His  vile  ^^ 

aggressions,  till  we  s  alone  ?  o        i"  -D^jn^n  «q 

«'s  in  her  pew  and  hums  her  decent  psalm  Sugg,  by  «i«  J^  ^^ 

I  To  s  witfiin  the  level  of  their  hopes,  ^nZniLuoM  12 

Standeth    Death  s  by ;  She  will  not  die ;  I' the  9^ominghg^  12 

There  s  our  ancient  enemy  ;  (repeat)  English  War  Song  23,  45 


Standing  Singing  airily,  S  about  the  cbarm^  root.  The  Hesperidts,  Song  i  4 
Singing  airily,  S  about  the  charmkl  root.  „  te  34 

Star    s's  Were  flooded  over  with  clear  glory  Timbuctoo  8 

bore  globes  Of  wheeling  suns,  or  s's,  „    172 

The  pleasant  s's  have  set !  Hero  to  Leander  39 

underneath  the  s  Named  of  the  Dragon —  A  Fragment  5 

For  the  western  sun  and  the  western  s,  The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  7 

But  the  other,  like  a  s.  Germ  of '  Maud '  28 

And  all  her  s's  decay.'  The  Ringlet  10 

Stare    And  s's  in  his  face  and  shouts  '  how  ? 

how  ?  '  The'  How  '  and  the'  Why '  29 

Staring    somewhere  in  death  They  sleep  with  s  eyes  and 

gilded  lips,  A  Fragment  29 

Starlit    bearing  on  both  sides  Double  display  of  s  wings  Timbuctoo  155 

Starr'd    (See  also  Newstarr^d)    those  which  s  the  night  o' 

thfe  Elder  World?  „  60 

s  at  slender  intervals  With  blossom  tufta  Lorxr's  Tale  i  399 

Starry  great  angel  mind  which  look'd  from  out  The  s  glow- 
ing of  his  restless  eyes.  Timhudoo  89 
The  herald  lightning's  s  bound,  Chorut  14 
Starry-fair  Her  face  Was  s-f,  not  pale,  Lover's  Tale  i  76 
Startle  may  rude  Death  never  s  them,  „  796 
State  (commonwealth)    I  feel  the  thousand  cankers  of 

our  <S',  ^^f?'  ^  Heading  43 

State  (condition)    earth  hath  made  her  s  forlorn  Tears  of  Heaven  3 

Could  I  outwear  my  present  s  of  woe  Could  I  ouitoear  1 

Stately    Her  gardens  frequent  with  the  s  Palm,  Timbuetoo  233 

Statued    Your  portals  s  with  old  kings  and  queens,  Cambridge  2 

Stay    Huge  moimds  whereby  to  s  his  yeasty  waves.  Timbuetoo  15 

I'll  s  thee  with  my  kisses.  Hero  to  Leander  22 

If  that  he  would  them  hear  And  s.  The  Hntwhite  7 

Our  life  evanisheth :  Oh  !  s.  ..         16 

Though  thou  art  fleet  of  wing,  Yet  s.  „        25 

Delight  is  with  thee  gone.  Oh !  s.  „        34 

S's  on  the  flowering  arch  of  the  bough,  The  Hesperidet,  Song  iv  18 

Why  s  they  there  to  guard  a  foreign  throne  ?  Britons,  guard  41 

Stays  (corsets)    The  padded  man— that  wears  the  s's —  New  Timon  8 

Steal    and  sadness  s  Symbols  of  each  other ;  Every  day,  etc.  25 

Stedfast     Father,  twinkle  not  thv  s  sight ;  The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  3 

Steep  (adj.)    The  path  was  s  and  loosely  strewn  with  crags  Lover's  Tale  i  376 

Steep  (s)    {See  also  Highland-steep)    ewes  bleat  On  the 

solitary  s's,  Lotos-Eaters  30 

Steep  (verb)     And  s  my  soul  in  laughter  There  art  three  things  2 

Steep«i    It  shall  be  s  in  the  salt,  salt  tear,  Shall  be  * 

in  liis  own  salt  tear :  English  War  Song  14 

Steeple    Why  a  church  is  with  a  s  built ;  The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why '  34 

Stem    Flowing  between  the  clear  and  polishM  s's,  Timbuetoo  51 

Stemmed    -S^e  Thickstemmed,  White-stemmed 

Step    s  by  s  to  scale  that  mighty  stair  Timbuetoo  196 

breaks  in  above  Those  marble  s's  below.  Hero  to  Uander  35 

Step-dame    she  did  act  the  s-d  to  mine  eyes.  Lover's  Tale  i  664 

Stem    his  spirit  and  his  secret  heart  The  s  experiences  of 

converse  lives,  _^*'  ^^'^^ 

Still    Like  a  swol'n  river's  gushings  in  *  night  Ttmbwioo  193 

Ye  could  not  read  the  marvel  in  his  eye.  The  s  serene 

abstraction ;  The  Mystie  5 

I  had  lain  as  s.  And  blind  and  motionless  as  thea 

J  jjy  I  Lover's  Tale  t  618 

Sting     Popes  And  Brummels,  when  they  try  to  s.  New  Timon  20 

Stir    So  gladly  doth  it  5 ;  ^.    ^.^'^  ^^  ^**^ -^I 

Crocodiles  in  briny  creeks  Sleep  and  5  not :       The  Hesperides,  Song  t  9 

Stol'n    and  the  golden  apple  be  4  away,  ••  »».ll 

The  golden  apple  s  away,  'in-,    •*t*o« 

rare  pity  had  s  The  li\-ing  bloom  away,  Lover  si  aU  t  la 

Stone     By  a  mosseil  brookbank  on  a  »  O  sadNonurt!^ 

Stony    With  s  smirks  at  all  things  human  and  dinne !  Sugg.  byReadmg  48 

Stood    I  -S'  upon  the  Mountain  which  o'erlooks  TtmbuOool 


and  he  s  beside  me  There  on  the  ridge, 

And  alternations  of  idl  hues,  be  *. 

S  out  a  pillar'd  front  of  bumish'd  gold 

where  no  gaze  Might  rest,  5  open. 

Always  there  s  before  him,  night  and  day, 

which  s  In  the  midnoon  the  glory  of  old  Rhodes, 

Here  s  the  infant  Ilion  of  the  nund, 

I  6'  on  a  tower  in  the  wet, 


65 

„      76 

..    175 

„    179 

The  Mystie  11 

A  Fragment  1 

Mablethorpe  3 

1865-1868  1 


1 


stop 


1200 


Sweet 


stop    sing  aloud  and  evermore  in  the  wind, 

without  5,  The  Hesperides,  Song  it  14 

Storm    calm  and  s  Mingle  day  by  day.  Every  day,  etc.  7 

By  secret  fire  and  midnight  s's  Chorus  5 

s's  of  sorrow  and  ruth  That  roar  beneath  ;  Though  night  9 

vessel  and  your  Church  may  sink  in  s's.  Sugg,  by  Reading  74 

Storm-blast     the  shrill  s-b  feeds  it  from  behind,  Lover's  Tale  ii  47 

Strain     s  Weak  eyes  upon  the  glistering  sands  Pallid  thunderstricken  4 

S  the  hot  spheres  of  his  convulst^d  eyes.  Love  37 

Close  by  our  ears,  the  huge  roots  s  and  creak),  Lover's  Tale  i  63 

Straining     No  more  unfurl  the  s  sail ;  Lotos-Eaters  24 

Strange    Which  flung  s  music  on  the  howling  winds,  Timhuctoo  80 

are  full  of  s  Astonishment  and  boundless  change. 

(repeat)  Chorus^  9,  19,  29 

All  visions  wild  and  5 ;  ol  'piovres  2 

0  SAD  No  more!    O  sweet  No  more !    O  s  No  more!   0  sad  No  more  !  2 

Strangling    s  sorrow  weigh  Mine  utterance  with  lameness.  Lover's  Tale  i  24 

Stream  (s)    {See  also  Understream)    borne  Adown  the 

sloping  of  an  arrowy  s,  Timbudoo  144 

Down  an  ideal  s  they  ever  float,  Pallid  thunderstricken  2 

Over  a  s  two  birds  of  glancing  feather  Dualisms  8 

And  all  things  flow  like  a  s.  (repeat)  ol ' piovres  8,  16 

Two  s's  upon  the  violet  deep  :  The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  6 

To  whom  the  slope  and  s  of  life,  Rosalind  5 

low-hung  tresses,  dipp'd  In  the  fierce  s,  Lover's  Tale  i  375 

the  cbillness  of  the  mountain  s  Smote  on  my  brow,  „  652 

the  loud  s,  Awoke  me  not,  but  were  a  part  of  sleep  ;  „        ii  123 

Stream  (verb)     They  s  like  fire  in  the  skies  ;  English  War  Song  26 

solid  shining  ground  S  from  beneath  him  B.  of  F.  Women  3 

To  flame  and  sparkle  and  s  as  of  old,  The  Ringlet  8 

Street     and  the  s's  with  ghastly  faces  throng'd  Timbuctoo  29 

mndeth  through  The  argent  s's  o'  the  City,  „         231 

Why  change  the  titles  of  your  s's  ?  Hands  all  Round  31 

Strength     buoyancy  and  s  To  bear  them  upward  Timbuctoo  158 

mailed  warrior  in  youth  and  s  complete ;  The  Grasshopper  13 

thro'  the  sapphire  deeps  In  wayward  s,  Chorus  29 

in  him  light  and  joy  and  s  abides ;  LA)ve  42 

For  where  is  the  heart  and  s  of  slaves  ?     Oh  ! 

where  is  the  s  of  slaves  ?  English  War  Song  36 

ere  the  Czar  Grew  to  this  s  Bloio  ye  the  trumpet  6 

We  won  old  battles  with  our  s,  the  bow.  Britons,  guard  44 

On  that  day  the  year  First  felt  his  youth  and  s,  Lover's  Tale  i  306 

Strewn    path  was  steep  and  loosely  s  with  crags  „  376 

Stricken    See  Awestricken,  Thunderstricken 

Strife     know  no  s  Of  inward  woe  or  outward  fear ;  Rosalind  3 

Strike    some  you  s  can  scarce  return  the  blow ;  Su^g.  by  Reading  27 

String    See  Lutestring 

Stringing     As  they  gambol,  lilygarlands  ever  s  :  Dualisms  15 

Stripe     In  a  s  of  grassgreen  calm,  Lotos-Eaters  5 

Stroke    a  lightning  s  had  come  Even  from  that  Heaven     Lover's  Tale  i  623 
Strong    The  issue  of  s  impulse,  hurried  through  The  riv'n 

rapt  brain :  Timbuctoo  120 

more  fleet  and  s  Than  its  precursor,  „        127 

But  an  insect  lithe  and  s,  The  Grasshopper  7 

Where  are  thy  mommients  Piled  by  the  s  and  sunbom 

Anakim  A  Fragment  20 

He  is  weak  !  we  are  s ;  he  a  slave,  we  are  free ;      English  War  Song  38 

O  rise,  our  s  Atlantic  sons,  Hands  all  Round  49 

Caucasus  is  bold  and  s.  The  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  7 

Stronger    May  Freedom's  oak  for  ever  live  With  s  life 

from  day  to  day ;  Hands  all  Round  6 

Strove    S  to  uprise,  laden  with  mournful  thanks.  Lover's  Tale  i  748 

Struck    sound  which  s  the  palpitating  sense,  Timbuctoo  119 

Strung    S  in  the  very  negligence  of  Art,  Lover's  Tale  i  562 

Style     How  much  I  love  this  writer's  manly  s  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  1 

Subaltern    who  are  to  you  As  captain  is  to  s.  New  Timon  16 

Subject     Free  s's  of  the  kindliest  of  all  thrones,  Sugg,  by  Reading  71 

Substance     Issue  of  its  own  s,  Love  and  Sorrow  10 

Substanceless    Almeida,  if  my  heart  were  s,  „  13 

Subterranean    and  the  streets  with  ghastly  faces  throng'd 

Do  utter  forth  a  s  voice,  Timbuctoo  30 

Subtle    The  s  life,  the  countless  forms  Of  living  things,  Chorus  7 

no  control  Within  the  thrilling  brain  could  keep  afloat 

The  s  spirit.  Oh,  Beauty  11 

Bold,  5,  careless  Rosalind,  Rosalind  2 


Subtle-fanged    blood  Of  hateful  herbs  a  s-f  snake.  Lover's  Tale  i  821 

Such     There  are  no  hearts  like  English  hearts,  S  hearts 

of  oak  as  they  be.  National  Song  4 

Of  late  s  eyes  looked  at  me — while  I  mused  At 

sunset.  There  are  three  things  9 

self-upborne  With  s  gladness,  as,  Rosalind  18 

With  two  s  couches  soft  and  white ;  0  darling  room  16 

The  centre  of  the  splendours,  all  unworthy  Of  s  a 

shrine—  Lover's  Tale  i  70 

I  well  remember,  It  was  a  glorious  morning,  s  a  one 
As  dawns  but  once  a  season.  Mercury  On  s  a 
morning  would  have  flung  himself  From  cloud  to  cloud,         „  301 

There  was  no  s  thing. —  „  670 

Suffer    She  hardly  can  believe  that  she  shall  s  wrong.    Sugg,  by  Reading  66 
Suffering     wan  dark  coil  of  faded  s —  Could  I  outwear  4 

Sufficed     with  her  week-day  worldliness  s,  Sugg,  by  Reading  62 

Suitor     I  am  any  man's  s,  If  any  will  be  my 

tutor:  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  1 

Siunmer  (adj.)     and  sloped  Into  the  slumberous  s  noon  ;        A  Fragment  11 

The  s  midges  wove  their  wanton  gambol,  Check  every  outfiash  12 

In  summer  still  a  s  joy  resumeth.  Me  my  own  fate  4 

When  s  winds  break  their  soft  sleep  with  sighs,  Lover's  Tale  i  559 

Summer  (s)     A  s  of  loud  song,  The  Grasshopper  32 

The  naked  s's  glowing  birth,  Chorus  16 

A  s  still  a  summer  joy  resumeth.  Me  my  own  fate  4 

S's  tanling  diamondeyed.  Dualisms  22 

from  his  spring  Moved  smiling  toward  his  s.  Lover's  Tale  i  307 

Summerflowers     Bowing  the  seeded  s.  The  Grasshopper  8 

Summerhours    Life  of  the  s,  „  3 

Summerplain    Joy  of  the  s,  „  2 

Summerpride     In  thy  heat  of  s,  „  36 

Summertide     And  in  the  glow  of  sallow  S,  Timbuctoo  201 

Summervault     Under  a  s  of  golden  weather ;  Dualisms  18 

Summerwind    Voice  of  the  s,  The  Grasshopper  1 

Summerwood     In  the  s's  when  the  sun  falls 

low.  The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why  '  27 

Summoning     Unto  the  fearful  s  without :  Timbuctoo  36 

Sun    when  the  S  Had  fall'n  below  th'  Atlantick,  „  3 

'  Wide  Afric,  doth  thy  S  Lighten,  ,.  58 

Of  those  that  gaze  upon  the  noonday  S.  „  71 

planet-girded  S's  And  moon-encircled  planets,  .,        109 

bore  globes  Of  wheeling  s's,  or  stars,  „        172 

In  the  summerwoods  when  the  s  falls  low,   The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  27 
Nor  the  round  s  that  shineth  to  all ;  Burial  of  Love  26 

Each  s  which  from  the  centre  flings  Chorus  21 

Thou  art  my  heart's  s  in  love's  crystalline :  Lme  and  Sorrow  6 

The  mighty  disk  of  their  majestic  s,  Love  21 

If  thou  dost  leave  the  s.  The  lintwhite  32 

Whebe  is  the  Giant  of  the  S,  A  Fragment  1 

For  the  western  s  and  the  western  star.  The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  7 

S  peeped  in  from  open  field,  Home  they  brought  him  6 

the  dew,  the  s,  the  rain,  Unto  the  growth  lover's  Tale  ii  73 

Sunbom     Where  are  thy  monuments  Piled  by  the  strong 

and  s  Anakim  A  Fragment  20 

Simlight     In  s  and  in  shadow,  The  Grasshopper  20 

Sunny     But  a  short  youth  s  and  free.  „  29 

Thy  locks  are  full  of  s  sheen  The  lintwhite  28 

Simset    while  I  mused  At  s,  underneath  a  shadowy 

plane  There  are  three  things  10 

fullf  aced  s  yellowly  Stays  on  the  flowering  arch  The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  17 
S  ripened,  above  on  the  tree,  „  21 

Gray  sand  banks  and  pale  s's — dreary  wind,  Mablethorpe  7 

About  s  We  came  unto  the  hill  of  woe,  Lover's  Tale  i  364 

Supernatural    and  my  spirit  With  s  excitation  bound 

Within  me,  Timbuctoo  91 

Siurpassing     s  Earth's  As  Heaven  than  Earth  „        169 

Swalloweth    narwhale  s  His  foamfoimtains  in  the  sea.  Lotos-Eaters  7 

Sway     no  mightier  Spirit  than  I  to  s  The  heart  Timbuctoo  195 

Hopes  did  s  from  that  Which  himg  the  frailest :  Lover's  Tale  i  857 

Swear     No  man  to  bear  it — S  it !     We  s  it !  Britons,  guard  58 

We  s  to  guard  our  own.  „  60 

And  I  s  henceforth  by  this  and  this,  The  Ringlet  20 

Sweet    (See  also  Double-sweet)    for  a  moment  fill'd  My  eyes 

with  irresistible  s  tears,  Timbudoo  191 

Her  Pagods  hung  with  music  of  s  bells :  „         234 


Sweet 


1201 


Three 


Sweet  (continued)    Nor  the  rivers  flow,  nor  the  s  birds  sing,    Burial  of  Lave  29 
Thy  voice  is  s  and  low  ;  Hero  to  Leander  33 

Ebe  yet  my  heart  was  s  Love's  tomb.  Love,  Pride  etc.  1 

S  Love  was  withered  in  his  cell ;  „      '        8 

Embalming  with  s  tears  the  vacant  shrine,  Lost  Hope  3 

Moving  his  crest  to  all  s  plots  of  flowers  Could  I  outwear  7 

The  lintwhite  and  the  throstlecock  Have  voices  s  and 

clear ;  The  lintwhite  2 

Alas  !  that  hps  so  cruel  dumb  Should  have  so  s  a  breath  !         „         18 

O  SAD  No  more  !     0  s  No  more  !  Q  sad  No  more  !  1 

Oh,  Beauty,  passing  beauty  !  sweetest  8  !  Oh,  Beauty  1 

We  will  eat  the  Lotos,  s  As  the  yellow  honeycomb,         Lotos-Eaters  14 

Surely,  surely,  slumber  is  more  s  than  toil,  „  38 

Peace-lovers  we — s  Peace  we  all  desire —  Britons,  guard  13 

Sweeter     This  is  lovelier  and  s,  Lotos-Eaters  10 

Sweetest    Oh,  Beauty,  passing  beauty  !  s  Sweet !  Oh,  Beauty  1 

Swift    till  they  minister'd  Unto  her  s  conceits  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  666 

Swiftness     Agglomerated  s,  I  had  lived  „  495 

Swim    Thine  eye  in  drops  of  gladness  s's.  Hero  to  Leander  18 

Swimming     till  the  eyes  in  vain  Amid  the  wild  imiest  of  s 

shade  Timbuctoo  129 

Swol'n    Like  a  s  river's  gushings  in  still  night  „  193 

Sword    world  is  wasted  with  fire  and  s.  The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  22 

Swum    s  with  balanced  wings  To  some  tall  mountain.       Lover's  Tale  i  304 
Symbol     and  sadness  steal  S's  of  each  other ;  Every  day,  etc.  26 


Tact    A  little  feeling  is  a  want  of  t.  Sugg,  by  Reading  58 

Take    men's  hopes  and  fears  t  refuge  in  The  fragrance  Timbuctoo  226 

Lest  one  from  the  East  come  and  t  it  away.    The  Hesperides,  Song  i  29 

t's  his  flags  and  waves  them  to  the  mob  J),  of  F.  Women  5 

t  it,  t  my  skipping-rope  And  hang  yourself  Skipping-rope  11 

fierce  old  man — to  t  his  name  You  bandbox.  New  Timon  43 

T  care  thou  dost  not  fear  to  fall ! '  What  time  I  wasted  9 

To  t  Sardinia,  Helium,  or  the  Rhine  :  Britons,  guard  50 

T  heed  of  your  wide  privileges  !  Su^g.  by  Beading  11 

'  Then  t  it,  love,  and  put  it  by ;  The  Ringlet  11 

Taken    If  the  golden  apple  be  t  The  world  Th^  Hesperides,  Song  ii  21 

And  t  away  the  greenness  of  my  Ufe,  Lover's  Tale  i  625 

Tale    There  must  no  man  go  back  to  bear  the  t :  Britons,  guard  56 

Talk     You  t  of  tinsel !  why  we  see  New  Timon  37 

Talked     Angels  have  t  vrith  him,  and  showed  him  thrones :      The  Mystic  1 

Talking     other  things  t  in  unknown  tongues,  Timbuctoo  112 

Tall    Daughters  of  time,  divinely  t,  The  Mystic  26 

There  are  no  men  like  Englishmen,  So  t  and  bold  as 

they  be.  National  Song  8 

Till  midnoon  the  cool  east  b'ght  Is  shut  out  by 

the  rotmd  of  the  t  hillbrow ;  The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  16 

and  swimi  with  balanced  wings  To  some  t  mountain.  Lover's  Tale  i  305 

Tanling    Summer's  t  diamondeyed.  Dualisms  22 

Tarry    In  the  hoflow  rosy  vale  to  t,  Lotos-Eaters  12 

But  she  tarries  in  her  place  And  I  paint  Germ  of '  Maud  '  1 

Tartar  Than  when  Zamoysky  smote  the  T  Khan,         Blow  ye  the  trumpet  12 

Taste    assimilated  all  our  t's  And  future  fancies.  Lover's  Tale  i  238 

Taught    did  profess  to  teach  And  have  t  nothing,  Cambridge  14 

Teach    t  him  to  attain  By  shadowing  forth  Timbuctoo  196 

did  profess  to  t  And  have  taught  nothing,  Cambridge  13 

Nay,  dearest,  t  me  how  to  hope,  Skipping-rope  9 

Tear     Bathes  the  cold  hand  with  t's,  Timbuctoo  38 

fill'd  My  eyes  with  irresistable  sweet  t's,  „        191 

With  the  t's  he  hath  shed,  Burial  of  Love  6 

Her  t's  are  mixed  with  the  bearded  dews.  /'  the  glooming  light  H 

Laughter  bringeth  t's  :  Every  day,  etc.  18 

Thou  hast  no  sorrow  or  t's.  The  Grasshopper  26 

Embalming  with  sweet  t's  the  vacant  shrine.  Lost  Hope  3 

all  the  day  heaven  gathers  back  her  t's  Tears  of  Heaven  6 

commend  the  t's  to  creep  From  my  charged  lids ;       Could  1  outwear  10 

It  shall  be  steeped  in  the  salt,  salt  t.  Shall  be 

steeped  in  his  own  salt  t :  English  War  Song  14 

And  both  my  eyes  gushed  out  with  t's.  0  sad  No  more.'  6 

I  said,  '  O  years  that  meet  in  t's,  1865-1866  4 

We  passed  with  t's  of  rapture.  Lover's  Tale  i  409 

Flooding  its  angry  cheek  with  odorous  t's.  ..  565 

my  vmhappy  sighs,  fed  with  my  t's,  ..  674 


Tiaxicontmued)    eyes,  1  saw,  were  full  of  t's  in  the  mom,    Lover't  TaU  i  728 
iiiink  not  thy  t's  will  make  my  name  grow  green,—  806 

woful  ailments  Of  unavailing  t'«  and  heart  deep  moans         "  819 

Tearless    i  or  ever  write  In  the  weathered  light  Of  the  t  eye    Burial  of  Love  22 
TeU    —Of  wmds  which  t  of  waters,  "^  TimlLtoo  206 

1  cannot  t  if  that  somewhat  be  L  The'  How  'and  the'  Wku '  26 

Number,  t  them  over  and  number  How  many  The  Hetperidet,  8ona  ii  7 


Who  COM  toy  4 


Skippinf-rope  10 

Sands  all  Botmd  27 

Lover's  TaU  i  291 

New  Tinum  28 

Britons,  guard  2 

Lover's  TaU  1  742 


23 

75 

683 

Rosalind  22 

Lover's  TaU  i  748 

749 


Who  can  t  Why  to  smell  The  violet, 
where,  alack,  is  Bewick  To  t  the  meaning  now  ? 
Or  t  me  how  to  die. 

Yet  t  her — better  to  be  free  Than  vanquish 
what  profits  it  To  t  ye  that  her  father  died. 
Temperament    With  moral  breadth  of  t. 
Tempest    world's  last  t  darkens  overhead ; 
Tender    After  my  refluent  health  made  (  quest  Un- 

answer'd. 
Tenderly    Oh !  lead  me  t,  for  fear  the  mind  Rain  tiiio' 
my  sight, 
Her  face  Was  starry-fair,  not  pale,  t  flush'd 
Tenement    And  damn'd  unto  his  loathed  (. 
Tennis    Think  you  hearts  are  t  balls  To  play  with. 
Thanks    Strove  to  uprise,  laden  with  mournful  t. 
That    and  ever  since  t  hour.  My  voice  hath  somewhat 

falter'd —  ^^^ 

Thebes    melody  flattering  the  crisped  Nile  By  columned  T.    A  Fragmient  27 

Then     But  what  is  the  meaning  of  t  and  no«  !     The' Hov' andihe'Wky'^ 

Thick    and  t  night  Came  down  upon  my  eyelids,  and  I  felL    TimAneloo  186 

The  Mnow  falls  on  her  flake  by  flake,  /'  the  gloomino  l^/kt  90 

Pushing  the  t  roots  aside  Of  the  singing  flowert'-d  graasee,  GrasSopper  37 

And  crushing  the  t  fragrant  reeds  he  lies,  Lgfe  32 

Thick-ribbed    Cathedralled  caverns  of  t-r  gold  Pallid  thunderstridcen  7 

Thickstemmed    Looks  through  the  t  woods  by  day  and  night  Lovt  44 

Thin    And  Memory  tho'  fed  by  Pride  Did  wax  so  t  on  gall,   Zow,  Pride,  etc.  12 

T  dilletanti  deep  in  nature's  plan,  Su^.  by  RntOng  80 

Thing    other  t's  talking  in  unknown  tongues,  Timlmeloo  IIS 

shape  These  t's  with  accurate  similitude  „         184 

And  all  t's  creeping  to  a  day  of  doom.  Tks  MwHie  40 

the  countless  forms  Of  living  f 5,  cSrmt  8 

For  all  t's  are  as  they  seem  to  all,  (repeat)  ol  'ptorrn  7, 15 

And  all  t's  flow  like  a  stream,  (repeat)  „        8,  16 

Surely  ail  pleasant  t's  had  gone  be/ore,  Q  sad  No  more!  7 

These  are  three  t's  that  fill  my  heart  with  sighs    There  are  three  things  1 

There  are  three  t's  beneath  the  blessed  skies  „  5 

All  t's  are  not  told  to  all,  ,  The  Hesperides,  Song  m  12 


All  good  t's  are  in  the  west, 

By  the  1 1  hold  in  scorn. 

We  Ukewise  have  our  evil  t's ; 

stony  smirks  at  all  t's  human  and  divine ! 

I  sorrow  when  I  read  the  ^s  you  write. 

These  t's  Unto  the  quiet  dayught  of  your  minds 

With  her  to  whom  all  outward  fairest  t's 

There  was  no  such  t. —  „  _.^ 

Think    Some  t  it  speedeth  fast :  Th*  '  How '  and  the  *  Wh^ '  4 

T  you  hearts  are  tennis  balls  To  play  with,  Botaliii  82 

T  not  thy  tears  will  make  my  name  grow  green, —  Lover's  Tmlt  i  806 
Thinking    we  The  t  men  of  England,  loathe  a  tyranny.    Sugg.  bglUaiing  12 


t«14 

Oerm  of '  Mavd '  6 

Hands  aU  Round  19 

Svgg.  by  Reading  48 

77 

Lover's  TaU  i  293 

383 

670 


Thought  (s)     With  such  a  vast  circumference  of  (, 

thrilling  t's  Involving  and  embracing  each 

the  torrent  of  quick  t  Absorbed  me 

My  t's  which  long  had  grovell'd  in  the  slime 

E  en  so  my  t's,  erewhile  so  low, 

Aix  t's,  all  creeds,  all  dreams  are  true, 

every  ruder  sally  Of  (  and  speech ; 

Sowed  my  deep-furrowed  t  with  many  a  name 

nor  with  the  t's  that  roll, 

I  turn  To  you  that  mould  men'«  t's ; 

The  wreck  of  ruin'd  life  and  sbatter'd  /, 

So  gazed  I  on  the  ruins  of  that  ( 
Thought  (verb)    a  familiar  face :  I  (  we  knew  him 
Thousand     I  play  about  his  heart  a  (  wajrs, 

I  feel  the  (  cankers  of  our  State, 
Three    And  yet  again,  t  shadows,  fronting  one,  j. nm  xayanc  xi 

These  are  t  things  that  fill  my  heart  with  sighs  There  are  three  tMngi  1 

There  are  { tilings  beneath  the  blessed  skies  For 
which  I  live —  6 


timbwioo  9i 

„       116 

.       141 

.       148 

,.       157 

ol  'ptwnt%  1 

Cheek  every  outflash  2 

D.ofF.  Women  15 

Cambridge  II 

Sutjf.  bjf  Reeding  86 

Loper's  TaU  1 1 62 

71 

New  Timon  7 

Timbuctoo  20t 

Sugg,  by  Reading  43 

The  liysUe  17 


4  o 


Three 


1202 


Turn 


Three  (continued)  Hesper,  the  dragon,  and  sisters  t.  The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  24 

Hesper,  the  dragon,  and  sisters  t,  Daijghters  t,  „             iv  25 

Three-fold     For  the  blossom  unto  <-/ music  bloweth :  „              i  17 

Threshold    from  the  golden  t  had  down-roll'd  Lover's  Tale  i  617 

Thrill'd    Who  killed  the  girls  and  t  the  boys  New  Timon  9 

Thrilling    t  thoughts  Involving  and  embracing  each  with 

each  Rapid  as  fire,  Tirnbuctoo  115 

Lenora,  laughing  clearly  A  light  and  t  laughter,  Anacreontics  10 
no  control  Within  tie  t  brain  could  keep  afloat  The 

subtle  spirit.  Oh,  Beauty  10 

Throne    Ts  of  the  Western  wave,  fair  Islands  green  ?  Timbiictoo  42 

Part  of  a  i  of  fiery  flame,  „       181 

Oh  latest  T !  where  I  was  rais'd  „       240 

Anoels  have  tsilked  with  him,  and  showed  him  t's :            The  Mystic  1 

Basing  thy  t  above  the  world's  annoy.  Though  night  8 

The  very  t  of  the  eternal  God :  Love  6 

Breathe  on  thy  winged  t,  and  it  shall  move  ,.  27 

Why  stay  they  there  to  guard  a  foreign  t  ?  Britons,  guard  41 

Free  subjects  of  the  kindliest  of  all  t's,  Sugg,  by  Beading  71 

Throng'd    and  the  streets  with  ghastly  faces  t  Timbuctoo  29 

Thronging     T  the  cells  of  the  diseased  mind,  Shall  the  hag  3 

Throsttecock    The  lintwhite  and  the  t  The  lintwhite  1 

Throwing     And  t  by  all  consciousness  of  self,  Lover's  Tale  i  787 

Thrown    I  had  t  me  on  the  vast,  „           493 

Thrust    woful  man  had  t  his  wife  and  child  „           368 

Thunder  (s)     The  heavy  t's  girding  might,  Chorus  13 

Melodious  t's  through  your  vacant  courts  Cambridge  9 

Why  waste  they  yonder  Their  idle  t?  Britons,  guard  40 

I  hear  a  t  though  the  skies  are  fair,  Sugg,  by  Reading  89 

rapid  brook  Shot  down  his  inner  fs.  Lover's  Tale  i  372 

had  down-roU'd  Their  heaviest  t,  „            618 

Thunder  (verb)    And  t  thro'  the  sapphire  deeps  Chorus  28 

Thunderstricken    Thk  palUd  t  sigh  for  gain,  Pallid  thunderstricken  1 

Thymiaterion    Past  T,  in  calmed  bays,  The  Hesperides  4 

Tide    {See  also  Summertide)    Call  home  your  ships  across 

Biscayan  t's,  Britons,  guard  37 

In  rising  and  in  falling  with  the  t,  Lover's  Tale  i  62 

Tilth    T,  hamlet,  mead  and  movmd :  D.  of  F.  Women  4 

Timbuctoo    Or  is  the  rumour  of  thy  T  Timbuctoo  61 

Time    (See  also  Summertime)    Giant  of  old  T  infixed 

The  limits  of  his  prowess,  pillars  high  Long  t 

eras'd  from  Earth :  „        11 

A  dream  as  frail  as  those  of  ancient  T?'  „        62 

the  t  is  well  nigh  come  When  I  must  render  up  „      242 

In  t  there  is  no  present.  The  '  How '  and  the  '  Why '  5 

One  reflex  from  eternity  on  t,  The  Mystic  22 

Daughters  of  t,  divinely  tall,  „          26 

T  flowing  in  the  middle  of  the  night,  „          39 

what  t  Ijud  low  And  crushing  the  thick  fragrant  reeds  Love  31 

dewy  prime  Of  youth  and  buried  t  ?  Who  can  say  7 

What  1 1  wasted  youthful  hours  What  time  I  wast^  1 

To  raise  the  people  and  chastise  the  t's  Sugg,  by  Reading  5 

touch  of  T  Will  turn  it  silver-gray ;  The  Ringlet  5 

touch  of  T  Can  turn  thee  silver-gray ;  „        15 

legend  ran  that,  long  t  since.  One  rainy  night,  Lover's  Tale  i  366 

Planting  my  feet  against  this  mound  of  t  „           492 

Timon    The  old  T,  with  his  noble  heart.  New  Timon  3 

A  T  you !     Nay,  nay,  for  shame :  „        41 

Tinsel     rou  talk  of  / !  why  we  see  The  old  mark  „        37 

Tithon    No  T  thou  as  poets  feign  The  Grasshopper  5 

Title    Why  change  the  t's  of  your  streets  ?  Hands  all  Round  31 

Titmarsh    And  a  t  in  the  bough.  A  gate  and  a  field  4 

To-and-fro    Did  brush  my  forehead  in  their  t-a-f:  Lover's  Tale  i  736 

To-day     Who  can  say  Why  T-d  Who  can  say  2 

Toil    slumber  is  more  sweet  than  t,  Lotos-Eaters  38 

Told    When  in  this  valley  first  1 1  my  love.  Check  every  outflash  14 

All  things  are  not  t  to  all,  The  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  12 

For  what  is  this  which  now  I'm  t.  The  Ringlet  31 

Tolerance     And  those  who  tolerate  not  her  t,  Swgg.  by  Reading  68 

Tolerate    And  those  who  t  not  her  tolerance,  „               68 

Toleration    God  save  the  Nation,  The  t,  Britons,  guard  28 

Tomb     Ebe  yet  my  heart  was  sweet  Love's  t,  Love,  Prvde,  etc.  1 

we  deem  the  world  thy  t.  Lme  19 

To-morrow     T-m  will  be  yesterday  ?  Who  can  say  3 

Tone    wondrous  t's  Of  man  and  beast  Chorus  8 


Tongue     other  things  talking  in  imknown  t's,  Timbuctoo  112 

Mute  his  t.  Burial  of  Love  4 

To-night    Thou  shalt  not  wander  hence  t-n.  Hero  to  Leander  21 

T-n  the  roaring  brine  Will  rend  thy  golden  tresses ;  „  23 

Took     1 1  delight  in  this  locality !  Mablethorpe  2 

I  that  t  you  for  true  gold.  The  Ringlet  32 

Tool     Be  noble,  you !  nor  work  with  faction's  t's  Sugg,  by  Reading  29 

Torrent    the  t  of  quick  thought  Absorbed  me  Timbuctoo  141 

Tortured     From  iron  limbs  and  t  nails !  Hands  all  Round  16 

Tossing    T  on  the  t  ocean,  Lotos-Eaters  3 

Tost    See  Wind-tost 

Touch  (s)     chilling  t  of  Time  Will  turn  it  silver-gray ;  The  Ringlet  5 

chilling  t  of  Time  Can  turn  thee  silver-gray ;  „        15 

Touch  (verb)     As  with  one  kiss  to  t  thy  blessed  cheek.  Oh,  Beauty  8 

Toucheth    and  sometimes  t  but  one  string,  Lover's  Tale  i  17 

Tower    ranged  Chrysolite,  Minarets  and  t's  ?  Timbuctoo  236 

soon  yon  brilliant  t's  Shall  darken  „        244 

Show'd  me  vast  chffs  with  crown  of  t's.  What  time  I  wasted  3 

I  STOOD  on  a  <  in  the  wet,  1865-1866  1 

Town     In  any  t,  to  left  or  right,  0  darling  room  14 

Trackless    A  maze  of  piercing  t,  thrilling  thoughts  Timbu^oo  115 

and  strength  To  bear  them  upward  through  the  t  fields  „        159 

Traitor     But  be  not  you  the  blatant  t's  of  the  hearth.    Sugg,  by  Reading  24 

Peace-lovers,  haters  Of  shameless  t's,  Britons,  guard  16 

Trampled    And,  t  on,  left  to  its  own  decay.  Lover's  Tale  ii  81 

Transitory    Thy  woes  are  birds  of  passage,  t :  Me  my  own  fate  2 

Translucent    Child  of  Man,  See'st  thou  yon  river,  whose  t 

wave,  Timbuctoo  229 

Treasure    watch  the  <  Of  the  wisdom  of  the  West.  The  Hesperides,  Song  i  13 
Tree    (See  also  Fruit-tree)     Round  about  the 

hallowed  fruit  t  curled —  „  H  13 

Bound  about  the  golden  t  „  25 

Sunset  ripened,  above  on  the  t.  „  iv  21 

The  gnarlt'd  bole  of  the  charmed  t,  „  29 

Where  Love  was  worshipp'd  under  every  t —  Lover's  Tale  i  324 

Tremble    inner  soul  To  t  Uke  a  lutestring,  Oh,  Beauty  13 

Trembling     a  snake  her  forehead  clips  And  skins 

the  colour  from  her  t  lips.  Pallid  thunderstricken  14 

Tremulous    imaging  The  soft  inversion  of  her  t  Domes ;  Timbuctoo  232 


At  length,  Upon  the  t  bridge. 
Tress    roaring  brine  Will  rend  thy  golden  ^es ; 

That  brush  thee  with  their  silken  t'es  ? 

low-himg  t'es,  dipp'd  In  the  fierce  stream. 
Tribe    Alas,  Church  writers,  altercating  t's — 
Trick     By  t's  and  spying, 
Tried     And  once  you  t  the  Muses  too : 
Triple    With  t  arch  of  everchanging  bows, 
Triple-folded    I  fain  would  shake  their  t-f  ease, 
Triumph  (s)    The  t  of  this  foretaste, 
Triumph  (verb)    He  t's ;  maybe,  we  shall  stand  alone : 

(repeat) 
Trod    See  Seraphtrod 
Troubled    Like  light  on  t  waters : 
Troublous    The  t  autumn's  sallow  gloom. 
True     All  thoughts,  all  creeds,  all  dreams  are  t. 

The  t  men  banished, 

Till  your  balls  fly  as  their  t  shafts  have  flown. 

And  then  shall  I  know  it  is  all  (  gold 

I  that  took  you  for  t  gold, 
Truer     '  God  save  the  Queen '  is  here  a  t  cry. 
Truest    Oh,  ( love  !  art  thou  forlorn. 
Trumpet     Blow  ye  the  t,  gather  from  afar 
Trust     Peace-lovers  we — but  who  can  t  a  liar  ? — 

And  t  an  ancient  manhood  and  the  cause 
Truth    Deep-rooted  in  the  living  soil  of  t : 

shalt  thou  pierce  the  woven  glooms  of  t ; 

Man  is  the  measure  of  all  t  Unto  himself. 

Till  we  were  left  to  fight  for  t  alone. 

Like  them,  you  bicker  less  for  t  than  forms. 
Try    when  they  t  to  sting. 
Turn  (s)     Has  given  all  my  faith  a  t  ? 


Lover's  Tale  i  406 

Hero  to  Leander  24 

The  Grasshopper  39 

Lover's  Tale  i  374 

Sugg,  by  Reading  73 

Britons,  guard  21 

New  Timon  13 

Timbuctoo  74 

Sugg,  by  Reading  44 

Lover's  Tale  i  515 

Britons,  guard  5,  11 

Love  40 

Chorus  17 

ol  'piovresT. 

Britons,  guard  10 

47 

The  Ringlet  7 

„         32 

Britons,  guard  26 

Burial  of  Love  14 

Blow  ye  the  trumpet  1 

Britons,  guard  14 

Sxigg.  by  Reading  39 

Timbuctoo  225 

Though  night  11 

All  t  is  change :  io  'piovre^  3 

Britons,  guard  35 

Sugg,  by  Reading  76 

New  Timon  20 

The  Ringlet  52 


Turn  (verb)     T  cloud  to  light,  and  bitterness  to  joy.  Though  night  6 

once  more  I  <  To  you  that  mould  men's  thoughts ;  Sugg,  by  Reading  85 
therefore  now  you  t,  New  Timon  14 

touch  of  Time  Will  t  it  silver-gray ;  The  Ringlet  6 


Turn 


1203 


VeU 


Turn  (verb)  (continued)     touch  of  Time  Can  t  thee  silver-gray  ;   The  Ringlet  16 
Turned    all  faces  t  to  where  Glows  rubylike  D.  of  F.  Women  6 

Turning     hinge  on  which  the  door  of  Hope,  Once  t.  Lover's  Tale  i  298 

Turretstairs    t  are  wet  That  lead  into  the  sea.  Hero  to  Leander  36 

Tusked    Where  the  t  seahorse  walloweth  Lotos-Eaters  4 

Tutelary     I  became  to  her  A  t  angel  Lover's  Tale  i  388 

Tutor    I  am  any  man's  suitor,  If  any  will  be 

my  t :  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '  2 

Twenty    See  Four-and-twenty 

Twilight    glooms  And  cool  impleached  t's.  Timbuctoo  228 

the  back  owl  scuds  down  the  mellow  t.     The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  30 
Like  a  lone  cypress,  through  the  t  hoary,  Me  my  own  fate  6 

if  he  had  fall'n  In  love  in  t  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  700 

Twinkle    Father,  t  not  thy  stedfast  sight ;  The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  3 

Two     and  beneath  T  doors  of  blinding  brilliance,  Timbuctoo  178 

Why  t  and  t  make  four  ?    Why  round  is 

not  square  ?  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  13 

For  the  t  first  were  not,  but  only  seemed  One  shadow       The  Mystic  20 

T  bees  within  a  chrystal  flowerbell  rocked  Dualisms  1 

Over  a  stream  t  birds  of  glancing  feather  Do  woo  each  other,         „         8 

T  children  lovelier  than  love,  adown  the  lea  are  singing,  „       14 

T  streams  upon  the  violet  deep :  The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  6 

With  thy  t  couches  soft  and  white,  0  darling  room  3 

With  t  such  couches  soft  and  white ;  „  16 

Type     they  were  the  i's  and  shado wings  Lover's  Tale  i  386 

Tyranny     thinking  men  of  England,  loathe  a  t.  Sugg,  by  Reading  12 

Tyrant  (adj.)     Permit  not  thou  the  t  powers  To  fight      Hands  all  Round  42 

Tyrant  (s)     Heaven  guard  them  from  her  t's'  jails  !  „  14 

God  the  t's  cause  confound  !  (repeat)     Hands  all  round  10,  22,  34,  46,  58 

You  may  not,  like  yon  t,  deal  in  spies.  Sugg,  by  Reading  20 


U 


Timbuctoo  197 

Lover's  Tale  i  819 

557 

Love  1 

Lover's  Tale  i  733 


Unattainable    By  shadowii^  forth  the  U ; 
Unavailing    whom  woful  ailments  Of  u  tears 
Unaware    All  u's,  into  the  poet's  brain ; 
Unborn    Thou,  from  the  first,  u,  undying  love. 
Unchanged    Keeping  u  The  purport  of  their  coinage 
Un-Christian    What  unheroic  pertness !  what  m-C 

spite  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  7o 

Unconceived    vision  Of  u  and  awful  happiness.  Lover's  Tale  i  798 

Uncontrolled    This  was  the  very  arch-mock  And  msolence 

of  M  Fate,  .  ^  »  ^**'* 

Undefin'd    through  the  trackless  fields  Of  u  existence  far 

and  free.  Timbuctoo  160 

Understand     I  have  given  tA«e  To  m  my  presence,  v,.      214 

What  profits  now  to  u  The  merits  of  a  spotless  shirt—    Neio  Timxm  66 
Understood    They  can  be  u  by  kings.  Harids  all  Round  52 

Understream    gUstering  sands  that  robe  The  u.         Pallid  thunderstnckenQ 
Undescended    unsounded,  u  depth  Of  her  black  hollows.  Timbuctoo  104 

Undiscemed    obelisks  Graven  with  gorgeous  emblems  u  ?      A  J^ragment  16 
Undisceming    Ye  scorned  him  with  an  w  scorn :  itieMystwA 

UndreadSr  Unknowing  fear,  U  loss.  The  Grasshopper  17 

Undying    Thou,  from  the  first,  unborn,  u  love,  ^^^  ^ 

Unfading    such  as  gird  The  u  foreheads  of  the  Samts  m  r-mbuctoo  54 

Heaven  ?  ,      m      u    ;j  *'  8 

Unfathomable    chasms  of  deep,  deep  blue  Slumber  d  u,  .,  o 

Unfed    The  light  of  his  hopes  M,  ,  r  T^/flf=;8 

Unfrequent     U,  low,  as  tho;  it  told  its  pulses  ;  ^""ZtosEat^r^  24 

Unfurl    No  more  M  the  strainmg  sail ;  .  Lotos  Ji^aurs  ^'i 

Unhappy    and  tho' horrid  rifts  Sent  up  the  moanmg  .,  r«7..-Riq 

"^^  u  spirits  Imprison'd  in  her  centre  Lover  s  Tale  t  613 

^U  iov -who  drew  the  happy  atmosphere  Of  my  M  sighs,      ,,  0(4 

Unheroic%Vhat°„  pertness  !  Xt  un-Christian  spite  !  ^JO-'yJf^^^^ 
Unicom    Those  rhymes, '  The  Lion  and  the  Z7  '  Lovers  Talet  ^85 

uSSn'd    an  u  Sth  And  harmony  of  planet-guxled  Su^J-Jg'   108 
Union    Most  loveUest,  most  dehcious  u  ?  ^-o^er  s  j.aie%  |^^ 

And  were  in  u  more  than  double-sweet.  nJlhrnyoer  16 

Unknowing     f7  fear,  Undreading  loss,  ^''^  ?SSril2 

Unknown    Or  other  things  talking  m  «  tongues,  iimov^too  ii^ 

Unlike    Like,  u,  they  roam  together  Under  a  summer-vault      ^^^^^  jg 
UnnunSLlS'^'^^^h  seU^ought  evils  of  .  years,  Tears  of  Heaven  4 


Unrelenting    Would,  u.  Kill  all  dissenting, 
Unrest    Amid  the  wild  u  of  swimming  shade 
Unretumed    Love  u  is  like  the  fragrant  flame 
Unrevenged    love  !  art  thou  forlorn.  And  u  ? 
Unroof     U  the  shrines  of  clearest  vision, 
Unscathed    Yet  endure  u  Of  changeful  cycles 
Unsealed    The  glory  u, 


BritoHf.  guard  33 
Timimetoo  129 

To 5 

Burial  of  Love  15 

To  a  Lady  Sleep.  3 

A  Fragment  8 

The  Hesperidtt,  Song  Hi  3 


Timbuetoo  151 

Though  nigh:  10 

Dualitms  6 


Unshaken    like  dusky  worms  which  house  Beneath  u 
waters, 

u  peace  hath  won  thee : 
Unshocked    wave  u  Lays  itself  calm  and  wide, 
Unsounded    the  u,  undescended  depth  Of  her  black 

hollows.  Timbuctoo  104 

Unstrung    His  bow  u  With  the  tears  he  hath  shed.  Burial  of  Love  5 
Unutterable    and  look'd  into  my  face  With  his  u,  shining 

orbs,  Timbuctoo  67 

erewhile  so  low,  now  felt  U  buoyancy  and  strength  „      158 

The  silence  of  all  hearts,  u  Love.  Love  14 

Unvisited    her  silver  heights  U  with  dew  Timbuctoo  103 

Unwaning    Dim  shadows  but  u  presences  FourfacM  The  Mystic  15 
Unworthy    The  centre  of  all  splendours,  all  u  Of  such 

a  shrine —  I/yter't  Tale  i  69 
Up    See  Far-up 
Upborne    See  Self-upborne 

Upbuming    without  heat,  into  a  larger  air  V,  The  Mv$tie  45 

Updrawn     U  in  expectation  of  her  change —  Lover's  Ttue  i  597 

With  mighty  evocation,  had  u  .,            668 

Upheld     U,  and  ever  hold  aloft  the  cloud  The  Mystic  31 

Uprend    though  they  u  the  sea,  lave  9 

Uprise    Calls  to  him  by  the  fountain  to  u.  »    35 

Strove  to  u,  laden  with  mournful  thanks.  Lover's  TaU  i  748 

Upsprung    u  the  dazzling  Cones  Of  Pyramids,  Timbuctoo  168 

Use     No  longer  in  the  dearest  u  of  mine —  Lover's  TaU  i  590 

Utter    Do  u  forth  a  subterranean  voice,  Timbuctoo  30 

But  lose  themselves  in  u  emptiness.  Love  and  Sorrow  16 
Utterance    strangling  sorrow  weigh  Mine  u  with 

lameness.  Lover's  TaU  i  25 


Vacant    Embalming  with  sweet  tears  the  v  shrine.  Lost  Hope  3 

Melodious  thunders  through  your  v  courts  At  mom 

and  even ;  Cambridge  9 

Vagrant    her  silver  heights  Unvisited  with  dew  of  v  cloud,      Timbuctoo  108 

Vague    As  men  do  from  a  v  and  horrid  dream,  Lover's  TaU  i  786 

Vale    In  the  hollow  rosy  v  to  tarry,  Lotos- Eaters  18 

We  will  abide  in  the  golden  v  Of  the  Lotos-land,  „          28 

Valley    In  the  v  some,  and  some  On  the  ancient  heights  „          16 

watered  vallies  where  the  young  birds  sing  ;  Could  I  outvear  8 

But  in  the  middle  of  the  sombre  v  Cheek  every  outfask  6 

When  in  this  v  first  I  told  my  love.  ..              14 

Have  hallowed  out  a  v  and  a  gulf  lover's  TaU  i  26 

Van    the  brazen  beat  Of  their  broad  »'»,  Shall  thekaa^ 

Vanish'd    All  freedom  v,  *"'''-'**Lf*^ 

Vanity    in  my  v  1  seem'd  to  stand  Upon  TimbuOoo  94 

hath  felt  The  vanities  of  after  and  before ;  The  Mystic  6 

Vanquish    Than  ti  all  the  world  in  arms.  Hands  all  Round  28 

Vapour    The  cruel  v's  went  through  all.  Love,  Pride,  tie.  7 

Or  moisture  of  the  v,  left  in  clinging,  lovers  TaU  ii  46 

Varicoloured    SeeYaiy 

Varied    The  «  earth,  the  moving  heaven,  0*ori«l 

Vary    Of  wayward  v  coloureil  curcuinstance,  The  Myitte  U 

Vast  (adj.)    With  such  a  v  circumference  of  thought,  Timhu^oo  93 

Show'd  me  v  cliffs  with  crown  of  towers.  What  time  I  wasted  3 

Some  v  Assyrian  doom  to  burst  upon  our  race.  Su^.  by  Rcadina  42 

The  night  is  dark  and  v  ;  Hero  to  lender  2 

Vast  (s)     I  had  thrown  me  on  the  v.  Lover  *  TaU  i  488 

Vastness    between  whose  limbs  Of  brassy  c  A  Fragwtent  7 

Vault    See  Summervault 

Vaulting     V  on  thine  axry  feet.  The  Grasshopper  10 

Veil  (s)     Athwart  the  v's  of  evil  which  enfold  thee  l^nm  17 

Oil  !  rend  the  v  in  twain  :  ^-    i    "    ^ 

Veil  (verb)    I  did  v  My  vision  with  both  hands,  Timbuctoo  88 


Vein 


1204 


Wave 


Could  I  outwear  6 

Love,  Pride,  etc.  5 

Love  6 

Lover's  Tale  i  562 

679 


687 
725 

Sugg,  by  Reading  74 
Lover's  Tale  i  601 


Vein    labyrinthine  v's  Of  the  great  vine  of  Fable,  Timhuctoo  221 

and  our  mirth  Apes  the  happy  v.  Every  day,  etc.  13 

Verge     I  seem'd  to  stand  Upon  the  outward  v  Timbuctoo  95 

camel  on  the  v  Journeying  southward  ?  A  Fragment  18 

Vernal    beauty  issuing  A  sheeny  snake,  the  light  of  v 

bowers, 
Very     One  v  dark  and  chilly  night  Pride  came  beneath 
and  held  a  light. 
The  V  throne  of  the  eternal  God : 
Strung  in  the  v  negligence  of  Art, 
The  V  spirit  of  Paleness  made  still  paler 
This  was  the  v  arch-mock  And  insolence  of  uncontrolled 

Fate, 
her  cheek  was  pale.  Oh  !  v  fair  and  pale  : 
Vessel    The  v  and  your  Church  may  sink  in  storms. 
View  (s)    Lay  like  an  open  scroU  before  my  v, 
View  (verb)     I  v  Fair  maiden  forms  moving  hke 

melodies).  There  are  three  things  2 

Vigorous    My  f alconhearted  Rosalind  Fullsailed  before  a  v 

wind,  Rosalind  10 

Vile     Nor  seek  to  bridle  His  v  aggressions,  Britons,  guard  53 

Vine    labyrinthine  veins  Of  the  great  v  of  Fable,  Timbuctoo  222 

And  the  lithe  v  creeps,  Lotos-Eaters  34 

Vineyard    Through  v's  from  an  inland  bay,  Rosalind  29 

And  Oberwinter's  v's  green,  0  darling  room  8 

Violet  (adj.)    Two  streams  upon  the  v  deep  :           The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  6 

Violet  (s)     Who  can  tell  Why  to  smell  The  v.  Who  can  say  6 

Virgin    Long  hath  the  white  wave  of  the  v  light  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  5 

Vi^le    Whose  lowest  depths  were,  as  with  v  love,  Timbuctoo  49 

For  nothing  v,  they  say,  had  birth  In  that  blest  ground  „         55 

These  things  with  accurate  similitude  From  v  objects,  „      135 

Vision    I  did  veil  My  v  with  both  hands,  „        69 

my  himian  brain  Stagger'd  beneath  the  v,  „       186 

Visit  his  eyes  with  v's,  and  his  ears  „      206 

Unroof  the  shrines  of  clearest  v,  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  3 

All  v's  wild  and  strange  ;  oi  'piovTes  2 

But  grow  upon  them  like  a  glorious  v  Lover's  Tale  i  797 

Visit     V  his  eyes  with  visions,  and  his  ears  Timbuctoo  206 

Vital    Some  v  heat  as  yet  my  heart  is  wooing  :  Could  I  outwear  12 

Vive  I'Empereur    '  V  I'E'  may  follow  by  and  bye  ;  Britons,  guard  25 

Vivid     Distinct  and  v  with  sharp  points  of  light  Timbuctoo  107 

Less  V  than  a  half-forgotten  dream,  „       136 

Vocal    The  V  spring  of  bm-sting  bloom,  Chorus  15 

Voice    Do  utter  forth  a  subterranean  v,  Timbuctoo  30 

I  rais'd  My  v  and  cried  '  Wide  Af ric,  „         58 

Thy  V  is  sweet  and  low  ;  Hero  to  Leander  33 

V  of  the  summerwind.  The  Grasshovper  1 


lintwhite  and  the  throstlecock  Have  v's  sweet  and  clear  ;  The  lintwhite  2 


Came  v's,  like  the  v's  in  a  dream, 
Voiced    See  Fall-voiced 
Vote    We  hate  not  France,  but  France  has  lost  her  v 

single  V  may  speak  his  mind  aloud  ; 

since  that  hour.  My  v  had  somewhat  falter'd — 

By  lying  priest's  the  peasant's  v's  controlled. 
Voyaging    Zidonian  Hanno,  v  beyond  The  hoary 
promontory  of  Soloe 


W 


The  Hesperides  12 

Britons,  guard  19 

Stigg.  by  Reading  14 

Lover's  Tale  i  750 

Britons,  guard  8 

The  Hesperides  2 


Wafted    w  on  the  wind,  drove  in  my  sight,  Lover's  Tale  i  730 

Waileth    Heaven  crieth  after  thee  ;  earth  w  for  thee  :  Love  26 

Wait    To  its  Archetype  that  w's  Germ  of '  Maud '  31 

Spirit  w's  To  embrace  me  in  the  sky.  „          33 

For  her  there  lie  in  to  milMons  of  foes,  Sugg,  by  Reading  59 

Waiting     W  to  light  him  with  his  piuple  skies,  Love  34 

Waive    And  to  a  little  of  his  claim  ;  New  Timon  22 

Wake    Whether  we  w  or  whether  we  sleep  ?  The '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  '17 

If  on,  my  soul,  nor  crouch  to  agony :  Though  night  5 

Waken    If  he  w,  we  w,  The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  17 

Walk    portals  of  pure  silver  w's  the  moon.  Though  night  4 

All  men  do  to  in  sleep,  ol  'piovres  5 

Could  be  not  w  what  paths  he  chose,  Lover's  Tale  i  692 

Wall    some  great  City  where  the  w's  Shake,  Timbuctoo  28 


Wall'd    See  Black-wall'd,  Mnd-walled 

Walloweth    tusked  seahorse  w  In  a  stripe  of  grassgreen 

calm. 
Wan    wheel  in  wheel,  Arch'd  the  w  Sapphire. 

So  their  w  limbs  no  more  might  come  between 

and  mightily  outgrow  The  w  dark  coil  of  faded 
suffering — 
Wand    Shall  darken  with  the  waving  of  her  w  ; 
Wander    Thou  shalt  not  w  hence  to-night, 

odours  w  On  the  black  and  moaning  sea, 

That  w  roimd  their  windy  cones, 

To  w  down  his  sable  sheeny  sides. 

We  will  not  w  more. 

islanders  of  Ithaca,  we  wiU  not  w  more. 
Wanderer     W's  coming  and  going 
Wandereth     But  the  land-wind  w. 
Wandering    eyes  so  full  of  light  Should  be  so  w  ! 

W  waters  unto  w  waters  call ; 
Want  (s)     Worth  eternal  w  of  rest. 


Lotos-Eaters  4 

Timbuctoo  111 

Shall  the  hag  12 

Could  I  outwear  4 

Timbuctoo  245 

Hero  to  Leander  21 

28 

Chorus  6 

Love  39 

Lotos-Eaters  28 

37 

1865-1866  7 

The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  4 

The  lintwhite  27 

The  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  8 

il2 


A  little  feeling  is  a  w  of  tact.  Sugg,  by  Reading  58 

Want  (verb)     You  fools,  you'll  w  them  all  again.  Hands  all  Round  32 

we  to  a  manlike  God  and  Godlike  men  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  84 

Wanton    The  summer  midges  wove  their  w  gambol.  Check  every  outfiash  12 

Think  you  hearts  are  tennis  balls  To  play  with,  to 

Rosalind  ?  Rosalind  33 

War    rolled  The  growing  murmiu'S  of  the  Polish  to  !     Blow  ye  the  trumpet  % 

Should  to's  mad  blast  again  be  blown. 

When  w  against  our  freedom  springs  ! 
Warbled     W  from  yonder  knoll  of  solemn  larches, 
Warbling     Heard  neither  to  of  the  nightingale. 
War-cry     Better  wild  Mabmoud's  u-c  once  again  ! 
Warlike    I  call  on  you  To  make  opinion  to. 
Warm    When  the  new  year  to  breathed  on  the  earth. 


Hands  all  Round  41 

50 

Chech  every  outfiash  10 

The  Hesperides  6 

Sugg,  by  Reading  83 

87 

Love  33 


Every  flower  and  every  fruit  the  redolent  breath 

Of  this  to  seawind  ripeneth.  The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  2 

No  little  room  so  to  and  bright  Wherein  to  read,  0  darling  room  5 

Not  any  room  so  w  and  bright.  Wherein  to  read,  „  17 

Even  where  the  grass  was  to  where  I  had  lain,  Lover's  Tale  i  790 

Warmer    My  heart  is  to  surely  than  the  bosom  of  the 
main. 

Warning-note    loud  and  long,  the  w-n  :  Prepare  ! 

Warping     W  their  nature,  till  they  minister'd 

Warrior    Thou  art  a  mailed  w  in  youth 

Waste  (s)     Black  specks  amid  a  to  of  dreary  sand. 
The  rapid  to  of  roving  sea, 

Waste  (verb)     How  canst  thou  let  me  w  my  youth  in 
sighs ; 
Why  to  they  yonder  Their  idle  thimder  ! 
Which  to  with  the  breath  that  made  'em 

Wasted    The  world  is  to  with  fire  and  sword. 
What  time  I  to  youthful  hours 

Watch    to  the  treasure  Of  the  wisdom  of  the  West.  The  Hesperides,  Song  i  13 
Father  Hesper,  to,  to,  ever  and  aye,  „  ii  1 

Father  Hesper,  to,  to,  night  and  day,  »  iii  1 

W  it  warily  day  and  night ;  ,,  ii>  13 

W  it  warily,  ,,  32 

Watcher    the  angels.  The  to's  at  heaven's  gate.  Lover's  Tale  i  616 

Watching    Out  of  to's,  out  of  wiles.  The  Hesperides,  Song  iii  10 

Water    worms  which  house  Beneath  imshaken  to's,  Timbuctoo  151 


Hero  to  Leander  8 

Sugg,  by  Reading  90 

Lover's  Tale  i  665 

The  Grasshopper  13 

Timbuctoo  247 

Chorus  2 


Oh,  Beauty  2 

Britons,  guard  39 

Lover's  Tale  i  475 

The  Hesperides,  Song  iv  22 

What  time  I  wasted  1 


■ — Of  winds  which  tell  of  to's,  and  of  to's 

Like  light  on  troubled  to's  : 

Through  the  to  and  the  fire,  (repeat) 

The  crisped  to's  whisper  musically. 

Wandering  w's  unto  wandering  to's  call ; 

springtime  calls  To  the  flooding  to's  cool, 

And  the  foam-white  to's  pour  ; 
Watered     And  w  vaUies  where  the  young  birds  sing ; 
Waterfall    to's  That  sing  into  the  pebbled  pool. 
Wave  (s)     Huge  moimds  whereby  to  stay  his  yeasty  w's. 

Divinest  Atalantis,  whom  the  to's  Have  buried  deep, 

Thrones  of  the  Western  to,  fair  Islands  green  ? 

Beat  like  a  far  to  on  my  anxious  ear. 

With  harmonies  of  wind  and  to  and  wood 

translucent  to.  Forth  issuing  from  darkness, 

to's,  which  bore  The  reflex  of  my  City  in  their  depths. 


114 
207 
229 
288 


208 

Love  40 

National  Song  14,  32 

Check  every  outfiash  7 

The  Hesperides,  Song  iii  8 

Rosalind  20 

Lotos-Eaters  32 

Could  I  outwear  8 

Rosalind  23 

Timbuctoo  15 

22 

42 


Wave 


1205 


WUd 


Wave  (s)  (continued)    Worn  Sorrow  sits  by  the 

moaning  w  ;  7'  the  glooming  light  4 

The  dull  w  mourns  down  the  slope,  „             21 

And  the  w's  climb  high  and  fast.  Hero  to  Leander  4 

deep  salt  w  breaks  in  above  Those  marble  steps  „           34 

white  w  of  the  virgin  light  Driven  back  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  5 

the  w  unshocked  Lays  itself  calm  and  wide,  Dualisms  6 

the  winedark  w  our  weary  bark  did  carry.  Lotos-Eaters  9 

W's  on  the  shingle  pouring,  1865-1866  11 

Upon  the  crispings  of  the  dajjpled  w's  Lover's  Tale  i  46 

where  the  w  Plash'd  sapping  its  worn  ribs  „             58 

fierce  stream,  bore  downward  with  the  w.  „           375 

And  onward  floating  in  a  full,  dark  w,  „            739 

Wave  (verb)    w's  them  to  the  mob  That  shout  below,  D.  of  F.  Women  5 

Waving    Shall  darken  with  the  w  of  her  wand  ;  Timhuctoo  245 

Wax     Did  w  so  thin  on  gall.  Love,  Pride,  etc.  12 

Wax-lighted     W-l  chapels  and  rich  carved  screens,  Cambridge  4 

Way     the  infinite  w's  which,  Seraphtrod,  Wound  Timhuctoo  47 

I  play  about  his  heart  a  thousand  w's,  „        205 

Looking  warily  Every  w.                                    The  Hesperides,  Song  i  27 

And  she  has  mov'd  in  the  smooth  w  so  long,  Svgg.  by  Reading  65 

Must  he  come  my  w  too  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  698 

Wasrward    Of  w  vary  coloured  circumstance,  The  Mystic  12 

And  thunder  thro'  the  sapphire  deeps  In  w  strength,  Chorus  29 

But  Misery,  like  a  fretful,  w  child,  Lover's  Tale  i  696 

Weak    and  whUe  Above  her  head  the  w  lamp  dips 

and  winks  Timhuctoo  35 
while  wistfully  they  strain  W  eyes  upon  the 

glistering  sands  Pallid  thunderstricken  5 

He  is  w  !  we  are  strong ;  he  a  slave,  we  are  free  ;    English  War  Song  38 

Weaken    Father,  old  Himla  w's.                              The  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  7 

Weal     All  is  change,  woe  or  w  ;  Every  day,  etc.  23 

Wear    gazeth  on  Those  eyes  which  w  no  light  Timhuctoo  39 

The  padded  man — that  w's  the  stays —  New  Timon  8 

Weariness     W  and  wild  alarm,  Lotos-Eaters  2 
Weary    even  as  the  sea  When  w  of  wild  inroad  buildeth 

up  Huge  mounds  Timhuctoo  14 
Long  enough  the  winedark  wave  our  w  bark  did 

carry.  Lotos-Eaters  9 

then  came  in  O'erhead  the  white  light  of  the  w 

moon  Lover's  Tale  i  659 

Weather    blue-glossed  necks  beneath  the  purple  w.  Dualisms  13 

Under  a  summervault  of  golden  w;  „        18 

Weathered    For  ever  write  In  the  w  light  Burial  of  Love  21 

Wedded    he  would  make  his  w  wife,  Camilla  !  Lover's  Tale  i  793 

^Vpf^    Scs  v^ildwcfid 

Week-day    with  her  w-d  worldliness  sufficed,  Sugg,  by  Reading  62 

Weep    She  cannot  speak  ;  she  can  only  w  ;  P  the  glooming  light  18 

Let  us  MI  in  hope—                                   .  ^^^'H/  «^2/.  «^<^-  ^2 
HK4.VEN  w's  above  the  earth  all  night  till  mom. 

In  darkness  w's,  as  all  ashamed  to  w.  Tears  of  Heaven  1 

W  not,  Almeida,  that  I  said  to  thee  Love  and  Sorrow  3 

never  learnt  to  love  who  never  knew  to  w.  ,.            1° 

but  inwardly  I  w  :  C'omW  I  outwear  11 

one  of  those  who  cannot  w  For  others'  woes,  Rosalind  11 

And  the  dark  pine  w's,                                 .  Lotos-Eaters  66 

Weigh    strangling  sorrow  w  Mine  utterance  with  ,    n,  ■,    ■  ca 

laments  Lover's  Tale  %  24 

Weight    a  highland  leaning  down  a  w  Of  cUffs,  The  Hesperides  10 

lithe  limbs  bow'd  as  with  a  heavy  w  ^^Va  io  o^  qq 

Welaway    Ah  !  w  !  (repeat)                      Every  day,  etc.  5,  11,  lb  4^,  ^?,  66 

Went    The  cruel  vapours  w  through  all,  Love,  Pride,  etc.  1 

West    watch  the  treasure  Of  the  wisdom  of  the  W.  The  Hesperides,  Song  1 14 

Look  from  w  to  east  along :  "            *?*  ^ 

And  the  low  w  wind,  breathing  afar,  »            .**  | 

AU  good  things  are  in  the  w,  r,     j  "n  -d     *j  -xn 

Gigantic  daufhter  of  the  W,  Hands  all  Round  37 

To  out  great  kinsmen  of  the  W,  "            g' 

To  omr  dear  kinsmen  of  the  W,  ,   "    ,    .  (.^n 

Was  not  the  South,  The  East,  the  W,  all  open.  Lovers  Talei  699 

Western    Where  are  ye  Thrones  of  the  W  wave,  _  Timhuctoo  4J 

No  w  odours  wander  On  the  black  and  moaning  Leander  28 

BeTw4en  the  Southern  and  the  W  Horn,  The  Hesperides  5 

For  the  w  svm  and  the  w  star,  "  '^"*'»  *" 


Westwind    Hum  a  lovelay  to  the  w  at  noontide.  Dwditms  2 

Wet  (adj.)    turretstairs  are  w  That  lead  into  the  sea.       Hero  to  Leander  36 
Wet  (s)    I  STOOD  on  a  tower  in  the  w,  J865-1866  1 

What    I  feel  there  is  something ;  but  how 
and  w  ?    I  know  there  is  somewhat ; 

but  w  and  why  ?  The  *  How  '  and  the'  Why '  23 

Who  will  riddle  me  the  how  and  the  w  ?    Who 

will  riddle  me  the  w  and  the  why  ?  „  36 

Wheatear    The  w's  whisper  to  each  other :      The  '  How '  and  the  *  Why '  11 

Wheel    w  in  w,  Ai-ch'd  the  wan  Sapphire.  Timbueioo  110 

Wheeling    Each  aloft  Upon  his  renown'd  Eminence  bore 

globes  Of  w  suns,  „         172 

Hallowed  in  awful  chasms  of  w  gloom,  Love  22 

Wherefrom    w  The  snowy  skirting  of  a  garment  bung,  Timbuetoo  181 

Whilome    w  won  the  hearts  of  all  on  Earth  „  17 

Whip    The  Russian  w's  and  Austrian  rods —  Hands  all  Round  18 

Whirl    bitter  blasts  the  screaming  autumn  w,  Though  night  2 

How  lightly  w's  the  skipping-rope  !  Skivpiwfrope  5 

Whisper    The  wheatears  w  to  each  other :      The  '  How  '  and  the  *  Wfw '  11 

The  crisped  waters  w  musically.  Check  every  out/uuh  7 

In  a  comer  wisdom  w's.  The  Heeperidet,  Song  i  16 

Whit    For  the  devil  a  w  we  heed  'em,  (repeat)  National  Song  10,  28 

White  (adj.)    (See  also  Blosmwhite,  Foam-white)    A  curve 

of   whitening,  flashing,  ebbing  light!     A   rustling 

of  w  wings  !  Timbuetoo  64 

The  indistinctest  atom  in  deep  air.  The  Moon's  to  cities,  ,.        101 

The  headland  with  inviolate  w  snow,  .,        204 

Why  the  heavy  oak  groans,  and  the  w 

willows  sigh  ?  The  *  How  '  and  the'  Why  '  15 

I'  the  glooming  light  Of  middle  night,  So  cold 

and  w,  /'  the  glooming  light  3 

The  w  clouds  drizzle  :  her  hair  faUs  loose  ;  „  9 

The  w  moon  is  hid  in  her  heaven  above.  Hero  to  Leander  3 

he  had  well  nigh  reached  The  last,  with  which  a 

region  of  w  flame.  The  Mystie  43 

Long  hath  the  w  wave  of  the  virgin  light  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  5 

With  thy  two  couches  soft  and  w,  O  darling  room  3 

With  two  such  couches  soft  and  w ;  „  18 

A  light,  methought,  flash'd  even  from  her  «  robe,       Lover' t  Tale  i  361 
W  as  quench'd  ashes,  cold  as  were  the  hopes  Of  my 

lom  love !  «  MO 

and  then  came  in  O'erhead  the  w  light  of  the  weary 

moon,  669 

as  tho'  a  red  rose  Should  change  into  a  w  one  suddenly.       „  727 

White  (s)    The  hoarhead  winter  paving  earth  With  sheeny  ir,        Chimu  19 
Whitening    A  curve  of  w,  flashing,  ebbing  light !  Timbmeloo  63 

White-robed    Come,  thou  of  many  crowns,  w-r  love,  Lom  84 

White-stemmed    And  all  the  w-s  pinewood  slept 

above —  Cheek  every  outfaA  13 

Wholesome    Be  loyal,  if  you  wish  for  w  rule :  Sngg.  by  Readmg  33 

Why    Who  wiU  riddle  me  the  how  and 

the  w  ?  (repeat)  The  '  Bow  '  and  the'  Why  '  9,  20 

W  two  and  two  make  four  ?     W  round  is  not 

square  ?     W  the  rocks  stand  still,  .,  13 

W  the  heavy  oak  groans,  and  the  white  willows 

sigh  ?     W  deep  is  not  high,  and  high  is  not  deep  ?     „  16 

How  you  are  you  Plflaml?  „  W 

The  httle  bird  pipeth  '  w  !  to  !  '  m  jJ 

W  the  life  goes  when  the  blood  is  spilt  ?  «.  M 

W  a  church  is  mth  a  steeple  built ;  ••  »* 

Who  wiU  riddle  me  the  what  and  the  w  ?  n  87 

Wide    '  W  Afric,  doth  thy  Sun  Lighten,  Timbuetoo  68 

Where  in  a  creeping  cove  the  wave  unsbock&i  Lays 

itself  cabn  and  w,  ^"^"i^""*,! 

Take  heed  of  your  w  privileges  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  11 

Was  not  the  w  world  free.  Lovers  TaU  t  6^ 

Widow'd    Because  my  hope  was  «,  ,."i„_^i2? 

Width    opal  w  Of  her  small  glowmg  lakes,  Ttmbueloo  101 

Wife    There  are  no  wtcM  like  English  wives,  A  atwnal  Song^  21 

As  I  woo'd  her  for  my  to  ;  Germ  of^ '  -^aud  '11 

woful  man  had  thrust  his  to  and  child  Lover  t  TaU  t  368 

he  would  make  his  wedded  to,  Camilla !  ,.  793 

Wild    even  as  the  sea  When  weary  of  to  inroad  buildeth  Timbuetoo  14 

till  the  eyes  in  vain  Amid  the  to  unrest  of  swimming  shade         „      129 

And  in  red  Autumn  when  the  winds  are  w  With  gambols,  „      202 


Wild 


1206 


Wound 


Wild  {continued)    Hark  how  the  w  rain  hisses,  Hero  to  Leander  14 

and  blow  back  Their  w  cries  down  their  cavemthroats,      Shall  the  hag  10 
All  visions  w  and  strange ;  oi  'p^ovres  2 

And  nothing  seems  to  me  so  w  and  bold,  Oh,  Beauty  7 

We  have  had  enough  of  motion,  Weariness  and  w 

alarm,  Lotos-Eaters  2 

Better  w  Mahmoud's  war-cry  once  again  !  Sugg,  by  Reading  83 

Her  words  were  Uke  a  coronal  of  w  blooms  Lover's  Tale  i  561 

WUdemess    methought  I  saw  A  w  of  spies,  Timbuctoo  162 

Wildest    The  foimtainpregnant  mountains  riven  To  shapes  of  w 

anarchy,  Chorus  4 

We  still  were  loyal  in  oxn  w  fights,  Sugg,  by  Reading  35 

Wildweed     I  smelt  a  w  flower  alone  ;  O  sad  No  more  !  4 

Wile    Thy  pleasant  w's  Foi^otten,  Burial  of  Love  15 

Out  of  watchings,  out  of  w's.  The  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  10 

Will    apart  In  intellect  and  power  and  w,  The  Mystic  38 

Willow    and  the  white  w's  sigh  ?  The  '  How  '  and  the  '  Why '  15 

Win     And  w  him  imto  me  :  Timbuctoo  210 

Smiles  on  the  earth's  worn  brow  to  w  her  if  she 

may.  Tears  of  Heaven  9 

Wind  (s)  \See  also  Land-wind,  Northwind,  Seawind,  Summer- 
wind,  Westwind)  Blown  round  with  happy  airs  of 
odorous  ic's  ?  Timbuctoo  46 

Which  flxmg  strange  music  on  the  howling  w's,  ,,         80 

in  red  Autumn  when  the  w's  are  wild  With  gambols,  „      202 

With  harmonies  of  w  and  wave  and  wood  „      207 

— Of  w's  which  tell  of  waters,  and  of  waters  Betraying 

the  close  kisses  of  the  w —  „      208 

But  w's  from  heaven  shook  the  acorn  out,  Lost  Hope  7 

the  w  which  bloweth  cold  or  heat  Would  shatter  Shall  the  hag  6 

borne  abroad  By  the  loud  w's.  Love  9 

sing  aloud  and  evermore  in  the  w,  without 

stop.  The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  14 

And  the  low  west  w,  breathing  afar,  „  iv  8 

Rosalind  Fullsailed  before  a  vigorous  w,  Rosalind  10 

Gray  sand  banks  and  pale  simsets — dreary  w,  Mablethorpe  7 

And  w's  were  roaring  and  blowing  ;  1865-1866  3 

One  rainy  night,  when  every  w  blew  loud.  Lover's  Tale  i  367 

summer  w's  break  their  soft  sleep  with  sighs,  „  559 

Being  wafted  on  the  w,  drove  in  my  sight,  ,,  730 

ringlets,  Drooping  and  beaten  with  the  plaining  w,  „  735 

Wind  (verb)     Yet  w's  the  pathway  free  to  all : —  What  time  I  wasted  8 

Windeth    w  through  The  ai^ent  streets  o'  the  City,  Timbuctoo  230 

the  blue-green  river  w  slowly ;  Chech  every  outflash  5 

channel  w  far  Till  it  fade  and  fail  and  die.  Germ  of '  Maud '  29 

Wind-tost    And  close  above  us,  sang  the  w-t  pine,  Lover's  Tale  i  60 

Windy    By  secret  fire  and  midnight  storms  That  wander 

round  their  w  cones.  Chorus  6 

Wine    Over  their  scrips  and  shares,  their  meats  and  w,  Sugg,  by  Reading  47 

Winedark    Long  enough  the  w  wave  our  weary  bark  did 

carry.  Lotos-Eaters  9 

Wing    A  rustUng  of  white  w's  !  Timbv^oo  64 

starlit  w's  which  bum  Fanlike  and  fibred,  „      155 

Though  thou  art  fleet  of  w.  Yet  stay.  The  lintwhite  24 

swiun  with  balanced  w's  To  some  tall  mountain.         Lover's  Tale  i  304 

Winged  Through  dark  and  bright  W  hours  are  borne  ;  Every  day,  etc.  4 
Through  whose  dim  brain  the  w  dreams  are  bom.  To  a  Lady  Sleep.  2 
Breathe  on  thy  w  throne,  and  it  shall  move  In  music  Love  27 

One  of  the  shining  w  powers.  What  time  I  wasted  2 

Wink    Above  her  head  the  weak  lamp  dips  and  w's  Timbuctoo  35 

Look  to  him,  father,  lest  he  w.  The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  11 

And  a  lady  may  w,  and  a  girl  may  hint.  The  Ringlet  17 

Winnow     W  the  pmple,  bearing  on  both  sides  Timbuctoo  154 

Winter     W  roofs  The  headland  with  inviolate  white  snow,  „        203 

hoarhead  w  paving  earth  With  sheeny  white.  Chorus  18 

state  of  woe  With  one  brief  w,  Could  I  outwear  2 

Wisdom    To  know  thee  is  all  w.  Love  15 

watch  the  treasure  Of  the  w  of  the  West.        The  Hesperides,  Song  i  14 
In  a  comer  w  whispers.  „  15 

Hoarded  w  brings  delight.  „  H  6 

Wise    The  w  could  he  behold  Cathedralled  caverns    Pallid  thunderstrichen  6 

Wiser    To  France,  the  w  France,  we  drink,  my 

friends,  Hands  all  Round  35 

Wish    That  w  to  keep  their  people  fook ;  „  54 

Be  loyal,  if  you  w  for  wholesome  rule :  Su^g.  by  Reading  33 


Withered     No  w  immortaUty, 

Hateful  with  hanging  cheeks,  a  w  brood, 

What  happy  air  shall  woo  The  w  leaf  f  all'n  in  the 
woods, 
Withered    Sweet  Love  was  w  in  his  cell ; 
Wittiering    dead  skin  w  on  the  fretted  bone, 

But  the  w  scorn  of  the  many  shall  cleave 
Woe    All  is  change,  w  or  weal ; 

The  linked  w's  of  many  a  fiery  change 

CotTLD  I  outwear  my  present  state  of  w 

Thy  w's  are  birds  of  passage,  transitory  : 

know  no  strife  Of  inward  w  or  outward  fear ; 

one  of  those  who  cannot  weep  For  others'  w's. 

About  sunset  We  came  to  the  hill  of  w, 

Christ  cried  :   W,  w,  to  Pharisees  and  Scribes  ! 
Woful     A  w  man  had  thrust  his  wife  and  child 

whom  w  ailments  Of  unavailing  tears 
Won    whilome  w  the  hearts  of  all  on  Earth 

vmshaken  peace  hath  w  thee  : 

We  w  old  battles  with  our  strength,  the  bow. 
Wonder    and  what  w  That  when  hope  died. 
Wonderful    it  was  w  With  its  exceeding  brightness. 

Galaxy  Shorn  of  its  hoary  lustre,  w. 
Wondrous     Upon  the  w  laws  which  regulate  The  fierceness 

the  w  tones  Of  man  and  beast  are  full  of  strange 

Astonishment  Chorus  8 

Woo     Do  w  each  other,  carolling  together.  Dualisms  9 

happy  air  shall  w  The  wither'd  leaf  Lover's  Tale  i  621 

Wood    {See  also  Pinewood,  Summerwood)    With  harmonies 

of  wind  and  wave  and  w  Timbuctoo  207 

Looks  through  the  thickstemmed  w's  by  day  and  night  Love  44 

fall'n  in  the  w's,  or  blasted  Upon  this  bough  ?  Lover's  Tale  i  622 

Woodbine    in  and  out  the  w's  flowery  arches  Check  every  outfiash  11 

Woody    where  the  Rhene  Curves  towards  Mentz,  a  w 

scene.  0  darling  room  12 

Woo'd     As  I  w  her  for  my  wife  ;  Germ  of '  Maiid  '  11 

Wooing    vital  heat  as  yet  my  heart  is  w  :  Could  I  outwear  12 

Word    bare  w  ziss  hath  made  my  inner  soul  Oh,  Bea%Uy  12 

Because  the  w's  of  Uttle  children  Cambridge  12 

w's  were  like  a  coronal  of  wild  blooms  Lover's  Tale  i  561 

Work     Be  noble,  you  !  nor  w  with  faction's  tools  Sugg,  by  Reading  29 

Worked    He  w  for  both  :  he  pray'd  for  both :  Lover's  Tale  i  223 

Working    On  that  day.  Love  w  shook  his  wings  .,  308 

World    notes  of  busy  life  in  distant  w's  Timbuctoo  113 

groveU'd  in  the  slime  Of  this  dull  w,  „        150 

To  carry  through  the  w  those  waves,  „         238 

The  w  is  somewhat ;  it  goes  on  somehow ;  The '  How  '  and  the  '  Why  21 

w  wiU  not  change,  and  her  heart  will  not  break.   I'  the  glooming  light  22 


The  Grasshopper  28 
Shall  the  hag  4 

Lover's  Tale  i  622 

Love,  Pride,  etc.  8 

Lover's  Tale  i  678 

English  War  Song  5 

Every  day,  etc.  23 

The  Mystic  9 

Could  I  outwear  1 

Me  my  own  fate  2 

Rosalind  4 

„      12 

Lover's  Tale  i  365 

Sugg,  by  Reading  75 

Lover's  Tale  i  368 

818 

Timbuctoo  17 

Though  night  10 

Britons,  guard  44 

Lover's  Tale  i  750 

Timbtictoo  86 

..      106 

„      147 


Though  night  8 

The  Hesperides,  Song  ii  16 

22 

Hi  2 

iv  22 

1>.  of  F.  Women  10 

Britons,  guard  2 

59 

Hands  all  Round  28 

Lover's  Tale  i  693 

Su^g.  by  Reading  62 


Basing  thy  throne  above  the  w's  annoy. 

For  he  is  older  than  the  w. 

The  w  wiU  be  overwise. 

Lest  the  old  wound  of  the  w  be  healed. 

The  w  is  wasted  with  fire  and  sword, 

Lets  the  great  w  fiit  from  him. 

The  w's  last  tempest  darkens  overhead  ; 

Although  we  fought  the  banded  w  alone,. 

Than  vanquish  all  the  w  in  arms. 

Was  not  the  wide  w  free, 
Worldliness    with  her  week-day  w  sufficed. 
Worm    like  dusky  w's  which  house  Beneath  imshaken 

waters,  Timbuctoo  150 

Worn     W  Sorrow  sits  by  the  moaning  wave  ;  P  the  glooming  light  4 

Smiles  on  the  earth's  w  brow  to  win  her  if  she  may.   Tears  of  Heaven  9 

Eyes  are  w  away  Till  the  end  of  fears  Every  day,  etc.  19 

Worship    did  pause  To  w  mine  own  image,  Lover'sTale  i  68 

Worshipp'd    Where  Love  was  w  upon  every  height,  „  323 

Where  Love  was  w  imder  every  tree —  „  324 

Worth  (adj.)     W  eternal  want  of  rest.  The  Hesperides,  Song  i  12 

Have  ye  aught  that  is  w  the  knowing  ?  1865-1866  5 

But  aught  that  is  w  the  knowing  ?  "       .  ^ 

Worth  (s)    Lest  the  old  w  of  the  world  be  healdd,  The  Hesperides,  Song  Hi  2 
Womid  (s)     To  soothe  a  civic  w  or  keep  it  raw,  Sugg,  by  Reading  32 

Had  film'd  the  margents  of  the  recent  w.  Lover's  Tale  i  764 

Womid  (verb)    Seraphtrod,  W  thro'  your  great  Elysian 

solitudes,  Timbuctoo  48 


Wound 


1207 


Zoned 


Wooiid  (verb)  (continued)    About  her  forehead  w  it, 
Wove    I  w  a  crown  before  her, 

Slimmer  midges  w  their  wanton  gambol, 

mine  w  chaplets  of  the  self -same  flower, 
Woven    So  shalt  thou  pierce  the  w  glooms  of  truth ; 
Wrapped-wrapt     Wrapped  round  with  spiced  cerements 

landing-place  is  lorapt  about  with  clouds 
Wreathed    See  Darkly-wreathed 
Wreck    The  w  of  ruin'd  life  and  shatter'd  thought, 
Write    For  ever  w  In  the  weathered  light 

Wherein  to  read,  wherein  to  w.  (repeat) 

You  hide  the  hand  that  w's  : 

I  sorrow  when  I  read  the  things  you  w, 
Writer    How  much  I  love  this  w's  manly  style  ! 

Alas,  Church  w's,  altercating  tribes — 
Written    The  w  secrets  of  her  inmost  soul 
Wrong    Lest  you  go  w  from  power  in  excess. 
Wronged    From  w  Poerio's  noisome  den, 
Wrote    With  dandy  pathos  when  you  w, 
Wrought    See  SeUwrought 


Anacreontics  11 

Anacreontics  5 

Chech  every  outfiash  12 

Lover's  Tale  i  333 

Though  night  11 

A  Fragment  30 

Timbuctoo  199 

Lover's  Tale  ii  62 

Burial  of  Love  20 

0  darling  room  6,  18 

Sugg,  by  Reading  25 

77 

1 

73 

Lover's  Tale  i  600 

Sugg,  by  Reading  10 

Hands  all  Round  15 

i\'ew  Timon  10 


Tear    music  flowing  from  Th'  illimitable  y's. 

Thou  hast  no  compt  of  y's. 

With  seKwrought  evils  of  unnumbered  y's, 

Call  to  the  fleeting  y, 

Fair  y,  fair  y,  thy  children  call. 

Fair  y,  with  brows  of  royal  love  Thou  comest. 

That  trouble  life  in  early  y's. 

And  New  Y  and  Old  Y  met, 

I  said, '  0  y's  that  meet  in  tears. 

Old  Y  roaring  and  blowing  And  New  Y  blowing 
and  roaring. 

brain,  Now  seam'd  and  clink'd  with  y's — 

the  y  First  felt  his  youth  and  strength, 

The  slope  into  the  current  of  my  y's. 
Teaming    Men  clung  with  y  Hope  wluch  would  not  die, 
""  Huge  mounds  whereby  to  stay  his  y  waves. 


Timbuctoo  219 

The  Grasshopper  27 

Tears  of  Heaven  4 

The  lintwhite  5 

10 

19 

Rosalind  14 

1865-1866  2 

4 

12 

Lover's  Tale  i  131 

305 

ii  76 

Timbuctoo  27 

15 


Yellow    We  will  eat  the  Lotos,  sweet  As  the  y  honeycomb,     Lotot- Eaten  15 
Lower  down  Spreads  out  a  little  lake,  that,  flooding, 
makes  Cushions  of  y  sand  ;  Lover's  Tale  i  537 

Yeoman    Now  practise,  yeomen.  Like  those  bowmen,  Britons,  guard  45 

Yeomen,  guard  your  own.  „  48 

Yesterday    To-morrow  will  be  y  ?  Who  can  say  3 

Yon    Child  of  Man,  See'st  thou  y  river,  whose  translucent 

wave,  Timbtu:too  229 

soon  y  brilliant  towers  Shall  darken  with  the  waving 

of  her  wand ;  „        244 

You  may  not,  like  y  tyrant,  deal  in  spies.  Sugg,  by  Reading  20 

Yonder    Through  y  poplar  afley  Below,  the  blue-green 

river  windeth  slowly  ;  Cluck  every  outfiash  4 

Warbled  from  y  knoll  of  solemn  larches,  „  10 

You    How  y  are  2/  ?     Why  I  am  I  ?  The'  How  '  and  the'  Why  '  19 

Young    The  bright  descent  Of  a  y  Seraph  !  Timbuctoo  65 

And  watered  vallies  where  the  y  birds  sing ;  Could  I  outwear  8 

Y  fishes,  on  an  Arpil  mom,  Rosalind  21 

Youth    light  Of  earliest  y  pierced  through  and  through  The  Mystic  29 

mailfed  warrior  in  y  and  strength  complete  ;  The  Grasshopper  13 

But  a  short  y  sunny  and  free.  „  29 

indue  i'  the  spring  Hues  of  fresh  y.  Could  I  outwear  3 

So  in  thine  hour  of  dawn,  the  body'*  y,  Thouah  night  13 

How  canst  thou  let  me  waste  my  y  in  sighs  ;  On,  Beauty  2 

the  dewy  prime  Of  y  and  buried  time  ?  Who  can  say  7 

Alas,  our  y,  so  clever  yet  so  small,  Sugg,  by  Reading  79 

the  year  First  felt  his  y  and  strength.  Lover's  Tale  i  306 

that  thought  Which  was  the  playmate  of  my  y —  „  it  72 

Youthful    beneath  Severe  and  y  brows,  with  shining  eyes        The  Mystic  27 
What  time  I  wasted  y  hours  What  time  I  wasted  1 

I  fear  for  you,  as  for  some  y  king,  '^"^-  ^^  Reading  9 

Yronne    In  rings  of  gold  y.  The  lintwhite  29 


Zamoysky    Than  when  Z  smote  the  Tartar  Khan, 
Zidonian    Z  Hanno,  voyaging  beyond  The  hoary 

promontory  of  Soloe 
Zone    Girt  with  a  Z  of  flashing  gold 
Zoned    and  z  below  with  cedarshade, 


BUno  ye  the  trumpet  12 

The  Uesveridts2 

TimlmBlooT2 

The  Hesperiits  U 


ADDENDA 


Abysmal    The  a  deeps  of  Personality,  Palace  of  Art  223 

Achora    A,  yer  laste  little  whishper  was  sweet  as  the  lilt  of  a 

bird !  Tomorrow  33 

Aonshla    A,  ye  set  me  heart  batin'  to  music  wid  ivery 

word !  „        34 

Adown    channed  sunset  linger'd  low  a  In  the  red  West :      Lotos-Eaters  19 

a  the  stair  Stole  on  ;  Godiva  48 

that  passing  lightly  A  a  natural  stair  of  tangled 

roots, 
a  the  steep  like  a  wave  I  would  leap 
A  the  crystal  dykes  at  Camelot 
AfSuent    Stood  up  and  spake,  an  a  orator. 
Afoor  (before)     Or  sits  wi'  their  'ands  a  'em, 
see  that  all  be  right  and  reg'lar  fur  'em  o  he 

coom. 
WeU,  I  never  'card  the  likes  o'  that  a. 
a  ony  o'  ye  wur  bum — 

but  a  I  coomed  up  he  got  thrufE  the  winder  agean. 
It  be  five  year  sin'  ye  went  a  to  him, 
she  set  the  bush  by  my  dairy  winder  a  she  went  to 

school  at  Littlechester — 
Well  but,  as  I  said  a,  it  be  the  last  load  hoam ; 
Let  ma  aloan  a  foalk,  wilt  tha? 
fur  I  haates  'im  a  I  knaws  what  'e  be. 
Fur  she  niver  knawed  'is  f aace  when  'e  wiu:  'ere  a ; 
lam  mysen  the  rest,  and  saay  it  to  ye  a  dark ; 
but  I  were  bum  a  schoolin-time. 
'A  cotched  ma  about  the  waaist,  Miss,  when  'e  wur 

'ere  a, 
we'd  as  lief  talk  o'  the  Divil  a  ye  as  'im, 
Aldre  (before)     Eh  !  that  was  a  bastard-making  began.    Queen  Mary  i  i  44 
After    <Se«  Arter 
Again    See  AgeSn 
Against    <S'ee  Age&n 
A-gawin'  (going)     I  ha'  heard  'im  a-g  on  'ud  make 

your  'air —  Prom,  of  May  1 135 

Age&n  (again)    An'  coostom  a  draw'd  in  like  a  wind  fro' 

far  an'  wide,  North.  Cobbler  93 

Theer  ye  goas  a,  Miss,  niver  believing  owt  I  says  to 

ye —  Prom,  of  May  1 106 

I  sead  that  one  cow  o'  thine  i'  the  pinfold  a  as  I 

wur  a-coomin'  'ere. 
then  a-scrattin'  upon  a  bit  o'  paaper,  then  a-lookin'  a ; 
then  back  a,  a-foUering  my  oan  shadder — then  hup 

a  V  the  faace  of  the  sim. 
but  afoor  I  coomed  up  he  got  thruff  the  winder  a. 
but  if  iver  I  cooms  upo'  Gentleman  Hedgar  a, 
Ye  shall  sing  that  a  to-night, 
and  he'll  be  rude  to  me  a  to-night. 
But  I'll  git  the  book  a,  and  lam  mysen  the  rest, 
an  soa  I  knaw'd  'im  when  I  seed  'im  a 
an'  I  worked  early  an'  laate  to  maake  'em  all 

gentlefoalks  a. 
an°  it  belongs  to  the  Steers  a :  I  bowt  it  back  a ; 

but  I  couldn't  buy  my  darter  back  a 
The  owd  man's  coom'd  a  to  'issen. 


Lover's  Tale  i  527 

The  Mermaid  39 

Geraint  and  E.  470 

Princess  iv  291 

Spinster's  S's  86 

Prom,  of  May  1 169 
I  256 
I  366 
i405 
n6 

nl8 
11 169 
11213 
n585 
n607 
mis 
ra40 

in  120 
ml31 


1 191 
I  203 

I  371 
I  406 
nl37 
II  216 
n220 
ml2 
ml22 

m449 

in  452 
ni702 


Agean  (against)     Es  I  should  be  talkin  a  'em,  Village  Wife  110 

Ay,  roob  thy  whiskers  a  ma.  Spinster's  8's.  81 

Fur  moast  on  'em  talks  a  tithe.  Church-warden,  etc.  52 

thaw  'e  knaws  I  was  hallus  a  heving  schoolmaster 

i'  the  parish !  Prom,  of  May  1 186 

and  fell  a  coalscuttle  and  my  kneea  gev  waay  „  i  403 

an  a  the  toitbe  aa.'  the  raate.  Church-warden,  etc.  11 

Ago     affianced  years  a  To  the  Lady  Ida :  Princess  ii  215 

Aich  (each)    Whin  we  laid  yez,  a  by  o,  Totnorrou!  82 

Airily     There  be  some  hearts  so  a  built.  Lover's  Tale  i  803 

Albeit    a  their  glorious  names  Were  fewer.  Princess  ii  ]&5 

'  A  so  mask'd.  Madam,  I  love  the  tmth ;  „  213 

All    We  have  made  war  upon  the  Holy  Father  A  for 

your  sake :  Queen  Mary  \  ii  307 

Well,  I  be  coomed  to  keep  his  birthdaay  an'  a.  Prom,  of  May  i  76 

Hands  a  round  !  (repeat)  Hands  all  Bound  9,  21,  33 

Alios  (always)    so  I  a  browt  soom  on  'em  to  ber ;  Prom,  of  May  u  20 

You  should  hev  him  a  wi'  ye.  „  n  75 

What  maakes  'im  a  sa  glum  ?  ..  n  148 

and  I  telled  'im  'at  sweet'arts  a  worked  beet  togitber ;        ,.  n  157 

Aloof    and  stream'd  Upon  the  mooned  domes  a  In 

inmost  Bagdat,  Arabian  Kights  127 

and  the  sound  Which  to  the  wooing  wind  a  The  poplar 

made,  *  Mariana  75 

Altogether    See  Altogitber 

Altogither  (altogether)    We  laays  out  o'  the  waay  fur 

gentlefoalk  a —  Prom,  of  May  i  211 

Alway    (See  also  Alius)    A  the  inaudible  invisible 

thought,  Lover's  Tale  ii  102 

Amber  (adj.)    before  us  glow'd  Fruit,  blossom,  viand,  a  wine, 

and  gold.  Princess  w  35 

Ambrosial    Streams  o'er  a  rich  a  ocean  isle,  Milton  14 

The  broad  a  aisles  of  lofty  lime  Princess  Pro.  87 

Dropt  thro'  the  a  gloom  to  where  below  „  tv  24 

Anear  (near)    Dark-brow'd  sophist,  come  not  a ;  Poet's  Mimd  8 

Anew  (enough)     Pretty  a  when  ya  dresses  'em  oop,  Spiiuttr's  STt.  86 

thaw  thou  be  haale  a  I  seed  tha  a-limpin'  up  just 

now  Prom,  of  May  I  384 

and  theer'll  be  room  o  for  all  o'  ye.  „  i  454 

The  weather's  well  a,  but  the  glass  be  a  bit  shaaky.  n  51 

I  could  put  all  that  o'  one  side  easy  a.  .,  n  111 

I  should  ha'  thowt  they'd  bed  a  o'  gentlefoalk,  ,.  n  580 

Angry    Over  her  snow-cold  breast  and  a  cheek  (Enone  142 

Anight    A  my  shallop,  rustling  tlux)'  The  low  and 

bloomed  foliage,  Arabian  MghU  12 

Anything    Mixt  with  kisses  sweeter  sweeter  Than  a  on 

earth.  -Waiui  n  iv  10 

Anns    See  Han-in-arms,  Men-at-arms 

Am'd  (earned)    an'  a  naw  thanks  fur  'er  paains.  VtUage  Wife  a 

Art    but  that  you  are  a  and  part  with  us  In  purging 

heresy,  Qtiten  Mary  ill  iv  316 

Arter  (after)    He'll  be  a  you  now.  Miss  Dora.  Prom,  of  May  1 118 

He's  been  a  Miss  Eva,  haan't  he  ?  „  1 121 

I  laame't  my  knee  last  night  mnning  a  a  thiaf.  ,.  i  887 

Well,  I  runned  a  thief  i'  the  dark,  „  I  402 

and  we'll  git  'im  to  speechify  for  us  a  dinner.  ..  i  440 

_  oV.<yM    \-,ajxn   o.raiiHin'  mA  tKlA  l<>t(«r  wi'  'at  TO' 

nl28 


a  she'd  been  a-readin^  me  the  letter  wi'  *er  Toioe 
a-shaakin'. 


but  us  three,  a  Sally'd  telled  us  on  'im. 


miss 


1209 


Askew 


1210 


Except 


Askew  Then  glanced  a  at  those  three  knights  of  hers,  Pelleas  and  E.  134 
"Asta  (hast  thou)     Wheer  'a  been?  ^.  Prom,  of  May  i  349 

Athurt  (athwart)    and  doant  laay  my  cartwhip  a  'is 

shou'ders,  >.  n  138 

and  wheere  the  big  eshtree  cuts  a  it,  „  m  94 

Athwart    (See  also  A^urt)    mind  Lies  folded,  often 

sweeps  a  in  storm —  Lover's  Tale  i  50 

A  pine  in  Italy  that  cast  its  shadow  A  a 

cataract ;  Queen  Mary  iii  iv  137 

Atwain  cuts  a  The  knots  that  taiigle  human  creeds.  Clear-headed  friend  2 
Atween  (between)    Fur  a  'is  readin'  an'  writin'  'e  snifEt  up 

a  box  in  a  daay,  Village  Wife  40 

Aught    The  nursery-cocker'd  child  will  jeer  at  a  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  395 

Av  (if)    An',  afther,  I  thried  her  meself  a  the  bird  'ud  come 

to  me  call,  Tomorrow  45 

Avore  (before)    I'd  ha'  been  here  a.  Queen  Mary  iv  iii  476 

Gardiner  wur  struck  down  like  by  the  hand  o' 

God  a  a  could  taste  a  mossel,  „  iv  iii  517 

Awkward    See  Hawkard,  p.  305 


Caare  (care)    an'  I  c's  nowt  neither. 

Care    See  Cs&ce 

Casselty  (unsettled)    Nasty,  c  weather  ! 

Casual^    See  Casselty 

'Cep'  (except)     'ud  ha'  done  it  'c  it  were  Dan  Smith, 

Certain    See  Sartan 

Clock  (p.  101)    See  O'clock,  p.  506 

Coarser    When  did  a  frog  c  croak  upon  our  Helicon  ? 

Confused  (p.' 873)    See  Maftted,  p.  995 

Coorse  (course)     Why,  o'  c,  fur  it  be  the  owd  man's 

birthdaay. 
Cum  (come)    See  A-com 
Current  (p.  125)    See  also  Undercurrent,  p.  753 
Curtsey    See  Bob 
Cycled    sons  of  flesh  Shall  gather  in  the  c  times 


Prom,  of  May  i  27 

Church-warden,  etc.  2 

Prom,  of  May  i  411 

Trans,  of  Homer  4 

Prom,  of  May  i  5 

In  Mem.  Ixxxv  28 


Back  (adv.)    nor  to  round  about  and  h  to  yoiur  lordship's 

face  again, 
Back'd    See  Highback'd,  p.  955 
Bakkuds  (backwards)     But  Billy  fell  h  o'  Charlie, 
Bara    'B!'  what  use  ? 

Beant  (am  not,  are  not,  is  not)    B  Miss  Eva  gone  off  a 
bit  of  'er  good  looks  o'  laate  ? 
The  owd  man  be  heighty  to-daay,  J  he  ? 
I  taaked  'im  fur  soom  sort  of  a  land-surveyor — but 

a  6. 
I  be  a  gentleman,  thaw  I  6  naw  scholard, 
B  there  house-breakers  down  i'  Littlechester,  Dobson — 
So  the  owd  uncle  i'  CJoomberland  be  dead,  Miss  Dora, 

J  he? 
why  then  I  h  Farmer  Dobson,  but  summun  else — 

blaame't  if  I  6 ! 
or  she  h  Dora  Steer. 

Dobbins,  I  think !     Dobson.    I  b  Dobbins. 
I  6  sa  sewer  o'  that,  fur  Sally  knaw'd  'im ; 
Bean't  (am  not,  is  not)    — and  I  b  wrong  not  twice 
i'  ten  year — 
fur  him  as  be  handy  wi'  a  book  b  but  haafe  a 
hand  at  a  pitchfork. 
Before    See  Moot,  Afore,  Avore,  'Fore 
Bellows'd  (out  of  breath)    He  wur  sa  b  out  wi'  the 

wind  this  murnin', 
Beslings-puddin'     Baacon  an'  taates,  an'  a  b-p 
Bestial    and  since  his  ways  are  sweet.  And  theirs 

are  b, 
Between    See  Atween 
Blackbird  (p.  846)    See  Merle,  p.  1006 
Blazon'd    By  two  sphere  lamps  b  like  Heaven  and  Earth 
Blossomy    Creeping  thro'  b  rushes  and  bowers  of  rose- 
blowing  bushes, 
Blurly    sallow  lights  shone  Dimly  and  b  with  simmer 

ing  fat. 
Bo&th  (both)    The  Lord  bless  b  on  'em ! 
And  long  Ufe  to  6  on  'em. 
Fur  b  on  'em  knawed  as  well  as  mysen 
I  eddicated  b  on  'em  to  marry  gentlemen, 
Bob  (to  curtsey)    little  gells  b's  to  ma  hoSens  es  I  be 

abroad  i'  the  laanes.  Spinster's  S's.  107 

Bom    See  Bom 
Both    SeeBcAOi 

Broad-imbased    rib  and  fret  The  b-i  beach,  Siij>p.  Confessions  127 

Bum  (bwn)     B  V  traade.  Church-warden,  etc.  18 

Buss  (kiss)     Gi'e  us  a  6  fust,  lass.  Prom,  of  May  n  228 


The  Falcon  115 

Village  Wife  85 
Sir  J.  Oldcastle  19 

Prom,  of  May  i  32 
I  77 

I  205 
I  332 
I  388 


n2 

II 139 
II  605 
n  700 
in  146 

Queen  Mary  iv  iii  534 

Prom,  of  May  i  188 


Prom,  of  May  in  432 
North  Cobbler  112 

Com.  of  Arthur  181 


Princess  i  223 
Leonine  Eleg.  3 


Far  off  in  the  dun  100 

Prom,  of  May  i  342 

1346 

II  313 

„         ui  455 


Dewy    days  Of  d  dawning.  Lover's  Tale  i  52 

bUght  Lives  in  the  d  touch  of  pity  „         696 

Divided  (p.  152)    See  Twelve-divided,  p.  751 
Doant  (don't)     I  d  believe  he's  iver  a  ^eart  under  his 
waistcoat. 
I'll  not  meddle  wi'  'im  if  he  d  meddle  wi'  mea. 
But  'e  d  fish  neither. 
There  mun  be  summut  wrong  theer,  Wilson,  fur  I  d 

understan'  it. 
An'  thou  d  understan'  it  neither — 
Beant  there  house-breakers  down  in  Littlechester, 

Dobson — d  ye  hear  of  ony  ? 
and  d  laay  my  cartwhip  athurt  'is  shou'ders, 
Why,  lass,  d  tha  knaw  he  be  sweet  upo'  Dora  Steer, 
Dosta  (do  you)     By-and-by — eh,  lad,  d  knaw  this 

paaper  ?  „  ii  686 

Eh,  lad,  d  knaw  what  tha  means  wi'  by-and-by  ?  „  n  690 

Downward     And  hke  a  d  smoke,  the  slender  stream  Lotos-Eaters  8 

some,  like  a  d  smoke.  Slow-dropping  veils  of  thinnest  lawn,     „  10 

How  sweet  it  were,  hearing  the  a  stream,  „  C.  S.  54 

Duer    for  song  Is  d  unto  freedom,  Princess  iv  141 

Dully    Far  off  she  seem'd  to  hear  the  d  sound  Of  human 

footsteps  f alL  Palace  of  Art  275 

Dusk  (adj.)     that  making  slide  apart  Their  d  wing- 
cases,  Gareth  and  L.  687 


Prom,  of  May  i  129 
1 174 
I  214 

I  234 
I  238 

I  389 
II  137 
nl60 


Each    See  Aicb 

Earned    See  Am'd 

'Edn't  (had  not)    fur  I  'e  naw  time  to  maake  mysen  a 

scholard  Prom,  of  May  i  333 

Eighty    <See  Heighty  ,  ^    ,  „     ,n, 

Enew  (enough)    (See  also  Enow)    Warm  e  theere  sewer-ly,      Oibd  Boa  111 
Enough    See  Anew,  Enew,  Enow 
Enow  (enough)    (See  also  Easw)    Tut :  he  was  tame 

and  meek  e  with  me, 
'  Ay,'  thought  Gawain,  '  and  you  be  fair  e : 
Enter'd    See  Inter'd 
'Ereabouts  (hereabouts)    but  noan  o'  the  parishes  goas 

by  that  naame  'e. 
Except    See  'Cep' 


Gareth  and  L.  718 
Pelleas  and  E.  388 


Prom,  of  May  i  269 


FeU'st 


1211 


Myson 


P 

Fdl'st    I  believe  thou  /  into  the  hands  Of  these  same 

Moors  Foresters  n  i  562 

First    See  Fust 

Tore  (before)    'F  God,  I  think  she  entreats  me  like  a 

cliild.  Queen  Mary  i  iii  111 

Nay  the  Queen's  right  to  reign—'/  God,  the  rogues—      „  ii  ii  96 

He  falters,  ha  ?  '/  God,  we  change  and  change ;  „        m  iv  406 

'/  God,  I  know  them  heretics,  but  right  English  ones.      „        rv  iii  343 
'  F  God,  I  am  a  mightier  man  than  thou.  Becket  i  i  223 

Wilt  thou  embrace  thy  sweetheart '/  my  face  ?  Foresters  ii  ii  29 

Preedom    May  /'s  oak  for  ever  live  Hands  all  Rovmd  5 

Fust  (first)    master  'ud  be  straange  an'  pleased  if  you'd 

step  in  /,  P'TO'^-  of  ^<^y  ^  168 

but  I  thowt  I'd  bring  tha  them  roses/.  „  n  50 

Gi'e  us  a  buss  /,  lass.  ..  n  228 

Taake  one  o'  the  yoimg  'uns  /,  Miss,  „  m  32 


0 

Cteve    See  Gev 

Oawin'    See  A-gawin' 

Gev  (gave)     An'  I  'eard  the  bricks  an'  the  baulks  rummle 

down  when  the  roof  g  waay, 
Gtoing    See  A-gawin' 
Gotten    And  then  he  sent  me  a  letter,  '  I've  g  my  work 

to  do; 
Grafted    <See  Grafted 
Groond    '  So  when  the  sun  broke  next  from  under  g, 

'  But  when  the  next  day  brake  from  under  g — 
Gmfted  (grafted,  begrimed)    An'  'is  noase  sa  g  wi'  snuff  es 

it  couldn't  be  scroob'd  aw^y. 


Owd  Rod  109 


First  Quarrel  85 

Holy  Grail  328 
„        338 

Village  Wife  39 


Heighty  (eighty)     The  owd  man  be  h  to-daay,  beant  he  ?  Prom,  of  May  1 11 
Hereabouts    See  'Ereabouts  ^      ^      j  t  oa,^ 

Hweat    H  Sir  Gareth  call'd  from  where  he  rose,  Oareth  and  L.  045 

Herself    See  Hersen 
Hersen  (herself)    an'  one  on  'em  went  an'  lost  h  i  the 

riyer.  Prom,  of  May  m  456 

Himself    See  Hissen 
Hinder    See  Inder 
Hissen  (himself)    Then  the  owd  man  i'  Lear  should  be 

shaamed  of  h,  P'rom.  of  May  i  267 

he  be  fit  to  bust  h  wi'  spites  and  jalousies.    Sally. 
Let  'im  bust  h,  then,  for  owt  I  cares.  »  H  lo4 

Hoffen  (often)    Fur  A's  we  talkt  o' my  darter  es  died  o'  rrr  .<•  m 

the  fever  at  faU:  ,  .    ,  ..  o  ^-"^^f  Kn7 

little  gells  bobs  to  ma  h's  es  I  be  abroad  i'  the  laanes,  Spinster  sSs.  107 
Honest  (p.  331)    See  Right-honest,  p.  581 
Horse  (p.  334)    See  Ridin-erse,  p.  580 
Howsoever    See  'Siver 


Kestrel  (p.  356) 
Kiss    See  Buss 


Imbased    See  Broad-imbased 

Immingled    in  the  stream  beneath  him  shone  /  witb 

Heaven's  azure  waveringly,  ^ 

Inder  (hinder)    Or  sits  wi'  their  'ands  afoor  'em,  an 

doesn't  not  'i  the  talk  ! 
Inter  (into)    knaw'd  better  nor  to  cast  her  sister  s 

mjsfortin  i  'er  teeth 
Inter'd  (enter'd)     An'  afther  her  paarints  had  t  glory, 
Into    See  Inter 


See  Wind-hover,  p.  800 


Gareth  and  L.  935 

Spinster's  S's.  86 

Prom  of  May  ii  126 
Tomorrow  53 


Qu^en  Mary  i  ir  17 

n  iv  109 

Minnie  and  Winnie  9 

Becket  m  i  195 

The  Fakon  178 

192 


408 


La    If  I  tried  and  I — she's  amorous. 

L,  to  whistle  out  my  life. 
Lady    Sleep,  little  ladies  !    Wake  not  soon ! 
Ladyship    or  I  couldn't  look  your  I  i'  the  face, 
Nay,  let  me  place  this  chair  for  your  I. 
and  your  I  has  given  him  bitters  enough  in  this  workL 
for  wasn't  my  lady  bom  with  a  golden  spoon  in  her  Ut 
mouth,  and  we  haven't  never  so  much  as  a  silver 
one  for  the  golden  lips  of  her  /. 
but  shaU  I  not  mount  with  your  lordship's  leave  to  her 
Vs  castle,  in  your  lordship's  and  her  Vs  name,  and 
confer  with  her  Vs  seneschal,  and  so  descend  again 
with  some  of  her  Vs  own  appurtenances  ? 
with  your  Vs  pardon,  and  as  your  I  knows, 
would  commend  them  to  your  Vs  most  peculiar 

appreciation. 
Your  I  lives  higher  in  the  sun. 

if  your  I  were  not  Too  proud  to  look  upon  the  garland, 
we  have  made  a  song  in  your  honour,  so  your  I  care 

to  listen.  ForeeUre  m  415 

Lordship    Darning  your  I.  The  Falcon  41 

I  never  spare  your  I  to  your  Vs  face,  nor  behind  your  Ve 

back, 
to  your  Vs  face  again,  for  I'm  honest,  your  I. 
then  there  is  anything  in  your  Vs  larder  at  your  Vs 

service,  if  your  I  care  to  call  for  it. 
Spoons,  your  I. 

but  shall  I  not  mount  with  your  Vs  leave  to  her  lady- 
ship's castle,  in  your  Vs  and  her  ladyship's  name. 
How  can  your  I  say  so  ? 

for  tho'  we  have  been  a  soldier,  and  ridden  by  his  Vs  aide, 
yet  are  we  now  drill-sergeant  to  his  Vs  lettuces, 
his  Vs  own  foster-brother,  will  commend  them 
But  the  prunes,  my  lady,  from  the  tree  that  his  I — 
But  the  prunes  that  your  I — 


418 
566 

568 
588 

662 


lis 

115 
137 


418 
507 
548 
550 
566 
686 
602 


Uacbree    Och,  Molly,  we  thought,  «,  Tomonwe  81 

Mebbe  (may  be)    I  hears  es  soom  o'  thy  boooka  m  worth  „.,  «» 

their  weight  i'  gowd.'  ^  VOatt  Wift  70 

Meselt  (n^self)    An',  afther,  I  thried  her  m  ar  the  bird  *ud  

come  to  me  call,  Tomorrov  45 

An'  I  didn't  know  him  m,  an'  none  of  the  parish  knew.  ,.  76 

Mine    Me  the  sport  of  ribald  Veterans,  m  of  ruffian  violatoiB !   Boadieea  50 

Mo&nt  (must  not)     Naw,  nor  a  m  to  Robins—  -V.  Farmer,  0.  8.  60 

Mowt  (might)    A  m  'a  taaen  owd  Joanes,  as  'ant  not  a 

'aapoth  o'  sense.  Or  a  m  'a  taaen  young  Robins, 

an'  bappt  wersens  oop  as  we  m. 

Mud  (must)    an'  if  I  »n  doy  I  m  doy.  N. 

Fur  work  m  'a  gone  to  the  gittm'  whiniver  munny 

was  got. 
'  Ya  m  saave  little  Dick,  an'  be  sharp  about  it  an'  all, 
Hysen  (myself)     But  Moother  was  free  of  'er  tongue,  as  1 
oflens  'ev  tell'd  'er  », 


48 

OvdRoi  112 

Fanner,  O.  S.  68 

N.  S.  50 
Owd  Bod  SI 

OwdBodld 


Near 


1212 


Wersens 


H 

Near    See  Anear 

Nioed  (nice)    Thaw  thou  was  es  soaber  es  daay,  wi'  a  m 

red  faace,  Spinster's  S's.  75 

Night    SeeAmght 

No    N  is  trouble  and  cloud  and  stonn,  Window,  No  Answer  8 

No&D  (none)    wi'  n  to  lend  'im  a  shuw,  N.  Fanner,  N.  S.  31 

Nobbut  (only)     an'  I  Seead  n  the  smile  o'  the  sun  North.  Cobbler  50 

None    See  Noan,  N6ne 
Nfine  (none)    An'  I  didn't  know  him  meself,  an'  n  of  the 

parish  knew.  Tomorrow  76 


Offens  (often)    An'  sarvints  runn'd  in  an'  out,  an'  o  we 

bed  'em  to  tea.  Village  Wife  56 

But  Moother  was  free  of  'er  tongue,  as  I  o  'ev  tell'd  'er 

mysen,  Owd  Rod  73 

Often    See  Hoffen,  Offens 
Oidy    See  Nobbut 
Onward    sharp  fancies,  by  down-lapsing  thought 

Stream^!  o,  D.  of  F.  Women  50 

Ourselves    See  Wersens 
Outright    Maim'd  me  and  maul'd,  and  would  o  have 

slain,  Last  Tournament  75 

Outward  (s)    For  Thought  into  the  o  springs,  Mechanophilus  11 


Peak'd  (adj.)    And  p  wings  pointed  to  the  Northern  Star.     Holy  Grail  240 


Say  (sea)    '  Your  Danny,'  they  says, '  niver  crasst  over  s  to 

the  Sassenach  whate ;  Tomorrow  48 

Scantly    And  there  is  s  time  for  half  the  work.  Marr.  of  Geraint  288 

Sea    See  Say  , 

Set    And  he  sung  not  alone  of  an  old  sun  s,  Dead  Prophet  4ik\ 

Sewer  (sure)    'E  reads  of  a  s  an'  sartan  'oap  o'  the  tother  1 

side;  Village  Wife  92' 

Sewer-ly  (surely)    Warm  enew  theere  s-l,  but  the  bam  was  as  ' 

cowd  as  owt,  Owd  Boa  111 

'Siver  (howsoever)    'S,  I  kep  'um,  my  lass  N.  Farmer,  0.  S.  23 

Snifft    Fur  atween  'is  readm'  an'  writin'  'e  s  up  a  box  in  a 

daay.  Village  Wife  40 

Sorra  (sorrow ;  an  expletive)    An'  s  the  bog  that's  in  Hiven      Tomorrow  67 
S  the  dhry  eye  thin  but  was  wet  for  the  frinds  that  was 

gone !  „         83 

Sorrow  (p.  661)    See  Sorra 
Spent  (p.  669)    See  WeSr'd,  p.  783 
Sure    See  Sewer 
Surely    See  Sewer-ly 


Re-firain    Or  Trade  r-f  the  Powers  From  war  with  kindly  links 
of  gold. 


Epilogue  15 


Thereamong    Three  knights  were  t ;  and  they  too  smiled,  Pelleas  and  E.  96 
Thereat     T  once  more  he  moved  about,  Pass,  of  Arthur  462 

Therebefore    And  t  the  lawless  warrior  paced  Unarm'd,     Gareth  and  L.  914 
Therebeside    and  t,  Half -naked  as  if  caught  at  once  from 

bed  Princess  iv  284 

And  t  a  horn,  inflamed  the  knights  At  that  dis- 
honour done  Last  Tournament  434 
Theretoward    set  no  foot  t  unadvised  Of  all  our  Privy 

Council ;  Queen  Mary  ii  ii  204 

Thereunder    From  out  t  came  an  ancient  man,  Gareth  and  L.  240 

Therewithin    a  sign  That  t  a  guest  may  make  True 

cheer  Pro.  to  Gen.  Hamiey  15 

Through    See  Thruf 
Thruf  (through)    Steevie  be  right  good  manners  bang  t 

to  the  tip  o'  the  taail.  Spinster's  S's.  66 


S 

Sanely    Of  saner  worship  s  proud ; 
Sarten  (certain)    'E  reads  of  a  sewer  an'  s  'oap  o'  the 
tother  side ; 


Freedom  30 


W 


Village  Wife  92      Wersens  (ourselves)    an'  happt  w  oop  as  we  mowt. 


Owd  Roa  112 


Pbinted  at  The  Edinbubqh  Press,  9  and  11  Young  Steeet. 


RETURN  CIRCULATION  DEPARTMENT 
TO^»   202  Main  Library  642-3403 

LOAN  PERIOD    l 


LIBRARY   USE 

This  book  is  due  before  closing  time  on  the  last  date  stamped  below 


DUE  AS  STAMPED  BELOW 

FORM  NO.  DD6A 


UNIVERSITY  OF  CALIFORNIA,  BERKELEY 
BERKELEY,  CA  94720 


COOaiMMVMt 


LIBRARY  USE  0:UY